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                    <text>Thursday

July

23,

1959

Loe

perticld Keview

Walden School—Park Site
Is Being Landscaped By
Park

Board
ih

i

Employees
aaa

i

�The big bank that grew up
with Highland Park

Have you ever needed a loan?
There are very few people today who go through life without borrowing money
for one reason or another. Fact is, it makes good financial sense to borrow money
for important things. When you find it’s time for you to get a loan, come to the
First National. All sorts of folks do for all kinds of loans. They find it’s conven-

ient and they get low bank rates. Terms for your own
in any

personal budget, too. Stop

time!

The

Our

| FIRSE NATIONAL BANK

60th
af

ih
and

‘

RS
Trust

of

Services

WEEKEND

High

:

la nd

Park

Member The Federal Reserve System
The Federal Deposit Insurance

BANKING

HOURS:

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

Corporation

�Vol.

34, No.

Thursday, July 23, 1959

20

as

The

Deerfield

Commons

Shopping Center

on which

The Deerfield Village Board will
meet Wednesday, July 29, at 8
p.m. in the Village Hall.
Two items on the agenda will be

con-

struction started last fall is nearing completion with several of
the stores scheduled to open by Sept. 1, with the official open- the approval of the appropriation
ing of the entire Center predicted a month later.
and budget ordinances and the deThe

for

Jaycees Approve
School-Park-Pool
August Referendum
The
Deerfield
Junior Chamber
of Commerce will have a dinner
meeting on Tuesday, Aug. 6 at 7
p.m. Keith Nickoley is president.
The group meets semi-monthly in
the Legion Hall.
At the July 16 meeting, Edward
Walchli,
park board member
reported on the plans for the purchase
and
improvement
of parkschool
sites,
approximately
45

acres

in three

sections

of the

vil-

lage,
and
the
construction
of a
community swimming pool in the
southeast corner of Jewett Park at
a total cost of $500,000.
The Jaycees voted in favor of the
park district proposals.
Also on the program was a movie
of the Indianapolis Speedway with
guest commentary
by Reggie

Dawson,
famed
classic.

assistant
500

starter

mile

of

Memorial

the
Day

Reservoir Request
The Deerfield Plan Commission
met July 16 in the Village Hall.
Peter Weinert acted as chairman in
the absence of Frank Curto. Mrs.
G. F. Clampitt
and
Carl
Bagge
were the other two members present, with
Lester
Moate
missing.
Their
secretary
is
Mrs.
Grace
Knack. Kenneth Wyle represented
Matthew Rockwell.

public

hearing

regarding

2

conditional use for an underground
water reservoir at the rear of the
Village Hall and Town Hall-Library
for the village was withdrawn.
The ordinance for uses in the
business district was amended
to
delete auction rooms, dance halls
and manufacturing employing more

than

10 persons.

Leslie Sanford, attorney, spoke
for the Benefit Association of Railroad Employees, an insurance company, which has petitioned to subdivide 18 acres into 48 lots, and
annex, on the west side of Wilmot
Rd. between the Carl Horenberger
and James Mailfald Sr. Farms.
The request was for annexation
in the R-1-A
classification.
Mrs.
Clampitt had studied the ordinance
for
annexation
without
the
R-1
hearing preceding the petition for
R-1-A which she explained to the
board.
Vernon
Trabert of the Wilmot
School District 110 was an interested spectator. Mrs. Willard Loarie
questioned
Attorney
Sanford
for
20: minutes.
Wirt Ramskill of 1112 Meadowbrook Ln., developer of the Wil-

liam

H. Rix Co.

northwest

subdivision

corner

of

square

leases

at the

foot

were

project,

cision

developed

open

by Sept.

1 are the Jewel

Owens

Shore

Line

Cleaners,

located

lage

Su-

Daniel P. Kedzie, library trustee,
reminds
Deerfield
and
Bannockburn residents that the Township
Public Library is also open Saturday mornings.
The
library
is
open,
Monday

2

to 5 o’clock; Monday, Wednesday
and Friday evenings, 7 to 9 o’clock
and Saturday mornings from 9 to
12 noon.

The

library

is

located

in

the

Stryker store at 758 Waukegan Rd.
Work
is progressing on the new
Town Hall-Library building at 860

Waukegan

Rd.

Park-School Sites
And Public Pool To

Be Voted August 15
Joseph Powell, president of the
Deerfield Citizens Association, presided at a meeting of representatives from some of the local civic
groups last Wednesday evening in

the Jewett Park field house
the

park

two

referendums

sites and

for

where
school-

the swimming

pool

to be placed in Jewett Park were
discussed.
Edward
Walchli,
park
board
member, explained that the cost of

(Continued

on page

10)

Greenwood

rezoning of six lots from R-3 to R-5.

in his plat. They encouraged him
to take a higher classification, but

He was complimented
by the
board for the large size of the lots

he will consult with his company
before making a decision.

Ave.

and

Waukegan

Rd.

asked

for

Hall

to

hear

the

petition

of

B.

Walton

Sr.

will

pre-

side,

the

from

has requested that his resig-

Lewis

directly

afternoons

the

Kleinschmidt
Division
of
Smith
Corona Marchant Inc. for an elevated water storage tank.

Township Library
Is Open Saturdays

Friday

of

The
Board
of Zoning
Appeals
will hold a public hearing tonight
at 8 o’clock in the Deerfield Vil-

west of the Frost Building, which
houses the Deerfield Post Office, in
the 700 block off Waukegan
Rd.
The
land
was
purchased
from
Frank
O’Connor
and
Matthias
Hoffmann last year.

through

resignation

Board Of Appeals
Meets This Evening

Deerfield Barber Shop and Etheridge’s
Restaurant
and _ Coffee
Shop.
The Grand Opening celebration
for the Center
is scheduled
for
early October, by which time the
Walgreen
super self-service drug
store will have been opened.
Space in the Center is being provided for women’s wear, home furnishings, beauty salon, camera and

is

the

nation be accepted as of Sept. 1.

permarket,
Sure
Save
Supermarket, S. S. Kresge Variety and Burny Brothers Bakery.
Also scheduled for opening during September are the Gift Lan-

tern,

on

village manager, Royce Owens. Mr.

by Landau and Heyman, shopping
center specialists, will contain 21
stores when completed.
Architecture
for
the
structure
will be of brick and vertical wood
siding
with
the effective
use of
ceramic tile and lannon stone facades on the store fronts.
The Center will provide parking
for over 400 cars and will have
entrances on Waukegan Rd. (42-A),
Deerfield Rd. and Osterman Ave.
Among
the stores scheduled to

service shops.
The Center

Village Withdraws

The

100,000

which

!

Deerfield-Bannockburn United Fund

VILLAGE BOARD
MEETS JULY 29

DEERFIELD COMMONS SHOPPING
CENTER IS NEARING COMPLETION

Budget Goal For 1959-60 Is $38, 556 |
a Deerfield- Bannockburn United Fund will seek to raise 5
$38,556 during the 1959 campaign, October 1 through 11, it was aa

announced this week by Earl F. Paul, board chairman.
This

figure

was

approved

at

4: Z

meeting of the local United Fund’s
board of directors in Deerfield Vil-

Dutch Elm Disease
Makes Gains On
Deerfield’s Trees

|

lage Hall following a report by the
budget
Oben

committee,

headed

by Mrs. —

Holt.

The Deerfield public works department has been checking all elm
trees on the parkways in the search
for Dutch
elm
disease.
Edmund
Klasinski,
foreman,
reports
they
have found 21 diseased trees on
the parkways
and
15 on private

property,

to date, with others

ing specimens

being checked

havat the

University of Illinois laboratory.
Among the locations of the park(Continued on page 10)

SCHOOL DISTRICT 110 WILL VOTE
ON $450,000 REFERENDUM AUG. 15
Citizens
mot,

of Deerfield

Woodland

School

Park

on Saturday,

and

Public

Schools

South

Aug.

Park)

of District
will

15 between

go

110

to the

the hours

(Wil-

Wilmot

of 6 a.m.

and

7 p.m. to vote on a $450,000 referendum for the building of junior high facilities in the Wilmot
land and South Park Schools.
In addition to the $450,000 bond
issue, those residents who live in
the Village of Deerfield and in District 110 will be asked, also, to approve two park board issues:
(1) $205,000 for a swimming pool
in Jewett
Park, (2) $295,000
for
purchase and improvement of three
school-park sites.

School and to equip the Woodvided very adequately for the children

in these

grades.

Five years ago the Wilmot School
site

was

for

equipped

a total

school

with

facilities

district

Earl

popula-

F.

_

Paul

“The board considers this to be- oa
a realistic goal to provide for the |
minimum needs of the Deerfield-— Rc:
Bannockburn
community,” |
Mr. Paul explained, ‘and we have i
Explain Need Of Junior High
every expectation of making it.” —
t
“The Junior High concept of ed- five years has now reached the inApproximately $34,000 was raised ry
ucation has come to be widely ac- termediate and Junior High area.
in last year’s drive, it was stated.
cepted throughout the country as a The
following
table
shows
the
Following is the 1959-60 budget
desirable addition to school district growth in grades 6, 7 and 8, as of
for the 13 member agencies ap- 4
organization,” said Charles J. Ca- June in the indicated year.

ruso, Wilmot School superintendent. He went on to say, “The term
Junior High has different meanings
to different people. To some of us
it means seventh, eighth, and ninth
grades. To others it means sixth,
seventh, and eighth grades. To still
others it means only the seventh
and eighth grades. The type of district organization for grades one
through twelve, whether it be 6,
3, 3or
8.4 or:5) 34, or6; 2, 471s
largely dependent upon state law
and local conditions.”
To explain
further, Wilmot School has been
on the 6, 2, 4 plan. This means 6years of elementary school (which
consists of grades 1 through 6), 2-

tion
have
has
more
has
and

of 350 children. The facilities
not been expanded but it now
20 more classrooms
and 500
children. The growth which
characterized
the
pre-school
primary school over the past

proved

Grade
6
7
8

1955
42
28
23

Grade
6
3
8

1956
28
Ad
a5

1959
115
719
63

“This

clearly

for your

1960 (Est.)
120
120
90

1958
68
52
43
1961 (Est.)
120
125
125

indicates

approval

cilities being

1957
52
37
47

the

to build

need

the fa-

asked for at this time.

We must build now so as to be able
to

take

care

of

the

educational

needs of our students in September
of 1960,”

stated Mr. Caruso.

He further went on to say, ‘‘We
are thinking of Junior High to include grades 7 and 8. The facilities

years of Junior High school (which

to

consists of grades 7 and 8) and 4years of high school (which consists
of grades 9 through 12).

the Junior High Grades (7-8), and
the intermediate
grades
(4-6), as
long
as the
enrollment
permits,

The $450,000 referendum now being proposed will be used to construct

junior

high

present Wilmot

facilities

at

the

School and to com-

plete and equip the present Woodland Park School addition and the
new South Park School.
The
growth
in School
District
110 has been presented to the taxpayers many, many times.
When
you look at the figures that show
the increases in the student body

in the past years you can see that
the primary grades have borne. the
greatest influx of students. Because
of a great

deal

of foresight

by

the

Board of Education and the citizens of the district they have pro-

be

while

provided

will

the primary

be

shared

grades

K-3

by

will

by the board of the Deer- _

field-Bannockburn
Visiting Nurse
Retarded Children

Salvation
Highland
Gisk:

United

Fund:

Army Donut Day
Park Hospital ....

Scouts

Boy Scouts...
Red ‘Croas:

1,000.
2,500 —

ice

5,600 Be

3...
cc.

6,500
4,900

isc
Gea

Family Service ..................---.
North Shore Mental Health

6,200

Olinie
5.02...
eee
Recreation’ 0.00.
Canoe?
vince

1,500
5,000
1,000

jc T_T Ng SERA Te Ree ROMER RENN
Pola’

2%

1,000

ho. el ee

expense allowance
Mr.

Paul

pointed

budget
for
was reduced

500%)

..........
out

a fi,

$38, 556
that thea y

Deerfield
Recreation —
$4,200 from last year ©

in anticipation

of tax

revenues

in- Pi

be able to use the present Wilmot
gymnasium,
music room,
and art
room. This will enable every child
in the district to have a gymnasium
available to his class for such essential
activities
as
assemblies,
movies, dramatic skits, physical education, ete.”

1960.
As a result of a favorable 2
referendum last spring, Recreation .
is scheduled to become a tax-sup- —
ported activity.
Following
the adoption
of the
—

“The passage of this bond issue
will permit the schools in District
110 to give equal opportunities to
all children no matter which school

Will Meet Tonight

they

attend.

Because

of

the

in-

crease in the assessed valuation the
passage of this bond issue will have
‘little effect on the tax bills,” Mr.
Caruso explained.

(Continued

on page

10)

Chamber of Commerce

_

The Deerfield Chamber of Commerce will hold its monthly dinner
meeting tonight at 7 o’clock in the
Legion

dining

hall.

Arthur

C.

Ull-

mann, president, reports that a pro-

motional advertising campaign will
be the topic of discussion.

.

_—
—
—

�DEERFIELD FORUM
Opinions

expressed

in

have less than 300
should contain the
dress of the writer,
will be withheld if

these

columns do not necessarily constitute the opinions of the paper.
Letters
should
be brief and

To

the Citizens
There
have

comments

of Deerfield:
been
letters

in the

and

newspapers

regarding the office of the Village
Manager,
and particularly regarding my resignation from that office.
I wish to state that any criticism
made in person to me as Village
Manager concerning the office of
manager
and its function in the
Village
will
be
gladly
discussed

with

tolerance

and

consideration

for the problem at hand.
Anyone is welcome to

the Village

Hall and

come

receive

to

truth-

ful
and
accurate
information
as
well as courteous and understanding treatment concerning municipal
matters.
Village Hall files are open to the
citizens of Deerfield for the purpose of checking on village problems. All are free to avail themselves of the opportunity of checking on community problems.
I wish Deerfield, and its many
fine citizens, the best of luck and
the
happiest
of solutions
to all
problems.
Very truly yours
Royce W. Owens

United Fund Group Agrees
With ‘Chicago Banker’
To

the Editor:
Please
tell Chicago
Banker
to
come forward and declare himself.
We’re looking for him. And I think
he’s looking for us.
He will find us a most congenial
organization,
for
we
agree
with
every word he wrote. That’s why
we’re in business!

Chicago
Banker
complained
(Deerfield REVIEW,
July 2) that
every week brings new swarms of
requests for donations to causes,
all of them worthy. Where, he asks,
does one start and where stop; what
does one do about competition for
the same illness; what of excessive
organization and collection costs?

In short,

how,

he

asks,

can

a man

‘of limited means decide where to
contribute?
Well friend, so thought many of
‘us. That’s how the United Fund was

born.

The

idea

was

to

stop

the

waste of manpower and collection
money, and to make sense “of the
whole business by combining all the

worthy causes into one major annual push.
You’d think this would be simple
enough, wouldn’t you? You’d think
all agencies would welcome this op-

portunity
fort

of collecting without

or expense,

_Many

do,

wouldn’t

and

our

as

Banker

Fund

points

‘out,

this

So what’s to be done about it?
There was a time, soon after the
Red Cross agreed to United collection, when the situation looked fa-

But

three.

well-known

groups,
the national
organization
for polio, cancer and heart, refused
to go along.
They claimed they were able to
do better alone, although the Deerfield U.F. guaranteed to at least
one of these organizations to match
the largest amount they had ever
raised here, and without any collection costs.

The

other

argument

of

these

three is that they must run their
Own campaigns in order to further
their educational program.
U. F.

pointed out they were free to do
this, and in fact could do a better
Page

4

into
col-

of paid staff.
Where will it all end? What can
be done about it? The answer is
easy. And quite obvious.
Whenever you get a solicitation,
merely return it with the note: “I
give through the United Fund.”
Remember
this isn’t something
peculiar
to Deerfield.
The
same
thing is going on all over the country, and everywhere United Funds
are fighting the battle of the single
drive.
They, and we, can win only if
the public really wants to end the
waste and nuisance of new drives
each week, and want it enough to
say: “I give liberally through the
United Fund.”
And then do it. Liberally!
John D. Austin
1056 Sheridan Avenue

Asks Why More Support
Isn’t Given Fire Department
To

the Editor:
What is wrong with the people
of Deerfield? For less than 10 cents
a day we receive fire protection,
emergency inhalator service, transportation for accident victims and
other things too numerous to list.
All the firemen ask us through
the year is a few dollars which
benefits us. (They buy equipment.)
We
have attended all the firemen’s
dances
since we’ve
moved
here and enjoyed each one! We’d
gladly give three dollars each year
without the entertainment, just for
peace of mind.
T’ll bet those who haven’t sent
their donation would complain the
loudest
and
the
longest
if they
needed help and it didn’t come fast
enough
or seem
good
enough
to
them!
I think they do a super job asa
volunteer outfit and thank God for
such
a wonderful
and _ unselfish
bunch of guys.

The

men

need

a

hose

drying

tower rack. We all need it. So get
behind
them
and
send
in your
checks, you Deerfield and Bannockburn citizens.
Mrs. Kenneth Hoffman
1227 Wood Avenue

The Discord On
Village Board
To

The

for

personal

seems

gains

by

Vil-

to me

to be

some

who

July 16)
Trustee
Petesch
and
Chief
of
Police David Petersen run a clean
police department.
The state makes it very rough
on traffic violators found guilty of
wrong doing. Some of these violators
fight
hard
to
keep
their
drivers’ licenses. If you doubt this,
check on some who have gone to
legal expense
of getting changes
of venue.
When
these cases
are
transferred out of the village, they
are continued and continued and
continued ...
What
should we do about this
discord?
A
panel
discussion
in
Jewett Park might help. It could
bring out some facts, as well as
some evasive talk. Certain conclusions can be drawn from the letter.

panel

should

Residents

I

have

consist

of the

His Views
of Deerfield:

debated

long

and

hard

with
myself
before
writing
this
letter. Mv first impression was that
I should not comment on the letter
Review,
the
one
in, Jast week’s
headed. “Here are the Facts About
the Village Board.” but finallv TJ
reasoned
that manv
rennle
read
these letters and in the absence

of information to the contrary, they
helieve

what

thev

last

read.

For

that reason I feel impelled to comment since IT am a member of the
Village Board,
As a member of the board. T siev
to

wor

that

the

statements

in

the

letter
sioned
H.NK.
are
not
a
factual revresentation of items thie
person discusses. There are manv

arhierts not covered in the letter
that have a bearing on the items
discussed. I do not choose to wash
anv linen in this column. but I must
exoress
surprise that the person
writing the letter did not search
for corroboration of what is stated
to be facts. At no time was I ar-

proached

and

asked

for

the

storv

nor any questions asked of me bv
the person I assume to have written the letter. It would seem logical
that
anyone
wanting
to present
“the
facts’
would
interview
the
President
and
other members
of
the Board.
Since I was not questioned by
this person, it is my honest opinion that the readers of Deerfield

Review

should

not

jump

to

con-

clusions
that
H.N.K.’s
facts
are
facts. I repeat, the letter referred
to did not contain a factual story
nor did it contain anywhere near
the complete story.
I take issue with the statement
the “Village Manager has chosen
this
time
to make
his: pressure
play.”
The
village
manager
for
months has wanted to resign, but
acting in what I thought to be the
best interests of the Village, I had
successfully talked him into staying with us. The fact is that he had
agreed that he would not give up
the shiv at least before the budget.
the
appropriation
ordinance
and
several other items were completed. The Board has discussed among
its
members!)
for
sometime
the
probability
of
his
leaving.
This
resignation
is not
news
to
the
Board,

William (Bill) Pantle proudly displays the shoulder patch,
which is the insignia of the Deerfield Public Parks District. Today's
cover

shows

109,

where

the park employees

at Walden

they are

the

improving

it’s Time To Cut
Thistles And Weeds
Thistles and noxious weeds must
be cut by property owners according to Deerfield
Ordinance
285,
sections 401 and 402. Edmund Klasinski of 1036 Broadmoor PIl., public works
foreman,
reports
that
fines can be levied against those
who fail to cut weeds.
A big patch of thistles, in full

bloom,

on

the

railroad

side

of

hope

sincerely hope that
of
Deerfield
will

dollars

from

go

and

item
that
The Board

any

other

the taxpayers
watch
where

will

is
is

question

not
readily
no different

worker,

it

needs

suggestions and criticism, constructive criticism, of course.
I must also add a further note to
my letter of last week where-in I

stood clearly for Village Manager
government by referndum. There is
a misconception
that
have such government

dum,

you

and

when
you
by referen-

the Board

lose con-

trols. That is not at all the case.
You just merely tell the world that
the
electorate
has
decided
they
want Village Manager form, rather

than any other. The Board does not
hand

to

blanche
The

the

Manager

checkbook

Board

still

(Continued

has

or
the

on page

any

carte

authority.
same

con-

38)

village board, village manager and
a
citizen’s
committee.
A _ good
moderator is essential.
The names of the ‘‘Committee of
Twenty” would be an interesting

list.
An Observer
(Name withheld by request)
(Continued on page 38)

)

When the Deerfield Park District
was organized, Jewett Park was the
tract first slated for improvement.
A visit to the park proves
that
much has been accomplished.
At first, just one employee was
needed and Charles Smith was employed and has done a very fine
job. As school-park land has been
acquired and more tracts are about
to be purchased, more men were
necessary to do the work. The next
man to be employed was Howard
Pantle and next, his brother, William.

Holy Cross Bowlers

Village
noxious

Plan Golf Tourney

Reports On Survey

Followed By Dinner

Ave. which has been requested by
the Deerfield Manor Home Owners

I sincerely

District

Residents may call the
Hall to report locations of
weeds.

fests that

interest.

School

grounds.

The Pantle brothers introduced
their sister, Jean, to their ‘boss”
and now she is Mrs. Charles Smith,
making the park employees a big
happy family.
Richard Knackstadt is a part-time
employee
and not related to the
group,

For Milwaukee Ave.

that the public will continue to
come out to meetings, and I just as

School,

school-park

Chestnut St. north of Hazel Ave.,
is just one of the many locations
where weeds have not been cut.
The
Rev.
Robert
Humrickhouse,
Baptist Church minister, at a recent zoning hearing, reported that
there were high weeds in the properties east of the railroad tracks
and north of Greenwood Ave.

One other point—TI think good
government is obtained when the
citizenry is interested and mani-

every
clear.

wish to continue the character assassination
of
Maurice
Petesch,
village trustee, as reported in the
letter last week by HNK.
(Forum,

The

To

their

the Editor:
The big issue in the current

lage Hall discord

you?

United

has not stopped the multiplicity of
drives. They continue to multiply.

vorable.

words. They
name and adwhose name
requested

lections.
But they weren’t convinced, and
in their wake have followed swarms
of other new disease funds each
year, each with its own bureaucracy

ef-

last year had 13 approved organizations for which it collected.

But,

Expresses

job if all their efforts went
public education rather than

Resignation Discussed
By Village Manager

Displays Park Board Insignia

Village President

The

speed

survey

Association

and

the

River

Association

was

for

asking

mph

from

County

The

on Milwaukee

Line

Woods

Rd.

for

45

to 150

yards north of Deerfield Rd. D. S.
Magowan,
state engineer, has re-

ported that the survey may be concluded before school starts in September.
A service station is being constructed
on the northeast corner
of the
Milwaukee
Ave.-Deerfield
Rd. intersection. “Neither association was notified that this construction
was
contemplated,”
August
Rodaniche, secretary of the Deerfield Manor, states.

Holy

7:30 p.m.
Wheeling.

and

at

the

by a dinner at
Union

Hotel

in

Joseph Stackowicz is chairman of
the day and he reports that both
men and women are invited to golf
and dine. Further information may ~
be obtained by calling him at WI
5-2259 or James Marks at WI 5- ~

5334.
The Public Press, no less than Public
Office, is a public trust.

DEERFIELD
REVIEW
July

23,

\

Vol. 34, No. 20

1959

PUBLICATION

The Walden School-Park site is
being improved
by the Deerfield
Public Parks board. Left to right
are William Pantle, Charles Smith,
park superintendent; Howard Pantle and Richard
Knackstadt,
employees.
The new schools of both District
109 and 110 use the playgrounds

hours

league

Published Weekly every Thursday

On The Cover

school

bowling

at 11 a.m., followed

Thursday,

during

Cross

will sponsor a golf tournament on
Tuesday, July 28 at Chevy Chase «
Country Club, with teeing off time

the

grounds become public parks when
school is not in session.

699

DEERFIELD,
Telephone

HIGHLAND

608

OFFICE

Waukegan

Road

ILLINOIS

Windsor

PARK

5-4500

OFFICE

Laurel Ave., Highland Park,
Telephone ID 2-4500

Ill.

MEMBER
National
Editorial Association
Illinois Press Association
Local Subscription Rates—$3.50 per year
Domestic Rate—$5.00 per year
Single Copies—15c¢
Forelgn Rates on Application.
“Entered as second-class matter November 27,
1944, at the post office at Deer-

fleld, | {ilinots, under the Act of March 8,
Thursday,

July

23,

1959

�ZZ
ddddddddddddddddddddpyyf
¥

e GREASE

TUNE UP

e OIL CHANGE

YH
YJ)

Sfp of PY.

Wy

ec
ddd
Ce

&lt;

WASHING

LL

r

750 WAUKEGAN RD.
DEERFIELD ILLINOIS

YY

RED HORSE SERVICE STATION

fy

ld

FORMERLY THE

¥

TIRES
BATTERIES

¥

¥

YSSLISISDS

SLIT

LS

ACCESSORIES

¢

bbe

tyy

RICHARD
PEET
Station

»

Manager

ice Station, is at your service and anxious to be of service to you.
We

are equipped

to handle all your

needs

from

a Tank

of Gas

to a Complete Tune Up. Our Service Men have the knowledge to
handle your needs and are expertly trained to service the Model
T Ford up to the modern sleek 1959 Automobiles. Stop in soon
and purchase some Mobil Gasoline and let our Service Men show
you how much we appreciate your business and make you want

to become a regular customer.

.

Stop in and Get Acquainted with us at the

DEERFIELD COMMONS MOBIL SERVICE
750

Be

EM
WE EEE
Thursday,

July

23,

1959

apt cra

ia

ae

C C™}™J EEE:

-0576
VME

\

|

�Nursery Group ‘Looks Up’ On Field Trip

Howard

Cousin,

John Marder,

Bruce Taylor,

Robert Brook,

Blake Schneider and Wendy

Roger Cohn,

Walzer,

all stu-

dents from Highland Park and Glencoe attending North Shore
Congregation

Israel

nursery

school

summer

session,

recently

visited neighboring Sky Harbor airport.
The

INSTALLED
WHILE
YOU WATCH

and

a _mipas

we

session

will

Mrs.

Marvin

Jacobsen

~

home

of Greta

Fell,

Open Thursday till 9, Open

Monday

MUFFLER
SHOPS

of Big Sisters

. Page

6

ID 2-5300

Highland Park

Belvidere, Waukegan
8:30 - 6 p.m.

Friday—8
:30 - 9 p.m.

ve 5-3555

as

glencoe

Waukegan
NEEDS
in Advertis-

ing Agency, Radio or TV; or with unusual talent
in Creative Writing, shorthand and typing, Music
Appreciation, Speech and Dramatics.
|

|

a

Mon. Appts. Available

Permanent female with background

THE FELL COMPANY
595 Central Avenue

arses
ro

call

SHOP

MAjestic 3-8395

WKRS

are Judy*

hair styles &amp; colors

COAST-TO-COAST

MIDAS MUFFLER

Evening 7-9

Vine

Tondi, presdent;
Greta Fell, vice
president; Mary Hexter, secretary;4
Barbara
Sturm,
treasurer;
Judy
Hammerman,
publicity
chairman;
and Linda Vanoni, social chairman.

NIN po

MIDAS’

skirt, slack, short, shirt .. . fairly breathes youth and _ individuality. But, enough of mere words. See the new things for
Back to College at The Fell Company and thrill to assembling
your complete wardrobe.

360

Ave. The acts tie in with the theme
of the tea, based on the idea that
the
freshmen
are
making
their
debut into high school society.

Teale Bie
seen
i i

Daily

5-

Tryouts For Big
And Little Sister
Tea Are Aug. 3

the
el

America’s
Finest Mufflers
Tailpipes,
Dual Exhausts
For Every Car
and Truck.

Open

(VE

“

Officers

1535

twoy

Tryouts for “Hi Society” skits
the
Big-Little
Sister Tea
theme,
will be held at 7 p.m. on Aug. 3 a

‘

Today!

Part of the fun of going back to school is selecting your fall wardrobe at The Fell Company. And, whatever you choose here, depend upon it, it will be fashion correct ... for we’ve been busy
for weeks in consultatiwith
on leading style authorities before
we made the final selection for your approval. We’re pleased
with our efforts ... and you will be, too. Every coat, sweater,

have

Call Mrs. Murray— DElta 6-7900
Thursday,

July. 23, 1959

t

A

a ~

~~

fall

weekday morning classes, one for
three-year-olds and one for fouryear-olds; and an afternoon class
for four-year-olds.
Reservations are being accepted
and
anyone
desiring
further
information is asked to contact Mrs.
Ritter at the temple (VE 5-0724)

or

Takes
}
only. minutes and
you will drive out in
_
new quiet comfort.

~"

a year-round

by the Couples

3436).

a UFFLER

~
” «
o*
« eeu

school,

sponsored

Club of the organization, will start
its third fall term Sept. 14 under
the direction of Mrs. Henry Ritter.
The group meets at the temple

"You" can actually see the
noisy worn out muffler come
off your car. And you will
see it replaced with a guaranteed, bright, new, safe,

’

nursery

program

�‘PINNED’

AT

ROTARY

INSTALLATION Men’s Garden Club
Presents Annual
Show Next Month
For the 17th consecutive year the
Men’s
Garden
Club
of Highland
Park will present its annual flower
show Aug. 22 and 23. Many new
features with appeal to the general
public as well as the amateur gar-

dener

will

be

included.

Numerous

Classes

LOCAL ARTISTS JOIN
ART FAIR EXHIBITORS
Artists Hilda Rubin and Dorothy
Driskell were exhibitors last week
end at the second annual Rolling
Meadows Art Fair.
Mrs. Rubin of 1184 Beech Ln.,
who
recently
returned
from
a
painting trip to Greece, exhibited
oil paintings. Mrs. Driskell, park
supervisor for Chicago Park District, of 1000 Judson Ave., showed
oil paintings
and
did on-the-spot
portrait sketches.

looks on from

left.

Peter

Gorner

Attends

High

School

Institute

Peter Gorner, 1906 Holly Rd., a
senior
at
Highland
Park
High
School, is attending Northwestern
University’s High School Institute.
He is in the music division.
Peter is in the high school ’S
Triad Club and a member of the
orchestra. He also played in the
orchestra for Student Stunts last
year. His instrument is the clarinet.

|
(

+(Author’s

Name

Below)

research

to

create

better

drugs.
Every prescription
you get is helping in the
discovery of future drugs.
How wonderful that modern prescriptions, which already saves so many lives,
lessens sickness-time and
cost so little for what they
accomplish, are also helping
future
generations.
Your children will live longer, healthier lives because
of today’s research.

Hand
featuring

as

low

as

and

POWER
&amp;

LAWN

PARK

Pick up your prescription

if shopping near us, or let
us deliver promptly without extra charge. A great
many
people entrust us
with the responsibility of
May

their
we

prescriptions.

compound

*Quotation by
(480-406

_ Thursday,

or

JIM
MATfor the Na-

Jaycee Golf Finals at Ports-

*

*

*

day

for a 5 day vacation!
*
*
*
greetings

to

BEV-

of their
life

Ravinia

Euripedes
B.C.)

2nd

25

*
Here’s

years

of

*

a

“Keeping

real

pensive

weather

special.

who

dress

*

has

For

that

watch.

that

one

Give

ex-

him

a

July 23, 1959

/

Leeds
17
Jewel,
water-resistant
watch that is guaranteed for life
against damage from shock or a
=

broken mainspring. Only $24.50.
And for that youngster a 7 jewel
copy with the same guarantees at
only $15.95.
*
*
*

-

sessions. DON
great band. The

we
—-

—
‘

&gt;

who

FERTILIZER
ALL

TYPES

- BRANDS

ON SPECIAL!

HOOVER

ANY

New

VACUUM

you

during

alk,

Portable

DEEP

CARON
and his
Student Activities

.

Committee
and
the
Recreation’
Board will be bringing us other
great bands every Tuesday durtng
the rest of the summer. It’s a great
opportunity to meet your friends

995

With

Bay Road, Highwood

:

married

warm

Time’’

active fellow

HARDWARE
314 Green

.

Saturday.

|

normally

the

school

*

see

every

ID 2-2041

—
.©

day

year.

*

*

Fast becoming a favorite spectator sport for us old guys over 21!
Little League and PONY
League

Ball!

Treat

the family to a couple

of hours of fun next Sunday at 5

when
the
Highland
Park
Pony
Leaguers
will be playing Northbrook. More fun than the world
series.

*

*

*

Not in Webster:—‘Etc.”—a sign
used to make believe you know

than you do.
*
*
*
Don’t
forget!
Most

.

more

Park

stores

are

Highland
Thurs-

.

day nite instead of Fridays. It’s in
answer to a survey which indicated
that most people consider Friday

©

family

now

nite

a

sure

to get your

or

open

social

TNT

nite.

Be

ticket.

The _

prize now
up
to $150.00.
MRS.
THEODORE
KOCH, who won the

$5.00

consolation

wishes

she

had.

prize
Just

last
drop

week
in

at

Leeds or any other participating
store after dinner Thursday and
pick

one

up.

No

purchase

is neces-

sary.

:

SHERONY

—PHARMACISTS—

Park

*

yours?

EARL W.
GSELL &amp; CO.
Highland

to

Sunday and to the LLOYD
BERQUISTS who celebrate the first lap

4 Burner GAS RANGE 7999
IRON

want

celebrate the all-important first on

as low as

FRE

*

Anniversary

regular $34.95

STEAM

we

ERLY and HUGH HUNTER who

ID 2-2300
e

because

Anybody
who
says
“you
can’t
take it with you” should have seen
how my car was packed last Mon-

SKOKIE

DEHUMIDIFIER

2.99

138

inches

short

mouth,
Virginia
next
month
by
placing third in the state finals at
Olympia Fields last week.

5-8383

Westinghouse

ft. Plastic

Guar. for
12 years

18

It’s Great! But—we have to cut our
vacation

tional

SERVICE
BUREAU, INC.

MAIN

20 to

BOY

8 ft. rigid POOL

« RAVINIA

When You Need A Medicine

filling

4

For Details OR

Bonds.

GARDEN
HOSE

1688

w/hood
&amp; spit
as low as

land
Parker
BERT
SHINDERMANS
Nippersink
Manor
resort.

HIGH SCHOOLERS and alumni!
Back again—next Tuesday nite! At
the Free Recreation Center Jam

60

Ask Your Physician to Phone
HIGHLAND

h

WTS

24” ELECTRIC
GRILLS

As you read this your writer is
enjoying a short holiday at High-

*

BY-OWNER PLAN
WE SERVE THE NORTH SHORE

erg

MODELS

t

ID 2-2600

U. S. Savings

888».

TORO

leeds

Congratulations
to
TEONI who qualified

a month

IN EVERY DEPARTMENT

ALL LAWN MOWERS
REDUCED!!

=

Scientists predict the recently perfected “miracle
drugs,” are just the beginning of the many new discoveries time will reveal to
us.
Up to 10% of the sales of
prescription
medicines
is
set aside by the pharmaceutical manufacturers for

were sold in less than
thru the

ANDMUMEMER Sar

“TIME WILL REVEAL
EVERYTHING”
www

1 OUT OF EVERY 3 HOMES

4846

100’s OF BARGAINS

paul

ond
GERRY
MULLIGAN
Quartette and KINGSTON
TRIO
concert at Ravinia.

SELLING YOUR HOME*T
SAVE TIME—MONEY

'

Buy and hold

with

be back tomorrow nite for the sec-

Flowers, fruits, vegetables, special
exhibits,
competition
within
competition, an “aisle of flowers,”
and educational exhibits will be on
display.
The public is invited and is asked to look for programs, rules and
more specific information through
the NEWS, local merchants and the
Highland Park Recreation Center.

Rotary’s president, Edwin A. Schwechel, right, pins the orSganization’s past president pin to the lapel of Dr. Albert Slepyan
at officers’ installation ceremonies. John Cortesi, vice president,

KEEPING
TIME

LEEDS JEWELERS
491 Central, Highland Park
Page

7

�ORDINANCE 0-59-38
BE IT ORDAINED by the President and
Board of Trustees of the Village of Deerfield, that:
The Zoning Ordinance for the Village of
Deerfield—1953,
as amended,
be and the
Same is hereby amended as follows:
The
first paragraph
of Section XXII-A
of the said ordinance is amended to read
as follows:
“There is hereby established a Board of
Zoning
Appeals.
Said Board
shall consist
of

seven

(7)

members

appointed

by

the

President of the Village and confirmed by
the Village Board of Trustees.
The members of said Board shall serve respectively

GRANT

for

the following terms:
One (1) for one (1) year.
One (1) for two (2) years.
One (1) for three (3) years.
One

(1)

for

four

(4)

One (1) for five (5)
One (1) for six (6)
One (1) for seven
PASSED: This 8th
APPROVED:

Children Display Stamps Marking Learned Skills

years.

years.
year Ss.
(7) years.”’
day of July, 1959.
G. E. HOLMQUIST
Village President

ATTEST:
CATHERINE
B. PRICE
Village Clerk
PUBLISHED: July 23,
field Review.

1959

in

the

Deer-

7/23 /59—219

&amp; GRANT

3 DAY RECORD SALE
THURS.

FRI.

SAT.

All Kingston Trio

aan tae Reg.
All Mantovani LP’s
Bde Skt Reg.
All Columbia Pop Stereo a ee Reg.

3.98.
3.98
5.98

3.25
2.98
4.89

All Mercury Stereo LP’s ipa eer Reg.
SS RTS Reg.
All RCA Pop Stereo

5.98
5.98

4.89
4.89

708

Central

GRANT

&amp; GRANT

ID 2-7222
Open

Thurs.

Eve.
Students at North Suburban Synagogue Beth El display Israeli stamps earned by developing
Hebrew skills. From left are Laurie and Richard Pathman, Charles C. Kirshbaum, newly-elected
One
president of Highland Park Stamp Club, Harold Benson, Leslie Jacobs and Leah Zell.
hundred thirty-two children participated in the program. Value of stamps awarded increased
with each skill learned; they were distributed at monthly family services. Dr. Louis Katzoff, educational director, developed the program with the assistance of Kirshbaum.
ORDINANCE

Hair Cuts of Distinction

HERE IT 1S... the
new YARD-STER by
YARD-MAN. It's built
right for smooth

BE

OMITTY’S
BARBER
SHOP

starting, stability,
easy steering and

quick stops.

Serving

1820

Highland

Park

Since

Board

IT

ORDAINED

of

Trustees

0-59-39

by

of

the

the

President

Village

of

and

Deer-

field, that:
Chapter V, Section 604 of Ordinance 172,
entitled
“AN
ORDINANCE
REGULATING
THE
USE OF PUBLIC
AND
PRIVATE SEWERS AND DRAINS, PRIVATE
SEWAGE
DISPOSAL,
THE
INSTALLATION
AND
CONNECTION
OF
BUILDING
SEWERS,
AND
THE
DISCHARGE
OF WATERS
AND WASTES
INTO THE
PUBLIC
SEWER
SYSTEMS,
AND
PROVIDING PENALTIES FOR VIOLATIONS
THEREOF”
be and
the same
is hereby
1900

2nd St., near the Jewel
Phone ID 2-0636

Buy and

hold

U. S. Savings

Bonds.

amended to read as follows:
“604. No
roof drain connections shall be
made to any storm sewer or sanitary sewer
from and after the date of the passage of
this ordinance; and it shall be unlawful to
permit water from such drains to flow upon
or over private property other than the site
upon which the building is located.”
This ordinance shall be in full force and
effect from and after its passage, approval
and publication as provided by law.
PASSED: This
APPROVED:
ATTEST:
CATHERINE
Village Clerk
PUBLISHED:
Review.

8th day of July, 1959.
G. E. HOLMQUIST
Village President

B.

PRICE

July 23,

1959

in the Deerfield
7/23 /59—220

El langee

Final

NEW, EXCLUSIVE
», DRIVE-O-MATIC.

Clearance

permits operator to keep
both hands on the wheel
«+» eyes on the course.

COMPLETELY

¥z to %

TO

GO

Designed for off-street use—in backyards,
parking lots and other supervised areas

Features...

as

low

Dresses;

Rd., Highwood

olf

Slacks; T Shirts and

Toddler

Crawler

Blouses;

Fall

Sets;

Jackets
T

Shirts;

All Sales Final — Not Returnable
Store Hours— 9 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. Open Wednesday

afternoon

fashions

lt at...

ID 2-2041

Highland

Park,

for

TYPEWRITERS
AND
ADDING MACHINES
SALES - RENTALS - REPAIRS

children

Illinois at 1900

Sheridan

Road

ID 2-8655
Parking —

always available on the east side of St. Johns

Avenue,

north of Central Avenue
645

Page

8

—

Jackets

AMyitdud Cogll

SHERONY
HARDWARE
Bay

Laing

oe

Pajamas;

America’s leading
manufacturer of
Quality
Lawn Mowers!

314 Green

S.

Dresses; Pajamas; Gift Items

H.P. Briggs &amp; Stratton Engine—recoil starter.

See

G.

Children’s Shoe Fitting
Specialists . . . featuring:

Fall

$9995

In and

—

H.P.

Meg daepearvbdekmaskeuey Slacks and Shorts (Oxford); T Shirts;
Merry Mites (broken sizes); Pajamas;

as

@ Smooth DRIVE-O-MATIC transmission
Welded, tubular steel frame
Automotive-type mechanical steering
Floating action on all four wheels
Low center of gravity
Foot operated friction-type brakes
Front wheels adjusted for toe-in, caster, camber

Come

CENTRAL AVE.,
Ph. ID 2-0879

ASSEMBLE
e « » READY

22

Shoes
616

TRANSMISSION

Shipped in its
own garage.

Summer

CENTRAL
Thursday,

°*
July

ID 3-0230
23,

1959

�TS 00
RTA

F

BS Ba bis

Pia

eee

MEATS
U.S.

with

to cook
the

many

newer
products.

outdoors,
new

is the

. . . For

O

COLLEGE
1434-072,
Jars

Barbecue Sauce
CHINET

ASST.

69c

COLOR

AGED

FRYING

nowadays
foods.

of wonder

in-or-outdoors,

these

Even

“instant”
campers’

into your

meals.

TENDER,

FRYING

Chicken Legs
OSCAR

MAYER

Cotto Salami

CHICKEN
714-02.
Cans for

79%

FROZEN

SPECIALS!

INN

Boned Chicken

55c

Beste

oe

(2

APPLE

OR

CHERRY

Pet Ritz Pies
SWANSON’S

=

Chicken Breasts
Strawberry Preserves ..- = 49c
BIRDSEYE

Paper Plates

EVERBEST

CENTRELLA

Salad Dressing

SWANSDOWN

SALADA

HOFFMAN

ORANGE

TENDER,

FRESH,

Chunk Tuna
STEWART

CUT,

Chicken Breasts

especially

specials will put a zing
BREAST

FRESH,

convenience

parade

BLADE

Beef Pot Roast

MPI

It's fun

CHOICE

Pound Cake Mix

PECOE

Pkgs.
For

69c

HOLLOWAY

HOUSE

Seafood Cocktail Sauce 2 #= 69c

Teabays. 2.

French Fried Botatoes” 2 Pies.
HOUSE

Stuffed Peppers .

eee seen nes cones esc cen accesses

with

coupon

= $119)

er
ail

COFFEE.

TTL
20c
20c

« KRAFT

Macaroni Dinner

DISUDICK 3s

PICNIC TIME

Pe. O9C

Ritz Crackers

Linen Embossed

TABLE CLOTHS

vee, 29C

Phe.

PRODUCE

2

EXTRA

FANCY

9

40”x84”

|

FREESTONE

Elberta Peaches

Seedless Grapes

Cooking Apples
EXTRA

FANCY

Tomatoes
Nectarines
Thursday,

39c

|

July 23, 1959

Purchase of
Folger’s Coffee

EXPIRES JULY

= 20c

CALIFORNIA

LARGE

Toward
2-Lb. Can

|

hee ae

31,

1959

|

,

20c

Sf AVETENAVANANOWAWOWOWENGHOWOUEHENE |

Bartlett Pears
GEORGIA

This Coupon Worth 20c

Paper

... 2

SUNSET
FOODS |

‘ror 29¢
19¢c
*Sclentific tests
prove no Fly,
no Mosquito
sprayed with Kan-

Kil Fly

1812 GREEN BAY ROAD — A CENTRAL FOOD STORE
Ope: Both Thursday and Friday Nights ‘Til 9 P.M.

&amp; Mosquito

Killer is immune

to

Its fast Bug-Killing
power!

12-oz.

Can

PLENTY
89c

OF

FREE

PARKING
— ALWAYS!

�}

it
mh
:

By

Joseph

F.

Hope
Ppsterdey

Peyronnin

those of you who were at the
The crowd seemed to be most

dance had fun
congenial—too

we did not have enough room for everyone to have a seat.
bégan

everything

| rations,

to

Be-

run

Schramm’s

deco-

all of which she made

by herself,
Hiwould
say,

°

seemed

Ellen
were,
“real

all give a bow
he

to Grace

of

the

ager
let’s

and

Bob

barber

shop

5

Carlson,

all

as the teen
sharp.”
So

for their efforts.

So

people

ae

i

quartet,

many

_ Bienlich,

the

helped,

Housers,

Alice

Houstons,

-Nielsens, the Emerys,
the Lauers
who
brought
a
very
important
guest, her brother-in-law, Don EIston
and his wife; he is a Cubs

4
4 ,
a

|

would
the

Majors,

was

quite

dle

the

handled

derson

about

the

it.

ticket

association,

sales

for

Ruth

Hen-

the

Prep;

Hazel

Holz-

for the

Pony,

my

wife

for

Soprani

for

the

for

macher
the

Majors,

Kay

Intermediate and Hannah Brown_ ing for the Minor; then each team
a

mother, some 31 in all, handled the
Sales
for each individual
league.
Bet there were a hundred people
who
did something and that is a
i
_ sign of wonderful cooperation by

a

wonderful
The

group.

question

ing as such
come

of

a

manager

for the

up again.

next

act-

year

has

The past policy has

been that a manager could not succeed

himself,

he

could

take

over

a

_ different team in the same league
or

yi

there

willing

it

Clancy

and

able

to han-

appeared

logical

ask Hank and
the Cards.

a team

in

big problem

another

here

league.

The

is the

con-

now

cern of some people over the possibility of our losing Hank Najdowski with the wife and three daughters but no sons. If what some people
think
were
true
then
Hank

necessary

program.

his family

for

You

the

can

that no matter what they
not be satisfactory for
the Cards would think it
tice if they lost Hank
parents would
think it

let Hank

stay

with

good

be

to

do it will
everyone,
an injusand some
unfair to

an-

are as fol-

lows:
Team
Pirates
Dodgers
2b hits,

Shodron,

H
5
8

1
4

s
|

Bolster.

LG Fig Fe, DRI ate Og Pe ae
Yankees
3b hit, Kudgett.
Indians
White Sox
2b
hits,
Frantz,
Broms, Thompson,
Keppler.

R
fe
13

3
7
Murtfeldt,
Carlson
Jordan, Daniels. 3b

upon us.

week

the week

SOMEONE

will

be

our

and

now

the zero day

and

page

3)

stressed

during

the

“We

will

show

how

are

given

needed

citizens

6
if
(2),
hit,

our

fellow

help

by

our willingness to fulfill our individual responsibility to the community,” he said.
Anotner
appeal
will emphasize
that while most Deerfield-Bannockburn family heds work in Chicago
and, therefore, give to the Combined
Appeal
there,
an
equally
compelling obligation exists to sup-

the

United

Fund

Dutch

at

home

and children

live

Elm Disease
from

page

3)

way trees which have been or are
about to be removed are on Birchwood, Somerset and Cherry, Northwoods Dr., Hazel and Springfield,

Deerpath,

Woodvale,

Sunset

and

Chestnut,
Arbor
Vitae,
Jonquil,
Brierhill, Wilmot, Central and Elm.
Tree locations on private property
have
been
on
Northwoods,
Stratford, Brierhill, Oxford, Sunset and Chestnut and Wilmot.
Mr. Klasinski states that all diseased trees are sprayed before they
are taken away so that the beetles
will not be dropped along the way.
Cubs
Cards
Home

Run,

Scheskie,

2b

hit,

.
2
Scheskie,

py
z
Ray.

STANDINGS

National
Dodgers
Pirates
Cards
CAIOS::

1

American
Indians
Orioles
White Sox
Yanks

L
2
8
9
0
L
ms
6
i,
dé

There has been no official report
from
the
Intermediate
League.
They are too busy trying to get
in make up games.
From
the Minors we have received the current standings as of
last Sunday.
Team

ZERO HOUR!
The month,

of

assured

the (Cards

reported

be

(Continued

Play during the week was curtailed by inclement weather. There
were no reports of games played in
the PONY or Prep; the Majors did
get a few games in as did the Intermediate and the Minors.
Major

games

will

where “our wives
their lives.”

other year. Personally I would like
to see him switch around just to
give as many boys as possible the
opportunity for working with him
for, aS we all know, he is a fine
fellow, an asset to the program.

League

which

port

Kelly

fident that they will take whatever

gracious

i, the whole

Wy

in

ceedingly

Pe wife

,

because

Cubs,

that we
manage

action

4

the Cubs

this year because

board—and

the

oH

year.

pitcher—spent most of his time
signing autographs but he was ex-

It is not easy to remember everyone who helped so soon a list will
pi be made
and proper
recognition
will
be given these people.
For
i.
instance,
Alice
Bienlich
and my

i

this

The future will be determined
by your next executive board, they
are quite competent and I am con-

Hb

Se

managing

seemed to be a problem of acquiring a manager for the Cards—two
of the fathers are on the executive

y

v

be

Last year he managed

Fi Bi

is?
# 4

not

from

last forthcoming drive to make every
bad family a United Fund member.

Tieve it or not, we had about 300 chairs set out—all the chairs
_ inthe place. The dance was a financial success. Once the dance
B27
smoothly.

BY

budget, Robert 'C. Gand, vice chairman in charge
of the campaign,
explained
the
basic
appeals
of
WV

i®

OM

(Continued

ee

iy

SB

United Fund

Du IELD BOYS BASEBALL
i‘a

ig

Braves
Indians
Dodgers

White Sox
Yankees
Cubs

hour

is

Giants
Pirates
Cards

Pees
‘
at
es

Rae
er

generation

has

the

Park,

Stagers

has

little theater’s

1959-60

would

ONE

MILLIONTH

Prescription

passed

on

an

accumulative

friends, who

to thank

have enabled

and with the cooperation

the

thousands

of

Contest

By

Bill

of the E. R. Squibb

Co. we will

Highwood’s big inning was the
fourth when they scored six times,
all unearned.
After LaBuda made the first out
in the inning, making a put out in
center field, Hollmann, who pitched, gave up two walks and a single
to load the bases. But, a ground
ball to Henderson,
a sure double
play
ball, forced
the
runner
on
first coming into second and got
away
from
Rich
Root,
the
first
baseman.
This allowed two runs
to come in. A home run, a series of
hits and another two run error by
Root accounted for the six runs.
Highwood also put a run together
in the second and sixth innings.
MEO WOO
TOOOPTIOLS

ear
as eee 010
csc ec csaptiase
atts 102

601
001

before will be shown

a giant celebration here in our store.

Watch

for it!

LINDEMANN’S
PRESCRIPTION

Page

0—8
2-6

STANDINGS
North
Team
Ww
N. Chicago
8
Glenview
R
7
Highwood
6
Waukegan
6
jBTSs1
eat gd ee ae
4
Wiles
TRECPERUONG
lea ee, 0
South
Team
Wildwood .....
Evanston
Edgebrook
......
Glenview S
Niles §

liest.

permanents...

from

Ww
11
8
6
2
ys

on

us for hair styling

$11.50

Road

PHARMACY

WI 5-0022

with

ways

sun

OFFER

And

protected

and

against

COMPLETE

summer

water!

hair coloring
BEAUTY

a specialty!

SERVICE

BEAUTY CORNER
BEAUTY
AIR
CONDITIONED
for your comfort
For Appointment
PHONE:

of

play-selection

for

group

are

already

plays

that

SHOP
666 Waukegan
OPEN

Rd., Deerfield

MONDAYS

WI 5-1525

reading

have

the

been

ma-

released
to
in

Mr. Hamilton has created three
new committees this year. Serving
with him on the budget and finance
group will be business manager,
John Sullivan of Holly Ln.; treasurer,
Mrs.
Daniel
Flanagan
of
Woodland Ln. and member-at-large,
Charles Bletsch of Highland Park.
On the production committee will
be
vice-president,
Miss
Louise
Korst of Springfield Ave., production manager,
Charles Palmer of
Lake
Forest and charter Stagers
member,
James
Russell
of Rosemary Terr.
Changing

Membership

Rules

The rules for Stagers membership are undergoing a change this
year although it will continue to
be open to all Deerfield residents
who are interested in theater. Mrs.
Edward Borre of Elmwood Ave. and

Mrs. Stuart Hamilton will head this
new committee. Miss Korst will be
in general charge of the Stagers’
winter entry in the North Shore
Drama Festival and will supervise
all short plays offered to community groups. Mrs. Daniel Flanagan
has been
announced
as the new
editor of the group’s monthly membership letter, The Promptor. Most
officers
will
not
announce
their
personal committees until the August members’ meeting.

Deerfield Still

Among Leaders In
Home Building

L
2
2
2)
6
10
10

Deerfield was listed as one of the
10 leaders
in suburban
building
for the first six months in 1959,
with 170 permits issued for new
home
construction,
with
an
estimated cost of $4,801,818, and an
L
0 average cost of $28,246 per home,
3 according
to a report by the Bell
4
and Loan Association of
¥ 5 Savings
8 Chicago.

are

some

June

figures:

BUILDING

Municipality
omes
Morton Grove
$2455.73 118
Wheeling
......
{VAT
Deerfield
_......
. 40
Waukegan
....
Pie it
Wilmette. .:.........
mae
PPHIGNG PARK nc)
uke ys
ake
Forest
Nis aed 15
ATIOVIOW
ats idea
A
Glencoe . ........
Evanston ........
Lake Bluff ....
Libertyville ....
Northbrook
Barrington

Value
$2,102,400
24,490
1,155,821
1,051,849
43,000
528,066
585,961
228,517
281,000
215,500
186,500
117,100
50,050
30,000

Park School Sites

regular appointments

here make sure your hair is al-

including
HAIR CUT &amp; STYLE
WE

Our gratitude to those who came

The

Hamilton
committees

to amateur groups. They hope
announce their recommendations
early August.

The season is slowly but surely
coming
to an
end
as
Deerfield
played its 14th game on July 16 in
Jewett Park.
They lost this game, a fairly close
affair, Deerfield coming out on the
short end of an 8 to 6 score with
Highwood, the victors.
Deerfield went into the seventh
trailing 8 to 4 and
began
what
looked like a comeback. A double
by
Tom
LaBuda,
triple
by
Bob
Hollmann, walk to Ray Nord and a
single to Mike Zarich, brought in
two runs with the tying run on
first, two out and Bill North up.
Bill hit a sharp ground ball in the
hole between short and third which
the third baseman picked up and
threw to first to end the game.

expert permanent waving that
keeps your hair looking its love-

us to reach this staggering total,

honor our 1,000,000th prescription customer with a fabulous

Waukegan
Deerfield

jor

Olson

Keep your hair
in lovelier
shape all summer

and

free weekend of fun in New York City, including tickets to
“Flower Drum Song” and an appearance on a N.Y. TV show.

800

season.

DEERFIELD PREP
BALL LEAGUE

number

customers

Charles

working

‘Park

Depend
like

his

consisting of Mrs. Robert Benson of Wilmot Rd., Mrs. Gerald
Kramer of Birchwood Ln. and Robert Johnston of Highland

that’s fashionable, flattering ...
We

president,

announced

HOME

RN
TES

Deerfield

Here

The Lindemann name has been synonymous with the compounding of quality drug prescriptions for 3 Generations and
each

New
Highland

bringing or calling in a prescription this

winner.

to the next.

DEERFIELD STAGERS ANNOUNCE
WORKING COMMITTEE CHAIRMEN

(Continued

from

page

3)

the swimming pool is estimated at
$205,000 and the purchase and improvement
of about
48 acres
of
land for park-school sites will be

$295,000 . .. a total of $500,000.
The referendum for the half million dollar bond issues will be held
Saturday, Aug. 15 from 6 a.m. to
6 p.m. in the Wilmot and Deerfield Grammar Schools.
Swimming

Pool

Roy Layman of MacFadzean and
Everly,
park planners,
showed
a
large colored picture of how the

community

pool

and

bath

will look.
Complete details of the
the pool and the tracts of

house
size
land

of
to

be purchased will be given in next
week’s REVIEW.
Thursday,

10

July

23, 1959

e

of

NT

ART

hee

~

amie vn ts
Reo
oe
yee

YUE

wes

_—

sia swe

Fieve

AAURWWNNOE

a

AAINY

oT

a

UAROY

TEE
ea
itso
wadtet dah
ata Fg
ise
See Coe ie ac

:

MENWwWRAUAG

’

�Fred

Local School

Neumann

At Harvard

Superintendents

Fred

Neumann,

magna

Attend Mass. Meet

cum

College

his

studies

Theme

of

the

Institute

is

“The

Administrator Looks at The Educational Program—Review
and Preview.” School officials considered
case studies of problems
in curriculum and new developments in
several
areas of instruction. The
Cambridge,
Mass., meeting closed
Friday.
Speakers
Speakers at evening sessions included
Prof.
John
Kenneth
Galbraith and Prof. Samuel A. Stouffer of Harvard,
Prof.
Robert
C.
Wood of M.I.T., and James B. Conant, president emeritus of Harvard.

bers

faculty

of the

Milton

from

Amherst

Highland

will

continue

Voigts,

at Harvard
was

at

the

Hawaii

Voigt,

son

of

Parkers,

the

Milton

J.

promoted

to

recently

serving

in teaching.
This summer,
he is
teaching at Newton High School in
Cambridge,
Mass. A graduate of
Highland Park High School, Neumann was a Phi Beta Kappa
at
Amherst. He is a son of the Harold Neumanns
of 1919 Groveland
Ave.

was

former

of aviation
electronics
first class, USN, while

with

Patrol

Naval

Air

Squadron

Station,

Six

Barber’s

Point, Hawaii.
The Want-Ad
interesting
tunities.

section is filled with

facts.
Don’t

and

miss

golden

MAKE

For

As

Little

$290.00

the

floor chore

EASY ..
.

oppor-

NEW

it!

BOATING IS FAMILY FUN
JULY SPECIAL

at Ole],
ote]
Si Pi gglely

As

Down

You Can Own the Fabulous
CRUISERS, INC. Lapstrake
Runabout with 35 H.P.
MERCURY Electric Starting
Motor and
GATOR Tilt-Bed Trailer

FULL PRICE
We

$1395
Have

Everything

We

Give

Except

T.N.T.

the

Water

Tickets

mt BOAT HOUSE, inc

graduate

and
Professors
and Matthew P.

Proposals for public education on
a national scale in the fields of
physical science, mathematics, advanced placement of students and
several other aspects of secondary
education were presented
at the
sessions.

a scholar-

Point,

L.

the
rank
technician

University

granted

school of education, including Dean
Francis
Keppel,
Harold
C. Hunt
Gaffney,

Barber's

graduated

month,

assisted by several mem-

of the

In

ship to work for a Master’s degree

Dr. Paul J, Misner, superintendent of schools at Highland Park’s
near-neighbor,
Glenview,
led
the

Institute,

Milton L. Voight Promoted

Master's

who

laude

last

this fall. He
A. E. Wolters, superintendent of
- Township
High
School
District
113, Dr. Casper O. Dahle, superintendent
of District
107, and Dr.
Charles H. Wilson, superintendent
of District 108, are among 62 school
superintendents from communities
throughout the nation who attended a ten-day meeting of the Advanced Administrative Institute of
the Harvard
Graduate
School
of
Education.

Seeks

University

1848

First

ID

Street

3-0880

Highland

Park,

Illinois

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waxes, polishes and buffs to take the
hard work out of keeping floors clean
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BRAND NEW ELECTRIC PORTABLE
MADE BY SINGER BACKED BY SINGER
REDUCED TO

e@ Combination Scrubbing and Waxing
Brushes (included)
e Long Life Polishing
Brushes (included)
e Snap-on Felt Buffing
Pads (included)

ee

IN PERSON |

LITTLE

Easy to carry

OSCAR,

Sunbeam

AND

hines
| these features of mac
much as
as
selling for
gat

Appearing at This Store

3 P.M.

Wikdieeteiibrcasetie:

FREE
FOR

SOUVENIRS
EACH

CHILD!

ONLY A LIMITED NUMBER IN THIS SHIPMENT
SEE IT NOW AT YOUR

HALS
DRIVE-INN
Cor.

Skokie

Highland
Thursday,

TI9*:

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NUMBERED DIAL TEN
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SINGER PARTS, SIN

DAY: FRI., JULY 24
2 TO

Hwy.

Park

&amp;

Rt.

x

SINGER SEWING CENTER
Listed in phone

book

under SINGER

614 Central

22

.... ID 2-5155

July 23, 1959

ment Available
u

A

Trademark

of The SINGER

MFG.

CO.

SEWING

MACHINE

“ogee

Our Regular Price $54.40—NOW

maneae| &gt;

HIS

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TIME:

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34

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or VERN

HIGHWOOD
&amp; APPLIANCE
2631

Waukegan
Highland

Phones:

Ave.

at...

RADIO
CO.
sess

Park

ID 2-6260

COMPANY

ID 2-3811

We
Mon.

Are

Now

&amp; THURS.

Open

on

Nites

7-9

All Day Wednesdays,

too!
Page 11

�SS
SE
DRAPERY CLEANING FACTS:
MY

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ey.
mt

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aS y

Bal
bes
j

a)

At

vee

rn

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ac

yo,

EY

UN

ISU

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PM eR
the, ee

Ce

y

$

Wee

ops bs mia
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ON

oni oat a pay
tc
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eer
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Destroy ALL
If you

have

in paper

Plastic Bags as soon

children

Senos

ask us to put

Thirty-two teen-age foreign exchange students from 19 countries recently were
feted by their Highland
Park counter-—
parts while on a stop-over of a three-week bus tour
of the country.
Each foreign student was a guest of an American
teen-ager and
the entire group got together for a picnic supper
at the William
Davidson residence, 2413 Egandale Rd., and later
attended a
jam session as guests of the Students’ Activities Committ
ee at the

bags.

DUFFY CLEANERS
487 LAUREL (Across from H.P. Library) ID 2-1820

Park Free At Our Door!

city’s Recreation

Center.

From

left are Jeanne

Kurtzon,

266

Delta

Rd., and Jean Goldberg, 275 Linden Park Pl., serving
Pietro Garau,
Italy, and Oystein Ostebo, Norway.

*

DEERFIELD SAFET Y COUNCIL LISTS
TRAFFIC VIOLATIONS IN JUNE
The Deerfield Safety Council, in its
effort to make the village
streets safer, reports the following traffic
violations during the month
of June, 1959, heard in the courts of Judges
Mercurio, Page and George.
Thomas
E. Clarkson

, Highlan
Ean
d Biel Park
Sg -) aganranee Sara
TRC
..Speeding
Andrew J. Lampe, Glenview ................
Damaging State Property—Reckless Driving
Jack TD... Hughes, Zion 4.3/5
st siebnonsbesetusmperehi ceieasa tity ual oe Ios Speeding
Frank D. Loizzo, Kenosha, Wisconsin
Speeding
Harriet P. Bone, Deerfield
or:
Stop Sign
Helen Faulk, Deerfield
Failure to Stop at Flashing Lights
William O. Jeffrey, Glenview
Speeding
eee
Ey Wee) SOMONE i
le ne
aia
ta
ee
No Drivers License
David R. Rusk, Melrose Park
Stop
Sign
Ronald
D. Johnson,
ONDE
iit sor inticliahind Sicihilsiennl onl
te catg
ee
Speeding
Kenneth Arthur Bengson, Round v1 SA
EMP Suen eRe
prope
epee
eae
cae
aks
MEV
GRA
Lap
Speeding
Melvin Jacobs, Highland Park
Illegal Parking
SORE | TEMMDN
LOOT
M ncinaias sania esas
ce
Speeding
POUR AE EME, WOTNOUE ricsecciadrcsivinuhud
icnnelikenioiinnc her en Speeding
Wilbert Ay Weasels, CRIUAEO oii ca ccelaccs
Speeding
SPOS OVGROl,
TICMONE S oiisci
creiiny cosas, dec eS Speeding—No
Village Sticker
J. Golterman, Oak Park ....
Illegal Parking
Charles James Caruso, Deerfield Lid eeibeebineinanlet oie tates Illegal
Parking—No Village Sticke
Helen
I. Johnson,
Deerfield
Strdeue valk. Damaging
Village
Property «
Ann Vogg, Deerfield ......
dagen He
Stop Sign
deabiecs
..Speeding
;
Stop Sign +
Speeding
--U Turn
--No Headlights, No Rear Plate
in
Speeding
Speeding
Pope
Speeding
L. M. Sandberg, Deerfield ....
No Village Sticker Displayed
hie
Stop Sign
Maurice Arthur Cohen, New York City;“New
York ...0..:
“
U Turn
cestrude A. Martineau, Highland Path o.iciscci
02... cn ee
Speeding
Ray H. Breuer, Deerfield
No Village Sticker
Sign
Stop
Speeding
Speeding
eisacen
Sree Wes COS
POMBO,
BRIM
iid
a, bcuids leskeucm
ie
Speeding
..Parking Illegally
Illegal Parking
apene a
No Village Sticker
Illegal Parking
Robert
M. Retzinger,
Northbrook
Speeding a
John A. Berry, Deerfield
..Parking
Bruce M. Stephen, Deerfield
..Following Too Close
Arthur H. Backman, Hammond, Indiana
Speeding
Seymour Rosenfield, Chicago
No Drivers License on Person
Donald J. Nicholis, Evanston
r
.U Turn
William
Altman Jr., Highwood
..Dropping
Mud
Roger W. Tengwar, Deerfield
Stop Sign
James B. Feehan, Deerfield
U
Turn
Louis I. Hadden, Highland Park
;
i
Speeding
Charles James Caruso, Deerfield
....Expired Drivers License
Lionel Watson, Deerfield
rice
poem? No
Village Sticker
Harry W. Taylor, Deerfield .
Failure to Yield Right of Way
Frank K. Jegan,
Chicago
U Turn
Nick Bogner, Niles
Speeding
William M. Walton, Deerfield ....
Speeding
Howard
G. Klehm, Lake Forest
;
Speeding
Scassellati &amp; Sons, Deerfield
No Village Sticker
Arthur F. Zeman
Stop Sign
Howard
Kodym,
Deerfield
Iegal
Parking
Freida Koclanis, Deerfield
Following Too Close
Johnathan Q. Loch, Highland Park
Speeding
Harold P. Roth, Carpentersville
Speeding
Carolyn
H.
Rosene,
Deerfield
Speeding
Raymond J. Hollander, Northbrook
Speeding
Harold P. Roth, Carpentersville
No Chauffeur License
Anna McNeil, Northbrook
:
:
Illegal Parking
Robert Devoy Harris, Chicago
Not Displaying Food Vendor Sticker
Catherine M. Seymour, Lincolnshire
Expired License
.-...-Stop. Sign
;
Robert N. Knutsen, Deerfield
Artemis D. Mitchell, Deerfield
;
Expired Drivers License
Steven R. Kolski, Maywood
:
ie
:
Stop Sign
Speeding, Stop Sign
Catherine M. Seymour, Lincolnshire

Our store will be closed from

Monday, July 27 until Mon-

day, Aug. 10
Deerfield Bakery
&gt;

-

(

BECRric kW

peck

pa

aS

NN
Gets

as

813
Page

WAUKEGAN
12

RD., DEERFIELD

WI

5-0068

Probationary

705

Permit

Reccetaty
“bt Gtate Charles -¥
p Reeoipe tb reports that the arty.
er’s

license

of

Philip

B.

Braus

Chestnut

St.,

which

had

been

suspended for three violations, has
been reinstated on a probationary

of | permit.
Thursday,

July

23,

1959

�Fae

Me
a wie

Wee
7X

es
Ge

‘

,
.

a
Pew Oe

See

pide

aear,

a

ee

Lyman’s Paintings, Highwood Community Center
Chess Sets Shown
At Local Library

Sets Two Informal Dances

Eight paintings and drawings by
George
S. Lyman
and
numerous
examples of chess sets loaned by
other Highland Parkers are being
exhibited at Highland Park Public
Library
from
now
through
the
middle of August.
Lyman,
who
resides
at
1258
Linden Ave., served on the Library
board for about eight years, leaving
it in June, 1958. As art director of
an advertising agency, he has close
contact with
commercial
art and
several years ago joined the ranks
of Sunday painters.
He has exhibited in some Chicago shows, including the annual
Art Directors Club of Chicago and
Artists Guild of Chicago events.
Lyman was educated in the public schools
of Chicago
and
was
graduated from the University of
Chicago.
He
studied
at the Art
Institute and the Chicago Academy
of Fine Arts and worked in a class
under Claude Buck.
“It does not seem quite enough
to have
only
color,
pattern
and
texture in a painting,” said Lyman.
“T think that an important part of
a work of art is what might be
called
‘spiritual content.’ ”
(Continued on page 14)

Two informal dances with
mandatory for girls and slacks

Richard
and

dresses or skirts and blouses
and shirts for boys are being

held this week end at Highwood

Community

Center.

Friday girls and boys in grades six through eight, including eighth grade June graduates, will dance to juke box tunes
from 8:30 through 10:30 p.m.
The Saturday affair, from 8:30 to
11 p.m., is open to all high school
students
of Highwood,
Highland
Park, Deerfield and Fort Sheridan.
Fun Park Trip Tomorrow
The Center is invited all youngsters taking part
in its summer
recreation
program
to
a_ special
field trip to Riverview Park, Chicago, tomorrow.

A

chartered

bus

will

leave

ism

Help defeat
by buying

White

Sox-Yankee

W.

Mrs.

R.

Leckie,

son

William

Call ID 2-8701 Highland Park
for
of

Leckie.

Mr.
3449

University
Ave.,
was
among
324
Williams College students achieving dean’s list grades for the term
ending in June.
Leckie was one of five
class ranking in ninth place

list. He
day
to Comiskey
Park,
Chicago.
Chartered bus will leave the Center
at 10 am. Scheduled game is between
New
York
Yankees
and
Chicago White Sox.

Park

graduated

High

School

from
in

in
on

his
the

Highland

GOOD

Since

COVERING
1915

j

JOHN B. NASH
Carpet

&amp; Linoleum

CARPETS-VINYLTtEE

&amp;

Installation

own

626

1958.

FLOOR

Roger

by

our

Co.

ASPHALT
Experts

Williams—Ravinia

the threat of communU. S. Bonds.

the

Center
at 11:30 Friday
morning.
Before boarding the bus each boy
and girl must present a slip from
his or her parents giving approval.
Return time is set for 4:30 p.m.
Reservations for the trip are being accepted at the Center today
and
tomorrow
morning.
Those
joining
the
group
are
asked
to
bring a lunch which will be eaten
at the Park before the afternoon
program.
See

Richard Ww. Leckie
Is On Dean’s List

EVANSTON

KADDIE
1822

Battle

Second

Highland

Beginning Monday morning reservations will be accepted at the
Center for a field trip next Thurs-

Next
H.P.

507
St.

Park

to the

Jewel

CENTRAL

ID

AVE.

2-6944

~ A CUSTOMER APPROVED FASHION!

Store

Exclusive
at

SALE!

Shop

For

ae

MEN
ONLY!
The famous “Brooks’’ classic

Freeman Shoes
$ 6 76
*8°°
Our

Over 500 PAIRS of these wonderful BUYS!
But not every size in every style.
This

Sale

Is Limited!

famous

classic

that

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all

fashion

tifully tailored with fine details. This classic
plus zip-out orlon pile lining for 3-season wear.
Gamadura is 75% wool and 25% camel hair
only in these coats. Camel, red, navy or grey,
or without matching slacks; 7 to 14, coat only;
8 to 14. See them today!

A

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with zip-out pile lining

5

LAST FEW DAYS!
FLORSHEIM SHOES

NO REFUNDS
ALL SALES FINAL

the

whims!

Beau-

is fully lined,
The exclusive
and is found
3 to 6X with
and pre-teen

~Waltons. Shoes
THE

499

Central

Thursday,

July 23, 1959

YOUNG

(Open Thurs.

POINT

OF

VIEW

IN

SHOES

&amp; Fri. Nites During

Sale!)

ID 2-0172

Page 13

�*

eye

¥

ef

e

t

Exhibits At Library
(Continued

Chess

LORS

pared

Cote’s has moved to Hubbard Woods, but we'll be delighted to take your telephone order and give you speedy
_ service. We still carry a complete line of Kirsch Drapery
_ Hardware and will deliver your order free.

Sofa Pillows
CALL

é
to $4.95
$2.50
to
.

..... 20%

TODAY

FOR

FREE

represent

eac

with

Scandinavian

figures.

Ravinia Features Kingston Trio,
Gerry Mulligan, Michaels Award Winner
Viadimir
Ravinia

Norman

Gustafson,

son

of

Augustin

Anievas,

DELIVERY

C.P.A.

890 Linden Ave., Hubbard Woods

senior

degree,
year

graduate

ID 2-3430

a

he

training

Marines

will

fall.

of Loyola

six-weeks

the

this

the

enter

his

Gustafson,

a

Academy,

is in

program

with

at Quantico,

Va.

will conduct

will

be

Michaels

the

again

conductor

Memorial

Tonight
Overture
aro”

at

to the

8:30

tonight

at the

Saturday

award-winning

when

pianist,

p.m.

‘‘Marriage

Intermission
Poem, “The

Of

Fig-

Fountains

Pastoral’’

Beethoven

Intermission
“Pictures at an Exhibition”
Moussorgsky-Ravel
Wednesday, July 29, 8:30 p.m.
Richard Dyer-Bennet

Program

“Bolero”

Emil L. Gustafsons,
1806
Sunset
Rd., recently was elected treasurer
of Delta
Sigma
Pi,
professional
commerce fraternity at the University
of IDinois.
Studying
for
a

off

He

is scheduled to be guest artist.

Norman Gustafson Is Elected
Commerce Fraternity Treasurer

each

Golschmann

Festival.

Symphonic

assorted sizes, shapes
and colors
reg.

display

13)

Those lending sets to the Library
exhibit are Dr. Ralph B. Bettman,
William Kalan, Richard F. Kuhns,
Robert
Ross,
William
Schwartz,
Maurice Walk, Dr. Paul Siever and
Theodore Ruwitch.

|

SPECIAL
JULY

on

page

several mediums.
One molded
in
pastic is contrasted with a wood
carving set or an ivory carving set;
while oriental characters are com-

FREE DELIVERY!

24

sets

from

of folk songs

in The Ravinia Theatre

Tomorrow at 8:30 p.m.
Gerry Mulligan
and The Kingston Trio.
Saturday at 8:30 p.m.
Conductor, Vladimir Golschmann

August Anievas,
Overture to “Oberon”’
Concerto for Piano,
Opus 26

pianist

No.

3 C Major,
Prokofieff

Intermission
No. 2, Opus 18
Kabolevsky

Symphony

(first performance here)
Tuesday at 8:30 p.m.
Andre Cluytens, conductor
Overture to “The Roman Carnival”
Berlioz
Symphony
No. 6, F Major,
“The

ROBERT NATHAN
ATTENDS JAZZ
CLINIC AT IND. U.
Robert “Bing” Nathan, son of
the Louis Arnold Nathans of 1001
Green Bay Rd., will be among 150
jazz
enthusiasts
from
United
States attending

“Stan

Kenton

music

all
the

over
first

clinic”

this

week at Indiana University. Kenton has an array of prominent and
active jazz and classic men to instruct the jazz students.

Robert, who will be a sophomore

STATE

at
Highland
Park
High
School
next
fall,
already
has
his
own
combo and does solo work on the
trumpet. He recently completed a
three-week course with Northwestern University’s
(Evanston)
high
school summer band and will continue his studies at Indiana where
he will work with piano, composition and arranging.

FARM
. 4

INSURANCE

FOR INSURANCE

CALL

WI 5-1383
HENRY HAKANEN
825

Deerfield Rd., Deerfield

State Farm Mutual Automobile
Insurance Co,
State Farm Life Insurance Co.
State Farm Fire and Casualty Co.
HOME OFFICE—BLOOMINGTON, ILLINOIS

Mr., Mrs. Theodore A. Pasquesi
Announce Birth Of Second Son
Mr. and Mrs. Theodore A. Pasquesi
of
Arlington
Heights
announce the birth of their second
son. Little
John Murray was born
July 11 in Lake Forest Hospital.

His brother is Thomas A., aged 244
years.
Paternal
grandparents
are
the
Battista Pasquesis of Highwood.

We've Got the

Published at
$2.00 to $10.00

FICTION — LITERATURE
PHILOSOPHY

- BIOGRAPHY

- PSYCHOLOGY

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SCIENCE - HISTORY - REFERENCE
ROMANCE

- SPORTS - ART - TRAVEL

All Subjects — Hundreds of Bargains!

ON THE NORTH

: 645

Central Ave.

SHORE SINCE

You can still find an unusual. |p
collection of well tailored shorts
here
— at Cobey’s. Comfortable
=
. easy fitting ... in stripes,

1895

ae

plaids, &amp; solids. 5 thru 12.

ID 3-0230

Cobey’s

478 Central
(Open Thursday Night)

Highland Park

Thursday, July 23, ‘1
ks

�Highland Parkers Work For Red Cross Swim

Ratings

is New—

EVERYTHING
New Owners

.

. at the NEW

New Merchandise
New Personolized

se

Service

New

Store Hours

We

Are

Now

Nights ’til 9 p.m.
Open Thurs.

Fourteen
toward

local girls work

Red

Cross

Swim

Ratings at Whispering

Pine

Camps, Mercer, Wis.
From
left, above, are Marilynn
Alschuler, Barbara Henley,
Bonnie
Betterman,
Carol
Ann Johnston, Roberta
Bramson,
Lois
Montague,

Wendy

Meyers,

Kyle

Ran-

derson,
Judith
Block and
Roberta
Paule.
At
right,
boating, are Kristine Randerson,
Andrea
Fischer,

Becky

Thomas

Winthrop.

and

Nan

Mary

Stein,

not

pictured, also is attending
the camping session.
Frederick B. Grant
Completes Basic Training
Frederick

B.

Grant,

son

Army

training

course

at

Ft.

Leon-

[uated

from

Michigan

State

Uni-

ard
Wood, Mo., according to army ‘versity
atYiehewk
East Lansing,
Mich., with
news release. Mr. Grant has been |
A
tn sestanrant | take

of

the

C. F. Grants
of 2255 St. Johns
Ave., has completed his basic U. S.

a trainee since May 6, 1959.
He is a Highland Park High
School

graduate

and

in

1958

oh
ie da
agement.

grad- | Kappa

orm
He

Phi

:
is

a

member

of

fraternity.

Pi

Bewitchingly yours...our
§

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all sales final

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548

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Also available at The Pershing Smart Shop
4818-20 N. Western Ave., Chicago
Thursday,

July

23,

1959

Page

15

�Mostly for Women

|
|

gaged

Showers are being given for Miss
Irma Diener, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs.
Henry
Diener
of
Chicago,
whose
marriage
to Gene
Nelson,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Nelson
of 1406 Dartmouth Ln., Deerfield,
will take place on Sept. 12 in St.
John’s Lutheran
Church
in Chicago.
Among
the
pre-nuptial
parties
have
been
a kitchen
shower
by
ehoir
members
of St.
John’s
“hureh; a miscellaneous shower by
Mrs. George Freese and Mrs. Lyle
Thorpe in Park Ridge and another
miscellaneous
shower
by
Mrs.
Henry Stiegerwaldt and Mrs. Groh
in Chicago.

Bartels

of

Northbrook, for
merly of Deerfield,
announce
the engagement of their
daughter,
Ida, to
Donald M. Busscher, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Bernard
Busscher
of
748
Osterman Avenue.
Miss Bartels is a

graduate of Mallinckrodt High
School in Wilmette.
Mr.

Busscher

was

graduated from St.
George
High
School

in

Madeleine Urelius
Returns From Europe

Evanston

and
the Milwavukee School of Engineering
in Milwaukee.
No
date

been
set
wedding.

has

for

the
Glenview

Ida

Deerfield

Are Apppointed To
'

Board

The Illinois state division of the

ong
Women

Association of University
has appointed two mem-

bers of the Deerfield branch of
AA.A.U.W. to state committees,
| Mrs. Robert C. Gand, 665 Timber
Hill Rd., will serve as a member
of

the

Status

State

Committee

of Women,

Craig, 725
‘Committee

and

on

Mrs.

the

Philip

Pine St., on the State
of Higher Education.

‘ Both women were chairmen of
their respective committees in their
local Deerfield branch. They were
chosen on the merit of their work
as chairmen for the past year. The

Deerfield
just

branch

completed

of A.A.U.W.
its

first

has

year

as

a

member of the national association.
Mrs. Gand and Mrs. Craig will
serve on their committees for one
year. These committees help channel information and ideas through
national, state and local levels of
A.A.U.W.

Lake Forest Show
The

Stagers’

evening

nocents”

by

Theater

play-readtomorrow
they will
“The
In-

Under

the

Stars in Lake
Forest. They
will
meet after the play for a discussion at the home-of
the Gerald
Kramers, 2629 Birchwood Ln.
_ All regular members who would
like to attend the play and discussion should call Mrs. Kramer before noon tomorrow.

The

regular

monthly

afternoon

play-reading section will meet on
Aug. 7 at the home of Mrs. Harold
Sparks, 642 Hermitage Dr. at 1:15.
One-act plays will be read and discussed. The public can attend this
meeting by notifying the hostess.

Towne
The

Club

Meets

Deerfield

Today

Legion

setting for the Towne
ing

today

at

12:45

Page

Steiskal

16

|

and

is the

Club’s meet-

p.m.

are to be Mrs. Donald
Robert
Pack.

Hall

Hostesses

Smith,
Mrs.

The first tea will be held the evening of July 30 at the home of Mrs.
Edgar Katzenberg, 1323 Dartmouth
Ln. A documentary film, “The Mellah’’ which portrays the life of a
child in a North
African ghetto,
|
will be shown,

The subsequent

Return

From

Eastern

in-

Trip

Mr. and Mrs. Frank Meronek and
rildren
have
returned
to their
Yome
in the Pekara
Subdivision,
west of Mi'waukee
Ave., from
a
trip to New Jersey, New York and
Pennsylvania.
Mr.
Meronek
is a

Mr. and Mrs. F. G. Menig of 820
Woodward
Ave.
are
proudly
announcing
the arrival of a grandchild, Kurt Frederick Teuber, born
to Mr. and Mrs, Donald Teuber of
Highland
Park on July 4 at the
Highland Park Hospital. Kurt has
a brother, Keith, who is 2%. The
paternal
grandparents
are
Mrs.
Myrtle Peterson and Arthur Teuber
of Chicago. Great grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Baur of Green
Bay. Wis. and Mrs. Irene Teuber
of Chicago.
*

*

27.

look

forward

to this

*

*

The
Edwin
Golines
of Pekara
Subdivision have named their new
daughter, Karen Elizabeth. Mr. Goline is vice president of the Deerfield Manor
Home
Owners
Assosiation.
:

somber of the board of education
" the Aptakisic-Tripp School.

oppor-

Mrs.

Herman

of 29 members
of the agency tc
make the trip as guests of the company.

Unit

Reports

Successful

The ice cream
social given by
Mrs.
Emory
Cleveland
and
Mrs.
Walter Ryden last Saturday for the
benefit of the Deerfield Unit of the
Lake County Home Bureau, is reported as a complete success.

Lincolnshire Club To
Have Dancing Party
The
Lincolnshire
Swim
Club
will have a dancing party on Saturday, July 25. Bill Otto’s orchestra
will play.

M.

nor

Ct.,

won

daughter

Larsons
a free

of

of
514

the
Cum-

demonstration

long distance telephone call during
a visit to the Bell Telephone exhibit
at
Chicago’s
International
Trade Fair and Exposition and is
shown
here
placing
the
call
to
Detroit, Mich.

Gail

Larson

Visitors to the telephone exhibit
saw the ‘phone of tomorrow and
how it plays a major role in the
nation’s defense.
'
New
telephones
shown
at the
Fair included a no hands ‘Capri’
and a smaller, lighter phone which
has a dial which can be used as a
night light.
Musically-included: visitors at the
exhibit ‘“played’’ songs on a pushbutton telephone with tones created by transistors and saw a Bellinvented
solar
battery
provide
power to spin a wheel.

The calls were placed by a long
djistance operator at a switchboard
on the stage while visitors used 70
brightly-colored telephone to listen
in on the call over a special “party
line.” At other times during the
orogram, demonstration calls were
made to England, Alaska and Hawaii—also arranged so all visitors
could hear—to compare
notes on
weather and other current topics.

Jordan Agency in Chicago, was one

Social

Larson,

The new international flavor of
Chicago, now that it has become a
major world port with the opening
of the St. Lawrence Seaway, was
dramatized
by the telephone
exhibit, which was sponsored by IIlinois Bell Telephone Company and
the Long Lines Department of the
American Telephone &amp; Telegraph
Company. Speed and efficiency of
long
distance
and
overseas
telephone
service
also were
demonstrated. Selected visitors to the exhibit won free calls anywhere in
the U. S. or overseas.

Mr. and Mrs. John J. Ward, 1266
Linden Ave., spent three days recently at The
Greenbrier,
White
Sulphur
Springs,
W. Va., at the
annual midwestern regional conference of Massachusetts Mutual Life
Insurance
Co. The meeting, July
12-15, was held for members of the
Leaders
Club, the company’s national honor organization.
Ward, an associate of the Earl C

Bureau

Gail
Raymond

Christened

Stay At Greenbrier

Home

Deerfield Gir!
Visits Telephone
Exhibit In Chicago

*

tunity to meet prospective
members, and to answer any questions
they might have about ORT.

Ice Cream

Thaw

A son, Mark
Bryan.
was
born
July 13 to Mr. and Mrs. Richard
Dobroth of 1435 Warrington Rd., at
the Highland Park Hospital. Their
other children are, Kevin, 4, Brendan, 3, and Megan, 2. The children’s
grandparents
are
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Theodore Monahan of Forest Hills,
N. Y., and Mr. and Mrs. Charles O.
Dobroth of Skokie.

membership chairman, states that |
she and the chapter president, Mrs.
Theodore
Bloch,
1310
Charing

Cross,

Chis

*

Attend Benefit Party

Winograd, 614 Invice president and

—

Mr. and Mrs. Wesley W. Wise of
1133 Kenton Rd.,. became parents
of a daughter July 14 in the High‘and Park Hosvital. The infant has
Heen named Suzanne, and she has
a brother, John. 7 years old. Mrs.
May Wise of Wichita, Kansas, the
yaternal
grandmother,
is visiting
at the Wise home.

teas will be held

13 and August

Mrs. Arnold
dian Hill Rd.,

Miss Urelius’ hands are badly
jured from rope burns.

Weddings

In West Virginia

Stagers Play Reading
Group Will Attend
ing group will not meet
(Friday)
night. Instead
attend
a production
of

Deerfield
chapter
of
Women’s
American ORT is planning a series
of three Thursday evening teas for
prospective members, this summer.

on August

Miss Madeleine Urelius has returned to her home at 1132 Linden
Ave. from a trip to Europe. Miss
Urelius was one of the fortunate
persons who escaped from the fire
which destroyed the Stahlheim Ho-el in Vossestrand
in Norway on
une 23;
She and her traveling companion,
Miss Ruth
Norberg,
slid down
a
‘ope from their third floor room,
~a'vaging only their purses, which
they tossed out the window before
sliding down the rope.

Deerfield ORT
Plans Series Of
New Member Teas

Women

State AAUW

Studio

Bartels

—

NEW ARRIVALS
Birth Announcements

IRMA DIENER TO
WED GENE NELSON

Mr. and Mrs. Al-

bert

Engagements

Mrs. Pobert Gougler of Warrington Rd., left, with the Mesdames Aifred G. List, Quentin J. Lewis and Paul Amerman of
Highlavd Park, met recently to atterd a benefit for Chicago
Junior School in Elgin, sponsored by Lakewood Friends of the
school.

Green

Thumbs

Study

Floral

Club

Will

Arrangements

The
Green
Thumbs
Club
will
meet Monday evening, July 27 at
the home of Mrs. Fred Hayes of
Central
Ave.
The
Mechanics
of
Flower Arranging is to be the subject.
The
club has a garden
center
project planned
at the Deerfield
Lawn and Garden Spot.
Thursday,

July

23,

1959

�i

NESE

ah

Ne

BAO

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ee

WER

at

See

pues

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1
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tata: ain
wou

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¢

¥

DEERFIELD DOINGS

Rotarians To Hear
Of N.Y. Convention

WA

Miss Veronica Buckles, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jesse J. Buckles
of 1042 Fair Oaks Ave., was hostess at a Luau on Saturday evening for
' Miss Nancy Newton, daughter of the Frank Newtons of Cumberland

Dr., Lincolnshire.

It was

Nancy’s

fourteenth

birthday

anniversary

and

the party was in the Hawaiian theme.
The 25 guests dressed appropriately and dined on Hawaiian foods.
Candy
Koehler
celebrated
her 1350 Greenwood
Ave.
This
past
eighth
birthday
anniversary
on weekend
they
were
guests
of
Friday
afternoon,
July
17,
with friends in Rockford.
many
of her friends
at a party
Mr. and Mrs. William Hertel of
given at the home of her parents, Chestnut St. will be observing Mr.
Mr. and Mrs. William Koehler of Hertel’s 60th birthday anniversary
1414 Greenwood Ave. While Mrs. at a party on Sunday, July 26 at
Koehler was busy with the enter- their summer home near Mercer,
tainment
for the
children,
Mrs. Wis.
Mr. Hertel has been in the

attended

the International Rotary Convention in New York City, June 6-11,
will report on the highlights of the
conclave.

Charter
early
has
will
tive

night

is

planned

&amp;

&amp;

&amp;

&amp;

&amp;

&amp;

&amp;

Young

The
Deerfield-Northbrook
Rotary
Club
will
have
its weekly
luncheon this noon at Sportsman
Country Club on Dundee Rd. Ralph

Nash, vice president, who

&amp;

for

fall.
A Wheeling Rotary Club
been formed.
Aksel Petersen
appreciate names of prospecmembers.

Sanders Rd. plan to visit Rev. and
Mrs. Thomas Chapin at Pentwater,
Mich.,
next month.
The
Chapins
will be making their new home in
Morrison, I1]., in September.

employ of the National Brick Co.
as hostess for the parents.
for 40 years. He is a former village
New residents at 526 Princeton trustee.
Rd. are Mr. and Mrs. George McMoving
to Tucson,
Ariz.,
next
The Hubert N. Kelleys of 1001
Laughlin Jr. and son, who have month are Mr. and Mrs. W. E.
moved
here from Evanston
.|Sandberg
and
children
of
1314 Deerfield Rd. are building a new
at 530 Princeton are Mr. and Mrs. Greenwood
Ave.
They have sold home on Sunset Ln. in Bannockburn. Mr. Kelley is a former vilMichael Mahoney and son
from
their home
to the James
Lyons
lage trustee and is a member
of
Milwaukee ... From Maryland are family of 950 Alden Ct.
Robert Wolcott, USN and his wife
Joseph Haroski and son, Tom, of the Deerfield Police Commission.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Happ have
and two children at 1038 Oxford Warrington Rd. and Mr. Haroski’s
Rd.
brother, Andrew Haroski of Bell- sold their home at 457 Elm St. and
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Hugh and wood, returned Sunday from a fish- have moved to Wheeling. Mr. and
children of 803 Pine St. have re- ing trip. They were guests of Mr. Mrs. Anthony Fontana, who were
turned from a two weeks’ stay at Haroski’s mother, Mrs. Pearl Har- married July 11 and have been on
Eagle River, Wis. .. . Their daugh- oski, in Marquette, Mich. and at- their honeymoon, are the new ownter, Donna, has as her house guest tended the wedding of a niece, Miss ers of the Happ house on Elm St.
_ her cousin, Karen Fox of Menlo Barbara Lee L’Huillier, while in
Recent marriage licenses issued
Park, Calif., who will be here for Marquette.
in Waukegan were to Ruben Colseveral weeks.
Bruce Blietz, vice president
of lazo of Deerfield and Maria R. WilBack at their home at 1050 Som- the Irvin A. Blietz home building lars of Bensenville and to Anthony
erset Ave. after a four weeks’ trip organization, which has 210 acres Borelli of Highland Park and Juto California are Mr. and Mrs. Har- for development in Deerfield, will dith Pack of Deerfield.
old Giss and their two daughters, participate in a seminar in WashThe
Arthur
C.
Agazims
have
Jeri and Linda. In Paio Alto they ington, D.C., today, aimed at assist- moved
from
1041
Oxford
Rd. to
visited Mr. and Mrs. Ray Sanders, ing
manufacturers
of
building Lake Forest.
former Deerfield residents.
products in providing better maRay D. (Dick) Brewer
of 1063 terials
and
services
for
future
Central Ave., principal of Maple- homes.
wood School, is attending classes
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Fox, with
at
Northwestern
University
this their daughter, Gail and son, Lee,
of 1039 Springfield Ave. have resummer.
The James Varney family of 1110 turned from Albuquerque, N. Mex.,
Camille
Ave. spent last week
at where they visited their son-in-law
Ephraim, Wis.
Mr. Varney is em- and daughter, Lt. and Mrs. Robert
ployed by Standard Oil Co.
Eggers, who are stationed at Sandia
The Rev. Paul V. Berggren, pas- Army Base.
tor of Zion Lutheran Church, with
More new residents in LincolnMrs. Berggren and their two daugh- shire are Mr. and Mrs. Raymond
ters, Deborah, 13 and their newly Slouf and three sons, ages 4, and
arrived
Amelia
Sue,
visited
in twins, 2, from Missouri to 3200 OxSouth Bend, Ind., several days last ford Dr. ... Mr. and Mrs. Hugh
week. Amelia Sue was introduced Blair Jr. and three sons from Edgeto her maternal grandparents, Mr. brook to 3221 Oxford Dr. (Deerfield
and Mrs. Carl Swanson,
for the has an Oxford Road and Lincolnfirst time.
shire has an Oxford
Drive, both
Mrs. James Macadie of Chicago with the Deerfield post office adis staying at the home of her son- dress.)
in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
Mr. and Mrs. Edward Jordan of
Ralph Peterson of 930 Knollwood
Rd. Mrs. Peterson is confined to a
EIGHTH ANNIVERSARY
wheel chair.
She fell, getting out
of her
car about
a month
ago,
SPECIAL!
breaking her right leg just below
ONE 8x10 PORTRAIT
the hip. Now back from the Highin blonde or walnut frame and
land Park Hospital she is reported
EIGHT PLASTICIZED
as improving satisfactorily.
FRIENDSHIP PHOTOGRAPHS
Newcomers
to Lincolnshire
are
Appointments
$ 1 % 75
. Mr. and Mrs. Louis Malina at 3239
made in studio
Oxford Dr., from Chicago, and Mr.
and
Mrs.
George
Stembridge
to
Photographer
3238 Oxford Dr., from Park Ridge.
599 ROGER WILLIAMS AVE.
Back from a vacation trip to Mar-

&amp;

ff

&amp;

bp bp by fp fo br bo br hr be by bp bn bo bn bp bb

cople G.

%

Jacqueline
and daughter

Frost

of

Waukegan

Rd.,

ceived their degrees in June
Michigan State University.
*
“Hi

Society’

*

refrom

*

has

:

the theme of the Big and Little
Sister tea at the high school on &gt;
Sept. 8.
Joyce
Moeller
of
1055
Forest.
Ave., Deerfield, a high school jun—
ior, states, ‘“‘We need your help.
Tryouts for the tea are on Aug. 3 — a
at the home
of Greta
Fell, 360

Vine

Ave.,

Highland

Park,

at

7

p.m,”

%

and Roger Frost, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Bruce

726

hn hn hn ha ha ha bn hh

Nehool ‘and Sonia

Gail Fox, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Harold Fox of 1039 Springfield Ave., will be a freshman at
the University of Illinois in September. During the June rush, she was
pledged to Chi Omega sorority, following graduation from Township
High School District 113 in Highland Park.
*&amp;

bn bn hh

been

chosen

as

“The theme ‘Hi Society’ sets an
atmosphere for each freshman girl —
who makes her debut into the new
~
world of high school,” said Joyce. — 6,

“Please

in

accord-

ance with the theme,” she
the girls who are planning
ticipate in the program.

make

your

act

advises
to par-

or

NOw!

STATIONERY
Established

Your

Friendly

STORE
1906

stop for:

DAILY PAPERS
MAGAZINES
SMOKES
HALLMARK and

many

other GREETING

CARDS

OUR STORE
WILL BE
OPEN
‘TIL 9:00 P.M.

THURSDAYS

TOYS &amp; GAMES
OFFICE SUPPLIES
WRITING EQUIPMENT

Step into
soft water luxury
~

-

,

William Burns of Colwyn Rd. acted

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from the harsh hard water elements that

coat your skin with a film of harmful soap
curd... the same scum that causes the
ring in your bathtub. You need soft water
. . for shampooing,
all through your home.
laundering, dishes and bathing. Call us

today for Culligan Soft Water Service...

4

Percy H. Prior, Jr.

Movie-queen-luxury is yours the moment
you touch your toe to the rich, relaxing,
knee-deep suds of a soft water bath. Gentle
soft water soothes and smooths your
complexion because it is completely free

quette, Mich.
Mr.

and

Mrs.

ID 2-3199
Offer Expires Aug. 29, 1959

and Crystal Falls are
Clarence

Varney

of

S SR

SHOP

IN HIGHLAND

WIN

RS RRR

PARK TONITE

150°

$3.75
Per
Month

In Thursday Night Treasure

INT
Thursday,
ek

vay

July

23,

1959

YOU DON'T HAVE TO BUY IT TO TRY IT!

*Plus modest original
installation charge

COPR.

1956

CULLIGAN,

ING.

3 W. CENTRAL
MT. PROSPECT,

RD.
ILL.

CL 3-1040
Page

17

�Classic

HIGHLAND

Car

Of

Highland

P. “anhers

Win

First

Sorina

At

Mect

PARK STORE
° 1D 2-8550

589 Central

&amp;
WINNETKA
847 Elim
¢

STORE
HI 6-514)

Runner-up as second
place
winner in the same division was
Mrs. Irving E. Meyerhoff’s 1932
Lincoln coupe with which she is
pictured. She and her husband
each entered an antique car in
the competition.

RAVINIA
FAST!

WASH
592

FAST!

Roger

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Williams

IDiewood
Complete

FAST!

Ave.

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Washing

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SHIRTS and
DRY CLEANING

FAST!

8:00

HOURS...
A.M. to 5:30

8:00

A.M.

Saturday
Closed

NOW

1- DAY
EASTMAN
KODACHROME

on

4:00

Wednesday

these

are

just

interested

in

this

community endeavor.
the showing of films

not-for-profit
. . either in
at the High-

Public

Library

audi-

Smiths

Vacation

Samuel S. Smith, newly-appointed Lake County assistant supervisor, and his wife have just returned
from a three and one-half month
vacation trip to Florida and Nassau
in the Bahamas.

Schools —

FOR

BUSES

Churches —

ANY

Clubs

OCCASION

Insured

Drivers

For Information

call:

WI 5-3852

DEERFIELD - HIGHLAND PARK
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under

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swimsuits.

‘‘Sportie Shortie’ weighs
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pay

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nylon and elastic fabric. ‘‘Sportie
Shortie’ is quick drying, porous and

and
you

Ln. for the pres-

summer,

two of many
of her works. that
have been shown here by the local
Society.
The
Society
asks that
anyone

land

torium or in meeting monthly with
the Film Analysis Workshop.
contact Mrs. Morris B. Rotman at
VE 5-0074 or Mrs. Morton Goldsholl at ID 2-6937. Plans for the
coming year’s program are being
made at this time.

CHARTER

chromes before 10 A.M.
one day and you'll be able
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Miss Clarke is lecturing on filmmaking at Northwestern University

ROSEY oO

featured at...

or even

processing

of

She also showed “Loops,” a film
made at the request of the United
States State Department and shown

P.M.

the tightest shorts,

your

this

meeting

Film Society.
Weiss opened

entation.

to leave tell tale ridges

in

a

of

pat

PROCESSING
Bring

at the American Pavillion
Brussels World Fair.

special

Dr. stands beside his
judging of Classic Car
Club of America’s meet
one of 110 old cars on
its division.

Winner Shows Film, ‘Skyscraper’ To NS Film Society

804 Kimballwood

...

to

Elson of 122 Indian Tree
1931 LaSalle coupe during
recent Antique Automobile
Academy. Dr. Elson’s car,
meet, tied for first place in

Shirley Clarke, one of this year’s
Venice Film Festival Award winners,
showed
her
prize-winning
film, “Skyscraper,” last Friday at
Shore
James

P.M.

Dr. Ralph
prize-winning
division at the
at Lake Forest
display at the

no

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at Powell's!

machine

$3.

washable.

e safe
e comfortable

50

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Have your eyes examined by an
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UHLEMANN.
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OSB

1835 Second
Page

18

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y
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from

H.P.

suburbon
Jewel)

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Phone:

ID 2-0788

company

the best In sight—since

1907

PHONE for appointment or Information
Highland
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Thursday,

July

23,

1959

©

�Miss Dora Ladurini Weds In Highwood

Vu fololalopso&gt; &lt;

Stereo Anniversary

Precision changer
— automatic shut-off
Stereo Diamond Pick-up

Mr.

and

Mrs.

Silvio

Mordini

Miss Dora Ladurini, granddaugh-|

James

D.

Gleeson

ter of Mrs. Rosa Ladurini, 245 High} Nuptial Mass
the bride | Highwood.
became
St., Highwood,
Miss Mary
June 13 of Silvio Mordini of Toron-

Percy

Prior

celebrated

the

at St.
I.

James

Church,

329

Palmer

Santi,

to, Ontario, Can., in a double ring | Ave., a cousin of the groom,
(Continued on page 20)
Msgr.
Rev.
Rt.
The
ceremony.

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access to changer

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Page

19

�Dsch-othad

EDSEL SALES ARE UP
A BOOMING 46.1%
BECAUSE EDSEL IS
THE BIG ECONOMY BUY!

Come a-running!
Best savings! Best trade-ins!
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EDSEL GIVES YOU
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Miss

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Wed

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HERE’S YOUR CHANCE 1960

EDSELS

TO WIN ONE OF TWO
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HIGHLAND PARK LINCOLN-MERCURY, INC.
Page

20

sicmnsne vane

from

page

19)

maid of honor. Best man was Giacomo
Serafini,
329
Palmer
Ave.
Junior
bridesmaid
was
Marsha
Ladurini of 245 High St., a cousin
of the bride. Little Emilio Santi,
228 Llewellyn Ave., was her partner.
The bride was lovely in a lace
gown with a voluminous silk-satin
skirt. Her shoulder-length veil was
held by a crown of pearls and lace.
She wore short white mitts and carried a white rose and orchid bouquet.
Following the ceremony a dinner
reception for 100 persons was held
at Hotel Moraine On The Lake.
Out of town guests included Mr.
and Mrs. Ben Mordini and Mrs. Ida
Mordini
of Virginia, Minn.;
Mrs.
Mabel
Ladurini
and
Mrs.
Nella
Ladurini, aunts of the bride from
Madrid, Iowa. From Chicago came
the Joseph Mordinis, Angelo Mordinis, Pietro Mordinis, and Mr. and
Mrs. Italo Pagliai.
The couple journeyed to Canada
for their wedding trip and now are
at home at 245 High St., Highwood.

When you move
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If you,. or others you
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Cecile Casey ID 2-0442
Deerfield. Bannockburn
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(Continued

EDSEL GIVES YOU BIGCAR PERFORMANCE

Baron

Mr. and Mrs Jack Baron of Chicago announce the engagement of
their daughter, Bonnie, to Jeffery
A. Finkle. Mr. Finkle is the son of
Mr, and Mrs. Irving M. Finkle, 540
Rambler Ln. The couple is planning an August, 1960, wedding.
Both young people are attending
the University of Illinois in Urbana. Miss Baron is a sophomore
in the
school
of education.
Mr.
Finkle, a graduate of the Highland
Park High School, is a senior in
the school of architecture.

EM

Lae

bn

sg.

pias!

Behe BRT

Thursday,

July

EN

P

23, 1959

4

4
id

�Sat. At Ravinia
Features Quartet
Walter
Hendl’s
children’s
concert, first of the season for the
Chicago Symphony Orchestra, drew
an overflow audience
to the Ravinia Theatre last Saturday morning when he and orchestra members
described
and
demonstrated
the
percussion instruments.
The Chicago Wind Quintet will
be featured in the second concert
Saturday at 11 am. under the direction of Philip Farkas, first horn
of the symphony.
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Mrs.

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Louis
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of
Kansas

City,

son

Mr.

of

berg

Mo.

and

Mr.

Ampel

is the

Mrs.

Max

Rosen-

also of Kansas

City.

Studios

Ampel

The vows were exchanged at 2
p.m., in North Shore Congregation
Israel,
Glencoe.
Rabbi
Edgar
E.
Siskin officiated. Decorations were
Filigoll
screens
decorated
with
masses of green foliage with yellow
(Continued on page 22)

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Park

ID

2-0093

ID 2-0037

I
time

In

ORIGINAL

cin stein

of need...

and Sons inc.

BAKED FRESH
BEFORE YOUR EYES! |

...adewish Funeral Chapel only
minutes from the North Shore

LEE’S

3019 West Peterson Road

DRIVE-IN

650 Skokie Hwy., Highland Park

LOngbeach 1-1890

ID 2-0040
Adjacent

HERSHEY WEINSTEIN, President
LAURIE WEINSTEIN, Funeral Director

RONALD E. SCHWARZBACH,
Thursday,

July 23, 1959

Funeral Director

This Coupon

| Kc

rr

DOZEN

only 60c per doz. with this coupon

over 200

HOURS:

For
ni

parking for
Cars...

Good

Sunday through Thursday, 7 A.M. to 12 P.M.
Friday and Saturday, 7 A.M. to 1 A.M.

1

�lesa

Aaah)
ah,

ae)

i

COR

ame

Women

will be burdensome

if left

until

PARK

be

the

CHARTER

—

We Operate Our Own

CARE

on

Mrs.

ni

d)

eeaa

60

5.

home

Ln.

Council

at

The

was

of

installed

president

at

1959-

the

meet-

Friedman

of

Glencoe

Schuman,

1302

Forest

with
Mrs.

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

brighten

recording

Richard

Maxon of
secretary;

Axelrod,

Tree Dr., treasurer;
ney Katz,
Glencoe,

ian

patio

and

353

are:

page

and_

AME RAC

SHUR ion

21)

sister,

Ave.,|

in

at

the

marriage

an

ivory

by

taffeta

grandmother,

Mary,

was

her

Bridesmaids

Dr.,
Her

Lambert

parties

ale

ee

%

i

Museo.

ek
tS

Parties

maid

were

for

.

Among
the

Cea

ee Ei
£

TS A

ae

Reception
After the ceremony, a reception
was held
in the Michaels
Court
and Rebecca Crown Room of the
Temple.
Later
a dinner for the
family and out-of-town guests was
held at the Northbrook
home
of
Mr. and Mrs, Jay Isador.

Couple

who
entertained
couple
are
the

Goldsteins,
the

;
Irving

For

those
young

of| Jerome

Miss|man

Kenneth Green of Columbia, Mo.,
the former Barbara Cole of Highland Park. Both bridesmaids
are
cousins of the bride.
Mrs. Isador wore a gown of cornflower blue. All other attendants
were dressed alike in yellow organza_
shirt
waist
dresses
with
puffed sleeves. They carried green
cymbidium orchids.
Mr. Ampel’s best man was Ronald Katz of St. Louis. His ushers
were
Jerome
Cosner
of Kansas
City and Brandt Ross of Elmwood
Park.

and Mrs. Sidparliamentar-

By
pier

Mrs.

\yartha Brown of Chicago and Mrs.

SkoMrs.

fd

The bride’s mother wore a beige
chiffon dress. The groom’s mother
wore a pink lace gown.
The couple journeyed to Wisconsin before
settling
in
Columbia
where they are making their home.
The groom is a student at the University of Missouri Medical School.
The bride is a graduate of Highland Park High School and graduated in June from the University
of Missouri.

carnations.

placed

given

wore

bride’s

honor.

historian.

with GAS LIGHT!

from

were

father,

The

secretary.

Also, Mrs. Bert
kie, corresponding

Oe

Irving Isador, 1040 Ridgewood
served as her matron of honor.

second vice president; and Mrs.
Richard Levy, 195 Green Bay Rd.,

UNiversity 4-5061; 4-5062

orecoe,
»
- MCS
TRAY

,

gown fashioned with long sleeves,
a ‘bodice of lace and pearls and a
chapel
train. The
veil she wore
is a full-length rose point family
heirloom.
She carried a white Bible with white amazon orchids and
stephanotis.

: Mrs. P Morton i Crane, Glencoe,
first vice president; Mrs. Harry

L.

i

Miss Janie Isadore Is Bride Of L. L. Ampel
her

275

as

Other officers installed
by out-going President

Mey
ieee ry
a.”

Candelabras
pulpit.
The bride,

Arthur
of

ES
tite sae | ogy

(Continued

invitation

Rosenberg

PPL
Atay aa

chrysanthemums

Round

Mrs.

4ek

mi

by the board which
for luncheon at the

Lester

Leslee
ing.
her

campers

Aug.

William

FUND

Greenhouses

Evanston:

of

Glencoe
Yergin.

Ridge Road and Harrison St., Evanston
Chicago: KEystone 9-4747; 9-4424

guests

Lake

CEMETERY

GENERAL

Ws

To Be Guests

was accepted
recently met

COMMUNITY MAUSOLEUM—EARTHEN INTERMENT
COLUMBARIUM—CREMATORIUM
PERPETUAL

Cae
Te
bs Wh

Members of the Women’s Council of Camp
Henry
Horner
will

emergency is at hand.

MEMORIAL

q

Of Campers Aug. 5

Just as you provide insurance or make a
will, so should you choose a fitting resting
place for yourself — and for them — a task

that

Wee

veg

a

Mrs.

eae

Hy

Rosses,

LipMrs.

Isadore and the following
Chicagoans,
Mrs.
Alvin
Gooman
(formerly Nancy Goldstein), Mrs.

Milton
and

Frank,

the

Irving

the

Jesse

Browns

Rosemans.

Charles D. Lawhead

Is Michigan Grad
Charles D. Lawhead, son of Harley F. Lawhead of 1436 Sunnyside
Ave., was graduated from Michigan
State
University,
East
Lansing,
with a B.S. in chemical engineering.
The official list for spring term.
just received from the department
of information, also lists two from
Deerfield:
Miss Jacqueline D. Frost, B.A.
art, and Roger Bruce Frost, B.S.
electrical engineering.
They are the daughter and son
of the Bruce C. Frosts.

"

4

4

Imported

(
ae
a

direct for promotional

use

. . . floored,

bark

roof,

9’ open

front, 10%’ depth. Complete with 5 foot high solid stone outdoor
lantern, garden stones, ‘’tatami mats,” cushions and all beautyware
for authentic TEA CEREMONY.
A “one-and-only’’W—to enhance your home and yard—best offer.
Financial 6-7557 or c/o J.E.I., Rm. 353

;

22 W.

Madison

St., Chicago

SINCE 1900
Psy

659

CENTRAL
We

‘

AVE.,
Will

|

4

H.P.

Be

Outdoor entertaining takes on extra charm

OP EN

with the soft glow of gas lights on the patio.

Tonight

Wonderful gas lights extend

2

THURSDAY

a warm welcome that

immediately puts guests at ease. Creating an aura

and every Thurs’ ‘til 9:00 p.m.

of unhurried, gracious living, gas lights provide
needed illumination ... without harsh glare. Why
not add a touch of charm to your outdoor living? Gas
lights are priced from $49.95, installed.

a

tf,

AND

Funeral

Directors

Jewish Community

NORTH

Company
“The Friendly People”’

Shore

Chapel:

to the

Since

1865

SERVICE

Complete facilities in your community
for prompt service . . . Lee J. Furth,
Jules L. Furth, and their staff, will
personally arrange and conduct the
entire funeral—a service of warmth
and beauty, observing customs and
ritual with reverence.

Call Midway
3-5400

South

‘Page 22

SHORE

COMPANY

2100

East

75th

Street, at Clyde

Thursday,

Avenue

July. 23,

1959

�=

ne

bt
oy

z

ree

re

.

as

6

*E

e

:

er

e

ah

eee

Tey

Jo Jefferson On Dean’s List
for nearly 15
mont, N.Y.

years,

now

of Larch-

The wedding will take place in
Trinity Episcopal Church here on
Sept. 5. A reception
will follow
at the
Highland
Park
Woman’s
Club.
Miss
Thodt
is a graduate
of
Davenport
High
school
and
the
University of Iowa. She did graduate
work
at Tulane
University,
New Orleans. She is affiliated with
Alpha Xi Delta social sorority and
Beta Gamma Sigma, Alpha Lamdba
Delta and Mortar Board honorary
fraternities. At present, she is with
the
Leo
Burnett
Advertising
Agency, Chicago.
Mr.

Hadlock

attended

ansee eeescsasce
maARaseannacans

Miss
Mr.

and

Davenport,
engagement
of their

Lynn
Mrs.

Alfred

and

daughter,

H.

Thodt

announced

coming
Lynn

zine

in

Chicago.

He

resides

in

Parking

Areas

—

Old

Drives

Refinished

@

Expert Black Topping

@

Concrete

@

Call for FREE

Crushed
Stone

ESTIMATE!

... CHOICE TOP SOIL
GE
SILJESTROM FUEL CO.
ID 2-0065
1930

First

Highland

St.

Park

Evanston.

sees
ase

of
the

Einabath Srdond Har oftyle of the ollonth

Flight

marriage
Esther,

Park High School and was graduated from Lake Forest Academy. He
attended Brown University and the
University of Illinois, where he received his degree. He is affiliated
with Delta Kappa
Epsilon
social
fraternity.
He
served
two
years
with the United States Army and is
currently
employed
as
a media
representative for Parents’ Maga-

DRIVEWAY CONSTRUCTION

AMERICAN
A AIRLINES

E. Thodt

Ia., have

Highland

Announcement
has come
from
Illinois Wesleyan
University,
Bloomington, that Miss Jo Jefferson
is on the Dean’s
List, just
released by the University.
Miss Jefferson is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. John A. Jefferson of
879 Burton Ave.

to

Stewardesses

Willard Gardner Hadlock. He is the
son of Mr. and Mrs. George Hadlock, residents of Highland Park

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oe

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500-watt lamp and sharp
f/1.6 lens.

only 129
McMasters’

your

and am
view.

interested

in an

LJ
(J
L

Age

[]

Weight 105-135

C

inter-

Single

set into a high-

Beautiful, easy cool hairdo
for active summer days,
“Sunburst” is newly created

“Sunburst,” a cluster Wiglette
of curls, worn high enough to

be visible from the front. For
extra chic, you can add a
black velvet bow. Come in

by Miss Arden’s talented sty]-

20-26

A High
School
Graduate

20/50 vision without
corrective

simple

headed coiffure.

ee

1 meet all qualifications below

[_] Height 5’3”-5'8”

Pharmacy

For evening, the simple addition of a pin-on Wiglette (made
of genuine hair) transforms

Department

American Airlines
5245 W. 55th
Chicago 38, Illinois

ee

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No fuss, no fumbling,
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og
ee

y Vib go mey.¥ &gt;)

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lenses

ee

&amp;

ists in the Hair Salon.
Elizabeth Arden’s new summer

soon for your beautiful summer coiffure and let our stylists
help you select the right

coiffures are based on charm
and

ee

Bell

You will be trained at our
fabulous Stewardess College and receive a generous salary plus liberal
expenses, travel privileges
for you and your family.

practicality

of chic

hair

pieces, made up to blend perfectly with your own hair.

Wiglette or Chignon and learn
how to use it effectively.

Lake Forest Photographic

10 to |

584 N. Western Lake Forest 1900
Emergency phone Lake Forest 1920

70 East Walton

Place

@

SUperior 7-6950

Vs me

Hours

8 a.m. to 7 p.m. - Sundays

ee

ee

Headquarters

Page
Ash

23

�Mr. and Mrs. Ferdinand Humer Cut Their Wedding Cake
air conditioners

at discount

the north shore’s smallest discount
Moley TV

e

670 Central

Ave.,

H.P.

house!
e«

ID 2-2042

C. R. ANDERSON AGENCY,
INSURANCE — BONDS
»,.

Sound, Experienced Insurance Service
WIndsor
735

%

INC.

Deerfield

5-0155

Road,

ts

Deerfield,

III.

“Ss

ERRORS

Miss
LaVerne
E.
Nottke
andjis the daughter of the Herbert H.
Ferdinand
A.
Humer
exchanged|Nottkes
of
Twin
Creeks
Farm,
wedding vows June 27 in an eve-| Itasca, and Mr. Humer is the son
ning ceremony in Lutheran Church|of
the
Ferdinand
Humers,
1465
of St. Luke, Itasca, Ill. Miss Nottke | McDaniels Ave.

Northshore Garden of Memories
A

Surprise

Awaits

You

If You

Have

THIS BEAUTIFUL GARDEN
Very

Green

Reasonable

Bay Rd. &amp; 18th St.

Not

Visited

CEMETERY
iii.

Prices

Phone

DE 6-6500

The
cated

Rev.
at

Kurt

the

V.

Grotheer

ceremony

at

offiwhich

R. R. Block was organist and Miss
Barbara
Seablom,
soloist.
Pew
decorations were blue: carnations.
Baskets of the carnations and white
gladioli banked the altar.

The

bride,

given

in marriage

Mrs. Stanley Tonkin of Woodale,
Ill., served the bride as matron of
honor.
Miss
Jacqueline
Shramek
of Bensenville was her only brides(Continued on page 25)

WARDS.

-M.O

NOT

G.O.M'E

Wards Catalogs...

RY

jus

selections at your

re at home, then

order by phone any hour of any
day or night.

For grea

@
®
@

ping ease, have home delivery
service, too. Try it...

@

at your convenience!

Shop ‘Round the Clock
CALL

Page

24

ID

2-8830

EXCAVATING
GRADING
ROADS

‘GLADER
4-HOL

“Telephone Shubping

CRANES

@ WRECKING
® DRIVEWAYS
@® PARKING LOTS
RENTED

&amp; TAZIOLI

EXCAVATING

by

her father, wore a white organdy
gown over ice blue taffeta with a
fly-away train. Her organza headpiece was ice-blue. It was trimmed
with dainty stephanotis. She carried a Venetian lace fan with white
orchids, stephanotis and ivy.

CO.

ID 2-3785
Thursday,

July

23,

1959

�Charlotte Boren
Writes Book On

Nottke-Humer Rites

Dennis Lee Larson

(Continued from page 24)
maid. Both were gowned in white

Weds In Quiet Rites

S. American Trip

silk ballerina-length dresses fashioned with scoop necks with banks
of
ice
blue
lace.
They
carried
venetian lace fans with blue carnations mounted on them.
Best man was Frank Humer, and
Walter Mikesell served as usher.
A reception at Salt Creek Golf

Dennis Lee Larson, son of the
Milo D. Larsons of 1760 Elmwood
Dr., wed Miss Sharon Lee Michel
in a quiet evening ceremony July
11. Judge E. W. Carlsen, justice of
the peace, performed the ceremony.
Miss Michel is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Richard J. Michel of
Mauston, Wis.
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Inman
of

Mrs. Harry Boren, 258 Sheridan
Rd.,
who
has
written
a_ book,
“South America in Thirty Days,”
would like to go back there some
day with the “same
companion,”
she told the NEWS.
Her book is
published this week by Exposition
Press.
The companion, with whom she
was still good friends at the journey’s end, is an amusing and friendly person whom she calls Sue. They
spent their time traveling through
Bogota, Brazil, Paraguay and other
countries.
Mrs.

Boren’s

book

came from

the

day-by-day diary she kept. She

jot-

Club

in

Itasca

followed

the

cere-

mony.
For her daughter’s wedding, Mrs.
Nottke wore a beige lace dress with
cymbidium
orchids.
The
groom’s
mother
wore
a pale
blue
gown
edged in satin, and white orchids.
After a wedding journey to the

Wisconsin

Dells,

the

couple

home at 824 Central Ave.
The groom graduated from

TO VISIT US

in our new location...
We
All Types of Paint
Venetian Blinds
-

land

Park

Bradley

High

groom’s

@

School

and

University.

parents

attend-

is at

ed

The

High-

attended Luther
Institute and
Northwestern School of Commerce.

in:
-

Paint Sundries
Bamboo Drapes

Glass Furniture Tops
Auto Glass - Mirrors

3046 Skokie Valley Rd., the bride’s
brother-in-law and sister, attended
the couple and the
were guests.

specialize

Paint Color Styling
Window Shades
~

Tub

Enclosures

Telephone

- Shower

IDlewood

Doors

2-7211

LAKESIDE GLASS AND PAINT CO.
formerly

bride

1914

Highwood

First Street,

Glass

Highland

&amp;

Paint

Park,

Co.

Iliinois

ted down her impressions of people, restaurants and shops, driving
conditions, airplane flights and cus-

toms,

| VaR

Guides, reliable and unreliable,
helped to orient them in countries
where the language was a puzzle,
but
the
twosome
always
found
someone to help resolve their difficulties. Traveling, as they did, in
a country
where
women
seldom
travel without husband or family,
they awakened a gallantry in the
South
Americans
they
met
and
never lacked attention.

Makes

all curves

feel banked...

They made the trip by air and
always had a guide. Despite this,
they managed to meet a great many
residents.

Adjudication una Claim Day Notice
NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
to all
persons that the first Monday
of August,
1959, is the claim date in the estate of
ELEANOR W. BANFIELD, Deceased pending in the Probate Court of Lake County,
Illinois, and that claims may be filed against
the
said
estate
on or before
said
date
without issuance of summons,
All claims
filed against said estate on or before said
date and not contested, will be adjudicated
on the first Tuesday after the first Monday
of the next succeeding month at 9 A.M.
The First National Bank of
Highland Park,
Executor
By Henry Pearon, Trust Officer
Singer &amp; Singer
Attorneys for Executor
Highland
Park, Illinois
7/9-16-23 /59-200

PUBLIC HEARING
HIGHLAND PARK PLAN COMMISSION
NOTICEIE HEREBY
GIVEN
that a
public hearing will be held in the Council
Chamber in the City Hall, City of Highland
Park,
Illinois
on Wednesday,
August
5,
1959 at 8:00 P.M.
Said public hearing will

be conducted

by the undersigned,

the

Plan

Commission for the City of Highland Park,
designated and appointed by the Mayor and
City Council of said City, for the purpose
of considering an amendment to Section 4-7
of the Highland Park Zoning Ordinance of
1947. Said Section to read as follows:
SECTION
4-7.
Any
and
all property
which may hereafter be annexed to the
City as ‘‘B” Country Home District until
differently classified by amendment to this
Ordinance.
Public hearings on the zoning
classification on property to be annexed
to the City may be held by the Plan Commission either prior to the date the annexation of such property shall become
final, or not more than sixty (60) days
after such date of annexation.
Upon the
conclusion of such public hearings, the
Plan Commission shall recommend to the
City Council such changes in the zoning
classification of said annexed property as
it shall deem necessary, or required.
_ At said public hearing and at any adjournment thereof, an opportunity will be
afforded
to all persons
interested
to be
heard in relation to said matter.
HIGHLAND PARK PLAN COMMISSION
Norman J, Schlossman, Chairman
APPL 3-59
7/16-23 /59—209

PUBLIC HEARING
HIGHLAND
PARK PLAN COMMISSION
NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
that a
public hearing will be held in the Council
Chamber in the City Hall, City of Highland
Park,
Illinois
on
Wednesday,
August
5,
1959 at 8:00 P.M.
Said public hearing will
be conducted by the undersigned, the Plan
Commission for the City of Highland Park,
designated and appointed by the Mayor and
City Council of said City, for the purpose
of considering an amendment of the Highland Park Zoning Ordinance of 1947. Said
proposed amendment
consists of the addition of an Article 12-A to the 1947 Zoning Ordinance, creating what is to be known
as the G-1 Office and Research District,
to permit
certain
administrative
research
and business organizations, which do not de-

tract from

residential

desirability,

July 23, 1959

THE ONLY CAR WITH

WIDE-TRACK

WHEELS

Dotted lines show conventional wheel positions. Pontiac’s wheels are five inches farther
apart. This widens only the stance, not the

more comfortable than you’ve ever been in narrow track cars.

car itself. Pontiac hugs tighter on curves and
corners. Sway and lean are considerably
reduced, ride is smoother, balanced, steadier.

PONTIAC! AMERICA’S NUMBER (4) ROAD CAR

to locate

in areas and act as transitional districts between a transportation network, Class I industrial
districts,
and
certain
residential
districts.
_ At said public hearing and at any adjournment thereof, an opportunity will be
afforded
to all persons
interested to be
heard in relation to said matter.
HIGHLAND PARK PLAN COMMISSION
Norman J. Schlossman, Chairman
APPL 4-59
7/16-23 /59—210

Thursday,

It’s been a long time since the public took to an automobile with the
verve and vigor of the current admiration for Pontiac. It’s now first in
sales in its price class. Sleek beauty is one reason. Wide-Track Wheel
design is another. The wheels are five inches farther apart to increase
stability on curves and corners. It’s a very simple, basic innovation yet
the improvement it makes in your control of the car is remarkable. You’re

SEE

YOUR

LOCAL

AUTHORIZED

PONTIAC

DEALER

PETERSEN PONTIAC
1949

ST.

JOHNS

AVENUE,

HIGHLAND

PARK
Page

25

�4

me

nse

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x

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2 yf

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nig

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isihf

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re

ei

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\

i

a

se in

fis

8 ie

¥

L
A

Complete

WASHING

Harrison

Line

of Pure

¢ GREASING
Chicago

710

Burton

Club
ID

2-1066

Ravinia Standard
SERVICE STATION
LUBRICATION

TIRES

¢

on\
i

ee

ee

4,

es

P

Bey

‘

¥

pets

‘

P

Rien}

\

bad

q

¢ BATTERIES

Ave.

WASHING

(

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¢ TIRES
Motor

rT
i
ey

You Get MORE W

RAVINIA
AUTO SERVICE
Geo.

eh

BATTERIES

Buy LOCALLY

Thanks To....

SIMONIZING
Free

Pickup

and

Delivery

Service

585 Roger Williams Ave.

ID 2-2320

WALTS
STANDARD SERVICE
¢ AUTOMOBILE
e TIRES
. LUBRICATION

GREEN

&amp;

ACCESSORIES
BATTERIES

- WASHING

- TOWING

BAY &amp; CENTRAL

Does It Make A Difference
Where You Get Your Gas &amp; Oil?

ID 2-9809

Does it make a difference WHERE

SERVICE STATION
Service

local service station man

Products

¢ MOTOR TUNE-UP
¢ BRAKE SERVICE
e WHEEL BALANCING
e WASHING &amp; POLISHING

_ | 535 Roger Williams

you get your gas or oil

. . » WHERE you get that lube job or other auto service?
motorists will tell you most emphatically that it DOES . .
that the difference is in YOUR favor when you patronize
LOCAL service station. The reason for this is pretty obvious.

ROGER WILLIAMS
Cities

i

ID 2-9815

has a definite stake in YOUR

Most
. and
your
Your

driving

satisfaction. ‘Repeat business” is what he lives by . . . and this he
can only get from you and other LOCAL motorists. He knows
that it will take alert, heads-up service to hold your patronage
. so he goes all out to please you

every time.

You

are more

than “just another customer” to him... you are part and parcel

[ f- N NY
MOBIL

S

SERVICE
STATION

PRODUCTS

e TIRES

e¢ BATTERIES

e LUBRICATION

e TUNE

e¢ WASHING

490

Skokie

Highway

ID 2-7660
Page

26

of his business future ... and he treats you accordingly.

He stands

behind every service job he does for you. He pays particular attention to your every need . . . because you are particularly important to him!
:

UPS

1359 #4 ONE HUNDRE!
Thursday,

July

23,

1959

4 Ve

Foy

vee

ee

�Ame’s North Shore Shell Service
TOWING
¢ MOTOR

SERVICE

TUNE-UP
e BRAKE

TIRES

SERVICE

BATTERIES

PHONE
COUNTY

LINE

ACCESSORIES

[|

ID 2-6121

RD.

&amp;

OLD

HIGHLAND

SKOKIE

HWY.

PARK

OIL CO.
STANDARD

Service Station
Open

24

Hours

;

e TIRES

e BATTERIES

Pickup

&amp; Delivery

Skokie Valley
ID 2-8816

Rd.

oe

Te

= 3

2645

e

e OIL

e GREASE

e WASH

|

DEALER IN
SHELL PRODUCTS

.y

e SHELLUBRICATION

“Treat Your Car Well — Fill Up
532 WAUKEGAN AVE., HIGHWOOD
»-fant

BY

4,6ET

2x

Tp.

BEHIND

2

q

your

ae) #

abs

Pee

on

¢ TIRES
¢ BATTERIES
¢ OILS
e GASOLINE
||
ES
ACCESSORI
¢
¢ WASHING
¢ MOTOR TUNE-UPS
“—E
Member Chicago Motor Club
A.A.A.

Summer driving fun is yours for the asking . . . IF you make
sure you're driving a SAFE car.

Don’t just guess.

Bring your car

Towing —
FREE

any safety hazards at reasonable cost.

Safety doesn’t just happen . . . YOU
about it. Bring in your car today!

have to do something

Service

Bonded

Emergency
PICKUP

&amp;

:

Station

Road

Service

‘

DELIVERY

ID 2-9576

in NOW to any local service station listed on this page and have
it safety-checked. Then our competent mechanics will correct

HANK’S SERVICE STATION |
Ist
TOWING

and

—_

ACCESSORIES
Sinclair

ID
July 23, 1959

.

[DX SERVICE STATION

SKOKIE VALLEY

A

COMMUNITy

AK its SLGGTSTO KW ERIE J

Thursday,

Shell”
ID 2-9565

‘)

é

SAFETY DRIVE,

Coe

With

Be

ELM
MOTOR
—

TUNE-UP

BATTERIES

Products

2-9755
Page 27

�-|Mr.

And Mrs. Aurelio Cecotti
Announce

Birth Of Third Child

Mr. and Mrs. Aurelio Cecotti, 658

ae

Broadview

4

of

a

your

guests
*

-_ SUNSET

FOOD

1812 Green
Highland

third

announce

child,

a

the birth

son.

Born

June 3 at Highland Park Hospital,
the infant has been named
Jack
Gerard. Other children are Dante,
9, and Susan, 6.

For you
..» your family
++

their

Ave.,

Mr. and Mrs. Jack Cimbalo of
the
same
address
are
maternal
grandparents.
Paternal
grandparents are the Dante Cecottis of San
Francisco.

ele

MART

Bay Rd.
Park

f;

4p

+

eo

in

v

&lt;i
ee

%

yrus A. Mead Is Member
Of

Honor

Section

Cyrus A. Mead, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Cyrus Mead III, 1267 Forest
Ave., has received
notice of eli-

giliblity to, and has accepted membership, in the Sophomore Honor
Section at the
of Technology.
The

honor

California
is

based

Institute

on

standing

in the class for the academic year,
1958-59. Mead,
Highland Park

a 1958 graduate of
High School, is ma-

joring in chemistry at the Institute.

ANTIQUE

TRY GIVING

Mrs. Dorman

Two Sons Wed In One
Mrs.

Dorman

Highland

Park,

Using

SPRING

FRESH

WATER

Sparkling
1629

Park

Ave.,

Mineral
W.

Water

IDlewood

2-0042

LUCITE

‘CORNER CHAIR
fine patina

IDlewood
CLOSED

ACRYLIC
HOUSE PAINT
LASTS 50%

LONGER

Skokie Valley &amp; Clavey Roads
Highland Park, Illinois
3-2300
MONDAYS

LASTS 50% LONGER THAN
REGULAR HOUSE PAINT
.-- you don’t have to repaint for

Feel’ right: .

years!

SOLVES BLISTERING
PROBLEM

bok right

.. . used with Du Pont No. 38
primer on new or unpainted wood !

EASIEST PAINT TO APPLY

Our exclusive drycleaning

saw

Anderson
two

of her

of

Grand

sons

take

Chicago. The bride is the daughter
ford of Chicago.
The groom’s brother, Dorman C.
Anderson Jr., served as best man.
Dr. Bryant M. Kirkland read the
wedding vows.
After a wedding trip to Texas,
this
couple
is at home
in Fort
Morgan, Colo.
In

Oklahoma

Dorman
C. Anderson
Jr., Mrs.
Anderson’s other son, was married
July
11
in
the
First
Christian
Church at Broken Arrow, Okla. He
NOTICE
OF
ELECTION
FOR DEERFIELD
PARK
DISTRICT,
LAKE
COUNTY,
ILLINOIS.

New Du Pont

ENDALE MAHOGANY
beautiful faded color and
Circa 1770.

C.

Rapids,
brides

in

one

of Mr.

and

toughest, most weather

process will keep your

Zeitlins Assist Plans
For World Federalists’
and

Mrs.

Shore

chapter,

United

A locally produced
program.
The picnic

will be

at Lloyd’s Woods
Winnetka. Supper
at 6:30 p.m.

HAVE

THAT

NEW

LOOK

RESTORED

MEN’S

SUMMER

SUITS

BY OUR

SIZING

PROCESS

Secretary

SALON

North Shore’s Distinctive

fokeS*

For Truly Original Hair
Styling .. . and Truly
Complete Beauty Service!

CLEANERS

454 Waukegan Ave.—Highwood
IDiewood

IDlewood 2-9265

QUALITY

CLEANING

AT

A

Tracks

North Highland Park

Cc.
597 Roger Williams—Ravinia

Hair Stylists

Corner of Old Elm Road and Krenn

ore

REASONABLE

2-0455
PRICE

BRAND
BROTHERS
PAINT-GLASS-WINDOW

SHADES

638 Central Ave., Highland
ID 2-0949

Park

Della

Phone

Hellerman

ID 2-1644

Ample Free
%

4
2

.

Parking

@

AIR

movie,

‘‘Val-

held

Sunday

J. CARUSO,

7/23 /59—214

just west of the N.W.R.R.

—WAYNE'S

Fed-

on the Lake in
will be served

CHARLES

work

TO

World

NOTICE
is hereby given that on Saturday, August 15, 1959, a special election will
be held in and for School District Number
110, Lake County, [llinois, for the purpose
of voting upon the following proposition:
Shall the Board of Education of School
District Number
110, Lake County, IIlinois, be authorized to complete the building and equipping of the ‘South Park
School” of said School District, complete
the building and equipping of an addition
to the “Woodland Park School’ of said
District, build and equip a new school
for the upper elementary grades of said
School District
on
the Wilmot
School
Site and issue additional bonds of said
School District to the amount of $450,000
therefor, and said bonds to bear interest
at not to exceed the rate of 542%
per
annum?
For
said election
said
School
District
shall constitute
a single election precinct
and the polling place for said election is
designated as the Wilmot
School, located
on Wilmot Road and Deerfield Road, Deerfield, Illinois.
The polls at said election will be open at
6:00 A.M. and will be closed at 7:00 P.M.
Central Daylight Saving Ttime, on said day.
By Order of the Board of Education of
School District Number 110, Lake County,
Illinois.
DATED
this 14th day of July, 1959.
DAVID
C. WHITNEY,
President

Buy the paint that’s
BEAUTY

Zeitlin

NOTICE OF
SCHOOL ELECTION

SPECIAL

resistant

The

Picnic

ley of the Shadow,” premiered in
1951, will be shown as part of the

vibrant and gay. You'll look

the

Craw-

eralists.

and feel wonderful.
worth

C.

Nathaniel

. . . $0 you can repaint the same
day !

as spring. Colors will sparkle,

of

time.

of 200 Oak Knoll Rd. are assisting with plans for the family picnic and annual meeting of North

y DRIES IN 30 MINUTES

garments crisp and fresh

week’s

Clifford

finish ever developed.

cottons and other summer

formerly

took Miss
Janice
Hudson
as his
bride.
The groom’s brother, Manly, was
his best man. Gordon Sheahen of
1846 Park Ave. W was an usher.
The Rev. Charles R. Griffith officiated at the ceremony.
After their wedding trip to Minnesota, this couple is residing in
Casper, Wyo.

Dr.

PUBLIC
NOTICE
is hereby given that
an election will be held in and for the Deerfield Park District, Lake County, Illinois,
on Saturday, August 15, 1959, at which time
there will be submitted to the electors of
said Park District the following questions:
1. Shall bonds of the Deerfield Park District,
Lake
County,
Illinois,
to the
amount of, $205,000, be issued for the
purpose of building, maintaining and
improving the park facilities, including
the construction
and equipping
of a
swimming
pool,
bathhouse
and
improvements incidental thereto in Jewett
Park
and
paying
expenses
incident
thereto?
2. Shall bonds of the Deerfield Park District,
Lake
County,
Illinois,
to
the
amount of $295,000 be issued for the
purpose of purchasing or condemning
additional
land
for
parks,
building,
maintaining, protecting and improving
the present parks and the land to be
purchased
or
condemned
for parks,
and paying expenses incident thereto?
That for the purpose of said election said
Park
District has been divided
into two
election precincts, the boundaries and polling places for which have been designated
as follows:
PRECINCT NUMBER
1
All that part of the District lying within the
boundaries of Wilmot School District No.
110, Lake County, Illinois.
POLLING
PLACE:
Wilmot School Gymnasium,
Deerfield
&amp;
Wilmot
Roads,
Deerfield, Illinois.
PRECINCT NUMBER 2
All that part of the District not lying within
the boundaries of Wilmot
School District
No. 110, Lake County, Illinois.
POLLING
PLACE:
Deerfield
Grammar
School
Gymnasium,
Deerfield
Road,
Deerfield, Illinois.
Voters must
vote at the polling place
designated for the election precinct within
which they reside.
The polls at said election will be opened
at 6:00 o’clock, A.M. and will be closed at
6:00 o’clock P.M., Central Daylight Saving
Time, on the day of the election.
By Order of the Board of Park Commissioners of Deerfield Park District, Lake
County, Illinois.
DATED this 30th day of June, 1959.
JAMES MITCHELL
President
ATTEST:
CATHERINE PRICE
Secretary
7/23/59—213

Mrs.

... thins with water—yet dries to

and style-control sizing

Week

Mich.,

On July 5, Manly R. Anderson took Miss Carroll Ann Crawford as
his bride in an afternoon ceremony in the First Presbyterian Church,

Married

LEMON - “AID”

C Od pelerson Sees

CONDITIONED

-

. .
in

�4

The

A
garden
party
luncheon
and
“Back
To
School’
fashion
show
will launch
the annual
membership drive, Aug. 4, of North Suburban Beth El Sisterhood. Fashions
will be exhibited by a North Shore
shop and models will be children of
members.
Mrs.
Sam
Beer of 804 Mosely
Rd., membership
chairman,
is in
charge
of arrangements
for the
festivities to be held on the lawn
of the Synagogue. Luncheon will
be served at 12 noon.
Mrs. Irving N. Finkle, immediate
past president, will give the invocation
and
will
introduce
Mrs.
David
White,
president,
who
in
turn will welcome the guests.
Mrs. Leonard Wald is co-ordinator of the fashion show; Mrs. Leroy
Mintz
will
provide
the
musical
accompaniment;
and Mrs. Harold
B. Durschlag will narrate.
Assisting Mrs. Beer will be Mes(Continued on page 32)

A
Mrs.

Of

Is Houseguest

Mr.

and

Mrs.

Gorenstein

Dennis M. Luczak, a houseguest
over the weekend of Mr. and Mrs.
Edward A. Gorenstein of 406 Woodland Rd., has an exhibit of his oil
paintings in Highland Park.
They are on display at the Talk
O’
the
Town,
757
Central
Ave.
Lueczak is an art student
at the
University of Notre Dame. His show
will be up for five weeks.

Susan

Selz

“Carol Block Nagel

Championship

former
Highland
Park
girl, | #
Dyne Hardy, recently won the Ki

Middle

Atlantic

States

ociate 0
Electrolysi s Ass
BLOCK
RUTH Y OUNG
from face

Trapshoot- | #

unwanted hair

ing
Handicap
Championship
at
South Rifle Club, Reading, Pa.
Mrs.
Hardy,
the former
Susan
Selz,
daughter
of Mr.
and
Mrs.

Lawrence

H.

Selz,

820

N

D;
HAIR REMOV.
athermy )

Edgewood

Buy

and

hold

U.

S. Savings

A THINKING

Miss

Gloriajean

1893 Sheridan Rd.

:

Short Were
Suite 111

Rd., won the championship in competition with
over 200 men
and
women.
Mrs.
Hardy
was
a 1952
graduate of North Shore Country
Day
School
and
attended
Smith
College.

J D 2-8800

Highland Park

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

Bonds.

WOMAN’S

Housinger

Nicholas T. Housinger of Chicago
announces
the
coming
marriage,
Aug. 1, of his daughter, Gloriajean,
to Robert Burns Johnson Jr., son
of the senior Robert Johnsons of

604 Broadview

Artist

Rifle

Ave.

The

——————

Ui

Rds

&lt;a

ee

owe

EE We

SSS

...on a sort of SENSITIVE Subject:

couple will reside at 574 Broadview
Ave.

Lk

it's
time

for
our
famous

NOW”

SALE

AAAs
i i, Oe OP AE EAE OE Ob OP OP Ab Ob Ob Ob Ab AP Ob Ob OOoO2O
OOO OOO
OO
COO CO OO
COC OS
ODOO
ox
Cleanliness presents a constant problem for the woman
who is entrusted with the maintenance of her home. Dusting, sweeping and just plain picking-up become routine,
but when confronted with a clogged drain or sewer you
wish for a magic wand to dispel the problem. We HAVE
a “magic

which

wand”

will make

basin, floor drain or main
call

discuss

ID 2-3220,

your

sewer

your

sink, bathtub,

line work

problem

with

wash

like new.

Just

a registered

en-

gineer, who will give you a FREE estimate and a GUAR-

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its efficient, courteous and prompt service. The secret is
out... call NOW... ID 2-3220.
—

CECE TET Eee el eal al al tal te! Wel Wee
may we suggest that you tear this out and

SOVoCOOOOoSD

»
*
mM
»
v
*
we
¥

HIKARI
DI DIDI DICH

»*
»*

keep it with your other private memos...

revere

Nationally

AQUA POOLS

during which we traditionally offer

25%

waearatease “Le

marriage

will be solemnized
at St. Paul’s
Church,
The
United
Church
of
Christ, Chicago.
Miss Housinger is a graduate of
Augustana School of Nursing, Chicago, and Mr. Johnson is a graduate of Highland Park High School
and served four years in the United
States Navy. He now is working in
Ravinia.
After their marriage the young

“The Time Is

Cd

Y)

ud Va

‘BACK TO SCHOOL’
FASHION SHOW

Former

Wins

Betrothed

VOOOCOCOCOOOCO

For August

EVIE 4 EVE Ve Ve ot
EEE
PL PePePovovovexenekenes

Set

Advertised

OFF

ON EVERYTHING IN THE SHOP!
The Event you’ve waited for! EVERYTHING—but everything in the shop . . . house gifts, accessories, interior inspirations and wall-decor all at savings of 25%!

Doo

Now’s the time to

acquire those smart decorator touches for your home . . . to
pick up tasteful gifts at exciting savings. SALE RUNS THURSDAY, JULY 23 THROUGH AUG. 1 — DON’T MISS IT!
Cash and Carry Only.
ALL

No Credits Honored.
SALES

No Deliveries.

Custom ‘Built ‘Steel

FINAL.

1888

12’x27' Size

Sheridan

Highland

Rd.

Park

ID 3-0300

Concrete,

Reinforced

FOR

LOCATION

OF

DISPLAY

POOL

P.O. Box 376
July

23, 1959

..

. CALL:

JAYNART, INC.
Libertyville,

Thursday,

Vinyl

Liner, Filter, Skimmer, Underwater Light, Chemical Test Kit, Vacuum Clnr. and Step Ladder are
included.

[[linois

"1995"
COMPLETELY
NO

Larger Models

MONEY

INSTALLED
Available

DOWN

Up to 5 Yrs. to Pay
Phone:

LI 2-7420
Collect

or

LI

2-1724

Calls Accepted
Page

29

�&amp;

Sgt.

Visit
Sgt.

And

Mrs.

Family
Ist

Peterson

Peterson

Route

Abroad

En

class

are

Donald
and

visiting

Mrs.

Donald

his

parents,

the Lester
Petersons,
620
Glenview Ave. Recently returned from

Japan, the Petersons
way to Germany.

are

on their

Highland Parkers

Louis Armstrong

Register For Fall
Term At Wisconsin

Appears Here For
Benefit Performance

Six students from Highland Park
visited the University of Wisconsin
campus this past week to register
for the September semester of the
Madison, Wis., school.

Louis Armstrong will star in a
concert at Tenthouse Theatre Tuesday for the benefit of Foundation
for Hearing and Speech Rehabilitation.
Curtain time is 8:30 p.m.

5
Fantastic Results
Lasts

Days!

Even

-

Through Rain .

FOGGING

EXTERMINATING
Ask About

Our Service

DUSTING

INSECTS &amp;
RODENTS

Plan

Shoreline Mosquito &amp; Pest Control
7 Days A Week

iy

When Your
Condition Demands
Something Flattering

WI

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FINE MATERNITY APPAREL
THE

NORTH SHORE’S MOST
COMPLETE SELECTION

Le Grande Pavillion
645 CENTRAL
HIGHLAND PARK
ID 2-1300
ID 2-0410

5-1749

Girls,

1 Boy

According to a news release from
the University,
those
who
registered are Miss Barbara E. Klevs,
daughter
of the
William
Klevs;:
Miss Nancy Wolff, daughter of the
junior Allan I. Wolffs; Miss Carol
A. Lipman, daughter of the Albert
S. Lipmans;
Miss Rebecca
Kahn,
daughter of Dr. and Mrs. Henry
Kahn;
Miss_
Billie
Rosenhouse,
daughter of the Seymour S. Rosenhouses; and Ronald W. Foreman,
son of the junior H. E. Foremans.
The Want-Ad section is filled with
interesting facts and golden opportunities. Don’t miss it!

e

Your

kitchen
ith

stays
dern

Electric

s

And you can boil, bake, roast, broil—do
every kind of cooking completely automatically.

ea
on
ae

What a job it is to wash kitchen walls!
You need tackle this chore only half as
often, you know—when you cook with a

a

modern

‘a

electric range.

It’s easy to understand why.

,

Electric

ranges burn no fuel, create no soot. Absolutely nothing cooks cleaner!
But an electric range belongs in the

:

shades

©

Register

a

:

f

cl

Mrs. Straus
Mrs. Golan
Mrs. Melvin Straus of 37 Sheridan Rd. is benefit chairman
for
the Foundation which supports the
Hearing and Speech Service at Michael Reese Hospital and Medical
Center.
Mrs. Lawrence Golan is Foundation treasurer; Morton Schambert,
chairman;
Herbert
Stern,
secretary; and Mrs. Samuel Meyer, financial secretary.
Tickets for the benefit may be
ordered
in
advance
from
Mrs.
Strauss, or may be purchased at

the box office the night of the per-

R

formance, In either case, the Foundation will benefit.

San

Diego

Regional

Manager

George Knuepfer, 421 Green Bay
Rd., is the newly appointed
San
Diego Regional sales manager for
Hoffman Electronics Corp.
The
Knuepfers
have
lived
in
Highland Park since 1947.

modern kitchen for other reasons, as well.
Electric cooking means accurate control
of heat.

For whether you’re using the surface
units, baking or broiling ... the cooking
_heat stays at the exact temperature you

Adjudication

and Claim Day Notice
23638
NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
to all
persons that the first Monday of August,
1959, is the new claim date in the estate of
ANNA
ROACH,
Deceased pending in the
Probate
Court
of Lake
County,
Illinois,
and that further 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.
WM.
ROACH,
Executor.
Behanna &amp; Engber, Attorneys
1935. Sheridan Road
Highland Park, II.
IDlewood 2-4304
7/9-16-23 /59—194

select. (And automatic electric controls are

the most accurate made.)
It’s also worth knowing that the kitchen
equipped with a new electric range will
— stay modern for years to come.

Adjudication and Claim Day Notice
NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
to all
persons that the first Monday of August
1959, is the claim date in the estate of
SAMUEL R. BANFIELD, Deceased pending in the Probate Court of Lake County,
Illinois, and that claims may be filed against
the
said
estate
on or before
said
date
without
issuance
of summons.
All claims
filed against said estate on or before said
date and not contested, will be adjudicated
on the first Tuesday after the first Monday
of the next succeeding month at 9 A.M.
The First National Bank of
Highland Park,
Executor
By Henry Pearon, Trust Officer
Singer &amp; Singer
Attorneys for Executor
Highland
Park, Illinois

7/9-16-23/59-201

Bt

FOR THE NEWEST IN ELECTRIC RANGES, SEE YOUR ELECTRIC APPLIANCE DEALER

J Public Service Company
a

OP
Bigst

o

| Page

© Commonwealth Edison Company

30

®

PUBLIC HEARING
HIGHLAND PARK PLAN COMMISSION
NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
that a
public hearing will be held in the Council
Chamber in the City Hall, City of Highland
Park,
Illinois on
Wednesday,
August
5,
1959 at 8:00 P.M.
Said public hearing will
be conducted by the undersigned, the Plan
Commission for the City of Highland Park,
designated and appointed by the Mayor and
City Council of said City, for the purpose
of considering
an amendment
to Section
16-5 of the Highland Park Zoning Ordinance
of 1947.
Said Section to read as follows:
SECTION 16-5. Accessory buildings may
be built in a required rear yard, but such
accessory building shall not occupy more
than 30 per cent of the required rear
yard, provided, that such restriction as to
the percentage of occupancy of the rear
yard shall not apply to Class F multiple
family
dwelling
districts
abutting
upon
an alley, accessory buildings may be built
at the rear yard line where
such rear
yard line abuts upon an alley, and such
accessory building may extend to the side
of lot lines of the property upon which
the accessory buildings are erected without restriction as to the percentage of
the rear yard occupied by said accessory
buildings.
At said public hearing and at any adjournment thereof, an opportunity will be
afforded
to all persons
interested
to be
heard in relation to said matter.
HIGHLAND
PARK PLAN COMMISSION
Norman J. Schlossman, Chairman
APPL
5-59
7/16-23/59—211

Thursday,

July

23,

1959

�Men’s Garden Club Pays Tribute To First President
including
of

all

light

shades

blondes

Permanent

Waves

Hair Cutting
Specializing

In All

Branches

Of

Beauty

Culture

CLASSIQUE BEAUTY SALON
1815

St. Johns

Avenue

ID 2-1603

EXPERIENCED

OPERATORS

You can be sure
of getting “just what
the
When

In solemn

ceremonies

July

13, the central

section

of Memorial

Rose

Garden

of Highland

your registered pharmacist fills a prescrip-

Park

are E. G. Schaubert, present Club president; Mrs. Eugene Pfister, Clayton J. Sandel and E. P. Engle-

We put at your doc-

brecht.

tor’s command
planned

and

planted

17

by the Men’s

Garden

Club

years

ago

of High-

land Park. The garden was presented to the city (Highland Park)

on

June

26,

1942,

in

commemor-

ation of the horticultural achievements of three local men:
“The Rose Garden memoralizes

Highland
C. Egan,

drug
landscape
garden
Jens Jensen, creator

famous landscapes, founder
(Continued on page 33)

manufacture.

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For the Ultimate in Contemporary Living...

ALL WOOL - STYLE

vast

set-up

could be grown in this

climate.
“The
native
is dedicated to

of

the

Park’s first Rosarian, W.
who proved the ‘Queen

of Flowers’

ordered”

tion for you, all of the ingredients specified by
your doctor are measured with the utmost precision.

was dedicated in memory of the late C. Eugene Pfister, former resident and one of the founders of
the Men’s Garden Club of Highland Park. Shown before the rock plaque marking the section

The dedication tribute, as published
below,
was.
delivered
by
Clayton
J. Sandel.
It aptly
describes the esteem with which the
late C. Eugene Pfister is regarded
by his friends, neighbors and fellow gardeners.
“We
are gathered here in the
gardeners’.
Memorial
Garden

doctor

and remember

e We give you an EXTRA service
... your cottons, sport shirts, slacks
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OUR SPECIAL SIZING ” PROCESS*
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his association

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outstanding

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=
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CHICAGO 1, ILLINOIS
Thursday,

July 23, 1959

“©

Serving the North Shore Over 60 Years

ALPER-SULAK
490 N. STATE STREET,
SUITE 220

Phone
2226

Green

Bay

Todoy
Rd., H.P. —

ard:
AMPLE

FREE

PARKING
Page 31

�Hair

Edward Kruegers

Styling

Democratic

Attend
Accounting
oat

Tinting

Meeting

Bleaching

ger,

ly attended

ae,

Manicurin

508

Lake

County

South

Area

the

: Fecent-|nois plan to attend
formance

40th

tional Association
in New York City.
Past

International]

of

a benefit per-|

“Pajama

Game’

President,

of

Chicago

ID

2-2330

to-

y
Among
Highland
Parkers
planning
to
attend
are
the
John
Quisenberrys,
Theodore
Harrises,
Richard Kahns,
John
Eddlemans,
William
Anixters
and
Daniel
Pierces.
Tickets may be obtained
from Mrs. Richard H. Levin, 2576
Sheridan Rd. (ID 2-4709), area vice
president.

Accountants

Chapter

Pebonsgeinegb

inn

1 o)th central regional manager,
;
‘

ef-

;

fective
July 1. He willbe suoceeded as Chicago
manager

Bloch,

by Mark

E.

605 Indian Hill Rd.

Allen
has
been
with
Formica
since
1939
in
several
sales
capacities, including seven years as
district
manager
in
Milwaukee.
During
World
War
II he served
four years with the U.S. Air Force
in the South Pacific.
Bloch joined Formica in 1946 and
has been assistant district manager
in Chicago since 1956, He served
four years with the U.S. Army in
the European Theater during World
War II.

Friday evenings by appointment only )

Central

of

W./13th
“ioncorporation,
corporation has
fil
bet Congressional District ofR Illi-|“|mica
has heen
been named
name

Krueger is a past president of the
Chicago Chapter of the N.A.A. and
a partner in the C.P.A. firm
of
Walton, Joplin, Langer and Company.
(Open

Benefit

Accounting Conference of the Na-|morrow at Music Theatre

g

Highland Parkers
Named Managers

Plan

Theater

In New York | ,occratie Women’s Club of the Hie ickval tise wards

Mr. andGAL Weodinnd
Mrs. Edward
Sineker:
tea.

Permanents

Women

Friday

DOLLARS:

‘Back To School’
(Continued

Choose
TYPING

FOR

TYPING

From

The

PERSONAL

FOR

Following
OR

BUSINESS

SHORTHAND

USE

Jerome Martulies, Arthur H. Rubin,
Leroy Mintz, Harold B. Durschlag,
Sol August, Leonard Wald,
Irwin, Byron Epstein, Sig

Ronald

(days only)

SECRETARIAL

AS

Ho

Me

RY meitoen

ACCOUNTING

x [

COMPTOMETRY

g

BEGIN

ANY

Classes

MONDAY
WHICH

EXCEPT

BEGIN

Wm.

H. Callow,

SPEEDWRITING

AUGUST

3,

1718
W.

H. Callow,

The

Sherman

A

5

Security —
1811

;

Z
eAN

[SS

Johns
OF

Service —

Highland

Ave.
THE

Satisfaction Since 1888

SAVINGS

AND

ID 2-0361

Park

LOAN

FOUNDATION,

INC.

4-3004

QUALITY
MEATS and GROCERIES
“Everything for the
Table”

made!

€

e

6

‘

——
Ss

LO AN

fixtures

DELIVERY

ome

7
Ps

ea

St.

MEMBER

‘

Look smart

oe

ee summertime
oa

"A

4

#

and

ps

¢

ve

&amp;

ASSOCIATION

CLASS

UN

ofe

S AVINGS

VK sy

Ave.

most beautiful plumbing

&gt;

S. Rokoff

Mrs. Feiger at VE 5-1361.

rely OF

17

Prin.

ever

Guerston

calling Mrs. Taub at ID 3--1273 or

one

Prin.

EVANSTON BUSINESS COLLEGE

Taub,

George
Feiger,

and Gerald Schwartz, all of Highland Park.
Reservations
may
be made
by

Ti iahs ‘sive seek

Evening

29)

Adolph Sperling, Theodore Scharf,
Simon B. Rosenstein, Martin Pink,
Sam
Lerner,
Maurice
Fagel,

(6 weeks)

EN
PHI c
STENOGRA

Day and

page

Lavin, Hans Weiniger, Louis Small,

SHORTHAND

Speedwriting
GREGG

Courses:

SCHOOL

from

dames Burton David Eisner, Lawrence Jacobson, Nathan Paset, Sam
Posen,
Max
Auerbach,
Marshall

—

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Begin

attractive on
°

drives and

d

groomed best.

Let our experts give

Prompt

your

service

and pressing.

always

rive, with a crisp, fresh look.

a

thorough

cleaning

You'll travel, and ar-

2-4400
AVE.,

CENTRAL

608

trips

trips at your well-

clothes

IDlewood

°

summer

SERVICE

a Ee

BETTS, BORLAND
&amp; Co.
|

: Since 1896
|

BROKERS
STOCKS

—

BONDS

Members

Phone TODAY

for Pick-up Service!

New York Stock Exchange
and Other Exchanges
PARTNERS
ARTHUR M. BETTS
CHAUNCEY B. BORLAND
FRANCIS P. BUTLER
LOUIS J. STIRLING
DAVID _H. BETTS

e High-style Neo-Angle bath—top quality
matching New Roxbury lavatory—quiet-flushing

.
‘
;
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Enjoy the luxury of

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JOHN P. WISE
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we)

this bathroom while you pay on easy terms.
Comes in white and seven beautiful colors.

DI PIETRO PLUMBING
398 COUNTY LINE RD.
DEERFIELD
WI 5-0044
Page

32

ASSOCIATES
SAMUEL D. ROWE
RICHARD J. SHROSBREE
J. TRACY ALEXANDER
STEPHEN W. BACHAR
POTTER H. —

LAUNDRY &amp; DRY CLEANERS, INC.

HEREeRT demon
SIDNEY

RUBENSTEIN

of Highland

Main Office and Plant:
IDlewood 2-3310 — Deerfield Call Enterprise 1616
512-518 Waukegan Ave., Highwood

BORLAND
111

South

La

Tel.

Park

BUILDING

Salle

CEntral

Thursday,

St.

©

Chicago

3

6-1474

July

23, 1959

�Club Pays Tribute To First President
(Continued

from

forest preserves
in preservation
scapes, wild, life

page

thusiastic

31)

and an influence
of natural
landand wild flowers.

“The native garden and Rockyledge Pool are a tribute to Jesse
Lowe
Smith
who,
for 32 years,
influenced children and adults to
a
deep
appreciation
of
natural
beauty.

“It

seems

appropriate

indeed

when
these three men
are mentioned that we see fit to add, after

17

years,

the

name

this honored group
ers’ Memorial.

“C,

Eugene

of

another

in the

Pfister

to

garden-

was

one

of

the founders, May 2, 1939, of the
Men’s
Garden
Club
of Highland
Park.
He
was
elected
its
first
chairman and later its first president. He served the club full well
in many
ways
through
its first
years and made the Highland Park
Club
well-known
throughout
the
country.
“His list of services to horticulture and particularly to the Rose
are long indeed. To name
but a
few. . . he was director, vice president and president of the Mens
Garden Clubs of America in 1945,
1946. He was president of the Chicago Horticultural Society and the
28th
president
of the
American
Rose Society.
“In
1956 he was
awarded
the
Gold Honor medal by the American Rose Society for his ability to
inspire others to grow roses. Previously,
in 1949,
the
first
Gold
Medal ever awarded by the Mens
Garden
Clubs
of
America
was
given to Mr. Pfister for his en-

No Mosquitoes

tions

services

and

contribu-

to MGCA,

“Gene
initiated
the
National
Rose test program. During World
War
II he was
instrumental
in

establishing
program.
“His

was

the

own

Rose

visited

thusiasm

by

for

ascending

Victory

Garden

garden,

Rosebrae,

thousands.
the

Rose

popularity

His

led

and

en-

to

its

many

of

our own Rose growers originally
were inspired by him,
“Our own Rose Show was first
suggested by him and this Garden
(Memorial Rose Garden) owes its
beginning to his energy and determination.”

Chapter

Plans

Patio

Party Saturday Night

Moraine
Chapter
of
Women’s
American
ORT,
Organization
for
Rehabilitation
through
Training,
will hold a patio party on Saturday
at 8 p.m. The homes of the Walter
Bregmans, 3382 Dato Ave., and the
Seymour
Greenbergs,
3392
Dato
Ave.,
will
be
transforrned
into
“Gourmet
Gardens.”
Plans
include
dancing
on
the
patio to the music of the Bing Nathan combo, cocktails, and a smorgasbord supper at 10 p.m.
A continental
theme
will
be
followed
with
table
settings
representing
countries where the various foods
originated.

Tickets

may

be

secured

from

Mrs.
Stanley
Lapin,
3141
Ave., and Mrs. Jim Kruger,
Brook Rd.

(Advertisement)

for this Garden

Dato
3323

Party

Army Sergeant First Class Meldern M. Phillips, 433 Burton Ave.,
recently began 16 weeks of NikeHercules
guided
missile
training
with Battery F of the Ist Guided
Missile Group’s 2nd Battalion
at
Fort Bliss, Tex.

After
geant

the

and

training

Mrs.

to Minneapolis,
is a Nike

period,

Phillips

MTT

Malicious Mischief
Reported To Police

Sergeant M. M. Phillips
Studies Guided Missiles

Ser-

will

move

Minn., where

there

site.

Residents
Rosemary
Park

of
Rd.

police

the
have

they

AT

sTTHAAAMLLNVLEUOREGILAALLEMGEALAT

streets
told

will

near | =

PHOTO

Highland | §
be

on

the

watch for any children “innocently” | &amp;
playing near new houses under con- | §
struction. The last time a group of |§
children played there, contractors
|&amp;
for the housing reported to police,

Hill

COPIES

AND

PLIABLE PLASTIC
LAMINATING
OF YOUR
IMPORTANT PAPERS

$200 worth of thermopane windows | 3

Powell’s

were
broken. The
malicious mischief was reported to police July 15.

eee

Camera

Central

wi

Mart

ed = 8550

|

ANU

Highland Parkers Attend
Theatre Arts Summer Camp
Six Highland Park children are
attending
the
Harand
Summer
Camp of the Theatre Arts at Elkhart Lake, Wis.
Local
campers
are
Linda
and
Andrea
Aberman,
Dale Rossman,
Judy Frigon, Leslie Korshak
and
David Lewitz.
Young
people
pursue
a sports
program as well as participate in
classical
and
modern
theatrical
productions.

Don't miss

FOR A SMOOTHER
MOVE....CALL

ACROSS THE STREET OR
ACROSS THE NATION

Reh

@oy

a -7 ao} e

STORAGE

&amp;

VAN

CO.

GREEN BAY ROAD
WILMETTE, ILLINOIS
Alpine 1-0032 - UNiversity 4-0052
821

SHIPPING
STORAGE
PACKING

our big

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Allied
Van Lines

HURRY!

EDSEL 2nd Anniversary
SELL-c-BRATION

ENDS
AUG.

See us now for big trade-ins! Big savings!
Your car will never be worth more than right now. Biggest trade-

ins this year. Top savings on all models. Hurry in and take
advantage of the best deals you’ll ever see on the 1959 Edsel.

Mosquitoes

at North

Shore garden

parties have

since Household Pest Control division
new fogging equipment into operation.

become

a thing of the past

of Aerosol Exterminators has put its
One treatment the day of your party

does the job, won’t harm flowers or shrubbery but kills mosquitoes.

HPC

also

Beautiful new

has a special plan that brings sudden death to ants, moths, spiders, waterbugs,
carpet beetles, roaches and all the other annoying and damage-dealing insect

pests that invade our homes.

for insects.

The

HPC

plan

HPC

Househald
Phone

Hillcrest

09 EKDSEL

chemicals are safe for people . . . murder

is inexpensive,

too.

Pest Control

6-6173

7

Loy,

Days

a

Week

ee

Imagine! Only

Memorial Chapels

$260°9

* Most Complete Funeral Home
in Metropolitan Area

¢ Perfect accommodations for
small or large attendance

* Convenient to North Shore

¢ Parking adjacent to building

down
It’s true! As little as

$14.66 per week.

and Downtown Chicago

YOUR CHANCE TO WIN ONE OF TWO

1960 EDSELS

7’S EASY

TO

WIN AN

EDSEL:

1. Use official contest entry blank available
at your Edsel Dealer’s.
2. Complete sentence ‘I would like to win a
1960 Edsel because
@eeeeeeseeeeeeeos
in 25 words or less.

* Funeral consultation and arrangements may be made in your
own home with our North Shore representative.

SUBURBAN

PHONE

NUMBER—VEnrnon

or LOngbeach
5206 North Broadway, Chicago

5-2221

1-4740
(Just north of Foster)

HIGHLAND PARK LINCOLN-MERCURY, INC.
1890 FIRST ST.

HIGHLAND

PARK

rere ener ara

Thursday, July 23, 1959

Page

33

�Happy Scouters Officiate At Camp Ma-Ka-Ja-Wan Dedication

Lodge Dedicated To Schwechel
Large

garrison-size

Boy Scouts

49-star

flag

July 4 at dedication

raised

by

The

ceremonies

cated

for enlarged Camp Ma-Ka-Ja-Wan is a gift
from 10th District, American Legion.
The
District also donated the other 18 American
flags that fly throughout the camp. Bernard
Sheehy of 1046 Ridge Rd. is current commander of the District.
The camp was named as the result of a
contest among Boy Scouts. In 1928 Ma-KaJa-Wan
was selected; it means
‘Land
of

Spring

Lake

spring-fed

Five

Water’

70-acre

hundred

lake

and
on

seventy

refers
the

five

to

man

Scouts

the

then

were

efficient service
in this area 10 years.

BURNER
—

ID 2-8120

SEO SSR OSS
HEATING SERVICE

COMMUNITY
GAS

HEATING
A. E.

SERVICE

Savage,

Owner

OIL - GAS
DEPENDABLE

CLEANING

Of Boilers or Furnaces
BOILER SALES &amp; INSTALLATION

Windsor
If no answer

1010
Page

5-0602

call Windsor

5-4427

HAZEL AVE., DEERFIELD
34

River Camp,

146-acre Camp

—

WATCH

of

OIL AND
Heating

dedi-

Execu-

and

85-acre

Camp

Watch

Inspector

for the North

recruited

from

Lake and
Counties.

Established

Office

West

of

in

Cook

and

1885

Nursery

Deerfield

R.R.

Road

Deerfield

PLUMBING

IT—

For Your

Repair Screen Doors and Windows
Replace Broken Windows
Fix Storm Windows and Doors
Keys Made To Order While You Wait.

Store Hours Daily 8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. —

YOUR

nanniger He”

RAVINIA
447

Roger

Williams

Formerly

6 bid

Wed.

ARE OPEN

’til Noon

SUNDAYS—

HARDWARE
Husenetter’s

NOW

On Linens, Blouses, Sweaters,
Towels, Shirts, etc

Your

ID

Is Here
532 WAUKEGAN

¢

AVE.

HIGHWOOD
Phone

Service

ID 2-9565

with

* Septic Tanks
Catch Basins
Pumped

WI 5-3600

2-4387

Residential
454

a Smile

. pisice

,

Needs

HAROLD ROOT
PLUMBING CO.
Repair

HIGHLAND REFUSE
SERVICE

SHELL DEALER

Plumbing
CALL

If no

MONOGRAMMING

UNiversity 4-3034

part

WI 5-0035

We

FOR

Evanston

34 communities

northern

PARK, TLL.

Western

— LET US DO

CO.

Fabric Shop

Thunderbird.

GRGRRHRERERGRARE ROARK

BROS.

Pleating — Belts
Buttons —- Hand Bound
&amp; Machine Button Holes

Russell

These, together with Camp Ma-KaJa-Wan serve the Council Scouts

GAS

Highland Park

and

F. D. CLAVEY
RAVINIA NURSERIES

TTT
DRESSMAKER’S SERVICE

722 Main

7 Committee;

Inc.

Carl Casel, Division Manager

Vogue

Robert C. Brown Jr., 1300

LANDSCAPING

Equipment

444 Central Ave.

Fund;
Region

Crown

REPAIR

CENTRAL &amp; SHERIDAN
HIGHLAND
- TELEPHONE ID 2- 2028

_ Official

OIL

Pk.

Development
S, member

Leading W atch Repair, Craftsmen
and Jewelry Designers

BRAUN

First St., Highland

Ave.

‘oleeds ° Jewelers |

SERVICE

PHONE
ID 2-3804

2()th
CENTURY
TV &amp; Radio

left, was

Bs Dox

JEWELER

CORNER

gg MEST NUTS
ALL
MAKES
Prompt, reasonable

hall, pictured

in tribute to current Scout

land Park, between Pearson
and
Antigo, Wis., near Wolf River.
Recently
North
Shore
Area
Council has acquired, by gifts, 360acre Camp
Traer, 360-acre Paint

Gas

OIL

for

1858

camp.

;

OIL
SALES

\

in

in use; they accommodated some 420 boy
scouts, an all-time high for the camp.
Frank S. Wichman, 1351 St. Johns Ave.,
pictured above, was one of the original committee that selected the 720-acre camp site
approximately 300 miles northwest of High-

FUEL

US

dining

Lodge

C. Whitney, formerly of Highland Park. The veiled plaque
above Wichman (left) lists the honored names of 108 persons
who contributed $500 or more during the 1957 campaign.

On July 7 the old and new facilities were

HERE
SERVICE

of Camp

Lincoln

served meals during dedication week end.
This included 258 guests who were housed
in the
new
facilities,
together with
the

TELEVISION

lodge with

tive E. A. Schwechel, pictured center, above.
With him are
four past presidents of the Council: from the left, Donald L.
Porth, Northbrook; Milton H. Gray, 420 Lakeside Pl., chair-

grounds.

persons

new

as Schwechel

,
Rubbish

- Commercial
Central

ID 2-2883

Work — New
Dishwashers

Work

Water Heaters
answer call WI 5-0743

Phone

ID 24500
for
Advertising Space
on this page
Thursday, July 23, 1959

�LAKE MOTORS offers you

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NOW!

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as

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DESOTO
2.

LAKE has the WIDEST selection of new cars in the midwest.

Not 2, 3, 4 or 5, BUT SIX

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and IMPERIAL... YES, LAKE MOTORS has ALL SIX!

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LAKE SERVICE FACILITIES are LARGE, MODERN, COMPLETE and CONVENIENT
as you can find! Factory trained SERVICE EXPERTS give your new car the PROFESSIONAL CARE your WISE INVESTMENT DESERVES.

Weekdays

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DESOTO

1766-1778 FIRST ST., HIGHLAND PARK
- Thursday, July 23, 1959

@

DODGE

@

PLYMOUTH

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PHONES: ID 2-2500

:

�%

Receives Good

LAWN-BOY

‘contact

By

Makers

Conduct

of:

Johnson-Evinrude

Specialist Four Daniel M. Herz,
| son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Herz,
86 Waller Ave., recently was awarded the Good Conduct Medal while
serving
with
Headquarters
Company
of the U.S. Army
Port
of
Embarkation in Bremerhaven, Germany.

As ADVERTISED IW

LIFE * LOOK

” Saturday ‘P
ost
« Evening

Power Mower Exchange
Highest Trade-In Allowances

COAST

See

Market

your eye physician

(M.D.) first. If he says
you can wear them—
H.0.Y. has all the newest

Ei

:

The

Bet
ria

COAST
_ Lake

Want-Ad

interesting

types. Get the benefit
of our 20 years of
pioneering and

a

TO
Square

tunities.

facts
Don’t

and

miss

Entered

STORES

is filled with

golden

Army

1957

Herz received the decoration for
his exemplary behavior, effeciency
and
fidelity,
according
to
the
release. He
entered the army
in
1957
and
was
stationed
at Fort
Chaffee, Ark., before being sent to
Europe in 1958. Herz is a graduate
of Highland Park High School and
Lake Forest .College.

Forest 3998

section

Palm Tree Sets Theme For HawaiianLuau

Medal

oppor-

it!

continued research.

| For the answer fo your questions about contact lenses—

be}

THE HIGHLAND HOUSE

°

_

write

for our new

iace
‘ {

booklet.

RESTAURANT

of Vision” Me.

losed f for Redecorating
Will ll Be Closed
d
i
°

It didn’t take long for members of the arrangements
committee for the Hawaiian Luau Evening to be held Aug.
15 to get into the spirit of the affair after Donald Skrinar,
Highwood recreation director, set up the palm tree, used on
a recent Community Center float, next to the pool at the
Bertram Schwartz home at 885 Virginia Rd.
Pictured

: \

Craftsmen

in Optics

SHERRY
BUNS
NORTH WABASH, Age?
CHICAG

JULY

_ And

Will

aT

Reopen

98 28

July

-

30—at

11:00

A.M.

©H.O.V.
e

at

the

pool-side

e

Slavin

(Deerfield),

Eugene

Mrs. Seymour Goldgehn
win Slavin (Deerfield).
Under

4

:

Check these points

kc

plan-

ning meeting are, standing, from
the left, Rudolph Schwartz, chairman,
Jay
Wasserman,
Martin
Kramer,
and
Bertram
Schwartz,
host.
Seated
are
Mrs.
Theodore
Kassel,
Mrs.
Rudolph
Schwartz,
Mrs.
Bertram
Schwartz,
hostess,
Mrs. Leland Winter,
Mrs. Edwin

29

and youll see why
¢

Kt

The
party,
front
quired

Rose,

and

Ed-

the Stars

Hawaiian Luau, an evening
is to be held on the lakegrounds
of
the
newly-acB’nai Torah building at 2789

Oak St. There
Hawaiian food,

will be authentic
music and enter-

tainment

Oriental

in

the

part of the Temple

Gardens,

grounds.

Reservations
may
be made
by
calling Mrs. Winter at ID 2-7676.

WHEN ITs
TIME TO ACT

7

Farr, Phillips
Win Scholarships
John Farr, 1265 Taylor Ave., and
Fred Phillips, 208 Llewellyn Ave.,
Highwood,
have received scholarships to Northwestern U. from the
Evans Scholars Foundation.
They were two of 28 boys from
the Chicago area so awarded. The
scholarships are given annually to
golf caddies and the winners are
chosen by the Western
Golf Association.

Three Local Couples
Vacation At Greenbriar
The
Henry
Braeburn Rd.,

E. Franzens,
230
Louis Telpners of

340 Moraine Rd. and Harry Mayers
of 1260 Sherwood
Ave. have returned after a vacation at Greenbrier, Sulphur Spring, W. Va. The
gentlemen of the group combined
pleasure with business as they attended a three-day conference at
the resort.

NOTICE
#
4
i\

Galaxie 4-doc: Town Victoria

} eR
|)

er

eS

|

Looking for quality cars that will look
and act younger over the years? Then
Ford’s your baby! For the world’s most
beautifully proportioned cars are designed for long living . . . starting with

‘s
‘
"
M
;

the youthful beauty of their Thunderbird
lines.
Model for model, the built-for-keeps
Ford is the lowest-priced car of the most
popular three! *

‘

© LOCAL

TRADEMARKS,

Inc.

*Based on a comparison of manufacturers’ suggested retail prices
Aluminized muffler—It will normally
last up to twice as lon as the conventional type. Standard equipment on
all 59 Fords.

a
oF
‘

Diamond Lustre Finish —It
never needs waxing, yet keepsits
new car look for years. Of course,
only Ford in its field has it.

F

BOUNCE

H

ON

IN

FOR

FORD

|

DEALER'S

SUMMER

Wide-contuured frame—It providesa
“bumper of steel’ around all six
passengers. Only Ford in its field
gives you this safer frame design.

Five sturdy roof cross braces—
Five all-steel roof cross braces,
solidly welded to rails, provide
extra rigidity, greater safety.

A

HONEY

OF

A

DEAL AT YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD

a

DURING

HIS

SWAPPING

FORD

BEE

et

Deep-Block engine design—It
means extra rigidity and longer
life for your engine. Only Ford in
its field has this engine design.

HOLMES
1909 St. Johns Ave.
Page

36

66-plate battery—It has higher
Capacity and
provides surer
starting than standard 54-plate
batteries in competitive cars.

en

is

yr

Kn

\/

Fi

\

\ /

,

F.D.A.F.

é

‘

If you're attracted to pretty
homes, let us show you our
listings. We have homes to
fit every budget . . . every
family’s needs.

r-:

THE

a

Ul

WORLD'S

MOST

MOTOR
Highland Park

BEAUTIFULLY

PROPORTIONED

CO.
ID 2-8640

CARS

BUILDERS

REALTORS

+ APPRAISERS

#

826 DEERFIELD Road.
DEERFIELD, ILLINOIS

OF

SALE

NOTICE is hereby given that on August
12, 1959, at 9:30 A.M.
Central Daylight
Saving Time, the County Board of School
Trustees of Lake County, Illinois, will sell
at public sale at not less than the minimum
price: specified, all its right, title and interest in and to the following
described
property located thereof:
:
That part of Lot A in Block 3, Highland
Park Highlands, First Addition, being a
subdivision of parts of Section 15, Township 43 North, Range 12 East of the Third
Principal Meridian, Lake County, Illinois,
lying (1) southerly of a line 75 feet South
of and parallel to the south line of Lot 1
in said Block 3 in said subdivision and
(2) westerly of the east line of said Lot 1
in said Block 3 in said subdivision as extended southerly.
Minimum acceptable bid: $12,750.
Location of property: On the Northeast
corner of Summit Avenue and North Avenue, Highland
Park, Illinois.
:
The sale will be made on the following
terms:
;
The sale of the interest of the grantor in
the land will be made to the highest bidder
bidding
at least the minimum
acceptable
price.
A contract will be entered into between the County Board of School Trustees
executed by its Secretary and the successful
bidder at the conclusion of the bidding and
the successful bidder will be required to
deposit thirty per cent (30%) of the amount
bid at that time and to pay the balance of
the purchase price within (20) days. If the
balance of the purchase price is not paid
within 20 days, then at the option of the
County Board of School Trustees the thirty
per cent (30%) deposit will be retained as
damages
and the bidder will then forfeit
all interest in the property.
All of grantor’s interest in said property will be conveyed by quit claim deed of the County
Board of School Trustees of Lake County,
Illinois conveying a merchantable title to
said property.
Information
regarding the property, the
Chicago Title and Trust Company title report thereon showing the title of grantor
and the form of contract to be entered into
by the successful bidder can be secured at
the Office W
C., PETTY, County Superintendent of Schools, Courthouse, Waukegan,
Illinois.
DATED this 23rd day of July, 1959.
By Order of the County Board of Schoel
Trustees of Lake County, Illinois.
ROBERT J. WILTON, President
County Board of School Trustees
of Lake County, Illinois
W. C. PETTY, Secretary
7/23-30 8/6/59—212

Thursday,

July

23, 1959
he

r

�North

Highwood Couple Represent
Area Barracks, Auxiliary

Shore

SIDELIGHTS
From

Here

Mr.

Burtis

and

and

Mrs.

Ray

Suzzi

Ave., Highwood,

of

were

32

dele-

gates
in Peoria
a week
ago
at
the department convention of Veterans of World War I, USA. Suzzi
is Service Officer of Barracks, and
Mrs. Suzzi is president of the auxiliary of Waukegan area No, 917.

There

House Comes Down For Sunset Expansion

AVORITE SPORT. TM MEMOS

a

Mrs. Suzzi was
a member of the
credentials committee at the convention and Sunday was appointed
Assistant Guard by the newly-elected department president.

The

Want-Ad

interesting
tunities.

facts
Don’t

section
and
miss

is filled
golden

i

RR

(ata

By ED GREENWALD
According to the records, Henry Armstrong was the only boxer to
hold 3 world championships simultaneously. . . . He won the featherweight
crown by knocking out Petey Sarron in 6 rounds on October 29, 1937—
took the welterweight title from Barney Ross on May 31, 1938—and on
Only
August 17, 1938, took lightweight title from Lou Ambers. .
other triple crowner

with

oppor-

was

Bob

Fitzsimmons.

. . . Fitzsimmons

held

4
te
a]

middle-

weight, light-heavyweight, and heavyweight title but not at the same time.
... (more next week).

i

GREENWALD’S, 1775. SECOND STREET — ID 2-1100

oa

it!

SUMMER

CLEARANCE|

The old Gieser home at 1822 Green Bay road recently was
down to make room for a 50’ x 100’ addition to Sunset

torn
Foods

new

Supermart,

bakery,

located

next

delicatessen,

door.

The

lobster tank

addition

will

house

coffee

counter,

ac-

cording to John Cortesi, president of Sunset
pects to open the new addition in November.

Foods.

Cortesi

ex-

Accepts Appointment
As Reference Librarian
Kent Followell of Deerfield has
been named Reference Librarian at
Highland Park Public Library.
Followell
attended
Blackburn
College and was graduated from
Wheaton College with a Bachelor
of Science: He majored in history
and science. After graduation he
was
associated
with
several
elementary
school
systems
in
the
states of Illinois and Iowa before
joining. -the
.Commonwealth _ Edison Company in Chicago as assist-

ant

district

engineer.

Later he returned to teaching
and
held
teacher-librarian
posi-

(Continued

on page

40)

AN ORDINANCE
AMENDING
AN ORDINANCE
ENTITLED
“AN
ORDINANCE CREATING A TRAFFIC COMMISSION AND ESTABLISHING TRAFFIC REGULATIONS
FOR
THE
CITY
OF HIGHLAND
PARK, LAKE
COUNTY, ILLINOIS,” AS AMENDED.
BE IT ORDAINED BY THE COUNCIL
OF THE
CITY
OF HIGHLAND
PARK,
ort
ahd OF
LAKE,
STATE
OF
ILLINOIS:
SECTION I. That that portion of Schedule III B of an ordinance entitled, “AN
ORDINANCE
CREATING
A _ TRAFFIC COMMISSION AND ESTABLISHING
TRAFFIC
REGULATIONS
FOR
THE
CITY
OF
HIGHLAND
PARK,
LAKE
COUNTY, ILLINOIS,”’’ as amended be and
the same
is hereby
amended
to read as
follows:
SCHEDULE III B
PARKING
PROHIBITED
BETWEEN
THE HOURS OF NINE O’CLOCK A.M.
AND
SIX
O’CLOCK
P.M.
ON
ANY
SATURDAY,
SUNDAY,
OR HOLIDAY
DURING
THE
MONTHS
OF
JUNE,
JULY,
AUGUST
AND
SEPTEMBER
WITHIN
THE
DISTRICT
OR
UPON
ANY OF THE STREETS AS FOLLOWS:
(See Section 64 (c)
Hawthorne Lane.
Ravine Drive from Forest Avenue to
the Lake (excepting the turn around
at

NOTICE
OF
PUBLIC
HEARING
NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
by the
Board of Education of School District No.
111 in the County of Lake, State of Illinois,
that a tentative budget for said School District for the fiscal year beginning July 1,
1959 will be on file and conveniently available to public inspection at the Oak Terrace
School, 240 Prairie Avenue, Highwood, Illinois, from and after 8 o’clock A.M., on the
23rd
day
of July
1959,
at Oak
Terrace
School in this School District.
NOTICE
IS.
FURTHER:
HEREBY
GIVEN that a public hearing on said budget will be held at 7:30 P.M. on the 25th
day of August 1959, at Oak Terrace School
in this School District 111.
Dated this seventh day of July, 1959.
Board of Education of School District No.
111 in the County of Lake, State of Illinois.
By: CHARLOTTE
BYE, Secretary
7/23 /59—216
PUBLIC HEARING
HIGHLAND
PARK
PLAN COMMISSION
NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
that a
public hearing will be held in the Council
Chamber in the City Hall, City of Highland
Park, Illinois, on: Wednesday,
August
12,
1959 at 8:00 P.M.
Said. public hearing will
be conducted by the undersigned, the Plan
Commission for the City of Highland Park,
designated and appointed by the Mayor and
City Council of said City, for the purpose
of considering the following matter:
A
petition
by
Cosmopolitan
National
Bank
of
Chicago,
Trustee
Under
Trust
Number 6445, to rezone from Class ‘‘C” to
Class “‘D” the following described property
bounded on the North by the High School
Athletic Field, on the South by Taylor Avenue, on the West by Western Avenue, and
on the East by Beverly Place:
Lots 5, 6 (except the North 53.13 feet of
the West 96 feet of the East 228 feet of
Lot 6) and Lot 7 (except the North 72
feet of the East 132 feet and the West
96 feet of the East 228 feet of Lot 7) in
Duffy’s Subdivision of the South 34 acres
of the West one half of the South East
One quarter of Section 22, Township 43
North, Range 12, East of the third P.M.
At said public hearing and at any adjournment thereof, an opportunity will be
afforded
to all persons interested
to be
heard in relation to said matter.
HIGHLAND
PARK PLAN COMMISSION
NORMAN
J. SCHLOSSMAN, Chairman.
7/23-30/59—217

Thursday,
Rar

;

July 23, 1959

the

street

end,

and

on

the

|

50%

to

25%

a

and

Kent Followell

SAVE

south

side only of that portion of Ravine
Drive providing access thereto where
posted with signs permitting parking
at these times).
SECTION
II.
That
all ordinances
or
parts of ordinances in conflict herewith are
hereby repealed.
SECTION III. This ordinance shall be in
full force and
effect from
and
after its
passage, approval and publication, according
to law.
ROBERT S. CUSHMAN,
Mayor

* Redwood

Furniture

* Barbecue

Grills

5’ Barbecue Set

ie

3 Styles

:

Regular $29.95 - $39.95

fe

Now $19.88 to $16.88

|

Regular $12.95

Now

$9.88

Attest:

ROY MILLEN, City Clerk
Passed:
July 13, 1959
Approved:
July 13, 1959
Published:
July 23, 1959
Recorded:
July 14, 1959
7/23 /59—215
PUBLIC HEARING
HIGHLAND
PARK
PLAN COMMISSION
NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
that a
public hearing will be held in the Council
Chamber in the City Hall, City of Highland
Park, Illinois on Wednesday,
August
12,
1959 at 8:00 P.M.
Said public hearing will
be conducted by the undersigned, the Plan
Commission for the City of Highland Park,
designated and appointed by the Mayor and
City Council of said City, for the purpose
of considering the following matter.
A
petition
submitted
by
the
Manilow
Construction Company
which
requests the
rezoning of certain properties in Section 16,
Township 43 north, Range 12 east of the
Third P.M. liying west of the east Skokie
drainage ditch, north of Half Day Road,
east of the west line of the NE%
of the
SE%
of said Section 16, and south of a
line approximately 2,000 feet north of and
parallel to the centerline of Half Day Road.
Said request is substantially as follows:
A portion of the “G” Outlying Business
District, lying in the southwest corner of
the tract above described, to be rezoned to
“D” Single Family Dwelling District.
A portion of ‘‘A” Country Estate District
within the area above described to be rezoned to “‘D” Single Family Dwelling District.
At said public hearing and at any adjourmnment
thereof, an opportunity will be afforded to all persons interested to be heard
in relation to said matter.
HIGHLAND PARK PLAN COMMISSION
NORMAN
J. SCHLOSSMAN.
Chairman

* Quantities Limited
* Cashway
* Includes Delivery

Club Chair

3 for $59.88

‘
:

‘

CRAFTWOOD
LUMBER
1590

Deerfield

COMPANY,
Road,

Highland

8 A.M. - 5:30 P.M. — Thursday until
Just

west

of

Route

41—Phone

Park,
9 —

INC.
Illinois

Sunday

|IDlewood

10-1

2-0140

7/23-30/59—218

Page

37

�Deerfield Doctor
a:
oIs as
e of

it

always

had,

Manager

under

ordinance.

any
When

boil it down, the only real difnce is that the voters decide
type

of government

rather than

Board. Then, there is a burden
er
the referendum
type
of
lager,
that
the
Manager
is
onsible
to
the
people
in
a
ater degree than if he were put

by the Board. The Board retains
clear

right

to

employ

or

dis-

ge the Manager at all times!
re is another great virtue to the
ferendum

type,

and

that

is

the

ibility that is implied. I’m all for
the

referendum,

but

as

I said

last

reek, we don’t have to rush into
—I’d wait for the next general
ction.
When I agreed with the caucus
ommittee

to

accept

the

nomina-

ion for President, I did it because
hought

I could

do some

good

I thought

I

with

job

the

could

I

handle

have

it

that

ings in a salary. (As most of you
w,

no

member

of

the

Resigns Assistant

At Chicago Conclave

Deerfield Twp.

Dr.
side

William
Lane,

public

Mauer,

served

relations

as

964

Brook-

chairman

during

the

of

63rd

annual national convention of the
American
Osteopathic Association
last week at the Palmer House.

Dr.

Mauer,

a

new

resident

of

Deerfield, maintains
an office in
the Loop and recently opened an
office at 924 Deerfield Rd. in the

home

of the

late

Dr.

C. Johnston

Davis.
Attended

U.

S.

N.

He received his pre-medical education at the U.S. Naval Academy
and
Northwestern.
He
graduated

from

the

Chicago

College

Board

ceives any remuneration for
tving as a member or as Presi-

Mrs.

Clarence

of

Osteopathy in 1956. Dr. Mauer is a
general
practitioner
in medicine
and surgery.
dent). I’m sure that all other Board
members thought the same, and I
hope they still do. We’ve gotten off
to a bad start but time heals lots
of wounds, and pretty soon maybe
we'll get down to cases.
Eldon
Holmquist
Village President

(Continued

Post

(Minnie)

Balke

of

Highland
Park,
age 84, who
has
been an assistant Deerfield Town-

ship

supervisor

for

14

years,

has

resigned
because
of
ill
health.
Samuel Smith, former police magistrate of Highland Park, has been
appointed to fill the 2-year unexpired
term
left by Mrs.
Balke’s
resignation.
Mrs. Balke, as a member of the
Lake County Board of Supervisors,

assisted

Academy

for

2 Village,
because
I thought
ere’d be some fun in it, and bese

rs. Clarence ‘Balke

Acts As Chairman

by

Karl

Berning,

West

Deerfield
Township Supervisor,
when the village and township were
involved in litigation with the National Brick Co. in 1952.
Early in her supervisorship, Mrs.
Balke served on the committee of
the Lake County Hospital
(where
indigents from this area and
all
Lake County are sent). She is justly proud of her contribution to this
committee since its efforts resulted
in the hospital being placed on the
approved list of the American College of Surgeons.
For

13

years

she

was

treasurer

of the Mosquito Abatement District,
which

includes Deerfield.

| Fell Shoes

Deerfield

Business

Gives

His

View

To

Editor:

the

page

4)

Man

Points

A week ago, these columns included a letter entitled “Here are
the facts about the Village Board.” |
I feel that the headline was entirely misleading, as the writer was
merely stating his views, and not
presenting any factual matter. * I
am sorry that H.N.K. added fuel

to the apparent
must

be

fire, but his letter

answered.

There
has
been
a ‘“COMMITTEE,” which he choses to call the
“COMMITTEE
OF TWENTY.”
It
has been composed of a number of
local citizens, many of whom have
served the Village well in different
capacities in the past, and none of
whom
have
a
personal
‘ax
to
grind” in the present difficulties.
They have been disturbed at the
sometimes
juvenile
or immature
actions
of several
Village
Board
members who apparently place personal desires and animosity above
the public jobs they hold in representing the residents of Deerfield,
who elected them.
In the past few weeks,
all or
part of the “Committee” have met
with all of the Village Board, the
Village
President,
and
the Manager, not collectively but individually. This has been done in an
attempt
to learn
from
each
of
them, their reasons for the lack of
cooperation between
Board Members, the President and the Manager; also to impart to them the
necessity
of handling Village
affairs in a more expeditious manner,
and to help in any way possible
to promote
a harmonious,
work
together attitude of the Board.

Open THURS. Eves.
‘til 9 p.m.

HIGHLAND PARK
HUBBARD WOODS

from

SUMMER SHOE
CLEARANCE

Deerfield is no longer the sleepy
little Village with minor problems

that

could

be

handled

smoothly

with a village government composed of a six member board and a
president. It is now a village ap
proaching 11,000 population and is
among
the three fastest growing

suburban
cago

Prices Reduced on Most

communities

Metropolitan

in the Chi-

area.

This

growth brings problems, of which
all of us are aware. Namely schools,
parks, water and sewer problems,
and last but not least growing pains
in general. It is an ever growing
list of activities, requiring the constant
attention
of
the
Village
authorities. The members
of the
board
and
the
president
serve
without pay. They each have a full
time job earning a living to support
their respective families. Most of
them commute from Deerfield to
their place of employment. At work
they are heckled by phone calls.

Summer Styles
A Large Selection
Of Styles &amp; Sizes Still Available

At home

their life is not their own

because
of phone calls etc. With
so little time to devote to village
affairs, after their regular jobs are

done daily it would
would

do

seem that they

everything

in

their

power to lighten their Village work
load.

Anyone

in

the

business

world

around Chicago knows that at best
one job is all that can be handled
efficiently.
A
start
was
made
several years ago to alleviate this
problem for our board members,
when a village manager was hired.

But

31.

BANK’
NTEREST

633

Central

932

Linden

Highland Park
Hubbard Woods |

BANKS
1771 Second St.

no

village

board

has

ever

given a manager an opportunity to
show them that the board members
work could be lightened by letting
him handle the details and by letting the board set the policies. Any

“The Service Bank

Of Highland

Park”

HIGHLAND

BANK—POST OFFICE BLDG.
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

Bruce

Garrett

The Deerfield-Bannockburn Summer Recreation program contains
a variety of events. Last week at
Maplewood
School,
a bicycle
parade was held.
Grandmother

Makes

Costume

Bruce Garrett, age 6, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Brower Garrett of 1136
Cherry St., was feeling pretty sad
last week when his bicycle had to
be laid up for repairs. However, his
grandmother made a clown costume
for him and made his horse and he
was able to lead the bicycle parade

and join in all the fun.
business corporation would expect
its executive officer to operate the
business after the board of directors: established the basic policies.
Why is running a village like Deerfield so different?
Are the above mentioned activities of the “Committee of Twenty,”
so dastardly that its “conservative

citizen members
should know
better?” Is it wrong for them to try
and clear up a local problem without ensuing publicity? Is it wrong
for the village manager to want and
to have
authority to do his job
properly? Is it wrong for the local
citizens to wish to know why it
takes so long for the village board
to accomplish things?
It is impossible for all of our
citizens to attend all of the board
meetings in our Village Hall, but
I feel that it is very important to
our Community that each of you
attend as many as possible and give
encouragment and support to our
trustees, and village president.

This

is

not

a

“Committee

of

Twenty” letter, but just an informative letter to clear up a few of the
rumors around town. While I am
writing this my first letter to the

Editor, I wish to register one complaint.
I
when
any

the

Review

sincerely
letter is

that

believe
that
published
in

the

name

and

address
of the writer should
be
included.
I have been a resident of Deerfield over six years and have been
in business locally for 13 years.
Edwin M. Gillen
566 Longfellow Avenue
(* The headlines for HNK’s
letter and all others are written
by the editor.)

PARK
IDilewood 2-—7800
Thursdday,

Jul

�Ta

BEEF RIB ROAST

Rainbow Trout
Stream Fresh Brand
Free! 60c Value! 2
Fland-Tied Trout
Flies in Each Pkg.

Super-Right Smokies
Tender Rib Steaks
Beef Chuck Steaks:

SUPER-RIGHT ee —|" ”"

“7 00

10-02.
pkgs.

{ 2-02.

pkg.

Super-Right
Quality

5TH AND 6TH
RIBS

45°

IST THRU 4TH RIBS, Ib. 67c

Ib. 15°

Pan

Ready,

Fresh, Whole

or

FRYERS
WATERMELON

49 CUT-UP

Blade Cut
uper-Right

kl

Our Vegetable Department is all "ears", sweet, young, tender,

teats’ on AQ,

juicy ears! The price is low, the value's high ... come get ‘em!

with

Beauties

Bursting

Juice

Pascal Celery
Blueberries
Red Plums

Milnot

Low in Calories.
Perfect for Coffee
or Baking

Root Beer

Kola, Ginger
Ale, Excelsior
Club

10. Pure Sugar
10.
24-0z.
Btl.

G.W.

Brand,

Granulated

A&amp;P

Brand,

Frozen,

(Plus Deposit)

“a 19° Strawberries

Barhecue Sauce

m.da¢

Printing

Cream Cheese

=~.

dor.

a

Ann P age Ketchup

pte Bean Sprouts

25
me, 49°

ix"

pint
box

California
Large size

10°

9c

w. 19¢

yey

at 19

Jello Pudding “22! $ ,.,. 29°

10° Gorn Flakes “'zSs*"

Irish Potatoes “s:"~"

“S: 10° Flavor-Kist Saltines

Kool-Aid." Sre,

12... 45°
THE GREAT

1876

stalk

size.

Michigan
Cultivated

Sliced &amp; Sugared
i

Gut Green Beans .... ee O°

30

10 = 89-

Snider’s Catsup “=&lt;”
=~

Mich.

Libby Tomato Juice
ATLANTIC

&amp; PACIFIC

=, 27°

—_. . 20°
“".. 25°

TEA COMPANY

Ist Street
All Prices Effective Through July 25th

Thursday,

July 23,°1959

Page

39

�Kendig, Chickerneo
Shape Up Program
On 1959 Football
Highland

Parkers,

mer,

may

about

football

tember

find

is

Kendig,

deep

it

hard

this

week.

coming

athletic

and

in

to

SepS.

High-

land
Park
High
School,
has
announced that John Chickerneo, new
football coach, will start the new
program four weeks from now.
Physical examinations for all candidates
for
the
varsity
football
team are scheduled for 9 a.m. Aug.
29 at the high school. Freshmen
will report at 11 a.m.

Library
In

Mrs.

Science

the

Richard

Kuhns,

continuity

F.

of

topsy - topsy - topsy - topsy

miss

BIG

golden

oppor-

it!

SCREEN!

AL

OUTDOOR
THEATRE

GRAYSLAKE
ROUTE 130” Bt

INTACT!

UNCUT!

AT REGULAR PRICES
NOW—ENDS SAT., JULY 25

:

5

Li?

ISNEYS

*

library

Starts

Music

Friday,

For

The

Tonight

jon

1 Fig
:
Gerry Mulligan

ani

July 28
Chicago Symphony
Orchestra
Andre Cluytens

July 25
ikat ‘Matte

oh

fahted lr

Conducting

tanist

Chicago Symphony
Orchestra

July 29 &amp; 31
Richard

Conducting

In the Theatre

Vladimir Golschmann

Dyer-Bennet

July 30 &amp; August 1
Leon Fleisher, Pianist
Chicago Symphony Orchestra
Andre Cluytens Conducting

FIRST TIME EVER AT
THESE POPULAR PRICES!

Admission to park $1.50
1000 unreserved free seats
FREE
PARKING
Phone: Northern suburbs—ID 2-1236
Chicago—ST 2-9696.
After 5 P.M.—HO 5-7600

%é 52a -* Bestorid-Wide
Picture Honors
Awards

GLENCOE THEATRE

MICHAEL TODD'S

ID

in8o asy®

FRingston

Conducting

24th

und nee

Vernon

2-0605

Ave.,

Glencoe
VErnon

Sth and FINAL

In the wonder of

Hi-Fi SreneoPHOMIG Sound

854

EXCLUSIVE

|

WEEK!

SHORE

SHOWING!

All the romance...
songs...and spectacle
of the entertainment

Friday, July 31st

COMMANDMENTS

NORTH

5-0605

DON'T MISS IT!

Macs tar ardincderaa!

CECIL B.DEMILLE'S

ater

July 24

Chicago Symphony
Orchestra
Vladimir Golschmann

FREE

July

Unidos

Park

8:30 P.M.

service

IT PAYS TO WAIT ....
SEE ALL THE ROADSHOW
HITS ON OUR GIANT
42 FT. SCREEN AS
SHOULD BE SHOWN!

L.F.
Call

Mystery

: |

PARKING

4370

KLEINE

in Highland

1716 CENTRAL’ UN-4-4900

THE TEN

Under

Don’t

and

- topsy

tunities.

facts

- topsy

interesting

section is filled with

president

aik-CONDITIONg,

world’s most

“.

wonderful
entertainment!

CHECK CHICAGO PAPERS
FOR FEATURE TIMES!

eatre

The Want-Ad

The Innocents

Plan a Complete Evening in the
EDGEWATER BEACH HOTEL

the thrilling Adult

osenen=* PUYHOUSS
Dinner] Call LO 1-6308

MISS MARGARET

Reservations, Marshall Field's, 3rd fl.
Box-Office Oper Daily 12 to 9 P.M.

Presents Your Favorite Little Actress

SPECIAL SAT. MATS. 3 P.M.
and SATURDAYS AT 10 P.M.

Proudly

Sun. at 7:00; Mon. thru Fri. 8:39;

Converse

|

Mr. John

- topsy
|

- topsy

MARX

- topsy

&amp; GROUCHO

- topsy

KRASNA

* Sun. thru Thurs. 2.50, 3.50;
Fri. &amp; Sat, 2.95, 3.95;

- topsy

NORMAN

topsy

“TIME FOR ELIZABETH”

- topsy

HIT

- fopsy

LAUGH

fine

Alon

2

topsy

In The

appointment,

in the community.

——

AUG.

RAVINIA

degree.

announcing

of the Library board of trustees,
said, ‘We are very pleased to appoint Mr.
Followell to the position of Reference
Librarian.
We
know his rich background
in education will contribute much to the

Reservations

thru

_——

Morrison

Stars

NIGHTLY

37)

the

PERSON

- topsy

IN

page

Followell
then
enrolled
in
the University of Illinois and was
awarded a Masters of Science in

ees

a

from

tions in Lake Mills, Iowa;
and Palatine.

think

Robert
at

(Continued

sum-

But

director

Reference, Librarian

WAIT! SEE THE BEST HERE!

topsy - topsy - topsy - topsy =

Enjoy a FREE
After Dinner

Choose your favorite
cocktail at Patterson’s.

“THE TRA
Admissions for ‘’Sleeping Beauty”
Adults $1.00 - Children 35c

SUN. --THURS

July 26-30

, Wave HoLoEN
Jone

Ss

af

WhRAIAee

JOHN FORD'S

It’s served free with

any dinner from 5 p.m.
African Lobster Tail _....... $1.50
Chicken—Fried or BQ .... 1.25

Prime Ribs of Beef ........ $1.25
ER
a
Ne a 1.50

All Fich Dinners .............. 1.25

Filet Mignon ..............--.- 2.00

Seeded tele ne

ine

U.S. Choice Sirloin .......... 1.75

LUNCHEONS
ras
mas

SQL

evens ove UTED J MATSTS

DANA AMREWS-ANE POWELL
BENEDICT BOGEAUS

presents

BY THE
B MIGHTY

i¢
0

eemetIE :

COMING! JULY 31-AUG. 6
“Ask Any Girl”
Shirley MacLaine, D. Niven
Page

40

DOT

. wcdtdcdeedvertons
oot

Pork

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

PAT

TECHNICOLOR

AUTHOR OF
“MOBY
DICK”!

ORT AEITKO er OM

Sas OAT Re Ace ele

Private

Hear the hit
theme song.
“ENCHANTED
sSLAND”

MIGHTY
ADVENTURE

eat

Roast

hee

PHONE
ace

Dining

ORDER

DELIVERED

c

75¢

Prime Ribs of Beef ........ $1.25

Co-Feature

Drink!

VE

Room

FREE

5-1611

COLOR

ROSSANO BRAZZI - MITZI GAYNOR - JOHN KERR

for Parties of 50

PATTERSON'S

FRANCE

STEAK 49% HOUSE

NUYEN

This Is Entertainment

CUT RATE LIQUOR STORE
7 DAYS A WEEK

INCLUDING

Edens, Skokie &amp; County Line Rd.

HOLIDAYS
VErnon

featuring RAY WALSTON © guanita HALL

ON OUR NEW, GIANT SUPEROPTICA SCREEN!
With Complete HI-FI Stereophonic Sound!
Features—Mon.,

OPEN

by DE LUXE

starring

5-1611

Fri.,

7:00

and

for the Entire Family!
10:00

P.M.

Sat., 2:00 - 4:40 ~ 7:30 - 10:30
Sun., 1:30 - 4:20 - 7:10 - 10:00
_Adm.: Adult, $1.50
Children under 12, $
Sat. Matinees $ .90 until 5 p.m.

Starting July 31st—"TEN

.50

COMMANDMENTS”
Thursday,

July

23, 1959

�e

eae

Pe

were

Commander

Adventure”
‘Paint Your Wagon”
“Come Back Little Sheba”
“Tall Story’
Ravinia Festival
Cubs &amp; Sox Games and

Register
Now!

All Sports and Stage Attractions

EVANSTON

Classes Now

TICKET

Formine

Fed

915 Linden Ave.—Winnetka, II}.
Call Miss Thomas—HI 6-4123

S.

Ave.,

and

Harold

Stern,

Theo-

Hillcrest
1004

Ave.,

Harvard

1:30—6 p.m.
Closed Sundays

DIAMONDS

Watches
We Carry
PAYMENTS AS

1. H.

and

Silverware

the Leading Lincs
LOW AS $2.00 A WEEK

over

35

.ears

Group

Use

Tenthouse

Theatre — Tues., July 28

Time

Limited

Of Tickets Available At

his Concert

BENEFIT PERFORMANCE FOR
FOUNDATION FOR HEARING &amp; SPEECH REHABILITATION

589

Central

MART

MRS.

M.

ID

Ave.

L.

STRAUS

TENTHOUSE

2-0778

iy

Si

il

tea

Dhan

Outdoor Theatre—
MOSQUITO CONTROLLED

TENTH
CONSECUTIVE SEASON
Sheridan

Lake

&amp;

Illinois

Forest,

Roads

Illinois

THE INNOCENTS
July 24-25-26
Novel—The Turn of the Screw by Henry James

Play—William Archibald
July 31-August 1-2

SKIN OF OUR TEETH
Thornton Wilder

August

BLITHE SPIRIT
Noel Coward

7-8-9

For reservations

call

Lake

Friday, July 24 thru Thursday,
— ONE
On

Our

July 30

WEEK —

Panoramic

Wide

Screen

“The Young Philadelphians”
based

on the

novel

by Richard

Powell

“The Philadelphian”’
starring—Paul Newman

Barbara Rush
Diane Brewster
ALL

THE

BOLDNESS

OF

THE

SMASHING

BEST-SELLER!

— SCHEDULE —
Weekdays—’’ The Young Philadelphians”’ begins at 7:16 and 9:48
(Saturday matinees are discontinued ‘til school reopens)
Sunday—"’The Young Philadelphians’”’ begins at 2:16-4:40-7:10-9:45
July
August

Exhibit In Our

14—

Disney's “Sleeping

Beauty”

Lobby by
Richard
Serrin

Thursday, July 23, 1959

—
n

and

©

Rd.

They have named
liam Scott.

the

infant

Wil-

—
2

Mrs. Sheldon is the former Margaret Demichelis, daughter of the

Joseph

Demichelis’

—

of 947 Harvard

—

Ct. Paternal grandparents are the
William A. Sheldons of Kenosha,
Wis.

|

COOL — FREE PARKING
a arapem THEATRE
HIGHLAND PARK

i

WP.
fpe—npaan
pa

PH. 1D. 2-2400
* AIR

CONDITIONED

Thursday,

July

“SOME

+

23—Last

Day

LIKE IT HOT”

REA PADS

J

FRIDAY, July 24

Mats.: Mon. thru Thur. 2:30, Fri. 1.00-—$1.80, $1.55,

for20n a Matson
Liner JULY 29
to AUG. 4

$1.25: Sat. 2:30—$2.20, $1 .65, $1.25 © Eves.s Mon.
thru Fri. 8:30—$2.75, $2.50, $1.55; Sat. 8:30-—$3.40,
$2.75, $2.00 « Sunday: 2:00 and 8:00—All day $25,
$2.50, $1.55.

RANDOLPH

ST.,

CHICAGO

1},

MICHAEL TODD'S

Pound ewe

THEO aays
starring

DAVID NIVEN | —
CANTINELAS | ©
ROBERT NEWTON | —
SHIRLEY

MUSIC Theatre
Loke Cook Road between Skokie and Edens—
Highland Pork

THRU

NORMAN
“MOST
With

Frank

"7 Cities of Gold” op. 1 p.m.
Capt. Video &amp; 3 Cartoons
Wed.,

July 29

- “Kiddie Show”

“20 Million Miles to Earth” |
3 Cartoons &amp; Comedy—op. 1 p.m.

between Skokle and Green
Highland Park

Bay—

JILL COREY .,,:".

Mon., July 27

Game”

OPENS

in

Weekdays—6:20 - 9:18
Saturday—6:05 - 9:23
Sunday—2:05, - 5:28 - 8:50
Saturday, July 25 - “Kiddie Show”

Park Ave.

Sunday

DEBRA
PAGET
in “Pajama

W.

Stars

Feature Time...

Fs TENTHOUSE Theatre
Thru —

SUNDAY

MacLAINE]

Featuring 44 “Cameo”
TECHNICOLOR

PALACE BOX OFFICE
OPEN 10 a.m. to 9 p.m.
MAIL ORDERS FILLED
For Information rouse AN fas 0055

ILL

FOR ONE WEEK

52 Best Picture Awards
&amp; World-Wide Honors

You'll skim
the vast
Pacific
into the
exotic blue
splendor
of the
SOUTH
SEAS!

TECHNICOLOR
SCHEDULE OF SHOWS AND PRICES

Win a FREE

me

Walt

31—’’HERCULES”

Italy,

Day

I

POLICY

E.

~

S.D.

Trip to Hawaii

EERILY GD
RARE EERE
TEREEEEEE ERS ¥RERRERENERER

THEATRE

Open Daily 6:40 to 12 Midnight—Curtain at 7:00
Sunday Continuous 2 to 12 Midnight—Doors Open 1:40

at Huron,

Mrs.

29th

‘PALACE
|

and

A CARL
DUDLEY
Production

W.

the

Half

Dr.

= SOUTHSEAS =
| ADVENTURE
159

announce

Modena,

The NEW-

North Shore’s Most Beautitul Theatre
Lake Forest, Illinois —L.F. 2106 of 4744

Rd.,

Loesch,

See...

Forest 4370

Bay

Pelago,

Can You

Single admission $1.25 . . . Four Admissions $4.00
Special Rates for groups or theatre parties

Green

birth of a daughter, Juli Ann, on —
June 29 at Highland Park Hospital. —
Juli has a sister, Lauree Ann, 13 —
months,
Grandparents are the Emil ©
Levericks, 2470 Green Bay Rd., and ~
Mrs. Elda Fernesi, 130 North Ave., |

Simon

daughter,

tt

|

2470

Pieve

and

CINERAMA’S 6th BIRTHDAY!

sith

Ann

law

JULY

on

BOXOFFICE

Juli

Highwood. Great-grandparents are
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Amilcare
Crovetti,

9

CAMERA

Of

Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Leverick, :

Mrs. James Reilly, 108 Elm Ave.,
Highwood,
just returned
from
a
three-weeks visit with her son-in-

Oe

POWELL’S

S.D.

Dr. and Mrs. William Sheldon of
Evanston are parents of their first
child, a son born Saturday at Wesley
Memorial
Hospital,
Chicago.

28. Bicmoad Set, $158.00
Other Sets to $1 500.00

At

Dis-

Returns

Huron,

Se

Tickets Available

Reilly
to

Com-

Dr. and Mrs. William Sheldon
Name First Child William Scott

Plan!

a charitable donation

Visit

.

Tickets $5.00,

James

From

Forrestal,

The
infant
has
two _ brothers,
James, 6, and Thomas, 5, and a sister, Barbara, 3.

Paymens

Box Office

of the Ninth Naval
guest of honor.

a

Number

mandant
trict was

Mrs.

P.

CRE.

and

E.

While there she became acquainted
with
her
newest
grandchild,
Margaret Elise, born to the Collings’ on June 14. Mrs. Collings is
the former Ruth Reilly.

JEWELERS -. OPTICIANS
Highland Park
Tel. IDlewood 2-0636
bank

RADM

J. Collings,

NEMEROFF

Across from

THE

Commander
1103

Hinds,

FINE

BENEFIT

THE

Beckmeyer,

SERVICE

9—12:30;
thru Sat.

Mon.

Dato

E.

Ct., were among the guests and as-

NORTH SHORE HOTEL
DAvis 8-8282

Hubbard Woods
Ice Skating Studio

3270
dore

H.

J. Levericks
Birth

|

Seas

Robert

Announce

ct

“South

The

Ic

Man”

sociation
members
who
attended
the Armed Forces Communications
and Eléctronics Association annual
dinner meeting at U. S. Naval Electronics Supply Office, Great Lakes.

July 28: Benefit

MONDAY

Foundation
for
Hearing
and
Speech
Rehabil-

ATKINS

I

“Music

AROUND

Parkers Attend Dinner
RADM E. P. Forrestal

OOO

YEAR

Highland
Honoring

for:

Si)

Loesser’s

HAPPY

FELLA”

Mark Dawson, Ginny DerLowin,
Buzz Halliday, Andy Thomas

RESERVATIONS
MAIL:
Box 277, Highland Park
PHONE:
VE 5-4040; RO 4-7579
Bank of Highland Park or Marshall Field &amp; Co.,
3rd FI., Chicago store.
PRICES:
Sun.-Fri., $3.50, $2.90, $2.40, $1.90
Sat. eves., $3.90, $3.40, $2.90, $2.40
°
CURTAIN: 8:30 p.m. Mon.-Sat.; 8 p.m. Sun.

ARMSTRONG
RESERVATIONS
MAIL:
Box 277, Highland Park
Phone ID 2-1160; RO 4-7579
Bank of Highland Park or Marshall Field &amp; Co.,
3rd FL., Chicago store
PRICES: $3.50, Mon.-Fri. &amp; Sun. $3.90 Sat. Eve.
Unreserved Lawn Seats $1.00
CURTAIN: 8:30 p.m. Mon.-Fri.; 7:00 &amp; 9 p.m. Sat.
8 p.m. Sun.

ISIC

OPEN

Choice Tickets

oeneiee

FAICIICO

ICE SKATING

A

j

Page

41

—

�[oDeofiad Chara”
bl

elles

_ HOLY
:

es

ll

CROSS

ns

ae

i

ee

CATHOLIC

ee

ee

ae

CHURCH

I

Masses:

irst

8,

9,

10,

11:15

and

at 7:15.

Friday

and

7,

of

8:15 a.m.

iturday:

4

eacn

p.m.

month,

and

7:30

Masses

p.m.

at

Confes-

rucified, Risen and Coming Again
SDAY
»m. All Church Visitation Program
DAY
0 a.m. Sunday
School.
There
are
of Bible
study
for all ages and
ry
care for babies.
a.m.
Morning
Worship
Service.
facilities
are
provided
for
the
m. Young Peoples Fellowship. ProiS are provided by the youths themp.m. Evening Gospel Service.
TEDNESDAY
_ 7:30 p.m. Mid-Week Prayer meeting
;
study.
30 p.m. Choir rehearsal.

and

Rectory
Church

Telephone—WiIndsor
Telephone—WiIndsor

SUNDAY SCHOOL—9:30 a.m.

Rev.

WlIndsor

WBKB-TV PROGRAM
NDAY, July 26
5 a.m.
“The Healing Message

5-

of

the

based

on

SERMON
he

effectiveness

itual law

of

will be

healing

brought

out

at Chris-

Science services Sunday in the Lessonmon entitled ‘‘Truth.’’
-Peter’s healing of the “man lame from his
ther’s womb”
will be featured in the
le readings which include this passage:

Peter

said,

Silver

and

gold

have

.

one; but such as I have give I thee: In
name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth rise
and walk. And he took him by the right
d, and lifted him up: and immediately
feet and ankle bones received strength.
d he leaping up stood, and walked, and
ered with them into the temple, walking,
nd leaping, and praising God’’ (Acts 3:6-8).
rrelative
selections
to be read from
nce and Health with Key to the Scripes’? by Mary Baker Eddy include (183:26“Truth casts out all evils and maalistic methods with the actual spiritual
law,—the law which gives sight to the blind,
hearing to the deaf, voice to the dumb, feet
the lame.”
FIRST
ye
oy

Rev.

9:30 a.m.

July

Ph.D.,

7:30 p.m.
)
4,

meeting—lower

ZION
LUTHERAN
10 Deerfield Road,

CHURCH
Deerfield

Rev. Paul V. Berggren, Pastor

Wa
R. Johnson, Intern
Pe
T
hone Windsor 5-2009
RIDAY, July 24
joy
Scout Troop
150 leaves for
a-Ja-Wan
to return on Aug.

SATURDAY,

oe

Bes

care provided

during this service

children three years old and younger
Ronald Forslin home, 829 Appletree Ln.

_ Bus
4

25

.m. Couples Club theatre party.
NDAY, July 26
a.m. Celebration of Holy Communion.
a.m. Family worship service with Church
ool for children
entering
this fall in
first, second
and third grades;
older
dren to attend worship service.

Nursery
in

July

Wakeland,
Route 22

Bible

at

service provided for this service only,

schedules telephone church office.
:30
p.m. Luther
League
barbecue
home of Terry Walker.

at

first term of service for a furlough period of one year. They
will be guest speakers at the Deerfield Community Baptist
Church on Sunday, July 26, at both the Sunday School period

has accepted

Mr.

Chapin

has

been

preach-

services

during

1043

The Rev. J. D. Parker, rector of
St. Gregory’s Episcopal Church and
his family are away on vacation.
During his absence the duties of
the church are being supervised by
the Rev. William Robinson, assist-

ant, and

the

new

curate,

the

Rev.

Edwin Wampler.
The Rev. Mr. Wampler and his
wife are now living in the Parish
House. He is holding evening prayers. at 5 o’clock every evening for
those who wish to attend.
Choir practice has been discon-

To Have Theatre

Party And Supper
The Couples Club of Zion Lutheran Church will have a theatre
party in two parts on Saturday,

tinued

for

the

summer

months.

Sunday
services
continue
at
same hours of 8 and 9:30 a.m.

25.

the

The
curtain rises on part one
“The
Innocents”
at Lake
Forest
Theatre Under the Stars, Sheridan
and Illinois Rds., at 8:45 p.m. Part
two follows with an after the theatre party by the Torch Light Club
on the church grounds.
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Slavin of
Members are asked to make their
630 Appletree Ln. will assist in the
reservations in two parts and may |
fellowship hour on the hospitality
call the Hultmans at LE 17-1099, the committee Friday, tomorrow evePeets at WI 5-0340 or the Rupps at
ning, following Sabbath Eve 8:30
WI 5-1691.
o’clock services at the B’nai Torah
Reform Temple of Highland Park.
Rabbi
Sholom
Singer,
spiritual
Deerfield Manor Ass’n
leader, will conduct a presentation
Has Playground Area
by an open discussion on
| followed
Bids have been received by Earl “The Jewish Missionary Concept:

B’nai Torah Reform

Temple Sabbath

'.

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

Manor,

president

for

the

new baseball diamond
ground area.
Recreation

for

of

Deerfield | Past, Present and Future.”

back-stop

the

for

the:

in the play-

Deerfield Resident

youngsters of |

the Manor will be discussed at the |
next board meeting, August Roda-|
niche,

secretary,

reports.

THE HIGHLAND PARK
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH

THE
BETHLEHEM
CHURCH
(Evangelical
United
Brethren)
Rev, Eugene M. Wykle, Minister
1 Rosemary Terrace
Church—WI
5-0078
Parsonage—WI 5-2221
SATURDAY,
July 25
7:30 p.m. Elgin-Elmhurst Youth Rally at
Barrington.
SUNDAY,
July 26
9:30 a.m. Services of Divine Worship.
9:30
a.m.
Church
School
for
Nursery
through 6th grades and adult classes.
10:55 a.m. Services of Divine Worship.
Rev. Sheldon Trapp will be in the pulpit.

Help defeat the threat of communism by buying

Lectures At Ripon
College Seminar
L. E. Blockus of 4380 Circle Ct.,
Deerfield, a staff member of Abbott Laboratories, served two days
last week as visiting lecturer dur-

GRACE

NORTH SHORE
UNITARIAN CHURCH
Rev. Russell R. Bletzer, Minister
Ferry Hall
apel
Lake Forest
For Information Call WI 5-1972.
All services are discontinued for summer,
to be resumed on Sunday, September 13,

minister

U. S. Bonds.

ing the second week of the summer

science program currently in progress at Ripon
College
in Ripon,
Family balcony available during both servWis.
ices of worship.
10:55
a.m. Church
School for Nursery,
More than 65 teachers of biology,
Kindergarten, Primary and 7th through 12th
chemistry, and physics from high
grades.
sthools in eight states are attendirg this second annual program at
the Wisconsin liberal arts College

segs E=————— sage

-

‘i

“How Christian

—A program

\

| Science Heals”

andheld a special session with the

Sunday, July 26

WBKB-TV 9:45 A.M.

gree in

Neuropharmacology.

Resident faculty members will be
augmented by specialists in their
fields, other educators, and representatives of business and government at intervals during the comprehensive six-week course for the

of God

————

Uni-

Chicago firm in 1952, working for
@ number of years in the field of

1590 kc., 9:15 a.m.

You”

pharma-

studid at the University of Illinois
medial school in Chicago.
_
He joined the staff of the North

WLS 890 kc., 6:45 p.m.
Is Within

and

the Northwestern

versiy Medical school. He also has

of the Bible”
ALSO RADIO
Kingdom

physiology

cology from

(CHANNEL 7)
“The Healing Message

“The

by the Na-

bioligy section.
Anative of Chicago, Mr. Blockus
was {raduated from Loyola University, and earned his master’s de-

TV Series for Everyone

WNMP

sponsored

timal Science Foundation.
Mr. Blockus,
administrative assisant to the director of the Divisioi of Experimental Therapy, Abbot Laboratories, gave several lecture to the entire seminar group,

y
a

high

school

teachers.

“The Service Bank

Of Highland Park”

BANK HIGHLAND
1771 Second St.

BANK—POST
Member

Federal

OFFICE

Deposit

BLDG.

Insurance

Corporation

to

both

in

that

body

and

soul,” The Rev. Robert Humrickhouse,
minister
of
the
church
states. “The Rev. Mr. Metzler is:a
dentist and has used this talent to
relieve physical distress as well as
using
his
preaching
services
to
minister to the needs of souls and
helping in the organization of the
indigenous
Baptist churches.”
To

Show

Colored

Slides

In addition to bringing the evening message, Rev. Metzler will be
showing
colored
slides
depicting
the work in which they have been
engaged for the past four years.
“The Community Baptist Church,
which has had some small part in
the support of this family and their
work, is happy to commend their
ministry to the community,”
the
Rev. Humrickhouse reports.

Service Tomorrow

Simpson,

5-4623

REDEEMER LUTHERAN CHURCH
1731 Deerfield Rd.
Rec. 1817 Green Bay Road
Highland Park, Ml.
SUNDAY
9 a.m. Sunday School and Bible classes.
10:15 a.m. Worship services.

For
4-3060

they

Has New Curate

Lutheran Couples

July

-and the evening service.
“Their work
is unique

Episcopal Church

During the month of August Rev.
and Mrs. Chapin will be at Pentwater, Mich.

NORTHBROOK
METHODIST
CHURCH
Meadowbrook Sehsol
Rey. R. W. Thornburg, Minister
For information call Windsor 5-4351.
SUNDAY
9:30 a.m.
Church
School and Worship
Service. Nursery for pre-school children.
B’NAI TORAH
Lincoln School
Highland Park
Sholom Singer, Rabbi
Joseph Burns, Cantor
information call WIndsor

Church,

a eall to the
First Presbyterian
Church in Morrison, Ill. and will be
installed on Sunday, Sept. 13. The

field. Their new address will be
314 North Jackson, Morrison, Ill.

Pastor

meets

Presbyterian

The
Chapins
will
be
moving
from Phyllis Ave., south of Deer-

SUNDAY
9:45 a.m. Sunday School.
10 a.m. Friends meeting
in Deer Path
School Library in Lake Forest.
For information
call WIndsor
5-1774.

For

Rev. and Mrs. Edwin Metzler, missionaries under Baptist
Mid-Missions to Liberia, Africa, recently returned from their

ing at the union
July in Morrison,

BIBLE FELLOWSHIP
Wilmot Road
evening at 7 o’clock, the

Fellowship

The Rev. Thomas Chapin, former
assistant minister of the Deerfield

Rev.

Camp

for
for

‘

Trustees’

nae

TRINITY UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST
(Evangelical
&amp; Reformed
Church)
Rev. Edward J. Busse, ID 2-2113
Rev. Laslo L. Hunyady, WI 5-3508
(Associate Pastors)
WALDEN
SCHOOL
SUNDAY,
July 26
9:30 a.m. Church School.
9:30 a.m. Morning worship.

9:30 a.m.
Church
School.
Nursery
ildren 1, 2 amd 3 years. Kindergarten
dren 4 and §.

July 27

sath

floor,

Minister

26

Morning Worship.

INDAY,

ih.

Ministers
Summer worship in the sanctuary at 10
a.m. each Sunday morning. Fellowship
hour
on the chyrch lawn immediately following
the service, weather permitting.
Church School for children of sixth grade
and younger, including toddlers, meets also
at 10 a.m. each summer Sunday.
Worship services at 9:30 a.m. and 11:15
a.m.
and
Church
School
classes
at 9:30
a.m., 10:05 a.m. and 11:15 am. will be resumed on September 13.

PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH
824 Waukegan Road
Phone Windsor 5-0775

Paul J. Keller,

SUNDAY,

hh.

QUAKERS
SOCIETY OF FRIENDS
Sylvia
Judson,
Clerk.

in

Then

Lewis

DEERFIELD
1043
Every Sunday

ey ¥ to 20 years of age.
DAY
EVENING MEETINGS —
p.m. Including testimonies of healing
ugh Christian Science.
il are welcome to attend these services.

call

ih.

SUNDAY
9:30 a.m. Church School.
9:30 a.m. Worship Service.
11 a.m. Worship Service.
A nursery is provided for small children.
Telephone WI 5-4179 for more information.

01 Re

information

phi,

WASHBURN
CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH
Half Day

5-1881
5-1678

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY
155 Deerfield Road
NDAY—11 a.m. Services.
Children
are cared
for during
Church
rvice,

further

iin

NORTH
SUBURBAN
EVANGELICAL
FREE
CHURCH
Deerfield Masonic Temple
Rev. Howard Hermansen, Pastor
711 Waukegan Road
SUNDAY
9:45 a.m. Bible School.
11 a.m. Services,
7 p.m. Services.
WEDNESDAY
8 p.m. Bible study and prayer.

Deerfield

NDAY
a.m. Holy Communion.
0 a.m. Holy Communion on first and
Sundays.
a.m. Morning Prayer on second and
th Sundays.
730 a.m. Church
School
children
will
nd adult service. Nursery care provided
pre-school children.

;

ties pte

Wilmot Rd. Public is invited. Bible messages
on current events along with Christian fellowship.

GREGORY’S
EPISCOPAL
CHURCH
_
Wilmot and Deerfield Roads
The Rev. J. D. Parker, Rector

_

fee. atts

At Morrison, Ill.

7 p.m. Softball games: Trinity and Zion
seniors at Jewett Park East; Redeemer and
Zion
juniors
at Jewett
Park
West.
TUESDAY, July 28
8 p.m. Church
School staff meeting at
church.

North Waukegan Road
Rey. John O’Mara, Pastor
_ Rev. Edward Reilly, Assistant
Rectory, 724 Elder Lane
Windsor 5-0430

aily Mass

fe.

Presbyterian Church

LIBERIAN MISSIONARIES TO SPEAK
AT COMMUNITY BAPTIST CHURCH

Will Be Installed

2 aman

OBITUARIES
Ernest

Lemmel

Ernest

Lemmel,

75,

of

Chicago,

husband
of
the
former
Lillian
Frantz of Deerfield, died Friday,
July 11 in Chicago. Funeral services were held July 14 and burial
was in Forest Home Cemetery.

Mrs.

Karl

Peterson

Funeral services for Mrs. Mildred
Harbaugh
Peterson,
56, of Highland
Park, formerly
of Brierhill
Rd., Deerfield, were held July 16
with the Rev. William A. Young of
the
Highland
Park
Presbyterian
Church officiating. Burial was in

Ridgewood

Cemetery.

Mrs. Peterson died Tuesday, July
14, in the Medical Pavilion in Highwood. She was born June 21, 1903
in Lake Villa and had resided in

Highland

Park

her

Her

life.

in October,

the greater part
husband,

Karl,

of

died

1958.

Survivors are her son, Robert of
Knoxville,
Tenn.,
two
daughters,
Mrs. Patricia
Lloyd
of Highland
Park and Miss Marcia Peterson of

Libertyville

and

a

sister,

Mrs.

Arthur (Bertha Harbaugh) Goelitz
Sr. of Tucson, Ariz., and two grand-

children.

H. Cyril Nelson
H. Cyril Nelson, 47, of 1440 Dartmouth Ln., died Friday in the Highland Park Hospital. Services were

held Monday

at a funeral chapel in

Chicago.

He is survived by his wife, Beatrice; 2 sons, Scott and Murray and
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. Baruch
Nelson.
Mr. Nelson was
turer in Chicago.

a

toy

manufac-

Presbyterians Will Have
Guest Minister Sunday
The Rev. Donald Driscoll will be
the guest minister at the Deerfield

Presbyterian

Church

on

Sunday

morning. Elder Robert Folger will
assist in the duties. There is just
one service at 9:30 o’clock during
July, August and the first week in
September.

PARK

IDlewood 2-7800

Thursday, July 23, 1959
\

ta

�Participates In Summer

Recreation Program

Mrs. J. M. Kipp
When

Car

Mrs.
Capt.

Patricia
J.

Injured

Hits Tree

M.

C.

Kipp

Kipp,
of

531

wife

of

Mallard

Ln.,
was
making
a
turn
from
Central Ave. onto Elm St. Tuesday
morning
and lost control of her
car. She crashed into a tree.

Police

handled

the

call

and

the

8, son

of Mr.

and

Mrs.

Vander

Noot

present

building

school

from

Isely, patrol leader,
and
Carrol
Kopp,

Deerfield;

Nora

Jane
all

Luthmers

and
Kay
Hart
from
Highland
Park:
and
Mary
Towner
from
Mundelein took part in the International
Girl
Scout
Round-Up,
July
1—July
13,
in
Colorado
Springs,
Colo.
Included
in their
patrol were two girls from Saskatchewan,
Canada.
The
other girls
in their international troop were
from
the United
States,
Greece,
and Canada,
The first big event at Round-Up
was
the
all-camp
campfire
with
10,000 girls and leaders participat-

ing.

Next

Force

the

the

girls toured

Academy

Gods,

and

the

stopping

the

Air

Garden

for

a

of

chuck-

wagon
lunch
at
the
Flying
W
Ranch. July 8 was Colorado Centennial Day. The camp was open
to visitors who were later invited to

congratulatory

telegram

well
all

campfire.
the

fare-

Representatives

countries

Round-Up,

from

a

dressed

participating

of
in

in their respec-

tive
Guide
and
Scout
uniforms,
offered their wishes for peace and
faggots on the blazing fire, sym-

bolic of unity in the world through

crete floor hardened
up

of the new

building

approximately

ficer

Koets

Glen

and

Geri

Miss

Gallery had arranged the program
Village President Eldon Holmquist
and others praised the two men
for their long and valued service.
with
retired
were
stars
Their
them and presented to Capt. McLaughlin and Officer Anderson by
Trustee Maurice Petesch, chairman
of the police department. Each retiring officer also received a wrist
watch, gifts from the invited guests.

Rat Takes Ride In
Police Squad Car

Rd. reported a rat in the garage at
this home. Officers Arthur Crumpler and Elmer Krase had answered
the call and put the rat in a box

and placed

it in the police

car.

A change of shifts was made and
the two who
had boxed
the rat
went off duty. The rat chewed its

way

out

of

the

box

into the front seat and

and

G. D. Hendrick, who resigned recently as deputy treasurer in the
Deerfield Village Hall, has gone to
work for the Village of Maywood.

Thursday,

July 23, 1959

of

space in past years has resulted in
doubling up of classes, and this arrangement will still be used at the
beginning of this school year.
In the old building there were
six classrooms serving eight grades.
The addition will have four rooms,
but in the building process one old

room
is designed
to disappear,
leaving a total of nine available
rooms in the school. One of these
rooms will be split in half and used —
as a combination office and faculty |
room with eight rooms remaining
—one for each grade.
The addition will have the same

colonial

architecture

Ba:
¥
oa

Phe.

*

— part

as the older —

part of the building with the same
outer

walls

of

white

being

built

at

a

cost

brick.

of

It

is

$75,000,

which
includes
the
classrooms,
lavatories, a new boiler room, and
a separate heating plant.

George Ergang is principal of the
Bannockburn School.

HOME

Beoe

&amp;§

REPAIRS?
CAR?

Mr. and Mrs. Hendrick,

A LOW

COST

LOAN
|

is the answer
Whatever you’re wishing for, a bank loan can help you
have what you want, when you want it. And thanks to low bank
is easy to repay in convenient
rates, your loan costs less
monthly installments sized to fit your income. Come in soon...
talk over your needs in confidence. You'll get prompt, friendly

7

service.

WHEELING

STATE BANK

their

Resigned

To Work

Lack

all

jumped

across

its way to freedom by the time the
bewildered officers stopped the car.

Employee

foot

“Tt was a grand party!” Everyone said so. They were referring
to the dinner party last Thursday
evening which honored two Deerfield police officers who have reMcthe force, Percy
tired from
Laughlin and Alfred Anderson.
village manager,
Owens,
Royce
acted as master of ceremonies. Of-

laps and out of the car and was on

Deerfield

one

school year in September.

‘VACATION?
FREEZER?

brick

are built

skating.

Scouting.

Goes To Maywood

—»

oe

and next year funds for that purpose will be available. This means
that the recreational program will
be tax-supported for all residents
of the park district.
The winter program, henceforth
ice
include
will
tax-supported,

What would you do if a white rat
watch the evening show in the big ran across your lap while you were
arena. The pioneer theme was Car- driving a car? You’d be surprised
ried out by the nationally famous
. and so were Deerfield Police
Westernaires and Koshare Indian | Officers
,;
Thomas
Rogge and Paul
dancers in authentic costume. The
Kaehler.
highlight
of the
evening
was
a
Monday a call from Montgomery
President
Eisenhower.
The final ceremony was

of the

Retiring Police
Officers Honored

Girl Scouts Report
On Colorado Trip
Barbara
Stallmann

is now

*

complete

wing

and ready for further progress. The

Business
Progress

is going on, including

Road,

Telegraph

Construction of the addition began
during
the second
week
of
June, and is expected to be finished in the early fall, not, however, in time for the start of the

Building
In Pictures

z

as far as having the foundation in and the poured-in-place con-. —

Sr. of 822 Appletree Ln., participated last week in the decorated
bicycle parade sponsored by the Deerfield-Bannockburn Summer
Recreation program at Maplewood School.
The summer program ends July
30.
Funds
for
this
part
of the
recreation program have been provided by private gifts, first to a
separate
recreation
drive
and
in
later years, through the DeerfieldBannockburn
United
Fund.
Last
spring, citizens of the village voted
a tax-supported recreation program

on

north

to the

is attached

which

addition,

around to the level of the concrete
floor, which encases the conduit.

construction

age

The

she had head and knee injuries.
Her car was badly damaged.

Deerfield Savings and Loan Building, Town Hall-Library, the Commons
Shopping Center,
Standard
Oil
Filling
Station
and _ others.
These pictures appear elsewhere in
today’s REVIEW.

Noot,

tion.

walls

District
Shown

pie

Electrical conduits and junction boxes now delineate the
four new rooms taking shape in the Bannockburn School addi-

firemen removed her to the Highland Park Hospital in the rescue
truck where it was reported that

Deerfield’s continued growth is
shown in pictures of seven locations
around the business district where

Dirk Vander

BANNOCKBURN SCHOOL ADDITION
WILL BE COMPLETED THIS FALL

— Service and Security Since 1921 —

WHEELING,

ILLINOIS

who had

been living in the Carter M. Christensen
home
at 944
Sunset
Ct.,
moved to Maywood on July 15.

Each account Insured to $10,000.00 by Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.

Page

43

�PHONE YOUR WANT A ee WE'LL CHARGE IT
x

REAL

ESTATE

FOR

(HIGHLAND

5¢ each additional word
(For 55 words or Less)

25¢ Service charge for blind ads
Ads containing 56 words or
‘more are charged at the rate of
a0 per column inch.
mtract rates for 4 or more
consecutive insertions available

request

This

1,

cost

inch.

will

Minimum.

cover

the

Deerfield Review

©
©

Highland Park News
Highwood News

©

The

Lake

Forester

run in above publications
ng the same week in which
Fort Sheridan Tower is published
will also appear in

Fort Sheridan

__

NEWLY LISTED—$36,500. On approx. 200x
200 of most beautiful landscaped property
on a quiet lane. This quaint Cape Cod has
had over $30,000 in remodeling in the past
few years to make it an outstandingly attractive
spacious
ranch.
Completely
modern kitchen and baths. 2 car attached garage. Small den and screened porch.

GOLDEN
OPPORTUNITY!

Published Every Other Friday
x Want Ads will be accepted up to

2.

_ Tuesday, 4:30 P.M.

DEADLINE FOR CONTRACT
ADS 3 P.M. TUESDAY

CANCELLATION
DEADLINE
12 NOON, TUESDAY
Copy is accepted with the underStanding
that
the
publisher
assumes
no
responsibility
for
omission
through
clerical
or
mechanical
error and
shall be
under no obligation or liability
of any kind whatsoever, either to

the

advertiser

or

third

4. SPACIOUS DUTCH COLONIAL 2 big
bedrooms that can be easily converted
to 3. This neat home has a manicured
yard. Separate dining rm., big living
rm. with fireplace, bedrms. upstairs—
$19,500.

parties.

Earhart &amp; Co.

the event of an error in copy,
@n the advertiser’s request, the
tt
will rectify the error
4 pice
the corrected
ad
€ next regular issue without
charge. All claims for adjustment
ust be made within five days of
e date of publication in which
the error occurs.

1899

IDlewood 2-4500
Windsor 5-4500
Lake Forest 2300
HIGHLAND PARK
608 Laurel
DEERFIELD
699 Waukegan Rd.
LAKE FOREST
287 Deerpath

FOR

(HIGHLAND

SHERWOOD

SALE
PARK)

(Improved)

FOREST

ny move to the suburbs if you are going
be cramped on a city sized lot? This 3
bedroo
_ bi-level is on 11% lots, one of the
lar; est in Sherwood
Forest
usually
not

c ig in similar homes. The large stockade

bi

yard
is spacious enough for adding
001 with plenty of room to Spare. Large
io living room, all walls tiled in white
id yellow,
kitchen with breakfast area, aplances included, and the best Philippine
hogany used to finish the air-conditioned
amily room are some of its other features,
recently redecorated, attached garage, comte
landscaped, storms, screens, draperies,
ind some carpeting also included, excellent
ferms available with a low down payment.
Owner. Telephone ID 3-1088.

‘
INCOME PROPERTY
‘TWO
FLAT
IN HIGHWOOD
orner lot, Cyclone fence, 6 car parking

se. No

parce!

ID

headaches

for landlord—all

Rd,

util-

separate,
RECENTLY
REMODELED
TIP TOP CONDITION
for quick sale, inquire at 125 Maple
Highwood or call Mr. Louis Santello
2-4067.

622 Pleasant Ave.: Three bedroom, 2 bath
split level. Paneled family room, New and
ready to move into. For sale on contract or
for rent
for $225
$25,500,

585 Broadview Ave.: Eight rooms. 5 bedrooms, 2 baths. Separate dining room and
living
room
with
fireplace. A
wonderful
home for a large family. Close to all conveniences
$29,800
498 Burton Ave.: Three bedroom brick ranch
in good location. Close to schools, trains
and shopping. Full basement with plumbing
roughed in for second bath. Built in 1953s:
$23,500

ID

2-0880

Fine
executive
brick
residence,
beautiful
grounds,
choice
location,
private
beach
rights. 10 years old but like new; custom
built. 1st floor has spacious entrance hall
and large living room with fireplace and bay
window; dining room with picture window
and
built-in
cabinets;
panelled
den
with
built-ins; modern kitchen with oak cabinets,
formica counters, carrara glass walls, dishwasher
and
breakfast
area;
well
located
screened porch; powder room with colored
fixtures and carrara glass walls. 2nd floor
consists of extra large master bedroom suite
with
dressing
room
and_
built-in
closets,
drawers
and
vanity with
connecting
cartara glass walled bath room; also 2. additional extra large twin-size bedrooms with
built-in closets and drawers plus bathroom
with carra glass walls and colored fixtures.
15 closets throughout,
many built-ins and
numerous
other
practical features.
Lower
level has unusual and distinctive custom finished log cabin recreation and entertaining
rooms
(in north
woods
motif)
with fireplace and built-in bar with hot and cold
running water, plus refrigerator and bathroom. Must be seen to be appreciated. Gas
heat;
Thermopane
throughout;
completely
central air conditioned; underground automatic lawn sprinkler; attached 214 car garage with radio operated door. Low priced
in high 70’s for quick sale; worth considerably more. Phone IDlewood 2-6118 after
8 p.m. Friday for appointment. No brokers.

WHITE BRICK COLONIAL
Spacious 4 bedroom, 2%
bath, white brick
colonial. Situated approx. 100 ft. off private
drive on beautifully wooded and landscaped
lot. Fenced back yard with bar-b-que and
patio. Full basement with attractively finished family
room
with outside entrance.
Gas heat. Living room with fireplace opens
into large screened porch. Full dining room,
first floor powder room. Extra large Early
American kitchen. 4 bedrooms. 2 full baths
up. Plenty of closet space. Extra large 2
car garage. Situated close to schools, trains,
Edens. and coming shopping center. All this
for $32,500. Sizeable mortgage available.
32 Valley Rd.
ID 3-0180
GET
free copy of booklet
“Things
You
Should Know About Buying A Home.”
Write Chicago Title &amp; Trust Co., 26 N.
Utica St., Waukegan.

PARK

1024 Marion Ave.: Brick and frame
split
level with large family room with
fireplace.
Three bedrooms. Gas heat
$27,900

Woodridge:
Two bedroom brick ranch on
beautifully
landscaped
large
wooded
Full basement. Gas heat, attached garage lot.
....
Sister eek)
$27,500

HIGHLAND

PARK—EAST

Brick Colonial:
Situated on a ravine lot,
this immaculate
home has 3 family
rooms and 2 baths and 2 maid’s rooms bedthe 3rd. bath. Gracious entrance hall and
with
spiral
staircase,
Library
«with
fireplace.
Living room
with fireplace and adjoining
Screened
porch
Overlooking
the
Large separate dining room. Kitchenravine.
butler’s pantry. Powder room, Basemen and
t, 2
car garage Sarvehe iabekseoter aa teses eR peeh ccd $55,000

Dorsey Husenetter
REALTORS
723 St. Johns Ave.

NEW

ID 2-1484

LISTING.

Shore.

REALTORS
Sheridan

SALE
(improved)
PARK)

BRICK
RANCH:
On nearly 14 acre private wooded lot. Easy walking distance to
Ravinia Park, trains and shopping. Modern
kit. with
Formica
tops
and
eating
area.
Large living room with fireplace. Two bedrooms, new C.T. bath, attached greenhouse.
Patio.
Tool
house.
Full basement.
Brick
garage
7
$27,400

standing

HIGHLAND PARK
NEWLY OFFERED

TELEPHONE
WANT AD SERVICE

ESTATE

IN
EAST
RAVINIA—3
blocks
to
shops and school. This 2 story 7 rm.
home has living rm.-dining rm., kitchen, porch on Ist fl. 4 bedrms., 2 tile
baths upstairs, rear garage—wooded lot.
Price $25,500. Also an ideal property
to rent for income.

3. IN WOODRIDGE. Brick 2 story 7 rm.
home on wooded lot in finest neighborhood. Living rm., dining tm., kitchen,
porch and powder rm. on Ist floor—4
bedrms.,
tiled
bath
upstairs.
Owner
rE perenyed, immediate possession! $29,-

For Publication in the Current
Week’s Issue.

ESTATE
FOR
(HIGHLAND

HIGHLAND

1, IN EAST RAVINIA—2 blks to school
and shops. 2 bedrooms, 1 bath, living
room, dining room, kitchen on 1st fl
2 bedrms., pipes installed for 2nd bath
upstairs. ...New gas ht., full basement.
Price only $17,800. An ideal property
to rent for income.

Tower

REAL

REAL

RAVINIA

THREE 4 BEDROOM
VALUES!

Ads

|

(Improved)

This newly modernized bright and charming English home in northeast location offers tremendous value! 4 bedrooms, 3 full
baths plus 2%
baths, deluxe kitchen, den
and recreation rm., beautiful ravine bed 9
erty on dead end street creates a magnificent setting. Owner transferred. A real market value. $53,500.

insertion in all 4 papers.

©

PARK)

4 BEDROOM
3 BATH RANCH

for only

on

SALE

One

homes

of

on

Luxury

the

the

built

outNorth

all

STONE

HOME in a beautiful section near
the lake. Step-down liv. rm. with
beamed ceiling, dining rm., NEW
WOOD-CABINET
KITCHEN,
brkfst. rm. 2 lovely porches, maid’s
rm. and
bath. Upstairs, 3 lovely
bedrms,
plus PANELED
DEN
or
bedrm. 3 deluxe baths. Don’t miss
this at the very fair price of $62,500.
(Choice
Vacant
Lots)
2 lots available in estate area,

237.

Wooded

scaped.

and

partially

83x

land-

$11,500-$12.500.

Glamorous level home can be built
on this BEAUTIFUL RAVINE lot.
Asking $12,500.

J-H Kahn
Glencoe

REALTORS
Theatre Bldg.

GOELZER

and

VE

5-0236

WILDE

EAST
CENTRAL
AREA—New
listing in
a most desirable location. This 2 story frame
has a very flexible floor plan and can comfortably
house
a large
family.
The
first
floor has a large living room with a firePlace, dining and
activities room
with a
fireplace,
powder
room
and
kitchen.
On
the second floor there are 3 bedrooms and
2 baths and
an apartment
with
a living
room, bedroom, kitchen and bath. The 3
car garage is attached and over it is an
attractive recreation room, 21x28. There is
a full basement, oil heat and a good lot
115x200. The price is $32,500.
WOODRIDGE—At
a _ reduced
price
of
$34,500, we think this good ranch is one of
the outstanding values on the market today. There is a combination living-dining
room
with
fireplace,
modern _ kitchen,
screened porch, 4 bedrooms,
paneled
den
and 3 full baths. The lot is 94x129. The
house is heated by gas and the tacked down
carpeting is included.

GOELZER
790 Elm

Street

and WILDE
Realtors

HI 6-5544

CALL WI 5-4500

ESTATE

FOR

Baird
OPEN
1491
field

SALE

(HIGHLAND

1

&amp;

TO

PARK)

(amproved:
REAL

Warner

5

STUNNING

SUNDAY

DEERFIELD RD.
Rd., 1 blk. W. of

(Turn S.
Beverly)

off

Deer-

HIGHLAND PARK
DISTINCTIVE RANCH
ON PRIVATE LANE

BEDROOMS,

1%

NORTHFIELD TOWNSHIP
OWNER SELL $5,000 DOWN
NEAR WILMETTE GOLF CLUB
NORTH SHORE COUNTRY CLUB

Modern brick ranch in quiet street in Glen
Oak Acres, 3 twin size bedrooms. 2 tile
baths. Attract. built-in kitchen,
oven and
range.
Ample
closets.
Large
living room
with fireplace. Picture windows. Basement.
san
garage. ASK FOR LIONEL
WAT-

&amp;

Hillcrest
SHeldrake

with push
bedrooms.

THAT

ON

fire.

CAN

BE

CONTRACT

RETIREMENT
HOUSE
— Living
rm., din, rm., cabinet kit., 2 bdrms.,
tile
bath,
utility
room—dAsking
$25,500.

Huge family house on _ beautiful
property—4
bdrms.,
4%
baths:
GAS heat; modern kitchen with
dishwasher—$49,500.
For details call:

L. Ringer
Realty
457

Co.

Realtors

Central

ID

2-6600

On really beautiful lot 98x168 with
many
fine trees, this face brick
house ineludes living room w/frpl.,

and

tile

att, garage.

bath

on

3 bedrooms,

2nd.

Extras

in-

clude a 220 line, first floor and
stair carpeting, screens and storms.
Early possession.

REALTORS

FAST

On

Ave.

over

ID

2/3

This

some

of the

land

Park.
of

acre

house

2-1212

ROAD

wooded

erty.

rooms

beautifully

Ravine

prop-

is surrounded

finest

Well

homes

constructed

generous

size,

by

in High-

with

it

needs

only modest modernization to place

HOMEFINDERS, Realtors
ALpine

BY OWNER

H. PK.—Enjoy this country style home with
city advantages. 3 br., 2 ba., Ige. grounds,
many
extras. So much for so little. Mid.
30’s.
H. PK.—Comfortable
air-cond. 3 br., 1%
bath ranch. Rec, rm. and many extras for
less than cost. Lge. wooded lot. Low 30’s,
DEERFIELD-500
Indian
Hill
Rd.
Open
daily. Owner trans. wants quick sale of 4
br., 2% ba. snlit-level. Many built-ins. Imm.
poss. Mid. 30’s.

BY-OWNER
service bureau
4846 Main St.
Skokie
ORchard 5-8383
Broker

it in a price class far beyond it’s
offering price.
:
Large liv. rm., fireplace, spacious
din, rm., kit., pow. rm., att. en-

trance

hall and

beautiful

porch overlooking
floor has 4 bdrms.

Excellent

buy

screened

Ravine. Second
and 3 baths.

at

AND JUST
AROUND THE CORNER

1-1111

YOU
WILL
PROFIT
FROM
BUYING
ANY OF THE FOLLOWING HOMES DIRECT FROM OWNER.

Estate

Central

landscaped

A budget
priced
smaller
home
perfectly
decorated
and
landscaped.
A 2 bedroom
gem for $17,900. Call Mrs. Hedlund.

Wilmette

463

MORAINE

HERE’S A LISTING
THAT’S NEW—
CALL US NOW
IF IT’S FOR YOU

Real

including

entry,

H. and R. Anspach

Price reduced to $20,950 on this ideal smaller home set in garden with fruit trees. Call
Mr. Degen.

Registered

bluestone

HOUSES

cer.

PANELED DEN
WITH BUILT-IN TV—
THIS 2-BEDROOM HOME
IS ONE TO SEE

Rd.,

shopping

features

place, opening into living room and
SEPARATE
step-down
dining
room,
oversize
screened
porch
overlooking wooded 200 feet deep
garden and patio; 3 bedrooms, 2
full baths. Out of town owner has
reduced price to $31,900 for quick
sale.

porch

New-on-the-market
center-entrance
Colonial on heavily wooded lot, designed for active family needing 5 bedrooms, 3!4 baths.
$38,000. Call Mrs. Ruby.

Bay

and

ago,
con-

sep. dining room, cab. kitchen and
pwd. room. There is a small sernd.

Exciting brick and frame ranch
button kitchen, family room, 3
$34,900. Call Mrs. Moser.

HERE IS A VALUE
SURE TO LAST—
A FINE COLONIAL
WHICH WILL SELL

LEVEL

$22,500
6-1855
3-1855

33 TREES ROUND
AN L-SHAPED HOME—
BUY THIS AND
YOU’LL NEVER ROAM

Green

school

Warner

576 Lincoln Avenue
Winnetka,
Illinois

111

to

SOLD

baths

SPLIT

extra

2

Attractive Lannon stone, lot 66x220, close
Northbrook centre. Large living room with
fireplace, dining area, large kitchen. Basement. Low
taxes. Owner transferred. Call
for LIONEL WATSON

Baird

venient
handsome

NORTHBROOK
$3.500 DOWN
OWNER FINANCING
PAYMENTS LIKE RENT

SALE
(Improved)
PARK)

Architect-built, just 9 Years
in
excellent
neighborhood,
Many

Contractors own home perfectly maintained
and gleaming with
newness.
Living room
with
panorama
window
and
dining
‘“L.”
Keen birch and ceramic tile kitchen with
attractive eating space. Three excellent bedrooms
with
abundant
closets.
Enchanting
porch, 2 car garage. Appealingly priced for
your inspection. Call HARRIET STEVENS,
HI 6-1403

4

ESfATE
FOR
(HIGHLAND

On 100 feet of attractive prop.,
this
one
story
home
offered
to
close estate. 30 ft. pan. liv. rm.,
with frpl., 2 good sized pan, bedrms., bath, kit., half basement. Low
taxes and heating costs.
In excellent
fine homes

PAUL
1925

loc.

surrounded

PHELPS,

Sheridan

Rd.

by

INC.
ID

2-4580

HIGHLAND
PARK _ Highlands—930
Old
Trail—walk to school. 3 bedroom ranch,
2 baths, fabulous kitchen, basement playroom and closets, immediate possession,
$32,500. Low down payment, 444% G.I.
loan. Telephone ID 3-0497.

Thursday, July 23, 1959

�Perfect home for a growing family. 8 rooms,
4 bedrooms, 2% plus baths, large fenced in
yard, close to schools, transportation, beach
and shopping. $42,500.

FOR

NEW ULTRA-MODERN
NINE ROOM HOME

RENT

2%

Carr Realty Co.
OPEN

WI

SUNDAY

LOW,

12

LOW

TO

5-0984

6 P.M.

1

30's

Chatming
colonial.
3 exceptionally
large
bedrooms,
separate dining room,
spacious
living room with natural fireplace, screened
porch
overlooking
beautifully
landscaped
yard. Modern kitchen with dishwasher, powder room first floor, large recreation room,
incinerator, economical gas heat. Quiet dead
end street, near schools and transportation,
wonderful for family with children, by owner. For appointment ID 3-0030.

HIGHLAND

ON

THE

a
36

LAKE

ah

buy

OWNER

2 story air conditioned Colonial house on
large wooded lot. 4 bedrooms, 2% baths,
den,
dining
room,
living
room,
paneling
throughout.
ID 2-6252
854 Marion
NEW
3 bedroom custom built ranch, 1376
Arbor Ave., Highland Park. For sale by
builders. Face brick veneer, birch custom
made cabinets, ceramic tile bath and kitchen, finished recreation room, 2 fireplaces,
concrete driveway. $25,500. Call Halvor
Ulvenes. ID 2-1587 after 6 p.m.
FOR
sale by owner:
brick house;
living
room,
dining
room,
kitchen,
two
bedrooms and bath. Second floor, one large,
one small bedroom, bath and one unfinished room. Two car garage and it’s $28,ema
for appointment. Telephone ID

HIGHLAND

PARK

Outstanding buy at $28,900 due to illness
nearly new brick and redwood
ranch on
semi-private
road among
fine homes
and
beautiful trees, large living room and dining room divided by huge fireplace, with
adj. screened patio, all overlooking beautiful
evergreen
garden.
3 med.
sized brs., 112
baths, kitchen with dining space, 2 c. garage, basement, gas heat, on 200 ft. corner
lot.
3143 Greenwood. Telephone ID 2-6759.
No brokers.

UNUSUAL brick and redwood ranch, beautiful landscaped
spacious grounds,
paneled living room, beam ceiling, stone fireplace, opens on 30 ft. patio, separate dining
room,
kitchen
with
built-in
dishwasher and stove, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
full basement
and garage, near schools
and train. Mid 30’s. Telephone ID 2-1503.

BY

owner,

Sherwood Forest,

contemporary

bi-level, beautiful view out picture win. dow, 3 twin size bedrooms, 2 baths, gas
heat, paneled recreation room, patio and
fenced in yard. $24,800. Open house Sun_ day,
1359 Ridge Rd. Telephone
ID 2-

7336.

Thursday

July 23, 1959

$29,000

Sons,

SP

1345

Section

REAL ESTATE
REALTORS
5-1971

(improved)

FAMILY

HOUSE

On beautiful lot. Living room, dining room,
kitchen, 3 bedrooms and bath on first floor.
Upstairs has large finished bath plus 2 bedrooms which need some work. Nice basement. MAKE
OFFER.

TOWN

From
this 2 bedroom
ranch
with
living
room, separate dining room and beautifully
screened and glazed family room. Full basement
and
garage.
THE
LOW
ASKING
PRICE WILL AMAZE
YOU.

VIKING Realty Co.

BY

Deerfield

Open
a.m.-8 p.m.

Rd.

Monday

2

kit.,

liv.

$29,900

$29,750
1% baths, liv. rm.,
beautiful yard with

Brick ranch, liv.
2 bdrms., bsmt.,

1104

$27,500
rm. with frpl.-family
gar., beautiful yard.

OSTERMAN

Brick 2 bdrm.
rm. with frpl.,

rm.,

$20,500

home, Cathedral ceiling liv.
din. rm., small den, att. gar.

OSTERMAN

1535 STRATFORD

din.
gar.

Brick ranch on lovely wooded lot, liv.
with frpl.. 3 bdrms., bsmt. with pan.
tm., -gas ht., gar.

RIVERWOODS

7 Room brick ranch, att. 2 car gar.,
bsmt., on 2 acres, add’l land available.

DEERFIELD

full

$35,000

ranch, 2 acres,
rm., frpl., huge

3 bdrms., 2 baths,
family rm., gar.

WI

WOODLAND

OPEN

623

1341

CARLISLE

$32,900

1571

CRABTREE

comb.,
baths,

$30,900

Beautiful property, swimming pool, liv. rm.
with frpl., din. rm., 3 bdrms., 214 baths,
bsmt. with frpl., sc. porch.

806

APPLETREE

$28,750

Nearly new brick ranch, 3 bdrms., 11%, CT
baths, family-din. rm., full bsmt. with pan.
rec. rm., new carpeting inc.

FARNER

CT.

$34,500

On nearly an acre, brand new split level, 3
bdrms., 3 baths, liv. rm. with frpl., din.
ell, beautiful kit., family rm., 2 car gar.

SUNSET

TR.

$34,900

Contemporary ranch, 1%
acres, 3 bdrms.,
family kit., 2 frpls., 2%4 baths, sc. porch.

1%

901

NORTHWOODS

$52,500

Beautiful wooded
imp. property. Liv.
with frpl., din. rm. with frpl., built in
3 bdrms,
family
rm.
or 4th bdrm.,
baths, sc. porch, patio, 2 car gar.

DIMMEY DALE

rm.
kit.,
2%

$42,500

Underconstruction
5 bdrm.,
2%
bath,
2
story colonial, liv. rm. with frpl., din. rm.,
built in kit., family rm., bsmt., gar.

2111

CAMBRIDGE

$20,900

In Lincolnshire,
contemporary
ranch,
2/3
acre, 3 bdrms, TV rm., frpl., 1% baths, 2
car gar.

Piersen Realty
REALTORS
730

Waukegan

Rd.

Unusual brick and stone ranch on 24%

HERE’S

Windsor

5-1670

acre

OFFERED

brick ranch close to all co

Open

Sunday

REAL
on

CHARM

WI

12 TO

Tree

ESTATE

Deerfield

Rds.

BANNOCKBURN
A RARE FIND
This

authentic

WI

5.

JUST LIST
AT $40,0
A

EARLY

.

h

CAN FARM HOUSE on more tl
4
acres
commands
magnifi
views of the surrounding beauti!
countryside. All of the old ch

remains plus modern convenience
There are 5 bedrooms
with

one

of

the

and 3 ba’

bedrooms

~

baths, on the 1st floor. The kitch
is panelled, as is the den, an
bedroom, Short walk to spl
grade school and the bus ~ ¥
across the road for “Hi” sch
Owners
moving
to Arizona
wish to sell at once. See

REAL ESTATE CO.

6-2900

AMbassador

5-0984

6 P.M.

Lane

WI

&amp;

SEARS

1225 DEERFIELD
Rd. 7 room modified
Colonial; living room with fireplace, dining room, den, 3 bedrooms,
1%
baths,
screened
porch, full basement,
attached
garage, gas hot water heat, fully land-

Telephone

Waukegan

Hillcrest

Owner being transferred and forced to sell
this 2 year old tri-level with finished recreation room, tiled basement and many other
extras. Spacious comfortable family home,
excellent location near schools and churches.
Priced ‘to sell. Telephone WI 5-0271.

$29,500,

Just one year old with a roomy 2: car
tached garage. Kitchen has built
in
ap
ances
with
exquisite
hardwood
c
Attractive
fireplace
separates
dining
are
from living room. Will decorate to 132, Vv
taste. Landscaped
..
$3

COD
%

OPEN HOUSE SUNDAY
July 26, 3 to 5 p.m.

scaped,

re¢

space)

Road

Apple

And that is not all—8-room brick and

wood ranch with handsome paneling, n arb!
fireplace,
2%
baths.
$42,500.
Call
Mrs.
Parkinson.
:

$23

‘REALTORS

640

OUTDOOR LOVERS
COME AND SEE
re
A STABLE ON THIS PROPERT

Stunning

Carr Realty Co.
SUNDAYS

ranch —
areas,

ences. Large living room with fireplace
an attractive kitchen with ample
family dining. 2 bedrooms will accomn
twin size beds very easily. Full ba
oversized garage, nicely landscaped lot.

Within city limits. 3 bedroom ranch. Family
style kitchen, large living room with pine
paneled wall and fireplace, attached garage.
Reduced to $25,750.

OPEN

LISTING

3 bedroom
brick
and frame
super kitchen, carpeted living
lent garage space. $27,500.

IN TOMORROW

Waukegan

A

b
i

THAT'S NEW
AND JUST RIGHT FOR YOU

Beige Shingle ranch .on lovely corner lot.
Owner gone East. 3 bedrooms, full basement,
screened
breezeway
to
attached
garage.
Priced right at $23,500.

701

—

handsomel
Mr. Dege Le

Every luxury for the discriminating
$47,500. Call Mr. Degen.

3 bedroom frame ranch. Living room, kitchen-dining combination,
tile bath,
screened
porch,
1144 car garage, nicely landscaped.
a
of young people. Priced to sell at $18,-

1331-37-43 KNOLLWOOD

TOO

THIS COUNTRY ESTATE
Is ONE THAT WON'T WAIT

LISTING

COUNTRY

—

baths
Par
1

FOR YOU.

and glassed porch overlooking
landscaped corner, $47,500. Call

5-5100

STORY CAPE

MOVE

MORE

with 2%
Call Mrs.

FIREPLACE,

JUST

WI

3 bedrooms, 2%4
car garage,
dead-end street. $14,500.

NEW

MARBLE

10-5

Deerfield Rd.
of parking

AND

vacant!!!!

SUNDAYS

(Plenty

New homes. Ranch and split level. Quality
construction, plaster walls, bsmt., gar., gas
ht. $34,600-$37,700.
r

p.m.

owner:
1% year old 4 bedroom splitlevel with 2 full baths, large kitchen with
built-ins, disposal, basement, wall to wall
carpeting, on 80x150 ft. landscaped lot,
$28,700. Telephone WI 5-2452.

bdrms., 2%
car gar. All

C

Luxurious lannon stone raach with screenes

John Coons, Realtor
in Deerfield

$39,500
4
2

Brick split-level, large ell liv. din.
built-in GE kitchen, 3 bdrms., 2%
pan. family rm., bsmt., 2 car gar.

5-5300

thru Friday
Sat. 9 a.m.-5

LN.

Colonial ranch,
1%
acres,
baths, frpl., sep. din. rm.,
large rooms.

of

BEDROOMS

A

Evening Phones: Nancy Sullivan, WI 5-1393,
Ewart Blain, ID 3-0097, Jim Feehan, CR
2-3033, John Coons, PA 3-0084.

rm.
rec

$47,500

kinds

$45,000.

baths.

AIR CONDITIONED

PUBLIC
SCHOOLS,
TRANSPORTATION are
to this 4 bedroom, brick
a lovely family kitchen,
basement and 2 car att.
the many features of this

all

with 4-5 be

3-level
3

King-sized split level
family room. $37,500.

Members of Evanston-North Shore
Multiple
Listing Service

rm.,

$33,500

have

area,

FOR CLOSETS GALORE
4

NEW
LISTING — CONVENIENCE
TO
SHOPPING,
TRANSPORTATION
AND
SCHOOLS will be yours with this charming
2 bedroom
home.
There’s a large living
room
w/fpl.,
sep. dining
room,
screened
porch, basement and 2 car garage. Contract
purchase
possible.
Immediate
possession.
$19,800
We

8-room,

game

Hastings.

Up-to-the-minute
3-bedroom
ranch with
roo
family
paneled
and
baths
ceramic
Priced in the 30’s. Call Mr. Degen.
— :

THERE’S SPACE TO PLAY &amp; SPACE TO
LIVE in this 5 bedroom, 2 bath ranch with
its 2 car att. carport nestled on 2 wooded
acres. There’s a huge screened porch for
lazy summer evenings
42,500

$17,900

Cape Cod with frpl. in liv. rm.,
2 baths, 2 bdrms., partial bsmt.,

2845

PAROCHIAL
&amp;
SHOPPING AND
walking distance
ranch. You'll find
1%
baths, a full
garage as some of
home ....

ee

LIVE LUXURIOUSLY
WITH VINYL FLOORS

GLENVIEW

LINDEN

2665

LINCOLNSHIRE
9 room brick and frame ranch on wooded
half acre, 4 bedrooms, panelled den, 2 ceramic baths, living room has cathedral ceiling and fireplace.
Beautiful
kitchen
with
built-in oven and range. Washer and dryer
in utility room plus 2%
car garage. ATTRACTIVELY PRICED.

826

lge.

1108 OXFORD

Redwood
sep. din.

VIKING Realty Co.

UP

bdrms.,
frpl.

$18,900

Brick ranch, 3 bdrms.,
din. rm., family. kit.,
patio, att. gar.

3420

VE

ESTATE
FOR
SALE
(DEERFIELD)

WALK

$29,500

GLENCOE

ROAD

2-7873

LARGE

FINEST DETAILING—in this quality brick
and stone ranch. 3 Bedrooms,
1%
baths,
crab orchard fpl. in living room, charming
kitchen
w/large
breakfast
area.
Beautiful
Rec. Room. Briarwoods area
36,500

IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION on this brand
new 4 Bedroom Classic Colonial—2%% baths
—living room w/fpl., separate dining room
—family room—eating space in well equipped
kitchen, basement. On wooded lot in Scatterwood Subdivision

ELMWOOD

1303

CHARMING.
older
home
near
Catholic
school
and
transportation.
Completely
modern
interior. Three bedrooms, living
room, and dining room, family room off
paneled kitchen with nook. Garage, patio,
low taxes, gas dryer and range included.
Low 20’s. Telephone ID 2-1520.
BY
owner.
Attractive
6 room,
1%
bath
home.
Screened
porch,
master bedroom
with fireplace, large beamed living room
with stone fireplace set in knotty pine
wall, separate dining room, full basement,
near transportation and stores. Price, $24,000. Telephone ID 3-1919.
BRICK, two story, seven family size rooms,
1%
baths, fireplace,
garage,
near park
and transportation. $23,900.
Owner, 508
Burton. Telephone ID 3-1457.
REAL

WESTERN RANCH—This 3 bedroom, 1%
bath home with it’s full basement is the
“right brand” for you and your little ‘“‘cowpokes.” Dad will enjoy cookin’-up a meal
on the bar-b-q in the family room. Mom
will love the lovely wooded lot on this quiet
?
cul-de-sac

Quality brick ranch, liv. rm. with frpl., din.
ell, den, 2 bdrms., bsmt. with pan. rec rm.,
att. gar.

HIGHLAND PARK
Near Ravinia school and shopping. Attractive brick and clapboard colonial. 2 bedrooms, 114 baths, paneled recreation room,
attached garage. $26,500.

GLENCOE

INDIVIDUALITY
OF
DESIGN—3_bedroom
contemporary—central
air conditioning—thermopane windows. On large wooded property landscaped to perfection ..$22,900

JUST COMPLETED!!!
Well planned colonial ranch in Scatterwood Section. Huge living-dining room—2 C.T. baths—basement, on
beautiful wooded corner lot
?

DEERFIELD

1309

4-5611

Mr.

frpl., din. rm.,
3 bdrms., 2 CT

on 114 wooded acres, 4
large country kitchen with

1059

AMbassador

$42,500

White Clapboard, 2 bdrms.,
rm. with frpl., bsmt., gar.

FOUR yr. old attractive brick ranch on 1/3
acre property
with
lovely trees on all
sides.
Combination
living
and
dining
room, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, built-in kitchen, attached garage, secluded from traffic,
Masta financing. $28,600. Telephone ID

9

LINDEN

2785 GEMINI
Ranch
baths,

ment.

712

$34,500

brick split level, 214
baths, liv.
rm., pan. family rm., bsmt., gar.

Brick ranch, liv rm. with
pan. family rm. with frpl.,
baths, bsmt., 2 car gar.

Highland Park, large wooded lot (85 foot
frontage).
3
bedrooms,
2
complete
tile
baths
with
showers,
modern
kitchen,
screened porch, sun deck, tile roof, Ideal
location, 2 blocks from
school, shopping
and trains. Quick sale. Priced in the low
thirties. Telephone ID 2-4744, for appoint-

LANG

RD.

1300 CARLISLE

1160

BY OWNER
East Ravinia

Beautiful

OXFORD

4 Bdrm.
rm., din.

SHERWOOD
FOREST.
3 bedroom,
1%
bath bi-level, Pecky Cypress kitchen and
family room, stockade fence. Many features not found in similar homes. By owna ia gael 1361 Arbor. Telephone ID 2-

HIGHLAND
PARK WOODRIDGE
333 RIDGE RD.
LANNON
STONE RANCH
7 rooms on near % acre of wooded grounds.
Near
all
conveniences.
Architect
design,
new in 1951. 3,000 sq. feet. Oak floors, 3
coats of plaster, 20x16
living room,
has
panel
wall
and
fireplace.
Papered
12x13
kitchen with steel cabinets and dishwasher.
Convenient hall leads to 3 big bedrooms.
Large
panel family room has Parquet floors
and jalousie windows. Full basement with
fireplace in 28 ft. paneled rec. room, larger
children’s area and large laundry. Gas heat.
Reduced to upper 30’s. Open daily 4 to 6,
weekends 2 to 6. Immediate possession. Excellent loan. Owner or your broker. Telephone MUndelein 6-0068.

HIGHLAND

1060

Brick ranch, 3 bdrms., 1% baths, liv. rm.
with frpl., din. ell, bsmt. rec rm. with frpl.

PARK—RAVINIA

and

Custom-built

DEERFIELD

frpl.,
din.
baths, sc.

R

FOR LIFE THAT/S GRACIOUS
CHOOSE THIS HOME
THAT'S SPACIOUS

Coons

Realtor

Brick Colonial,
liv.
rm.
with
rm., family rm., 3 bdrms., 114
porch, bsmt., gar.

pan-

3 bedrm. brick ranch, full bsmt. Built-ins,
convenient neighborhood; long term financing. Construction to start soon.

275
N.
Deere
Park
Drive—by
owner.
Charming Mediterranean home on magnificent bluff property overlooking Lake Michigan. 5 family bedrooms, private beach with
riparian rights. $62,500.
Open Sat.-Sun. ID 2-6366

MORTGAGE
LOANS
CONVENTIONAL
OR
FHA
For prompt, personal service when you
—build or refinance see us.
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
OF LAKE FOREST
LAKE FOREST 5100

large

Piersen Realty

$20,950

Herbert
HIGHLAND
PARK—Tri-level.
Like
new
modern home in beautiful wooded area.
Large lot, lawn, shrubbery and flowers
add to beauty, privacy and gracious living. 3 large bedrooms, 2 full baths top
level; large living room, dining area and
modern kitchen, built-in oven, counter top
stove,
dishwasher,
breakfast
nook
and
screened porch on ground level. Lge. recreation
room,
paneled
walls,
fireplace,
maid’s room, % bath with shower stall,
tile floor thruout lower level. Gas heat
and incinerator. Entire home
air conditioned. Priced at $38,500 for a quick sale.
Owner transferred.
ID 2-7721

baths,

John

SEE THESE BESE BUYS
848 ROSEMARY
$26,700

eled family room
and island
kitchen, gracious dining room
and paneled living room with
Crab
Orchard
fireplace,
unusual 2 story glassed foyer with
dramatic open staircase, 2 car
carport, broad heavily wooded
landscaped
site.
Immediate
possession. Attractively priced
in upper 40’s. Phone Mr. Herz,
ID 2-8711 for appointment.

REALTORS
Road

ceramic

y

rooms,

Deluxe and excitingly different
in every detail . . . individually custom designed and quality
constructed.
Four
bedrooms,

3 bedroom apartment. Large rooms, close to
schools, beach, stores. Heat and water included. $175 per month.

Waukegan

ERFIELD)

BY owner, 6 room house, 3 bedrooms, room
for fourth,
separate
dining
room,
fireplace, oil heat, 1 car garage, low taxes,
under 20. Telephone ID 2-9219.

COMPLETELY
REMODELED

701

- SALE (Impro

STHIGHLA

(HIGH

5-1158.

NEW
7 room
stone brick redwood —
level. 3 bedrooms, large living room \
stone planter, kitchen with built-in |
ances,
black
walnut
panelled
den
fireplace,
2 full baths,
completel
ished basement panelled in white 4
22; 1144 car garage, hot water heat,
he
and
garage
plastered,
fully landsc
Offered by owner and builder, im
occupancy, must sell, $29,900. Tele
Libertyville 2-1782.
BY

owner, reduced to
ranch, large kitchen,
room,

car

port,

carpeting,

dryer.
1114 Davis,
WI 5-1096.
OWNER moving out
low down payment.

room

brick

$21,750. 3 DEC
living room, f

ranch

drapes,

Deerfield.

w

Teleph

of state. By co
5% mortgage. 2

on

80x200

wooded

Lowest taxes Lake County. Ceram
bath,
mahogany — paneled
living,
room, natural fireplace. Excellent
Telephone WI 5-0352.

�ra

ele

Lea

oe

REAL ESTATE

: Se

BY

Saal

FOR

SALE

(improved) REAL ESTATE

(DEERFIELD)

owner:

1%

ie

FOR SALE
“(LAKE FOREST)

year old 4 bedroom

split-

vel with 2 full baths, large kitchen

with
i built-ins, disposal, basement, wall
to wall
) $39 ab
on peel it. Jandscaped lot.
:
»900.
Open
house
Sun
2
si
___ phone WI 5-2452.
:
i
¥% ACRE wooded lot, brick ranch,
2 bedrooms,
large paneled
living room
with
fireplace, paneled family room, 2
car ga‘a mrs
$21,000. Telephone WIndsor 5-5767.

“

DEERFIELD

- Brick ranch on beautiful landscaped lot. 3
twin size bdrms.,

4 bse

baths.

&amp;

space.

~

McGUIRE

den

or

i
dining
rm.
basement.

Full

ae

at

oe

plus

Sep.

&amp;

4th

bdrm.,

Kitchen
with
Price $39,000.

ORR,

Realtors

GReenleaf

5-1080

listed

Lake

Bluff

charmer

on the Lake. Three bedrooms, bath
and
a half. Living
room,
dining
room, den, kitchen, powder room
on first floor. Delightful outdoor
patio. Full basement, new gas heating plant. One-car attached garage.
In such
excellent
condition
one
could move right in. Only reason
for sale. Owner transferred.
Priced at—$37,500.

est

LAKE
| White
in

BLUFF RAVINE AREA
brick Williamsburg

EXCLUSIVE

pe near

WOODED

setting,

schools, shops and transporta-

tion. Spacious entrance hall; living
| room

with fireplace;

| Pine

panelled

| Tiled

kitchen;

Dining

room;

Breakfast

family

room;

room

with

fireplace; 6 bedrooms; 314 baths;
_ Porch, walled patio and FORMAL

| GARDEN;

Offered

INVESTMENTS

Colonial

in the

Seven-

Three bedroom, two bath, modern
house. Unusually interesting livingdining room with fireplace, kitchen
with
dishwasher.
Basement,
oil
heat.
One-car
detached
garage.
Minimum
upkeep
and
maximum

living. Beautiful ravine lot.
Priced

at—$42,500.

JOHN GRIFFITH, INC.
Exclusive Agents

ay 13 9

Pi

12 Scranton Ave.
_: Lake Bluff 816

T HREE

HOUSE

country

settings,

LISTINGS

NEW

Southwest

in

area.

‘Many distinctive features in each

_—owners

moving.

Priced

in high

| ONWENTSIA ROAD—Fine Colonial Brick Ranch on 1% acres. 4
bedrooms,

3

baths,

Priced in the sixties.

UN

kitchen,

panelled

$350

Kathryn

MS

den.

per month.

Jaicks

Berenice Ressinger
Carmen

ae

Three
bedroom,
two bath, frame
ranch on almost two acres of beautiful wooded property. Living room
with fireplace
and book
shelves,
dining room with fireplace, kitchen, paneled
family
room,
utility
room. Gas heat. Two-car heated garage, dog run.
Priced at—$54,500.

LAKE FOREST 382

FOR SALE—BY OWNER
16
8-ROOM
RANCH
HOME
|
(3-YEAR OLD—LIKE NEW)
paperge living room with fireplace
_
Modern
kitchen
with
built-in
range
__ Oven, dishwasher and disposal.
a Large family room; peg floor; dado
=» —place.
aneled den (15x22).
3 twin bedrooms.

| 2

a

ceramic

tile baths

-conditioned.

with

|
_

Full basement

Gas heat.
Heated 2-car

er,

l

| FOR

an

equipped

appointment:

with

electric
Deerpath

Lake

Forest

4052.

LIFE THAT’S GRACIOUS

CHOOSE A HOME
THAT'S SPACIOUS
This.
a pe
es

delightful
rustic
room,
living
, and 2 ceramic

_Mr. Hastings.

A

BEAUTIFUL

HOME

SET BACK FROM THE ROAD ON 3
i
of beautifully wooded and landscaped

Ps
tty, this charming 3 yr. old brick home
lis
its separate 3 car garage makes a strik4
picture. Spacious ent. hall divides din.
im.
from the Ige. liv. rm. with fpl. Gen| erous lib. with f/pl. and entire wall of book
I va thag beau. glazed and scr. pch. over|
looking rose gardens and terr., mod. nat.
| wood kit., attr. bkfst. area, pwd. rm., bedtm. and bath complete 1st fl.
_ _ 2nd fl. has luxurious mast. suite with Ige.
_ drsg. rm.-bath, 2 add’! lge. bdrms., one deee peed for dividing, with attr. bath.
f
-A. Gas ht., air-cond., basemt. playrm.

| This house is notable for its spaciousness
_ and beau. detail as well as its exquisite land- scaping. Realistically priced at
$85,000

/1925 PAUL
PHELPS, INC
Sheridan
Rd.

Page

46

LAKE

FOREST

LAKE

LAKE

BLUFF

CHARMING WELL BUILT BRICK—3 bedrooms, 1%4 baths, living room, frpl., 14 ft.
dining room, flagstone patio. Basement, att.
garage. LACY SETTING, flowering shrubs,
garden &amp; play areas. 30’s. 235 Blodgett.
FOUR BEDROOMS, 214 baths, living room,
frpl., 16 ft. dining room, porch, 26 ft. panelled Family room, frpl., Gas heat, 2 car
att. garage. This is the house for the large
family!
LITTLE
HOUSE,
living room, frpl., dining room, 2
drms., 1 bath, basem. Gas
hot water heat. 2 car garage. House in wonderful
private
setting
of birds,
trees
&amp;
flowers
yet
walking
distance
to
Village.
Modest in Price!
TRI-LEVEL—Dishwasher,
disposal, _ fire.
place, family room, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
garage. $28,500.
RENTALS
.
. 4 bedrooms,
2%
Immed Occup!
. . « 3 bedrooms, 1%4 baths, Immed

Lindenmeyer,

acre

fireplace,

of

Living

dining

room,

at—$74,500.

H.

D.

baths,
Occup!

Lake

Bluff

969

Olson

&amp;

Waukegan,
OPEN

FOR

Ifl.

INSPECTION

SUNDAY,

3

TO

5:30

GREENVIEW
PLACE
' LAKE
FOREST
Ideally located one year old splitlevel.
Charming
exterior
of red
brick with large Colonial windows.
Living room with fireplace, dining
area,
kitchen with
built-ins
and
breakfast
area,
3 bedrooms,
21%4
baths,
spacious
family
room,
screened
porch.
Hot water
heat,
large
basement,
attached
garage.
Occupancy
before opening of
schools. An excellent value in high
30’s.

Lake

GRIFFITH,
INC.
485
Lake Bluff

LAKE
BLUFF:
Moffett
Road.

4

Live on
years

Libertyville. Three acres of ground.
Paneled living room with fireplace.
porch, dining room with fireplace,
library
with
fireplace,
screened
porch, modern kitchen with eating

built-ins,
eating
area
and
wood
burning fireplace . . . a wonderful spot for entertaining. Features

large walk-in closets; electric eye
garage; big basement. For appt.
call Lake Bluff 4057 (Mrs. Jones).
Exclusive!

8

pieces

of

beautiful

vacant property, ranging from 11%
to 3 wooded acres, and priced from

area, laundry. On the second floor:

$7,000 to $18,000, All in Lake

bedrooms,

four

est.

den.

Basement

with

room

with

fireplace.

and

recreation
Storage.

Gas

three room apartment. Kennels and
storage barn. Orchard and gardens.
Priced at—$85,000.

display ad on page
STUART
Exclusive

In
LOW
ered.

FOREST
BARGAIN

of the
Multiple

ID 2-4580

Evanston-North
Listing Service

excellent

Shore

SOLD;

TWENTIES

Forest

Six

home

Bluff,

ESTATE
FOR
SALE
(MISCELLANEOUS)

LIBERTYVILLE
2 Bedroom brick. Has rec. room with fireplace in full basement, separate dining room,
2 car garage, oil forced air heat, hardwood
floors, plastered throughout. $15,000.

An

offer

will

GRIFFITH,
485

Lake

be

15
In

oil

consid-

LOTS
Highland

Park,

%

mile from business area with water
and paving in and sewer available.

Ripe for building small homes.
Priced at less than $3,000 a lot in
parcel.

one

PAUL PHELPS, INC.
1925

Sheridan

Rd.

ID

2-4580

ee
RAVINE lot for sale in northeast Highland
Park, 110x150. Telephone ID 2-1697.
LOT
for sale by owner,
50x150,
Cherry
Lane, Highland Park. Call ID 2-8719,

ee
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
(DEERFIELD)

REAL

(Vacant)

ESTATE FOR SALE (Vacant)
(MISCELLANEOUS)

OFFICES,

Completely furnished 1 bedroom, full basement frame on 75x125 ft. lot. Separate dining room, screened porch, hardwood floors,
plastered throughout. $10,500.

1,

STORES &amp;
TO RENT

STUDIOS

2 AND
3 rooms for offices
Central Ave. ID 2-0150.

only.
4

456

2 Bedroom brick and frame, close to transportation. Tile bath has colored fixtures, oil
baseboard
heat, hardwood
floors, washer,
dryer, stove and
refrigerator
included
in
firm price of $17,500.

aAPANIAMENTS
TO RENT (Unfurnished)
(HIGHLAND PARK)

2 Bedrooms. Solid brick with attached garage. Living-dining room combination, cabinet kitchen with dining area, gas baseboard
heat, hardwood
floors, stove, refrigerator,
automatic washer,
drapes, blinds, balance
included in firm price of $18,600. Retired
owner will hold papers at 5%.

Modern 114 room apartment. Elevator building. New stove and re-

3 Bedroom
frame has family room
fireplace,
attached
garage,
1958
oil
$94.60. Close to schools. $15,950.

with
bill,

4 Bedroom frame with basement. Fireplace
in living room,
separate
dining
room, 2
baths, oil heat, hardwood floors, plastered
throughout. Oversized 2 car garage. Asking
$18,525.

SCHWANDT
606 No.
Milwaukee
Libertyville 2-2015

VICINITY

REALTY

CO

OF

WM.

816
403

JUDSON

frigerator.

L.

J.

SHERIDAN

RA 6-7743

&amp;

CO.

Agent

ID 2-5041

ATTRACTIVE
3 large
room
apartment
with private bath, stove and re rigerator
furnished; laundry facilities, parking. $115
Ales
Telephone ID 2-1877, after 6

furnished;

Libertyville
MUndelein 6-6720

NORTHBROOK

available

immediately.

$135. Telephone ID 2-5041.
4 ROOM
apartment for rent on second
floor, utilities furnished.
For more
information call ID 2-7817.
THREE room apartment in Highwood, close
to transportation, shopping.
Refrigerator
and stove furnished. Inquire ID 2-4067 or
at 125 Maple, Highwood.
lst FLOOR,
3 room
apartment,
enclosed
porch and garage, working couple | preferred, rear entrance. 212 Everts Place,
Highwood. ID 3-1627.
GREEN
BAY
and Deerfield Roads.
2%
rooms, 1 bedroom,
complete kitchen and
living room. $120. Telephone ID 2-6759.
4 ROOM apartment, second floor, in
Highwood, no pets. Telephone ID 2-3039,
after
3:30. Rent $80 per month.
FOUR
room kitchenette apartment, second
floor. 2 bedrooms,
walking
distance to
school and transportation; heat and hot
water
furnished.
Telephone
ID
2-1060
days or WI 5-0645 evenings for appointment.

EDWARDS

CARR
REALTY
Dundee Rd.
LEhigh
Evenings CRestwood
2-1519

RAVINIA—730

42 ROOMS. 2 bedrooms, stove and refrigerator

Older country home has living room, dining room,
kitchen, 2 bedrooms, bath and
enclosed
front porch,
2 car garage,
full
basement, hot water heat, plastered walls,
corner lot, 1 acre, large trees. Only $16,500.

INC.

LAKE BLUFF East. 4 bedrooms, 114 baths,
living-dining
combination,
large
utility
room,
attached garage, ample closet space,
on quiet shaded street close to schools,
transportation and beach. Owner leaving
ib
priced in high teens. Lake Bluff

Central

SALE
(Vacant)
PARK)

BEAUTIFUL wooded % acre lot on private
Sylvan lake, 80 foot lake frontage. Desirable for nicer year round home. LIbertyville 2-2147,

one

the

FOR

(HIGHLAND

Older 4 bedroom frame with 2 car garage
on 87x214 ft. lot. Separate dining room,
hardwood floors, plastered throughout. $15,500.

Beautiful ranch, 3 years old, combination
living and dining room, cabinet kitchen, tile
walls, 3 bedrooms, tile bath, washer, dryer,
stove, and oven included, gas heat, 1% garage, lot all fenced. Owner transferred, will
sacrifice only $15,500.

in

ESTATE

DEERFIELD:
Lovely wooded lot, 75x170,
Stratford Rd. All improvements. $7,500,
Open to offer. Call Forest 9-6715.

IIl.

new

Bluff

REAL

3 Bedroom, 3 bath English Colonial. Has
rec room with bar in basement, family room,
enclosed breezeway, attached garage, living
room with fireplace, separate dining room,
Youngstown kitchen with dining area. This
spacious home has many very fine features.
$29,500

WHEELING

room

EVANSTON
luxury
co-op
apartment,
8
rooms, 4 baths, Lake view from
every
room,
elevator, wood burning fireplace,
dishwasher, garage. On quiet street near
schools,
shopping
and_
transportation.
Board approval. Owner. Telephone DAvis
8-5226. Brokers invited.
COUNTRY
LIVING
Custom built, 4 bedroom, 2 bath country
estate on 134
acres with barn, ideal for
horses. Fully landscaped overlooking orchard and lake. Excellent schools, churches
and transportation. 5 miles to Mundelein, 9
to Barrington. Under $30,000. Owner, PArk
4-4066 or JAckson 6-1148.
WHEELING;
immediate occupancy, 3 bedroom brick, sell or rent, option to buy,
excellent
condition,
electric _ kitchen,
fenced yard, garage. $17,000. Telephone
LEhigh 7-2816.

(improved)

Frame
Cape
Cod
on
%
acre has living
room, dining room, kitchen, bath, 3 bedrooms, utility room, FA oil heat, 2 car garage, carpet and range included, $14,500.

near town.

condition,

system.

JOHN
Lake

CO.

LAKE
REAL

BE

heating

&amp;

Lake

Hart, Shaw &amp;
Company

MUST

Member

LAKE
BLUFF
East. New
6 room brick
ranch. 2 full ceramic tile baths, full basement, wooded New England atmosphere.
Full price, $23,500 complete; only 10%
down.
See
today.
313 E. Scranton.
3
blocks to Lake Michigan
Beach.
Telephone ID 3-0766.
BY OWNER
5 year old, 3 bedrooms, 14 baths, living
room
with fireplace, oversized 2 car attached garage with workshop area, on acre;
city water; West of Lake Forest Limits. Mid
twenties. Low taxes. Telephone ID 2-9468
evenings or all day weekends.

9 of this issue.

agents

story expandable

135 S. La Salle St.
RAndolph 6-7155

immed. sale. By appt. Lake Forest 4520,

LOVELY 6 room ranch, 2 bedroom home
on
%
acre
wooded.
Wood
paneled
throughout, 2 car garage, large patio and
outdoor
brick
barbecue.
Lake
Bluff
School District. Low
taxes. $22,500 includes range and refrigerator. Call owner
Lake Bluff 2352.

For-

Want a colonial ranch in Lake Forest close to commutation? See our

A

Richard B. Hart, President
C. Howard ReQua, Vice President
Mrs. Stuart R. French
Milton McN. Traer
Ruth Henderson
Kenmore Thorsen

LAKE FOREST—Builder’s own home. Well
designed brick ranch. Quality throughout.
3 twin size bedrms.; 2 tile bathrms., vanity;
10
closets;
large
living-din.-frpl.;
Beaut. lge. kitchen, brkfst. rm. Built-ins;
Washer,
dryer,
carpeting;
214
car att.
garage. 2 porches, one alum. scrn’d. One
half acre; Lovely views of wooded country, at 604 S. Waveland Rd. Priced at
$43,500. Have job in Florida, must have

REALTORS

Parking Space Available
for Our Customers

260 E. Deerpath
Lake Forest 4040

816

charming
old, one-

Four

baths

dence.
Separate garage and apartment.
Many trees.
Aldis Browne Jr. Lake Forest 819
Or WHitehall 4-7373 week-days.
Chicago

MUNDELEIN

owner colonial ranch built by Gus
Olson. Wooded lot with ravine behind. Has many extra features including a big country kitchen with

BUYERS!

LAKE FRONT HOME
RIPARIAN-KENOSHA,
WISC.
Watch the harbor lights from a high cliff
overlooking Lake Michigan with an unobstructed view of the harbor, just % hour
from Highland Park. 5 room, modern white
brick ranch. Wood burning fireplace, master bedroom, knotty pine dinette, small den,
tile kitchen and bath, screened terrace and
paved
patio
overlooking
lake.
150
ft.
frontage (riparian). Private beach and _ private stairway
to lake.
Must
sacrifice to
settle estate. Beautifully furnished in modern furnishings including all housekeeping
equipment, linens, china, bedding. Just unpack your suitcase and move right in. All
express commuter’s train from Kenosha to
Chicago, 55 minutes to Loop. A steal at
$18,500 full price.
Contact M. J. Rosenthal Realty, ID 30084. By appointment only.

Approximately 9.3 acres near Lake.
Faces 3 streets. Substantial resi-

REAL

ESTATE FOR SALE (improved)
(MISCELLANEOUS)

FOREST

656

JOHN
Forest

REAL

(improved)

MUNDELEIN; Must sell 3 bedroom ranch,
4 years ald, built by owner, large livingdining area, fireplace, birch cabinet kitchen, tile bath, colored fixtures, carport,
full basement, near schools and shopping.
Newly
decorated.
$17,750.
Telephone
Windsor 5-2419.
PRAIRIE VIEW countryside. ARCHITECT
OFFERS
own
design, 8 room,
1 story
modern home.
Unique interior, 11 foot
ceiling, 40 foot living room, 4 acres on
wooded
stream,
5 car garage.
$38,000.
Telephone NEwton 4-3834.

Co.

Realtors

Realtors

eu Green Bay Rd., Wilmette ALpine 1-1111
Me

an

level:

heat. Two-car detached garage with

bi-level
includes
a
room
with
2-sided
baths. $42,000. Call

~HOMEFINDERS,

Main

land.

over

Two-story remodeled, white frame,
farm
house
overlooking Lake
in

at $52,000.

for

rolling

fire-

BY CY

Priced

air-conditioned

on

vanities.

+, K acre landscaped.
nea
ice
location—Waukegan
&amp;
_ { _ Roads, Meadow Wood Section.
ny

stone,

and

with built-in cabinets.

garage

and

Priced

_ IThermo-paned throughout.
Includes carpet and drapes.

|

Brick

contemporary

cabinet kitchen, two bedrooms, library or third bedroom, two Marlite baths, powder room and outdoor
patio.
Ground
level:
Two
heated family rooms, maid’s room
and
bath, laundry room,
storage
room and utility room. Gas heat.
Two and a half-car attached garage.

266 EAST DEERPATH

a

WISE

room with

Burgess

GILBERT RAYNER
REAL ESTATE

|

FOREST)

BRICK—living room, frpl., carpeted through
hall &amp; panelled room,
tiled bath,
18 ft.
enclosed porch. Full basemt. 2 car att. garage, black top driveway. 90 ft. wooded lot.
TRANSFERRED
OWNER
DESIRES
OFFER! Financing available. Offers!

Mrs.

Bi
FOR RENT
_ Newly decorated White Brick Co| lonial Ranch on acreage in West
_ section. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, St.
_ Charles

(LAKE

(improved) REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
.
(LAKE FOREST)

Lake Forest 485

ATTRACTIVE,

| RANCH

SALE

BRICK
RANCH—3
bedrooms,
1%
tiled
baths, 34 ft. living room, frpl., FAMILY
ROOM, 2 car Garage, Gas heat; carpeting,
drapes, range, etc. included. Owner leaving
state. See this well built house; ewner will
contract. East section!

FOR

678 N. Western

FOR

CUSTOM DESIGNED —+this 4 bedroom, 21%4
baths, 30 ft. living room, bay window, frpl.,
dining room, FAMILY ROOM, gas heat, 2
car garage.
The
bedrooms
are extremely
large, Master has private bath, Lovely spacious grounds.

EXCELLENT

Newly

4

REAL ESTATE

(improvea)

7-0800

WAUKEGAN,
west side. Income property,
4 apartment,
solid masonry,
hot water
heat, full divided basement. This building
operates with very low expenses. On large
oe For appointment call Libertyville 2-

FIVE
room, 2 bedroom
apartment, basement, garage. $125 per month plus utilities. Available August 1. Shown by appointment. Telephone ID 2-1434,
4 ROOM apartment, large grounds, $70 plus
utilities, possession August 1st. Telephone
ID 3-1868 between 9:30 a.m. and 5 p.m.
IN Highwood, five room unfurnished a artment, near town and transportation.
Telephone ID 2-8077.

Scant 1 oy,

Thursday,

July

23, 19
ay

tie

esse

ae

tse

we

ane
meth
“ty:

�5 nee

seid

as

ae

Yagi

Hie2

ee ead

Hate

Se

—

a

EERE he
3st:KL ae
RRO eT

BAe

Pe
Tg
fe

One

iF a

pate
0
aE

CA

AN his
seataan
eS Se

EA aatos?

HELP WANTED—FEMALE

APARTMENTS TO RENT
(Unfurnished)
(HIGHLAND vr ue

HOUSES &amp; APARTMENTS WANTED
(Furnished or Unfornished)

FOUR room apartment in Highwood, heat
and
water,
refrigerator
and
stove furnished. $115 per month. 546 Green Bay
Rd., Highwood. Telephone ID 2-0885.
3 ROOM apartment in Highland Park, near
Lincoln school, stove, refrigerator, garage,
$80. Adults. Telephone ID 2-2305
FOUR
room
unfurnished
flat, 226 South
Central, Highwood. Telephone ID 3-1708
or ID 2-6245.
5 ROOM apartment, first floor, near schools
and transportation. $160. Available September 1. Telephone ID 3-1034.
SMALL apartment suitable for one or two
people, stove and refrigerator furnished,
in central Highwood
location. Leonardi
Agency. Telephone ID 3-1000.
BRAND new two bedroom apartment, available immediately. Call ID 2-5909.
HEATED
3 rooms and bath, small porch,
refrigerator
and
stove,
%
block
from
downtown business district. Telephone ID

HOUSING needed by August 15th to September 1 for high school teachers. Two
1 bedrm, four 2 bedroom and one 3 bedroom unfurnished houses or apartments.
Call Miss Werhane, ID 2-6510.
WANT to rent 3 bedroom house for 2 or
3 gg
starting Sept. 1st. Call ALpine
1-1289.
FAMILY
of three desires three or four
room
unfurnished
apt.
while
building.
oe
1st through Nov. Telephone ID 3-

3

ROOM apartment, stove and refrigerator
furnished, off street parking, $75 a month.
Telephone ID 2-4419,

APARTMENTS TO RENT (Furnished)
(HIGHLAND PARK)
3 ROOM furnished apartment in Highwood,
private
bath
and entrance,
all utilities
furnished. Telephone ID 2-0980
COMFORTABLE
_living-bedroom
paneled
garage apartment, kitchen, bath, own entrance, utilities furnished, ‘suitable for one
__or two, $110. Telephone "ID 2-8574.
3 ROOM
and
bath
furnished
basement
apartment, utilities furnished except for
gas and electricity, available August
1.
Telephone ID 2-2241
3 ROOMS;
heat,
light,
water furnished;
private entrance. Telephone ID 2-3786 after 5 p.m.
FURNISHED
apartment for rent in Highwood, available Aug. 15th. Telephone ID
2-3802. Between 8 and 5 p.m.
2 ROOMS furnished apartment, large living
room, closets, bathroom, kitchen, gas and
light furnished,
in convenient
location,
couple only, reasonable. Telephone ID 22965
TOWNHOUSE,
available September
1 or
October “1 for at least 6 months, beautifully
furnished, central location, 2 bedrooms,
dishwasher, T.V., patio and garage. Telephone Thursday before 5 or Friday morning, ID 2-1431 or ID 2-1486
io
TWO
room
furnished
apartment,
utilities
furnished, close to transportation and Fort
Sheridan. Telephone ID 2-9184
3 ROOM
and bath
furnished
apartment,
suitable for working couple. no children
or pets. Telephone ID 2-2035
ATTRACTIVE
cool two room
apartment
with view. Adults, no pets. $100 includpinay
| and utilities. Telephone ID

BOARD

APARTMENTS TO RENT (Furnished)
(LAKE FOREST)
IN

beautiful country house, apartment suitable for 2 people. ne
Labor Day.
2 bdrms., 2 baths, 2 living rooms. Garage.
$180
monthly,
utilities
inclusive.
Telephone Lake Forest 4772.
SMALL, first floor partly furnished apartment, share bathroom with owners. 789
McKinley Rd. Lake Forest 463.

HELP

HOUSES TO RENT
(HIGHLAND

THREE
bedroom,
1%
bath, carport, finished recreation room, gas heat, close to
shopping and tiakapontatinn, call ID 25561 or ID 2-3246.
FOR rent September 1, 3 bedroom ranch,
1376 Arbor Ave., Highland Park, large
living room, finished family room, ceramic
tile bath and kitchen, lease. For rent by
builders. Call Halvor Ulvenes, ID 2-1587
after 6 p.m.

Two

bedroom

bungalow

type

residence,

large
living
room
with
fireplace,
dining
room, cabinet kitchen, stainless steel sink,
tile bath, gas heat, refrigerator and stove,
garage, beautiful corner lot, close to trans-

portation
per
665

and

shopping.

month.
DONALD
Vernon
VE

HOUSES

Adults

ANDERSON

only.

$135

Glencoe

5-2113

TO RENT (Unfurnished)
(DEERFIELD)

FIVE room Town House, newly decorated,
2 bedrooms,
basement,
garage,
walking
distance to ‘shopping, transportation. August 1 occupancy, $150 month. Telephone
WI 5-0905.
SIX room residence, 114 baths, furnished or
unfurnished, close to transportation and
schools.
944
Sunset
Court,
Deerfield.
Telephone WIndsor 5-0690.

HOUSES TO RENT (Furnished)
(HIGHLAND PARK)
LIVING room, dining room, kitchen, den,
three bedrooms, 114 baths, wood burning
fireplace, large yard, five blocks to school
and transportation. ...Ravinia area. $275.
Telephone ID 2-3236 after 6:15 p.m.

_; Thursday, July 23, 1959

RENT

OPERATING

Opportunities

In

e CLERICAL

Free

40

e TECHNICAL
(MALE
If

you

live

rounding
be

one

OR
in

Evanston

suburbs

of the

you

Apeco

ing in Evanston’s
ern,

air

now

for personal

will

conditioned

want

time,

ROOM

general

floor

NURSES

PERSONNEL
2-8000

FOR

ultra-mod-

office.

Phone

HOSPITAL

Group

CORP.
4-6050

OFFICE GIRL
General office, work and typing.
Full time. Pleasant working conditions. Apply

in person.

be

glad

to

AMBITIOUS
your

own

women—build
with

national

INC.
ID 2-2500
a

business

prestige

Job
Company

children’s

Life

Many

give

of

company.

No
capital,
future
security,
immediate
money, full or part time, flexible hours,
car
desirable.
PERSONALITY
AND
BACKGROUND
more
important
than
business
experience,
Fascinating
work
with unlimited potential. Telephone Lake
Bluff 471 for interview.
SALESLADY,
neat, courteous, and a willing
worker for new subteen and junior shop.
Good pay. Apply in person Saturday 9 to
12 a.m. Miss Gay,
1902 Sheridan Rd.,
Highland Park.
SWITCHBOARD
OPERATOR,
days,
40
hour week, experience necessary. Apply
personnel director, Lake Forest Hospital,
Lake Forest 5600.
OFFICE clerical help, typing not essential,
permenent
position,
excellent
insurance
program for employees. Telephone ID 22954 for appointment.
RECEPTIONIST-SECRETARY.
Interesting
work. Apply only if interested in permanent position. Family Service of Highland
Park. ID 2-4981.
YOUNG LADIES
Telephone
calling. Temporary
opening on
day or evening shifts. No
experience required. Immediate
employment,
Telephone
WI 5-1873.

to

small

of-

WOMAN, part
Ritzenthaler

engineer.

HIGHWOOD
Community Center
Hagen
Brothers
Circus
need
ticket sales help. Contact J. G.
Highwood Ball Park.

sponsored
telephone
Parker at

STENOGRAPHER,
EXPERIENCED.
or part time. Interesting work, good
Telephone ID 2-1553.
bookkeeper,

phone ID 2-3080

must

type

Challenging position. Varied
duties. Many benefits. See or
call Mr. Jungherr, The City of
Lake Forest. Telephone 2600.

WANTED

ROUTE

information

J-45

c/o

Highland

experienced.

Full
pay.

and

ments.

be

time work, school bus driver.
Bus Service, NEwton 4-3900.

able to take

handle

Call Frank

dictation,

special

infants’

and Be

Shop

ah

about

Park

Write

yourself.

2

i

08

News.

a

)

ENGINEERS
JOIN
THE GBC FAMILY
LOCATED IN NORTHBROOK

PROCESS
A

challenging

be
_

ENGINEERS ~

opportunity

for

top

nots) 4

process engineers who can handle all phases
of = gti
and assembly of office a
men

~

PRODUCT DESIGNERS

These men will carry new products right
bape from the talking stage into produc- para:

ion

Call

for

personal

interview

CRESTWOOD

2-3700

GENERAL BINDING
CORPORATION
1101 SKOKIE HIGHWAY —
NORTHBROOK

assign-

SALESMAN
ALSO

PART TIME
4
MAINTENANCE MAN
GARNETT &amp; CO.
LAKE FOREST 881

Mohr.

Culligan, Inc.

PERMANENT

NORTHBROOK
CRESTWOOD 2-1000

LABORER
1

YOUNG woman, 2 positions open for general office work. Typing necessary. One
position requires experience. Pleasant surroundings,
work
interesting, educational
benefits. Telephone Lake Forest College,
Lake Forest 3100, ext. 52

position available at Village of
Winnetka. Ability to drive large
trucks required. 40 hour week. Vacations, Holidays, etc. Apply personnel

director,

Village

Hall,

—

Win-

netka or call HI 6-2500.

Resilient Tile Setters
(Union)
for work at

NURSE
For Specialist’s office.

5 day week,

pleasant

top

surroundings,

time,

Commons

om

HOTEL desk clerk, day shift, good starting
salary, board and room. Apply in person.
Deerpath Inn, Lake Forest 2280.

Tele-

WAITRESSES,
full time or part time for
Highland Park’s most beautiful, busy restaurant. Excellent salary and tips. Telephone ID 2-5880.
SECRETARY WITH MEDICAL EXPERIENCE, Winnetka, new air conditioned office.
Telephone
Hillcrest
6-6310
week
days, or VErnon 5-1178, Sunday and evenings.
ONE GIRL OFFICE
PERMANENT
Experienced, full time, salary open, good
working conditions.
20TH CENTURY
TELEVISION
1858 First St., Highland Park
PART time waitress and kitchen help wanted. Call after 4 p.m. Telephone ID 3-0250.

Boxa4—

MEN,
part time work, school bus driver,
Ritzenthaler Bus Service, NEwton 4-3900.
KITCHEN help wanted, G.I. preferred for
FA rate work. Telephone ID 2-0440 after —

68

Here’s your opportunity. To qualify,
you

ID 2-7900
city

2-3700

OF

self,

REPORTER

full

More

SECRETARY
ADVERTISING

WALTON-MARCH
Deerfield Rd.

SOUTH

your

WANTER—MALE

and

Insurance

Rd.

BOOKKEEPER

1592

MILE

full

Deerfield

STAFF

Advancement

&amp;

about

large company offering all benefits,
for interview giving education, e

GENERAL BINDING
CORPORATION
1101 SKOKIE HIGHWAY
NORTHBROOK
%

i ie 4

wanted by group of local, community news- ee
papers; education or experience i journalism is desired. Permanent position with

You have always dreamed of being
a “Gal Friday” for the advertising
manager
of
a national
concern.

Experienced, 5 day week,
fice, good salary (open).

CLERK-TYPIST

LAKE MOTORS,
1766 First St.

SALESWOMEN,

HELP

a Growing

CRESTWOOD

|

Why not see us for a wonderful opportunity in the business
world.
Mrs. Barnes will
you the details.

full information

ILL

Permanent

And

226.

J-45 c/o Highland Park News.

DRYDEN

For

Extension

REPORTER

Center. Telephone Glenview,
PA 4SALESWOMEN,
permanent, full and parti
time, Jr. and Teen apparel shop, Hubbard 4
Woods, no nights, good pay, discounts, air
cond.,
pleasant
surroundings,
experience preferable, 990 Linden Ave., HlIlicrest 6-

HEIGHTS,

Hospital

UNiversity 9-9000

ILLINOIS BELL
TELEPHONE CO.

UN

NORTH

Opportunity

APPT.

SUPPLY

write

and

Good Starting Salary

Dempster

See her at 812 Deerfield
or call WI 5-9996.

OFFICE

Evanston

Conditions

WORKING CLOSE TO HOME
IN A NEW MODERN OFFICE
HAS SO MANY ADVANTAGES

Interesting position for young woman who
enjoys public contact. Duties involve some
typing and switchboard relief. Good starting
salary, and full range of company benefits.
Hours 9 to 5 Monday through Friday.

Ridge

Working

Young Women

With

5-1990,

wanted by group of local, community newspapers;
education
or experience in jour- —
nalism is desired. Permanent position with —
large company offering all benefits. Write —uw
for interview giving education,
experience —

Week

ARLINGTON.

AMERICAN
PHOTO COPY CO.

RECEPTIONIST

AMERICAN

12

work-

WI

STAFF

Bonus

Hour

to

interview.

2100 West

phone

~ KRESGE’S

sur-

family,

most

Policy

To get your application

or

as
GIRL or woman
wanted for ai-arou Bis
cafeteria work in Deerfield industry. Te "4

Insurance

Pleasant

FEMALE)

Be
4

Vacation

Christmas

e ADMINISTRATIVE

IF YOU’RE NOT PLANNING
TO GO TO COLLEGE THIS
PALLY aos

Interesting work in pleasant environment. Why commute when you
can work close to home?

ID

Immediate

NURSES

Full time and part
duties; good salary.

NATIONAL BANK
HIGHLAND PARK

taken

ful new store.

WANTED—FEMALE

REGISTERED

being

(WE WILL TRAIN)
THE FIRST

Come
in or call for personal interview.
Employment office hours are 8:30 to 4:00
Monday through Friday. 8:30 to 12:00 Saturday.

NEEDS

2020

(Unfurnished)
PARK)

TO

now

BOOKKEEPER —

for all positions in our beauti-

ROOM

HIGHLAND PARK
HOSPITAL

CALL

Applications

Liberal

GARAGE, Roomy, cement floor, drain, alley entrance, car, boat, etc. Near lake;
vicinity nen
and Park. $12. Telephone
ID 2-1138
GARAGE
stall for rent suitable for vehicle or storage. Call Lake Forest 410.

APARTMENTS TO RENT (Furnished)
(MISCELLANEOUS)
ATTRACTIVE
3 room in new ranch type
apartment building in Gurnee. Decorated
and furnished in good taste with pine
furniture. Simmons Beauty Rest bed, automatic washer and dryer, excellently located on Skokie Highway and Ferndale Ayenue.
Telephone
Kenosha,
Wisconsin,
OLympic 2-7282.

&amp;

GARAGE

EXPANDING

RENT

RELIABLE MAN
desires board and room
and 2 meals a day, 5 days per week.
Locally employed. References. Contact Mr.
LaBuda, ID 2-5250 days.

(Furnished)

FURNISHED living room, kitchen, dinette,
bedroom and bath in country home, suitable for couple. Telephone WI 5-5361.

TO

PARK HOTEL sleepin
rooms, by day or
week, free parking,
11 Waukegan Ave.,
ghwood.
ROOM
for rent,
kitchen
privileges,
one
block from Central. Telephone ID 2-4685.
SLEEPING room for rent, hot water at all
times, no pets. Telephone ID 2-5822.
SLEEPING room in Highwood, near transportation. Call ID 2-9843 or ID 2-3309
after 5 p.m.
ROOM
for rent, kitchen privileges, close
to transportation and shopping. Call after
5 p.m., ID 2-7468
LARGE light airy room, kitchen and laundry privileges, suitable for couple, hot
water at all times. Telephone ID 2-3694.
LARGE
front
bedroom:
one
block
from
business area, for employed woman, kitcheen privileges to share with two other employed women. Telephone ID 2-4718.
SINGLE room for rent in Highwood, private kitchen if desired. Telephone ID 23263 or ID 2-1130.
NICE comfortable ere
room for 1 or
2. Telephone ID 2-2531.
LIGHT housekeeping room, near transportation. Telephone ID 2-3591.

MODERN
2 bedroom
apartment, ceramic
kitchen
and
bath,
partly furnished,
in
Highwood. Call Lake Forest 3268.

APARTMENTS TO RENT
(DEERFIELD)

IS

SALES executive transferred from east desires 4 bedroom
home,
top references.
Rent to $200 with or without option to
buy. Telephone Lake Bluff 1623.
WANT
to rent furnished house by adult
couple,
September
through
December.
Lake Forest 2361.

ROOMS

KRESGE'S
OPENING SOON
IN DEERFIELD

APECO

salary.

NAVAL

Permanent, active, responsible position. Call ID 2-4650.
SALESLADY,
preferably
with
knowledge
of sewing, "Arends Sewing Machine Co.,
pat Central Ave., Highland Park, ID 2WAITRESS, 3 to 5 days per week, no nights,
top salary and tips. Millers, 349 Park Ave.,
Glencoe. Telephone VErnon 5-1000.

TRAINING STATION
GREAT LAKES
a.
=

Morton

154 E. Erie St.

Floors,

DElaware
WANTED,

Inc.

a

Chicago —

17-6446

is

college boy to assist with 3. boys —

8, 10 and 11, 5 days a week for 6 weeks. .
References
‘required.
Please
telephone ne
Mrs. Carney, Lake Forest 1632.

Page 47

�HELP

Real
Part

Estate Salesman

and

homes.

full

time,

North

PART

Shore

work

model

builder.

Tele-

TIME — Evenings

Occasional work,
rience necessary.

THE
952

to

5-1238.

WI

phone

S{TUATION WA NTED—DOMESTIC

WANTED—MAL®

stock

handling;

no

BROOKSHORE

Sunset Ridge Road
Phone CRestwood

expe-

CO.

Northbrook
2-1200

STUDENTS AND TEACHERS
You can still earn $600 to $1,000 next 8
weeks helping contact our customers with
wih
Telephone Real Silk, FRanklin

YOUNG

nan for life guard duty for Sat-

ay an
unday,
_ Moraine Hotel.
d

ELDERLY

1

a

ee

man, part time, 3 days a week

for light janitor work. Telephone ID 23115 after 7 p.m.
MAN
with mechanical
experience wanted
to work on golf course, year round employment
with paid vacation. Apply
to
golf course superintendent, Old Elm Club

800 Old Elm Rd., Highland Park, Il”

YOUNG German woman wishes housework.
Must have apartment so husband can live
in. Prefer garage apartment. Husband will
work one day. Telephone ID 2-500, Ext.
2153, after 12. Ask for Mrs. Lewis.
GENERAL housework, 5 days a week, go,
experienced, reliable, colored girl, North
Shore
references,
Call ID
3-2686 until
4:30. After 6 call GReenleaf 5-4505.
YOUNG
woman would like 4 or 5 days a
week, $20 and carefare. Call after 6 p.m.
MAjestic 3-5659.
YOUNG
lady wants 3 days work, top references. Call MAjestic 3-8076 after 4:30.
DAY work, Monday, Wednesday &amp; Thursday. Call after 6. Telephone KEnmore 63590. Call ID 2-3820 for references.
BABY

HOUSEHOLD

:
YOUNG
MEN
Light messenger work. Part time. Car reguired.
Good
earnings.
Apply
in person
a
second floor, 623 Deerfield Rd., DeerHELP

WANTED—DOMESTIC

50

A-1
JOBS.
Cooks,
$50-$60.
Cou les
$400-$500. Matas and nursemaids, $45-$60
No
fee. Shorline
Agency,
525
Lincoln
Ave.,
Winnetka.
Telephone
HI
6-5818.
EXPERIENCED
woman for general housedab ng ee
and Monday off, eat
Ee
rb
a week,
recent references
ref
. A Tele =
PD
ree

maid, white, adults, experienced,
ag, current wages,
ces,
ges. Telephone Lake

SMALL
family
would
like
ex erienced
cook-housekeeper. 3-4 days per Wouk, References required. Telephone ID 2-3007.
Sar aby
aie person
DEPENDABLE
t Oo do housework
p
references
required,
stay
preferred or go with own tr
tati

Telephone ID 3-1763.

GENERAL1

re

housework,
:

? local girlgirl —may
go
home nights if she prefers, or live lo to
children 10 and 12, recent references required. Telephone ID 3-1673.
GENERAL housekeeper, live in, permanent.
Private room, bath, T.V. Modern ranch
home near Braeside station, all new apepances, -gy' Piglpea 2 children. Must have
Xperience
and
recent
refe
-

phone ID 3-1181.

cael

WEEKEND

girl, a Friday evenin g through
ugh
Sunday noon. Light housework and baby
Sitting. Telephone ID 3-0176.
me
Prats mare no experience necesut must
have characte

Cail Lake Forest 3115.

COOKING
and
ee
room and
ees TV,
Mee

general house work
own
other hel p, references. : Lake

enh
»

Sitting,

roe

pep anie

girl

ove

SITUATION
WALL

s pastimes

for

house-

Dette,

WANTED—MALE

WASHING,

$8

per

roo

ili

and walls, 10x14; WALLPAPER. REMOW.
references,

and
up,
10x14,
Dara’ 8-6669.

DECORATING

service,

er

interior,

net

exterior,

lastering. Telephone NOrmal
17-4328 or
Laza 2-3784, ask for Mr. Sisson.
ESTATE
gardner,
30
years
experi
Write John McGregor, Rt. 2, box 144.
Mundelein. Call JAckson 6-8223 evenings.
Nal
ae bo
Mas
position as chaufTing
or o lpg
jobs.
Experi
perienced, Telephone
ALL the year round man. Well experien
house cleaning. Serve house Ping or oe
at sc,
gee .
ate
James Benja*
reenfield,
Waukegan.
DElta 6-7800. Leave message.
.
ays

RELIABLE
type.
gad

Ask
650

young man desires work of an

for Robert. Call MAjestic Ed
South Clinton St., Waukegan,

GENERAL
maintenance,
repairs,
cement
work, painting, etc. Telephone WI 5-1492
after 6 p.m.
LAKE FOREST. General handyman for one
or two days a week. Telephone ID 2-0251.
GENERAL housecleaning, day or week, experience, references. Telephone ID 2-4482,
BOY 16, desperately
in need
of

Telephone ID 2-7705.
SITUATION
maids,
Baker,

1 hrs idag.

WANTED—DOMESTIC

male
or
female;
couples,
housemen. Experienced only.
Mrs.
Shorline Agency, Winnetka. HIIl-

crest 6-5818.

THE

CURTAIN

DEPOT

North

Shore’s Only Curtain
Laundry
1825 Green Bay Rd., Rear
All work done by hand; linens,
curtains, blankets, drapes, etc.

TELEPHONE

ID 2-8615

GIRL wants general house work, baby sitting, 2 days week or after 4, 5 days a
week. Call after 4 p.m. DE 6-9627.
EXPERIENCED
lady
wishes
day
work,
Monday, Wednesday, Thursday and Saturday. Good references. ONtario 2-2297.
FROM Chicago, day worker, colored, cleaning or laundry, $10 and transportation,
Winnetka
to Highland Park.
Telephone
ATlantic 5-7299,
.

Page

48

SITTING

WANTED:
woman to care for 1 year old
child, one day per week, 9:30 a.m. to 9
p.m. Local references required. Telephone
ID 3-1200.
WANT young woman to sit 5 days a week.
Telephone evenings, ID 2-8114.
MOTHER
of one will care for your children in my home, fenced in yard. Telephone WI 5-2427.
WOMAN
wants
baby
evenings.
sitting,
Telephone ID 2-3486.
RESPONSIBLE
woman wants baby sitting
work, experienced, lives in Highwood section. Call 9 to 11 a.m. ID 2-2201.

Thurs.,

Fri.

&amp;

GOODS
Sat.

FOR

10 a.m.

SALK

to 5 p.m.

211 Pinepoint Drive, HIGHLAND
PARK
(Sheridan Rd. to the 2nd street north of
County Line Rd., which is Oak Knoll, turn
east to Pinepoint) Steinway Grand Piano;
25 Pieces of Habitant Furniture for Porch
or Recreation Room; Olive Green Leather
Couch and 2 Arm Chrs; Brown Mahogany
Breakfront;
18th Century Dining Set with
credenza
to floor; Antique
English
Stick
Barometer; Hunt Table; Glass topped, oblong Coffee Table in simple design; finest
Brown
Mah.
Bachelor’s Chest;
Interesting
Hanging
Shelf; 2 sets of Brass Fireplace
Equipment;
Dutch
Marquetry
Fall
Front
Desk; Fruitwood Finish flat topped Desk;
Capehart TV in Fr. Prov. Case; Fr. Prov,
Double
Bed,
Pr. Nite Tables
and
small
Chest; Variety of Decorator’s Lamps; Ratchet Lamps; Light Oak Twin Beds w/upholstered
Headboards;
Small
Fr.
Prov.
Bench; Game
Table; Formica &amp; Wrought
Iron Kitchen Set; Card Sets; Boy’s English
Bike; Dressing Table &amp; Revolving
Stool;
Power Mower;
Beautiful plates in Lenox
and Haviland; Rock Crystal; Linens; Mink
Stole;
Kitchenaids;
Set
of Susie
Cooper
Pottery; Sealskin Jacket; Russian Broadtail
Coat; Women’s and Men’s Clothing; Speaker Cabinets; Webcor combination AM-FM
radio and tape recorder; Misc. ID 2-4907.

Sale

by

HAZEL

ANN

STUPPLE

2

MATCHED
AR\1’s walnut,
$140
each;
1959 Bell sterio tape deck, automatic shut
off,
$80;
Berliant
recorder
sterio play
back, $450; Knight Sterio preamp, $40;
Also miscellaneous sterio tape. Telephone
ID 2-8661.
MOVING,
must sell. ABC Omatic washer,
Kenmore dryer, 9 by 12 hooked rug, $55
each; French sofa, ironing board, carpet
sweeper, building jack post. 222 Sheridan
Place. Lake Bluff 1973.
AIR CONDITIONER,
% ton, $90, Lullaby
6 yr.. crib, mattress and matching chifforobe,
$35.
English
convertible
buggy,
$10. Telephone WIndsor 5-0758.
CONTEMPORARY
Simmons _ convertible
sofa and slip cover, $50; lounge chair, $20;
cocktail
table,
$8;
pair Simmons
steel
ig
bed frames, $5. Telephone ID 31288.
RELAX-A-CISOR
for sale, perfect condition, $150. Call Lake Forest 4558.

SIMMONS

hide-a-bed,

$70;

tape

recorder,

$85;
Capehart
radio-phonograph,
$55;
ladies’ writing desk, $20. Telephone ID
3-1148 after 6 p.m.
HOOVER
VACUUM
CLEANER
with all
attachments.
In perfect
working
order,
$25.
Also
electric
floor
polisher,
$10.
__ Telephone ID 2-3454.
1958
FRIGIDAIRE,
double
oven
electric
range, will sacrifice for $250.
Call ID
2-9256.
21 INCH Sylvania television, mahogany console, very good condition. Call after 5
__p.m., ID 2-7425.
SAGINAW
convertible dining room chesttable and 4 matching chairs, best offer.
Telephone ID 2-3916.
G. E. Refrigerator, 45 pound freezing compartment.
Good
condition,
reasonable.
Telephone WI 5-0819.
LAWN
mower, $15; Homart 20 inch window fan, $20; Westinghouse cannister vacuum,
$10;
leathertop
drum table,
$10.
Telephone WI 5-0469.
LEATHER dining room chairs, table, Baker
wing chair, other living room chairs, excellent condition, metal bridge chairs and
table, reasonable. Telephone ID 2-0156.
NORGE
electric
stove,
good
condition,
Kenmore automatic washing machine, best
offer. 1285 Cavell, ID 2-4758.
UPHOLSTERED
living
room
chair with
footstool, good condition, $25. Telephone
ID 2-0971.
BARGAINS:
16 inch girl’s bike, excellent
condition; pink quilted coverlets; assorted
draperies; nearly new Rotissomat; laundry
hamper;
Lightolier ceiling fixture. Telephone ID 3-0545.
UNIVERSAL gas range excellent condition,
dining room set, no reasonable offer refused. Telephone ID 2-4718.
RARE
antique French
inlaid chest desk,
needs
some
work,
$125;
4 mahogany
Windsor chairs, not old, $30 the set; 3
fine old French miniatures on ivory from
Park Benet, 3 for $90; Antique bleached
Chippendale desk chair, $18; French Sevres blue porcelain stove, $50. Call Lake
Bluff 1739.
36 INCH gas stove, good condition, $30 or
best offer. Telephone WI 5-2278.
GARAGE
sale Friday and Saturday, 1428
Forest, Wilmette.
Extra long oak twin
bed, mattress, spring; fireplace equipment;
tables; lamps. Reasonable. Telephone ALpine 1-2527,
;

HOUSEHOLD

GOODS

IMPORTANT
ON
THE

1111

FOR

Complete
furnishings
of this fine North
Shore
14 room
residence,
including
very
important collection of Judaic art, fine furnishings,
Oriental
and Continental
ivories
and
porcelains,
original oil paintings
by
listed artists and large collection of collector’s works of art.
SALE DAYS
~
THURSDAY, JULY 23, 10 A.M. to 4 P.M.
FRIDAY,
JULY
24, 10 A.M. to 4 P.M.
SATURDAY, JULY 25, 11 A.M. to 1 P.M.
Fine collection of custommade furniture including
pair
large
upholstered
sectionals,
love seats, chairs, Bergere, painted and antiques Italian furniture, consoles, Trumeau
and matching
commode,
large round
antiqued dining table with matching buffet and
side cabinet with 8 bleached and upholstered
dining
chairs,
fine pair
English
pedestal
tables, pair of important Parliament leather
book tables on teak stands, large quarter
round bleached planter table, large Grosfeld
house French Provincial bedroom set with
double
upholstered
twin
bed
headboard,
double
dresser,
chest,
dressing table
and
night
stands.
New
Orleans
wrought
iron
breakfast set, quantity of garden and porch
furniture,
several very nice
chaises.
The
Judaic
art
collection
includes
miniature
pewter
altar,
fine
paintings
of scholars,
Torahs, ceremonial Cain pitcher and bowl
in silver, Shofar horn, pewter and _ silver
pieces, and many other interesting pieces.
Vast collection of ivories, figures, plaques,
ornaments of all sorts in both Oriental and
Continental motifs. Includes extremely fine
pair
of
16”
Juggler
figures,
pair
teak
plaques
with
large
raised
ivory
flowers,
wood and ivory 9 piece band, ivory birds,
exceedingly
fine pair carved
ivory Swiss
lace vases on teak stands, pairs of plaques,
coaches, figures, etc. Continental porcelains
including rare pair of Vincennes Bisque figure and porcelain vase lamps, large Palace
Royal Vienna urn mounted as lamp, important pair of Bisque figures mounted on velvet
plaques,
pairs
of
porcelain
plaques
mounted on velvet, bronze and silver plated
figures in pairs, fine Limoges lemonade set
with bowl and 20 stemmed cups, fine pair
Minton lamps, fine pair large marble and
Ormolu urns, important 3 piece marble and
Ormolu clock set, small pair carved wood
and gilt Italian mirrors, Continental ivory
miniatures,
set
4
important
soap
stone
plaques, Swiss singing bird cage, important
Limoges enamel, miniature singing bird box,
set of Stevens
needlework
pictures,
14K
gold and Limoges enamel boat, large silver
plated nef, Royal Dux figure, Bisque, Meissen and Dresden figures, silver plate and
sterling pieces, tea sets, kettle and stand,
champagne
racks
and_
buckets,
Tiffany
clock.
Unusual
Mexican
silver large
bar
cabinet, yellow wrought iron breakfast set,
6 burner Roper stove, G. E. refrigerator,
freezer, Whirlpool washer, Hamilton dryer,
mangle. Important very large round Italian
lace dining cloth.
DON’T
MISS
1
opel alee aint
Sale

Conducted

by

GALLERIES
HI

6-7444

MOVING
this week-end. Mahogany dining
table and chairs, formal, excellent condition, recreation room furniture, new bar
chairs, card table and chairs, occasional
tables, antique white Rattan lounge chairs,
tables and service cart in Rattan, stationary mahogany card table with leather top.
All priced to sell. Call morning or evening, ID 2-5595.
COFFEE table and dining room chairs for
sale, excellent condition. Telephone ID 347.
MOVING:
Interior
decorator’s
complete
household furnishings for sale at fraction
of cost. Beige carpeting, rubber foam padding approx. 22’x23’; round pine table, 2
leaves; 4 antique maple chairs with pads;
pine hutch
cabinet;
Lawson
2 cushion
couch; pr. Pembroke tables; wing chair;
pine console card table with 2 arm chairs;
mahog. chest-desk; sectional with corner
step table;
pr. 4 poster beds;
mahog.
colonial chest; cherry colonial 2 section
dresser and mirror; magazine table; 2 pr.
Chintz draw drapes, match. slipper chair;
sectional corner desk and commodes, desk
chair; fire screen and tools; complete set
redwood
lawn
furn.;
pr. stunning
tall
table
lamps;
pr.
dresser
lamps;
other
lamps, pictures; Servel refrig., 4’7’’x2’4”’;
Kenmore washer; dehumidifier; everyday
dishes; Limoges; demi-tasse cups and saucers; sterl. candlesticks, cocktail shaker,
12 sterl. sherbert or wine glasses; pewter,
china access.; blankets, linens, kit. utensils; ping-pong
table;
card table; extra
chairs; books; lge. bookcase; ant. Chippendale music cabinet; high-chair; 4 yr.
crib mattress;
baby
buggy
pad;
diaper
pail; misc. items too numerous to mention. 497 Pleasant Avenue, Ravinia.

GARAGE SALE
Pair brand new never used white Naugahide
swivel chairs, $185, sell for half price; also
beautiful upholstered odd chair, $35; magnificent antique pull up chair, $45; very
fine $100 Thayer 6 year crib and mattress,
sell for $30; Hoover vacuum cleaner, perfect condition, $18; also pair antique tall
brass’ candlestick
lamps,
reasonable;
four
old English prints; many other antiques and
moderns; bric-a-brac.
CLOTHING
Girl’s clothing, 3 years through 12, perfect
condition. Men’s clothing, suits, coats and
jackets, size 42. Women’s
clothing, suits,
coats and dresses, 12-14-16.
1975

Old Briar
Thursday,

Rd.
Saturday

3 PIECE sectional, gray,
Telephone ID 2-1942.

and

Highland
Sunday

small,

Frieze,

FRIGIDAIRE

PUBLIC

HOUSE
SALE
PREMISES

Park

$35.

dryer;

AUCTION

SHERIDAN RD., WILMETTE
(Corner of Elmwood
&amp; Sheridan Rd.)

PICK

HOUSEHOLD

HOUSEHOLD GOODS FOX SALE

SALE

The

Collection

By

AND

Order

MRS.
on

the

Of

LYNCH

premises

307 NORTH
DEERE PARK DRIVE
HIGHLAND PARK,

double

Norge

mat-

COUCH,
down cushioned, 8 foot, $150; 3
down
cushioned chairs, all for $100; 5
leathertop tables, hand tooled, all for $100.
Telephone LE 7-1062.

EAST
ILL.

MAGNIFICENT
framed
gilt mirror from
France, 4 ft. x 6 ft., very old, $100; laundry tub, double with legs and fittings, $10.
Telephone WI 5-1950.

SUNDAY
1 P.M.

COUCH
$25; coffee table, $5; 2 rugs, 6
by 9 and 9 by 9, $2 and $5; Electrolux, $5;
Philco % ton air conditioner, $95; 2 pairs
46 inch drapes for 80 to 106 inches; men’s
cowboy boots, size 12, $8. Call Lake Bluff
4437.
ELECTRIC
refrigerator,
$125
and
Norge
gas stove. $100. Good condition. Telephone
ID 3-0876.
DELUXE
gas stove in excellent condition,
$30. Telephone WI 5-0639.

Magnificent French furniture, including Aubusson and Needlepoint Chairs; curio cabinets; inlaid occasional and end tables; satinwood marquetry inlaid cupboard with grill
door and bronze mounts; Louis XVI Bouile
inlaid cabinet desk; English bronze Dore
porcelain
plaque
top table;
collection of
rare antique carved ivory pipes; pair spinach jade covered urns;
important
Napoleonic Sevres porcelain portrait decorated
tea set; sterling silver; china; bronze groups;
the rarest of French, Tiffany, Bohemian and
Venetian
glassware;
Sevres
and
Dresden
porcelain urns; bronze fireplace accessories;
ivory carvings; collection of antique enamel
watches;
fine
paintings
by
Largilliere,
Knight, Perez, Piot, Crane, Gulielmi, Hermandez and many others. A great amount
of miscellany including garden furniture.

MISCELLANEOUS

24—NOON

TO

FOR

SALE

“Jim Beinlich Trucking handles all
following services for Homeowners:

TOP SOILS
e
e PEAT MOSS

of

the

HUMUS
e MANURES
e LAWN ROLLING
e
RUBBISH
RE-

PREVIEW

FRI., JULY

washer;

Beautyrest

MAHOGANY table-chest, extends to 108 in.,
6 wide extention leaves stored inside. Perfect for living room-dining dining room
combination, $75; large over-stuffed wing
back chair, $35. Telephone WI 5-5114.

of

FRANK

SATURDAY AND
July 25-26, AT

Simmons

tress, double box springs; 2 single and
double pine bookcase headboards. Telephone WI 5-2611.

FURNITURE
MR.

GOODS FOR SALE
automatic

5 P.M.
5-1195.

SALE
UNDER
SUPERVISION

DIRECT
OF THE

GARAGES

CHICAGO
ART GALLERIES
LO

1-7257

CAR AND A HALF WITH
DOOR, CONCRETE FLOOR
RAGE WINDOWS.

$695
WALSH

SALE! SALE! SALE!
RED SHUTTERS WILL HOLD
THEIR
WONDERFUL
SALE
OVER
FOR
ANOTHER
THREE
DAYS — THURSDAY, FRIDAY
AND
SATURDAY—FOR
THOSE
WHO WERE OUT OF TOWN OR
UNABLE
TO GET
IN DURING
SALE DAYS.
25%
(1/4)
OFF
ON
EVERYTHING IN THE SHOP.

THE
SHUTTERS

RED
480 ELM

PL.

ID

2-8866

CADILLAC
OF REFRIGERATORS:
Kelvinator Foodarama, 15.6 ft. combination;
11 ft. refrigerator with 4.6 ft. freezer, 48
inches wide, 61 high, reason for selling—
will not fit in new house, $275; Also deluxe
Westinghouse
washer
and
electric
dryer, washer has water saver and door
to weigh clothes, dryer plays “How dry I
am when wash is dry, $100 pair—new
me
already equipped. Telephone WI 5-

Owner

Must

Be Sold

Moving

Before

NO

Nearly new gas dryer; stove; Westinghouse
refrigerator; beautiful mahogany dining room
set; living room couch; chairs; table; twin
bed steads, matching chests; many miscellaneous items.
1825 Balsam Rd.
Highland Park
MATTRESS, box springs, and 3 piece bedroom set, $89; large brown couch; 2 dining room chairs, $4.25 each; dacron panelled curtains, 65c each; odds and ends of
dishes, glassware; Hi-boy, radio cabinet,
$3.75;
mahogany
console
cabinet
with
78rpm automatic changer, good for mounting HI-FI
components,
only $20. Telephone ID 2-8760.
MOVING
to
Florida,
must
sacrifice;
2
matching upholstered chairs; Maytag washer; Kenmore dryer, 1 year guarantee; bar
and 4 pony skin stools; stationary card
table and 4 chairs; 2 lounge chairs; 6
pair black and white bamboo cafe curtains;
3 bedroom
chests
and
matching
twin
headboards;
metal
desk;
modern
andirons. Telephone ID 2-0913.
TV 24 inch RCA console model, in excellent condition, $90. Telephone WIndsor
5-3197.
VACUUM CLEANER. Electrolux with pop
out bag, automatic chord winder, and attachments, used 2 months, less than half
price. Telephone ID 2-7179.
GARAGE sale, including sofa, lounge chairs,
Bendix washer, small trailer, misc items.
ee Westgate Terrace. Telephone ID 2GARAGE sale: new and used men’s clothing,
medium to large sizes; shirts, 16-34; hats,
7%;
shoes, 944A.
Miscellaneous dishes,
auto parts, books, yard and ere
tools,
curtains. Saturday,
10-5, 1564
Oakwood,
Highland Park.
GOOD
used room sized rugs at very reasonable prices. Beige and grey.
JOHN
B. NASH
ID 2-8701
WILL trade or sell 58 inch walnut office
desk in good condition. Telephone WIndsor 5-3296.
GE ELECTRIC
range, full size, in good
condition. Telephone WI 5-0165.
WIDDICOMB blond mahogany dining room
table; 8 upholstered brown metallic chairs;
brown tweed metallic 2 piece sectional;
plus fully upholstered matching Formica
top table; 2 ebony end tables, red tooled
leather tops. Telephone ID 2-7357.

PAYMENT

E-Z

TERMS

HOME IMPRCVEMENT CO.
2800 BEL\ “DERE
ON 2-8770
WAUKEGAN
IMMEDIATE CONSFRUCTION
FOR BETTER LIVING
:
Aluminum Specialty Products. Combination
windows, doors, awnings, sidings, porch enclosures,
jalousies,
gutters,
fencing,
lawn
furniture, ornamental railings, etc. Quality
and price wise see us before buying.
THERMO-TITE WINDOW
CO.
708 WAUKEGAN
RD.
DEERFIELD
WI 5-1198
ID 2-1553
FOR rent: garden tillers, cub tractor and
attachments,
lawn
miowers,
etc.
Lawn
mower
sharpening
service,
and
sales.
Telephone
ID 2-8029, 2070 Green
Bay
Rd. Woody’s Highland Park Service Station.
NEED BLACK SOIL?
We are one of the North Shore’s largest top
soil and Nutri Soil dealers. We
are. also
equipped for grading and spreading soil.

VE

JIM

5-0513

BEINLICH
or

VE

5-1195

ALL TYPES MANURE
AVAILABLE
Large
supply of cattle, horse
and mushroom manure. We deliver any amonut.

VE

Sunday

DOWN

OVERHEAD
AND 2 GA-

M

5-0513

BEINLICH
or

VE

5-1195

LEI KAM’S Home Grown Vegetables. We
are 2 miles south of 59A on Milwaukee
Ave. Everything for your freezer or canning. Pickles, sweet corn, etc.
General construction and repairs. We _ specialize in repairing leaking or cracked basements,
rough
floors,
walls or any
other
necessary
repairs;
also
new
construction,
patios, drives, walks, foundations or general
construction and additions. 25 years experience; work guaranteed, insured and bonded.
Also general hauling. Free estimates. Telephone ID 3-1298.

DENO

CONSTRUCTION

&amp;

CORP.

LUGGAGE,
3 piece matched set, 1 small
STEAMER
TRUNK,
2 large BOSTON
BAGS, $60 takes all. Telephone ID 2-6787.

OVERHEAD 4

section garage door, 10 feet

by 6 foot 6 inches, excellent condition,
$35. Call weekends or after 6. Telephone
Windsor 5-3538.
3 OFFICE
desks, 3 office chairs, also 1
tilt-back
office
chair;
very
reasonable,
Telephone ID 2-9116.
ROTISSERIE, broiler, grill, baking attachment. Excellent condition, $35. Call Lake
__ Forest 5203.
LIKE new 14x7 over head garage door, $50.
Odd
sized used
aluminum
doors. Telephone ID 2-7882.
21 INCH blond Stromberg Carlson TV console. Best offer. Lake Forest 5393.
COLLAPSIBLE
Storkline
baby
carriage,
$12; almost new bathinette; walker, $2.50;
Teeterbabe, $2.50. Telephone ID 2-5352.
WINDOW
fan, 2 speed,
$10;
bar-b-que
grill,
$2;
power
mower,
$25;
outdoor
clothes dryer,
$8; 7x9 child’s linoleum
rug, $4; desk as is, $4. Telephone ID 29307.
T.V. 21 INCH Sylvania mahogany console
set. Excellent condition, $50. Telephone
ID 2-0206.
COMPLETE
dark room equipment,
$100;
Violin Ai, $75; Guitar and case, $15;
porch lounge, $10; window fan, $12; gym
set, $10; 17 in. TV, needs repair, $10;
wheel chair, $25; lawn roller, $10; Jacobsen Roto with sulky, $30; Wardmaster
riding mower, $100. Telephone WIndsor
5-2745 after 5:30 p.m.
FURNITURE
for
sale,
reasonable.
Like
new acrosonic Baldwin spinet piano. Dining table and 6 chairs and miscellaneous
articles. 15 Deerpath. Lake Forest 1088.

Thursday,

July

23, 1959

�Mg

HISCE)

0

SHOP AND SAVE
STOCKADE TRADING POST
WHEELING, ILLINOIS
516 N. MILWAUKEE AVE.
LEHIGH

WE
Open

SELL
Mon.
sat. &amp;

LOST:

light weight red 24” bicycle, wire basket,
light on handle bar. Reward. Telephone
WI 5-0957.
FOUND:
ring in vicinity of Sheridan Rd.,
central and Park. Telephone ID 2-0828.

17-0247

AUTOMOBILES

ON

TERMS

thru
Sun.

Fri,
9-6

1959

ANTIQUE
rocker, side table, child’s desk,
table, chair. Leather chair, rugs, fruitwood
bedstead, headboards, dressing table, magnavox, range. Stark piano, accordion. Deluxe golf cart. Pictures, mirrors, books,
Pottery. Lake Bluff 3245.
ORIENTAL
Sarouk
8x12
rug,
like new.
Very moderately priced. Come
and see.
Telephone ID 2-3812.
1948 CHEVROLET
Club
coupe,
$95;
85
gallon electric hot water heater, $45. Telephone WI 5-1766.
TO SETTLE ESTATE
2 Cars, 1959 Ford, 1951 Cadillac, give away
prices.
Self
propelled
reel
type
power
mower, $25; hand mower, good condition,
$11;
Shelvador
Crosley refrigerator,
good
condition, $50; 50 feet of wire fencing, 2
inch,
$12;
kitchen
draw
drapes,
2 large
windows
and
door,
$20; pull down
wall
lamp, modern, $11; Jenny Lind single bed,
complete,
$10. Many
miscellaneous items.
Telephone ID 3-0012.
MOVING
to Calif. Dining room set, $40;
Apex console ironer, $50; portable sewing mach., $40; Smith-Corona typewriter,
$50;
gray
metal
typewriter
desk,
$10;
blonde lamp table, $10; 29% volume encyclopedia, $15; electric heater, $15; little
league shoes, size 3, $1.50, size 6, $2;
boy’s figure and hockey skates, sizes 1,
2, 3, 5, 9, 10; clothing, misc. toys, rummage. Call after 5:30 ID 2-7208.
ROSE SALE. While they last 150 all American
roses,
Eb
Inman’s
Rose
Acre.
Telephone WI 5-0530.
ROTARY
mower,
Sears, 18’’, $25; studio
bed, $25; Ambassador trumpet, $85; boat
trailer, $15; boy’s 26” bike, $15. Telephone ID 2-5771.
21 INCH Jacobsen Manor reel mower with
sulky, good condition, $75; 1958 TR3 Triumph, AAA condition, radio, heater, etc.
$2000 or best offer. Telephone ID 2-6559.

FOR

9-9

St.

INSTRUMENTS

ck

2-2510
9-5

WANTED

BUY

&amp; FOUND

LOST: Golden Retriever, male, 4 years old,
between 10 and 11 a.m. in Market Square,
June 21. No tag but has tattoo in one
ear (TL), answers to name of Rusty. $50
reward. Call Mrs. Robert Anderson, Lake
Forest 2861.

July 23, 1959

a

ee

ad $1695

1957
1957

PEE
1957

SOW a

ae

$1595

1956

Buick 4-dr. Super hard
BOD ences
ha
ewe
$1695
Pontiac 2-dr., R-H ........ $ 795

1956

Ford

1955

Ford
conv.;
trans.; DWT.

2-dr.;

1955, Ford:
1955

R-H.

.22.2.....:. $ 895

R-H.
auto
SURO cea $

2dr

R=

2s

995

$ 745

Chevrolet station wagon
4-dr., R-H, at. steering ..$1195
Ford Victoria
Pontiac 4-dr.; R-H,
“Che ROMER EeePC
SE fa Be, $ 245
BOP 2G? Sc ae
$ 245
Rambler Station wagon $ 195

1954
1953
1952
1951

1957 DESOTO
Sportsman. Power steering
and brakes. Call Lake Bluff 4625.
1956
CHEVROLET,
4 door,
8 cylinder,
power steering, power brakes, R.H., 30000 miles. Lake Forest 2391.
1950 MERCURY convertible, radio, heater,
electric window control, reasonable, clean
Call Lake Forest 2292.
CADILLAC,
Lake Forest owner disposing
of 1958 convertible. Low mileage, color
Meridian
taupe, white top, fully equipped, save 312% sales tax. $4,595.00. Lake
Forest 5077.
1957 FORD
ranch wagon Thunderbird engine, good
condition, $1100. Call Lake
Bluff 1916.
1948
DODGE,
excellent
condition,
new

tires, battery, etc. Perfect second car. $150.
Call

ID

1928 MODEL A Ford sports coupe, $400;
1931 Model A Ford coach, perfect for
restoration, $125;
1949 Plymouth
sedan,
good transportation,
$75. Cars may
be
seen at 10 Deerfield Rd., Deerfield or call
WI 5-2359.
JAGUAR
roadster 1952 XK
120 M. Like
new condition, 220 H.P., rebored engine.
New commercial black enamel paint job.
Call Lake Forest 3125.

1909 St. Johns

Highland

ID
Open
Open

2-8640

8 A.M.

Sundays

Park

to 9 P.M.
10

A.M.

USED
AND

MOTOR
TRUCKS
MOTORCYCLES

1956 FORD pickup truck, A-1 shape,
Telephone ID 2-8091 after 6.
MOTORCYCLE,
Harley-Davidson,
model
165, less than 2600 miles,
Telephone LE 7-1062.
AUTOS

$750.
1958,
$400.

WANTED

CONVERTIBLE,
good
condition, 1950 to
1955, private
party.
Wanted
as second
car. Call Lake Forest 5046.
WANTED:
clean 1953 or 1954 Chevrolet,
any body style. Will pay top dollar. Telephone WI 5-2131.

Now, two locations to serve you better for
custom clothes and alterations.
THE SILVER NEEDLE
HIGHLAND
PARK, ILLINOIS
1866 Sheridan Rd.
610 Laurel Ave
Phone ID 2-7118
Phone ID 2-1774
LOOK chic for summer with shorter skirts.
Ask
for Eda.
Zengeler
Cleaners,
Inc..
1905 Sheridan Rd. Telephone ID 2-2800

Daily
to

5

AUTO

P.M.

OPPORTUNITY
TIME

AT CADILLAC

SERVICE

WM. RUEHL &amp; CO.
GENERAL BODY SHOP
NOW OPEN
Auto

Body

and

All Makes
to
of

come in and view
used Cadillacs, now

First

Motor

Car

St.

487

E.

Fender

FOR

JACK

Park Ave.
Highland

Park

2-3442

1950 CHEVROLET, off-white, Powe: Glide,
almost new tires; engine and brakes, good
condition; radio, heater. $95 or highest
offer. Telephone ID 2-7290.
1958 BLACK Karmann-Ghia. Excellent condition, excellent mileage. Telephone DExter 6-2924,
OLDS Super 88, 4 door sedan, radio,
2 speakers,
heater,
excellent
condition,
new tires and battery, lots of carefree
miles, Call ID 2-2871 between 9:30 a.m.
and 12:00 noon, week days.

1952 FORD
convertible, privately owned,
radio, heater, whitewalls, excellert condition, must sell, leaving for college, $475.
Telephone ID 2-4479 for appointnent.
1953
FORD
9 passenger
statior wagon,
radio,
heater,
Fordomatic,
good _ tires,
newly painted, excellent mecharical condition, $595. Telephone ID 2-794),
1956 FORD
Country
Squire 9 passenger
wagon;
power
steering
and
al extras.
Priced for quick sale, $1300. Telephone
ID 3-1343,

1959

PONTIAC

Catalina,

2

docr,

“inance
‘coney.

your
FIRST

DENO

ye

GORGEOUS
1958
Pontiac
ccnvertible,
white with blue top, power steering, power brakes, radio with rear speaker, heater,
leather
interior,
crash-dash,
whitewalls.
No cash, take over payments. Full price
$2600, financing included. Telephone WI
5-3457, after 6 p.m.
MG-A,
1959 ROADSTER:
beautiful
red,
black leather interior, hardly used, $2350.
May accept trade. After 9 p.m., telephone
Lake Bluff 5236.
1957 CADILLAC
Fleetwood 4 door. Full
power,
factory
air conditioning.
Very
clean car. $2995,
HIGHLAND PARK LINCOLN MERCURY
1890 First St,
ID 2-6300

Repair:

Johns

FRECH
ID

2-5845

car

LOANS

the

bank

NATIONAL

way

and

saw

BANK

Park

CONSTRUCTION

Park

-AGHT
types
G09R

BIKES—Boy’s or Girl’s Used and
Reconditioned. Some like new—a
few Schwinns. Most, but not ali
sizes. Also repairs and parts for ali
make bicycles.

CYCLE &amp; HOBBY SHOP
486 Central
ID 2-1369
WILL exchange two 26 in. girl’s bikes, excellent condition, for two 24 in. girl’s
orth or will sell separately. Telephone ID

BLACK
dirt, gravel
Dordand,

BOATS
BOAT and Motor for sale, 12 ft. runabout
in good condition, 25 H.P. Johnson outboard. Call ID 2-4622 after six.
12 FT. Indianap fast outboard
runabout.
Sea blue and bronze color, on trailer.
Freshly refinished. Also Harley-Davidson
120 motorcycle. Evenings, 960 W. Westleigh Rd., Lake Forest.

OVERNITER

camping

h.p. motor and trailer. $1600
$1350, Telephone WI 5-0357.

boat,
value

30
for

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
ACCOUNTING,
bookkeeping, tax service,
Chicago.
Most
clients well established.
May sell with down
payment as low as
25%. DEarborn 2-4030.

ACRES

LANDSCAPING,

LAWN

Complete

*URNITURE
MOVING—Local
Distance—one piece or a truck
ing, crating,
shipping.
Ward
telephone (1D 2-007

RESUME

and Lon
load. Pack
Andersor

SPECIALIST

A well written job resume highlights your
abilities, illustrates experience, demonstrates
capabilities. Tells your story professionally.
Phone or come in.

LAVIN
East

Erie

St.

Michigan

2-6322

ACCOUNTING
and
bookkeeping
service.
Tax
Reports. Wide
experience. William
C. Heinrichs, 685 Park Ave. W. Telephone
ID 2-1642.

CONTRACTORS

&amp;

JOR

FOR building that sew home, addition, o:
remodeling,
be
it large
or small,
cal
V_ &amp; F Construction Co. Telephone ID
2-5477 or WI 5-2980.
RELIABLE experienced carpenter. Remod
¢eling, paneling, porches and Hi Fi rooms
siding. H.
Blomquist Construction,
tele
phone WI 5-2830.
CHRISTO-CRAFT REMODELING
CO.
WI 5-3273
ID 2-2319
Remodeling and home maintenance is our
business.
Porch enclosures, basement paneled
room
additions,
kitchen
cabinet,
or
just that one door that doesn’t close right.
All work guaranteed.
CONCRETE
or stone patios, brick barbeques, home maintenance, remodeling and
room
additions.
For free estimates call
Lake Bluff 3632, R. A. Goodman
Construction.

COATING

Tree Service
j
Pruning
Tree
Removing
Spraying
@ Fertilizin
Make
arrangements now to have
unde
sirable trees removed this winter.
Winter rates for tree removal
15%
than normal price.
Fully insured
Free Estim
Hlllcrest 6-5524
ELOF T. CLAUSON
;
The finest in tree work, patios, landsca ping
and maintenance. Insured. Satisfaction
anteed. Telephone Lake Forest 3366.
DO IT YOURSELF
“4
Lawn sprinkling system. Fast, efficient,
cost.
Free
planning
and
free
estim
Telephone WI 5-3431.

MOTORS
1956 CHEVROLET engine and
complete, ready to run, $295
phone ID 2-1498.

skunk

PONIES

Prospect

Avenue

in High

PAINTING

&amp;

DECORATING

mating

call

Eric

Schneider,

Liberty

2-8592.
PAINTING
and
decorating;
cialty. Fully insured. Lake
Telephone any time.

PAINTING

AND

AND

INSTRUCTION

Hank
Winston,
staff pianist
at WBBM
CBS. Call WI 5-0244 after 7:30 v.m.
JACK MOORE
GUITAR
SCHOOL
Guitar exclusively taught. Private lessons,
group participation;
instrument
furnished.
National and State winners, 1955-56-57-58.
wn
Park Studio, telephone Hlllcrest

PAPER

,

CO.

HANGING.

Telephone

ID

2-3452—ID

2-305.

PETS
SIAMESE kittens, 10 weeks old, male
female, housebroken, adorable pets,
Call MAjestic 3-9044.

PERSIAN
black.
Round

kittens,

creams, blues,

red

Show type, champion backgro
Lake, KImball 6-2815.

GLENCOE
BOARDING KENNEL
Glencoe
VErnon 5-13
South of Dundee Rd. on the
Service Drive of Edens High

For all types of junk brought to our door,
such as:
Papers, rags, iron, metal, etc. Or
call IDlewood 3-1466 for free pick-up. We
specialize in industrial accounts. Hours daily
including Saturday, 8:30 a.m. to 5:30
p.m.
HIGHLAND
PARK
WASTE
MA’
L
1466 Berkeley Rd.
SHORELINE SCRAP &amp; PAPER CO.
We pick up paper and all metals, do maintenance work and haul. Telephone ID 31268 or ID 2-6578.

fin

Boarding Kennel.
Private inside heated stalls anc
connecting
individual
outs
runs.
Expert grooming of all bh
by professionals.

@
@

@ Under the personal direction |
Elaine Ortman.
Kennel Shop features all
sories.

@

MINIATURE
Schnauzer pups, AK
tered, perfect for town or country,
derful with children, $75 and up.
jestic 3-9044,
GERMAN
Shepherd
puppies,
blackChampion
Blue-Boy sired, excellent
position. Telephone CLearbrook 5GOLDEN
RETRIEVER PUPPIES.
registered. Splendid pedigree, litter
to go Aug.
ist. Come
see and
ch
now. Hillcrest 6-5134.
5 AKC BLACK miniature poodle pu P)
8 weeks
old, male and female.
Ho
raised. Telephone NEwton 4-3036.
with

PAID

3

CONGER
BROTHERS
PAINTING
DECORATING
SERVICE. Paper

GERMAN

JUNK

::

terior and exterior painting. For
workmanship
by
exverienced,
reli
men call W. C. Varney. WI 5-0654.
PAINTING and paper hanging, reaso.
trices; free estimates. Telephone
tiddy or Peter Gallos. Lake Forest

INSTRUCTION
GARINO MUSIC STUDIOS
North Shore’s Finest. Instruction on accordion and guitar; instrument furnished. Inre about our trial plan. Telephone ID

oar

DECORATING

Up to date methods
Careful workmanship
Color coordination
Interior and Exterior
BLOOM PAINTING
ID 2-5544

PAINTING

outside
Forest

@ North Shore’s newest and

BEAUTIFUL chestnut mare, half Arabian,
half saddle horse. This horse is very well
mannered and well trained. Price $525,
Also handsome bay geldng, mostly Morgan. Very well trained, gentle. This horse
is being ridden by a 10 year old girl.
Price $325. Must sell these horses because
I am
going
away
to school this fall.
Call Lake Forest 359.
FOR
sale, bay hunter 16.1, 8 years old.
Excellent
jumper
and
hack.
Has
been
yes
Excellent condition. HlIllcrest 6-

PRICES

on

PAINTING
and
decorating,
‘nterior
exterior, natural or bleached wood
ishing;
quality
workmanship.
For

REPAIR

GUTTERS
replaced or repaired, cleaned,
painted with A-1 rust preventative. Careful expert work. Also, wire screening supplied and installed. Telephone ID 2-6362.
GUTTERS AND DOWNSPOUTS
Cleaned, repaired or replaced. R. E. Beset
Sheet Metal. Telephone CRestwood

HIGHEST

powe
firm.

Park
is deoderized
and children’s
Don’t shoot.
WILL the persons who assisted woma
accident last Oct. 13 from the side
on Deerfield Rd. near Waukegan, p)
ID 2-4769 evenings.

ing.

FIX it shop. Responsible High School student will do electrical repairs or installations at your home or mine. Reasonable
rates. All work guaranteed.
Please call
ID 2-0883.

&amp;

A

REPAIRS

FURNACE

MURRAY’S

PERSONAL

leather case. Telephone WI 5-1733.

&amp;

bl

@
@

CAMERAS
EXCEPTIONAL camera value, Exacta VX,
2A,
automatic
Biotar,
F2, never
used,
original
factory
label,
complete’
with
CARPENTERS,

CARB

FRANK
VENA
LANDSCAPING
Call me for the finest in lawn care,
removal, top dressing, patio work, fer
ing. Telephone ID 2-5494 after 7 p.m.
|

JOHN

27-4917

;

Grading, plowing, hauling, fill dirt,
top soil, rotted cow manure, top
d
seed rolling. Telephone WI 5-0818.

general hauling. We also nove a:
of household appliances. Call ID 2

~~
PIANO

SOIL

and file, lawns graded.
telephone
NEwton
4

PRAIRIE

or

TTD

GA

MODERN LANDSCAPING. For the
bes‘
lawn maintenance and garden work
phone Jack Vena, ID 2-5266.
GENERAL
LANDSCAPING
New lawns, black dirt, humus, top di
manure, planting, lawns fertilized, tree
stone work, patios, driveways.
A. MELCHIORRE
:
ID 2-0829
s

&amp; CORP.

General construction and repairs. We specialize in repairing leaking or cracked basements,
rough
floors,
walls
or any other
necessary
repairs.
Also
new _ construction,
patios, drives, walks, foundations or general
construction
and
additions.
25
years
experience,
work
guaranteed,
insured
and
bonded.
Also
general
hauling.
Free
estimates. Telephone ID 3-1298.

HORSES

BICYCLES

INCH

Highland

ELECTRICAL
Ups

COST AUTO LOANS
LAKE FOREST 5100
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
OF LAKE FOREST

17

it today

| Applicators for Latex coatings. Renew and
weatherproof
your driveways.
Also
Latex
coatings for asphalt shingle roofs in colors.
AL
1-0377
HI 6-3730

LOW

BLACK
ae

try

LAUNDRY

DRIVEWAYS

Park

Hichland

sports

coupe, full power, fully equipped, only
eee
old, 4,000 miles. Telephone ID

3-

St.

SERVICE

desired,

WOO

GUTTERS

1957 CHEVROLET
CONVERTIBLE
LIGHT BLUE, 20,000 MILES
TELEPHONE ID 2-2757

754

SAM

1875

FAST
service

DRIVEWAY

- All Models

Complete Painting,
Undercoating and Touch

the
on

Div.

Highland

if special

161

ALTERATIONS

Holmes Motor Co.

SHIRTS
FAST,

2-6895.

1956 BUICK Special, 4 door hardtop, power steering, power brakes, radio, heater,
exceptional
condition.
Best
offer
over
$1250. Telephone WI 5-1555.
1952 CHEVROLET 2 door sedan, stick shift,
good condition, $175. Telephone WI
5-

AUTO

WANTED AT ONCE
Oriental rugs, French furniture, bric-a-brac,
antiques, and pianos. Top cash paid. ROgers Park 1-4400.
WANTED,
Tandem bicycle in good condition. Telephone WIndsor 5-3775.
SULKY for power lawn mower. Call Lake
Forest 4969.
WANTED to buy: Dehumidifier; single canopy bed; small dinette table with formica
top. Telephone WI 5-3229.

rsday,

RUE?

Ford. \S-0r., tts ial $1195
Ford Thunderbird; R-H,
full pwr.
Ford
9-pass. Country
Sedan;. R-H,
Fordo.
....$1795
DeSoto
4-dr. hard top,

MERCEDES-BENZ,
180-A, 4 door sedan,
1958. Purchased new, kept new, 18,000
careful miles. Regular authorized service.
Excellent mileage, luxurious ride. Owner
going abroad, must sell. See car by appointment. Telephone ID 2-8424.

TOP dollar for used spinet pianos. Tele_ phone ID 2-2510.
WILL
pay up to $200 for small upright
piano. Call Lake Forest 4558.
PIANOS WANTED
ALL MAKES—STYLES
TOP PRICES PAID
ROGERS PARK
1-4400

LOST

DC
L967
1957

Cadillac

LOWREY
organ, fruitwood, one year old,
must sell this week. Telephone ID 2-1498.
ROTH
tempertone
trombone,
professional.
Ambassador cornet. Best offer. Telephone
ID 3-0453.

TO

1957

2050

Sat.

Daily

WANTED

L958
1958

ID

ID

$1895

Edsel Citation conv., full
MOWGE 6 uo Ca
a
aad $2095
SKOda 32k
oss
$ 795
Pontiac Bonneville convy.,
PUL OWED 26k
erty $2595
Ford conv., R-H, Fordo.,

LIST

Johns

MUSICAL

1958

R-H,

whi

1950 STUDEBAKER
Champion,
2° door,
Peery condition, $75. 1285 Cavell, ID 2-

ASK

LOWREY
Organ Studios
1795

wagon;

Overdrive:

We invite you
finest selection
display at

Chord Organ
OFF

Rambler

SALE

ALMOST NEW
Hammond
$400

SALE

FOR NORTH SHORE’S
FINEST A-1 USED CARS

Round maple table and 4 Captain’s chairs,
$99.50; maple hutch cabinets, $79.50; maple
chairs
and
rockers,
bargain
prices;
Beautiful lamps less than wholesale;
bird
baths, $2.95 each; good buys on bedroom
and living room
furniture;
stainless steel
sinks, $15 each;
good
buys on linoleum
and carpeting; children’s swing sets, $19.50;
new and used sail pipe, $1.50 &amp; up; ping
pong tables with nets and paddles, slightly
damaged, $14.50; metal wall cabinets, $7 &amp;
up; office desks, $19.50 and up; doors, $3 &amp;
up;
Many
other
items
too
numerous
to
mention.
COME
IN AND
BROWSE

INSTRUMENTS

FOR

SEE HOLMES

9-9

POTTERY AT
REDUCED PRICES

MUSICAL

July 11, Jewett Park, J. C. Higgins

LANDSCAPING 2 &amp;

‘BUSINESS SERVICE

SALE

Shepherd,

both

parents,

AKC,
best

home
blood

AKC

sale.

registered

8

weeks

cocker

old.

spaniel

Call

raise

line,

sonable. Telephone ID 2-5467.

puppies

ONtario

2-3518, _
puppies,

weeks
old, Princess Laura pro
nounces her family, champion b

Telephone WI 5-5529.

a

2-010’

or ONtario 2-5620.
TWO
year old German Shepherd,
ably priced in exchange for good h
Call ID 2-2811.
BEAGLE
puppies and grown dogs,
registered, wormed and inoculated.

pets, good hunters. Call LI
GERMAN
Shepherds,
AKC

re:

fo!

�a

GERMAN

Shepherd,

trained,

used

4:30

ell

owner

ii

Shepherd,

one

year

WInd;
rend uc

old

male,
ideal children’s companion, good disposiea
ae
Se
ae
Papers
obtainable,
iiany Paces:
how.
groome
(e) r show.
Telephone

Peeve, te spon
must sacrifice.
‘
usel
quick
silver
d_
sire.
__Phone ID 2-3731.,
of aia
age
WESTIES; only two adorable
ups remain

Look like white Scotties, 3 months old,
trained, home raised with

Telephone

RUSSIAN

ALpine

wolf

children,

1-1867.

hound

puppy,

9

AKC.

months,

female, white, elegant, very sweet, very
reasonable. Call WHitehall 3-3749.
Pee
EOL
che anon
Shetland pony,
6
ars Old, wonderful with
children.
ake Forest 3305.
str
reece
TOY PEKINESE, AKC registered a

Call MUndelein 6-0365.—

eat

aaa

PIANO

TUNING

PIANOS exactly TUNED
and REGULATED by
KARL
LANGER,
piano tunermusician. Lake Forest, 153 Atteridge
Telephone Lake Forest 4063 between Rd.
8
and 9 a.m. and p.m.
PenT a

REMOD.

&amp;

HOME

MAIN.

ALL KINDS OF HOME IMPROVE
AND REMODELING.
ee
ESTIMATES

ON

AND BARS.

REC

ee

Attic rms. and Dormers, Room Additions
,
Porches, Patios, Garages, Kitchen &amp; bath
modernizing. Terms.

COMPLETE
HOMES
BUILT
ON YOUR LOT OR OURS.

Lake Bluff.

at

ee

ROOFING

SEWERS

BERNARD’S SEWER SERVICE
Quick service for clogged or slow main
ers, cleaned and opened with electric sewrod
pen gon We perviee any type drain.
Also
c
asins and
spetic tank

high 7-0232, Wheeling.

mi ae

Her

\

ed

by

MACHINES

SEWING

Complete

Sales

Home

Repair

General

TRAILERS

MACHINE

and

Service

Demonstration

&amp;

TRAILER

sPACE

HALE TRAILER SALES
oe
EG Pop Aik 9 trailers; we bu;
i.
Sherijan
Rd., North Chi
c
(2 blocks north of naval base)
al
TREE

SURGERY

WING’S
ming,
pont

TREE EXPERTS.
Cutting, trim
removing,
feeding
and
repairing
pn J oe
bonded; free
ates.
Telephone
KIm
ball 6-2292
Hf
rect dt:
G &amp;N
LREE EXPERTS. Trimming, tee:
ing, ot FREE
eae My
removal. Full:
insured.
TES.
Ti
¢
ID 2-8750
ID 2-5481
—
WINTER
rates now in effect for tree re
moval. Completely insured. Jim Beinlich
VE 5-0513.

Miss Nancy Anderson
Is Featured Soloist
In Concert Tuesday
Nancy

Anderson,

instructor
School,

at
will

st at a concert

vocal

mu-

-Highland

Park

be featured

solo-

Tuesday,

presented

by the Lake Forest College Summer Chorus, composed of students
and residents.
Miss

Lake

Anderson

Forest

graduated

College

in

from

1953.

Prominent
as a vocal soloist on
campus, she was a member of the
Madrigal
Singers,
Choir
and
Pi
Alpha Chi, honorary Music Fraternity. She is completing work for
her master’s degree at Northwestern
University
this summer.
On
July
2,
she
sang
her
Master’s
Recital
at
Lutkin
Hall
on
the
Evanston campus.
Also

_ Page

singing

50

Eisenhower

for

to the rank of Brigadier

and

Engineer,
Korea,

has

been

in

the

Eighth

assigned

U.S.

effective

The

Aug.

nomination

U.S.

Senate

Colonel

has

A

graduate

Academy

of

custodians

are

busily

in

scrubbing

walls

and

to

the

confirmation.

chorus

are

in

wash-

ing floors. Paul Greenfield,
1075
Hillcrest Ave., is president of the
board.

Assistant

U.S.

Point,

engaged
floors,

ing windows and waxing and polish-

gone

been

the

at West

Following
the
policy
of
the
board of education of School District
109
of
maintaining
school

as

15,

has

for

Jewett

Army

Chief
of
Staff
at
Headquarters
Fifth U.S. Army since August, 1957.
Military

N.

Y.,

and

Engineers
throughout
his
Army
career. He received the degree of
Master of Science from the State
University of Iowa in 1934.

Robert

ling

Agan,

School,

principal

is working

custodians who
are
and
William
Lehto

Grammar

School,

of

Kip-

with

the

Rolland

Heritage Concert
Aug. 7 at 8 p.m.
Deerfield.

Among

&amp;

to be presented
at Jewett Park,

featured

quartets will be

the Fire-House Four of Highland
Park.
Robert LeClair,
1060 Centerfield Ct., is assisting with plans
for the free concert.

Laurie

Ann,
To

Second

Howard

Howard

R.

1004

Princeton Ave., are parents of a
second daughter, Laurie Ann, born
June 20 at Highland Park Hospital.
Laurie’s sister is Ellen, 3. Grand-|parents are the Irving Barrons and
the Richard Shapiras, all of Chicago,

Emmons Riddle Serves
On Aircraft Carrier
Midn. 1/ec Emmons Riddle, son of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Hugh
Riddle,
906

Dean

Ave.,

a student

at Yale Uni-

versity, is serving aboard the antisubmarine
aircraft
carrier
USS
Randolph operating with the U.S.
Second Fleet off the Atlantic Coast.

John

S. Wineman

Welcome

Juniors

Katherine July

11

The junior John S. Winemans,
451
Burton
Ave.,
announce
the
birth
of a daughter,
Katherine,

July 11 at Highland Park Hospital.
She is their first child. Katherine’s
grandparents are the Leo Larsons,
2120 St. Johns Ave., and the senior Winemans of 280 Cary Ave.

Sue

Ann

Joins

Family On July

Puzin

11

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Puzin, 1566
McCraren Rd., announce the birth
of Sue Ann on July 11 at Highland
Park Hospital. Sue Ann has two
brothers, Ronald, 8, and Donald, 5.
Grandparents are the Steve Puzins,
1570 McCaren Rd., and the Walter
Smiths, 1539 Deerfield Rd.

Douglas Heinrichs, 685 Park Ave.
W, and Mrs. Serena Bartoni, David
Mihuri
and
Robert
Ziccarelli
of
Highwood.

following

are

improvements

completed

or

yo
6 ec

Lae
COM

:

oN

and

under-

2. New
acoustic
ceilings
in
2
classrooms — Deerfield Grammar
School.
3. New bookshelves and bulletin
boards in three classrooms in Deerfield Grammar School.
4. All rooms in
since January 1,

at

in

Kipling

5. Painting of redwood
Maplewood.
6.

Barrons

Barrons,

TA A
eka eae
WALES SHORTS:
2.00.

1. Repair
ceilings throughout
Deerfield Grammar School.

Daughter,

R.

39.95

team in renovating the floors while

Barbershop Singers

a Harmony

...

Reg. 38-46, Longs 39-46

of
of
a

repairs
way:

Inc.) have scheduled

’n Wear

Sizes:

Demgen

of Maplewood, Clarence Varney
Kipling, and Falierio Ballerini
Walden.
Three
men
work
as

During
World
War
II, Colonel
Jewett was executive officer and
commanding officer of Army Engineer regiments
in the European
Theater. He came to Chicago as an
engineer
for the Fifth Army
in
1956. Col. and Mrs. Jewett have
three children.

County Line chapter, Society for
the Preservation
and Encounagement of Barbershop Quartet Singing in America, Inc. (SPEBSQSA,

SUITS—Wash

Dewey
Deal
of Deerfield

the other men are repairing desks,
mowing
grass, washing
windows,
and painting.
The recommended alterations in
the Deerfield Grammar School by
the state fire marshal and the local
chief of the Fire Department, Fred
Grabo,
have
been
completed.
In
addition a complete new automatic
sprinkler system has been placed
in the basement.

The

on All Makes of Machines
TELEPHONE ID 2-3811

High

President

promotion

Born
SEWING

sic

805

Schedule Concert

CEDAR
SHINGLES?
Don’t
Neglect
Them
SUBURBAN
ROOF
TREATING
SERV.
Call ALpine 1-0377
HI 6-3730

Miss

Jewett,

The

ere

PLAN TO REMODEL NOW! Get our low
Te-season
estimate
without
obligation.
athrooms, kitchens, additions, enclosures
a specialty. Terms—NO MONEY DOWN.
reer rone
nate
Bluff
4023
before
10
a.m.,
after
4, or write
P.O.

Free

L.

T

PHONE
ID 2-1553
DAVIS
HOME
BUILDERS

SINGER

Richard

later an instructor there, Colonel
Jewett has been in the Corps of

acme

FREE

Colonel

School District 109
Readies For Fall

Central Ave., recently was nominat-

——

SO

SA:

By The President

see at Butterworth Animal
8 Telephone
8:30 t
) Bs
edn

f

Jewett Nominated

6-3694,

AKC

children,

ae rl Pia
de
Hours
except Sunday,

GERMAN

EUclid

registered,

with

must sell. May
ote

Phone

2

12 bookcases

ID 2-2871

OCC

Drive Carefully — The Life You Save

painted
and

May Be Your Own!

trim

constructed.

NEW!

7.
New lighting in 2 classrooms
Deerfield Grammar School.
All

Rooms

To

Be

TUN 163

Garino Festival Band,
directed
by Mrs. Louis
Garino
and comprised of students from Highland
Park, Highwood
and surrounding
communities, will play Tuesday at
8 p.m. at the Wilmette Bowl in
Gillson Park.
The public is invited to hear,

selections

such

Thomas,

Barbara

Pa

ee

Gare

Te

Bes

&amp;

as

Punelli’s
“Dream
Time,”
Diero’s
“Trieste,” ete.
Among members of the band are
Rosemary
Jacobson,
Norma
Menoni, Margaretta Helm, Mary Joan
Roos, Jack Bert, Tanya
Dietrich,

Patricia

Only At

is really

Garino Accordion
Band Gives Concert
Tues. At Wilmette

charge,

NEW!

FREEMAN’S Lake F orest Store

Used

Every available space in the four
buildings will be used in September.
Exclusive
of
Kindergarten
children, 21 new students in the
grades have registered since school
has closed.

without

Yj:

kittens.

eae

@

PETS
SIAMESE

ee

Eng-

strom,
Ginny
Lee
Garino,
Judy
Sitz and Jerry Nustra.
Also, Tony
DeFalco,
Jack McGuire, Larry Mathe, James Bert,
Thomas
Anfiuli, Gary
Fox,
Lennary Ernquist, William Schneider
and Richard Azzi.
Louis Garino is instructor of the
students,

only
er

y

89%

eee

t

tt

Ye

Ye

Now—a fine electric guitar that’s easy
to afford... and just what the young
player wants!

The exciting new

Melody Maker with choice of 3/4 or
full-scale neck—and amazingly easy
playing action. It has a fine sound,
big tone, sensitive pickup, and feather-

light touch. Best of all it’s a Gibson,
finest name among

guitars. See it, try

it... sounds even better with a Gibson
amp. Convenient terms make it easy to own.

OLSONS RETURN
FROM EUROPEAN

HOME
TOUR

Mr.
and Mrs.
Ruben
Olson
of
3330 Skokie Valley Rd., returned
Saturday from an European
tour
during which Mr. Olson sang with

the Swedish
gan.

Glee

Club

of Wauke-

FREEMAN'S The Finest in Guitars, Instruments,
Sheet Music, Reeds and Strings

648 N. Western

Lake Forest 519
‘Thursday, July

23, 1959
{

�GROW...

US

WATCH

Assets Now Almost

EERFI EL

SAVING

$22,000,000.00

&amp; LOAN ASSOCIATION

ray

!
6.
|
REMODELING, EXPANSION AND NEW DEVELOPMENT IN EVERY QUARTER. DEERFIELD SAVINGS SHARES IN THIS ACTIVITY WITH

THE

CONSTRUCTION

OF

A

NEW

1/2
AND

1.

Deerfield

Commons

Shopping
5.

Center

Progress

on

2.

New

service

station

new

high

school

6.

EERFIEL
AVING
.

on
New

MILLION

DOLLAR

IDENTIFY

THE

Waukegan
library

Rd.
next

3.
to

OTHER
New

Village

DEERFIELD

745

HOME.
SIX

restaurant
Hall.

CAN

next
7.

RD.

New

YOU

on

All

Paid

from

Savings

the

of

first

Received

by

the

the

to

Post

Office.

DEERFIELD

SAVINGS

@

EXCAVATION

4.

New

face

building

for

Briarwood

Country

Club.

site.

DEERFIELD,

ILL.

Windsor

5-1911

Mon., Tues., Thurs., Fri,— 8:30 to 4:00

month

10th.

OUR

SITES?

&amp;LOAN ASSOCIATION
Earnings

LOCATE

OFFICE

HOURS:

Sat., 8:30 to 12:00

‘Fri. Eve., 6:00 to 8:00

Closed Wednesday

�you'll

find

it in Highland

Park

at

Garnett = Co.

get

your

suntan

the

easy

way...

Phone

ID

2-470

with

Belle-Sharmeer
seamless

hosiery

1.50

1.95

seamless

to

suntans

look

just

like

your

natural

tan!

(Hesiery)

Special

Purchase!

Chatham
Orlon*

Blankets

Wonderfully soft and warm, with nylon bindings,
guaranteed

Gold,

against

turquoise,

shrinkage,

red, brown,

moth

green

damage.

or white.

Twin size only 66 x 90

reg.

14.95 .... nowonly
*Du

Pont's

Acrylic

(Downstairs

Special

Baby

Fiber

Store)

Purchase

—

JULY

Knit creepers

Layette

navy

SALE

or toast.

..1.95

,

1.39

reg

sale

.......... 2.95
gis
i ok 3.50

2.99
2.99

6 yr. fitted crib sheet
Flannel

sale
2.89
2.59
1.19-1.35
1.59
1.89
1.39

Needs

Birdseye diapers
meee
MONS

receiving

OWE):

BBR

...... 1.25

blanket

...

.49

es
oe i ye os 2.95

1.69

Quilted

pads,

17x18

......

gads,

27x34

....3. 1.29

Snap-on
Slip-on

undershirts
undershirts

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

A9

79
.69

69
.49

met.

BOOTS

3.95

3.49

Crib

shee!

664.46. s 3.95

2.79

Knit

chin

ASS

set

bibs,

pink

BINMNOO:

66666805

Oo

.50

39

(Infants)

Hours Free Parking

in our Lot - Hours 9 to 5:30 Daily; Thursdays 9 to 9

no-iron

|
/

39

49
2.59
39
3.89

88.

/

e

/

Warm

»

and

kitten-soft,

ever
.ae

chenille

79

Flannel kimonos
pink; blue, yellow.
.....0°5. 59
COON
BONNE
ck
ei cs 2.28
Waterproof
baby pants
.... .49
Orlon shawls, white
....... 5.95
oft

|

99

.59

Quilted

WiUO

BABY

Apparel

reg
ON
6 ev CEN
ck
EON 3.95
Tener
FO oak ka i RRS 4.92
Geren erawiel i. ves Vis 1.95
ere GPOWIOle 6a is
Pea es 1.95
Pastel Phillipine dress sets. ..2.50
Pastel Knit cardigan........ 1.95

OY:

11.95

robe

these

school or home. White,, blue,
medium, large and extra-large.

robes

pink

are

or

only

ideal

coral,

5

95
e

(Daytime

Dresses)

for

sizes

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                    <text>)Fd

Thursday
July 16, 1959

Loe

Deerticl Keview

: ocean oo

|

AT THE DEERFIELD DEPOT

Senior

Girl

Happily

As

To

Scouts
They

Leave For

Smile
Prepare

Colorado

�The big bank that grew up
with Highland Park

Put yourself in the driver’s seat
with a First National loan
A new automobile is one of the biggest purchases you make. ‘That's why it pays
to be certain you're getting the very best deal possible. That best deal is wait-

.
»

ing for you right here in Highland Park at any of the local auto dealers. And
the place to get your car loan is also right here in Highland Park — at the
First National where the rates are low and the service fast. Now is especially
a good time to buy.

The

Bf

a

Complete

Banking

and

Services

Trust

FIRST NATIONAL BANK

WEEKEND

1

High

la

YE

Park

Member The Federal Reserve System
The Federal Deposit Insurance

BANKING

HOURS:

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

Corporation

�Thursday,

16

1959

Township Officials Board Adjourns To July 29
Surprised At Action DEERFIELD BOARD ORDERS STUDIES
ENLARGING SEWAGE PLANT
By Village Board FORWinston
Porter, trustee, acted as president pro tem

last

Vol. 34, No. 19

SCHOOL LAND—PARK PURCHASES
AND POOL BOND ISSUES EXPLAINED
Assembled last night in the field house at Jewett Park was
a group

of villagers, representing

the various

civic bodies

and

school district and park board officials and others interested in
~

the referendum to be held Saturday, Aug. 15 for the purchase
of land for park-school sites and for the construction of a community swimming

pool, also for ad-

ditions to Wilmot School.
Joseph Powell of the Deerfield
. Citizens Committee acted as chair-

man.
The
park
board
and
the
two
school
districts, Wilmot
110 and
Deerfield 109, are cooperating for
the $295,000
bond
issue for the
purchase and improvement of three
park-school sites, approximately 5
» acres. One is the Jardine tract on
South Wilmot Rd., another is the
Franken-Pottenger
Nursery and
the third on East Deerfield Rd. is
Lowell Builders property.
In addition to the proposed purchase of park-school sites, the park
board has plans for a community
swimming pool at a cost of approximately $205,000 to be placed in
the
southeast
corner
of
Jewett
Park.
Residents
of the
park
district
will be asked to approve the onehalf million dollar bond issues for
land and pool.
Residents of Wilmot School District 110 will be asked to approve
a referendum (amount not as yet
announced)
for
completing
two
new schools and remodeling another for a junior high, in addition

it Costs Money To
Let Dogs Run Around
Deerfield Streets
A little red truck is patrolling
the streets of Deerfield with a big

sign

“Deerfield

Dog

to

the

$500,000

Chief

of

Police

000 bond issues will be open Aug.
15 from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m. Polls for
the
special
referendum
for
improvements of Wilmot School will
be open from 6 a.m. to 7 p.m.

Water Reservoir—
Up In The Air
Or Underground?
Tonight, the Plan Commission is
being asked to approve a variance
for the construction of an UNDERGROUND
reservoir at the rear of
the Village Hall and the new Library-Town
Hall.
The
Township
authorities have not been consulted on this reservoir, which if constructed, would prevent the expansion of the library to the west when
growth demands it.
At the Village Board
meeting
last Wednesday
evening, trustees
voted the sale of bonds for the
1959-60
water
improvement
program. They ordered completion of
plans for an ELEVATED
storage
tank and submission thereof to the
State Sanitary Water Board.
Trustee
Winston
Porter
explained that the tank can “be up or
down” but that would not hinder
the sale of the bonds.

The

west

end

of

the

township

tract is left open for future expansion of the township public library.

It was

stated by township

that no
proposal

mention
of the
had been made

officials
village’s
to them.

The public hearing for putting
the underground reservoir at the
rear of the village and township
property is being held tonight with
Frank Curto as chairman.
There
was
considerable
discussion by township officials concerning a letter from Village Manager
Royce
Owens
which
stated
that
only two of the five justices of the
peace would be serving in court.
He designated Walter Page
(now
ill) to hear 75% of the cases and

Michael

George,

the

other

25%.

With one sitting judge, the village has stirred up trouble, it is
reported, and has not cooperated
in allowing each justice to take
turns and have a month in court,
assisted by a second justice on call
day or night.
William Pittenger, township as-

sessor

sent

bills

for

payment

for

four additional field workers for
the summer months at $1.75 per
hour. Those employed are Gordon
Shepard, James Powers, Ray Traub
and Don Lindsley.
Bruce Frost and Karl Berning,

(Continued

on

page

5)

Wednesday evening in the absence of Village President Eldon
Holmquist.

All six trustees were present including John Aber-

son, Arno
Koss

and

Wehle,
Mr.

Maurice

Petesch,

Downspouts Cannot
Be Connected
Storm Sewers

To

An ordinance was passed Wednesday

night

tion

of

prohibiting
downspouts

the
of

connecall

new

buildings to the storm sewer system,
All new
construction
must
have downspouts
which
‘‘splash.”
Action was taken at the request
of the drainage ditch trustees because too much water cannot be
handled in the ditch.
Several years ago all householders
were
ordered
to
disconnect
their downspouts from the sanitary
sewers and were given a certain
length of time to make a proper
connection to the storm sewer.
Yellow dye was placed in eaves
of houses and results observed in
sewers. Many
college young men
were hired at considerable expense
to the taxpayers. There were protests by house owners at that time
at the demand that they must disconnect from the sanitary sewers
and must re-connect to storm sewers. This new ordinance evidently
invalidates the previous ordinance
making it mandatory to connect to
storm sewers.
The
ordinance
prohibiting connecting downspouts to sanitary sewers is still in force.

arrest

ticket,

local

subject

a fine

It was explained at the meeting
that by showing the state that the
board plans to enlarge its sewer
treatment plant... then the growth
can continue and more sewer connections made BEFORE the enlarging takes place! The State Water
Board advised the trustees on June
19 they would refuse issuance of
more
permits for sanitary sewer
connections until the plant is enlarged.
This complaint was brought to
the notice of the state by the Isaac
Walton League of Glenview.
Stanton and Rockwell
tinue as plan consultants

working on the master plan, a total
of $400 per month. The master plan
is now completed.
Their services

for

the

per

month.

coming

well

was

year

(While

will be

Matthew

vacationing

last

$350
Rock-

week,

Marwood F. Rupp was available in
the Stanton-Rockwell office for consultation. )

board

voted

to

spend

$615

Also approved was the expenditure of $250 for a mosaic map from
Township High School District 113
from Milwaukee Ave to Lake Michigan and Old Elm Rd. to County

Line Rd.

in

Bills totaling

there

will confor Deer-

field. Last year their fee was $200
for monthly consulting and $200 for

court.

Incidentally,

Joseph

The board voted to retain Baxter
and Woodman, Crystal Lake engineer-consulting
firm,
to
prepare
studies of enlarging of the sewage
treatment plant. Designed in 1952
and completed in 1956, it was for a
population
of 17,500.
It was
too
small in 1956 and now with a population of over 10,000, the state has
stepped in and ordered no more
sewer line extensions until the new
plant is completed.

The

Petersen

to

Peterson,

for a topographical map of the excavation of the brickyard. Trustee
Koss said that the cost is expected
to be shared by the owner of the
National Brick Co.

states that the owner must pay a
$10 impounding
fee, plus $2 for
each day’s board and receive an
the

Harold

Porter.

Replace Street Light Near Railroad Underpass

Warden”

David

issues.

Polls for the park district $500,-

printed on it.
All dogs which are running at
large are picked up and given a
ride to Kay’s Animal
Shelter in
Morton Grove where they are impounded.

_

bond

There will be two polling places,
one at Wilmot School and the other
at Deerfield Grammar School.

At a meeting of the West Deerfield Township
board of auditors
last Friday evening in the Town
Hall, amazement was expressed by
the township
officials concerning
an underground
reservior
which
the village proposes to put partially
on township—library property.

July

$57,058.93

were

ap-

is also a fine

proved, but not read aloud. In this

for the person who walks his dog
and
allows
it to dirty parkways
and lawns ... or on school grounds
or public parks,

amount was the sum of $9,693 for
buying back $10,000 in obligation
bonds at 4% on the Village Hall
paid through the one-half of one
(Continued on page 11)

Kleinschmidt Asks

Zoning Variance

Village Board Deeds
Tract For Widening
Of Deerfield Road

For Water Tower
The

will

Board

hold

of

a public

Zoning

Appeals

hearing

in

the

The

Deerfield
Village Hall on Thursday, July 23 at 8 pm. Lewis B.
Walton Sr. is chairman,
They will consider the petition
of Kleinschmidt Division of Smith

Corona

Merchant,

Line

as

by said company
Road, Deerfield.

on County

The variation

requested would provide
(Continued on page 5)

an

Deerfield

meeting

last

Village

Board,

Wednesday

at

eve-

ning, voted to dedicate the right of
way for public road purposes, the

.004

acre,

which

on the northeast

Inc., for a varia-

tion from the requirements of the
zoning ordinance of the Village of
Deerfield — 1953, as amended, to
permit
the
construction
of
an
elevated water
storage
tank
120
feet
in height
on
the
premises

owned

its

branch

drainage

Deerfield’s

east

the

village

ditch just beyond
village

limits

side the city of Highland

Public Service Co. employees,
at the corner of Chestnut

St. on

Geske,

and

Edward

Gedman

last Friday, assembled the big overhead street light which hangs

Deerfield

Ambrose

Rd.

Left to

right,

busy

at work

are

James

Neal,

James

Cantagallo, who is crew chief and a resident of Deerfield.

Poles at the corner have been changed and the light is now suspended from a long arm instead of hanging directly in the middle of the street. This work is being done in preparation of
the widening of the two streets.

booster pumping
on this tract.

owns

side of the middle

Park.

in-

A

station building is

The action was taken so that the
widening

of the bridge

can proceed

for the overall plan of widening
Deerfield Rd. Deed for this tract of
.004 acre will be executed and filed.

�DEERFIELD FORUM.
inions expressed in these
ms do not necessarily conthe opinions of the paper.
‘s
should
be brief and

have less than 300
should contain the
dress of the writer,
will be withheld if
park and recreation
my community.
That

concerned
it’s

all

right

with

you,

let’s

ng it out into the daylight.
ough
there
may
been
some
didn’t know it, since it was
ctly a whispering campaign, the

f issue in May’s village elecwas the chairman of the Police
rtment. The issue was never
into print largely
ig candidates had

because the
little to do

| it. They were just convenientBere.

aurice Petesch, who believes
ly that laws should be adminered equally to all, made some
nies by refusing to play ball

th the “I gotta
rt

to

drag’

eliminate

boys.

him

An

failed

in

Caucus and again in the elecbecause his accomplishments
th the Police department were
well known and widely approvut the effort did not stop with
election. Today the tempo has
ed up into a Class-A
cter assassination (an

d,

of
in

ich Deerfield has long excelled)
you know if you have been

recent

village

nething

by

job
art

board

of a climax

meetings,

is at hand.

‘he situation has become critical
use it has spread far beyond
originators who are today aided
even quite solid, conservative
tizens who
should know better.
arently they believe any story
are told. Village officials are

S wooed

and

split

apart,

e are being pressured

the

and con-

programs
of
is why I am

comments

I have

already
heard regarding
the August
15
Park
referendum
for
a
swimming pool in Jewett Park and
an increase in small park areas.
I want to urge my fellow taxpayers not to be opposed to this proposal for park expansion until the
park district has an opportunity to
present
to the citizens its longterm plan for an adequate park system for Deerfield.
I am sure that
the park commission can satisfactorily explain how the small park
program fits into its master plan,
and I feel sure that once we see

the

whole

picture

of

park

expan-

sion to meet our growing needs,
we will better understand what our
present action should be.
I also feel that we should not oppose the swimming pool on a cost
basis (or for any other reason, such
as parking problems, location, etc.)
until the park commissioners have
a chance to explain how much it
will raise our taxes and where the
swimmers who drive will park their
cars.
Let’s wait with
our discussion
and opposition until we can see the

whole picture. Our park commissioners surely will be able to present a master plan which will justify their proposals on the August
15 referendum.
Russell A. Perry
1530 Greenwood Avenue

Explains Meaning
‘Junior

High

Of

School’

To

d.
he

Village

Manager

has

chosen

time to make his pressure play.
s

is

not

to

say

he

is

insincere,

I have no doubt Royce Owens
t justified in saying: “Either you
ve me full power or I quit.’ He
ns to have
the

departure

é
s in
bad for
The
sch
ys

reaction

well

similarly to a high school.

idea

three

man-

if the seventh and eighth grades
have
different
teachers
for
different
subjects
they
are
being

of

very

less than five years looked
someone.
only
criticism
of
Mr.
as a village official has
been

that

0 thoroughly.
inning”

the

he

does

his

job

He is accused of

Police

department

directly, without going through
manager.

It is somehow

otten that some

always

other trustees

the same thing (or at least did
ny

day) and that Petesch
an,

cold

that

he

at any

could

&gt;

“Committee

mposed

of

men

is but

be

stop-

past

have

vote

mentary school and a 4-year high
school. Most other states have a 6year elementary
school, a 3-year
Junior
High,
and
a 3-year high
school.
Recognizing the effectiveness of a Junior
High
many
of

of

Twenty’’

who

cannot

is
be

1 their belief that they are workering.

good

of the village

But

I

think

too

by
that

y people are being gullible. I
der how many even know the
rigin of the whole

thing.

he Village Board will fare best
is left alone to work out its
problems. Pressures and counressures are helping only in
menting chaos.
I hereby move that we all adopt
Leave-The-Board-Alone
month.
e board is composed of good and
ble men. They will come out all
ht if they are given a chance.
it

H.

N.

K.

Page 4

interest

elementary

in

the

an

8-year

schools

are

ele-

at-

tempting to provide this phase of
the school program.
The Junior High School of Wilmot School District 110 will consist of grades 7 and 8. Until the
time when the State of Illinois revises its laws regarding school dis-

trict organization, it will be impractical for school districts in this

area to form a Junior High consisting of grades 7, 8 and 9.
If there are any questions re-

garding the organization

of School

District 110 feel free to contact me
for clarification.
Charles J. Caruso, Superintendent
Wilmot School District 110

With

in Bannockburn

has been

Plans
by

are

Paul

now

made

by

being

reviewed

building

commis-

Bannockburn.

Alfred

Beuttas,

sioner

of

Dichtel

will be the builder.

Parking Tickets
Cause Furore

The arrests were made to all who

that he had

not

given the orders and that warning
tickets should have been given.

How Many Alleys Are
Closed Illegally ?
Last week
quite
a number
of
Deerfield alleys were listed in the
REVIEW which had been illegally
closed by residents who had taken
over the land for their own use.
Two more alleys were called to
the
attention
of the editor:
the
north-south alley west of the 1100

block

on North

Chestnut

St., from

Greenwood to Fair Oaks, and the
east-west alley which begins at the
north-south alley and extends west
to Oakley Ave.

To Royce W. Owens:
Several questions regarding

Police Make 90
Arrests In June

zon-

in my

own

mind

whether

deciding
whether
the _ subject
should be referred to the public

or not. It seems

to me

there is an

excellent argument for it being by
referendum. I can’t see too much
argument for it not being by referendum,. Anyhow, I do believe it
should be referred to the people
for decision.

or any

other

similar

town. In order to have a manager,
first the board has to pass an ordinance creating the position and defining the scope of the job. Then
it has to hire a manager. It would
appear that if six man and a president decide that a manager form of
government
is good for the Village, then the subject should be referred to the populace for support
or denial.
The board commits the Village
to
aman, an appreciable salary and
quite a lot of authority. It also expects a lot of work out of a person,
placing a tremendous amount of responsibility on the person and placing him in a position where he’s
got to get a lot of work out of a
sizeable force. To do that, the manager must have the backing of the
majority of the Board, if not all of
them.
I’ve just talked myself into believing that the office of village
manager should be created by referendum. First, though, we must
work out a representative manager
ordinance. I believe the basis of it
should be that the manager is expected to administrate the affairs
of the Village in accordance with a
policy set by the board, and kept

With

The

for

Petitions Tonight
The Deerfield Plan Commission
will meet at 8 o’clock tonight in
the Village Hall to hear four petitions. Frank Curto is chairman,
They will hear a petition from
the village to build an underground

reservoir

on

village

village

to

classifications

delete

some

presently

(4)

of an or-

of the

allowed

in

a request

R-1 to R-1-A from

of Railway

employees, if annexed. This location is on the west side of Wilmot
Rd. about 1132 feet north of County
Line Rd., outside the village.

some

of

the

members

of

the

board want to place full authority
into the hands of the manager with
power to hire and fire anyone and

I don’t believe
into this pellmell.

ager

ordinance

it to
sons
the
have
next

we
I’d

should
get the

drawn

up,

a

~

rush
man-

submit

several competent outside peror established trade groups in
city manager orbit, and then
it placed on the ballot at the
general election, perhaps next ©

April.
I would not spend the money for
a special referendum, for I believe
we will be able to attract a replacement of our present manager, if his

resignation stands. I believe it certain that if we go on record as establishing
a clear cut ordinance
sufficiently
broad
in scope,
that
we'll be considered a good village
for which to work, and that capable,
experienced men will apply for the

job. But, without a
nance, and without

~“

strong ordiplanning to

£

have it accepted by the voters generally, I question
that Deerfield

will

be

type

of person.

attractive

(Many

you,

people

Mr.

that

a

to

will

the

disagree

Holmquist.

good

proper
with

We _ believe

ordinance,

clearly

de-

fining the duties, is a better protection for Deerfield and that a
referendum is not necessary.—The
Editor)

everyone

and

to

put

the

feel
that this is too drastic and
that too much power must not be
invested in one person.
When
the
Town
Hall-Library
building is completed there will be
room there for the justices of the
peace, who were given the village
clerk’s room
last November
and
the village clerk, elected by the
people, was moved to a cubicle in
the main room.
We believe that the rift in the
board has been made doubly deep
because some of the trustees fear
too much
authority placed in an
appointed office could lead to an
absolute monarchy.
There should
be a compromise and the elected
officials should be the administrators, with the manager carrying out
their orders.
The

Public

Senior Girl Scouts of Troop 115,
who represented the Moraine Council, left recently from the Deerfield
depot to attend the 1959 Girl Scout
Senior
Roundup
at
Colorado
Springs, Colo., where Girl Scouts
from all parts of the United States
camped from July 3 to 12.
Standing left to right are Barbara Isely, Carrol Kopp and Mary
Towner with Nora Luthmers as photographer. Seated are Kay Hart and

Jane

Stallmann.

no

less

than

Public

DEERFIELD
REVIEW

village

On The Cover

Press,

Office, is a public trust.

clerk out of the village hall. Others

and

township-library
property
at 850
and 860 Waukegan
Rd. They will
also consider a request from the
Deerfield State Bank for a change
in zoning at Greenwood Ave. and
Waukegan Rd.; (3) a petition from

the

by the passing

dinance
governing the work
and
duties of a village manager.
It will have to be a compromise,

Plan Commission

water

The Deerfield Village Board will

alleviated

Will Hear Four

up
to
date
by each
succeeding
board, so that the board can do a
farsighted job of planning for the
Village, leaving the day to day work
for the manager. This means that
he must have board authority with
his most definite responsibility. He
must have charge of all operating
departments of the Village, and the
authority it takes to carry that out.

Let's Talk It Over......

meet Wednesday, July 29, at which
time the budget and appropriations
ordinance should be passed.
Many people believe that the discord on the village board could be

to July.

or ref-

on it was charged with

Editor

from

continued

plan of gov-

it should be ordinance

but the committee working

Justices of the Peace Walter Page
and Michael George were $419 with
$315
costs.
Five cases were
dismissed by court, 3 fines suspended,
1
reckless
driving,
1
case
disorderly
conduct
and
10 cases

Patten, Holem and Krase.
Fines received for June

the Benefit Association

ing enforcement have come to pub(Continued on page 13)

mined

erendum,

John
Aberson,
458 Longfellow
Ave., village trustee, has started
work on a new manager ordinance
for Deerfield, but told the audience
at the village board meeting
on
July 8, that he and other trustees
had been working on the budget
and
appropriations
ordinances
to
meet a deadline, and had to delay
the village manager ordinance.

There were 90 arrests made in
Deerfield
during June,
according
to the monthly report of Chief of
Police David J. Petersen, with 17
by radar, Serving during the month
were Officers Koets, Hall, Kaehler,
Deimler, Rogge, Mullins, Crumpler,

for rezoning from

Questions

The question of whether the Village Manager

ernment for the Village of Deerfield should be by referendum
seems to be paramount of the moment. I haven’t fully deter-

of Deerfield,

had parked on the railroad property, parkways and streets.
A
new
comprehensive
traffic
code, in book form, was adopted
last week by the Deerfield Village
Board, which defines traffic rules
and prohibits parking on parkways
and in streets from 2 a.m. to 6 a.m.
Chief of Police David Petersen

REVIEW

Referendum For Village Manager

IT have tried to put myself in the
place of a manager for the village

Several Deerfield police had a
“field day’ Saturday night and put
arrest slips on approximately
25
autos on North Chestnut St., Greenwood . Ave.,
Somerset
Ave.,
and
other locations.

told the

10

permit

Allen Friedman of Chicago. It is
reported
that
this
home
to
be
located on a private lane south of
Hilltop Ln. on 10.75 acres, is the
last house personally designed by
Frank Lloyd Wright, internationally known
architect,
who
passed
away recently.

the business district;

Letter To Village

Manager

the Editor:
Since recreation is my profesn, I often feel that I take more
average

your

Open

creation, Parks And
imming Pool Discussed

an.

same type of program used by the
high school.
Therefore, we refer
to these younger pupils who
are
being prepared for the more
independent
type
of
program,
to
come, “Junior High School pupils.”
Many of us are from different
areas
of
the
country.
In
most
states the
school
organization
is
different from that of Illinois. We

in the

lightly and I am sure they
e well-intentioned. I expect quite
t of other people too are sincere
for the

taught by a specialist in each separate subject area.
This is the

traditionally

Application for a building

That is,

majority

time

ears by simple
board.

the Editor:
Several people have questioned
me recently as to what we mean by
“Junior High.”
The.term
Junior
High
is affixed
to that segment
of an elementary school program
which
organizes
its
curriculum

to the

calculated

popular

an

with

words. They
name and adwhose name
requested

| Plans Were Dasighed :
By Famous Architect

Thursday,

July

16, 1959

‘Vol.

34,

No.

19

Published Weekly every Thursday
PUBLICATION

699

Waukegan

OFFICE

Road

DEERFIELD, “ILLINOIS
608

Telephone Windsor 5-4500
HIGHLAND
PARK
OFFICE
Laurel Ave., Highland Park,
Telephone ID 2-4500

IIl.

MEMBER
National
Editorial Association
Illinois Press Association
Local Subscription a
ait 50 per year
Domestic Rate—$5.00 per year
Single Copies—15¢
Foreign Rates on Application.
“Entered as second-class matter November 27, 1944, at the post office at DeerCare INinois,’ under the Act of March 8,

Thursday, July 16, 1959

~

4

«+
\

'

�Four Public Schools Of District 109
Being Prepared For September Opening

Deerfield Lions install Officers

Following the policy of the Board

of Education

of District

109 of maintaining school facilities of high standard, the custodians are busily engaged in scrubbing walls and floors, washing windows, waxing and polishing floors.
Robert Agan, principal of Kip-ling School, is working with the
custodians
who
are
Dewey
Deal
and
William
Lehto
of Deerfield
Grammar School, Rolland Demgen
of Maplewood, Clarence Varney of
Kipling, and Falierio Ballerini of
Walden.
Three
men
work
as
a
team in renovating the floors while
the other men are repairing desks,
mowing
grass,
washing
windows,
and painting.
The recommended alterations in
the Deerfield Grammar School by
the state fire marshal and the local
chief of the Fire Department, Fred
Grabo,
have
been
completed.
In
addition a complete new automatic
sprinkler system has been placed
in the basement.

The following improvements

Officers were
Legion

Hall.

Michael

left to right,

Pedersen,
The

Edward

second
three

public

Tanielian,

vice

directors

are

telegram

to

on July

the

Deerfield

8 from

Congress-

To Be Honored At

Pedersen,

Burns,

Allan

Adelman,

a

dinner

Howard

Seated

treasurer.

meeting

Wolf,

are

Not

at

the

president;

Dr.

Robert

present

Ritchie,
is Arnold

retiring

president

and

Richard

J.

Two retired Deerfield police oficers will be honored tonight at a
dinner at Hank’s Restaurant near
Waukegan.
Capt. Percy McLaughlin, who has
Yeen with the police department
ince 1925 resigned in May when
ié was elected township road com-

missioner.
Officer Alfred Anderson retired
une 15 after serving in the department since 1939.
» Police
Lieutenant
Glen
Koets
and Miss Geri Gallery of the secretevial department
in the Village
iall are co-chairmen of plans for
oday’s party.

aukegan Road Site Being
uéleared For Filling Station
» Work began Friday on clearing
rees and preparing the land on
he former C. W. Pettis property
just south of the bowling alley on
Waukegan Rd. for the new Standard Oil filling station.
4

Kleinschmidt
(Continued

from

imposed

XV-B

To Lake Forest Or Highland Park

Deerfield-Northbrook
Rotary
Club, meeting this noon at Sportsman Club on Dundee Rd. will hear
a talk by John Harrison, factory
representative of Electro-Air Corporation. He will tell of electronic
air filtering for warm air heating
systems.
Rotarian Mark Balmes of Northbrook, who is in the heating and
air
conditioning
business,
will
introduce the guest speaker.
While the president, Dr. Paul J.
Keller is vacationing at Mattapoisett, Mass., Ralph Nash, vice president, will preside.

Officers of the Deerfield Lions
Club met recently with Fire Chief
Fred Grabo to discuss the project
of raising money for the purchase
of an ambulance for the DeerfieldBannockburn Fire Protection District.
The
Lions
Club
promoted
the
purchase
of the
present
rescue
truck and an inhalator about
10
years ago. A fully equipped
ambulance is now their big project as
a community service.

TOWNSHIP
(Continued

from

page

3)

township
officials, will cooperate
with J. Robert York of the library
board in contracting with a tree
surgeon firm for the trimming of
the
large
trees
whose
branches
touch the roof of the new Town
Hall—Library building.

Bills
for
the

were

approved

poor relief and
general fund.

for

$225.60

$1,749.46

from

Final payment of $8,500 on the
$27,500 for the purchase
of the
property at 860 Waukegan Rd. from

the village hall will be due in Seppage

3)

additional 60 feet in height for the
plevated tank, instead of the 60
Section

Del Mar Woods Considers Annexation

Lions Club Plans Campaign
For New Fire Dept. Ambulance

Dinner Tonight

yoning

Clarence

at
J.

president.

Talk This Noon

Police Officers

limitation

vice

Air Conditioning

“Have
today
recommended
to
Post Office Department that Chrisian M. Willman Jr., now serving
as acting postmaster at Deerfield,
be named as permanent postmaster
at
Deerfield.
Mr.
Willman
was
ated eligible No.
1 on basis of
esults of competitive civil service
amination.”

-3 and

and

third

Club

secretary;

Rotarians To Hear

woman
Marguerite
Stitt
Church
R.-13th Dist., Ill.) from Washington, D. C. is as follows:

oot

tamer

Dr. William

Re: Postmaster
REVIEW

lion

Lions

Emmett,

relations.

Sends Telegram

wo

George

president.

Rep. M. S. Church

A

are

Baran, first vice president; Allen Weigle,

tail twister;

Riley,

installed on July 6 for the Deerfield

Standing

by

Section

of the

ordinance.

Thursday, July 16, 1959

said

and

repairs
are completed
or underway:
1. Repair
ceilings
throughout
Deerfield Grammar School.
2. New
acoustic
ceilings
in
2
classrooms — Deerfield Grammar
School.
3. New bookshelves and bulletin
boards in three classrooms in Deerfield Grammar School.

tember.
Tax bills may not be out
until November,
so the township
may have to issue tax anticipation
warrants until tax funds are available. The next regularly scheduled
meeting of the Town Board will be
Thursday, August 6 at 8 p.m.

4. All rooms in Kipling painted
since January 1.
5. Painting of redwood and trim
at Maplewood.
6. 12 bookcases constructed.
7. New lighting in 2 classrooms
in Deerfield Grammar School.
All Rooms To Be Used
Every available space in the four

buildings

will

be

used

in Septem-

ber.
Exclusive
of
Kindergarten
children, 21 new students in the
grades have registered since school
has closed.

Police Officer's
Wife Is Given
Peddler’s License
Mrs. R. W. Deimler of Waukegan,
wife
of Deerfield
Police
Officer
Deimler, has been granted a permit for a peddler’s license to operate an ice cream delivery service
on Deerfield’s streets.
The Deerfield Village Board, last
Wednesday evening, with a tie vote
of 3 to 3 failed to pass an ordinance
which would prohibit the sale of
foodstuffs on any street, sidewalk
or
public
thoroughfare.
It
was
aimed directly at carts with bells
driven through the streets selling
ice cream to children. The purpose
of attempting to prohibit the sales
was reported as a safety measure
to protect children.

Three possible courses of action to ensure the future of
Del Mar Woods were examined by the officers of the Del Mar
From The Audience
Woods Homeowners’ Association when they met on July 8 at
GorMrs.
G.
F. Clampitt said that the
E.
Stanley
8 p.m. at the home of Association president,
man with the bell was like a “Pied
don Jr.
According
to President Gordon,.
the hoe
three choices open to unincorporated Del Mar Woods are (1) incorporation with Lake Forest, (2)
incorporation with Highland Park,
and (3) incorporation as a separate
section.
The
Homeowners’
Association favors incorporation with
either
Lake
Forest
or
Highland
Park and reserves separate incorporation as a last choice to be used
only if efforts to join Lake Forest
or Highland Park fail.
The
Homeowners’
Organization
plans to approach Lake Forest and
Highland Park to map the necessary steps to be taken towards incorporation.
If and when
one of
the cities decides to admit the area,
then a referendum among the residents of Del Mar Woods would be

required.
Bordered on the north by Lake
Forest and on the east by Highland
Park, Del Mar Woods is considering
incorporation as a result of Bannockburn’s
arbitrary
rezoning
of
land directly across Half Day Rd.
from Del Mar Woods.
Among other topics discussed at
the Association
meeting
was the
possible
installation
of fire
hydrants in the area. There are no
hydrants
at present,
and
in the
event of fires it is necessary to
have a special truck for pumping.
Hydrants would not only provide

greater

safety,

but also reduce

in-

surance rates. Voluntary contributions from
resident of the
area
would be used to pay for the hydrants.
Officers of the Association are
President, Stanley E. Gordon Jr.;
vice
president,
James
E. Baker;
treasurer, Mrs. Roy A. Stallmann;
secretary, Mrs. Richard A. Crawford;
and
trustees,
William
P.
Listug; Russell D. Raske; Dr. Albert Mickew, Hubert A. Anderson,
and Peter A. Pfister.
Also in attendance were former
treasurer,
Donald
Rein
Jr.,
and
former president, Thomas L. Berry.

_,

| Fire Department
Inhalator

To

Takes

Bohl

Home

The Deerfield Fire Department
volunteer rescue squad was called
out Monday evening to the Herman
Bohl home
at 1501 Central Ave.
Mr. Bohl suffered a heart attack
and had passed away before the
firemen arrived.
Firemen Hope To Get
Money To Buy Drying

Piper” who lured all the children
to him and that the youngsters in
their zeal to see him forgot all
about keeping out of streets.

Donald Dickens urged passing of
the ordinance, but wanted children
to be allowed to have lemonade
stands.

She's a

More
Rack

The
Deerfield
Volunteer
Firemen are keeping their books open
until August 1, hoping that more
residents will send in their checks
for $3 for tickets to the annual
firemen’s benefit dance held June
27. They
have, to date, received
about one-third of the amount of
money necessary to buy the hose
drying tower rack.

Girl
:@

8.

Fe

Lions Club To Increase
Membership Limit
The
Deerfield
Lions
Club
is
planning to increase its membership to allow 50 instead
of the
present 30 members. They meet the
first and third Monday evenings.

Receives

Appointment

In Chicago

Bank

T. Allen Granfield of Deerfield
has been
appointed
an
assistant
secretary in the trust department

of

The

Northern

Chicago.
He is a graduate

Trust
of

sity of Minnesota, and

Company,
the

Univer-

a member

Secretary
Crawford
and
trustees
Anderson and Pfister were absent.
Another
meeting
of the group
will be held in approximately six
weeks
unless
the
press
of
the
incorporation issue requires
a
sooner meeting.
Bp

De

TRADEMARKS, tac

She

knows

how

and

save

money

at the

secret:

The

time.

Dry

Her

Cleaners

to

help

look

smart
same

ALPHA

her to

chic

by prescerving the loveliness of
her wardrobe.

of

Chi Psi fraternity. During World
War II he served in the Army air
force.
With his wife and three children,
Granfield lives at 987 Forest Ave.

k

© LOCAL

iste das’

“FOR THOSE WHO CARE

FIRST COPFPL ETE

CLEAN!

‘Tv

�oP
sit’

Ryne fs ee

gers ye

7

3

ay

Ve Lat .

|

easly

y oy

7 7

¥

i as

Ah sel a{

«

.

x

junges

. '

} -

: y

reVitalAE

OM aera

tTtT

t

~

Bie

5

‘ats ; ie go

J ai

ree AIT
MO

ae
RS

bate
es

. Sy

:

Ar

SALE
Our famous Griffon
55% Dacron- 45% Worsted

LIGHTWEIGHT

1

For an undreamed
yourself

of fit’ you owe it to

to try on these

suits.

|

Quality

fabrics, quality tailoring, know how fitting—equals as good looking a suit it is
possible to buy.

Shop Thursday 'til 9
Friday and Saturday ‘til 5:30

Hundreds of bargains thruout our store. See them.
Open Monday Evening 7-9

595 CENTRAL AVENUE
Page

6

Ee

|

Open Thursday Evening thru ‘til 9

ID 2-5300

HIGHLAND PARK
Thursday, July 16, 1959
\
bya

NS

hae eee

Ne

�Ripe SCA
EDS TADUE TTC: Li mi
Sn:(DRO os Pane a
ene Penal ura
|
CS
ov rome

Rustad

pe)

ark

Ra

fae

ee

ee

5

District 113 Board Reports Progress In Building Of Second High School!
Concrete
work
on
the
second
high
school
in
Township
High
School District 113 has been speeded up
because
the
District
has
enough steel on hand to build with,
Earling Zaeske, district operations
manager, said Monday. The “pads
are in on the boiler room and the
basement excavation is ready for
the walls to be formed up,” he said.

Half the foundation is in and the

*~

parking lot is being graded.
Changes ordered for the new Administration building amounted to
$884; $374 of it went to close par-

titions to give needed privacy in
offices; $208 to change paint trim
on the outside of the building and
cut glare; $54 for asphalt tile in the
new board room,
School
Construction
Changes
The board o.k.’d the first order
on changes in construction on the
second high school. As a time-saving measure, the board had voted
to start work on the school and not
wait the usual two-week period for
the architect to erase check drawings and specifications.
The expected
changes
included

‘Firkusny Stars With Chavez
‘Mexican Conductor, at Ravinia

the finishing of a ceiling, $1,066;
heating
specifications,
extra con-

trol,
$530;

booth,

$807;

sink

wall

in

tiling,

$733;

chemistry
$124;

and

lab,

telephone

a recessed

direc-

tory board, $932. A provision of $2,635 would adjust radiation of heat
for six classrooms from baseboard
to electric blower system.

During

the

past

collected

$4,585

facilities

to

year

by

outside

the

renting

board
school

groups.

Ex-

penses for the year were $4,189.
The question of whether or not
Township High School District 113
shall pay Bannockburn for a building permit has been left up to the
attorneys
representing
the board
and the Village of Bannockburn.
The board objects to paying for the

permit, unless required to, because
it would be “spending public funds
for a building permit,” a spokesman
said.

KEEPING
TIME
with

How’s your golf game?

?? Some

|
—
|

at

Sunset

time

out, better your
*
Ps
*

made

eee

p.m.

Viadimir Golschmann, conductor
of the St. Louis Symphony Orchestra for 27 years, will present the
Suite No. 2 from the Ballet, “Romeo and Juliet,’’ Opus 64, by Prokofieff.
Jennie Tourel, mezzo-soprano, to
be guest artist, has programmed
these operatic arias:

*(Author’s

Name

Your
Condition Demands
Something Flattering

one of many

THE

Ultimate iN
FINE MATERNITY APPAREL
NORTH

SHORE’S

COMPLETE

MOST

SELECTION

Le Grande Pavillion
645 CENTRAL
HIGHLAND

ae

Ete
a
616

*

days

and

*

G

Shoes
Shoe

Fitting

« RAVINIA

ID 2-2300

the

responsibility

of

filling their prescriptions.
May we compound yours?

EARL W.
GSELL &amp; CO.

A

&gt;

—PHARMACISTS—

Simple:

lexies
16,

1959

Highland

Park

or

Ravinia

*Quotation by Hester Thrale
(1739-1821)

*

KETTLE

BAR-B-Q

home
Fs

\

com|
re

*

j

Ny

Our

good

Cover and dampers give magic
FLAVOR-CONTROL

wishes

for many

more

O'NEILL'S

shockproof 17 Jewel watch reduced

ACE HARDWARE

from $35.00 to $19.95 and the heir-

1746

duced from
beautifully

St.,

—

Park and St. Johns who are celebrating their 30th year.
ivew
*
*
ES
Don’t forget that LEEDS JEW- —
ELERS and most other stores in
—
the Central business district are
|
now open on Thursday instead of
Friday nites. This Weeks Keeping
|
Time Specials on Thursday nite
|
from 7 to 9 only are: Our regular

The best charcoal broiled meat you’ve ever tasted! And you'll
easily do it yourself, first try. The Magic cover and dampers give
complete control of imtense reflected heat that seals in savory
juices lost in ordinary cooking.
The baked-in porcelain finish is completely weather-proof ...
can be left outdoors all year ’round. Treat yourself to this taste
thrill t oday!

Second

_

is the family.”
*
*

years of friendly service to SHEA- —
HAN’S STANDARD STATION on —

loom

ID 2-1150

gift of Cultured

Pearls

re-

|

$39.50 to $19.95 for a
matched
necklace.

SHOP ON THURSDAY NITES...

There

is plenty of Free
*
*
*

It looks

like

another

Parking!

great

|
|
i

week

for the High School crowd. On Saturday the Student Union has another of its parties at the Recreation Center. And Next Tuesday
the Free Jam Sessions bring us

great band

who

SUITS—Wash

’n Wear

SLACKS
WALK SHORTS

...

39.95
12.95
9.95

will

—

of recording jazz stars

be

playing

some

of

|

the

—

music they are going to record
soon. And then on Wednesday and
Friday
the
Kingston
Trio
and —
Gerry Mulligan’s quartet will be —
at Ravinia. There are still a few —

Student

Activity

Committee

tick-

|

ets left at only $1.00 for Ravinia.
*
*
*
Anniversary Greetings this week
to

ANN

who

and

celebrate

DR.

and

MRS.

BOB

LEOPOLD

their second
SLEPYAN

JR.

and to

who

in

wei

Webster:

Coiffure: A

French
word
meaning
“Youll
keep coming to us because youll
never be able to do it this way
yourself!”
*
*
*
Is your watch on time? ? The hot
humid summer weather is the time
of year when

—

cele-

brate their 22nd.

Not

Pick up your prescription
if shopping near us, or let
us deliver promptly without extra charge. A great
many
people entrust us

with

:

July

American

*

Specialists . . . featuring:

Thursday,

*

When You Need A Medicine

CENTRAL AVE., H.P.
Ph. ID 2-0879
— G. S. Laing —

re

PARK

ID 2-2600

angqgee

serious

Ask Your Physician to Phone
HIGHLAND

Children’s

possible

|

With so many of our youngsters
away for all or parts of the summer we realize more than ever
that—‘what is needed most in the

other symp-

sickness.

PARK

ID 2-0410

ID 2-1300

should be a real “swinging”
mittee this year again.

VM

THE
ee

oes

the committee for a great choice. It

dethe
serjust

toms to be studied if a cure
is to result. Do not wait ‘til
pain grows sharp and sickness rages.
Consult your
physician immediately to
prevent
other
pain-filled

*

the Student Activities Committee:
to be at their helm for the coming
year. And Congratulations, too, to

RUST-PROOF |
: PORCELAIN :

danger may result.
No one but a physician
has the knowledge to
termine if a pain is
result of a minor or
ious condition. Pain is

When

FOR

Below

Pain is an indication of
sickness.
Persistant recurring pain is nature’s warning signal that something
must be done soon to correct the condition or serious

ae

*

Our
congratulations
to TOM,
STONE, last years H.P.H.S. Junior.
class president who was chosen by

Vdd

8:30

aw

couple—

FONTANA.

x

“podium.

at

a wonderful

game.

walking down the aisle last Saturday, and our best wishes go to the
former SHIREY TANNER and AN-.

cago
tonight. Carlos Chavez, the Mexican conductor, will be on the

Tuesday

creating

Next

THONY

“WHEN PAIN GROWS
SHARP AND SICKNESS
RAGES”

are

a stir locally and nationally
this wonderful
innovation.

They

Firkusny, pianist, will be guest soloist with the ChiSymphony Orchestra in a concert at the Ravinia Festival

“When I am Laid in Earth” from
“Dido and Aeneas”’ .......... Purcell
“Voi che sapete,” from “The Marriage of Figaro”
(First Performance at These
concerts)
“Una voce poco fa,”’ from “The Barber of Seville” ..22.:.)..02..0.: Rossini
(First Performance at These
concerts)
Intermission
Adagio for Strings, Opus 11
Barber
“L/Invitation au Voyage” ..Duparc
(Continued on page 39)

Park

quite
with

Rudolf

Tonight at 8:30 p.m.
‘Teonore NO) 37? ...24-00.--2:- Beethoven
‘Bensemaya” .2.).2.6 0a Revueltas
Danzas Sinfonicas .................. Orbon
Piano Concerto No. 1 .....-.... Brahms
Tomorrow at 8:30 p.m.
+
The New York Pro Musica
(Ravinia Theatre)
Renaissance and Early Baroque
Music
Saturday at 8:30 p.m.
Conductor, Carlos Chavez
Rudolf Firkusny, pianist
Symphony NO: 4 “i535a: Chavez
‘Concerto No. 1 for Piano ................
Mendelssohn
“Valses Nobles et Sentimentales’”’ ..
Ravel
eh AION BPUIO sk G10 Gees Falla
Suite from the Ballet ................ with
contralto soloist, Lili Chookasian

leeds

of the gals and fellows claim that
the new invention—‘“‘Caddyettes”
has really improved theirs! AGNES
PARKS and her crew of 21 beauties

COOKS WITHOUT
BURNING FOOD

paul

our watchmakers

—
|

_

are

busiest. . . But we are still main-

|

taining our schedule of fast service
in this most important phase of our
business at Leeds. Has it been
‘more

than

a year

since your

watch

was dissembled, cleaned, oiled, adjusted and put in new working or-

thal
vs

der?

LEEDS JEWELERS
491 Central, Highland Park
Page?

=

�Local ‘Earlybirds’ Reserve Tickets For GOP Garden Walk
THE

He

ag,

EXCITING

NEW

Nolen
fore

MOTOR ta

Among Highland Park and Highwood “earlybirds’” who have reserved tickets for this year’s summer
outing of the Women’s Republican
Club
of
the
13th
Congressional
District
are
Mesdames
Howard
Armstrong, Wil'iam T. Jones, Howard
Lausche,
Baldwin
Newman,
Robert
Olsen,
Roy
M.
Olson,

HOTEL
IS
A

New

Concept

Business
meeting and

5 private

in

Hotel

NOW

Vacation

OPEN

and

Accommodations
conference rooms... magnificent

out-

door and indoor swimming ‘pools . « » dining in the splendor of
the

Fountain

Room

...

cocktails

at

the

Highland

Fling

...

Highland Park Music Theatre ... 100 spacious air conditioned
rooms and suites. FREE PARKING
For information call p

Silla)"

George

ILL.

Pat Miller, General Mgr.

SKOKIE

HIGHWAY-LAKE COOK
EDENS , EXPRESSWAY

Frank Nustra, C. C.

Pasquesi,
R. J. Ronchetti,
C. C.
Rossio and Mrs. Robert Turalli.
The event next Wednesday will
feature a House and Garden Walk
in Lake Forest between the hours
of 10 a.m, and 4 p.m. A light buffet
luncheon will be served at Ferry
Hall School between 11:30 a.m. and
2 p.m. Admittance
to the homes
and luncheon is by ticket only.

pene
5-4000

PARK,

Reber,

Residences being opened to the
club are those of Mrs. Clive Runnells, Mrs. D. M. Ryerson, Mr. and
Mrs, Solomon B. Smith, Mr. and
Mrs. R. Douglas Stuart and General
and Mrs. Robert E. Wood.
General chairman is Mrs. Glen
A. Lloyd
of Libertyville,
a past
Lake
County
co-chairman of the
club
and
former
State
Central
Committeewoman for the 13th district.
She
is being
assisted
by Mrs.
Robert McClory of Lake Bluff, Mrs.
Robert
Tieken
and
Mrs
Winston
Elting of Libertyville, Mrs. Hempstead Washburne Jr. of Lake Forest, and the two co-chairmen of the
club, Mrs. Horace S. Vaile of 112
Maple Ave. for Lake County and

ROAD

Mrs. B. J. Murphy
Cook County.

of Evanston

for

Sisters’ Surprise Reunion
Filmed For TV Show Tuesday
“It

be

Could

telecast

Be

You,’

Tuesday

program

morning,

to

will

depict
the first reunion
in four
years of Mrs. Bernard
Klineman,
1510 Arbor Ave., and her sister,.«
Mrs.
Marvin
Harris
of Pacoima,
Calif.
Flies To Coast
Mrs.
Klineman
last week
was
flown to California to appear as a
surprise guest on the filmed program honoring her sister who is
president of Little League in her«
city.

NORGE OK's ONE MORE WEEK
END &amp; TRUCKLOAD of FREEZERS
30 MORE HOURS to SAVE on these WORLD’S LEADING APPLIANCES
We Will Be Open TONITE (THURSDAY) from 7-9 P.M.
SALE ENDS SAT., at
Each Unit Uncrated for You Right Here in Our Big Warehouse Parking Lot!
The

Norge

Factory

Representative

will be

here to Answer

5

ome

=

p.m.

Your Questions These

Days.

:

Model AV-12

i

Model AV-15

SPECIAL!

jr

SPECIAL!

%1999

12

$2

15
Cu.

Ft.

@

JET-FREEZE

Shelves

@

Automatic

@

HANDIDOR

Storage

@

Food

@

SAFETY

@

Freezer

@

LATCH

COLD-LOCK

Door

COLD

Protection
and

Insulation

Warranty

of Moraine

Rd.—East

system

19
Cu.

Ft.

$2

@

SAFETY

Temp.

@

Dry Cabinet

@

Safety

@

DELUXE

DOOR
Inside

6950

Mfg. List
$529.95

“

$3 69°

Control

CONDENSER
SEALS
&amp;

Out

RADIO &amp; APPLIANCE CO.

2631 Waukegan Ave., Highland Park »
North

REFRIGERATOR-FREEZER
ULTRA-SPECIAL!

Pull-Out BASKET

HIGHWOOD
Blocks

|

CONTROL

sealed-in

Model CB-915

SPECIAL!

3950

warranties

@

1%

Model AV-19

of Tracks

For your convenience we are open:
onday &amp; Thursday Evenings—7 to 9

All Day Wednesday

AMPLE
PARKING AT

FREE
ALL TIMES

ID 2-6260

HaTOQAHEQNGUGAREGONAGEAONEOUESRUNGRKBGAHEOOHHGORAUCOTGOUEOOUNGOUUGBRINEOUIGESINEOUCOOEUEONASOAHIGAAABSOEIEOIEBDA
Page

8

Thursday,

July

16,

1959

�The “Circle SSS” means “Special Summer Sale”... A horde of bargains hogtied and branded for
you...So come early. Stock up and have fun in Western fashion at our Food Rodeo.
HUNT’S

INSTANT

CARNATION

STYLE

ITALIAN

4 %:100) Dry Milk“. 29¢
Tomatoes

KRAFT
“Mayonnaise

Bei

59c

HUNT'S TOMATO

PURINA

HUNT’S

CHOCOLATE FUDGE ov

CATSUP 2 =: 35c| Dog Chow *$2.39

S&amp;W
STEWED

Tritoce on ake

Tom ato Juice cee 39c

PILLSBURY’S WHITE,
or CHOCOLATE

Manor House Coffee

,

2 Ib. can S19
D4
.

Season ©

Pkgs. for

Vo

Relief....: $1.00
ASSORTED

NEW TABLE SERVER
@®

COLORS

|Cake Mix

:

TNS

2s

COOKIES

=&lt; 45c

IVORY

“r*:.29c|

FLAKES

ELDORADO

or

SNOW

ress. 69¢

|

PRODUCE

FOODS

}

SWEET PLUMS ~~

~ 19¢

rere

_-

WATERMELON. tuesoe nen 89
39
:
RIPE,

EXTRA

SUGAR

FANCY

SWEET—21

Lb. Average

LARGE

NECTARINES ~...---———--_—- we. 29¢

TABLE

NAPKINS

CANTALOUPE

ws 29¢

GREEN PEPPERS |

ach 5

CALIFORNIA

CROSSE &amp; BLACKWELL

-Consomme Madrielene

or

YELLOW

SUNSET

RED

'

IN y,

400-Count

|

N.B.C. CHIPAROONS

WEST

SIDE

$1.00 | cron

5 “x

~

INSTANT

MAXWELL

HOUSE

COFFEE. a
&gt;

FOR
~

COOKING

OR

FOR

RIB ROAST ©. 75c

INSTANT

: MALTED

MILK............ “can 45¢

* CENTRELLA NO. 2 SIEVE

PERS
La

NEW

ENS

SUPER

No.

303

Cans

39c

Globe,

Butt End

Smoked Hams

55c

COOKED—READY-TO-EAT

DEODORANT

SECRET...

Roll-On
Economy Size

$1

.00

Best
Medium
Personal

_49c
29¢

Kosher

FRANKS

.. ke, 69c

~&lt;z—~, DELSEY

&gt; TOILET TISSUE
Thursday,

July

16,

1959

ARTICHOKE HEARTS
BIRDS

Plankinton

4 #24

|

MAIN COURSE .......... = me A

U. S. Choice Aged,
Ist 5 Ribs

SALADS

WESSON OIL |
BORDEN’S

FROZEN SPECIALS ! !

RS

30

49

PEAS

EYE

= AQc
TREE

SWEET

ress. 30 | Lemonade 3 &lt;= 29¢

SUNSET
FOODS
1812
Open

GREEN
Both

PLENTY

BAY

ROAD

Thursday

OF

FREE

— A CENTRAL

and

Friday

PARKING

Nights

FOOD

STORE

‘Til 9 P.M.

— ALWAYS!
Page

9

�Were a

RELAY

gst

RINE

ee

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Tae

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tps

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sage eed
i
Piatt

on

;

y

waaay

ree

i

tit:

etal
Gia
att
he
Sak YR

a

pes

Hare a

1

ciate
eas

Schools — Churches — Clubs

ANY

James

OCCASION

EIR’

Nn.’

et

monsFig

°

PS bi

i.

ial

a aidTebi

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O.

Research,

call:

Clarke

died at Arlington

Hospi-

tal, Va., July 1.
Born in Augusta, Ga., and graduated from the Georgia School of
Technology, he and his family had
lived
at
2237
Lincolnwood
Rd.
for nearly ten years before moving
to Vienna,
Va., where
they now
live.
Mr. Clarke entered the Federal
service in 1917, after four years as
Assistant State Chemist of Georgia.
He headed the Savannah and New
York stations, and from
1929 to
1948 was chief of the former Central District of the FDA.

WI 5-3852
DEERFIELD
- HIGHLAND PARK
TRANSIT, INC,
Deerfield

After retiring in 1952, he served
as justice of the peace
and as treasurer of the

INSTALLATION

the

Comforter

in Vienna
Church of

there.

He is survived by his wife, Margaret;
two
daughters,
Margaret
Clarke of New York, and Mrs. Cur.
tis Prendergast of Paris; and four
grandchildren.

15 Minute Service
While You Wait
No Appointment Necessary
Work: Done by Skilled
Muffler Specialists

Holy

Services were

held July 2 at the

Church of Holy Comforter.
followed in Oakton, Va.

=:

Mrs.

Anna

Burial

Brady

A
resident
of six years,
Mrs.
Anna
Brady
died July 8 at the

home of her son, George,
1850
Crescent Ct., where she was living.
Mrs,

on
FACTORY

WRITTEN

GUARANTEE

BE

“MONEY:

SURE?

was

28,

born

1881

in Chicago

and

had

lived

there
until
moving
to Highland
Park.
She is survived by her son, with
whom
she
lived.
Her
husband,
Isaac, and a daughter,
Mrs.
Zoe
Engelbrecht, both preceded her in
death.
Funeral services were held July
11 in the chapel at 1913 Sheridan
Rd. Burial followed in Mount Emblem Cemetery, Elmhurst.

FOR THE LIFETIME
OF YOUR CAR
GOOD AT MIDAS MUFFLER
SHOPS FROM
COAST-TO-COAST

SAVE

Brady

June

ae

Look for the Midas Sign

gy

Mrs.

America’s cnly codstite:
coast network of exclusive
auto: muffler shops,

Sarah

Mrs.

340

V.

Sarah

Temple

V.

Ave.,

Laegeler
Laegeler,

died

90,

July

of

7 in

the Wayside Nursing Home, Libertyville.
Born on Oct. 12, 1868, in Lake
Forest, she had been a resident of
Highland Park for 82 years. She
odist Church.
Mrs. Laegeler was preceded in
death by her late husband, Julius
C., who
founded
the
Highwood
drug store bearing his name since

p.m.

Now
1835

SALE
Sizes 10-20, 5-15,
and 122 to 2414

grandchildren
Funeral

day

at

also survive.

services

Wesley

were

held

Methodist

Fri-

Church,

Highwood. The Rev. Darrell Sample officiated. Burial followed in
Memorial Park Cemetery, Skokie.

Mildred

H.

Peterson

Mildred H. Peterson died Tuesday at the Medical Pavilion in Highwood. A resident of 2038 Sheridan
Rd., she was born June 21, 1903,

in Lake

Villa, Ill.

Survivors
include
a daughter,
Mrs. Patricia Lloyd of 43 Maple
Ave., Highwood;
a daughter, Miss
Marcia
Peterson
of Libertyville;
and a son, Robert,
of Knoxville,
Tenn.
Arrangements
for
services
are
being made.

Miss

Jennie

Carleton

Miss Jennie Carleton, 430 Park
Ave., a retired teacher, died Tuesday at the Medical Pavilion in High-

wood.

Born

cago,

she

reer

there

Dec.

20,

began

her

at

the

1880,

in Chi-

teaching

age

of

17

ca-

and

taught for 45 years.
She is survived by one sister,
Maud,
of the same
address,
and
three nieces.
Services will be held at 1 p.m.
today at the chapel, 1913 Sheridan
Rd. Dr. William
Atkinson Young
will
officiate.
Burial
in Rosehill
Cemetery, Chicago, will be private.

Robert

Saielli

A
Highwood
resident
for
48
years, Robert Saielli, died July 12
in Lake
Forest
Hospital
after a
lengthy illness. He
had lived
at
303 Ashland Ave.
Mr. Saielli was born in Italy on
April 28, 1892. He came
to the
United States in 1906. He was a
member of the Modenese Mutual
Aid Society.
Survivors
include
his
widow,

Theresa;

one sister, Mrs. Domenica

Bertucci, and one brother,
both of Highwood.

Egidio,

ME

ve

eR

ea

es

ne

“4

RON
ont

Funeral services were held in St.
James Church, Highwood,
yesterday morning. Burial followed in All
Saints Cemetery, Des Plaines.

Mrs.

Mary

De

Vanna

A Highwood resident of 10 years,
Mrs. Mary De Vanna, 76, of 126
High St., died July 10 in Highland
Park
Hospital.
She
was
born
in
Chicago.
She was a member of the Sacred
Heart Guild and the Italian Women’s Prosperity Club.
She
is survived
by two
sons;
John of Highwood
and Joseph of
Chicago;
and one daughter,
Mrs.
Louise
Corso
of Highwood.
Mrs.
De Vanna’s other survivors include
seven
grandchildren
and_
three
great-grandchildren.
Funeral Mass was said Tuesday
in St. James
Church,
Highwood.
Burial took place in Mt. Carmel
Cemetery in Chicago.

John

W.

Robinson

John William Robinson of 1695
Second St. died July 11 in the Lake
County
General Hospital, Waukegan, after a two-year illness. He
was 86 years old.
Mr. Robinson was. born Nov. 17,

1872.

He

is survived

by two

sons,

Gerald of Wheaton and Charles of
Highland Park; and two daughters,
Mrs. Thelma Moore of Kansas City
and Mrs. Lola Hagerty of Libertyville. Other survivors are 11 grandchildren,
10
great-grandchildren,
five sisters and one brother. He
was preceded in death by his wife,
Belle.
Services were held Tuesday in
the chapel at 1913 Sheridan Rd.
Burial followed in Mooney Cemetery.

Mrs.

Virginia

Manfredini

Mrs.
Virginia
Manfredini,
82,
died July 12 in Augustana Hospital,
Chicago,
after a short illness. A
former resident of Highwood, she
had been living in Chicago with
her son, Enrico, at the time of her
death. She was born in Italy o

June

27, 1877.

‘&lt;

Mrs. Manfredini is survived by
three sons, Enrico and Pietro both
of Chicago, and Silvio of 224 High
St., Highwood;
a daughter,
Mrs.

Sam Sez...

a

see

Ni

transom

(which

closed)

this A.M.

is no

mean

feat—now,

that

it’s

sy

ARVIN

a

ROM

Sen PN

TF)

ala

TAN TES

=n

LL

ghee
2) aI

OP

ERE

ty a

etary ich While

PON

pathy aia Gin Sa ul Caney us aaron hig ety:

Aleyon’s Mid-Week
Break

With

Matinees

30-Year

Tradition

evening performances is being continued.
Seymour

Hite,

manager

of

ice and appearance of the theater.
Soon the marquee and entrance, a
Highland
Park
landmark
for
a

quarter

of

a century,

will

be

Community Requested To View
Telecast On Mental Health
“Stranger In the Family,” a story
of the battle against mental illness
in the Illinois state hospitals, will
be telecast on Saturday at noon
on Channel 5.
Mrs.
Paulette
Hartrich,
executive secretary of the North Shore
Mental
Health
Association,
says,
“This is an excellent film, sponsored by the Illinois Department of
Public Welfare, and we hope the
community will watch it. The program should go a long way toward
increasing
understanding
of
the
mental patient not only when he is
in the
hospital but when
he is
making an adjustment to the community after his discharge.

(Across

from

10

t

Leon Ilda Bertucci of 111 North
Ave., Highwood;
seven grandchildren;
and
three
great-grandchildren. Her husband, Virginio, died
in 1949,

Funeral
9:30

services

this

Church,

were

morning

in

Highwood.

St.
Mary’s
Park.

held
St.

Burial

Cemetery,

at

James

was

in

Highland

Second Son Is Born
To James A. Newells
A son, named David Keith, was
born
June
18 at Highland
Park
Hospital to the James A. Newells
of 588
Vine
Ave.
David
has
a
brother, Scott, 2.
Grandparents
are
the
Oscar
Lundgrens, 428 Orchard Ln., and
the L. L. Newells of Merrill, Wis.

Contact

kept

&amp; elicited the following pertinent in-

See your eye physician
(M.D.) first. If he says

&amp; unusual!”
Why not come over &amp; see for yourself.

you can wear them—

If you really

H.O.YV. has all the newest

types. Get the benefit
of our 20 years of
pioneering

Jewelry

Thursdays

re-

placed
by
a modern,
especially
lighted front featuring a black and
white decor.
The interior of the theater has
been recarpeted, and plans for remodeling
and
redecorating
the
theater proper, lounges and lobby
are in the offing.

wearables for men.

REDUCED

the

theater, told the NEWS this is one
more step in modernizing the serv-

@

Purses

FOR

Cobey’s

OFF

CLEARANCE

‘til 9:00

H.P.

Jewel)

478 Central
(Open Thursday Night)

For the answer to your questions about contact lenses—
write for our new booklet.

Ch

ID

ge

House of Vision’
Craftsmen

P.M.
2-0788

and

continued research.

Highland Park

in Optics

1891 SHERIDAN ROAD
HIGHLAND PARK

135 NORTH

WABASH,

CHICAG
©H.0.V.

/

Page

pe

en)

For the first time in 30 years,
a special vacation-time show
for
children is being shown each Wednesday at 1 p.m. at the local Alcyon
Theatre. The regular schedule of
Saturday and Sunday matinees and

feel you deserve a break, we'll fracture you with old fashioned courtesy, pretzels &amp; coffee . . . and some wonderful

to 50%
St.

include four

sons, Julius C., 566 Skokie Ave.;
Charles, 340 Temple Ave.; Lloyd,
1022 Central Ave.; and Lester, 2673
Logan Ave. Mrs. Elsie L. Nichols,
a daughter, of Highland Park, and
ten grandchildren and nine great-

ya

“So,” Sam continued, “I buzz them about Cobey’s
(grimacing slightly) where the boss says he won’t hold
a sale for nobody while his mensware is fresh &amp; inviting

ROSBY’S

Second

ce!

&amp; the sizes don’t fit, &amp; mostly
they don’t like the idea of paying one price on Monday &amp;
another price on Tuesday.”

Skirts
© Lingerie

Open

survivors

Cae
:

mdse. offered is inferior, undesirable &amp; downright shoddy;

Dresses
@ Suits
@ Blouses

DRASTICALLY

Her

Oehy i

Kd
a eel

the colors are too colorful

CLEARANCE

30%

patos
2

“People,” breathlessly said Sam, “are being rather coy
this year . . regarding sales. It seems that most of the

Summer

@

f

re

formation:

ROSBY'S

®

aS ores

our

Our friendly flitter, Sam the Parakeet, swept thru our

FURTHER
REDUCTIONS at |

@

Ay «ST ay

SNORT

was a member of the Wesley Meth-

MIDAS MUFFLER SHOP
1535 Belvidere, Waukegan
MAjestic 3-8395
Open Daily 8:30-6 p.m.
Friday—8
:30 -9

ld 2

1890.

James O. Clarke, 68, retired director of the Food and Drug Administration’s Division of Program

Insured Drivers
For Information

Maas ei gt a

_ OBITUARIES

| CHARTER BUSES
FOR

=

n

A

atau

Thursday,

July 16, 1959

�VILLAGE

BOARD

(Continued

from

page

3).

cent sales tax.
Reports, for the first time, were
not read concerning the building
commissioner,
collector,
department of public works, fire marshal,
police chief, sewer and water department. They were placed in the
foyer of the Village Hall for those
who wished to read them.
Mr. Porter said that the traffic
ordinances were in book form and
available for those who wished to
read it.
Three appointments (Edwin Gillen, Mrs. E. R. Emery
and John
Kies)
to the board appeals were
not acted on and are held over to
another meeting. An ordinance was
passed to have seven members on
the board of zoning appeals.
Approval was given for a revision of the plans of the street into
the Deerfield Commons
Shopping
Center from Osterman Ave.
No action was taken on the op
_ tion and deposit for the purchase
of the National Brick Co.
The permit for K-V &amp; Associates,
942 Waukegan
Rd., for 12 apartment Townhouse
was referred to
the
building
committee
of
the
board, Trustee Koss, chairman. The
action was omitted on the petition
of Melvin Wolfson, 1137 Deerfield
Rd., for two multiple family dwellings,
Approval was granted for signs

for Ford Pharmacy,

Alden Ct. and for Harold Gleason
at 706 Deerpath Dr., both for remodeling of garages.

Line Rd. sewer. It was
this payment does not
proval of the work.

Floral Park plat was approved.
Scatterwood Unit 3 was “dropped.”
Ordinances for amending the areas
where filling stations may be constructed
and
prohibiting
certain
uses in the business area were not
ready for action.

A resolution will be sent to the
Cook County Zoning Board of Appeals, asking them to hold up action on the rezoning of Northfield
Township for business and industrial along the tollway until Deerfield’s comprehensive
plan is approved. Cook County’s hearing is
scheduled for Thursday, today, in
Chicago.

The

letter

torney

from

for

Louis

the

Ancel,

North

at-

Suburban

Builders
Council, dated June
15,
1959, was
referred
to committee
for recommendations.
B. and M. Construction Co. will
receive all but $10,000 of their bill
from
construction of the County

Se

The board

stated that
signify ap-

WARDS
NT

GoM
.€
Ravi

UW

ATR 2B

adjourned to Wednes-

day, July 29 at 8 p.m. to prepare
the budget and appropriation ordinances and to get them done before the legal deadline.

Gh

AVORITE
a

*

ae

By

BOB

YOUR

CHOICE

GREENWALD

What’s your chances of bowling a perfect game?
The A.B.C.
(American Bowling Congress) from 1906 to 1952 lists 4,340 scores of 300
. 1,745 games of 298 bowled on
There were 2,367 games of 299 .
AB.C.

alleys.
*

*

*

We sure have heard a lot about the N.C.A.A. (National Collegiate
Athletic Association) lately and find that it came into being in the first
place as a result of the alarming amount of football injuries around 1905
The eastern colleges called a conference to determine whether to

Coons Real Es-

abolish

tate and the Pedersen development
at Appletree Lane and Arbor Vitae
Rd.
Sideyard
variations
were
approved for Robert A. Davis at 942

football—but

decided

to make

certain

reforms—at

the

same

time,

plans were made for a national body to assist in the formation of sound
requirements for intercollegiate athletes.

GREENWALD’S,

1775 SECOND

STREET

—

ID 2-1100

THURSDAY NIGHT SPECIAL!
Decorative,

99c

$1.98

TOSS PILLOWS .........
XMAS

SALE

CARDS,

STARTS

Boxed

—

TODAY

1

Price

BUY NOW!
Wards Canister Cleaner— Was °49.95

We Will Be Open 7-9 p.m.
Thurs.

Night!

Kitchen
1822

2nd

St.

Next

—~

door

to

+ Ka ddic_|

H.P.

Jewel

eee ii
OWNER

TRANSFERRED

cc

AND

MUST

easily

on

3-wheel

base;

Powerful

9/10-HP

motor

turns

at

a touch

in

cord storage recess.

pulls out deep-down

dirt.

Suction dial adjusts from ‘gentle’ to extra-power.
Includes 7 handy cleaning attachments, and 3 disposable "throw-away” dust bags. 5-Year Guarantee,

ID 2-8678

Store)

a

Rolls

any direction. “Reel-away”

TT

st

Johnson’s New Polisher-Scrubber
~ NATIONALLY ADVERTISED, °49.95

SELL

a

Single-brush

design

. . . like commercial

machines.

Perfectly balanced; you guide it with a fingertip.
Cleans

floors

as it waxes

them,

in one

operation;

buffs and polishes, and even dry cleans your rugs!
a

Scrubs floors thoroughly, without splashing. Complete

waxing and scrubbing kit is included FREE!

Here’s “household help” you can afford ... Yes,

you'll save $10 now on each of these two fine
cleaning aids that will take so much of the hard
work out of housework! So, order today.

See Them On Display
In Our Catalog Store
Exceptionally well planned Bed Brick Split level
home, built only 2 yrs. ago. On naturally wooded
and landscaped lot in area of fine homes, and
friendly neighbors. Near
schools and _ beaches.
Living room with stone fireplace, dining room
11.4 x 12. Birch cabinet kitchen 16 x 9, built in

JOHN

Roper ovens and range.
full tile baths/shower
Paneled

den

12

x

21,

3 spacious bedrooms with
and twin wash basins.
plus

paneled

room with lavatory and outside entrance. Priced
well under reproduction including new carpeting.
By appointment.

CHANNER

BAIRD &amp; WARNER
Since 1855
576 Lincoln Avenue
Winnetka, Illinois

OPEN
Thursday,

July

16, 1959

Hillcrest

SUNDAYS:

recreation

11

A.M.

to

5

6-1855

1854

FIRST

ST.
remember

HIGHLAND
...

use

PARK

our

24-Hr. — 7 Day Phone Service
ID 2-8830

L = Va

SHeldrake 3-1855
P.M.
Page

11

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MSR
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.

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4

Brownies festn 16 Make Necklaces

ty your, gamer
Even

if you’ve worn them

other high-fashion

and again, your cottons, taffetas and

get crisp, fresh,

renewed “life.” Our stylecontrol sizing process restores new body and crispness to fabrics—they stay
clean and wrinkle-free longer, too.
Men’‘s wash and wear suits get that new look when cleaned and treated
| with our special sizing process.

:

ae

WAYNE’S ake ShoreCLEANERS, INC.
597

Roger

Williams —

IDlewood

454

Ravinia

Waukegan

QUALITY

Avenue — Highwood

IDlewood

2-9265

CLEANING

AT

A

REASONABLE

2-0455

Renee Marotte, age 82, is one of the Brownies who learned
to make necklaces from wallpaper at the summer day camp held
recently in Jewett Park. Renee, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Ralph
F. Marotte of 795 Woodview Rd., west of the Tollway, is a student at Wilmot School.

PRICE
alhe...tthe..olhe...thae...tthe...whe...
the... vle..sle...ole...olee..alteeellien
aller ..talliher

Whipped Cream

CHIFFON
PIES
AND ... Frozen Whipped Cream CAKES

CHIFFON CAKES

DEERFIEL
Page

WAUKEGAN
12

RD., DEERFIELD

ear
vr
wage
Sgr” - eye
te

Call for Appointment
—ID 2-3814
AMPLE FREE PARKING
1394 Deerfield Rd., Highland Park
bt

li

li

al

al

li

i

i

i

i

Lift

CLEARANCE

of all Spring

Summer

Merchandise

BAKED BEANS

(MANY
One

and

FALL

Two-Piece

TERMS

SALE

BEGINS:

5-0068

and

INCLUDED)

Dresses,

Sizes

Blouses

and

Skirts

8-18

Thurs., July

16th at 10 a.m.

Diss ion

oki At WERE PROUD OF OUR

WI

oe

ULTRA-NATURAL LOOK!

204 East Westminster

813

Oe

. .. Comfortable...

Oe

that Casual

POTATO SALAD
BAKED HAM

&amp;

Or

Welcomes

Or

Summer

a Mid-Summer

BAKERY

oye”

abn

SALE!
Give Your MATERNITY WARDROBE

try our delicious

ORANGE

Beauty

Ee

Frozen

MAGIC SCISSORS

QO

athe..slhe.slte.slte..tlhe...shae.sthe...slhe.
ste. slte .slbe..olhe...slte...ste..sthe..slte...slte...stee..allie

|

garments

again

One

block

north

LAKE
of Market

FOREST,

ILL.

Square

Thursday,

July

16,

1959

*

�Forum

yn Greenwood

|

lic attention recently which affect
various neighborhoods in Deerfield
and
I would
appreciate
it very
much if you or Robert Bowen our
building
.and zoning
enforcement
officer would answer them:

1.

Residents

of

the

5.

Briarwoods

like

of

is

a

new

Mobil

Oil

garage

gas

to

station

the

in

6. Have provisions been made for
appropriate “buffer’’ between shopping center and homes on Osterman Avenue? It does not seem that
ordinary provisions of a four foot
planting of shrubs will be adequate
protection for these neighbors from
traffic, noise, blowing papers, de‘iveries, and
other features
of a
shopping center.
At the July
8 board
meeting,
there was a vote of $250 to purchase an aerial map of this area
from
the
Highland
Park
High
School. While Marwood Rupp was
village
manager,
the
village
acquired such a map.
Do you know
where this is?

3. The silver balloon like building in the rear of Tractomotive
Corporation which is visible from
Waukegan Road still stands. While
Joseph
Brown
was a trustee, he
stated at a board meeting that this
was a temporary structure, soon to
be removed.
Do you know if this
structure
complies
with building
and zoning laws?
garage

just east of

Shopping
Center which
does
not
appear to be compatible to other
buildings.
Does
it
conform
te
suilding and zoning laws? It is my
recollection that the board of trus‘ees recently enacted a law providing
for
architectural
review
of
buildings in business and industrial
districts.

2. Within recent weeks several
new
signs
of
the
overhang
or
“protruding” type have appeared in
the business district. Do they meet
the requirements of zoning
ordinance? Have public hearings been
held if variances were needed?

the

There

rear

area say that the “Country
Club
Appurtenances,”
which
are being
built at the Briarwood Club look
very close to Deerfield Road and
on top of the west property line—
and that this section, once covered
with trees and shrubs is beginning
to look mighty bare.
Are precautions being taken to save as many
trees as possible?
Have setbacks
been checked? Are there any other
rules which were laid down by the
Village President and Board to preserve the character of this neighborhood and village property values?

4. Does

Avenue,

the Milwaukee tracks comply with
ouilding
and
zoning
laws?
This
building appears to be unoccupied
and recently has been covered with
a political placard.

Mrs. Loarie’s Letter
(Continued from page 4)

Mrs. Willard J. Loarie
853 Oxford Road

Democratic

Women

SEE IT TODAY

Plan Benefit For

Campaign

16° MIRRO

Fund

The Lake County South Area of
the Democratic Women’s
Club of
the
18th
Congressional
District
plans a Music Theatre benefit of
“Pajama Game” on Friday, July 24,
to raise money for the newly established campaign fund of the district.
Among the couples planning to
attend from Deerfield are Mr. and
Mrs. A. R. Bandemer, Mr. and Mrs.
William Reilly, Mr. and Mrs. Karl
Berliant, Mr. and Mrs. Cyril Fritz,
Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Eskin and Mr.
and Mrs. William Weil. Information
regarding tickets may be obtained
from these residents.

WELDED

Including

Only

Top,

ALUMINUM

Have

1848

First

FAMOUS

NAME

4

to

HAIR

AND

5110

Cashmere
Coats

88

t0.

e Magnificent Julliard

14

$30
and

e 6 Advanced

VALUE

vicuna,

IN

&amp;

Girls,

Toddlers

Fall Styles

2 to

New

Colors,

nude,

bamboo,

black, ruby, navy, green olive,

gray, harvest blue.

Poplin and Nylon Snow Suits
Boys

Einiger Fabric

$35

e 9 Smart
SPECIAL

TICKETS

WOOL

$25
1, $30

e Beautifully Hand

6X

$14.98

° Milium

$20 Value

e Perfect for Travel

Limited supply —- Come early for best selection.

Tailored

Lined

e Sizes 8-20;

5-15

Price Goes Back to $110 Aug.

fashions

Highland

Thursday,
a!

July

16, 1959

down

Water

llinna Hart

b)intithe - Wighlandak

and $59.95

7

Aug.

T.N.T.

the

For Two Weeks Only, July 16-31

6X

After

$195.00

Except

1

|

3-0880

Classic “Boy” Coats
CAMEL’S

Steering

IN GIRL’S COATS

only $39.95
Regular $49.95

ID

Street

July Winter Coat Sale
THE MOST

GIVE

Hardware,

rat BOAT HOUSE, nc

The Village Manager replies:
Mrs. Loarie’s letter will be referred to the Village Board. Should
the
board
so instruct,
then
Mr.
Bowen will respond to Mrs. Loarie’s
comments.

structure

COMPLETE

Everything

WE

The Village Manager thanks the
editor of the REVIEW for giving
him the opportunity to respond to
the
letter.
Perhaps
the
Village
Board will authorize the manager
to reply to such communications.

RUNABOUT

Side Curtains, Aft Cover, Lights,
Windshield, Upholstery.

$995.00

We

CRAFT

Sacto

Deerfield

at

1900

ID

2-8655

for

children

Park,

Illinois

Sheridan

Road

474 Central, Highland Park

er Winnclha
iS

Pighland

Park

1

580 Lincoln, Winnetka

~¢: lina Har
Page

13
{

�No Mosquitoes

(Advertisement)

for this Garden

Driver’s

Party

License

Secretary

Moving To Nashville

Suspended

of

State

Charles

peg

Carpentier reports that the actions
in the drivers license division affecting Deerfield residents includes
Nils
Bjerg,
933
Warrington
Rad.,
whose license has been suspended
for three offenses.

Buy and hold

U. S. Savings

Position With

An Elgin Corporation

F.

Bonds.

RAVINIA
WASH
592

Roger

TUB
Williams

IDlewood

2-9771

Complete
Mosquitoes
,
new

at North

Shore garden

parties have

Household Pest Control division
fogging equipment into operation.

become

a thing

roaches

and

of the past

o. Aerosol Exterminators has put its
One treatment the day of your party

all the other annoying

and

damage-dealing

oe ere

The

HPC

insect

Phone

Hillcrest

8:00

Pest Control

6-6173

A.M.

to 5:30

Saturday

8:00

7 Days

one

HOURS ...

plan is inexpensive, too.

Household

ene

SHIRTS and
DRY
CLEANING

pests that invade our homes. HPC chemicals are safe for people . . . murder

for insects.

Washing

and
Drying Service

does the job, won’t harm flowers or shrubbery but kills mosquitoes. HPC also
has a special plan that brings sudden death to ants, moths, spiders, waterbugs,
carpet beetles,

Ave.

A.M.

Closed

a Week

to
on

P.M.

...

4:00

P.M.

Wednesday

Bachmann

A.

Bachmann

Robert
Central
ceived
staff

SUNDAY — JULY

R. A.

a
of

Deerfield,

key

appointment

Tennessee

Chemical

19th

Corp.

cording

of

Ave.,

to

in

1131

has

re-

to

the

Products

and

field

has

Nashville,

ac-

neer

by

Richard

I.

Goodkind,

vice president.

... our event of the year!

In

new

post

with

Tennessee

Products

Mr.

Bachmann

is respon-

for

his

personnel
including

company’s

over-all

administration

program

employment,

training and

employee
relations.
He will also
assist in labor relations activities.
Prior to joining Tennessee Products Mr.
Bachmann
held
similar
positions
with
S and
C Electric
Company of Chicago and Marathon
Paper
Corporation
of
Menasha,
Wis.
A native of La Porte, Ind.,
he is a graduate of Purdue University where he received a degree in
science.
Mr. and Mrs. Bachmann moved
to Deerfield
from
Neenah,
Wis.,
two and a half years ago.
Their
two sons are ages 8 and 414 and
their little daughter is 6 months
old.

in person
JIM

sale!

MILLS
Star of Radio &amp; Television
with his mobile Radio Studio!

EDDIE

LANI

The Bachmann
house has been
purchased by Francis E. Wing of

Highland

Park

through

the

Realty Co.
The Bachmann
will be moving to Nashville,
the latter part of July.

TRIO

Ee

Direct from the Islands with’

OORT

Carr
famliy
Tenn.,

S.

Hermanson

been

named

Mr.

Company,
of

the

comes

Prior

to

chanical
mental
major
lines.

where
for

he

the

that,

he

held

the

general

en-

past
and

12
as

control

experience

neapolis-Honeywell

years.
a me-

was

in the development
temperature

of

Regulator

has
of

EM-

plant

served

engineer

His

cab-

to

Chicago

supervisor

gineering

modu-

Engineer

Minneapolis - Honeywell
post

Cor-

the

in metal

Hermanson
from

engi-

III.

Mechanical

COR

Deer-

of

system

Elgin,

of

chief

Metalformers

originators

enclosure

inetry,

Hermanson

S.
Elgin

poration,
lar

his

sible

H.
Henning

instruof many
product

with

also

Min-

includes

two years as an application engineer working in conjunction with
the organization’s branch sales of-fices.
Mr. Hermanson is a graduate of
Cornell
University.
He
received
his degree in electrical engineering
in 1935.
He is married and resides with
his wife and four children at 1100
Hazel Ave.

st

Nationally

thrilling Island rhythms.

AQUA POOLS
Advertised

HAWAIIAN
PLAYMATES!
You get all 3!

16! x 34’

usually $22.95

$2895

the

Custom

Built Steel

Vinyl Liner, Filter, Skimmer, Underwater
Light, Chemical

and

Two-step

For

suburban
!

a

feb cobs da
i

14

Se

Test Kit, Vacuum

Ladder

Location

are

oe
PARK |

_

|'' rustproof
aluminum
Pp

VELON

wide webbing.

Chaise

Box

Completely Installed
NO MONEY DOWN

Clnr.

Up to

included.

of Display

5 Yrs. to Pay

Pool

Call

or Write

INC.

JAYNART,
P.O.

1672 SKOKIE HIGHWAY,

Page

Reinforced Concrete,

LI 2-7420 or LI 2-1724
Libertyville, Illinois

376

¢

footrest folds under

to form chair. All 3 fold
to small carrying size.

City

State

[]

Please

send

literature and

information.

[]

Please

have

representative

call.
Thursday, July 16, 1959

�1230
1040

Established

Your

(fil fi presenls

Ph

See

ve 5-3555

%

ues

Vet Vik am Seite
Beeps
38, ON
iesia es

4

“2

MAUPINTOUR

Available

18

days,

or

Warsaw

through

Call ID 2-8701

every

September

CARPETS-VINYLTILE

&amp;

Installation

own

626

Roger

by

ASPHALT
Experts

463

Williams—Ravinia

New Owners
New

—

Central

New

F. Anspach,

“4

We

ie
a

aes,

panes

os

A

Rates

Thursday,

eR

Pres.

Service

VVVVVVVV
~, =,
hy

7, 2%

OPO
ae
Nit
BID
HUCK
Wiiess
HY Wh) “or
2)
WW
As

ESV

All Dacron Leno elas-

and wonderfully different from

dif-

ferent! Back is
newly shaped,
actually curves
to fit body and
stay in place.

tic assures perfect fit

O

with cool comfort.

Gees
sy

nt

oN

ace

4

\

a

;

reasons
why you
will love
the new

Completely

Patented criss-cross
bands of elastic under the bust cups expand as you breathe.
No binding, no shoulder strap strain.

Nylon lace cups, reinforced with nylon
taffeta: undercups
are set individually
for complete freedom of movement~
give you a lift all
day, every day.

a \ Spiral, never-feelthem, bones under
arms

guarantee

con-

trolled shaping.

Style #400 White only.
A cup, sizes 32 to 26; B cup, sizes 32 to 38; $ =
C cup, sizes 32 to 40;

all other bras as Sarong is dif-

D cup, sizes 32 to 44.

ferent from all other girdles...

July
uf

han

aby

““SARONG”

$495

is the registered trademark of Sarong, Inc.,
for its girdles and bras.’’

The

ae

16, 1959

609-611
-

Central

Ave.,

Highland

.

throug

June

1

ID 2-121

Ave., H.P.

Under fitted or
“chemise” styles,
gives a rounded,
natural look.

A new bra that’s as completely

“fy

April

Merchandise

Personalized

Park

ID 2-8700

Also available at: THE PERSHING SMART SHOP, 4818-4820 N. Western Ave., Chicago

2

Luxury
Sailings.
aboard the Queen

Parva buckles on
straps insure daily
ease of adjustment.

ow

May

3, $519.

Departures:
complete.

Cecile Casey
ID 2-0442
Deerfield. Bannockburn
Grace Cark
WI 5-0887

WELCOME WAGON

week

Tour:
Hels

H. and R. Anspach
TRAVEL BUREAU

Co.

Herman

our

countries.
28 $1687

for full information call...

JOHN B. NASH
&amp; Linoleum

from

September, from $2,105.
MAUPINTOUR _— Student
- Teac
Economy Tours. 72 days, visiting

FLOOR COVERING
Since 1915

Carpet

Motorcoach

9
departures
Mary and Elizabeth,

Highland Park
for

GOOD

if!

departing

MAUPINTOUR

The girls pictured at the Deerfield station were on their way to
Chicago, where they boarded an all
Girl Seout train for Colorado. Already at the camp was Mrs. Walter
Kopp,
1040 Wilmot
Rd., who
attended
as Moraine
Council
adult
volunteer.
Within two days of their arrival,
they pitched 6,000 tents, unpacked
camping
gear,
set
up
outdoor
kitchens, constructed storage space
and
dining: areas.
They
lived in

4

for yourse

Ru sia

glencoe

Mon. Appts.

bra

Your Welcome Wagon
Hostess will call with a
basket of gifts...and
friendly greetings from
our religious, civic and
business leaders.
If you, or others you
know, are moving, be
sure to phone Welcome
Wagon.
Highland Park.

ws

ey

call

sarong

to town...or to
a new home...

for:

hair styles &amp; colors

As
representatives
of Moraine
Girl
Scout
Council,
they
joined
with more than 8,500 Senior Girl
Scouts from all parts of the United
States, territories and possessions
and
with
Girl
Guide
Associates
from all over the world. Also present were almost 1,500 adults making up the volunteer and professional staff.

CriSS-Cross|

When you move

stop

DAILY PAPERS
MAGAZINES
SMOKES
HALLMARK and many
other GREETING CARDS
TOYS &amp; GAMES
OFFICE SUPPLIES
e WRITING EQUIPMENT

Stallmann,

1200 Oakwood
Dr., all Deerfield;
Mary Towner of Mundelein;
Kay
Hart
and
Nora
Luthmers,
both
Highland Park. These girls embarked
on
the
largest
movement
of
teen-age girls in history.

Friendly

1906

i

PUBLIC
NOTICE
Notice of Proposed
Changes
in Schedule
COMMONWEALTH
EDISON
COMPANY
and
its Public
Service
Company
Division hereby give notice to the public
that certain revisions in Schedule 8-R “Information and Requirements for the Supply of Electric Service”
have been
filed
with the Illinois Commerce Commission on
July
1, 1959.
The
primary
purpose
of the
filing
is
to show the new
requirements
connected
with the use of polyphase socket meters in
place of A-base meters for new or revised
installations. This change will affect only
customers
requiring
three-phase
service.
Certain changes are also proposed with
respect to the requirements for (1) clearances from secondary service connections,
(2) grounding
facilities where
three-phase
service is rendered, (3) installation of duct
in public streets and alleys, and (4) meter
clearances and meter boards.
Further information with respect to these
changes
may
be
obtained
directly
from
the Company or by addresing the Secretary
of the Illinois Commerce
Commission
in
Springfield,
Tilinois.
A copy
of the proposed
changes
may
be inspected by any interested party at any
business office of this Company.
COMMONWEALTH
EDISON COMPANY
By Hubert H. Nexon
Director of Rates
7/9-16/59—198

Jane

STATIONERY STORE».

The Roundup program was de
signed to utilize the camping skills
of the girls, giving them a chance
to take care of themselves in the
out-of-doors,
live
democraticaliy,
and to explore new frontiers with
the opportunity
of meeting
teen
agers from all over the world.

SOS

About 15 members of The Homefinders, Inc., had an aerial view of
the North Shore area on Monday
morning. They took off in helicopters at Sky Harbor
to see what
Deerfield and other suburban communities looked like from a bird’s
eye view.
Deerfield members. of the flight
were
Mrs.
Ronald
Parkinson
of
1525 Wilmot Rd., Mrs. E. P. Auth
of 695
Timber
Trail
and
Julian
Degen of 2950 Riverwoods Rd.

and

qn sor |

OUR STORE
WILL BE
OPEN
‘TIL 9:00 P.M.
THURSDAYS

SS
we
ire,

Shore Area

Rd.

of

NE 223)

Of North

Six senior Girls Scouts went to
Colorado Springs to attend a national
1959
Girl
Scout
Senior
Roundup held July 3 to 12. Their
departure at the Deerfield depot of
the Milwaukee Railroad is pictured
on today’s cover of the REVIEW.

Wilmot

part

; Ke

Get Bird's Eye View

Picture)

The girls are Barbara Isely,
Elmwood
Pl., Carrol
Kopp,

patrol was

NN)

Such funds will be used by the
board to buy adult and juvenile 1ibrary furniture, office equipment,
card
catalogs,
water
cooler,
ete.
Anyone
wishing
further
information may call J. Robert York at WI
5-0696 or Kenneth Weir at WI 50191.

Cover

Council

an International troop, comprised
of girls from eight different countries.

WEL
\ &amp;

The Newcomers Club has already
presented
a check for $200
(see
last week’s REVIEW
cover). The
board has announced that it would
welcome further contributions.

(See

Moraine

\
IM

The
West
Deerfield
Township
Public Library board has received
inquiries from individuals and representatives of several civic groups
regarding the donation of money to
be used in the purchase of equipment for the new library building.

and cooked on charcoal stoves. The

Lite

Monev Gifts For
New Equipment

gti sgh.

these tents, slept in sleeping bags, |

Senior Girl Scouts
Camp In Colorado

Library Accepts |

epee

‘

i

95

�Mostlyfor Women
Warvied

ye

he, resbyterian

Engagements

House And Garden
Walk Planned By
Republican Women

Chine

Mrs.
mond

John
L.

Hildreth,
Mrs.

Aberson,

Craig,
Mrs.

Keith

Mrs.

Mrs.

James

—

Weddings

a

Club

Tews

Wed In St. James Catholic Church

Ray-

Owen
Ketelson,

Nickoley,

and

Mrs.

Bruce Stephan are among the first
local members to obtain tickets for
this year’s summer
outing of the
Women’s
Republican Club of the
13th Congressional District, which
will be a House and Garden Walk
through five beautiful Lake Forest
residences,
with
a
light
buffet

luncheon

served

at

Ferry

Hall

School between
11:30 a.m.-2 p.m.
The date of the outing is Wednesday, July 22, from 10 am. until 4
p.m.
Admittance to the homes and the
luncheon
will be by ticket only,
and all club members have been
advised
to purchase their tickets
by July
15 from
Mrs.
LaVerne
Dixon
of
Gurnee,
Lake
County
ticket chairman.

*

Mr. And Mrs. William Crawford

Miss Dolores (Dee) Ubl, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George
Ubl of 1103 Osterman Ave., became the bride of William Crawford

of

Helena,

Mont.,

son

of the

late

Mr.

and

Mrs.

William

Crawford Sr. of Golden, Colo., on Saturday, June 27 at 4 o’clock

with Dr. Paul J. Keller officiating in the Deerfield Presbyterian
Church.
Mrs.
Prayer”

To Participate
In Flower Show

There will be four classes for
boys and girls to enter, in addition
to
horticulture
and
conservation
groups. Information concerning the

junior exhibits may be obtained by
WI
WI

5-0999
5-1231.

or

Joseph

Zally,

Mrs.

Wilson,

Fred

Mrs. Wilson explains that juniors
under nine years of age can try
their
hands
and
imagination
at
making
circus
characters
from
vegetables and fruits. Juniors from
nine to 12 may create arrangements
from weeds and foliage in this area.
Those
over
12 can
have
fun
in
making
flower
arrangements
to
suggest song titles. Juniors of any
age can compete in making pretty
fall corsages for mother.
Boys and girls may exhibit flowers grown by themselves or plants
grown
in water,
such
as potato
vines or carrot tops.
Girl Scouts will have an opportunity to show their collections of
dried leaves and Boy Scouts, their
collections of local weeds.

High
Have

School Classmates
Dinner In Tucson

Orin

land

Spalding,

Park,

with

formerly

his wife

of High-

and

chil-

dren moved last week from Iowa to
Tucson, Ariz. They are staying in
the home of his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. F. J. Spalding, temporarily,
until they find a house.
Mrs. Jean Pettis West,
(now a
resident
of Tucson)
daughter
of
Mrs. R. E. Pettis of Chestnut St.,
had dinner with her former high
school
classmate,
Orin
Spalding
and his family Sunday evening.

Page

16

was

organist.

during

the

ceremony.

White summer flowers in tall baskets
were
at the
altar and
the
front pews were flower-decked.

There will be a Flower Show in
the
Jewett
Park
field house
on
Sept. 18 and 19, sponsored by the
Amateur Gardeners and the Green
Thumbs.

Mrs.

Derby

Chester Kyle sang “Because” preceding the service and “The Lord’s

Children Invited

Calling

John

ale

The bride’s empire gown was of
white
peu
de _ soie
with
short
sleeves, rounded neck and hand embroidered flower
at the neckline
decorated with seed pearls. It buttoned down the back with a folded
tie at the waist. Folds were set in
for a three foot train. She wore
white leather wrist gloves. Her veil
was arm length fastened to a crown
and she carried white carnations,
roses and an orchid.
Miss
Marilyn
Prihoda
of Glen
Ellyn,
cousin
of the
bride,
was
maid
of honor
and
Mrs.
Donald
Ubl of Lake Bluff, the bride’s sister-in-law,
was
bridesmaid.
Their
frocks were egg shell silk shantung
sheaths, rounded necks, with chiffon drop in back below large fiat
silk
bows.
They
wore.
flower
erowns of pink tea roses and carried yellow tea roses.
Donald
G.
Ubl
of Lake
Bluff
served his brother-in-law as best
man. Ushers were Karl Hout, John
Prihoda and Richard Ubl.
Mrs. Ubl chose a pink silk dress,
with beaded neck, pink shoes and
hat and white elbow gloves for her
daughter’s
wedding.
The _ bride-

groom’s

aunt,

Mrs.

Clarence

C.

Shively of Helena, Mont., wore a
beige lace sheath with aqua hat and
gloves.
A reception
and
buffet dinner
*ollowed the ceremony in the home
of the bride’s parents. Both Mr. and
Mrs. Shively were here from Montana for the wedding and reception.
After their honeymoon in Wash(Continued on page 18)

Green
Flower

Thumbs

To

Study

Arrangements

The Green Thumbs Garden Club
will meet Monday, July 27 at 8 p.m.
at the home of Mrs. Fred Hayes of
Central Ave. The subject for discussion will be “The Mechanics of
Flower Arranging.”

Residences being opened to the
club are those of Mrs. Clive Runnells, Mrs. D. M. Ryerson, Mr. and
Mrs. Solomon B. Smith, Mr. and
Mrs. R. Douglas Stuart, and General and Mrs. Robert E. Wood.
General chairman is Mrs. Glen A.
Lloyd of Libertyville, a past Lake
County co-chairman of the club and
former
State Central
Committeewoman for the 13th District. She
is being assisted by Mrs. Robert
McClory of Lake Bluff, Mrs. Robert
Tieken
of Libertyville
and
Mrs.
Horace S. Vaile of Highland Park,
Lake
County
co-chairman
of the
(Continued on page 17)

20,

Miss

John

Ann

Marie

Frantonius

Frantonius,

and

Mrs.

Green Thumbs Club
To Have Garden

Center Project
The

Deerfield
Club,

in

Green

Thumbs

conjunction

with

another feature of the project, according to Mrs. Carl Arend of 1333
Elmwood Ave., vice president and
(Continued on page 17)

“A

Deerfield
Lawn
and
Garden
located at 641 Deerfield Rd.,
open a garden center replete
books, brochures and informa
on
any
gardening problems
both old and newcomers might

plant

of the

month”

will

be

DEERFIELD WOMAN'S CLUB PLANS
ADDITIONAL ACTIVITIES IN 1959-60
Club executive board met July 7

at the home of Mrs. Thomas W. Evans of Crabtree
Mrs. Locke Rogers, president, in the chair.

The club has added to its plans
for the coming season with a special
tour and luncheon at the Art Institute of Chicago. Mrs. Harold Fox
will be in charge.
Mrs. Rogers has received word
that the Lake County Federation
of Woman’s Clubs will have a daily
radio program out of radio station
WKRS,
Waukegan,
beginning
in
September. The Deerfield Woman’s
Club being one of the largest in
Lake County, will broadcast for one
week
in November
and
another
week in the spring. The programs
will tell of the history of the club,
philanthropic
work
and_=
special

plans

and projects.

Frank

Jerome

on

June

Mayor
Dinelli,

Park, were

united

Michael
and
John
Frantonius,
brothers of the bride,
served
at
Mass. It was a double ring ceremony
with
the
Rt.
Rev.
Msgr.
James
D.
Gleeson
hearing
their
vows.

Hostesses are to be Mrs. Donald
Smith,
chairman;
Mrs.
Robert
Steiskal
and
Mrs.
Herman
Pack.
Reservations may be made by calling WI 5-2502.

Mrs.
Rogers
appointed
Mrs.
James C. Mitchell as the club’s new
corresponding secretary. The club
is planning a new youth program
with Mrs. Fred T. Rahn as chairman. Mrs. Rahn and her committee
will meet in the near future to discuss activities for the program.

Highwood

in marriage.

The Towne Club will meet Thursday, July 23 at 12:45 p.m. in the
clubroom of the Deerfield American Legion Hall.

The Deerfield Woman’s

and

of

Dinelli of Highland

the
Spot,
will
with
tion
that
have.

Meet On July 23

daughter

Frantonius

son of Mr. and Mrs. Frank

Garden

Towne Club Will

Mrs. Frank Jerome Dinelli
in St. James Church, Highwood,

Mr. and
In a Nuptial Mass

Lane

with

At the July meeting the following
applications
for membership
were submitted and approved:
Mrs. Stewart B. Flechter, Mrs.
Robert
N.
Knutsen,
Mrs.
R.
E.
Malmquist, Mrs. Valentine F. Voisard, Mrs. Hal A Petit, Mrs. Gordon
R. Ommen,
Mrs.
Henry
G.
Zander III, Mrs. Robert W. Malm-

strom, Mrs.
Holbert W.

Richard Paulson, Mrs.
Ellis, Mrs. Edward A.

Kussler,
Mrs.
Arthur
Neyendorf
and Mrs. Carl H. Fremling.
The club accepted Mrs. E. F. Anderson. who has transferred from
the Edgebrook Woman’s Club. The
resignations
of
Mrs.
George
A.
Hallsteen,
Mrs. Eugene
E. Mark,
Mrs. Kenneth S. West, Mrs. Ralph
Ritter and Mrs, Q. J. McNall were
accepted.
The next meeting of the execu-

tive board
1 at the
Dieterle.

will be held
home

of

Mrs.

September
H.

Robert

The bride wore a gown designed
and made for her by her mother.
It was fashioned with a chantilly
lace bodice with a pearl-trimmed
bateau neckline and long tapered
sleeves. The silk organza bouffant
skirt was adorned with pearl-trimmed
lace
medallions.
Her
silk
illusion veil was held by a pearl
crown.
Given in marriage by her father,
the bride asked
her sister, Miss
Judy Frantonius, to be her maid of
honor, Her bridesmaids were Miss
Kathleen Rogan of Half Day Rd.
and Miss Mickie Maiorano of Deerfield. Miss Maiorano is a niece of
the groom.
All
attendants
wore _ identical
dresses of apricot silk organza with
embroidered
designs
on their
skirts. Their headpieces were veiled organza
Dior
bows
to match
their dresses. They carried sprays
of white and pink carnations.
Peter Ori, Highland Park, served
as Mr. Dinelli’s best man. Ushers
were Ben Maglio of Waukegan and

(Continued

on page

18)

Ice Cream Social To
Re Given Saturday
On Ryden Lawn
An
ice cream
social has been
planned for Saturday, July 18, from
2 to 4 p.m., rain or shine, at the
home
of Mrs.
Walter
E. Ryden,
1314 Somerset Ave., with Mrs. E. E.
Cleveland of 1338 Somerset Ave.,
assisting Mrs. Ryden.
The social is being given for the
benefit
of
the
Deerfield
Home
Bureau
Unit, which sponsors the
4-H clubs, for support of their programs.
Members
of the Home
Bureau,
all 4-H members, their parents and
friends
are invited,
Mrs.
Ryden
states.

Thursday, July 16, 1959

�SPL

DEERFIELD DOINGS _

VAN ay)hie oe

i

SiS i

hii

MN

Rat

ay

ieee

fy tp
*

tts

NEW ARRIVALS...
Birth Announcements

Miss Karen Johnson, daughter of the P. W. Johnsons of 850 Beverly Pl., who has had as her house guest the past month, Miss Carolyn
Gassmann of Louisville, Ky., accompanied her to Kentucky last week
for a visit at the Gassmann home in Louisville . . . Karen, who attended
School in Evanston, will enter her freshman year at the
Marywood
University of Wisconsin in Septem- ~~
he justice of the peace court.” Mr.
ber.
Daze called Michael George Friday
Mrs. G. A. Willen and son, Ralph,
o say that he is improving
and
of 1111 Springfield Ave. accompanropes to be at his summer home at
ied Mr. and Mrs. Ronald HohlfelJake Geneva this week, to recuperder
(Rosemary
Willen)
and
two ate.
sons of Mt. Prospect on a vacation
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Olson of
trip, recently, at Ellison Bay, Wis.
3t. Petersburg, Fla. are guests at
he Aucust Safstrom home in LinIn Hesperia, Calif., for a month's
eo'nshire ... Mr. and Mrs. Shervisit are Mr. and, Mrs. A. F. Long
and son, William, age 14, of 1970 wood Wilson of Lincolnshire gave
a bon voyage party last Sunday for
Saunders Rd.
They are accompanied by Mrs. Paul Burgess of High- Mrs. Wilson’s parents, Mr. and Mrs.
. land Park who is visiting the Dan- Walter Dreyfus, who have planned
a two-month trip in Europe.
iel Youngs and Matthew McClures.
The Misses Viola and Irene RocThe Longs are guests of Mr. and
Mrs. Ralph Ridgeway
and family kenbach of 550 Elm St. had as their
last Tuesday,
their
niece,
who moved to California last April. guests
Mrs. Paul Card of 557 Deerfield Mrs. Vern Lageschulte (Alice Rockenbach) and her daughter, GretchRd. is a member of the committee
on of Barrington.
On Sunday, anassisting in plans for the festival on
July 26 for the benefit of the Lt. other niece, Mrs. Charles Bobinette
Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. School for (Lydia Rockenbach) and daughter,
Heights
were
Exceptional Children to be held on Beryl of Arlington
their guests.
the school grounds in Palos Park.
Sharon and Deborah Anderson of
The school is operated by the FranHighland
Park
spent
last
week
ciscan Sisters.
with their grandmother, Mrs. E. R.
Mrs. Harold Root Jr. of Central
of 755 Chestnut
St.
Ave. and Mrs. George Sticken of MacPherson
Somerset Ave., drove down to Las This week their little brothers, Coy
Jess
Anderson
are
visiting
Cruces, N. Mex., last week to visit and
Mrs. Root’s son and wife, Mr. and Grandmother MacPherson.
Judy Hammermann, high school
Mrs. Charles Root.
Park, calls atNewcomers include Mr. and Mrs. student, Highland
Raymond
Demarest and two chil- tention to all high school juniors,
dren from Syracuse, N.Y., to 1014 reminding them of the “Big and
Brookside Ln. ... The Paul K. Ev- Little Sister’ tea planned for Sept.
enstad family from Charlotte, N.C. 3. Among the Deerfield girls who
information
for the
to 518 Princeton Rd. ... Mr. and will provide
tryouts for entertainment for the
Mrs. William Bixby and two daughters from
Columbus, O., to 1142 tea are Nancy Fredrickson, Joyce
Deerfield Rd.... Mr. and Mrs, An- Moeller, Tari Weisert and Valerie
thony Hebel and three sons, one Sedgwick.
The theme of the tea is ‘High
age 7, and the twins, age 4, from
Society,” with the freshman girls
Chicago to 1037 Warrington Rd...
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Anderson of as the debutantes being introduced
new
high
school
social
505 Jonquil Terr. have had as their into the
house guest the past three weeks, a world. Tryouts will be held in Aucousin, Mrs.
John
MacDonald
of gust and all junior girls may participate.
They are urged to make
Wallington-Surrey,
near
London,
England.
They accompanied
their their acts original and pertaining
to the debut theme.
guest to Windsor, Ontario, Canada,
The
Mesdames
Howard
Kane,
last week where they visited relaJames McDonough, Owen Hildreth,
tives and where Mrs. MacDonald
Henry Zander, Keith Nickoley and
remained for a longer visit. . .
Mrs. Paul M. Dietz and her sis- Raymond Craig were among those
ter,
Miss
Martha
Karch
of 925 from the Deerfield Jayceettes who
Deerfield Rd. had as their lunch- assisted with the recent Salvation
Army Doughnut Tag Day.
eon
guests
on
Thursday,
Mrs.
Mrs. Joseph Haroski of WarringCharles Blume of Austin and her
sister, Mrs. Charles Hess of Clear- ton Rd., a secretary for the State
water, Fla. ... On Friday, visitors Farm Insurance Co. at 825 Deerfield Rd., was quoted Friday in the
at their home were Mr. and Mrs.
Collar
Girl
column
in a
Walter Karch of LaGrange and a White
Someone had
cousin, Miss Constance Young
of Chicago newspaper.
written in to complain about 25th
Miami,
Fla.
Their
Monday
guests were Miss Pauline Pabst and anniversary office parties, asking
Miss Josephine Goetz, both of Nor- how to avoid them. Mrs. Haroski is
quoted, in part, as writing:
wood Park.
“One doesn’t avoid it, one enjoys
Earl Paul and George Lutz went
down to Wesley Memorial Hospital it! ... Time enough to contemplate
recently to call on Walter Page of the passing of years, so why not
Greenwood Ave., retired rural mail make the anniversary a festive occarrier and at present “top man on casion with one’s fellow-workers?”

LAKE

FOREST QUALITY
USED CAMERAS

Speed Graphic 214x314, Like new
Zeiss Contessa f2:8 35mm Meter
Zeiss Contina 3:5 35mm_
Case
Zeiss Contax f1:5 35mm_
Meter
Stereo-Realist like new
Minox Miniature, Like new
Pony 828 35mm in an 8 exp. size
Flash Bantam 828
with case
Leica 35mm 1 sec to 1/500 f 2
Leica 35mm 1 sec to 1/500 £3:5
Tower (Leica by Sears) no lens
Polaroid 80 smaller one
Polaroid 95 larger one
Rolleiflex 3:5 with Meter
LN
Kodak Bantam Special F2:0 828
Zeiss Ikonta 214x214
Tessar £3:5
Heiland Electronic Flash, like new
Bell G Howell 8mm Sportster
Bell &amp; Howell 16mm
Roll film
Bell &amp; Howell 16mm Magazine Cam
Kodak 16mm Magazine Cam f1:9
Bell &amp; Howell 16mm Proj 1600 Ft
Bell &amp; Howell Stereo Projector
584 Western
Open 8 a.m. to 7 p.m.

McMASTER’S
584

Thursday,

July

16, 1959

Mr and Mrs. Alfred Lambert Jr.
of Northbrook
have
a daughter,
Denies Louise, who arrived June
25
at
Highland
Park
Hospital.
Grandparents
are
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Harold Seiler of Deerfield and Mrs.
Alfred Lambert Sr. of Round Lake.
Great grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Leo Seiler and Henry Tuttle
Sr,
all
of
Deerfield
and
Mrs.
Estella Lambert of Staples, Minn.
*

*

Mrs. James Rogers of Lake Bluff,
the former Friedel Fuller, is proudly announcing the birth of her first
grandchild, Janet Elizabeth Fuller,
on June 23 to Mr. and Mrs. Paul
Fuller of Woodland Hills, Calif.
*
*
*
A daughter was born to Mr. and
Mrs. Frederick M. Runyon
(Diana

Jordan)

in Denver,

Colo.,

on July

12. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Robert E. Jordan of Deerfield and
Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Runyon
of

Scottsbluff,

Neb.
*

*

*

Mr. and Mrs. Howard R. Petersen
of 1620 Berkley Ct. announce the
birth of a daughter, Sherri Lynn,
on July 11 at the Highland Park

Hospital.

Her

brother,

Gary

*

*

for

School

i

cople

Pours

G. Daniel Zally, son of Mr. and
Mrs. J. W. Zally of 941 Cedar St.,
was one of 518 students named to
the University of Utah spring quarter honor roll. Only students with
averages of 3.5 (A-) or higher are
eligible for the high honors list.
Mr. Zally was also on the winter
quarter honor roll.
A junior majoring in electrical
engineering, he is active in Sigma
Phi Epsilon social fraternity and
the Naval ROTC program. At Loyola
Academy
in
Chicago,
from
which he was graduated in 1957, he
was active in football and golf.
*
*
*
Evelyn
Wood,
daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Fred C. Wood of 640 Warwick Rd., a student
at Roosevelt
University,
was chosen
queen
of
the Lake County Fair last summer.
This year’s Fair dates are July 29
through Aug. 2.
The prettiest and fairest young
lass in the county last year, Evelyn
will reign over the first part of
this year’s Fair. Blonde, with flash-

Senta

ened

ing green eyes, and 5-foot 3-inches
tall, she will be the official hostess until the new queen is chosen.
Applicants must be Lake County
residents, 16 and over, as of Dec.
31 and single. Contestant chairman

Jerry Cray of radio station WKRS
reports that six bachelors will be
the committee to select the queen.
Deadline for applying is July 22.

should
send
their —
Candidates
name, address, telephone number,
age, date of birth, sponsor (if any)
to the Queen. Contest. Committee,
P.O. Box 500, Waukegan,
Ill. All
applications should be accompanied © 4
by a small snapshot, which will not
be returned.

Green Thumbs
(Continued
program

from

chairman

originator

page

16)

of the club and

of the idea.

Mrs. Arend

also added that all

the other garden clubs are invited
to join the Green Thumbs in this ©
garden

center.

Sho

is 14%

years old and her sister is 3. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. George
Anthony of Deerfield and Mr. and
Mrs.
Carl
Petersen
of Arlington
Heights.
Great grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Charles Petersen of Arlington
Heights, Mrs. George Anthony of
Winter Haven, Fla. and Mrs. Einar
Nelson of Deerfield.

CHILDREN&amp; TEENS

*

A daughter was born to Mr. and
Mrs.
Frederick
Chezem
of 1156
Linden Ave. at the Highland Park
Hospital on July 12.
*

*

*

A son was born to Mr.

House And
(Continued

Garden
from

page

16)

club.
“Plans are being made to assure
a pleasant and memorable day as
well as an occasion when members
of the club from the entire district
can get together to renew acquaintances and compare notes on the)!
political situation,” said Mrs. Vaile.

EIGHTH
ONE

EVANSTON

and Mrs.

Stephen X. Sunyak
of 1439 Ambleside Dr. on July 11 at the Highland Park Hospital.

507

CENTRAL

ID

AVE.

2-6944

Yes...
the SALE
is still on!

ANNIVERSARY
SPECIAL!
8x10

PORTRAIT

in blonde or walnut frame and

EIGHT PLASTICIZED
FRIENDSHIP PHOTOGRAPHS
Appointments
$ 1 3 5
made in studio ............-

Percy H. Prior, Jr.
Photographer
599 ROGER WILLIAMS AVE.
ID 2-3199
Offer Expires Aug. 29, 1959

You can have a delightful
overlooking the pool at The
for as little as 95c

luncheon
your

GARDEN PARTY!
For that just right festive embellishment
for a novel floral idearrangement for your
SOIREE.

call on Bahr’s
next GARDEN

Moraine

Served from 12 noon to 2 P.M. daily except Sunday.
Sunday Brunch 11 A.M. to 2 P.M.
Sunday Buffet Supper 5 to 8 P.M.

g

TELEPHONE

ID 2-4444

for the BEST
in

p.m.

*

FLOWERS

PHARMACY

Photographic Headquarters
LAKE FOREST 1900
Western Open 8 a.m. to 7

——e

653 LAUREL

AVE., H.P.

Flowers

@e
ID 2-3420

Plenty

of

VRE
Parking

LAKE

+ BIGMLANS

in our

New

PARK,

Parking

MLINOIS

Lot!
Page

17

SY

�(Coblinaed tanh

Duffy's take them

down

Hooks taken
method.

off or covered

Drapes

soaked

too)

easy

release

No harsh or hurried
drapes at any time.

Pressed

according

NOTE:

with

Mr.
Crawford
was
graduated
from Missoula County High School
and
received
his B.S. degree
in
business at Montana State University. Presently he will be graduate
assistant in Economics at MSU. He
j will enter the U.S. Army in 1961
as a second lieutenant.

new

in crystal clear cleaning

solvent. (Giving
&amp; grime).

PUBLIC

&amp; rehang.

work,

of dirt

treatment

to drape

‘(Continued

ington,
D.C.
and Virginia Beach,
Va., the young couple will be at
home in August at 19 Gallatin St.,
Missoula, Montana.
The bride, a graduate of Township High School District 113, received her B.A. degree in mathematics
at Montana
State University and is affiliated with Delta
Delta Delta sorority.

Don’t let them hang too long!
(Sun &amp; dirt take their toll)
(Professional

page 16)

of

W. Deerfield Township
Adds More Precincts

material.

page

16)

Robert Sheahen, Highland Park.
Following the ceremony, a luncheon
reception
was
held
at
the
Country Squire Restaurant.
For her daughter’s wedding, Mrs.
Frantonius chose to wear a light
grey eyelet over taffeta dress with
rose accessories and corsage. The
groom’s mother wore a beige lace
sheath dress with matching accessories
and
a cymbidium
orchid
corsage.
After a wedding journey to the
Wisconsin Dells, the couple is residing in Deerfield at 1121 Linden
Ave.
The bride attended Holy Child
High School, Waukegan,
and the
bridegroom,
St. George High
School, Evanston.
be divided.

West
Deerfield Township is to
have two new precincts, making a
total of 11 polling places. Precincts
8 and 9, located in parts of Highland Park and Lake Forest are to

Destroy ALL Plastic Bags as soon

from

Karl

Berning,

West

Deerfield

Township supervisor, will provide
a new map when plans are completed so that all voters will be informed.

as you can. If you have children ask us to put
your cleaning in paper bags.

Park

Free At

Our

Door!
MONTGOMERY

DUFFY CLEANERS
487 LAUREL (Across from H.P. Library) ID 2-1820

Fell Shoes

Open

THURS.

Eves.

‘til 9 p.m.

HIGHLAND PARK
HUBBARD WOODS

ce io bi

Looking for Summer Shoes ?
a single stop here will
end your search!

SHOP WARDS CATALOGS
BY PHONE

No Shortage:
of styles
of sizes
New

‘round the clock!

crisp whites are still arriving to assure
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Whatever the hour—3 o'clock in the morning

you of success in receiving
just what

you

or 3 o'clock in the afternoon... whatever the

want.

day—Sunday, Monday or any day... you can
order from our Catalogs by phone! Here’s real

‘round the clock convenience ... The things you
want are only as far away as your phone 24
hours a day! Try it today, tomorrow, any time.

Shop ‘Round the Clock

633 Central
932 Linden

Highland Park
Hubbard Woods

l

Wr

Poa

att 24- HOUR

git

i

Thursday,

July 16, 1959

�ia

hs in

eer

ae E

:

¥

Cee

ee

“het
Re

iPad

esat

ih

ATT

ra,

MR:

ee

es
\

¥

ris

Share

#

;

vat

a

ey

eams

ene

—

ae

Nis

RE
abkgurere
fr

CR

GS

Residents Join Queen For Luncheon

Tieeae ete

ie

me

3

as

;
f

Victor

i

“s

-

Q

.

Segals

Mr.,.and

Ps
‘ey

Hs

ids

ee

aNx

Tee

&gt;

AO

en

pees

ae‘ Soh 5

er

Ms

eM

EN

are

having

Segal

of

house

guests

of

been

the

with

a future,

TOP

a

U.

2

eee

A

ry Aty

ay

ty
Rap
¥

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N

INSURANCE
In

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AGENCY

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21

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‘THE

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SHOES

Highland Park's smartest shoe value!

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Twice a year we bring you this wonderful opportunity
for great savings! A variety of styles... dressy,

Spring &amp; Summer Clothing
Starts

Store Hours:

ccsd,
Oe

~ ANCHOR

SAVINGS

Mr. and Mrs. Leonard Florsheim of Green Bay Rd. are seen
entering the Guildhall of the Ambassador West Hotel for the luncheon given by Gov. William G. Stratton for Queen Elizabeth Il and
Prince Phillip.
Also at the luncheon were Mr. and Mrs. John W. Evers Jr.
of Beech St. Mrs. Evers chose to wear a beige linen sheath Iress
with a matching cashmere sweater with a fox collar. Her hat
was a floral circlette, and she wore matching gloves and shoes.
The Evers were among the few people to be included in both the
luncheon and dinner parties in honor of the royal pair.
The Albert Picks of Vine Ave. and the Sterling C. Quinlans,
formerly of University Ave., also attended the dinner.

372

Sit

of Every Kind and Character

national

1896

GLEN

bedsag

Ko

ig

president
of
Women’s
American
ORT.
She presently is on vacation
from her position as national administrator of Deborah Hospital.
The present
Savings Bond.

uk

FOR

Victor

Mr.
and
Mrs.
Robert.
Vick,
272
Oakland Dr.
Mrs. Segal is well known in this

area,

AT

Visit Here

Mrs.

Philadelphia

7 Bs

Thursday,

HAZEL

AVE.,

9-5

July

16

tailored, casual. Not all sizes in all styles. You're sure to

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Closed Wednesdays

Life Stride Shoes

ot dae

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A

fixtures just like these in your bathroom!
Neo-Angle Bath has twin corner
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Symphony

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Little Yankee Shoes
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ASK ABOUT

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DI PIETRO PLUMBING
398 COUNTY LINE RD.
DEERFIELD
WI 5-0044
Thursday,

July

16,

1959

NO nenines ‘iat ne SALES FINAL

PLAN...

OPEN

THURS. &amp; FRI. NIGHTS
DURING

499

Central

Ave.,

©

THIS BIG SALE!

H.P.

ID 2-0172
Page19

�-|Jean Pantle Silva.

eT

1

q

Mr.
Mrs.

"Need

a new water heater?

See

the

bride

June

the new,

Jean
of

Silva

Charles

Lutheran

Rev.

B.

Arthur

The

on

rites held

Church.

Preisinger

of Lake

Mr.

is the

Pantles

daughter

of

Smith

1180

is the

Naomi

Smith

of

Tryout

Time

For

of the

Deerfield

son

of

Mrs.

Lake
riage

Deerfield.

and now

Pucini have

wedding

trip

are residing in

couple
July

were

5 in

united

an

in

afternoon

marcere-

The
bride
is the former
Miss
Joan Pasquesi, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Battista Pasquesi of 9 Burtis
Ave., Highwood. The groom is the
son of the John Pucinis of North
Chicago.

‘Hi Society’

Mr. and Mrs. Donald Rizzolo of
1041 Court Ave., the bride’s brother-in-law
and_
sister,
served
the
bridal couple as best man and matron of honor.

Juniors are asked to plan their
acts on the tea’s theme, ‘Hi Society,” which treats the freshmen as
debutantes, bowing into a new social
world,
high
school.
“Acts

should be original and pertain to
the theme,’’ Miss Hammerman said.
be

Skits selected from tryouts
given at the tea, Sept. 8.

will

North Shore's
Outstanding
Selection of Toys

Fast Electric Water

Heaters are very compact, create no fumes, soot

or smoke.

their

mony
held in Chicago’s
Assumption
Church.
The
Rev.
Michael
Cepon,
a
close
friend
of
the
groom,
officiated
at the
nuptial
rites.

24-hour-a-day electric water heating rate when
you install one of these.

Ke

Forest.

The

Tryouts for the Big and Little
Sister Tea, given each fall by girls
in Highland Park High School junior class for incoming
freshmen
girls, will be held in August, according to Judith Hammerman, 561
Groveland Ave.

really hot water a day. And there is a new low,

Mrs. Richard
from

to Colorado

Skits Set For Next Month

40-gallon models will deliver up to 432 gallons of

and

returned

The

officiated.
bride

Charles
Rd.

became

Smith

20 in late afternoon

in Redeemer
Forest

fast electric
water heaters

Pantle

7

eds

n Lake Forest

Weds Charles Smith
2

dimes eK ey,

Ve

‘a

No flue is needed. You can install a

fast Electric Water Heater where you want it
—basement,

utility room,

kitchen,

bathroom,

laundry—even in a closet.

INC.

ID 2-3001

It’s almost impossible to run out of hot water
for dishes, baths, automatic laundry, showers,

shaves with one of these. Bay
Most makes offer a 10-year
warranty (even longer difeexpectancy ).

Put your best looks forward
on all festive occasions

In tests, they show far less
tendency to “lime up” and
corrode—so you can expect
maximum

efficiency with

a Fast Electric for far more

years than ever before.
SEE

YOUR

j

ELECTRIC

40-Gallon fast Electric Water
Heaters are available in tank-

cleaning service that gives your clothes

that right-out-of-the-bandbox look!

Phone TODAY

for Pick-up Service!

type and countertop models.

APPLIANCE

DEALER

NOW

Get the facts, and you’ll get a fast Electric Water Heater for sure!

J Public Service Company
© Commonwealth Edison Company

Prompt
service
always

When it is specially important that
you look your very best, you'll specially appreciate the perfection of our

KOKIE
LAUNDRY

VALLEY
&amp;

DRY

CLEANERS,

INC.

Main Office and Plant:
IDiewood 2-3310 — Deerfield Call Enterprise 1616
512-518 Waukegan Ave., Highwood
Thursday,

July 16, 1959

�* Former Resident Weds Lake Forester E. M. Anderson
Former

residents,

Mr.

and

Lindra

their

daughter,

come

the bride June 27 of Edward

Gene,

be-

Maxwell Anderson in Trinity Episcopal Church here.
Mr. Anderson
is the son of the James Andersons
III, also of Lake Forest.
The Rev. Scott Jones officiated
at the late afternoon ceremony at
which the bride was given in marriage by her father.
The church
was decorated with blue delphinium and white stock and greens.

The

bride’s

gown

silk organza
over
tucked bodice and

three tiers.

was

of white

taffeta with
a
a skirt made in

It had a chapel-length

train.
Her waist-length veil
held by a small fitted flowered
She carried white roses with
phanotis and ivy.
The

Ann
or.

bride’s

sister,

Miss

Vallaly, was her maid
Bridesmaids

were

Mrs.

was
cap.
ste-

of honEdward

each of the following classified services:
Building Inspector: Applicant must have a
building inspection.

between 25 and 40. Starting salary $4,680.00,

gowned

in

white

violets.

organdy

in
olive
green
and
appliqued

They

all carried

vio-

E. Anderson served as his

Beatty of Deerfield.
Lawrence

of Highland Park will hold oral and written
examinations to establish an eligible list for

were

James

Maxwell

in the Council Chambers City Hall, Highland
Park, Illinois, the Civil Service Commission

Miss E. Lloyd Owens
of Seattle,
Wash., and Miss Barbara Wing. All

brother’s best man.
Ushers were
John
Braun of St. Louis, Robert
Winship of Scarsdale, N.Y., Donald
Douglas of Lake Forest and Robert

Edward

On Tuesday, July 21, 1959 at 8:00 P.M.

Karen

let bouquets.

Mrs.

in Highland Park

knowledge

with

and

Top Civil Service Jobs

Ellis Heydt of Glen Ellyn, Mrs.
Robert L. Leopold Jr. of Chicago,

dresses
trimmed
grosgrain
ribbon

Mr.

—Now Available—

Mrs.

Linn J. Vallaly of Lake Forest, saw

Lindahl

Following

the ceremony

(Continued

Anderson

on page

a recep-

25)

of building codes, licenses and

increasing

Desirable age should be

to $4,888.00.

Clerk-Typist: Applicants must be a graduate
of a standard high school, which included
courses

in typing.

Knowledge

of business
English, spelling and commercial arithmetic
needed. Ability to meet public and carry out
routine

assignments.

Salary

$3,380.00

in-

creasing to $3,510.00 after probation.
Highland

Park’s Most Modern

Pet Shop

&amp; Complete

on the North Shore

Maintenance No. I. Applicants must be able
to perform varied skilled jobs of above the

average difficulty in the fields of carpentry,

Canine Coiffure Shop

p
ai,
sis

WE

“8 poe

PROUDLY

position. Applicants should have certain abilities in rough carpentry, rough masonry and
trench excavating. Job also includes cutting

3 VEES

BIRD -O - RAMA
RARE

weeds, loading trucks and operating light
tractor. Knowledge of driving laws is necessary. Ability to secure a chauffeur’s license

BIRD DISPLAY

will be at our shop on Friday and Saturday, July 17 &amp;
18. Come in and meet Mr. Robert Helford and get Free
advice and tips on the care, feeding and training of your
bird. See our complete selection of Toucans, Love Birds,
Doves, Cock A Tiels, Imported Cardinals, Finches and a
flock of other rare and unusual birds.

Free Samples

Free Balloons

required.

Salary

$3,900.00,

increasing to

$4,108.00 after probation.
Janitor: Starting salary $4,108.00 increasing

Free Booklets

to $4,316.00.

cme

Plus Valuable Door Prizes

Canine Coiffure Shop

PPlication blanks and

mation

may

Clerk’s

Office,

further infor-

be obtained
City

Hall.

from

the

must be filed with the Secretary by 5:00 P.M.
Saturday, July 18, 1959.
Paul J. McLaughlin,

EXPERT

Civil Service

TRIMMING

BATHING

OUR

TERRIERS
NEW

PICKUP

&amp;

141
AIR

ID 2-0771
FREE

16, 1959

COCKERS

ADDRESS:

672 Central
July

GROOMING

CONDITIONED

City

All applications

A Complete Selection of Pet Supplies for All Your Needs

POODLES

Thursday,

probation.

Maintenance No. II. This is a semi-skilled

PRESENT

First on The North Shore

FAMOUS

plumbing, masonry and electrical work. Salary $4,316.00 increasing to $4,472.00 after

Bloom

Sec.

Commission

Street

Highland Park, Il.

7/2-9-16/59—182

DELIVERY
Page

21

�Chi Omega
Winner

winners

“just what

your registered pharmacist fills a prescrip-

your doctor are measured with the utmost precision.

vast

paper

drug

modern

manufacture.

Ready

always!

495

CENTRAL

be

honored

Tuesday

TRY GIVING

technical

of

to

aside!

all

dt,

set-up

Miss Winifred Fulde

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

We put at your doc-

the

Award
Tues.

Mrs. Willard L. Hemsworth will
accept Highland Park reservations
for the supper until Monday evening.

tion for you, all of the ingredients specified by

tor’s command

School

Honored

evening at. the annual summer supper meeting
of the North
Shore
Alumnae of Chi Omega.

{ the doctor ordered”
When

High
Be

Miss Nancy Bilow will be one of
the four winners of the Chi Omega
High
School Achievement
Award

' You can be sure
: of getting

To

PEASE PHARMACY
ID
FREE

2-0143

DELIVERY

“al

LEMON - “AID”
Using

SPRING

FRESH

WATER

Sparkling
1629

Park

Ave.,

Mineral
W.

Water

IDlewood

2-0042

For the Ultimate in Contemporary Living...

ALL WOOL - STYLE TURF
CARPETING

‘10°

In Champagne-Beige,

Off-White,
Light Beige

&amp; White

Tweed

Reg. $13.50
THIS

LOW

PRICE

Sq. Yd.

INCLUDES

40-OZ.

PADDING

&amp; TACKLESS

D.

INSTALLATION

FOR

Lewis Carpets
Edens

near Tower
Open

-Everyone

Monday

through

9 to 5 — Evenings

hates crabgrass.

| Not everyone

knows this

quick, clean way to get rid of
= Page: 22

by Appointment

it—fast!
your

825

-

Farm Mutual Automobile
Insurance Co.
State Farm Life Insurance Co.
State Farm Fire and Casualty Co.
HOME OFFICE—BLOOMINGTON, ILLINOIS

with the Scotts

Spreader. Now

Deerfield Rd., Deerfield

State

Just walk CLOUT on

lawn

CALL

WI 5-1383
HENRY HAKANEN
VE 5-2400

Saturday,

INSURANCE

that wasn’t '

S. Willison

Miss
Winifred
Alice
Fulde,
daughter of Mrs. Herman C. Fulde
of Crystal Lake and the late Mr.
Fulde, became the bride of James
Victor
Engdahl,
son
of Mr.
and
Mrs. C. R. Engdahl, 739 Elm Pl., on
June
13 in St. Thomas
Church,
Crystal Lake.
The bride wore a bouffant silk
taffeta gown with appliques of reembroidered Alencon lace at the
scoop neckline, on the skirt front
and on the chapel train. Her veil
was a mantilla of Brussels Princesse lace which
she brought from
Belgium last summer. She wore her
maternal
grandmother’s
string of
pearls
as her only jewelry.
Her
bouquet was of amazon lilies and
sprays of stephanotis in crescent
shape.
The
Verne

matron of honor was Mrs.
Sveinson of Spring Beach,
(Continued on page 23)

so hard,:was it?
CLOUT*®'to

treat

5000 sajft, $6.95

Thursday;

July

16, 1959

�y

(Continued
Cary,

and

Mrs.

the

bridge
cousin.

Grove

Lake

22)

near
the

bride’s

identical
ballerina

draped

side

Fox
Bainemer-

length
panniers

of chiffon,
and
carried
crescent
bouquets
of
pale
yellow
roses,
snowflake pompons and carnations.
They wore matching hats of fluted
horsehair and matching shoes. Little Leslie Ann Condron, niece of
bride, of Arvada, Colo., was flower
girl,
wearing
yellow
and _ white
nylon
and
carrying
a miniature
yellow bouquet.
The

best

man

was

Robert

C.

Engdahl, brother of the groom, and
ushers
were
Valette
Waugh
of
Libertyville and Earl Capps of Fox
Lake. George Bainbridge, grandfather of the bride, gave her away.
For her daughter’s wedding, Mrs.
Fulde wore a champagne beige lace
sheath with a slipper satin sash
in the same shade and shoes and
hat to match.
Her corsage was of
pink cymbidium orchids. The mother of the groom, Mrs. C. R. Engdahl, wore a full skirted slate blue
lace
dress
with
a white
orchid
corsage and silver accessories and

County

Leo

were

Dawn

Lake,

wore

taffeta

with

of

Miss

of Crystal

green

gowns

Wolff

and

They

page

bridesmaids

Reaginold

River

ald

from

Is Vice

President,

Craftsmen

LaBuda,

300

OO

TT

IT

I

IT

TT

TT

TT

IT

IT

I

I

IT

TT

TT

FT

TT

I

TT

IT

IT

TT

TT

Club

Temple

Ave.,

recently was elected vice president
of
the
Lake
County
Craftsmen
Club, a printing trade organization.

What Do You Do when a

LaBuda
is vice
president
and
general manager of Singer Printing
&amp; Publishing Co., 1747 Green Bay
Rd.

are

Fulde-Engdahi Rites

Leo LaBuda

Drain STOPS UP in YOUR Home?

Mr. And Mrs. Charles Hall
Have Third Child, A Son
Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hall, 679
Park Ave. W, announce the birth
June 15 in Highland Park Hospital
of their third child, a son, Charles
Grendi. The Halls’ other children
are Kathy Grendi, 7, and Michael
Angelo Grendi, 3.

Wise women rely upon men whose ONLY business is
cleaning debris from drain pipes of all sizes. A long flexible shaft, headed with sharp steel blades, is rotated

Maternal
grandmother
is Mrs.
Angelo Grendi, 679 Park Ave. W.
Paternal grandmother is Mrs. Katherine Hall, 1852 Pleasant Ave.

a blue

feather

electrically through the pipe to remove everything
leave your drains and pipes as clean as when

and

new.

% ALL work GUARANTEED in writing.
% FREE ESTIMATES. Our method actually costs LESS.
*% FAST, Efficient, Courteous Service.

hat.

A luncheon for the families and
bridal party was held at the home
of the bride after the ceremony. A
reception for 165 guests was held
at Martinetti’s at 5:30 p.m.

PN
in|P

To

The couple took a wedding trip
to Texas and is now residing at
1415 St. Johns Ave.

Discuss

with

a

ANY

Pipe

REGISTERED

Cleaning

Problem

ENGINEER,

Phone:

iills==,By
aes iV

ID 2-3220

(Advertisement)

Aardvarks Are a Luxury!

I yee

|
SareeCoe
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pI
A
gel

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1640 DEERFIELD ROAD, HIGHLAND
Anneli.
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ITS VACATION TIME!

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$2.00 for each additional room.

Household

Pest Control—Phone
7 Days

It has been said: If your motor fails, there you are.
If your steering fails, where are you?

HI Ilcrest 6-6173

a Week

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Need a Scotts Spreader?
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Now

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OPEN

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- 5:30

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Thursday

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- 1

Sunday

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P.M.

WEAK FRONT
CORRECTED

CRAFTWOOD
LUMBER
1590
Just
Thursday,

Deerfield

west
July

of

Road,

Route

16, 1959

COMPANY,
Highland

41—Phone

Park,

|IDewood

Check:

® Steering Linkage
e Loose or Worn Front End Parts
e Weak or Broken Springs
e Weak or Leaking Shocks
e Head Light Adjustment

CLOUT ($6.95) plus
35 Spreader ($16.95) Together

No.

ge

Aardvarks (ant eaters) are not only a luxury but completely unnecessary in
the North Shore suburbs since Household Pest Control division of Aerosol
Exterminators took over. A self-respecting ant wouldn’t be caught alive after
an HPC treatment.
To get rid of ants, moths, roaches, waterbugs, spiders,
carpet beetles and all other damage-dealing
insect pests that invade our
homes just call HPC.
HPC chemicals are safe for people . . . murder for insects. And the HPC plan is inexpensive, too — as low as $17.50 per year
for two complete treatments inside and out for most 6-room homes . .

Illinois
2-0140

OR REAR SPRINGS CAN BE
WITH HELLWIG SPRING
STABILIZERS

GET A FREE

AHL S

INC.

2058

FIRST ST.

ESTIMATE

TODAY!

ixconsr

RECONSTRUCTION
ID 2-0077
Page

23

�Miss Carolyn Jane Gilmour’ S Engagement Announced _

HOME IMPROVEMENT
with the CUSTOM TOUCH!
The PEERLESS
Architect Designed

WAY Means
and Supervised

PEERLESS

CALL

¢ FAMILY AND RECREATION ROOMS
* ROOM ADDITIONS
¢ GARAGES

PEERLESS HOME
1550

Park

Ave.,

Mr. and Mrs. William B. Gilmour
of Wilmette, formerly of Highland
Park
and
Deerfield, recently
announced the engagement
of their
daughter, Carolyn Jane, to Leonard
C. Truesdell Jr. Mr. Truesdell is
the son of the senior L. C. Truesdells of Winnetka.
Miss
Gilmour
graduated
from
Highland Park High School and attended Stanford University for two

¢ KITCHENS
¢ BATHS

years. In the fall, she will continue
her studies at Western Reserve University. —

BUILDERS, INC.
Highland

West

Mr. Truesdell, a graduate of New
Trier High School, received a degree in Chemical Engineering from
Stanford
University
in June.
He
will enter the graduate school of
(Continued on page 30)

Park

ID 2-6800

IRWIN R. WARE
takes

pleasure

his association
outstanding

in

announcing

with

Fur

America’s

Couturier

ees

ALPER - SULAK
RAndolph

6-0485

CHICAGO

1, ILLINOIS

190 W. STATE STREET
SUITE 220
Miss

TELEVISION

SERVICE

FUEL

RADIO REPAIR

OIL
SALES

JEWELER

OIL

BURNER
—

—

WATCH

oe!

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CORNER

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and
Official

OIL

AND

Heating
We

Repair

AUTO

ALL

and

MAKES

also

TRANSISTOR RADIOS
FM - AM - HI-FI
Sales and

Service

20th Century TV
and

1858 FIRST ST., H.-P.
Ample Parking in Rear
ID 2-8120

ShSCR eRe
HEATING SERVICE

COMMUNITY
GAS

HEATING
A.

E.

SERVICE

Savage,

DEPENDABLE

CLEANING

Of Boilers or Furnaces

BOILER SALES &amp; INSTALLATION

Windsor
1010 HAZEL
Page

24

444 Central Ave.

5-0602

call Windsor

5-4427

AVE., DEERFIELD

Main

Craftsmen

THIS SIZE

North

Western

R.R.

Blouses,

Sweaters,

Fabric Shop
Evanston

UNiversity 4-3034

$3.60

IT—

Weekly*
To Reach
10,947 Homes

Repair Screen Doors and Windows
Replace Broken Windows
Fix Storm Windows and Doors
Keys Made To Order While You Wait.

in

RAVINIA
447
oh

Roger

RS

Williams

Formerly

2

0

F. D. CLAVEY
RAVINIA NURSERIES
Inc.
Office

and

WI
West

1885

Nursery

A

For Your

Deerfield

area.
2-4387
ae

Phone ID 2-4500
For Further Information
*on annual basis.
ob Ee

ae

Po

Popo P ietoh. Dap

Plumbing

aa

NOW

Needs

:

CALL

Your

HAROLD ROOT
PLUMBING CO.

SHELL DEALER

WI

5-0035

Deerfield

Deerfield

PLUMBING

LANDSCAPING

Established

ID

Park

Highwood

HARDWARE
Husenetter’s

the

Highland

Store Hours Daily 8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. —- Wed. ‘til Noon
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE “
yo OPEN SUNDAYS—

Highland Park

Pleating — Belts
Buttons — Hand Bound
&amp; Machine Button Holes

722

AD

ILL.

Designers

Inspector
for the

9 A.M.

MONOGRAMMING

Vogue

Repair,

Jewelry

PARK,

2-2028

We

CO.

TT
TTT
TTT
TTT
DRESSMAKER’S SERVICE

Linens,

HIGHLAND

ID

— LET US DO

Carl Casel, Division Manager

On

YOUR

Costs Only

BROS.

Towels, Shirts, etc

OIL - GAS

If no answer

OlL

Owner

REPAIR

Equipment

BRAUN

RADIO

Gilmour

GAS

PHONE
ID 2-3804

HOME

Watch

Jane

Jewelers

TELEPHONE

Leading

Carolyn

Repair

Road
If

no

Is Here

5-3600

Work —
New Work
Dishwashers
Woter Heaters
answer call WI 5-0743

532

WAUKEGAN

:
AVE.

HIGHWOOD
Phone

ID 2-9565

Thursday,

July

16,

1959

�Warbara

Woe

(Continued
Mr.
3071

and

Mrs.

William

M.

from

page

with

21)

Wolfe, |

Ridge Rd., have announced

tion was held at the Highland
Woman’s Club.
The bride’s mother chose to
a periwinkle
blue
chiffon
with
matching
veil
and _
for her daughter’s wedding.
groom’s mother wore a beige

the

betrothal of their daughter,
Barbara Suzan, to Sheldon Isaac Rips,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Aaron Rips of
Omaha.
The engagement was revealed by
Mr. and Mrs. Wolfe at a reception
recently held in Omaha
honoring
Mr. Rips’ parents on their fortieth
wedding
anniversary.
June
26,
1960, has been named the couple’s
wedding date.

brown

After

Park

Francisco
couple is

wear
gown
shoes
The
dress

Forester

hat and

a

shoes.

wedding

trip

to

Permanent

The
bride
attended
Lawrence
College and the University of Illinois. The groom attended Cornell
University in New York state.

HIGHLAND
589 Central

Waves

WINNETKA
847 Elm
°¢

Hair Cutting
Technology

Miss

Barbara

Specializing

Studio

Branches

Of

2eauty

1815

St.

Johns

EXPERIENCED

STORE
HI 6-5141

FAST!

ID 2-1603

Avenue

PARK
STORE
°* ID 2-8550
r)

Culture

CLASSIQUE BEAUTY SALON

Wolfe

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

In All

San

and Portland, Ore., the
at home in Lake Forest.

including all shades
of light blondes

Miss
Wolfe
attended
Emerson
College in Boston.
Her fiance was
graduated in June from the Massachusetts
Institute
of Technology
and plans to enter the University
of
Chicago
Graduate
School
of
Business in the fall. While at the
Institute, he was a member of the
Dover Club, a colony of Zeta Beta
Tau fraternity.
The Wolfe family came to Highland
Park
last September
from
Omaha.

Lake

Resident Weds

Former

Bebrothed

OPERATORS

FAST!

FAST!

FAST!
1-DAY
EASTMAN
KODAHROME
PROCESSING

NOW! SAVE A HATEFUL OF MONEY DURING
BUICK DEALERS’ GALA CELEBRATION sALg!

Bring
chromes

GET THE YEAR'S BEST DEAL ON
THE BEST LOVED BUICK EVER!

wearing a straw hat with red
your Quality Buick Dealer’s.
The man is wearing his straw
as good a time to get such a

your

before

Koda10

A.M.

one day and you'll be able
to pick ‘em up by 2:30 the

following
When you see a man in an auto showroom
and white stripes—go right in! You'll be at
And, you’re about to save a hatful of money.
hat to let you know that there’s never been
great car at such a bargain price.

in

Eastman

day!

processing

super-service
more

Genuine

cost

and
you

no

at Powell's!

Biggest Selection! Immediate Delivery! See Your Buick Dealer Today And Save! .........seeeeeeeeereeeeeeeeenees

KLEEBURG BUICK, INC.
Thursday, July 16, 1959

1732 First Street
Page

25

�- John Carlson Is General Manager Of

Cor

Ba ed Manor Gets

Deerfield Works Of Allis-Chalmers Co.
a

From

Charles

announcement

F. Carpentier,

Secretary

of State, comes

of intent to dissolve the Tractomotive

a

Corpora-

| Allis-Chalmers.
eis

John

’

W.

ger of

general

Deerfield

mana-

Works

of

Township

Al-

June,

The

A

High

were

40

in addition

permits

issued

to permits

for

new

homes

for a school,

in

Deerfield

five garages

and

AllisChalmers

Manufacturing |

- Company of Milwaukee,
Wis.,
ie nite will continue the local operations as a part of the Construc-

STaMps

e

issu

;
Two may commemorative stamps
hasan garg
ela a

lata
a iin kc NR
Pee Allis-Chalmers has a .distin-| sce on Aus 17, a

os

i

- guished

:. i | to

record of 112 years of pro-

gress.

ity

ee

The

Company

products

z electrical,

to supply
+

a

ae

builds

qual-

many

fields

ricultural,

,

construc-

id tion, steel, cement, nuclear power,
- mining and manufacturing, to name

| just a few.
eal

Favorable
{

4:

‘

Affiliation

y

“The

affiliation

appears

to

be

a

| most favorable one for many rea/ sons. Allis-Chalmers has size, di+_

versification, strength and experience in the capital goods and ma- chinery fields. These factors will
- offer new opportunities which will

|

be

very

beneficial

to

our

employ-

ees and our stockholders, and we
_ believe that it is in the best interests of the Deerfield community.
“The Company’s 1958 annual report
presents
information
about

_ the financial record, the Company’s
- products
and
the
markets
they
_

serve. A-C SCOPE, published regularly for employees in the United
States and Canada, tells about Al_lis-Chalmers people and the many
_ Ways they work for community bet-

_ terment.

Deerfield

I

Lo

re

i

CN

Residential

ROAR

i

Si

School.

t

'

. oP

mail

Hil:
veaee

sont
Onee

by John

: th
ray

Wise

‘ m

ae

rane
CREF

in the

AS

Balloon

Jupiter. It will be 0.84 by 1.44 inches in size, vertical, printed on the
Giori press in red on white paper
and
issued
in sheets
of 50.
An
initial printing
of 90,000,000
has
been authorized.
Through the Rapid City, S. Dak.,
post office, a 4-cent conservation
postage
stamp will be issued on
Aug.
26. This
stamp,
which
emphasizes the importance of contour
plowing
to those
who
farm
and
raise livestock and its relationship
to the urban areas, will be 0.84
by 1.44 inches in dimension, horizontally arranged, printed on the
Giori press in yellow, green and
blue. It will be issued in sheets of
50 with an initial printing of 120,000,000.

Attends Farewell
Tribute Dinner
Fred Farner of Duffy Lane, Deerfield, was one of a group of Stand-

ard

Oil

drivers

has

a

ie

HUIS

Feemee.

RENE LENT COON

One da

RW sed ke sh Ab Se

who

attended

Owners

tes ‘Become a, reality here in the)
Manor through the untiring effort
of the president,
Earl Simpson,|
‘

oi

ALL WOO

PORN:

Ba:

SOU

Gave

AVG;
SEI.

or

pdb
Hank of 981]

Thy

k.

isis

: ial

touch

Wee

WHICH

time.

NSO.

Cheri

ea

SENOS

he

hae

Adee

Building

Permits

RU SIG RESO

Cee 40

ote.

WOK)

AT

YOrLONe,)

without charge to the Association
A vote of thanks to him was extended by the Board, for all of the
boys and girls. Gus Pekara, who is
in charge of the little leaguers, has
given his approval to the field, and
has suggested a 10-foot back stop
with
official
sides
of three
feet
each. The secretary has been requested to write to the two largest
fence manufacturers
in the area.
one in Waukegan and the other in
Chicago.

ily.”

Ome.

Wee

coer

any es

ese

Weis,

,

40

altss lista wapatiegdoieaadsven Sede ada rata Howpadvblinc

pn

Wertiticate

OL

i meee

CCHpPaNneCy

2). ce
SE

june 1959 2
Sans

1OGR

ee

ey

7 Te

ate

LO

1088

MIGLe

fai

LOO

hu

Total

to

mumner:

have

the

state

of

his Color
in

the

permits:

issued:

Guard

represent

Independance

celebration,
which
was
held
Brookfield. Marion Huber and
wife are also connected with
post from the Manor.

speed
Ave.,

zone signs for
and he stated

Ban

°

Parties

°

e

Theatres

°

fh

Airports
(

Special

5,445,793.

ee

4,903,622.

ys 133

$1,386,146.

JAYCEE COUPLES TO
HAVE THEATER PARTY
Husbands
of
the
Jaycettes
of
Deerfield will join them at a theater party on Friday, tomorrow evening, to see ‘Born Yesterday”
at
Tenthouse.
After
the
play
the
couples will have a buffet supper
and pool party at the home of Mr.
and
Mrs.
Donald
Pioli
at
330
Landis Ln,
Mrs. James McDonough is general chairman of the activities, assisted by Mrs. Thomas Laube and Mrs.
LeRoy
Katz.
Catering
committee
includes Mrs. Robert Burns, Mrs.
Richard Wales and Mrs. Raymond
Craig. Decorations are being directed by Mrs.
George
Sandenburgh
and Mrs. George Dressler.
Officers of the Jayceettes (Junior Chamber of Commerce Auxili-

@°Y) are Mrs. Howard Kane, presisecretary and
treasurer.
COUNTY

Mrs.

Charles

BOARD

Allison,

TO

REZONING

Deerfield village
trustees
have
sent a letter to the Cook County
Board of Zoning Appeals, meeting
in Chicago today, requesting them
to defer
petitions
for
industrial
and business zoning along the Tollway in Northfield Township.

MIDWAY LIMOUSINE SERVICE
Depots

—

9,150.
16,064.
11,855.

Mil- dent;
Mrs.
John
Aberson,
vice
that|President;
Mrs.
Bruce
Stephen,

the reply was the same as requested—45
M.P.H. from County
Line
Rd. to 150 yards north of Deerfield
Rd.

Train

28

ek

ewe
ea

at
his
the

opened | year, His opinion was asked regard-|
ing the
waukee

Sas

Day

of luggage. He will move on as superintendent
of
Standard’s
new

e

175,000.

1,160,985.

at

Word has been received from the
township supervisor, that the overhead light at Pekara Dr., and Milwaukee Ave. is assured for another

Weddings

10,000.

1

$1,386,146.

DELAY

°

4,237,560.
$ 8,256.

5

CS

ee
ee
ey

Melvin Swanson of Birch street,
vice commander of AMVETS POST
66, reports that the Color Guard
of the Post won 2nd place in State
Competition,
at the 14th Convention held recently at Jacksonville,
Ill. The newly elected state Commander, Edwin Fifielski, asked the
Post Commander,
Ray Broulliard

James Saunders who formerly was
assistant superintendent at the 48th
and Harlem installation.

4,764,494.

i

cwnda hci

9

1,148,741.

oe

Sinee the seeding of the ditches
has been approved several of the
housewives have asked their various block board members when the
oiling of the roads will start. These
members have suggested that a special meeting be called to speed up
the matter that is now in the hands
of the road commissioner, Francis
(Chuck) Stancliff, to see if it can
go through this month, as it is very
much needed.

aj trucking facilities recently

Harlem.
Mr. Wise received a number of
gifts including a desk set and a set

swim-

$1,155,821.

bo Oe kd odes ga bedihanuiodaseduehavenees a

Swimming
Pools &lt;i... coi seis
2
|Sprinkler System 2200000000
1
Plumbing Permits 2020.
ccs
eseceesesseseeseeneeee
..
50

URE

“We
look forward to continuing | farewell tribute for George Wise, | at the
pipeline
terminal
near}
_ the close relationships we have had|tank truck superintendent for the | O’Hare installation.
i in the past with our many commu- company’s
terminal
at 48th
and
Promoted to replace Wise will be
_ nity neighbors as we begin operations
in the Allis-Chalmers
fam-

| To

A playground for the youngsters|South Park School

AN ES aitbingMe ne
T-cont air tnail| Reltbor, E. W. (Bill)

Postmaster

during

two

ee
a i
168
Hitechalmers, explains the new| Postmaster Reports
Association: of which August Rade-| 70 dite 4868
ob
nener nant 153
_ ownership of Tractomotive Corp: |New Commemorative | rc iclicaind eas
Sete pnd Alidvations cco
a
Ss, 6
_
“The firm has been purchased by St
To Be
Issued
i
SMI
Fis nis aru es idl
Manor

i AaB wae

ming pools, also remodelings, a total of 133 permits at an estimated
cost of $1,386,146.
the west
oe
UEpY
B
the west
Robert E. Bowen, building commissioner, gave the following
reChildren | Port for June to Village Manager Royce Owens:

this area
attend
Aptakisicgrade school and Ela-Vernon
s

ies

ia &amp; aubdiviglon

;
ae)
in Vernon
Township
at
end of Deerfield Rd. on
side of Milwaukee
Ave.
from
Tripp

There

Area

Mande

:

Carlson,

the

Deeetibid

the

-

Issue 133 Building Permits In June

n

Playg round

_ tion. This firm has been purchased by Allis-Chalmers Manu| facturing Co. of Milwaukee, Wis., which will continue the local
| Operations as a part of the construction machinery division of
i

iamon

ae

Guest Service

Although this lies beyond the 114

miles

south

which

the

of

the

village

village

wants

limits

to control,

they believe that it may effect future zoning requests within the 114

miles

now

in

Deerfield’s

master

plan,

Now Midway with the largest fleet of late model
air conditioned Cadillacs is equipped to serve you anywhere on the North Shore.

BETTS, BORLAND &amp; Co.
Since

1896

BROKERS
STOCKS

—

BONDS

Members
New

York

and

Stock

Other

Exchange

Exchanges

PARTNERS
ARTHUR M. BETTS
CHAUNCEY B. BORLAND
FRANCIS P, BUTLER

People
e,

For

Weddings,

Parties,

Theatres,

Train

Who

Know

Depots,

Air-

ports or anywhere in the Chicagoland Area, Midway
Limousine offers the finest limousine service on the North
Shore. Courteous Uniformed Drivers who are always
alert to anticipate your needs. Let Midway handle your
Limousine needs and relieve you of all responsibility.

‘i

Travel With

LAKE
Page

26

FOREST

4550

ASSOCIATES
SAMUEL D. ROWE
RICHARD J. SHROSBREE
J. TRACY
ALEXANDER
STEPHEN W. BACHAR
POTTER H. CARROLL
HERBERT
HIDER
HUGH
J. O’CONNOR
SIDNEY RUBENSTEIN
of Highland Park

Midway specializes in Weddings and Private Guest
Service. The constantly growing North Shore area has
prompted us to expand our Fleet and to give you the
finest service anywhere on the North Shore. No matter
what the occasion Midway stands ready to serve you at
any time of the Day or Night. Next time call Midway and
see

For

Midway

Reservations

the

BORLAND

difference.

Call:

{11

ROgers

Park

1-5878

South

La
Tel.

Salle
CEntral

Thursday,

BUILDING
St.

©

Chicago

6-1474

July

16, 1959

3

Sf kt

rf

�EN

:

{

wes

Z

ag
wee

N. S. SECTION ¥
CELEBRATES
BIRTHDAY

Ke 3d. Riskind

|
.

The North Shore Section of the
National Council of Jewish Women
will entertain members and friends
at a box luncheon on Wednesday at
12:30 p.m. at the home of Mrs. William
Friedman,
25 Sycamore
PI.
The Section is celebrating its tenth
birthday as an autonomous unit.
Mrs. Charles Hymes, present national president of the Council, will
be guest of honor at the affair. Mrs.
Hymes will speak on the aims and
achievements of the Council.
The afternoon program will be
a fashion show on interior decorating. Roy Klipp, member of American Institute of Decorators, is in
charge
of the program
planning
staff.
Four

Different

Commissioned

Kenneth J. Riskind, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Phillip A. Riskind, 1161
Linden Ave., was commissioned in
the Army Reserve after he graduated
from
Cornell
University
in
Ithaca, N.Y.
Lieutenant Riskind now begins a
six month tour of active duty. He
is a 1955 graduate of Highland Park
High School.

First Child,
Born

to

Karin

Dominic

members,

each

Braeside
Chapter
of
Women’s
American ORT is sponsoring a theater party Wednesday at Tenthouse
Theatre. All benefit proceeds from

will go

towards maintaining the organization’s philanthropies.
Tickets may
be obtained from
Mrs. Robert Rothschild, ID 2-1995
or Mrs. Jack Rubin, ID 2-5984. Mrs.
Albert
Rosenthal,
332
N.
Deere
Park Dr. W, is president of the

are

the

Edwin

H.

98

Larson,

announce

the

Mrs.

Harold

S. Larson,

Mich.; Mrs. Stephen
Sarasota,
Fla.;
and

FOR

CASH

Car Wash
8

Gals.

of Gasoline
Normally

ONLY

a $2.25

Value

Fri. &amp;
Sat.

Flint,

W. Sikorski,
Charles
E.

July

17th &amp; 18th

FAST
PHOTO COPIES
AND

PLIABLE PLASTIC

N.

LAMINATING
=

OF YOUR
IMPORTANT PAPERS
Powell’s Camera Mart

ss

589

Central

ID

ROGER WILLIAMS
SERVICE STATION

2-8550

535 ROGER

WILLIAMS

ID 2-9815

SUMMER
QUALITY
MEATS and GROCERIES
“Everything

\

SOFT

CLEARANCE
25% to 50%

SAVE

for the

Table”
DELIVERY

IDlewood 2-4400
608

ON

SERVICE

CENTRAL

HIGHLAND

AVE.,

ALL

* Redwood

Furniture

*

Grills

PARK

group.

WANT

Donald

Ave.,

with

will

Braeside Chapter Sponsors
Theater Party Wednesday

of ‘Gigi’

and

Lindgrins
of Minneapolis,
Minn.,
and the senior Dominic Turchis of
1907 Second St,

display a creative work. Artists participating are Mrs. Harold V. Block,
Mrs. Harold Kinzelberg and Mrs.
Herbert Heyman of Highland Park;
and Mrs. Henry Feldman and Mrs.
Michael Fischer of Winnetka.
Models will appear in the settings
and
demonstrate
how
the
background design fits the creative
work of each woman.

the performance

Mrs.

birth June
17 of their first son,
Christopher
Donald,
at Highland
Park
Hospital.
Christopher
has
three sisters, Laura, 10, Karen, 5,
and Sally, 3. Grandparents are Mr.

The junior Dominic Turchis of
140 Michigan Ave., Highwood, announce the birth June 22 of their
first child,
a daughter,
at Highland
Park
Hospital.
They
have
named the infant Karin Marie.

Grandparents

and

Summit

Complete

Turchis

Settings

who

Mr.

3103

Straud, New York City.

Marie,

Four different room settings have
‘ been
espically
designed
and
assembled as a background for five

Council

Mr. And Mrs. Donald H. Larson
Announce Birth Of Christopher

WATER?

Barbecue

No. 8704 :

* Grill Accessories

You don’t have to

it to try it!

No. 8172

REDWOOD

Allthe soft water you need,
automatically, with no

FURNITURE

Reg. $123.80
Entire Group

equipment to buy, no work

$

8

GROUP
28

8

to do.
AS LOW AS

BARBECUE

$3.75

Reg. $39.95

PER MONTH
plus modest original
installation cost

GRILL

$2. &amp;

8 8

Complete
Now Only........

xe
3yi

CULLIGAN

CRAFTWOOD

SERVICE

ID 23010

LUMBER
1590

July

16, 1959

Road,

Highland

Park,

INC.
Illinois

9 A.M, «5:30 PLM.— Thareday until 9 &lt;5 Gundy £001
Just

Thursday,

Deerfield

COMPANY,

west

of

Route

41—Phone

|IDlewood

2-0140

Page

27

�C. R. ANDERSON

AGENCY,

INSURANCE
Sound,

—

The suggestion of Mrs. J. B. Hurst, ways and means chair-

BONDS

man,

Deerfield

tive board
July 6.

5-0155

Road,

The

Deerfield,

1669 Elmwood

Ave., to give a western theme to the an-

nual family fun day was enthusiastically received by the execu-

Experienced Insurance Service
WIndsor

735

INC.

GREEN BAY ROAD PTALASSOS
WESTERN THEME FOR FUN DAY

III.

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

of the

group

met

Arthur

G.

Spruce

Ave.,

at

Hansen,
to

the

program.

event

will

be

held

Sept.

playground.

for

first

big

26,o0n

the

After

the

regu-

members

used

a brainstorming method
activities

to develop

of

their

fun

| day.
The three men of the group, Bernard
Marder,
Kenneth
Margeson

and Hansen, with other fathers, will
manage
fast
draw
shooting § galleries, wild
pony rides and root

Choose
TYPING

FOR

TYPING

From

The

PERSONAL

FOR

Following
OR

beer gushing
mothers will
chuck wagon

Courses:

SCHOOL

USE

(6 weeks)

BUSINESS

Speedwriting

SHORTHAND

ticipating

in

watering holes. The
provide a_ bountiful
for the guests parfun

day.

Richard G. Fuchs Family
Welcomes

Kim

of the
Fuchs

infant

girl

is Mrs.

W.

H. Callow,

which

met

Girl Scouts Attend
World-Wide
A

six-girl

Richard

Roundup

Moraine

trol of scouts

Council

is attending

the

Girl Scout Senior Roundup

Pa1959

now in

session in Colorado Springs.
Kay
Hart of 1870 Sheahen Ct. and Nora
Luthmers
of 2401
Egandale
Rd.
represent Highland Park.
Barbara
Isely, Carol Kopp and Jane Stallman are from Deerfield and Mary
Towner is from Mundelein.
The patrol is part of an international troop whose members come
from eight countries.
More than
8500 senior girl scouts and 1500
adults comprise this largest movement of teen-age girls in history,
according to a Council announcement.
‘
City

Sr. of Chicago.

of

Tents

Colorado Springs now is called
the city of tents.
The scouts are
sheltered by 600 of them.
They
sleep in sleeping bags and cook on
charcoal stoves, utilizing the skills
they have perfected through local
chapter membership.

Stay hair-free, carefree, far longer!

The

Roger

First

UN

Welcome

Laura

Miriam

The
Roger
Baskes,
251
Oak
Knoll
Terr.,
announce
the
birth
June 16 of Laura Miriam at Highland Park Hospital.
Grandparents
are the Bernard
Zells,
251
Oak
Knoll Terr., and the Irwin Baskes,
252 Oak Knoll Terr.

Robert Clearys Announce
Birth Of Susan Lynn
A
daughter,
Susan
Lynn,
was
born July 1 at Lake Forest Hos-.
pital to the Robert E. Clearys, 949
Pleasant Ave.
Susan joins Chelli,
5, and
Robert,
3.
Grandparents
are the Frank Brunos, 639 Melody
Ln., and the E. T. Clearys, Chicago.
Great-grandmother
is Mrs.
Anne
Karhoff of Edina, Mo.

Daughter

Born

To J. H.

Liens

A daughter, Elizabeth Mary, was
born June 24 at Lake Forest Hospital to the Jere H. Liens of 1341
Arbor Ave.
Elizabeth has a brother, Terrence James, 2. Grandpar-

are

the

Winnetka, and
Franklin Park.

George
the

Engelhards,

Carl

B.

Liens,

ZG

Ycadment

Ave.

Prin.

Baskes

Child,

Elizabeth Arden

EVANSTON BUSINESS COLLEGE
Sherman

PTA

Mr. and Mrs. Donald Fried, 1760
Ryders
Ln.,
announce
the _ birth
June 28 of their second son, William
Howard,
at Highland
Park
Hospital.
William
has a brother,
Maurice William.
Paternal grandparents are the M. W. Frieds, Chicago,
and
maternal
grandmother
is Mrs. William Ledbetter, 242 Linden Park PI.

ents

Day and Evening Classes
Wm. H. Callow, Prin.
BEGIN ANY MONDAY EXCEPT SPEEDWRITING CLASS
WHICH BEGIN JULY 20; AUGUST 3, 17

1718

School

Allison

Mr. and Mrs. Richard G. Fuchs,
589 Clavey Ct., announce the birth
June 30 of Kim Allison at Highland
Park Hospital. Kim has a brother,
David,
16.
Paternal
grandmother

GREGG SHORTHAND (days only)
STENOGRAPHIC
SECRETARIAL
BUSINESS ENGLISH
ACCOUNTING
COMPTOMETRY

Road

of
1910

plans

This

lar business meeting,
of

home

initiate

fall

details

Bay

president,

their
school

Green

‘Donald Frieds Announce
Birth Of William Howard

4-3004

TYPEWRITERS
ADDING
SALES

645

-

MACHINES

RENTALS

CENTRAL

am

-

REPAIRS

ID 3-0230 |

°*

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fun time

summer

“vacation” besides.

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Leave it to your Elizabeth Arden Salon—the task
of removing the hair nobody loves from your legs,
arms, even the tenderest areas of the face. This
famous Electra Wax Treatment works wonders so
safely, pleasantly and efficiently. In no time—
there you are—soft-skinned, silky-legged, smooth
as a statue. And the flattering results last a long,
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e safe
e comfortable
e full satisfaction—
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Have your eyes examined by on

Eye-Physician (M.D.)

UHLEMANN

Lf,

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Phone Today . . . ID 2-4551
2226
Page

Green
28

Bay

Rd.,

H.P.

—

AMPLE

FREE

idler, Salon

70 East Walton
PARKING

Place, Chicago

SUperior 7-9650

11

optical company
the best In sight—since 1907
PHONE for appointment or Information
Highland Pk. IDlewood 2-5150
1874 Sheridan Rd.
1645

Orrington

Ave.

Evanston

UNiversity 4-3311

Thursday, July 16, 1959

j,

�In Pennsylvania

THAT PRESCRIPTION

In an afternoon wedding on June
27 at Grace Methodist Church, Natrona Heights, Pa., Raymond Bradshaw
took Miss Carol Lynn
McLachlan as his bride.
She is the

daughter

of the Harry

NO

on

page

HE

[5

Featuring precise Prescription service — Surgical and sick room supplies
Baby Needs —— Vitamins —- Cosmetics —- Films — We Deliver.

B. McLach-

lans of Natrona Heights and he is
the son of Mrs. Lorena Bradshaw
of 2020 St. Johns Ave. and the late
Thomas L. Bradshaw.
Dr. Robert H. Cairns officiated
at the ceremony in which Mrs. Ray
Pearson was organist and Mrs. Robert Emery was soloist.
All are of
Natrona Heights.
The church was decorated with
white candelabra, ferns and palms.
Given in marriage by her father,
the bride wore
a re-embroidered

(Continued

MATTER WHO YOUR DOCTOR IS OR WHERE
LOCATED—-WE ARE PREPARED TO FILL
YOUR PRESCRIPTION

Roger Pharmacy
643

ROGER

WILLIAMS

ID 3-1212

AVE.

Next Door to Ravinia Medical

Building
A

FOR

EMERGENCY
CALL

SERVICE AFTER
ID 2-9126

Henry A. Stine, R.Ph.
35

30)

yeors

en

TE

HOURS

25

experience

L. Sylvester, R.Ph.
years experience

Enjoy ICEMAGIC for 90 days

Cherman

Mrs.

&gt;

Raymond

AN
ORDINANCE
AMENDING
“THE
HIGHLAND
PARK
ZONING
ORDINANCE
OF 1947” AS AMENDED
BE
IT
ORDAINED
BY
THE
CITY
COUNCIL OF THE CITY OF HIGHLAND
PARK, COUNTY
OF LAKE, STATE OF
ILLINOIS:
SECTION
I. That Section
14-8 of the
Highland Park Zoning Ordinance
of 1947,
as amended,
be and the same
is hereby
amended to read as follows:
SECTION
14-8. SPECIAL
PERMITS:
The Council of the City of Highland Park,
may, by special permit, after public hearing held by the Plan Commission and advertised as provided in Article 22, and
subject to such protective restrictions that
it deems necessary authorize the location,
extention or structural alteration of any
of the folowing buildings or uses, or an
increase in their height, in any district
from which they are prohibited or limited
by this Ordinance;
provided
that such
buildings or uses will not have any serious
and depreciating effect upon the value of
surrounding property.
SECTION
II. That Section 14-23 of the
Highland Park Zoning Ordinance of 1947,
as amended,
be and the same
is hereby
amended to read as follows:
SECTION 14-23. Before issuance of any
special permit for any of the above buildings or uses the Plan Commission shall
report to the Council of the City of Highland Park regarding the public hearing
thereon and also upon the effect of such
proposed building or use upon the character of the neighborhood, traffic conditions, public utility facilities, and other
matters pertaining to the public health,
public safety or’ general welfare. No action
shall be taken upon any application for
a proposed building or use above referred
to until and unless the report of the Plan
Commission has been filed, but such report
shall be made within sixty (60) days after
the matter has been referred to the Plan
Commission by the City Council of the
City of Highland Park. If the Plan Commission recommends against the issuance
of the special permit, then it may be issued
only by an affirmative two-thirds (2/3)
vote of the Council of the City of Highland Park.
SECTION
III. That Section 15-1 of the
Highland Park Zoning Ordinance of 1947,
as amended,
be and the same is hereby
amended to read as follows:
SECTION 15-1. The owner or owners of
any tract of land comprising an area of
not less than twenty (20) acres may submit to the Council of the City of Highland
Park a plan for the use and development
of all of the tract of land for residential
and allied purposes. The development plan
shall be referred to the Plan Commission
for study and report and for public hearing. If the Plan Commission approves the
plans, they shall then be submitted to the
Council of the City of Highland Park for
consideration and approval. The approval
and recommendations of the Plan Commission shall be accompanied by a report
stating the reasons for approval of the
application
and
specific
evidence
and
facts showing that the proposed community unit plan meets with the following
conditions:

Thursday,

July

16, 1959

Studio

Bradshaw
SECTION
IV. That Section 20-1 of the
Highland Park Zoning Ordinance of 1947,
as amended,
be and the same is hereby
amended to read as follows:
SECTION 20-1. It shall be the duty of
the Building Inspector to enforce this Ordinance. It shall also be the duty of all
officers and employees of the city and
especially of all members of the Police
Department to assist the Building Inspector by reporting to him upon new construction, reconstruction, or land uses, or
upon seemingly violations. The Building
Inspector shall send a description of any
violations of the zoning regulations to the
Plan Commission within fifteen (15) days
after he discovers such violation.
SECTION V. That Article 22 of the Highland Park Zoning
Ordinance of 1947, as
amended,
be
and
the
same
is_
hereby
amended to read as follows:
ARTICLE 22
CHANGES AND AMENDMENTS
SECTION 22-1. The regulations imposed
and the districts created by this Ordinance
may be amended from time to time by
ordinances, but no such amendments shall
be made
without
a hearing before the
Plan Commission. Notice shall be given
of the time and place of the hearing, not
more than thirty (30) nor less than tifteen
(15) days before the hearing, by publishing a notice thereof at least once in one
or more newspapers published in or with
a general circulation within:the City of
Highland Park. In case of a written protest against any proposed amendment of
the regulations or districts, signed
and
acknowledged
by the owners of twenty
(20) per cent of the frontage proposed to
be altered, or by the owners of twenty (20)
per cent of the frontage immediately adjoining or across an alley therefrom, or by
the owners of twenty (20) per cent of the
frontage directly opposite the frontage proposed to be altered, is filed with the City
Clerk of the City of Highland Park, the
amendment
shall not be passed except
by a favorable vote of two-thirds of all of
the elected members of the City Council.
SECTION
22-2. Before any action is
taken upon any application as provided
in this Article either by the Plan Commission or the City Council, the applicant
shall deposit with the City Clerk the sum
of Fifty Dollars ($50.00) no part of which
shall be refundable, to cover the approximate cost of the procedure and the Clerk
shall then cause the deposit of this amount
to the credit of the General Corporate
ae a
Fund of the City. of Highland
ark.
SECTION VI. All ordinances or parts of
ordinances in conflict herewith are hereby
repealed,
SECTION VII. This amending ordinance
shall be in full force and effect from and
after its passage, approval, recordation, and
publication as provided by law.
vi
ROBERT S. CUSHMAN, Mayor
ttest:
ROY MILLEN, City Clerk
Filed: June 22, 1959
Passed: June 22, 1959
Approved: June 22, 1959
Recorded: June 23, 1959

Published:

July 16, 1959

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TRY

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YOU

BUY—

The RCA Whirlpool gas refrigerator of your chotce
will be installed in your home for $10 down. If at
the end of 90 days, you're not convinced of its
superior performance, the refrigerator will be re-

moved and your $10 refunded. If you buy the refrigerator, the $10 acts as the down payment. Pay
as little as $8.78 per month for 46 months (model

no. EGC-9).

Companv
“The Friendly People’’
PETROPOULOS
3440

HIGHWOOD

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ENTER

Waukegan

Ave.

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amen:

BE SURE TO

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GAS

REFRIGERATOR

DRAWING!

7/16/59-203

Page

29

�ere

PUBLIC

_.
_
|
_
_
__
!

Public

hearing

HEARING

will

be

held

in

the

(Continued

AND

Funeral

Directors

Community

NORTH

page

24)

Case
Institute
of Technology
in
September
where
he
will
work
toward his master’s degree.
A December wedding is planned.

..tf,.
Jewish

from

COMPANY
1865

SERVICE

personally arrange and conduct the
entire funeral—a service of warmth

beauty,

observing

customs

and

ritual with reverence.

South

Shore

Chapel:

2100

East

(Continued

THIS

You

BEAUTIFUL
Very

75th

Street,

at Clyde

Avenue

eT TeBS

If You

Have

GARDEN

Reasonable

Not Visited

on

Bay Rd. &amp; 18th St.

Phone

from

page

29)

poudre

brand

SUITS

regular
the

stock

labels

of

blue gown

nylon

tulle

with ruffled

and

lace.

Beaver, Pa., a nephew

—

We Operate Our Own
Ridge Road

CARE

on

famous

SPORT

on

AGS

a ase
iAlidados ee
sh aeiny

tiers

Chairman

Leo Melton, 460 Green Bay Rd.,
Highwood, has been named chairman
of the
Christmas
dance

her

planned by Cuore Arte Club. The
dance will be held at the American
Legion Hall on Dec. 19.

of the bride,

Announcement also was made at
the Club’s meeting last week that
Mrs. Joseph Koopmen Sr., 235 Jefferson Ave., Highwood, and Melton
are accepting reservations for the
group’s
annual
New
Year’s
Eve
Dance. This, too, will be held at
American Legion Hall. Music will
be provided by Virgil Lenzini and
his orchestra.

The
bride
who
attended Thiel
College
in Greenville,
Pa.,
is a
medical
technician
at
Highland
Park Hospital.
The groom
tomotive Co.,
Adjudication

is employed at Tracin Deerfield.
and Claim
23638

Day

Notice

NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
to all
persons that the first Monday of August,
1959, is the new claim date in the estate of
ANNA
ROACH,
Deceased pending in the
Probate
Court
of Lake
County,
Illinois,
and that further 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.
WM.
ROACH,
Executor.
Behanna &amp; Engber, Attorneys
1935 Sheridan Road
Highland Park, Il.
IDlewood 2-4304
7/9-16-23 /S9—194

he

brand

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* Convenient to North Shore
and Downtown Chicago

* Parking adjacent to building

small or large attendance

* Funeral consultation and arrangements may be made in your
own home with our North Shore representative.

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famous

STRAW

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and arrangements may
be made in the privacy

2eeee

ALL

JOHN

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LOngbeach 1-1890

ALTERATIONS

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+

HIGHLAND PARK
SAVINGS « LOAN

- RONALD
Page

30

E. SCHWARZBACH,

Funeral Director

Fine Imported Custom Made
Men’‘s Wear
IN THE FASHION WOODS
FASHION CENTER

105

Adjacent
parking for
over 200

cars...

DIDN'T

HATS

of your own home.

3019 West Peterson Road ‘

---- IM

Dobbs

Haflle
*

° , HERSHEY WEINSTEIN, Presider
_ LAURIE WEINSTEIN, Funeral Direct:

Mia)x

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COATS

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Evanston:

| Leo Melton

Adjudicatuun ana Claim Day Notice
NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
to all
persons that the first Monday of August,
1959, is the claim date in the estate of
ELEANOR W. BANFIELD, Deceased pending in the Probate Court of Lake County,
Illinois, and that claims may be filed against
the
said
estate
on or before
said
date
without issuance of summons,
All claims
filed against said estate on or before said
date and not contested, will be adjudicated
on the first Tuesday after the first Monday
of the next succeeding month at 9 A.M.
The First National Bank of
Highland Park,
Executor
:
By Henry Pearon, Trust Officer
Singer &amp; Singer
Attorneys for Executor
Highland
Park,
Illinois
7/9-16-23 /59-200

SLACKS

and Harrison St., Evanston

Chicago: KEystone 9-4747; 9-4424

i ta ot k dah ala
Ne
ee
weed
ste entra

“fe

of

20% OFF

CEMETERY

GENERAL

On

Vc

served as ringbearer. Best man was
Robert Merrick of Columbus, Ohio.
Ushers were James
and Malcolm
McLachlan, brothers of the bride.
After the ceremony, a reception
was held at the church.
Later a
dinner was served at the home of
the bride’s parents.
The bride’s mother wore a pink
lace gown with all white accessories
and
white
carnations.
The
groom’s mother wore a two-piece
dress of blue Chinese silk print and
white accessories and flowers.
After a wedding journey to Florida and a Caribbean cruise, the
couple is at home at 2020 St. Johns
Ave.

e EAGLE

COMMUNITY MAUSOLEUM—EARTHEN INTERMENT
COLUMBARIUM—CREMATORIUM
CHARTER

Mahe e
A

DE 6-6500

Just as you provide insurance or make a
will, so should you choose a fitting resting
place for yourself — and for them — a task
that will be burdensome if left until the
emergency is at hand.

PERPETUAL

pn

head was a crown matching that of
the bride.
She wore a wrist corsage of tinted carnations.
Little Scott Allen McLachlan of

e PETROCELLI

PARK

ah ag

e.

¢ KUPPENHEIMER

MEMORIAL

Accel

Bradshaw Weds 1 n Pennsylvania

famous

from

Prices

Mees sii
=

TROPICAL

CEMETERY

pane

5aCCMA

20% OFF

bearing

Green

Rae

silk
tulle
floor
length
bouffant
style gown with a sabrina neckline
and
a front
inset
of
accordion
pleats and floating panels of tulle
in the skirt. Her fingertip illusion
veil was held by a crown of seed
pearls
and
sequins.
She
carried
her bridal bouquet
of roses and
lilies of the valley on a small Bible.
Maid of honor was Miss Agnes
Bell of Sharon, Pa.
She wore
a

Northshore Garden of Memories
A Surprise Awaits

ABE
Ce Se
:

Adjudication and Claim Day Notice
NOTICE
IS
HEREBY
GIVEN
to all
persons that the first Monday of August,
1959, is the claim date in the estate of
SAMUEL R. BANFIELD,
Deceased pending in the Probate Court of Lake County,
Illinois, and that claims may be filed against
the
said
estate
on or before
said
date
without issuance
of summons,
All claims
filed against said estate on or before said
date and not contested, will be adjudicated
on the first Tuesday after the first Monday
of the next succeeding month at 9 A.M.
The First National Bank of
Highland Park,
Executor
By Henry Pearon, Trust Officer
Singer &amp; Singer
Attorneys for Executor
Highland
Park, Illinois
7/9-16-23/59-201

Complete facilities in your community
for prompt service . . . Lee J. Furth,
Jules L. Furth, and their staff, will
and

OGMfe

to the

Since

SHORE

Call Midway
3-5400

ARLEN j

Raymond

Betrothal A nnounced

City

Hall, 428 Green
Bay Rd., Highwood,
on
July 22, 1959, at 7:30 p.m. to discuss the
re-zoning of land on Euclid Ave., formerly
belonging to the Chicago &amp; North Western
Railway Co.
;
JOSEPH BARUFFI
Chairman of the Zoning Board
7/9-16/59—195

|]

LEMME
eee ae

ASSOCIATION

GLENCOE RD.
VE 5-4188
Security —

Qpen Monday &amp; Thursday Evenings
for Your Convenience

1811

St. Johns

MEMBER

OF

Service —

Ave.
THE

SAVINGS

Satisfaction Since 1888

Highland
AND

LOAN

Park

ID 2-0361

FOUNDATION,

INC.

Thursday, July 16, 1959

(

�ye

the Coach

and Four

The home that for the first time is built around the family.
Privacy is built-in from the Parents’ Retreat to the Four complete living
levels which

provide quiet sleeping chambers,

an adult entertaining

level, a

wonderful Family-Living Center opening directly to the exquisitely landscaped
gardens, and a Project area for hobbies, workshop or rough-and-tumble. Yet
the surprising feature is that for 90% of your daily activities you'll have one

Exquisitely furnished by
Myrtle Todes Interiors
of Glencoe
Open daily and Sun. from
to 5:30 p.m.
Located on
wood Lane in
from Dundee
of Hohfelder
School.

1141

floor ranch home living.

With either 3 or 4 bedrooms and 21/2 or 3 baths, you'll find this home
most unique. The private dressing entry of the master bedrooms provides luxurious closets and the baths with their lighted ceilings, built-in storage, and

1:00

mirrored walls are for today’s mode of living.

charming
PebbleGlencoe. . . Enter
Rd. one block West
Rd. and the West

Located in the prestige section of Glencoe just 1 block to school with the
Forest Preserve park area directly adjoining . . . it’s the home and location
you've been seeking.

Inquire about

Rental

Garden

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Homes

HIBBARD

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|

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Price $52,500.

* BUILDER

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Say

* REALTOR

‘

re,
builders

Thursday,

July

16,

of:

1959

linden,

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england,

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pine

tree,

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sprucewood

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Page

31

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Gite Sammy 1826 N.
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HIGHLAND

PARK

�L. Bell of 357 Kingston Terr.,
‘field, was a special guest of
Illinois Bell Telephone
Comfor the opening of its exhibit
e International Trade Fair on
shicago’s Navy Pier.
He was one

The call opened with the skirl
of bagpipes
and Sir Andrew
extended his greetings to the people
of Chicago.
The group spokesman,
C. L. Bell, who retired this year
after 38 years with Illinois Bell,
chatted with Sir Andrew and Mrs.
Christie while the other members
of the special group listened in.

f the 15 Illinois Bell employees
amed Bell who were invited to the
ening to participate in a special

The

They took part in a long-distance

cently

to
the
Edinburgh,
Scotland
om e in which Alexander Graham
s born. On the other end of the
y line” were Sir Andrew MurLord Provost (Mayor) of Edin-

h

and

sent

a

Mrs.

eyier

Christie,

of

call

went

opened

out

over

the

transatlantic

Holy
Plan

re-

tele-

phone
cable which
puts calls to
Glasgow and Chicago on the same
footing. This was part of the theme
of the Bell Telephone exhibit which
demonstrates
the
ease
and
efficiency of long-distance
telephony
by giving a free long distance telephone call to winners in, the audi-

the

Alexander

L
L
A
B
E
S
A
B
S
Y
O
B
DEERFIELD

ence.
The calls are heard on 70
phones available to the rest of the
visitors at the exhibit.
The exhibit also includes a display of telephones
of the future
and
such
scientific
achievements
of Bell Laboratories as the transistor and the solar battery.

By

know

this by now

our

convenient

_your

banking

bank-by-mail

bank-by-mail

at your

nearest

service

mailbox.

and

Ask

Cross Youths
Outing July 24

some

assistance from

by mail
the
State Bank
steps, effort

do

on

all Savings Accounts
Save in a Commercial Bank ‘and receive the highest interest rate permitted by law .. . plus constant avail-

ability and safety.

ihe...clie..tthe.. tte. .wtie...wlie...ttie...stie...ote..olte..olte..ote.
othe
site
ole. slhe..slhe..slhe..olte. olde
olde
olde
olde
olte
ofte
oles
oie

alte.

us

handle

savings
he ali

allt

allt

lin

[SAFE DEPOSIT
=e), 4

nt

the

and
nin

li

transfer
loan.

its

Solid

lt

of your

account

. . anywhere
a

i

protection

lt

i

for

i

ll

your

in the
i

a

valuable

prized possessions is available NOW
deposit

Ask

i

any

United
i

papers

a

a

and

in our safe

boxes.

about

accounts

from

to

our
meet

regular

and

your

needs.

WHEELING

special

checking

bank

or

States.

anyhow.

For

those

;

seen

,

brand of ball playing this year. The
team with the lowest number
of

wins

ee

that

we

are

played

getting

the

team

a
with

good
the

greatest number of wins a 1 to 0
game and with a few breaks could
have won the game.
Major League Standings
are:

CHECKING
ACCOUNTS 3

NATIONAL
DOGRETS 2k. TT
PiPates. Coa
ku. is
9s
ROT
re ae Gen
CUS Aietlioad mag

STATE BANK

AMERICAN
.
2k Asis.
acre 8
4
Ps CERO LOB Gok | NO
Bc Wiis: Bor saga
sy
0) Bieate SEP een AT

INTERMEDIATE
League
play
was curtailed somewhat during the

past week because of rain and wet
zrounds. This league has been trying to make up games as fast as
possible so that they can complete
the season play on time.
At the
present time the American League
~ection has pretty well settled the
champion of its division with the
White
Sox,
the
Athletics
would
have to win the balance of their
games while the Sox lose the bal-

— Service and Security Since 1921] —

WHEELING,

a ticket

who
attend
there
will
be
many
very valuable prizes offered.
Don Brandt has a glove that he
found in Jewett Park.
If anyone
lost a glove there contact him at
WI 5-2263.
The Prep League team is rolling
along pretty well under the handling of our old standby, Ben LaBuda.
Last week they split a pair
of games losing a home game and
winning a road game.
PONY League has everyone chasing the Redlegs.
There are some
very good games played over on
that field. It would be nice if more
parents would drop: over and see
the games. The boys enjoy playing
before a crowd and the only way
we can get a crowd is to have you
parents
come.
The
big planning
now in this league is the Tournament play. Bob Folger is handling
the tournament team.
We will be
hosts for a game.on the date Saturday, July 25. These are elimination
series, you either win or get out.
How
about adding to the morale
by going to this game and cheering
our boys on?
Major league activities have not
lost their momentum.
We are having some very interesting games,
close ones too, in this league. There
seems to be good balance within
each division.
Ten of the games
have
been
decided
by
one
run;
there were
12 games
where five
runs or less were scored in the entire game; in the 50 games played
to date the average
numbeer
of
runs by the winners is eight, by
the
losers
three.
The
greatest
in individual
spread
game _ score
was
the
Indians
defeat
of
the
‘Yanks 17 to 1.
The Yanks
later
accounted for one of the two losses
by the Dodgers
when
they beat
them 5 to 0, then the Indians, lost
to the Dodgers 7 to 0. So it can be

forms and envelopes.

Let

the various

and to do other tasks so if you have
the time available
why
not give
me a call at WI 5-2055. The dance
is not limited to the parents in the
organization,
outsiders
are
very
welcome.
We would like to have a
large crowd for it is through such
means as this that the program is
supported.
If you cannot come it
would be nice if you would pur-:

for free

Interest Paid

It is pretty certain that all of you

for the various sub committees

committee have been working at it pretty hard.

DO YOUR BANKING AT
THE NEAREST MAIL BOX
Use

Peyronnin

Saturday July 18 at the Northbrook Legion Hall will be the

night of the annual dance.

chase

BANKING
SERVICE

F.

WA

The Holy Cross High Club members will leave the church parking
lot at 6:30 p.m. on Friday, July 24,
to see the Kingston Trio at Ravinia.
Last Sunday
the young
people
had a beach party at Wauconda.
The Rev. Edward Reilly is youth
adviser for the group.

Banking
at
Wheeling
saves time,

Joseph

ILLINOIS

Each account Insured to $10,000.00 by Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.

ance

of

“The Service

theirs..
Bank

It

could

Of Highland

happen.
Park”

BANKS HIGHLAND
1771 Second St.

BANK—POST
Member

Federal

OFFICE

Deposit

BLDG.

Insurance

Corporation

fathers

of the dance

We

will need

to help set up tables

The
National
League
is
pretty
tight, who will emerge the victor
is not known
at this time.
The
standings are as follows:
AMERICAN
White

Sox

Athietles
Yankees.

NATIONAL

........ Se
2.55.5
22,2005:

THONGS 5.020 Se
Orioles. :....0)..4..

OR

a

5
be Ha, Sg bseh
4.°5$&gt;-Pitates:

cae
Oo.

2

Sag

meer
ia8

3
:
7

4
4

Be
S ge CANT pe $456
odgers. 2.2... re Mae Oe §

The Minor League had a big day
last Sunday at Deerfield Grammar
School. Jim Johnson staged an all
star game, The part that I saw was
good and they tell me it got better.
The final score was 19 to 15, thekind of game that you would exect when these eight and nine year
old sluggers band together.
Don’t forget the dance —
and
how
about
the
Father
and
Son
night tickets? Do you know that a
lot of boys have not reported in on
this to their managers? Give us a
little
help
and
have
the _ boys
remember to turn in the money or
the tickets. This year the Father
and Son night was not too successful financially based on current revorts. It is hoped
that when
all
tickets
are
accounted
for,
Lew
Landreth
will be able to give a
good financial picture on this activity.
At the beginning of the season
we
told
you,
honestly,
that
we
would need money to operate this
program for the boys. We told you
that we would need your financial
assistance. There may be another
olace
or another way
of getting
money —
can you give us some
suggestions? I am sure that your
next executive board will ca
ate this cooperation.

Anpoint Commissioner
For Assessments On
Four Streets
A meeting of the Deerfield Board
of Local Improvements
was held
July 8. with Winston Porter, village
trustee, presiding. All six trustees
were vresent which included Aberson. Koss, Peterson, Petesch and
Wehle. President Eldon Holmquist
was absent.
Myron Jacobsen of 1324 Central
Ave., appointed by President Holmquist, was approved by the board,
as commissioner
for the Jonquil
Terr.-Hazel-Wayne and Holly street
‘mprovements. Henry Uteg of East
Dundee,
also
recommended
by
Holmquist, as deputy commissioner
of assessments, was also approved.
Mr. Uteg’s resignation
as commissioner of assessments
for the
Westgate improvements was accepted.
Special Assessment 90 on Hackberry Rd., payment
by vouchers,

was

approved

so

that

work

could

continue. Attorney fees were $2,329.67 and Kuch and Watson Construction Co.’s costs were $36,051.-

18.
Deerfield Receives
Motor Fuel Tax
Deerfield’s share of the Illinois
state motor fuel tax for June is
$3,851.

PARK
IDlewood 2-7800
Thursday,

July 16, 195

�Exmoor Women Win Maschmeyer Golf Cup

EEA

a, mc
te

en

Happy

prescription

sidelight

of Women’s Western Amateur tournament is Exmoor’s

foursome
lowest net to-

tal who brought it
home to stay were,
left to right, Mrs.
William J. Moore,
Mrs.
William
J.
Walker
Jr.,
Mrs.
Richard L. Williams
Jr. and Miss Rena
Nelson.
Club won
it in 1931, also in

|

service

|

oh

ae

“

FIRST

a

|

‘

rf

ull ameter

IONAL ARTS PHARMACY
f PROFESS
. .. in the Doctor's Building
1895 Sheridan Rd.

PASTARet es

winning of Augustus Maschmeyer
Cup in qualifying
rounds
Monday.
Club
with

ILIKE

Highland

Park

We Carry a Supply

HEARING

For Prompt,
M, J. Dray,

AID

BATTERIES

Free Delivery

Phone:

R.Ph.

Paul

ID 2-9000
K. Haines,

R.Ph.

1935.
Wie wie Se

DRIVEWAY CONSTRUCTION

V\
Mrs. Robert Wilson Is Second Flight witha

Parking

Mrs. Robert Wilson of Exmoor

Areas

—

Old

Drives

@

Expert Black Topping

@

Concrete

@

was second flight winner in the
Women’s Western Amateur.

is pictured
Wright
whom

of

with

Mrs.

Glenview

she defeated

John
Club,

one

Call for FREE

She

Ga?

A.
left,

up

Refinished

Crushed
Stone

ESTIMATE!

... CHOICE TOP SOIL

SILJESTROM

on

18.

FUEL CO.

ID 2-0065
1930

First

St.

Highland

Park

IF MONEY
IS AN OBJECT
LOOK AL

Engraved
Wedding
and
Social

mu

FAR

ee
BY STUDEBAKER

Look what happens when you buy a Lark Play Wagon! You start by
saving on price—it’s America’s lowest priced station wagon with a full
And then you keep right on saving! For example—
sized interior.
economy. Just recently in the South African Mobilgas Run, 'The Lark
“6” led all American cars with an amazing 24.69 miles-per-gallon.
Classic Lark styling is designed to minimize year-to-year depreciation.

Sb tionery

PS

Interiors

are

upholstered

in

handsome,

easy-to-care-for

vinyls

and

Fun drive The Lark at your Studebaker dealer’s today—
and look at all models. You'll see why it’s winning friends everywherel

fabrics.

SPECIAL
100 ANNOUNCEMENTS

or INVITATIONS
$21.95

Other

Styles

50

for $17.95

up

YOUR WEDDING ORDER SHOULD INCLUDE
ONE OR MORE OF THE FOLLOWING

ENCLOSURE

CARDS

for Mae eke” nedice
‘ppceehicn' oF lation teply"

CALLING

CARDS

For the new title of “Mr. and
.
Mrs. John Richard
Jones a
and Mrs. John Richard Jones

100 FOR $10.50
100 for $3.95 and up
INFORMAL NOTES

Discover what you'll save at

For the same change in names and for

“thank you’’ notes to acknowledge wedding gifts

100

FOR $6. I AND
645

UP

CENTRAL
ID

Thursday,

July

16, 1959

3-0230

AVE.

EDENS

MOTORS,
SEE

INC., 680 SKOKIE
THE

STUDEBAKER

VALLEY

TRUCKS...

THEY

RD., HIGHLAND
COST

PARK

LESS, TOO!
Page

35

�uae?
igen,Kt
as ies

so

Bu

fy

A OPN

ATT Oe . lage

Segt onte

tinction.
Local honor students are Mrs.
Herbert C. Altholz, 1865 Dale Ave..,
4.0 average; James V. Engdahl, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence R. Engdahl, 739 Elm Pl., 3.8 average; Miss |!
Elaine M. Goldberg,
daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Julius B. Goldberg,
1316
Sheridan
Rd.,
3.8 average;
Miss Nancy Houghtaling, daughter |
of Col. and Mrs. Jules V. Houghtaling, 1787 Clifton Ave., 3.5 average; and Sanford E. Marovitz, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Marovitz,
330 Prospect Ave., 3.6 average.

‘

ta

Mrs.
Howard
Hazel Ave. took

McCarty
of
259
all six of her chil-

4

_

dren with her to tour the destroyer, The Joseph P. Kennedy Jr. (No.
850), moored
at the Merchandise
Mart as part of festivities marking
the opening of the St. Lawrence
Seaway.

4

a

NY,
br

er

Caeut
WP
Ee tes Sea,

Highland Parkers
Take Top Honors
At Lake Forest

Mother Board
U.S. Destroyer

four
fe
a5
rt
F

Ries
fain be bea
az L thst

yh

As

aa
pea
a

five

of

the

sters are sons,

gate

Howard

4, Kevin,

4, and

ei
a.

ter Kathy

is 11.

a

youngran

students

single

James,

3.

from

community,

are listed

A Thanking

Daugh-

Invitations to the private viewing
‘ of
the destroyer,
one
of the
16
ey
that
rendezvoused
off
- gunboats
Chicago’s lake front, were extended to Caritas society, of which Mrs.

a

A

i

McCarty is a member.
Caritas,

as an

auxiliary,

supports

the Lt. Joseph P. Kennedy
Jr.
School for Exceptional Children.

1a
ie

|

BUY

Moa
af

II
-

casualty.

His

the Mart, is
to Britain.

father,

a former

Make
Ads

owner

before

laying

paper aside!

.

FROM

:

.

THIS
A

LAKE

FOREST

large living room

¢

¢
¢

OPEN

YEAR

Register

BOASTS

by

appointment

Hit
eS

picture

electric eye

—

Forest

Under

byl

pe

ID

Sea

|

~~

Woods

Studio

915 Linden Ave.—Winnetka,
Call Miss Thomas—HI

*

FREE

III.

PARKING

HIGHLAND PARK

THURS., JULY 6—LAST
Open 6:30 p.m.
“COMPULSION”
17

MOSQUITO

CONTROLLED

DAY

THE

Week

MARILYN
MONROE
and her bosom companions
TONY CURTIS

OF

OUR

July 31-August

TEETH

Thornton Wilder
BLITHE SPIRIT
Noel Coward

August

Single admission

$1.25

Special

for

For

Rates

. . . Four Admissions
groups

reservations

call

or

Lake

theatre

Gerry Mulligan

FREE
Northern
2-9696.

PARKING
suburbs—ID 2-1236
After 5 P.M.—HO 5-7600

Ave.,

Glencoe
VErnon

5-0605

4th BIG WEEK!

a

All the romance...
songs...and spectacle
of the entertainment

world’s most

THE INNOCENTS .............;..-:.....: sc Viges esedscaustohinaae’ July 24-25-26
Novel—The Turn of the Screw by Henry James
Play—William Archibald
SKIN

Trio

ss

EXCLUSIVE!
NORTH SHORE SHOWING!

July 17-18-19

CHILDREN’S HOUR
Lillian Hellman

Kingston

2-0605

Sheridan &amp; Illinois Roads
Lake Forest, Illinois

THE

for One

mn * is

~~ TENTH
CONSECUTIVE SEASON

»*

o Senn THEATRE
8)

JULY

Theatre—

6-4123

PH. 1D. 2-2400
* AIR CONDITIONED -

FRIDAY,

Outdoor

Phone:
Chicago—ST

Vernon

4052

Thealee

Classes Now Forming

July 22 &amp; 24

GLENCOE THEATRE

Seminitaaiimesiehiasta: 1

Lake

the theat
ine
a ie

Admission to park $1.50
1000 unreserved free seats

Fs we
WaT
i
4

Wall to Wall carpet and drapes
full basement
Two car garage equipped with

only

In

Chicago Symphony Orchestra
Vladimir Golschmann conducting

OF:

windows

a:

Now!

Hubbard

New York
Pro Musica

July 23

AROUND

Ice Skating

Pianist
Chicago Symphony
conducting
July 21
Jennie Tourel
Mezzo-soprano
Chicago Symphony
Orchestra
Vladimir Golschmann
conducting

Know the pride of ownership — Buy this home for the future
Shown

July 17

Orchestra
Walter Hendl

Seven Thermopane

¢
¢
¢
¢
ee | panelled | 5 x 22 family room sake

Sins

Rudolf Firkusny

2 tile baths
2 fire places

Breakfast room
Modern kitchen including builtin oven and stove, electric dishwasher, electric garbage disposal
3 twin bedrooms

ye

8:30 P.M.

OWNER

HOME

Park

Tonight &amp; July 18

lh mae

ICE SKATING

tid:

living and the prestige of location.

of

your

Looks

This executive type home is for the discriminat-

¢

week

Whisic

ing buyer who appreciates the essence of good

ambassador

it a habit to read the Want

every

in Highland

$5,000

* Separate dining room

pores

Ne

RAVINIA

Beautiful 8 room air conditioned ranch home,
located on 2 acre of landscaped property,
in the exclusive Meadowwood subdivision of
Lake Forest can be yours for $52,500.

~ Both the vessel and the school are
named
in memory
of the young
naval hero who was a World War

bee |
a

Man

SAVE

vt

-

any

on the

high.

a

ast

Highland

upper honor roll at Lake
Forest
College. Only students whose grade
averages range from 3.5 (an equal
number
of A’s
and
B’s)
to 4.0
(straight A’s) are awarded this dis-

is 13, Michael, 9, Timothy,

|
ie
ae

McCarty

excitement

Five

Park, the largest number from

,“

wonderful
entertainment!

1-2
7-8-9

$4.00

parties

Forest 4370

JACK LEMMON
in a BILLY WILDER production

SOME

LIKE iT
©.
HOT

LAKE

COUNTY FAIR
RODEO
4-H CLUB SHOW

Released by
Century-Fox

July 29 thru August 2, 1959
Grayslake,
"RELEASED THRU UNITED
| Feature Time:
Weekdays—7 :20 - 9:40
Saturday—5 :15 - 7:27 - 9:39
Sunday—1

:50-4:15-6:40-9:05

Sat., July

18—KIDDIE

“DANCE
Abbott

&amp; “CAPT.

WITH

ME

&amp; Costello—

SHOW”

HENRY”
3Cartoons

VIDEO’’—Open

1 p.m.

WED., July 22 Midweek Matinee
Glenn Ford in “SHEEPMAN”
3 Cartoons—Open at 1 P.M.
Page

36

(Intersection
one

mile

of

IIlinois

routes

east

of

45

and

120,

starring

ROSSANO BRAZZI - MITZI GAYNOR - JOHN KERR

Grayslake)

5 BIG DAYS AND

NIGHTS

FRANCE

ENTERTAINMENT — RIDES — FIREWORKS
EXHIBITS — DISPLAYS
General Admission,

50c—Under

12 Free—Auto

Parking,

50c

NUYEN

featuring RAY WALSTON «© guanita HALL

ON OUR NEW, GIANT SUPEROPTICA SCREEN!
With Complete HI-FI Stereophonic Sound!
This

Is Entertainment

for the Entire Family!

Features—Mon., Fri., 7:00 and 10:00
Sat., 2:00 - 4:40 ~ 7:30 - 10:30
Sun., 1:30 - 4:20 - 7:10 - 10:00

P.M.

Adm.: Adult, $1.50
Children under 12, $ .50
Sat. Matinees $ .90 until 5 p.m.
Thursday, July 16, 1959
Pe

�DON’T

LOSE

YOUR

Bring

Your
We

Rings

Check

and

Jewelry ‘In.

Them

MUSIC. Theatre

STOCK. CAR RACES.
SUNDAY NITE

DIAMONDS

North Shore

S
SIDELIGHT
Here and

?

-Lake Cook. Road. bet.
*Skokie and Edens

» Highland Park, Ae ces

FREE. .

From

I. H. NEMEROFF
JEWELERS - OPTICIANS |
.
Highland Park ‘fas
- Tel. IDlewood 2- 0630 - |
Across from bank over 35 yenrs.

ee TRIALS ale
‘RACES. .... + 8:30
~ WAUKEGAN
eg

for:

West

Mon.

The

HOTEL

Free.

$1.25 —

Want-Ad

8-8282

interesting

1:30—6 p.m.
Closed Sundays

tunities.

section

facts
Don’t

Parking

Children

and
miss

-~

is filled
golden

Lake

Shore’s

Most

Beautiful

THEATRE

oppor-

2
No.

Theatre

2106 or 4744

—

Pictures

on

One

Based

on

the

HILL”

ff.

Gregory

—

Peck

2

TO

|

‘|

SATURDAYS
For

Day,

Ernie

Kovacs

YOUNG

PHILADELPHIANS”

August

14—Walt

Disney's “SLEEPING

Exhibit In Our
Lobby bv

BEAUTY”

2.90,

Richard
Serrin

Enjoy a FREE
Dinner

Stuffed Shrimp ............ 1.50

Breaded Shrimp ...........--All Fish Dinners ..............

Ribs of Beef _....... $1.25
Steak ......
!

Nabe” tenia arg en ei

1.25
1.25

became
erage 1.75
Filet Mignon .................. 2.00

Roast
Meat’

eNO
Prime

Beef ....................
Loaf ® 5.0500 2...046000.-

PHONE
age
75¢

POOR iicecnssss Sacre
75¢
Ribs of Beef ........ $1.25

Private

Dining

Room

ORDER

DELIVERED

STEAK

Thursday,

July

16,

1959

recently-

INTACT!
AT

ROUTE 130

To Highland

Park

Mrs. L. H. Fitzgerald
and her
daughter,
Miss
Margaret
Fitzgerald, are moving to Highland Park
from Wilmette the latter part of
this month. They will reside at 67
Laurel Ave.

CAML vei

1.90

p FREE
preinc

3

UNCUT!

REGULAR

PRICES

CECIL B.DEMILLE'S
PRODUCTION

THETEN |
COMMANDMENTS

July 17th

MARILYN

é

MONROE
TONY

CURTIS
Billy WIIDFR
PRODUCTION

(LIKE iT
HOT:
CHILDREN’S MATINEE
Sat., July 18th—1:30 P.M.

“THE

Shown

JULY

It As
on

PAYS

Giant
TO

PICTURE

__NISTYISION

@

TONIGHT 7 P.M. thru July 19

PLUS LATE SHOW
BONUS FEATURE—SAT.

@

‘4 CRITICS

RAVE!

HANS
STARTS

SUNDAY,

FOR

ONE

JULY
WEEK

24th

It Should

Our

PARAMOUNT

TECHNICOLOR®

BUCCANEER”

FRIDAY,
See

A

Charlton Heston
Yul Brynner
Anne Baxter
Edw. G. Robinson

A

[ LEMMON | COME

Be

19

| DONATH-CHANEY
LUDWIG

FRANCES

COMEDY. ‘HIT

Screen!

Tall Story’

WAIT!

FIRST TIME EVER AT
THESE POPULAR PRICES!

Directed by

CHARLES OLSEN

OPENS JULY 20
' 2 WEEKS ONLY

ards
st Picture Aw

GROUCHO

Honors
2 ori Wide
DD'S
MICHAEL TO

e
Pound ow

in8o asy&gt;

—

In the wonder of

Hi-Fi STEREOPHONIG SOUND

CUT RATE LIQUOR STORE
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK INCLUDING HOLIDAYS
Edens, Skokie &amp; County Line Rd.
VErnon 5-1611

of the

churches will serve a family

ee

FRIDAY,

for Parties of 50

HOUSE

2.40,

1716 CENTRAL: UN-4-4900

FREE
VE 5-1611

PAT PATTERSON'S

Highland

BIG SCREEN!

Tonight!

Alor
ALON

IT

LUNCHEONS

men

at

of

Mrs. R. B. Cook, 273 Park Ave.,
is one of a group who will meet
Tuesday
at 8 p.m,
at Winnetka
Community
House
to
talk
over
plans for initiating a Reform Jewish congregation
in the tradition
of the late Rabbis, David Einhorn,
Emil G. Hirsch and Isaac Mayer
Wise. Local residents who desire
further information are asked to
call Mrs. Cook at ID 2-7684.

Moving

piR-CON DITIONED

It’s served free with

Prime
T-Bone

School

Church

Sunday,

“COMPULSION”

Choose your favorite

Tail 3 dog se
or BQ ....
I.

Sunday

worship

Thurs., July 16
at 6:15 - 8:15 - 10:15

cocktail at Patterson’s.

oe
era
icken—Fried

a.m.

GRAYSLAKE.

Drink!

any dinner from 5 p.m.

and

Sunday

10

The grand opening of the shop’s
new location will be held this week
end. Door prizes and balloons will
be given free.

Local Resident Is Assisting
Plans For Reform Congregation

Set

breakfast. E. H. Amick of 654 Elder
Ln., chairman, has tickets available
for all who wish to join this fellowship event.

$1.00

JACK

After

Park

} Sat. eves., 3.90, 3.40, 2.90, 2.40

reopens)

Sunday——’"’It Happened to Jane ‘’ begins at 2:00 - 5:30 and 9:00
“’Pork Chop Hill’’ begins at 3:54 - 7:24 - 10:30
24—"THE

Seats

the

Methodist
merged

Children

Last Times

Lemmon,

July 31—”HERCULES”

P.M.

“CINDERELLA”

— SCHEDULE —
Weekdays—’"'It Happened to Jane’’ begins at 7:00 and 10:30
“Pork Chop Hill’ begins at 8:54

July

at 2:30

Men

Breakfast
to

service

TOTHOUSE THEATRE

movie for the

Jack

(Saturday matinees are discontinued ‘til school

Prior

“GIGI"

Sun.-Fri:;+3.50,

Starring—Doris

To Serve

in

"RESERVATIONS
BOTH.
THEATRES
&lt;. Mail: Box 277, Miahiend Park. :
“Suburbs phone: ID 2-1160
VE 5-4040
Chicago ‘phone: RO 4-7579°*
Res.-at Bank. of Highland: Park
Marshall Field &amp; Company
3rd Floor, Chicago Store » .
Moo.
ALL’ SEATS
RESERVED.
:

2—

in Eastman color
A warm wonderful
whole family!

Bethany-Methodist

MONDAY

JILL COREY

n

23

“IT HAPPENED
JANE”

best-seller

It was named lightly—this Hill
that became the hell-torn heart of
a war! Now it is a name that has
come to mean heroism and
greatness!

Starring

SUNDAY

All

Program

No.

“PORKCHOP

THRU

POLICY

July 17 thru Thursday, July
—— ONE WEEK ——
Our Panoramic Wide Screen

1—

Bay
11,

it!

Open Daily 6:40 to 12 Midnight—Curtain at 7:00
Sunday Continuous 2 to 12 Midnight—Doors Open 1:40

On

bet. :

Green
Park,

OPENS

Forest, Illinois —L.F.

Friday,

Park . Ave,

Skokie’ '&amp;
Highland:

PEGGY CASS in
“BORN YESTERDAY”

with

ODEERPATH |
North

| West

25¢ ©

|

DAvis
9—12:30;
thru Sat.

3-9540..-:

ee

SHORE

St. between

a

MA

Adults

EVANSTON
TICKET SERVICE
NORTH

Washington

Green Bay Rd. &amp; Skokie Hwy.

Canine Coiffure Shop, the largest
and most complete pet shop on the
to new,
Shore, has moved
North
larger quarters at 672 Central Ave.,
according to Mr. and Mrs. Edwin
H. Bright, proprietors of the firm.
They have installed the most upto-date equipment and now carry a
variety of birds, bird supplies and
cages in the new store.

am

Tickets

“Music Man”
“South Seas
Adventure”
‘Paint Your Wagon”
“Come Back Little Sheba”’
“Tall Story’
Ravinia Festival
Cubs &amp; Sox Games and
All Sports and Stage Attractions

Six
air
conditioned
Cadillac
limousines have recently been added to the 15-car fleet operated by
Midway Limousine Service, according to Stanley Johnson, sales manager of the firm. The limousine
service provides private livery cars,
airport
and
train station
service
and, in season, service to Arlington
Park,
Midway
Limousine
Service was
formed originally by several pilots
who used to fly Midway Airlines’
shuttle service planes.

see

Choice

Cars

on

Have your diamonds set in modern settings. Payments. arranged. |

ae

setting.

OoNononNs

We do our own diamond

Canine Coiffure
Opens New Store

Midway Limousine
Gets Six Air
Conditioned

There

WAIT!

COMPLETE! INTACT! NOT AN INCH HAS BEEN CUT:
SEE THE BEST HERE!

WALT DISNEY
PRODUCTIONS

Pius

i

Pechite

“THE TRAP”
RICHARD

WIDMARK

ADMISSIONS
“SLEEPING
BEAUTY”
Children (4-12) 35c
Adults—$1.00

Sun. rr Thurs. 2.50, 3.50;
Fri. &amp; Sat. 2.95, 3.95;
Sun. at 7:00; Mon. thru Fri. 8:30;
Sat. 7:00 &amp; 10:00.
Reservations, Marshall Field's, 3rd fl.

Box-Office Open Daily 12 to 9 P.M.

&amp;

eae, CAO
Dinner]

Call LO 1-6308
Plan a Complete Evening. in: the
EDGEWATER BEACH HOTEL,
Page

37

�serfell Cl urches
#

elles

Y
‘,

el nl

ni

i,

i

i

i

i

i

CROSS CATHOLIC
CHURCH
North Waukegan Road
Rey. John O’Mara, Pastor

Rey.

Edward

Reilly,

Rectory, 724
Windsor

day

Masses:

Assistant

Elder Lane
5-0430

7,

8,

Mass at 7:15.
rst Friday of eacn
8:15 a.m.
turday: 4 p.m. and

9,

10,

11:15

and

y

COMMUNITY
+

fice

month,
7:30

Masses

p.m.

BAPTIST

We

Pastor

Windsor

Preach

Confes-

CHURCH

1250 Waukegan Road
Robert Humrickhouse,

Telephone:

at

5-0708

Christ

a.m.
Sunday
School.
There
are
of Bible
study
for all ages
and
ry
care for babies.
45
a.m.
Morning
Worship
Service.
ery
facilities
are
provided
for
the
s

p.m. Young
Peoples Fellowship. ProS are provided by the youths themp.m.

Evening

Gospel

INESDAY
0 p.m.
study.
p.m.

Mid-Week

0

Choir

Prayer

meeting

EPISCOPAL

and

Deerfield

CHURCH

Roads

INDAY
a.m. Holy Communion.
1:30 a.m. Holy Communion on first and
‘d Sundays.
0 a.m. Morning Prayer on second and
h Sundays.
30 a.m.
Church
School
children
will
id adult service. Nursery care provided
pre-school children.
SDAY
p.m.
Choir practice.

aad

are

cared

for

during

DAY SCHOOL—9:30 a.m.
iy dy up to 20 years of age.
ESDAY EVENING MEETINGS —
p.m. Including testimonies of healing
ough Christian Science.
All are welcome to attend these services.

further

information

WBKB-TV

call

WlIndsor

Answers

For

Home-

SERMON
e divine, eternal source of all life and
nm will be stressed at Christian Science
ices Sunday.
ghlighting
the
Lesson-Sermon
on

Life” is the Golden Text from John (5:26):

the Father hath life in himself;
so
ath he given to the Son to have life in
mself.
From
“Science and Health with Key to
Scriptures” by Mary Baker Eddy the
Owing will be read (289:32):
‘Because
e is God,
Life must be eternal,
selftent. Life is the everlasting I AM, the
ing who was and is and shall be, whom
thing can erase.”
scriptural selections include this passage
John: (2:25): “And this is the prom-

ZION

promised

us, even

LUTHERAN

10 Deerfield
v. Paul

V.

eternal

CHURCH

Road,

Deerfield

Berggren,

Pastor

nporee R. Johnson, Intern
Telephone Windsor 5-2009

DAY, July 16
Board of Deacons meeting
rs of the Christian Education
Committee.

YDAY, July 19
am. Celebration
am,

Family

School

for

of Holy
Worship

children

with
and

Communion.
Service

with

entering

this

for

the first, second and third grades;
hildren to attend Worship Service.
a.m.
Family Worship Service with
ch School
for children
entering this
first, second and third grades; older
ren to attend the Worship Service.
ursery
care is
provided
during
this
e only for children three years old

younger,

in the home

of Mr.

ald Forslin, 829 Apple Tree
S service is provided
by

this service

only.

For

and Mrs.

Lane.
the church

schedule

phone

urch office.
,
.m. Chicken Bar-B-Que for the consation, Sponsored by the Luther League.
DAY, July 20

p.m.

Softball

iors at Jewett

n Juniors

FIRST

games:

Park

Trinity and Zion

West;

Redeemer

at the Maplewood

PRESBYTERIAN
Waukegan

School.

and

CHURCH

Road

Phone Windsor 5-0775
‘ev. Paul J. Keller, Ph.D., Minister
DAY, July 19
:30 a.m. Morning Worship.
:30 a.m.
Church School.
Nursery for
dren 1, 2 amd 3 years. Kindergarten for
dren 4 and 5.

3h

BANK.
NTEREST

ls i a

ee

FELLOWSHIP

SUNDAY
9:45 a.m. Sunday School.
10 a.m. Friends meeting
in Deer Path
School Library in Lake Forest.
For information call WlIndsor 5-1774.

|

The B’nai Torah Reform Temple
of Highland Park will hold a Summer
Sabbath
Eve
Service
tomorrow
(Friday, July 17) at Lincoln
School on Green Bay Road at 8:30
p.m.
Rabbi
Sholom
Singer,
spiritual
leader, will report on the proceedings of the recent Conference of
American
Reform
Rabbis held at
Bretton
Woods,
New
Hampshire,
where numerous issues of vital concern
to American
Judaism
were
discussed.
Following the services, there will
be a Fellowship Hour during which
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Otto
Ejidinger
of
Northbrook
will
be
host
and
hostess. Mrs. Irving Locke of 1661
Berkley and Mrs. Max Russell of
708 Appletree Lane, Deerfield, will
be in charge of hospitality.

Luther

League

To

Give

Chicken

The Luther League of Zion Lutheran
Church
is
sponsoring
a
chicken barbecue to which the con-

gregation

is

invited

on

Saturday,

July 19, between the hours of 4 and
7 p.m. Proceeds of the project will

field Presbyterian Church through Sunday, Aug.
Paul

J. Keller,

minister,

Baptist Women

is vacationing

B’NAI TORAH
Lincoln School
Highland Park
Sholom Singer, Rabbi
Joseph Burns, Cantor
information call WIndsor

The

J. O.

Y. Missionary

Community

Baptist

entertaining

picnic
July

in
17 at

lier will

their

Jewett
7 p.m.

be

Aides

of

will

be

at

a

Church
families

Park

on

Friday,

Mrs.

Edward

as

hostess.

acting

Col-

Each family is to bring a basket
supper and the soft drinks will be
provided at the park. A time of fellowship,
singing,
and
testimonies
will follow the evening meal, the
Rev. Robert Humrickhouse, pastor,

announces.

Barbecue
be

added

Supper
to

the

*O

To

Texas

Fund.”
Dads of the Leaguers will help
with the meal. The menu will include chicken,
baked potatoes,
salad, rolls, dessert and beverage.

GRACE

For
4-3060

my daily needs?

5-4623

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

NORTH SHORE
UNITARIAN CHURCH
Rev. Russell R. Bietzer, Minister
Ferry Hal) Chapel
Lake Forest
For Information Call WI 5-1972
All services are discontinued for summer,
to be resumed on Sunday, September 13.
THE
BETHLEHEM
CHURCH
(Evangelical
United
Brethren)
Rev. Eugene M. Wykle, Minister
801 Rosemary Terrace
Church—WI1
5-0078
Parsonage—WI 5-2221
SUNDAY,
July 19
9:30 a.m. Services of Divine Worship.
9:30
a.m.
Church
School
for
Nursery
through 6th grades and adult classes.
10:55 a.m. Services of Divine Worship.
10:55 a.m. Church School for Nursery,
Kindergarten, Primary and 7th through 12th
grades.
Family
balcony
available
during
both
services of worship.
7:30 p.m. Barrington Assembly grounds.
Dr. Vernon Farnham, regional director of
Missions of the E.U.B. Church, former missionary to Japan and authority on Communism, will be the speaker.
THE HIGHLAND
PARK
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
ID 2-1695
Dr. William Atkinson Young
Rey. J. A. Miller
Ministers
Summer worship in the sanctuary at 10
a.m, each Sunday morning. Fellowship hour
on the church lawn immediately following
the service, weather permitting.
Church School for children of sixth grade
and younger, including toddlers, meets also
at 10 a.m. each summer Sunday.
Worship services at 9:30 a.m. and 11:15
a.m.
and
Church
School
classes
at 9:30
a.m., 10:05 a.m. and 11:15 am. will be resumed on September 13.
TRINITY UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST
(Evangelical
&amp; Reformed
Church)
Rev. Edward J. Busse, ID 2-2113
Rev, Laslo L. Hunyady, WI 5-3508
:
(Associate Pastors)
WALDEN
SCHOOL
SUNDAY, July 19
9:30 a.m. Church Sichool.
9:30 a.m. Morning worship.

THE TRUTH IN THIS
GREAT BOOK CAN
SUPPLY THEM

SCRIPTURES

MARY BAKER EDDY

You need not experience lack and limitation in your daily life, if you will but turn to the
truth contained in this great book, Science and Health
with Key to the Scriptures by Mary Baker Eddy, and
read it with an unprejudiced, receptive thought.
Science and Health explains that God is Love, a
tender, loving Father who imparts to His children the
ideas which bring them daily supplies. It also teaches
that this all-loving God does not give to one and withhold from another, but impartially bestows blessings

upon

all alike. Holding to these truths has brought

abundance and plenty to many students of Christian
Science who have proved the truth contained in their

textbook, Science and Health.

Find this out for yourself! Read, buy,* or borrow
this book at the Christian Science Reading Room
nearest you. There you can read it, together with the
King James Version of the Bible, in an atmosphere of
quiet and rest. You can also borrow Science and Health
without charge to take home and read at leisure.
COME ... YOUR NEEDS CAN BE MET!
*Science and Health can be purchased in red, green, or blue

binding

Vaga

Dr.

at $3 and will be sent postpaid by the Reading

Room on receipt of check or money order.

Christian Science

J.

Photo

Keller

July 19, the guest
be
Dr.
Roscoe
C.
by
Elder
Thomas

For Sunday, July 26, the guest
minister will be the Rev. Donald
Driscoll, assisted by Elder Robert
Folger.
For Aug. 2, the guest minister
will be the Rev. Philip Sorce, assisted by Elder Cedric Voll.
For Aug. 9, the guest minister

will

be

Dr.

William

T.

Jones,

Highland Park

by

Elder

Melvin

Slattery.

The
summer
schedule
of
one
church service at 9:30 a.m., with
one church school session, also at
9:30 a.m.,
will continue
through
July and August and the first Sunday in September.
The church office will be open

mornings,

only,

during

July

Sunday School is also cvailable.

Union
The

union

Services
annual

Discontinued
custom

services

in

of

the

having

Deerfield

Protestant Churches during
has been discontinued.

heal
rele

August

“Qe
SHE

‘‘
efa
* “How Christian's
Science Heals”
TV Series for Everyone

Sunday,

July 19

WBKB-TV 9:45 A.M.

(CHANNEL 7)
“Some Answers

for Homemakers”
ALSO

RADIO

“The

i

Immediate

Availability of God's

"

fr

4

CO ————|

“The Service Bank Of Highland Park”

ON SAVINGS AT

BANKS HIGHLAND

1771 Second St.

BANK~—POST OFFICE
Member

Federa\

Deposit

BLDG.

Insurance

Corporation

and

August.

ma,

Information concerning free public lectures, church services and

as-

sisted by Elder Paul Martin.
For Aug. 16, the guest minister
will be the Rev. David B. Tallman,

WNMP 1590 kc., 9:15 a.m.
WLS 890 kc., 6:45 p.m.

READING ROOM
1773 Second St.

Paul

For Sunday,
minister
will
Coen,
assisted
Berry Sr.

assisted

SCIENCE
HEALTH

Mass.

Picnic Tomorrow

ow can I meet

REDEEMER LUTHERAN CHURCH
1731 Deerfield Rd.
Rec. 1817 Green Bay Road
Highland Park, Ml.
SUNDAY
9 a.m. Sunday School and Bible classes.
10:15 a.m. Worship services.

16, while Dr.

at Mattapoisett,

Plan

NORTHBROOK
METHODIST
CHURCH
Meadowbrook Sehol
Rev. R. W. Thornburg, Minister
For information call Windsor 5-4351.
SUNDAY
9:30 a.m.
Church School and Worship
Service. Nursery for pre-school children.

5-

ra."

phat he hath

BIBLE

PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH PULPIT

At Bretton Woods

QUAKERS
SOCIETY OF FRIENDS
Sylvia
Judson,
Clerk.

PROGRAM

NDAY, July 19
5 a.m.
“Some

ba

1043 Wilmot Road
Every Sunday evening at 7 o’clock, the
Deerfield
Bible Fellowship meets at 1043
Wilmot Rd. Public is invited. Bible messages
on current events along with Christian fellowship.

For

Church

E

ch

DEERFIELD

Scouts,

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY
155 Deerfield Road
'UNDAY—11 a.m. Services.

Children
rvic

ed

WASHBURN
CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH
Half Day
Rev.
Lewis
Wakeland,
Pastor
Route 22
SUNDAY
9:30 a.m. Church School.
9:30 a.m. Worship Service.
11 a.m. Worship Service.
A nursery is provided for small children.
Telephone WI 5-4179 for more information.

Girl Scouts.

Boy

fhe dhe

and

e Rev. J. D. Parker, Rector
Telephone—WIndsor 5-1881
h Telephone—WiIndsor 5-1678

Evening,

ee fe,

To Report

On Conference Held

NORTH
SUBURBAN
EVANGELICAL
FREE
CHURCH
Deerfield Masonic Temple
Rev. Howard Hermansen, Pastor
711 Waukegan Road
SUNDAY
9:45 a.m. Bible School.
11 a.m. Services.
7 p.m. Services.
WEDNESDAY
8 p.m. Bible study and prayer.

rehearsal.

_GREGORY’S
iat

Service.

ee a

Rabbi

PARK

IDlewood 2~7800

J

Thursday, July 16, 1959
é

�GE

Se
Pie

é

PORTS

aoe OA

FEA
yee

eRe i

etree ES

Se

TINT

CO

ST

apiOsh

ARE Ae,

Thomas Stone Heads
Student Activities

wy

PNG WeAT.

RTEGN
CORTE
neyeeeCents

Vek

Thomas

Stone,

LT mmien 3 287)at

A £6eis

babi

*

ae

vi

ones:

Tek!

,

:

.

Bh saan o

,

"

(First performance
at these
concerts)
Suite No. 2 from the Ballet, “BacOpus

Ariadne,”

and

chus

“Jeanne

.

_

q

i

@

Glass
Auto

@

Tub

officers

with

will

him

be

as_

student

William

i

Bachle,

Open
FRI.

ot

———

=

ei

pn

Types

of

Paint

-

Furniture
Glass
-

i

—

OCR

RS

sila

OL6 toate

ae

——

en

in:

Paint

Styling

Color

-

Paint

Sundries
Drapes

Bamboo

-

Shades

ee

See

oy

:

specialize
Window

a

Blinds

i

location
om

All

Ne

7

—

hia

We
Venetian

&amp;

.

ae

48 ........

@

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patie ONE RS Sa

Roussel

aie crecsecations Tchaikovsky

NOW
ein
THURS.

db

TO VISIT US
in our new
®

of
Student
Activities
for the coming year.

—

23

oases

ial

Linden

Serving

1676

peru

Park
a senior at Highland
School, Monday was elected

president
Committee

of

e
ERY

Rit

Aria, “Adieu, forets,” from

RENT

Ave.,
High

cee
A
ets

(Ravinia Festival
sine cements talk

Year

Coming

For

ry eh

Tops
Mirrors

Enclosures

- Shower

Doors

Til 9 p.m.

vice
president;
Judy
Tondi, secretary; and James Gray, treasurer.
pe

Adult

as

:

HE

The Great Atlantic &amp; Pacific Tea Company

Super Markets

Paul Leeds, a long-time member
of
the
committee,
was.
elected
adult chairman; Harry Knoll will

serve

ay

Chairman

vice

chairman;

Fell as secretary; and
Wolff as treasurer.

Neuman

Mrs.

Allan

OORT

en

re

ee

IDlewood

2-7211

LAKESIDE GLASS AND PAINT CO. |
formerly

ica’s Dependable Food Merchant
1959

TESS

I.

Telephone

ee

Highwood

;

1914

First

Street,

‘

Glass

&amp;

Highland

Paint

Co.

Park,

ae

:

Illinois

YOUNG ADULTS PLAN
LAKE DELTON TRIP
Young
planning

Adult group, YWCA,
is
a week-end trip to Lake

:

* Delton, Wis., July 25-26. Those deby

to

call

“Y’

the

Dianne

True

are

members,

provided

(ID

2-0675),

670 Central

¢

Moley TV

asked

Ca-

a

or Thomas

badminton, croquet, bicycling, golf-

eet

GRANT

&amp;

GRANT

OPEN

Johnson-Evinrude
AS ADVERTISED IN
Tia ee mele) .&lt;

$4.98
reg. $5.98 ............ only
MERCURY STEREO

R.C.A. STEREO sh

Allowances

Si

WHEN

pin

Ts

DIAMOND

TIME TO ACT

NEEDLE

q

:
io

i

4

only

95

59

$899

ogy

314

GREEN

a

\\C

BAY

RD.,

reg.

109.95

a

Py

,

iH ARDW ARE

HIGHWOOD

ID

2-2041

4

i"
ts

22 Watts,

.

Reg. $635.00

We

GRANT

&amp; GRANT

PARKING

IN

Invite You To...

a

4

ORGANi. saul Cane on

3 Days $435.00

FREE

AP T8

SHERONY

$69.95
Days CONSOLE
3 PILOT

SALE

Only $9.95

ID 2-7222

Blackburn

Family did.

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REAR

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ga,

BRICKER’S

Ne

PASTRY

a

SHOP

q

ee

3

wr

me $169.95

$28.98 List
708 Central

eat

2 Speakers

R98 LP YourChoice

ea

$

.

$179.00

10 Watts

$3,
$2.98
bie Bhs ea.a seat

Lake Ferest 3998

Market Square

theSune
easygoing
Maa

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Kingston Trio “Hungry I”

STORES

COAST TO COAST

Air’
_only

Reg. $279.95

3 Days

cleans your
Nothing
rugs as well as

8

5

Bae hate?

. 5.98

Exchange

Mower
Trade-In

on

20 Watts
4 Hi-Fi Speakers

98

HOOVER

oebe
TALiehaapaigs
that

CONSOLE

Walnut

$4.50

"only ....0.0....

veg. 5.98

Swtuelay
" g paeT
_

HOOVER

PHONO BUYS

MAGANVOX

a

oovE

—

NIGHT

3 DAY SPECIAL SALE

COLUMBIA STEREO POP

ower

THURSDAY

RECORD SALE

By Mokers of

Highest

oF

PRODUCTS

HOOVER

[|

band.

to a live

dancing

and

DRY

with the purchase of any of these

Among activities the group will
enjoy
are
fishing,
riding,
boat
tour,
tennis,
swimming,
archery,

ing

HOOVER S"IRON | |

ID 2-2042

¢

H.P.

Ave.,

Miss

(ID 2-5140), Miss

rol DeVlieg (ID 2-5234)
Harris (ID 2-2734).

the north shore’s smallest discount house!

will

which

transportation,

siring
be

;

bir conditionars qt Giscount

‘

/

4
: .

“ONLY THE FINEST”
Specializing

* FINE PASTRIES

:

in

fi

-

¢ HORS D‘OEUVRES

=

¢ SANDWICH
We

believe in cutting short

the time

between

list

home

your

when

with

us

you

DECORATED

and

;

when it's sold. Call WI 5-5300

CAKES
‘

‘

Special Attention

for fast service.

FOR

Given

ALL

ify

4

.

&gt;

.

LOAVES

-

e ROLLS

*

OCCASIONS

to Organization

—S

.

Mr.

Affairs

With

and

Mrs.

Our

Blackburn,

Lowrey

Organ

of

e A Private Weekly
e

BUILDERS

+* APPRAISERS

826 DEERFIELD
Road.
DEERFIELO, ratttr.
:
Thursday,

BRICKER’S

REALTORS

July

16,

1959

801

ELM

PASTRY

WINNETKA

Library

of

9-9
6-3182

Daily

Sat., 9-5

per week
your

Lesson

and

Larry

Program
you

get

ae

Own

k

for the Whole

Family

.

Music

1795 St. Johns Ave. 4

SHOP
HI

$25

;

Family Musical

for only $7.50
e A

i
Merla

1.0
ee

2
re ad

Highland Park
ID 2-2510

Lous, Keys to the World of Music #
Page

39

�|ae
a:

CALL WI 5-4500
REAL

WANT AD RATES

EXCLAMATION

20 words
for only

tion

if 25¢ Service charge for blind ads

containing

56

words

or

more are charged at the rate of
-90 per column inch.

ntract rates for 4 or more
- consecutive insertions available
on request
| inch Minimum.
A

cost

will

cover

Deerfield

the

Review

® Highland Park News
® Highwood News
®

The

Lake

Forester

Fort Sheridan Tower
Published

Every Other Friday

: Want Ads will be accepted up to

Tuesday, 4:30

kitchen

with

three feet long and beautifully pro-

Ads run in above publications
uring the same week in which
_ Fort Sheridan Tower is published
will also appear in

_

fireplace,

eating area, utility room and a twocar garage. Carpeting and draperies
in living room and hall included in
asking price.
PRIGUH ML ik es $26,500

This three bedroom, one bath, Colonial frame ranch perfect for small
family desiring picturesque wooded lot. The living-dining room combination
with
fireplace
is thirty

| insertion in all 4 papers.
©

with

P.M.

DEADLINE FOR CONTRACT
ADS 3 P.M. TUESDAY
For Publication in the Current
Week’s Issue.

REAL

ESTATE

(LAKE

portioned. Electric kitchen, utility
room,
attic
storage,
two-car
attached garage.
Pee at os
le aesooes $39,500

This well-built, three bedroom, bath
and a half, brick ranch on 100x200
foot. wooded lot is an excellent buy.
Living room with fireplace, dining
room,
kitchen
with
refrigerator,
deep-freeze,
washer
and
dryer.
Basement with recreation area and
fireplace. Two-car attached garage.
PUTOOKE BL oud: aiid ac, ok vet caer’ $42,500

This gracious five bedroom, three
and a half bath New England Colonial lends itself beautifully for
lovely antique furniture. Entrance
hall, living room with paneled wall
and fireplace, screened porch, dining room, completely modern kitchen. Full basement, two-car attached
garage. Gas heat.
PHIGSO Be he
ee
ass $65,000

VV

VV

VV

VV

VV

This
five
family
bedroom,
two
maid’s
rooms,
four bath
English
brick house has great charm. Living
room
with
fireplace,
dining
room,
library,
solarium,
powder
room, Full basement, oil heat. Twocar attached garage.
PYVCON Mb cae
Nea Nace ae $65,000

VCC;

TELEPHONE
WANT AD SERVICE
IDlewood 2-4500
Windsor 5-4500
Lake Forest 2300

4 BEDROOMS, 1% baths, low
&amp; taxes, near School. $19,500.

This newly listed, air conditioned,
four bedroom, English house is one
of the nicest listings to come on the
market.
Two-story
living
room
with fireplace, dining room, modern

kitchen
.

ESTATE FOR SALE
(LAKE FOREST)

Umproveo

FIRST TIME OFFERED
LAKE BLUFF EAST
Owner leaving state. Charming 3 year old
ick Colonial ranch. Sunken liv. rm. with
‘ireplace, separate din. rm., modern kit. with
ishwasher, 3 bedrooms,
2 baths, paneled
. rm. in basement, 2 car attached garage.
rge lot, excellent
location,
Realistically
iced at $37,500.

HARLAN

&amp;

Lake

Bluff

1387

MUST
Well

built

older

or

BE
2 story

Ave.

Lake

Bluff

breakfast

area,

screened porch, bedroom and bath
on first floor. The second floor has
three
large
bedrooms,
dressing
room and two baths. There is an
outstanding
paneled
family room
with fireplace in the basement. Gas
heat, two-car attached garage. An
acre of beautifully landscaped yard.

IPPICOU Bie

ot ak

$80,000

LAKE

DELUXE
CUSTOM
BRICK—wooded
lot,
20 ft .family room on Ist floor, dream kitchen, firepl, gas/h air conditioned. 2 car garage. Private patio. Low 40’s.
2 ACRES PLUS. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, FAMILY
ROOM, 2
firepl.,
Built-in
kitchen,
basement, gas/h, 2 car garage.
OWNER TRANS., wants offer or will contract; 3 bedrooms, tiled bath, 18 ft. enclosed
porch, base. 2 car att. garage. Carpeting,
220 wiring. Low taxes. LOW 30’s. Offers.
RENTALS—4 bedrooms, 2% baths, immed.
Occup.
3 bedrooms, 11% baths, immed occup.

Lindenmeyer,

H.

home,

2331

near

D.

Lake

Olson

High

paneled den,
.......... $22,500

JOHN
Serving

&amp;

Member

of the
Multiple

135 S. La Salle St.
RAndolph 6-7155
Evanston-North
Listing Service

the

BRICK
school;
Owner

Ill.

area

INC.

since

LAKE

1904

BLUFF

TWO-STORY:
Close to
4 bedrooms;
excellent
transferred; $27,500.

NEW
LISTING:
Modern
years old; 3 bedrooms; 2
porch; $29,750.

shops and
condition;

brick
baths;

ON LAKE:
Seven charming
rooms;
1%
baths;
screened
transferred; $37,500.

ranch;
3
screened

rooms;
patio;

Shore

3 bedowner

RENTAL:
4 bedroom
brick
home
near
school; ideal for large family; Offered at
$225 per month; available Sept. 1.

JOHN

ESTATE

FOR

(LAKE

GRIFFITH,

SAL

FOREST)

(Improved)

OPEN
FOR
INSPECTION
Sun. 2-4, 356
Newman Court. two story, 4 bedrooms, 1%
baths. Living-dining comb. Kitchen and utility room. Ample closet space. One car attached garage, on lovely quiet street, close
to school and beach. Under $20,000.

HARLAN
Lake

&amp;

104 Scranton Ave.
Bluff 1387 or Lake Bluff 4283

LAKE FOREST—Builder’s own home. Well
designed brick ranch. Quality throughout.
3 twin size bedrms.; 2 tile bathrms., vanity;
10
closets;
large
living-din.-frpl.;
Beaut. Ige. kitchen, brkfst. rm. Built-ins;
Washer,
dryer,
carpeting;
2%
car att.
garage. 2 porches, one alum. scrn’d. One
halt acre; Lovely views of wooded country, at 604 S. Waveland Rd. Priced at
$43,500. Have job in Florida, must have

immed. sale. By appt. Lake Forest 4520.

MORTGAGE
LOANS
CONVENTIONAL
OR FHA
For prompt, personal service when you
—build or refinance see us.
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
OF LAKE FOREST
LAKE FOREST 5100

buy

LAKE
BLUFF
East. New
6 room
brick
ranch. 2 full ceramic tile baths, full basement, wooded New England atmosphere.
Full price, $23,500 complete; only 10%
down.
See
today.
313 E.
Scranton.
3
blocks to Lake
Michigan
Beach.
Telephone ID 3-0766.
BY OWNER
5 year old, 3 bedrooms,
1% baths, living
room
with fireplace, oversized 2 car attached garage with workshop area, on acre;
city water; West of Lake Forest Limits. Mid
twenties. Low taxes. Telephone ID 2-9468
evenings or ali day weekends.
ESTATE
FOR
(HIGHLAND

SALE "pa
PARK

TO

SERVE

678 Western Ave.
Lake Forest 485

12 Scranton Ave.
Lake Bluff 816

ATTRACTIVE
BRICK
gas

5

ROOM

COLONIAL

wooded

acre.

heat,

YOU

2

2-car

RED

RANCH

full,
garage

on

tiled
and

1%

baths,
breeze-

taibice

way. $35,000 including carpeting,
draperies, and appliances.
CHARMING
ONE STORY

BRICK
COLONIAL
HOUSE on lovely 14%4

acre
site.
7
screened porch,

rage,

gas

heat.

rooms,
3_
baths,
2-car attached ga-

Priced

in the

60’s.
ENGon %4

rooms, 4 baths. Screened
house and patio. A won-

family
location.

house
Priced

in
in

desirable
the

GILBERT RAYNER
REAL ESTATE
266 EAST DEERPATH
LAKE FOREST 382
Kathryn
Jaicks
Berenice Ressinger
Carmen Burgess

60’s.

HIGHLAND
PARK
White
painted
brick
on _ lovely
property. 6 bedrooms, 4 baths on
second plus den and powder room
on
Ist. Rec.
room
in basement.
Powder room.

ELM

PLACE

SALE
(Improved)
PARK)

BY OWNER
BUY ANY OF THE FOLLOWING
FINE
HOMES
DIRECT
FROM
THE
OWNER
pan igt EARN THE COMMISSION
YOURELF.

HIGHLAND
PARK—yYear around comfort
in air cond. home. 3 bdrms., 1% ceramic
baths, full bsmnt., rec. rm., comb. S.s., carpet inc., corner lot, 66x189. Low 30’s.
HIGHLAND
PARK
—
Beaut. remodeled
farm home with city advantages. 3 bdrms.,
2 baths, den, scr. pch., large att. gar., near
schools. Immediate
poss., e.z. terms. Mid
30’s.
EVANSTON—Spacious
home w/5 bdrms.,
2 baths, 25x18 liv. rm., w/frpl., sun room,
scr. pch., sleeping pch. on 2nd. h.w. ht.,
convenient
location,
large
yard,
shade
trees. Low 30’s.
GLENCOE—Charming
older home with 2
bdrms., family rm., frpl., carpeting, range,
refrig., walk to Northwest station and shop.
Owner moving to Florida. Mid 20’s.
GLENVIEW—Enjoy
this
air cond.
split
level home, 4 bdrm., 1% baths, many builtin features &amp; extras, low taxes, immediate
poss. High 20’s.
GLEN VIEW
Superb
brick and stone
ranch. 3 bdrms., 14% baths, breakfast rm., 2
picture
windows,
scr.
pch.,
on _ natural
woods, built-in appl., convenient
location,
att. gar., 30’s.
WILMETTE — Sprucewood.
Owner
wants
quick sale on executive’s home. 3 bdrms.,
double bath, lge. din. rm., breakfast rm.,
dishw.,
disposal,
full
carpet.
Immediate
poss. Low down payment. Low 40’s.
WILMETTE—Attractive
3 bdrm.,
2 bath
ranch, Lge. liv. rm., frpl., full bsmnt., rec.
rm., carpets incl., gas heat, att. gar., convenient terms. Low 30’s.

by-owner
4846

LOVELY 6 room ranch, 2 bedroom home
on
%
acre
wooded.
Wood
paneled
throughout, 2 car garage, large patio and
outdoor
brick
barbecue.
Lake
Bluff
School District. Low
taxes. $22,500 includes range and refrigerator. Call owner
Lake Bluff 2352.

REALTORS
OFFICES

ESrFATE
FOR
(HIGHLAND

DEERFIELD—500 Indian Hill Rd. Nearly
new delightful 4 bdrm., 242 bath home, 2
car gar., carpets, drapes, inc., perfect cond.
Immediate poss. Mid 30's.

HARLAN

IN THE 20’s
By owner, 3 bedroom redwood ranch situated on 114 acres of wooded land. Country
living with many
advantages
of the city.
Low taxes, many extras. 301 Little Melody
Lane, west on 59A just off Bradley Road.
Lake Forest 3819.
LAKE
BLUFF
(Knollwood)
3 bedroom,
2% bath Calif. style brick house on wooded acre. $23,000. Call Lake Bluff 1916.

REwt

INC.

REAL

BLUFF

DELIGHTFUL FRAME RANCH in
a very exclusive section. On 2 acres
insuring maximum privacy. 3 bedrooms, 2| baths, living room, PLUS
most attractive family room. Owner transferred, priced in low fifties.
JOHN GRIFFITH, INC.
Lake Forest 485
Lake Bluff 816

VICTORIAN
DUPLEX:
Near
Grade
School; 4 rooms down; 3 rooms up; GOOD
INCOME
PROPERTY:
$21,250—offers.

East

Richard B. Hart, President
C. Howard ReQua, Vice President
Mrs. Stuart R. French
Milton McN. Traer
Ruth Henderson
Kenmore
Thorsen

969

Co.

GRIFFITH,

COOL

derful

Company
260 E. Deerpath
Lake Forest 4040

Bluff

Realtors

acre. 12
summer

SOLD

chool. 3 bedrooms, beautiful
lovely modern kitchen, asking

FOREST

SEVEN
ROOM
RANCH-—2
tiled
baths,
range, dishw, full base, air cond., 2 car att.
garage. 40’s.

REMODELLED
2-STORY
LISH TYPE RESIDENCE

Parking Space Available
for Our Customers

Hart, Shaw &amp;

HARLAN

104 Scranton

with

maintenance

QUAINT—immaculate
little house, firepl.,
bath on Ist floor, base., gas heat. Garage.
Low 20’s. Offers.

Mrs.

REAL

LAKE

NEW
LISTING—Brick
3 bedroom,
1%
baths,
slate
entry,
Living
room,
firpl.,
FAMILY
room,
gas_
heat,
dishwasher,
range, refrigerator, drapes, rugs, 2 car garage, landscaped lot. Near Village &amp; priced
for quick sale.

TWO

HIGHLAND PARK
608 Laurel
DEERFIELD
699 Waukegan
Rd.
LAKE FOREST
287 Deerpath

(improved)

BLUFF

Waukegan,

Copyis accepted with the underStanding
that
the
publisher
assumes
no_
responsibility
for
omission
through
clerical
or
mechanical
error
and shall
be
under no obligation or liability
of any kind whatsoever, either to
the advertiser or third parties.
In the event of an error in copy,
on the advertiser’s request, the
ublisher will rectify the error
y publishing
the corrected
ad
in the next regular issue without
charge. All claims for adjustment
must be made within five days of
the date of publication in which
the error occurs.
VV

SALE

FOREST)

CHARMING
BRICK,
3
bedrooms,
1%
baths, living room, firepl., dining room, 18
ft. screened porch, patio, basement, garage,
on unusual landscaped wooded setting. 235
Blodgett Ave., 30’s,

CANCELLATION DEADLINE
12 NOON, TUESDAY

VV

FOR

LAKE

POINTS

ranch is ideal for young couple. It
has a living-dining room. combina-

(For 55 words or Less)

This

&lt;improvea)

This three bedroom, one bath, brick

5¢ each additional word

_ Ads

ESTATE
FOR
SALE
(LAKE FOREST)

THREE

BUREAU

Skokie
ORchard 5-8393
Real Estate Broker

NEW

LISTINGS

RAVINIA
BRICK
RANCH:
Two
blocks to Ravinia
Park. 4%
blocks to train and shopping.
Modern kit. with Formica tops and eating
area. Living rm. with fireplace, 2 bedrooms,
new ceramic tile bath. Attached greenhouse.
Patio. 10x12 Brick tool house. Full basement. Gas heat. Brick garage. Lovely rose
bed. Large (very private) wooded lot ..$27,400

L. Ringer
Winnetka
999 Linden

Realtors
Hillcrest 6-7274

EAST
Braeside.
First offering by owner,
exquisite
custom
built
ranch
home
on
more than
%
acre, approximately 3,000
sq. ft. of living area. 3 bedrooms; 2%
baths; family room, 17x14; living room,
37x15; dining porch, 18x11; radiant heat.
$65,000. Shown by appointment only, ID
2-3815, or VErnon 5-2400.
Highland Park—lovely home, 30 ft. livingdining
room
with
fireplace.
3 bedrooms,
basement,
expansion
attic.
1 block
from
elementary school. Low 20’s.
-0834

,

NORTHBROOK
STONE RANCH
ON APPROX.
1 ACRE:
Ceramic tile kitchen with formica tops and
eating area. Separate
dining room,
living
room with fireplace. Ceramic tile bath. Completely GE air conditioned. Fruit trees and
veg. garden. Black top driveway, 2 car attached garage. H.W. baseboard heat. Patio
and a big bundle of extras Ubetsaateae 28,5

HIGHLAND

PARK

EAST

EXECUTIVE’S HOME: Five bedroom, 3%
bath immaculate home
too large for one
person. Living room with fireplace, library
with fireplace, large dining room with bay
ovetlooking ravine. Basement with fireplace,
dark room, laundry and FHA gas heat. 2

DEERFIELD
Immmediate poss. Buy on contract.
3 bed.,
2 bath
ranch;
screened
porch; basement; garage. Near new
school.

{

DEERFIELD
TWO
STORY
BRICK
SOUTHERN
COLONIAL: Nice kitchen with separate eating
area, separate dining room, living rm. with
marble fireplace, screened porch and powder room complete the first floor. On the
second floor are three bedrooms and C.T.
bath. Master bedroom has 2 single and one
double closet. Full basement, attached ga’
rage, convenient location Perrerrrrereerert rey

SCHOOL

Spacious
and
convenient
home.
Family room on Ist. 4 bedrooms, 3
baths
plus
maid’s
quarters;
on
beaut. Ravine property.

SERVICE

Main St.
Registered

Dorsey Husenetter
REALTORS
723

St. Johns

Ave.

1346 ST. JOHNS
OPEN 2 TO 5 P.M.

ID

2-1484

AVE.
SUNDAY

Must sell 2 story 3 bedroom frame, carpeted
living
room
with
fireplace
and
solarium,
dining room, cabinet kitchen, and basement,
2 car garage, oil heat, 3 blocks to school.
For details call agent, ID 2-0474.

BY

owner, 6 room house, 3 bedrooms, room
for fourth,
separate
dining
room,
fireplace, oil heat, 1 car garage, low taxes,
under 20. Telephone ID 2-9219,

Thursday, July 16, 1959

1

�eh
LE

:
PRETTY

Wonderful trees (for climbing and
shade); excellent Northeast neighborhood filled with children, and a
. gsereened porch overlooking a permanently
beautiful view of park
and ravine are just a few of the

“plus” values
bath home.
EAST
and

in this

4 bdrm.,

114

$39,500
LOCATION

comfortable

living

are

yours

for the asking in this attractive Colonial
home
situated
on
192 ft.
frontage, yet not too much yard to
maintain. 4 bdrms., 2 baths, plus
maid’s room and bath which can
be used for children;
a compact
well maintained family home in a

good neighborhood.
$49,500
HAS ALREADY

OWNER

Everything

for

comfortable

liv-

ing—TV room, separate breakfast
room,
cabinet kitchen with dishwasher, gas heat, ideally located on
beautiful street.
$53,500
A
RARE
OPPORTUNITY
TO
HAVE
BOTH
PRIVATE
BEACH
FACILITIES AND ALSO AN EXTRA
HALF
LOT
WHERE
ONE
HAS ROOM TO PUT IN A SWIMMING
POOL
IF
ONE
SO
DESIRES.
This BRICK home has a fabulous
California room, flexible bedroom
arrangement,
414
baths,
modern
kitchen with dishwasher and disposal; 2 car att. garage; GAS heat.
Wonderful financing and available
for immediate possession. OWNER

Le aSger
Realty
Central

457

Co.

Realtors
ID

2-6600

JUST
LISTED.
Immaculate,
up-to-theminute
Colonial with 3 bdrms.,
2 baths,
large PANLD. FAMILY rm., modern kitchen. Best of all—only $29,750.
LANNON STONE RANCH. 3 bedrms., 114
baths, LARGE
LIVING
RM. w/fireplace,
large dining area, CYPRESS PANLD. DEN.
Bsmt. $36,750.
ON
THE LAKE
- RIPARIAN
RIGHTS.
Classic brick home with
a COMPLETELY
MODERNIZED
INTERIOR.
MAGNIFICENT
FAMILY
ROOM
overlooking
the
lake. S fam. bedrms.,
3 fam.
baths plus
help’s quarters.

4 BEDROOMS—$17,800
IN EAST
RAVINIA—2
blocks to shops
and
schools.
This
well
maintained
older
home is arranged with living room, dining
room, kitchen, 2 bedrooms and bath, porch
on first floor, 2 additional bedrooms upstairs with plumbing
roughed in for 2nd
bath.
FULL
BASEMENT,
NEW
GAS
HEAT
AND
HOT WATER
HEATER.
A
TOP VALUE.

COLONIAL RANCH
WITH SPACE!

Earhart &amp; Co.
REALTORS
1899

Sheridan

NEW

Bldg.

GARDEN

5-0236

LISTING

Be the first to see this well priced 3 bedroom bi-level, complete with king size carpeted living areas, spacious kitchen and full
basement with tiled floor and powder room,
A steal for $24,900. Call Mrs. Nilsson.

NEW LISTING
NEAR BEACH

AND

RAVINIA

What will you like best about this new-onthe market brick ranch? Perhaps its picturesque ravine view, perhaps the walnut
paneled family room or finished basement
with play area, perhaps the 2 car gar. and
fine landscng., perhaps its 5 bdrms. and 3%
baths.
See
this unusual
home
priced
at
$44,750. Call Mr. Newby.

HOMEFINDERS,
111

Green

Bay

Realtors

Rd., Wilmette

HIGHLAND

ALpine

665

Vernon

VE

5-4121

GRAHAM,

ENGLISH
In

finest

34

acre

East

Ave.
HO

Glencoe
5-0665

OWNER TRANSFERRED—MUST SELL
Finest east Highland Park location, 8 rooms,
3 full baths and powder room, full basement with fireplace, realistically priced in
the 40’s. 8 years old. Open Sunday,
1-5.
265 Ivy Lane. ID 2-4408.
IMPORTANT to real estate buyers. A Chicago Title Insurance Policy protects you
against loss due to possible flaws in real
estate title.

Thursday, July 16, 1959

the

most

discriminating

din.

rm.

Lge.

sunny

farm

kit.

natural wood
with many
built-in
features
and
unusually
spacious
eating
area.
Pan.
library,
send.
porch.
Luxurious master suite with exquisitely appointed bath; lge. guest
room and bath. Pan. rec. rm. with

bar;

warm

air gas

heat,

PAUL PHELPS,
1925 Sheridan Rd.

in

INC:
ID 2-4580

TWO FLAT
HIGHWOOD
Corner Lot
Cyclone Fence
6 Car Parking Space
No Headaches for Landlord
ALL UTILITIES SEPARATE

TIP

Remodeled

TOP CONDITION
Priced

for

Quick

location

grounds.

NEW ULTRA-MODERN
NINE ROOM HOME

struction and condition ........ $58,500

kitchen,

eled
and

H. and R. Anspach
LAKE

over 2 acres of beau.

landsc.

PAUL

PHELPS,
Rd.

INC.

D.

J.

BARACANI REAL
ID 2-8077

gracious

paneled

living

Orchard

pan-

and.

island

dining

room

room

with

fireplace,

un-

RAVINIA—HIGHLAND
1ST

TIME

PARK

OFFERED

Fine
executive
residence,
choice
location,
10 years old, custom built, 3 large twin-size
bedrooms with 2 baths on 2nd floor; living
room, dining room, den, kitchen and powder
room on 1st floor; attractive screened porch;
15 closets and
many
built-ins;
distinctive
finished recreation and entertaining rooms
on lower level, with bath; gas heat, Thermopane throughout; completely air conditioned;
underground automatic lawn sprinkler; private beach rights; oversized attached 2 car
garage with radio operated door. Priced in
high 70’s. Write, giving name, address and
phone number. Owner will contact you. Box
No. J-95, c/o Highland Park News.

ID 2-4580

EXCLUSIVE
Lovely 2 bedroom house
come apartment, nice lot,
cation.

room

large

OWNER
selling.
Spacious,
quiet location
near lake, 34% car garage and 4 room
apartment on attractively landscaped site,
suitable as is or for rebuilding. Telephone
ID 3-1124.

bkfst. rm. and paneled library with
full bath.
The 2nd floor has 18x28 master
bdrm.
with
dress. rm.
and
tiled
bath; 2 add’l large bdrms. and tiled
bath, plus porch usable as 4th bedrm.
A beautiful home with many unusual appointments.

family

Crab

ID 2-1212

ground with more than 300 ft. of
beach, this 10 year white colonial
home features exquisite views and
lge. luxurious rooms.
Each room
has a view of the lake—the
entrance hall with curving staircase;
spacious liv. rm. with frpl., porch,
sunny din. rm., lge. mod. kitch. and

baths,

usual 2 story glassed foyer with
dramatic open staircase, 2 car
carport, broad heavily wooded
landscaped
site.
Immediate
possession. Attractively priced
in upper 40’s. Phone Mr. Herz,
ID 2-8711 for appointment.

REALTORS
463 Central Ave.

ceramic

with
good

inlo-

HIGHLAND PARK
Artistic Redwood and Crab Orchard stone
7 room, modern tri-level. Built by famous
architect
and
appeared
in four
national
magazines. 2 car attached garage, wonderful EAST
location with rights to private
beach. In the 60’s.

LANG
ESTATE
712

GLENCOE

AMbassador
HIGHLAND
PARK _
Highlands—walk
to
school, 3 bedroom ranch, 2 baths, fabulous
kitchen,
basement,
playroom
and
closets, beautiful lot, immediate possession,
$32,500.
May
assume
44%
G.I.
loan. Telephone ID 3-0497.

REAL ESTATE
REALTORS
ROAD

2-7873

GLENCOE
VE

5-1971

BRICK, two story, seven family size rooms,
1%
baths, fireplace,
garage,
near park
and transportation. $23,
Owner, 508
Burton. Telephone ID 3-1457.

CO.

room

and

bath

with

oven and
bedrooms,

range;
cerami

double

vanitory,

attached

3 bedroom

1%

bath ranch.

$37,750.

3 bedroom

2 bath

¢

split level. $35,650.

Exceptionally well built brick ranc
living room with stone fireplace, |
dining room, large kitchen with cate
3 twin size bedrooms, 1% baths,
ment, attached. 2 car. garage. $29,000.

PARK—RAVINIA

$20,500

Sons,

SP

4-5611

SHERWOOD
FOREST.
3 bedroom,
1%
bath bi-level, Pecky Cypress kitchen and
family room, stockade fence. Many features not found in similar homes. By ownx, pee
1361 Arbor. Telephone ID 2HIGHLAND
PARK
HIGHLANDS.
Moving, must sell; 3 bedroom ranch, 2 full
baths,
a full basement,
finished
recreation room, central air conditioning, dishwasher, fireplace, all wool carpeting and
drapes.
$34,500.
Contract
sale possible
with $4500 down. 3475 Summit. ID 2-5490,
By owner,
low 30’s. Lovely 6 room,
1%
bath, Colonial home with fireplace. Large
screened porch, 3 exceptionally large bedrooms,
large
recreation
room.
Modern
kitchen with dishwasher.
Lncinerator,
gas
heat. Beautifully landscaped yard. Dead-end
street.
Perfect
for children.
See by
appointment.
TELEPHONE ID 3-0030

East

plaster wal

with dining L, tiled kitchen with

ing area,
built-in
level, 3 twin size

$20,950

Herbert

location,

ON AN ACRE

6-2900

3 bedrm. brick ranch, full bsmt. Built-ins,
convenient neighborhood; long term financing. Construction to start soon.

OWNER

Ravinia

Section

Highland Park, large wooded lot (85 foot
frontage).
3
bedrooms,
2
complete
tile
baths
with
showers,
modern
kitchen,
screened porch, sun deck, tile roof. Ideal
location, 2 blocks
from
school, shopping
and trains. Quick sale. Priced in the low
thirties. Telephone ID 2-4744, for appointment.

REAL

Deluxe and excitingly different
in every detail . . . individually custom designed and quality
constructed.
Four
bedrooms,

2%

HIGHLAND

BY

Santello

ESTATE

Hillcrest

Beautiful

on

Very

REAL

Finest northeast

heat,
lower
level,
large
basement;
level, entry hall, panelled family room
thermo-pane
doors
leading
to re
powder
room;
second
level,
large
1

REALTORS

Sale

Inquire at
Maple Ave., Highwood

125

SEARS

the

Income Property

Recently

LISTED—$27,900

All
brick
ENGLISH
home
near
shopping
and
transportation.
A
step-down
living
room,
separate
dining room, kitchen with eating
space and a powder room comprise
the first floor. Upstairs are 3 bedrooms and a bath. There is a 2 car
garage and the play area in the
yard is fenced. See

complete

air cond., full basement.
A luxurious home priced
seventies,

large living room, pan. dining room,
brkfst. room, kitchen, maid’s room,
bath, pwd. room and large sernd.
porch on first. 3 huge bedrms., 2
tile baths, pine pan. sitting room
and sleeping porch on 2nd. Pan.
rec. room with bar in basement. 2ear att. garage. Unusually fine con-

THE

in

TUDOR

Ravinia

park-like

1925 Sheridan

REALTOR

SETTING

to

Lovis

Relaxed living with more time to enjoy your
family in this 3 bedroom, 2 tile bath ranch
with large family kitchen, patio, 2 car garage. Half block to school. Priced in 30’s.

SEYMOUR

2-0880

JUST

taste.
The spacious entrance hall opens
onto a 30 ft. liv. rm. with frpl. and
cathedral ceiling, and a pleasant

500.

1-1111

PARK

peals

tails. Gas heat. Well priced at $37,-

On
VErnon

ID

Yesterday’s
charm
with
today’s
convenience in a 7 room, 2 bath
home
offering an unusual family
kitchen,
secluded patio. Fine de-

ON

REALTORS
Theatre

Rd.

RANCH

Within 200 yards of the Lake on
beautifully
landscaped
wooded
property this Col. brick ranch ap-

Entrance hall—9x15, powder room, 2 wardrobe guest closets.
Living room 16x22.
Sep. dining room 16x14.
Rec. room 17x30.
Porch 10x21 plus patios.
3 bedrooms 14x18, 14x16, 11x14.
Face brick, highest quality construction. Immediate possession, 2 car attached garage,
%
acre
beautifully
wooded
property—
$47,900.

J-H Kahn
Glencoe

DELUXE

in this red cedar shake Cape Cod centrally air conditioned
beautifully
maintained
home on a quiet dead end street two blocks
to school. First floor has living room with
panelled’ fireplace
wall—separate
dining
room, pecky cypress den with double closet
which could be third bedroom—ceramic tile
kitchen with nice eating area and powder
room. Upstairs are two enormous bedrooms
with excellent closets and
a ceramic tile
bathroom (plumbing roughed in for an additional bath off master bedroom). A good
panelled recreation room with fireplace and
built in bar. Add to all this a jalousied
heated porch for all year entertaining. Two
car garage and many more features to make
this a most enjoyable
house
to see and
really live in. New listing, $31,500.

SELL. A most unusual value.

oa

LOT

OF NEW ENGLAND

MOVED

and will help finance the purchase
of this excellent 4 bedroom,
4%
bath home.

MUST

A WHOLE

$28,500
BRICK &amp; CLAPBOARD

¥STATE
FOR
SALE
(DEERFIELD)

2

bedroom

home,

appointed

fo

ing in living room, also fireplace,
dining room, small den, kitchen, th
rooms and bath are on second floor.
is an attached garage and big shade +
in yard. Easy walk to train and sho)

JUST COMPLETED
New split-level on nearly an acre. Beaut
kitchen with breakfast area, 3 bedroo
baths, large family room, 2 car garage.
be bought on contract. $34,500.
‘

NEW
Lovely

Colonial

LISTING
brick

ranch

—

in Wo

SPIC AND SPAN.

Rare find for couple. Fireplace, bas met
garage, 2 bedrooms, pleasant sunny kit
nicely landscaped,
close to transporta'
gas heat, taxes $255. $18,900.

ON 2 WOODED

ACR

Beautiful contemporary ranch, 3 be
2 baths, large living room with
separate dining room, family room,
kitchen with breakfast bar, patio,
garage. Immediate occupancy.
$35,0

BRICK
Must

be

sold.

separate

dining

COLONIAL
Living

room,

room

with

kitchen

fi

with

area, family room, powder room,
rooms and bath up, full basement,
porch, garage. $26,700.

NORTHBROOK
$3500 DOWN
OWNER FINANCING

3 bedroom

brick

ranch

on lovely

Attractive Lannon Stone lot 66x220. Close
to Northbrook
centre. Large
living | room
with fireplace, dining area. Large kitchen.
Basement.
Low
taxes. Owner
transferred.
ASK FOR MR. WATSON

landse:

lot, large patio, large living room,

sepa

dining
room,
family
kitchen
with
eé:
area,
attached
garage.
A
most
attra
home. High 20’s.

RAMBLING

PAYMENTS LIKE RENT
4 BEDROOMS—1'% BATHS

3

BRIARWOODS ARE/

DEERFIELD
Most
attractive
Brick
2 story.
Close
to
stores. 4 bedrooms, 1% baths. Living room
with fireplace, dining room, modern kitchen.
Recreation room. Large lot. Full price $26,750. Good financing.
ASK FOR MR. WATSON

X

Ue

Park. Living room with fireplace, be
dining-family
room,
small
panel
kitchen with eating area, 2 twin size
rooms, ceramic tile bath, full basement
rec. room and bath, attached garage,b
tifully landscaped yard with complete
vacy. $27,500.
ae

(improved)

Baird &amp; Warner

brick

cious living on a small scale, cathed

RANCE

Owner transferred.
Offers beautiful |
on wooded improved lot, 200x300, large
ing room with fireplace, dining room °
fireplace,
wonderful
built-in
kitchen
dining area, 3 bedrooms, large family
or
fourth
bedroom,
children’s pl.
large screened porch, sun deck, ov
2 car garage. $52,500.

DEERFIELD
Ranch, redwood &amp; lannon stone, on heavily
wooded
1%
acre amidst beautiful homes
and yet only 5 mins. to store &amp; transport.
By Architect Wooldridge and perfectly built
—extra wide eaves, pegged floors, walnut
panelling. 3 Twin bedrooms, 2 CT baths,
lge. LR F/P, DR, Kit, Break area, refrig.,
washer &amp; dryer incl. 2 car garage. Gravel
drive. Landscaped.
Priced around cost in
30’s. ASK FOR LIONEL WATSON.

Baird &amp; Warner
576 Lincoln Avenue
Winnetka, Illinois

Hillcrest
SHeldrake

REALTORS
730

Waukegan

MAPLEWOOD DISTRIC
2

bedroom

LISTING

HOMEFINDERS,

Realtors

111

ALpine

Green

Bay

Rd.,

Wilmette

1-1111

OWNER moving out of state. By contract,
low down payment. 5% mortgage. 2 bedroom brick ranch on 80x200 wooded lot.
Lowest taxes Lake County. Ceramic tile
bath,
mahogany
paneled
living,
dining
room, natural fireplace. Excellent schools.
Telephone WI 5-0352.
BY owner: 14% year old 4 bedroom splitlevel with 2 full baths, large kitchen with
built-ins, disposal, basement, wall to wall
carpeting, on 80x150 ft. landscaped lot.
$29,500. Open house Sunday 2 to 5. Telephone WI 5-2452.

and

HIGHLAND
Dutch

NEW

redwood

stone

large lot in nice area. Living
dining “‘L”, kitchen. All large
rage and patio. $19,750.

6-1855
3-1855

In smart wooded area. Enjoy country living with city conveniences when you choose
this 8 room brick and redwood ranch, handsomely set on 1 plus acres with stable for
2 horses. See the carpeted living room with
marble fireplace, separate dining room,
3
bedrooms and 2% ceramic baths, plus den
AND paneled family room, all for $42,500,
Call Mrs. Parkinson.

Rd.

Colonial.

Older

rz
roo
roo:

PARK

home

that has

remodeled. Good location for children—
end street. Center entrance hall, living
with fireplace, separate dining roo
kitchen, powder room on first floor
rooms and bath up. Priced to sell at

NORTHBROOK
Reduced to $23,500. Lovely brick ranc
large corner lot. This was a 3 bed
home but is now used as two. Own
at his expense restore to original
pl
desired. Large living room, separate di
room plus 2% car garage. Must see to
preciate.

Carr Realty Co.
REALTORS
701

Waukegan

OPEN
%

Road

SUNDAY

Wi

12 TO 6 P.M.

ACRE wooded lot, brick ranch, 2
rooms,
large paneled
living room —
fireplace, paneled family room, 2 car
rage. $21,000. Telephone WIndsor 5-!

Page

b

�af

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
(DEERFIELD)

John

$12,950
ON YOUR LOT
NO
MONEY DOWN

Coons

Realtor
DEERFIELD
EW

LISTING—JUST

Colonial

Ranch

on

COMPLETED!

2

acres

in

!

Deerfield’s

!

Beautiful
Riverwoods.
Bluestone
center
lall, 3 bedrooms, large living room and din-

El

w/crab

orchard

corner

fpl.

serving

- Hh areas, charming breakfast room, G.E.
Kitchen w/blt-ins, 2.C.T. baths, Thermopane
ndow wall overlooks wooded grnds. Att. 2
yar heated garage. Realistically priced
$34,600.

UALITY

CONSTRUCTION

on wooded

acre. Well planned 3 bedroom brick and
me ranch.
Delightful family
kitchen—2
baths—lovely living room w/stone fpl.—
ull basement—2 car att. garage ....$38,900.
AZZLING 4 BEDROOM, COLONIAL —
Less than a year old—family room w/frl.,
—2¥, baths—completely equipped kitchen—
ae
dining room—spacious living room—
_
basement. 2 car attached garage. Only ii.
ae
$43,000.

‘EXCEPTIONALLY WELL BUILT 7 room
Colonial Ranch—3 bedrooms, 2 Ceramic tile
-basement.
Located
in Scatterwood.
Mumeniy.
priced | .&lt;.....:.)...0. $38,800.
a

RAND
NEW
8 ROOM
2 STORY
COONIAL—2"%
baths—4 bedrooms — Full
sement, Patio—Located in the finest resi“oc
area.
Immediate
possession.
Price
mae
t0........
$39,800.

4)

We
Members

Evening
é

have

all

kinds

of

vacant!!!

of Evanston-North Shore
Listing Service.

Phones: Nancy Sullivan, WI
Jim Feehan, CR 2-3033
John Coons, PA 4-0084
OPEN

SUNDAYS

5-1393,

10-5

OFFERED

BRIARWOODS

(Plenty

of

HIGHLAND

Waukegan

space)

COOL

WITH A RECREATION

BASEMENT,

ROOM

for parties

games, make this Cape Cod Frame a
ome for the growing family. Living room,
twin Bedrooms, cabt. Kitchen &amp; Bath on
irst floor; Expandable
2nd floor suitable
r 2 extra
Bedrooms
and
Bath. Garage
_ with screened porch
$19,950

A NEIGHBORHOOD VIBRANT WITH
RMTH
AND
FRIENDLINESS,
that’s
re you'll find this Frame Ranch. Comb.
iving-Dining room, large cabt. Kitchen; 3
in Bedrooms; cer. tiled Bath; Basement;
need yard
&gt;

ORTHBROOK:
‘g

YOU’LL
LIKE
THE
SENSIBLE
FEATURES IN THIS MODEST HOME. Living
‘oom; Kitchen; 2 Bedrooms; Bath; Utility;
%
car Garage; on 100x200 ft. Lot. CAN
BOUGHT
ON
CONTRACT.
FULL
CE
$29,750.

5 year old, 1% story frame with full basement on 75x150 foot lot (well landscaped).
Has 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, living room with
fireplace,
separate
dining
room,
cabinet
kitchen with dining areas, oversized 2 car
garage, oil hot water heat, hardwood floors,
plastered
throughout.
Taxes,
$214.
Calif.
bound owner has it priced at $18,525.

HIGHLANDS

.

REALTY

2-2015

.

CO.

MUndelein

COUNTRY

6-6720

West

Signal

HOME

Rds.

WI

have

some

excellent

home

sites.

MELROSE
Barrington
1-1395

7

RM.

CAPE

COD

Summer
or winter home.
$2000 down or
will trade for vacant or what-have-you in
Deerfield area. 3 bedroom, 2 bath ranch in
Carol Beach
Estates. Have private beach
for residence. Furnished or unfurnished. Lot
90x200. Back yard overlooks Lake Michigan.
Call for appointment.
$17,500.

Owner
moving immediately to Indiana. 4
bedrooms (2 down), 2 baths, att. breezeway
and 2 car gar., on 2/3 acre. Only ....$27,500

WOODLAND

Carr Realty Co.

PARK

Must sell large 7 room brick ranch built in
1957. 3 twin size bedrooms, 2 tile baths,
living room and family room,
each with
fireplace. Full basement, 2 car garage, lot
106x180. Financing arranged.

REALTORS
701

Waukegan
OPEN

Road

SUNDAY

WI
12

TO

5-0984

6 P.M.

LINCOLNSHIRE
Executive 9 room brick and frame ranch
on wooded half acre CONTAINS
4 bedrooms, panelled den, 2 ceramic baths, living
room with cathedral ceiling and fireplace.
Kitchen has eating area with beautiful view
and
contains
built-in
oven
and_
range.
Utility room has washer and dryer. Carpet and drapes included.
Priced for quick sale

FULL

PRICE—$16,900

NORTHBROOK: by owner, 3 bedroom Colonial clapboard ranch on dead end street.
Short walk to schools, trains, shopping
and parks. Nice landscaping with evergreen and shade trees. 20x24 living and
dining room, custom kitchen with roll out
shelves,
copper
hood
and
fan, built-in
dishwasher
plus separate
breakfast area
and utility room, attached breezeway. 20x
24 garage. Gas forced air heat, $103 a yr.
ore
Ave. Telephone
CRestwood

3 bedroom
fanch with built-in oven
and
range, washer, dryer, 114 car garage with
concrete drive. Screened knotty pine porch
and fenced yard.
$16,200
‘OU CAN GROW
ANYTHING
IN THE
EARTY, LOAMY SOIL of almost 1 acre
th a nice Frame Ranch; comb. Living-Dinine toom; 3 twin Bedrooms; tiled Bath; encl.
orch; Garage
$19,950
BUILT
TO BE LIVED
IN, with a large
mb.
Living-Dining
room;
2 twin
Bed‘ooms; large Kitchen, including Range
&amp;
frigerator; heated enclosed Porch; 2 car
arage;
on
78x130
ft.
landscaped
Lot.
in
$20,500

“ARTHUR C. ULLMANN

INDIAN
Only

4 wooded

Rd.

WI

826
9

Deerfield

a.m.-8

Open
p.m.

FOR
In the

owner:

1%

year

old

4 bedroom

5-1080

split-

level with 2 full baths, large kitchen with
built-ins, disposal, basement, wall to wall
carpeting, on 80x150 ft. landscaped lot,
$29,500. Telephone WI 5-2452,

Page

42

Monday

WI

5-5300

thru Friday
Sat. 9 a.m.-5

p.m.

PROPERTY

INVESTMENT

center

of Hubbard

Woods

store building.
12 years old. Exceptionally well designed, air conditioned. On 50x200 feet—driveway
and large parking area.

Now

GReenleaf

BARRINGTON;
tool house, good

business area, attractive stone front

DEERFIELD

—
_BY

available.

Rd.

BUSINESS

5-3200

DEERFIELD

acres

LONG
GROVE;
6 room furnished
acres with large barn. $25,000.

ESTATES

VIKING Realty Co.

REALTOR

216 Waukegan

TRAIL

under lease for 2 years. Net

rental except taxes, $9,300 per year.
An excellent investment and realistically priced.
For

particulars

call—

PAUL: PHELPS,
1925 Sheridan Rd.

INC,
ID 2-4580

MR.

2 AND
3 rooms for offices only. 456
Central Ave. ID ?-0150.
OFFICE space for rent in Deerfield, suitable for doctor, lawyer, etc. Telephone
WiIndsor 5-0489 after 6 P.M.

APAKIMENTS
TO RENT (Unfurnished)
(HIGHLAND PARK)

RAVINIA—730

JUDSON

J.

SHERIDAN

&amp;

CO.

Agent

KENOSHA

5-5700

STUDIOS

RA 6-7743

400 PARK

ID 2-5041

AVENUE

An Address of distinction
EAST OF SHERIDAN ROAD

acre

Hill Rd.
DUnkirk

sale in northeast Highland
Telephone
ID 2-5266 or

STORES &amp;
TO RENT

16 acres, 7 rooms,
area. $37,500.

on

4

garage,

YOUNG; EVENINGS
WINDSOR 5-3095

MUNDELEIN; Must sell 3 bedroom ranch,
4 years old, built by owner, large livingdining area, fireplace, birch cabinet kitchen, tile bath, colored fixtures, carport,
full basement, near schools and shopping.
Newly
decorated.
$17,750.
Telephone
Windsor 5-2419.
LIBERTYVILLE, 3 bedroom ranch, 3 years
old, on % acre at edge of town, walk to
ad
storms and screens. Libertyville 2-

NORTHBROOK EAST
1040 DELL RD.
3 bedroom brick ranch with full basement.
Fenced
patio
area,
thermopane
windows
throughout, walking distance to school and
North Shore RR. 44%% mortgage available.
Low 20’s
CR 2.3327
PRAIRIE VIEW countryside. ARCHITECT
OFFERS
own
design, 8 room,
1 story
modern home.. Unique interior, 11 foot
ceiling, 40 foot living room, 4 acres on
wooded
stream,
5 car garage.
$38,000.
Telephone NEwton 4-3834.
FOR
sale, within
Half
Day
School
district, 2 year old 3 bedroom ranch with
2 car garage, half acre landscaped lot.
$17,900.
Telephone
NEwton
4-3500.
5-54% MORTGAGE
MONEY. New loans
—refinancing.
Terms to 30 years. Free
appraisals!) LAUREN R. JANUZ, FRanklin 2-0400, (Residence: Lake Forest 3557).-

APARTMENTS

3 BEDROOM — 24% BATHS
AIR CONDITIONED
LUXURIOUS RENTAL HOMES
AVAILABLE SEPTEMBER 1, 1959
CALL ID 2-4115

TO
RENT
(DEERFTELD)

(Unfurnished)

MODERN
2. bedroom
apartment,
birch
cabinet kitchen, ceramic tile bath; near
shopping and schools, $145 monthly, including everything but electricity. No pets.
Telephone WI 5-2419.
APARTMENTS
TO
RENT
(Unfurnished)
(LAKE FOREST)

FOR

1-1111

1,

L.

Many
other
country homes for sale.

WALTER

ALpine

Modern 3% room apartment. Elevator building. New stove and refrigerator.

A very
clean
and
attractive 2 bedroom
ranch, 2 car garage and storage building
located on 20 acres. Partly wooded, balance high land. 1 acre zoning. Good opportunity for subdivision, Desirable area, Asking $54,000.

5

111 Green

RECEPTION room and two separate offices
in center of town. Desk space in large
office. Space available from one to three
desks. Telephone ID 2-1060.

REALTORS
Libertyville

Realtors

Bay Rd., Wilmette

TO RENT (U
(HIGHLAND PARK

APARTMENTS

EAST central location, 4 rooms, adults, $125
or
utilities. ID 2-4590 or ID
3-

HOMEFINDERS,

OFFICES,

English
colonial
(brick)
on
120x165
lot
fenced by shrubbery. Large living room has
fireplace, thermopane windows, separate dining room, Youngstown kitchen with dining
area, 3 spacious bedrooms with large closets,
3 baths, family room, 12x12 enclosed breezeway in between the house and 1% car garage. Ful basement has recreation room with
bar. Hardwood floors and plastered throughout. Oil hot water heat. A delightful neighborhood for the children. $29,500.

SCHWANDT

PARK)

1. 3 lots available in elegant subdivision
of Colonial homes, $12,500.
2. Elegant Lake Forest site available for
$12,500.
3. Improved 100x200 Whispering Oaks site
$6,500.
&gt;

RAVINE lot for
Park,
110x150.
ID 2-1697.

TERRACE...

LIBERTYVILLE

(HIGHLAND

CHOOSE YOUR NEW HOMESITE
THIS
WEEK.
LOTS
AVAILABLE
THROUGH
OUT THE NORTH SHORE:

.

ESTATE

Deerfield

AUTHENTIC

a

DEERFIELD:

&amp;

..

ESTATE FOR SALE (Vacant)

HOMESITES

PARK...

MUNDELEIN

OAK

Also,

VIKING Realty Co.

PARK:

REFRESHING

_

WI 5-5100

parking

OUTSIDE

IN

Sunday

REAL

SHORE

BARRINGTON

ZANDER-OMMEN

in Deerfield

NORTH

REAL

2%
year old 3 bedroom frame with full
basement on 3 or 9 acres. Living room has
natural fireplace, separate dining room (very
nice), 9x14 cabinet kitchen, 2 one-half baths
and 1 full bath. Taxes for house and 9 acres
approx. $970.

AREA

Immaculate, 3 bedroom ranch on a beautifully landscaped lot. Choice location. Living-dining area is unusually spacious, features an attractive brick fireplace. Kitchen
has many extras. Attached garage, 33’ long,
provides ample storage and work area. A
real buy
$29,500.
Open

623 Deerfield Rd.

WI 5-4400
AVAILABLE

Stunning brick ranch close to all conveniences. Large living room with fireplace plus
an attractive kitchen with ample room for
family dining. 2 bedrooms will accommodate
twin size beds very easily. Full basement,
Oversized garage, nicely landscaped lot. Only
$23,500.

Multiple

(improved)

(MISCELLANEOUS)

JUST

REALTOR

JUST

SALE

2 bedroom frame with partial basement, 20x
28 garage on 5 acres. Owner moving to Wisconsin. Taxes $83. $17,500.

M. ROSSET &amp; ASSOC.
DESIGNERS AND BLDRS.
EXCLUSIVE AGENT
ARTHUR C. ULLMANN
DESIGNS

FOR

10 year old, 1144 story, 3 bedroom FRAME
on 50x125 foot lot, is offered for sale (or
trade for Kenosha home) by transferred owner. 12x28 living room has 5x8 dining ‘“‘L’’,
8x9 cabinet kitchen, 12x12 enclosed porch.
Back yard fenced, taxes approx. $160. $16,500.

OPEN DAILY UNTIL DARK
SUNDAYS
FROM
NOON
UNTIL DARK

WI 5-3200
MANY
OTHER

REAL ESTATE
IN

1200 SQ. FT. BRICK
CONSTRUCTED RANCH
OFFICE AT
1216 DEERFIELD RD.
DEERFIELD

GLENVIEW
CE REDUCED
TO $29,750 on this 6
brick ranch. 3 good size bedrooms, liyroom
with chestnut paneled fireplace
all, separate
dining
room.
Kitchen
w/
ting space. Stone fireplace in breezeway,
ll basement, 2 car att. garage.

(improvea)

RENT

Clean
cheerful
apartment
near
trains and shopping. Living room,
dining room, kitchen, den, 2 bedrooms. Basement.
Low heat cost.
Rental $130.
HART,

SHAW
Lake

&amp;

Forest

COMPANY
4040

MODERN
2. bedroom
apartment,
landscaped yard, near shopping and transportation.
Stove
and
refrigerator
included.
$140. Call Lake Bluff 1887 or 4100.
APARTMENTS
TO
RENT
(Unfurnisheu,
(MISCELLANEOUS)
4 ROOM apartment, 2nd floor, 2 bedrooms,
close to school and transportation, heat
and hot water furnished, avaiiable August
1. Telephone ID 2-5206 for appointment.
APARTMENTS TO RENT (Furnished)
(HIGHLAND PARK)
KITCHENETTE
apt,
Highwood
business
district, no children, no pets. Telephone
Lake Forest 136.
3 ROOM furnished apartment in Highwood,
private
bath
and entrance,
all utilities
furnished. Telephone ID 2-0980.
FURNISHED
one bedroom
apartment in
Highland
Park;
ideal for middle
aged
business
woman
who
wishes
desirable
quiet location. ID 2-2247.
3 ROOM
apartment at 125 Maple, Highwood, to share with another couple. Laundry facilities. Telephone ID 2-4067.
ATTRACTIVE
2%
room furnished apartment to sub-let. $115 a month including
utilities. Call ID 2-6634.

APARTMENTS TO RENT (Furnished)
(MISCELLANEOUS)
ATTRACTIVE
3 room in new ranch type
apartment building in Gurnee. Decorated
and furnished in good taste with pine
furniture. Simmons Beauty Rest bed, automatic washer and dryer, excellently located on Skokie Highway and Ferndale Avenue.
Telephone
Kenosha,
Wisconsin,
OLympic 2-7282.
2 APARTMENTS
for rent, 504 Waukegan
Ave., Highwood.

ATTRACTIVE
3
large
room
apartment
with private bath, stove and refrigerator
furnished; laundry facilities, parking. $115
a month. Telephone ID 2-1877, after 6
ID 3-1278.
FOUR
room kitchenette apartment, second
floor. 2 bedrooms,
walking
distance to
school
and
transportation;
newly
decorated, heat and hot water furnished. $150
per month. Showa by appointment after
HOUSES TO RENT (Unfurnished)
July 4th. Telephone ID 2-1060.
(HIGHLAND PARK)
4% ROOMS. 2 bedrooms, stove and refrigBRICK 6 room house. 1% baths, 1 car gaerator
furnished;
available
immediately.
$135. Telephone ID 2-5041.
rage, circular
driveway,
fireplace;
furnished if desired.
1435 Deerfield place,
BRAND
new 2 bedroom apartment, availID
2-8321.
able
immediately,
call ID 2-5909,
after
6 p.m. ID 2-0120.
4 ROOM apartment for rent, second floor,
HOUSES TO RENT (Unfurnished)
2 bedrooms, sitting room, tile bath, new(DEERFIELD)
ly remodeled
kitchen,
private
entrance
and parking, all utilities furnished, adults
only.
Telephone
ID
2-1814.
4 bedroom Cape Cod
$160
4 ROOM
apartment
for rent on second
2
bedroom
house,
good
location,
basement,
floor, utilities furnished.
For more
ingarage
$150
formation call ID 2-7817.
LARGE
3 rooms, decorated, extra storage,
1 bedroom apartment, built-in kitchen, gas
patio use, utilities furnished, reasonable
heat
$132.50
rent. Highwood. Telephone ID 2-3187.
THREE room apartment in Highwood, close
to transportation,
shopping.
Refrigerator
and stove furnished. Inquire ID 2-4067 or
at 125 Maple, Highwood.
REALTORS
DELUXE TOWNHOUSE
Just 2 blocks to shopping and trains, in a 730 Waukegan Rd.
Windsor 5-1670
wooded residential setting, 2 bedrooms, excellent closet space, large storage attic, fully |
equipped kitchen, with
dining area, over- FIVE room Town House, newly decorated,
looking patio and garden. $250 per month
2 bedrooms,
basement,
garage,
walking
including
garage.
Occupancy
September
1
distance to shopping, transportation. Aufor 18 months. New longer lease available.
gust 1 occupancy, $150 month. Telephone
Telephone ID 2-4289.
WI 5-0905.
FOUR
room
unfurnished flat, 226 South
Central, Highwood. Telephone ID 3-1708.
HOUSES TO RENT (Unfurnished)
1st FLOOR,
3 room
apartment,
enclosed
(LAKE FOREST)
porch
and garage, working
couple preferred, rear entrance. 212 Everts Place,
3 BEDROOM
red brick ranch; full baseHighwood. ID 3-1627.
ment; 2 car attached garage; beautifully
3 BEDROOM apartment, 1 block from town
decorated, corner lot, choice Eastside loand school, 2 blocks from beach, $150
cation,
1 block west of Sheridan, $225
monthly, plus utilities. Telephone ID 2per month. Available immediately. Lake
5294.
Forest 1895.
NEWLY
decorated
3 room
apartment in BRICK ranch 3 bedrooms, 1% baths, recHighland
Park,
stove,
refrigerator
and
reation room with bar, fireplace, gas heat,
garage included, $80 monthly. Telephone
near schools, trains. Lake Forest 4433.
ID 2-2305.
3 ROOMS;
heat,
light,
water furnished;
HOUSES TO RENT (Unfurnished)
private entrance. Telephone ID 2-3786 after 5 p.m.
(MISCELLANEOUS)

Benj. Piersen Realty

5 ROOM

apartment, first floor, near schools

and transportation, available September 1.
HIGHWOOD
Telephone ID 3-1034.
PLEASANT
garage apartment, private en- 3 bedrooms, living room, kitchen and basetrance,
car
port;
woman
to work
in ment, gas heat. Immediate occupancy, $110
Call agent, ID 2-0474.
house, salary; man, experienced gardener
and handyman to work part time in ex- AVAILABLE
August
1, six room
house,
change for apartment. Telephone ID 2full basement, attached double car port.
1658.
Telephone Mr. Rones. HOllycourt 5-0736
mornings or evenings.
GREEN
BAY
and Deerfield Roads.
2%
rooms, 1 bedroom, complete kitchen and
WHEELING;
immediate occupancy, 3 bedliving room. $120. Telephone ID 2-6759.
room brick, sell or rent, option to buy,
excellent
condition,
electric
kitchen,
4 ROOM apartment, second floor, in Highfenced yard, garage. Telephone LEhigh 7wood, no pets. Telephone ID 2-3039, after
2816.
3:30. Rent $80 per month.
4 ROOM apartment, large grounds, $70 plus
4 BEDROOMS, 2 baths, living room, dining
utilities,
possession
August
1st,
adults
room,
kitchen,
oil heat. Available
Auonly. Telephone ID 3-1868 between 9:30
gust 11. North Hickory, Waukegan. Call
a.m, and 5 p.m.
:
Lake Bluff 1695.

Thursday, July 16, 1959

�hahah 9 as
Ca ees ig ieas ig aten
ARERR Poe
YT NE
VESTER

ie

me

Reiwea ‘ hts Hy

Be

beak

4 os)
"

TY

- HOUSES

HELP

TO RENT (Unfurnished)
(MIS CELLANEOUS)

About 8 miles northwest of Lake
Forest is this charming
Colonial
residence. On the first floor is reception
hall,
very
large
high
beamed ceiling living-dining room,
cabinet kitchen, maid’s room and

KRESGE'S
OPENING SOON
IN DEERFIELD

bath and master bedroom, dressing
room and bath. Upstairs are 3 bedrooms
porch,

and bath. Large
screened
3-car
attached
garage.

Monthly rental $300. References re-

Applications

quired.

SHAW
Lake

&amp;

Liberal
Free

40

Pleasant

4040

12

room

room,

transportation.

close

to

Telephone

ROOMS

Y%

and

2-1229.

ROOM

in

Copy

Department

5 day week, hospitalization,
other benefits.

THE

printing

vacation

BROOKSHORE

Sunset Ridge Road
Phone CRestwood

and

CO.

Northbrook
2-1200

GIRL
or woman
wanted
for
all-around
cafeteria work in Deerfield industry. Telephone WI 5-1990, Extension 226.
STAFF REPORTER
wanted by group of local, community newspapers;
education
or experience
in journalism is desired. Permanent position with
large company offering all benefits. Write
for interview giving education,
experience
and full information about your self, Box
J-45 c/o Highland Park News.
SALESWOMEN,
full time,
infants’
and
children’s
Deerfield
Commons
Shopping
Center. Telephone Glenview, PA 4-2224.

BEAUTY

OPERATOR

Good Pay, Good Hours
Excellent Opportunity
For Ambitious Person
Phone Lake Forest
RINALDO’S
BEAUTY
250 Market Sq., Lake

729
SHOP
Forest

SALESWOMEN,
permanent, full and part
time, Jr. and Teen apparel shop, Hubbard
Woods, no nights, good pay, discounts, air
cond., pleasant
surroundings,
experience

peeierenrs

OF

ROUTE

990

Linden

SECRETARY

Ave.,

Thursday, July 16, 1959

FOR

Hlllcrest

6-

to

Challenging

Assistant for well known physician,
ferred.
Excellent
salary,
pleasant
conditions.

Varied

NURSE
For Specialist’s office. 5 day week,
pleasant surroundings, top salary.
Permanent, active, responsible posi-

OFFICE

Must
have automotive
experience.
Salary
no
object.
Pleasant
working
conditions.
Employee benefits.
Merrill

Highland
2-5030

ADVERTISING

with sales exp. for new
photography
studio
in Highland
Park.
Exp. necessary.

NORTHBROOK
CRESTWOOD 2-1000

2-2234

ED

4-2708

of

Smith-Corona

and

and

Deerfield,

Be

exof

Line

FOR

FULL

GROCERY

TIME

STOCK

MEN

MEN,
part time work, school bus
Ritzenthaler Bus Service, NEwton

6901 GOLF RD.
MORTON GROVE
APPRENTICE

driver.
4-3900.

YOUNG

to maintain files of —

semble presentations, etc.in
munications department of

sulting

high

organization.

school graduate

asco}
co

Must

|

or better.

Knowledge of graphic arts help-—
ful but not required. Must have
own transportation. Call LI 4080 week days.

MAINTENANCE
ELECTRICIAN
Avon Products, Inc.
MAN
ence
psrgg

wanted,
white,
landscaping
preferred. Must be able to
Cristofer Landscape, Lake

est

a

ee

m4

DRAFTSMAN
SENIOR
&gt;

Opportunity

in

our

research

and

experience on mechanical and hy- |

DEPT.

draulic mechanisms,

601

SEARS
ROEBUCK
Central Ave.

DRUG
FULL
HI

SALES
TIME

6-6500

&amp;

CO.
ID 2-4600

Ke

Culligan, Inc.

PERSON
EVENINGS
Hubbard

degree

NORTHBROOK
CRESTWOOD 2-1000
HOTEL desk clerk, day shift, good start
salary, board and room. Apply in pe
Deerpath Inn, Lake Forest 2280.

Woods

EARLY
morning route man, 4 a.m. to 6
a.m., six days a week, use own car, married man preferred. Glencoe News Agency,
ee
VErnon 5-1600 or WIndsor 5KITCHEN help
evening work.
4 p.m,

M. E.

preferred.

Ill.

REGISTERED
NURSES.
Openings in pediatrics, obstetrics and medical - surgical
Modern 100 bed hospital. Living quarters
available on hospital grounds. Excellent
working conditions, 40 hr. week. Apply
Director of Personnel. Lake Forest Hospital, Lake Forest 5600.
SALES woman wanted for fine drug store.
Must be neat and intelligent. Experience
preferred
but
not
necessary.
Martin’s.
Lake Forest 5111.
NURSE-SECRETARY,
Winnetka, new air
conditioned office. Telephone Hlllcrest 66310, week days, or VErnon 5-1178, Sunday and evenings.
EXPERIENCED
office
nurse, part
time,
three mornings, one afternoon. Telephone
ID 2-4844.

man

gineer with one to three years of.

TIME

Apply:
Inc.)

MATERIAL SERVICE CORP. _

SECRETARY-STENOGRAPHER
Familiar with office procedures
and machines,
including
dictating
machines.
Excellent working conditions in new air-conditioned
offices.
5
day
week.
Excellent
salary. Telephone ID 2-7900.
SWITCHBOARD operator, 4 nights a week,
midnight to 8 a.m. Interviews, July 20
and 21. Telephone ID 2-3102 for an appointment.
YOUNG woman, 2 positions open for general office work. Typing necessary. One
position requires experience. Pleasant surroundings,
work
interesting,
educational
benefits. Telephone Lake Forest College,
Lake Forest 3100, ext. 52.
MIDDLE
aged woman, 3 days a week, 8
hour day with local business organization.
No experience necessary. Write Box W-70,
c/o Lake Forester.

MECHANIC

Night work. Steady job. Some mechanical
experience required. Ages 21 to 25. Call
Mr.
Hayden at BlIshop 2-2410 between 9 a.m.
and 11 a.m.
Rap |

development department for an en- |

PART

excel-

Roads

a

6901 GOLF RD.
MORTON GROVE —

The North Shore’s fastest growing
food chain, opening soon in Deerfield, offers splendid job opportunities

SALES

Marchant,

County

MAINTENANCE
MACHINIST
Avon Products, Inc.

SURE SAVE
FOOD MARTS

KLEINSCHMIDT
(Div.

GENERAL BINDING —
CORPORATION
1101 SKOKIE HIGHWAY
NORTHBROOK

WANTED—MALE

For information call
LOngbeach 1-5466

Excellent
opportunity for an
perienced
clerk-typist capable
meeting day-to-day challenges.

Waukegan

interview

usual materials, keep records,

STAFF REPORTER
wanted by group of local, community newspapers;
education or experience
a
journalism is desired. Permanent position with
large company offering all benefits. Write
for interview giving education, experience
and full information
about yourself. Box
J-45 c/o Highland Park News.

CLERK-TYPIST

Pleasant
surroundings
lent company benefits.

ORGAN STUDIOS
ID 2-2510

FULL time salesladies, experience not necessary; paid vacations, paid pension plan.
5%
days per week, good salary. F
‘
Woolworth, 600 Central Ave. Telephone
ID 2-9756.
EXPERIENCED
typist
and
secretary required for two days a week. Knowledge
of bookkeeping helpful. Field &amp; Shiller,
Inc., 1811 St. Johns. ID 3-0260.
WAITRESS wanted, full or part time, experience preferred. No Sundays. Telephone
Dini’s Fountain Lunch, ID 2-9724.

Park

RECEPTIONIST

Culligan, Inc.

LOWREY

PONTIAC

SECRETARY
You have always dreamed of being
a “Gal. Friday” for the advertising
manager
of
a national
concern.
Here’s your opportunity. To qualify,
you must be able to take dictation,
type
and
handle
special
assignments. Call Frank Mohr.

personal

ace

HELP

Johns
IDlewood

RN preworking

ORGANISTS
Male or Female
If you play or teach you can earn important
dollars in your spare time. Our new program provides every detail for successful
leisure earnings. Call for complete information.

tion. Call ID 2-4650.

68

St.

for

engineer.

SECRETARY,
efficient at shorthand
and
typing. Should know some accounting or
ee
Call Mr. Norr. DExter 6-

PETERSEN

i

Nurse for physician’s office and clinic. Good
salary.
Pleasant
furnished
apartment
if
wanted.

duties. Many benefits. Shorthand
required. See or call Mr. Jungherr, The City of Lake Forest,
220 E. Deerpath,
Lake
Forest.
Telephone 2600.

Frank

oe

Several secretarial and stenography positions
open in Highland Park and vicinity. Above
average starting salaries and opportunities
for rapid advancement.

position.

Apply

of office equip- —

CRESTWOOD 2-3700 —

AN EXPERIENCED

po ead REGISTRY
AND
PERSONNEL SERVICE
Suite 215
1866 Sheridan Rd.
ID 2-4461

APPT.

city

GENERAL

and assembly

PRODUCT DESIGNERS _

FITZGERALD

OFFICE

Mrs. Reed
VErnon 5-4000

ID

girl (or will

952

SOUTH

of fabricating

WE OFFER INTERESTING WORK, FIVE
DAY
WEEK,
MODERN
AIR _ CONDITIONED OFFICE, IN HIGHLAND PARK.
BLUE
CROSS
AND _ BLUE _ SHIELD,
ES aa BENEFITS. TELEPHONE ID 2-

CLERK

Sundays,
4 p.m.

2-8000

ENGINEERS

ment.

SWITCHBOARD-TYPIST

Light typing

WANTED—FEMALE

Pleasant work, for experienced
plant.

MILE

FOR

floor

NURSES

POSTING

PROCESS

A
challenging
opportunity
for top note ah
process engineers who can handle all phases —

tion.

ILL.

1949

acrnig

for

2-

These men will carry new products right
|
through from the talking stage into produc-

general

PERSONNEL

ID

Experienced bookkeeper wanted, very good
pay and fringe benefits, would like someone
who would want a permanent job. Call for
appointment or interview at ID 2-5561.
RAVINIA PLUMBING
WOMAN ,part time work, school bus driver.
Ritzenthaler Bus Service, NEwton 4-3900.

RELIABLE MAN desires board and room.
Locally employed. References. Contact Mr.
Clampitt, ID 2-5250 days.
HELP

Mrs.
ID

JOIN
THE GBC FAMILY
LOCATED IN NORTHBROOK

(WE WILL TRAIN)
THE FIRST
NATIONAL BANK
HIGHLAND PARK

Environment pleasant, work interesting. Commute — Why?
Spend
more time at home.

DRYDEN
HEIGHTS,

6,

ENGINEERS

Call

time,

ROOM

Saturdays and
7:30 a.m. to

CALL

CRESTWOOD 2-3700
GENERAL BINDING
CORPORATION
1101 SKOKIE HIGHWAY
NORTHBROOK

DOES someone have a room and meals for
an older pleasant refined woman
while
her daughter takes a vacation? Write Box
W-80, c/o Lake Forester.

&amp;

write

Come
in or call for personal
interview.
Employment office hours are 8:30 to 4:00
Monday through Friday. 8:30 to 12:00 Saturday.

WANTED

BOARD

Conditions

Permanent Job
With a Growing Company
Good Starting Salary
Opportunity For Advancement
Group Hospital &amp; Life Insurance
And Many More

Lease

shopping
ID

MACHINE

Working

after

4

HELP WANTED—MAL®

WANTED—FEMALE

BOOKKEEPER

NURSES

OPERATING

WORKING CLOSE TO HOME
IN A NEW MODERN OFFICE
HAS SO MANY ADVANTAGES

required, In business district. Call ID 28117 or Windsor 5-1869.
ROOM for rent near transportation, kitchen
privileges, suitable for older woman. Write
Box W-75, c/o Lake Forester.
ROOM
for rent, kitchen privileges, close
to transportation. Call after 5 p.m.,
2-7468.
SINGLE, light, airy room, hot water at all
times. Telephone ID 2-2684.
NICE,
comfortable
sleeping
room.
Tele__ phone ID 2-2531.
SLEEPING
room for rent, near shopping
__and transportation. Telephone ID 2-5208.
EAST side near lake and main station, for
one employed woman, comfortable room.
No transient. Usual privileges, $10. Telephone ID 2-1138.
ROOM with kitchen privileges, share sitting
room, near transportation. Telephone ID
2-3591.
ROOM
for
rent,
kitchen
privileges,
one
block from Central. Telephone ID 2-4685.

SLEEPING

or

HIGHLAND PARK
HOSPITAL
NEEDS

Young Women

RENT

and bath. $70 per month,

Telephone

2-7640,

BOOKKEEPER

rooms, by day or
PARK HOTEL sleepin;
11 Waukegan Ave.,
week, free parking,
Highwood.
NICE, big, front bedroom, nice location;
lady only. Telephone ID 2-1556.

ONE

clothes.

ID

Full time and part
duties; good salary.

Week

NORTH

SALESLADY

REGISTERED

Bonus

ARLINGTON

in

LAKE
FOREST
family
of
five
desires
newer 3 bedroom
home, close to town
by Sept.
Ist for 6 to 8 months while
ee
Call after 5 p.m. Lake Forest
3726.

TO

Policy

~ KRESGE’S

HOUSES
&amp; APARTMENTS
WANTED
(Furnished or Unfurnished)

ROOMS

your

Levi,
6674.

taken

To get your application

house, partially furnished,
Telephone ID 2-3576.

on

Insurance

Hour

CHARMING three bedroom colonial house
overlooking ravine in Highland Park. Secluded yet very convenient to transportation, business district and schools. Large
porch,
full
basement.
Semi-furnished.
Available September. $300. Box W-60, c/o
Lake Forester.
ROOM
Highwood.

Vacation

Christmas

HOUSES TO RENT (Furnished)
(HIGHLAND PARK)

3%

being

HELP

Well groomed mature woman, permanent
position,
selling
better
women’s apparel, unlimited opportunity, 5 day week, 30% discount

ful new store.

COMPANY

Forest

now

APPAREL

for all positions in our beauti-

Also
Six room country farm house on
North
Telegraph
Road
(West
of
Waukegan).
Living
room,
dining
room,
kitchen,
3 bedrooms
and
bath. 2-car detached garage. Monthly
rental
$100.
References
required.

HART,

"HELP WANTED—FEMALE

WANTED—FEMALE

eee as

eb

wanted, G.I. preferred for
Telephone ID 2-0440 after

DESPERATELY

need

experienced

wee
ag |
‘,
As

man to |

operate
elevator
in
new
home.
She
hours,
highest
wages,
fringe
benefits.
Pleasant surroundings in average
Ameri- |

can home. Call Mrs. O. W. Henry, Lake |
Forest 3717.
ae |
WEEKEND route man, full day Saturday, |
half-day Sunday, married man preferred. ¥
Glencoe
News
Agency.
Telephone
VEr$597
non 5-1600 or WIndsor 5-2331.

HANDY
outdoor

man
work.

wanted,

one

Telephone

day a week
WIndsor

for

5-1155.

Page 43

�WANTED—DOMESTIC

SITUATION

TOP SALARY
WHITE

WOMAN IN H.P. AREA
LIGHT HOUSEWORK

1 FULL AND 2 HALF DAYS
PREFER OWN TRANS,
ID

WHITE,

RECENT

THE

TELEPHONE

COOKING
WEEK

PER

REFERENCES

TELEPHONE

ID

IN

H.P.

AREA

2-1107

TEEN ager or older, Friday to Sunday, light
housework and baby sitting, Own room,
will consider room, and board arrangement
to otherwise employed person, Telephone
ID 3-0176.
| YOUNG
woman, white, plain cooking and
general
housework.
Attractive
quarters,
Other help
employed.
Telephone
LI 23354 collect.
WHITE woman for cleaning and or laundry,
2 in family. Whole or half days. References. Telephone Lake Forest 3828.
CAPABLE,
experienced
woman
for light
housework and help with cooking, 4 or
5
rye
Stay, references, Telephone ID 2-

COOK,

no housework, 5 day week, 10:30
through dinner, must have own transportation and local references, only experi€nced need apply. Telephone ID 2-2012.
GENERAL housework, part time, 9
to 12,
5 days a week, own transportation. Tele__
phone ID 2-4033.
EXPERIENCED

cook-housekeeper,

live in,

2 adults, recent references required, Top
wages.
Telephone
ID 3-0160,
139 Cary
Ave., Highland Park.
50
A-1
JOBS.
Cooks,
$50-$60.
Couples,
_ $400-$500. Maids and nursemaids, $45-$60.
No
fee. Shorline
Agency,
525
Lincoln
Ave.,
Winnetka.
Telephone
HI
6-5818.

EXPERIENCED

cook

for

family

of

four

adults, will meet to
wages for the right
gg
Stay or go nights, other permanent
elp, no cleaning, no laundry and no serving, recent North Shore references preferred. Telephone ID 2-1936.
| EXPERIENCED cook for one person.
Ref_ erences required. Current wages. Florida
winters. Call Lake Bluff 260.
SUMMER girl to assist with three children
and light housework, stay, references. Tele_Phone ID 2-8348.
PLEASANT
garage apartment, private enfrance, car port; woman to work in house,
Salary;
man,
experienced
gardener
and
handyman, to work part time in exchange
for apartment. Telephone ID 2-1658.
AUGUST 1, for one week, household helper
to assist grandmother
and 2 grandchildren. Prefer live in. Telephone ID 2-7699
or VErnon 5-0944.,
GENERAL housework, new ranch home,
no
basement, boys 9 to 14, new baby, have
vis
te Own room, stay. Telephone ID

CLEANING
woman for one day a week,
referably Thursday or Friday, must have
Ocal references and own transportation.
_ Telephone ID 3-1200.

EXPERIENCED

laundress

and

cleaning

woman, 3 days a week, must have own
transportation, references required, HighMand Park home. Telephone DExter 6-2200.

GENERAL
|
|

housework

care,

air

For

all occasions,

call

NORTH

SHORE’S FAVORITE MAGICIAN. Children’s shows are my specialty. For information, call Dave Echt, WI 5-0774.
RELIABLE
young man
will do odd jobs
around the house, inside and out. Teleysting ONtario 2-2028 or write Billy Wilams, 1102 Judge, Waukegan.
GARDENER
or caretaker, part time, experienced. In exchange for garage or cota Ag
self and wife. Call MIchael Park

THREE

high

school

seniors

will

do

odd

jobs
around
the house.
Good,
reliable
workers. Telephone ID 3-1322.
DECORATING
service,
interior,
exterior,
lastering. Telephone NOrmal
17-4328 or
Laza 2-3784, ask for Mr. Sisson.
DESPERATE college man needs work. Specializing in anything legal. No job too
small or too strange. Call Lake Bluff 1821.
EXPERIENCED
man
desires work.
Yard
work,
storms
and_
screens,
windows
mee
etc. References. Call Lake Forest
TWO High School boys will do inside odd
jobs, washing walls, ceilings, etc. References. Telephone ID 2-7986 or ID 2-8385.

Page 44

ID 2-8615

EXPERIENCED,
reliable housekeeper-companion for elderly lady or adults. Good
cook, excellent references, moderate salary
if allowed to bring well behaved pussy-cat.
Write Box K-5, c/o Highland Park News.
REFINED
elderly widow lviing in Northbrook
desires
position
as
companion
housekeeper or convalescent duties. A-1
references. Write box J-90, c/o Highland
Park News.
DAY work, 4 or 5 days, general housework
and ironing, references. Telephone MAjestic 3-6119 or ONtario 2-4838.
WILL do ironing in my home. Call Lake
Forest 2082.
EXPERIENCED lady wants 2 or 3 days a
Good references, Call MAjestic 3bem
day
like
would
woman
EXPERIENCED
Wednesday, Thursday or
work Monday,
Saturday.
References.
ONtario
2-2297
mornings.
WOMAN wants day work, experienced. References,
Call
ONtario
2-2028
Monday
through Friday.
EXPERIENCED
WOMAN
WILL
DO
IRONING.
TELEPHONE
ID 2-1022.
EXPERIENCED woman wants light housework, help with
children 4 to 5 days
week. Best references. If interested write
Mrs. Laura Bannwart, 2238 Ottawa Rd.,
Waukegan, IIl.
CLEANING
woman
with
top
references
wishes
Mondays,
Wednesdays,
Fridays,
while
regular
employer
is vacationing.
Call Florine McKinley, MAjestic :3-9664.
WOMAN
desires cleaning for Tuesday and
Thursday,
experienced
and_
references.
Telephone ONtario 2-8451, after 5 p.m.
RELIABLE: painting, landscape work, wall
cleaning, minor repairs. Telephone HIIIcrest 6-5818;
or SUnnyside 4-9626, evenings or mornings from. 6:00-7:30,
YOUNG
lady wants Monday,
Wednesday
and Friday day work. References. Telephone MaAjestic 3-8076 after 4:30.
HOUSEKEEPER,
white, desires work, separate living quarters for self and 14-yearold daughter. Prefer adult family. Telephone ID 2-7689.

GENERAL

housework

wanted,

Monday,

Wednesday,
Thursday.
Experienced,
excellent worker with finest current Highland
Sty references. Telephone BOulevard 8-

HAVE Tuesdays open, day work, good references, experienced, $1.25 per hour plus
carfare. Telephone ONtario 2-1627 after
4 p.m.
BOY, 16, can do odd jobs, lawns, cleaning
basements, etc. Telephone ID 2-7705.
RELIABLE woman desires cleaning or personal ironing,
also reliable young
man
to do window washing, walls, basements
or lawn work. MAjestic 3-7533.
EXPERIENCED
woman
desires day work
3 or 4 days per week, references. $12 per
day. Telephone DExter 6-1909.
TWO women want day work, 3 or 4 days.
References. $10 and carfare. Call MAjestic
3-5659, Katie Parks.

BABY

SITTING

WANTED: reliable woman for every Saturday night, occasional
week
nights, Ravinia area or own transportation, must
have references. Telephone ID 2-7463 after 12 noon.
WANT
high school girl to assist. mother
with 2 small children. Lake Bluff resident
preferred. Call Lake Bluff 1671.
WANTED
responsible woman, to take care
of children July 24th to 27th. Call WIndsor 5-2548.
COLLEGE
girl will care for children, exyin?
and reliable. Telephone
Lake
orest 1547,

CLOTHING

GLEN

COTE

FOR

THRIFT

SHOP

Starts Thurs., July 16
AND SUMMER CLOTHING
372 Hazel Ave., Glencoe
9-5
Closed Wednesdays

SPRING

HUSBAND
surprised
for sale.
Two
one
sweaters with mink
black sweater, white
er, brown trim; also
Telephone ID 3-0841.

HOUSEHOLD

me—new
wrap now
year
old
cashmere
collars and cuffs; 1
trim; 1 white sweatPersian lamb jacket.

GOODS

FOR

SALE

GENERAL Electric mangle, like new, used
very little, $100. Telephone ID 2-3557.

DAVENPORT;

twin chairs;

FOR

SALE

odds and ends.

Telephone ID 2-5124.
9 PIECE dining room set, good condition,
$50. Telephone ID 2-4821.
:
MATCHING couch and chair, $25; leather
breakfast nook, $25; portable Easy-Spin
washing machine, $25; sweeper, $2. Telephone ID 3-1416,

HOUSEHOLD

LONG

GROVE

FRI., JULY
Bring

%

your

mile

friends,

north

COUNTRY

17 AND
low

heels

and

Rts.

JULY

FAIR

SAT., JULY

of junctions

18
purse

83 &amp; 53

ANY
reas. offer takes round dining table,
chairs,
Easy
automatic
wash.
machine;
wool
tweed
rug
&amp; pad,
15x15;
round
mirror, 4 ft. diameter;
books; recorded
operas, with librettos; small Oriental rugs;
variety throw rugs; denim curtains, bedspread, charcoal &amp; aqua;
antique brass
fenter; children’s toys &amp; boks; brown &amp;
gold metallic draperies, lined, 8 panels;
kitchen tabe &amp; 3 chairs; Revere 8 mm.
movie camera;
misc. Thurs. only, 9 to
9, 2341 Lawndale Ave., Evanston.

FINAL sale. Moving next week. Best offer
takes: 17 inch Dumont console TV set;
king size head board and spread; drapes;
leather chairs; fireplace equipment;
mahogany
drum
table;
ranch
mink
coat;
various clothing; miscellaneous items. Reo
24 inch power mower. Telephone
VErnon 5-2582.
Saturday and Sunday
Washington Ave., Glencoe
Lamps;
rugs;
chair;
drapery;
chandelier;
miscellaneous.
2 MATCHING grey lounge chairs, excellent
condition, $35 each. 93 Blackhawk Rd.,
. Highland Park. Home after 5:30,
COMBINATION
Zenith 17 inch television,
double door mahogany cabinet, $75, game
table, lamps, miscellaneous. Leaving town,
aoe be sold this week. Telephone ID 3375

CLOSING
large home.
Double and
twin
beds,
dining
room,
bedroom
furniture,
Oriental and large domestic rugs, antique
sofa, chairs, tables, refrigerator, modern
gas range, steel porch chairs, bric-a-brac,
extra large andirons, fireplace equipment.
10 a.m. to 4 p.m. July 17-18. 81 W Laurel,
Lake Forest.
LAWSON love seat in good condition, portable washer, and bookcases. Lake Bluff
1671.
SIX month old all wool beige rug, 10x11,
Just cleaned, pad included, excellent condition; Conlon ironer, like new. Telephone
ID 2-5655.
KITCHEN
set with 6 chairs, chrome, formica pearl
grey; child’s training chair;
Sova - excellent condition. Telephone ID
combination,
book
portable bar, lamps,
:
item. 17 inch T.V.,
needs repair, $10. Telephone ID 2-9311.
STROLLER and buggy, excellent condition;
infant seat, Portacrib, Nursmatic and plastic bottles, electric sterilizer, high chair,
children’s miscellaneous furniture, T. 2 and

T.

3

girl’s

coats,

complete

GOODS

FOR

SALE

HOUSEHOLD

SALE! SALE! SALE!

IT’S HERE!

set’ of

Patty

Berg Signature clubs including bag, double
size Westinghouse wall oven and assorted
miscellaneous household goods. 982 Marion
Ave. Telephone ID 3-0176.
24x24”
WATER
cooler with connections,
used one year, $20; electric ringer type
wash machine with tubs, $30. Telephon
e
ID 2-5000, ext. 226.

JUST refurnished, must get rid of: Simmons
hide-a-bed, Beauty
Rest mattress
(never
used), green mohair; step table, blonde,
modern;
pr.
brass
candlestick
lamps,
matching shades; wrought iron TV swivel
table &amp; Snack tables; pr. matching gray
Velon oversized chairs; new folding camp
cots; lge. shadow box, plate mirror, hand
carved wood border; boy’s figure skates,
small; RCA
portable battery or AC-DC
tadio; 20” boy’s bike, medium wt., new
tires; floor lamp, marble bases 1) ou, fk;
G.E. refrigerator, exc, condition; R. C,
Allen std. typewriter &amp; stand; many misc.
items. 1690 Clavey Rd., Highland Park
after 6 p.m.
1827
CLAVEY
RD., Highland Park, 44”
tall upright piano in A-1 Shape; 2 Practice
typewriters;
Grandfather’s
Clock;
Dropleaf Mah.
table &amp; 4 Chrs; coffee
table;
Liv. Rm.
Chrs;
3-speed Garrard
hceanger
w/Hallicrafters
radio
in Mah.
Cabinet; Ant. Mah. foldover table; Console Elec. sewing machine; Dehumidifier;
Thor Wringer type washer; small Hoover
Vacuum;
like new
Formica
topped K.
Table &amp; 2 Chrs; 20 ft. Ext. Ladder; Hand
lawn mower;
White
Wedgwood
w/blue
grape border, service for 9; Inexpensive
double
bed,
chest
and
dressing
table;
Misc. ID 2-3064.

SALE

1% PRICE SALE

Hours

GOODS

DEPOT

WANTED—MALE

WALL
WASHING,
$8 per room, ceilings
and wails, 10x14; WALLPAPER REMOVING,
$12 and up, 10x14. North Shore
_ references. DAvis 8-6669.

‘MAGIC!
_

child

conditioned ranch home, 5 day week, stay.
Telephone ID 3-0128.
GENERAL housework, small family, 5 day
week,
stay,
own
room
and
bath,
refM ee
required. Telephone Hllcrest 6-

SITUATION
_

and

CURTAIN

Shore’s Only Curtain
Laundry
1825 Green Bay Rd., Rear
All work
done
by hand;
linens
‘urtains, blankets, drapes, etc.

DOWNSTAIRS

$60

HOUSEHOLD

WANTED—DOMESTIC

CLEANERS,
male
or
female;
couples,
maids, housemen. Experienced only. Mrs.
Baker, Shorline Agency, Winnetka. HIIIcrest 6-5818.

COOK
FOR

AND

SITUATION

North

3-0094

A-1

WANTED—MALE

COLLEGE student will wash and Simonize
your car for $11. Telephone ID 3-0620,
after 5:30 p.m.
HUSKY
16-year-old
wants yard work
or
what have you. Experienced in all types
of garden work. Libertyville 2-7639.

ALMOST
new
carpeting,
imported
grey
wool, 17-6x11-6, 9x10, 3x10, Beige 9x10.
Sunbeam animal clipper, wrought iron tea
cart and step table, book case, deep fat
fryer,
and
adding
machine.
Telephone
Windsor 5-3699,
MAHOGANY bedroom set, twin beds, dresser, 2 night tables; pair twin beds; walnut with leather backs and foot board;
hanging shelf; intermediate size desk; coffee table. Telephone ID 2-4843.
REFRIGERATOR
about
6 cubic feet, 4
burner gas stove, sink with storage compartment, all like new. Couch, arm chair,
cabinets, etc. Call Friday and Saturday.
Telephone WIndsor 5-0073.

16’ CHEST TYPE FREEZER IN GOOD
CONDITION, VERY REASONABLE. TELEPHONE ID 2-6677.
DINING
room
set, drop leaf Flues and
Orr Table, bleached oak top, black lacquered legs, four chartreuse upholstered
chairs. Telephone WIndsor 5-0296.
COLDSPOT refrigerator 8 cu. ft. Excellent
condition,
$40.
Telephone
Lake
Bluff
4463
ELECTRIC
stove and. refrigerator, reasonable. Call evenings and all day Friday,
Lake Forest 1180.
PHILCO % ton, 714% amp. window air conditioner. Telephone ID 2-8438.

16-17-18

EVERYTHING
IN OUR SHOP
IS GOING ON SALE AT A 25%
REDUCTION.
THERE
WILL BE
MANY THINGS THAT WE WILL
OFFER
AT
FAR
GREATER
VALUES,
EVEN
TO 50% NORMAL SELLING PRICE.
INCLUDED IN THIS SALE ARE
HUNDREDS OF BEAUTIFUL ANTIQUE PIECES OF FURNITURE
AND BRIC-A-BRAC.

THE

ELM

PL,

ID

MISCELLANEOUS

2-8866

RD., GLENCOE
Hill &amp; Franklin

AND A HALF WITH
DOOR. CONCRETE FLOOR
RAGE WINDOWS.

Fine collection of French Provincial furniture purchased from Richard Norton, which
includes exquisite dining room set, 2 arm
chairs, 6 side chairs, serpentine sideboard,
handsome
bedroom
set, antique secretary
with
cut
brass
doors,
French
Provincial
walnut finish. Pair of night stands, side
chairs, love seat, lamp tables, side tables,
planter tables and several odd Provincial
chairs, Everett spinet piano, large Regency
secretary with cut brass doors and antique
white finish with bachelor pull out, 90-in.
chintz sofa, matching Provincial arm chair,
black lacquer and mother of pearl inlaid
small commodes, pair copper lamps, books,
antique
small
Provincial
cabinet,
sterling
imported
holloware,
service plates, diversified set of fine dinnerware, crystal stemware, oil paintings and water colors, brass
fenders and pairs of andirons, tufted chair
and ottoman, collection of unusual miniature oil lamps, Campbell far east recreational furniture in pumice
finish (like new),
black wrought iron breakfast set, Paul McCobb
dressing mirrors and shelves, three
air conditioners,
large
double
door
GE
Frigidaire, Universal stove, hanging modern
lamps, assortment of luggage, brass sconces,
Pilot Hi-Fi like new, brand new clarinet,
modern
bedroom
furniture,
chests, desks,
draperies, iron double bunk beds, children’s
furniture, collection of dolls and toys, set
of left handed golf clubs, linens and many
more items too numerous to mention.
Conducted

UNIVERSAL
gas range,
excellent condition; dining room set, suitable for recreation room; mahogany Baker dining room
set, buffet
and
server.
All
reasonably
priced. Telephone ID 2-4718.
OVAL mahogany dining table, 2 leaves and
pads,
matching
chest,
4
Chippendale
chairs; lounging chair, book shelves, G.E.
washing machine. Telephone Lake Bluff
2745

RCA

Whirlpool washer and

dryer;
deluxe
models,
$200
the
pair.
Also Conlon mangle, $60. All in excellent
condition. Call Lake Forest 3231.
DINING
room group, floor sample, light
walnut Mt. Airy; 44-in. round table extends to 80 inches, 4 chairs, breakfront.
$595 complete. Telephone ID 2-5422, 9-5.
CARPETING, does not fit new home; must
sacrifice immediately, 65 yards Gulistan’s
luxurious Trianon, in beige color. Excellent condition. Telephone ID 3-1181.
11x17 RUG and pad, cinnamon color; Craftsman paint spray outfit. Telephone ID 31196,
BEDROOM
set, cherry French Provincial;
twin beds, dresser, chest, night table, 2
mirrors. Telephone ID 2-5113.
COMPLETE Hi-Fi in Herman Miller walnut
cabinet,
originally
$1,150,
will sell_for
$350; also Miller desk cabinet unit. Telephone ID 2-2313.
SMALL Baby Grand piano, short wave Tadio, trumpet with case, grate for fireplace. Telephone WIndsor 5-3333,

the

DOWN

$695
WALSH

PAYMENT

OVERHEAD
AND 2 GA-

E-Z

TERMS

FOR BETTER LIVING
Aluminum Specialty Products. Combination
windows, doors, awnings, sidings, porch enclosures,
jalousies,
gutters,
fencing,
lawn
furniture, ornamental railings, etc. Quality
and price wise see us before buying.
ERMO-TITE WINDOW
CO.
708 WAUKEGAN
RD.
DEERFIELD
WI 5-1198
ID 2-1553
FOR rent: garden tillers, cub tractor and
attachments,
lawn
mowers,
etc.
Lawn
mower
sharpening
service,
and
sales.
Telephone
ID 2-8029, 2070 Green
Bay
Rd.
Woody’s Highland Park Service Station.
NEED BLACK SOIL?
We are one of the North Shore’s largest top
soil and Nutri Soil dealers. We are also
equipped for avime | and spreading soil.

VE

6-7444

UNFRAMED
mirror,
24x24,
3 tier hors
d’oeuvres tray, silver plated water pitcher; glasses
and
ice cube
container
in
brass tray; suitcase;
girl’s clothes, size
10; boy’s, size 3 and 4; lace table cloth;
white
Damask
table
cloth; blue
linen
bridge
set and napkins;
pink
set and
napkins; place mats and napkins; single
gray chintz curtain; green chintz curtains;
also miscellaneous items, many new. Call
ID 2-7003.

of

HOME IMPROVEMENT CO.
2800 BEL\ “DERE
ON 2-8770
WAUKEGAN
IMMEDIATE CONSTRUCTION

by

MOVING:
GARAGE
SALE.
39-in. Hotpoint push button electric range, $40; 81inch gold tweed sofa; infant wear; boy’s
clothing, including hooded jacket, size 16;
ice skates, size 6; Detecto Beam
baby
scale; English folding baby buggy, $10;
car bed, stroller, baby car seats, 50c each;
Shoo-fly rocker, $2; baby gate, wood combination screen
door,
32x81,
$3;
white
formica, 14x73 inches, $3, 24x31 inches,
$1.75; bridge table with chairs, $7 set;
6x9
white
shag
rug,
$5;
Smith
typewriter, $10; comic books, navy blue
wool gabardine suit, size 40 short; pin
up lamps;
kitchen base cabinets; many
other items. 1144 Linden Ave., Deerfield.
Telephone WI 5-1943,

MATCHING

NO

GALLERIES
HI

SALE

GARAGES

SALE DAYS
THURSDAY, JULY 16, 10 A.M. to 4 P.M.
FRIDAY,
JULY
17, 10 A.M. to 4 P.M.
SATURDAY, JULY 18, 10 A.M. to. 1 P.M.

Sale

FOR

TOP _ SOILS
e HUMUS
e MANURES
@ PEAT MOSS e LAWN ROLLING e@
TREE
REMOVAL
e_
RUBBISH
REMOVAL
e GRAVEL
DRIVEWAY
REPAIRS @ WRECKING OF ALL TYPES
PHONE Jim Beinlich—VE 5-0513 or VE

Complete
furnishings
of this fine
North
Shore residence, including very important
French Provincial, modern furniture, accessories and bric-a-brac.

PICK

SALE

“Jim Beinlich Trucking handles all
following services for Homeowners:

HOUSE SALE
ON THE PREMISES
964 SHERIDAN
(between Maple

FOR

HOTPOINT
deluxe
automatic
wash
machine, G.E. electric range, full size. Both
in good
condition.
Telephone
WIndsor
5-0165.
LEAVING
town.
Beautiful
grandfather
clock, a perfect timepiece with Westminster chimes, reasonable. Also household
furniture. 15 Deerpath. Lake Forest 1088.
PAIR of rose fireside chairs, $75, excellent
condition. Call Lake Forest 4219.

RED SHUTTERS
480

GOODS

MOVING: MUST SELL. 9x9 fiber rug, $9;
9x12 grey carpet, $12; 9x12 beige tone
carpet, $50; 9x12 pad, $5; 2 occasional
chairs, $6; foot stool, $2; 2 cushion sofa,
charcoal, $75; matching chair, $25; light
wood desk, $25; chrome kitchen table, 4
chairs, $45; 5 drawer chest, $18; 3 cushion
couch, $20; dark bookcase, $7; wrought
iron telephone stand, $3; 3 shelf metak
stand, $2. Telephone WI 5-0478 before 5.

IM

5-0513

BEINLICH
or

VE

5-1195

ALL TYPES MANURE
AVAILABLE
Large supply of cattle, horse
and mushroom mawommis
deliver any amonut.

VE

BEINLICH
or

5-0513

VE

5-1195

WALL MURALS and reproductions painted.
Call Mr. M. Wikstrom for estimates. WI
5-0618 after 4:30 during week. Week ends
open.
a
NEW
4
hp. 21 in. power mower w:
sulky ond Modelidr attachment, cost $385,
too large for lawn, will sell for $175. 2744
Summit, Highland Park. Telephone ID 26056.

OPENING,

Saturday, July 11th, the Antes

vegetable
year,
At
Deerfield

stand.
Same
place
as_
Stackel’s
Green
House,
Rd., Highland
Park.

last
1928

GUNS for sale: 14 inch Dyniscope reflecting telescope with eye pieces and Equatorial mount, $25; reconditioned Stevens
single shot 22, $20; Lewis percussion target rifle, like mew, very accurate, with
ammunition,
complete
$75;
Argus C-4
35mm camera, flash, light meter, filters,
the works, $80; Marlin lever action 22,
good condition, $37.50; Terni carbine, bolt
action, fine condition, $17.50. Other guns
in excellent condition. Telephone ID 2SWIMMING
pools,
2
family doughboy
Pools in good condition. One is 18 ft. in
diameter
and other is 23 ft. diameter.
Currently
set
up
and
operating. Also
Trampoline for $80. Call Paul Voisard,
Windsor 5-4662.
_

HELP

LARGE Chess set, Chinese washed gold
and silver, $125. Also, 4 inch Sim ivory
set, $35. 10 Chinese paintings, 2 pair of
bowls, 2 screens, 2 scrolls. Telephone VIIlage 8-5428.
ji

TOW Truck, steam cleaner, electric welder
and battery charger, wheel balancer, cash
register,
Victor
adding
machine,
check
machine. Can be seen at 745 Waukegan
Road, Deerfield.
GARDEN tractor, sulky, 6 h.p. 3 reels for
72” cut, excellent for large lawn. All garden
attachments
available,
$325.
Telephore VErnon 5-3555 or ID 3-0264,
LEI KAM’S Home Grown Vegetables. We
are 2 miles south of 59A on Milwaukee
Ave. Everything for your freezer or canning. Pickles, sweet corn, etc.
LIKE new: Larsen twelve foot car top boat,
Portable electric saw, electric hand drill,
Indian
rugs,
pottery,
rummage.
3116
Greenwood, ID 2-1930.
LIKE new Smith
ard, $110. Call

Corona Pacemaker standID 2-7500 after Saturday.

BOY’S 24” English racer, hand
condition. ID 2-8049.

brakes,

good

VORNADO W100C, custom air conditioner,
fresh air, filtered, odor neutralizer, dehumidification and exhaust, like new, $125.
Telephone WIndsor 5-2810.

Thursday, July 16, 1959

�is

ill Pi

iC)

AN

eae

:

Open

Mon.
Sat. &amp;

ON

TERMS

thru
Sun.

Fri,
9-6

9-9

Rambler

wagon;

R-H,

OVEREUIVE

oe

Na

Edsel Citation conv., full
DOWOD sich Woe
$2195

LODE“

SRONA

1958 Pontiac

POTTERY AT
REDUCED PRICES

1958

ous... $ 795
Gea ee ea $2695

Metropolitan
Conv., R|S RBS aN fee eRe Baa EY tae OR $1295
Ford conv., R-H, Fordo.,

Round maple table and 4 Captain’s chairs,
$99.50; maple hutch cabinets, $79.50; maple
chairs
and
rockers,
bargain
prices;
1957
Beautiful lamps less than wholesale;
bird
baths, $2.95 each; good buys on bedroom
1957
and
living room
furniture;
stainless steel
sinks, $15 each;
good
buys on linoleum
1957
and carpeting; children’s swing sets, $19.50;
new and used soil pipe, $1.50 &amp; up; swimming pools,. $5. and up; ping pong tables
1957
with nets and
paddles,
slightly damaged,
$14.50;
metal
wall
cabinets,
$7
&amp;
up;
office desks, $19.50 and up; doors, $3 and
1957
up; heavy duty power mower with surrey, |!
$165. Many
other items too numerous to,|'
mention.
1957
COME
IN AND
BROWSE

1) gah 18

ogtaeageniaia
te Ne ere atin Oe $1695

Word’ Ssdrs Rees 2o3 8 $1195
Ford Thunderbird; R-H,
BUYS BRIE?
aici catcess
at nciaes $2895
Ford
9-pass.
Country
Sedan; R-H, Fordo. ...... $1795
DeSoto 4-dr. hard top,

PURI DWP cs av alan
ei tads $1595
Buick 4-dr. Super hard
FON 5 aie aiclimaveientesls. $1695
Pontiac 2-dr., R-H ........ $ 795
Ford
Victoria;
R-H,
auto trans., pwr. str. ...$ 945
Ford conv.; R-H, auto.
CPHNS 5 WWE: BULLE ae sceacs $ 995
Mercury 9-pass. wagon;
Berths WLOLOOs: 62s alice $1095
Ford 2dr
ReMi $ 745
Chevrolet wagon, R-H ..$ 595
Cadillac 4-dr., full pwr. $1395
Plymouth wagon, as is ..$ 295
Ford Victoria ................ $ 595
Pontiac 4-dr.; R-H, HyLT a)
oe a a
hema ae $ 245
Ford 2-dr.
$ 245
Rambler Station wagon $ 195

1956
1955
1955
1955
1955)
1954
1954
1954
1954
1953
1952
1951

ID
ID

DENO

CONSTRUCTION

&amp; CORP.

ID
Open
Open

1954,

INSTRUMENTS

FOR

SALE

ONLY 1 LEFT
FROM SALE!
Used Hammond Chord organ, fruitwood finish, new organ guarantee, take over monthly
payments of only $23,53.

1795

St. Johns

AUTOS

to

5

e

e

*

MUSICAL

INSTRUMENTS
for used
2-2510.

WANTED

spinet

TO

WANTED
pianos.

Tele-

BUY

SET of walnut tables, pair of lamps, brass
tea cart, pair of chairs, white sofa, contemporary, almost new. ONtario 2-7567. |
USED GO KART, IN GOOD CONDITION.
TELEPHONE ID 2-6234 AFTER 6 P.M.

LOST

&amp; FOUND

FOUND:
German shepherd dog, male, on
Bradley Rd. Call Lake Forest 2553.
LOST:
child’s
glasses,
combination
black

and

clear plastic frame.

Probably

lost in

vicinity of Wilmot School baseball field.
Name on frame, Edward Hoffman. Telephone WIndsor 5-5218.
$50 REWARD.
Black,
Labrador mongrel
lost, male, answers to name of Chipper.
Telephone ID 2-8752.
LOST: folding aluminum table, Yacht Club
beach, please return to Y.W.C.A. or call
ID 2-0675.
LOST, West Highland white terrier, short
haired small dog looks like white Scotty.
Yellow or green collar. Child’s pet, named
Andy. Reward. Call Lake Forest 558.
LOST: Diamond wrist watch, stretch band,
on Deerfield Road, or in town Friday,
July 10th. Reward. Telephone WI 5-3172.

‘Thursday, July 16, 1959
be oka.

se-

ALTERATIONS

AUTO

SERVIUE

WM. RUEHL &amp; CO.
GENERAL BODY SHOP
NOW OPEN
Body and Fender Repairs
All Makes - All Models
Complete Painting,
ASK
48Y

P.M.

E.

and

FOR

e

Finance
money.

Park Ave.
Highland

your

Touch

JACK

car

Ups

the

One
application
lasts
for
200,000
miles
without RING and VALVE JOBS. In short
Motaloy keeps new motors running like new
for life of car and makes old engines run
like new again.

P.O.

SALES

of ILLINOIS

Box
253—Phone
ID
2-3166
Highland Park, Illinois,

TID
Park

bank

way

and

BICYCLES

CYCLE &amp; HOBBY SHOP
486 Central
ID 2-1369

KARMANN

GHIA

repairs.

BLACK
ae

dirt, gravel
Dordand,

aunt
types
4NOR

TD

MOVING—Local

BUSINESS

1959,

SERVICE

and

Distance—one piece or a truck
ing, crating,
shipping.
Ward
telephone ID 2-0087.
CARPENTERS,

CONTRACTORS

&amp;

JO?

DRIVEWAYS
DRIVEWAY COATING
Applicators for Latex coatings. Renew and
weatherproof
your driveways.
Also Latex
coatings for asphalt shingle roofs in colors.
AL
1-0377
HI 6-3730

ENTERTAINMENT
CHILDREN’S
parties, bands, aqua shows
(for club or private pools) for any type
of entertaniment.
Call H.D.O.
Productions, ID 2-1240.

FAST,
if special

1875

St.

FAST
service

Johns

—

try it today

RY

Highland

Park

Telephone

Lake

WI

5-5117—after

PAINTING

&amp;

FURNACE

HORSES

&amp;

and

exteriur,

3366.

12

noon

Batural

of

~

:nterior

Dieacned

wo

PAINTING

AND

PAPER

HANGING.

terior and cnet
painting. For q
workmanship
y
experienced,
c
men call W. C. Varney, WI 5-0654.
PAINTING and paper hanging, reason
prices; free estimates. Telephone A.
Priddy or Peter Gallos. Lake Forest
CONGER
BROTHERS
PAINTING
DECORATING
SERVICE.
Paper
h
ing. Telephone ID 2-3452—ID 2-3053. |
=

PETS
SIAMESE kittens, 10 weeks old, male
female, housebroken, adorable pets,
Call MAjestic 3-9044.
PERSIAN
kittens, creams, blues, red
black. Show type, champion backgroun
Round Lake, KImball 6-2815.

GLENCOE
BOARDING

and

3

KENNEL

|

Glencoe
VErnon 5-1
South of Dundee Rd. on the
Service Drive of Edens High’
@

North Shore’s newest and
Boarding Kennel.
Private inside heated stalls
outside
individual
connecting
runs.
it
Expert grooming of all bre
by professionals.
Under the personal direction 0
{
Elaine Ortman.
Kennel Shop features all acc
sories.

PONIES

INSTRUCTION
GARINO MUSIC STUDIOS
North Shore’s Finest. Instruction on accordion and guitar; instrument furnished. Inhice h about our trial plan. Telephone ID
15.
PIANO
INSTRUCTION
Hank
Winston,
staff pianist
at WBBM
CBS.
Call WI 5-0244 after 7:30 p.m

Westphalen
Von
DACHSHUNDS.
known for their consistent show q
@ cho last year, 2 on their way this y ir,
raise
kitchen
of
care
excellent
and

PRICES

PAID

&amp;

GARDENING

MODERN LANDSCAPING. For the best in
lawn maintenance and garden work telephone Jack Vena, ID 2-5266.

LANDSCAPING

New lawns, black dirt, humus, top dressing.
manure, planting, lawns fertilized, tree work,
stone work, arr
scorns

one year
FOR sale German Shepherd,
childr
with
good
obtainable,
papers
sh
have all shots. May be groomed for
.
5-3063
or
$100. Telephone WInds
E Schnauzer pups, AKC
, W
spre dis A for town or country
children, $75 and up.
with
derful
jestic 3-9044.
registered, shots, wonder
reasonable. Telephone.

or b
RABBITS, babies or adults, black
and white. Telephone ID 2-4556.
black-s
puppies,
Shepherd
GERMAN
Blue-Boy sired, excellent
Champion
5-16
brook
position. Telephone CLear
months, s
8
ream,
blue-c
cat,
IAN
PERS
sé
ground,
Champion back
type,
Te)
because of long distance move.
Windsor 5-3678.
K Labrador male pups. AKC:
stock. Marvelous with children, t
ar
OLiver 8-4619. Algonquin,
RE®RIEVER _PUPPIES.
GOLDEN
registered. Splendid pedigree, litter chi
see @
Ist. Come
to go Aug.
now. Hillcrest 6-5134.

registered, 2. months

INESE, AKC
ACRES

LANDSCAPING,

LAWN

TWO
CARE

Grading, plowing, hauling, fill dirt, black
top soil, rotted cow manure, top dressing
seed rolling. Telephone WI 5-0818.
FRANK VENA
LANDSCAPING
Call me for the finest in lawn care, tree
removal, top dressing, patio work, fertilizing. Telephone ID 2-5494 after 7 p.m.

MURRAY’S

Complete Tree Service
Pruning
Tree
Removing
Spraying
@ Fertilizing
Make
arrangements now to have undesirable trees removed this winter.
Winter rates for tree removal 15% less
than normal price.
Fully insured
Free Estimates
HIllcrest 6-5524

male,

white,

Poodle,

E

ARG
with children,
2-2552.

and

ger

PRAIRIE

F,

Some are show prospects, all will make
delightful pets. Priced according to shov
potential, starting at $75. Call TEnn
7-8640, Bartlett, Ill. P.S. Sorry our w
haired. Dachshund pups sold except
a 7 mo. female show prospect.

I

For all ope of junk brought to our door,
such as:
Papers, rags, iron, metal, etc. Or
call IDlewood 3-1466 for free pick-up. We
specialize in industrial accounts. Hours daily
including Saturday, 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
HIGHLAND
PARK
WASTE
MATERIAL
1466 Berkeley Rd.

t’s, M_ and

b &amp;

reds

have

We

pups.

JUNK

GENERAL

DECORATING

decoraung,

isbing;
quality
workmanship.
kor
maung
call bric Schneider, Libe
;
2-8592.
PAINTING
and
decorating;
outside
cialty. Fully insured. Lake Forest
Telephone any time.
PAINTING AND DECORATING
Up to date methods
Careful workmanship
Color coordination
Interior and Exterior
LOOM PAINTING CO.
ID 2-5544.

REPAIR

BEAUTIFUL chestnut mare, half Arabian,
half saddle horse. This horse is very well
mannered
and well trained. Price $525.
Also handsome bay geldng, mostly Morgan. Very well trained, gentle. This horse
is being ridden by a 10 year old girl.
Price $325. Must sell these horses because
I am
going
away
to school this fall.
Call Lake Forest 359.
SPOTTED mare, 5 years old, ridden English
and Western, also jumps. $225. Call Lake
Forest 3024 evenings or Sundays.

LANDSCAPING

&amp;

PAINTING

GUTTERS
replaced or repaired, cleaned,
ainted with A-1 rust preventative. Careul expert work. Also, wire screening supplied and installed. Telephone ID 2-6362.

@
@

Forest

NELSON
LANDSCAPE
SERVIC
Maintenance
- Rototilling
Black Dirt - Fertilizer
Patios - Lawns Put In
Expert Sod Work

FENCES

JOHN

SERVICE

desired,

gua
_

FENCING, ALL TYPES—chain link stockade; post-rail, etc—Manufacturer installer
Chain Link Fence Corp. OR 4-8700 or
MUndelein 6-7789.

})

SHIRTS

_

anteed.

Loui,

load. Pack
Anderson

FOR building that new home, addition, o:
remodeling,
be it large
or small,
ca!
V &amp; F Construction Co. Telephone [i
2-5477 or WI 5-2980.
RELIABLE
experienced carpenter. Remou
cling, paneling, porches and Hi Fi rooms
siding. H. Blomquist
Construction, tele
phone WI 5-2830
CHRISTO-CRAFT REMODELING
CO.
WI 5-3273
ID 2-2319
Remodeling and home maintenance is our
business.
Porch enclosures, basement
paneled
room
additions,
kitchen
cabinet,
or
just that one door that doesn’t close right.
All work guaranteed.
B &amp; K CONSTRUCTION—Why
not have
that new rec. room now! We specialize in
kitchen,
attic, porch
and
basement
remodeling. Now is the time! Call us about
your remodeling problems. Free estimates.
Telephone WI 5-4182 or WI 5-4454.
CONCRETE
or stone patios, brick barbeques, home maintenance, remodeling and
room
additions. For free estimates call
Lake Bluff 3632, R. A. Goodman Construction.

OPPORTUNITY

ACCOUNTING
LEVEL
bookkeeping
and
tax service available;
Chicago
accounts
only.
Will
sell immediately.
RAndolph
6-3193.
GAS station and equipment, low inventory
and two bay; good corner location, 42A
and Everett Rd., Lake Forest. Call Lake
Forest 5187 or WI 5-0047, evenings.

construction,

—

22-4917

HIGHEST

BOATS

new

~

ELOF T. CLAUSON

The finest in tree work, patios, landsca)
and maintenance. Insured. Satisfaction

generai nauling. We also nove «
of sousehold appliances. Call ID ?
ar

“URNIETURE

SOIL

and fie, lawns graded.
telephone
NEwton
4

EVINRUDE
outboard
motor,
7%
H.P.,
like new, less than 20 hours, $135. Telephone Lake Forest 1559.
164%
FOOT
Lyman
runabout,
35 _ horse
Johnson motor, electric start, top, cover
and trailer; in perfect condition.
Telephone ID 3-1506.
134%
FT.
Aristo-Craft
Sea
Flash
Master
Craft
Trailer,
30 HP
Mercury
motor,
steering wheel, remote control. Telephone
CRestwood 2-0177.
12 FT. runabout Niles craft, and steel trailer
and 40 h.p. Mercury motor, 2049 Hervey
Ave., No. Chicago, Dexter 6-1423.

BUSINESS

Also

patios, drives, walks, foundations or general
construction
and
additions.
25
years
experience,
work
guaranteed,
insured
and
bonded.
Also
general
hauling.
Free
estimates. Telephone ID 3-1298.

GOOD
condition: used girl’s 20” Schwinn
and boy’s 16’ Schwinn, both have coaster
brakes, best offer. Telephone ID 2-0519.

1956 CHEVROLET engine and powerglide,
complete, ready to run, $295 firm. Telephone ID 2-1498.
KARMANN
GHIA
convertible, 1958, 10,000 miles,
AM-FM-SW-Blauplant
radio,
auxiliary heater, country horn, tan with
brown
top,
private
owner,
serviced
by
VW only. $2,750. Call ID 2-6905.
1951 PONTIAC for sale, good condition and
good motor, $150. Telephone Lake Forest
5234 for information.
BUICK
1955 Special Estate wagon, $1200.
Also Buick 1953 Super Riviera, $500. Both
in excellent condition. Single owner. Lake
Forest 2934.
1956
CHEVROLET,
4 door,
8 cylinder,
power steering, power brakes, R., H., 30,000 miles. $1300. Lake Forest 2391.
only 3,000 miles. New condition. Dolphin
Blue. Morningstill 1.30 at Onwentsia Club
i ea George Pavelich. Extras ww tires,
radio.
1957 LINCOLN Premier coupe, full power,
private owner. Must sell. Best offer. May
be seen at Standard Station, Skokie and
Deerfield road.
55 OLDS 98 convertible-Starfire-black with
red leather-power windows, brakes, steering, and top. $1250. Lake Forest 5334.

necessary

save

BIKES—Boy’s or Girl’s Used and
Reconditioned. Some
like new—a
few Schwinns.
Most, but not all
sizes. Also repairs and parts for all
make bicycles.

SOTO,
1955, Fireflite. Clean, 4 door
sedan, 2 tone, radio, heater, full power,
original
owner.
$850.
500
Waukegan,
Highwood, ID 2-8914 between 6 and 9
p.m.

VOLKSWAGEN

General construction and repairs. We specialize in repairing leaking or cracked basements,
rough
floors,
walls
or any
other

GUTTERS

2-5845

LOW COST AUTO LOANS
LAKE FOREST 5100
FIRST NATIONAL BANK
OF LAKE FOREST

4 DOOR CONVERTIBLE
Frazer 1951, Phaeton body, flame red, immaculate condition, red leather upholstery,
radio, heater, whitewalls, power
windows,
hydramatic. One of few left in mint condition, $750, or trade. Telephone ID 2-8592
after 8 p.m.
DE

DENO CONSTRUCTION &amp; CORP.

FRECH

LOANS

BLACK

TOP dollar
phone ID

4-door

Now, two locations to serve you better for
custom clothes and alterations.
THE SILVER NEEDLE
HIGHLAND
PARK, ILLINOIS
1866 Sheridan Rd.
610 Laurel Ave.
Phone ID 2-7118
Phone ID 2-1774
LOOK chic for summer with shorter skirts.
Ask
for Eda.
Zengeler
Cleaners,
Inc.,
1905 Sheridan Rd. Telephone ID 2-2800.

An atomic energy product that scientifically
tin-plates worn combustion chamber parts
WHILE YOU DRIVE. Raises compression,
increases gas mileage and stops oil burning.
Prevents carbon formation, removes carbon
and checks acid corrosion. Makes starting
easier in all kinds of weather.

9-5

BABY
grand Baldwin piano, condition excellent. Call Lake Forest 5099.
LOWREY
organ, fruitwood, one year old,
must sell this week. Telephone ID 2-1498.
UPRIGHT
piano for sale, excellent tone.
Telephone ID 2-7808.

180A,

FIRST NATIONAL
BANK
nf Highland Park

MOTALOY

Sat.

Telephone

WANTED

Undercoating

A.M.

$195.

WANTED to buy: 1950 to 1955 convertible,
good condition, from private party. Call
evenings after 7. Lake Forest 5046.

AUTO

ID 2-2510

9-9 Daily

grill,

MERCEDES-BENZ,

Park

Already used by over one million motorists,
saving them an average of $100 every year
in gas and repair bills. Also smooth running
engines with good compression bring better
prices on the ‘“‘trade-in.”” GUARANTEED
AND INSURED. The cost is low. For further information write or telephone.

LOWREY
Organ Studios

needs

dan, 3 months old; private owner. Priced
reasonably for quick sale. Telephone ID
2-3779.
1958 CHRYSLER
New
Yorker,
beautiful
condition, low mileage. Telephone ID 25852.
1952 FORD, 2 door, good tires and good
heater,
nice
interior.
Telephone
ID
27740, mornings or after 6 p.m.
1958 PLYMOUTH
wagon,
like new, economical, 6 cylinder engine, private owner. Call Lake Forest 928,

8 A.M. to 9 P.M. Daily
10

door,

2-4270.

1959

2-8640

Sundays

LIONEL train set, 8 cars, coal loading station, barrel car, 2 switches,
cross-over,
extra track. Telephone ID 2-7511 evenings.
6 YEAR
crib and mattress, $12; 26 inch
girl’s Schwinn bicycle, $15. Call Lake Forest 2735 after 6 p.m.

MUSICAL

Highland

——

4

1958
CHEVROLET
convertible
Impala,
fully equipped, all power, 300 HP motor;
suburban driven only, brand new. Telephone ID 2-7338.

Holmes Motor Co.
1909 St. Johns

'

88,

2-2442.

Auto
General construction and repairs. We specialize in repairing leaking or cracked basements,
rough
floors,
walls or any other
necessary
repairs;
also
new _ construction,
patios, drives, walks, foundations or general
construction and additions. 25 years. experience; work guaranteed, insured and bonded.
Also general hauling. Free estimates. Telephone ID 3-1298

Super

MG-A,
1959, ROADSTER:
beautiful red,
black leather interior, hardly used, reasonable.
May
accept
trade.
After
9
p.m., phone
Lake
Bluff 5236.
1958 VOLKSWAGEN,
low mileage, in excellent shape, $1375. Can be seen at 1850
Green Bay Rd., Highland Park. Telephone
FORD,

Bonneville conv.,

PULLMOWeP

“GAS
range Universal, 40 inch, four burner, fine broiler and oven, excellent condition. $35. Telephone WIndsor 5-3606.
MOTORCYCLE
engine, Crosley front and
rear end, Crosley engine, home made racing car frame to fit hot rod. Call WIndsor 5-3075.
CORONET power mower, 21 inch reel with
sulky,
2
years
old,
perfect
condition.
Craftsman power mower, 18 inch rotary,
5 years old, good condition. Telephone ID
2-4978 or ID 2-5524.
2 PASSENGER home made go cart with 2
h.p. Reo engine,
best offer. Telephone
ID 2-1939, after 7 p.m.
BABY
equipment
for sale, lowest prices:
Thayer crib; mattress; car seat; collapsible
stroller; play pen; gates; bassinette. Telephone ID 2-4097.
20 INCH
Pincor power mower, reel type,
used twice since sharpening and general
overhall, $30. Baby’s bathinette, used 3
months. Call Lake Bluff 3140.
OUTBOARD motor, 12 H.P. Excellent conga
used very little. Call Lake Forest

$1895

1958

2500

1955,

black, clean, power brakes, hydramatic,
radio, heater, original owner. Can be seen
at Woody’s Highland Park Service Station,
2070
Green
Bay
Rd.,
Highland
Park.

FOR NORTH SHORE’S
FINEST A-1 USED CARS
1959

SELL

7

OLDSMOBILE,

SEE HOLMES

LEHIGH 17-0247
WE

ES FOR

ot

SHOP AND SAVE AT
STOCKADE TRADING POST
WHEELING, ILLINOIS
516 N. MILWAUKEE AVE,

female.

and

black

to be given
Bluff 2811.

Call

2 black

away,

pan

6

MUndelein

and

white ki
Call

trained.

ERMAN SHEPHERDS, AKC. 2 femal
. 1 male, $30 each; shots. 2055 Techny
Telephone CR 2-0355.
,
AKC BLACK miniature poodle puppies
old, male and female.
: 8 weeks
4-3036.
raised. Telephone NEwton
ho
kittens, healthy, trained,
IAMESE
choco!
. raised with dog; seal point and
or
days
5-5700
WI
Peet,
Mrs.
Telephone
WI 5-0222 evenings for appointment.

like

look

white

Scotties;

mother

and White
iy ‘bees model for Black AKC.
TeleScotch ads. 3 months old,
‘
phone

pis

ALpine

oy

broken,
derful

1-1867.

ups for
fornales,

home

pets.

raised. Don’t

AKC

silver gre
old, Looe

sale; two
11 weeks

registered.

Call ELliott 6-5639, Lake

shed;

won-

Reasonable.

Villa.

— ~ Page45

—

�REMOD.

&amp; HOME

=ee

MAIN.

=]

HOME IMPROVEMENTS
AND REMODELING
LARGE

OR

SMALL

JOBS

ESTIMATES
FURNISHED FREE

‘EM

REPAIR

Sakrete

+

Blacktop LIQUID SEALER!
and

=

Sakrete
No

=

COMPLETE HOMES
BUILT TO ORDER
ON YOUR LOT OR OURS

... TO

BLACKTOP DRIVES FAST!
*

PROMPT
EXPERT
SERV.
BY UNION
MECHANICS

as

BLACKTOP

Heating!

No

(ready to use)

BUILDERS

MUTUAL

:

Phone

ID 2-0027

AAA

PLAN TO REMODEL NOW! Get our low
pre-season
estimate
without
obligation.
Bathrooms, kitchens, additions, enclosures
a specialty. Terms—NO MONEY DOWN.
Telephone
Lake
Bluff
4023
before
10
a.m.,
after 4, or write
P.O.
Box
56,
Lake Bluff.

FOR SALE — LAKE

FOREST

Ordinance.

ROOFING
ROOF
1-0377

TREATING
SERV.
HI 6-3730

SEWERS
BERNARD’S SEWER SERVICE
Quick service for clogged or slow main sewers, cleaned and opened with electric rod
equipment. We service any type drain. Also
catch basins and spetic tanks cleaned. LEhigh 7-0232, Wheeling.

SEWING MACHINES
SINGER

SEWING

MACHINE

Complete Sales and Service
Free Home Demonstration
Repair on All Makes of Machine:

TELEPHONE
TRAILERS

&amp;

Living

ofACE

HALE TRAILER SALES
House trailers and travel trailers; we bu‘
and sell. 1920 Sherijan Rd., North Chicago
(2 blocks north of naval hase)
TREE

the

above

living

is

room)

patio

of

(off

colonial

the

brick

family
ranch

room)
in

and

Lake

Forest.

terrace
This

home has everything found in Lake Forest executive’s homes PLUS many
extra features seldom found at this price. For example: LARGE ROOMS:

ID 2-3811
TRAILER

Pictured
(off

SURGERY

WING’S TREE EXPERTS.
Cutting, trim.
», removing,
feeding
and
repairing
spraying. Fully insured and bonded; free
estimates.
Telephone ID 2-6546 or KIm
ball 6-2292.
G &amp; N TREE EXPERTS.
Trimming, teec
ing, repairing, guying and removal. Full:
insured. FREE
ESTIMATES.
Telephon:
ID 2-8750. ID 2-5481
WINTER
rates now in effect for tree re
moval. Completely insured. Jim Beinlich
VE 5-0513.

room

is

17’

x 29’ with

studio

ceiling

and

window

wall;

master

bedroom is 20’ x 15’ plus bay. KITCHEN: has all usual built-ins
PLUS a wall refrigerator-freezer. FAMILY ROOM: paneled, double
fireplace.
Extra playroom
(tiled and wood paneled wall in basement.
Extensively landscaped acre; stockade fenced for privacy. 6
blocks to commutation. Offered at $65,000. Call Lake Bluff 4057
(Mrs. Jones )or L.B. 166 (office) for information.

Stuart &amp; Co.
Exclusive
32

Center

Agents

Ave.

Lake

Public hearings on the zoning

classification on property to be annexed
to the City may be held by the Plan Commission either prior to the date the annexation of such property shall become
final, or not more than sixty (60) days
after such date of annexation.
Upon the
conclusion of such public hearings, the
Plan Commission shall recommend to the
City Council such changes in the zoning
classification of said annexed property as
it shall deem necessary, or required.
_ At said public hearing and at any adJournment thereof, an opportunity will be
afforded
to all persons
interested to be
heard in relation to said matter.
HIGHLAND, PARK PLAN COMMISSION
Norman J. Schlossman, Chairman
APPL 3-59
7/16-23/59—209

CEDAR
SHINGLES?
Don’t
Neglect
Them

SUBURBAN
Call ALpine

Board of Education
School District No. 111
The Board of Education, School District
No. 111, Highwood, Illinois, solicits bids for
pick-up anod
disposal of rubbish
at the
Oak Terrace, Wayne
Thomas
and Northwood schools.
Service should include one pick-up weekly at each respective school.
p
All bids are to be submitted in writing
to the Board of Education, 240 Prairie Avenue, Highwood, Illinois, before 12:00 Noon,
Wednesday, August 26, 1959,
The
Board
of Education
reserves
the
right to reject any and all bids.
Charlotte Bye
Secretary, Board of Education
7/16/59—206
PUBLIC HEARING
HIGHLAND PARK PLAN COMMISSION
NOTICE
IE HEREBY
GIVEN
that a
public hearing will be held in the Council
Chamber in the City Hall, City of Highland
Park,
Illinois
on Wednesday,
August
5,
1959 at 8:00 P.M.
Said public hearing will
be conducted by the undersigned, the Plan
Commission for the City of Highland Park,
designated and appointed by the Mayor and
City Council of said City, for the purpose
of considering an amendment to Section 4-7
of the Highland Park Zoning Ordinance of
1947. Said Section to read as follows:
SECTION
4-7.
Any
and
all property
which may hereafter be annexed to the
City as “B’”? Country Home District until
differently classified by amendment to this

Mixing!

SERVICES OF HIGHLAND PARK, INC.

FOR FREE ESTIMATES
PHONE ID 2-1553

HOME

GOT

FOR

RECREATION ROOMS AND BARS
ROOM
ADDITIONS
ATTIC
ROOMS
AND
DORMERS
BATH
AND
KITCHEN
MODERNIZING
PORCHES AND PATIOS
GARAGES AND CARPORTS

DAVIS

WE'VE

==

eee

Bluff,

Il.

PUBLIC HEARING
HIGHLAND PARK PLAN COMMISSION
NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
that a
public hearing will be held in the Council
Chamber in the City Hall, City of Highland
Park,
Illinois
on Wednesday,
August
5,
1959 at 8:00 P.M.
Said public hearing will
be conducted by the undersigned, the Plan
Commission for the City of Highland Park,
designated and appointed by the Mayor and
City Council of said City, for the purpose
of considering an amendment of the Highland Park Zoning Ordinance of 1947. Said
proposed amendment
consists of the add-

ition of an Article
ing Ordinance,

as

the

G-1

12-A

to the

and

Research

creating what

Office

1947 Zon-

is to be known

District,

to permit
certain
administrative
research
and business organizations, which do not detract from: residential desirability, to locate
in areas and act as transitional districts between a transportation network, Class I industrial
districts,
and
certain
residential
districts.
_ At said public hearing and at any adjournment thereof, an opportunity will be
afforded
to all persons
interested to be
heard in relation to said matter.
HIGHLAND PARK PLAN COMMISSION
Norman J. Schlossman, Chairman
APPL 4-59
7/16-23 /59—210

HIGHLAND

PUBLIC
PARK

HEARING
PLAN COMMISSION

NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
that a
public hearing will be held in the Council
Chamber in the City Hall, City of Highland
Park,
Illinois
on Wednesday,
August
5,
1959 at 8:00 P.M.
Said public hearing will
be conducted by the undersigned, the Plan
Commission for the City of Highland Park,
designated and appointed by the Mayor and
City Council of said City, for the purpose
of considering
an amendment
to Section
16-5 of the Highland Park Zoning Ordinance
of 1947,
Said Section to read as follows:
SECTION 16-5. Accessory buildings may
be built in a required rear yard, but such
accessory building shall not occupy more
than 30 per cent of the required rear
yard, provided, that such restriction as to
the percentage of occupancy of the rear
yard shall not apply to Class F multiple
family
dwelling
districts
abutting
upon
an alley, accessory buildings may be built
at the rear yard line where such rear
yard line abuts upon an alley, and such
accessory building may extend to the side
of lot lines of the property upon which
the accessory buildings are erected without restriction as to the percentage of
the rear yard occupied by said accessory
buildings.
At said public hearing and at any adjournment thereof, an opportunity will be
afforded
to all persons
interested to be
heard in relation to said matter.
HIGHLAND PARK PLAN COMMISSION
Norman J. Schlossman, Chairman
APPL
5-59
7/16-23 /59—211

3%
lake—charming

5-bedroom,

5%

bath

home

with

studio

ceilings,

first floor family room overlooking spacious back yard and ravine, separate 3room garage apartment over 2-car garage. Property over 1% acres on beau-

@

tiful Waverly

®

Refinancing

@

Construction

@

No

Rd.

EARHART

and

COMPANY

New

REALTORS
1899

Sheridan

Road,

Highland

Park

For

Appt.

Phone

ID

2-0880

P.

Lake

Public Notice
Notice is hereby given that the Board of
Education, School District No. 111 County
of Lake, State of Illinois, will receive bids
on homogenized, Grade A milk to be furnished to the children of the Oak Terrace,
Wayne Thomas and Northwood schools in
half-pint
bottles
during
the
school
year
1959-1960.
Service wil begin approximately
October 1, 1959 and end June 1, 1960.
Bids will be received in the Superintendent’s office, 240 Prairie Avenue, Highwood,
Illinois, until 12:00 Noon, Wednesday, August 26, 1959.
:
The Board of Education reserves the right
to reject any and all bids.
Charlotte Bye
:
Secretary, Board of Education
7/16/59—205
BOARD
OF
EDUCATION
SCHOOL
DISTRICT
NO.
111
;
The Board of Education of School District Number
111, Highwood, Illinois, will
receive bids in the Superintendent’s office
until 12:00 Noon, Wednesday, August 26,
1959, on a maximum of 135,000 gallons of
No. 5 fuel oil, to be delivered to the Oak
Terrace,
Wayne
Thomas
and
Northwood
schools during the period October 1, 1959,
to September 30, 1960.
Weather watching
automatic delivery service to be furnished
by bidder.
:
Bids should conform to government specifications CS-12-48.
Tank capacities are as follows: Oak Terrace School—9,000 gallons; Wayne Thomas
School—3,000 gallons; Northwood School—
10,000
gallons.
The
Board
of Education
reserves
the
right to reject any and all bids.
CHARLOTTE
BYE, Secretary
7/16/59—208
Board of Education
PUBLIC
NOTICE
PUBLIC NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN
that the Board of Education, School District
Number
111,
County
of Lake,
State _of
Illinois, will reecive bids for re-charging
and testing fire extinguishers at Oak Terrace,
Wayne
Thomas
and
Northwood
schools in the Superintendent’s office, 240
Prairie Avenue,
Highwood,
Illinois, until
12:00 Noon, Wednesday, August 26, 1959.
The
Board
of Education
reserves
the
right to reject any and all bids,
CHARLOTTE BYE, Secretary
7/16/59—207
Board of Education

Lawn - Boy
Power Mower Exchange
Sales and Service
Tired of Hard Starting
Tired of Trouble

Trade that balky noisy
mower
GET

Yrs.)

JOHNSON
Special,

46

LAWN-BOY

by Makers

FREE

18-in.

ONE

of:

- EVINRUDE
_........... 74.50

Deluxe, 21-in. ............
Quer:
6...
oo
Automower, 21-in. ....

99.50
114.50
134.50

YEAR WARRANTY
ACT NOW

FREE DEMONSTRATION
HIGHEST TRADE ALLOWANCE
LOW
DOWN
PAYMENT

LAWN-BOY MOWER REPAIR
SERVICE — Reasonable Rates
If your Lawn Boy needs service—
bring it in for Dr, Lawn Boy to
doctor.

MOWERS

ee

ST'T0'COAS

CORT TORES’

McRAE

1804

eee.
OWNED

Market Square
Page

now...

NEW

TODAY

Loans

Forest

THE

HOMKO—30-in. Ride Reel, Elec.
Starter, Briggs &amp; Stratton Engine.
Was $495.00
Now $399.00
(Floor sample—one only)

Closing Costs
A.

| Phone:

30

Board of Education
School District No. 111
The Board of Education of School District Number 111, Highwood, Illinois, will
receive bids in the Superintendent’s office,
240 Prairie Avenue, Highwood, Illinois until
12:00 Noon, Wednesday, August 26, 1959,
for the following:
Snow
removal,
without
call from
the
District
office,
before
8:00
A.M.
from
driveways and parkways at the Oak Terrace,
Wayne
Thomas
and
Northwood
schools
at times
when
city snow
plows
clear streets, for the school year 1959-1960.
The Board of Education reserves the right
to reject any and all bids.
Charlotte Bye
Secretary, Board of Education
7/16/59—204

RIDE

Mortgages
(Max.

Mr. and Mrs. Charles D. Spencer,
1619
Ravine
Ln.,
announce
the
birth of a grandson, Charles Bruce,
born June 29 at Evanston Hospital
to the Bruce F. Spencers, Glencoe.
He is the couple’s first child.

*
*
*

MORTGAGES
Near

Charles D. Spencers Announce
Birth Of Grandson, Charles

NATIONALL®
ORGANIZED

Lake Forest 3998

Thursday, July 16, 1959

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new WHITE models, too. . .now at BLUMBERG’S. . .see why more and
more homemakers are “switching to WHITE”.. .the finest values in
home sewing since 1876.

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in,-you'll find a WHITE for you. ..at BLUMBERG’S.

WHITE PORTABLE
foot control.

AS

LOW

complete with carrying case and

AS

25¢

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DAY!

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FREE

DELIVERY

—

HIGHLAND

PARK

OPEN

THURSDAYS

‘TIL 9:00

«

SINCE

J-

1900

Blasi

JUST
ture

SAY
659

“Charge
CENTRAL
STORE

AVENUE
HOURS:

— _
P.M.

ID 2-9400

�at

tess

a

ae

Wash

‘n

Sport

Wear

Shirts
and

transitionals pretty
enough
.both

in

for a party

for

little-or-no-iron
dacron

Ivy Slacks
boys 8 to

18

1. Combed cotton shirt with permanent collar stays, needs little or no ironing. Can
be worn in or out. Assorted plaids or stripes.

and

1.95
cotton
2. Polished
cotton
sateen
slacks
forized, crease-resistant.
Ivy style
pockets.
Assorted
colors.

are
sanwith tab

3.95

1. Lace and
and sleeves;

ball fringe
a handsome

at neck
band of

Brown

transitional

or

sheath
A

sparked
Jewel

necked

beauty

with

bowed belt and embroidered skirt.

Brown

or

green,

10-16.

with

two

ropes, in an olive
print. Sizes 12-18.

\V

\

‘
golden

©

|

green
&amp;

a

«f

1
1

10.95

25.00
(Fashion

2

Yo
£

22.95
2.

sf

4

i

oe i
vee

skirt.

Room)

4
a:

e,°e

black net, lace and ball fringe
encircling
the
10-16.
green,

(Boys

*Henry

Corner)

Rosenfeld

(Daytime

Le

Dress)

—
.
:

See

THURSDAY

NIGHT

is
you'll

your
find

NEW

it in Highland

Park

SHOPPING

NIGHT

at

rnd €
Phone

Two

Hours Free Parking

ID 2-4700

in our Lot - Hours 9 to 5:30 Daily; Thursdays 9 to 9

�</text>
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Thursday

July

9, 1959

a

ee

19

Deerticl koview

Newcomers Club Gives Check
To Library Board President
To Purchase Reference Books

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with Highland Park

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The

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Member The Federal Reserve System
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Corporation

�Vol.

34,

No.

Thursday,

18

9, 1959

‘PLAN COMMISSION WILL HEAR
PETITION FOR VILLAGE RESERVOIR

New Sign Of Welcome

~y

July

The Deerfield Plan Commission will meet Thursday, July
16 at 8 p.m. in the Village Hall to hear four petitions. Frank
T. Curto is chairman. Commission members are Lester Moate,
Peter Weinert, Mrs. G. F. Clampitt and Carl Bagge.
The Village is asking a conditional use for the construction of
an underground storage reservoir
with necessary controls and ap-

Township Budget
For Road And Bridge
Posted And Approved

purtenances

Percy
McLaughlin,
West
Deerfield Township road commissioner,
approved and presented a budget
|for $67,067.83
to Mrs. Kenneth

of the
Public

and

appropriation

nance
for
purposes,

road

and

plans

Forest

for

the

ordi-

of

at the

C. Ullmann,

Deerfield

the

of

left, is president

Robert

of Commerce;

Chamber

Smith is a member of the Junior Chamber of Commerce, representing Keith Nickoley, président of
the Jaycees, and Frank Sweeney of the senior Chamber of Commerce, inspect one of the signs.

The

Goes To Church
Sunday Morning

A referendum will be held Saturday, August 15, from 12
noon to 7 p.m. in the Wilmot School District 110 to complete
and equip Woodland Park and South Park Schools and provide

facilities at the Wilmot site for a junior high school.
“Wilmot School District 110 has
provided
an
ample
number
of
classrooms for academic instruction
during the staggering growth period of the past five years,” stated
David
Whitney,
president
of the
board of education.
Since 1954, District 110 has add-

ed

43

classrooms

to

give

them

a

_ total of 50 rooms which will be
available for use this coming school

term. During that same period the
enrollment has increased over 1,000
pupils! Mr. Whitney went on to
say
that
school of

develop

“The
comprehensive
today which
strives to

the

diverse

interests

and

; varying capacities of each individual child, as well as providing a
strong academic program, must be
equipped with facilities other than

classrooms.”
District 110 has highly developed
programs

in music,

tion,

and

art,

physical

health

educa-

services.

In

1959-60: they are anticipating the
development
of a guidance
and
foreign language program.
Latest statistics show that when
compared
to national
norms,

Wilmot

Schook,; pupils

rate

very

Legion Post Will
Install Officers
Monday Evening

Fields,

sexton,

8:30

that

Holger

Ericson,

about

junior

vice

com-

mander;
John
Barnes,
chaplain;
George Shaeffer, sergeant-at-arms.
Emden Mielenz has been appointed adjutant.

and
who
had
handled
another
family of skunks for the police several weeks ago in the 1400 block on
Waukegan Rd.
The air was cleared in time for

the

church

and

Sunday

school

services,

Plan Membership
Exams

For

To

Held

Be

New

Police

Tea In Evanston

Saturday

The board of police commissioners of the Village of Deerfield will
hold
examinations
on
Saturday,
July 11, to establish an eligibility
list for positions on the Deerfield

Police Force.
Commission

members

are Hunter

high in all areas.
“We are already lacking facilities
in physical education, music, art,
and for administrative purposes,”
said Mr.
Whitney,
“and
will be

Johnson,

will be for Junior

High

completely overtaxed-in our junior
high by 1960-61 unless we increase
the size of our school plant.” ~
The bond issue: being proposed

and whatever

classrooms

Hubert

William

Hertel

and

N. Kelley.

other

as recently brought

survey.

attending

facilities
will

out by a school

the. Democratic

Women’s

Club of the 13th Congressional District membership tea on Thursday,
July 16, in the Evanston home of

of

president

membership

and

in
also

chairman of the. tea.
.
Special guests. will be-Democratic
State Representatives Jack Bairstow of Waukegan, 31st District,
J. J. Lelibelt, 5th; B. M. Peskin,
6th;

Jeanne

C.

Hurley,

7th

Ave.

Greenwood

of

corner

and Waukegan Rd., to be changed
from’its present R-3 one family
classification to R-5, except the

re-

presently

is

family

which

a section of the B-2. Central Busiauction
delete
District to
ness
rooms, dante halls and manufacwhich is
processing
or
turing
clearly incidental to retail use,
limiting employment to not more

include
of

Delmar

Wilmot

the village;

Woods,-

Rd.,

Sanders

not

inside

Rd., etc., both

will be
motor

allotted
fuel

some

of the

state

Mrs.

Kenneth

ordinance.
Petitions

Vetter,

is

at

602

Deer-

quali-

R-1

the

to

be

to

property
one

R-1-A

for

zoning

in

put

allow

family

dis-

trict for the property on the west
side of Wilmot Rd. (not now in
1132
approximately
the village)

this board.
newcomers

R-1-A

classification

annexed

ly

Frost, Walter Page, Anthony Mercurio and Eugene
Seyl, comprise
Hall

For

Another petition to be heard
that evening is the request of the
Benefit Association of Railway employees for a change in the zoning
ordinances which require all new-

town clerk and the five justices of
the peace, Michael George, Bruce

Town

sec-

These

processing.

are to be taken out of the

tions

The West Deerfield Township
board of auditors will meet Friday,
tomorrow, at 7:30 p.m. in the Town
Hall. Karl Berning, township supervisor;

or

turing

consider

to

in the .manufac-

10 persons,

than

tax.

district.

is

petition

third

A

the

for repairs and snow removal.
This year, for the first time, Mrs.
Vetter
states,
that the
township

feet north of the Lake-Cook County Line Rd. and east of the Toll-

fied to vote may register, weekday
mornings from 9 to 12 noon,

way.

REFERENDUM PLANNED AUGUST 15
FOR COMMUNITY SWIMMING POOL ~
The Deerfield Park District board. met last. Tuesday
evening. Plans for the new community swimming pool were
shown. The pool and bath house will occupy about one-half
pool

is

designed

to

according

Park,

acre site in the southeast corner of Jewett
the architects McFadzean and Everly.

to

accom-

modate a community of from 15,000 to 20,000 population, according
to statistics. The cost is being estimated and will be released as soon
as all details are completed.
Deerfield residents will be asked

Deerfield’s share of the. one-half
of one cent of the 3-cent sales tax
for April amounts: to $2,515.89.

to

This

approve

a

bond

issue

for

the

Deerfield Gets More Sales
Tax To Pay For Village Hall

is less than

the March

construction of this pool on Satur-

of $3,623.89. This money

day,

for

August

15, when

polls

will

be

open in the Wilmot and Deerfield
Grammar ‘Schools, 12 noon to 7 p.m,
In

addition

will

vice

is
to
as

which

field,

first

State

one

swimming

is

Bank

for an amendment
Ordinance of 1953,

feet

Mrs. Russell Packard. Mrs. Harry
Sholl of Trillium Ln., west of Deercharge

be needed at the other school sites,
board

Mrs. Karl Berlient will be among
the Deerfield. women who will be

as recom-

R-5

The

Demccratic Women

the

system,

110

The

the situation. They called Mrs. J.
H. Ohlhaver of 694 Deerfield Dr.,
who knew how to catch skunks

the

of

south

field Rd., where

Mr. Ericson called the police department
and
Officers
Thomas
Rogge and Paul Kaehler surveyed

of

amended, for property at the north-

the

The

water

part

expansion

zoned

morning.

Mrs. Ohlhaver To The Rescue

Deerfield Post 738 of the American Legion will hold its annual installation of officers on Monday,
July 13 at 8:15 p.m. in the Legion
Memorial Hall.
John R. Johns will be the new
commander, succeeding Edwin Gillin. Robert
Broege
is to be installed as senior vice commander;

Edward

A mother skunk and her young
one went
to church
on Sunday.
They were found in a window well
on the north side of the Christian
Education
building
of
the
Deerfield Presbyterian Church by

the

located.

the

Deerfield

west

Town Board Meets
Tomorrow Evening

Skunk Family

DAVID WHITNEY EXPLAINS NEED
FOR WILMOT SCHOOL REFERENDUM

are

the

mainder of the fund is used on the
roads in the unincorporated areas,
section

=

New signs, welcoming visitors and newcome rs to Deerfield, have been erected at the four
approaches to Deerfield on the north and south ends of Waukegan Rd. and the east and west of
Deerfield Rd. There had been some discussion about legibility of the printing...
Arthur

areas

for

petitioning
the Zoning

township in which those incorporated

of

mended, by Highland Park and by
engineers.
who
prepared _ several
surveys for the village.

bridge

parts

rear

West
Deerfield
Township
Library and Town Hall at

Deerfield

The ordinance had been on file
for public inspection since May 29
and was
approved
by the Town
Board on June 23. Funds from this
budget are allocated to Deerfield,
Bannockburn,
Highland Park
and

Lake

the

860 Waukegan Rd.
This reservoir is

Vetter, town clerk, on Tuesday
morning, June 30. It is the tentative
hudget

at

premises of the Village Hall at
850 Waukegan Rd. and at the rear

ask

to

pool,

voting

the

residents

park
to

for

the

district

approve

a

referendum of $295,000 for acquisition and improvement of approximately 35 acres_in three parcels
for park-school sites.

‘Also,

on

August

15, .. Wilmot

School District voters will be asked
to approve funds to complete and

the

On

Village

July

amount

is paying

Hall.

1, the

Illinois

sales tax

was
increased
one-half
cent,
so
Deerfield now pays 314 cents sales

tax.

The

newly

legislated

one-half

cent will go to schools for educational purposes. It will be allotted
at.so much per pupil.

equip Woodland Park and. South
Park Schools and provide for the
building of Junior High facilities
at the Wilmot

site.

beet

�Are Many Alleys

DEERFIELD FORUM
Opinions
columns

expressed

do

not

in

these

necessarily

have

con-

Manager
To

By

Referendum

Ordinance

the

jority

It seems

them.

there

executive

apparent

to build

this

is

up

afoot

tinct

pressure

must

be

puzzling

to

the

law, no individual
has
any
power

trustees

as

The

are

it

to

legislative

and

are

dis-

in

not

as

the

federal

work.

managers,

for

the

past
eight
years,
have
been
by
ordinance. That is, they have been

hired by the village board,

are re-

sponsible to the board, and have
exactly as much authority as the
board chooses to give them. Powers

a body.

Individual trustees have power or
authority only as far as the ma-

With

they

Deerfield’s

president’s
authority
as _ liquor
commissioner.) Municipal power is

in

between

gives

When the village grows so large
that the volume
of work
is too
great for such volunteer help, a
paid
full-time
business
head,
or
manager,
is necessary.
You
can
use a manager
in either of two
ways, by ordinance or by referendum.

whatever in himself (except for the
vested

board

functions

as

unpaid

for this.

Under Illinois
board
member

They

government.
In
many
villages,
board members not only make the
laws, but also attend to executing
the business
of the village. The
effectiveness
of this depends
on
the amount of time and devotion
a trustee is willing to give to this

many people, and should be made
clear.
President
Holmquist,
Manager
Owens and their respective predecessors are all sincere, I am sure,
in
believing
manager-by-referendum would bring greater efficiency
to village operations. At the same
time, I believe it is safe to say
that most village trustees, past and
present, oppose it. There are good

reasons

the

Division

for a referendum
on the subject
of village managers.
Considering
the fact that Deerfield
has
had
managers for approximately eight

years,

of

Explained

Editor:

a movement

300 words.

should contain the name and address of the writer, whose name
will be withheld if requested

stitute the opinions of the paper.
Letters
should
be brief and

Versus

less than

may

be

added

or

(Continued

on

taken

away

page

by

15)

Editor

Let's Talk It Over......
Enlargement

of the

water

system

and

ment plant are major issues in Deerfield.
been aware

The
taken

July

for enlarging

16 when

the

Plan

request
of the Deerfield
Village
Board for a variance in the zoning

to

allow

an

underground

storage

tank to be constructed at the rear
of the Village Hall, 850 Waukegan
Rd. and extended at the rear of the
new
Library-Town
Hall
at
860

Waukegan

Rd.

The Illinois State Sanitary Water
Board
in Springfield has,
for’ a
second time, ordered no more sew:
er
extension
permits
until
-the
treatment plant is enlarged.
Who plays for these extensions
and enlargements? Many residents
have already paid for two sets of
sewers and first, for bringing the
water from Highland Park in 1913

and later for enlarging the system.
The old-timers seem
to be
the
“goats”

We

of continued

believe

taxation.

that

these

big

time

developers who
have caused
this
need
for more
water
pipes
and
larger
sewage
treatment
plant
should pay for the expansions.
. -|

and

not

ready

and

the

been

are

people

taxed

Bar

May

Journal

Sized

so

have

many

al-

times

Lots

Hysteria

issue

has
vs

of

an

Odd

the

Illinois

article

“Odd

Shaped

Opin-

ions” written by Paul Peter Black,
which
His

lem

fits Deerfield.
article concerns’

of

sewage

treat-

Village officials have

odd

sized

lots

the

of

water

system

Commission

will

hear

record,

necessary.)

. . . the members

of the

local
zoning
board,
sitting
as a
hearing agency, are more prone to

an

application

for

a

variation on the basis of local politics, personal
knowledge
peculiar
to individual but not all members
and pressures from various property owners associations and other
! Page

4

Utility Company
Executive Retires

“What brings this problem into
sharper focus is the large number
of cases
appealed
to the
lower
courts through the traditional remdies
of
declaratory
judgment,
The
article
continues:
“The
granting
of a variation does not
flow from the largesse of a municipal corporation.
Rather,
it is a
duty imposed upon a city or village
from the enabling legislation itself,
if the conditions under the Act are

be exercised as to deprive the own-

er of any existing property of its
use or maintenance
for the pur-

pose to which
SR

it is lawfully devot-

“If zoning boards were acquainted with what is commonly regarded
as universally accepted and fundamental propositions of law, perhaps
more petitions for variations could
be properly determined at the local

level, without
attendant

the expensive

in litigation.”

delay

Almon

Air Station.

members.

Christy Merry, age 2, daughter
Merry
Mrs. Richard
and
of Mr.
her
and
Rd.,
Deerfield
of 2160
the
into
off
strayed
dog
little
woods north of her home and got
lost, Monday morning.
The Deerfield volunteer fire de-

was

called,

For Many

of

men

the

Families

Binard
William
Mrs.
and
Mr.
at
a new home
purchased
have
Trail
Ln., Indian
Cherokee
2945
Co.
Realty
Viking
from
Estates
and have moved from 708 Hermitage Dr. Col. Harold Hayward (retired, U. S. Army) and Mrs. Hayward have bought the Hermitage
house vacated by the Binards.

George

The

Ralph

wood

S.

Rd.,

Peterson,

930

a

Knoll-

division

vice president
of Commonwealth
Edison Company, retired July 1 to
mark the end of a 37-year career
with the utility company.
Peterson has been in charge of
Commonwealth’s
Chicago-Central
division
operations
since
1953,
serving
originally
as
commercial
manager before being named to his
present post in 1956.
He
started
with
the _ electric
company
as a draftsman in 1922
and
subsequently
became
chief
draftsman,
line
design
engineer

and

head

of the

company’s

trans-

mission engineering department.
A
graduate
of Lewis
Institute

(now

Illinois

Institute

of Technol-

ogy),
Peterson
is
a_
registered
professional engineer. He is a fellow of the American Institute of

Electrical Engineers and a member
of the Western Society of
ers and the Physics Club

Engineof Chi-

cago.

several

years

His

affiliations

for

have

included

also

the

Central Lions Club and the Ground
Hog

club,

an

organization

of

con-

struction and utility men who have
worked underground.
Veteran
son
is
a

of World
member

family

Abernathy

moved from 1027 Greenwood Ave.
to 1117 Osterman Ave. The Allen
apartthe
from
moved
Danners
ment at 861 Waukegan Rd. to 1027

Deerfield,

War I, Peterof
the
33rd

qe

Greenwood
the

made

Ave.

Realtors

Viking

sales.

Division War Veterans’ Association
Commonand
and the Deerfield
wealth Edison Posts of the Amer-

ican Legion. He is past master of
the Deerfield Lodge, A.F. &amp; A.M.
Married for almost 39 years, Mr.
Peterson and his wife, the former
Irene
Macadie,
first met
as students at the Deerfield
Grammar

School.

A

I. Edwards
Deerfield.

daughter,
(Doris)

Mrs.
also

William

resides

Anyone

interested

may

obtain
additional
information
by
writing
to him
at his Deerfield
address or to the Naval Air Station

It Was Moving Day

R. S. Peterson

Ave.,

J. Frost of 759 Osterman

LCDR Frost states that there are
vacancies for both pilots and crew

Christy Merry, Age 2
Gets Lost And Found
Monday Morning

partment

... “The
loose
and
informal
manner of hearing, usually attended en masse by ‘packed’ irate citizens claiming their rights are in
jeopardy, has caused this phase of
the zoning law to be abused to the
point where rational men in everyday affairs take leave of their logic
to whet the appetites of the mob;
satisfying the whim of the greater
number of objectors justifies yielding to pressure.”
(Deerfield gets sued and loses
many times and is reported about
to be sued again.)

Lieutenant Commander

Deerfield, executive officer of Patrol Bomber Squadron 725, prepares for a flight in a navy patrol bomber P2V or “Neptune.” The
“Neptune” is used in his squadron for anti-submarine missions.
This group is having its annual training cruise at Glenview Naval

Gas Co. working in that area, and
neighbors joined the search. She
was found by Ray Hehr of Libertyville.

ony
who
believe,
rightly
or
wrongly, that they will be harmed
financially or esthetically, and their
property downgraded by any variation that may be granted.”

met.”
_ “In all ordinances passed under
‘the authority of this zoning article,

prob-

deficient as to minimum area requirements. (This could mean less
frontage but greater depth than

determine

Pettis Ave., there is no open-

ing to the alley, either east or west.
The second case is that of the
alley from Forest Ave. to Sheridan
Ave., behind the houses on Hazel
Ave. That alley is open only at the
Sheridan Ave. end, with the east
end closed.
A third case of closing an alley
was attempted recently behind the
property
in
the
1100
block
on
Waukegan Rd. The person who put
up a fence was required to take it
down,
Another alley exists behind the
houses on Journel PI. This is also
partly closed. Are there more?
“Good fences make good neighbors” is a good old adage, but it
should continue further with the
fact that the fences should be on
their own property and that closed
alleys can cause trouble, also.
A suggestion for the public works
department: Make a survey of all
alleys platted in the village and
see that they are properly used,
kept clean,
and
in the locations
listed on the deeds.

the

platted and recorded PRIOR to the
enactment
of a zoning ordinance due allowance shall be made for
existing conditions ... The powers
by a municipality.
By odd sized lots are meant... . conferred by the article shall not

“Often

From

is being

mandatory injunction, etc.”

still paying.
Mob

The

who

the

Prepares For Flight

Warrior’

It would be interesting to know
how many people have closed up
alleys
and
taken
over
the land,
without
legal recourse,
for their
personal use as lawns or gardens.
Many cases come to mind: One is
the alley between Osterman
Ave.
and Central Ave., opening on Waukegan
Rd.
between
St.
Paul’s
Church and the cemetery. Only the
east section of that alley is open.

of this for at least three years.

first step

on

the

"Weekend

Closed IIlegally?

in

at Glenview.
Members
of
Patrol
Bomber
Squadron 725 are called ‘Weekend
Warriors” because they report for

active
month

duty
one
in addition

used

in

the

regular

navy

as

a

patrol
bomber,
mine
layer
and
anti-submarine plane to find and
sink enemy submarines. The “‘Neptune” is manned by a pilot, two
co-pilots and a seven man crew.
It is built with all the latest electronic equipment developed in navy
research.
The prime objective of VP 725’s
annual training cruise is achieving

and

maintaining

squadron

capable,

in

taking

of

a high

readiness,

time,

degree

a

a minimum
its

of

squadron

length

place

of

regular navy, LCDR

?

shoulder

to shoulder with components of the

s

Frost explains.

Scott Hamilton Hurt
In Fall From Tree
Scott
Mr.

Hamilton,

and

1300
tree

Mrs.

age

Stuart

Elmwood
house on

Ave.,
June

paled on a branch
punctured lung.

son

of

Hamilton

7,

of

is

expected

This

home

is the

and

received

this

a

second

week.

child

to fall

from a tree hut in Deerfield
a short time.

within

The Public Press,
Office, is a public

no less
trust.

than

Public

DEERFIELD
REVIEW

Thursday,

July

9,

1959

Vol.

34,

No,

18

Published Weekly every Thursday
PUBLICATION

699

the high school level.

Telephone

HIGHLAND

608

OFFICE

Waukegan

DEERFIELD,

Road

ILLINOIS

Windsor

PARK

5-4500

OFFICE

Laurel Ave., Highland Park,
Telephone ID 2-4500

Ill.

MEMBER
;
National
Editorial Association
Illinois Press Association
Local Subscription Rates—$3.50 per year
Domestic Rate—$5.00 per year
Single Copies—15c¢
‘
Foreign Rates on Application.
‘sEntered as second-class matter November 27, 1944, at the post office at Deeraid, ,|Minols, under the Act of March &amp;,
1

.

™

fell from a
29, was im-

Dr. Ralph Elson took the child
to the Highland
Park
Hospital.
Scott is, reported improving and

The Newcomers Club has given
a check for $200 to the West Deerfield Township Public Library for
the purchase of reference books at

Deerfield Township Public Library,
accepting
the check from
Mrs.
Walton.

WF

two-week active duty training.
The “Neptune” is the same plane

On the Cover

Left to right are Mrs. Robert E.
Jordan, Deerfield’s official greeter
and organizer of the Newcomers
Club, Mrs. Charles L. Walton, president of the Newcomers Club and
J. Robert York, president of the
board
of
trustees
of
the
West

weekend
each
to their annual

;

Thursday, July 9, 1959

Se)

�o

meis

School of the University of Tlinois.

Camp Kiawassa in Woodstock was the destination of a group
of Girl Scouts of Troop 115 recently. The photographer took this
\

girls

had

returned

home,

by

bus,

and

were

He was on the Dean’s academic list
at Illinois Wesleyan where he also

at the

received his social fraternity’s, Tau

Wilmot School awaiting their parents.
Standing, left to right, are Diana Boratyn, Ann Whitney,
Stephanie Bateman, Martha Rudolph and Karen Foster. Seated
are Mary Joh Eisinger, Gretchen Eisinger, Kathy Dendel, Laura Rudolph and Robin Eisinger.
The troop camping log begins:
“We
board
the
bus
for
Camp
Kiawassa,
pick up Troop
171
of

"Highland

Park.

Here

we

come

Woodstock!
A fine ride, we talk,
*we get acquainted with the other
troop.
At last—‘Deer
Crossing’—

the

sign

that

tells

us

the main highway
“We
are here!

to turn

off

Walter
rector,

to

Kopp),

units.

our

bag

(Mrs.

camp

and

assigns

tenting,
lunches

Tree,’

then

sing

we
up

dius

take
to

the

grace

and

picnic.
Assigned

for camp.
‘Kopper’

troop

us

Before

nose

‘Linden
had

the

welcomes

“Back

to

To

our

housekeeping,

Tents

units,

four

we

set

up

of us to a tent;

.P. Funeral Home
Granted Permit For
Deerfield Rd. Site

up go our cots, down go our bedrolls smooth as can be; our orange
crate dressers as neat as possible.”

A special permit to operate a funeral service in a residential zone
on Deerfield Rd. in Highland Park,
as granted to Kelley &amp; Spalding,

“Kinder,”

1913

Sheridan

and

Park

Rd.,

City

by

the

Council

Tents

recently.

Action on a rezoning request by
John D. Garrity was postponed until the next Highland Park Council
meeting,
July
13.
Three
other
zoning actions were referred to the

*Planning

Commission

for

public

Kelley

&amp;

Spalding

permit

side

of

Deerfield

plot is currently
dential use.
Wants

To

Garrity’s
the

zoned

Enlarge

request

property

on

The
resi-

the

store

nied

a special

but that

granted,

ley

similar

rezoning

&amp; Spalding.
Garrity’s store

present

an

address

outside

zoning

rity’s
dential

The
and

plan

for

given

been

is

de-

be
Kel-

at

its

since 1923.

In 1947

developed

a new

the

city

and

ended

up

in a

draft

of

an

Gar-

resi-

area.

latest

Research

District”

zone

“Office
classi-

fication as prepared by City Planning Consultant Matthew Rockwell
was

presented

to

the

Council

and

by a 4 to 1 vote was referred back
to the planning commission for a
publie hearing.

Thursday, July 9, 1959"

observer

and

last two years

were

Admiral’s

quarters

“Fireflies,”

for the

Aide

Eastern

Star.”

Vegetable

Mr.

and

Stand

Opens

Mrs.

Richard

Summer’s

PROFESSIONAL

Care

Sun...

Beauty

rabies

dogs

shots,

will

seven

be

days

otherwise

picked

will

up

be

and

(a specialty)!

© Style

Cutting

® Permanent

. . .

Mrs.

Gordon

Contine

Secretary

Reports

Of State

On

oe
ee
ee
ree
Er
AI

i
ae rene.

bitten

JULY
Me

minister

of-

of

Church,

his pastorate

effec-

Club. John Carlson, president
(Continued on page 14)

Church

‘is

must

by members of the choir.
Church School meets during the
two worship hours. At 9:30 there
are classes for all children from
age two through sixth grade and

Licenses

at

11

classes

are

in

session

for

children from age two through Primary
Department
(third
grade)
and for young people in seventh
(Continued

on

page

14)

1959
TOW

etn
Sey
12 13 14
19 20 21
26 27 28

ES

ae
a9
15 16
22 23
29 30

8

THIS

8

eee
17 18
24 25
31 -

IS THE MONTH!

WILL YOURS BE THE
ance on a N.Y. TV Show.
FOR

WI 5-1525

MILLION

Now

CELEBRATION

Serving

the Public’s

Pharmaceutical

Needs!

LINDEMANN’S
PRESCRIPTION

Rd., Deerfield

MONDAYS

ONE

3rd Generation

Waving

SHOP

OUR

800

Waukegan

Deerfield

Road

;

Bethlehem
Church
continues a
full Sunday morning program during the summer months with two
worship
hours
at
9:30
and
11
o’clock. Special music is furnished

sidy, 343 Kingston Terr., has been
revoked.
A _ probationary permit
has been issued to Chase M. Smith
of 708 Indian Hill Rd.

G)

Keller,

took

Summer Program
Is Announced

Secretary
of State
Charles
F.
Carpentier reports changes in the
drivers
license
department.
The
drivers license of Charles A. Cas-

Sr.

Deerfield-

Club

Presbyterian

Bethlehem

He

Carpentier

Drivers

J.

resigned

tary

promp-

all dogs

Paul

Keller

the

tive Sept. 1, is the new president
of the Deerfield-Northbrook Ro-

after

was

which

ted the warning that
have rabies shots.

WATCH

BEAUTY CORNER
666 Waukegan

who

birds.

® Shampooing

BEAUTY

Dr.

the Deerfield

was also in the subdivision to investigate the reports that boys with
BB guns were killing or wounding

by a dog last week,

J.

of

Northbrook Rotary
fice on July 1.

the

destroyed.

Paul

officers

YOU may be the guest of Lindemann Pharmacy and E. R.
Squibb &amp; Co. on a fabulous weekend of fun in New York
City, including tickets to “Flower Drum Song” and an appear-

Services

COLORING

For Appointment
PHONE:

Antes

get

Dr.

.New

1,000,000th
PRESCRIPTION?

© HAIR

OPEN

Front

day at 1928 Deerfield Rd. in Highland
Park,
near
the
Gastfield
bridge.

including: HAIR CUT &amp; STYLE
CONDITIONED FOR YOUR COMFORT
Our

Sea

are opening their vegetable stand
again this year, beginning Satur-

PERMANENTS

AIR

at Head-

in New York City.

® Manicuring
has

firm

store

be

permit

to that

as

The

from $11.50

located at 1855 Deerfield Rd. at
the corner
of Ridge
Rd. from
single family to outlying business
use. The old zoning committee had
recommended

spent

“Pajafaco,”

“Evening

a weather

Don’t Neglect—Get
Beauty Corner Treatment!

to rezone
his

and

From

Stove

was

which

Rd.
for

Hollow,”

was

Your Hair Needs

allows the building and operation
of funeral
service
establishment
between
the Redeemer
Lutheran
Church and Garrity’s store on the

ynorth

names

he

forecaster.

Their camping trip log tells of
their
meals
and
their
activities
during each day and evening. Their
assignments
for
each
day
were
given for “Clean Clara,” ‘Helpful
Hannah,”
“Susie Sanitation,” ete.
to keep the camp tidy.

hearings.

The

receive

“Sleeply

High-

Kappa Epsilon’s, scholarship.
He is a member
of the Labor
Industrial
Relations
Association
and the Industrial
Relations
Research Association.
While
attending the University of Ilinois, he
served
as volunteer
management
consultant where he did research,
at Mercy Hospital in Champaign,
Ill. His duties at the Hospital will
have
to do with
recruiting
and
preliminary screening in employee
hiring,
wage
and salary
surveys
and employee relations.
Predan was in the Navy for four
years, the first two spent on the
carrier,
the U.S.S.
Leyte,
where

Oe

The
officers
of the
Deerfield
Manor Home
Owners
Association
have voted to crack down on speeders. Sheriff Norris C. Froelich was
consulted and he has advised that
the local deputies should take the
license numbers
of the speeders
and turn them into the Association
secretary, who will turn them over
to the sheriff. A warning
letter
will be sent from the sheriff’s office to all speeders.
A park area is being cleared at
the south end of Aspen Ct. for a
baseball diamond at the suggestion
of Gus Pekara. Work was started
last week by Fred Tibaldi. This location was selected after a survey
by the executive committee as the
window breaking problem is less
likely to occur here.
No: further word
has been received from the Illinois Commerce
Commission regarding the permit
for the water company and meters.
Through the cooperation of John
Pekara Sr. the roads will be oiled.
Francis (Chuck) Stancliff, township
road commissioner,
will see that
the dirt in the turn-around at the
end of Catalpa St. is taken care of
before the oiling starts.
The Lake
County
animal warden, Wilbur
Turner,
was
in the
area last week to see that all dogs

aes

Robert A. M. Predan of Chicago
is the newly appointed personnel
director at Highland Park Hospital,
according to a report from Frank J.
Schwermin, administrator.
Mr.
Predan
succeeds
the
late
Bernard Schufelt, who had resided
in Northbrook and was a member
of the Zion Lutheran
Church
of
Deerfield.
Schwermin disclosed that Predan
has just completed
work
on his
Master’s degree from the University of Illinois, where
he majored
in industrial relations. Before that
he attended Illinois Wesleyan University in Bloomington, Ill. where
he was
awarded
his B.S. degree
in Sociology and Business Administration. He has also had additional study at Wright Jr. College and
Loyola in Chicago. A native Chicagoan,
Predan
graduated
from
Carl Schurz High School.
Honors

3

Rotary President

Speeding Autos

His academic honors include an
academic scholarship and research
assistantship
in
the
Graduate

as the

~ \Dr. Keller Named

On

At H. P. Hospital

Academic

picture

Down

eens ew

Director

tee ed we ee

Personnel

e

Deerfield Manor
Cracks

ened &lt;n pcan

R A.M. Prodan Ie

Saige

r Troop 115 Is Home From Camp

Be et
Rg Sree

fc

Maaee
i

eee

it

Ste iglipec tee apm

| Yes)

atte

Fah

PHARMACY

WI 5-0022
Page 3°

|

eS

igh

HED
Y Se ah
Fea!

,

se capt

pa ute e

RN

�iil iy sas ei

a 5 i

Naty

tis site a sete

9 is Pte

- STOREWIDE

star

of our

SUMMER

SALE

Shop All Day Thursday from 9 A.M. to 9 P.M.
Stop in Thursday and save on hundreds of items for men,
women and boys. Many items are in short supply so it will be
to your advantage to shop as early as possible.
For 30 Lucky Shoppers!

A Limited

Group

of

Suits and SPORTCOATS
All

oe LIGHTWEIGHT

balstiian

: : SPORT

.

wool,

Not

All

Sizes.

SHIRTS

A

Huge

KNIT

Quality,

55%

Dacron—45%

Short

WOMEN’S

Sleeve

volves

CLOTH

SOX—special

Selection

of Men’s

Short

—values

Worsted

LIGHTWEIGHT SUITS

YEAR ‘ROUND SLACKS—entire stock

to 5.95

JACKETS—value

SHIRTS

Griffon

WASH ‘N WEAR SUITS—dacron/cotton
YEAR ‘ROUND SUITS—large group

An

to 6.99; So WOE

Early

220 SF.

Sleeve

to 6.95

CAR

$49 and $59
20%

Off

DEPARTMENT
Shopper

Special!

BOY COATS

WHITE SHIRTS—dacron/cotton, short &amp; long sleeve ....
TERRY

Famous

boat neck, Peers)

of Men’s

_ LIGHTWEIGHT

|

take your pick $20

—

mixtures
SPORTCOATS—Many at

SWEATERS—all
Huge

Summer

SLACKS—dacron

LIGHTWEIGHT

A

for

Our

Man

Tailored

10% Off

These are quality tailored,
regulars dnd petites

to 33 1/3%

Off

SUMMER BAGS « SUMMER JEWELRY
25% to 50%
SWEATERS—a large group at
25% off to 50%

Off
Off

Our.

COATS—a

Entire

Stock

selection at

20%

of

SUMMER DRESSES-reduced 20% to 331/3%
T SHIRTS—fine cotton, special
BOXER UND. SHORTS—special

BOYS’ DEPARTMENT
A Group

of Boys’ Summer

|
and

WOMEN’S SLACKS—a
Year

SUITS and SPORTCOATS

BOYS’ SPORT

SUMMER SKIRTS—a group reduced 25% to 331/3% Off
WOMEN’S BERMUDA SHORTS group 25% to 33 1/3% Off

‘Round

25% off

SHIRTS ——c Group reduced to

2 for $3

_ . BOYS’ SUMMER PAJAMAS—while a group lasts
-BOYS"’BEACH JACKETS AND PANTS—while they last $3

ass Monday ee

A

Large

Selection

of

group reduced 20% to 33 1/3% Off

Summer

CO-ORDINATES —reduced .. 25% to 33 1/3%
SHIRTS assorted groups

SUMMER

25%

HATS—our stock

to 331/3%

25%

to 50%

Off

Off

ROBES - GOWNS - BRAS—assorted groups 25% to 50% Off

7-9. Open Thursday Evenings ‘til 9

ID 2-5300

HIGHLAND

PARK

Thursday, July 9, 1959. |

�Dist. 113 Board Acts Monday On Budget At Public Hearing
The board of education of Township High School District 113 will act Monday on a
proposed annual budget for the coming year. A public hearing is scheduled for 7:30 p.m. in the
board room of the new Administration building on Park Ave. The budget has been on file
and available for public inspection since July 1.
Operating

expenses

for the coming

and

West

Ridge

Parks,

and

end

Athletics
Hed

Leaguers

will not meet

next

at

ever, since it will not be completed
or used until 1960. However, the
budget has a $300,000 appropria‘tion for equipment and furniture at

League

Standings
W.

L.

Sunset Majors
Nankeés 2.2...)). Tita
White Sox ........ S
, Orioles: Ue et a

Sill

T.

Pct.

Sunset

Minors

West

Pts.

Pies t ce wy @
2
OO
re
30;
i571:

8

Minors

Ridge

24%
2%

S850

PS

A Sx

B59

ae

2

BS

‘A’
O2:0.
ol
3
4
0...
BEE

‘B’~

NJ

me:
a
Tt
0

Fund

estimate

tion figures, has no tax levy figure
to report

as yet this year.

Estimated. budget expenses will.
be higher this year because new.
teachers have been added. to the.

staff,

along with: new

ployees, because
rollment.

274
750
+.250
.000

The

school

of

clerical

St.

Next

door

as

two

only

mites

provided

by

law. The limit. has been
to those living one. and
miles or beyond,’ ©

Will Be Open

to

H.P.

Jewel

eee

increased:

DRAPES

Need .Cleaning?
Removed 2 installed: 2
ON EDENS

| LEW IS NORTHBROOK ©

Dial VE 5-2400

must:

buy’‘two

other

“Open 7 Days Weekly
from 4:00 P.M.

Pavillon
service

.and.: atmosphere

Cleaning

os

e WINTER CLOTHING
e BLANKETS
° COATS
¢ SWEATERS
° TIES

—

.

We

STORE ‘em WITH US!
USE OUR

Also

Edens at Dundee Road. |

Service

Insures

DUFFY
487 Laurel Ave.

Clothing

$300.00

H.P. Library)

right at our Door!

. .

repeating:

‘Today

DRUGGISTS”

=="

+( Author’s

About
the

birth

the

elder,

Name

annual
JOHN

theatre
party.
Chairman
CORTESI
set this years’

party
Peggy

at Tenthouse
during
the
Cass presentation of “Born

fifty years after
iPliny,

warned -of the

danger of obtaining. medicines from
unreliable
sources or people whose
only interest in their ‘sale

was the profit to be made.
He explained that physicians trust druggists who
have a professional reputation to cherish and pre-

some thoughtless or money-hungry people attempting to sell medicines, even
though they have
no
knowledge of the problems
involved. Thesimptest
medicine requires proper
cautions against possible
dangerous misuse.
We
pharmacists
have the
knowledge to protect you.
Ask Your

®
Physician

to Phone

HIGHLAND

PARK

* RAVINIA

ID 2-2600

ID 2-2300

When You Need A Medicine
a

Pick up your prescription
if shopping near us, or let
us deliver promptly without extra charge. A great
many
people entrust us

the

responsibility

*

Our warm

and

*

FACTOR

an even
and to

who

*

good wishes to ALIDA

JEROME

who

cele

dozen years of mar=
JANICE
and TOM

celebrate their 2nd. .
*
*
TONITES’
THE
NITE! ! 11
When almost all the Highland Park
a

stores switch-over from Friday
Thursday
nite openings.
And

Gent’s

Below) ===

of : Christ,

é

to
to

$45.00

Elgin

All-American

at only $29.00 and beautiful cultured
pearl
necklaces
reduced
from

$37.50

to $19.00.

Many

other

values during this 2 hour sale. Pick
up your TNT coupon!

*
*
*
“It’s better to make

Quote:
takes

in

trying

than

to

:
mis-

make

the

mistake

of not trying at all.”
*
*
*
Hey Kids! ! Back again next
Tuesday for the third scheduled
week of FREE Jam Sessions at the
Recreation Center—DON CARON
and

his

great

orchestra

who

gave

the opening session last week such
a. wonderful send-off. The Student
Activities Committee has planned
seven more Tuesday nite sessions.
And don’t forget another in the
summer
series
of
STUDENT
UNION parties tomorrow nite at
the

“Ree.”

Free

Coke,

and

here’s

a chance for freshman

to join this

group

great plans

who

have such

for the young set.
*
*
*
Do you own a fine Swiss or
American watch? ? You wouldn’t
let your auto go 10,000 miles with.
out

a

you?

grease

Your

important

or

oil

watch
care.

It’s

change,

needs

the

delicate

would

same
mech-

anism should be dis-assembled, the
old oil cleaned out and re-oiled and
adjusted every year. At Leeds, we
are proud that so many thousands
of our north shore neighbors chose
us each
service.

year

for

this

important

of

filling their prescriptions.
May we compound yours?

for

$5.95

CLEANERS

(Across from

Park FREE

to

in.

worth

help you get the habit of Thursday
nite shopping Leeds Jewelers are
featuring many specials from 7:00
to 9:00 p.m. including: — Ladies
$65.00 Hamilton at only $37.00;

ENTIRELY TO THE

with

FILL AA BOX
Storage

Specialize

helped

*
*
*
$
Next Monday nite the Rotarians
of Highland Park, their families
and friends will be attending their

brate
riage

Enter at Sunset Ridge ¢ Northbrook

=

who

yesterday.”

MANN

Night!

TAT

leeds

present the celebration.
*
*
*

in food

Telephone CRestwood 2-51.11

ID 2-8678

Store)

organizations

and

Yesterday.”

luxury

“PHYSICIANS TRUST

7-9 p.m. Thursday

paul

spent. The parade was swell, we
had fun at the carnival, enjoyed
the Jaycees barbecued chicken and
got a real “bang” out of watching
the Little Leaguers from Highwood
and Highland Park. play. “Hat’s
off” to the Jaycees and all the
plan

*

|

|

Did you get uptown and out to
Sunset last Saturday. It was one
of the nicest 4th of Julys we ever

Quote,

new

$100

your

Our

TIME

is the tomorrow you worried ‘about |

en-

buses this year and the board has:}
employed custodian-bus drivers’ to’}
drive them.
The school’ formerly

AAT

-

a Chore.

KEEPING

changed
one-half

serve.
There have always been

Save

or
state

with

em-

Kitchen Vd Kaddie
2nd

away,

is $401,680

|
THURSDAY NIGHT SPECIAL!

We

1822

more

transportation

living

cational Fund was estimated at 86
cents per $100 valuation, but the:
board, lacking Lake County valua-

COMPOTE

ASS

for the. Eduapproved by

the board Monday, is $160,610, according to Miss Lillian Tucker,
board
secretary. The _ tentative

Colorful

mm

bus

students

for the fiscal year of 1959-60.
Last year’s tax levy for the Edu-

.

gh tba
2k
0
S570:
4.0 =

Tentative estimate
cational Fund, to. be

Building

7T214
BO
.428
SBS

Minors

Oridles* hoy
THdians:) oe
Senators ........
Athleties
..........

be”
5
4

icc | ccc
*)

‘the new school,

Beare ee,
a.
bd
Bee
Blue Devils ...... 12}.
885
Lincoln Minors
Pivtates ii? 3
ae
S700
Cents cs
pie
ea Bae 2
CMDS teentt yc
eee (te) ba
Dodgers
ia") ). 0%
S36."
000

the
the

*night games.

PAGING

Sunset

Mon-

day
morning
but will carry
regular season’s schedule for

~........... t38

Sox

Braves? joshi ie
Cards2&lt;
es
Phillies 3332
23:
ReGe
csc ea

9 p.m,
- Minors play from 6 to 7:30 p.m.;
majors from 7:30 to 9 p.m. Little

to

year will not include funds for the second school, how-

HP Fathers Invited To See Sons
Play In Little Leagues Monday Night
Fathers will have an opportunity
to see their sons in action on the
baseball
diamond
next
Monday
night,
when
the
Highland
Park
Recreation Center has invited them
to attend Little League games.
Major games
are scheduled
to
» start at 6 p.m. at Sunset, Lincoln

furnished

ID 2-1820

EARL W.
GSELL &amp; CO.
—PHARMACISTS—

Highland

Park

or Ravinia

*Quotation by The Elder Pliny

LEEDS JEWELERS
491 Central, Highland Park

(23-79 A.D.)

Thursday, July 9, 1959

Page 7

_

�a

.
store
Sour
nent
RE
‘TIL

Estoblished 1906

© DAILY PAPERS
MAGAZINES
SMOKES
HALLMARK and

Highland

9:00

madrigals

P.M.

CARDS

TOYS &amp; GAMES
OFFICE SUPPLIES
© WRITING EQUIPMENT
Pnaiial &gt;.
Af,

Sfp

Af,

,

J 7,

.N)

N

SUITS—Wash

’n

symphonic
right

Wear:...

SLACKS

TO

VISIT

LLL

We
@
@

All Types of Paint
Venetian Blinds
a

@

Glass
Auto

@

Tub

Furniture
Glass
-

“Stumpy”
san Maro,

Brown, solo vocalist, Suvocalist, Bob Neel, drum-

mer, Bill Usselton, tenor sax, Donn
Trenner,
piano,
“Butch”
Stone,
comedy
vocals, and arrangements
by Frank Comstock.
Saturday at 8:30 p.m.
Walter Hendl, conductor
Byron Janis, soloist
All Russian Program
Suite, from “The Fire Bird”
Stravinsky
Symphony No. 4, in E, Op. 91
A. Tcherepnin
(First performance at these
concerts)
Intermission
Concerto for Piano, No. 3,
DANG?
ce uk: Rachmaninoff
Tuesday at 8:30 p.m.

Suite

for

Orchestra,

“Water Music”
Handel, arranged
Allegro
Air
(Continued on page

location

specialize

MM
SS

zz

Lczc
WAL

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Paint Color Styling
Window Shades

-

10)

.
Paint Sundries
Bamboo Drapes

- Shower

Doors
S

4é

IDlewood

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Sve

‘

ie RA
oe
gE

/

formerly

First

Se

{

Gj

ae

ae

AND PAI NT CO.

LAKESIDE GLASS
Highwood

Street,

Glass

&amp;

Highland

7

é

Paint

Co.

Park,

Illinois

Inventory

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Look for the MIDAS -Sign—Amer“ica's, only. coast-to-coast network
of exclusive auto muffler shops.

Transition

Cotton

famed

party

is planned

to stimulate

the,

recruitment of new members in the
North Shore area and increase annual
membership’
contributions.
The present membership of several
thousand women support 12 affiliated
medical
and
social
welfare
agencies which make up the Fed+
eration.
Highland Parkers Serve
Serving with Mrs. David Dimsdale, chairman for Highland Park,
is a large committee, among whom
are these local residents:
Mesdames
Kenneth
Newberger,

Julian Good, Leslie Bezark, Joseph
Gidwitz, Chester Pink, Irving Si*
den, Edwin Hokin, Bernard Sang,
Irving
Horwitch,
Sidney
Mandel
and Gerald Gidwitz. Mrs. Rudolph
Silverman,
1210
Crofton
Ave.,
heads the North
Shore Women’s
Division.
This
division
holds
bi-monthly
meetings to acquaint members witht
the work of agencies they support.
They give the annual summer gala
party, this year featuring a luncheon-in-a-basket around the pool of
the Lester Abelson’s Glencoe home,
and
a view
of the antique-filled
house, preceding the program.
Studs Terkel Emcees
Emcee of the entire program, as
well as narrator of the jazz portion, is Studs Terkel. Produced under the direction of Hope Abelson,
the program will be divided into
three sections, dance, drama, and
music. Professional personalities in
each field will present each in an
informal fashion.
Ann Barzel, dance lecturer and
critic, Lois Solomon, director, an
Marty Rubinstein of the trio bear:
ing his name, will head the groups.
Admission cards are being mailed
to those who enroll before July 1
and to members of the North Shore
Division,
New
enrollees
will
bt
guests for the afternoon entertain
ment.
‘

Service

of
Dresses

The

course

is restricted

NOW

Your

SHELL DEALER

OOOO

Is Here

MUFFLER
SHOP

MIDAS MUFFLER SHOP
1535 Belvidere, Waukegan
MAjestic 3-8395

Open Daily

8:30-6 p.m.

Friday—“8:30 - 9 p.m.

Who
650

N.

CTothes
Western

alings

nc.
HIGHWOOD.

Lake

Forest

tq

men only so Caddyettes are on cal
from 9 a.m. to noon.
Mondays
the girl caddies havé
an opportunity to play the courses
Waiting time between calls is take
up by golf and bridge lessons. Th
first is taught by Bill Chambers
course pro; and the second by Mis
Agnes Parks, caddy director.

Work Done by Skilled

hipment

the

“Le Dejeuner sur
L’Herbe.” Sponsored by the Women’s Division of the Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Chicago, the

3 p.m.

¢ SKIRTS
e DRESSES
¢ BLOUSES and ACCESSORIES

New

Called

afternoon

Eighteen Caddyettes and fiftee,
caddies are registered to give “to
form” service at Sunset Valley Golf
Course.
The Caddyettes, who are restrict
ed to pushing golf-bag laden carts
for women only, are available fro
11 a.m. to 4 p.m. on Saturdays, Sun
days
and holidays. On
Tuesday
Thursdays and Fridays their hours
are 9 a.m. to 4 p.m,
:
Wednesdays between 12 noon an

ON SUMMER MERCHANDISE

Muffler Specialists

party.
the

per-

Ts ‘Tops’ For Women

——

While. You Wait
NO APPOINTMENT.

fun

and

Champetre,”

«rete

ep. peel

dita

Caddyettes

SALE

oy

ee
——

by Harty

in:

.

1914

from

the

*

—

will|

Tops
Mirrors

Enclosures

Telephone

\

Hiroto

Century | acquainted

Festival

Ravinia

The

US

in our new

\

pre-18th

or

music

at home.

rvvvuvvuvvuvvuvuvevPSIVVVVVVVVVVVVY

"

fp)

a,

week,

urday night under Walter Hendl,
and
a Bastille Day
concert next
Tuesday night with an appropriate
Gallic flavor, under the baton of
Andre Kostelanetz. The famed New
York Pro Musica group, who play
18th Century musical instruments
and sing ballads, will give the first
of two programs next Wednesday.
They will appear again July 17.
Tonight at 8:30 p.m.
Walter Hendl, conductor
Byron Janis, soloist, piano
Overture to “Prometheus”
Beethoven
“Partita for Orchestra”
William Walton
(First performance at these
concerts)
‘“Rhapsodie Espagnole
Intermission
Concerto for Piano, No. 1,
B Flat Minor: .:::.4.&lt;. Tschaikovsky
Tomorrow at 8:30 p.m.
Les,.Brown and his Band Of Renown,
featuring
Abe
Aaron,
soprano
sax,
Matt
Utal,
alto
sax,

many

other GREETING

this

a taste

feature Les Brown and his Band of Renown tomorrow night;/|takes its theme
the Chicago Symphony will present Byron Janis, pianist, Sat- Manet painting

THURSDAYS

for:

Parkers have an opportunity to indulge

d

.

.

classical

for

jazz,

for

OPEN

STATIONERY STORE
stop

Is Wea.
Musica, Hendl, Janis _ Festival
| Pro
,
dnesday, a festival of
.

BE

WILL

Graco

Friendly

o's

va

eet ee ee

:
Your

RaviniaFeaturesLes Brown Performing Arts

|

res

2168

Phone

ID

.

2-9565

Thursday, July 9, 1959

�CHARCOAL

BRIQUETS

View

ee
Fe

*) New Chuck Wagon

10-Ib. Bag

20-Ib. Bag

Ake | 8%
ASSORTED

SEALTEST

a

St

} CHOICE

FLAVORS
79c

V&gt; Gal.

CREAM

ICE

oa
»

Chicken

Rie i ae 2 cos 59} TOMATO JUICE ......

RAE

U.S. Choice, Genuine

Spring

LEG or LAMB

18. 69c

100%

Centrella

of the Sea

Pure

«= $1.00 | GROUND BEEF 18. 55¢
Oscar

Mayer

‘x5

BOLOGNA

Hills Bros. Coffee
&gt; tb. can’ S119 &gt; - | waranenn oneal

FROZEN FOODS
BOOTH

MEATS

AFRICAN

LOBSTER TAILS “rs. 98c

45¢

TOMATOES |. 1. 23¢

POT

PIES

seat sees oe 3 ve 69c

CENTRELLA

SWANSON’S Chicken, Turkey

SILVERCUP

COCK O’ WALK FAMILY

CATSUR 2 1 276) Ree ee

TV DINNERS 2% 59c
in ca vce
wih al ab aciab
CASSEROLE
‘rn 69c |

TEA BAGS

=== 55c} PLATES

McCORMICK GROUND
Black Pepper “Can 29

BUDLONG

SUPREME DILL PICKLES
‘ CERAGE

BARBECUE
FLEICHMANN

OLEO

Om

PILING. ee
te

29¢

—. 2. ats. for AQ¢ | ormMO21NS tency
.-—~
MUSHROOMS

vee

LE

SUNKIST

3 18 oz. btls. for 85c¢ | ORANGES

SWEET

29¢

own 390

SEEDLESS

pon 59C

LIBBY’S

Sa Raat

With Coupon 23¢

BOUUICK.
CENTRELLA

80 rsts89¢ | extra sweet

ALCOA
Alum. Wrap “ro

PLAIN

a

39c

Pork &amp; Beans 2 cans 25¢

ie

DOG FOOD 62: 89c

QUEEN

SPANISH OLIVES
Thursday, July 9, 1959.

“"s:29c | LESTOIL

-... at. 5. 65¢

1812

Open

GREEN

Both

BAY

ROAD

Thursday

and

—

A

CENTRAL

Friday

Nights

FOOD

:

rm» 39¢_

BLUEBERRIES

CALIF.

SAUCE

..—- 1». 25¢

2 c=: 69c| MUSTARD 2 35" 35c | GRAPES

SARDINES

Beef, Chicken or Turkey

CALIFORNIA WHITE SEEDLESS

mR

KING OSCAR BRISLING

STORE

‘Til 9 P.M.

G!
— ALWAYS
PLENTY OF FREE PARKIN
Page 9

)

�a

Game

Ravinia Program

Ope

Monday At Theater
“Pajama

Paget,

JOHN B. NASH
Carpet

&amp; Linoleum

Game,”

starring

opens Monday

Debra

at the Music

Co.

DISCOUNT

On Any
Rug

Room-Size
Cleaned

LEWIS ON EDENS
NORTHBROOK
Dial VE 5-2400

BOARD OF ZONING APPEALS
VILLAGE OF DEERFIELD
By:

Lewis

B.

Walton,

Sr.,

Chairman

7/9/59-202

| PATIO TORCH
cwith “canned flame” ,.

~

~
a“

‘’

a

heads

brass

torch

CCC

holders

Complete

Refills (6 cans &amp;
Wicks) $2.98

|

NO PHONE ORDERS
AND CARRY ONLY

the Seouq
1672 skokie highway,
ID

2-7077

or

highland

park

2-8456

open every day including sundays 9 a.m. to 9:30 p.m.

a_

sister-in-law,

Mrs.

Paula

De

Giacinto of Herbster, Wis.
Services were held yesterday at
St. James Church. Burial followed
in Superior, Wis.

concerts)

: Intermission
Debussy
Offenbach
American In Paris” ..Gershwin
Wednesday at 8:30 p.m.
New York Pro Musica
in the Ravinia Theatre

Angelo

i
Hor ch’el ciel e la terra ....ensemble
Io mi son giovinetta
Ecco Mormorar ]’onde
Si ch’io verrei morire
Lamento della Ninfa
Betty Wilson, soprano solo, voices
&amp; continuo
Claudio Monteverdi
(1567-1643)
II
Romanesca
Martha Blackman, bass viol and
harpsichord
Biagio Marini
(1595-1665)
O viva fiamma
Betty Wilson and Bethany
Beardslee, soprano duo and
continuo
Ardo e scoprir
Gordon Myers and Bryton Lewis,
baritone and bass duo and
continuo
Monteverdi
III
Lamento d’Arianna
ensemble
Monteverdi
Intermission
IV
Scherzi. Musicali
ensemble

1950. He was born Sept.
in Fiumealbo, Italy. He
this country in 1920.
Services
were
held
Italy. Burial took place

27, 1901,
came to

July
3 in
in Abetone,

Italy.

R. N.

Fredrickson

Ragnar

N.

Deerfield

Fredrickson

Rd.

died

July

of

5

1324

in

Sweden on March 9, 1881.
Fredrickson, a member of Wesley
Methodist

Church,

where

Fredrick-

Bartolotti

tractor.
He
is

Hulda;

survived

three

by

his

daughters,

widow,

Marion,

Margaret and Barbara, all of the
North Shore area; three sons, Stan-’
ley, Arthur and Phillip, also of the
North
Shore;
a_ brother,
Oscar

Stonewall of Round Lake; two other brothers and a sister, who live

in Sweden; and five grandchildren.

La violetta
Clori amorosa
Amorosa pupilletta
De la bellezza

Services were held yesterday in
the chapel at 1913 Sheridan Rd.
Burial
followed
in
Northshore
Garden of Memories.

Monteverdi
V
Canzona
prima
....Paul
Maynard,
Gagliarda terza ....Harpsichord solo
Girolamo Frescobaldi
(1583-1643)
Sonata in D Minor
Bernard
Krainis,
recorder
and
continuo
largo
allegro
largo
allegro
Francesco Maria Veracini
(1690-1750)
VI
Laudate dominum
Charles Bressler, tenor and
continuo
Litany of the Blessed Virgin
ensemble
Monteverdi

Mrs. Marie M. Yudinsky
On July 4, Mrs. Marie Monica
Yudinsky, 36, of 1982 Green Bay
Rd.,
died
in the Highland
Park
Hospital.
;
;
She was born on Jan. 12, 1923,
in Staunton, Ill., and had been a

resident of Highland Park for three
years.
She is survived by her husband,
Elmer; a son, Richard Fleming; her
mother,
Mrs.
Mary
Tuchalski
of

Staunton;

four

brothers,

James

Negro of Springfield,, John Negro
of Palos Heights, Eugene E. Negro
of 609 Onwentsia Ave., and David
Negro of Streetsboro, Ohio.
A Requiem Low Mass was said
Tuesday in St. Michael’s Church,
Staunton. Burial rites followed.

If you’re a subscriber, the answer is that during
past

six

months

you’ve

received

dozens

more pages in your North Shore
Group Newspaper at no increase in subscription
or newstand prices.
typical.
paper.

This week’s paper is

A year ago you received a 56-page
This issue contains 60 pages!

If you’re an advertiser, the answer is the vast
amount of extra circulation that you get in
North Shore Groups Newspapers at no increase
in advertising rates.

During the past year,

circulation has increased by more
than 800 copies to a new

high of 18,215

net

paid weekly.
These are just two of the things we’ve done

for you lately. And we intend to continue
to strive to give you more!
HIGHLAND

PARK

LAUREL

DEERFIELD

AVE.

699

ID 2-4500

HIGHLAND

PARK

ORTH

NEWS

WAUKEGAN
WI

¢ HIGHWOOD

NEWS

HORE

his

home. A resident of Highland Park
for
38
years,
he
was.
born
in

What Has The North
Shore Group Done For
YOU Lately?
the

Ott

since

son Hall had been dedicated in
his honor, was a retired mason con-

Angelo
Bartolotti,
57,
of
329
Palmer Ave., Highwood, died June
30 in Pisa, Italy, after a short illness. He was visiting his brother
and two sisters who reside in Italy
at the time of his death. They, and
his wife, Irene Santi Bartolotti, are
his only survivors.

Monteverdi and the Italian Baroque

608

suburban
ID

concerts)
Overture
William Walton
(First performance at these

enna

SORRY,
CASH

OOOO

foot

——TVVCVCCCC

five

CCCCCCCCCCCC

® 6 long lasting fiber wicks
standards with black spiral

30 years. Born Nov. 11, 1893, in
Italy, he was a landscape gardener
by trade.
Mr. De Giacinto is survived by

at these

in Highwood

Mi
Ml
A

® 6 gleaming brass and black

©2

had
for

pay

resided

Al
Ml
Mt
Ml
Mi
LM
Me
Mi
Mi
Li
Mi
C
CUCCCOCCCCCC

And Here's the
Package You Get!
torch

Crisantemi

performance

0D

i

hd

It's the new Redi-Torch featuring
disposable fuel and wick containers.
To use, just slip the "canned flame"
on the standard, light! When
finished, throw the can away and
replace with a new one. ... ..
No muss. No fuss.
Redi-Torch kills summer insects.

Giacinto

Highland Park Hospital. He
been a resident of Highwood

Allegro deciso

“An

De

Victor De Giacinto of 113 Prairie
Ave., Highwood, died Monday
at

by
Festival

NOTICE
IS HEREBBY
GIVEN
by the
Board of Zoning Appeals of the Village of
Deerfied,
Illinois,
that
a public
hearing
will be held by said Board on Thursday,
July 23, 1959 at 8:00 P.M., im the Village
Hal,
850 Waukegan Road,
Deerfield,
on
the petition
of Kleinschmidt
Division
of
Smith
Corona
Marchant,
Incj,
for
a
variation
from
the
requirements
of
-the
Zoning Ordinance of the Village of Deerfield —
.1953, as amended, to permit the
construction of an elevated water storage
tank 120 feet in height on the premises
owned
by said company on County Line
Road,
Deerfield.
The
variation
as_
requested
would
provide
an
additional
60
feet in height for said elevated tank, instead
of the 60 foot limitation imposed by Section
V-3 and Section XV-B of the said Zoning
Ordinance,
At
said
hearing
and
any
adjournment
thereof, all persons interested are invited
to be present and be heard.

CASH

Victor

Bourree
Horn-Pipe
Andante

(First
‘LEGAL NOTICE
July 23, 1959

$] .00

‘

had

(Continued from page 8)

Theatre,
on Lake
Cook
Rd., between Skokie and Edens Highways.

SENSATIONAL
SAVINGS
ONE WEEK ONLY

—

LAKE
RD.

287

5-4500

¢ DEERFIELD REVIEW

Oroup

FOREST

E. DEERPATH
L.F. 2300

© LAKE FORESTER

¢ FT. SHERIDAN

TOWER

EWSPAPERS.
Thursday, July 9, 1959

�"10

Hichland

Part
Angelo

se Ninied To Lake
number

of

Highland

Parkers

were named to the honor roll last
semester at Lake Forest College, it
was announced recently. Sanford E.
Marovitz, 330 Prospect Ave., a junior, is on the upper honor roll,
Lower

Honor

gen

ior.

Forest Honor Roll
A

g
Highwood,

Ss. Vinais

Turn to the Want-Ad section for
“hard-to-find” items there at moneysaving prices!

Roll

Those named to the lower honor
roll are: Karen Sue Brehmer, graduating senior; Gerald A. Burgess,
graduating senior; Richard H. Compere,
junior;
Robert
J. Proctor,
graduating senior; Eugene B. Short,
junior; Diane J. Siegman,
sophomore; Diane Singer, senior; Jan J.
Toof, junior; Jerome C. Johnson,

BE KIND TO
YOUR CARPETS!
Fine Custom Cleaning
of Rugs, Furniture
LEWI

ON

EDENS

NORTHBROOK

Dial

VE

5-2400

IS HERE!

BOATING IS FAMILY FUN
COME

IN AND SEE OUR SPECIAL
PACKAGE PRICES ON

BOATS — MOTORS — TRAILERS
To

We

Have

Open

Everything

Evenings

‘til 9:00

Wednesday

See our complete line of Boats - Motors - Trailers

re BOAT HOUSE,

1848

First

Street

ID

3-0880

Highland

Park,

the

switch

to

THURSDAY NIGHT STORE HOURS
in HIGHLAND PARK

Except The Water
Except

celebrate

Illinois

participating firms offer you
a chance to win the fabulous

Tuurspay
Nicut
Treasure
SHOP TONIGHT and
We have just received a shipment of crisp natural
shoulder suits from our favorite maker. You will find
hairlines, hopsackings, miniature plaids, solids &amp; curds
modestly priced at
in Regulars, Shorts &amp; Longs . .
40. &amp; 45.
Cobey’s

478 Central

Highland Park

(Open Thursday Night)*
*Starting tonight we will be open Thursday Nights until 9.
on over for a most unusual shopping experience.

Thursday, July 9, 1959

Come

NIGH

THURSDAY

EVERY

in Highland Park!

Tuurspay
Sponsored

Nicut’s

by Highland

Park

Chamber

Terrific!
of Commerce

�Garden Club Honors
Late Eugene Pfister
Sunday Afternoon

LOWEST PRICES IN 15 YEARS

Freshmen Invited
To Student Union
Dance

Officers of Men’s Garden Club of
Highland Park and other dignitaries will gather next Sunday at 3
p.m, at Memorial Rose Garden to
honor
the
late
Eugene
Pfister,
celebrated
rose grower
and first
president of the Club.

All

VE

Dis-

Remo Picchietti, 450 Sumac Rd.,
is in Hartford,
Conn., this week
and next representing the Bowling
and Billiard Institute of America
at the National Bowling
Council.
The
Council
sponsors
the
high
school
leagues
American
Junior
Bowling Congress.

FOLKS

Picchietti is the youngest president ever elected to this national
office of the Institute and, as such,
represents
the
Institute
at
the
State, National
and
International
level throughout the year.

ON EDENS
NORTHBROOK

Dial

in

Picchietti Represents Bowling
Institute At National Meet

CLEANING

LEWIS

age _ students,

freshmen,

There will be dancing to a juke
box
as
well
as
free
cokes.
A
membership
fee
(for
the
whole
year) will be collected. The Highland Park Jaycees are sponsoring
the dance
and acting as chaperones.

FINE FURNITURE
FUSSY

school
new

trict 113 are invited to a dance
tomorrow night from 9 to 12 p.m. ,
at the Student Union in the Recreation Center.

The rose garden, maintained by
the Men’s Garden Club, is located
next to City Hall. Friends of the
late Mr. Pfister are invited to attend the ceremonies.

FOR

high

especially

As part of its 20th anniversary
celebration, the Club will dedicate
a bronze plaque and a section of
the Memorial Rose Garden to be
named in honor of Mr. Pfister.

U.S. ROYAL WHITEWALLS...the tires of top
stay-white fame. The whitest whitewalls you can buy!

Tomorrow

5-2400

ROSBY'S.
Summer

WHITEWALLS

CLEARANCE SALE
Be

@

Dresses

@

6.70-15

TUBE

TYPE

@

FIT PRE-1957 CHEVROLET, FORD. PLYMOUTH, NASH, STUDEBAKER
ie

U.S.

a”

ROYAL

-_

a

‘

and

Jewelry

DRASTICALLY

@

REDUCED

FOR

Now
1835

Open

Second

Thursdays
(Across

St.

CLEARANCE

H.P.

P.M.

Jewel)

ID

2-0788

chain-drive design for positive traction, quick-stop

WHITEWALLS
6.70-15.....+.-2 for $31.90
7.10-15. 2005.2 for 35.90
7.60-15..+++. 2 for 39.90

STUDENT

UNION

BLACKWALLS
6.70-15......2 for $25.90
7.10-15...+.2. 2 for 29.70

7.60-15...+.. 2 for 32.50
6.00-16......2 for 23.90

113

The Student Union is extending its membership to all
a those interested in joining, who reside in District 113 and are
mof high school age (includes incoming freshmen). Please fill

fout and return in person the enclosed application with $2.00
ito the Highland Park Recreation Center on one of the coming

Plus Tax and Retreadable Tires ... Tube Type Only

ALL U.S.ROYALS

ARE

Waukegan

PLACE
Highland Park

SAFETY-FIRST TIRES —

DEERFIELD OIL CO.
671

24%

Purses

‘til 9:00

from

DISTRICT

in

5-15,

to

ROSBY'S

SAFETY-FIRST

action. Wide, deep tread for high-mile capacity. Get a set
of 4 at this new low price. Come in today.

SAFETY
AT EVERY

10-20,
1212

30% to 50% OFF

ae |

Hr Ride GH VITNTIEWALLS
Dual

Sizes

Suits
@ Blouses
@ Skirts
® Lingerie

“eye

Rd., Deerfield

WI 5-1277

Recreation Center

Application

for membership
District

DATES
July 10, 18, 31
Aug.

1, 7, 14, 15, 28

to Student

Union

ar HACE RTL PICS AP RA

name

RG PR hg hi

I

Phone No.

oes wamabup towns TARAta ue Li wesiwoes halbabue kickop aaa Rduoc cabin Ouace Sieur
address
town

give

:
:

PPL AN MOO Aig Fevirln Sts AR AP RCE a LMR SHEE AON PR Sr STAC IEE Shani

| heartily

Club

113

my

child

'
i

Weer aire

4
'

.
'

.
name

permission to join the Student Union Club of District 113.

}
I

rl

parent or guardian
we

Page

12

MES

HCH

ANN

a

NY CY KN

mK

I

MAE NN

ORO AT

SR

SE

A

:

A

Thursday,

RNY AS

SOE

July

RN

I

9,

eR

ae

1959

�ee

eat

ial

ear

4

%ei

Contract Bridge ork

{

Bective

Old

Represent

.

Equity

Norman D. Glist, 909 Castlewood
Lane, Deerfield, has been named

All
His
Tune
Grove,
Glist
rYealth
‘eal,
issued

Types

Of

FREE DELIVERY!

Insurance

&amp; Shades

CALL

annual

Lakeland

Contract

Bridge

Tournament

last week

of Northbrook,

with

whom

Mr.

Sager

won

the

men’s

pair.

FOR

FREE

DELIVERY

Drive Carefully — The Life You Save

Williams
2-9360

May Be Your Own!

is New—

EVERYTHING
New Owners

Drive Carefully — The Life You Save

TODAY

off

ID 2-3430

in Minoc-

qua, Wis. Mr. Sager is holding the victory cup and his wife, Arline,
is holding another “first award.” At the left is Martin Applebaum

20%

890 Linden Ave., Hubbard Woods

Studio

465 Roger
IDlewood

reg. $2.50 to $4.95 each

Sofa Pillows

RAVINIA
Mr. and Mrs. Edmond S. Sager, center and right, of 832
Northwoods Dr., Deerfield, won the mixed pair event of the 19th

assorted sizes, shapes
and colors

JULY
SPECIAL

DISCOUNTS
20% to 40%

Lamp

‘

Cote’s has moved to Hubbard Woods, but we'll be delighted to take your telephone order and give you speedy
service. We still carry a complete line of Kirsch Drapery
Hardware and will deliver your order free.

appointment was announced
24 by Hal Olsen of Morton
Old Equity state manager.
will
handle
all
forms
of
and accident, hospital, medand
life
insurance
policies
by the company.

Lamps

TERIOR S

EN

special representative
of the Old
Equity Life Insurance Company in
Svanston. Glist, a veteran of the
U. S. Navy, will represent the company in Kane County, Ill.

re

ee

caer

si

warmer

a

D. Glist Will

‘Norman

New

—

New

_ at ‘the NEW

Merchandise

Personalized

Service

May Be Your Own!

659

CENTRAL
We

AVE.,
Will

H.P.

Be

Sacony’s

OPEN

hip-smoothing

Tonight

girdle

THURSDAY
and every Thurs’ ‘til

for your

9:00 p.m.

hip-fitting

BRICKER’S

Panels of nylon power
net and rayon satin lastex
are deftly placed in this little
gem of a Sacony girdle,
to keep your hips and tummy flat
and smooth without pinching or
binding. Front panel dips slightly
for waist-slimming effect. All white, or
white with yellow embroidery on front
panel. Small, medium, large,
extra large. Girdle, or panty-girdle
with nylon tricot crotch, 8.95

PASTRY

SHOP
“ONLY THE FINEST”
Specializing

¢ FINE

DECORATED
Special

in

PASTRIES

¢ HORS

D’OEUVRES
¢ SANDWICH

CAKES

Attention

Given

FOR
to

ALL

dresses

LOAVES
e ROLLS

OCCASIONS

Organization

Affairs

The

NEW

BRICKER’S PASTRY SHOP
801

ELM

Thursday,

WINNETKA
July 9, 1959:

HI

6-3182

609-611
Also

Central
available

Ave.,
at:

THE

Highland

ID 2-8700

Park

PERSHING SMART

SHOP,

4818-4820

N.

WESTERN

AVE., Chicago
Page

13

�_ That Crisp, Casual Look in
N73,
wi

AX

j=

(Continued

of the former

page

5)

Tractomotive

Corp.,

Manacer Of
Skokie Bowling Lane

Bethlehem Program
(Continued

Ralph Nash is vice president; Dr.

YOURS-—

Walter

Glanville,

Raymond

Katajezak and Mr. Carlson are directors.
Mr. Nash will preside during the
summer
months
until Dr. Keller
returns from his vacation.

when

Louis Zenko,

cleans them
Monte

uy

AME Clary,

Srl

Washing-

ton has a way with
sports clothes that
Py
looks good on you.
Gentle, personalized
care returns your soiled garments color
bright, country-fresh and band-boxed
pressed. Even more, Washington provides
a special sizing process — without extra
charge — that restores a like-new body to
all fabrics.
You'll be delighted — as hundreds already are. So call Washington now and
ask for a route man to stop at your home.
He'll come promptly.

G

Vile

UNiversity 4-5900*

Alpine 1-0145

Enterprise 4900*

Call any time.
Line open 24
bours a day.

FORD

for an estimate
and quick service

*
MOTOR

St.,

You

sen,

Before
joining
the
staff
of | II.
Orchard Twin Bowl, Woolever was
Mr. and
part owner and manager of a bowl- children.

ROLL-A-TRAY

two

Former

FAIR TRADE PRICE........ $2195

NOW REDUCED
oeeeee

Effective February

$4595

1, 1959

Beautiful tray tables you’ve always wanted
for buffet entertaining...TV suppers:
“White Marble” pattern in gold, black,
rose
5-pe. Bronze
QUEEN-SIZE
Tray Table Set

on

white

background.

Stain,

aicohoi

resistant trays. Non-skid plastic-tippeo ‘egs.
Four tray tables and handy maiching
storage rack, wheels easily at a touch.

EVERY HOME

Worth of Fine Dry

Town’s

First

$395

in

Talking

Highland

CALL!
About

It!

Park

ZENGELER, INC.
MAIN OFFICE &amp; PLANT:

1905 SHERIDAN
14

have

SETS

receive

WAIT FOR THE PHONE

Page

Woolever

BRASS

May
Be Called...

~ Cleaning for only

Fine

Mrs.

CO.

“Rose Garden”
Item No. B44

JOHN

Cen-

-—-2—4

containing

Whole

of North

AimGoi ZE

FLORENTINE

Jim Tocklet

The

president

ing establishment in Freeport. He
|js a naval veteran of World War

to

$12.90

vice

tral College, Naperville,
I1l., will
lead a panel-discussion concerning
the college and its future. The college is now observing its centennial,

Body &amp; Paint Shop
1877 St. Johns
ID 2-0734

Evanston

to

Mrs. Alex Briber and

HOLMES

Laundry and Drycleaners
Washington

OWNERS
DAILY

5)

Bring your car in

Washington
700

Woolever

Monte Woolever of 1149 Camille
St.,
Deerfield,
has
been
named
manager of Orchard Twin Bowl in
Skokie. He has been an active participant in the bowling field for
over 15 years, Nelson Harris, president of the company, builders and
operators of the center, reports.

In drycleaning — in

page

Mrs. Fredda Kollar. Herbert Wenger is Church School superintendent.
Sunday
evening,
members
of
Bethlehem Church join with other
Evangelical United Brethren people of neighboring communities in
Union
Worship
Services
at Barrington Camp Grounds. The services begin
at 7:30.
This
coming ’
Sunday evening, Dr. Harvey Siem-

»rNWASHINGTON

laundering,

from

grade
through
high
school.
The
program for the Junior and Youth
Department
is composed
of outstanding motion pictures portraying Bible stories followed by a discussion period about the film and
the Biblical setting.
Bethlehem’s
Daily
Vacation
Church School will be held August
10-21. Plans are now underway by
departmental superintendents, Mrs.

Herbert
Smith,
secretary;
Lawrence Smith, treasurer; David Bar-

row,

pe

from

now an affiliate of Allis-Chalmers,
is the retiring president.

Sports Clothes
3

! Named

Dr. Keller Named

Craftsmanship

ID 2-2800
—

Friendly

Service

5-pe. Brass

5-pc. Bronze

5-pc. Brass

QUEEN-SIZE

KING-SIZE

KING-SIZE

Roll-A-Rack* Set
“Normandy”
Item No. B46

Roll-A-Rack* Set
“Olympia”
Item No. B48

Tray Table Set
“Golden Rose”
Item No. B47
$13.95

$19.9

ACE HARDWARE
1746

Second

St.,

Thursday,

ID 2-1150
July

9,

1959

�bib.

we

ples Club
i

~ Plan Two Events For Cou

a

=e

se

i

see

f

©

©

©

©

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ee

es

ee

ee

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tae

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ee

ee

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FOR

BOYS

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AND

GIRLS

Cotton and washable Wool School Dresses $5.95 up
sizes 3-14

New

Winter Jackets $14.95 up
sizes 3-14

Young Girls’ School Dresses $8.95 up
sizes 6-14

Boys’ short and long Pants $3.95 up
Orlon and Wool Sweaters, Blazers, Skirts, Blouses
Discussing the 92 reservations for the Tenthouse play and an
evening at Ravinia are, left to right, Mrs. George Buss, Philip
Craig, Mrs. Craig and George Buss. Mr. and Mrs. Craig are pro-

gram
and

chairmen

Mrs.

Buss

of the Bethlehem Church

are treasurers.

The Couples Club of Bethlehem
Church will have its annual summer social event on Tuesday evening, July 14 when one group will
attend ‘Born Yesterday” at Tenthouse and the other group will go
to Ravinia
to hear
Andre
Kos-

telanetz

and

the

Chicago

Sym-

phony.

Church for refreshments following
the performances.
Mr. and Mrs.
Walter Strub have charge of refreshments, assisted by members of
the executive board.
Officers are Mr. and Mrs. George
H. Stanger, co-presidents and representatives to the church Council
of Administration;
Mr.
and Mrs.
Philip L. Craig, first vice presidents in charge of programs; Mr.
and Mrs. Walter Strub, second vice
presidents
and
hospitality
chairmen; Dr. and Mrs. Michael Baran,
secretaries
and
public
relations;

and

Mrs.

George

treasurers and
resentatives.

Others

on

church

the

H.

Buss,

council

executive

rep-

board

are Mr.. and Mrs. George
Brady,
past presidents and the Rev. and
Mrs, Eugene M. Wykle.
The club meets the first Saturday
of each month, September through
June,
and has one annual
event
such as the one planned for July 14

Deerfield Men
To Attend Tennis

Ch-meionship Dinner
Tennis
fans will have
the opportunity
of meeting
the
famed
United States Davis Cup team and
their captain, Perry Jones, at the
Davis Cup Dinner, July 14, Four

Georges

Room,

sador West

Guildhall,

Ambas-

Hotel.

Among
those aiding Robert H.
Pease,
general
chairman
of the
dinner will be Carlton F. Buerger
728
Hermitage
Drive,
Deerfield.
chairman of Professionals committee,
Chicago
District
Tennis
_ Association;
and
Peer
Pederson,
651
Appletree
Lane,
Deerfield,
director
of the
Chicago
District
Tennis Association.

Mr.

Deerfield Forum
(Continued

Pease,

a

director

Chicago
District
Tennis
tion, announces that Alex

of

the

Associa
Olmedo,

| hero
of the
Cup
matches
last
_ December, will come from Wimble_ don England to attend.
;

Pe ta

J

;

1959,

from

Sagenpaeaeaeessa
SBesaepaeaeaeeasesssa
SBeaeaeaeeaeaeneaeae
e
@seesaeass

page

are

set

by

the

state,

run the vilthe

The

powers

of

SQUARE

PHONE

LAKE FOREST 548 "_ Mate te”

A manager-by-referendum
runs
the village, but he is not elected.
He is not responsible to the people.
Except in a general way, he is not
responsible
to
the
board.
The
board
can, with
some
difficulty,
discharge him, but unless there is

‘Til?!

|

Summer

village

board are sharply curtailed.

2

Open every Friday

FELL SHOES
| Highland
Park

they
are
considerable,
and
cannot be altered by the board
of
trustees.
The division between legislative
and executive functions are then
much
more
distinct.
The
board
makes village laws, but the manlage.

265 MARKET

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SBenpepeupeepseaeaunuauvpeeseevpeaepeaeaeaseaeaeaeaeanweaeaeeaesepeaespaeseaeespeseaseaeaoas
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SBageuepesepeaeeaeaneaeaeaeseseaeaeaeaeeaeseaeseseaeaeaeeaeaesses
ea

and

ager and the president

FOREST

CHILDRENS SHUR:

-2,",9,2,8,8,8.8,8

4)

the board.
Manager-by-referendum is a very
different thing. If a municipality
votes for the manager form of government,
then
the
manager’s

powers

The entire group will return to
the Fellowship Hall of Bethlehem

Mr.

LAKE

Couples Club and Mr.

Shoes

Galore!

another referendum for appeal, the
board can only try to hire another
manager, who would have the same
powers.
This, I submit, is a dangerous
form
of government,
and
is too
high
a price to pay for greater
efficiency.
Part of the trouble in Deerfield.
and right at the core of the present
tug-of-war going on in the village

We have on hand a fine selection
of hot weather shoes.

hall, is the fact that the ordinance

WHITES

creating
the
village
manager
is
vague,
making
it almost
certain
that any manager will become confused and dissatisfied.
Much difficulty would be ended
if the board would decide exactly
what it wants the manager to do
and not to do, and draw up a more
coherent ordinance accordingly.
H.N.

(Let’s

keep

the

ordinance and make
the manager clearly

PASTELS
BRIGHT COLORS

K.

government

by

We have these shoes in your size.

the duties of
defined.—The

Editor)

Mrs.

Kenreth

Northbrook

Griffiths

Women’s

Heads

Come in today.

Society

Mrs. Kenneth Griffiths of 135!
Berkley
Ct.
is president
of the
Women’s Society of Christian Serv
ice of the Northbrook
Methodist
Church.
The
WSCS
meets
once
each
month,
September
through
June
for a business
meeting
and pro-

gram.

The

Society

also

has

evening and two afternoon
which meet monthly ir the
of members.

—

ell Shoes |

five

circles
homes

'

932

Linden

Highland F
Hubbard W.

�Mostly for Women
Garden Club Will
Have Workshop

THE PARTY'S OVER.

The
Garden
Club
of Deerfield
will have a workshop on Thursday,
July 16 in the home of Mrs. William D. George
of 853 Westcliff
Ln.
Patricia Riddle of Highland Park
will be the guest speaker and will
teach the Japanese form of flower
arranging. In this art Miss Riddle
holds a ‘‘Master of Flowers” diploma,.from » the
Sogetsu
School
of
Japan and she taught the first class
in Japanese flower arranging at the
Art Institute of Chicago.
Refreshments will be served and
guests are invited.
The weekly collection of flowers
and greens by this club continues
and
members
and
residents
are
urged to bring them to the home
of
Mrs.
Robert
Goodspeed,
830
Warrington Road each Wednesday.
These flowers will be distributed
through the Chicago Plant Flower
and Fruit Guild.

Mrs. Joseph Perry of the Deerfield Wings, left, and Mrs.
DeWitt C. Cregier of the Deerfield Center of the Infant Welfare Socity of Chicago, smile happily, as they ponder the success of the
dinner-dance held Saturday, June 27 at Lake Forest Academy. The
party’s over but the memory lingers on.

Six 4-H Clubs Are
Preparing For Big
July Events

Bethlehem Youths
?lan To Imitate

Tom Sawyer

The month of July is a busy time
for 4-H members who are finishing
their projects and attending county
events.
The county events began July 8
with a record school at the fair
grounds
auditorium.
The
Home
Economics show is next on July 21
at the Grayslake High School. This
is where the projects are judged
and rated.
The
final
event
is the
Lake
County
Fair,
July
29-August
2.
Here some of the clubs will have
displays in the 4-H building.
Another important date is Deerfield
Achievement
Night
on
Wednesday, July 15 at 8 o’clock at
Zion Lutheran Church. There will
be a style show and demonstrations
of subiects the girls have learned.
Six clubs
“Deerfield

Dears,”

participating
are the
Daisies,’
‘Deerfield

“Deerfield

Marigolds,”

“Deerfield Pansies,’ “Happy Helping Homemaking Hands,” and the
“Thimblekins.”

Senior Gir! Scouts
Are In Colorado

Attending Roundup
The
1959
Girl
Scout
Senior
Roundup
is
being
held
July
3
through
12 in Colorado
Springs,
Colo.
Representing
the
Moraine
Girl Scout Council, in the assemblage of more
than 8,500 senior
Girl Scouts, are Barbara Isely of
1230 Elmwood PI., Carol Kopp of
1040 Wilmot Rd. and Jane Stall-

mann of 1200 Oakwood
Dr., all
Deerfield, with Kay Hart and Nora
Luthmer
of
Mary Towner

Highland
Park
of Mundelein.

and

These girls who left for Colorado from the Deerfield depot will
be pictured
REVIEW on

on the cover
July 16.

of

the

Already at the camp was Mrs.
Walter Kopp who attended as a
volunteer adult from the Moraine
Council.

Page

16

MB te

Tom
Sawyer may have been a
figment
of
the
imagination
of

Mark

Twain,

but

the

in the

inner-city,

is an

interracial church and ministers to
many
Spanish-speaking
people.)
There they will work with young
people of Second Church painting
the picket fence around the church.
Once the job has been completed
the two
groups will go to Lake
Michigan
for a swimming
party.
President Tom Camp urges all the
youths to turn out Saturday with
paint brush in hand to help this
church improve its appearance.
Other social action projects for
the summer undertaken by Bethlehem youths are in the interest
of neighboring
migrant
workers.
Several hundred pounds of clothing were collected for these folk
and fruit juice and cookies are being
collected
for.
use
in
Dailv
Church Schools for the children of
the workers and for evening family nights in the camps. Pinadas are
being made for use in the camp
festivities also. Some of the young
people from Bethlehem
will participate in directing the recreation
for at least one of these family
nights. This work among the migrants is under the supervision of
the
Council
of
Churches.
The
chairmen of the Social Action and
Missions
Commission, for Bethlehem’s Youth Fellowship are Lawrence Carlson and Pamela Rodbro.
Adviser is Mrs. Eugene Wykle.
A swimming party for the afternoon of July 19 is being planned
by
the
chairmen
of
Recreation
Commission,
Linda
Kassner
and

Gary

Whisler.

Adviser

for

the

Commission is Mrs. Robert Camp
with Mrs. George Kassner assisting with the food details. The Rev.

Sheldon
youth.

Trapp

is

The
Bethlehem
Church
linked
with a world out-reach will have as
its guest speaker, Miss Irene Anderson, veteran missionary to Japan on Sunday, July 12. Miss Anderson
has
given special leadership in Bible instruction to high
school
young
people.
Under
her
leadership
the
Boshi
Home
for
Mothers
and
Children
has
been
established.
Miss Anderson will speak at both
services at Bethlehem this coming

minister

to

Jean

She

Wd

ae

nd:
MO

diene

The marriage of
was solemnized on
Lutheran Church in
Preisinger of Faith
their

on jae

vows.

Elizabeth

Given in marriage by her father, °

received

them.

Mr.

and

Mrs, Edward L. Ryerson, 3305 Aptakisic Rd., are Deerfield residents
who
attended
both the luncheon
and the dinner for the Queen on
July 6.
About 400 guests were present
at the luncheon given by Gov. and
Mrs. William Stratton at the Ambassador West Hotel. Among these
guests
were
the
Ryersons
and

James L. Donnelly, father of Deerfield resident, James L. Donnelly
427

Pembroke.

Mayor
Daley’s
dinner
for
the
Quecn was in the Conrad Hilton
Hotel, and the guest list included
approximately
1.000
prominent
persons.
Both
these
events
were
overseen by the U. S. State Department.
which
provided
the
Mayor’s office with instructions in
protocol and in the Queen’s likes
and dislikes in regard to functions
such as these.

Here
Move

To

Evanston

The
Robert B. Edwards
family
has moved from 1140 Half Day Rd.
to Evanston.

From

(Drak

and Mrs. Charles Pantle of Highland Park. Mr. Smith’s mother is
Mrs. Naomi Smith of 1024 Warrington Rd., Deerfield.

Invitations to meet Queen Elizabeth and Prince Philip of England
during their visit to Chicago have
been hoped for by almost everyone and
highly
prized
bv those

Jr..

ta

The bride is the daughter of Mr.

For Queen

have

eee

Fleas

Chib

Mrs. Jean Pantle Silva and Charles Smith
Saturday, June 20 at 4 p.m. in Redeemer
Highland Park with the Rev. Arthur B.
Lutheran Church of Lake Forest hearing

Receive Invitations
To Attend Affair

who

—

Smith

fe SE

Sunday.

Bethlehem

Youth Fellowship is still going to
try out Tom’s philosophy of life.
Saturday
morning
at
8:30
the
young people will leave from Bethlehem
Church for Second
E.U.B.
Church
of Chicago.
(This church

is located

Missionary To Japan
To Speak In Deerfield

Weddings

aaa

Engagements

Milwaukee

Mr.
and
Mrs.
Eugene
Kemper
and
two
sons
have moved
here
from
Milwaukee
to 1153 Camille
Ave,

WH Clubrate Gollen Wedding

the bride wore a beige embroidered
linen suit, Her corsage was of white
orchids.
Mrs. Edward A. Collier of 1047
Wilmot
Rd..
bridesmaid,
wore
a
navy blue linen dress with a corsage of red roses.
Howard
Pantle, brother of the
bride. served as best man.
The bride’s mother wore a blue
»rint and the bridegroom’s mother’ dress was navy blue. Both wore
gardenia and red rose corsages.
A dinner followed the ceremony
for about 50 guests at the Deerpath
Inn in Lake Forest.
Mr. and Mrs. Smith are now at
home in their new house at 1004
Broadmoor
Pl.
Mr.
Smith
is in
charge of grounds for the Deerfield
Park District.

la»

Reading

Group

's Being Organized
The
next meeting
of the play
reading group which is an affiliate
of the Deerfield
Stagers will be
held Friday, tomorrow,
at 1 p.m.
Mrs. Daniel Flanagan of Woodland
Dr., WI 5-3213 may be called for
the location of this meeting.
This group is an extension of the
Stagers but not exclusive to that
membership. Mrs. R. Lenn Franke
Jr. states that anyone interested in
reading and discussing plays of all
kinds is welcome.
Meetings are held on a Friday
afternoon or a Monday evening at
the convenience of the most members at a given meeting. Mrs. Flanagan will provide additional information concerning the project.

Come

From

Maine

The
Herbert
Hemann
family,
with five daughters and one son,
are newcomers to Deerfield. They
have moved to 1345 Hackberry Rd.
from Brunswick, Maine.

Newcomers

On

Timber

Hill

Mr. and Mrs. J. A. Wellmerling
and
two
daughters
have
moved
‘rom Highland Park to 650 Timber
Hill Rd.
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Joffe have
come
from
Chicago
and
have
bought the house
at 671 Timber
Hill Rd.

NEW ARRIVALS
irth Announcements
A daughter was born to Mr. and
Mrs. John P. Foster of 1445 Hackberry Rd. on July 5 at the High-

‘anc

Mr. and Mrs. Carl Horenberger
The children of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Horenberger of 80 Wilmot
Rd. are inviting friends and relatives to a reception on Sunday,
July 12 from 2 to 5 o'clock in celebration of their 50th wedding
anniversary.
Mr. and Mrs. Horenberger yeare| Mrs.
Ralph
(Mary)
Mangino
of
married July 15, 1909 in Wauke- ‘Highland Park; Edward of Mundegan. They have eight children, 20 ‘Tein; Robert and George of Deergrandchildren
and
seven
great /field; Mrs. Thomas (Julia) Moran
grandchildren.
of Mundelein; David of Cary, II;
Their children are Mrs. Arthur | Mrs. Willard (Frances) Martin of
Hook of Eustis, Fla.; | Grayslake.
(Katherine)

Park

Hospital.

Their

other

children are Susan, 14, John, 12,
Nancy,
11 and Gail 7. Grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Owen Foster of Kankakee and Mrs. Melvina
Stoltz of Bradley, Ill.
*
*
*
Mr. and Mrs. Carl P. Johnson
of 1148 Cherry St. announce the
birth of a daughter, Catherine Diane, on July 5 in the Highland
Park Hospital. Her brother, Paul,
is one year old. Grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. R. W. Brettell of Chicago.

Thursday,

July

9,

1959
*.

|

�De

FANNY
wie
i

:

a | eaA,

path

Deerfield Resitonte fave Featured
Roles In ‘The Apollo Of Bellac’

Young

cople Jn

Scheel ain: See
Pvt. Roger Antes, son
Stanley
Antes
of
538
Terr., is stationed at Ft.
Wood, Mo.
*
*
*

George

Armstrong,

son

of Mrs.
Margate
Leonard

of

the

John Armstrongs of 1249 Stratford
Rd., who will be a senior at College of Wooster, at Wooster, Ohio,
this fall, is working at the college
this summer,
Philip, youngest
of
the Armstrong brothers, is spending the summer on the ranch of
his uncle, A. T. Carlson
at Big
Piney,
Wyoming.
Gregory,
eldest
of the sons, is studying in Germany. He received his degree at
Connecticut
Wesleyan
University,
his divinity degree at McCormick
Theological
Seminary in Chicago
and is doing additional
graduate
work on a scholarship in Europe.
*
*
*
Rusti

Salmon

Deerfield

Francisco

residents

Charles

Charles

Francisco

and

Francisco

his

wife,

Rusti,

of 121 Wilmot Rd., will play featured roles in Jean Girardoux’s
one-act satire “The Apollo of Bellac,” to be produced Wednesday, July 15, for 500 North Shore women who are annual
subscribers to the Jewish Federation.
The

production

“Festival
which

of

is

North

being

Shore

is

part

Performing
sponsored
Committee

Women’s

Division

of

tion.

Festival

will

be

of

Mrs.

The

the

Glencoe

home

the

of
by

the

of

the

Federaat

Lester

” Abelson.
Lois
the

Solomon,

Shaw

play

Society

of

director
Chicago,

of
will

direct the performance in a natural
outdoor
theatre
setting
on
the
Abelson grounds.
A radio and television
Mr. Francisco is best

his

“Night Watch”

announcer,
known
for

show

on WIND.

He
recorded
the
voice
of King
Solomon in the jazz interpretation
of “Song
of Songs,’
has
played
leading roles in many
Shaw
So-

ciety

productions,

and_

opposite
Peggy
King
pagne
Complex,”
at
Lane Theatre.
Wife

Is

starred

in ‘‘Chamthe
Drury

Actress

His wife,
known
professionally
as Rusti Salmon, has been active
in television, movies
and on the
stage. Discovered
by Howard
Hughes
she has played
in many
RKO pictures. Her stage credits include
“Happy
Birthday,”
with
Miriam
Hopkins
and
“One
Fine
Day”
with
Mary
Boland
and
Charles Ruggles. Locally she has
appeared
“en.
TV i. in”
“Curtain
Time.”
The Festival, which is the annual
effort of the North Shore Committee to enlist new subscribers. and
members
for the Jewish
Federation, will also include a demonstration of classical and modern dance
techniques
and
a “Panorama
of
Jazz.”
The Jewish Federation is the 60
year
old
central
agency
for
12
medical and social welfare institutions
in
metropolitan
Chicago,
which serve 187,000 people of all

faiths

Appointments

Now

for

WEDDING
CANDID
PHOTOS

FOR DETAILS CALL

Percy H.

Prior, Jr.

Photographer

599 ROGER WILLIAMS AVE.
ID 2-i3199
Txurcdcy,

cuy

9, 2059

CENTRAL

AVE.

ID

2-6944

Ralph E. Linehan, yeoman 3/c,
USN,
son of Mr. and Mrs. John
W.
Linehan
of 2985 Arrowwood
Ln., west of Deerfield, was promoted on June 16 to the present
rating while serving at the Chase
(Continued on page 18)

DEERFIELD DOINGS
Mr. and Mrs. Donald B. Budge Jr. have sold their home at 1121
Linden to Mr. and Mrs, Frank (Jerry) Dinelli of Highland Park and are
moving to Austin, Tex..... Mr. and Mrs. Dinelli (Ann Marie Frantonius), both 18 years of age, were married June 20 in St. James
Catholic Church in Highwood, followed by a luncheon and reception
at
Country
Squire
near
Gages
Lake. Their honeymoon to the Wis- Noy
consin Dells is over and they are
George W. Haney of 2320 Riverbusy getting settled in their new woods Rd. is one of the three new
home. Mrs. Dinelli is a staff memvice chairmen of the Lake Forest
ber of the Highwood
Community
College Parents Council appointed
Center Recreation department. Mr. by John W. Scallan, chairman, to
Dinelli is employed at Northmoor
assist him in liaison work between
Country
Club
in Highland
Park. the parents of currently enrolled
Mr. Dinnelli is a brother of Mrs. and prospective students and the
Paul P. Haines of 1116 Linden Ave. college
administration.
EE
Recently the chancel choir of the
Presbyterian
Church
enjoyed
a
barbecue supper at the home
of
Mr. and Mrs. George Holderbaum
of 1356 Arbor Vitae Rd.
George Ott was host at a family
picnic at his home at 846 Forest
Ave. on the Fourth of July. His
daughter, Doris, and her family are
here for a visit from Rochester,

GIRLS’ DRESSES

Haney, a personnel consultant, will
direct the efforts of the Council
in presenting Lake Forest College
to prospective students. His son,
George,
will be a sophomore
at
the beginning
of the fall term.
Young
George’s
mother,
Mrs.
Helen Haney, is librarian of West

FIRST DRESS

. . . regular price

Deerfield Township Public Library.
(Continued

on

page

18)

SECOND

DRESS

YOU
AND

YOUR

CHILD

ENJOYING

$700
300

Summer

SIG

THIS SUMMER?

Fie

get

ae

Pre-Teen
SUNSHINE VALLEY children are having a wonderful time. They are swimming or learning to swim in
our heated pool, enjoying the wood shop and craft shop
and learning safety in boats besides having a full
round day of activities. Everyone is having fun led
by a very fine staff.

annually.

Make

507

the

Arts,’

held

EVANSTON

Why doesn’t your child join us for the last four
weeks, beginning JULY 20th. Transportation provided
to our

18

cool

Sh

ae

SEE OUR SALE TABLES
OF ITEMS
REDUCED AS MUCH

AS

30%

acres.

SUNSHINE VALLEY
Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Thompson,

LAKE

FOREST

directors

3120
Page

17

�PLANNING A
FALL WEDDING?

(Continued

from

page

Beeville,

17)

Texas.

*
o*
*
Appleton, Wis.,

announcement
that
Joyce
(now Mrs.
Gerald Fox)
a

fidence in us.

at Lawrence

College,

comes

the

Ward,
senior

has received

high honors for a semester scholastic average of 2.750 or better on a

3.00 system. Mrs, Fox is the daughter
of

: 653

LAUREL

of Mr. and Mrs. George Ward
714
Osterman
Ave.
Mr.
and

(tiff presenle

Flowers

AVE.,

his mother,
Westchester,

H.P.

ID

Marilyn

call

18
‘or

days, departing from
Warsaw every week

through

September

September,

Helsinki
May 21

from

w="

countries.

28

$1687

CHARTER

Departures:

complete.

June

§ 463

Herman

Central

F; Anspach,

FOR

14, 21,

ANY

ok

*K

on

June

26

at

the

35th

Provisional

Force

Cadet

Academy,

Air

Letters
address:

Wing,

U.S.

The

Air

Colorado.

TTT mh wa
TIME TO ACT

WI

—

(Continued from page 17)
Mr, and Mrs. James

Oberlin and

their daughter, Constance, of Orlando,
Fla.,
have
been
visiting
neighbors in the village. The Ober-

lins formerly lived at 720 Chestnut
St.

Mrs.

Oberlin

taught

at Wilmot

School for several years.
Mrs. Richard N. Becker of Woodward Ave., who underwent major
heart surgery several weeks
ago
at Wesley
Memorial
Hospital,
is
reported
improving.
Mrs.
Becker
teaches
at Edgewood
School
in
Highland Park.

If you

have

been

company

from

out

on a
of

trip, had

town

or

en-

tertained at a party, call the editor
at WI 5-4500
column more

and help make
interesting.

Robert Evans

of Westfield,

the

N. J.

has purchased
the house
at 525
Pine St. and is moving his family
here
this
month.
Mr.
Evans
is
with the A. B. Dick Co. He bought
the house from Mr. and Mrs. Les-

ter

Willson,

San

Diego,

who

are

moving

call:

for their new home
to be ready

on Kenton Rd.

for occupancy.

Zion Lutheran Church was the
setting for a very quiet wedding on
June 16 when Miss Maria Fejes,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Julius

PARK

INC.

Deerfield

Fejes of 1053 Deerfield Rd. became
the bride of Sandor Lendvay of
Chicago. The Rev. Paul V. Berggren

MID-SUMMER

officiated.

Their

witnesses

were Mrs. Percy M. Stelle and
Wayne Johnson. The Fejes family
came
to Deerfield
several years
ago when Hungarian refugees were
admitted to the United States during that uprising.

CLEARANCE

Rem Tw

Lightning

action

CO

The

. . . that’s

present with a future, a U. S.

Savings Bond.

what you get when you come

NOW IN PROGRESS

to VIKING

REALTY

CO.

to buy

or sell property. Call WI 55300 or come in this week.

Carpet Repairs?
A
A

e ALL-IN-ONES

Bad

Hole

Call
a

e PANTY

GIRDLES

BUILDERS

tm

tn

Pwr

—

An

Spot—
A

Tear?

Expert!

LEWIS NortHsroox

CSO.

REALTORS
bse
*+&gt; APPRAISERS

826 DEERFIELD
Koad.
PEERFIELD, eer.

Dial

VE

5-2400

e GIRDLES
e LINGERIE

Going

e ROBES

Somewhere?

e BRAS

Drastic Reductions

Daily door-to-door service to and from all airports, train depots, boat docks and the Chicago
Loop.
REASONABLE

RATES

Call

Emity Jacobi 575 uncon
OF WINNETKA,

to

Calif.

Cedar St., and more recently at
630 Hermitage Dr., while waiting

5-3852

TRANSIT,

ID 2-1211

ey

Rd. They had formerly lived at 800

Drivers

DEERFIELD - HIGHLAND

ly

Mrs. E. R. MacPherson
of 755
Chestnut St. was the guest of her
cousin, Mrs. Susan Cowlin Reed in
Woodstock
on Thursday.
. . The
Robert
Knutsens
have moved
to
their new home
at 1401 Kenton

BUSES

For Information

ve

Deerfield Doings

2088-

Squadron,

OCCASION

Insured

Pres.

Ave., H.P.

were

Schools — Churches — Clubs

H. andR. Anspach
TRAVEL BUREAU

g

Available

3, $519.

$2,105.

junior,

that
and

glencoe

Mon. Appts.

MAUPINTOUR _ Student - Teacher
Economy Tours. 72 days, visiting 12
'

Clifford,

Basic Cadet Allen BE. Wolf
Air

ve 5-355

Tours.

MAUPINTOUR
Luxury
Sailings.
9 departures
aboard
the Queen
Mary and Elizabeth, April through

ah

F.

Force
Base
in Colorado.
are always welcome. His

Force

Motorcoach

*

on the honor roll for high scholastic grades.
Sally is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. R. I. Cassady of 624 Hermitage Dr. and Marilyn’s parents are
Mr. and Mrs. Walter Clifford of
908 Fair Oaks Ave.

K,

for full information call .. .

*

S. Fox in
summer.

Lake Forest College reports
Sally M. Cassady, freshman,

reported

hair styles &amp; colors

MAUPINTOUR

took

Allen Wolf, son: of Mr. and Mrs.
Edwin Wolf of 457 Hermitage Dr.,

2-3420

See Russia for yourself!

marriage

Mrs. R.
Ill:, this

*

for the BEST
in

whese

*

Let Bahr’s handle the complete arrangement of flowers for you. Our skill, taste
and dependability will justify your con-

From

Fox,

place at the Decrfield Presbyterian
Church on June 6, are living with

Field Naval Auxiliary Air Station
at

|

Mrs.

Young People

HI

6-4750

MIDWAY LIMOUSINE
SERVICE
EXPEDITED
For

ROgers

Park

AIRPORT

reservations,

1-5878 —

SERVICE
call:

Lake

Forest 4550

Thursday,

July

9, 1959

�MISS SHIRLEY SCASSELLATI 1S WED

rs. Vaile Named

The Junior Dominic
Announce

To White House
Gov. William G. Stratton has announced the appointment of Mrs.
Horace S. Vaile of 112 Maple Ave.
as a member of the Illinois Committee for the 1960 White House
Conference on Children and Youth.

The

Were

White

begun

Roosevelt

»

House

in

1909

|

of

the

Mr.

632

October benefit ball. The luncheon
meeting Tuesday will be held at
Saddle and Cycle Club, Chicago.
Site of the fall ball will be the
deck
of the
first
Trans-Atlantic
Steamer to enter Chicago since the
opening of the St. Lawrence SeaWay.

Welcome

Turchis,

and

Hill

Mrs.

St.,

Rollin

became

the Etters’ are Gwen,
and Ron, 3.
Mrs. Arthur
bridge,
Mass.,
grandmother.

Mr.

who will make plans July 14 for an

William

Dominic

PEN

1907

St.

A.

the

Etter,

parents

ALL DAY

June
15 of their fourth child, a
daughter,
Karen
Lynne,
at Lake
Forest Hospital. Other children of

Bett’s

Mrs. Julian E. Roseth, 412 Sheridan Rd., and Mrs. William Berger,
380 Dell Ln., are two charter members of the Chicago chapter, WAIF,

Mrs.

WE'RE

(| Fourth Child Is Born
To The Rollin A. Etters

his|:

Highland Parkers To Aid Plans
For WAIF Fall Benefit Ball

and

|

Child

|

concern for the welfare of children |:
and youth
in the United
States.
Since
then,
the
conference
has
been called every 10 years, with
delegates
from
every state, both
professional
and
lay, meeting
in
. Washington to discuss and take ac- |
tion in all services, practices and
plans affecting children.
Mrs. Vaile is a member
of the |
Illinois
Commission
on Adoption
whose work during the past two]:
years has resulted in the introduction of a new and improved adoption law for Illinois.

Mr.

senior

Second

|:

Theodore

because

Turchis
First

Mr. and Mrs. Edwin N. Lindgrin
of Minneapolis are maternal grandparents. Paternal grandparents are

Conferénces

by President

Of

Mr.
and
Mrs.
Dominic
Turchi
Jr., 140 Michigan Ave., Highwood,
announce
the birth of their first
child.
A
daughter,
Karin
Marie,
was born June 22 at Highland Park
Hospital.

Committee

,~

Birth

and

Mrs.

Robert

Arthur

The Rev. D. A. Runkle officiated
at the wedding ceremony in Holy
Cross
Church,
Deerfield,
which
united
in marriage
Miss
Shirley
Seassellati
and
Robert
Arthur
Grossenbach Jr. Miss Scassellati is
the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Con-

(Continued

C. R. ANDERSON

Their Third Son, Gary

INSURANCE

Mr. and Mrs. William Firestone,
3162 University Ave., announce the
birth of a son, Gary Allan, born
June 26 at Highland Park Hospital.
Their other sons are Randy Scott,
5, and Jeffrey Lee, 4.
Mrs. Jack Rothbaum of Chicago
is the
infant’s
maternal
grandmother.

Sound,

on page

AGENCY,
—

BONDS

36)

INC.

4,

Saturday
ALL DAY

of Cammaternal

Wednesday

Photo

i

ALL

Summer

LONG»

PRESENTS...

Experienced Insurance Service
There

WIndsor
735

Onge
the

Jr.

and Mr. Grossenbach is the son of
the senior Robert A. Grossenbachs
of Milwaukee.
The ceremony was performed before the altar decked with flowers
and ferns. Ribbons and flowers decorated the pews. Organist at the

stantine Scassellati, 740 Clavey Rd.,

Firestone

Grossenbach

St.
is

'5; Wayne,

Deerfield

5-0155

Road,

Deerfield,

is no such thing as a

“‘typical’’ Willis patron. Every
woman who comes to our shop is
Ill.

distinctive and individualistic—

STORE

yet each will have a flair for the
dramatic

9:15

in hair styling.

She will be a woman who
demands highly personal atten-

MONDAY

tion and deftly fast service—
like.

Mrs.

WOULDN'T
YOU

Merle

THROUGH

SATURDAY

.

Brody

of Highland Park, whose coiffure was styled last week by
Miss Bendy . . . newest

Willis stylist.

RATHER

HOURS:
- 5:15

And

now—all

during

July—the

fabulous “Sale of Sales” is o
Store-wide reductions! Subst
tial savings on silver, china, lit
ens, lamps and shades, antiques,
summer and occasional furni-

ture,

practical

and

decoratiy

gifts of every description. Co
in—shop and save in air-co
tioned

Mrs. Brody’s hair is shaped into
a bubbling boufant with an em-

| Right now an Olds
costs

less than you’d

VALUE-RATE
AT

YOUR

A

ROCKET

LOCAL

guess!

TODAY!

AUTHORIZED

OLDSMOBILE
QUALITY

July 9, 1959

DEALER’S

comfort.

pirish twist extending above the

nape of the neck. The style is
brought alive with ‘’professional’’ sunshine on the tips.

WILLIS

PRESENTS

BEAUTY

SALON

661 Vernon Ave., Glencoe
Phone: VErnon 5-3555
Lake Forest Shop-645 Western
Phone

cas

Lake

563 LINCOLN
WINNETKA

Forest 644

Open Mondays

HI

6-1811

AVE.

�ea ;

REtia tr

North Shore's

Outstanding
Selection of Toys

fab

EE

Rs

Bala ee Re i OF

‘

‘i

ay

pe

ee

John

A. Kalk Graduates

From

Officer

en
ee

ve ,

we

RN

b3

FS Ap

IN

ais

CORE

A.

atte

Cee

Ope

T

pike

Hite

W Neat
fing Nadas Fo

/

William Daniel Seitz Takes Bride

Academy

Army Specialist Four John A.|
Kalk, son of Mr. and Mrs. Edward
Kalk, 1469 St. Johns
graduated from the

Ave., recently
4th Armored

Division Non-Commissioned

Officer

Academy in Ulm, Germany.
Specialist Kalk is regularly

signed

as

quarters

35th

a

dispatcher

Company

Armor

in

of the

|:
|.

in

|

as-|:

Head

|

division’s

|:

Erlangen.

He

en-|

—

tered the Army in May, 1957, and|_
arrived
in Europe
in December,
1957. Kalk is a 1953 graduate of |.

Highland Park High School.

INC.

| | 1833 2nd STREET

ID 2-3001

contact

lenses ?

—_

i

f

‘

See your eye physician
(M.D.) first. If he says
you can wear them—
H.O.V. has all the newest

types. Get the benefit
of our 20 years of
pioneering and

WE INVITE YOU TO
SPECIAL CLEARANCE
OF

BOYS’

FURNISHINGS

continued

OUR
SALE

©

&amp; CLOTHING!

Long

6 to

for

our

new

booklet.

Ftouse of Vision’

&amp;

Craftsmen

Short

in Optics

1891 SHERIDAN ROAD
HIGHLAND PARK

WABASH,

CHICAGO
©H.O.V.
e

© SWEATERS
20

in

the

group

A THINKING

William

William Daniel Seitz, son of Mr.
and
Mrs.
Richard
J. Seitz, 1326
Ridgewood Dr., took Miss Elizabeth
Ann Schnorr as his bride on June
13. The bride is the daughter of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
R. C. Schnorr
of
Farmington, N.M. The double ring
ceremony
took
place
in
Sacred
Heart Church in Farmington.
Given in marriage by her father,
the bride wore
a gown
of chan-

apa

135 NORTH

¢ T SHIRTS
Sizes

write

Che

FURNISHINGS

SPORT SHIRTS,
Sleeves

Mrs.

tions about contact lenses—

1/3 OFF
ON

research.

For the answer to your quesDaniel

Seitz

tilly lace over taffeta, styled in the
Empire fashion with the skirt flowing into a chapel train. Her shoulder-length illusion veil was held by
a small crown of seed pearls matching those on her dress. She carried

a

bouquet

of

French

white carnations.
Miss Margaret

maid

Coury

of honor;
(Continued

shatteredserved

WOMAN’S

1/3 OFF
ON
e ALL

WOOL

© SPORT

COATS

Sizes

20

6 to

SELLING!

| REVERSIBLE or
| FLEECE-LINED

NOW

§ [™ 99

| Reg. $8.95
- $9.95 .......

...0n a sort of SENSITIVE Subject:

|]Bere:
SPECIAL SELLING!
cl acKs
VA

THE

ORE

ABOVE

PO

en

oe

AC

ee

MERCHANDISE

AVAILABLE

IN

HUSKY

OFF

RE

IS

*

ALSO

SIZES

by

IN

THE

Avenue

Hubbard

HUBBARD

WOODS

VErnon

FASHION

Woods

CENTER

5-3181

The North Shore’s finest shop for Boys and Young Men

Page

20

oe

~°

Cleanliness

ae)

who

fe},

| Geutlemen Gg a,
69 Linden

FETEF pS LISS
TEV EV EVPSPSPS
oe VET e Ve Ve V oe Vie Vat V ot Y ot Van Ve Ve Ve Ve Ve Ve Vout 2
SS 9990090090,

Pr
3°

SS

1/2

am

presents

is entrusted

with

a

constant
the

problem

maintenance

for

of her

the
home.

woman
Dust-

ing, sweeping and just plain picking-up become routine,
but when confronted with a clogged drain or sewer you
wish for a magic wand to dispel the problem. We HAVE
a “magic wand” which will make your sink, bathtub, wash
basin, floor drain or main sewer line work like new. Just
call ID 2-3220, discuss your problem with a registered engineer, who will give you a FREE estimate and a GUARANTEE in writing. The company is nationally respected for
its efficient, courteous and prompt service. The secret is
out...call NOW... 1D 2-3220.

OoOoooO

|

ODOOVOO

| WINDBREAKERS

oof hed Yel ect Ud tod thet us
eet

|

eAES
e
fu fe, He, Oe
pe 22loCel

|

SUITS

SLACKS

SPECIAL

|

CLOTHING

e COTTON

OOOO
OOVO
OVO VO OOOO
OOO OOOO
to \oF Nol ol No) Nol Vo! “od No) Vol Nol Vol No! Nol Na) Nal Nad Nad Nal Nal Nal Nal Nal a

may we suggest that you tear this out and keep it with your other private memos.

as

she and _ brideson page 24)

*F

.

Thursday,

.

}

July

9,

#59

ae

�SO

weaos

ice

8.

a

We

OR

eey

ais

ae

vy

¥
er

Robert Berube Takes Bride In lowa

Carpet

Clearance

2375 square yards of name-brand carpeting will go on sale at 9 A.M.,
Friday, July 10. Shop early for best selection.
186

YDS.

HEAVY

Champagne,

pink,

COTTON
beige,

SHAG................... reg. 6.50 sq. yd.

sand

$3.99

j
|-

beige

4

63 YDS. 100% DU PONT NYLON TWIST, grey .. reg. 8.95 sq. yd.

$4.99 |

74 YDS. 70% WOOL—30% NYLON,

¢

Beige &amp; white tweed 2.0.0...

97 YDS. ALL WOOL, gtey 2) ce

reg. 10.95sq. yd.

$7.50

reg. 9.95 sq. yd.

$7.50 |

61 YDS. ROXBURY ALL WOOL, beige tweed __ reg. 10.50 sq. yd.
with

foam

pad

q

$7.80

|

attached

:

126 YDS. ROXBURY ALL WOOL, pumpkin beige .. reg. 9.95 sq. yd.

$7.50

|

128 YDS. ALL WOOL, grey-beige ...................... reg. 8.50 sq. yd.

$5.95

|

156 YDS. ALL WOOL, champagne ........................ reg. 8.75 sq. yd.

$5.95

4

@

PLUS MANY

Lewis
Edens

OTHERS

@

&lt;

Carpets

near Tower
Open

Monday

VE 5-2400

through

Saturday,

9 to

5 —

Evenings

by

Appointment.

Luther-Rusing

Mr.
Robert L. Berube,
James
Murphy,
1826

and

Mrs.

son of
Sunset

Robert

L.

Berube

Mrs.|seph Harney of Woodward.
Rd.,
The wedding took place

in

As

and the late Mr. C. C. Berube, wed | sumption Church in Granger, Iowa.
Miss Susan Harney in Woodward,|The Rev. James Harney of LouisIowa, on June 6. Miss Harney is| ville, Ky., a cousin of the bride,
the daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Jo(Continued on page 38)

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

Whipped Cream
.sNot
|

CHIFFON
PIES

Only Cleaned
'
but RE-FINISHED!

SIV) werd peddiym uezoly*** GNV
try our delicious

e We give you an EXTRA service
... your cottons, sport shirts, slacks
and silks come back to you looking as bright and
crisp as new... all their life, body and lustre

0

restored. OUR SPECIAL SIZING PROCESS*
MAKES ALL THE DIFFERENCE!

and

remember

..

.

You

can

RA

-

N

G

_
a

E

C

H

FFO

ee
eo

aan

RELY

‘&amp;

on...

pe

i

LS

N

CAKES

POTATO

BAKED

|

SALAD

BEANS

BAKED HAM

HAMBURGER &amp; HOT DOG BUNS

Phone Today... 1D 2-4551
) Serving the faa

Shore Over 60 Years

2226 Green Bay Rd., H.P. — AMPLE

Thursday, July 9, 1959

FREE PARKING

DEERFIELD
813

WAUKEGAN

RD.,

peuicaressen Jj

;

BAKERY

BAKING:

&amp;

WERE PROUD OF vi

DEERFIELD

3

|

WI

i.

5-0068 —

Page 21

�~WeltEn. Shves
THE

499

YOUNG

Central

MAN'S

POINT

OF

VIEW

IN

Ave.

SHOES

ID

2-0172

present the WESTPORT...

SLEEK

William

Bruce

Is Born

At

Mr.
meyer,

and
734

SPORTS

TIE

FLAT

WITH

TAPERED

CAR

Mrs.
Ridge

came the parents

:

Hospital

Thomas
Rd., June

udith

oF

acgeler

ig

:

ecomes

ale

(J

WV

:

a Kistler

Klaus27 be-

of a son, William

Bruce, at Highland Park Hospital.
The infant has one brother, John
Brian, 3.
Maternal grandmother is Mrs. A.
R. Pfaffinbach of South Bend. The
paternal
grandparents,
also
of
South Bend, are Mr. and Mrs. O. H.
Klausmeyer.

Gavin

AS A NEW

Klausmeyer

Local

R.

Aboard

Boyd

Serves

Aircraft

Carrier

Gavin
R. Boyd,
seaman,
USN,
1301 Ridge Rd., is serving aboard
the anti-submarine aircraft carrier
USS
Lake
Champlain
operating
with the U.S. Sixth Fleet in the
Mediterranean. The ship is in the
midst
of a three-month
tour
of
duty.

LOw,

LINES

Local
Train

Logistical
At Camp

Major

Reservists
McCoy

Charles

D. Ellsworth,

1641

Northland Ave., and Chief Warrant
Officer Esther Larsen, 11 Walker
Ave.,
Highwood,
are
among
the
more than 300 members of the 322d
Logistical
Command,
a
Chicago
area Army Reserve Unit, attending
summer encampment this month at
Camp McCoy, Wis.
NOTICE OF PUBLIC HEARING
is hereby given by the Board of Education
of School District No. 109 in the County of
Lake,
State of Illinois,
that
a _ tentative
budget for said school district for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 1959, will be on
file and conveniently available to public inspection at Deerfield Grammar School from
and after 9 o’clock A.M. on the ninth day
of July, 1959 at 501 Deerfield Road in this
that

Notice

a Public

is further

Hearing

on

J. D.

hereby

said

Mrs.

of a sleek, new sports car.

by

Softest leather and a contrasting
rubber sole . . . newest flat to

Orange

at

School in this School District 109. | in marriage Miss Judith Ann Laegeler, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Lester
this sixth day of July, 1959.
BOARD
OF EDUCATION
OF | Laegeler, 2673 Logan St., and Stephen Bird Kistler II, son of Mr. and

LILLIAN

C.

ROOT,

109|

secretary

7/9/59—196

‘a

come along in ages.

Dr. William Atkinson Young performed the ceremony which united

Deerfield

Mrs. Kirtsel S. Kistler of Elmira, N.Y. The couple repeated their wedding vows in a 4:30 p.m. ceremony held June 27 at The Highland Park
(Continued on page 39)

Sa

x

PUBLIC HEARING
Public hearing will be held in the City
Hall, 428 Green Bay Rd., Highwood,
on
July 22, 1959, at 7:30 p.m. to discuss the
re-zoning of land on Euclid Ave., formerly
belonging to the Chicago &amp; North Western
Railway Co.
JOSEPH BARUFFI
Chairman of the Zoning Board
7/9-16/59—195

$6.95
VORITE SPORT.MEMOS

sa

el

AND

Funeral

Jewish

NORTH

COMPANY

Directors to the

Community

Since

SHORE

Call Midway

prompt

1865

SERVICE
service

. . . Lee

of 970 points and by scoring 81 points in games
nents became

personally arrange and conduct the
entire funeral—a service of warmth
and

beauty,

observing

ritual with reverence.

Shore

Chapel:

Furth,

Jules L. Furth, and their staff, will

3-5400

South

J.

2100

East

75th

Street,

customs

Clyde

and

Avenue

BLACK
DIRT
(Screened,

Stock

Piled)

CALL....

MENONI
&amp; MOCOGNI
2200 Skokie Hwy., Highland Park

ID 2-0850

“Page

22

CUSTOM

im

. In 1952-53

season he broke Lovelette’s major college record of 795 by notching
884, .. . O’Brien’s 3 year total of 2537 points was also a record.
Can the Pacific Coast support a Major League team? The record
attendance for a single game in the Major Leagues is held by Cleveland
on Sept. 12, 1954 . . . 86,563 attended

and

in 1956 over 8 million

National League games and over 7 million American
pretty big figures to live up to.

1775 SECOND

STREET

We Install

attended

League—those

—

MADE

j

with non-college oppo-

first to pass 1,000 . . . in one season, that is...

GREENWALD’S,
at

SHU

O’Brien’s record. . . . When Johnny finished school in 1953, he held 3
all-time scoring records—During 51-52 season, he set small college record

Complete facilities in your community
for

By ED GREENWALD
When a school gets someone like Elgin Baylor, we begin to wonder
what the last record holder at the school did . . . so looked up Johnny

are

ID 2-1100

LUGEUUADEOLEEA TELE
FURELVROUAVEU EATEN =

[tf

KP

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

:
E
f

Red

1959

SCHOOL DISTRICT NO.
In the County of Lake
State of Illinois

... reminds you

Black
Grey

August,

Landfield

II

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

Ly

Dated

Low, tapered lines

of

Kistler

nat tt

Grammar

day

Bird

Budget

will be held at 8 o’clock P.M. on the seventeenth

Stephen

LUT

given

District.

UL

School

_
ie a

THE

wee

‘

EXCITING

‘alae

Ke; aN

¢

NEW

ee ve
deine Mor
HOTEL

SVilla

OPEN
IS NOW
New Concept in Hotel Vacation and
Business Accommodations
§ private meeting and conference rooms ... magnificent outdoor and indoor swimming ‘pools ... dining in the splendor of
A

the

Fountain

Room

...

cocktails

at

the

Highland

Fling

...

Highland Park Music Theatre ... 100 spacious air conditioned
rooms and suites. FREE PARKING,
iy
For information call VErnon 5-4000

fitla

No

HIGHLAND

PARK,

rgrer
ILL.

Pat Miller, General Mgr.
SKOKIE

HIGHWAY-LAKE
COOK
EDENS, EXPRESSWAY

ROAD

i

&amp;

Vertical Shutters
¢ Shoji Panels
¢ Louvre Doors
¢ Screens
¢ Room Dividers
¢ Fret Work

Buy Direct from the
Manufacturer and Save!

SHUTTER
HOUSE
7600 Greenwood Ave., Chicago
Samples shown in

your Home.
PHONE:

RA 3-3632
CR 2-5541

Formerly Crestwood Products
Thursday,

July

9,

1959

�Democratic Women
The

Democratic

Women’s

Club

Slate Membership Tea
of

the 138th Congressional District of
Illinois will have its first membership tea next Thursday at 2 p.m. at
the Evanston home of Mrs. Russell

Packard,

club

founder.

Special

Guests

Special
guests
will
be
the
Democratic
state
representatives
from their respective districts: Joseph J. Lelivelt, fifth; Bernard M.
Peskin, sixth;
Jeanne
C,. Hurley,
seventh;
and
Jack
Bairstow,
thirty-first.
The
Club
was
incorporated
in
1956
and
formally
organized
in
1958 at the home of Adlai Stevenson. At the spring business meeting
the membership
approved the es-

tablishment of a 13th Congressional
District Campaign Fund as one of
its projects.
Mrs. Wayne A. R. Leys, Wilmette, president, says the tea is open
not only to members,
but democratic women
who would
like to
join.
Mrs.
Richard
Levin,
2576
Sheridan Rd., area vice president,
will
accept
reservations
by
telephone (ID 2-4709).

Eugene L. Rose Elected
To Young Presidents’ Group
Eugene L. Rose, president of the
Gene Rose Company, Inc., Chicago,
has been
elected
to membership
in the Young Presidents’ Organiza(Continued on page 34)

VOTERS LEAGUE
WELCOMES NEW
CITIZENS TODAY

Expert Hair Coloring
. . including all shades
of light blondes

Members of the League of Women
Voters
of
Highland
Park
welcomed new citizens and helped
them to register after a Naturalization ceremony
held today in the
County Court House, Waukegan.
Among
the
65 petitioners
for
citizenship representing 20 foreign
countries are five residents from
Highland
Park
and
three
from
Highwood.
Highland Parkers
are Kathleen
Coscrove, 945 Dean Ave.; Eugenio
and Alvarino Toni, 2731 St. Johns
Ave.;
Erio Mordini,
1666 Second

(Continued

on page

Permanent

Waves

Hair Cutting
Specializing

In All Branches Of Beauty

BEAUTY SALON

se
1815

St. Johns

ID 2-1603

Avenue
EXPERIENCED

32)

Culture

OPERATORS

OPEN THURS. &amp; FRI. NITES, 7-9
Truck will be parked at our warehouse parking lot from 9 a.m. today until 5 p.m. Saturday!

NORGE BLASTS PRICES on FREEZERS!
The

Norge

Factory

Representative

will be there to Answer Your Questions These

a3)

=

hab

Days.

Se

mi

nh ai Re
Ree

i

at

NI
i}

Model AV-12

U

Model AV-15

a

*1999%

15
Cu.

$2

Ft.

@

JET-FREEZE

Shelves

@

Automatic

@

HANDIDOR

Storage

@

Food

@

SAFETY

@

Freezer

@

COLD-LOCK

LATCH

Door

Insulation

COLD

Protection
and

wiarvciliia

3950

19
Cu.

CONTROL
Warranty

sealed-in

system

© PullOur BASKET

HIGHWOOD
of Moraine

Rd.—East

of Tracks

°

S

Model CB-915
REFRIGERATOR-FREEZER
ULTRA-SPECIAL!

@

SAFETY

@

Dry

@

Safety

@

DELUXE

Control

This Big Beauty

CONDENSER

Can't Be Beat

Temp.

Cabinet
DOOR

Inside

at this Bargain

SEALS
&amp;

Out

Price. 2 Doors, Too!

RADIO &amp; APPLIANCE CO.
a

Blocks North

“a

5269°° ¥35"53 695°

Ft.

2631 Waukegan Ave., Highland Park morser' tiesiey Evenings F'
1%

J

SPECIAL!

SPECIAL!

SPECIAL!
12

Model AV-19

eel

ednesaa

‘

AMPLE
PARKING AT

FREE
ALL TIMES

ID 2-6260

:

i

rome

July 9, 1959

Page

23

�Pr

',

ve

v

15:8

neh

a

{

is

William D. Seitz Takes Farmington Bride
Rey

(Continued

ORs

maids,

A
i

¢ Perfect accommodations for
small or large attendance

* Convenient to North Shore
and Downtown Chicago

¢ Parking adjacent to building

* Funeral

igi

consultation

and arrangements

may be made

Sydney

page

20)

Norman

Miss
Patricia
Dickinson,
Farmington, were classmates
bride both in high school and
University
of New
Mexico.
were gowned identically in
length aqua taffeta dresses.
wore
matching
headbands
floater veils.

Memorial Chapels
¢ Most Complete Funeral Home
in Metropolitan Area

Miss

from

and

all
of
of the
at the
They
waltzThey
with

Flower
girls
were
the _ bride’s
cousins from Albuquerque,
Susan
Doak and Mary Catherine Harris.
They wore coral dresses.

in your

own home with our North Shore representative.

Philip Seitz served as his brother’s best man. Ushers were William

SUBURBAN

PHONE

or LOngbeach
q

Schnorr,

NUMBER—VE_Enrnon 5-2221
1-4740

5206 North Broadway, Chicago

a

brother

Robert Garcia and
of Albuquerque.

of
Don

the

bride,

Moore,

all

For her daughter’s wedding, Mrs.
Schnorr chose
to wear
a sheath
dress
of pale
green
linen
with
matching
accessories
and
white

(Just north of Foster)

corsage. Mrs. Seitz wore a gown of
Dior blue lace with all pink acces-

sories,
The home of the bride’s aunt and
uncle, Mr. and Mrs. W. R. Gibson,
was the scene of the reception.
The bride received her bachelor
degree in Fine Arts from the University of New Mexico this June.
She is a member of Chi Omega, social
sorority,
and
Sigma
Alpha
Iota, honorary music sorority.
Mr. Seitz, a graduate of Highland
Park High School and the University of New Mexico, has been on the
staff of Esponola High School in
New Mexico, where he taught biology last year. He is a member of
Kappa Sigma fraternity.
After a honeymoon in Colorado,
the couple is living in Albuquerque,
Late in August, they will leave for
Hawaii where they will teach in the
public schools.

C.

Miss

Ruth

Bennette

Moore

Griswold

Mr. and Mrs. James F. Griswold
Jr. of Tallulah,
La., formerly
of
East Park Ave., announce the engagement of their daughter, Miss
Ruth
Frances
Griswold,
to Kent
Albritton Russell. Mr. Russell is the
son of Mrs. Frank Valentine Russell of New Orleans and the late
Mr. Russell.
(Continued

on

STATE

page

42)

FARM

INSURANCE

“What can you buy

fora penny today?”
MORAL:

INSURANCE

WI 5-1383
HENRY HAKANEN
825

Deerfield

Farm Mutual Automobile
Insurance Co.
State Farm Life Insurance Co.
State Farm Fire and Casualty Co.
HOME OFFICE—BLOOMINGTON, ILLINOIS

When you move

MIXING

more of it (actually 4 times as much

to town...or to
anew home...
Your

as you did a few years ago).

lectricity costs |

than it did many

Welcome

Wagon

Hostess will call with a
basket of gifts...and
friendly greetings from
our religious, civic and

oss today you know.
jong

Rd., Deerfield

State

CAKE

much better .. . you’re using much, much

ee

CALL

CV

but because electricity makes living so

ae

FOR

[f your electric bill seems high,

it’s not because electricity is expensive,

by

®

years

business leaders.
If

4

you,

know,

ago!”

or

others

are

you

moving,

be

sure to phone Welcome
Wagon.
Highland

Park

Cecile Casey

ID 2-0442

Deerfield
Grace Cark

Bannockburn
WI 5-0887

WELCOME WAGON
oe

A

ahs
Page 24

et

eams

Ws Ka

52

Thursday,

July

9,

1959

�ALLIS-CHALMERS has always been
proud of its home towns... now with
Deerfield, Illinois, 17 of them are in the
States and 5 in other countries.

United

The plants in these cities build a wide
variety of products for many of the
world’s growing industries . . . electrical, steel, cement, processing, construction, farm and nuclear power, to name
just a few.
Now... Deerfield is home, too, and
Allis-Chalmers is proud to be a part
of it. As in other Company plants, the
*

*
rs

products of the Deerfield works complement the other equipment in the
Allis-Chalmers line. The products built
here fit well into the Company’s highly diversified production.
The Deerfield facilities become the
22nd plant in the world-wide AllisChalmers family with a 112-year-old
tradition of serving the basic needs of
business at home and abroad.

*

©

e

*

«
«
w

ALLIS-CHALMERS
e.

*

“*

a:
*

Sales

Branch

@

Manufacturing

Offices

i

International.

4

Plant

Thursday, July 9, 1959

oS,

ALLIS-CHALMERS

iia

ALLIS-CHALMERS

Noh

SF

=

or

Tee

*

nation

shown here—and through the worldwide
facilities of ALLIS-CHALMERS

*

LEGEND

our

ie

*

serves

and the growing world through the
many domestic plants and offices

Se

a

�i

Concert-Goers Attend Ravinia Festival Opening

HIGHLAND PARK STORE
589 Central

*

i

WINNETKA

847 Elm

ID 2-8550

@

STORE

»*

Hl 6-5141
Fashion note on opening night at Ravinia Festival . . . festive white woolen cape
worn by Mrs. John A. Holabird Sr. of Chicago, a guest of Mrs. Norman J. Schlossman

RECORD

three thousand
vilion.

catch

one,

were

Sharing

in the pa-

the

John

V.

but

Spachner box were Mr. and Mrs.

ot
oe
fe ane Rais
i
allan pe vahdely pea
and
return
any
unopened
film. We also supply mailing
bags so you can send in your
exposed film and have it processed and waiting for your

G. Corson Ellis of Chicago, Mr.
Ellis, at left, Mrs. Spachner (Mr.
Spachner and Mrs. Ellis). Ahead
are Miss Helene Bernard and
Warren Spachner. Eighteen hundred persons heard the first concert out under the stars, on
benches
or, at right, on the
lawns.
Picnic suppers, brought

return.

2A

HOUR

Kodachrome
Service

Processing
Handled

early,

assured

space

near

them

the

Festival season
more

weeks,

of

precious

pavilion.

The

continues for five
the

final

one

of

Directly by

ballet. Special Wednesday night

EASTMAN.

features

(July
FILM

at right.

formance, with guest artist, Isaac
Stern, at the Ravinia
Festival;

.

may

Ave.,

Forty-eight hundred persons
heard the Chicago Symphony
Orchestra in its opening per-

MUSKIE!

You

of Dean

SPECIALS!

Gerry

are

15) the

the

Pro

Kingston

Mulligan

(July

Musica

Trio and
22),

Rich-

ard Dyer-Bennet, July 29, and
the Story of the Blues, Aug. 5.
620

Kodacolor

$1.35

‘

Now $1.08

eee

35mm

Now

ee

rt

May
No

Kodachrome

Movie

Movie

Now

DID

EVENING

A.M.

Now

$5.28

HOURS:

to 9:00

&amp;

Mosquitoes at North Shore garden parties have become a thing of the past
since Household Pest Control division of Aerosol Exterminators has put its
new fogging equipment into operation.
One treatment the day of your party
does the job, won't harm flowers or shrubbery but kills mosquitoes. HPC also
has a special plan that brings sudden death to ants, moths, spiders, waterbugs,
carpet beetles, roaches and all the other annoying and damage-dealing insect

ASSOCIATION

P.M.

9:00 A.M. to 5:30 P.M.

Security —

'

1811

St.

MEMBER

26

Party

$2.28

Fridays:

Page

for this Garden

_... JI DIDNT

Thursdays:
9:00

(Ad vertisement)

Mag.

$6.60

NEW

SOKN

Mosquitoes

Roll

$2.85
16mm

S

Pe Your Own!

$1.64

oy de nah dl dl
8mm

ee

Drive aston! — The Life You Save

35mm _ Kodacolor

$2.05

é

any

Joh

OF

Service —

ee

Ave.
THE

SAVINGS

pests that invade our homes.

Satisfaction Since 1888

wine

Highland
AND

LOAN

en

Park

for insects.
ID

FOUNDATION,

HPC

plan

HPC

Shona

‘Milidnedt:6:6173

chemicals are safe for people . . . murder

is inexpensive,

Household

2-0361
INC.

The

too.

Pest Control
ea

7

Thursday,

Days

July

aeons 3

9,

1959

�for all your lumber needs
Craftwood stocks the greatest variety of species,
grades and sizes of finishing and construction boards,
mouldings and plywoods. Kiln dried of course.
Special milling to your specifications and
courteous assistance in the proper selection of lumber to suit
your needs. Prices include delivery. Come in or phone today.

PINE BOARDS

ee
:

PINE AND HARDWOOD MOULDINGS

You will enjoy working with Craftwood

quality pine.

All these and many

others in stock at all times

Three grades priced per lineal foot,
Clear

Pine

Size

Utility

Prices

1x2

S¢

Per

1x3

44%

Foot

1x6

1x8

W

Knotty Clear

==

8

6

a

1%”

i

txJ0

we

1x12

24

1%”

2

MOULDINGS

I4¢

176 ° 25¢

12

21

24

35

“as

5G

ae

ane

$9

ee
48

84

Base 3%” Modern
Weg

og

Casing 2%

| Corner Bead. 34’
a

2x8

21

2x10

27

2x12

33

ys

ve
36

6x6

oH

33c

We

SS

19

B.S

S-,

ae

a

9

Wenn,

Pages

ae

1s 1 88S
4.26

7.80

16.96

11.65

8.65

in home

two sides, Finest quality (graded FAS), In stock at all times,
:

Species

owner service!

Price

Ash

Basswood

Mahog.
Phil. Mahog.

.70

Birch

1,05

Cypress

60

priced per square foot in full 4’ x 8’ sheet.
Thickness
Per Sq. Foot

1/4”
. 14%

&gt; 9/8"
20

1/2".
26

-5/8” .. g/a"
30
33

Use.

Per 4’ x 8 Sheet 4.64

640

832

9.60

For

Thickness

L/S

Per Sq. Foot

16%

21%

Use or.

Per atic! Sheet

5.28

688

10.56

68

78

Mosewood

2.40

10.50

DISCOUNTS

EE

SRR

ee

28142

33

37%

50 BF —

9.60

72

S4S stocked at nominal additional cost

10 BF —
26 BF—

9.12

80

2.50
1.32

Bhouy

For
Interior

Outdoor

Oak Red

Teak
Walnut

thickness

BIR

Maple

Oak White

89
.60

examples

1.10

84

Cherry
Chestnut

are &amp; few

Price

61

Balsa

Butternut

Species

65

We handle only U.S, Plywgod stock. Any size or

25 BF
50 BF

10%
20%

99 BF

25%

NOTE: These prices apply to
FAS stock surfaced.2 sides
random width and length
—
:

Allow 48 hours for delivery.

100 BF — 200 BF 331/3%

12,00

Good
Both
Sides

CRAFTWOOD
1590
8 A.M. - 5:30

Deerfield

LUMBER
Road,

P.M.—Thursday

Highland

until 9—Sunday

COMPANY,
Park,

Illinois

10-1

Just west of Route 41—Phone

Thursday, July 9, 1959

23c

Prices are per board foot, random width and length, surfaced

specializing

rl

Here

6

Oak

HARDWOODS

PLYWOOD
available.

il

Stops 13/8’

Jambs 3’ x 7’

sniaiibaeeal

FIR

43¢

Birch

SMU

WALD S00 210

18

4x6

2l¢

4

Kiln dried, smooth, straight and even textured.
Use it, you'll see the difference.

ne

14¢

Cove %4x 34”

EQ

CONSTRUCTION LUMBER
6¢
11

Wal.

1.34

13” and wider in clear up to 24” usually available at slightly higher price.

2x2
2x4

Mahog.

or

OSE

LL

Oe
96

Pine

IDiewood 2-0140

INC.

Ash

�Community Choir

{

e

Sets Fall Program

.

1

Scheduled for late fall or early
winter performance by the newlyorganized North Shore Community
Choir
are
Brahms’
“Nani,”
the
Magnificat
by
Carl
Philip
Emmanuel Bach, a number of madrigals, motets and several folk songs.
Highland Parker Directs
The group is directed by Mrs.

Philip N. Hyman, 863 Judson Ave.,
who may be reached at ID 2-8163.
Those interested in auditioning for
the choir, which
is made
up
of
business
and _ professional
men,
housewives,
teachers
and
others,
may telephone her.
Mrs. Hyman is a former director
of the Civic Choral Society.

Hair

Featured...

Styling

Tinting
DID YOU
Our

KNOW

Sunday

restaurant
ROAST

THAT....

evening
food

BEEF

value

YOU

CAN

Bleaching

Buffet

Dinners

are

in the Midwest?
EAT!

the

best

(ALL

THE

Permanents
Manicuring

!)

Evaughn

Served Sunday 5 p.m. to 8 p.m.
$3.00 adults; $1.50 children

Beauty
TELEPHONE

508
FRE

LATE

Plenty of Parking

¢

BRISGMLANS

in our New

PARK,

Parking

Sabon

ID 2-4444
(Open

@e

j

Friday evenings by appointment only)

Central

ID

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

0400NO1S

Lot!

ANNOUNCING-ph

AIR CONDITIONED

PROOFED

— OPENING
HOURS
NOW
*SSeisua ROOM
VERNON HILLS,

ILLINOIS
Telephorie Libertyville 2-8770

ROUTE 45—2 MILES. WEST OF HALF DAY

—

BUSINESS

11:30

M.-Mon,

A
OPEN

SUNDAYS

AT

HOURS!

thru Sat.

Want-Ad

interesting

section

facts
Don’t

592

and
miss

is filled with

golden

oppor-

it!

Roger

TUB
Williams

IDlewood

Drying

Ave.

2-9771

Complete

1 P.M.

Washing

and

Service

SHIRTS and
DRY CLEANING

som. | BUFFET LUNCHEON
cece ee eee ec ees eee
"All You Can Eat” ........

chee ee

The

WASH

RMH/IO---'"_!’’©*UVD*—-—=
SESS
@mC€{*0YrIr
————S
Open
ies

Jo Ann Le Compte, wife of former Highland Parker, Noel Behn,
is being featured at the Edgewater
Beach Playhouse through July 19
in the hit comedy,
“Tall Story.”
Starring is Hans Conried, pictured
above with Mrs. Behn. Behn, son
of the Jack Behns of 780 Bob-OLink Rd., is producer of Playhouse
productions. Formerly he was one
of the producers at Cherry Lane
Theatre in New York City.

RAVINIA

IN EFFECT

LONGER

NEW,

Actors Conried, Mrs. Behn

tunities.

In response to 100's of requests,
we are pleased to announce

@ SAIL FISH ROOM

° TOM weeny

2-2330

PET

RR ERE iio

HOURS...

8:00

A.M.

to 5:30

Saturday

8:00

x00. } COCKTAIL HOUR

A.M.

Closed

to
on

P.M.

...

4:00

P.M.

Wednesday

sopPy.) Martial, Manhattan, Old Fashioned ..............0.00000 .« 50cents

DINNERS
COURSE
\FULL
TRG BRCGINORT DOCU oi
Ce hak
rE
bx dee

soem.
to
Close

CHICKEN,

CHOPS,

STEAKS,

LOBSTER,

"FRIDAY
SPECIAL -- "Fish Banquet”

a

$
All the trimmings
— All you can eat— 2.25

ENTERTAINMENT NITELY
Billy Wright

Quartet
— "Cool"

Combo

Bernice Murry
— "Cool" Piano Moods
DANCING
— Wed. thru Sat. From 10 P.M. on — DANCING

VERNON

HILLS RESTAURANT |

“Lake County's Newest, Finest
HOME OF THE SUCCULENT STEAK"
Page

28

SHRIMPS,

from $2.25

SHISHKEBAB

i,

On Route 45—2 miles West of Half Day

QUALITY
MEATS and GROCERIES
“Everything for the
Table”
DELIVERY

SERVICE

IDlewood 2-4400
608

CENTRAL

HIGHLAND
Thursday,

AVE.,
PARK

July

9,

1959

�Miss Edith Ann Brasseler Weds

SLADERSTAZION CO.
CRANE RERTALS EXCAVATING

BIRUCHIRG MSRLAND
PARK ILL,
HBEWOOS 23785

@
@
@

EXCAVATING
GRADING
ROADS
@

Bett’s

Mrs.

Gunther

Miss Edith Ann
Brasseler, 316
Washington
Ave., Highwood,
and
Gunther
W.
Esswein
exchanged
wedding vows in St James Church,
Highwood, before an 11 a.m. Nuptal
Mass. The Rt. ‘Rev. Msgr. James
D. Gleeson officiated at the May 23
rites.

W.

Mrs. W. W.
Germany.
The

by

Photo

Esswein

bride

her

Esswein
was

uncle,

(Continued

of

given

John
on

Backnang,
in marriage

Brieden,
page

42)

be-

CRANES

GLADER

Psu

@® WRECKING
@ DRIVEWAYS
@ PARKING LOTS
RENTED

&amp; TAZIOL

EXCAVATING
ID 2-3785

CO.

When you buy a new car,

Miss Brasseler is the daughter of
Mr.
and
Mrs. Fritz Brasseler
of
Wegscheid, Germany. Mr. Esswein
of Chicago is the son of Mr. and

don’t settle for less than you're entitled to.

And before you buy, remember this fact:
At today’s prices...

YOURE CLOS ER TOA
CHRYSLER THAN YOU THINK

TYPEWRITERS
ADDING
SALES

645

-

MACHINES

RENTALS

CENTRAL

-

REPAIRS

ID 3-0230

°

BETTS, BORLAND &amp; Go.
Since

1896

BROKERS
STOCKS — BONDS
New

York

and

Members
Stock Exchange

Other

Exchanges

PARTNERS

ARTHUR M. BETTS
CHAUNCEY B. BORLAND
FRANCIS P. BUTLER
STIRLING

yin CHRYSLER

JOHN P. WISE
HAROLD C. STEINER
ASSOCIATES
SAMUEL D. ROWE
RICHARD J. SHROSBREE
J. TRACY ALEXANDER

Chrysler Division of Chrysler Corporation

HUGH J. O’CONNOR
SIDNEY RUBENSTEIN
of Highland

BORLAND
111

South

La
Tel.

LAKE MOTORS,

Park

Salle
CEntral

BUILDING
St.

e
6-1474

Thursday, July 9, 1959

Chicago

3

1766 FIRST ST.

HIGHLAND

PARK

INC
ID 2-2500
Page 29

�AUTHORIZED

SALES &amp; SERVICE CENTER

@

M.5S.S., INC., YOUR

AUTHORIZED

SALES &amp; SERVI

The
-@
@
®@
©

Family

Pet

POWER
VERSATILITY |
DESIGN
QUALITY

@
@
®
@

MORE SUN
MORE FUN
MORE DONE
LESS COST

YEAR ROUND WORK HORSE
Just Loaded With Good Engineering
‘ GARDEN TRACTOR

RIDING MOWER

SNOW PLOW

(Loads of Fun)

ONI

HOOKS UP TO ANY OF 22 OPTIONAL
ATTACHMENTS, including:

YNOA

32” ROTARY MOWER
30”

ise

REEL MOWER

FJOIAUIS 2 SITVS GAZIMOHLNV

Fully Geared Drive

@

Automatic

and
TR A CT OR

TRAILER

GARDEN
WITH

\\

SELF-DUMPING

@

YARD

DOZER BLADE

SELF-DUMPING
_

eékiesiabe

ONLY

THE

SNOW-PLOW-

60” REEL GANG~E.
LAWN

"

SWEEPER

U NI

DRIVE

ae

(Pat. Pending

Link-Type

GEARS,

NOT

BELTS

steering

@

Lift Type Drawbar
Attachments

*

imate

for

—

“Uni-Drive”

nit

@

/

4h.p., 4-Cycle

Engine

@

Tractor Type

DON

T

WAIT

Call for an Appointment to FUN TEST
It on Your Own Lawn

© Two-Wheel Brakes
&amp; Clutch

YILNID
@
“ONT “S*S°'W
ILNV UNOA
} Tans

Tractor

Suburban

HORSE

WHEEL

‘S°S°W

@ =: MALN3D ADIAUIS 2 SITVS GIZIYOHLNV UNOA *“ONI

“S'S

M.S.S., INC., YOUR

Tires

AMS

BRING IN YOUR OLD MO

s
e
n
i
e
t
S
@
Y
T
L
A
I
C
E
P
OUR S
Two Phones to Serve You:

IDlewood 2-6116
M.S.S.,
op

INC., YOUR

|

POWER

or IDlewood 3-2210

AUTHORIZED

SALES

&amp; SERVICE

wf

e

MOWER

~ 2210 SKOKIE VALLEY RD. (
CENTER

@®

M.S.S.,

INC., YOUR
|

AUTHORIZED

SALES

Thursday,

&amp; SERV

July 9, 1959

�Wt

a

CENTER

M.S.S., INC., YOUR AUTHORIZED SA

@

NEW 4462540) mower actually
ee

aS

vacuums your lawn!

...lawn clean-up problems go...IN THE BAG 2
BA craB GRASS—

ELM SEEDS—

Fkere’s the new Toro rotary that picks up where others leave

S# GRASS CLIPPINGS— -2% TWIGS—
JIE MAPLE SEEDS— -igetz LAWN LITTER—

This full-circle expanding wind tunnel is cast into the housing to provide a super-powerful vacuum that snatches clip-

SF COTTONWOOD

®
©©

off! The exclusive ‘‘wind tunnel” design makes it possible.

FLUFF— 2% LEAVES _ pings, seeds and other light litter off your lawn and blows it

ik WEED SEEDS— wa DANDELIONS

... all go in the BAG!
* EXCLUSIVE Toro “wind-tunnel”
housing design gives powerful
vacuum and air flow to make
bagging possible. Patent
applied for.

__ intoa bag foreasy, convenient disposal. And this same super-

powerful vacuum freezes every blade of grass upright for the
cleanest, sharpest cut of any rotary mower on the market.
There are lots of “hidden” advantages, too—like the short
crankshaft (only 1 inch) for less engine wear, and the crankshaft-mounted scalp guard that eliminates housing-strain
found in staggered wheel design.
This is the same “wind tunnel’ rotary you saw pictured

in Life magazine—the rotary that ‘‘outmows ’em all!”
Put it to work for you—summer,

fall and spring.

ALSO AVAILABLE in 21-inch handpropelled, 2.5 hp—$99.95 complete; 21-inch
self-propelled, 3 hp—$139.95 complete.
EASY-ON, EASY-OFF BAG attaches
to special grass chute that connects to
clipping discharge port. No other power
mower on the market is engineered to take

such a bagging attachment. Streamlined
design keeps bag out of your way, makes
handling easy.

NOW! 11 work savers for the amazing
POWER HANOLE
= vt

. a)

SPORTLAWN 25

WHIRLWIND 22 S.P.

25° FRONT REEL

GENERATOR

a

Ne

TILLER

AERATOR

ESTATE
EDGER-TRIMMER

EDGER-TRIMMER

R FOR A TOP TRADE-IN

We Sharpen and Repair All Makes &amp; Models
#

»

of Mowers

INC.
GARDEN CENTER

S. 41)
FE CENTER

HIGHLAND
@

M.S.S.,

Thursday, July 9, 1959

Weekdays: 8:00 a.m. - 8:00 p.m.
PARK,

HOURS:

ILL.

INC., YOUR

AUTHORIZED

SALES

Sundays: 9:00 a.m. - 2:00 p.m.

&amp; SERVICE

CENTER

®

‘M.S.S.,

INC., YOUR

AUTHORIZED

SA

�ae
i

Pretty As A Picture In Their Light Blue Gowns...

DRIVEWAY CONSTRUCTION
Parking

‘hd

Areas

—

Old

Drives

@

Expert Black Topping

@

Concrete

@

Bouffant evening
gowns
graced officers of Ladies of the

Refinished

Moose at their installation ceremonies June 27. Pictured front,

Crushed

from

Stone

Call for FREE

ESTIMATE!

Ga?

FUEL

St.

Choose
TYPING

FOR

TYPING

From

The

PERSONAL

FOR

Following
OR

BUSINESS

Speedwriting
GREGG SHORTHAND
STENOGRAPHIC
SECRETARIAL
BUSINESS ENGLISH
ACCOUNTING
COMPTOMETRY

USE

(6 weeks)

SHORTHAND

left to right,

Citizens
from

page

23)

Rescues grass
from
choking weeds
Fontostic Resuits
Lasts Doys! Even

-

Through Roin .

INSECTS &amp;
RODENTS

EVANSTON BUSINESS COLLEGE
H. Callow,

junior grad-

Top,

Ave.; and Maria Johnstad, 2731 Ft.
Sheridan Ave.
The
three from
Highwood
are
Isabelle
DeCiacino,
427
Funston
Ave., Paola Giusti, 118 North Ave.,
and Egidio Ori, 211 Burchell Ave.
Mrs.
Jerome
L. Solgon,
voters
service
chairman
of the League,
made
a short speech of welcome
following the oath of citizenship,
administered by Judge Bernard M.
Decker.
Other
League
members
who participated in the welcoming
ceremonies were Mesdames Ralph
Ettlinger, Jack Friedman and Edward Ex.

(days only)

1718

Sherman

Ask About Our Service

UN

Plan

Shoreline Mosquito &amp; Pest Control

Ave.

Prin.

7 Days A Week

4-3004

WI 5-1749
Now it’s easy to banish lawnspoiling weeds like dandelions,
plantain, buckhorn. Apply 4-xp ®,
Clean, granular — no mixing, no
measuring. Takes just half an
hour to apply with the Scotts
Spreader, your year-round lawn
aid.

4-XD ® for 5,000 sq ft - 3.75

blast out ugly

crabgrass
With

CLOUT
quick,

Spread

sure,

modern,

easy...

granulated CLOUT.
No mixing or fussing
with water.

ready to apply!
treat 2,500 sq. ft. ........ $3.95

' Wheels
This

are

widens

five inches
the

farther

stance,

not

apart.
the

car,

gives you road-hugging stability, less
lean and sway. Only Pontiac has it!
SEE

sa

YOUR

LOCAL

AUTHORIZED

NIDE-TRACK
TIAC !
PONTIAC

PETERSEN PONTIAC
1949

Page 32

ee

ST.

El-

Joseph

senior regent; and

(Continued

Day and Evening Classes
Wm. H. Callow, Prin.
BEGIN ANY MONDAY EXCEPT SPEEDWRITING CLASS
WHICH BEGIN JULY 20; AUGUST 3, 17

W.

Barbara
Mrs.

Harms,

regent.

New

Park

Courses:

SCHOOL

Miss
regent;

are Mrs. Howard Early, chaplain;
Mrs. Frank Tagliapietra, treasurer; and Mrs. Virgil Prenkert,
recorder.

CO.

Highland

Walter

vate

ID 2-0065
First

junior

Volpendesta,
Mrs.

... CHOICE TOP SOIL

SILJESTROM
1930

left, are

wood,

JOHNS

AVENUE,

HIGHLAND

DEALER

PARK

RAVINIA
HARDWARE
447

Roger Williams
ID 2-4387

Store Hours Daily 8 a.m. to
5:30 p.m. Wed. ‘til Noon

9:00

Open Sundays
A.M.-1:00 P.M.
Thursday,

July

9, 1959

�lows into our Home Office!
NG. a lot of money—and a lot of responsibility! The
money is payment for the product we are proud to sell:

financial security for American families in the event of
death, illness and old age. It's a vitally important product—but to deliver it we must make this money ‘‘grow’’
... We are justifiably proud that it has grown, through
sound investments in those very things which have
made America great: her free Government—her cities—
her industries—her homes. (Below you'll see what we
do with $11% million a week before we ultimately return

&amp;

it to our policyowners.)

1630

URANC
CHICAGO

EVANSTON,

AVENUE

ILLINOIS

RON

24%

4.8%

OANA ANAL SA

of our dollars help to operate the na-

tion's railroads and industries and furnish electricity and gas throughout the Nation through
investment in railroad, industrial and public

of our dollars supply mortgage funds

‘utility bonds.

enabling young families to establish homes,
and private enterprises to obtain buildings,
machinery and real estate needed to expand
operations.

18%
and

of our dollars back up the United States

Canadian

Governments,

and

the govern-

yom

2a

ee

INS

ments of states, provinces, counties and cities.
These dollars are invested in bonds which pro4

é

vide funds for the functioning of these governments.

‘4% of our dollars are invested in Home Office
and branch office properties to service our 3
million policyowners and 3000 field representa23%

of our dollars provide policyowners with

ready cash for emergencies in the form of loans

on their policies.

Thursday, July 9, 1959

tives. (This figure also includes
accruals and other assets.)

ne.

cash, stocks,

Page

33

�Adjudication and Claim Day Notice

—Now Available—

Top Civil Service Jobs
in Highland Park

Katherine D. Piersen,
Cornell and Wolff Attorneys
1866 Sheridan Road
Highland Park, Illinois

IDlewood

On Tuesday, July 21, 1959 at 8:00 P.M.
in the Council Chambers City Hall, Highland
Park, Illinois, the Civil Service Commission

of Highland Park will hold oral and written
examinations to establish an eligible list for
each of the following classified services:
Building

Inspector:

knowledge

Applicant

of building

codes,

must

have

licenses

a

and

building inspection. Desirable age should be
between 25 and 40. Starting salary $4,680.00,
increasing

to $4,888.00.

Clerk-Typist: Applicants must be a graduate

of a standard high school, which included
courses in typing. Knowledge of business
English, spelling and commercial arithmetic
needed. Ability to meet public and carry out
routine assignments.
Salary $3,380.00 increasing to $3,510.00 after probation.
Maintenance No. I. Applicants must be able
to perform varied skilled jobs of above the
average difficulty in the fields of carpentry,
plumbing, masonry and electrical work. Salary $4,316.00
probation.

increasing

to

$4,472.00

after

Maintenance No. II. This is a semi-skilled
position. Applicants should have certain abilities in rough carpentry, rough masonry and
trench excavating. Job also includes cutting
weeds, loading trucks

and

operating

light

tractor. Knowledge of driving laws is necessary. Ability to secure a chauffeur’s license
required.
Salary $3,900.00,
$4,108.00 after probation.

increasing to

Janitor: Starting salary $4,108.00 increasing
to $4,316.00.
Application
mation

may

be

blanks

and

further

obtained

from

the

inforCity

Clerk’s Office, City Hall. All applications
must be filed with the Secretary by 5:00 P.M.
Saturday, July 18, 1959.

Civil Service
141

Bloom

Sec.

Commission

Street

Highland Park, IIl.
7/2-9-16/59—182

-3-1140

Adjudication

Executor

6/25 7/2-9/59—176

and Claim
23638

Day

Notice

WM.
ROACH,
Executor.
Behanna &amp; Engber, Attorneys
1935 Sheridan Road
Highland Park, Ill.
IDlewood 2-4304
7/9-16-23 /59—194

CITY

OF

NOTICE OF LETTING
HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS

Public Notice is hereby given that the
City
Council
of Highland
Park,
County
of Lake,
State
of Illinois,
will
receive
bids
for the
construction
of bituminous
concrete leveling and surface courses on the
existing pavement on Lincoln Avenue West
from Green Bay Road to the Chicago and
North Western Railroad, Ridgewood Drive
from DeTamble Avenue to Lincoln Avenue
West and Dean Avenue from St. Johns Avenue to Sheridam Road, known
as Motor
Fuel Tax Section 25 C.S.
Said bids shall be received until 12:00
o’clock Noon, Central Daylight Saving Time,
July 20, 1959, in the Council Chamber of the
City Hall, in Highland Park, at which time
pine place bids will be publicly opened and
read.
Plans, specifications and proposal forms
will be furnished at the office of the City
Clerk in the City Hall of said City.
Payment will be in cash. All bids must
be accompanied by cash or certified check
for 10% of the total bid.
The City reserves the right to reject any
and all bids, or increase, or decrease, or
omit any item or items.
By order of the City Council.
June 22, 1959
R.
W.
SNYDER
City
Manager
7/2-9/59—185

CITY

OF

President
Miss

Diane

Welcomes
True,

720

Adults group, YWCA,

Homewood

Ave.,

perches on the hood

president

of

Young

of John Swan’s sports

car to welcome three visitors to the recent “Jamaican Jamboree”
swim party. Swan, 549 Michigan Ave., is at the extreme left. The

visitors, to the right of Miss True, are Donald Goldstein,
Susan

Chicago;

Rich, 320 Dell Ln., and Sidney Copilow, Chicago.

NOTICE OF LETTING
HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS

PUBLIC NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN
that the City Council of Highland
Park,
County of Lake, State of Illinois, will receive bids for the liquid asphalt seal coating
of Ridge Road from Park Avenue to Half
Day Road, known as Motor Fuel Tax Maintenance Section.
Said bids shall be received until 12:00
o’clock
Noon,
Central
Daylight
Saving
Time, July 20, A.D.
1959 in the Council
Chamber
of the City
Hall,
in Highland
Park, at which time and place bids will be
publicly opened and read.
Plans, specifications and proposal forms
will be furnished at the office of the City
Clerk in the City Hall of said City.
Payment will be in cash. All bids must
be accompanied by cash or certified check
for 10% of the total bid.
The City reserves the right to reject any
and all bids, or increase, or decrease, or
omit any item or items.
By Order of the City Council.
June 22, 1959.
R.

7/2-9/59—186
NOTICE
HIGHLAND

W.

SNYDER,

OF PUBLIC
PARK PLAN

City

Manager

HEARING
COMMISSION

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN THAT a
public hearing will be held in the Council
Chamber in the City Hall, City of Highland
Park, Illinois, on Tuesday, July 21, 1959,
at 8:00 P.M.
Said public hearing will be conducted by
the undersigned, the Plan Commission for
the City of Highland Park, designated and
appointed by the Mayor and City Council
of said City, for the purpose of considering
an application of Joseph E. Hirsch to rezone the following described property:
The south 539.7 feet of that part of the
SE% of the NE% of Section 28, he ge we
43 North, Range 12, east of the 3rd Principal Meridian, lying west of the centerline
of Ridge Road containing 10 acres more or
less and all in Lake County, Illinois and
being more generally described as a tract
of land containing 10 acres more or less lying on the west side of Ridge Road abutting
and to the north of Richfield Avenue extended westerly.

application

requests

the

rezoning

of

a portion of the above described property
along a line parallel with the west line of
Ridge Road to a depth of 150’, more or less,
from “B” One acre single family residence
zone to “C’” Twelve Thousand square foot
single family residence zone and the balance of the tract from “‘B” One acre single
family residence zone to ‘“B-1” One-half
acre single family residence zone.
At said public hearing and at any adjournment thereof, an opportunity will be
afforded
to all persons
interested to be
heard in relation to said matter.

NORMAN
J. SCHLOSSMAN,
Chairman
HIGHLAND PARK PLAN COMMISSION
6/29/59
1/2-9/59—189

Page 34

Jamboree’

NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
to all
persons that the first Monday of August,
1959, is the new claim date in the estate of
ANNA
ROACH,
Deceased pending in the
Probate
Court
of Lake
County,
Illinois,
and that further 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.

The

Paul J. McLaughlin,

Jamaican

NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
to all
persons that the first Monday of August
1959, is the claim date in the estate of
BENJAMIN G, PIERSEN, Deceased pending in the Probate Court of Lake County,
Illinois, and that claims may be filed against
the said estate on or before said date without issuance of summons. All claims filed
against said estate on or before said date
and not contested, will be adjudicated on
the first Tuesday after the first Monday of
the next succeeding month at 9 A.M.

Collegians Congregate
College students, home
of

the

tables

for

for the summer,

refreshments.

Rolland

crazy hat as he gets acquainted with, from
Clure, 1787 Spruce St.,
Miss Janet Henderson,

Drake

have

(DeKalb)

student;

event
adult

is

the

next

social

on the schedule of the young
group
sponsored
by
the

YWCA.
Sing

And

Swim

dons

left, Miss Missy Mcand
and

and

Wells

is a

University

is
of

‘Young’ President

A beach party tomorrow night
at Rosewood beach (foot of Roger
Ave.)

at one

Bluff,

lowa State College; Miss Henderson

BEACH PARTY TOMORROW
FOR THE ‘Y’ GROUP

Williams

Lake

David Drake, 1717 Sunnyside Ave.,
594 Glenview Ave.
Miss McClure

returned from

a Northern Illinois
Ilinois man.

congregated

Wells,

Party

(Continued

from

page

23)

tion. The group now has 1400 members, including four women, in this
country and abroad, all of whom
have become corporation presidents
before the age of 40.
The average president’s company
employes around 300 persons and
does $6 million in sales.

Single persons in the community
from 18 year of age are invited
to attend. The program will include
softball,
swimming
and _ singing.
Those with musical instruments are

Park Pl., will be invited to attend
the annual week-long “School for
Presidents,” to be held this year in

urged

Miami.

to

bring

them

along.

Rose,

who

lives

Thursday,

at

July

296

9,

Linden

1959

�Vanng... fele)iicriminating
“RO

Entertainment

Best in Food and

The
“OisEsees

baat,

|

Complete Dinners for Gourmet Tastes
, HE

L | 0 N

RAVINIA

N

BONELESS

GRILL

ROQUEFORT

Fone Oliv Buhicilis

HAN

4

100% Ground
PUREin BEEF
HAMBURGER
Our Own Kitchen

REASONABLE

TO

TAKE

OUT

MENU

@

REAL

481 Roger Williams 1D 2-3306
Highland

Sea,

......

Sauteed
$3.50

in Wine
@®
Shrimps DeJonghe

Park

Ralph

Hutchins

Cool! —

Air Conditioned

AT

oe

NW,

®
COMFORT

AND

Hearth Fare’s

aw

ecirth

Visit

ha

are

UNIQUE

estaurant

SPAGHETTI

ie

1918 Waukegan Rd., Glenview | &lt;ct'eii:.csans4
comfort.

Recommended

by Duncan

Member

Diners’

tak

of the

Member
§

BROILED

LUNCHES

:

STEAKS

Express

Complete Variety of Italian Foods - Pizza - Sea Foods
Attractive Cocktail Lounge—Seating Capacity 150
Air Conditioned
e
Plenty of Parking

Private Dining Room for Parties

,

@

CARRY-OUT SERVICE

@ COMPLETE

of American

Hines

Club

CHARCOAL BROILED STEAKS — RIBS — CHICKEN

a

CHICKEN

FRIED

or

BAR

Enjoy excellent drinks
at our table height

‘

RELAXATION

BROILED

e

e Ask About Our Credit Card Membership
A SUPERB

“agg

BEEF

FAMOUS FOR STEAKS &amp; PRIME RIBS

Praia

We Use Prime &amp; Choice Meats Only!

ORDERS

CHOPPED

vin
i

qu

OPEN FOR DINNER EVERY DAY AT 5 P.M. — SUNDAY AT 3 P.M.

CTF AKe

@

of CHICKEN

©

TURBOT from the North
Dover Sole Amandine

BURGERS

paid sue

BREAST

$1.00DINNERS
from

ri

re
y

i

ae
:

:

“Real

Americana—with

Good

561 ROGER WILLIAMS AVE.
—

RAVINIA

Our

Own

Tees

Food”

?

ID 3-1433

Vie.

*

Ps,

PRR,

eS

a

a

AL

©

Gy

e

7

|

&gt; |

so BEES Bek
mn
re

iibi

MORES

abe

le

Ya

.

440 Green Bay
3

,

i

pel

Ili.

Ph. 1D 2-0440

)

abel

ae

nite

ee

p.m,

For ICTHYOPHAGISTS

:

Highwood,

Sey

txoremecm

a

Rd

ig e et

:

Lot

Parking

t
ay

-

a.m.

L

Live lobster ... direct from Maine
Just a few miles north
Shores

of

Lake

. . . on the

Sig

Michiqan

a
pees

g

some

HOME

MADE

ON!’ S

CLAYTON

Front)

(Lake

For Reservations Call ON

2-3610

ITALIAN

FOODS

|

WAUKEGAN
or ON

os

SUN.

—Sumptuous

CALL ID 2-7651

NS

P

ip

J]

Spring

Chicken

2.95
Soentivarey « OEyN
WED.—Braised Sirloin Tips
With Mushrooms en casmd ani wet -tcthincennnacanlones ave

Beef tom Wagon oa 295
ta aie
f osc

f

Children

Ln

2-9787

Buffet

Ait vou Cen U8 ci, 3.00

SHIN

ORDERS TO TAKE OUT
ID

NU
MON.—Fried

3

j

Si

gs

e

CHARCOAL
BROILED

AM ATH
AVE.

to treat

the family!

or

6

home

Boats

... only $5.50

DINNER

ed perfectly, served
piping hot!
Enjoy

it here « . . or take

Chicken and Prime Steak
IAL

like it . . . season-

VF,

e

sheciaL blake
24-Lb. LOBSTER

Here's pizza as you

As

4

RESTAURANT

Fresh Fish from Our Own
Shad Roe
M™ Soft Shelled Crabs

SS

re

MATHON'S
SEA FOOD

Bs

Always

4

Welcome

lee et

:

© CUT RATE LIQUORS
WASHINGTON

GARDENS
ON

(SCORNAVACCO’S)

2-9437

550

Green

Bay

Road

Highwood,

Ill.

THE

LAKE

«

HIGHLAND

Plenty of Parking in Our New Parking

PARK,

Lot!

ILLINOES

�er

Pare

ee
}

IE

er

I

ee

OL.

“

abe

ta

rik ec

sei
i

hee)

CdS
URE TP
Hp
8

CONT

and

In

Business

Character

1896 Sheridan Rd.
Highland Park

AGENCY

21

Years
Office:
Res.,

caf Caren

CMR

heedLe Ty EEUU
*

(Continued

™ ANCHOR
INSURANCE

er

ide

SR

AC NAL eee
ag

,

Pe.
ere
i
i) VERETY

Tye
we

Til

NTE
APS bi

‘

ie

TUR
atic

ar
hae

EN
Na

Miss Shirley Scassellati Is Wed

INSURANCE
of Every Kind

;

ID 2-0093
ID 2-0037

from

page

19)

served as matron of honor. Maid of

ness fell in a carded effect. The
voluminous skirt had several panels of alencon lace appliqued on it
and was embroidered with pearls.
It fell into a chapel train.

noon wedding was Miss Wilma Vignocchi of 52 Elm
St., Highwood.
Soloist
was
Frank
Casorio,
26
Prairie Ave., Highwood.
The bride was given in marriage
by her father. She wore a gown
of ivory peau de soie with short
shirred sleeves and a scoop neckline. The front of the gown had
princess
styling
with
a dropped
waistline and the back skirt full-

The bride’s delicate pearl crown
dotted
with
rhinestones
held
a
double fingertip veil of imported
English illusion. She carried a bouquet of phalaenopsis.

The
Rudolph

bride’s_

sister-in-law,

Scassellati

of

Mrs.

Deerfield,

honor was Miss Marilyn Wasson of
Tulsa. Bridesmaids were Miss Peggy Lennox, 255 Linden Park PIl.,
and Mrs. John P Derning Jr. of
Madison,
Wis.
Flower
girl
was
Cindy
King
of
Deerfield.
Ring

bearer was
of

Rudolph

Scassellati

Jr.

Deerfield.

All
attendants
were
gowned
alike in dresses of turquoise nylon
chiffon with draped bodices, brief
sleeves, cumberbund waistlines and
very full skirts. Side panels on the
skirts
were
shirred.
Their
head
pieces were modified picture hats
of matching turquoise net and velvet
ribbon.
Their
flowers
were
glamellias.
Timothy
Thompson
was
the
groom’s best man. His ushers were
Rudolph
Scassellati, a brother of
the bride;
Fred
Helmer
of Wilmette;
John
Ahern,
Milwaukee;
Peter Grossenbach, a brother of the
groom, also of Milwaukee.
Reception

At

Woman’s

Club

After the ceremony a reception
was
held
in the Highland
Park
Woman’s Club,
The bride’s mother wore a beige
lace
dress
with
shirred
chiffon
bodice
and
matching
accessories
for her daughter’s wedding.
The
mother of the groom wore a beige
and white Italian silk print gown
with a beige chiffon bodice, matching jacket and accessories.
After a wedding trip to the Bahamas, the couple is residing in Ft.
Gordon, Ga.
The
bridal
couple
graduated
from the University of Wisconsin,
where the bride was a member of
Pi Beta Phi sorority and the groom
was affiliated with Chi Psi fraternity.

Opportunity
when

knocks

every

pay

day

you buy U. S. Savings Bonds.

Lc:

TRY GIVING
LEMON - “AID”
Using

SPRING

FRESH

WATER

Sparkling
1629

Park

Ave.,

Mineral
W.

Uhlemann’s

2-0042

new

easy-to-wear

foped Jo
r the fyest...and (rot ft /
Just a short time ago, he walked into his dealer’s showroom—with his heart and his hopes high—to see if the time
had come for his first Cadillac.
Well—his fondest hopes were realized—and here he is
today with the car of his dreams.
What were the facts about Cadillac that made this
happy and memorable moment possible ?
First of all, the cost of a new Cadillac is remarkably
modest—so much so, in fact, that many models are priced
competitively with other cars of American manufacture.
And because Cadillac’s initial price includes so many
basic features that cost extra with other makes—Cadillac
is actually the price rival of cars of far less stature.

Water

IDlewood

CONTACT
Lenses

There is also Cadillac’s extraordinary economy of ownership. The car is amazingly frugal with gasoline and truly
marvelous in its dependability.
And then there is the way a Cadillac protects its owner’s
investment. For such is the demand for Cadillac that the
car returns an exceptionally high percentage of its original
cost at the time of resale.

Those are the facts—and the
obvious: if you are considering
the medium price field—you owe
Cadillac dealer’s showroom before

He'll

be

waiting

conclusion, we feel, is
any motor car—even in
yourself a visit to your
you make your decision,

for you—with

the most

e comfortable
e full satisfaction—

guaranteed

surprising

Have your eyes examined by an
Eye-Physician (M.D.)

economy story of the year!

UHLEMANN
VISIT

YOUR

LOCAL

AUTHORIZED

CADILLAC

DEALER

optical

company

the best In sight—since

CADILLAC MOTOR CAR DIVISION
2050 FIRST STREET, HIGHLAND PARK
© Phone ID 2-3442

PHONE for appointment or Information
Highland
Pk. IDlewood 2-5150
1874 Sheridan
Rd.
1645

Every Window of Every Cadillac is Safety Plate Glass
Page

36

1907

Orrington Ave. Evanston
UNiversity 4-3311

Thursday,

July

9,

1959

�€é

the Coach

and Four

The home that for the first time is built around the family.

'

Privacy is built-in from the Parents’ Retreat to the Four complete
levels which

provide

quiet sleeping

chambers,

an adult entertaining

living
level, a

wonderful Family-Living Center opening directly to the exquisitely landscaped
gardens,

floor ranch

of Glencoe

:

Located on charming
Pebble. . . Enter
Glencoe
Lane in RE
wood
cre biucle Went
Nowy Prams
of Hohfelder Rd. and the West
School.

1141

Rental

Garden

Town

Homes

HIBBARD

RD.

builders

Thursday,

July

9, 1959

of:

* WILMETTE,

linden,

ILL.

crestwood,

home

Yet

of your daily activities you'll have one

living.

With either 3 or 4 bedrooms and 212 or 3 baths, you'll find this home
most unique. The private dressing entry of the master bedrooms provides luxurious closets and the baths with their lighted ceilings, built-in storage, and
mirrored walls are for today’s mode of living.

oe

Inquire about

a Project area for hobbies, workshop or rough-and-tumble.

the surprising feature is that for 90%

om
Exquisitely furnished by
Myrtle Todes Interiors

ee
oe
a5;
mM.
2130 mes

and

‘
‘
R
.
‘
mm 1 block to school with "
Located in the prestige section of ee
Forest Preserve park area directly adjoining . . . it’s the home and location
you've been seeking.

* ALPINE

Price $52,500.

1-7800

connecticut,

new

england,

williamsburg,

pine

tree,

hillside

and

RR ascent

sprucewood

ak

villages

Page

37

�HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS
NOTICE TO BIDDERS

Robert Berube Takes Bride In lowa

Public Notice is hereby given that the
City Council of the City of Highland Park,
County of Lake, State of Illinois, will receive bids for liquid asphalt seal coating
and bituminous
concrete surfacing of existing bituminous and concrete surfaces on
various streets in Highland Park.
Said
bids will be received
until
12:00
o’clock Noon, Daylight Saving Time, July
20, 1959, in the Council Chamber of the
City Hall, in Highland Park, at which time
and place bids will be publicly opened and
read.
Specifications
and
proposal
forms
will
be
furnished
at the
office
of the
City
Clerk in the City Hall of said City.
Payment will be in cash. All bids must
be accompanied by cash or certified check
for 10% of the total bid.
The City reserves the right to reject any
and all bids, or increase, or decrease, or
omit any item or items.
By order of the City Council.
R.
W.
SNYDER
City
Manager
7/2-9/59—187

PRICE

SAVE ON IMPRINTING COSTS, TOO!
BF MOTOS coneisns
oe Gores ........

HEREBY

GIVEN

that

a

ORMAN

J:

CO SO

OSSMAN,

Chairman,|

ald B. Runkle, 1890 Green Bay Rd.,
and Mr. and
Donald, 1560

Mrs. William E.
McDaniels Ave.

The bride’s mother wore an iceblue silk organza dress with white
accessories and a white orchid for
her
daughter’s
wedding.
The
groom’s mother wore an aqua silk
dress with matching shoes and accessories. She too, wore a white orchid.
At

Home

In

Deerfield

After a wedding journey to Colorado Springs, the couple is at home

at 902 Osterman

Ave., Deerfield.

The bride is a graduate of the
Assumption
School
in
Granger;
Drake University in Des Moines;
the Chicago National Dancing Mas-

Mr. Berube’s best man was John|

She conducted a dancing school in

ee ean cosetas Santi of West Allis, Wis. Ushers|Granger for six years and now is
were Donald Stefanik of Berwyn;| employed by Science
Pelligrino Picchietti of 973 Burton | sociates, Chicago.

NORTH

SHORE

SINCE

1895
y

TELEVISION

\LL

SA

Ama

SERVICE

FUEL

US

OIL BURNER
SALES

2-Otee

OIL

—

Woodward and
Des Moines.

JEWELER

vad

SERVICE

—

Edward

The

reception,

WATCH

REPAIR

d-

eeas.

Currie

a wedding

bridegroom
University

dinner | schmidt

Laboratories

(ooo

SHERIDAN

HIGHLAND

PARK,

ILL.

AD

2 2028

RE

Ip

Prompt, reasonable
_ efficient service
in this area 10 years.

BRAUN
OIL

ID 2-8120

Pk.

Peg
SERVICE

COMMUNITY
GAS

HEATING
A. E.

SERVICE

Savage,

Owner

OIL - GAS
DEPENDABLE CLEANING
BOILER

Of Boilers or Furnaces
SALES &amp; INSTALLATION

WIndsor
If no
1010
Page

answer
HAZEL
38

5-0602

call Windsor
AVE.,

Equipment

5-4427

DEERFIELD

Carl Casel,

For Your

Established

Office

CO.

and

WI

Division

Nursery

WI

5-0035

Repair

Highland Park

Deerfield

Leet

DRESSMAKER’S

BT

SERVICE

Db

SE

EE

Road
{

MONOGRAMMING
On Linens, Blouses, Sweaters,
Towels,

Shirts,

etc

Pleating — Belts
Buttons — Hand Bound
&amp; Machine Button Holes

Vogue

FREE

EPR

hte

OFFER

ee

YOU

—

EEE

Copywriting

FREE Market
ID

2-4500

—

eR

Work

10,947
Homes

Pps. -f]

in the

Highland

Park

Highwood
Deerfield

our

Art

Services.

Advice

by

Experts.

Analysis
Ask

To Reach

THESE

ad.
from

New

Te ier ee?

Layout of your
Illustrations

Weekly*

Dishwashers
Water Heaters
answer call WI 5-0743

Services

FREE

Call

no

Work

SB

$3.60

Needs

5-3600

FREE
FREE

Fabric Shop

722 Main
Evanston
UNiversity 4-3034

If

WE

Plumbing

A

Costs Only

HAROLD ROOT
PLUMBING CO.

1885

Manager

West

DE

CALL

Deerfield

CRE RT ERE EE

Western’ R.R.

PLUMBING

F. D. CLAVEY
RAVINIA NURSERIES

BROS.

444 Central Ave.

North

LANDSCAPING

Inc.

First St., Highland

ST
HEATING

for the

mk

PHONE
ID 2-3804

20th
CENTURY
TV &amp; Radio

1858

Heating

Ansnector

GAS

a

MAKES

Watch

THIS SIZE

er

“Leading Watch. Repair. Craftsmen.
‘
and Jewelry. Designers,
‘Ofticial

OE

&amp;

TELEPHONE

ee

CENTRAL

oer

OIL AND

Deerfield.

YOUR

ers’

iar tr

CORNER

in

ee ee;

fe:

ewe

attended
Marin
Milwaukee,

of | and Northwestern University. Presently, he is employed at Klein-

ee

Ci

aa
SENET ar gr
ae
ism
by buying
VU. 5. Bonds.

é

The
|quette

SR

ON THE
AVE.

Ave.,
and
Gerald
Muzik
of 881
Driscoll
Ct.;
Clem
Spellman,

of commun-|

As-

ee

CENTRAL

the threat

Research

eM

Help defeat

645

Mc-

scattered | ters School, Chicago. She is a memwho
Spellman,
petals in the bride’s path.| ber of the Alpha Xi Delta sorority.

Kileen
flower

Le

y}

oh ond pg a
gig
4
heard in relation to Said) matter.

2.40
3.00

75 Cards ........
100 Cards oo...

ne
1.70

IS

public hearing will be held in, the Council
Chamber in the City Hall, City of Highland
Park, Illinois, on Tuesday, July 21, 1959, at
8:00 P.M.
Said public hearing will be conducted by
the Plan Commission for the City of Highland Park, designated and appointed by the
Mayor and City Council of said City, for
the purpose of considering the application
of Jacob T. and Jeannette E. Pincus for a
special permit to enable them to use the
premises
located
at 654 Deerfield
Road,
Highland
Park,
Illinois,
more
commonly
known as the Ketter Building, to operate
a school and exhibit center of fine arts.
At said public hearing and at any ad-

Santi, 1338 Ridgewood Dr., Mr. and
Mrs. James Loizzo of Skokie and
Mr. and Mrs. Emmett T. Moroney
and their daughter, Ruth Ann, of
789 Deerfield Ave., the Rev. Don-

oe

Vp)

NOTICE

performed the ceremony and officiated as celebrant of the Solemn
Nuptal High Mass. Deacons were
the Rev. J. J. Gorman,
Granger,
Towa, pastor,
and the Rev. Nelo
Leto of Des Moines.
Mrs. E. E.
Hurd of Perry, Iowa, was organist.
Soloist was Miss Lorraine Bleich
of Wesley, Iowa.
The bride, given in marriage by
her father,
wore
a floor length
gown
of white organza with embroidery and satin trim. It fell into
a train of nylon organza. Her fingertip veil was
held by a pearl
tiara. She carried a large bouquet
of orchids.
Mrs. Clem Spellman, sister of the
bride, was her matron
of honor.
Bridesmaids were Miss Mary Ann
Sweeney
of Denver,
Miss
Sheila
O’Carroll
of
Chicago
and
Mrs.
John
Hunt
of Des
Moines.
All
were
dressed
in
embroidered
shrimp organza gowns with matching
shoes
and
headdress.
They
carried bouquets of white daisies.
The bride and her father were
preceded
up
the white
carpeted
aisle by the groom’s nephew, Terry
Moroney,
and
the
bride’s
niece,

HEARING
COMMISSION

and dance was held in the Grand
Ballroom
of the Hotel Savery in
Des Moines. Among the 250 guests
who attended were Mr. and Mrs.
L. F. Ebert,
114 Michigan
Ave.,
Highwood; Mrs. Raymond Seiffert,
2358 Green Bay Rd., Mrs. Angelo

21)

ue

CARDS

OF PUBLIC
PARK PLAN

page

eke

CHRISTMAS

NOTICE
HIGHLAND

from

me AO

SPECIAL JULY PRICES

(Continued

ae

OF

Se

CITY

for a

Information.
Display

Representative

area.

Phone
For

ID 2-4500

Further

*on annual

= ®%

Information

*

basis.

Thursday,

July

9,

1959

.

�John Fuller Wins Writers’
Conference Scholarship

Judith Laegeler Becomes Bride
(Continued
Presbyterian

from

page

iii. |
chief pharmacist at Geisinger Memorial Hospital and The Foss Clinics,
Both the bride and bridegroom
received their master of science degrees from the University of Maryland and their hospital pharmacy
internship
certificates
from
the
Johns Hopkins Hospital in June.
Many
prenuptial
parties
were
held for the couple. A linen shower
was held by Mrs. Julius C. Laegeler, 566 Skokie Ave., and Mrs. Daniel
Oleh
of
Skokie.
A_
kitchen
shower was given by Mrs. Everett
Bellei, 2738 Ft. Sheridan Ave. A

22)

Church.

Miss Janet Laegeler served her
sister as maid
of honor.
Bridesmaids were Miss Ellen Laughlin of
Spooner,
Wis.,
a cousin
of the
bride;
Miss
Geraldine
Klota
of
South Bend and Mrs. Bert Waterhouse of Drexel Hill, Pa., both sorority sisters of the bride. Miss Linda Bellei, 429 Temple
Ave., was
flower girl.
Mr. Kistler’s best man was Bert
Waterhouse of Drexel Hill. Ushers
were Ronald Bellei, 2784 Ft. Sheri-

of

a cousin

Ave.,

dan

Mrs. Miller
Bluff.

.

Harold
At

ey tafetn Pei
rors Le
train.
e bodice and
shadowe
Teta
Her silk illusion veil was held in|

Dr.

Wolnak

orange

Of

Chemical

place

of

a crown

by

pearl

blossoms. She carried a white bible,
give to her by her grandmother,

valley.
Bridal attendants wore peacock
blue silk organza dresses and carried bouquets of white carnations.
The flower girl wore a white silk
cotton dress over pink taffeta and
carried a basket of flowers.
The bride’s mother wore a beige
lace sheath dress and matching accessories.
She
had
a corsage
of
green
cymbidium
orchids.
The
mother of the groom wore a petal
pink lace dress with matching accessories and a corsage of cymbidium orchids.
Following the wedding, a reception was held in the Church parlor.
After a wedding trip to Mackinac
Island the couple is at home
in

:

Ridge se

" agit

ee
Section

ee
Chicago

nf

ana ete
sees

atatweats

Fitting

Della Hellerman

gy

Phone ID 2-1644

:

.

resin

Ample Free
AIR

CONDITIONED

OF YOUR
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589 CENTRAL

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os
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j

ee Gas

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(1

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[

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ie

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Complete Beauty Service!

CENTRAL AVE., H.P.
Ph. ID 2-0879
— G. S. Laing —
Children’s

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the

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Ellangee

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the

Danville, Pa., where Mr. Kistler is | Fifi

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670 Central

The North Shore's Distinctive Hair Stylists

the
of
A
‘
Chetniadl
Sab
dybehsebag
canaries
He
was
named secretary
ofociety.
the sectick
De
Wolkek
{4 Glvettar
be
Chemlab, Inc.

PHOTO

e

Trains

Summer

Belvoir

San Jose,
University

Section

tearhaee

ag

with # White cochid aed Beek thet
in

ine

Society

Moley TV

summer
Corps
Training
officer
camp at Fort Belvoir, Va.

St., on the

Secretary

Is

S. Hayward

Fort

weeks

her father, wore a gown of rose|Deerpath Inn in Lake Forest and|
point chantilly lace and silk organ-| a brunch was given by Mr. and Mrs.|
and| W. L. Casey, 315 Bloom
collar
high
formal
za with
three-quarter sleeves, and full bouf- | couple’s wedding day.

at discount

1641
Cadet Harold S. Hayward,
Thornapple
Ln.,
is receiving
six

W.

The rehearsal dinner was at the|

The bride, given in marriage by|

air conditioners

the north shore’s smallest discount

One of 10 Winners
He was one of 10 winners who
received
the scholarships
on the
basis
of
manuscripts
submitted.
Workshops
in television
writing,
the novel and poetry, as well as
the short story are being held.

were

shower

and

dinner

picnic

bride;|

the

Gerald Manring of South Bend and | given by Mr. and
peas
Bene of Milwaukee.
Schreiner of Lake

John G. Fuller of 2766 Roslyn
Ln. was awarded a tuition scholarship for the short story workshop
of
Indiana
University’s
annual
Writers’ Conference
which began
July 6 and closes Saturday.

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Tarpoon Cotton Shirts $3.95 up

265 MARKET SQUARE © '4 PHONE LAKE: FOREST 548 ee

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sae

Bathing Suits $1.95 up

and Girls

Boys’

‘ss.
re het he
on 8 8

Beach Jackets and Robes $3.95 up

os

7

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eeseeeepunpunaeeeueeaas
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Cotton Dresses
$3.95 up
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8 ee
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LAKE FOREST
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so os 8 8

aga

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eat

Cotton Dresses

Beene eeueeaoas
aoneeae
oe

tee

Further

seinisescoeneeeet
on

en

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Reductions

atatenetatstesa

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on Cocktail

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se.

ass.

ALL SALES

Setatavetarste"s

CASH

. oe
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265. MARKET SQUARE

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seettatarararerarscnseceeereeecereststaterarecronoseseerereeeectrtstaal
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FINAL, ALL SALES

a

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sas

and Evening clothes

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$8.95 up

“ane”

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Blouses + Belts + Shirts
tetatete
stato ae
aseatatatatatatatatateceratntetaceratecctecetotutatarstetetetststerstetets
«0.0.4.9 5 6 0 90.0.8
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Thursday, July 9, 1959

�VRRP

TES

ee

tat od

nit iy

i

e William Riddle Serves
Destroyer USS Barton

In

time

ORIGINAL

Navy

of need...
and Sons

inc.

son

of

966

Dean

the

destroyer

acted

LOngbeach 1-1890
Adjacent

Nl

foie

HERSHEY WEINSTEIN, President

Ee.
re
Pr’,
i
ai.
ty ,
of

LAURIE

RONALD

WEINSTEIN,

Funeral Director

E. SCHWARZBACH,

pi

Riddle,

is
USS

serving

aboard

escort

Barton
for

which

the

private

OMITTY’S
BARBER
SHOP
Serving

Funeral Director

1820

brighten

Hugh

Mrs.

Ave.,
an

Riddle,

Hair Cuts of Distinction

3019 West Peterson Road

oy

as

and

L.

Squadron.

minutes from the North Shore

Tis 7

Mr.

William

patio

Highland

Park Since

1900

2nd St., near the Jewel
Phone ID 2-0636

parties

with GAS LIGHT!

3 iat —

PREC

RVE

Hes

Org

iin,

goat

ieee

:

Tore

,

‘

ss PR

Pity ay
Hot tae
Stee

rt

e

rt

Woodridge Committee

On

vessels competing in the AnnapolisNewport Yacht Race which began
June
20. The
race is under the
auspices of the N.Y. Yacht Club
and
the
Naval
Academy
Sailing

...adewish Funeral Chapel only

i

Ensign

vy

Commends
City

Council

upon

motion

Highland

of

pride

and placed

commending
“Hon...

the

Miss

Wil-

on file’ this letter
road

eRe
ak DBs! :

Cesae PMP
Oy Pye
Socks
Baht

Pollack

graduate

of
of

389

Park
High
School,
was
chosen
cheer leader, for the second year,.
at the University of Iowa.
Of Nursing

“We
desire
to
favorably
and
with a great amount of appreciation advise of the very satisfactory,
courteous and efficient manner in
which your Road Department and
especially Mr. Andrew
Beck,
Superintendent, co-operated in the reconditioning
of
the
local
roads
above mentioned.
Supervision

“We
also are pleased that the
City saw fit to and did undertake
to engage and supervise the work
to be done. True it was at our expense but we felt we were the recipients of a far more satisfactory
job than if privately supervised.

She is co-captain of cheerleaders
with William Buck of Glencoe and
is corresponding secretary of the
Peg Club council for the second
year. Miss Pollack is in her junior
year of nursing at Iowa.

$19,195 Contribution
Sets Division

Record

Sidney Platt, 25 Sheridan Rd.,
and
Leo
Stein
of
Chicago
announced
at a dinner held at the
Covenant
Club that their leather
and leather goods division has contributed a total of $19,195 to the
1959 Combined Jewish Appeal Campaign. In making the joint statement the men said this amount sets
a division record.

fective manner in which our petition to the Council for an ordinance
to prohibit heavy trucks from using
Briar Road westward, was authorized and made effective.”

Promptness

Signature of the letter is Woodridge Committee on Roads, by EIlmore Davies, member.

“We likewise commend favorably
and appreciate the prompt and ef-

10 WAREHOUSES TO SERVE YOU
NO FINER SERVICE ANYWHERE

io)

aol 3

BROS.
‘@&amp;

VAN

Ine
os

1-0032

ed.
F Veg =

521 GREEN BAY ROAD

+ Alp

SHIPPING

STORAGE

CO.
+ UNiversity 4-0052

Agent

(Fy

Allied

PACKING

Van

Lines

We help you
stretch
your dollars

Our
Outdoor entertaining takes on extra charm

superior

laundering

services

are modestly priced to fit your bud-

with the soft glow of gas lights on the patio.

5 save

Gets.

a warm welcome that

replacements,

immediately puts guests at ease. Creatine an aura

you

money

too.

We'll

on costly
save

you

gas by promptly picking-up and de-

of unhurried, gracious living, gas lights provide

livering your bundles, too!

needed illumination ... without harsh glare. Why

not add a touch of charm to your outdoor living? Gas
lights are priced from $49.95, installed.

SEE THE MANY

Novth a

DIFFERENT MODELS

AVAILABLE

AT:

Company

KOKIE
LAUNDRY

VAL LEY
&amp;

DRY

CLEANERS,

INC.

The Friendly People’’
Main
IDiewood 2-3310 —

Office

and

Plant:

Deerfield Call Enterprise

1616

512-518 Waukegan Ave., Highwood
Page

40

Dell

Highland

MOVING - STORAGE

Wonderful gas lights extend

ee

PollackIs Chosem

Junior Year

“In behalf of and speaking for
the property owners abutting Old
Briar Rd., Country Ln. and Lewis
Ln., in the Woodridge
section of
Highland Park, we, the Committee
upon Roads of our section, wish to
express ourselves as follows;

Appreciate

Oe er
Sa+ *

Cheerleader

Sandra
1957

ee ae
Sh ¥

Cushman,

Mayor:

City

a

department:
F,

OE
i Nie5a

aks

Sandra

Ln.,

‘received with

Rob-ert

N

Miss
Park,

Councilman

liam B. Hutchinson,

ea

ia eee
ni |

As 1959-60

Council
of

et

We

Thursday,

July

9, 1959

.

�Ai

eR

Borticcis Retire

Alvin

Of Area Golf Courses
Bertucci

of 874 Deerfield

brothers,

fered
July

Joseph

Rd., and Elmer

of

on

in

North

=i

TTY

and

then

as

in

nA

of

Chicago

and
he

leg

and

involved
Hwy.

another
in an

and

cars
Rd.

Deerfield

was

approaching

while

report

going

See

Rd.
that
the

north

Gaspare Fontana, 954
Rd., told Highland Park

on

Hl WAI) AAA

Hill) Hh

TIATED

TAH

extra

HAH

|

LR

Hilt

RASER OE

ED

|

At
Hy
Lilt

itil
nna

started

RUTH YOUN, BLOCK
unw ante

to

HAIR ri
Short
Suite

#11

Highland

Wav

Pack

Custom PORCH

WINDOWS.
2
AND |

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Days

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ue

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3

Days

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You

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Your

|

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Net $279.95

Easiest
Terms!

3 e.

Res)

Wil]

MAGNAVOX

Thursday, July 9, 1959

you buy one
at regular price.

3 Days

ome

|

When

$25.00
3.98

20-Watt Amplifier — 4” Speakers

LINE RD.
WI 5-0044

Only

.

SALE

FIDELITY

VERVE JAZZ
SALE

NEEDLE

“BRON

Stereo

High

398 COUNTY

HIGH

ONLY

Stereo
LUT

:

2-1316

ID

H.P.

AVE.,

ARBOR

1227

$5.55

:
3

GRANT &amp; GRANT OPEN THURS. NITE
T.N.T. 3 DAY SPECIALS

FoR THAT | EXTRA | BATHROOM!

Di PIETRO

Color

Reg.

HH
tt

ie

DICK LATTANZI

KONSLER

ID 2-0252

All Mercury

x“

e

SIDING
ieee
K Home Improvement Co.

|
HTVATOTOTUTOTOTHOVOTATATVETRTRTU

a

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ationer

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SERVICES OF HIGHLAND PARK,
Phone ID 2-0027

turn

north

=

uniform, perfectly processedE=

Most

left

pass the car it turned; he braked
and skidded into it, There was an
estimated
$100
damage
to
each
auto,
police
said.
Fontana
was
charged
with
improper
passing.
The other driver was an 18-year-old
Highland Park girl.

Both brothers
are members
of
the Midwest
Association
of Golf
Course Superintendents.

= SPECIALLY PREPARED BY MACHINE. Easier to Spreadex

HM i

travelled

Bertucci keeps active maintaining his lawn at home and raising
flowers and vegetables.

In MMM
GET THE FINEST!

the

last Thursday.

Deerfield
police he

maintenance as greensman, He became
foreman
and then superintendent, retiring last year. His son,
Albert, succeeded him.

{

no

notice

Signal

HTH

==—-Improves Growing.
=ssoil obtainable . .. at

didn’t

mo-

a

AAA

ANNA WANA
tI
EH

NOSALE SRS
tN
Ree}

given by the driver ahead

accident

police

light

suf-

SHREDDED
TOP SOIL

alll

‘

abrasions

Park

Didn’t

course

MTT

HN

bas

James J. Kuchar of Chicago, a
passenger in Karlinsky’s car, was
hospitalized with a one-inch cut in
his forehead
and
a possible
rib
fracture.

horses

Africa

started

ATTHTTHE

z= Al HAA

¢

he

Lencioni was charged with failure to yield the right of way at a
stoplight. There was $600 damage
to the Karlinsky car, $125 to Lencioni’s auto.

blacksmith. He also became an accomplished accordion player.
After
coming
to
the
United
States in 1907, he worked in the
coal mines
in Colorado
and Illinois and then moved to the North
Shore in 1910. He worked first at
Exmoor
and moved
over to Old
Elm two years later to assist in
laying the foundation for the club-

house

i

Skokie and was almost through the
intersection when
an auto driven
by John W. Lencioni, also of Chicago, struck the rear of his car on
the right side. It spun around, and
then slid 105 feet sideways into a
stoplight standard.

were used in mowing the fairways.
Like the rest of his family, he
enjoys
the
hobby
of gardening.
Travel is a second interest, and he
spends the winter months in Florida.
The
younger
Bertucci,
Elmer,
earned
his
living
in
his
native

and

when

Skokie

green

His golf course associations cover
a period of 44 years. As recently as

Italy

1

Karlinsky

Retired recently as golf course
superintendent at Lake Shore Country Club after a 15-year stint there,
Joseph Bertucci also served at the
Old Elm and Knollwood Clubs. He
is succeeded at Lake Shore by his
son, Adolph.

observed,

Karlinsky

Highland

Both were born in Modena, Italy,
in the 1880’s and came to this country in the early 1900’s.

Bertucci

Pra

forehead

torist were

345
Highwood
Ave.,
Highwood,
have retired after many years’ experience in maintaining
golf
courses and now pursue hobbies of
raising flowers and vegetables.

1925,

Tit

Two Persons Are Injured In Traffic Mishap

Superintendents

Two

gE

ve
ane

As

Nid ets th Gs

ERASE Be MONS

|

= 'D.2-7222,—s

REAR
Page

41 ;

�To Wed In August
(Continued

You

can

be

of getting
the
When
tion

doctor

what

ior at Louisiana

you,

all of

the

ordered’

ingredients

specified

24)

State

by

University.

Eckehard Friederich
was Mr. Esswein’s best

the

command
vast

set-up
drug

all

technical

of

modern

e TUCK

manufacture.

Ready

Miss
kie

Grace

Valley

K. Clissold,
Rd.,

in

her master

of arts

tion

Paul

at De

A registered
is

an

3403

Sko-

June

received

degree

in educa-

University.
nurse,

instructor

at

Miss

Clissold

Cook

County

School
of Nursing,
Chicago.
She
was an army nurse during World
War II in Europe and co-ordinator
of the School of practical nursing
at
Waukegan
Township
High
School.

of Chicago
man.
|

cago.
After a wedding journey to Milwaukee, the couple is at home at
655 Central Ave.

POINTING

¢ WATERPROOFING

CENTRAL

Chimneys - Fireplaces
Repair &amp; Cleaning

ID
FREE

DELIVERY

2-0143

,

DS

WAR

always!

PEASE PHARMACY
495

29)

After the ceremony, a breakfast
was served at the Brieden’s home,
316
Washington
Ave.,
Highwood.
Later,
an evening
reception
was
held at the
Joe Weber Hall in Chi-

We put at your doctor's

page

Mrs.
John
Brieden
served
as
her matron of honor. She wore a
peacock blue chiffon organza gown
and carried dipped blue and white
carnations,

The wedding will take place in
August in Trinity Episcopal Church
in Tallulan,

your doctor are measured with the utmost precision.

Miss Grace Clissold
Receives M.A. Degree

Residents
from

fore an altar decked with white
chrysanthemums,
gladioli
and
ferns. She wore a silk taffeta Alencon lace gown. Her fingertip veil
was held by a Julienne cap. She
carried a white orchid and lily of
the valley bouquet.

Mr. Russell was graduated from
New Mexico
Military Institute at
Roswell, and attended Washington
and
Lee
University
and
Tulane
University. He is a member of Sigma Alpha Epsilon fraternity.

your registered pharmacist fills a prescripfor

page

Park

(Continued

Miss
Griswold
attended
Elm
Place
School
and Highland
Park
High School and presently is a sen-

sure

“just

from

‘Highland

M.-OON

TOG.O°M.

ER

Uv:.

WARY OD

ID 2-4553

For the buy of your life

EDSEL 2nd Anniversary

See why
Edsel sales
are up
a big 46.1%
as more and
more buyers
discover

SELL- e"BRATION

the
king-size
e
e
e
e

value—now

pare convenience

1854

*‘260”
DOWN

as

little as

$14°°

per week

eee

You get all these extras at no extra cost:

ee
eee
ee
eee
ee
ee

42

ST.,

HIGHLAND

PARK

PARK

Just as you provide insurance or make a
will, so should you choose a fitting resting
place for yourself — and for them — a task
that will be burdensome if left until the
emergency is at hand.

MEMORIAL

PARK CEMETERY

COMMUNITY MAUSOLEUM—EARTHEN INTERMENT
COLUMBARIUM—CREMATORIUM
PERPETUAL

CHARTER

——

GENERAL

We Operate Our Own
CO

HIGHLAND PARK LINCOLN-MERCURY, INC.
Page

FIRST

it’s fully automatic. So buy now!

=

A PENNY MORE FOR THESE
EDSEL BIG-CAR EXTRAS

HIGHLAND

...

ID 2-8830

Wall-to-wall carpeting, self-adjusting brakes, an aluminized muffler,
a Diamond Lustre finish that never
needs waxing. And much, much
more. See and drive the 1959
Edsel. Add up all the wonderful
things you get, count up the sayings we give—and you’ll just have
to decide on Edsel,

1890 FIRST ST.

pints of water

USE OUR CONVENIENT
24-HOUR
PHONE SERVICE

eee

NOT

a

Tru-

Ridge Road

CARE

FUND

a

in 25 words or less.

air, with

price . . . Wards

a

to win a fullEdsel because

ONLY

air to comfortable
Compare

from air every 24 hours at max. rel. humidity. Com-

eee

would like
sized 1960

‘I

musty

a

the sentence

dehumidifier.

Cold is $53 less than comparable dehumidifiers. Com-

eee

Complete

damp,

pare capacity . . . it removes up to 31

1. Use official contest entry
blank available at your
Edsel Dealer’s.
M2.

Convert
Tru-Cold

ln

1960 EDSELS

EDSEL
IS SELLING
MORE CARS
BY GIVING
MORE VALUE

Greenhouses

and Harrison St., Evanston

Chicago: KEystone 9-4747; 9-4424

Evanston:

UNiversity 4-5061; 4-5062

Thursday,

July

9, 1959

a

YOU CAN WIN
ONE OF TWO

in the lowprice field

Automatic—built-in Electric Humidistat
Dehumidifies areas up to 13,000 cubic feet
Ys-HP sealed compressor Guaranteed 5 yrs.
10-quart Polyethylene water container

�YWCA

Highland Parkers

Frolicking
.

ee

eT

Then

Highland
Park students attending the Lake Forest College sum-

mer.

school

include

LAWN-BOY

Love Those Rugs?

Enroll In College
Summer Session

:

Elizabeth

Send

Us

C.

Anthony, Sally Ann Briddle, Carole
R. Brown, Robert R. Burton Jr.,
Raquel
S.
Chizewer,
Susan
L.
Donge, John L. Eisendrath, Charles

Them

to

for

Personal

Custom

Cleaning

LEWI

By

AS ADVERTISED IM

prey POST

ON EDENS
NORTHBROOK

Dial

VE

Power

Highest

participants at the YWCA’s

recent Jamaican

Miss

Helen

will be met

by

Denby

of

Donald

Market Square

STORES

Lake Forest 3998

9 a.m.

to

Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Howard
Gutner, 3441 Krenn Ave., announce

aa et

9 a.m.

AND

5:30 p.m.

to

2:15

Saturday

Friday
9 a.m.-2:15

Thursday

9 a.m.

| The Kenneth Gutners Announce
| Birth Of Second Daughter, Lisa
London

her brother,

Allowances

HOURS:

Wednesday

Tuesday

buffet style, to the partygoers. Fo r other pictures see page 34.

|

Exchange

Jam-

boree included Judith McClain, Northfield, who teases Thomas
Killian, 2480 Green Bay ‘Rd. with some of the turkey served later,

London Resident To Make
Home Here With Brother

Mower

Trade-In

COAST TO COAST

5-2400

BANKING
Frolicking

of:

LIFE ¢LOOK

L. Erickson, Robert E. Fell.
Robert L. Gershun, Susan Gins(Continued on page 45)

Makers

Johnson-Evinrude

to

to

2:15

8:00 p.m.

the birth of a daughter, Lisa, on
July 2 at Evanston Hospital. She

Denby
of 2964
Greenwood
Ave.,
when she arrives in New York City
Monday
aboard the liner, United
States.
They
will drive
back
to
Highland Park.

has

a

sister,

Kim,

3442.

grandparents

are

Mr,

J.

St.

Louis,

Nelson

of

Maternal

and

Mrs.

Mo.,

I.

Only the BANK offers

and

paternal grandparents are the Jack
Miss Denby will make her home|
|N. Gutners, Chicago.
with her brother who
arrived in
this country nine months ago and
Buy and hold U. S. Savings Bonds.
in Highland Park two months ago.

Complete Financial Service under One Roof!

ANTIQUE

Member

Federal

FES

Deposit Insurance Corporation

TA POOLS

Sheraton Mahogany Side Table
1770

Circa

Brompton Hall,
Eng land

From

Midlands

QUALITY

$170.00

Wilson
Skokie

Galleries
&amp; Clavey

Valley

Highland

Park,

IDlewood
Closed
Thursday,

July 9, 1959

Mondays

Phone

Roads

Illinois

3-2300

DEPENDABILITY
e
STYLE
°
° CRAFTSMANSHIP
deseribes the FIESTA POOL... built of time-proven GUNITE .. . any
shape... any size... constructed and serviced by a local contractor serying this area over 10 years.

VESTA &amp;
POOLS |

Libertyville 2-2892
FIESTA

Division

POOLS

of KLEINPASTE
General

&amp;

ROLLENE

Contractors
Page

43

�am....tin..te...e...e..tthe.
ole. ole
mee ete ole ste
ome

Dears lt
tla

ae

i

la

an

i

Chana
ai

HOLY

CROSS CATHOLIC
CHURCH
North Waukegan Road
Rey. John O’Mara, Pastor
Rev. Edward Reilly, Assistant
Rectory, 724 Elder Lane
Windsor 5-0430
7, 8, 9, 10, 11:15 and
Sunday Masses:
12:15.
Daily Mass at 7:15.
Masses at
First Friday of eacn month,
6:45 and 8:15 a.m.
Saturday: 4 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. Confes-

sions.

COMMUNITY
BAPTIST CHURCH
1250 Waukegan Road
Rev. Robert Humrickhouse,
Pastor
Office Telephone:
Windsor
5-0708
We Preach Christ
Crucified, Risen and Coming Again
THURSDAY
7 p.m. All Church Visitation Program
SUNDAY
9:30 a.m. Sunday
School.
There
are
classes
of Bible
study
for all ages
and
Mmursery care for babies.
10:45
am.
Morning
Worship
Service.
Nursery
facilities
are
provided
for
the
young.
6 p.m. Young
Peoples Fellowship.
Programs
are provided by the youths themselves.
7 p.m. Evening Gospel Service.
WEDNESDAY
7:30 p.m. Mid-Week Prayer meeting and
Bible study.
8:30 p.m. Choir rehearsal.
ST

GREGORY’S
EPISCOPAL
CHURCH
Wilmot and Deerfield Roads
The Rev. J. D. Parker, Rector
Rectory Telephone—WiIndsor 5-1881
Church Telephone—WIndsor
5-1678
SUNDAY
&amp; a.m. Holy Communion.
9:30 a.m. Holy Communion on first and
third Sundays.
9:30 a.m. Morning Prayer on second and
fourth Sundays.
9:30 a.m.
Church
School
children
will
attend adult service. Nursery care provided
for pre-school children.
WEDNESDAY
8 ass
Choir practice.
THURSDAY
Afternoon, Girl Scouts.
Evening, Boy Scouts.
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY
155 Deerfield Road
SUNDA Y—11
a.m. Services.
Children
are cared
for during
Church
service.
SUNDAY
SCHOOL—29:30 a.m.
For pupils up to 20 years of age.
WEDNESDAY EVENING MEETINGS —
8 p.m. Including testimonies of healing
through Christian Science.
All are weleome to attend these services.
1,
further information
call WlIndsor
5-

:

WBKB-TV

SUNDAY,
9:45 a.m.
ic Ilness.”

July 12
“Finding

PROGRAM
Freedom

from

Chron-

SERMON
The spiritual power of Christ Jesus’ teachings and example will be emphasized Sunday
at Christiam Science services in the LessonSermon entitled
‘Sacrament.’
One of the key statements of Jesus to be
read from the Bible is this from John (6:63):
“It is the spirit that quickeneth; the flesh
profiteth nothing: the words that I speak
unto you, they are spirit, and they are life.
Correlative citations from
‘Science
and
Health with Key to the Scriptures” by Mary
Baker Eddy
will include (25:26-31): “Implicit faith in the Teacher and all the emotional love we can bestow
on him,
will
never alone make us imitators of him. We
must go and do likewise, else we are not
improving
the
great
blessings
which
our
Master worked and suffered to bestow upon us.”
The Golden Text is from II Corinthians
(13:14):
“The
grace
of the
Lord
Jesus
Christ, and the love of God, and the comeeyen
of the Holy Ghost, be with you
a

Bod

THE
BETHLEHEM
CHURCH
(Evangelical
United
Brethren)
Rey. Eugene M. Wykle, Minister
801 Rosemary Terrace
Church—WI
5-0078
Parsonage—WI 5-2221
SATURDAY,
JULY
11
7 p.m., Joint executive boards of Couples’ Club potluck supper at Arthur Taylor
home
8:30
a.m.
Youth
Fellowship
meet
at
church for trip to Second Church in Chicago, a day of service and fun.
SUNDAY,

JULY

12

9:30 a.m. Services of Divine Worship.
9:30 a.m.,
Church
School
for Nursery
through 6th grades and adult classes.
10:55 a.m., Services of Divine Worship.
10:55 a.m., Church School for Nursery,
Kindergarten, Primary and-7th through 12th
grades.
Miss Irene Anderson,
Missionary to Japan, wil be the speaker at both services
of worship.
Family
balcony
available
during
both
services of worship.
TUESDAY, JULY 14
Couples
Club
theater
party
with
all
couples meeting at the church for late refreshments.
WEDNESDAY,
JULY
15
8 p.m. Committee on Missions.

3

LAND PURCHASED FOR UNITARIAN CHURCH

BANK |
o.INTEREST. ,

lle

ile

se

te

aie

ade

adit

ath

aD

FIRST

PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH
824 Waukegan Road
Phone Windsor 5-0775
Rev. Paul J. Keller, Ph.D., Minister
SUNDAY, July 12
9:30 a.m.
Morning Worship.
9:30 a.m.
Church
school.
Nursery for
children
1, 2 and
3 years.
Kindergarten
for children 4 and 5,
TUESDAY,
July 14
9:15 a.m.
Meeting of kindergarten teachers and mothers.
NORTH
SUBURBAN
EVANGELICAL
FREE
CHURCH
Deerfield Masonic Temple
Rev. Howard Hermansen, Pastor
711 Waukegan Road
SUNDAY
9:45 a.m. Bible School.
11 a.m, Services.
7 p.m. Services.
WEDNESDAY ©
8 p.m. Bible study and prayer.

WASHBURN
CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH
Rev.

Lewis

Half Day
Wakeland,
Route 22

Pastor

SUNDAY
9:30 a.m. Church School.
9:30 a.m. Worship Service.
11 a.m. Worship Service.
A nursery is provided for small children.
Telephone WI 5-4179 for more information.
DEERFIELD BIBLE FELLOWSHIP
1043 Wilmot Road
Every Sunday evening at 7 o’clock, the
Deerfield
Bible Fellowship meets at 1043
Wilmot Rd. Public is invited. Bible messages
on current events along with Christian fellowship.
QUAKERS
SOCIETY OF FRIENDS
Sylvia
Judson,
Clerk.

Left to right

SUNDAY
9:45 a.m. Sunday School.
10 a.m. Friends meeting
in Deer
Patt
School Library in Lake Forest.
For information call Windsor
5-1774.
NORTHBROOK
METHODIST
CHURCH
Meadowbrook Sehsol
Rev. R. W. Thornburg, Minister
For information call Windsor 5-4351.
SUNDAY
11.
am.
Church
School
and
Worship
Service. Nursery for pre-school children.

For

B’NAI TORAH
Lincoln School
Highland Park
Sholom Singer, Rabbi
Joseph Burns, Cantor
information call WIndsor

5-4623

REDEEMER LUTHERAN CHURCH
1731 Deerfield Rd.
Rec. 1817 Green Bay Road
Highland Park, Il.
SUNDAY
9 a.m. Sunday School and Bible classes.
10:15 a.m. Worship services.
GRACE

For
4-3060

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

NORTH SHORE
UNITARIAN CHURCH
Rev. Russell R. Bletzer, Minister
Ferry Hall Chapel
Lake Forest
For Information Call WI 5-1972.
All services are discontinued for summer,
to be resumed on Sunday, September 13.
ZION
LUTHERAN
CHURCH
10 Deerfield Road, Deerfield
Rev. Paul V. Berggren, Pastor
Wayne
R. Johnson,
Intern
Telephone Windsor 5-2009
FRIDAY, July 10
3
8 p.m. Meeting of the Parish Evangelism
committee.
SUNDAY,
July 12
;
8 a.m. Celebration of Holy Communion.
9
a.m.
Family
Worship
Service
with
Church
School
for children
entering
this
fall the
first,
second
and
third
grades;
older children to attend Worship Service.
10:45 a.m.
Family Worship Service with
Church
School
for children entering this
fall the first, second and third grades; older
children to attend Worship Service.
Nursery care is provided during this service only for children three years old and
younger,
in the home
of Mr.
and
Mrs.
Ronald Forslin, 829 Apple Tree Lane.
Bus service is provided by the church for
this service only. For schedule please phone
the church office.
MONDAY,
July 13
7 p.m.
Softbal games:
Zion Seniors and
Juniors at the Maplewood School.
TUESDAY, July 14
8 p.m.
Board of Trustees meeting.
WEDNESDAY, July 15
1:30 p.m.
Dorcas Circle at the home of
Mrs. T. Albert Larson, 1000 South Green
Bay Rd., Highland Park.
THURSDAY,
July 16
8 p.m. Meeting of the Board of Deacons
with
the
members
of the
committee
on
Christian Education and Youth.

are

Mrs.

Geoffrey

Retired Minister
Moves To Deerfield

44

Mrs.

J.

A.

Abercrombie,

The

Rev.

Johnson

A. P. Johnson

have

moved

and

from

Mrs.

High-

The Rev. Mr. Johnson
has retired as minister of Bethany Evangelical United Brethren Church.
He
was
minister
of
Bethlehem
Church
1927-1931
when
it
was
known as the “Bungalow Church.”

The

He was graduated from Western
College
at LeMars,
Ia., and
had
taken graduate work at the University of Chicago.

Unitarians
For

of
Highland
with
Wesley

The congregation will hold
monthly outdoor services and picnics as it has done in past years.

William Atkinson Young
Rey. J. A. Miller
Ministers
worship in the sanctuary

Summer
a.m.

each

on

the

the

service,

Sundav

church

morning,

lawn

weather

Fe!lowshin

immediately

at

The Rev. Bert Faison, a former
chaplain in the Armed Forces, will
occupy the pulpit of the Deerfield
?resbyterian
Church
on
Sunday
morning, Dr. Paul Keller will be
yn vacation for the next six SunTays. He will return to preach the
Sundays
of
August
23
and _ 30.
Elders will assist in the chancel
with the guest ministers.

10

hcur

following

permitting.

Church School for children of sixth grade
and younger, including todd'ers, meets also
at 10 a.m. each summer Sunday.
Worship services at 9:30 a.m. and 11:15
a.m.
and
Church
School
classes
at 9:30
a.m., 10:05 a.m. and 11:15 am. will be resumed on September 13.
TRINITY UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST
(Evangelical
&amp; Reformed
Church)
Rev. Edward J. Busse, ID 2-2113
Rev. Laslo L. Hunyady, WI 5-3508
(Associate Pastors)
WALDEN
SCHOOL
SUNDAY,

9:30
9:30

a.m.
am.

July

Bethlehem Couples Club
Executive Board To Meet
The Bethlehem Couples Club officers for 1958-59 and for 1959-60
will have a potluck supper followed
by a business session on Saturday

12

Church School.
Morning worship.

BANK*e*
1771

give

In Presbyterian Pulpit
Sunday As Guest Minister

PARK

PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH
ID 2-1695

Dr.

to

Conrad
Alan
and
Christopher
Alison Pioli, sons of Mr. and Mrs.
Donald
Pioli of 330 Landis Ln.,
were
baptized
on Sunday
in the
Deerfield Presbyterian Church. Dr.
Paul
Keller
officiated.
S»vonsors
for the children were Mr. and Mrs.
Fred Lindenmann of 353 Warwick
Rd. and Mrs. Lindenmann’s sister,
Miss Lillian Lang of 940 Beverly
dra

Months

HIGHLAND

voted

Baptized Sunday In
Presbyterian Church

Unitarian
Church
services
at
Ferry Hall, Lake
Forest, are recessed until Sunday, Sept. 13, for
the
minister,
the
Rev.
Russell
Bletzer
is
directing
camps
in
New York and Massachusetts.

THE

congregation

Dr. Keller $11,500 in addition to his
salary for the months of July and
August, Dr. Keller has been pastor
of the Deerfield Church for nine
and one-half years.

Recess

Summer

attended

Dr. Paul J. Keller’s resignation
4s minister of the Deerfield Presbyterian Church, effective September 1, was accepted with regret in a
resolution by the congregation last
Thursday evening.
Dr.
William
A.
Young
of the
Highliaand
Park
Presbyterian
Church was chairman of the meeting.

land Park to their home
at 630
Hermitage
Dr., which
they purchased from the Fred Wrights.

Bethany
Church
Park
is
merging
Methodist Church.

who

Presbyterian Pastor's
Resignation Accepted
By Congregation

“The

Service

Bank

Of

Highland

Park”

HIGHLAND

Secend St.

BANK—POST
Member

Page

Eyler,

enne Ringuette and son, Scott, and Neal J. Mosely,
the new site of the North Shore Unitarian Church.

Federal

Deposit

OFFICE

BLDG.

insurance

Corporation

Dr.

Franklin

the sign

raising

Newmark,

Adri-

on June

27 at

A “sign-raising’”’ ceremony
was
held recently by members
of the
North Shore Unitarian Church, on
the newly purchased church property. The new North Shore Unitarian Church will be built on a five
acre tract on the north side of Half
Day
Road,
between
Waukegan
Road and the Tollway. It is felt that
this location will be ideal, as the
Church serves all of Lake County
and the northern-most communities
of Cook County.
John Holland of the firm of Holland and Chaney of Deerfield, has
been engaged to design and build
the
church.
The
church
will be
built in two stages, the first stage
consisting
of
classrooms
and
a
meeting hall, to be ready for use in
the fall of 1960.
The
North
Shore’
Unitarian
Church started as a small fellowship-meeting in the Masonic Temple
in Deerfield
in 1953.
Rapid
growth neccessitated two successive
moves, first to the Masonic Temple
in Highland Park and then to the
present quarters in the Ferry Hall
Chapel. Classrooms at Ferry Hall
are used for the Church School.
The first full time minister, the
Rev. Russell R. Bletzer, was called
from Needham, Mass., in September of 1925. The
Rev.
and Mrs.
Bletzer and their children, Ingrid
and Jonathon, live on Pine Street
in Deerfield. For the summer, the
Bletzers are at the Rowe Camp, a
church affiliated junior high camp

in Rowe,

Mass.,

is the camp

where

Mr.

Bletzer

director.

Members of the board of Trustees
of the North Shore Unitarian who
reside in Deerfield are:
Adrienne
Ringuette
of
Crowe
Ave., chairman; Neal Mosely of Willow Ave., vice chairman; Mrs. Wells
D. Burnette of Sherry Ln. and Mrs.
E. D. Gourley Jr., of Orchard St.,
trustees.
at 7 p.m. at
Mrs. Arthur
berry Ln.

the home of Dr. and
Taylor of 1401 Bay-

PARK
IDiewood

2-7800

om gt ~
Phwyerd-y.

mrt.

Faw
way.

9

n

39

bg tore

�Mandel,
Robert
Nachman,
Mrs.
Nancy R. Spiegal, Diane J. Siegman, David Rietz, A. Terry Treger,
Jan
J. Toof,
William
C. Young,
Nancy
J. Wertheimer,
Woodward
Burgert
Jr.
Students
From
Deerfield

Indian : Hill Cane: Out Ahead
Of Exmoor In NS Tennis Suburban
Indian
Hill
defeated
Exmoor
Country Club four matches to one
Sunday
to take the lead in the
North Shore Suburban League Tennis tournament.
Dave Nelson of Exmoor defeated
Roy Anderson of Indian Hill, 6-3,
6-4 and Steve MacKinnon of Indian
Hill defeated Bert Rance
of Exmoor, 6-2, 8-6.
Tell

Doubles

Summer

Session Students

(Continued

from

page

Susan
43)

D. Buker,

Nancy

Richard

J.

Durkee

and

A Surprise Awaits You

D. Card,

Ronald H. Davies, Lynn Fruchaux,
John E. Garrity, Joseph M. Hoffmann, Mary Kay Neilsen, Allen D.
Wilson and Russell F. Zartler.
Students
from
Highwood
are

burg, Jack L. Hammond, Barbara
A. Hess, Nancy L. Holland, Frank
S. Karger Jr., John E. Koretz, Lois
M. Leonardi,
Susan
S. Leonard,
Phyllis S. Levin, Stanley L. Lind,
Lucy
M.
Loevenhart,
Roger
B.

Northshore Garden of Memories

Susan

A. |,

THIS

BEAUTIFUL
Very

Have

If You
GARDEN

Reasonable

CEMETERY

Prices

Phone

Bay Rd. &amp; 18th St.

Green

Not Visited

DE 6-6500

Thomas.

Winners

In the doubles matches, Arthur
Nielsen and Dan Kreer of Indian
Hill defeated R. L. Williams Jr. and

R. L. Williams III, 46, 6-2, 6-0.
, James Hinchcliff and Sam Baird..of
Indian Hill outpaced Exmoor’s Lee.
Bisnop and Roald Fiater, 6-4, 9-7
and Clint Abbott and Ernest Roth
of
Indian
Hill
defeated
Robert
Burnside
and Martin
Nelson
63,
6-4.

Ask the Cuttie family and they’ll tell you the
warmest house on earth stands at 645 Byron Court in
Deerfield. This is a prejudice shared by Nola and Don

PUBLIC
NOTICE
Notice of Proposed
Changes
in Schedule
COMMONWEALTH
EDISON
COMPANY
and
its Public
Service
Company
Division hereby give notice to the public
that certain revisions im Schedule 8-R “Information and Requirements for the Supply of Electric Service” have been filed
with the Illinois Commerce Commission on
July
1, 1959.
The
primary
purpose
of the filing
is
to show the new
requirements
connected:
with the use of polyphase socket meters in
place of A-base meters for new or revised
installations. This change will affect only
customers
requiring
three-phase
service.
Certain changes are also proposed with
respect to the requirements for (1) clearances from
secondary service connections,
(2) grounding
facilities where
three-phase
service is rendered, (3) installation of duct
in public streets and alleys, and (4) meter
clearances

and

meter

Cuttie, and the three younger pillars of their house
—Pat, Tom, and Mike. After all, it’s home!

Though happy to spend most of their time at this
address, the Cutties occasionally seek out a
second house. That would be Holloway House on
Skokie, where they get away from it, relax,
and enjoy doting service, pleasing environment and

a menu so downright exciting that just
reading it is an experience.
Want

to put a

boards.

Further information with respect to these
changes
may
be
obtained
directly
from
the Company or by addresing the Secretary
of the Illinois Commerce
Commission
in
Springfield,
Illinois.
copy
of the proposed
changes
may
be inspected by any interested party at any
business office of this Company.
COMMONWEALTH
EDISON COMPANY
By Hubert H. Nexon
Director of Rates
7/9-16/59—198

HOLLOWAY
GLENVIEW

AND

SKOKIE

the

right now

benefits

and

for only

July 9, 1959

SKOKIE,

ILL. Across from Old Orchard

year-round.

$18.90

we walk. Wow!

"Scotts.

CLOUT® to treat

5000 sq ft, $6.95

“FIRST

COMPANY,

LUMBER
1590

Deerfield

west

of

Road,

Route

Highland

41—Phone

Park,

IDlewood

INC.

IN

LAWNS

OPEN

8 A.M. - 5:30 P.M.
Thursday

Just
Thursday,

North Shore address.

ROADS,

CRAFTWOOD

reap

CLOUT ($6.95) plus
No. 35 Spreader $16.95) Together
Now

find Holloway House convenient to reach from any

Scotts Spreader dial to 7 so
CLOUT goes on just right!
We’re killing crabgrass as

Need a Scotts Spreader?
$5.00

To get to Holloway House, the Cutties drive east
on Deerfield to Edens Highway, south on Edens to:
Skokie Road, then direct to the restaurant. You'll

The North Shore’s Home of Gracious Dining

Who wants crabgrass? Let’s
make it disappear. First we
pour in CLOUT, then set the

Save

little more excitement

into your life? Join the Cutties at Holloway
House—the North Shore’s Home of Gracious
Dining. Make Holloway House the
*‘second house’’ in your family’s life!

Sunday

10

until

9 P.M.

A.M.-1

P.M.

Illinois
2-0140
Page

45

�ZS Leeryd
low ay
Prices Ov Your Everyday Needs

HRIFTY

Everyd
Low ay
Prices Ov Your Everyday Needs C8:

WAY

TO

FEED

A FAMILY!

‘One meal the summer cook's in love with is a good oldfashioned pot roast dinner! No need to heat the oven—you just
brown it in the pot, throw in a few vegetables, and leave it to cook

for itself. A quick salad and simple dessert . . . and there you arel
Of course, Jewel

knows

how

important it is that your roast

be juicy and tender. That's why Jewel brings you only U. S. Choice

beef. Your roast will be well marbled with tiny veins of fat... just
the right amount to let it cook nicely in its own rich jvices—never

dry up.

You'll be in love with this low Jewel price, too! So hurry to
Jewel today for a thrifty but hearty old-fashioned dinner this weekend]

U.S.

CHOICE—EXTRA

Pot

VALUE

Roast

TRIM

�Ure Raponsct

Steaks

Nun. Ov Nabel There :
STEWING

= 39:

Bing Cherries
,

Corn 3 = 39:
Sweet
Sweet Corn
E&gt;,
ang

Take the whole Famity |
to Your

OR

SALAD

WHOLE
Chickens orci‘.
U.S.

CHOICE—CENTER

CUT

Lemonade
EVERBEST

ASSORTED

REG.

2/23c

RELISHES

&amp;

10 :% $7°°

CHERRY

VALLEY—-REG.

29c

HARTEX——SLICED--REG.

29¢

Lh soz $]

Pork Chops

*» 89 Pickles

BLUEBROOK CUT—REG. 2/25c

10 : 1°° Pineapple

42% $19

(ID Roast

» 79:

GreenBeans

10'%°5]°°

A 2 22. $]O

BEEF—LEAN

Peers

Jewel Store at...

Short

Ribs

1826 Second St.

LEAN—END CUT

580 Roger Williams
Highland Park, Il.

» 29:

REALEMON—FROZEN

U.S. CHOICE—EV.T. CUT FROM FIRST 5 RIBS—STANDING

Friendly

aa

Rib
é

Deluwered Prete bh
RED

CUT FROM FIRST 5 RIB

Corned|
Beef

5
a4
Californi
Tomatoes

DARK

U.S. CHOICE—E.V.T. ;

ROUND BONE or BOSTON CUT

BONELESS BRISKET

be scp slena

EARGE,

Uo tamuly favorite;

Liha Velie um!

Pork Chops
FOR BETTER BAKING
Crisco
GOLDEN

Fluffo
100% PURE

Ivory Soap
IT FLOATS

seg

LB.

29:

» 39:

DAWN FRESH SLICED-—REG. 29¢

RED

Kidney

MOTT'S—REG.

Beans

BLUEBROOK

SlicedBeets

10

or

$]00

8 5-

22 BB

Camay

Soap

Zest
Yp PRICE PACK

2%: 35&lt;« Zest

Anplesauce

10 5 5179° Spaghetti:_
SCOTT, JUMBO

Sf lp engl

5

Paper

4a 25 OF. $]°

4 ::%2-$]0

Towels

2 ::29: Scott Tissue

3 cs 51&lt; Mazola Oil

3x2 31&lt; Lava Soap

2 «2.99. Bosco

Ivory Soap

ane

Se ee

8

Camay Soap

3 =. 33-&lt;

Comet Cleanser 27.0: 49:

Ivory Soap

29c

CHEF BOY-AR-DEE—REG. 29c

“5c OFF” LABEL—PINK, BLUE AND WHITE
=

Mushrooms

ROLL

3om3

ca. $0

“or BE

at Sade Tee gs
Corned Beef Hash

3

&lt;7

OC

�Sac.

C28&gt;
P eRty crt:
ids aaa fipee9 ak) he es
osTen

aR po 4

Bt. *

_

ip qi

a

rah v

Bookkeeper

EE

LEO L. 505 oaks
Supplies

sc eqecafipcescncus,

..

d

a

an

SB
Court Costs

ESSN

GIG

ay

WE
i

bh

Witness

Fees

Peaeamberiance Of Autos

onc. c..e

50.00

400.00
700.00

ee A

2,000.00
50.00

150.00

leeds:

600.00

1,200.00
800.00
750.00
3,500.00
1,000.00

INSURANCE
Fire (Extended Coverage) on building and contents 20.0....0.2--ccccecesc00-- $ 1,000.00
Fire, and Theft, Liability and Property damage on Auto &amp; Trucks
450.00
Equipment
Floater
400.00
Burglary, Robbery, Fraud
40.00
Workmen’s
Compensation
1,250.00
MN
RA
goo ical en 22N pst 0i2 cescncesensees
100.00
Liability Insurance—Sledding Hill ........
40.00
Accident and Public Liability
2,000.00

ah
q

|

SUNSET VALLEY GOLF COURSE
For salaries and expenses in connection therewith:
Police
ORT:
PI AND Poh i ii SE NALD Uy PARI eae
$ 1,200.00
te
|
EIR
28 i aie ar pee Oy Pee
2,450.00
MMO OUS TiADOL oi fac oc necheo cc eceecdedacoclecdaceeaus
900.00
me mor Maintenance of Course &lt;......cccccccccesceoe:
30,000.00
_ For Maintenance of Tractors, Trucks and Mowers
7,600.00
_
For Maintenance of Buildings, Bridges, Roadways,
'
sewer and Water Mains
............
5,000.00
TEREST
VAS A
Arh Ae ot
ne
600.00
I
cis con ac
eksuieyaviec ies ci taotey.s
2,000.00
Water
1,200.00
EN
i
id
ois cccad ead ues sas
800.00
954
225% cai Gos 41 ceca oa pbe es VA Gc. Jn Lelibedaba seul Aacel,
250.00
I
REC LNLS SEROUS oo occas bcc idan sadness
debe nschce teens
800.00
Sums to be expended in payment for golf prizes &amp; other
MELO MOOG: OIL) 1ONAG fosai lous sc lascedeldsderdshsesaslcteaesideactsc,cae
700.00
Miscellaneous Expense—Sunset Valley Golf Course 200..........-:ccccsseeceeoee
1,000.00
Mmmm
LICKCtS Ke tAGS cs. cc.ccccecsecsccsseccscccdersace
1,100.00

PARKS
and Operation

SKATING RINKS:
For Maintenance and
Labor
Supplies

Operation

$26,750.00

5,280.00

of Skating

FOR

a portion

ILLINOIS
_

_

kL

To

HOSPITAL
of the

MUNICIPAL

ACQUISITION OF
For Purchase of:
Electric Saw

Curb

Hydraulic

_

Hf

_

Air

3,000.00

18,000.00
100.00
100.00
100.00
.00

Insurance

$

Classes Now

Hubbard

Ice Skating

Retirement

Fund

8,000.00
400.00

700.00
700.00

70.00
1,350.00
350.00
450.00
880.00
700.00
500.00
1,800.00
150.00
65.00

450.00
300.

1,700.00
400.

500.00
900.00

850.00
125.00
250.00
65.00
60.00
500.00
2,500.00
1,300.00
400.00
6,000.00

THURSDAY,

Woods

Studi

July 9—Last

°

915 Linden Ave.—Winnetka, II.
Call Miss Thomas—H! 6- 4123

FRI. thru MON.,

July

GIVEN

to

all

M-G-M presents
A George Pal

Production

STOCK: CAR RACES

SUNDAY. NITE

umb
--./t's
colorsomel!
: is

wonderful |

455

musical
adventure...

*,\

starring

Adults

ate —and

—

St. ber ween
Skokie Hwy.

Children

July

Fri.-Mon., ‘’Tom Thumb”
7:29-9:30

-

y +.

(Must

Dean

thru

THURS.,

July

ORSON WELLES,
Stockwell, Bradford Dillman
in
Meyer Levin’s Best Seller

“Compulsion” at 7:20 - 9:23
Wednesday-Midweek Matinee
Open 1 P.M.

be accompanied
by adult)

“DAY THE EARTH STOOD
STILL”

Bldg.

2

800.00
400.00

Drain Tile—Old Elm Park
Backstop—Sunset
Park
Walk—Sunset Park

DISTRICT

REAL

99,555.00

ESTATE

to

pay

interest

Don’t

700.00
500.00
500.
4,000.00
300.00
500.00
300.00
130.00
11,500.00
500.
800.00
15,000.00
25,000.00
2,000.
400.00
3,000.00
2,300.00
2,300.00

and
miss

is filled with

golden

oppor-

it!

3,500.00

Whit

3°19 3
PARKING

$75,000.00

1716 CENTRAL- UN-4-4900

75,000.00

NOW!

The

High

$160,000.00
8,500.00
8,700.00
500.00
8,000.00
8,000.00
500.00
20,000.00
900.00

FRIDAY

Latest

Fidelity

STEREO

SOUND!

thru MONDAY

July 10-11-12-13

Mat.
215,100.00

Fri., Sat. &amp; Sun.

M-G-M presents A George Pal Production

5,000.00

FOR ISSUANCE OF BONDS
For expenses of special election or elections
re-issuance of general obligation bonds
$
600.00
Counsel Fees covering approval of bonds and preparation of
proceedings for issuance of bonds, and for all services in
GORME COON FICE: OCI AECUIOD sie
ck pak iedscs batik accdcas MereGiKs sas
dcavdasasdintsead 4,000.00
Publication expense
150.00
For expense of printing or engraving bonds
300.00
For miscellaneous expense in connection with issuance of bonds—
obtaining necessary certificates and similar items ...............0:000
350.00
Unclassified expense
250.00

indebtedness

tunities.

section

facts

$ 1,000.00
1,000.00
500.00
1,000.00

GENERAL EMERGENCY PROVISIONS
To meet emergencies and contingencies not herein provided for,
or in excess of the provision of any section hereof ......0.00.00.......

necessary

Want-Ad

interesting

360.00

payment of cost of improvement of lands
condemned or purchased, or to
be
condemned or purchased:
Swimming Pool
Ridge Park
Old Elm Park
Port Clinton Park
Mooney Park
Rosewood Park
West Longview Park
Lake Park (Cary Avenue)
For plans for future Parks and Park Structures

bonded

The

350.00
600.00
900.00

Station Park

TO MEET EXISTING OBLIGATIONS AND
NON-RECURRING ITEMS
BONDED
INDEBTEDNESS
Amount necessary to pay Maturing Bonds

Plus Comedy

600.00
250.00
250.00
900.00

Volleyball, Badminton, Horse Shoe Courts
Drain Tile—West Longview Park

FOR EXPENSE OF BUYING PARK
Council
Fees
Title &amp; Trust Company Charges
Filing, Publication &amp; Recording Fees
Unclassified Expense

14-16

“COMPULSION”

NIGH T

CHILDREN
FREE

Prices: All Seats $2.00
Save Nearly Half. Series Subscription to all plays: $4.50. Curtain at

TUES.

12

CHILDREN’S

many more!

Sat. - Sun.,
1:59 -4 :00 - 6:01
8:02 - 10:00
Plus Alcyon “‘SHORT SKETCHES”

- Free. Parking

$1.25

s

Terry-Thomas « Peter Seller

WAUKEGAN.
SPEEDWAY
MA’ 3-9540

So

Alan Young

TIME TRIALS .. 7:15
RACES....... 8:30

West Washington
Green Bay Rd. &amp;

&lt;4

ey

Russ Taba

19, 30

Speech

A tom

i
the

July O12) | 5. AS, 24, 28
Shaw’‘s “Saint Joan”
July 21).23; 25, 26,'29, 34

Amount

10-13

Notice

Sheridan’s ‘“‘The Rivals’’
July 11, 14, 17; 22
Sophocles’ ‘Oedipus, King of

Concrete Walk—Repair

Day

“Rio Bravo” with John Wayne

5,000.00

Wwe, Nan
sIT'S cotorsomer”

5,650.00

OTHER
$10,000.00

Young » Terry-Thomas

Peter Sellers and many more!

TUES., WED. &amp; THURS.
July 14-15-16
SEE IT ON OUR 42-FT.
CINEMASCOPE SCREEN
in the WONDER of High-Fidelity
STEREOPHONIC SOUND!
DARRYL F. ZANUCK

on

Productions, Inc.
Presents

1,185.00
11,185.00

3. . . c0.).0 c c ds eas.

Parking

Daily 6:30 P.M.
&amp; Wed., Open 1 P.M.

Forming

ee

For

400.00

$

Compressor

Cool—Free
Open
Sat., Sun.

ACQUISITIONS AND IMPROVEMENTS
OF PARK SITES AND PROPERTY
For Payment of Lands Condemned or Purchased,
or to be condemned or purchased

400.00

PROPERTY

..........

48

16,

5,700.00

$ 8,000.00

Typewriter
Kitchen Equipment

Page

10,

iameretereandt

Now!

Night’s Dream”

July

Sunset Valley Walks
Laurel Park Walks
Bench Pads
Landscaping—Sunset
Park

$15,000.00

FUND

of the Municipal

Hoist

Lounge
Furnishing
Sand Blaster
Acetylene Torch
Battery Charger
- Traffic Counter
Hand-driers (3
Fencing Sunset Valley Golf ....
Bleachers (6) ......
Exhibit Shelter (2)
Beach Cleaner
FOR CONSTRUCTION OF:
Stairway—Rosewood
Landscaping—Rosewood
- Plumbing—Central
Park
Storage Building
West Longview Park
Drinking
Fountains
Knoll Park
Tennis back-board
Clubhouse Addition
lumbing—Sunset
Valley
andscaping—Sunset Valley
Launching Ramp .........
Sentral Beach Bath House
Shuffle Boards—Sunset Park
Park Ave. Guard Rails
FOR INSTALLATION
OF:
Sunset Valley Parking Lot
Central Park Paving
Rosewood Park Paving
Walk Paving

HEREBY

Day

HIGHLAND PARK

Reaister
egist

said

Beaches:

for Hospitalization

Trimmer

Duplicator
a

or before

THEATRE

AROUND

350.00
due

File Cabinet
Park Mower
Lockers
ife Boats ....
boy
_ Greensmower
Picnic Tables
Rail Fencing
Miscellaneous Equipment
Polling Booths
yy
Lapping Machine
“Ae

IS

Claim

8:30. UN 4-1907.
on the N.U. Campus.

5,000.00

$

Property Survey
Playground Equipment

ens
at

and

32,000.00

$ 4,000.00
500.00
500.00

RETIREMENT

PERMANENT

on

YEAR

3 -Cartoons-3

CARE

pay the Park District’s portion
as provided by Law

estate

in Nightly Rotation
Shakespeare’s “A Midsummer

.$25,000.00
7,000.00

IMPROVEMENTS:

premium

said

OPEN

The World’s Four Great Plays

Parks:

Supplies

pay

ICE SKATING

Thebes”

e

PLAN

Mace
nA
Paes
ft ame
genre)

Rinks:

BATHING BEACHES:
For Maintenance and Operation of Bathing
fy
oo. 5s
scbdasifouindiysuedsiecs is:

To

EW
vs

NORTHWESTERN
DRAMA FESTIVAL

Park:

OTHER RINKS
0.
bs de rcul fave sdonadehede coed hcesekccdébioe,
ios.
iets. sags &lt;adevssns s4essitiotucsers.
Equipment Rental

7

PRO
Tre

OPEN-AIR GARDEN
THEATRE
(Indoors if cloudy)

$ 4,500.00
1,200.00

_ FOR GENERAL AND LOCAL
Collecting Special Assessments
Miscellaneous
Advertising and Mailing
Clerical Help

against

NOTICE

$12,000.00
5,000.

other Small
Fiahiies

RabeAS GIRR EY)
é
+9

persons that the first Monday of August,
1959, is the claim
date in the estate of
SAMUEL R. BANFIELD,
Deceased pending in the Probate Court of Lake County,
Illinois, and that claims may be filed against
the
said
estate
on or before
said
date
without
issuance
of summons.
All claims
filed against said estate on or before said
date and not contested, will be adjudicated
on the first Tuesday after the first Monday
of the next succeeding month at 9 A.M.
The First National Bank of
Highland Park,
Executor
By Henry Pearon, Trust Officer
Singer &amp; Singer
Attorneys for Executor
Highland
Park,
Illinois
7/9-16-23 /59-201

3,800.00
Woods

Piel
See

7/9-16-23/59-200

17,000.00
of

filed

$ 3,000.00
800.

SUNSET WOODS PARK
or Maintenance and Operation of Sunset
ML
os. 5.55 sacs
dicekscesoies.
MM
ete asa sucecsicidcax thats sivas

AP
en

Adjudication and Claim Day Notice
NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
to all
persons that the first Monday of August,
1959, is the claim date in the estate of
ELEANOR W. BANFIELD, 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

55,600.00

TREE MAINTENANCE
NE
Linc iecdhesissss¥ se ethcucsacedegsnse lociees.
ENUM
gdh cic. dhcihObd dod s saan
Wadsacaboasetoddve

OTHER SMALL
For Maintenance
Labor
Supplies

ke eae
Sy
en
Sota

Adjudication

ys

Be

EST,
Lite

date and not contested, will be adjudicated
on the first Tuesday after the first Monday
of the next succeeding month at 9 A.M.
The First National Bank of
Highland Park,
Executor
By Henry Pearon, Trust Officer
Singer &amp; Singer
Attorneys for Executor
Highland
Park, Illinois

750.00

iscellaneous Expense—Gen. &amp; Admin.
Election Expense .......0..0..2.1.0......
529d
orbs ecdiih ois Moh k col do bassavas
Anniversary
Publication
.............02.........
BLO
3520
a2 CCU, cdot deca NS ca cial casas otMOde aise Shida secede coiheve pico pale

et

SE
Rare.

toe!

2,000.00

Printing &amp; Publishing of Ordinances
Audits and Reports

Fes

wc ARE

4,200.00

SAOITD sco diccocce ce clcccn cosecesss.

_ Office

Tae

ed?

et

ORDINANCE MAKING APPROPRIATIONS FOR CORPORATE PURPOSES
_ FOR THE FISCAL YEAR FROM MAY Ist, 1959 TO APRIL 30th, 1960
BE IT ORD INED BY THE BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS OF THE PARK
DISTRICT OF
HIGHLAND PARK, COUNTY OF LAKE, AND STATE, OF ILLINOIS:
SECTION 1. That the following sums, or as much thereof as may be authorized by
law, be and the same are hereby appropriated for corporate purposes for the fiscal
eet commencing May 1, 1959, and ending April 30, 1960.
GENERAL AND ADMINISTRATIVE
For salaries and expenses in connection therewith:
Superintendent and Secretary ....
$ 8,600.00

ae
pag
as

en

Rakitawes

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is

GRAND
TOTAL
.....
$592,870.00
SECTION 2. All unexpected balances of any items of any general expense appropriation made by this ordinance may be expended in making
up any deficiency in any
appropriation and for the same general purpose or in a like appropriation made by
this ordinance.
SECTION 3. All ordinances or parts of ordinances in conflict herewith shall be and
the same are hereby repealed.
SECTION
4. This ordinance shall be in full force and effect from and after its
passage, approval ard due publication, as required by law.
/s/ WILLIAM
G. SHEAHEN,
President of the Board of Commissioners
of the Park District of Highland Park
Attest:
/s/ DAVID H. FRITZ,
Secretary of the Board of Commissioners
of the Park District of Highland Park
Passed: June 22nd, 1959
Approved:
June 22nd, 1959
1/9/59-197
Published: July 9th, 1959

ORSON WELLES - DIANE VARSI
Poi
DEAN STOCKWELL

FRIDAY, JULY 17th
“Some

Like

It

Hot”

FRIDAY, JULY 24th
“Around

the

World

in 80 Days”
Thursday,

July

9,

1959

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2244 Sheridan Rd., is receiving six |State
lars

Outdoor

Theatre—

MOSQUITO

CONTROLLED

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Officer

HIRDREN'S

HOUR occa

at

the

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1:30

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POLICY

Fri., 7:00

for

and

-

4:20

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7:10

2 to 12 Midnight—Doors

Jerry Lewis in

ts

Our

Spenser,

—SCHEDULE—

Weekdays—’Don’t Give Up the Ship’’ begins at 7:34 and 9:42
Fight Pictures begin at 7:16 - 9:24 - 11:27
Give Up the Ship’ begins at 2:00 - 4:03 - 6:06 Sunday——’’Don’t
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July 16—"IT HAPPENED TO JANE” &amp;
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YOUNG

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PHILADELPHIANS

Ky

Exhibit In Our

“

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J uly 31—"HERCULES
August 14—Walt Disney’s “SLEEPING BEAUTY”

Thursday, July 9, 1959

reopens)

by
Lobby
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Sass
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Sunday.

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13-26

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Films!

Action, thrills in slow motion!
Better than Ringside!

Fight Pictures begin at 3:29

4

e

opens

theatre

Terry-Thomas,

4=)*

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the

dy

%

Championship

Mickey Shaughnessy,
Robert Middleton

4

AO

program

Russ

includes

Family!

P.M.

aC

CBP

which

Matinees

Filmed

Lake Cook Road between Skokie and Edens—

Official World’s Heavyweight
Fight

ment.

+

Johansson

Ingemar

Cia

:

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Co-starring—Dina Merrill,

at

10, for a four-day

Friday,

10:

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Floyd Patterson

Panoramic

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Thursday, July
Thursday,
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“DON’T GIVE UP
Diana

1:40

Open

Clie

dances,

July

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the Entire

10:00

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Adm.: Adult, $1.50
*

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and

Screenplay by

Sat.,
5 % 2:00
1:30 - - 4:40
4:20 - - 7:30
7:10 - - 10:30
10:00

Open Daily 6:40 to 12 Midnight—Curtain at 7:00

July

Directed by

Features—Mon.,

THEATRE

On

a

setting.

2

thumb

single

Sat. Matinees $

Friday,
ies

im

bines both live actors and ani- } —
mated cartoon characters, music J |

JOHN KERR

In the Wonder of HIGH-FIDELITY STEREOPHO! ''C SOUND

.

Continuous

y,

35.years.

fairy tale in Eastman Color com-

N featuring RAY WALSTON » JuaNiTA HALL

un.,

Sunday

¢

MITZI GAYNOR

sie

ois

BUDDY ADLER JOSHUA LOGAN P&amp;C Sseo8N RG

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THE

:

BRAZZI

Produced by

FREE
PARKING
Northern suburbs—ID 2-1236
2-9696.
After 5 P.M.—HO 5-7600

Most

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NUYE

FRANCE

bing

Forest, Illinois —L.F.

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from

We do our own diamond

In The Theatre

Carlos Chavez

Shore's

In.

Park

IDlewood

‘

er

North

Jewelry
FREE.

- OPTICIANS

Highland

‘tiie

July 15 &amp; 17

Lake

Your Rings and
We Check Them

10

Pianist

\

LOSE YOUR fm

JEWELERS

July 16 &amp; 18

mt

Closed Sundays | |

I. H. NEMEROFF

ha ak

July 14

_ conducting

7

be

Have your diamonds set in modern settings, Payments arranged.

Andre Kostelanetz

Sp

p.m.

DIAMONDSE

Chicago Symphony
Orchestra

Phone:
Chicago—ST

;

NORTH SHORE HOTEL

i

Rudolf

|

EVANSTON

pct

Walter Hendl
conducting

|.

|

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July

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Les Brown

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place,

first

has

and Weinert

entertainment!

The

11

.

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“Tall Story”

Park

Byron Janis

bins

Kaiser

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“Music

ga

~ RAVINIA
‘Pls

was —

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race

second

Mon. thru Sai.

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Kensik.

Choice

spectacle

wit

ino

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Shore ©

Weinert

the

in

Regatta

Kaiser

WEEK!

wonderful

in Highland

North

Joe

Peter

Joe

second

romance...

and

songs

Single admission $1.25 . . . Four Admissions $4.00
Special Rates for groups or theatre parties

For

the

in

fae

e

Kaiser took first in the third |

G!

TEETH | .......5.00:-3.0208 July

too

face, with Kensik secu ae

Play—William Archibald

THE. SKIN:

Re

Kaiser

:

INNOCENTS

4th

second and Weinert third.

5-0605

VErnon

ID 2-0605

24-25-26

July

In

2
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fae
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Lillian Hellman
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of three

race

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tet
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Andrew

acc July 17-18-19

HOUR

eGR

Collins, Of July

|Colo., and a 1956 graduate of High-

summer

Vita

Radle

Lake Forest, Illinois
CHILDREN’S

training

Training

Fort

:
First

.
pesany

aeCea
+ cpeyRye wave

Yacht Club’s annual Fourth. of July —

at

THE

of

—
ot etsiFALE

Ageeé

¥

Andrew

Kan.
Cadet
at Colorado

SEASON

litnale:

&amp;

Shheviclan”

weeks

University,

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2

land

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“BORN

x

YESTERDAY”

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Brownies Have Day Camp

FERFIELD BOYS BASEBALL
By Joseph

F. Peyronnin
wr

Those of you who were present
day, July 4 to see either or both of
rewarded with excellent play by all
were thrillers, the kind that give the
pleasure to watch. Too bad that the
inning

of

the

Major

League

game

for it dampened the spirit of some
of the spectators
and
sent them
home
but it did not dampen
the
Spirit of the National League team
one iota.

The first game began with Royce
Owens, Village Manager, throwing
in the first ball. This was
done

after

introduction

of

the

players.

It was nip and tuck for four innings, the National League having
a 3-2 lead. Then things began to
happen, a walk and three hits, one

a double by Sharp, and the Nation-

al League doubled its score to six
runs.
They
held
the
American
League scoreless in the fifth then
came back and on a base on balls,
two errors and three hits including
a double
by
Neal
they
pushed
across two more runs to make their
total 11. The American league went
scoreless in the sixth and thus end-

ed

the

first

Intermediate

League

All Star game with the National
League
team
winning
outscoring
the American League 11 to 2 and
outhitting
them
eight
to
three.
Umpires
for
this
game _ Miller,
Griftner, Wells and Neal; Scoring
was Clayton and announcing was
Chuck Francisco,
The
second
game,
the
second
Annual All Star game for the Major League group was a nine inning
affair. For seven innings this was
a real tight ball game. It was tight
in
every
respect.
The
National
League
boys were
getting
some
solid wood on the ball only to be
robbed of a clean hit by the stellar
defensive
work
of the American
League team. It was enough to discourage anyone but they kept trying. On the other side the National
League team was not too loose in
their defensive work either. In the
fourth inning on three hits they
allowed only one run to score and

that

was

a lead

off home

run

by

Rickey Moore which just cleared
the fence. In the fifth inning with
two walks and three hits the American League was able to score only
two runs. At this point in the game
the score was American League 3
runs 6 hits, the National League 0
runs 1 hit. The eight inning started
with Frantz driving the third pitch
over the fence for a home run then

came

later

the

the

rain.

game

About
was

20

at Jewett Park last Saturthe All Star games were
boys involved. The games 4
spectators the greatest of |!
rains came in the eighth

minutes

continued

and

ended it with a double.
everybody went wild.

cluding
another
double
by
Le
Claire., Then came the big inning
that the boys will long remember.
Esplin started the inning by hitting
a home run over the right center

field

fence

with

a three

and

two

count on him; then a single, a walk,
a hit batter, a single a fielder’s
choice but all were safe then an

out, a hit batter another fielder’s
choice and all were safe then a two
base hit by Esplin his second time
at bat during the inning two more
bases on balis and then Scheskie

27 sank s
D/o INTEREST,

Page

50

that

The
National
League
showed
great will to win in the discouraging position they were in needing
eight runs to tie and nine to win.
The
American
League
should
be
proud
of
their
great
defensive
work and wonderful play throughout the
eight
preceding
innings.
Both sides deserve a great deal of
credit for their excellent play and
sportsmanship. Final American 11
runs 13 hits, National
12 runs 9
hits.
We wish to thank the starting
battery—Mitchell and Owens (park
board president and village manager respectively)
for the excellent
performance.
Mitchell
threw but one ball and it was a
perfect strike; Owens caught like
he was a Bill Dickey. Umpires for
the
game
were
Folger,
Roche
Wells and Eaker, announcer Camp,
Score Yordon.
Quite

An

Event

The Minor League wishes to announce their first all star game to
be held July 12 at Deerfield Grammar
School’ north
diamond.
The
game is scheduled to begin at 1:30
p.m. This should be quite an event
and a lot of fun for the boys. It
gives them something extra to work
for during
the regular schedule.
Hope to see most of you there.
There were three games played
in the PONY
league
during
the
week. The Giants breezed past the
Tigers 22 to 8 and the Redlegs took
two from the Braves by scores of 7
to 4 and 9 to 2.
Standings
based
on games
reported
to
date
in
the
various
leagues are:
PONY League
Standings

Team
Redlegs
Braves)
Tigers
Giants

sax.

Team
Dodgers...
Pirates
Cards
Cubs
Team
Indians
White Sox
Yanks
Orioles

with a couple of walks and doubles

by LeClaire and Keppler the American League was able to score four
more
runs
then
the
National
League
began
al rampage.
Three
walks
and
a hit gave them
two
runs. In the ninth the American
scored four more
runs
on three
walks an error and three hits in-

With

Team
RT
OE
Athletics
Yankees
Indians
Orioles
Team
Cub
Pirates .
Giants
Cards
Dodger

MAJOR
League
Standings
National Division

American

Division

INTERMEDIATE
Standings
American Division
eae
i ck

National

dale
Division

Won
9
5
3
2

Lost
1
5
6
yi

on
10
5
4
‘|

Lost
2
7
¥
8

Won
4 i
b§
4
4

Lost
3
5
5
bj

6
4
4
Se

on

Lost
2
2
4
4
8

Won
7
7
7
P|
4

Lost
yd
3
4
6
6

Minor
League.
I promise
you
that I will get in touch with Jim
Johnson
and get these standings
straightened
out. He was
out of
town all of last week and we could
not get together. You boys are play-

ing great ball, I’ve seen a lot of the
games.
Do not forget the dance July 18
at Northbrook Legion Hall. You do
not have to have a boy in the program or be a member to come —
everycne is welcome.

Mrs.

Brownies have learned many things and had much fun at the Day Camp in Jewett Park.
Louis Zenko was pictured one morning recently as she taught the girls how to have a cook-

out.
Mrs. Joseph Furo was chairman
of the
project
with Mrs.
David
Kaplan as assistant chairman. Unit
leaders
have
been
Mrs.
George
Baxter, Mrs. Stephen Feller, Mrs.
Arthur LeFeuvre, Mrs. H. L. Houskeeper and Mrs. Zenko.
Learn

|

By

Crafts

Caper

Episcopal Church

Bill Olson

more. We had
La Buda held

five hits, but
Highwood to

Tom
only

two hits, Highwood
getting
one earned run and enjoying
errors.

only
four

Deerfield
PEAR WOOK

Duty

O00
TOR?

Sy. ccus.! babacen

Bill North
win
against

Thursday

One of the best liked features of
the Camp
was
the
“caper
duty”
each noon when the girls took turns
cooking over an outdoor fire. This
consisted of the cleaning and preparation
of the food
as well
as
cleaning up after each meal.

0 OF
TO

bo: 145
es! 4-2

picked up his second
only
one
loss
last

against Niles Recreation,

winning 6-2 on a three hitter. The
only two runs that Niles managed
to push across came in the sixth
when
Bill- North
seemed
to be
wild,
hitting
two
batters,
giving
two walks, but only allowed one
hit.
Harry
Henderson
was
one for
four, his one hit starting off a rally at the beginning of the game.
Bob Hollmann was two for four,
both singles, Bill North singled in
two official trips to the plate, and

Also, included in the two week
period was a trip to Hawthorn-Mellody
Farm.
Two
solid
weeks
of
beautiful weather made it a most
enjoyable part of the summer for
the girls who participated.

Steve

Dexter

had

a

perfect

Niles Recreation
Deerfield

The
annual
4H _ achievement
night will be held on Wednesday,
July 15 at 8 p.m. at Zion Lutheran

.......... 00:0.

602.0
10:2
&lt;x

2-3
6-7

We went to Waukegan last Sunday trying to extend our streak to
two games, but a nine run third
in which 18 men batted iced the
cake for Waukegan in their 15 to 3
victory.
With two runs in the top of the
third we tied the score, three each,

10 Deerfield Rd. All of the

4-H groups.in Deerfield, composed
of girls from 10-13 years of age,
will be participating. The cooking
and sewing skills learned by these
girls will be demonstrated and exhibitions of work done will be on
view. The sewing groups will also
model the clothing they made.
The
public
and
families
and
friends of members, are cordially
invited.
Refreshments
will
be
served,

being

helped

by

the

second

The Rev. J. D. Parker, rector of
St. Gregory’s Episcopal Church officiated Sunday at the baptism of
Scott Robert
Vickers
and
Emily
Belfield Hawkes.
Scott Robert is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. John Milton Vickers of
1339 Dartmouth Ln. Sponsors were
Rollie Gerrard, Madalyn
Gerrard
and Robert Manning.
Emily Belfield is the daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Albert K. Hawkes of
933
Forest
Ave.
Sponsors
were
James R. Hawkes, Mrs. John Ingham and Jeanne Veatch.

Benefit Dance To Be
Given July 18 For

Boys Baseball Ass‘n
The
Deerfield
Boys
Baseball
Women’s
Auxiliary is busy planning the annual summer dance to
be held Saturday, July 18 at the
Northbrook Legion Hall.
The music will be furnished by
Reno Tondelli. Mr. and Mrs. Robert Carlson
are chairman
of the
party.
Mr. and Mrs. Harold Schramm
have
charge
of decorations;
Mr.

and

Mrs.

Mr.
and
prizes.

Robert
Mrs.

David,

publicity;

Harry

Henderson,

day

having one for one with a walk.
They played the game that night
as they should have played all season.

4-H Achievement
Night Is July 15

Church,

Baptized Sunday In

With five straight defeats, Deerfield went to Highwood on Tuesday, June 30, to try to pull out of
its slump.
Highwood
broke the ice in the
second
with
an
unearned
run,
which looked bigger and bigger as
the game
progressed. Holding us
scoreless for the first six innings,
Highwood increased its lead to 4-0.
We scored once in the seventh
but couldn’t find
the range
for

Emphasis on the use of natural
resources
and acquiring responsibility were the key points of this
year’s Brownie Day Camp held at
Jewett Park from June 15 through
June
26.
Girls
representing
all
schools
in Deerfield
worked
together
in identification
of trees,
various crafts such as making beads
out
of wallpaper,
weaving
belts,
and an unusual projet of making
barometers with the use of cans,
twigs, tissue paper, and plaster of
paris.
Enjoy

DEERFIELD PREP
LEAGUE NEWS

suc-

cessive triple by Bob
Hollmann,
the starting pitcher. However, then
the roof fell in when
Waukegan
scored its nine runs.
It was then just a matter of good
pitching
by
Waukegan
and
our

lack of hitting that gave Waukegan
the victory.
Deerfield’ ig
102
000
0 3-6
Waukegan

‘6.232.508. BA

D380

&lt;i

Standings
(not including Sunday)
NORTH
Team
Won
Glenview Reo
er
ees 7
worth Chifcasorinc6
8) 5
PRP WOOE
eee
eo o
WRUR@@ar ss fo 8 og
he
4
TWOOTTU
oe
AL Si 3
Ps DUCT MEA PS TR NED SR GaniCe BRENT 0
SOUTH
Team
Won

We MONS

es siaic CS. aa

Lost
0
4
4
5
7
8
Lost

saad 7

TPRDBTOR ese ee
Sate a
Pecenrook.
la
cs
CleAnView (Gi
uel ial
INCOR Re This
ae See

18-10

0

6
4
Z
1

2
4
5
ve
ae |

“The Service Bank Of Highland Park”

ON SAVINGS AT

BANK? HIGHLAND

1771 Second St.

BANK—POST
Member

Federal

OFFICE

Deposit

BLDG.

Insurance

Corporation

PARK

IDlewood 2-7800
Thursday,

July

9,

1959

�Children Flock To Vacation Bible School
edeemer Lutheran Church Conducts
aily Classes On Theme ‘Keed His Lambs’

Some 93 children, ranging in age from 2 to 15
years, registered for Vacation Bible School at Redeemer Lutheran Church.
In the picture above “Jesus’ Little Helpers” don
caps with their
names
printed across the front. At
right the young man learns
his Bible lesson through
bright colored picture
stories.

Above, children use cutout letters to set up learned
Bible passages. At le ft,
small fry pour over bible
story pictures. Closing services and a picnic were held
for students and parents
June

26.

Classes

were

taught by a staff of 30
adults and junior boys and
irls.
ls
oom

Thursday,

July 9, 1959

Names of the books of the Bible are taught in blackboard drill and divisions, such as history, poetry, etc., are taught with the aid of finger drawings.
Page''51

�PHONE YOUR WANT AD . .
REAL

ESPfATE

WANT AD RATES

ay... $1.75
‘

5¢ each additional word

:

(For 55 words or Less)

25c Service charge for blind ads
Ads containing 56 words or
more are charged at the rate of
$4.90 per column inch.
Contract rates for 4 or more
consecutive
on request

insertions available
| inch Minimum.

This cost will cover the
insertion in all 4 papers.
©

Deerfield

run

in

EAST

above

publications

Tower

Published Every Other Friday

Want Ads will be accepted up to

Tuesday, 4:30 P.M.
DEADLINE

FOR CONTRACT
ADS 3 P.M. TUESDAY
For Publication in the Current
Week’s Issue.
CANCELLATION
DEADLINE
12 NOON, TUESDAY
Copy is accepted with the underStanding
that
the
publisher
assumes
no_
responsibility
for
Omission
through
clerical
or
mechanical
error’ and
shall
be
under no obligation or liability
of any kind whatsoever, either to
the advertiser or third Parties.
In the event of an error in copy,
on the advertiser’s request, the
ublisher will rectify the error
y publishing the corrected
ad
in the next regular issue without
charge. All claims for adjustment
must be made within five days of
the date of publication in which
the error occurs.

NEED
A
NEW
HOME
WITH
DOWN PAYMENT
3 bedrooms,
large
family
room,
convenient
At eee en ewww ecescennenessccecees

SMALL
2 baths,
location
&gt;

BRAESIDE:
3 bedrooms,
large
1st floor
family room with fireplace, modern _ kitchen.
Basement,
playroom
with
toliet.
A
steal
$27.500

SMALL
KITCHEN-TWO
BEDROOMS,
ONE
BATH:
Gorgeous
living room
with
marble fireplace, $3,000 breezeway. Beautifully wooded landscaped large private lot.
Full basement. Gas heat, attached garage.
$6,000 below owners cost
$27,500
RAVINIA-Thrée
bedroom
brick
ranch.
Close to park, schools, transportation and
trains
$23,500

NORTHBROOK
RANCH-3 bedrooms,
Built in 1956 $28,500

THIS IS A BUY: Two bedrooms, out of
this
world
kitchen,
lovely
ceramic
tile
bath,
large
living
room
with
fireplace
(marble mantle), huge 2 car attached garage,
70x200
wooded
lot. Extra’s
galore
$20,900

Dorsey Husenetter
REALTORS
Bt,

Johns

Ave.

ID

2-1484

RANCH

AIR
CONDITIONED
throughout.
3
bedroom, 1% bath bi-level. 2-story living room,
tiled kitchen, family room, appliances, etc.
hens
included

Within 200 yards of the Lake on
beautifully
landscaped
wooded
property this Colonial brick ranch
will appeal to the most descriminating taste.
The spacious entrance hall opens
onto a 30 ft. liv. rm. with fireplace
and cathedral ceiling, and a pleasant din. rm. Large sunny farm kit.
in natural wood with many built-in
features
and
unusually
spacious
eating area. Pan. library, screened
porch.
Luxurious master suite with exquisitely
appointed
bath;
large
guest room and bath. Pan. rec. rm.
with bar; warm air gas heat, complete
air conditioning,
full basement.

RANCH—almost new, 2 bedrooms,
den, fireplace, dream kitchen

A luxurious
seventies.

|

HIGHLAND
PARK
608 Laurel
DEERFIELD
699 Waukegan
Rd.
LAKE FOREST
287 Deerpath

RE.il

ESTATE

FOR

(HIGHLAND

SALE
PARK)

(Improved

2 baths,
29,800

QUALITY
two story. East of Sheridan. 4
bedrooms, 314 baths, den, fireplace ..$49,500
One story—needs remodeling. 3 bedrooms,
den, choicest East location, wooded
100x
190 lot
$27,000

Idlewood Realty
REALTORS
1550

Park

Ave.

ID

2-6776

CHARMING older home. 2 or 3 bedrooms,
living room, dining room, family room off
large paneled kitchen with nook, 1% car
garage,
patio, low taxes, near Catholic
school,
transportation
and
stores.
Low
20’s. Telephone ID 2-1520.
.

Page

52

ESTATE
FOR
(HIGHLAND

home

priced

in

DEERFIELD—S500 Indian Hill Road. Open
Saturday,
Sunday.
Deluxe
split-level.
4
bdrms., 24% baths, rec. rm., att 2 car gar.,
nicely decorated, carpet, drapes inc. Priced
in mid 30’s.

SALE
(improved;
PARK)

OF

THE

Handsome
brick and redwood
bi-level
Thermopane
windows
overlooking acre
with large trees
Mahogany
paneled
family
room
with
beamed ceiling and jalousied walls
$29,500. Call Mrs. Parkinson

ACCENT
@
@
e
*

ON

YOUTH

LET

YOUR

BUDGET

OUR

AMAZING

NEW

HOMEFINDERS,

WILMETTE—3
bdrms., 2 baths, large living
rm.
with
fireplace,
rec.
rm.,
patio,
att. 2 car gar., nicely landscaped lot, carpet
a.
gas heat, low down
payment.
Low
30’s,

by-owner
SERVICE

BUREAU,

PHONE
ORchard 5-8383—24
4846 Main St., Skokie,
Registered Real Estate

CHOICE
EAST
LOCATION
This
Colonial home
with
5 bedrooms, 3. baths, is the PERFECT
family home. No CHAUFFEURING
children to school. Dad can WALK
to the train. Spend lazy summer
days relaxing on nearby. beaches.
A home that provides a delightful
way of life for the whole family.
$39,500.

L. Ringer
457

Realty
Central

Co.

@
@

Realtors
ID

Open

loe.

for’

‘car

family,

1.

1%

ID 2-0880

ACRES

This
4-year
old
owner
designed
ranch offers the feeling of country
living
inside
city
limits
in
most sought-after Elm Place District. There is a lovely LR with
crab orchard fireplace, dining area,
kitchen with elec. dishwasher and
brkfst. bar. 3 bedrooms,
114 cer.
tile baths. Full basement with rec.
room
and
pan.
den.
Blue
stone

patio

with

low

maintenance.

priced

at

barbecue.

Unusually
Attractively

Central

Ave.

ID

On

ranch
2 plus
fam.
black
under

100

one

feet

of

story

Lincoln

Hillcrest

HIGHLAND

6-5000

PARK

Near Lake, schools, and main NW station.
This home, on beautifully wooded lot, has
a spacious first floor with den and powder
room;
3 bedrooms,
1 bath, and _ sleeping
porch on second, is being offered in- upper

CALL OWNER, ID 2-2940
HIGHLAND

PARK—RAVINIA

$20,950
3 bedrm. brick ranch, full bsmt. Built-ins,
convenient neighborhood; long term financing. Construction to start soon.

and

Sons,

SP

4-5611

SHERWOOD
FOREST.
3 bedroom,
1%
bath bi-level, Pecky Cypress kitchen and
family room, stockade fence. Many features not found in similar homes. By owner. $24,500. 1361 Arbor. Telephone ID 28525.
DID you know that hidden flaws can threaten your title to real estate? Insist that the
seller furnish a Chicago Title Insurance
policy.

HIGHLAND
PARK
ELM
PLACE
SCHOOL
Wonderful family home. Spacious
rooms
with
recreation
room
on
Ist.
5 bedrooms,
4 baths.
Cab.
kitchen with eating area. Beautiful ravine property.

DEERFIELD
3 bedroom,

Brick

Ranch

with separate dining room.
en with built-in oven and

Kitchrange.

Breakfast

2

bath

room,

full basement.
sion.

screened
Immediate

porch,
posses-

L. Ringer
Winnetka
999 Linden

Hillerest

Realtors
6-7274

2-1212

EXCLUSIVE

prop.,

offered

to

close estate. 30 ft. pan. liv. rm.,
with frpl., 2 good sized pan. bedrms., bath, kit., half basement. Low
taxes and heating costs.
In excellent loc. surrounded by
fitie NOMIRS i372. be ee
$24,500

PAUL. PHELPS,

Realtors

Winnetka

STORY

attractive

home

5-0236

CONDITIONED

BAUMANN-COOK,

$33,500.

REALTORS

this
blk.

AIR

VE

Highland Park, just 1 blk. to lake. 4 yr. old
stone and clapboard Colonial, deep wooded
lot. 4 spacious bedrooms, 2 ceramic tiled
baths. Living room with bay window, paneled
family
room,
cabinet
kitchen
with
breakfast space.
Pine recreation
room, 2
powder
rooms.
All
bleached
woodwork,
quality built, air-conditioned. In the 50’s,
Call Mrs. Coulter.

Herbert

REALTORS
Rd.

NORTHEAST—ONE

4 blks. to intermedi-

ate &amp; high school. Red brick
facing park. 3 or 4 bedrms.,
baths, lge. liv. rm., paneled
rm., patio, lge. fenced yd.,
top circle drive. Now priced

$16,250.

Earhart &amp; Co.
Sheridan

REALTORS
Theatre Bldg.

Glencoe

EAST

LISTINGS!

Expandable 2 bedrm. cottage in convenient
location on wooded
lot. Living rm. with
fireplace
and
separate
dining
room,
new
heating plant.

2-6600

4

J-H Kahn

1-1111

RANCH
WITH 2 CAR ATTACHED
GARAGE on beautiful corner 100 ft. x 170 ft.
fenced for privacy. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths,
partial basement.
Large
kitchen
with big
breakfast area. Spacious dining L will handle your dining room set. 444%
25 year,
approx. $22,000 mortgage to assume, monthly payments including last taxes $166 per
month. Priced to sell
35,500

1899

SALE
(improved)
PARK)
A

lovely homes.
Bus to school and
easy access to Edens. Value priced
at $62,500.

Realtors
ALpine

4 BEDRM. BRICK RANCH on over 1 acre
of fully improved property in lovely Woodridge. Large living room with fireplace and
separate dining room, kitchen with pleasant eating area, 214 baths, plus recreation
room and screened porch
44,500

OWNER

1

Rd., Wilmette

H. and R. Anspach

House Sunday, 1 to
1984 Sunset Road

to elementary,

Bay

NEW

463

BY

ESTATE
FOR
(HI GHLAND

EXQUISITE
RANCH
of STONE
and BRICK. 4 bedrms. 2 deluxe
baths. WALNUT DEN, Large liv.
rm. w/frple., din. rm., family size
tiled kitchen; eirele. drive. On %
acre on a winding lane among,

551
111 Green

ONLY

THE
POPULAR
SPLIT LEVEL
Brick &amp; Frame construction, 3 bedrms. TWO
tiled baths; comb. liv.din. rm.,
large
kit., bkfst. area;
pnid.
Recreation
rm.
with
bar;
TRUE
LINK
fenced yard; Fiberglass Awnings; oversize 11% car gar.
$28,000.

LISTING

9-room
English brick: residence
ist. floor family room, up-to-the-minute
kitchen
Near beach and Ravinia Park, on ravine
All for $44,750. Call Mr. Newby

INC.
hour service.
Illinois
Broker

RETIRE

Perfectly
maintained
home
for
the
smaller family
2 bedrooms, large closets with built-in
dresser
Includes carpeting, washer, dryer
Just $18,500, Call Mr. Hastings

GLENVIEW—Air
conditioned.
129
Julie
Drive.
Open
Saturday,
Sunday, 1 yr.
old,
split
level, 4
bdrm.,
1%
baths,
built-in oven, range, dishwasher, att. gar.,
patio, carpets. Under 30. Immediate
possession, low taxes,
‘

WILMETTE—Large family home. 4 bdrm.,
2 baths, sleeping porch, den, 33x15 living
tm., fireplace,
scr. pch., near
“El”? and
Py i gas heat, immediate possession. Mid
’s.

REAL

Push button brick and redwood ranch
3 bedrooms, 2 tiled vanity baths
Expansive views of well-kept lawns
$34,500. Call Mrs. Parkinson

@
@

WILMETTE—Sprucewood.
Junior
executive home, priced for quick sale. 3 bdrm.,
dbl. baths, att. gar., patio, newly decorated,
immediate
possession,
carpeted,
gas
heat. Low 40’s.

Realtors
HEADLINES

GLENCOE—For couple or small family. 2
bdrms., family rm., glazed porch, att. gar.,
near Northwest station and shop, carpeting, range, ref. inc. Mid 20’s.

ID 2-4580

Brand new and stunning. Just a few steps
to private
beach
on
lovely
Lake
View
Terrace. 4 bedrooms, 2% baths plus maid’s
room and bath. Magnificent beamed ceilting living room. Paneled recreation room,
opening to patio, First floor laundrv room.
Many
luxury
features.
Builder will finish
and decorate to your personal taste. Telephone ID 2-6253.

ESTATE
FOR
(HIGHLAND

AHEAD

EVANSTON—South
east. Large 5 bdrm.
home,
2 baths,
sleeping
porch,
built-in
range,
dishwasher,
fireplace,
sun
rm.,
screened porch, h.w. ht., large wooded lot.
Low
30’s.

the

CONDITIONED

CALL WI 5-4500

HOMEFINDERS,

HIGHLAND
PARK—Country
living with
city advantages.
3 bdrms., 2 baths, den,
glazed screened porch, att. 2 car gar., city
water, sewer, walk to schools, immediate
possession, low down payment. Mid 30’s.

Exe;

AIR

REAL

HIGHLAND PARK—Air conditioned ranch,
14%
baths,
rec. rm.
in basement,
att. 2
car gar., wooded
corner lot, combination
S.S., carpet
inc.
Low
30’s.
.

PAUL PHELPS, INC.
1925 Sheridan Rd.

SALE
(improvea
PARK)

YOU WILL PROFIT IN BUYING ANY
OF THE FOLLOWING HOMES DIRECT
FROM OWNER.

DEERFIELD

DELUXE

IDiewood 2-4500
Windsor 5-4500
Lake Forest 2300

PARK

FIVE
BEDROOMS:
Seldom
are we able
to offer a 5 bedroom, 2 bath home on a
generous lot in this price class. This home
is in first class condition and convenient
to schools, train and shopping. You should
see ...
$29,800

BRICK AND STONE
2 baths on full acre.

REAL

ELL CHARGE IT

BY OWNER

EAST BRAESIDE
OF SHERIDAN
ROAD

’

Tas:

$
TELEPHON
WANT AD SERVICE

(improved)

PARK)

HIGHLAND

during the same week in which
Fort Sheridan Tower is published
will also appear in

Fort Sheridan

SAL E

ENCHANTINGLY attractive home on 100’
beautifully landscaped. lot. Inviting entrance.
hall
with
spiral
staircase.
Step
down
living room
(with fireplace and gorgeous
chandelier)
opening
onto
lovely
screened
porch and patio which overlooks the ravine. Large separate dining room
with 3
sets of double
French
doors
forming
a
bay
which
also
opens
onto
the
patio.
Library
with
fireplace,
kitchen
and
butler’s ,pantry
and
powder
room
complete
the first floor. The second floor (also accessible from the kitchen) includes 4 bedrooms
and
an artist studio or Sth bedroom and three baths. The basement has
partially finished rec. room with fireplace,
dark room with sink, laundry and forced
hot air gas heat. 2 car att. garage. Artistic
tool shed. Call today for appointment to
see

Review

® Highland Park News
© Highwood News
. The Lake Forester
Ads

FOR

(HIGHLAND

. W

INC:

$35,000.

1925 Sheridan Rd.

BRICK
3 bedroom, 2 bath ranch on spacious wooded site. Built in appliances, attached garage. $26,800. $4,000 down. Telephone ID 2-9280.

BRICK, two story, seven family size rooms,
1%
baths, fireplace,
garage,
near park
and transportation. $23,900. Owner,
508
Burton. Telephone ID 3-1457.

ID. 2-4580

Lovely
house
with
income,
2 bedrooms,
living room with dining area and fireplace,
sun porch, full basement with rec. room
and
fireplace
plus
#hree. room
income
apartment
with
separate
entrance.
2 car
garage, nice lot, good location.

D.

J.

BARACANI REAL
ID 2-8077

ESTATE

DIRECT FROM OWNER
4 bedroom,2%
bath,
brick colonial, 20
years old, custom built, beautiful lot, best
location, to settle estate, $44,000. Immediate
occupancy.
Open
for inspection
Saturday
and Sunday, 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., 289 Laurel
Ave., Highland Park.
CHOICE
location.
Near
lake,
large
lot
with

34%

car

garage

ment,
own
utilities,
for rebuilding. Owner,

Thursday,

and

4

room

apart-

excellent
location
ID 3-1124,:

July

9,

1959

�TELEPHONE
BY

Beautiful

ID

Benj. Piersen Realty

3-0030

BRIARWOODS

OWNER

East

Ravinia

MOST
AREA

Lovely custom brick ranch has 3 bedrooms,
2% baths, jalousied family room with barb-cue.
Living
room
with
fireplace,
nice
entrance
hall, deluxe
recreation
room.
car. garage. Tremendous value for $44,500.

LINCOLNSHIRE
PRESTIGE
PARK

AND

AREA

SWIM

LARGE
WITH

FAMILY HOUSE
5 BEDROOMS

Mom can cook, wash or iron and at same
keep eye on children at play in extra large
family room on same level. Fenced yard,
port with storpatio for rubber pool, car
age space and concrete drive. All thermoto
Dad
for
storms
no_
windows,
pane
inchange. Appliances, carpet and drapes
cluded. Best bargain in town ........

WHEELING

down

Why rent when you can buy a 2 year old
frame 3 bedroom ranch with built-in oven
and range, washer, dryer, 14% car garage
with concrete drive. Screened knotty pine
porch and fenced yard. Full price ....$16,900

FRIDAY
THRU
MONDAY
OPEN
9 a.m.-5 p.m.
a.m.-8 p.m. SAT.

VIKING Realty Co.
826

Deerfield

Rd.

Deerfield

WI

5-5300

SPLIT-LEVEL

COLONIAL

Less than one year old, OWNER TRANS2 full baths, _full
FERRED,
4 bedrooms,
Large kitchbasement, unusual storage space.
L
C
en with beautiful wood cabinets and builtatgarage,
Attached
oven.
and
in range
tractive home in immaculate condition. Fine
$29,950.
neighborhood. Unusual buy at

WE HAVE BUYERS
WE NEED LISTINGS
HOMES. INWE HAVE BUYERS FOR ACREAGE.
IF
COME PROPERTY, AND
. . .
YOUR PROPERTY IS FOR SALE YOUR
DISCUSS
CAN
CALL US! WE
PROBLEM WITHOUT OBLIGATION.
Open

LINCOLNSHIRE

Sunday

3 BEDRMS.—$18,950
A frame ranch. Living room, dining-kitchen
combination, utility room, screened porch,
garage,
plastered
throughout.
Close
to
schools and transportation.

Waukegan

&amp;

Deerfield

Rds.

WI

5-5700

1% year old 4 bedroom splitowner:
level with 2 full baths, large kitchen with
built-ins, disposal, basement, wall to wall
-..carpeting,..on 80x150_ ft. landscaped lot,

BY

$29,500.

Telephone. WI

5-2452.

Thursday, July 9, 1959
as

hd

bai)

ot

a

4

‘wad

PRICE,

$21,900

Brick ranch with charm on beautiful half
acre wooded lot. Mahogany paneled living
room with brick fireplace, 14x24: separate
dining room or den, 2 bedrooms plus 2 car
garage. Low taxes. Ideal for small family
or retired couple.

HIGHLAND

PARK

Carr Realty Co.
Road

SUNDAY

WI

NOW

all

kinds

of

vacant.

of Evanston-North Shore
Listing Service

Multiple

Evening Phones: Nancy Sullivan, WI 5-1393;
Jim Feehan, CR 2-3033; John Coons,
PA 4-0084

OPEN

SUNDAYS

10-5

John Coons, Realtor
in Deerfield
623

Deerfield

Rd.

of

parking

WI

5-5100

space)

A HOME GLOWING WITH WARMTH &amp;
COMFORT
That’s what you'll find in this 3 Bedroom
Ranch,
with
carpt.,
comb.
Living-Dining
room, full Basement, surrounded by a graceful landscaped lot
19,500
QUITE A BUY: APT. HOME:
5 rooms, 2 Bedrooms, Bath &amp; encl. Porch
on ist floor, 4 rooms, 2 bedrooms, bath on
2nd
floor.
Full
Basement;
Oil Hotwater
Heat.
Central
location.
Lge. wooded
lot.
Should see today at
$21,000
A DELIGHTFUL NEIGHBORHOOD FOR
THE CHILDREN
6 room Stone &amp; Frame Ranch; Studio ceilings, birch cabt. Kitchen,
built in OvenRange;
cer. tiled Bath &amp; Powder
Room;
full
Basement.
BUYER
CAN
ASSUME
PRESENT $22,200-414% Mortgage ..$25,500
THE INTERIOR DECORATING IN
HOME IS EXQUISITE!
Face Brick Colonial Ranch on lge.
Bedrooms, lots of Closets; birch cabt.
en, designed for modern convenience;
ity; att. Garage to be used as Family

12

TO

6

AT

Waukegan

$25,500

Rd.

WI

Baird: &amp;-Warner®:
1157 Waukegan
PArk 4-1855

SEE
SPLIT

rooms,
storms

ALpine

ORR,

1-0228

|

Realtors
5-1080

OWNER moving out of state. By contract,
low down payment. 5% mortgage. 2 bedroom brick ranch on 80x200 wooded lot.
Lowest taxes Lake County. Ceramic tile
bath,
mahogany
paneled
living,
dining
room, natural fireplace. Excellent schools.
Telephone WI 5-0352.
TWO BEDROOM ranch, tiled bath, kitchen
with eating area, large family room with
fireplace, garage and carport, low taxes.
Price $18,300. 1056 Elmwood Ave.
FOUR
bedroom
brick
and
shingle
split
level, 214 baths, large family room with
noise-proof
ceiling and
built-ins,
living
room, fireplace, dining room with shutters,
basement,
dishwasher,
disposal,
built-in storage benches and noise-proof
ceiling
in
kitchen,
built-in
range
and
oven,
double
garage,
many
closets,
3
years
old,
corner lot fully landscaped.
Priced
mid-30’s.
Deerfield.
Telephone
WI 5-5015.

Ranch, redwood &amp; lannon stone, on heavily
wooded
1%
acre amidst beautiful homes
and yet only 5 mins. to store &amp; transport.
By
Architect
Wooldridge
and _ perfectly
built—extra wide eaves, pegged floors, walnut panelling.
3 Twin
bedrooms,
2 CT
baths,
Ige.
LR
F/P,
DR.,
Kit.,
Break
area, refrig., washer &amp; dryer incl. 2 car
garage.
Gravel
drive.
Landscaped.
Priced
around cost in 30’s. ASK
FOR
LIONEL
WATSON

DEERFIELD
Pretty
Brk 2 story, short
walk
to new
shopping center. Wooded
lot—large frontage. Home in perfect condition. 4 bedrooms,
1%
baths,
LR,
F/P,
DR,
sunny
kit,
Paneled Recreation room with F/P &amp; scrd.
Porch.
Beaut.
lawns
&amp; landscaping.
Full
price $26,750. Good financing. ASK FOR
LIONEL
WATSON

store

6-1855
3-1855

PROPERTY

years

old.

Now under lease for 2 years. Net
rental except taxes, $9,300 per year.
An excellent investment and real-

istically

priced.

For particulars call—

PAUL

1-1111

PHELPS,

INC.
ID 2-4580

FABULOUS—FASCINATING
In fact FANTASTIC ranch home in estate
area of delightful DEERFIELD.
Dramatic
cathedral
ceilinged
living
rm.
with
brk.
fplc.
wall,
sep.
dining
rm.
opening
to

a

“‘see-to-beli¢ve”

kitchen

with
all
the
extras
included,
adjoining
family
tm.
Completely
separated
bedrm.
wing with 4 bedrms, and 2 vanity baths,
bsmt. and att. 2-car garage. This is one
you just can’t beat in mid
50’s.

Hugh

C. Michels &amp; Co., Realtors

NORTHBROOK
WONDERFUL
BUY in business property.
Skokie
Highway.
Just
7 years
old.
One
story
brick
store,
good
display
windows
with 2 bedroom apartment, 1% baths, radiant heat. $37,500.

LANG
712

GLENCOE

AMbassador

751

Elm

St

room,

att.

Hillcrest

REAL ESTATE
REALTORS
ROAD

2-7873

vir

3

brick)

garage

BRICK RANCH—East, .3 bedrooms, goes
en with dishwasher, lge. living room,f
place,
1%
baths, FAMILY
room, 2
garage.

Oe

FOREST

BRICK—4
bedrooms, 3
room, full dining room,
2 car garage, CUSTOM

Lovely landscaped

:

baths, large livin
FAMILY
ROOK
kitchen, basement.

acre.

at

BRICK
on wooded property; 3 bedrooms,
ceramic bath, living room, carpeted pane
frpl.
wall,
picture
window
with
wooded
view. Jalousie porch 18 ft. att. 2 car garage.

|
|

FULL dry basement. OWNER LEAVING —
STATE. Mortgage 414% available or CON-

TRACT

SALE.

LOW

30’s.

Pleasant 114 bath house, 3 bedrooms, den, |
full dining room, basement, garage.
2)

ER 20's.

ia
cite os,

RANCH—3
att. garage.

bedrooms,
$26,750.

CUSTOM

DESIGNED

fine appointments.

2

baths,

brick

eae

basement, —
Ses

ranch

big

Featuring huge FAMILY

kitchen,
spacious
room,
off dining
room
basement, gas heat, 2 car att. garage,
lovely landscaped lot. Perfect location.
—
RENTALS—with option to buy: 4 bedro¢
O iee
2%
baths, 2 car garage. Immed.
2 bedrooms, 1%
baths, 1 car garage.
med. occup.

|

|

af
L!

ane?

‘Mrs. Lindenmeyer, Lake Bluff 96!

H. D. Olson &amp; Cd:

ae

Realtors

Waukegan,

Ill.

BLUFF

$20,000:
116 WASHINGTON
ST: Eng)
Style
5 room
house.
Solid
construc
wooded area; convenient to trains and trz
portation.
:
;
$27,500:
137 CENTER
AVE:
Well
bi It
brick home with 4 large bedrooms;
ty
decorated throughout; 2 blocks to scho
and shopping.
es

$32,500:

125 NORTH AVE: 5 year old 3 |

bedroom
brick ranch
with extra building
site: each lot 50x125. ZONED DUPLEX.

|
|

$33,500: 509 MAWMAN AVE.:: 4 bedrooms
—
and 2 full baths; ‘brick home on 100x150.
landscaped lot; many fine features.
a
S
$79,500:
271 RAVINE
FOREST
ea
Spacious white brick Colonial in finest
-|
dential area; 6 bedrooms
and 3%
baths; |
formal gardens and paved patio; excellently
maintained.
Outstanding
features
through|
out.
-

FOREST

$22,500: 329 SCOTT ST. Well built 8 room, |
1% story stucco; close-in east
be remodeled into duplex.

year

baths,

Ex-

ceptionally well designed, air conditioned. On 50x200 feet—driveway
and large parking area.

Realtors
ALpine

Woods

area, attractive stone front

12

—s_ |

$25,500.

location. Can
oe

$38,000:
383 ILLINOIS
ROAD:
Excell
home
for large family. 4 bedrooms ~
sleeping porch, 2% baths.
te

INVESTMENT

building.

Combination —

lot.

2! fait baths; FAMEE
frpt.,-dining. Ei»
$28,500.

LAKE

Hillcrest
SHeldrake

1925 Sheridan Rd.

porch,

room,

Baird &amp; Warner

business

bath.

LAKE

DEERFIELD

BUSINESS

tiled

Wooded

of.

TRI-LEVEL

$39,000:

Realtors

size

screens.

Baird &amp; Warner

576 Lincoln Avenue
Winnetka, Illinois

BA)2

500

QUALITY
brick-stone ranch, 75 ft. landscaped lawn, near Woodland Park school;
3 bedrooms, carpeted living dining room,
attractive pink and birch kitchen with eating area, basement. Low 20’s. Telephone
WI 5-2429.

FOR

830 HOLMES—Count
’em—1,
2, 3, 4, 5
bedrooms. This is only half the story of
this handsomely landscaped brick and frame
split level
which
is 1 year
old.
Inside
are 7 closets, carpeted living area, family
room and 2%
baths. . . all for $37,500.
See Mrs. Parkinson.

screened

king

&amp;

=

CAPE
COD—30
ft. living ©
cabinet
kitchen
with
di
va
room, h/water heat. 3
d-

LAKE

GReenleaf

(Improved) —
bea

1% baths,
FOR THE FAMILY, 4 bedrooms,
lge. activity room, garage. LOW taxes. $1 ao

5-3200

THIS SPECTACULAR
LEVEL THIS SUNDAY

Bay Rd., Wilmette

SPARKLING
room,
frpl.,
space, utility

Brick ranch on beautiful landscaped lot. 3
twin size bdrms., plus den or 4th
rmm.,
1% baths. Sep.
dining rm. Kitchen
with
eating space. Full basement. Price $39,000.

&amp;

or
7-0800 —
Sie

LAKE BLUFF

att.

McGUIRE

a

ESTATE
FOR
SALE
(LAKE FOREST)

DEERFIELD

In the center of Hubbard

HOMEFINDERS,

QEAL

Glenview, Ill.
IRving 8-2204

Rd.,

EDWARDS

CARR
REALTY
Dundee Rd.
LEhigh
Evenings CRestwood
2-1519

403

Excellent all brick ranch, lovely inside and
out.
Center
entrance,
fireplace
in living
room, dining room, porch, 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, 2 car garage. Reduced price. MR.
DEAKINS.

DEERFIELD

P.M.

AT. $22,900

THIS
lot; 3
KitchUtilroom.
$28,150

ARTHUR C. ULLMANN
REALTOR

5-0984

BY OWNER

APPRAISED

have

111 Green

Moving,
will take great loss rather than
rent. One owner, 4 year old custom built 2
story, 6 rooms, 2 full baths, basement with
rec. room and built-in play house. Large
screened porch and fenced yard. On lovely
wooded street. Walk to everything. BUILT
FOR: CHILDREN.
WI 5-0294.

SELL

We

HOMEFINDERS,

REALTORS
Waukegan

“HER!

ENJOY
COUNTRY
LIVING
on
this 2
acre property with its spacious 5 bedroom
2 bath ranch. A screened porch and -attached 2 carport are just some of many
features
$45,000

NORTHBROOK

Reduced
to $24,500.
Colonial brick Cape
Cod. 4 bedrooms, pine paneled living and
dining
room
combination
with
fireplace,
pegged
floors, lot 100x284.
Has
attached
breezeway plus 2 car garage, full basement.
Owner wants offer. Immediate possession.

701

"Et pe

JUST
COMPLETED!
Beautiful
classic
2 story colonial on wooded property. Center hall, living room w/fpl., Sep. din 1m.,
family rm., kitchen w/eating area, 4 bedroom, 2% baths, full basement, in Walden
school
district
$41,500

216

Perfect
location.
Remodeled
older
home
with 8 spacious rooms, 4 bedrooms,
2%
baths, 2 natural fireplaces, screened porch,
large well landscaped and fenced yard. Close
to schools, churches and beach. Priced at
$42,500.

OPEN

ESTATE

5-1670

Ranch
home.
3 bedrooms,
living
room,
large kitchen, full basement, screened porch
and attached garage. Exceptional value at
$23,500.

ZANDER-OMMEN
REAL

Windsor

TRANSFERRED

WEST

a

DEERFIELD:

Rd.

BUDGET

we

WM.

Designed
by
fine
architect.
Better
than
new. Cathedral living room with fireplace,
dream
kitchen,
3 bedrooms,
1% _ baths,
basement,
porch, 2 car garage. Close to
trains,
fine
schools.
To
see
call,
MR.
DEAKINS.

2/3 wood acre. 1%
2 car garage. Now

REALTORS

OWNER

MOM” AND’

eas

WHEELING
Store building or home
to rent in
ness district. Has large living room,
en, 3 bedrooms, bath and
closed porch 1M
Full basement,
$150 per month.
Gs

Williamsburg Colonial in perfect condition
with finest appointments.
Panelled family
room, beautiful living room with panelled
fireplace, big dining room, deluxe kitchen,
basement, 2 car garage. A dream home.
MR. DEAKINS.

SCHOOL-AGE
CHILDREN
is this almost
new 4 bedroom brick ranch w/full basement, beautiful family kitchen, 2 car att.
garage,
walking
to
parochial
&amp;
public
schools
$41,9

(Plenty

Benj. Piersen Realty

AREA

LINCOLNSHIRE

beautiful
garage,
car
2%
bedrooms,
2
property with park across street.
wooded
eececeeccceecee=
’
Delightful living for just

PARK

3 bedroom ranch home, living room with
fireplace, large screened porch, 1%
baths,
dining room, kitchen with eating area, full
basement with fireplace and bath, swimming
pool, beautiful large lot. Low 30’s.

3 bedroom ranch on
baths, den, fireplace,
vacant. $29,900.

FOR

Members

Reduced to $28,500. On 1% acres adjoining
golf course, stone fireplace in living room,
built-ins and family sized kitchen, 3 bedrooms, screened porch, 2 car port.

730 Waukegan

HOME PLANNED
EASIER LIVING

10%

CONTEMPORARY
RANCH

WOODLAND

and 2 up that needs
down
3 bedrooms
some finishing. 2 full baths, eating area in
kitchen, full dry basement. 8 closets. House
just 7 years old. Take advantage of low
24,500
price

THIS
FOR

RANCH

Face brick, 3 bedrooms, 1144 CT baths, living room
(or family room), kitchen. with
eating
area, full basement
with beautiful
paneled recreation room, nearly new wall
to wall carpeting included, High 20’s.

POOLS

Executive 9 room brick and frame ranch
4 _ bedon wooded half acre CONTAINS
rooms, panelled den, 2 ceramic baths, living
room with cathedral ceiling and fireplace.
Kitchen has eating area with beautiful view
and _ range.
oven
built-in
contains
and
Utility room has washer and dryer. Carpet and drapes included.
Priced for quick sale

PERFECT

VENA

"BUSINESS PROPERTY

(Improved)
.—_

Has everything, also. 16’x20’ paneled family
room.
Fireplace in living room,
separate
dining
room,
3 bedrooms,
2 baths,
big
kitchen.
Reduced
price. MR.
DEAKINS.

NEARING
COMPLETION—Sturdy
oaks
surround
this well planned
brick 3 bedroom
Colonial
ranch.
Living
room
with
large dining L, family room, 2 baths, basement, patio,;; Walden: schook: district. $39,850)

Briarwood
location, brick split level, has
paneled rec. room with enclosed bar, living
room, dining room, pleasant kitchen with
eating area, 214
baths, partial basement,
garage. $34,500.

NEW

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
(DEERFIELD)

Baird &amp; Warner

IF NEIGHBORHOOD IS IMPORTANT to
you, this luxurious 3 bedroom brick and
stone
ranch
located
in Briarwoods
with
an outstanding rec. rm. and jalousied porch
plus
many
other
features
is
one
you
shouldn’t
miss
36,500

4 BEDROOMS

NEARLY

F sR
ORER

Coons

CRISP AND
FRESH
is this 8 month old
3 bedroom ranch with its charming family
kitchen w/bar-b-q, lv. rm. w/fpl., full basement, gas heat, contract purchase possible.
Offered at
26,800

White Cape Cod with green shutters. Large
living room with fireplace, dining room, 2
bedrooms, 2 baths, basement, garage, trees,
a few blocks to shopping.

VIKING Realty Co.
DEERFIELD’S
DESIRABLE

year old brick ranch
room with fireplace,
fireplace, dining ell,
bath, powder room,
gas heat. $29,000.

$17,900

(improved)

A

s

A PEACEFUL
WOODED
SETTING
will
be yours
with this exquisitely kept contemporary-central
air
conditioning-thermopane
windows-carpeted-all
village conveniences-only
$22,900

4 year old brick and frame ranch on 1%
wooded acres, 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, all purpose country kitchen with fireplace, built-in
oven and range, low taxes, school bus at
door. $29,500.

SALE
by owner, Woodridge; seven room
Cape
Cod,
1%
ceramic
baths,
central
air conditioning, 2 fireplaces, paneled bar
and rec room, 2 car garage, beautifully
landscaped,
combination
aluminum
storms, canvas awnings, ceramic kitchen,
huge closets, 36 inch attic fan. 7 yrs. old.
Convenient schools and train. Low 30’s.
Telephone ID 2-3616.

ESTATE FOR SALE
(DEERFIELD)

right into this 3
basement rec.
room with stone
bedrooms, CT
cabinet kitchen,

I hd
Ce

SRNR

Realtor

RIVERWOODS

Section

Highland Park, large wooded lot (85 foot
frontage).
3
bedrooms,
2
complete
tile
baths
with
showers,
modern
kitchen,
screened porch, sun deck, tile roof. Ideal
location, 2 blocks from
school, shopping
and trains. Quick sale. Priced in the low
thirties. Telephone ID 2-4744, for appointment.

REAL

John

OWNERS TRANSFERRED
MUST SELL NOW

Move
home,
living
3 twin
wood

tal

Nad

656

old

GREENVIEW

brick

split-level;

spacious

family

JOHN

PLACE:

3 bedrooms,

One

2

room.

iva

GRIFFITH,

INC.

REALTORS
;
OFFICES TO SERVE YO dice

TWO

12 Scranton

678 Western Ave.
Lake Forest 485

Lake Blut

egNt
4

816.
cah

be

CHARMING
7 room ranch home.
Large
living room, separate dining room, wali
to wall carpeting, double fireplace. Wall
out from living room and dining room t
patio with garden lighting. 3 large
bec
rooms, paneled den or 4th bedroom,

ee iheae

pointment,

a a Baas
wants

ay

+)

ne ©
ote B

By owner,
low 30’s. Lovely 6 room,
1%
bath, Colonial home with fireplace. Large
screened porch, 3 exceptionally large bedrooms,
large
recreation
room.
Modern
kitchen with dishwasher.
Lncinerator,
gas
heat. Beautifully landscaped yard, Dead-end
street.
Perfect
for
children.
See by
ap-

MA

1

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE (Improved)
(DEERFIELD)

(Improved)
FOR SALE
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE (Improved) REAL YSTATE(DEER
FIELD)
(HIGHLAND PARK)
HIGHLAND
PARK
HIGHLANDS.
Moving, must sell; 3 bedroom ranch, 2 full
baths,
a full basement,
finished
recreation room, central, air conditioning, dishwasher, fireplace, all wool carpeting and
drapes.
$34,500.
Contract
sale possible
with $4500 down. 3475 Summit. ID 2-5490.

PS
as As
OT
i

}

plus snack bar. Closets galore. Full bas = |
ment: with fireplace. 2% car attached g:
rage with tool closet. 2 Years old.
extras. Convenient
to transportation. I
40’s. For appointment call Lake Foi 2st.
4579.
:
‘
;
Rh
LAKE
BLUFF—well
planned, almost
n ow |
brick ranch.
3 bedrooms,
huge closets, |
main floor utility room, full base: ent.
Large living room with fireplace, dining
room,
including
carpéting.
Located
3
blocks from RR_ station. Offered in_mid|
30’s.
For
appointment
telephone
ake .

Bluff 4125.

GLENCOE
VE

ceramic tiled baths with built in cabinets.
Early American kitchen with eating area

P

hy

¥

sh

Mf

CP

anY

Cnr aM

ee Pn
is

LOVELY

on

%

6

ia

room

acre

throughout.

outdoor

5-1971

owner,

6-7100

?

2 car

brick

Lake

ranch,

wooded.
garage,

2

barbecue.

Bluff

2352.

:

bedroom

Wood
large

home

paneled

patio

$22,500.

and)

Call!

ss!

Page53 —

�| REAL ESTATE. FoR SALE moro ne
VACANT
PROPERTY
attractive 2 acre building

Three

HOUSES

priced

from

$8,000

room with fireplace, dining

to

spacious

$10,000.

ative three bedroom, three
Colonial brick ranch, Eastocation. Acre of ground.
En-

oven

paneled den with fireplace,
= room,
kitchen,
basement
utility room and recreation
Gas heat, two-car attached

2

baths,

living

kitchen,

room,

screened

dining

porch

screened

porch.

Plus

ter-

six

bedroom,.

four

ite brick Colonial. Entrance hall,
s room with fireplace, library
fireplace, dining room, break.
room, kitchen, pantry, powder

m,

Screened

porch.

Large

¢ and basement. Gas
attached _ garage.

Middle

Kathryn

two-

FOR

Gas _ heat.

three-year

old

Colonial.

e hall, living room with
place, library with fireplace,
ng
room,
kitchen,
breakfast
bedroom and bath, screened
lazed

heated

porch

on

first

r. On
second
floor:
Master
room, dressing room, bath with

Features

er

stall,

d be

large

divided

bedroom

into

bung people, Gas
detached garage.

that

two

rooms,

heat.

Three

Middle

Eighties.

path

forced

to

sell

for

In

the

detached

ump

from

garage.
the

A

skip

and

Tollway.

$90,000.00

60’s.

health
For

reasons.

LAKE

near

lake.

©
$28,000.

STUART

&amp;

Exclusive

Agents

32 Center

Ave.

CO.

Lake

REAL

Bluff,

house

on

over

THEM

ALL!

this

bedrooms,

is for

3%

you!

4 twin

baths,

a

size

porch, a ist floor FAMILY
room
and space in the basement for a
game
room.
Realistically
priced!

ESTATE

CO.

fireplace,
&amp; room and two baths. Dinym, large paneled recreation
with fireplace and separate
ecue
room.
Pool,
dressing

| with shower,
d porch. The

kitchen and
second floor

9 bedroom suites each with
ith.
Swimming
pool and
pool
e. Gas heat. Two-car attached
$115,000.00

: Parking Space Available

|

for

Our

Customers

Hart, Shaw &amp;
Company
Richard B. Hart, President
Howard ReQua, Vice President
art R. French
Milton McN. Traer
Henderson
Kenmore
Thorsen

iB. Deerpath
Forest 4040
i

mber

135 S. La Salle St.
RAndolph_ 6-7155

of the Evanston-North
Multiple
: Listing’ Service

Shore

@
@
@
@

LOOKING

AT

6-room expandable Cape
22 trees on its spacious
$21,900-in Knollwood
Call Mr. Hastings

Cod
site

HOMEFINDERS,
111 Green

Bay Rd., Wilmette

Realtors
ALpine

1-1111

Dr.

Rd.

from

Leonard

EXCLUSIVE

BROKER

FOREST

DUNKIRK

2375

ESTATE
FOR
SALE
(MISCELLANEOUS)

403

REAL

GOELZER

BY

owner, 3 bedroom redwood ranch situated on 1% acres of wooded land. Country living with many
advantages of the
city. Low taxes, many extras. Middle 20’s.
301
Little Melody
Lane,
west on
59A
just off Bradley Road. Lake Forest 3819.
LAKE
BLUFF
East. New
6 room
brick
ranch, 2 full ceramic tile baths, full basement, wooded New England atmosphere.
Full price, $23,500 complete; only 10%
down.
See
today.
313
Scranton.
3
blocks to Lake
Michigan
Beach.
Telephone ID 3-0766.
BY OWNER
5 year old, 3 bedrooms, 114 baths, living
room
with fireplace, oversized 2 car attached garage with workshop area, on acre;

city water; West of Lake Forest Limits. Mid
ID

2-9468

7-0800

and WILDE

Elm

Street

HI

ANDRUSS,

Green Bay
3-2550 ,

PRAIRIE

VIEW

bath

country

Fully

SALE (Vacant)
PARK)

ESTATE FOR SALE
(DEERFIELD)

BANNOCKBURN

(Vacant)

(AREA)—

WOODED
ACRES
DRIVE OUT TODAY

TO:

DEERFIELD
WOODS

Take Edens superhighway to Half Day Rd.
(Rt. 22), then left on Half Day Rd. and
preceed
west
to
DEERFIELD
WOODS
OFFICE,
at the corner of Saunders
and
Half Day Rd.
PArk 4-1457

desks. Telephone ID 2-1060.

SHOP
space with large work or storage
area at rear. Suitable for small service or
retail business. Call Lake Forest 410.
1,

2 AND
3 rooms for offices
Central Ave. ID ?-0150.

only.

456

APAKIMENTS
TO RENT (Unfurnished)
(HIGHLAND PARK)

RAVINIA—730

JUDSON

Modern 3% room apartment. Elevator building.. New stove and re-

6-5544

Rd.

REAL

ESTATE FOR SALE
(LAKE FOREST)

(Vacant)

BEAUTIFULLY
WOODED
CORNER
%
acre
lot.
ALL.
IMPROVEMENTS
§INCLUDED. Corner of Green Bay Rd. and
ried Lane. Price $7,900. Call Lake Forest
85x190 FT. lot on Valley road in Lake
Forest
in
wooded
area;
road,
sewer,
water, in and paid. Owner transferred and
must sacrifice this at once for $6,500 firm
price. Telephone R Doty, 145 S. Ashland
in Palatine at FLanders 8-0781.
TWO lots in vicinity of Buena and Linden
in H O Stone subdivision in Lake Forest.
Heavily wooded.
Telephone R. Weldon,
ORchard 5-0684.

REAL

ESTATE FOR SALE
(MISCELLANEOUS)

(Vacant)

WILD land on River where it empties into
a large lake. Price $370, $10 down and
$10 per month. Will send picture and full
details. Art Schmidt, Park Falls, Wis.

FARMS
15

acres.

11%

Realtor
Kenilworth
1-7300

countryside. ARCHITECT

OFFERS
own
design, 8 room,
1 story
modern
home.
Unique interior, 11 foot
ceiling, 40 foot living room, 4 acres on
wooded
stream,
5 car garage.
$38,000.
Telephone NEwton 4-3834.
FOR
sale, within
Half
Day’ School
district, 2 year old 3 bedroom ranch with
2 car garage, half acre landscaped lot.
$17,900.
Telephone
NEwton
4-3500.

L.

FOR

SALE

43

2 bedroom

acres,
acres.

$10,000

home,
$11,500.

2 residences.

Part

down.

1 acre-Bi-level. 4 bedrooms,
old. $27,500. $2,000 down.

FARMS

MARTIN

—

A.

HOMES

—

down.

zoned.

$65,000.

2 baths,

5 years

VEHLOW,

433 GAGES
BALDWIN 3-0880

$23,500.

$2,000

ACREAGE

REALTY

LAKE RD.
GAGES LAKE, ILL.

OFFICES,

STORES &amp; STUDIOS
TO RENT
STORE
RAVINIA
465 ROGER WILLIAMS

L. J. Sheridan &amp; Co.
N.

agent
:
N. Danielson

RAndolph

6-7743

SHERIDAN

&amp;

CO.

Agent

RA 6-7743

ID 2-5041

400 PARK

AVENUE

An Address of distinction
EAST OF SHERIDAN ROAD
3 BEDROOM
— 24% BATHS
AIR CONDITIONED
LUXURIOUS RENTAL HOMES
AVAILABLE SEPTEMBER 1, 1959
CALL ID 2-4115
ATTRACTIVE
3
large
room
apartment
with private bath, stove and refrigerator
furnished; laundry facilities, parking. $115
a month. Telephone ID 2-1877, after 6
ID 3-1278.
1ST FLOOR,
3 room apartment, enclosed
porch and garage—Come to rear 212 Eyerts Place, Highwood. ID 3-1627.
CLEAN
5 room
apartment
and.
garage,
second floor, screened rear porch. Telephone ID 2-2421.
3 ROOMS and bath, kitchen with stove and
refrigerator
included;
bedroom
and _living room, off street parking -area. Telephone ID 2-4419.
FOUR: room kitchenette apartment, second
floor. 2 bedrooms,
walking
distance to
school
and
transportation;
mewly
decorated, heat and hot water furnished. $150
per month. Shown by appointment after
July 4th. Telephone ID 2-1060.
4% ROOMS. 2 bedrooms, stove and refrigerator
furnished;
available
immediately.
$135. Telephone ID 2-5041.
4 ROOM
apartment
at
1397
McDaniels,
large grounds. $70 plus utilities,
possession August Ist. Telephone ID 3-1868.
LARGE
5 room,
2 bedroom
apartment,
newly decorated, wall to wall carpeting,
heat
and
hot
water;
centrally located.
$175.
per month.
Telephone
ID 2-0229.,
FIVE room, 2 bedroom
apartment, basement, garage. $125 per month plus utilities. Available August 1. Shown by appointment. Telephone ID 2-1434.
BRAND
new 2 bedroom apartment, available
immediately,
call ID 2-5909,
after
6 p.m. ID 2-0120.
1155 ST. JOHNS AVE. Modern brick building, large garden, Comfortable, very attractive, 4 rooms with tiled bath. Available next month. $125 including modern
kitchen equipment, hot water and apartises,

well heated.

See

Mr.

Ek

on prem-

BEDROOM
Townhouse,
modern
building,
close
to Ravinia
shopping
center
and
Northwestern
train
station,
available August 1, rent $135. 751 St. Johns
Ave., ID 2-9136 after 6:30 or Evanston
vane
and
Mortgage
Co.,
GReenleaf
ROOM apartment for rent, second floor,
2 bedrooms, sitting room, tile bath, newly remodeled
kitchen,
private
entrance
and parking, all utilities furnished, adults
only.
Telephone
ID
2-1814.
BASEMENT apartment, $30 a month, also
second floor porch to rent, $20 a month.
1734 McGovern
St., Highland Park.
4 ROOM
apartment for rent on second
floor, utilities furnished.
For more
information call ID 2-7817.
3 ROOM apartment, garage, all utilities paid,
half block from train station, will decorate to suit, $125. Telephone ID 2-1175.
IN Highwood. Five room apartment. Telephone ID 2-8077.
3% ROOM apartment for couple. All utilities furnished, close to town, transportation. Telephone ID 2-3426.
HIGHLAND
PARK.
Attractive 3%
room
third floor apartment, stove, refrigerator
and garage, $110 per month, 1 block from

town,

barn.

vacant.

J.

pene
caea ne

ment

DEERFIELD:
Very beautiful wooded lot,
75x170’ on Stratford Avenue in Woodland
Park area, all improvements. Phone owner, FOrest 9-6715.

and WILDE

New and spacious bi-level on large wooded
lot and quiet street. Studio living room,
large
dining
area,
modern
kitchen
with
eating space.
Family
room,
3 bedrooms,
2 baths, 2 car garage. Beautifully decorated.
All appliances,
carpeting
and
drapes
included. Must be seen to be appreciated.
Realistically priced in Mid 30’s.

ANN

2

with small barn.

Realtors

WILMETTE

440
BR

LIVING

bedroom,

ESTATE FOR
(HIGHLAND

REAL

VIEW

EDWARDS

4

acres

HIGHLAND
PARK—
OWNER. LVG. TOWN
.
Last chance to save $$ on beautiful 80x240
wooded,
all Improved
lot, before Agents
see raises price.
Woodridge sect.
ORchard 4-0480
WOODRIDGE,
75x150, wooded, part landscaped,
all
improvements,
last.
lot
in
neighborhood.
Special low price. $8,200
if your building plans acceptable. Telephone ID 2-8760.

1-2353

NORTHFIELD—We
are pleased to offer
this unusually attractive brick ranch built
in 1956. The living room
with the fireplace wall of stone, is 15x22. The study
adjoining the living room, converts easily
into a guest room and there are 3 bedrooms, 2 baths and a powder room. There
is a separate dining room, screened porch
and
a
wonderful
family
kitchen
with
ample breakfast area, fireplace and space
for TV and activities. The 2 car garage
is attached
and
the acre
lot adjoins
a
forest preserve. The price is $98,500.

790

Three bedrooms, 2 baths, Cape Cod. Separate dining room, full basement, screened
poe.
attached
garage,
100x250
wooded
ot; located in East Lake Forest. Call Lake
Forest 3896.

Low taxes. Telephone
or all day weekends.

1%

(imaproved :

CARR REALTY
Dundee Rd.
LEhigh
Evenings CRestwood
2-1519

GOELZER

FIRST OFFERING
MIDDLE THIRTIES

twenties.
evenings

Winwood

Waukegan

WM.
-

WORTH

Deer-

3 bedroom frame ranch, combination living
and
dining
room,
cabinet
kitchen,
breeze-way,
garage,
appliances
included.
Only $16,500. $1500 down $125 per month

6-2900

HOMEFINDERS, Realtors
WORTH LOOKING FOR

se

on

of

Older
brick
home,
close-in,
living
room
with fireplace, separate dining room, kitchen, breakfast nook, 2 bedrooms, full. basement, hot water oil heat. 3 car garage. Large
attic
$18,500

See
REAL

RECEPTION room and two separate offices
in center of town. Desk space in large
office. Space available from one to three

COUNTRY

landscaped
overlooking orchard and _ lake.
Excellent
schools,
churches
and _ transportation.
5 miles
to
Mundelein,
9 to
Barrington.
Under
$30,000.
Owner.
Park
4-4066 or.JAckson .6-1148.
;
5-544% MORMGAGE
MONEY. New loans
—refinancing.
Terms to 30 years. Free
appraisals!) LAUREN R. JANUZ, FRanklin 2-0400. (Residence: Lake Forest 3557).
WHEELING:
owner transferred. Immediate
occupancy, will rent with option to buy.
Ceramic tile electric kitchen, clean 3 bedroom
brick, excellent condition, beautifully landscaped, completely fenced yard,
garage.
FHA
financing, reasonable. 715
S. Wayne Place, LEhigh 7-2816.

gas,

Frame ranch, 3 years old, gas heat, combination living, dining room, 3 bedrooms,
11% baths, cabinet kitchen, carpet, washer,
dryer, refrigerator, storms and screens included. Owner transferred. Sacrifice $18,500.

jalousie

acres

FEC

north

built,

estate on

WHEELING

tion, large grounds (over 3 acres)
and a 2 year old truly exquisite

bedroom

two

light

COUNTRY

Custom

New
frame
country
ranch
on
%
acre,
living room
with fireplace, dining
room.
3 bedrooms,
bath,
‘cabinet kitchen,
basement, 2 car attached garage. Landscaped.
$26,500
Bus to all schools. Asking

If you like
a ROSE
GARDEN
as
well as flowers of every descrip-

Hillcrest
five

SITE

Illinois

REALTORS
completed

stop

miles

PRAIRIE
“TOPS”

THE

o

LIBERTYVILLE.
6
year
old
house.
5
rooms, full basement, newly painted inside and out. $13,000. Call owner for appointment. Libertyville 2-1923.

LAKE FOREST—Quality built pressed brick
ranch, Like new. Well designed; 3 twin
size bedrms., 2° tile. baths, vanity; large
living. - din.,
firepl,
overlooking
rear
grounds;
10 closets; beaut. Ige. kitchen,
brkfst. rm., built-ins, washer, dryer; carpeting; 244 car att. garage; 2 porches, one
alum sernd. Well located at 604 S. Waveland Rd. on % acre lot. Priced at $43,500,
or reasonable offer, for immediate sale.
By appointment. Lake Forest 4520.
ATTRACTIVE well built fairly new ranch.
3. bedrooms, basement, wdie lot on quiet
dead end court, near schools, middle 20’s.
321 Hirst Court, Lake Bluff 4325.

Lake Bluff, rental, 3 bedroom brick
completely furnished.

SEARS

ly

by

information

Lake Bluff, 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick

home,

thirties;
3931.

underground

Clifford

owner

3 choice one acre home sites. Exclusive Lake Forest residential sec-

$7,000.

1.2

which
joins
the west.

call Lake Bluff 4057 or 166.

tion. Each

include

Located

for privacy. Original

THIS
tic and charming brick Colonial
most seven acres. Wonderful
nming
pool—plenty
of bed, Stable with four Stall, three-

Attractively

water, electric, and telephone service.

Ressinger
Burgess

fenced

home

bath,

Excellent level building
site on
blacktop road within city limits.

Priced below owner’s cost for quick
"active

included.

ACREAGE

Colonial brick ranch set on extensively landscaped acre. Area of executives’ luxury homes.
Stockade

sale.

half

IN

S)

frigerator.

Jaicks

Berenice
Carmen

Seventies.

and

with

$8900

at-

heat,

room

HOME

, ‘

Nestled in beautiful wooded area on 70 ft.
x 160 ft. corner lot facing private lake, 2
bedrooms, contemporary ranch style home.
Expandable. Beach rights. Mature trees (2060 feet high), oaks, white pines, cedars,
hickories,
etc.
Professionally
landscaped
yard (perennials and annuals), roses, begonia,
phlox, shrubs, etc. Natural land trimmed
hedges. Colored winding walks, patios, barb-que. Many other extras. Every detail of
quality, permanent and restfulness are expressed by us in this livable “home in the
country with all city conveniences.” Price
$19,500. Low taxes. For further details, contact owner, 602 North Greentree Rd., Wildwood, Illinois. Telephone Grayslake, BAIdwin! 3-4659.

bar,

basement

landscaped.
Low
owner.
Lake Bluff

GILBERT RAYNER
REAL ESTATE
266 EAST DEERPATH
LAKE FOREST 382

bath,

room,

built-in

breakfast

full

peries

$35,000.

ovely

range,

recreation

Newly listed 6 room, 2 bath frame
two-story Cape Cod house in N.E.
location on 1% acre. Attached garage,

with

screened porch, 11% garage, gas
heat, Rusco combination screens
and storms; carpeting and dra-

race. $42,000.

High Sixties,

and

bath.

room,

and

kitchen

CITY

birch cabinets; large ceramic tile

IMPROVED
PROPERTY
Newly listed Brick and Frame twostory Colonial house on % acre
wooded, private lane. 4 bedrooms,

ance hall, living room with fire“€,

site

wey

LAKE BLUFF. Four-year old brick
ranch. Three bedrooms, living

sites near Knollwood Country Club.
Each

A

aaah motare FOR

adults

only.

Telephone

WI

5-2415.

LARGE
3 rooms, decorated, extra storage,
patio use, utilities furnished, reasonable
rent. Highwood, Telephone ID 2-3187.

APARTMENTS TO RENT (Unfurnished)
(LAKE FOREST)
3 ROOM unfurnished apartment with stove.
Call Lake Forest 3835.
CONVENIENTLY
located 5 room
apartment.
Available
immediately.
$125
per
month.
Heat
and
appliances
furnished.
John Griffith, Inc. Lake Forest 485.
TWO
bedroom
apartment
for rent, $150.
__Call Lake Forest 2778 after 6 p.m.
4 ROOM
apartment with garage, available
August 1st, middle aged couple preferred.
Call Lake Forest 3153 after 5 p.m.
2-3
BEDROOM _ unfurnished
apartment
available September 1st in beautiful country home. Rent $180 monthly all utilities
inclusive. Telephone Lake Forest 4772.

APARTMENTS TO RENT (Furnished)
(HIGHLAND PARK) _.

KITCHENETTE
district,

Lake

no

apt,

children,

Forest 136,

Highwood: - business
—

no

pets.

ae

Telephone

RPS.

PS

�ag

3” ROOM

and bath furnished apartment,

suitable for

working

couple,

no

children

or pets. Telephone ID 2-2035.
3 ROOM furnished apartment in Highwood,
private
bath
and entrance,
all utilities
furnished. Telephone ID 2-0980.
THREE room furnished apartment in Highwood, adults, $95 per month. Telephone
ID 2-6587.
TOWNHOUSE
apartment,
available
September 1 to October 1, for 6 or 7 months,
attractively
furnished,
2 bedrooms,
garage,
patio,
dishwasher,
T.V.,
central
location. ID 2-1431. Evenings or Saturday.
3 NICELY furnished rooms for rent, private bath and entrance. Telephone ID 25735,
or ID
2-1942,
or come
to 614
Green
Bay
Rd., Highwood.
FURNISHED
one bedroom
apartment in
Highland
Park;
ideal for middle
aged
business
woman
who
wishes
desirable
quiet location. ID 2-2247.
IN HIGHWOOD,
partly furnished 2 bedroom apartment. Call Lake Forest 3268.

APARTMENTS TO RENT
(DEERFIELD)

i

airy ar

suitable for two,

‘kitchen and laund ry privileges, hot water
at all times. Telephone ID 2-3694

LARGE
room
in modern
home,
nicely
furnished
and
decorated,
near town, 2
large closets, private cooking and washing facilities. Telephone
ID 2-1338.
ROOM
for rent, near transportation, hot
water at all times. Telephone ID 2-3786.

GARAGE

TO

RENT

ONE
garage stall, suitable for
vehicle. Call Lake Forest 410.
HELP

storage

of

WANTED—FEMALE

WOMAN with telephone personality to cail
from your home 1% hours each evening,
Monday
thru Friday for local business
Organization;
salary
arrangement — no
commission. Write Box J-85 c/o Highland
Park News.

MIDWAY

(Unfurnished)
PARK)

ROOM
house, 2 car garage, lovely garden, 1% blocks from lake, unfurnished or
partially furnished. Telephone ID 3-1368
after 4 p.m.
ALMOST new three bedroom brick ranch,
tile
kitchen
and
bath,
large
lot, full
basement, close to schools, shopping and
trains. Telephone ID 2-7149.
3 BEDROOMS, den, 2 baths, 2 car garage.
$225 per month. ID 2-5994.
BRICK 6 room house. 1% baths, 1 car garage, circular
driveway,
fireplace;
furnished if desired.
1435 Deerfield place,
ID 2-8321.

LIMOUSINE

SERVICE

has an opening for a girl with a pleasant,
personable voice to take reservations for
Midway Limousine Service; must be able
to type and have own transportation. Telephone Lake Forest 4550,

ful new store.
Liberal

HOUSES

2 bedroom
garage

house,

good

1 bedroom
heat

apartment,

location,
built-in

Highland

Waukegan

Rd.

CLERK-TYPIST

Windsor

or call Mr. Jungherr, The City
of Lake Forest, 220 E. Deerpath,
Lake Forest. Telephone 2600.

GLENCOE: Luxurious ranch, September 4th
to June 15th or longer. 2 bedrooms, den,
large living-dining room, fireplace, screened
porch, 2 car garage, basement. Carpeting,
drapes,
stove
and_
refrigerator.
North
school.
$350 a month.
1145 Carol Ln.
VErnon 5-1981.

HOUSES TO RENT (Furnished)
(HIGHLAND PARK)
CHARMING
three bedroom colonial house
overlooking ravine in Highland Park. Secluded yet very convenient to transportation, business district and schools. Large
porch,
full
basement.
Semi-furnished.
Available September. $300. Box W-60, c/o
Lake Forester.

’

GENERAL
OFFICE
WORK
Shorthand
preferred;
permanent.
5
day
week. Some experience and references required. Modern, air-conditioned office. Telephone ID 2-9030.

BANK POSITIONS
_ BOOKKEEPERS
PROOFCLERKS
FULL TIME,
PERMANENT
EXPERIENCED
OR WILL TRAIN.
Good hours, working conditions and benefits
other than wages. Ample. opportunities for
advancement.

RENT 5 room house, partly furnished,
large lot near lake. Call before 10 a.m.
Lake Bluff 4431.

HOUSES
&amp; APARTMENTS
WANTED
(Furnished or Unfurnished)
TWO
new teachers at Sheridan and Lake
Forest High School desire furnished liv“ing accommodations for the school year
of 1959-60. Write box number W-45 c/o
Lake Forester.
SMALL
family desires 3 bedroom house,
furnished or unfurnished for September
Occupancy or earlier. 1 to 2 year lease,
excellent care of your property. References.
Telephone ALpine 1-9543.
WANTED
to rent: minimum 2 bedrooms,
for three adults, September 1st occupancy,
GReenleaf 5-1925, if no answer, DlIversey 8-1211.
DESIRABLE
young
couple
would
like
home or apartment for summer months;
would be willing to care for
place while

on

your

vacation.

Call

Lake

Bluff 3254.

791

Elm

NICE, big, front bedroom, nice location;
lady only. Telephone ID 2-1556.
BEDROOM
and sitting room. Near town,
and transportation. Telephone ID 2-4828.
ONE room and bath. $70 per month. Lease
required. In business district. Call ID 28117 or Windsor 5-1869.
GENTLEMAN’S
large room to rent,.. fine
residence,
%
block to Highland
Park

shopping,

Street

HI

DRYDEN
HEIGHTS,

ILL.

MACHINE

Young Women
Job

THE
952

BROOKSHORE

Sunset Ridge Road
Phone CRestwood

SOUTH

OF

ROUTE

PART

woman

THE
952

office

BROOKSHORE

Sunset Ridge Road
Phone CRestwood

work,

CO,

Northbrook
2-1200

SALESWOMEN,
full time,
infants’
and
children’s Deerfield
Commons
Shopping
Center. Telephone Glenview, PA 4-2224.

BEAUTY OPERATOR
Good Pay, Good Hours
Excellent Opportunity
For Ambitious Person

~

Phone

Lake

2020

RINALDO’S

BEAUTY

SHOP

250 Market Sq., Lake Forest

to

and

handle

DEPT.

SECRETARY

HOSPITAL

Ridge

Part

SUPPLY

Evanston

orders,

APPAREL

SALESLADY

Well groomed

lady, permanent

tion,

better

selling

posi-

women’s

ap-

parel, unlimited opportunity, 5 day
week,
30%
discount’ on your
clothes. Telephone Mrs. Levi, ID

2-7640, or after 6, ID 2-6674. EXPERIENCED
SWITCHBOARD-TYPIST
Modern local office, all employee benefits.
Mr. Graff
ID 2-8711
PART time sales, 6 men and women,: multimillion dollar food supplement. corporation. Offers individuals an opportunity to
earn $200-$400 per month. This is worth
a call. Telephone WI 5-2972.
Experienced bookkeeper wanted, very good
pay and fringe benefits, would like someone
who would want a permanent job. Call for
appointment or interview at ID 2-5561.
RAVINIA PLUMBING
STENOGRAPHER, experienced,
part or full
time, top salary. Telephone ID
2-1553.
MANICURIST
wanted at Willis Presents.
661 Vernon, Glencoe. Telephone VErnon
5-3555.
HAIR dresser with following; top commis-

or

space

rented.

Telephone

ID

2-

time work, school bus driver.
Bus Service, NEwton 4-3900.

SALESLADY wanted, full time, interesting
work. Telephone HIi
6-4224,-

G

ar
First

OPERATOR
*

*”
to

*

suit.

*

BROOKSHORE

Sunset

Ridge

Phone

CO.

Road

Northb

CRestwood

2-1200

—

CLEANING ROUTE DRIVER
Good

employment.

w

and commission.

ERMINE
445 Waukegan

CLEANERS
Ave.

ID

Hig]

2-3710

SHOES
Deerfield

EXTRA MONEY FA‘
Men
cars,

and women,
18 years or older
to deliver new and pick up old

land

Park,

phone
Bluff,

books.

Deerfield

wanted by group of local, community newspapers;
education or experience
in journalism is desired. Permanent position ‘with

or

and

part

time in

High-

Lake .Forest,

adjoining

Lake

rural a

PHONE ORCHARD: 6-3470

Winnetka. High School Grad |
ferred. Only those intereste
permanent position need z
Contact personnel director,V
Hall, or call HIllerest 6-2500.
OPPORTUNITY
basis;

good

for your

mechanic,

own commi:

tune up man.

BH

wood Shell Service Station, 532 Wa
Ave,, Highwood.

YOUNG
time

Park

men
light

ane

with

cars.

messenger

for

next, 10

wanted
work

days;

in

good

for .
Hig

earnin:

Apply in person only, 4:30 to 7:30 p
See Mr. Sondel, 2nd floor, Coon’s Re
Building, 623 Deerfield Rd., Deerfield.

part time Wark,

Ritzenthaler

REPORTER

Full

Highwood,

GET THE ROUTE.IN YOUR «

MEN,

WANTED—MALE

STAFF

$100
1766

time—hours

THE
952

4-6050

HOSPITAL
office personnel for 100 bed
hospital, admitting clerk, cashier and insurance clerk, High school education required, Must be able to type.
hour
week.
Living
quarters
available.
Apply
personnel
director, Lake
Forest Hospital, Lake Forest 5600.
SECRETARY-STENOGRAPHER
Familiar with office procedures
and machines,
including
dictating
machines.
Excellent working conditions in new air-conditioned
offices.
5
day
week.
Excellent
salary. Telephone ID 2-7900.
SECRETARY
‘
Shorthand
and
typing
essential,
duties
varied, permanent position, excellent working conditions. Call Mrs. Berman VErnon
5-0724.
PART time nurse, doctor’s office. Telephone
ID 2-4844
KINDERGARTEN teacher to teach 5 year
olds
starting
in September
at modern
Killdeer
Countryside
school
in
Long
Grove
(near rts. 83 and 53). Monday
through Friday 9 to 11:30 a.m. Contact
Mrs. J. R. Corbus, NEwton 4-3577 for
interview.
GIRLS—HIGH
SCHOOL AND
OLDER
Days or evenings to talk on telephone; no
experience
required.
Pleasant,
dignified
work in Deerfield.
Temporary,
part time
work only. Immediate employment. Salary
plus bonus. Telephone WI 5-1873.
HIGHLY qualified female X-ray technician
wanted in radiology office; typing knowledge required. Full or part time. Salary
excellent.
1893
Sheridan
Rd., Highland
Park, Illinois. Telephone ID. 2-2441.
FULL
or part time salesladies, experience
not necessary; paid vacations, paid pension plan. 5% days per week, ape salary.
F. W. Woolworth, 600 Central Ave. Telephone ID 2-9756,

HELP

combination

_ SEE

*

CORP.

UN

SALESLADY

68

G AND
Shoppers Court

shipping

fender

Park.

ID 2-2500

PART TIME

NORTHBROOK
CRESTWOOD 2-1000.

WOMAN, part
Ritzenthaler

~

body

Work for Chrysler dealer.
plus 50%.
Lake
Motors,

Steady

Culligan, Inc.

pa

Forest 729

Auto

Highland

Unusual
opportunity
for
career
minded
young woman willing to assume responsibility. Shorthand not necessary but should be
neat,
accurate,
typist.
Congenial,
modern
offices; good starting salary and full range
company benefits. Hours 9:00 to 5:00 Monday through Friday.

AMERICAN

addressograph and light typing.

CO.

TIME..TYPIST

For information call
LOngbeach 1-5466

Apply

GIRL
Or
woman
wanted
for
all-around
cafeteria work in Deerfield industry. Telephone WI 5-1990, Extension 226.

—For billing and light general
about 20 hours a week.
—

SALES

TIME

GROCERY STOCK ME}

CLERK

Sundays,
4 p.m.

*

CRESTWOOD 2-3700
GENERAL BINDING
CORPORATION
1101 SKOKIE HIGHWAY
NORTHBROOK

Northbrook
2-1200

WE have openings in our sales department
for personable young women;
full time
preferred. Retail
experience
not necessary. Summer only applicants wilf not be
considered. Apply in person. L. and A.
Stationers, 546 Lincoln, Winnetka.
BOOKKEEPER, - full
time.
Some
background needed. Will train. Infants’ and
children’s Deerfield Commons
Shopping
Center. Telephone Glenview PA 4-2224,

ea

LINOTYPE

CLERK

STAFF
REPORTER
wanted by group of local, community newspapers;
education
or experience
in journalism is desired. Permanent position. with
large company offering all benefits. Write
for interview giving education,
experience
and full information about your self, Box
J-45 c/o Highland Park News.

nities

For Advancement

Hospital &amp; Life Insurance
And Many More

MILE

Shore’s fastest grov

FOR FULL

CALL PERSONNEL OFFICE
ID 2-8000 FOR APPT.

Come
in or call for personal
interview.
Employment office hours are 8:30 to 4:00
Monday through Friday. 8:30 to 12:00 Saturday.

¥%

floor

Interesting work in pleasant environment. Why commute when you
can work close to home?

With a Growing Company
Good Starting Salary

Opportunity

general

NURSES

POSTING

Saturdays and
7:30 a.m. to

WORKING CLOSE TO HOME
IN A NEW MODERN OFFICE
HAS SO MANY ADVANTAGES
Permanent

ROOM

North

food chain, opening soon in De
field, offers splendid job oppo:

NURSES

OPERATING

de

SURE SAVE
FOOD MARTS
The

time,

and
E.

NORTHBROOK
CRESTWOOD 2-1000

HIGHLAND PARK
HOSPITAL

Full time and part
duties; good salary.

M.

Culligan, Inc. —

NEEDS

6-0097

Pleasant work, for experienced girl (or will
a
for
Copy
Department
in printing
plant.
5 day week, hospitalization, vacation and
other benefits.

1 block to transportation. Tele-

phone ID 2-0699.
LARGE 1
room
efficiency, private bath,
redecorated,
ideal
bachelor’s
quarters.
Highwood. Telephone ID 2-3187.
ROOM
for rent, kitchen privileges; near
transportation.
all between
12 and
5
p.m. ‘Telephone ID 2-3591. °

write

Excellent opportunity for qualified

ROOMS TO RENT
TARE
HOTEL seeping, rooms, by day or
week,
free parking,
1 Waukegan Ave.,
Highwood. 4

ARLINGTON

WINNETKA TRUST
AND SAVINGS

HOUSES TO RENT (Furnished)
(LAKE FOREST)
TO

NORTH

experience on mechanical
draulic mechanisms,
preferred.

NORTHBROOK
CRESTWOOD 2-1000

Conditions

REGISTERED

Group

5-1670

HOUSES TO RENT (Unfurnished)
(MISCELLANEOUS)

Working

~ KRESGE'S
12

2-1603

partment. Varied duties. Many
benefits. Shorthand required. See

FIVE room Town House, newly decorated,
2 bedrooms,
basement,
garage,
walking
distance to shopping, transportation. August 1 occupancy, $150 month. Telephone
WI 5-0905.

Week

Park

in our building de-

you must be able to take dictation,
type
and
handle
special
assignments. Call Frank Mohr.

Opportunity in our research
development department for an
gineer with one to three years

Culligan, Inc.

To get your application

Will

of being

Here’s your opportunity. To qualify,

Bonus

Hour

Pleasant

.

BEAUTY SALON
St. Johns Ave.
ID

1815

kitchen, gas
$132.50

‘REALTORS

mother.

CLASSIQUE

ene ot

Benj. Piersen Realty

prospective

Policy

ENGINEER

a “Gal Friday” for the advertising
manager
of
a national
concern.

Insurance

40

OPERATOR

pointment.

TO RENT
(Unfurnished)
(DEERFIELD)

Nearly new town house. Living-dining combination, family kitchen, powder room; up:
1 bedroom and bath. Basement
150

730

to replace

Vacation

Christmas

6

consider Thurs., Fri., Sat. or full
time. Good working conditions in
air conditioned salon. Call for ap-

You have always dreamed

Applications now being taken
for all positions in our beauti-

to:

BEAUTY

SECRETARY
ADVERTISING

KRESGE’S
OPENING SOON
IN DEERFIELD

Free

(Furnished)

FURNISHED
one
room
apt.
basement.
Private bath, and entrance. All utilities
paid. Laundry facilities. $68 per month.
Telephone WI 5-2390.
HOUSES TO RENT
(HIGHLAND

LARGE, light,

Bus

school bus driver

Service, NEwton

4-3900

HELP. WANTED—DOMESTIC

large seni mrad offering all benefits. Write
for interview giving education, experience

and
J-45

full
c/o

information
about yourself.
Highland Park News.

Box

CUSTODIAN
Wanted: Custodian to work aie
mot School District 110, Deerfield,
Please
apply to Wilmot School, 795

Road,
5-2580.

Deerfield,

Illinois.

at WilIlinois.
Wilmot

Telephone WI
Riaig
whee,

COOK.
and general housework,
referer
required; no heavy cleaning or laund
Telephone Lake Forest 893.—
‘
I need help for a few hours a week to cle
my: bedroom and bath, experience ‘requi: iy

Jeighborhood of Greenwood and Pa

Lane in

Deerfield. Telephone
WI

5-4

�ey 8

:LP

weekend

baby

sitter, to come

Fri-

THE

_ day 5 p.m., stay until Sunday p.m. Light
ee
2 children. Telephone ID 3-

live

housework

in,

own

“modern

ID

for

room,

air

must

conditioned

2-4344.

doctor’s

love

home.

GENERAL housework, 51%, day
like
children, to stay, own
_bath. Telephone ID 2-9127.

| LIVE

in, general housework;

ing,

plain cooking,

Private

like
non

room

children,
5-0723.

RELIABLE
_ stay,
bath,

GIRL

must
good

or

general

live

in,

assist

ID 2-6191.

and
chil-

from July
required.

experienced

girl for cooking

and

loyed husband. Adult family. ID 2-4482.

CHEN
help wanted in evenings. Call
after 4:30. ID 3-0250.
_ GLEANING
woman,
experienced and reliable, Monday, Wednesday and Friday,
recent
references
required.
Telephone
WANTED,
girl white,
for
waitress
and
first
floor
work.
References
required.

Telephone

Lake

Forest

Telephone Lake Forest 330.
SENERAL housework and child

care,

no

LIGHT HOUSEWORK, assist 4 year old;

own
room,
TV,
air conditioned
ranch.
| .. References; must be over 21. ID 2-8488.
ERIENCED
maid, serving, references;
Stay, 1 adult, no thorough cleaning, other

es

Telephone

ID 2-0652.

cleaning woman,
1 or
Telephone ID 2-4392.

HOUSEKEEPER,
clean,

for

drive.
a

2

days

a

white, to stay, neat and

three

adults;

Current

must

salary.

be

able

Telephone

to

ID

2-

5372
SMALL office, 4% to 1 day per week. Famte Service of Highland Park. Telephone
2-4981.
HOUSEWORK,
child care, plain cooking,
live in, own room; must have references.

a

_Telephone ID 2-7376.
GIRL,
experienced,
Monday,

|

Wednesday

and
Friday,
1 o’clock through
dinner;
gmail
house, 2 in family. Telephone ID
|
_2-2018.
|
HOUSEKEEPER.
2 school
age children;
own
room, TV, no laundry. References re| _ quired. ID 2-0367.

| YOUNG

woman

to cook and do some

- EXPERIENCED

cook-housekeeper,

gen-

live

in,

_
2 adults; recent references required. Top
wages.
Telephone
ID 3-1060,
139 Cary

_

_Ave.,

Highland

| GENERAL

Park.

housework,

_ :Jaundry...3
‘age’
collect

school.

plain

age

children; own
ID2-4068.

SITUATION

cooking,

and

no

1 pre-school

room., References.

Call

WANTED—FEMALE

EXPERIENCED.

Party

and _

luncheons.

Working
for family twelve years. Have
own
transportation. Call Lucille Glover,
ID
2-8145, Monday, Wednesday, and Sat-

|

__urday. In evening call UNiversity 9-0219.

|

PRIVATE

Es

ome.

ri

ts

tutoring

by

fully

in

all elementary

qualified

Telephone

Windsor

teacher,

sub-

in

5-1274.

my

Bh’ oe
g ph

SITUATION

iis:

WANTED—MALE

_ TRUCK hauling; tractor work; tree removal;
_. rubbish;
;

clean

~ non 5-0057.

out basements; yard mainPyatt, ID 2-5177 or VEr-

_ WALL WASHING, $8
per room, ceilings
a and walls, 10x14, WALLPAPER REMOVING, $12 and up, 10x14. North Shore
_ references.

HAVE

Avis
8-6669.
weekends
open for

gardening,

window

outside

washing,

etc.

work,

Ref-

erences.. Call ID 3-1192 evenings after 6.
(perienced white general handy man wants
Pp
time work, lawn work
and heavy

_ cleaning,

|
Ps

local
stic

MAN

evenings

references.
3-8212.

would

and

Call

like work

weekends.

Jim

Best

Meyers,

of

MA-

as caretaker, chauf-

___
feur or maintenance man. Good references.
3
Telephone MAjestic 3-6853.
a COLLEGE
student
wants
summer
yard
_
work:
Willing,
capable.
Call
Larry
Christensen
Lake Bluff 3592.
ANING
mam,
references,
one day a
week. Call TRinity 2-3500.
%
a: COLORED
man desires position as chauftis
ihe
feur, maintenance, custodian; best North

ee

Shore references. 15 years
Telephone DAvis 8-7017.

_

DEPENDABLE,

on

last

job.

handy high school boy ex-

perienced in yard work is available
any odd jobs. Telephone ID 3-0758.
fn once

af

SITUATION

a

$2.70 PER

for

WANTED—DOMESTIC

HOUR

for skilled white couple.

| _
Fix-up, clean-up, paint-up. Tuckpointing,
caulking,
gardening.
References.
Tele-

___
eG.

ie

hand;

COME

linens,
etc.

ID 2-8615

phone, HUmbolt 9-5000.
ga
male or female;
ousemen.

Beis
Baker, Shorline
|
—s erest 6-5818.

Experienced

Agency,

gy

only.

Winnetka.

Mrs.

HIll-|

SEE

4 Rooms

MAIDS GENERAL
Experienced with

LINDGREN
811

Elm _

St.

EMP.

480

HI

6-1047

home.
Forest

1%

FOR

From

17 and SAT., JULY

Mile

north

of

junctions

Rts.

83

&amp;

53

tables,

sales

this month

PICK GALLERIES

-

AND

WINNETKA
HI 6-7444
TOWER RD.

18th CENTURY dining room set, too large
for our room, will sacrifice, best offer
over $375, complete; consists of credenza
buffet, breakfront china cabinet, with recessed
extemsion
board
to comfortably
seat 16, 6 chairs including host and hostess chairs. Telephone ID 2-3543.
GIGANTIC
antique
clearance.
Barn
full
of old furniture from $1.00 china, glass
from 5 cents. Must sell. 9 am.
to 5
p.m. July 10,
11, 12—Friday, Saturday,
Sunday. 221 N. West St. ¥Y, block south
a. poenne Ave., Waukegan.
ONtario 2MOVING,
MUST
SELL;
WILL
SACRIFICE: Baker mahogany dining room set;
Dumont 21-in. TV, walnut console; leather chairs;
fireplace
equipment;
drapes;
14 cu. ft. GE upright freezer; 12 cu. ft.
GE refrigerator; 40-in. GE double oven
electric range;
Bendix
washer
and
gas
dryer;
Reo
24-in.
lawn
mower;
ranch
mink coat; various clothing; miscellaneous
items. VErnon 5-2582.
MAPLE twin bedroom set, davenport, twin
chairs, tables, desk; reasonable. Telephone
ID 2-5124.
SEARS electric
hot water heater, 80 gallons,
glass lined; like new, $55. Telephone WI
5-1745,
AIR CONDITIONER,
Philco, three-fourths
ton; excellent condition and reasonable.
Telephone Windsor 5-1559.
CRANE
Laundryette,
vitreous china, like
new, beautiful formica top; very reasonable, $50. Telephone ID 2-4744.
69 YARDS
cotton carpeting and padding,
excellent condition; best offer. Telephone
ID 2-0892.
PEDESTAL mahogany dining table with
leaves,
seats
16;
antique
buffet;
small
rounded
love
seat; dressing
table-desk;
mahogany breakfast table and 4 chairs;
drapes; tole wood box; bric-a-brac; carpeting;
20
cu.
ft. Coolerator
freezer;
large GE refrigerator; gas-electric mangle.
Telephone ID 2-1711.
PERFECT condition Maytag electric dryer.
$100. Telephone ID 2-3999. If no answer
call ID 2-4221.
36x36
INCH
light
wood
table
and
4
matching
captains chairs,
$50.00:
814
11%
ft. sarouk oriental rug. Also 5 ft.
x 2%
ft. sarouk. Telephone Lake Forest 2060 after 4 o’clock.
GOOD
used
room
sized
rugs
at
very
reasonable Pg
Beige and grey.
OHN
NASH

ID

2-8701

STUDIO lounge purchased 18 months ago,
very good condition, measures 72 inches
long, bolsters and foam rubber seat, $50.
Lake Forest 892.
PAIR of 27 inch lamps, hearing aid, mahogany magazine rack, 6 yr. crib, mattress, new 1 yr. crib, high chair, bathinette,
teeter-babe,
baby
carriage.
Lake
Bluff
1087.
MOVING:
Limed
oak dining
room
set;
gray couch;
Universal gas range; rocking horse;
boy’s
28-inch
bicycle.
Best
reasonable offer. Telephone WI 5-4390.
GARAGE
sale. Beautiful children’s dresses
sizes 5 through
12, ladies dresses size
9, man’s overcoat size 40, miscellaneous
nai
items,
565
Cherokee,
Braeside.
STORKLINE 6
yr. crib, matching chifforobe like new, bathinette, $50. Play pen
and insulated formula bag, other needs
for
baby.
Telephone
WlIndsor
5-1629
MAHOGANY
dining table: 6 all leather
chairs; 72 inch buffet, leather top, $300.
Telephone HI 6-2925.
WALNUT
dining room suite, 6 chairs, 2
extra table leaves, complete set of pads,

buffet.

$45.

Telephone

ID

of

CAR AND A HALF WITH
DOOR, CONCRETE FLOOR
RAGE WINDOWS.

OVERHEAD
AND 2 GA-

NO

E-Z

DOWN

PAYMENT

TERMS

WALSH
HOME

IMPRCVEMENT CO.
2800 BEL\ “DERE
ON 2-8770
WAUKEGAN
IMMEDIATE CONSsRUCTION

2-2988.

Everything
in
glass is available
at the
newly remodeled Lakeside Glass and Paint
Co. Mirrors, specialties, Shower and Tub
Enclosures are all on display.

LAKESIDE
1914 First St.

GLASS

&amp; PAINT CO.
ID 2-7211

FOR BETTER LIVING
Aluminum Specialty Products. Combination
windows, doors, awnings, sidings, porch enclosures,
jalousies,
gutters,
fencing,
lawn
furniture, ornamental railings, etc. Quality
and price wise see us before buying.
THERMO-TITE WINDOW
CO.
708 WAUKEGAN
RD.
DEERFIELD
WI 5-1198
ID 2-1553
FOR rent: garden tillers, cub tractor and
attachments,
lawn
mowers,
etc.
Lawn
mower
oy
gee
service,
and _ sales.
Telephone
ID
2-8029, 2070 Green
Bay
Woody’s Highland Park Service Staon,

Exterior and Interior Paint to suit your
every need. Complete line stains, varnishes
and paint sundries. Visit our newly remodeled store to see complete displays of glass,
mirrors, shower and tub enclosures, window
shades, venetian blinds, bamboo draperies,
and Modernfold folding doors.

&amp; PAINT CO.
ID 2-7211

NEED BLACK SOIL?
We are one of the North Shore’s largest top
soil and Nutri Soil dealers. We
are also
equipped for geine and spreading soil.

BEINLICH
or

5-0513

VE

5-1195

ALL TYPES MANURE
AVAILABLE
Large supply of cattle, horse and mushroom manure. We deliver any amonut.

VE

5-0513

JIM

BEINLICH
or

VE

5-1195

WALL MURALS and reproductions painted.
Call Mr. M. Wikstrom for estimates. WI
5-0618 after 4:30 during week. Week ends
open.
USED air conditioner for sale. Berns AirKing,
%-ton,
in perfect condition;
extremely quiet, cools, heats, dehumidifies,
ventilates. $75. Call ID 2-8960.
NECCHI
(new,
$49.50).
Arends
Sewing
Machine Co., 662 Central Ave., Highland
Park. ID 2-5200.
GIRL’S 24 in. bicycle, $5; mahogany oval
dining
table,
36x48;
round
leather top
cocktail table; 2 pair figure lamps; one
crystal lamp;
yard
gym
set, $5; boy’s
clothes, size 6 and 8: 2 pair ice skates,
size 31% and 4. Telephone ID 2-7131.
LAWSON davenport, modern lounge chairs,
Spinet piano, small trailer, lamps, tables
and miscellaneous. Telephone ID 2-1818.
NEW
4%
hp. 21 in. power mower with
sulky and Muncher attachment, cost $385,
too large for lawn, will sell for $175. 2744
Bape, Highland Park. Telephone ID 2GOOD condition: Hide-a-way sofa bed, $60;
Electrolux buffer, heavy duty, $45; Trombone, $50; Italian violin, $100; bird cage
and stand, $3; gallon vacuum, $1.50; new
$20 ice chest, $12; 24 in. R.C.A. console
Taek 120. Telephone ID 2-4395 or ID 28230.
USED TELEVISIONS

21 inch

Silvertone,

nb
ba

e

WE

SELL

Open

Mon.
Sat. &amp;

17-0247

ON

TERMS

thru
Sun.

Fri.
9-6

9-9

POTTERY AT
REDUCED PRICES
Beautiful lamps less than wholesale;
bird
baths, $2.95 each; good buys on bedroom
and living room
furniture;
stainless steel
sinks, $15
each;
good buys on linoleum
and carpeting; children’s swing sets, $19.50;
new and used soil pipe, $1.50 &amp; up; swimming pools, $5 and up; ping pong tables
with nets and paddles,
slightly damaged,
$14.50;
metal
wall
cabinets,
$7
up;
office desks, $35; doors, $3 and up; heavy
duty power mower with surrey, $165. Many
other items too numerous to mention.
COME
IN AND
BROWSE
OPENING,
Saturday, July 11th, the Antes
vegetable
stand.
Same
place
as_
last
year.
At
Stackel’s
Green
House,
1928
Deerfield Rd., Highland
Park.
TWO 24 inch bicycles for sale, one boys,
one
girls, excellent condition,
Call ID
2-5381.
LARGE
picnic table and
benches,
large
dog house, $15 each. Maple 6 year crib,
$5. Telephone WIndsor 5-0200. After 5.
ROTARY mower, 18 inch, Jacobson, never
used. We won it and already have one.
Price $75. Telephone WI 5-3848.
PORCH
glider,
metal,
cushion
seat
and
back. Telephone
WlIndsor 5-0652.
ATTIC
FAN,
30
inch,
complete’
with
frame and shutter for ceiling installation.
Price for quick sale. Telephone WIndsor
5-1399.
OIL
conversion
burner,
controls 275 gallon tank, fittings, complete $65. Telephone
DE 6-2734.
HAND crocheted table cloth, 2 air mattresses
for beach, wading pool, 8x6, miscellaneous.
Telephone ID 3-1624, after 6 p.m.

MUSICAL

INSTRUMENTS

FOR

SALE

Portable Organs
—

SPINETS

Your choice from $99.50 to $179.50

PAINT

VE

ha tert

LEHIGH

CHORDS

LAKESIDE GLASS
1914 First St.

ire

SHOP AND SAVE AT
STOCKADE TRADING POST
WHEELING, ILLINOIS
516 N. MILWAUKEE AVE.

the

GLASS

2 very exciting

886 LINDEN
HUBBARD WOODS
CORNER OF LINDEN

SALE

$695

18

SPACE

house

FOR

nea

MISCELLANEOUS
FOR SALE

GARAGES

2-8866

for

PULLMAN sofa bed, finest in dual purpose,
$300 value, like new, will sacrifige; also
other
furniture
items.
454
Broadview,
Highland Park.
APARTMENT
size
gas
stove
for
sale,
good condition. Call Lake Forest 4957.
TELEVISION
21
inch
Spartan
console,
blond
cabinet
with
doors.
Best
offer
takes. Lake Forest 3370.
PAIR
of occasional chairs, excellent condition,
and
8 ft. two
piece
sectional
sofa. Call Lake Forest 4219.
FOR
SALE,
Westinghouse
electric stove,
30
inch,
best
reasonable
offer.
Telesphone WI 5-1957.
GAS
range, white, excellent condition, 42
inches, $50. Telephone WI 5-2899.
11
POINT
5,
Norge
automatic
defrost
refrigerator,
80 lb., freezer, four years
old. $150. Available Aug. 15. Telephone

boys, dressing, table, mirror; velvet club
chair; studio couch. Telephone ID 2-7789.

F ei

TOP SOILS e HUMUS
e MANURES
@ PEAT MOSS e LAWN ROLLING
¢@
TREE
REMOVAL
e
RUBBISH
REMOVAL
e GRAVEL
DRIVEWAY
REPAIRS @e WRECKING OF ALL TYPES
PHONE Jim Beinlich—VE 5-0513 or VE

tan
ID

THIS

SALE

Windsor 5-0033.
BEDROOM set, double bed, headboard, }i

e i orh?

Oe

“Jim Beinlich Trucking handles all
following services for Homeowners:

WATCH

RUG,
9x14, wool, brown, white and blue
mixture, $60; carpeting, pumpkin, nylon
and cotton, fits average living room, $200;
drapes, white with metallic thread, 2 pair,
8 panels, $75. All items cleaned;
rugs
have padding. Telephone ID 3-1306.
FINE FURNITURE, all French Provincial,
marble top end tables, coffee table, breakfront, Pullman sofa bed, 2 aqua upholstered chairs, 1 red chair by Sligh, contemporary
desk.
Telephone
WI
5-2772.
No Friday.
STORKLINE
twin convertible buggy, $20.
Call WI 5-4112.
BOY’S 16 in. French made bike, $10; Queen
Anne chair, $25; wing chair, $25; Thayer
play pen, $10; mahogany tip-top end table,
$25: or best offer on all items. Telephone
ID 3-0490
105 FOOT wooded play yard fence (7 ft.
sections)
with
gate, electric roaster on
cabinet, double hot plate, 2 large spreading yews (buy now move in fall). Other
flowers, bushes. Redwood outdoor furniture: chairs, coffee table, fireplace screen
and tools. Bureau with mirror, play pen,
baby
tenda.
Electric
floor waxer
and
polisher, 4 ft. double floruescent light. R.
Hunter, 10 College Campus, Lake Forest.
Can be seen between 3 and 5 p.m.
PHILCO % ton, 74% amp. window air conditioner. Telephone ID 2-8348.
MOVING
Universal gas range; Westinghouse vacuum;
electric roaster;
two
four drawer
chests;
chairs; power lawn mower; oak dining room
set; rummage. Must dispose of this week.
Thursday. 1520 Ridge Rd., Highland Park.
TEMCO
gas dryer, $45. Telephone
Lake
Forest 4221.
6 YEAR
maple crib, innerspring mattress;
extra
large
walnut
library
table.
Lake
Forest 3386.
MOVING
to
California.
Carpeting,
one
piece 12 by 18, 2 smaller pieces beige
tweed, also davenport and chair. Reasonable. Lake Forest 2715.
MAHOGANY
desk and corner table for
sale. Call MAjestic 3-5132.
CHAISE lounge, pink plastic, perfect condition, $30; Chinese large black lamps,
pair, Beye 2260 Sheridan, Highland Park.

night

Choose

PL.

SITTING

SITTER NEEDED,
must have Friday and
Saturday
nights
available;
experienced
girl or woman to care for children 7 and
9. Telephone ID 2-8660.
HIGH
school girl desires baby sitting by
day or week;
will stay some
evenings.
Telephone DExter 6-1453.
YOUR CHILD IS
IMPORTANT
TO
ME
Reliable
mother
will
care
for
child
in
her
home
by
day
or
week.
Telephone
ID 3-1989,
BABY _ sitter
wanted,
Saturday
nights
steady also other times during the week,
top wages, call Friday. ID 2-5536.
MOTHER
will baby sit in her home for
working
mother.
Babies
preferred.
References. Telephone
ID 2-4397.
EXPERIENCED
baby sitter will take care
of your family in my home by day or
week. Will also sit evenings. Telephone
ID 2-0079.
WILL care for children in my home while
mother works. ID 2-5168.
HIGH
school girl wants baby sitting job,
preferably
in Sunset
sub-division.
Telephone ID 2-6235.

GOODS

To

Wide selection in 11 shops, antiques, Farmers
Market,
art exhibits,
etc.
Luncheon
served. Come comfortable and be prepared
to have fun and buy, buy, buy!

woman desires 3 or 4 days

mattress,

ELM

FRI., JULY

housework in one home. Telephone MAjestic 3-1801.
GENERAL housework, eee:
5 days
per week. Telephone MAjestic 3-4546.
I WILL
DO
ironing in my home.
Pick
up
and
deliver.
Telephone
ID
2-8671.

spring,

Full

LONG GROVE
COUNTRY FAIR

3453.

WILL do laundry and ironing in my
No pick ups or delivery. Call Lake

HOUSEHOLD

YOURSELF

AGENCY
Ill.

CLEANING
woman,
three days a week.
Good
references.
Telephone
DExter
6-

EXPERIENCED

FOR

THE
Reichl

- COUPLES
References

Winnetka,

Ne a%

MISCELLANEOUS

WE HAVE A CONSTANT FLOW
OF SELECT HARD-TO-FIND
ITEMS

WORKERS

BABY

cooking,
air
conditioned
ranch
home,
own
room and T.V. Call ID 3-0128.
MER
girl,
light
housework,
assist
with
3 girls, 10, 6, and 5; own room
and
bath. Telephone ID 3-0464.
WOMAN
to stay or go, must love children,
clean, modern home. Telephone ID
‘
2-8425

ity
ey.

Rear

drapes,

TELEPHONE

1632.

EXPERIENCED
laundress,
white, 2 days
a
week,
preferably
Monday
and
Tuesday.
Recent
local
references
required.

ITE
week.

by

blankets,

DAY

poutine housework.
ill consider part time person, 3 or 4
ays
r week through dinner.
_ Or full time person to live on place, have
private quarters and can accommodate em-

help.

done

Rd.,

VEr-

with

_ WANTED: white, temporary cook
15th
to Sept.
1st. Reférences
Call Lake Forest 118.

_

Bay

Must

room

a

_

Green

work

curtains,

housework,

own

housework,

$30, Telephone

DESIRE

Curtain

home.

TV.

3. Telephone

for

1825

All

must
TV,

Only

like children, own room and
salary. Telephone ID 2-3944.

eneral

_ dren,

children,

Telephone

ranch

and

Shore’s

: Pou

7

ESTATE
electric range, 2 ovens, griddle
and deep well in good condition. Telephone WIndsor
5-1127 after 6 p.m.

SUMMER IS FOR
ANTIQUES

DEPOT

Laundry

cleaning, iron-

bath

have

woman,

bath,

|

we

person

North

family,

week,
room,

in modern

with

CURTAIN

bend
ey pe

HOUSEHOLD GOODS FOR SALE.

WA NTED—DOMESTIC

we

GENERAL

atk

SITUATION

WANTED—DOMESTIC

DESIRE

paste

4

1958 model;

metal cab-

inet; knobs on side. Best offer over $75.00.
T.V.’s in working condition, 17 inch Zenith,
$40; 12 inch Philco, $25; 10 inch R.C.A.,
$20. Phil Stone, 1171 Linden Ave. Telephone
ID 2-7427 between 5:30 and 7:30 p.m.
14 THERMOPANE,
20 by 16, used, some
agate
The lot $20.00. Lake Forest
MILLINERY
supplies, felt, flowers, feathers and ribbons. Jewelry making supplies,
beads, rhinestones, jewels and shells, at
less than jobbers price. Liquidating. Excellent for arts and crafts work.
Lake
Forest 4436.
TORO Colt riding mower; baby’s play pen;
sterilizer; car seat; man’s tropical suits,
size 42. Telephone ID 2-7785.
THREE 275 galion oil tanks, slightly used,
$10 each. ID 2-5786 or ID 2-3198.
CRAFTSMAN bench drill perss, Craftsman
wood shaper, Craftsman belt sander. All
machines complete with motor. 846 Central, Deerfield. WI 5-0373.

Leslie Speakers
FOR ALL ORGANS
from

$195—installed

Hammond Chord Organs
BEST OFFER

LOWREY
Organ Studios
1795 St. Johns
9-9 Daily

ID

2-2510
Sat. 9-5

KAY tenor banjo, like new, $45; $90 value.
Telephone ID 2-6187.
BIG upright piano, beautifully tuned, $50.
__Telephone ID 3-1578.
GIBSON. Spanish electric guitar and case,
2 years old, perfect condition, $80. Telephone WI 5-2604.
MUSICAL

INSTRUMENTS

WANTED

PIANOS
WANTED
ALL
MAKES—STYLES
TOP PRICES PAID
ROGERS PARK
1-4400
TOP dollar for used spinet pianos.
phone ID 2-2510.

WANTED

TO

Tele-

BUY

WANTED
AT ONCE
Oriental rugs, French furniture, bric-a-brac,
antiques, and pianos. Top cash paid. ROgers Park 1-4400.
WANTED
two boy’s 24”
bicycles, good
condition. Telephone WlIndsor 5-2842.

LOST

&amp; FOUND

LOST:
purse in Highland Park train station, has no identification, please return,
reward. Telephone ID 3-0379, after 6 p.m.
GENEROUS
reward offered for information about garden figure taken from house
on Lake Rd., Friday or Saturday night.
Write Box W-65, c/o Lake Forester.
CAT found June 26, Roslyn and Walker,
Highland
Park,
almost
grown,
white
with black and yellow spots, short hair.
Telephone ID 3-0033.
LOST,
brown
leather
zipper
brief case,
also small black address book, vicinity
West Lake
Forest. Reward.
Call Lake
Forest 3689.
FOUND:
German shepherd dog, male, on
Bradley Rd. Call Lake Forest 2553.
LOST:
June 30, black silk umbrella, gold
handle, Ravinia Park, section 5, row
J,
seat 15. Please return. Reward. Telephone
ID 2-4039.
DIAMOND
wrist watch and band lost at
Ravinia
Park July 4th. Handsome
Re-

ward.

Telephone

WHitehall

4-7785.

Thursday, July 9, 1959

�ee

Su

roe

AUTOMOBILES FOR SALE
SEE

sibs
AUTOMOBILES
.

HOLMES

AT

FOR NORTH SHORE’S
FINEST A-1 USED CARS

E950
1957
1957
TE57
1957
1957
1957:

PUL
1957
1956

STOWE, alsin

1955

ude $1595
$1495

Rambler
station
wag.;
5S ey Cla 40 9 a en
a eg $ 795
Ford
Victoria;
R-H,.
auto.
trans.,
pwr.
str.$ 945
Ford
conv.; R-H, auto.

1955
1955

trans,, DWH.
1955

Sitkin: ciel $1095

Mercury 9-pass. wagon;
WRT AVLOROOS &lt;5 ac. ccbssacestsbens $1095
Pontiac
Catalina;
R-H,

1954

Hryera..

pwr

sthr is

$ 595

1954

Chevrolet: wagon,

1954

Cadillac 4-dr., full pwr. $1395

1954
1954
1953

Plymouth wagon ............ $
Ford Victoria ............2..... $
Pontiac 4-dr.; R-H, Hy-

RPA
1952

CE

RSS

Chevrolet

1852

R-H

..$

rere a

pick

up,

595
495
595

$ 245

lift

12

eR HE ane Peal er Badge $ 595

Ford:

2+dr

2.0...

hk

$

245

Holmes Motor Co.
FORD
1909

St. Johns

Highland

Park

ID 2-8640
Open

Open

8 A.M.

to 9 P.M.

Sundays

BUYS

ALSO
Jag, ’°57 Jag, ’55 Porsche,
’59 Simea, ’58 Ghia.

LAKE
COUNTY
IMPORT MOTORS
517-519
Waukegan

S. Genesee

St.
MA 3-8575

1958

Chevrolet Impala sport coupe;
280 hp, V8 engine, jet black
with white wall tires, standard transmission.
1957 Chevrolet Bel Air V-8 sport
coupe;
dual carburetors, std.

trans., 2-tone with white wall
tires,

1955

Oldsmobile 88 Holiday sport
coupe.
Chevrolet V-8 station wagon
with

1955

auto.

with

And

McCALLUM
191

trans.

Mercury 9-passenger station
wagon; full power equip. 2tone

E.

whitewall

Many

tires.

Others

CHEVROLET,

DEERPATH

INC.
LF

3200

Sales Dept. Open 9 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Saturday ’Til 6 p.m.
Thursday, July 9, 1959
al

2050

First

Motor

Car

St.

the
on

Div.

Highland

ID

Park

2-3442

OLDSMOBILE,
1955, Super
88, 4 door,
black, clean, power brakes, hydramatic,
radio,
heater,
original
owner.
$1300.
Telephone ID 3-0130 Thursday and Friday, 6 to 9 p.m.
1959 CORVETTE,
black, 4-speed transmission. Call Saturday or Sunday. Lake Forest 3832.
1957 and 1954 Mercury station wagons, both
exceptional,
top
condition,
full power,
electric
windows,
fully
equipped,
one
owner, low mileage, with extra snow tires.
$2100 and $900. Telephone ID 2-8034.
1953,
2 DOOR
Ford ranch wagon, motor
just overhauled, Fordomatic, radio, heater,
excellent
tires,
$450.
Lake
Bluff
1049
after 6 p.m.
VOLKSWAGEN
convertible,
1957,
radio,
heater, whitewalls. Telephone ID 2-3866
for appointment. Can be seen Sunday and
Monday only.
1950 MERCURY,
2 door sedan, excellent
condition, radio, heater, economical
operation. Telephone ID 2-5677.
CADILLAC.
Late
1958 convertible
coupe
by original owner, all power, immaculate
white body and top, red leather interior,
Cadillac
service invoices to prove
low,
low mileage, $4,500, no tax. Telephone
Lake Forest 4830.
1953 PONTIAC 8 station wagon, 9 passenger, radio, heater, $450. Telephone
WI
5-1511.
1953 RED
Rambler station wagon,
radio,
heater, spot light, automatic transmission,
extra snow tires, best offer. Telephone
_ ID 2-6523;,
CHEVY,
1955 station wagon,
$550.
1957
Chevy, 2 door coupe, $1,100. 333 Juneberry Rd., Deerfield. Telephone WI 5-2491.
1954
PONTIAC
convertible,
Hydramatic,
power brakes, radio, heater. Best offer.
Telephone WI 5-4009.
STUDEBAKER convertible, 1948. Top, tires,
mechanical condition good, newly painted.
$50. Telephone WI 5-1261.
1952 STUDEBAKER 2 door, radio, heater,
over-drive,
like
mew
paint,
unusually
clean, good
tires. A dependable,
inexpensive second car. Telephone WIndsor
§-3773.
1952 DODGE
for sale. Good condition. 2
door, light green. Telephone ID 2-3781.
1953
CHEVROLET
convertible,
all new
tires.
Priced
$375.
Call
Friday,
Lake
Forest 1435.
MG-A,
1959, ROADSTER:
beautiful red,
black leather interior, hardly used, reasonable.
May
accept
trade.
After
9
USED

MOTOR

AND

TRUCKS

MOTORCYCLES
oe
reasonable :

a
eep

exone

1956
LAMBRETTA
motor
scooter,
150
LD, 2 seats, 100 m.p. gallon, safest two
wheel scooter, great condition. ID 2-1240,
from
69
p.m.
SPORTSMAN
Whizzer motor bike, excellent condition, reasonable, private owner.
Woody’s Service Station, 2070 Green Bay
Rd., Highland
Park.
ALTERATIONS
Now, two locations to serve you better for
custom clothes and alterations.
THE SILVER NEEDLE
HIGHLAND
PARK, ILLINOIS
1866 Sheridan Rd.
610 Laurel Ave.
Phone ID 2-7118
Phone ID 2-1774
LOOK chic for summer with shorter skirts
Ask
for Eda.
Zengeler
Cleaners,
Inc..
1905 Sheridan Rd. Telephone ID 2-2800.
EXPERIENCED
alteration
and_
repair
woman. wants full time work. Call ONtario. '2-9831.

ANTIQUES

LAKE FOREST
USED CARS

1955

to come in and view
of used Cadillacs, now

1958 LAMBRETTA
iti
ota 1 tgecimaabs

PEE TOE. NLS, odatsbclacselnemias $1995
DeOerie Bede sia: $1195
TR-3 Rdstr.
$2695
TR-3 Rdstr. (two) ........... $2295
MG-A, loaded ............ dn. $ 495
MG-TD ....
$1295
MG-TD, 2.tOM6 whats $1395
Berkley: ii3..c08
a $ 995

D5

few

p.m., phone Lake Bluff 5236.

Daily

LAKE COUNTY
IMPORT MOTORS

Ee
ST
59
58
56
52
‘Os
"OS.

Cadillac

10 A.M. to 5 P.M.

BEST

Reconditioned.

CADILLAC

OT

Some

Schwinns.

CYCLE
486

Pontiac Conv., Full pwr.$1995
Chevrolet
hard _ top,

PAR cea

ST

_

Most,

SERVICE

WM. RUEHL &amp; CO.
GENERAL BODY SHOP
NOW OPEN
Body and Fender Repair:
All Makes - All Models
Complete Painting,
Undercoating and Touch Ups

&amp;

FOR

JACK

487 E. Park Ave.
Highland
AUTO

TD

2-5845

Park

LOANS

Finance your car the bank way and
money.
.
FIRST NATIONAL
BANK
:
of Highland Park

parts

al

for all

SHOP
ID

dirt, gravel
Dordand,

2-136%

RENT (tn ee

ee

STREBLOW
15
foot
mahogany
planked
runabout, 1956. Decked, windshield, Mercury
55E,
controls,
lights,
tilt
bed
trailer, skibar, spot, ladder, cover,
red
and white upholstering, Extra prop, beautiful new finish. Immaculate condition.
Telephone
ID
2-0940.
SAILING
DINGIES
10 foot fiberglas. Complete, ready to sail.
Choice of colors. Direct from manufacturer.
$299. Telephone WI 5-2384.
EVINRUDE
outboard
motor,
7%
H.P.,
like new, less than 20 hours, $135. Telephone Lake Forest 1559.

ACCOUNTING
LEVEL
bookkeeping and
tax service available;
Chicago
accounts
vate Will
sell immediately.
RAndolph
193,

SERVICE

LIGHT general hauling. We also nove al
types of household appliances. Call ID 2
6098 or ID 2-4917

SHIRTS
FAST,
if special

FAST
service

try

St.

Johns

Highland

FURNITURE
MOVING—Local
Distance—one piece Hage or a truck

Park

and Lon;
load. Pack

ing, crating, shipping: Ward Anderton

BOOKKEEPING,
accounting
and
income
tax service. Wide experience. William C.
Heinrichs, 685 Park Avenue West. Telephone ID 2-1642.
a aan
cae
CON
CARPENTERS,

PRAIRIE

ACRES
LAWN

SS esa COMPANY.

Telephone

REPAIRS

CLAUSING ELECTRIC
All types of electrical work, post lights,
wall outlets, new circuits, repairs. Reasonable prices. Telephone ID 2-6287.

ENTERTAINMENT
ENTERTAINMENT!
Children’s
parties,
bands, aqua shows (for club or private
pools),
for any type of entertainment.
HDO
Productions, ID 2-1240.

FENCES
FENCING, ALL TYPES—chain link stockade; post-rail, etc—Manufacturer installer
Chain Link Fence Corp. OR 4-8700 or
MUndelein 6-7789.

&amp;

FURNACE

REPAIR

GUTTERS
replaced or repaired, cleaned,
painted with A-1 rust preventative. Careful expert work. Also, wire screening supplied and installed. Telephone ID 2-6362.

&amp;

PONIES

ONE
ARALIAN
stud,
one
5 year
old
Shetland pony, ride and drive. Rasmussen,
Libertyville 2-3476.

motor, goed condition,
$85. Call Lake Forest
DECORATING

PAINTING
and
decorating,
interior anc
exterior, natural or bleached wood
fin
ishing;
quality
workmanship.
For
esti
bet
g call Eric Schneider, Libertyville

pups.

to date

AND

outside
Forest

spe3938.

DECORATING

methods

$ Careful workmanship

PAINTING AND WALL PAPERING
INTERIORS — EXTERIORS
QUALITY WORK GUARANTEED
CALL %
ae
painting
2-3452.

and

decorating.

PERSONAL
AS

have

a

7

reds

Dachshund

mo.

female

BLACK

cocker

all acces- —

b &amp;

t’s, M and F,

pups

sold

show

except

OF JULY 7, not responsible for debts
incurred by anyone but myself. Ronald
Grostad, 996 West Park, Highland Park.

PETS
TWO playful pink kittens to be given away,
pan trained and weaned. Telephone
ID
2-7363.
LEAVING town, must sell registered Boxer
pups, male and female, 8 weeks, make
offer. Telephone ID 2-4069.
WHITE toy french poodles, AKC, reasonable. Call MAjestic 3-4691.
MINIATURE
Schnauzers,
9 week
male,
champion
sired,
home
raised,
also
10
month old male, exccllent conformation
and disposition. Telephone ID 3-0425.
DO you want a top quality German Shepherd at a reasonable price? See our 2
month old registered pups at 2055 TECHNY RD., Northbrook. Phone CRestwood
2-0355.
2 DARLING
female white rats with new
wire cage to be given away. Telephone
Lake Forest 2565.
SIAMESE kittens, 10 weeks old, male and
female, housebroken, adorable pets, $25.
Call MAjestic: 3-9044,
:
PERSIAN
kittens, creams, blues, red and
black. Show type, champion. background.
Round: Lake, KImball 6-2815,
whe

for

prospect.

puppies,

i
blood

excellent

lines,
AKC
registered.
Telephone
Antioch 554W1.
WEEK
old Wire Haired Terrier puppy
for sale. Telephone ID 2-8844.
AkC,
DACHSHUNDS,
true
miniatures,
near Long Grove. Mrs. Carl Huck. Telephone
LEhigh
7-0099.
5 AKC BLACK miniature poodle puppies,
8 weeks
old, male
and female.
Home
raised,
$150
each.
Telephone
NEwton
4-3036.
8

ROOFING
CEDAR
SUBURBAN
Call ALpine

peace

SHINGLES?
Them

Neglect

ROOF
1-0377

Cu

TREATING_
SERV. —
HI 6-3730

SEWERS
gree ag
he are
ret
ick service for clogged
or
slow m

aia

hoy cleaned and opened with electric rod
equipment. We service any type drain. Also
catch basins and spetic
high 17-0232, Wheeling.

tanks

cleaned.

SINGER

SEWING

Complete
Free

Sales

Home

=

LE-

aes
ma ee,
—&lt;——

SEWING MACHINES

MACHINE
and

Service

Demonstration

ie

Repair on All Makes of Machines
TELEPHONE ID 2-3811
TRAILERS

&amp;

TRAILER

ofACE

HALE TRAILER SALES
i
House trailers and travel trailers; we buy
and sell. 1920 Sheridan Rd., North Chicago.
(2 blocks north of naval base)
A

TREE

SURGERY

WING'S TREE EXPERTS. Cutting, trim-.
ming

removing,

spraying.

7

Fully ’ insured’ and “ponded;

estimates. Telephone UD 2-6546 or Kim
ball 6-2292.
;
, feed[ri
N [REE EXPERIS.
Fully
“SS repairing, guying and removat,

agured,

Color coordination
Interior and Exterior
BLOOM PAINTING CO.
ID 2-5544
PAINTING AND PAPER HANGING.
In
terior and exterior painting. For quality
pipe
pe 4
by
experienced,
reliable
men call
W. C. Varney. WI 5-0654.
PAINTING and paper hanging, reasonable
saw
free estimates. Telephone A. G
riddy or Peter Gallos, Lake Forest 15¢
@
@

ELMER
Conger
Telephone ID

We

haired

.

PAINTING
and
decorating;
cialty. Fully insured. Lake
Telephone any time.

DRIVEWAYS

ELECTRICAL

MURRAY’S

MOTORS

PAINTING

direction of

Some are show prospects, all will make
delightful pets. Priced according to show
potential, starting at $75. Call TEnnyson
7-8640, Bartlett, Ill. P.S. Sorry our wired-

Don’t

Complete Tree Service
Pruning
Tree
Removing
Spraying
@ Fertilizing
Make
arrangements now to have undesirable trees removed this winter.
Winter rates for tree removal 15% less
than normal price.
Fully insured
Free Estimates
Hillcrest 6-5524

Up

the personal

Elaine Ortman.
Kennel Shop features
sories

@
@

&amp;

professionals.

black

ELOF T. CLAUSON
The finest in tree work, patios, landscaping
and maintenance. Insured. Satisfaction guaranteed. Telephone Lake Forest 3366.
FRANK
VENA
LANDSCAPING
Call me for the finest in lawn care, tree
removal, top dressing, patio work, fertiliring. Telephone ID 2-5494 after 7 p.m.

WI

j
DRIVEWAY COATING
Applicators for Latex coatings. Renew and
weatherproof
your driveways.
Also Latex
coatings for asphalt shingle roofs in colors.
AL _ 1-0377
HI. 6-3730

CARE

Grading, plowing, hauling, fill dirt,
top soil, rotted cow manure, top
seed rolling. Telephone WI 5-0818.

15_H.P. outboard
ters overhauled,

finest

GARDENING

LANDSCAPING,

PAINTING
FOR building that new home, addition, o:
remodeling,
be
it large
or small, ca!
V_ &amp; F Construction Co. Telephone II
2-5477 or WI 5-2980.
RELIABLE experienced carpenter. Remog
eling, paneling, porches and Hi Fi rooms
siding. H. Blomquist Construction, tele
phone WI 5-2830.
CHRISTO-CRAFT REMODELING CO.
WI 5-3273
ID 2-2319
Remodeling and home maintenance is our
business.
Porch enclosures, basement paneled
room
additions,
kitchen
cabinet,
or
just that one door that doesn’t close right.
All work guaranteed.
B &amp; K CONSTRUCTION—Why
not have
that new rec. room now! We specialize in
kitchen,
attic, porch
and
basement
remodeling. Now is the time! Call us about
your remodeling problems. Free estimates.
Telephone WI 5-4182 or WI 5-4454,
REMODELING,
additions, repairs. Specialist in design and construction of quality
country homes.
E. S. POWELL
CON-

&amp;

MODERN LANDSCAPING. For the best in
lawn maintenance and garden work telephone Jack Vena, ID 2-5266.
GENERAL
LANDSCAPING
New lawns, black dirt, humus, top dressing.
manure, planting, lawns fertilized, tree work.
stone work, patios, driveways.
MELCHIORRE
ID 2-0829

JOHN

it today

DRY
1875

LANDSCAPING

and

&gt;

DACHSHUNDS.
Von
Westphalen
Kis.
known for their consistent show quality.
(3 cho last year, 2 on their way this year)
and
excellent
care
of
kitchen
raised

SHORELINE SCRAP &amp; PAPER CO.
We pick up paper and all metals, do maintenance work and haul. Telephone ID 31268 or ID 2-6578.

SERVICE

desired,

by

Under

PAID

For all types of junk brought to our door,
such as: Papers, rags, iron, metal, etc. Or
cali IDlewood 3-1466 for free pick-up. We
specialize in industrial accounts. Hours daily
including Saturday, 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m
HIGHLAND
PARK
WASTE
MATERIAI
1466 Berkeley Rd.

5-1302

on the
Highway

Private inside heated stalls and
connecting
individual
outside
runs.
Expert grooming of all breeds

*

PRICES

of Dundee Rd.
Drive of Edens

Shore’s newest
Boarding Kennel.

PIANO
INSTRUCTION
dank
Winston,
staff
pianist
at
WBBM
CRS
Call WI
5-0244 after 7:30 v.m
JACK MOORE
GUITAR
SCHOOL
Guitar exclusively taught.
Private
lessons,
group
participation;
instrument
furnished.
National and State winners,
1955-56-57-58.
Me
Park Studio, telephone Hlllcrest

HIGHEST

KENNEL.

VErnon

rs North

2-0015.

OPPORTUNITY

BUSINESS

South
service

JUNK

FOOT
Larson outboard Cabin Cruiser,
sleeps
4, complete
facilities
for
living
aboard and long range cruising; condition
of this boat is like new. Extra equipment
includes dinghy, life jackets, fire extinguisher,
boarding
ladder
and
more.
Moored
Montrose
Harbor;
boat
name
ae
Telephone
SUnnyside
4-

BUSINESS

BOARDING

slencoe

GARINO MUSIC STUDIOS
North Shore’s Finest. Instruction on accor
4ion and guitar; instrument furnished. In
eet about our trial plan. Telephone ID

SOIL

e

PETS
GLENCOE

INSTRUCTION

and file, lawns graded
telephone
NEwton
4

BOATS
22

HORSES
save

not

HOBBY

BLACK
BLACK
[ae

GUTTERS

FRECH

and

but

Central

Auto

ASK

See eee RRR

like new—a|_rider. TelephoneiD 31431,

BOYS 20’ Schwinn bicycle, excellent con__ dition. Telephone ID 2-1859.
26 INCH
boy’s bike with coaster brakes,
one
year
old,
excellent
condition,
$25
or best offer. Telephone ID 2-1942.
BOY’S 24 inch English racer, good condition.
Telephone
ID
2-8049.

pHs

ANTIQUE
SALE
Early
Americana
from
private collection.
2 large eagles carved, papier mache; child’s
half-Windsor, original paint; 2 candle stands;
English
folding
coach
table;
American
maps; pair purple slag spooners; 3 weathervanes; advertising items; model steam engine; audirons; china, glass, many unique
primitive items in wood and metal. Lake
Forest Academy Route 59A, % mile west
42A, FRI., JULY
10, 2 to 6 p.m., SAT.,
JULY:
11, (40 A.M.
to: 6° P.M,
NLY
AUTO

Gs BEER UA

BICYCLES
HORSES &amp; PONIES
BIKES—Boy’s or Girl’s Used ano | BEST otter wins my Deautitul western type

viene.

We invite you
finest selection
display at

Rambler
wagon;
R-H,
OVETOLIVE
Uy
$1995
Edsel
Citation
conv.,
PUT MWOWET sie
Se $2295
Skoda 24d
os.
eects $ 895
Ford conv.; R-H, Fordo.,
Wr
Ste
an ey Ley $1695
Pontiac 4-dr. hard top;
TUL pwrg R-He es
$1595
FOV 2900 SRE, ccs cies $1195
Ford Thunderbird; R-H,
TU PWT iacc steeeis $2895
Ford
9-pass.
Country
Sedan; R-H, Fordo. ........ $1795
De Soto 4-dr. hard top,

1958

FOR SALE

,

sizes. Also repairs
make bicycles.

SPRING SALE
DEMONSTRATORS
SAVINGS UP TO $1000
1959

Pee

ES Sea

i
ID 2
tates now
WINTER
moval. Completely
VE 5-0513.

Telephone

.
in effect for tree re
insured. Jim Beinlich.
a

3 Qualify In Jaycee

Wa

Jr. Golf Tourney;
Enter State Finals
Three Highland Parkers qualified for the Illinois Junior Golf
Jaycee ie
annual
an
Tournament,
'
event, when they came out with
Golf
low scores in Monday’s Jaycee
tournament at Sunset Park.
John Levinson, 144 Ravine

SED

ay
ae!

Dr.,

member of the winning state and
district Highland Park High School
team this spring, placed first with
a 38-36 for a two over par 74. Jim
Ave.,
McDaniels
1474
Matteoni,
placed second with a 42-36 for a
to Rick
went
place
78. Third
Ascher, who was on the winning
sophomore

team

at the high school.

He came in with a 41-39 for an 80.
Lloyd Kuehn of Deerfield shot an
81

to

become

first

alternate.

The state tournament will be
held Saturday and Sunday at Olympia Fields Country Club in Olympia

Fields,

Il.

Four

entrants

will

be picked from the state event to
represent Illinois in the National
Tournament Aug. 22-23 in Portsmouth, Va.

Page 57

sit:

4

�Captain In Reserves At Camp McCoy

Highland Parkers Attend School
At Le Mesnil,

Switzerland

Miss Patsy Kulp,
and

Mrs.

dan

Rd.,

Harry

Kulp,

and

Miss

of

Dr.

daughter

daughter

Sheri-

Sammet,

and

Mrs,

Joel

Ave.,

left

Tues-

Sammet,

Lincoln

day

Montreaux,

for

1237

Trudy

of Mr.

Switzerland,

where they will spend six weeks
at Le Mesnil, a school for girls’
summer
program. They will stop
for visits in London and Paris on
their trip home.

Flower Arranger To Be Guest
Wednesday Of Rosenthals
Mrs.

Robert

L. Silberman

(right),

470

Groveland

Ave.,

an

Murray

Rosenthal,

384

Army

DANCE

Scout

Camp

Begins Its

Second

Session

dance,
been

families.

Season

The

Council

ran

a

drive last year to raise funds, under the chairmanship of Mrs. Homer Ohlhaver, 1440 Linden Ave.,
and
completed
facilities
at
the
camping site during the summer.

Highwood Pony
Squad Will Meet

Gurnee On Sunday
The Highwood

ball

squad,

wins

and

nee

a

Ales

Re.

——

——_—

(cS Mh
VA

\\ \

Sat

ss
x

rat

Pony League

with

a

record

base-

of

six

six losses, will battle Gur-

in a

6 p.m.

twilight

game

at

Memorial Park Sunday night.
Jim Panther, hurling for Highwood in a recent 20 to 0 shutout
against Highland Park, had a no-

hitter

going

when,
Good

after two were out, Kenny
smashed
a sharp single to

until

the final

inning

right field.
Highwood
defeated
the Racine
Redlegs, and lost to Elmwood Park,
8 to 7. In the Racine game, Highwood’s Mike
McLaughlin
chalked
up the second one-hit victory for
his team when he hurled a 4 to 0
shutout.

CARD

We'll make it easier to

OF THANKS

We would
our gratitude

Fire

follow that new-car urge
We've got the best answer to the question of financing that new
car of your heart’s desire. Our loans for new or used cars are low
in cost. Service is fast. Terms will be arranged to suit you to a T.

like to express
to the Police,

Department

and

North

Shore Gas Co. and all others
who helped in the search to
find our little girl, Christy,
Monday morning.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard Merry
2160

°
Deerfield Road
°
Deerfield

Want to make major home improvements? Need extra vacation money? Make us your
headquarters for ALL your financial needs. You can count on us for
fast, cooperative

scheduled

service.

Save in a commercial bank and remitted

by law

It’s served free with

any dinner from 5 p.m.

safety.

|

African Lobster Tail ........ nf
Chicken—Fried

SAFE DEPOSIT
BOXES

protection

for

your

valuable

papers

and

in our safe

Ask about our regular and special checking
accounts designed to meet your needs.

CHECKING
ACCOUNTS

HEELING STATE BANK
— Service and Security Since 1921 —

WHEELING,

ILLINOIS

Each account Insured to $10,000.00 by Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.

BQ

....

50

Prime
Prime Ribs
Ribs of
of Beef
Beef

1.25

T-Bone

Vas
1.25

LUNCHEONS
yn
OE
Roast
Prime

Steak

........ $1.25

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

1.50

(US. Cholea Sidoin
1.75
Filet Mignon .................. 2.00

:

PHONE

pee bel debi aseaue pcre os
sq
75¢
LOGE Socenccececbcaniasce
Pork ....................
75¢
Ribs of Beef ...:.... $1.25

ORDER

DELIVERED

VE

FREE
5-161

1

Private Dining Room for Parties of 50

PAT

PATTERSON'S

STEAK 44] HOUSE
~ CUT RATE LIQUOR STORE
OPEN

7 DAYS

Edens, Skokie
Page. 58,

or

Breaded
Shiny vw
A tek Gisee

States.

prized possessions is available NOW
deposit boxes.

Drink!

Choose your favorite

Let us handle the transfer of your account from any
bank or savings and loan. . . anywhere in the United

Solid

has

cocktail at Patterson’s.

. . . plus constant

and

12,

Enjoy a FREE

ceive the highest interest rate peravailability

July

cancelled.

After Dinner

SAVINGS
ACCOUNTS

for

adult
Synatheir

AN
ORDINANCE
AMENDING
AND
ORDINANCE
ENTITLED,
“AN
ORDINANCE
CREATING
A TRAFFIC
COMMISSION
AND
ESTABLISHING
TRAFFIC
REGULATIONS
FOR
THE
CITY
OF HIGHLAND PARK, LAKE COUNTY,
ILLINOIS”
AS ‘AMENDED.
BE IT ORDAINED BY THE COUNCIL
OF THE
CITY OF HIGHLAND
PARK,
COUNTY
OF
LAKE,
STATE
OF
ILLINOIS:
SECTION 1. That
Section
64(c)
of
an
ordinance
entitled,
“An Ordinance Creating a Traffic Commission and Establishing Traffic Regulations
for
the
City
of
Highland
Park,
Lake
County, Illinois’? as amended, be and the
Same is hereby amended to read as follows:
Section -64(c). When
signs are erected in each block giving notice thereof,
no person shall park a vehicle between
the hours of nine o’clock A. M. and six
o’clock P. M. on any Saturday, Sunday +
or Holiday, nor shall any person park
a vehicle between the hours of eleven
o’clock P. M. and six o’clock A. M.
of the day following of any day, from
Memorial
Day
to Labor Day
within
the District or upon any of the streets
described in Schedule III B, attached
to and made a part of this ordinance.
SECTION II. That all ordinances or parts
of ordinances in conflict herewith are hereby repealed.
SECTION III. This ordinance shall be in
full force and effect from and
after its passage, approval and
publication,
according
to law.
ROBERT S. CUSHMAN
Mayor
ATTEST:
ROY
MILLEN
City Clerk
Passed:
June 29, 1959
Approved:
June 29, 1959
Recorded:
June 30, 1959
Published:
July 9, 1959
SCHEDULE III B
PARKING
PROHIBITED
BETWEEN
THE HOURS OF NINE O’CLOCK. A. M.
AND SIX O’CLOCK P. M. ON ANY SATURDAY, SUNDAY, OR HOLIDAY AND
BETWEEN
THE
HOURS
OF
ELEVEN
O’CLOCK
P.
M.
AND SIX . O’CLOCK
A. M. OF ANY DAY FROM MEMORIAL
DAY
TO
LABOR
DAY
WITHIN
THE
DISTRICT
OR
UPON
ANY
OF
THE
STREETS
AS
FOLLOWS:
(See Section 64 (c)
Hazel Avenue, from Forest Avenue to the
Lake.
Prospect Avenue, from Forest Avenue
to
the Lake.
Laurel Avenue, from Dale to the. Lake.
Central Avenue,
from Dale to the Lake.
Park Avenue, from Linden Avenue to the
Lake.
Vine Avenue, from Egandale to the Lake.
Egandale
Road.
Belle Avenue.
Park Lane.
Lake
Avenue,
from
Sycamore
Place
to
Central.
Dale Avenue,-from Laurel Avenue to Park.
Crescent Court.
Forest Avenue, from Ravine Drive to Hazel.
4 ary Drive, from Lindén Avenue to the
ake.
eects Street, from Lincoln Avenue to the
ake.
Roger Williams. Avenue, from Rice Street
to the Lake.
eS oon
from Sheridan Road to the
ridge
Lakawaod
Place,
Sheridan
Road
to the
Lake.
Edgecliff
Avenue,
from
Roslyn
Lane
to
Sheridan Road.
Bloom Street, Roslyn Lane to Oak Street.
ori
Avenue, Dean to the Lake.
alker
venue,
Roslyn
Lane
to
Oak
Street, south side only,
7/9/59—199

This is the second summer that
Camp
Kiawassa,
near Woodstock,
has been available to Scouts and

their

CANCELLED

Officers
of
the
young
group
of North
Suburban
gogue
Beth
El
announce

The second session of resident
camp
at
Kiawassa
begins
on
Wednesday
for members
of Moraine Council of Girl Scouts. The
first session, which began July 1,
concludes Tuesday. The only visiting day for all people of the Moraine Council is Sunday from 2 to
4 p.m. This is the date to see the
camp in action and meet the staff.
Second

Ravine Dr., will have as her guest
Wednesday Mrs. Dorothy Packee of
Skokie. Members
of several local
and
North
Shore
garden
clubs
have
been
invited
to meet
Mrs.
Packee
at 8 p.m. when
she will
demonstrate flower arranging.
Among
Mrs.
Packee’s
artistic
arrangements
will
be
some _ she
studied while on a visit to Japan.

Reserve captain in the 416th Engineer Brigade, and Maj. Bernard
Carroll of Lombard scout Camp McCoy, Wis. The two are making
arrangements for billeting and supplying the approximately 1500
troops which trained there June 12-28.

Kiawassa

A WEEK

INCLUDING

&amp; County Line Rd.

HOLIDAYS

VErnon 5-1611
Thursday, July’
9, ° 1959

�~

dR

a

,

se

32 271349 ae

a

4
ah”ITS No SECRET. 79 ouR NE Ww BUILDING- TAKEA LOOK: ae
a
5 a coma _«, 9000SAVERS INOUR FAMILY © :
18 S500

é

_ ARE You ONE?

o-.

~~

me @*

- accounts wsureo ~2

t

2

Fg

ce

ie) 700008

oe

9

o

i

©

A

mn

IT’S

NO

SECRET

@

DEERFIELD

SAVINGS’

new

@

DEERFIELD

SAVINGS

is the

@

DEERFIELD

SAVINGS

now

has

9,287

@

DEERFIELD

SAVINGS

will

pay

you

@

DEERFIELD

SAVINGS

is conveniently

@

DEERFIELD

SAVINGS’

accounts

We

home

ALSO

will be the showplace

largest

are

Savings

and

Loan

_prestienr Prine

that:

of Deerfield.
Association

in

Lake

County.

savers in our family.

a

dividend
located

insured

equal

in the

to any
heart

in the Chicago

of downtown

area.

Deerfield.

to $10,000.

will be glad to help you work out a systematic savings

plan to fit

your dreams and your available funds. To get some of the wonderful
things you want.... Ready, Set, SAVE at DEERFIELD SAVINGS!

DEERFIELD
SAVINGS

J4S DEERFIELDRD.

«

&amp; LOAN ASSOCIATION
Earnings Paid from the first of the month
on All Savings Received by the 10th.

DEERFIELD,

Windsor

OFFICE

HOURS:

ILL.

5-1911

Mon., Tues., Thurs., Fri. —- 8:30 to 4:00
Sat., 8:30 to 12:00
‘Fri. Eve., 6:00 to 8:00
Closed Wednesday

�T. N. T. is here = we’re celebrating with BIG values for you!

Wash’n

better
summer

Wear

sleepwear

Jamaica

Shorts

Have

these

quality

herringbone
bamboo,

green,

wonderful

shorts

July Specials

in
twill

red,

in

black

or yarn

poplin

in blue, pink or
stripes

on

Wear

Perma-Lift

stitched

white.

rey
in a

10-18.
(Fashion

Wash’n

dyed

green
Sizes

new

or

Corner)

firm

a

eee

cup

bra

reg. 5.95 - 6.95

Pee entrees. rey ever wend

Sale

bra! No-gap sides, magic insets in cups for
uplift, Neveride diaphragm
band are only

few

of

reg.

the

Priced.......

features.

2.50

|

vhesccclae

3.95

|

4.95

Toreador

aan

(Foundations)

&amp;

Waltz

|

Baby

)

J's

Gowns
Dolls

(Lingerie)

shop

tonite

(Thurs.)

until

9 - shop

tonite

(Thurs.)

until

9 - shop

tonite

(Thurs.)

until

9

special
purchase !

&amp; Remnant

Sale
cottons,
drip

synthetics,
drys,

even

some wools in this
big

collection.

:

greatly reduced.
(Downstairs

Store)

All

Summer
Pajamas
1.

Dainty

dolls for
MRE)

cotton

plastic
batiste

pedo
‘

baby

girls 8-10-12.
cs Ares 1.99

or your
kitchen

2. Little Nurse
embossed
cotton pajamas
need
no ironing.

Breadbox and matching
jar in white or pastels.

Sizes 3 to 7.
OG. TRE: Scie
eas oo 1.39

Beadbox,

2.88

(Children's)

Cookie
(Gift

you'll

find

cannister

it in Highland

jar,

set

and

Cannister

set,

cookie
2.44

1.07

Shop)

Park

at

arnétt « Co,

Two

Hours

Free

Parking

in our

lot - Store

Hours

9 to 5:30

daily; Thursdays

9 to 9

�</text>
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                    <text>LO?
Thursday
July

2,

1959

lot

verticld Keview

O’er

‘Long

May

It Wave

The

Land

Of

And The Home

The

Free

Of The Brave

�Special mid-year bonus

The

from

big bank

that grew

up with Highland

Park

Money
deposited by

|

JULY 10
will receive

interest from

pits!
To

help

you

take

advantage

of our

new 3% interest rate, all money you deposit

in your First National

Savings Account

by July 10 will receive interest from July 1.

It’s

a

from

just

like

capitalize

on

getting

10-day

bonus

the

First

National.

We

hope

you

it.

The

,

BBS HIRST NATIONAL BANK
Complete Banking
and

Trust

of

High

la nd

Park

Member The Federal Reserve System

Servi

The Federal Deposit Insurance

Weekend

banking
Closed

hours:

Friday

all day

8:30

am

this Saturday,

- 2:00

pm

The

Fourth

&amp; 5:30
of July

pm

- 8:00

pm

Corporation

‘

�Vol.

34, No.

Thursday,

17

July

2, 1959
y

Referendum

To

Be

Held

August

Deerfield Village Manager Resigns
Gives Board 90-Day Notice
Village Proclaims

15

Additional Funds Needed By School
District 110 For Building Program
“Construction
the present

in process and planned

Wilmot

site require

new

additional

construction

funds,”

said

at

Vernon

Trabert, Future Plans Chairman of School District 110. “For
that reason,” he continued, “the Wilmot School Board is set-

ting the date for the next bond issue referendum for August 15.
Additional funds are needed to
complete and equip Woodland Park
and South Park Schools and provide
for the building of Junior High fa-

Deerfield Ordinance
Prohibits Fireworks
An

ordinance

in

Deerfield

cilities

at

referendum

board

The

} displays which are licensed may be
permitted

The

by the

contemplated

Any person, firm or corporation
violating any of the provisions of
this article shall be fined not less
than two dollars nor more than two
hundred dollars for each offense;
and
a separate
offense shall be
»deemed
committed
on
each
day
during or on which a violation ocA. curs or continues.
4%

James

Mitchell,

Deerfield

Public

Exams To Be Given
For New Policemen

William

"John

are

Hun-

and

Darrell

Anderson,

an-

August

15

was

of

29,

sentenced

to

two

prison hospital at Springfield, Mo.
and receive psychiatric care, as

Child Injured In
Tree

of the

board,

years
in prison,
last Friday,
in
Federal
District
Court
for
the
$2,115 robbery of the Lake Forest
Savings and Loan Association on
March 3.
He will serve his term in the

Hertel.

) Fall From

On

Seney,

Deerfield,

REVIEW.

commissioners

president

Two Year Seniteformerly

Po-

Applications must be filed at the
Village Hall on or before Thurs,day, July 9. The legal notice apPolice

Pool

Parks

House
age

814,

of

recommended by Judge P. L. Sullivan.
Seney, the father of three children, confessed that he used a toy

Skokie, Ill., was a guest Monday at
in
the
robbery.
Frank
the Gordon T. Reynertson home, pistol
, 1410 Woodridge Rd. The children Whalen, the bank teller, died of a
of that neighborhood had built a heart attack shortly after the robtree house

bery.

on a vacant lot and were

playing there.
Darrell

fell

out

of

the

tree,

a

drop of approximately 20 to 30 feet,
receiving a broken leg and fractured jaw, according to the police
report by Officers Thomas Rogge
and Paul Kaehler. The fire depart-

ment rescue squad took the child
_ to the Highland Park Hospital.

Deerfield
To

Be

Village

Closed

Hall

Tomorrow

The Deerfield Village Hall will
be closed all day Friday, July 3,
due t&gt; the holiday on the following
day, wccording to a bulletin from

Royce.

Owens,

village

manager.

Water Regulations

come

Deerfield water consumption exceeds the capacity of the public
water system. Storage facilities are

not

adequate

future

to meet

present

and

requirements.

President Eldon Holmquist proclaims restrictions because of the
hazard of fire and endangering of
public health and welfare. If water
pressure
falls
below
35
pounds
pressure
at
the
Highland
Park
source, no water
except
for domestic purposes inside of homes,
can be used. Special notice will be

broadcast

by

police

and _ loud

speakers.
Lawn
sprinkling
is
regulated
(unless notified) during this emergency so that the hours are from
6 a.m. to 12 noon and from 9 p.m.
to midnight on alternating days.
Those whose street addresses are
on the odd numbered side of the
street may
sprinkle
on the
odd
numbered days of the month. Those
who
live on the even numbered
side of the street may sprinkle on
the even
numbered
days
of the
month.

Golf

courses,

businesses,

parks

and schools may sprinkle between
midnight and 6 a.m.
The legal notice, published today,
explains the fines for those arrested and violating the regulations.

John Seney Gets

lish an eligibility list for prospec-

ter Johnson, Hubert N. Kelley

due

The referendum is to be held at
Wilmot
the
as
time
same
the
School has its bond issue, Saturday,
August 15, with polling places at
Grammar
Deerfield
and
Wilmot
Schools from 12 noon until 7 p.m.

The Deerfield Board
of Police
Commissioners will hold examina,tions on Saturday, July
11 at 1
p.m. in the Village Hall to estab-

in today’s

issue,

nounces a referendum on a $295,000 bond issue for acquisition of
three parcels of land for schoolpark sites and another bond issue
(amount not as yet determined) to
build a community swimming pool
in Jewett Park.
Vote

spears

bond

And Swimming

doing, any fireworks in the village.

Deerfield

Necessary

Park Board To Hold
Referendum For Land

No person shall sell or offer for
sale, or keep for the purpose of so

the

ad-

The school board and the park
board have been working together
very closely and both plan to have
a referendum on the same day.

cured from the Chief of Police. All
, such public displays shall be under
the supervision of a competent person, and shall be superintended by
the Chief of Police or some member of the police department
assigned to this duty by him.

on

school

the

to the higher assessed valuation of
the total school district, however,
will not effect the bond retirement
tax rate.

No public exhibition of fireworks
or pyrotechnics shall be given un» less a permit therefor is first se-

tive positions
lice Force.

the

This

The rapid growth in the Wilmot
School
District
110
requires
expanded facilities for upper grades
for classes starting in the fall of
1960. Plans for this expansion are
now in the discussion phase
and
upon their completion will be released to the Deerfield REVIEW.

Ordinance

time

give

Expansion

of-

It shall be unlawful to discharge
_ or set off any fireworks, or give or
exhibit any pyrotechnic displays in
the village, excepting that public
given at any
license.

will

site.

ditional funds.

pro-

each

Wilmot

authority to provide

hibits the firing of fireworks in the
village and the fine for
fence is from $2 to $200.

the

_ Royce W. Owens, Deerfield village manager, has submitted
his resignation to Eldon Holmquist, village president, to be-

Deerfield Police
Warn Motorists To

Drive Carefully
Police Chief David J. Petersen
said today that the Deerfield Police Department
will join forces
with state and county authorities
during the July 4 holiday in a full
scale crackdown on traffic law violators.
Chief Petersen said his men and
equipment will be on patrol constantly during the 54-hour holiday
watching
for
violators
who
endanger the lives and property of
other drivers.
“Traffic
violators
in Deerfield
can expect no leniency from any
officers,’ Chief Petersen said. “I
have
instructed
the men
to dispense with any practice of issuing
warning tickets and to arrest violators on the spot.”
“I’m convinced that the best way
to cut down on holiday accidents
is to apprehend careless drivers before they get themselves involved
in a situation they can’t cope with,”

he declared.

Appointed

To County

Red

Committee

Cross

effective

Mr. Owens
Jan. 1, 1958

Minn.
Rupp.

He

In

his

Owens

succeeded
letter

of

30.

to Deerfield on
Golden Valley,

Marwood

F.

resignation,

Mr.

states:

“Under the council-manager type
of government it is common practice NOT to have standing commit-

tees. A recent survey showed that
80% of the communities having the
council-manager
form
of government do not wish standing committees. ..
“It was my understanding when
I was employed that the principles

of

the

council-manager

form

of

|:

government would be adhered to
in the interests of efficiency, good
government
and
in the
over-all
best interests
of the citizens
of

Deerfield.
“Since
this has
not been
the
case I have come to the conclusion
that I must submit my resignation
effective Sept. 30, 1959.”
His concluding paragraph:
“T urgently recommend that the

Royce
“T have

held

W.

Owens

this

resignation

for

citizens of Deerfield decide through

some days while I have had several

a referendum, whether or not they
wish the council-manager form of
government and that, in the mean-

long and searching conversations
with Royce. .. . He doesn’t want to

time,

the

board

relieve

the

leave, in the true sense, but he believes he should.”

man-

ager of the duty of operating under an archaic system and adopt
the Manager
Ordinance
substantially as proposed by Frank Koehler in his report of Dec. 26, 1958.”
President Holmquist States
President Holmquist, in his let-

Mr. Holmquist’s letter,
quite lengthy, points out

ter
the

out systemitizing

dated June 26, addressed
six members of the board

streets

many

trials

cleared

of

snow

last

treatment plant, etc. He also points

to
of

of office routines.

In another letter to the trustees,
Mr. Holmquist writes that he will

be out of town for the next regular —
village board meeting. July 8. He
hopes that much will be accomplished. . . “You’ve got an immediate agenda sufficient to choke a

initial

May.”
He continued, “I have one other
Certainly the committee
thought.
could arrange to give the manager
more responsibility and power of

meeting

him

in your

employ.”

DEERFIELD VILLAGE BOARD AGENDA
ING
IS LENGTHY FOR JULY 8 MEET
Wednesday, July
The Deerfield Village Board will meet
18 items

on the

agenda

on June

of the board
and

only three items were acted upon.
Holmquist,
Eldon
was
Presiding
village president and the trustees
were Arno Wehle, Harold Peterson
and Maurice Petesch. Absent were
Trustees Joseph Koss, John Aberson and Winston Porter.

a quorum

was

24 there

present,

board.

lage or city. Mr. Koss came into
the meeting later that evening with

lots.

The

developer

has

but

already

sewer
permits
for
36
field that day attending a session received
houses instead of the 39 he requestof the legislature in the interests
ed. He had received a letter from
of Deerfield to prevent the passage
Edwin M. White of St. Gregory’s
of Bill No. 1499 which would allow
David
J.
Petersen,
Deerfield
Church
board
stating
that
the
Chief of Police, attended the Illi- dumping of garbage near a commudid not want
any of the
nois Police Chiefs
conference
in nity against the wishes of that vil- church

Attends Police Chief
Conference In Quincy

Quincy

last Thursday.

discussed

was

The

“Narcotics.”

subject

|

ee

8, a

a good report on his trip.
Max Weinrib of Progress Development Corp. had presented plats
for Floral Gardens subdivision at
Wilmot and Deerfield Rds. to the
Plan Commission, which came up
for
approval
before
the
village

Trustee Koss had been in Spring-

~

in

decision. . . He must be the ad-ministrator as long as you have,

ahead.

at 8 p.m. in the Village Hall.
At an adjourned meeting

ae

cow,” the letter states, “and almost
nothing has been done since the

preciation.
“Some of you and I remember
went
we
difficulties
sore
the
through not long ago when we were
searching for a manager. I sincerely hope we don’t have that same
drawn out process again, yet I forsee

were

which is
how the

winter,
physical
improvements
made to properties of the Village
Hall,
municipal
garage,
sewer

trustees, states:
“Tt is with genuine regret that
I hand you herewith the resignation of our village manager, Royce
W. Owens. You will see that he has
given us 90 days notice, which I
believe to be a most generous gesture on his part and one which we
should accept readily and with ap-

were

Irl H. Marshall of 1100 Waukegan Rd. has been appointed chairman of the new building committee
for the Lake
County
Red
Cross
chapter.

on Sept.

came
from

The Wilmot School District
(Continued on page 4)

�Briarwood Country Club Improvement Program

From The President's Desk ...
To

The

Residents

of Deerfield:

LAST WEEK OUR VILLAGE PLANNER presented at
an open meeting, the final report on the comprehensive plan for
Deerfield. This is the result of almost a year’s work and is the

professional viewpoint

of what

would

be

lage of Deerfield in the years to come.
hands of the Plan Commission for
study. They should study it minutely and then report to the Board
of Trustees on their. recommendations, after which there will be a
public hearing, or a series of them
if necessary.
IT WAS
DISAPPOINTING
that
there
was
an
audience
of
only
seven persons at the final workshop
meeting at which the Planner pre‘sented the final plan. It was significant that none
of the Trustees
of the Board were there. It seems
a
shame
that
we
would
spend
several
thousands
of
dollars
to

have

this

survey

made,

and

then

no one show up for the presentation. I realize that people probably
are waiting for the public hearings,

but

it seems

more

interesting

to

me to hear the background of the
presentation. Good questions were

asked

from

the

floor,

and

good

answers were given. About an hour
and a half was spent in discussion

after the presentation.
*

*

little to dispute
*

it.

*

*

I GENEUINELY
REGRET
the
decision of our Village Manager,
Royce Owens, to leave Deerfield.
Not only do I think we suffer a
serious loss in the departure of the
person, but I also think the Village
suffers a loss in time and money
that it can ill afford to take. We
have had too much
turn over in
this
job,
and
the _ subsequent
changes in other jobs as a result of
the one. I don’t believe there is
anything we can do to keep Mr.
Owens here, but there are things
we can do to make sure that we
don’t go through this same turnover again in the near years. The
issue is squarely in the hands of
the Board, and I hope they’ll take
the proper remedial action.
%

%

*

THE ENGINEERING
on the expansion of the water system now
proposes an underground water reservoir, The exact location has not

been

decided

upon,

but

a tank

of

capacity
sufficient
to hold
more
than
a day’s supply
of water is
thought of. This should not add too
much to the expense of the system,
but the collateral benefits are numerous. The tank can be buried, and

then the area covered

and used for

park, landscaping, parking, or playground. A public hearing will be
held on this proposal shortly.
*

*

*

Have a safe and sane and happy
Fourth
of July. Come
to Jewett
Park
and watch the young folks

in

their

baseball

games.

They’re

great fun, and you’ll get a lot of
fresh
air watching,
(and
sun,
I
hope). And, don’t forget to put out
your flag for the day.

:

Eldon
,
Page

4

», Village

for the

Vil-

Highland

Park Plans

Independence Day
Celebration Saturday
The combined
service organizations of Highland Park are sponsoring an old fashioned Independence

Day

celebration

on

Saturday,

July

4, beginning with a flag ceremony
at the corner of Central and St.
John’s Aves. followed by a parade

to Sunset Park.
Deerfield

Invited

The Highland Park Jaycees are
doing the same thing that the Deerfield Jaycees did recently with such
success. They are preparing barbe-

cued

chicken

dinners,

boxed,

to

carry out at Sunset Park.
Among the Deerfield men participating in the Fourth of July affair
are Russell Hanson, Keith Beyer,
John Paul Jones, John Riggio, with
Dr. Ira M. Niederman as publicity
chairman inviting local residents to

gate.

Work is beginning for the renovation of Briarwood Country Club, formerly known as BrierBarancik, Conte and Associates are the architects and this sketch shows the new swimming

pool, bath house,
bath house area.

Holmquist
President

More

Money

Pay

Received

To

For Village Hall

Opinions

The one-half of one cent of the
three-cent sales tax, which is received monthly from Illinois State
treasurer,
Joseph D. Lohman,
amounting
to $3,623.89 for Deerfield for the month of March, 1959
sales,
was
sent
to
Deerfield
in
June.
This fund is designated, by
ordinance, to be used to pay off the
$175,000 bond issue for the construction of the Village Hall.

VILLAGE
(Continued

110 will receive

BOARD
from

page

3)

$350 from

the

de-

veloper for each completed house.
Trustee Koss is to receive a letter
from
the
Wilmot
School
board
verifying the approval.
Village
attorney,
Thomas
Matthews,
was
authorized
to defend
the village in a suit where the U.S.
Fidelity and Guaranty Co., an insurer, seeks to collect $215 on behalf of Kimber
Baracani,
son of
Mrs. Nadine Baracani of 824 Chest-

nut

St.

In

1957,

when

the

child

was 14, he is reported to have been
injured because of a “faulty sidewalk.” The case is to be tried in
a justice of peace court in Skokie.
The emergency water restriction
ordinance was passed which provides fines of from $2 to $200 for
each offense. The legal notice is
published today,
Deerfield Lads Invited
To Golf Tournament
Deerfield boys under 18 years of
age are invited to participate in a
golf tournament on Monday, July

6 sponsored

by the Highland

Jaycees
at Sunset
time is 9 a.m.

Park.

Park

Tee-off

Trains To Run On Sunday
Schedule On Saturday
The

that

Milwaukee

its

suburban

Road

train

between

Chicago, Deerfield, Fox Lake and
Walworth will be operated on Sunday schedules on Saturday, July 4.
Secretary Of State Reports
Drivers License Changes

bar

and

expressed

in

parking

have

these

solumns do not necessarily constitute the opinions of the paper.
Letters
should
be brief and
Cites
To

lot.

The

new

club

house

Tennis

the

Court

Need

Editor:

tennis
courts
erected
somewhere
for the young
people who
enjoy
this activity. For my part, I should
much
prefer seeing the youth of
Deerfield gathered ’round a tennis
court than a pistol range, any day.
The
courts
back
of
Deerfield
grammar
schoo!
are entirely
inadequate.
Not only are they not
large enough, but the last time I
was up there I found the nets in
deplorable
condition,
and anyone
who plays tennis will teil you that
good tennis can only be played on

clay

courts.

tennis

Cement

is ruinous

to

ball.

There are some of us in Deerfield who
cannot
afford
country
clubs—in fact there are a lot of
us. So if the taxpayer’s money is
to be spent on gun ranges, then I
think. there should’ be some consideration for those badly needed
tennis courts.
I cannot think of a
village anywhere
in this vicinity
which has not provided good clay
tennis courts for their young people.
And
I reiterate—how
could
$10,500 possibly have been spent
in the Village Hall basement, which
I understand already had some provisions made in its building for a
pistol range?
As a taxpayer who
helped pay for this pistol range, I
feel I am entitled to some explanation.
Just Another Taxpayer

Confusing

Situation

To

the Editor:
When we open our mail in the
morning at the bank there will be
one or more requests for donations
to worthy
funds—other
mail
deliveries during the day may bring
more.
When
we
arrive
home
at
night there are bound to be more.

What

should

be

our

stand

on

300 words.

this

Secretary
of State
Charles
F.
Carpentier reports actions in the
drivers license division which suspended
the license of Chase
M.
Smith of 708 Indian Hill Rd. and

—do
these
continued
heavy
demands puzzle you as they do us?
We feel we should contribute to the
Community
Fund
(or the United

granted a probation permit to Howard W. Green of 730 Central Ave.

Fund, we find trouble in keeping
up with the names) both in Deer

be

located

The long-range

when

Briarwood

They

will be withheld if requested

a project), maybe we can have some

a

less than

will

gram,

should contain the name and address of the writer, whose name

Now that we have spent $10,500
on a pistol range in Deerfield (and
for the life of me I cannot imagine
how $10,500 could be spent on such

A

announces

snack

DEERFIELD FORUM

attend.

*

THERE
APPEAR
TO BE.many
persons still hesitant about approving the sanitary landfill method of
reclaiming the property now used
by the brickyard. The plan as pro‘posed by Joseph Koss has unlimit‘ed merit and is completely feasible
for our town. I suggest that interested persons seek material on the
subject
of sanitary landfill from
the libraries, and study it before
we go ahead. I’m certain that a little research by interested persons
will remove many doubts the persons might have as to the advisability of the operation. The success of the countless towns over
the country on this method of reclamation
bears
out our plan.
I
sincerely believe that the proposal
has everything to recommend
it,

and

desirable

The report is now in the

field where we live and Chicago
where we work.
Somehow we seem to recall that
a few years ago some such fund
was organized to take care of all
the demands—but what happened?
The heart group, the cancer group,
the infantile paralysis people, the
tuberculosis people tell us that they
are not identified with the community group and that we should
contribute to them independently.
Apparently they somehow come out
better financially when they make
separate drives, but do we?
Then there is the question as to
whom
we
should
give
in these
groups.
In
the
field
of
raising
money for cancer there are at least
five competing groups—do we pick
one or two or spread our contributions over five? There are four organizations that collect for mental
illness, there are nineteen in the
field of blindness—besides we have
some of our own private charities
connected with our church which
we feel sure we should help with
our limited funds. There are the
numerous tag days—the poppy days
(a couple of weeks ago we ended
up buying five poppies as our suburb and other suburbs in which we
shopped and Chicago all held their
drives on different days.
We
know nothing about where
the
money
goes
although
that
doubtless is our own fault because
we have never inquired. We have
been
told
that
one
organization
spends 81c to raise $1—this must,
however, be the exception. But it
all comes back to this: how can a
man of limited means, which is certainly our position, decide where to
contribute?
As the appeals grow
in number we get more confused
—does it bother you, too?
A Chicago Banker

improvement

completed,
Country

for Independence Day. in De:-rfield.

will

Club

prox|

make*%

of

Deer-

golf

courses in
reported.

it

David

the

Chicago

area,

Fisher, president,

construction of the
swimming pool, bath

is

said that

new
heated
house, tennis

court, snack bar, and parking lot is
scheduled to be finished in August.
He added that architectural plans
are nearly complete for improving
the golf course and the construction of a new club house.
Architect
Richard
Barancik
of
Barancik,
Conte,
and
Associates,
said he will use stone and greystained redwood for both the bath
house and snack bar. These circular
structures will have exposed steel
framing and will be painted white.
He stated that the most modern
safety factors will be employed ix
constructing the pool, which will
have underwater lights, and a wa
ing pool for children. Modern light®
ing will ring the large deck area.
The pool area will be fenced.
B. H. Handler Construction Co. is
building
the pool, bath house, tennis court, snack bar, and parking
lot.

Fisher said the nearly complete)
plans for the golf course include
17
new
tees
for the
6,300-yard
women’s course and the 7,000-yard
championship back course. Many of
the old traps will be eliminated,
and new traps set out for long hitters. A few of the holes will be redesigned, and several new greens
will be built.
The course will have two lakes
which will also serve as a reservoir
for the new watering system now

being

designed

for Briarwood.

The Public Press, no less than Publi¢
Office,

is a public

trust.

DEERFIELD
REVIEW
Thursday,

July

2,

1959

Vol.

34,

No.

17

Published Weekly every Thursday
PUBLICATION

Looking north in Jewett Park,
the E. H. Selig memorial fountain
is in the foreground. The flag is
flying majestically from
the tall
slender pole and in the background
is the field house.
No patriotic services are pianned

the

field, one of the most modern

699

On The Cover

behind

Waukegan

DEERFIELD,
608

OFFICE

Road

ILLINOIS

Telephone Windsor 5-4500
HIGHLAND
PARK
OFFICE
Laurel Ave., Highland Park,
Telephone ID 2-4500

Ill.

MEMBER
National
Editorial Association
Illinois Press Association
Local Subscription Rates—$3.50 per year
Domestic Rate—$5.00 per year
Single Copies—15c¢
Foreign Rates on Application.
‘‘Entered as.second-class matter November 27, 1944, at the post office at Deerfield, Illinois, under the Act of March 8,
1879,"
:

Thursday, July 2, 1959

i

�The Veatch Family Packs Up For Vacation

| Chamber of Commerce

Gives Check To Boys
Baseball Pregram
The Deerfield Chamber of Commerce, at its June dinner meeting
in the Legion Hall, voted $100 for
the Deerfield Boys Baseball prosram. Speakers that evening were
Joseph
Peyronnin
and
Warren
Flint, who told of the 509 boys now
in the baseball program
as compared
to 120 boys when
it was
started seven years ago.
They explained that expenses for
equipment, uniforms, and supplies
for this year had amounted to $4,000 and insurance was $850 and
that there was a big deficit. They
were given permission to solicit the
various
merchants
for
additional
funds.

The

Prep

team,

made

up of the

16 and 17 year olds is sponsored by
Duraclean Co. Some of the larger
local businesses also sponsor teams.
There was a discussion about the
parking problem, which they stated
had continued without solution for
five years.
They
also remarked

that

Mr.
Randall,

they

packed

Benefit

Pau! D. Veatch and their three children, David, 7 months; Paul Jr., age 6, and
670 Pine St. were just like many other Deerfield neighbors last month when

Mrs.
3, of

and
age

up for a vacation

Dance

Is Big

DEERFIELD-BANNOCKBURN VOLUNTEER
FIREMEN GET 11 CALLS IN JUNE
During the month of June the Deerfield-Bannockburn Fire

Protection District, in a report by Fire Chief Fred Grabo, listed

4

11 calls, with three for the rescue squad truck and one inhalator,
» one electric motor fire, and six brush pile fires.

“hit the child, who was in the street,
but was not seriously hurt.
There were three calls on June
8, with two brush fires at 1210
Warrington
Rd.
(rear)
and
at
Colwyn and Blackthorn, both started by Valenti Builders employees;

and

a

smoking

motor

at

Central

Food store.
On June 13 a pile of burning
trash
at
1426
Warrington
Rd.
brought out the fire department,
$ and another brush fire at Colwyn
and Wincanton
by employees
of
Valenti Builders.
k
A brush fire at 1100 Park Ave.
was extinguished on June 16 and
a log fire at 1163 Holly Ln. on

June

19

on

the

Schladt

property.

The inhalator was taken to the
»A.
E. Dodge
home,
558 Mallard
Ln. on June 21 when Mr. Dodge
phad
a heart
attack
and
passed

The firemen appreciate the cooperation given by the public in
making their benefit dance a success.

Police
On

Pick

Up

Margate

Monkey

Terrace

Officer Glenn Koets was called
to the home of Mrs. T. R. Roth, 330
Margate Terr., when a monkey was
found in the Roth garage, Saturday
afternoon about 4 p.m.
The monkey was taken to Morton
Grove
where
stray dogs
are impounded
and
the
owner,
whose
name
was
not
known,
appeared
Monday to pick up her pet.

Called

To

Duluth

Mrs. August Rodaniche
of Ash
St., in Deerfield
Manor, west of
Deerfield,
was
called
to Duluth,
Minn.,
last week
because
of the
death of her mother, Mrs. G. Kornstad, 76.

# away.
Children
were
involved
in accidents on June 22 and June 29.
On the 22nd
at 1045 Fair Oaks
Ave., Root and
Gardini
children

‘were
taken

hit

by

to

the

an

automobile

Highland

Park

and
Hos-

* pital. On the 29th, Darrell Anderson, age 814, of Skokie fell from
a tree hut, near 1405 Warrington
Rd., broke a leg and fractured his
jaw.
The
rescue
squad
removed
the child to Highland Park Hos-

r pital.
‘;
The fire chief made inspections
y during
the month
at the Briarwood Country Club, Christian Science Church
and
National
Food
store. Fire hydrants were also in-

spected.
The

day

annual

evening

dance,

at

the

given

Satur-

fire

station

» Was well attended and many prizes
were given. Chief Grabo states that
the books will be open until August

1

and

those

who

have

not

sent

their checks are urged to do so.
Funds received are used for equipment.
The immediate
need
is a

drying tower for the hoses.
Thursday,

July

2, 1959

fire

hydrant

in

the

IGA

there,
alhad prom-

ised to remove it.
There was dissatisfaction voiced
about the signs at the four corners

trip.

Success

On June 6 at 1160 Myrtle Lane,
the firemen took Jerry Grimshaw,
age 2% to the Highland Park Hospital. A car had backed
up and

a

driveway
still
stands
though village officials

Walks

Dog

On

School

Grounds

Monday morning, about 8 o’clock,
a young woman in blue shorts was
walking a big black shaggy dog on
Kipling Pl. right on the KiplingDeerfield
Grammar
School
property. There are fines when arrests
are made for this offense.

Street Numbers Get
Changed Around
Mrs.
A. R.
Cantagallo
of
Hermitage
Dr.
reports
that
street number was taken over

weekend

651
her
the

and in its place the num-

ber 731 was left by someone evidently playing a prank. Since there
is no 731 in her neighborhood she
is wondering to whom
it belongs
and if they have her 651.

Deerfield Man Named To
Cook County Polio Fund
Joseph

H.

Payne

of

703

Byron

Ct., has been named to the executive committee of the Cook County
chapter of the National Foundation,
March of Dimes.

But ... before
leaving,
they
made careful preparations so that
their home would not be burglarized while they were away.
Deerfield Police Chief David J.
Petersen, concerned about housebreaking, states that the week of
June 28 through July 4 is being observed
as
Burglary
Prevention
Week,
as proclaimed
by
Village
President Eldon Holmquist.
“This is not just another ‘week’,”’
Chief Petersen emphasized. “It is
being held in conjunction with a
state-wide program by the Illinois
Police Association .to educate the
public on how they can help reduce
burglary losses.”
Leave No Tell-Tale Signs
The Veatches were very careful
to leave no tell-tale signs that their
house was empty last month. They
stopped all deliveries from coming
to the house; (2) provided for care
of lawn; (3) arranged for someone
to pick up mail; (4) locked all exterior
doors
and
windows;
(5)
notified a close neighbor and' police
to watch to see that nobody removed anything from the premises; (6)
left windows partly uncovered; (7)
did not leave notes in the mailbox
for prospective guests announcing
that they were gone;
(8) left no
ladders or tools lying outside.
No House
Is Burglar-Proof
Referring
to the empty
house,
Chief Petersen
states. that there
is no such
thing
as a “burglarproof’’ house but there are steps to
take to keep burglary at a minimum.
He
advises
an automatic
light
with a timer for evening; (2) pintumbler cylinder locks on exterior
doors; (3) put valuables in a safe
deposit box with a record of all
serial numbers . . . in addition to
the eight safety measures taken by
the Veatches.
Chief Petersen advises all residents to be careful and plan in
advanee
for
the
departure.
He
states that motorists should have
a valid driver’s license with the
correct address on it.

Tennaqua To Have
Tennis Exhibition
Sunday Afternoon
Members of Club Tennaqua will
have an opportunity to see some
excellent
tennis
played
at their
club on Sunday, July 5, at 3:30 p.m.,
according to an announcement by
E. J. Raley.
Marty Riessen, 17 year old hold-

welcoming

people

to

the

village.

President Arthur C. Ullmann said
he would invite the painter of the
signs to the next meeting.
The
signs had cost $185 and the complaint was that they could not be
read.
Eldon Holmquist, village
dent, was voted an associate
ber of the Chamber.

presimem-

James
DiPietro
was
asked
to
start the committees of the various
civic organizations
of the village
into action so that plans for Deerfield Family Day
can be formulated.
The date will probably be

the

Sunday

though no
the date.

after
one

Labor

seemed

Day,

certain

alas to

Deerfield Manor
Home Owners Ass’n
Discusses Problems

Deerfield Woman
Escapes Hotel Fire
In Norway
Miss

Madeleine

Linden
Ruth
on

Ave.

Norberg

a tour

Urelius

and

a

of

friend,

of Skokie,

of Europe,

1132

Miss

who

were

escaped

from

the fire which destroyed the Stahlheim Hotel in Vossestrand, Norway

on June 23.
Miss

Miss

h

Urelius

Mary

her

McMurtrie,

she lives, and

traveling

called

with whom

told how

companion

friend,

she and her

slid

down

rope from their third floor
room.
Their
only
injuries
rope burns on their hands.

a

hotel
were

They grabbed their purses when
they fled. They traveled the 200
miles
to Oslo,
Norway,
clad
in
pajamas. Their hand luggage and
clothing was destroyed in the fire.
Trunks
and
heavier luggage had

not been

checked

into the hotel.

W. J. Loarie Has
Eioht Paintings In

Chicago Exhibit
Willard J. Loarie of 853 Oxford
Rd. has eight paintings in the ex-

hibition by members
ter Thompson

Co.

of the J. Wal.

painting class on

the 13th floor North Wrigley Building,

which

began

continues
is open

to July

June

17

15. The

and

exhibit

to the public.

The
group
has
been
studying
one night a week through the past

fall,

winter

and

spring

supervision of Claude
temporary painter.

under

Bentley,

the
con-

Mr. Loarie’s pictures, listed from
23 through 30 are titled ‘‘Montmarte,
Paris,”
‘“Ibizia—Balearic
Islands,” ‘‘Moret-sur-Loing (Seineet-Marne),” ‘California Street-San

Francisco,” ‘Cherokee, Colorado,”
“Still Life,” “Honolulu Docks,” and
“Swift and Silent.’

The Deerfield Manor Home Owners Association held a meeting last
Sunday.
The report
of the ways
and means committee was given.
Gus Pekara is heading the Little
Leaguers for the Manor. He suggested that land
offered for the
baseball diamond
be cleared and
prepared
so the boys coulda play
ball near home.
Action was taken to enforce the
ruling
against
B-B
guns.
Complaints
had
‘been
received
that
birds were being shot. A list of
violators will be turned over to the
deputies for action.
The first inspection
of ditches
showed
that several
places
have
not conformed to the rule which requires
a growth
of grass before
funds can be released for oiling
the roads. The secretary of the association was instructed to contact
the inspector so that the seeding
can be done by the group if the individuals are unable to do so at this
time.
Women of the Manor have joined
forces with the River Woods
Association in opposing a request for
a cement
factory
near Deerfield
(Continued on page 42)

er of four national
titles and
a
member of the U.S. Davis Cup Junior Squad, will appear against his
father, Clare Riessen, tennis coach
at Northwestern University.
Mr. Raley states that
sen and Marty are well
Chicago
tennis
circles
fine exhibitions.

—

Miss Urelius and Miss Norberg
are on a travel tour and plan to
continue the five-week trip through
Europe.

B LOCAL

TRADEMARKS

The

«am

suit,

cleaned

the

AL-

PHA way always wins praise.
ALPHA

dry cleaning

efficient and
isfying.

is safe,

completely

sat-

Try it today.
FOR

THOSE WHO CARE

FIRST COMPLETE
CLEANING PLANT
un CPEERFIELD

Mr. Riesknown in
for their

Page 5

�STOP IN THIS WEEK-END AND SAVE DURING
Our Annual

Mens

Summer

CLOTHING

SALE

Our entire stock of lightweight suits,

sportcoats and slacks will be reduced!
A HUGE SELECTION OF SUITS WILL BE REDUCED TO

$46

om

§ 52

-«

$62

A HUGE SELECTION OF SPORTCOATS WILL BE REDUCED TO

326 ~~ 336
A HUGE SELECTION OF SLACKS WILL BE REDUCED TO

39
A large group of regular weight
SU

iTS

for a limited

time

Our entire stock of regular weight
$49

and

$59

SLA

C K S

for a limited

time

20%

off

Since no more lightweight clothing will be added to our stock,
the earlier you shop the better will be your selection.

SIE NEECEREERESECEEEERE
WATCH

FOR...

ET.N.T.z
SANIH0U00905500000052
Open Monday and Thursday Evenings From 7 - 9
All normal

995
Page

6

Central

Avenue

alterations will be free

ID 2-5300

Highland

Park
Thursday,

July

2, 1959

�"hy

“

ae

sina
RT
a

K

atk

nee

2

piles

'
ay

2

Hy

Benefit Scheduled

... Elect Officers Monday
Rotarians

Monday

honored

president, and Phillip
urer throughout many

Dr.

Albert

At the same luncheon, a regularly scheduled
meeting,
these new
officers were installed:
Edwin A. Schwechel, president;
John
Cortesi, vice president; Arthur
Ropiequet,
secretary;
Bruce
Johnson, assistant secretary; Nafe
Larson, treasurer; and Percy Prior

‘and Phillip H. Ewens,

assistants to

the treasurer.
Named
to committees

club

service

are

John

director;

Dr.

William
S. Bradford,
attendance
chairman; A. E. Wolters, 1960 classification
chairman;
Henry
Ber-

chairman;

K. P.

(Conarchy, sergeant at arms chairman.
Dr. George
Wendel,
fellowship
director; Leo E. Hart, club welfare
chairman;
William Heuer, fellowship chairman; Ralph W. Snyder,
fines and frolic chairman; Edward
-A. Alder, music chairman.
Norman Hirsch, program and information; E. D. Gourley, club bulletin chairman;
Gerald
S. Dean,
program
chairman;
Norman
E.
Brown,
public
information
chairman; Glenn M. Harris, Rotary information and magazine chairman.

¥

Bruce

Johnson,

community

serv-

ice director; David Fritz, community
service
chairman;
George
Stone,
1960
scholarship
and
student loan chairman; Robert Black,
youth chairman.

-

Dr. Albert Slepyan, international
service director; Herman Anspach,
international service chairman.
Lyle Gourley, vocational service

_4director;

Chet

service

chairman,

Jones,

vocational

LF Youth Reports Car
Damaged In HPHS Lot
A 17-year-old Lake Forest youth
complained to Highland Park po‘lice Monday that he parked his car
in the Highland Park High School
parking lot from 9:20 to 11 am.
Monday and when he went to get
it, found someone had tried to drive
_it. The transmission had been made
inoperable.
ra

1 CHARTER BUSES
Schools —

FOR

Churches —

ANY

Ld

Clubs

OCCASION

Insured

Drivers

For Information call:

WI
DEERFIELD

5-3852
- HIGHLAND

TRANSIT,
.

their

retiring

PARK

INC.

a charm for her bracelet for her
in editing the Highlander, High-

Flag Raising July 4
Begins Scout Camp
Dedication Rites
Some
250 visitors composed
of
North
Shore Area Scout Council
members, leaders and other Scouters and their families, as well as
the 200 Scouts now at Ma-Ka-JaWan, will participate July 4 in the
dedication ceremonies marking
completion of the enlarged and improved camping facilities near Antigo, Wis.
Following the flag raising ceremony, the welcome will be given
by Carl Vorreiter of Wilmette, program chairman.

and

Robert

C.

Invitational

is

sponsoring

a

dinner and “Night of Sports”
July 11 at Sportsman’s Park.
go

Proceeds
toward

on

from the evening
support of Radio

medical

Brown

use

Highland

of

Radio

Park

Hospital.

Tickets

may

be

Bus

ID
ID

at

from
2-7107
2-6895.

service will be available from

Ravinia

Station.

stein, VE
bus

Mrs.

Herman

wee

*(Author’s

Name

but we

Competes

1300 Lincoln Ave. S, a past president and member of the regional
committee.
The program will include placing
of bronze plaques honoring donors,
many of whom come from the local area, and a tour of the camp’s
facilities.

went

mixtures,

Your

Match

Event

with

1692.

Schilke

Schmieg

of Evanswas

second

DS

WAR
M

vi

ON:
Gio
MER

Extra

with the

RIVERSIDE

TIRES

~

FOR

INSURANCE

CALL

WI 5-1383
HENRY HAKANEN
825

Deerfield

Rd., Deerfield

State Farm Mutual Automobile
Insurance Co.
State Farm Life Insurance Co.
State Farm Fire and Casualty Co.
HOME OFFICE—BLOOMINGTON, ILLINOIS

Thursday,

July 2, 1959

or

this

~

Dinners,

_

week.

as

President

Park Rotary

Also

honored

BY

Club

with

~

a

specially designed Past Treasurers’
diamond pin was PHIL EWING ~
who

served

for sO many

*

*

years.

*

definition

“Youthful

her

by

Judge

figure’”—some-

awom-

age.

*

warmest

and

MET

MRS.

*

7

congratulations

VIRGIL

to

RITACCA

and

PATRICIA

STUPEY

and ART and COLLEEN BEVINS

|

who

_

celebrate

their

anniversaries

Ae

*
*
*
Is his fine watch too dressy and
valuable for use during these active summer days ahead? ? ? A
good investment, and practical too,
would be our permanently guaranteed shockproof 17 jewel watch
with a lifetime mainspring. The
stainless steel case is water-resistant too! Only $24.50 as this
weeks’ Keeping Time Special. . .
You save over $10.00.

be

*

make

*

such

Me

__

we

a nice

NEHER

“walking

urday.

black tubetype 6.70-15
Plus Fed. Tax

couple!

and

JOHN

Our

to them.

down
very

the
best

aisle”
good

Sat-

wishes

Pais

*
*
*
Not in Webster: Dime—A Dollar with all the taxes taken out.
*
*
*

:

There’ll Be Some Changes Made:
Now,

for July

4th

outings

and

ull summer

driving,

you

can get the extra safety of Wards Nylon ''64”’ tires at
extra savings!
Nylon is the toughest tire cord made.
It withstands

heat,

moisture

bruises,

and

flex

fatigue

better. Yes, Nylon ''64” tires are better and stronger
than the tires that came on your new car! Order today.
Prices below

include Fed. Tax. Catalog

orders

only.

SIZE

BLACK
TUBETYPE

WHITE
TUBETYPE

BLACK
TUBELESS

7.50-14

_

_

$24.95

| $29.95

23.65

28.60

26.25

31.65

6.70-15

| $20.70 | $25.35

7.10-15

of

Ravinia

SLEPYAN

of the Highland

SHARON

WHITE
TUBELESS

23.30

28.25

Expert installation service available.
1854

FIRST
USE

ST.,

OUR

HIGHLAND

PARK

—Remember when Saturday was
“bath” day and Saturday nite was
the family

24-HOUR

nite for shopping?

after the war with

|

Then

the advent

of

the 5 day week, Friday became the
nite for shopping locally. And now
there has been a gradual change

Y

to where Friday has become a
“family” nite for social affairs, the
beginning of the week-end for so

|
~

many and in many cases it is an
evening for worship. It soon became
evident that more
people
could be served conveniently on
Thursday than on Friday... and
so,— after a careful study almost
all of the stores in Highland Park
will be changing from Friday to

~
;
—
—

And with the “TNT”
should see lots of our friends on
the

9th

when

the

|

is

switch-over

‘ u

made.

aan
IE
SSUAITAIIEREREEEHCOUCGUECOTREUHCRLE
ESRD

a

oe

WATCH

CONVENIENT

PHONE SERVICE

—PHARMACISTS—

Park

Chicken

—

“BUDDY” GIANGIORGI who will

EARL W.
GSELL &amp; CO.
*Quotation from the Bible
(Exodus)

the

*

filling their prescriptions.
May we compound yours?

Highland

ALBERT

They

FOR...

ID 2-8830

ceoeoevoeeoevoeveeveeeeeeeeeee7eeeeneenenewmemc8emUcOhmUMAMUMOHMUMOHMUHCUO

eee

®

(And

this week also.

Nylon “64”

ID 2-2300

responsibility

|

Carni-

can be delivered at home if you
prefer). Then add the usual great
im
attractions in Highland Park like
Ravinia, Tenthouse, Music Thea—
tre, etc. and you'll agree this is
Ry
the place to be during the coming
_ 4
week-end.
{ae
*
*
fc
Our very best good wishes for i
a great
year
to
ED
“CHIEF
SCHWECHEL
who followed DR.

MR.

Safety Costs Less at.Wards

ON

Pick up your prescription
if shopping near us, or let
us deliver promptly without extra charge. A great
mahy
people entrust us

INSURANCE

Parade,

Show, Fireworks, and)
the
Jaycees
Chicken

*

e

FARM

Dinners.

Our

Were ee

: Ti

who celebrated their 10th wedding
anniversary this week and to EM-

When You Need A Medicine

STATE

val, Water
especially

an

ointments,

« RAVINIA

has ever had. The

Another

ex-

PARK

leeds

It sounds like the greatest 4th
of July celebration Highland Park

1684.

Save

to Phone

paul

thing you get when you ask

Jr.,

e
Physician

with

Braude:

pills, suppositories and eye
drops. We welcome your
bringing us these important prescriptions requiring
skill, knowledge and compounding time.
Ask

Glencoe

Pistol

In Rockford

to Edward

ton with

ercise our art by making
certain
they
are
potent
when dispensed and exactly the ones specified.
We compound many special

the

1109

He
competed
in
the _ [Illinois
State
Rifle
and _ Pistol
Association championship Saturday at
Rockford,
a three-gun
aggregate,
22 center fire and 45 caliber, 1800
aggregate event. He won the center
fire on 45 aggregate with 575 and
565 out of a possible 600 each. The
grand aggregate and championship

5-1498, may be called for

reservations.

Below)=—_=—

still must

in

Police

pistol

Ep-

The bible states that the
holy annointing
oil was
made by the apothecary
using his special skill. The
compounding of medicines
is a special art learned after years of study and apprenticeship in a pharmacy.
Some of the medicines
we
dispense
now-a-days
are prepared in the laboratories of pharmaceutical
firms,

shots

with

Thirty-six teams and 195 police
officers
from
the
North
Shore,
Waukegan and Zion took part in
the
event.
Chief
Schmieg
was
first in individual
matches
with
285 out of 300.

Dinner

obtained

Mrs. Theodore
Gleick,
or Mrs. Lou
Gilbert,

1200

police

place

Sgt.
Michael
Bonamarte _ Sr.,
Acting Sgt. Michael Bonamarte Jr.,
Patrolman Richard Long and Police
Chief Anthony
Schmieg made up
the team.

at

will be served in the clubhouse
the Park beginning at 6 p.m..

of

Park

second

last weekend.

will
Iso-

Isotopes

took

out

buffet

“AFTER THE ART OF
THE APOTHECARY”

ID 2-2600

y

Committee

Messages and greetings will be
presented
by
Milton
Gray,
420
Lakeside Pl., immediate past president of the Council; L. W. Gougler
of
Winnetka,
Council
president;
Forrest
White
and
Walter
MacPeak, officials of the regional and
National Boy Scout staffs, respec-

tively;

Highland

team

tope Laboratories at Michael Reese
and Mt. Sinai Hospitals and the

HIGHLAND

Deerfield

A

The United Order of True Sisters Radio Isotope North Shore

ee

va

ynard, membership

Slepyan,

H. Ewens for his outstanding services as treasyears, with diamond rotary pins. Mrs. Edith S.

Yesley of Evanston was honored with
assistance to Dr. William S. Bradford
land Park Rotary Club’s bulletin.

Cortesi,

H.

KEEPING
TIME

HP Police Pistol Team
Takes 2nd Place In Match

Buffet Dinner

Hoiarians Present Awards

Wp Ooo Ws. More Qualityfor Loss!
eoeoeoeom@enmeeeeoeeeeeeeeet @

eeeeoemeeeeeeeseeeeeeee @

491

Central, Highland Park
Page

7

.

“y

;

�Sanders Has Guest
| Linden PL. is entertaining as Wel
‘slie Sanders, 10, daughter of | Suest for the next few weeks, Betvi Mrs. David Sanders III of | tina Marsh, 10, of Alpine, N.J.

ir

tort Cut... Save 240
Driving Miles

FORMER HIGHLAND
A former Highland Park resident,
Douglas Martin Duggan, son of the
F. F. Duggans,
was
married
on
June 27 to Miss Marian Ann Walton,
daughter
of Mr.
and
Mrs.
George
Stokes
Walton
of Rome,
Ga.

MUSKEGON,

MICH.

Daily Sailings "East and
West. Relax en route on

wis. pry

[one-way Rates

Aete

this luxury liner. Beautiful | Passenger
lounges—spacious decks
a

$8.95
$ ene

$5.23

. Comfortable bedrooms and berths . . . entertainment . . . children’s playroom . . . fine
food and refreshments at reasonable prices.
FOR INFORMATION: Wisconsin &amp; Michigan Steamship Co.,
Milwaukee Ticket Office and Dock —
New City Passenger Pier, Lake Front — Near Wisconsin Ave. — Tel. BR 1-7905

Muskegon Ticket Office and Dock, ‘The Mart", Tel. 2-2665

Southwest

young

E. Erie

St. —

BR

couple

RENT

EVERYWHERE

CAMP

OR

BUY

IN COMFORT!

will make

the

their home

3%

Camping

lers, all of Highland

MORTGAGES

A

HEILITE

ANYWHERE

Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Matthieson.
594 Broadview Ave., were given a
surprise
buffet
dinner
on
their
fortieth anniversary, June 28. Forty
friends of the Matthiesons joined
them for the outdoor affair, which
had been planned by Matthieson’s
daughter, Miss Jo Ann Matthieson
and Mrs. Lawrence Helke Jr., Glencoe, and friends, the J. T. Farmers,
Peter Duskeys, and Leonard Eich-

1-7905

| YOU DON’T HAVE TO “ROUGH IT”
TO ENJOY FAMILY CAMPING!
GO

Mexico,

®

Trailer!

New

30

Miss

Yrs.)

@

Refinancing

@

Construction

®

No

Phone:

P.

Loans

Forest

1804

were:

new

officers

are:

Mrs. Joseph Volependesta, senior
regent: Mrs. Walter Harms, junior
graduate
regent;
Miss
Barbara
Elwood, junior regent; Mrs. Howard
Early,
chaplain;
Mrs.
Frank
Tagliepetria, treasurer; Mrs. Frank
Prenkert,
recorder;
Mrs.
Selma
Dal
Ponte,
sentinel;
Mrs.
William
Anderson,
Argus;
Mrs.
Winters, Guide; Mrs. Angelo Pasinato,
assistant
Guide;
and
Mrs.
Louise Kortman, pianist.

Albino .

Rinkenberger,

John

Rhodes,

hospital

guild;

Mrs.
Margaret
Rion,
childcare;
Mrs. John McIntyre, membership;
Mrs. Gino Dal Ponte, Mooseheart;
Mrs.
John
Burke,
homemaking;
Mrs.
Angelo
Maddalon,
Moosehaven; Miss Julia Zielinski, social

dean

service; and Mrs. Charles Coleman,
publicity.
Special

Mrs.

chairmen

Ruth

are:

Cardina,

Academy

Anthony

Porco,

806

Fund.

COMFORT

YOU’LL

| TRAILER SAFETY
Designed for high speed highways, roughest back roads.

_

Lightweight aluminum alloy — easy to pull and handle.
' Unusually strong, riveted, reinforced construction.

Adjustable double hitch — safe, easy to maneuver.
Single, rugged swivel wheel,
with rubber torque mounting and shock absorber.
_ Duplicates car tail lights, brake lights, turn signals.
CAMPGROUND EASE
Tent sets up or folds down
(Set up in less than a
No ropes, no center poles,
Built-in legs adjust level to

_ EXCELLENT

AS

CONVERTS

BACK

QUICKLY,

WITHOUT
MOST

for

634

AVAILABLE

8

TO

BEDROOM
UTILITY

TRAILER

at

While

Pajamas

Selection

SUITS — PLAY SUITS
Boys’ BEACH WEAR
Also High Chairs and
Vinyl

Is Good

Rocking

Horses

of the Pride G “hess shane aera to MS:
shown

by you,

making

our

first year in Deerfield a success. Our aim is fair trade, good merchandise and price moderation, plus personal service. We hope to
continue to satisfy all you wonderful customers this way. Thanks

demonstration

CAMPING

SERVICE
DEERFIELD, ILLINOIS
Orchard Street
Shop: 707

Phone:

Page

a

M. TIBBETTS,
SALES

Office:

SPARE

EASILY

Early

Summer

SUN

her gratitude for the kind patronage

QUESTION, THE LIGHTEST, FINEST, SAFEST,
VERSATILE OF ALL CAMPING TRAILERS!
Ask

JAMES

YARD

Boys’ &amp; Girls’ COATS—Sizes 3-6x
Girls’ DRESSES—Sizes 1-14

Mildredde

(May be used without detaching from car)
25 cu, ft. clear storage compartment locks securely.

GALORE

With Savings of 1/3 to 1/2 on Spring &amp; Summer Wear

Come

Unusually strong doors used also as seats, tables.
Detach trailer simply, easily when set up in camp.

BARGAINS

The Pride &amp; re Shohin
Crawlers —

in a few minutes.
minute, if necessary)
no tools required.
any terrain.

FIND

Windsor

EQUIPMENT
RENTALS
Waukegan

The Pride &amp;© Joy Shoppe

Road

Located in DEERFIELD

5-0040

FREE: The counsel of an experienced camping

family.

654 DEERFIELD

RD.

HOURS:

9 to 5:30

SHOPPERS

of

Friendship; Mrs. Herbert Coleman,
College
of
Regents;
and
Mrs.

Double bed with innerspring mattress on trailer.
Use your bedding from home—bed stays made up.
Plenty of room to sleep five adults comfortably.
Floored tent doubles as sleeping or living area.
Canvas snaps securely to trailer—zips tightly shut.

Three windows open and close from inside tent.
_ Nylon screening in windows and door.

4

library;

COME TO OUR FIRST ANNIVERSARY
TENT

|

Escorts are mesdames Robert LeClair, Fred Rainey, Servio Corso,
John
Hollander,
Dominic
Turchi
Sr., Eldon Soefker, George Schinler and Fred Nettleman.

Mrs.

More than 80 college admissions
officers
will meet
to investigate
problems caused by America’s everincreasing number of college appli‘| cants and to supply formal training
for admissions personnel.

McRAE

Lake

Elyse

officers

Chapter chairmen are:
Mrs.
Dorothy
Benson,

of girls
at Highland
Park
High
School, will attend the College Admissions Institute July 6-22 at DePauw
University
at Greencastle,
Ind.

Closing Costs
A.

Park.

Miss Elyse Rinkenberger
Attends College Institute

Mortgages
(Max.

The

C. W. Matthiesons Given Surprise
Party On Fortieth Anniversary

trip through

and

Installing

~

Raymond
Mann,
regent;
Frank
Prenkert, chairman; Howard Early,
chaplain; Albino Dal Ponte, guide;
and
Joseph
Volependesta,
flag
bearer. Miss Olive English, North
Chicago chapter, was pianist.

Effective in August the monthly
point game scheduled by the club
is to be held on the second Friday
of each month at 8 p.m. The club
meets at Deerfield’s American Legion Hall,

Club, Sigma Gamma Tau and Phi
Eta Sigma, honorary societies, the
Institute of Aeronautical Sciences,
and Theta Chi, social fraternity.

the

The
Highland
Park
chapter of
the Women of the Moose held installation of officers Saturday during an open meeting in the Moose
Home.

Colonel and Mrs. Harvey Hopp,
1287
Forest
Ave.,
recently
were
winners
of
the
weekly
Friday
duplicate bridge game,
sponsored
by Deerfield Contract Bridge Club.

nology, where he was a member of
The Presidents Club, Tech Bar Bell

their wedding

Install Officers

Colone! And Wife
Take Bridqe Honors

On June 13, Mr. Duggan received
the highly-prized
co-operative degrees in Aeronautical Engineering
from
Georgia
Institute
of Tech-

After

Women Of Moose

SAT.

in Los Angeles, where Mr. Duggan
will be an engineer
with
North
American Aviation Corporation.

Mr. Duggan’s bride was graduated June 8 from Agnes Scott College in Atlanta,
where
she
was
president of the Dolphin Club. She
also is a member
of the
Rome
Girls’ Cotillion Club.

sirwien MILWAUKEE,

685

PARKER WEDS

COURT

FRIDAYS 9 to 9

WI 5-2676

Thursday, July2, 1959

4

4

�uly

celebration with
s hot dogs, potato
and all the

SUNSET
. FOODS

.. Party

_—

time meats, baked goods and
rozen desserts on special.

|

U.S. Choice

“Piney PRODUCE”

PABST ASSORTED

GRAPES...» 29¢
/RADISHES
me be
CUCUMBERS... »» 5c
CABBAGE. ae

WATERMELON.» 6¢
'WINESAP APPLES +» 10c
NEW

LOW

PRICE—U.

S. NO.

FLAVORS

PLANTER’S

Fresh

COCKTAIL PEANUTS 3 ‘&lt;== $1.00

Chicken Legs

HAWAIIAN PUNCH

at. pu. 49¢

REALEMON JUICE

Oscar Mayer

Cotto Salami &lt;= 55¢

yy

NN

3

LOOK

‘WISH-BONE

Siam

CHEESE DRESSING

SS OPEN TONITE QaiE
Colossal RIPE OLIVES z='cm 29¢ 2 AND FRIDAY SPE
Z ILO PM. 2X4
Tiny Irish POTATOES 4 “&lt;=: 49c Ly
SCY

.
..
AN
LI
TA
69
DRESSING

CENTRELLA

hyo) WANG)

LIGHT CHUNK TUNA 4 “cm: 99¢

LEMONADE

3 fs 29c

GREEN BEANS 2"**: 39c
FLAV-R-PAC

SLICED

Strawberries 3 «=. $1.00

poeskin
Thursday,

July

2, 1959

CHARCOAL LIGHTER

GRILLITE

~ CENTRELLA

at. cn 39¢

B &amp; M OVEN

CARNATION

MILK

92:".99¢

SE

wes :STN TE Ee

Chili Sauce

2 &gt;: 49c | Eyanenttnmnniniiite

DILL PICKLES ... o »».25¢
WALK

Bartlett Pears 3 =:

$1.00

CENTRELLA

SALAD DRESSING =.43c
DINNER NAPKINS
ee

Ralich 2 ic

......... 8-oz. Btl. 49e

“* 39c sobre

SUPREME PLAIN OR KOSHER
O’ THE

iit

CATSUP ...... 2 sis. 35¢

Ct

BAKEDBEANS
COCK

-49c

Chicken Breasts «=. 59c

ROYAL-CHINET

CENTRELLA

Frying

3 &lt;= $1.00

CENTRELLA

‘ TREESWEET

us. 49¢

Pot Roast

RED POTATOES 10+. 69c

CREAM PIES ......* 59¢

Cut

CANNED BEVERAGES 12 «=== $1.00

1

FROZEN SPECIALS

Blade

39c

§
1812 GREEN

A alee FOOD STORE
—
oat lercg
Oper n vill? PM,
— et
At t Suve
rily Nigh
0) 3 ‘FREE PARKI? 16 — ALWAYS!

friday NightIs Fa

deol

�ELECTRONICS HAS SOLVED
THE ANNOYING PROBLEM!

NEWeor-tite
mosquito trap with “Black-Lite’ :
PATENT PENDING:

Just plug in and relax!
type

black

mosquitoes,

light attracts

moths,

June

bugs

NO MORE SPRAYING

OR FOGGING

@

NO MORE

@

COMPLETELY

@

MILLION MOSQUITOES AND INSECTS A
NIGHT

@

TESTED

@

OPERATE

A

PATIO OR GARDEN

DUSTING
NEW,

2 YEARS

—

SIMPLE,

SAFE

EFFECTIVE

TO

HUMANS

—s

}

Latest

,

@

in

EVERY

NIGHT

RAIN

OR

SHINE

unbelievable
will

just sprayed.

IF YOU’RE

Immediate

WILL

INSTALL

AND

YOUR

daytime
with

A

relief for parties and

freedom

nightly

life-time

Insect-Free

from

mosquitoes

PLANNING
A

DEMONSTRATOR

GUESTS

WILL

WITHOUT

BE MOSQUITO

PARTY, WE
OBLIGATION

FREE.

;

operation.

operation

Nothing

in

else to buy

Nationally

Living!

advertised

‘

retail price

$69.95
‘

Exclusive

Distributor

DEERFIELD LAWN &amp; GARDEN SPOT
2

FREE

For

on your own
Page

10

641

DEMONSTRATION

patio.....

Call WI

DEERFIELD

ROAD,

DEERFIELD

5-0298
Thursday,

July

2,

1959

~--

and

volume in most areas,
|
draw very well in areas

�rinat

¥

Samuel Baskin Plans

AGGA Families Will Be Host:

Centennial Dinner
For Family Service

Tuesday To Exchange Pupils
Thirty-two foreign exchange students from 19 different countries
will arrive in Highland Park Tuesday. These students have spent the

past

school

year

with

American

families
while
attending
high
school. They are part of the 1,170
students from Europe, Central and
South America and the Near and

Far

East

in

United

the auspices
Service.

States

the foreign

David

Michaels,

pann,

will be guests of 32 high school students here and in Deerfield.
Arrangements
for
entertaining
and housing the group have been
which

Leon-

Samuel

Nathan,

Morris

Harold

Newmann

and

John

is chairman of the Jewish Family
and Community Services’ 100th an-

niversary celebration. Seymour Logan, 125 Indian Tree Rd., is a member of the dinner committee.
Dr.

Hutchins

To

Speak

A commemorative dinner will be
held Sept. 20 in the Ballroom of
the Palmer House. More than one
thousand persons are expected to
attend the event whose principal
speaker
will
be
Dr.
Robert
M.
Hutchins,
former
president
and
chancellor of the University of Chi-

Committee

For Red

pointed

to

American

head
Red

county
Cross

chapter

|}

committees

e TUCK POINTING
¢ WATERPROOFING

for 1959-60.
Patten is heading the home serv-| ¥
ice committee, which is responsible | }
for helping
veterans,
Committee

service

families

chairmen

Chimneys - Fireplaces
Repair &amp; Cleaning

and

J iter

are appoint-

ed for one year and will serve until |
July,

1960.

air conditioners

cago.

Thomson.

BRUNO M. ORI

Cross

Joseph Patten, 1474 Linden Ave.,
is among
15 Lake Countians
ap-/|§

at discount

the north shore’s smallest discount house!
Moley TV

e

670 Central Ave., H.P.

ID 2-2042

by the local AFS committee,
includes

Lansman,

Mesdames

Robert

Koretz

liam Aaron.
Plans
include
a
Wednesday followed

Harry

and

COMING NEXT WEEK!
WATCH FOR IT!

Wil-

beach
party
by a jam ses-

sion at the Highland

Park

Recrea-

tion Center that evening. The latter
is sponsored by the high school
student activities committee. Mem-

bers of the exchange
mittee
guests.

Samuel Baskin, 368 Moraine Dr.,

Mesdames

Root, Richard Rubel, Robert Shapiro, Harold Shaw, Louis E. Steinman,
Saul
Stone,
Albert
Tiondi,
Bert M. Wallenstein, Maurice Weigle, Lester Wellman, William Zup-

Field

During their visit to Highland
Park, a stop on the three-week bus
tour provided by AFS, the students

made

are

A. G. Bradt,

ard Braver, A. K. Cox, William Davidson, Jacob Fell, J. C. Gibson,
Irving Goldberg, E. A. Gorenstein,
Walter Guthmann, William Hutchinson, Saul Kahn, Robert Koretz,
K. H. Kraft, Albert Kurtzon, Bernard Joseph, Harry Lansman, Ralph

under

of the American

students

Axelrod,

Joseph Patten Heads

will

help

student

com-

entertain

the

The students will leave
day for Washington, D.C.,

Thurswhere

they will meet the 33 other
which have made tours.

buses

ARE YOU THINKING ABOUT

TNT
i'

Hostesses
Mothers

of

the

Sponsored

high

school

A. FENCE?

By

Highland

Park

Chamber

of

Welae
oy

Commerce

ii

stu-

dents who will open their homes to

an ST 4

a!

|

Wh

i

ADDING or REMODELING? Why not a beautiful

d?

aa

&gt; ie
a

r
a
d
n
a
t
S
merican

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y
b
m
o
o
bathr

|

|

i}

J

se

WML.

We

PICTURED

Euly

American

HERE IS OUR

STOCKADE

FENCE,

a most popular yard enclosure that enhances the

beauty of your home—and

\,

DiPie

increases the value.

We also have many other styles of authentic Early
American fence styles to suit any purpose and all architectural design, This is the fence made from Northern
Michigan’s White Cedar—the world’s most durable wood.
It never needs painting, it is prefabricated at the mill.
Installation is fast and simple. The price is low.

We'll custom-design
your bathroom

Stop in or phone for fully descriptive brochure’

6 ft. high
per lin. foot

tro Plumbing Co.

We'll do the plumbing

handles the whole remodeling job...assures you of...

CRAFTWOOD

e One responsible contractor ¢ One low, “Package” price
e One full guarantee on materials and workmanship
Tired of worn, cracked or old-fashioned fixtures? Fed up with a
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We'll help you finance

Phone
ESTIMATES

FREE

IN

YOUR

Di Pietro
398 County
‘Thursday,

July

2, 1959

Line Rd.

INC. |

1590 Deerfield Road

5-0044

by and see the ! ovely American-Standard
and colors f rom which to choose.

Or stop

COMPANY,

LUMBER

cheerful, colorful? Then let us examine your old bathroom,
suggest a convenient new layout and put in modern equipment.
It will make living more p leasant ... add to the value of your
. and probably cost less than you think.
home

HOME-—-NO

Plumbing
Co.
WI

IDlewood

2-0140

Free

Delivery

OBLIGATION

HOURS: 8
Thursday

a.m. -5:30 p.m.
’til 9 p.m.

SUNDAY— 10 a.m.-1

p.m.

5-0044
Page

11

�Northshore Garden of Memories
: ‘A Surprise Awaits You
‘THIS

If You

BEAUTIFUL

Very

Have

GARDEN

Reasonable

Not Visited

Spurred
party,

CEMETERY

success

Saturday

DE 6-6500

YWCA-sponsored

party

for the weekend

a beach

by a weekend

son,

to

young

adults

over

Barry

INTERMENT

Caris,

nished
sion.

48

dance

Caris

and

Valley

music
Miss

for

Trudy

Rd.,

fur-

the

occa-

Deerfield,

were

Summer

later in

winners

of

Christian-

UNiversity 4-5061; 4-5062

BSS

MI
M

Vertical

Shutters

¢ Shoji

Panels

and arrangements may
Rawr

of your own home.

LOngbeach 1-1890

HERSHEY WEINSTEIN, President
LD

¢

Funeral

ING REALTY CO. handles the
sale of your property.
this week.

See us

Director

ReaAtrw

BUILDERS

826

7600

co.

(-l9-Vin
fol xy)

if

DEERFIELD

Mrs.Foa’s

* husband

is pro-

Mrs, Foa
fessor of Physiology
and
Pharmacology
on the
school’s faculty. He recently has
returned from an extensive lecture

PHONE:

Koad.

hr At ser.

aoe

SSS

SS

scientific meetings at the Universities
of
Copenhagen,
i&lt;elsinki,
dressed
posium

and

an
held

Milan.

He

also au+

international
symat the University of

Bologne on the relationship of sulphur to diabetes.

Local Knights Elect
Council Officers
Several

from

Knights

Highland

of

Columbus

Park, Council

Deerfield,
Seek

advocate.

New

Members

The council is planning a new
‘|membership program with added
emphasis on regular meeting and
religious

and

social events.

’

DU

Spray Glaze
specialists
bumper

CR 2-5541
SS

SS

PONT

to

bumper

protection

that

( utshines
4.4

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/'\the best wax job!

tll

... yet costs no more
| « Most Complete Funeral Home
||
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¢ Perfect accommodations for

Il

¢ Parking adjacent to building

© Convenient to North Shore
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small or large attendance

* Funeral consultation and arrangements may be made in your
own home with our North Shore representative.

tf,

AND

Funeral

NORTH

5206 North Broadway, Chicago

1-4740

(Just north of cn

to the

SHORE

South

Shore

Chapel:

SERVICE

and beauty, observing customs and
.
2100

.
East

.
75th

Street, at Clyde

e enriches colors
e makes chrome sparkle
e long lasting
DRIVE

Complete facilities in your community
for prompt service. . . Lee J. Furth,
Jules L. Furth, and their staff, will
personally arrange and conduct the
entire funeral—a service of warmth

3-5400

PHONE NUMBER—VErnon 5-2221
or LOngbeach

Directors

COMPANY

Jewish Community Since 1865

Call Midway

SUBURBAN

4238,

were elected to office for the Council’s fourth year. They are T. W.
Bresler, grand knight; Frank Cimbalo, deputy grand knight; William
M. Rogan, chancellor; Edward H.

RA 3-3632

8

©

trip to Europe, where he addressed

TUE

your Home.

Formerly Crestwood Products

.

B meeting
of the
# season
in the
i Standard Club.

Ave., Chicago

Samples shown in

~

+ APPRAISERS

DEERFIELD,

Greenwood

|

final

Louvre Doors
¢ Screens
¢ Room Dividers
¢ Fret Work

SHUTTER
HOUSE

over 200
cars...

a

of two
at the

Buy Direct from the
Manufacturer and Save!

Adjacent
parking for

Funeral Directsr

E. SCHWARZBACH,

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ew

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EYUIEURASUENALTEAOUONOLI

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HAUUALAEHLUGAOEAS EDEN
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(Veinrens A

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URED AUSUGUERERCRGEDS

of need...

PL,

A group
’s

rison,

PONTE

|
TD

te in

Wives

aterm
= years

a

UGEUTUREVELEDERUAETIREEERY

time

MADE

BUEHL

i In

CUSTOM

Elm

4 | Higgins,
secretary;and Gordon
Sheahen, treasurer;
Donald
Mor-

S$

)

0 RIGINAL

336

# ciation

Edinburgh

Schedule

y
/

:

Foa,

a

The Wisconsin Dells trip planned
for the latter part of July will be
spent
at the Belleview Hotel on
Lake
Delton.
Also
slated
is an
outing in August at Chicago’s Riverview amusement
park followed
by a beach party. The
“Y” also
reserves the Sunset Park Tennis
Courts every Tuesday beginning at
7:15
p.m.
and
each
Wednesday
night has access to the swimming
pool at Highland Park High School.

TTT] ek ma
TIME TO ACT

St., Evanston

P.

to the board of directors of the Chicago Medical
School Facul-

10 to be

Dells

The affair was planned by Misses
Diane True, Arlene Markov, Carol
DeVlieg,
Sandra Heins, and Barbara Partlow. Also
James McLaughlin, Dennis Auth, Thomas Killian,
Thomas Harris and Richard (Scotty)
Walker.
Harris,
Walker
and/}
Edward
Young
were
the
three
“Jamaican”? beachcombers furnishing the entertainment.

18

Jamaican Jamboree
Saturday’s outing,
“Jamaican
Jamboree,”
at
the
Do-Mor
Day
Camp, began with swimming in the
camp
pool followed
by a turkey
buffet supper and climaxed with
entertainment by three “Jamaican”
beachcombers. A band organized by

We Operate Our Own Greenhouses

Evanston:

of July

Piero

elected

“sarong-wrapping”
contest.
Local
college students, home for the summer, predominated
among the 60
young people in attendance.

PERPETUAL CHARTER — GENERAL CARE FUND

hicago: KEystone 9-4747; 9.4424

Mrs.

was

Adults

ty

The.
exact
date
of the
beach
party hasn’t been set; however, interested parties are asked to con-

are open
years.

COLUMBARIUM—CREMATORIUM

and Harrison

Faculty Board

summer

Young

trip to the Wisconsin

tact Miss Diane True, ID 2-5140,
James McLaughlin, ID 2-3302, or
.{eall
Mrs.
Donald
Miles
at the
YWCA, ID 2-0675. The “YY” parties

CEMETERY

MAUSOLEUM—EARTHEN

Ridge Road

of their first

Park

Elected To

Is

the month.

Just as you provide insurance or make a
will, so should you choose a fitting resting
place for yourself — and for them — a task
that will be burdensome if left until the
emergency is at hand.

COMMUNITY

the

Highland

have planned

Prices

PARK

by

the

followed

Phone

MEMORIAL

fighlar

Beach Party Is ext On Socia
Schedule Of *Y’ Young Adults

oh

Avenue

IN

TODAY!

or phone...

ID 2-9722
for FREE
and

PICK-UP

DELIVERY

by APPOINTMENT...

LAKE Car Wash
First
&amp; Elm Streets
Highland Park

—

�Graduates Give Check To Cancer Research

James P. Carlsen Assigned

Italian Women’s Prosperity
Club Cancels July Meeting

To

Army

Mrs. Philip Pasquesi, president
of Italian Women’s Prosperity Club,
announces the club will not meet in
July.
At its recent meeting plans for
the annual
benefit in September
were projected by the ways
and
means committee.
Also, the following were initiated
into the Club:
Mesdames Carl Konsler, Daniel

Murphy,

Pascal

vetti

Michael

and

Attard,

Joe

—

EVERYTHING

In Germany

Pvt.

James

P.

Carlsen

Jr.,

son of Mr, and Mrs. James Carlsen,

is new

at the

NEW

615 Onwentsia Ave., recently was
assigned to the 3rd Division’s 30th
Infantry in Germany.
A driver in the infantry’s Company C, Carlsen entered the Army
in 1958. He completed training at
Fort Benning, Ga., and arrived in
Europe last month. A 1954 graduate of St. George High School, Evanston, Carlsen attended Marquette
University.

Cer-

Riley.

THE

Infantry

EXCITING

NEW

He,

MOTOR Ve
HOTEL
IS NOW OPEN

Fite Medan
A

New

5 private

Concept

Business
meeting and

in Hotel

Vacation

and

Accommodations
conference rooms... magnificent

out-

door and indoor swimming ‘pools ... dining in the splendor of
the Fountain Room... cocktails at the Highland Fling ...
Highland Park Music Theatre... 100 spacious air conditioned
rooms and suites. FREE PARKING

MA

THE

For information

call forme
5-4000

dente

Silla

Cadet Major, Marq Warner of 3485 University Ave. (left),
looks on as Cadet Colonel Dennis Kissel of Park Ridge, representing graduating class, presents check to Laurence Rieser, director
of the University of Chicago Cancer Research Foundation. Presentation was made at graduation ceremonies in June of the Park Ridge
Military Academy at Our Saviour Lutheran Church gymnasium,
Norwood Park.
Cuore

Arte

Club

Plans

Public

Masquerade

TRY

Initial plans for the event were
discussed
at June
meeting.
Mrs.
Everett Bellei Sr. gave a report on
the
successful
bowling
banquet.

SKOKIE

date

HIGHWAY-LAKE COOK
EDENS , EXPRESSWAY

of the

GIVING
a

LEMON

Sparkling
1629

Park

Ave.,

FRESH

Mineral
W.

Sponsored

Water

IDilewood

By

f

Chamber

of

Commerce

4th of JULY
PICNIC TABLE SPECIAL
(LIMITED

TIME

e STEEL

BETTS, BORLAND &amp; Co.

° 6-FT. LENGTH

1896

e COMPLETE
WITH BENCHES

BROKERS
ten

FRAME

BONDS

e ALL

1

Venu
$E495

Compare with any
similar $9.95 Panty.

ONLY)

$9875

dium, large and extra large.

COME
and
OUR

PIECE

York

and

Stock

Other

EXPERT

DEERFIELD
LUMBER &amp;
FUEL CO.

Exchanges

WISE
HAROLD C. STEINER
ASSOCIATES
SAMUEL _D, ROWE
ernie J. SHROSBREE
J. TRACY ALEXANDER
STEPHEN W. BACHAR

612 Waverly
SIDNEY RUBENSTEIN

111

South

La
Tel.

Thursday,

Deerfield

Park

BORLAND
Salle
CEntral

BUILDING
St.

Corsetieres

Exchange

PARTNERS
ARTHUR
M. BETTS

of Highland

IN

MEET

Graduate
New

F

Cool, sheer white power net
with 2%” non-roll waist band
and stay-down leg. Four detachable garters. Small, me-

ID 3-0230

°*

Since

Park

utdeor Eat’n Time

AND
ADDING MACHINES
SALES - RENTALS - REPAIRS

CENTRAL

Highland

find more in
extra-long leg
panty girdle by

2-0042

TYPEWRITERS

645

“&lt;_2aitts

INT

- “AID”

Using

SPRING

ROAD

COMING NEXT WEEK!
WATCH FOR IT!

Party

The Cuore Arte Club is planning | Next Wednesday is the
a fall masquerade
party
at the/|next club meeting.
American
Legion
Building.
The
party, to be held Oct. 10, will be
open to the public.

HOTEL

illa/"
PARK, ILL.
Pat Miller, General Mgr.

¢
6-1474

July 2, 1959

Chicago

3

WI

5-3220

Ct.

Our personalized service offers
you...
‘Figure Refinement
without Confinement!’’
THE

NEW

611 CENTRAL AVE.
Highland Park—ID 2-8700
also available at...
THE

PERSHING

SMART

SHOP

4818-4820 N. Western Ave.
Chicago, Ill.
Page

13

�Hawes Wo.
¥

Parkers

Of WAIF

Highland Park High School

Mrs.

nights for adults only thru

Friday nights for high school students

and adults thru August 7th, 1959*
P.M.

to 9:30

P.M.

stars

75¢ per person
and soap furnished. Life guard
present at all times.

Towel

Berger,

380

Of
Dell

to October when the newly-formed
Chicago chapter of WAIF will have
as guests at its Fall benefit Jane
Russell and Helen Hayes. The two

August 5th, 1959.

7:30

of films

supporters

Social

and

of

TV

WAIF,

Service

ing adoption
youngsters.

*Elementary students are not admitted.

are

ardent

International

devoted
of needy

TUATHA
NAA

to furtherforeign-born

HAE
11}HH Hil\|
Wit

HT

FAST
PHOTO COPIES
AND

ie
+»

Sunset
1812

PLIABLE PLASTIC
LAMINATING

your family
your

OF YOUR
IMPORTANT PAPERS

guests

Food Mart

Green

Harry Sternberg

Charter

Chapter

Ln., and Mrs. Julian E. Roseth, 412
Sheridan Rd., are looking forward

Main Pool!
Wednesday

William

Are

Bay Rd.

Highland Park

==

Powell’s

==

589

Camera

Central

ID
HASHUVAUVAHEO

Mart
2-8550
HV UHLUATUU EU

Chicago

Association

Harry Sternberg,
formerly executive

He

will work

health

POLICE ADVISE

Bound

Test Your Skill On
Defensive Driving

839 Todd Ave.,
director of the]:

Easter Seal Society of Milwaukee
County, has joined the staff of the
Chicago Heart Association as field
representative.
cal

Jamboree

Joins Staff

Heart

with

officials

departments

and

|:

A relatively new phrase has been
added to the present day motor

of lo-

community
agencies to study un
met
needs
in the cardiovascular
field, and, where feasible, help set
up programs to meet the needs. In|:
his new position he will publicize |:
in Lake, Cook and Dodge Counties
through
tion.

the Chicago

Heart

like the Boy
Prepared.”

Being

Somewhere?

Administration at the University of |:
Chicago. He previously served as|}
administrator of the Cerebral Palsy | |
Clinic of Milwaukee County’s Medi- |:
= | cal Society, and was chief social
worker of the Medical and PsychiStar Scout Norman
atric Social Services
at the Vetof Post 38, is
erans’ Administration Regional Of- member
Boy Scout to register
fice.

call

Daily door-to-door service to and from all airports, train depots, boat docks and the Chicago
Loop.
REASONABLE RATES

ve 5-3555

glencoe

Mon. Appts.

Available

Call

MIDWAY LIMOUSINE
SERVICE
EXPEDITED AIRPORT SERVICE
For reservations, call:

ROgers

Park

1-5878 —

Lake

lowing the driver to give more of
his attention to the other cars. In
order to be a safe driver, we always

must
Charak,
the first

with

the

Norman is the son of the Marvin
Charaks of 1032 Marion Ave. His
father is Scoutmaster of Troop. 38.
Both Troop and Post 38 are sponsored by Braeside PTA.

Uhlemann’s new
easy-to-wear

DISCOUNTS
20% to 40%

CONTACT

Lamps &amp; Shades

Lenses

RAVINIA
Lamp

Studio

465 Roger
IDlewood

INT

WASH
592

Roger

Highland

Park

Chamber

of

Commerce

Ty

company

(Screened,
COAL

Stock

PHONE for appointment or
Highlan
lewoo

14

1645

ae ye

i RTS

Orrington

Evanston

UNiversity

Ave.

DRY

8:00

We

CLEAN

4-3311

8:00

| NG

sary egaasnumyn:

A.M.

to

5:30

A.M.

Closed

to
on

P.M.

...

4:00

P.M.

Wednesday

ALL WOOL
CARPETING

695

PER SQ. YD.

:

o

selicesits

Edens near Tower

Carpets
VE 5-2400

Open Monday through Saturday, 9 to 5
Mon. &amp; Wed. Evenings by Appointment

alert

and

the

on

“Drive”

Seven

Cars

We have to “drive” seven different cars, not just our own, on
the highway.
We
are concerned

about the car ahead
immediately

coming

of us, the car

behind

towards

us,

us, the

the

one

car beside

us, the cars coming from either
side of us on a cross street and
the most dangerous of all, the car

we

cannot

see—the

out of a driveway
a hillerest on our
or unexpectedly
the curb without
this and our own
What

one

that darts

or comes up over
side of the road
pulls away from
any warning. All
vehicle too!

You

Can

Do

Anticipating the unexpected acts
of these cars and being prepared to

_|take evasive action is the art of
defensive driving. Allow sufficient
distance between your car and the
car ahead of you (one car length
for each 10 miles per hour you are
traveling is recommended) so that
if the car is suddenly stopped without a warning, you have your vehicle under control and can stop
without running into or over the
other vehicle.

Keep an eye on the rear view,
mirror; then you can take the nec-

essary action to avoid the car that
rides your rear bumper
or move
out of the way of the day dreamer
who just isn’t paying attention and
won’t be able to stop without running
into
you.
Slow
down
as
you
approach
an intersection
or *
hillcrest, so that if the cross-traffic ’
or unexpected car coming over the

hill on your
to

provide

side of the road

you

with

your

fails

share

of

the road, at least you can avoid the
accident.

parked

Look

cars

ahead

on

the

into

side

the

of

the

street or road.
If there’s a driver
behind the wheel, then look at the
back of the car to see if fumes are

coming

and

Saturday

sas

ID 2-0850

Page

SH

Information
-

sia" badiabe

Piled)

MENONI
&amp; MOCOGNI
2200 Skokie Hwy., Highland Park

Service

Lictilabebdanibid

the

on

be

defensive.

there

ss

BLACK
DIRT

Ave.

2-9771

Drying

the best In sight—since 1907

By

Williams

Complete Washing

UHLEMANN
;

TUB

IDlewood

Have your eyes examined by an
Eye-Physician (M.D.)

optical
‘Sponsored

Williams
2-9360

RAVINIA
e safe
e comfortable
¢ full satisfaction—
guaranteed

-

lends itself to defensive driving, al-

The Council is planning to send
a full troop of 40 boys and leaders
from each of its four districts to
the
Golden
Jubilee
July
22-28,
1960, to be held at Air Force Academy, Colorado Springs, Colo.
Some 50,000 Scouts and Explorers representing Councils throughout the United States will attend
the event, celebrating 50 years of
Scouting in the United States.

Forest 4550

COMING NEXT WEEK!
WATCH FOR IT!

and

required take time and determination. Results are worth it.
car with its automatic
Today’s
and
power
equipment
controls

Sternberg has a master’s degree
from the School of Social Service

hair styles &amp; colors

any

for

prepared

“Be

but the self-discipline and training

Associa

{itl presenls

of

motto

Scouts’

occur
that may
every emergency
while you are driving sums up the
The procedure is simple,
subject.

North Shore Area Council for the
Fifth National Jamboree.

Going

something

Driving,’

is “Defensive

phrase

The

vocabulary.

vehicle

other

&gt;

|

Highland

Members

A

| | Recreational Swimming

out of the exhaust pipe.
are,

that

car

can

If

pull

out

into your lane of traffic at any
time. Be prepared to avoid it if it
does.

All this requires you always to be
alert

and

often

requires

that

you

give up your “right of way.” You'll
find some pretty brash drivers takma | ing advantage of you, but you’ll also find you are not having accidents

and

are

a safe

driver.

Hair Cuts of Distinction

OMITTY’S
BARBER
SHOP
Serving

Highland

Park Since

1900

1820 2nd St., near the Jewel
Phone

ID 2-0636

Thursday,

July

2, 1959

�eR

ws

Pr

.

:

‘

;

ay

Dance Group Completes 2-Week Special Training
Rs

_ NEW OFFICE HOURS

Bs

(July 1, 1959— Sept. 5, 1959)

MONDAY

through

FRIDAY —

8:30 a.m. —5

SATURDAYS

p.m.

—

Closed

All Day

Company

elected

these

officers:

=

Mrs. Koplin, past president, to
board membership;
Mrs. Axelrod,
president;
Mrs. Edward
Ettlinger
and Mrs. Bennett, vice presidents;
Mrs. Pieroni of Lake Forest, secretary; Mrs. Rich, treasurer;
and
Mrs.
Mozen
and
Mrs.
Theodore
Van
Zelst of Wilmette,
publicity
co-chairman.

Robert
Visit

G.

9 p.m.

IG SAVINGS

AU

MACHINE.

BY

PREPARED

SPECIALLY

sembled the best array of boating values anywhere in the Midwest.
Stop in today or Friday
(open ‘til 9 p.m. both nights)
and you'll be set for the holiday fun ahead!

Easier to Spreade

==—Improves Growing. Most uniform, perfectly processed=
==soil obtainable .. . at no extra cost.

MANURE—FERTILIZER

Boating’s

Biggest

Buy!

Super Alcort Sailfish &amp;

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Czerwonky
(Jean O’Connell)
of Dallas, Tex.,
were
expected
in Highland
Park
Tuesday for several days’ visit with
her parents, the George J. O’Connells of 261 Laurel Ave. They will

Sunfish—Alll
SERVICES

OF

HIGHLAND

Phone

be here until next Wednesday.

i Hh

ECE
ae Ae a

AU ANTE
HTT

TELE

HTH

AE

SH
-

A0 8 8 8 a
ELEY

oO
EE

INC.

Will

HATH

eM A A A A
ERS ae ————————

=

.

NS

PARK,

ID 2-0027

ACT

ATT

ee seseee
eee
ah

be

Down

$31.00

per mon.

tmnt

TEA

Vy,

CRUISERS,

rp et

NEE CPT

,

it’s

=

word...

Gutttonly $389.00

Movement

(Across

from

H.P.

Library)

ID

SOURS wore LC
ee CEE
oan Ss OB BUGRRE Ul Dae

=
—

OS IRR
en

a
GA DG

=

Ye

RG

=——

et

ph

behets

care FSR
ceo
phewe
tetetett
tthe =

ws was EEA

TNS

ONS ya emo 8s eR
VEOOPeRemone
ASR

as

US ERD

ET

OS WE

ST

—————

A

eT.

ARES
er. et eS em
TN

$99.00

PPP

wyeyyve

==

TH

sve}

July

2, 1959

Soe

16’ BELL

BOY

Cabin
Cruiser,
including
Twin
Bunk
Mattress,
Running
Lights,
Hardware
G&amp; _ Steering.
Mercury
Mark 58 A E L Electric Starter &amp;
Generator
motor.
Gator
Tilt
Bed

Down

Trailer.

$2695.00
$550.00

Full Price

down

Bal.

24

months

See our complete line of Boats - Motors - Trailers

rat BOAT HOUSE, we.

S TS

cn

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Thursday,

month

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backed
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that
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ww

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per

World Record
dependability.
Power &amp;

¥

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Full
$57.00

70 H.P.
6 cyl. in line

Wie
Ltt

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CLEANERS

Free”

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Down

Performance

Tf

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Insurance

$300

with

$5.95

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Mercury

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$289.00

a7 as

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%

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¢

Storage

Fill-A-Box

ASS

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ra

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Bring in your WINTER WOOLEN
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a

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v

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v

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SZ

Clean Out
Week

=

CLOSET

INC.

Lapstick
runabout including
Steering,
Windshield
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Mercury
35
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Electric
starter
&amp; controls. Gator Tilt Bed Trailer.

e

the

Fiberglass

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a
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vacation.
No
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unsinkable.
Boats are quickly righted
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Speed
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ee

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GET THE FINEST!

Czerwonkys

_ ee
a

My

Foe Zl DededeoF rH CFCC IT TOTe CORR Pare oe

The
To

‘til

i

OINAITTRUT

im

mM

recently | eaWj

group

Workshop

The

Reich

John

Bennett,

Leonard

Pieroni,

Kop-

etry

Fred

Allen

On Sale Today &amp; Friday

Leslie Axelrod.

a

lin,

and

Mozen,

Milton

right, are Mesdames

from

her,

With

group.

the

for

course

two-week

SUPER SPECIALS

poses at far right with
Litz conducted a special

N.Y.,
Mrs.

Miss Katherine Litz, guest teacher from Brooklyn Heights,
members of North Shore Modern Dance Workshop at the YWCA.

First

Street

a

ead

ID

3-0880

Highland

Park,

,
Illinois

Page

15

�Mostly for Women

Engagements

Miss Keating, J. B. Cleaver Marry In Savannah
Miss Marcella Keating and
Joseph
Burton Cleaver of

a

Weddings

—

Club

Vw

DEERFIELD WOMAN’S CLUB PLANS
A VARIED PHILANTHROPIC PROGRAM

The philanthropic activities of the Deerfield Woman’s
Country Ln. were married June
are manv—givine sunnert to the West Deerfield TownClub
13 in the Church of the Holy
Sacrament in Savannah,
Ga. ship Public Library, the Park Ridge School for Girls and a
The noon ceremony was fol- scholarship program.
Several years ago when there wos ———
lowed by a reception in the
a
threat
of Deerfield losing its li- nois in assisting the Park Ridge
Gold Room of the Hotel Debrary the Deerfield Woman’s Club | School for Girls—girls from broSoto, given by the bride’s par- was called unon. The "ub formed; ken homes or in need of emotional
ents, Mr. and Mrs. James Mi- the Friends of the Library organ: | stability. These clubs contribute to

chael Keating of Savannah.
The

bride

wedding
gandy

chose

gown

of

fashioned

a

embroidered
with

and

bracelet-length

wore

a lace

and

carried

ter,

Miss

as

maid

tiered

crown

of

ice blue

Other

attendants

styled

dresses

Her

sis-

Keating,
gowned
and

wore
in

She

a tiered veil

lilies.
was

or-

collar

sleeves.

Mullarky

honor,

organdy,

a high

with

valley

Mary

full-skirted

in

white.

similarly-

ice

pink

and

white.
Party

James, John and William
ing, brothers
of the bride,
ushers.

Joseph

Burton

ENGAGED

Plan Golden Wedding
Reception For The

Carl Horenbergers

2 to 5 o’clock

of their

50th

in celebration

wedding

Their children are Mrs. Arthur
(Katherine)
Hook of Eustis, Fla.;
Mrs.
Ralph
(Mary)
Mangino
of
Highland Park; Edward of Mundelein; Robert and George of Deerfield; Mrs. Thomas
(Julia) Moran
of Mundelein; David of Cary, Ill.;
Mrs. Willard
(Frances)
Martin of

Woman's Club
Executive Board
Elizabeth

Plans for the coming season will
be completed at a meeting of the
executive board
of the Deerfield
Woman’s Club Tuesday, July 7, at
9:30 a.m. The meeting will be held

of the club’s recording
Thomas

Jr., 1510 Crabtree

Lane.

W.

Evans

Applications
for new
members
must be submitted for approval by
this date if they are to appear in
the year book. However, the club
is happy to accept new members at
any time; Mrs. H. Robert Dieterle,
publicity chairman reports.

Gives

Swim

Pa rty

Miss Julie Clampitt, daughter of
the G. F, Clampitts of 1455 Greenwood Ave., entertained a group of
friends at a swim party at Tennaqua on Tuesday evening.
Julie

will
the

be

a senior

fall.

Page

16

at high

alone,

the

a library fund

in|

club|

under

is asked

offering
| Christmas

the

to bring

for

the

her

girls’

envelope

Christmas

of | fund to the December meeting. One

$1400.

Mrs. Andrew Bradt is siven much
credit as executive head of the library committee. The coming season finds Mrs
Albert Dawe at the
wheel of the public welfare department. Of course, a new library. as
a new home of any kind, finds a
bottomless
barrel of expenses. A

dance,

ber

direction

of Mrs. J. G. Kitzerow, ways and
means
chairman,
is
planned
in
April to add to the fund.
The
Deerfield
Woman’s'
Club
joins the other clubwomen of IIli-

Club
each

the

Deerfield

Woman’s

contributed
enough
to
girl a skirt and sweater.

buy

A series of benefit card parties
is given by the members in January to add to the fund. The club
is looking forward to the November
meeting this year which will be a
tour and lecture of the Park Ridge
School for Girls, the purpose being
that the members will be cognisant
of the
needs
of the
girls.
Mrs.
Locke Rogers, the club’s president,
feels the trip will be interesting
(Continued

on

page

42)

Models For Ravinia Ticket Sales

Mrs. Ella Plagge
Has 94th Birthday

Green Thumbs View
Flower Show Slides

To Meet July 7

Mrs.

has accumulated
approximately

contributions.

Mrs.
Plagge’s
brother,
Samuel
Rockenbach
and
her
sisters,
the
Misses Viola and Irene Rockenbach,
all of Deerfield attended the party.
Another brother, Preston Rockenbach, who lives in West Hollywood,
Calif. was not here.

Grayslake.

at the home

and

years

Mrs. Plagge
has five children,
Irwin and Miss Margareth Plagge
living at home; Harold of 840 Todd
Ct.; Auston of Forest Park and Mrs.
Vida
Jacobson
of
Westminster,
Calif. All were able to be here except Mrs.
Jacobson,
Mrs.
Plagge
also has 10 grandchildren and 14
great grandchildren.

anniversary.

Mr. and Mrs. Horenberger were
married July 15, 1909 in Waukegan.
They have eight children, 20 grandchildren and seven great grandchildren.

secretary,

benefits

past two

Mrs. William Plagge (Ella Rockenbach) was 94 on Tuesday, June
30. About 50 friends and relatives
gathered at the Plagge home, 510
Elm
St., last Sunday,
for an informal party to honor Mrs. Plagge.

The
children
of Mr.
and
Mrs.
Carl Horenberger of 80 Wilmot Rd.
are inviting friends and relatives
to a reception on Sunday, July 12

from

Keatwere

Mr. Cleaver, son of Mr. and Mrs.
James Benjamin Cleaver of Highland Park, formerly
of Bannockburn, has taken, his bride to Nassau on a wedding trip. They will
make their home in Evanston on
their return.

Cleaver

many

the

supper
In Wedding

Mrs.

ization whieh h ho're? to stimn'ate |! the welfare of the Illinois Cottage.
interest and aid the library in serv- Christmas is made a more festive
ing the community.
Among
the) occasion for the girls. Each mem-

school

in

B.

Grant

Mr. and Mrs. Arnold
Grant of
1016 Sheridan Ave. announce the
engagement of their daughter, Elizabeth Barbara, to Francis Stupey,
son of Mr. and Mrs. David Stupey
of Highland Park. A spring wedding is planned.

Move

To

New

Mexico

Mr.
and
Mrs.
Lavern
Flaten
(Nancy
Antes)
and
little’
son,
Steven, have moved to Farmington,
N. Mex., where Mr. Flaten will be
employed
as a geologist
for the
Texaco Oil Co. Mrs. Flaten is the
daughter of Mrs. Stanley Antes of
538 Margate Terr. Mr. Flaten received his M.A. degree at the University of Wisconsin in June.

Here

From

Crystal

The Green Thumbs Garden Club
met Monday evening in the home
of Mrs. Lawrence F. Ryan Jr. of
1052 Greenwood Ave. Mrs. Edward
Higgins of Hermitage Dr. is president.

Mrs.

Carl

A.

Arend

Jr.

of Elm-

wood
Ave.,
program
chairman,
showed
slides
of
the
Chicago
Flower Show.

Makes

Library

Annual

In

Son’s

Gift

To

Memory

Mrs. Frederick C. Ritter of 946
Clay Court has made her annual
gift to the West Deerfield Township
Public
Library—bound
volumes of National Geographic Magazine for 1957 and 1958 in memory
of her son, the late Robert D. Ritter.

Lake

Mrs,
Lester
Taylor
of Crystal
Lake spent Tuesday with her aunts,

the Misses Viola and
enbach of 550 Elm St.

Irene

Rock-

Miss Joan White, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edwin S. White
of 2180 Wi:mot Rd., Baai.ockburn, who made her debut last
Thursday evening at Exmoor Country Club in Highland Park, is
pictured at Ravi:.ia Park in the dress she modeled for the 1959
Ravinia Fashion Show, “Concerto in Coolness,” presented on June
23 by Carson Pirie Scott and Co. in cooperation with the Ravinia
Fashion

Show

committee.

Walter

Hendl,

Ravinia’s

artistic director,

commentated the fashion show in words and music, to the delight
of the

1959

debutantes

who

modeled,

bers of the Ravinia women’s coupon

and

mem-

book committee who

their

mothers,

made

up the audience. The fashion show was presented to spur the
sale of coupon books for the 1959 Ravinia Festival season which

opened Tuesday, June 30.
Thursday,

July

2, 1959

�Rey

;

¥

mn

NEW ARRIVALS

Admire Prize Winning Dogs .

Birth

yer

Announcements

Mr. and Mrs. Frank O’Connor of
Deerfield Rd., announce the arrival
of their first grandchild, Beverly
Marie. She is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. James O’Connor of Chicago and was born June 17 at St.
Elizabeth’s
Hospital.
Mrs.
John
Blachura of Chicago is the maternal grandmother.
*

*

*

Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Adams
(Mary
Ann
Meyer,
formerly
of
Deerfield) of Buffalo, N.Y. became
parents of their first child, David
Ray. He was born June 9. The maternal grandparents
are Mr.
and
Mrs,
Raymond
T. Meyer
of 727
Waukegan Rd.
*

*

*

Mr. and Mrs. John F. Hanrahan
of 1125 Oxford Rd., became parents of their first child on June 19
at Lake Forest Hospital. The infant
has been
named
John
Frederick
and his grandparents are Mrs. Robert M. Hooper of Rome, N.Y., Dr.
E. C. Tyler of Bristol, Conn., and

Left to right are Mrs. Kennard Manchester, Mrs.
Mr. Manchester and John Manchester, age 21

del,

dogs are
Serenade.

Champion

Starkrest’s

The Kennard Manchesters of 385
Thornmeadow Rd. held open house
at their home “Teckelwald”’ following
a recent
dog
show
of
the
Dachshund
Club. Honored
guests
were Mr. and Mrs. George Plummer of Dallas, Tex. Mr. Plummer
judged
the
dachshunds
and
the
hound group.

Sharp

Note

and

Clayton Sanmonths.
The

Teckelwald’s

Rosemary Bojesen of Salem, Wis.,
Mrs.
Harlene
Walter
of
Union
Grove, Wis., Dr. and Mrs. Ridge
L. Scott of Independence, Mo., Mr.
and Mrs. Grover E. Schlitz of Kansas City, Mo.

Also there were
Mr. and Mrs.
Raymond Brophy of the Bro-Bark
Kennels of Blue Springs, Mo. and
There
were
approximately
50 Mrs. Paul Konrad of Kansas City,
people there from the entire Chi- Mo., who remained as the Manchescago area and a large portion of the ters’ house guests until Tuesday.
104 dachshunds that were exhibited
Their dachshunds, of course, were
at the show.
also guests.
The Manchesters’
dogs are Ch.
Mrs. Konrad had her dog, Betsy,
Starkrest’s
Sharp
Note
and
her with her, One of Betsy’s puppies
daughter
Teckelwald’s
Serenade.
was sold to Mr. Hall, owner of HallSharpie and Sara were winners of mark greeting cards. That puppy
the brace class at the dachshund
was featured on one of last season’s
specialty show of the Dachshund
Christmas cards by Hallmark. All
Club of the Great Lakes held in are looking forward
to next seaconjunction
with
the
Chain
O’ son’s cards as they will feature a
Lakes All Breed Show on Sunday. | wire-haired dachshund and a longSharpie and Sara and Sharpie’s son haired
dachshund
owned
by the
Teckelwald’s
Meistersinger
then | Brophys.
showed together in the Brood Ma- |
After
leaving
the
Manchester
tron class and came out winners.
| home the group went on to Long
People
who
came
from a
dis-| Island with their dogs to be exhibittance were Mr. and Mrs. J. Harvey
ed at the Dachshund Long Island
Carruthers of Urbana, I11., Mrs. Vic- | show which is usually the largest
tor Gascoigne of Milwaukee, Mrs.| dachshund show in the country.

DEERFIELD DOINGS

grapes.

Small vials of

white and gold daisies from Mrs.
Harold Yegge’s garden topped the
centerpiece and complemented the
gold table settings.

The

Misses

Myra,

Grace

and

Hattie Gutzler of Forest Park were
guests at the home of Fred Stryker
of 710 Orchard
St. last Tuesday.
They
are early residents
of the
community. Their parents, the late

Mr.
and
Mrs.
farmed the land
of

George
Gutzler
on the south side

Greenwood

Ave.,

Rd., for many

years.

Back

from

Mackinaw,
bert
Curtis

and

week’s

Wilmot

vacation

at

IIl., as guests of the Gil-

Baechlers

Clarence

a

near

are

Baechler
Richard,

nut St.
Newcomers

Mr.

and

Mrs.

and

two

sons,

of

1142

Chest-

to the village include

Mr. and Mrs. Rene Yerke and two
daughters
from Chicago
to their
new
home at 1422 Hackberry Rd.;

“Thursday, July 2, 1959

Mr. and Mrs. Raymond T. Meyer
of 727 Waukegan Rd. flew down to
Nashville, Tenn., last Sunday and
had dinner with their son, Freder‘ck R. Meyer and his family. They
flew back that evening and arrived
at Sky Harbor at 8 o’clock. . . Miss
Nancy Bartholomew of Harold, IIl.,
formerly
of Deerfield,
spent
the
weekend
with
Linda
Lu
Meyer,
daughter of the R. T. Meyers.
Miss Helen Engstrom, daughter
of the George
Engstroms
of 627
Central
Ave.
is in Miami,
Fla.,
spending
several weeks
with her
cousin, Miss Edith Chase. She flew
down but will drive back with Miss
Chase and they will stop at Clearwater to visit Miss Chase’s brother,
Col. W. E. Chase (retired) and Mrs.
Chase en route to Deerfield.
Miss Mabel! Ducker has come up
from Orlando, Fla. for her annual
summer visit with her sister, Mrs.

(Continued

on page

John

*

42)

Hanrahan

*

of

*

Mr.
and
Mrs.
William
M.
Schroeder of 707 Westgate Rd. announce the birth of their seventh
child, June 24 in the Highland Park
Hospital. The baby has been named
Jeanette
Marie
and her brothers
and sisters are, Bill, 15, Tom, 12,
Shephen, 7, Mary, 5, Joan, 3, and
Ann, 114. The maternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. T. C. McLaughlin of Milwaukee. The paternal
grandfather
is
William
H.
Schroeder of Deerfield.
*

*

*

*

*

*

Mr. and Mrs. Stanley F. Smudde
of 817 Woodward Ave., welcomed
their first son, Stanley Francis Jr.,
June 17 at the Highland Park Hospital. They have 3 daughters, Teresa, 6, Katherine, 4, and Annette,
11 months. The children’s grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Francis
M. Smudde of Lombard and John
Boveri of Elmwood Park.
*
*
*

A

son,

Randy

Scott,

28 in the Highland

was

born

Park

Hos-

pital to Mr. and Mrs. L. S. Borchert
of 947 Forest Ave. Their other chil-

dren are Sherry,

3 years old, and

Holly,

old.

18 months

Mrs.

Kuhlmann of Chicago
dren’s grandmother.
*

KNOW

WHAT YOU NEED TO
ABOUT THIS YEAR’S EVENT

HERE’S

THE

a

DATES

JULY

THURSDAY,

2nd,

FRIDAY,

JULY 3rd, AND SIX DAYS A WEE
THROUGH JULY 31st.

THE

HOURS
MONDAY

9:15-5:15,

THROUG

SATURDAY.

THE

PLACE

THE GRACE HERBST SHOP, 563 LI
COLN, WINNETKA.

THE

PARKING

*

Appointments

chili

*

Now

LOT

NEARBY.

THE

SALE

STORE-WIDE! MAJOR REDUCTIONS
A, LINENS
ON SILVER. CHINAND
SHADES
S
LAMP
E,
GLASSWAR
ANNAL,
ASIO
(OCC
E.
FURNITUR
HE
LEAT
ER),
SUMM
AND
TIOUE
PRACTICA
GOODS, HUNDREDS OFITEM
S FO
VE
RATI
AND DECO
NDS.
GROU
HOME AND
’

ran

THE SERVICE

L
ING FOR SHIPMENT, FREE LOCA
DELIVERY, AND SALE ITEMS MAY
BE CHARGED.

Dagmar

is the

Mr. and Mrs, Allan M. Stahl of
656 Chestnut St., became parents
(Continued on page 42)
Make

AND

*

Mr. and Mrs. Donald Lindsley,
1030
Springfield
Ave.,
announce
the arrival of a son on June 17 at
the Highland
Park Hospital. The
infant has been named David Lee,
and he has a sister, Susan, 9, and,
a brother, Robert, 4. The
grandparents
are
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Axel
Houstrup of Chicago and Mr. and
Mrs. Lantz Lindsley of Rock Falls,
Til.

June

+ SALE

*

Judith Ann, the first child of Mr.
and Mrs. Alexander J. Greco, 1133
Elmwood Ave., was born June 18
at the Highland Park Hospital. The
infant’s
maternal grandmother,
Mrs. Walter L. Goebel of Chicago,
is visiting her daughter and new
grandchild.
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
Greco of Highland Park are the paternal grandparents.

ES

At an informal little coffee, last Wednesday
morning, Mrs. Armond Mitchell of 806 Kenton Rd., introduced her new neighbor, Mrs.
Harold T. Neal of 510 Deerfield
Rd.,
formerly
of
Rochester,
N.Y.
Guests
included
Mrs.
Philip
Needham,
Mrs.
Arthur
Christy,
Mrs.
George
Hallsteen
and
Mrs.
Carl
Rich and
Freeberg ... The centerpiece was Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth
the subject of much praise. It was son from Chicago to 1511 Hacka pineapple, with little cantaloupe berry; Mr. and Mrs. Theodore Kanvik and two daughters from Irvingballs fastened to the bent leaves,
‘on, N.Y., to 1508 Hackberry.
with the base surrounded by green

and purple

Mr. and Mrs,
Deposit, N.Y,

v= SALE

July Just Woulda’t
Be July Without . . .

for

WEDDING
CANDID
PHOTOS

THE

BEST

SOONER THE BETTER! BUT YOU‘LL.
ALWAYS FIND SOMETHING NEW
TO. SEE, TO GIVE, TO OWN, TO
CHERISH!

GRACE HE

FOR DETAILS CALL
Percy H. Prior, Jr.
Photographer
599 ROGER WILLIAMS AVE.
ID 2-3199

TIME

HI 6-1811
563 LINCOLN

AVE.

�sda

g tg

ue

Py

.

" p

*

aS

Py

Bead

Ly

oe

ae

No Mosquitoes

a

ah ee

4

Rye

Ca
ALAR NS ee

}

for this Garden

Shirley Growney

Party

cab

y

2

Getting Ready For The Convention

To Wed Former
Resident
A July 25 wedding
Church,

Lake

in St. Mary’s

Forest,

will

Miss Shirley Growney,

unite

daughter of

Vincent Growney of Lake Forest,
and James B. Kelley, son of the
Byron
Kelleys
of Ramstien,
Germany. Mr. Kelley lived in Highland
Park while his father was stationed
at
Fort
Sheridan.
He
attended

Highland Park High School,

_ Mosquitoes at North Shore garden parties have become a thing of the past
__ since Household Pest Control division of Aerosol Exterminators has put its
‘new fogging equipment into operation. One treatment the day of your party
does the job, won't harm flowers or shrubbery but kills mosquitoes. HPC also
has a special plan that brings sudden

death to ants, moths, spiders, waterbugs,

carpet beetles, roaches and all the other annoying and damage-dealing insect
pests that invade our homes. HPC chemicals are safe for people . . . murder
for insects. The HPC plan is inexpensive, too.

Household
Phone

Hillcrest

Pest Control

6-6173

7

Days

a

Week

Miss Sharon
Growney
of Lake
Forest will be her sister’s maid of
honor, Best man will be the bridegroom’s brother, John E. Kelley of
Vermillion, S.D.
A reception will be given after
the ceremony in the home of the
bride’s father.
Miss Growney attended the Art

Institute

of Chicago.

Her fiance,

a

senior at the University of South
Dakota, is a member of Phi Delta
Theta fraternity.

After their marriage,

the

couple

will reside in Vermillion while Mr.
Kelley completes his studies at the
university.

How many girls will a sports car hold? Alumnae members of
Alpha Gamma Delta try it out for size while they planned for
their departure June 27 for French Lick, Ind., and the sorority’s
biennial convention. Front, left to right, are Mrs. Charles Collins,
Northfield; Miss Celine Grabert, Wilmette and Mrs. J. R. Stapleton,
Evanston.

Second
Heights; Mrs.
who was the

made
Gamma

row, left to right, are Mrs. W. G. Peterson, Arlington
Herbert
official

up of Northwestern
Delta;

and

Williams

Ave.

Ravinia

Section

IDiewood

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ud

os

when

Robert

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TNT

John B. Nash Carpet &amp; Linoleum Co.
Roger

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Mrs.

COMING NEXT WEEK!
WATCH FOR IT!

Brand Name Carpeting
626

Garbrecht of 1342 Oxford Rd., Deerfield,
delegate from Lambda Alumnae chapter,

A

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We

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Park

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of

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To...

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Blackburn

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Page

18

Mr.

With

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Mrs.

Blackburn,

Merla

and

Family Musical

Larry

Program

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Highland

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ORGANS

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Park

ID 2-2510

Your, Keys to the Worle of Music #

Thursday,

July

2, 1959

�LA

ot

Amideis

Are Om Mois

On

Bob ALink

RL

Announcement is made of the
marriage of Miss Rose Ann Hironimus, daughter of Mrs. Lester R.
Hironimus of Waukegan and the
late Mr. Hironimus, to Armand A.
Amidei, son of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur A. Amidei of Highwood.
The wedding took place at 11:30
a.m. June 6 in St. Joseph’s Church,
Waukegan,

followed

by

a

everything
to safeguard
your health

quality you
can rely on
every time

Nuptial

Mass celebrated by the Rev. George
A. Knippen. The bride was gowned
in
white
silk
organza,
designed

with an applique trim at the neckline and train. Her bouquet was of
white

calla lilies.

Attendants wore organza frocks
in rainbow shades with matching
picture hats. Miss Carol Hironimus
of Waukegan, a cousin, was in blue;
Miss Shirley Swanson
of Waukegan, in green; Mrs. George Doty

of Fox Lake, in pink, and the maid
of honor, Miss Frances Amidei, sister of the bridegroom, was gowned
in yellow. Their flowers were carnations.

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Dom
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served as best man for Mr. Amidei,
and a brother, George, was among
(Continued on page 30)

Betts’

Mr.

and

Mrs.

Armand

A.

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Amidei

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Bay Rd., H.P. —
2, 1959

AMPLE

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PARKING
Page

19

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id

ayo
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Fee

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pon

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ENN

;

Pi

ARNEL
Ree

The Rev. A. P. Johnson officiated
at the ceremony
at which
Mrs.
Marion Morrison was organist and
Miss Deanna Smith, soloist.
The bride chose an embroidered
silk sheer gown worn over taffeta
for her wedding. It was fashioned
with
a
sabrina
neckline,
short
sleeves and detailed bodice. Her intermission-length skirt fell into a
chapel train. A jewel crown held
her silk illusion veil, She carried a
white orchid and lily-of-the-valley
on her white Bible.
The
bride
asked
Mrs.
Judith
Kunath,
1017 Brittany Rd., to be
her matron of honor. Bridesmaids
were Mrs. Jeannine Happ of Mundelein and Miss Susan Madson of
Northbrook.
All attendants were gowned identically in nylon sheer print dresses
over orchid taffeta. The ballerinalength dresses were designed with

now

scoop

Mrs.

Lawrence

D,

Jenart Studio

Neargarder

necklines,

cumberbunds

and

full skirts. They wore matching orchid crowns
and carried colonial
bouquets of miniature white carnations surrounding large orchids.
Mr. Neargarder’s best man was

(Continued on page 26)

MID-SUMMER

CLEARANCE
STARTS JULY 6

CRABGRASS
BLASTER

Quick, sure

\

pa

:

i

i

2

(Monday)

ion

°f Spreading Crabgracs

e ALL-IN-ONES
e PANTY
Here’s the guaranteed way

to end crabgrass fast

— without hard work. Rasciy pour % song dry

e

GIRDLES

GIRDLES

CLOUT into the Scotts Spreader hopper, set the
dial to 7, and start walking! CLOUT goes on uniformly
— just the right amount. Kills even big,
tough, full-grown crabgrass. Don’t delay — blast

&amp;

LINGERIE

crabgrass now, with CLourT.

e ROBES
.

CLOUT® -

Vs

treats 5,000

sq ft- $6.95

Need a Scotts Spreader? Save $5.00 right now and

e

reap the benefits year-round. CLOUT ($6.95) plus
#35 Spreader ($16.95) together now only $18.90.

447

3
k

ae

Store

Roger Williams —
Hours

wad Mn
Daily

8 a.m.

ID 2-4387
to 5:30

p.m.

Open Sundays 9:00 A.M. - 1:00 P.M.
Page 20

BRAS

Drastic Reductions

RAVINIA HARDWARE
4

Hoey ts ah ni
Ss

Miss Schoonover is the daughter
of
Mrs.
Anna
Schoonover,
1948
Deerfield
Rd.
She
was
given
in
marriage by her brother, Clyde F.
Schoonover.

\

AMPLE

Y

The Bethany Church altar was
decorated with white gladioli and
ferns for the evening wedding of
Miss Anna
Mae
Schoonover. She
became the bride of Lawrence D.
Neargarder on May 16.

-tiie....0ie..alie,...0iie..viie...vthe....rlhe...0iie,..olhe...olie..olte..she..slte

Beauty

ie

Me

site. .slie.

IC SCIS

ae

R

site. .ole.ofie..ot.

©

mily

FE,

My

OF

d

acobi

WINNETKA,

578 LINCOLN
HI 6-4750

Thursday, July 2, 1959
7

“

4

�thin May

op

si

Fo

\

Local Artist Shows Friends Of Hebrew
University Leave
Work On Left Bank Today For Europe

James

Black

James

John

Marc J. Berkman, 328 Ridge Rd.,
mid-west director of the American
Friends of the Hebrew University
of Jerusalem, Israel, leaves today
for a five-week trip to Europe, Russia and Israel. He will lead a party
of 12 to confer with leaders of the
Society in Copenhagen, Vienna and
Rome. They also will visit Moscow,
Leningrad and Kiev. All are from
the great metropolitan area which
includes the North Shore.

Art

Black,

son of Mr.

H. Black,

1172

cently completed

Academy

of

Goes

Course
and

Wade

courses

Bruce

Mrs.

St., re-

S.

at Central

Commercial

Art

To

in

morial

of
the
and

son of Mrs.

115

Hazel

Stephen

trophy

Military

Everett

Everett,

Everett

received

Cincinnati, Ohio. At home now, he
is planning to enter the advertising field.
Black,
a Highland
Park
High
School
graduate,
received
his
bachelor of arts degree last year
from the University of Colorado at
Boulder.

Bruce

at
Naval

i

ar

ta

Navy Lt. Robert E. Adler: 2) oo Gh
Graduates In California

‘Scholarship Trophy

Completes

Commercial

eae
@

Ave.,

Nelson

Jean
has
Me-

Northwestern
Academy

in

Lake Geneva. The trophy is awarded
for
scholastic
improvement.
Considered for the award are undergraduates
in the
top
10 per
cent
of the
school.
Bruce
is a
sophomore.

Navy Lt. Robert E. Adler, son of —
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Henry
recently
Hazel
Ave.,

from

a

course

of

Adler,

259°

\f

graduated — %
study at the |

Naval Post-graduate School, Mon- |
erey,

Calif.

Approximately 455 officers, rep-

resenting

the

different

of the Armed

grees

branches

Forces, received de-

at this ceremony

marked
the
Naval School,

which

anniversary

of

|

also —
the

~

While in Jerusalem Aug. 1, they
will view the famous seven Dead
Sea Scrolls at the University and
be guests at a reception in their
honor.

Shirley

P.

Kravitt

The work of a local winner of
the Prix de Paris, Shirley (Mrs. Jerome
J.) Kravitt
of 1314 Forest
Ave., is being exhibited this month
at the Raymond Duncan Galleries
on the Left Bank in Paris. Twenty
American artists will be represented at the show which was opened
by official members of the French
state and municipality.

The prize was awarded Mrs. Kravitt by the Ligoa Duncan Galerie
Des Arts in New York City, sponsors of the First Salon of the 49
states.
Her
work
was
displayed
there from Dec. 22, 1958 through

Jan.

5.
Reception

in

Gloucester

Mr. and Mrs. Kravitt and their
two sons will be guests of Carlos
Maria
Flumiani,
director
of the
Gloucester (Massachusetts) Art Institute July 10.
The director has
arranged a reception for them at
the institute where a one-woman
exhibit of Mrs. Kravitt’s is on display throughout July.
Emotional conflict is the theme
of the exhibit of oils and collage.
In writing of Mrs. Kravitt’s works,
the
director
said,
“In
her
canvasses, there is death and life, destruction and creation, the end of
the whole and the eternal rebirth
of the one, the everlastingness of
the infinite in terms of the unending succession of the finite . .

(Mrs.

Kravitt)

emerges

in

When you move

Wagon

El Synagogue.

A dance

will furnish music from

THE LEWIS CO.

If you,. or others you
know, are moving, be
sure to phone Welcome
Wagon.
Highland Park
Cecile Casey
ID 2-0442
Deerfield- Bannockburn
Adalyne Sickel
WI5-1210

WELCOME WAGON

Edens near Tower Road,
Phone VErnon

Northbrook

5-2400

Pillow Sale
Our complete stock of LAZY BACK
pillows, bench pads and floor cushions,

of

single men and women will hold a
“Summer Fling” dance July 12 at

Beth

JULY DOLLAR - SAVING SALE

business leaders.

the

group

|

during our

Hostess will call with a
basket of gifts...and
friendly greetings from
_our religious, civic and

‘Summer Fling’ Planned
By Young Adults Group
newly-organized

OW

RUG CLEANING ORDER

a new home...
Your Welcome

RRS

on any room size

to town...or to

world
of contemporary
American
art as a personality rich with arresting originality and the positive
talent of the modernistic masters.”

A

SAVE $100 N

CNV

O|

very specially priced. See our big assort-

band

8:30 p.m.

ment - from $2.95.

Bedspread Sale
N ETTLE

CREEK

twin-size bedspreads

in stock reduced 50%.

One-of-a-kind only.

sale ends July 18

all sales items cash

&amp; carry

QUALITY
MEATS and GROCERIES
“Everything for the
Table”
DELIVERY

SERVICE

IDlewood 2-4400
608

CENTRAL

HIGHLAND
Thursday,

AVE.,
PARK

July 2, 1959

now

all sales final

4

BERGER
678

CENTRAL

AVENUE AT GREEN BAY ROAD
HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS

i
IDlewood

Inc.
2-5422
Page

21

�Two

HOME IMPROVEMENT
with the CUSTOM

Receive

Degrees

cently were

TOUCH!

land

Park

awarded

to two

PEERLESS

CALL

PEERLESS HOME
Park

Ave.,

* KITCHENS
* BATHS

BUILDERS, INC.
Highland

West

Park

ID 2-6800

PORCH

AWNINGS
e All

Home
ARBOR

AVE.,

HERE
RADIO

SERVICE

REPAIR

OIL
SALES

—

Mrs.
Dr.

Edwin

CENTRAL

B.
J.

L.

Block

DeCosta

Society

is

medical
Medical

Named

President

Dr.
Edwin
J.
De
Costa,
176
Roger Williams Ave., an obstetrician and gynecologist, was named
president-elect of the Chicago Gynecological
Society
at its
annual
meeting
June
19. His
duties
as
president will follow the expiration
of his four-year term as secretary.

—

WATCH

REPAIR

on

olers

)
CORNER

of

&amp;

Heating
We

Repair

AUTO

ALL

and

MAKES

HOME

also

TRANSISTOR
FM

RADIOS

- AM

Sales and

now

in

and

Equipment

PHONE
ID 2-3804

RADIO

1858 FIRST ST., H.P.
Ample Parking in Rear

BRAUN
OIL

C00 S0

BROS.
CO.

Highland Park

HEATING

SERVICE

A. E. Savage,

Owner

Established

Office

PARK,

West

&amp; Machine Button Holes

5-0602

call Windsor

5-4427

1010 HAZEL AVE., DEERFIELD

‘Page 22

Vogue

North

THIS SIZE

Western

For Your

RR.

and

WI
Repair

Weekly*
To Reach

5-3600

Work

—

New

Work

10,947

Dishwashers

Road

Water
If no

WE

$3.60

Needs

HAROLD ROOT
PLUMBING CO.

Nursery

ee ea
Ee eee

EEL Pere
YOU

OFFER

FREE

answer

Heaters
call

se Pr

WI

PEE

Homes

5-0743

Ty Tht y |
in

THESE

FREE

Services

Illustrations from

FREE Copywriting

ID

2-4500

—

Ask

Park

Highwood
Deerfield
area.

our Art Services.

Advice

FREE Market Analysis
Call

the

Highland

FREE Layout of your ad.

Fabric Shop

722 Main
Evanston
UNiversity 4-3034

Plumbing

Costs Only

CALL

1885

Deerfield

Towels, Shirts, etc.

Of Boilers or Furnaces

BOILER SALES &amp; INSTALLATION

year

for a

by Experts.
Information.
Display

Representative

of

Reserve

AD

ILL.

Bee eeee eee
PLUMBING

WI 5-0035

On Linens, Blouses, Sweaters,
Pleating — Belts
Buttons — Hand Bound

If no answer

I

F. D. CLAVEY
RAVINIA NURSERIES

MONOGRAMMING

OIL - GAS
DEPENDABLE CLEANING
Windsor

for the

Deerfield

eR bit TET
Ee
LEE EL LELT LL PET EET
HEATING SERVICE
DRESSMAKER’S SERVICE

GAS

Inspector

Ree

ID 2-8120

COMMUNITY

third

Highland Park Camp of the Royal
Neighbors
will
meet
at
8 p.m.
Wednesday in the V.F.W. hall, according to the oracle, Mrs. Bessie
Peterson. Further plans for the district convention in August will be
made. Members
are urged to attend. Refreshments will be served.

Jewelry Designers

LANDSCAPING

Carl Casel, Division Manager
444 Central Ave.

his

school at Western
School.

,

HIGHLAND

Inc.

20th Century TV

to
re-

GAS

- HI-FI
Service

the

Mrs.

Camp of Royal Neighbors
Plan August Convention

Watch. Repair. Craftsmen

and
Watch

and

YOUR
SHERIDAN

Leading
Official

of

Beach

Is-

Miss

a
wedding
journey
Can., the couple will

. TELEPHONE ID 2-2028

OIL AND

were

(sister

Miami

per-

at Temple

B: Dox

JEWELER

SERVICE

Bernstein

bride)

Morton

Rislander

attendants

Nancy

and

2-1316

BURNER

Selwyn

Mrs.

The bride graduated from Highland Park High School and Western
Reserve
University.
The
groom
graduated from Haverford College

AN

FUEL OIL

in Day-

side in Cleveland, Ohio.

Co.

I.

Sunday

the ceremony

Bridal

Dayton.
After
Quebec,

Chicago

ID

Mr.

was held in the Van Cleve Hotel in

Color

H.P.

of

Gerald Flagel, Dayton.
Mr.
Block’s best man
was
his
brother,
James, of Dayton. His usher was Gerald Flagel also of Dayton.
Following the ceremony a dinner

DICK LATTANZI
1227

TELEVISION

rael.

ENCLOSURES

Improvement

KONSLER

ID 2-0252

Design

Illinois U. and is a member of
Kappa Tau, social fraternity.

ALCOA—Any

Colors

Ave., was wed

Rabbi

ALUMINUM
SIDING

e Stationery
© Roll-up

of Mi-

daughter

Block, son of Dr. and
E. Block of Dayton.

Beautify Your Home
With Fabulous .. .

Aluminum

R. Bernstein
Fla.,

ton, Ohio. The groom is Blaine Lee

NOW in ALL COLORS!

WINDOWS

Custom

CARL

Lake

Louis R. Guentz, 599 Vine Ave.,
a graduate of Highland Park High
School, received a B.A. degree. Mr.
Guentz majored in design. He attended Coe College, Cedar Rapids,
ern
Phi

STORM

K

(Mrs. Thomas

Iowa, before transferring to South-

Aluminum

L &amp;

In

Linda

Beach,

formed
Major

Ohio

and Mrs. Avery J. Bernstein now
of Miami Beach and formerly of

year.

* FAMILY AND RECREATION ROOMS
* ROOM ADDITIONS
¢ GARAGES

1550

ami

Bahr), 653 Laurel Ave., received
a B.S.
in
education.
Mrs.
Bahr
taught at the Community Nursery
School during the 1957-58 school

WAY Means
and Supervised

Dayton,
Miss

High-

residents.

Mrs. Juanita Bahr

The PEERLESS
Architect Designed

Wlarvied Sn

Bachelor’s degrees at Southern
Illinois University, Carbondale, re-

Phone
For

ID 2-4500

Further

*on annual

Information

basis.

Thursday,

July

2,

1959

�OODBYE
ES
with
HPC's
NEW, SAFE
EASY TO USE
DO -IT-YOURSELF
SKEETER SCOOTER
MOSQUITO
CONTROL KIT

ONE 10-MINUTE
TREATMENT
LASTS 7-10 DAYS
Pets, Plants, Wildlife When

Completely Safe for Humans,

=

Fr

ofl

He

=|
|
Ideal for:

———
———-_

PICNICS - BARBEQUES ==—4

LAWN

PARTIES - PATIOS ===

SWIMMING POOLS

DELIVERY IN TIME
FOR THE 4th
Thursday,

July

2, 1959

SENSATIONAL

mCagouti

NEW

==

Y

MAGAZINE

CYNON,

MONEY-BACK
GUARANTEE

2
=

DISCOVERY ACCLAIMED
_ IN PEST CONTROL,
OUTMODES INEFFECTIVE, STICKY, MESSY
REPELLENTS
GREASY
SMOKES,
BOMBS,
- BACK
MONEY
er a lteee SPRAYS.

MOSQUITOES
he

FREE DELIVER

(Estate size duster also available.)

NATIONAL

yeti

|

C.0.D.

EASY-TO-OPERATE PROFESSIONAL-TYPE AND
SIZE DUSTER WITH SIMPLE OPERATING INSTRUC-

TIONS.

»-E, =

HEN
=

{=

15”

upon size of your yard), AND EASY-TO-HANDLE,

&gt;
am

j_TRicersate

———=

IMAGINE- A SUMMER FREE
sO MOSQUITOES FOR ONLY
LOW PRICE INCLUDES 10 Ibs. of GRANULAR MATERIAL (enough to last 5-10 weeks, depending

Cee

mt 5

‘N\\

Used As Directed.

you

are

not

completely

satisfied,

return

the

unused

portion

2

If

=

of saeelas

=
=

within 10 days of purchase, and your money will be completely
vetunded:

Scooter

and

the

duster

in good,

usable

=&gt;

condition

SHAPAAPARPARGINIA

§ Household Pest Contiel:
z
2
Hillcrest 6- 6173.

Page

23

�By

#5
x

YWCA Schedules
Busy Summer Program

7

Expert Hair Coloring

The Highland Park YWCA’s summer program is busy. Bridge, tennis,
art,
grooming
classes
offer
something
of
interest
to
nearly
everyone.
New Teens Class
Especially
for
the
teens
is a
brand new class, “The Art of Being
Pretty,
Poised
and _ Popular.’
Classes
are
meeting
three
more
weeks,
from.
1:30-2:30
p.m.
Wednesdays.
&lt;A
similar
class
will meet from 10-11 am. Thursdays beginning today, for a fourweek period. It will cover clothes,
color, complexion, walk, talk and
manners. Weight, grooming and exercising toward
a more beautiful
(Continued on page 26)

. » . including all shades
of light blondes

Permanent

Waves

Hair Cutting
J

Specializing

In All Branches Of Beauty

Culture

CLASSIQUE Beauty sALon
1815

St. Johns

Avenue

ID 2-1603

EXPERIENCED OPERATORS

ROSBY’S GIGANTIC

STARTS—MONDAY,

DRESS Sale
SIZES:
Misses 10 to 20 NOW

Juniors
Half

5 to

121%

15

to

$9.98

$24.98

JULY

to

to

222

Originally

a

Spring
Summer

to

1835

SECOND

ST.

rus
(Across

from

the

blue

union

of the

official

according

to Mrs.

Gordon

R.

Parks,

Shore Daughters of the American Revolution.
The

DAR,

publishes

a

as

a

Flag

public

Code

service,

which

de-

scribes and illustrates every detail
concerning display of the American flag.
Mrs. Parks emphasizes that the
48-star flag never will be considered outdated, although it may become shabby and worn from use.
It is not proper, however, she said,
to display the 49-star flag until
Saturday, Independence Day.
The admission of Hawaii as the
fiftieth state cannot take place until after the Hawaiian general election referendum on July 28.
The
50-star
flag will not
become official until July 4, 1960.
When a flag, whether it have 49,
48 or lesser number
of stars, is
in such
condition
that
it is no
longer a fitting emblem
for dis-

Areas

—

play, it should be destroyed in a
dignified way, preferably by burning, Mrs. Parks stated.
This information, plus all other
rules concerning the flag and its
display, are found in the DAR Flag
Code leaflet. A limited number are
available to the public.
They may
be obtained by calling Mrs. Harold
O. Sudbring
of Deerfield
(WI 51018); she is the chapter’s newlyelected flag chairman.
In the fall
the chapter may have 49-star flags
available upon order.
Another
project
of
the
local
chapter, in cooperation with other
Illinois chapters, was contributing
money for replacement of the IIlinois 48-star emblem flag with a 49star emblem flag to fly in the Na(Continued on page 26)

Old

Drives

Refinished

P

ee

Expert Black Topping
@ Concrete
@ Crushed
Stone
Call for FREE ESTIMATE!

Gaus?

... CHOICE TOP SOIL

SILJESTROM

for CLEARANCE!

FUEL CO.

ID 2-0065
First

St.

Highland

Park

FASHIONS

Jewel)

ID

2-0788

COOLERS — Any Size!

BISHOP’S is BEST for AIR

the

@

07

$ 17.98

$49.9 8

SUBURBAN
H.P.

dot

1174 Glencoe Ave., immediate past Flag chairman of the North

1930

ROSB

will

48-star flag at any time,

Parking

A SPECIAL GROUP of blouses.
. - cotton
skirts . .. lingerie . . jewelry... purses

REDUCED

49 stars

DRIVEWAY CONSTRUCTION

SPRING CAR COATS are now REDUCED TO $7.00 &amp; $9.00
COORDINATED SKIRT AND BLOUSE SETS NOW 40% OFF

DRASTICALLY

Although

American flag after tomorrow, it still is permissible to fly the

and
Suits

Now 40%

8 to 20
1442

It's Official! 49-Star American.
lag May Be Flown July 4, 1959

6th

SUITS
ale
SIZES:

07

2412

Originally
to

40%

AFTER JULY 4th

‘

|

Our service
is fast
and friendly

Miss Veen

Call

on

us when

you

need

your

laundry

done

in a hurry!

We’re

always

prompt.

. . with

sacri-

no

fice of our high standards of quality!

List

Fast

Model

F8100

air conditioning

Cools, filters,
all with easy
pushbutton controls. Compact, not just thin—lets in
light as it keeps out heat, dust, noise. Limited offer.
circulates air...

1741
Page

24

Second

&amp; AIR

St., Highland

CONDITIONING

Park

deliveries, .

at its best!

ES
Bo"

Phone TODAY

for Pick-up Service!

directs it as you wish...

BISHOP’ S
HEATING

and

$349.95

Big cooling capacity—
luxurious appearance—
at this new low cost!
Automatic

pick-ups

ENGINEERS

.

KOKIE
LAUNDRY

.

Phone:

ID 2-0407

VALLEY
&amp;

DRY

CLEANERS,

INC.

Main Office and Plant:
iDilewood 2-3310 — Deerfield Call Enterprise

1616

512-518 Waukegan Ave., Highwood
Thursday,

July

2, 1959

�PANGS a 8 ay
an
ee
a

‘

3 Project Recognized

By Nuclear Society
The Society of Nuclear Medicine,
whose

physicians

and

scientists

in

many

countries

are

engaged

in

the various facets of nuclear medicine,
officially
recognizes
the
United
Order
of
True _ Sisters
Cancer Service Isotope project, a
group
project
of
1300
Highland
Park and Chicago women.
The women
of the UOTS
are

said

to

be

groups

field

one

to

of

of

be

the

first

lay

in

the

recognized

nuclear

EDSEL SALES ARE UP
A BOOMING 46.1%

medicine.

The project recently was awarded exhibit space at the Society of
Nuclear Medicine annual meeting.
The exhibit consisted
of display
poster, placards, photographs and
literature
showing
all
of
the
groups activities, fund raising and
future plans.

Best savings! Best trade-ins!

The Order supports the indigent
patient program at Highland Park,
Michael
Reese
and
Mount
Sinai

Best buys during our

Come

BECAUSE EDSEL IS

|

nol

:

a-running.

THE BIG ECONOMY BUY!

Get your Edsel now!
EDSEL GIVES YOU

hospitals. To date, $84,000 has been
contributed
toward
by the committee.

this

BIG-CAR LOOKS, LUXURY
AND FEATURES AT
SMALL-CAR PRICE!

program

Highland Parkers who attended
the Nuclear Medicine meeting are
Mrs. Phillip Rubens, co-chairman
of arrangement, Mrs. Harry Levi,
Morton Teller and Simon Neiman.

Get your Edsel now!

University of Rochester
Graduates Local Residents

Rochester,

Rochester,

at the

School

University’s

YET RUNS ON REGULAR GAS.

|

N.Y.

Miss Althea Elizabeth Speelman,
321 Euclid Ave., also was among
the graduates, receiving a master
of music degree in music education.
Miss
Speelman
took
her

work

oe

2ND ANNIVERSARY

Charles A. Buerk, son of Mrs.
Elizabeth Buerk, 1583 Cavell Ave.,
received a B.A. degree with honors in history at the 109th annual
commencement of the University of

Get your Edsel now!

:

ae

|

Eastman

LIKE FINDING MONEY!
“OFF-THE-FLOOR” SPECIALS

of Music.

!

NOTICE
TO BIDDERS
CITY OF HIGHLAND PARK
LAKE
COUNTY,
ILLINOIS
SANITARY SEWER IMPROVEMENTS
Sealed proposals, invited by the City of
Highland Park, will be received by the City
Manager at the City Hall, 1707 St. Johns
Avenue, Highland Park, Illinois, until 8:00
P.M., Central Daylight Saving Time, July
13, 1959, at which time and place they will
be publicly opened and read aloud, for Division D of the Sanitary Sewer Improvements.
The work comprises the construction of
cast iron pipe and vitrified clay pipe sewers,
complete with all wyes, tees, special connections, railroad crossings, highway crossings, connections to existing sewers, manholes,
and
other appurtenances and_incidental work, as follows:
Size
Approximate
Inches
Material
Length-Feet
21
A, i J
’
20

CIP

18
16

CIP
CIP

416
898

15
14

VCP
CIP

5,642
2,165

12
12
10

CIP
VCP
CIP

444
6,095
1,266

10

VCP

2,669

PRICED WAY DOWN
FOR QUICK CLEARANCE!
Get your Edsel now!

254

VC
The work also includes the construction
of the Moraine Ravine Sewer, complete as
above, along either of two alternate routes
for which
alternate proposals will be received.
The sizes and approximate lengths
of sewer pipe included under each alternate
are as follows:

Size

Inches

Material
CIP
CIP

12

12

Approximate Length—Feet
Alternate
20
976

VCP

12 VCP
10

I

808

(in tunnel)

Alternate
12
1,357

2

1,617

585

VCP

1,622

8
VCP
47
The
Instructions
to
Bidders,
Proposal,
Form of Bid Bond, Agreement, Specifications, Plans, Form
of Performance
Bond,
and other Contract Documents may be examined at the office of the City Engineer,
City Hall, Highland Park, Illinois, and at
the office of Greeley and Hansen,
Engi-

neers,

14 East

Jackson

Boulevard,

Chicago

4, Illinois. Copies of these Contract Documents may be obtained from either office
upon the deposit of Twenty-Five
Dollars

for

each

set.

The

amount

of

the

deposit

will be refunded if the documents are returned in good condition within 30 days
after the opening of bids.
Each proposal must be submitted on the
Proposal
forms included
in the Contract
Documents and must be accompanied by a
certified check on a solvent bank or trust
company,
made
payable
to the
City
of
Highland Park, in an amount of not less

than

10 per cent

of the total bid,

City

of Highland

Park

reserves

the

right to reject any or all bids, to waive any
informalities in bids and to readvertise.

By

Dated

Order

of the City Council.

By R. W. SNYDER, City Manager.
June 22, 1959, Highland Park, Illinois
6/25-7/2/59—180

Thursday,

July

2, 1959

This is all you have to do: (1) Pick up your entry blank at your
Edsel dealer’s. (2) Complete the sentence ‘I would like to win
eee ee eees
e cere
a full-sized 1960 Edsel because..........0 e

;
It’s fun. It’s easy. And it’s your big chance to own a beautiful
brand-new

1960

Edsel. Hurry

in! The contest closes Aug.

8.

FL

|
ai

Ng-StSize va
k ri

in the

or by a

bid bond of like amount, on the form set
forth in the Contract Documents, as assurance that the bid is made in good faith.

_ The

wm rot OOO EDOELD. | saaructscneetel
HIGHLAND PARK LINCOLN-MERCURY, INC.

lueId

low-price fie

{22057

HIGHLAND

PARK
Page

25

�(Advertisement)

49- Star American Flag May

Aardvarks Are a Luxury!
(Continued

from

page

24)

When
not
in
uniform,
men
should
remove
head-dress
with
right hand, holding it at left shoulder, the hand being held over the

tional Cathedral, Washington, D.C.
Mrs. Parks points out that the
DAR does not establish law on dis-

position

of

the

flag,

but

merely

heart.

seeks
to make
the
detailed
law
enacted by Congress more
easily
understood by the public.

Some

important

flag

display

a decoration.

Use

is

(ant eaters) are not
Shore suburbs since

Exterminators took over.
treatment.

HPC

an

To

only a luxury but completely unnecessary in
Household Pest Control division of Aerosol

A self-respecting ant wouldn’t be caught alive after
rid

get

of ants,

roaches,

moths,

waterbugs,

spiders,

carpet beetles and all other damage-dealing insect pests that invade our
homes just call HPC. HPC chemicals are safe for people . . . murder for insects. And the HPC plan is inexpensive, too — as low as $17.50 per year
for

complete

two

$2.00 for each additional room.

Household

and

inside

treatments

out

for

Pest Control—Phone
7 Days

most

6-room

.

homes

permitted.
During the ceremony of hoisting
and lowering the flag, or when the

flag is passing in parade,

or in re-

view,
all persons
present
should
face the flag, stand at attention,
and salute. Those present in military uniform should render military salute.

HI Ilcrest 6-6173

a Week

salute

by

over a sidewalk, suspended vertically from a rope stretched from
house to a pole, it should be hoisted out with blue field first.
When displayed with other flags
on the same halyard, the American
flag should be flown at the top.
Only flags of American states and
cities and pennants of societies may
be flown on the same halyard.
The flag, when carried in a procession with another flag or flags,

of red,

white and blue bunting or material
Aardvarks
the North

should

projecting at an angle from your
home, the blue field must be at the
top of the staff. When displayed

water or merchandise.
The flag
should never be tied or draped to
as

Women

placing right hand over the heart.
The salute to the flag in the moving column should be rendered at
the moment the flag passes.
Home
Display
If the flag is displayed on a staff

rules follow:
Flag etiquette requires that the
flag should not touch anything beneath it, such as the ground, floor,

serve

Be Flown July 4, 1959

SUMMER. %
sae
SCHOOL 5
, &amp;

Choose
TYPING

FOR

TYPING

From

The

PERSONAL

FOR

Following
OR

SCHOOL

USE

(6 weeks)

BUSINESS

dpeedwriting
GREGG

Courses:

SHORTHAND

(days

BEGIN

only)

Charter

Good, sound construction will do more
than just keep the Wolf from your door.
It will protect your down payment and
monthly payment dollars by preserving
resale value... it will protect your
ears and privacy in keeping out noise...

\

it will protect life and property by

Wm.

6,

H. Callow,

SPEEDWRITING
20;

AUGUST

3,

Prin.

CLASS
17

12

THROUGHOUT
CEILINGS!

13.
14.
15.
16.
18.

AND

LATH

|

19

AND

23.

Bis

© FIREPROOF
©

© KEEPS

WEATHERPROOF
KNOCK
YOU

CAN

TELL

ON
IF

GENUINE

THE

OUT

NOISE

25.
FO)
27.

© DURABLE
WALL

IT's

utatn anp

PLASTER

BUREAU
PLASTER

FOR LATH &amp;
OF LAKE CO.

‘ T

=

QUALITY, HM BUILT

affiliated with the NATIONAL BUREAU
for. LATHING
Page

26

and

PLASTERING

PLASTER :
mtn LATH

ted

Sherman

Prin.

UN

4-3004

14390

TOTAL

ASSETS

$29,532,807.05

LIABILITIES
eet
;
Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships, and corporations ............ $12,463,369.87
Time deposits of individuals, partnerships, and corporations ................
12,659,574.16
Deposits of United States Government
378,046.82
Deposits of States and political subdivisions ...
1,787,394.81
Other deposits (certified and cashier’s checks, etc.)
240,871.62
TOTAL

Other

DEPOSITS

$27,529,257.28

liabilities

OTE,

254,573.31

Meee

Capital Stock:
iS): Common
Stotk;:
PONS
un baw,
Undivided profits

A fa

EF sR

CAPITAL
total

All other ruies will be found in
the four page DAR flag code leaflet.

YWCA

Schedule

(Continued

from

page

24)

figure will be included.
The instructor is Nancy
Miles,
former
professional
model
and
more recently a speaker to junior
women’s
clubs, high school girls
and settlement house groups. Her
lectures and demonstrations have
covered the subjects mentioned in
this course.
Summer

Schedule

BRIDGE:
Instructor, Mrs. Isabelle Garn;
Wednesdays, 8 p.m.
TENNIS:
Instructor, Miss Sarah Frelinger;
Tuesdays, 11 a.m.
Wednesdays, 10 a.m., Thursdays at 7 p.m.
ART:
Instructor, Mrs. Hilda Rubin; Tuesdays, 9:30 a.m.

At

Bethany

Church

from

Powers,

page

238

S.

20)

Central,

Dar

29.

SOTA,

GATILTAGDZACCOUNTS .

30.

TOTAL

LIABILITIES

AND

Ne

$27,783,830.59

ACCOUNTS

$200, 00000

ai

digo

CAPITAL

His mother wore a navy blue raw
silk suit with pink accessories for
her
son’s
wedding.
The _ bride’s
mother chose to wear a beige shantung dress with all white
accessories.
After a wedding trip to Florida,
the couple is at home in Libertyville. Both are graduates of High-

land Park High School.

Ave.

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 June 10,
1959, Published in Response
to Call Made by Comptroller
of the Currency,
Under
Section 5211, U.S. Revised
Statutes.
ASSETS
Fs Cash, balances with other banks, including reserve balance, and
cash items in
process of collection
$ 3,622,775.50
2. United States
Government obligations, direct and guaranteed ............... 13,731,362.45
3. Obligations of States and political subdivisions .....
5,072,093 .07
5. Corporate stocks (including $36,000.00 stock of Federal Reserve bank)
36,000.
6. Loans and discounts (including $2,449.44 overdrafts)
6,977,019.42
7. Bank premises owned $1.00, furniture and fixtures EOD tac2- thal
CRG css
2.00
11. Other
assets
i
93,554.61

resisting fire.... BUT ONLY IF GENUINE
LATH AND PLASTER IS USED

FOR WALLS

No.

Day,

Highwood. His ushers were Donald
Goring, 1821 Second St., and Andrew Neargarder, his brother.

EXCEPT

BEGIN JULY

1718
H. Callow,

Independence

(Continued

EVANSTON BUSINESS COLLEGE
W.

Day,

Constitution Day, Armistice or Veterans
Day,
lLincoln’s’
Birthday,
Washington’s Birthday and Illinois
Day which is December 3.

William

Classes

MONDAY

WHICH

Memorial

should be displayed by
especially on Flag Day,

The groom is the son of Mr. and
Mrs.
Henry
D. Neargarder,
1716
McGovern St.

Evening
ANY

Special Days
The flag
individuals

Wed

SHORTHAND

STENOGRAPHIC
SECRETARIAL
BUSINESS ENGLISH
ACCOUNTING
COMPTOMETRY

Day and

should be either on the marching
right, or, if there is a line of other
flags, in front of the center of that
line. The flag should not be displayed on a float in a parade except from a staff.

oe

he

eG

ACCOUNTS

ee

$

200,000.00
1,000,000.00
548,976.46

$

1,748,976.46

................. $29,532,807.05

MEMORANDA
31. Assets pledged or assigned to secure liabilities and for other purposes ...$
949,000.00
32. (a) Loans as shown above are after deduction of reserves of .............
415,301.82
» M. C. HART,
Cashier of the above-named bank, do solemnly swear that the
above statement is true to the best of my knowledge and belief.
M. C. HART, Cashier.
Correct—Attest:
VALLEE
O. APPEL)
Wm. HE UER
} Directors,
EARL W. GSELL
(SEAL)
State of Illinois, County of Lake, ss:
Sworn
to and subscribed before me this
19th day of June, 1959, and I hereby certify
that I am not an officer or director of this
bank.
BETH F. TAFT, Notary Public
My commission expires 2/9/61
7/2/59—178

Adjudication and Claim Day Notice
NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
to all
persons that the first Monday of August,
1959, is the claim date in the estate of
BENJAMIN G. PIERSEN, 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 sycceeding month at 9 A.M.
Katherine D. Piersen, Executor
Cornell and Wolff Attorneys
1866 Sheridan Road
Highland Park, Illinois
IDlewood 3-1140
6/25 7/2-9/59—176

PUBLIC NOTICE
Notice

Of

To the Patrons
Company:

Proposed

Filing

of the Illinois Bell Telephone

The
Illinois
Bell
Telephone
Company
hereby gives notice to the public that it
has filed with the Illinois Commerce Commission
provisions
in its
General
Local
Exchange Tariff which will permit a subscriber who requires two or more main line
telephones in a household to subscribe for
different types of residence service.
A copy of the proposed filing may be inspected by any interested party at the business office of this Company at 1866 Second
Street, Highland Park.
All parties interested in this matter may
obtain
information
with
respect
thereto
either directly from this Company
or by
addressing the Secretary of the Illinois Commerce Commission at Springfield, Illinois.
ILLINOIS BELL
By J. A.

Thursday,

TELEPHONE
CO.
Rosander, Manager
6/25 7/2/59—175

July

2, 1959

�‘Then Remember Community
Concert Series, In The Fall
With summer concerts at the Ravinia Festival and musicals

at Music Theatre currently on their minds, Highland
were reminded this week that the winter program
Communition

Concerts

Association

Mrs. John V. Spachner, president
of
the
association
and
program
chairman,
announced
a series of
concerts by five world famous artists.
The Roberto
Iglesias Ballet
Espanol, which has been seen at
Ravinia, will open the series Oct.

Robert

Casadesus,

pianist, will

give the program Nov. 27, Lee and
Makanowitzky, piano and violinduo.
will appear Jan. 6; Leontyne Price,
soprano, will give the March 2 program and Isaac Stern, who plays
tonight at Ravinia, will give the
April 12 concert.
Fall Membership Drive
Mrs. George
Simmonds
of 276
Hazel Ave. will be hostess for a
garden
party
in
mid-September
when George Blake, the Community Concert
representative
from
New York, arrives to discuss concert details with membership captains
and their
committee.
Mrs.
Irving C. Schur and Mrs. Mortimer
Scheff head the membership drive,
which
opens
officially
with
the
party.
Many checks had to be returned
last year, Mrs. Spachner said, because there were more applicants
than there are seats in the Highland Park High, School auditorium

where

has been

concerts

are

Parkers
for the

set up.

held.

Former

dation. Seymour B, Orner, 146 Pine
Point Dr., president, made the an-

opening

Cook

Vice presidents—Mrs.
Wieboldt
and
Joseph

membership

TNT

Seventy-five
thousand
dollars
will be provided for the establishment of “The Dr. Jerome D. Solomon Memorial Institute for Graduate Studies in Medicine and Surgery” to provide lectureships at the

day of the drive, she add-

County

Graduate

School

of

The additional $25,000 will
used to furnish and equip a
(Continued on page 30)

be
re-

Medicine.

Sponsored

By

Highland

Park

Chamber

of

Commerce

Werner A.
H.
Caro:

co-chairmen

—

Mrs.

Schur and Mrs. Scheff; secretary—
Mrs.
Spencer;
treasurer—William
N. Anspach;
counsel—Richard
H.
Levin; chairman of arrangements—
Harold W. Norman; publicity chairman—Mrs.
Samuel
R.
Wittelle;
scholarship
chairman—Mrs.
Dud-

ley Hall.
On the board
Canmann,

are Mrs.

Mrs.

Mare

Mrs. Jerome Hayman,

Harry

L.

C. Goldsmith,

Mrs. L. Juli-

an Harris, Mrs. Henry C. Hawes,
Harold N. Finch, Mrs. Theodore L.
Osborn Jr., Mrs. Samuel R. Rosen-

(Continued

on page

31)

See Russia for yourself!
MAUPINTOUR Motorcoach Tours.
18 days, departing from Helsinki
or Warsaw every week May 21
through September 3, $519.
MAUPINTOUR
Luxury
Sailings.
9 departures aboard the Queen
Mary and Elizabeth, April through
September,

from $2,105.

MAUPINTOUR _ Student - Teacher
Economy Tours. 72 days, visiting 12
countries. Departures: June 14, 21,
28 $1687 complete.

for full information call...

H. and R. Anspach
TRAVEL BUREAU
Herman

463

Central

F. Anspach, Pres.

Ave., H.P.

This is the tap
that never runs cold!

ID 2-1211

Natienally

AQUA POOLS

The water it brings you is heated

Advertised

by

16° x 34'

$2895
Custom
Vinyl

Completely Installed
NO MONEY DOWN
Up to
5 Yrs. to Pay

Built Steel Reinforced Concrete,

Liner, Filter, Skimmer,

Underwater

Light, Chemical Test Kit, Vacuum Clnr.
and Two-step Ladder are included.

For

Location

of Display

Pool

Box

376

Libertyville,

[]

Please

send

literature

[]

Pleese

have

representative

‘Thursday, July 2, 1959

and

or Write

GAS!

Fast Gas.

covery that as you
Efficient Gas. No
when you want it,
Gas.
Your hot
ending, wash day,
Economical Gas.
size water heater

So quick on the re-

use water, it’s heating more.
wait, no waste. Water’s hot
hot as you like it. Dependable
water supply seems neverbath day, any day, all day!
Because it’s Gas, a smaller
keeps pace with greater de-

mands! Fast, Efficient, Dependable, Economical.
You just can’t beat modern Gas!

Visit:

INC.
Ll 2-7420

JAYNART,
P.O.

Call

Illinois

information.

call.

Ae
wat

nouncement.

subscribers have an opportunity to
renew their memberships first and
new applications are accepted on
ed.
Renewals may be made with
Mrs. Charles D. Spencer, 1619 Ravine Ln.
No tickets are sold for
individual concerts.
Elections Held
Besides Mrs. Spachner, the following persons were elected officers and director of the Community Concert board:

WATCH FOR IT!

Two
grants,
totalling
$100,000,
have been voted by the Jerome D.
Solomon Memorial Research Foun-

ont acta naneaselirt

-19.

series

COMING NEXT WEEK! —

Announces Two
Hospital Grants

OR

YOUR

GAS

APPLIANCE

DEALE

:

r

�aaa

Police Give Tips On Burglary Prevention
Police

men
5 $e

ol

a

aH

f~

FIRST

PROFESSIONAL
ARTS PHARMACY
. .. in the Doctor's Building
1895 Sheridan Rd.

Highland

Park

tially open before you leave home,

in cooperation.
with
the
Illinois
Police Association’s designation of
June 28-July 4 as Burglary Prevention
Week
in
TIllinois,
has

even for the day, and
check to
be
sure
all exterior
doors
and
windows
are securely locked and
all ladders securely fastened with

issued

pin-tumbler

HEARING

For Prompt,
M., J. tad

Free

AID "BATTERIES

Delivery

Phone:

R.Ph.

ID 2-9000

Paul

K.

Haines,

R.Ph.

Pre -Holiday Special
THURSDAY

&amp;

FRIDAY

—

JULY

2nd

&amp;

3rd

COMPLETE CHASSIS LUBRICATION

ge

98c

q

a

Anthony

do-it-yourself

and

Carry

Use

Cities

—

Service

Use

Our

Products

Lubricating

Oils

Credit
for

and

Card

the

in their

absence,

ID

4

WANT

2-9815

When
two

you go out at night, leave

or

various

three

lights

parts

of

burning

the

house,

Williams
Highland

since

being lifted off their frames. Safety
latches which permit windows to
open
only part way
are a good
idea, he said, and since burglars
are expert climbers, use them on
second floor windows too.

Minor

Shoplifting

Reported

Harold Weber, manager of Woolworth’s store on Central Ave., reported a minor shoplifting item to
Highland Park police June 24. He
said a woman took a pair of men’s
socks,
left the
store,
and
drove
away in a car with a Georgia license number. Police said he reported it to alert other business
houses to possible shoplifting.

By ED GREENWALD
Often wonder why I can’t get those simple ideas that make a
million—Oliver P. Smith did when Humane Societies ruled out the use of
live rabbits in the dog races—he, to save his business, invented the
mechanical rabbit . . . tried it successfully in 1919 and made millions
and

his

heirs

WATER?

You don’t have to

more

before

*

the

patents

¥

*

ran

out.

*

GREENWALD’S,

1775

SECOND

STREET

—

ID 2-1100

$3.75
MONTH

DID

YOU

KNOW

People

come

CULLIGAN

THAT

.

all the way
our Sunday

out from
Brunch?

Chicago

for

Poached

Blintzes,

Founded

With

in

Families

1932,

The

Experi-

ment has enrolled over 10,000 people in its programs during the last
27 years, sending them to live in
communities
on five continents—
basic emphasis is placed on individual family living experience in
the countries visited.
Experimenters
travel
in
small
groups to other countries under the
guidance
of trained leaders. The
first month abroad is spent living
as members
of separate families
and the second month exploring the
country visited in the company of
the
young
people
of their
host
families.
A visit
Paris or
summer’s
nity for a
travel is
qualify.

to a major city such as
London is a part of the
experience and opportufew days of independent
provided for those who

Your

Pardon

In a traffic accident June 13, reported in June 18 issue, the NEWS
stated that a car driven by John S.
Pastella of Mundelein had struck
an auto driven by Mrs. Mary K.
Shively of Highwood. The drivers’
names were reversed in the story.
It was Mrs. Shively’s car that struck
Pastella’s
when
he slowed
after
turning at a Green Bay Rd. intersection
to let pedestrians
finish
crossing
the
street,
according
to
the police report. No ticket was issued.

Interested in
Stocks?

of

securities,

emphasizing common
stocks. The securities
for this fund are chosen
with objectives of longterm capital appreciation possibilities and
reasonable income. For
a free prospectus-booklet, cal] or write:

124

Blueberry

Pancakes,

Bacon,

Wirser- Sbeaten

orai
@u

of

vee

tace

Parking

©

in our

P.

BLONER

Call

West
Northwest
Hwy.
Barrington, MDlinois
Collect DUnkirk 1-3210
Representing

Ohevestors

New

ID 2-4444

rhe

BISGBLANRD

PARK,

Parking

na-

Ex-

Diversified Services, Inc.
FOUNDED 1894

Plenty
28

from

‘The

ZONE MANAGER

Eggs Benedict, Scrambled Eggs and
Creamed Chipped Beef on Toast, ete.
Served from 11 A.M. to 2 P.M.

ID 23010
Page

Live

RAYMOND

Featuring:
Cheese

SERVICE

of

fessional supervision

AS

plus modest original
installation cost

received

periment In International Living”
in Putney, Vt., that Samuel E. Benjamin
Jr., son of Mr.
and
Mrs.
Samuel
E. Benjamin,
530
Green
Bay
Rd., leaves
July
2 to visit
Sweden as a participant in the 1959
summer program.
A pioneer in the field of educational travel,
The
Experiment
is
a
non-profit
organization
which
maintains offices in 28 countries.

diversified

equipment to buy, no work
to do.

PER

has been

headquarters

Investors Stock. Fund,
Inc., offers an open end
mutual fund with pro-

Allthe soft water you need,
automatically, with no

LOW

Word

tional

In looking over old records, find that Washington football teams
were undefeated from 1907 to 1917 . - 63 games won and 4 tied.

buyit to try it!
AS

Will Visit Sweden
For Study Program

Beg

gh.

Park

in

the

chief said, since light is the night.
time burglar’s enemy. Screens and
storm windows should be hooked
on
the
inside
to prevent
their

AVORITE son

of dollars

SOFT

Have mail and daily deliveries
held until your return and if you
rent a safe deposit box, use it to
store
valuables
during
your
absence,
Keep
a
record
of
the
valuables.

sale

Greases

Roger

and

padlocks.

on

ROGER WILLIAMS
SERVICE STATION
535

list

there is no such thing as a “burglar-proof”
house,
according
to
Chief Schmieg, he. offers the check
list, in the hopes
that residents
will use it to discourage would-be
prowlers.
Check List
During
vacations,
leave
a
light
on
connected
to an
automatic
timer.
Install
pin-tumbler
cylinder locks on all exterior doors,
or install auxiliary night latches.
Notify police when you are taking
a trip. Don’t leave notes telling
where a key can be found. Check
credentials of salesmen and repairmen
before
admitting
them
to
your home.
Make
certain
that
shades
are
left up and Venetian blinds par-

Plan

Finest

check

to
householders
leaving
for
an
evening, a weekend or a vacation.
“Matinee” burglary continues in
most residential areas, he said, because
professional
house _ breakers know that many women leave
their homes for an hour or two in
the afternoon to attend club meetings, visit friends or just go shopping.
They often forget to lock up the

With Oil Change
Cash

. E. Benjamin A

Schmieg,

house
We Carry a Supply of .

Chief

Hecenors

Lot!
Thursday,

July

2, 1959
x

�mae.

ie

Lists New Books Added To Shelves of

Kenneth J. Weir

Goes To Luncheon ,

West Deerfield Twp. Public Library
Mrs.

George

Haney,

librarian,

has

made

a list of many

Praises Corporation

of the

Kenneth
J. Weir, president
of
the
Deerfield
Savings
and
Loan
Association today hailed the Federal Savings and Loan Insurance
Corporation for its contributions to
the nation’s thrift and home ownership movement over the last quarter century.

new

books which have been added recently to the shelves of the West Deerfield

Township

Public

Library.

They

include

both

fiction

and

non-

fiction.

FICTION
Beaty, David
Berle, Milton—Roeburt,
Bristow, Gwen
Brown, Frank London
Buck, Pearl
Busch, Niven
Caldwell, Erskine
Caldwell, Taylor
Cleary, Jon
Cordell, Alexander
Douglas, Jack
Duerrenmatt, Fredrich
Durrell, Lawrence
Eberhart, Mignon G.
Ellin, Stanley
Eyre, Katherine W.
Farris, John
Fast, Howard
Faulkner, William
Frank, Pat
Gilbert, Edwin ....
Giles, Janice Holt
Gcedden, FON
Gordon, Richard
Hecht, Ben .:
Kirst, Hans Hellmut
Linklater, Eric ..
Marshall, Edison
Mason, F. Van Wyck
McLaughlin, Robert
Millar, Margaret
Morgan, Al
Packard, Rosalie
Pratt, Theodore ..
Read,
Miss
Renault, Mary
Sandburg, Helga
Shipley, Nan
Singer, Howard
Smith, Dorothy Evelyn
Taber, Gladys
Updike, John .....
Vatsek, Joan
Wodehouse, P. G.

Cone of Silence
Earthquake
Celia Garth
Trumbull Park
Command The Morning
California Street
Claudelle Inglish
Dear And Glorious Physician
The Sundowners
Rape Of The Fair Country
By Brother Was An Only Child
The Pledge
Mountolive

John

In a statement issued in connection with the 25th anniversary . of
the founding of the Corporation,
Mr. Weir said that if it had not
been for the Corporation’s activ-

ities,

Melora

Ue STORE
TEN gO AF
e
AYpdiats

Eighth Circle
The Chinese Box
Harrison High
Spartacus
Faulkner Reader
Alas, Babylon
The Hourglass
Tre Land Beyond The
Mss. Panopoulis
Doctor And Son
The Sensualists
The Seventh Day
My Father And I
Pagan King
Young Titan
The Notion Of Sin
The Listening Walls
One Star General
Love in The Mist
Florida Roundabout
Storm On The Village
The Charioteer
Measure My Love
The

Scarlet

R.

Steiskal

Joseph
R.
Steiskal,
dealer,
of
the Shell station, Waukegan
and
County Line Rds., was one of the
305 service station dealers who attended a luncheon June 18 at the
Congress
Hotel,
Chicago,
as the
guest of the Shel! Oil Co.
Aftcr the luncheon the dealers
attended the Cubs-Pittsburgh baseball game in Wrigley Field.

Lily

Charter Member

Garrison, Roger H.
Hall, Ennen R.
Howard, Ruth Leslie
Kane, Harnett T.
Keys, Ancel and Margaret
Knight, Hugh M
Lancaster,
Osbert
Lang, Gladys E., editor
Lansing, Alfred
Levant, Oscar
Lipton, Lawrence
Loehr, Franklin
Loomis, Stanley
MacLeish,
Archibald
Martin, Betty—Wells, Evelyn
Matson, Ruth A
Maugham, W. Somerset
McClellan, Grant S., editor
Murphy, William E.—Murphy, Chester
Neese, Robert
Ogburn, Charlton, Jr.
Packard, Vance
Parson, Donald
Pasternak, Boris
Pearsall, Milo—Leedham, Charles
Rayback, Joseph Gi.
Ruge, Gerd 2
Sack, John
Scott, Robert Lee, Jr.
Shenton, Edward
Sondern, Frederic
Stevenson, Adlai
St. John, Robert
Thomas,
Lately
Thurber,
James
Toynbee, Arnold J.
Traubel, Helen
Tyler, Poyntz, editor
Waugh, Alec ....
Winwar, Frances
Wright, Olgivanna

B. B. Brown

Goes

To Madison, Wis.
of

B. B. Brown of Gemini Ln., west
Deerfield, who has been princ-

ipal of one of the Glenview schools,
left last Monday for a three-year
study at the University of Wisconsin, where he will be assistant to
the head of the Ford Foundation
in an experiment being carried on
there.
Grants were made to six universities by the Ford Foundation
to study all phases of more effective teaching.
His family will be moving to
Madison before the summer is over.
Mrs. Brown has been very active
in Stagers work, both in production and publicity.
Mr. Brown will work on his docThursday,

July

2, 1959

Alaska: the Big Land
World’s Racing Cars
Charley Weaver’s Letters From Mama
This Is The Desert
Trial Of Dr. Adams
Designs For Outdoor Living
Pageant Of Elizabetham England
American Indians
American Labor Movement
Fidel

Castro

Last Nine Days
Better Vacations
Sane Society

Gardner’s
The

Of The Bismarck
For Your Money

Photographic

Civil

Sketch

Book

Of

War

The Adventure of Learning In College
One Saint and Seven Sinners
A Quite Remarkable Father
Golden Coast
Eat Well and Stay Well
Simplified Guide
To Collecting American
Coins
Here, Of All Places
Mental Health
Endurance
Smattering Of Ignorance
The Holy Barbarians
Power Of Prayer On Plants
DuBarry
a
Manual of Septic Tank Practice
No One Must Ever Know
Gardening For Gourmets
Points of View
The Two Germanies
Tennis For Beginners
Prison Exposures
The Marauders
The Status Seekers
Fall Of The Cards
I Remember
Dog Obedience Training
History Of American Labor
Pasternak, A Pictorial Biography
Report From Praictically Nowhere
Flying Tiger:
Chennault of China
The Rib and Adam
Brotherhood Of Evil
What I Learned In
Friends and Enemies:
Russia
Ben Gurion
The Vanishing Evangelist
The Years With Ross
Hellenism:
The History Of A Civilization
St. Louis Woman
City and Suburban Housing
Love and The Caribbean
Haunted Palace
Our House

OBITUARY
Raymond

L. Classen

Raymond
L. Claussen, 65, died
June 16 in Ozona, Fla. where he
had lived since 1956. Previously he
had lived in Le Mars, Iowa.
He is survived by his wife, Mrs.

Isabel Kist Claussen

and

not

have

been

Mr. Weir listed the Corporation’s
contributions to the American economy as follows:
—1.
Increased
confidence
in
savings and loan associations, and
financial
institutions
generally,
which has resulted in an increased
flow of capital in the form of individual
savings
into
land
and
homes and an expansion of the nation’s basic wealth.
—2. The availability of a continuing
and
ever-growing
supply
of home mortgage funds to meet
the needs of an increasing population. Savings account insurance has
enabled
insured
savings
associations to make long-term loans on
homes at more liberal terms and at
lower interest rates, to the advantage of today’s cost conscious home
buyer.
—3.
The
adoption
of uniform,
simplified
and
better
operating
practices
and
procedures
among
savings
associations, thus making

NON-FICTION
Adams,
Ben
Armstrong, Douglas ....
Arquette, Cliff ..
Ault, Phil
Bedford, Sybille
Brimer, John B. .
Burton, Elizabeth
-Daniels, Walter M., editor
Daniels, Walter M., editor
Dubois, Jules
Forester, C. S.
Frome, Michael
Fromm, Eric
Gardner, Alexander

would

The Federal Savings and Loan
Insurance Corporation, which this
month
is celebrating its TwentyFifth Anniversary, was established
by Congress on June 27, 1934, to
insure savings accounts in savings
associations
against loss up to a
maximum
of $10,000 per account.

Mountains

Wake Me When It’s Over
Miss Plum and Miss Penny
Spring Harvest
The Poorhouse Fair
This Fiery Night
A Few Quick Ones

....

there

sufficient funds available to finance
the over 13 million new homes built
sinee the-end. of World War II.

a daugh-

ter,
Mrs.
Douglas
D.
Roach
of
Ozona and a sister, Miss Jeannette
Claussen of Spencer, Ia.
Mrs. Claussen’s mother, Mrs. Isabel
Woodman
Kist,
formerly
of
Deerfield, died about a month ago.
Mrs. Kist and her sister, Miss Josephine Woodman, lived just a few
doors from their niece, Mrs. Claussen in Ozona.

‘|for a more

and

smoother

Presbyterian Visitor Makes
Summer Activities Survey
H.

F.

Tubergen

Jr.

Harry F. Tubergen Jr. of 1103
Kenton
Rd., Deerfield,
has been
named
a charter member
of the
National Council
of the National
Planning Association.
Approximately 1,000 leading citizens from all parts of the country
and all walks of life have been invited to form the Council. Purpose
of the group is to develop better
methods for reaching solutions to
national problems.
Tubergen is immediate past president of the Chicago
Conference,
National Association of Bank Auditors and Comptrollers.
The
local
conference, composed of representatives of 115 Chicago and suburban banks, is the largest NABAC
chapter in the nation.
He is a member of the American
Institute of Management
and for
the past four years has served on

the faculty

tion in 1955. He
are parents

Lee

Ann,

bara,

4.

The Deerfield Presbyterian bulletin announces that Douglas Laub
arrived here on July 1 to conduct
a survey on summer youth activities. This is a portion of the nation
wide
spot
survey
to
formulate

Bloch,

has

E. Bioch
resident,

been

Mark

named

E

Chicago’

district manager of Formica Corp
to succeed B. R. Allen of Highland
Park.

Bloch

joined

Formica

in

1946

and has been assistant district manager

since

1956.

the U.S. Army
European

He

served

with

for four years in the

area

during

World

_
~

©

War

I.
Mr. and Mrs. Bloch and
live at 605 Indian Hill Rd.

family —
!

Deerfield Resident
Attends Seminar
Richard

P.

Wales,

visor,

Continental

pany

in

from

Rockton,

group

super- —

Assurance

Chicago,

just

Ill.,

Com-

returned

where

he

at- —

tended his company’s annual groupt pa
insurance sales seminar.
Started 5 years ago as an experiment to keep its widely scattered
field staff abreast of the newest —
developments in Group Insurance =
and current changes in the com-

pany’s sales and underwriting policies, the seminar idea proved an am
outstanding
success.
It has be- —
come an annual event attended by —a
some 80 key Sales representatives er:
and Home
Office executives
and —
staff personnel.
Mr. and Mrs. Wales live at 1001.
Sunset
Ct.,
formerly
the
H.
Nu a
Kelley guest house.
2,
wie

better

and

programs

more
in

effective

summer ee

churches.

Me

Moving Day For 2-School Administrators

of the Illinois Bankers

Association’s school for junior bank
executives at Southern Illinois University.
A native of Chicago, Tubergen
attended Northwestern University
and
the
American
Institute
of
Banking. He is a graduate of the
school of banking at the University of Wisconsin.
Joining Merchandise National in
1952 as controller and auditor, Tubergen assumed his present posibara,

torate while participating in this
effective teaching experiment.

efficient

operation, and accordingly a stronger and more vigorous thrift and
home financing movement.

Mark
Deerfield

A

ass oe

Shy

and his wife, Barof three

11, Thomas,

children,

9, and

Bar-

A short time before this p icture was taken Monday at the
new administration building ere cted on the Township High School
District 113 athletic field, Park Ave. W, desk, chairs, and supplies |

were helter skelter, as always happens on moving
ready to plunge
High School and
Deerfield

day.

Poised,

into administrating affairs for Highland Park |
the second district school being built in West

Township,

are,

from

the

left,

Leslie

Libakken,

assistant

e

superintendent; A. E. Wolters, superintendent; and Earling Zaeske, .
operations

manager.
Page

29.

ns i

�Marry

SHORE

LINE CLEANERS

In

(Continued

Bride Of Highwood Man

Waukegan
from

page

19)

the ushers, Other ushers were Walter Pieri of Highwood and Joseph
Hironimus, brother of the bride.

JULY SPECIAL

After

a

wedding

brunch

at

the

Karcher Hotel in Waukegan and a
reception in the American Legion
building, 1957 Sheridan Rd., Highland Park, the couple left on a wedding trip to Colorado. They are at
home on Bob-O-Link Rd.

contact

lenses ?
BLANKETS 6sinsie)
Dry Cleaned

“Fluffy Fresh”

Plastic Wrapped for Summer Storage

CUSTOM

SHIRT

Individually Cellophane

Complete Quality

See your eye physician
(M.D.) first. If he says

SERVICE

Wrapped

Dry Cleaning

you can wear them—
H.O.V. has all the newest

Service

types. Get the benefit
of our 20 years of
pioneering and
continued research.

For the answer to your questions about contact lenses—
write for our new booklet.

- CLEANERS
—where

craftsmen

652

clean

your clothes

Deerfield

CA

Rd.

GIVE S&amp;H

GREEN

STAMPS

House of Vision”

Nordquist

Mrs.

Carl

Ostrand,

the

former

Nancy

Servine,

couple

will move

a position

It has been said: If your motor fails, there you are.

If your steering fails, where are you?

Check:

mar-

hosts at the rehearsal dinner in the
Now at home in Champaign, Ill., the

to Cincinnati

in August

when

ceives his degree from the University of Illinois.

IS YOUR CAR SAFE ?

photo

whose

riage to the son of the W. A. Ostrands of Highwood took place
June 6 in the First Lutheran Church, Moline. Her parents, Dr. and
Mrs. J. S. Servine, gave the reception there at the Short Hills
Country Club. The Walter Ostrands of Highwood, uncle and aunt
of the bridegroom, were
Plantation Club, Moline.

ITS VACATION TIME!

Let Us

ie

Craftsmen in Optics
1891 SHERIDAN ROAD
HIGHLAND PARK
135 NORTH WABASH, CHICAG
©H.O.V.

Deerfield

WE

Loge

in Cincinnati,

versity, will teach

and

his bride,

in the Cincinnati

Mr.

Ostrand

re-

He has accepted

a graduate

of the

Uni-

schools.

Highland Parker Announces Two Hospital Grants
(Continued from page 27)
Building. In 1958, the foundation
search
laboratory
in La
Rabidavoted a $100,000 appropriation to
Sanitarium’s new research center,the Columbus Hospital and $50,000
the Richard J. Finnegan Memorialto the Gottlieb Memorial Hospital.

DOLLARS

e Steering Linkage
e Loose or Worn Front End Parts
e Weak or Broken Springs
e Weak or Leaking Shocks
e Head Light Adjustment

__.. JOHN DID

Wheel Alignment - Balancing
WEAK FRONT
CORRECTED

AHL'S

OR REAR SPRINGS CAN BE
WITH HELLWIG SPRING
STABILIZERS

GET A FREE

2058

FIRST ST.

ESTIMATE

HIGHLAND PARK
SAVINGS « LOAN

cost

TODAY!

$10,000. S

RECONSTRUCTION
ID 2-0077

Security —

1811

St. Johns

MEMBER
Page

30

ASSOCIATION

OF

Service —

Ave.
THE

SAVINGS

Satisfaction Since 1888

Highland
AND

LOAN

Park

ID 2-0361

FOUNDATION,
Thursday,

July

INC.
2,

1959

�.

INSURANCE —

*

yf

1s

Recreation Center Gives Summer Class In Ballroom Dancing
George
Davis,
1799 Rosemary
Rd., will instruct classes in ballroom dancing at Highland Park

samba

Recreation

will

Center

this

month

and

next. Davis is a former dance director of Arthur Murray’s.
Each course includes eight lessons. A class in beginning cha-cha-

cha, beginning July 8, will meet
8:10

p.m.

tion

in

on

the

Wednesdays.

tango,

at

Instruc-

merengue

and

will be

at 9:20

p.m.,

also

on

Wednesdays.
High

school

have

an

juniors

and

opportunity

ment will be limited.
telephone ID 2-2442.

To

register,

seniors
to

learn

the fox trot, cha-cha-cha and rhumba on Mondays
at 7:30 p.m., beginning July 13. The same instruction for college-age youths will be
Mondays at 8:40 p.m.
Howard Copp, Center’s director,
urges early registration as enroll-

ay

Community Concert Series
(Continued
thal,

Harry

from

N.

Sager,

C. Sonderman,
Mrs.

George

page

27)

Mrs.

Henry

Mortimer L. Scheff.

Echt and Mr. and Mrs.

of Every Kind and Character

“ ANCHOR
INSURANCE
In

AGENCY

Business

21

a

88

1896 Sheridan Rd.
Highland Park

Chester Kyle, all of Deerfield, also
are on the board.

Years
Office: ID 2-0093
ID 2-0037
Res.,

SPEC
at the Plaltlilo

suburban

LAU AE

oS
a

tmha\ey
a\=\a\

ele elev 9)

four of
most

popular
items

Very

Special

on

sale

for the

Ath of July!

Florida Folding Chaise

2 CHAIRS +. 5°

@ Full 6 ft. 2 in. long

matched

@ No fade VELON

or mixed

for game
© Cool,

rooms,

comfortable,

Contour

woven

patio,
and

back

webbing

¢ Finger-tip adjustment multi-position

AN TUB CHAIR

© Footrest folds underneath
chaise a chair

porch

and

to make

the

® Colors: Green and White, Yellow and White

lightweight
seat

wy

our

2-Bahama Chairs
Both for

FREE!
bring this coupon
and receive free
with this or any
chaise lounge
purchase

$888 -

a handsome clip-on
“butts” ash-tray
multi-striped
telescoping

hammock
steel frame

o

regular

$14.95

THIS

ie
é

e

Extra wide VELON webbing |

sorry, no phone
cash and carry
only at these
low prices
ii

“Thursday, July 2, 1959
TY

orders

THROUGH

* Made of 1” rustproof aluminum
Folds to compact carrying size
sactiinbatcilnichics AMUN
scaeecarseteteree eT
§
SoS ERR
ee
Caisse

eeeit

4th

WEEK-END
QRORLE

EN EE
5

the Plato
1672 skokie highway

OFFER

ROOD

Re

GOOD
of JULY
ONLY

Biais Saseuacsoeicouae
eae

suburban

highland park,

id 2-707

OPEN everyday (including 4th of July) 9:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m!

NG

�Pe

Te

a Pe

a

Ge

Bh

Youth Group
Officers

—Now Available—
|

At

the

a

eae

re age ae

Elects

Two

For Year

recent

meeting

| Are
of

the

Roberta Schwartz, president; David
Kleiman, vice president; Carol Ber-

man

in Highland Park

and

Susan

Schwartz,

secre-

taries; Glen Geist, treasurer;
na Martin,
social chairman;
Katz, religious chairman.
Leadership

On Tuesday, July 21, 1959 at 8:00 P.M.
in the Council Chambers City Hall, Highland
Park, Illinois, the Civil Service Commission
of Highland Park will hold oral and written
examinations to establish an eligible list for

MarKay

Conclave

As president, Roberta Schwartz
will be attending
the leadership
conclave offered this summer
by
the Chicago Federation of Temple
Youth, to be held at the Union Institute camp in Oconomowoc, Wis.
The B’nai Torah Sisterhood and
Brotherhood
jointly will
sponsor
her
attendance
at the
conclave.

PC‘

lp

Top Winning
Owned

By

C. R. ANDERSON

knowledge of building codes, licenses and
building inspection. Desirable age should be

INSURANCE

—

Experienced

Insurance Service

between 25 and 40.

Applicant

must

have

Sound,

Starting salary $4,316.00.

WIndsor

Clerk-Typist: Applicants must be a graduate

735

of a standard high school, which included
courses in typing. Knowledge of business
English, spelling and commercial arithmetic
needed. Ability to meet public and carry out
routine

assignments.

Salary

$8,354.00

in-

creasing to $3,484.00 after probation.

Deerfield

”

a

eer

i

e523
ie
Ne

Cee
ban”

ete

A

aL?

GN ho egret
RAG
be

7

WERE

;

PUR

Sk

tek

a

CAEit MahRAP as Lee EY a
a ia ed
Shah

AGENCY,

INC.

Mr.

5-0155

Road,

Deerfield,

and

Mrs. James

F. Kaatz

III.

\

_ Maintenance No. I. Applicants must be able
to perform varied skilled jobs of above the

Maintenance No. II. This is a semi-skilled
position. Applicants should have certain abilities in rough carpentry, rough masonry and
trench excavating. Job also includes cutting

Inside the
59 Ford

FORD PUTS YOU IN THE SHADE
WHEN IT COMES TO COMFORT!
HARDLY ANY \&lt;—
INSULATION
‘
\

weeds, loading trucks and operating light
tractor. Knowledge of driving laws is neces-

SHADE

ZONE

OF

at

A

eae

!

sary. Ability to secure a chauffeur’s license
required.
Salary $3,874.00, increasing to
$4,004.00 after probation.
Janitor:

Starting salary $4,108.00

Application
mation

may

be

blanks

and

obtained

further
from

the

inforCity

Clerk’s Office, City Hall. All applications
must be filed with the Secretary by 5:00 P.M.
Saturday, July 18, 1959.

Inside one of
Ford’s competitors

Here in Chicago we have enough sense to stay out
of the sun! Sensible design is just one reason why

THE WORLD'S MOST BEAUTIFULLY PROPORTIONED CARS

sol wRNDS

the cool 59 Ford is Chicago’s hottest seller. Lowpriced Ford gives everyone a roof over his head.

Save a cool $219* on an air-conditioned Ford! Save

Paul J. McLaughlin, Sec.
Civil Service Commission
141 Bloom Street
Highland Park, Il.
7/2-9-16/59—182

up to that on an air-conditioned Fairlane 500
with radio, heater and automatic transmission !

Buzz on down to your local Ford Dealer

*Based on a comparison of manufacturers’ suggested retail prices

for a honey of a deal on a 59 FORD
F.D.A.F,

HOLMES
1909 St. Johns Ave.
Make

MOTOR
Highland Park

a Beeline for a best deal in town

of

Champaign
announce
the
birth
June 16 of a daughter, Linda Diane.
Mrs. Kaatz is the former Barbara
Stupple. Maternal grandparents are
the Edward Stupples, formerly of
Highland Park, now of Miami, Fla.
Paternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Arthur F. Kaatz of Deerfield.

FIELD

average difficulty in the fields of carpentry,
plumbing, masonry and electrical work. Salary $4,134.00 increasing to $4,264.00 after
probation.

RO

James F. Kaatz Family
Welcomes Linda Diane

BONDS

MOST
\e
INSULATION \*

IN ITS

tae

Edward S. White of 1782 Clifton
Ave. was named chairman of the
professional Group on Engineering
Management of the Institute of Radio Engineers on June 24. He is a
director of research for the Warwick Manufacturing Co. White has
had 18 years in the radio-TV industry.

Also attending will be David Kleiman,
Marna
Martin
and
Melody
Reichman,
past president
of the
TYGers.

a

Inspector:

196

Logan

each of the following classified services:
Building

sain

Elected Chairman

Poodles

Dr.

Bae
he Soeh eaevg
‘
:

pitas? 9"

One of the top winning miniature poodles in the Midwest
today
is
Forest
Mr.
Black,
owned by Dr. Ralph A. L. Logan of Kenbrook Kennels, 1866
Sheridan
Rd.
Mr.
Black
recently
won
six
non-sporting
groups
throughout
the
Midwest and took best in show at
Dubuque, Ia.
Dr. Logan’s Kenbrook Forest, Vodka, nine and one-half
inch black toy, won
the toy
group for his kennel in Fayetteville, N.C., show.

TYGers, the Youth Group of B’nai
Torah Reform Temple of Highland
Park, the following were elected as
officers to serve this coming year:

Top Civil Service Jobs

a a

during

our Summer

CO.
ID 2-8640
Swapping

Bee.

Thursday,

July

2, 1959

Pee

�Ys:

Dr. Nissenson

—

Miss Sarah Frelinger

Among hosts and hostesses at the
Open House, at Merry Oaks School,
Lake
Forest, were
the following
Highland Parkers:
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Carman, the
Harold
Shapiros, Jay M. Wassermans, Jack H. Pillers, Harry Reismans, Ben Roses, William G. Koschins, Gale M. Marcus’, Mrs. Raymond
M. Solomon, Dr. and Mrs.
Martin
D. Lerman
and
Dr.
and
Mrs. Samuel H. Fraerman.
The open house, to acquaint parents of students and guests with
school’s facilities, was held from
2 '26°5' p.m.

Dr.

from the assembly line to the executive suites,” he said.
About parent-child relationships,
he remarked, “Our efforts to treat
our children as equals is merely a
rationalization — a self-deceptive
cover-up of our inability to offer
authoritative strength and real security.”
He stated, “We are failing to develop mature independent individu-

Nissenson

als
“From
Red
Flannels
to
Grey
Flannels—the American Family in
Transition,’ was the title of a recent address by Dr. Marc Nissenson. He spoke at the annual meeting of the La Porte County Mental
Health
Association
at
Michigan
City, Ind.

who

can

meet

the

needs

Assists In Research
For Radio Series
Miss Sarah Frelinger, daughter
of Mr.
and Mrs.
Gregg
F. Frelinger, 160 Lincolnwood Rd., was
among
those
assisting
with
research for a radio series on industry. The series will be continued
Sunday
over
Waukegan’s
radio
station, WKRS, from 5:30 to 5:55
p.m,
The
ten
programs,
introduced
by John R. Howard, acting president of Lake Forest College, constitute
a short
course
in
Lake
County history, labor relations, industrial
management
and _ public
relations. The study recently was
undertaken by 14 members of the
radio and television class at the
College.
Research for the series is done
by the students—each assignment
requiring at least three visits to
the plants where students are conducted on tours and given opportunities to interview Lake County
company officials and plant workers.

ste

Highland

Parkers

Funds

Luncheon

we may

members

one day find our own

Cha rity Benefits
From Play, ‘Hands
Off The U.S. Male’
A group

Pic-

Mrs.

At

Seymour

of seventh

Sheridan

who

Two
performances
of the play,
which was filmed and tape recorded, was given at the home of the
sponsors,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Richard
Hirschfelder, who
reside at 1750
Clavey Rd.
She was assisted by
Barbara Cohen of 167 Barberry Rd.
Cast
Miss

Barbara Hirschfelder
REE
Kathy Magnus
WeNGY c.tecee Harriet Brickman
CArOlyh
aia. inet Lyn Wasserman
OROE Goneeee Lynn Gordon
bag Wi 7 cage ieee reenter
waren ee Diane Swartz
Debee. 205.; Barbara Cunningham
Betsy ke
ata Sherry Rubin

LAWN-BOY
By

are

the

Ruth

spondent

Gruber,
for

a New

rinses POST

Com-

special
York

corre-

daily.

Power Mower Exchange
Highest Trade-In Allowances

COAST

TO

COAST

Market Square

PARK

589 Central

°

STORE

ID 2-8550

a

WINNETKA
847 Elim
¢

STORE
Hi 6-5141

Ath of July

of:

AS ADVERTISED IN
tii Ry Ole) &lt;

committee

planned

bined
Jewish
Appeal
luncheon
June
24. Over
200 North
Shore
women
attended
the fund-raising
event at Prairie View. Speaker was

Dr.

Makers

Johnson-Evinrude
146 Pine

HIGHLAND

a

Wedford

Raise

B. Orner,

Rd.,

girls at

an original play entitled, “Hands
Off the U.S. Male.” Proceeds from
admissions
were
donated
to the
Cerebral Palsy Fund.

Point Dr., and Mrs. Carl L. Reinish,
84

grade

Red Oak School recently presented

of

others
as well
as gratify
themselves. Sincere interest in and real
consideration for other humans is
fading from the picture we once
painted of our Western man. Behind the glossy youthful exterior
ture of Dorian in the Grey Flannels.”
Dr. Nissenson is director of Psychological
Services,
North
Shore
Hospital, Winnetka. He resides at
966 Princeton Ave.

Dr. Nissenson commented on the
trend towards
conformity in our
culture.
‘Mediocrity
is
a
cruel
word, yet this seems to be our goal.
At work it sets the pace all the way

rae

Ben

Residents Are Hosts
At School Open House

Addresses: Mental
Health Meeting

gx

wy

4

STORES

Lake Forest 3998

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with a note stating color of eyes, hair,
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Thursday,

July 2, 1959

P.O.

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33

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�Volunteer Library Workers Are Honored

———- — -

ove

Young

cople on

Shoot hel Darvice

Mary Kay Ellis, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Holbert W. Ellis of 820
Oxford
Rd., has enrolled
in the
45th
annual
summer
school
at
Wheaton College (Illinois) for the
first session} She is taking special

study

in the

area

#

*

of education.
*

Faith
Kelley,
daughter
of Mr.
and Mrs. Hubert N. Kelley of 1001
Deerfield Rd., left July 1 for a vacation
at
Timberline
Ranch
at
Vernon, Ariz., near Winslow. Faith
will be a junior this fall at North
Shore Country Day School. Accompanying her to the ranch is one of
her classmates, Heather Pirie.

*

Nine

among

*

*

Deerfield

the

312

residents

student

are

registered

for the first six weeks’ session at
the Lake Forest College summer
school. They include:

Susan

D. Buker,

daughter of the

Edward
Bukers
of 326 Deerfield
Rd., who attended the University
of Arizona last semester; Nancy D.
Card, daughter of Mrs. Paul Card

Mrs. George

Haney,

luncheon on June

left, librarian of the West

18 at Sportsman

Country Club

library.
Seated,

left

Mrs. Ormond
Mrs. Frank
Ritter.

to

right,

Henninger,
A.

Zartler.

are

Mrs.

Haney,

Deerfield

to honor

Mrs.

V.

W.

Township

the volunteers

Spriggs,

dedication

ceremonies

Launched 30 years ago with an
enrollment of 350 boys, the expanded camp this year will accommodate over 1,400 youths on 700 acres
of timber land that encompasses
all of Spring Lake. Over
100 of
these
campers
will be Deerfield

scouts.
More than 200 scouts attending
camp for the first of four two-week
periods,
will
participate
in
the

dedication

member

ceremonies,

as_

will

some
250
visitors
composed
of
Council members, leaders and other scouters and their families, and

donors
camp

Good

of

memorial

expansion

gifts

to

the

fund.

One of the largest of its type in
the Middle West, Camp Ma-Ka-JaWan consists of 16 separate troop
camp
sites, five
of which
have

cabin

accommodations,

others have
forms.

while

the

two-boy tents with plat-

Each
of two separate
program
areas
has
its
own
handicraft,
scout-craft, quartermaster, nature,
trading
post,
administration
and
dining hall buildings, and complete
waterfront
facility. The main
health lodge, with a doctor in attendance,
serves
both
areas,
as
does a new camp chapel which provides facilities for Catholic, Prot-

Jewish,

and

Christian

Sci-

ence services. For the first time a
chaplain will serve as a member of
the camp staff.

Luck!

A total

Donald

Cumnor,

L.

Bauer,

founder

and

last

month

and

34

Friday
in the

evening

American

ing at the Masonic

Rd.,

duplicate
Legion

at 849

will

Waukegan

Bridge
for
its

block north of Deerfield Rd.
The group, which had been

preside when AAUW resumes
activities in September.

collected

tal,

$5,801

There
field.

was

were

from

99

Wholesalers
accounted
for

tion,

which

food

taxpayers
and
the

was

all
to-

stores.
in

Deer-

manufacturers
largest collec-

$7,103,

about

$1,-

300 more than from food stores.
Other items were as follows: drinking and eating places, $1,724; fill-

ing stations, $1,301;
ing and hardware,

lumber, build$585; general

merchandise,

apparel,

automotive,
hold

and

$404;

$279;

radio,

furniture,

$244,

and

just

hall

a half
play-

hall, is attract-

ing residents of Glencoe, Highland
Park, Highwood, Lake Forest, Lake
Bluff, Waukegan, Northbrook, Ban.

nockburn,
and

Libertyville,

Wheeling,

Chicago.

A change

in the monthly

master

who

will

begin

her senior year at LFC this fall;
Ronald H. Davies, son of Mr. and
Mrs, W. H. Davies Jr., Sunset Ln.,
Bannockburn, will begin his junior
year at LFC in the fall.

Also are Lynn
of

Mrs.

H.

Fruchaux,
B.

daugh-

Seymour,

3227

lege in Indiana last semester; John
E. Garrity, son of the J. E. Garrity Srs. of 812 Pine St.; Joseph
M. Hoffmann of 1015 Hazel Ave.,
son of Matt Hoffmann
of River-

side,

Calif., formerly

of Deerfield,

who will be a senior in the fall;
Mary K. Neilsen, daughter of the
Walter B. Neilsens of 707 Oster-

man
Ave., who
attended
Beloit
College (Wisconsin) last semester.
Also Allen D. Wilson, son of the
Clarence Wilsons of 845 Rosemary
Terr., who took his first two years
at Lincoln
College and his next
year at Southern Illinois Univer-

sity at Carbondale;

and

Zartler,

Frank

son

of

the

Russell

F.

of Mr. and Mrs.
of 1267 Berkley

Ct., is working for the Lockheed
Corp. this summer. He received his
B.S. degree at California Institute
of Technology in June and will do
graduate work this fall at the University of California at Berkeley,
under a National Science Foundation Fellowship.
John
received
his degree
and
academic honors at the 65th annual commencement
exercises
of
CIT. The commencement
address
“Democracy in an Age of Science”
was given by Sir Solly Zuckerman,

M.

D.,

of

Anatomy,

D.

mingham,

Se.,

F.R.

S.,

professor

University

deputy

of

Bir-

chairman,

ad-

visory council on scientific policy
of Great Britain. Mrs. Price, Deerfield village clerk,
attended
the
commencement exercises and saw
her son receive his degree.
*
*
*
Richard Pagel, A 2/c, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Arthur Pagel of 825 Cedar Terr., is stationed at Hunter
Air Force Base in Georgia.
*
*
*

Zartlers

Harold

of 1454 Wilmot Rd., who will begin his senior year at LFC in Sep-

Driscolls
dent

tember.

Driscoll,

of 426

at Township

(Continued

son

of the

Circle

Pl.

High

H.

School

on page

F.

a stuDis-

42)

Getting ‘Made Up’ For Play

$397;

house-

all other,

$1,674.

Local Men Receive
Awards In Scouting
Richard

N.

Becker,

931

Wood-

ward Ave., and Charles L, Healy,
848 Rosemary Ter., were recently
awarded the Trail Blazer award for

distinguished service to boyhood

at

a dinner meeting of the Boy Scout
leaders of the Skokie Valley district.
Mr. Becker is the scoutmaster of
troop 52, sponsored by the First
Presbyterian
Church.
He has re-

ceived the Scouter’s Award and is
a holder of the Woodbadge Award.
training

for

the

latter

was

which meets at Walden School. He
spent some time last summer giving training at the Philmont Scout

Contract
quarters

left,

to her succcessor, Mrs. James W.
Morrow, 804 Pine. Mrs. Morrow

was

in Deerfield during April from
types of retail outlets. Of this

The
Deerfield
Club
has
new

first

president of the Deerfield branch
of the AAUW, wishes good luck

of $19,518

Rd.,

Oxford Dr., Lincolnshire, who attended St.Marys-of-the-Woods Col-

taken at Boulder Junction, Wis.
Mr. Healy is cubmaster of Pack
150, sponsored by District 109 PTA,

game

Page

board;

New Quarters Listed
For Bridge Club
weekly

office

library

More
than a fourth of the receipts from the sales tax in Deerfield are collected from food stores,
according to a report sent out by
the Illinois Department of Revenue
for the month of April.

His

took

a

Tax Receipts Here

The camp is located in the Northern
Wisconsin
forest
area,
275
miles from the North Shore. Equipment
includes
rifle and
archery
ranges, rowboats,
and canoes. In
addition to these activities scouts
participate in merit badge instruction, adventure hikes, crafts, nature
study and special events — a program which begins each day at 7:25
a.m. and runs through 9:30 in the
evening,
A
total
of
75
staff
members
supervise the camp’s operation.

Mrs.

the

gave

her in the

Food Stores Account
For Quarter of Sales

The program will include placing
of bronze plaques honoring donors
and a tour of the camp’s facilities.

estant,

420

of

assist

ter

marking completion of the enlarged and improved camping facility
of the North Shore Area Boy Scout
Council, will take place Saturday,
July
4,
at
Camp
Ma-Ka-Ja-Wan
near Antigo, Wisconsin.

_

Library,

who

1959 chairman of the volunteers; Mrs. Elmer Pope, retiring chairman and
Standing are Mrs. Bernard Collins, Mrs. Carl Jaeger and Mrs. Ralph

Dedication at Ma-Ka-Ja-Wan
Of Camp Site Scheduled July 4
Special

Public

of Waukegan

John Price, son
Trenton O, Price

Ranch

at Cimarron,

N.M.,

cently
Award.

received

the

and

re-

Scouter’s

point games has also been made.
Effective in August,
this special
event will take place on the second
Friday
of
the
month.
Starting
time is 8 o’clock. Additional information is available from Mr. and

Mrs.

Neal

Deerfield,

Mosely,

WIndsor

504

5-3410.

Willow,

Eric Laurence,

left, is assisted

with

his

make

up

for

his

part

as Apples by Selden Clark, son of the Robert O. Clarks of 418
Brierhill Rd., who had a lead role as Johnny Pope. The play “A
Hatful of Rain” was presented at the Lake Forest College Theatre
Under the Stars each evening, June 25 through June 28. Eric is
the son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Nichols of 444 Hermitage Dr.,
Deerfield.
Thursday,

July

2, 1959

�nis

ks

‘

AP

Se

PAREN
sh

ae

Zion Lutheran Bible
School Closed Friday

Zion Lutheran
Church Changes
School Schedule

The last session of the two week

The Board of Deacons of Zion
Lutheran
Church,
in conjunction
with the Church School staff and
the committee on Christian education and youth, passed
a motion
that all children who will be entering
the
fourth
grade
in public
school this fall, and older children,
will
be
dismissed
from
Sunday
school during July and August.
The 9 a.m. and 10:45 a.m. Sunday
school sessions will be continued
during
July
and
August
for all
children entering the third grade in
public school this fall, and younger
children. It is the wish of the Rev.
Paul V. Berggren that children not
attending Sunday
School will attend either of the church worship
services,
one
at 9 a.m.
and
the
other at 10:45.

daily vacation
Lutheran
spect

children,

Highland

Parkers

were

Walter H. Clarke Takes
Medical Degree At Illinois

theme,

held in drill hall, Navy Pier.

Clarke received an A.B. degree
from the University in 1951. He
will intern at White Cross Colum-

Hospital,
NOTICE
Deerfield

Columbus,
OF
Plan

Ohio.

HEARING
Commission

NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
by the
Plan Commission of the Village of Deerfield that a public hearing will be held by
said
Commission
on
Thursday,
July
16,
1959, at 8:00 P.M. C.D.T., in the Deerfield
Village Hall, 850 Waukegan Road, to consider the granting of a Conditional Use, as
requested by the Board of Trustees of said
Village, to permit the construction of an
underground
water
storage
reservoir with
necessary

controls

and

appurtenances

at

the

rear of the premises commonly known as
850 Waukegan Road (site of the Deerfield
Village Hall) and 860 Waukegan Road (site
of the West Deerfield Township Library and
Town Hall building).
This public hearing is held in compliance
with Section I1I—Conditional Uses, and Section XXIII
of the Zoning Ordinance for
the Village of Deerfield—1953, as amended.
At said hearing,
and
any
adjournment
thereof, all persons interested are invited
to be present and be heard.
DEERFIELD
PLAN
COMMISSION
By:
Frank T. Curto, Chairman
Publish: 7/2/59
7/2/59—192

NOTICE
HIGHLAND

OF PUBLIC
PARK PLAN

HEARING
COMMISSION

NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN THAT a
public hearing will be held in the Council
Chamber in the City Hall, City of Highland
Park, Illinois, on Tuesday, July 21, 1959,
at 8:00 P.M.
Said public hearing will be conducted by
the undersigned, the Plan Commission for
the City of Highland Park, designated and
appointed by the Mayor and City Council
of said City, for the purpose of considering
an application of Joseph E. Hirsch to rezone the following described property:
The south 539.7 feet of that part of the
SE% of the NE'%4 of Section 28, Township
43 North, Range 12, east of the 3rd Principal Meridian, lying west of the centerline
of Ridge Road containing 10 acres more or
less and all in Lake County, Illinois and
being more generally described as a tract
of land containing 10 acres more or less lying on the west side of Ridge Road abutting
and to the north of Richfield Avenue extended westerly.
The application requests the rezoning of
a portion of the above described property

along

a line parallel

with

the west

line of

Ridge Road to a depth of 150’, more or less,
from ‘B’? One acre single family residence
zone to “‘C’ Twelve Thousand square foot
single family residence zone and the balance of the tract from ‘“‘B’’ One acre single

family

residence

zone

to

‘B-1”

One-half

acre single family residence zone.
_ At said public hearing and at any adjournment thereof, an opportunity will be
afforded
to all persons
interested
to be
heard in relation to said matter.
NORMAN
J. SCHLOSSMAN,
Chairman,
HIGHLAND
PARK PLAN COMMISSION
6/29/59
7/2-9/59—189

Thursday,
,

\

“Going

staff included

a

ad

the

P. oink

worship
pot

1650

luck

God’s

Way.”

Enjoy

Gan

Waukegan

lawn.

Rd.

Glenview

The

24 persons.

Groups

NOW

...see

an

ART EXPOSITION

Outings

On
Saturday,
the couples club
sponsored
its
annual
outing
at
Anetsberger’s
near
Northbrook.
The
congregation is invited. The
High
school
group
had
its
first summer outing on Sunday at
6 am.
They
met
at the church
for
a sunrise
service
and
then
traveled to Cedar Lake for a meeting and picnic activities.

"

of Abstract

Impressionistic Paintings

by Dennis M. Luczak
at

TALK

the

O’ THE

757

July

2, 1959

See BAHR’S
for SOMETHING

Highwood Legionnaires Herman Vechioni, 583 Chicago Ave.,
right, and John Schaefer, 321 Oak Terr., take time out from mind-

that will

Central

TOWN

Ave.,

H.P.

go-round,

Loop-o-plane

and

had

their

fill

of

cotton

candy

be

the

DIFFERENT

talk

of

YOUR GARDEN PARTY on

ing refreshment stand to assure children of a good time at Post
501’s Sunday matinee Carnival performance. Highwood American
Legion sponsored the affair held June 18-21 at Oak Terrace School
grounds. Children enjoyed rides in the miniature train, merryand

popcorn.
NOTICE
HIGHLAND

Walter H. Clarke, son. of Mr. and
and Mrs. Harold
G. Clarke,
886
Yale Ave., received the M.D. degree from the College of Medicine,
University of Illinois. Ceremonies

bus

a closing
in

in-

by

Chairmen

appointed committee
chairmen.
Miss Marie Nelson, 474 Laurel Ave.,
will head the service committee and
Miss Clara Hall, 795 Deerfield Rd.,
the program committee.
The first social event of the season will be a summer brunch at a
restaurant near Elgin.

were

to

made

church

ly at the

at Zion
brought

school

join

the

gan played professional-

Eighty-four pupils from the area
attended the school to study on the

At a recent meeting of the Lambda Gamma chapter of Beta Sigma

two

the

handicraft
and

on

school
Friday

attend

service,

Of Beta Sigma Phi

Phi,

to

the

picnic

Bible

Church

parents

Local Chapter
Appoints

Hear the Lowrey Or-]

OF PUBLIC
PARK PLAN

NOTICE
OF HEARING
Deerfield Plan Commission
July 16, 1959

HEARING
COMMISSION

NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
that a
public hearing will be held in the Council
Chamber in the City Hall, City of Highland
Park, Illineis, on Tuesday, July 21, 1959, at
8:00 P.M.
Said public hearing will be conducted by
the Plan Commission for the City of Highland Park, designated and appointed by the
Mayor and City Council of said City, for
the purpose of considering the application
of Jacob T. and Jeannette E. Pincus for a
special permit to enable them to use the
premises
located
at 654 Deerfield
Road,
Highland
Park,
Illinois,
more
commonly
known as the Ketter Building, to operate
a school and exhibit center of fine arts.
At said public hearing and at any adjournment thereof, an opportunity will be
afforded
to all persons
interested
to be
heard in relation to said! matter.
NORMAN
J. SCHLOSSMAN,
Chairman,
HIGHLAND PARK PLAN COMMISSION
6/29/59
7/2-9/59—188

NOTICE OF HEARING
Deerfield Plan Commission
July 16, 1959
NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN _ by the
Plan Commission of the Village of Deerfield
that a public hearing will be held by said
Commission on Thursday, July 16, 1959 at
8:00 P.M. C.D.T., in the Deerfield Village
Hall, 850 Waukegan Road, on the petition
of the Deerfield State Bank for an amendment to the Village
of Deerfield
Zoning
Ordinance—1953, as amended. The property
involved is located on the Northwest corner
of Greenwood Avenue and Waukegan Road,
legally described as follows:
That part of the SE%
of the NE%
of
Section 29, Twp.
43 North,
Range
12,
East of the 3rd P.M. described as follows,
to-wit: Commencing at the SW corner of
said 144 Section and running thence North
21.71 rods (358.215 ft.); thence Easi 38.96
rods
(642.84 ft.) to the center
of the
Public Highway; thence South 26 degrees
East along the center line of said road,
24.68 rods (407.22 ft.) to the Half Section
line and then West 49.98 rods (824.67 ft.)
to
the
place
of
beginning
(excepting
therefrom
the
Right
of
Way
of
the
Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific
Railroad Company) in Lake County, Illinois. ALSO that part of the SE™% of the
NEY
of Section
29, Twp.
43 North,
Range 12, East of the 3rd P.M. described
as follows:
Commencing
on
the West
line of the SE%
of the NE
of said
Section 29, 22.27 rods (367.455 ft.) North
of the SW corner thereof, running thence
North on said West line 100.0 ft.; thence
East parallel with the South line of the
SE\% of the NE
to a point in the center
line
of
Public
Highway,
which
point
would be 467.45 ft. North of the South
line of the said SE% of the NE% thence
South 26 degrees East, along the center
line of said Public Highway to a point,
which point would be the point of intersection of a line drawn East from the
place of beginning to the center of said
Public Highway; thence West from said
point to the place of beginning (excepting
therefrom
the
Right
of Way
of
the
Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul and Pacific
Railroad
Company)
in
Lake
County,
Illinois.
The amendment, as proposed seeks to rezone the above legally described property
to the R-5 One
family District from its
present classification as an R-3 One-family
District, except that the South 110 ft. thereof
is presently zoned R-5.
At
said
hearing
and any
adjournment
thereof, all persons interested are invited
to be present and be heard.
DEERFIELD
PLAN
COMMISSION
By: Frank T. Curto, Chairman
7/2/59—191

For

NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
that a
public hearing will be held by the Deerfield
Plan Commission on Thursday, July 16, 1959
at 8:00 P.M., C.D.T., in the Deerfield Village

Hall,

850

Waukegan

Road,

to

consider

an amendment to Section XIV—‘B-2” Central Business District, Paragraph A, which
would delete from said paragraph permitted
uses

as

the

BEST

in

Flowers

We Now Deliver to ALL North Shore
Suburbs and Chicago . . . direct.

653

LAUREL

AVE.,

ID

H.P.

2-3420

follows:

** 4, Auction rooms.
13. Dance halls,
37. Manufacturing
or processing
which
is clearly incidental to retail use is
permitted.
Such
manufacturing
or
processing is limited to that which
employs not more than ten (10) persons in the manufacturing
or processing.”
and to also consider other deletions from or
additions to the said permitted uses.
At said hearing or any adjournment thereof, all persons interested are invited to be
present and be heard.
DEERFIELD
PLAN
COMMISSION
By:
Frank T. Curto, Chairman
7/2/59—190

NOTICE OF HEARING
Deerfield Plan Commission

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

19 -OZ.” JACKET

July 16, 1959
NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
by the
Plan Commission of the Village of Deerfield that a public hearing will be held by
said Commission on Thursday, July 16, 1959
at 8:00 P.M. C.D.T., in the Deerfield Village Hall, 850 Waukegan Road, on the petition of the Benefit Association of Railway
Employees, for consideration of an amendment to Section V, paragraph
14 of the
Zoning of the Village of Deerfield—1953,
as

amended,

the

amendment

as

proposed

to

read as follows:
“14.
Any area annexed to the village shall,
upon
such
annexation
be
automatically
zoned R-1 One-family District, and shall be
subject to all restrictions applicable in such
districts, unless and until the zoning ordinance is amended to establish a different
zoning
classification
in the manner
provided by law. Provided if the following described property be annexed to the Village
of Deerfield, to-wit:
That part of the East half of the South
West quarter of Section 31, Township 43
North, Range 12, East of the Third Principal
Meridian,
described
as _ follows:
Commencing at a point 68-4/7 rods North
of the South East corner of said Section;
thence North 31-3/7 rods; thence West 80
rods; thence South 20 rods; thence East 10
rods; thence
South
11-3/7 rods; thence
East 70 rods to the point of beginning;
ALSO that part of the South West quarter
of the South East quarter and of the West
10 rods of the South East quarter of the
South East quarter of Section 31, Township 43 North,
Range
12, East of the
Third
Principal
Meridian,
which _ lies
North Easterly of that part thereof taken
by the Illinois Toll Highway Commission
for the Northern Illinois Toll Highway in
Case No. 13890. in the County Court of

Lake

County,

Illinois,

in

Lake

a

THE ''19-OZ."* JACKET OF WOVEN
MOST

County,

Illinois
it shall be and become an R-1-A One-family | |
District upon such annexation.”
The above described property lies on the
West side of Wilmot Road approximately
1132 feet north of County Line (Lake-Cook)
Road
At said
hearing
and
amy
adjournment
thereof, all persons interested are invited to
be present and be heard.
DEERFIELD
PLAN
COMMISSION
By: Frank T. Curto, Chairman
7/2/59—193

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THE LAST DETAIL. ' 59.
ener

Cobey’s

478

Central

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Park

(Open Friday Nites)
Page

35

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Ground Beef

BLUE

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98c

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Lb.

Hams

Turkeys

Lamb Chops
LOIN—4

EAT

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�Deerfield

ht?
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“

C Rssrehees

FIRST

PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH
824 Waukegan Road
Phone Windsor 5-0775
_ Rev. Paul J. Keller, Ph.D., Minister
Ae
Boy
Deerfield, MDlinois
_ THURSDAY, July 2
ot)
8
p.m. Special meeting of congregation.
te UNDAY, July 5
9:30
a.m.
Morning Worship.
Bt
9:30 a.m.
Church
school.
Nursery for
children
1, 2 and 3 years.
Kindergarten
|
for children 4 and 5.
of

i

ZION

LUTHERAN

CHURCH

ie 3
10 Deerfield Road, Deerfield
i
Rev. Paul V. Berggren, Pastor
;
Wayne
R. Johnson,
Intern
+
i
Telephone Windsor 5-2009
SUNDAY,
July 5

|

Sixth Sunday After Trinity
8 a.m. Celebration of Holy

5
e

9 a.m.

Family

|
munion.
a

Worship

Church

_ entering
this
fall
third grades; older

oh

e

my

ie ;

Communion,

Service

School

only

with Com-

for

the
first,
children to

Services.
a.m.
Family
;

children

second
and
attend Wor-

0:45

Worship Service with
Church
School
for children
ente: ring this fall the first, second and third
other children to attend Worship
Diy: ; te
;
rvices.

|, Communion.
_.

Nursery care is provided during this serv-

ice only for children under three years of
ere. in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
orslin, 829 Apple Tree Lane.
-__
Bus service is provided by the church for

|

this service only.

For schedule please phone

the
church office.
MONDAY,
July 6
:
No softball games
- holiday weekend.

ea

Di,
hi

-

SUNDAY

i‘

9:45

a.m.

scheduled,

etna, a

due

to

the

QUAKERS
Viv:

udson.

Sunday

:

erk,

School.

10
a.m. Friends meeting in Deer Path
' School Library in Lake Forest.
;
For information call WlIndsor 5-1774.

q
TA)

COMMUNITY
BAPTIST CHURCH
1250 Waukegan Road
Rev. Robert Humrickhouse,
Pastor
Office Telephone:
Windsor
5-0708
We Preach Christ
)
Crucified, Risen and Coming Again
THURSDAY
7 p.m. All Church Visitation Program
SUNDAY
|
9:30 a.m. Sunday
School.
There
are
classes
of Bible
study
for all ages
and
_ mursery care for babies.
UM
a.m.
Morning
Worship
Service.
Nursery
facilities
are
provided
for
the
|

young.

7

6 p.m, Young Peoples Fellowship. Programs
are provided by the youths them-

_

|
;

selves.
7 aint

A

_

i

ee
di

_
~

Evening

Gospel

WEDNESDAY
7:30 p.m. Mid-Week

Bible study.
8:30 p.m.

Choir

Service.

Prayer

meeting

and

rehearsal.

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY

155 Deerfield Road
_SUNDAY—11 a.m. Services.
Children are cared for during
rvice.

SUNDAY

SCHOOL—9:30

Church

a.m.

For Wey
up to 20 years of age.
WED
DAY EVENING MEETINGS —
8 p.m. Including testimonies of healing
_
through Christian Science.
_
All are welcome to attend these services.

i

further

information

;
WBKB-TV
|
SUNDAY, July 5
ee
9:45 a.m.
“Filling
Promise.”

call

WlIndsor

5-

PROGRAM
Our

Lives

With

Fresh

NORTHBROOK
METHODIST
CHURCH
Meadowbrook Sehsol
Rey. R. W. Thornburg, Minister
_ For
information call Windsor 5-4351.
‘SUNDAY

11.
a.m. Church
School
and Worship
_
Service. Nursery for pre-school children.
‘a
Bence

2

ib
M
For

B’NAI TORAH
Lincoln School
Highland Park
Sholom Singer, Rabbi
Joseph Burns, Cantor
information call WIndsor

5-4623

REDEEMER LUTHERAN CHURCH
1731 Deerfield Rd.
Rec. 1817 Green Bay Road
Highland Park, Ml.
SUNDAY
9 a.m. Sunday School and Bible classes.

10:15 a.m. Worship services.

ST

GREGORY’S
EPISCOPAL
CHURCH
eo
Wilmot and Deerfield Roads
ees:
The Rev. J. D. Parker, Rector
m4
Rectory Telephone—WlIndsor 5-1881
Church Telephone—WIndsor
5-1678
SUNDAY
$ a.m. Holy Communion.
9:30 a.m. Holy Communion on first and
third Sundays,
__
9:30 a.m. Morning Prayer on second and
fourth
Sundays.
Oe
9:30 a.m.
Church
School
children
will
attend
adult service. Nursery care provided
_
for pre-school children.
WEDNESDAY
-.8
p.m. Choir practice.
THURSDAY
‘ Afternoon, Girl Scouts.
Evening, Boy Scouts.

.

re)

Page

38

BANK
H
NTEREST

NORTH SHORE
UNITARIAN CHURCH
Rev. Russell R. Bletzer, Minister
Ferry Hall Chapel
Lake Forest
For Information Call WI 5-1972.
WASHBURN
CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH
Half Day
Rev.
Lewis
Wakeland,
Pastor
Route 22
SUNDAY
9:30 a.m. Church School.
9:30 a.m. Worship Service.
11 a.m. Worship Service.
A nursery is provided for small children.
Telephone WI 5-4179 for more information.
DEERFIELD BIBLE FELLOWSHIP
1043 Wilmot Road
Every Sunday evening at 7 o’clock, the
Deerfield Bible Fellowship meets
at 1043
Wilmot Rd. Public is invited. Bible messages
on current events along with Christian fellowship.
THE
BETHLEHEM
CHURCH
(Evangelical
United
Brethren)
Rev. Eugene M. Wykle, Minister
801 Rosemary Terrace
Church—WI1
5-0078
Parsonage—WI 5-2221
SUNDAY, July 5
9:30 a.m.
Services of Divine Worship.
9:30 a.m.
Church
School
for
nursery
through 6th grades and adult classes,
10:55 a.m. Services
of Divine
Worship.
10:55 a.m. Church
school
for
nursery,
kindergarten, primary and 7th through 12th
grades.
Family balcony available during both services of worship.
MONDAY,
July 6
8 p.m.
United
Stewardship
orientation
meeting in Oak Park.
TUESDAY, July 7
1 p.m. Women’s Society for World Service meets in Fellowship Hall. Dessert luncheon and program.
7:30 p.m.
Local conference and council
of administration meeting.
GRACE

For
4-3060

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

THE HIGHLAND
PARK
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
ID 2-1695
Dr. William Atkinson Young
Rev. J. A. Miller
inisters
Summer worship in the sanctuary at 10
a.m. each Sunday morning. Fellowship hour
on the church lawn immediately following
the service, weather permitting.
Church School for children of sixth grade
and younger, including toddlers, meets also
at 10 a.m. each summer Sunday.
Worship services at 9:30 a.m. and 11:15
a.m.
and
Church
School
classes
at 9:30
a.m., 10:05 a.m. and 11:15 am. will be resumed on September 13.
HOLY

CROSS CATHOLIC
CHURCH
North Waukegan Road
Rev. John O’Mara, Pastor
Rev. Edward Reilly, Assistant
Rectory, 724 Elder Lane
Windsor 5-0430
Sunday Masses: 7, 8, 9, 10, 11:15 and
12:15.
Daily Mass at 7:15.
First Friday of each month, Masses at
6:45 and 8:15 a.m.
Saturday: 4 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. Confessions.
NORTH
SUBURBAN
EVANGELICAL
FREE
CHURCH
Deerfield Masonic Temple
Rev. Howard Hermansen, Pastor
711 Waukegan Road
SUNDAY
9:45 a.m. Bible School.
11 a.m. Services.
7 p.m. Services.
WEDNESDAY
8 p.m. Bible study and prayer.
TRINITY UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST
(Evangelical
&amp; Reformed
Church)
Rev. Edward J. Busse, ID 2-2113
Rey. Laslo L. Hunyady, WI 5-3508
(Associate Pastors)
WALDEN
SCHOOL
SUNDAY, July 5
9:30 a.m. Church School.
9:30.
a.m.
Morning
worship.
Sermon:
with the
“Land
of the Pilgrims’
Pride,”
Rev. Busse in the pulpit.

Presbyterians

In Minnesota
The
pastor

Trinity United
formed
by
the

Rev. Robert Humrickhouse,
of the Community Baptist

Church,

1250 Waukegan

Rd., Deer-

field, has returned from the 28th
annual conference of the General

Association
Churches,

of
held

‘Rochester,

Minn.

Historic

Regular
Baptists
June
22-26
in

“The Associa-

College scholarships for 1960 will
be available through the Board of
Christian
Education
for qualified
young people to any of the 45 colleges related to the Presbyterian
Church. Details of this announcement may be obtained by calling
the church office, WI 5-0560.

Scott Vernon Christiansen,
son
of Mr. and Mrs. Vernon Christiansen, 1460 Greenwood Ave.; Glenn
Paul Jacobs, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Andrew E. Jacobs Jr., 1660 Deerfield Rd. and Karen Jean Daluga,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Daluga of Libertyville and grandniece
of
Mrs.
Edwin
Beckman,
Deerfield.

Summer
services will continue
each evening at 8:30 p.m. at the
Lincoln School on Green Bay Road.

Unitarians Buy
Site For Church
On Half Dav Road

———“g es
Sh

The North Shore
Unitarian
Church, which has held its services

“EEG
‘Gan

at Ferry

Science Heals”
TV Series for Everyone

Sunday, July 5

WBKB-TV 9:45 A.M.
(CHANNEL 7)

*

“ON SAVINGS AT

Lake

Forest,

Dedicate Building To
Mrs. W. J. Loarie’s Father

“Filling Our Lives

The Richard J. Finnegan Memorial building, a $750,000 facility for
research into rheumatic fever and

RADIO

related diseases was dedicated Saturday and Sunday, June 13 and 14

1590 kc., 9:15 a.m.

890 kc., 6:45 p.m.
“What Am |
Listening To?”

Hall chapel,

for the past several years, will soon
have its own location.
The building committee has purchased a tract of land on the north
side of Half Day Rd., just west of
the
former
Mary
Black
Flower
Farm, near Bannockburn.
Minister of the Unitarian congregation is the Rev. Russell R. Bletzer of 426 Pine St., Deerfield.

“How Christian?

WLS

of Christ.”

June 21, Father’s Day:

As of July 1, the offices of B’nai
Torah Reform Temple of Highland
Park will leave 508 Central Ave.
for permanent
relocation
at the
temple’s newly acquired building at
2789 Oak St., Highland Park.

WNMP

St.

The Rev. Eugene M. Wykle, pastor of Bethlehem
Church
administered the rite of Holy Baptism to
the following children on Sunday,

B’nai Torah Reform Temple
Office Moves To New Location

ALSO

and

Baptized Sunday At
Bethlehem Church

with Fresh Promise”

Offer

Deerfield,

tion to “United Church

Increases

i

Church,
Highland
Park,
each
Sunday
at
Walden
in Deerfield.

Highland Park is approved,
then
everything west of the ditch will
be in Bannockburn, including this
unimproved future site of Trinity
United Church of Christ.
No announcement has been made,
as yet, as to whom
both church
properties will be sold. St. Paul’s
Church and parsonage are located
on Waukegan
Rd. between Osterman
Ave.
and the cemetery.
St.
John’s Church is on North Green
Bay Rd. in Highland Park.
St. Paul’s Church, known in the
early years as the ‘‘German Lutheran Church” is the oldest established church in Deerfield, organized
in 1875. More recently it has been
known as “Evangelical and Reformed Church” until last year when a
national union with Congregational churches changed the denomina-

“An increase in the number of
churches
in
the _ Association
brought the total from 843 of last
year
to 888 for this
conference
year. The membership was increased from 126,268 to 130,583.”

ee
7

Church,

John’s
meets
School

limits. If the proposed trading of
land between
Bannockburn
and

tion is made up of Baptist churches
which have remained true to historic Baptist principles: separation
of church and state, the Bible as
the only and final source of authority
in
matters
of
practice
and
doctrine,
and
believer’s
baptism
after
recognizing
Christ
as
the
atonement for personal sins. Important resolutions on Red China,
separation of church and state, social action and civil defense were
presented
to the Association
for
adoption by the Council of Fourteen, the administrative body of the
Association.
Membership

Paul’s

These
two
congregations,
now
united, recently purchased a tract
of land on the undeveloped North
Ave., west of the drainage ditch,
now inside the Highland Park city

Principles

He also explained,

Church of Christ,
merging
of
St.

On Sunday, at 9:30 a.m., the Rev.
Edward
J. Busse will be in the
pulpit.

Rev. Humrickhouse reports that
a capacity crowd from all over the
United States and several foreign
countries
daily
filled
the
Mayo
Civic Auditorium to care for the
association’s business and listen to
sermons centered around the theme
of the conference “If ye love Me
...keep
My
commandments.”
(John 14:15)

College Scholarships

as on sail Naha

Presbyterians Called
To Congregational
Of Christ Meets In
"Walden Grade School .. Meeting Tonight
Trinity United Church

at La Rabida sanitarium in Chicago.
Mr. Finnegan, father of Mrs. Willard J. Loarie of 853 Oxford Rd.,
Deerfield, was president of La Ribida’s board of trustees from 1944
until his death in 1955.

E&gt;.

Be

Baptist Minister
Attends Conference.

“The

Service

Bank

Of Highland

Park”

BANKS HIGHLAND
1771 Second St.

BANK—POST
Member

Federal

OFFICE

Deposit

BLDG.

Insurance

Corporation

A special meeting of the congregation of the Deerfield Presbyterian
Church
has
been
called
for
Thursday (tonight) at 8 o’clock in
the Christian Education building.
Summer schedule has been started with just one worship service
each Sunday at 9:30 a.m.
The church school also will be at
9:30 a.m. with nursery for children,
ages 1, 2 and 3, and for kindergarten, ages 4 and 5.

No

Tuxis meeting

for the
ple.

high

school

is scheduled
age

young

peo-

Lutheran Church
School Summer

Schedule Announced
The Board of Deacons of Zion
Lutheran Church, at its meeting on
June 23, in conjunction with the
Church School staff and the com-

mittee

on Christian

Education

and

Youth,
passed
a motion
that
all
children who will be entering the
fourth grade in public school this
fall, and
older children, will be
dismissed from Sunday School during July and August and that the
9
am.
and
10:45
am.
Sunday
School sessions be continued during July and August for all children entering the third grade in
public school this fall, and younger
children.
It is the wish of Pastor Paul V.
Berggren that children not attending
Sunday
School
will
attend
either of the Worship Services.

Selected To Attend

Leadership Course At
Augustana College
yi ames Gleason of 706 Deerpath
Dr.
and
Richard
Dahl
of
1309
Greenwood
Ave.
will
attend
the
leadership
school
at
Augustana

College

in

Rock

Island

on

July

through
11 as representatives
Zion Lutheran Church League.

5
of

These boys are the newly elected officers of the Luther League
and receive this specialized training for leadership of their group.
Wayne R. Johnson, church intern,
will be one of the instructors at
the school as well as director of
music. He states that this school is
designed to give intensive training
to a select group of young people
with emphasis on the practical dealing
with
League
methods
and
thoughtful churchmanship.

B’nai Torah

Reform

Temple Begins Its
Summer

Services

This Friday night

(July 3) B’nai

Torah Reform Temple of Highland
Park will hold summer services at
8:30 p.m. at Lincoln School.
In the absence of Rabbi Sholom
Singer, spiritual leader, who is at-

tending

the Central

American

Rabbis

Conference
in

New

of

Hamp-

shire, members of the Ritual Committee will conduct the Sabbath
worship
services. Howard Walton
will lead the congregation in prayer

and

Mrs.

Slavin

of 630

Lane,

Deerfield,

gulies

of Highland

sent musical
be

and

Appletree

Milton

Park

Mar-

will

pre-

there

will

solos.

Following the
a Fellowship

services
Hour.

PARK
IDlewood 2-—7800
Thursday,

July

2, 1959

�SUPER-RIGHT

===]
J
iSette

rans)

Q

15

yy,

Y

yj

|

BIRTHDAY

I
aha

1859-1959

trimmed.

is carefully

ham

or half. Each

Semi-boneless, 8 to 12-Ib. size. Whole

|

the

and

shank

The

fat are removed.
pelvic bone are removed; only the round center bone remains. All skin and excess

RIDAY, JULY 3rd, YOUR A&amp;P SUPER MARKET WILL BE

THURSDAY, JULY 2nd, and

UNTIL 9:00 P.M.

OPEN

Meats can be purchased after 6:00 P.M.

and Smoked

All Poultry, Canned

DAY

INDEPENDENCE

SATURDAY,

DAY

ALL

CLOSED

HOES

EEEARERD

REELS

7

IT'S BAR-B-@
°

: an

ule

oy

C

Ib.

Bursting with

©

as!

hese
whe

Crisp, Fresh
Twin Pack

ivratecomres

Rolls

Large Red,
Ripe Beauties,

fr

i

Parker,

Sugar-sweet
Juice. Serve

jc
t

29°

Sultana Beans «ot

Ann Page Ketchup =: 3 ‘ss 49°

Often.
on a

.

... 89°

‘2°

Fresh Lemons

49°

nance.

Bing Cherries Ys"2'"

|

|

ES,

SK

Perfect
Picnic.

Radishes.cccrrepe.3 for 19
&gt;

Brand,

—Hi-C
S

‘eas

peciaial

wey
The

Great

Atlantic

age
ets

&amp;

Pacific

pLuS AvDEPOSIT. k

Tea

ma
Yj

Y

ma f

ar

uper

|
1859

America’s

Dependable

Food

:

Oo

an

rE

]

A

aS 5 ;

e
Merchant

$
1959

lona, Halves

;

' Bartlett

t

k

M

S

0

Non-Carbonated—Rich

Company
F

en

POSE

BEART STS

Gu)

3% 95¢

COLA Fruit Cocktail

Holtdey

,. 29°

3

Golden Peaches

Cheese Slices xii 2 rte. 89°) suitara Brand, Five Choice Fruits

COCA

TIP

awe

POTATO CHIPS |
Jane

SIRLOIN

OR

AT:

Whole
Ham

Ib.

RUMP

bo" panne

Ib.

Half

1640 20-Ib. Size

Ag:

Butt
Half

Shank

Super-Right

Hom

Smoked

ROUND,

You can rely on Super-Right for the best

C

iC

2

=

oe

Skinless Franks

BEEF

3 m °2™ Werssolhavea complete selection of ick

TyNee Brand om
°

BONELESS

be

$459

= 6-LB, SIZE

$249

3-LB. SIZE

“ ROTISSERIE ROASTS

Cc

LB

Famous Brands,
9 to II-lb. Size

Pears
_

P;

29-02.

In Syrup
I

46-02.

ineappile

sin

2%

Bee

Vitamin

C

Holiday

TH

tin

Del Monte Drink eri
hho

in

46-02

.
Special

Wyandotte

PAGE

Ripe

‘oe
tin

lives

Yukon Club or Hills

Sauce

eg

49c

A

Beverages fac.

Kaiser

7-oz.

tin

Large size
rted

Aluminum

§
i9°

&amp;

ei, 10¢

24-oz.

(Plus Deposit)

» Open Pit Brand

“All Prices Effective Through July 3rd _ Barbecue

C

Foil

nv

�Chapters Co-Host
Supper Dance
co-hosted by the

newly-formed Evergreen and Green
Bay chapters of ORT, will be held
July 11 on the linking patios of the
Marvin
Isensteins, Howard
Palmers and Mortimer
Scheffs, all of
Bob-O-Link Rd.
of the
Tarrson

affair are
and
Mrs.

The evening’s entertainment will
include
dancing
to
music
py
&lt;a
three-piece Lou Browning combo.
Proceeds
of
the
affair
will
go
toward
maintaining
the organization’s trade schools throughout the
world.
Committee

Members

Ticket chairmen are Mrs. Morris
Draft
(ID 3-0045)
and Mrs. Max
Koenigsberg
(ID
2-3318).
Other
committee members are Mesdames
Harry
Eisenstein,
David
Weiss,
Benjamin Waldman, Arthur Lipski,

Hold Musical

The Senior Center, a meeting and
doing place attended by many Highland Parkers, is conducting a “do-

Merrill

Because

Tea

An informal Musical Tea will be
held Wednesday,
from
7:30 to 9
p.m., at the Glencoe home of Mr.
and Mrs. Morton Koch, for parents
and guests of the local branch of
the All Children’s Grand
Opera.
Assisting Mrs. Koch as hostess is

Mrs. Sam

Rubin, 971 Wade

Ave.

The children’s opera is directed
by Zerline Muhlman
Metzger. He
and
his
group
will
demonstrate

phrases

of

vocal

technique

and

operatic
acting, as a preparation
for next season’s performances.
Persons interested in children’s
performances
of grand
opera
in
original score are invited to the tea.
They are asked to call Mrs. Koch
or Mrs. Rubin to confirm a reservation.

Choice Tickets
“Music

Adventure”

RAVINIA

Taking up hems, repairing zippers,
general mending
and patching is
included in the class.

in Highland

The group meets in Room 204 of
the Winnetka Community House on
Wednesdays from 10 a.m. till noon.
After lunch, there is an outdoor
program of shuffleboard and cro-

Vilas:

quet until 3 p.m.

STOCK: CAR RACES |
SUNDAY. NITE

Man”

“South

Seas

“Paint Your Wagon”

Isaac Stern
violinist

Chicago Symphony
Orchestra

Chicago Symphony
Orchestra

Pierre Monteux
Conducting

July 7

July 8 &amp; 10

Richard Tucker
Frances Yeend
soloists

Les Brown
and his Band
of Renown

Mon.

West Washington
Green Bay Rd. &amp;

1:30—6 p.m.
Closed Sundays

(ier
AG
na
gS

MA:

a |

2

away Aah)

Byron Janis
pianist

Chicago Symphony Orchestra

WAUKEGAN.
SPEEDWAY

NORTH SHORE HOTEL
DAvis 8-8282
9—12:30;
thru Sat.

3-9540

Adults

-

$1.25

Children

Added

Admission to park $1.50
1000 unreserved free seats
FREE
PARKING
Phone: Northern suburbs—ID 2-1236
Chicago—ST 2-9696.
After 5 P.M.—HO 5-7600

St. between
Skokie Hwy.

Free. Parking
—

Walter Hend! conducting

.

25¢

°

Vernon

Event

Spectator

GLENCOE THEATRE

-’

ID

Race

HIGHLAND PARK

2—asso-oope
aay A
ewe |

Cool—Free

Parking

world’s most

Open Daily 6:30 P.M.
Sat., Sun. &amp; Wed., Open 1 P.M.
Thursday,

Enjoy

VErnon

5-0605

2nd BIG WEEK!
All the romance...
songs...and spectacle
of the entertainment

* ¥ PH 10. 2-2400

PARKING

4th

Glencoe

NORTH SHORE SHOWING!

«

FREE Fireworks——July

Ave.,

2-0605

EXCLUSIVE!

Back-Up

FAST: the Hot Rods

AT BELMONT—AMPLE
EXCEPT LABOR DAY

Nk
July 4

July 9 &amp; 11

TIME TRIALS .. 7:15
RACES ..... + 8:30

EVANSTON
TICKET SERVICE

into the two new groups. Mrs. Isenstein is president of the Evergreen
chapter and Mrs. Marvin Mendelson, 1174 Wade St., is president of
the Green Bay group.

11:30 A.M.—WESTERN
CLOSED MONDAYS

a8

Tonight

Orchestra
Walter Hendl
conducting

All Sports and Stage Attractions
the

former Bob-O-Link chapter divided

OPENS

Under

Park

Pierre Monteux
conducting

for:

‘Come Back Little Sheba”
“Tall Story”
Ravinia Festival
Cubs &amp; Sox Games and

Swartz.
of large membership,

it-yourself” class for women, given
by Mrs. William Allen, Winnetka.

Chicago Symphony

Sim Bows, Seymour Rosenhouse,
Morris Gabel,
Irving Distelheim
and

&lt;&lt;
— aw ee

Eee

Co-chairmen
Mrs.
Emanuel
Sidney Winter.

Opera Group Will

A ‘Fix-It’ Class

ae

A supper-dance,

Senior Center Begins

Children’s Grand

ath

FRIDAY,

wonderful
entertainment!

July 2nd

“IMITATION

OF LIFE”

July 3 for

,“

1 Week

a FREE

After Dinner

Drink!

Choose your favorite
cocktail at Patterson’s.
It’s served free with

any dinner from 5 p.m.
African Lobster Tail ........er ky
Chicken—Fried or BQ.... 1.25

costed Vinten SRN

Prime Ribs of Beef ........ $1.25
T-Bone Steak ................ 1.50

Bets

U.S. Choice Sirloin .......... 1.75

All Fish Dinners _........... 1.25

LUNCHEONS
ale

Roast Beef pe
EE

|

I

Prime

UAT.

Filet Mignon .................. 2.00

PHONE
ORDER
DELIVERED

75

Ucdindenacdidacccees

c

75¢

FREE

Ribs of Beef ........ $1.25

Private

PAT

Dining

VE

Room

5-161

UOKA WAYNE
DEAN MARTIN
RICKY NELSON
wns FLO BRAVO
ANGIE DICKINSON: WALTER BRENNAN

1

WARD BOND

for Parties of 50

TECHNICOLOR®
from

PATTERSON'S

AN ARMADA PRODUCTION

WARNER

BROS

WB

Directed and Produced by HOWARD

HAWKS

Weekdays—”RIO BRAVO”

STEAK Sj HOUSE

at 7:00 - 9:33
Saturday—5
:00, 7:33, 10:06
Sunday—1:50, 4:28, 7:01, 9:34

CUT RATE LIQUOR STORE
OPEN

7 DAYS

A WEEK

INCLUDING

Page

40

HOLIDAYS
VErnon

Century-Fox

“EcoLor ‘by DE LUX
starring

ROSSANO BRAZZI - MITZI GAYNOR - JOHN cr
FRANCE NUYEN caturing RAY WALSTON -sunnra na

BUDDY ADLER - JOSHUA LOGAN PAU OseoRn
Produced by

Directed by

Screenplay by

cal

.

A MAGNA Production

Saturday, July 4—’‘’Kiddie Show”

Edens, Skokie &amp; County Line Rd.

Released by
=

5-1611

“THUNDERING JETS”
3 Cartoons — “Capt. Video”
Wednesday, July 8—Open

“Deerslayer”—3

1 P.M.

Cartoons

In the Wonder of HIGH-FIDELITY STEREOPHO!'IC

This Is Entertainment
Features—Mon., Fri.,
Sat., 2:00 - 4:40
Sun., 1:30 - 4:00
Adm.: Adult, $1.50

SOUND

—_&gt;

rh)

for the Entire Family!

7:00 and 10:00
~ 7:30 - 10:30
- 7:00 - 10:00
Children, $ .50

P.M.

Thursday,

July

2, 1959

�DON’T LOSE YOUR
DIAMONDS
Bring

Your Rings and
We Check Them

Jewelry
FREE.

We do our own diamond setting.
Have your diamonds set in modern settings. Payments arranged.

Register
Now!

Classes Now

Turn

Forming

to the

Want-Ad

section

for

“hard-to-find” items there at moneysaving

915 Linden Ave.—-Winnetka, I1i.
Call Miss Thomas—HI!

prices!

6-4123
Last

“THE

Lake Cook
Road bet.
‘Skokie and
Edens
Highland Park,

SHAGGY

PARKING

1716 CENTRAL: UN-4-4900

“PAINT
YOUR
| WAGON”

NOW! See the BEST
MOVIES as Should be
Shown on our GIANT
SCREEN &amp; NEW
STEREOPHONIC SOUND!
COMPARE!

Mary Ellen, Bill Shirley
and Len Dresslar

MITENTHOUSE Theatre
West.

Park

Ave.

bet.

a

a
Bry NNER: WOODWARD: LEIGHTON
FRIDAY, July 3rd

Green
Bay
Park, &gt; HI.”

THRU SUNDAY
LILLIAN ROTH in

= WLAN

“COME

BACK LITTLE
SHEBA”
OPENS MONDAY
PEGGY CASS in
“BORN YESTERDAY”

OLOR

RESERVATIONS ‘BOTH THEATRES
Mail: Box 277, ‘Highland Pk.
i

Suburbs

phone:

DOG”
at 6-8-10

aiR-CONDITIONED

CARRADINE

Skokie &amp;
Highland

Tonight!

Thurs., July 2nd

Thru
July 12

with

Times

with

1D: 2-1160°:

VE 5-4040°

“Chicago phone: RO 4-7579:
Res, at’ Bk.
of “Highland
*Pk.;
Marshall Field &amp; Co. 3d FI.
ALL SEATS RESERVED
Sun.-Fri., 3.50, 2.90, 2.40, 1.90
Sat. eves., 3.90, 3.40, 2.90, 2.40.

by*OE LUXE

STEREOPHONIC
FRIDAY,

JULY

“TOM

SOUND
10th

THUMB”

North Shore's Most Beautiful Theatre
Lake Forest, Illinois —L.F. 2106 or 4744

Yaa

2 DEERPATH 7
\2

THEATRE
Open

Daily

6:40

to

12

Midnight—Curtain

Friday, July 3 thru Thursday,
On

Our

ONE

at

WEEK

Panoramic

7:00

1:40

July 9

—

Wide

Screen

“SOME LIKE IT HOT”
A Billy Wilder

Production

starring—Marilyn
George

Monroe,
Raft,

Tony

Pat
—

Curtis,

O’Brien,

Jack

Joe

Lemmon,

E. Brown

SCHEDULE —

Weekdays—’‘‘Some Like It Hot” begins at 7:16 and 9:39
Saturday Matinees are discontinued until school reopens)
Sunday—

"Some

Like

It

Hot’’

begins at 2:31

- 4:54

July 10—"DON’T GIVE UP THE SHIP”
July 16—"IT HAPPENED TO JANE”
July 24—"THE YOUNG PHILADELPHIANS”
July
31—"’HERCULES”
August 14—Walt Disney’s “SLEEPING BEAUTY”
Thursday,

July 2, 1959

Chicago’s

headquarters

and

Rd.
adult

serves

Ritual Committee
Conducts Service
B’nai Torah Reform Temple will
hold summer services at 8:30 p.m.
tomorrow at Lincoln School, Green
Bay Rd. In the absence of Rabbi
Sholom
Singer,
spiritual
leader,
who is attending the Central Conference of American Rabbis in New

members

of the Ritual

Committee
will conduct the Sabbath worship services.
Howard Walton, 580 Washington
Ave., will lead the congregation in
prayer. Mrs. Edwin Slavin, Deerfield, and Milton Margulies, 1974
Richfield Ave., will present musical
solos. There will be fellowship hour
following the services.

- 7:17

- 9:40

Exhibit In Our

Lobby by

Downing
Barnitz

William Schaeffer, judge of the Shoreline German Shepherd
Dog Club’s second sanctioned match, hands Best in Match trophy
to Mrs. Lesley Kodner, 1980 Lewis Ln. With Mrs. Kodner is her
winning dog, Denlea’s By Jiminey.
Denlea’s By Jiminey, German Shepherd dog owned by Mrs.

LEGAL NOTICE
The Board of Police Commissioners of the
Village of Deerfield, Lake County, Illinois
will hold examinations on Saturday, July 11,
1959, at 1 P.M. at the Village Hall, Deerfield, to establish an eligibility list for positions on the Deerfield Police Force. Application
blanks
and
further
information
may
be obtained
from Village Hall,
850
Waukegan Road, Deerfield. All applications
must be filed by or before noon on July 9th.
BOARD OF POLICE COMMISSIONERS
DEERFIELD, ILLINOIS.
H. N. Kelley, Secretary.
7/2/59—183

NOTICE OF LETTING
CITY OF HIGHLAND
PARK, ILLINOIS
Public Notice is hereby given that the
City
Council
of Highland
Park,
County
of
Lake,
State
of
Illinois,
will
receive
bids
for the
construction
of bituminous
concrete leveling and surface courses on the
existing pavement on Lincoln Avenue West
from Green Bay Road to the Chicago and
North Western Railroad, Ridgewood Drive
from DeTamble Avenue to Lincoln Avenue
West and Dean Avenue from St. Johns Avenue to Sheridan Road,
known
as Motor
Fuel Tax Section 25 C.S.
Said bids shall be received until 12:00
o’clock Noon, Central Daylight Saving Time,
July 20, 1959, in the Council Chamber of the
City Hall, in Highland Park, at which time
neh place bids will be publicly opened and
read.
Plans, specifications and proposal forms
will be furnished at the office of the City
Clerk in the City Hall of said City.
Payment will be in cash. All bids must
be accompanied by cash or certified check
for 10% of the total bid.
The City reserves the right to reject any
and all bids, or imcrease, or decrease, or
omit any item or items.
By order of the City Council.
June 22, 1959
R.
W.
SNYDER
City
Manager
7/2-9/59—185

POLICY

Sunday Continuous 2 to 12 Midnight—Doors Open

—

is

as a central clearing house for the
area’s educational and cultural organizations.

Hampshire,

MUSIC Theatre
JOHN

J. Baskin, 368 Moraine
Council

education

“Saint Joan”

-

Hubbard Woods
Ice Skating Studio

»

The

July 215/23) 25) 26,29, 3k
Prices: All Seats $2.00
Save Nearly Half. Series Subscription to all plays: $4.50. Curtain at
8:30. UN 4-1907. Speech Bldg.
on the N.U. Campus.

AROUND

~~

Samuel

July 3, 9, 12, 15, 18, 24, 28
Shaw’s

Top Honors At 4-State Show
Go To Local German Dog

Baskin Is Director
Elected as a director at the Council’s
recent
annual
meeting
is

Thebes

ICE SKATING
YEAR

Mrs. Chester A. Pink, 351 Moraine Rd., has been re-elected vice
president
‘and
chairman
of
the
Woman’s Committee of The Adult
Education Council of Greater Chicago.

The World’s Four Great Plays
in Nightly Rotation
Shakespeare’s “A Midsummer
Night’s Dream”
July 4, 7, 10, 16, 19, 30
Sheridan's “The Rivals’’
Jdly 2 5, BT
la ti ee
Sophocles’ ‘"Oedipus, King of

JEWELERS
-. OPTICIANS
Highland Park
Tel. IDlewood 2-0630
Across from bank over. 35 yexrs.

Chester Pink

Re-Elected VIP

NORTHWESTERN
DRAMA FESTIVAL

in.

I. H. NEMEROFF

OPEN

Mrs.

OPEN-AIR GARDEN
THEATRE
(Indoors if cloudy)

ORDINANCE
0-59-37
An Ordinance Amending an Ordinance
Providing for the Limitation of the Use
of Water
During
Emergency
Periods
BE IT ORDAINED by the President and
Board of Trustees of the Village of Deerfield, that:
Section II of Ordinance No. 203, entitled
“AN
ORDINANCE
PROVIDING
FOR
THE
LIMITATION
OF
THE
USE
OF
WATER
DURING
EMERGENCY
PERIODS” is hereby amended to read as follows:
“SECTION II. All emergency regulations
issued by the President or Chairman of the
Water Committee shall be published once
in a newspaper having a general circulation
in the Village of Deerfield, and shall be
effective upon publication.
Provided that,
after publication of the proclamation promulgating
regulations restricting and
controlling the use of water for lawn sprinkling,
upon water pressure falling below thirtyfive (35) pounds pressure at the Highland
Park source, no water shall be used for any
purpose
other than inside domestic uses,
and the Village Manager is authorized to
use such means as may be available to notify residents of the existence of an emergency.””
Any person, firm or corporation violating
any provision of this ordinance
shall be
fined not less than TWO DOLLARS ($2.00)
nor more
than
TWO
HUNDRED
DOLLARS ($200.00) for each offense.
This ordinance shall be in full force and
effect from and after its passage, approval
and publication, as provided by law.
PASSED:
This 24th day of June, 1959.
Approved:
G. E. HOLMQUIST, Village President
Attest:
CATHERINE B. PRICE, Village Clerk
Published:
July 2, 1959
7/2/59—184

Lesley Kodner, 1980 Lewis Ln., took top honors—best in
show—at second AKC sanctioned match staged June 13 at
Highland Park athletic field by Shoreline German Shepherd
Dog Club. The following day the same dog won best of winners

Grounds,
Fair
County
at
class
Grays Lake, in show sponsored by
Chain-O-Lakes Kennel Club.
119 Dogs

Were

Entered

Competing
in
Highland
Park
against the winner were some 119
dogs,
whose
owners
represented
four states—Illinois, Wisconsin, Indiana and Minnesota.
Many other Highland Park, Lake
Forest and Deerfield residents took
top ratings here with their dogs.
Ferdinand J. Mann, 1766 Blossom
Ct., entered Denlea’s First Lady;
it took second place in the open
female class.
H.

Foxy Of Ruwalt, owned by Frank
Lichtwaldt Jr., 1492 McCraren

NOTICE OF LETTING
CITY OF HIGHLAND
PARK, ILLINOIS
PUBLIC NOTICE IS HEREBY
GIVEN
that the City Council of Highland
Park,
County of Lake, State of Illinois, will receive bids for the liquid asphalt seal coating
of Ridge Road from Park Avenue to Half
Day Road, known as Motor Fuel Tax Maintenance Section.
Said bids shall be received until 12:00
o’clock
Noon,
Central
Daylight
Saving
Time, July 20, A.D.
1959 in the Council
Chamber
of the City
Hall,
in Highland
Park, at which time and place bids will be
publicly opened and read.
Plans, specifications and proposal forms
will be furnished at the office of the City
Clerk in the City Hall of said City.
Payment will be in cash.
All bids must
be accompanied by cash or certified check
for 10% of the total bid.
The City reserves the right to reject any
and all bids, or increase, or decrease, or
omit any item or items.
By Order of the City Council.
June 22, 1959.
R. W. SNYDER,
City Manager
7/2-9/59—186

CITY

OF

HIGHLAND
PARK, ILLINOIS
NOTICE TO BIDDERS
Public Notice is hereby given that the
City Council of the City of Highland Park,
County of Lake, State of Illinois, will receive bids for liquid asphalt seal coating
and bituminous
concrete surfacing of existing bituminous and concrete surfaces on
various streets in Highland Park.
Said bids will be received
until
12:00
o’clock Noon, Daylight Saving Time, July
20, 1959, in the Council! Chamber of the
City Hall, in Highland Park, at which time
eet place bids will be publicly opened and
read.
Specifications
and
proposal
forms
will
be furnished
at the
office
of the
City
Clerk in the City Hall of said City.
Payment will be in cash. All bids must
be accompanied by cash or certified check
for 10% of the total bid.
The City reserves the right to reject any
and all bids, or increase, or decrease, or
omit any item or items.
By order of the City Council.
R
SNYDER
City
Manager

7/2-9/59—187

Rd., placed third
female class.

Mrs.

Robert

in 6- to

9-month

Stoddard

of

2501

Half Day Rd., placed fourth in the
open female class with Inka Vom

Waldsee;

and

placed

third

in

the

Open dog class with Jeff-Lynne’s
Niki. These dogs were handled »y
Miss Pam Roddro of Deerfield.
Deerfield

Winner

Richard Ziebell of Deerfield won
first prize in the 6- to 9-month puppy with female Denlea’s Just Rave;
and Donald Norman, also of Deerfield, won third prize with Wilva
Don’s Orpha in novice female class.

In the obedience trial Miss Susan
Overman of 3490 Summit Ave. took
second
open B

prize with
division.

Apollo

in

the

of Mr,

and

Donald Nichols Graduates
From Miami University
Donald

Nichols,

Mrs. Charles
Cherry
Ln.,
from
Miami

son

G. Nichols of 1017
recently
graduated
University,
Oxford,

Ohio, with a bachelor of science
degree in accounting. Nichols also
received

a commission

in

the

U.S.

Naval Reserve. On campus he was
circulation manager of the Miami
Student; also a member of Delta
Upsilon, social fraternity; Beta Alpha Psi, accounting honorary; and
Delta Sigma Pi, business honorary.
Nichols will attend Naval Supply

School in Athens,

Ga.

He
is a Highland
School graduate.

NOTICE

Park

High

OF PUBLIC HEARING

NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
by the
Board of Education of School District No.
110 in the County of Lake, State of Illinois,
that a tentative budget for said school district for the fiscal year beginning July 1,
1959 will be on file and conveniently available to public inspection at the Wilmot
School office from and after 9:00 a.m., on
the 8th day of July, 1959, at 795 Wilmot
Road in this School District.
Notice
is further hereby
given that a
public hearing on said budget will be held
at 8 p.m., on the 11th day of August, 1959
at Wilmot School, 795 Wilmot Road, Deerfield, Illinois.
Dated this 24th day of June, 1959.
Board of Education of School District
No. 110, in the County of Lake,
State of Illinois.

By CHARLES
6/24/59

J. CARUSO,

Secretary

7/2/59—181
Page

41

_

�.

Py

4 wn} nites ne)

Deerfield

~ DEERE IELD BOYS BASEBALL
By Joseph

aw rth ©

(Continued

Mudgett

tional

(Yankees);

League:

(Orioles);

For

Sharp,

and

the

Na-

Eselin,

La-

Brun
and Ohman (Dodgers); La- Buda, Emmons, Eckerling and Wall
(Pirates); Miller, Wells, Butler and
Flint (Cardinals); Scheskie, ScasYordon
and
Gunderson
sellati,
_ (Cubs). The game is scheduled for
|

nine
play

innings,
and no

than

three innings.

Then

_

all
one

the boys are to
can pitch more

on Thursday

night, in order

to clear
existing

up some of the problems
in the Merchants
Can-

vass,

were

we

extended

the

privi-

lege of attending the Chamber of
Commerce
meeting
in order to
present our case.
We were not
aware that it was
tain the approval

_ tion

in order

chants.
tended

necessary to obof this organiza-

to canvass

Warren
together.

_ The

Flint

members

standing of
-eontribution

the

mer-

and

were

I

very

under-

our program
and its
to the development of

the boys in the community.
‘result was that not only did
approve

of

at-

our

canvass

The
they

but

they

passed a resolution that the Chamber

of Commerce

$100.

directly

We,

the

board

would

to our

members

contribute

organization.

of the

executive

of our organization

- appreciative

are most

of this generous

act on

the part of the membership
Chamber of Commerce.

of the

A
the

general meeting was held
Jewett
Park
field
house

June
tee
the

29.

The

nominating

in
on

commit-

offered a slate of officers for
next year. They were Warren

_ Flint, commissioner,
-ass’t

Jim Johnson,

commissioner.

presidents

For

were

League

named

Bob

_ Broege,
‘Prep;
Dave
Maundrell,
PONY;
Wendell
Clayton,
Majors;
_ Paul
Haines,
Intermediate;
Bob
_ Varney,
Minors;
for
secretary,

Marge
Hamilton
and_
treasurer,
_ Ann Yordon. There were no additional

nominations

These

officers

from

were

the

then

floor.

elected

unanimously.
Let us all wish these
men and women the best for a suc- eessful tenure of office.

Subscribe to The

DEERFIELD
REVIEW
Telephone

Windsor 5-4500

3,
42

of

getting

all boys

into the

game

with the net result that there will
be a written regulation provided

all managers

to eliminate

any

Standings

Team
Redlegs
Braves
Tigers
Gians
Team
Braves
Giants
Giants
Braves

aha!

os

ate

se

and

Mrs.

Willson

has

been,

teaching

at

Wilmot School for several years.
The Hawaiian theme was carried
out in decorations and food when
Diane Moore, daughter of the O. D.
Moores
of 1515 Northwoods
Dr.,
gave a party last Thursday.

Recent guests at the home of Mr.
and Mrs.
Richard
M. Harvey
of
1014 Deerfield Rd., included Mr.

Harvey’s aunt, Mrs. Clara Long and
her daughter and son-in-law, Mr.
and
Mrs.
Orlin
Holm
and
two
daughters of Evansville, Wis.; his
niece, Miss
Marguerite
Rehm
of
Chicago,
and cousins,
Mrs.
Margaret Habel of Hector, Minn., Mr.
and Mrs. Paul Nelson and three
children of Chicago.

Lewis Thompson, left, presents trophy to Kenneth J. Weir
at a recent dinner of the Deerfield Savings and Loan Bowling
league held at a supper club near Waukegan. Mr. Weir represents the sponsor. Names of the winners are inscribed on the
cup which is then placed in the Savings and Loan building.

Woman’s
(Continued

Mr. and Mrs. John H. Stryker
and children of Navesink, N.J., are
staying with his brother-in-law and
sister, Mr. and Mrs. Ambrose Cox
of 701 Jonquil Terr., while visiting
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. John A.
.| Stryker of 1033 Deerfield Rd. and
other relatives here. Friday
evening a family picnic was held at
the Cox home. Out of town guests
included his two aunts, the Misses
Minnie and Edith Stryker and his
cousin, Miss Edith Stryker, all of
Evanston and Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
H. | Rutherford
(Marlene
Easton)
of
;
Lake Bluff.

as well

Young People

Club
from

page

as informative.

tion will be furnished.
of

the

Mrs.

public
Albert

TransportaAs chairman

welfare
Dawe

(Continued

16)

department,

is

in

charge

of

Club

is

this meeting.
The
also
en

Deerfield

Woman’s

interested

in the

of Deerfield.

For

young
the

past

womthree

Batting Leaders
years the club has established
a
Salemi (Reds)
Dyslin (Tigers)
scholarship at the Highland ParkCamp
(Reds)
Samuelson
(Tigers)
Deerfield High School. Each year
Major League:
(Two
games
not seperen
a girl from Deerfield or BannockTeam
burn is selected by the high school
White Sox
5
Cards
8
to receive a minimum of $250 for
2b. hits Pointdexter, Keppler, Fremling, tis
From Atlanta, Ga., to 1020 KenMiller and Butler. Umpires
Rumpsa
and
the purpose of furthering her eduton
Rd.
are
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Edgar
Blount.
Team
R.
H -|Lochrie
and their daughter . . .|cation toward a vocational goal. The
Cubs
3
4
From Texas to 1327 Arbor Vitae club has planned a card party in
Indians
10
7
Home
Run,
Delaney,
Ump.
Walns
and
Rd. are Mr. and Mrs. Rodney Lloyd
September, under the supervision
Brin.
Team
R,
H. with their two sons and one daughof Mrs. Kitzerow, to raise money
Dodgers
0
2
ter
... From Evanston to 1128 Dafor this scholarship.
Yankees
3
4
vis
Ave.
are
the
William
Hughes
Umpires:
Griftner and Lees.
From
a special fund set aside
Team
s
H. and their two sons ... And from
for such emergencies
a donation
White Sox
6
5
Libertyville to 1355 Dartmouth Ln. was made
Orioles
5
4
to the Deerfield Park
2b Hits: Couch, Keppler and Turbov. Umps.
are Mr. and Mrs. Harry C. Irons District to help in the cost of the
Chester and Roche.
and their three children.
Indians
7
6
kitchen
in the new Jewett Park
Yankees
Z
i
Recent
guests
at the home
of field house. Plans are now being
Umpires Walns and Blount.
Mrs. Paul M. Dietz and her sister, discussed to add to the appearance
Team
fs
H.
Dodgers
;
Miss Martha Karch of 925 Deer- of the interior to provide an atCOB 5; sie
field Rd. were their brother-in-law mosphere adaptable to social gath2b hits Sharp. Umps. Babcock ie Wells.
Standings
and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Sae- erings.
National
Division
and their son and wife, Mr.
Team
Won
Lost man
The
club
is
anticipating
conDodgers
8
y
and Mrs. Robert Saeman and chil-

Pirates
Cards
Cubs

5

5

6
8

dren, all of Cross Plains, Wis.
Scott and Murray Nelson, chil-

Won
6
)
4
4

Lost
2
4
bt |
5

dren of the H. Cyril Nelsons
of
1440 Dartmouth Ln., are members
of the Glencoe branch of the All
Children’s Grand Opera, which will
have an informal musicale on Wednesday, July 8 from 7:30 to 9 p.m.,

4
American

Division

Team
Indians
White Sox
Yanks
Orioles

Intermediate
League:
Some
of
the score sheets were turned in but
insufficient to make a full report
on the activities or standings. This
same situation exists in the Minor
League.
Next week we will give a
full report ‘on these two leagues.

18 at Northbrook Legion Hall. Any-

1179 Deerfield Rd. ... the Ernest
A. Walen Jrs. moved from 607 Ap-

the

Dance—on

one wishing to help please contact
Grace Carlson or Call Warren Flint

or call
the

me

at WI

help.

5-2065.

We

do

ple

Tree

Ln.

to

South

philanthropic

trict
one

ty

113

in

from

dersons, formerly of 1193 Deerfield
Rd.
Five
outstanding
concerts
are
promised with world famous artists
this fall and winter according to
an announcement by Mrs. Samuel
R. Wittelle
of Highland
Park,
a
member of the Community Concert
Association.
The
concerts are to
be presented in the auditorium of
Township High School District 113
in Highland Park . .. On the committee are Mrs. George Echt and
Mr. and Mrs. Chester Kyle, all of
Deerfield, who will supply information concerning tickets.

Chatham,

Mass. . . . 689 Timber Hill Rd. is
the new address for the R. V. An-

page

Highland

of four winners

scholarships

34)

Park,

of Lake

at

the

was
Coun-

University

of Illinois. Examinations were supervised by W. C. Petty, county

superintendent
of
schools
and
graded at the University of Illinois.
*
*
*
Susan
Mr.

A.

and

Thomas,
Mrs.

daughter

Wayne

of

Thomas

(Dorothy Lidgerwood), Highwood,
who attended the University of Tlinois at Urbana, is a summer student at Lake Forest College. Her
father, Wayne Thomas, was principal
of
the
Deerfield
Grammar
School, before he went to High-

wood

to become

superintendent

of

School District 111. Her mother,
born in Deerfield, also taught at

DGS. The Lidgerwood home, for
Many years, is now the location of
the

office

of

the

Deerfield

RE-

VIEW.

Birth

Announcements

(Continued

from

page

17)

of their first child, Michael Allan.
He was born June 26 in the Highland Park Hospital. The grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Earl Cleon
Varner of Deerfield and Mr. and
Mrs. Irving Stahl of Long Grove.
*

coe home of Mr. and Mrs. Morton
Koch.
Director is Zerline Muhlman Metzger.
Peoria is the new home of the

James R. Watsons who moved from

forget

tinued success in its
program for 1959-60.

for parents and friends at the Glen-

July

Don’t

REY

om

at 525 Pine St. and

Police
Officer
Paul
Kaehler
Of special interest in the PONY spent two weeks with relatives near
League is that a squad of 14 year Marinette, Wis., and enjoyed some
old boys went to Racine, Wis. last good fishing. . . Gilbert Miller is
Saturday and beat the Racine team moving from 697 Waukegan Rd. to
Mundelein.
His wife and children
5-2.
Games played in the results for are en route here from California
. .. The Robert Campbells have
last week as reported are:
sold their home at 760 Sanders Rd.
PONY League
Team
.|and will be moving to Wheeling.

Redlegs
Tigers
Redlegs
Tigers

FRA

are moving to California on July 10.

all misunderstandings.

need

Mr.

and

*

Mrs.

*

Roman

Dickt

“The Service Bank Of Highland Park”

BANKS HIGHLAND

1771 Second St.

BANK—POST
Member

Federal

OFFICE

Deposit

BLDG.

Insurance

Corporation

of

1501
County Line Rd., announce
the birth
of a daughter,
Sherry
Jean, June 28 at the Highland Park

Hospital.

Mr.

and

of La Porte,
parents.

Ind.

Mrs.
are

Fred

Dickt

the

grand-

Deerfield Manor
(Continued

from

page

5)

Rd. The petitions had been handed
at the meeting by Attorney McAndrews, representing Eugene

the Waukegan

Daly of

Title and Trust

—

BANK
NTEREST
Page

if factual evidence can be provided
you can be assured that your executive
board would
remove
the
manager.
A committee consisting
of Warren Flint, Cy Fritz, Wendel
Clayton and Dave Maundrell has
been set up to study the situation

sold their home

=

Ray

Jacobsen

wig

un-

NANN

and

LeClaire,

ot

ler, Schlesinger

_ Larson,

get in the game.
Truthfully it is my belief that
no manager could be so small as to
conduct his team in that manner,

in Ravinia

-

Point-

home as they will not play in the
next game. This is to overcome the
rule that any boy who reports must

taught

a

Jordan,

Hedge
(White
_ Sox); Moore, Franz, Murtfeldt and
Bennett (Indians); McGuire, Mand-

you

drift around from league to league
you hear all types of rumors—like
the one about some managers telling the less capable boys to stay

and

awn

Rosters are for the

occur

When

pF

til her retirement several years
ago.
Mr. and Mrs. L. H. Willson have

x

All Star game.

American League:
dexter,
Keppler,

intentional.

17)

ARAN

|

not

waees

_ boys for the All Star Team for the
Major League,
the game to be
played July 4 at Jewett Park following
the Intermediate
League

it was

o

_ Last Tuesday the final returns
_ were received on the voting by the

quite certain that if this does

xP

ph as Rots

while the Rev. J. D. Parker and his
family are away on their vacation.
Miss Ducker is a former Deerfield
resident

it is

i)
=

them

observation

Se iataceal

be better to deal with

chronologically.

and

a

may

investigation

wan

- velopment during a week, that is,
which item should be reported on
first, is always a problem.
So, it

At this meeting
was
discussed
the problem of managers reputedly
not playing boys.
From
my own

a

Which is the more important de-

CER

A

Margaret Harvey in Evanston and
to stay in St. Gregory’s
rectory

F. Peyronnin
ww

oa

page

lg

gar (ots Bowtiig League ee

Doings

from

Sar

PARK
IDlewood 2-7800
Thursday, July 2, 1959
\

Co.

�Celebrate 85th Birthday Of Johanna

Opens 4th Of July

Board Has First
Policy Meeting

Blumenthal

have

helped

position

each artistic work on the lawns and
galleries.
Mrs.
Blumenthal
was
chairman of the tea yesterday for
hostesses for the art exhibit. They
were given a preview of the work
to be shown to Ravinia audiences
before concerts and at intermission.

Also, Mesdames George Niblock,
Aaron R. Lauter, coPTA News;

chairman;

Sisters

Samuel

Seltzer,

music;

E. A. Gorenstein, art; Harold Newmann, scholarship; John Thomson,
assistant
to
scholarship;
Donald
Rigler, personnel; and Harry Lansmann, American Field Service.
Mesdames Russell Johnson, budjet and class mothers; I. J. Goldberg, senior girls; Ralph Stolkin,

junior girls; Thomas Picker, sophomore boys; Edward Olson, sophomore girls; and Albert Malmquist,
freshman boys.
Other members whe are serving
on the PTA board are Mesdames
Ralph
Pottker,
publicity;
Harry
Kulp, ways and means; Morris Kaplan,
Student
Activities
assistant
chairman;
W. L. Pettengill, PTA
circulation; Bernard Pollack, Sandwick Memorial and class mothers;
J.
V.
Houghtaling,
senior
boys:
Walter
Davies,
junior boys;
and
Paul Ammerman, freshman girls.
Change

Board

Meetings

Board
meetings
of
the _ high
school PTA will be changed to the
third
Thursday
of
each
school
month,
according
to Mrs. Keare.
This was decided after a discussion
of the inconvenience of attendance
at two meetings in the same day
when
a regular PTA
meeting
is
scheduled. The time of the meetings will be announced after a special August meeting.

Mother

Of

2 Earns

Degree

Mrs. Sam R. Weisberg, mother of
two children, Louis, 8, and Eilene,
2, received a bachelor of education
degree
from
Chicago
Teacher’s

are,

left to

Feldman,

a

chairman;

and

In
the

have

its

vice

many

right,

chairman,

Mrs.
years

community,

Harry
of

Johanna

transcribed

Mrs.

Abrahams,
Mrs.

Levi,

service

Cancer

Mrs.

Epstein,

a vice

of

Wm.

J.

Glencoe,

of vol-

Three
students
from
Highland
Park were among the candidates
for degrees
at the University of
Wisconsin this year.
Local residents who received degrees and the degrees they received
were:

Dressings

Miss Shirley A. Scassellati, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Constantine
Scassellati, 740 Clavey Rd., a bachelor of science degree. Miss Scassellati is a member of Pi Beta Phi sorority.

Members of the order also make
cancer dressings and give financial
aid to the Radio Isotope clinics for
the medically indigent at Highland
Park, Michael Reese and Mt. Sinai
Hospitals.

Miss Carol

of Mr.

and

J. Goldberg,

Mrs.

David

daughter

Goldberg,

203 Blackhawk Rd., a bachelor of
science
degree
in physical medicine. Miss Goldberg was file editor
of the “Badger,’’ Wisconsin Year
Book. She also has served as chairman of the Summer Open House.

Harry Highriter Arranges
Student Science Seminar
Harry
Highriter,
825 Marion
Ave.,
chairman of the Joe Berg
Foundation (Chicago) science seminar group, helped to arrange and
coordinate
a
seminar
for
high
school students at Great Lakes to
study the UNIVAC II in the electronic supply office.
The seminar, an educational device, offers students of exceptional
ability instruction in scientific concepts,
methods
and _ application
more advanced and individualized
than can at present be offered under the regular curriculum.

Members of 12 classes graduating
from the university, from 1904 to
1954,
held
reunions
this
year.
Among
them
was
actor Frederic
March, a 1920 graduate.

Miss

by Maurice Paradise and Alice Lazard (Mrs. Ben Lazard) are shown
in the main exhibit.

chairman.

Three From City Get
Degrees At Wisconsin

to

umes
of braille through
the Johanna Bureau for the Blind. One of
the newer projects has been mimeographing, for children who are partially sighted,
sight-saving manuscripts
for
Chicago
Public
and
Haven Schools.
Make

Herman

also

members

thousands

treasurer;

Barbara

J.

Two

According to Fechheimer, there
are 5,000 people, past supporters of
the Society, who may have forgotten their 1959 Easter Seal contribution, and will receive these letters.
Needed

educational

For

10 years

worked toward
it as a hobby

homemaking
she

will

society.

Mrs.

Weisberg

activities.

by

joining

Suburban

Nursery

her

This

A graduate

the

Synagogue

staff

ity. He

of

School.

Rosin Named Badge Sales
Head, 1959 NU Homecoming
Richard Rosin, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert W. Rosin, 3702 Sheridan
Rd., will co-chairman
badge
sales of 1959 Homecoming celebration at Northwestern University.
Rosin is serving with 18 other
undergraduates on the celebration
executive board. A sophomore, he
is a member
of Tau
Delta
Phi
fraternity.
As a freshman he served as cochairman of carnival. This fall he
will fill office of class treasurer.

Rosin
School

is

a

Highland

Park

graduate.

Thursday,

July

2, 1959

High

of Lake

Lynch,

of Alpha

write to us right away

Write

Box

W55

c/o

Lake

Forester

_

a

Chi

Rho soja)

e

Lipis Stever
From Indiana

Mrs. Thomas M. Steuer (the former

Leah

Judith

Lipis),

daughter

|

of Rabbi and Mrs. Philip L. Lipis,
1154

ceived

Lincoln

a

B.A.

Ave,

S,

degree

in June

in

re-

—

social

service from the University of In- a
diana.
Be
A graduate of Highland piltic
High

School,

Mrs.

Steuer is a mem-

_

ber of Sigma Delta Tau sorority. —
Her father is spiritual leader of
North Suburban Synagogue Beth © a

S. Michigan

Receives

BA

Joseph
Eastwood
his degree
Industrial

Edward
Warren,
1769
Ave., in June received
of Master of Social and
Relations from Loyola aed

University.

Br

From

U. of Ill.

Lundgren,

2-DOOR IMPERIAL
UPSIDE-DOWN DUAL-TEMP |
REFRIGERATOR-FREEZER |
COMBINATION
hes

|

ral
AdReg.mi$549.75
14M85

$39995 |

can type, and can spell
if you're the kind of a gem

Tell us all you can do—
make us want to hire you!

&amp;

on

Mrs. Leah
Graduates

want to work close to home
if you take shorthand well

Don't pause, don’t delay

Fenner

fraternity,

NOW

won’‘t mind peaks and pressure
then this job you will treasure.

a position with

Charles B. F. Weeks, son of Mr. —
and Mrs. Francis D. Weeks, 1919
Dale Ave., received a B.A. degree

If you don’t care to roam

men

economies

Forest Acad-

Pierce,

Model

for two

;

Smith Inc. in New York City.

Secretary

that can work

in

has accepted

Merrill,

in

Beth El

a

Col- a

was on the swimming team at Trin-—

fall

interest

received

Trinity

emy, Onderdonk was a member eer a
St. Anthony Hall fraternity and —Bs

ma sorority.

has

Parkers
from

ceived a B.A. degree
and fine arts.

daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Oscar L.
Lundgren,
428
Orchard
Ln.,
a
bachelor of science degree with a
major in education. Miss Lundgren
is a member of Kappa Kappa Gam-

her degree, treating
supplementing her

continue

teaching
North

honor

June

ley Onderdonk, 259 Ravine Dr., re- a

Wollege, Sabin Branch. In addition,
she is a member of Kappa Delta
Pi,

in

lege, Hartford, Conn. Peter H. Onderdonk, son of Mr. and Mrs, Dud-

El.

Chicago.

Highland

degrees

Extra Funds are needed to support two summer day camps which
are the only facilities available to
crippled children. Volunteers assist
the regular
professional
staff in
providing play activity for the handicapped youngsters. Contributions
may be sent to “Easter Seals,” 116

Ave.,

Weeks P. H. Onderdonk

member

Richard Fechheimer, 265 Maple
Ave., member of board of directors
of Easter
Seal
Society
(Chicago
Metropolitan Unit, Illinois Association for the Crippled), today announced that area residents will be
receiving special letters requesting
contributions in behalf of the Society and the handicapped persons
it serves.

Funds

Charles

in English. He was president of the —
school band
and member
of a a
dance band that played at local
functions. A graduate of Highland
Park High
School, Weeks
is a

Easter Seal Society
Sends Out Appeal
For Contributions

Extra

|}

Lisa

Mrs. Gerald S. Gidwitz, Henry
Gamson,
Highland Park sculptor,
Mrs. Walter Stein and Mrs. Harold

This year Johanna lodge is celebrating 85th anniversary of
The exhibit opens at 7 p.m. on
its founding. North Shore committee is 33 years old. Pictured at concert nights and will continue
the Kincaid Ave. home of Mrs. Donald Abrahams before the recent through Aug. 16. William Laurie’s
anniversary luncheon of Johanna No. 9, United Order of True work in the Little Gallery and oils

Members

College Degrees
é

many months of work by a commit-'}
tee of suburban women and men
assisting Mrs. Abel Fagen of Lake
Forest,
chairman.
John
Temple,
Chicago artist, and Eldon Danhausen, Chicago
sculptor,
are members of the committee helping to
select paintings and sculpture in
the main art show and prints and
drawings for the Little Gallery on
the first floor.

cipal of Highland Park High School.
Board
members
who
attended
were Mesdames A. G. Bradt, Deer-

List

=

Receive Trinity

The Ravinia Festival Art exhibition, which opens Saturday in the
Casino
building,
is staged
after

Mrs. Spencer R. Keare, 1270 Linden Ave., president of the Highland Park High School PTA, was
hostess to the new PTA Board at
its first policy making meeting for
1959-60.
Guests at the afternoon tea were
A. E. Wolters,
superintendent
of
Township High School District 113;
Leslie Libakken, assistant superintendent; and Charles Stunkel, prin-

field, first vice president; Morris
Root, second vice president; John
R. Haugan,
third vice president;
William Davidson, secretary; Jules
Gelperin,
financial
secretary;
Henry
Fortran,
treasurer;
L. V.
Trabert, social chairman; William
Schwab, co-chairman; and Samuel
Smith, student activities chairman.

Highland Parkers | .

Ravinia Art Festival

és

f

Ft. —

Automatic

ONLY

a

KELVINATOR.
Reg, $449.95 bay $329.95 |
12

Cu.

Defrost

NOW

KELVINATOR—Reg. $349.95 onty
SPECIAL!
SPECIAL!
12 Cu. Ft. — Reg. $249.95
KELVINATOR This Week Only ..

648

N.

$249.95
|
SPECIAL!
$199.95

FREEMAN'S
Western

Lake

Forest

|

519.
Page

43
i

High School PTA

�YOuw'LL FIN-D
ire

RE

ae

PHONE YOUR WANT AD
REAL

ESTATE
FOR
SALE
(LAKE FOREST)

(Improved:

HARGE IT

REAL

ESTATE
FOR
SALE
(LAKE FOREST)

LAKE BLUFF—LAKE FOREST
CHOICE SELECTIONS!
5¢ each additional word
(For 55 words or Less)

-25c Service charge for blind ads
Ads containing 56 words or
ore are charged at the rate of
4.90 per column inch.
tract rates for 4 or more
cutive insertions available

(

on

request

This

1

cost

inch

will

Minimum.

cover

the

_ insertion in all 4 papers.
®

Deerfield

Review

Ads run in above publications
uring the same week in which

Fort Sheridan Tower is published
will also appear in

Fort Sheridan Tower
_ Published Every Other Friday
Wont

Ads will be accepted up to

Tuesday, 4:30 P.M.

DEADLINE FOR CONTRACT
_ ADS 3 P.M. TUESDAY
For Publication in the Current
Week’s Issue.

JUST LISTED—NEAR
High School. This
3 bedroom ranch has frpl., basement, gas
heat, garage. Private yard. 26,750.
FINE
APPOINTMENTS—this
QUALITY
BRICK featuring a 20 ft. FAMILY ROOM
off living room, finger-tip kitchen, basement,
gas heat, completely air conditioned, 2 car
garage, landscaped &amp; private patio. LOW
’s.
FAMILY
HOUSE—Living
room-dining
room, country kitchen, tack room, bedrooms
up, basement, garage. 20’s.
SECLUDED, QUAINT &amp; COZY, THIS rustic paradise, living room, frpl., dining room,
2 bedrooms,
basement,
GAS
HEAT
(hot
water),
MOST
WONDERFUL
SETTING.
Near shops &amp; Trains. LOW 20’s.
SPARKLING
CAPE
COD—30
ft. living
room, frpl., DREAM
kit., hot water heat.
King size bath, 3 bedrooms, wooded
lot.
25,750. Offers invited.
JUST
THE.
TICKET
for young
growing
families (LOW maintenance, lots of space).
4 bedrooms, 114 baths, hot water heat, gas
permit available to purchaser. LARGE
activity room. LOW TAXES. Only 19,500.

Copy

Mrs.

is accepted with the underding

nder

that

the

no
no

|

Lindenmeyer,

H.

obligation

advertiser

or

Lake

Bluff

or

liability

third

parties.

7

Olson

&amp;

Co.

Realtors
Waukegan,

In the event of an error in copy,

the advertiser’s request, the
blisher will rectify the error
‘
ublishing the corrected
ad
;
e next regular issue without
charge. All claims for adjustment
must be made within five days of
the date of publication in which

D.

Ill.

on

the error occurs.

"

Modern
1-story
house
in Northmoor section on large lot. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths. 2-car attached garage, gas heat.
Eleven room frame Colonial house,
close to transportation and shopping, on 7 acres—beautiful orchard
and garden, garage and apartment.
Property can be divided.

_
TELEPHONE
WANT AD SERVICE
IDlewood 2-4500
Windsor 5-4500

GILBERT RAYNER
REAL ESTATE
266 EAST DEERPATH
LAKE FOREST 382

HIGHLAND PARK
608 Laurel
DEERFIELD
699 Waukegan
Rd.
LAKE FOREST

287

Kathryn
Jaicks
Berenice Ressinger
Carmen Burgess

Deerpath

ESTATE
FOR
SALE
(LAKE FOREST)

LAKE

(improved:

FOREST

Colonial brick ranch set on extenively landscaped acre. Area of exutives’
need

luxury

homes.

for privacy.

Stockade

Original

owner

ed to sell for health reasons.
*riced below owner’s cost for quick
ale. In the 60’s. For information
1 Lake Bluff 4057 or 166.
. choice one acre home sites. Exlusive Lake Forest residential secion,

Each

$7,000.

STUART

&amp;

Exclusive

Agents

2 Center Ave.

CO.

Lake Bluff, Illinois

CTIVE well built fairly new ranch.
bedrooms, basement, wdie lot on quiet
: ree end court, near schools, middle 20’s.
321 Hirst Court, Lake Bluff 4325.

Page

44

LAKE BLUFF. Four-year old brick
ranch.
Three
bedrooms,
living
room with fireplace, dining room,
spacious
kitchen
with
built-in
oven and range, breakfast bar,
birch cabinets; large ceramic tile
bath.
Plus
full basement
with
recreation room
and half bath,
screened porch, 1% garage, gas
heat, Rusco combination screens
and storms; carpeting and draperies
included.
Attractively
landscaped.
Low
thirties;
by
owner.
Lake Bluff 3931.
SEEING
IS
BELIEVING
how
beautiful
this brick &amp; lannon stone ranch house is.
Large living room with fireplace, wood
paneled den, dining room, unusual kitchen
with breakfast room, 2 large bedrooms,
two
tiled baths,
utility
room,
screened
porch, attached garage. Picture windows
throughout. Huge flagstone patio. 4% acre
completely
landscaped
facing
Old
Elm
Club. Price includes wall to wall carpeting, draperies &amp; appliances. In the 40’s.
Call Lake Forest 3613.
8

A
Three
bedroom,
one
bath,
brick
ranch. Living-dining room combination,
kitchen,
screened
porch.
Basement with laundry and shop.
Oil heat. Two-car detached garage.
Draperies,
carpeting,
refrigerator,
stove, washer and dryer included in
asking price.
Priced in—Low Thirties.

SAFE
Three bedroom, two bath, troublefree, modern house on over an acre
of beautiful ravine property. Combination
living-dining
room
with
fireplace, kitchen with dishwasher,
partial basement. Oil heat. One-car
detached garage.
Priced in—Low Forties.

ROOM
brick contemporary ranch house.
244 baths, attached garage,
on wooded
acre. By owners. $23,000. Lake Bluff 1916.

Four bedroom,
three
bath, brick
Colonial ranch on one and a half
acres. Living room, kitchen, dining
room,
screened
porch
and
patio.
Attic storage, gas heat, and a twocar attached garage.
Priced in—The Sixties.

ONE!
Newly listed, air-conditioned, brick
and stone contemporary.
On the
main
level:
Living
room,
dining
room, cabinet kitchen, three bedrooms, two baths, powder room and
patio.
Ground level: Family room,

bedroom,

bath,

laun-

dry room, storage room and utility
room. Gas heat, two-car attached
garage.
Priced in—Low Seventies.

Parking

Space

for Our

Available

Customers

Hart, Shaw &amp;
Company
C.
Mrs,

Richard B. Hart, President
Howard
ReQua, Vice President
Stuart R. French
Milton McN. Traer

Ruth E. Henderson
260 E. Deerpath
Lake Forest 4040
Member

of the
Multiple

INC.

since

1904

FOREST

Custom
designed
COLONIAL
split-level
in Northmoor
Sub., only
one
year
old.
Three bedrooms, two and one-half baths,
spacious (22’x16’) FAMILY
ROOM.
Cabinet kitchen with built-in oven, range, and
dishwasher plus breakfast area. Priced in
the 30’s.
Two story brick English style residence on
full acre EAST of the tracks. FOUR bedrooms, 312 baths, studio type living room,
dining room, plus breakfast nook. BEAUTIFUL RECREATION ROOM in basement.
AIR
CONDITIONED.
Superb
condition;
priced
right.
Immediate
possession.

LAKE

BLUFF

ENGLISH STYLE 5 room house. Solid construction. Fireplace in living room; SEPARATE DINING ROOM; full basement; gas
heat;
attached heated
garage.
WOODED
AREA
convenient
to
trains
and _ stores.
Priced at $20,000 for quick sale.
BRICK
RANCH
IN EXCELLENT
CONDITION:
5 years old; one owner; 3 bedrooms, tiled bath, modern kitchen, fireplace
in large living room with dining area. Extra lot. ZONED
DUPLEX.
Immediate occupancy, $32,500.

JOHN
TWO

GRIFFITH,
REALTORS

OFFICES

678 Western
Lake Forest

TO

INC.

SERVE
12

Ave.
485

YOU

Scranton Ave.
Lake Bluff 816

Excellent level building site on
blacktop road within city limits.
Features include underground gas,
water, electric, and telephone serv-

ice.
Located

path

1.2

stop

miles

light

which
joins
the west.

SANE

room,

area

(Improved)

ACREAGE SITE
$8900

Delightful, stately, old brick house
with countless bedrooms and baths.
Wonderful home for a large family.
Graciously
proportioned
rooms
with high ceilings.
Beautiful
grounds.
Near Lake.
Priced in—Low Fifties.

hobby

the

LAKE

AND
969

GRIFFITH,

Serving

Four bedroom, one bath house. Living
room
with
fireplace,
dining
room,
modern
kitchen. Gas heat.
Two-car garage with a black top
drive. Nice yard.
Priced in—Low Twenties.

occup.
occup.
occup.

baths. Immed.
baths. Immed.
bath. Immed.

publisher

of any kind whatsoever, either to

the

RENTALS—
bedrooms, 24%
bedrooms, 1%
bedrooms, 1%

ESTATE
FOR
SAL
(LAKE
FOREST)

JOHN

OWNER
LEAVING AREA WANTS
offer
on this 3 bedroom BRICK, ceramic bath,
paneled
fireplace
wall,
picture
window,
woodland
views,
kitchen
10x12,
formica
counters, 18 ft. Jalousie porch. Full concrete
base. 2 car att. garage. Mortgage with 414%
interest available to purchaser. LOW 30’s.

3
4
3
2

REAL

HAVE

BI-LEVEL
custom
interior;
4 bedrooms,
2%
baths, wonderful
cedar 26 ft. family
room, frpl., 16 ft. dining room, living room,
frpl., finger-tip kit. with built-ins.
15 ft.
paneled den, GAS. heat, lge. porch, att. 2
car garage. Landscaped. Carpeting included.

CANCELLATION DEADLINE
12 NOON, TUESDAY

(improvea)

CALL WI 5-4500

Kenmore Thorsen
135 S. La Salle St.
RAndolph 6-7155
Evanston-North
Listing Service

Shore

north

on

LAKE

3

Winwood

Waukegan

Clifford

of
Rd.

Dr.
from

Leonard

EXCLUSIVE

BROKER

FOREST

DUNKIRK

2375

Deer-

1-2353

BEDROOM
red brick ranch; full basement; attached 2 car garage; corner lot,
choice
east
location,
1 block
west
of
Sheridan Rd. 20’s. Lake Forest 1895.

538 CENTER
AVE, Lake Bluff, 2 blocks
from
beach
and
boating.
Fine
older
home,
rewired. 5 bedrooms,
2%
baths,
screened
porch, breakfast room,
new 2
car garage
and breeezeway,
double lot.
We
have purchased
another home
and
are anxious to sell with immediate possession.
Exceptional
financing
available.
Call owner,
Lake
Bluff 2569
or your
broker. $33,000.
FOR sale by owner. Under $25,000. Cape
Cod, 4 bedrooms,
living
room,
dining
room, den, 2 full baths, kitchen and separate breakfast room, sewing room, full
basement, nice yard, low taxes and maintenance, adjacent duplex lot also available.
Telephone Lake Forest 4604.
LAKE FOREST—dQuality built pressed brick
ranch. Like new. Well designed; 3 twin
size bedrms., 2 tile baths, vanity; large
living - din.,
firepl,
overlooking
rear
grounds;
10 closets; beaut. lge. kitchen,
brkfst. rm., built-ins, washer, dryer; carpeting; 244 car att. garage; 2 porches, one
alum scrnd. Well located at 604 S. Waveland Rd. on ¥% acre lot. Priced at $43,500,
or reasonable offer, for immediate sale.
By appointment. Lake Forest 4520.
BY OWNER
5 year old, 3 bedrooms, 1% baths, living
room
with fireplace, oversized 2 car attached garage with workshop area, on acre;
city water; West of Lake Forest Limits. Mid
twenties. Low taxes. Telephone ID 2-9468
evenings or all day weekends.
LAKE
BLUFF
East. New
6 room
brick
ranch. 2 full ceramic tile baths, full basement, wooded New England atmosphere.
Full price, $23,500 complete; only 10%
down.
See
today.
313
E.
Scranton.
3
blocks
to Lake
Michigan
Beach.
Telephone ID 3-0766.
BRAND
new house, 6 rooms, for sale or
rent with option to buy. 125 Ravine Ave.
Lake Bluff 1327.
3 BEDROOMS,
brick ranch, 2 car garage,
aneled
basement,
gas
heat,
low
30’s.
elephone Lake Forest 3095.

REA!

STATE
FOR
SALE
(LAKE FOREST)

HOMEFINDERS,

(improved)

Realtors

THE ULTIMATE IN EYE APPEAL. The
interior of this split level is intriguing but
practical. 4 bedrooms, sitting room, 2% C.
T. baths. Kitchen well planned on street
side—rear still wooded lot, 117x377. Such
specials as blue slate and parquet floors, ornamental
iron,
soffit
lighting.
Carpeted.
Owner anxious to sell. Priced in 60’s. Mrs.
Nilsson.
WEST
LAKE
FOREST.
Rolling
wooded
acre with quiet comfort in every inch of the
trees, screened porch, 2-sided hearth, thermopane windows. Kitchen with dishwasher
and disposal. Paneled family room. 3-plus
bedrooms,
2 C.T. baths. Good
basement.
$42,000. 14 mi. W. of Mil. RR station. Mr.
Hastings.

HOMEFINDERS,

Realtors

111

ALpine

Green

REAL

Bay

Rd.,

Wilmette

1-1111

ESTATE FOR SALE (improved)
(HIGHLAND PARK)

HOMEFINDERS,

Realtors

NEW LISTING—MOVE RIGHT IN. Owner transferred, leaving 5-plus room bi-level
in Westridge School district. Gas heat, full
basement, 1% baths, 3 bedrooms. $24,900.
Mrs. Nilsson.
NOT NEW RANCH. Outgrown by present
numbers. Full basement, fireplace in living
room; separate dining room; paneled den;
2 bedrooms. Carpeted, built-in TV. Homey
setting. $20,950. Mr. Degen. WI 5-1784.
LIKE OLDER
HOUSE
FOR YOUR
ANTIQUES?—(except for stainless steel kitchen
with dishwasher
and range) On
1 A. of
wooded seclusion. Bar-B-Q. Dog run. You
will
enjoy
the quaint
appeal
of this 3bedroom, 2-story house. Very comfortable.
$26,500. Mrs. Hedlund.
ALL THE NEW FEATURES in this Scholz
ranch set across a charming corner lot. Has
thermopane
wall
sliding
windows,
patio.
Compact but not crowded—3 bedrooms, 2
baths, gas heat. Complete
with carpeting,
draperies and appliances. $34,900. Mrs. Moser.

HOMEFINDERS,

Realtors

111

ALpine

Green

Bay

Rd.,

Wilmette

1-1111

A

CHICAGO Title Insurance Policy insures
your
real
estate
title
against
possible
loss—pays the cost of legal defense. Ask
your lawyer.
;
AIR-CONDITIONED
Expandable 3 bedroom Cape Cod (all on
one floor), living-dining combination,
full
basement,
gas heat, unusually
good
construction,
low
maintenance
in convenient
location, Elm Pl. School Dist., many extras.
By owner, mid 20’s. ID 2-8270.
BY

owner. 3 bedroom split level, combined
living, dining room; Youngstown kitchen,
paneled TV room, 14% baths. On beautiful
corset lot. Low 20’s. Telephone
ID 2-

Beautiful

BY OWNER
East Ravinia

Section

Highland Park, large wooded lot (85 foot
frontage).
3
bedrooms,
2
complete
tile
baths
with
showers,
modern
kitchen,
screened porch, sun deck, tile roof. Ideal
location, 2 blocks from
school, shopping
and trains. Quick sale. Priced in the low
thirties. Telephone ID 2-4744, for appointment.

NO

CHAUFFEURING
FOR
MOTHER

One
blk
to elementary
school
(Children
cross no streets), 4 blks. Main N.W. trains.
Attractive home in lovely east side setting;
spacious first floor with den and powder
rm., 3 bedrooms and bath on second floor.
2 car garage.
CALL
OWNER
ID 2-2940,
BRICK 3 bedroom, 2 bath, ranch on spacious wooded
site; built in appliances,
attached garage. Will help finance. $28,500. Telephone ID 2-9280.
SALE
by owner,
Woodridge, seven room
Cape
Cod,
1%
ceramic
baths,
central
air conditioning, 2 fireplaces, paneled bar
and rec room, 2 car garage, beautifully
landscaped,
combination
aluminum
storms, canvas awnings, ceramic kitchen,
huge closets, 36 inch attic fan. 7 yrs. old.
Convenient schools and train. Low 30’s.
Telephone ID 2-3616.
BY owner: Low 30’s. Lovely 6 room, 1%
bath, Colonial home. Wood burning fireplace and screened
in porch,
3 exceptionally large bedrooms, large recreation
room,
modern
kitchen with dishwasher,
incinerator, gas heat, beautiful landscaped
yard; dead-end
street. Perfect for chilaie
by appointment. Telephone ID
3-0030.

Thursday,

July 2, 1959
pane

ab

�)

FOR S
: REAL ESCATEGHLAND
PARK)

YOUR
1256
453

HOLIDAY

ST.

JOHNS—2

ST.

JOHNS—4

TOUR!

bedrm.

bedrms.,

1565 OAKWOOD—5
tiple zoned

bedrms.,

937 JUDSON—4
Ravinia

eee

1239
1%

GLENCOE—3
baths, bi-level

Dutch
Co$19,500
2 baths, mul$24,500

2

bedrms.,

baths,

East
$24,500

bedrms.,
family
«&lt;..2.2.0......6000.2.....

1146 RAGO—(Deerfield)
ranch w/bsmt.

3

bedrm.,

2 bath
$26,500

1%

baths,

brick,
$30,500

1504 GLENCOE—Income
4 bedrms.

Apt.

Bldg.,

1 apt.
$34,500

457

1361 LINCOLN—5
Colonial

bedrms.,

1920 NORTHLAND—3
rm., rec, rm., approx.

314

3_

baths,
$42,500

baths, brick
$43,500

LANG

bedrms., sep. din.
% acre ........ $47,900

1447
WAVERLY
RD.—5
baths, family rm., over 1

bedrms.,
5%
acre ....$69,500

712

us

for

appointment

to

see

Rd.

ID

HIGHLAND

PARK

NEW
LISTING:
Five
bedroom,
2
home
on 60’ lot. Living room
with
place.
Large
separate
dining
room.
bedrooms and bath on the 1st floor. 3
rooms and bath on the second plus 2
tra”
upstairs
playrooms.
Convenient
schools, trains and shopping

bath
fireTwo
bed‘‘exto

ON
CONTRACT-OR-LOW
DN.
PAYMENT: New 3 bedroom, 2 bath, split level.
Beautiful
family
room.
Convenient
location
$25,500
FOR THAT MAIN FLOOR REC. ROOM
with lovely woodburning fireplace. See this
3 bedroom
split level. Top
location. Reduced
:
$27,900
FOR INDOOR AND OUTDOOR. LIVING:
Don’t miss this beauty. Woodridge. $27,500

NEED

A

park?

3 BEDROOM

Convenient

to

BRICK?

Near

everything?

a

“at Ry

NORTHBROOK
GORGEOUS
BRICK
AND
RANCH
on 1 acre. Built in
rooms, woodburning fireplace,
and 2 baths, only

STONE
1956. Large
3 bedrooms
$28,500

DEERFIELD

Dorsey Husenetter
Johns

high

ground,

ID

2-1484

TO

rm.

SETTING

overlooking

THE

with

fireplace,

MINUTE

EN, brkfst, area,
der rm. Upstairs,

WOOD

tall

trees,

this

dining

rm.,

UP

CAB.

KITCH-

screened porch and
4 bedrms., 2 baths.

powCon-

veenient to school and train. $39,500.

SOUGHT
Easy

walk

most

gracious

shops,

nificent

to

yet

a

lot.

AFTER
Elm

real
5

There

Place

LOCATION

country

bedrm.

are

school,

feeling

home

large

train

on

in

and

Bldg.

VErnon

wm

y 2, 1959

n

Glencoe
5-0665

wae

charming

sep. large din. rm.
enclosed sun porch.

Located

close

667

lovely

Broadview

in

homes.
ID

2-7913

BRICK, STONE &amp; SIDING
60x180.

with

bath.

old
full

room
way,

split

comb.,

level
Living

fine

3 bedrooms

garage.

All

in

on

Pan.

beautiful

Rec.

room

room-dining

kitchen,
and

breeze-

tile bath.

beautiful

Pee cna as oF
5-0236

everything

of.

Att.

condition

ata $28,000

H. and R. Anspach
Realtor
463
BY

Central

Ave.

Road

WI

SUNDAY

McGUIRE
ALpine

12 TO

&amp;

2-1212

owner. Brick house. First floor: living
room, dining room, kitchen; 2 bedrooms
and
bath;
closed
stairway.
Upstairs:
1
large, 1 small bedroom, bath,
1 unfinished room. 2 car attached garage; corner
lot. Needs some repairs. Will sell $28,500.
Call for appointment. ID 2-2069.
3 BEDROOMS, den, 2 baths, 2 car garage.
$225 per month. ID 2-5994,

ORR,

1-0228

FIRST

Nearing completion in the Waldon school
area this 7 Rm Colonial Ranch on 85 ft.
wooded
lot, 3 bedrms.,
2 baths;
Family
room; ‘Full basement: 20.05.0052. 39,850

Realtors
5-1080

OFFERED

Sunday

ZANDER-OMMEN
REAL
Waukegan

&amp;

ESTATE

Deerfield

Rds.

all

kinds

OPEN

Shore

WI

RIVERWOODS:
just completed
brick-redwood ranch, designed for beautiful 2 acre
Woodland setting on private road. 22 foot
Andersen window walls, 3 bedrooms,
1
ash
paneled, 2 ceramic baths. Crab Orchard
fireplace, baseboard hot water heat,
2 car garage, $32,500 on contract by owner. Telephone WI 5-1353.
BY

owner: Brick ranch, 2 bedrooms, glazed
den, panelled and cork floor, living room
with stone fireplace, dining room, completely carpeted. Cabt. kitchen with éating
area, full basement, recreation room, also
bar and card room; patio and attached garage, Priced to sell, open to offer, 25 year
mortgage available. Telephone WI 5-1355.
BEDROOMS,
2%
baths,
large
family
room, fireplace, living room, dining room.
basement, dishwasher, disposal, double garage, many
closets, 3 years old, many
extras, corner lot, fully landscaped. Splitlevel, brick and shingle, price mid 30’s.
Telephone WI 5-5015.

QUALITY
brick-stone ranch, 75 ft. landscaped lawn, near Woodland Park school;
3 bedrooms, carpeted living dining room,
attractive pink and birch kitchen with eating area, basement. Low 20’s. Telephone
WI 5-2429.
owner: 114 year old 4 bedroom splitlevel with 2 full baths, large kitchen with
built-ins, disposal, basement, wall to wall
carpeting, on 80x150 ft. landscaped lot,
$29,500. Telephone WI 5-2452.

BY OWNER
2 year old tri-level, in excellent condition,
3 bedrooms, 2 baths, GE range, oven, dishwasher, disposal, finished family room, tiled
basement, garage and patio, extra large lot,
located
on
cul-de-sac,
one
block
from
school. Reasonable.
Telephone
WI
5-4637
for appointment.

NO

kitchen

has

built-

STAIRS

TO

car

|
ic

CLIMB

—

bed:

In this California ranch with 3

extra large family room. Kitchen with
tiful wood
cabinets, eating
area
appliances.
Car
port
with
storage
Thermo-pane
windows.
Outstanding
°
at

JUST
5 bedrooms,

REDUCED

2 baths,

situated

acre near schools. House

large

living.room

kitchen
full

and

on lovely

hi

is 7 years old,

ha

plus. dining. room. -

closets

basement.

galore.

Now

;

All t

only

CLOSED

.

JULY

4th

:

OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY
9

a.m.-8

p.m.

SAT.

9

a.m.-5

p.m.

VIKING Realty
826 Deerfield

Rd.

wi

Deerfield

LINCOLNSHIRE

SUNDAYS.

Owners

10-5

of parking

WI

5-5100

space)

COLONIAL

GEM

IMMEDIATE
POSSESSION
1 year old brick ranch home, living room,
paneled
dining
room
(or
family
room),
kitchen with dining area, 3 bedrooms and
tile bath, beautiful paneled
rec. room
in
basement. The owner has been transferred
and must sell. He will leave his nearly new
wall to wall carpeting.
Centrally located.
Priced in high 20’s.
:

MAN

BRICK

once.

Separate

rooms

and

SCHOLZ

wish

plus

2 extra

NO

RANCH

living

wooded acre in

and

=z

di

rooms!

C

a COUNTRY

location.

;

BANNOCKBURN IN THE
On a WINDING COUNTRY ROAD
and

beautiful

~

with lo

neighbors

close by, this 4 year ol

EARLY

AMERICAN

charming

beyond

hon

description!

See

.

SEARS REAL ESTATE CO.
REALTORS

Hillcrest 6-2900

HOMEFINDERS, Realtors
pris
NOT A THING
into this cleverly

TO DO
planned

NOW

READY

with attached
washer, snack
$22,900. Mrs.
home.

White with green shutters, large living room
with fireplace, separate dining room, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths. Outside entrance to basement, garage, big shade trees. Just a few
blocks to shopping and trains. Rarely do
you find all of these features for $18,500.

PARK

when you
3-bedroom

mc

garage. Kitchen with
bar. Divided tile bath.
Parkinson, WI 5-0248.

ALMOST

3-4 bedrooms,

—

2%

ran

dis

your

baths. Dute

lonial on new neighborhood wooded
choice W. Deerfield area. Come and
$44,500.
Mr.
Hastings.
SECLUDED

stone

COD

WOODLAND

transferred

sell their 4 bedroom, 2 bath

bedrooms, 21% baths, screen
and a 2 att. gar. Come see it

“Gracious living’ is the only way to describe
this charming
home.
Large center
entry hall leads on one side into beautiful
living room
with fireplace, on the other
into well proportioned
dining room
with
French doors through which one enters onto
a huge screened porch. There is a most attractive kitchen and breakfast room. both
done in knotty pine, den and a powder
room
complete
first floor. Upstairs there
are four large bedrooms
and
bath.
Full
basement, 3 car garage, located on beautiful wooded acre. $36,500.

CAPE

|

2108 ELSINORE—$42,500 ©
SHOWN BY APPT. ONL’

quiet

5-5700

Beautiful

range, oven, washer and dryer. 1%
rage with porch. Beautiful yard.

Nancy Sullivan WI 5-1393;
2-1360; John Coons PA 4-

Deerfield
‘Rd.
(Pienty

3 bedrooms.

Multiple

John Coons, Realtor
in Deerfield
623

DOWN

2 year old frame ranch located in Wheelin; .

of vacant.

Benj. Piersen Realty

GReenleaf

TIME

have

5-0984

6 P.M.

Will sacrifice this attractive ranch on a 75’
lot in beautiful BRIARWOOD
section.
3
bedrooms, living room with fireplace, lovely
kitchen with eating space.
1%
baths and
oversize attached garage. This is a completely and delightfully finished home. Carpeted and landscaped.
A real buy at $29,500

BY

ID

Williamsburg
Colonial
with
4 Twin
size
bedrms and 2% Baths. There are eight extra
large rooms in this delightful
home. Family
rm has fireplace. The kitchen is completely
outfitted. Excellent dining room. Basement.
Patio.
$43,000

Evening Phones:
Ed Enerson CR
0084.

Brick ranch on beautiful landscaped lot. 3
twin size bdrms., plus den or. 4th bdrm.,
14% baths. Sep.
dining rm. Kitchen with
eating space. Full basement. Price $39,000.

Exceptionand
beaut.

2 bdrms plus
Ceramic bath.

to

neighborhood
OWNER.

Brand
New
Listing
of quality
3 bedrm.
Stone &amp; Brick Ranch on ™% acre of woodland paradise. Stone fireplace in Living rm.,
spacious
family
kitchen,
2
ceramic
tile
baths, full basement, 2 car att. garage with
circle drive, can’t be beat at ............ 38,

Members of Evanston-North
Listing Service.

DEERFIELD

5

Bay front liv. rm. with

grounds

HIGHLAND
PARK
HIGHLANDS.
Moving, must sell: 3 bedroom ranch, 2 full
baths, a full basement, finished recreation
room, central air conditioning, dishwasher, fireplace,
all
wool
carpeting
and
drapes. Contract sale possible with $4500
down. 3475 Summit, ID 2-5490.
ROOM brick home, attached garage, 835
County Line Rd. Telephone ID 2-1631,
if no answer ID 2-7521.
BY OWNER, Sherwood Forest. Three bedroom,
1%
baths,
Paneled
rec.
room.
Priced for quick sale. $24,500. Full de-

_ tails. Telephone ID 2-8525.

INTO

3-year

REALTORS

Bee

RIGHT

4 ONLY

MUST SELL THIS WEEKEND
BY OWNER:
Transfer &amp; premature purchase forces immediate sale. Immaculate 6
rm., 2: baths, rec. rm. &amp; full bsmt. 23’ scr.
porch. Fenced wooded lot, quiet st. Close
to schls., trans., shopping, park, 4 yrs. old.
Built by architect. Exc. Financing.
APPRAISED AT $25,500
OFFER LOW IN $20’s
Really sacrificing for quick sale. WI 5-0294.

RAVINIA

with

a mag-

rooms

J-H Kahn
Theater

Waukegan
OPEN

REALTOR
HO

this

high
ceilings,
elegant
millwork,
unusual
stairway—to name a few of the fine features. Beautiful living rm., DEN, CYPRESS
GAME RM., 3% baths, breakfast porch and
summer porch for lounging. $54,500.

Glencoe

701

OUR
beautiful
custom
built 4 year
old
ranch of brick and redwood is for sale
due to a business transfer. The interior
is excitingly different with
much
character and
charm.
A _ block
slate foyer
opens on a sunken 30 ft. mahogany paneled living-dining room with window wall
of thermopane; slate ledges, flank raised
two way fireplace in 18 ft. brick wall;
beamed ceilings, built-in bar and cabinets
add interest. There are two over-sized twin
bedrooms and a paneled den guest room
opening onto the living room via a sliding wall. Two
ceramic tile baths, with
built-in vanities, hampers,
and mirrored
walls. Birch cabinet kitchen with electric
wall oven and counter top range, a separate
9x12
breakfast
room,
screened
glazed porch, leads to a 40 ft. patio and
professionally landscaped grounds.; There
is a partial basement,
114 car. garage.
The
house
is newly
decorated;
within
easy
walking
distance
to
schools
and
transportation,
in
lovely
neighborhood.
Priced in the low 40’s, Telephone ID 2- |
6724 for appointment.

MOVE

JULY

REALTORS

Ave.

10%

Transferred owner has moved from this delightful 6 Room Brick Ranch, 3 twin_bedrooms,
114 baths, Patio, Basement,
Large
kitchen with built-ins, $25,950. with excellent
financing.

We

Carr Realty Co.

5-1971

Birch cab. in tile kit. Full base.
with plaster ceiling. 14% car gar.

WHITE
BRICK
and SHINGLE
COLONIAL, in the very pink of condition. Lge.
living

Vernon
5-4121

GRAHAM,

maintained.

Ave.

HILLSIDE
On

665
VE

CLOSED

PARK

room
brick bungalow.
ally well constructed

REALTORS
St.

OFFICE

Open

PERFECT
2
BDRM.
BRICK
RANCH:
Large oversized 2 car garage. Large living
room with fireplace. Every convenience plus
70x200 ft. landscaped lot. Only ........ $20,900

723

SEYMOUR

Realtor

VACANT

Country living in this 4 bedroom, 2% bath
brick tri-level. Just 3 years old, paneled
rec. room and 14 closets make living a comfort and joy. A real buy in the low 30’s.

2-0880

OR OLD

Coons

You
must
see this attractive 2° bedroom
Brand new well built Williamsburg 2 story
brick
ranch
within
walking
distance
to Colonial. 8 Rooms,
4 bedrms, 24 baths,
everything. Living room with fireplace, din- | full basement, gas heat, covered patio
ing “L,” screened porch off living room.
$41,500
Kitchen with eating area, attached garage,
full basement with fireplace. Exceptionally
GLENVIEW
landscaped. Priced right at $27,500.
Outstanding 3 bedrm brick ranch in excellent neighborhood.
Panelled fireplace wall
in living rm, 2 full baths, Separate dining
rm, all weather breezeway with fireplaceBar-B-Q, 2 car att. garage, full basementrec rm.-fireplace, breakfast space in kitchCorner duplex lot. Close in location. Price
en.
$29,750.
$7700.

DEERFIELD

REALTORS
Sheridan

YOUNG

Why pay rent when a small down payment
will buy this lovely young 3 bedroom ranch
a desirable Woodridge area? Priced in low
"Ss.

interior

Earhart &amp; Co.
1899

2-6600

VE

2-7873

LOT

Brick and frame ranch with 3 bedrooms plus
family room. Has entrance hall, living roomdining
room
combination
with
fireplace.
Kitchen and living room overlook rear yard.
Owner
transferred—anxious.
$25,000.

GLENCOE

ROAD

HIGHLAND

WOODBRIDGE
LANE—6
bedrms.,
baths, riparian property .......... $99,000

Call

Realtors
ID

REAL ESTATE
REALTORS

GLENCOE

AMbassador

326 RAVINE
DR.—5 bedrms., 514 _ baths,
&gt;
family rm., about 1 acre eeeweenencscecsenees $79,000
2445
5%

LARGE

GLENCOE
Luxurious 4 year old Roman Brick ranch.
4 bedrooms, 3 ceramic tile baths, paneled
den, Jalousied porch facing wooded
area.
Luscious kitchen with wonderful built-ins,
large breakfast area. Gas heat, completely
air conditioned. 2 car attached garage.

780 APPLE
TREE—3
bedrms.,
2_ baths,
family rm., 2 car att. garage ............$39,500
bedrms.,

Co.

John

Close to shopping and schools. Living room
with fireplace, dream kitchen with eating
bay, 3 bedrooms, bath, large utility room,
screened
in porch
and
attached
garage.
Price $24,500.

SUNSET PARK
This contemporary brick ranch offers healthful, relaxed, informal living for the young
family. Keep an eye on the kids while dining in the family-kitchen. 4 bedrooms, 3%
baths, recreation’ room. Excellent construction. A good buy in the 40's.

3551
UNIVERSITY—3
bedrms.,
3 baths,
plus
family
rm.
and
heated
jalousied
UTED, 2 CAL BATASS &lt;&lt; ccbiceae hw.

DR.—5

Realty
Central

RANCH

CONTEMPORARY
RANCH

L. Ringer

rm.,
4

241 SUMAC—4
bedrms.,
Woodridge area

326
RAVINE
modernized

FRAME

3 bedrooms, living room, family size kitchen, full basement, screened porch, attached
garage,
close
to
schools,
ideal
location.
Terrific value for $23,500.

Tremendous living room overlooking beautifully landscaped garden.
COUNTRY
KITCHEN
with
fireplace looks like it just came out of
HOUSE
BEAUTIFUL.
4
family
bedrooms, plus a maid’s room; 3
baths;
completely
AIR
CONDITIONED. CUSTOM BUILT HOME.
For further details call:

&gt;

1377 FERNDALE—2
bedrms.,
lonial, neat and spacious

i

(DEERFIE

LUXURIOUS RANCH HOUSE
ONE YEAR OLD

bungalow
$16,250

East

ATE FOR |

COMFORT

3-bedroom

ranch.

in

this

Living

and

rooms both paneled in ash and m
Cork floors, thermopanes,
stone
f
C.T. baths; terrace;
242 car garage.
or horse stall, Now $47,500.

ONE MAN’S LOSS—another’s gain.
rich, rambling ranch on % A. can be |
in time for school (or before). In the
of Deerfield—near everything. 3 be
2 C.T. baths, and quite “plush’—p:
the 40’s. J. Degen.
.

Built in 1954, this lovely brick ranch home
has many desirous features. Fireplace, spacious, cheerful kitchen,
3 twin bedrooms,
paneled recreation room plus additional bedroom and bath, living room 24x15, stove
and refrigerator included. Low 30’s.

JUST COMPLETED
New split-level on nearly an acre. Beautiful
kitchen with breakfast area, 3 bedrooms, 3
baths, large family room, 2 car garage. May
be bought on contract. $35,500.

Benj. Piersen Realty

ON

REALTORS
730

Waukegan

Rd.

VERY DELUXE ALL BRICK COLONI
style ranch. For sale by original owne:
is in lumber business. Many deluxe feat
and
appointments.
Family
room, 2
lat
bedrooms,
2 ceramic tile baths, p
basement, large porch, 2% car gar:
acre wooded
lot. Very fine, Priced
MR. DEAKINS.
;
THE

Briarwood

Windsor

5-1670

ranch,
room,
baths,

to Texas
BRICK
2 tile
with
stone
large
ment,
num

ranch, 3 years old; 3 twin bedrooms,
baths, large paneled family room
fireplace, large
living
room
with
fireplace,
rooms
fully
carpeted,
birch kitchen, dishwasher, full base2 car garage, lot 107x180, alumiscreens-storms, patio. Owner. WI 5-

NORTH
east Deerfield, 1505 Northwoods
Drive. 6 room
brick ranch, lot 100x300,
priced $42,500. Telephone UNiversity 46800; after 5, UNiversity ¢-3063.

MOST

BEAUTIFUL

Estates. Deluxe

LO

all brick Tac

Center
entrance,
separate
fireplace,
3 bedrooms,
2
porch, 2 car garage. Owner

wants

offers.

MR.

d
mo

DEAKINS,

DESIGNED
BY LARRY
SCHWALL,
chitect.
Very
attractive, better than
all brick veneer ranch with basement a
car garage.
Beamed
ceiling
living

super deluxe

kitchen,

ury baths. Pretty lot. A
MR. DEAKINS.

3 bedrooms,
pleasure

1% h

ar
ne
8

to see.

Baird &amp; Warner
1157

Waukegan

PArk

4-1855

Rd,

Glenview,
IRving

8-22

Ill.

�if

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE.
(MISCELLANEOUS)

usiness area, attractive stone front

e building.
12 years
ophapaegee well designed,

old. Exair con-

_ ditioned. On 50x200 feet—driveway
_ and large parking area.
_ Now under lease for 2 years. Net
ntal except taxes, $9,300 per year.
An excellent investment and real-

WHEELING
First time offered. Older brick home
in
good condition. Close in, near schools and
shopping
center. All large rooms.
Living
room with fireplace and bookcases, separate
dining room, kitchen with built-in breakfast
nook, 2 bedrooms, bath, plastered walls and
oak floors, full basement, hot water oil heat,
large attic with 3 dormer windows for expansion, 24x32 three car garage and work
shop. Bargain of the century at $18,500.

WM,

istically priced.

For

403

particulars call—

PAUL

PHELPS,

INC.

| 1925 Sheridan Rd.
AL

ID 2-4580

ESTATE
FOR
SALE
(MIS CELLANEOUS)

(improved)

BY OWNER
OU SAVE THE COMMISSION WHEN
U BUY ANY OF THE FOLLOWING
OMES DIRECT FROM OWNER.

HOME

IN

THE

amily. 2 bdrms., 1 bath on cool wooded
landscaped 100x150 lot, walk to North West-

_€rn station and shop, glazed porch, fam. rm.,
att. gar., gas heat, comb. s.s., carpeting, ref.,
Tange inc. A real buy in mid 20's,

BetELAND

PARK—1908

Richfield.

AIR

COUNTRY

Nestled in beautiful wooded area on 70 ft.
x 160 ft. corner lot facing private lake, 2
bedrooms, contemporary ranch style home.
Expandable. Beach rights. Mature trees (2060 feet high), oaks,
white pines, cedars,
hickories,
etc.
Professionally . landscaped
yard (perennials and annuals), roses, begonia,
phlox, shrubs, etc. Natural land trimmed
hedges. Colored winding walks, patios, barb-que. Many other extras. Every detail of
quality, permanent and restfulness are expressed by us in this livable “home in the
country with all city conveniences.” Price
$22,500. For further details, contact owner,
602 North Greentree Rd., Wildwood,
IlIlinois. Telephone Grayslake, BAldwin 3-4659.

Older two story, three bedroom, full basement, frame,
on 80x180 foot lot. Zoned
business. Living room with fireplace, separate dining room, modern cabinet kitchen
with built-ins, enclosed back porch used as
den, hardwood floors, plastered throughout.
Taxes approximately $230. $17,000.

MUNDELEIN
Two bedroom frame home, 1% garage, cabinet kitchen
with
dining
area,
hardwood
floors, gas forced
air heat, 4 blocks to
schools. Taxes approximately $200. $12,000.

SCHWANDT

REALTY

CO.

REALTORS
Libertyville

_
Screeh and glazed porch, att. 2 car gar., city
_ Water and sewer, hot water heat,
walk to
_ Schools. Immediate
possession. Low
down
WILMETTE—914
Yale. Open Friday, Saturday, Sunday p.m. Hom ey 3 bdrm. ranch,
tile baths, family sized living room with
place, rec. rm., patio, att. 2 car gar.,
wooded
nicely
landscaped
lot, gas
included.
Near

WILMETTE—S

_

rucewood.
Owner
moving
to larger home
n Sprucewood. Wants quick
sale on
present 3 bdrm., 1% bath, executive
home,
arge
dining
room
and_
breakfast
room,
fireplace, att. gar., covered
patio,
newly
decorated
deluxe carpeting,
drapes,

dishwasher included. Reasonably priced with
low down payment. Immediate possession.

a

WILMETTE—318
day, Sunday p.m.

_

family.

4 bdrms.,

Greenleaf.
Open
SaturAttractive home for large

2 baths, den,

sleep porch

or extra bedroom, 33x15 living room, large
panne d room, screened porch, 2 car gar.,
Stefully
os
decorated,
many
desirable
feaoe ures, fully carpeted, drapes, dishwasher included. 1% blocks to L and shopping, gas,
50's water heat. Priced for quick sale. Mid
Ss.
PHONE

ORchard

5-8383—24

hour

4846

Main

BUREAU,
St.,

5-5%% MORYGAGE
_

Skokie,

INC.
Illinois

~ REAL ESTATE FOR SALE (Vacant)
(LAKE FOREST)

le

85x190 FT.
lot on Valley
road in Lake
Forest
in
wooded
area;
road,
sewer,
water, in and paid. Owner transferred and
must sacrifice this at once for $6,500 firm
price. Telephone R Doty, 145 S. Ashland
in Palatine at FLanders 8-0781.

REAL

lannon stone brick ranch;

RESORTS
&amp; HOTELS

REAL

Ceramic

tile electric kitchen,

clean 3 bed-

room
brick, excellent condition, beautifully landscaped, completely fenced yard,
garage.
FHA
financing,
reasonable.
715
Bias
S. Wayne Place, LEhigh 7-2816.
Ya
oe.
PISTAKEE LAKE
t
Year around house, 714 rooms. 4 bedrooms,
|
;
full basement,
rumpus
room,
automatic
|
Oil heat, fireplace, large corner lot. Call
_-~-owner, JUstice 7-5414 or JUstice 7-0220.
TT

LIVING AT ITS BEST
COUNTRY
‘
_ 6 room, 2 bath, Colonial home, 2 years old
| On
1%
acres with small barn—ideal
for
horses.
Fully landscaped,
overlooking
or_ chard
and
lake.
Excellent
schools
and
|
churches, 5 miles west of Mundelein. Under
oe
Owner, PArk 4-4066, or JAckson 6-

‘

Page

46

SERVICE

OWNERS

YOU

PLANNING

TO SELL YOUR
HOME?
You can save sales commission
using our services.
Call
ORchard
5-8383,
or
write for details.

by

by-owner
SERVICE
4846

Main

OFFICES,

BUREAU,
St.,

Skokie,

STORES
&amp;
TO RENT

INC.
Illinois

STUDIOS

Owner will build to suit for rent. Stores,
offices, warehouses, garages, etc. for contractors, building trades or what have you.
Property
zoned
commercial.
For
further
information call
'

PEERLESS

ees

Hey

ESTATE

HOME
ARE

liv-

ing room, dining area, beautiful tile kitch2 bedrooms, 2 baths, screened and
en,
glass porch, full basement, gas heat, comoccuImmediate
air-conditioned.
pletely
ancy. $25,500. Telephone owner, Grays
Lake, BAldwin 3-4259.
_
HEELING: owner transferred. Immediate
Occupancy, will rent with option to buy.
_

(Vacant)

DEERFIELD:
Very beautiful wooded lot,
75x170’ on Stratford Avenue in Woodland
Park area, all improvements, Phone owner, FOrest 9-6715.

LE

CHARMING

_

ESTATE FOR SALE
(MISCELLANEOUS)

2 AND
3 rooms for offices
Central Ave. ID ?-0150.

&amp; STUDIOS

only.

JUDSON

Modern 312 room apartment. Elevator building. New stove and refrigerator.
L.
RA

J.

SHERIDAN
Agent

6-7743

&amp;

CO.
ID 2-5041

ATTRACTIVE
3
large
room’
apartment
with private bath, stove and refrigerator
furnished; laundry facilities, parking. $115
a month. Telephone ID 2-1877, after 6
ID 3-1278.
FOUR rooms, first floor unfurnished apartment in Highland Park; near Highwood
Station. Telephone ID 2-4665.
AVAILABLE immediately. 6 room, 2 bath;
air
conditioned,
dishwasher.
Telephone
ID 2-5264.
BEDROOM Townhouse, modern building,
close
to
Ravinia
shopping
center
and
Northwestern train station,
available
August 1, 751 St. Johns Ave., ID 2-9136,
after 6:30.
1ST FLOOR,
3 room apartment, enclosed
porch and garage—Come to rear 212 Eyerts Place, Highwood. ID 3-1627.
CLEAN
5 room
apartment
and
garage,
second floor, screened rear porch. Telephone ID 2-2421.
TWO 3 room apartments, all utilities paid.
__
Telephone ID 2-3187.
3 ROOMS and bath, kitchen with stove and
refrigerator included;
bedroom
and _living room, off street parking area. Telephone ID 2-4419.
AVAILABLE
immediately, 344 room third
floor
apartment,
1
block
from
town;
heat, hot water and garage. Adults only.
Telephone WI 5-2415.
FOUR
room kitchenette apartment, second
floor. 2 bedrooms,
walking
distance to
school
and
transportation;
newly
decarated, heat and hot water furnished. $150
per month. Shown by appointment after
July 4th. Telephone ID 2-1060.

TO RENT
(DEERFIELD)

(Unfurnished)

NEW
two bedroom garage apartment with
utility room, in secluded cool woods near
toll road; paneled rooms, birch cabinet
kitchen, new stove and refrigerator. $100
plus utilities. Telephone WI 5-3061.
MODERN
2 bedroom
apartment,
birch
cabinet kitchen, ceramic tile bath; near
shopping and schools. $145 monthly, including
everything
but
electricity.
No
pets. Telephone WI 5-2419.

APARTMENTS
TO RENT (Unfurnished)
(LAKE FOREST)
NEW Town and Country 5 room apartment.
2 bedrooms, tile bath, powder room, dishwasher, basement and attic, garage. $185
per month.
Available
after June
15th.
Telephone Lake Bluff 1919.
LAKE BLUFF, one bedroom, 4 room apartment,
freshly
decorated,
available
July
15th or sooner. $105. Garage obtainable.
Call Lake Bluff 1055 or 3774.
3 ROOM unfurnished anartment with stove.
Call Lake Forest 3835.

APARTMENTS TO RENT (Furnished)
(HIGHLAND PARK)
KITCHENETTE
apt,
Highwood
business
district, no children, no pets. Telephone
Lake Forest 136.
3 ROOM furnished apartment, in Highwood.
Telephone ID 2-9823.
3 ROOM
and
bath
furnished apartment,
suitable for working couple, no children
or pets. Telephone ID 2-2035.
FURNISHED
one bedroom
apartment in
Highland
Park;
ideal for middle
aged
business
woman
who
wishes
desirable,
auiet location. Write Box W-50 c/o Lake
Forester.
3 ROOM
furnished
second
floor
apartment, share bath. $110 monthly; all utilities paid. Block from town. Couple preferred. Telephone ID 2-1227.
THREE room: furnished apartment in Highwood. Can be seen at 614 Green Bay Rd.
before 10 a.m. or after 7 p.m. or call ID
2-5735 or ID 2-1942.
EAST
RAVINIA,
attractive
house,
with
large master
first floor bedroom,
with
bath. Available for rental from July 22
to Aug. 16th. Adults only. Telephone ID
2-8511.
THREE room furnished apartment in Highwood, private bath, private entrance, utilities included. Telephone ID 2-0980.
APARTMENTS
TO RENT (Furnished)
(LAKE FOREST)
APARTMENT for rent in West Lake Bluff;
adults only. Available immediately. Call
Lake Bluff 2722.

HOME BUILDERS,
INC.
ID 2-6800

HOUSES TO RENT
(HIGHLAND

RECEPTION room and two separate offices
in center of town. Desk space in large
office. Space available from one to three
desks. Telephone ID 2-1060.
SHOP
space with large work
or storage
area at rear. Suitable for small service or
retail business. Call Lake Forest 410.
1,

RAVINIA—730

APARTMENTS

LAKE
BLUFF
wooded
lot 100x124,
east
tracks,
easy
walking
distance,
schools,
railroads, parks, shopping.
Owner,
telephone WI 5-3718 after 6 p.m.
BEAUTIFULLY
WOODED
CORNER
%
acre
lot. ALL
IMPROVEMENTS.
_INCLUDED. Corner of Green Bay Rd. and
lr Lane. Price $7,900. Call Lake Forest

MONEY. New loans

_ ARCHITECT
OFFERS
own
designed
8
m one story modern house. Unique inor, 11 ft. ceiling, 40 ft. living room, 4
garage.
5 car
stream.
wooded
cres_ on
8,000. Telephone NEwton 4-3834.
Iie.» «anne

SALE (Vacant)
PARK)

FOR sale: three modern cabins, knotty pine
interiors, on Webb Lakes, Wisconsin, 27
miles northwest of Spooner on Highway
77: 22x24 two bedrooms,
$4800;
24x24
two bedrooms,
$5500;
and 24x36 three
bedrooms, 8500; each cabin on lake front
lot 100x300. For information call Lake
Forest 434 after 7 p.m.

PRAIRIE VIEW
COUNTRYSIDE

i

6-6720

HIGHLAND
PARK
WOODLANDS.
Investment
property.
55x150
unimproved.
Owner moving—anxious to sell. Best offer. Telephone ID 2-1454.

refinancing.
Terms to 30 years. Free
: fer 30400. LAUREN R. JANUZ, FRankae
-0400. (Residence: Lake Forest 3557).

ay

MUndelein

ESTATE FOR
(HIGHLAND

service.

by-owner
SERVICE

REAL

2-2015

TO RENT

OFFICE
space for rent in Deerfield on
Waukegan
Rd; front office 22x14, two
12x14. Can be used as separate offices
or aS a suite; suitable for any professional office. Telephone WI 5-9841.
OFFICE SPACE: 4 room suite, will divide;
2nd floor in Deerfield business district.
Call John Coons, Realtor, 623 Deerfield
Rd., WI 5-5100.
OFFICE space for rent in Deerfield, suither for doctor, lawyer, etc. Telephone WI
-1121.

7-0800

LIBERTYVILLE
LENCOE—199
Linden.
Open
Saturday,
day p.m. Ideal home for couple or small

STORES

APAKAMENTS.
TO RENT. (Unfurnished)
(HIGHLAND PARK)

EDWARDS

CARR
REALTY
Dundee Rd.
LEhigh
Evenings CRestwood 2-1519

CITY

OFFICES,

ved)

_

FOR INVESTMENT
In the center of Hubbard Woods

er?

456

(Unfurnished)
PARK)

IMMEDIATE
occupancy, newly remodeled
2 bedroom house, 1 block north of Ra
vinia
business.
section,
$160
monthly.
Telephone ID 2-5439.
FOR
rent, in Ravinia, 4 bedrooms,
two
baths,
2
acres
beautifully
landscaped,
close to school and transportation. One or
two year lease. $250 per month.
Telephone ID 2-6171. Possession Sept.

‘au

y

}

HOUSES
TO RENT
(HIGHLAND

(Unfurnished
PARK)

ROOMS

THREE
bedroom home,
may be seen at
1249 Berkeley Rd., Highland Park. $115
per month. Telephone ID 2-9727.
6 ROOM
house, 1% baths, 1 car garage.
Sept. Ist or sooner. Furnished. or .unfurnished, $225.00. After 7 p.m. or Saturdays
and Sundays. ID 2-8321.
BRICK, two story, seven family size rooms,
1% baths, fireplace, garage, near park,
and transportation.
$23,900. Owner, 508
Burton. Telephone ID 3-1457.
HOUSES

TO RENT
(Unfurnished)
(DEERFIELD)

FIVE room Town House, newly decorated,
2 bedrooms,
basement,
garage,
walking
distance to shopping, transportation. August 1 occupancy, $150 month. Telephone
WI 5-0905.
ALMOST new three bedroom brick ranch,
will decorate
to suit, tile kitchen
and
bath, large lot, full basement, close to
schools, shopping, and trains. Telephone
ID 2-7149.

HOUSES

TO RENT

(Unfurnished)

(MISCELLANEOUS)

A long, tree-arched, private lane
leads to this! lovely Colonial home
where it is always quiet, peaceful
and
private,
yet only
about
ten
minutes
drive from
Lake
Forest
and Waukegan. There is a reception
hall,
spacious
living-dining
room,
kitchen,
maid’s room
and
bath, master bedroom with dressing room
and
bath on the first
floor; upstairs there are three bedrooms and bath. There is a very
large screened porch and a threecar attached garage. Monthly rental $350. References. Also on the
same
farm
on
North
Telegraph
Road is an old frame farm house
with
a two-car
detached
garage.
There
are
three
bedrooms,
one
bath, living room, dining room and
kitchen. Monthly rental $100. Ref-

TO

RENT

PLEASANT
room
for rent in. Deerfield.
__ Telephone WI 5-1173.
ROOM
for rent,
kitchen
privileges,
one
block from Central. Telephone ID 2-4685.
NICE
comfortable sleeping room. One or
‘two’ adults. Telephone ID 2-2531.
SLEEPING
room, new tiled bath, private
a
in Deerfield. Telephone WI 5GENTLEMAN’S
large room to rent, fine
residence,
%
block to Highland
Park
shopping, 1 block to transportation. Telephone ID 2-0699,
ROOM for rent, near business district, close
to parking area. Telephone ID 2-3527.

GARAGE

TO

RENT

DOUBLE garage stall, suitable for storage
or vehicles. Call Lake Forest 410.

HELP

WANTED—FEMALE

WOMAN with telephone personality to call
from your home 1% hours each evening,
Monday
thru Friday for local business.
Organization;
salary
arrangement — no
commission. Write Box J-85 c/o Highland
Park News.

SALES
Air
but

REAL
ESTATE
PERSONS WANTED

conditioned offices. Prefer experience,
not necessary.
Call for appointment,

Idlewood Realty
REALTORS
1550

Park

Ave.

ID

2-6776

WANTED:
Clerk-Typist,
experience
not
necessary but desirable. Call Miss Jehle,
ID 2-6510, for appointment.
DISPATCHER
wanted—man
or
woman;
typing
required.
Full
time.
Call
Lake
Forest 300.
GIRL,
13 through 16 years, part time in
small kennel; must like dogs. No experience
necessary.
Telephone
WlIndsor
52450.

erences.
HART,

SHAW

&amp;

COMPANY

MIDWAY

260 E. Deerpath
Lake Forest 4040

has

an

LIMOUSINE

opening

personable

EAST
RAVINIA,
attractive
house,
with
large master
first floor bedroom,
with
bath. Available for rental from July 22
ae
16th. Adults only. Telephone ID

TO

a

to

girl

take

A

five

day

week

with

RENT

Good

HOUSES
&amp; APARTMENTS
WANTED
(Furnished or Unfurnished)

HOUSE

RENT,

2 OR

FOREST.

3 OR

NO

SMALL

IN

Working

YEAR

FAMILY

LEASE

OR

OBJECT,

Conditions

SECRETARY

LAKE

Wanted

CHILDREN.
WILL

TAKE

3

LONGER.

RENT

NO

CALL

ID

Position

IN

DOWNTOWN
OFFICE
Knowledge
of typing,
shorthand and dictaphone
or similar type
equipment required.
37%-HOUR WEEK
NO SATURDAYS
PHONE

3-0094,

MAjestic

TWO
new teachers at Sheridan and Lake
Forest High School desire furnished living accommodations for the school year
of 1959-60. Write box number W-45 c/o
Lake Forester.
WANTED
to rent: minimum 2 bedrooms;
September
1st occupancy.
GReenleaf
51925, if no answer, DIversey 8-1211.
WANTED
for artist teacher, garage apartment immediately, Call Lake Forest 4856
after 5 p.m.
SMALL
one or two
bedroom
apartment
with kitchen and bath for July and August
in as near
Lake
Forest.
Call ALpine
1-3852.
DESIRE
2, 3 or 4 room furnished apartments for men employed by our company,
July 1 to October 1. These men are college graduates, responsible, and in some
instances married. Contact R. V. Seaman,
director of personnel, UNiversity 4-6050.

ROOMS

TO

chal-

Salary

Permanent
RELIABLE

great

WALTON-MARCH
ID 2-7900

4 BEDROOM

3 BATHS

for

ing dictating machine, required.
Small Office
Excellent

TO

a pleasant,

reservations

lenge for hard working secretarystenographer. Familiarity with office machines and routine, includ-

NEAR Wild Rose, Wisconsin. 5 Bedrooms.
Modern sand beach. Deepwoods. $50 wk.,
Sept. $75 Wk., July and August. Telephone ID 3-0080.

WANTED

SERVICE

with

Midway
Limousine
Service; must be able
to type and have own transportation. Telephone Lake Forest 4550.

HOUSES TO RENT (Furnished)
(HIGHLAND
PARK)

COTTAGES

voice

for

RENT

PARK HOTEL sleeping rooms, by day or
week, free parking, 511 Waukegan Ave.,
Highwood.
NICE, big, front bedroom, nice location;
lady only. Telephone ID 2-1556.
NICELY
furnished studio bedroom, single
only; ample drawer and closet space, hot
water. Telephone ID 2-0405.
BEDROOM
and sitting room. Near town,
and transportation. Telephone ID 2-4828.
ONE room and bath. $70 per month. Lease
required. In business district. Call ID 2__ 8117 or WIndsor 5-1869.
PLEASANT
single room, one block from
shopping center. Employed person only.
Call Lake Forest 1039.
LARGE
sunny room suitable for working
couple,
kitchen
and laundry
privileges.
Hot water at all times. Telephone ID 23694.

BEAUTY
to replace

OPERATOR

prospective

consider
time.

3-0120

Thurs.,

Good

working

air conditioned

mother.

Fri.,

Sat.

Will

or

full

conditions

salon.

in

Call for ap-

pointment.

CLASSIQUE
BEAUTY
1815

St.

SALON

Johns Ave.
ID
Highland Park

CLERK-TYPIST

2-1603

in our building de-

partment.
Varied
duties.
Many
benefits. Shorthand required. See
or call Mr. Jungherr, The City
of Lake Forest, 220 E. Deerpath,
Lake Forest. Telephone 2600.

BEAUTY OPERATOR
Good Pay, Good Hours
Excellent Opportunity
For Ambitious Person
Phone Lake Forest
RINALDO’S
BEAUTY
250 Market Sq., Lake

720
SHOP
Forest

GENERAL
OFFICE
WORK
Shorthand
preferred;
permanent.
5
day
week. Some experience and references required. Modern, air-conditioned office. Telephone ID 2-9030.

Thursday,

July

2, 19 59
re

�HELP

POSITIONS

BOOKKEEPERS
PROOFCLERKS

NEEDS
REGISTERED

FULL TIME,
PERMANENT
EXPERIENCED
OR WILL TRAIN.

Full time and_ part
duties; good salary.

OPERATING

Good hours, working conditions and benefits
other than wages. Ample opportunities for
advancement.
;

POSTING

WINNETKA TRUST
AND SAVINGS
791

Elm.

Street

HI

Fridays

THE
952

BROOKSHORE

Sunset Ridge Road
Phone CRestwood

THE FIRST NATIONAL
BANK OF WINNETKA
739 ELM STREET
WINNETKA

Permanent
a Growing

Good Starting Salary
Opportunity For Advancement
Group Hospital &amp; Life Insurance
And Many More
Come
in or call for personal
interview.
Employment office hours are 8:30 to 4:00
ot atu through Friday. 8:30 to 12:00 Saturday,

2-3700

GENERAL BINDING
CORPORATION
1101 SKOKIE HIGHWAY
NORTHBROOK
Y%

MILE

SOUTH

OF

ROUTE

commute
to home?

Call

an

HI

position

on your
air

6-5510
and

for

ask

for

MINNA
580 Lincoln

this

Foy.

HART

Ave.

are

interested

in diversified

duties and like to meet people we
have an opening in the personnel
department

for

a stenographer.

Good working conditions. Hours 8
to 4:30. Five day week. Free Life
Insurance and Hospitalization. Liberal vacations.
Call Personnel,

WI

5-1990.

WOMAN
interested in theatre cashier work
Saturdays and Sundays.
Apply
Glencoe
Theatre, evenings. Telephone VErnon 50605 or ID 2-0605.

Thursday,
Be
Meta,Ba

Sehak Ny

BELL

APPT.

TIME

Part

BROOKSHORE

office

July

2, 1959

time—hours

*

TYPIST
general

STOCK MEN

work,

THE
952

DESIGN
ENGINEER

3

*

BROOKSHORE

CO.

Northbrook
2-1200

Maintenance machinist to work on
light
packaging
machinery.
Full
time permanent
job.
Many
valuable company benefits.

AVON
6901

Golf

PRODUCTS,
Road

CLEANING

445

INC.

Morton

ROUTE

Steady employment.
and commission.

Grove

DRIVER
Good

wages

ERMINE
CLEANERS
Waukegan Ave.
Highwood
ID 2-3710
STOCK

CLERK

Learn hospital supply field in our modern
warehouse. Permanent, full time position for
alert, young
man, high school grad. Excellent promotional and pay opportunities.
Good
working
conditions
and
full range
company
benefits. Hours 9 to 5 Monday
through Friday.
AMERICAN
2020

Ridge

HOSPITAL
Evanston

SUPPLY
UN

CORP.
4-6050

SALESMAN
Opportunity
development

in our research
and
department for an en-

gineer with one to three years of
experience on mechanical and hydraulic mechanisms, M. E. degree
preferred.

Culligan, Inc.
NORTHBROOK
CRESTWOOD 2-1000

To work on the floor for summer months,
some experience necessary, college student
majoring in business preferred. Call ID 26260, Highwood Radio and Appliances Co.,
Highland Park.
LAKE FOREST Country Day School wants
addition
to
custodial
staff.
Preferably
someone with experience in the mechanical trades and who desires permanent secure position.
Apply after July 7th to
Lake Forest 2350.
BOY,
13 through
17 years, part time in
small kennel; must like dogs. No experipers necessary.
Telephone
WlIdnsor
52450.
FULL time man, news agency work, noon
until 7 p.m. Glencoe News Agency, telephone VErnon 5-1600 or WI 5-2331.

BABY

sitting: Experienced

desires baby

__Forest

RELIABLE
in

THE

college

Ravinia

freshman

area

in afternoon.

or

on

her

Telephone

HOUSEHOLD

will baby sit
private

ID

beach

2-6688.
alae
——_ “I
FOR SALK N

GOODS

PICK GALLERIES
AUCTIONEERS-APPRAISERS

We

buy

and

sell entire partial

|

es- —

tates, furniture, crystal, silver, ori- |
$55

ental art, paintings, rugs and works
of art. Appraisers for insurance and —
gift tax. Phone us today. No obli- —
gation

on

your

part.

SPECIALIST

IN

Either in Your

386 Linden

Home

HOME

or Our

SALES

Galleries

Winnetka

HI 6-7444
Wy

—

BAMBOO DRAPERIES
GLASS
PRATT &amp; LAMBERT |
Paint
For

®

Varnish

Every

Surface,

Standard

@

Interior

&amp;

Stains ©
&amp;

Custom

Exterior — ‘

Colors

GREAT LAKES PAINTS

Redwd.

Rez,

White

Scotch

Lead

Paint,

WALLPAPER,

Laddie

Dutch

Cement

FAB.,

Frames

Closed Fri.
During

&amp;

Luminal

MATCH.

Picture

&amp;

_
Boy

Paint

R:

MURALS

WANTED—DOMESTIC

A-1
JOBS.
Cooks,
$50-$60.
Couples.
$400-$500. Maias and nursemaids, $45-$60.
No
fee. Shorline
Agency,
525
Lincoln
Ave.,
Winnetka.
Telephone
HI
6-5818.

yd

Framing

Nites &amp; Wed. Aft.
July &amp; August

BREAKWELL’S |
DECORATING
SUPPLIES
AIR
251 Waukegan

CONDITIONED
.
Ave.
Highwood
ID 2-1418

RODS

KIRSCH

SHADES

YOU NAME IT

WANTED—FEMALE

WE'VE GOT IT!
ALL ITEMS
IN GOOD CONDITION
and

INEXPENSIVE

ee.
—

CALL ID 2-7366

WANTED—MALE

TRUCK hauling; tractor work; tree removal;
rubbish; clean out basements; yard maintenance. Bill Pyatt, ID 2-5177 or VErnon 5-0057.
WALL
WASHING,
$8 per room, ceilings
and walls, 10x14; WALLPAPER REMOVING,
$12 and up, 10x14. North Shore
references. DAvis 8-6669.
GENERAL
maintenance,
repairs,
cement
work, painting, etc. Telephone WI 5-1492
after 6 p.m.
LAKE FOREST college student desires summer yard work of any type; experienced.
Call Tom Strong, Lake Forest 2418.

SITUATION

S

HIGH school girl wants part time baby sitting
job
in Deerfield
area,
preferably
—
small children. Telephone WI 5-5473.

PRIVATE tutoring in all elementary subjects by fully qualified teacher, or will
baby sit in my home by day or week.
Telephone WI 5-1274.
SWIMMING
Instructor will teach you in
your pool; private or group. Have also
worked
with
handicapped.
Lake
Forest
1026.
EXPERIENCED.
Party
~and
luncheons,
Working for family twelve years. Have
own transportation. Call: Lucille Glover,
ID 2-8145, Monday, Wednesday, and Saturday. In evening call UNiversity 9-0219.
SITUATION

high school girl —

sitting at any time. Call Lake

3124.

WANTED—DOMESTIC

CURTAIN

Trim-Tub

bathinette,

$4; Admiral

21

DEPOT

Shore’s Only Curtain
Laundry
1825 Green Bay Rd., Rear
\ll work
done
by hand;
linens
‘urtains, blankets, drapes, etc.

ID 2-8615

CLEANERS,
male
or
female;
couples,
maids, housemen. Experienced only. Mrs.
Baker, Shorline Agency, Winnetka. HIIlcrest 6-5818.
EXPERIENCED day worker, Tuesday available, good references; cleaning or laundry.
$10
and
carfare.
Telephone
MA__jestic 3-5721, after 6:30 p.m.
COLLEGE freshman wants full time job as
mother’s helper. Call Lake Forest 1547.
PART time work, white, refined; breakfast,
help with dinner, adults, modern kitchen,
room, board, salary, excellent references.
Thursdays and Sundays
off. Write Box
__J-80, c/o Highland Park News.
GIRL wants general housework 5 days a
week, go nights; experienced. Call TRinity 2-5551.
YOUNG
woman desires day work, five or
six days a week, steady; references. Telephon MAjestic 3-8874.
COLLEGE
girl will take care of children
and do light housework, summer employbigot references. Call after 5 pm. DE
-2466.
BABY

—

| DINETTE table, walnut, modern, 32x52, ex:

North

TELEPHONE

baby

inch TV &amp; stand, $75; 2 storage end ta
$10 ea.; 2 matching lamps, $5 ea.; over 3
ft. “%-in. top quality plastic garden hose,
3
sprinklers, 2 nozzles, $18; set of garden tools,
never used, $12; wheelbarrow, $10; 2 snow
shovels, garden shovel, $2 each; Lewyt vacuum cleaner &amp; attachments, $15; 2 heater-cooling fans, $3 each; never used nestle trays, set
of 4, $2;
1957 Norge
dryer, $100; m

tends

to 76.

$35.

Telephone

ID

SITTING

JUNIOR
nursemaid,
age 12, loves young
children; capable, reliable. Do light housework; baby sit days, evenings till 9. Lake
Forest 1547.

%

_

2-3130.

1

GREEN two cushioned couch with slip co
er; best offer. Telephone ID 2-4904.

6 YEAR old crib, blue grey wood; 2 tri- rs—
cycles, size 2 to 4 and 4 to 6 years, Call (i
Lake

Forest

4337.

WALNUT
double
good
condition,

os

ae

bed, chest of drawei
reasonable.
Call
Lal

Bluff 3135.
SIMMONS Daveno bed, $40; good condi|
tion. Call Lake Forest 4098.
a
RUG, 9x14, wool, brown, white and blue
mixture, $60; carpeting, pumpkin, nylon —
and cotton, fits average living room, $200; —
drapes, white with metallic thread, 2 pair,
8 panels,
$75. All items cleaned;
have padding. Telephone ID 3-1306.

WISH

to

sell

lovely

traditional

longue, in excellent condition;
Telephone ID 3-0827.

ALMOST

new 22-in. Hunter

best

rugs ;

chaise

—

offer.
—
1a

reversible win- |

dow fan, 3-speed; Hurricane ceiling
ture;
torchiere
floor lamp. R
Telephone ID 2-2919.

eer

CRIB, 6 year size, complete, and matching|
chifforobe;
carriage,
and
other baby |
equipment. Telephone WI 5-5722.
ete
oS
BRAND new couch, never used, just de- —
livered from Field’s, quilted chintz, Lawson;
originally
$600,
will sacrifice for
$300 or best offer.
1415 Sheridan Rd.
Telephone ID 2-7855.
1
ae

3 PIECE maple bedroom set, full size bed,

box spring and mattress, $100; baby crib, b,
$25. Telephone ID 2-5299.
WaRS
lESTATE range, electric, 2 ovens and
dle; good condition,
11 years old.
Best
__ offer takes. Call WI 5-1127 after 6 p.m.

10 FOOT knotty pine bar and 6 stools, $125.
HELP
50

EARN $100 per week. Full time, part time,
no experience necessary. Call CRestwood
2-0227, Northbrook, Ill.

WANTED—DOMESTIC

SITUATION

suit.

BABY SITTING

HOUSEKEEPER
Desirable position for experienced woman
to assist in care of baby, some cooking,
light general duties (have other help); own
room, bath, in new
air-conditioned
home
with pleasant family. 2 other school aged
children. Top starting salary, bonus, many
benefits. Must have recent references. Call
ID 2-5573 collect.
WOULD
YOU
LIKE A VACATION
IN
NANTUCKET?
Someone
wanted
who
knows how to cook and likes children,
who
would
be
available
approximately
Aug. 6th through Sept. 8. References required.
If
interested
please
telephone
Lake Forest 73.
COOK
and general housework,
references
required; no heavy cleaning or laundry.
Telephone Lake Forest 893.
CLEANING
woman
Friday
only; permanent. Lake Forest 652.
aki
SUMMER
girl to care for 2 year old; live
on the lake with grandparents while parents vacation. Call Lake Forest 4441.
CAPABLE young woman for general housework in pleasant home, live in, 542 days;
must be experienced
with young
child.
Telephone ID 2-9345.
vis
GENERAL housework, plain cooking, own
room and bath; references required. Telephone ID 2-4843, collect.
COOK, general housework, stay; employed
husband may live in too. No heavy cleaning or laundry. References required. Telephone VErnon 5-0341.
GENERAL housework, must love children;
new modern home, stay, own room. References. Telephone ID 2-6711.

MACHINIST

SALESWOMEN,
full
time,
infants’
and
children’s Deerfield
Commons
Shopping
Center. Telephone Glenview, PA 4-2224.
WANTED—MALE

*

Sunset Ridge Road
Phone CRestwood

CO.

Northbrook
2-1200

to

Res

ny

MUST love children, housekeeping; live in,
other help. References appreciated; airconditioned home. Telephone VErnon 5-

LINOTYPE OPERATOR
*
*
-

TELEPHONE

Sunset Ridge Road
Phone CRestwood

HELP

TIME

UNUSUAL
opportunity with a future in a
new packaging firm that is being organized. A man is needed to operate it. If
you are mechanically inclined, can assume
responsibility, can sell and are presentable,
please write Box J-75, c/o Highland Park
News.
TELEPHONE SOLICITORS
Evenings 6 to 9 p.m. Experience not necessary.
Salary
plus
commission.
Apply
at
ALL YEAR BUILDERS, INC.
3080 Skokie Valley Highway, Highland Park
ID 2-5423
STAFF REPORTER™
wanted by group of local, community newspapers;
education or experience
in journalism is desired. Permanent position with
large company offering all benefits. Write
for interview giving education, experience
and full information
about yourself. Box
J-45 c/o Highland Park News.
3 MEN
We need 3 men to start immediately. Will
earn approximately $105 a week to start.
Those who are mechanically inclined will
be given
preference.
Telephone
ORchard
6-0332 for personal interview. Call between
10 a.m. and 2 p.m. only.
CUSTODIAN
Wanted: Custodian to work nights at Wilmot School District 110, Deerfield, Illinois.
Please apply to Wilmot School, 795 Wilmot
Road,
Deerfield,
Illinois.
Telephone
WI
5-2580.
Auto
body
and fender combination
man.
Work for Chrysler dealer. $100 guarantee
plus 50%.
Lake
Motors,
1766 First St.,
Highland Park.
ID 2-2500
SEE AL
Auto painter and helper; work for Chrysler
dealer. Lake Motors, 1766 First St., Highland Park.
ID 2-2500
SEE AL

Winnetka

PERSONNEL
If you

you

and
store.

excellent

Mrs.

FOR

billing and light
20 hours a week.

THE

clothes

when

WANTED
woman, white not over 35, for
general
sales
work.
In _ air-conditioned
drug
store.
Permanent
40 hour
week,
good working conditions, salary plus bonus. Apply in person to Mr. Rehn. Rehn’s
Hillman Pharmacy. 333 Park Ave., Glencoe.
BOOKKEEPER,
full
time.
Some _ background needed. Will train. Infants’ and
children’s
Deerfield Commons
Shopping
Center. Telephone
Glenview PA 4-2224.

952

conditioned

envi

WE have openings in our sales department
for personable young women;
full time
preferred.
Retail
experience
not necessary. Summer only applicants will not be
considered. Apply in person. L. and A.
Stationers, 546 Lincoln, Winnetka.
RECEPTIONIST-TYPIST
to
Superintendent of Schools and Board of Education,
District
111,
Highwood,
Illinois;
full
time, 5 day week. Salary commensurate
with
ability.
Write:
240
Prairie
Ave.,
Highwood, or phone ID 2-1183.

PART

Mature, well groomed lady to sell
better women’s appareal. This position is permanent with top salary
and commission. There is an unlimited
future
with
increased
earnings. 40 Hour week, no nights,

discount

2-8000

FULL

For information call
LOngbeach 1-5466

fo

PERSONNEL
* OFFICE

ILLINOIS

68

SALESLADY

of course

-&amp;.m.

pleasant

close

—For
about

30%

2330)

CASHIER NEEDED—We’re looking for a
young lady to work as a cashier in our
Business
Office. If you’re
a high school
graduate and are interested in a job with
| opportunity for advancement, we’d like to
talk to you. Call or come in and see: Mrs.
Barnes,
812 Deerfield Rd., Deerfield, Ill.
Windsor 5-9996,

Job
Company

CRESTWOOD

in

opportu-

to 8 a.m.

SWIMMING
instructor,
experience
with
young children; Red Cross life saving certificate
required,
college
age or older,
references. 2 mornings
a week;
private
pool, ID 2-6711.
SALESLADY
wanted for part time work.
516 North Milwaukee Avenue, Wheeling.
LEhigh 7-0247.
FULL or part time salesladies, experience
not necessary, paid vacations, paid. pension plan, 54% days per week, good salary.
ID 2-5796.

Permanent,
good
starting
salary,
pleasant working conditions. 5 day
week;
opportunity
for
advancement.

With

work

job

FOR

SECRETARY
Religious institution, shorthand and typing
essential,
duties
varied,
permanent
position, excellent working conditions. Call Mrs.
Berman VErnon 5-0724.
GIRL
or woman
to handle office duties,
telephone, and some selling; interesting,
diversified
work
in small
store.
Good
starting salary. Telephone ID 2-8120.
BOOKKEEPER,
male
or female,
experienced, general ledger payroll and tax report. 5 days a week, good pay. Hahn
aoe
672 Western
Ave.,
Lake
Forest

BOOKKEEPER

WORKING CLOSE TO HOME
IN A NEW MODERN OFFICE
HAS SO MANY ADVANTAGES

Sundays,

Why

ID

STAFF
REPORTER
wanted by group of local, community newspapers;
education
or experience
in journalism is desired. Permanent position with
large company offering all benefits. Write
for interview giving education,
experience
and full information about your self. Box
J-45 c/o Highland Park News.

Young Women

Midnight

can work

CALL

GIRL
or woman
wanted
for
all-around
cafeteria work in Deerfield industry. Telephone WI 5-1990, Extension 226.

BANK

and

splendid

nities

NURSES

ronment.

Northbrook
2-1200

floor

offers

GROCERY

Saturdays,

Interesting

CO.

ROOM

general

field,

CLERK

Saturdays
4 p.m.

Pleasant work, for experienced girl (or will
eat
for
Copy
Department
in printing
plant.
5 day week, hospitalization, vacation and
other benefits.

time,

CLERK

and

POSTING
6-0097

The North Shore’s fastest growing
food chain, opening soon in Deer-

NURSES

Ree

LOCAL
woman,
some light cleaning and
ironing, assist kitchen; Tuesdays, Wednesdays and Fridays, 4 p.m. to 9 p.m. Telephone ID 2-9320.
YOUNG woman to cook and do some general
housework;
other
help
employed.
German
speaking
preferred.
Telephone
Libertyville 2-3354 collect before 10 a.m.
EXPERIENCED,
cooking
and _ general
housework;
local
references
preferred.
Two adults; top salary. No objection to
working husband. Telephone ID 2-4415 or
DExter 6-2200.
FIVE day week, own room, bath and TV;
good salary for reliable woman under 50
with references. Telephone ID 2-0286.
COOK,
housekeeper,
experienced,
references, stay, own room and bath, ranch
house, have cleaning help, 2 school age
children. Telephone ID 2-0399.
WOMAN
for general
housework,
experienced with children. Stay, own room, $35.
Tae
required.
Telephone
WI
5-

SURE SAVE
FOOD MARTS

HIGHLAND PARK
HOSPITAL

me

SITUATION

HELP WANTED—MALE

WANTED—FEMALE

BANK

Abe

et

Zi

STASI
C ae Gem
pial sabac: tad
nee
cea,
fi

ee

prea

Rahs
patie.
ct

__ Telephone

WI

CARPETING,

5-2733.

grey

wool,

beige 9x10. Wrought
step table, bookcase,

clippers,

Telephone

adding
WI

9x10;

ae

deep

fat fryer. ts

Page 47

|

a
Yond

iron tea cart and
new electric anim:

machine,

5-3699.

17-6x11,

—

Vie

�UMMER IS FOR
HAVE A CONSTANT FLOW
*f SELECT HARD-TO-FIND
ITEMS

Exterior and
Interior Paint to suit your
every need. Complete line stains, varnishes
and paint sundries. Visit our newly remodeled store to see complete displays of glass,
mirrors, shower and tub enclosures, window
shades, venetian blinds, bamboo draperies,
and Modernfold folding doors,

LAKESIDE GLASS
1914 First St.

&amp; PAINT CO.
ID 2-7211

NEED BLACK SOIL?
We are one of the North Shore’s largest top
soil and Nutri Soil dealers. We
are also
equipped for grading and spreading soil.

2-8866

and pair of lounge chairs, custom
down
filled;
reasonably
priced.
ID 2-4808 Thursday and Friday.

IZED
ss,

Columbia

and

frame;

ID 2-7676.

AINS.

Porch

bed,
like

couch,

and rattan porch

60x80,
new.

spring,

$45.

Tele-

upholstered

glid-

furniture;

also beau-

down filled brocade
lounge
chair,
phone ID 2-1941.
E 38-inch deluxe electric range with
well a
warming oven. Call Lake
GERATOR,
11 cu. ft. Kelvinator,
ist cold,’’ large freezer compartment,

egetable storage bin; good condition. 131
Fs: pecagett at north end of Lincoln,
sale,
icine

5 ft. left apron
chest. Call Lake

bath tub and
Forest 282.

Y¥ 12 and 6 by 9 oval braided rugs, $40;
ple love seat, lounge chairs and cof&gt; table, $30; Duncan Phyffe dining room
ble and 4 chairs, $35; apartment size
mas: window oven, clock and timer,
'
ll Lake Forest 4221.
Cl BIC foot Frigidaire, Magic Chef gas
e, red formica chrome
table and 4
ts; best offer. Telephone ID 2-8151.
JTIFUL solid oak dining room furture,
buffet,
refectory
table
and
6
airs; RCA radio record player; 1 maple,
alnut chest; odd chairs, tables, lamps,
perecal
appliances. Telephone
ID
Living
room
furniture;
G.
sofa,
air, TV set, andirons; oak dinette ta&gt;. Reasonable prices. ID 2-8975
after
0
A-1 CONDITION
mangle; fireside chairs; brass fireScreen and andirons; Tuxedo couch;
Tug, rust; 2x2 slide projector; pair of
draw drapes; dresses and coats, size
gulation pool table; 9x12 black tweed
rug; Caloric 2 oven, 6 burner, stove;
1 air compressor and tank. TeleALpine 1-6523.

Y!

Must

e,

be sold

Thursday

only:

gas

refrigerator,
kitchen
set,
dining
set, maple twin bed with mattress,
e maple set, TV, movie camera and
toys,
75%
rummage.
Kimball

proieion
Rd. ID 3-8478.

_Rd. ID

ARAGE
sale: small Nesco cooker, Dorer deep fryer, Universal electric cofpot, many miscellaneous items. 1116
sn Ave., Deerfield, Thursday, Friday.

t

gue

2 cushion,

; electric
condition.

$25.

eryear old;
ID 3-041.

dryer, one
Telephone

; MISCELLANEOUS

Telephone

FOR SALE

Sede
Trucking handles all of
services for Homeowners:
SOILS

e

HUMUS

e

the

MANURES

EAT MOSS
e LAWN
ROLLING
e
22
REMOVAL
e
RUBBISH
RE.
@ GRAVEL
DRIVEWAY
RE.
5S @
CKING
OF ALL
TYPES
A Jim Beinlich—VE 5-0513 or VE

GARAGES
AND A HALF WITH
CONCRETE FLOOR
~WINDOWS.

5
WALSH

HOME

OVERHEAD
AND 2 GA

WAUKE GAN
CONSTRUCTION

GLASS

&amp; PAINT CO.

St.

ID

2-7211

FOR BETTER LIVING
uminum Specialty Products. Combination
lows, d
;

VE

5-1195

VE

JIM

5-0513

BEINLICH
or

WINDOW

VE

5-1195

SHADES

LAKESIDE
1914

GLASS

&amp; PAINT

First St.

ID

&amp;

CORP.

MOVING:
Garage sale; will sacrifice Reo
24-in. lawn mower with snow blower attachments,
lawn trimmer,
luggage, king
size headboard and spread, drapes, single
size spreads with drapes to match, various
clothing, miscellaneous items. Telephone
VErnon 5-2582.
ALUMINUM
boat, three: power saws, drill
press,
automatic
ironer, silverware,
linens, bric-a-brac. 3116 Greenwood.
Telephone ID 2-1930.
9 FT. model airplane, R.C. 90% complete.
5 channel transistor, transmitter and receiver with 3 servos. $60. Telephone WI
1,

POWER

LAWN

deluxe;

runs

3130.

MOWER,
fine.

$40.

20-in.

Telephone

Pincor
ID

2-

COLLAPSIBLE Thayer buggy; play pen and
pad; stroller; Teeter-babe;
walker. Very
good condition; all for $37, original cost
$79. Telephone ID 2-5352.
HOTPOINT air conditioner, 14-ton, slightly
used. Call ID 2-0706 after 5 p.m.
USED
air conditioner for sale. Berns AirKing,
%-ton,
in perfect condition;
extremely quiet, cools, heats, dehumidifies,
ventilates. $75. Call ID 2-8960.
HAND
crocheted table cloth, 2 air mattresses for beach; wading pool, 8x6; miscellaneous, Telephone ID 3-1264 after 6
p.m.
GE WATER
heater, 40 gallon, $35. Telephone WI 5-4574.
NECCHI
(new,
$49.50).
Arends
Sewing
Machine Co., 662 Central Ave., Highland
Park. ID 2-5200.
GO-CART, 7 hours on engine, 35 mph, 714
HP Mercury motor. 3 large black awnings. 1948 Chrysler. Telephone ID 2-9894.
SEE
us for mill work,
kitchen cabinets,
formica
tops and hard
wood
paneling.
Madsens Plywood Mart. Lake Bluff 5151.
LARGE
dormitory trunk, 714 cu. ft. capacity; just right for college student. $10.
Call Lake Forest 908.

MUSICAL

INSTRUMENTS

FOR

5-1198

ID

rent:

garden tillers, cub
ents,
lawn
mowers,
mower
sharpening
service,
elephone
ID
2-8029, 2070
. Woody’s Highland Park

UXE English ‘baby
lephone ID 2-6474.

buggy,

2-1553

tractor and
etc.
Lawn
and _ sales.
Green
Bay
Service Sta-

like new.

1959

1958
1958
1958
1958

‘

MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS WANTED
PIANOS WANTED
ALL MAKES—STYLES
TOP PRICES PAID
ROGERS PARK 1-4400
1g
|)

Ford
pwr.

4-dr.;
str.

R-H,
conv.,

R-H,

Fordo.,

1957
1957

BW Us ee
$1695
Pontiac 4-dr. hard top;

1957
1957

full pwr., R-H
Ford 2-dr., R-H

1957

Ford
9-pass.
Country
Sedan; R-H, Fordo. ........ $1795

1956

Buick

1955
1955
1955
1955

hard

Rambler

station

1955
1955
1954

full
wag.;

ed, TAVORAS ee
$ 795
Ford
Victoria;
R-H,.
auto. trans., pwr. str. ....$ 995
Ford conv.; R-H, auto.
PANS: DWT. BU s coud ie $1095
Buick
2-dr.
hard
top,

Tee OE
1955

top,

Sk

i ok

Pontiac

Catalina;

Hydra.,

pwr.

Tele-

First

R-H,

sth... $

Motor

Highland

Park

8 A.M.

to 9 P.M.

1958

Fiesta

sedan,

Oldsmobile

GHIA

1959 coupe,

7500 miles,

perfect condition, reasonable; private party. Telephone WI 5-5386.
1957 and 1954 Mercury station wagons, both
exceptional,
top
condition,
full power,
electric
windows,
fully
equipped,
one
owner, low mileage, with extra snow tires.
$2100 and $900. Telephone ID 2-8034.
1953 CHEVROLET
Bel Aire 4-door sedan
with automatic transmission; exceptionally
good condition, low mileage. $550. Telephone ID 2-7053.

USED
AND

MOTOR
TRUCKS
MOTORCYCLES

HARLEY-DAVIDSON
1953
motorcycle,
Model K, good condition, $450. Call Lake
Forest 1441.
ALTERATIONS
Now, two locations to serve you better for
custom clothes and alterations.
THE SILVER NEEDLE
HIGHLAND
PARK, ILLINOIS
1866 Sheridan Rd.
610 Laurel Ave.
Phone ID 2-7118
Phone ID 2-1774
LOOK chic for summer with shorter skirts
Ask
for Eda.
Zengeler
Cleaners,
Inc..,
1905 Sheridan Rd. Telephone ID 2-2800.

AUTO
Finance
money.

your

car

LOANS

the

bank

way

and

9-passenger,

V-8;
radio, heater, excellent mechanical
condition,
new
white finish, clean blue
interior. _$665. Telephone WI 5-5576,
1957 VOLKSWAGEN,
fully equipped; sun
top,
radio;
gas,
oil
and _ temperature
gauges. Low mileage. Call ID 2-8664.
1956
PLYMOUTH
2-door
Plaza,
white,
needs work; best offer. After 7 p.m. or
Saturday and Sunday. ID 2-8321.
1950 CHEVROLET sedan, $95; almost new
tires, radio, heater, and seat covers. Telephone ID 2-9138.
CONVERTIBLE
1954 Pontiac Star Chief,
second
car; must
sell. $700. Telephone
WI 5-4009 after 5 p.m.
1957 OLDSMOBILE convertible 98, metallic
blue with new white top, fully powered;
original owner,
Extremely
low mileage.
Call ID 2-8595.
1950 FORD
four-door,
good motor;
best
offer. Telephone ID 2-6863.
1949 PLYMOUTH
4 door Deluxe,
good
radio and heater, fair. tires, excellent second car. Telephone ID 2-8785.

ASK
487

E.

FOR

SERVICE

JACK

Park Ave.
Highland

FRECH
ID

2-5845

Park

BICYCLES
BIKES—Boy’s
Reconditioned.
few Schwinns.

or Girl’s Used and
Some
like new—a
Most, but not al)

sizes. Also repairs and parts for all
make bicycles.

CYCLE
486

&amp;

HOBBY

Central

GIRL’S

16 inch

glassed

sailing pram,

Schwinn

SHOP
ID

2-1369

bicycle,

excellent

condition, $15. Telephone WI 5-0931.
GIRL’S Hawthorn 20-inch bicycle in good
condition, $20. Telephone WI 5-3081.
20-INCH
girl’s bicycle,
Schwinn,
in very
good
condition.
Telephone
Lake
Bluff
2691.

BLACK
BLACK dirt, ‘gravel
or ag Dordand,

excellent

con-

with
sails.
Call Lake
8 a.m. or after 6 p.m.

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
FOR lease: new modern 2 bay service station by major oil company, located on
Highway 41 in Highland Park; excellent
opportunity for responsible person. Telephone WI 5-0521 by day or Wonder Lake
7534 nights.

BUSINESS
LIGHT
types
6098

SERVICE

general hauling. We also nove all
of household appliances. Call ID 2or

TD

2-4917

SHIRTS
FAST,
if special

1875

St.

FAST
service

SERVICE

desired,

try

it today

DRY

Highland

Johns

Park

FURNITURE
MOVING—Local
and Long
Distance—one piece or a truck load. Packing, crating, shipping.
Ward
Anderson,
telephone TTD) 2-00"7

DENO

CONSTRUCTION

&amp; CORP.

General construction and repairs. We specialize in repairing leaking or cracked basements,
rough
floors,
walls or any other
necessary
repairs.
Also
new
construction,
patios, drives, walks, foundations or general
construction
and
additions.
25
years
experience,
work
guaranteed,
insured
and
bonded. Also general hauling. Free estimates.
Telephone ID 3-1298.

CAMERAS
EASTMAN 16 mm magazine movie camera.
Bell and Howell 16 mm projector. Both
excellent condition. McMasters Pharmacy,
Lake Forest 1900.

CARPENTERS,

CONTRACTORS

&amp;

JOB

FOR building that new home, addition, or
remodeling,
be it large
or small, call
V &amp; F Construction Co. Telephone ID
2-5477 or WI 5-2980.
Z
RELIABLE experienced carpenter. Remodeling, paneling, porches and Hi Fi rooms,
siding. H. Blomquist Construction, telephone WI 5-2830.
CHRISTO-CRAFT REMODELING CO.
WI 5-3273
ID 2-2319
Remodeling and home maintenance is our
business.
Porch enclosures, basement paneled
room
additions,
kitchen
cabinet,
or
just that one door that doesn’t close right.
All work guaranteed.
CARPENTRY, general repairs and remodeling, porch additions, etc. Telephone WI
5-1511.
CARPENTRY,
additions,
remodeling,
and
cabinet work. Call Halvor Ulvenes, ID
2-1587, after 6 p.m.
B &amp; K CONSTRUCTION—Why
not have
that new rec. room now! We specialize in
kitchen,
attic, porch
and basement
remodeling. Now is the time! Call us about
your remodeling problems. Free estimates.
Telephone WI 5-4182 or WI 5-4454.
CONCRETE
or stone patios, brick barbe-

ques,

home

maintenance, remodeling

room
additions. For
Lake Bluff 3632, R.
struction.

and

free estimates call
A. Goodman Con-

DRIVEWAYS
DRIVEWAY COATING
Applicators for Latex coatings. Renew and
weatherproof
your driveways.
Also Latex
coatings for asphalt shingle roofs in colors.
AT.
1-0377
I 6-3730

Body
and
Fender
Repair:
All Makes - All Models
Complete Painting,
Undercoating and Touch Ups

Daily

FIBRE

assv

FIRST NATIONAL BANK
of Highland Park

WM. RUEHL &amp; CO.
GENERAL BODY SHOP
NOW OPEN

10 A.M. to 5 P.M.

Country

black

Station wagon. New whitewall tires. $3,000. Lake Forest 5145.
1936 DODGE
Coupe, in good
condition.
$50. Telephone ID 2-2474.
1959 CORVETTE,
black, 4-speed transmiscoy
Saturday or Sunday. Lake Forest
7
VOLKSWAGEN,
1958 Deluxe sedan, excellent condition; low mileage, one owner.
$1390. Telephone ID 2-2442.

Auto

1953 NASH Statesman, 4-door; radio, heater
and drop seat bed, needs a little work.
Telephone ID 2-8785.
FOR. economy:
this 1956 Ford 2-door, 6
cylinder,
standard
transmission;
GOOD
TIRES,
32,000 miles. Telephone
ID 21735 after 5.

FORD

Park

CLEAN
1953
convertible
Pontiac,
motor
recently replaced,
good
condition,
well
taken care of $395. Telephone ID 2-0613.
TR-3
OWNERS—want
a spare block assembly?
Crank,
cam,
rods
and piston,
$50. Telephone WJ 5-3061.
1954 FORD
convertible,
sandstone
white,
Crestliner, original owner, excellent condition, new top, brakes, tires, battery, with
radio, heater, ww, very clean. $650. See
to appreciate at 21 South June Terrace,
Lake Forest or telephone 399 Early morning or evening.
1959 BLACK Dodge sedan, like new, low
mileage, all accessories except power, includes plastic seat covers. See to appreciate. Best offer. Call E. C. Gray, Lake
Forest 5600.
1953 POWDER
blue convertible Cadillac;
excellent
condition;
new
motor;
white,
blue, leather interior; electronic eye; radio; heater; $1,000. Telephone ID 2-4555.
1956 CHEVROLET Bel-Aire, 2 door hardtop, radio and snow tires, $800. Telephone
__ID 2-755.
PLYMOUTH
convertible, 1950, rebuilt engine, good running condition, $125. Call
__Lake Bluff 471.
1955 STUDEBAKER, 4 door sedan, 1 owner, low mileage, excellent blue finish, good
ae
bargain at $550. Telephone ID 2-

sale:

range cruising; condition

of this boat is like new. Extra equipment
includes dinghy, life jackets, fire extinguisher,
boarding
ladder
and
more,
Moored
Montrose
Harbor;
boat name
“Tilmaroto.””
Telephone
SUnnyside
43293,

Div.

2-3442

AUTO

Holmes Motor Co.
FORD

Car

Highland

ID

595

1954 Chevrolet wagon, R-H ..$ 595
1954 Cadillac 4-dr., full pwr. $1395
1954 Plymouth wagon
1954 Ford Victoria

the
on

Cabin Cruiser,
facilities
for living

complete

dition,
complete
Bluff 2721 before

St.

$1095

Oldsmobile
4-dr.
hard
POD EWE
cca $1295
Chevrolet
4-dr. wagon;
R-H, Pwrglide
Mercury 9-pass. wagon;
R=
Mereo). ec erate $1095

to come in and view
of used Cadillacs, now

Cadillac
2050

4,

aboard and long

CADILLAC

We invite you
finest selection
display at

KARMAN

Ford Thunderbird; R-H,
TOR DWE. Geek
We Aas: $2895

sleeps

TIME

AT

FOR

Oldsmobile
4-dr.;
R-H,
PIV OVE ee
ava ae. $2195
Ford conv.; R-H, Fordo.,

Open Sundays

ID 2-2510
’til 9 p.m.

pianos,

Rambler
wagon;
overdrive
Edsel
Citation

Open

ANTIQUE upright Grand piano, $100. Telephone ID 2-5398 before 3 p.m.
LOWREY
organ, fruitwood, one year old.
MUST SELL. Telephone ID 2-1498.

spinet

SALE

ID 2-8640

LOWREY
Organ Studios

for used
2-2510.

FOR

PULL WOVE, fai stiscs eecie Gik deal $2295

1954

TOP dollar
phone ID

6 month

SPRING SALE
DEMONSTRATORS
SAVINGS UP TO $1000

1909 St. Johns

by the 4th of July.

Eve.

evening,

FOR NORTH SHORE’S |
FINEST A-1 USED CARS

SALE

Including one Hammond Chord organ,
one
Gulbrandsen
Model
B
spinet organ and 2 Lowrey Spinet
Organs. These organs must be sold

1795 St. Johns
Thurs. and Fri.

Wednesday

SEE HOLMES

2-7211

General construction and repairs. We specialize in repairing leaking or cracked basements,
rough floors,
walls
or any. other
necessary
repairs;
also new _ construction,
patios, drives, walks, foundations or general
construction and additions. 25 years experience; work guaranteed, insured and bonded.
Also general hauling. Free estimates. Telephone ID 3-1298.

CONSTRUCTION

last

old
black
small
poodle,
yellow collar.
Reward offered. Telephone ID_ 3-0890.
LOST:
male German Shepherd, silver and
black; answers to the name of “Dewey.”
Reward. Telephone ID 2-4029.

CO.

WALL MURALS and reproductions painted.
Call Mr. M. Wikstrom for estimates. WI
5-0618 after 4:30 during week. Week ends
open.

DENO

&amp; FOUND

AUTOMOBILES

res,

R

LOST

Window coverings, such as shades, blinds.
bamboo
draperies,
are all on display
at
Lakeside Glass and Paint Co. newly remodeled store. Quick service is available on all
standard items. Estimates are given without
obligation.
Call us today,
or better yet,
stop in and visit us,

ONLY 4 LEFT!

GLASS

First

BEINLICH
or

LOST

Continued

ing
in
glass is
available
at
the
remodeled Lakeside Glass and Paint
Mirrors, specialties, Shower and Tub
Osures are all on display.

AKESIDE

JIM

5-0513

ALL TYPES MANURE
AVAILABLE
Large
supply of cattle, horse
and
mushroom manure. We deliver any amonut.

ORGAN SALE

IMPRCVEMENT Co.
2800 BEL\ “DERE
IATE

VE

Lake Forest ay
WANTED
AT ONCE
Oriental rugs, French furniture, bric-a-brac,
antiques, and pianos. Top cash paid. ROgers Park 1-4400.

LOST: left handed first baseman’s mitt at
Highland Park recreation center baseball
field. Reward. Telephone ID 2-6807.
LADDIE,
brown
and white mixed collie,
lost in Ravinia vicinity; no identification
tags. If found call ID 2-7743.
REWARD:
small gold crucifix and chain
lost June 12; treasured World War I memento. Telephone WI 5-1924.
LOST,
gold
colored
blouse,
last
Friday
at beach. Finder please call Lake Forest
1105.

;
outboard
|22 FOOT Larson
out

“OPPORTUNITY

Call

~ ANTIQUES

ID

il

GIRL’S bicycle, 20-inch, ta good condition:

SOIL

and file, lawns graded
telephone
NEwton
4

CATERING
GOURMET
SNACKS
Unsurpassed
hors
d’oeuvres,
canapes
and
sandwiches exclusively; large or small orders. Telephone ID 2-0699.

ELECTRICAL

REPAIRS

CLAUSING ELECTRIC
All types of electrical work,
post lights,
wall outlets, new circuits, repairs. Reasonable prices. Telephone ID 2-6287.

ENTERTAINMENT
PONY wagon rental service, for birthdays,
parties,
and
picnics.
Children
love
it.
Telephone WIndsor 5-2450.
ENTERTAINMENT!
Bands,
aqua shows
(for clubs or private pools),
children’s
parties, any type of entertainment. HDO
Productions, ID 2-1240.

GARDEN

SUPPLIES

BOLENS
3.6 h.p. ride-amatic garden tractor with 30-in. reel mower and 42-in, snow
plow
and
grader;
excellent
condition.
$275.00—owner, VErnon 5-1700.

HORSES
HANDSOME
well
rt ete gelding.

&amp;

PONIES

mannered
Telephone

8 year old
Lake Forest

FENCES
FENCING, ALL TYPES—chain link stockade; post-rail, etc—Manufacturer installer
Chain Link Fence Corp. O
or
MUndelein 6-7789.

GUTTERS

&amp;

FURNACE

REPAIR

GUTTERS
replaced or repaired, cleaned,
panies with A-1 rust preventative. Careul expert work. Also, wire
sup-

plied and installed. Telephone ID 2-6362.

Thursday, July 2, 1959
Nugt

�olorado University
GARINO MUSIC STUDIOS
North Shore’s Finest. Instruction on accor
dion and guitar; instrument furnished. In
ass about our trial plan. Telephone ID
PLANO

Hank
CRS

INSTRUCTION

Winston,
Call

WIT

staff

pianist

45-0244

after

at

WBBM

7°30

nm

@

JUNK

HIGHEST

PRICES

For all types of junk brought to our door,
such as: Papers, rags, iron, metal, etc. Or
call IDlewood 3-1466 for free pick-up. We
specialize in industrial accounts. Hours daily
including Saturday, 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m
HIGHLAND
PARK
WASTE
MATERIAI
1466 Berkeley Rd.

Expert grooming of all breed:
by professionals.
Under the personal direction 0’
Elaine Ortman.
Kennel Shop features all accer
sories.

®
®

LANDSCAPING

&amp;

GARDENING

MODERN LANDSCAPING. For the best in
lawn maintenance and garden work telephone Jack Vena, ID 2-5266
GENERAL
LANDSCAPING
New lawns, black dirt, humus, top dressing
manure, planting, lawns fertilized, tree work.
stone work, patios, driveways.
A. MELCHIORRE
2-0829
PRAIRIE

ACRES

LANDSCAPING,

LAWN

CARE

Grading, plowing, hauling, fill dirt, black
top soil, rotted cow manure, top dressing
seed rolling. Telephone WI 5-0818.
ELOF T. CLAUSON
The finest in tree work, patios, landscaping
and maintenance. Insured. Satisfaction guaranteed. Telephone Lake Forest 3366

For reasonable prices
and guarantee yardage

Call

NEwton

4-3213

Humus
Top Soil
Nutri Soil
Sand and Gravel
Lime
Stone

FRANK
VENA
LANDSCAPING
Call me for the finest in lawn care, tre
removal, top dressing, patio work, fertiliz
ing. Telephone ID 2-5494 after 7 p.m

@
@

GERMAN
Shepherds,
Pekingese,
puppies,
AKC,
champion
blood
lines,
best
of
temperament,
excellent
dogs.
Telephone
Lake Forest 2960. ONtario
2-0626 evenings. Olive Naomi
Nelson,
3029 Crescent, Waukegan.
PERSIAN
kittens, creams, blues, red and
black. Show type, °* champion background.
Round Lake, KImball 6-2815.
ALASKAN
Malamutes, AKC
reg. Huskies
of the north; gentle disposition, beautiful
__ markings. Telephone WI 5-2450.
9 weeks
MINIATURE
Schnauzer
puppy,
old, male. Libertyville 2-1321.
regisDACHSHUND
puppies,
Lh., AKC
JAckson
6Coe
wormed.
Reasonable.
7317.
BOXER pups, AKC registered, 7 weeks old;
reasonable. Telephone ID 2-4069.
MINIATURE
Schnauzer male, inoculated;
reasonable.
Telephone
FLanders
9-1824.
CHIHUAHUA
puppies, four months
old,
chocolate and blonde, AKC; loveable little heart stealers. Telephone ID 2-4185.
BEAUTIFUL
Palamino Shetland pony for
sale, 6 years old; wonderful with children.
Call Lake Forest 3305.
BASSETT
puppy,
champion
bred,
AKC
registered, female. hest in litters omer
moving,
must
sacrifice affectionate. pet,
$75. Call Lake Forest 2208.

CEDAR
SHINGLES?
Don’t
Neglect
Them
SUBURBAN
ROOF
TREATING
SERV.
Call ALpine 1-0377
HI 6-3730

NELSON
LANDSCAPE
SERVICE
Maintenance - Rototilling
Black Dirt - Fertilizer
Patios - Lawns Put In
Expert Sod Work
WI 5-5117—after 12 noon

JOHN

MURRAY’S

SEWERS
BERNARD’S SEWER SERVICE
Quick service for clogged or slow main sewers, cleaned and opened with electric rod
equipment. We service any type drain. Also
catch basins and spetic tanks cleaned. LEhigh 7-0232, Wheeling.

SEWING

SINGER

trees

removed

this

winter.

Winter rates for tree removal
than normal price,
Fully insured
Free
HIllerest 6-5524

15%

less

Estimates

HAVE truck and tractor, will work. Grass
cutting, hauling
and
all kinds of yard
maintenance; other odd jobs. Telephone
WI_5-1486
ie
MOTORS

1956 CHEVROLET

TELEPHONE

run,

$295

firm.

PERSONAL

&amp;

DECORATING

PAINTING
and
decorating,
‘uterior
exterior, natural or bleached wood
ishing;

quality

Parte,

call

Eric

workmanship.

Schneider,

For

am
fin
esti

Libertyvill

PAINTING
and
decorating;
outside
specialty. Fully insured. Lake Forest 3938.
Telephone any time.
PAINTING AND
DECORATING
Up to date methods
Careful workmanship
Color coordination
Interior and Exterior
BLOOM PAINTING CO.
ID 2-5544
PAINTING AND PAPER HANGING.
In
terior and exterior painting. For quality
workmanship
by
experienced, _ reliable
men call W. C. Varney. WI 5-0654.
PAINTING and paper hanging, reasonable
tices; free estimates. Telephone A. G
tiddv or Peter Gallos. Lake Forest 156
PAINTING AND WALL PAPERING
INTERIORS — EXTERIORS
QUALITY
WORK
GUARANTEED
CALL
ROY
CARLSON
ID 2-2699
CONGER
BROTHERS
PAINTING
AND
DECORATING
SERVICE.
Paper _hanging.
Telephone
ID
2-3452—ID
2-3053.
PETS
DACHSHUND puppies, toy, 2 months old,
AKC
registered.
Telephone
ONtario
2:
5047,7. 512
Center St., Waukegan.

‘Thursday, July 2, 1959

MACHINE

&amp;

ID

2-3811

TRAILER

9

wlacke

north

of

naval

TREE

WING’S TREE

sPACE

base)

SURGERY

EXPERTS.

Cutting, trim

ming, removing,
feeding
and
repairing
spraying. Fully insured and bonded; free
mga
Telephone ID 2-6546 or *KIm

,&amp; “ 'REE EXPERTS.

frimming,

tee
Fu

ing. repairing. guying and removal.
insured. FREE
ESTIMATES.
Telephor
TD 2-8750. ID 2-5481

NVINTER
rates now
moval. Completely
VE 5-0513.

Two

in effect for tree re
insured. Jim Beinlick

Miss.
daughter

Miss Shayna Goldberg, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Goldberg,
1316 Sheridan Rd., has been granted a fellowship in their Summer
Research Program by the National
Science Foundation.
She will assist in a research proj-

University

Park

in

of Colorado
Bonnie
of the

Lakeside

from

received

Degree

In

on

in
birds
Professor
at North-

Sommerville, son of
Herman. Cucchiaro,

Music

Theatre,

may

from Mrs, John Ward

a

be

also

Upsilon

social

fraternity.

Mr.
979

Windsor Rd., has been named public relations chairman for Campus
Chest, a University of Illinois activity.
Sommerville
second year at

will

be

is completing
the university

entering

the

his
and

School

of
a

Duties

A picture of Sommerville. together with other Chest officials, appeared in a recent issue of The
Daily Illini. In discussing his duties
the Daily points out that ‘Public
relations committee is divided into
two major sections. News relations
handles Daily Illini news releases
and
the Campus
Chest
two-page
newspaper which goes to committee members as well as to housing

groups.
“Public

relations

subcommittee

is involved mainly with checking
through new ideas brought up by
members for feasibility and working with deans, store dealers and

advertisers.”
be

Sommerville’s

major

advertising.

Army Pvt.
James H. Franzen, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Henry E. Franzen,
230 Braeburn Ln., recently was assigned to the 1st Radio Broadcasting and Leaflet Battalion at Fort
Bragg, N.C.
Illustrator

An

illustrator

in the

battalion’s

headquarters company, Franzen is
a 1954 graduate of Highland Park

High

School

and

attended

MissisFranzen
H. Don-

the Francis W. Parker School,

fellowships
Game”

who

Donald Sommerville Named
A Campus Chest Chairman

to

benefit,

scholarship

displayed leadership in campus a
tivities. Frisch is a member of

Economics

sippi
Southern
College.
was employed by Reuben

“Pajama

high

Michael
Perlman,
son of Mrs.
Henry Getz, 333 Hazel Ave., was
given a B.A. degree in economics.
A graduate of Highland Park High
School, Perlman plans to train in
the Air National Guard in Texas.

Donald
and Mrs.

per-

at

obtained

(WI 5-0264).

be-

Chi-

cago. Adelman
is an alumnus
of
the school. Announcement
of the
appointment was made by David B.
Silberman
Jr.,
president
of
the
board of trustees.

Com

merce and business administration
at the University of Illinois,
been
named
to membership
Skull and Crescent, national

a B.A.

Robert Adelman, 2255 Egandale
Rd., has been elected a trustee of

of

Ln,
of

degree in elementary education. A
graduate
of Highland
Park High
School, Miss Johnson is a member
of Kappa
Alpha
Theta
sorority.
She plans to teach in Bannockburn
this fall.

Robert Adelman Elected
Trustee Of Francis Parker

formance

Ivy

Johnson,
Johnsons,

Mrs.
Lee
Hershberger,
1356
Cavell Ave., is a member of committee of the Deerfield branch of
American Association of University
Women planning a benefit July 21

international

256

College

re-

nelley Corporation in Chicago,
fore entering the Army.

swell

the

the

University Women
Sponsor Benefit

and grants funds.
Tickets for the

in

at Boulder.

Jean
E. N.

Pl.,

Frisch,

Johnson

students

June

Sidney
freshman

James Franzen Assigned
To Radio Battalion

Shayna Goldberg Wins
Science Fellowship

the
reproductive
cycle
under
the direction
of
Wolfson. She is a senior
western.

degrees

University

will

ect at Northwestern

Highland

ceived

339

Bonnie

Chairmen’s

HALE TRAILER SALES
“louse trailers and travel trailers; we bu
nd sel). 1920 Sheridan Rd., North Chicage

Tele-

PRINTERS
ink in your blood? Highland
Park Safety Council needs spare time reporters to do safety stories
about
our
community. Telephone ID 2-4517.
AS of Monday, June 22, we are responsible
only for debts incurred by Duffy’s Kitchen at 246 Green Bay Rd., Highwood; we
are not responsible for any debts of RobJ-Kitchen, 246 Green Bay Rd., Highwood.
PAINTING

TRAILERS

engine and powerglide,|

complete, ready to
phone ID 2-1498

SEWING

Perlman

Journalism
in the fall. He
is
member of Sigma Nu Fraternity.

MACHINES

Complete Sales and Service
Free Home Demonstration
Repair on All Makes of Machine:

Complete Tree Service
Pruning
@ Tree
Removing
Spraying
@ Fertilizing
Make
arrangements
now to have unde-

Sirable

Michael

ROOFING

HEITKOTTER BROS.

Harry W. Knoll, 230 Sumac Rd.,
was a delegate last week to the National Conference of Student Councils at Pittsburgh, Pa. As president
of the northeast-northwest division,
he was a delegate of the Illinois
State Student Council. A senior at
Highland
Park High School next
fall,
James will be on the executive
board of the student council.

runs.
®

Conference

James Knoll, son of Mr. and Mrs.

North Shore’s newest and fines
Boarding Kennel.
Private inside heated stalls anc
connecting
individual
outside

®

PAID

VErnon 5-130:
of Dundee Rd. on the
Drive of Edens Highway

Knoll

Student

Gives Degrees To
Highland Parkers

GLENCOE *-: :
BOARDING KENNEL
Glencoe
South
Service

James

Sponsored by
Highland Park
Chamber of Commerce

�cma ee

OBITUARIES.
_ Mrs. George

W.

died

Childs

ie
Mrs. George W. Childs (Elizabeth L, Childs), 73, died last Fri‘ day in the Palo Alto Hospital in
California. She and her husband

Mit have lived there since leaving High-

land Park in 1948.
_
Mrs. Childs was born Jan. 27,
@ 1886, in Chicago. She had lived on
* Sheridan
Rd. in Highland
Park
| since about 1900. She was an ac_tive member of Trinity Episcopal
isSBhureh and had held memberships

|

in Arden Shore and other local or-

a -Sanizations.

Survivors include her husband,
George W. Childs; two sons, Rob-

ert L. of Wayne, Ill., and William
_ C. of Winnetka. She also is surA vived by eight grandchildren.
ag

Services

were

held

in California

; and burial was in Lake

Forest.

ai
(James) Silvestrini
4
Giacomo (James) Silvestrini, 81,
«of

229

Highwood

Ave.,

last Friday

kegan

Highwood,

Hospital

ai

morning
after

in Wau-

a lengthy

Survivors

ill-

Mrs.

Sheridan

Born Aug. 21, 1877, in Aquaria,
Modena, Italy, he had been a resi-

sisters,

dent of Highwood

Petersburg,

a landscape

for 35 years. He

She

Eva

son,

Mrs.

is

Adler

a

Alfred

III,

Lau-

of

And

GIANTS

Giants.
Date

Local Young People
In Northwestern
Music Program
number

of young

people

dogs,
from

Those from Highland Park
will join the two groups are:

Minnie

Lupei

of

in

the

with

1048

Plano,

Liv-

Il.

Phoebe
Ave.;
E.

Carol

Ct.;

a

care-

you want...
us!

Harris,

2434

Green
Bay
Rd.;
Edward
Imhoff,
1503 Sunnyside Ave.; Frank Lennox, 255 Linden Park PI.; Robert
Nathan, 1001 Green Bay Rd.; Gershon Ratner, 1557 Cavell Ave.; and
Edward
Sheftel,
474
Broadview
Ave.

Joint

future,

who

Fabricant,
1250 Linden
Michael
Goodkind,
406

Daniel

concerts

by

the

band

Other
survivors
are five
grandchildren.
Services were held Tuesday in
the
chapel
at 113
Sheridan
Rd.
Burial followed in Mooney Cemetery.

Zigman

Mark

olde

cian

ofa

EE

IE

Solid

IIT

IIT

LIS

IGS

protection

IGT

for

GT

IIE

your

IIT

IGS

GET

valuable

IIT

NI

Papers

TIT

I

IT

OE

ole

ofa

egy

olde

or

TOT

eye

oiie

us handle the transfer of your account from any bank
savings and loan . . . anywhere in the United States.

OT

OT

Zigman,

11-year-old

son of

Mr. and Mrs. Hyman
Zigman
of
1239
Cavell
Ave.,
died
Sunday
morning in his home.
Born March 12, 1948, in Chicago,
the boy had
completed
his fifth
year at Red Oaks School.
He is survived by his parents and
one brother, Cary, 7.

Hoffmans

trip

to

was

changed

today

to

avoid

said Don

Skrinar,

center di-

rector.
The bus leaves at noon and all
who plan to go must sign up for
the trip with summer staff members this morning.
Elks

When
ginning

Play

the

convention

Highwood

International

is

held

Sunday,

in

Elks

Chicago

Highwood

be-

Little

Leaguers
will
entertain
visiting
Elks. Little Leaguers will travel to
Chicago for ball games with them
on Sunday and again on Tuesday.
Time for the games is set for 4 p.m.
Dances Postponed
Informal grade and high school
dances have not been held for the
past two weeks due to bad weather.

Miss Toni Goodman
Attends Convention

In Sun Valley

and

orchestra
under
the direction
of
John P. Paynter and Thor Johnson
will be held July 17 and 24. The
concerts are scheduled for 8 p.m.
in Cahn auditorium, Emerson
St.
at Sheridan Rd. on the Evanston
campus
and will be open to the
public without charge.
The concerts represent the culmination of three weeks of rehearsals
by
both
groups
of teen-age
musicians.
The
Summer
High
School
orchestra
and
band
programs, sponsored by Northwestern
University school of music, provide
an
opportunity
for
high
school
musicians to further their musical
growth during the summer.
The two groups will be made up
of students from
throughout
the
country who will live on campus,
instrumentalists from the National
High School Institute and commuting students from the metropolitan
Chicago area.

Mark

the

Friday

holiday traffic and to give youngsters a chance to buy plenty of hot

He
is survived
by his widow,
Pearl;
a daughter,
Mrs.
Evelyn
Cumming of Prairie View; a son,
Christian
Jr.;
two
sisters,
Mrs.
Mary
Tomaza
of Cincinnati
and

of

of

from

High school students who wish to
play in the two music organizations
may register for available positions
until Monday, the first day of the
three-week session.

59,

BATTLE TODAY

Wrigley Field to see the Chicago Cubs battle the San Francisco

land Park Hospital.
Born Sept. 13, 1899, in Rumania,
he came to this country in 1908
and had lived in Highland Park
for 31 years.

Roske,

ace ae na aeni
wR AY

gents

Highwood youngsters’ Fourth of July week end of activities will get underway today when a bus load will motor to

ingston Ave., died June 27 in High-

Account

iie..olie.oite..site.clie..riie.oiie..iie

aiie...slde.

CUBS AND

Highland Park are instrumentalists

Roske

“yb
SRA)
WE ey

HIGHWOOD YOUNGSTERS WILL SEE

playing in the summer high school
orchestra and band at Northwestern University.

Mrs.

he..otte...cite...rite..siie..oite..riie..olte..clie..rie..siie..otte..s

OO

AIand

ITI.

Save in a Commercial Bank and receive the highest interest rate permitted by law... plus constant availability and safety.

NO

Bender

seven

SAVINGS
ACCOUNTS

Let

three

of St.

by

INTEREST

"
*
pk
pe
re .
BY |

your Savings

M.

A

Christian

free time is also yours, because your savings help you get what
Open

781

survived

Do your saving first, and you can do your spending with a carefree mind, because

in emergencies.

Rd.;

Elsa

Have a carefree time
|}... Save before you spend !

protect you

of

Arthur

Radzinski

Fla.,

also

Arthur

Park for 10

you've already acted to provide for future plans.

daughter,

rence,
Arthur
and
Marilynn
schuler;
and
Jamie,
Wendy

R. Adler

lived in Highland

Miss

Christian

years.
She
was
a
member
Johanna Lodge No. 9.

one

grandchildren:

Mrs. Alma R. Adler of 730 Judson Ave., formerly of Roslyn Ln.,
died Friday in Highland Park Hospital. Services were held Monday
at the North Shore Congregation
Israel, Glencoe. Burial was private.
Born in Chicago and a longtime
resident of the North Shore, she

had

Rd.;

her

Alschuler

and Mrs. Grace Portis, both of
Chicago, and a brother, Wilmer A.
Radzinski of Beverly Hills, Calif.

gardener by trade.

and one daughter, Mable Babbini,
both
of
Highwood.
He
also
is
survived by four grandchildren and
three great-grandchildren. His wife,
Giovanno, preceded him in death.
Funeral services were held Monday in St. James Church in Highwood. Burial followed in Ascension
Cemetery in Libertyville.

Alma

A.

Adler Jr., 2385 Egandale

Survivors include one son, Frank,

Mrs.

include

Helene

ness.

was

"
BSS

ma i iy

Miss Toni Goodman, daughter of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Eugene
Goodman,
374
Braeside
Rd., is attending
the 50th convention
of
Alpha
Epsilon Phi sorority
at
Sun
Valley, Idaho.
Miss Goodman
is vice president
of Sigma Chapter of the sorority at the Uni-

versity
|»

of

consin,
she also

Miss Goodman _
She

will

be

a

Wis-

where
is var-

sity cheerleader.

senior

next

fall.

Services were held yesterday in
the
chapel at 3019
W.
Peterson
Ave., Chicago. Burial followed “in
West Lawn Cemetery, also in Chi-

cago,

Subscribe to The

DEERETELD
REVIEW
Telephone

Windsor 5-4500

Interviewed On

Radio

and

prized possessions is available NOW in our safe

deposit boxes,

Ask about our regular and special
accounts to meet your needs.

|

WHEELING

checking

STATE BANK

— Service and Security Since 1921] —

WHEELING,
Each account

Insured to $10,000.00

ILLINOIS

by Federal

Deposit

Insurance

Corporation.

Mr. and Mrs. Bernard Hoffman, 3195 Summit Ave., are
shown at an interview with Ed Ladd on national radio network.

Hoffman
Page

50

is president of Leeds Chemical

Co., Chicago.

Thursday, July 2, 1959

�boo
FOO

&amp; 4
yg

%

"Aooaa05

©

a

&gt;

;

NA. £

0066.45.05

gh vg

\ fmm
ne 2

SLEFPS

5-PC.
®

.

¢
e

Cape

Ann

COLONIAL
...you get
maple

at
oa &gt; Abe

P

als

9

sofa

at
© tt

:

ADULTS

Regular

.

:

?
$229 atSOO

rs

e

CONVERTIBLE MAPLE LIVING ROOM
all these authentic colonial pieces.
bed

- sleeps
P

two.

bl

Cape
Ann maple cocktail table
2 matching step end tables

This versatile group of glowing
rich
hand-rubbed
Salem
maple
made
by
New
England
craftsmen
brings
your

home all the charm. and
early America.

comfort of

$15

DOWN

hea

Reg. “$69.95

zoe
AA
mT

Platform

Rocker. . .$49.95

ne

PALOMINO WHITE

Each doubles as a single bed.

Ju Ccather-grained waskable Palomino.
2 modern sofa sleepers to dramatize corner arrangements
anywhere...apartment,
runipus,
living or teen room. Upholstered in Palomino—the reinforced vinyl that’s supple as leather,
smooth as leather, luxurious as leather, yet won’t split, scuff, stain or smudge. Each sofa with
wedge bolster and tufted spring built seats.
If purchased singly, 54.95 each.

SINCE

1900

J-Blamb
sane

N

e-:

funn

Kf
iture

JUST SAY
659

“Charge
CENTRAL

we"

AVENUE

STORE

HOURS:

—

OPEN

.
HIGHLAND

FRIDAYS

PARK

—

‘TIL 9:00

P.M.

ID

2-9400

�(it’s very

ee

alle

in the

summer)

black pique sheaths

white orlon bulkies

frosted with white
in junior sizes

bit of warmth

2S

Sere

chic

ee ee

.

.

.

for a pretty

e

14.95
Le

oo

“~

1.

|

\.

Button

front

cardigan,

5.95

C
v

e:

0

:

%

9)

s

1),

RE

1. Daintily embroidered bolero laced

with

black

ribbon

tops

a

sheath.

Sizes

7-15

2.

scoop

Removable

cape

collar

velvet

©

'

..14.95

glamour

dot
to

this square necked sheath.
MG F010) 8h 8 14.95
(Fashion

Aga

neck

polka

adds

bs

you'll

Corner)

/

find

it in Highland

Park

at

Carnétt &lt; Co,
ID 2-4700

girls love playclothes
with dash and style
1. Skort

Summer Toys
for young gardeners
and
sports fans
1. Golf
bag
four irons and

with
ball.

1.95
2.

5-piece

lene

garden

rake,
mower,
and

polyethyset

hoe,
grass

spade

with

lawn
rake

....1.79

3. 42"
fishing
rod
with
2-way_
ratchet
reel, floater, line and
WORE:
icy s wea 1.00

4. Beach boat of unbreakable
polyethylene with spade 1.00
(Toys)

ae

Two

Hours

Free

Parking

in our

lot -

with

white,
2.
no

set

with

attached

siges.

Pedal

71s

Bee

and
In

pleated

smart

skirt

red

and

est.

pusher

ironing.

POR,

blouse

panties.

set

that

Multi-striped

2-OR;

So

(Children's)

needs
top,

3.95
little

cocoa

i ick

or

sateen

2.50

�</text>
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                    <text>Thursday
June 25, 1959

lo¢

berield,

CHIE’

oi

eT

g

,

Infant

a

Te Le

a

Bae

Welfare

ee

a

Center

Plans Dinner-Dance
Saturday

ee ee

Evening

|

�Statement

of Condition
JUNE 10, 1959

RESOURCES
Cash and Due from Banks.
. . . . . $3,622,775.50
United States Treasury Bills ..,°.
....
8,98/7,229.95
United States Treasury Bonds and Notes.
4,744,132.50
Other Bonds and Securities.
. . . . . 5,072,093.07
Federal Reserve Bank Stock.
. ..
.
36,000.00
Loans. aod Distouits
4...
. foe.)
7992,425.24
Banking House and Adjacent Property.
.
1.00
Parmiitire and

Fixtures

«=.

3.

Interest Earned, not Collected.

.

ow

=.

1.00

.

.

93,554.61

.

$29,948, 108.87
LIABILITIES
Capital

Surplus.

Stock

«

.-

.)

2

Profits

.

.

§

. . . . . .

Undivided

.

200,000.00

1,000,000.00
548,976.46

Capital Funds
I

ee

ge

a

e

e.

Discount Collected, but not Earned.
Dividend Declared, but Unpaid.
.

RO

a

ei

Sk

$ 1,748,976.46
571,604.31

.
.

ye

.
.

|

88,270.82
10,000.00

eo
ae ee
29,948,108.87

Board
VALLEE O. APPEL
President, Fulton Market

of Directors
a

EARL W. GSELL
Pres., Earl W. Gsell &amp; Co., Inc.

WILLIAM HEUER
Executive Vice President

ALBERT PICK, JR.
President, Pick Hotels Corp.

Cold Storage Company
PARKER

J.
when 03
CHARLES
Banker

males

ay: oak

F. GRANT

Treasurer, University of Chicago

Bighage. FGrk

LEO J. SHERIDAN
Chairman, L. J. Sheridan &amp; Co.

RICHARD
Chairman,

BERNARD NATH
Sonnenschein Lautmann Levinson
Rieser Carlin &amp; Nath

GEORGE R. STONE
Partner, Hill &amp; Stone

Leo

Burnett

N. HEATH
Executive Committee
Co.,

RICHARD

a
Aa

Inc.

F. UHLMANN

Trust

President, Uhlmann

Grain Company

| FIRST NATIONAL BANK
,

Our 60th year
Complete Banking
and

R. MAVOR

MORTON

HALL

of

High

Services

la YE

lita

Member The Federal Reserve System
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

WEEKEND

BANKING

HOURS:

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

�Vol,

34, No.

Thursday,

16

June

25,

1959

—

ewage Plant Is

Break Ground For Second High School In District 113

Overloaded Here
The Deerfield Village Board has received warning from
the Sanitary Water Board in Springfield that the local sewage
treatment plant is overloaded and that sewer extension permits
will not be granted until the works is enlarged.
ed

Summer May Bring
More

Water

The water board has receommendto the village officials that they

deny further connections to “existing sanitary sewers which would increase the overload on the plant

Woes,

Says Village Head

and probably cause pollution of the

Emergency
conditions
in water
usage
are
likely
to
reappear
throughout the summer, according
to
Village
President
G.
Eldon
Holmquist.

meeting of the Village board and
the matter was referred to a committee which was asked by President G. Eldon Holmquist to report
at the next adjourned meeting of
the board, scheduled for June 24.

outlet stream.”

The letter was read at last week’s

Deerfield
cooperative

when

citizens
over the

a crew

were
largely
past week-end

of about

20 men,

in-

cluding
policemen
and
firemen,
toured to the town in department
vehicles equipped with loudspeakers announcing the water shortage.
A eamplete curb on lawn sprinkling and a request for conservative use of water facilities were
necessitated both in Deerfield and
in Highland Park because of lack
of rain during June. This shortage
became both a hazard in case of
fire and also a health and sanitation problem.

Front end loader serves as temporary seat for members of School District 113 board of education when they arrive in Bannockburn for groundbreaking ceremonies. On hand were, left to
right, Earling Zaeske, Samuel Rosenthal (former board president) and Mrs. James Tibbetts, president.

Next

row

are

Norman

Schlossman

of architects’

firm

Hansmann, former board member, and far right, Mrs.
Johnson. Harold E. Foreman Jr. stands next to the driver.

designing

the

building,

Mrs.

Elwood

Spencer R. Keare and Mrs. J. Sigurd
Next are Harry Cadenhead of architects’

According to the city manager
Highland
Park,
Ralph
Snyder,

(Continued

on

page

of
a

4)

Permits
to Continue
Issuance of permits for connections to existing sewer mains will
continue for the time being.
The trustees could not agree on
continuance of the investigation of
Baxter
and
Woodman,
engineers,
who have advised the board that
for a maximum of $300 they could
bring up to date a comprehensive
report
suitable
to present
for a

bonding

program.

Advisability

of

calling for other engineering surveys for the sake of comparison
was suggested by Trustee Maurice
C. Petesch.
In the letter from the sanitary
(Continued on page 42)

Dance Receipts to Help Pay for Tower

firm and A. E. Wolters, who becomes superintendent of the two schools next Wednesday.

500 RESIDENTS SIGN PETITION
ASKING LANDFILL REFERENDUM
About 500 Deerfield residents have signed a petition calling for a public vote on the proposed National Brickyard Company purchase by the village. Plans are to present the petition
to the village board at the first July board meeting.
The
petitioners have expressed
themselves as aware that the village trustees “may be legally justified in committing Deerfield to a
$1,875,000 debted obligation with-

out

a public

vote

on

the

matter.”

However, they contend that a sizeable segment of Deerfield taxpayers believe that the ‘village trustees and president face a moral ob-

ligation to call for a village vote
on the purchase.”
They have deferred presentation
of the petition in hope that the
trustees
and
the president
‘will
recognize,
of
their
own
accord,
their moral obligation to bring the
$1,875,000 purchase plan to a public vote.”
According to Donald J. Dickens,
one of the group who has been active in circulating the petition, ‘““We

feel the only thing that might ‘panic’ the board into ramming the purchase through without a public referendum would be the passage of
Illinois House Bill 1499, which is
scheduled
for
Senate
vote
this
week in Springfield. If it is passed,
this bill would permit a sanitary

landfill
with

operation

Illinois

Public

that
Health

complied
Depart-

ment specifications, to be operated
in any non-restricted area right up

to village or city limits. But since
this is precisely what
the ‘Koss
plan’ proposes that Deerfield do,
we see no justification for pushing
a ‘panic-button’. . . especially a $1,875,000 panic-button.”
Another concern of the petitioners is what they term the speculative nature of the garbage landfill economics on which the Koss
plan is based.
On
this
point
Dickens
quoted
(Continued on page 4)

Fere’s
Here’s

how

Township
special

zak,

How

the

West

Deerfield

vote

went

in

election

when

Bruno

Stanc-

was

elected

incumbent,

(R)

Tuesday’s

Lake County State’s Attorney
Richard G. Kahn (D).
W.

Dfld.

Twp.

PLAQINCt

over

Stanezak

Kahn

se

61

70

PECINCS

2)

Vos

65

38

Precinct.

3

v.28

98

24

Precinct

4.

.:.-0...2...

74

24

Precinct.°5

20..2-%

98

28

Precinct

6

2.0.20...

65

19

Preeinet

375k.

35

23

Precinct

6.

ooo.

64

65

Precinct

9)

lo...

119

34

Vernon Twp.
PEBCINICT 20
PHRECINGE..3

3603
2
ke

87
128

16
39

United Fund Plans 1959 Drive;
Robert Gand Lists Committee
The
annual drive of the Deerfield-Bannockburn
United
Fund
will be held October 1 through 11,
it was announced today by Robert
C. Gand, vice chairman in charge
of the campaign.
“With many outstanding citizens
agreeing to serve on various committees, we have great hopes that
our goal can be attained for the
first time in several years,’ Gand
said.
He added that the 1959 goal will

be determined

as soon as members

of the budget committee complete
their review of requests for financial support from the 10 member
agencies.
Although
Deerfield
Recreation
will become a tax-supported activity as a result of the favorable
referendum this spring, the agency
has asked to be included in the
drive until such time as tax funds
are available.

Other

member

American

Red

agencies

Cross,

(Continued

Boy

on page 4)

are

Scouts,

Firemen Ted Gastfield, Charles J. Rogers, Eric Iverson and Al
Gastfield, assistant fire chief, inspect plans and spot for the erection of a tower for hose drying. Receipts from Saturday night's

dance at the fire hall will help pay for this badly-needed structure.
At the present time, the Deerfield-Bannockburn
hose as far as Glencoe for drying.
Tickets

for the

dance,

to be

held

Saturday

firemen
from

must take

9 p.m.

to 1,

have been mailed out to all local residents. “Y’all come,” is the
invitation from the firemen, but they add that even if unable to
attend

residents

of the fire district can

project by buying the dance tickets.

help

in this worth-while

�ELE pO is

ae:

| From The President's Desk...
To The
AN

United Fund
(Continued

Residents of Deerfield:
EMERGENCY

EXISTS.

first

By

motion,

the

issue

failed

for

from

page

3)

Girl

Scouts,

Family

Service,

High-

land

Park

Hospital,

North

Shore

SURVEY REPORT MADEON NAMES
FOR NEW DIST. 113 HIGH SCHOOL

want
of a second.
The
audience
Mental Health, Retarded Children,
then entered into the discussion,
Salvation Army and Visiting Nurse.
| in the papers you have been advisduring which the village attorney
With the naming of the 16 dis| ed
of the restricted hours for made the statement that there was
trict chairman for the drive, pre_ sprinkling.
nothing to prevent the trustee in- liminary preparations for a successThe condition worsened over the volved from seconding the motion ful United Fund campaign are well
at issue.
Because
of the
saving underway, Gand pointed out.
week-end
so that a complete ban
available to the village, the audiFor this first time, Lincolnshire
BP. on sprinkling was set. While the
ence
seemed
to
insist
that
the
| ban is lifted for the time being, motion be again offered. It was residents will join Deerfield and
_ we fear that similar situations may and then the attorney was asked if Bannockburn in conducting the annual United Fund drive. The com|
arise throughout the summer.
he would recommend
the bid be
has
been
designated
as
|
SUNDAY MORNING I RECEIV- let to the company whose products munity
District 16.
_ ED A CALL from Mayor Robert the trustee was agent for. The atThe district chairmen are: H. A.
‘2 _ Cushman
of Highland
Park.
He torney
replied
‘I would
not reHarris,’
District...
1:;°
Mrs::’,
Harry
| told me that their water reserve commend
it.”
The
motion
was
Abrahamson,
2; Robert J. Demi| ‘was down to less than two hours’ passed, and I as president cast the
supply, which means that in the deciding vote in favor of giving chelis, 3; Gordon Vines, 4; Alex A.
event of fire we would be in bad the contract to the lowest bidder, Briber, 5; Robert S. Seiler, 6; Alex
|
shape. It means that from a sanita- the company represented by a trus- W. Peterson, 7; Mrs. William C.
McBride, 8.
ee tion standpoint we must conserve
tee. After the meeting, the attorney
George
Robinette,
District
9;
|
water. Several things have happen- volunteered the information that
| ed to cause this situation. As you had he been asked if he would James E. Mandler, 10; Reid A. Ol_ know the spring this year was not recommend against giving the con- son, 11; Richad Wilts, 12; Dr. Carl
A. Reeb, 13; John E. Hale, 14; John
abundant with moisture, and we tract to the person in question his
A. S, Lindemann,
15, and A. G.
have
had very little rain the past answer would have been “I would
is
*
Barsumian, 16.
ag month. Then, for some reason, the not
recommend
against
it.’
So,
To expedite
the administrative
| intake at Highland Park has been there you have a situation where
work in the 16 districts, territorial
BS pulling in algae, which interferes the law, as we know it, is neither
chairmen
have
been
named _ to
| with the filtering basins, and slows for or against. I am of the opinion
supervise a number of districts.
_ down
the supply of water. These that the village is being well served
Edward L. Bax has Districts 6, 7
| hot days have caused increased use in this case. Anyhow, it was a lot
and 10; Howard Kodym, Districts 3,
of water in many ways. The answer of fun, and many in the audience
4 and 5; Nicholas J. LaChat, Dis_ is that water must not be used for joined in the discussion.
tricts 9, 11 and 12; Lewis B. Land_ any purpose other than where necTHE
LIBRAR Y-TOWNSHIP
reth, Districts 8, 13 and 14; Roland
_ essary for human use.
HALL is taking shape. Going to be T. Robinson, Districts 1, 2 and 16,
Re
WHILE IT MAY APPEAR that a good looking community center. and Robert C. Gand, District 16.
|
increased water distribution sta- Also, have you noticed all the
|oai tions might be of help, there isn’t teams of youngsters and young
/ ‘much
we can do until Highland people playing ball in Jewett park
aa Park gets its expansion program and the other ball diamonds? We
(Continued from page 3)
|
well under way. Our own program are wise and fortunate that we
is on the boards and can be started have provided playgrounds for our President
Holmquist’s
statement
|
almost any time. We will be in tune future generations. These young made during the June 17 board
| with the Highland Park develop- people need places to work off the meeting. ‘“‘We are much in agree|
ment to hook in when they are energy, and certainly the parents ment,” said Dickens, “with the vil|
ready.
need opportunities to be either um- lage president’s statement that ‘It
is not the business of a village gova
DURING A ROUTINE INSPEC- pires or hecklers.
ernment to speculate on future fiEldon
Holmquist
|
TION of our sewerage system, the
ey
nancial possibilities.’,”
Village
President
_ ; State Health Department conclud-

| card

and

by

special

proclamation

Referendum

a
|

ed that our system was reaching
the overload point, They have made
several stipulations and a recom-mendation that we not grant any

Asked

All Aboard for Better Citizenship —

due

to the lag in time from

permit application to occupancy of
the home, we will have expanded
the sewerage treatment plant. Work
has
been
months on

‘

-

pand

underway
for
what is needed

the

plant.

many
to ex-

Concentrated

ef-

ag fort and constructive thinking will
permit the work soon to go ahead.

In

the meantime, we think there is

_ no danger of ill effects from posmt sible
_

overloading

IT

WAS

_ people

out

- meetings.
ested
in

The

the

GOOD

system.

to

see

so

many

at the last two

way

to insure

good

heard

board
am

needs

certain

ates
lows
|

when

you

help
that

or

the

think

I

will do a better

job

all the

THE

_ troversial

_ perhaps

|

essary.

LAST

MEETING a

issue

was

some
You

explanation
may

con-

settled,

recall

but

is

that

on
_
_

our

annual

requirements

for

petroleum products. Because it was
thought there might be a conflict

This was the beginning of an exciting and busy week for
(left to right) Misses Barbara Patterson, Marie Schilling and Louise
Bradt, who attended Illini Girls’ State at MacMurray College, Jack-

5 _ of interests on the low bid, the
|
item was held over pending search
Bes by our village attorney. The at-

sonville, as guests of the American

|

By taking: roles in a mythical
state government, the girls learned
the functions and operations of a

torney

came

i _ while
_ direct
item

|

|

up

with

a report

that

it appeared there was no
conflict of interest on the
involved,

there

appeared

to

be an indirect interest that could
4

Legion

auxiliaries of Deerfield,

Highland Park and Vernon Township.

government

such

Commonwealth

of

as

that

Illinois.

of

the

Experi-

be construed to be a conflict. On enced government and civic lead-!
Page

“A new high school will soon be
built near here, a sister school to
the Highland
Park High
School.
Both township schools will be operated by the same school board
that
has
operated
the
Highland
Park High School successfully for
many years, and the present principal, Mr. A, E. Wolters, becomes
superintendent
of
both
schools
The nucleus of the staff of the
new school will come from High-

land Park High School, including
the principal, Mr. Phillipi.

3 yes;

a

previous meeting we opened bids

ag

were

sent to the directors of admission
for a number of colleges and universities of various sizes throughout the United States. The letter
started out:

answers

necat

a questionnaire

At' the May 12
Steering Committee
New High School,
ported
that “the
a wide divergence

_ way thru if the citizens will come
seit out and participate when necessary
ia in the government.

AT

and

makes little difference as long as it
is clear that the schools are sister
schools
operated
by
the
same
school board of District 113.

appreci-

a good audience and it folwithout. a doubt that the

Board

a letter

erated by the same school board of
District 113 and (3). The name

the

correction.
board

Earlier this year it was suggested
that the persons best able to answer these questions were the directors of admission themselves, so

School West,
(2) Deerfield High
School, provided
it is clear that
both schools are sister schools op-

gov-

_ out and look, listen and make yourself

It was generally agreed that for
it was
college entrance purposes
desirable for the new school to be
identified in the minds of the directors of admission with Highland
Park High School of District 113,
Lake County, Ill. Whether the best
way to accomplish this would be to
call it Highland Park High School
West, or to call it some other name
such as Deerfield High School and
build up the association through
other means, was an open question.
Many
felt that
adequate
results
could be accomplished by the proper design of letterheads, forms and
other material to show that both
schools were managed by the same
board
and
administered
by
the
same staff that has so ably brought
Highland Park High School to its
present position of prestige.

attached form... .”
The questionnaire provided three
choices, (1) Highland Park High

board

People should be intergood
local government.

best

be used.

“Everything
possible
is
being
done to assure the same educational excellence and performance that
characterizes Highland Park High
School today. .. .” It then went on
to explain the situation, and asked:
“would you say that in the first
few years the graduates of the new
school would
find better
acceptance by the directors of admission
if they came from Highland Park
High School West, or if they came
from Deerfield High School, operated by the same School Board of
Township High School District 113?
... Please note your opinion on the

more
building permits. This may
_ serve to slow the building program,
but before any real slowdown is
needed,

At the time of the referendum on the new high school a
year ago, there was discussion concerning the name for the
new high school. Some felt it should be Deerfield High School;
others believed that in order for the graduates to have the best
chance for acceptance at the colleges and universities of their
choice, a name such as Highland Park High School West should

ers

served

as

counselors.

A

field

trip
to the
state
legislature
in
Springfield was made.
A total of 485 high school junior
girls
from
throughout
the
state
(Continued

on

page

5)

were

(1)

meeting of the
for Naming the
A. G. Bradt rereturns showed
of opinion.” The

6 yes, 3 no;

(2)

Deerfield High School, both propositions being subject to the qualification that it be made clear the
school
is operated
by the
same

school board and staff that operate
Highland
Park
High
School
in
Township High School District 118.
Thus ten believed that the prestige
of
Highland
Park
High
School
could be transferred to a school

with

another

unimportant

tion 1 could well be disregarded as
being inconsistent with the ques-

tion.

name
3

number of votes, 7,
the proposition that

makes
were

little

cast

for

difference,
the

name

be-

as the school
E. Wolters.
that
the

the schools would experience greater loyalty with
different
names.

Two of those who voted “No”
question (1) said that the use
‘North, South, East and West’
identify schools was confusing
people

not

acquainted

communities,

and made

to distinguish

between

with

to
of
to
to
the

it difficult
schools.

Water Shortage
(Continued

from

page

3)

filter partially plugged with algae
was
another
cause of the water
shortage. The normal daily capacity
of the water system he listed as
7,500,000 gallons, compared with a
demand
of 9,200,000
gallons Saturday.
President Holmquist pointed out
that rapid growth of the two municipalities has placed an ever-increasing strain on the water supply
and that until the improvements
currently being planned are complete
emergency
situations
such
as this may continue to arise.
He pointed out that towns which
obtain
their water
supply
from
wells were
also facing shortages
during the past week.

On The Cover
Mrs. Paul Brown, Mrs. Warren
Coray and Mrs. Bruce Brown, committee
members
for
the
annual
dinner-dance of the Deerfield Center of the Infant Welfare Society,
are shown at Lake Forest Academy
where the affair will be held Sat.
urday
evening.
They
are at the

stairs
Reid

leading

to the

garden

from

Hall.

The Public Press, no less than Public
Office,

is a public

trust.

DEERFIELD
REVIEW
Thursday,

June

25,

1959

Vol.

34,

No.

16

Published Weekly every Thursday
699

608

OFFICE

Waukegan

DEERFIELD,

name will give the graduates of the

schools?” the 3 ‘‘No” votes on ques-

six

schools would prosper better with
distinctive names, A third said that

these results so
question, “What

new high school the best prospect
of being accepted at their chosen

the

as long

PUBLICATION

In interpreting
as to answer the

while

and

is associated with A.
Another
commented

(3) 7 yes.

The largest
were cast for

name,

lieved the prestige could best be
preserved by using a name such as
Highland Park High School West.
In addition there were some interesting comments.
One director
of admission
said the name
was

Road

ILLINOIS

Telephone Windsor 5-4500
HIGHLAND
PARK
OFFICE
Laurel Ave., Highland Park,
Telephone ID 2-4500

IIl.

MEMBER
National
Editorial Association
Illinois Press Association
Local Subscription Rates—$3.50 per year
Domestic Rate—$5.00 per year
Single Copies—15c
Foreign Rates on Application:
‘sEntered as second-class matter Novem
ber 27, 1944, at the post office at Deer:
field, Illinois, under the Act of March 8
1879.”

Thursday, June 25, 1959

�Deerfield Garden

Girl Scouts Transcribe, Donate Books to Blind

Deerfield Observes
Ravinia Festival

Club Asks Check
The
has

Garden

issued

Next week has been proclaimed
Ravinia Festival Opening Week in
Deerfield.

symptoms

A proclamation issued by Village
President
G.
Eldon
Holmquist,

ministration

the

Ravinia

Festival

and

or

Other

North

issued

Shore

similar

leaves

Rudolph

Firkusny

and,

pianists

Leon

Flei-

scher.
Books On Sale Here
This
year
for this
first
time
coupon books may be purchased in
Deerfield. They will be on sale at
the Deerfield
Savings
and
Loan
and also at Garnett’s in Highland
Park.
Mrs. Frank Jacober, 1130 Rago,
is chairman of the committee
in
charge of coupon book sales. Mrs.
John H. Kies, 237 Landis Ln., is
club
and
organizations chairman.

Others

on the

committee

are Mrs.

Joseph Powell, 1050 Meadowbrook;
Mrs. Chester Kyle, 1425 Woodland
Dr.; Mrs. Fred Rahn, 453 Hermitage;
Mrs.
Gerald
Kramer,
2629

Birchwood

Ln.,

Mrs.

Bischoff,

Walter

Delmar

Woods;

1775 Meadow

Ln., Bannockburn; Mrs. James J.
Sayre, 433 Hermitage, and Mrs.
Jere H. Lien, 1341 Arbor.
George
P.
and Renslow

Park,

Simon,
409 Willow,
P. Sherer, Highland

are in charge

of public rela-

tions.

Woman
And

Two

Children

possible

death

Patty Davidson of the Dawes School for the Blind in Evanston reads over ore of the books
transcribed by Deerfield Girl Scouts after completion of 20 lessons in Braille. The scouts, attended by Mrs. Anthony B. Herman, president of the Moraine Girl Scout Council, are (left
to right) Rosemarie Sternberg, Jory Crane, Lovisa Winters and Sandy
Nelson. Absent are
Carol Hooker and Jane Rawitzer.
“A
useful

Girl
and

Scout’s
help

duty

is

others,”

the

to

be

Parents of Wilmot
Musicians Organize
New Group, MAPAW

third

Girl Scout law, has real meaning
for six members of troop 127, each
of whom has completed 20 lessons
in Braille and transcribed a book
for the Evanston school.

A
has

Complete

Books

new
been

organization
formed

vancement
and
band, orchestra,

Under
the direction of one of
their troop leaders, Mrs. Herbert
Winters, the following books were
completed:
“A Joke
on Cinder’’Romney Gay, transcribed by Rosemarie
Sternberg;
“Kiki
and
Muffy’’-Charlotte Steiner, by Sandy
Nelson; ‘A Crow I Know’-Wesley
Dennis, by Louisa Winters; “Prayer
for a Child’’-Rachel Field, by Jane
Rawitzer;
“Happy
Easter’-Kurt
Weise, by Carol Hooker and “Ask
Mr. Bear’? Marjorie Flack, by Jory
Crane.

School

District

to

of

aid

(Continued

on

page

From

(Continued

from

To be known as MAPAW, Music
Appreciation
Parents’
Association
of Wilmot, the group voted approval of its Constitution at a meeting
in the Wilmot School music room
last Wednesday. Among the objectives are the raising of funds for
equipment
and administrative assistance to the faculty.

were present, selected for outstanding

character,

honesty,

leadership,

abilities and cooperativeness
for their scholastic records.
Louise

and

is

Mrs.

Margate

Girls’

the

daughter

Andrew

G.

Ter., and was

State

by the

and

of

Mr.

Bradt,

454

sponsored

Deerfield

at

Unit

738 of the American Legion Auxiliary. Barbara, daughter of Mr. and

Mrs.

Harold

Crabtree

Vernon
auxiliary

Mr.
of

B.

Ln.,

Township
and

and Mrs.
Highland

Patterson,

was

sponsored

Unit

Marie,

Otto
Park,

1550

F. G. Schilling,
was

sponsored

by Highland Park Unit 145.
Mrs. William A. Tennerman
of
1020
Oakley,
is the Girls’ State
chairman for the Deerfield unit.

Thursday,

June

Our

PROFESSIONAL

25, 1959

Sun

ad-

Village

Carleton,

to watch

900

chairman
following

for: wilting

of

turn-

on wilted

message

may

or dead

be

left

elm

with

have

been

diag-

Wallace

Vickerman

is

Mr.

and

Mrs.

President,

and

Mr.

and

Thayer.

Mrs.

recording

Arthur

secretary;

Mrs.
Robert
Blair, corresponding
secretary,
and
Mrs.
John
Wolf,
treasurer. Members of the board of
directors are Mrs. LeRoy Hamilton,
Robert Ray, Robert Grodinsky and
Mrs.
Lloyd
Rudolph.
Association
meetings will be held the fourth
Tuesday of September, November,
January, March and May.

All

parents

of

students

in

the

Wilmot School music activities are
urged
to take
an active part in
MAPAW. For information they may
call Gerald Schwartz, WI 5-0814.

.

Beauty

(a specialty)!

® Style

Cutting

® Permanent

Waukegan
OPEN

For Appointment
PHONE:

vacant

property

must

be

count

of

trees

may

the

number

be

kept.

of

diseased

This

will

give

the village a correct picture of how
the

disease

is

progressing.

All in a Day’s Work
It’s all in a day’s work for a
Deerfield policeman.
Mrs. H. E. Tucker, 749 Deerpath,

called for help from the police department Monday afternoon when
she found an injured squirrel in a
tree at her home. Officer Thomas
Rogge responded and found it neeessary to dispose of the animal.

ELEVENTH HOUR
APPROACHES!

WILL YOURS BE THE
1000 000th

.

..

.

ance on a N.Y. TV Show.
WATCH

FOR

SHOP
Rd.,

OUR

ONE

3rd Generation

Waving

BEAUTY CORNER
666

on

destroyed, it is reported, as such
spots are breeding places for the
elm bark beetles.
Anyone sending a sample directly to a laboratory for diagnosis is
asked to report the result to the
village hall so that an accurate

THE

@ Shampooing

BEAUTY

or

YOU may be the guest of Lindemann Pharmacy and E. R.
Squibb &amp; Co. on a fabulous weekend of fun in New York
City, including tickets to “Flower Drum Song” and an appear-

Services

COLORING

@ Manicuring

cut down and destroyed if it is infected with the disease.
Any dead elmwood in wood piles

PRESCRIPTION?

e HAIR

by
of

Summer's

Care

including: HAIR CUT &amp; STYLE
CONDITIONED FOR YOUR COMFORT

1247 of the
daughter

Mrs.

Vice

from $11.50
AIR

4)

Eisinger,

Second

Elected to the offices of Mr. and
Mrs. President are Mr. and Mrs.
Gerald
Schwartz;
Mr.
and
Mrs.
First Vice President, Mr. and Mrs.

PERMANENTS

42)

page

ad-

of the
club of

Constitution

Don’t Neglect—Get a
Beauty Corner Treatment!

High-

Girls State

the

110.

Approves

Your Hair Needs

last

Skokie

in

expansion
and glee

parents

John

em

Mrs. Basile was driving across
the tracks when the traffic light

and

the

nosed, the result will be relayed
immediately as the tree must be

ing,

Rd.

at

Rd., conservation
club,
lists
the

those who call.
When
samples

Thursday morning when they abandoned their car before an on-coming train on the Chicago Milwaukee
Railroad tracks at Briargate cross-

at Deerfield

office

trees

to the

samples and send them away for
diagnosis. He will get in touch with

Quick thinking on the part of
Mrs. Joan B. Basile, 32, 1504 Crowe
Ave., saved her and her two chil-

from

suspicious

wood

for

disease

at the tree tops, leaves

The

From Oncoming Train

dren

look

Elm

the operator at the village Hall.
She will give the information to
William Haney, who is employed
by the village this year to collect

The girls presented their books
to Patty, who is a member
of a
Girl Scout troop in Evanston.

Saves Herself

any

elm

the sapwood
branches.

This year the festival will present six weeks of great music, featuring
the
Chicago
Symphony
Orchestra and such conductors as
Andre
Cluytens,
Vladimir
Golschmann,
and Andre
Kostelanetz.

and _

Dutch

Deerfield
to

ing yellow, gray-green, brown or
any combination of these on entire
branches and brown streaking of

communities

Yeend

of

dead

symptoms

in regard to the opening
of the
24th season at Ravinia, which is
one
of only two
summer
music
festivals in the United States under
a permanent roof.

Frances

of

reminder

report

any

Oxford
of the

proclamations

Guest artists include vocal solists
Richard Tucker, Jennie Tourel and

to

Club

a

Hall, WI 5-5000.
Mrs. Gilbert D.

as

a world-famous cultural and enterainment attraction bringing prestige to the community and requests
all citizens, interested groups and
organizations to participate in the
current season.

have

|

Of Elm Trees Here

eek June29-July6

describes

|

MILLION

Now

CELEBRATION

Serving

the Public’s
”

Pharmaceutical

Needs!

LINDEMANN’S

Deerfield

PRESCRIPTION

PHARMACY

MONDAYS

WI 5-1525

800

Waukegan
Deerfield

Road

WI 5-0022
Page

5

,

�+

7

Boy Scout Office Moves

Uhlemann’s

new

To

Fort

Sheridan

The North Shore Area Council, Boy Scouts of America, has
moved its offices from 1811 St.
Johns Ave. to a temporary location at Fort Sheridan, just a
bleck east of the south gate.
E. A. Schwechel, Scout executive, announces the new office is in building 659, on Eleventh St. off Patton Rd.

easy-to-wear

CONTACT
Lenses

e safe
e comfortable
e full satisfaction—
guaranteed

INSURANCE
j
®

Have your eyes examined by an
Eye-Physician (M.D.)

FOR INSURANCE

UHLEMANN
optical

1874
1645

Sheridan

Rd.

Orrington Ave. Evanston
UNiversity 4-3311

ek

bya!

*

%

Teen Jam Sessions Start Tuesday Night At Recreation Cente
What

are

night?
That’s

Park,
teens

you

the

doing

question

Tuesday. Don Caron, his saxophone
and his orchestra, who played for

keep

in

stride

what’s

the graduation and New Year’s Eve
dances, will be on hand to open the

Two women
the Activities

season Tuesday.
soft drinks.

Mrs.

Highland

with

the friendly, informal jazz sessions
from 8:30 to 11 p.m.
tion Center.

Highwood
and
Deerfield
will be asking one another,

now that the summer jam
are ready to go again.
To

sessions

more than to dance—are paid fol
by the Student Activities commit
tee with funds
left over fro
dances during the year, and by the
Chicago Musicians’ Union, out of its
performance trust fund of the rec
ord industry,

Tuesday

going on in the world of teens (it
includes eighth grade grads now
considered high school freshmen)
most students will want to attend

at the

Recrea-

New night for the jam sessions,
formerly held on Wednesdays,
is

The

There will be free

concerts—teens

have been named toa
committee
for the

first time, Mrs.

Allan I. Wolff

John Thomson.

(Continued

like to listen

on

Neuman

page

Limited Number Of Memberships Still
Available In ELMS SWIM CLUB

CALL

WI 5-1383

company

the best In sight—since 1907
PHONE for appointment or Information
Highland Pk. IDlewood 2-5150

Location

io

HENRY

HAKANEN

825 Deerfield Rd., Deerfield
State

Farm Mutual Automobile
Insurance Co.
State Farm Life Insurance Co.
State Farm Fire and Casualty Co.
HOME OFFICE—BLOOMINGTON, ILLINOIS

There

will be an open

meeting

for all interested

persons

who wish to join the Elms Swim Club, a non-profit corporation,
on Saturday, June 26, 1959, at 2:30 p.m. The meeting will be
held at the Wayne

Thomas

School, Summit

and

North Avenues,

Highland Park.
There are only a limited
EVANSTON

number

of charter

left. Charter memberships will close on July 2nd, 1959, and thereafter membership fees will be increased.

| 507 CENTRAL AVE.

ID 2-6944

Tennis Anyone?
IMPORTANT

Easy-care tennis

REDUCTIONS

dress is the key to
summer fun.

In

pretty pastels, plaids
or checks.
Sizes 3 to 6X

$2.98

from

Sizes 7 to 14

SUMMER SALE

$3.98

from

ROBERT

FISCHEL

~ EAUDONOREENOODOOLOOLCOLOOAROONOONEDE

=

WATCH

FOR...

eae

T.N.T.
IATVTOQUTUNOUAAUOQURNGEQUOez

memberships

» LAKE’ FOREST

QP

il
265 MARKET

SQUARE

PHONE

LAKE

FOREST

548

and

“Red’

8)

�Queen

Elizabeth

EVERYTHING

Reigns At Men’s
arden Club Show
“Queen Elizabeth,” a grandiflora
rose entered by A. M. Fischer of
1950 Garland Ave. in the 12th annual rose show held Saturday at

Highland

Park

Recreation

Center

was judged best in its classification
and best of show.
This year’s show, sponsored by
the Men’s Garden Club of Highland Park, had the largest number
of entries ever, with more than 60
exhibitors entering some 600 roses.

The

new

classification,

rose

New

is New—

Owners
—
New Merchandise
New Personalized Service

Ufapleec hia without wit!

It feels

LEO
13th

Don Glassman

ZAHNLE
Monday,

MARY

CASARIO

crowd

florabunda;

“FANTASY

Hey

Borin,

Kids!
and

row

nite

For

Student

Anita

“Miniatures,” Mrs. A.
“Old Curiosity Shop.”

Children’s

Merle

Charak,

9

Nancy
John,
and Patsy John,

year

Some

Name

people

ly obtaining
health-aids

This

sources,

do

may

causing

be

realize

anyone.

Pharmacists

stays Comfortable
stays U, P

you

COME
and

Ask for the “Comfort” strapless bra .. . with no
i
underbust wire!

OUR

MEET
EXPERT

Graduate
Ou

June

service

offers

Refinement

uniform

cul-

bride

of

the

several

Peryears

*
miss the first
Sessions and

Recreation

Center

and they will
our _ favorite

Saturday.

*

boys

*
in my

forward

*
band

and

to playing

I are

for

our

club

at

at the

their

party

tomorrow

Lake

yo

you

without

Confinement!”

The

}
.
T
TN
WATCH

SUT

NEW

ri

FOR...

LEEDS JEWELERS

Ravinia

25, 1959

of

at a low $29.50.

the pearls were a little larger?
It
would surprise you to know how inexpensively
you
can
add
larger

Corsetieres

onalized
r personali

. Figure

IN

—PHARMACISTS—

Thursday,

strand

Forest Academy.
*
*
*
Not in Webster, but I like Judge
Braude’s definition of college
years:
“The vacation a boy gets
between his mother and his wife.”
*
*
*
Do you have a string of cultured
pearls? Have you sometime wished

Peggy O'Neil

How is it done? Lightweight “Cuddle-Stays” are embedded in the thin-foam lining of the bra. They provide
the holding and shaping... yet never touch you. All you
feel is gentle uplift and soft comfort.

Pick up your prescription
if shopping near us, or let
us deliver promptly without extra charge. A great
many
people entrust us

(1749-1832)

at

looking

you want with the freedom and comfort you demand.

e

Quotation by Johann Goethe

a
the

Do”

The

Yes, it’s true... a strapless bra with no rigid wire under
the bust... none over the bust! A strapless bra that stays
up! A strapless bra that gives you the attractive figure

« RAVINIA

or

for

nis

ID 2-2300

Park

pearls

nite

When You Need A Medicine

Highland

Spe-

many friends in the Town and Ten-

Ask Your Physician to Phone

EARL W.
GSELL &amp; CO.

in

tured

“I

stays In Place

s

with the responsibility of
filling their prescriptions.
May we compound yours?

Time”

*
*
*
Our very warmest good wishes
go to JANICE GREENWALD and
ED McQUIRE who will be saying

sician. You are safer when
you get medicines from a
pharmacist.

PARK

“Keeping

Alumni.

best for you to consult a phy-

ID 2-2600

driving.”
*
for the bride by
traditional heircultured pearls.

bands—Don
Caron, plus all the
free coke you want. Remember—a
new nite—TUESDAY.
They’re always free for High Schoolers and

Eve Levy

about any possible dangers
and advise you when it is

HIGHLAND

are

session of the series
bring
us
one
of

improperly. Patent medicines
sometimes only relieve symtoms while masking serious

tell

value

dances

are _ taught

can

*

next Tuesday nite! The Coca-Cola
Company is sponsoring the first

that any medicine can be potentially dangerous if taken

We

and

nite.)

*

too!
*
*
Teen-agers!—don’t
of the summer Jam

dif-

sold

*

standing,

they

serious

tomorrow

week’s

fect

and

Medicines are not
merchandise to be

troubles.

Auster

unqualified

ficulties.
ordinary
by

Ann

thoughtless-

not

and

band

cial is a beautifully matched strand
of graduated cultured pearls at
only $24.50
and an _ exceptional

Below)==_—

from

Center.

off the “Cool”
You can become

if they
*
*
The favorite gift
the groom is the
loom strand
of

winner;

medicines

miss

Tomor-

members

great

especially

11
year
winner
12 year winner.

*+(Author’s

School

Don’t

My
favorite
safety
slogan:
“Watch out for school children—

“THE GREATEST DIFFICULTIES
LIE WHERE WE ARE NOT
LOOKING FOR THEM”
wees

and
cele-

Recreation
A

their
and

also

*
the High

Union

To start
program.

a member

Glassman

RS

Awards

at the

dates.

guests.
summer

34

Children’s winning entries were:
Allen Rosenblum, 5 year class;
Jane
Paradise,
7
year
winner;

Sevfam-

JOHN

IN BLUE’!!!

Arrangements winners were:
F. M.
Yager,
best of arrangements with “Greetings;” Mrs. Irma

their

*

For

alumni...

best climber.

J. Belmont,
M, Fischer,

and

PATTY WINEMAN who
brate this coming week.

Sandel, “The Queen in White;” W.
J. Buckroeder, “Vanity Fair;” J.

Nations

who celebrate
and
to
JIM

*

F.

United

*
*
cs
Our warm wedding anniversary
congratulations to:
HELEN
and

Winners

Harlen

the

ilies are here at the Moraine Hotel
attending the Oliver International
Convention. They say they like our
town.

“CONFIDENTIAL”

ar-

like

in Highland Park this week.
eral hundred men and their

C. J. Sandel took best hybrid tea
rose; Dr. Albert H. Slepyan, best
and

= \

with paul leeds

rangements, added greatly to the
beauty of the show and the many
entries showed the interest people
have in making
and viewing
arrangements.
Arrangement

KEEPING
TIME

...« the New

609-611

Central Ave.,

Highland

Park

ID 2-8700

491

Central,

Highland

Park

Also available at: THE PERSHING SMART SHOP, 4818-4820 N. Western Ave., Chicago
Page

7

�Teen Jam Session Starts Tuesday Night

TRY GIVING

(Continued

PHOTO

LEMON - “AID”

COPIES

AND

Using

PLIABLE PLASTIC
LAMINATING

SPRING FRESH

WATER

OF YOUR
IMPORTANT PAPERS
Powell’s Camera Mart

Sparkling Mineral Water
NN1629 Park Ave., W. IDlewood 2-0042

589

reared

| ID

z do

==|

from

page

atre,

6)

Fell and Harold Newmann are new
members
elected
to serve
along
with Harry Knoll and Paul Leeds,
who continue on the board.
On the committee from the high
school are William Keogh, William
Bachle, Judy Tondi, James Pollak,
Jeffery
Leckie,
Burton
Ruder,
:|Thomas
Stone,
James
Gray
and
=| Grant Abrahams, who do the planning for the committee.
Student activity funds buy Ravinia Festival tickets at the regular price, then offer them for $1
each to students. They are sold at
Leed’s Jewelry Store. Because of
the many
benefits scheduled
for
Tenthouse Theatre and peu. _TheEE
TG TA WAT

The

HT

present with a future, a U. S

Savings Bond.

the

only

tickets

there

allowance

this

year

given

will

be

on Monday nights (if all seats are
not sold). Then students may purchase the regular $3.50 tickets for

$1.75.
Student

The

Union

Formed

have

planned

students

their

jam sessions so they will not conflict with Fridays, when the Student Union, another organization,
has arranged
a series of dances.
Student
Union,
a canteen
sponsored by the Highland Park Jay-

cees, also is at the Recreation

Cen-

ter. The Union is featuring a dance
tomorrow night called, ‘‘Fantasy in
Blue,”
a
semi-formal,
with
no
stags allowed. Only members can
attend
Student
Union
dances
(memberships can be purchased at
the door) whereas Student Activ-

*l ities
open

Committee

jam

sessions

to all teens.

MON

by

July

4

at

8:30-9:00

TG.O

MIE

R

Ns:

WA

tion.

Independence

A

parade

order

led

Day

by

celebra-

the

Fifth

child’s buggy.

events

a

carnival,

works

Air Conditioner

At

The

Park

barbeque

chicken

din-

Michael G. Kadens, son of Mr.
and Mrs. M. J. Kadens, 419 Sheri
dan Rd., was graduated this month!
from Stanford University school o:
law, Palo Alto, California,
Kadens
was
a member
of the
school’s Law Review staff in hi

BUY WARDS PORTOCOLD

first year at Stanford

and later be

came revision editor of the publi
cation. He graduated from the Uni
versity of Michigan in 1956 where
he was a member of Zeta Beta Ta
fraternity.

Cools, circulates, filters, dehumidifies!
Has exclusive truly automatic “Dual Stat’’
Lightweight; move easily from room to room
Installs in minutes, with a screwdriver!

DISCOUNTS
20% to 40%

Just select the weather you want, then forget it...
Wards Portocold with exclusive “Dual Stat’’ keeps it

Lamps

It's the only 100% automatic

air conditioner, yet it costs much less.

and

Stanford Graduates
Michael Kadens in Law

AND IT COSTS
FAR LESS!

that way automatically!

show

Chamber of Commerce, V.F.W. and
the North Shore Yacht Club.

1-HP; $5 Down

e
e
e
e

boat

ners will be prepared over charcoal
and sold by Jaycees in Sunset Park.
Among
groups
sponsoring
the
day’s festivities
are the Jaycees,

a oO

100% Automatic

194"

for

display.

Dinner

SED

scheduled

day are a water fight between
Jaycees
and the fire depart-

Delicious

bands

in

Army Band will form at the flagpole at 9:30 a.m., and will include
floats and marchers from various
organizations of the city.

the
the

ROOF;

ROSE

Criss-cross

am.

all activities associated with an oldfashion

fire

DOUBLE
PLAY
by
warner’s®

the

crowded highways.
Program for the day will include

ment,

ROSBY

and

4 festivities so that North Shore
residents may elect to keep off the

Additional

&amp;

ROSBY

Jaycees

that the parade can get off on time.
Combined
service
organizations
of the city are sponsoring the July

and

ROSBY

ROSE

Park

Prizes will be given for the best
floats and there will be awards for
the best decorated bicycle, tricycle

DS.

WAR

Endorsed

RUTH

are

Highland

Highland Park Chamber
of Commerce wish again to remind all organizations
and
business
groups
planning floats for the Highland
Park Day parade to register them
early and to be ready to assemble

Awards

Personally

RUTH

on

Jaycees Announce
Plans For July 4

&amp; Shades

RAVINIA

So, order today!

Lamp

Studio

465 Roger
IDlewood

put

Williams
2-9360

Sex

the

on

tummy

bulge!

First girdle ever so laughter-light, so greatly
pound defying (hidden criss-cross bands in front
hide the truth about tummy bulge)! Double Play
is a combination of lightweight elastic and firm
control—and how you’ll love it. Be fitted here, today.
In power net with satin elastic front and back.
Average

length

with

2” Sta-Up-Top®.
Matching

OTHER

WARNER

1835
Page

SECOND
8

‘ST.

FROM

WILSON

Bob

Girdle

$8.95

FROM

$3.95

ANN

ROSBY'S
ACROSS

GLADYS

$8.95

GIRDLES

SUBURBAN

JUUL

slimming

White.

Pantie

DOROTHY

We
Are

1854

FASHIONS
THE

H.P.

JEWEL

ID

2-0788

CHORBAJIAN

MARGARET

AIR CONDITIONED
First St.

SCHULTZ

for

your

comfort:
Highland

ID 2-8830

Park

Denzel

HIGHLAND PARK
FUEL CO.
Fuel

Oil

and

Gasoline
24 Hour

Service

ID 2-3700
Thursday, June 25, 1959

�H

7

'
i

‘¢

|

‘*

1

4

\

R
e

Plankinton

Cooked,

Ready-to-Eat

SMOKED HAMS
FRESH,

Has tb. 5c

TENDER

Chicken Livers Ib. 79c}
PLANKINGTON

BACON

1-Ib. pkg. 49c

MAXWELL

Betty Crocker
Angel Food

HOUSE

Penn.

Dutch

2 “ns 69c

Pieces &amp;

MUSHROOMS

LIQUID VEL... can cm 59¢

WATCH

FOR.

FROZEN

FOODS

PET

RITZ

APPLE

OR

CHERRY

PIES

mee

LEMONADE ....... 3. cans 29¢
BIRDS

EYE

ORANGE JUICE 2 cas 45¢

|

Pe. 2OC

99.

6-OZ.
JAR

Custard

PAPER NAPKINS 2% 25¢_
“fahey PRODUCE
EXTRA

FANCY

FANCY

CALIFORNIA

BLUEBERRIES

rn nox 390
;

RED SWEET PLUMS
EXTRA

Lb. 19c

10 %69c

FANCY

WATERMELONS .....- om 5e.

SUNKIST ORANGES = 29

CALIFORNIA

FANCY

TUBE TOMATOES ..=» 19¢.

6 m=. 49c
e. 23¢

PILLSBURY FLOUR... 2 A9c
beni

DEL MONTE CATSUP 2‘ 39c
_ Thursday, June 25, 1959

Ry.

8-02.

RED POTATOES

2 c=: 27¢ TV DINNERS... vine: 59¢

T.N.
T.
sil
ie

i”

SOFLIN

4 i: $1.00

Cashmere Bouquet 4 = 36c
SUHHTANEAHERAEAGUESEEN HEUER
=
=

ita

Stems

PINK

AJAX CLEANSER

'

al

Paste FREE

Lemon

ae
:

COREE? on. 2% 99¢ CAKE MIX
NESTLE QUICK *™&lt;s" 89¢ CARNATION MILK 7: $1.00
|.

Palmolive Soap 2 °"'s«= 26c

pare JELLY

Hunt Tomato

KRAFT SPAGHETTI DINNER
KELLOGG CORN FLAKES

Lk

APPLE SAUCE

NORWOOD

GELATIN DESSERT

Can

éS INSTANT COFFEE

Globe

BUTT END

RR.

tte Me

1

i

f

‘

:

Our war ehouse is overstocked. It's your gain
... Hundreds of items marked at cost or below
cost... Buy and save .. . Stock your
freezer and pantry. Here’s a checklist.

\

KS

—(L

; 4
SHO

\

‘

¢

,a,

We

pes:

:

by

ore

tp: GREEN BAY ROAD

—_. A CENTRAL FOOD STORE

“Friday Night Is Fam ily Night At Sunset — Open till 9 PM,

“PLENTY

OF FREE PARKING — ALWAYS!

j

�1130 Gas Heat

Fuel Oil, Gas Bids ;

Accepted By Board
Of School Dist. 113

Permits Released
North

38
;SOYiorashes
wx alli

4

:

re

er

Hat

Ahan st

Members
of
Township
High
School District 113 board of education voted Monday night to accept
a bid from Sinclair Refining Co.
for fuel oil and gas for the coming
year.
They
accepted
a coal
bid
from Menoni-Mocogni.

Pas

£ tats
fet
inh t

Pk

on

ree

hago

dential

gas

Gas

Company

releasing
heat

1150

permits

an-

resinext

authorizing gas heat-

ing installations will be mailed out
Tuesday, according to C. J. Skidmore, district manager.

This release, the second one this
year by North Shore Gas, has been
made possible by the expansion of
underground
storage
facilities at
Herscher, Ill. The new release will
bring to 3450 the number of gas
house heating permits distributed
by the company this year.

Members
okayed
the hiring of
Charles Goodroad as custodian and
part-time bus driver, Ovidio Nerini
as watchman
and Gregory Blackstone
as
accountant.
Blackstone,
scheduled to start July 1, will direct the operation
of new _ bookkeeping machines in the new administration building.
When members meet in the new
board room of the administration

ene

it is

week. Letters

The
board
deferred
action
on
whether
to
extend
the _ liability
limitations of the School District
beyond the present $2,500,000. It
approved
a motion
that
student
group
insurance
again
be
made
available to students who wish to
purchase it.

ey i's
+g Pe hee
Che if ays atte: »

Shore

nounces

building, they’ll be walking on the
same rug, They have arranged to
move the present carpet to the new
and larger room, turn it sideways,
and fill in additional space with asphalt tile. The budget to equip the
administration
building has been
cut from $12,000 to $9,000, accord-

ing

to

board

Mrs.

James

M.

Tibbetts,

president.

‘he

THE

because

factory-trained

mechanics—specializing

in foreign

IS
A

meeting

shop

means

fast

service!

latest equipment at hand, we can speed
save you needless waiting time.
_ because a

With

We

the

ila

EDENS

ALSO

...

magnificent

out-

HOTEL
PARK,

ILL.

Pat Miller, Genera! Mgr.
SKOKIE HIGHWAY-LAKE COOK
EDENS , EXPRESSWAY

ROAD

have

Consider What We
Have To Offer...

If possible, please phone for an appointment!

AT

rooms

VErnon 5-4000
,
|

NM

HIGHLAND

in soon for a check-up . . . and any time you need repairs!

STOP

call

THE

a complete stock of parts for all makes of foreign cars.

Come

conference

the Fountain Room... cocktails at the Highland Fling ...
Highland Park Music Theatre... 100 spacious air conditioned
rooms and suites. FREE PARKING

up a job...

large stock of parts insures complete service!

and

OPEN

and

door and indoor swimming ‘pools .. . dining in the splendor of

For information

fully-equipped

NOW

New Concept in Hotel Vacation
Business Accommodations

5 private

ia

a

NEW

SilaNodene S78

cars

—give you expert service! We have men like Bob Emmerich—widely known as one of the top foreign-car mechanics
in the Chicago area—waiting to help you. And, of course,
“ie Edens mechanic is trained for work on all makes of
.S. cars.
because

EXCITING

for

the

1. Friendly, personalized service.

newest Larks and Lancias...and

2. Effective July 1st, all savings earn 314%.*

an outstanding selection of used

3 . Save-By-Mail

MGs, Jaguars, Austin-Healeys,
Karmann Ghias, Mercedes-Benz

5. Home

...all priced to sell!

6

4 - Modern,

—

We pay all postage.

up-to-date mortgage

Improvement

plan.

Loans.

Purchase and redemption

of U.S. Savings

Bonds.
7. Traveler’s
*Free

On Skokie between Clavey and Deerfield Rds.

‘IDlewood 3-2222

Gift for New

OFFICE

BRoadway 4-5555

checks.

HOURS:

Accounts—Limited

Time,

»«

9 a.m.

to 4 p.m.—Mon.,

Tues.,

9 a.m.

to 12 noon—Wed.,

Thurs.,

Fri.

Sat.

LAKE FOREST SAVINGS
and
ARTHUR

HOWARD
WEINER

STUART
PEROM

600

N.

LOAN

ASSOCIATION
Lake

Western

Accounts

Insured

to

Forest

4200

$10,000.00
Thursday, June 25, 1959

�Young People From Highwood Center
Will Visit Riverview Park Tomorrow

Italian Women’s

The first field trip of the summer to Chicago’s Riverview
Park will take place tomorrow for youngsters taking part in
the Highwood Community Center summer recreational program. Young poeple may sign up today for the trip.
A special

ter

at

bus

11:30

will leave

am.

the Cen-

Friday

for

Chi-

Wednesday evening during summer
months.
The films get underway
at dark.

cago. Those going on the field trip
are asked to take their lunch which
will be eaten at the park before
the afternoon rides and other activities.

The
cal

following

boys

and

*

have

an

op-

portunity to travel to Wrigley Field
to see the San Francisco
tle the Chicago Cubs.
*

*

SBS
3S
SBS

through

|

13-year-old

by

members

of

tle

Guys

as

“the

Basketball.”

home

The

of Lit-

entry

drew many rounds of applause as
it wound its way 10 miles before
100,000 spectators.
The next float to be constructed

*

now

may

Panels

s

east

Market Square

ye

call

COAST TO COAST

WHEN ITs
TIME TO ACT

ve 5-3555

glencoe

Mon. Appts. Available |

STORES

Lake Forest 3998

~Na
ai

i Wy

lot

Some
speeded

MORETTI

¢

things

tT

just

CoO.

can’t

be

up .. . but the sale

of your property can. List with
Viking Realty Co. for fast,
efficient

Buy Direct from the
Manufacturer and Save!

action.

Call

WI

5-

5300.

HUTTER
HOUSE
7600 Greenwood Ave., Chicago
Samples shown in
your Home.

7?
7

RA 3-3632 §
CR 2-5541

PHONE:

*

parking

TONY

iit

LIST -BUY-SELL

* Room Dividers
¢ Fret Work

4
Outdoor movies are held in the| ¥

Center’s

Evening

hair styles &amp; colors

pogTy

Power Mower Exchange
Highest Trade-In Allowances

——,

Louvre Doors
¢ Screens

%

take

Monday and Wednesday afternoon.
A bus leaves the Center at 12:30
p.m. for the pool.
*

,

A

MIKE MORETTI

aR

¢ Shoji
¢

part in supervised swimming each | ¢

*

meeting.

IW

ti £3 Rete).
Saturday

will follow.

BS

LUE

Shutters

*

youngsters

AS ADVERTISED

LUE

‘

Vertical

parade,
Local

social hour

business

Rea

¢

by the Center will be one entered a
July 4 in the Highland Park Day | J
*

at the

Mrs.

bt

the|€

of Sportsmanship,” the float depict-

UV UENEEAAL

*

Center’s summer recreation staff.
Built around the theme, “100 Years
Highwood

preside

Center.

club president, will

|

AO proceale

of:

i

TUTAUUUL EEE
HUEAEUGUELUVGEDUEANOHIEE

*

Entered in last weekend’s Cen-| 7
tennial parade in Waukegan was a
gaily decorated float, constructed | ¢

ed

Community

Makers

age

summer staff to learn about the
eight-week program for girls. Ac-|)
tivities are under the direction of | }
Miss Jenny Dubach.

staffed

Highwood

Philip Pasquesi,

By

for girls in

day from 9 a.m. until noon, and 1|@
p.m. until 4 p.m. Girls and parents | §
are urged to contact the Center’s|¥

and

Johnson-Evinrude

Z

group will be conducted each week |

*

The Italian Women’s Prosperity
Club meets today at 8 p.m. at the

*

A full day’s program
nine

LAWN-BOY

Giants bat-

Highwood
Community
Center’s
summer program moves into full
swing this week as registration for.|
offered programs is completed.
the

*

There will be an informal dance
for high school students at the center tomorrow from 9 through 11:30
p.m,

Friday, July 3, 1lo-

girls will

*

Prosperity

Club Meets At Center Tonight

Former ly Crestwood

each

826

DEERFIELD Koa

DEERFIELD,

Pro ducts

{a aL

@AY

AL
and

JANES
FREE

Ball

Point

Pen

order of $10

with

or more!

OLD CLASSIC

IMPORTED

VERMOUTHS

BOURBON

Sweet or Dry
Large
Bottle

Hannah &amp; Hoag

Popular 8-Yr.-Old

GIN

BOURBON

$939

90 Proof
Full Qt.

$349

Bottled in Bond

AL &amp; JANES Cut-Rate LIQUORS
OUR

406 GREEN

PRICES

BAY

ARE

ALWAYS

ROAD

LOW

—

VISIT

OUR

MIKE’ $
SHOE STORE

SELF-SERVICE

DEPT.

HIGHWOOD

Orthopedic

Shoes
Our

41

HIGHWOOD

AVE.,

and

Prescription

Specialty

HIGHWOOD

Free Parking

Work

ID 2-5293

|

in Rear of Store
Fae

Thursday,

June

25, 1959

Page 11 a
a
ee

x

©

ae

�Two In A. Goldfarbs’

O.K. To Swim

Family Get Degrees

Park District

Two
this

graduates
month

is

in

their

keeping

family

busy

Gives Beach

the

Alger Goldfarbs of 177 Indian Tree
Dr. Their daughter, Mrs. Suzanne
Klemperer

for the BEST

received

her

Information

de-

gree from the school of speech and

in Flowers!
KARL

Kaatz

audiology

at Northwestern

sity.

Kaatz

Mrs.

in the

BAHR

RUTH

Chicago

is

an

publie

Univer-

The

audiologist

received his
of business,

“These

degree in the school
Lake Forest College,

is in training

with

a La

Salle

St.

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

chose

a typical

conditions

day

2-1099.

prevail at the

bathing beaches in Highland Park
today. The air temperature is 80
degrees; the water temperature is
66 degrees. The water is calm and
clear. The beaches are open from
10 a.m. to 3 p.m.

firm.

tion your

NEWS

this week
and dialed ID
This recording was heard:

schools.

Their son, Ralph Klemperer, who

BAHR

Today?

This

service

Highland

place.

on

Park

conditions

beaches

is

at

avail-

able
to any
resident
who
dials
ID
2-1099.
The
recordings
are
changed as temperature and wave
conditions
change.
Car

MARTHA

ORSINI

Come

to

CLARE

COHEN

Needed

To

Park

Park District of Highland Park
officials announced this week that
all applications received for beach
decals and swim tokens have been

Tntonitny

BAHR’S

Decals

* suburban

processed. Parking on beach areas
now is prohibited except for cars
with decals; all swimmers and sun
bathers must have tokens, or have

Bahr’s have

had years of experience

in formulating

plans

for

wedding flowers and would like very much to help make yours
a beautiful, wonderful

Come

in or Phone

for an Appointment.

RGF RR

AB ASAI RATA

PRAT

RARER ER EREROR SE Re

eae

SRPTREL IEEE LAREN
ARRER

eARA

UPTOWN
INTERIORS!

Assistance To Elderly People

New Community Service Plan

It’s a fact . . . many of the

Laurel Ave., Highland Park

653
REVSB

one.

She’s Lovely, She’s
Engaged, She’s
Registered with

been admitted to beach area with
guest privileges or have paid daily
swim fee.
Applications still are being accepted at the Park District office
in Sunset
Park.
They
may
be
filled out in person or mailed.

ie

Lasiiet

ID 2-3420

North
Shore’s
brides-to-be
use

é#
B

e

Two
Highland
Parkers,
John
Friedlich of 1442 Waverly Rd. and
Seymour N. Logan of 125 Indian

loveliest
our
free

Bridal

Registry Service.

They

know

our

good

taste,

wide

Tree Dr. are members

impeccable

of
decorative
accessories,
china and glass and full exchange privileges eliminate

SPECIAL INTRODUCTORY OFFER!

most

wedding

gift problems.

Then too, since we won't be
at the wedding, we've a

the JFMC.

small gift waiting for each
bride together with our best
‘wishes and warmest congratulations.

1888

Sheridan

Measure

Of Independence

According to President Maynard
Wishner, program is designed for
people who are well enough to care
for
themselves
but
not.
strong enough
to
maintain
their
own

Road

Highland Park
ID 3-0300

Convertible

of the board

of directors of Jewish Federation
of Metropolitan
Chicago
that
is
launching a Private Residence Program
aimed
at assisting
elderly
people. It is a project sponsored by
Family
and
Community
Service,
one of the 12 affiliate agencies of

selections

household;
individuals
who
live
apart from their children but prefer

Delightfully Air Conditioned

living

with

a

family

rather

than

S
. Cash,
items

. United

balances with
in process of

States

other banks,
collection

Government

ETS
including reserve

obligations,

direct

and

balances,

guaranteed

. Loans and discounts (including $5,518.28 overdrafts)
. Equity in bank premises and adjacent owned $24,815.90,
fixtures $14,731.39
Other
assets

. TOTAL

and

cash
499,578.44

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

furniture

3,086,975.94
1,277,054.01

and
39,547.29
5,939.39

ASSETS

$ 4,909,095.07

LIABILITIES
- Demand deposits of individuals, partnerships, and corporations. ............
. Time deposits of individuals, partnerships, and corporations .................-

. Deposits

of United

. TOTAL

DEPOSITS

. Other

A CLEANER AS NEW
AS TOMORROW!
This

new

Hoover

. TOTAL
.
.
.
.

has that famous

“Beats,

as it Sweeps, as it Cleans’ cleaning principle PLUS 50%
more power for the attachments.

HIGHWOOD
RADIO
&amp; APPLIANCE CO.
Ample Free Parking Always

2631
Page

12

Waukegan

States

Government

(including

postal

. Deposits of States and political subdivisions .........
. Other deposits (certified and officers’ checks, etc.)

SS

Ave.,

H. P.

........

435.87

381,796.27
38,132.34

$ 4,557,999.19

liabilities

61,454.60

$ 4,619,453.79

LIABILITIES

Capital (par value
Surplus
Undivided profits
Reserves

per

. TOTAL

CAPITAL

- TOTAL

LIABILITIES

share

CAPITAL

$100.00)

ACCOUNTS

50,000.00
100,000.00
14,641.28
125,000.00

ACCOUNTS
AND

CAPITAL

289,641.28
ACCOUNTS.

2.00...

$ 4,909,095.07

MEMORANDA
. Assets pledged or assigned to secure liabilities and for other purposes ....
30,000.00
. (a) Loans as shown above are after deduction of reserves of ................
10,019.43
I, Floyd D. Stanger, Assistant Cashier, of the above-named bank, do solemnly swear
that the above statement is true, and that it fully and correctly represents the true state
of the several matters herein contained and set forth, to the best of my knowledge and
belief.
Correct—Attest:
FLOYD es STANGER
ROBER A
igae®
) Directors.

ROBERT

Open: Monday and Friday 7-9 P.M.

ID 2-6260

savings)

2,854,382.89
1,275,251.82

(SEAL)
SEAL

S. ALEXANDER)

State of Illinois, County of Lake, ss:
Sworn to and subscribed before me this 20th
day of June, 1959.
ELEANOR L. ALTMAN, Notary Public
My commission expires Jan. 18, 1962
6/25 /59—179

Thursday,

June

25, 1959

,

�First Local Scout Executive To Attend

July 4 Camp Ma-Ka-Ja-Wan Dedication
Walter
MacPeek,

first Scout Executive of the North

Area Council, will participate July 4 in the Camp
Wan dedication ceremony.

As

Seen

On

The

Shore

Ma-Ka-Ja-

MacPeek, who served the local
area in 1928-29, currently is staff
editor of the editorial service of
the National Council, Boy Scouts
of America, at New Brunswick, N.J.
He writes articles and edits material
for
“Scouting,”
the
BSA
monthly magazine for all Scouters;
and the “Boy Scout Program Quarterly,”
which
contains
program
helps
for leaders
of Boy
Scout
troops.
Editor MacPeek has a special interest in the coming dedication ceremonies because he was instrumental in locating and purchasing the
land for the Camp and in developing the early plans for construction.
The ceremonies July 4 mark the
completion of the enlarged and improved
camping
facility,
making
Camp
Ma-Ka-Ja-Wan
one of the
largest of its type in the Middle
West
with its 16 separate
troop
camp sites, five of which have cabin accommodations, while the others have two-boy tents with platforms.

Electronics Has Solved This Annoying Problem!

Protection
Throughout
The Years!
Walter

Serving

1820

Highland

Park

Since

prone

er

Not

@

Completely

A

Dust

New,

Simple,

Effective

®

641

a

For FREE
ON

Nothing Else To Buy—
$69.95 full price

EXCLUSIVE

DISTRIBUTOR

DEERFIELD

ROAD,

DEMONSTRATION

YOUR

OWN

PATIO....

DEERFIELD

Call WI 5-0298|

1900

2nd St., near the Jewel
Phone ID 2-0636

DON’T

x

Fo

®

DEERFIELD LAWN &amp; GARDEN SPOT

OMITTY’S
BARBER
SHOP

Mr. and Mrs. Edgar C. Benson,
110 Pleasant Ave., Highwood, announce
the birth
June
14° of a
grandson,
Edgar
Charles
III. He
was born to the junior Edgar C.
Bensons
of Dover, Del. Maternal
grandparents are Captain and Mrs.
Leo Pagitt, also of Dover.

Not A Spray

MacPeek

Hair Cuts of Distinction

E. C. Bensons Announce Birth
Of Grandson, Edgar Charles Ill

@

MISS

BISHOP'S

FAVORITE SPQRT.MEMOS

BS

. New—thin—low—Deluxe

By ED GREENWALD
Speaking of sportsmanship always brings to mind the great yachtsman,
Sir Thomas Lipton. In looking up the records on this event, I find that
in 1850 a group of New York yachtsmen bought the “America” and sent
it abroad to compete. . . It defeated 14 English boats and brought the

trophy

back

“American

to America

Cup”...

where

ever since

Sir Thomas

Lipton

the race has

brought

been

his famed

called

the

“Shamrocks”

FRED

to this country to compete unsuccessfully on five different occasions.
*
Longest

1920

game

he

.

50 minutes

of play

*

played

game

in Major

was

.. . Score

GREENWALD’S,

1775

%

*

Leagues

was

called
was

for

26

darkness

Brooklyn—1;

SECOND

innings

after

3

on

May

hours

BISHOP

Big cooling capacity—
luxurious appearance—
at this new low cost!

I,

and

Boston—I.

STREET

—

ID 2-1100
Automatic air conditioning at its best! Cools, filters,
circulates air . . . directs it as you wish... all with easy
pushbutton controls. Compact, not just thin—lets in
light as it keeps out heat, dust, noise. Limited offer.

tobewt
CHUCK

ROBINSON

We Are Open To Serve You With

|

COMPLETE INTERIOR

DECORATING SERVICE
One of the largest selections of new decorative
fabrics in rich new textures and patterns, all moderately priced. Choose now!
We

Custom

Make
— With

¢ Draperies
© Slip Covers
© Bedspreads

Custom

® Upholstering

© Matchstick
© Cafe

Furniture
— Carpets

Draperies

Curtains

June

25,

1959

LEHR

1741

Second

BILL

LOOMIS

BISHOP'S

HEATING

of All Qualities

STOP IN or CALL for APPOINTMENT
890 Linden Ave., Hubbard Woods
ID 2-3430
Thursday,

HERMAN

Expert Workmanship

&amp; AIR CONDITIONING

St., Highland

Park

ENGINEERS

“MAC”

McCHESNEY

.. .

Phone:

ID 2-0407
Page

13

J

�lds ddr NV)

\

lls

La

YU

Our Factory Sale last week was a big

Daniel

couldn’t get in we

ey

tory Authorized Specials.

To those who

offer another

oppor-

tunity to SAVE . . . and get a FREE Has-

BOB

sock Sewing set in the bargain.
if you can’t stop in!

ARENDS

Call us,

~ HUGH JOHNSON

SUPERNOVA

BF

LOLOL

fote|S

(hth Vishildn

fff fp fed
fp

SLA

AT NO. EXTRA COST

@
@
@
@

Push-button
Push-button
Push-button
Many other

forward and reverse
drop feed
bar tacking
exclusive features

BOTH FOR ONLY
$

ie

ot

a

j

a)"

as

Ly LLL

AA

17 at
chris-

tened Sunday at St. James Church.
A party was given afterwards by
the maternal

Mrs.

grandparents,

Frank

Silverstrini,

Mr.

and

330 Green

Bay Rd.
Paternal
grandparents
are
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Alfonso
Picchietti,
991
Deerfield Rd. Godparents are Miss
John

Peradotti,

Rd. Daniel
3l4.

has

a

330

Green

sister,

Bay

Pamela,

The major portion of the ne
stairway
at Rosewood
Beach
ig
eompleted,
according
to
David
Fritz, superintendent of the Park
District of Highland Park. “Further
landscaping
will
be
carried
ou
during
the
year,’
he
told
the

NEWS.
About 36 tons of limestone slabs
were put into place to make the
stairway.
New

On

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

begun

cess

Parking

Friday
to

r

3

Mee

figHs,

k

©:
Bhs

ba

As little as $1.25 a week
©} Beautiful

ACT NOW!

Hassock
Opens
For

For Limited Time Only!

Storage

to

ME
Witt:(ldttdde ZL Ushhtbhb tigi

stand

Ripper

vA

Seam

ot

car

the

was

Ave.,

ac

parking

lo

Mrs. Quinlan
Is Entertained
Before Moving

Marty Shapiro

CAR WASHES
ROGER

Highland

WILLIAMS

SERVICE

at a lawn party in honor o

Mrs.
Sterling Quinlan,
versity Ave., and Mrs.
Paine, Long Grove, III.
The
Quinlan
family

STATION

dency
Paine
home.

Park

Mrs.

Pottker’s

Mesdames

535

Roger
ID

Form

V®ISY SY Sf

Dress

Y

VA

is

leaving

Chicago

resi

Mrs, Ha
the Quinlay

guests

include

Goldman,

Leonarg

John Ab

bott, Julian Graff, Herman Rito
Carl Greyson, Randall Kent, Fred
erick Kasper,
John Haugan, Franci

2-9815

Cities

3226 Uni
Harry
A

Barclay,

Paul

Miller, George

Williams

for

and
Mr.
and
are moving into

O’Connor,

Service

Warren

Zellmer,

Edwit

Hansbrough, Samuel Somenzi, Wi
liam Lynch and Miss Betty Karge

it’s
time

for
our
famous

oA LE

| Skirt marker
with

work

Carey

planned at water level at Rosewood
Beach. Target date for completio
of entire
project
is Aug.
1, a
which
time it is expected
there
will be room for 100 cars in the
parking area,

“The Time Is
j

Area

excavation

improve

road

ernoon

Valued At

Lf

Highwood, on May
Park Hospital, was

Limestone Used
For Beach Stairs

Mrs. Ralph Pottker, 3240 Unive
sity Ave., entertained Thursday aft

Accessories.

04

to

3

VLMIPLLELIEA fs

JA fff

born

Ed]

“Wanted
Sewing

NOW”

Yy Ls

during which we traditionally offer
Tracing

Paper

Tracing

Wheel

| Thread

e:

¥

Sewing

Pd

VA

i

OELLLLLLLE

PUSH-BUTTON

ton Ave.,
Highland

and

ECCHI

Automatic

YH

Measuring

ZzYELL

Picchietti,

Stella Picchietti, 991 Deerfield Rd.,

EVERY’ SEWING ITEM YOU'LL

‘ti
SJ

Joseph

the Dante Picchiettis, 317 Washing-

success thanks to those who were able
to get in and take advantage of the Fac-

\

Thirty-Six Tons

Birth And Christening Of
Daniel Picchietti Announced

Cutting

&lt;_&lt; mas

Board

EE

Foot

Thimble

. oodles

Tape

Book

Measure

2.5%

ON EVERYTHING IN THE SHOP!

ay

‘
Razor

Knife

ARENDS

battataaieh

CIRCLE

PLL

VIIIAI7

Page

14

7

I

MY MOI

(4 Doors

East of Green

Bay

4

fs

\

No Credits

Honored,

1888 Sheridan Road, Highland Park
SSAA

Ss

VE

as

SSASASS

No

Deliveries.

ALL SALES FINAL.

Road)
Off

The Event you’ve waited for! EVERYTHING—but everything in the shop. . . house gifts, accessories, interior inspirations and wall-decor all at savings of 25%! Now’s the time to
acquire those smart decorator touches for your home... to
pick up tasteful gifts at exciting savings. SALE RUNS THURSDAY, JULY 23 THROUGH AUG. 1 — DON’T MISS IT!
Cash and Carry Only.

SEWING MACHINE CO.
662 CENTRAL AVE.

OFF

SAS

YY

ID 3-0300

9 eff
af aff of y

Thursday, June 25, 1959

�Second High School Will Look Like This!
of Shirts

3,750,234

A man with an adding machine and nothing better to do once
figured out that there are 3,750,234 different possible combinations
of men’s

shirts—sizes,

colors, collar types

think, therefore, that it would

You’d

&amp;

patterns.

be pretty difficult for a

:

men’s store to carry a stock of shirts that would meet the requireBut we've

ments &amp; satisfy the tastes of the men in its community.
learned how to do it—with an inventory of considerably less than
3,750,234. The secret is to carry the best lines, study the pref-

erences

Above is architect’s drawing of the new high school for
Township High School District 113. The school is being constructed on an 80-acre site on North Waukegan Rd. in Bannockburn (in the Deerfield Elementary School District); site

adjoins the western boundary
pictures

the

wooded

land

and

of Highland
landscaping

Park.

The

sketch

surrounding

the

building sites, the wide road approaches and the parking areas
which immediately will provide room for 200 cars.
A bond issue of $4,250,000 for the
second high school in the district
was approved by voters in election

held

May

17, 1958. Loebl,

In anticipation of a possible steel
strike, contracts for all structural
and reinforcing steel have been let
with
deliveries
scheduled
before
next Wednesday (July 1).

breaking

(Continued

on page

35)

Schloss-

man and Bennett is architectural
firm. General contractors are Joseph J. Duffy Company of Chicago.
Construction calls for substantial
completion for September, 1960.

Ground

pleted and concrete is being poured
for foundations in the initial phase

We

of construction.
Water
lines
for
fire protection and daily school use
now are being installed from Highland Park mains in Ridge Rd. Sewerage disposal lines also have been
installed, connecting
school plant
with North Shore Sanitary District.
Initial Construction
Initial construction, according to
a report from the board of education, Township
High
School
Dis-

know

of your customers,

carry top makes
color.

&amp;

fit, style

Come

their sizes

&amp;

in

look

order accordingly.

by their

you'll be pleased

guarantee

&amp;

&amp;

them

over.

take

your

Highland

Park

And

time—we want you to be happy with anything you buy.

Cobey’s

478

Central

(Open Friday Nites)
ANON REE a Re
i Bes
Pe

NO

I

WHY GO TO THE NORTH WOODS WHEN YOU CAN
ENJOY THESE VIEWS IN THE LUXURY OF YOUR OWN HOME?

ceremonies

were held June 16 (see photograph,
page 5). Site clearing is being com-

ravine, this house has every detail for luxurious modern living:
a lower level panelled family room with sliding doors leading to a crab orchard patio; master bedroom with
Built

RT
FACTORY WRITTEN
GUARANTEE

:

dressing

into

the

room;

all

FOR THE LIFETIME
OF YOUR CAR
GOOD

side of a magnificent

Thermopane
You

AT MIDAS MUFFLER
SHOPS FROM
COAST-TO-COAST

name

windows;
it, this

electric
flexible

“snow

melt”

4-bedroom,

under

3-bath

driveway.

home

has it!

to see.

Call us for details and appointment

ID 2-6600

457 CENTRAL AVE., H.P.
We

Sell Real

w/e
MIDAS MUFFLER SHOP
1535 Belvidere, Waukegan
MAjestic 3-8395
Open Daily 8:30-6 p.m.
Friday—8:30 - 9 p.m.
Thursday,

June

25, 1959

“Your Doorway to
BETTER LIVING”

REALTY
COMPANY

on
Winnetka

Estate

the North

Office: 999

Anywhere
Shore

LINDEN

AVE.

HI 6-7274

Page

15

�Mostly for Women
Joyce Ward |s
Bride of Gerald
Fox, Westchester
_

Attends Convention

ments

Glenn

Miss
Sandra
Williams,
a Lawrence
College
classmate
of
the
bride, was soloist and Miss Helen

Engstrom

was

church was
Bladioli and

the

organist.

decorated with
pink carnations.

The
white

The bride wore a gown of white
silk organza with a Sabrina neckline and bouffant skirt, trimmed
with Alencon lace re-embroidered

with pearls and sequins. Her orange
blossom headpiece had a silk illusion
veil
and
her
flowers
were

white Fuji mums.
She

was

given

her father.
The flower

in

marriage

girl, Ardith

by

Ward,

a

cousin
of the bride, wore
white
organza and lace over pink, and
carried a white basket filled with

white mums and pink carnations.
The maid of honor, Miss Rosalie
Ann Ward, a sister of the bride,
was dressed in pastel turquoise silk
organza over taffeta with a bouffant skirt. She carried a bouquet
of pink sweetheart roses.
Miss Anita Hansen, a Kappa Alpha Theta Sorority sister of the
bride, and Miss Linda Ohlander, a
Lawrence College classmate, were
bridesmaids and wore gowns iden-

tical to that of the maid of honor.
They carried pink carnation bouquets.

The bride’s mother wore a gown
of blue silk organza trimmed with
Alencon lace and she had an orchid corsage. The groom’s mother
wore pink embroidered silk organza and also wore an orchid corsage.
Best
man
was
James
Fox,
a

cousin
were

of

the

Gary

Donald

groom,

Griffin,

Bischoff,

and

also

a

ushers

a

to allow for the few

people

who
were
away
on vacation and
could not get their reservations in
before the dead-line.

field.
Officiating were Dr. Paul J. Keland
the
Rev.
of the groom.

Mrs. Chester Kyle, 1425 Woodjand Drive, National Social Activities chairman of Sigma Sigma Sigma will join other national officers
and chairmen at the 25th National
Convention of Tri Sigma, June 27
to July 1, at the Chase-Park Plaza
Hotel, St. Louis.

AAUW

to Sponsor

Theater Benefit
The fellowship committee of the
Deerfield branch of the American
Association of University Women
will sponsor a benefit at the July
21 performance of Music Theater’s
production, “Pajama Game.” Vivian
Blaine stars in the musical.
Tickets may be obtained by calling Mrs. John
Ward,
WI
5-0264.
Mrs. Ward, of 1266 Linden, is committee
chairman,
Other
members
are
Mrs.
Allen
Root,
1051
Fair
Oaks, and Mrs. Lee Hershberger of
Highland Park.
Proceeds from the benefit will
go to the 70 international fellowships and grants awarded by AAUW
to any
qualified
women
for
advanced research and study. A sum
of $500,000 a year is given through
these grants and fellowships.

To

Be

Wed

Saturday

Miss Delores Elaine Ubl, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. George K. UbIl,

Members
and
guests may
also
look forward to a pleasant evening
in which to enjoy the gardens, for
long-range forecasts predict a clear,
moon-lit night.
The
regular June
meeting
has
been moved up to Tuesday at 12:30,
when a luncheon meeting will be
held at the Brierhill Rd. home of
Mrs. Frederick H. Heintz.

Joan White to Make
Debut Tonight At

Exmoor Country Club
Miss Joan S. White, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Edwin M. White, 2180
Wilmot
Road,
Bannockburn,
will
make her debut this evening at Exmoor
Country
Club
in Highland
Park.
Miss
White
and
a _ school
friend,
Miss
Nancy
Carstens
of
Lake Forest will bow together at a
supper dance. Miss Carstens is the
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Milton S.
Carstens of Lake Forest.
On Tuesday Miss White modeled
in
the
Annual
Ravinia
Fashion
Show, presented by the Women’s
Committee of Ravinia. The fashion
show featured debutantes modeling
clothes
suitable for wear
to Ravinia. Miss White
appeared
in a
dark brown and light brown striped
sun-back dress.
1103 Osterman Ave., and William
M. Crawford, son of the late Mr.
and
Mrs.
William
Crawford,
of
Golden, Colo., will be married Saturday afternoon at 4 at the Deerfield First Presbyterian Church.

DAR Meets at R. R. Wolfe Home

Northwestern

trip to Deis at home

Fox,

occurred

just

five

days after the wedding ceremony.
He was buried in Dubuque, Iowa,
on June 15. The bridegroom was an
only
child.
The
newly
married
couple will make their home with
his mother this summer.

Sails
Miss

erset

for

Europe

Anne

Ave.,

Bellamy,

sailed

from

1427

Som-

Montreal

last Friday aboard the RMS Carinthia. She is traveling with an Olson
Campus Tour and will visit Eng-

land,

Scotland,

Holland,

Belgium,

Germany,
Switzerland,
Italy,
France and Monaco, returning to
Deerfield in August.
Page

16

with

paintbrushes

and

bongo

Jacquelyn Borucki
And Alvin Nardini
Married Saturday
Miss Jacqueline Joyce Borucki,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Roman
Borucki, 3291 Half Day Rd., Lake
Forest, and Alvin V. Nardini, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Angelo Nardini,
Highland Park, were married Saturday afternoon at 2 at the Holy
Cross Church.
The Rev. Fr. Edward Reilly officiated.
The organist was Mrs. Bess Rink.
The
church
was
decorated
with
white altar bouquets and there was
a colonial bouquet placed at the

feet

of

the

statue

of

the

Virgin.
The

past
regent,
624
Brierhill Rd.,
Robert |. Johnson,
Mrs.
presided at the tea table at the Flag Day meeting of the
North Shore chapter of the DAR at the home of Mrs. Richard
R. Wolfe, 320 Portwine Rd. Standing are Mrs. Wolfe, Mrs.
Raymond W. Flinn, 1038 Springfield, tea hostess, and Mrs.
Ir! H. Marshall, 1100 Waukegan Rd., immediate past chaplain.

drums.

Members
of the Deerpath Center of the Infant Welfare Society
of Chicago donned their turtleneck
sweaters
and
black
pants
and
played the role of “Beatniks” at a
recent social evening. Husbands accompanied
the members
for the
unusual festivities at the Severson
home.
Mrs. James J. Sayre, 433 Hermitage Ave., was in charge of committees. The clever Beatnik posters

decorating the home were made by
Mrs. Merletti and Mrs.
stein, 443 Hermitage.

charge

bombazine,

gown

was

ballerina-length

of

silk

and

with

sequins

and

pearls.

The
bride’s mother
wore
pink
silk organza with matching accessories and the groom’s mother wore
blue silk organza with matching accessories.
Best man was the bride’s brother
Ronald.
She was
given in marriage by her father.
A dinner at Vernon Hills Supper Club for 50 guests was followed
by an open house at the home o£
the groom’s parents.
After a short wedding trip the
couple
will leave for Fort Bliss,
Tex., where the groom is stationed
with the armed forces.
Pre-nuptial
parties
included
a
catered miscellaneous shower given
at the Krokadara Banquet Room in
Chicago by the bride’s aunts, Mrs.
Winiarski and Mrs Stanley Krupa,

of

the

informal

midnight

supper.

|

Throughovt

were
bride’s

Carl LauenMrs. James

Wetzel, 650 Pine, and Mrs. Thomas
Spriggs, Highland Park, were in

Blessed

Mrs.
Henry
Winiarski,
Park
Ridge, an aunt of the bride, was
matron of honor. She wore a ballerina-length gown of yellow silk
organza.
Her headpiece was a yellow whimsy and her flowers were
a spray of yellow and white carnations.

The
bride
attended
Lawrence
College,
Appleton,
Wis., and the
groom Lincoln College and Northwestern
University.
Prenuptial
parties were held at Deerfield, Villa Park and Lawrence College.
Tragedy Follows Wedding
The death of the groom’s father,

S.

niks”

Mrs. John G. Severson, 343 Landis Ln. (right), and
Roger A. Merletti, 930 Oxford Rd., “make like Beat-

Her elbow-length veil was gathered
about a pearl tiara.
Her flowers
were
white
carnations
bordering
a white orchid in a spray effect.

at 700 Suffolk, Westchester.

Ronald

Mr. and
and Mrs.

lighted

Club.
a wedding
the couple

Mr.

with a harem skirt appliqued with
re-embroidered Alencon lace, high-

cousin,

University
classmate
and
James
Williams III.
A reception for 250 guests was
held at the Highland Park Woman’s
Following
troit, Mich.,

"3

Because of pleasant memories of
past dances and well-laid plans for
the Deerfield Center dinner-dance
at Lake Forest Academy Saturday,
Mrs. Paul Brown, chairman, states
that total reservations were reached
so quickly that adjustments had to
be made
in the seating arrange-

Miss Joyce Marilyn Ward, daugh-

ler, pastor,
Reed, uncle

Imitating the ‘Beat Generation’

Moon-lit Night Is
Predicted for Infant
Welfare Dinner-Dance

ter of Mr.
and
Mrs. George
W.
Ward, 714 Osterman Ave., became
the bride of R. Gerald Fox, son of
Mrs. Ronald S. Fox, 700 Suffolk,
Westchester, Ill., and the late Mr.
Fox, in a ceremony performed Saturday, June 6, at 7:30 p.m. in the
First Presbyterian Church in Deer-

_

Vews

Clas

any

Weddings

—

Engagements

various

tre

evening

activities

there

planned

in

keeping with the party theme. One
room
was: turned
into
a _ studio,
where everyone had a chance to

try

his

hand

at

painting,

Mrs.

Keith
Nickoley,
622 Timber
Hill
Ln., was in charge of this and of
the resulting art exhibit held later
on in the evening.
For the music enthusiasts there
was dancing
in the family room
and impromptu jazz sessions with
the bongo drums and other instruments.
This affair was the annual spring
party
for
the
Deerpath
Center,
which
held its final meeting for
the season Monday.

Mrs.

Hausner

Is

Hostess

Mrs. Robert Hausner, 300 Thornweadow
Rd., a volunteer hostess
for the Ravinia Art Exhibit, has
received an invitation to attend a
preview of the exhibit to be held
at a tea in the Casino
Building
next Wednesday.
Niles. It was attended by about 50
women
and
a smorgasbord
was
served.
Another
miscellaneous
shower
delighted
the
bride-to-be
at the home of the groom’s parents.
This
was
a buffet
attended
by
about 45 women and given by Mrs.
Gemma
Amidei, Mrs. Rena Brugioni, Mrs. Olga Amidei
and Mrs.
Diana Cabri.
Thursday,

June

25, 1959

�ex

Mr.

1242
Mrs.
the

Robert

E.

REVIEW,

Pettis,

and

her

editor

sister,

of

ily.

a trip to Florida.

they were

guests

Park

Mr.

and

Mrs.

family,

Joseph

E.

Ave.,

are moving to Danville, Calif. They
have lived in Deerfield for four
years, coming here from Spokane,
Wash ... Mr. Griffith will be in
California
July
11
and
will
be

joined by the rest of family August

...

Nicky

Timmy

Mc-

Karstrom,

Lake

Forest, have returned from a recent trip to Bailey’s Harbor, Wis.,
where
they
visited
their
grand-

mother,
went

Mrs. A. C. Goodnow.

to Wisconsin

by train

turned by airplane...
Mrs. S. M. Greiling

They
and

and

Mrs.

land,

Wis.

Nancy

...

Their

to

Is-

left with a

friend,
Cecelia
Kenney,
Jonquil
Ter., to visit Nancy’s
uncle
and

aunt, Mr. and Mrs. Richard Merner,
at Avondale,

Pa.

Theodore

“Ted”

Johnson,

Mr. and Mrs. Theodore
826

Pine,

left

York

City

plane

today

son

of

J. Johnson,

Tuesday

where

he

for

London

for

will

New

board

a

. . . Once

in Europe he will travel throughout
Holland,
France
and
Denmark,
hitch-hiking

and

bicycling.

He

pects to visit his great-uncle,
| Georg
Hansen,
and
after four

1030

students,

will

construct

en

in

the

and

group

other

will

do

domestic

ex-

Illinois

- Johnsons
with

two

in
have

the
had

cook-

fall...

graduations

in

The

advisory board

of

Rd.,

is thrilled

TRAIL BLAZER

Appointments

Now

Photographer
599 ROGER WILLIAMS
ID 2-3199

fam-

DAY

For

is

for

CAMP

DUDE

Boys

and

Girls

AVE.

RANCH
5 thru

12

Directed by Ted &amp; Al Fenn, Educators
SPECIAL FEATURES OF OUR COUNTRY
ESTATE LOCATED IN NORTHBROOK
Riding — Fishing — Boating
_-~
Swimming — All Sports
Crafts —
Golf
Overnighters —
Baseball Uniforms for Boys —
Bowling — Hot Lunch — Teacher Staff — Transportation
CAMP SEASON—JUNE 29 to AUG. 21, 1959
Reserve a place for your child now!

Phones—ORchard
Thursday,

June

25, 1959

Rd.

Schultz

announce

Opens Tonight at 8:30
of

the

The

son,

Allan,

children’s

is 6 years

grandparents

are Mr. and Mrs. John Schultz of
Des Plaines, Mr. and Mrs, Edward
Gieske and John Brumm,
all of
Wheeling.
%

%

*

A son, James
Peter, was born
June 16 to Mr. and Mrs. Howard
P. Dahl of 1309 Greenwood Ave.,
in the Highland Park Hospital. The
infant has two brothers, Richard,
16, and Robert, 14, and a
sister,
Doreen, 5. The grandmother, Mrs.
Orpha Williams of Minneapolis, is
visiting her daughter and family:
*

*

The

Theatre

the campus

Under

of Lake

the

Stars

on

Forest College

will open tonight at 8:30 to run
through Sunday with its first play
of the 1959 season, “A Hatful of
Rain.’
Several
Deerfield
people
are included in the cast.
Presented
by Triangle
Productions,
a newly
formed
amateur
theatrical organization, in cooperation with members of The Stagers
of Deerfield, the play is an added

at

4-9789

or

ORchard

4-3829

“ie

BUY U. S. SAVINGS BOND

*

Mr. and Mrs. James F. Kaatz
Champaign announce the birth

of
of

their first child, Linda Diane, June
16.
Mr.
950

The
baby’s
grandparents
are
and Mrs. Arthur F. Kaatz of
Warrington Rd., Deerfield.

Move

Here

From

Glenview

Mr. and Mrs. Ervin Heppert and
daughter Raye have moved to 926
Cedar St. from Glenview.

the board in Evanston Monday...

Mrs.

Peterson

is chairman

BRICK

Attractive 6 room
./|€

of the|

Mr. and Mrs. Roy W. Sylvan and
Sylvan’s
Donna

Convenient

maintenance

daughter Anne, 2665 Forest
Trail, entertained last week

nieces,
Hart,

Lulu,

of Des

Glen|¥
Mrs.

Cathy

Plaines...

and

|®

cost.

to

schools

In the 20’s.

lot.

Living

root

and

transportation.

Low

Call Mrs. Olmsted.

BAUMANN
- COOK
Hillcrest 6-5000_
Winnetka

551 Lincoln Ave.

Open every Friday E
THOP

FELL SHOES
Highland

large wooded

with colonial fireplace, full dining room, panelled recreation room. Screen porch. 3 bedrooms, 1% baths. Attached
garage.

board.

house on

COLONIAL

Park

Su mmer

Shoes

Galore!
We have on hand a fine selection
of hot weather shoes.

WHITES
PASTELS

FOR DETAILS CALL
Percy H. Prior, Jr.

spring,
the

28

WEDDING
CANDID
PHOTOS

and

work...

a busy

of the

Make

Ted
will be back by September
1 and will return to the University

of

June

Untermyer

Mrs.

Education Auxiliary Board Executive Committee
at a luncheon of

houses

the

San-

Mrs. Lawrence L. Peterson, 1554
Oakwood PIl., presented new members to the National College of

for refugees, while the young wom| ing

in Chicago

1...

Waukegan

the other young men in the group,
all

Mr.
Mrs.

the prospect
of attending
Camp
Awana
at Fredonia,
Wis.,
for
a
month this summer. She leaves on
Saturday. ... Then in August she
will spend two weeks at the Presbyterian Camp at Druce Lake, near
Lake Villa. Jill is a veteran camper
as she will be spending her third
session at Druce Lake this year. ...

Axel

He

1219

of

G.

reg

plays to be given by the Lake
est College summer session
group.
Tickets may be purchased fre
Mrs. John E. Sullivan at K
Realty at 623 Deerfield Rd.
Among those in the cast are |
Carl A, Larson Jr., 662 Pine A
Eric Laurence, son of Mr. and
Harold Nichols, 444 Hermitage,
Selden Clark, son of Mr. and
Robert O. Clark, 418 Brierhill

Jill, 12-year-old daughter of Mr.
and
Mrs.
William
R.
Pittenger,

senting many different nations in
a UN work camp
devoted to re-

refugees.

Aubles,

Lake County’s new Forest Preserve
District . . . Miss Helen Engstrom,
627 Central Ave., is vacationing in
Florida with a cousin .. . Harold
Krefting
is entered
in the 29th
annual Illinois State Amateur Golf
tournament
this
week
over
the
University
of
Illinois
course
at
SU CT
gain

near
Copenhagen
weeks
will wind

of

C.

Untermyer,

House

July

up at Wels, Austria... There he
will work with 30 students repre_habilitation

H.

Their

old.

from

Frable, of Chicago.
parents,
Mr.
and

chairman

daughter

in the meantime

The

Frank

Palmer

children,
Carol,
Chris
and
Curt,
have moved from 1226 Wilmot Rd.
to 1750 Chris Ct. . . . Mr. and Mrs.
Milton Merner
and two of their
children,
Wendy
and
Ricky,
920
Forest Ave., have returned from a

to Washington

graduated

A.

Waukegan

pital.

in the fall, while

ders Rd., will speak at the annual
meeting of the American
Society
of
Landscape
Architects
at
the

Donnelly Jr., 427 Pembroke Ct. ...
Mr. and Mrs. Don Anderson and

junket

....

Mrs.

re-

William
Westfall,
of Green
Bay,
Wis., are spending the week with
Mrs.
Greiling’s
son-in-law
and
daughter, Mr. and Mrs. James L.

four-day

was

Mrs.

birth of a daughter, Cheryl Susan,
June 16 in the Highland Park Hos-

Highland

Frank L. Frable, 910 Lake Shore
Dr., Chicago, were residents for 11
years of Deerfield at 407 Brierhill
Rd. William is a graduate of Highland Park High School and spent
three years at Dartmouth. He and
his wife,
who
met
during
their
first
year
at
Northwestern
and
were married the second, have a
daughter, Debbie, two. They will
intern together at Passavant Memorial Hospital in Chicago...

Guire, son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
McGuire, 822 Warrington, and his

cousin,

School

who

William
Frable’s

Miss Francine Zellet, daughter of
City

enter

Holy

Carlisle Pl., are moving to Godfrey,
Tll. . . . Among the graduates from
Northwestern
University’s
school
of medicine
were
Mr.
and
Mrs.

Mr. and Mrs. Frank A. Zellet, 814
Spruce, has returned from a
trip

York

High

ton

1, who
in the meantime
will be
visiting Mrs. Griffith’s parents, Mr.
and Mrs. Marvin
R. Cross, Mantaloking, NJ... They will leave
Deerfield July 2. There
are four
children in the family: Peter, 14;
Marilyn, 11;
Jimmy, 8 and Tommy,
five months .

to New

will

from

Three new families have moved
to
Hackberry
recently ... They
are the John F. Auwaerters at 1407
Hackberry, the Donald Chisholms
at 1333 and the Alex Chisholms at
1355 .. . Miss Erna Mayer of New
York
City is here for a ten-day
visit with her niece, 18-month-old
Rachel Judith, at the home of Mr.
and Mrs. Ernest Kahn, 1200 Ken-

Griffith

Elmwood

graduated

Highland Park, is working at the
State Farm
Insurance
office...
The
family
entertained
a large
gathering of friends and relatives
to celebrate both events ...

of their brother,

1260

and

Jeanne,

In Tallahassee

Wallace
Reichelt, and his family.
Mr.
Reichelt
teaches
at Florida
State
University
...In Ozona,
they visited Miss Josephine Woodman, aged 83, a former Deerfield
resident ...

and

was

Cross

Mrs.

E. R. MacPherson, both of Chestnut
St., have been spending two weeks
on

Don

and

attractionto the

‘Theatre Under Stars

Birth Announcements

BRIGHT COLORS
We have these shoes in your size.
Come in today.

{Fal shoe]

633 Central
932 Linden

@

�Miss Nancy Servine |s|Carleton Graduate
Bride Of Carl Ostrand
a

The marriage, June 6, of Miss
Nancy
Servine,
daughter
of Dr.
and Mrs. J. S. Servine of Moline,

&lt;nnc YO

See

Ack

eee

XN

rs

\\ WHA

Ill., to Carl

try

Club.
Both bride

487

To

Clean

That Dirt Right

Across

Laurel

from

the

H.P.

OQuta Your

and

bridegroom

will

after a wedding

trip.

The former Miss Service chose
a wedding dress of white antique
silk
trimmed
at
the _ off-theshoulder neckline
in re-embroidered
Alencon
lace.
She
carried
white carnations
and stephanotis.
Attendants
were
clad in waltz
length frocks of white silk organza

tied with mist blue cummerbunds.
Among the graduating seniors at
They carried carnations and blue|Carleton
College,
Northfield,
daisies. Miss Arthurene Russell of Minn., is Miss Josephine Solomon,
Franklin Park was maid of honor, | 4 history major.
Mrs.

J,

E.

Thomas,

S

Miss

Judith

ISS

BRUNO

A

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Dinner served 6 to 8 p.m. weekdays
Buffet served 5 to 8 p.m. Sundays

Pp i ES

ORANGE

Highland

of Moline, John Jenkins, Elmhurst,
William

Frozen

of

Reilly, both of Moline, were bridesmaids
and
Miss
Janet
Ostrand,
the bridegroom‘s sister, was junior
bridesmaid.
Robert Little of Toledo was best
man. Ushers were William Servine

Chimneys - Fireplaces

Drapes!”

graduate

| High
School,
Miss
Solomon
was
secretary of the Young Democrats
Club.
She is the daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Julius E. Solomon,
716 DeTamble Ave.

© WATERPROOFING

DUFFY CLEANERS
Like

of Highwood,

be graduated from the University
of Illinois in August. They are at|.
home
on
campus
in Champaign

e TUCK

“We'd

Ostrand

took place in the First Lutheran
Church,
Moline. Dr. and Mrs. J.
S. Service gave the wedding
reception in the Short Hills Coun-

West

Monroe

St.

*

Chicago

Tel: RA 6-2960

Thursday,

June

3, Ill.

25, 1959

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highest

bank

insured

like you

just
with

the

are

sav-

interest permitted by law—3%.
It means a lot to you to have
your savings available to you when
you want them and still earn the full

OPEN

YOU

R

ACCOUNT TODAY!

3%

guaranteed

There’s nothing
convenience

of

bank

a

savings

account

the BANK OF HIGHLAND PARK.
stop

in today

rate.

interest

like the security or the

and

start

at

Why not

earning

more

on your savings?
Savings accounts opened ’til July
1l earn 3% as of the first of the
month,

“The Service Bank of Highland Park”

BANKYHIGHLAND
Member

PARK

Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

Bank-Post Office Building
1771 SECOND
Thursday, June 85, 1958

STREET

IDlewood 2-7800
Page 19

�“| Miss Sally Smith To Wed Midshipman

-INSU RANCE

Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence T. Smith
of 650 Lincoln Ave. W announce
the engagement and forthcoming
marriage of their daughter, Sally
Ann,
to Midshipman
Gerald
J.
Churchill, son of Mr. and Mrs, Gil-

of Every Kind and Character

~~ ANCHOR
INSURANCE
In

Business

AGENCY
21

bert A. Churchill
Miss
Purdue

Years

1896 Sheridan Rd.
Highland Park

Office:
Res.,

ID 2-0093
ID 2-0037

jored
was

Smith was
University

in

English

affiliated with

of Chicago.
graduated from
where she ma-

and

French

Sigma

Tau

and
Del-

ta

honorary

Omega

fraternity

and

Chi

sorority.

Highland Parkers —
Receive Amherst
College Degrees

Midshipman
Churchill
received
his degree in mechanical engineering from Purdue University where
he was president of Scabbard and
Blade, military honorary society. A
member of Delta Tau Delta frater-

nity, he also was affiliated with
Quarterdeck Society, Pi Tau Sigma
(Continued on page 21)

Goldberg

Gunn

Your kitchen stays shades cleaner
with a modern Electric Range

Two Highland Parkers received
degrees June 14 at Amherst Col-

lege, Amherst, Mass. William Gold-.
berg,

son

modern kitchen for other reasons, as well.
Electric cooking means accurate control

matically.
What a job it is to wash kitchen walls!

of heat.
For whether you’re using the surface
units, baking or broiling. . . the cooking
heat stays at the exact temperature you

You need tackle this chore only half as
often, you know—when you cook with a
modern

electric range.

It’s easy to understand why. Electric
ranges burn no fuel, create no soot. Absolutely nothing cooks cleaner!
But

an

electric

range

belongs

in

the

select. (And automatic electric controls are
the most accurate made.)

It’s also worth knowing that the kitchen
equipped with a new electric range will
stay modern for years to come.

Mr.

and

275 Linden

Mrs.
Park

L.

H.

P1., ma-

jored in history and received his
degree cum laude. A graduate of
Highland Park High School, Goldberg was elected to Phi Beta Kappa. He was a member of the Dean’s

List, on the staff of the college
radio station,
a member of Delta
Sigma

And you can boil, bake, roast, broil—do
every kind of cooking completely auto-

of

Goldberg,

Rho,

sonnel

and

also

assistant

manager

of

the

B.

son

of Mr.

per-

Debate

Council.

Giles
Mrs.
pect

Gunn,

and

Buckingham Gunn, 178 ProsAve., was a member
of the

Dean’s List, member of Scarab and
of Sphinx. He also was vice president of the Christian Association
and a member of the Zumbyes.
Gunn

is

a

graduate

of

Highland

Park High School.

Emblem Club Plans
Annual Luncheon
Members of the Highland Park
Emblem Club are making plans for
their annual luncheon July 1, ten-

tatively scheduled for the new Villa
Moderne Motor Hotel. The Club
honored mothers of members at a
luncheon in May and welcomed
two new members, Mrs. Francis
Phillips

the

and

Mrs.

formal

Robert

initiation

Peddle,

and final business meeting
Mrs.

Roy

Tillotson,

at

ceremonies
June

Scout

10.

Leader

of Troop 69 of Immaculate

Concep-

tion School and an Emblem Club
member, assisted Girl Scouts Jean
Matteoni, Peggy Ronzani, Pamela

Meehan,

Kathie

Fox

and

Barbara

Tillotson in a recent program
memorating Flag Day.

The

club joined members

Elks
Club
Flag Day.

in

their

com-

of the

program

on

SSOUUTOESEEEEEECEEEEELEEETAETTECETLE
WATCH

FOR...

— I.N.T.
FOR THE NEWEST

IN ELECTRIC RANGES, SEE YOUR ELECTRIC APPLIANCE DEALER

J Public Service Company
©

Commonwealth Edison Company

Lillian

Ettinger

SINGER
SEWING

MACHINE

641

Central

Highland

NORM

BROWN

L. M. HANK

CO.

Park

ID 2-3811
SALES and SERVICE
“Thursday,

June

25;

959

‘

�Pride-Elect

Three Students Win
4 Year Scholarships

!

Whe

Three
Highland
Parkers
are
among seven county winners of the
competitive
examination
given
April 25 for scholarships
at the
University of Illinois.
Announcement is made by W. C. Petty, County Superintendent of Schools, at request of the public relations director of the university.
The students ranked in the upper

quarter

of their

classes,

and

earned four tuition-free
the University of Illinois.
Local

Bett’s

Photo

Mr.
and
Mrs.
Leroy
Leonard,
1348 Bob-O-Link Rd., announce the
engagement
of their
daughter,
Helen Marie, to William W. Betts,
son of Mr. and Mrs. George J. Betts
of Arlington Heights. The couple
is planning an October wedding.
Miss

Leonard

Highland

Park

presently

is

tary

graduated

High

at Culligan,

as

at

Winners

Local
winners
of
the
county
scholarships
are
George
Millen,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Roy Millen,
Harold
and
Ave.,
Michigan
555
Driscoll, son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold F. Driscoll, 426 Circle Ct., Deerat Highland
field, both students
Park High School; and Robert L.
J. Gillispie III, son of Mr. and Mrs.

Robt.

L.

J.

Gillispie,

S, a
coln Ave.
Forest Academy.

student

1317

Lin-

at

Lake

Lake County had a potential
nine scholarships as a result

of
of

ais

oLandys

Marriage
everything

Of Daughter fhe

to safeguard
your health

aes

Mr. and Mrs. Nathan Landy of
261 Leslee Ln. announce the marriage
of their daughter,
Barbara
Myrta, to Kenneth Edwin Fletcher,
son
of
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Herbert
Fletcher of Lebanon, Ind.
The ceremony took place at 11
am. June 13 in the Purdue University chapel at West Lafayette,
Ind. Both the bride and bridegroom
are June graduates of Purdue and
will remain on campus for the summer while the bride completes her
graduate studies in teaching.
They
will live in Bloomington
this fall, where Mr. Fletcher will
enter Indiana University on a threeyear law fellowship.

quality you
can rely on
every time
Make us your convenient, one-stop
headquarters for all health needs. It’s
so good to know that you can have
complete confidence in our up-to-date
stock of name brands. Our prices are
thrifty, too!

PEASE
495

the state’s
“County
Scholarship”
plan for examinations, The examinations were supervised by Supt.
Petty in Lake County and the examination papers were graded at

PHARMACY

Central
FREE

ID 2-0143
DELIVERY

the University of Illinois.

from

School

employed

have

years

ye

Viathan

a

and
secre-

Inc., Northbrook.

Her fiance graduated from Arlington Heights High School and is

employed by Suhr, Peterson, Peterson &amp; Suhr,
Chicago.

Aug.

consulting

8 Wedding
(Continued

and Tau
nities.

Beta

family
Park
take

will

Planned

from
Pi

After
moving
week
to Easton,

engineers,

page

20)

honorary

frater-

Monday
of this
Md., the Smith

return

to

Highland

for the wedding which will
place Aug. 8 in Immaculate

Conception Church.

=

.. your family
+» your

Sunset
1812

guests

Food Mart
Green

Bay Rd.

Highland Park

Youll get the best deal
right now during
Buick Bargain Days
FINEST DEALS-—Novw is the time to see your Quality Buick Dealer.
You'll find the best buys of the year during Buick Bargain Days, the big
sales event going on right now. And now is the time to buy.

QUALITY
MEATS and GROCERIES
“Everything for the
Table’’
DELIVERY

SERVICE

IDlewood 2-4400
608

CENTRAL

HIGHLAND

AVE.,
PARK

_ Thursday, June 25, 1959

BIGGEST SELECTION -Our Big Bargain Days stock of ’59
Buicks means an unusually wide choice of models and colors. ‘Take your
pick from among Electras, Invictas, and LeSabres, with a wide choice of
optional and accessory equipment.
FASTEST DELIVER Y-—You needn't wait to start enjoying the
pleasure of driving a 59 Buick. You can take delivery right away from
our Big Buick Bargain Days vacation stock. Come on in and look ’em over.
SEE YOUR

LOCAL

AUTHORIZED

QUALITY

BUICK

DEALER

NOW...

. YOUR

NEW award-winning clean-winged style
NEW exclusive aluminum brakes
Jet-Smooth Turbine Transmissions
NEW higher peabline mileage
(Owners report

NEW
NEW
Safety
NEW

15-18 m.p.g.)

Easy Power Steering
high torque Wildcat Engines
PLATE Glass in every window
Magic Mirror Finish

LUXURY Ride of all-coil springs

QUALITY

BUICK

DEALER

IN HIGHLAND

PARK

IS:

KLEEBURG BUICK, INC. — 1732 First Street

�ied secciate

Sa

of

2 REMO VAL
Pie

Suite

Suen.

111

Highland Park

Beautjil Does
“

&lt;&lt;

Mrs.
president

Robert
of the

Carpenter, retiring president,
Pre-School Mothers’ Club, at

right, Mrs. Harold Wright, second vice
Oliver L. S. Joy, first vice president.
Local Man
Tn NMAA

Is Elected
Education

Post

Howard
Gray,
of Kleinschmidt
Laboratories, was elected director
in charge of education at the organization
meeting
of the North
Shore Chapter of the National Machine Accountants Association last
Thursday in Waukegan.

Richard
pins a corsage on Mrs.
the recent installation. Looking on

president,

Mrs.

Norman

Other officers not in the picture
are Mrs. Richard Peet, treasurer,
Mrs. Donald Ball, membership, and
Mrs. Stephen Keay, publicity.
_
The retiring board met with the
new
officers
to discuss
program
plans and social activities for the
1959-60 season. Those who served
on the board throughout the past

Davis,

season

C.

secretary,

are

as follows:

McLean,

are, left to
and Mrs.

Mrs.

Carpen-

ter, president;
Mrs. Richard
McLean, vice president in charge of
social activities; Mrs. James Ferch,
vice president
in charge
of program;
Mrs. Edward Olney, secretary; Mrs. John Aberson, treasurer; Mrs. Neil Danahy, membership,
and Mrs. Robert Richter, publicity.

SEVEN REASONS WHY
YOU'LL BE SMART TO BUY
PAR
” An

out-of-this world

a

ff ger ercozsaces

Initial price hundreds of dollars below the low-priced three. oS et

Economical to operate—in the Mobilgas Economy Run, The Lark V-8

all-wool Wilton, guar-

produced an outstanding 22.28 miles-per-gallon, topping all other V-8’s.

- anteed mothproof.

A rich, expensive looking carpet that will take lots of rough
asa

and tumble treatment and never show it! Perfect for heavily

vs

trafficked areas because its softly-crested, densely looped
richness resists wear ... . perfect for any and all decorating

ee

The Lark “6” did even better. ait Ideal for today’s driving
— shorter
outside by a yardstick. DF
Spirited performance—the V-8 goes from
0 to 60 miles an hour in 9.5 seconds! ee Spacious interiors (seats six)
and vacation sized trunks, too. oe Styled so tastefully, The Lark is
approved by Harper’s Bazaar. Upholstered in practical, washable vinyls
or modern fabrics. ED at Cuts insurance and maintenance bills.

schemes. Here’s lasting luxury and budget economy PLUS
i

guaranteed mothproofing for the life of the carpet! Come
in to see outstanding Mooncrest in these celestial colors:
Starlight Beige, Comet Sand, Neptune Green, Strato Beige,
Earth Brown, Corona Gold, Cumulus Grey, Polaris Green,
Heavenly Blue.

OD)
:

Sitter

Drothers

Carpet Specialists Since 1920
Be

120

Green

Bay

Road,

Winnetka

Hillcrest 6-3336
4

Hillcrest 6-6120

Monday and Thursday 9 A.M. to 9 P.M.
Daily
9 A.M. to 5 P.M.

/

Avallable as a 2-door and 4-door
sedan, hardtop and station wagon.

Discover what you'll save at

Chicago— La Grange
CARPET EXPERTS AGREE THAT CLEAN CARPET WEARS LONGER!
WE OFFER YOU THE FINEST IN CARPET AND FURNITURE
CLEANING!

“Page
te”

22

EDENS

MOTORS,

INC., 680 SKOKIE

VALLEY

RD.,

HIGHLAND

Thursday,

PARK

Jeane 25, 1959

�FET

Se

ate

ste

iy

4

Mf
¥

‘

Ws

t

Roll for th Grading Period
The

Wilmot

Sixth

School

as follows
Grade

by

High

Honor

Roll

Earl

Hodgen,

Honors
Jim Roche, Joanne Dendel, Tom Wells,
Joe Ann Cox, George Schmid, Mary Janis,
Stephen
Poindexter,
Linda
Siegel,
Judy
Bruce,
Pat Emmett,
Priscilla Bax,
Diane
Hamilton,
Marilyn
Mesch,
Carol
Miller,
Bonnie
Sarley,
Lauren
Gold,
Jacqueline
Thayer,
Teena
Weisert,
Laurel
Eldridge,
Bill
Vickerman,
Robyn
Vogel,
Michel
Brown, Robert Faraone, Charles Lutz, Ingrid Strakusek, John Forbis, Laura Rudolph,
Toni Linnig, Ray
Miller, Peter Sazanoff,
Steven
Postil,
Melody
Chester,
Jeffrey
Stienorth and Anne Soule.

Grade

for

Handbills

High

A

SAVE

mg

the

fourth

grading

period

is

Honors

express

Jean Fargo, Sandra Modes, Kathy Dendel, Les Ann Powell, Jo Maiorano, Stephanie Bateman, Diane Boratyn, Nancy Root,
Ingrid
Weiand,
Mark
Eckerling,
Gary
Hedge, Stephen Yordon, David Tuttle, Roger Wall, Ellen Wright, Gregg Kraft, Joanne
Scoppa, Sandra Wolf and Nancy Batchelder.

Eighth
Barbara
Staats and

Grade

High

Auth,

Bill

1499,

opposition

to the

measure.

ing

of garbage

within

a distance

of

Harry

expressing opposition to this measure at the June 10 meeting.

Alan
Breuer,
Margaret
Hall,
Patricia
Quirk, Peggy Fine, Pamela Trettel, Betty
Wilson, Kathy Holmberg, Mike Wondreis,
Joel Fritz, Mike Herschman, Tove Kaspersen, Frederick Teeter, Mary Lee Kieft, Alan
Jacobson,
Marilyn Schmid, Tom
Screnock
and Susan Brin.

The handbills urge the mailing
of post cards to the Senator Robert
McClory at Springfield.

Member of the Wedding . . .

Mary Joh Eisinger, Deanne Davis, Judy
Courington, Judy Peterson, Cheryl Ramsey,
Barbara
Oswald,
Timmie
Driscoll,
Ann
Whitney,
Kathy
Rogers,
Ellen
Conadera,
Donna
Herrman,
Jayne
Shay,
Marjorie
Wolf, Judy Pearce, Phyllis Thayer and April
Warren.

rz
7,
wy

a

|
R
O
L
CO

one mile of the corporate limits of
any town if the operation is conducted in accordance with a sanitary landfill method. The Deerfield
Village Board voted
a resolution

Honors

Honors

WITH THESE

This bill would permit the dump-

Honors

Zimmer,
David
Charles Kafadar.

concerning

now in the state legislature, were
distributed by a group of local citizens throughout Deerfield during
the past week urging residents to

principal:

Honors

Bill Arthur, Mark Burnette, Sally Muir,
Susan Kaplan, Linda Parker, Virginia Johnson, Melissa Case, Marlie Parker, Marilyn
Mandler,
Joan
Stamas,
Kathy
Filipetti,
Rusty
Benedict,
Patricia Windhell,
Carol
Harnisch, Paul Schlenker, Michael Yordon,
Mary Dahlstrom and Randy Weil.

Seventh

INI

Ba!

Handbills Urge Protest
Against Garbage Bill

Wilmot School Announces Honor
announced

Se
if

y

HIGHLAND

PARK

589 Central

*
-

WINNETKA

847

Elm

FILM —
SPECIALS

STORE

ID 2-8550
:

STORE

°

Hi

6-5141

{2

4 [dF
¥
i
‘¢@
Rote

James Donnelly

Named Assistant

8mm

2.28

U. S. Attorney
James
L. Donnelly
of
Pembroke
Ct. was
appointed

assistant

United

States

last week
Tieken.

by

Attorney

U.S.

427
an

Attorney
Robert

Frank

firm

of

Henslee,

Monek

and

to emphasize

line and

all Washington

design

attributes

. . . these

that

you'll

16mm

So make

Washington

a member

of your

wedding — for the personal care you'll want
your garments to have . .. before you put
them on, and before you store them away.
Call now, and ask the route man to stop
at your convenience.

ads

:

Washington

St.,

Evanston

WINDOWS

PORCH

AWNINGS

Thursday,

ALCOA—Any

Improvement

June

1227
25, 1959

\VACATIONERS| |
Craig

Color

Co.

DICK LATTANZI

KONSLER

ID 2-0252

ARBOR

2.85

53

ALUMINUM
SIDING

e Stationery
e Roll-up
e All Colors

CARL

36 Exposure
Kodachrome

2.28

ENCLOSURES
Beautify Your Home
With Fabulous .. .

Aluminum

Ho me

Leoni

NOW in ALL COLORS!

Aluminum

L&amp; K

2.05

1.64

lon.

Cookie

Custom

20 Exposure
Kodachrome

Laundry and Drycleaners
700

STORM

.. 8.00

Otto Joerger

UNiversity 4-5900*
ALpine 1-0145
,
Enterprise 4900*

*Call any time.
Line open 24 hours a day.

100’ Roll

6.40

are

want

reflected in your clothes.

Murray in Chicago. He and his wife
recently moved to Deerfield from
Evanston.

INUWAI

3.28

Henry Kerulis

If there is anything Washington is particularly known
for, it’s the tender personal care given to wedding garments. Freshness of color and fabric, complete absence
of cleaning odor, pressing done to exactness

Mr. Donnelly took his undergraduate work at Notre Dame University, entered Georgetown University
Law School in 1955 and was graduated from DePaul University Law
School in 1957. He was president
of the DePaul Junior Bar Association.

.. 4.15

3.32

\)

is Admired

Enlisting in the U.S. Navy as a
seaman recruit in 1951, he spent
four years in service and was discharged
in 1954 as a Lieutenant
J. G. He saw duty in the Korean
war as assistant staff CIC officer.
Prior
to his appointment,
Mr.
Donnelly was associated with the

8mm Magazine

Karger

16mm Magazine .. 6.60

~e WASHINGTON Loo

law

Roll .........--- 2.85

AVE.,

H.P.

ID

2-1316

Tribolet

Te

=

aS

Ask about our free film bags for mailing
your films back to us. Use them and your films a :
will be processed by the time you return!

�Hair

Young Cadets Advance In Navy League

Styling

Tinting
Bleaching
Permanents
Manicuring

vaughn
Weauty
(Open

508

(Screened,

,

a

Friday evenings by appointment

Central

Stock

ID

only)

2-2330

Piled)

CAL.

MENONI
&amp; MOCOGNI
2200 Skokie Hwy., Highland Park

ID 2-0850

William

T. Rose,

son

of Mr.

and

Mrs.

Lake

SERVICE

FUEL

RADIO REPAIR
ay

D.

Rose,

Forest; Thomas

C. W.

Keitel,

154

Edgecliff

289

Prospect

Dr.; and Thomas

1 became the first chapter of a nationwide organization
and 13, have spent several months learning about Navy
tration of their organization.

AN
TELEVISION

Forrest

Ave.,

SALES

OIL

—

E

JEWELER

—

WATCH

V. Geimer,

198

Vee

gh)

Leading

Heating
We

Repair

AUTO

ALL

and

MAKES

TRANSISTOR
RADIOS
FM - AM HI-FI
Service

BRAUN

20th Century TV
and

SERRE ROS OCR Sees
HEATING SERVICE

COMMUNITY
GAS

HEATING
A. E. Savage,

SERVICE
Owner

OIL - GAS
DEPENDABLE

If no answer

5-0602

call Windsor

5-4427

1010 HAZEL AVE., DEERFIELD
Page

24

We

On Linens, Blouses, Sweaters,
Towels, Shirts, etc
Buttons —

Belts

Hand Bound

&amp; Machine Button Holes

Vogue

Fabric Shop

722 Main
Evanston
UNiversity 4-3034

Storm

Made

Lt) bab tel haebi be) pshtd? Pb

Costs Only

pd

$3.60

IT—

Windows

and

Weekly*

Doors

To Order While

YOUR

hist

ny

We

RAVINIA
447

MONOGRAMMING

LEE

HARDWARE

You Wait.

Store Hours Daily 8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. — Wed. ‘til Noon
FOR

Highland Park

Eee OD LETTE
ELT
DRESSMAK.ER’S SERVICE

Er

Fix

Carl Casel, Division Manager

OT

THIS SIZE

Repair Screen Doors and Windows
Replace Broken Windows

Keys

CO.

444 Central Ave.

AD

3

Repair. Craftsmen

— LET US DO

BROS.

Pleating —

CLEANING

Of Boilers or Furnaces
BOILER SALES &amp; INSTALLATION

Windsor

OIL

RADIO

1858 FIRST ST., H.P.
Ample Parking in Rear
ID 2-8120

iE

PHONE
ID 2-3804

HOME

also

Sales and

ea

Roger

Williams

Formerly

bear

ear

OPEN

To Reach

SUNDAYS—

HARDWARE
Husenetter’s

ID

10,947

For Your

Office

and

Wi

West

1885

Nursery

S-0095

Deerfield

in the

Needs

Highland

i

WI
Repair

Road

Work

Deerfield
area.

5-3600
—

New

Phone

Work

Dishwashers
If no

Park

Highwood

HAROLD ROOT
PLUMBING CO.

:

Deerfield

eer)

CALL

Inc.
Established

Plumbing

Homes

2-4387

PTTLPLP
LANDSCAPING
PLUMBING

F. D. CLAVEY
RAVINIA NURSERIES

Unit No.

YOUR

‘

and Jewelry. Designers
3).
‘ Official Watch Inspector for the. North Western R.R.

GAS

Equipment

Watch

St.

REPAIR

INELEPHONE ID 2-2028.;,

rhe //// Ao

AND

certifi-

ONE

Giclees

SERVICE

Bloom

CORNER. CENTRAL &amp; SHERIDAN | HIGHLAND PARK, ILI.

OIL

his

in February.
The youngsters, ages 12
nomenclature, ratings and the adminis-

ee

as

receives

cate for advancement from Carmen C. Sberna, commanding officer of Navy League Cadet Unit No.
1 at Great Lakes. William is one of sixteen boys in the unit promoted to apprentice Cadet. Looking
on after receiving their certificates are, left to right, James Bowgren, Round Lake; James A. Lynch,

Water Heaters
answer call WI 5-0743

For

ID

Further

*on annual

2-4500
Information

basis.

Thursday, June 25, 1959

�covering a surface?
Craftwood offers attractive materials to
finish walls, ceilings, floors, counter tops
and all types of surfaces.

Whether buying or

planning, come in today. You’ll be pleased
with

our prices, quality,
courteous

PLYWOOD PANELING
V

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solid wood.

Ready

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easy

Unfinished

ha
Philippine

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to

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Prefinished

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6.72

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7.56c

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33

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10.56

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12.60

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Ribbon Mahogany .................. ao

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11.48

13.12

53

14.84

16.96

8

41

11.48

13.12

53

14.84

16.96

ee eS

41

11.48

13.12

53

14.84

16.96

ATES SROO ORES ALE

41°

1148

13.12

53

14.84

16.96

oe rita as. eines

41

11.48

13.12

53

1484

16.96

Set b&gt;

L148

- 138.12

53

14.84

16.96

NN

ges

ek fi wel

5) CAS ae nee I

Fe

oie, iacckicuvhieceioke

SUR

RR eee Ss ae ee

| RSE

AGT Sop ey Rp caper

en

SERS

NR

SEER

eigen

paneling at

these prices

Be Dees

about 170.00)

Masonite, Marlite and hardwood

it at

Sq. Ft.

4x8 Panel

ll
Ad

3,52
4.16

ee Prtsin Cont 6c

16

5.12

DeWalt Saws

22
17
27
27
064%
07%,
.09
14

7.04
5.44
8.64
8.64
2.08
2.40
2.88
4,48

nikal
Furniture, Unpainted
Fertilizer
Gas Lights
rie i
Si dinilile
House Numbers
Lawn Tools

cae oe

Masonite Hardboard ....................
Masonite Pegboard ........................
Masonite Pegboard ..................-.-+-.
Seadrift Paneling ........................-Plasterboard
SP ARBEOE DORTIN: © s.cenceibverdosssa ehaglaawiies
Plasterboard.
ciccij dice tacncidmndvieue
Plasterboard woodgrain ................

Patio

(32 sq. #.)) coca...

&amp; Tile Marlite ..................

“MAATUNG.

Pegboard

PH 50.0

is, . cies
che tas.

Marlite: o..cc 6k ha

Celotex or Insulite Yo” ooo...

or

clear

sheet material in all sizes and thicknesses. Pieces are cut to your size.

Ash White 0.0.00...

BRANDS

FEATURED

Brown

i505.

BOOT cit
acti cielliakes ss
Disc

acca
ee ee

Butternut occ cece

DISCOUNTS

72
1.00

87

Chestnut (sound waving)

.88

Sects Pncific

Mahogany,

Philippine ..

.69

Weldwood

Maple—soft ....................

72

Craftwall

FU:

65

cs

Onk, wittte iotes

Plywall
Owens

ios.

bit

ra

ea

5 oz.

6 oz.

8 oz.

59c

79c

CRAFTWOOD
8 A.M. - 5:30

Thursday, June 25, 1959

00

16.00

Shopsmith

10

3.20

Table Legs

Prices

shown

are

tile—washable

Deerfield

40c/unit—Color

LUMBER
Road,

P.M.—Thursday

for

12”’x12”

14”

and paintable.

Armstrong
Cushiontone

...........-

2]

Full Random Cushiontone ......... 20
Classic Cushiontone .............200-++ 23
Cushiontone
Cushiontone

............... bt
................. 32

DISCOUNTS

10% IN FULL CARTONS
We also feature
sulite, Nu-wood.

64c

Highland

until 9—Sunday

J.M.,

In-

Staples and use of staple gun free.

COMPANY,
Park,

Celotex,

84c

40c/unit

Illinois

10-1

Just west of Route 41—Phone

_

Mekeod

Shelf Brackets

Hib scccahads statirieds
tet capcen 2.50/qt.

Hardener

1590

30.40

34” Fireproof Travertone ......... 62

PSO hain
49c
Alsinite, Barclite,
Glasbord, StructoAAR
oc ugsidettats 54c
FeO.

iti! 4

54

Jeweled

Fiberglass cloth ........ TY oz. 1.65 yd.
09

Lumber

14.40

Textured

SHEETS

Corrugated for patio roofs, screens
and light diffusers, or flat for room
dividers and shoji screens.

65

Att

FULL

FIBERGLASS

1.17

ji eek eapgererte
eek Sat 2.50
Illinois

4.07

1.66 2.95 3.49
1.87 2.26 2.65

SAVE 20%

Mt ated

~=—«:1.60

A5

YW"!

4.69

3.08

Plexiglass
CURIE oo cionkeie
Frosted ........

AZ

YS

2 5

Germann
pare tr:

Most patterns

aa

Knotty

72

ae

att

ene
Sine Arie See

34

3/16”

Acrylite
Butterflies ....sq. ft. 3.60

Prices are based on 12’x16’ room quan-

Select

05144

Barbecues
Cornices

CEILING TILE

unbreakable

Yg""

Ash

eee

ACRYLIC PLASTICS
Translucent

tity per board foot.

;

Cra f #woo di

Marble Marlite ....soccs:sssssscsccsssseeseee 95

HARDWOOD
PANELING

N ATION Al

products that qualify

14” Masonite Hardboard Standard ......
14” Masonite Hardwood Tempered ......

94" Rocklath

panelling add

[59 Aout 305,00]

youll

Woodgrain

or prefinished

SE ichincbdpmoeitthes about 215.00

HARDWOOD &amp; GYPSUM

14”
14”
14"
14”
34”
Ma
SG"
34”

To panel a 12’x16’ room all materials including furring, floor and ceiling
moulding, ceiling tile, nails and staples.
Based on

service.

well as surfacing materials.

oe

0.08

MONNEME PAM

............ 2

selection and

IDiewood 2-0140

INC.

ae
:

�Primary Recreation

R. ANDERSON

Starts

AGENCY, INC.

INSURANCE

—

735

Deerfield

BONDS

mittee begin each morning,

wood
11:30;

Deerfield,

Monday

through Thursday, at 9:30 at Jewett
Park Fieldhouse and the Maple-

5-0155

Road,

Daily

Primary activities of the Deerfield-Bannockburn Recreation Com-

Sound, Experienced Insurance Service

WIndsor

9:30

To

III.

School,

Take

and

Part

A/2C

in

William

continue

until

Air

Tour

T.

Ralle,

649

Elder Ln., will take part in the
summer
tour for the 640th
U:S.
Air Force Hospital to be held at
Lowry
Air
Force
Base,
Denver,
Colo.
The
hospital
is located
in
Chicago.
Help

defeat the threat of commun-

ism by buying
eee

ee

oe

se

Sf

&gt;

OF THEIR

Give

them

LIVES

SUMMER

Constant
Guidance
Them To The

Send

$20

FIELDS
DAY CAMP
Mon.

thru

FREE
Bus

|_™*t

WKLY.

Fri. 8:30 A.M.
PICK

Transportation

UP
To

to 4:30

P.M.

SERVICE
&amp;

From

The

Home

Swimming

Horseback Riding

BEAUTIFUL

Baseball
Nature Study
Bowling

Handicraft
Cook-outs
Hiking

Pye

Volleyball

Treasure

Hunts

ON

3RD

LAKE

Boys &amp; Girls 5 to 13 Years of Age.
NOW

Fields

Terrace,

CAMP

DIRECTOR

BLANCHE
certified physical
EY

A

A

A

A

A

A

PY

Waukegan

FIELDS

education
A

A

AY

instructor
A

A

1,

APPLICATION FOR FIELDS DAY CAMP
nn | SRP OARS TU. ANCL ALIS eR ae LR
Pe ceca
EES
SEBS HON DE DUE OL ERNE TE ORIEN
RE
RY
EST PSB ae Sh SOO De ha CE
OS ee ORE o&gt;
SEMBLE
RAN ak nee
i
Ee. SERS
RnR NOONE ES
I would like to enroll my child for the following weeks:
ee

minimum
j
7

[] JULY
[] AUG.
Il am

y,
a

AS

Page

26

6-JULY
3-AUG.
enclosing

17
14
$

two

weeks enrollment
[1] JULY 20-JULY 31
L] AUG.
17-AUG. 28
to pay for weeks

indicated.

ee

1950

Mi

Ml
Ml
Ml

to

right,

Robert

J.

Atz,

John

Orsi,

Mrs.

Gerard

Noerenberg,

Kenneth Weir, president of the Deerfield Savings and Loan
Association, Mrs. John Orsi and Lyle Jacobs.
The association sponsors eight mixed teams with a membership of 40.

Ln
Li
La
Man

bp he hp bo ho hp bo ho bo bo

MA 3-7560 or ON 2-6807 or
write Fields Day Camp,

ee

Call

Sara

Rabattini

Rodde

bn he hn

ENROLL

Norma

bp hn hp bp hp he

POSITIVELY NO EXTRA CHARGE FOR ANY ACTIVITIES
INCLUDING HORSEBACK RIDING, BOWLING OR CAMP
EXCURSIONS.
MILK &amp; ICE CREAM FURNISHED DAILY.

if

Madeline Neargarder

ho ho ho ho ho be

THIS

bo ho ho ha hh

TIME

HAVE

bp bp bp hp bp hp bp bp bp hp hp bp bp hp bp bp bp bp bp fp bp bp fp bp bp bp bp bp by by fp bo bp fp bp hp bp fp bo hb

THE

WILL

CLEANERS

bo he bp bo bp by bp bo ho be bo bo ho bo

CHILDREN

5-1749

bb

YOUR

WI

ha ha hi hi ha hi hi hi

7 Days A Week

ha hi hi

Shoreline Mosquito &amp; Pest Control

ha

Plan

ha ha

Ask About Our Service

hi hn i

INSECTS &amp;
RODENTS

Ml, li Ml

hn ha ha ha hi ha hn ha~~ hl

Through Rain .

Trophies were presented to the winning teams of the
Deerfield Savings and Loan Bowling
League at a banquet
held in Waukegan. Participating in the presentation were, left

hl

Even

ID 2-3900
or

ID 2-4000
2061 Green
Highland

487

Roger Williams Ave.

Ravinia
Mi, A

Mt Me A

Bay Rd.
Park

ID
A

Ml, hen A, Mn Mt Mn, ln, A

2-3903
Mtn Mh, ddr, An A

dle. Ar

rVvVVVTVVTVeUVVUVTeWVTVTUT
UCU
UCUVCUUCVCUCCVCCUCUCUCUCCUVCCCUCVCCV
CVCVCVCCVCCVCVCCCVCVCVCVCVCVCVCVCCVC
VTVTVUCTCUCUC
VCVCVCVUCVCVUVCVUVUVUVUVUVUVUVVVVVVY
UCVTeCUCCCUCU
CUCUCUCUCVC "

Fantastic Results
Lasts Doys!

Met, Mel, Mel, Ml, Al, Ali Al

A

fe

Ml

fe

Ml

be

Mi

be

hi

by

hi

A

ee

U. S. Bonds.

Under New Ownership

New Du Pont

LUCITE ACRYLIC

LASTS 50%
LONGER
LASTS 50% LONGER
HOUSE PAINT
... you

don’t

THAN

REGULAR

have to repaint for years!

SOLVES BLISTERING PROBLEM
... used with Du Pont No. 38 primer on
new or unpainted wood!

EASIEST PAINT TO APPLY
... thins with water—yet dries to tough:
est, most weather resistant finish
ever developed.

DRIES

IN 30

»+.SO

you

MINUTES
can

repaint

the

DEERFIELD
Formerly

810

WAUKEGAN

BUY

THE

RD.,

PAINT

R.

A.

Kole

same

PAINTS
GLASS

Paint

&amp;

Co.

DEERFIELD

THAT’S

day!

WI

WORTH

THE

5-2286

WORK

Thursday, June 25, 1959

�sien
GCG

:

VVC

VV

VV

VV

VG VG

Young

VV

VVC CTV

VV

VV

VVC

CVV

CCTV

VV

VV

VVC

CCV

VIC

CCG

cople Si Shoot and Sante
and Mrs. Walter L. Clifford, 908
Fair Oaks, was elected secretary of
the senior class of Lake Forest College.
*
*
*
Nancy Card, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Paul Q. Card, 557 Deerfield
Rd., is the author of a poem appearing
in the
current
issue of
Tusitala, a student publication of
Lake Forest College.
There were
35 contributions in the magazine,
which is devoted to prose, poetry
and the visual arts.
*
*
*

Janet

Judith Ann
Reeb, daughter
of
Dr. and Mrs. Carl A. Reeb, 2420
Riverwoods
Rd., is enrolled
this
fall at Southern Illinois University,
Carbondale, having been graduated
this spring
from
Highland
Park
High School.
Judith rode her mare
Shy Gal
in the historical pageant last weekend which was part of the centennial celebration at Waukegan. One
of 40 riders in her contingent, Judy
was dressed in full western regalia.

Vieregg

*

Janet Vieregg, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. John A. Vieregg, 654 Orchard, was graduated from Carleton College, Northfield, Minn., with
a class of 204. An art history major, Janet was a counselor in the
women’s dormitories and Y.W.C.A.
treasurer.
She
is a graduate
of
Highland Park High School.
*
*
*
Sally Cassady, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. R. I. Cassady, 624 Hermitage Dr., was elected recording secretary of the Independent
Women’s Club at Lake Forest College.
*
*
*
Marilyn

Clifford, daughter

of Mr.

*

*

Michael
Reeb, son of Dr. and
Mrs. Carl A. Reeb, of 2420 Riverwoods Rd., is attending the University of Idaho summer forestry camp

held

at McCall,

Idaho.

His parents

will drive out to accompany
him
home. This fall he will be enrolled
as a junior at the University of

Idaho

at Moscow,

Ronald
Ronald

Ida.

Hennings
Blair,

J.

Keller,

Convention

Mrs. Ronald Goodman
of Bannockburn will be a delegate to the
Alpha Xi Delta national convention
from June 27 to July 2 at Glenwood Springs, Colo. Accompanying
Mrs.
Goodman
will be delegates
from
Lake
Forest
College
and
Northwestern
University,
as well
as Mrs. Grundy Steiner, Wilmette,
national
philanthropy
chairman,
who will speak, and Mrs. Richard
Lindeman,
Elmwood
Park,
vice
president of the Chicago Alumnae
Chapter.

son

of

Notice
To the Patrons
Company:

Of

Proposed

Mr.

of

the

Permanent

Waves

Hair Cutting
Specializing

In All Branches Of Beauty

Culture

CLASSIQUE BEAUTY SALON

Filing

1815

St. Johns

ID 2-1603

Avenue
EXPERIENCED

OPERATORS

of the Illinois Bell Telephone

The
Illinois
Bell
Telephone
Company
hereby gives notice to the public that it
has filed with the Illinois Commerce Commission
provisions
in its
General
Local
Exchange Tariff which will permit a subscriber who requires two or more main line
telephones in a household to subscribe for
different types of residence service.

DRIVEWAY CONSTRUCTION
Parking

All parties interested in this matter may
obtain
information
with
respect
thereto
either directly from this Company
or by
addressing the Secretary of the Illinois Commerce Commission at Springfield, Illinois.
ILLINOIS BELL
By J. A.

TELEPHONE
CO.
Rosander, Manager
6/25 7/2/59—175

Areas

—

@

Expert

@

Concrete

A copy of the proposed filing may be inspected by any interested party at the business office of this Company at 1866 Second
Street, Highland Park.

Old

Drives

Refinished

Black Topping
@ Crushed
Stone

Call for FREE ESTIMATE!

FERTILIZER

... CHOICE TOP SOIL

SILJESTROM

FUEL CO.

ID 2-0065
First

Highland

St.

Park

and
635
Dr.

teadiest stance!

Deerfield
at

_

. . including all shades
of light blondes

1930

Hennings,
baptized by

Presbyterian
Church,
Sunday morning.

Expert Hair Coloring

PUBLIC NOTICE

Baptized

Mrs.
William
H.
Brierhill Rd., was

Paul

To Attend

services

LO ROVRES Oo a /
ee

&gt;)

ren

o

. Ve,
° FABRICS

x

°

¢ FURNITURE
URNITU

Le
ve /A ee

:

© DRAPERIES

Gg

'7A| | © CARPETING

¢ BED SPREADS

Se

‘\a | | ® ACCESSORIES

¢ UPHOLSTERY

197

)

ee,

"i

EAnGe

o

;

©lax
/o

ay

%6, ]

2 V\
-y

n
oI

4 U

o

OD

ss

[9

;

,

STELLA MAE

Ae

BUTTERWORTH

|

h

KIRKMAN Z.
FISCHER

Wheels are five inches farther apart. This widens the
stance, not the car, gives you road-hugging stability,

Wa
A

less lean and sway. Only Pontiac has Wide-Track Wheels!

He

Members

National Society of Interior Design

1338 SKOKIE VALLEY
ID 2-5781
Thursday,

June

25, 1959

SEE

RD.

a

YOUR

LOCAL

AUTHORIZED

PONTIAC

DEALER

PETERSEN PONTIAC

1949 ST. JOHNS AVE., HIGHLAND PARK
Page

27

�Six Scouts Invested
At Troop 33's Annual
Family Picnic In Park
Six

boys

became

Scout

‘Robin Hood, Alive In Sherwood Forest

members

in June at the annual family picnic
of

Lincoln

other

Here’s

What

Our

Box

Storage

Service

Means

to

Usual

Low

Cleaning

Charges

Will

Be

Added

to

You!

Storage

Troop

received

38.

Four

second

class

Scout awards.
Invested
in ceremonies
led by
Scoutmaster
James
Felsenthal
of
888 Kimball Rd. were Peter Glick,
591
Ravine
Rd.; Don
Mintz,
485
Lincoln Ave. W; Alan Seeger, 1251
Glencoe Ave.; Dennis Delee, 1368
McDaniels
Ave.;
Dennis
Harris,
1115 Golf Ave.; and Paul Mayer,
1329 Lincoln Ave.
Seventy-five
persons
were
on
hand to observe the ceremonies and
hear the fathers’ committee report,
given by John
Schellinkhout, fathers’ chairman.
Honored with awards were Scott
Schoen of 612 Mulberry PIl., Ricky

Everything you send beautifully cleaned, carefully stored and
immediately insured.
Fill the box we furnish with all the woolens
you want returned clean in the Fall. Of course, you pay nothing ‘til
garments are returned.
Our

School

boys

Schneider

of 1352

Green

Bay

Here are the “Maid Marions”
of Girl Scout troop 84—a group
of sixth grade girls at Red Oak
school who wrote and presented

Rd.,

Doug
Schellinkhout
of
1325
St.
Johns Ave. and Michael Galbreath
of 1509 Oakwood Ave.

Cost!

the play “Robin Hood.” Proceeds
from two one-day

STOP

—

AMPLE

FREE

PARKING

HI-FI — RECORDS — STEREO

Ge ey

SALE

HIGHLAND
RADIO

&amp;

RECORD

Central

ID

rT
ee ET Eee ebb blr

sp bebe bel Esbs bleh bay)

F $5.00

orrer expires June 30, 1959

wa

COUPON

Leal

on

r

the

IS WORTH
purchase

$5.00
$5.00

at suggested

-

HIGHLAND

=

on

= 33 1/3

Monaural

itt

at

-

8WA

purchase

NantSRR

gé

avGini
fy &lt;a

We as AlwaysY

:

Answer!

HI-Fl

MERCURY

suggested

HIGHLAND
651
SERGE

EREERS

ID 2-0154

ERE ER ERE
-@

Page

28

RADIO &amp; RECORD

Central Avenue
See

eee
2

Rene
+

t

sixth-grade

and

performances

were

in the

the

play presentation, the
composed
of
children

will be

to town...or to

Estimates

a new home...

2-3220

Your

Welcome

Wagon

will call with a
of gifts. --and

basket
friendly greetings from
_our religious, civic and
business leaders.
3

F\))))

2

AS

Es

If you, or others you
know, are moving, be
sure to phone Welcome
Wagon.
Highland Park

ae
aw

:

Records

list

eight

When you move

FRE E
Rs

of two

REDEEM THIS COUPON AT

rs
|

the

of

Hostess

$3.48

of

|| donated to buy toys for the chilg | dren’s ward of Highland Park Hos| pital.

Call ID

THIS COUPON IS WORTH $3.48

mm

group

served refreshments.
Proceeds from admissions

RADIO &amp; RECORD

orrer expires JUNE 30, 1959

(Sheriff

| dressed in costume and adults, were

list

B 651 Central Ave.
ID 2-0154
TT
LLLet Litt tr iti t iret eee eet it
lalallala lalate
lle

2 $3.48

A

After

REDEEM THIS COUPON AT

2

Lauzon

girls, members of Girl Scout troop
84 in the Sherwood Forest neighborhood, wrote and presented an

@ | audience,

#
®

Stereo HI-FI MERCURY Records

u

Hayner (Robin Hood) top
Marcia

Nottingham) and Elise Eisenberg,
the narrator.

Ln.,

5

of two

bride),

Marion),

Cecile Casey
ID 2-0442
Deerfield. Bannockburn

sie..elhe...sthe...riie...sle...thie...thien.tlie.olie.
tiie. ste. .slhe..slie..stte. rie. .slie..slie..slte site
ole
ler

GUARANTEED
SEWER
a

ll

alla

als

al

i

and
ls

al

al

DRAIN
a

i

CLEANING

Adalyne Sickel

WI 5-1210

al

THIS

2-0154

the

(Maid

@ | back yard of her parents’ home.

all
a
i

651

(Elizabeth

Vetter

group.
The adaptation was written by
%| Helen
Hayner,
daughter
of
the
# | Simeon Hayners, 1675 Huntington

ee

Were

Nelson

Goldman

Little John), Les-

ai Si Rp Se

Classical &amp; Popular
$3.98 &amp; $4.98 oe
Now $2.49 |

Roselyn

RGR rains hire

Suess

Adale),

Hed-

SSSR

Ginny

(Allen

Patty

Doris Scher

A matinee performance at 2 p.m.
and an evening performance at 8
p.m, was presented June 17 by the

aaa

Brands)

(Will Scarlet),

#| adaptation of Robin Hood.

SRE

(All

strom

Helen

cis

12” LP’s

of

row,

REESE

Rd., H.P.

of

lie

AS

Bay

purchase

toys for the children’s ward
Highland Park Hospital.

Marsha

as tes ea RNs sas op aatn

Green

performances

toward

(Friar Tuck and

Lectro-Matic cleans your sewer
: and
floor drains Electrically.

Phone Today . . . ID 2-4551

going

Left to right are

mopping basements

Serving the North Shore Over 60 Years

2226

are

WELCOME

woe BROEK:
a

+4]

WAGON
eae,

.

=/

"f)
t

Thursday, June 25, 1959

�Joint Plan Groups
'Alan Sager Is Rated
Approve Annexation
in Engineering Top 10
Plea Of Area To West
Mr. and Mrs. B. W. Sager of 239
Ivy Ln. have been informed that
their son, Alan, who is just completing his first year in the college of engineering at Tufts University, Medford, Mass., has been
rated among top ten engineers in
his class.
Sager has been on the freshman
honor
roll both
fall and.
spring
semesters. Recently he was initiated into Alpha Epsilon Pi fraternity.
He is one of eight freshmen cadets
in AFROTC
selected for membership in the honorary group, Arnold
Air Society. He managed freshman
basketball, wrote sports for campus
paper and was active in Hillel.

Highland
Park
Planning
Commission does not disagree with the
idea of annexation of a section of
Bannockburn lying north of Park
Ave.,
if extended,
and
west
of
Skokie
Drainage
ditch, Ralph
Snyder,
city
manager,
told
the
NEWS.
This would place the area, ap-

proximately

50

acres

now

in Ban-

nockburn,
in Highland Park; the
Skokie Drainage Ditch would become
the common
boundary line
between Highland Park and Bannockburn along the area in ques
tion. Thomas Compere, corporation
counsel, has been directed to draw
up an ordinance incorporating this
area into Highland Park,
The
matter
came
up
approximately three months ago at a joint
meeting of the Planning Commissions of the two cities.
On March 23 The Chicago National
Bank,
as trustee
for
the
Bannockburn
property owner, re-

quested

annexation

Highland
sufficient

age facilities. Petition
ed
from
Planning
April 18.

Illinois

Department

of

Revenue

Thursday
reported
to Governor
William G. Stratton that $13,111.31
for Highland Park, and $1,812.20
for Highwood, are amounts certified to the State Treasurer as city
sales
tax
collections
on
retail
sales for April.
These

collections

represent

charges).
Tax
the cities.

PACKING

LAKE

CAR

WASH

XA

STORAGE

by

will

of lack of
and sewer-

ACROSS THE STREET
OR ACROSS THE NATION

521 GREEN
WILMETTE,

BAY ROAD

Agent

ILLINOIS

Allied

Alpine 1-0032 - UNiversity 4-0052

Van Lines

/

| MAKE YOUR CAR’

was returnCommission

VAN ,.CO.

a

SHIPPING

self-imposed

&amp;

TAKE WORRY OUTOF

one-half cent tax on retail sales
(less
six
per
cent.
collection
is

BROS.

' STORAGE

SPARKLE

i &lt;“with DU PONT

Lalas

aig

Snyder
stated
that
respective
counsel or boards of trustees for
owners
of
vacant
property
can
bring about annexation or disannexation by ordinance; if the property is improved,
a referendum
is necessary to accomplish either
change.

of this area to

Park because
water supply

JOYCE

State Reports On April
Retailers’ Occupation Tax

ene

(Advertisement)

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2972

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Remember:

Phone

Every Wednesday

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$799 DAY
With

Mosquitoes at North Shore garden parties have become a thing of the past
since Household Pest Control division of Aerosol Exterminators has put its

8 Gals. of Gas
Lake Car Wash

and

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car

finishes!

car’s finish!

BY

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A $22.00
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at

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Sun.,

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p.m.

new fogging equipment into operation. One treatment the day of your party
does the job, won’t harm flowers or shrubbery but kills mosquitoes. HPC also
has a special plan that brings sudden death to ants, moths, spiders, waterbugs,

carpet beetles, roaches and all the other annoying and damage-dealing insect
pests that invade our homes. HPC chemicals are safe for people . . . murder
for insects.

The

HPC

plan

is inexpensive,

Household
Phone

Hillcrest

too.

Pest Control

6-6173

7

Days

a

Week

SLADERGTAZION 6G.

CRANE REAL EXCAMATIN
ETRUCHIRG MGRLAND
PARE NLL
BORE DLE OND 2.9785

Choose
TYPING

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TYPING

From

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FOR

Following
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SCHOOL

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(6 weeks)

BUSINESS

Speedwriting
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SHORTHAND

(days

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STENOGRAPHIC
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BUSINESS

ENGLISH

@
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ACCOUNTING
COMPTOMETRY

Day and Evening Classes
Wm. H. Callow, Prin.
BEGIN ANY MONDAY EXCEPT SPEEDWRITING CLASS
WHICH BEGIN JULY 6, 20; AUGUST 3, 17

EVANSTON BUSINESS COLLEGE
1718
W. H. Callow, Prin.
Thursday,

June

25, 1959

Sherman

Ave.
UN

4-3004

EXCAVATING
GRADING
ROADS
@

CRANES

@® WRECKING
@ DRIVEWAYS
@® PARKING LOTS
RENTED

GLADER &amp; TAZIOLI
EXCAVATING CO.
ID 2-3785
Page

29

�Trustees Award

ALL WOOL
CARPETING

Petroleum

Edens

near

with President G. Eldon Holmquist

Carpets

Tower

VE

5-2400

Open Monday through Saturday, 9 to 5
Mon. &amp; Wed. Evenings by Appointment

tt tH ANH i Hi 1tl AE HM AA

ih AAA

tH i ti) A

HA

A=

GET THE FINEST!

SHREDDED
TOP SOIL
SPECIALLY PREPARED BY MACHINE. Easier to Spread =
—Improves Growing. Most uniform, perfectly processede=
soil obtainable . . . at no extra cost.

MANURE—FERTILIZER

OF

HIGHLAND

Phone

alll

casting the deciding vote.
The D-X bid being the lowest of
three offered to the board, Trustee
Joseph W. Koss proposed its acceptance and his motion was sec-|:
onded by Trustee Harold L. Peterson,
whose
relationship
to
the
company had been questioned.
An
audience
that nearly filled
the board
room
heard
assurance
that the company’s main office in
Tulsa described Trustee Peterson
as its agent or distributor, while
his brother, A. E. Peterson, was the
person who would make deliveries
to the village.
Village Attorney Thomas J. Matthews, asked if he would recommend
awarding
the
contract
to
D-X, replied “no” although he declared
that he
accepted
without
reservation Trustee Peterson’s assurance that he had no connection
with the village contract. Several
persons from the audience spoke
up in favor of awarding the con-

tract

MUTUAL
SERVICES

PARK,

Attend ‘Ten Year and Over’ Luncheon

Deerfield
village
trustees
last
week
awarded
the
controversial
oil contract to D-X Sunray Oil Co.,

69&gt;.

ews

Contract

to

Peterson,

and

cited

“in-

dictment by innuendo”’ as unfair.
Trustee Maurice C. Petesch and
““
Arno
D.
Wehle
voted
“no” ”? on
awarding the contract, while Trustee John Aberson joined the “ayes”
after he had been assured that the
contract would
be terminated
at
any time that it was shown that
Trustee
Peterson
were
receiving
any remuneration
from
the con-

NC.

ID 2-0027

I AT

= | tract,

M.

W.

Bolster

Cc. W.

Three
Deerfield
men
attended
the annual
“Ten Year and Over
Club”
luncheon of the Shell Oil
Company’s
Chicago
Division
at
Edgewater
Beach
Hotel, followed

Lost Youngster
Jeffe
age

Backe,

out

of

Jeff

was

Wednesday

by a ball game at Wrigley Field.
Among
those in attendance were
M. W. Bolster, 417 Willow Ave., C.
W. Summers, 1425 Dartmouth Ln.,
and Edward Yatsko Jr., 1346 Stratford Rd.
since

5 p.m,

from

Apple

Tree.

When

Located
312,

his

gets

little

good

mile-

three-wheeler.

reported

at

as having

6

been

p.m.

missing

Summers

thereafter

by

Rogge,

was

1977
Park.

he

his

home

located

Officer

Deerfield

pedaling
Rd.

in

at

737

shortly
Thomas

along

Come +o our

Big Bar B-Q

R, ube

Demonstration
See the new way...the sure way...the most tastetempting way to cook meats, fish or fowl on Weber
Covered Bar-B-Q Kettles.

I

North Shore's Outstanding Selection of Toys
Tables

and

Chair

For Children’s

Rental

Parties

Party Planning
Entertainment

Children’s
JANE

RUBENS

Books

Party Favors and Souvenirs

FREE

RUTH

CASE

GIFT WRAPPING

Ws

Come see chow expert
in action...
Joe
Sat.,

10

FREE

Bailey
June

Adjacent

a.m.to 4 p.m.

LORETTA

O‘NEILL’S

ACE HARDWARE
1746

Second

St.

ID

2-1150

Page

30

HI

|

ac

Park

&amp;

Areas

JONES

JOY

“THE BEST IN TOYS FOR GIRLS AND
ALL
PHONES

DIXON

BOYS”

[ID-2-3001

1833
i

DELIVERY

Highland
27

2nd Street

Highland Park
Thursday,

June

at

Highland

25, 1959

�Deviticld Manor News
The

Bar-B-Q

fit of the

for the bene-

playground

last Saturday

judged

the

most

successful

fair
since the
formation
of
Deerfield Manor Homeowner’s
sociation.

The

son extended
nors

from

Wheeling

president
thanks

an

area

to Half

Earl

to over

afthe
As-

Simp35

extending

do-

from

Day.

Mrs.
Marion
Huber
Simpson, co-chairmen,

and
Mrs.
reported

Chairs

and

tables

were

loaned

by

the Amvets Post 66.
The association will meet Sunday
evening at 7:30. The question of water supply will be discussed. An invitation
has
been
sent
to
the
Pekara Water Works to have one
of
their
representatives
at
the
meeting. The president reports that
he has received his reply from Illinois Commerce Commission.

Word was received from Martin
Immenga, of the Wauconda Construction

Company,

that

he

will

take steps toward oiling of the
roads.
Birthdays were recently celebrated by Patty Goline, Wilbur Henneman,
Scout
advancement
leader,
and Marion Huber, of Birch St.

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

best market

place.

Robert Broege Attends
Boys’ State This Week

Highland Park High School = J

Robert Broege, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert F. Broege, 802 Deer-

field

Rd.,

is attending

Boys’

Main Pool

State

Wednesday nights for adults only thru
August 5th,

at Springfield this week. The citizenship
school
sponsored
by the
American Legion is being conducted in the Youth Building at the
state fairgrounds.
The local boy is sponsored by

the American

Legion

1959.

|

Friday nights for high school students
and

adults

thru August

7th,

jf

1959*

Ne

7:30 P.M. to 9:30 P.M.
75¢

per person

Towel and soap furnished.

Post 738. He

eS

Life guard

present at all times.

has just completed his sophomore
year at Highland Park High School.

*Elementary

students are not admitted.
=r

paces nas

SPECIAL!

a

was

picnic

that much help was given in arranging
and
serving
by Kessels,
Ruleys,
Polenemis,
Sonderbergs
and
the Ted
and
Otto
Holzens.

at the Plait lilo suburban

four of
our

most

popular
items

Very

a

hs

on

sale

for the

4th of July!

Florida Folding Chaise

2 CHAIRS sox $Q%0

@ Full 6 ft. 2 in. long

matched

@No fade VELON

or mixed

RATTAN
Se

SessEROLR ssa

® Cool,

rooms,

comfortable,

¢ Contour

woven

patio,
and

back

© Footrest folds underneath to make

the

chaise a chair

porch

lightweight
and

webbing

e Finger-tip adjustment multi-position

TUB CHAIR

for game

@ Colors: Green and White, Yellow and White

seat

IQ

DOI

2-Bahama Chairs

PIAA

ea ek eae
oe
siitiniaeussoece

every day

Both for

including

a

saturday &amp;

Sunday
9:30 a.m.

Soe thane

LOIRIQLIIIIILE SLOQOIOILY
SERRE SeANoeNoSS OBS

Special

3 PG. BARBECUE st

| 9”

to 9:30 p.m.!
»

@Top

quality

California

Redwood

@ Big 6 ft. table and 2 benches
@ Guaranteed sturdy construction

sorry, no phone orders

* Extra wide VELON webbing —
¢ Made of 1” rustproof aluminum
¢ Folds to compact carrying size

the [re] Tj

suburban

cash and carry
only at these
low prices

Thursday, June 25, 1058

1672 skokie highway
highland park,

id 2-7077

�Miss Jeanette
Belmont Receives

Robert Fathauer
Graduates From

June Leuer Shekut

Fort Lewis College

School Diploma

Business Degree
Miss Jeanette R. Belmont, daughter

of

Mr.

and

cently
received
a
bachelor
of
science
degree
n business administration and
marketing from
Marquette
University, Milwaukee, Wis.
Miss Belmont,

Robert Fathauer, son of Mr. and
Mrs. C, E. Fathauer, 238 Ivy Ln.
was
one
of 41
graduate
to re.
ceive degrees or
Coe rt it. Tes
cates
at commencement exercises
at Fort
Lewis
A
&amp; M
College,
Durango, Colo.
He
received a twoyear
certificate

a

with a major

Mrs. Maria Belmont,
1505 Ca-

vell

Miss Belmont

731

DEERFIELD

ROAD

a

sft:

Remodeling ‘Team
MODERN

DENTAL

sorority

No

BEST

WISHES

.

of

board

member

and

matter

what

you

want

Mother, 2 Daughters
Graduate This Month
The Seymour Banish family, 1915
Old Briar Rd., claims three graduates this
June. Mrs. Banish received
her master’s degree in art education at Illinois Institute of Technology. A graduate of the Univer-

sec-

See Russia for yourself!
.
Re

Dr. Crowley

BUILDERS

ate

wy

MAUPINTOUR Motorcoach Tours.
18 days, departing from Helsinki
or Warsaw every week May 21
through September 3, $519.
MAUPINTOUR
Luxury
Sailings.
9 departures aboard the Queen
Mary and Elizabeth, April through

CS:
~

REALTORS

--APPRAISERS

826 DEERFIELD Koad.
DEERFIELD, /LLINO/S$

September,

DOLLARS

Mrs.

Shekut,

daugh-

sity

of

Chicago,

pervisor

she

of art for

schools.
Miss Roslyn

is

district

Chicago

Banish

su-

public

just graduat-

ed from
Highland
Park
High
School and Vivian Banish, from
Red Oak School. Another daughter,
Marian, a junior at the
of Illinois, achieved a
average this year.

University
five point

Contact

from $2;105.

28

$1687

complete.

R. Anspach
TRAVEL BUREAU

DID

Herman

Central

F, Anspach, Pres.

Ave., H.P.

See your eye physician
(M.D.) first. If he says
you can wear them—
H.O.YV. has all the newest
types. Get the benefit

ID 2-1211

Our methods
always get

of our 20 years of

pioneering and
continued research.

best results

HIGHLAND PARK
SAVINGS « LOAN

For the answer to your questions about contact lenses—
write for our new booklet.
Ch

Craftsmen

tific methods . . . thoroughly, but
so gently

that the life of fine

garments

and

linens

is greatly

e

Notice

Illinois

filed

1811
Highland
MEMBER
LOAN

THE

who

for
A

copy

KOKIE

SAVINGS

LAUNDRY

VAL LEY
&amp;

DRY

CLEANERS,

INC.

INC.

General
permit
or

by

any

interested

office

of

this

information
directly

the

in

party

this

this

Company

Commission

at

of

be

at

the

Illinois

matter

respect

Secretary

may

at

with

from

submain

service.

filing

Deerfield,

interested

Local
a

to subscribe

Company

Road,

it

Com-

more

residence

proposed

parties

Commerce

Main Office and Plant:
IDiewood 2-33 10 — Deerfield Call Enterprise 1616
512-518 Waukegan Ave., Highwood

its
will

the

All

addressing

AND

of

that

Commerce

two
of

Company

public

in a household

Deerfield

either

in

types

812
obtain

the

which

requires

different

business

ID 2-0361

FOUNDATION,

Illinois

Tariff

inspected

Ave.,

Park
OF

for Pick-up Service!

Service

St. Johns

the

line telephones

Carol Jean Sikorski

1888

Filing

Telephone
to

provisions

scriber

Since

Bell
notice

with

mission

—

Proposed

of the Illinois Bell Telephone

gives

Exchange

Security

NOTICE

Company:

has

Satisfaction

of

To the Patrons
The

Phone TODAY

in Optics

PUBLIC

hereby

B. Frances Willock

aa

1891 SHERIDAN ROAD
HIGHLAND PARK
135 NORTH WABASH, CHICAGO
©H.O.V.

accordance with the latest scien-

ASSOCIATION

oS

House of Vision”

We clean your laundry in strict

prolonged!

Diane True

Leuer

H. and
463

UP TO
$10,000.
~
Neg CORR

June

ter of Mr.
and
Mrs.
Joseph
J.
Leuer,
1066
ee
Centerfield
Ct.,
is one of 60 students at Evanston Hospital
School of Nursing who June 15
received
diplomas in the
Northwestern
University
commenceMrs. Shekut
ment exercises.
Parents and friends of the graduates were served a buffet luncheon
in the student nurses’ home after
the ceremonies.
The Evanston Hospital School of
Nursing
pin,
marking
successful
completion
of the three-year
course, was given members of the
graduating class in a separate “pinnight” program.

MAUPINTOUR — Student - Teacher
Economy Tours. 72 days, visiting 12
countries. Departures: June 14, 21,

for full information call . . .

“tne

MARY

Fathauver

a

to buy

find the Want-Ad

in

geology. He will work for the Highland Park Water Department this
summer,

tion your best market place.

OFFICE

CONGRATULATIONS
AND

graduate

freshman
orientation leader during her junior and senior years at
Marquette.

or sell you'll

BRIGHT

re-

Sacred
Heart
Academy
in Lake
Forest,
is
a
member
of
Theta
Phi Alpha social sorority. She was

In the HEART of DEERFIELD
THE OLD ICE HOUSE
VIKING

Ave.,

Earns Nursing

the

may

thereto
or

by

Illinois

Springfield,

Ili-

nois.

ILLINOIS BELL TELEPHONE CO..By E. T. LAURES, Manager.

6/18-25 /59—174
Thursday, June 25, 1959

�Alan Engle Awarded

C. F. Grimes Elected

‘Thumbs Down‘ Slogan Senior Vice President

Designed For Safety,
Says Police Chief
With

a long

summer

ahead

Charles
Ave.,

has

F. Grimes,
been

and

L,
Schmieg
timely new

a

and

slogan

to

prevent

today
signal

Many
of
our
people
will
be
among the 37 million of Americans

of
all ages who
enjoy the invigorating, and pleasant sport of
boating this summer,” the Chief
said.
forms

“It
of

is
one
of
the
safest
recreation,
yet just as

- motoring

has

its

minority

responsible ‘hot rod
‘drag race show-offs’

retary

highway

and waterway accidents. It’s short
and simple, “Thumbs down means
‘Don’t clown!’ ”

of

others,”

he

held since 1952.
Associated with the company since 1919 he
has been general counsel for the
past 12 years. Grimes was graduated from the University of Chicago
with a Ph.B. degree in 1916 and a
J.D. degree in 1919.

ir-

jockeys’ and
so does boat-

the

ture

familiar

safety

down”

ges-

show-offs.
authorities,

he

said, are suggesting that whenever a person is seen making a
‘pest of himself by clownish behavior in or around a boat, or
for that matter, in an auto on the
highway,

annoyed

bystanders
takeable

When
people

Campbell Chapter No. 712, Order
of
Eastern
Star,
will
meet
on
Wednesday evening at 7:30 p.m. in
the Masonic Temple. There will be
a business meeting, initiation and
a social hour. Mrs. Joan Korhumel
is worthy matron and Steven Anderson is worthy patron.

dangerous
besuggests use of

“thumbs

to discourage

Public

Campbell Chapter
Meets On Wednesday

declared.

To
curb
this
havior, the Chief

give
“Thumbs

of the

board
of directors, a position

ing have a few smart elecks who
imperil the safety of themselves
and

Lincoln

elected senior vice
president
“of Chicago Title
-and Trust Com-

the Fourth of July weekend coming
up, Highland Park’s Chief of Police
Anthony
urged use of

1176

Exchange Scholarship

plaints

above

motor

Psychologists

noise.

say

he

stop

endangered

the

unmis-

common

Down”

signal.

he’s even a fair sportsman.
A final reminder—when towing
a boat on the highway, remember
to have proper lights and signals

or

him

the offender sees enough
make this sign, he’ll know

he’s doing something he shouldn’t
do, even when he can’t hear com-

air conditioners

with

e

670 Central

the

act
like
Chief, if,

vast

at discount

Ave., H.P.

house!

¢

ID 2-2042

Pee
Whdeding
a
oe
Stationery

SPECIAL
100 ANNOUNCEMENTS
or INVITATIONS
$21 95
Other Styles 50 for $17.95 up
YOUR WEDDING ORD ER SHOULD INCLUDE
ONE OR MORE OF THE FOLLOWING

ENCLOSURE CARDS
for ‘at home” notice
“reception” or ‘please reply’’

100 FOR $10.50

CALLING

CARDS

For the new title of “Mr.

and

Mrs. John Richard Jones’’
and Mrs. John

Richard Jones

100 for $3.95 and up
INFORMAL NOTES

For the same change

in names and for

“thank you’’ notes to acknowledge wedding gifts

100 FOR $6. 15 AND

a
in

majority.

on a trailer.

the north shore’s smallest discount
MoleyTV

and
the

will

his
foolishness
gentleman,
said

UP

645 CENTRAL AVE.
ID 3-0230

A scholarship

has been

by the Department

awarded

of State to Alan

Grant Engle, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Holland Engle, 474 Comstock P1.,
to study
commercial
Spanish
at
the
University
of
San
Carlos,

Guatemala

City,

Guatemala.

This graduate study scholarship
is awarded under the International
Educational Exchange program of
the State Department, designed to
promote a better understanding of
the United States in other countries and increase mutual understanding between the people.
Studied

In

Fraternity Officer
Alan Bills, nephew of Mrs. H. W.
Christopherson,
1361
Ridgewood
Dr., recently was elected secretary
of Delta Chi fraternity at Lake Forest College.
New officers are for the semester
beginning in September.

RAVINIA
WASH
592

Roger

TUB
Williams

IDlewood

Spain

Engle
completed
his first two
years on the Illinois College (Jacksonville) campus and spent his junior
year
at
the
University
of
Madrid in Spain. Returning to the

I, C. campus in the fall, he
pleted his course of study

Allen Bills Elected

comthis

spring and was granted the B. A.
degree
in
Spanish
during
commencement exercises June 14. He
is a graduate
of Highland
Park
High School.

Mr.

Koger

2-9771

SHIRTS and
DRY CLEANING
HOURS...

8:00

A.M.

to 5:30

Saturday

8:00

A.M.

Closed

..

to
on

prescription to us.

4:00

;

LEWIS SYLVESTER, R.Ph. Mg
HENRY A. STINE, R.Ph. |

Phone
643

Roger

ID 3-1212

Williams

Rav

P.M.

Opposite Jewel Food Store

P.M.

After
Hours Emergency
Call IDlewood 2-9126

.

Wednesday

Prescriptionists

25 Years Experience

and

Service

;

Ask your Doctor to telephone your

Complete Washing
Drying

P harma.

Precise

Ave.

Stine

�FOREST

Dr.

A.

J.

Crowley

dor at 731 Deerfield

265 Market

We

Prep League News

Dentist Opens Office
At 731 Deerfield Rd.

SPORT
LAKE

Square

phone

will be closed Saturday,

and every Saturday

Lake

Forest

548

July 4,

until August

8,

opened

by Bill Olson

his

Rd. this week

to begin the practice of dentistry.
He is located in the brick building
near
the
Deerfield-Waukegan
intersection which was recently attractively
remodeled
by
Viking
Realty. The structure many years
ago was used as an ice house.
Dr.
Crowley
is a graduate
of
Loyola
University
and
has completed a period of active duty in
the U.S. Navy. He served as dental
officer for Pacific Seabee Battalions
and
was
stationed
in
the
Hawaiian Islands, the Marshall Islands
in the
South
Pacific,
the
Aleutians and in Kodiac, Alaska.
During the past year he has been
practicing with another dentist in
Beverly Hills, Chicago.

Deerfield played its fifth game
Thursday
night
at
Jewett
Park
against Waukegan. Bill North was

the starting pitcher, but soon was
relieved by Tom LaBuda for North
gave up six runs and seven hits in
only one and one-third innings.
The
four runs
that Waukegan
got in the first inning proved to be
all they needed
as Deerfield got
only two runs
all evening, even
though Waukegan pushed four runs
across in the sixth and one more
in the seventh for a grand total of
11, beating Deerfield 11-2.
Waukegan
.4
Deerfield ...0

It seemed

SHILOENS SHOP
SQUARE

PHONE

LAKE

FOREST

548

SWELTERING WEATHER
IS ON THE WAY

THESTA
POOLS

that

424
Oe

Deerfield

pT 4

was

go-

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RAYMOND

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when

North,

driving

Bob

Holl-

the

one-run

lead

we

had

looked
bigger
and
bigger.
However, Glenview dropped a bomb in
the bottom of the fourth, scoring
six times on six hits and taking a
six to one lead.

We

came

back

for

two

runs

in

the top of the fifth, but the damage

had been done. We were retired in
the sixth and seventh
ing, giving Glenview

without scortheir fourth

straight victory in four games.

BLONER

returned
record.

ZONE MANAGER
124 West
Northwest
Hwy.
Barrington, Mlinois
Call Collect DUnkirk 1-3216

home

with

Deerfield ........ t'- O48
Waukegan ...... Oe.
8

a two
0,
6

We

and four

2)
1:0,
%

(Not

Chevestors

Including

Sunday’s

North
w
GION VIEW
3.62.8oaL 3
North Chicago °.......... 3
Waukegan
1
Deerfield
Highwood
Niles Recreation. ...... 0

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South
Ds aie
Wildwood?’
ics 3
RVOMSIOR
Wok A 4
Glenview Signode ....2
Niles Sellergram ...... 0
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Games)

ff
0
1
1
3
2
2

Pct.
1.000
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500
.400
333
.000

GB
_
YY
1%

8
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Page

34

3:9
Us

Standings

Representing

FOUNDED

Bill

mann, who was on second because
of an error.
Going into the top of the second,
it seemed we were going to repeat
what happened in the first when
Will Bodle opened up with a single
and Bro Abrahamson followed with
a walk. Jim Ramsey, next up, hit
sharply into a double play and a
strike-out that followed killed the
rally.
The
game
became a _ pitcher’s
duel for three and one-half innings

Interested in
Stocks?

FOREST

MARKET

0. 07
O45

view Realty Sunday. In the top of
the first we scored once by a hit

when we will be open.

265

2
1

ing to have better luck when they
traveled to Glenview to play Glenby

LAKE

2
0

Thursday, June 25, 1959

z
2%

31%

�Fs

NA

Second High School, District 11
_

(Continued

from

page

15)

trict 113, will include complete

| permanent

finishing

classrooms,

of

gymnasiums,

all

the

laborator-

ies, athletic fields and grounds required for 1,200 students; plus the
swimming

pool,

music

department

facilities, shops, library and administrative

dents

facilities

who,

attending

for the 2,200

it is projected,
in

a few

stu-

will be

years.

Other areas ultimately needed for
the 2,200 student enrollment—part
of the
rooms

practice

Form’

Architects
explain
this
means
areas ultimately
needed
will
be
permanently
walled,
roofed
and
floored
and will have
all utility
services installed so that final finishing of needed space as required
can be done efficiently and eco-

than

The

board

of procedure

if

it

were

says

will

necessary,

For A Summer

and _

ot boas

te ®

y

ee

ee

utility. Not only will the structuce | of construction as for the other,

will

include

ceilings,
structural
tile
and resilient tile floors.

throughout
omy

eNO

materials

Plastered
stead

%

OM area st tye Aa \ aac

walls

of concrete

of each

will

all classroom
block.

material

be

used

areas
The

in-

econ-

selected

has

been measured in terms of maintenance as well as initial cost.
Safe And Economical

The design of the new school has
been

keyed

to safety,

economy

and

be of construction rated as incombustible throughout, but, in addition, the school has been planned
essentially as a one-story building.
The
board
has noted that the
added ground area required for the
one-story structure is not proportionately greater than for a more
conventional two-story school because building elements such as the
auditorium, physical education facilities and swimming pool require
as much ground space for one type

« (¥
|
demonhave
The architects
strated to the board that the one- |

story school is less expensive with
two examples: in both, their plans
for Mather High School nearing
completion in Chicago and in this —
new school, bids submitted by consufficiently within
were
tractors
to
the budget, despite rising costs,

F

permit more of the ultimate school —Rat!
for 2,000 to 2,200 students to bef
built immediately than originally 2
was

9

anticipated.

girls’

less

Building Materials
Materials used for the school will
be simple and durable, reports the
board. Exterior principally will be
face brick and
precast concrete,
with generous
glass and window

ulti-|

areas.

this

cost

boys’

all with locker and shower rooms
and spectator facilities.
Also a library, cafeteria, health
department
and
facilities
for
a
school nurse and complete administrative offices.

form.”

nomically.

rooms;

‘gyms and a six-lane swimming pool,

areas—will be constructed in “‘shell

method

acoustic
corridors

ae

cilities complete with rehearsal and

cafeteria, auditorium, classand one of the gymnasium

‘Shell

Interior

skh one

LIKE THIS!

3, WILL LOOK

complete
mately,
to
construct
wings or additions.
The school is designed to meet
the district’s educational standards
as already expressed in the initial
school at Vine Ave., Highland Park.
Twenty five students will constitute a typical class. For the 1,200
students, initial finished construction will provide 27 classrooms and
21 laboratory rooms; home economics, art and shop areas; music fa-

and

Fas

Ay

of Fun

Enroll

Now

Get automatic ton burner cooking
with GOLD STAR GAS RANGES!

in the

FERRY HALL SCHOOL DAY CAMP
(Member of the American Camping Association)
N. MAYFLOWER ROAD, LAKE FOREST, ILLINOIS

541.

For Girls 6 to 14 years old
June 22 to July 31, 1959
The

camp

will

have

use

including the gymnasium,

courts.
door

The
and

of the

swimming

ample

daily, all-weather program

outdoor

events

on

this

facilities of

pool, the playing

will include

beautiful

campus

Ferry

Hall,

fields, and tennis

a balance
in

a

of in-

wooded

area

adjacent to Lake Michigan. Archery, miniature golf, softball, handicraft, and games will be among the activities. A hot lunch will be
served in the school dining room and will be followed by a quiet hour
devoted to nature study and storytelling.
Prizes are frequently given to campers who compile points for
skills,

cleanliness,

game

participation,

neatness,

honesty,

improvement

and cooperation. For further information write: The Director, Ferry
Hall School Day Camp, Lake Forest, Illinois, or phone Lake Forest 4811.
DR. ROBERT G. ANDRUS, Headmaster
MR.

FRANK

McCORMICK,

Camp

Director

Craftwood ...
SPECIAL THIS WEEK
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e

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cooking

burned

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No

running

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ia
Bi

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e

the

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temperature

derful Gold

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one of the automatic wonders of the won

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Star Gas ranges!

STAR GAS

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e Sturdy 112”
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CRAFTWOOD

The Friendly People’
OR

LUMBER
1590

Deerfield

Road,

COMPANY,
Highland

8 A.M.-5:30 P.M.—Thursday until 9—Sunday

Park,

10-1

Just west of Route 41—Phone
Thursday,

June

25, 1959

INC.

Illinois
IDiewood 2-0140

|

Compony
NEW

Monday

AT YOUR
OFFICE

GAS

HOURS

RANGE
(JULY

4
| ee

DEALER

1—SEPT.

5,

1959)

:

thru Friday 8:30 A.M. to 9 PM.
CLOSED ALL DAY SATURDAY

hae

ne

Page 35

�‘Couples. Club Plans
Annual Outing Sat.
The

Couples’

Lutheran
PRESBYTERIAN

annual

CHURCH

NORTH SHORE
UNITARIAN CHURCH
Rev. Russell R. Bletzer, Minister
Ferry Hall Chapel
Lake Forest
For Information Call WI 5-1972.

824 Waukegan Road
Phone Windsor 5-0775
Paul J. Keller, Ph.D., Minister

30 am.
0 am.

Morning
Church

Nursery

for

n 1, 2 and 3 years. Kindergarten for

on 4 and 5.
xception
of

Also
high

other classes with
school
and
adult

a.m. Morning Worship.
p.m.
.m.

Tuxis

meeting—Tuxis

Jr. High Westminster
All 7th and 8th graders

ESDAY,
30

:

Society

p.m.
.m,

fellowship
are invited

July 1_

Tuxis

choir

rehearsal—Sanctu-

choir

Chancel

rehearsal—Sanc-

ZION
LUTHERAN
CHURCH
10 Deerfield Road, Deerfield
Rev. Paul V. Berggren, Pastor
e R. Johnson, Intern
i;
hone Windsor 5-2009
DAY, June 26
;
30 a.m. Closing session of the Daily
on Bible School with parent visitaginning
at 10:30, when handcraft
on display; 11 a.m., closing Worice, followed by a pot luck picnic
© church lawn.
RDAY, June 27
en
¢—Couples’ Club Outing at Anetsnear Northbrook.
Y,
June 28
SUNDAY
AFTER
TRINITY
.m. Luther
League
Sunrise
Service
sd by Outing at Cedar Lake.
n. Celebration of Holy Communion.
n. Family Worship Service with comChurch
School.
a.m. Fellowship and coffee hour on
&gt; Parsonage Lawn.
45 a.m. Family Worship Service with
Church School. Nursery Care is
ed during this service only for chilunder three years of age, in the home

and Mrs. Ronald Forslin, 829 Apple
Lane. Bus service is provided by the
for

this

service

only.

Seniors
at the
Deerfield
001; Presbyterian Church and
at Jewett Park East.

ee

Grammar
Zion Jun-

QUAKERS

i - SOCIETY OF FRIENDS
_.
Sylvia Judson, Clerk.
AY~
a.m. Sunday
Lr
ong

School.
meeting

in

| Library in Lake Forest.
information call Windsor

Deer

p.m. Young Peoples Fellowship. Proare provided by the youths themService.

p.m. Mid-Week Prayer
ly.
4 ‘p.m. Choir rehearsal.

meeting

and

RISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY
155 Deerfield Road
Services.

ong

—

igh Christian

C)

of

Science.

healing

e welcome to attend these services.
t information
call WlIndsor 5WBKB-TV

PROGRAM

AY, June 28
a.m.

“The

Basis

of

Unfailing

ROOK
METHODIST
Meadowbrook School

fj

Pro-

CHURCH

Fi. R. W. Thornburg, Minister
ep rmation call Windsor 5-4351.
ah.

Church

; ernrvery

School

for

and

pre-school

Worship
children.

B’NAI TORAH
Lincoln School
Highland Park
Sholom Singer, co
Joseph Burns, Cant
information call Windsor

5-2243,

DEEMER LUTHERAN CHURCH
1731 Deerfield Rd.

Rec.

1817

Green

Highland
.m.

Bay

Park,

DEERFIELD BIBLE FELLOWSHIP
1043 Wilmot Road
Every Sunday evening at 7 o’clock, the
Deerfield Bible Fellowship meets at 1043
Wilmot Rd. Public is invited. Bible messages
on current events along with Christian fellowship.
THE
BETHLEHEM
CHURCH
(Evangelical
United
Brethren)
Rev, Eugene M. Wykle, Minister
801 Rosemary Terrace
urch—WI
5-0078
Parsonage—WI 5-2221
THURSDAY, June 25
7:30 p.m.
Central
Building
Committee
meeting.
SUNDAY, June 28
9:30 a.m. Services
of Divine
Worship,
Sacrament of Holy Communion.
9:30
am.
Church
School
for Nursery
through 6th grades and adult classes.
10:55 a.m. Services of Divine Worship,
Sacrament of Holy Communion.
10:55 a.m. Church
School for Nursery,
Kindergarten, Primary and 7th through 12th
grades,
Family Balcony available during both services of worship.
GRACE

For
4-3060

am.
Sunday
School.
There
are
of Bible
study for all ages and
y care for babies.
am,
Morning
Worship
Service.
facilities
are
provided
for
the

Gospel

WASHBURN
CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH
Half Day
Rey.
Lewis
Wakeland,
Pastor
Route 22
SUNDAY
9:30 a.m. Church School,
9:30 a.m. Worship Service.
11 a.m. Worship Service.
A nursery is provided for small children.
Telephone WI 5-4179 for more information.

Path

AUNITY BAPTIST CHURCH
1250 Waukegan Road
. Robert Humrickhouse,
Pastor
&gt; Telephone:
Windsor
5-0708
i
We Preach Christ
ucified, Risen and Coming Again
URSDAY
x: m. All Church Visitation Program

peor

GREGORY’S
EPISCOPAL
CHURCH
Wilmot and Deerfield Roads
The Rev. J. D. Parker, Rector
Rectory Telephone—WIndsor 5-1881
Church Telephone—WIndsor
5-1678
SUNDAY
&amp; a.m. Holy Communion.
9:30 a.m. Holy Communion on first and
third Sundays.
9:30 a.m. Morning Prayer on second and
fourth Sundays.
9:30 a.m.
Church
School
children
will
attend adult service. Nursery care provided
for ee rear
children.
Wer NESDAY
p.m.
Choir practice.
THURSD AY
Afternoon, Girl Scouts.
Evening, Boy Scouts.

5-1774.

Road

Ml.

Sunday School and Bible
a.m. Worship services.

classes.

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

THE HIGHLAND PARK
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
ID 2-1695
Dr. William Atkinson Young
Rev. J. A. Miller
Ministers
Summer worship in the sanctuary at 10
a.m. each Sunday morning. Fellowship hour
on the church lawn immediately following
the service, weather permitting.
Church School for children of sixth grade
and younger, including toddlers, meets also
at 10 a.m. each summer Sunday.
Worship services at 9:30 a.m. and 11:15
a.m. and Church
School
classes
at 9:30
a.m., 10:05 a.m. and 11:15 am. will be resumed on September 13.
HOLY

CROSS CATHOLIC
CHURCH
North Waukegan Road
Rev. John O’Mara, Pastor
Rev. Edward Reilly,. Assistant
Rectory, 724 Elder Lane
Windsor 5-0430
sed
Masses: 7, 8, 9, 10, 11:15 and
Daily Mass at 7:15.
First Friday of eacn
6:45 and 8: &lt; a.m,
Saturday: 4 p.m. and
sions.

month,
7:30

Masses

p.m.

of the

will

outing

at

omeirdit our

Zion

sponsor

Parents are invited to visit the Zion Lutheran Daily Vacation Bible School, 10 Deerfield Rd., tomorrow morning when

Anetsberger’s

the

include
golf
on the _ nine-hole
course, swimming, volleyball, softball and croquet. Refreshments will
served.
The congregation
tend.

NORTH
SUBURBAN
EVANGELICAL
FREE
CHURCH
Deerfield Masonic Temple
Rev. Howard Hermansen, Pastor
711 Waukegan Road
SUNDAY
9:45 a.m. Bible School.
11 a.m. Services.
7 p.m. Services.
WEDNESDAY
8 p.m. Bible study and prayer.
TRINITY UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST
(Evangelical
&amp; Reformed
Church)
Rev. Edward J. Busse, ID 2-2113
Rev. Laslo L. Hunvady, WI 5-3508
(Associate Pastors)
SUNDAY, June 28
11 a.m. Annual Picnic at Sunset Park,
beginning
with
Morning
Worship.
No
Church School. Games begin at 1 p.m.
MONDAY, June 29
9:15
to
11:30
am.
Vacation
Church
School at 630 Waukegan Road.
WEDNESDAY, July 1
9:15
to
11:30
am.
Vacation
Church
School at 630 Waukegan Road.
FRIDAY, July 3
9:15
to
11:30
a.m.
Vacation
Church
School at 630 Waukegan Road.

school

will

close

after

a two-weeks

OBITUARIES

be

Mrs.

Ester

Ester

S. Kahila

S.

Kahila,

78,

of

mer outing Sunday morning at 6
when they meet at the church
grounds
for a _ sunrise
worship
service,

gan.

have

Drive

To

its

first

Cedar

sum-

Lake

Armand

After the service they will travel
to

Cedar

will

Lake

be

ming,

where

held,

boating

a

followed
and

swim-

picnicking.

The congregation of the Trinity
United Church of Christ will hold
its annual picnic at Sunset Park
Sunday beginning at 11 a.m. There
will be no church school and games
will start at 1 p.m.

Rev.

Edward

J.

Busse

the Rev. Newland

C. Roy, of Evans-

ton.

at

Burial

of

In Spiritual

O., and a brother, Charles,

Healing Is Cited
A. marked
interest in spiritual
healing these days is evidenced by
the
attention
which
people
are
giving
“How
Christian
Science
Heals,” it was said by Christian
Science
Society,
Deerfield,
concerning
a
program
carried
by
Channel 7 at 9:45 every Sunday
morning.

Serves

5 Program

way

of

Sterling,

life.

Ill.

A

tells

woman

held

Mrs.
James

Frost,

in

Luncheon

Robert

Leonard,

Mrs.

new

Assist
Mrs.

with

Sheridan

Demain,

The

dance

evening

will be

at the

New

business

manager.

Jr.

Mrs.

of Woodland

Daniel

Dr.

is

the new treasurer; Miss Irene Donohue of Deerpath Ave., secretary,
and Mrs. Lenn Franke, the publicity chairman,
The
Daniel
Flanagans were
in
charge
of the banquet
with
Dr.
Dorothy
Hunter
of Wilmot
Rd.,
Clarence Eagan of Timberhill Rd.,
and Mrs. Robert Benson of Wilmot
Rd. on their working committee.
Outgoing
president, Mrs. F. C.
Ritter, was presented with a gift
from the group. Retiring directors,
Mrs. B. B. Brown of Gemini Lane,
Mrs, John Sullivan of Holly Lane,
and Richard Thompson of Bannockburn were given a vote of thanks

Enrollment

Charing Cross, will assist with
rollment
arrangements
for.

Park.

Saturday

Flanagan,

James
Enright
and
Mrs.
Erich
Lademann
were
luncheon
guests
last week
of Mrs.
Gerald
Dale,
South Lake County District President of Catholic Women,
at the
Church
of
the
Transfiguration,
Wauconda.

To

Committee

duction manager
and John Sullivan of Holly Lane will be the

Raymond
Marshall,
Mrs.
McLoughlin,
Mrs. Herbert

Mrs.

On

The
Stagers
of Deerfield
held
their
annual
banquet
at Hank’s
Supper Club recently and elected
the
1959-60
board
of
directors.
Charles Hamilton of Highland Park
will head the local little theatre
group during the coming season.
Miss Louise Korst of Springfield
Ave.
will
be
vice-president
in
charge of casting. Charles Palmer
of Lake Forest will continue as pro-

God’s
goodness
enabled
her to
rise above loneliness, unhappiness,
and lack of education.

Attend

reg-

and

enjoyed

as well

handicraft

as study

closing

ses-

classes.

worship

service

at

11 a.m. tomorrow will be followed
by a pot luck picnic on the church
lawn

beginning

at 11:30.

Superintendent of the school was
Wayne R. Johnson, intern, assisted
by Dale A. Schmidt.
The staff of 24 persons included
the following: teachers, Mrs. Maurice DeWulf, Mrs. Fred Drechsel, —

Miss Pat Hays, Mrs. Roger Nelson,
Mrs. Verner Nelson, Mrs. Reid Olson, Mrs. Frank Peterson, Mrs.
Earl

Broms;

music,

Poindexter,

and

Miss

ants,

Mrs.

Barbara

Susan

Mrs.

John

John

Kohlhase

Carlson;

Anthony,

assist-

Betty

Lou

Broms,
Pamela
Kinsey,
Janet
Kmieciak, Karen Olson and Sharon
O’Shea.
Refreshments
were
in.
charge of Mrs. Harold Gleason and |
Mrs.

Charles

Texley.

Sabbath Eve Services
To Start Hour Earlier
B’nai Torah
hold
hour

Reform

Temple

will

its Sabbath Eve services one
earlier than usual tomorrow

night. A family service will be held
at Lincoln School, Green Bay Rd.,
at 7:30 p.m, Children of the congregation are invited to the serv-

ices

which

Cantor

will

Joseph

be

conducted

Burns.

Geller, Temple

Mrs.

by

Oscar

organist, will assist

Cantor Burns in the musical portion of the service.
Rabbi
Sholom
Singer, spiritual
leader of B’nai Torah, will be at-

tending the Central Conference of
American Rabbis at New Hampshire

this

coming

week.

Villa Moderne. Mrs. Wolf is recording secretary of B’nai Torah.

DEERFIELD STAGERS ANNOUNCE
OFFICERS AT ANNUAL BANQUET

from

trust

of Day-

O.

Highland

Listed

how

Park,

Mrs. Seymour Wolf, 829 Holmes,
is a member of the Earning Fund
Dinner Dance Committee for the
B’nai
Torah
Reform
Temple
of

July 5 the program is “Filling
Our
Lives with
Fresh
Promise.”
A man from Baltimore relates how
through
prayer he overcame
the
drinking and gambling habits and
gained a more Satisfying, meaning-

ful

Acacia

Born July 17, 1907, at Oil City,
Pa., Mr. Dodge was Midwest Manager of Elleott Service Company of
Mt.
Vernon,
N.Y.
He
moved
to
Deerfield a year ago from Evanston
and
is
survived
by
his
widow,
Florence W.; a daughter, Mrs. M.
H. Conrad,
of Rochester,
Mich.,
and two grandchildren; two sisters,
Mrs. Dorothy Waters, of Florida,
and Mrs. K. W. Wilks, of Dayton,
ton,

July

was

Chicago.

Highland Park, and the Rev. Laslo
L, Hunyady of Deerfield, are associate pastors of the congregation.

Interest

E. Dodge

denly
at his home
here
Sunday
morning. Services were held Tuesday afternoon at 2 at the Lauterburg and Oehler Chapel on Waukegan Rd. and were in charge of

United Church Plans
Annual Picnic Sunday

The

period

Frances Rockey, Mrs. John Ward
and Mrs. Arthur Zeman; craft, Mrs.

The death of Armand E. Dodge,
51, 558 Mallard Ln., occurred sud-

meeting

by

Eighty-four pupils attended
The

Mrs.

Luther League, high school
of
the
Zion
Lutheran
will

the

sions

Waukegan,
mother
of Walter W.
Kahila, 417 Hermitage Dr., died at
her home Friday after an extended illness.
Born in Finland, she came to the
United States in 1898 and to Waukegan in 1899. Survivors include
a daughter and three sons. Services were held Monday in Wauke-

Church,

on

ularly

is invited to at-

Zicn Luther League
Plans Summer Outing
The
group

study

theme, “Going God’s Way.”

at

Confes-

Parente Invited

its

near Northbrook
Saturday. Activities, to begin in the early evening,

ST

Worship.
sonal”

Club

Church

1319
enthe

Leadership Conclave offered this
summer by the Chicago Federation
of Temple Youth, to be held at the
Union Institute Camp in Oconomowoe, Wis.

for their year’s work. The James
Russells
of
Rosemary
Terrace
were awarded theatre tickets for
selling the most season subscriptions. Mrs. Thomas
Ventriss of
Chicago furnished a program of
parodies

on

the

Stagers’

past

sea-

son of plays. The words of the
songs were originated by the Ventrisses and Mrs. Lenn Franke of
Lincolnshire.

Work

on

the

new

season

will

start immediately
after the new
board
meets
to appoint
working
committees for the coming year.
They will continue their meetings

throughout
adding two
reading

are

groups.

open

that

available

izations;

All

to the

programs

are

the summer months,
each month for playsuch

public.

the

group

meetings

The

to community

their

three

short

produces

organ-

major

plays

are available to groups wanting to
run a benefit. Residents of Deer-

field

and

neighboring

towns

are

always welcome to join the Stagers.
Further

information

ings and

programs

calling the new

Mrs.

Lenn

about

may

publicity

Franke

of

meet-

be had by
chairman,

oo

Lane.
oh

“The Service Bank Of Highland Park”

BANKSY HIGHLAND
1771 Second St.

BANK—POST
Member

Federal

OFFICE

Deposit

BLDG.

Insurance

Corporation

PARK
IDlewood 2—7800

|

�rtists Plan Summer Outdoor Showings

as

will,

so should

fitting

choose a

you

a

make

or

insurance

provide

you

Just

resting

place for yourself — and for them — a task
that

until

if left

burdensome

be

will

the

emergency is at hand.

MEMORIAL

PARK

CEMETERY

COMMUNITY MAUSOLEUM—EARTHEN INTERMENT
COLUMBARIUM—CREMATORIUM
PERPETUAL

CHARTER

—

GENERAL

We Operate Our Own

Hilda
Several

Highland

Shirley

Rubin

Park

painters

are

among

those

planning

to

exhibit their works
in outdoor shows
this summer.
Artists
Hilda
Rubin, Shirley Ross, Gertrude Paule and Catherine Lillie have been
announced as participants in the Edens Plaza Art Fair Saturday and

Sunday

at the Wilmette

A Viennese

born

shopping

artist, Mrs.

bin of 1184 Beech Ln. received her
earliest

training

studied
Chicago
stitute

Europe

and

further
with
prominent
artists and at the Art Inof

eled,

in

Chicago.

she

has

Widely

lived

in

or

center.

Ruyears.
has

tercolor,

the

media

it

is

of

oil

exhibited

trav-

reported

she

purpose,

should

be

paintings

(Illinois)

at

State

and
the

seum and in the Central Illinois
art exhibit at Decatur.
She, too,
studied at the Art Institute of Chicago.
Mrs. Walter N. (Kay) Lillie of
1227 St. Johns Ave. will show examples of her portraiture in pastels
and oil at the week-end Art Fair.

(Continued

Mu-

on page

UNiversity 4-5061; 4-5062

In

ORIGINAL

time

(Weinnsté in

of need...

and SONS inc. 7

39)

If You

Have

...adewish Funeral Chapel only —

Not Visited

feels

THIS

BEAUTIFUL

GARDEN

CEMETERY

a partner-

ship between the artist and the onlooker.
Mrs. Shirley Ross of 1575 Green
Bay Rd. has been a resident of the
community for one and one-half

Evanston:

minutes from the North Shore
A Surprise Awaits You

wa-

strongly that painting, to fulfill its
true

in all media

St., Evanston

Ross

Northshore Garden of Memories

visited

and

paints

Springfield

England,
Austria,
Mexico,
Italy,
France,
Portugal,
Spain,
Greece,
Turkey and the Middle East. Pre-

ferring

She

KEystone 9-4747; 9-4424

FUND

Greenhouses

Ridge Road and Harrison
Chicago:

CARE

—

Very
Green

Reasonable

3019 West Peterson Road
LOngbeach 1-1890

Prices

Bay Rd. &amp; 18th St.

Phone

DE 6-6500

Adjacent —
3

HERSHEY WEINSTEIN, President
LAURIE WEINSTEIN, Funeral Director

Cars...
i

RONALD E. SCHWARZBACH, Funeral Director

11S VACATION TIME!

IS YOUR

CAR SAFE?

It has been said: If your motor fails, there you are.
If your steering fails, where are you?

Let Us

oe

Check:

Oe

Memorial Chapels
* Most Complete Funeral Home
in Metropolitan Area

¢ Perfect accommodations for
small or large attendance

* Convenient to North Shore

* Parking adjacent to building

and Downtown Chicago

e Steering Linkage
e Loose or Worn Front End Parts
e Weak or Broken Springs
e Weak or Leaking Shocks
e Head Light Adjustment

¢ Funeral consultation and arrangements may be made in your
own home with our North Shore representative.

SUBURBAN PHONE NUMBER—VErnon 5-2221
or LOngbeach

1-4740

5206 North Broadway, Chicago

(Just north of Foster)

Wheel Alignment - Balancing
WEAK FRONT OR REAR SPRINGS CAN BE
CORRECTED WITH HELLWIG SPRING
STABILIZERS
GET A FREE

DAHL
2058
| ‘Thursday,

FIRST ST.
June

25, 1959

ESTIMATE

AND

er
Funeral

Directors

Jewish Community

NORTH

TODAY!

AUTO
RECONSTRUCTION
ID 2-0077

Chapel:

1865

SERVICE

Complete facilities in your community
for prompt service . . . Lee J. Furth,
Jules L. Furth, and their staff, will
personally arrange and conduct the
entire funeral—a service of warmth
and beauty, observing customs and
ritual with reverence.

3-5400

Shore

to the

Since

SHORE

Call Midway

South

COMPANY

2100

East

75th

Street,

at Clyde

Avenue’

Page

:
|

�| SEVEN SAY ‘NAME (OF HIGH SCHOOL) IS UNIMPORTANT’
- "The
Steering
Committee
for
Pitamine the New High School di| Yectly contacted directors of ad- mission

of

14

or

15

outstanding

colleges and universities, All responded and Andrew G. Bradt of
Deerfield, chairman, reported to
the committee that “The returns
showed
a wide
divergence
of
_ opinion.
The

questionnaire

panied

letter

that

accom-

explaining

“naming
dilemma
_ opposing
groups

current

and
desires
of
of citizens pro-

vided three choices:
Pi 1) Highland Park High School
‘West; 2) Deerfield High School,
provided
it is clear that both
| schools

by

are

the

trict

sister

same

1138,

schools

school

and

3)

operated

board

the

of Dis-

name

makes

little difference as long as it is
clear that the schools are sister
‘schools
operated
by
the
same
school board of District 113.
;

Responses

- On
“no.”
3),

7

responses;

affirmative

committee’s

10

believed

and

that

the

pres-

tee, “there were some interesting
comments. One director of admission said the name was unimpor(Continued on page 39)

tige of Highland Park High School
could be transferred to a school
with another
name;
six believed
the prestige
could
best be
preserved by using a name such as
Highland Park High School West.”
The

OPEN-AIR

letter began:

“In

New

wrote

the

King

The

Tickets

After

for:

“Music Man”
“Garden District’’
“South Seas Adventures”
“Diary of Anne Frank’

SERVICE

sw

NORTH SHORE HOTEL
DAvis 8-8282
ia
9—]2:30; 1:30—6 p.m.
} Mon. thru Sat.
Closed Sundays

Rte. 22,

Lake

10th

Sunday,

Dinner

Tail _.......ape
or BQ .... 1.25
.............. 1.50
.............. 1.25

Drink!

All Fish Dinners .............. 1.25

| $1.75 Adults
| 75c Children (under

12:00

LUNCHEONS

PHONE ORDER

Beef =. 02. 5.).5.305:..2..

st

DELIVERED

INAGGE

LOGE

555.5 Hawks ccccs,

c

MOOSE

PORK

55025052.
och ccch sce

75¢

Prime Ribs of Beef ........ $1.25
Private

PAT

Dining

VE

Room

t

WATER

¢

FREE

5-1611

ID

for Children

Chicago

6-14

3

Private

6-1474

what

you

want

or

small

group

to buy

For

sec-

Information

Call

ID 2-5884

Ave.,

Glencoe
VErnon

EXCLUSIVE!
NORTH SHORE SHOWING!

5-0605

STARTING FRIDAY, JUNE 26
FOR A LMITED ENGAGEMENT!

All the romance...
songs...and spectacle
of the entertainment
world’s most
|
wonderful
entertainment!

PATTERSON'S

CUT RATE LIQUOR STORE

12 yrs.)

Vernon

2-0605

HOUSE
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK INCLUDING HOLIDAYS
Rdens, Skokie &amp; County Line Rd.
VErnon 5-1611

CARNIVAL

BALLET

GLENCOE THEATRE

for Parties of 50

1959

to 5:00 P.M.

INC.

SWIMMING
INSTRUCTION

tion your best market place.

Filet Mignon .................. 2.00

moos’

Illinois

28,

PARK

Deerfield

or sell you'll find the Want-Ad

Prime Ribs of Beef ........ $1.25
T-Bone Steak ............... 1.59
U.S. Choice Sirloin
1.75
se Reena
aides seat

Dinner

June

St.

CEntral

matter

ANNIVERSARY

| Chicken
|

African Lobster
Chicken—Fried
Stuffed Shrimp
Breaded Shrimp

Chek

Zurich,

TRANSIT,

BUILDING

Salle

- HIGHLAND

lessons in a private pool
by experienced teacher.

It’s served free with

Frantts

anys rales

Tel.

any dinner from 5 p.m.

EVANSTON

: Se

La

call:

cocktail at Patterson’s.

&amp; Sox Games

TICKET

South

Drivers

Choose your favorite

And ALL Sports and
Stage Attractions

_

111

No

Enjoy a FREE

stated,

=

Cubs

BORLAND

Series Subscrip-

Insured

DEERFIELD

question

responses.

conclusion

Choice

Exchange

Exchanges

ASSOCIATES
SAMUEL D. ROWE
RICHARD J. SHROSBREE
J. TRACY
ALEXANDER
STEPHEN W. BACHAR
POTTER H. CARROLL
HERBERT
HIDER
HUGH
J. O’CONNOR
SIDNEY RUBENSTEIN
of Highland Park

Prices: All Seats $2.00

OCCASION

WI 5-3852

PARTNERS

of

tion to all plays: $4.50. Curtain at
8:30.
UN 4-1907.
Speech Bldg.
on the N.U. Campus.

Stock

Other

ANY

For Information

ARTHUR M. BETTS
CHAUNCEY B. BORLAND
FRANCIS P. BUTLER
LOUIS J. STIRLING
DAVID _H. BETTS
JOHN P. WISE
HAROLD C. STEINER

Thebes”
July 3, 9, 12, 15, 18, 24, 28
Shaw's “Saint Joan”
July 244,23, 25; 26; 29; 31

commit-

York

and

The World’s Four Great Plays
in Nightly Rotation
Shakespeare’s ““A Midsummer
Night’s Dream”
July 1, 4, 7, 10, 16, 19, 30
Sheridan's “The Rivals’’
duate2 75 8, 11,34, VRQ

Save Nearly Half.

FOR

Members

GARDEN

“Oedipus,

Schools — Churches — Clubs

1896

BROKERS
STOCKS — BONDS

NORTHWESTERN
DRAMA FESTIVAL

Comments

addition,”

Since

(Indoors if cloudy)

Sophocles’

CHARTER BUSES

BETTS, BORLAND &amp; Go.

THEATRE

“A new high school will soon be built
near here, a sister school to the Highland
Park High School. Both township schools
will be operated by the same school board
that has operated the Highland Park High
School successfully for many years, and the
present principal, Mr. A. E. Wolters, becomes superintendent of both schools.
The
nucleus of the staff of the new school will
come
from, Highland
Park
High
School,
including the principal, Mr. Phillipi.
“Everything
possible
is being
done
to
assure the same educational excellence and
performance
that
characterizes
Highland
Park
High
School
today
..
.”
Letter
then went on to explain the situation, and
asked, “‘.
. would you say that in the
first few years the graduates of the new
school
would
find
better
acceptance
by
the Directors of Admission
if they came
from Highland Park High School West, or
if they came from Deerfield High School
operated
by
the
same
school
board
of
Township High School District 113? . .
ieee note your opinion on the attached
Of +.

‘Special

question 1), 6 said “yes,” 3,
Question 2) brought 3 af-

firmative

“Thus

North Shore’s Most Beautiful Theatre
Lake Forest, Illinois ——L.F. 2106 or 4744

Sat. Eve. and Sun.

STOCK: CAR RACES:
SUNDAY. NITE
|

THEATRE

POLICY

|

Open Daily 6:40 to 12 Midnight—Curtain at 7:00
Sunday Continuous 2 to 12 Midnight—Doors Open 1:40

Released by
Century-Fox

Friday, June

— ONE

TIME TRIALS. . 7:15
RACES ...... 8:30

2 ——

WAUKEGAN.
SPEEDWAY
me
i

West Washington
Green Bay Rd. &amp;

MA

3-9540

Adults

—

No.

Parking

Children

ON

starring—Russ Tamblyn,
Alan

Event

Bigger

Than

Ever

Demolition
Race

2

2—

JESSE JAMES”

begins at 7:00 and

10:24

Sunday—"’Tom Thumb” begins at 3:46 - 7:10 - 10:00
‘Alias Jesse James” begins at 2:00 - 5:24 - 8:48
July

3—"SOME

LIKE

July

10—”DON’T

July

17—"IT

IT

GIVE

HAPPENED

HOT”
UP
TO

THE

SHIP”

JANE”

COLOR’ by DE LUXE

Exhibit In Our
Lobby by

Downing
Barnitz

FRANCE

38

NUYEN

Produced by

featuring RAY WALSTON ~ JuaNiTA HALL
Directed by

BUDDY ADLER - JOSHUA LOGA

Screenplay by

PAUL OSBORN
A MAGNA

Production

In the Wonder of HIGH-FIDELITY STEREOFi40° ‘SC SOUND

This Is Entertainment

Adm.:

Adult,

Mat.:

$1.50

Adults,

Children,

$

.90

Som

for the Entire Family!

Features—Mon., Fri., 7:00 and 10:00
Sat., 2:00 - 7:30 - 10:30 P.M.
Sun., 2:00 - 7:00 - 10:00 P.M.

Sat.

Page

,

Starring

aT BRAZZ| - MITZI GAYNOR - JOHN KERR

— SCHEDULE —
begins at 8:46

(Saturday Matinees discontinued ‘til school reopens)

Spectator Race
Giant

——

starring—Bob Hope,
Rhonda Fleming

Young

Weekdays—’’Tom Thumb”

July 2

—

PROGRAM
No.

“Alias Jesse James’’
Added

WEEK

“ALIAS

THUMB”

25c¢ *

ONE

I1—

“TOM

St. between
Skokie Hwy, |

- Free

$1.25

26 thru Thursday,

P.M.

$ .50

Children,

$

.50
Thursday,

June

25, 1959

�ICE SKATING
OPEN

YEAR

Last

Times

"THE

AROUND

MATING

Thurs.,

GAME”

June

See

25 at

6:15 - 8:15 = 10:15

Hubbard

915

Forming

Woods

Studio

Linden Ave.—Winnetka,

Call Miss Thomas—HI

4th

FRIDAY, JUNE
ANNIVERSARY

26th
SHOW!

| Walr DISNEVS

Ii.

6-4123

Curtain
8:30

‘Cook

Roadb
td? Eden
d»Rark

| Fred MacMURRAY:Jean HAGEN &amp;

:

tn

“SHOW BOAT”

MARGARET

Sheridan

LAKE

in
BCINEMASCOPE

June

THE

Fy

LEIGHTON jg
WILLIAM FAULKNER'S |

“Paint Your Wagon”

25-28

Rd.

UNDER
STARS

N. &amp; Maplewood

FOREST

BENEFIT

KAY’S ANI MAL

in

will open

OF

SHELTER

Sat.,

Tues., June 30 a mile north of Deerfield

Waukegan

Rd., and

will be open

on

1454

thereafter on Tuesdays,

Wednesdays, Thursdays and Fridays
MONDAY

From

in

RESERVATIONS

BOTH

THEATRES.

ware, china,
much else.

Mail: Box. 277, Highland Pk...
:
Suburbs phone: ID 2-1160
VE 5-4040
Chicago phone: RO 4-7579
Res. at Bk. of Highland Pk.,
Marshall Field &amp; Co..3d Fl. « ;
ALL SEATS RESERVED
Sun.-Fri., 3.50, 2.90, 2 40, 1.90 2.90, 2.40
Sat. eves., 3.90, 3.40

horse

blankets,

bridle,

You are cordially invited to visit and

°

you

animals.

buy will be helping

COME

IN

AND

BRING

“SHAGGY

saddle,

not

browse

of
bers
League.

the

with

acquainted

the

North

Shore

Art

DIAMONDS

FINE
Watches
Carry
PAYMENTS AS

Silverware

and

the Leading Lines
LOW AS $2.00 A WEEK

THEATRE

1. H.

NEMEROFF

HIGHLAND PARK

JEWELERS - OPTICIANS
Highland Park
Tel. IDlewood 2-0630

Gat
enraeonaoninle

Parking

Across from

bank

35 years

over

Use

p.m.

Time

Paymens

DOG”

Plan!

~"28-Diamond Set, $158.00
Other Sets to $1500.00

‘South Pacific’

[JOHN GAVIN

Coming

SANDRA DEE.

FRIENDS

to

confusing

was

communities and made it difficult
to distinguish between schools.”

presents

around.

to

West’

and

East

schools

people

UNIVERSAL INFERNATIO

and

to care for unfortunate
YOUR

1) said that the use of

South,

‘North,

identify

“No”

voted

who

those

of

“Two

(to question

DISNEYS

We’re sure you'll find something to strike your fancy——
possibly an item you've been wanting for years. Remember,

anything

different

with

loyalty

greater
names.

Thursday, June 25 Last Day
WALT

38)

“Another
commented
that the
schools would prosper better with
said
third
A
names.
distinctive
that the schools would experience

Friday June 26 For One Week

10:00 to 4:30 P.M.

furniture,

page

We

Open Daily 6:30 P.M.
Sun. &amp; Wed., Open 1

We
have an enticing assortment of new and used
articles, all from fine homes—including office desks, crystal

“COME BACK
LITTLE SHEBA”

NAME
from

tant as long as the school is associated with Mr. A. E. Wolters.

* * py. 1. 2-2400
“Cool”——Free

THE

37)

It is said she especially enjoys
creating children on her sketching
pad and that she has the talent and
touch
to reproduce
likeness,
yet
achieve casual, spontaneous effects.
Mrs. Lillie currently is staff artist
for Tenthouse and Music theatres.
Howard
N. Paule
of 381
Mrs.
Woodland Rd. in the fall held a
one-woman showing of her work at
Libertyville
Art
League
Gallery.
Her career began
at the age of
nine, when she began to study under a scholarship from the Art Institute of Chicago.
Her painting,
was
se‘Model
with
Children”
lected out of over 100 other examArt
ples
at the
Union
League
Show.
All four of these artists are mem-

COLLEGE

SCHOOL

(Continued

She studied in France at The Academie de la Grande Chaumiere (clasmodern
art at the
sic art), and
Ecole Andre L’hote.

THE THRIFT SHOP

“HARVEY”

Lillian Roth

page

BMaHal

FOR

OPENS

from

od

TENTHOUSE
Thea
“West. Park Ave.” bet:
Joe E. Brown

P.M.

THEATRE

MONDAY

John Carradine

Thursday, Sunday

At Mosquito-controlled...

FRIDAY, JULY 3rd
in STEREOPHONIC SOUND! |
3
20”
BRYNNER §
i
JOANNE ff
WOODWARD

THRU
SUNDAY
Allan Jones, Bert Wheeler

OPENS

Of

Admission $1.50

STARRING

Wa

Version

A HATEFUL
QF RAIN

=~

Ice Skating

(Continued

Original

Broadway

Now!

Classes Now

The

pik-CONDITIONED

Register

HIGH

Artists Show Works

Tonight!

To

March 26

Glencoe

The

Glencoe

Theatre,

Vernon

Ave., Glencoe will premiere the
film

version

of “South

Pacific,”

exclusively on the North

Shore,

on Friday, June 26. Carl Funk,
Manager,
announced
that
the
show will run for a limited engagement at advanced prices.
Stars
Rossano
Brazzi,
Mitzi

Gaynor, John Kerr and France
Nuyen were directed by Josh
Logan who also directed the
original Broadway hit.

Feature Time—Weekdays
7:
Saturday—5 :00-7 :24-9 :49
Sunday — 1:00-3:16;-5:32-7 :48-10:04

Acclaimed as one of the great
musicals
of
all
time
“South
Pacific’ was filmed in De Luxe
color. Over half the sequences
were shot on one of the most

Saturday June 27’’Kiddie Show”
Open

RAVINIA FESTIVAL

“BIG LEAGUER”
3 Cartoons &amp; “Capt Video”
Wednesday July 1
“Midweek Matinee’ Open 1 p.m.
“THRESHOLD OF SPACE”

in Highland P, nek
16
i,

* Chicago Symphony

te

Orchestra * Monteux ® Hendl * Golschmann
* Cluytens * Chavez * Kostelanetz ¢ Wallen-

i

Whisic

World Famous Artists

HENDL,

Ravinia
Room

Artistic

Festival

1206 — 231
Northern

and

WON

Early

Save

Director

FRANCHOT

In Shaw's Brilliant

"CAESAR

Association

Suburbs

STIX

ra

**

ID 2-1236
Prices: Sun. thru Thur. $2.50, 3.50; Fri. &amp; Sat. $2.95, 3.95

DINNER

25, 1959

BY JOHN

Ba

S. LaSalle — STate 2-9696

ORDERS
NOW!
June

Comedy!

And CLEOPATRA"

DIRECTED

After 5 p.m. HO 5-7600

Thursday,

SUSAN

E-STRASBERG
TON
#

;

WALTER

Books

5 AS

Buy Coupon

DAYHOUSE 28

© Z WEEKS ONLY—JUNE 22+ JULY 5 @
N

stein * Stern * Janis * Firkusny * Fleisher
* Tucker * Yeend * Tourel * Dyer-Bennet °
Kingston Trio * Gerry Mulligan * Les Brown °
New York City Ballet

spots in the Pacific

—Kauai—known as the “Garden
Island of the Hawaiians.”

-. EDGEWATER BEACH

Stabs

THe

Under

picturesque

_* At the EDGEWATER BEACH HOTEL

SS

30-August

XS

June

1 p.m.

Sun. at 7:00, Mon. thru Fri. 8:30, Sat. 7:00 and 10:00 p.m.
Reservations, at Marshall| Field and Company, 3rd floor.
Box Office Open Daily 12-9 P.M.

Call LO 1-6308
SUPPER

= Plan a complete evening in the Beautiful Edgewater Beach Hotel.:~

Page 39

�LET’S

HAWE

A

STEAK

WITH

...

No need to go fo a lot of expense for a
broiled steak feast! You can serve up a fabulous
thick, juicy steak with this budget-minded meat
follow the easy recipe below and Jewel assures
wonderful cookout!

charcoalplatter of
buy. Just
you of a

Mix 1 tablespoon Worcestershire sauce, /3 cup lemon

jvice or vinegar, and 2 teaspoons onion juice together. Pour

over steak and allow to remain overnight. When ready to
cook, wipe steak dry and broil each side (about 10 minutes

overall for medium

rare). Season to taste and serve with a

sauce made of 3 parts melted butter to 1 part Worcestershire

sauce!

U.S. CHOICE—EXTRA

VALUE

TRIM

�Mf y Salad

U.S. GOVT.

HEALTHFUL, GOLDEN

feuls!
INSPECTED

STEWING

Ripe

Fosfect for Kottsseece fh
.S. CHOICE —E.V.T.

OR

Rump
Roast

Salad

Chickens
OR

CALIFORNIA

NEW

SLICED

CROP

OR

Seediess Grapes » 29-

Hunt’s Peaches

SIMPLE SIMON CHOCOLATE, COCONUT

WITH

Lemon Pies
TREESWEET

16 BOc

Lemonade
BANQUET

BEEF,

G «2: 59:

CHICKEN, TURKEY

Beef Dinner
a

Pi

OR CREAMY—REG.

overt Qe

32 39&gt;

Tea Bags

gs, BQ

the whole

Family

to Your Friendly
Jewel Store at...
1826

N.

HIGHLAND

Second
PARK

Shoulder Chops
Pork Ribs

Smoked Picnics

DUNCAN

100%

HINES

Dressing 3%

7% 39:

‘2% 19¢

Pig’s Feet

toe

BROADCAST

« 39&gt;

Dried Beef
OFF’?

» 39:

20 Aye

LABEL—FLORIENT

AND

«= 98s

COCKTAIL

» 79

Boiled Ham
OSCAR

MAYER

Vel Detergent

CASHMERE

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Soap
“4c OFF”

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nw. Ae

YELLOWBAND

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Jumbo Shrimp

u. BQc-

Banded

u DY-

15 TO THE POUND

Fancy Shrimp

LABEL

Vel Liquid

Palmolive Soap

Ox Tails

Bath

OFF’’

Room Deodorant «- 69:
GENTLE

MEATY

Wieners

‘5c

59Qez

Chuck Steaks

uv J 5:

PORK

vw 5BQ«

U.S. CHOICE—E.V.T.

= 59

WITH

BROADCAST

BEEF

Chop Suey fies:
WITH

HINES

French Dressing *:: 35:

‘10c

v 5Q-

PURE

Ground Beef
LEAN

CAMP’S

Spanish Rice

WITH

«= 79

Meat Loaf
LEAN

Veal Chops

DUNCAN

wv 79-

STYLE

Frozen Waffles 2 :°: 29:
VAN

LEAN BEEF, PORK AND VEAL

MILKFED—TENDER—-SHOULDER

DOWNYFLAKE

Take

LAMB—E.V.T.

LEAN ECONOMICAL

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43c

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Leg of Lamb
U.S.

CUP

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JIF CHUNK

FROZEN

MEASURING

7°: 25:

Ib.

BONELESS,
ROLLED

Ib.

U.S. CHOICE—E.V.T.

HALVES

FREE 3-IN-1

WHOLE
CUT UP

||

MILDER

Liquid Trend
SPECIAL ‘'1c SALE’’ PACK

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2. 39:
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4:2 47:

On Your Everyday Needs Ci
Fives ay
ryd
GB EveLow
Bd Leeryday Low Prices On Your Everyday Needs

�io Duick Thinking

Dr. Keller Named

(Continued from page

Picard

it was

_ Sewage

plant was

ie
ioe
_

pointed

persons

present

000.

that

designed

and

connected

Flows

out

to

the

the

to serve

estimated

population is 10,-

the

plant

during

: _ February,
March
and April have
a averaged
better than
1.3 million
Ae - gallons a day.
The letter pointed out that since

the

sanitary

board

advised

the

lo-

p eal village board on September 9,
Hh1957,
that the population already
Pe / exceeded the design population of

the

sewage

granted

erate

treatment works

permits

over

to

25,500

extensions

in

_Harks

feet

the

it had

install

and

op-

of sanitary

village.

Back

to

1952-54

_ The present situation harks back
to

the

period

a when

the

from

1952

sanitary

&amp; extension
i th ‘Struction

to

board

permits
of the

adopted
to pro-

study by

controls for such a reservoir would

i the located at the village hall site.
ager,

the

Owens,

reported

village

that

A. C. Allyn

the

man-

advice

of

firm

is

financial

that Deerfield issue $545,000 in water revenue bonds at the present

time,
|

reinvest

the

amount

not

im-

mediately
needed
in government
- securities
and
perhaps
realize
a
savings. After a lengthy discussion,
the board decided unanimously to

_

defer
-

the

matter

and

conduct

a

committee investigation.
James P. Doherty Jr., 1116 Wincanton,
speaking from
recommended
that the

low
out

the floor,
board fol-

the manager’s advice, pointing
that the rising money market

ee_ indicated possible profit on the venture.
Bonds

_

to

Be

Retired

Another unanimous vote was re-

-

corded in the authorization of the
use of
$10,000
village
thereby

sales tax money to acquire
worth of the bonds on the
hall and to retire them,
effecting a savings of $450

per bond.

a4

Development of a secondary road
fe Dg provide access to Deerfield Rd.

_ from

the Commons

ter was discussed

Shopping

and

Cen-

the village

Manager was asked to designate an
engineer to prepare an estimated
cost for the street improvement of

_

wagon

onto

the

tracks.

and

$300

to the train.

to

call

a

decided

As

mund

meeting

of

Ed-

Klosinski, public works fore-

man,
John Aberson,
chairman of
the public works committee of the
village board, and Mr. Ruhge
to
discuss the matter. The village, it
was pointed out, is seeking stand-

withheld

vide for a comprehensive

W.

extended

stoprear

the railroad
bell sounded
and
a
train approached, she ordered the
children, Christie, 8, and Robert, 5,
into the front seat and the three
jumped out of the car. The train
struck
the
car,
with
damage
amounting to $1500 to the station

Hill

Baxter and Woodman
to consider
uaep popeinility of providing an underani
rather than
an overhead
water storage reservoir. Automatic

Royce

end

_ Lot No. 7, as listed on the master

to Be

from

R-3

to

R-1A

of

the
third
addition
of
Deerfield
Park,
Unit
2, was
unanimously
adopted
and
ratification
of
the
signing of the plat was also adopted.

The

request

of Edward

Tanielan

for a variance from 60 to 50 feet
frontage for multiple dwellings at
1121 Deerfield Rd. was denied.
President
Holmquist
declared
that he would agree to the referring of the improvement of Wilmot
Rd. to the committee on public improvements on the condition that
the street be maintained in a passable condition in the interim. The
village manager
commented
that
cost of the patching of the road

amounted

to $150

and

about twice

that amount in labor.
Trustee Koss suggested that an
arbitrary line, such
as Deerfield
Rd., might be set as the division
between the areas for which the
township
and the village are responsible.
Bonding

Companies

Added

The
following
companies
were
added to the list of bonding companies as approved by the village:
National Surety Corporation, Fireman’s
Fund
Insurance
Company
and Fidelity and Deposit Company
of Baltimore.
Trustee

mates

Koss

of the

asked

costs

that

as well

esti-

as the

plans and specifications concerning
sanitary landfill operations be ac-

ce plan. This comprises the area adja- cent to the Fragassi TV and Appliances store on the west.

quired.

3 Joseph W. Koss, chairman of the
_ building, zoning and planning com4% mittee, initiated a resolution to dis-

field legislature against House Bill
1499 changing restrictions on garbage
dumping
operations.
The
board last week voted similar protest.

: a courage

the

development

of

any

_

outlets from the center that are not
_ a part of the master plan, Present
3 outlets as shown on the plan include these three: to Waukegan
aRa. south of the Frost building, to
- Osterman Ave. west of the Bernard
x _ Busscher home, and to Deerfield
CS Rd. west

a

of Fragassi’s

Trustee

i _ ity of
a
_ Properties

Koss

store.

suggested

Glen

possibil-

special
assessment
for
from Deerfield to Oster-

A. Ruhge,

of Spruce

street,

| presented a plan for the rebuilding
oegi 00 Spruce street, with residents
| sharing
the
expense.
Since the
BS) _ plan

as

outlined

Thea village

did

not

specifications,

He
of

is sending

come

up

the board

stated
the

that

National

the
735

Bernard
Brick

Co.,

a protest to the Spring-

The board referred
the
improvement
of
control system of the
a project explained by
commissioner, Robert
costing about $600.

Building

‘man that would benefit by the pro- posed road.
_

Weber,

permits

Deerfield
Deerfield

to committee
the
heating
village hall,
the building
Bowen, and

were

Dr.

field

Paul

to

Savings
and Loan,
Rd.; the Deerfield

Grammar

School,

for

a_

sprinkler

system;

the

Deerfield

James Thompson

and Fun and Fro-

by Capt.

Jos-

Erich

Lademann

and

Commissioners

Check

West Drainage Ditch
Infractions
along
the
drainage
ditch have been photographed by

the Drainage

Ditch

Commissioners

and the Toll Road Commission has
been notified to make
necessary
repairs.
In
several
cases
where
sewer
lines have
been
run
into
the ditch from the toll road, banks
have washed away.
Rubbish
and
debris
has
been
found in the ditch as well as small
dams constructed by children. Per-

sons found violating posted notices
are

subject
Village

to

a

fifty

Office

dollar

fine.

Notified

The open ditch at Hazel Ave. has
not as yet been corrected to the
commissioners’ satisfaction and the
village
office has been
notified.
The sewer leading into the ditch

at Castlewood is broken and notification has been made.
There is also a headwall

Deerfield Rd. in
In this case the

south

of

need of repairs.
owner has been

notified,
Commissioners are Forrest
ley,
Raymond
C.
Dahlgren
Kenneth S. West.

By Joseph

in-

assisted

eph Thatcher,
H. W. Kafka.

Pasand

5-year-olds Taken

Monday night a general meeting
will be held at either the Legion
Hall or the field house, whichever
is available.
You will be notified
of the time and place. The nominating committee wjll present their
list of officers, additional nominations will be entertained from the
floor and then the voting. It is important that you be there to help
elect your new officers who will
take over October 1.
Plans for the dance
are going
ahead rapidly.
Tickets are being
distributed to the team mothers.
Grace
Carlson
will need
a few
strong backs to assist in decorations, setting up tables and other
such work.
For those who are interested in volunteering call Grace
at WI 5-1530.
Returns for the ticket sales for
the father and son night have been
coming
in rather
slowly.
If you
have not already done so, will you

parents

Two
who

five-year-old
emerged

PONY
League:
This
league
moved into a new and interesting
part of their schedule. For the first
time the teams are playjng a two
game series. The Braves played the
Tigers Saturday and again Sunday,
while the Giants played the Reds

on

they

following

were

Giants

Garber

twice

5-2

and

re-

office

in

the

Deerfield

Won

Lost

3
3
1

3
7
pe

with just a little break. Of particular satisfaction to the board mem-

opened

bers

is the

fore,

this

umpiring.

As

is the first year

piring for most of
Arts Building, 763 Deerfield Rd. course they may
He is a gynecologist
and
obste- right in the opinion
trician.
you find this same
His name was listed as Gerber Wrigley Field and
in a recent issue of the REVIEW. On a whole these
an

10-1.

Major League: The mighty have
fallen.
Last
Saturday
the White
Sox took the Dodgers 3-2 and credited the Dodgers with their first
loss. This league is well balanced
this season—the consistent losers
could have won most of their games

treatment

has

Braves split their
coming from bewin 5-4 and the
Sunday Marathon
extended
their

Standings

Correction
Harry

two-game

Team
Reds
Braves
Tigers
Giants

for minor abrasions and contusions.

Dr.

These

streak to five straight by taking the

the street at about ten miles an
hour as he approached his home
when the accident occurred. Elbert
Ghardini,
5, 1022 Half Day Rd.,
who was visiting in Deerfield, and
Matthew Root, 5, 1051 Fair Oaks,
were taken to the Highland Park
Hospital
by
Officers
Krase
and
Mullins. Dr. Ralph Elson attended

and

dates.

The Tigers and
serjes, the Tigers
hind Saturday to
Braves winning a
12-11.
The
Reds

alongside

Thomas E. Connelly Jr., 1059
Fair Oaks, was proceeding along

home

both

series give the teams a look at each
other’s
whole
pitching
staff and
break up an otherwise repetitive
schedule.

moving vehicle at 1045 Fair Oaks
were taken to the Highland Park
hospital
for
slight
injuries
last
Monday afternoon at 6:15.

children

in the money

Jewett park.
It was the present
board’s
concern
that
too
many
home runs were credited to players in the past only because an outfielder missed the wall. We tried
the chalk line—partially successful,
we are certain that the fence will
make the game more enjoyable as
it will give the boys a chance to
make a play on the outfield grounders.
The
Prep
league
has
a game
scheduled
for Thursday
night at
6:30 p.m. This team, in the majority, represents the development of
baseball players in our community.
You will enjoy the game so why
not go out to Jewett Park then.

parked cars and darted into a slow-

turned

send

seems to be a satisfactory fence for

youngsters

from

please

or return the tickets to your team
manager? Your cooperation will be
appreciated.
We
have
finally devised
what

To Hospital After
Minor Accident

Township Library, for drain tile lo-

ter will provide for skating in winter and sprinkling in summer.

was

lic Chairman Ed Carter.
Program
chairmen for the evening was Da-

school

cated inside footings, and the Walden School for a two-inch water
main and a two-inch fire hydrant
to serve the playing field. The lat-

of the Deer-

Church

stalled as president of the Deerfield-Northbrook
Rotary
Club
at
the Ladies’ Night and installation
of officers held at the Glenview
Naval
Station Officers’ Club last
week.
Assisting
him
will
be
Ralph
Nash, vice president; Dr. Herbert
Smith,
secretary,
and
Lawrence
Smith,
treasurer.
Directors
appointed were Past President John
Carlson,
David
Barrow,
Walter
Glanville and Raymond Ratajezak.
The
guests
at the
installation
were
entertained
by
Comedian

the
issued

J. Keller

Presbyterian

vid Barrow,

Removed

Removal of the hill at the intersection
of
Greenwood
Ave.
and
Milwaukee
Railroad
tracks
was
authorized
at an
expenditure
of
$400. This is a safety measure to
attain desirable visibility for motorists at the intersection.

Re-zoning

DEERFIELD BOYS BASEBALL

Rotary Club Head

she
the

ardization of all roads.

plant.

oh

turned to red. When
her station
wagon

1954

prior to the conpresent
sewage

a
The board unanimously
-. a water supply ordinance

_

way
ped

5)

Medical

said

be-

of um-

these men. Of
not
always
be
of the stands—
disagreement at
Comiskey Park.
men have done

F. Peyronnin
a

wonderful

word

of

job

thanks

and

from

deserve

the

a

parents.

Have you ever tried to convince a
man that umpiring is not a thank-

less job—if

it was

a soft touch we

would be flocked with volunteers.
For every ten men who volunteer

to manage or coach we have one
man who volunteers to umpire. So
give them your moral
they are doing well.
Other

games

support—

reported

during

the

week were: Pirates 4, Cubs 3; Dodgers 2, Cards 0;
kees 1; Orioles

White Sox 6, Yan10, Indians 12; Pi-

rates 1, Indians 4; Orioles 12, Cards
7; and the Cubs beat the Yankees
but the score was not reported.
Standing as of
National League

last

Sunday:

NATIONAL

LEAGUE

Team
Dodgers
Pirates
Cards
Cubs

Won
7

AMERICAN

2
2

Lost
1
3
5
6

Won
4
4
3
2

Lost
3
&amp;
4
4

LEAGUE

Team
White Sox
Indians
Yankees
Orioles

Only one home run reported last week,
Pete Frants Indians versus Pirates.
Intermediate League:
An All Star team
from
each
division
was
selected by the
vote of the boys on each team. Game will
be played at 12:30 p.m. July 4 at Jewett
Park.
Rosters American Division: B. Danielson, D. Houston, David Roche, M. Rollheiser, S. Rollheiser, C. Lee, H. Schramm,
T. Schessler, D. Walker, M. Nielsen, M.
Thompson,
P. Sazanoff,
R. Kitzerow,
J.
Brown, and Paul Wells. National Division:
Skip Greenlee, Robin Robinette, Scott Garrett, J. Wickstrow, Phil Becker, Kurt Meintzer, C. McGrath, R. Smith, jae
Skinner,
R. Sharpe, N. Neal, D. Ownes,
S. Schreaded, A. Cossavella, and B. Bloch
Standing as of June2
AMERICAN

Team
Athletics
White Sox
Yanks
Indians
Orioles
Team
Cubs
Pirates
Giants
Dodgers
Cards

Minor League:
The regular schedule is
in progress.
Last week the Giants lost to
the Cubs 9 to 8; Braves defeated the Cards
19 to 8; Indians slugged out a 13 to 4 victory over the White
Sox and the Cards
smothered the Pirates 18 to 3.

Give Your Children
Traffic Schooling,
Says Police Chief
Children,

from

teen-agers,

pre-schoolers

need

education

in

to
the

rules of traffic safety, Chief of Police David J. Peterson pointed out
this week.
Little ones should be cautioned
by their parents against darting
into traffic and against playing or
riding

their tricycles in the streets.

Streets are not playgrounds, he reminded,

Bicyclists and teen-age drivers
must be told to conform to all
traffic rules. Parents can assist the
police in maintaining traffic safety by impressing on young people
the

seriousness

of

the

role

they

play as operators of any vehicles to.
use

public

Summer

transportation

Schedule

system.

Begins

Beginning July 5 and continuing
through September 6, the Deerfield Presbyterian

single

9:30.
will

Church

morning

The
also

Church
be

will

worship

held

have

a

service

at

School
at

service |

9:30.
sein

“

BANK
ot NTEREST

“The Service Bank Of Highland Park”

“ON SAVINGS AT

BANKS HIGHLAND
1771 Second St.

BANK—POST
Member

Federal

OFFICE

Deposit

BLDG.

Insurance

Corporation

PARK

[Dlewood 2-7800 1]
Thursday, June 25, 1959

�~ OBITUARIES
‘Mrs. Albert
of

June

Larson

1643

Green

(Frances

Bay

22 in Highland

Rd.,

Park

V.),

died

Hospital

after a long illness.
Born Oct. 25, 1885 in Highland
Park, she was a life-long resident.
She was a member of the Order
of Eastern Star and just received
a 50-year membership award.
Survivors include her husband,
Albert,

1906;

whom

one

she

married

daughter,

here

Mrs.

in

Lois

Wright
of Springfield,
Mo.;
one
son, Bradford, of Belmont, Mass.;

three grandsons and two granddaughters. One brother, Bert. Kirby, of Highland Park also survives.
Funeral

services

will

be

held

at

2 p.m. today in Bethany Evangelical
Church, Burial will take place in
‘Springfield,

Domenico

Mo.

Toni.

Born June 21, 1885, in Minozzo,
a province of Reggio Emilia, Italy,

Domenico Toni,
Johns Ave., died
ings

Hospital,

74, of 2731 St.
June 18 in Bill-

Chicago.

He came to the United States in
1909, returned to Italy in 1920 and
came back here three years ago. He
was a retired landscape gardener.
Survivors include his wife, Marianna; five sons, John and Frederick
of Park
Eugenio

Ridge, Arnold,
of Highland

Mario
Park;

and
two

daughters,
Maria
and Lucia
of
Highland Park and seven grandchildren.

Services were held June 22 in St.
James

Church,

Highwood.

Burial

followed in All Saints Cemetery
Des Plaines.

David

B. Stern

David

Ave.,

B.

Stern

died

June

in

Jr.
Jr.,

22

60

in

Prospect

his

home.

Born May 23, 1910, in Chicago, he
was 49 years old. He was a partner
NOTICE
TO BIDDERS
CITY OF HIGHLAND PARK
LAKE
COUNTY,
ILLINOIS
SANITARY SEWER IMPROVEMENTS
Sealed proposals, invited by the City of
Highland Park, will be received by the City
| Manager at the City Hall, 1707 St. Johns
Avenue, Highland Park, Illinois, until 8:00
P.M., Central Daylight Saving "Time, July
13, 1959, at which time and place they will
be publicly opened and read aloud, for Division D of the Sanitary Sewer Improvements.
The work comprises the construction of
- east iron pipe and vitrified clay pipe sewers,
complete with all wyes, tees, special con- nections, railroad crossings, highway crossi
connections to existing sewers, manholes, and other appurtenances and _incidental work, as follows:
Size
Approximate
Inches
Material
Length-Feet
21
VCP
479
20
CIP
251
18
CIP
416
16
OB
898
15
VCP
5,642
14
CIP
2,165
444
CIP
12

12

VCP

CIP
1,266
VCP
2,669
VCP
5,096
e work also includes the construction
of the Moraine Ravine Sewer, complete as
above, along either of two alternate routes
for which alternate proposals will be received.
The sizes and approximate lengths
of sewer pipe included under each alternate

as follows:

;

ee

Approximate Length—Feet
Size
_ Inches
Material
Alternate I Alternate 2
eee
CIP
20
12
12
CIP
976
1,357
12
VCP
808
1,617
12 VCP (in tunnel)
585
10
VCP
1,622
8
47
_
The
Instructions
to
Bidders,
Proposal,
- Form of Bid Bond, Agreement, Specificaof Performance
Bond,
- tions, Plans, Form
and other Contract Documents may be examined at the office of the City Engineer,
City Hall, Highland Park, Illinois, and at
the office of Greeley and Hansen,
EngiEast Jackson Boulevard, Chicago
q rae
iW
Copies of these Contract Docu] bilionn “an be obtained from either office
upon the deposit of Twenty-Five
Dollars
The amount of the deposit
- for each set.
| will be refunded if the documents are returned in good
condition within 30 days
after the opening of bids.
Each proposal must be submitted on the
proposal
forms included
in the Contract
Documents and must be accompanied by a
certified check on a solvent bank or trust
made
payable
to the
City of
- company,
Highland Park, in an amount of not less
than 10 per cent of the total bid, or by a
bid bond of like amount, on the form set
forth in the Contract Documents, as assurance that the bid is made in good faith.

The

City

Tom

of Highland

of Schumaker, Gilmore, Van Ness
and Stern of 38 S. Dearborn St.,
Chicago.
He had lived in Highland Park
since April of 1958.
His survivors include his wife,
Frances Thurston; two sons, David

B. Stern III and Thomas

Park

reserves

the

right to reject any or all bids, to waive any
informalities in bids and to readvertise.
By Fogg of the City Council.
y R. W. SNYDER, City Manager.
Dated as 22, 1959, Highland Park, Illinois
6/25-7/2/59—180

‘Thursday, June 25, 1959

Stern

of

Chicago;
a step-son,
Charles
B.
Puestow Jr. and a step-daughter,
Miss
Frances
Puestow,
both
of
Prospect Ave.; his parents, Mr. and
Mrs. David B. Stern of Chicago;

and one brother, Carl Stern of San
Francisco.

Mike

Russell

Wyles,

of Highland

years,
died
June
N. Mex., where he

a

former

Park

16
had

the
for

for

53

in
Pecos,
moved five

He
ers

of years

zoning

on

the

Lake

civilian

in the

training

and

to the
1938

for

Service

secretary
until

OF

lead-

passage

Law

Wis.

He

also

is

survived

grandchildren.

be-

of the

army

1955.

THANKS

ness and sympathy shown
during our recent bereave-

of

SALES

-

RENTALS

-

REPAIRS

ment.

The Family of

prewas

Domenico

as an advocate of

preparedness

winning

\

We wish to express our deepest thanks and appreciation
to our many friends for kind-

other

matters
of national defense
paredness. For this work, he

nationally known

aide
from

CARD

Associaof this

maintenance

camps

Selective

County

(in 1918) the

pany.

military

of the group’s
with

(Polly) Day of St. Louis and
W. P. (Ann) Coleman of Ma

Survivors

group, an agency which advised the
government

the

country.

Survivors are Mr. Wyles’ wife,
Mary; two sons, Tom R. Jr. and

Association

Wyles helped found

one

credited

of

board.

Military Training Camps
tion.
He
was
president

was

the

Army; two daughters, Mrs. Ar

fore World War II.
He held the post of chief civilian

emeritus to the secretary of the
army, He was former executive director of the Steel Plate Fabricators Association at 105 W. Madison
St., Chicago. He served for a num-

ber

organization sponsored camps
volunteer
military
training

throughout

years ago.
Services were held Friday
in
Santa Fe, N. Mex.
Mr. Wyles, former Chicago industrialist, was
chief civilian
aide

Helps Found

O’Keffe

defense. During the 1920s and ’30s

Dies

Mike O’Keffe, 51, of 532 Burton
Ave.,
died June
20 in Highland
Park Hospital after a long illness.
Born in Witchita, Kans., on Sept.
10, 1908, he had been a resident of
Highland Park for six years. He
was a survey analyst for George
May
Business
Engineering
Com-

Toni
645

national

CENTRAL

°*

Survivors
include
his
widow,
Gladys; his mother, Mrs. Alma R.
O’Keffe of Houston, Tex.; and a
sister, Mrs. Margaret Hughes, also
of Houston.
Services were held June 23 at
Sacred Heart Church
in Ottawa,
Kans. Burial was in Calvary Cemetery in the same city.
Adjudication and Claim Day Notice
NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
to all
persons that the first Monday of August,
1959, is the claim date in the estate of
BENJAMIN G. PIERSEN, Deceased pending in the Probate Court of Lake County,
Illinois, and that claims may be filed against
the said estate on or before said date without issuance of summons. All claims filed
against said estate on or before said date
and not contested, will be adjudicated on
the first Tuesday after the first Monday of
the next succeeding month at 9 A.M.
Katherine D. Piersen, Executor
Cornell and Wolff Attorneys
1866 Sheridan Road
Highland Park, Illinois
IDlewood 3-1140
6/25 7/2-9/59—176
Report of Condition of “BANK OF HIGHLAND PARK” of Highland Park in the
State of Illinois at the close of business
on June 10, 1959. Published in Response
to Call of Conrad F. Becker, Director of
Financial Institutions.
ASSETS
1. Cash, balances with other
banks,
including
reserve
balances, and cash items in
process of collection ..........
486,821.66
2. United States Government
obligations,
direct
and
PUOTANEOO Gog
Selb ace
1,884,593.43
6. Loans
and
discounts
(including
$2,793.29
overdrafts)
1,775,127.89
7. Bank
premises
owned
NONE,
furniture and fixTUTOR SIF OMe |. soshcsakacs-cc
54,265.24
9. Investments and other assets
indirectly
representing bank premises or other
POAT SCOURGE cis ils iscsrciat casos
1,000.00
11, Other « S8ete ic
26,956.31
12:
13.
14.

6,095

10
10
i

are

R. Wyles

resident

Mrs. Albert Larson

73,

Tom

15.
16.
17.
18.
19.
23.

TOTAL

AGSETS)

5.0: cciocc $ 4,228,764.53

LIABILITIES
Demand
deposits of individuals,
partnerships,
and
COPDOTAT
ONS
hak ie itdcissius
Time deposits of individuals, partnerships, and corDOLACIONG 6 cco conta
seh rte naics
Deposits of United States
Government (including posSOT MVNO.
sccsety sv dossiteeopekes
Deposits of States and political subdivisions ............
Deposits of banks ............
Other
deposits
(certified
and officers’ checks, etc.)
TOTAL
DEPOSITS.
........
LS Renter ed $ 3,894,048.36
Other ‘liabilities .........:.......

24. TOTAL

LIABILITIES

1,618,750.82
1,849,068.45
45,808.37
300,000.00
26,082.90
54,337.82
72,539.92

John B. Nash Carpet &amp; Linoleum Co.
626

Roger

Williams

Ravinia

Ave.

OPEN

FRIDAY

IDiewood: 2-8701 *

Section

NITE ‘TIL 9

REMOVAL
SALE
Now In Progress
Top Quality Brands You

Know

and Trust!

WE MUST MOVE!
PRESENT FURNITURE
STOCKS MUST BE SOLD!

....$ 3,966,588.28

CAPITAL ACCOUNTS
Do GR
a
i a
26. Surplus
27. Undivided profits 2.0.0.2...
29.

Brand Name Carpeting

Riake CAPITAL
ACCPU 1 oie
en ce he 2 $

0,000.00
50,000.00
62,176.25
262,176.25

30.

TOTAL
LIABILITIES
AND
CAPITAL
ACCOIN
ent ee
$ 4,228,764.53
MEMORANDA
31. Assets pledged or assigned
to secure liabilities and for
Other
PUIPOGSS &lt;i...
575,000.00
32. (a) Loans as shown above
are after deduction of reSELVES OF ais
18,179.88
I, C. M. WEGMAN,
Vice President, of
the above-named bank, do solemnly swear
that the above statement is true, and that it
fully and correctly represents the true state
of the several matters herein contained and
set forth, to the best of my knowledge and
belief.
Correct—Attest: C. ae WEGMAN
JOHN
F. LEONARDI)
SAM FELL
) Directors.
HARRY
J. LAZARUS)
State of Illinois, County of Lake, ss:
Sworn to and subscribed before me this
18th day of June, 1959.
(SEAL)
My commission
expires 5/19/63
ANGELO DIASPARRA, Notary Public

6/25 /59—177.

EVERY ITEM IN OUR
STORE REDUCED ...
Everything Must Be Sold. Costs &amp; Time
To Move Our Huge Furniture Stock
To New Store Would Be Too High, So
We've Reduced Everything Drastically
To Save You The Money And Us The
Time. Hurry In For Best Selections.

STEFFAN

“QUALITY”

FURNITURE

1016 WASHINGTON
Waukegan—DElta

ST.

6-2345

�tee seat

fi

oo

PHONE YOUR WANT AD . . . WE'LL CHARGE IT
REaiL

ESTATE
FOR
(HIGHLAND

WANT AD RATES
i}
|

HIGHLAND

20 words
for only
5c each additional word
(For 55 words or Less)

25c¢ Service charge for blind ads
Ads containing 56 words or
more are charged at the rate of
$4.90 per column inch.
Contract rates for 4 or more

os
|
1

consecutive
on request

insertions available
1 inch Minimum.

e

ie i

Deerfield

Review

Highland Park News
Highwood News

sb

The

Lake

Fort Sheridan

Dorsey Husenetter

Published Every Other Friday

REALTORS
723

ADS 3 P.M. TUESDAY

ELM
ing
en,

stand ing
that
the _ publisher
assumes
no_
responsibility
for
omission
through
clerical
or
mechanical
error
and shall be
under no obligation or liability
of any kind whatsoever, either to
the advertiser or third parties.
In the event of an error in copy,
on the advertiser’s request, the
ublisher will rectify the error
y publishing the corrected ad
in the next regular issue without
charge. All claims for adjustment
must be made within five days of
the date of publication in which
the error occurs.

PLACE
rm.

screened

REAL

1419

FOR

FIRST

TIME

Mn
Ml Ml Ml MM
Bo Mi MM

SALE (Improved)
P ARK)
OFFERED

3rd floor that can be utilized or closed off,

with

its

separate

heating.

Easy

and village. NOTHING

$43,500.

CHOICE

BUILDING

walk

LIKE

to

IT

LOTS

2 lots—in choice estate area, wooded and
/ ay
landscaped.
83x237
each, $11,500

fis f

$12,500

-_ EAST
-the

Ravinia ravine lot. Build overlooking

trees.

Conv.

to

school.

$12,500.

De
_ Glencoe

Page
ai
4

Theater

44

Bldg.

LIVING

NEAR

LAKE

3 bedroom 2 bath Ranch with full basement.
About 4 years old. Plastered walls. Contemporary
design.
August
1
possession.
$26,500

SUN.,

2-5

WARRINGTON

Realtors

Linden

1-1111

Earhart &amp; Co.

4

HI

6-7274

BRoadway

RIGHT OUT
OF A PICTURE
BOOK
is
this prettily designed brick and frame ranch
handsomely
set on
a semi-circular drive.
Surrounding it is fine landscaping, including 33 trees. Inside is a well equipped kitchen with family room, 3 bedrooms
and 2
baths. The living room with beamed ceiiing has valance lighting and panelled fireplace wall. $34,900.
Mrs. Moser.
IF
YOU
HAVE
IDEAS,
this
perfectly
maintained 8 room residence will set your
mind awhirl. Its spacious site affords space
for an additional residence and/or swimming
pool. This home includes 4 bedrooms, study,
push button kitchen, carpeted living areas
and many unusual features. It is near Lincoln and Immaculate
Conception
Schools.
Reduced to $45,000. Mrs. Ruby.

111 Green

5-0236

Bay

Rd., Wilmette

Realtors
ALpine

Sheridan

FOR THE
VALUE

1-1111

BEDROOM
house
for sale. Trade
or
rent for three bedroom Ranch home. Details, call ID 2-6739.

ID 2-0880

Rd.

MAN WHO WANTS
FOR HIS MONEY

A successful business man or financier doesn’t mind spending an
extra dollar if he knows it is well
spent.
Here is a wonderful family home
in the best EAST
location,
two
blocks from Lake Michigan, easy
walking
distance
to
school,
churches, shopping and North Western Station.
5
family
bedrooms,
3
family
baths, plus maid’s quarters which
can also be used by members of the
family; a large screened porch that
is conducive to pleasant summer
living. Owner moving out of city;
must sell—$49,500.
For appointment to see, call:

L. Ringer
Realty

457

Co.

REAL

ESTATE
FOR
(HIGHLAND

acre, this very finely built English
Tudor offers most gracious living.

Very large living room w/frpl. and
beamed
ceiling,
exquisite walnut
pan. dining room w/parquet floors.
Solid oak spiral stairway
in entrance hall. Pan. brkfst. room, butler’s pantry, maid’s room and bath,
pwd. room and large sernd. porch
on Ist. 3 very large bedrooms, 2
completely tiled baths, each with
walk-in shower stall, pine-pan. sitting room w/sleeping porch on 2nd.

Pan. rec. room

w/bar in basement.

2-car att. garage. Finest construction thruout and in perfect condition. Close to school and shopping.
EE A eee hte, Gye MIN ° cies ea A $58,500.

H. and R. Anspach
REALTORS
463

Central

Ave.

ID

NORTHEAST—ONE

2-1212

STORY

On 100 feet of attractive prop.,
this one story home
offered for
first time to close estate. 30 ft. pan.
liv. rm., with frpl., 2 good sized
pan. bdrms., bath, kit., half basement, Low taxes and heating costs.
In excellent loc. surrounded by
PAS NGries.. Her
$24,500

1925 Sheridan Rd.

ID 2-4580

‘
HIGHLAND PARK
Brick and stone ranch designed especially
for children and gracious living. Just 1%
years old, 4 bedrooms, 24% baths, separate
dining room, family room, tile kitchen with
builtin
range,
oven,
refrigerator,
freezer,
dishwasher,
washer
and
dryer.
Screened
porch, play room, 2 car attached garage.
Beautiful white oak woodwork throughout.
It really has everything. In the 50’s.

LANG
712

ROAD

GLENCOE

2-7873

OPEN

VE

SUNDAY

5-1971

2-5

BRICK
split level home
near Woodridge
school.
3 bedrooms,
2 baths,
completely
equipped kitchen, partially finished recreation room, screened porch, attached garage,
carpeting included, bring offers. A bargain
at $23,900.

Benj. Piersen Realty
Rd.

2 baths,
29,800

QUALITY two story. East of Sheridan. 4
bedrooms, 314 baths, den, fireplace ....$49,500

Windsor

5-1670

BEAUTIFUL South Deere Park, by owner,
8 exceptional rooms, 2 tile baths, 2 powder rooms,
attached 2 car garage, low
_ 60's, shown by appointment. ID 2-3902.
BY owner: brick house, living room, dining
room, kitchen, bedroom,
den and _ bath,
upstairs 1 large, 1 small bedroom, bath
and 1 unfinished room, closed stairway,
2. car

attached

garage,

corner

lot,

near

Lincoln school. If perfect condition $32,000 to $33,000. Needs some repairs. Will
sell ee
Call for appointment.
ID

One story—needs remodeling. 3 bedrooms,
den, choicest East location, wooded
100x
190 lot
$27,000

Idlewood Realty
REALTORS
1550

Park

Ave.

ID 2-6776

owner: Low 30’s. Lovely 6 room, 142
bath Colonial home. 3 Exceptionally large
bedrooms, large recreation room, modern
kitchen with dishwasher, incinerator, gas
heat, beautiful landscaped yard; dead-end
street. Perfect for children. See by appointment. Telephone ID 3-0030.

CONVENIENT

EAST

SIDE

Four blocks to North Western Train, one
block to Elm Place, Indian Trail and H.S.,
3 blocks to Lake. Two story home with 3
bedrooms,
1%
baths.
Beautifully
wooded
lots. Two car garage. Priced in upper 20’s.

OWNER

ID

MICHIGAN

On over 2 acres of beau. landsc.
ground with more than 300 ft. of
beach, this 10 year white colonial
home features exquisite views and
lge. luxurious rooms. Each room
has

a

view

of

the

lake—the

en-

trance hall with curving staircase;
spacious liv. rm. with frpl., porch,
sunny din. rm., lge. mod. kitch. and
bkfst. rm. and paneled library with
full bath.
The 2nd floor has 18x28 master

bdrm.

with

dress.

rm.

and

tiled

bath; 2 add’l large bdrms. and tiled
bath,
plus
porch
usable
as 4th
bdrm.

A beautiful home

with many

un-

usual appointments.

PAUL PHELPS, INC.
1925

Sheridan

Rd.

ID

2-4580

ARMY Officer, being transferred must sell
brick ranch home; three bedrooms, 2 ceramic baths, full basement, large living
room with dining area, attractively landscaped on wooded lot. $26,500; no bargaining. Telephone ID 3-0876.
AIR-CONDITIONED
Expandable 3 bedroom Cape Cod (all on
one floor), living-dining combination,
full
basement,
gas heat, unusually
good
construction,
low
maintenance
in convenient
location, Elm Pl. School Dist., many extras.
By owner, mid 20’s. ID 2-8270.
OWNER leaving state: must sell 3 bedroom
frame;
large living room with fireplace and sun room, dining room, kitchen, basement,
oil heat, 2 car garage.
Lincoln
School District. For details call ID 2-0474.
FOR sale by owner: desirable east location
on Sheridan Rd., 100x200 wooded lot. 3
bedrooms, 11% baths, kitchen with breakfast
nook,
paneled
living
room-dining
room
‘combination,
service
porch
with
pantry area; carpeting, drapes, stove, refrigerator, washer, dryer, air conditioner,
power
mower
included.
$28,500.
1330
Sheridan Rd., ID 3-1587.
HIGHLAND
PARK—
SHERWOOD
FOREST
Builder’s custom 6 room ranch on wooded
lot. All thermopane windows, 2 fireplaces,
radiant gas heat; beautiful paneling, huge
screened porch. Mid 50’s. ID 2-5833.
BY

REAL ESTATE
REALTORS

GLENCOE

AMbassador

LAKE

(Improved)
SALE
PARK)

—

ID 2-6600

RANCH—almost new. 2 bedrooms,
den, fireplace, dream kitchen

ESTATE
FOR
(HIGHLAND

ON

| In park-like setting’ on. beautiful 34

730 Waukegan

AIR
CONDITIONED
throughout.
3 bedroom, 1% bath bi-level. 2 story living room,
tiled kitchen, family room, appliances, etc.
included
$27,900

REAL

EAST RAVINIA

REALTORS

Realtors

Central

SALE
(improved)
PARK)

PAUL PHELPS, INC.

REALTORS
1899

3-3333

PRICES FROM NINETY
THOUSAND TO LESS THAN
NINETEEN THE FINEST HOMES
YOU’VE EVER SEEN

5
VErnon

PROPERTY

An inviting hall leads to the elegant liv. rm.
with frpl., a charming solarium and to a
most dramatic family rm. with a tremendous
frpl. All these rms. open onto the extensive
blue stone terrace with a dramatic view of
the lovely gardens and ravine. The dining
rm., powder rm., butler’s pantry and kitchen
complete the 1st floor. There are five light,
airy bedrooms and 5 baths on the 2nd floor.
The separate 2 car garage has an enchanting 3 rm. apt. with large screened porch. The
whole property is in flawless condition. Must
be seen to be appreciated and is appealingly
priced at

BY

REALTORS

wih

OPEN

HOMEFINDERS,

J-H Kahn
‘%

bedrooms,

BUY OR SELL
YOUR HOME WITH EASE
CALL HOMEFINDERS NUMBERS
—ONE’S AND THREE’S

Treat your family to the luxury of space
and room to grow in this lovely older home
in the PEAK OF CONDITION. There is a
large liv. rm. with ftplc., DEN,
gracious
dining
rm.,
screened
porch,
family
size
_kitchen, powder rm. all on the ist floor. 5
_ bedrms., 3 baths on 2nd., plus a finished

school

GRACIOUS

overlooking

54+

Winnetka

Deerpath

(HIGHLAND

Chi,

E740

rm.

L. Ringer

aad

re

Lovely livfamily

Ranch on lovely wooded property,
3 bedrooms, 2 baths, full basement,
kitchen w/built-ins
and excellent
eating area. Living rm., separate
dining rm., screened porch. Garage,
close to new school.

DEERFIELD
Waukegan
Rd.
LAKE FOREST

ESTATE

fed

i

porch

ravines.

DEERFIELD

ALpine

AT

SCHOOL.
fireplace,

tion.

n&gt;

699

287

re

PARK

HIGHLAND PARK
608 Laurel

oo
‘

nuit’

2-1484

baths.
Call us to-day to see this
fine family
home.
Convenient
to
schools, shopping and transporta-

999

ie

w/

beautiful

IDlewood 2-4500
Windsor 5-4500
Lake Forest 2300

-

ID

INCOME

BUY!

This apt. building has a gross income of
$360 per month. Well maintained, conveniently located. First floor apt: 4 bedrms.,
living room, SEPARATE dining room, large
kitchen,
heated
sunroom
and bath.
Ideal
for a nice home PLUS income. Newly listed
$34,500

w/ fireplace, dining rm., cab. kitch-

TELEPHONE
WANT AD SERVICE

it

Ave.

HIGHLAND

Copyis accepted with the under;

St. Johns

BILEVEL

DEERFIELD

For Publication in the Current
Week's Issue.
CANCELLATION
DEADLINE
12 NOON, TUESDAY

bie

BEDRMS.—ONLY $17,800
IN EAST RAVINIA

Immediate possession to this 3 bedrm., 14%
bath brick and frame home near Lincoln
school. Large kitchen, ceramic tile bath, 3
large bedrms.
and
spacious family room.
Now $26,000—$2,500 to $3,000 cash down
will handle to qualified buyer!

COME INSIDE: You should see the inside
of this 2 bedroom ranch on a beautiful high,
large wooded
lot. Gorgeous
new kitchen,
lovely CT
bath. Large
living room
with
fireplace, huge 2 car garage, ..:....:.... $20,900

Tuesday, 4:30 P.M.
DEADLINE FOR CONTRACT

(Improved)

PARK)

NEAR PARK: Three bedroom brick ranch
in Ravinia
built in 1955. Full basement.
Plumbing roughed in for an additional bath.
Just completely decorated. Close to all conveniences.
$23,500

DEERFIELD

Tower

SALE

Large living room, separate dining room, 2
bedrooms, on ist and 2 on 2nd; full basement, new gas furnace and water heater.
2 blks. to shops and schools. House perfectly maintained.

Want Ads will be accepted up to

#

5

PARK

NORTHBROOK

Forester

FOR

NEW
LISTING:
Dazzling white home in
immaculate condition in Sunset subdivision.
Built in 1950 by builder as own
home.
Modern
kitchen
with
eating
area,
living
room with fireplace and 3 bedrooms and
bath on the first floor. Wonderful partially
finished basement. Expandable
2nd floor..
The stairs are in and the heat and plumbing
are roughed in for 2 additional bedrooms
and a bath. Large 1% car garage. Wonderful yard—Only
$27,900

BBUILT IN 1956: Three bedroom, 2 bath
brick and stone ranch. Stone BBQ off patio.
2 Car garage.
$28,500

Ads run in above publications
during the same week in which
Fort Sheridan Tower is published
will also appear in

ESfATE

(HIGHLAND

THIS IS A BEAUTY: Two bedroom brick
ranch on heavily wooded, beautifully landscaped large lot. Living room with marble
fireplace.
Finished
breezeway.
Full basement. Gas heat. Attached garage. 25 Yr.
financing.
$27,500

This cost will cover the
insertion in all 4 papers.
ae

REAL

SALE
(npproved)
PARK)

CALL WI 5-450:

2-2940

HIGHLAND
PARK HIGHLANDS. 4 year
old ranch. 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, full
basement,
finished recreation room, gas
heat, air conditioned, fireplace. $34,500.
Somat
Sale possible. 3475 Summit, ID

owner. 3 bedroom split level, combined
living, dining room; Youngstown kitchen,
paneled TV room, 1% baths. On beautiful |
one
lot. Low 20’s. Telephone ID 29204.
WHY take a chance on errors? Insure your
real estate title with a Chicago Title Insurance Policy. Ask your lawyer or real
estate broker.
By owner, 5 year old bi-level. Living room,
dining
room
combination,
finished family
room,
3 bedrooms,
plumbing
roughed
in
for second
bath.
Sherwood
Forest
area.
Telephone ID 2-7048.
:

Beautiful

BY OWNER
East Ravinia

:
Section

Highland Park, large wooded lot (85 foot
frontage).
3 bedrooms,
2
complete
tile
baths
with
showers,
modern
kitchen,
screened porch, sun deck, tile roof. Ideal
location, 2 blocks
from
school, shopping
and trains. Quick sale. Priced in the low
thirties. Telephone ID 2-4744, for appointment.

REAL

ESTATE
FOR SALE
(DEERFIELD)

ESPECIALLY

FOR

(Improved)

CHILDREN

Located on a cul-de-sac in Deerfield Park
this lovely two year old tri-level is designed
for children. No through traffic, no streets
to cross to get to school, only one block
to
playground
and Little League Field.
is
is a three bedroom home with two baths,
ten closets, spacious living room, finished
family room, full tiled basement, laundry
room, garage, and patio. The birch cabinet kitchen is equipped
with built-in GE
range, oven, dishwasher, and disposal. The
lot is 200 feet deep with an oversized back
yard. This home is in excellent condition
and is equipped with aluminum storms and
screens throughout. Shown by appointment
only. Phone WIndsor 5-4637.
CAPE COD Colonial on beautifully wooded
corner acre, 2 large bedrooms and bath
on second floor; bedroom or den, dining
room, kitchen, living room, and bath, first
floor; breezeway, fireplace, 2 car garage.
School
bus
1 block.
$28,000.
1 block
north,
1 block
east of intersection, of
Deerfield and Portwine Rds. Telephone
WI 5-1511.
:

Thursday,

June

25, 1959

�So

Wa ieee

:
id

_ REAL ESTATE FOR SALE (Improvea
ce,
A @RERFEED),

REAL

. Benj. Piersen Realty
CAPE
White
with green
room with fireplace,

2 bedrooms,

2 baths.

Outside

large
dining

living
room,

entrance

ALpine

to

4 BEDROOMS—
22 BATHS

ACRES

BUY

OWNER MUST SELL. Transferred. 2 year
old ‘custom brick ranch home on beautifully
landscaped wooded half acre. 3 bedrooms,
1% baths, dream kitchen, basement, 2 car
attached garage, quality construction. 70 ft.
patio plus large screened porch. Priced under cost. Bring offer, $35,750.

2 BEDROOMS
Cozy white clapboard. Pleasant airy kitchen,
living room has fireplace, 2 bedrooms and
bath, gas heat, high dry basement, garage,
close to town and transportation, ideal for
retired couple, lovely landscaping. $18,900.

ON AN ACRE
Quality brick ranch home, living room with
fireplace, separate dining room, kitchen with
eating area, 3 twin size bedrooms, 114 baths,
full basement, 2 car attached garage. Now
offered for $29,000.

~WOODLAND

PARK

3 bedroom ranch home; living room with
fireplace, large screened porch, 1% baths,
dining room,
kitchen, full basement with
fireplace, bath, swimming
pool.
Beautiful
large lot. Low 30’s.

OPEN HOUSES
SUNDAY 2-5

IN

1060 OXFORD RD.—IMMEDIATE OCCU-PANCY.
FACE
BRICK
RANCH
HOME,
FIREPLACE, 3 bedrooms, 1/2 baths, basement recreation room with fireplace, plaster walls, carpeting
and
drapes included.
Worth seeing, $29,000.

Benj. Piersen Realty
REALTORS
Rd.

Windsor

WISH THE ULTIMATE
FINE LIVING

5-1670

HOMEFINDERS
OF

THIS IS ONE
OUTSTANDING

OUR

‘ON THE
MOST
BEAUTIFUL
LOT
IN
Briarwood Estates. Deluxe all brick Tackett
ranch.
Center
entrance,
separate
dining
room,
fireplace,
3 bedrooms,
2 ceramic
baths, porch, 2 car garage. Owner moving
to Texas wants offers. MR. DEAKINS.
DESIGNED
BY LARRY
SCHWALL,
architect.
Very
attractive,
better than
new
all brick veneer ranch with basement and 2
car garage.
Beamed
ceiling
living room,
super deluxe kitchen, 3 bedrooms, 1% luxury baths. Pretty lot. A pleasure to see. Call
MR. DEAKINS.
OWNER
MOVING
TO
IOWA—can
give
immediate
possession
on this immaculate
ranch home in pretty wooded setting. Looks
like a model show home—nothing could be
added for deluxe living for 2 or 3 people.
Center entrance, Cathedral living room, deluxe kitchen, 2 big bedrooms, 2 luxury baths,
oversized 2 car garage and big patio. Deluxe living in mid 30’s. Won’t last long—call
"
to see this fine home. MR. DEAK-

Baird &amp; Warner
1157

Waukegan

PArk 4-1855

Thursday,
A

pa

aul

Rd.

June

Glenview,

IIl.

IRving 8-2204
25, 1959

WOODED LOT—
OLDER HOME
Frame Colonial. 3 bedrooms, sewing room,
living room with fireplace, separate dining
room, large kitchen, back porch, full basement plus garage. All for $22,

OWNER

TRANSFERRED

Priced to sell at $23,500. Frame ranch on
corner lot, schools half block away, 3 bedrooms, large living room, kitchen with eating area, breezeway,
attached garage, immediate occupancy.

ON

DEAD

END

See this modern 4 bedroom, 1% bath, basement tri-level. Large lot, garage, close to
everything. A buy at $23,500.

CLOSE TO TOWN
Ideal for retired couple. Easy maintenance.
Roman brick ranch on beautiful landscaped
lot. Full basement, 3 bedrooms, large living
and dining room combination, one block to
church. Priced at $24,000.

REDUCED

TO $25,750

(Improved)

ESTATE
FOR SALE
(DEERFIELD)

LOW

LOW

DOWN

F

2 SALE

(DEERFIELD)

VIKING Realty Co.

Byes

Hees4%

shh

MODULAR
DISPLAY
"3
HOME
fee
FABULOUS
to
WESTERN RANCH 7 ~

PAYMENT

See this model 3 year old ranch. Glamour
kitchen has built-in range, oven and washerdryer. Lovely living room, 3 bedrooms and
bath, plus garage and screened porch for
only
$16, 900

ae 8

| Living room, family kitchen, 3 bedrooms, 114 baths, basement, carENJOY RAISING YOUR FAMILY peting, ceramic tile, slate entry,
snack bar, birch cabIn this California style ranch with 3 bed- fireplace,
rooms, extra large family room, kitchen that inets, formica tops. Built-in rang
eating
cabinets,
wood
beautiful
contains
oven, garage, gas heat, large
area and all appliances. Living room is Car- and
peted and
house.

this

with

go

draperies

lovely

all

Priced low at

glass areas.

$23,200

FOR THE
DISCRIMINATING

STREET

5 year old frame ranch on lovely lot. 15x24
living room with fireplace, paneled wall, 3
bedrooms, family sized kitchen, 14x15, full
basement, attached garage, close to schools,
on bus line.

HOMES

NEW

This stately white Georgian Colonial is picturesquely set on 4 plus acres of perfectly
maintained
grounds
including formal garden, blue stone terrace, exquisite outdoor
lighting, immense
Bar-B-Q
and tool shed
(with mowers &amp; truck). Also perfectly maintained are the gracious living areas with
winding
staircase
to 5-6
bedrooms,
4%
baths, 26 ft. glazed &amp; screened living porch
&amp; 3 car garage. Mrs. Ruby.

HOMEFINDERS,

Realtors

111

ALpine

Green

Bay

MODERN

Rd., Wilmette

3

BEDROOM

5

ROOM

RUSTIC

RANCH

On 1 acre. Has large oversize 2 car attached garage with a screened porch surrounded by trees. Ideal for a retired couple.
You'll love this setting.

ALMOST

NEW

split-level with
a Colonial
touch,
has 4
bedrooms, 2 full baths, ideal location, living
room, dining “‘L’’, huge kitchen with built-in
oven and range. Spacious closets with sliding-doors. Full basement with storage room.
Attached garage. Fully landscaped lot, 75x
120. Close to schools.

STUNNING

RANCH

Peaceful
residential
area
has
2 ceramic
tile baths, full basement. 3 good sized bedrooms
and
large
patio.
Attached
garage
with added room for a work bench, Priced
for quick sale.

WE

HAVE

BUYERS

WE NEED LISTINGS
WE HAVE BUYERS FOR HOMES, INCOME PROPERTY, AND ACREAGE. IF
YOUR PROPERTY IS FOR SALE .
.
CALL US! ! WE CAN DISCUSS YOUR
PROBLEM WITHOUT OBLIGATION.
Sunday

REAL

BUYER

Almost new custom ranch has all the extras. On a magnificent wooded lot 3 blocks
from down town Deerfield. 3 bedrooms, 2%
baths, terrific recreation bar room thatis
out of this world, plus a jalousied family
room with built in bar-b-que. Real luxury
for only
$44,500
OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY
9 a.m.-8 p.m. SAT. 9 a.m.-5 p.m.

:

Deerfield
909

Road

Apple

BS)

West

Tree

—

to

Lane

ARNOLD PEDERSEN |
Building
711
WI

Contractor

hig

Orchard
5-1238

11%, YEAR
old 4 bedroom
bi-level, 2
baths, paneled family room with fireplac
built-in oven, range and dishwasher,
to wall
carpeting,
patio, garage,
la
landscaped lot. 41% % loan available. $3
ates
Cranshire
Ct. Telephone \

VIKING Realty Co.

Waukegan

&amp;

Deerfield

Rds.

WI

5-5700

PRICED FOR QUICK SALE
OWNER TRANSFERRED
Attractive grey frame Cape Cod, 4 bdrms
(2 up), 2 baths, liv. rm., frpl., lovely din.
bay, modern kit., dishwasher, disposal, rec.
rm., full bsmt. 2 car garage attached to
breezeway, nearly acre land. Ideal for children, nr. schools, shopping, transp. $27,500
incl. new cpting, drapes. Call WI
5-3819
or ALpine 1-4493, weekend appointments.
3, BEDROOM ranch on large corner lot, 114
baths, large living room with fireplace,
dining room,
fully equipped
kitchen, 2
car garage, close to public and parochial
schools. Low 30’s, open to offer. Telephone WI 5-3257.
LET us show you the finest ranch home in
exclusive area. Former Tribune Home of
the Week. Beautifully landscaped on 150
ft. frontage.
7 rooms, full basement,
3
fireplaces, 2 baths, shower stall, screened
oy
patio. The Kempf Realty, WI 52
JUST $17,900. Ranch home, 5 large rooms.
2 bedrooms,
living
room
with paneled
dining L and family room. Convenient,
nice area. 1051 Elmwood. Telephone WI

5-0854.

Waukegan

OPEN

Road

WI

SUNDAY

John

12 TO

826

Deerfield

Rd.

5-0984

6 P.M.

Coons

Realtor
FOUR
BEDROOMS
.
Parochial and Public schools are walking
distance
from
this 4 bedrm.
face
brick
ranch. Beautiful family Kitchen, Full basement, Center hall, 2 car att. garage—100x150
lot.
$41,900.
Western gray Ranch Living rm with Stone
fireplace, 3 bedrms,
Family
kitchen
with
Bar-b-q_
grill.
Full
basement.
Towering
Oak ‘shades: rear’ Yard.) &lt;.scciccnci:.6 $26,800

all kinds

of vacant.

Members of Evanston-North
Listing Service.
Evening Phones:
ee pen
CR
OPEN

Shore

Multiple

Nancy Sullivan WI 5-1393;
2-1360; John Coons PA 4SUNDAYS

10-5

John Coons, Realtor
in Deerfield
Deerfield
(Plenty

TWO

of

Rd.

WI

parking

WEEKS

TO

5-5100

space)

A DELIGHTFUL NEIGHBORHOOD FOR
THE CHILDREN
6 room Stone &amp; Frame Ranch; Studio ceilings, birch cabt. Kitchen, built in OvenRange;
cer. tiled Bath &amp; Powder Room;
full
Basement.
BUYER
CAN
ASSUME
PRESENT $22,200-41%4% Mortgage ..$25,500
THE INTERIOR DECORATING IN THIS
HOME IS EXQUISITE!
Face Brick Colonial Ranch on lge. lot; 3
Bedrooms, lots of Closets; birch cabt. Kitchen, designed for modern convenience; Utility; att. Garage to be used as phere
ie”

Waukegan

NEW

COLONY

BI-LEVEL

Deerfield, 8 rooms. 214 baths, large living
room with paneled fireplace wall, separate
dining room opening on patio, deluxe kitchen with built-ins, 4 double bedrooms, paneled rec room with fireplace, two car garage, gas heat; near schools and transportation. Carpeted throughout. 2,800 sq. ft. Only
$36,000. Telephone WlIndsor 5-2457.
DEERFIELD
East, by owner: Attractively
landscaped, near schools, shopping, transportation; living room with fireplace, separate dining
room,
large panelled
den,
3 twin size bedrooms, 11% baths, screened
porch overlooking golf course, breeze-way,
attached garage, $32,500, 645 Byron Ct.,
telephone WI 5-1645,

store

building.

12

years

old.

ceptionally well designed,

DEERFIELD

air con-

ditioned. On 50x200 feet—driveway

and large parking area.
i
Now under lease for 2 years. Net

An excellent investment and real- |
istically

priced.

rs

For particulars

call—

PAUL PHELPS, INC. :
1925 Sheridan Rd.
REAL ESTATE

NEWLY

ID 2-458

FOR

(LAKE

SALZ

DECORATED
in

BRICK

once.

Separate

'

rooms

plus

living

2 extra

wooded acre in
location.

RANCH
and

rooms!

at

dining

On

a COUNTRY

%

CLUB

BANNOCKBURN

OLDER

BRICK2- |

older,

conven-

8

ROOM

BRICK

REAL

ESTATE

AND &gt;

;

&lt;4

2-STORY

ME

near Barat College.3_

bedrooms, 2 baths on 2nd floor. Liv-_
ing room, dining room, screened —
porch, kitchen, powder room on Ist
floor. Full basement, gas heat. $34,-

500.
ey:
5 ROOM, 2 BATH BRICK HOUSE
on wooded

1% acre, North Sherid:

ing. $37,500.

Fortunate the person selecting this
almost new COLONIAL on picturesque
winding
road
and
on 2/3
acre.
3 bedrooms,
2%
baths,
a
“dream” kitchen and 2 att. gar. In
the 40’s. See

SEARS

a

Rete:

STUCCO HOUSE with 114 baths, in |
well established neighborhood, on —
100 foot lot. Priced in high twenCOLONIAL

and
wish
to
2 bath NOR-

SCHOLZ

(improved) —
| =

FOREST)

HOUSE

ATTRACTIVE

2108 ELSINORE—$42,500
SHOWN BY APPT. ONLY

MAN

—

rental except taxes, $9,300 per year,

ties.

LINCOLNSHIRE

Owners
transferred
sell their 4 bedroom,

|

Ex-

2-car garage, gas heat. $24,000.

WI 5-3200

Rd.

INVESTMENT

ient location, 4 bedrooms, 1 bath. —

ARTHUR C. ULLMANN
REALTOR
216

PROPERTY

In the center of Hubbard Woods
business area, attractive stone front

STORY

SELL

By owner.
Transfer.
BEST
OFFER,
BELOW
APPRAISED
VALUE
OF _ $25,500.
NO MATTER HOW GREAT OUR LOSS!
One owner, 4 yr. old custom built. DOWN:
18 ft. kit. w/eat. space under picture window, L.R., sep. din. rm. or den or bedrm.,
full bath, foyer, screen porch. UP: 3 bedrms., full bath. Full bsmt. w/rec. rm., Indry.
rm., built-in play house and storage. Exc.
shady loc. Exc. financing. SACRIFICING
6
Magners at
SALE. Telephone WI

BUSINESS

FOR

A HOME GLOWING WITH WARMTH &amp;
COMFORT
That’s what you’ll find in this 3 Bedroom
Ranch,
with
carpt.,
comb.
Living-Dining
room, full Basement, surrounded by a graceful landscaped lot
$19,500

Location,
Construction,
and
Quality can’t
be beat in this’ 3 bedrm brick ranch, exceptionally fine recreation rm., large kitchen,
jalousie porch, must be seen to be appreciated
$36,500
have

5-5300 |

DEERFIELD:

Redwood contemporary with scenic view in
lovely wooded setting in Village, 3 bedrms,
central
Air
cond.,
carpeted,
thermopane
windows
ot
$22,900

We

WI

Deerfield

QUITE A BUY: APT. HOME:
5 rooms, 2 Bedrooms, Bath &amp; encl. Porch
on ist floor. 4 rooms, 2 bedrooms, bath on
2nd
floor.
Full
Basement;
Oil Hotwater
Heat.
Central location.
Lge. wooded
lot.
Should see today at
$21,000

REALTORS
701

623

ESTATE

rec room, entrance
‘‘L,” kitchen with
Tops in location.

Carr Realty Co.

RANCH

Just one year old with a roomy 2 car attached garage. Will decorate to your own
taste. Kitchen has built in appliances with
exquisite
hard
wood
cabinets.
Attractive
fireplace separates dining area from living
room.

TRI-LEVEL

3 bedrooms plus den and
hall, living room, dining
built-ins, 2 car garage.
$32,500.

1-1111

ZANDER-OMMEN

VERY DELUXE ALL BRICK COLONIAL
style ranch. For sale by original owner who
is in lumber business. Many deluxe features
and appointments.
Family
room,
2 large
bedrooms, 2 ceramic tile baths, plastered
basement, large porch, 242 car garage, 2/3
acre wooded lot. Very fine. Priced right.
MR. DEAKINS.

BARGAIN

Wooded half acre. Nice brick ranch, living
room, large kitchen with eating area, 2 bedrooms plus two car garage. Low taxes.

BANNOCKBURN

Open

Baird &amp; Warner

$17,500—A

REAL

(REAL ESTATE

one

CALL

ATTRACTIVE

2590 HAZELNUT LANE—(W. 2 miles on
Deerfield
Rd.
to Portwine
Rd.,
So.
to
Sherry, E. to Hazelnut). Just reduced to
$28,500,
this
contemporary
ranch
is on
choice 14%4 acre wooded property adjoining
golf course. Stone fireplace in spacious living room, built-ins in family size kitchen,
3 twin size bedrooms,
ceramic tile bath,
screened porch, 2 car port. IMMEDIATE
OCCUPANCY.

730 ‘Waukegan

YOU

TRANSFERRED

Must sell nearly new brick ranch home, 3
bedrooms, living room, paneled dining room
(or family room), kitchen with eating area,
full basement with beautiful paneled recreation room, nearly new wall to wall carpeting included. High 20's.

TWO

A PICTURE BOOK RANCH is now priced
at $22,900. When you choose this 3 bedroom home you will enjoy professional landscaping, a 16 ft. picture window overlooking
the rear garden. Three bedrooms plus a divided tile bath with colored fixtures. Mrs.
Parkinson.

IF

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE (Improved)
(DEERFIELD)

3-3333

ENJOY
OUTDOOR
LIVING
when
you
choose. this king-sized split level. The family willl love its fine patio, plus a lower
level family room. Most unusual are the
bedrooms, 5 in all, plus 7 wardrobe closets. An unusual residence for $38,500. Mrs.
Parkinson.

Transferred. 4 year old custom built brick
and frame ranch home. 4 bedrooms, 212
baths.
Huge
kitchen—family
room
with
brick fireplace wall. Wood
paneling
and
beamed ceiling, unusual and artistic; also
expandable. Quick occupancy, $29,000.

OWNER

Broadway

JUST
IMAGINE
owning this 4 bedroom
Dutch
Colonial
on
a handsome
wooded
acre.
Packed with values, this soon-to-becompleted home features living room with
fireplace, separate dining room, family room
and 2% baths. Included is full basement and
2 car garage. $44,500.

Choice
Briarwoods
location.
This
brick
split level has much
to offer, including
paneled recreation room with enclosed bar,
landscaped lot, garage, living room, dining
room, eating area in pleasant kitchen. Excellent buy for $34,500.

TERRIFIC

1-1111

PRICES FROM NINETY
THOUSAND TO LESS THAN
NINETEEN THE FINEST HOMES
YOU’VE EVER SEEN

basement, garage, big shade trees. Just a
few blocks to shopping and trains. Rarely do
you find all of these features for $18,500.

1Y%2 WOODED

(improved)

BUY OR SELL
YOUR HOME WITH EASE
CALL HOMEFINDERS NUMBERS
—ONE’S AND THREF’S

COD
shutters,
separate

YSTATE
FOR SALE
(DEERFIELD)

Ns

:

NS

GILBERT RAYNER
REAL ESTATE
266 EAST DEERPATH
LAKE FOREST 382
Kathryn

Jaicks

Berenice Ressinger
Carmen Burgess

CO.

REALTORS
Hillcrest
8

6-2900

ROOM
ranch home located on very exclusive dead end lane West of Deerfield,
1% mile off Riverwoods Road. 214 baths,
full basement,
3 bedrooms,
den, family
room
off kitchen, large screened porch
on 1144 acre. Shown by appointment. Telephone WI 5-2110 after 6 p.m.

TWO
year brick 3 bedroom
ranch, landscaped 75 foot lot, carpeted living-dining
full basement, appliances available, near
schools, shopping and churches. $23,500.
Telephone WI 5-2429.

ACREAGE SITE
$8900
Excellent
blacktop
Features

Brick
bath;
down
2739

Located

path
the

RD,

Windsor
AND 22

5-0352

site on

1.2 miles

north

of Deer-

stop light on Winwood Dr,
joins

Waukegan

Rd.

from|

west.

4

Clifford

ranch, natural fireplace, ceramic tile
80x200 wooded lot; low taxes. Low
payment.
Birchwood Lane
WAUKEGAN

building

water, electric, and telephone service.
a

which

DEERFIELD—BY OWNER
DELMAR WOODS

level

road within city limits. —
include underground gas,

EXCLUSIVE

Leonard
BROKER

—

�REAL

ESTATE | FOR
(LAKE

LAKE FOREST
one

bath,

on

beautiful

brick

Colonial

wooded

half

‘Living room with fireplace,
room, kitchen with breakst area,

screened

patio.

Partial

2ment with recreation area. Gas
Two car attached garage.
g and draperies are includthe purchase price.

$36,000.00

OWNER LEAVING AREA wants offers on
well built BRICK, 3 bedrooms, living room,
paneled fireplace wall, picture window overlooking wooded view. Kitchen 10x12 with
eating space. Full concrete basement, many
cabinets for storage. Jalousie porch, yard
lights, 2 car attached. Taxes below 400
COLONIAL, 3 bedrooms, tiled bath, 21 ft.
living room,
14 ft. dining room, formica
counters &amp; eating space in kitchen. Full
concrete basement, gas heat. 30,000.
IMMACULATE
baths, basement.

older,
Lower

LAKE

3 bedrooms,
20’s.

1%

BLUFF

DELUXE
ranch with 3 bedrooms,
DEN,
PORCH, 1% baths, horseshoe kitchen with
breakfast space, living room, carpeted thru
dining. Private patio, full basement, huge
FAMILY
ROOM, h/water heat. 2 car attached garage. Lovely yard. 30’s.

paneled living room with
ce, dining
room,
paneled

DELIGHTFUL
large family house, many
fine features, 214 baths, 4 bedrooms PLUS
26 ft. cedar family room, fireplace, 16 ft.
dining room, porch, 2 car garage. Gas heat,
all ROW windows. Many extras.

Oil heat.

FOUR
BEDROOMS,
1%
baths, attached
garage. Here is a good 1st home that is
near Village &amp; has tall shade trees. Carpeting included, priced at 19,750.

Two

car

detached

and a play house.
$39,500.00

3 BEDROOM
Cape Cod with 30 ft. living
room,
fireplace;
cabinet
kitchen,
h/water
heat, wooded lot. 25,750. At 218 North Ave.

Mrs.

Lindenmeyer,

H.

newly listed three bedroom,
and a half, brick ranch. Livroom

with

fireplace,

n a choice Lake Bluff neighLiving
room
with
fireden
with fireplace,
dining

itchen, powder room. There
two

or

maid’s

that

en’s

rooms

could

be

bedrooms.

. Oil

heat.

Two

on

sec-

used

Full

car

for

$65,000.00

brick

Colonial.

fireplace,

Living

library

room

with

fire-

dining room, kitchen,
om,

ed

powder

porch.

Two

car

$75,000.00

ay

is inviting four bedroom,

four

, two story white frame house.
» acres of ground. Entrance
aneled living room with firelibrary with fireplace, modkitchen and laundry. Besides
drooms on the second floor
is a small study. Basement
e. Gas

heat.

Two

car

Ze with three room
other

nice

detached

apartment.

extras.

$85,000.00
arking Space Available
for Our Customers

Hart, Shaw &amp;
Company
Kenmore Thorsen
135 S. La Salle St.
RAndolph 6-7155

erof the Evanston-North
Multiple Listing Service

Shore

Co.

Custom built
with spacious

Ill.

large bedrooms, 214 baths. Laundry
room with washer and dryer. 2 car
oversized garage. Beautifully landscaped. 495 Exeter Place. Call Lake
Forest
3

TWO

678 Western Ave.
Lake Forest 485

12

1-1111

On

3-3333

Realtors
ALpine

1-1111

LAKE BLUFF. Owner moving to Florida.
Two story cottage uniquely located in rustic garden at edge of ravine on dead end
street. Living room with fireplace, dining
room, two bedrooms, cabinet kitchen, partial basement,
two
thermopane
picture
windows overlooking ravine, gas hot water
heat, automatic gas water heater, combination alum. storm windows and doors,
glass
enclosed
porch,
two
car
garage.
Unusually
private
location
in heart of
town, near business, transp., school, beach.
Low taxes. Low heating bill. $21,500. Call
William Dern, Lake Bluff 3225.
ROOM brick contemporary ranch house,
2%
baths;
attached garage, on wooded
acre. Also 6 room frame contemporary
ranch house, attached garage,
on large

corner lot. Lake Bluff 1916,

kit.

is

the

last

word

in

de-

heat.

and

drapes.

Price

Owner

duced

includes

transferred;

to

low

40’s

carpeting
price

for

re-

immediate

occupancy.

New BRICK
AND
FRAME. 2
flat with
full basement. Living room, kitchen, dining
combination, 3 bedrooms and one bath in
each. Hardwood floors, zoned oil baseboard
heat, 2 gas water heaters and 2 laundry
tubs.
$29,750.
2 bedroom brick. Full basement has _recreation room. with fireplace and toilet. Hardwood floors, plastered throughout. 2 car garage. Realistically priced at $15,000.
4 bedroom frame and brick Tri-level. Kitcheen with built-ins, big family room. Large
bedrooms have double closets with louvered
doors, hardwood
floors.
3 bedroom Norman brick ranch with fireplace in 14 by 28 living room. Dining room.
Tiled
birch
cabinet
kitchen
with sliding
door has dining area. Oil radiant heat.

MUNDELEIN

1925 Sheridan

3 bedroom
bungalow
100 by 160 ft. lot,
hidden by trees and shrubbery. Has fireplace
in big living room. Dining room, cabinet
kitchen with breakfast nook and den, rumpus room in full basement. Close to school,
Will rent or sell on contract.
If you are handy with tools, see this 2 bedoe frame on private lake. Priced at $10,500.
3 bedroom: home,
distinctively modern
in
every way. Endowed with built-in features
you’ve always wanted. Situated on approximately 2 acres. A delightful neighborhood
for the children.

LAKE

DRIVE
3

out

and

bedroom

ated on

see

this

redwood

1%

acre

tages
many

of

the

ranch,

situ-

of wooded

land.

city.

advan-

Low

taxes,

extras. $29,500 or offer. 301

Little Melody Lane. West on 59A
Road.

Lake

For-

est 3819.

BUSINESS
OPPOSITE

LOCATION

C&amp;NW

STATION

Northwest corner of Western &amp; Illinois Rd.
75x78 ft. Includes 8 rm. house fully insulated
and well maintained. Business zoning. City
parking lot close by. For full information
call Elsa Fitzgerald at LF 86 or HI 6-7180.

Storm Realty Co.
REALTORS

ceiling

bay

Cheerful

deck,

WILMETTE—914 Yale. Open Saturday and
Sunday.
Attractive ranch,
3 bedrooms,
2
baths, att. 2 gar., full bsmt., nicely landscaped lot, 66x135, near schools, shopping
and transportation, Low 30’s.
WILMETTE — Sprucewood.
Executive’s 3
bdrm. home with 1% baths, spacious living
rm. with raised fireplace, large dining rm.,
breakfast rm., metal kitchen cabinets, dishwasher, disposal, att. gar., beautiful landscaped
75x144
lot, attractive price. Open
Saturday and Sunday.
WILMETTE
WEST—Family
size bi-level,
3 bdrms., 2%4 baths, rec. rm. with fireplace,
GE kit. with all built-in features, breakfast
rm., carpeting and drapes in living rm. and
dining rm. Priced for quick sale.
GLENCOE—Newly
painted and decorated.
2 story frame home on 100x150 wooded lot,
2 bdrms., glazed porch, family rm., combination S.s., carpeting, refrig. and range included. Mid 30's.
HIGHLAND
PARK
—
Sherwood
Forest.
Face brick ranch on beautiful wooded corner lot. 3 large bedrooms,
1% baths, attached 2 car garage, rustic finished basement. Low 30’s.
EVANSTON — Brand new brick 2 apartment; 5% spacious rooms, built-in oven and
range, automatic heat, many extras, open
daily. Upper 30’s.
Buy DIRECT from owner and save
mission.
24 Hour telephone
service,
chard 5-8383.

Three bedrooms, 2 baths, Cape Cod, separate dining room, full basement, screened
porch, attached garage, 100 by 250 wooded
lot; located in East Lake Forest. Call Lake
Forest 3896,
538 CENTER
AVE, Lake Bluff, 2 blocks
from
beach
and
boating.
Fine
older
home,
rewired. 5 bedrooms,
2!4 baths,
screened
porch, breakfast room, new 2
car garage and breeezeway,
double lot.
We
have purchased
another home
and
are anxious to sell with immediate possession.
Exceptional
financing
available.
Call owner,
Lake
Bluff 2569
or your
broker. $33,000.
BEDROOMS, brick ranch, 2 car garage,
aaneles basement
gas
heat,
low
30's.
elephone Lake Forest 3095.

FOR sale by owner. Under $25,000. Cape
Cod, 4 bedrooms,
living
room,
dining
room, den, 2 full baths, kitchen and separate breakfast room, sewing room, full
basement, nice yard, low taxes and maintenance, adjacent duplex lot also available.
Telephone Lake Forest 4604
LAKE FOREST—dQuality built pressed brick
ranch. Like new. Well designed; 3 twin
size bedrms., 2 tile baths, vanity; large
living - din.,
firepl,
overlooking
rear
grounds;
10 closets; beaut. lge. kitchen,
brkfst. rm., built-ins, washer, dryer; carpeting; 24% car att. garage; 2 porches, one
alum scrnd. Well located at 604 S. Waveland Rd. on '% acre lot. Priced at $43,500,
or reasonable offer, for immediate sale.
By appointment. Lake Forest 4520.
BY OWNER
5 year old, 3 bedrooms,
1% baths, living
room
with fireplace, oversized
2 car
attached garage with workshop area, on acre;
city water; West of Lake Forest Limits. Mid
twenties. Low taxes. Telephone ID 2-9468
evenings or all day weekends.

comOR-

4846

Main

St.,

Skokie,

to

match

mowers.

walls.

75x

140 lot. 9x17 screened patio, tiled
bath, oil heat, garage. Really a bargain. $16,500.
Oak

Spring

hardwood

master

12x12.

floors.

15x30

34

with

Pleasant,

sun
sun

modern

buses,

Immediate

5 minutes

to apd

possession.

FARMS — HOMES — ACREAGE _

MARTIN A. VEHLOW, REALTY :
WM.

433 GAGES LAKE R
3-0880
GAGES RP AKE,

PITTENGER—REAL

LAKE

TLL

a

FOREST

Road

HIGHLAND

PARK

California brick

ranch,

WOODRIDGE
painted white.

Liv. —

din. combination, beamed ceiling, fireplace;
2 twin size bedrms., split bath; patio
BBQ, att. gar. Mid 20’s. Low down
ment to qualified buyer. Mrs. Moran,
0645.

—
4y-

1084 West Everette Rd,

Lake Forest 249

GOELZER and WILDE
NORTHFIELD—one
of the most fabulou
ranch houses in this area is now offe

for sale. It is the architect’s own home

and

fireplace, dining room,
spacious
kitchen with breakfast area, 2 car

with

garage, oil heat,
plastered
walls,

recreation room.
TERMS

hardwood
basement

kitchen,

breakfast

room

and

f

\

nily

©

bar, TV and a barbeswimming
pool of. jo a
completely fenced back

yard. There are 2 bedrooms,

a paneled den —

or guest room and 2%4 baths plus an rasa
of 800 square feet for conversion to buy
needs. It was built in 1955 with the fi
possible construction and is on a beauti
ly
landscaped lot of 1 1/3 acres.

GOELZER and WILDE
Realtors

790

Elm

Street

HI

65544

To liquidate estate. First time offered.
vestment property. Over an acre in

In-

Day surrounded by business. Beautiful piece
of property located on a main highway.

Very

close

to schools,

able house

repairs.

and

Low

shopping.

2 other buildings

taxes.

Priced

for

Small

liv-—

which need

quick

—

sale

at $8,500.

‘—
j

Open

wp

Sunday

ZANDER-OMMEN
&amp;

Deerfield

Rds.

is

Ba

REAL ESTATE

Waukegan

yee

ane

WI

at

5-5700

NORTHBROOK
A lovely country house on lot 98x387, situated in grove of trees. A quiet
retreat, marvelous for retirement.
Room
shingled ranch, living room with fireplace, —

SAMUEL McNAB
CAMPBELL ~
REALTOR
1656 Shermer
5-544%

Ave.

©

CRestwood 2003

MORTGAGE

MONEY.

—refinancing.
Terms
appraisals! LAUREN

New

loans

to 30 years. Free
R. JANUZ, FPRan

lin 2-0400. (Residence: Lake Forest 3 557)
FOR sale, within Half Day School distric
2

year

old

3

bedroom

ranch

half acre landscaped

Telephone

NEwton

with 2

lot. "

4-3500.

?

f

PRAIRIE VIEW
COUNTRYSIDE
ARCHITECT
room

one

story

OFFERS
modern

own

desi

house.

terior, 11 ft. ceiling, 40 ft. living
acres on wooded stream. 5 car
$38,000.

Telephone

NEwton

room

:

age

4-3834.

$38,500.

J. C. REUSE &amp; COMPANY
322 N. Milwaukee Ave.

Libertyville

|

includes such features as a 17x33
living
room with fireplace wall of stone; a c

LIBERTYVILLE
Immediate possession. Approx. one
wooded acre with lovely 3 bedroom,
2 bath, brick veneer ranch home.
15x21 living room with large stone

heated
floors,

;

el

Deluxe 2 bedrm. with possible oxranae
brick
home,
radiant
gas
heat,
fireplac
screened
porch,
on _ heavily
wooded
re
107x278.
Close
to
transportation,
shops,
—
schools and ia
Low 30’s. Mrs. ne
ney, ID 2-6878
;

garage,

960

and

School

shopping.

Illinois

the

ayer sf

cabinet
kitchen
and
dinette,
tiled
=
a
shower, 12x18 screened porch, also p
Automatic gas heat, deep well, screens, 1y “i
car garage. COMPLETELY
and beauti
ns
furnished including all garden tools, power ?

INC.

LIBERTYVILLE:
Lovely
2
bedroom solid brick home, 2 blocks
from Grade School. 12x20 living
room
tastefully
decorated,
with
draperies

Miche

dining room, iovely tile kitchen, two bedsoot? and bath, porch and attached —.

by-owner
BUREAU,

or

window,

bedrooms,

12x14

room with built-in
cuing fireplace; a
square feet and a

BY OWNER

SERVICE

retirement

WM. PITTENGER—REAL ESTATE _

AREA

SCHWANDT REALTY CO.
REALTORS
Libertyville 2-2015
MUndelein 6-6720

FIRST OFFERING
MIDDLE THIRTIES

3

for

in a very exclusive dead end cedar lane, |
adjacent
to
a _ scenic
clean
lakeshore.
Grounds
are
beautifully
landscaped
flowers, shrubs, towering trees, 15x34 ave
ing-dining room with fireplace and floor to ©

nation

beautiful

Country living with many

ZURICH

3 bedroom
ranch in established neighborhood, comfortable and well kept. Frigiadire
stove,
refrigerator,
washer
and
dryer incuded. 2 car garage with work bench. Realistically
priced
at
$16,500.
See
Michael
Dennee,

ID 2-4580

Rd.

ELITE COUNTRY HOME
Ideal

BALDWIN

7 year old outgrown 2 bedroom brick with
attached garage. Hardwood floors, plastered
throughout. $16,000.

PAUL PHELPS, INC.

Scranton Ave.
Lake Bluff 816

THE ONE WORD that best describes this
brick and redwood split level is “luxury.”
The de luxe construction includes a generous
use of blue slate, parquet floors, wood panelling, deep carpets and ornamental
iron.
This 4 bedroom residence with exotic entertaining arrangements is one of the most
unusual homes now for sale. Mrs. Nilsson.

Rd., Wilmette

AREA

an acre this 3 year old

gas

YOU

PRICES FROM NINETY
THOUSAND TO LESS THAN
NINETEEN THE FINEST HOMES
YOU’VE EVER SEEN

Bay

over

CLUB

ranch house is of modern design.
The 30 ft. liv. rm. has Thermopane
picture windows; den or din. rm.,
3 bedrms. and 2 ceramic tile baths.

INC.

BRoadway

HOMEFINDERS,

BEDROOM
red brick ranch; full basement; attached 2 car garage; corner lot,
choice
east
location,
1 block
west
of
Sheridan Rd. 20’s. Lake Forest 1895.

just off Bradley

BUY OR SELL
YOUR HOME WITH EASE
CALL HOMEFINDERS NUMBERS
—ONE’S AND THREE’S
ALpine

5077.

ONWENTSIA

FOREST

REALTORS
OFFICES TO SERVE

with
with

separate breakfast area, all modern
built in electric appliances, cypress
paneled
recreation
room.
Four

sale and

BLUFF

GRIFFITH,

living room
room. Large

sign and equipment. Full concrete
basement, 2 car attch. garage and

A CHOICE
ONE
YEAR
OLD
split-level
with numerous quality features:
Charming exterior of red brick with large
Colonial windows.
14% blocks to SOUTH
PARK
where children
enjoy
healthful play.
Easy care lawn and landscaping will please
DAD.
Built-in kitchen
with breakfast
area
will
delight MOM.
Large
panelled
FAMILY
ROOM
and
screened porch for everyone’s enjoyment.
THREE good sized bedrooms and 24 baths.
A PRICE
that should be a pleasant surprise.

JOHN

Large
dining

cherry paneled family room
fireplace. Spacious kitchen

4 BEDROOMS
and TWO FULL BATHS;
Brick
home
on
100x150’
landscaped
lot;
St. Charles Kitchen with built-ins; Living
room with fireplace; Dining L; Full basement with rec. area; Oak .floors and plastered walls throughout; Comb. storms and
screens;
MANY
FINE
FEATURES:
Offered at $33,500.

LAKE

Bi-level, 1 year old
grounds.
Excellent

for children.
with fireplace,

REAL ESTATE FOR - SALE |
(MISCELLANEOUS)
LIBERTYVILLE

BY OWNER
EXCLUSIVE MEADOWOOD
SECTION

The

FIRST
TIME
OFFERED:
Five year old
Brick Ranch with extra building site. Each
lot 50x125 and ZONED
DUPLEX. 3 Bedrooms; 1% baths; Cabinet kitchen; Livingroom; Dining area; Detached garage; Immediate
Occupancy;
REALISTICALLY
PRICED IN LOW THIRTIES TO SETTLE
ESTATE.

111 Green

Richard B. Hart, President
&gt;. Howard ReQua, Vice President
tuart R. French
Milton McN. Traer
E. Henderson
. Deerpath
Forest 4040

LAKE

and

attached

969

JOHN
GRIFFITH,
INC.
Serving the area since 1904

break-

room

&amp;

Waukegan,

base-

attached

Olson

Bluff

Realtors

dining

kitchen,
enclosed _ porch.
ent has a recreation room
replace. Two car attached gae. Oil heat. Refrigerator, deep
washer and dryer included
ing price.
$42,500.00

D.

Lake

‘Cimproved)

POnisTy

2-2000

OWNER transferred. Immediate occupancy,
will rent with option to buy. Ceramic tile
electric kitchen, clean 3 bedroom brick,
excellent condition, beautifully landscaped,
completely fenced yard, garage. FHA financing, reasonable, 715S$ . Wayne Place,
LEhigh 7-2816,

porch, spacious dining room, kitchen
laundry room, full basement, large 2
story
2 car garage, on wooded corner lot, scho
bus stops on corner. Only $20,750. I
meee occupancy. Telephone owner, —
ee
-3941,
PRAIRIE
VIEW.
Charming
2
home, roomy 20 ft. living room, sp
kitchen with dining area, tile
]
basement, 2 years old, % acre of |
living for a mere $18,500.
ing
state,
immediate
igi:
phone NEwton 4-3941.
x

Thursday, June

—

�Sag
UCHIGHLAND.

ai

raat

NE ERD
mos

Elm_ Place
‘by

School

District:

132’

DELUXE
TOWN
HOUSE
Just 2 blocks to shopping and trains in a
wooded residential setting. Two bedrooms,
excellent closet space, large storage attic.
Fully equipped
kitchen, with dining
area
overlooking
patio
and
garden.
$250
per
month including garage. Occupancy September 1 for 18 months. New longer lease available. Telephone ID 2-4289.
FOUR room apartment in Highwood. Near
transportation. Telephone ID 2-0225.
6 ROOMS,
unfurnished,
newly
decorated,
centrally located, reasonable. Call ID 2
3093. By appointment.

frontage

218’ deep on dead end street, its own
oded ravine, 14 mile from, Ravine Drive
. Could you ask for more than this?

ca

To
st

see, call ID 2.5341.

a

Baird &amp; Warner

one

HIGHLAND

APARTMENTS

PARK

WOODED LOT
FACING THE LAKE
70

foot

frontage

on

Sheridan

Road,

576

Lincoln

Winnetka,

very

APARTMENTS
TO RENT (Unfurnished)
(LAKE FOREST)

&amp; Warner

Avenue
Tilinois

Hlllcrest

6-1855

SHeldrake

3-1855

NEW Town and Country 5 room apartment,
2 bedrooms, tile bath, powder room, dishwasher, basement and attic, garage. $185
per month.
Available
after June
15th.
Telephone Lake Bluff 1919.
AVAILABLE July 15, five room apartment.
3 rooms on second floor, 2 rooms on
third, with all utilities. $110 a month.
Call Lake Forest 1994.
LAKE BLUFF, one bedroom, 4 room apartment,
freshly
decorated,
available
July
15th or sooner. $105. Garage obtainable.
Call Lake Bluff 1055 or 3774.
ONE bedroom 3 room apartment centrally
located in Lake Forest. $105 a month plus
utilities and heat. Call Lake Forest 3030
after 4 p.m.

HIGHLAND PARK-WOODRIDGE SECT.
SOUTH of CLAVEY. 80x240 IMPROVED
|
lot on DEAD
end
STREET.
MANY
|
TREES, LANDSCAPED, OWNER, leaving city. ORchard 4-0480.
_

_ BY owner, vacant lot 82% x300; overlooking

al
pore Golf Course. Call
Telephone ID 2-2034.

-

»

after 6 evenings.

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE (Vacant)

a

(LAKE FOREST)

&gt;

LAKE
BLUFF
wooded
lot 100x124, east
tracks,
easy
walking
distance,
schools,
- railroads, parks, shopping.
Owner,
tele- phone WI 5-3718 after 6 p.m.
DUPLEX lot in choice location in new subdivision. Southeast area. Priced at $6500
for quick sale. Private. Lake Forest 2617.
/aeecemmsn

_

e2

APARTMENTS TO RENT (Furnished)
(HIGHLAND PARK)
2%

ROOMS,
$110 month, lease required;
in business district. Also one room and
bath, $70 month, Available July 1. Telephone ID 2-8117 or WI 5-1869.
KITCHENETTE
apt,
Highwood
business
district, no children, no pets. Telephone
Lake Forest 136.
THREE modern rooms, furnished apt. Newly decorated, with carpeting wall to wall.
Heat, hot water, included. Couple only.
Telephone ID 2-8476 after 9.
2 ROOMS nicely furnished. 246 North Ave.,
Highwood.
TWO furnished apartments, all utilities furnished, Call ID 3-0435.
2 ROOM
furnished
apartment,
close
to
Fort Sheridan and train station. Telephone
ID 2-3971.
3 ROOM furnished apartment, in Highwood.
Telephone ID 2-9823.
and bath furnished apartment,
3 ROOM
suitable for working couple, no children
or pets. Telephone ID 2-2035.
_
ROOM furnished second floor apartment,
share
bath,
$115
monthly.
All utilities
yay Block from town. Telephone ID 21227.
ONE room kitchenette apartment, close to
transportation and shopping, share shower
bath with one. Telephone ID 2-5481.

z

REAL

ESTATE

FOR

SALE

(Vacant)

(MISCELLANEOUS)

¥

-

LIBERTYVILLE: 5

acres, high and scenic.

Restricted to 2% acres per dwelling in area
of all fine homes.
Tract
has beautifully
landscaped building site with many shrubs
and evergreens. Good deep well with excellent water. Close to St. Mary’s Road.
6,
'
J. C. REUSE
&amp; CO.
Libertyville 2-2000

LIBERTYVILLE
-North—1

acre homesite, beautifully

wooded

winding

black

top

road.

FOR

w

Underground utilities, every feature of a private estate. Low down
payment, balance monthly. Write
Jaffee, 8028 Jeffery Blvd., Chicago,
ll., or call BAyport 1-9474.
FARMS

SALE

FARMS
BARRINGTON—140
acre

subdivision

acres,

fine

possibilities,

»-pgere, terms.

HUNTLEY—160

acres,

level

Cash

GARAGE
apartment, one room and kitchenette, utilities included; furnished or unfurnished. $80 monthly. VErnon 5-3493.

HOUSES TO RENT
(HIGHLAND

$495 per acre.

‘Call

Young,

Mr.

SHOP

space

WI

good

5-3095

STORES &amp;
TO RENT
with

large

soil, 2 nice
after

6

or

storage

area at rear. Suitable for small service or
retail business. Call Lake Forest 410.

4,

2 AND

Central

3 rooms for offices only. 456

Ave. ID 2-0150.

STORE for rent, 30x35, in center of town,
reasonable rent. Call after 5 p.m. ID 2-

8928
SPACE 20x32 suitable for garage, storage
or small business. Central Court, Highland
_ Park.

ID

2-0540.

BY

- APAKAMENTS TO RENT (Unfurnished)
Barve tue
(HIGHLAND PARK)
OOM apartment, all utilities paid. Teleone ID 2-3187.
e
M apartment with range and refrigitor included, Highwood
business dis. Telephone Lake Forest_ 136.
DROOM Townhouse, modern building,
Pe
to
Ravinia
shopping
center
and
rthwestern train station, available
mgr’ a
751 St. Johns Ave., ID 2-9136,
OM

apartment, second floor, garage;
children or pets. Available July 1.
ly 628 Vine or telephone ID 2-2421.

o

-EDROOM, 2
nsportation;
s Avenue,

baths, heat furnished, near
July ist occupancy. 725 St.
Highland Park. Telephone

—3-0826.
BEDROOM
apartment, newly decorated,
Park Ave.; no pets. $150 monthly,
og
Available July 15. Telephone

E

rooms
two

and

adults;

bath,

garage.

suitable

for

Telephone

room
apartment,
first floor,
ls and transportation, available

ber first. $160.
oe B

ID 3-1034.

one

ID

near
Sep-

necessary. See at 904 Deerfield,
d Park.

ay, June 25, 1959
7)

HOUSES
&amp; APARTMENTS
WANTED
(Furnished or Unfurnished)

WANTED

TO

HOUSE

CLAVEY

HOME

HIGHLAND

FAMILY
OR

SMALL house ideal for older couple or
working couple. Living room and dinette,
bedroom,
kitchen,
bathroom,
automatic
gas hot water heat, garage for one car.
Will
rent to responsible
people
only.
$89.50 per month.
Call ID
2-2871
between 9:30 a.m. and 12 noon.
IMMEDIATE
occupancy, newly remodeled
2 bedroom house, 1 block north of Ravinia
business
section,
$160
monthly,
Telephone ID 2-5439.

3 OR

2

OR

OR

WILL

BATHS

NO

CALL

ID

NO

LEASE

OBJECT.

3-1560.

TO

GARAGE

RENT

TO

POSITIONS

Good hours, working conditions and benefits
other than wages. Ample opportunities for
advancement.

WINNETKA TRUST
AND SAVINGS
Elm

Street

NORTHBROOK
CRESTWOOD 2-1000°

2-3700

%

MILE

SOUTH

OF

ROUTE

HI

6-0097

Pleasant work, for experienced girl (or will
train)
for
Copy
Department
in printing
plant.
5 day week, hospitalization, vacation and
other benefits.

SALESLADY ~

&amp;

GENERAL BINDING
CORPORATION
1101 SKOKIE HIGHWAY
NORTHBROOK

Mature, well groomed lady t
better women’s appareal.
T
sition is permanent with top sa
and commission. There is at
limited future
with inere

68

earnings. 40 Hour week, no
30% discount on your clothe
of course an air conditione
Call HI
position

HIGHLAND PARK
HOSPITAL

6-5510 for this e3
and ask for Mrs.

NEEDS
REGISTERED

NURSES

OPERATING

580 Lincoln

time,

ROOM

general

CLERK -TYPISTS

6.

CLERK

and

Sunday,

5

ARE

IMPOQ

PEOPLE and these positions lead t
other opportunities in our com)
have a high school diploma an
a “peak load’ now and then, v rd
you, Call or see H. C. Jac
:
(
oy
St., Highland Park, Ill.
1

don’

p.m. to 8:30

CASHIER
Saturday

Ave.

floor

NURSES

PAVILLION
CLERK
Monday through Friday, 4:30
p.m.

p.m.

to

11

ILLINOIS

BELL

TELEPH

p.m.

TYPIST

Monday

through

p.m.

Friday,

8:30

a.m.

to

5

opening

SWITCHBOARD
Saturday

and

Interesting
ronment.

OPERATOR

Sunday,

work
Why

8

a.m.

to

4

in pleasant

commute

p.m.

envi-

when

you

can work close to home?
CALL

PERSONNEL

ID

2-8000

Position

FOR

open

Salary

high

in person

Lake
Forest
Shoulberg.

1ST
OF

5100,

gr

gram, group insurance, etc.
in person or telephone 5100,
for Mr. Salm.

1ST NATIONAL

BANK

OF LAKE FOREST —

school

with

or phone

ask

school

PERSONNEL

commensurate

Apply

high

fits, including low cost lune

APPT.

for

for

no experience necessary. Fi
week. No Saturdays. Many

OFFICE

graduate, must be proficient typist.
Will train in dictaphone.
5 day
week—no Saturdays. Many fringe
benefits, including group life, retirement, and low cost lunch proability.

FULL TIME,
PERMANENT
EXPERIENCED
OR WILL TRAIN.

791

Insurance

More

CRESTWOOD

gram.

BOOKKEEPERS
PROOFCLERKS

A

Life

CLERK-TYPIST

WANTED—FEMALE

BANK

&amp;

Many

Come
in or call for personal
interview.
Employment office hours are 8:30 to 4:00
Monday through Friday. 8:30 to 12:00 Saturday.

RENT

DOUBLE garage stall, suitable for storage
or vehicles. Call Lake Forest 410.
HELP

Hospital

Full time and part
duties; good salary.

PARK HOTEL sleeping rooms, by day or
week, free parking, 511 Waukegan Ave.,
Highwood.
SLEEPING
room, hot water at all times,
near transportation. Telephone ID 2-3786.
ROOM
for rent, kitchen privileges; near
transportation.
Call between
12 and
5
p.m. Telephone ID 2-3591.
NICE, big, front bedroom, nice location;
lady only. Telephone ID 2-1556.
BEDROOM and sitting room for rent. Nice
living conditions. Convenient for couple
or two people. Telephone ID 2-6682.
NICELY
furnished studio bedroom, single
only; ample drawer and closet space, hot
water. Telephone ID 2-0405.
ROOM
for rent; working man or woman.
Call Lake Forest 2234.
BEDROOM
and sitting room. Near town,
and transportation. Telephone ID 2-4828.
ONE room and bath. $70 per month. Lease
required. In business district. Call ID 2__ 8117 or ‘Windsor 5-1869.
i
PLEASANT
single room, one block from
shopping center. Employed person only.
Call Lake Forest 1039.
COOL
comfortable
room
and
bath
for
couple. Character reference and car necessary. Call Lake Forest 1547.

Excellent opportunity for qual
woman to handle shipping

Permanent Job
With a Growing Company
Good Starting Salary
Opportunity For Advancement
And

FURNISHED
house
or apartment
for 6
weeks for 4 people in Lake Bluff or Lake
Forest. Call Lake Bluff 1271.
FURNISHED or unfurnished home or apartment.
One,
two,
or
three
bedrooms.
Edgewood
School district. Starting September 1 for 6 months. Telephone ID 27454.
TWO
new teachers at Sheridan and Lake
Forest High School desire furnished living accommodations for the school year
of 1959-60. Write box number W-45 c/o
Lake Forester.
WANTED
to rent: minimum 2 bedrooms;
September
1st occupancy.
GReenleaf
51925, if no answer, DIversey 8-1211.
ROOMS

IN A NEW MODERN OFFICE
HAS SO MANY ADVANTAGES

Group

RELIABLE

3 YEAR

RENT

IN

SMALL

PETS.

TAKE

LONGER.

4 BEDROOM

3

PARK.

CHILDREN

RD.

BUILDERS
ID 2-5595

RENT,

WITH

DAILY

New Peerless built, 3 bedroom tri-level. Living room,
separate
dining
room,
kitchen
with eating area, paneled family room, very
close to transportation and schools.
$250
per month.

PEERLESS
ID 2-6800

WORKING CLOSE TO HOME

(Unfurnished)
PARK)

THE
2 bedrms. plus sun room, on beautiful property in country atmosphere on Ridge Road.
Spacious living room 27 ft. x. 30 ft, 1%
baths, includes 3 rm. guest cottage, 1 or
2 year lease. $180 per month. August 1st
possession.

EARHART &amp; CO.
ID 2-0880
4 ROOM UNFURNISHED
COTTAGE
kitchen, bedroom, living room, small adjoining room, bath. 212 Sard, Highwood.
Telephone ID 2-4035.
FOUR bedrooms, block from
Ravinia station, across from school. 2 acres woods
and lawn, vegetable garden, fruit trees,
glassed in 15x17 screen porch. $250 per
month. Call ID 2-6171. Available Sept.

2-

E heated rooms, apartment, in Highot close to school, transportation, and
pping area, garage included. Telephone
(22-2298.
ROOMS,
stove and refrigerator in-

Seed

1707

p.m.

STUDIOS

work

OPEN

~ CLERK”

Young Women —

for

Mr.

If you are interested in diversi
duties and like to meet peopl
have an opening in the pe!
department for a stenograp
Good

working

Insurance and Hospitalizatio
eral vacations.

Call Personnel, WI 5-1990.

NATIONAL BANK
LAKE FOREST

DICTAPHONE
TYPIST

CLERK

TYPIST

Excellent
opportunity
for young
High School Grad, interested in
typing assignment. 50 wpm typing
quired—sorthand
not necessary.
sition offers good starting salary
promotional
possibilities, Full
ri
pany
benefits.
Hours,
to
through Fridays.

AMERICAN
2020

Duraclean Co.

pa

conditions.

HOSPITAL

Ridge

abilit
Th

SUPPLY

Evanston

WOMAN
interested in theatre cashie:
Saturdays
and Sundays. Apply
G
Theatre, evenings. Telephone VE
0605 or ID 2-0605.
;
WE have openings in our sales de
for personable young women;
preferred.
Retail
experience
not
sary. Summer only applicants will
considered, Apply in person, L
Stationers, 546 Lincoln, Winnet
RECEPTIONIST-TYPIST
to
Dt
co

;

acres,

_ homes.

|
«OFFICES,
‘ieee
3

1

HARVARD—360 acres, level land, 2 homes,
net income, $6,000. $325 per acre.
WOODSTOCK—160

E

APARTMENTS TO RENT (Furnished)
(MISCELLANEOUS)

per

land,

rent $3,600. Price $64,000.

f

lake,
$1100

(Unfurnished)

MODERN
2. bedroom
apartment,
birch
cabinet kitchen, ceramic tile bath; near
shopping and schools. $145 monthly, including everything but gas and electricity.
No pets. Telephone WI 5-2419.

deep. Ideal site for a modern home. Priced
to sell at $10,500.00. MR. RAMSAY.

Baird

TO RENT
(DEERFIELD)

PARK)

WILL rent our desirable East Ravinia home
while in Europe,
3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
air conditioned. July 15 to April or longer,
to right tenent. Telephone ID 2-0461.

HOUSES

TO RENT (Unfurnished)
(LAKE FOREST)

3 BEDROOM ranch $135 a month available
immediately. Call Lake Bluff 4208.
ese
EAST Lake Bluff. Colonial 4 bedrooms, 2
baths, near schools, available July 1st.
Call agent, Lake Bluff 816.
LAKE
FOREST—3
bedroom house, good
location; available August 1st. $175. References required. Call Lake Forest 1126.

952

BROOKSHORE

Sunset Ridge Road
Phone CRestwood

CO.

Northbrook
2-1200

839 WAUKEGAN
DEERFIELD
WI

RD.

5-2000

GIRL
or woman
wanted
for
all-around
cafeteria work in Deerfield industry. Telephone WI 5-1990, Extension 226.
STAFF REPORTER
|
wanted by group of local, community newspapers;
education
or experience
in journalism is desired. Permanent position with
large company offering all benefits. Write
for interview giving education,
experience
and full information about your self. Box
J-45 c/o Highland Park News.

BANK

BOOKKEEPER

Permanent, good starting salary,
pleasant working conditions. 5 day
week;
opportunity
for
advancement.

THE FIRST NATIONAL
BANK OF WINNETKA
739 ELM

STREET

WINNETKA

BOOKKEEPER
(WE

WILL

TRAIN)

THE RIRSH,
NATIONAL BANK
HIGHLAND PARK
EXPERIENCED, FULL CHARGE BOOKKEEPER FOR HIGHLAND PARK CONTRACTOR.
MODERN
_ AIR-CONDITIONED OFFICE, ALL BENEFITS. TELEPHONE ID 2-8711.

ent of Schools

and

Board

District
111,
Highwood,
time, 5 day week. Salary
with
ability.
Write:
240

Highwood,

or phone

ID

of

Ed

Illino
comm
Pre

2-1183.
13

CASHIER

young

lady

NEEDED—We’re

to

work

as

loo

a cash

Business Office. If you’re a h
graduate and are interested in a
opportunity for advancement, we’d

talk to you. Call or come in and
Barnes,

Windsor

812

Deerfield

5-9996,

DESIRABLE

opening

Rd.,

Dee:

t

lik

see:
field,

in one girl

day week, short hours; small am
tation, filing, answering
telephon
conditioned, convenient location,
atmosphere. Telephone Lake F
for interview,
’

�is
te

y

HELP “-WANTED—DOMESTIC
WAITRESS, white, experienced, recent references required; sunny corner room; two
adults in family. Mrs. Chapman, telephone
Lake Forest 196.
LIGHT
general housework, noon through
sy al 2 or 3 days a week. Lake Forest

ry, high caliber, intelligent girl, capble of handling diversified, detailed intering work, excellent working conditions in
air conditioned general contractors ofe,
top salary, position available immed» CR 2-3090.
CONSTRUCTION
COMPANY
SKOKIE
BOULEVARD
NORTHBROOK,
ILLINOIS

general
sales
work.
In _ air-conditioned
drug
store.
Permanent
40 hour
week,
good working conditions, salary plus boa ot. Apply in person to Mr. Rehn. Rehn’s

Hillman

Pharmacy.

333

Park

Ave.,

1

Experienced in metal fabrication,
assembly and finishing operations.
Good working conditions, paid vacations and other benefits.

Lighting
Products, Inc.

Glen-

— coe.

SUMMER girl, white, live in, own room and
TV., help with children and light house|

_ work. Call ID 3-0973 AFTER
THURSDAY.

BOOKKEEPER,
ground
Copal
ter.
‘(OMAN
for our

5 O’CLOCK

fulltime.

Some back-

needed. Will train. Infants’ and
Deerfield Commons
Shopping
Telephone Glenview
PA 4-2224.
to make telephone appointments
estimator. Work from your home.

Telephone

ID

3-1044.

~ PART

TIME

TYPIST

For billing and light general office work,
about 20 hours a week.

THE

BROOKSHORE

CO.

2 Sunset Ridge Road
Northbrook
Phone CRestwood 2-1200

*

SALESWOMEN,
children’s

Center.

full time,

Deerfield

Commons

Telephone

eae

HIGH

infants’

Glenview,

SCHOOL

and

Shopping

PA

4-2224.

GIRLS

Days or evenings to talk on telephone. No
experience required. Pleasant, dignified work
for ‘Deerfield firm. Temporary,
part time
york only. Immediate employment.
Salary

us bonus. Telephone WI 5-1873.

TRESS needed part time, Saturday and
unday, and some week day evening work.

;
ID 2-4102. Parkside Restaurant.
SALESLADY aged 25 to 45, permanent position; experience not necessary. Apply
'UTCH

MILL

path, Lake

CANDIES,

Forest;

583

284

E.

Deer-

Central, Highland

ark,
uy

PART-TIME

-.
e

saleslady

interested

in selling

attractive women’s apparel 3 or
r week;
pleasant environment.

4

write P.O. Box 589, Lake Forest.

days
Please

1549

$30"

starting

HELP

salary.

Telephone

ID

2-

Park

Ave.

ID

Permanent position. Interesting supervisory
work in lake front plant. 40 hour week, excellent retirement, disability, sick, vacation
benefits.
High
school
diploma _ required.
Chemistry,
bacteriology,
or
engineering
training and water plant experience desirable. Apply, Director of Public Works, Village Hall, 675 Village Court, Glencoe, Ill.
MANAGER
for restaurant and soda fountain in Lake Bluff; experience necessary.
Opportunity for either a man or woman
to associate themselves with a growing
business. Starting salary open; fixed salary and percentage of gross available after proof of successful management. Call
W. L. Stuart—Lake Bluff 166 for appointment for interview.
EXPERIENCED
grocery
clerk
for
high
class service store. 5% days, good pay,
group insurance and bonus arrangement.
Hahn Bros., 672 Western Ave., Lake Forest 1500; ask for Miss Hahn.
HOTEL night relief clerk, July 15 to Sept.
1. Apply in person, Deerpath Inn, Lake
Forest 2280.

OFFSET
*

Prefer

THE
952

PRESSMAN
*

*

experienced all-around
rate for right man
*
*
*

BROOKSHORE

Sunset Ridge Road
Phone CRestwood

DESIGN
ENGINEER
development department for an en-gineer with one to three years of
experience on mechanical and hy-

draulic mechanisms, M. E. degree

Culligan, Inc.
NORTHBROOK
CRESTWOOD 2-1000

he North

Shore’s

chain,

TELEPHONE

SOLICITORS

soon

in

Deer-

| field, offers splendid job opportu|

nities

CLERK

Unusual opportunity for young man, high
school grad. Work involves maintaining perpetual inventory cards. No experience required, will train. Good starting salary and
many promotional possibilities. Full range
company
benefits.
Hours:
9-5,
Monday
through Friday.

AMERICAN
2020

Ridge

HOSPITAL
Evanston

SUPPLY

FULL

HELP

TIME

UN

4-6050

_ LINOTYPE OPERATOR
Man.
*
*
KLUGE

PRESSMAN

*
Part

cea
THE

*

*

time—hours

Bi

to

suit.

BROOKSHORE

952 Sunset

Ridge

Phone

A ESMAN

Road

CO.
Northbrook

CRestwood

2-1200

and assistant manager

store—ladies’

and

men’s

depart-

apparel,

largest in Crystal Lake, Ill. Excellent opt

Page

or young
rystal, Lake

48.

energetic
13.

houseworker to stay with

private
family,
North
Highland
Park.
ne have good references. Telephone ID
-2376.
GENERAL
housework,
2 children,
stay,
own room, bath and T.V. ID 2-9377.
COOKING
and
general
housework,
own
room and bath, other help employed, recent local references, top salary, Telephone VErnon 5-0757.
CLEANING woman, references, one day a
week, prefer Friday. Own transportation.
Telephone WI 5-1282.
WANT white cleaning woman 3 or 4 days
a week. References. Call Friday after 9:30
a.m. Lake Forest 1918.
COOK,
experienced.
Light
housework.
2
adults. Top wages. Highland Park home.
Other help. Must have recent North Shore
references. Telephone DExter 6-2202.
DEPENDABLE and neat woman for housework and ironing one day a week to start,
increase days in fall. Own transportation.
Telephone WI 5-5417.
LAUNDRESS.
Must
be
experienced
on
shirts. Telephone DExter 6-2200.
TEMPORARY
cook, white, for 5 weeks.
Live in or come by the day. References.
Mrs. Burke Williamson. Lake Forest 146.
COOK-GENERAL,
white. Own
room and
bath. Must like children. Call Mrs. McIlvaine. Lake Forest 372 after 5 p.m.

SITUATION

WANTED—FEMALE

EXECUTIVE HOUSEKEEPER
SECRETARY,
COMPANION
Well educated, cultured woman will manage large home for busy individual or semiinvalid; secretarial, accounting, nursing experience with State license. Free to live or
travel
anywhere;
adept
in
dealing
with
others. Drive a car. Excellent references.
Write Box J-30 c/o Highland Park News.

SITUATION

WANTED—MALE

TRUCK hauling; tractor work; tree removal;
tubbish; clean out basements; yard maintenance. Bill Pyatt, ID 2-5177 or VErnon 5-0057.
WALL
WASHING,
$8 per room, ceilings
and walls, 10x14; WALLPAPER REMOVING,
$12 and up, 10x14. North Shore
references. DAvis 8-6669.
HANDYMAN
would like to have one or
two days a week—Tuesdays through Fria
can
give
references.
ONtario
2THREE High School Seniors will wash and
Simoniz car for $12, also do odd jobs
around house—good
workers.
Telephone
ID 3-1322.
GENERAL
maintenance,
repairs,
cement
work, painting, etc. Telephone WI 5-1492
after 6 p.m.
HIGH School boy with rotary power mower
will mow
lawns. Call WI
5-4258
after
5 p.m. on week days.
MAN
desires work. Housework, yardwork,
serving or bartending. Telephone Appleby
at DE 6-1053 after 9 a.m.
GARDENER, handyman, houseman. Experienced, with references. Available 3 or 4
ounce week or any afternoon, Call ID
HIGH school sophomore wishes work doing
yard
work
or baby
sitting. References.
Telephone ID 2-5715.
WANTED:
part time afternoon work, experienced in gardening, odd jobs, outside
work. Have power mower. Call TRinity
2-8269 after 5 p.m.

SITUATION

THE

WANTED—DOMESTIC

A-1
JOBS.
Cooks,
$50-$60.
Couples,
$400-$500. Maids and nursemaids, $45-$60.
No
fee.
Shorline
Agency,
525
Lincoln
Ave.,
Winnetka.
Telephone
HI
6-5818.
MATURE,
reliable,
capable
housekeeper,
references
required;
good
living conditions,
permanent
situation.
Own
room,
bath,
TV;
salary
increases;
no
heavy
cleaning or ironing. Telephone ID 2-7409.
NURSEMAID,
assist with one year old;
own room, bath, TV. Stay nights. Telephone ID 2-6353.
EXPERIENCED woman for general housework, 3 day, go; or 5 days, stay. References required. Telephone ID 2-8049.
GENERAL
HOUSEWORK,
assist care of
4 yr. old; air-conditioned
ranch home,
itty salary. References. Telephone ID 2-

For information call
LOngbeach 1-5466

Hi

EXPERIENCED

man.

Tele-

WANTED—DOMESTIC

CORP.

50

ment

WOMAN
to do washing and ironing, will
deliver
and
pick
up.
Call
ID
2-3200.
Thursday 12:30 to 3:00, and Friday 6:30
p.m. to 8:00 p.m.

North
FOR

ta,

/

COOK,
general housework; also man for
yard work and driving. Excellent quarters, top salary. Lake Forest 2890.
LAUNDRESS, white, experienced, to come
in two days a week. Mrs. Chapman, telephone Lake Forest 196.
GENERAL housework and cooking for capable
experienced
woman
under 50, no
heavy cleaning or laundry, European newcomer
welcome;
recent local references
rot Renton
necessary.
Telephone
ID
21,
GENERAL
housework,
cooking, no laundry, own room and bath, 3 school age
children, Thursdays and Sundays off, refa
required.
Telephone
VErnon
5-

-0128.

fastest growing

opening

CO.

Northbrook
2-1200

Evenings 6 to 9 p.m. Experience not necessary.
Salary
plus
commission.
Apply
at
ALL YEAR BUILDERS, INC.
3080 Skokie Valley Highway, Highland Park
ID 2-5423
STAFF REPORTER
wanted by group of local, community newspapers;
education or experience
in journalism is desired. Permanent position with
large company offering all benefits. Write
for interview giving education, experience
and full information
about yourself. Box
J-45 c/o Highland Park News.
COLLEGE men, summer work; about $75 a
week to start. 36 South State, Room 1013,
Chicago.

INVENTORY

food

man

UNUSUAL opportunity with a future in a
new packaging firm that is being organized. A man is needed to operate it. If
you are mechanically inclined, can assume
responsibility, can sell and are presentable.
responsibility, can sell and are presentable,
pisees write Box J-75, c/o Highland Park
ews.
MAN
wanted, white, for service work, no
experience necessary. Rug cleaning plant.
VE 5-2498.
PART time delivery truck driver, day hours,
also man who has an evening shift in Chicago and is willing to deliver packages to
Loop. Steady part time job, prefer men
from Highland Park area. Telephone AL
6-1455 after 7:30 p.m.

WANTER—MALE

\

|

2-5180

WATER PLANT
FOREMAN
VILLAGE OF GLENCOE

YOKKEEPER
wanted,
experienced
_preerred, but will train. Appply Sunset Food
onl
1812 Green Bay Road, Highland
mors
ERIENCED
woman
to handle
office
ties, telephone, and some selling; inresting, diversified work in small store.

W.

WHITE woman to clean on Friday, small
home;
references
required.
Call
Lake
Bluff 2620.
WAITRESS, white, experienced, from July
1st to August 11, while mine goes on vacation; recent references required. Mrs.
Kent Clow, Lake Forest 42.
:
EXPERIENCED
maid,
references,
light
housework, serving, one adult. ID 2-0652.

1825

CURTAIN

DEPOT

Shore’s Only
Laundry
Green

Bay

Curtain

Rd.,

All work done by hand;
curtains, blankets, drapes,

TELEPHONE

Rear

linens.
ete.

ID 2-8615

CLEANERS,
male
or
female; _ couples,
maids, housemen. Experienced only. Mrs.
Baker, Shorline Agency, Winnetka. HIIlcrest 6-5818.
aay do ironing at my home. Call WI 5YOUNG woman wants Mondays and Saturdays for day work. Have references. Call
after 5 p.m. MA 3-8076.
CLEANING woman will work 2 or 3 days
a week. Good references. Telephone DExter 6-3453
EXPERIENCED
YOUNG
WHITE
COUPLE
WANTS
WORK;
Any
kind
day
work,
skilled
odd jobs, cleaning.
References.
Telephone
HUmboldt
9-5000;
Bill, Betty Andrews.
EXPERIENCED
woman
wants day work
cleaning, Tuesday, Wednesday, Friday and

Saturday.

Call

DExter

i

_ HOUSEHOLD GOODS FOR SALE
:

6-7600.

SITUATION WANTED—DOMESTIC ©
GIRL, 19, would like summer job as mother’s helper;
experienced.
Judy
Ackeret,
P.S.R., Medford, Wis. Telephone 6453.
DAY
work
or will consider
ironing
or
mother’s helper; references, experienced.
Call TRinity 2-3500.
HANDYMAN
would like work by day or
week. References. Call ONtario 2-8698.
GIRL,
white, wishes cooking or cleaning
on Monday or Tuesday; references. Call
after 5:30 p.m. Lake Forest 2264.

BABY

SITTING

HIGH
school graduate available for baby
sitting in Lake Forest, days or evenings.
Call Lake Forest 3463.
COLLEGE
freshman and reliable 12 year
old will care for children. Capable and
experienced. Lake Forest 1547.
WILL baby sit in my home. 5 days a week,
$5 a day. Call Lake Forest 5116.
BABY sitter wanted, Tuesday through Friday, for two small children. Inquire Trailer Space 925, Fort Sheridan, Ill. Dependable high school girl acceptable.
WANT
experienced
teen-age
sitter
for
Thursday
mornings
and/or
afternoon;
Wilmot
school
area. Telephone
WI
53452
EXPERIENCED
baby sitter will care for
children in my home by day or week.
Telephone ID 2-0079.
EXPERIENCED college or high school girl
to sit, in Sunset area, Sunday afternoons,
12:30 to 6 p.m. Telephone ID 2-8107.

CLOTHING

FOR

SALE

SILVER
fox jacket, $10; men’s suits and
coat,
size
42,
women’s
suits,
1 mink
trimmed, size 12, cheap. Telephone Lake
Forest 3091.

HOUSEHOLD

GOODS

FOR

SALK

FRIGIDAIRE
automatic washing machine;
Hollywood
wheel chair; walker;
Rexair
vacuum cleaner; brass bed; dresser; Sunbeam coffee maker; Sunbeam steam iron;
Sunbeam Mixmaster; 2 floor lamps; hand
crocheted bedspreads, table cloths, doilies,
misc. Telephone WI 5-1834 after 5 p.m.
434 Lakeside Pl.. HIGHLAND
PARK
Thurs., Fri., Sat.—10 A.M.-5 P.M.
(2nd St. ea. of Sheridan Rd. Rav. Pk
Entrance)
Handwoven All Wool Beige rugs 23x13 &amp;
13 ft. 9 in. x 1114; 90 in. custom made
down filled couch &amp; loveseat; Good Liv.
Rm. Chrs.; Custom made Pine Breakfront
w/hi fi, pilot tuner, amplifier and Phono.;
Glass topped Coffee table; Wig Stand; Variety of Lamps.
MADE
BY BAKER—Pr.
Pine Commodes;
Leather topped Pearwood Kneehole Desk;
64 in. Brown
Mah.
Sideboard and Chrs;

Table made by NAHON.

:

IN APPLIANCES—Electric
Servel Refrig.
w/aut. ice maker; Elec. stove; Dehumidifier; Aut. Washer &amp; Gas Dryer.
ALSO — Pingpong
table;
Poker
Table;
Wedgewood China, service for 12; Custom
made
Hall Shelf &amp; Mirror;
Bridge Sets;
like new Sofa Bed; Custom woven hemp
porch rug; Fick’s Reed Porch Set; Variety
of Single Beds &amp; Chests; Sheared Racoon
Coat;
Radios;
Women’s
Clothing
10-12;
Much Misc. ID 2-0585.

Sale by HAZEL

ANN

STUPPLE

PICK GALLERIES

gation

on

your

us today.

No

obli-

part.

SPECIALIST IN HOME SALES
Either in Your Home or Our Galleries-

386 Linden

Winnetka

HI

ALL ITEMS IN FINE CONDITION |
FROM
LARGER
HOME
:
BEDS—Pair
twin Early
American knotty —
pine, box springs and mattress included.

SPREADS—Pair

custom

6-7444

Rte.

21—1
Half

SALE

ANTIQUE
Mile
Day,

SHOP

North
I.

homespun,

LIKE new Pullman sofa bed; TV 3 speed
record
player,
FM _ radio,
combination
console; Herman Miller chests of drawers,
etc. 454 Broadview, Highland Park.
1% PRICE SALE
QUALITY MERCHANDISE
Resale shop. June 22-August
1, 9:30-5:30.
Fabulour
buys,
don’t
miss it. All types
clothing,
household
items,
miscellaneous.
Ort Value Center, 1801 St. Johns Ave., ID
2-9504.
2 BLUE pull up chairs, quilted chintz sofa,
mahogany
buffet, reasonable.
Telephone

ID 2-8967.

i

3 PIECE Maple bedroom set, full size bed,
box spring and mattress, $100; baby crib,
$25. Telephone ID 2-5288.
TWIN beds, used 1 month. Call after 6 p.m.,
ID 2-0146.
STORKLINE
baby buggy, used only short.
time, $20. Telephone 1D 2-4686.
SEVRES lamp, Louis XV original. Exquisitely hand-painted.
Elaborate
gold trim
with knockers. Appraised at $3,000. ONtario 2-6303.
TWO dressers, one bed stand, walnut, reasonable. Call after 6 p.m. Lake Bluff 2882.
MOVING. Must sell immediately: Day bed
with 2 bolsters, sleeps 2, $30; chrome and
leather easy chair, suitable for office or
den, $10; table-top baby bassinette, $5;
Norge dryer, $125; RCA Whirlpool washer, $50; 2 green and white stripe all wool
twin blankets, $10 each; 2 green all wool
dbl. blankets, $10 each; 1 pink all wool
twin blanket, $5. Everything in excellent
condition. ID 3-0802.
USED once, new BIG BOY deluxe barbecue, including meat thermometer, electric
fire starter, tongs,
asbestos mitts; cost
$132.81, will sell for $75. A Nesco roaster
including broiling accessories and stand,
$25. Large 6 suit wardrobe trunk, excellent
condition, $25. Call Lake Bluff 2876.
MUST
sell porch
blinds;
glider;
peeled
cane chairs and tables; glass and wrought
iron tables; kitchen table with matching
4 chairs; storm and screen doors; screens;
windows;
lounge chair with slip cover.
Telephone ID 2-1941.
BARGAINS.
Custom
made
dining booth
and formica table for rec. room or kitchen; 9x12 beige rug with pad; Thayer buggy, $5; radio, $3; misc. ID 2-0551. 540
Audubon, Highland Park.
:
SERVEL Wonder Bar, $50; upright piano,
$100;
red leather
couch,
$50; Duncan
Phyfe
table,
$25; assortment
of tables
and
shelves;
assortment
of
chairs;
1
breakfast chrome set, $35; glass top coffee table, $15. ID 2-3467.
MOVING,;
garage
sale, Friday,
10 a.m.
1520 Ridge Road, Highland Park. Living
room and bedroom chairs, dining room
furniture,
deep
freeze,
tables,
record
player, 2 four-drawer: chests, power mower, misc. items.
MOVING:
Walnut
bedroom
suite, chintz
bedroom
chair,
living
room
furniture,
cherrywood tables, davenport, chair, TV

of

WORKING man’s furniture, reasonable. Refrigerator, gas stove, kitchen set, 8 piece
dining room set, couch, end tables, new
21 in. TV, 2 Hollywood youth beds, assorted pieces
and
rummage.
Telephone
ID 2-8487,
750 Kimball
Rd., Highland
Park.
SALE,
Sherwood
Forest,
Highland
Park.
Sectional couch, Mosaic tile card table
with 6 chairs, pull out desk, dining table,
lamps, tables, lounge chair, furniture contemporary styling, kitchen set, child’s crib,
badminton
set,
lawn
chairs.
Telephone
ORchard 5-0727.
PERFECT condition. Simmons Sofabed, Cocoa $110; mahogany drop leaf table, $30;
step table, $5; antique fireside chair (a
real charm piece), $45; Kenmore 30 in.
oven gas range, $60. ID 2-9281.
20%
DISCOUNT
on furniture, remainder of June. Evanston
Antiques and Resale, 826 Custer Ave., Evanston.
BEAUTIFUL
antique chairs, small tables,
handsome
Chinese
mirror,
shadow
pictures, small Oxford mahogany chest, bed
spreads, Oriental Prayer rug. Private. Telephone ID 2-3613.
MAHOGANY
drum table, pale green wing
chair, both like new. Telephone ID 3-1116.

|

and chairs, stove and refrigerator, card
table and matching
chair. All in good
condition, at reasonable prices. Telephone
ID 2-8975.
BEDROOM
set, 3 pieces, mattress,
box
spring; large davenport, brown with metallic threads,
only $89;
Dacron
panel
curtains; washing-machine water softener,
new $39, value—$6.95; book-binders stapling machine,
$5.95. Telephone ID
WALNUT
dining
reasonable. Call
est 2629.

GENERAL
tion,
WANT

room
after

6

ELECTRIC

table and chairs;
p.m., Lake Foré

range, good condi-

$25. Telephone ID
a Hamilton
gas

5-1724.

Of sterling and
silver place for
wedding gifts. Also china, furniture and glassware.

LINCOLN

made

pair Canadian yellow and pair Canadian
blue.
DRAPERIES—3 or 4 pair hand blocked, 2
pair coral taffeta.
TABLES—2 bedside antique pine.
TABLES—Pair
knotty
pine
with
book
shelves,
CHAIRS—1 Antique Wing and 1 Barrel.
BANQUET
TABLES—6
folding masonite,
8 ft. by 3 ft., perfect condition.
OUTDOOR
FURNITURE—8
folding Troy —
metal chairs, 2 aluminum frame chaises.
TELEPHONE ID 2-0417

Perfect working

SPECIAL

.

set, den furniture, odds and ends in tables

AUCTIONEERS-APPRAISERS
We buy and sell entire partial estates, furniture, crystal, silver, oriental art, paintings, rugs and works
of art. Appraisers for insurance and

gift tax. Phone

a

2-6435.
dryer for

$45?

condition. Telephone

Z

WI

WALNUT
dining room
table, chairs and
buffet;
very
reasonable.
1311 Stratford
Road, Deerfield.
EXTENSION dining table, 6 leather chairs; —
wine
Chippendale
sofa and slip cover;.
odd
chairs;
lamps;
tables.
Reasonably
priced. Telephone ID 2-0156.
BEAUTIFUL
handmade tapestry chair; 9drawer dresser; fire screen; other items.
Telephone ID 2-4758.
KELVINATOR refrigerator; upholstered living room chair; 10 ft. green wilton runner. Telephone ID 3-0148.
BRAND new twin Beauty Rest box springs

and

mattresses,

$400,

sell

2-6469.

for

MAHOGANY

graph

extra long;

half

drum

price.
table

inset; upholstered

7 framed

circus

Telephone WI

pictures

5-1424

original price

Telephone

with

ID

ihe:

radio-phon

wing-back

chair;

for child’s

room.

after 6 p.m. Thurs-

ay.

OAK

‘Chea

dinette

set, love seat, 21 inch Zenith

TV, cherry Provincial cabinet, 10x11 wool
reversible rug, scatter rugs, miscellaneous.
__
Telephone WI 5-3536.
FRIGIDAIRE electric range, 39 inches, excellent condition, $45. Telephone WI 5-

1864

10

atfer

4 p.m.

or

all

day

Saturday.

1334 Woodland Drive.
PIECE
Fick
Reed
Rattan
set, white
leather separate cushions, ideal for den
or patio, good condition, reasonable. Tele
phone ID 2-3440.

HOOVER

upright

vacuum

cleaner

tachments,
$50,
10 months
model. Telephone WI 5-2714.

WALNUT

office desk

and chair;

automatic Remington shot gun
dining
room
table.
Evenings
Sunday only call WI 5-0766.

plus at-

old,

Green
Sag

12 gauge
and
4
Saturday,
y

Thursday, June 25, 1959
y
ii
*,

Oey

?
AK

PS,

|

�GOODS FOR SALE

K€
\

MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE

GLASS |

PICTURE FRAMES

PRATT &amp; LAMBERT
PAINT
For

@

VARNISH

Every

SET

Surface,

FAST
Fibre

Murals

Everything
in
glass is available
at the
newly remodeled Lakeside Glass and Paint
Co. Mirrors, specialties, Shower and Tub
Enclosures are all on display.

STAINS
&amp;

CANVAS

Beautifies
Awnings,

@

Interior

Exterior

LAKESIDE
1914 First St.

PAINT

Rugs,

Canvas

Furniture

Colors

BREAKWELL
DECORATING
251

KIRSCH

SUPPLIES

CONDITIONED

Waukegan

Ave.

GLASS

&amp; PAINT CO.
ID 2-7211

&amp; Renews

« Custom

AIR

GLASS_

Highwood

RODS

ID

WALL

2-1418

PAPER

| GARAGE sale—come browse: pair of pink
china lamps with shade, $5; chartreuse
- and green lamp with shade, $4; 30 inch
Chelsea window fan, $20; Catalina Isle
potter
set complete
with
8 demi-tasse
cups,
saucers,
coffee
server
and
tray,
$7.50; 22 inch portable barbecue, $5; chartreuse and green china hors d’oeuvre set
on wooden tray, $3.50; leather top cocktail table, $15;
glass candelabrum
with
prisms, $2; canvas cot with mattress, $2;
combination
waffle
iron
and
grill, $2;
wooden
salad bowls, $1; dressing table
complete with glass top, organdy ruffled
skirt and mirror, $10; other misc. and
‘bric-a-brac.
1219 Carlisle Pl. Telephone
WI 5-1761.

é
FOR BETTER LIVING
Aluminum Specialty Products, Combination
windows, doors, awnings, sidings, porch enclosures,
jalousies,
gutters,
fencing,
lawn
furniture, ornamental railings, etc. Quality
and price wise see us before buying.
THERMO-TITE WINDOW
CO.
708 WAUKEGAN
RD.
DEERFIELD
WI 5-1198
ID 2-1553
FOR rent: garden tillers, cub tractor and
attachments,
lawn
mowers,
etc.
Lawn
mower
sharpening
service,
and
sales.
Telephone
ID 2-8029, 2070 Green
Bay
ho Woody’s Highland Park Service Staon.

PAINT
Exterior and Interior Paint to suit your
every need. Complete line stains, varnishes
and paint sundries. Visit our newly remodeled store to see complete displays of glass,
mirrors, shower and tub enclosures, window
shades, venetian blinds, bamboo draperies,
and Modernfold folding doors.

LAKESIDE GLASS
1914 First St.

&amp; PAINT CO.
ID 2-7211

NEED BLACK SOIL?
We are one of the North Shore’s largest top
soil and Nutri Soil dealers. We
are also
equipped for grading and spreading soil.

MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE
FORMICA
top kitchen cabinets, ready to
finish furniture, 70 items all told, special
this week, captains chairs, $8; round drop
leaf breakfast table, $15; chairs to match,
$3 each; 9 drawer dresser, $24. Madsen’s
a
ee Mart, 113 Scranton Ave., Lake
uff.
POWER mower, 20 in.; 2 sets of occasional
upholstered chairs; odd tables; girl’s and
boy’s bikes;
miscellaneous toys; folding
sliding doors, 8 ft. by 12 ft.; two 10x12
rugs; Expandomatic blonde table. Miscelar
household
items. Telephone
ID
TWO
wheel trailer, steel
Telephone ID 2-2918.

box,

good

baby

fireplace with
Forest 4524.

MUSICAL

buggy,

$15;
$15.

INSTRUMENTS

imitation
Call

FOR

Lake

SALE

Organs &amp; Pianos

cleaner;
vacuum
sofa;
sectional
ROSE
toaster; baby scale; English baby carriage
M BEINLICH
with canopy,
like new;
double laundry
VE 5-0513
or
VE 5-1195
tub; bamboo drapes, etc. Telephone WI
June 25-26-27
5-2370.
ALL TYPES MANURE
AVAILABLE
Large
supply
of
cattle,
horse
and
mushMOVING:
misc. household goods for sale.
Each
Evening ’til 9 p.m.
room manure. We deliver any amonut.
Beds, appliances, living room furniture and
JIM BEINLICH
rummage.
Friday, Saturday, Sunday,
10
VE 5-0513
or
VE 5-1195
10 used chords &amp; Spinets, includto 3. 317 Waukegan Ave., Highwood.
BAKER
dining room set, table, 8 chairs, :
ing some such names as LOWREY,
ANTIQUES AND RUMMAGE
buffet, $350. RCA
TV,
Baker
cabinet,
Browsing welcome. Accumulation of glass, HAMMOND,
KIMBALL, etc. Come
$95.
Leather
screen,
$25.
Maple
bed,
china, lamps, pictures, books, etc. Reasonexcellent mattress and spring, $39.50. Sev- able. Many of items $1 and less. Misc. An- in and take your pick. All plainly
eral other items. Call ID 2-1564.
tiques in furniture line. Between Grayslake
marked and at prices so low you
BLACK
and white Douglass wrought iron and Lake Villa on Rollins Rd. First farm
formica dinette set, 48 in. by 36 in. plus on south side of road, 1 mi. E. of Rt. 21 can’t afford to miss this sale.
and 3 mi. W. of Rt. 45. Daily 1 to 5 p.m.
12 in. leaf and 4 matching chairs, $35;
All music books 15% off during
play pen
and pad,
$15;
Bissell carpet
ELEGANTLY-CARVED
Chinese Chippensweeper, $9. Everything in excellent condale solid walnut dining room
set, ap- this event.
dition. 3051 University, ID 2-6035.
praised at $6,000. 7 chairs, 2 host. Cane
STUDIO
couch, 3 cushion yellow duran,
backed
with
hand-carved
panel.
Beryl
opens to double bed or 2 singles, ideal for
walnut inlay on glasstop server, credenza
child’s room,
first $20 takes.
Call ID
and
table,
hand-painted Chinese
design
2-4920 Friday, Saturday or Sunday.
in gold.
Upholstered chairs in hand made
2 PIECE
dining
room
credenza,
$18;
2
eereeye
Individual
design.
ONtario
drawer file cabinets, $3 each; metal util-6303.
ity cabinet,
$6;
upholstered
chair,
$4;
LAWN
mower,
Kraftsman
reel, self prowagon,
$2; electric train, slide, swings,
pelled 21 inch blade in good condition.
sand
box,
lawn
mower,
garden
tools,
1795 St. Johns
ID 2-2510
Best
offer.
Electric
stove,
Kenmore
42
clothes. 820 W.
Deerpath. Lake
Forest
inch, 4 top burners, excellent condition.
3091.
Best offer. Lake Forest 5065.
TWO piece 8 ft. sectional sofa. Best offer
BALDWIN
baby grand piano, $450. Teletakes. Call ‘Lake Forest 4219.
FRIGIDAIRE de-humidifier, $30; reversible
phone WI 5-2209 after 4:30 p.m.
blue and white rug, made in Mexico, 6
THAYER buggy and mattress, $15; 4 year
GRAND
piano;
matural
pearl
Camerano
ft. x 4% ft., $15. Please call after 4 p.m.
crib with spring and mattress, $15; pair
accordion; Magnavox
console radio recLake Forest 2060.
of lady’s jodhpurs, size 12, $5; maternity
ord
player;
Gibson-Copy
guitar.
Lake
2 piece suit, size 12, $5. Call Lake Forest
Bluff 3245.
3081.

CLEARANCE

WINDOW

MISCELLANEOUS

~

.

FOR

SALE

SHOP AND SAVE AT
STOCKADE TRADING POST
WHEELING, ILLINOIS

~516

N. MILWAUKEE
LEHIGH 17-0247

WE

SELL ON

Open

AVE.

LAKESIDE GLASS
1914 First St.

9-9

POTTERY AT
REDUCED PRICES
Beautiful lamps less than wholesale;
bird
baths,
$2.95
each;
jardenieres and vases,
25c and up: pitchers, 60c; steins, 20c; good
buys on bedroom and living room furniture;
'§tainless steel sinks, $15 each; good buys on
linoleum
and
carpeting;
children’s
swing
sets, $19.50; new and used soil pipe, $1.50
&amp; up; swimming
pools, $5 and up; ping
' pong tables with nets and paddles, slightly
damaged,
$14.50;
metal wall cabinets, $7
&amp; up; office desks, $35; doors, $3 and up;

- heavy duty power mower with surrey, $165.
Many other items too numerous to mention.
“Jim

Beinlich

following

IN

- TOP SOILS
eo ras

AND

Trucking

services

for

BROWSE

handles

all of the

Homeowners:

HUMUS
e MANURES
e@e LAWN ROLLING
@

| MOVAL e GRAVEL DRIVEWAY RE.
‘PAIRS @ WRECKING OF ALL TYPES
PHONE Jim Beinlich—-VE 5-0513 or VE
1

it

GARAGES

| CAR AND A HALF WITH OVERHEAD
DOOR, CONCRETE FLOOR AND 2 GA
RAGE WINDOWS.

PS

NO

$695

DOWN

Window coverings, such as shades, blinds,
bamboo
draperies,
are all on display at
Lakeside Glass and Paint Co. newly remodeled store. Quick service is available on all
standard items. Estimates are given without
obligation. Call us today,
or better yet,
stop in and visit us.

&amp; PAINT CO.
ID 2-7211

TERMS

Mon. thru Fri.
Sat. &amp; Sun. 9-6

COME

SHADES

PAYMENT

E-Z

TERMS

WALSH
HOME IMPRCVEMENT CO.
2800 BEL\ “DERE
_ ON 2-8770
-_ WAUKEG
IMMEDIATE CONSTRUCTION

AN

RUG, grey twist, 7x11, with pad, $35; Deluxe wheel chair, Hoyer invalid lift, and
porch elevator, all half price. Telephone
ID 2-6671.
7% HORSEPOWER Mercury motor, excellent condition, $75. Three large awnings,
$25. 48 Chrysler, $75. Telephone ID 29530.
ATTRACTIVE
muskrat
coat, $30; Hollywood style double bed, $45. Both in excellent condition. Telephone WI
5-2193.
RIDING
power mower:
rebuilt, like new
6%, H.P. Wisconsin motor, Musgrave twin
blade rotary. Bargain at $185. Lange, 909
N. Harlem, Oak Park.
MOVING—GARAGE
SALE
Garden eqlipment; child’s swing set; metal
card table sets; king size headboard and
spreads; drapes; single size spreads; various clothing; luggage; books; games; miscellaneous items. Telephone VErnon 5-2582.
CAN’T
take them
with
us.
16-in. boy’s
Huffy,
$10; 20-in. girl’s Schwinn,
$15;
Magic
Chef,
$50;
20-in.
blonde
Philco
TV and table, new tube, $75; doll buggies,
books, bassinette, toys. Call at 1523 Sheridan or ID 2-6907.
PRIVATE, collection. 20 Chinese paintings;
40 fine reproductions from the Orient; 3-4
panelled
screens;
4
scrolls;
10
sword
guards; large jade vase; bronze head on
stand; bronze hand of Buddha on stand.
Telephone Village 8-5428.
AIR-CONDITIONERS,
two half ton room
air-conditioners, both used only 2 years.
$50 each. Call WI 5-2814.
TYPEWRITER,
Royal elite, HHE
series,
excellent condition. VARITYPER and 13
fonts of type. The New Secretary, 454
Central, Highland Park.
AUTO air conditioner, Chrysler Air Temp.
1957. Cost $400. Best offer. Telephone
_ID
2-0924,
36
INCH
blue
wardrobe
suitcase,
used
once, $15; 24 inch barbecue,
$5. ‘Tele__ phone ID 2-1647.
KRAFTSMAN
power
lawn
mower,
just
sharpened, $80. Lake Forest 4773.
ONE 2% HP Briggs and Stratton, one 30
inch motor mower,
A-1
condition; one
14x20 wool rug and foam rubber pad,
green;
mahogany
dropleaf table and 2
chairs. Lake Forest 923.

MUSICAL

INSTRUMENTS

TOP dollar
phone ID

for used
2-2510.

spinet

WANTED
pianos.

Tele-

PIANOS WANTED
ALL MAKES—STYLES
TOP PRICES PAID
ROGERS
PARK
1-4400
WANTED

TO

BUY

to buy: used gas stove, reason-

able. Telephone MAjestic 3-4715.
GIRL’S
26-inch bicycle; must be
able. ID 3-1086.

LOST

reason-

&amp; FOUND

LOST:
little white Spitz, answers to the
name of “Sugar,” child’s pet. Telephone
ID 2-6379.
FOUND in Deerfield, coin purse containing
miscellaneous items. Telephone WI 5-3825.
A BOY’S or man’s gold initial ring found;
identify and claim for cost of ad, Telephone ID 2-9215.
LOST, gold poodle pin in village June 17
or 18. Reward. Call Lake Forest 4390.
REWARD of $5 for return of glasses taken
from my car at Music Theatre; no questions
asked.
Ray Tracz,
332
Florence,
Evanston.

FOUND: man’s ring at Central Ave. beach
in Highland Park. Telephone WI 5-1551.
AUTOMOBILES

FOR

SALE

1949 LINCOLN 4-door sedan, excellent running condition; radio, heater, seat belts.
$225. Telephone WI 5-2697.
1953 CHEVROLET Bel Aire 4-door sedan
with automatic transmission; exceptionally
good condition, low mileage. $550. Telephone ID 2-7053.

1954 CHEVROLET
radio,

heater,

ID 2-2236.

1087
1955

station wagon,

automatic.

$500.

UT,

4-door;

Telephone

1956 MERCURY
Montclair convertible for
sale by former Mercury
executive; top
condition,
power
steering
and _ brakes,
automatic
transmission,
all
accessories.
$1250, Telephone WI 5-4180.

1953 TWO

AS.

Reel,
1955
1955

R-H,

cinta

$1695

TIGA G senceeikiotevsicceet $ 795

Ford
Victoria;
R-H,
auto. trans., pwr. str. ...$6
Ford
conv.; R-H, auto.

trans... Pw.
1955

Buick

995

hard

top,

PA
sick
a eiwcis tases $1095
1954 Pontiac Catalina; R-H,
Hydra Owriete i
$ 695
1954 Chevrolet wagon, R-H ..$ 595
1954 Cadillac 4-dr., full pwr. $1395

Holmes

Motor

door Ford Ranch Wagon, motor

PORSCHE 1957 speedster 1600 white, excellent condition. Call Lake Forest 880

JAGUAR

Mah

—

Pea

1956 roadster, XK140 MC, black-

red leather. Fully equipped, reasonable.
—
Will take American car in trade. ID
4044 after 6:00.
are
FOR sale, 1956 VW sedan, radio, seat
belts,

good

condition.

$1250.

Call

Lake

|

Bluff

4449,
oe
1950 FOUR
door Chevrolet, good school
transportation, mechanically sound, _—
some body work, good tires, cheap. T le
phone ID 2-8908.
RIDES

uly

WILL PAY FOR GAS
te
IN order to continue summer job, two boys
need ride to Waukegan, leaving Hi
Park around 7 a.m. Telephone ID
2or ID 3-1009.

ae

ANTIQUES
40 fine reproductions from the Orient
3-4 panelled screens; 4 scrolls; 10 sw
guards; large jade vase; bronze head
stand; bronze hand of Buddha on
sta
Telephone VIllage 8-5428.

Co.

ALTERATIONS

1909

St. Johns

Highland

Park

Open

8 A.M.

to 9 P.M.

Sundays

10 A.M.

Daily

to 5 P.M.

LAKE COUNTY
IMPORT MOTORS
THIS
59

WEEK’S

TR-3A,

a few

3,000
actual
cludes
htr.,
Tonneau, and

Finance
money.

TD

MG,

Porsche

new

Super

cpe.

new

the

bank

way

and

SERVICE

All Makes

top-Ton-

dn

- All Models

Complete

Painting,

ene

Undercoating and Touch Ups

.......... $1995

&gt; DO NIG A si
tsa tien: $495
58 TR-3A, 5500 actual miles;
owner,

car

WM. RUEHL &amp; CO. ~
GENERAL BODY SHOP

miles,
inwire,
ww,
jump seat;

neau, original condition ..$1295
"HO MBOLEICY. essere
atts.c tse $ 995
’55

your

AUTO

old,

original cost, $3,038—our
price
New Car Warranty Included
752

better for
eae

FIRST NATIONAL
BANK
of Highland Park

SPECIAL

months

to serve you
alterations.

THE SILVER NEEDLE
HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS
1866 Sheridan Rd.
610 Laurel Ave.
Phone ID 2-7118
Phone ID 2-1774_
LOOK chic for summer with shorter

ID 2-8640
Open

Now, two locations
custom clothes and

ASK

FOR

JACK

487 E. Park Ave.

Highland

condi$2295

FRECH

ID 2-5845

Park

a

—_

BICYCLES

"
ae

cs)

MORE TO CHOOSE FROM. YOUR BIKES—Boy’s or Girl’s Used and ©
AUTHORIZED
MG
- JAGUAR Reconditioned. Some like new—a _
AUSTIN HEALEY - TRIUMPH - few Schwinns. Most, but not all —
MORRIS
- SPRITE
- RILEY
- sizes. Also repairs and parts for all —
MAGNETTE
AUSTIN
DEALER make bicycles.
aed

LAKE COUNTY
IMPORT MOTORS
517-519

S. Genesee

Waukegan

CYCLE &amp; HOBBY SHOP ©
486 Central
ID 2-1369
BOY’S

St.

MA

20
1958 9-PASSENGER Mercury Colony Park
wagon, completely equipped, full power;
i
ay party. Best offer. ID 2-5075 after
6.
LINCOLN
1955 4-door sedan, white with
blue top, fully powered
and
equipped;
original owner, two car family, serviced
regularly. Will take best offer. Telephone
VErnon 5-0704.
1954 OLDSMOBILE 98 Holiday, green and
white, full power,
air conditioning;
absolutely perfect and clean. Telephone ID
2-4434,
1957 CHEVROLET 4-door, Powerglide, excellent
condition;
private
party.
$999.
Telephone WI 5-2614.
1954
PLYMOUTH
convertible,
excellent
condition;
must be seen to appreciate,
Telephone ID 2-5852.
ANTIQUE
auto, 1928 Nash, good running
condition; always garaged. $200 or best
offer. 2345 Egandale Rd., Highland Park.
1958 VOLKSWAGEN,
12,000 miles, good
condition. $1395. Telephone ID 2-2442 or
ID 2-6236.
DODGE
1950
4-door,
good
dependable
transportation or station car; very clean.
a
ag
best offer. Telephone WIndsor
-0550.
1953 CUSTOM
country sedan, 9-passenger,
V8, straight transmission;
radio, heater,
windshield washers. One owner. $450. Telephone ID 2-8933.
JAGUAR
roadster,
1952
XK120M,
like
new condition; 220 HP, rebored engine,
new commercial black enamel paint job.
Lake Forest 3125.

CORVETTE,

1953,

two

tops, 13,000

ori-

ginal miles, price $1650, private
party.
OT
paaeag MAjestic 3-8395 or ALpine 1-

24 inch

Schwinn

bicycle,

and

ans

20 inch bicycle. Good condition. Both for _
$25. Call ID 2-1006.
aa

3-8575

INCH
Schwinn
phone ID 2-2217.

boy’s

BLACK

bike,

$20.

M

Tele- i

SOIL

BLACK dirt, gravel and file, lawns graded.
—

Dordand,

telephone

NEwton

9

4

BRAND
14 ft. BELL
BOY
steering, windshield,

incl MERCURY
and controls
16 ft.
about,

Nig

NEW
fiberglass
upholstery,

35 HP

runabout— —
hardware—

elec. start., motor —
$1175

CRUISERS,
INC.
Lapstrake
steering, windshield, runnin

RunSs,

hardware, incl MERCURY
35
Rie
start., motor and controls .........s.cs10--$1395

MERCURY OUTBOARD
Sales

and

Service

THE BOAT HOUSE, INC.
1848

First

St.

Highland
ID

3-0880

13% FT. Aristo-Craft Sea Flash
Craft Trailer, 30 HP Mercury

t

Park
Ahi

Master —
motor,

steering wheel, remote control. Telephone
CRestwood 2-0366 after 6 p.m.
Wek
ki

1952 CENTURY UTILITY SPEED BOAT,
125 H.P. GREY MARINE ENGINE,
VERTIBLE TOP, EXCELLENT
CONDITION. LAKE FOREST 255 OR 174,
8

FOOT

fiber

up to

Hydroplane,

glass

bottom

excellent

and

15 h.p. motor.

sides.

conditio

Can

Telephone WI

_
1

een

BOATS

|

Page 49
‘

tal

2-6113,

just over-hauled. Fordomatic, radio, heater, excellent
tires.
$475.
502 Ser
)
Ave.
Telephone
Lake
Bluff
1049.
after 6 p.m.
1950 CHEVROLET,
blue and white sports
coupe, $90. Telephone ID 26375,
;

‘Thursday, June 25, 1959
Paes

ID
i

SHARE

Sti. .455-6.0. $1095

2-dr.

Telephone

after 6 p.m.

Fordo.,

Pontiac 4-dr. hard top;
AGL OWE: ebE as
$1695
Word: 2-dr.; Hath nacscany $1195
Rambler
station
wag.;

one
tion

WANTED
AT ONCE
|
Oriental rugs, French furniture, bric-a-brac,
antiques, and pianos. Top cash paid. ROgers Park 1-4400.
DESK, living room chairs, cocktail and end
tables, all in red or honey maple; Twin
mattresses.
Write Box W-40,
c/o Lake
Forester.
WANTED to buy: 6 year crib, mattress and
spring; also high chair. Must be in good
condition. Telephone ID 2-1201 after 5:30
p.m.
WANT
mink coat, full length, ranch, size
oH private party, no furriers. EUclid 3478.

WANTED

1957

conv.;

$1345.

1954 Mercury Station Wagons,

both in top condition, full power,
tric windows, fully equipped, low
ah
age, one owner. $2100 and $900. Telephone —
ID 2-8389.
| a

WHE... cis aviindstessdatanelensidiow’ $2295
Ford 4-dr.; R-H, Fordo.,
DWE, Wl. hl
$1695
1958. Skoda. 2-0P. 484i. $ 895
Ford

convertible.

see after 4 p.m.

1958

SALE

LOWREY
Organ Studios

of extras.

1957 AND

Edsel Citation conv., full

1957

CHEVROLET

heater, good second car, $425. Call
Bluff 4208.
ee
SACRIFICE,
1957 Plymouth 2 door, |
top, power steering, radio, heater,
itewall tires, must see to appreciate, rid

SPRING SALE
DEMONSTRATORS
SAVINGS UP TO $1000
1958

accessories,

1953

HOLMES

FOR NORTH SHORE’S
FINEST A-1 USED CARS

tires.

GARAGE SALE
1586 McCRAREN
A Nesco
roaster;
folding
bed;
rotisserie,
used once; hand lawn mower; girl’s clothes,
size 4-12; lady’s clothes, sizes 12 and 14,
reasonable; toys and misc. ID 3-1586. Call
or come 10 to 5.
FOR
sale, newly strung tennis racket, in
excellent condition. Telephone ID 3-0622.
WALL MURALS and reproductions painted.
Call Mr. M. Wikstrom for estimates. WI
5-0618 after 4:30 during week. Week ends
open.
8 FT. sailing pram, complete with mast and
sail; pressurized paint sprayer. Telephone
Lake
Forest 3244.
THREE
green
awnings
from
redesigned
house for sale; two 9 ft., one 15 ft., with
rods. Call Lake Forest 2815.

HEDSTROM

SEE

�RE CLO

ape:

;Panos? tag
2

no saa

graduation

gift.

Hilcrest 6-3848

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
NTING

LEVEL

bookkeeping

and

‘service available;
Chicago
accounts
Will sell this week. RAndolph
6-

lease:

new

modern

2 bay

service

sta-

by major oil company,
located on
Highway41 in Highland Park; excellent
opportunity for responsible person. Telephone WI 5-0521 by day or Wonder Lake
nights.
BUSINESS

SERVICE

I general hauling. We also nove al
8 of household appliances. Call ID 2
or 1D 2-4917

SHIRTS
FAST,

FAST

special

service

SAM

desired,

try

St. Johns

Highland

MOVING—Local

Park

and

Lon,

ance—one piece or a truck load. Pack
crating, shipping.
Ward
Anderson
Dhone

ITD)

LANDSCAPING

2-0027

CONTRACTORS

PRAIRIE

ACRES

LANDSCAPING,

LAWN

BLE

experienced

For reasonable prices
and guarantee yardage

Call

&amp; JOB

carpenter.

od

and

home

work guaranteed.
ARPENTRY, general repairs and remodel.
a, porch’

additions,

etc.

Telephone

WI

ARPENTRY,
additions,
remodeling,
i.
et work. Call Halvor Ulvenes,

and
ID

-1587, after 6 p.m.
‘CRETE

ques,

or

home

stone

patios,

maintenance,

om
additions. For
ake Bluff 3632.

brick

barbe-

remodeling

and

estimates

call

free

pp!

ngs

for asphalt shingle roofs in colors.
HI

ELECTRICAL
—
ot

°6-3730

REPAIRS

CLAUSING ELECTRIC
s of electrical work,
post lights,
outlets, new circuits, repairs. Reasontices. Telephone ID 2-6287.
ENTERTAINMENT
any
ies,

kind of entertainment, children’s
bands of all sizes, whatever you
have, call HDO Productions, ID

FENCES
ENCING,

ALL

le; post-rail,

Chain

Link

TYPES—chain
Corp.

Indelein 6-7789.

ERS

link stock-

etc—Manufacturer

Fence
&amp;

OR

FURNACE

installer

4-8700

or

REPAIR

ERS replaced
or repaired,
cleaned,
d with A-1 rust preventative. Carepert work. Also, wire screening supand installed. Telephone ID 2-6362.

HORSES

&amp;

BROS.

NELSON
LANDSCAPE
SERVICE
Maintenance - Rototilling
Black Dirt - Fertilizer
Patios - Lawns Put In
Expert Sod Work
WI 5-5117—after 12 noon
Call

FRANK

me

VENA

for

the

PONIES

old Gelding and saddle; excellent
Bos adults or children. Telephone
URE horses for sale. One beautiful
tnut mare, 15 hands; one handsome
‘gelding, 14.2 hands. Call Lake Forest

LANDSCAPING

finest

in

lawn

care,

tree

removal, top dressing, patio work, fertilizing. Telephone ID 2-5494 after 7 p.m.
PAINTING

-1-0377

&amp;

DECORATING

PAINTING
and
decorating,
mterior
and
exterior, natural or bleached wood fin
ishing;
quality
workmanship.
For
esti
betty
call Eric Schneider, Libertyville
~8592.

PAINTING
and
decorating;
outside
specialty, Fully insured. Lake Forest 3938.
Telephone any time.
PAINTING AND DECORATING
Up to date methods
Careful workmanship
Color coordination
Interior and Exterior
BLOOM PAINTING CO.
ID 2-5544
PAINTING AND PAPER HANGING.
In.
terior and exterinr painting. For quality
workmanship
by
exnerienced,
reliable
men cal] W. C. Varney. WI 5-0654.
PAINTING and paper hanging, reasonable
prices; free estimates. Telephone A. G
Priddy or Peter Gallos. Lake Forest 156
PAINTING AND WALL PAPERING
INTERIORS — EXTERIORS
QUALITY
WORK
GUARANTEED
CALL
ROY
CARLSON
ID 2-2699

SINGER

TRAILERS

a8
a es

ACK MOORE GUITAR SCHOOL
exclusively taught. Private lessons,
articipation;
instrument
furnished.
and State winners, 1955-56-57-58.
Park Studio, telephone Hlllcrest

®

back

r

2-5629.

at

ID

in the future, call Tim

JUNK
[ORELINE
uance

@
®

Kennel

half hour.

hold you

SCRAP

&amp; PAPER

CO.

&lt; up paper and all metals, do mainwork and haul. Telephone ID 3-

8 or ID

2-6578.

Phi

Regular

Elaine

Ortman.

Shop features all acces-

sories.
GERMAN
Shepherds, 7 weeks, AKC.
12
champions
in 4 generations insures the
beauty, intelligence and disposition. May
be seen between 12 and 8 at 2055 Techny Rd., Northbrook, or telephone CRestwood 2-0355.
BEAUTIFUL
black
German
Shepherd,
7
months old, female, champion blood line,
AKC registered; has been spayed and has
had all shots. Raised with children. Telephone ID 3-1510.

DACHSHUND

puppies, AKC teg.,
eg., Cl champion sired. $75 each. Telephone ID 2-4518.
f

24-inch

GRILL
with
&amp; Spit

¢ Hood
e Utility Table
Reg. $26.95
This Week

CASHWAY

Also Save
25% - 33% on
'
portable grills ¢ charcoal |
picnic stoves ® accessories |

MACHINE
and

Service

CRAFTWOOD

ID 2-3811

TRAILER

PRICE

sPACE

LUMBER
1590

Deerfield

Road,

COMPANY,
Highland

ING.

Park, Illinois

SURGERY

8 A.M.-5:30 P.M.—Thursday until 9—Sunday

10-1

Just west of Route 41—Phone

IDlewood 2-0140

B

REDUCTIONS

Boys and Girls tarpoon cloth slacks sizes 3-s $2.95 wie .
ny

oe
Be

Cotton and knit shirts sizes 3-12 $1.00 up

Orlon slipover sweaters sizes 4-12 $3.95 up

Kennel.

Private inside heated stalls and
connecting
individual
outside
runs.
Expert grooming of all breeds
by professionals.
Under the personal direction of

ie

SUMMER SALE

per tag Le

®

AGO
elementary school reading spealist has time available to teach reading
ad
arithmetic
in her Deerfield home.
slephone WI 5-2439.
HIGH
SCHOOL
STUDENTS
,
AND
GRADUATES
e students available for summer tutorall subjects. If you would like to get
sad start om a course for next year or
up some points from last year which

morning.

Craftwood ...
BARBECUE PARTY
SATURDAY, JUNE 27th —

IMPORTANT

Shore’s newest and finest

Boarding

by the Albert Larsons, will close
at 1 p.m. today and open Friday

© Motor

WING’S TREE EXPERTS.
Cutting, trimming, removing,
feeding
and
repairing
spraying. Fully insured and bonded; free
ates. Telephone ID 2-6546 or KIm
ball 6-2292.

VErnon 5-1302
of Dundee Rd. on the
Drive of Edens Highway

® North

High

subjects. Call Robert Evans, (B.A.,
M.A.). Telephone NEwton
4-3305.

er

in effect for tree re
insured. Jim Beinlich

who died Monday, Larson’s Sta-'
tionery Store, owned until 1937)

Cotton dresses sizes 3-14 $3.95

@

and

Full:

Telephone

to Mrs. Albert Lar

&amp;

elementary

&amp;

TREE

as 8 8

ool

tutoring,

removal.

In respect

vi
he

HALE TRAILER SALES
House trailers and travel trailers; we buy
and gel]. 1920 Sherijan Rd., North Chicago
(2 blocks north of naval base)
TANDEM-WHEEL 2
horse
trailer. Call
Libertyville 2-0241.
STURDY two wheel trailer 3 ft. 8 in. v 6
ft. complete with tail gate &amp; hitch. Ideal
for camping etc. For sale $35. Telephone
Lake Bluff 5134.

eua

VATE

WBBM
p.m.

Sales

TELEPHONE

ss

PIANO
INSTRUCTION
Winston,
staff pianist
at
Call WI
5-0244 after 7:30

WINTER
rates now
moval. Completely
VE 5-0513.

Free Home Demonstration
Repair on All Makes of Machines

GLENCOE
BOARDING KENNEL
Glencoe
South
Service

SEWING

Complete

PETS

.

and

BERNARD’S SEWER SERVICE
Quick service for clogged or slow main sewers, cleaned and opened with electric rod
equipment. We service any type drain. Also
catch basins and spetic tanks cleaned. LEhigh 7-0232, Wheeling.

HOUSE
PAINTING, exterior only, by reliable, experienced men; reasonable rates.
Telephone Libertyville 2-1611 or MUndelein 6-4522.
MAKE
YOUR ROOM
DISTINCTIVE
ORIGINAL hand painted murals by award
winning artist. Call for conference and estimate. Telephone ID 2-8614.
CONGER
BROTHERS
PAINTING
AND
DECORATING
SERVICE.
Paper hanging.
Telephone
ID
2-3452—ID
2-3053.

INSTRUCTION
~GARINO MUSIC STUDIOS
Shore’s Finest. Instruction on accorand guitar; instrument furnished. Inabout our trial plan. Telephone ID

guying

insured. FREE. ESTIMATES.
ID '2-8750. ID 2-5481.

feed

SEWING MACHINES

DRIVEWAYS
DRIVEWAY COATING
ators for Latex coatings. Renew and
therproof your driveways.
Also
Latex

repairing,

Trimming,

SEWERS

is our

ss.
Porch enclosures, basement panroom
additions,
kitchen
cabinet,
or
at one door that doesn’t close right.

oy

HEITKOTTER

ing,

EXPERTS.

CEDAR
SHINGLES?
Don’t
Neglect
Them
SUBURBAN
ROOF
TREATING
SERV.
Call ALpine 1-0377
HI 6-3730

4-3213

Humus
Top Soil
Nutri Soil
Sand and Gravel
Lime
Stone

Remod

maintenance

NEwton

G &amp; N TREE

ROOFING

)

LAKE

FOREST

GRILDRENS SHO
265 MARKET

TSrsps

l

3

CARE

ELOF T. CLAUSON
The finest in tree work, patios, landscaping
and maintenance. Insured. Satisfaction guaranteed. Telephone Lake Forest 3366.

building that new home, addition, o1
Odeling,
be
it large
or small, cal
F Construction Co. Telephone ID
or WI 5-2980.
gz, paneling, porches and Hi Fi rooms
ing. H. Blomquist Construction, tele
WI 5-2830.
RISTO-CRAFT REMODELING CO.
5-3273
ID 2-2319

GARDENING

Grading, plowing, hauling, fill dirt, black
top soil, rotted cow manure, top dressing
seed rolling. Telephone WI 5-0818.

KEEPING,
accounting
and
income
service. Wide experience. William C.
inrichs, 685 Park Avenue West. TeleShone
ID 2-1642.

RPENTERS,

&amp;

MODERN LANDSCAPING. For the best in
lawn maintenance and garden work telephone Jack Vena, ID 2-5266.
GENERAL
LANDSCAPING
New lawns, black dirt, humus, top dressing.
manure, planting, lawns fertilized, tree work,
stone work, patios, driveways.
MELCHIORRE
ID 2-0829

it today

LAUNDRY

PRICES PAID

For all types of junk brought to our door,
such as: Papers, rags, iron, metal, etc. Or
call IDlewood 3-1466 for free pick-up. We
specialize in industrial accounts. Hours daily
including Saturday, 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
HIGHLAND
PARK
WASTE
MATERIAL
1466 Berkeley Rd.

SERVICE

WOO

TURE

HIGHEST

SHETLAND sheep dogs (miniature collies),
uppies for sale; AKC registered. Finest
obby-Ho championship blood line. Call
Lake Forest 1797.
BLACK labrador litter, AKC, Sire running
well in current field trials. Excellent family
pets. $75. OLiver 8-4619, Algonquin.
POMERANIAN
puppies, male and female.
AKC. Call DExter 6-3635.
AKC females, 26 months old golden retreiver
and 2 month old Black Labrador. Good
hunters, excellent with children. Price secondary to good homes. Call OLiver 8-4619,
Algonquin.
WANTED:
good home for four adorable
kittens, (very gentle mother,) weaned and
ready to go, Call any time. Telephone
ID 3-0086.
MINIATURE poodle, white, 6 months old,
AKC
reg.,
all
shots,
champion
blood
lines, loves children, reasonable. Telephone
ID 2-2552.
TO be given away: 5 cute kittens, 7 weeks
old; weaned and pan broken. Telephone
WI 5-2407.
CHAMPION
sired, AKC
registered, collie
pups, for show or pets. Call Libertyville
__2-2802,
BABY
ducks for sale; large -white Peking
and Mallards. Call Lake Forest 2812.
BOXER pups, AKC registered, reasonable.
6 weeks old. Telephone ID 2-4069.
SIAMESE
kittens, seal point; very gentle,
lovable
disposition.
Show
quality.
Call
KImball 6-1230.

SQUARE

op
‘

.

ip
f
D

)
a}

PHONE LAKE FOREST 548

�Lake County's

LARGEST
SAVINGS

NOW

&amp; LOAN

ASSOCIATION

offers you

MORE EARNINGS ON —
Insured

DEERFIELD

Savings

SAVINGS

Plans

to

POY

6.

;

ON INVESTMENT ACCOUNTS
EFFECTIVE JULY

Ist

Earnings Paid from the Ist of July on All Savings Received

Waaitataal
SAVINGS

745

DEERFIELD

RD. ©

by the 10th.

DEERFIELD,

ILL.

Windsor

5-1911

&amp; LOAN ASSOCIATION

|
ACCOUNTS INSURED
TO $10,000.00

Deerfield Savings &amp;
735 Deerfield Road,
Deerfield, Illinois

|

||

|
|
|

Mon.,

Tues., Thurs., Fri. —

Sat., 8:30 to 12:00

8:30

Association

Gentlemen:

Please open an investment account (in $100. units) for me.

||

OFFICE HOURS:

Loan

My check for $

has been enclosed.

to 4:00
Name(s)

‘Fri. Eve., 6:00 to 8:00

Closed Wednesday

Addr

|

City

WHERE

You

Save DOES

Make

a Difference

|
|

[|

Phone

pening
Bef
question
or two.

my

|

would

like

No.

y

ll

d

w

�1. “Tropic Queen" knit suit by Sea
Nymph with deep V back outlined
‘in white. Red, blue, 10-16 ..8.95

(Fashion Corner

2.

‘‘Curvacious''

esp.
UND

lastex

10-16

MO

Jantzen's

for

and

accessories

hh

f

oe 50-0) hares oc eo 1.65

(Fashion
3.

beachwear

hand

men.

‘Skiff’

Solids

boxer

or

(Men's

ha
or

Corner)

hours

by

PPY

-

or

in

y

trunks

plaid

..3.95

Store)

4. White terry robe, wraparound
Style. Sizes 12-18 ........ 5.95
(Daytime

Dresses)

5. Jantzen's lastex faille suit in
white and navy. 10-16 ....19.95
Oriental

Happi

coat

for

glamour

plus, with ‘‘embroidered happiness
RN
85d Fak 4k Ee ae 2.95
Straw hat with attached scarf .2.95
(Fashion

Corner)

6. Girls taffetized cotton suit, sizes
Pee ee cae os eeefa 8 3.50
(Children's

7.

Boys

plaid

RN

Wear)

cotton

eg
(Boys

boxer

cee
Room)

8. The Gamin
swim
kkul Ue eRe
(Fashion

9.

The

scarf

OO?

new
with

trunks,

Fa

is 1.95

cap

is

so
4.95

Corner)

Ban-Dana
built-in

bangs

bangs

for

oP cin Bees Pes

- a
gay

1.95

(Accessories)

10. Beach towels in beautiful designs handprints styled in Califoron Se
a
ot
from 2.29
(Downstairs

Store)

11. Zippered circle beach bag with
Oey fish Gesien 64 ec...
ees 3.00
(plus

tax)

(Notions)

you'll

find

your

beachwear

in Highland

Park

at

Garnett sCo.
ID 2-4700

Two

Hours Free Parking

in our Lot - Open

Daily until 5:30, Friday nights until 9

-

the

water

�</text>
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                    <text>Thursday
June 18, 1959

Loe

bethild Keview

i

-

os

se

ce aaah Nig

Sssse iae
a

aaa.

SOS Deen ne oe

peeretts

IE

eeeess

res ae ao even
swans
wre

ng het.

jam

cle

CeTOt

oe

Pe eae penneaoc cK

BP Oca

i

rf
naeal

:
:
Hepes
sceetersecatee ote
PE RTEST oes

pRistecsterestpey
63
ss

Reaesnreeeee

�The big bank that grew up
with Highland Park

Lots and lots of banking hours
at the First National
We

learned

during

years

regular

mornings
depositors.

ago

banking

that

suburbanites

hours.

You

see,

at

the

often

So we stay

(as well as every week
First

banking convenient and pleasant.
davs, come to the First National.

day)

,
can’t

open

to make

National

we

So if you

get

Friday

their

nights

banking

and

done

Saturday

it extra easy for First National
do

find

everything

yourself

possible

short

to

make

of time

these

The

Our 60th year
Complete

Banking

and

Services

Trust

WEEKEND

of

Highla

NYA |

Park

Member The Federal Reserve System
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

BANKING

HOURS:

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

�Vol. 34, No. 15

iT

Bannockburn Board Sees
No Water Rate Increase
No

water

rate

increase

is

The board met in the Bannockburn school and discussed the problems of getting water and of the

mains.

The

new

system

will be tested soon. A new main
‘may possibly then be built, bringing water to Bannockburn
from
Highland
Park rather than from
Deerfield as it is at present.
According to the board, purchas-

ing from Highland Park will result
in cheaper rates than Deerfield
maintains. An increase in hook-up
cost, water rates from possible new

industry and a new bond issue will
be

used

in

James

Expert
named
ester.

paying

for

A. Hoyt,

the

of the

system.

Hoyt

Tree

Co. of Northbrook,
was
Bannockburn’s official forMr.

brook’s

Hoyt,

who

official

is also North-

forester,

will

in-

spect the village trees and will give
the village a discount on all trees

needing removal.
Bannockburn pays

its police

of-

ficial by private contribution and
it was announced at the meeting

that only $600 has so far been collected for this purpose.
Thirty
villagers still have not made contributions.

There was a discussion about
whether or not to charge a building permit fee for the new high
school. In general practice fees are
waived

for school

construction,

but

according to Paul Wade, village
jattorney, there hasn’t been a court
ruling on this issue. The village
board decided to discuss the fee
with
the
Highland
Park
High
School board.

Honor

to

winner

the

Medal

John Newman.

is

selected

by

of

The award

the

faculty

and is chosen for the demonstration of the qualities of scholarship,
character,
perseverance,
application,
accuracy,
school
spirit and

fidelity.

The program, omitted
week’s
issue
of
the

REVIEW

through

an _

from last
Deerfield

oversight

was as follows:
March—Pomp and

Circumstance...
Elgar
Mrs. D. K. Morrison at the organ..
Processional of Graduates

Class Marshals—Karen

Cheli and

James Johnson
Invocation .... Rev. Jack D. Parker
Rector, St. Gregory’s Episcopal

Church, Deerfield
“A Philosophy of Life” ...................
Cynthia

Member

Member

Educated

Class

Man?”
Eric Engberg

over Israel”

(From Elijah)
(Continued
t

Jacob

of the Graduating Class

Watching

“He,

Graduating

of the
Is an

“What

the three

products

bids for pe-

received

June

4

by the Village of Deerfield.
A Dun
&amp; Bradstreet listing of
‘Harold Peterson” as “owner” of
the company at 768 Osterman Ave.
was presented to the village board
at last week’s meeting by Trustee
Winston Porter. Trustee Peterson
stated that he was not the owner
and that assessment records would

so prove.
According
to Village
Attorney
Thomas Matthews no officer of a
municipality shall be interested di-

rectly or indirectly in any contract.
The bids are as follows:
D-X
Sunray
Oil Co.—premium
gasoline
19.9
cents
per
gallon
with a 3.5-cent discount;
regular
gasoline, 15.9 cents per gallon with
a 3.5-cent discount. No. 1 fuel oil,
13.6 cents per gallon, with a 2.5cent discount; No. 2 fuel oil. 12.6
cents, with a 2.5-cent discount.
Sinclair Oil Co.—premium gasoline, 21.4 cents per gallon with a
2-cent discount;
regular gasoline,
17.4 cents per gallon with a 2-cent
discount. No. 1 fuel oil, 14.3 cents
per gallon with a 1.3-cent discount;
No. 2 fuel oil, 13.3 cents per gallon
with a 1.3-cent discount.
Standard Oil Co.—premium gasoline, 23.4 cents per gallon with a
2-cent discount;
regular gasoline,

19-4 cents per gallon with
discount;

In

A class of 374 was graduated last
Thursday
night
from
Highland
Park High School in the 69th annual commencement.
Highlight of the ceremonies was

of

among

troleum

with

Ceremony Here

presentation

bid”

No.

1 fuel

oil,

a 2-cent

15.9

cents

per gallon with an 8-cent discount;
No. 2 fuel oil, 14.9 cents per gallon

374 Graduated
In 69th Annual

‘the

Don’t get lost next Tuesday when
you’re on your way to vote in the
special election for state’s attorney.
Jot down your voting place from
the following list.

Further study of the relationship
of Trustee Harold Peterson and the
D-X Sunray Oil Co. is holding up
acceptance of a “lowest and best

Mendelssohn
on page 46)

an

all

8-cent

discount.

bids,

discounts

were

fered on purchase of over
gallons of gasoline and in
of 10,000 gallons of fuel oil.

Officer

Patten

of-

12,000
excess

Is Home

Officer Patten Jr. of the Deerfield Police returned Saturday from
the Highland Park Hospital following an operation. He is recuperating at his home at 940 Lilac, Highland Park.

Candidates to be voted upon are
Bruno
Stanczak
(R),
incumbent,
and Richard G. Kahl (D).
There is one new polling place
set up in West Deerfield Township

for

this

election

and

The

petition

of Jack

Kreisman,

Chicago, for re-zoning from residential to multiple housing of a
property
at the rear
of 1023-29
Deerfield Rd., was heard by the

Plan

Commission.

adjacent properties
protest against the

Four

owners

of

were heard
change.

in

At the present time the property,
which extends for 82.5 feet along
Deerfield Rd., is zoned multiple
housing for a depth of 152 feet,
with 541 feet in the rear, from
which there is at present no other
street access, zoned R-2 one-family.
Harry Horn, attorney represent-

ing Mr. Kreisman, who is the deve-

is for

Precinct 6, changed to Woodland
Park School, 1330 Crabtree Ln. The

Matthew

Midle

home

at

1332

Greenwood Ave. is the former
ing place for that area.

poll-

The complete list follows: Precinct 1, Wilmot School, Deerfield
and Wilmot Rds.; Precinct 2, Ma-

sonic Hall, 711 Waukegan

Rd.; Pre-

cinct 3, Town Hall, 602
Rd.; Precinct 4, Village
Waukegan Rd.; Precinct

Deerfield
Hall, 850
5, Maple-

wood School, Clay Ct.; Precinct 6,
Woodland Park School, 1330 Crabtree Ln.; Precinct 7, Bannockburn
School,

Telegraph

Rd.;

Precinct

8,

Norm’s Gutter Shop, 2356 Skokie
Valley Rd.
(U.S. 41), Highland
Park, and Precinct 9, Lake Forest
Fire
Station,
Forest.

Everett

Rd.,

Lake

Elected to Twp.

Library Board

Here

The
West
Deerfield
Township
Library Board has elected Daniel
P. Kedzie
to fill the unexpired

term

of G. E. Holmquist,

resigned.

the

Mr.

board

Holmquist

for

ten

who

has

served

on

years

and

was

president for four years.
Mr. Kedzie moved to Deerfield
a year ago. He was educated at the
University of Wisconsin where he
obtained a bachelor’s and master’s

degrees in business administration
and a Doctor of Philosophy in
commerce,

He is connected with the Continental Casualty Company where
he is Director of Education
and
Training. He lives at 1015 Springfield with his wife and four children,
The other present members
of

the library board are J. Robert
York, president; Kenneth J. Weir,
treasurer;

Mrs.

Edward

(Continued

M.

on page

Recreation Group
Starts Summer

|

Program Monday ©
The Deerfield-Bannockburn Recreation Committee
will begin its
summer
activities Monday
at the
Jewett Park Fieldhouse and the Mavlewood School. They will continue
through July 30.
Primary
activities will be held
Monday
through
Thursday
each
week from 8:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m.
and are restricted to children in
grades 1-4. A child who is six years
of age on or before June 1, 1959,
may participate.
Registration will take place Monday morning from 9:30 to 10:30 at
either Jewett Park or Maplewood.

A

one-dollar

fee

will be

collected

cover craft charges.
Directors are Mrs. M. Baran and
Mrs.
Nancy
Christensen,
assisted
by Sally Stillson, Pleasant Thiele,
Patty Olson, Margretta Winters, Diane Teeter, Barbara
Cohen,
Bar-

Thiele,

46)

bara York,
Janet Bruce, Penny
Berning,
Sandy
Kevant,
Eve
Schwab, Ellen Neilsen, Karen Kenny and Maureen Riordon.

days from

3:15 to 6:30 p.m. Chil-|

dren

9

aged

to

12

will

swim

on

Tuesday and those 13-16 on Thursday. Bus transportation will be provided for fifty cents. Other charges
are assumed

mittee.

by the recreation com-

Buses

pick

children at Deerfield
Wilmot schools.

up

and

Swimming
supervisors
Sally Stillson, Margaretta
Patty

Olson

and

return

Grammar

Pleasant

and

will be
Winters,
Thiele.

Tennis courts at Deerfield Grammar
School will be open to the
public in June. All activities are
under the sponsorship of the Deer-

field-Bannockburn Recreation Committee,
of which
Mrs.
Raymond
Frost is chairman. Ray D. Brewer
is recreation coordinator.

Deerfield-Bannockburn
Firemen Plan Annual Dance
The Deerfield-Bannockburn firemen
will
sponsor
their
annual
dance Saturday evening, June 27,
from 9 to 1 at the fire station at

839 Deerfield Rd. Music
by the “Suburbanites.”

will

be

Is Hearing Issue

loper of the property with option
to buy, declared that construction

objections to the change.
Matthew Rockwell, plan consult-

of a road

ant for Deerfield, read a memorandum
prepared
on the subject
which pointed
out that the property is surrounded on three sides

homes

to serve

erected

$15,000,

thus

a possible

thereon

creatng

would

four
cost

a “hardship”

for the developer.
Mr. Kreisman
wishes to build garden apartments.

Owner of the property is Clarence
Wilson, 845 Rosemary Terrace.
Homeowners

Speak

Up

by the R-2 one-family district and
that approval of the petition would
result in additional petitions in the

immediate

neighborhood

lar re-zoning.

for

Such re-zoning,

simiin the

Home-owners
who objected to
the change and pointed out that a
public hearing was held last July

opinion of Stanton and Rockwell,
planning consultants, is not justified since Deerfield already exceeds

10 on
the
same
issue
included
Ambrose
Cox,
701
Jonquil
Ter.;
James Ellis, 714 Jonquil Ter., and
W. A. Stryker, 717 Jonquil Ter.
Mrs. Frank Wales, 1555 Crabtree,

neighboring communities in multifamily acreage per 100 persons.
It was also pointed out in the

and Mrs. Willard J. Loarie, 853
Oxford Rd., also registered their

r

18, . 1959 ‘

The

irresistible

force _and

the

immovable | object
met . at last
week’s meeting. of the. Deerfield
Village Board. After which, busi-:
ness proceeded much. as, usual.
:
‘Despite. a general, air. of ‘com‘promise, with avowed intentions on
both sides of. going “half-way” or
more,
the -board:-east
a sharply

divided vote 4-2 overriding President Eldon G. Holmquist’s veto of
the

new

ordinance

providing

that

the committees be selected by the
board members.
In a natural follow-through the: 4
committees

as set up

the board were

previously

approved

by

and later

in the evening were advised by the
president to “get busy” so that an
agenda of some 30 items — less
than a third of which were attended to at last week’s meeting —

be cleared
Large

to

Swimming will be held at the
Glenview pool Tuesdays and Thurs-

Daniel Kedzie Is

Multiple Housing
Multiple
housing
in
Deerfield
became an issue once more at a
public hearing at the village hall
last Thursday evening.

that

£5 June

Board Covet Veto
4-2 on Appointments —

Place Is Tuesday

Village Trustees
Study Bids Before
Awarding Contract

adeno

i

Be Sure You Know
Where Your Polling

in

view for present Bannockburn residents in spite of the cost of building a new system in the area of the
new high school, it was reported
last week at the Bannockburn village board meeting.

new water

i

i

An
the

Audience

audience
board

may

up.

that

room

Attends

nearly

gathered

filled
to hear

the board thrash out the commit-—
tee dispute and also to present peti-

tions concerning the plans of Briarwood Country Club for the construction of additional facilities including

swimming

pool,

snack

bar

and parking lot. This latter group,
which presented petitions with a

total
i

of 111

signatures,

engaged

The board proceeded
in a
straight forward manner soon after

roll call to the matter of immediate |
concern, the selection of commit-—
tees. A letter of the president dated |

June

9 explaining his veto of the —

May 13 ordinance was read by the
village manager, Royce W. Owens.
The

ordinance

was

presented

~

by

Trustee Arno D. Wehle for passage
over the president’s veto and was
seconded by Trustee Maurice C.
Petesch. Length discussion followed.

In a last ditch effort to attain a_

compromise

and

include

the

presi-—

dent in committee appointments,
Trustee Joseph W. Koss presented
an ordinance by which committees —
would be appointed by the president, with the consent of the board
members.
Four Problems Listed
President Holmquist
expressed
his intentions of vetoing even that
ordinance should it be brought to —
a

vote,

explaining

that

there

are

four problems which he declares
must be faced before the matter of ©
new committees is settled. These —
four points he listed as follows: —
Koehler report concerning the ad- —
ministrative operation of the vil-—
lage, the village manager
ordimance, personnel survey and rules _
of procedure.
He

recommended

over

of

more

the

turning

responsibility

and —

authority to the village manager
and the operation of the village
along the lines of a business corporation. He voiced his objection
to what he termed a “rump” ses- —
sion from which he reports that
he and one trustee were excluded. re
He

also reported

that he, the man-

ager and the clerk, were asked to
leave

the

a

recent

board

other members

meeting

by

of the board.

Trustee Wehle stated that he —
and his three colleagues were pi
ation constitutes some of the most terested mainly in getting down to
desirable
close-in
single-family} work and were whole-heartedly in
residential property in the village.
(Continued on page 46)

report that the area under consider-

—

�q

DEERFIELD FORUM
Opinions expressed in these
columns do not necessarily con_ stitute the opinions of the paper.
Letters
should
be brief and

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

Landfill Operation
In Brickyard Clay Pit

“E.

After

covering

old

dump

areas as stipulated in D, all rat col} onies
should
be
killed.
Future
To the Editor:
dump operations, if conducted as
On January 3, 1953, the Deeroutlined above, should prevent defield
Review
published
a letter velopment of rat infestation; howwritten to me by Dr. Roland R. ever, continual vigilance will be
Cross, head of the Illinois Depart- necessary and appropriate extermi- ment of Public Health. In it he dis- nation methods should be employed
cussed the brickyard situation and to kill any rats that may appear...
about one-third of the letter con“A properly
conducted
landfill
cerned possible landfill operations.
operation can be an asset to a comIt has been suggested to me that munity.
Every
community
needs

this discussion of landfill opera_ tions would be both timely and interesting
to Deerfield
residents
today,

from

especially

such

since

Andrew

454
_

The

letter
lows:

comes

Bradt

Terrace

portions

Dr.

Cross

“In accordance

H,

G.

source.

Margate

pertinent

from

Engineer

it

an authoritative

are

of

the

as

fol-

with your request

A.

Spafford

and

Sci-

entist William B. Jackson of the

Iinois Department
of Public
Health, visited Deerfield on December 22, 1952, for the purpose of
investigating

sanitary

conditions

“a garbage dump
tional

Brick

Deerfield.

of

Company

In

clay pit near

addition

to

visiting

Company:
“Gayle T. Martin, Deerfield vil‘lage manager; Esther Gill, Deerfield village health
officer; Dr.

Frank

Brooks,

West

Deerfield

Twp. health officer; Benjamin J.
-Piersen,
West Deerfield Twp.

|

“health

board;

building

and

satisfactory
garbage

means

disposal.

of refuse

In

the

opin-

ion of the engineers of this department, a satisfactory landfill 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
landfill is the only practical means
now available by which such manmade scars on the landscape may
be economically eliminated, without creating a nuisance. Proper operation, however, is essential.”

at the Na-

the
garbage
dump.....
Mr.
Spafford and Mr. Jackson conferred with the following persons, all
officially concerned with sanitary
conditions
at the National
Brick

-

some

Harry

officer,

J.

Lake

More

About

Briarwood

Club

To

the Editor:
One of the topics which came before the board of trustees at their
meeting on June
10 was
a complaint against the present lessees
of Briarwood Golf Club that there
were
too many
noises emanating
from the club, thus bothering residents immediately surrounding the
property and other residents as far
north
as
Oxford
and
Margate.
Though I appreciate their sincer-

Carlson,

ity I do not believe a village board

County

meeting is the place to bring up a
matter such as this, especially when
(Continued on page 46)

- building
and
zoning
commission;
’ William T. Hooper Jr., engineering

consultant, Lake County building
and zoning commission; A. J. Fox,
_ sanitary
engineering
consultant,
“Lake County building and. zoning

Attempted Break-in
At Dairy Store Reported

From The President's Desk...

An attempted break-in at the
Zykaski Dairy Store on Deerfield
Rd. was reported to the Deerfield

To The

police

11.

last

John

Friday

Ross,

evening

who

was

about

working

late at the Village Hardware store,
reported seeing two youths apparently
trying
to
enter
the store
illegally. They fled as soon as he
sighted
them.
Officer
Rogge
in-

vestigated.

Early Arrest in Hit
And Run Case Expected

Church

Monday,

June 8, at 11:30 a.m.
Mrs. Carol Buss, 604 Apple Tree,
is the owner of the damaged car

which

she

mile

was

check-up

taking
on

accident. Damage

for

the

Firemen

Put

Fires

Valenti

at

Out

a 1,000

day

of

the

amounted to $50.

Officer Arthur Crumpler
ing on the case.

2

is work-

Brush

Subdiv.

Four fires within a week brought
the
Deerfield-Bannockburn
Fire

Department

to the Valenti subdivi-

sion. There were two calls Saturday, one at 6 a.m. at Colwyn and
Wincanton and the second at 5:45
p.m. at 1426 Warrington. In the latter, telephone cable and shrubbery
in the area were endangered.

Elmer

Krase

in Police
Elmer

Dr.,

Assists

Department
A.

owner

Krase,

1449

of Village

Woodland

Cleaners,

is

giving
the police department
an
assist
during
the
current
emergency situation. He is serving as
special officer because of the absence
of several
police
through
vacations and illness.

It’s a Girl at Zion Lutheran Parsonage

commission, and W. Gebert; assistant superintendent,
Dee r fiel d
plant, National Brick Co. . 2. .
“In order to be of assistance to
all persons concerned in the gar

bage-dumping
the
pit

problems

National Brick
near Deerfield,

following
“1.

If

at

Company clay
we make the

recommendations:
garbage

dumping

in

are
vise

and

covering

operations

in progress, in-order to superall dumping and covering op-

erations.
“B. Garbage

and

refuse

deposit-

ed each day shall be compacted and’
completely covered at the end of.
each day with a clean earth covering having a thickness of not Iéss,
than eight inches. The sloping faées;
of the advancing fill shall be sealed
with earth at the end of éach day,
as well as the top, including any fill
‘placed in water. A final top covering having a depth of not less than

two feet should be placed as a permanent
cover
filled areas.
“C. No refuse

the dump

over
shall

completely
be burned

at

and any fires started ac-

cidentally shall be extinguished.
“D. All of the old dump areas
now
inadequately
covered
with
earth shall be re-covered with at

least two
covering.
Page

4

feet

of new

clean

earth

the

these

was

issues

have

been

ruled

on

previously by competent authorities such as the Zoning Board of
Appeals, the Plan Commission, our
professional
planner
and
others.
While
all of these
bodies
make
only
recommendations
to
the

Rev. and Mrs. Paul V. Berggren don’t believe in keeping

folks in suspense so when Amelia Sue Berggren was born Wednesday, June 10, at 12:06 a.m. at Highland Park Hospital, they decided to let the stork tell the news.
Holding a pink bundle festooned with pink streamers ,the
stork was hoisted to the rooftop. The Rev. Mr. Berggren said he
got the idea from a “Believe It or Not” column and he enlisted the
willing aid of the church architect to design this particularly handsome wooden stork. One member of the congregation cut out the
design and another applied the paint.
Amelia

grandparents

Sue

has

are Mr.

a

sister,

and

Mrs.

Deborah,

Carl

13,

Swanson,

and

her

South

maternal

Bend,

Ind.

The

proof

is in

the

eat-

I
HAVE
RECEIVED
MANY
CALLS asking me what the fight
all

about.

There’s

been a

lot

said and written about it, but for
the sake of those who still are not
informed I shall briefly set fortk
views

on

the

issue.

PRIOR TO THE LAST ELECTION, the question of committees
for the ensuing term became an
issue. The board and I could not
agree on my
responsibility

desire to put more
and authority in the

vein.

village

PRIOR
TO
THE
MEETING
LAST WEEK,
the board had settled the issue of permits for improvements
in
the
Briarwoods
Country Club. Legal authority had
advised us that we would be acting properly were we to grant permits for those appurtenances which
are common to country clubs. This
seemed a logical thought—country
clubs have been in existence
all
over the world for many years, and
through usage and passage of time,
it has come to be accepted practice
that
certain
functions
occur
in
country
clubs.
So,
while
certain
groups
thought
a public hearing
should be held on the permit applications for the club, the board
believed that to do so would be
only prolonging an issue and causing unnecessary expense to all concerned. Hence we granted the permits applied for.
AT
LAST
WEEK’S
MEETING
the foregoing subject was brought
up. While it was a closed issue, we
allowed
discussion
time,
in
the
belief that everyone has a right to
be heard. There were no new facts
rought forth, so we closed discussion, with some
difficulty. There
has been some criticism that the
board acted hastily in granting the
permits,
and
in
not
permitting
more
discussion after the fact. I
firmly
believe
the
board
acted

mean fewer committees, less work
for the
members
and
more
administrative work in the hall. I am
firm in my belief that the board

wisely

on

the

permit

issue,

and

I

think we were considerate on the
time allowed for discussion, which
actually
wasn’t
at all necessary,
since
the
issue
was
closed. The
| board
then
refused
to
grant
a
variance changing the boundaries
‘}of the parking lot for the club.
It was believed that to move the
limits of parking to within a relatively few feet of Deerfield Road
was not to the best interests of
the Village.
*

Mrs.

Edward

D.

Crilly,

Craig, president, as Mrs.

Green

Jr.,

vice

which

would

for the

and the Manager is to
the wishes of the board,

too, that the trustees

village,

carry out
I believe

and I cannot

afford to give as much time as we
do to the detail work — I believe
we
can
hire
professional
and
trained people for that, who can
do a better job than we can. There
is plenty of work for us to decide
what is to be done and how it i

to be done. Since the board and
I could not agree on this, the board
wanted
to pass an ordinance removing
from
the
president
the
right to appoint committees. I ob-

jected

to

this

on

the

grounds

it

removed the power and dignity of
the office. The board then drew
up a set of committees and mem-

bers which

did not conform

to my

planning. Nor did I agree with the
arbitrary manner in which this was
offered.
Subsequently
the
board
passed an ordinance completely removing
from
the
president
the
right to name committees, but giving the sole and full right to the

board. That I vetoed,

and that was

what
was passed
over
my
veto.
Result,
we
have
committees
appointed by the board.

DURING

ALL

THIS

MELEE,

Deerfield was in the limelight. It’s
all over now, and without too much
harm, I hope. The entire issue is

regrettable, and as is usual during
such fracases, things are said and
done

in an unfavorable

light.

Some

of those things have to be straightened out, but I hope that it will
soon be over and forgotten, and
that we can go back to work for
Deerfield. This statement applies to
public officials, the staff and the
citizenry. Deerfield is a good place
Eldon Holmquist
Village President

Deerfield

Gets

$3,686

Deerfield’s
share
of the motor
fuel tax for May is $3,686, according to Director Morton H. Hollingworth of the Illinois Department
of Finance.
Entire
allotment
to
Illinois municipalities from the tax
which has been paid to the state
treasury is $3,841,326.
The

Public

Press,

no

less

Office, is a public trust.

than

Public

DEERFIELD
REVIEW
June

18,

Vol. 34, No. 15

1959

Published Weekly every Thursday
re-

Nev-

in
L. Fidler, corresponding
secretary, and Mrs. Howard
looks on.

is to set POLICY

Thursday,

tiring president of the West
Deerfield Township Women’s
Republican
Club,
congratulates the new officers of the
club and pins the party emblem on Mrs. Raymond
L.

E.

manager,

to live—let’s enjoy it!

*

On the Cover
The

job.

ing.

my

on facts as they find them, and
generally
speaking
the Board
of
Trustees would “find” in the same

THE QUESTION
OF WHO APPOINTS WHOM has now been settled. Last week the board overrode
my
veto of an earlier ordinance
providing for appointment of committees and their members by the
board. The vote was 4 to 2 for override, so that’s that.
I am not at
all satisfied with the conclusion,
but all avenues of handling have
been exhausted, and now we have
a set of committees and members
as appointed by the board. Certainly I shall work with the appointments to a finality. I believe, also,
that if there is a desire to work,
this line-up of committees can do

be employed in the operations to
assure satisfactory disposal of garbage
and refuse by the sanitary
landfill. method,
which
are herewith outlined:
“A.
Some
responsible
person
should be present at all times when

dumping

IT IS DIFFICULT and a strain
on the emotional processes to decide some of the issues that come
before the village board. Many of

*

the

clay pit is to be permitted to continue in the future, there are certain basic principles which should

_

of Deerfield:

board, yet their decisions are based

Three
persons
who
witnessed
the accident have given police a
clear-cut description of a car which
continued on its way after hitting
a brand-new station wagon parked

at the Bethlehem

Residents

president,

PUBLICATION

OFFICE

699 Waukegan
Road
DEERFIELD, ILLINOIS
608

Telephone Windsor 5-4500
HIGHLAND
PARK
OFFICE
Laurel Ave., Highland Park,
Telephone ID 2-4500

IIl.

MEMBER
National
Editorial Association
Illinois Press Association
Local Subscription Py Sagat
50 per year
Domestic Rate—$5.00 per year
single Copies—15¢
Foreign Rates on Application.
‘‘Entered as second-class matter November 27, 1944, at the post office at DeereS
{Ilinois, under the Act of March 8,

- Thursday,

June

18, 1959

�Lake County's

LARGEST

SAVINGS &amp; LOAN ASSOCIATION

NOW

=|

offers you

MORE EARNINGS ON
Insured

Savings

DEERFIELD SAVINGS
Plans
ON

to-

INVESTMENT

ACCOUNTS

EFFECTIVE JULY

Ist

Earnings Paid from the Ist of July on All Savings Received

Where

DEERFIELD

“SAVINGS”

You Save DOES

74S DEERFIELD

Make

RD.

by the 10th.

A Difference!

e

&amp; LOAN ASSOCIATION

te

sobueGO

DEERFIELD,

Windsor 5-1911

OFFICE HOURS:

Le Pee

eee

Closed Wednesday

‘Thursday, June 18, 1959
}

ILL.

�FATHER’S DAY

Swim

Walk Shorts—huge selection in all fabrics.
$5 to $10.95

Sport Shirts—half

Trunks—fancies

and plains.
$3.95 to $5.95

sleeve

$4 to $8.95

ivy style.

IS JUNE

21st

Knit Shirts—cottons,
orlons .... $4 to $19.95

see
Dress Shirts—half sleeve

batiste oxfords, white &amp;
$4 &amp; $5
colors.

Bill Folds

$3.95 to $20
Bow Ties

4

ide

re

leven wa
of ear half Osta
Seckehugo$7.95 variety
to $18.95
,

ress

irts—was

Summer Pajamas—short
sleeve, short length.

bo

n

4 &amp;

Swank Jewelry

$1.50

$1 to $20

$5.00

Belts

$1.50 to $10

Bring in a snapshot of Dad and win one of these prizes for
Father's Day, June 21
WIN

2nd,

Open

595 Central
Page

6

Pictures will be displayed

in the window.

RENT

IN

Monday

Avenue

OR

SELL

Tennis

FOR YOURSELF

Racquet

3rd, 2 box seats for Cubs or
Sox game

Sport Shirt

3rd, Arrow

WE

2nd,

Golf Slack

Hogan

Ben

ONE OF THESE
Ist, Bicycle

WIN

ONE OF THESE FOR FATHER
Ist, Madras Sport Coat

THE

FINEST

and Thursday

ID

FORMAL

WEAR

Evenings from 7-9

2-5300

Highland

Park
Thursday, June 18, 1959

�Pe
FRM
See,

ul

an

inds Up On Fence
bf Chicago,

by August

towing

said

R. Ball

a trailer

when

he

north

was
the
tow
an
ear.

braked

the

railer jackknifed and wound up on
h center

cable

Leland

of

L.

the

highway.

Semm

of

Trailer

Pourt, Waukegan, was ticketed for
mproper backing at 1:55 p.m. Satrday when,
according to police,

e backed
in auto

his car into the side of

driven

by Dr.

Roy

Brackin

bf Lake Forest. Brackin, police
said, had stopped at the Homewood
Ave. intersection and was making
A right turn onto Green Bay, when
Semm backed into him.
Suffers

There
Hamage
Semm’s,
his

Injuries

was
an estimated $100
to Brackin’s car, $5 to
Brackin suffered a bump
forehead

and

an

ie
taHF

re
iy VatGRE ThE SR eo
es uci

;

WORT

injured

oot.
No ticket was issued in an acciHent at 4:50 p.m. the same day,
hlso on Green Bay Rd. Police report that a car driven by John
S. Pastella of Mundelein struck an
Auto
driven
by
Mrs.
Mary
K.
Shively of 13 Webster Ave., High-

THAT

apprehended
didn’t belong

The
miles

two,

car

them in
to them.

stopped

per

hour

a

they

for

in

were

a

take

name

of

A.

When
Friday

sicians

a

of

cists

to

are

of

high

fairly priced.

$28.98

&lt;i

ONLY

to Phone

HIGHLAND

PARK

* RAVINIA

When

ID 2-2300

You

TAPE

20%

$5.50

on

PILOT

MANTOVANI]

STEREO

Fon pe ERNE
a aos i

$3.95

SYSTEMS

WALNUT

EPL

REF

ENCLOSUR! E PSS

X

C

SUR

SPEAKERS occa

BR

SAVE

S

te

ong ta

7

lok

.00

2 JENSEN

48,00 Fo)!

|

filling

}

May

we

||

entrust

IN

Pay Only $300.00

bd

EARL

GSELL

15%

on

ing

Only

FISHER

STEREO

WALNUT

You

STEREO

Carlton, California

3.98

SYSTEMS

Park

359

.

90

$633.85

Pay Only $539.00

a top grain cow-

Hartman

Two

Suiter.

Blue,

Set

in Danube

Trimmed

with

Stay-Bright, Triple Plate,
:
Chromium

Hardware.

Pullman

$30.00

Weekender

Train° Case

&amp; CO

Thursday, June 18, 1959

transistor

listen to the

not

of

the

*
too

the

pipe.

*

*

late!

To

who

Highland

Priced

give

that

—

will be leay-

Park

area

to

to

Commuter.

readable

. . . This

history

wonderful,

of our

town

is

© ees

put you can

||Still get one at Leeds, Gsell’s, Lar-

[||Son’s and several other stores in
A

Congratulations

to

CHARLES

oe
Rai:

*

*

MR.

SAS

and

BROOKS

who

2

i

will be celebrating their 40th wedding anniversary next Tuesday and
to JOSEPH and LENA ARIANO
who reached their 28th this week.
*
*
*
It’s getting to be a habit! And a
nice one. This Saturday finds the

Paul Leeds band back at the Villa
Moderne.
This time we will be

MRS.

MARTIN

MARTIN

co-workers
have planned
dinner dance that should
fun.

and

her

another
be great

*
*
*
During the past month customers

4

of Leeds Jewelers have saved hun-

W.

*Quotation by John Heywood
(1497 - 1577)

—

playing for our many good friends
of the Old Elm Civic Association.

For her a Skyway

yours?

or Ravinia

bowl

i

ENCLOSURES

Matched

abun-

29.95 || town.

.

GRANT &amp; GRANT
3-DAY SALE

ID 2-7222

dreds of dollars through our policy

of Free Engraving
purchased

at

our

on most gifts

store.

Just

an-

$20.00

[other one of the many times when

$17.95

we can say—‘“no charge.”

J

Highland

pocket-size

starting to get Te

54.50

Ee enen era tamran inteasmaimnarens

hide

of

—PHARMACISTS—

the

SPEAKERS

Dad

our

work the perfect gift he will always treasure. A copy of Pioneer

$
ae

For

Miss Barbara Rogers
1230 W. Maple PI.

prescriptions.

compound

the

MRS.

$378.90

us

responsibility
,
cred

their

onaura

TEN PELE EIS

Need A Medicine

people
the

into

4.95 | PICKERING STEREO CARTRIDGE ..............-.

0 i

Re

6

many

is

so that he can

from $5.50.

—_

You

constitutes

ball game as he “enjoys” himself
on his day off working in the gar-

SALE

'

el

*

den. Priced from $24.95. And if he
is one of the many new converts to
pipe smoking you could get him
the remarkable Beattie “Jet” pipe
lighter that shoots a jet of flame

23°95 | GARRARD 88 STEREO CHANGER .............---

Pick up your prescription
if shopping near us, or let
us deliver promptly without extra charge. A great
with
xl

radio

ap $189.20 | FISHER 40-WATT STEREO AMP. 0.0... $189.50

WALNUT CHANGER BASE...
BR?

tereo

2M

|

*

*

college graduate

GE STEREO CARTRIDGE...
LEX

*

*

enjoy,

It’s

............ only

son

*
*
*
Sunday is Fathers Day. ...
Among the many gifts for him at

¢ AND MANY OTHERS

SALE

3rd

favorite quote worth repeat‘‘Not what we have, but what

we

Give A Matched Set of Luggage

tL
Physician

ID 2-2600

SAVE

Reg.

A
ing:

WHEN YOU BUY ONE
AT REGULAR PRICE

99c

9.95

RAW

his

SINICATO and JAMES A. FACCHINI and to JACQUELYN J. BORUCKI and ALVIN NARDINI who
will be ‘walking down the aisle”

e ELLA FITZGERALD
© JERRY MULLIGAN
° LIONEL HAMPTON

=

as

Our warmest congratulations and
best wishes go to ANNA-MARIA

Leeds

12” &amp;P
ONLY

List

MR.

year.

*

FISCHEL

VERVE JAZZ SALE

Diamond Needle
L.P. of your choice

your

Ask Your

another

DIAMOND

Reg.

and

for

dance.”

Ft.,

quality

ROBERT

GRANT

1800

horrid

engagement

and

who plays a

with JOE E. BROWN
this week.
Members of the Chamber of Commerce and their friends and families will be at their annual theatre
party at Music Theatre next Tuesday.
A

All Sizes Available —

SALE

FELL

NEWMANN

Gifts For Grads &amp; Dads
NEEDLE

first time

*
*
*
A sure sign that summer is here!
The opening of Music Theatre with
ALLAN
JONES
and _ Tenthouse

Up to 2 OFF

etipnial acl

certain

return

over

Continues !

&amp;

the

enters high school. MR. HARRY ‘
KNOLL and your writer were held

SALE
—Not

for

“RED”

HAROLD

Saturday.

$25.00
3.98

2

ID 2-6944

AVE.

5

and depend on us pharmatne

CENTRAL

a
wyendig ste see
Nagt.; Sp Reg. ae3.502
only
$2.

you

make

507

ake

your physiBesetes tetwhat
to take,

women

MANN

or pharma-

profits.

‘Mecitine.

EVANSTON

who

two

since the group had been organized.
MRS. ALLAN WOLFF and MRS.
JOHN THOMSON were elected as
new members
along with NEU-

Chicago,

GRANT

im-

inipaieent 2700 Immediate
tell

ored

field Rd., owners checked but apmissing,
nothing
found
parently
although the shed leading into the
main building had been entered.
County
A day later the Lake
Sheriff’s Office called Craftwood
and told the firm Racine police
were holding Victor Jensen of MilHe allegedly admitted he
waukee.
took a chain saw from Craftwood
Friday night. Tom Nathan, owner,
said he checked and found the saw
missing.

consider your welfare more

cian

belonged

certain

is too

of no medical
plea

In selecting their adult co-workers for the coming school year the
Student Activities Committee hon-

Co., 1590 Deer-

Craftwood Lumber

portant to entrust to people

ceutical

an

with paul leeds

a burglar alarm went off
o’clock in
at 9:45
night

prices were found to be exhealth

45-mile

driving

Palmieri

door-to-door salesmen of
vitamins and other mediIn their eagerness
cines.
a _ sale, these
to make
agents were making claims
Their
untrue.
that were
Your

55

said they took the car to go to
Libertyville. The driver was using
his companion’s driver’s license.

Below)

against

cessive.

that

going

who had reported it stolen.
Police arrested the boys

governour
Recently
ment found it necessary to
action

car

to a brother-in-law. A check by
police shewed it registered in the

GOLD

Name

_ KEEPING
TIME

hour zone on Skokie Hwy., said the

GLITTERS”

emmeees ¢(Author’s

‘

night by Highland Park police who

ood, at the Central Ave. intersec-

IS NOT

—
tive Gae Bhohes

Two Chicago youths were turned
over to Chicago
police Saturday

ion. The
report
said that
Mrs.
Shively had to stop for a pedesrian crossing at the intersection
hen her car was hit.

“ALL

ganas“
me RS
~
paaere

soe

Youths In Stolen Car

bn Skokie Sunday at 4 p.m.,
lamaged when he swerved to
eft to avoid a car ahead. The
Dar was bent and there was
stimated $250 damage to the
Police

Re

Se,

HP Police Apprehend

: railer Jackknifes,
A ear driven

OS
Seayons, keke
* reds

r

&lt;aee

”

a

LEEDS JEWELERS
Parking

Enter on

in

ru

Rear

Green

Bay

491

Central,

Highland

Park

Page 7
\

�John Newmann Gets Medal Of Honor At HP High School
Recipient of the Medal of Honor
award is kept secret until graduation night.

Newmann,

son

of Mr.

and

Harold L. Newmann of 1919
land
Ave.,
was
president
sophomore class, president

3-PIECE REDWOOD
BAR-B-Q SET... 6’ LONG

Student

Council

member

of the

ciety

and

a

a letterman

sity tennis

He

as

national

and

swim

Harvard

Book

received

the

Mrs.
Groveof his
of the

senior,
Honor

on

a
So-

the

var-

teams.
Award
Harvard

Book

Club award as an outstanding member of his class during his junior
year. Newmann will enter Amherst
College in the fall.

His brother, Fred, June graduate
of Amherst, received the Medal of
Honor

ts

seats up to ten adults

*

built for rugged

OWNERS

outdoor use

by-owner
service

the Plaltlijo

suburban

1672 skokie highway,
ID

2-7077

or

real estate
bureau,

4846 Main St.

highland
ID

School.

We have many buyers anxious
to purchase a home direct from
owner. Call us for details of our
by-owner
plan
which
saves you
sales commission.

complete with 2 separate benches

* certified kiln-dried redwood

A $32.00 VALUE!

High

HOME

full six-foot length
*

at the

OR

park

inc.
Skokie, Ill.

5-8383

At graduation ceremonies in Highland Park High School John

Newmann
Scholarship,

receives Medal of Honor from A. E. Wolters, principal,
character,

spirit and fidelity
the award.

are

perseverance,

the

bases

the

application,

faculty

accuracy,

uses

schoo

for bestowing

2-8456

open every day including sundays 9 a.m. to 9:30 p.m.

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

HI-Fl — RECORDS — STEREO
SALE
12” LP's

Ginny

Brands)

Suess

Classical &amp; Popular
Were $3.98 &amp; $4.98

Now $2.49

HIGHLAND
RADIO
651

&amp; RECORD

Central

ID

2-0154

$5.00

orrer expires sune 30, 1959

THIS

COUPON
on

Stereo

the

purchase

Central

Pee
eT

eee

$3.48

MERCURY

at
REDEEM

suggested list
THIS COUPON

RADIO

CeCe
Pa

CEE

LEELCELLELECCLLLCPLECLLELL

ae as eae

pb Ee Beer

eB

CE

orrer expires une 30, 1959
the

33 1/3 Monaural
at

REDEEM

HIGHLAND

8

AT

RECORD
ID 2-0154

on

Page

&amp;

Records

Ave.

THIS COUPON

651

$5.00

of two

HI-FI

HIGHLAND
651

IS WORTH

$5.00

Central Avenue

iS WORTH
purchase

THIS

$3.48

of two

Records

list

COUPON

RADIO

rk

$3.48

HI-Fl MERCURY
suggested

eee

&amp;

AT

RECORD
ID 2-0154

E

B %AGRE EEERREREEEEERE

|

eer
energy-transfer
settles
ssn sennheiser

(All

‘59 Ford Pickups’
aimee

delivered 25.27 better gas mileage
».. than

average

of other

leading

makes

A 25.2% saving averages out to 129 gal.
of gas for every

10,000 miles

of driving

An independent research firm tested
all leading makes of six-cylinder halfton pickups. And the ’59 Fords scored
a clean sweep! Better gas mileage at
30 mph, better at 45, at 60, and in city
traffic! Come in and test drive a new
Ford Pickup today. Check the certified
proof on America’s thriftiest truck.

&amp;e FORD $l: for savings
SEE US NOW
FOR THE
BEST DEAL IN TOWN!

HOLMES
1909

St. Johns Ave.

FORD TRUCKS
COST LESS
F.D.A.F.

LESS TO OWN...
LESS TO RUN... LAST LONGER, TOO!

MOTOR
Highland

Park

CO.
ID 2-8640

If Yow’re Interested in An A-I Used Car—Be Sure to See Your Ford Dealer
Thursday,

June

18, 1959

�cut |

Ty

fancy PRODUCE

A

FANCY

CALIFORNIA

GEORGIA

S

a

ep

nd

h

cocitty. somacidiits cad.

MLEDOSIS
GREEN

lectable ready-to-eat baked and

CRISP RADISHES

sisted desets.thoie

°

oadadnedyViabacksoudsuedabcceugnentéebosds du

greens, cooling beverages, de-

e

Pet

mm

z

’

k

:

Cello ed

CARROTS

—all of Dad’s favorites...

SEH]

=

Selected

eq]

....- each 25

nnnccxcc00--—-— ? urs. 29

PEACHES

Ss

SSS
atl
;

=

VINE-RIPENED

SIZE

JUMBO

CANTALOUPES

4

AL

I

SOUTHERN

SWEET CORN ~~ b

=e
‘

NEW

BEANS

Lb, Pkg. ] 9c

ate, ea

oasis

5c!

tobaccos and candy.

| CHOICE MEATS |

|

REGULAR SIZE

CAMELS, CHESTERFIELDS, LUCKY STRIKE, OLD |
GOLD, PHILLIP MORRIS CIGARETTES = a: $1.99
GIFT

IDEAL

FOR

FATHER’S

DAY

U.S. Choice, Aged, Ist 5 Ribs

Rib Roast of Beef

«== $2.05 | Roasting Chickens

HIGHLANDER DICED ICE CREAM

paanntnacbannng

“vee”

Qtr Bac

COLLEGE

SYRUP

HERSHEY

i

mes. 5Ac

3

:

?

Pde

FUJI CHOW MEIN

i

Noodles.

39c

Apple,

Peach

cm 39¢

Instant Coffee “%77c | Lux Liquid
|

or Cherry

os
Carnation Milk 2cm:29¢ | srourrer
Spinach Souffle r«. 39c

:

O f¢ , REGULAR
NEW TABLE SERVER

RED CROSS MACARONI or

Keone niki

2%: 23c | LIMA BEANS 2 #2: 45c

SPAGHETTI

pence

LEMONADE 34" 29¢ | sm

x

‘can $] 19

th 776 | WISK

SANKA

ieeae ina

Barbecue Sauce
Old

93 i
Ass‘td.

Manse

Strawberry Preserves |
far 59c
Jar

_ Thursday, June 18, 1959

$1.00

Flavors

Jello Gelatin Dessert
Pes.
* 25¢
Pkgs.

2s

UNSET

§
|

|

|

| 2
STEWARTS

:

7

Scouring Pads 2°49

Leer eee

POTATOES 2 = 39¢ | FRUIT PIES 2 #2 29¢
'

-.-.. 9) Cam

$.0.S.

,

eae

lb. 45

Bean Sprouts 2%! 19¢

H

INN

Chicken Broth 2c: 49¢
42 BOe
BOSCO

—Ib. 79

Fresh Dressed, 5 to 6 lb. Avg.

ALL FILTERED &amp; KING SIZE
POPULAR BRANDS CIGARETTES

OY

%

:

al

it

|

C

1812 GREEN BAY ROAD — A CENTRAL FOOD STORE
ALWAYS!
PLENTY OF FREE PARKING _—— ALWAYS
Friday Night Is Family Night At Sunset — Open till 9 PM.

�e
ns
cos
-ms
0.
0.0
$10
WIN
!
NOW
ER
ENT
_ “WHO’S WHO IN HIGHLAND PARK’S BUSINESS DISTRICT”
CONTEST
i

IT’S

EASY

—

STARTS TODAY . . . ENDS JUNE 24
IT’S

FUN!

In

this

issue,

"4 many ads contain
blank
squares.
Each
" square is captioned with the name of a sales
oF service person who works in a local busi-

ness house.

On

10 and

The first person who brings in a completed, correct entry to the Highland Park
NEWS
office, 608 Laurel Ave., will be awarded the $100 prize.
It’s perfectly OK
to go into each participating store to see “Who’s Who” for yourself.
If no correct
entries are received, the entry most nearly correct will win.

10-A photos of these

business folks appear. Your job is to identify
who's who, clip the photos and paste them
in the correct squares.

Be

(Paid

ease

i

WE,

THE

Political

UNDERSIGNED

Advertisement)

PRACTICING

ATTORNEYS

OF

LAKE

COUNTY, having full knowledge of the capabilities and qualifications
of BRUNO W. STANCZAK, heartily endorse his candidacy for and urge
A

his election to the position of STATE’S

Be

Morton A. Alshuler—Waukegan,

Illinois

i

David K. Anderson—Waukegan,

Illinois

4

J. Kenneth Baird—Zion, Illinois
é

ATTORNEY

of Lake County, Illinois.

Illinois

a .

Paul C. Behanna—Highland

b |
i

William R. Behanna, Libertyville, Illinois
Ralph Boches—Highland Park, Illinois

Charles M. May—Waukegan, Illinois
Senator Robert McClory—Waukegan, Illinois

f

Wilbur B. Brazell—Waukegan,

Peter L. Melius—Waukegan,

Park, Illinois

Illinois

Clarence L. Brown—Waukegan, Illinois
Louis W. Brydges—Waukegan, Illinois
Claude R. Calloway—Waukegan, Illinois
Richard C. Christian—Waukegan, Illinois
George O. Churchill—Grayslake, Illinois
Lewis D. Clarke—Waukegan, Illinois

Marshall Meyer—Waukegan, Hlinois
Burl F. Nader—Libertyville, Illinois
Peter J. Nardigian—Waukegan, Illinois
Thomas B. Nelson—Grayslake, Illinois
William Nemanich—North Chicago, Illinois
Nello Ori—Highwood, Illinois
Willis A. Overholser—Libertyville, Illinois

a i

Thomas H. Compere—Highland

*

Murray R. Conzelman—Waukegan, Illinois

ie
ioe

William Pavlov—Waukegan, Illinois

W. J. Crowley—Waukegan, Illinois
Ralph J. Dady, Jr.—Waukegan, Illinois

Lawrence J. Petroshius—Waukegan, Illinois
Thomas J. Pojunas—Waukegan, Illinois

Pe

Eugene T. Daly—Grayslake,

Thomas J. Przyborski—No.

:
i

Frank M. Daly—Waukegan, Illinois
Daniel J. Dalziel—Waukegan, Illinois

Michael J. Pucin—North Chicago, Illinois

‘

Clarence W. Diver—Waukegan, Illinois

Ray

Thomas W. Diver—Waukegan,

Eugene M. Runyard—Waukegan, Illinois

a

LaVerne A. Dixon—Gurnee,

Park, Illinois

Illinois

Chicago,

Donald Ridge—Waukegan,

Illinois

EN

eH

SL

ales

H

B PiOOO i issih sisi

ee

ence ace

en

acai

te

halite

of

nee

ee

the
eee

]

hee

(please print)

aa

Ri Li
2a

ecb

eng e

is

Oy rite Phone: Noe, :......:.0:.....

Illinois

Richard B. Seyfarth—Antioch, Illinois
Joseph N. Sikes—Grayslake, Illinois

Harry D. Fisher—Waukegan, Illinois

Alvin |. Singer—Highland Park, Illinois

ae

Donald S. Flannery—Libertyville, Illinois
Eugene A. French—Waukegan, Illinois

Esther Singer—Highland Park, Illinois
Mortimer Singer—Highland Park, Illinois

Ellis E. Fuqgua—Waukegan, Illinois
Okel S. Fuqua—Waukegan, Illinois

John R. Sloan—Waukegan, Illinois
Carlton A. Smith—Waukegan, Illinois

Fred H. Geiger—Waukegan,

Harvey L. Smith—Waukegan,

Illinois

Walter M. Givler—Waukegan, Illinois

Illinois

rugene M. saerek-- Waukegan,

loos
SeymeerA. crenbian-Wvkegan,itnes Rab Sook Wevkege,

|

read

John J. Green—Mundelein, Illinois

ae
|

‘

o

i

tanley ren

John C. Soffietti—Fox

anand Park,

Albert L. Hall, Jr.—Waukegan,

}2
‘oat
VY |

_

x
e
i,

F
ey
i
Aa

ois

gan,

Lake,

Illinois

Harry G. Strouse, Jr.—Barrington, Illinois
Donald J. Swanson—Mundelein, Illinois

Illinois

Edward R. Holmberg, Jr.—Waukegan,

W. Howard Swanson—Gurnee, Illinois

Illinois
William A. Holmquist—Waukegan, Illinois
Jack Hoogasian—Waukegan, Illinois

Dudley H. Thomas—Waukegan, Illinois
Ray E. Thomas—Waukegan, Illinois
Clinton O. Thompson—Antioch, Illinois

Julian Johnson—Waukegan, Illinois
Bernard J. Juron—Waukegan, Illinois

Edward A. Turowski—North Chicago, Illinois
Walter W. Ulick—Waukegan, Illinois

Paul W. Kaiser, Jr.—Waukegan, Illinois
Paul W. Kaiser, Sr.—Waukegan, Illinois
Bruce E. Kaufman—Waukegan, Illinois

Lloyd A. Van Deusen—Waukegan, Illinois
Marvin W. Wallach—Highland Park, Illinois
Earl J. Wasneski—North Chicago, Illinois

Paul C. Kilkelly—Waukegan, Illinois
Adeline J. Geo-Karis Lambros—Zion, Illinois
Axel F. Lidman—Waukegan, Illinois
Mark R. Lidschin—Wavukegan, IIlinois
Max Lidschin—Waukegan,

Illinois

10

Charles
John F.
Norman
Allan I.

L. Whyte, Jr.—Waukegan, Illinois
Williams—Waukegan, Illinois
A. Witt—Lake Zurich, Illinois
Wolff, Jr.—Highland Park, Illinois

Raymond G. Zack—Waukegan,
(Paid

Page

tilinols

Paul S. Stern—Highland Park, Illinois

inois

o

ba

a

het

positioning

Illinois

Ne

by
er

ae

correct

John E. Schultz—Barrington, Illinois
Glenn K. Seidenfeld—Waukegan, Illinois

Illinois
Richard J. Drew—Waukegan, Illinois
Richard S. Finn—Waukegan, Illinois

:

Sa

The

Illinois

a
ee
a
a
a
¥ |

ag
a

IE a

© ene

issue.

Don E. Maxon—Libertyville, IIlimois

Anthony Mercurio—Highland Park, Illinois
Fred B. Meyer, Waukegan, Illinois

q

Pk

June 25
issue,

Charles E. Mason—Gurnee, Illinois

Harry P. Breger—Waukegan, Illinois
V. William Briddle—Highland Park, Illinois

i

Winner will be announced in our
photos will also appear in the June 25

Donald C. Lundquist—Zion, Illinois

Mark H. Beaubien—Waukegan, Illinois

»
i

Remember ... use as many photos . . . fill as many blank spaces as possible.
Try to fill them all. Please print your name, address and phone number on this page.
Cut My
cae page of your completed entry and bring or mail to the Highland Park
NEWS
office.

Harold A. Liebenson, Highland Park, Illinois
Eugene Lieberman—Waukegan, Illinois

i

s

speed do count. Everyone,
NEWS and of the partici-

Donald M. Lonchar, Jr.—Waukegan, Illinois

Richard R. Bairstow—Waukegan,

ie
Bk

Neatness doesn’t count. Accuracy of identification and
age 16 or over, is eligible to win, except employees of the
catia business firms,

Political

Illinois

Advertisement)

Thursday,

June

18, 1959

Pann

Prener we tne
SRR Oh
&lt;

Bf

|

�Thursday,

June

18, 1959

Page

10-A

�&gt;me Soon! Ready to Serve You!
|
he North Shore’s Newest and Nicest

for Quick

Service

Eating!

OPEN:
6 A.M. until Midnight
7 days a week
Year around

DRIVE-INN
AT DUNDEE ROAD
WAUKEGAN NORTHBROOK
COME

TO

OUR

GRAND

OPENING!

Thursday, and Friday, June 18 &amp; 19

FREE GIFTS for ALL:
For Boys &amp; Girls Under

FREE

Pied

10....

FREE

For Young

Malted Milkshake

Piper Flutes

with each

Hamburger

Serving good food!

FREE Schwinn Bike

or Hot Dog

h

and

(Register for Drawing)

Luncheon,

You
Money!

The Pied Piper is the first of a chain of locally owned and
independently operated quality Drive Inns.

HAROLD L. HENDERSON, President
&amp; General

Dinner or Late at

Night Snack

Reasonably Priced !
Time

to 17

Complete breakfast menu

Quickly Prepared !
To Save

Adults—11

Hamburgers, hot dogs

Salads,

Steak sandwiches,

Sandwiches,

Fish fillets,

Thick

French fries,

Sundaes,

Soups,

Sodas, Cones

Malts,

Specialities:

Manager

Fried Chicken, Pied Piper Pizza
thes

Pied

Call ahead for TAKE OUTS

CRestwood 2-4233

Piper

Thursday,

June

18, 1959

�Park’s

Playground

and

Recreation

Board

put

its stamp of approval on a city summer recreation program
submitted by Howard Copp, superintendent of recreation, and

his staff, at its recent board meeting.

are

Gordon

David Joseph,
Arthur Olson.

Buchanan
Stanley

Jr.,

president;

Lind

Baseball

for boys and girls five-years to 11years-of-age
will
be
conducted
Mondays
through
Fridays
from
9 a.m. to noon at seven school and
park areas. These are Green Bay,
Elm Place, Ravinia, Braeside and
West
Ridge
schools
and
Lincoln
and Old Elm parks.

includes

games,

sports,

music, dramatics, story hour, crafts,
dancing, art and field trips.
Men
instructors will take charge of junior softball for younger boys on
Tuesday and Thursday mornings.
Little
The

Junior

League

boys

Little

League

baseball for those 8 to 10-years-ofage for the minor league and 10 to
12-years-of-age
for
the
major
league will be playéd each Monday,
Wednesday
and
Friday morning.
Fred Cronkhite is in charge of all
baseball programs.
He is assisted

by

Russell

John

Johnson,

Scornavacco,

Russell
Steve

Lee,

Rosen-

baum,
Ronald
Sachkeim,
James
Tiles and others from the summer
Recreation Department staff.

FATHER’S DAY
JUNE 21

A
to

of the board

Theodore

and

Junior neighborhood playgrounds

Program

Members

baseball

Cornell

Jr.;

School

school

15-years-of-age

will

be

11eon-

ducted by coaches Cronkhite and
Ostrander at the High School athletic field each Monday, Wednesday and Friday afternoon at 1:30
p.m.
The

Little

League

and

Pony

League teams that represent High-

land Park in inter-town competition will be sponsored by the High-

land

Park

Jaycees.

Registrations
“Special
tennis, art,

classes
dancing

in trampoline,
and others are

told

the

(Continued

|

NEWS.

“Registra-

on page

14)

David

Jack Solomon, 1098 Ridge Rd.,
is the newly-elected president of
B’nai Torah Reform
Temple
of
Highland
Park.
Other
officers
ing

at the

are

Geist,

recent

Russell
Bruce

annual

Hattis,

meet-

secretary;

Mrs.

Wertheimer

Seymour

and

Wolf

of

Deerfield, recording secretary; and
David Wolf, treasurer.
Board of Trustees
Jerome Don, Dr. Stanley Goldberg,
William
Goldman,
Gerald
Hahn,
Theodore
Kassel,
Joseph
Morris

Orlowsky,

Earl

Waintroob,

Yaffe

and

Howard

Richard

Recreational

Walton,

Zucker.

Swimming

Highland Park High School

Herbert

Bertram Schwartz, vice presidents;
Rudolph Schwartz, corresponding
secretary; Eugene Meyer, financial

Light,

Due

filling up rapidly,” Superintendent
Copp

At Temple Meeting

elected

for boys

ond year of their two-year terms:
Normand
Cohen, Bernard Kleinman, Kenneth Levy, Milton Margulies, Jerome Moss, Alfred Teton,

nights for adults only thru

August 5th, 1959.
Friday nights for high school students
and adults thru August 7th, 1959*
7:30

P.M. to 9:30

Set Your Sails For

x TWEEN TRAILS 4
A New Experience
In Tween-Age Development
June 29 - August 21
CHEVY CHASE
COUNTRY CLUB
e Swimming
@ Riding
e@ Bo
ing @ Archery @ Baseball @
minton

Main Pool
Wednesday

BOYS &amp; GIRLS, 11-1

Volleyball

Call or write for FREE

IRving 8-0749

Eugene

e.)

Deerfield are elected to the board
of trustees.
These members of the board of

SPECIAL!

=

for dad

SOON

FREE

BUTTS CAN, 30” high

LEEDS JEWELERS
nae

case

$2495 acioc

NEW

orelcd
SPEEDSHAVER.

FLORIDA
FOLDING

with Rotary Blades
@Shaves you with a stroke you
can hardly feel!
@ Patented skin smoother erects
whiskers, adjusts automatically
to every type beard!
@ Self-sharpening rotary blades!
@ Exclusive push-button cleaning!
@ Rugged, soft-spoken brush type
motor, never needs oiling!
@ What a value! What a gift!

LEEDS
JEWELERS
491

Central

¢

Highland
‘ Thursday,

ID

2-2027

Park

June 18, 1959

CHAISE

® Full 6 ft. 2 in long

® No-fade Velon webbing
© Finger-tip adjustment

WATCH
FOR

IT!

brochure

UNiversity 9-0926

FREE with any chaise lounge
purchase
— this handsome

travel

Dra

OR THE ENTIRE SUMMER

75¢ per person
Towel and soap furnished. Life guard
present at all times.
*Elementary students are not admitted.

FREE
FREE
BRING THIS COUPON

with

e@

REGISTER NOW FOR A PART

P.M.

Rose, A. M. Rothbart, Robert Silverman and Gene Turban of Highland Park, and Edwin Slavin of

COMING

@

e Crafts
@ Cookouts
@ Natu
e@ Trips to Ravinia Concerts a
Highland Park Music Theater
Hot Dinners and Lunches

to

multi-position
© Footrest folds underneath
to make the chaise a chair

Very
SPECIAL

a

| &amp;3

® Colors: Green and White,
Yellow and White

the Rial tio) suburban

1672 skokie highway
highland park, id 2-7077
open

every day to 9:30 p.m.

a

Highland

‘directors will be serving the -sec-

Jack Solomon
Elected President

\rrtittititftittitttttttt

HIGHLAND PARK SUMMER RECREATION
PROGRAM COVERS ALL AGE GROUPS

&amp;

�Eighth Grade Officers Greet Banquet Guests

Craftwood ...
SPECIAL THIS WEEK
|

24-INCH GRILL
MOTOR, SPIT,
WIND HOOD
Regular $26.95
Value

$1689

THIS

WEEK

ONLY

CASHWAY

PRICE

SORRY—
NO

PHONE

ORDERS

District

111;

Mrs.

George N. Burmeister
Graduate Of Bowling

1590

COMPANY,

Deerfield

Road,

Highland

8 A.M.-5:30 P.M.—Thursday until 9—Sunday

Illinois

10-1

Just west of Route 41—Phone

Recent
Green

George N. Burmeister, son of Mr.
and Mrs. George Burmeister, 882
St. Johns Ave., received a bachelor of science degree in education
at Bowling Green State University
on June 7. A graduate of Highland
Park
High
School,
he
attended
Loyola University before entering
Bowling Green.

INC.

Park,

Clifford

Terrace

Oak

Glathart,

School, left to right, Wayne Thomas, superintendent

student

advisor;

and

IDlewood 2-0140

During
the
evening
program
class gifts were presented to Superintendent
Thomas
and
Principal
Neteland
by President
Goldman.
Jeffrey
Leckie,
president
of the
class
of
’57,
and
Jerry
Nustra,

president

of the class

am

BISHOP

New

Concept

in AIR

Installation

*

Adaptable

*

May

be

is
to

most

located

attic

or

phecy,

air

practically

E.

Butts,

William

Kittle,

J.

Rich-

ard O’Conner, Miss Eleanor Johnson, Mrs. June Meyer, Mrs. Charles

Hagood,
William
Mrs.
Stunkel,
Mrs. Larry Helke, Mr. and Mrs.
and Mrs. Max
Heidmann
Donald
Kerrihard.

heating
anywhere

Costs

are

Lower

S

Ss

6

ews

95

YD.

Carpets

systems
. . . basement,

Open Monday through Saturday, 9 to 5
Mon. &amp; Wed. Evenings by Appointment

outdoors.

CALL
CHUCK

warm

DUE

CONDITIONING!

¢ Operation

Easier

LICENSES

ALL WOOL
CARPETING

WATERLESS COOLING
¢

welcomed

were

Ted Benvenuti, chief of police of Highwood, states that
July 1 is due
date for dog
licenses. Fees are $2 for male
dogs; $4 for female. Licenses
are available at Highwood City
Hall.

of 58, then

“ALL SEASON"
A

DOG

presented
the
school
gifts from
their respective classes. Theodore
Cubbison read the 1959 class will;
and Linda
Towry
the class proOther than the guests pictured
above, those who enjoyed the delicious dinner
prepared
by
Mrs.
Joseph Herbert and her committee
of mothers and the party that followed in the gymnasium were Mrs.
William Hansen, James Waller, D.

FRED

Thomas

Mrs.

June 8 by school’s eighth grade officers to banquet and program. Shaking hands with Superintendent Thomas is Jeffrey Goldman, class president. At his right are Diana Dratler, vice president;
James Benvenuti, treasurer, and Margaret Herbert, secretary.

CRAFTWOOD
LUMBER

principal

Neteland,

Edward
School

TODAY

for

FREE

ESTIMATE

ROBINSON

MAGIC SCISSORS
Beauty Salon
Spring into Summer...

HERMAN

LEHR

Page 12

Second

“MAC”

LOOMIS

McCHESNEY

BISHOP'S

HEATING

1741

BILL

&amp; AIR

St., Highland

CONDITIONING

Park

ENGINEERS

with that Casual

. . . Comfortable

.

ULTRA-NATURAL LOOK!
...

Phone:

ID 2-0407

Call for Appointment
— ID 2-3814
AMPLE FREE PARKING
1394 Deerfield Rd., Highland Park
: Thursday;

June:/18, 1959

�RSEN GUARANTEES
...and

Petersen

Delivers

Only

at

new

cars

PETERSEN
to

PONTIAC—more

choose

from!

.

.

.

Lake

than

It!

100

County’s

Largest Pontiac Dealer . . . will you find such
a wide selection of Pontiacs, 1959’s most-wanted
cars.
want
price

Choose from the
and get immediate
includes everything!

color and
model
YOU
delivery.
Petersen’s low
There are no gimmicks,

no extras!

52633

BRAND NEW 1959 PONTIAC 2-DOORS
$233 Down
* Immediate

¢ Take

Financing

On

Premises

Up To Three Years To Pay

Petersen Offers YOU
The Biggest Selection
In Our History! !
‘58 Chevrolet
Top Coupe
with

factory

air

Impala

Hard

conditioning,

biggest

V-8

engine made. Radio, heater, whitewall tires,
power brakes, power steering, positive traction rear end, many other extras. Must be
seen to be appreciated.

$2295

$295 down

steering,

transmission.

Radio, heater, whitewall tires. Around-theblock mileage. New car guarantee. Save..

$700
58 Plymouth Town Sedan
Six cylinders, standard transmission.
heater,

whitewall

tires.

One local owner only.

91395

A

real,

$195

Radio,

fresh

car.

down

full factory

dynaflow.

air conditioning

heater, power

whitewall tires.
local owner.

steering,

Many

$1995

other

and

power

extras.

‘57 Chevrolet
Sedan

brakes,

One

$245 down
Convertible

steering,

brakes,

seat and

steering,

automatic

transmission.

Radio, heater, whitewall tires.
Extremely
low mileage. Looks new and runs like new,

$1595

$295 down

‘58 Buick Special 4-Door
win-

Sedan

Full power equipped steering and brakes.
Dynaflow, radio, heater, whitewall tires,
many other extras. Can pass for new car.
One local owner.

$3995

$2395

‘56

$395 down

Pontiac

Automatic
wall tires.

$995

4-Door

Sedan

transmission, radio, heater, whiteA-1 condition. One local owner.

$95

down

‘58

Pontiac

$295
Town

Sedan

Full deluxe equipment.
Air
heater, spotlights, whitewall

$1695

down
conditioning,
tires, many

$295 down

PONTIAC
Open Seven Days A Week
9 — Saturday 9 to 6 —Sunday

1949 St. Johns (Corner Elm Pl.) Highland Park
1959

power

Hard Top

dows. Can pass for new car. Radio, heater,
whitewall tires, many other extras. Three to
choose from. Many other sedans and coupes

Daily 9 to

June 18,

Full

Riviera

PETERSEN
Thursday,

Down

Paid

For Your

Payment,

Old

9 to 6 ,

Car

Up To 36 Months
=e

ciel

¢ Immediate Financing On Premises

Top

Radio,

Dollar

sou:

‘57 Buick Super Hard
Coupe

Full power

automatic

e Low

Coupe

Convertible Coupe
power

¢ Highest

‘58 Cadillac

‘59 Chevrolet Impala
Full

e Every Used Car Doubly Guaranteed

‘56 Chevrolet

In Trade
On

i

Balance
ee

#

Delray Coupe

V-8 engine, straight stick, radio, heater,
whitewall tires, many other extras. One local

$1 095

$195

‘55 Dodge
Coupe

Hard

down

Top Sport

V-8, automatic transmission, radio, heater,
whitewall tires, two-tone paint, many other
extras. The car can pass for new. Very low

$875

$100 down

‘56 Chrysler
Top Coupe

Nassau

Hard

Power steering, power brakes, automatic
transmission. Radio, heater, whitewall tires,
many other extras. Can pass for new. Ideal
transportation. Yours for only .. .

$1395

$295 down
“Lake

County’s

LARGEST
Pontiac

Dealer’

1D 2-5080
Page

13

�Richard

F. Levys

Announce

Recreation Center

Ronald R. Vanoverbekes
Announce Daughter's Birth

|

Birth Of Their, First Child
Mr. and Mrs. Richard F. Levy,
1576 Eastwood Ave., announce the
birth of their first child, Victoria
Joy. She was born May 29 at Highland Park Hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Victor Neumark of
Glencoe are maternal grandparents.

Paternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Daniel Levy of Forest Hills,
Nix

(Continue

Mr. and Mrs. Ronald R. Vanoverbeke,

the

531

birth

Barberry

of

their

Rd.,

announce

first

child,

a

daughter, Michele, born May 26 at
Highland Park Hospital.
Maternal
grandparents
are Mr.
and Mrs. Emile Note of Tourcoing,
France. Paternal grandparents are
Mr. and Mrs. Jerome Vanoverbeke
of Willebrock, Belguim.

tions
are
Center.”

from

being

page

11)

accepted

at

the

The Sunset Park Recreation Department Day Camp goes into operation Monday, with over 200 children taking part.

In all, a staff of 60 persons will
conduct the recreation program for
Highland

Park.

Experienced

per-

sonnel for this work was recruited
from teachers of physical education
and recreation
in school
departments, from students who attended
college classes in the educational

field and from
school students.

SPANISH
Air-conditioned
skip—leave
cuts evenly,
as well.

in ONE
THE

Operation

BERLITZ SCHOOL

GRASS

twigs,

518

‘

BUY FROM YOUR
AUTHORIZED SALES
SERVICE CENTER.

&amp;

M.S.5., INC.
&amp; Garden

Center

Complete Mower Sharpening
&amp; Engine Repair
2210

Street,

Evanston

FRanklin
GReenleaf

592

Skokie Valley Road (U.S.
Highland Park, Hl.

What an inviting background

for “New Business
conversations!

high

BONDS.

A dinner of capon and wild ricé
is planned, after which Paul Leeds
orchestra will furnish
music for
dancing. Arrangements have bee
made
for
table
reservations
for

groups

who

wish

to be

Roger

Williams

Rd.,

Is

2-9771

is

social

chairman

and

SHIRTS and
DRY CLEANING
8:00

P.M.

8:00

A.M.

P.M.

on

chairman.

Beauty

A Highland Parker
Candy

Henderson,

Southland

Ave.,

14,

not

of

only

180§

wa*

Twirler
Henderson
also
wa
awarded medals for winning secong

HOURS...
A.M. to 5:30
Saturday .. .

Closed

Lewis

ing at the 9th annual competition
she also presided at evening fes
tivities at the Queen’s Court, ha
ing been selected first runner-up iy
the beauty contest.

Service

to 4:00

means

and

Ave., is ways

awarded a second place trophy ir
the Senior Advanced Open Nation
al Competition for solo baton twir

Complete Washing
Drying

to

Robert M. Buhai, 3131 Dato Ave,
is president of the association; Mrs
Martin M. Martin, 842 Old Trai

Baton-Twirling

Ave.

seated

gether.

and

TUB

IDlewood

2-4341
5-434!

SPOSOSOSSSHSSSHHHOHSSHSHHHSSHSHSHEHHOSHHSHHHHSSHHHHHHHHHHHHHHHOHEOE

SAVINGS

WASH

etc.

3—BAGS AS IT VACUUMS—
puts debris in bag.
EVEN IN WET GRASS

Power Mower

Davis

S.

of

RAVINIA

OF LANGUAGES

207 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago

p3 SOSHHSSSHSSSHPSEHSETCSHSOSSSESSES e

clippings,

ITALIAN

2 or 4 hours per week
10 hours per week
Private Lessons or Small Groups

2—VACUUM CLEANS THE
LAWN—picks up leaves,
grass,

e

LANGUAGE

REGULAR COURSES:
INTENSIVE COURSES:

without expensive attachments
1—CUTS

ANY

U.

group

Old
Elm
Civic
Association
is
sponsoring
its first dinner-dancg
which will be held in the Skokie
Room
of the new Villa Moderne
Motor Hotel Saturday at 8 p.m.

Pollack, 3586 Summit

Spend 2 hours daily with us this Summer—June to Labor Day and
thrill to a new language by Fall. Also special Children's classes
and coaching at High School, College and graduate level.

Wind-Tunnel
Whirlwind
All

FRENCH

classrooms

BUY

SOCHOSSSSHESSEHSSSESOHESHHHESES

Ordinary
mowers
clump,
messy clippings. New Toro
cleans-up
other
clippings

@e GERMAN

a

OLD ELM GROUP
TO HOLD FIRST
DINNER-DANCE

Wednesday

place in Senior Two-Baton twirlin,
and

third

in

Senior

Flag

twirlins

competitions. Competition was helg
in Chicago.

DOLLARS
JOHN

DID

41)

IDlewood 2-6116
IDlewood 3-2210

PRE

eG

OONS ES

SAO
BA IK

eres

yd

Weekdays: 8 a.m-8 p.m.
Sundays: 9 a.m.-2 p.m.

WE TAKE
TRADE-INS!
WHEEL HORSE

HIGHLAND PARK
SAVINGS « LOAN

© A
year ‘round work horse—hooks up
to 22
optional attachments
including
32” mounted rotary mower.
with “Uniof proven

eBig Tractor power from tremendous
gear reduction. Gear shifts into three
speeds forward, plus reverse.

SEE IT © TRY IT
FUN TEST IT TODAY

Turn Yard Work
into

WHEEL- HORSE
TRACTOR Fun!

uP 10
$10,000.

1 S ames

on the Pioneer Limited

ASSOCIATION

(be-

tween Chicago-Twin Cities) have been specifically

soundproofing all help give these cars a relaxing atmosphere for the exchange of ideas. Enjoy midnight snacks
and refreshments there, then start off next day with a
Continental or Club breakfast before arrival.

Stops at Glenview to pick up North Shore patrons
Carol Jean Sikorski

B. Frances Willock
ALSO

Twin Cities
SUPER

DOME

HIAWATHAS
for daytime
travel

' Page 14

CARS

S

redesigned to make it easier for businessmen to meet
and talk. New seating arrangements, new decor, and

SOCCOSHSOSHSHSSHSSHSHSHSSESOHHEOSS

° Only yard-garden tractor
Drive,”
a multi-gear-pack
efficiency.

Smoscthest
ride on raile

Pioneer Limited

Satisfaction

For reservations, call

1811

Security

—

Service
Since

1888

St. Johns

Ave.,

Highland Park
MEMBER

LOAN
7

OF

THE

ID 2-0361
SAVINGS

FOUNDATION,

AND

INC.

Diane True
‘Thursday, June 18, 1959

�fe cay Sain

Rotary President — —

Manor News

To 70 Members
Carlson,

who

will

complete

his year. as president of the Deerfield-Northbrook Rotary Club at
the end of June, stated yesterday,
“The years 1950-59 has been a significant one in the tremendous
growth of Rotary International, as
the

number

of clubs

Bathing Beaches Open
Saturday for Season

: Deerfield

Notes Increase
John

iE

passed

10,000

The Deerfield Manor Homeowners Association,
headed
by Earl
Simpson, wishes to have all donors
for the playground
fund
bar-b-q
this Saturday report their names
to the secretary so that thanks may
be extended to each one.

Monthly water bills are due, the
officers of the association advise
residents. It is desired that books
may be cleared so that service with
the
newly
installed
meters
may
begin operation. The Pekara Water
Works Inc., which has now taken
over the water
supply
in the
manor,
must
receive
the
proper
number to do business from the
Illinois
Commerce
Commission,
which is making an investigation.
Wilbur Henneman, advancement
leader of Boy Scout troop 18, ac-

companied

14 boys on a fossil hunt

to
Coal
City,
near
Joliet. The
things found on the hunt will be
displayed at the next meeting.
John and Ross Turk have left to
attend the funeral of their mother,
who
died
at the
age
of 85
in

and this growth has reflected itself
in the

increase

in membership

of

several years later began
accepting members from Northbrook.

our local club from 53 to 70 members.”
The local club is one of the two
clubs in all Rotary that embraces
two separate villages. The group
meets every Thursday at 12:15 at

distinction

to

family

season

beach

privi-

Insured

W.

D.

Johnston

William

D.

call:

.

WI 5-3852
DEERFIELD - HIGHLAND

TRANSIT,

Recuperating
Johnston,

Drivers

For Information

for the season last Saturday. In the’

1958.

PARK

Nora

INC.

ation

performed

may

last

contact

A.

Coleman

and Family

Deerfield

4

long-time

resident of Deerfield and a former
superintendent of public works, is
recuperating
following
an _ operFriends

—

In loving memory of our .
beloved husband and father, Fred A. Coleman,
who passed away one
|
year ago, on June 17,
—

‘ FOR ANY OCCASION

leges at the Central Avenue Beach
in Highland Park, which
opened
past
many
local
residents
have
availed themselves of this opportunity.

IM MEMORIAM

featured

month.

him

I dreamed

by

writing in care of Mrs. C. H. Johnston, 1521 Dennis Circle, El Paso,
Tex.

at

I posed for a fashionad

Georgia.
They were
accompanied
by their wives.
A response of 99% was reported
by Mel Swanson, Birch street, vice
commander of Amvets Post 66, in
the
solicitation
of
funds
for
a
youngster
suffering from cancer.
The money is to pay her bills at
the hospital, the balance to be turned over to the cancer fund.

\ A FAVORITE SPORT

Mr. Carlson, who is also president
of the Tractomotive
Corp.,
further stated, “Rotary is a worldwide association of men of good-

without

chase

»

Schools — Churches — Clubs

ro

Sportsman Country Club.

will,

CHARTER BUSES

Deerfield residents have received
through the mail invitations to: pur-

* BR

reli-

By BOB GREENWALD

gion,
political
or
philosophical
opinion, or nationality, and who are
animated with the ardent desire to

Did you know that when Bob Mathias won the decathelon for
the second time in 1952, he became the first man to win this event
twice — this makes him the greatest all-around track and field athlete

serve society.”
Rotarians endeavor to exemplify
their motto of “Service above Self’
in all of their business, social and
civic
contacts,
Mr.
Carlson
continued. Rotary is made up of one
representative
from
each
of the
major businesses, trades and professions in a community.
The local club was chartered as
the Deerfield Rotary Club in November, 1930, with 15 members and

in the world.

x

*

+

*

Although basketball had an American birth, during the first World
War, U. S. soldiers introduced it to Europe . . . It still remains an
indoor sport in the United States but in foreign countries it flourishes
as an outdoor game.

GREENWALD’S,

1775 SECOND

STREET

—

(7
| Look twice at

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ce

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Another look! You see the cups are fashioned of
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| RIGOR RARE 8

Worth of Fine Dry

a aN DE
Personally

Cleaning for only
e

$ 3 95

Endorsed

by

&amp;

RUTH

WAIT FOR THE PHONE
The Whole

Town’s

ROSE

CALL!

Talking About

ROSBY

It!
RUTH

708

the most
in DRY CLEANING

Deerfield

Road,

Deerfield,

Ill.

R

June

18,

1959

OSB

SUBURBAN

WI 35-2992

\

ROSBY

Ss

FASHIONS

ACROSS FROM THE H.P. JEWEL
1835

Thursday,

ROSE

ROSBY

SECOND

ST..

ID

2.0788
Page

15

.
5

�‘Mostly for Women

Joyce Altman Is
Bride of Robert G.
Porter Here Friday

To Be Wed

Abrahamson-Breh

WeddingAnnounced
Mr.

and

Mrs.

of Chicago
of

their

daughter

William
Mrs.

Merle

Harry

Hermitage

Ave.,

Tenn.,

Both

G.

the

Breh

marriage

Linda

to

on

bride

son

of

Abrahamson,

715

and

Mr.

the

performed
May
and

late
at

The
wedding
of
Miss
Joyce
Elizabeth Altman, daughter of Mrs.
Frank
Altman,
1107
Hazel
Ave.,
and Robert George Porter, son of

Corp.

Abrahamson,

W.

Abrahamson
ton,

Edward

announce

Mr.

Coving-

9.
groom

are

serv-

To Meet Tuesday

flowers

Deerfield
Wing
of the
Infant
Welfare
Society
of Chicago
will
old its monthly meeting Tuesday

home

Hausner,

of

300

Mrs.

Robert

Thornmeadow

Rd..

The annual dinner-dance of the Deerfield Center of the Infant with Mrs. Henry Staats as co-host_ Welfare Society of Chicago is sure to be a happy occasion, judga ing from the smiles with which these committee members, left to ' The board met Monday at the
fight, Mrs. George Niblock, Mrs. Leon’ Sherman and Mrs. Paul home of Mrs. Chase Smith Jr.,

‘ Brown. approach the project.
|

Once

again

surrounding
est

Reid

Hall

gardens

Academy

will

with

and

the

of Lake Forbe

the

setting

Brown,

chairman

has expressed

of

this

will

arrive

they

may

|

Of Bannockburn
Entertain Guests

for

the

dance

formal

given

affair.

by

the

Mrs,

Ray-

Center,

is

ex-

pate pected to be one of the loveliest
yet,
with the theme in gold and
white.

Mrs.

Leon

Sherman,

in

charge of decorations, has planned
_white and yellow. flower-be-decked
bird cages flanked by glass stormchimney

candle

holders

for

each

table and buffet. An identical ar-

Xe

rangement, on a very grand scale,
will grace the beautiful marble
staircase of Reid Hall.
The last week-end in June is

_

customarily

chosen

as

the

perfect

ie time for this dance because the
'
Weatherman always seems to play
right
along
with
the
extensive

a

plans of the Deerfield
ne.

:

in the past, the
‘will be open
to

he

members.
The grounds,

which

of 175
main

two
of

acres and
buildings

Center. As

Italian gardens
the guests
and

now

consist

lakes,
Lake

and the
Forest

\Academy, were originally a part of
tthe home
owned
by
family. The academy

property,
678

fhave

rags

which

acres,

tried

jeauty

and

the Armour
acquired the

then

about

15

to

keep

consisted
years

grandeur

ago

the

of
and

original

intact.

All

of

vie main floor rooms of Reid Hall
blwill be utilized the evening of June
27. A sit-down dinner will be en‘a

fjoyed

in

the

rooms

surrounding

the main hall and dancing
be held in the fountain-room,
easy

access

to

the

will
with

veranda

and

gardens.
| A social hour will, as usual, be
held before the dinner. Mrs. Paul

Mr. and Mrs. Nevin Fidler have
moved into their new home at 1215
Kenton
Rd. They
had previously

enough

this

acquainted

so

that

opportunity

with

the

Balzer,

vice

presi-

‘candle tea, to be held in November.

to

\'Towne Club to Meet

Center

‘Next Thursday Noon

George Boltons

mer
came

ceremonies

of

the

March’s

Mrs.

City,

Harold

Tex.,

Watson,

announce

engagement

of their daughter

to

Stephens,

Irvin

G.

and Mrs. William
Waukegan Rd.

L.

son

the
Mary

of

Mr.

Stephens,

941

The couple will be married September 5 at 5 p.m. in the Denver
City Church of Christ. The brideelect is a graduate of Denver City
High School. She will be graduated
in August from Abilene Christian
College, where she is majoring in
elementary education.

groom-to-be

is a senior

stu-

'

the college.

Town

Club

Hostesses are
‘kine, chairman,

will

meet

next

Mrs. Norman ErsMrs.
Charles
H.

Mrs. Harold

Geilman

and

‘Mrs. Charles
Fargo. The hostess
‘committee met at the home of Mrs.
‘Herman
Pack
June
10 to make

‘plans for the meeting.
- The Towne Club is open

Mr. |:
for- |

residents. of
Bannockburn,
to attend
the
graduation|

and

Denver

The

to anyvisiting with them, and Miss Bar- ‘one who enjoys a pleasant afterbara March
of Shaker Heights, ‘noon of bridge. Reservations may
Ohio, is their other guest.
‘be made with Mrs. Pack, WI 5-2502.
Miss March and her parents,
and Mrs. Edward
F. March,

Mr.

iThursday at 12:45 in the club room
‘of the American Legion Hall.

The

-Carman,

Mr. and Mrs. George W. Bolton,
1405 Valley Rd., are entertaining
two house guests. Their niece, Miss
Ellen Dowman
of Atlanta, Ga.,

and

dent at Abilene Christian College,
where he is a Bible major. He is
a member
of the Knights
Social
Club and the Men’s Glee Club of

members before dinner is served.” |

Alumnus

Re-elected

to

Board

Richard
Wilts,
2756 Birchwood
Ln., was re-elected to serve another
four-year term on the Lake Forest
College
alumni
executive
board.
The
occasion
was
the _ annual

awards

banquet

at Calvin

Durand

Commons.

Artist and Subject Pose with Portrait

moved

in November.

Allan remained
here
so that he
could
complete
his
high
school
education at Highland Park High
School.
Miss Dorinda Bolton, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. George Bolton, has
recently
returned
home
for
the
summer from Denniston College in
Ohio. :

West

Page

16

Deerfield

Republican

Rd.

Town-

Club.

of

honor

was

the

Jean E, Altman,

who wore a gown of palest green
organza and lace. It was also of
ballerina length with a bell-shaped
skirt. Her headpiece was of pale
green tulle and her flowers were
yellow garnet roses.

Frank L. McComber
man and
Faulkner
was given
Gene F.

Jr. was best

David Price and Michael
were ushers. The bride
in marriage by her uncle,
Hardt, of Glenview.

The bride’s mother wore a dress
of vale blue jersey and the groom’s
mother wore
ed cotton.

pale

green

embroider-

A reception for 100 guests in the
church parlors followed the ceremony. The couple left on a wedding

trip to Turkey Run, Ind. They will
be at home at 829 Hazel Ave. after
June 20.
Both young people were graduated from Highland Park High school
and the groom attended Southern
Illinois University and Lake Forest
College.

Parties

preceding

the

wodaing

day were given by Mrs. John Gembra and Miss Maureen Carney, Mrs.
Ritter

D. Wehle,
and

Mrs.

Mrs.

Frederick

Harry

C.

A. Morrison.

work

at the

Alice Wood

The. Little Gallery of the Ravinia

president, will announce plans and
committee heads for next season’s
benefits.

The

Exhibit

exhibit

to Open

opens

July

Mrs.

John

Nuptials
From

St.

Louis

The Donald Andersons and their
three, children,
Linda,
Christine
and Jearine of St. Louis, Mo., for-

of

Standard

the

southern

Oil Co.

Severson,

Landis

Ln.,

4.

ager

the

Women’s

Kenton

valley

Art Exhibit, on the first floor. of
the
Casino
Building
at
Ravinia
Park, will show prints and drawings this year for the first time.

Art

of

ship

1014

the

Station in Chicago during June include Mrs. Robert Kilburg, Woodland Dr.; Mrs. Thomas Cath, Gemini Ln.; Mrs. Carl Lauenstein, Hermitage Dr., and Mrs. James Wetzel,
Pine St.

tary

-

at

maid

bride’s sister, Miss

volunteer

Fidler is corresponding secre:

living

of

The Deerpath Center of the Inof Chicago
Society
fant Welfare
will hold its final meeting of the
season next Monday evening at the
of Mrs. William Hennings,
home
635 Brierhill Rd. Co-hostesses will
Carl
Mrs.
J. J. Sayre,
be Mrs.
Lauenstein and Mrs.
James Wetzel.«
Center members who have done

Mrs.

‘been

The

lilies
lilies.

To Meet Monday

Mrs. Buford King, 1653 Garand Dr., entertained 28 friends
from
Deerfield, Lake Forest, Northbrook and Mount Prospect to
merly. of 1162: Oxford Rd. are visiting
friends
in
Deerfield.
Mr. witness the unveiling of her portrait by Anthony Vorauer, Vienna,
The champagne party was held at her home.
man-' Austria.
Anderson ‘is administrative

|

Porter, :

Of Infant Welfare

Mr. and Mrs. March ‘are staying
at the home
of
the
Walter
E.
Bischoffs, 1775 Meadow Ln., where
Allan March has been staying since

Marches

S.

Deerpath Center

son,

School,

the

were

Amazon

Arno

Allan,-from Highland Park High|

Here

| Moved Up the Street
-_

get

early
use

Fred

ident, presiding. Plans were made
dance, for the fall benefit, a Christmas

the hope that “guests

mond
Fidler
and
Mrs.
Howard
Hudson state that invitations have
already been sent for Saturday,
June 27, for one of Deerfield’s
most beautiful parties.
|;
This, the fifth annual dinner-

Mrs.

Winston

The bride chose a simple, ballerina-length
gown
of white lace
and white peau de soie. The dress
had
a bell-shaped
skirt and
her
short tulle veil was gathered about
a lace and pearl headpiece. Her

Infant Welfare

the

Mrs.

Miss
Helen:
Engstrom was
or-.
ganist. The church was decorated
with white carnations and stock.

Neerfield Winn

‘at

and

944 Clay Court, took place Friday
afternoon at 4:30 at the First Presbyterian
Church.
Dr.
Paul
J.
Keller, pastor, officiated.
i.

‘ing in the United States Marines
and
are
attending’
electronics
school
at the
naval
air station,
Memphis, Tenn. They are making
their home near the base.

OF

Thue

Club

—

Weddings

—

Engagements

area

of: the

Mr. Vorauer, on his fifth trip to this country, has produced
portraits of a number of North Shore residents.

to

Be

Held

The wedding of Miss Jacquelyn
Joyce Borucki, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Roman
Borucki,
3291
Halfday Rd., Lake Forest, and Alvin
Nardini, son of Mr. and Mrs. Angelo Nardini, 2650 Western Ave.,
Highland Park, will take place Saturday afternoon at 2 at the. Holy
Cross Church in Deerfield.

Thursday, June 18, 1959
Be

a

"

“
Be,

ha

Ae
May
LE
eke 2!

Aer

Mee
Se

�paint

ask

5

¥

ay

iat

v

eS

ry

RY

aae

|

A

aN
,

"DEERFIELD DOINGS
Mrs, J. Kenneth
Vetter,
Deerfield Township’s cheerful and accommodating town clerk, is enjoy_ing
a visit this week
from
her

sister,

Mrs.

town,

N.D.,

E.

J.

Young,

who

James-

arrived

Monday

with her husband and two children,
Christine and Tricia. The Vetters
live. at 825 Hazel Ave .... Mr.
and Mrs. Richard G. Dexter, 560
Whittier, have as guests the former’s parents, Mr. and Mrs. William
A.
Dexter,
St. Petersburg,

Fla.

who

are

spending

shows

have

occupy-

Susan,

rode

Sunset,

mare last week-end
sia show
in Lake

looking

forward

her

chestnut

at the OnwentForest
and is

to the

Barrington

show in August. Both girls rode
the recent Royal Oak show .

Katy

Whitney

and

Anne

....

ily,

1445

to

sey

City,

Highland Park. Edwin Slavin, 630
Appletree Lane, was elected to the

Coming

attend
niece,

from

the
Miss

Highland
and Mrs.

Memphis,

Tenn.,

graduation
of
Barbara York,

their
from

Park High
School, Mr.
Frank F. Walker were

guests last week of Mrs. Walker’s
brother and. sister-in-law, Mr. and
Mrs,
J. Robert
Meh. sc 2.

Mr.

and

York,

Mrs.

John

564

ton
Anchorage
Auxiliary ....

by

the.

Mr. and Mrs. Robert K. Wegge,
‘1132 Elmwood Ave., are moving to
Highwood next month .... Mrs.
Robert

R.

Pettis,

editor

of

the

from

Jer-

the

Frank

Stones,

Abel,

2650

Sunset

Leader

Train-

Hackberry.

Robert
Trail,

B.

attended

the

ing course given
Books
Foundation

by the Great
at
Winnetka

Community Center this spring . «o.

of B’nai

board

Lee

Torah

Reform

of the

Milton,

908

Warrington

hostess

Methodist

2583

is New— ... othe New :

EVERYTHING
New

New Merchandise
Personalized Service

Owners

New

Versatile bra!

PETER
PAN
Hiddnctacsunet

Park.

... The home

of'.Highland

of the Adrian

Ringuettes at 1458 Crowe was the
meeting-place
last Wednesday
of
the board of trustees of the North

Shore Unitarian Church

....

.

Bra for every fashion —
strapless, but with attachable
straps for scoop, halter or
regular necklines. Adds fullness,
confidentially, without pads!
The scallop cups, encircled with
nylon lace, give extra coverage
-.. the underwire gives extra lift.
Leno elastic sides and back

Wednesday

1

Bi

assure snug, comfortable fit.

The

Tuxis
of the
First
Presbyterian
Church held a picnic last Sunday
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. D. D.
Decker, 1335 Valley Rd., BannockDeON sco

|
|

convertable
strapless

Circle of the WesChurch

599 ROGER WILLIAMS AVE.
ID 2-3199

Whit-

Miller,

last,

Photographer :

Rd.,

was a guest at the Stonehenge Inn
in Ridgefield, Conn., this week ....

Moon.’

was

of

for

FOR DETAILS CALL
Percy H. Prior, Jr.

Mrs. James Bench, 1110 Chestnut
St.,

Temple

of trustees.

rate Tables,” “The Glass Menagerie,’ “Anna Christie’*.and “Dark

ley

Glencoe

N.J.,

and

is at Saugatuck, Mich., where she
will
be
acting
at
the
Redbarn
Theater
throughout
the
summer
theater
season,
until
October
3.
Helen
has
played
at Tenthouse,
Chevy
Chase
and
other
Chicago
area
summer
theaters
and
this
year will have parts in such plays
as “Happiest Millionaire,’”’ ‘“Sepa-

to the Patience

the benefit of the Florence Critten-

1501

Hackberry,

Now

WEDDING
CANDID
PHOTOS |

829 Holmes,

through Indiana and Kentucky

in

were two Deerfield girls who rode
in the Royal Oak show, held for

Wolf,

was elected recording secretary at
the annual congregational meeting

- +!

Fisher

Seymour

land Park, Albert Hattis and family, 729 Colwyn Ter.; from Park
Forest, John P, Forester and fam-

several

been

Mrs.

Make Appointments

sisleft
trip

Hickory Ln., will be moving back
to town in a few weeks. The family, who will live at 630 Timber
ther, Henry Tuttle, Osterman Ave., Hill,
had
two
graduations
this
have returned from a week’s fish- month. Their son, John Martin, was
ing trip at Burdette, Minn. Henry
graduated from Notre Dame High
Jr. is busy with plans for the June School in Niles and is enrolled for
27 dance sponsored
by the Ban- the fall at Loyola University. Maunockburn-Deerfield
Fire
Depart- reen was
graduated from
eighth
ment of which he is chairman... . grade at Holy Cross School and
A treasure hunt, badminton and will enter Regina High School in
croquet were on the program
at Wilmette in the fall . . . . Mr. and
A. L. Cohen
and children,
an eighth grade graduation party Mrs.
and Judith, have moved
held by Carol Finney, daughter of Rosalyn
Bloomington,
Ill.,
to
1137
Mr. and Mrs. H. Ross Finney, 625 from
Waukegan
Rd..... Mrs.
Percy
Westgate, for 11. of her classmates.
Typical teen-age refreshments in- Wilson, of Bannockburn, publicity
chairman of the board of managers
cluded
sloppy
Joes,
watermelon
of the Chicago Child Care Society,
and pop. Guests were Dana Jensen,
reports that the department receivDiana King, Diane Williams, Joan
an
award
from
the
Welfare
Schiffer, Ellen Petersen, Bill Lim- ed
Relations
Forum
for outberg, Fred Schroeder, Don Clark, Public
....
Jerry
Christy,
Tom
Wands
and standing publicity
Ken Kinney....
Helen Ross, 1160 Chestnut St.,

Horse

Deerfield People Elected
To Serve on Temple Board

Deerfield
REVIEW,
and
her
ter, Mrs. E. R. MacPherson,
last
Thursday
on
a motor

months visiting relatives here and
in Michigan .... Henry H. Tuttle Jr., Deerfield Rd., and his fa-

ing the time and thought of many
local youngsters.
Plans
of Karen
Prosser,
daughter of Mrs. Philip
R. Agnes, 1735 Wilmot Rd., Bannockburn,
to participate
in’ any
shows in the near future toppled
when her palomino mare, Eggnog,
sustained a severe leg injury fording
a
creek... . Her . ‘sister;

Among the newcomers to Deer
field
are
the following
families:
from
Peoria,
the Joseph LaRash
family, 901 Stratford; from High-

¥.

eet

*Reg. U.S. Pat. Off.

7

In fine white cotton broadcloth,

zl

sizes $2-36 A, 32-88 B, 32-38 C.

js

Only

395

|

Shoulder
Eve Levy

Don

Glassman

Ann

Auster

COME IN AND
MEET OUR EXPERT
GRADUATE CORSETIERES
Our personalized service offers you .
‘Figure Refinement without Confinement! !/’
Peggy O'Neil

Anita

Glassman

The

NEW
Here is our authentic natural shoulder suit. And we show it
here in the lightest of Dacron-and-Viscose blends . . . to give the
wearer a truly cool &amp; correct hot weather suit.
40. &amp; 465.
Cobey’s

478

Central

(Open Friday Nites)
Thursday,

June

18,

1959

Highland

Park

|

609-611

Central Ave., Highland

Park

ID 2-8700
i}

Also available at: THE PERSHING SMART SHOP, 4818-4820 N. Western Ave., Chicago
Page 17

_

�Mite (Cah Mamed Offear

NEW ARRIVALS.
Birth

oe

Mr. and Mrs. Howard F. Schmidt
of 945 Rosemary Terr. announce
the arrival of their second son,
Paul Frederic. He was born June
8 at Lake Forest Hospital. Their
son, Daniel Howard, is 2 years old.

We.

Picture of

Perfection

The

Duffy!

%

A
born

-

HEAVY

Laurel

from

Holly,
was
Dwight B.

7%. The children’s
are Mr. and Mrs. A.

Mr.

%

%*

Mrs.

Boris

ID

I.

Moroz

To Assist at Services

Mrs. Edwin Slavin, 630 Appletree
Lane, will assist with hospitality
at the fellowship hour following
Sabbath

and

Mrs.

born,

I. J. Moroz,

all of Dear-

Mich.
%

%

Eve services tomorrow eve-

ning at B’nai Torah Reform Temple of Highland Park at Lincoln
School, Green Bay Rd. Rabbi ShoSinger

will

officiate

at

Bas

of

8 at the Highland Park Hospital.
The baby has been named
Janet
Louise and her sisters are Sandra
Joyce,
7,
and
Barbara
Jo,
16
months. The maternal grandparents
are Mr. and Mrs. H. J. Kennedy and
the paternal grandparents are Mr.

2-1820

League

Mitzvah services,

1157 Waukegan Rd. became parents of their third daughter, June

by

Library)

and

*

Bureau

day camp program.
Social chairman for the luncheon
was Mrs. Ray Resnick, 719 Pine St.

lom

to $300 Value of

All Cleaned

H.P.

*

daughter,
Helen
to Mr. and Mrs.

Children’s

Mrs. Arnold Cohn, 1425 Central,
was named vice president in charge
of programming by the North Suburban League of the Jewish Children’s Bureau at a luncheon at LePavillon restaurant recently. Two
checks were presented at the meeting, one being partial payment for
a room in the new Jewish Children’s Bureau treatment center and
another to be used for a summer

Hills, N.J.

WOOLENS - BLANKETS - COMFORTERS

(Across

Mrs.

J. Duclos of Winter Park, Fla., and
Mr. and Mrs. R. G. Palmer of Short

DUFFY CLEANERS Wrere You
PARK FREE at our Door!
' 487

*

topher Cole,
grandparents

A - Box

Have Them

and

pital: The infant has two brothers;
Dwight
Banister,
10,
and
Chris-

Use Our

Fill

are Mr.

Palmer of 1140 Greentree Ave.,
June 9 in the Highland Park Hos-

our Specialty!

Just $5.95 Storage—up

grandparents

G. Schnee of Inverness, Fla., and
Mr. and Mrs. Theodore F. Schmidt
of Wheaton, Il.

CLEANING by

DRAPERIES

Of

Announcements

%

Mr. and Mrs. Gustave Heimbruch
of 1516 Rosewood Ave. announce
the birth of a daughter June 12

at the Victory
in Waukegan.
*

*

Hospital

*

Mr. and Mrs. Jerrold Flaschner,
848
Apple
Tree,
announce
the

birth of a son, A. Mark, at the
Memorial Hospital, Niagara Falls,
N. Y., Saturday.
They
have
another son, Steven Lloyd, 2. Mrs.

Flaschner returned to her home

in

Niagara Falls for the birth of the
baby. Mrs. A. H. Flaschner, Chestnut Hill, Mass.,
is the
paternal
grandparent and Dr. and Mrs. Ir-

vin

Sidenberg,

the

maternal

Give
-

Memorial

from

him

Niagara

something

our wide

Falls,

are

grandparents,

to

wear

selection of finest

men’s apparel.

Frozen

Whipped Cream

CHIFFON
PIES
AND ...Frozen Whipped Cream CAKES
DECORATED
%

CAKES
Made

for EVERY
to Order

OCCASION
~%

At Geo.

Kahn

you'll find men’s

wear he'll be proud to wear.
We have the answer to all Fa-

HOME MADE POTATO SALAD

ther’s Day problems.

Stop in and get acquainted.

Pint 50c

DEERFIEL
813

WAUKEGAN

BAKERY &amp;
DELICATESSEN

RD., DEERFIELD

OPEN

WERE PROUD OF OUR

BAKING!

Fine

WI

5-0068

imported

in the
105

Gffile

MONDAY &amp; THURSDAY EVENINGS
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE

GLENCOE

and

Hubbard
RD.

custom

Woods

made

men’s

Fashion

wear

Center
VE

Thursday. June

5-4188
18, 1959

�cetie

oN as

SN
%

ree
reua
ar

_
AME ey hg

hs Se iy

Ag

me Fe

ra

Py

Poy

ees Ant ci si

i

“Miss Marilyn Petcreon
P
Weds Th Phoenix
length

veil,

and

her

eestiat

was

of white
cymbidium
orchids
and
stephanotis on a white Bible.
Mrs. Morgan E. Lilly, matron of
honor, and Miss Marjorie Chapman
and Mrs. Theodore Peterson wore
gowns of blue chiffon and carried

colonial

bouquets

of

pink

carna-

tions.

Patsy

Margaret

Sterns

was

flower girl. Miles Wiltrout was best
man. Ushers were Capt. Morgan E.
Lilly and Arthur Marshall, all of
Phoenix,
The Petersons
and Mrs. E. W.
Carlsen,
569 Onwentsia
Ave., all
traveled to Phoenix for the ceremonies.

Local Residents Participate
In Business School Fund Drive

BRIDES
BRIDES
BRIDES

At least two local residents are
taking an active role in the effort

to

raise

$35,000

Fund
of
Business

for

the

Alumni

the Graduate
School of
of the University of Chi-

cago.
Announcement

that Thomas

Car-

lin, 91 Lakeview Terr., and David
J. Harris Jr., 142 E. Central Ave.,
are participating in this drive was
made by Jay Berwanger, chairman
of the Alumni Fund.
Funds are being sought to pro-

vide faculty

Mr.
ter

Miss
of

620

Glenview

the bride
III in an

May

Mrs.

J.

Marilyn J. Peterson, daughMr.
and
Mrs.
Lester
C.

Peterson,
came
man

and

16

Church,
SLOOSOOROSOR OOO

of John
evening

in

Central

Phoenix,
OOOO ODOC

OC

Ave.,

be-

M,. Chapceremony

Methodist

Ariz.
ISSO IIIS OOOO

M.

Chapman

III

Dick

Mr. Chapman is
and
Mrs.
J.
M.
Phoenix.
For her wedding
a full-length gown
lon tulle bouffant
bodice. Her tiara

Dietrich

Photo

the bride chose
with white nyskirt and lace
held an elbow-

IOS IIIT

business

LISTINGS,

HERE’S

BUY THEIR

re-

TO

NORTH

A

Son,

Kurt

Is

Born

To

FOR

A

son,

Ham

Kurt

and
of Lake

Forest

Michael
E.

Hams

Michael,

Mrs.

was

Rowland

Bluff

June

THE

FINEST,

SELECTION

MOST

OF

HONEYMOON

GIFTS
HOME:

born

5 in Lake

SILVER,

CHINA,

are Mr.
of Lake

LINENS,

CUTLERY,

SHADES,

FURNITURE

Hospital.

Paternal

TO

Elwood

Maternal
grandparents
and Mrs. H. L. Hubertz

Forest.

THEIR

WHERE

SHORE’S

COMPLETE

R.

FIND

GIFTS)

search, new facilities and increased
scholarships and fellowship aid to
outstanding students.

to Mr.
the son of ve
Chapman
of

additions,

(HERE’S WHERE

grandparents

Mr. and Mrs. Jesse E. Ham
Fort Sheridan Ave.

are

of 2765

GLASSWARE,
LAMPS

AND

(ANTIQUE,

OCCASIONAL AND SUMMER PIECES),

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BASKETS,

DECORATIVE

PRACTICAL

WASTE
AND

ITEMS OF EVERY

DESCRIPTION.

for the BEST
KARL

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RUTH

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PORQOLTE
RIOD
tasatetaanaeatetetatetet

in Flowers!

TO

SUIT

POCKETBOOK

AN

HONEST

EVERY

. . . AND

VALUE,

GIFT-WRAPPING

EXTRA CHARGE

STURDY

PACKING

OR WORLD-WIDE
MARTHA

ORSINI

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Remember

FLOWERS

to help make your

GARDEN PARTY Just Right!
Help

You

Our Arrangement Ideas Will
with tthe Proper Accent You

shh

ONG:

sigmane

Park

GRACE

NO

FOR

.

.

LOCAL

SHIPMENT

EXTRA COST

HERBST
SHOP
WINNETKA

Want.

,

563

Lincoln

Ave.

.

Call or Stop in Today!

/ ssh

AT

COHEN

ITEM

INCLUDING

HANDSOME
AT NO

EVERY

q

ID 2-3420

(Open

9:15

Hillcrest
nai oa
to 5:15—Menday through

6-1811

Saturday)

ROOOOOD00

Thursday,

June

18,

1959

Page

18-A

�WARDS
MON

T:.GO

M

EE ROY?

OWA

Stephen Zeff

HP Woman Is Exhibition
Chairman For Art Show
Mrs.

Edward

A.

Gorenstein

To Accept Award

of

In New York City

406 Woodland Rd., vice president
of the Alumni Association of the

REO

School

Nylon strength and sajety
at extra SAVINGS

cago,
an

of the

is

art

Art

Institute

exhibition
show

at

the

of Chi-

chairman

sculpture opened Friday with
ception for the artists. It will
tinue through June 26.
Doris Lane Butler, head of
lic relations and publicity at
Art Institute, and former art
tor of the Chicago Daily News,

ist

Rainey

Bennett

Oehlschlaeger
Opportunity

when

and

comprise
knocks

and

Frank

pay

FREE INSTALLATION

DOROTHY

MARGARET

JUUL

THIS
WEEK!

GLADYS

SCHULTZ

ANN

WILSON

CHORBAJIAN

AIR CONDITIONED cOnfoitr:
| 1854 First St.

Highland Park

ID 2-8830
Only at Uns. Moe Quality for Loss
WES

POR

Page 18-B

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24.70

the

NAA.

ment

of

his

daughter,

Betty

Ann

also teaching accounting, is the son

Hickey, to Clifford J. Parmentier,
son
of Mrs.
Lloyd
Parmentier,

of Mr. and Mrs. Roy D. Zeff, 230
Oak Knoll Terr. He is a Highland
Park High School graduate and received his bachelor’s and master’s

Ky.

Miss Hickey graduated from Lake
Forest High School. She is presently employed at Fort Sheridan.

degrees

A September wedding is planned.

Dad

Never

Had

Graduate

Zeff, now studying for his Ph.D.
at the University of Michigan and

from

the

University

Colorado.

It So

A

20.90

Neargarder

HPHS

John C. Hickey, 12 Webster Ave.,
Highwood, announces the engage-

Louisville,

Madeline

Hickey

ROAM

18.40

Betty Ann

Remember

A

7.60-15

Miss

Norma

Rabattini

...

_ FATHER’S DAY,

DAMM

23.45

by

In April announcement was made
Zeff was awarded one of two annual prizes given by the committee
of Ann Arbor chapter of the NAA
for this same paper.

day

you buy U. S. Savings Bonds.

Mary Guthrie

sponsored

June 21st

#

AAA

19.70

pre-

KAA

16.55

will be

AMA

7.10-15

He

np

21.15

City.

York

Statement Purposes,” will be published in the association’s official
bulletin.

Stag

a

17.80

at its annual meeting

in New

His article, entitled ‘‘Theoretical and Practical Implications of °
Using Standard Costs for Financial

a

14.45

ants Monday

petition

Nina,

Sara

Rodde

Slippers of genuine Deerskin, softest leather ever
tanned

. ..

every

detail,

the

luxury

your

feet deserve

for

leisure hours! So soft, so light you hardly know
you're wearing slippers. Beautifully crafted in
they

richly deserve

their reputa-

|

tion as

The Very

Best

Slippers You

Can

Buy!

CLEANERS
ID 2-3900
or
ID 2-4000
2061 Green Bay Rd.
Highland Park
487 Roger Williams Ave.
Ravinia
ID 2-3903

Si ;

6.70-15

Tube-

Size

guest

499

(Open

Central

Fri.

Nights)

XU PENVOATVARDERUOEROOERVERIOERNORAEE
We
AIR

Are

CONDITIONED

for your

comfort

WATCH

FOR...

T.N.T.z

yes

White
Tubeless

the

of Account-

pubthe
ediart-

vw

Type

Black
Tubeless

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bh ha ha i hi i hi hi hi hi hi hihi hi i hhh
AAA AA bh hebben bb bah bob
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Order now!

PVUVVVVTVTVVVY

Cold rubber tread gives excellent mileage, positive traction.

And, you get a 15-month Guarantee.

be

sented with a certificate of merit,
won in this year’s manuscript com-

VVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVVV VY

For safer summer driving, plus savings, buy
Air Cushion Nylon tires! Nylon tire cord resists
impact damage, withstands heat and moisture better.

will

Association

a recon-

the jury.

every

Zeff

of National

Oehlschlaeger

Art Gallery in Chicago.
The exhibition of paintings

Buy RIVERSIDE
Air Cushion
NYLON TIRES

Stephen

for

Thursday, June

18, 1959

of

�(Paid

Political Advertisement)

SICK OF HIGH COUNTY TAXES?
Here's what you can do about them!

You and every registered voter should vote next
Tuesday, June 23rd in Lake County's special election for State's Attorney.

VOTE FOR
DICK KAHN
The former Federal Prosecutor who is preferred and endorsed by the Non-Partisan
Deerfield Township Voters’ Association.
Dick Kahn Pledges To:
I. Expose corruption in public contracts and public
offices.

2. Compel fee offices to make immediate payments
to the county of their surplus funds.
3.

Speed disposition of County Court tax objections

(some of which have been pending for 10 years) .
4. Hire a few, skilled attorneys to replace the “horde
of Assistant States Attorneys’’ who have lost
every major case they've tried.

x

ko *

A HONEST, CAPABLE
STATE’S ATTORNEY CAN DAM
THE FLOOD OF RISING TAXES

VOTE FOR [x] RICHARD G.KAHN JUNE 23rd
(Paid

Thursday,

June

18, 1959

Political

Advertisement)

Page

19

�PT

OTT i)

‘ub!

Ds. be

©

A

via

'

OE
ca.

ee

Pes
ucla

pagBele are
al

asatintsAh Luide®

sh)

ste

DAY

MISS DORIS KATZMAN TO WED AUG. 23

CAMP

TRAIL BLAZER DUDE RANCH

Mr. and Mrs. Louis Katzman, 912 Rollingwood Rd., announce the
engagement of their daughter, Doris, to Ralph Goldenberg, son of Mrs.
Jacob S. Goldenberg of Chicago and the late Mr. Goldenberg.
Miss Katzman
has completed

For Boys and Girls 5 thru 12
Directed by Ted &amp; Al Fenn, Educators
SPECIAL FEATURES OF OUR COUNTRY
ESTATE LOCATED IN NORTHBROOK
Riding — Fishing — Boating
iy
Swimming — All Sports
Overnighters —
Baseball Uniforms for Boys —- Crafts —
Bowling — Hot Lunch — Teacher Staff — Transportation
CAMP SEASON—JUNE 29 to AUG. 21, 1959
Reserve a place for your child now!

Phones—ORchard

4-9789

or

ORchard

Henry Arenberg
To
Golf

LF College
Henry

Re-Elected
Alumni

X. Arenberg

Board

of 40 Black-

hawk Rd. was re-elected to a
year term on the Lake Forest
lege alumni executive
board,
college has announced. The
tion took place at a meeting

4-3829

the recent annual Awards
on campus.

fourColthe
elecafter

Banquet

her third year at Northwestern University where she is in the school of
dental hygiene. She is a graduate of
Highland Park High School.
Mr. Goldenberg attended Southern Illinois University and served
in the United States Air Corps. He
is engaged in business in Chicago.
Plans are being completed for an
Aug. 23 wedding.

Terry Szold Tours
Europe To Study
Miss
Terry
Szold,
daughter
of
Mr.
and Mrs.
S, L. Szold,
1655
Spruce
Ave.,
will
be
studying
abroad
this
summer
in
Vienna,
Austria, as a member of the Vienna Summer School program spon-

sored

by

Hope

College,

Holland,

Mich.
Miss
Szold
is a senior at.
Pratt Institute.
The group
sailed June 6 from
New York and docked at La Havre,
France, June 14. They will return
in September.

MISS KAROL ANN JOHNSON
WEDS RESIDENT IN ROCKFORD

BETTS, BORLAND &amp; Co.

'4) ANY THROW

RUG

Since

BROKERS
STOCKS —

CLEANED

PARTNERS
ARTHUR M. BETTS
CHAUNCEY B. BORLAND
FRANCIS P. BUTLER
LOUIS J. STIRLING

RUG
near

Time

Tower

PHONE

Rd.,

The

her

ASSOCIATES
SAMUEL D. ROWE
RICHARD J. SHROSBREE
J. TRACY
ALEXANDER
STEPHEN W. BACHAR
POTTER H. CARROLL
HERBERT
HIDER
HUGH
J. O’CONNOR
SIDNEY RUBENSTEIN
of Highland Park

Only ¢

Northbrook

bride,

father,

VE 5-2400

111

South

La
Tel.

Salle
CEntral

¢

given

in marriage

wore

a

Chicago

6-1474

3

Nancy

Norsen,

were Miss Nancy
ton, Miss Margy

en
Eire
en

a cousin

of

Paulson of EvansJohnson, another

of Mr.

cousin

and

Mrs.

Arnold

of the bride,

and

Richard

bride’s
Phillip

brother, William Johnson,
Strand and Donald Alexan-

der, all of Rockford.
After the ceremony a reception
was held at YMCA Log Lodge. The
bride’s mother wore a light blue
eyelet dress for the occasion. The
groom’s mother chose to wear a
champagne lace gown.
The couple left immediately for
a wedding journey to Quantico, Va.,
where they are making their home.
on

to

get $4

your

Savings

for $3

on
St

Bond.

if held to ma-

turity.

TTT i bbma
TO ACT

LIST
It’s easy to move up to Edsel, now
priced down with many models of
Plymouth, Chevrolet and Ford. Low
initial cost saves you money when you

TRADEMARKS,

Ine

BUY SELL

ReAaAwury

CoO.

You'll yowl with delight
when you let Viking show
you some of their fine income-

producing

Real

Estate

buys.

Stop in this week, or call...

The king-size value now in the low-price field.

YOUR

LOCAL

EDSEL

DEALER

Edsels are also at many Mercury dealers

REA

tre

ee

©:

REALTORS
BUILDERS - APPRAISERS

826

DEERFIELD

DEERFIELD,

20

the

were

Ushers

be his best man.

to

Park,

Highland

of

you money when you drive.

SEE

Page

Karin

asked his broth-

Mr. Ellenberger
er,

Hold

buy. Two V-8 engines and an Economy
Six that operate on regular gas save

Edsel

Mrs.

They were gowned identically in
waltz-length
maize
nlyon
sheer
dresses designed with square necklines, empire bodices of tiny tucks
and pleated full skirts. All wore
matching maize taffeta cloches and
of talisman
carried semi-cascades
roses.

© LOCAL

low cost

Johnson

both of Rockford.

Bohr,

You'll

Edsel is designed to be the most distinctive car on the road.
Note its fresh, crisp lines... its decorator-smart interiors...
and you'll know why Edsel is singled out for high-style beauty.

“a

by

hand-clipped

the bride from Rockford, was her
maid of honor. Her bridesmaids

high style

Loe ge ee NOES

daughter

and simulated pearls. It had a bouf-

BUILDING
St.

Johnson,

fant scalloped skirt and a chapel
train. Her triple-tiered French illusion veil was held by a Swedish
crown of simulated pearls. She carried a cascade of white roses.
Miss

BORLAND

Ann

chantilly lace gown designed with
scalloped decolletage neckline embroidered with iridescent sequins

JOHN P. WISE
HAROLD C. STEINER

~ LEWIS ~
¢ For Limited

Karol

The Rev. George P. Bernard officiated at the ceremony at which
Prof. Carl Alexis was organist and
Miss Katy Muehlemyer was soloist.
The church was decorated with baskets of white gladioli and mums.

New York Stock Exchange
and Other Exchanges

with cleaning order of

Edens

BONDS

Members

FREE
ANY
ROOM
SIZE

Miss

of Rockford, became the bride June 13 of Frederick Harper Ellenberger, son of Mr. and Mrs. Eugene P. Ellenberger of 1194 Linden Ave.
Mr. Ellenberger is stationed at Marine Base, Quantico, Va. The wedding took place in Rockford at the First Lutheran Church.

1896

Thursday,

oe

June

Koad

aoe

18, 1959

y

�GOODBYE MOSQUITOES!
with

NEW

SAFE

DO-IT-YOURSELF

1 TREATMENT LASTS 7-10 DAYS!
COMPLETELY SAFE FOR HUMANS, PETS, PLANTS, WILDLIFE WHEN USED AS DIRECTED
SENSATIONAL NEW DISCOVERY
ACCLAIMED IN NATIONAL
PEST CONTROL MAGAZINE*
RESULTS
by

TOP

HOUSEHOLD
named to distribute Skeeter
in North Suburban area

of TESTS

AUTHORITIES

at UNIVERSITY
of ILLINOIS,
SOUTH

The

COOK

ABATEMENT
DISTRICT

1959—Copies
available

MATERIAL BUILDS
THAT LASTS

of complete

upon

Scooter

North

E.

BERNS,
Shore’s

MYRON

oldest

G.

and

most

NUSSBAUM,
experienced

Partners,
commercial

Household
mosquito

Pest

control

Control

firm.

COMPLETE HOME DO-IT-YOURSELF
KIT
INCLUDES
PROFESSIONAL-TYPE DUSTER: 10 Ibs. of GRANULAR MATERIAL (enough to last 5-10 weeks depending upon size
of your yard), and SIMPLE INSTRUCTIONS.

MOSQUITO

reports

CoNTROL

“In all our years in the pest control business we’ve tested hundreds
of anti-mosquito compounds, many of them good ones; but Skeeter
Scooter is by far the best we’ve ever seen.’
ROBERT

and

COUNTY

*APRIL,

Pest

request

RESIDUAL EFFECT
7-10 DAYS!
Skeeter

Scooter

IMAGINE —
SUMMER FREE
OF MOSQUITOES
FOR ONLY

$
1h”

C.0.D.

FREE

DELIVERY —

OUTMODES

INEFFECTIVE,
STICKY,

MESSY

BOMBS,

SMOKES,

ORDERS FOR ADDITIONAL SUPPLY OF

GREASY

REPELLENTS

SKEETER

and

SMELLY

SCOOTER

FILLED

PROMPTLY

SPRAYS

5 Ib. Bag—2.25
25 Ib. Bag—9.50
Minimum

Order,

15 Ibs.

LOW PRICE INCLUDES MATERIAL AND EASYTO-HANDLE, EASY-TO-OPERATE PROFESSIONAL-TYPE
AND
SIZE DUSTER WITH
SIMPLE
OPERATING INSTRUCTIONS. (Estate size duster

AUN INDARIEN ~~

AVAVAVAVAVAVAVA AVAL

=

VULVA VN V2

~ MONEY-BACK
GUARANTEE
If you
of

are not completely satisfied, return the unused

Skeeter

Scooter

and

the

duster

in

good,

usable

portion
condition

Za
3

within 10 days of purchase, and your money will be completely
refunded.
"/1\ 117

W/ Wi V4 v7 | 7 |

Wy Way

Vi j WY

Vi

OT

INGY | NOY Fo

also available. )

PHONE TODAY
COLLECT
Thursday,

June

18, 1959

Household Pest Control
AVENUE

6-2530,

31, 32
Page 21

�\

Prize Given, Officers Named At Meeting

Ride Deluxe
Streamliners

Pictured, left, with her winning arrangement
NS African Violet Society meeting is Mrs. Herman

ST. PAUL-MINNEAPOL
Wis

TAX)

(PLUS

hf

comfort

tn

3

TAX)

Reserved

Beraed to thes

°

;

with individual re-

dom at the lowest cost ever.

Car.

NEW LOW COST MEALS x. esas i
the dining car. Delicious lunches and dinners are priced at only $1.25.
S ample Menu: Soup or Juice—Swiss Steak or Baked Lake Superior
Whitefish—Parsley or Whipped Potatoes—Beets or Peas—Roll and
Butter—Tea, Coffee or Milk.

NEW COACH FARES
Round Trip

$2.95

$ 5.35

2.95
4.40
5.79

5.35
7.95
10.45

5.90
7.35

10.65
13.25

Evansville

se

Sie

97.50

St. Paul-Minneapolis

8.65

*Bus

Rapids

Above fares do not include 10%

13.50

&gt;

$1.36.

Federal Tax.

CHICAGO

NORTH

AND

WESTERN
RAILWAY

22

(Advertisement)

for this Garden

Party

Mosquitoes at North Shore garden parties have become a thing of the past
since Household Pest Control division of Aerosol Exterminators has put its
new

fogging

equipment

into operation.

One

treatment

the day

of your

does the job, won’t harm flowers or shrubbery but kills mosquitoes.

party

HPC also

has a special plan that brings sudden death to ants, moths, spiders, waterbugs,
carpet beetles, roaches and all the other annoying and damage-dealing insect

pests that invade our homes. HPC chemicals are safe for people . . . murder
for insects. The HPC plan is inexpensive, too.

Household
Phone

Hillcrest

J

15.60

For schedules and full information consult
your nearest North Western ticket agent.

Page

treasurer.

Pest Control

6-6173

_—

7

Days

a

Week

bk 4 0 0 9 9 }
One Way

Madison
Baraboo
Adams*

to Wisconsin

Lakeside Pl., recording secretary; and Mrs. W.

of Deerfield,

Ride the

between Chicago and

Adams

King Jr., 666 Lotus Pl., first vice-president;
Laurel Ave., second vice-president; Mrs.

2°W low coach fares, is

all you pay for a private
°88Y chair in the parlor

fare

president,

inal

clining coach seats, diner and lounge facilities right at hand and walk-around free-

Eau Claire

newly-elected

Other officers elected were

Parlor

Ride the TWIN CITIES or

Camp Douglas
Merrillan

club’s

2

Dine

Car Seats at reduced

“400”

is the

TRIP

travel at bus travel costs.

DAKOTA

her

No Mosquitoes

i

3

you can enjoy

lence

Beside

the hostess, Mrs. J. W.
Mrs. Alan Joyce, 801

H. Bierkmeier

ONE
WAY
Now

Rd.

Mrs. Walter Lubke, 2637 Roslyn Circle.

James Snow, 441

205 §
(PLUS

Woodland

at the recent
Pomper, 207

CHICAGO

JUNIOR

SUMMER

CAMP

FOR BOYS and GIRLS now has big pool
This year Chicago Junior has a
beautiful new all-weather pool
of

competition

size

to

round

out the daily camp activities.
Here is the opportunity for
supervised, summer activity for
2, 4 or 6 weeks in an atmosphere

of wholesome

thinking.

Boys

live in cabins and tents, girls in
dormitories on the beautiful
100-acre wooded site.
Excel-

* Chicago

Junior

lent

meals.

Enrollment

is

small enough to give every boy
and girl plenty of individual
attention—large enough to
make interesting companion.
ship and full team play. To assure placement for this summer, write at once to William
Holford, Superintendent, or
hone him at Sherwood 1-3037,

Igin.

School,

Elgin,

Illinois

Thursday, June

18, 1959

�Highland Parkers Receive Degrees

Local Talent
Hunted For Radio

Interest Exempt From Present
Income Taxes
$47,000.00

Program In Suburbs
Miss

Dale

oaks

Dr,,

new

radio

Manowitz,

is assistant

program,

60

Ravin-

producer

of a

“Saturday

(Part of an issue of $25,000,000)
METROPOLITAN FAIR &amp; EXPOSITION
AUTHORITY
9% Revenue Bonds

by

the Lake,” originating on the stage
of a North Shore theater. She and
Paul Rubenstein are hunting local

talent

to appear

radio

stage

It is

a weekly

on

show

urday.
Featured

“the

in the

gram

is the

Campus

piece

band,

with

Rogers,

Cris

PRICE— PAR

each Sat-

on

the

$1,000

pro-

Crew,

a

vocalists

Brooks,

live

Midwest.”

show held

regularly

only

16-

TAX

Curtis

and Dominic Daverro all of Steinmetz High School in Chicago. Also
featured is a folk singing trio, The
Beachmen, These young people are

all

students

at

New

Trier

H. C. SPEER

Reita
daughter

Goeckner

Reita

of Mr.

J. Goeckner,
Anne

T.

Misses

E.

and

T.

Anne

Goeckner,

Mrs.

Anthony

906 Pleasant Ave., and

Maslen,

daughter

of

Mr.

and Mrs. Frederick G. Maslen, 500
Braeside Rd., received their bachelor of arts degrees on June 1 from
Newton
College
of
the
Sacred

Heart,

Newton,
Class

Mass.

was
and
book
Miss
the
New

E.

in Wilmette.
Auditions Scheduled
Auditions are scheduled for 10
a.m.
Saturdays.
Further
information can be obtained from producer

Maslen

a member of the literary club
on the staffs of the 1959 yearand the college newspaper.
Maslen was graduated from
Convent of the Sacred Heart,
York City.

Tickets

&amp;

&amp; SONS

Established 1885

COMPANY

Tel. RA

6-0820

Complete descriptive circular on request.

Paul Rubenstein
at AM
2-2816.
Young people passing the auditions
will be invited to participate in the
show as guest performers.

FREE

135 South La Salle Street
Chicago 3, Illinois

High

School

The

&amp; Accrued interest per bond
for a net income of 5%

Sandy

Betty

Federal

|8

Reservations

for AIR-SEA-HOTELS

Activities

Miss Goeckner, a philosophy major, served as circulation manager
of the college newspaper. She was
a member of the athletic association board for four years and a
member of the Catholic Action organization and Liturgical Club. She
previously attended the Convent of
the Sacred Heart in Lake Forest.

May

PURCHASED
At

Be

and PICKED-UP

ADVERTISED

Rates

from...

standing in water!

.

Lectro-Matic cleans your sewer
and floor drains Electrically.

H. and R. ANSPACH

Miss Maslen, an English major,
served as treasurer of the Dramatic
Club. She played leading roles in
several
Newton
productions.
She

TRAVEL

BUREAU

463 Central Ave., Highland Park

ID 2-1211

MPLS

CET

TE

BE SAFE

It is a great comfort when one can
face the future without fear or worry.
In this competitive, fast moving age, that
is, indeed, an achievemenc,
One
satisfaction
to many
today
is
having adequate health insurance—you
never know when an accident may occur
or when sickness may strike.
With today’s high living costs, a period of idleness enforced by an accident or sickness
can be disastrous.
One
of the best assurances against
disabling illness is maintaining a trouble
free spine. Because the spine is so vital
to the nervous system and the function
of glands, organs and muscles, Chiropractors look to the spine as the KEY
to normal body functions and Health.

ad

All garments cleaned by us receive FREE MOTHPROOFING during the cleaning process. Protect your precious
garments .. . call us today!
HAVE

YOU

BROUGHT
WOOLENS?

IN YOUR HEAVY
DON’T WAIT!

Ss
pee

2857.

FREE Estimates!
call [ID 2-3220

WINTER

The Chiropractor locates and corrects
the spinal cause of ill health, and given
time, the physical symptoms disappear
as normal body function and Health is
restored.

We

Always

Answer!

S

Arrange for an appointment soon so
you may benefit from this modern method of natural healing.
Consult:

AY

Fredrick A. Mokrasch

Chiropractor
@ X-RAY SERVICE e@
524 WAUKEGAN AVE.
HIGHWOOD
Telephone ID 2-0125
Office Closed Thursdays
Thursday,

June

18, 1959

Serving the North Shore Over 60 Years

Phone Today
2226

Green

Bay

.

Rd., H.P. —

.. ID 2-4551
AMPLE

FREE

|
PARKING

aite...slta..slte...olte.

Alin.

thin..the...thhe...thhn..thin.thie..thn..then...thien..tlie..olte
ole
ole
alte
lhe
se
sM.
of.
om.
2.

GUARANTEED
SEWER and DRAIN CLEANIN
er

,

e
q

�27
ae

Fourth Child Is Born
To The Donald J. Quinns
Mr.

air conditioners
e

at discount

670 Central Ave.,

H.P.

Mrs.

Donald

FOSe

Peanoa

LE

pt DRA

ih
.

che

be

i

¥ Se

‘

ayn,

©

.

Tay

oae,

tas

oteel

is

Tee
AT
Gi
coi
ihe
:

wer

a

‘Fete Champetre’ ;

Plan

Women

Federation

BS

a
ay
Me o&gt;]eA
A
oft.
K

J. Quinn,

11 Valley Rd., became the parents
of their fourth child, a son, on May
29 in Lake
Forest Hospital. The

the north shore’s smallest discount house!
Moley TV

and

taeSats

¢

ID 2-2042

baby has been named Lawrence Anthony Quinn. Other children are
Kevin, 8; Donna
Brian, 3.

Marie,

5, and John

Mrs. Loretto Mills of Chicago is
the maternal grandmother. Mr. and
Mrs. Maurice Quinn, also of Chicago, are paternal grandparents.

Highland Parkers are taking an active part in planning the
informal “Fete Champetre,” festival of performing arts, to be held

July 15 in the gardens of the Lester Abelsons of Glencoe.
luncheon will be served and a unique program

by Studs Terkel.
North

Proceeds will go to support

Shore Women’s

Pictured,

Division

left to right, are Mrs.

of Jewish
Rudolph

A basket

presented, emceed

philanthropies

Federation

Silverman,

of

of Chicago.

president; Mrs.

Edward E. Hokin, hostess to the planning group at her Hazel Ave.

while 8¢ off packages last!

home;

and

Mrs.

Mrs.

Gerald

Abelson

Gidwitz,

vice chairman

of Glencoe,

Yozo Takeda

in charge

Is Initiated Into Pi Mu

Yozo Takeda, 1440 Linden Ave.,|
is one of 34 students at the Uni-|
versity of Missouri, Columbia, Mo.,|
to be initiated into the local chap-|

é

=

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25

T

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ber of Emerson
*

ditch Sarics

Francine
and

John Price, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Trenton QO. Price, 1267 Berkley Ct.,
will be engaged in missile research

at

Lockheed

in

Burbank,

Calif.,

throughout the summer. Mrs. Price
flew to California last Thursday to
attend
his graduation
from
the
California Institute of Technology.
#
*
*

Robert S. Ramsay Jr., son of Mr.
and Mrs. Robert S. Ramsay, 393

in your basement,

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this Spring these nuisances are really ‘‘living it up.’’ But you can get rid of
them easily if you call Household Pest Control. In fact the HPC Plan will put

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7

Days

a

Hillcrest

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ball,

received
an
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degree
from
DePaul University at the 61st an-

YOUR
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nual

2

last

week

=

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is

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BE SURE YOUR HOME IS BUILT WITH MATERIALS
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in

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and

on the staff of the Spectacollege
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An

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*

*

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Frank

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JULY

HIGHLAND
Federal

Deposit

PARK |

Insurance

Bldg.

Corp.

1771

IDlewood

—

1, 1959

Second

2-7800

AOE

St.

this

coeducational

We make all
laundry
sparkle again

ber

of

the

student

she was elected
home-coming
queen. Francine’s brother, Donald,
is also an under-graduate student
at the school.
The graduates, their parents and

many

friends

heard

message

*

*

*

Charles Hansen, son of Mr. and
Mrs.
Charles
H.
Hanson,
1310
Linden Ave., was graduated from
Ohio
Wesleyan
University,
Delaware, O., June 8 in the liberal arts
tollege’s
115th
commencement.
There were about 400 in the class.
Charles will spend the summer as
unit director and program director

*

Edward

Mr.

a Y.M.C.A,
Mass,

*

Ruxton

*

Stanwood,

and Mrs. George

Bannockburn,

was

son of

H. Stanwood,

graduated

from

the University of Colorado in the
117th
commencement
exercises
held June 5. He received the degree of Bachelor of Science from
the School of Business.
A member
of Delta Tau Delta, Edward
has
received
a commission
as ensign
in the Navy and following a month
at home will be stationed as a supply officer in Georgia.

*

*

*

Park

High

School,

she

will

our

superior
Your

nice

clothes,

on

page

27)

differ-

laundering
things,
your

the
hus-

band’s shirts, fine linens . . . all

come back fresh and spotless!

When you move
to town...or to

a new home...

BUILD OR BUY

G

the

delivered by Norman
Ross, radio
and TV personality who spoke to
them
in front
of the
academic
building
known
as
“Old
Main”
where the ceremonies were held.

a junior at college this fall.
Sandra
and
her
twin
sister,
Susan,
also a junior
at Oxford,

children’s

ON

i
4

serving

of the cheersenior
year

be

makes!

.

body,

as secretary-treasurer
leaders.
During
her

land

ence

INSIST

preparatory

school in Elgin for the past three
years. She has been an active mem-

Sandra Baarsch, daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. F. W. Baarsch, 2380 Riverwoods Rd., was named to the dean’s
list at Western College, Oxford, O.,
and was one of 13 students to receive
the
Peabody
Award
for
scholarship. A graduate
of High-

You'll see the wonderful

YOU

Spruce

at its 103rd commencement
exercises Saturday morning, June 6, on
the campus.
Francine has been a student at

(Continued

WHEN

814

St., was one of a class of 31 to be
graduated from The Elgin Academy

at
Camp
Norwich,
camp at Huntington,

=

bY]

convocation

Alumni

soccer,

has been
tor,
the

AT

pool for waterbugs

a

a private swimming

Ramsay Rd., was graduated from
!'Hamilton College at Clinton, N.Y.
with a Bachelor of Arts degree at
the
149th
annual
commencement
ceremonies.
George V. Allen, director of the
United States Information Agency
for the past two and a half years,
delivered the charge to the graduating class. The Commencement
address was given by Richard P.
Flanagan, a member
of the gradJames J. Reagan, son of Mr. and
uating class from Norwich, N.Y.
Mrs. Edward Reagan, 827 Pine St.,
Ramsay has been active in foot-

oo

‘Are you maintaining

Literary Society, a

local fraternity.

Your

LATH
AND

Welcome

Wagon

Hostess

will call with

basket

of gifts... and

friendly

greetings

a

from

our religious, civic and
business leaders.

BUREAU

FOR

PLASTER

OF

LATH
LAKE

&amp;
CO.

KOKIE
LAUNDRY

r+.
ot LATH =

PLASTER

Page

26

affiliated with the NATIONAL BUREAU
for LATHING and PLASTERING

VALLEY
&amp;

DRY

CLEANERS,

INC.

If you, or others you
know, are moving, be
sure to phone Welcome
Wagon.
Highland

Park

Cecile Casey
ID 2-0442
Deerfield. Bannockburn
Adalyne Sickel
WI5-1210

WELCOME WAGON
Main Office and Plant:
IDlewood 2-3310 — Deerfield Cail Enterprise 1616
512-518 Waukegan Ave., Highwood
Thursday,

June

18, 1959

�OVeung Pesple In
School And
(Continued
have

had

as

Linda
and

Service
from

their

page
guest

rington
College
class-

mate,
Miss
Akemi
Uchema,
of
Tokyo, Japan. Following Akemi’s
departure
to visit Lake
Forest
friends,
the
local
girls
left for
Minnesota,
where
they will continue the teaching of swimming for

the Red Cross.
Grant

*

Berning,

Mrs.

Karl

was

graduated

*
son

Berning,

of

1006

from

Mr.

and

Rosemary,

Northwestern

Military
and
Naval
Academy
at
Lake Geneva, Wis., Saturday. Activities and exercises covered three

days

and

included

the

annual

Cut-

ler races, drill competition,
ora-torical contests,
as well
as field
music and parades. The Rev. James
D. Moffett,
of the University of
Wisconsin, gave the baccalaureate
sermon and Maj. Gen. George E.
Martin the commencement address.
Out-of-town friends and relatives
attending
the
graduation
were
Mrs.
Miller
Mikkelsen,
Mr.
and
Mrs. Miller Mikkelsen Jr. and chil-

dren, Cedar Falls, Iowa; Miss Edna
Mikkelsen, Kansas
City; Mr. and
Mrs. Walter Sherman and children,
Northbrook;
Mr. and Mrs. LeRoy

Berning

and

Donna,

Lake

Forest;

Mr. and Mrs. Archie Antes, Deerfield; Mr. and Mrs. Donald
Ubl,
Lake Bluff; Miss Dorothy Fredericksen,
Racine,
Wis.,
and
John
North, Wheeling.
ok

of

*

Pvt. E-2 John
Wolter,
23, son
of Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Wolter, 1362
Arborvitae,
has been
assigned to
B Company
of the 4th Training
Regiment
at Fort
Dix,
N.J., for
eight weeks of infantry basic train-

ing.

He

will

serve

on

active

duty

for six months and then be transferred to hometown duty with an
Army
reserve or National Guard
untt. He attended Highland Park
High
School
and
Illinois
State
Normal.

WANT

W.

daughter
Ruppel,

has

Mr.
War-

completed

her

year at Toronto

in Toronto,

of

1231

Teachers’

Can.

She

and

her family moved here last November from San Francisco.
*

*

SF
5

*

a\

Dolores Ubl, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. George Ubl, 1103 Osterman
Ave.,
has
been
graduated
from
Montana State University at Mis-

soula,

*

W.

Rd.,

freshman

26)
a

Ruppel,

Mrs.

Mont.,

with

a

degree

June A. Koch, 513 Radcliffe Circle, and Willard R. Taylor, 3055
Orange Brace Rd., were graduated
Saturday from
the University of
Michigan with a class of 3,865 students
in the
115th
annual
commencement exercises. June the degree
of bachelor
of science
and
Willard the degree of bachelor of
business administration.
*

ya

“

r

”

is

«

BEACHBALL

FRIDAY &amp;
SATURDAY,
JUNE 19-20

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of gas purchased)

AT

|

*

ROGER WILLIAMS SERVICE STA.

David A. Kelley, son of Mr. and
Mrs. F. D. Kelley, 829 Deerfield
Rd., is one of 44 ROTC cadets at
Southwest
Missouri State College
who will attend summer camp at
Fort Riley, Kan., from June 21 to
July 31. David, who will be a senior next fall, is enrolled in the advanced ROTC course at the Springfield school.
&amp;

a

of

bachelor of arts in mathematics. A
graduate
of Highland
Park High
School
and
Deerfield
Grammar
School, Dolores has served as treasurer and rush chairman of Delta
Delta Delta sorority, and during her
senior year was a delegate to the
student government. She was also
a member
of the commencement
committee.

*

WS

*

535

ROGER

Marty

WILLIAMS

Shapiro,
Prop.

D 29815

*

Marilyn F. Clifford, daughter of
Mr. and Mrs. Walter L. Clifford,
908 Fair Oaks, received a ring denoting the highest active scholastic
average
during
presentations
made
by Chi Omega
sorority at
Lake Forest College. Outstanding
members for the school year 195859 were honored.

North Shore’s Outstanding Selection of Toys

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Adjacent

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Thursday,

June

18,

1959

LORETTA

Park

&amp;

Areas

JONES

JOY

DIXON

“THE BEST IN TOYS FOR GIRLS AND BOYS”

on

PHONES
1833

2nd Street

ID-2-3001
Highland Par

�Aine
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POLICE
What

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ments

service

FaPs

P

yf
|i

ry

FIRST

s*

‘4 PROFESSIONAL
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ce

P

1895 Sheridan Rd.

Highland

Park

We Carrya Supply of . . .

HEARING

|

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BATTERIES

For Prompt, Free Delivery Phone:

ID 2-9000

M, J. Dray,

K. Haines,

R.Ph.

Paul

R.Ph.

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

ADVISE...

Lt. Col. Eberhart Receives Army Ribbon

..

are the mechanical

require-

of a good bicycle? The ques-

tion comes up because of the important place of the bicycle in the
life of the American boy and girl.
On a good bike, wheels should
have all of their spokes and be
adjusted so that they are in true
alignment. Weak tires on a bicycle
are
just
as
dangerous
as weak
tires on a motor vehicle.
The front fork of the bike should
be
solid
at the
collar where
it
passes through the frame. Handle
bar should have good tight grips
and the bar should be firmly seated in the top of the fork.
Cones in front and rear wheels
should
be properly
adjusted
and
lubricated.
The
chain
should
be
lubricated and kept tight enough
to keep it from dropping off the
spocket. Each bicycle should have
a chain guard.
Brakes are supposed to lock and
slide the wheel on a bike as on a
car,
to be
sufficient
for safety.
Pedals
must
have
rubber
treads
and fittings and be tight and safe.
The
saddle
should
be
adequate,
comfortable and properly adjusted
to allow the proper reach to the
pedal. Since comfort is paramount
to safety, the bike has to be adjusted so the rider is comfortable.
Highland Park Traffic Ordinance

U.S.

Lt. Col. Claude

surgeon

section,

M.

Eberhart,

Headquarters

right, chief

preventive

Fifth

Army,

U.S.

(Sections 97 through 100) requires
that bicycles be equipped with a
(Continued

on

page

30)

DU

News Agency

CHICAGO

A native of Chicago, Col, Eberhart has been assigned to Army
Headquarters
since
September,
1954. He is leaving early in July
for duty with headquarters,
Seventh U.S. Army, in Stuttgart, Ger-

many.
During his tour of duty in Chicago, he and his wife and children
resided at 1523 Sheridan Rd.

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TRIBUNE

CHICAGO

‘

.-

v

PONT

was

An estimated $200 damage to an
electric cart used to transport golfers around
the course
at Northmoor Country Club was reported
June 10 to Highland Park police.
The report stated that a watchman
at the club said the day before the
damage occurred he had chased a
group of 15 or 16 teen-aged boys off
the grounds near the cart. The cart
looked
as
though
it
had
been
“jumped
on”
or rammed
into a
wall, police said.

Highland Park

Distributors

with

medicine,

recently

Someone Damages
Cart At Northmoor

‘\

Photo

awarded the Army Commendation ribbon. Col. George E. Leone,
Fifth U.S. Army Surgeon, made the presentation.

2 WE’VE MOVED!

’

Army

SS

SS

SS

size

or design.

FOrest 6-0837

built by

HOLMES
MOTOR
Body

&amp;

CO.

Paint

Shop

-—2_&gt;—
1877

St. Johns

Thursday,

ID 2-0734

June

18, 1959

�1380 Pennies Worth $62.50 to Susie

Home Construction
Here Rates Ninth

Tractomotive Gives New Shower Rooms

Throughout 1959
Deerfield home construction for
the first five months of 1959 has
slipped to ninth place in the Chi-

cago metropolitan area, with a total
of 130 homes costing $3,645,997.
The

local

community

first ten, however,

heads

the

in average

cost

of the homes built throughout that
period. With $28,046 as the average
cost of a Deerfield home, second
place
is claimed
by Park
Ridge
with $27,750 as its average. Skokie
leads in home
building with 314
homes costing $5,808,000.

was won by the Buffalo Patrol with
52,545 points. Scoutmaster Warton
pointed
out, however,
that while
all patrols can’t be winners,
the
lowest of the five Patrols in Troop
50 with 47,475 points is also a high
achievement.
Buffalo Patrol To See
Hiawatha
Pageant

Susie Busse, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Walter G. Busse, 1420
Greenwood Ave., was only three cents off when she guessed 1377
as the number of pennies in a size 11 man’s gym shoe at G. and
G. Shoe Shop in Deerfield. Her prize was a $62.50 Schwinn bike,
presented to her by Don Rognstad, manager of the shop. At the
left is Arthur C. Ullmann, president of the Deerfield Chamber of
Commerce,
is 14 years

who was the official checker in the countdown.
Susie
old and was graduated this year from Wilmot School.

Boy Scout Troop 50 Holds Blazing
Final Court; Adopts Court-of-Arms
Suddenly — without warning — a
who-o-sh split the air—there was a
quick flash of a flaming arrow followed by a who-o-m—and the bonfire
of the
final
Court-of-Honor
for the current scouting year was

sparked

ablaze!

As

if

out

of

the

past, silhouetted
against the setting sun, there stood an Indian in
glorious
head-dress,
armed
with
bow,
surveying
his
work.
This
spectacular flourish set the proper
mood for an unusual Court-of-Honor held
out-of-doors
in the area
east of St. Greogory’s
Episcopal
Church,
sponsor
of
Boy
Scout
Troop 50.
A second look revealed that this
spirit out of the past was enacted
by Kent Elworthy, assistant scoutmaster of the troop and: a qualified
member of the Order-of-the-Arrow!
The achievement of a successful
Scout year was appropriate for the

presentation

of

the

troop’s

his

merit

made
win
him

badge

him
five

the

first

merit

eligible

for

to

troop

This

appear

to

makes

before

the

Star-Life Board
of Review for a
chance to become a Star Scout—
the first step toward Eagle Scout.
Scout George Schmidt was commended for his perfect attendance
record.
The interpatrol contest based on
the number of points each patrol
accumulates thru the scouting year

facilities

Officer Deimler Called
To Ala. to Attend Father

Two

it was

from

announced,

active

is

leadership

of service

re-

after

in Scouting.

He will remain active as a member
of the troop committee. Committee
Chairman Tom Wood expressed the
confidence that the high standard
of the troop will attract a man who
will meet it as a challenge and lead
on from there.
Mr. Warton
closed this blazing
Court-of-Honor with a reminder to
“his” scouts to: “do your best and
be
trustworthy,
loyal,
helpful,

friendly,

courteous,

kind, obedient,

cheerful, thrifty, brave, clean and
reverent in all of you do this sum-

mer.”

Cars

Collide

Minor
damage
resulted
in the
collision of two cars at the intersection of two cars at the intersection of Deerfield
and Waukegan
Rds. Tuesday morning, June 8, at
8. The car of Bruce M. Stephen,
2880 Orange Brace, struck the rear
of a car driven by William D. Hill,
1800 Sanders Rd. Lt. George Hall
investigated.

Boy

Injured

in Fall

Steven
A.
Vordon,
13,
825
Holmes, was injured in a fall from
his bicycle at Pine St. and Central
Ave.
Officers
Rogge
and
Krase
assisted the boy, who drove a stone
into the palm of his right hand and
skinned his left elbow. Dr. C. B.
Foelsch and Dr. V. Z. Hutchings attended.

Here's a Little Girl Who Knew Right Answer

star to Scout

Pete

Franz,

and

Browning,

Bob

Faraone,

Thursday,

June

18,

1959

at Ma-Ka-

are the gift

The insignia at the entrance to
the new shower facilities at Camp
Ma-Ka-Ja-Wan, North Shore Area
Council Boy Scout camp, identifies
the up-to-date structure as the gift
of Tractomotive Corporation.
With
a_
three-year
monetary
pledge, the firm is helping in the
development
of
the
new
Camp

West

which

will include

a dining-

hall, a trading post, quartermaster
building, headquarters building, a
nature
lodge
and
a Scout
craft
shelter.

Located
300

at

near

miles

be

River,
of

Wis.,

camp

Antigo,

720
acres
9,000 Cub
Explorers.

Wolf

northwest

the

about

Deerfield

covers

and
serves more
than
Scouts, Boy Scouts and
The new camp site will

officially

dedicated

on

July

4

week-end and on July 7 the first
scouts
will
begin
their
camping
period.
Camp
East,
the
original
campsite, opens June 23. Both will
run through August 20.

Contributing their time and ability to the Boy Scout troops of Deerfield are two employees of Tractoromotive: Richard N. Becker, 931
Woodward
Ave., Troop
52 scout-

and

Charles

Wilson,

neighborhood

655

commis-

Joseph P. Condon
Accepts Charter

From Navy League
Joseph P. Condon, long-time resident of Bannockburn, recently accepted a new charter in the name
of the North Shore Illinois Council
from
the
Navy
League
of
the
United
States. He is one of the
charter members and an executive

vice

president

son Joseph
member.

A.

of the
is

council.

also

a

His

charter

Mr. Condon’s brother-in-law, William A. Aitken Jr., of Deerfield,
was recently voted a director as a
charter member of the North Shore
council. Mr. Aitken’s father was a
founder of Bannockburn
and the
family has long maintained an active interest in community affairs
and good government.

one-

Berg, Tim Staats, Louis Barth, Jim
Hamilton, Bob Carlson, David Mais,
Jeff
McCullough
and
George
Kloepfer.
Scout Paul Gillis was awarded

West

Local Company
Donates Shower
Room to Scout Camp

Elder Ln.,
sioner.

own

Richard

for Camp

master,

coat-of-arms, which
is also referred to as an achievement in heraldry.
An
original
coat-of-arms
was
built from a blank shield and explained by the designer and troop
committee
member,
Al Gillis. It
was adopted by formal resolution
for Troop 50 to serve a two-fold
purpose: as an exclusive badge of
identity;
and
as a continual
reminder of the ideals, principles and
objectives of Boy Scouting.
Scoutmaster Jack Warton followed the presentation of the troop
arms with the award of a two-year
year stars to Scouts Charles Lutz,
Brickie Maerano and Roger Wall.
Except for the initiation of two
Tenderfeet — Scouts Jay Mandler
and Terry Rothschild—all
Scouts
of Troop 50 are no less than second
class. The last ten scouts to win
their second class awards to filling
in all blanks in the troop advancement
chart
were
Scouts
Steve

(above)

It was announced that 35 Scouts
from Troop 50 will attend summer
camp
at Ma-Ka-Ja-Wan,
a larger
group than from any other troop
in the Council. Scoutmaster Jack

eight years

of the

badges.

shower

Officer
Ralph
Deimer
of
the
police
department
was
called
to
Mobile, Ala., because of the serious
illness
of his father.
He
accompanied his parents from the veterans
hospital
in Alabama
to the
veterans hospital in Iowa, his home
state.

tiring

which

new

The prize for being the top patrol
of the troop is a trip to see the
impressive
Pageant
of Hiawatha
which is presented each year by
the Big Timber Council in Elgin.
The senior patrol leaders, Scouts
Gary
Hedge,
Jim
Paterson
and
Terry Franke, will also attend as
guests of the troop.

Warton,

cooking

The

Ja-Wan, North Shore Area Council Boy Scout camp,
of Tractomotive Corporation, Deerfield.

‘Stay Home,
Police Warn
Elaine

Werner,

7,

daughter

of Mr.

and

Mrs.

Russell

Werner,

552

Mallard,

could

hardly

get

to sleep the other night. She felt she was already dreaming that day when, after answering correctly a question asked by the Garfield Goose quizman, she received $400 worth of toys, including
a 26-inch bicycle.
Christmas in June can be real fun for the whole family. Elaine’s sister Lauren, 9, and brother,
Jeffrey, 10, are sharing with her the fascinating items that include a swimming-pool, bow and arrow, gun, the Junior Britannica, and a dozen other toys. Elaine was called to the phone at 4 p.m.
to answer the question and two hours later a Volkswagon rolled up to the door to deposit the prizes.

Rover,’
Wanderer

A Glenview dog which stretched
Deerfield hospitality to the breaking point was picked up by police
here after it bit Lorentz Helo, 32,
1100 Somerset, last Wednesday at

1:30 p.m. The dog
Fred
Lichtenfeld,

was owned by
Glenview.
Lt.

George Hall and Officer Thomas
Rogge investigated and Dr. Ralph
Elson attended the victim.
Page

29

�Police List Cases In Monthly Reports

BLACK
DIRT
(Screened,

Stock

The monthly reports by Highland
$2,000

$15

in building

Park

been reported by Highland
Park
police for the first four months of
the year.

Breakdown of the cases is as follows: One attempted suicide (fe-

A

WANA iW =

male);

JULY

INTEREST
Il,

Federal

Deposit

two

Cin

Second St.

2-7800

ccc

auto;

five

illegal

use

of fire-

from

outside.

There

were

six

and two feand two
were re-

Twenty-five of the offenders during the first four months of the
year
were
from
Highland
Park
High
School,
11
from _ outside

Corp.

1771
IDlewood

eight

ported here.

PARK

Bank—Postoffice Bldg.

(male);

male.
One
local truant
truants from out of town

1959

Insurance

assault

sex charges, four male

BANKSSHIGHLAND
Member

one

fighting; one trespassing; one disorderly conduct; and one larceny

arms; six larcenies of wallets and
money (one female, five male); two
=3|annoying telephone calls (female);
==/| 14 other larcenies; one boy was re=|ported missing from home here,

SAVINGS

EFFECTIVE

in

and
and

$6,895 has been recovered.
Juvenile Cases
Forty-five male
juvenile cases
and nine female juvenile cases have

of an

ON

$2,500

$215 lost in other larcenies, for a
four-month loss of $10,624. Of this,

ID 2-0850

BANK

materials;

clothing, $120 in machinery
$1,183
through
shoplifting,

Hwy., Highland

INSURED
3%

stolen

As of April 30, $500 had been

Piled)

A

was

SERVICE

AA

Min

schools,

two

from

from
Red
Oak,
By ares, two from
from
Edgewood,
| Place, one from

Lincoln,

two

two
from
Saint
Oak Terrace, six
one
from
Elm
Immaculate Con-

month

of Janu-

stolen in daytime

residence

During the months
of January
through April, 3535 written warning traffic tickets were issued, as
compared to 3,019 last year. There
were 2,115 arrests, compared with
2237 last year.
Arrests were for illegal speed,
445; failure to yield right of way,
35; driving on wrong side or wrong
way, 32; illegal overtaking,
nine;
passed stop sign, 49; disregarded
traffic
signal,
175;
followed
too
close, 21; illegal turn, 100; failure
to signal, four; driving while under
the influence of alcohol, 32; other
hazardous violations, 100, totaling
(Continued on page 31)

OIL

—

—

WATCH

TAY

BURNER

SALES

B.

JEWELER

FUEL OIL

RADIO REPAIR

the

ception, and two not in school.
A total of 131 cases involving juveniles were handled from Jan. 1
through April
30—111
males,
20
females.
There were 34 investigations involving
juveniles,
43 onthe-spot juvenile adjustments and
105 conferences held.
Four
Injuries
Four persons have been injured
in street accidents from January
through
April,
according
to the
police report.
Five
were
injured
in falls at home, one from other
causes, and police gave assistance
to 11 sick persons.
There
were
three suicide attempts, six sudden
deaths, five other accidents.
Traffic Listings

AN
TELEVISION

Park police show that

during

burglaries, $160 in night burglaries, $100 lost in stolen bicycles,

MENONI &amp; MOCOGNI

Cnn

of clothing

SERVICE

CORNER

Guest

At

To

Retiring

Be

Heating
We

Repair

AUTO

ALL

and

MAKES

Finkle of 540 Rambler Ln., retiring
president, is being given.
A gift from the sisterhood

be

presented

TRANSISTOR RADIOS
FM - AM - HI-FI
Sales and

Service

BRAUN

20th Century TV

ee

|

Inc.

PARK, ‘ILL.

Office

and

RADIO

444 Central Ave.

Highland Park

ID 2-8120

447

SERRERRSESEER
eee
HEATING SERVICE

SORE Ree ee eee
DRESSMAKER’S SERVICE

COMMUNITY
HEATING

MONOGRAMMING

SERVICE

A. E. Savage,

On Linens, Blouses, Sweaters,
Towels, Shirts, etc

Owner

OIL - GAS
DEPENDABLE
BOILER

Windsor

Page

Buttons —

Of Boilers or Furnaces
SALES &amp; INSTALLATION

If no answer

1010

Pleating —

CLEANING

Vogue
722 Main

5-4427

HAZEL AVE., DEERFIELD
30

&amp; Machine Button Holes

5-0602

call Windsor

Belts

Hand Bound

|

Fabric Shop
Evanston

UNiversity 4-3034

YOUR

gutsy

y's

RAVINIA

Carl Casel, Division Manager

1858 FIRST ST., H.P.
Ample Parking in Rear

GAS

Inspector for the North

West

Western

Pita
LER

Roger

tT
NIE

MEI

R EIRP

Williams

TE EEE
A

NE

LAMAN IRS

mt

Formerly

For Your

REN

RE

AOS

PT

NAOT

LE EE EDT EEL LER
OMG

NEE MAN

ARNE

Na

ACN

NON

WI

2-4387
NRO

Needs

HAROLD ROOT
PLUMBING CO.
Repair Work

TELE
NES:

Plumbing
CALL

iE

ID

Road

ORR EGER eee
PLUMBING

TTT

SUNDAYS—

Husenetter’s

5-0035

Deerfield

IT—
OPEN

Nursery

Deerfield

RR,

HARDWARE

ETE LEP
CR

our

1885

and

WI

Repair Screen Doors and Windows
Replace Broken Windows
Fix Storm Windows and Doors
Keys Made To Order While You Wait.
FOR

by

Paset,
59 Lakeview
president of the or-

Established

We

CO.

will

Finkle

F. D. CLAVEY
RAVINIA NURSERIES

Store Hours Daily 8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. — Wed. ‘til Noon
OIL

Mrs,

LANDSCAPING

da

— LET US DO

BROS.

to

Mrs. Nathan
Terr., a past
ganization.

REPAIR

TTT
EET
HARDWARE

PHONE
ID 2-3804

HOME

also

Luncheon

President

Board members of Beth El Sisterhood are meeting today at Deerpath
Inn
in Lake
Forest
where
luncheon honoring Mrs. Irving N.

GAS

Equipment

Board

D) ov

CENTRAL &amp; SHERIDAN HIGHLAND
| TELEPHONE ID 2-2028

Official-Watch
AND

from page 28)
— such as a bell or
no siren. And the
is to be used like
horn, not to create

a disturbance.
When bikes are ridden after dark
they must show a front lamp visible
500 feet away and a red reflector
in the rear which is visible at night
from 300 to 50 feet from the rear.
Don’t be a Trick Rider
The police department tries to
discourage
trick
riding.
Riders
should
keep
astride
the
saddle
with both feet on the pedals and
both
hands
on
the _ handlebars.
Bikes should carry only one rider,
unless
they
are
equipped
with
more than one seat.
Children riding to school ought
to have a basket to put their books
in to leave their hands free to control the bike.
As parents, we must take a greater interest in the bicycles we give
our children, being sure we give
them a safe vehicle, teach them to
ride properly and teach them the
bike riding regulations.

Leading Watch. Repair, Craftsmen
and Jewelry Designers
OIL

ADVISE...

(Continued
warning device
horn — but
warning device
an automobile

ary, none in February, $2,000 in March and none in April.

CALL....

2200 Skokie

worth

POLICE

If

no

SNE

HON

AE

ot AEE

SIE

—

New

Work

Dishwashers
Water Heaters
answer call WI 5-0743

E EL EEL ELT TELLER
AB

5-3600

ACE EON

TEESE

EEE
ASE

TAS

ELIE LIE
ASIN

INTERES

We Defy You To Lose Money
By Advertising On This Page!
Call
from

IDlewood

2-4500

and

get the complete

one of our display advertising

story

representatives.
Thursday,

June

18, 1959

ETI

�. Coons Gives City
School Traffic Award
Highland

Park’s

School

safety education program
the city a certificate of

ment

from

the

Need a new water heater?

traffic
has won
achieve-

National

Safety

Council.
The city was one of 256 honored
across the nation for having achieved “80 per cent or more’ on its

See the new,

safety education in the schools, according
ment.

to

the

council’s

City-Wide

announce-

Program

fast electric
water heaters

Officer
Melvin
Moon,
police
safety officer.for the schools, conducts
the
program
of _ bicycle
safety checks and tests for students
who ride them, and the series of
safety assemblies. It has been held
in all the city’s schools.

Monthly Reports—Police
(Continued
1,002.

There

from
were

page
also

30)

18

arrests

for illegal lights in the first four
months,
eight for illegal brakes,
and 1,090 for non-hazardous violations .

40-gallon models will deliver up to 432 gallons of
really hot water a day. And there is a new low,

24-hour-a-day electric water heating rate when
you install one of these.
NORM BROWN
Mr.

Roger

Stine

Heaters are very compact, create no fumes, soot
or smoke. No flue is needed. You can install a
fast Electric Water
—basement,

Pharmacy

Precise

Prescriptionists

Fast Electric Water

Heater where you want it

utility room,

kitchen,

bathroom,

laundry—even in a closet.

Ask your Doctor to telephone your
prescription to us.

25 Years Experience

It’s almost impossible to run out of hot water

LEWIS SYLVESTER, R.Ph. Mgr.
HENRY A. STINE, R.Ph.

Phone
643

Roger

for dishes, baths, automatic laundry, showers,

ID 3-1212

Williams

Opposite Jewel Food Store
After Hours Emergency
Call IDlewood 2-9126

SE

TE
WATCH

shaves with one of these.

Ravinia

alsa anes)

x,

Most makes offer a 10-year
warranty

(even longer life-

FOR.

T.N.
T.
SridAUHTTTEOGGATECGGAREEOOORAEEOGGL

expectancy ).
In tests, they show far less
tendency to “lime up” and
corrode—so you can expect
maximum
a

Lillian

years

Ettinger

SINGER
SEWING

MACHINE

641

Central

Highland

SEE
CO.

Park

ID 2-381]
SALES and SERVICE
Thursday,

June

18,

1959

Fast

efficiency with

Electric

than

YOUR

ever

for

far

more

type and couritertop models,

before.

ELECTRIC

40-Gallon faint Toa
Water
Heaters are available in tank-

APPLIANCE

DEALER

NOW

Get the facts, and you’ll get a fast Electric Water Heater for sure!

Public Service Company
© Commonwealth Edison Company

�Bade

foley

vb ‘: Se

BELO

eT

ates

Rear

os

Ak

eT
ee
MGS Ce er te
eR Rap

PRT

OAR

Ta BSH

ht

tia

\y

James

Rubenstein

Springtime Brings College

Is Named

Editor Of University Paper
James

Rubenstein,

Sidney

son

Rubensteins,

of

2345

the

Maple

Ln., was named managing editor of
the summer
editions of the New
Mexico Lobo, university newspaper.
James, a sophomore, is a member of Tau Kappa Epsilon frater-

nity and
Chakaa,
James

Park
Bob

is

a

graduate

High

of

Highland

School.

Denzel

Oil

and

to 40%

Lamps

&amp; Shades

24 Hour

Service

Lamp

name
on

of Miss
the

Carol

Harris

list of Frosh

Week-

142

Central

Ave.,

was

chairman.

Purpose of Frosh Weekend is to
unite freshmen
coeds in a class
project promoting friendship and
cooperation
among
its members,

teach students the fundamentals
of committee work and acquaint
first-year students with the func-

Studio

465 Roger
IDlewood

ID 2-3700

The
appears

decorations

RAVINIA

Gasoline

tions of the Michigan
room
as the center
ricular activities for
students.

Williams
2-9360

School’s

LIVE!...

with
breakfast at Lee s

Goes On At Stations

Among 17 new members recently initiated into the University of Rochester chapter of Delta Phi Alpha, national German honorary fraternity, was Charles Buerk, son of Mrs. Edward J. Buerk, 1583 Cavell Ave. Buerk is a student in the
school of arts and science at the university. Members are
selected on the basis of excellence in German studies and general high academic standing.

Harris’,

20%

‘Finish The Fight’

Honors To Local Residents

end Central Committee members
at the University of Michigan. Miss
Harris, daughter of the David J.

DISCOUNTS

| HIGHLAND PARK
FUEL CO.
Fuel

recently was tapped for
junior
men’s
honorary.

NS Commuters

colors,

League Ballof extra-curU-M women

as in past years,

formed the theme for the project.
Coeds
drew
for membership
on

teams during registration week last
fall

and

later

petitioned

for

in

the

central

year

they

committee

positions,
Frosh
Weekend
is
an
annual
event at the University of Michigan.
First record of a freshman

project

was

a pageant,

“The

tory

ed

of Music,”

in

1924,

changed

which

but

form

was

since
and

present-

then

includes

serving every morning at 6 a.m. Your order can
be served with or without our early morning

jokes. Just smile or growl .. . we'll catch on!
the way .. . the food’s darned good!

such

things as a Freshman Fiesta, Mardi
Gras, Strawberry
seed Hop.

Journalism

Social

honors

and

Hay-

in Northwest-

ern University’s Medill School of
Journalism
were
given
Michael

Barkun,

1035

Green

Bay

Rd.

Barkun’s
name
appeared
among
those students who earned highest
distinction by achieving a straight
“A” grade average.
Miss Jeanette Tondi, daughter of
Mr.
and Mrs. Albert Tondi,
146
High
St., Highwood,
was
among
Illinois
State
Normal
University
students
from
76
high
schools
throughout
the state
to receive
recognition at a recent special assembly at the school.
The group represented three per
cent of the under-graduate student
body
having
the
highest
honor
point averages.

His-

Invitations to attend the assem(Continued on page 36)

You may as well start off the day with the
world’s best breakfast (modest we ain‘t). We start

i

it has

Stay hair-free, carefree, far longer!

“Finish
paign of
Commuters
tinues this

camLine

Association
conmonth.
Members

have distributed a 16-page brochure and a 2-page flyer at local station stops.
On

June

8

and

9,

a

mem-

bership drive was conducted by
commuters stationed at Highmoor,
Briargate and Woodridge
on the North Shore Line.

stations

Highmoor
captain
is
George
Benedek. Others appearing in the
early morning hours at this station

were: Mr. and Mrs. Frank Klensch,
Mr. and Mrs. William Summerfield,
Mrs. Beth Coleman,
Mrs. George
Benedek,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Edward

Jasper and Mrs. William

Eckmann.

Briargate captain is John Hughes
who is co-chairman of the membership committee with Lawton Crosby

of Lake Bluff. Hughes’ team is comprised of Donald Cuttie of Deerfield, Lionel Gross, Sherman Corwin, Benton
Covert and Edward

Hoffman,

all of Highland

Park.

At Woodridge station, captain is
Tom Friedman who is treasurer of
the organization. Mrs. Friedman is
sharing the captain’s job with her

husband. Members of their team
are William Hutchinson, director
of the association, Curtis Brook,
Lowell Harter, Mr. and Mrs. Charles Rose, Mr. and Mrs, Warren
Westcott,
Sidney
Weinberg,
Ferdinand Mann, Richard Pick, Sheldon Burman and Bert Exelrod.
Roy

By

The Fight”
North Shore

R.

Roadcap

president

of

of Lake

the

group,

Forest,

said

that

300 members from Skokie to Zion
actively participated in the membership campaign.

Elizabeth Arden

‘4

(Continued

on page

35)

TRY GIVING
LEMON - “AID”

Wd

Wd

Using

a
::

a
:

with

Hid

af

.

Sast &amp; Coffee

Bacon,

Toast

&amp;

Coff aN Sse

Ham, Toast &amp; Cofe

a

A

hs

”e

F

Coffee

WA

Biting

with

Ham Fi

|

A

ee.

Ta

|

Coffee

D

S

Matin.

Ps

Leave it to your Elizabeth Arden Salon—the task

i . i

!
nF
—_

R

1] F.|

N

ID

?

0 040

of removing the hair nobody loves from your legs,
arms, even the tenderest areas of the face. This
famous Electra Wax Treatment works wonders so
safely, pleasantly and efficiently. In no time—
there you are—soft-skinned, silky-legged, smooth
as a statue. And the flattering results last a long,
long time. Do telephone the Elizabeth Arden
a

ZG; 4 thn

h

ee your eye physician
(M.D.) first. If he says

you can wear them—
H.O.V. has all the newest
types. Get the benefit
of bed a years of
genie. and
conemned Sa
Fe or the answer to your ques-

tions about contact lenses—

Puider

Salon

ae

Che

Htouse ofof Visio
Vision
Craftsmen

if
‘

OPEN

; Page

32

2-0042

write for our new booklet.

.

was

650 SKOKIE HWY. % mi. N. of Clavey Road
i

IDlewood

i

Ree

CALL

W.

ed

a

Orders

Ave.,

|

Water

65

7

4 a Phone

Park

50

e,
PL
a
"

1629

Mineral

[ CHSES vd
'

een.

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a

‘

WATER

Sparkling

DERS

olden Pp ancakes
2

FRESH

contact

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a

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PLACE

@¢

SUperior

7-6950

he

in Optics

1891 SHERIDAN ROAD
jas Nomen acabeaant CHICAGO

Thursday,

June

18, 1959

�“We

Guarantee You

HONEST

SAVINGS

on Honest Prices and Honest Trade-in Allowances!
No allowances you know are ridiculous!
low VOLUME

PURCHASE

our-customers policy.
Vern Cioni, Manager

price—and

...

No inflated list prices.

The price you pay is based on our

backed by our guaranteed service-to-

GO RIGHT . . . to Highwood Radio!”

Jimmy Garino, Service Mgr.

John Bosselli, Owner

Lp]

d

AUTOMATIC
WASHER

FOR ANY TYPE OF LOAD... aufomatically !
Model WCI-59

JUST SORT THE CLOTHES
AS YOU ALWAYS DO AND
“DIAL THE KIND OF FABRIC!”
Just Dial

WASH

&amp; WEAR

REGULAR

WHITES

SIMPLE AS SETTING
—
YOUR WATCH
aXeWMhee's hs9
Boe

me

ete
AER PSE

PRU

Pp

TR
So

ed

Just sort your clothes...

ey,

COLORS

for the kind of load you put in
and the amount of soil. Your
Frigidaire washer automatically gives you the right wash
and rinse water temperatures,
wash speed and spin speed for
perfect wash for any load!

See John

or Vern

Exclusive 3-Ring “Pump” Agitator

BATHES DEEP DIRT OUT
WITHOUT BEATING

REGULAR

No Blades! 3-ring agitator pumps
up and down guards against stretching, twisting!
No Harsh Rubbing! Waterpower pumps suds
through every piece, every fold, over every fiber!

No Lint to Empty Ever
! It’s pumped away automatically.
BACKED

BY GENERAL

MOTORS

for EXTRA

SPECIAL PRICE!
Plus
““SPECIALS”
... Like fringed bedspreads

Ul

ULTRA

has

Highwood

HIGH

TRADE

slipcovers, shag rugs, etc.!

Radio’s
ws

IN

ALLOW

e

|

ih

2s

BUILT AND

dial

Our 28th Year Serving the North Shore!

HIGHWOOD

RADIO

&amp;

APPLIANCE

2631 Waukegan Ave., Highland Park ferro sorrsrionce
ws re oven;
1%

Blocks North of Moraine

Thursday, June 18, 1959

Rd.
— East of Tracks

All Day Wednesday

AMPLEAT ALL
FREE TIMES

PARKING

CO.
ID 2-6260
:

Page 33

�from paint to patio
Craftwood quality products help you meet
the challenge of outdoor living. Come in today.
You'll be pleased with our prices,
quality and courteous service.

BARBECUE GRILLS &amp; ACCESSORIES
22”
24”
24”
22”
18”

Weber Grill
Yard Chef Smoker
Hi-Lo Yard Chef
Weber Kover Kooker
Portable Charcoal Grill

Camp

Out Picnic

Stoves

ACCESSORIES:
Lawn Servants
Chow Bells

REDWOOD PATIO FURNITURE

Utility Table Set
Charcbel 10-lb. bag .89

Genuine California redwood picnic sets.

20-lbs., 1.69

40 lbs., 3.29

Reg.

6 foot table and benches

34.95

6 foot folding table
45” square table
40” bench for square table
48” round table
Curved bench
36” x 23” coffee table
Upholstered Settee—Green/white
Upholstered Chaise—Green/white
Upholstered Chair—Green/white

1144”
stock

39.95
26.95

EARLY AMERICAN FENCES
We carry a complete stock of fence materials.
Installation

is available.

Estimates

free.
Materials per
running

PAINT FOR OUTDOOR USE

36” Full round rail, 3 rail

36” Split rail, 3 rail
Cape Cod picket, 3 ft. high
Colonial picket, 314 ft. high
Patio weave, 6’
All heart redwood
for board fences ............ 2214c bd. ft.

House paints in white and lively colors.
Long lasting, highest pure linseed oil content.
No quick cover, wash away fillers.
Exterior gloss white and pastels
Waterchek Masonry Paint
Rez in redwood and twenty colors
Penta Preservative Redwood Stain

GASLIGHTS [ag

Width in
Inches
Alum. Bronze Galv.
24”
;
50*
.22*
26”
;
55°
28”
:
.59*

By Arkla
The newest, warm-

DOG

HOUSES

26”x26”x36” Redwood
32”x32”x48” Redwood
38”x38"x48” Redwood

Plant tubs, 12”, six sided

TRELLISES

PLANT

Trellises, white

Plant boxes 24”

15”x6’ high

est, garden lighting.
Complete installa-

PLANT TUBS
23.95
30.95
37.95

ft.

4’ high stockade
5’ high stockade
6’ high stockade
7’ high stockade
8’ high stockade
44” Split Picket

30”

tion available.
Cabildo
Flair

4.95

Welsbach

BOXES

Installation up to 50’
from 29.00 to 45.00
Do it yourself kits 1.00

also:

arbors,

é

.63*

32"
,
.67*
34”
:
36”
;
75°
42"
;
.88*
48”
48*
1.00*
Discount 10% in full 100 foot rolls.
*Available in full rolls only.
We can make up screens in any dimension with any material.
Consider enclosing your porch with
Anderson Flexivent windows or Sun
Valley Window Walls.

benches,

gates,

borders

&amp;

stakes.

CRAFPTWOOD tomer company. INC.
1590
8 A.M. - 5:30

Deerfield

Road,

P.M.—Thursday

Highland

until 9—Sunday

Park,

Illinois

10-1

Just west of Route 41—Phone

IDlewood 2-0140

Thursday, June 18, 1959

�Parochial School

Theatre Under Stars
To Feature Actors
From The HP Area

Plans To Build
12 Classrooms
- According

to present plans, con-

struction
of
12
new
classrooms
will begin at Immaculate Conception School in August. It is anticipated they will be completed by

September,

1960,

although

bids

have not yet been let.
The rooms will be added to the
west side of the new school building and will follow the general ar-

chitectural

design

of the

building.

When construction is completed,
nine rooms in the old school building will be retired from use.
Since
there
are
15 classrooms
presently in use, all of which prob-

ably will be used for the 1959-1960
school

year

beginning

in

ber, the abandonment
the addition of
over-all increase

12
to

Septem-

of nine

and

will mean
an
18 classrooms.

‘Finish The Fight”
(Continued
The
muters

Three members of the cast of “A
Hatful of Rain,” to be presented at
Theatre Under
the Stars on the
campus of Lake Forest College, are
Highland Parkers.
Ralph Klemperer, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Alger D. Goldfarb, 177 Indian
Tree Dr., is cast as Mother; Harry
Perlman, 2153 Linden Ave., as John
Pope
Sr.,
and
Mrs.
Richard
Les

at the college

by

an

Arguments

July

Oral arguments before
commissions are scheduled

7, according

to Roadcap.

7

road

Parking

@
@

residents

ceived

who

degrees

at

(Continued

recently
John

on page

New

Old

President

at

ESTIMATE!

SILJESTROM

FUEL CO.

ID 2-0065
1930

First

St.

Highland

Park

probably will appeal.

off-

for custom

opening
College
series.

date of
summer

design and
on

the Lake Forest
session
theater

and

From

The

PERSONAL

Following
OR

Courses:

SCHOOL

USE

(6 weeks)

Speedwriting SHORTHAND

slipcovers

bedspreads—

FOR

TYPING

exquisite

draperies,

Ownership

i

hoes

Geass? ~... CHOICE TOP SOIL

TYPING

Carroll

Refinished

Stone

re-

39)

Drives

Expert Black Topping
Concrete
@ Crushed

Choose

workmanship

Under

—

Call for FREE

Robert J. Pasquesi, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Dominic J. Pasquesi, 580
Skokie
Ave.,
is among
Highland

Park

Areas

the full
for July

Roadeap said that if the railroad
wins, the commuters will appeal,
and if the commuters win, the rail-

campus drama group. The new
arrangement utilizes the Theatre
Un| der the Stars prior to the regul
ar

Robert Pasquesi Receives
Science Degree At Carroll

association is asking comto contribute the price of a

Oral

DRIVEWAY CONSTRUCTION

32)

to help in the legal battle against
the Susquehanna corporation,
which
conrtols the line and proposes abandonment
of services.
Briefs were filed in May by both
sides
after months
of testimony
before the Illinois Commerce Commission
and the Interstate
Commerce Commission examiners.

Selden Clark, son of the Rober
t
O. Clarks of Deerfield, will appea
r
as Johnny Pope and Eric Laurence,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Nicho
ls,
will portray Apples,
The play is scheduled for production next Thursday, Friday and
Saturday, with the curtain at 8:30 p.m.
It is the first annual summer play
to

given

page

weekly ticket, or a smaller amount,

Thorne, 2100 Linden Ave., as Celia
Pope.

be

from

GREGG

FOR

BUSINESS

SHORTHAND

(days

only)

STENOGRAPHIC

[HOUSE PAINT

SECRETARIAL

for the newest of spring fabrics—
for carpeting

Ends
White-

we

and unusual papers—

invite you

wallpaper

Staining

to visit

unlimited

BUSINESS

ENGLISH

ACCOUNTING
COMPTOMETRY

Day and Evening Classes
Wm. H. Callow, Prin.
BEGIN ANY MONDAY EXCEPT SPEEDWRITING CLASS
WHICH BEGIN JUNE 22; JULY 6, 20; AUGUST 3, 17

EVANSTON BUSINESS COLLEGE
1718

Sherman

Ave.

W. H. Callow, Prin.

UN 4-3004

interiors

Problem

727 deerfield

rd.

There's Nothing Cooler Than Ice

deer field, ill.

wi 5-1354

mors MUDAS
YY

@

For

white

wood

brick and
@ Resists
vents

areas

masonry

on

houses

‘‘chalking’’— prewhite

run-down

on

dark colored surfaces.
e@ Brilliant white—

may be tinted.

9741

“‘Your Complete Paint Store”
Picture Frames, Custom Framing,
Window Shades, Artist Supplies

DEERFIELD
PAINT

&amp; GLASS

Formerly R. A. Kole Paint Co.
810

Waukegan Rd., Deerfield
WI 5-2286

Buy the
worth

paint that’s
the work

PAINTS
Thursday, June 18, 1959

MUFFLERS

FREE INSTALLATION
15 Minute Service

Ss

. . . and

St

ice we've plenty of at

HUBBARD WOODS
ICE SKATING STUDIO

2)

Daytime &amp; Evening Classes
Adults &amp; Children

«| Work Done by Skilled
Muffler Specialists, |”

SAVE MONEY—BE
SURE!
. Look'for the MIDAS Sign —Amer/Pica’'s: Only: coast-to-coast network
-of'exclusive ‘auto muffler shops.

.

TEN
GUARANTEE
FOR THE LIFETIME
. OF YOUR CAR
GOOD AT MIDAS MUFFLER
SHOPS FROM

ERA:

\

“’ MUFFLER

eo SHOP...

Gi

Have fun, get

your exercise, learn to Ice Skate in cool, cool comfort. Register
now, classes now forming.

NO APPOINTMENT.
(NECESSARY ®:

ss

Why swelter on the course or on the courts.

While You Wait
pg

SSRs

MIDAS MUFFLER SHOP
1535 Belvidere, Waukegan
MAjestic 3-8395
Open Daily 8:30-6 p.m.
Friday—8 :30 - 9 p.m.

Basic,

intermediate,

by America’s
Equipment

and apparel

Free
for
advanced

Daily

students

Practice
in

classes

instruction

finest instructors
available

in our Sport Shop

Be different. Be kind to your guests and the Kiddies.
Throw an Ice Skating Party when the temperature soars.
Ice time rented for group parties—Church, club, camp or
just to cool off.

915

LINDEN

AVE.

WINNETKA,

ILL.

Hillcrest 6-4116
Page , 35

�TEP ity lg4 Fe
Pana

:!
4
SSI wx
it Licey
Wu
CRA POIRNGR
of
Re ay pag Gn
ke
Parr
aah UH Lt ig ERED

fl

1

Hes

aD

.

toy

ba atse e Aaa id mo
ARR
are
i,

i

helby

ot

YP

i

aXe

Rant
BESET
ik aS
ba
alata:

ey

7

| Siidente. Honored
(Continued
bly

were

the

students

the

schools

meet

the jewish burial ground of unsurpassed beauty
For Personal Memorial Counseling Without Obligation,
Contact
Harry Hershman, ID 2-6225
Rand

Road

(U. S. 12)

BRIARGATE

at Wilke

Road

Palatine,

4-2236

extended
and

to
to

from

32)

parents

of

principals

of

which

they

were

faculty

Junior,

members.

Freshman

Honored

Oberlin College recognized 220
students for academic achievement
during the recent Honors Day Assembly in Finney Chapel.
Two from this city—Donald M.

Illinois

CLEARBROOK.

page

graduated. Following the program
in Capen Auditorium, an informal
reception was held to give parents
and principals
an opportunity to

Avis
i
oe:

from

5-3526

Larner

(a junior),

son

of Mr.

and

Mrs. Victor Larner, 1444 Sunnyside
Ave.,
and
S.
Ronald
Waldman

(freshman),

Lo

son

of

Mr.

and

Mrs.

Benjamin P. Waldman, 1180 Wade
St., were among those recognized.
On
the
Ohio
State
University
honor roll for the winter quarter

2

Memorial Chapels

were Miss Ann Roe Richards, Deerfield, and Miss Hazel M. Keller, 443
Burton Ave.

* Most Complete Funeral Home
in Metropolitan Area

¢ Perfect accommodations for

* Convenient to North Shore
and Downtown Chicago

¢ Parking adjacent to building

small or large attendance

3

NUMBER—VErnon

or LOngbeach

told

them

the

Place

School.

From left, Skidmore, Natalie Kahn, Thomas

Dietzgen, Allen Engle-

hardt, and spectators.

. . . And Solar Furnace

gates

were
down
and
the
train
went
through. When the gates lifted, he
went through, but the gates came
down on his truck. Police said the
gates were repaired June 9 and, as
recently as June 3, had not been

5-2221

1-4740

5206 North Broadway, Chicago

driver

Elm

Above, Dennis Skidmore displays dry ice to a group of observers.

Gates at the Clavey Rd. Chicago
and North Western Railway crossing came down June 10 on a truck
driven by Arthur Sietman of Palatine, Highland Park police report.

The

PHONE

District 107 at an Evening of Science Program
The exhibit demonstrated certain regular
science activities of the school and certain interests of the students.

at

Chicago &amp; North Western
Gates Come Down On Truck

* Funeral consultation and arrangements may be made in your
own home with our North Shore representative.

SUBURBAN

Parents and the public recently were guests of students and
teachers of School

(Just north of Foster)

working

properly.

There

was

$65

damage to the gates and flashing
lights, it was estimated, none to the
truck.
No
charges
were
placed
against the driver.

—

Guests Invited To Meeting,
Dance Of Cuore Arte Club

SERVICE

Jules

L.

Furth,

and

Shore

staff,

will

personally arrange and conduct the
entire funeral—a service of warmth

and

beauty,

observing

ritual with reverence.

South

their

Chapel:

2100

East

75th

Street,

customs

Legion

Home,

1957

Sheridan

Louie Crovetti and his orchestra
will
play
for
dancing
after
the
meeting is over. Mrs. Elda Sernesi
and
Mrs.
Dessi
Mattei,
both
of
Highwood,
are
in charge
of re-

Complete facilities in your community
for prompt service . . . Lee J. Furth,

3-5400

:

can
Rd.

1865

and

PUBLIC
at Clyde

Northshore Garden of Memories

Avenue

THIS

|

ia

ORIGINAL

instein
él Sons A

ee

:

LOngbeach 1-1890

- RONALD

WEINSTEIN,

Funeral

E. SCHWARZBACH,

Direc!.y

Funeral Director

Adjacent
sini

Poy

cars...

e
ee
ee
ea

of your own home.

West Peterson Road

Have

GARDEN

Reasonable

Not Visited

CEMETERY

Prices

Phone DE 6-6500

eSeS

eS

ee

ae

place for yourself — and for them — a task
that will be burdensome if left until the

MEMORIAL PARK CEMETERY
COMMUNITY MAUSOLEUM—EARTHEN INTERMENT
COLUMBARIUM—CREMATORIUM
PERPETUAL

CHARTER

—

GENERAL

CARE

FUND

We Operate Our Own Greenhouses
Ridge Road and Harrison St., Evanston
Chicago: KEystone 9-4747; 9-4424

Evanston: UNiversity 45061; 45062

a

a

a

a

i ll

NOTICE

Notice of Proposed Change in Schedule
of Water Rates.
To Patrons of Countryside Water Company of Illinois:
The
Countryside
Water
Company
of
Illinois herewith gives notice to the public
that it has filed with the Illinois Commerce
Commission a proposed change in its rates
for water service in the service area of
the
Company,
Glen-Brook
Countryside
Homes
Subdivision
and
contiguous
territories in Northfield Township, Cook County,
and Deerfield Township, Lake County, Illinois, and that said change involves a general rate increase for water service.
A copy of the proposed change in schedule may
be inspected
by any _ interested
garties at the business office of the Company at 10 South La Sale Street, Chicago 3,
Illinois.
All parties interested in this matter may
obtain
information
with
respect
thereto
xither directly from this Company
or by
addressing the Secretary of the Illinois Commerce Commission, Springfield, Illinois.
COUNTRYSIDE
WATER
COMPANY
OF ILLINOIS
by /s/ Edward Benjamin, Secretary.
6/11-18/59—169

LEGAL

emergency is at hand.

i ner

Page 36

eS

Just as you provide insurance or make a
will, so should you choose a fitting resting

be made in the privacy

8019

If You

Green Bay Rd. &amp; 18th St.

and arrangements may

HERSHEY WEINSTEIN, President

BEAUTIFUL
Very

3

-_-,,.. complete funeral consultation

E. LAURIE

Pictured with them is Bert S. Leech,

science instructor and chairman of the Evening of Science program.

freshments.

A Surprise Awaits You

,A |

Here Willard Hemsworth and Stanley Korshak show the solar
furnace they have constructed.

NOTICE

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN that examinations will be held at 8:00 P.M. C.D.S.T.
on Monday, June 29, 1959, in the Municipal
Building,
1225
Cedar
Lane,
Northbrook,
Illinois, by the Board of Fire and Police
Commissioners
for applicants for position
in the Northbrook Police Department.
This examination
is open
and free to
all electors of the Village of Northbrook,
Illinois,
meeting
requirements
for
age,
health, habits and moral character.
This
examination is also open to non-residents
of the Village of Northbrook, Illinois, subject to approval of the Board of Fire and
Police Commissioners.
Applications
for
examination
must
be
filed with the Board of Fire and Police
Commissioners before 5:00 P.M. C.D.S.T.,
June 26, 1959.
By order of the Board of Fire and Police
Commissioners
of the Village
of North-brook, Illinois.
JOHN
W. HIRSCHMANN,
Chairman
Board of Fire and Police Commissioners
6/18/59—171

Thursday, June 18, 1959

.

Since

SHORE

Call Midway

Bt

Members may bring guests to the
regular meting of Cuore Arte Club
at 7:30 p.m. Saturday in the Ameri-

Directors to the

Jewish Community

NORTH

COMPANY

Te

Funeral

AND

TE

[-..tf,

�Vang... frle\\iicininatig
CH E | T

N's

soy Gaealets
BONELESS

RAVINIA

GRILL

ROQUEFORT

Frain Our Belictces
:

TURBOT

RG

¢

ANU

Dover

OPEN

:

@

BEEF
in

ORDERS

Own

eS

TO

MENU

Kitchen

TAKE

......
in Wine

$3.50
DINNER

EVERY

@®

DAY

AT

Shrimps DeJonghe
5

P.M.

—

SUNDAY

AT

3

P.M.

@o

Highland Park

Cool!

e

REAL

481 Roger Williams 1D 2-3306

.

pa

Sd

COMFORT

AND

e
er

Hut chin .

R alph

AT

si

OUT

au vin

Sea, Sauteed

A SUPERB

HAMBURGER

Our

FOR

Tastes

FAMOUS FOR STEAKS &amp; PRIME RIBS
e Ask About Our Credit Card Membership

We Use Prime &amp; Choice Meats Only!
PURE

the North

BEEF

Sole Amandine

CIF AKe

Chowk

of CHICKEN

CHOPPED

from

FR

To Our Luscious, Sizzling

100%

BREAST

Dinners Jey Gourmet

sa

Air

ecndh

Hearth

vas
Conditioned

‘ee

Fare’s

UNIQUE

Rati

Enjoy

‘

at

our

BAR

excellent drinks

table

height

1918 Waukegan Rd., Glenview | &lt;zcitsi.o,cssnes

ee

(One mile south of Willow Rd.) ¢ GL 4-3830

—

|_comfort.

4)

SPAGHETTI

et

?

Recommended

by Duncan

Member

Diners’

:

of the

Member

BROILED

or

FRIED

CHICKEN

_*

COMPLETE

LUNCHES

CARRY-OUT

$1

Express

CHARCOAL BROILED STEAKS — RIBS — CHICKEN
Complete

BROILED STEAKS
@

of American

Hines

Club

Variety

of

Italian

Foods

-

Pizza

-

Sea

Foods

etic
Ot he er rlas

SERVICE

Private Dining

@

Room

for Parties

OODINNERS
from

- CHUBEE’S
Real

561

ROGER

KITCHEN

Americana—with

Good

y |.

aoe

Food”

WILLIAMS AVE.
RAVINIA — Our Own Parking Lot

¥

ID 3-1433

440 Green

|
re

ch

|

ee
P

Sm

ae

Pi

tL

Le

Ph.

a a MS
Bi
e
Finest Restaurant &amp; Lounge”
“North Shore’s
2.
io

ID

Bay

2-0440

ae eas ayn

For ICTHYOPHAGISTS
Live lobster ... direct from Maine
Just a few miles north . . . on the
Shores of Lake Michigan
MA

;

iu
=

OF

Here’s pizza as you
like it . . . season-

Sa
Y

ed perfectly, served
piping hot!
Enjoy
it here... or take
some home to treat

HON'S

SEA FOOD RESTAURANT

mer Reneitys
¢

Fresh
Shad
pA

Fish

from

Our

Own

Ti
Si
-”

HOME

MADE

ITALIAN

FOODS

%

00

e

SUN.

MON.—Fried

Boats

Southern

re
&amp;

CHARCOAL

Roe

Soft Shelled Crabs
Chicken and
Prime Steak
via
Leunee

BROILED

STEAK

ORDERS

TO

TAKE

—Sumptuous

:

OUT

*

(A

:

5

X

Mi).
el

yi

We

.... only

$5.50

.

CALL

ave
or

MAT HON'S
'

as

-

Chicken

-........... 2.95

tees

ae

ag
t Round rk
Beef from Wagon .....2.95
SAT.—Roast
Children

NN

Spring
Style

Alaeeceee

Prime

SPECIAL DINNER
2'2-Lb. LOBSTER

Buffet

All you Can Eat .......3.00

Top

Beef,

ou

Always

nder
ue

Round
jus

;

of

....2.95

Welcome

ears —

he

WASHINGTON GARDENS
550

Green

(SCORNAVACCO’S)
Bay Road
Highwood,

Ill.

Plenty of Parking in Our New Parking

Lot!

�‘
s

¢

Highland Parkers Gartinalestoned
In Army Reserve At Indiana
Jon

F.

J. Ruby,

rome
than

Ruby,
684

P.

son

Park

Pollock,

L. Pollocks,

received

Army

of

Mrs.

Ave.

W,

son

of

158

Sheridan

Rd.,

Reserve

commis-

ceremonies

University.

Maternal
grandparents
are the
James Merrikens, Baltimore, Md.

the

sposnored

Show,

Rose

annual

chairman,

assistant

show

year’s

this

that

anticipate

will be even larger than last year’s,
1| which broke all previous records.
All

amateur

growers

are

rose

fanciers

and

enter

and

to

invited
show

the

at Highland

Park

Viewing

time

Center.

exhibited

blooms

an
promote
roses,” Borin

Entrance

may

be

ing

business

rules

finally,

and,

interest
told the

Entries

VE 5-2400

Open Monday through Saturday, 9 to 5
Mon. &amp; Wed. Evenings by Appointment

and

obtained

at

houses:

regulations

the

Pure

- just

follow-

Borchardt

Oil Station.

Members of the club will be on
hand as early as 8 a.m. to assist
those who bring exhibits. Entries
are to be in place at 10:30 a.m.,
and judging will begin at 11 a.m.
Trophies,

Certificates

Show is conducted under the
American
Rose
Society
rules.
Trophies will be awarded for Best
Hybrid Tea Rose, Best Floribunda
or Polyantha Rose; Best Climber,
Best Grandiflora and Best
Show,
American Rose Society

will

be

awarded

Rose

in

Certifi-

for

second

Best
Rose
in show,
Gold;
third
Best Rose, Silver; and fourth Best
Rose, Bronze.

The Sweepstakes Trophy, a semipermanent trophy to remain in
winners
possession for one year,
or kept permanently
if won
for
three years, not necessarily in suc-

world

a GAS

of

Entries must be submitted by amateurs,
and entered under the exhibitors own name.
All roses must be grown in exhibitor’s own
garden.
As many exhibits as desired may
be entered in the show, which is open to
all amateurs, regardless of residence.

to

in growing
NEWS,

Invited

"Don't promise
the

Club

Fuel Co., Evans Garden &amp; Pet
Shop, Treeland, Elmer Clavey, Inc.,
O’Neill’s
Ace
Hardware,
Jewel
Supermart and Gordon Leonard’s

cates

me

Garden

and

chairman,

Borin,

F.

Sandel,

J.

C.

for public has been set as 1 te
5 p.m.
There are no entry or admission
fees. “The show is given to provide an opportunity to show (your
of
mass
the
admire
and
roses

PER SQ. YD.

by the Men’s

Highland Park.

attend

Carpets

Edens near Tower

Service

A new classification, rose a rrangements, has been added to
many for which awards w ill be made at Saturday’s 12th

Recreation

&gt;

SHOW

ROSE

ANNUAL

OF TWELFTH

Harlen

Calif.

ae

ID 2-9815
Cities

167 S. Deere Park Dr., announce
the birth of their first grandchild,
Peter,
born
on
June
11
to the
James
Goldsmiths,
Mill
Valley,

$69

Williams

ROSE ARRANGEMEN TS NEW FEATURE

Mr. and Mrs. Marc S. Goldsmith,

ALL WOOL
CARPETING

CAR WASHES
ROGER WILLIAMS
SERVICE STATION
Roger

Je-

Na-

Marty Shapiro

535

and

the

sions at commencement
at Indiana

Frank

Birth Of Grandson Announced
By The Marc S. Goldsmiths

LIGHT!"

cession,

will

member

of

the

most

be
the

awarded
local

to

club

points

in

the

(Continued

on

page

the

scoring

show.

In

39)

THE
" :
PERFECT GIFT

MARK

ll

y

PaPER¢MATE
Guaranteed

4, not to skip

1 over
handprints,

1 fingerprints,

Of course, she wants a gas light Her romantic mind picturés_a little rose-covered

cottage,
glow

sas

basking

of gas

ifi“tHe soft, sentimental

Priced From $49.95 (Installed)

grease spots
...even
writes over
a smear
of butter!

light

lights ere

mance that: 1
other form off’
‘

mnin.
;

SUT,

tien!/The
NA

j

soft

aince—resembli
bright moonlight
Joors—has a beauty of its own

radi-

out of

3aas light has b
fpart and parcel of
yracious modern fiving. See the many difsrent types of gas lights now available

§

Compan:
“The Friendly People’’
On the North Shore Since 1895

645 CENTRAL AVE. « ID 3-0230
Thursday,

June

18, 1959

�Ae

NOTICE

eS

ELECTION
NOTICE
NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
THAT
ON Tuesday, June 23, A.D. 1959, a Special Election will be ‘held in the County
of Lake, State of Illinois, at the following
Precinct Polling Places:
PRECINCT
Benton 1
Beach School, Beach Road, Benton Twp.

Benton 2

:

Main
Street,
American
Legion
Home,
Winthrop Harbor.
Benton 3
’ Howe School, Green Bay Road and 33rd
Street, Benton
Twp.
Benton 4
Winthrop Harbor Fire Station, Sheridan
Rd., Winthrop Harbor.
Benton 5
Hi-Way
Lunch,
21st
&amp;
Sheridan
Rd.,
Zion.
Zion 1
Lake
View
School, 22nd and Bethesda
Avenue, Zion.
Zion 2
City Hall, 2828 Sheridan Road, Zion.
Zion 3
Elmwood School, 31st and Ezra Avenue,
Zion.
Zion 4
Rook’s Drive in, N. E. cor. 31st &amp; Sheridan Road, Zion.
Zion 5
East School, Elim &amp; Caledonia Avenue,
Zion
Zion 6
Zion-Benton Township High School Gym,
2206 Eschol Ave., Zion.
Newport 1
Newport Fire Station, Wadsworth.
Newport 2
Browe School, Mill Creek Road.
Antioch 1
Fire Station, Orchard &amp; Broadway.
Antioch 2
Village Hall, Main
Street, Antioch.
Antioch 3
Lotus Country School, Antioch.
Antioch 4
Grass Lake
School,
Grass Lake Road,
Antioch Twp.
Antioch 5
Channel Lake Grade School, Lake Ave.
&amp; Woodcrest,
Channel
Lake.
Antioch 6
Emmons
School Rte. No. 59 &amp; Beach
Grove Rd.
Lake Villa 1
Village Hall,
Lake
Villa.
Lake Villa 2
Gavin School, North Hwy. 59 &amp; Grand
Ave.
Lake Villa 3
Lake Villa Grade School Dist. No. 41,
N. W. cor. Grand Avenue &amp; Hwy. 21,
Lake Villa,
Lake Villa 4
Venetian Village Civic Ass’n Bldg.
Lake Villa 5
Lindenhurst Village Hall, Grand Ave.
Grant 1
Fox Lake Fire Station.
Grant 2
Fox Lake Grade School Dist. No. 114,
Forest Ave., Fox Lake.
Grant 3
Town Hall, Ingleside.
Grant 4
St. Bedes Church, Grand Avenue &amp; Wilson Road, Ingleside.
Grant 5
Cc. M. St. Paul Depot, Long Lake.
Grant 6
Big Hollow Grade School District No. 38,
S. E. Cor. Hwy. 12 &amp; Big Hollow Road.
Avon
1
Grayslake
Grammar
School,
Grayslake.
Avon 2
Round Lake Village Hall, Round Lake.
Avon 3
Grayslake
Village
Hall,
Grayslake.
Avon 4
Village Hall, Lake Shore Drive, Round
Lake Park.
Avon 5
L. B. Harris Real Estate Office, Round
Lake
Beach.
Avon
6
Round Lake Beach Village Hall, Round
Lake Beach.
Avon 7
Todiaa Hill oe
Club House, Rollins
Road, Avon Twp.
Avo: n 8
Men's Club, Round
Lake Park.
Warren
1
Warren Township High School, Gurnee.
Warren 2
Woodland
School, Gages Lake Road.
Warren 3
40 &amp; 8 Chateau, Edic &amp; Grange Hall Rd.
Warren 4
‘
Gurnee Fire Station, North Side Grand
Avenue, Gurnee.
Warren 5
:
Wildwood Community House, Wildwood
Sub.
Warren 6
Gurnee Furniture Warehouse, South Side
Grand Avenue
4% mile West of Green
Bay Rd.
Waukegan ;
Greenwood School, North Avenue, Waukegan.
Waukegan 2
O
K_
Barber
Shop,
1115
Greenwood
Ave.
Waukegan 3
Holy Child High School-Library, Sheridan ae
Waukegan
John S. *Pillitant Garage, 816 N County
St.
Waukegan 5
Hallway
New
Building,
North
School,
Franklin St.
Waukegan
6
728 North
Avenue.
Klein’s Garage,
Waukegan 7
Mordhorst Transfer &amp; Storage Company,
1203 Glen Flora,
Waukegan 8
Y.M.C.A., 202 North County Street.
Waukegan 9
Austin Garage, 626 Grand Ave.
Waukegan
Low
Water
Works
Bldg.,
City Yards,
Avenue,
Waukegan 11
Hyde Park School, 1525 Hyde Park Avenue.
Waukegan 12
Legion Home,
Washington
&amp; West St.
Waukegan 13
Jefferson School, S. Lewis Avenue.
Waukegan 14
$
Shop,
1123
WashingMerle’s_
Barber
ton Street.

Thursday,

June

‘| Annual Rose Show

LEGAL NOTICE
Waukegan 15
Krumervy’s’
Barber
Shop,
ington Street.
Waukegan 16
—
Service
Center,
150

1815
S.

WashSheridan

Waukegan 17
Wagner’s
Garage,
132 °° S. 7) Park
Ave.
Waukegan 18
Waukegan
High
School,
Senior
Bldg.,
Jackson &amp; Glen Rock.
Waukegan 19
Davisons Garage, 126 S. Elmwood Avenue.
Waukegan
20
South Side Fire Station, 322 South Ave.
nue.
Waukegan
21
Lincoln School, 532 Helmholz Avenue.
Waukegan 22
Braun Bros. Oil Co., 1210 Belvidere St.
Waukegan 23
Slovenic Hall, 424 10th St., N. E Cor.
McAlister
Avenue.
Waukegan
24
10th
Mother of God Church Hall, 516
Street.
Waukegan 25
Lithuanian
Hall,
901
Lincoln
Street.
Waukegan 26
North School, 12th St., North Chicago.
Waukegan
27
Simmon’s
Hall,
1236
Prescott
Street,
North Chicago.
Waukegan
28
American
Legion
Home,
17th
&amp;
Park
Avenue,
North
Chicago.
Waukegan
29
Korus Hall, 911 13th Street, North Chicago.
Wewkwaasl
30
Bretzlauf’s
Garage,
1803
16th
Street,
North Chicago.
Waukegan
31
Whittier
School,
901
Lewis
Avenue,
Waukegan.
Waukegan 32
Exotic - Arrow - Motors - Volkswagen,
742 Greenwood Ave.
Waukegan 33
Armenian Club, 227 South Avenue, Waukegan.
Waukegan 34
Bud_
Siver’s
Dari-Delite,
2920
Grand
Ave.,
Waukegan.
Waukegan
35
York House Church, Green
Bay Road,
Waukegan.
Waukegan
36
Lake
Shore
Awning
Company,
2106
Grand
Avenue,
Waukegan.
Waukegan
37
West
Side
Fire
Station,
Lewis
Avenue &amp; Monroe, Waukegan.
Waukegan 38
Junior
Achievement
Bldg.,
2409
Washington Street, Waukegan.
Waukegan
39
Lyon
Grade _ School,
Elmwood
Avenue
Entrance,
Waukegan.
Waukegan 40
Pro Shop, Bonnie Brook Golf Club.
Waukegan
41
Bonnie Brook Fire Station, Lewis Avenue, North of Holdridge.
Waukegan
42
Little Fort School, Blanchard Road, East
of Lewis Ave.
Waukegan 43
1600 Glen Flora
Illinois State Armory,
Avenue.
Waukegan 44
Glen Flora School, East Side, Chestnut
Street.
Waukegan 45
15th
&amp;
Lewis
Avenue.
Novak
School,
Shields 1
662 N.
Bank
Lane,
Fire Dept.
Bldg.,
Lake
Forest
Shields 2
Avenue,
Lake
Village
Hall, 40 Center
aera’
Shields
1815
Sheridan
Road,
North
City fall,
Chicago.
Shields 4
400 E. Illinois Road,
Gorton
School,
Lake
Forest.
Shields 5
Green
Bay
West
Park
Field
House,
Road, Lake Forest.
Shields 6
Winter Club, 956 Sheridan Road, Lake
Forest.
Shields 7
1285
N.
High
School,
Lake
Forest
Lake
Forest.
McKinley
Ave.,
Shields 8
Atkinson’s Garage, 22nd &amp; Hervey Ayenue, North Chicago.
Shields 9
Lake Forest College Field House, South
Campus.
Lake
Forest.
Shields
10
Pumping
Station,
Center
Street,
Lake
Bluff.
Shields
11
George Walkanoff Service Station, 22nd
&amp; Wright, North Chicago.
Libertyville 1
Masonic Temple, Brainard Avenue.
Libertyville 2
Victor
Lawn
&amp;
Marine,
1232
North
Milwaukee
Ave.
Libertyville 3
Central School, School Street.
Libertyville 4
Veteran
Foreign
War
Bldg,
Sia
Hy
Park Avenue.
Libertyville 5
Highland
School,
W.
Rockland
Road,
Libertyville.
Libertyville 6
Collins
Lumber
&amp;
Fuel Co., 328 No.
Morris Ave., Mundelein.
Libertyville 7
Jack
Ahrens
Decorating,
728
South
Lake St.
Libertyville 8
CNS &amp; M Depot, Prospect &amp; McKinley,
Mundelein.
Libertyville 9
Copeland Manor School, So. 7th Avenue.
Libertyville 10
Mrs. Archie Foss Residence, 164 W. Austin Ave.
Libertyville 11
Mrs.
Philo Burgess Garage,
304 South
Seymour Avenue.
Libertyville 12
Town Hall (American Legion),, 715 No.
Milwaukee Avenue.
Fremont 1
Congregational
Church
Hall,
Tvanhoe
Ivanhoe.

Fremont 2
Lincoln School, 200 West Maple.
Fremont 3
Fremont
Township
Public
Library,
470
No. Lake St.
Fremont
4
Santa Maria Del Popolo Church, 116 No.
Lake St.
Fremont 5
Washington School, 122 So. Garfield.
Fremont 6
Diamond
Lake
Methodist
Church,
Library, Rte. No. 59A and Lake Ave,
Wauconda
1
‘
Wauconda High School, McHenry Road.
Wauconda 2
Volo
School,
Hwy.
120,
Volo,
Wauconda Twp.
Wauconda 3
Island Lake
Garage,
Hwy.
176 Across
from
the
‘Dome,’
Wauconda
Twp.
Wauconda 4
Vern’s Standard Service Station, Williams
Park Rd. &amp; Rt. No. 176, Wauconda.
Wauconda
5
Village Hall, Main
Street.
Cuba 1
Biltmore Country Club, Barrington.
Cuba
2
Cuba Township Office, 126 West North
West Hwy.
Cuba
3
Office
Tower
Lake
Imp.
Ass’n.,
Hwy.
59, Barrington.
Cuba
4
Victor Sylvester Residence, County Line
Road, RFD Cary, Cuba Twp.
Cuba
5
Buick
Garage,
206
N.
Cook
Street,
Barrington.
Cuba 6
Barrington
Wood
Craft,
Hobein
Bldg.,
Hwy. 14 &amp; Hart Road.
Ela 1
‘Town
Hall, Lake
Zurich.
Lake
Zurich
Lions Club
House,
Hwy.
22 &amp; Lions Drive,
Lake Zurich.
Ela 3
Forest
Lake
Food
Shop,
McHenry
&amp;
Lake Side Drive, Forest Lake.
Ela 4
Lake
Zurich
Evangelical
Free
Church,
44 Golf View Rd.
Ela 5
Quinten
School,
Quinten
Rd.,
Near
Hwy. 12.
Vernon 1
Vernon
Fire
Station,
Hwy.
45,
Half
Day.
Vernon 2
Aptakisic
School,
Aptakisic
&amp;
Buffalo
Grove
Road,
Prairie View.
Vernon 3
Ladd’s_
Lincolnshire
Builder’s
Office,
Rte;
225: South
“of Hine
Ra:
West Deerfield 1
Wilmot School, Deerfield &amp; Wilmot Rds.,
Deerfield.
West Deerfield 2
Masonic
Hall,
711
Waukegan’
Road,
Deerfield.
West Deerfield 3
Town Hall, 602 Deerfield Rd., Deerfield.
West Deerfield 4
at
Hall, 830 Waukegan Road, Deerie
West Deerfield 5
Maplewood
School, Clay St., Deerfield.
West
Deerfield
6
Woodland Park School, 1330 Crab Tree
Lane,
Deerfield.
West Deerfield
1
Bannockburn School, Telegraph Rd., Bannockburn.
West Deerfield 8
Norm’s
Gutter Shop, 2356 Skokie Valley (US 41) Highland
Park.
West Deerfield 9
Lake
Forest Fire Station, Everett Rd.,
Lake
Forest.
Deerfield 1
South
Park Field House,
Lake
Forest.
Deerfield 2
Old City Hall, 489 Waukegan Ave., Highwood.
Deerfield 3
Highwood Community Center, 428 Green
Bay Road,
Highwood.
Deerfield 4
Oak Terrace School, 240 Prairie Avenue,
Highwood.
Deerfield 5
St. John’s
Church,
Green
Bay
Rd.
&amp;
Homewood,
Highland
Park.
Deerfield 6
Highland Park High School Auditorium,
St. Johns Ave., Highland Park.
Deerfield 7
Highland Park Recreation Center, Green
Bay Road, Highland Park.
Deerfield 8
American
Legion:
Post,
1957
Sheridan
Rd., Highland
Park.
Deerfield 9
Bethany
Church,
Laurel
&amp;
McGovern
Ave., Entrance.
Deerfield 10
Town
Hall, 482 Central Avenue, Highland Park,
Deerfield 11
Lincoln
School,
711
Lincoln
Avenue,
Highland Park.
Deerfield 12
Villa St. Cyril Garage, Beach St., Highland Park.
Deerfield 13
Field House,
Lincoln
&amp; Glencoe
Avenue,
Highland
Park.
Deerfield 14
Ravinia School, 763 Dean Avenue, Highland Park.
Deerfield 15
H. Scott Howard
residence, 277 Green
Bay Rd., Highland Park.
Deerfield
16
Ravinia School Field House, Roger Williams Ave.
Deerfield 17
Braeside School,
150 Pierce Ave.
Deerfield 18
C.N.S.M. R.R., Woodridge Station, Clavey
Road, Highland Park.
Deerfield 19
City Garage, McCraren Rd.
Deerfield 20
Ravinia Fire Station.
The polls will be open from 6 o’clock
a.m. to 6 o’clock p.m. on said day. Dated
at Waukegan, County of Lake and State
this
8th
day
of June
A.D.
of Illinois,
59.
GARFIELD
R. LEAF,
County Clerk
6/18/59—172

(Continued

from

page

‘| Tell Arcival Of
Mr.

38)

all cases, the decision of the judges

will be final.
Committees
In addition
chairman

and

to Borin

and

Sandel,

assistant chairman

of

the show, these persons head committees: Lynn Leigh, chief secretary; E. P. Engelbrecht, judges; E.
G. Schaubert, club president, trophies and prizes; A. M. Fischer,
publicity;
and
Sandel,
reception
and placement of exhibits. Section
heads
are R. E, Strauss,
hybrid
teas;
Fischer,
floribundas;
and
George Gessert, climbers and grandifloras.

Robert

from

page

Son 26
€

Mr. and Mrs, Steve Rosman, .
Pleasant Ave., announce the | 3
of their second child, a son, Gre
ory Steven. He was born May ve
at Highland Park Hospital.
ter is Joyce Marie, 3.
Mrs. Catherine
Pleasant Ave., is

mother.
man of

His

Stephenson,
maternal

Mr. and Mrs. George
Sykesville, Pa., are pate

Interested in
Stocks?
Investors

35)

Stock

Fund, |

mutual

fund

with

diversified

pro- |

124
Call

©

P.

BLONER

West
Northwest
Hwy.
Barrington, MDlinois
Collect DUnkirk 1-3210

Representing

hie

pe
{| —
£4
‘

ae

hevestors

CALL

Diversified Services, Inc.
FOUNDED 1894

WI 5-1383
825

|

stocks. The securities | |
for this fund are chosen | |
with objectives of longterm capital appreciation possibilities and
reasonable income. For
a free prospectus-booklet, cal] or write:
x
ZONE MANAGER

HENRY

|

securities, | |

emphasizing common |

RAYMOND

INSURANCE

|

fessional supervision of |

spe FARM

FOR

|

Inc., offers an open end |}

University’s
73rd
annual
commencement in Cleveland, Ohio.
Pasquesi, age 21, was awarded a
bachelor
of
science
degree
in
natural
science.
An
alumnus
of
Loyola Academy, he was active in
many
campus
groups
at Carroll,
among them, Alpha Sigma Nu, honorary
fraternity,
and
Alpha
Psi
Omega, dramatics fraternity.

INSURANCE

!

nal grandparents.

Pasquesi

(Continued

iene

HAKANEN

Deerfield Rd., Deerfield

State

Farm Mutual Automobile
Insurance Co.
State Farm Life Insurance Co.
State Farm Fire and Casualty Co.
HOME OFFICE—BLOOMINGTON, ILLINOIS

Expert Hair Coloring
. . . including
of

all shades

light blondes

Permanent

Waves

Hair Cutting
Specializing

In All Branches Of Beauty

Culture.

CLASSIQUE Beauty SALON
1815

St. Johns

ID 2-1603 iBiuA |

Avenue

EXPERIENCED OPERATORS

ig

|

TOUCH!

The PEERLESS WAY Means
Architect
CALL

Designed

and

PEERLESS

PEERLESS HOME
1550

Park

Ave.,

ID 2-6800

18, 1959
A
ie
SN
5 ie, MOH EN i eae steal
iha ah

* KITCHENS
¢ BATHS

BUILDERS, INC.

West

3

"

Supervised

¢ FAMILY AND RECREATION ROOMS
* ROOM ADDITIONS
* GARAGES

ao

Be

HOME IMPROVEMENT
with the CUSTOM

i
ae
Pc

Highland

Park

§

�games
Carbines Have Their | Bicycle Race To Benefit Local Hospital
Second Son, Jeffrey

FOR
j

NJ

S$

fe

A

,
Kind

of Every
CALL

and

N

e

Mr.
and
Mrs.
James
Carbine,
1245 Eastwood Ave., announce the
birth of their second son, Jeffrey.
Born June 1 at Highland Park Hospital, Jeffrey’s
brother
is Christopher, 4.
Mrs.
Myrtle
Basinger
of
San
Diego, Calif., is the maternal grand-

Character

|
INSURANCE

AGENCY

4

In
1896

Sheridan

Highland Park

Business

2)

Years

Rd

mother.

Office:

ID

2-0093

Res.

'D 2-007"

Dad

to The

for the

Uhlemann’s

U

CONTACT

Special

i.

i.

$3

Lenses

William

&lt;

Tickets

00

© safe

Plenty

of

Parking

in

12

Our

Parking

residences,

optical

ID 2.4444

LAKE

©

BIGRLANRD

F.

Kahnweiler

Jr.

inspect

PARK,

1874 Sheridon ea, Highton cok

UT beneeal

F400HO08

bicycle | Park

at 7 p.m. to benefit
Park Hospital Fund

1175

and

1178

Wade|met

|

ae

EL

I.

and

Caplin
secured

have

permis-

ERG

ATS

TALES

ERSTE ATR ME

STE

:

GET

=

SHREDDED

THE

FINEST!

SOIL

=SPECIALLY PREPARED BY MACHINE. Easier to Spread

CORRECT

Hal christs-siaccare can he ae

SPRING SAG

EXCESSIVE ROLL

Arthur
with

group anticiand Mr. and

AA

TOP
STOP

fire department.

The neighborhood
|seniors Kahnweilers

barrier, intersection of Forest Ave. | benefit. School Safety Officer Ptl.
and Wade St., marking the competi- | Melvin Moon will be on hand for
tion course.
the event, as well as a first aid
James F. Kahnweiler Jr., Wil-| truck and personnel from Highland
liam Caplin and their parents, the
(Continued on page 41)

company

the best in gight—sinee 1907

Phone for nana sans rego
VRE

James

St. Or, spectators may purchase |sion of Highland Park police dethem during racing hours at the|partment to stage the hospital

Heve yeur eyes examined
by en
€ye-Physision (M.D.)
UH LEMANN

Lot

TELEPHONE

Oe

and

may be secured in advance at two|Mrs.

e full satisfaction—
guaranteed

$1.50
New

left,

to neighborhood

race Monday
the Highland

e comfortable

under

Caplin,

a bicycle preparatory to a final check by Ptl. Melvin Moon, school
safety officer. The Highland Park Hospital Fund Bicycle Race is
set for Monday at 7 p.m. Entrance to competition is intersection
of Forest Ave. and Wade St.

°

Children

new

easy-to-wear

Moraine

FATHER'S
DAY
A

also of San Diego,

is visiting with the Carbines.

SUNDAY'S HIS DAY!
Take

Mrs. Elsie Carbine, pater-

nal grandmother,

=—|

ing.

i

MANURE—FERTILIZER

MUTUAL

SERVICES OF HIGHLAND PARK, INC.
Phone

A

CN

ID 2-0027

Ws

Nationally

AQUA POOLS
Advertised

hh»

o444,44,4

YY

44444444444

4

NOW

4

44AAAAAAAAAAAA

vuVvy

... available for...

COIL and LEAF-Type Rear Springs

4
€
4
€
.
€
4
4
&lt;
&lt;
a

a

+h

WVU

4
4
€
€
&lt;

STABILIZER

Including

1959

Model Cars

wer
R

th

&gt; .4444444444444444
FRUVVVVVVVVVYVVV
YY

FRONT

$9895
Custom
Vinyl

SAF

Built Steel Reinforced Concrete,

Liner, Filter, Skimmer,

most COMFORTABLE

Ride possible:
e

Page 40

FIRST ST.

eT Tey,

AUTO

RECONSTRUCTION
ID 2-0077

MONEY

DOWN

Up to
5 Yrs. to Pay

For Location of Display Pool Call or Write

*

GET A FREE ESTIMATE TODAY!

2058

NO

Light, Chemical Test Kit, Vacuum Clnr.
and Two-step Ladder are included.

e

4 L'

Completely Installed

Underwater

a

Libertyville,

he

oe

[]

Please

send

literature

[]

Please

have

representative

and

tee
Illinois

information.

call.
Thursday, June 18, 1959

�| Third Daughter
Joins
J. A. S$. Lindemann Family

"

Corinne Elizabeth, born May 23
at Highland Park Hospital, is the
third daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
John

A,

S. Lindemann,

1287

Ridge

Rd.
Their
other
daughters
Gayle, 6; and Kathleen, 2.
Maternal

grandparents

are
Mr.

Jan Anne, First Child Of
Martin D. Dubins, Is Born
Jan

Anne,
Mrs.

D.

Dubin,

Park Ave., was born May
Highland Park Hospital.
The

infant’s

maternal

239

22

at

grandpar-

ents, Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Jankowsky of Tulsa, Okla., have been here
visiting their daughter
and
new
grandchild. Mr. and Mrs. Henry Du-

bin,

2350

Maple

Ln.

are paternal

grandparents.

Jean
Sixth

Kathryn Is Born—
Child Of J. H. Morans

Jean Kathryn
at Highland

26

the
John

Ct.

child

H.

Moran,

Other

Michael,

of

Mr.

1072

children

10; Mary,

and

Mrs.

Centerfield

are

John,

12;

5; Jerry, 4; Joey,

18 months.
Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Moran,
1554 Oakwood Ave., are paternal
grandparents,

Benefit

Bicycle

(Continued

from

Race

page

and

size

of bicycle.

daughter

of Mr.

given

and

Mrs.

Sally, 6.

Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Platt of Chicago are maternal grandparents.
Mr. and Mrs. Milton Fell, 2152 Midlothian Ave., are paternal grandparents.

Mr,

and

2401

St.

Mrs.

Johns

Paul
Ave.,

in elegance and luxury . . .

the new LANCIA FLAMINIA

the

birth of their fourth son, Maxwell,
on June 9 at Highland Park Hospital, Maxwell has three
Jonathan,
8, Jeremy,
5,

brothers,
and Mi-

chael, 3.
Grandparents are Mrs. Maxwell
Abbell, Chicago, and Mr. and Mrs.
H. David
Pa.
a

Rosenblum

i

and

Farrell,

ee

Only the Want
values

of

Ads offer amazing

opportunities

able elsewhere.

Read

not

them

avail-

now!

alte,...rthe..rlie...rliee.....rtne...the.....alie...ehlier..
aber... elie... ser... ler.

tilt presenle

From its classically simple, flowing lines to the most beautiful interior of any production automobile in the world the LANCIA
FLAMINIA bears the indelible
stamp of elegance.
It handles
EDENS

call

ve 5-3555

glencoe

Mon. Appts. Available

MOTORS

FLAMINIA

—

cordially invites you

to try the LANCIA

exclusively on the North

Shore

with EDENS

om

MOTORS.

Visit us, too, for an outstanding selection of used
sports cars — including MG, Jaguar, Austin-Heal-

-_Craftwood

ey, Karmann Ghia,
car priced to sell!

SPECIAL THIS WEEK
sbi ebe Consine California
Redwood

PICNIC TABLE

WITH TWO

with a smoothness and ease which
conform with its thoroughbred
look — all the elements, including a superb V-6 engine, offering
you a new dimension in driving
pleasure.

hair styles G colors

Awards

will be made for first, second and
third place winners in each heat.

for your ultimate

Rosenblum,
announce

40)

pates about 20 bicycle riders and
their vehicles will be entered in
the races. Heats will be run off
before final competition in each
main event, entries for which will
be selected according to age and

sex,

Bethis the name

Jerome C. Fell, 1337 St. Johns Ave.
Born May 21 at Highland Park Hospital, Nancy has two sisters, Jen-

ls

Moran, born May
Park Hospital, is

sixth

Nancy
the third

Paul Rosenblums Announce
Birth Of 4th Son, Maxwell

the first child of Mr.
Martin

$

Their Third Girl

nifer, 8, and

are

‘and Mrs. Frank Murphy, 1854 York
“Ln. Paternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mus. A. S, Lindemann of Deerfield.

and

irs

Welcome

and

Mercedes-Benz.

Bob

Emmerich

has

Every

joined

trained mechanics who

BENCHES

vice

regular $29.95 value

for

all

foreign

our

staff

of

factory

offer the most expert sercars.

Please

phone

for

an

appointment.

We also have the largest selection of LARKS
on the North Shore! Your choice of models!

THIS

¥

CASHWAY PRICE
SORRY—
NO PHONE ORDERS

¢

$4989

WEEK

ONLY

Limited Quantity

EDENS MOTORS, INC. |

¢

On Skokie between Clavey and Deerfield Rds.

CRAFTWOOD
LUMBER
1590

Deerfield

Road,

COMPANY,
Highland

8 A.M.-5:30 P.M.—Thursday until 9—Sunday

Park,

Thursday,

June

18,

1959

BRoadway 4-5555

INC.

Illinois

10-1

Just west of Route 41—Phone

IDlewood 3-2222

IDlewood 2-0140

ARTHUR
MANN

HOWARD
WEINER

STUART
PEROM

Page 41
Ae

eee

�: : / 20 ELEBRATE

DAD’S

DAY

WITH

A..

There’s fun and feasting in store for Dad this
week end! Bring the whole family out to celebrate
Father’s Day with a backyard Chick-n-que! Such a
thrifty idea, too, for such a special occasion. At Jewel's
low price you can feed a whole crowd for just a few
dollars.
Tender, Jewel fryers are just the kind you
want... they're meaty and sweet-flavored all the
way through. Buy them whole for rotisserie, or already cut-up for your grill. Either way, it's a feast to
remember... so hurry on over to Jewell!

WHOLE
CHICKEN

�-hav
FoeoLes
ra /

Sewe The Beat: 3

DEWKIST-FROZEN

LIBBY'S

Strawberries

U.S. oo

Tomato

cage

EXTRA VALUE TRIM

Cube
Steak

Reg. Price 2/ 45c

BANQUET

FROZEN

Apple Pie

herry Pie

BANQUET FROZEN

SWEET,

3

$100
ee

22 Oz.

3 #: $100
22

Ox.

RIPE

eorgia Peaches «= 10:

RESH, CRISP

Head Lettuce
OOL,

CRISP

Cucumbers

Puddings
WITH

‘5c

OFF"

PLUMP

TENDER

Riceland Rice

BROWN

Roast Beef
BROADCAST

CORNED

"

Pkg. of

HEAVY DUTY—18

2 Rolls

INCHES WIDE

3» 25:

9:

— xx

25 Ft.

Lux Soap

Leg of Veal

AND

LEAN,

PORK

BONELESS

Pork Tenderloin

CHOICE—LEAN

STYLE

Pork Ribs

CHOICE—E.V.T.

‘ci:

BLADE

LB. SIZE

Pork Roast

BEEF

Short Ribs

U.S. GOV'T.

INSPECTED

Wieners ,:".,
| |

DETERGENT

Lux Flakes

Breeze

WITH

"25c¢ OFF”

LABEL

All Detergent

DETERGENT

Lux Liquid

Wisk ea

VEAL

Jewel Meat Loaf

U.S.

DETERGENT

WITH ‘8c OFF’’ LABEL

BEEF,

2 i 69:

cnt Qc
= aan

Fluffy All

Praise Soap
ALL PURPOSE

Handy Andy

1959 SPRING

Leg of Lamb

RIB PIECE—4

Lifebuoy

Surf

LEAN,

Pot Roast

Lux Soap

Rinso Blue

U.S. CHOICE—-GENUINE

STEAK

FRESH COUNTRY

WHITE OR PINK

FOR REALLY WHITE CLOTHES

CHOICE—TAILLESS

Porterhouse

U.S.

SOAP

3 33°

U.S.

FED

ALL CUTLETS LEFT IN

Round Steak

issue

MILK

Veal Chops

SOFT WEVE ASSORTED COLORS

WHITE, PINK, BLUE, YELLOW

ries 80:

SHOULDER—TENDER

CUT FROM
Ist FIVE RIBS

U.S. CHOICE—E.V.T.

Hash

Reynolds Foil

Be. Ol

U.S. CHOICE—E.V.T.
—
k
:
Ca

GRAVY

BEEF

2+ 29:

LABEL

Spry

TERRY FROZEN—WITH

Lge.
Pkgs.

's $219

ns. OI:

2: 41:
a O9:

PINK,

YELLOW

AND

WHITE

ScotTissue

2

3» 39

YUMMY

Ice Cream
FRESH

Y Gal.
Ctn.

69:

MILD

-Cheddar Cheese » 49
: Cottage Cheese 2° 49 .

Baby Food «« 24 «: $199
sonra
Mle
@
CLAPP’S

STRAINED

4V,

pein

Creryiey Low Pies LE

98:

�43

a

Deerfield
ala

allt

allt

A

i

i

9

lt

a

el

PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
824 Waukegan Road
Phone Windsor 5-0775
ev. Paul:J.Keller, Ph.D., Minister
DAY, June 21
a.m.
a.m.

Morning
Church

ip

of

Worship,
school.
Nursery

school.
Bible class

Elder

Richard

al

for

under

the
For

Adult

90—lower

Bible class under

SUNDAY

INESDAY.

the lead-

Girl

p.m.

Turxis

choir

rehearsal—Sanc-

Chancel

choir

rehearsal—Sanc-

7:30

.m.
ZION

Scout

SDAY,

June

Board

the

meeting.

banquet

church.

in the

Speaker

social

will

be

an

cutive officer from the Glenview Naval
Station. who will show film and dem€

some

of

the

latest

naval

equip-

RDAY,. June 20
a.m.
Acolyte Guild meeting.
p.m.
Confirmand
initiation into the
Leacue at the home of Mrs. Janet
2250 Telegraph Road, Bannockburn.
AY, June 71

a.m.
Fellowship and coffee hour on
l€ parsonage lawn.
10:45
a.m.
Family worshiv service with
mole e Church
School.
Nursery care is
rovided during this service onlv for chil‘under three vears of ace. in the home
r. and Mrs, Ronald Forslin. 829 Avrle
Lane.
Rus service is nrovided by the
h for this service only.
IDAY. June 22
.m.
Deborah Circle at the home of
Jack
D.
Dowdall,
1045
Rosemary
ce. Co-hostess. Mrs. Henrv Basile.
p.m.
Softball—Preshvterian Church and

,Zion

Seniors

C.’s _and
8

Zion

at

Jewett

Juniors

at

Park

the

West:

Maplewood

.m. Church School staff meeting with
ristian Education Committee in the
gtggl = me church.
2m.
Ruth
Circle at the home of Mrs.

id J. Redine,
, Mrs.

1426 Hazel Avenue.

Paul

Co-

Hultman.

UAKERS
OF FRIENDS

SOCIE
_ Sylvia

Judson,

Clerk.

“om Pandey School.
"
ends meeting
in
Library in Lake Forest.

information

call

Deer

WIndsor

Park

.
classes.

GREGORY’S
EPISCOPAL
CHURCH
Wilmot and Deerfield Roads
The Rev, J. D. Parker, Rector
Rectory Telephone—Wlndsor 5-1881
Church Telephone—Windsor 5-1678
SUNDAY
$&amp; a.m. Holy Communion.
9:30 a.m. Holy Communion on first and
third Sundays.
9:30 a.m. Morning Prayer on second and
fourth Sundays.
9:30 a.m.
Church
School
children
will
attend adult service. Nursery care provided
for Pk
eA] children.
WEDNESDAY
8
p.m. Choir practice.
THURSDAY
Afternoon, Girl Scouts.
Evening, Boy Scouts,

18

of Deacons

Highland

Path
‘

5-1774.

We

Preach

.m.
em All

3
33

2s

Church

a.m. Sunday
School.
There
are
of Bible
study for all ages and
care for babies.
a.m. Morning
Worship
Service.
facilities
are
provided
for
the

p.m, Young Peoples Fellowship. Proare provided by the youths themm, Evening Gospel Service.
YESDAY.
ot
Mid-Week Prayer meeting
y.
) p.m. Choir rehearsal.

and

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY
155 Deerfield Road
INDAY—11 a.m. Services.
}
n are cared
for during

YDAY
For

SCHOOL—9;30

pupils up

DAY

a.m.

to 20 years of age.

EVENING

p.m.

cee

are

welcome

gh Christian
further

Church

|

MEETINGS

testimonies

Science.
to

attend

information

call

of

these

—

healing
services.

WlIndsor

5-

;
WBKB-TV PROGRAM
NDAY,
June 21
am.
“Discovering
the
Power
1est Pg

of

| cy ny\
Te
‘w/o INTEREST

Srensors Father-

To Be Discussed
At Local Church

The

annual

father-son

banquet

will be served by the Ruth Circle
of the Women’s Guild at the. Zion
Lutheran Church, 10 Deerfield Rd.,
tomorrow

evening

dining-room.
trimmings
Speaker

in

the

Roast beef

will

be

for

the

church’s

and

on

the

all the
menu.

evening

will

an executive

officer from

the Glen-

view

Naval

Air

who

show

film

of

the

demonstrate

latest

Tickets
each

and

Station,
naval

may

of the

Sunday

be
three

from

will
some

worship

the

after

services

deacons

of

the

THE
BETHLEHEM
CHURCH
(Evangelical
United
Brethren)
Rev. Eugene M. Wykle, Minister
801 Rosemary Terrace
Church—WI1
5-007: 8
WI 5-2221
FRIDAY, June 19
7 p.m. Ice Cream Social on church lawn.
Everyone welcome.
SUNDAY, June 21
9:30 a.m.
Service of Divine Worship.
9:30
am... Church’
School for Nursery
through 6th grades and adult classes.
10:55 a.m.
Church School for Nursery,
Kindergarten, Primary and 7th through 12th
grades.
10:55 a.m. Services of Divine Worship.
Family
balcony
available
during
both
services of worship.
6:30 p.m.
Fireside Club—potluck supper
at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Roger Case,
822 Forest Ave.
TUESDAY, June 23.
Pro8 p.m.
Women’s
Guild meeting.
gram:
Secular concert by Choirs.
Silent
auction.
LUTHERAN CHURCH
(Missourl Synod)
Walters Ave. at Fourth St.
Northbrook
further information call CRestwood
or Windsor 5-1323.

THE HIGHLAND PARK
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
ID 2-1695
Dr. William Atkinson Young
Rev. J. A.
ler
Ministers
Summer worship in the sanctuary at 10
a.m. each Sunday morning. Fellowship hour
on the church lawn immediately following
the service, weather permitting.
Church School for children of sixth grade
and younger, including toddlers, meets also
at 10 a.m. each summer Sunday.
Worship services at 9:30 a.m. and 11:15
a.m. and
Church
School
classes
at 9:30
a.m., 10:05 a.m. and 11:15 am. will be resumed on September 13,

JUNE

Evangelist—Formerly

with

21,

a.m.

&amp; 7 p.m. Services

EVAN.

FREE CHURCH

NORTH
711

1959 —

11

SUBURBAN

Waukegan

Youth

for

the

next

Sunday.

and

the

spreading
business

of

the

gospel

offices.

Mr. Mitchell has been associated
with the Pocket Testament League
and
was
foreign
secretary
for
Youth for Christ, which took him

Sumatra

and India.

Members

Received

Christian Scientists
Cite Greater Need
“or Sniritual Power

Deerfield

Deeper

understanding

of

spiri-

tual resources is vitally needed to
meet the sharp challenges of the
times.

ow can I find

of

This

was

the

Annual

Mother

Church,

of

Christ,

the

major

Meeting
The

First

Scientist,

in

theme

of

The

Church

Boston,

Mass. About 7,500 Christian Scientists from many parts of the world
attended.

peace of mind?

Mrs. Lilyan
tian
Science

Browning of ChrisSociety,
Deerfield,

was one of the many Christian Scientists
Boston

THE TRUTH IN THIS
GREAT BOOK CAN
COMFORT YOU
What comfort can come to
knows who he is and where he is going—to
realizes his oneness with God and his safety
own child! Such assurance can be yours if you

of this
for the

one who
one who
as God’s
will turn

problems

PEACE

OF

of

at $3 and

will be sent postpaid

sf

(CHANNEL 7)

“Discovering the
Power of Honesty”
ALSO

RADIO

{ WNMP 1590 kc., 9:15 a.m.
a WLS 890 kc., 6:45 p.m.

READING ROOM

a “An Important Question
ae. Answered—A Disease
Ga,
iN
Healed He

Park

Reg. U.S. Pat. Off,

PEG

Information concerning free public lectures, church services and

SER 0 SS Be A

Sunday School is also available.

“The Service Bank Of Highland Park”

rc

cca mec cm

BANKS HIGHLAND

PARK

1771 Second St.

IDiewood 2-7800

BANK—POST
Member

Federal

OFFICE

Deposit

BLDG.

Insurance

‘a

WBKB-TV 9:45 A.M.

by the Reading

Highland

Mrs.

Sunday, June 21

MIND!

1773 Second St.

said

TV Series for Everyone

Christian Science

/¥

kind,

“How Christian
| Science Heals”

Room on reccipt of chs: or moncy order.
“GK RAISE
Seen
a7

every

ti

*Science and Health can be purchased in red, green, or blue

binding

to

Kathryn F. Cook, of Boston, who
was named president of The Mother Church for the coming year.

without charge to take home and read at leisure.
FIND

went

scientific prayer in destroying fear,
healing sickness and solving human

Health with Key to the Scriptures by Mary Baker Eddy.
Countless thousands have found their peace of mind
in the midst of apparent chaos when they have prayerfully sought an understanding of God and man as explained in Science and Health. They have learned how
to turn away from the confusion of today’s changing
world to a sense of calm and tranquillity that can be
found only in communion with God.
Find this out for yourself! Read, buy,* or borrow
this book at the Christian Science Reading Room
nearest you. There you can read it, together with the
King James Version of the Bible, in an atmosphere of
quiet and rest. You can also borrow Science and Health
COME...AND

area who
meeting.

The effectiveness of spiritual resources
is being proved
through

to the truth contained in this great book, Science and

HOLY

te

of

Membership
rolls were opened
to new apvlicants Sunday evening,
Tune 7, when charter members of
the North Suburban church were
formally received by the interim
yastor, the Rev. Howard Hermansen, and the district superintendent, Dr. Irving Hedstrom.

Christ

Rd.

director

The
Inter-Church
Ministries
is
a group whose purpose it is to encourage Christian worship, prayer

to Formosa,

congregation.

Rev. Hubert Mitchell

"y

CROSS CATHOLIC
CHURCH
North Waukegan Road
Rev. John O’Mara, Pastor
Rev. Edward Reilly, Assistant
Rectory, 724 Elder Lane
Windsor 5-0430
Sunday Masses: 7, 8, 9, 10, 11:15 and
12:33.
Daily Mass at 7:15.
First Friday of eacn month, Masses at
6:45 and 8:15 a.m.
Saturday: 4 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. Confessions.

Mitchell,

p.m. at the North Suburban Evangelical Free Church, 711 Waukegan

within

equipment.

purchased

Hubert

Inter-Church Ministries in Chicago,
will speak at both morning and
evening services at 11 am. and 7

Rd.,
be

HEAR

DEERFIELD BIBLE FELLOWSHIP
1043 Wilmot Road
Every Sunday evening at 7 o’clock, the
Deerfield
Bible Fellowship meets at 1043
Wilmot Rd. Public is invited. Bible messages
on current events along with Christian
fellowship.

For
4-3060

P rogram

Gospel in Offices _

Charter

Rev.
Lewis
Wakeland,
Pastor
Route 22
SUNDAY
9:30 a.m. Church School,
9:30 a.m. Worship Service.
11 a.m. Worship Service.
A nursery is provided for small children.
Telephone WI 5-4179 for more information.

Christ

Visitation

ion Lutheran

WASHBURN
CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH
Half Day

GRACE

ified, Risen and Coming Again

Bey

Son Banquet Fri.

TRINITY UNITED CHURCH
OCF ‘CHRIST
(Evangelical
&amp; Reformed
Church)
Rev. Edward J. Busse, ID 2-2113
Rev. Laslo L. Hunvady, WI 5-3508
(Associate Pastors)
SUNDAY,
June 21
9:30 a.m.
Church School
and Morning
Worship at Walden
School.
Visitors and
newcomers in the community are cordially
invited.
MONDAY, June 22
9:15
to
11°30
a.m.
Vacation
Church
School at 630 Waukegan Road.
TUESDAY, June 23
6 p.m.
Evening Circle of the Women’s
Guild leaves for Kenwood-Ellis Community
Center, Chicago.
WEDNESDAY,
June 24
9:15
to
11:39
a.m.
Vacation
Church
School at 6:30 Waukegan Road:
FRIDAY, June 26
9:15
to
11:30
a.m.
Vacation
Church
School at 6:30 Waukegan Road.

ST

Johnson, Intern
Windsor 5-2009

DAY, June 19
p.m. Father-Son
1 of

124—lower

LUTHERAN

Wayne
R.
Telephone
a.m.

troop

CHURCH

NORTH SHORE
UNITARIAN CHURCH
Rev. Russell R. Bletzer, Minister
Ferry Hall Chapel
Lake Forest
For Information Call WI 5-1972.

June 24

p.m.

a

9 a.m. Sunday School and Bible
10:15 a.m. Worship services.

hin of Elder C. E. Piper—room 5.
VES DAY, June 23
3:45
p.m.
Girl Scout troop
11—lower
room,
0 p.m.
Boy
Scout troop 52—lower

‘oom.

i

METHODIST

REDEEMER LUTHERAN CHURCH
1731 Deerfield Rd.
Rec. 1817 Green Bay Road

All 7th and 8th graders are invited to
_—lower west room.

3 p.m.

i

B’NAI TORAH
Lincoln School
Highland Park
Sholom Singer, Rabbi
Joseph Burns, Cantor
information call WIndsor 5-2243.

Thompson—

troop

a,

For Raprmatee call Windsor 5-4351.
SUNDAY
11
a.m.
Church
School
and
Worship
Service. Nursery for pre-school children.

a.m.
Morning Worship.
p.m.
Tuxis mecting—Tuxis
rcom.
m.
Jr. Westminster Fellowship meetIDAY, June 22
5 p.m.
Girl
Scout

a

NORTHBROOK

dren 1, 2 and 3 years. Kindergarten for
ildren 3 and 4 years. Classes for all other
through high
am.
Adult

PES BP

NORTH
SUBURBAN
EVANGELICAL
FREE
CHURCH
Deerfield Masonic Temple
Rev. Howard Hermansen. Pastor
711 Waukegan Road
UNDAY
9:45 a.m. Bible School.
11 a.m.. Services.
7 p.m. Services.
WEDNESDAY
8 p.m. Bible study and prayer.

Corporation

z£
An
450

maa

Thursday, June 18, 1959
Ee
Ss

gaat
s.2
Lee

vr ja
Ge
Sate)
AS " inp int ai
eee She acid
Shin dae

�21 Confirmed at Zion Lutheran
e

On Viena

+

Pastor

H

FAST

d

AT

Associate Pastor Laslo L. Huny-

TAITT RIGA LAR

=

PHOTO

ady of Trinity United Church of
Christ began his vacation yesterday. He and his wife Eleanor and
children, Sheila and Dean, will visit their parents, who live in Pennsylvania and New Jersey. Members

of Trinity United Church
will

J.

be

served

Busse,

ID

by

IMPORTANT PAPERS
Powell’s Camera Mart
589

his

Central

TOUTE
HHH

vacation.

C. R. ANDERSON

ID

2-8550

EET
Reg
ii }! ti ; }'

HAT THAT

Sound,

COPIES

PLIABLE
PLASTIC
LAMINATING
OF YOUR

Edward

during

We

AND

of Christ

Pastor

2-2113,

T HUTT TSE

Hl i

AGENCY, INC.

INSURANCE

—

BONDS

Experienced

Insurance Service

WIndsor 5-0155
735 Deerfield Road, Deerfield, III.

Twenty-one

students

who

became

members

of

Zion

Lutheran

Church

last

month

HIGHWOOD
RADIO
and G.E.
SPECIALS!

received

their first sacrament of Holy Communion last week. They have met weekly since October to study
the teachings of the church. The Rev. Paul V. Berggren is pastor.
Shown

above

are:

Ist

row,

left to

right,

Alan

othy Blank, the Rev. Mr. Berggren, Janet Ostrand,
Robert
man

Powers,
and

Ralph
To

Linda

David

Nelson,

Arnold;

3rd

Rickan, Margaret

Have

Theater

James
row,

Andrews,

Edward

Kmieciak,

Thomas

Deborah

Berthold,

Herbert and James

Karen

Urban
Berggren,

Betty Lou

and

Jackson,

Thomas

Broms,

Jeffrey

Timothy

Wang;

McDonald,

Joseph

Funk,

Dor-

2nd

row,

Mary

Kiehl, Marcia

PeterGrinde,

Sullivan.

Evening

The Holy Cross High Club will
have an évening at Tenthouse The-

atre

Monday,

when

they

will

see

))

Joe E. Brown in “Harvey.” For reservations call Miss Susan Burgett,

WI 5-4247 today.

Attend
The

Reverend

pastor

at

John

Eugene

Bethlehem

Suter,

tended

.

Conference

lay

M.

representative,

the Illinois Annual

i

ence
of
Brethren

Wykle,

Church,

and

T

at-

Confer-

SHUTTERS
CUSTOM

EE]

=

ALL AMERICA ROSES

MADE

We tastan

si

ALL AMERICAN CITY
ne,
eRe Wikes’

5

==

¢ Fusilier
* Gold

,

Cup

¢ Ivory Fashion
e

Starfire

©

White

ND

Steam MODEL
and F50Dry Iron

IT’S 2 IRONS

STEAM MAKES

1958 Winner

IN ONE!

IRONING

1958 Winner

Flip button up

Iron without sprinkling

1959

Winner

Push

Winner

and it’s a dry iron.

1959 Winner

1957

and it’s a steam iron,
button

Vertical

Shutters

¢ Shoji

Panels

¢

heavy

cottons,

° Screens
*

Room Dividers
¢ Fret Work

Buy Direct from the
Manufacturer and Save!

SHUTTER
HOUSE
7600 Greenwood Ave., Chicago
Samples shown in

your Home.

PHONE:

Rose Show sponsored by the Men’s
Highland Park, on June 20th.

Plus

CR 2-5541

At Our Deor

Formerly Crestwood

Products

‘Thursday, June 18, 1959

Garden

Club

2 Slice—Compl. Auto.

of

TOASTER

NOW

&amp; cLAVEY RP.
HWY. IE
SKOK
Free

Parking

THIS

SPECIAL

$1488

CLAVEY’S TREELAND

RA 3-3632

linens

and starched things.

Don’t forget to enter your best roses in the 12th Annual

Louvre Doors

EASY!

everything except

down

Plus many more all-time
favorite rose varieties

y
¢

Bouquet

88

FAMOUS

For The

| EE

$

NOW

the
Evangelical
United
Church at Naperville this

|

HIGHWOOD RADIO
&amp; APPLIANCE

Phone

Ample Free

ID 2-4664

Open:

Parking Always
2631

Waukegan

CO.

Monday and

Friday 7-9 P.M.

Ave.,

H.P.

iD

2-6260

Page45.

�Village Board

Graduation
(Continued

Psalm

_

from

page

150

(Continued

3)

Lewandowski

The Commencement Choir

| Presentation

of the Class

A.

E. Wolters, Principal,
H. P. High School

‘

The

Star-Spangled

Banner

Sung

by

the

Audience

nediction
ig

Rev.

Eugene

M.

Wykle

- minister, Bethlehem Evangelical
United Brethren Church, Deer-

field

The Lord Bless You and Keep You
o
,

The

Lutkin
Choir

Commencement

of

pointed

Presentation of Diplomas
is
Frank Conley
_ Member of the Board of Education
Presentation of Honors
;

favor

_Recessional of Graduates
RY

i \ A STEP INTO

ye FUTURE

oe

getting

and

Preview of Bethlehem Church Ice Cream Social

from

page

3)

committees

working

ap-

before

the

September
date which was mentioned as the time when the four
“contentious” matters listed by the
president could reasonably be ex-

pected

to be settled.

It was pointed out that the majority of the board feel that no
one person should have complete
control over the functioning of administrative and operating personnel and that from the president of
the United States on down appointments are subject to the scrutiny
of the elected representatives
of

the people.
According to Mr. Wehle, the ordinance
providing
appointment
of
committees by the board alone was
considered only after the president
refused to accept the addition of
the stipulation ‘‘with the consent
of the board” to the former ordinance.
Several

Speak

from

Floor

Among those who spoke from the
floor,
posing
questions
to
the
board,
were
Glen
Ruhge,
Locke
Rogers, Edwin M. Gillen and Mrs.
EK. R. Emery.
The
former
5-1
stand
of the
board in favor of the new ordinance
was
changed
to 42 when
Trustee Koss voted with Trustee
Harold L. Peterson against overriding the veto. Opposing them were

Trustees

Wehle,

John

F. Aberson,

Winston S. Porter and Maurice C.
Petesch.
The following are the committees
as named by the board: building,
zoning and planning, Koss, Aberson

i ‘We
|

will

suits

keep

and

lovely

those

graduation

dresses

as

smart

j -as on the day they were first worn.
| Periodic cleaning
to

is a sure method

well-groomed

appearance

al-

and

Porter;

administration

works, Aberson, Koss and Peterson,
and

public

relations,

President

FIRST COMPLETE
CLEANING PLANT
tor DEERFIELD

and

personnel,
Wehle,
Petesch
and
Porter; finance and audit, Porter,
Aberson
and
Peterson;
judicial,
license
and
health,
Peterson,
Petesch and Wehle; police and fire,
Petesch, Koss and Wehle;
public
Holmquist.

Holmquist

declined

the above appointment.
First item of business for the
evening was the request by Trustee
Porter for formal certification of
bills by the village manager. The
village attorney, Thomas Matthews,
will work with the manager to set
up such an arrangement. The pay-

ment of $47,546 in bills and payroll
was

authorized.

This

total

includes

Testing the ice cream and the service for Bethlehem Church’s ice cream social to be held on
the church lawn tomorrow night are Mr. and Mrs. Robert Camp, their family and friends. Those
who will be helping with the serving are Helen Cox, Karen Larson and Carol Finney.
This old-fashioned festival has been modernized with the addition of car-hops and a combo
to play throughout the evening. The chancel choir is sponsoring the event. Mrs. Ambrose Cox is
the retiring president and Mr. Camp the newly elected president.

Deerfield
(Continued

Forum
from

page

4)

the agenda consisted of 5142 pages
of business involving the entire village. I would,
therefore,
like to
suggest that the persons who are
so bothered appoint a committee
to represent them and request per-

mission in writing to appear before
Mr. Fischer and the board of directors of Briarwood
and resolve
their problem
in this manner.
I
feel
certain
the
officials
of the
club would be more than willing
to discuss any justified complaints
in a decent, gentlemanly manner.
Although
I live just north
of
Margate
Terrace,
a
good
drive
and a five iron from Briarwoods
Clubhouse, I have not as yet heard
any noises which I could say ‘were
coming from the club. Nor have I

a payroll of $13,600.

LAWN-BOY
By

Makers

of:

Johnson-Evinrude
AS ADVERTISED 16

Ut) mere) &lt;
Saturday
POST

Evening

:

|

Power

_ Highest

Mower

Exchange

Trade-In

Allowances

| COAST TO COAST STORES
‘Market Square

at

Lake Forest 3998

7
a

A request to extend the parking
lot of the Briarwood Country Club
to within three feet of the lot line
instead of the 25 feet as presently

stipulated

was

turned

down

by

a

unanimous vote. Trustee Koss moved that the village submit its disapproval of the re-zoning of the
Cook County area south of LakeCook road and west of the Milwaukee railroad tracks to light manufacturing. The board was unanimous on this issue also. The board
also
expressed
unanimous
disapproval
of house
bill 160 in the
Springfield legislature dealing with
garbage
disposal
rulings
and
of
plans to re-zone’ from farming to
industrial usage the area east of
Milwaukee Ave. and south of Deer-

field Rd.
Officer

Mullins,

who

has

served

with the police force in a seasonal
capacity for three years, was hired

| TYPEWRITERS
-

RENTALS

-

Piano

REPAIRS

SUMMER

°

ID 3-0230

was recom-

mended for the village before the
April 21st election. And if 135 families seem to bother a few neighboring residents, just think what 2,500
families coming and going all day
long would sound like?
J. G. Powell
1050 Meadowbrook Lane

Thanks

From

the

Jaycees

the Editor:
The Deerfield
Jaycees wish
to
thank everyone who supported our
second annual Chark-o-Chick Day
Sunday, June 7. A special thankyou is extended to contributors.

(Continued

from

page

secretary; Allyn J. Franke
Vaughn Spriggs.

4)
and

Mrs.

The new building which is under
construction

at

860

Waukegan

Road
(just north of the Village
Hall) will house the library and the
township offices when
completed
late this fall. Mrs. Helen Haney,
librarian announces that the library
is now
open
Saturday
mornings
from 9 a.m. until noon.

To

In
ing a
admit
a bit

cooking, boxing and deliverrecord 2,500 dinners, we must
our production line sputtered
and that some deliveries were

late. We
hope
the inconvenience
was slight because the chicken was
so good!
All funds raised from this project are reinvested in the community
for
a
better
community
through Jaycee endeavor.
Deerfield Junior Chamber
of Commerce

for an additional 60 days
at an
increase
in salary from
$365 to
$380, following a motion by Trustee Petesch.
Action
on
petroleum
products
bids was deferred until investigation has been made concerning a
Dun &amp; Bradstreet notation concerning
the
relationship
of
Trustee
Peterson with D-X Sunray Oil Co.,
who submitted low bid for the service.
Attorney
Anthony
Mercurio
spoke
concerning
the request
of

Edward

Tanielian,

for

a variance

from 60 foot to 50 foot frontage
for multiple dwellings for his property at 1121 Waukegan Rd.
Because of the 21 items on the
agenda
which
were
not touched
upon, the board voted to meet the
following
week
at an
adjourned
regular meeting open to the public.

829

Waukegan

Pedagogue

CLASSES

Early

645 CENTRAL

large as the one which

Library Board

JOHN SUTER

ADDING MACHINES
/| SALES

heard many noises as I have driven
by. Certainly the pool which they
are building is nowhere
near as|

NOW

FORMING

Registration Advisable

Road,

Deerfield

ID

2-7410

There’s a hat for every member of the family at the 25th
annual reunion at Cambridge of the Harvard Class of 1934, as is
demonstrated by the Rev. and Mrs. Russell H. Bletzer, 426 PineSt., and their children, Jonathan,

10, and

Ingrid,

14.

Thursday,

June

18, 1959

�1
|

|

AMERICA’S DEPENDABLE FOOD MERCHANT

|

|

SIRLOIN

SUPER-RIGHT QUALITY
M-man!

BIRTH DAY

WEDGE

Thick, red, juicy Super-

BONE

PORTERHOUSE

REMOVED

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or

Club,

Tail-less

Right Sirloin Steak, Porterhouse,

T-Bone or Club. There's a barbe-

Ib.

cue treat that's hard to beat...

Ny,
MAKE

because the quality of this grainfed beef is truly outstanding.

|

PLANS

TO

ATTEND

THE

CHICAGO

Famous

INTERNATIONAL
TRADE FAIR
TO

BE

HELD

JULY

3rd

THRU

JULY

[8th

CHILDREN

$ F 00

SAVINGS

OF

50c

SAVINGS

|

OF

10c

“tn 25¢

Chunk Pineapple ‘=&lt;

“tin 25¢

A&amp;P Apple Sauce rms

lona
in

Apple

Bi. 39C

Del Monte

Bran

Brand

“O02,

syrup

Tin

Jane

Parker

CA

» 80°
» 49°

Whitefish "2" %:*%,,

Jumbo 27 Size, Serve with Ice Cream

2-39
Southern

tm 1 5¢

Green Beans

Stri

Button or Sliced

40-07.

Tin 29c

a

Firm,

24 Size

Head Lettuce

2.

ate

2, Saag a
8-8.2-2-8-8.°.

SALE

FAMOUS

EIGHT O'CLOCK

COFFEE

MILD &amp; MELLOW
3-Pa Bag

Brand,

5-Choice

Cc

Fruits

Fruit Cocktail
THE

Nutley Margarine
1-Ib
Pk ute
95.

Crisp,

es 29c

ON

Sultana
Brandywine

Colored and Quartered.
Just fine on waffles,
bread or for ae

Grown,

Ba. 39C

Oven Fresh

Niblet Corn === wnste'kemar

June .18,.1959

49.

Suet

bey

SPECIAL

C

uv. 49¢

Thursday,

10%

Halibut Steaks cx’

‘ -

Pan-Ready
Cut-Up or Whole

fat :

Cheddar Cheese “Wisconsin”

Mushrooms

Plus

Sweet Gorn 5.03:7t.: 6 fr 29° Juice Lemons &lt;3)... 39°

29

Cling

Pie

Luncheon Meat &lt;r: 3 |; 99°
pea

Geef

Beef

2 “r 29¢

SLICED PEACHES
Yellow

Quality 90%

c

HiC Orange Drink

Prune Juice

Super-Right

Ground

As an additional service to our A&amp;P customers A&amp;P is handling
the advanced sale of tickets at a special price for a limited time
only These special rates will end Saturday, June 27th.

ADULTS

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1859

GREAT

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1959

All Prices Effective. Through Tine 20th

Page 47

�IAA
AAAAAAAAAAAAUAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAANAEE

DEERFIELD BOYS BASEBALL
By Joseph

Hearing on Country

Club Additions

F. Peyronnin
wv

Last Friday night we had
the
Father &amp; Son night at Jewett Park.
There
was
an excellent
turnout,
over five hundred,
to hear
Bob

property. We
children they

Trowbridge

assume

and talk with him. The

generally
not

to

do not know whose
are but would you

warn

do

the boys

damage

that

it

and

there.

is

girls

We

only

can

a few

as

outdoors did make the gathering a
little more comfortable than had it
been held indoors. Our only regret
is that some of the boys trampled

there
are
too
many
nice
kids
around the neighborhood.
The women’s auxiliary is doing a
wonderful
job
with
their
food

on the flower

handling

fieldhouse
damage
to

beds

outside

of the

causing
considerable
the
plants;
we _ will,

naturally, have to make restitution
to the park board.
The minor league was expanded
by the addition of another team.
It was realized that with up to
twenty-five boys on one team there
was no possibility to get each boy
in the four-inning
game
played.
So, even though it created a great

deal of extra
son and the
create

the

work for Jim Johnmanagers they did

second

assignments
from

each

slips

team.

Team

were made
team,

each

and

having

name of a boy
the team was

re-

by picking

out

of

an

a hat,

individual

in the quantity
over the pro

that
rata

quantity.
There was no partiality as was
rumored—this rumor returned to
me, If anyone believes that these
men who manage, coach or otherwise serve
or unfair,

without
always

pay, are partial
remember
that

there is room for your son’s father
in the program.

If you were to work

in the program you would soon discover that the majority of the
fathers are doing the best they
can. We do admit that in the Inter.
mediate

League

a couple

of teams

have not played all the boys in
each game, because of this Tom
Skinner and Cy Fritz held a special
managers’ meeting to reiterate the
rule that all boys must play. We
have a couple of new managers
and they were not completely familiar with the rule. So this situation

should

be

overcome.

If

you

have any complaints let us know. I
am sure that they can be explained.
While on this type of subject,
it is believed that it should be
made clear to all that the umpires
are
not
professional
umpires.
I
would say that at least eighty per

cent did not umpire until this year.
On the whole, we believe that
these boys are doing an excellent
job and do not require coaching
from the stands.
Last year
operated by

(Bob

Folger

the major league was
three or four umpires

working

Wednesday,

Thursday

times

games

three

year we
attempt

Tuesday,
and

some-

Sunday),

This

have held a school in an
to familiarize these men

with the rules and conduct

of um-

pires;
as
inexperienced
as they
were they have shown the courage
to go out and do a job— I believe
two things:
1. Never
criticize
a

man

for

trying,

2. Never

criticize

another unless you know you
and are willing to do a better

can
job.

How about you people in the stands
cooperating with us as much as the
umpires have done?
We have repaired the shed in
Wilmot Field—McDonald Builders
furnished the material and Hank
Nadjowski and Don Brandt did the
work.
However,
some
children
broke into the building and caused
damage. The malicious conduct of
the children around that park is
hard to understand; these children
seem to have no regard for public

efforts

and
of

other

all

of

activities.

these

PONY
Team
Redlegs
Tigers
Umpire
Braves
Giants
Umpire
Redlegs
Braves
Giants
Tigers

The

women

greatly appreciated.
Scores for the past week

are

Lost
10
4

Flint
10
3

8
5

7
5
6
4

8
3
10
5

Brin

MAJOR
LEAGUE
Team
Won
Lost
Cards
8
8
Cubs
3
4
2B hits Wells, Butler, Rohan, Delaney. HR
Dwyer. Umps Babcock-Fleming.
Yankees
1
1
Indians
17
14
2B Hits Frantz, Binelich (2), Bennett, Carlson. HR Moore (2) (one grand slam). Umpires Chester and Rocke.
Cubs
1
yd
Dodgers
13
15
EB Hits LeBrun, Essin (3), Bodony, Gunderson, Scheskie. Umps Baker and Delaney.
Cards
0
2
Pirates
2
4
2B Hit Butler
Orioles
7
9
Yanks
8
9
2B
Hits
Weil, Mandler,
Larson,
Parson.
Umpires Walns and Burnette.

Pirates

0

3

Dodgers
7
9
Home
Runs
LeBrun,
Sharp
(2). Umpires
Bolster and Wells.
Indians
15
12
White Sox
1
12
2B Hits Hedge, Kempf (2), Pointdexter, Jordan, Blount, Clayton, Moore, Frantz, Bennett. Home Runs Moore (2).
STANDINGS
American
Team
White Sox
Indians
Orioles
Yanks

Won
2
Ss
2
Y

Lost
y}
3
3
3

National
Dodgers

6

Pirates

0

4

Cards
Cubs

2

Z
1

INTERMEDIATE

LEAGUE
American

4
4

STANDINGS

White Sox
Athletics
Yankees
Indians
Orioles

4
2
2
1
0

1
1
2
4
5

National
Team
Cubs
Giants
Pirates
Cardinals
Dodgers

Won
4 ”
3
3
3
2

L

0 .
2
3
3
3

Chancel Choir Plans
Concert at Church
The
will

Bethlehem
enjoy

a

Women’s

secular

Guild

concert

pre-

sented by the Chancel Choir of the
church at the guild’s meeting Tuesday.
The
program
will
feature
“Ballad
for Americans,”
with
J.

Robert Welsh
Another

as soloist.

light

number

will

be

“Peter Piper” by the women. Following the concert, all members
and friends will participate in a
silent auction of items donated.
The Rev. Eugene M. Wykle will
install the following officers: Mrs.
Charles Hansen,
president;
Mrs.
Louis Zenko, first vice president;

Mrs.

John

president;

Carlson,
Mrs.

corresponding

Michael
tary.

Baran,

Mrs,

second

Russell
secretary,

Walther,

recording

William

vice

and

Mrs.

secre-

Springer

was

elected treasurer but will not be
installed as she is moving from the
community.

on

its

new

facilities

was

made

at

last week’s village board meeting
through petitions signed by 111
residents of the Briarwood-Brierhill
area.
G. Eldon

the

Holmquist,

president

explained

to

board,
that

necessary

LEAGUE
3

Request
for a public hearing
and legal notice before the Briarwood Country Club begins work

tioners

are:
Won

Newcomers Discuss Year's Program

Petition Requests

torney,

a public

because

Thomas

A.

and

sidered
club.

tennis

is not

village

at-

Matthews,

Bell,

has

pools, snack

courts

appurtenances

Robert

of

peti-

hearing

the

advised that swimming
bars

the

are

con-

of a country

625

Byron

Ct.,

asked for a list of those things
considered
normal
appurtenances
for country clubs and posed the
question that bowling alleys might

also

be

considered

as

a

proper

operation.
The village board recently gave
the country club a permit for this

additional

construction

zoning an
from R-2

R-1

area along
(9,000 sq.

after

Newcomers Club board members met recently to discuss plans
for next year’s program. They are as follows: standing, Mrs. Jo-

re

Deerfield Rd.
foot lots) to

seph Dassing, president, Mrs. Donald K. Smith, recording secretary,

and Mrs. Jules Pallagi, first vice president. Seated are Mrs. Phillip
F. Ruth, treasurer, and Mrs. Erwin Wolf, corresponding secretary.
Mrs. Armand E. Dodge, second vice president, was absent.

(20,000 sq. foot lots).

Those

who

presented

tion

included

Mrs.

James

Mueller,
Mrs.

Mrs.
J.

Mrs.

Willard

peti-

Bell,

Mrs.

Fritz

Sayre,

Roger

the

Robert
Merletti

DEERFIELD SAFETY COUNCIL LISTS
TRAFFIC VIOLATIONS DURING MAY

and

J. Loarie.

Special Assessments
Commissioner Needed

The Deerfield Safety Council, in its effort to make the Village
streets safer, reports the following traffic violations during the month
of May, 1959, heard in the courts of Judges Earl Paul and Walter Page:

The village board is looking for
a civic-minded
citizen to assume
the duties of commissioner of spe-

Al

cial assessments,

John

it was announced

at last week’s meeting of the Board
of Local
Improvements,
held
by

will

investigate
to make

kind

of

Rose,

Lewis

Fuller,

Michael

O’Shaughnessy,

William

Paul

Lahti,

Philip

H.

Lindgren,

Emery

Adams,

DiPietre,

Welch,

to Yield

Intoxication

Parking

Highland

Mud

Park—Speeding—No

Deerfield—Illegal

Deerfield—Drivers

Deerfield—Illegal

Parking—No
License

collection

were

Twenty per cent of the collection remains in Deerfield for local
help to humanity.

and

License

Not

Village

Sticker

Changed

Parking

committeemen.
the

Drivers

Turn

members of the Presbyterian Women’s Club, the Bethlehem Woman’s
Club, the Deerfield Garden Club,
the Deerfield Woman’s
Club and
the Chamber
of Commerce.
The
Deerfield State Bank and the Deerfield Savings and Loan assisted in
counting the money.

re-

of Way

Turn

Park—Spilling

Chicago—U

in

Sticker

Right

Winnetka—Speeding

Highland

Dodge,

Influence

Village

Chicago—Speeding

Sandberg,

Armand

the

Park—Speeding

Northbrook—lIllegal

T.

Parking

Under

Park—Failure

Chicago—U

Bubash,

Edwin

Influence

Mundelein—Speeding

C,

Becker,

the

Parking—No

Deerfield—Public

Finkler,

of Way

Property

Ohio—Speeding
Under

Park—Illegal

Highland

Audrey

Assisting

Michaels,

Thompson

C.

John

W. Roessler, chairman, Louis Seider, treasurer, and Bruce Ford, ArWellon

Krueger,

Robert

Right

Glencoe—Speeding

Highland

Thorne,

N.

Public

Deerfield—Illegal

Gaston,

L.

Yield

to

Highwood—Driving

A,

R.

to

Highland

Janice

Pia

ports that this was $70 more than
collected last year. The Deerfield
service unit consists of Mrs. Carl

Felix

Filipetti,

E.

The Salvation
Army
Doughnut
Day went over the top once more
last Friday when a total of $523
dollars was collected for the organization.

Nordham,

Joan

Mrs.

Collected Friday

thur

Barrington,

Influence

Forest—Failure

Cleveland,

Lederer,

Christafano,

the

Forest—Damage

Deerfield—Driving

Nick

G.

Lake
Lake

Wheeler,

Cecel

R.

Over Top With $523

chairman,

M.

Jerome

Doughnut Day Goes

Darling,

E.
Tyrell,

Josephine

equitable adjustment.

Warren

Charles

Under

Deerfield—Speeding

Condon,

Rothering,

Charles

“recapture

some

Baumann,

Egan

Intoxication

Chicago—Driving

William

Mary

Investigation was authorized of
cases
in which
subdividers
find
they must pay for improvements to
houses or lots intervening between
their properties
and
nearby
improved property. Persons benefiting through such arrangements are
known
as “free riders’
and the

Evanston—Public

Catch,

H.

Mary

The special assessments at the
present
time
include
the
Hazel,
Wayne
and
Holly
improvements
and the Jonquil Terrace paving.
Robert Bowen, village engineer,
reported receipt of one answer to
letters sent out a week previously
to Oakley residents asking for easements for the construction of storm
sewers along the west side of the
street.

agreements”

B.

Ray

the village board prior to its regular meeting at the village hall.

board

McKeever,

Workshop On Master
Plan Is Next Thurs.
The sixth and last meeting of the
workshop

on

the

master

plan

for

Deerfield will be held next Thursday evening
at 8 in the village
board room at the Village Hall on

Waukegan Rd.
Matthew Rockwell, plan consultant, and Frank Curto, chairman of
the Plan Commission, will be in
charge.
|

3

\ Page

48

BANK

o INTEREST

“The Service Bank Of Highland Park”

ON SAVINGS AT

BANKS HIGHLAND
1771 Second St.

BANK—POST
Member

Federal

OFFICE BLDG.

Deposit

insurance

Corporation

PARK

\Diewood 2-7800
Thursday, June 18, 1959

�PRESENTS THE BIGGEST SEWING MACHINE SALE
le 18,19

2°
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20

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PORTABLES

Your Choice—Lime Oak, Walnut, Mahog.

1959 CONSOLE

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WE

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Thursday,

June

18,

1959

D

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=
IDlewood 2-5200

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SAV5 E
Nationally Advertise, d

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SAVE

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Reg. $419.95

NOW $239.95
Save

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Electric Portable...
CONSOLES

i

�OOM

LES 3
i,

re
Ie,
Pi, fe

res

ig

ean

3

aa

Ee
He

te

a

RPE
Gey £ agi

ad Vs fe
Ce Be ERC
OMAR

elope
SHORE

Ke IE

Anew

‘

AAie

Doletig

srey

Be ak
i Na

,

x Cub
alee

South Di damon d
Ss) ox—sSouth

Reliable Laundry

‘a Giox
Be

Kasper

k’

‘

Miami

in

Ball

Rose

A former movie actress and now|comedy’s

h

ae.

te leat

2
will

Brown

.666

6

39

°

_ Manilow Braves
iP. O'Brien .......... 5
PD. Goldman ........ 6

4
4

Mrs. Grace Lawther, mother of
800
666 | Mrs. Balaban, lives at 128 Pleasant

ang Davriry
HIGHLAND PARK
~
a te

6

3

500 | Ave.

schools

PH. ID. 2:2400

cong ae

a

_ Clavey’s Yankees
a.

Ee eattiven Fade GA
.

Fe

Bonga

%

1333

2

6

dvecncee

ivan

ul

towgc teqgees,s|
es

_ Summer
of

son

Training

At McCoy

Mr. an

rs.

Richard

THRU

f

4
»%

JUNE

x
oe

He is scheduled to re-

*

SHOW

:

BOAT

¢

at Camp McCoy, Wis.,
the summer training

National|

and

Reservists

Army

_ Guardsmen.

ome cel the Lshachooyange camp —

Army;
to an
ember, according
- news release.
Rubel entered the Army last Sep-|
_

_ tember.
member of Tau Delta Phi]
A
_ fraternity, the young soldier is a
1954

graduate

of

Highland

Park

- High School and is a 1958 graduate|
of

the University of Pennsylvania.|

tm
|a

GARDEN
OPEN-AIR
THEATRE

ete

(Indoors if cloudy)

4

5

+

,
Wh

+
¥

collage

{

Skokie &amp; Green

Bay

—_—_ITTSS STS

* al oe

+

x*7 OPENS

ax
Re

Sheridan's
17, 22
11, 14,Rivals’
5 8, "The
Mid,

3 st Bk i of ‘Highland
Field &amp; iCo. 3d Fl
Marshell
4Res

Tha

|

““Oedipus, | King of
Sophocles’ Thebes”

-Sim.-Fri., 3.50, 2.90, 2.40, 1.90

‘
Fe

July 3.9, 12, 15, 18, 24, 28
ard
omnia

23; 22, 20, 29) 3|
mee 21,
6
Prices: All Seats $2.00
ee
era ly
| | Save ‘sgh Ben Pac
Curtain at
$4.50.
| tion to all plays:

| 18:30. UN 4-1907. Speech Bldg.
be

on the N.U. Campus.

STOCK CAR RACES
SUNDAY. NITE

TRIALS...

TIME

7:15

. 8:30

RACES ......

WAUKEGAN
WAY
SPEED
6

West Washington
Green Bay Rd. &amp;

St. between
Skokie Hwy.

MA 3-9540-- Free. Parking Adults $1.25. — Children 25c
Added

Event

Spectator
Giant

Bigger

Race
Than

Ever

Demolition
Race
Page

50

over 35 years

eee

CHILDREN’S MATINEE

$158

Set

i.

DOG”

SHAGGY

NOW INSTALLING

eoeee

i
STEREOPHONIC
HI-Fl

:
SOUND

sick ‘Wiecuasbes Whadae

ecutiru
8
4744
2106 oreatre
—L.F.
Lake ° Forest,ore Illinois

-

NY?

ma
‘7.

SF

POLICY

THEATRE

Fred MacIMURRAY-Jean HAG

| Howard

hectiu whee, &gt;

:

‘dhae

Ml

Ml

in technicolor

pitti

.

Sat. June 20 “KIDDIE SHOW”

starring—John

x2

Brides for 7 Brothers”
Video”
3“7Cartoons—“Capt.

Co-starrina—Angie
\ngi

June

24, Midweek
#

SCHEDULE —

Soni at 7:00 and 9:39
up: Brayo”’ i begins
Weekdays—"Rio
(Saturday matinees discontinued ‘til school reopens)

Matinee
es

Sunday—’
es
mia
Bravo”
unday—’’Rio

jam
skaneunllemapit
3 and Comedy

P

3 —Cartoons—

NG

ENGAGEM

FOR

THE

oh

z
\ 9:48
17!
Ney
9.
i
- 7:12.
- 4:36 Pike:
2:00
begins.at

June 26—'’TOM THUMB" and

Midweek Matinee Open 1 P.M.

TAKI

on
Bond

War
Ward

Walter B Brennan,
Walter

Dickin
ckinson,
—

.

Nelson

Ricky

Martin,

Dean

Wayne,

*

Wed.,

ais iake

Mma

1,
aitiaiiast

RIO BRAVO

S

Wide

‘¢

p

Hawks’

—

WEEK

OWE

—
O

On

25

June

Thursday,

thru

19

June

Friday,

JESSE

“ALIAS

Sat. eves., 3.90, 3.40, 2.90, 2.40
QAAAAWAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAVANAAAAAAAAAAAAA AAA AAAAAAAAA A
b

;

:

Exhibit In Our
Lobby by
i
D
NGI g

JAMES”

rni

ENTS

—_

HET

SUMMER

Enjoy

After

=

FREE

a

Dinner

Drink!

Choose your favorite
cocktail at Patterson’s.
It’s served free with
any dinner from 5 pm.

the
a

a
|

pages: pig le He

icken—Fried

or

pene

Stuffed Shrimp ..............
Rikaded Shiteie &lt;u.

Prime

|

directed by Ed Imhoff

1.50
1.25

LUNCHEONS

EVER

y

MOOD

hd o. vrovvctions
1D 2.1940

Steak ............ .

1,50

‘
nse
mt
U.S. Choice Sirloin .......... 1.75

Filet Mignon .................. 2.00

Dissension

15¢

tee Park PCT RLAR LE

wee

Prime Ribs of Beef $1.25

FOR

Ribs of Beef ........ $1.25

T-Bone

All Fish Dinners ............-. 1.25

MUSIC

Disney’s

Walt

“THE

Shuiale

sia,

ee

eS

;

P.M.

Brynner, Charlton Heston
“THE BUCCANEER”
Karnival
rt
:

Yul

00

* 2:00

20th

SAT., June

ni

’
Sets to $1500.00
Otheramon

fe

and

d

ip CinemaScope And METROCOLOR

%

0

meaeemar

i

Pk a

NOW

PAUL DOUGIAS..,

NPS “The 2-7
vie
Game ”
Mating

Plan!
“28-Di

RIOT!4

pb ee sope
DEBBIE REYNOLDS » ToNY RANDALL

P ayment

Sea

19th

JUNE

FRIDAY,

ROMANTIC

;
Time

r -m.

:

ae
e te

'

i st:
alia

U

SSN
Fhe 6 os ACTED a CET A
Ld Oo ii)
C

r

-}

1716 CENTRAL: UN-4-4900

NEMEROFF

wih.

|

Le

2

Eyanslin
:

Tass

ReM ANSE Ae

oe

:

Sunday Continuous 2 to 12 Midnight—Doors Open 1:40

«

“RESERVATIONS BOTH THEATRES
277, Highland
Box. phone:
"Mail:
ID 2-1160 Pk. Suburbs
VE 5-4040
;

ehh

\n-CONDITION

Highleed Fats
Tel. IDlewood 2-0630

_

Weekdays—6:30 - 8:26 - 10:22

re

¢

Thurs., June a at 7:00-9:40

(ID

chair-

Lines

Leading

the

Across ffom bank

- 7:42 - 9:46
K* |] sot —5:38
% |} Sun.—1:30 - 3 at 2385)
&lt;—

Last Times Tonight
“IMITATION OF LIFE”

Open Daily 6:40 to 12 Midnight—Curtain at 7:00

x

x

:
++

H.

x
Pe

Brown

E

Sy 3 wel
es pa
rs
Night’s Dream 7
July 1, 4, 7, 10, 16, 19, 30

va

ts dog FOne Fur

:
eeier
cat
ia
(Ulhyme
Ma
yea
= Wee. Baek Ave: Theatre *
: Be
©

—

|[

Silverware

and

abbot

June 25

«

oa!

=

e

ACCLAIM

POPULAR

i

+ &lt;

18

June

BO

oN

Oa honemCReE

et

Ae

D iA M 1] N HH] S

Carry

|
Repel

"neo over ov

:

28

%

%

eigen
’i
Great Plays

oy

J

1

re)

d

WwW

&amp;

Thursday,

Allan Jones {|
3

e
Onn DANEed., Pf Open

Sun.

thru Thursday,

t

to
of|

| Rubel, 1964 Sheridan Rd. recently|
arrived
support

R.

IM.

Park;

iighland

sce

+

S

t
at.,

PURINE

-

For This Showing

S

Theatre

ieee
Tene

'

psec

Park

Parking

Cool——Free

Skokie ang. Edens

Pe

*

shite licloremiele

ee
i

:

+ MUSIC

ae

Ss

Castle .............. 6.

seers eeerseeooeeereer
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,a

seboiged

and High-

Park

Highland

500 | 12 —

5

A, Levinson ........ 10

|

attended

Mrs. Balaban

°

aR eny

Axelrod

2 THEATRE

ye

Fund.

Miami saluted the United

a

\

as

«5.500 | the Florists Association of Greater

eee

Piabis

ya

Highland

is

We

pre-

She

TAR

Peete)

Watches

at

good

books,

Asis

tore RAR

Leslie

Mrs.

end | RNG

will

run

10-day

who | June 28.
guybscription
Bob|

entertainment

hour’s

an

sented

666

9

Cross.

Red

GATE

PORE

rE | N F

North
member and chairman of | Theatre now’ are is available.
8 # Board
one of the e phiphilmotor corps. of the: Dade chap-| Shore Hadassah
the
das:
American

a °

:

The

star.

555 | HOPe-Bing Crosby “Road” pictures, | either Tenthouse Theatre or Music
ter,

ee

fits by direct sale, through its
village chairmen, of subscription
2-6923)

5

aag|
:

wey

7.

‘anthropic organizations tha bene-

play, “Harvey” will open

E.

Joe

f

pet.

ET

Bae

!books.

Season

9

|... .3,5c.0-

ETI °

x

producer of High- | man).

igs

beg

0

Marie‘ Lawther), San Marco Island, | winning

ee

6

ae DK Be + pat 10

ee

1

sane
ii

;

Opens

Rogers,

Herb

yh

ie

ae

i

‘Har vey

gs
CALA betes

ear ak ak a

10

G Harding ..........
Bly 9:4
eh
Cubs
McCallum

Be OOS
Vy
Platt
PD

2

Mi

a civic leader, Mrs. Balaban,
goo | aPPeared in several of the

Oe

eae,

bia)

season
theater'sstage
Of | theveteran
as mistress
Fla., recentlyforserved
screen abi
and tomorrow
Fund’s|
the United
ceremonies

Hitters
h
ab

Leading

Us
Sas

(former

Balaban

Henry

Mrs.

ia-

Yankees—Nor

.

Tenthouse

BENEFIT

CHARITY

sie us caine)
ee
xy
Games geri for aoe yt 8
fe

Braves
_j el

r]

;

- Yankees vs. Sox—South Diamond

Bs

vs vs.

Coys

eer “s

;

ey ig!

NCTM

tian

RESIDENT |
A Mi AMI

FORMER
EMCEES

Old Eim League
_____ (Continued! from page 48)

TR
yee

hag
BLS

iw

Ss

,

A

lA 1

gragor

ten

due

PHONE ORDER

DELIVERED
FREE

VE 5-161]

PAT PATTERSON'S
Private Dining

+] STEAK

Room

for Parties of 50

Sqm HOUSE

CUT RATE LIQUOR STORE
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK INCLUDING HOLIDAYS
Edens, Skokie &amp; County Line Rd.
VErnon 5-161]
Thursday,

June

18, 1959

�| Four Named To Hotel

‘season, Faber is resident manager
of the Boca Raton Club, Boca RaMoraine On The Lake ton, Florida.
Also joining the Moraine, now in
its 63rd summer season, is Bill
The appointment of four new Mayo
as front
office manager.
people to the executive staff of Ho- Mayo has held executive positions

GANDRAN vinss ase

’

Executive Staff

tel Moraine On The Lake was announced this week. Paul Faber has
been appointed manager of the ho-

in Miami

Beach

and Nassau

North Shore

$IDELIGHTS

Mrs. Dorothy Warren Greene,
formerly of Glencoe and for many

GROUND

BROKEN

tel, announced Larry Boyle, gen-| Years active in civic affairs in the] §4 VINGS
eral

manager.

During

the

winter|North

Shore,

raine’s

ICE SKATING
OPEN

YEAR

Carpet

626

&amp;

Linoleum

Register
Now!

Co.
Classes Now Forming

announced

2-8701

PY

PHONE

AT

Sun.

ote

TO

The present home of Deerfield Savings and Loan Association
at 745 Deerfield Rd., Deerfield is being augmented by a 90 x 92
ft. structure of two-story and basement. The new building will be
colonial in architecture with a pure white concrete front and traditional tall white columns. At the ground breaking ceremony,

GO

MUZIK’S

&amp; | shown

Waukegan
Highwood

FRI. thru

THURS.

ONE

Bring The Whole

above,

NIN

EDGEWATER BEACH
At the EDGEWATER BEACH HOTEL
fe

FRANCHOT

1K)
\ | eee
STRASBERG

¢

ward

@ JUNE 22&lt; JULY 5

Groucho AA, rN "&gt; 4

F. Segert,

PARADE

@ JULY

J. Howard

Wolf

and

Leslie Acox.

Show

°

MATINEE

Only

“MA

&amp;

ON

20

at

PA

2

P.M.

KETTLE

THE

FARM”

Plus

Cartoons

&amp;

Comedy
Mrs.

COMING—JUNE

6-19

26—

| “SOUTH PACIFIC”

WN We) x13

ety bbe oy

Charles

IN THE NEW. COMEDY
“The Law and Mr. Simon"
PRIOR TO BROADWAY.
@ AUG. 17-SEPT, &amp;

of Grant

IN THE N.Y, HITE
857
“Once More With Feeling”
@ AUG, 3-16 ©

remodeling

is a unique,

3.50
ii
|

Sat. 7:00 and 10:00 p.m.

EDGEWATER BEACH PLAYHOUS
— EDGEWATER
E
BEACH HOTEL— CHICAGO 40, Ill.
Enclose self-addressed stamped env, with check or money order

available
ATT

af

at Marshall

Field &amp; Co., Loop

recently

completed.

hi-fi listening

Included

in

room.

NEW

NOW

Vacation

OPEN

and

Opens New Offices
The Highland Park News Agency,
formerly located on St.
Johns Ave.,
moved
to new
and
larger quar-

ters recently at 2016 First St. The
firm, which distributes three Chi-

door and indoor swimming ‘pools ... dining in the splendor of
the Fountain Room. . - cocktails at the Highland Fling...

cago metropolitan newspapers, was
recently purchased from the estate

Highland Park Music Theatre ... 100 spacious air conditioned

of Fred Rice by Edward Fink. Fink
was long-time manager for Porett

rooms and suites. FREE PARKING
For information call VErnon 5-4000

Saba

ila

dene
HOTEL

HIGHLAND PARK, ILL.
Pat Miller, General Mgr.

= Ploa's compiete evening in the Beautiful Edgewater Beach Hotel =: SUPPERG 2

Hotel

new

News Agency

fore

in

Ave.,

program

EXCITI NG

Concept

Central

Park store’s new

The new department was installed during

store

Business Accommodations
5 private meeting and conference rooms .. - magnificent out-

MAIL
ORDERS NOW!
Prices: Sun. thru Thur. $2.50,

RATES and SEASON TICKETS

New

Inc., 708

luggage department.

IS
A

&amp; Grant,

in the Highland

the

the remodeling

Mees
ef bane
SNE Ao&gt; Cet

THE

Fri. &amp; Sat. $2.95, 3.95
Sun. at 7:00, Mon. thru Fri. 8:30,

1-6308 for information

Reservations available

Grant

shows off some of the luggage

MOTORVa

SKULNIK |

18, 1959

Shapiro,

FANNIE HURST'S

CHILDREN’S

eewummes

3

|

MENASHA

June

Solomon

WEEK

JACQUES

e JULY 20-AUG. 2

Thursday,

Tennis,

Grant &amp; Grant Install Luggage Dept.

“TIME FOR ELIZABETH"

PARTY

P. A.

19-25

JUNE

One

IN THE COMEDY HIT
“TALL STORY"
DIRECT FROM BROADWAY

Cleopatra"

FULL

SAT.

CONRIED
HANS

IN SHAW'S COMEDY

THEATRE

right,

BRANT | UNIVERSAL: INTERNATIONAL PICTURE
orCEART
EARL GRANT.
ing

PARKING

AY) 1500* FORCARS
¢

DINNER

left to

SANDRA DEE- DAN O'HERLIHY 2a
SUSAN KOHNER
+ ROBERT ALDA==Saamal
~*JUANITA MOORE *MAHALIA JACKSON hh,

The THEATRE of STARS Siné 22
5 Sparkling PLAYS with NEW YORK CASTS—une 22-sepr,

Call LO

were

Fred Stryker, Lewis Walton Sr., Kenneth Weir, Stuart Bradley, Ed-

Ave.

June

LANA TURNER
JOHN GAVIN

Family!

e RIDES
e REFRESHMENTS

e FUN
e GAMES

LAUGH

and the

tz

8

IN THE

Betty

THEATRE—GLENCOE
ID 2-0605
VErnon 5-0605

EX: SN
Bethe
al (2

Grounds

~

Mo-

GLENCOE

A
e

Oak-Terrace School |

and

DRFLD.

BUILDING

rep-

ZESTO

Lj

4 Fun-Packed Days

“Caesar

NEW

LOAN

ID 2-9718

ORDERS

548

%

Miss

AND

915 Linden Ave.—Winnetka, Ill.
Call Miss Thomas—HI 6-4123

Post 501

Fri., Sat.,

FOR

|

Inn, Phoenix, Arizona.
(Continued on page 52)

Bigger! Better Than Ever!
HIGHWOOD AMERICAN LEGION

Thurs.,

the

catering

Paradise

Hubbard Woods
Ice Skating Studio

Section

IDlewood

as

Hotel, Hamilton, Bermuda;

Roger Williams
Ravinia

joined

staff

Here and There

Green, sales manager, (Because of
the similarity of names, the new
catering representative will use her
maiden name of Mrs. Dorothy Warren.) Mrs. Warren previously was
with the Soreno Hotel, St. Petersburg, Florida; the Castle Harbur

AROUND

John B. Nash

has

sales

resentative,

From

resorts.

SKOKIE HIGHWAY-LAKE COOK ROAD =e
wen

DENS , EXPRESSWAY

Bros.,
newspaper
distributors
in
Waukegan.
Fink has been in the newspaper
distribution field since his eighth

birthday. The Highland Park News
Agency was established by the late
Fred Rice in 1918. He operated it
until the time of his death.
Page

51

�-

CALL WI 5-4500
REAL

ESTATE
FOR
SALE
(LAKE FOREST)

LAKE

(For 55 words or Less)

Ads

containing 56 words or
re are charged at the rate of
$4.50 per column inch.

DELIGHTFUL one floor plan in BRICK—
just 3 yrs. old. 1144 baths, 3 bedrooms, living
room,
dining
room,
newly
carpeted.
DEN
&amp; porch
patio with barbeque.
Attached 2 car &amp; full basement with family
room, bar, heating is in the floor of basement &amp; copper tubing was used; making it
comfortable for use in winter months. Large
landscaped lot, fenced yard. 30’s.

tract rates for 4 or more
consecutive insertions available

request

This

1

cost

inch

will

Minimum.

cover

the

_ insertion in all 4 papers.
©

Deerfield

FINEST
LOCATION
is this 3 bedroom,
large living room, tiled bath, many closets.
Hot
water
heat,
combination
storms
&amp;
screens. Wooded lot. $25,750.

Review

® Highland Park News
® Highwood News
® The Lake Forester
ds

run

during

in

above

LAKE

publications

Fort Sheridan Tower is published
ill also appear in

Fort Sheridan

Tower

Published Every Other Friday

OLDER with space &amp; charm—living room,
frpl., dining room, playroom, large country
kitchen. Bath &amp; bedrooms up, lots of closet
space. Basement,
%4 bath. Garage &amp; drive.
20’s.

Want Ads will be accepted up to

Tuesday, 4:30 P.M.

DEADLINE FOR CONTRACT
ADS 3 P.M. TUESDAY

DELUXE RANCH of brick, many fine features, dining room &amp; family room, 20 ft.
patio, basement,
gas heat, 2 car garage.
Wooded secluded lot. Near transportation,

For Publication in the Current
‘,
Week’s Issue.

Mrs.

CANCELLATION DEADLINE
12 NOON, TUESDAY

Lindenmeyer,

H.

D.

Copyis accepted with the under-

faved street.
ae in low

ocated

Mn
Mn Ml
Mo, Ml
Mi
Ml

%

ac.

lot.

Must see to appreciate. Best
40s. By appt., Lake Forest

FIRST OFFERING
MIDDLE THIRTIES
e bedrooms, 2 baths, Cape Cod, sepdining room, full basement, screened
ch, attached garage, 100 by 250 wooded
; located in East Lake Forest. Call Lake
WHITE

dition,
ing

brick

ranch

spacious

room

area,

home

grounds.

21x13;

2

in

excellent

Living
large

the

since

Efficient 114 story home on quiet street near
grade school; 4 BEDROOMS;
living-dining
comb.;
kitchen;
large utility
room;
1%
baths; glazed porch; attached garage; IM&gt;
kl oh OCCUPANCY.
Priced at $21,-

GRIFFITH,
REALTORS

INC.

SERVE

678 Western
Lake Forest

Ave.
485

NEWLY

LISTED

BRICK

COLONIAL,

YOU

12 Scranton Ave.
Lake Bluff 816

TWO-STORY

9

room,

bath, house

on 3144 wooded

landscaped

acres;

3-car

DUTCH

town.

4 bedrooms,

Realtors

Realtors

111 Green

ALpine

basement

31%

and well

garage.

Rd., Wilmette

and

con-

din-

bedrooms,

ed bath; extra large beautifully decorat-

kitchen,
cabinets,
formica
counters,
range;
screened
patio,
10x19;
drapes.
Priced at $16,250 for quick sale. LI 24
.

LAKE

dishwasher

and

car attached garage,
gas heat. $45,000.

WELL

disposal;

2-

full basement,

GILBERT RAYNER
REAL ESTATE
266 EAST DEERPATH
LAKE FOREST 382

1-1111

Custom built Bi-level, 1 year old
with spacious grounds..
Excellent
for children.
Large
living room
with fireplace, dining room. Large
cherry paneled family room with
fireplace.
Spacious
kitchen
with
separate breakfast area, all modern
built in electric appliances, cypress
paneled
recreation
room.
Four
large bedrooms, 214 baths. Laundry
room with washer and dryer. 2 car
oversized garage. Beautifully landscaped. 495 Exeter Place. Call Lake
Forest 5077.
LAKE BLUFF east by owner. Attractively
landscaped, 3 twin bedroom home, close
to schools, shopping, transportation. Has
31 ft. living room with wall to wall carpeting, stone heatilator fireplace and large
picture window
overlooking terrace and
ravine, also viewed from kitchen picture
window.
Reception-dining
room; _ basement; 144 baths; many closets and builtins, 2 car garage. Mid-20’s, Call Lake
Bluff 1973.
THREE bedroom ranch, carport, basement,
one block school, 90 ft. lot, 2% years old,
middle 20’s. 321 Hirst Ct., Lake Bluff

DUNKIRK

BEST

Dutch

Colonial

100

Earhart &amp; Co.

ft.

wide.
Large
living
room
w/pan.
fireplace wall, sep. dining room,
den, 3 bedrooms, 11% baths. Very
close to school, transportation and
Ravinia Park. For early fall occu$32,500

CLAPBOARD

REALTORS

1899 Sheridan Rd.

HOMEFINDERS,

COLONIAL

In East central location. Large living room, sep. dining room, booklined den, guest room with half
bath on first floor. 3 attractive bedrooms, 2 tile baths on 2nd. Full
basement
w/pan.
rec.
room
and
fireplace.
Lovely
grounds’
with
beautiful gardens
$39,500

TIME

463

OFFERED

6 room brick, St. Charles
Under $30,000. Shop these
ues.
Telephone

Lake

32 Center

STUART
Ave.

3

Bluff

room.,
2 car

cabinet kitchen.
outstanding val-

4057

or

166

&amp;

CO.
Lake

OPPOSITE

Ill.

LOCATION

C&amp;NW

STATION

Northwest corner of Western &amp; Illinois Rd.
75x78 ft. Includes 8 rm. house fully insulated
and well maintained. Business zoning. City
parking lot close by. For full information
call Elsa Fitzgerald at LF 86 or HI 6-7180.

Storm Realty Co.
REALTORS
378

Green

Bay

Road

OPEN

Winnetka

ID

Ave.

SUNDAY
265 IVY

2-1212
2 TO 5

LANE

A young house in choice
4
oversized
bedrooms,
kitchen with eating area,

OPEN
Bluff,

BEDROOM
red brick ranch; full basement; attached 2 car garage; corner lot,
choice
east location,
1 block
west
of
Sheridan Rd. 20’s. Lake Forest 1895.

BUSINESS

Central

Braeside
modern’
den, 31%

SUNDAY
345 OAKLAND

location.
cabinet
baths.

2T0O

5

Beautiful
100x190
lot. Ranch
type home.
3 bedrooms, separate dining room, den, 2
car garage, bus to high school. ........ $27,000

Idlewood Realty
REALTORS

OPEN

ID 2-6776
SAT.,

SUN.,

12 TO

Realtors

THE EXPANDING FAMILY should investigate this handsome Bi-level on a wooded
acre site. They’ll like its 2 bedrooms, birch
cabinet kitchen and mahogany paneled family room, with beamed ceiling, and 2 jalousied walls.
A home to enjoy now and in
the future—$29,500. Call Mrs. Parkinson—
WI 5-0248.
THE PRICE-CONSCIOUS FAMILY should
not miss this Spanish ranch just reduced to
$20,950. Ideal for the smaller family, it has
living room with fireplace, separate dining
room, den, 2 bedrooms and full basement.
Call Mr. Degen, WI 5-1784.

HOMEFINDERS,
111 Green

1550 Park Ave.

2-0880

THE OUTDOOR FAMILY will fall in love
with this handsome farm-style residence on
an acre wooded site overlooking the Forest
Preserve. The grounds include bar-b-q area,
80 ft. dog run, and a driveway lined with
sturdy elms. Inside are 3 bedrooms, new
G. E. pine paneled kitchen and living room
with fireplace. $26,500. Call Mrs. Hedlund.

REALTORS
FIRST

ID

THE
BEAUTY
CONSCIOUS
FAMILY
should cast an eye on this handsome brick
and frame ranch. See its circular drive, 33
fine trees, Thermopane windows, Westinghouse kitchen, 3 bedrooms &amp; 2 baths. Highlight is the living room with paneled fireplace wall, valance lighting &amp; beamed ceiling. $34,900.
Call Mrs. Moser.

H. and R. Anspach

6 room Lake Bluff home incl. fam.
paneled walls, patio, with Bar-B-Q,
garage, wooded half acre. Low 20’s.

BARGAIN

This exquisite 5 bedroom, 514 bath, 2 story
home on about 1 acre just up from the
lake and swimming beach is ideal for ease
of living in a large home. No “living in”
help necessary
to maintain.
Modern
and
up-to-date in every detail. Beautiful yard,
3 car attached garage. Please call us for the
many
superb
details.
Realistically
priced
at
$79,000

on beau-

lot over

BI-LEVEL

FRENCH NORMANDY
NEAR LAKE

BRAESIDE

landscaped

RANCH

Living Room with fireplace, separate dining
room, wood cabinet kitchen with generous
eating area, family room on first level, 3
twin size bedrooms with 2 full baths. Wonderful area for future recreation room, attached garage, wooded property with over
100 ft. frontage in lovely Woodridge. Owner transferred. Worth more but forced to
price at
29,500

ESTATE FOR SALE (improved)
(HIGHLAND PARK)

EAST

DELUXE

Perfectly maintained, 3 twin sized bedrooms,
2%
tiled baths plus large TV room
and
porch
opening
off separate
dining
room
and completely modern kitchen with good
eating area. Living room about 20x20 with
fireplace. New gas heat. Beautifully wooded
lot in top location east of Green Bay Road
and only 3 blks. to schools. An exceptional
value
$33,500

1-2353

BEDROOMS, brick ranch, 2 car garage,
= pe
basement,
gas
heat,
low
30's.
elephone Lake Forest 3095.

tifully

ONWENTSIA
ROAD—Frame
and
Stone Ranch on one acre. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths, living room, dining room combined,
den, kitchen

with

FOREST

Attractive

VERY

MOST

BY OWNER
5 year old. 3 bedrooms, 1% baths, living
room
with fireplace, oversized 2 car attached garage with workshop area, on acre;
city water; West Lake Forest. Mid twenties..
Telephone ID 2-9468 evenings or all day
weekends.
3

LISTED—$20,500

MODERNIZED—SPACIOUS

BROKER

2375

SALE
(improved)
PARK)

Spacious on approx. % acre, this brick 7
room home
features large separate dining
room, 3 very spacious bedrooms, porch, superb
panelled
recreation
room
with fireplace in basement. 2 car attached garage
and gas heat. Immediate possession ....$47,900

Leonard

EXCLUSIVE

with

BUILT solid brick one-story, sixroom house on 1% beautifully wooded acre overlooking Old Elm Cluh
grounds; 2-car attached garage, gas
heat, large basement. $36,000.

on

limits.

538 CENTER
AVE, Lake Bluff, 2 blocks
from
beach
and
boating.
Fine
older
home,
rewired. 5 bedrooms,
212 baths,
screened
porch, breakfast room, new 2
car garage and breeezeway,
double lot.
We
have purchased
another home
and
are anxious to sell with immediate possession.
Exceptional
financing
available.
Call. owner,
Lake
Bluff 2569
or your
broker. $33,000.

REAL

recreation

site

city

Located 1.2 miles north of Deerpath stop light on Winwood
Dr.
which
joins Waukegan
Rd. from
the west.

11% baths, 2-car

AND

NEWLY

building

within

ESTATE
FOR
(HIGHLAND

ATTRACTIVE
COLONIAL. with charming
Mahogany
panelled
Living-Dining
Room
with
fireplace.
Modernized
wood
cabinet
kitchen with breakfast area, screened porch
off of dining area. 2 large bedrooms, tile
bath with shower, sun deck on second floor.
This home is in immaculate condition. All
new
carpeting,
stove
and
refrigerator
included. Call today.

ice. Will never be any cheaper.

COLONIAL

room. $34,500.
ATTRACTIVE

level

road

Clifford

Well built brick home ideal for large family.
Living room with fireplace; dining room;
sun room; kitchen.
4 LARGE BEDROOMS
on 2nd floor; corner lot; 2 blocks to school,
shopping and transportation. Owner transferred. Offered at $27,500.

TO

RE.siL

Features include underground gas,
water, electric, and telephone serv-

on
quiet
street,
and
well
landscaped 75 foot lot, convenient to

Ill.

HOMEFINDERS,
Bay

Excellent

blacktop

BLUFF

OFFICES

(improved)

ACREAGE SITE
$8700

FOREST

LAKE

TWO

ESTATE
FOR
SAL
(LAKE FOREST)

1904

One year old BRICK
SPLIT
LEVEL
in
Northmoor Sub. Living room with fireplace,
dining L, kitchen with built-ins, screened
porch, 3 bedrooms, 2% baths, SPACIOUS
FAMILY ROOM. Hot water heat, attached
garage. Excellent closet and storage space.
Offered in High Thirties.

JOHN

REAL

INC.

area

329 SCOTT ST.—1%
story home in closein east location. Living room with fireplace,
dining room, sun room, kitchen with breakfast bar, 3 bedrooms and bath on first floor.
Large finished room and storage space on
2nd floor. Full basement,
screened porch
and garage. Offered in LOW
TWENTIES
AND WELL WORTH IT.

TWO-STORY

Ll
Sl
Ln

(improvea)

on

GRIFFITH,

LAKE

BY OWNER
EXCLUSIVE MEADOWOOD
SECTION

Deerpath

Well

Co.

JOHN
Serving

(Improved)

i

{
|

|

\

|

{

scrnd.

969

THE
BUDGET
CONSCIOUS
FAMILY
should see this well-built Cape Cod which
offers fine living for just $21,900. This 3
bedroom home can be expanded and now includes modern kitchen, full basement &amp; 2car garage. Call Mr. Hastings.

FOREST—Quality built pressed brick
anch. Like new. Well designed; 3 twin
bedrms., 2 tile baths, vanity; large
living - din.,
firepl,
overlooking
rear
nds; 10 closets; beaut. lge. kitchen,
kfst. rm., built-ins, washer, dryer; carpeting; 2% car att. garage; 2 porches, one

lum.

Bluff

THE
ACTIVE
FAMILY
will
delight
in
this brick
and
redwood
Bi-level
offering
rustic charm and spaciousness coupled with
modern design and transportation, schools
and shopping convenience. Here are 7 delightful rooms with elegant details such as
raised 2-sided fireplace, Thermopane
windows, push-button
kitchen, Ceramic baths
&amp; paneled family room. $42,000. Call Mr.
Hastings.

FOREST

ESTATE
FOR
SALE
(LAKE FOREST)

&amp;

HOMEFINDERS,

HIGHLAND PARK
608 Laurel
DEERFIELD
699 Waukegan
Rd.
287

ESTATE
FOR
SALE
(LAKE FOREST)

garage,

on the advertiser’s request, the
gaan
will rectify the error
y publishing the corrected ad
in the next regular issue without
charge. Ail claims for adjustment
must be made within five days of
the date of publication in which
the error occurs.

LAKE

Olson

Waukegan,

In the event of an error in copy,

IDlewood 2-4500
Windsor 5-4500
Lake Forest 2300

Lake

Realtors

Standing
that
the _ publisher
assumes
no
responsibility
for
omission
through
clerical
or
mechanical
error and
shall be
under no obligation or liability
of any kind whatsoever, either to
the advertiser or third parties.

TELEPHONE
WANT AD SERVICE

FOREST

OWNER
LEAVING AREA would like offers on this brick 3 bedroom house on a
lovely wooded property. Living room, fireplace paneled wall, also one bedroom paneled (11x15), kitchen 10x12, formica counters. Jalousie breezeway. Full concrete base.
2 car att. garage. Taxes
below 400 and
heating
costs low.
Combination
windows,
yard lights &amp; covered gutters. Lower 30’s.

the same week in which

REAL

BLUFF

PLENTY ROOM FOR CHILDREN in this
4 bedroom newer house, 2% baths; also’'16
ft. den and 26 ft. family room, tiled floors
&amp; paneled walls. Large living room, frpl., 16
ft.
dining
room,
kitchen
has
Chambers
range, oven, mixing units, disposal &amp; breakfast bar. Basement, gas heat, porch, 2 car
att. garage. Walk to trains &amp; village. This
house has plastered walls, oak floors &amp; is
carpeted.

5c each additional word

on

(Improved

5

Deluxe
4 bedroom,
brick ranch; 2 large
ceramic baths, 1 with shower; huge beamed
and paneled den; living room
with stone
fireplace
and
large
dining
area;
modern
kitchen with nook; big utility room; screened
porch; all same floor, Fenced
yard with
fruit trees, barbecue and rustic storage cabin. 1 Block to Lincoln School. Owner offers
at $49,500—buyers only. 920 Bob O’Link
Road, 1 block west of Green Bay.

Bay

Rd., Wilmette

Realtors
ALpine

1-1111

DISTINCTIVE 4 yr. old, 3 bdrm., frame
ranch home
on over an acre of lands.
prop. Liv. rm. with frpl., din. L, 1 C.T.
full bath, pow. rm., small kit. with dishwshr.
and bkfst. bar, blue stone patio
with B.B.Q., hardwood firs. and plaster
thruout. Oil fired, FHA; full bsmt. w/rec.
rm., asphalt tile on flr.; att. 144 car gar.,
surfaced driveway. Country living within
the city limits with bus serv. to Elm
Place schools. Avail. Sept. 1. In the low
30’s. Telephone ID 2-7495 for appt. No
brokers.
$33,500
4 bedroom face brick California ranch, fully
air-conditioned, living room with fireplace,
dining room, den, garden room,
1300 sa.
ft. recreation room with fireplace. Lincoln
School District, near town and transportation. Open house 10 to 4 p.m. Sunday, June
21. 1274 Glencoe Ave., Highland Park.

Thursday, June 18, 1959

�ves erg
HIGH IN VALUE—
LOW IN PRICE

HIGHLAND

Spacious home overlooking ravine and LAKE in best EAST Ravinia area. Studio living rm. (35x
20),

charming

library

a steal at $39,500.
BRAESIDE

blocks
street.

from

Perfect for the family with young
children,

this

house

has

HIGHLAND

2

car

att.

EXCELLENT

DEERFIELD

SEYMOUR
655

HIGHLAND

and

PARK

EAST

L. Ringer
Realtors
ID

2-6600

Wonderful

original

farm

garage,

chicken

house,

$2,250 PER ACRE

family

:

$20,900

NORTHBROOK
Three

bedroom,

Living

room

2

bath

brick

ranch on an acre of ground.

Oversized.

2

with

car

fireplace.

and

stone

Stone

BBQ.

Built in 1956.

home

set

on

cab. kitchen,

2

to

schools,

1024 MARION
AVE: Three bedroom split
level. Large
family
room
with fireplace.
Hard to find this location for
$27,500
622
split
New

PLEASANT
AVE.:
Three
bedroom
level. 2 Baths. Paneled family room.
and ready to move in. ............ $25,500

3443
BUENA
RD.:
on large wooded lot

Two
bedroom
ranch
(80’x300’) ........ $21,000

Dorsey Husenetter
REALTORS
723

St.

Johns

Ave.

ID

2-1484

HIGHLAND
PARK
Custom built ranch just 2%
years old. 4
bedrooms,
3 baths,
recreation
room,
gas
heat, dishwasher, range, new carpeting and
drapes. $44,250.

LANG
212

GLENCOE

AMbassador

REAL ESTATE
REALTORS
ROAD

2-7873

Realtors
HI 6-7274

SCHOOL

DISTRICT

MUCH

FOR

THE

MONEY

J-H Kahn
Glencoe

Theatre

Bldg.

VErnon

5 BEDROOMS

5-0236

$27,900

Located on large 150 ft. lot in beautiful
West Ridge School District. Has separate
dining room, den, 2 baths, full basement,
enclosed porch and 2 car garage. Priced for
immediate sale. Call today for appointment.
OPEN MONDAY
THRU
FRIDAY
9 a.m.-8 p.m. SAT. 9 a.m.-5 p.m.

VIKING Realty Co.
826

Deerfield

Rd.

Deerfield

HIGHLAND

WI

5-5300

PARK

Here is WONDERFUL LIVING on a deep
green wooded lot. True white colonial with
2 comfortable porches. Modernized kitchen
with breakfast
corner, dining-family
room
combination,
large living room
with fireplace,
5 family
bedrooms,
large
storage
space,
2 car
garage,
excellent
neighborhood. Inclusions. Asking $39,500.

QUINLAN
HI 6-0177

&amp; TYSON,

INC.
AM 2-3153

GLENCOE
VE

5-1971

CHARMING older home. 2 or 3 bedrooms,
living room, dining room, family room off
large paneled kitchen with nook, 1% car
garage, patio, low taxes, near Catholic
school,
transportation
and
stores.
Low
20’s. Telephone ID 2-1520.

floor

with

has

dress.

18x28
rm.

master

and

tiled

bath; 2 add’l large bdrms. and tiled
bath, plus porch usable as 4th
bdrm.
A beautiful home
usual appointments.

with

many

PHELPS,

Sheridan

Lincoln

ID

2-4580

Winnetka,

BY OWNER
Country style home. Approximately one half
acre surrounded by fruit trees and shade
trees. 7 rooms, screened, and glazed porch.
Perfect setting for children. Must be seen
to appreciate. West Ridge School district.
Convenient to shopping and transportation.
wes v9
available. $34,500. Telephone

4

DAVIS

2 bedroom brick home, appointed for gracious living on a small scale, cathedral ceiling in living room, also fireplace, separate
dining room, small den, kitchen, the bedrooms and bath are on second floor. There
is an attached garage and big shade trees
in yard. Easy walk to train and shopping.
Priced at $21,250.

TRANSFERRED

Must sell nearly new brick ranch home.
3 bedrooms,
living room, panelled dining
room (or family room), kitchen with eating
area, full basement with beautiful panelled
recreation room, nearly new wall to wall
carpeting included. High 20’s.

Owner wants quick sale. Brick ranch
living
room,
2 bedrooms,
one
Could be three bedrooms. Separate
area, 21%4 car garage. Good location.

COUNTRY HOME
Brick Cape Cod for large family. —
space and closets. Interior finish
lonial. 4 bedrooms, living room with
fireplace, large lot. Breezeway plus
parser Immediate possession. All f
t

Carr Realty Co.
REALTORS

6-1855

701

Waukegan

SHeldrake

3-1855

living room
and garage,

BRICK

SPLIT

LEVEL

Best value in village. 3 twin bedrooms, 2%
baths, full basement, large panelled family
room,
spacious living room, built-in oven
and range and dishwasher, spacious living
room,
attached
2 car garage,
beautifully
landscaped. Low 30’s.

WOODLAND

PARK

3 bedroom ranch home; living room with
fireplace, large screened porch, 1%
baths,
dining room,
kitchen, full basement
with
fireplace,
bath,
swimming
pool.
Beautiful
large lot. Low 30’s.

Benj. Piersen Realty
Waukegan

PEOPLE

THE EXPANDING
FAMILY
should consider this well-planned 5 bedroom
home.
A Tri-level floor plan offers spacious living
areas including a game room, living room
with Norman brick fireplace, separate dining
room &amp; screened porch. $45,500. Call Mr.
Hastings.
FAMILY
will
enjoy
the
of this 3 bedroom ranch. Inof living space, including 3
kitchen with snack bar, $22,Parkinson—WI 5-0248.

THE LAZY
FAMILY
will want to move
right into this Lannon stone ranch. Here’s
push-button living at its finest. Perfect landscaping, carpeted, living areas, screened &amp;
glazed porch, air-conditioned, 3 bedrooms
and 2 Ceramic baths. $47,500. Call Mr. Degen—WI 5-1784.
THE FAMILY WITH HOBBIES should see
this—unusual 2% acre estate, complete with
handsome residence, kennels &amp; 212 car garage.
Unmatched
luxury
features
are
its
screened
porch
with terrace,
living room
with stone fireplace, paneled library, modern
kitchen
with
appliances
including
2 wall
wee.
$47,500.
Call Mr.
Degen—WI
5-

Realtors

111 Green Bay Rd., Wilmette ALpine 1-1111

One

LARGE

\

year old brick ranch,

kitchen,
scaped

11%4

baths.

Full

3 bdrms., basement. —
fy

Luxurious 3 bdrm. ranch in Woodland
dise. Hickories,
maples,
oaks
abou
this % acre. Finest brick &amp; stone
tion. Beautifully planned home. 2
tile baths. Full basement. 2 car att.
Family kitchen. Many other fine f
An excellent value
Spacious
4 bdrm,
Colonial, 2%
tile baths. Paneled family rm. w/
equipped
kitchen, large eating
cious bay windows. 2 car att. garage.
venient to Tollway, trains, schools &amp;
Contract purchase possible ..............
Five bdrm. ranch home on wooded
2
20x30 iiving rm., 14x28 family rm.
3600 sq. ft. under roof. Want to see a
value at
&gt;
have

ali kinds of vacant.

GO

Evening Phones:
Ed Enerson CR
0084.

FAMILY

Shore

M

Nancy Sullivan WI
2-1360; John Coons

OPEN

SUNDAYS

10-5

HOME

“than anywhere.’”? Why not get one to your
liking. This fine 3 bedroom ranch has large
family room, eating area in the kitchen, all
thermopane windows,
and includes carpet,
drapes, washer, dryer. A real buy ....$23,200.

in Deerfield
623 Deerfield Rd.

HOUSE

has 3 bedrooms down, 2 up, needs some
finishing, 2 full baths, eating area in kitchen,
full basement, many closets. This house on
a half acre is only 7 years old any Saas

(Plenty

of

WI 5-5’

parking

space)

.

(improved)

Realtors

5-1670

VIKING Realty Co.
MORE

Coons

Members of Evanston-North
Listing Service.
Windsor

Rd.

wl

Realtor

We

REALTOKS
730

Road

OPEN SUNDAY 12 TO6 P.M. —

John

New split-level on nearly an acre. Beautiful
kitchen with breakfast area, 3 bedrooms, 3
baths, large family room, 2 car garage. May
be bought on contract. $35,500.

at

HOMEFINDERS,

with dining area, 3 bedrooms, attache
rage, full basement. On bus line.

JUST COMPLETED

Hillcrest

ESTATE FOR SALE
(DEERFIELD)

THE
ACTIVE
fenced garden
side is plenty
bedrooms and
900. Call Mrs.

Custom
built home
on large lot.
room
with fireplace, large family -

NORTHBROOK
REDUCED TO $24,0

Very well built brick ranch in lovely residential area, walking distance to schools,
shopping
and transportation.
3 twin bedrooms,
carpeted living-dining combination,
kitch. wth eating area, full basement, fenced
yard, patio. Priced to sell.

K

HOMEFINDERS,

3 bedroom ranch with screened br
attached garage, large rooms, full ba
Close
to schools and transportation.
mediate possession.
:

DON’T MISS TH

of this 3 bedroom,
2 bath
of surprises and loaded with
is beautiful decor throughout,
recreation room with 14 ft.
with stools and many other
Asking
$24,900,
but owner

IT’S DIFFERENT

OWNER

FOR QUICK SAL
NOW $23,500

$20,900

owner, 2-bedroom frame ranch, birch
cabinet kitchen, utility room, garage, ample closets and storage space; convenient
to schools
and
transportation.
$17,900.
ID 2-6872.
AIR-CONDITIONED
Expandable 3 bedroom Cape Cod (all on
one floor), living-dining
combination,
full
basement,
gas heat, unusually
good
construction,
low
maintenance
in convenient
location, Elm Pl. School Dist., many extras.
By owner, mid 20’s. ID 2-8270.
OWNER leaving state: must sell 3 bedroom
frame;
large living room with fireplace
and sun room, dining room, kitchen, basement,
oil heat, 2 car garage.
Lincoln
School District. For details call ID 2-0474.
GET
free copy of booklet
‘‘Things You
Should
Know
about Buying
a Home.”
Write Chicago Title &amp; Trust Co., 26 N.
Utica St., Waukegan.
OWNER.
Desirable
7 room
brick,
1%
baths, basement, 2 car garage. Ravinia.
508 Burton. $23,900. Telephone ID 3-1457.
BY
Owner:
3 bedrooms,
14
baths,
full
basement with shower and lavatory, 21%
car garage, on two wooded acres, low 20’s.
Open
Sundays
2 to 5 p.m.
Seen
by
appointments
other
days.
2222
Highmoor. Telephone ID 2-3829.
BY owner, 8 room older well built brick
house, 2 baths, full basement, 2 car garage, gas heat, in Highwood.
Ideal for
large family. Lot 75x150. Fenced
yard,
could also be used for 2 apartments as
income
property.
Immediate
possession.
Priced for quick sale, low 20’s. Call ownod
appointment, ID 2-1500 or ID 2REAL

The
interior
ranch is full
extras. There
plus a terrific
mirrored bar
appointments.
wants offer.

ESTATE

Illinois

2 ranch homes available under $19
cellent financing to qualified buye
living room, 2 bedrooms plus family
+
and garage.

Rambling contemporary ranch on beautiful
11% wooded acres, family kitchen with fireplace, huge 16x28 living room with fireplace,
3 bedrooms, 2 baths, screened porch with
barbeque, patio. Priced
at $34,900.
Open
to offer.

1106

WOODLAND PAR

Realty

OPEN SUNDAY 2-5
2665 SUNSET TRAIL

un-

INC.

Rd.

Avenue

Piersen

library with

BY

transp.

REALTORS

WOODRIDGE: Brick ranch on large wooded, beautifully ladscaped lot. Living room
with
fireplace.
Finished
breezeway,
att.
garage. Full basement. Gas heat. ....$27,500

bdrm.

paneled

REAL

Bi-level with 3 bedrms., 2 full baths. SURFWOOD PANELLED lower level game room
and WHITE
ASH
FAMILY
ROOM
(18x
16) on main level. Transferred owner wants
immediate deal. $26,500.

PARK

JUST LISTED: Three bedroom brick ranch
in Ravinia. Modern
kitchen, Dining-living
L. Full basement.
$23,500

and

full bath.
The 2nd

WARNER

Convenient to everything, this utterly charming family home with 5 bedrms., 342 baths,
on 3/5 acre beautifully landscaped. There
is a lovely living rm. with fireplace, dining
rm., DEN and PECKY CYPRESS GAME
RM.,
screened and glazed porch. Closets
galore
and
a floored
attic
for
storage.
PRICED RIGHT $54,500.

garage... $28,500

HIGHLAND

sunny din. rm., lge. mod. kitch. and

VALUE

Convenient

PLACE

en-

trance hall with curving staircase;
spacious liv. rm. with frpl., porch,

BY OWNER
Two bedroom house, L shaped
with fireplace; full basement
on corner lot.
CALL
ID 2-7532

and

room

and

master suites each with bath, 2
other bedrooms, and bath, maid’s

ELM

Two bedroom dream house on large wooded
lot. Large, gorgeous, expensive new kitchen.
Large
living
room
with
fireplace.
Extra
large 2 car garage. Gas heat and low taxes.

Each

lake—the

BAIRD

DEERFIELD

DEERFIELD

the

ARMY Officer, being transferred must sell
brick ranch home; three bedrooms, 2 ceramic baths, full basement, large living
room with dining area, attractively landscaped on wooded lot. $26,500; no_ bargaining. Telephone ID 3-0876.

L. Ringer

,

rooms.

of

rm., screened porch,

quarters.

Benj.

110 ft. Lot.

Winnetka
999 Linden

APPROX. 5 ACRES
Build on 1 or 2 sites and
sell off the other 7 or 8
or hold for investment

view

576

house,
etc.

a

1925

HOME

MICHIGAN

beautiful ravine property. Lovely
living rm. with fireplace. Family
rm. with fireplace, dining rm., card

estates

Includes

luxurious

has

PAUL

BEDRM.

EXCELLENT

AREA

46 ACRES
for 5 acre

Zoned

lge.

$24,800-$2,800
DOWN
3383 WESTERN
DAVIS 8-863 1

shopping
BARRINGTON

66’-3

Built Ins.

children.
dining
rm.,

rooms, 3 baths, plus servant’s quarters; work shop, recreation room,
separate 2 car garage with apartment.
Entire piece $62,500—house can
be
sold
for $56,500
without
all
property.

457

5-4121

Living - Separate Dining
2 Bath - 2 Car Garage
Gas Heat.
Colored Plbg.

kitchen, DEN, screened porch and
breakfast porch;
4 family bed-

Co.

VE

RANCH

old trees and handsome landscaping. 1/3 in gardens and lawn, house
stands on 1/3 and 1/3 left wild as

Realty
Central

Ave.

NEW

is an

at $49,500.

playground for the
Large
living
rm.,

REALTOR

aK)

On over 2 acres of beau. landsc.
ground with more than 300 ft. of
beach, this 10 year white colonial
home features exquisite views and

H.P. HIGHLANDS

Tudor style home on 1144 ACRES.
North East secluded area of fine

a

GRAHAM

Vernon

LAKE

bkfst. rm.

a finished

garage

VALUE

PARK

10% down can buy this lovely young ranch
house in desirable Woodridge area, 3 bedrooms, many extras, immediate occupancy,
low upkeep, priced in low 20’s.

recreation room, screened porch,
large kitchen with eating space, 4
big bdrms., 212 baths, outside barb-que,

ON

Fresh, young and beautiful tri-level with
lots of growing
space.
4 bedrooms,
214
baths, paneled recreation room and many
added features. Priced $34,900.

SCHOOL

located
3
a dead end

PARK

Relaxed
living with more
time to enjoy
raising your family in this 3 bedroom, 2
tile bath ranch with large family kitchen,
patio, 2 car garage.
% block to school.
Priced in 30’s.

w/fireplace;

5 bedrms., 3 baths on 2nd; playroom with fireplace and bath on
3rd.
If you’re looking for space and
quality construction in the finest
neighborhood, you’ll know this is

Ideally
school on

(HIGHLAND

REAL

LUXURY

That’s what you'll find in this lovely landscaped custom built brick ranch that is located in Deerfield’s most desirable section.
Contains many extras, including 214 baths,
rec. room, fireplace, family room, bar room.
2 car garage. Priced to sell at
$44,500.

INCOME

PROPERTY

One unit, 6 rooms, one unit, 4 rooms, 2
car garage,
lot 100x150. A handy
man’s
opportunity for $16,500.

HIGHLAND

OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY
am.-8
p.m.
SAT. 9 a.m.-5
p.m.

VIKING Realty Co.
826

Deerfield

Rd.

Deerfield

only

home

of its kind

Architect

designed

i
wi

details spared for gracious and
urious

living.

3 most

spacious —

rooms, 2 ceramic tile baths, a hu
screened
basement

porch,
fireplace
in
and
an oversize

t

gar. The property is 34 acre—b
tifully planted and near all |
veniences.

PARK

Income property. Well maintained house on
150 ft. frontage. 2 four room apartments,
full basement, 2 car garage. Excellent location. Priced at
$27,900
9

The
area.

WI

5-5300

CAPE COD Colonial on beautifully wooded
corner acre, 2 large bedrooms and bath
on second floor; bedroom or den, dining
room, kitchen, living room, and bath, first
floor; breezeway, fireplace, 2 car garage.
School
bus
1 block.
$28,000.
1 block
north,
1 block
east of intersection
of
Deerfield and Portwine Rds. Telephone
WI 5-1511.

LINCOLNSHIRE

2108 ELSINORE—$42,500
SHOWN BY APPT. ONL
Owners
transferred
sell their 4 bedroom,

MAN
once.

rooms

and
wish t
2 bath
Ni

BRICK SCHOLZ RAN
Separate living and di

plus 2 extra rooms!

wooded acre in
location. See

SEARS

On

a COUNTRY

REAL

ESTATE

REALTORS
HIllerest

6-2900

CO.

�‘4

ESTATE

FOR

"

ii

NEN

Shia

se

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE (improved)

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE (Improved)

SALE Laesetels

,

—

Picolonal Voukees Be gpltsevel, with | “hams, paneled family room, with fireplace
:

|

R

3

baths,

ideal

| + ,”

1

huge

ti

“i livi

itchon

.

piansny

with

1%,

4, coe

bethin chet

built-in

et

Spacious closets with sliding doors,|
Pfatige.
Ful basement. with storage room. Attached
schoo. Is

lly landscaped

lot, 75x120.

Close

to

|.

$29,950

EB YEAR

old 3 bedroom

brick ranch,

2

| attached garage. Family sized kitchen
th built-in appliances. Beautifully finished
d wood cabinets. Fireplace, landscaped,

Briarwood section of Deerfield ....$32,000.
TW VO-YEAR
old
ranch
on
beautifully
| wooded lot, 150x300. 2 bedrooms, large den,
‘Screened
in patio, 2 car attached garage.
eplace. Must be seen to be spprecated
000.

pay

ranch, 2 ceramic
iful HREE-BEDROOM
basement, attached garage, large

baths,
patio.
........ $27,250

j Ne ar Schools and transportation
Open

Sunday

~ZANDER-OMMEN
ae+]

‘

REAL
‘aukegan

&amp;

WI

Rds.

5-5700

MODULAR

DISPLAY
HOME
FABULOUS

114

baths,

sting, ceramic
ireplace, snack

se

ets,

| and

formica

oven,

pee lass areas.

basement,

car-

tile, slate entry,
bar, birch cab-

tops.

Built-in

garage,

gas

range

heat,

large

iA

ARNOLD PEDERSEN
m1
i WI

Contractor

Orchard
5-1238

Deerfield
WI 5-1799

—

“ae

BANNOCKBURN

aa Well back from road on 4 acres

entr.

1st floor

hall,

lge.

picture

window,

ily rm.,
rm.

and

liv.

has
rm.

2

car

tiled
with

din.

modern

rm.,

Property

has

On

ESTATE

addn’l

stall barn.

4846

n

139
he

ranch,

ID 2-4580

PRAIRIE

Windsor
AND 22

Illinois

LIBERTYVILLE
4 bedroom tri-level, 2 tiled baths and
closets. Natural birch cabinets with
in oven and range.

INCOME

Immaculate
FRAME on
shed, 2 car
scaped.

many
built-

Can

ZURICH

easily

be

AREA

2 bedroom,
full
basement
2% acres. Chicken house, tool
garage, grounds lavishly land-

LAKE

SCHWANDT

ORR,

Realtors

GReenleaf
s

_ 3229

Cumberland

Dr.,

Deerfield.

5-1080

Lincoln-

#f _ shire estate reduced for quick sale, One of

_ the most charming ranch houses on the
market today, on a wooded area among
beautiful homes. 4 Bdrms., pan. den, 2
baths, 2 C. gar.

0

Chippewa

Pathway,

Deerfield.

Indian

Trail Estate, E. of Sanders Rd., wooded
1 acre. 3 bdrms., den w/fp., lovely kitchen, basement. Will take contract.
MAE B. BLACKWELL

AL

1-2746

DEERFIBLD-HALF DAY, on private road
near expressways.
facing
private
park,
_ Two bed rooms, dining and utility rooms,
2% car garage, designed for ultimate living ease. By owner, $17,500. Telephone

WI

5-3862.

Page 54

2 acres—3 bedroom
garage. Middle 20’s.
Details, consult

frame on private lake.
to the minute kitchen.
with patio.

REALTY

2-2015

SAMUEL McNAB
CAMPBELL
REALTOR
1656

Shermer

Ave.

CRestwood

2-0433

5-544% MORTGAGE
MONEY. New loans
—trefinancing. Terms to 30 years. Free
appraisals! LAUREN R. JANUZ, FRanklin 2-0400. (Residence: Lake Forest 3557).
FOR sale, within Half Day School district,
2 year old 3 bedroom ranch with 2 car
garage, half acre landscaped lot. $17,900.
Telephone NEwton 4-3500.

-;'|.

$300

per

RINGER
ID

ROOM,
2 bedroom
apartment
at 442
Central, Highland Park; close to transportation. Will decorate. For rent on or
before July 1. Heat and hot water furnished;
parking
space.
Call WI
5-0645
after 6 p.m.

2-3933

BEDROOM Townhouse, modern building,
close
to
Ravinia
shopping
center
and
Northwestern train station, available
August 1. 751 St. Johns Ave., ID 2-9136,
after 6:30.
ROOM apartment, stove and refrigerator
furnished,
all utilities except
electricity
paid; close to shopping and transportation.
Telephone ID 2-6683.

NEWER
home;
4 room,
2 bedroom upstairs apartment and garage. Water, heat,
garbage disposal included. Telephone Lake
Forest 5260 or ID 3-1685.

LOT

HIGHLAND PARK—IMPROVED LOT
80x240 with trees, landscaping in!
Woodridge Sect. Quiet, dead-end street.
South of Clavey Rd. ORchard 4-0480
LOT
for sale in Highland
Park, 68x192,
2 blocks from school, Old Trail. Telephone MOnroe 6-2417.
50 FT. frontage. Temple Ave., zoned two
family. Telephone ID 2-9468 or all day
weekends,

3 ROOM apartment and bath for rent, secye floor, in Highwood. Telephone ID 3-

ESTATE FOR SALE (Vacant)
(DEERFIELD) .,

KING

MUIR

(Vacant)

The
last piece
of beau.
wooded
prop. Surrounded by fine homes.
Over an acre. A bargain at $12,500

1925

PHELPS,

INC.

Sheridan

Rd.

ID

2-4580

east
LAKE
BLUFF
wooded
lot 100x124,
tracks,
easy
walking
distance,
schools,
railroads, parks, shopping.
Owner,
telephone WI 5-3718 after 6 p.m.

REAL

ESTATE FOR SALE
(MISCELLANEOUS)

(Vacant)

EAST GLENCOE
2 adjoining lots, wooded
and landscaped.
Central School district. Close to transportation and town. Call ID 2-1274.

OFFICES,

STORES
&amp;
TO RENT

BEAUTIFUL

STUDIOS

CORNER

JOHN

STORE

F. LEONARDI
REALTOR

TD 3-1000

ID 2-2468

SHOP
space with large work
or storage
area at rear. Suitable for small service or
retail business. Call Lake Forest 410.
1,

2 AND
3 rooms for offices
Central Ave. ID 2-0150.

only.

456

aAPAMIAMENTS
TO RENT (Unfurnished)
(HIGHLAND PARK)
3 ROOM apartment,
phone ID 2-3187.

all utilities

SMALL

for

apartment

rent.

paid.

471

ROOM
apartment, second floor, garage;
no children or pets. Available
July 1.
Apply 628 Vine or telephone ID 2-2421.

2 BEDROOM, 2 baths, heat furnished, near
transportation; July 1st occupancy. 725 St.
Johns Avenue, Highland Park. Telephone
ID 3-0826.

5

ROOM

unfurnished

Tele-

Roger

Williams Ave. Telephone ID 2-0178.
3 ROOM apartment, heat, water, stove, refrigerator,
garage,
1 block from town,
__adults only. Telephone WI 5-2415.
3 ROOM apartment with range and refrigerator included, Highwood
business district. Telephone Lake
Forest 136.

apartment.

2

bed-

rooms modern kitchen and bath. Only responsible
people
need
apply;
no _ pets.
Telephone ID 2-2975.
FIRST floor 3 room apartment in Highwood, enclosed porch and garage. Telephone ID 3-1627.
3 ROOM
unfurnished apartment for rent.
ID 2-0148 or ID 2-8136.
PRIVATE garage apartment, unfurnished, 3
rooms,
living
room,
bedroom,
kitchen,
dining area, beautiful wooded residential
section. $100 a month. Occupancy July 1st.
Telephone ID 2-0639.
AVAILABLE
immediately.
3 rooms
and
~~. garage, adults, $90. Telephone ID
2-2305.

APARTMENTS

ROAD

PAUL

hot ‘water

rent

to

heat

garage

responsible

for

one

people

or

car.

only.

TO RENT
(DEERFIELD)

(Unfurnished)

MODERN
2
bedroom
apartment,
birch
cabinet kitchen, ceramic tile bath; near
shopping and schools. $145 monthly, including everything but gas and electricity.
No pets. Telephone WI 5-2419.
3 rooms, modern;
living room,
bedroom,
kitchen. Adults only. Close to shopping and
transportation. $110.
NALD
N. ANDERSON,
AGENT
665 Vernon Ave., Glencoe
§-2113
DELUXE 4 room apartment carpeted, with
glass
enclosed
porch,
garage
and
all
utilities included except electricity. Couple only, $150. Telephone WI 5-0120.

APARTMENTS
TO RENT (Unfurnished)
(LAKE FOREST)
NEW Town and Country 5 room apartment.
2 bedrooms, tile bath, powder room, dishwasher, basement and attic, garage. $185
per month.
Available
after June
15th.
Telephone Lake Bluff 1919.

APARTMENTS TO RENT (Furnished)
(HIGHLAND PARK)
21%2 ROOMS,
$110 month, lease required;
in business district. Also one room _ and
bath, $70 month. Available July 1. Telephone ID 2-8117 or WI 5-1869.
APARTMENT for rent in Highwood; three
rooms, furnished. Available immediately.
Call between 8 and 5 p.m. Telephone ID
2-3802.
2 BEDROOMS, living room, dining, kitchen,
$100 plus % utilities. Telephone ID 24646.
KITCHENETTE
apt,
Highwood _ business
district, no children, no pets. Telephone
Lake Forest 136.
LARGE
living room, kitchen, bath; newly
decorated;
suitable for working
couple;
no children. Telephone ID 2-8693.
3 ROOM furnished apartment in Highwood,
$75 per month. Telephone ID 2-3544, after. 5:.P.M,

HOUSES TO RENT
(HIGHLAND

Ravinia,
room

available

home,

oil

July

bed-

garage,

near

transporta-

L. RINGER
Winnetka
999 Linden

LAKE
FOREST—3
bedroom house, good
location; available August 1st. $175. References required. Call Lake Forest 1126.
THREE
bedroom
ranch,
$150
a month,
available
immediately.
Call Lake
Bluff
4208.

FAMILY

HOUSE,

4 bedrooms, 2%

2 car garage,
July
Lake Bluff 969.

1

occupancy.

baths,
Call

HOUSES TO RENT (Furnished)
(HIGHLAND PARK)
WILL rent our desirable East Ravinia home
while in Europe,
3 bedrooms, 2. baths,
air conditioned. July 15 to April or longer,
to right tenent. Telephone ID 2-0461.

COTTAGES

TO

RENT

MODERN
furnished
3 bedroom
summer
cottage, on Otter Lake, Eagle River, Wis.,
with 2 sleeping porches, 114 baths, kitchen, breakfast
nook,
living-dining
room,
fireplace, 3 car garage, inside plumbing,
electricity, 100 feet lake frontage, sand
beach, $200 per month. Available July and
August.
Box
J-70,
c/o
Highland
Park
News.
HOUSES
&amp; APARTMENTS
WANTED
(Furnished or Unfurnished)
WANTED
to sublet: “Clean, quiet family
desires
to
sublet
house
from
July
8
thru Aug. 8. References furnished. Please
send description of house and your terms
to
Foxworth,
1610
Garland,
Flint
3,
Mich.”
IN Lake Forest, or nearby area, house or
apartment, 2 or more bedrooms
and 2
baths; need on or before Sept. ist until
about Jan. 1st or March
1st. Must be
clean and in good condition; prefer unfurnished. Telephone VIllage 8-8259.
DEFRAY your vacation cost. U of Ill. Law
Professor,
and
family,
wishes
to
rent
house for last 2 weeks of August. Telephone ID 2-7696.
RETIRED
Air Force Colonel, desires unfurnished 3 bedroom home in Highland
Park, or Lake Forest. Close to school.
Telephone LEhigh 7-2636.
MONTGOMERY
WARD
executive desires
to rent 3 bedroom, 2 bath, full basement,
unfurnished house with 2 car garage for
occupancy
August
or
September.
Will
guarantee owner’s care. Finest references.
Call Mr. Ward, days SUp. 7-6200, ext.
2247 and nights SUp. 7-2200, room 167.
WANTED to rent July 18th through August
20th. 4 bedroom furnished house, preferably near the lake in Lake Bluff or Lake
Forest. $400 top. Call Lake Bluff 2979.

ROOMS

TO

RENT

PARK HOTEL sleeping rooms, by day or
week, free parking, 511 Waukegan Ave.,
Highwood.
SLEEPING
room, hot water at all times,
near transportation. Telephone ID 2-3786.
ROOM
for rent, kitchen
privileges;
near
transportation.
Call between
12 and
p.m. Telephone ID 2-3591.
COMFORTABLE
furnished
room,
near
town and transportation. 208 North Ave.,
Highwood. Telephone ID 2-3769.
ROOM for rent to employed lady, located
near
hospital, very
large closet
space.
Telephone ID 2-0376.
ROOM
for rent, near transportation; gentleman preferred. Lake
Forest
1758 or
Lake Forest 716.
gt
3 with private bath. Call Lake Forest
NICE, big, front bedroom, nice location;
lady only. Telephone ID 2-1556.
ROOM for rent. Also room with kitchenette
for rent. Telephone ID 2-1621.
EAST Park Ave, very central. Comfortable
room for one employed woman. No transient.
Usual
privileges.
$10.
Telephone
ID 2-1138.
GENTLEMAN’S
large room to rent, fine
residents,
1%
block
to Highland
Park
shopping, 1 block to transportation. Telephone ID 2-0699.
BEDROOM and sitting room for rent. Nice
living conditions. Convenient for couple
or two people. Telephone ID 2-6682.
FOR
rent,
furnished
bedroom,
$10
per
week,
adjoining
bath;
available
now.
Telephone ID 2-3981.

GARAGE

TO

RENT

DOUBLE garage stall, suitable for storage
__or vehicles. Call Lake Forest 410.
ONE garage stall for rent. $10. At 1559 N.
McKinley
Rd.
Call Lake
Forest
2308.
Madsen.

HELP

WANTED—FEMALE

PART TIME
SALESLADY

G AND

3

schools, shopping and
tion. $160 per month.

1,

TO RENT (Unfurnished)
(LAKE FOREST)

Apply

(Unfurnished)
PARK)

heat,

IMMEDIATE
occupancy, newly remodeled
2 bedroom house, 1 block north of Ravinia
business
section,
$160
monthly.
Telephone ID 2-5439.

2-6600

AVAILABLE,
6 room
deluxe
apartment,
air conditioned, 2 baths, dishwasher, builtin oven; quiet dead end street. $225. 639
Onwentsia, ID 2-5264.

SALE (Vacant)
PARK)

ESTATE FOR SALE
(LAKE FOREST)

gas

Will

we

HOUSES

Central

ROOMS,
unfurnished, newly decorated,
centrally located, reasonable. Call ID 2__ 3093 after 5 p.m.

ranch, attached 2 car
Immediate occupancy.

1300 sq. ft. with ample parking, suitable
for medical or professional office use or
for any business.

A lovely country house on lot 98x387, situated in grove of trees. A quiet peaceful
retreat, marvelous for retirement.
5 Room
shingled ranch, living room with fireplace,
dining room, lovely tile kitchen, two bedrooms and bath, porch and attached garage.
$27,500.

2

5

6-6720

NORTHBROOK

Cond

Elm
Place
School District:
132’ frontage
by 218’ deep on dead end street, its own
wooded ravine, 12 mile from: Ravine Drive
beach. Could you ask for more than this?
To see, call ID 2-5341.

CO.

MUndelein

:

2 BEDROOM second floor apartment, convenient
location,
mear
schools,
trains,
shopping district, $75 per month. Tenant
pays heat and utilities: Leonardi Agency.
ID 3-1000.

3

AREA

AREA

ee

6

LOTS, @:LOTS OF

house ideal for older couple

‘

for 2: years. Par-|
if desired. Excel-

location.

L.

VIEW

ESTATE FOR
(HIGHLAND

(Unfurnished)
=;
(t

PARK)

ee oe gre Raney

SMALL apartment, suitable for one or two
people, stove and refrigerator furnished,
in central Highwood
location. Leonardi
Agency, ID 3-1000.
,

GUY VITI, Realtor
Green Bay
ID
Highwood

REAL

A SMALL

month.

4

PRAIRIE

REALTORS

Pa,

&amp;

Winnetka

ARCHITECT
OFFERS
own
designed
8
room one story modern house. Unique interior, 11 ft. ceiling, 40 ft. living room, 4
acres
on wooded
stream.
5 car
garage.
$38,000. Telephone NEwton 4-3834.

PROPERTY
frame.

3 bedroom brick and
Built 1 year ago. Up
Paneled family room

5-0352

fi Brick ranch on beautiful landscaped lot. 3
| twin
size bdrms., plus
den or 4th bdrm.,
ph
1% baths. Sep. dining rm. Kitchen with
ting space. Full basement. Price $39,000.

~McGUIRE

Road

PRAIRIE VIEW
COUNTRYSIDE

REAL

DEERFIELD

Ss ‘wie

° lable July

~

REALTORS

VIEW

MUNDELEIN

payment.

RD.

Skokie,

6%
acres in desirable location. Has older
frame house with 5 bedrooms, 2 baths, 2
car garage and 2 chicken houses and orchard.

natural fireplace, ceramic tile
wooded lot; low taxes. Low

Birchwood Lane
WAUKEGAN

Storm Realty Co.

457

Bay

‘TO
HOUSES
TO RENT
RENT
- (HIGHLAND

month. “Call ID 2-2871 begood closet.space;*basement.Avail-|'39.50.:per
tween 9:30 a.m. and 12 noon.
EAST

Green

Air

ee.

lent

Transferred owner will give immediate occupancy of 3 bedroom home on ¥% acre.
El shaped living-dining room, beamed ceila
and hardwood floors throughout. $15,-

Libertyville

»

St.,

LAKE

PHELPS, Inc.

DEERFIELD—BY OWNER
DELMAR WOODS

%

Main

baths,

A Jules Marling Ranch. Most unusual interior; unique floor plan. 4 Bdrms., 3 baths,
11/3
acres. $94,500.
Call Mrs.
Reardon,
CR 2-0591 or HI 6-7180.

LOCATION

DEERFIELD-NORTHBROOK
AREA
Corner
101x200
lot. In neighborhood
of
moderately priced homes.
Priced right at
$2,495. Call for appointment to see. CLearbrook 3-5910.

INC.

1%

oe

15th,
furnished

REAL

BUREAU,

GRAYS

80x200

bdrm

3

tially

378

PARK)

TOWN HOUSE

ESTATES

COVETED

226

by-owner
SERVICE

at

th;

(improved)

EVANSTON
— Brand new brick 2 apartment; 512 spacious rooms, built-in oven and
range, automatic heat, many extras, open
daily. Upper 30’s.

2 story 5 bedroom
made into 2 flats.

For further details call

tick

SALE

WILMETTE
WEST—Family
size bi-level.
3 bedrooms, 22 baths, recreation room with
fireplace, GE kitchen with all built-in features, breakfast room, carpeting and drapes
in living room and dining room. Priced for
quick sale.

fl.

| Close to fine school. Ideal for grow: family.

| 1925 Sheridan

FOR

(MISCELLANEOUS)

pwd.

2nd

many

incl. 2 horse

PAUL

APPLETON

HIGHLAND
PARK — Sherwood
Forest.
Face brick ranch on beautiful wooded corner lot. 3 large bedrooms,
1% baths, attached 2 car garage, rustic finished basement. Low 30’s.

20x20

_ and bath.
Basement has 40 ft. rec. rm. with
frpl.

wall

large

GLENCOE—Newly
painted and decorated,
2 story frame home on 100x150 wooded lot,
2 bedrooms,
glazed porch,
family
room,
combination storms and screens, carpeting,
refrigerator and range included. Mid 20’s.

fl.

| is master suite with own bath &amp;
| frpl., 3 addn’l bedrms., 1 pine pan.

_ features,

garage,

BY OWNER, 4 yr. old custom 3 or 4 bdrm.
Colonial in perfect cond. 2 full baths, foyer,
cork firs., bsmt. with rec. rm., scr. porch,
Ige. fenced yd., loads of closets &amp; storage
built-ins. Located on shady st., ideal for
children &amp; commuters. Close to everything.
Exc. financing. MAKE OFFER IN 20’s.
5-0294.
hha

frpl.

kitchen,

garage.

dishwasher,

patio,

5-2T79.
:
TWO
year brick 3 bedroom ranch, landscaped 75 foot lot, carpeted living-dining
full basement, appliances available, near
schools, shopping and churches. $23,500.
Telephone WI 5-2429.
JUST
completed
brick and
redwood,
designed for beautiful 2 acre woodland set) ting on private road. 22 foot Andersen
Windowalls, 3 bedrooms, one ash paneled;
2 ceramic baths. Crab Orchard fireplace,
baseboard hot water, 2 car garage, 2%
miles west of Deerfield. $32,500 on contract. Telephone WI 5-1353.
BRICK
Cape Cod,
6 large rooms, living
room,
fireplace, powder
room,
kitchen,
dining room or bedroom, down; 3 bedrooms, bath, ample closets, up; full basement, toilet, shower, gas heat, attached
garage. Telephone WI 5-1468.

of beautifully landscaped ground,
his brick and stone English Manor
use features spacious and cheer-

ful rooms.

and

TO RENT. (Unfurnished,

(HIGHLAND

NORTHBROOK

2%

WILMETTE — Sprucewood.
Executives
3
bedroom home with 11% baths, spacious living room with raised fireplace, large dining
room
and
breakfast
room, metal kitchen
cabinets, dishwasher, disposal, attached garage, beautiful landscaped
75x144 lot, attractive price. Open Sat. and Sun.

Deerfield
Road West to
909 Apple Tree Lane

Building

range

carpeting,

bi-level,

BY OWNER

pa ving room, family kitchen, 3 bedI

bedroom

available. $33.5
4% % Joan
andscaped
500.
1657 lot.
Cranshire
Ct. Telephone
WI

REAL

_ WESTERN RANCH

| rooms,

oven,

4

APARTMENTS

=

a

wall

old

SACRIFICING VALUE
FOR IMMEDIATE
SALE

ESTATE

Deerfield

YEAR

-

(MISCELLANEOUS)

(DEERFIELD)

(DEERFIELD)
in

‘3

Realtors
HI 6-7274

Shoppers Court

G SHOES
Deerfield

SECRETARY,
part
time;
shorthand
required Small pleasant office. Apply Mr.
Wilson
or
telephone
ID
2-6220.
Boy
Scouts of America.
FULL or part time secretary for small office. Enough variety to avoid any monotony, and our girls have always found our
work most interesting. Typing and shorthand the only essentials. ID 3-0064.

Thursday, June 18, 1959

�HELP

and these positions
other
opportunities

lead to
in our

many
com-

Permanent
a Growing

With

If you have a high school diploma and don’t mind a “peak load”
now and then, we’d like to talk to
you.
C.

Jackson

Hospital
And

&amp;

Life

Many

1866 Second Street
Highland Park, Illinois
IDlewood 2-9956

2-3700

GENERAL BINDING
CORPORATION
1101 SKOKIE HIGHWAY
NORTHBROOK

ILLINOIS BELL
TELEPHONE

%

MILE

SOUTH

OF

ROUTE

with

electrics.

Excellent pay.

employee
profit

experience

Liberal

benefits including

sharing

and

free

68

839 WAUKEGAN
DEERFIELD

Modern air conditioned office lo-

WI

Bluff

5-7405

3400

or HOllycourt

(WE

THE

HIGHLAND PARK
HOSPITAL
REGISTERED

NURSES

Full time and part
duties; good salary.

time,

general

Part
7:30

time,
Saturday
am. to 4 p.m.

and

Sunday,

Interesting work in pleasant environment. Why commute when you
can work close to home?
CALL

PERSONNEL

ID

2-8000

OFFICE

FOR

tion. Call

RD.

CLERK-TYPIST
graduate, must be proficient typist.
Will train in dictaphone.
5 day

Shoulberg.

For Children’s Shop. Must be experienced. Excellent salary. Contact
Mr. Fischel, ID 2-6960.

1ST NATIONAL BANK
OF LAKE FOREST

SHOP

DISBBURSEMENTS

FOR CHILDREN
507 Central

fringe

benefits, including group life, retirement, and low cost lunch program. Salary commensurate with
ability. Apply in person or phone
Lake Forest 5100, ask for Mr.

SALESLADY

STYLE

BANK
PARK

Many

Highland,

Park

CLERK

Interesting and varied assignment for young
woman, high school grad, in our accounting
Dept.
No experience
required—will
train.
Modern
offices,.
latest.
equipment.
Good
starting
salary
and
full
range
company
we
Hours: 9-5, Monday through Friay.

AMERICAN

BANK

POSITIONS

UN

CORP.
4-6050

PERSONNEL

FULL TIME,
PERMANENT
EXPERIENCED
OR WILL TRAIN.

If you are interested in diversified
duties and like to meet people we

791

Elm

Street

HI

have an opening in the personnel
department for a stenographer.
Good

Pleasant work, for experienced girl (or will
hm
for Copy
Department
in printing
ant
5 day week, hospitalization, vacation and
other benefits.

Sunset

BROOKSHORE
Ridge

Phone

Road

CRestwood

CO.
Northbrook

2-1200

Thursday, June 18, 1959

conditions.

Hours

8

6-0097
Call

THE

working

to 4:30. Five day week. Free Life
Insurance and Hospitalization. Liberal vacations.

WINNETKA TRUST
AND SAVINGS

Bera

SUPPLY

Evanston

BOOKKEEPERS
PROOFCLERKS

Good hours, working conditions and benefits
other than wages. Ample opportunities for
advancement,

952

HOSPITAL

2020 Ridge

Personnel,

WI

In-

Miss

JANITOR

DESIGNERS

personal

2-3700

HI

duties
Must

YOUNG

ENGINEER

6-7400,

for

a

qualified

perienced
special
tions

in

has

Mechanical

design

equipment
is

of

for

preferred.

Engineering

CASHIER NEEDED
We're looking for a young lady to work as
a cashier in our Business Office.
If you’re a high school graduate and are
interested in a job with opportunity for
advancement, we’d like to talk to you.

This position

created

an

men

5-1990.

SECRETARY
BOARD OF EDUCATION OFFICE
Hours
8 to 4; experience preferred; full
time position; salary open. Call CRestwood
2-0600 for appointment.
WANTED:
white companion to live at our
home and take care of elderly lady. Must
drive car. Furnish best of references. Excellent salary. Telephone ID 2-8440.

or come in and see
J. A. Rosander
1866 Second Street
Highland
Park
TDlewood 2-9995
ILLINOIS BELL
TELEPHONE

SECRETARIAL
and general office work,
shorthand preferred, 5 days a week. Telephone ID 2-9030.
DENTAL
assistant, full time for busy office. Pleasant surroundings. Will train if
no experience. Write box J-65, c/o Highland Park News.
BEAUTY
OPERATOR.
Also shampoo girl
who can manicure. Closed Monday. Mata’s
Beauty Salon, Glencoe.
Telephone VErnon 5-0213.
SALESPERSON to sell Real Estate. Contact
John Coons, Realtor, at WI 5-5100 or at
__
623 Deerfield Rd., Deerfield,
HIGHLAND
PARK dentist would like experienced dental assistant. Write box J-55,
c/o Highland Park News.

machine

Degree

shop

in

TELEPHONE
SOLICITORS
Work direct from office. Evenings 6 to 9
p.m. Experience not necessary. Salary plus
commission. Apply at
ALL YEAR BUILDERS, INC.
3080 Skokie Valley Highway, Highland Park
ID 2-5423
ASSISTANT
doctor’s
office,
3
days
a
week, convenient hours; typing not required. Telephone
ID
3-1516 Thursday,
Saturday, or Tuesday.
STAFF REPORTER
|
wanted by group of local, community newspapers;
education
or experience
in journalism is desired. Permanent position with
large company offering all benefits. Write
for interview giving education,
experience
and full information about your self. Box
J-45 c/o Highland Park News.
TELEPHONE
CALLING
Days or evenings. Pleasant work you will
enjoy with friendly associates. No age or
experience
requirements.
$1 per hour
to
start. Immediate employment. Please phone
Mr. Sondel, WI 5-1873
DENTAL
assistant for orthodontic office;
will train interested person. 5 days a week,
pleasant
working
conditions;
full time
only. Telephone ID 2-9100.
DENTIST requires young assistant; experience unnecessary. Saturday only, 8 to 4.
Telephone ID 2-5350
EXPERIENCED woman for secretarial and
general office work;
air conditioned,
3
girl office in Highland Park. 5 day week,
top salary. Write Box J-50 c/o Highland
Park News

girl. Steady, year around. Tele-

fits,
based

ideal

working

on

experience,

tage

of

All

replies

Please

Waukegan
will

include

conditions
with

the

Plant
be

bene-

and

salary

added

advan-

strictly

confidential.

with your letter.

2
DIRECTOR

food

chain,

field,

opening

soon

splendid

job

in

Deer-

opportu-

nities
for

GROCERY

STOCK

MEN

For iniormation call
LOngbeach 1-5466

INVENTORY

&lt; _LERK

Unusual oppor! unity for young man, high
school grad. Work
involves maintaining perpetual inventory cards. No experience required, will train. Good starting salary and
many promotional possibilities. Full range
company
benefits.
Hours:
9-5,
Monday
through Friday.

AMERICAN

HOSPITAL

2020 Ridge

CLEANING

SUPPLY
UN

Evanston

ROUTE

CORP
4-6050

DRIVER

WANTED, kindergarten teacher with training to teach 5 year old children at Kildeer Countryside School, 5 mornings per
week, 9 to 11:30. For information and interview
contact
Mrs.
Joseph
Corbus,
NEwton 4-3577.

ERMINE
CLEANERS
445 Waukegan Ave.
Highwood
ID 2-3710

TELEPHONE SOLICITORS
Evenings 6 to 9 p.m, Experience not necessary.
Salary
plus
commission.
Apply
at
ALL YEAR BUILDERS, INC.
3080 Skokie veers et
Highland Park

*

time—hours

to

*

suit.

*

ie

CO. —

Northb
2-1200°

Good

TWO
early A.M.
route men.
One
(Monday through Saturday). One Sund
only. Glencoe
News
Agency,
321
Ave., Glencoe. Telephone VE 5-16
WI 5-2331.
uu
MAN, between 40 and 50, experienced, te
supervise
maintenance
‘and
7
small
motors
and _ tractors.
rite
J-60, c/o Highland Park News.
SALESPERSON
to sell Real Estate.

John

Coons,

Realtor,

at WI

or at 623 Deerfield Rd., Deerfield.
RESPONSIBLE
handyman for housecle:
ing and outside work, 2 or 3 days a
w
saat have references. Telephone ID 2
1968

LINOTYPE OPERATOR
Rr
Prefer

est

ea

ieee:

THE

rey

‘

all- sea

GorF. rate -

rie

man

man

fi

BROOKSHORE co.

952

Sunset

50

A-1

Ridge

Phone

No

Steady employment.
and commission.

WANTED—MALE

*

PRESSMAN
*
*

THE BROOKSHORE

Road

CRestwood

JOBS

$400-$500.

Shore’s fastest growing

offers

m

21200

HELP WANTED—DOMESTIC

SURE SAVE
FOOD MARTS
North

]

for limousine service;

952 Sunset Ridge Road
Phone CRestwood

tact

VASCOLAY-RAMET
CORP.
800 MARKET ST.
WAUKEGAN, ILL.

The

part

location.

brief resume

PERSONNEL

for

;

KLUGE
*

Mechanical

company

wanted

no pay but g
furnished. Telephone

*

opera-

is necessary.

offers complete

worker

be over 25 with good personal and d
|
record.
Telephone
Midway
Limousine
Service, Lake Forest 4550.
:
ti

and

phone ID 2-5000, Ext. 2266.
PART time dental assistant; experience precee
but will train. Telephone ID 2-

HELP

cars

*

EXPERIENCED, FULL CHARGE BOOKKEEPER FOR HIGHLAND PARK CONTRACTOR.
MODERN _ AIR-CONDITIONED OFFICE, ALL BENEFITS. TELEPHONE ID 2-8711.

COUNTER

with

Safety Council;
ence. Materials
2-4517.

Ex-

jigs,

good

ENTHUSIASTIC amateur press photog rT a
pher to take publicity pictures for Cc

opening

Engineer.

fixtures,

be

f&amp;

sma

time light messenger work in
Deerfie
]
for next 10 days; good earnings.
Apply
in person only, 4:30 to 7:30 p.m. 2n
floor, Coon’s Realty Buidding, 623
De
field Rd., Deerfield.
bedi

CHAUFFEURS
growth

for several

college janitor. See superintender
of buildings
and
grounds,
Forest College.

HI

OFFICE

Haynes,

custodial

and willing to learn how to be”

GENERAL BINDING
CORPORATION
1101 SKOKIE HIGHWAY
NORTHBROOK

Continued

;

Permanent position. Active man
buildings.

interview

CRESTWOOD

for appointment.

Call

FIRST

Saturdays.

only.

for

Free college tuition to children of
employees. Salary $385 per month,
See ener
By
of buildis :

Part

GIRL
or
woman
wanted
for
all-around
cafeteria work in Deerfield industry. Telephone WI 5-1990, oe
226.

week—no

APPT.

appointment

general office. Permanent full time
position.
Aerosol
manufacturing
concern in North Suburban loca-

floor

CASHIER

transportation.

own

by

TRAIN)

NATIONAL
HIGHLAND

NEEDS

Must

have

location.

Switchboard, reception, typing, and

5-2000

WILL

Suburban

GENERAL

BOOKKEEPER

for interview.

Excellent

Call

;

insurance and many other benefits.

These men will carry new products right
through from the talking stage into production.

EQUIPMENT

cated on 12 acres of woods. Call
Lake

experience.

industry. North
terview
6-7400.

Duraclean Co.

lunch.

for

career possibility, working with executives of young rapidly growing
company in the fascinating aerosol

DICTAPHONE
TYPIST

on

FRIDAY

Intelligence, organization, and self
starting
ability
more
important
than shorthand skill. Potential of
the individual is a satisfactory sub-

stitute

TYPIST WANTED
Preferably

JOIN
THE GBC FAMILY
LOCATED IN NORTHBROOK

PRODUCT

WATCHMAN

Permanent position. College ne
active man between ages of 30 a an
45.
Bicycle
provided
to
C01
grounds. 6 day week. Paid vacatio:

PROCESS ENGINEERS

Insurance

GIRL

NIGHT

ENGINEERS -

More

CRESTWOOD

WANTED—MALE

A challenging
opportunity
for top notch
process engineers who can handle all phases
of fabricating and assembly of office equipment.

739 ELM STREET
WINNETKA

Come
in or call for personal
interview.
Employment office hours are 8:30 to 4:00
ig
through Friday. 8:30 to 12:00 Saturday

_

BOOKKEEPER

THE FIRST NATIONAL
BANK OF WINNETKA

Job
Company

Good Starting Salary
Opportunity For Advancement

Group

HELP

Permanent, good starting salary,
pleasant working conditions. 5 day
week;
opportunity
for
advancement.

WORKING CLOSE TO HOME
IN A NEW MODERN OFFICE
HAS SO MANY ADVANTAGES

pany.

H.

BANK

Young Women

CLERK-TYPISTS ARE
IMPORTANT PEOPLE

WANTED -FEMALE

wages

STAFF
REPORTER
wanted by group of local, community newspapers;
education or experience
in journalism is desired. Permanent position with
large company offering all benefits. Write
for interview giving education, experience
and full information
about yourself, Box
J-45 c/o Highland Park News.
COLLEGE men, summer work; about $75 a
week to start. 36 South State, Room 1013,
Chicago,

fee.

Cooks,

Maids

Shorline

and

$50-$60.
nursemaids,

Agency,

_
our oles,

$45-$60.

525

|

nco

Ave.,
Winnetka.
Telephone
HI
GENERAL
HOUSEWORK;;
reliable, expe
rienced woman, to stay. Own room, =
manent. 2 school age girls. Local
iH
ences required. Telephone ID 230
TEMPORARY
cook, white, starting —
25th through July; some cleaning.
Re
erences required. Mrs. Burke Williamsc
Lake Forest 146.
DEPENDABLE experienced woman to:
general
housework
and
plain
cook
Own
room
with
TV,
recerenney
salary. Telephone ID 2-5119.
;
CHILD
care,
general
light
ocean
small Lake Shore Drive apartment, |
old boy; stay, own room, bath.
Experienced, recent references. $50. Telephone
ID 2-7050.
MATURE,
reliable,
capable
housekeeper,
|
references
required; good
living
conditions,
permanent
situation.
Own
room,

bath,

TV;

salary

increases;

no

hea) ry

cleaning or ironing. Telephone ID 2-740wid
GENERA
housework,
one
floor
ney
ranch home,
no basement; boys 9 and 1

and new
baby. Own rom stay. Refe
ences. rein 1one ID 3-0077
:
:
GIRL for
light housework and mother’s
helper !
3
surroundings,

phone

WI

year old; live in, pleasant
References
required. Te

5-4328.

ia

GENERAL housework, 3 days a week, m
have references. Telephone ID 2-1968.
GENERAL housework, light cleaning, as:
with 15 month old baby; own room, ba
TV. Top salary; stay nights. Tele phi
ID 2-6353.
MOTHER’S
helper to assist with two y
children and help with howe
compact house, near transportation. T
phone ID 9-5354.

MAID.

GO

HOME

NIGHTS.

5

wy
|
j

DAY

WEEK,
10 A.M.
THROUGH
D
ER
MUST
LIKE
CHILDREN,
MUST
|
EXCELLENT
REFERENCES.
$50 A |
WEEK.
TELEPHONE
ID 2-2928. .
BR,
MOTHER’S
helper for summer months, fu
or part time; assist with 2 children’

light housework.

Telephone

ID

2-7424.

LAUNDRESS, local, to do our laundry in
your

home;

must’

have

excellent. refer-

ences. Telephone ID 2-1995.
MOTHER’S
helper,
own
room
and
children ages 4 and 6. Telephone ID

0521

or ID

3-0876.

-

Vi

:

:

�14

SITUATION
WILL

WANTED—DOMESTIC

do ironing at my

home.

Call WI

5-

| EXPERIENCED
erences.

Pein

days a week, own room and
one ID 2-3573.
for cleaning one day a week for
eet
Own
transportation,
Lake
E girl to assist with children and
housework
in Lake Geneva,
Wis.
e call collect Lake Geneva, Chestnut
hs,

starting

July

1st while

for
mine

3
goes

vacation. Recent references required.
Kent Clow, Lake Forest 42.

D immediately experienced girl to
with young children. Live in. Call

Forest 3378.

L housework, assistance and care
_school-camp age children and new
Own room &amp; TV. Permanent posi-

Willing

to

interview

summer

girl.

one WI 5-1332.
housework, no heavy cleaning.
private quarters, must have experith children and good ref. Top salqualified person. Telephone
ID

ih G

woman,

references,

one day

a

sek, prefer Thursday
or Friday. Own
portation.
Telephone
Mrs.
Carney.
ce Forest 3877.
HER’S helper. Friday 8 p.m. to Sun8 p.m. $10. Pleasant surroundings.
hone ID 3-0517.

NDRESS

and

excellent

ironer

wanted

nornings a week; local or own transporon preferred. Telephone ID 2-2416.
ISEWORK,
4 or 5 days, experienced
caring for children, references. Must
Saal transportation. Telephone
ID

WANTED:

educated,

COMPANION

cultured

woman

will

man-

rge home for busy individual or semi- secretarial, accounting, nursing exe with State license. Free to live or
anywhere;
adept
in
dealing
with
Drive
a car. Excellent references.
Box J-30 c/o Highland Park News.
DENT
from
Teachers College desires
9ing or will tutor children in elementary
s. Telephone WI 5-4685.
.MER INFANT NURSE WILL work in
&gt; in domestic capacity. Daily basis.
h Shore references. Capable of taking
. Telephone Victory 2-2993.
{GE junior, afternoons free, starting
. Typing,
general
office work,
reonist, baby sitting, reliable, can drive.

yhone ID 2-5889.

SITUATION WANTED—MALE
L NG man, 24, desires summer garden
one day per week; experienced, refes. Telephone Lake Forest 1838.
ENCED man for house cleaning or
job around
the house; references.
TRinity
2-3342.

G

colored man

desires some type of

ing or light delivery
at DElta 6-3307.

3H,

school boy

work.

17, would

Telephone

like any type

work. Telephone ID 2-0305 before 6.
6 call ID 2-3156.
RIENCED
high
school
boy
wants
, work, gardening, etc. Call Lake Bluff

NING

man,

Tuesdays

available,

will

windows and walls. Good Highland
references. Call PLaza 2-8088 eveor write Fred, P.O. Box 72, HighPark.
tractor and truck, will work. All
s of yard maintenance, grass cutting,
ing, other odd jobs. Telephone WI
hauling; tractor work; tree removal;
; clean out basements; yard maince. Bill Pyatt, ID 2-5177 or VEr5-0057.
ERIENCED,
RELIABLE
high school
90y wants yard work, mowing, trimming,
and other miscellaneous jobs. REAABLE. Telephone ID 2-0872.

ATION
THE
North

WANTED—DOMESTIC

CURTAIN DEPOT
Shore’s Only Curtain
Laundry
Green Bay Rd.,

825

Rear

work
done
by hand;
ns, blankets, drapes,

ELEPHONE

linens,
etc.

ID 2-8615

ERS,
male
or
female;
couples,
, housemen. Experienced only. Mrs,
Hh a
Agency, Winnetka. HIIlSeno

ANT

5

North

young

Shore

woman

desires day work;

references.

Call

7 p.m., all day Fri., Sat.,
one LUdlow 2-8727.

Thurs.

and

Sun.

E
AGED
WOMAN.
WANTS
ADY SUNDAY WORK. BABY SIT
R ASSIST IN KITCHEN AND SERVE.
Sunday

10 p.m.
ker.

TICAL
also

through

ONtario
nurse
house

Tuesday,

2-9231,

5:15

p.m.

ask for Mrs.

to care for children or
cleaning. Call TRinity

NERAL HOUSEWORK,
assist care of
yr. old; air-conditioned ranch home.
rte Salary.

References,

ou need an experienced

Telephone

cleaning wom-

e call between
6 and
phone ID 2-5083.
iron in my home, pick up

Telephone

56

ID 2-8671.

ID

7
and

p.m.
de-

FOR SALE

JUNE 18TH
IF RAIN, ON
JUNE 19th

YOUR

PRICE

to pay for surplus articles of clothing and many useful items at

THRIFT SHOP
675 CENTRAL AVE.
HIGHLAND PARK, ILL.
SACRIFICE
lovely wild mink full length
coat, original cost $4500; best offer. Telephone ID 3-0340 evenings.

BOUSEHOLD

GOODS

FOR

SALE

RAG RUG WEAVER
Rag rugs, hand woven for sale. Rugs woven
from torn and sewed used material. Telephone MUndelein 6-6337, 404 East Maple,
Mundelein.
COMPLETE component Hi-Fi system, worth
$600, will sacrifice for half price. Telephone WI 5-1146.
SEWING machine, practically new, all automatic features of $400 sewing machine.
In a modern walnut desk cabinet, $125.
Telephone ID 2-9113.
NO
REASONABLE
OFFER
REFUSED
Friday, Saturday, Sunday. Oxfort of Kent
contemporary dining table (seats 24 open);

library

table

(black

marble

June

23,

7:30

PAINT

P.M.

For

Exhibition

high school girl, sit with 3 year

CHOOSE

Tues.,

SITTING

CLOTHING

WANTED—FEMALE

EXECUTIVE HOUSEKEEPER
SECRETARY,

3-2328.

old
mornings.
Vicinity
1157
Deerfield,
walk
or own
transportation.
Telephone
WI 5-3586.
CAPABLE, experienced, high school girl will
baby
sit days
or evenings.
References.
Telephone ID 3-1305.
YOUNG
experienced children’s nurse will
take complete charge while parents vacation. Excellent
North
Shore
references.
Own car. Telephone ID 2-0475.

2-1968.

TUATION

DOrchester

TWO girls will baby sit; steady for summer.
Telephone ID 3-0095.
HIGH
school graduate available for baby
sitting in Lake Forest, days or evenings.
Call Lake Forest 3463.
MOTHER
of three with college degree offers experien:
child care in her home.
Large yard, play equipment;
half days,
day or week. Telephone WI 5-1445.
COLLEGE senior desires baby sitting position afternoons or evenings. Excellent references. Lake Forest 3497.
YOUNG
mother
will take care of your
children in my home.
Reasonable,
will
pick up and return. Telephone WIndsor
$-2427.
HIGH
school senior girl desires full time
or part time baby sitting position. References. Preferably Braeside, Ravinia area.
Telephone ID 3-0851.

PONSIBLE woman for light housework
cooking, stay, top salary, references.
one ID

general

GAY’S summer play groups, ages 3 to 6,
mornings and afternoons, 9 to 11:30 a.m.
and 1 to 3:30 p.m. Daily and weekly rates.
aor
June
15. Telephone VErnon
5-

Ain

experienced,

Telephone
BABY

AAI

white,

desires

housework
and private
living
quarters,
husband will give one day’s service. Ref-

t.IENCED woman for housework and

ESS,

woman

PICTURE FRAMES
GLASS
PRATT &amp; LAMBERT

PUBLIC AUCTION
SALE DAY

3037.

top);

unusual

easy chair and matching
material;
black
wrought iron corner table; pull up chairs;
king
sized
bed
and
headboard;
chaise
longue;
one double dresser with attached
mirror; two single dressers; three Air King
window fans; lawn mowers; snow shovels;
drapes, spreads, lamps, silver and wearing
apparel. Also bargain basement. 153 Lake,
Glencoe, Ill. Telephone VErnon
5-1119.
FRIGIDAIRE
automatic washing machine;
Hollywood
wheel chair; walker;
Rexair
vacuum cleaner; brass bed; dresser; Sunbeam coffee maker; Sunbeam steam iron;
Sunbeam Mixmaster; 2 floor lamps; hand
crocheted bedspreads, table cloths, doilies,
misc. Telephone WI 5-1834 after 5 p.m.
COMBINATION writing desk-bookcase, full
length
mirror,
portable
TV-radio,
and
other household effects. After 7 p.m., 11
Walker St., Apt. 4, Highwood.
BEST
offer takes parchment
white drum
table; pair of hostess chairs; twin bed
with box spring and mattress. Telephone
ID 3-0340 evenings,
EXCELLENT
condition,
11
ft. Coldspot
deeepfreeze,
$100;
electric
stove,
$75;
maple knee hole desk, $10. Ort Value
Center,
1801
St. Johns Ave., Highland
Park.
PHILIPPINE rush rug, 12x14 ft., in good
condition, size can be reduced by removing 9 in. squares; original cost $60, now
$17. Electric fixtures, cheap: two kitchen neon fixtures, one brass ceiling, one
glass bedroom. Telephone ID 2-8714 after
7:30 or all day weekends.
MODERN chest, $20; typewriter, $15; mangle, $5; chair bed, $15; Hi-Riser,
$25;
tables,
lamps,
books,
guitar,
etc.,
at
give-away prices!
Telephone ID 2-9476.
54 INCH porcelain top sink with steel cabinet; 4 burner stove; coutch. Call Lake
Forest 2910.
MOVING: entire household goods for sale,
good condition, reasonable. Antique desk
cabinet. Telephone ID 2-8478, 750 Kimball Rd., Highland Park.
BEDROOM suite, 4 pieces, like new; original price, $159, for only $60, Call Mr.
Molina, telephone CR 2-0610.
ENGLANDER
duo divan, $25; two Herman Miller Eames arm; chairs, $15 each.
Telephone ID 2-7406.
GREEN sofa bed, sleeps 2, very good condition. Telephone ID 2-0467 after 6 p.m.
RED LEATHERETTE LOVE SEAT, matching chair; excellent condition. $47. Telephone Lake Forest 1980.
CARPORT
sale. Vinyl upholstered corner
dining booth; formica table; buggy, stroller, high chair; twin tubs on legs; miscellaneous.' Telephone
ID 2-0551. 540 Audubon Place, Highland Park.

Fri.,

Sat., Mon.—June 19, 20,
9:30 A.M. to 5:00 P.M.

Fine oriental gold lacquer cocktail tables,
fine jade lamp, pair of teak garden seats,
pair of porcelain garden seats, bronze elephant, fine four fold red lacquer screens,
oriental porcelain lamps and fixtures, five
rare large rice paper frame panels, oriental
ivory chess set, large royal Dux figures,
pair of large Capo di Monte urns, copper
tray cocktail table with teak base, ivory
and
wood
miniature
band,
five
antique
spears.
Large 7 piece sterling silver set, 140 piece
set of Continental flatware, revolving terrains, Montere dishes and other pieces of
plated
holloware,
Stueben
glass,
crystal,
dozen gold Bavarian service plates, brass
and copper candelabras, pots, kettles, etc.
Fine collection of paintings, including important canvases by W. C. Knell, W. G.
Meadows, Wm. Shayer, Jr., Levier Di Viti,
Kairy Jacquet, Igor Hayes and many other
noted artists. Included in this is a collection of etchings, antique oriental rugs, including a 10x12 and 8x17 and several throw

~ PICK GALLERIES
ONLY
1296 No.

AND

FRIDAY AND
Green Bay Rd.,

H
TOWER

RD.

SATURDAY
LAKE FOREST

(You drive in a distance from the road) IN
ANTIQUES—Dropleaf Maple Table, many
small stools, Needlepoint Fire Screen, many
Post Maple Bed, Walnut Bed, 2 Victorian
Chests and Bedside Table; Pr. Spool upholstered
Chrs.,
Mirrors,
Rockers,
Whatnot, China, Glass, Brass, Pictures, Books,
IN
MODERN—Nylon
Beige
rug.
18x26;
Wicker Porch Furn; Porch Chaises; Book
Shelves; 8 Cu. Ft. Refrigerator; 6 burner,
2 oven, table top gas stove; antique secretary desk; Encyclopaedia Britannica. Misc.
Like new Hideabed. Lake Forest 959,

Sale by HAZEL

ANN

STUPPLE

MOVING
House furnishings at sacrifice—Light green
shag rug,
14x19, good
condition, original
cost, $1800, sell at $300; dehumidifier, $75;
maple
bookcases,
32”, $20;
blond bookcases, 32”, $20; maple 25” bachelor chest,
$35; maple 4 drawer chest, $45; 2 swivel
bar stools,
$15
each; new
rotary power
mower, $50; large tropical plants, $25; portable typewriter, $25; green floral 9x12 rug,
$25; gray tweed Karpen sofa, $75; blond
end tables, $35 pair; tan tweed modern occasional chair, $35; tile top cocktail table,
60x21,
$50;
outdoor
chairs;
lawn
tools;
hose;
sprinklers;
basket;
cabinets, broom
and wardrobe; electric roaster, $25; Come
only between 10 and 5 on Thursday and
Friday. 410 Greenwood, Glencoe.
MOVING
Living room furniture: Cherrywood tables,
davenport, chairs, T.V. set, modern dining
room table and chairs, Bedroom set; walnut
bed, end tables, matching chests of drawers, bedroom
chair.
Misc.:
new
vacuum
cleaner, boat motor, etc. Reasonable prices.
Telephone ID 2-8975.
LARGE 12 cubic foot, refrigerator for sale,
$100. Call ID 3-0817 after 5:30 p.m.
SPEED
QUEEN
washer
and
dryer,
10
months old; vacuum cleaner with attachments;
mahogany
leather
top.
cocktail
table; lamps; bric-a-brac. Telephone WI
5-1761.
RUG, all wool, 10’8’x11’8’, floral design,
green
background,
excellent
condition,
$27.50. 2300 Dehne
Road,
Northbrook,
. telephone CRestwood
2-5375.
APARTMENT
size Welbilt
gas stove in
excellent condition, reasonable. Telephone
ID 3-1846.
ELECTRIC stove with double oven, 2 storage drawers, excellent condition, $50; Hotpoint automatic washer, 6 years old, minor repairs. Telephone WI 5-3513.
ONE double bed with bookcase headboard,
box spring and innerspring mattress. Almost new. Also one pair of white slippers,
size 8AA. Telephone ID 2-3157.

Surface,

FAST

@

Interior

STAINS
&amp;

CANVAS

Exterior

PAINT

Beautifies &amp; Renews
Awnings,

Danish modern sofa with attached marble
end tables and matching chairs, turquoise
and charcoal
grey sofas, like new, blue
modern sectional, Danish medern chest of
drawers
and matching
dresser and brass
headboard,
large pair
of modern
lamps,
modern white marble cocktail table, Danish
modern
dining
table,
brass
and _ crystal
sconces and fixtures, cherry night stands,
pair of marble top Provincial cocktail tables, bleached modern desk, up-to-date pedestal globe.

VARNISH

Every

SET

22

Fine collection of antique English, French
period and modern furniture, Oriental accessories, bric-a-brac, and original oil paintings. Pair of rare antique $17.90 Derby
lamps, period Sheraton mahogany knife box
on stand, fine small Queen Anne knee hole
desk, collection of antique globes, period
English
oak
low-boy,
mahogany
pedestal
desk, small Regency writing tables, pair of
French
lingerie cabinets, small marquetry
ladies desk, painted venetian console, French
Provincial
chairs
and
love seat, hanging
Sheraton
mahogany
wall
cabinet,
extraordinary set of 6 painted Regency dining
chairs, set of 6 Baker dining chairs, set of
4 Ballet
chairs,
Regency
and
Provincial
curio cabinets,
pair of marble
top
end
tables, Baker pine 32-in. bookcase cabinets,
mahogany Provincial leather top revolving
book
table,
small
pine secretary,
Early
American hutch and corner cabinet, custom
made pine shutter door TV cabinet, large
wing chairs, 3 gold leaf mirrors, Englis h|
Chippendale secretary, antique English barometers, pair of fine Old English prints,
collection of Stevens, needlework pictures,
collection of ivory miniatures, large pair of
brass andirons, pair of Regency Gueridons,
collection of miniature scales.

886 LINDEN
HUBBARD WOODS
CORNER OF LINDEN

@

Fibre

Murals

Rugs,

Canvas

« Custom

Furniture

Colors

BREAKWELL
DECORATING
AIR
251

Waukegan

KIRSCH

&amp;

Ave.

ID

WALL

electric trains,

some tools. Rummage
Sat. and Sunday, 10-7
Rd., ID 3-1089,

2-1418

parts,

sale, Thurs.,
Fri.,
p.m. 456 Woodland

86 Indian Tree, HIGHLAND PARK
THURS., FRI. &amp; SAT.,—10 A.M.-5 P.M.
(1 block east of Green Bay Rd., just No.
of County Line). Chinese Chippendale Dining Set made by Baker; RCA 19 in. TV in
BAKER
made cabinet; 21 in. RCA Table
Model TV; Chaise Longue; Very fine WalEquip;
Tying
Fly
Table;
Dressing
nut
Drapes &amp; Kirsch Rods; Assorted Screens
&amp; Storm
Windows;
Single
Beds;
Chests;
Kneehole Desk; Camping
Equip; Cook-NKettle Barbecue; Books; Misc. ID 2-1564.

Sale by HAZEL
CLOSING

for

sale.

out

ANN
estate.

Early

Misc.

Mon. thru Fri.
Sat. &amp; Sun. 9-6

9-9

bird baths, $2.95 each; jardenieres and vases,
25c and up; pitchers, 60c; steins, 20c. Bedroom and living room sets; good buys on
bedroom and living room furniture; stain-

less

steel

sinks,

items

COME

GARAGE
sale. Douglas wrough iron and
formica dinette
set, 48x36,
plus
12-in.
leaf and four matching chairs, $35; Westinghouse Mobilaire fan, $30; Bissell carpet sweeper, $10; Storkline deluxe baby
buggy, $20; Kamntwet car bed, $4; playpen and pad, $15; metal window screens,
child’s chamber pottie seat, and infant
bath seat, $1 each; child’s clothes rack,
$1.50;
suction
feeding
dish, $2;
misc.
Everything
in excellent
condition.
3051
University, ID 2-6035.

SOFA, 3 cushion, brown antique satin slip
cover; Detroit Jewel 4 burner standard
oven range; 3 interior doors. Telephone
ID 2-0414.
HOUSE
SALE
1274 GLENCOE
AVE.
HIGHLAND
PARK
Thurs., Fri. and Saturday, 10 a.m. to 4
p.m.
French
Provincial
furniture;
lamps;
and tables; chests; wrought iron game room
and garden furniture; extensive antique copper and hand-spun Swedish copper collection. Men’s, boys’ and Jrs.’ suits; drapes,
upholstery fabric; appliances; marble; Victorian hall stand, upright piano and bric-abrac.
MARY BETH HUGHES
Specialist in Home, Estate and Probate Sales
ID 2-7635
EXCELLENT
condition,
Duncan
Phyfe
drop leaf table with 3 boards, pads and
2 chairs; GE portable dishwasher; power
rotary lawn mower; Nesco electric roaster. Reasonable prices. Telephone ID 21396.
REFRIGERATOR-FREEZER, 2-door Frostair, 11 cu. ft.; large family type 2 motor
system, twin drawer freezer. Good condition, $75. Lake Forest 3123.
HUNTER
22-inch reversible window
fan;
day bed. Telephone ID 2-2919.
DUNCAN
PHYFE mahogany finish dining
room
table,
3 extra leaves.
Telephone
ID 2-5135.
BASSINETTE; youth mattress, never used;
odds and ends. Telephone WI 5-0609.
MOVING,
must
sell like new
furntiure:
Lennox china, crystal, 2 Dunbar flip-flop
dining room tables, floor to ceiling draperies, etc. Telephone ID 2-7402.
ONE dark green sleeper sofa, $20; one sofa,
needs slight spring repair, free. Telephone
ID 2-7596.
WINDOW
fan, 21 inch, two speeds and
timer, $25. Telephone WI 5-5234.
DINING room table, chairs and buffet, $65.
Telephone WI 5-0498.
FRIGIDAIRE washer and dryer, in excellent condition, both for $100. Telephone
WI 5-1927.
GENERAL Electric ice box, crib and mattress, toidy chair, sectional sofa. Telephone ID 2-3333 evenings and weekends.
DINING
room
set, gold metallic
couch,
cocktail table, 2 odd tables. Call Lake
Bluff 4786.
2 CUSHION
Lawson sofa, $50; 2 console
TV’s, 17 in., $25, 21 in., $60; Kittinger
pine chest, $35. Telephone ID 3-1223.
GARAGE, sale: yard goods, ladies’ clothes,
12-16; all purpose slicing machine; portable Mixmaster; TV table; rocking horse;
toys; games; books; student desks; combination
power
saw,
disc sander
and
a
et
jig saw. Telephone ID 2-

each;

IN AND

good

buys

on

BROWSE

“Jim Beinlich Trucking handles all
following services for Homeowners:

of

the

TOP SOILS e HUMUS
e MANURES
e PEAT MOSS e LAWN ROLLING 6
TREE
REMOVAL
e
RUBBISH
REMOVAL
e GRAVEL DRIVEWAY _ REPAIRS @e WRECKING OF ALL TYPES
PHONE Jim Beinlich—VE 5-0513 or VE

GARAGES
OVERHEAD
AND 2 GA-

AR AND A HALF WITH
DOOR, CONCRETE FLOOR
RAGE WINDOWS.

$695
WALSH

couch,

excellent condition;
Everette
piano; wash machine, used; Westinghouse refrigerator, used; misc.
chairs, chests of drawers. Telephone ID 3-1062.

$15

linoleum and carpeting; children’s swing sets,
$19.50; new and used soil pipe, $1.50 &amp; up;
swimming
pools,
$5 and
up; ping
pong
tables with nets and paddles, slightly damaged, $14.50; metal wall cabinets, $7 &amp; up;
54-inch cabinet sinks complete, $89.50; 42inch cabinet sinks, complete, $59.50; used
Remington
Rand
typewriters,
$40;
office desks, $35; doors, $3 and up; heavy
duty power mower with surrey, $165. Many
other items too numerous to mention.

STUPPLE

American

SALE

POTTERY AT
REDUCED PRICES

PAPER

radio

FOR

SHOP AND SAVE AT
STOCKADE TRADING POST
WHEELING, ILLINOIS
516 N. MILWAUKEE AVE.
LEHIGH 17-0247
WE SELL ON TERMS

SUPPLIES

Highwood

top antique table; fireplace
Telephone WI 5-3333.

MISCELLANEOUS

CONDITIONED

RODS

furn.;

set; marble
accessories.

Open

PRIVATE HOME
SALE
Moving. Fruitwood drop leaf dining table,
8 chairs,
Naugahyde
seats;
antique
wht.
mah. dresser and high-boy; rotary pwr. lawn
mower, ex. cond., $35; 2 yr. Norge gas dlx.
dryer, $150; 2 yr. 30-in. Kenmore
comp.
auto.
gas
stove
with
griddle
and _ rotisserie, $125. Man’s navy cashmere ovcoat.,
like new, size 44, $25; other misc. hshld.

items

|10 CUBIC foot refrigerator; dining room

NO

DOWN

E-Z TERMS

PAYMENT

HOME IMPROVEMENT CO.
2800 BELVIDERE
ON 2-8770
WAUKEGAN
IMMEDIATE CONSTRUCTION
FOR BETTER LIVING
:
Aluminum Specialty Products. Combination
windows, doors, awnings, sidings, porch enclosures,
jalousies,
gutters,
fencing,
lawn
furniture, ornamental railings, etc. Quality
and price wise see us before buying.
THERMO-TITE WINDOW
CO.
708 WAUKEGAN
RD.
DEERFIELD
WI 5-1198
|
ID 2-1553
FOR rent: garden tillers, cub tractor and

attachments,

lawn

miowers,

mower
sharpening
service,
Telephone
ID 2-8029, 2070
7
Woody’s Highland Park
on.

WINDOW

Green
Service

Bay
Sta-

SHADES

Window coverings, such as shades, blinds,
bamboo
draperies,
are all on display at
Lakeside Glass and Paint Co. newly remodeled store. Quick service is available on all
standard items. Estimates are given without
obligation. Call us today,
or better yet,
stop in and visit us.

LAKESIDE
1914

First

GLASS

&amp;

PAINT

St.

ID

CO.
2-7211

NEED BLACK SOIL?
We are one of the North Shore’s largest top
soil and Nutri Soil dealers. We
are also
equipped for grading and spreading soil.

VE

JIM

5-0513

BEINLICH
or

VE

5-1195

ALL TYPES MANURE
AVAILABLE
Large supply of cattle, horse and mushroom manure. We deliver any amonut.

VE

JIM

5-0513

BEINLICH
or

VE

5-1195

GLASS
Everything
in
glass is available
at the
newly remodeled Lakeside Glass and Paint
Co. Mirrors, specialties, Shower and Tub
Enclosures are all on display.

LAKESIDE

GLASS

&amp; PAINT

1914 First St.

COQ.

ID 2-7211

1958 COLONIAL
house trailer, 46x10 ft.,
2 bedroom, house type furniture; excellent
condition. Can be seen at Lot 846, Ft.
Sheridan Trailer Park.
GARDEN
ttractor with tiller-rotary mower
and lawn roller attachment, 2%,HP Briggs
and Stratton engine; floor sample. Was
$270, now $235. Coast to Coast Stores,
Lake Forest 3998.
CHEAP: maple dropleaf table, seats eight;
metal shower stall; ten inch Emerson TV;
sewing dress form, sizes 10 through 16.
Telephone ID 2-9151.
GOOD
used
1945
Encyc.
Britannica and
1952
Brit;
excellent condition!
World’s
finest reference. Call Lew, NEwton 4-3606.
20-INCH Sunbeam rotary lawn mower, used
only 2 times. Telephone ID 3-0469.
12HP DELUXE Buccaneer outboard motor
with 6 gal. tank; new floor model. Was
$365, now $285; one only, Made by makers of Johnson-Evinrude. Coast to Coast
Stores, Lake Forest 3998.

Thursday, June 18

1959

—

�a

i

AUTO LOANS

AUTOMOBILES
FOR SALE —

PAINT
Exterior

every

and

need.

Interior

Paint

Complete

to

line stains,

suit

SEE HOLMES

your

a

sua

prema

1914

First

GLASS

&amp; PAINT

St.

3998.

PHOTO
Murals, $14.75 value, only $4.85.
Deerfield Paint &amp; Glass, 810 Waukegan
Rd., telephone WI 5-2286.

MUSICAL

INSTRUMENTS

FOR

IMPERIAL
Lindo
Accordion.
condition. Cost $525, Sell $125.
ID 2-7426. Call after 6 p.m.

MUSICAL

INSTRUMENTS

SALE

WANTED

10

tables,

all

in

red

F]
i
|

LOST
ND:

Tele-

Missing

“Flash,”

and black
and WauRosemary

German

Large

REWARD.

Gnale)

from

Shepherd

Wilmette

SN

since March 26th. Black and cream coloring, some silver, has swollen callous on
both front legs at elbow. Owner handicapped, grieved, holds no animosity, just
return my dog or information. Please respond. Telephone ALpine 1-0288 (collect).
platinum
Park,
Highland
Vicinity
LOST:
ring and platinum
engagement
diamond
wedding ring. Both inscribed PG to GMC,
Pleasant
Jr., 423
Paul. Gross,
Reward.
ty
Ave., Highland Park, ID 3-0918.
Golf
Sunset
on
.watch
wrist
FOUND:
Call after July 3 to identify, ID
Course.
2-6967.
_ LOST, male sealpoint Siamese cat, pink colCall
of Buddah.
lar, answers to name
‘
Lake Forest: 855.
AUTOMOBILES

FOR

SALE

1956
CHEVROLET
Bel-Aire,
full power,
yelow and black convertible; one owner,
exceptionally
fine
condition,
very
low
mileage, used as third car in suburban
family. Must be seen to be appreciated.
This is the buy of buys. See it at 153 Lake
Street, Glencoe, Ill.
‘BLACK Dodge sedan, 1959, like new; low
mileage,’ all accessories except power, including plastic seat covers. See to appreciate. Best offer. Call E. G. Gray, Lake
Forest 5600.
1951
FORD
station
wagon,
9-passenger;
original owner, 41,000 miles. $225. Telephone ID 2-5357.
1953 CHEVROLET Bel-Aire 4-door; radio,
heater, Powerglide, whitewalls. $200 Telephone ID 2-8578.
1953 MERCURY
hardtop. A real honey.
Yellow and black; push button windows
and seats, radio, heater, whitewall tires,
all leather interior, runs fine. Just $200.
Lake Forest 3091.
1958
FORD
Skyliner,
retractable;
power
steering and brakes, excellent condition,
low mileage. Telephone after 6 o’clock,
ID 2-2035.
_ 1953 CADILLAC convertible, powder blue,
white and blue leather interior, whitewall
tie excellent condition. Telephone ID

Thursday, June 18, 1959
ak

9

i

Wagon,

TIO
1955

‘

heater

R-H

....$1295

Station
and Pwr-

DWES

Conv.,

$1095

ASK
487

E.

Motor Co.

8 A.M.

to 9 P.M.

Sundays

Park

486

55

VOLKSWAGEN
North

Daily

Shore,

door

sedan,

$50

First

heater, good second car, $425. Call Lake

Bluff 4208.

1953 FORD 9-passenger Country sedan; radio, heater, Fordomatic, excellent condi__tion. $650. Telephone ID 2-7940.

Bel Aire 4-door

sedan,

6 cylinder; excellent mechanical condition,
clean. $575. Telephone ID 2-7053.

very

1949 PLYMOUTH
ets

extra

club coupe, excellent mo-

tires,

$70.

Telephone

ID

2-

ADEQUATE second car for the little woman, transportation to railroad, or teenage
first.””-1949 Plymouth, good running condition. $100. Telephone WI 5-4046.

USED

MOTOR

TRUCKS

AND MOTORCYCLES

1958
LAMBRETTA.
motor
scooter,
like
new, low mileage, fully equipped; lights,
speedomoter, buddy seat, spare tire. Call
eae
after
6:30
or week-ends,
WI

SHARE
PASSENGERS

from

Wheeling

or

RIDES

exchange

to» Highland

turns

Park,

days through Fridays,» 9 a.m.,
p.m.
Telephone
“ID °2-7600,
hours,

driving

Mon-

back at
business

ALTERATIONS
Now, two locations
custom clothes and

St.

D

'to serve you
alterations.

better

for

THE SILVER NEEDLE
HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS

1866 Sheridan Rd.
610 Laurel Ave.
Phone ID 2-7118
Phone ID 2-1774
LOOK chic for summer with shorter skirts.|
Ask
for Eda,
Zengeler
Cleaners,
Inc.,
1905 Sheridan Rd. Telephone ID 2-2800.

small

$217

Highland

Park

SOIL

and file, lawns graded.
telephone
NEwton
4-

no

finer

&amp;

LIGHT
types
6098

TD

GUTTERS

&amp;

FURNACE

REPAIR

PRICES

WBBM
v.m.

PRAIRIE

ACRES
LAWN

SAM

1875

St.

WOO

Johns

ELOF T. CLAUSON
The finest in tree work, patios, landscaping
and maintenance, Insured. Satisfaction guaranteed. Telephone Lake Forest 3366.

For reasonable prices
and guarantee yardage

Call

SERVICE

desired,

try it today

LAUNDRY
Highland

&amp;

South
Service

LANDSCAPE

WIndsor

PAINTING

&amp;

Just

Edens

Hi

Boarding Kennel.

Private inside heated stalls and
connecting
individual
outside
runs.
Expert grooming of all bh

by professionals.

:

Under the personal directic
Elaine Ortman.
:
Kennel Shop features all ac
sories.

#

GERMAN
Shepherds, 7 weeks,
.
champions
in 4 generations insures
beauty, intelligence and disposition.

be seen between

12 and

ny Rd., Northbrook,
wood 2-0355.

8 at 2055

or

telephone

C)

BEAUTIFUL
black
German
Shephe:
months old, female, champion blood
AKC registered; has been spayed an
had all shots. Raised with children
phone ID 3-1510.
:

line

ALASKAN
Malamutes,
AKC _
regis
huskies of the North, pups and g
stock,
outstanding
markings.
Telej
WI 5-2450.

TO

be given away.
and bunnies. Call

Three healthy kittens
Lake Forest 1950.

FOR
sale,
pure
bred German
Shep
kennel trained,
18 months
old,
$25. Telephone ID 2-8115.
FOR
SALE,
DACHSHUND
pups,
AKC registered. $60-$85. Telephone
son 6-7317.
i
reg.,
puppies, AKC
DACHSHUND
pion sired. $75 each. Telephone Ip
BOXER pups, AKC registered; reaso
Telephone ID 2-4069.
ny
KC
6 weeks 0
Beagle puppy,
MALE
$35. Telephone wi 5.254 a5
Tecicured
wish home for “expecting”
MOVING,
Call Lake Forest 4443.
‘

housebroken, mostly tiger,

KITTENS,
good

Lake Forest 4021.
_
SHETLAND sheep dogs (miniature
puppies for sale; AKC
registered.
Hobby-Ho championship blood line,
Lake Forest 1797.
give away: 3 female kittens, 7
TO

homes.

Call WI

5-3671

p.m.

Quick

SEWER

service for clogged

cleaned

and

SERVICE

or slow

opened

with

main

electric

equipment. We service any type drain,
catch basins and spetic tanks cleaned. Pi
high 7-0232, Wheeling.
,

ROOFING

BROS.
SERVICE

haul

CEDAR SHINGLES?
Don’t Neglect
Them
SUBURBAN
ROOF
TREATING

Call

ALpine

1-0377

SINGER

away.

5-2450.

DECORATING

PAINTING
and
decorating,
‘nterior and
exterior, natural or bleached wood finishing;
quality
workmanship.
For
estimating
call Eric Schneider, Libertyville
2-8592.
PAINTING
and
decorating;
outside
specialty. Fully insured. Lake Forest 3938.
Telephone any time.

S.

§

MACHINES

SEWING

Complete

it

Tloyd

“

SEWING

AN hour, or contract, for both. White
couple. 7 days professional services. All
types of housecleaning, landscaping, gardening, edging, prunning, trimming, planting and painting, tuck pointing, etc. Work
guaranteed.
Highland
Park
references.
Telephone HUmboldt 9-5000.
MODERN LANDSCAPING. For the best in
lawn maintenance and garden work telephone Jack Vena, ID 2-5266.
Telephone

of

5-1

on t

@ North Shore’s newest and |

ers,

$4

manure.

Rd.

SEWERS

FIELD AND GARDEN SERVICE
WEED-MOWING
- ROTOTILLING
All Lawn
and
Garden
Work
Reasonable Rates
HAND AND POWER MOWERS
Sharpened by Machine
Free Pickup Service
Phone ROdney 3-3550

horse

Drive

BERNARD’S

Maintenance - Rototilling
Black Dirt - Fertilizer
New Lawns Put In
Old Lawns Top Dressed
WI 5-5117—after 12 noon

FREE

of Dundee

4-3213

HEITKOTTER

JOB

FOR building that now home, addition, o7
remodeling,
be it large
or small, cal
V &amp; F Construction Co. Telephone ID
2-5477 or WI 5-2980.
RELIABLE
experienced carpenter. Remoa
cling, paneling, porches and Hi Fi rooms
siding. H. Blomquist Construction, tele
phone WI 5-2830.
CHRISTO-CRAFT REMODELING CO.
WI 5-3273
ID 2-2319
Remodeling and home maintenance is our
business.
Porch enclosures, basement paneled room
additions,
kitchen
cabinet,
or
just that one door that doesn’t close right.
All work guaranteed.
CARPENTRY, general repairs and remodeling, porch additions, etc. Telephone WI
5-1511.
CARPENTRY,
additions,
remodeling,
and
cabinet work. Call Halvor Ulvenes, ID
2-1587, after 6 p.m.
B.
and
K.
CONSTRUCTION—Why
not
have that new rec. room now! We specialize in kitchen, attic, porch and basement remodeling. Now is the time! Call us
about
your remodeling
problems.
Free
estimates. Telephone WI 5-4182 or WI
5-4454,
CARPENTRY, general repairs and remodel-|
ing, porch additions, etc, Richard Myles,
Lake Bluff 3249,

VErnon

old: gentle mother.

Park

FURNITURE
MOVING—Local
and Lon
Distance—one piece or a truck load. Pack
ing, crating,
shipping.
Ward
Anderson
telephone ID 2-0087
DOES
your swimming pool need pumping
out? Do it yourself or let us do it. We
have the equipment. ID 2-9202.
CONTRACTORS

NEwton

Fo

KENNEL

Glencoe

6

Humus
Top Soil
Nutri Soil
Sand and Gravel
Lime
Stone

NELSON

CARPENTERS,

CARE

Grading, plowing, hauling, fill dirt, black
top soil, rotted cow manure, top dressing
seed rolling. Telephone WI 5-0818.

SERVICE

FAST
service

GARDENING

FRANK
VENA
LANDSCAPING
Call me for the finest in lawn care, tree
removal, top dressing, patio work, fertilizing. Telephone ID 2-5494 after 7 p.m.
GENERAL
LANDSCAPING
New lawns, black dirt, humus, top dressing.
manure, planting, lawns fertilized, tree work,
stone work, patios, driveways.
A. MELCHIORRE
ID 2-0829

SHIRTS
if special

BOARDING

PAID

For all pf
of junk brought to our door,
such as:
Papers, rags, iron, metal, etc. Or
call IDlewood 3-1466 for free pick-up. We
specialize in industrial accounts. Hours daily
including Saturday, 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
HIGHLAND
PARK
WASTE
MATERIAL
1466 Berkeley Rd.

LANDSCAPING,

Lake

GLENCOE

PIANO
INSTRUCTION
Winston,
staff pianist
at
Cail WI 5-0244 after 7:30

&amp;

Telephone —

PETS

INSTRUCTION

LANDSCAPING

reaso’

hanging,

Gallos.

HOUSE PAINTING, exterior only, by
liable, experienced men; reasonable
Telephone Libertyville 2-1611 or
lein 6-4522.

GARINO MUSIC STUDIOS
North Shore’s Finest. Instruction on accordion and guitar; instrument furnished. Inor about our trial plan. Telephone ID

22-4917

FAST,

Peter

5-065

PAINTING AND WALL PAPER
INTERIORS
— EXTERIORS
QUALITY WORK GU
CALL ROY CARLSON
ID 2-2699

GUTTERS
replaced or repaired, cleaned,
painted with A-1 rust preventative. Careful expert work. Also, wire screening supplied and installed. Telephone ID 2-6362.

general hauling. We also nove al
of household appliances. Call ID 2
or

paper

and

or

PONIES

FOR sale saddle horse, black, 9 yrs. old,
gentle with children and adults. Telephone
D 2-6363.
SEVERAL
well broke,
gentle horses, all
sizes. Telephone ID 2-7321.

graduation gift.
Hlilcrest 6-3848

LARGE
independent oil company
desires
local commission
agent to handle
fuel
oil distribution,
Lake
Forest,
Highland
Park area; excellent advertising coverage
and sales counseling.
Local bulk plant
facilities. Write W-35 c/o Lake Forester.
ACCOUNTING
LEVEL
bookkeeping
and
tax service
available;
Chicago
accounts
oar
Will sell this week. RAndolph 6BUSINESS

ddv

ENTERTAINMENT

HIGHEST

FT. runabout, upholstered seats, windshield;
Johnson
motor,
trailer,
Never
used. Call MAjestic 3-9310.
19 FT. Lone Star Fibreglass; 50 HP Evinrude Starflite; Holsclaw trailer. All new
summer 1959. Telephone ID 3-0880 days.

WORLD
BOOK
Miriam
Booth

C. Varney. WI

rices; free estimates.

14

dirt, gravel
Dordand,

call W.

_

experienced,

by

workmanship

men

PAINTING

REPAIRS

CO.

2-5544

PAINTING AND PAPER HANGIN
terior and exterior painting. For q

or-

JUNK

INC.

3-0880

or

and

CLAUSING ELECTRIC
All types of electrical work,
post lights,
wall outlets, new circuits, repairs. Reasonable prices. Telephone ID 2-6287.

DISPLAY

Alcort, super SAILFISH
All Fiberglass,
$374
Sailfish
knocked-down
kits,

or

best offer. Telephone ID 2-9404.
FOR sale by owner, 1955 Four door Olds
88.
Hydramatic,
clean, good
condition.
99 South Maywood Rd:, Lake Forest 915.
1953
CHEVROLET
convertible,
radio

CHEVROLET

ELECTRICAL

Hank
CBS.

HOUSE

canapes,

sandwiches exclusively, large
ders. Telephone ID 2-0699.

BUSINESS OPPORTUNITY

1957 LINCOLN Premier coupe, full power;
private owner. $2500 or best offer, May
be seen at the Standard Station, N.W.
corner of Deerfield Rd. and Skokie. Call
ID 2-9899,
1955
STUDEBAKER,
4 door sedan, one
owner, low mileage, excellent blue finish,
good tires, bargain $645. Telephone ID

1953

2-1369

BOOKS
free mile-

LAKE MOTORS, INC.
USED CAR DEPT.
Elm Sts. Highland Park ID 2-2500

2

SHOP

BOATS

ON

SNACKS

d’oeuvres,

HORSES

26-INCH boy’s bicycle, very good condition,
$25; 20-inch girl’s bicycle,
$8; wooden
rocking horse, $5. Telephone ID 2-1942.
GIRL’S 20 inch bicycle $15.00. Will sell or
trade for boy’s 20 or 24 inch. Call Lake
Forest 2367.
WANTED:
girl’s 24-inch bicycle in good
condition. Telephone WI 5-3013.

NOW

hors

PAINTING

ID

PONY Wagon rental service; birthdays, parties and picnics. Telephone WI 5-2450.

55

trouble

GOURMET

Unsurpassed

methods

BLOOM

2-5845

ID

BLACK

$995.00

2-3770
1951 PLYMOUTH,

ID

HOBBY

to date

Color coordination
Interior and Exterior

3632.

FOR all types of children’s, adult and club
entertainment, party lighting and unique
ideas, telephone
HDO
Productions,
ID

Park

Central

1848

NO MONEY DOWN
PAYMENTS TO SUIT

&amp;

&amp;

Up

Careful workmanship

CATERING

FRECH

Ave.

CYCLE

10 A.M. to 5 P.M.

One owner,
age maker.

JACK

BOAT

Park

Bluff

BICYCLES

BLACK
_—

Ist

FOR

PAINTING AND DECORA’

CONCRETE
or stone patios, brick barbeques, home maintenance, remodeling and
room additions. For free estimates call

Lake

Park

BIKES—Boy’s or Girl’s Used and
Reconditioned. Some like new—a
few Schwinns. Most, but not all
sizes. Also repairs and parts for all
make bicycles.

Super

Highland

sav

&lt; i

CARPENTERS,

SERVICE

Highland

$ 995

1955 Ford Conv., R-H ............ $ 895
1955 Ford 2-7," Bate 4s...;...., $ 69 5
1955 Chevrolet 4-dr., Bel-Air,
R-H
1955 Rambler Station Wag.,
Pele Fite re ee
Vay $ 795
1954 Cadillac 4-dr., Full pwr. $ 795
1954 Cadillac 4-dr., Full pwr. $1495
1954 Chevrolet 4-dr., R-H ...$ 595
1954 Pontiac Catalina, R-H,
Hydra.; Pow. str. &lt;..:....:.. $ 695
1954 Chevrolet Wagon, R-H $ 595
1954 re OM cle
$ 595

1909 St. Johns

Highland

and

Body and Fender Repairs
All Makes - All Models
Complete Painting,
Undercoating and Touch Ups

Full

i eG Sac)

Holmes

way

BANK

Auto

ad $1395

Soe
a ce

Mercury

1924,

Wilmot School, IDMarty2| (OST: Saturday at mitt.
Telephone

_”

oe

ONLY

|

| $150

SON

1956 Ford Sta. Wag.,
1955 Chevrolet 4-dr.

c/o

Lake

Call

DW,

&amp; FOUND

Marian Rawlings
3941.
kitten, white with grey
. LOST:
spots, Sunday near Deerfield
856
Reward.
Roads.
kegam
Terr., telephone WI 5-4419.
_

$1000

Edsel
Citation
Conv.,
See PES es
$2295
1958 Ford 4 dr., R-H, Fordo.,
DNs WP ces
$1695
1957 Ford Conv., radio, heater, Fordo., pwr. str, ........ $1695
1957 Pontiac 4-dr. hard top,
full pwr. R-H
1956 Ford Conv., R-H, Fordo.,

maple;

gold high school ring dated

TO

1958

Open

J-40

Box

UP

bank

WM. RUEHL &amp; CO.
GENERAL BODY SHOP
NOW OPEN

CARS

ID 2-8640

inside band, “K” on
Ponaraved “L.M.J.”Forest
4787. Pay for ad.
front.

SAVINGS

Open

or honey

SHORE’S
USED

the

AUTO

FORD

WANTED
AT ONCE
Oriental rugs, French furniture, bric-a-brac,
antiques, and pianos, Top cash paid. ROgers Park 1-4400.
CAMPING
EQUIPMENT
;
Sleeping bags,
air mattress,
tent, folding
stove or grill; must be in good condition.
Telephone ID 2-5905.
LIVING
room
chairs, desk, cocktail and

end

A-1

WANTED

BUY

Write
mattresses.
twin
Highland Park News.

FINEST

car
of

SPRING SALE
DEMONSTRATORS

Excellent
Telephone

TOP
dollar for used spinet pianos.
phone ID 2-2510.
PIANOS WANTED
ALL
MAKES—STYLES
TOP PRICES PAID
ROGERS
PARK
1-4400

i

NORTH

2-7211

SOUTHERN
colonial chest, unusual china
cabinet-bookcase, step table, desk, contemporary chest, headboards, double bed,
dropleaf table, upholstered
chairs, electric stove,
rugs,
guitar,
Hi-Fi
cabinet,
several Victorian items, collectors bric-abrac. Lake Bluff 3245.
BOLENS garden tractor, cultivator, 10 inch
plow and snow
plow,
$135; collapsible
wheel chair, $30; 21 inch TV console, $60;
riding rotary, 21 inch cut, $125; self-propelled 21-inch
rotary, $20. Call WI
52745 after 5:30.
RIDE rotary mower, 24-in. Trams, 3 HP
B&amp;S
engine
reverse;
automatic
clutch.
Was $199.50, now $178.88. Coast to Coast
Stores, Lake Forest 3998.
TELEVISION, table model, Zenith, 21-inch.
$90. Lake Forest 3158.
SURREY, carriages, all types; ’29 Packard
convertible coupe, side mounts; ’29 Model
A
station
wagon.
Route
3, Box
495,
Michigan City, Ind. TRiangle 2-8571.
SICKLE
bar, self-propelled unit, cuts 36inch swath; excellent condition. Cost $250
new, will sell for $125. Call Lake Forest
773.
ELITE
Royal
typewriter, excellent condition; varityper with 13 fonts of type. The
New
Secretary,
454
Central,
Highland
Park.
RIDE reel mower, 30-in. Homko 2% B&amp;S
engine, elec. starter, automatic automotive
transmission, fwd. and reverse. Was $495,
now
$465;
one
only.
Coast
to Coast

Forest

FOR

CO.

ID

Stores, Lake

your

” FIRST NATIONAL

varnishes

and paint sundries. Visit our newly remodeled store to see complete displays of glass,
mirrors, shower and tub enclosures, window
shades, venetian blinds, bamboo draperies,
and Modernfold folding doors.

LAKESIDE

Finance

'

Sales

MACH
and

Service —

Free Home Demonstration
Repair on All Makes of Machi
TELEPHONE
TRAILERS

&amp;

ID 2-3811

TRAILER

sPACE

HALE TRAILER SALES
House trailere and travel trailers;
and sell. 1920 Sheridan Rd., North
(2 blocks north of naval base)

TWO

wheel

2--8940.
33 FOOT

for

ie

‘
bu

we
nici

trailer for sale. Telephone
Alma

housetrailer,

immediate

$1400. .

occupancy.

low
down
payment,
ments, Telephone PA
TREE

Can

afi

low monthly
4-8091.

SURGERY

WINTER rates now in effect for tree re
moval.

Completely

VE 5-0513.

G &amp; N

TREE

ing,

repairing,

iesurede
ID

Be

ined ryote Mam

FREE

2-8750.

insured. Jim

[ID

guying

and

ESTIMATES.

2-5481

ae
, fee

remov:

Telep
;

F

�’ PUBLIC NOTICE
Notice

of

_ To the Patrons

Proposed

Executive Staff

Filing

(Continued

of the Illinois Bell Telephone

P

The

Illinois

Bell

Telephone

Company

hereby gives notice to the public that it
has filed with the Ilinois Commerce Com_

tmission

provisions

Exchange

scriber'

who

telephones

for

different
copy

inspected

which

requires

line
A

_

Tariff

in

in

by

General

will

permit

two

or

a household

types

of

its

of

the

proposed

any

interested

main

subscribe

residence

service,

filing

party

may

be

at

the

Sue

business office of this Company at
812

Deerfield

All

parties

obtain

either

Deerfield,

interested

information

directly

addressing
;

Road,

Commerce

from

the

in

this

matter

respect

this

Company

Secretary

Commission

of

at

and

may

the

by

Illinois

Springfield,

Illi-

- nois.

Gosswiller,

Mrs.

Earl

Sue

is the

and Mrs.
Broadview
ILLINOIS
By

BELL
E.

TELEPHONE

T.

LAURES,

Is Valedictorian
daughter

Gosswiller,

of

Mr.

Beverly

Hills, Chicago, is valedictorian of
her class at Morgan
Park
High
School. She plans to enter Purdue
University this fall.

thereto

or

with the Castle Harbur

Gosswiller

Sue

Illinois

with

was

Co.

granddaughter

of Mr.

Roland
Bleimehl,
611
Ave., and Mrs. Edward

Gosswiller,
1046
Centerfield
Ct.
Both Mr. and Mrs. Earl Gosswiller
are
graduates
of Highland
Park
High School.

Manager.

6/18-25/59—174

Walton-March

of Walton-March Plant, 1590 Deerfield Rd. Investigation, as reported by police, showed rear window

broken, through which intruder aphad

entered

building

Window Broken At New Home
It was
reported
to police
at
6:15 p.m. Friday that a 24” x 48”
window in front of new home being
constructed at 890 Windsor Rd. by

Joseph A, Carani, 447 Burton Ave.,
had

been

broken.

A

lump

of

hard

clay, mud and other debris was
found. No one was apprehended.
John H. Kunath, 21, 1017 Brit-

Bernadino,

Roger

Williams.

another

at 3:15

Skokie Hwy. and
tersection, police

Police

es-

$15 to Kunath
car.
accident

a.m.

that

Saturday

at

Deerfield Rd. inreported that Jo-

seph A. Copeland,
28, 5727 N.
Winthrop, Chicago, made an improper left hand turn from inside
lane off Skokie onto Deerfield and
his car was struck by one in outer
lane on Skokie driven by Leonard
C. Peterson, 51, Mundelein. Damages were
estimated
as $150 to
Peterson car; $75 to Copeland car.
Copeland was cited for making im-

proper

left hand

turn,

police said.

Mr.

Skrinar

was

a native of Joliet. He and his widow

son, Robert, of San Bernadino; and
a daughter,
Florence,
of Vista,
Calif.;

and

2

grandchildren.

Anthony Ronzani
Anthony Ronzani, 64, 317 Waukegan Ave., Highwood, died Monday
in Highland Park Hospital following a two months illness. He was
born April 5, 1895, in Italy. He had
been a resident of Highwood for
30 years.
Survivors are his mother, Mrs.

Binotto,

on

Calif.

of his
at San

have lived in California just the
past few years.
Survivors other than his widow,
Mary, and his son, Donald, are a

iel Gutman,
63, 264 Beach St.,
which, police said, was traveling

occurred

Give FATHER

the death last Thursday
father, Steve Skrinar, 70,

Mary

Regarding

MORETTI

Skrinar

Donald Skrinar, Highwood director of recreation, received word of

tany Rd., was cited by police for
failure to yield right of way when
entering Roger William Ave. from
St,
Johns Ave. at 5:10 p.m. Friday.
Kunath’s
car,
traveling
south,
was struck by one driven by Dan-

timated damages as
car; $50 to Gutman

TONY

and

opened door from inside. Police
said nothing appeared to have been
taken from premises.
They
are
checking fingerprints.

east

MIKE MORETTI

Steve

Plant

Highland Park patrolman, making routine check Saturday, at 1:24
a.m. found door unlocked at rear

parently

Highwood Police

~ OBITUARIES

Intruder

Forces Way Into

51)

Hotel; the Hollywood Beach Hotel,
Florida; and the Arizona Biltmore
in Phoenix,
The partnership of Larry Boyle
and Dick Wright operate and manage the Hotel Moraine.

sub-

more
to

merly

Local
a

Unknown
page

Also added to the sales staff is
Miss
Vicki
Scott
as
convention
sales representative. Miss Scott for-

Company:
Ls

from

Ronzani,

and

two

daughters,

Roberta and Rita, all of Highwood;
one son, Frank, Terre Haute, Ind.;
three brothers, Don and Charles,
Highland Park, and Neal, Davenport, Iowa; six sisters, Mrs. Mary

Mrs.

Phyllis

Whalen

and

Mrs. Emma Evans, all in California;
Mrs.
Elizabeth
Gaskell
and Mrs.
Irma Vanzo in Michigan; and Mrs.

Cecile Bramlage, Highwood.
Mr. Ronzani was a building construction contractor by trade. Services are today at 10 am. at the
chapel, 410 Green Bay Rd., Highwood.
Burial
will be in North-

shore

Garden

of Memories

ceme-

tery.

Those planning to attend the
Centennial in Waukegan June 1928 are assured of expert care in
case

of accident

Highwood
sending two

or injury.

police
Sunday
are
completely qualified

first aid officers who will be
charge of the first aid station

in
at

the end of Madison St., south of
the Yacht Club. Officers Charles
Sheahen and Patrick Myers each
hold first aid instruction cards.
Each of the three first aid stations at the celebration—at Weis
Field, at Lakefront

Beach,

and

Johnson Motors

at the end

of Madison

St.—will be well equipped by the
Waukegan
chapter
of
American

Red Cross with blankets, splints,
bandages, ice water and even facilities for warming baby’s bottle.
Booths, each in charge of police,

firemen
qualified

and
civilians
who
first aid instructors,

be

from

open

11

a.m.

to

5

are
will
p.m..

Squad cars will be provided to
transport those injured to the physician or hospital of his choice.

Jaycees Ask Floats

For HP Day Parade
Be Registered
Highland

Park Jaycees, together

with Highland
Park Chamber
of
Commerce, co-sponsors of Highland

Park Day July 4, urge all organizations

Young Republicans
To

Mans Centennial
First Aid Station

Honor

and

business

houses

planning

floats for the parade register them
early.

Candidate

The Young Republican Club of
Highland Park is holding a reception in honor of Bruno Stanczak,

This may be done by contacting
Ronald Danielson, parade marshall
(ID 2-2252). Information on the
day’s activities may be had by

Republican candidate for State’s At-

calling Gilbert Baruffi, co-chairman

torney, Sunday from 4 to 7 p.m. at
the Highland Park Recreation Center.
The
Hon.
Marguerite
Stitt
Church, Judge Thomas
Moran of
the Probate Court and Norris Froe-

(ID 2-0049, days), or John Stratford (ID 2-8593, evenings).
In order to raise money with
which to purchase uniforms for
Little Leaguers, Jaycees are sponsoring a Chicken Bar-B-Q dinner
to be purchased July 4 at Sunset

lich, sheriff of Lake County,
will be guests of the club.
(Paid

with purchase
of 1 gallon

also

Park, or ordered for home

Political

delivery.

Advertisement)

ELECT

\

Xx

BRUNO STANCZAK
States Attorney—Tues., June 23

Soft going in

floaters

DURABLE
COLORFUL-FOIL FABRICATED
(INSIDE

the lightest weight
*,

will

hardly

leather over
BATES

a remarkable

exclusive

age
3

A

want

Keeps Food and Liquids

|

to

take

58

Soft

glove

HOT

OR

COLD

(as well as expensive-type coolers)

crepe sole, plus the

JOHN

GOURLEY
LUMBER

Slipper-Free Where Your Foot Bends

SHOE
J Page

off!

$10.95

MIKE‘
41 HIGHWOOD AVE.

them

lightweight

construction.

pe
=
[: S

OUT)

Ideal for picnics— trips !

casuals ever!
isha Jor

Father

AND

579
Phone

S

COMPANY

ELM
ID

PLACE
2-0465

O'BRIEN

STORE
ID 2-5293

PAINTS

e 12 years a successful prosecutor
e 25 years legal experience
(Paid

Political

Advertisement)

Thursday, June 18, 1959

|

�p

SINCE

190

ae

:
eee, sae

i

jurniture

Dad at big savings!

7 ae &gt;

—

Famed Stratorester
Relaxation—luxuriously cradles
every inch of your body—adjusts
automatically whether you're sitting, resting or really stretching
out! Choose new stylings with new
health-benefiting kidney roll ...wideback support... in all-new textured
fabrics combined with Genuine
Boltaflex plastic.

4

reading —
all tension

disappears!

e

Re

ag
4

x

a

.

relaxing—
body cradled in
floating-comfort

reclining—
perfect balance...
circulation improves...
heart strain eases...
tensions vanish!

VINCENT

McCALL

FOLDING

Comfortable
innerspring
covered
in durable
weatherproof

plastic. Heavy aluminum
Adjustable back.

88

tubing.

i
a

e

ie

oe

ee
ii
a

Bra, Pee,

By

WESTINGHOUSE

FULLY AUTOMATIC WASHER BARGAIN!

MATCHING FULLY AUTOMATIC DRYER!

o

REFRIGERATOR

All you have to do is set the dial for completely
automatic, work-saving washing. Wash any way
you want, too... you can stop or repeat any part

Rain or shine, clothes dry fine! Takes the work
out of washday. Exclusive Westinghouse air-flow
system blows warm
air directly on tumbling

‘4
"

Full width freezer chest, deep
spacious shelves, Lots of storage
apace:
the: GEO Fel. reve. od
refrigerator be the down payment.

&amp;,

of the washing cycle any time. Revolving agitator
cleans itself; dirty water never drains through
clothes. Washes, rinses and spins dry!

SINCE

FREE

DELIVERY

DAILY

TO

5:30

- MON.

&amp; FRI.

EVENINGS

UNTIL

9 P.M.

le

'

:

1900

—Vluastiberea
o

OPEN

clothes, dries clothes faster at far less cost. Big
18-Ib. family-size capacity. Can be set for special
time requirements. So easy to operate.

“JUST SAY CHARGE IT”

‘

furniture
659

CENTRAL

AVENUE

—

HIGHLAND

PARK

ID 2-9400

�if

you'll

his gift in Highland

find

Park

"3

™

eee

‘gal

ilies

ee

ee

‘3

7

sie

bl

ape

——

pei,

ies:

ae

.

hain

A et

os CAN

8)

at

Garnttt sCo. &gt;
make

Dad

feel

like

a

king

gifts

great

his day... with

on

from

the

Men’s

Store

Heusen

Vantage

Van

wash

and

SPORT
cool

open

leisure.

weaves

Plaids,

wear
SHIRT

that

checks,

he'll

love

for

golf

or

solids.

4.00

Wash and Wear
smartly tailored
SLACKS
dressy

dacron

and

rayon

blend

that

he

can

wear for casual or special
occasions, and
no
cleaners bills ever! Grey, navy, brown, charcoal.

IN tl IN |

&gt;. \

—

1. Pat Boone sweater in his favorite style,
100% orlon for easy care. White, light
blue, light oxford, tan leather ...... 9.95

3.

ee

“Quick

2. Dacron
I

eee es ee ee
ke ee 7.95
Sportswear by Revere
tie in foulard print,
2
RE
vO... iin We

completely
a eg 2.50

5.

Initialed

hand

rolled

pure

boxer

Tartan

Care”

~

cotton,

swim

trunks

in

resist wrinkles

..4.95

4. Swank’s cuff link and tie clasp
designs featuring his favorite sport

sets in
. .5.00

linen

hems.

Jantzen

ad

“a\y|

ee,

7.50

handkerchiefs

Bax

OF. 0:

2).

with
3.00

6. Wash-’n-wear walking shorts with adjustable
waistline
that
breathes.
Linen
weave dacron-rayon .............. 4.95

cool

wash

and

wear

Pajamas

3.95
featherweight cotton knee length
for comfortable, restful nights.

Two

Hours

Free

Parking

in our

Lot - Open

Daily

until 5:30,

Friday

nights

until 9

�</text>
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                    <text>S
cS
=

CCU,

S

Thursday
June 11, 1959

ae
:
hii

�The big bank that grew up
with Highland Park
a

i,

RRO

Your

money grows faster than
ever at the First National
Beginning July Ist, the interest rate on all Savings Accounts at the First
National goes up to 3%. This gives you more reason than ever to save
right here in town at the First National. Because now you get all the
and

conveniences

First National

services

boot. So why
you did.

not start saving now?

and

a higher

interest rate to

Later on you'll be awfully glad

The

HIRST MEONAL BANK

eS

of

Complate Canking
and

Trust

WEEKEND

High

la na

Park

Member The Federal Reserve System
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

Services

BANKING

HOURS:

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

�Vol. 34, No. 14

Thursday,

They Are Talking Politics

In District 109
Wins 281 To 69
The

$375,000

referendum

Public

of

Schools of District

109 on Saturday,

carried by a vote

of 281 for the bond issue and 69
against. Approval
means
that
12
classrooms will be added to Walden
School
and
five
classrooms
to

Maplewood
There

three

School.

were

353

spoiled

votes

ballots

Deerfield Grammar
spoiled
ballots
at
Park precinct.
Carries
In

the

School

Bruno Stanczak, right, Republican candidate for state’s attorney, is discussing his coming Deerfield public meeting on June
16 with

Herbert

Garbrecht,

president

of the

Deerfield

Young

Highland Park May
Annex

Deerfield

Bannockburn
A petition

Republican
is June 16

And

Tracts

of Bannockburn

resi-

dents on the north and west boundaries. of Highland
Park for annexation to Highland Park and disannexation from Bannockburn was
approved recently by the Planning
Commission
and
the
corporation

counsel
land in

of Highland
question lies

Park.
The
east of the

Middle Branch of the Chicago River drainage
ditch.
A section
of
Highland Park west of the drainage ditch is considered, in this annexation
to
Bannnockburn,
just
north of the Deerfield village lim-

its,

which

includes

the

six

Rally

Will

Explain

Qualifications

tract recently bought by the newly
formed
Trinity Church
of Christ
(St. Paul’s and St. John’s) on the
proposed extension of North Ave.

“This rally is planned
so that
everyone may talk personally with
Mr. Stanczak, who is now acting as
state’s attorney by appointment,”

The Highland Park city council
will also consider annexation of the

said Mr. Garbrecht. “Questions concerning

land

ney,

south

ently

of Deerfield

in Deerfield,

drainage

ditch,

Highland

Park.

but

for

Rd.,
east

presof

the

annexation

to

James
far left

the

Johnson and Karen Cheli,
and right, will announce

names

of

graduates

tonight

when Township High School District 113 in Highland Park holds
its
69th
annual
commencement

ceremony.
Cynthia Jacob, second from left,
is salutatorian and Allen Wolf, second
from
right
is valedictorian.
Both were also graduated from the
Deerfield Grammar School.

Miss

Jacob

and

Eric

Engberg,

center,
are speakers.
The
space
era challenging all the graduates is

typified by the newest of airplanes,
jet-propelled

into

space.

office

of

Stanczak’s

state’s

attor-

qualifications

for the office and other queries
about
County
affairs
are
welcomed,” he said.

Mr.

On The Cover

the

Mr.

Stanczak

is a life-long resi-

dent of Lake County and has served
12 years as assistant state’s attorney during the past three adminis-

trations. He is now a candidate for

the

position

vacated

by

Thomas

Moran who became probate judge.

Chief

David

Petersen

is

on a two-day cruise from Glenview
Naval Air Base to Pensacola, Fla.

At the invitation

of Rear

Admiral

Allen Smith Jr., Commandant
of
Glenview Air Base, Chief Petersen

is among

35 prominent

School and no
the
Highland

4 To

1

Deerfield

the tally was

Grammar

258 yes votes

WHEREAS,
consumption

the
rate
of
water
exceeds the capacity

citizens

ties
are
not
adequate
to
meet
all present
and
future
requirements for water, and
WHEREAS, the depletion of water
storage
reserves
increases.
the
hazard of fire and endangers public health and welfare.

NOW

THEREFORE,

I.

G.

Holmquist,
President
of
lage of Deerfield, County

State
the

of

Illinois

Water

(or

Eldon

the Vilof Lake,

Chairman

Committee)

do

of

hereby

declare that a state of emergency
exists within the Village of Deerfield and promulgate the following
regulations restricting and controlling the use of water
for lawn
sprinkling:
1. Premises
with even
numbered
addresses
may
be
sprinkled,
watered or irrigated on the even
numbered days of the month be-

tween the hours
a.m. and twelve

of six o’clock
o’clock Noon

and between the
o’clock p.m. and

hours of nine
twelve o’clock

midnight.
2. Premises
with
odd-numbered
addresses
may
be_ sprinkled,
watered, or irrigated on the odd
numbered

days

of the month

be-

tween the hours of six o’clock
am. and twelve o’clock Noon
and between the hours of nine
o’clock p.m. and twelve o’clock

of

this area who flew from Glenview
yesterday to Pensacola on an orientation cruise.

Today they are on aircraft carrier where they will watch a demonstration of flight training.

3. Golf courses, business, industrial, and institutional premises,
parks, playgrounds, and schools
may draw water from the Village mains for sprinkling, or the
reservoirs serving such premises
filled from the Village mains,
on

any

day

of

the

month

be-

tween the hours of 12 o’clock
midnight and six o’clock a.m.
IN WITNESS WHEREOF, I have
hereunto set my hand and caused
the Seal of the Village of Deerfield,
Illinois,

to be

1959

There is no possibility of a steel strike slowing up the work
on the new building for Township High School District 113 to
be located in West Deerfield Township on the 80-acre tract on
Waukegan Rd. in Bannockburn, according to the board of education, since the structural steel necessary for the new high
school has already been purchased.
A

discussion

of

the

budget

for

the new building took place at the
meeting on May 28. Cost of the
steel. and of laying sewer water
mains (work now in progress) are
part

of the

general

budget

of

$3,-

720,071.
Three

“shells’—an

auditorium,

affixed.

G. Eldon Holmquist
President
Village of Deerfield

unfinished
school has

condition until
need of them,

the new
Schloss-

man said. He gave their approximate cost, in alternate bids, as follows:
The

shell

for

the

auditorium,

called
Area
6— $145,937;
girls’
gym—Area 7, $224,384; classroom —

girls’ gym and classroom wing are
to be built. All will be partially
completed and roofed and can be

wing,

heated

will come to $125,710, he said. The
budget listed architects’ and attor-

to

according

prevent

deterioration,

to Norman

Schlossman,

of Loebl, Schlossman and Bennett,
architects, who are designing the
new building. Shells will remain in

Deerfield

Firemen

Saturday

about

5

such

as

8—$70,561.

equipment

for kitchens,

refrigerators

and

lockers,

neys’
fees,
supervision,
interior
decorating fees and contingencies

at $469,128.95, which brings the total construction cost to $4,314,909.95.

tion figure and the $4,250,000 bond

Gary Grimshaw, age 214, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Donald W. Grimshaw

him,

Area

Built-in

Interest on this sum, which has
been invested, accounts for the difference between the total construc-

Take Child Hit By
Car To Hospital
of 1160 Myrtle Ave,, was in the
street as a car backed up and hit

Proclamation

midnight,

Chief David Petersen
Sees Flight Training
Police

the

of the public water system of the
Village of Deerfield, Illinois, and
WHEREAS,
water storage facili-

The
two
Republican
organizations
are
sponsoring
a rally
on
Tuesday, June 16 at 8 p.m. in the
Deerfield American Legion Hall to
which the public in invited to meet
Republican candidate Bruno Stanezak.
The
election
will
be
held
Tuesday, June 23 in all township
precincts in Lake County.
Everyone will also have an opportunity to meet many other already elected Republican officials
including Thomas Moran, probate
judge;
Norris
Froelich,
sheriff;
Hugo Schneider, county treasurer,
and others.

acre

with

in

and 62 no votes. In Highland Park,
the tally was 23 yes votes and seven
no votes.
Two more
tracts of land have
been designated for purchase for
District 109 in the near future, possibly within the next five years.
One location is in northeast Deerfield and the other, in the southwest section of the district.

Re-

publicans and Mrs. Raymond L. Craig, president of the West Deerfield Township Republican Women’s Club.

cast

cast

11,

DISTRICT 113 HIGH SCHOOL BOARD
DISCUSSES NEW BUILDING BUDGET

School Bond Issue

Deerfield

June

p.m.

The

issue

money

voted

by

residents

a

year ago.
With the two-year educational
equipment fund of $585,382 from
current

tax

moneys,

the

total

for

volunteer

construction and educational equip-

firemen took him to the Highland
Park Hospital in the rescue truck.
There were three fires Monday
evening
between
8:10
and
8:40.
Two of them were started by work-

The board has accepted the $2,938,579 bid of Joseph Duffy Construction Co. for building the new

men

school

Deerfield-Bannockburn

in

the

employ

of

Valenti

to the

firemen,

ment is listed at $4,900,291.95.
Accept Duffy Bid For School

in

Bannockburn,

to

be

fin-

at Blackthorne and Colfax Rds. and

ished by September, 1960. The Chicago firm submitted the lowest bid

the

of nine.

Builders,

according

other

near

Chief Fred
department

men

put

leaving

Wincanton.

Grabo
to

see

out

Fire

that

the

the

work-

fires

before

the construction.

The third fire, Monday evening,
was an electric motor in Benston’s
Central Food Store at 811 Waukegan
Rd., which
filled the store

with

smoke.

Richard Lundquist of 569
tier Ave. became a regular

ber

of

the

volunteer

fire

Whitmem-

depart-

ment Monday evening, at a meeting of the firemen,
Letters are being put in the mail

containing
men’s

tickets

Annual

for

Dance

the

on June

Fire27 at

the Fire Station. The firemen ask
the residents to send the stubs of
the tickets
tances.

back

with

their

remit-

Village Board Met

Last Night Too Late
For Report Today
The Deerfield village board met
last night, too late to obtain the
information for today’s REVIEW
concerning the impasse between
President

Eldon

Schlossman,

asked the police

Holmquist

and

five trustees, John Aberson, Arno
Wehle, Winston Porter, Maurice
Petesch and Joseph Koss,

new
fund

in

building,
covers

discussing

the

said a contingency
emergencies
which

may occur when the building “gets
out of the ground,” or when main
connections
the general

are put in, or during
finishing of the build-

ing or the “touch-up”
being finished. About
listed

in

the

when it is
$150,000 is

contingency

fund.

Part of the building will be used
for

temporary

classrooms,

will

eventually

become

enrollment

demands

which

labs

when

it, Schlossman

said, pointing out that it is impractical to “build and tear down,’
Everything in the new structure is
either
unfinished
(awaiting
increased

enrollment)

or

permanent.

Frank Conley, one of the board
members, suggested that an improved lighting system may now be
available for the new building, possibly one with louvers or diffused
light.
Schlossman, discussing the wiring of the building, said that wiring
includes one particular area where

recordings, tapes, closed circuit TV
and piped music

can emanate

“As new pieces
come out, they can
into

the

system,”

he

of
be

from.

equipment
introduced

said.

“So

far

for full authority to make appointments and to invest more power
in the village manager. The trustees oppose too much power placed
in the hands of the manager and

as we can see now, it is reasonably
wired for the future.”
It was suggested that $12,782 be
used for vinyl tile instead of asphalt in the new building and $9,000 be used for extra wood cabinets, but no decision was made.
The building will be “staked out

want

next week”

President

the

Holmquist

elected

has

officials

asked

to

head

the committees in the administration of village affairs.
A full account of the meeting
will appear in next week’s REVIEW.

and ground

will be bro-

ken soon, Schlossman said.
The
successful
bidder,

Duffy,

will make progress charts of the
work, so the board will have
a

chance to study it.

�Ground Is Broken For New Savings—Loan Building

DEERFIELD FORUM
Opinions

columns

expressed

stitute the opinions

Letters

in

should

Briergate

Golf

of the paper.

be

brief

and

Political

Club

To

the Editor:
Rumors of subdivision have persisted ever since a startled Deerfield
found
a “PRIVATE”
sign

hung on Briergate Golf Club’s gate
in April, 1958.
The
village
president
recently
stated that the Village Board had

granted this club a permit to build
a swimming pool, snack bar, tennis
courts,
and
additional
parking
space without a public hearing because
these
are
considered
ap-

purtenances

Ground
- Deerfield

was

Rd.

broken

The

last Wednesday

architects, Walton

and

for the new Deerfield Savings and Loan Building at 745
Walton,

have

designed

the

building

of colonial

architec-

_ ture with a pure white concrete front with tall columns projecting from the main structure. The
remainder of the building will be of red brick and will have a different rear design which will
be a second front on the Deerfield Commons Shopping Center.
The present building at the left will be remodeled to match the large 90x92 ft. structure
of two-story and basement. At the right, the entrance to the parking lot will have a gate harmonizing with the over-all construction.

The framework and floor system will be of pre-stressed concrete construction for this new halfmillion dollar project.

have less than 300
should contain the
dress of the writer,
will be withheld if

these

do not necessarily con-

of a country

club.

Public hearings before the Plan
Commission
prior
to
a
village
board
vote
usually
insure
‘good
neighbor” safeguards because citizens have the opportunity to assure
themselves that such facilities will
be placed in proper locations without change in the character of the

neighborhood,

deterioration in pro-

perty values, and other nuisance
factors which might be caused by
noise, lights, traffic, buildings and

equipment. The president and trustees have assumed a special responsibility in this particular case because they acted without consultation with the neighborhood involv-

ed.
Subdivision rumors can be stopped
immediately
by the
Village
Board, Briergate
owner,
and _ lessors by putting the Waukegan Rd.
frontage
property
back
into
its
proper zoning classification—Deerfield’s highest—R-1 (20,000 sq. feet
residential),
which
is designated
for golf courses.
Preliminary studies seem to indicate that public ownership
and
operation
of the
Briergate
Golf
Course
might
ultimately
benefit
the
entire
North
Suburban
area

To

Placard

Signs

the Editor:
Someone once

tion

to the

words. They
name and ad
whose name
requested

said

“pay

atten-

little things—for

they

are the key to big things’—or aft
least words to that effect.
The election for village trustees
took place on April 21, about seven

weeks

ago, but the

Party”
still
over town.
Ts

this

an

has

“All

its

Deerfield

signs

example

of

up

all

how

they

would have conducted village busia rather
in
I say
ness?—shall
“sloppy” way? This may only be
a little thing but to the people

a key.

it is

perhaps

of Deerfield

signs
after

The Caucus Party had all
days
four
within
removed

the election. This is a key—keep
it in mind when the next election
comes up and the same ghosts show
up.
Poor

Richard}

more than restricting use to 135
families.
Until
such
procedures
are
definitely
determined,
club
members can assure Deerfield residents that they are acting in good
faith and are not part of a speculative subdivision move by insisting
that the Waukegan Rd. strip have
proper zoning.
Wholesale rezonings by the village trustees in May, 1958 not only
downgraded
this
Waukegan
Rd.
frontage of Briergate, but also the
Blietz-Nixon
property
which
adjoins the club on the south edge.
Such rezonings would appear to be
“open
invitation”
for subdivision

instead

of a golf course.
Mrs. William J.
853 Oxford Road

Loarie

BIG WATER LEAK ON KENTON ROAD
LISTED IN PUBLIC WORKS REPORT
Edmund B. Klasinski, foreman of the Deerfield
Works department, made the following report for May

Public
to Vil-

lage Manager Royce Owens.

Sa

At the

ground

Stryker, Lewis
Leslie Acox.

breaking

Walton

ceremony

Sr., Kenneth

Weir,

were,

left to

right,

Stuart

Bradley,

Mr. Tennis is a former village trustee and employee
card

from

the

board

of

directors

designating

: Sidewalk Superintendents. Mr. Walton
Savings and Loan Association. Missing
_* quist who was in Puerto Rico.

him

P. A. Tennis,

Edward

F. Segert,

Solomon
J.

of the Association.

as the

Number

One

Shapiro,

Howard

Fred

Wolf

and

Fred Stryker holds a

member

of the

Society

of

is one of the architects and the others are directors of the
board of director member from this picture is Eldon Holm-

Sconce

The

ecard

editor

has

also

received

a

in the membership Soc
iety of

Sidewalk

reads

Superintendents,

“This

card

will

AWM

which

serve

to

identify
(name) who by virtue of
treasured friendship with Deerfield
Savings and Loan Association de-

serves this honor.”
The
ecard,
signed
by
Howard Wolf, secretary, and
neth

J.

Weir,

president,

’ “As a Sidewalk
the
of

ss

states:

Superintendent,

above is granted the privilege
kibitzing,
criticizing,
compli-

menting,

or just plain

cussing

the

intelligence of the directors, officers, employees.
. . Any remarks
will effect no changes but after
having expressed said feeling, all
- Superintendents are directed to re-

main
-

John
Ken-

-eate

happy
the

- pleted.”
‘Page

and

building
4

to help
when

us
it

dedi-

is com-

EEREIELD BOYS BASEBALL
By Joseph

F. Peyronnin
ww

“A general meeting was held June 2, at which a nominating
committee was named

to prepare a

year’s executive board.

Members

slate of candidates for next

of the nominating committee

are Bruce Brown and George Stanger representing the Major
League, Dan Mayworm and George Robinette representing the
Intermediate
and

Frank

Minor

League,

Pearce

League,

Bill

Varney

representing

Bob

Folger

the

repre-

senting the PONY League based on
his availability and Ben La Buda
representing the Prep League if he
is
available.’
The
next
general
meeting will be held Monday night

June

29 (and

open

night

in- all!

schedules) for the presentation of
the slate and the election of officers. The elected officers will take

office the last week

of September.

Joseph
Koss,
Village
Trustee,
attended
the
meeting
and
explained the purchase
of the Na-

(Continued

on

page

5)

Water Department:
The men repaired
one water main
break at
1222 Kenton on Sunday, May 31.
The water loss was estimated at
40,000
cubic
feet.
Two
buffalo
boxes and one fire hydrant valve
box were lowered. Six fire hydrants
were painted. The fire hydrants in
the Ramsay
Subdivision were inspected and flushed. One meter pit
was rebuilt.
There were six service leaks and
four new water taps made. The department
also
installed
32
new
meters and replaced 23 old meters.
These replacements were necessary
since the meters have become faulty through many years of service.
Fight final readings
were
made.
The department is continuing the
repairing of parkways where previous water leaks have occurred.
Sewer Department:
Dye testing
is being continued to determine the
flooding of basements
and sewer
backup. To date, 3500 feet of sewers have
been
cleaned.
Approximately one yard of concrete was removed from the south Deerfield Rd.
sewer west of Chestnut St. Manholes are being cleaned and, where

necessary, are flushed.
Street Department:

process. The rubber stop bars at
the
main
intersection
were
removed and replaced with new ones.
Two trees were removed—one on
Springfield and one on Osterman
Ave.
The
routine
sweeping
of
streets is continuing. Thirty-three
yards of sweepings were picked up

during

used, Eleven
new
streets
signs
were made and installed. Painting
of curbs
and ..cross-walks. is. in

Weed

cutting

has been started
cutting of four tri-

(Continued

on

page

5)

The Public Press, no less than Public
Office,

is a public

trust.

DEERFIELD
REVIEW
Thursday,

June

11,

1959

Vol.

34,

No.

14

Published Weekly every Thursday
PUBLICATION

699

OFFICE

Waukegan

DEERFIELD,
Telephone

HIGHLAND

men,

during the month of May, repaired
Wilmot
Rd.
from
Deerfield
Rd.
north to the Village limits. Ten
tons.
of
patching
material
and
five
yards
of
stone _ were

month.

Sewage Treatment Plant:
The
plant is operating as well as could
be expected with an excess of mud

608

The

the

along parkways
with the weekly
angle parks.

Road

ILLINOIS

Windsor

‘PARK

5-4500

OFFICE

Laurel Ave., Highland Park,
Telephone ID 2-4500

Ill.

MEMBER
ae
National
Editorial Association
Illinois Press Association
Local Subscription Rates—$3.50 per year
Domestic Rate—$5.00. per year
Single Copies—15¢
Foreign Rates on Application.
‘
‘SEntered as second-class matter Novermber 27, 1944, at the post office at Deer-

pe

i]

IHinois,

under

the

Act

of

March

8,

Pio

Thursday, June 11, 1959
&gt;

t

es

�’

He

also

would be made
available by this
action and that there was a good
chance that we would be permitted

to buy a portion of the property for
our own baseball diamond. Because
of the growth of the program, such
an acquisition would not take care

of our entire program, we would
still need the park boards’ cooperation in carrying out a program. A
committee consisting of Hank Najdowski, Jim McKillip and George
Stanger was named to contact the

park board.
the

The village board

recreation

program

other required

and

and

organizations

any

in or-

der to attempt to clear the way for
this
organization
to
obtain
this
land.
Reports were made by the various league presidents, Grace Carlson for the dance committee, John
Koss for the Father and Son night
committee and Barbara Rentscher

for the Women’s Auxiliary.
Scorekeeping has been below expectations this year. We had hoped
to devise a system so that we could
Now

it is official!

Kenneth

Weir

and

J.

Howard

Wolf

look

he Society of Sidewalk
10 Orchard St.

Superintendents

Deerfield
residents
for
many
ears have known that to learn the
proper
source
of information
of
anything being done in Deerfield
hey should seek out Fred Stryker,
he man with the white beard and
‘Dean of All Those That Know.”
On June 5, membership card No.
it of the Society of Sidewalk Superntendents, sponsored by the Deerfield Savings and Loan Association,
as handed to Mr. Stryker by Mr.
Segert, chairman of the board of
he Association. Peep-holes will be
provided in the fence.
Two

to

Fred

Stryker,

Duraclean Company
To Be Held In Deer

Deer

will

be

Grove

son,

who

held

Forest.

in the family.

Saturday

on

88

Orchard

sick

the game

SUMMER

mistake

in

the

For
Yankees
Orioles
No extra
Cards
Dodgers
No extra

829

Waukegan

base

the

hit

base

NOW

Road,

or

hits

umpires

or umpires

of

lumber

satisfactorily. Two pumps will require resleeving this month. Gradng and landscaping of the Sewage
reatment Plant is being carried
out as time permits. The routine

hecking
including

of the

two

greasing

lift

of

stations,

pumps

and

erinders, is being done.

Deerfield Police Department

acations

and

illness

have

‘Thursday, June 11, 1959

Do

not

forget

Father

and

Son

ing

June

needs

29.

help.

Dance

Committee

Call Grace Carlson.

—

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

b.
| a

Sb

i:

Virginia

Voigt

in Half Day

HOURS

&amp; Set $2.00

APPOINTMENT

4-3226

CALL

or

4-3732

We're

. COMING

2-7410

DOWN

from
including:

HOMESTRETCH

BECOMES

Beauty Corner —
PERMANENTS
$11.50

HAIR

CUT

&amp; STYLE

Our

PROFESSIONAL

Beauty

Services

¢ HAIR

COLORING

(a

© Style

Cutting

® Permanent

..

.

1,000,000th?
YOU may be the guest of Lindemann
Squibb &amp; Co. on a fabulous weekend

BEAUTY
666

Waukegan
OPEN

For Appointment

PHONE:

FOR

Rd.,

WI 5-1525

ONE

MILLION

Now

CELEBRATION

Serving

the Public’s
Pharmaceutical

Needs!

LINDEMANN’S
PRESCRIPTION

Deerfield

MONDAYS

OUR

3rd Generation

Waving

SHOP

Pharmacy and E. R.
of fun in New York

N.Y. TV Show.

WATCH

specialty)!

BEAUTY CORNER

|

City, including tickets to “Flower Drum Song” and an appear-

¢ Shampooing

® Manicuring

BE THE

WiLL YOU

ance ona

depleted

ts ranks.
Officer Edward Patten Jr. is hospitalized. Paul Kaehler is vacationng and Ralph Deimler has illness

League

FORMING

Also

as Shortage Of Officers
The Deerfield Police Department
s short three men this month while

PONY

Saturdays — 9-4
Weekdays — 9-5
Open Thursday Evening—Closed Wednesday

NE

a Beauty Corner
Specialty!

ends were removed.
Volatile acid tests are good. P.H.
ests remain 7.0. Vandals caused a
onsiderable amount of damage to
he East Lift Station. Windows and

— oe

night Friday, June 12 and the meet-

Located

NE

ID

mill

door glass were broken. The pumps
n the lift stations are operating

Salon

FOR

4)

and

Beauty

Shampoo

SUMMER

nfiltration due to heavy rainfall.
he two low level sewage pumps
ere Cleaned
eight times during

Pieces

to give

reported.

the

being washed into the primary settling tank by excessive amounts of

Ray.

information

games

Third Store South of Rt. 45 on the
West Side of Milwaukee Ave.

Runs
Hits
6
5
10
5
reported.
3
1
11
9
reported.

Big Water Leak
page

all

©

1
7
4
2
in,
standings

Tigers
Giants
Redlegs
Giants
Tigers
Braves
Redlegs
Braves

Gerry Fischer and

Majors

Deerfield

St, address

from

not

Registration Advisable

years.

(Continued

Inadequate

as

2
10
z
6

Intermediate

Pedagogue

CLASSES

Early

run Thompson.
Dodgers
Giants
Cards
Giants

EXPERT HAIR STYLING

league, actually the Cards beat the
Dodgers 19 to 7. Games reported
this week are:

leave

Piano

the petition —

to hear

of Jack Kreisman of Chicago for a
change in zoning on the property at
1023-29 Deerfield Rd.

Beauty

Half Day

JOHN SUTER

that sidewalk supervision
adequatedly provided, par-

of his present

a

at

Preserve.

been

summarize

play
is over
the statistics
be maintained.
How about

Officer Alfred Ander-

has

at 8 o’clock tonight at the

Hall

Village

4

a little more diligence in performing this task? Last week I made

since January, was officially retired
on June 15 after 20 years of service
in the department.

Segert in presenting the membership card to Stryker, “and now that
the ground is broken, we feel quite

all of his

after
could

Picnic
Grove

‘Old-Timers’

icularly so with Fred Stryker in
he number one spot.”
Segert and Stryker are both old
ime
residents
of Deerfield.
Mr.
Segert moved here 63 years ago.
Stryker has lived within five miles

It is rather difficult to decode some
of the scores; if only the score-

The annual picnic for the employees of Duraclean Co. and their

families

will meet

mation for this to be accomplished.

of

keeper would

“We have been planning this new
building for a long time,” said

ertain
ill be

88,

Evening

GRAND OPENING

have statisticians maintain statistics on the boys. The scorekeepers
have not provided adequate infor-

on as E. F. (Mike) Segert hands the first card for membership to

This

The Deerfield Plan Commission _

AAUANANN

property.

told of the recreation facilities that

WNHNKOS

Co.

4)

WNNK

Brick

page

Will Meet

NAWU

tional

from

HRWH

(Continued

CHRNN

Honorary Sidewalk Superintendent

Deerfield Plan Commission

Indians
Orioles
6
2 base hits Mandler, Weil, Beinlich. Umps
Babcock and Burnette.
White Sox
0
3
Yankees
11
14
No extra base hits etc. reported.
Pirates
9
12
Cubs
2
7
2 base
hits
Brandt,
Emmons,
McKillip,
Wall (2) and Kelly. Home
run MckKillip.
Umps. Griftner and Emmons.
Dodgers
12
10
Orioles
5
5
2 base hits Sharp, Dodoney, Ohman, Mandler, McGuire. Home run McGuire.
Pirates
7
Yankees
4
2 base hit La Buda.
Indians
3
Cards
8
2 base hits Sanger, Miller, Forbis. Home
Flint. Umps. Babcock and Wells.
Standings
National Division
Dodgers
Pirates
Cubs
Cards
American Division
White Sox
Orioles
Yankees
Indians
....
Intermediate League
Orioles
Pirates
Cubs
Cards
No extra base hits reported. Ump. Christopher.
23
8
Yankees
Orioles
11
3
2 base hits Kaczmarek,
Sazinoff, Kraske,
Laegeler, Postil; 3 base hit Sazinoff; home
—_
DOWIA

, Boys Baseball

800

Waukegan
Deerfield

Road

PHARMACY

WI 5-0022

As

x

�1959 Graduates, Lake Forest College
Quite a number of Highland Park residents received degrees ¢
commencement ceremonies of Lake Forst College in Alumni Memorig
Field House, Sunday afternoon.

Miss Houghtaling

Burgess

Mordini

Miss Frelinge

FATHER'S DAY [5 JUNE lst

Here Are Some

Yr

Excellent Gift Ideas

epee guys
Dr. Harold Blake Walker, pastor of the First Presbyterian
of Evanston, delivered the address, “This Different World.”

Baccalaureate services were held in the First Presbyterian Chure
of Lake Forest at 11 o’clock; the Rev. Richard H. Hutchinson, pasto

A complete selection of half-sleeve

SPORT

of the church, was the speaker.
for graduates and their parents
mons.

SHIRTS

to

A commencement luncheon was
at 12:30 p.m. at Calvin Durand

Those who received degrees from
Highland Park and Highwood are:

Gerald A. Burgess, son of Mr. and
Mrs. William Burgess, 589 Onwen-

including many ivy patterns
in dark and light shades

$4.

sia Ave.—Bachelor of Arts in business administration. A 1955 graduate of Highland Park High School,
he transferred to Lake Forest College from the University of Illinois.

$69 5

Miss Joyce Fern Glasser, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Daniel D.
Glasser,
668
Green
Bay
Rd.—
Bachelor of Arts degree with major in English.
Robert David Mordini, son of Mr.

Whatever you may

WALK

desire in

and Mrs. Constantino
Vine
Ave.—Bachelor

Mordini, 623
of Arts
in

business administration. A member
of Delta Chi fraternity, he is a 1955

SHORTS

graduate

of

Highland

Park

School.
Ralph

in all colors and sizes.
Practically all are wash n wear
fabrics.

$5

to

High

and

Mrs.

Linden

Klemperer,

son

of

ment

MADRAS

SPORT

COATS

RAINCOATS—Dacron

of

1
A

firm.

Richard

H.

Hansen,

son

of

Mr

Ella H. Hansen, 251 Green Ba
Rd.,—Bachelor of Arts in mathe
matics;
a graduate of Highlan

Park

High

School.

James

(Continued

Proctor,
on

page

son
45)

ALL WOOL
CARPETING

$695

PER SQ. YD.

s

$5 to $35

Cotton

: SS

Edens

$31.50 and $37.50

and

Goldberg,

Miss
Diane
Deborah
Singe
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Mort
mer Singer, 1111 Ridgewood D
will receive a Bachelor of Arts d¢
gree in art in August. She is
graduate of Highland Park Hig
School in 1953.

Mr.

$1095

JACKETS

D.

Tree Dr.,—Bachelor

Robert
S.

Alger

give
Co

degree in business administratior
A 1952 graduate of Highland Pz
High School, he plans to enter int
a training program with an inves

KNIT SHIRTS $4 to $14.95
LIGHTWEIGHT

Churc

near

aks

Carpets

Tower

VE

5-2400

Open Monday through Saturday, 9 to 5
Mon. &amp; Wed. Evenings by Appointment

$29.95

All Breeds — Unbenched
| We

Rent or Sell the Finest in Formal Wear

Open

Monday

DOG

and Thursday Evenings

from

7-9

Lake

County

SHOW

Fair Grounds,

Rts. 120 &amp; 45, Grayslake

Sunday, June 14, 9 a.m. to 6 p.m.
Admission:
For information

Page 6

un

adults $1.00,

contact Mrs. Walter

children 25c
Chmiel, JUstice 7-0242

Thursday, June 11, 1959

d

�Ceremonies At Immaculate Conception

sraduatec

Graduates numbering 49 received their diplomas from the

Rt. Rev.

Msgr.

James

V. Murphy

uesday evening.

Program
ocessional:

Pomp

and

‘Circumstance

Edward

Elgar

focal Selections: Were You
There
Negro Spiritual
With a Song in My Heart

Richard
Emitte

Rodgers

Spiritum

Tuum

Schuetky

esentation

Essay

of

on

Trophy

American

for

Prize

Flag

fees Cala Paul Conley
Scoutmaster
of Boy Scout Troop 36
Presentation of Honor Students
the Rev. Nicholas Carsello
onferring of Diplomas
.. the Rt. Rev.
James V. Murphy
Address to the Graduates.
.. the Rt. Rev.
James V. Murphy
Recessional .......... A. W. Marchant
Accompanist .... Mrs. R. P. McArdle
Class

of

in ceremonies

at the school

of Boy Scout
prize-winning

Troop
essay,

36, for
“What

her
the

American

Means

to Me.”

Her

Flag

essay reads:
To our forefathers,

the American

Flag symbolized the noble aspirations and glorious achievements of
the human race. To me, the flag
of my country stands for the gains,
hopes, and ideas of our American
people. The ideas of life, liberty,

and the pursuit of happiness are
safeguarded under this flag. And
though many may give their
in the achievements of these

ciples,

a noble

good

will

lives
prin-

endures

be and what we make

it. It signifies

our heartbreaks, a simple day’s
work, or the greatest dream. In the
flag we see the emblem of ourselves which

make

this nation.

women

of

America.

flag.

The

the making

work

that

we

do

firm

it we

find

The

people of this nation should take
great pride in their flag, although
we may be of different creeds or
nationalities, we are all striving for
an ultimate goal — happiness here
and hereafter.

the

a

faith.

Our
flag
floats
in
majestic
silence whether in peace or in war,
and though it appears to be silent,
it speaks to us of those who went
before us — the men, women, and
children of the past who have died
people in this
the makers of

and

In

courage

the
are

Hold on to your
You'll get $4 for $3
turity.

is

of the flag.

Savings Bond.
if held to ma-

© NO Installation Kits

down

A

z

Pull-out self contained

SCASSELLATI

*

th

*

TIME

SPECIAL

for

|

marquis
by

diamond
4

ring

baquettes

at

functions!

*Permanent Slide-out Filter __ removable without removing
*Amazingly Noiseless Operation—no noise to disturb slumber!
*Automatic Thermostat — room temperature is always at

Oe

center.

Me

SCORNAVACCO

has

eén-

Moderne and the graduates will be &gt;
dancing to 2 bands in the beautiful surroundings of this new addition to the North Shore.

Quiet Kool
Air Conditioners

*

*

Anniversary

start at

919995

*

Greetings

to MAR-

GARET

and LARRY

SASSAROSSI,

HAZEL

and

BENSON,

MR.

and

ROSSI

CARL

MRS.

who

the level of your choice!

FRANK

celebrate
*

And

SASSA-

this week.

*

*

I said it before, but it’s still a
good one, the old Chinese Proverb:
“If thine enemy wrong thee, buy

e

Pick up your prescription

if shopping near us, or let
us deliver promptly with-

this

out extra charge. A great
many
people entrust us

children

A

with the responsibility of
filling their prescriptions.
May we compound yours?

SUPPLY

2631
1%

a drum.”
*

*”

*

perfect

gift

for

Her..

a product of

Bride, Sweet Sixteen, Confirmant
or if you just want to be especial

Emerson Radio &amp; Phonograph Corporation, Jersey City 2, N. J.

tifully matched and graduated cul__

IS LIMITED— DON’T

WAIT

. . . See JOHN

or VERN

ly nice

at.

Highwood Radio &amp; Appliance Co.

—PHARMACISTS—

11, 1959

~

to

listed the co-operation of the Villa

|

*Robot Push Button Controls — six simple buttons contro! all

ID 2-2300

June

ANN

highlighted

JOHN

Le ‘Plug in and cool off

rigid metal side panels

Check these additional features—

* RAVINIA

Paine

and

—

1. Place on window-sill

When You Need A Medicine

Thursday,

Friday

A wonderful
graduation party
has been planned for tonite by the
Student Activities Committee. Student
Chairman
for
the
event,

=&lt;

.. IN SECONDS

Ask Your Physician to Phone

(1737-1809)

and

“march

aisle”

*

——

DO-iT-YOURSELF

front or any other part of air conditioner!

*Quotation by Thomas

SNOW
who

The North Shore diamond

you

or Ravinia

and best wishes

only
$300.00
(reduced
fro
$420.00). An unusual genuine star
ruby and diamond engagement ring
at only $125.00. And if you are
placing the wedding ring she has
had for a long time we are featuring a 21 diamond 3-row wedding
band at only $160.00. At Leeds—

KOOL-MOUNT
Air Conditioner

e

Park

the

brilliant

set

your particular condition.

Highland

*

JANE

KEEPING

have

EARL W.
GSELL &amp; CO.

time to get yo
wonderful River.

this week—in the Romantic mood!

sician and the specific medicine he will prescribe for

PARK

who will

and ROBERT GROSSENBACH JR.
who will be married on the next
day.
:

only temporary relief. Be
wise. Depend on your phy-

ID 2-2600

to one

*

WATROUS

SHIRLEY

what to take when you
are sick. Some of the remedies they promote offer

HIGHLAND

wishes

*

*

tell

good

*

JULIA

RICHARD

evision and other advertis-

to

warmest

Congratulations

with no medical
wearing
white

presume

when

each Rotarian
invites his competitor to be his guest at the meet-.
ing,

go to

jacket to simulate a physician, who by means of teling,

luncheon

Competitors

*

people

we

Day

be

you to as many rides and as often —
as you like in addition to the special entertainment and picnic hour.
Tickets are on sale at Leeds. .
For the United Charities,

sician.

Unfortunately,

will

Their is still
tickets for the

¢ NO Installation Extras

who are sick except a phylaymen,
training,

Monday

guest

JOE E. BROWN. It is the annual

Below) ===

advise

next

principal

view Ramble next Tuesday. A $3.50
ticket bought in advance entitles

dy and a sincere desire to
benefit the patient. Therefore, no one should atto

season

the

*

Pharmacists sincerely believe, that the practice of
medicine
requires
much
knowledge, continuous stu-

tempt

when

and MRS. BEN REACH

“THESE ARE THE
TIMES THAT TRY
MEN’S SOULS”
+(Author’s Name

Park

be celebrating their 55th weddi
anniversary next Sunday.

Essay Winner
Jean
Burton
was
awarded
a
watch by Paul Conley, Scoutmaster

==

of the Highland

Tenthouse

Our

the world’s first full-power air conditioner with

Beth Andres, William Berube, James Boyhn, Jean Burton, Ann Marie Carani and
arie Elaina Carani.
Paul Conley,
Susan Cuniffe,
Bernadette
Ye Lamar, David Ferrel, Vito Fiore, Mary
ou Haberkamp, Pamela Hargreaves, James
Hahn, James Hall and William Hesse.
Donald King, Gregory Kramp, Leo Ladrini, Linda Larson, Robert Lazaretti, Jeantte McClory and Kathleen McDonald.
John
Meierhoff,
Kathleen
Mikos, Mary
oretto
Nosek,
Peter Nowinson,
Thomas
)’Brien, James Panther and Gary Phillips.
Kathleen
Rafferty, Catherine
Rohr,
Paice Sheahen,
Lee
Sippel,
Diane
Smith,
Henrietta
Splett,
Patricia
Starcevich
and
ichael Taft.
Jean
Tazioli,
Christine
Teece,
Kevil
omas, Janet Tilley, Kathleen True and
loann Ugolini.
Jose Vila Arce, Joseph Weber, William
eed, Susan Wendel and Michael Wright.

Members

Rotary Club and their “competi
tors” will have a preview of the

of our favorite young couples. MR.

NEW ... at HIGHWOOD RADIO

1959

with paul leeds

The

stars and stripes are the dreams
and the labors of the men and

of freedom,

beneath it. We,
land of liberty,

KEEPING
TIME

Our flag is what we believe it to

as a monument to their sacrifice.
Our flag stands for more than
stars and stripes of red, white, and
blue. It stands for unity, power,
thought and purpose as a nation.
Our flag carries a message of hope
and inspiration to all mankind.
Wherever this flag comes and men
behold it, they can see the symbol

Waukegan

Ave.

Blks. No. of Moraine

ID 2-6260

Rd. East of Tracks.

Highland
AMPLE

FREE PARKING

Park

AT ALL TIMES

to her!

A

strand

of beaw-

tured pearls for only $24.50 or an
unusually
reasonably.
priced of
matched
uniform-size
pearls
at
$29.50.

LEEDS JEWELERS
491

Central, Highland

Park :

For your convenience we are open: Monday &amp; Friday evenings—7 to 9. All Day Wednesdays

Page 7

�GFE

oe BY EYL?

Mate

Pod

?

sR

ATES

He ci: 0)

Cabs tian iC ig ak SS 6

SWIMMING INSTRUCTION
WATER BALLET
SYNCHRONIZED SWIMMING
for

CHILDREN

BRAGG sale iy aortas:
Soe
j

‘Commencement
(Continued
minister,

United

from

—_

page

Bethlehem

Brethren

Police Lt. And Wife

Represent Highwood

3)

Evangelical

Church,

teacher.

Information
ID 2-5884

Call

You

Lutkin
The Commencement Choir
Recessional of Graduates
Hold

You'll

on

to

get $4

your

Savings

for $3

in Northwest

Deer-

The Lord Bless You and Keep

6-14

Bond.

if held to ma-

turity.

Lt. and

Mrs.

North

High

turned

from

Roy
St.,

an

Dransfelt,

222

Highwood,

re-

eight-day

trip

Suihing
besekar™
Officially Open

Invites Entries

On Saturday
Central
Avenue
and
Rosewood, Highland Park bathing
beaches, open officially on SatApplication blanks for
urday.
season tokens and parking permits are available at the Park
District of Highland Park Office, 1801 Sunset Rd.
Slightly
higher
than
local
rates are being charged residents living in Highland Park
districts not within the Park
District,
and
those living in
Deerfield.
The two public beaches have
life guards on duty from 10
a.m. until 8 p.m.each day from
Saturday through Sept. 7.

To Rose Show
Hal Borin, chairman of the rose
show committee of Men’s Garden

Club, invites flower growers

to ex-

hibit
in
the
12th
Annual
Rose
Show, to be held June 20 at Highland Park Recreation Center.
In
preparation
for
the
show,
which
last year was
judged
the
largest in the Chicago area, Mayor
Robert S. Cushman Monday signed
the following proclamation:
‘“Whereas:
The Rose
having become
a_ universally
loved and almost national flower, reaching
its full bloom
and peak of perfection at
this time, I, Robert S. Cushman, Mayor of
Highland
Park,
Illinois,
do proclaim
the
week of June 14 to 21 as Rose Week and
urge all citizens to visit the Memorial Rose
Garden (located north of City Hall) and to
participate in the Rose Show sponsored by
the Men’s Garden Club of Highland Park
at the Recreation Center, June 20, 1959,
and to enter into such other activities as
may be appropriate to this occasion.

of
|

to

the Northwest
where
Lt. Dransfelt represented the City of Highwood at the International Juvenile
Association
Convention.
Held
in
Seattle, Wash., the convention was
held May 27-29.

Angela
Lbs

Men‘s Garden Club

;

field

Private or small group lessons in
a private pool by experienced

For

his
AS is

ie

Two Residents Installed
As Board Members
Mrs. Gerald Margolis, 325 Barberry Rd., and Mrs. Fred Ruben,

See

Supply,

Evans

Pet

Shop,

OF

Clavey’s

20

executive

rence,

director

of

the

bureau.

of

thw

14 HAIRSTYLING
CONTESTS

of the

North Shore residents installed as
members of the board of directors
of North Suburban League of the
Jewish Children’s Bureau. Install
Mary Lawing officer was Mrs.

Treeland Inc., Ace Hardware, Jewel
Supermarket and Gordon Leonard’s
Pure Oil Station.

WINNER

are two

Rd.,

Sumac

487

Categories of arrangements and
other
details
are
given
on
brochures available at the following
business houses: Borchardt Fuel &amp;

COMPLETE INTERIOR
DECORATING SERVICE

AND

INTERNATIONAL GRAND PRIX
AWARD

One of the largest selections of new decorative
fabrics in rich new textures and patterns, all moderately priced. Choose now!
We

Custom

Make
— With

Custom

Expert Workmanship
© Upholstering
© Matchstick Draperies
© Cafe Curtains

e Draperies
© Slip Covers
© Bedspreads

will be here in our

|

Furniture
— Carpets

of

All

Qualities

STOP IN or CALL for APPOINTMENT
ID 2-3430
890 Linden Ave., Hubba rd Woods

SALON
NEXT WEEK
For A

Limited Time
BEAUTY

Only

The

North

Shore’s

SALON

Distinctive

Hair Stylists

For Truly Original Hair
. and Truly
Styling .
Complete Beauty Service!

Let Angela Restyle Your

Corner of Old Elm R oadand Krenn...
just west of the N .W.R.R. Tracks in
North Highland Park
Della

Phone

Hair and Also Frost It If You So Desire

Contoure
1929 Sheridan—Highland Park
Page

8

Coiffures

H ellerman

ID 2-1644

Ample Free
Parking

AIR

CONDITIONED

ID 2-3335
Thursday,

June

11,

1959

|
|
|

�.. See our dairy section for refreshing summer foods and menu tdeas, We have i :
he Jinest and most modern equipment to keep these products at peak goodness |

..Lry a different ice cream treat today!

ae

yee

SEALTEST ICE MILK
egal.

3

59¢

%

|

SUNSET

vs

Miss Wisconsin Sharp Shredded

PRODUCE,»
CALIF.

| Cut out and

ae

:

bring to Sunset Foods

NORTH

yi

WOODS

Instant

Al vem

f==e4 New! Regular or Drip

Zs

85c

a

iE

*
orf

Bea

(BY

atind

Mott's Applesauce

anon

ino

STAR

KIST

CHUNK

[21

Libby

RB

YOUR CHOICE

3 ” “™ 65c
ssn JasQ9C

?

Gr. Peppers 2

15¢

|Green Onions 2

15c

Sie

esti

PKG.

FOR

KLEENEX ©"*Pectare

2 tor 49

TOMATO JUICE

U.S.

Cans 39¢

2 vis: 29¢

CHOICE,

Hawthorne

Mellody

Pkg.

19¢

S.

CHOICE

TENDER,

STRAWBERRIES 2 ==.45c | New Salt Tang 2 r=" 69c

C | , e 7 T

Kit ly

K|

y) cans D7

e's

1812 GREEN
BIRD'S

PEAS

EYE
i

-02.

°

é

‘a

couwon 2 'vxss.29¢ | Carnation Milk 2 c=: 29c Sa e

Thursday, June 11, 1959

YOUNG,

SUMMER SAUSAGE

HOUSE

i

MAIN COURSE "#z55c}

SPRING

MEATY

BAKED BEANS 2 ca: 45c

SWANSON’S

GENUINE

COTTAGE CHEESE | | SPARE RIBS » 49c_
MORTON

FROZEN FOODS

:

LEG OF LAMB * 69c —
U.

MINUTE RICE

49

pare

3 c= 89c

5 %« 47c

3.490

EARLY JUNE PEAS

CUCUMBER ... ™ 5c

LIGHT

Ceresota Flour

“a .

ee

IDEAL FOR SLICING

NAPKINS

TUNA

‘i

| PEACHES .... = 19¢

2c’ *1.19

Coffee

Folger’s

pak

SWEET

NEW LOW PRICE

“he

69c
” win COUFON Fe

Snowdrift Shortening

res. 29¢ —

CANTALOUPE = 2%

meee

Coupon expires July1, 1959

SUGAR

AGEMy | taney sweet coun

PS

vt
coun

RIPE

PLUMS
...... 19]
ea.

EGG COFFEE SPECIAL

[Recess

RED

CHEDDAR CHEESE

|

BAY

:

39c

|

:

b 0 () I) C
ROAD

—

A CENTRAL

Kriday Night Is Family Night At Sunset —
PLENTY
OF FREE PARKING —

|

FOOD

|

STORE

Open till 9 PM.
ALWAYS!

,

Page 9

�"OVER QUARTER CENTURY OF QUALITY LEADERSHIP”
PAUL OLSON

ART OLSON

Popping With | tse

: aM

FATHERS

§ DAY

GIFTS =f timp!)

For DAD!

pee

Free Gift Wrapping

F JUNE 2st

ee

Open Fri. Nites

&lt;A

America’s Newest Most Exciting
Sport Shirts
SPORT

SHIRTS

of WASH

‘N’ WEAR,

VERTICAL

KNITS,

IMPORTED

FABRICS,

of
ETC.

S-M-ML-L-XL)
iH}

i

(Sizes

STRIPES,

Array

BRITISH KNIT SPORT SHIRT
WASH ‘N’ WEAR COTTONS
McGREGOR SEA BREEZE
TARTUN IVY DOWN
HATHAWAY SPORT SHIRT

‘
’
;
.
‘

SPORT

:

LA COSTE

SHIRT

IMPERIAL GINGHAM CHECK
IMPERIAL SILKS
IMPORTED COTTON KNIT
IZOD PIMA COTTON
IZOD IMPORTS

Be

WORSTED

‘
‘
:

SHIRTS

WINDBREAKERS

oe

McGREGOR DRIZZLER
ZERO-KING
R
R
ened BREAKE

“
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MANHATTAN NO-IRON
HATHAWAY BATISTE

..

IMPORTED SWISS COTTON
CHRISTIAN DIOR
CHRISTIAN DIOR SILKS

a

MANHATTAN NO-IRON S/S

TROPIC

Group III
$15.95 - $24.95

WHIT

Group Il
$9.95 - $14.95

A

Group 1
$3.95 — $8.95

— SUMMER SUITS —
PALM BEACH
WASH ‘N’ WEAR

PALM

$39.95

AVE.

PANORA

PALM BEACH
SPRINGWEAVE

$45.00

— WORLD'S
648 CENTRAL

BEACH

$55.00

GREATEST
Phone

$89.50

HABERDASHERS

ID 2-2871

el

IMPORTED FABRIC
— 6%-Oz. —

—

HIGHLAND

PARK,

ETETETCwa_tTa_

A

Thursday, June

ILL.
TUTTE

HATA We

11, 1959

�COMMUNITY

CENTER SUMMER

An eight-week summer recreational program offered by|
Highwood’s Community Center starts June 22. All age groups
will be provided with activities in the most extensive program
ever offered in Highwood.
The program will be divided into
three major age groupings. Youngsters five- through eight-years-old

will

be

eligible

to

participate

the
popular
“Kiddie
Klasses.”” Members
of

will

meet

each

in

Kollege
this group

morning

of

the

week. Misses Ann Frantonius and
Beverly Campagne, both of Highwood, will conduct these classes.

Girls

nine-

through

13-years-old

will have their own program. Boys
in the same age group will meet
separately.
The
two
groups
will
meet from 9 a.m. until 3:30 p.m.
daily. A full staff of leaders will be
on hand to conduct these programs,

including

badminton,

trampoline

Little Lassie
baseball, volleyball,
watercoloring,
supervised swimming, arts and crafts, newspaper
publishing, advanced and beginning
cheer leading, float construction,
field trips, tumbling,
tennis
and
others.

groups

traveling

to

Wrigley

reational
program
will
June 17, 18 and 19.
Schedule of activities:

school

students

Field

and

be

STARTS JUNE 22
3 . Little Major league baseball (11 and
12 yrs.
4 . PONY
league baseball (ages 13 and
14 )
5. PREP league baseball (ages 15 to 17)
6. Three all star little league teams for
out-of-town competition.
7. Supervised fishing
8. Trampoline
;
9. Supervised swimming
. Volleyball
ee
. Newspaper writing and publishing
. Field trips
. Wrestling
. Tumbling
:
. Junior
Olympics
(track
and _ field
events)
All Age Groups
1. Informal grade school dances
2. Informal high school dances
|
3. Out of town parade participation
4. A weekly series of outdoor movies
5. Field trips
. Wrigley Field (Cubs)
. Comiskey Park (Sox)
Riverview Park
. Brookfield Zoo
. Chicago museum tour
Storyland Park
. Others to be scheduled

held

a. Kiddie Kollege (Boys and Girls, 5 thru 8)
1, Kiddie Kollege Klasses
2. Trip, Hawthorne Mellody Farm Zoo
3. Hayride and picnic
4. Trampoline
5. Float participation
b. Girls—Ages 9 to 14
1. Badminton
2. Trampolene
3. Little Lassie Baseball
4. Volleyball
5. Outdoor watercoloring
6. Supervised swimming
7. Arts and crafts
8. Newspaper publishing
9. Beginning cheerleading
. Advanced cheerleading
- Float construction and_ participation
. Tennis
. Field trips
14, Tumbling
Boys—Ages 7% thru 17
1. Little Boys baseball (7 and 8 yrs.)
2. Little Minor league baseball
(9 and
10 yrs.)

to see the Cubs, to Comiskey Park
to see the White Sox, to Riverview
Park, Brookfield
Zoo, Storyland
Park and to tour Chicago museums.
There will be informal dances
for high

PROGRAM

grade

school students will participate in
parades in nearby cities.
Donald C. Skrinar, recreational
director, will head the summer staff
of seven—Ronald
Maestri,
Soren
Leahy,
Madreen
Fiocchi, Beverly
Campagne,
Ann
Frantonius,
Rita
Ronzani and Jenny Dubach. Miss
Dubach
will devote full time to

mrenodp

HIGHWOOD

skip—leave
Ordinary
mowers
clump,
messy clippings. New Toro cuts evenly,
cleans-up
other
clippings
as well.

girls’ sports. The staff will attend
North Shore Playground Leadership Training Institute
June 15 and 16.

Wind-Tunnel
Whirlwind

in Wilmette

Scheduled Activities
Registration for the summer

for custom
rec-

design and

workmanship

on draperies,

and

The corresponding boys’ program
will include
little boys
baseball,

exquisite
All

slipcovers

bedspreads—

1—CUTS

newspaper
field
trips,

for carpeting

with a “new look’...

wrestling and tumbling, as well as
several other activities to be scheduled.

new

and unusual papers—

we

complexion magic!

invite you

to visit

“miniatures” of three

wallpaper

exciting new

oS

products advertised in

Cr

AF

to town...or to

a hew home...

The Saturday

Hostess will call with a
basket of gifts...and
friendly greetings from

=

i

ATS

Free

deerfield

rd.

deer field, ill.

YN

Pe]

FAURE FDR

“Over

Ye

ee:

for

Sample

Quarter Century

OLSON

of Quality

ART

|

5
:
;

Mail

‘
1

to

1

MAGI-CARE

!

Box J-20
Highland Park

c/o
A

A

RE

OP

41)

Weekdays: 8 a.m-8 p.m.
Sundays: 9 a.m.-2 p.m.

WE TAKE
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Skokie Valley Road (U.S,
Highland Park, Ill.

to 22 optional attachments
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WHERE

——

WORLD’S

ID 2-1211

e
648

Thursday, June 11, 1959

OLSON

eS

WI 5-1210

TRAVEL

Leadership”

oicbssdp ib candiececvekycpdeweess :

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Repair

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PAUL

a

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anit bo ntenu Marae

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isa

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wi 5-1354

Evening

Clip This Coupon

Cecile Casey
ID 2-0442
Deerfield: Bannockburn

WELCOME WAGON

Complete Mower

contact:
i

If you,. or others you
know, are moving, be
sure to phone Welcome
Wagon.
Highland Park.
Adalyne Sickel

727

and POST

Wagon

unlimited

Mower
Center

2210

VOGUE:
BAZAAR

When you move

Power

interiors

RI

&amp;

M.S.S., INC.

for complimentary

_our religious, civic and
business leaders.

THE

BUY FROM YOUR
AUTHORIZED SALES
SERVICE CENTER.

skin care

products work

Field trips will be scheduled with

Welcome

GRASS
CLEANS

3—-BAGS AS IT VACUUMS—
puts debris in bag.
EVEN IN WET GRASS

for the newest of spring fabrics—

surprise yourself

, trampoline, supervised

Your

Operation

LAWN—picks up leaves,
grass, clippings, twigs, etc.

and three all star teams to play in
out of town competition, supervised
swimming,
volleyball,
writing
and
editing,

THE

2—VACUUM

little minor and little major league
baseball, pony league, prep league
fishing

in ONE

without expensive attachments

Central

GREATEST

OPEN

Ave.,

FRIDAY

Highland

HABERDASHERS
NIGHTS
Park

——

@
e

ID

2-2871

into

WHEEL- HORSE
TRACTOR F...!

�Nene

ee
SAN UNS

Tennis

CARD OF THANKS
The family of Caesar J.
Benvenuti wishes to express
our

deepest

thanks

to

our

many friends and relatives for
their kindness during
cent bereavement.

psarathies
rad

our re-

Er

¥

Classes

Pi,

tennis classes for women. A graduate of Lake Forest College, she
currently

is studying

under

former

Davis Cup player, George Jennings.
She will conduct
classes
for
women

only

on

Wednesdays

on page

CHARTER

oon

-

at

10

42)

Theodore

Special Summer
Salads

BUSES

First

award

TRANSIT,

COMPLETE
LUNCHEONS
SERVED

the

old

and

much-craved Spoon, presented “by
vote of the senior men to a junior

Second

call:

- HIGHLAND

was

award

of outstanding

PARK

INC.

Deerfield

the

Warren

arship and for useful activity in
college affairs.”
Steck is a member of Beta Theta
Pi fraternity, Mace honor society,
head of the Religion in Life conference and member
of the Lau-

rence United Charities board.

ALL WOOL
CARPETING

Served
5-8

695

Open 6:00 A.M.
to 8:00 P.M.

STARR'S

PER SQ. YD.

wh iis

GRILL

Carpets

Edens near Tower

1819 St. Johns
ID 2-9758

ye

ills

ib

eR

VE 5-2400

Open Monday through Saturday, 9 to 5
Mon. &amp; Wed. Evenings by Appointment

iy ST Ais
Pts

Woven
i

Gen.

Brig.
labor

and

fields

H.

William

a delegation

and

ep

EN

Lenape

meee ey

RE

Cea

One Of Party

from

(USA,

Wilbur

of 30 leaders

states

11

Central

371

Ret.),

civic,

in

business

church,

United

of the

in all sections

States will arrive in New York City by plane at 8:15 a.m. Monday from a 30-day People-to-People Mission to the Middle
East labeled “Operation Insight.”
Sponsored
by
the
American
Friends of the Middle East in col-

Award
was

HS ciel

Engaged In ‘Operation Insight’
Ave.,

Hurst Stevens Prize scholarship,
“awarded to a man of the junior
class distinguished for high schol-

WI 5-3852
DEERFIELD

Lakewood

campus.

Second

Drivers

For Information

44

Pl., recently
received
two major
honors in traditional honors
day
ceremonies
on Laurence
College

man,” and symbolic
leadership.

OCCASION

Insured

COMPLETE
FOUNTAIN SERVICE,
HOME MADE ICE CREAM

Dinners
from

ANY

Steck,

RIND

Coneral Wil bir

Honors Local Boy

Schools — Churches — Clubs

FOR

Me

ei,

{

Y Laurence College

At

Miss Sarah Frelinger, 160 Lincolnwood Ave., is instructing two

(Continued

The Benvenuti Family

ae *

?

discover under-lying truths.
“Tf we do this in a spirit

laboration with the President’s people-to-people committee on Foreign
Affairs, the
group
visited
Cairo,
Beirut, Damascus, Amman, Jerusa-

derstanding and humility, I am
sure that our mission will be a cred-

lem, both old and new, Tel Aviv, Is-

fit to the cause

tanbul and Athens.
From the middle of May to the
middle
of June, the party interviewed
high government
officials
in each country, held panel discussions and other sessions, met with
their vocational opposite numbers,
inspected development projects and
took part in social functions.

with the Middle Eastern people.”
The group is composed of four
clergymen, eight civic, church and
club
women,
three
lawyers,
two

Speaking on behalf of Harold B.
Minor,
president
of American
Friends of the Middle East, who
met the delegation in Cairo, Mil-

liam

Z.

Cline,

AFME’s

Eastern

Area director, said that the objectives of “Operation
Insight”
are
what the name
implies—“looking
into the problems of the area to
Hair Cuts of Distinction

SMITTY’S
BARBER
SHOP
Serving

1820

Highland

Park Since

1900

2nd St., near the Jewel
Phone ID 2-0636

it to our

country

educators,

two

and

of un-

of real bene-

of better relations

conductors

and

a

manufacturer,
labor leader, news
correspondent,
retired
diplomat,
dress designer, buyer, musician, architect,
economist,
professor
and
publisher.
States represented are Arkansas,
California, Colorado, Illinois, Indiana, Maryland, New York, Texas,

Vermont,
sin.

Washington

Pre-departure

and

Wiscon-

Briefing

Before their departure, the party
was briefed at the Carnegie Endowment Center on political conditions
in the Middle East by Dr. John S.
Badeau, president of the Near East
Foundation;
Alexander
Chapman,
petroleum engineering consultant;
and
the
Hon.
Musa
Bey
Alami
president of the Arab Development
Society in Jordan. Following the
briefing, they were entertained at
luncheon by AFME.
During the past 30 years, while
on duty in the United States Army
and since his retirement, General
Wilbur has made extensive surveys
of social, political and
economic
developments in vital areas of the

world: Western Europe, North Africa, Russia, the Balkans, Japan and
Korea.
He is the author of ‘“‘Guide Post
for the Future,” a new approach
to American foreign policy, and is
known as a country-wide lecturer.
The general was a leading combat officer in World War 11 and at
the
recommendation
of the late
Gen. George S. Patton, was award-

LEMON SHERBET CAKES
85c &amp; $1.25

ed the Congressional Medal of Honor.

ORANGE CHIFFON CAKES
90c &amp; $1.50
:t

AFTER GRADUATION,

Pint 50c_

Because the spine is so vital to the
nervous system and to the function of
glands, organs and muscles, Chiropractors look to the spine as the KEY to
normal function and Health. In aiding
the sick and suffering to recover Health,
the Chiropractor locates the points of
nerve interference in the spine and by
correcting
them
enables the body
to
function normally again.

DEERFIEL
813 WAUKEGAN

RD., DEERFIELD

hk Lal

Arrange for an appointment soon so
you may benefit from this modern method of natural healing.
Consult:

WERE PROUD OF OUR

BAKING!
WI

5-0068

Chiropractor
@ X-RAY SERVICE @
524 WAUKEGAN AVE.
HIGHWOOD
Telephone ID 2-0125

Office Closed Thursdays
Page

12

See your eye physician
(M.D.) first. If he says
you can wear them—
H.O.V. has all the newest

types. Get the benefit

The Chiropractor Profession has performed outstanding service to humanity
by restoring millions of physically ill
and suffering men, women and children
healthier,
happier,
more
abundant
ives,

Fredrick A. Mokrasch

BAKERY &amp;
DELICATESSEN

lenses ?

Whatever
you
do,
safeguard
your
health.
There
is little satisfaction
in
winning the goal of your desire if you
sacrifice your health.

MADE POTATOS ALA
is

‘contact

Most people work to make a living.
Many—because it is necessary to do so.
Others—because they like to work—their
work is creative and they enjoy the satisfaction of a job well done. It has been
said:
Life is work; good work is life!

“BLUSHING ANGEL FOOD CAKES
90c &amp; $1.50

SK

WHAT?

of our 20 years of

pioneering and
continued research.

For the answer to your questions about contact lenses—
write for our new booklet.

Ch

pee

House of Vision”
Craftsmen

in Optics

1891 SHERIDAN ROAD
HIGHLAND PARK
.
135 NORTH WABASH, CHICAGO
OH.O.Y.

Thursday,

June

11, 1959

4

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3

yes,

wat

Cee

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ee

TONS

he

ay

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SNe tee
-

Saaaren hy

PUSS

Fo

erat

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ees,
sey if

1 Ta
Hay

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ON
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\

| Highwood Family Portrait

ee

re
SR

ts

sr"

German Shepherds Compete Here Sat.
German Shepherd dogs from a
four state area will compete Saturday at the second annual sanctioned
show and obedience match of the
Shoreline German Shepherd Club.
Site of meet is Highland Park High
School athletic field.

Trophies
several

and

ribbons

hundred

valued

dollars

will

at
be

is invited.

awarded winning contestants in the
conformation and obedience trials
to be conducted under the rules
and regulations of American Kennel Club.
All pure-bred registered German
Shepherd dogs over six months of

President

man
nand

J.

Mann,

York

Little Sandy
to some

day

Women’s

Catchpole

becoming

and

fourth

Prosperity Club.

her sister, Cindy,

generation

At the meeting

of the Italian

recently held in High-

wood Community Center, three generations ‘were represented
in the club’s membership. Left to right, five-year-old Sandy, her
great-grandmother, Mrs. Marie De Vanna; her grandmother, Mrs.
Sam Corso; her mother, Mrs.
Cindy, posed for this picture.

Catchpole

and

her

44 446444444
ninety aad ald in Live

*
4
4
€

wishes

to

1
&lt;
+

announce:

6
4
4
4
4
&lt;
¢
4
«
&lt;
4
¢
q
4
.

444444444444
4464 4444444
itt
i
alin Sa adiaia li dite ine ann natn igi

A “Get Acquainted” Open House
For You And
on Sunday,

June

Your Children
15th, from

2-5 p.m.

Relax in the shade of the big oak trees on MERRY

OAKS

‘
:

beautiful 7 acres. Explore the exceptional features of MERRY
OAKS and meet our Parents Committee and Staff. They will

;
‘

be happy to show you around and tell you about our aims
and ideas, and the benefits and joy your children can derive

P
:

from our summer outdoor program

There

is still time

summer program.

and throughout the year.

to register your children

OAKS

4 to 9 for the

Enrollments are open for Pre-School and

Phone:

Lake

SCHOOL—-3350
Forest

Everett

Rd.,

Lake

South

La
Tel.

St.

CEntral

¢

Saturday
Evening

Power

Mower

Wik y ®

Exchange

Ge.

Highest Trade-In Allowances
ff
COAST TO COAST STORES | —
Market Square
Lake Forest 3998 |

Ger-

is Ferdi-

Blossom

Ct.

THROW

with cleaning order of

_

ANY
ROOM
SIZE

Base

me

ei

Sine

x

ty

ON

te

~ LEWIS ¢ For

Edens

BUILDING

Salle

AS ADVERTISED IN

td £3 Rete).&lt;

Chicago

Limited

near

PHONE

3

Time

Tower

Rd.,

Only

¢

Northbrook

VE 5-2400

6-1474

SWELTERING WEATHER |
IS ON THE WAY = |

FIESTA
POOLS

‘

Kindergarten in the Fall.
MERRY

BORLAND
111

1766

of:

FREE

Exchange

Exchanges

ASSOCIATES
SAMUEL D. ROWE
RICHARD J. SHROSBREE
J. TRACY
ALEXANDER
STEPHEN W. BACHAR
POTTER H. CARROLL
HERBERT
HIDER
HUGH
J. O‘CONNOR
SIDNEY RUBENSTEIN
of Highland Park

sister,

Forest

2113

&lt;

‘
&lt;
&lt;
&lt;
4
4
ci
&lt;
4
4
€
4

4
P

hep
hi

hh
4,
44,4444
tania in tht
i
hn

Richard

Club

Makers

CLEANED

PARTNERS
ARTHUR M._ BETTS
CHAUNCEY B. BORLAND
FRANCIS P. BUTLER
LOUIS J. STIRLING
ETTS

look forward

members

Stock

Other

Shoreline

By

Johnson-Evinrude

RUG

Members
and

the

Dog

ANY

1896

BROKERS
STOCKS — BONDS
New

of

Shepherd

BETTS, BORLAND&amp; Go.
Since

LAWN-BOY

age are eligible to enter the conformation
match.
Obedience
contestants may vie for honors in their
respective eligibility groups.
Entries may be mailed to Mrs.
William Overman, match secretary,
3490 Summit Ave., or turned in at
the show before 11 a.m. The public

a

NORTH SHORE SCHOOL OF DANCE
442 CENTRAL AVE., HIGHLAND PARK
PHYLLIS SABOLD
ERIC BRAUN
Announces
Annual Summer Course June 22-July 30
Separate Classes in Ballet and Contemporary
Combined Workshop for Advanced Students
Special Class for Adults
Registration To Be Held at the Studio
Thurs. and Fri., June 18 and 19, 3:30-6:00 P.M.

For

further

information

VISIT

call

ID

3-1350 at that time.

PHONE

BEAUTIFUL

SUNSHINE VALLEY
Accredited member of
American Camping
Association.

SUMMER DAY CAMP
FOR CHILDREN 4
A

wise

gram

Mother

and

carefully

director

of

thru 11

investigates

the

camp

the

to

site,

which

pro-

she

intrusts her child. SUNSHINE
VALLEY
offers
14
years experience,
18 acres of cool woods with a
private shaded lake. The HEATED instruction SWIM-

MING POOL was built for teaching children.
have a wide program of many activities where

INSPECTION
INVITED
Open

house on Sundays

2-5 P.M.
Location N.W. corner of
Toll Road and Route 22

Thursday,

June

11, 1959

LAKE

FOREST

3120

FEST

POOLS

TODAY

THERE’S STILL TIME to plan a summer of healthful fun for all your family
... if you act now. You can insure your youngsters a healthful, fun-filled vacation season .. . and think of the many care-free hours you'll enjoy swimming,
sunning, relaxing, when you have your own pool. A Fiesta Pool is an investment
that will bring many lasting benefits now and for years to come. Phone today.

We

child is -iamphanmea A instructed including golf and
tennis. The counselors are teachers plus adult college students.
No high school boys or girls. Ample
and clean sanitary
facilities.
Careful transportation provided.
Meals “i! experienced caterer available. June 22 — Aug.
14th.

Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Thompson

FOR MORE FAMILY ENJOYMENT THROUGH THE YEARS!

FIESTA
Div.

of Kleinpaste

and

POOLS
Rollene,

LIBERTYVILLE

General

2-2892

Contractors

e

hy

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Driver Asleep At Wheel
--Car Damages Gas Main
a driver

Because

YOU CAN RELA

Driver
Highland

DUFFY CLEANS
YOUR DRAPES!

of the car, according to
Park police, was Mark

police

and

by
Mrs.
Braeside

the

bridge,

A minor

CLEANERS
(across from

H.P.

occurred

Library)

Bryant

Mrs.

3%

old,

reported

by

bitten

on

owned

finger

by

a

Joan
PI.

A.

Warsaw,

Bryant

Leonard

of Central

years

was
been

dog

the
424

was

ticketed,

police

mal hospital.
Innocenzi,

875

Pleasant

Ave., 7 years old, fell off a bicycle
which he was riding double with
his sister and sustained a 24-inch
cut on his forearm, according to
police. The accident happened
at
2:45 p.m. Friday.

Police took the boy to the emergency ward of Highland Park Hospital and back home
again after
(Continued on page 41)

at 4:10 p.m. Friday.
Allen,

ring

Rd.,
have

say, for no current license and the
animal was impounded at an ani-

accident occurred, police

St., south

to

Mrs. Bryant’s son, Stephen, was
walking
the dog, a male French
poodle 2% years old, and took the
dog into the school playground. The
other boy attempted to pick the dog
up to pet and was bitten.

Ave., when a panel truck pulling
into a parallel parking place, was
struck by a car driven by Susan
Sickle, 1766 Old Brier Rd.
Police say that she was charged
with improper passing; that damage to her car was estimated at $50
—to the truck at $60. The accident

Your Drapes will be Carefully Taken Down, Cleaned Gently
and Thoroughly, and Rehung. As You Desire—a Completely
‘Professional Job!

%

left

Deerfield

| police report.
say, on First

Laurel

just past

went down a
slight enbankment,
there, hit a steel gas pipe which
crosses the water, and stopped.
Both the gas company and the
fire department were called. Damage to the car was estimated at
$300 and Rosenberg went to see
his
own
physician,
after
being
charged
with
negligent
driving,

ID 2-1820
487

Braeside

Rosenberg, 21 Riparian Rd., who
ran off the road at Deerfield Rd.
Pl., at 12:45 a.m, Saturday. His car

Dial...

DUFFY

off the

of the left arm.

WHEN

Just

ran

and

at the wheel

fell asleep

road, a six-inch gas main was broken and the entire front end
of his car was wrecked, but he received only slight lacerations

534

Use Our FILL-A-BOX Storage Service!
eee
+. 0.8 80 8
os 010.6%
ees
peees
AO

. .. the

USE THIS
DISCOUNT
CERTIFICATE

pride of

Highland Park High School
g

For
653
Each

Carton

Hand

Packed

‘Highland Park's Exclusive Distributor
Cantonese

Catering

and

Carry-Out

This rich, wholesome,

delicious ice cream

Experts

Member

DAY

. . . 24

Hour

CALL TOphone

ser-

vice.
The Smart Hostess knows

EVERY-

Deposit

1, 1959

Insurance

Corp.

1771
IDlewood

Maple

Chocolate

Chip

Chocolate

Mild

Banana
Lemon

Swiss Burnt Almond
Butter Pecan

Cocoanut

Maraschino Cherry

New York
Vanilla

Maple Pecan
Pistachio Nut

CHINESE FOOD
Especially When It’s from

Peppermint
Strawberry
.
Chocolate Bittersweet
2
RAI

Page: 14

Federal

JULY

Ac

has been known

Pineapple

Ralapew
Coffee

CHARLIE WENK’S

SAVINGS
Second St.

2-7800

HAVANA

VALA’S FABULOUS FLAVORS!

BODY LOVES CANTONESE AND
‘

INTEREST

Bank—Postoffice Bldg.

as Chicago's finest for many years. Still available
at original location too:
VALA’S ICE CREAM CO.
3335 N. Broadway — DI 8-8822

as Cantonese Food.

BANK

EFFECTIVE

ID 3-1414

we'll deliver ice cream as well

ID 2-3420

ON

1860 FIRST STREET
HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS

Freezer...

in Flowers

Ave.

INSURED

Charlie Wenk’s

Stock Your

BEST

ttt

—announcing—

Famous

Laurel

the

7 Fudge
Saree eee pe

Cocoanut Cream
Bavarian Cream
Chocolate Cream

Fudge
Fudge

(Screened,

Stock

Piled)

MENONI &amp; MOCOGNIf
CAL

2200 Skokie

ID

4s

Hwy., Highland

Park

‘Thursday, June 11, 1959

�|Richard Bloomstein
Graduates In East
Richard
W. Bloomstein, 776
White Oak Ln., was among those
graduated Monday from the University

of Pennsylvania

in the

Mu-

raise

nicipal Auditorium in Philadelphia
with the degree of master of business administration.

JOHN

President Gaylord P. Harnwell of
the University
presided
at commencement
and the address was
given by Dr. Robert S. Aitken, vice
of Birmingham,

their

prices

manufacturers
June

effective

of carpets

are

compelled

to

1959.

15th,

B. NASH CARPET COMPANY

will not raise its prices on the merchandise that is now on hand . . . consisting
of approximately 5,000 square yards of finest quality carpeting in various
colors and patterns. This merchandise will be sold on a first come—first served

chancellor and principal of the University

prices,

of wool

to increase

Due

England.

Following his address, the honorary degree of doctor of laws was
conferred upon Dr. Aitken.

aq ‘s

basis.
We invite you to come in and see this beautiful selection of floor coverings in our
pleasantly air-conditioned store.

STORE

HOURS:

Daily 8:15 to 5:30 ——

Open

Friday Evening

until 9:00

ohn B. Nash Carpet Co.
Mrs.

wood
vice

L.

Finder,

was

president

Hadassah
More

of

Youth
than

Wild-

North

of

the

Studs Terkel,

HIGHLAND

the

spring

radio and

personality, presented
of dramatic
readings.
Grand

a

It’s a fact . . . many

attended.

cause

and

Registry Service.

china

and

change
‘most

The Illinois Chapter of the Arthritis
and
Rheumatism
Foundation has granted $45,000 for the
support of the nine local research

on the

of the

loveliest
our
free

Open every Fri.

FELL SHOES
\Highland

Til 9 P.

Park

‘They know our impeccable
good taste, wide selections
of
decorative
accessories,

Illinois Chapter Arthritis
Grants Support For Research

projects

HI 6-3772

May Be Your Own!

North
Shore’s
brides-to-be
use

Bridal

SECTION

Drive Carefully — The Life You Save

UPTOWN
INTERIORS!

a tour of the building and a show of
summer fashions. Dignitaries and
guests
from
the
entire
Chicago

— RAVINIA

ID 2-8702

She’s Lovely, She’s
Engaged, She’s
Registered with

TV

program

Opening

area

PARK

ID 2-8701

The Villa Moderne Motor Hotel
was officially opened Friday with
a reception and party that included

metropolitan

626 ROGER WILLIAMS AVE.

Shore

luncheon
and _ officer-installation
ceremonies at Villa Moderne Motor

Hotel.

i

division.

members

attended

* suburban me

Monday

Aliyah

400

organization

1000

installed

cure

glass and

privileges

wedding

full ex-

eliminate

gift problems.

Then too, since we won ‘t be
‘at the
wedding,
we've
a
small gift waiting for each
bride together with our best
wishes and warmest congratulations.

of

rheumatic disease.
Mrs. B. E. Bensinger, Mrs. Ernest
R. Graham
and Mrs. Charles B.
Puestow are members of the Women’s Board. Former resident, General Robert E. Wood, is national
campaign
chairman
while
other
residents,
Robert
A. Bachle
and
Sanford I. Wolff, are members of
the board of directors.

.1888

Sheridan

Textured SILK

Road

gleaming white .. . or

‘Highland Park
‘ID

3-0300

tinted to match

‘ Delightfully Air Conditioned

By

Deliso Debs

Northshore Garden of Memories
A Surprise Awaits You
THIS

BEAUTIFUL
Very

Green

If

You

GARDEN

Reasonable

Not Visited

CEMETERY
24

Prices

AND

hour

service

on tinting

Phone

Bay Rd. &amp; 18th St.

Car

Have

DE 6-6500

COMPANY

Funeral Directors to the
Jewish Community Since 1865

SHORE

NORTH

SERVICE

Complete facilities in your community

3-5400

South

Thursday,

Shore

June

Chapel:

11,

1959

2100

East

75th

Street,

at

Clyde

————e

for prompt service . . . Lee J. Furth,
Jules L. Furth, and their staff, will
personally arrange and conduct the
entire funeral—a service of warmth
and beauty, observing customs and
ritual with reverence.

Call Midway

Avenue
—s

as

Paul

Ln.,

ell Shoes
633
932

Central
Linden

Highland
Hubbard

Pe
We

�ostly for Women
Jaycee Auxiliary To Have Luncheon

DRURY DAWSON LENINGTON BECOMES
BRIDE OF CHARLES DUANE SPECHT

Deerfield Garden
Club Is Collecting
Flowers Wednesday

sm

The

Garden

Club

will collect garden

of

from

its

members and local residents every
Wednesday, starting on June 17
and

continuing

mer.

The

uted

through

Flower

and

This
vide

Guild

flowers

people

through

flowers

in

the

will

the

be

distrib-

Guild.

was

organized
the

less

institutions.
them

Goodspeed

ton Rd.

each

on

June

tour

to

On

9:30

at

Allison, treasurer.

Chicago

Mrs.

Keith

Mrs.

Nickoley,

Raymond

chairmen
luncheon
publicity;

membership;

Craig,

program;

Mrs.
James
McDonough,
social;
Mrs. Henry Zander, Sunshine; Mrs.
Leroy Koetz, ways and means; Mrs.
Robert L. Smith, hostess and personnel;
Mrs.
Owen
Hildreth, bylaws;
Mrs.
John
Hooper,
representative
to the recreation
committee.

DEERFIELD WOMAN'S CLUB PLANS
DIVERSIFIED PROGRAM IN 1959-60

Deerfield
a.m.

St.,

The

club,

E,

Thursday,
guests

will

residence

this

students

to

Conservation

is

sending

Sangamon

They have selected Tony Merrick, son of Mr. and Mrs. Calvin
Merrick of 680 Portwine Rd., and
Carl Lantz, son of Harold
Lantz
of Woodland
Lane, both west of
July

12

to

July

attend

from

17.

The course of study will include
The Deerfield Woman’s Club executive board met June 1
game management, fisheries, game
at the home of Mrs. Locke Rogers, president of the club. An propagation, forestry, state parks,
interesting and diversified program for the 1959-60 season has history of conservation, soil, law

been

assembled

under

man, Mrs. Charles

the supervision

Lager, and ways

of the program

and means

chair-

chairman,

Mrs.

Jack Kitzerow.
The
with
in

club
the

will

begin

annual

new

September,

the

season

members

followed

tea

by

the

scholarship

benefit

card

party

Sep-

tember

A

acquainted

sup-

22.

get

per dance at the Rustic Manor is
planned for October. Also a lecture

on

U.S.

Frayn

foreign

Utley

policy

(Mrs.

celebrated news

given

Clifton

by

Utley),

analyst.

Men’s night will be honored with
a lecture by Dudley Crafts Watson,
an international figure and lecturer
on travel and the fine arts. The
Antoinne
Pope—School
of Fancy
Cookery is in the offing. The club
will add to its already generous library fund with a benefit supper
dance to be held at the new Villa

Moderne.
nual

The

spring

setting

luncheon

Villa d’Este at Cary,

for

the

an-

will

be

the

Ill.

Mental Health Week will be sponsored by the Deerfield
Woman’s

Club with Mrs. H. N. Staats selected

as representative

of the

club.

Combined with the special events
the new season promises to be an
active one.
At the June meeting the following
applications
for
membership

were submitted and approved:
New
Mrs.

Frank

Members
M.

Blake,

Mrs.

Charles H. Carman, Mrs. Robert
Hamilton, Mrs. Herman Pack, Mrs.
W. W. Ruppel, Mrs. Philip F. Ruth

The

year

committee

and

Mrs.

The bride, given in marriage by
her father, wore a white gown of
lace

over

taffeta

ing

lace

veil.

and

She

short

match-

carried

white

roses with ivy.
Miss Ann D. Lenington was her
sister’s bridesmaid. Her frock was

of

yellow

self-embroidered

cotton

satin and she carried white daisies
with ivy.
LeRoy
Childers served as best
man and ushers were Fred Arndt
and Glen Reiman.
A reception for 200 guests was
held in the church. Mrs. Lenington
chose a dress of ice blue chiffon
over matching taffeta, blue pumps

St.
Will

Paul’s
Meet

Afternoon
This

Mrs. Fred L.
kegan Rd. will
the Afternoon
Church.
Mrs.
Highland Park
ess,

Circle

J. Keller

officiated.

Bannockburn And
Deerfield Women
Tell Of Ravinia
Among

the

nockburn

Deerfield

women

who

and

Ban-

are working

on the sale of Ravinia coupon books
are
Mrs.
Walter
Bischoff,
Mrs.
Frank
E.
Jacober,
Mrs.
Gerald
Kramer, Mrs. Chester Kyle, Mrs.
Joseph Powell, Mrs. Fred Rahn and
Mrs. James Sayre.
Nearly twice as many
Chicago
and
suburban
women
have
been
enlisted as coupon book saleswomen for the Ravinia Festival this
vear, according to Mrs. Lawrence

F. McClure

of Highland

Park, gen-

eral
chairman
of
the
Ravinia
women’s coupon book committee.
One of the reasons for the increase in the number of workers
to more than 700, Mrs. McClure
and her co-chairman. Mrs. Thomas
J. Boodell of Winnetka, agree, was
the enthusiasm generated at a recent luncheon for community chairmen
and
co-chairmen
given
by
Julien H. Collins of Kenilworth,
chairman
of the Ravinia Festival

Committee,
Club.

at Indian Hills Country

Many of the suburban community chairmen already have been entertaining
their
committees
at
luncheons and teatime gatherings.

Afternoon

Wolff of 918 Waube hostess today to
Circle of St. Paul’s
Martin
Murphy
of
is the assisting host-

Honored

At

Farewell

Tea

Mrs. Guy Wood of 1050 Oxford
Rd. is entertaining at a farewell tea
today for Mrs. Arthur A. Agazim
who is moving from 1041 Oxford

Rd. to Lake Foerst.

under

the
leadership
of
Mrs.
Wessly
Stryker, is now compiling the new
list of members.
Applications for
membership must be submitted by
July 7 if the names are to appear
in the 1959-60 year book.
The July board meeting will be
held at the home of the recording
secretary, Mrs. Thomas Evans Jr.

Amateur

Gardeners

To Meet Monday
On Arrow Wood

Lane

Mrs.
George
Gessner
of 2875
Arrow
Wood
Ln., west of Deerfield, will be hostess to members
of the Amateur Gardeners on Monday, June 15 at 1 p.m. The guest
speaker will be Mrs. Frank Packee
of Skokie who will demonstrate the
importance of the correct usage of
flowers for attractive table settings.

“The

Amateur

Gardeners,

under

the direction of Mrs. Eugene Wall,
are actively engaged in the work
of the Fruit
and
Flower
Guild.
They have sent many bouquets of
lilacs
and
peonies,’
Mrs.
A.
J.
Harrison,
publicity
chairman
reports, “and have also supplied a
plant to each child in one of the
schools
in
the
poorer
Chicago
neighborhoods.”
Mrs. Harrison states that these
children
are
delighted
with
the

gifts

Woman’s Club. The transfer of Mrs.

something

16

book

and
field
trips
to
conservation
areas.

of Mr.

Plan For Flower Show With Theme ‘Injun Summer’

R. B. McMullin to California and
the
resignation
of
Mrs.
Walter
Whitehead were accepted.

and Mrs. Donald K. Smith. Mrs.
Ernest A. Walen Jr. was received
as
a member
from
Northbrook
Page

enforcement
the wildlife

Dr . Paul

daughter’s wedding and the reception.
The
bridegroom’s
mother
wore
delphinium
blue silk shantung, blue shoes and matching hat.
Their corsages were tiny brown orchids.
The young couple will be leaving
the latter part of July for their
wedding trip to Northern Michigan.
The bride attended Lawrence College and her bridegroom is a graduate engineer from Purdue University.

School,

will

Church.

Bouquets of white flowers were
on the altar and green and white
flowers were festooned on the ribbons of the pews. Miss Helen Engstrom was organist.

and blue chiffon picture hat for her

Springfield

daughter

Downers Grove on Saturday afternoon at 3 o’clock in the Deer-

field Presbyterian

for

the

who

Lenington,

651

County,
Springfield,
Ill., located
on the State Fair Grounds.

Deerfield,

Dawson

of

Candidates
year,

Drury

Robert E. Lenington of 3225 Cedar Lane, became the bride
of Charles Duane Specht, son of Mr. and Mrs. Max H. Specht of

leave

Piper
will

the

Garden

there.

Conservation

two

on
and

and

from

for

the

at the

Charles

Chestnut

for

Members

Mrs.

ident. Standing are Mrs. Bruce Stephen, secretary and Mrs. Charles

18

Garden

stalled are, seated left to right, Mrs. John Aberson, vice president;
Mrs. Howard Kane, president; Mrs. Owen Hildreth, retiring pres-

held Satp.m. in

beginning

June

the

scheduled

The luncheon is to be
urday, June
13 at 12:30
the Country Squire.
Permanent committee
to be introduced at: the
are Mrs. Michael Baran,

of Mrs.

at 830 Warring-

/
The Country Squire, near Grayslake will be the setting for Blind is
the annual luncheon and installation of officers of the Deerfield Club of
Jaycee Auxiliary. Newly elected officers for the year to be in- June 18.
of

are asked

home

Wednesday

Tour

I

meet

wish-

17.

To
A

to pro-

Those

to the

Robert

Plant

fortunate

ing to share their flowers
to bring

sum-

Chicago

Fruit
for

Miss

Deerfield

flowers

Tews

Che

—

Weddings

—

Engagements

and

are

grateful

‘‘green”

to

care

to

have
for,

they

The Amateur Gardeners and the Green Thumbs are focusing their attention on autumn when
will present a flower show with the theme “Injun Summer” at Jewett Park on Sept. 18

and

19.

Meeting recently to discuss plans were, left to right, seated, Mrs. George Rice, staging committee; Mrs. Stewart. Flechter, staging committee; Mrs. Donald Kempf, schedule chairman; and
Mrs. Frank Zellet, general chairman. Standing are Mrs. E. O. Mielenz, general chairman and Mrs.
Edward Hans Higgins, publicity.
Thursday,

June

11,

1959

�vSy

CP

REMAN

AY

en

Ley Se

y

Preview Of Renew Ramble

Garden Walk

Planned

By Newcomers

Group

The Garden Group of the Newcomers Club of Deerfield met on
June 24 at the home of Mrs. William
W. Pingenberg
to complete
plans for the Garden Walk to be
held on Wed., June 24.
The
1 p.m.

Garden Walk will start at
at the home of Everett M.

Inman,

rose

expert

located

at 720

Sanders Rd. It will continue north
on Wilmot Rd. to the Walter L.
Wecker. estate where Earl Caroni,

head
tour.

gardener, will conduct
At 3:30 p.m. the group

meet

at

the

home

of

Mrs.

Sholl, retiring chairman,
Trillium Ln., for punch.

Park

members

New

Mrs.

Delta

Valley
Delta

stalled

on

John

Business

the

Thumbs

of

At Villa d’Este

graduating
Club

Owen

5-1941

class

WI

5-2742.

Nichols,

of

sorority were

in-

Tuesday,

May

26

at

NEW

in Hotel

and

call dar

Silla
PARK,

NOW

Nothing to pay until Fall
We

PER BOX
This includes

insurance protection

PLUS

ROAD

furnish the box

Fill it full of woolens—then

call us

We

every-

clean,

USUAL CLEANING
CHARGES

Styling

This

New

Bleaching

refreshed

and

ready

to use

Price

Evaughn

ds

gz?

M4” CLEANERS

Manicuring

:

Sa

2061 Green Bay Rd.
(Open Friday evenings by appointment only)

1959

insure

In the Fall, woolens will be returned

Phone ID 2-3900 or ID 2-4000

Permanents

11,

and

Stop in for Your Storage Box, or We'll Deliver It

Tinting

Central

Low

store

thing; safe from moths, fire and theft

up to $250.00

Weauty

e

OPEN

ILL.

Hair

f

and

Notice

June

Photographer
599 ROGER WILLIAMS AVE.
ID 2-3199

a

clean,

Thursday,

at

Our Fill-A-Box measures 36”
long, 23” wide and 8” deep.

ae
4000

508

FOR DETAILS CALL
Percy H. Prior, Jr.

#

Accommodations

HIGHWAY-LAKE COOK
EDENS , EXPRESSWAY

for

|

Pat Miller, General Mgr.

SKOKIE

Now

CANDID
WEDDING
PHOTOS

the

Walker

Appointments

Midge’s

HOTEL

Silla)”

Make

are.
Nore.

Vacation

ID

2-2330

Highland

Park

Two
Stores

ee

ae

(;

Announcements

a

door and indoor swimming ‘pools... dining in the splendor of
the Fountain Room... cocktails at the Highland Fling .
Highland Park Music Theatre . . 100 spacious air conditioned
rooms and suites. FREE PARKING
For information

of

co-chairman,

Fred

5 private meeting and conference rooms .. . magnificent out-

THE

sy

Albert Pizzato of Highland Park.
(Continued on page 40)

of Deerfield,

or Mrs.

Foe

Laura Ann, on June 2 at St. Francis Hospital, Evanston. The paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.

licity chairman.
Mrs.

ee

terman Ave. became a grandmother —
for the fourth time when her son- —
in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs.
Richard Pizzato of Highland Park :
had their first child, a daughter,

Luncheon
reservations
must
reach Mrs. David Maundrell, 704
Warwick,
by
Monday,
June
15.
Mrs. Charles L. Walton is president and Mrs. Blaine Dorsett, pub-

WI

es

Mrs. Joseph O’Connor of 730 On”

Wednesday, June 17, will be reserved on the calendar by many
newcomers to Deerfield as the date
of the last function of the year of
The Newcomers Club of Deerfield.
The Villa d’Este, at Cary, will be
the location when the group meets
for luncheon at 12 noon, A style
show presented by the Villa d’Este
will add to the enjoyment of the
luncheon hour, to be followed by
the
installation
of
officers
and
graduation exercises for the first

official

Re

Ae

GlenviewChapter

Ford
Pharmacy
Texaco station.

EXCITING

Concept

Green

Birth

luncheon meeting held at the Deerfield home
of the retiring president,
Mrs.
William
T.
Brenner,
1417 Woodland Drive. Members of
the retiring board were co-hostesses with Mrs. Brenner.

IS
New

of

Alumnae

Delta

CAML
eden
A

of the

Year With Luncheon

Newcomers

ERT

py

NEW ARRIVALS”

Frid

Mrs. Charles G. Whitchurch of
Evanston is the incoming president.
Mrs. Bruce Stephen, 2880 Orange
Brace Road, Deerfield, was appointed chairman of magazine subscriptions for the service projects committee. Mrs. John Kittermaster, 410
Thornmeadow,
and
Mrs.
Richard
Derebey, now of Chicago who will
be moving soon into a new home
she and her husband are building
in Deerfield, were
among
others
at the luncheon.

Severson,
Mrs.
George
Koskey,
Mrs. Fred Gahl, Mrs. Frank Zellet,
Mrs,
P. R. Agnes,
Mrs.
William
Eckley, Mrs. John Poindexter, Mrs.
Herbert
Seymour
and
Mrs.
LeBolt.
Also selling tickets are Sally Wilson, James and Richard Parsons,
Arthur
Fink,
Richard
Johnson,
Barbara
and
Elizabeth
Thiele.
In the village they are available
at the Hobby Shop, Record Shop,

THE

officers

Skokie

A bus for teenagers will be run
from Deerfield if there is enough
demand.
Dispersing news and tickets for
the
Riverview
Ramble
are
Mrs.
Robert David, Mrs. Daniel Stolle,

Mueller,

1720

6

Tri-Delta Alumnae
Meet In Deerfield

“From 7 to midnight all 45 rides
fun houses and shows will be open
and all included in the price of a
ticket,” Mrs. John LeBolt explains.

Fritz

at

Deerfield and all Newcomers and
their guests are welcome. A nominal charge will be made to raise
funds for a civic planting. Reservations may be made
by calling

Right to left are Toni Harris, Highland Park; Mike Clement, Deerfield; Susan Maxwell, Edward Young, Star Brandon, Edward Imhoff, Ann Seyfarth, all Highland Park.

Mrs.

Harry

The entire Garden
Group will
act as hostesses for the day’as this
will be the final function of their
first year. Special guests will be

Teenagers wait expectantly for thrilling rides at Riverview
during United Charities’ Riverview Ramble preview party.

Riverview Ramble will be held
Tuesday,
June
16
at
Riverview
Park in Chicago to benefit United
Charities of Chicago. The evening
will start with a picnic hour from
5 to 7 o’clock to the tune of music
and entertainment from the bandstand. Picnic tables will be set up
around the park.

the
will

Newcomers

cee

aes

t Bat

ORE SIMIC

;

wa

CRC

3

ee

eee

eae

~s

ae

spe

5 Ay

487 Roger Williams Ave.
Ravinia
ID 2-3903
Page

17

�vve

Y CAMP

TRAIL BLAZER DUDE RANCH

oung

For Boys and Girls 5 thru 12
Directed by Ted &amp; Al Fenn, Educators

SPECIAL FEATURES OF OUR COUNTRY
ESTATE LOCATED IN NORTHBROOK
Riding — Fishing — Boating
2
—
Swimming — All Sports
Overnighters —- Baseball Uniforms for Bo ys —
Crafts —
Bowling — Hot Lunch — Teacher Staff, — Transportation
CAMP SEASON—JUNE 29 to AUG. 21, 1959
Reserve a place for your child now!

Phones—ORchard

4-9789

or

ORchard

cople On

School and Dera

Bill is a pre-medical student and
also a member
of Lambda
Chi
Alpha. He will be returning for his
senior year in the fall after his
summer of counseling at the North
Shore Area
Council’s
Boy
Scout
camp. He is the son of the William Binards of 708 Hermitage Dr,

*

*

*

Golf

4-3829

Only...
Fathers Day gets so much advance publicity each year that there
just ain’t no sense trying to pretend that come Sunday, June 21, you
won’t realize what day it is.
You

might just as well resign yourself to expect

some very special

treatment.

To prove we're completely sympathetic, &amp; to keep your loved ones
from making the kind of mistakes that amuse only cartoonists &amp; that
sort, we've worked out a sensible solution.
Simply, fill in the form below, detach on the dotted line, leave in a
conspicuous place, relax ... and... wait.

TO

WHOM

IT

Sunday,

June 21 is MY

Shirt...........

MAY

Sportshirt

CONCERN:
day.

My

sizes are as follows:

Belt.

Sox

Sport Jkt............. . Sweater............ . Raincoat

Slacks
Cap

In neck-

wear, I cannot stand the following
signed (check one)
Pop.

MS

teipnccionikys i

ag Se ake the

guvner.

_............ Boss.

Wldediend He. And my favorite store is . . .
Cobey’s

Allen Wolf
Allen Edwin
Wolf, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Edwin D. Wolf (Marian
Landau) of 457 Hermitage Dr., has
received
notice from
the United
States Air Force Academy, of his
selection as a cadet beginning in
June. He will report to the Academy at Colorado Springs, Colo., on
June 26. Allen had also been offered
a scholarship
at Amherst.
He will be graduated tonight from
the Township High School in Highland Park, as valedictorian of the
senior class.
*

June

Arline

478 Central

Highland Park

daughter

of

from the University of Michigan
with
a B.S,
degree
in physical
therapy on June 13. Mr. and Mrs.
Koch will be in Ann Arbor for the
occasion.

COMING

WATCH
18

*

Mr. and Mrs. Walter E. Koch of
513 Radcliffe Circle, is graduating

(Open Friday Nites)

Page

*
Koch,

Peter Elias
Peter M. Elias, son of Dr. and
Mrs. M. Hans Elias of 2670 Birchwood Ln., DelMar Woods, was one
of the 156 cadets at Culver Military
Academy who was a candidate for
graduation from the northern Indiana
college preparatory
school.
The
seniors,
who
came
from
26
states and nine foreign countries,
participated in the Academy’s 65th
annual commencement on June 9.
Peter has won Gold and Silver
“A”
awards
for academic
excellence, as well as membership
in
Cum Laude, a national society to
honor scholarship.
He was active
in chapel choir, drama club, history
club, and The Quill, cadet literary
magazine.
*

*

*

William J. Binard, recently was
elected as the outstanding active
member
of
Alpha
Phi
Omega,
Alpha Pi chapter for 1958-59 at the
University of Miami at Miami, Fla.

Stephen White
From
Colgate
University
at
Hamilton, N. Y., announcement is
made that Stephen White, son of
Mr, and Mrs. Edwin White of 2180
Wilmot
Rd.,
Bannockburn,
was
among
the 321
seniors
who
received
B.A. degrees
at Colgate’s
138th annual commencement exer.
cises on June 8. He majored in
English and was active in intramurals for his national social fraternity Phi Kappa Psi. He played
freshman baseball and was a mem-

ber of the winter carnival committee in his sophomore year.
Mr. and Mrs. White were in the
East for the commencement.
*
*
*
Francine Zellet, daughter of the
(Continued on. page 41)

SOON

FOR

IT!
Thursday,

June

11, 1959

�A

ee

MAE ae ES

OS MR ge MRE IG

fo

4

Deerfield Rotarians .
To Hear Historian

Home Owners To
Discuss Water

On Great Lakes

The next regular meeting of the
Deerfield Manor Home Owners As-

sociation

Speaker for the Deerfield-Northbrook Rotary Club this noon will

be

the

Rev.

Edward

Dowling,

ministered

to by

S.J.

the

Jesuit

Dowling

has

edited

a ma-

Suter

it is
rate

per month.
The Wauconda

Co.,

Construction

topic

tions,”

with

blended

“retirement

demonstrating

of Mr.

the
re-

search in preparation. He is the
owner
and operator of the Sunshine Valley recreational camp on
Half Day Rd. in Lake Forest.
May 28th’s program included an
address
by Edward
Horn
of the
Bell Telephone Co. on the subject

(Continued

on page

Mrs.

E. E. Ruley

Meetings
club member

addressed

the

on

the

23)

sical education,
but also on the
psychological repercussion of music
itself on its listeners. Mr. Suter

was assisted in his presentation by
one of his students, David Bye, who

Thatcher,

Lt.

Commander

Coghlan
presented
talk on the subject

Presentation”

Mrs.
Marion
Huber
Earl Simpson are being

INSECTS &amp;
RODENTS

and
Mrs.
assisted by

Ask About Our Service Plan

Mrs. Irwin Kessel and Mrs. John
Polimeni, for the Bar-B-Q cook out
for the playground on Saturday,
June 20, at 4 p.m. on the Simpson
lawn.

charge

Mrs.

Jean

Simpson

is

Shoreline Mosquito &amp; Pest Control
WI

7 Days A Week

in

of activities of the younger

5-1749

set,

and

he was

Sunday, June 14th

11 a.m. to 6 p.m.

Club

%

Frank

your bar-b-q
questions

assisted

Photographer

meeting

was

very special!

skilled chefs
will answer

of color slides

Chief

Glawson.
May
21

annual

special events!

an illustrated
of “Sea Power

the showing

Master

Rotary

~ FOGGING

man and is being transferred. He
has served as a member of the
board of directors of the Association and as a deputy sheriff.

interpreted
excellently the A-flat
Opus
90
Impromptu
of
Franz
Schubert.
On May 14, through the auspices
of
club
member
Captain
Joe

Frank
The

Through Rain .

free barbecue!

scholarly
manner,
touching
not
only on the many phases of a mu-

by

Fantastic Resuiti
Lasts Days! Even -

the [S)e]HAS) suburban

John

Club

subject of his own
classification,
“Music Education.”
His talk was
most
interesting
and informative
and it was presented in a highly

through

of Ash

ing his own dog at the post.
Mr. and Mrs, Casimir Bietlinski
of Birch St. are moving to Texas.
Mr. Bietlinski is an army career

occupa-

much

and

St. David reports that the high spot
of his past year’s work was in train-

it is reported.

May
May 7,

On

June

the original contract enforced,
reported, which is a flat water

versed. Mr. Thompson

gazine,
addressed
public
groups
throughout
the
country,
written
many
papers,
and
is
consulted
regularly by various Great Lakes
Historical groups. His personal collection of over 25,000 photographs
of Great Lakes Ships is the most
outstanding and comprehensive in

existence,

Sunday,

ters. Some people still want to have

Order.

Rev.

on

28. Earl Simpson, president of the
Association, has been asked to invite a legal representative of the
Pekara Water Works to the meeting, to explain the reason for me-

Clarence
Wilson’
and
Dr. Albert
Nischke are program chairmen and
they state the Rev. Dowling is the
foremost historian on Great Lakes
shipping and his topic will be “New
Aspects on Great Lakes Shipping.”
Rev. Dowling is at present affilited with Loyola Academy in Wilmette, and has taught at many of
the secondary schools and univer-

sities

will be

is responsible to Vernon
Township for seeding the ditches,
has received word from M. E. Amstutz, county highway superintendent, that funds which are in escrow
for the oiling of the roads can be
allocated.
A fond bon voyage was given
last week to David Ruley of the K-9
division of the army. He is the son

which

Deerrficld Manor :

of

featured

*

free food

the

by

a

%* free peter

talk by
club
member
“Tommy”
Thompson
on the subject of his
own
classification,
“Children’s
Camps,” a topic with which he has
well
extremely’
himself
shown

Sh baoed

pan hats to
all the kiddies
Adjustment

SS

remote

We Install
Shutters

Aaywhere
Match any Flaish

broadcast

sunday only!
24”
with

bar-b-cue

$1599
hood,

by WEAW

grill complete

motor,

spit,

Fold

crank

LUGEUAAELALEDULIOUEEUNNE
VEDUDORLELANEONDENANUULT

=:
Shutters

¢ Shoji

Panels

* FREE!
3-pc.
cooking

utensil

set with any

Louvre Doors
e Screens
¢ Room Dividers
¢ Fret Work

7600 Greenwood Ave., Chicago
Samples shown in
your Home.
RA 3-3632

PHONE:

CR2-5541

:

|
fl

G

all

large

24”

gg

size ....

:

ri

departments

* we'll be
“VV

|2

famous

serving

Stella White

WEAW

commentator

patio suburban

Sunday,

to

interview

bar-b-cue
purchase!

“

meet

ah

. . . at

the

1 p.m. to 3...
YOU!

succulent beef,
from Smithfield’s
choice
cuts!

hear stella white on WEAW daily
9:30 a.m. to 9:30 p.m.

Buy Direct from the
Manufacturer and Save!

SHUTTER
HOUSE

E

99

e

values
in

Legs
Under

bar-b-que

%* special

supply limited! . . . cash and carry

Vertical
¢

radio

MADE
TOU)

CUSTOM
aL
JU
PUG ELGLEENOHURURDEELE ul

A

the

Plaltiijo

1672 skokie highway
ID 2-7077or ID 2-8456

suburban

highland park
open EVERY day to 9:30 p.m.

Formerly Crestwood Products

Page 18-A
Thursday,

June

11,

1959
4

�DEERFIELD DOINGS
air conditioners

Mrs. Earl Kress of Rutherford,
ter-in-law, Mrs. Robert Greenslade

at discount

the north shore’s smallest discount
Moley TV

e

670 Central

Ave.,

H.P.

ID 2-2042

George

Hesler

of Highland

of Winnetka and Richard
Dundee and many other
in this vicinity.

Park

and

Kress of
relatives

In Portland, Ore., this past week
visiting friends was Mrs. Earl Gentry, who lives with her son-in-law

and

fathers day gi hie selection I
JUNE

daughter,

Mr.

and

Mrs.

Zellett of 814 Spruce St...
Village
President
Eldon

quist of 1311 Woodland

21ST.

Frank
.
Holm-

Dr. made

a

business trip to Puerto Rico last
week. Mrs. Holmquist visited relatives in New Orleans, La., while he
Was away.
.
Mr. and Mrs. William Starr (Constance
Koebelin)
are
here
from
Knoxville,
Tenn.,
visiting
Mrs.
Starr’s mother, Mrs. Edwin Koebelin and her grandmother, Mrs. Jacob Ott, both of 950 Sunset Ct.
Have you been away on a vacation or had guests? Drop a note to
the editor.
It helps to keep this
column interesting. ...
It has been a time of moving for

many

Deerfield

families

. ..

The

Wesley H. Shannons of 1035 Hazel
Ave. to Wayland, Mass. ... The

young

Delightful WALL BAROMETER dioibi
temperature
and
weather
trends.
Graceful harmony in walnut and polished brass fits beautifully into either
modern or period decor.
A smart walnut and brass companion,
TWIN THERMOMETER. Mounted indoors, tells both indoor and outdoor
temperatures.

Set

=

CIGARETTE
DISPENSER.
Holds a full carton either regular or king

size

. . . you

re-

move one pack at a time.
Made of antiqued pine with
amusing verse. Opening shows
how

supply

is oe

Alfred

Gastfields

from

her brothers-in-law,

Ln.,

a new

development

John

Kress

in north-

east Deerfield ... Mr. and Mrs.
Earl Klemp
(Joanne Huhn)
from
Ravinia to 1058 Brookside Ln... .
From
Chicago to 1106 Brookside
Ln. are Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Irving
and two children.
... Dr. and Mrs. R. K. Kinney
and
children
have
moved
from
their
apartment
building
at 561
Deerfield Rd. to 231 Ramsay Rd.,
the former home of the Perry Mehans.
The Mehans
have gone to
Scottsdale, Ariz.
The
Ingram
Rasmussens,
who
sold their home on Portwine Rd.,
have
been
living in Lake
Bluff.
This week they are moving
into
their newly
built home
in Lake
Forest.
Dr. William J. Mauer Jr. of 964
Brookside Ln. has purchased the
home
of Mr.
and Mrs.
Kenneth
Hunter
at
924
Deerfield
Rd.,
which had been the residence and
office of the late Dr. C. Johnston

Davis

for

many

years.

The

Friday,

the

Deerfield

Con-

Deerfield,

Highland

Park,

Wheel-

ing, Waukegan and Chicago.
This club is open to all duplicate
bridge
players
in the
area
and
games are scheduled each Friday
at 7:55 p.m, Further information
will be provided by Mr. and Mrs.
Neal Mosely, WI-5-3410.
North-south
winners
last week
were (1) Andrew Szoeke, Chicago,
Roy
Hansen,
Wheeling;
(2)
Mr.
and Mrs. John Dowdall, Deerfield;
(3) Mr. and Mrs. Emmett Norris,
Waukegan.
East-west winners were
(1) Mr.
Gershuny,
Deerfield,
F. P. Mastrangelo, Highwood;
(2) Mr. and

Mrs. Edward

Rowe, Highland Park,

(3)
Mr.
and
Deerfield.

Mrs.

John

Gibson,

vention June 27 through July 2 at
French Lick, Ind.
Mrs.
Arnold
Cohn
has
beer
elected vice president and program
chairman of the North Suburban
League
of the Jewish
Children’s
Bureau. Deerfield women installed
as directors are Mrs. George Lester, 1321 Charing Cross; Mrs. Herbert Berman, 1300 Charing Cross;
Mrs. Eugene Ornstein, 703 Appletree; and Mrs. Alfred Rubin, 675
Appletree.

Ken-

954

ff

Special

$1.49

.$24.75

in

Ring
binder
Style,
supplied with 3
Each

Last

tract
Bridge
club
held
its first
meeting at the Masonic Hall, 711
Waukegan
Rd.
Samuel
Gershuny
directed
a seven
table
duplicate
game which included players from

neth
Hunters
and
Mrs.
Hunter’s
Osterman Ave. to Freeport. . . .|mother, Mrs. Charles Sugden, have
Mr .and Mrs. Stephen Sunyak from moved to 1500 Wilmot Rd.
Mrs. Herbert Garbrecht of 1342
1130 Rago Ave. to 1439 Ambleside
Oxford Rd., newly
elected president of Lambda
alumnae chapter
Opportunity knocks every pay day of Alpha Gamma
Delta
sorority
when you buy U. S. Savings Bonds.
will attend the 22nd biennial con-

LEATHERETTE
MULTI-FLIP
PHOTO ALBUM

pages.

N. J., is the houseguest of her sisof 1006 Journal Pl. and has been

entertained in the home of her other sisters-in-law, Mrs. Elmer Clavey
of 1020 Journal Pl., Mrs, Alex Willman of 755 Waukegan Rd., Mrs.

house!
«

Weekly Duplicate
Bridge Club Has
First Meeting

page

has
10 acetate
pockets for 20 photos size 312" x 5”
or 40 photos 212" x
3%"'. Colors brown,
ivory,
green
and
wine, all gold tooled.
$2.98

Make

Dad

your own
backyard!

Feel Life a Real Chef
— Give Him

Barbecue Supplies

A COMPLETE LINE OF BARBECUE GRILLS

Extra refill
sheets

MORE GIFT SUGGESTIONS
BILLFOLDS - KEY CASES - STATIONERY - AUTO COMPASS
MAP MEASURE
MANICURE
SET
ASH TRAYS
TOILET
UTILITY
CASE
ALL
STEEL
WORK
BENCH
GOLF BALL MARKER
STEEL SHELVING
GOLF BALLS
FOUNTAIN PENS
LIST FINDER
BRIEF BAG
-

CHARCOAL and
_BRIQUETTES

BARBECUE

FIRE STARTERS.
COCKTAIL
Mixer

SET
&amp;

WITH
ROSS

$3.95

SPECIAL
$1.95

GOOD BOOKS FOR FATHER
THE

YOUNG

TITAN

by F. Van Wyck Mason
$5.95
THE STATUS SEEKERS
by sae
Samal

New Selection
Father’s Day

4.
THE YEARS WITH ROSS
by eres Naina

Greeting Cards

Chandler's
ON THE
645 Central Ave.

‘ Peeeie-n

NORTH

SHORE

SINCE

FIRE MITTS

2 Glasses.
Regular Price

1895

ID 3-0230

EERFIELD
LUMBER &amp;
FUEL CO.
612 Waverly Ct.
Deerfield

WI 5-3220
Thursday, June .11,-1959

�A

Report Nine Calls
Fire

Chief

Fred

Grabo

one

straw

faulty

at

462

electric

reporte4

Cumnor

wiring

Ct;

at 1515

Wilmot Rd.; one burning auto at
832 Rosemary Terr.; one for trees
burning in Valenti Builders project.

An

inspection

of

the

National

Food incinerator was made.
Firemen remind residents of the
district that their benefit
dance
will be given Saturday, June 27 at

the Fire Station.

Lt.

Col.

Richard

DeBower

On June 7, 1959, Lt. Col. Richard
DeBower of 1331 Wilmot Rd. com-

pleted 30 years in the United States
Army
Reserve.
He
received
his
original commission as a 2nd Lt.
in Artillery at the end of his jun-

ior year at Iowa State. The following year he received his B.S. degree and in 1948 his Masters degree in Education at the University
of

Chicago.

For 11 years he was in the 865th

USAR
US

592

mand

and

course

General

of the

Staff

he

became

director

}

fe

|a

David

staff

(Reinf)

THE SCHOO

Scribe

Troop
Chris

INSURANCE
FOR INSURANCE

George

Chris Robinson open
Tonight,
June
11,

Schmid

i

and

the meeting.
will be the

final meeting of the year, with the

825

Improvisation —

and

Diction

Mime
Movement

* Makeup

CALL

¢ Scene

WI 5-1383
HENRY

and

¢ Voice

|

‘i

* Body

Scribe

Last Thursday, at St. Gregory’s
Episcopal Church, the color guard
consisting
of
John
Siffert
Lee

Houskeeper.

* Acting

50

Robinson,

»

Summer Theatre —
Workshop

in the MemoGary Stryker,

Dan MacDonald and
carrying the colors.

|

Youth

Larry
Hyink

and David Lager acted as the color
guard. The troop worked on advancement, then played a game.
Scoutmaster R. N. Becker gave a
talk on safety.
Troop 52 marched
rial Day parade with

—

presents a

The last meeting for this season
was a Court of Honor held June 9.
At the previous meeting
Taaffee, Tom Ohlson, Peter

C

CREATIVE
DRAMATICS

Last week the boys had inspection of tents and other gear which
(Continued on page 32)

52

Lager,

big camp fire, weather permit.
ting. Parents are cordially invited.

Classes

Individual

HAKANEN

Attention

Professional

Instructi

Public Performance

Deerfield Rd., Deerfield

State

Farm Mutual Automobile
Insurance Co.
State Farm Life Insurance Co.
State Farm Fire and Casualty Co.
HOME OFFICE—BLOOMINGTON, ILLINOIS

For

Free

Telephone

Brochure,

ID 2-5857

XI

in St. Louis,

Double drifted colors

TUB

Roger Williams

IDlewood

in a delicious duet

Ave.

2-9771

Complete Washing

Com-

Drying

College

with meetings at Great Lakes followed by correspondence.
Upon return from overseas, Col.
DeBower set up and organized the
Information
and
Education
Division at the San Francisco Port of
Embarkation
at Ft. Mason, Calif.

Later

.

have
DeBower
for four years.

WASH

Last year he completed
year

(Res)

Corps

RAVINIA

Ft. Sill, Okla., Information and Education,
and the Special Service
Schools
at Washington
and
Lee
three

on the

Group

Control

Army

Mo.
Col. and Mrs.
lived in Deerfield

graduate of the Artillery School at

the

Department

and
faculty
of the
5902
USAR
School until 1956 when he became
and
in the Command
a student
His
Department.
Staff
General
5302
the
is
assignment
present

FA
Bn.
and
attended
summer
camps at Sparta, Wis.
Called to
active duty in December of 1940
he served as the SSO on the staff
of the 24th Inf. Div. with 32 months
service
in Hawaii,
Australia and
combat in New Guinea.
He is a

University.

MOS

Troop

Tom Ohlson,
David Lager

vidual Services at Ft. McPherson,
Ga. In the summers of 1949, 1950
and 1951 he had 90 day tours as
Executive S-3 at Camp McCoy, Wis.
supervising summer training of Reserve and National, Guard Units.
director of
In 1953 he became

the

j

Boy Scout News

nine calls in May. Five were with
the rescue truck; one was a pile of
burning

i

and

Service

SHIRTS and
DRY CLEANING
HOURS...

8:00

A.M.

to

5:30

Saturday

8:00

of Indi-

A.M.

Closed

P.M.

...

to 4:00
on

P.M.

Wednesday

Even “the Dad who

has

everything” welcomes
gifts from Geo. Kahn
Father’s

Day

will

happy for the Dad
Kahn label on his

OPEN

and
Ribbons, roses, rhinestone dewdrops (all divinely dunkable, of

Haffile

in the
GLENCOE
June

course) — such

and

Hubbard
RD.

custom

Woods

made

men’s

Fashion

:

Center
VE

5-4188

for

:

J

‘Jacobi

wear

enchantment

brides and all romanticists! You
never saw anything so pretty, the
way one color melts and merges
into the other in the gown and
peignoir, too. Lovely-to-launder nylon tricot in fabulous color duets.
Sizes 32 to 38. The set $25,
The gown alone, $10.95
os

MONDAY &amp; THURSDAY EVENINGS
FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE

Fine imported

_ Thursday,

bright

Dobbs hats to Johnston &amp; Murphy shoes.
The selection is so wide that you are
sure to find something precisely to Dad's
own particular taste.

k : :
or

105

dawn

who finds the Geo.
gifts. Choose from

;

578 LINCOLN
HI 6-4750

ty OF WINNETKA,

|
¢

11, 1959

Betti ai: |

4

i

aaa Nn

St a

:

�pp

ee

VR

ae er ree

ery

WAR

me

~ Lincolnshire Swim Club Opens
&lt;

ACROSS

THE

STREET

she)
ety

OR

ACROSS THE NATION

a

STORAGE
$21 GREEN
WILMETTE,
Alpine 1-0032 +

SHIPPING
STORAGE
PACKING

Ca

dot

©

ves
tro

FOR A SMOOTHER
MOVE....CALL

-7 ao} e
&amp;

VAN
CO.
BAY ROAD
ILLINOIS
UNiversity 4-0052

Agent
Allied
Van Lines

B
RUTH unYOUNG
wanted
.

ove
“og
i
ebrows shape
oe ag g, ey the Newer Metho
h
wit
Tayi
E

HAIR_K
Short Wave
wite

(D

J11

Taahuod

Park

A

week,
4

Wright,

swim

Richard

Postmasters

Meets

He

i
BE
Br

¢

Lectro-Matic cleans your sewer

Oi ¥

and

floor

drains

&amp;

Electrically.

club

but will be

has

been

dedicated

Cromartie,

organized
Ralph

Deerfield
American
Legion
on Tuesday, June 9. C. M.

William
Jr. is acting
for Deerfield and was

Lincolnshire,

Alston,

and

similar

to

postmaster
host to the

group.

Mrs.

Donald

Sheridan

Charing
pitality

Tennaqua,

which

opened

last

Directors are, left to right, Roger Nelson,
Choate,

with

Demain

John

Holland,

Donn

architect.

Another 4-H Club
Is Organized

B‘nai Torah Temple
To Have Confirmation

Association

In Deerfield

The
Northeastern
Illinois Postmasters
Association
held
a joint
meeting
with
the supervisors
of
this region with dinner served in

|the
Hall

in

officially on July 4.

of

1319

Mary

Cross will assist with hostomorrow
evening follow-

ing the confirmation service of the
B’nai Torah Reform Temple, Sheridan Demain of 1319 Charing Cross
and Seymour Wolf of 829 Holmes
Ave., were made directors to serve
on the board for the coming year.

and

Jo

Mrs.

Kenton
Happy
4-H

Streit,

John
Rd.,

daughter

W.
is

Streit

reporter

of
for

Helping Homemaking

Club

which

Wednesday.
a recent
bers.

is

hostess

Zenko

to the

the

Hands

meeting

Mrs. Louis

Mr.

of 1153

club

each

was
mem-

SPRING intro
SUMMER SAVINGS
WITH

THE

LOWEST PRICED V-8
THE TAR

is

BY STUDEBAKER

You save when you buy the lowest priced V-8 on the market—and
For example—economy. In the Mobil-

then you keep right on saving!
gas Economy

Run, The Lark V-8 produced an outstanding 22.28 miles-per-

gallon, topping all V-8’s in all classes.

Ee

from

FREE Estimates!

For performance—you can go

in 9.5 seconds. -_

Styled

so tastefully,

it’s

"See, drive, compare the car that’s win-

Available as a 4-door sedan,
hardtop and station wagon.

gr

gre,

Answer!

FO

Always

an hour

approved by Harper’s Bazaar.
ning the hearts of America.

cal [D 2-3220
We

0 to 60 miles

‘Discover what you'll save at

EDENS MOTORS,

INC., 680 SKOKIE VALLEY

RD., HIGHLAND

PARK

Thursday, June

11, 1959

�i

‘i

yee

CPt

aes
TO

eerticid Man Is

issue UT Permits

Awarded

For New

Harold

Rd.,

The

F.

Yegge

Deerfield,

chief

M.A.I.
of

915

appraiser

of

and

Kransz-Neuses

Mortgage Co., has been awarded
the
M.A.I.
designation
by
the
American Institute of Real Estate
Appraisers.

Yegge,

who

has been

with Kransz-Neuses

associated

since 1940, is a

past president of the Chicago Mortgage

Bankers

senior

Residential

of

the

of

the

Appraisers

(1947),

a

Society
and

of

a mem.

Evanston-North

Shore

Board of Realtors. Before joining
Kransz-Neuses, he was a mortgage
officer with Chicago Title &amp; Trust

Co. His educational background includes an S.B. degree from the
University of Chicago and a master’s degree from Harvard Graduate School of Business Administration.

The Merry Oaks School will have
open house on Sunday from 2 to 5
p.m, at 3350 Everett Rd., Lake Forest. Parents and children are invited to become
acquainted with
the program.
Children from Deerfield who are
attending
are Dianne Goodsmith,
Susie Jacobson, Merrie Jane Howard, Debbie King, Kari Kittermaster, Jennie and Robin Davenport,

Dean,

Paula

Drechsler,

Houses

Pe-

Bowen,

ok

alate

2g

BES

eat

“\e

¥

BO

8

Say)

ee

wx

{

ers)

i

(

aR

ata:

ee g

building

com-

17 new houses during the month

of

May. His full report follows:
Residential Building Permits
MAY ST DOO 6S
17
$ 484,777.
May 1956) 2s... 28" 28
725,063.
To date: 1959 = 2405). 128
3,608,673.
PO. G8te. L900: «8 Ai 113
3,088,819.
Additions and
Alterations
9
$
9,476.
Garages
oni
y
15,886.
Woodland Park School
AGGItION® i250"
1
75,000.
Gasoline Service
PLO)
ck vie
1
20,000.
Plumbing
Permits =: 4.05) 20
4,874.
Certificate of Occupancy
MPOTMits {262 5.0: 31

a

week

To Milwaukee

The
Deerfield
Presbyterian
Men’s Council is having its annual baseball outing via bus to the

missioner, in his monthly report to
Royce
Owens,
village
manager,
states that permits were issued for

Briarwood

Merry Oaks School
Plans Open House
Sunday Afternoon

Debbie

E.

oy tim

ee art x ad

Cubs-Braves
night game
in Milwaukee on June 26. Victor Turner

is taking the reservations.

C. R. ANDERSON AGENCY, INC. |
INSURANCE

values

and

Ads

Read

BONDS

5-0155

offer amazing

opportunities

able elsewhere.

—

Sound, Experienced Insurance Service

WIndsor
Only the Want

them

not

avail-

735

Deerfield

Road,

Deerfield,

III.

now!

Country Club

Addition ..........
1
43,000.
All Construction
May 1056: oe
$ 653,013.
Wavy 1980re
784,893.
To date 1959 ..........
4,059,647.
To date 1958: 22.0...
3,742,637.
Total number of permits
festied 8255
a
87.
.$- BbS;018:
ter
Mudgett,
Bruce
Reynolds,
Johnny
Shumway,
Ricky
Stein,
Jody Welch and Scott Becker.
Lincolnshire students are Gwen
Motter, Wendy Nelson, Jeff Schaefer, Lynne Wieboldt, Carol Wilson,
Wendy
Carter and Frank Unter-

myer.

Store out-of-season garments
\Yout of the

wd

y

Pe)

ee

*

e

:

sats A
MOTH TREATMENT
for all
“

garments

with WASHINGTON’s
practical ,.. economical

“Stow-Away Service”
Now — with Washington’s special “Stow-Away
Service” you can save space at home and store outof-season clothes safely, conveniently . . . at little

cost. Washington brings you a large, sturdy box.
You pack it as full as you like; it will hold 15 to 30
assorted garments. Washington calls for it... cleans

LOTS OF CHOCOLATE drinks around. But the wonderful one is
Borden’s Dutch Chocolate Milk! So deep-down delicious and
chocolate-y because Borden’s makes it with real Dutch cocoa

and moth-treats all garments . . . stores them safely

till you phone for them. They come back to you
spotlessly clean, freshly pressed, in plastic bags.

—the extra luscious kind brought all the way from Holland.

surance for higher valuation at small extra charge.
UNiversity 4-5900* Charges need not be paid until garments are delivered.
ALpine 1-0145
Enterprise 4900*

*Call any time.
Line open 24 hours a day.

:
as

Thursday,

June

lon.

Laundry and Drycleaners
700
11, 1959

Washington

St.,

oR

Washington's regular cleaning charges apply, and
the storage itself is only $4.95 for everything in the
box. This includes $250 insurance. Additional in-

yr

ber

Association

member

Robert

oR

Going

During May

Kenton

vice president

ye

a.

Evanston

Kids really go for it, and you can be glad. For Borden’s
Dutch Chocolate Milk gives ’em good milk nourishment in
every drop.
And what do you know! Borden’s Dutch Chocolate Milk
—all ready to enjoy—costs less than the chocolate drinks you
have to mix and fuss with. Pour some soon. You'll find it
at your favorite food store.

© sorven co.

�.

GET THE FINEST!
SHREDDED
TOP SOIL

arrests
radar.

Most uniform, perfectly processed

MANURE—FERTILIZER

Phone
HOUTA

TOT TOTHATUT TOT POTEATEATOTTOTTAT HH

HTH AI

AAT

Now

HA

of

Police

ch

,

fr

David

Registrations
classes

Petersen,

were

made

with

two

by

Justices
of
the
peace
Walter
Page and Michael George turned in
$323 for fines for the month. The
costs were $132.
There have been 413 arrests this
year as compared to 428 last year
for the first five months.

Court cases included one public
intoxication; 2 drunken driving; 7

INC.

ID 2-0027

HEAL)

gf.

in his report for May, to the Deerfield village board, states that 48

soil obtainable . . . at no extra cost.

MUTUAL
SERVICES OF HIGHLAND PARK,

e

Chief

PECIALLY PREPARED BY MACHINE. Easier to Spreade=
Improves Growing.

‘HPHS Summer

Police Report Lists
48 Arrests In May

Opportunity

AA

when

knocks

every

pay

day

you buy U. S. Savings Bonds.

for summer

Highland

C.
S.
openings

Stunkel,
still exist

Session
i‘

begins

cases dismissed

by court;

Mrs.

Lee

Blev-

the engagement
of her daughter,
Linda,
left,
to
William
Rhoads,
son
of
Mrs.
Judson
Rhoads
of

Manteca,

Calif.

Aug.

1 drunk-

glary,
police

driving guilty (Judge
apprehended for bur-

released

to

’ Offer
ends
SY:|

$2995

Lake

Forest

department.

June 13

Miss Blevins and Groom-elect
The

bride-elect attended

Ravinia

School
School.
month

and
Highland
Park
High
She
will
graduate
this
from
the
College
of the

Pacific

at

Stockton,

Calif.,

she has majored in speech
She
is
a
member
of
Lambda Sigma sorority.

where
therapy.
Epsilon

Her fiance is a graduate of the
College of the Pacific where he will
receive
his
masters
degree
in
chemistry in February. There he is
a member of Delta Upsilon fraternity.
The couple is planning a June
wedding.

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

REGULAR HOME DELIVERY
OF DELICIOUS PURE WATER

ENJOYING

THE

WATER

it. And if you need an electric range circuit inside your home, it will be added

YOU DRINK?
Sparkling Spring
Mineral Water Co.

and hooked up to your new range. It
means that for a fraction of the actual
cost, thousands of families will be able
to start cooking better, living better—

1629

Park

Ave..

Free Delivery

West,

Highland

Park

IDlewood 2-0042

is eligible.

This special offer covers standard range
installation in any single family dwell-

Uhlemann’s

(Details

new

easy-to-wear

ing served by Commonwealth Edison—
at

your dealer’s.)

ings

Your

kitchen

stays

far cleaner,

much

cooler

when

you

cook

with

CONTA EL
Lenses

a modern Electric Range. And nothing cooks food faster. So start
with the ‘heart’? of your new All-Electric kitchen now—during
“E”’ Days at your Electric Range Dealer’s. Get in on this special

al Extra!

low-cost

eci al Prices: °°:
on ne

resident,

ins, of Indio, Calif., has announced

larceny on complaint by citizen; appeal drunk
Decker);
4

below will have some spectacular values to show you. (Including a flat-price
installation offer of only $29.95.)
~
This means substantial savings on
whatever wiring you may need to install your new Electric Range. It means
that if you require 3-wire, 240-volt electric service into your home, you’ll get

Company.

ends

Former

en
driving
appealed
to
County
court; 1 mental patient released to
Downey Hospital; 3 cases continued
to June;
1 disorderly conduct;
1

During “E”’ Days the dealers who sell
the famous make Electric Ranges listed

Service

High

director,
said
in all classes.

Monday,

Offered by Electric Range Dealers
to homeowners in this area for
a limited time only

Public

Betrothed

school

auditorium.

_ an Electric Range

electrically!
How to tell if your family

Park

School will still be accepted tomorrow at 10 a.m, at the high school

is time to buy

Save important money on special
flat-price installation offer... .

at

School

Electric

Range

Installation

offer and start cooking

better,

living better—Electrically!

w Electric

CJ Public Service Compan
eseleceteter

a Big Red Letter
meanereeenete

oneness

e safe
e comfortable
e full satisfaction—

guaranteed
Heve your eyes examined by en
Bye-Physicion (M.D.)

saaasaaaaa

te |

s of These
Famous Brands
OOS

UHLEMANN
optical

company

the beot In gight—since 1907
1874
Phone

Sheridan

Rd., Highland

for information

Park

or appointment

IDiewood 2-5150
1645

Orrington

Avenue,

Evanston

UNiversity 4-3311

Thursday, June

11, 1959

�The Mario
First Child

Caranis Name
Patricia Ann

DEERFIELD ROTARIANS
(Continued from page
of

Mr, and Mrs. Mario Carani of
603 Glenview Ave. have named
their
first
child,
a
daughter,
Patricia Ann. She was born April
24 in Highland Park Hospital and
christened
Conception

May
7 at
Church.

Annette

talk was

in

abetted

and

by recordings

his

on

the subject. Mr, Horn was sponsored and introduced by club member
E. T. Laurers,
also
of the
Telephone Co.

Immaculate

of Every Kind

INSURANCE

The infant’s grandparents are the
Carlo Caranis of Glenview Ave.

Anna

Mari

and
tell

and

Renato

godmother

and

and Character

~ ANCHOR

godfather.

Rev. Nicholas Carsello offiat the christening and Miss
Carani

INSURANCE

18-A)

Sound”

The
ciated

Carani were named

Miss

‘Adventure

AGENCY

In Business 21

Lt. Col. and Mrs. Howard Litof Hasbrouck Heights, N.J.

Years
Office:
Res.,

1896 Sheridan Rd.
Highland Park

ID
ID

2-0093
2-0037

Ruder

Mr. and Mrs. Melvin Ruder, 355
Lincolnwood
PIl.,
announce
the
engagement
of
their
daughter,
Annette, to Marty Abramson, son of
Mr. and Mrs, Nathan Abramson of
Chicago.
The couple
wedding.

is planning

a winter

Miss Ruder graduated from Highland Park High School and is a

freshman
where
Alpha

at University

of Illinois

she is a member
Pi social sorority.

of

Iota

Mr.
Abramson
graduated
from
Senn
High
School,
and attended
the University of Illinois at Navy

Pier, Chicago.

PUBLIC
Notice
To

the

of

Patrons

phone

NOTICE

Proposed
of

the

Filing

Illinois

Bell

Tele-

Company:

The

[Illinois

hereby

gives

filed

with

sion

in

its

Chicago

and

the

Telephone
to the

Illinois
Local
Area,

relating

and

the

it has

Commis-

Tariffs

for

in the Chicago

in its General

revised

to

that

Commerce

exchanges

Tariff,

Company

public

Exchange

other

Metropolitan
Exchange
ticns

Bell

notice

rates’

public

Local

and

and

regula-

semipublic

services.
A

copy

of

inspected

by

business

office

1866

proposed
interested

interested

directly

addressing
merce

the

at

from

in

Commission

matter

respect

this

Company

may

thereto
or

by

of the Illinois Com-

at

Springfield,

ILLINOIS

BELL

By

Rosander,

A.

this

with

the Secretary

J.

be

at

Illinois

information

either

may

party

St.,

Park,

parties

obtain

filing

of this Company

Second

Highland
All

the
any

Illinois.

TELEPHONE

CoO.

Manager

6/4-11/59—162

PUBLIC

To

the

Illinois
The
by

of

Proposed

Patrons

of

the

Bell

Telephone

gives

notice

with

sion

in

its

Chicago

and

the

Company:

Exchange

to

the

Illinois
Local

Company

public

Exchange

Area,

Tariff,

relating

and

the

hereit

has

CommisTariffs

for

in the Chicago

in its General

revised

to

that

Commerce

other exchanges

Metropolitan
tions

Filing

Illinois Bell Telephone

filed

ersuaded by

NOTICE

Notice

rates

public

and

and

Local
regula-

semipublic

services,
A

copy

inspected

of
by

the

proposed

any

interested

business

office

of

Deerfield

Road,

Deerfield,

All
obtain
either

parties

this

interested

information
directly

filing

may

be

at

the

at

812

matter

may

party

Company

in

Illinois.
this

with

respect

this

Company

from

addressing

the

Secretary

Commerce

Commission

at

of

the

thereto
or

by

He’d be the first to tell you why his thoughts turned to
Cadillac. He was tempted by its beauty and elegance...
and by its great acceptance.
But yet, how pleasant it was to find that he could make
his final decision on the basis of practical considerations!
For an examination of the facts revealed some surprising
information about Cadillac’s economy.
Not only are several Cadillac models priced competitively with other makes—but are actually within easy reach
of many medium-priced cars.
Its world-famous quality has reduced maintenance expense to the minimum—and its gasoline mileage approximates that of cars built and sold largely for economy.

VISIT

Springfield,

T.

Laures,

11,

1959

AUTHORIZED

CADILLAC

MOTOR

DIVISION

DEALER

Illi-

ILLINOIS BELL
TELEPHONE COMPANY
E.

LOCAL

other motor car.
So there he is—wooed by its wonders and won over by its
wisdom—ready to take the wheel for his first journey in his
first Cadillac.
If you’ve wondered how far off this happy day should
be for you, we suggest you visit your dealer and learn why
this is such a propitious moment to make the move.
Whether you finally decide on Cadillac for pride or
pleasure—or for thrift and practicality—you’ll get all four.
We suggest you make plans today to stop in for a
personal demonstration tomorrow.

Illinois

nois.

By

YOUR

And it is a fact that Cadillac, year after year, returns a

higher percentage of its cost on the resale market than any

Manager

CADILLAC
2050

FIRST

STREET,

HIGHLAND

CAR
PARK

°

Phone

ID

2-3442

6/4-11/59—164
Thursday,

June

Page

23

�|

DRIVEWAY CONSTRUCTION —
. _ Parking

|
.|

Areas

—

Old Drives

Refinished

@

Expert Black Topping

@

Concrete

@

day

Crushed

;

ae |

FREE

y

lt CHOICE

of

parents

at-

Church. Wil-

of the

commission-

Lankton,

TOP

SOIL

commissioner, presented the troop
charter to Dr. Henry Sarton. Other
troop awards were given to Alex
Briber, Scoutmaster.
The Life Scout award was prefather,

iD

me | 1930

First

2-006

5

Highland

St.

Park

.

Roger

Drive Carefully — The Life You Save
May

Be

Your

Own!

Sarton.

ond class awards to Don Gardner,
Greg

fe

Dr.

Merit badges were given to Donald Dick and Michael Sarton; sec-

‘ah

A

many

SILJESTROM FUEL CO. |[.22: 82 S005"

ie
ig

Be

with

| tending at Bethlehem

Robert Bryson, the neighborhood

ESTIMATE!

Gaue&gt;

last Thurs-

of Honor

ers’ staff, presented Lester E. Marshall the Scouter’s Key.

Stone

for

Call

evening

51

Troop

Scout

Boy

a Court

liam

ae
i
"
Re

|\Has Court OF Honor

held

|

ore

Course

Deerfield Men Conduct Police

Boy Scout Troop 51
Deerfield

,

ee

cei

ig weoves

‘ as

a

ae

’
:

;

.

|

Robinson,
Lee

Alan

and

Blount;

Camporee

and

Scout-O-Rama

Winfield,

Robert

x ae

R. R, Frederick

awards were etven to all bors par
icipating.

Opportunity knocks every pay day | June

Two residents of Deerfield are conducting a police course
;
8-19 in Montgomery,

when you buy U. S. Savings Bonds.

Ala.

They

are

Richard

1140 Oakwood

R.

Frederick,

Dr., Del Mar Woods,

and Thomas A. Wolf, 823 Appletree
Lane. Both are on the staff of the
Traffic Institute of Northwestern
University in Evanston.
Frederick
is a member of the Institute’s field

i

staff, and Wolf is in the training

Corrina teh

ue

"He bought me

a

division.

They are conducting
“Supervision of Police

*

THEN

THE

I

teil

SHOWED

HIM

inh

DOOR!

No

Naturally, she wants

matter. what

Stocks?
Investors Stock Fund,
Inc., offers an open end

- dl
klar gla Bier
angéportsc rs. \But unlike

f

bar

and
cf

sec-

in

Interested

.

as

to buy

tion your best market place.

a gas light.

aa

you want

or sell you'll find the Want-Ad

ht’

Lig

as

monds,

sergeant

a

Breen,

HE FORGOT TO BUY ME A

G

formerly

Frederick,

aide

sportscar

other communities

with the Arlington County, Va., Police Department, has been a member of the Traffic Institute staff
since 1956. Wolf, a former lieutenant of the Milwaukee Police Department, has been with the Institute since 1957.
Both are graduates of the Institute’s Traffic Police Administration Training Pro-

-

mink

¥

home

officers

Montgomery

and police from
in Alabama.

é
a

35

about

for

_

ever ything

almost

a course in
Personnel”

patios,

mutual fund a

Hi

pro-

fessional supervision of
diversified securities,
emphasizing common
stocks. The securities
for this fund are chosen
with objectives of longterm capital apprecia-

in

tion possibilities and
reasonable income. For
a free prospectus-book-

cel of «
the

many

lights no..

Mts

;

‘cious*meodern
.
different

i

living

types

let, call or write:

See

of

RAYMOND
Het

P. yd
BLONER
124 West Northwest Hwy.

gas

available.

Barrington, Illinois
Collect DUnkirk 1-3210

Call

PRICED

FROM

$49.95

(INSTALLED)

Representing

Ohevestors
Diversified Services, Inc.
FOUNDED

- Page

24

7

EERE

:

ste

ie

WOOP

;

ox

®

04% 0a. SAN

%.

¥

ATS

rs

AS

an
E&gt;

y

4
&lt;,

Company
“The Friendly People’’

1894

Thursday,

June

11, 1959

�from paint to patio
Craftwood quality products help you meet
the challenge of outdoor living. Come in today.

You'll be pleased with our prices,
quality and courteous service.

BARBECUE GRILLS &amp; ACCESSORIES
a
24°:
O94"
22"
18”

Weber : Grk ious Ses el oe
creer as
Yard Chet: Swicker i600
2 be
Hi-Lo: Yard Chet i oie a esas
Weber’ Kover Kooker oii 3s
Portable Charcoal Grill .....0.2.0.00.00000...

Camp

REDWOOD PATIO FURNITURE
Genuine California redwood
6 foot table and benches

eg.

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

95

6 foot table and benches -.0.0.0..0...0..0000.0.cc.0--- all
thot fold Bible so es
11%”
Gee ON: Che ee
a
ee stock
40” bench for‘ square table. 2.0.0.0...
eS
ty PG HDMI ce
eae ee ee
a
Curved bench ..............2.... PARTI
SE RS ag YA PS SEO
WSS oe OOee MARIE og Reeae aa
Upholstered Settee—Green/white 20.0000...
Upholstered Chaise—Green/white .....00.0..0000000002....
Upholstered Chair—Green/white ........0.0.0.0.0.00000....

34.95
39.95
26.95
8.95
31.95
9.95
14.95
38.95
33.95
27.95

AE

A

28.89
36.89
21.89
6.89
25.89
8.89
11.89
32.89
32.89
22.89

RAT

AE

ETE

APES

3.89

DWINS \OOE oid

ERA PARAS

3 TUES METH

FMRI

PURE
SPEER

SEL

DOG

ET

Se

a

i

a

RPI

RA

HOUSES
23.95
30.95

Redwood

37.95

TRELLISES

ee

fy

ile, Ai

A

ogre

ne

SRE

4°
Sg
OG":
7
8
OA

$5.69
|
5.00

OER

ies isd
aR ee Rien a a
ic, ov craseeccascitis
o e
‘3.0.0.0
os
aad

per

2.05
2.36
2.50
2.61
3.13
.93

36” Full round rail, 3 rail ............

.60

OO, ee YRS
PM ee
Cape Cod picket, 3 ft. high ........
Colonial picket, 314 ft. high spganka

3
1.36
1.50

Patio Weave;

3.20

&amp; 5. cn.c kissin

SCREENS

By

Arkla

4.95

ea

oe

is?

Sor,

(25h

est, garden

ie

aphitt

ea

7%

ae

=

BAM

bis

37

35

eve

“30*

“354

&gt;

agg

ae

33%

39%

lightin

32”

available.

CSD
E

5. cisco

ch

ee

Semmes
eS SE ls

eS

:

59.95

Heritage

fs. s-sgeressnersticlemsuniecele

121.35

Dootimian

i005
ee
eka

29.95

Welsbachi.

BOXES

sco

ea,

pga
”

Discount

8 A.M, - 5:30

Deerfield

arbors,

99.95

benches,

P.M.—Thursday

Highland

until 9—Sunday

10%

ey

og

PR

oe

MEE

in full 100 foot rolls.

We can make up screens in any dimension with any material.
Consider enclosing your porch with
Anderson Flexivent windows or Sun
Valley Window Walls.

gates,

borders

tumsnn company
Road,

*

39%

See

*Available in full rolls only.

Installation up to 50’
from 29.00 to 45.00
Do it yourself kits 1.00

1590

Fibre
Glass
eee

The newest, warm-

CRAFTWOOD

Park,

Illinois

10-1

Just west of Route 41-—-Phone

11, 1959

RO

Width in
Inches
Alum. Bronze Galy.
27 Wiel NG ae 45"
SU i) eee

also:

June

EN

GASLIGHTS
tion

Trellises, white

Thursday,

a

All heart redwood
for board fences ............ 22Voc bd. ft

2

PLANT

TR Sb AUR
do.)7, |
DAGR BEOCKNER
Pion Bem i
high. stookede
SE UE

Complete installa-

Plant tubs, 12”, six sided

RE

running ft.

9

EEN | SRO SES

RT EPA

40 lbs., 3.29

Materials

ME Men ORR a a Ot.

ESE BTN TL

20-lbs., 1.69

We carry a complete stock of fence materials,
Installation is available. Estimates free.

PLANT TUBS

26”x26"x36” Redwood
32”x32”x48” Redwood
38”x38"x48”

Aa

iii

Xs tiscehs iatiase ance %

EARLY AMERICAN FENCES

House paints in white and lively colors.
Long lasting, highest pure linseed oil content.
No quick cover, wash away fillers.

Woodlife

4.95
1.98
.89
1.89

PAINT FOR OUTDOOR USE
Exterior gloss white and pastels .....000.00.00....... gal.
Waterchek Masonry Paint ....0.00.00002000000000..... eee
Rez in redwood and twenty colors _.....0.000.0.0000000..... gal.
Penta Preservative Redwood Stain ..........00.0............ gal.

ake

ACCESSORIES:
TRE
SORVEE
. y es
CS DIP cisco ide ce aig. hs Coe
BI ea
i hs
Nc
a ee
Charcoal, 10-lb. bag .89

picnic sets.

(114” stock)

Out Pienic Stoves 021.05. ccc

49.95
49.95
39,95
18.88
10.89

IDilewood 2-0140

&amp;

stakes.

INC.

�Miss Marilyn Nathan
Delegate To Meeting

Expert Hair Coloring ,

Miss
of Mr.
Green.

. . . including all shades

Waves

NAFSA

university

In All Branches Of Beauty

St. Johns

Avenue
EXPERIENCED

from

the

University

of

ID

is

an

organization

officials

who

help

of

the

47,000 foreign students adjust to
American
academic
and
eultural
life. Representatives of the United
States
Government,
foreign
embassies
and
United
Nations
also
attended the conference.

Culture

CLASSIQUE BEAUTY SALON
1815

daughter

2-1603

Miss

workshop

OPERATORS

Nathan

participated

discussions

on

in

subjects

Graduates

Management

Dante

Michigan where she is a student,
to the National Conference of Foreign Student
Advisors
(NAFSA)
in New York City.

Hair Cutting
Specializing

Nathan,

Pasquesi

From

and Mrs. L. A. Nathan, 1001
Bay
Rd.,
recently
was
a

delegate

of light blondes

Permanent

Marilyn

Dante

J.

Pasquesi,

POLICE

1020

Court

Ave., foreman of the chaffing department
at the
Vascolay-Ramey
Corp., Waukegan, was among the
24
graduates
of
the
Industrial
Management Institute at Lake Forest College. Graduates attended a
commencement banquet at Calvin
Durand Commons on campus.

The

Industrial

Institute,

a four-

year evening program, was organized 14 years ago by a group of
North Shore industries as a training program for mid-management
personnel,

vital

to

international

ADVISE...

Institute

student

change.

ex-

(References for this week’s discussion are
Highland Park’s Traffic Ordinance, Sections
13; 61 through 74 and Schedules I through
IIIB;
and
State of Illinois Uniform
Act
Regulating Traffic on the Highways, Article

XIII.)

Our streets and roads are designed and built to move traffic from
one point to another, not to store
cars.
But
for convenience
sake,
portions of the streets are set aside
for safe parking of a limited number of vehicles.
Parking

means

the

a vehicle, whether

‘‘standing

occupied

of

or not,

otherwise than temporarily, for the
purpose of and while actually engaged in, loading or unloading.” As
long as we keep safety foremost in
our minds and think of convenience
second, we will have no problem

with

our

parking.

It is unsafe to park within 30
feet of a stop sign because it blocks
the
sign
from
the
view
of approaching
cars.
To
park
a car
within
20
feet
of
a
crosswalk
is unsafe because it conceals cross
traffic and pedestrians
from
the
view of approaching motorists.
It is easy to understand why it
is dangerous to park in front of a
fireplug or so close to the fire station that the engines cannot get in
or out.
Some parking is not only illegal
but very discourteous. Double parking, for instance, or parking in an
underpass or on a narrow bridge or
alongside
an excavation, or in a.
narrow
alley,
creates
congested
conditions. by blocking
a passing
lane. A bit of cooperation from all
of us would ease congestion.
Parallel

Parking

When you parallel park, be sure
your right wheels are no more than
12 inches from the curb. Except on
one-way
streets,
park with
right
wheels
to the
curb.
Parking
on
(Continued

Opportunity
when

you

on

page

knocks

buy

33)

every

U. S. Savings

pay

day

Bonds.

WHEN ITs
TIME TO ACT

YOU

GET

THE

SOLID

QUALITY

OF

BODY

BY

FISHER.
ie

the road-hugging Wide-Track Pontiac!

s

.

ek

“

*S

aj

© LOCAL

TRADEMARKS,

Inc.

Wide-Track Wheel design brings car and road into a new relationship.
The wheels of a Pontiac are five inches farther apart. This widens the
REA

stance

but not the car. There’s

a feeling of complete

control,

Life

holding response. You’re steadier, more secure, balanced. Lean and sway
4

disappear. It’s the automotive advancement of the year and one of the

THE ONLY CAR WITH WIDE-TRACK

WHEELS

is full of surprises...

some of them very pleasant.
You'll find this to be. true
when you see VIKING BUILD-

Dotted lines show conventional wheel positions.

day come

Pontiac’s wheels are five inches farther apart.

ERS for Real Estate properties.

This widens only the stance, not the car itself.

See them this week.

for you to drive

SEE

this sleek beauty? The

YOUR

LOCAL

keys are waiting.

Pontiac hugs tighter on curves and corners.
Sway and lean are considerably reduced, ride is

(1) ROAD CAR
AUTHORIZED

smoother, balanced, steadier.

PONTIAC

DEALER

PETERSEN PONTIAC
1949
26

CoO.

big reasons why you see so many new Pontiacs these days. Hasn’t the

PONTIAC! AMERICA’S NUMBER

Page

ure

road-

ST. JOHNS

AVE.,

HIGHLAND

PARK

826 DEERFIELD
Koad
DEERFIELD, pepo en
Thursday,

June

11,

1959

�HONORED

fet

Sep,

ei

‘

:

ye

.

¢

f

i

To See Cubs Play

al)

ualy

x

4

1

?

Chicago

Tuesday

Cubs-Pittsburgh
Field.

game

to

see

at

Wrigley

‘

,

:

In

and

return

one

hour

to Highland

time

minutes from the North Shore

ation Center for transportation and
admission to the game
will be
the

Thomas
Recent

Paul Tarpey

recipient

Tribune

medal

of

Chicago}

for ROTC

work

3019 West Peterson Road

trip.
staff

LOngbeach 1-1890
Mr.

and

son of the|fcca,
Martin Tarpeys of 191 Laurel Ave,| 00d,

206

Thomas

Paul

Tarpey,

a major

Loyola

University

terday.

He

Tarpey,

in psychology

graduated

is a Cadet

major

is| ROTC.

at|

They

Mrs.

board

will

North

plane

tour

yes-|reside with Mr.

in the|ers

whom

Amedeo

they

the

F.

Ave.,

for

country

Ri-

High-

Italy.
and

LAURIE

seen

RONALD

Ritacca’s brothhave

not

Adjacent
parking for
over 200

HERSHEY WEINSTEIN, President
WEINSTEIN,
E.

for 38 years.

OLS

Cars...

Funeral Director

SCHWARZBACH,

Funeral

Director

ANC OD)-DOOLS veaae

HILL-BEHAN °\Cur ON E-SOP
Big Fix - Up Lumber Values!
FIR FRAMING!
SHELF LUMBER
traight

STORM DOOR
_

stur-

Clear

and Sound

on one side!

1000

OTHER

LOOK!
ea.

4x8-FT.

SHEETS

34-INCH THICK ...... 6.34

9

| Boum. ft.

54-INCH THICK ...... 9.44

:
4c

Cea,
| 13c run. ft.

| 2!c

| 19c run. ft.

2x8, 8-16ft. | 28¢ | 25¢ run.ft.

# BUILDING?

2x10, 8-16ft. | 35¢

| 32c run. ft.

| ADDING ON?

| Reg. |

SALE

/&gt;-INCH THICK

‘ad6 ft.
| Tic [65cea
a
: be tee
MAO.
2x4, 10-16 ft. |

2x6, 8-16 ft.

2x12, 8-16ft. | 45¢
he Ly |

ts ~~
ie

a
[

~~

|

Ly4

ae

1x6

BE

Aah

1x8

~1xl0

Te

Puy

The

eo

can't:

a a Be von. ft.

Le 10

run. ft.

[4c | 13¢ run.ft.

1312Ixl2 leIve 445e(15esruns ©ft,
PINE FINISH LUMBER

A sturdily built, good-looking door

FOOT
Held with waterproof glues, Use
1.49...... 1.26 | for nana a eb guges vi where

of western pine, with permanent
screen, removable storm sash.

4-Inch

2x4
Reg,

ak

a led ee ag ea | Ya-lnch Reg, 6.27...... 5.60

d

er

sid-

icon Lids
a

eg
wea

oe

|

:

one yaa

aaa
Rene
Reg.
|

x6

Redwood

'/,&gt;x8 Redwood

S58

aan

Bevel...
Bevel.

Redweed

;

Bevel

sah

dale

(5c

e

| baYo-Inch
_ ae
Reg. ei
10.79....
8°

,

Yo-Inch

Reg.

3.85...... 3.23

FIR

5g-Inch
34-Inch

Reg.
Reg,

4.41...... 3.68
§.02..:... 4.26

Stronger, denser, goes down faster,
Use for walls, roofs, floors,

4x4

FOOT

'/,-Inch

Reg.

2.98...... 2.51

9°47 | 3a-lnch Reg. 14.02...
SHEATHING

Ix4....Reg. 18c...16¢ Run, Ft.
Ix6

....Reg.

27c...24¢

Run.

Ft.

in
tee he a tee ce
Ixl2...Reg. 59¢...53¢ Run. Ft

|

:

Bd

|

|

Reg.

4.32..... 4.03

Yo-Inch Reg. 5.14...... 4.30 | 5g-Inch Reg. 7.49...... 6.15

sizes.

Sh-Inch Reg. 6.69......5.68 | %-Inch Reg. 9.12... 8.51

945

g55

; 24x80 | 30x80

| 32x80

1x6 Fir drop Siding...17¢ || 5% .Inch Reg. 5.87......4.91 | ¥-Inch Reg, 6.69...... 6.98

| FLOORING VALUES!

PRE- FINISHED
up

and

June

11,

1959

ges (225 1275 | (32

PANELS

you're

through!

Finished with 2 coats of hot lacquer

| {x3 Clear ........... 32.50
Softwoods per running ft.

Ve
{x4 Clear

onc \5¢

Fir .........10¢

that

brings

out

the

COMPLETE

lovely

grain. Random V-grooved,
PHILIPPINE MAHOGANY
7°
4x8 Foot Panels ...... each
Blonde Limba .............. 13.00
ooteagit ES SE es Ae: 15.10

Walle DOR

= UNFINISHED MAHOGANY

Lovely V-Groove "Lauan" Paneling. .....

:

4 r R
:
|
F

C0 M P A N y

ANCE

buy

ccc chaesweds 15.90

teach Bee CPOE CO

or 16.95

ree. RTS

$6.99

LIFE _ INSUR-

FOR

on

YOU

when

you

HILL-BEHAN’S

IN-

SURED

HOME

PLAN!

Ask

BUDGET

about

it!

ID 2-8801

SKOKIE HWY
HIGHLAND PARK

Be

OTHER YARDS IN CHICAGO, SO. CHICAGO, ARLINGTON HTS., BENSENVILLE,
ONTARIOVILLE

Thursday,

15x80 | 16x80
18x80

[ UJ M

:

.12.51

PLYWOOD

3g-Inch Reg. 3.98...... 3.30 | 34-Inch Reg, 5.06...... 4.71

: line close grain.
: Use
for furni-

Ft

Lovely 13%"
Western Pine
Doors
that
are extremely
popular now.
Add _ distinction to your
front entrance,
bedrooms! All

4x8 Foot Sheets
5/16-in.

Put 'em

10c.

toes
.9.63

Reg, 2.23...... 1.88

9c

. ./4c

9.84 | 3e-Inch Reg. 8.16...... 1.27

4-Inch

A Aa eae er 888,

ween

.
J
Rrlend “pes shrew

a FOOT
eae
3x4

: A beautiful fin-

Reg.

8.26

34-INCH THICK ...... 10.88
HAND PANELS | EXTERIOR FIR PLYWOOD

34,-In bhek eee.

FPSs
FIXING UP?

LUMBER

lag

......

LOCK SET
AND
HINGES
FREE!

%e-Inch Reg. 1.95...... 1.65 | mois ees

| 40c run. ft.

SHEATHING
Sas

PLYWOOD

l=

4*

racing!

ze

32x80 Only

uses!

4x8 Ft., Vs inch,
Reg. 5.70 per
Sheet. NOW!
SAVE!
540i saree

st contracpene ates

Qxdinch =|

ary

...adewish Funeral Chapel only

|.

after the ball game.

on

[einnstein
and Sonsi inc.

Park

Members of the Recreation
will supervise the outing.

ORIGINAL

of need...

The
first 200 children
to pay
the registration fee at the Recre-

taken

-

the

Four
buses
will
leave
from
the
Recreation
Center
at
11:45

a.m.

e

Visit Ital

Two hundred or more boys and
girls from the Highland Park Recreation
Department
Junior
baseball and playground teams will go

into

3

UC X—71Y.4=—

are)

ab mS—4

1200 Boys, Girls

er

Z&gt;iImoerrK-f

Pre

&amp;

NO.

AURORA.
Page

27

�Millard’s Book On World Law Stresses
Strengthening United Nations Charter
“Freedom

in a Federal World,” a

book written by Everett
of
1623
Sylvester
Pl.
lished by Oceana of New

L. Millard
and
pubYork City,

will be released Monday.

©

In it Millard reports a six-year
study by the Conference Upon Research and-Education (“CURE’’) in
world
government
which
he
or-

BLADERE TAZION CU.
CRANE RENTALS EXCAVATING
GTRUCRING HIGHLAND
PARK ILL,

ganized

AWOHE IDLEWOOD 2.3765

and

which

now

numbers

400 world
affairs
scholars
in 16
countries.
“We think the key to world peace
is to form a ‘house of representa-

tives’ in the United Nations, elected

@
@
@®

EXCAVATING
GRADING
ROADS

by the world’s peoples, in addition
to the present General Assembly,”
Millard told the NEWS this week.
“Such
a
world
legislature
can
wield decisive peace-keeping powers without invading the internal
affairs of nations, our studies show.
“Americans
can
accept
only a
democratic basis of world law, the
conferees believe, while Russia will
not entirely reject a proposal to
| ‘put the people in the UN.’ ”

@® WRECKING
@ DRIVEWAYS
® PARKING LOTS
RENTED

@® CRANES

Among
international
powers
| which CURE recommends for a UN
legislature
are
sovereignty
over
the
high
seas
and
Antarctica,
a
world economic development
authority, trusteeship of peoples in
| transition from colonialism and of
strategic trouble areas and agencies
for the
peaceful
uses
of atomic
power
and
exploration
of outer
space.

GLADER &amp; TAZIOLI
EXCAVATING CO.
ID 2-3785

HERE
TELEVISION

SERVICE

Oil

—

CENTRAL

\/
ALL
MAKES
Prompt, reasonable
_ efficient service
in this area 10 years.

20th
| CENTURY
TV &amp; Radio

1858 First St., Highland Pk.

ID 2-8120

Heating

GAS

Equipment

BRAUN
OIL
Carl Casel,

GAS

HEATING

SERVICE

A. E. Savage,

Owner

DEPENDABLE

CLEANING

Of Boilers or Furnaces
BOILER SALES &amp; INSTALLATION

Windsor
If no answer

5-0602

call Windsor

5-4427

1010 HAZEL AVE., DEERFIELD
Page

28

&amp; SHERIDAN.
HIGHLAND
TELEPHONE ID 2-2028

PARK,

for the finest in

Belts

Hand Bound

&amp; Machine Button Holes

722 Main

447

Roger

UNiversity 4-3034

cpeliah: os hire

Williams

Formerly

igh

ty

OPEN

Call
VE 5-3100

SHORE-LAND ©
ELECTRONICS

F. D. CLAVEY
RAVINIA NURSERIES
Inc.
Established

Office

and

1885

Nursery

WI 5-0035
West

Deerfield

Husenetter’s

Deerfield

Open

ID

685

2-4387

PLUMBING
For Your

Plumbing

Needs

CALL

HAROLD ROOT
PLUMBING CO.
WI
Repair

Road

SUNDAYS—

HARDWARE

LANDSCAPING

Fabric Shop
Evanston

YOUR

RAVINIA

Highland Park

On Linens, Blouses, Sweaters,

Vogue

IT—

SERVICE

Store Hours Daily 8 a.m. to 5:30 p.m. — Wed. ‘til Noon

MONOGRAMMING

Buttons —

SHORE-LAND
ELECTRONICS

ILL.

Repair Screen Doors and Windows
Replace Broken Windows
Fix Storm Windows and Doors
Keys Made To Order While You Wait.

Division Manager

Pleating —

fund.

ewe bis

We

FOR

Towels, Shirts, ete

OIL - GAS

the school’s social events, contributes to operation of the U-M Case
Clubs and supports a scholarship

Call

— LET US DO

CO.

444 Central Ave.

News
from
the
University
of
Michigan notes that Frank S. Pollack, son
of Mr.
and
Mrs.
Sidney L. Pollack, 649 W. Buena Rd.,
was among 32 Michigan law students who were elected to “Barristers,” senior honorary society of
the law school.
The group sponsors
several of

REPAIR

GOSS RES ES See eeeee
HARDWARE

BROS.

Association,”

Frank Pollack Picked
For Senior Honors

. Official Watch Inspector for the North Western R.R.

PHONE
ID 2-3804

ELLIE
IT L ETT TTT) ely ARERR HRRR REAR
HEATING SERVICE
DRESSMAKER’S SERVICE

COMMUNITY

WATCH

Leading Watch Repair. Craftsmen
and Jewelry. Designers

OiL AND

Millard

American
Bar
author Millard.

sk

CORNER
are:

for

—

Leeds

SERVICE

the
said

L.

J ONE

JEWELER

BURNER

SALES

ql

Cw.

T

FUEL OIL

[CALL US!!

“The
book develops
themes
of
world
law recently advocated
by
Vice President Richard Nixon and

Everett

Work

5-3600
—

New

Work

Dishwashers
Water Heaters

If no answer

call WI

5-0743

Friday Evenings

Vernon

Ave.,

VE 5-3100

Glencoe

ID 2-1110

Phone

ID 2450
for

Advertising Space
on this page
Thursday,

June

11,

1959

�Reg

:

MARA» eA

f

OR

Deerfield Man
Receives

a

at ih
dart

&amp;

Oe eh
ti

ve

Cae
‘

Pe

us
Ri

aia

i

7p

a

|New Stamp To Honor

Promotion

a)

;

yon

Summer Schedule Listed
At Lutheran Church

49-Star Flag, July 4
Postmaster C. M. William Jr.,
Deerfield, reports that the postal

Th

summer

schedule

at

Zion

Lutheran Church will have communion
celebrated
at the
three
49-star American
flag stamp services the first Sunday of each
through the Auburn,
N.Y. post-’ month:. ;The..bus “will «continue. to
office on July 4, the date when provide
transportation
for
the
the new flag becomes official.
10:45 a.m, church service.
Nursery care will be provided for
The stamp will be 0.84 by 1.44
inches in dimension, arranged hori- the 10:45 service at the home of
zontally, issued in sheets of 50, Mr, and Mrs. Ronald Forslin at
and printed in red, blue, and deep 829 Appletree Ln.
A coffee hour will begin Sunyellow on white paper. An initial
printing
of 120,000,000 has been
authorized.
department

will

issue

a

4cent

Camp

Ma-Ka-Ja-Wan

Period

Opens

There

are

for Boy
Wan.

The

June

four

Scouts

First

periods

at Camp

first period

planned

Ma-Ka-Ja-

is June

P.

Dendel

Mr.

Hamilton P. Dendel has been appointed assistant to executive vice
president
Robert
C. Gunness
of
Standard Oil Company
(Indiana).
Mr. Dendel was formerly sales promotion and advertising manager of
the company’s central sales region.

Dendel

enjoys

the

Labor Day

Mr. Dendel joined Standard in
1946 as an industrial salesman at
Detroit,
Mich.
After
serving
as
sales manager at Indianapolis, Ind.,
he was transferred to the general
office in Chicago in 1956. He was

PORCH

CARL

Mart
2-8550

|

Your

Fabulous

Home
. . .

ALUMINUM
SIDING
ALCOA—Any

Colors

Ho me

K

ID

ENCLOSURES
With

¢ Stationery
¢ Roll-up

&amp;

Camera

Central

Beautify

AWNINGS
e All

Powell’s
589

NOW in ALL COLORS!

WINDOWS

Aluminum

L

OF YOUR
IMPORTANT PAPERS

in September.

Custom

outdoors

and is particularly fond of fishing.
The rest of the family includes
his wife, Sara, and his four children,
Kathy,
Joanne,
Philip
and
David. They reside at 1219 Central
in Deerfield.

PLIABLE PLASTIC
LAMINATING

day
between
the
9
and
10:45
services.
The annual congregational picnic
is planned
for the Sunday
after

Aluminum

H.

AND

23-July

6; second period, July 7-20; third
period, July 24-August
6; fourth
period, August 7-20.

STORM

sales
manager-nitrogen
products
and later with the advertising department
before
becoming
sales
promotion and advertising manager
of the central sales region in 1958.
Mr.
Dendel
is a graduate
of
Michigan
State
University.
He
served as a lieutenant in the Unitserved
as
a
lieutenant
in
the
United States Navy during World
War II.

FAST
PHOTO COPIES

23

Le

¢

Improvement

Color

Co.

DICK LATTANZI

KONSLER

ID 2-0252

1227

ARBOR

AVE.,

ID

H.P.

2-1316.

To a lady whose husband is about to buy
their

next

fine

Car.

We do not believe that your interest in cars

lies only in how they look. Therefore we bring to your attention some of the womanly

¢
.

.°

graces of a vehicle which

THE
oe.
PERFECT GIFT ’,
FOR

combines fashion

and function

Calculated Simplicity . . . length without
bulk, size without mass. Eminently acceptable,
totally assured. In colors thoughtfully keyed to
the shades you’ll be wearing through the year.

Trusted
you

Fingertip

Heavenly Space . . . for hat, legs, feet. You
sit gracefully, head-high, imperially straight.

PaPpeR¢MATE

. . . Auto-Pilot reminds
limit . . . and may be set to

Driving . . . pushbuttons move you

We think you'll find such a car quite thrilling.

Interiors of glove-soft leathers, textured tweeds,
custom-woven broadcloths.

Enchanting

Guardian

of the speed

forward
and
rearward.
Pushbuttons
control
heater and air conditioner. Controls well in reach
and self-explanatory.

handles as gently.

y

way.

keep you at a steady pace, automatically, without a touch on the accelerator.

Implicit Obedience . . . to make you a dextrous driver. No other fine car steers as easily,

CAPRI
MARK Il

in a most unusual

It is immensely

attractive,

excellently tailored,

finished, and appointed.

Gallantry . . . specially installed

Its name is IMPERIAL. May we suggest that
you and your husband compare it with the
other two fine cars. We think you both will find
the prospect of owning an Imperial delightful.

swivel seats turn gently doorward so you enter
and alight gracefully, hat undisturbed, seams

straight, hemline decorously in place.

Guaranteed
4, not to skip

| over
handprints,

|. fingerprints,
grease spots
»».even
writes over
a smear
of butter!

IMPERIAL

$ D49

i] JUST

... excellence
GIFT

BOXED

FINEST

NOW

On the North Shore Since

645 CENTRAL

Thursday,

AVE.

June

11,

1959

VIEW

IN

YOUR

IMPERIAL

1766

FIRST ST.

HIGHLAND

PARK

OF

CHRYSLER

DEALER’S

LAKE MOTORS,

1895

« ID 3-0230

ON

PRODUCT

without

equal
CORPORATION

SHOWROOM

INC
ID 2-2500

Page

29

�Chosen Speaker

3 Highland Parkers
Are Marywood Grads

Miss Janet DeGrazia, newly-electm\ed vice president of the Speech
Club at Mundelein College, Chicago, has been chosen Vital Speak-

Three

Highland

Parkers

commencement

2 in

June

part

took
ex-

ercises of Marywood High School at
the Georgian Hotel, Evanston. Fola graduation
ceremonies,
lowing
dance was held at Michigan Shores
Club.
Miss Mary Jill Berube, daughter
of Mr. and Mrs. W. Burton Berube,

Ave., plans to attend

1385 Oakwood

BANKING
Tuesday

Wednesday

HOURS:
Thursday

9 a.m.

9 a.m.

Milwaukee,
College,
Mary
Mount
Wis. Miss Mary Eileen Santi, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Santi,

600 Ravinia Rd., will enter nursing

Friday
9 a.m.-2:15

to

2:15

9 a.m.

5:30 p.m.

to

ow9°

Saturday

AND

¢v

school, St. Vincents Infant and Maternity Hospital, Chicago. Miss Judi
Wright, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Kimball
851
Wright,
L.
George
College,
Rosary
attend
Rd., will
River Forest.

to

to

2:15

8:00 p.m.
Miss Janet DeGrazia
er of the Year

Only the BANK offers

She

has

various

Complete Financial Service under One Roof!
Member

Federal

to

speech

specialize

Miss
next

by

fellow

represented

contests.

in

Deposit Insurance Corporation

She

will
is

members.
college

She

speech

DeGrazia
year,

the

correction.

be

a

in

plans

a junior

member

LAKE

of

Delta
Sigma
Rho,
the
National
Forensic and DeBate society. She
has maintained an “A” average in
academic studies and consistently
has been on the Dean’s list.
Miss DeGrazia is the daughter of
the Eugene J. DeGrazias of 1820
Ridgelee Rd. She has two brothers,
Anthony, a freshman at University
of Illinois, and Fred, a sophomore

at

and

two

sisters,
Carole
who
attends
maculate
Conception
School
Mary Beth, a pre-schooler.

Quigley

Imand

CAR

Seminiary;

WASH

appointed

NOW

OPEN

FOR THE

DuPont SPRAY GLAZE
SPECIALISTS!

SEASON

Luncheon

EXCLUSIVELY IN THIS AREA!

Terrace

Wu

ANNUMY
Wy

RAY GLAZE
XX

WY / /DU PONT

SQuT

GUTTA

yl

‘|

Hotel Moraine’s Pool-Side

SH i R fe 3 the best wax job!
.+- yet

“4,

e Enriches colors

costs no

¢ Makes chrome sparkle

more

@ Long lasting

Our Spray Glaze Beauty Treatment Includes:
1.

Washing

2.

Removing

your car with

grime

and

Du Pont Car

dull pigment

Wash.

with

a special

Du Pont

Cleaner.

3.

37

Make a date now to meet for lunch at The Moraine. Luncheon is served
seven days a week on the Pool-Terrace from 11:30 to 2:30. If you wish,
you can make reservations by phone. And, of course, there’s plenty of
parking.
Plenty of Parking in Our New Parking Lot!
TELEPHONE

ID

2-4444

FREE
and

Glazing car from bumper to bumper with sparkling Du Pont
Spray Glaze.

508

A
$22.00
ic

Page

THE

LAKE

©

HIGHLAND

Sd

PARK,

ILLINOIS

By DuPont
Trained Specialists!

BY APPOINTMENT
PICK-UP
DELIVERY...

Address:
Sat.,

Phone

ID 2-9722

FIRST ST. &amp; ELM,

H.P.

Hours: Daily 9 a.m. - 6 p.m.
8:30 a.m.
- 6,
Sun., 9 a.m.-2
REMINDER:

ON

| |

EVERY

$1.00 DAY

WEDNESDAY

p.m.
IS

(with 8 gals. of gas)
At LAKE CAR WASH

30
Thursday,

June

11,

1959

�i

647 Deerpath, secretary.

Deerfield Stagers
Annual Banquet

with original ditties pertinent. to|

Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Ventriss of
Chicago

are entertaining

the

past
plays
Stagers.

group

and

activities

of

the

PEW

To Be June 17

SPANISH © GERMAN

The Deerfield Stagers are again
to have their annual banquet. This
year Mr. and Mrs. Daniel J. Flana-

gan,

1503

Woodland

Dr.

and

Air-conditioned

their

committee of Mrs. Kenneth Hunter,
1500
Wilmot
Road,
Mrs.
Robert
Benson, 303 Wilmot Road and Clarence A. Egan, 711 Timberhill have

arranged

that

it be

held

Mrs.

John

Spend

Hunter

Everything you
immediately insured.

you want

was

and

102%

returned

Our

Usual

Low

send
Fill

clean

beautifully cleaned,
the box we furnish

in the Fall.

carefully stored and
with all the woolens

Of course,

you pay

nothing

already

collected

turned

in

and

Cleaning

Charges

Will

Be

Added

to

Storage

monthly

Serving the North Shore Over 60 Years

Phone Today . . . ID 2-4551

me-

is
1,

from
1959.

For A Summer

2226

of Fun

Green

Enroll

Bay

Now

Rd., H.P. —

AMPLE

FREE

PARKING

Once-over way
to weed &amp; feed

in the

FERRY HALL SCHOOL DAY CAMP
(Member of the American Camping Association)
541

N.

MAYFLOWER

ROAD,

LAKE

FOREST,

ILLINOIS

The

camp

will

have

use

DR.

of the

swimming

ample

facilities of

pool, the playing

Ferry

fields, and

ROBERT

G.

PERSONAL

FOR

Following

OR

ANDRUS,

McCORMICK,

Hall,

USE

(6 weeks)

|

SHORTHAND

(days only)

Day and Evening Classes
Wm. H. Callow, Prin.
BEGIN ANY MONDAY EXCEPT SPEEDWRITING CLASS
WHICH BEGIN JUNE 22; JULY 6, 20; AUGUST 3, 17

1718

Sherman

‘as

Ave.

W. H. Callow, Prin.

UN

4-3004_

¥

prasad FU

Headmaster

Camp

Courses:

SCHOOL

BUSINESS

GREGG SHORTHAND
STENOGRAPHIC
SECRETARIAL
BUSINESS ENGLISH
ACCOUNTING
COMPTOMETRY

tennis

game participation, neatness, honesty, improvement
For further information write: The Director, Ferry

FRANK

The

4

Hall School Day Camp, Lake Forest, Illinois, or phone Lake Forest 4811.
MR.

FOR

From

ay

courts. The daily, all-weather program will include a balance of indoor and outdoor events on this beautiful campus in a wooded area
adjacent to Lake Michigan. Archery, miniature golf, softball, handicraft, and games will be among the activities. A hot lunch will be
served in the school dining room and will be followed by a quiet hour
devoted to nature study and storytelling.
Prizes are frequently given to campers who compile points for
skills, cleanliness,
and cooperation.

2-4341
5-434I

EVANSTON BUSINESS COLLEGE |

For Girls 6 to 14 years old
June 22 to July 31, 1959
including the gymnasium,

FRapklin
GReenleaf

Speedwriling

being

through

morials, The fiscal year
August 1, 1958 to August

OF LANGUAGES

Cost!

co-

$818

more

per week

‘til

Choose

which

with

hours

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

TYPING

Bannockburn

subscribed

classes

garments are returned.

chairman, Mrs. William Marshall,
headed the cancer drive by mail in
Deerfield

10

BERLITZ SCHOOL

1330

her

to Labor Day and

2 or 4 hours per week

COURSES:

207 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago
518 Davis Street, Evanston

TYPING

and

ITALIAN

Private Lessons or Small Groups

Cancer Drive Is Well.
Subscribed In Deerfield
Dorothy

COURSES:

INTENSIVE

Holly Lane, vice president, public
relations; Richard Thompson, 1560
Robin
Lane,
business
manager;
Charles
Hamilton
of
Highland
Park,
treasurer
and
Miss Louise
Korst of 1100 Springfield Ave., secretary.
The proposed
slate consists of
Charles
Hamilton
for
president,
Charles Palmer, production;
Miss
Louise Korst, casting; Mrs. Lenn
R. Franke, public relations; John
Sullivan, 1330 Holly Lane, business
manager; Mrs. Daniel J. Flanagan,
treasurer and Miss Irene Donohue,

Dr.

e

LANGUAGE

2 hours daily with us this Summer—June

REGULAR

Wednes-

Sullivan,

ANY

thrill to a new language by Fall. Also special Children's
and coaching at High School, College and graduate level.

day,
June
17
at Hank’s
Supper
Club. This is the annual business
meeting and election of officers.
Mrs. Frederick Ritter of 946 Clay
Ct. is retiring president; Mrs. B.
B. Brown, Gemini Lane, vice president, casting;
Charles Palmer
of
Lake Forest, vice president, pro-

duction;

FRENCH

classrooms

Bonus® does two jobs. Kills
ugly weeds like dandelions,
plantain, buckhorn. Fertilizes
good grass, makes your lawn

Director

DRIVE THE NEW:
SUNBEAM
RAPIER

greener, lovelier. Non-burning
a

a

SS

eS

ee

ee

Oe

ee

ee

Just as you provide insurance or make a
will, so should you choose a fitting resting
place for yourself — and for them — a task
that will be burdensome if left until the
emergency is at hand.

MEMORIAL PARK CEMETERY
COMMUNITY MAUSOLEUM—EARTHEN INTERMENT
COLUMBARIUM—CREMATORIUM

site

site

PERPETUAL

sie
oie

Ridge Road
Chicago:

GENERAL

Thursday,

and Harrison

KEystone 9-4747; 9-4424

elie

:

—

We Operate Our Own

ote

site

CHARTER

June

11, 1959

CARE

FUND

Greenhouses
St., Evanston

Evanston:

Bonus

ee

UNiversity 4-5061; 4-5062

is clean, dry. Apply with

the Scotts Spreader — uniformly
good results guaranteed!
el

a

Save

$5.00

Bonus for 5,000 sq ft, alone 5.95
Scotts SPREADER, alone
16.95

Both
a
a
ee

ae

site

sie

otitis. ti. tlie tlt. alte,
tlt. ..siie...0te.
.site..siie..siie

a

only $17.90

RAVINIA
HARDWARE
447

Roger

Williams

RALLY CHAMPION! 1st, 2nd, 4th and 5th in its class in the
2600-mile Alpine Rally — Europe’s toughest! The Sunbeam
Rapier is a 90 mph performer, complete with dual carburetors,
turbo-slotted wheel discs, tachometer and race-proven brakes
and

transmission!

And it’s got room, too! Seats five in the comfort of foam
rubber...in the safety of single-unit construction. Testdrive the new 1959 Sunbeam and take the family along!

Drive the Rally Champion Sunbeam today!

ID 2-4387
Store Hours Daily 8 a.m, to
5:30 p.m. Wed. ‘til Noon

Open Sundays

9:00 A.M.-1:00 P.M.

Hitioran

SCHMIDT
RETAIL

« Sunbeam

MOTOR

DISTRIBUTOR—Jaguar

4

« Humber

SALES,
- Sunbeam

INC.
- Hillman

Husky - Foreign &amp; Sport Cars

3527-41 N. Western Ave., Chicago 18—LAkeview 5-8776-77
Page

31

Fei!

�; {

ft ee is

from

page

E.

O.

Steinorth.

Boys

For the first time since its organization over a decade ago,
the;Countryside: Water Company’ of Illinois petitioned the, Illi-

who

| (passed: -were- Lee Houskeeper,:.Bob‘Ferone, Jim Hamilton, John Kopp
and

J.

George

H.

with
tion.

Kloepfer.

Warton
the

nois Commerce

Scoutmaster

closed

the

meeting

oath

and

benedic-

Scout

HIGHLAND PARK
SAVINGS &amp;« LOAN
ASSOCIATION

32nd

season

Glenbrook Countryside is located
east of Phil Johnson’s restaurant
and south of County Line Rd. in
Cook
County
and in Northbrook
Public School District 28.

St. Johns

MEMBER

OF

Highland Park

Ave.

THE

SAVINGS

AND

LOAN

|

you

BUY

Village
U.

S.

of

Deerfield.

SAVINGS

BONDS.

LG

the

increase,”

pany for its
purchased at

9

Company’s
said

Benja-

the Com-

past cost for water
the higher Highland

oe

Memorial Chapels
¢ Most Complete Funeral Home
in Metropolitan Area

¢ Perfect accommodations for

* Convenient to North Shore
and Downtown Chicago

¢ Parking adjacent to building

small or large attendance

PHONE

NUMBER—VEnrnon

5-2221

1-4740

810

WAUKEGAN

BUY

THE

RD.,

PAINT

R.

A.

Kole

same

ss

:

Even

youngsters

looking

presentable.

clothes”

our

play

fresh

must

be

will

and

still

THAT’S

WORTH

WI

THE

per
and

per

100

cubic

The proposed schedule would establish a minimum charge of $3.80
per month of each billing period
and
would
graduate
downward

95c per 100 cubic feet to 38c

per 100 cubic feet for large users.
Benjamin
said
that
the
Company’s 270 consumers were mainly
residential users in the Glenbrook
Subdivision with some large industrial users near County Line Road
west of Waukegan Road.

new

Highland

Park

rates

under which the Company has been
purchasing water since January 1,
1959, has caused a jump of approx-

posed rates would be granted by
the Illinois Commerce Commission
as soon as possible, as the increase
in cost of purchased water without
relief over its present resale rates
would cause the Company to operate at a deficit.

Salvation Army
Day is scheduled

Doughnut
Tag
for Friday, to-

morrow.
Warren

Darling

of 925 Hemlock

Ave,

heading

some

too!

&amp;
Phone TODAY
5-2286

WORK

PAINTS &lt;t

is

Tag

the

Day.

Deerfield

This

year the

have acquiesced.
per

cent

of

all

money

for Pick-up Service!

KOKIE
LAUNDRY

VALLEY
&amp;

DRY

CLEANERS,

State Bank for use for local emergencies. The funds contributed to

the

Salvation

Army

help support the
of social services.

are

varied

used

LEGAL NOTICE
OF
PUBLIC
HEARING
Notice is hereby given by the Board of
Education of School District No. 113, in
the County of Lake, State of Illinois, that
a tentative budget for said School District
for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 1959
will be on file and conveniently available
to public inspection at 433 Vine Avenue,
Highland
Park,
Illinois,
from
and
after
8 o’clock A.M. on the ist day of June 1959,
at Highland
Park
High
School
in
this
School District, until 8 o’clock A.M. June
22, 1959, and from
then will be on file
and conveniently available to public inspectior, at the Administration Building,
1
Park Avenue West, Highland Park, Illinois.
Notice is hereby given that a public hearing on said budget will be held at 7:30
o’clock P.M., C.D.S.T., on the 13th day of
July,
1959,
at 1040 Park Avenue,
West,
Highland Park, in School District 113.
Dated this 25th day of May, 1959.
Board of Education School District No.
113 in the County of Lake, State of Illinois.
By Lillian C. Tucker, Secretary
6/4-11/59—160

INC.
NOTICE
OF
PUBLIC
HEARING
Public Hearing will be held in the City
of Highwood at the City Hall, Friday, June
19, 1959, at 7:30 p.m., C.D.S.T., to discuss
and decide if Evolution Avenue will remain
a one way street or have traffic proceed
in both directions.
LEO MORDINI
Chairman,
Streets
and Alleys
6/11/59—168
A

Main
!Dilewood 2-3310

Office
—

and

Plant:

Deerfield Call Enterprise

to

program

as

Send their vacation clothes to us

share their fun

512-518 Waukegan Ave., Highwood
32

keep

sparkling

THE

Page

kept

If they’re “hard on

treatment

looking

and

at

Co.

DEERFIELD

fact
rate

collected is placed in the Deerfield

day!

PAINTS
GLASS
Paint

Com-

efficient

from 58c per

100 cubic feet to 24c
feet for large users.

Twenty

“new.

DEERFIELD

the

Deerfield Woman’s
Club
decided
not to sponsor the Salvation Army
Doughnut Day, so Mr. Darling has
written to many of the local organizations asking for volunteers,

IN 30 MINUTES

Formerly

graduating downward

Doughnut

REGULAR

... thins with water—yet dries to tough:
est, most weather resistant finish
ever developed.

the

that

sought

The present rates have been in
effect since 1946 and provide for

who

repaint

always

(Just north of Foster)

Good grooming
gives her

EASIEST PAINT TO APPLY

can

added

has

imately 80% in cost.
Benjamin
stated that he hoped that the pro-

don’t have to repaint for years!

you

Benjamin

pany

Doughnut Day Is
Friday, June 12

them

»».SO

that

facilities.”

from

5206 North Broadway, Chicago

SOLVES BLISTERING PROBLEM
... used with Du Pont No. 38 primer on
new or unpainted wood!

DRIES

Com-

min, ‘‘will not reimburse

the

or LOngbeach

Sr

.

the

basis

of

Benjamin,

Secretary.
“The rate

a good start
THAN

put

a minimum
charge
of $2.32
month of each billing period,

SUBURBAN

HOUSE PAINT
LASTS 50%
LONGER

will

operative

Edward

* Funeral consultation and arrangements may be made in your
own home with our North Shore representative.

‘| m LUCITE ACRYLIC

but

an

should allow it a moderate return
on the investment in water plant

The

New Du Pont

LASTS 50% LONGER
HOUSE PAINT

on

operating
methods,
which
stalled off any request for a
hike in the past.

INC.

Under New Ownership

rate,

pany

“The recent increase by the City
of Highland Park in the cost of
water purchased by the Company
has necessitated our request for an
increase in our own rates,” said

ID 2-0361

FOUNDATION,

oper-

Park

ation on June
1. The restaurant
began in a small way in 1927 and
has kept growing with additions
and remodelings to make it large
enough
to
accommodate
the
diners.
Although the mailing address is
still Northbrook, it is now a part

Security — Service — Satisfaction Since 1888

1811

of

on June 3, 1959, for an increase in

territory in Northfield Township,
Cook County, and Deerfield Township, Lake County, Illinois.

The Phil Johnson Restaurant on
Waukegan Rd, at County Line Rd.

its

Commission

its water rates affecting approximately 270 of its subscribers
in Glenbrook Countryside Homes Subdivision and contiguous

Phil Johnson’s Restaurant
Begins Its 32nd Season

began

‘
PN

Ee A
EB

oie

In Glenbrook Countryside Subdivision

19)

they used on the Camporee. Map
reading classes were headed by
Mr.

Ra OTS eC

Petition For Water Rate Increase

Boy Scout News
(Continued

SETS

1616

- Thursday, June 11, 1959

�rt

FEY

pie

eS

UGS

BAe

ae Byam

ren

weeks
House.

in painting and
held for eight

at
Winnetka
Sponsored by

Art League, summer
June 22.
Day,

Two

classes

adults
Miller

Community
North Shore

sessions begin

Evening

Classes

will

be

PENT

O

MIR

(Continued

Classes

Summer classes
drawing will be

ee

ants

4

r

POLICE ADVISE . . .

Art League Sets
Summer

Wotan,

held

for

from 1:30 to 4:30 p.m. John
will
teach
on
Mondays;

George Rocheleau on Wednesdays.
An evening class will be conducted by Carl Schwartz Tuesdays from
7:30 to 10:30 p.m.
Thursday is children’s day, with
a morning class for those age five
to 11 years; and an afternoon session for those age 11 through 18.
Mrs. Kay Hoffman Schwartz is the
instructor.
Further information may be obtained by telephoning Mrs. A. O.
Berger, Glencoe. Students may re-

gister on the first day classes meet.

from

; B’nai

page

Mrs.

sidewalks, on parkways and driveway approaches between street and
sidewalk is unsafe and illegal.

School

Jack

Solomon,

director

of

B’nai Torah Religious School, announces that at the recent Closing

Day

When
a car is parked
on the
driveway approach, there is always
the possibility of the car rolling out
into the street, causing an accident.
Highland Parker police tabulated
seven such accidents this last year.
Parking on the parkway tears up
the sod and disfigures city property. Both practices hide pedestrians
and children from the driver’s view
and enable unnecessary
accidents
to occur.
Limited

Torah

Gives Closing Awards

26)

ceremonies,

dents received
For perfect

Graham,

the following
awards:
attendance:

Elsie Hahn,

stu-

Wendy

Darlene

Kra-

mer, Donna Kramer, Nancy Margulies, Simon Piller, Felice Russell,
Joyce
Russell,
Laurene
Winter,
Marcia Zucker.
For outstanding Religious School
interest and performance, the Manfred
Kohlberg
Fund _ presented

camp

scholarships to Barbara Katz,

1690
Southland
Ave.,
and
Susan
Brinkman, 3244 Summit Ave. These
students will attend the Union of
American
Hebrew
Congregations
camp
at Oconomowoc,
Wis., this
summer.

Parking

Parking must be limited in certain business areas to create turnover and permit more people to
park. Meters can handle this arrangement,
along
with
one-hour,
two-hour,
and
90-minute
parking
limitations.
Those of us who must park all
day should use the municipal lots
to partly relieve congestion and to

make
it easier
for
shoppers
patronize our stores.
Cooperation, courtesy and a

tle unselfish

thinking

HIGHLAND

PARK

589 Central

*

STORE

ID 2-8550

ry
WINNETKA
847

Elm

:

STORE
e

Hi

6-5141

to
lit-

by all of us

could
help
diminish the parking
problem and cut down accidents.

LAKE FOREST COLLEGE

~ SUMMER SESSION ©
Two Terms: June 17-July 31 » August 3- August 22
All courses ate selected from the regular curriculum of the College and are equivalent in quality and in credit to those given during the regular school year. The
Summer Session faculty is drawn from the regular faculty of Lake Forest College.

FIRST TERM
ART
Drawing and Painting
(Elementary, Intermediate,
Advanced)

MUSIC
Music Literature and Appreciation

General Biology

Private Instruction

oe

aortas

@ Twice as bright —Twice

Public Speaking
Summer Theatre

(Limited Enrollment)

ART

Survey of the Visual Arts

PHILOSOPHY

ECONOMICS

Basic Logic

Introduction to Economics

Introduction to Philosophy

EDUCATION

eee

POLITICAL SCIENCE

Methods in the Elementary School

National Income Analysis

American Federal Government

Problems

International Relations

ENGLISH
English Composition

of American Labor

EDUCATION
The American Public School System
Educational Psychology
Tests and Measurements

Supervised Teaching

tea
nglish

Introduction to Behavior

HISTORY

Educational Psychology

American History

RELIGION
Introduction to the Study of

oe
asic College

FRENCH
First Year Course
Reading Course

SOCIAL

(second year)
ete

:

POLITICAL SCIENCE
American State Government

PSYCHOLOGY

Child Psycholo

SCIENCE

Introduction to Social Science
History of Modern Thought

y
SOCIOLOGY

By
kiosas
:

REGISTRATION: Ist term, June 17 © 2nd term, July 31
Classes begin June 18

Classes begin August 3

For folder describing these courses in detail, write:
DIRECTOR

LAKE

Thursday,

June

11, 1959

OF

FOREST,

SUMMER

ILLINOIS

SESSIONS,

LAKE

or Telephone

FOREST

LAKE

COLLEGE

FOREST

Be

owell

‘ih

ee

breaks the wattage

barrier to give you

@

radically new projection system—more than twice as bright as

SPEECH
Interpretative Reading

Principles of Sociology
Social Structure

American History
Twentieth Century America

Siabe hk Metaeitt Wonka
ow

Gere Sere

SOCIOLOGY

European History

i

PHYSICS
Thermodynamics

SECRETARIAL TRAINING
Elementary Typewriting
Elementary Shorthand

Drama

ph.

Mathematics

Calculus

ats
i
ia A Mie se

English Literature
World Literature
Modern

World Literature

PSYCHOLOGY

theites Bible
Meet

a
Composition

the detail

© Threads Itself Automatically in just 3 seconds
@ New f/1.2 lens
@ Brilliant new lamp design

ECONOMICS

¢ Ss riianames

8Smm

SECOND TERM

deed

NATURAL SCIENCE
Introduction to Physical Science

vescwy abd :
BED

1.2

Public Discussion

Music for Elementary Teachers
Summer School Chorus

maine

LUMINA

SPEECH

BIOLOGY
BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION
Principles of Accounting
Business Law
PORTS.
STRAT

-

First Year Course

Reading Course
(second year)

Calculus
Intermediate Calculus

¢&amp; Howell

MOVIE PROJECTOR

SPANISH

MATHEMATICS
Introduction to Mathematics
Basic College Mathematics

Bell

3100

ordinary “thy: gener to bring out every detail in your movies,
Shows stills 4 times brighter than ordinary projectors.

COMPARE
e
¢
e
e

THESE

FEATURES:

New f/1.2 lens
Automatic threading
Reverse, still projection
Automatic cord reel

+159”

°
e
«
*

Splicer included
Variable speed
Room lamp cut-off

Gear-driven reels

LESS
SPECIAL TRADE
Page 33°

: :

�It Is Baseball Time In Deerfield . . .

Jewett

Park

is a

busy place as the call ‘Play all” is heard.

Fathers turn out to help their sons and

DEERFIELD
GIRL SCOUT NEWS
Troop
Jerry

Scribe

Girl Scout Troop 127 had a cook-

learn

ing;

In the Busy Bees patrol Barbara
Brown received cook and hospitality
badges; Sharon Hart, cook and hos-

stress, cook, campcraft, swimming
and athlete and Marjean Wilson,
seamstress, skating, sports and hospitality.

Haslach,

cook, hos-

pitality
and
horsewoman;
Kathie
Loewecke,
seamstress
and
child
care;
Gail
Mockler,
seamstress,
cook, child care; Christine Rahn,
sewing, cook, child care, skating and

homemaking; Marcia Ramsey, cook,
hospitality,

needlecraft

and

skat-

Rosemarie

the national sport. So many boys have signed up that all the school
parks are being utilized. The picture was taken on opening day.

, Badges

received

Sternberg,

seam-

by members

of

the Clever Cats patrol were Janet
Bettiker,
hospitality and skating;
Jaedra
Bratko,
hospitality;
Holly
Carr, hospitality and cook; Colleen
Fahy,
hospitality;
Sandy
Nelson,
cook, hospitality, skating and horse-

eer

out and court of awards last Monday at Sakagawea lodge. The parents were invited to the court of
awards where 33 girls received 112

other people’s son

badges.

pitality; Cathie

127

Crane,

ss

ie

a

woman;
and

Jane

skating;

pitality

and

pitality,

cook

Rawitzer,

hospitality

| cook,

swimming

skating;

Stillwell,

hos-

ley

Louisa

Winters,

hos-

hospitality

and

Gail

seamstress

and

child

and

skating.

Those in the Green Elves patrol
receiving badges were Bonnie Cornelison, cooking,
child care, hospitality
and
skating;
Pat Cuttie,
cooking, seamstress, child care, hospitality; Sally Garrett, cooking and
child care; Francine Gourguechon,
cook;
Carol
Johnson,
cook
and
swimming;
Dawn
Moore,
cook,
child care, homemaker, hospitality
and handywoman;
Nancy
Moose,

Stolle,

and

Shirley

swimming,

cook

Whisler,

Shir-

and
cook,

care.

Members
of the Beechnuts
receiving badges were Jory Crane,
hospitality, cook, seamstress, skat-

ing,

needlecraft,

and

campcraft;

Linda
Corbett,
seamstress,
mammal, skating, insects, bird, garden

flower,

homemaker,

cook

and

hos-

pitality; Sharon Kassner, hospitality, Carol Hooker, hospitality and
skating; Susan Landau, hospitality,

(Continued

on page

35)

Crattwood

Se

¢
4

SPECIAL
6-Foot

THIS WEEK

Genuine

Colijernia Redwood

PICNIC

WITH TWO

TABLE

BENCHES

regular $29.95 value
The Frank Quinn home at
1034 Briarwood Lane, Northbrook,
is a spontaneous, family-oriented home
that revolves around the six Quinn kids.
With six good reasons to remain at home,
the Quinns do not often look for a
“second house’’—but when they do, they
choose Holloway House on Skokie.
Holloway House enjoys catering to
Quinn-size families—a fact which both
Marge and Frank Quinn appreciate.
So do Kathy, Sheila, Noreen, Peggy, Patrick,
and Eileen Quinn. “‘Going to
Holloway House”’ for family dinner is
recommended to you by all the Quinns.
For fun and relaxation, make the
North Shore’s Home of Gracious Dining
'
the second house in your life!

The North Shore’s Home

THIS

_, Page 34

AND

SKOKIE

SKOKIE,

ILLINOIS

ONLY

CRAFTWOOD

To get to Holloway House, the Quinns drive east
on Dundee Rd. to Edens Highway, south on Edens
to Skokie Rd., then direct to the restaurant. Elapsed
time: 15 minutes. You'll find this fine dining spot
convenient to reach from any North Shore address.

LUMBER

of Gracious Dining

ROADS,

$4989

WEEK

CASHWAY PRICE
SORRY—
NO PHONE ORDERS

HOLLOWAY £3 HOUSE sees jon ox rch
GLENVIEW

%

1590

Deerfield

Road,

COMPANY,
Highland

8 A.M.-5:30 P.M.—Thursday until 9—Sunday

Park,

INC.

Illinois

10-1

Just west of Route 41—Phone

IDiewood 2-0140

Thursday, June 11, 1959

�VISIT TOLL

ROAD

OASIS

Girl Scout News
(Continued

from

page

troop
child
bird;

dramatics,
group
care, homemaker,
Mary Lu Loarie,

paint,

hospitality,

maker

and

stress,

hospitality,

dener,

animal

ne

4

and

home-

Ulrich,

seam-

cook,

raiser,

yp

home

gar-

homemaker,

skating, bird, and insect.
This court of awards finished the
year’s activities which included an
overnight,
mother-daughter
banquet, troop dramatics and for some

members,

ice

SS eaeeeeaag S S

musician,
cook and
draw and

cook

Rochelle

34)

skating

and

braille

lessons.

SPECIALS

GRADUATION
oe
S Water

FOR

&amp; FATHER’S DAY

ge
Skis .:.: $17.95 | Moen |..20030.2 $18.95
Marine Clock ............ $15.95

Only the Want
values
able

and

Ads

offer amazing

opportunities

elsewhere.

Read

not

them

Polyethylene

now!

Speedometer .............. $12.95

Tow Rope .......... thi aclagl eee

avail-

Si

Bel

$3.55

14’ Runabout, 35 H.P. Mercury
Gator Trailer, Terms. Full Price
See our complete

Mrs.

Edward

Wachholder

and

her

son,

Mark,

of

525

HOOVER
Polisher-Scrubber

tended the grand opening of Standard Oil’s twin service areas
at Lake Forest on the Illinois Tollway, recently. The Oasis also
includes an “Over-the-Tollway restaurant which is now open.
Deerfield

Gives

Health

Report

Presbyterian

Officer

For Month

Dr,

The
report
of Health
Officer
Mrs.
Harold
Giss to the village
board for May shows that Deerfield had 13 cases of chicken pox,

2
measles,
3 scarlet
fever,
1
mumps, 1 streptococcus throat and
36

cases

of

German

measles.

Mrs. Giss made one restaurant
inspection , and
checked
on
two
pieces of property.

Paul

J.

on

Sunday,

Keller,

minister

Presbyterian
officiated

the

of

can

BUY

U.

S.

SAVINGS

BONDS.

Crattwood...
SPECIAL THIS WEEK
24-INCH GRILL
MOTOR, SPIT,
WIND HOOD
SS

az

match

ON

PHONE

First

ID

Street

3-0880

Highland

Park,

Illinois

outeverything
to safeguard
your health

quality you
can rely on
every time

THE

CONVERTIBLE
tahoe &lt;&lt;

at

It Beats,

Make us your convenient, one-stop
headquarters for all health needs. It’s
so good to know that you can have
complete confidence in our up-to-date
stock of name brands. Our prices are
thrifty, too!

PEASE
495

PHARMACY

Central
FREE

ID
DELIVERY

2-0143

?

as it Sweeps,
as if Cleans

Model 31
No Mosquitoes

formerly

REDUCED

PRICE

(Advertisement)

for this Garden

Party

TO

$6935

SORRY—
NO

with

|

ONLY

CASHAWAY

1848

‘HOOVER

$4539
WEEK

ino.

ep,

SUMMER
SPECIAL!

Regular $26.95
Value
THIS

- Trailers

HOUSE,

Only... SG Goo

tisms of David James Verney, son
of Mr. and Mrs. James Varney of
1110
Camille
Ave.,
and
Warren

thorne Ln.

- Motors

dated
‘down-on-theknees’
floor care.

bap-

Lee Winslow, son of Mr. and Mrs.
William
Winslow
of 1550 Haw-

line of Boats

beautiful gleaming
floors that you never

Church,

at

$1395.00

Takes the hard work
out of floor-care. Gives

Baptisms

the Deerfield

Lighter ............ $7.50

Motor,

tHE BOAT

Deer-

field Rd. are exhibiting a clock radio which was one of the special prizes which they received when the Wachholder family at-

$9.95

Ski MirrOr: c5.ai
0 ci..,03-4, $8.50
Marine

j

SS eR

ORDERS

With
HOOVER

CRAFTWOOD

NEW

Attachments
bags and
in stock.

belts

FRANCHISE
DEALER

LUMBER
1590

Deerfield

COMPANY,
Road,

Highland

8 A.M.-5:30 P.M.—Thursday until 9—Sunday

Park,

INC.
Illinois

PAINT-GLASS-WINDOW

10-1

Just west of Route 41—Phone

BRAND
BROTHERS

IDlewood 2-0140

638

Central

Ave.,

SF:

Mosquitoes
since

Pest

does the job, won't

Control

parties have

division

harm

of

Aerosol

become

s

a thing of the past

Exterminators

has

put

its

One treatment the day of your party

flowers or shrubbery

but kills mosquitoes.

HPC

also

has a special plan that brings sudden death to ants, moths, spiders, waterbugs,

Park

carpet beetles, roaches and all the other annoying

and

damage-dealing

insect

pests that invade our homes. HPC chemicals are safe for poeple . . . murder
for insects. The HPC plan is inexpensive, too.

Household

ID 2-0949

Phone
‘Thursday, June -11, 1959

Household

Shore garden

new fogging equipment into operation.

SHADES

Highland

at North

Hillcrest 6-6173

Pest Control
7 Days

a Week

. Page 35

�+ REPUBLICAN RALLY-

ec

(Paid

Political

Advertisement)

BRUNO STANCZAK
for

i

*

4

CANDIDATE

UESDAY

REPUBLICAN

16

J U N i

FOR
STATE'S

*

ATTORNEY

Deerfield American

OF LAKE COUNTY

Legion Hall

ok

8:00 p.m.

J

Talk It Over with Your States’ Attorney... Learn what
the States’ Attorney Does... Find Out About

STANCZAK’S

BRUNO
A

_

Practicing Attorney

for 25 Years

OUTSTANDING
12 Years in State’s Attorney's

QUALIFICATIONS

Office

Life-Long

Lake County

Resident

VISIT WITH YOUR ELECTED COUNTY OFFICIALS

THOMAS MORAN
Probate Judge

MINARD HULSE
County Judge

HUGO SCHNEIDER
County Treasurer

a

NORRIS FROELICH
Sheriff

Rally Sponsored by the DEERFIELD YOUNG REPUBLICAN’S CLUB
and the West Deerfield Township Woman’s Republican Club

* WOTE

REPUBLICAN on JUNE 23 «
(Paid

Page 36

Political

Advertisement)

Thursday, June 11, 1959

�a»

Fe

Dea ncing,

‘i

Swimming, Field Trip |League President,
In Offing At Highwood Center Voters Board Plan

dance tomorrow from 8:30 through 11:30 p.m. at Highwo
od’s
Community Center. The event is informal; Bermudas and
blouses for girls and blue jeans and cotton slacks for boys are
accepted attire. Music for this, one of the final high
school
dances this spring, will feature the week’s top 40 platter

Riverview Park is the site tomorrow of the first Center-sponsored
field trip. Young people taking part
in Highwood’s summer recreational
program

are

eligible

to

attend.

They may sign up today, or prior
to 11 a.m. tomorrow when the bus
will leave for the Chicago fun-park.
bad

Monday

*

marks

*

the first date for

supervised swimming for Highwood
youngsters.
Sessions, each follow-

ing

Wednesday

and

Monday,

are

for informal
swimming
only;
no
lessons are given.
A special bus
leaves Community Center each of
the two week-days at 12:30 o’clock

and

travels

Return

to

time

Mt.

Prospect

is shortly

pool.

after 4 p.m,

Those who desire to join the swim-

ming group are asked to sign up
each morning for the trip; bus and
pool charges are due at the time
of registration.
*

*

*

Saturday’s crowning of kings and
queens at the gala Grammar School

Prom was highlight for a most enjoyable formal evening. Queen of
St. James School was Lee Cioni;
in her court were Susan Bartlett
and Mary Linda Amedei. Mark Fiore was king, attended by Carl Cicero and Sarge Ori.

Oak Terrace School’s queen was
Donna
Beaudin;
Diane
Dratler
and

Carol

Robert

Burge

Brehmer

attended

was king,

her.

and his

court was made up of James
venuti and Albert Malmquist.

Ben-

s.

Kings

and

Queens

of

the

.two

schools were crowned by last year’s
royalty.
Don
Skrinar,
crowned
Anna

queen

named

from

*

director,
the
first

Immaculate

*

*

Community

will start its outdoor
ule Tuesday

ern.

with

Films

David

an

will be

Center

movie

sched-

exciting

shown

west-

on

Joseph,

president

Board

*

of directors

hearing

a

ye

A

Birth
son,

To

Son

Christopher

Daniel,

was

pital
of

to Mrs.

Daniel

Northland

Ave.

died

29.

Jan.

The

Parry

Jr.,

infant’s

642

father

Get-togethers

“Members will have
tunity to get to know

and the league,”
“Board

for

said Mrs.

members

these

the opporeach other

will

be

get-togethers

on

and

hand

there

will be no formal reports or planned programs.”
Yesterday the main topic of conversation was activities and accomplishments at the May convention

in Peoria,

which

two

Highland

dozen

was

WIT posse

Joseph.

attended

hair styles &amp; colors

Center

will

be

MERCURIC
FUNGICIDE
FOR TURF

ve 5-3555

by

glencoe

Mon. Appts.

Parkers.

Available

ca

lawn

use

ScuTL® is the Scotts mercuric
fungicide. Clean, dry, easy-to-use.
No mixing. No measuring. Checks
damaging fungus diseases like leaf
spot, brown patch. Apply regularly with the time-saving Scotts
Spreader.

5,000 sq ft- 3:25

INSURED BANK

RAVINIA

INTEREST

HARDWARE

ON
SAV
INGS
EFFECTIVE JULY

447

1, 1959

June 19 in City Hall, Highwood, at
7:30 p.m. to discuss and decide if |i
Evolution Ave. will remain a oneway street or if traffic will proceed
in two directions. Alderman
Leo|f
Mordini is chairman of street and
alley committee.

home

SCUTL® -2,500sqf-1.95

|é

held |

The professional
fungicide for

call

2

of the

scurt

Maternal grandparents
are Mr.
and Mrs. Chris Jorgensen, also of
the Northland
Ave.
address,
Paternal grandparents are the senior
Daniel J. Parrys of Libertyville.

p.m.

Highwood Residents Have
Public Hearing About
Evolution Ave. June 19
public

ef

east

will meet at 8:30 next Wednesday
at the Center. This is the regularly
scheduled monthly meeting.

A

oe

born May 12 at Highland Park Hos-

mer she will be at home, at 215
Lakeside Pl., to league members
and their guests from 1:15 to 3:15

parking
lot,
beginning
at
dusk.
Movies will be shown regularly on | =&amp;
Tuesdays, rather than on Wednes-|!
days as in previous years.
*

Gives

the League of Women Voters of
Highland
Park,
announces
that
each Wednesday during the sum-

Informal

Center
Carani,

Conception
School.
Runners-up
were Pamela Hargreaves and Mary
Nosek.
King
James
Hahn,
also
crowned by Skrinar, was attended
by Donald King and James Panther.
Highwood

Mrs.

dah

Daniel Parry's Widow

Weekly ‘At Homes’

Area high school students are invited to attend
an informal

ag

BANK

=

of

Member

Bank—Postoffice

Deposit

PARK

Store Hours Daily 8 a.m. to

Insurance Corp.

Bldg.

Williams

ID 2-438

HIGHLAND
Federal

Roger

1771

5:30 p.m. Wed. ‘til Noon

Second

St.

Open Sundays
9:00 A.M.-1:00 P.M.
|
- F

trims wasteful

overhang
— yet has
full 6-passenger room inside!

maneuvers and handles easier because

it’s smaller and weighs less!

weighs up to a '2-ton less than oversize cars—for

means greatly reduced insurance

extra gas miles!

—and

rates

savings in service and repairs!

Test-drive the LARK today at Edens Motors! We have the largest
selection of LARKS on the North Shore!
Also, we are an authorized

EDENS MOTORS, Inc.
Thursday,

June

11, 1959

Lancia

|

Your choice of models!
dealer!

On Skokie between Clavey and Deerfield Rds.

;

Telephone: IDlewood 3-2222

Page

37

�U. 5. CHOICE=—BLADE

Pot

Roast

Beef Chop Suey
Noodles

Scott Napkins
«

Bisquick

ae

‘s::
oe

“~

:

&gt;

er

7

|

Mixed

inc

CHUN

CHINA BEAUTY

CHOW MEIN

Bean Sprouts

|

:

é

CUT

Vegetabies

CHINA
sav

�Whipped Potatoes
Cat Food

White Bread

Dole Juice
an

3

Dressing

Peaches

10

ak
;

itor. 3Qe

9: 3 “2 $1.00
ITALIAN or RUSSIAN

cee ie

y

FRESH—SWEET

a

WISHBONE

Georgia

29:

Bil.

2

CHICKEN
NOODLE

FLAVORED

=

Peaches

ti

HE

Take this coupon to any Jewel Food Store

Daisy Cream Cheese

0 3
3x 19s
aa s

= WITH THIS

EE s
: Oc

15 Oz.
Jars
10% Oz.
Cans
—

HiT ticcu OT:

/

|

ee

Ou

MUSSELMAN'S

Campbell’s Soup

Tiral Of Ye Beato :

Oz.

46

-

Applesauce

=
= or

ae me eee
ea mic 56 ae caw

EWE

Cookies

Ripe Cantaloupe

98:

7 Oz.
Pkgs.

at:

' G. W. Sugar.

GRANULATED
REG. PRICE $1.03

FLAVORKIST CHOCOLATE
OR PECAN CHIP

3-Oz.

WITHOUT

Limit Rises ae

.&lt;

fi
| 0°

iieateteeennonnenets

CHUNK STYLE

Tomatoes

i.

Chicken of the Sea

Reg. Price 2/2%

Monte’

Catsup

Tuna

s

Reg. Price 2/39¢

_

JAYS

Potato Chips
LIQUID SHORTENING
Mazola Oil
MILK AMPLIFIER
Bosco
KRAFT
French Dressing
BROADCAST
Corned Beef Hash
LIBBY STRAINED
Baby Food
ORANGE PEKOE
Lipton’s

LIPTON’S

Tea Bags

Tea

a

63°
SOFT,

ABSORBENT

aoe

Modess

1202. 37¢

Liquid Chiffon

oe?

2

“19¢ OFF" LABEL
_

e

pO”

e

BROADCAST
ene
Chili Con Carne
24-HOUR PROTECTION

Tra 89¢
t

bing

16-Oz.

Can

Oe

39°

Dial Soa P

3

Res.
Bars

39¢

10 “3°

99¢

Dial Soap

Deen a

S9e

Pia

&amp;9&lt;

Dog

2.

2ee

5.

69s

Dog

2

pron 49

eet.

:

24-HOUR PROTECTION
PERK

Food

JET SPRAY

hae Real
Vy PRICE LABEL
O’Cedar Polish
“30 OFF LABEL—
QUICK ELASTIC

Liquid

Starch

RICELAND

Long Grain

Rice

FROZEN PINEAPPLE-ORANGE

PERK HORSEMEAT
Food

CLEANSER
aa aval

Dole

Juice

2 Cane 33°

Visit Your Friendly Jewel Store at

0 69¢
ae

1826 N. Second, Highland Par
:
=

Quart
Bil.

25°

�“St. Paul’

Lutheran Church
~—

Deerfield

NORTH

SUBURBAN

NORTHBROOK
METHODIST
CHURCH
Meadowbrook Sehool
Rev. R. W. Thornburg, Minister
For information call Windsor 5-4351.
SUNDAY
11
a.m.
Church
School
and
Worship
Service. Nursery for pre-school children,

Deerfield Masonic Temple
Rev. Howard Hermansen, Pastor
711 Waukegan Road
5 a.m.

gig

Bible

School.

Bible study

FIRST

and

B’NAI TORAH
Lincoln School
Highland Park
Sholom Singer, Rabbi
Joseph Burns, Cantor
information call WIndsor 5-2243.

prayer.

PRESBYTERIAN

CHURCH

824 Waukegan Road
Phone Windsor 5-0775
_ Rey. Paul J. Kelier, Ph.D., Minister
DAY, June 14
30 a.m. Morning Worship.
a.m. Church school, Children’s Day,
for children 1, 2 and 3 years. Kinzarten for children 4 and 5, Classes for
other grades through high school.
30 a.m. Adult
Bible class under the
ership
of Elder
Richard
Thompson—
uxis
Room.

For

REDEEMER LUTHERAN CHURCH
1731 Deerfield Rd.
Rec. 1817 Green Bay Road
Highland Park, Ol.
SUNDAY
9 a.m. Sunday School and Bible classes.
10:15 a.m. Worship services.

11 a.m. Morning Worship.

11

a.m.
p.m.

Church
Church

school. Same as above.
school picnic at Jewett

' p.m, Tuxis meeting—Tuxis room.
p-m. Jr. High Westminster Felowship
ting—Lower west room.
DAY, June 15
5 p.m.
Meeting
of leaders
of Girl
lower west room.

p.m. Adult Bible class under the leaderof Elder C. BE. Piper—Room
DAY, June 16
5 p.m.
Girl
Scout
troop

YNESDAY, June 17
5 p.m.
Girl Scout
room,
p.m.

Chancel

ZION

8

choir

5.
11—lower

124—lower

rehearsal—Sanctu-

LUTHERAN

10
Deerfield
Rev. Paul V.,
Wayne
R.
Telephone
URSDAY, June

p.m.

troop

CHURCH

Road, Deerfield
Berggren, Pastor
Johnson, Intern
Windsor 5-2009
11

Women’s

Guild

meeting

in the

ch parlors. Mrs. Donald G. Kempf, 820
feverly Place, will be the guest speaker.
s. Kempf is the student judge of garden
and president of the Amateur Garden
ib Of Deerfield. She wil demonstrate how
display flowers most effectively, from

nee a.m.

Celebration

of Noty

Communion.

am.
Family
Worship
Service
with
lete Church School. Coffee Hour on
&gt; church lawn between the 9 and 10:45
-m. service, for those who have attended
he earlier services and for those who will
d the 10:45 service.
:45 a.m. Family Worship Service with
plete Church School. Nursery
care is

rovided
E.

during

this service

only

for

June 15

:45 a.m, Opening session of the Daily
cation Bible School.
p.m.
Softball games:
Freelancers and
ion Seniors
at Jewett
Park
West;

lehem

and

the

Zion

Juniors

at Jewett

East.
SDAY, June 16
8 p.m. Mary Circle at the home of Mrs.
ed J. Zelent, 940 Northwoods Drive.
p.m. Altar Guild Meeting at the home

Mrs.

Frank

Carlson,

565

Skokie

Ave.,

His
thland Park.
WE DNESDAY, June 17
id 130mia
Dorcas Circle at the home of
ore. genneereees
570
Skokie
Ave.,

: IRSDAY ‘June 18
8, p.m. Board of Deacons

Rey.

meeting.

:

Judson,

é
9:45 a.m. Sunday School.

ry

ng.

p.m, Young Peoples Fellowship. ProS are provided by the youths themVi .
at i Gospel Service.
DNESD
30 p.m. id-Week Prayer meeting and
y.

Choir

rehearsal.

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY
155 Deerfield Road
DAY—11 a.m. Services.

‘Children
oe

are

DAY

cared

for

SCHOOL—9:30

during

Church

a.m.

~ For pupils up to 20 years of age.
EDNESDAY EVENING MEETINGS —
p.m. Including testimonies of healing
ugh Christian Science.
ll are welcome to attend these services.
further information
call WlIndsor 5-

PUNDAY.

WBKB-TV

f 45 a.m.

June

14

“Proving

PROGRAM
Man’s

WI

5-1972.

GREGORY’S
EPISCOPAL
CHURCH
Wilmot and Deerfield Roads
The Rev. J. D. Parker, Rector
Rectory Telephone—WIndsor 5-1881
Church Telephone—Windsor
5-1678
SUNDAY
$ a.m. Holy Communion.
9:30 a.m. Holy Communion on first and
third Sundays.
9:30 a.m. Morning Prayer on second and
fourth Sundays.
:30 a.m. “Church
School
children
will
attend adult service. Nursery care provided
for pre-school children.
had rat gad
.m.
Choir practice.
TH
RSDAY
Afternoon, Girl Scouts.
Evening, Boy Scouts.
WASHBURN
CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH
Half Day
Lewis
Wakeland,
Pastor
Rev.
Route 22
SUNDAY
9:30 a.m. Church School.
9:30 a.m. Worship Service.
11 a.m. Worship Service.
A nursery is provided for small children.
Telephone WI 5-4179 for more information.
Deerfield
Bible Fellowship
1043 Wilmot Road
Every Sunday evening at 7 o’clock, the
Deerfield Bible Fellowship meets at 1043
Wilmot Rd. Public is invited. Bible messages
on current events along with Christian fellowship.
THE
BETHLEHEM
(Evangelical
United

CHURCH
Brethren)

Parsonage--WI 5-2221
SUNDAY,
June 14
Family Day
9:30 a.m. Service of Divine Worship in
Deerfield.
9:30 a.m. Sunday School Classes.
10:30
a.m.
Cars
leave
for
Barrington
Camp Grounds.
11:15 a.m. Service of Worship at Barrington Camp Grounds.
12-4 p.m. Dinner and social time in Barrington.
MONDAY, June 15
Naperville.
Annual
conference,
TUESDAY, June 16
Annual
conference,
Naperville.
WEDNESDAY,
June 17
Annual
conference,
Naperville.
7:45 p.m. Chancel choir rehearsal.
THURSDAY,
June 18
Naperville.
Annual
conference,

For
4-3060

ert Church Visitation Program
DAY
130 a.m. Sunday
School.
There
are
sses of Bible
study for all ages and
irsery care for babies.
10:45
a.m.
Morning
Worship
Service.
Nursery
facilities
are
provided
for
the

p.m,

Call

ST

Clerk.

COMMUNITY
BAPTIST CHURCH
1250 Waukegan Road
Rev. Robert Humrickhouse, Pastor
Offic e Telephone:
Windsor
5-0708
We Preach Christ
prvcities. Risen and Coming Again

0

Information

GRACE

a.m. hag gg movies
in Deer Path
pol Library in Lake Forest.
or information call Windsor 5-1774.

God-given

Abil-

Members June 7
There

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

THE HIGHLAND PARK
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
ID 2-1695
Dr. William Atkinson Young
Rev. J. A. Miller
isters
THURSDAY,
June 11
9:45
a.m.
Woman’s
Association
board
meeting.
FRIDAY, June 12
“High "Away, ” the spring conference retreat of the church’s high school youths,
at College Camp on Lake Geneva, at Williams Bay, Wis.
The
“High
Away’
will
extend through Sunday afternoon,
SUNDAY, June 14
10 a.m. Summer Worship, followed by a
fellowship hour on the church lawn, weather
permitting.
Toddler’s
group
and
church
school classes for children three years old
4 through 6th grade will meet also at at
a.m.
High School Youths returning today from
“High Away.”
THURSDAY, June 18
10:30 a.m. Woman’s Association’s spring
luncheon, Sewing and Hospital Dressings.
11 a.m. Bake Sale—Mrs. J. F. Laegeler’s
Group.
12 p.m. Luncheon—Mrs.
Lindell
Peterson’s Group.
Mrs. Kenneth McAfee, book
reviewer, will present the program.
ST. PAUL’S
UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST
(Evangelical &amp; Reformed Church)
Rey. Laslo L. Hunyady, B.D., Pastor
638 Waukegan Road
Windsor 5-3508
THURSDAY, June 11
1: 30 p.m. ‘Afternoon Circle of the Women’s Guild at the home of Mrs. Fred L.
Wolff, 918 Waukegan Rd., with Mrs. Mar-

were

58 new members

re-

ceived
in
the
Zion
Lutheran
Church on June 7 with the Rev.
Paul V. Berggren officiating.
The new Deerfield members are
Mr. and Mrs. Walker L. Alexander,
Mr. and Mrs. Richard C. Benson,
Miss
Karen
Carr,
Dr.
and
Mrs.

Olof
Egilsson,
Mrs.
Thelma
Ehrhardt, Mr. and Mrs. Granville
A. Erickson, Mr. and Mrs. Ronald
J.
Forslin,
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Eric
Graepp, Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Johnson, Mr. and Mrs. Edward G. Kaufhold,
Miss
Barbara
Keller,
Miss

Janet

Kmieciak,

William

Mr.
For

QUAKERS
SOCIETY OF FRIENDS

im Sylvia

NORTH SHORE
UNITARIAN CHURCH
er
R. Bletzer, -ernaeesl

chil-

n under three years of age, in the home
Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Forslin,. 829 Apple
y free ‘Lane.
Bus service is provided by the
lurch for this service only.

INDAY,

Receives 58 New

Ch i

J.

and

Mr.

Means,

Mrs.

and

Mrs.

William

Edward

Olson,

Pearson,

Conrad
Petzel,
Mrs.
Frances
D.
Rockey.
Also
from
Deerfield
are
Miss

Patricia

Ann

Schad,

Peter

Schlen-

ker, Mr. and Mrs. Percy M. Stelle,
Bruce Stocker, Ralph Stocker, Mrs.
Augusta
Verner,
Mr.
and
Mrs.

Scouller L. Weaver and son, Terry,
Mr. and Mrs. Norbert V. Wehde,
Mr.

and
From

Mrs.

Karl

Other

J. Windberg.

Communities

From Highland Park are Mr. and
Mrs. Raymond B. Chiappe, William
N. Hagler, Mr. and Mrs. Lee Hilfman,
Mr. and
Mrs.
Walter
H.
Klauke
Jr., Miss Frances Miller,
and Mrs. Elsa M. Tobiasson.
Others include Mrs. Leonard G.
Ficks of Lake Bluff, Mr. and Mrs.
Lee Arnold of Crystal Lake, Mrs.
Elizabeth Smith of Highwood, Mr.
and Mrs. Clarence Wakefield Jr. of
Northbrook, Miss Nancy Jane Wilson of Arlington Heights and Mrs.
Arthur Zrimsek of Prairie view.

Trinity Church Of Christ
Vacation School To Open
Trinity United

Church

of Christ

will open Vacation Church School,
Mrs. Norval Rather superintendent,
at 630 Waukegan Road, on Monday,
June 15, at 9:15 a.m. Children age
3 through 11 are eligible. There is
a registration fee.
Theme
will be
“God
and
His
World,” which will be studied for
three weeks on Mondays, Wednesdays, and Fridays from 9:15 to 11:30

a.m.
Trinity Church is the new name
for St. Paul’s Church and St. John’s
Church which have formed a mer-

ger.

Lutheran Vacation Bible
School Begins On Monday
Zion
Lutheran
Daily
Bible
School
begins
on

and

will

continue

26, Monday through
to 11:45 p.m.

Vacation
Monday

through

June

Friday,

9 a.m.

St. Paul’s Evangelical and Reformed Church has probably
confirmed its last class in this Deerfield Church as the merger
with St. John’s Church has changed the name to Trinity United
Church of Christ.

The class includes, front row, right to left, Fred Schroeder,
LaVerne Sticken and William Pottenger. Back row: Wayne Brandwein, Duane Harr, Gary Bena and the Rev. Laslo Hunyady.
Gary is president of the class which presented a silver communion

chalice to the church.

A

spring

planning

retreat

the

HOLY

CROSS CATHOLIC
CHURCH
North Waukegan Road
Rev. John O’Mara, Pastor
Rev. Edward Reilly, Assistant
Rectory, 724 Elder Lane
Windsor 5-0430
=
Masses: 7, 8, 9, 10, 11:15 and
12:1
Weekday Masses at 6:45 a.m. and 8:15 a.m.
First Friday of each month, Masses at
6:45 and 8:15 a.m.
Saturday: 4 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. Confessions.

The

designed

activities

for

of the Beth-

lehem Youth Fellowship for the
fall session and a look at the whole
year ahead, has been scheduled for
June 13 and 14 at the Barrington
Evangelical United Brethren Camp
Grounds.
Accompanying
the
group
of
young people will be the Rev. and

Mrs, Eugene Wykle, the Rev. Sheldon Trapp. director of youth work,
Mr. and Mrs. George Kassner and
Mr. and Mrs. J. R. Kenney. They
will
leave
Deerfield
Saturday

morning, and join their parents and
friends on Sunday when the Bethlehem
congregation
will
have
a

Family Day at Barrington also.
Committee assignments for this
retreat
are
as follows:
Glenda
Lockwood

licity;

and

Karen

Karen

Peters,

Larson,

club

pub-

presi-

dent
and
Mr.
Trapp,
program;
Melodee
Fremling,
reservations:
Lyn
Kenney,
transportation
and
Mrs.
Kassner
and
Mrs.
Kenney,
food.

Birth

(Continued

from

page

17)

4 in the High-

land Park Hospital

and has a broth-

er, William

22 months

Craig,

old.

The grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
Elmer Odem and Mr. and Mrs. A.
Van Hulzen, all of Oskaloosa, Iowa.
*

Mr.

and

*

*

Mrs.

Carlo

B.

Alonzi,

1311 Oxford Rd. announce the arrival of a daughter, May 31 in the
Highland

Park

has been

named

her

6.

sister

David,

and

5,

Hospital.

Susan

are,

Michael,

and

Janell,

3.

The

children’s grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Carlo P. Alonzi of 360 Deer*

*

Marshall

of

1044

Missionary

Baptist

Aides

Church

will be joining with other Baptist
Women
Missionary
Groups
at a
meeting on Thursday, today at 2

p.m. at the Belden

Avenue

Church

The

the

of Chicago.

meeting

is

to

Baptist

purpose

acquaint

of

the

varied missionary groups with the
Baptist General Hospital, former-

ly Roosevelt

Memorial

Hospital

Chicago, which was acquired

Chicago

Area

lar Baptist

Fellowship

Churches

of

by the

of Regu-

just

this

past

spring.
The afternoon will be
touring the hospital and
ning sessions suggesting

spent in
in planways in

which the missionary groups of
local churches may help with projects. Mrs. V. P. Jones, superintendent of the hospital will direct
the tour and lead the discussion

period.
Dinner

will

be

provided

at the

Belden Ave. Baptist Church in order that the women may enjoy fel-

lowship

and

a

in the evening

devotional

service

at 7:30 p.m,

have

been

serving the past two years as Acolytes at Bethlehem Church were rec-

ognized at the morning service of
worship and presented
with an
award, which was Sallman’s painting, “Christ Is My Co-Pilot.” Those
receiving the
Arthur, John

le,, Warren

awards were William
Carlson, Dale Dieter-

Fremling,

Jeffrey Kol-

lar,
John Larson, Steven Platt, David Pratt and George Schmid. The

Rev. Eugene M. Wykle officiated at
the

service.

derson

*

Wendy Jane,
Mrs. William

Greentree

Ave.,

of Highland

Park

and

Mr.

and Mrs. Kenneth Hunter of Deerfield are the grandparents.
*

A

May

field Rd.
A third daughter,
was born to Mr. and

Y.

infant

Marie,

brothers

and

The

O.

Sixth grade boys who

Mr. and Mrs. William Van Hulzen of 1354 Arbor Vitae Rd, became
parents of a daughter, Jayne Marie.

June

J.

of the Community

Acolytes Receive Awards
At Bethlehem Church

Announcements

She was born
tin Murphy as co-hostess.
SATURDAY, June 13
9 to 10:30 a.m. Junior Confirmation Class
final test.
SUNDAY, June 14
9:30 a.m.
Childrens’ Day Service.
Sacrament of Holy Baptism.
Open house for
the
Sunday
Church
School.
Registration
for Vacation Church School may be made
at $1.50 per person.
Refreshments served
in the felowship hall.
MONDAY,
June 15
9:15
to
11:30
a.m.
Vacation
Church
School.
Mrs.
Norval
Rather
is superintendent.
Registration is $1.50 per person.
WEDNESDAY, June 17
Vacation
Church
9745
00;
18630 + am:
School.
FRIDAY, June 19
Vacation
Church
918)
(O°.
11:30 ° am.
School.

Baptist Women Will
Visit New Hospital

Youth Fellowship
To Have Retreat
In Barrington

son,

*

Keith

*

Robert,

29 in the Highland

was

born

Park Hos-

pital, to Mr. and Mrs. John R. Meloney of 1110 Central Ave. They

have

a son

Christopher,

old. The maternal

21%

years

grandparents

are

May 31 in the Highland Park Hospital. Their
other daughters
are
Laurie
Ellen, 312, and Christine

Mr. and Mrs. A. L. Frick of Riverside.
Mrs.

The
paternal
grandmother,
Eunice
S. Meloney
is also

Lee, 114 years old. Mrs. Selma

from

Riverside.

An-

Thursday,

June

11,

1959

�Young People In
Schoo! And
(Continued
Frank

Service
from

Zellets

Constellation” and has also held
the office of vice president of the
Girls Athletic Association on the

of

page

814

college

18)

Spruce

*
St.,

was graduated from Elgin Academy
on Saturday. She will attend Western Colorado College at Gunnison,
Colo., in the fall
*

ok

*

Roberta Gougler, daughter of Mr,
and Mrs. Robert Gougler of 1009
Warrington
Rd.,
was
graduated
from Principia Upper (high) School
last Saturday. Mr. and Mrs. Gougler were in St. Louis last weekend

for the. commencement
which
began
Thursday
with the campus

were

exhibits

nomics

sing.

by the

departments,

and awards

Carole

the

*

Robert

Linden

*

Rothschild,
Ave.,

Thespian

daughter

Rothschilds
was

honored

dinner on May

of

of

Friday there

art and

eco-

at

supper

© TUCK

»

Asleep At Wheel
page

«

© WATERPROOFING

TT

Chimneys - Fireplaces

a

Repair &amp; Cleaning

gone.
A paper
delivery
man
in the
neighborhood,
Bob
Garling,
was
alerted to be watching for the car.
At 3:23 p.m., he spotted it at 1270
Linden Ave., police say, while delivering papers.
Only damage was approximately

the

trunk

lock;

in

Huber

and here's why

T]

LAKE MOTORS
is WORTH coming to
TYPEWRITERS

14)

treatment.
Samuel
Haber,
Skokie,
a fur
salesman for a wholesale furrier in
Chicago,
reported
his car stolen
from the parking lot behind a local
furrier on Central Ave.
Police said he was in the fur
shop approximately an hour; when
he returned to the lot his car was

to

!
r
a
c
r
u
o
y
YOU buy

mM

POINTING

tion.
Susan recently took part in
the
sophomore
production
‘“S.S.

$5

ADDING
|}SALES

645

-

MACHINES

RENTALS

CENTRAL

°

-

REPAIRS

ID 3-0230

1. You

may

new

of

Notice of Proposed Change in Schedule
Water Rates.
To Patrons of Countryside Water Com-

2. Complete
trained

modern

service facilities with factory

repair experts... plus convenient FREE

3. Large volume

enables

able deal—top

us to give you an unbeat-

trade-in, too!

4. Large selection of North Shore idea “Second Car”

to pick from.
INQUIRE

ABOUT

LAKE

MOTORS...

FREE

EXCLUSIVE
FACTORY WRITTEN
GUARANTEE
FOR THE LIFETIME
OF YOUR CAR
GOOD AT MIDAS MUFFLER
SHOPS FROM
COAST-TO-COAST

100%,
PARTS

HOURS:

35,000

MIDAS MUFFLER SHOP
1535 Belvidere, Waukegan
MAjestic 3-8395
Open Daily 8:30-6 p.m.
Friday—8:30 - 9 p.m.

Mile

&amp; LABOR

OPEN

Chassis

or 2-Yr.

GUARANTEE!

DAILY

..

Lubrication

during your ownership
of the

. Weekdays:

9-9,

Dodge
Plymouth

.
.

car.

Sat. 9-6,

Sun.

LAKE MOTORS

Imperial
DeSoto

;

Thursday, June 11, 1959

SHORE”

pick-up and delivery.

The
Countryside
Water
Company
of
Illinois herewith gives notice to the public
that it has filed with the Illinois Commerce
Commission a proposed change in its rates
for water service in the service area of
the
Company,
Glen-Brook
Countryside
Homes
Subdivision
and
contiguous
territories in Northfield Township, Cook County,
and Deerfield Township, Lake County, Illinois, and that said change involves a general rate increase for water service.
A copy of the proposed change in schedule may
be inspected by
any
interested
parties at the business office of the Company at 10 South La Salle Street, Chicago 3,
All parties interested in this matter may
obtain
information
with
respect
thereto
either directly from this Company
or by
addressing the Secretary of the Illinois Commerce Commission, Springfield, Illinois.
COUNTRYSIDE
WATER
COMPANY
OF ILLINOIS
By /s/ Edward Benjamin, Secretary.
6/11-18/59—169

¢ Plymouth
¢ Chrysler
¢ Imperial

35,000 Sq. Ft. of BRIGHT, COMFORTABLE and
CONVENIENT AUTOMOBILE DISPLAY AREA!

pany of Illinois:

Illinois.

under one roof!

¢ Rambler
¢ Dodge
- DeSoto

EMILY
SMITH
CUNNYNGHAM
Administrator
with
The
Will
Annexed

NOTICE

ALL SIX

“The LARGEST Auto Dealer on the NORTH

Adjudication
and
Cam
Day
Notice
NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
to all
persons that the first Monday of July, 1959,
is the claim date in the estate of STELLA
S. 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 9 A.M.

Cornell and Wolff, Attorneys
1866 Sheridan Road
|
Highland Park, Llinois
5/28 6/4-11/59—159

choose from

car makes

was

notified of the car’s recovery and
picked it up at police headquarters
Friday night.
exthought the thieves
Police
pected to find furs in the car, but
were disappointed.
Though Huber did not leave the
key in the ignition, police advise,
he did not turn it to “lock,” so that
it was possible to start the car with
a minimum of effort.

PUBLIC

SS

a

,
e
k
a
m
S
E
O
D
e.
r
t
i
o
e
h
c
w
,
n
s
e
o
(
r
a diffe

38,

nois State University at Normal.
The Thespian organization is a drama and speech club for students
with high averages who are majoring in speech.

ton, Ill. She joined her family in
St. Louis for her sister’s gradua-

from

m

26 at IIli-

Commence-

ment exercises were held Saturday
morning followed by a reception
for the graduates, parents, faculty
and staff.
Roberta has served this past year
as a member of the student council
and as vice president of the Girls
Athletic Association.
Susan Gougler, Roberta’s sister,
has just completed her sophomore
year at Principia College near Al-

(Continued

:

1319

program
evening

lawn

ceremony.

campus.

.

.
.

.

.
.

.
.

.
.

10-4

Chrysler
Rambler
ID 2-2500
Page 41

�Theatre

EEX XKRIAKKIKKKKKKKKKEKKKEEKEKKEKEEEER

-MUSIC
ee

Lake: Cook
Road het.
«Skokie. and
Edens
Highland
Park, ALP

Allan Jones

eee

Bert Wheeler
TENTHOUSE Theatre.
West Park Ave.
Skokie..&amp;) Green»
Highland
:Park,

bet.
Bay
-11l.

Laurence W. Scott, 1760 Dale
Ave., has been elected to the board
of

directors

of

Cunningham

Chicago

HARVEY

John

Invited

i]the

L. W. Scott

advertising

During

and

World

War

are

staff and

Associates

who

He

is

a

vestryman

a member
rence Hall.

Famous

of

the

(Continued

of

of

am,

and

lege

students

p.m,

Teens,

Package

We

Highland Park, Deerand Lake For-

|}

YEAR

a

second

on
and

in

learning

their

game,

class

for

others

to play

call

Delicious

NEMEROFF

Across from bank over 35 years

AROUND

Use

Register

Time

Now!

P ee

Classes Now Forming

pane

Plan!
Our

Hubbard Woods
Ice Skating Studio

was. Diamand Set, $158.00
|

Other Sets to $1500.00

THEATRE

col-

7

inter-

or

join

the

at

West Washington
Green Bay Rd. &amp;

per-

MA

classes.

“Y,’”

HIGHLAND PARK

WAUKEGAN.
SPEEDWAY

ID

3-9540

Adults

. 2-2400

St... between
Skokie Hwy.

- Free. Parking

$1.25°—

Children

AIR CONDITIONED

a
25c

For This

“

Matinee

— FREE

Showing—Open

Sun. &amp; Wed.

Sat.,

PARKING

Daily

Open

6 P.M.

1 p.m.

Thursday, June 11, Last Day “BLACK ORCHID”

Event

SPECTATOR

FRIDAY,

JUNE

12

First North

Shore

Showing

RACE

PARENTI

&amp; Lake-Cook

|. H.

and

12)

Thursdays

may

AS

TIME TRIALS est LS)
RACES ©... .s..25-8330

page

all

the Leading Liius
LOW AS $2.00 A WEEK

JEWELERS - OPTICIANS
Highland Park
Tel. IDlewood 2-0630

ICE SKATING
OPEN

Carry

| PAYMENTS

field-Bannockburn
est-Lake Bluff.

Silverware

and

Watches

area

915 Linden Ave.—Winnetka, III.
Call Miss Thomas—HI 6-4123

GARDENS

Out Orders Given

an

Law-

Road

Italian

Prompt

Thrill To

Pizza,

‘The Song of
HIAWATHA”’

Spaghetti, Ravioli and Salad.
Take

that includes

serves

Highland

board

from

To register,
2-0675.

for our

organization

board

he

Tennis Classes

ested

Hwy.

The

Serv-

past

STOCK CAR RACES.
SUNDAY NITE

Added

Skokie

Family
are

of

FINE DIAMONDS

members. Robert Goodman, assistant director of Family Service, will
give the service report.

an officer in the U.S. Navy.

fect

AL

members

copy
II,

Park Trinity Epsicopal Church

SKOKIE

to

Invited

guests

agency

ice

University, Scott has
on the faculty as a

in

Mrs.

will be hostesses

Staff

count
supervisor.
A graduate of

RESERVATIONS
BOTH
THEATRES
Mail: Box 277, Highland Pk.
Suburbs phone: ID 2-1160
ee
Chicago phone: RO 4-7579
Pk.,
Res. at. Bk. of Highland
Marshall Field &amp; Co. 3d. Fi.
ALL SEATS RESERVED
Sun.-Fri;, 3.50, 2.90, 2.40, 1.90
Sat. eves., 3.90, 3.40, :2.90, 2.40

Sheldon

and

at the home of Mrs. Douglas Boyd,
999 Wade St.

company

Northwestern
served there

Meyerhoff

the board of directors of Family
Service of Highland Park Monday,

in 1957 as senior
vice _ president
and
ac-

was

Arthur

office

of the

KK HRI
ERK

JUNE
19

Mrs.

and Walsh, Inc.
Scott joined the

writing.

OPENS

EEE

Elected To Board

lecturer

Joe E Brown

Family Service Staff
Guests Of Board Mon.

Laurence W. Scott

Attention.

Phone

VErnon

5-2346

Goods

(Beer - Wines - Liquors )

on marty Joon wen
BTARRING

E FUNICELLO” “TIM
TOMMY KIRK: + ANNETT

Bar open daily from 4:30 P.M. to 4 A.M.

CONSIDINE: “KEVIN so

Oistributed by BUENA VISTA
FILM DISTRIBUTION CO., tac.

OWALT DISNEY PRODUCTIONS

Kitchen open daily from 5 P.M. to 3:45 A.M.
Kitchen

Now

EDGEWATER
At the EDGEWATER

Open

BEACH
BEACH

HOTEL
it

7 Nights

Feature—Fri.,
Sat., Sun. &amp;

A Week!

NTA)

TO

:

OPENS
JUNE 22

STRASBERG

IN SHAW'S COMEDY
“Caesar and Cleopatra”

Longfellow’s Immortal Story
of the Redman...
Presented

@ JULY 6-19:

VAN
MO] y | =
BERGERAC
IN THE N.Y. HIT!

Groucho fA ARX
&gt; IN: THE

LAUGH

JACQUES

PARADE

“TIME FOR ELIZABETH"

@ JULY 20-AUG. 2

“Once More

MENASHA

@ AUG. 3-16

SKULNIK
IN THE

“The Law

NEW

and

With Feeling”

MAIL ORDERS NOW!

COMEDY

Mr. Simon"

PRIOR TO BROADWAY
@ AUG, 17-SEPT. 6

Prices: Sun. thru Thur. $2.50, 3.50
Fri. &amp; Sat. $2.95, 3.95
Sun. at 7:00, Mon. thru Fri. 8:30,

Sat. 7:00 and 10:00 p.m.

Call LO 1-6308 for information

EDGEWATER BEACH PLAYHOUSE— EDGEWATER BEACH HOTEL— CHICAGO 46, Ill.
Enclose self-addressed stamped env. with check or money order

THEATRE PARTY RATES and SEASON TICKETS available
DINNER

Page

42

— Plan o complete

evening

in the

Beautiful

Edgewoter

Beach

Hote!

for

your

Big Timber
Kwo-Ne-She

@ JUNE 22-JULY 5
DOROTHY

Enjoy a FREE

Pageant

After

e

CAST

®

AUTHENTIC

OF

100

pleasure

by

Dancers,
Dancers.

e

UNFORGETTABLE
LIGHTING EFFECTS

e

30th ANNUAL
PRESENTATION

Seats

FREE
Tickets

or

Chicken—Fried

BQ

addit’l.

PARKING!

at Pageant

Grounds

Drink!

Prime

Ribs of Beef ......-- $1.25

TBess

1.25

Steck

oi

1.50

errs gens situpanionsee Het

U.S. Choice Sirloin .......... 1.75

All Fish Dinners ............-- 1.25

Filet Mignon ...............--- 2.00

LUNCHEONS
ete

PHONE ORDER

Roast Beef Saw

75

Oat
Roast

75¢
75¢

LOGY
Pork

cui coi ec
...................-

Private

50c

....

DELIVERED

Prime Ribs of Beef ........ $1.25

Adults $1.25, Children 50c
Reserved

African Lobster Tail ........ $1.50

PERFORMERS
COSTUMING

Dinner

Choose your favorite
cocktail at Patterson’s.
It’s served free with
any dinner from 5 p.m.

JUNE 16, 17, 18, 19, 20
8:30 p. m. (CDT)

-

IN THE COMEDY HIT
“TALL STORY"
DIRECT FROM BROADWAY

Outdoor

Beneath the Stars at
Beautiful Camp Big Timber
5 miles northwest of Elgin. .
on Big Timber Road

CONRIED

ae

America’s

Greatest

HANS

Ni E

See

1500 ‘CARS

5 Sparkling PLAYS with NEW YORK CASTS—vune 22-sepr. 6
FRANCHOT

Thurs.—6:30, 8:25, 10:20
3:34, 5:38, 7:42, 9:46

ng

i

The THEATRE of STARS

Mon., Tue.,
Wed.—1:30,

PAT

Dining

VE

Room

FREE

5-1611

for Parties of 50

PATTERSON'S

STEAK 490 HOUSE

or write:

HIAWATHA
Production,

Inc.

810 East Chicago St., Elgin
Telephone SHerwood 2-$141

CUT RATE LIQUOR STORE
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK

INCLUDING

Edens, Skokie &amp; County Line Rd.

HOLIDAYS
VErnon 5-1611

— SUPPER

Thursday, June 11, 1959

�ara
ARE YS

ae oe
poe!

ae

Choice Tickets
“Music Man”
“South

Highwood’s
°

for:

“Garden District’

of Anne

Cubs

Frank“

&amp; Sox Games

White

are ALL Sports and
age Attractions

NORTH

morial
night,

HOTEL

8-8282
1:30—6 p.m.

DAvis
9—12:30;

Mon. thru Sat.

Sox, 9 to 6, and

Both

SERVICE
SHORE

games

were

Park,

where

the

Racine

pear

locally

dropping

light

encounter

played

a

for

a

Phil

7

Me-

will

o’clock

against

Grabar

at

Lake Forest, Iincls LF, 2106 or 4744

twi-

in

tagged by plenty of hitters, Grabar
managed to keep the visitors in
check, while his team-mates were
coming
through
with some
im-

gust.

an

RRA

POLICY

nine runs.

weekend, but exact dates and times
of the games were not available
by press time. The team will be one
of the eight or nine teams that will

GLENCOE

DEERPATHSS
THEATRE

Prep

LAST
Thu.,

THEATRE—GLENCOE
ID

2-0605

VErnon

FRI. thru THURS.

|

ONE

Open Daily 6:40 to 12 Midnight—Curtain at 7:00
Sunday Continuous 2 to 12 Midnight—Doors Open 1:40

June

FULL

Thriller

TIMES

“COUNT

Friday,
On

June

12 thru Thursday, June
— ONE WEEK —
Our Panoramic Wide Screen
Filmed

Dino

in

Technirama

“THE TEMPEST”

;
4e

in technicolor
Based on the novel by Alexander Pushkin
Dino DeLaurentiis gave us “War and Peace,”
“The Tempest” is in that grand scale and tradition.
starring—Van Heflin, Silvana Mangano, Viveca Lindinfors,
Oscar Homolka.
—

SCHEDULE

June

19—"RIO BRAVO”
26—"TOM THUMB”

July

3—"SOME

“ALIAS
HOT”

&amp;

FRIDAY,
M-G-M

OF

LIFE”
Gavin

“SOUTH

Diam.

Jackson

for

a

six

o’clock

twi-

reg 65c

50&lt;

KARNIVAL
June

school boys, q
members of —

HAMBURGER}
&amp; A SHAKE

19th
We

presents

Serve

at

GAME

PIZZA

too!

Muzik’s

ZESTO

and METROCOLOR

FRIDAY, June 26th
ANNIVERSARY SHOW!

_

Coming June 26

Barnitz

Sox—South

varsity team

ROAD”

MATING.
In CinemaScope

6

this past spring.

ROMANTIC;:RIOT!

THE

vs.

Highwood
lighter,

12th

John

HAPPY

KARTOON

June

the

HIGHWOOD
ID 2-9718
FOR CARRY-OUTS!

Co-starring FRED CLARK
in CinemaScope And METROCOLOR

Downing
IT

TONY

Game"

Exhibit In Our
Lobby by

JESSE

presents

PAUL DOUGLAS
“The Mating

—

JAMES”
LIKE

M-G-M

DEBBIE

REYNOLDS v RANDALL |

Weekdays—"’The Tempest” begins at 7:16 and 9:40
(Saturday Matinees are discontinued for the summer)
Saturday Eve., “’The Tempest” begins at 7:16 and 9:40
Sunday, “The Tempest” begins at 2:16 - 4:40 - 7:02 - 9:26

June

Turner,

“THE

3

high
were

CHILDREN’S MATINEE
Sat., June 13 — 2:00 P.M.
GENE
KELLY

haystack
!

June

posed of local
most of whom

Hurst’s

co-starring
Sandra Dee - Dan O’Herlihy
Susan Kohner - Robert Alda
with Juanita Moore - Mahalia

DeLaurentiis

.500
(Oe
000 4

The next home game will be
Tuesday with Glenview traveling to

UN-4-4902

JUNE

“IMITATION
Lana

1
1
2

Cubs

33
PARKING

aie CERTRAL:

18

Reliable Laundry Sox
1
Manilow Braves .........- 1
Clavey’s Yankees .......- 0

Games Scheduled
Saturday, 9:30 a.m.
Yankees vs. Braves—North Diam. —

biden
Fannie

10082

BLESSINGS”

ALN
FRIDAY,

Pet.

0

Cubs

Games Played
Cubs, 8; Braves 4
Sox 5; Yankees 4
Games Played
Braves 8; Yankees 1
Cubs: 6; Sox 4

June 11, 6:15-8:10-10:05
Air-Conditioned

12-18

Li

TONIGHT!

YOUR

5-0605

Ww
.......... 2

McCallum

Highwood PREP league baseball
team opened defense of the Northwest Suburban PREP league title,
by dropping a thrilling 1 to 0 setback to North Chicago on the winner’s diamond late Sunday evening.
The team,
sponsored
by Highwood’s Community Center, is com-

Highwood opens play in the Lake
County Little Major league this

ap-

Highwood

turned

twice weekly starting this weekend, continuing through late Au-

hits and

Old Elm Little League

compete in the 1959 County circuit.
Members will play twilight games

excellent pitching chore in hurling
for Highwood at Racine. Although

portant

tomorrow

Yankees

Closed Sundays || Maior little leaguers,
Young

Os.

°

5 to 0 shutout to Norwood Park of
Chicago

EVANSTON

TICKET

e

Highwood’s Little Major league
All Stars split a pair of exciting
games, defeating the Racine, Wis.,

Seas Adventures”

“Diary

Lil’ Majors Split A Pair Of Games

a

,

Only the Want Ads offer amazing
values and opportunities not avail-

"Fred MacMURRAY-Jean
HAGEN

PACIFIC”

able elsewhere.

Read

them

—

now!

5 &amp;

=

Make this a Fun-Filled Summer on Ice
= SZ
LEARN TO
ice
Th part
SKATE .

i

1.
Wd

from ToT to

Ro! ed a

iy a chass-lr Luce

a

the age and ability of every one

FREE DAILY
SSeS

ES

3

SS =

=|SS=

SS
SSS

SS

NOW!

:

ee
SS et
SSSSS
SS

a

ES

a

SS

lt
SS

SS

a

SS SS SSS
5
JS

SS

SSS

SS

SS

SS

SSS

5

5

=

PRACTICE!
— at NS— oe ee SSS
a

SS

5

SS

=

Day and Evening Classes begin June 15th
Basic
Advance - Figure and Dance Instruction.
Our Skate Shop is fully equipped for your skating needs.

:

Ice Time available for private parties, campus and church groups.
SS

Math

Thursday,

June

11, 1959

Woods
f

S958

S583

S

ICE SKATING

FSS

STUDIO

e

915

S

S

Linden Ave., Winnetka,

=
=&gt;
TSSS
SSS

Ill.

&gt;
SS
SS

=
SS

=FS

+

Hillcrest 6-4116

pcg

Gohan

Page 43

�Sunset Valley Tee

nd Frosh - Soph Back On Course
%

Golfers Beat PGA
Scores In Match

&amp;

Three Sunset Valley
members
bettered the
posted

Saturday

wald,

PGA

by

Tee Club
67 score

Dow

Finster-

in

a match

champion,

with
Tommy
Bolt,
USGA
open
champion,
The
two
champions

played at Happy Hollow Country
Club in Omaha, Neb., while golfers,
playing at their own country clubs
all over the United States attempted to better the champions’ scores.

The three from here were Wally
Glader, who blitzed his way to a
sub-par 68 which, combined with
his five-stroke
handicap,
brought

him

in

with

a 63;

Morton Grove
Art Melnikoff
The latter two
Tee members.

Jack

Shaul

of

with a 70-6-64 and
of Chicago, 70-5-65.
are longtime Sunset

Seventy-two

men

and

23

women

paid a small fee each to compete.
Proceeds go to PGA charities. On
the

distaff

surpassed

putt from Tony Lamanna.

Highland Park High School’s varsity linksmen celebrate their
recent victory (311 first day, 326 the second) in the state tourna-

ment

by going

right back out on the golf course.

Frosh

From The Weekend
Highland Park High School dads
and their sons attending the annual spring sports award dinner at
the school Friday night (sponsored
this year by the Dads Club) heard
Robert
Kendig,
athletic
director,
announce
that the school’s swim

team rated second place this year,
instead of Suburban League third.
Seems that New Trier used an
ineligible man in three of the meets
and had to forfeit them.
Yacht Club Runs A Race
Good
weather
gave
the North
Shore Yacht Club a chance to run
off its third race of the Memorial
Day Regatta at 2 p.m. Sunday. Dr.
Harold
Gerstein
came
in
first,
Larry Cable, second, and Robert
Knight, third. This makes Cable the
winner
of
the
three-race
event,
Peter Weinert, second, and Robert

Knight,

third.

Go-Kart racer Herb Strange spun
out of the B class race at Santa Fe
Park
in Western
Springs
Friday
night when the Kart behind him
struck
his and
broke
the brake
shaft.
A third kart leaped
over
the
retaining wall and landed in a puddle. Outside of bruises, no one was
hurt. But Strange was out of the
race, which went to Jeff Trimble of
Palatine.
Highland
Park’s
Nick
Phelps
drove
a
Go-Kart
belonging
to
Strange
into first place for the

Class A race the same night.
Jack Shaal of Highwood won the
B Class
race
the next
night
at
O’Hare stadium. Strange took the

Class A race. From

now on O’Hare

‘will feature Kart races on Sundays,
instead of Saturdays.
Pony Grads Go Into Action
The Highland Park Pony Grads
swamped the opposition, Prospect
Heights, Sunday at Sunset Park, 140. Jack Secrest pitched a two-hit

shutout. Mickey Panther hit
run and a triple.

3h
Page

44

a home

BANK
NTEREST

Junior Baseball
Coach Fred Cronkhite announced
today that more than 275 boys have
registered to play on junior baseball leagues sponsored by the Highland Park Recreation Department.
They will be assigned to teams and

against players

of similar

ability.

{

Minors for boys 8, 9 and 10 years
of age will play Monday, Wednesday and Friday mornings beginning
Monday
at Lincoln
Park,
West
Ridge School and Sunset Park.

Majors,

for

boys

10,

11

and

piling

up

a

six-win,

one-loss

total

championships, at a barbecue Friday

High Scores Mark
16-Inch Games

For Rec Center's

matched

Not pictured is Joel Hirsch, medalist.

were

with district and suburban
night at Sunset Valley.

275 Boys Sign Up

In Review

meantime,

in the league. Left to right above are Barry Grossman, Steve
Gross, Rick Asher, Coach Ralph Cianchetti, George Cimbalo, awaiting drive by Joe Hurst. Varsity team celebrated state victory, along

Players say

pros at Sunset Valley, who have been showing them fine points of
the game since they were youngsters of 10 or 11, and excellent
coaching by Ted Repsholdt gave them the victory. Above, Marty
Gmiener, Steve Oggel and John Levinson wait for the perfect

Sports

soph,

their

first

defeat

of

the

year

143.

A home run with bases filled, by
Antone Harris, proved to be the

The
Highland
Park
Recreation
Department’s 16 in. softball league
got underway last week with some
high
scoring
games,
Last
year’s
champions, McDonald Builders, defeated the Newcomers 35-15. Hard
hitting
Bruno
Somenzi
and
Bill
Laing led the victors with 5 hits
apiece, including a home run each.
Jim
Winkelman
hit safely
three
times for the losing team.
The 400 Club started off fast by
scoring 14 runs in the first three
innings to give Strike ’N’ Spare

winning
margin.
Paul Daube hit
safely three times for the Spare
team. In a game that saw 57 runs
and 70 hits, B’nai Torah downed

Santi’s,

30-27.

Jim

Issacson

led all

hitters with 6 hits, one a home run.
Dick Lewis pounded out 5 safeties.
Mary Jane Lanes won by forfeit
over the Jaycees.
First Round
McDonald Builders .......... 1
rAGTI at el 65 ¢ ebaae Rabe seat gee a ea
is
Mary Jane Lanes .............. 1

Lost
0
0
0

Winners
play July

must

sign

next

up

6 in the

tourney

are

at River

Forest Tennis Club. Results there
will determine who will enter the
national tourney.

will receive

from the PGA.
Sunset Valley

Tee

medals

Club

is

open

to all male members of Sunset Valley Golf Course. Once a month, the
club sponsors a mixed foursome
event.

Applications

Club
pro

are

obtainable

for

the

at the

Tee

club’s

shop.

Bria POran ts ou.
1
0
Strike ’N’ Spare .............. 1
1
po Chg GRRRARMEE a RE ORO eee: aa
0
1
Jaycees
0
1
ING@WROIMERS wis-scccscsdeoncclacs. 0
2
Games Scheduled Tonight
At West Ridge
7 p.m. 400 Club vs. McDonalds.
At Sunset Park
7 p.m.—Newcomers vs, Jaycees.

8:30—Mary

Jane Lanes vs. B’nai

Torah.

Jenny Dubach, Donna Gherarand Anne
Seyfarth.
Jenny
the fifth award, earning the

Micki Gamm,

Lolly Harmon,

Caro

Halaine Maccabee, Sharon Maneck
Sherry Miller, Susan
Mordini

for

to

117-53-64.

Herman,
Susan
Johnson,
Sand
Julian, Gayle Kalseim, Karen Kin
ney, Nancy Leonard, Janet Logan

Thursday,

runners-up

with

All winners

most participation points in HGA
during her four years.
HGA members at Highland Park
High School announced new offi
cers at their annual Playday. Jud
Walker
is social chairman,
Bett
Ann Seltzer, secretary, Judy Gans,
treasurer and Aviva Holland, pub
licity chairman.
New board members
are Rick;
Baron, Pat Bernard, Penny Bern
ing, Ann
Davidson,
Barb
Feder

at the high school from Jean Goldberg, newly elected president.
Far left is Anne Seyfarth, this year’s president. Behind Jean is

Aimee
Morner, Lynn
Moses, Jil
Nathanson, Gail Platt, Jane Rade
macher,
Marie
Schilling, Pats
Schloss,
Sandy
Schreyer,
Jane
Smith, Anne Tatar, Katie Thomas

Suellen Bilow, who replaces her as vice president.

Diane

BS:

and

champs

low,
dini
took

George O’Connell, tennis pro at
Exmoor, will schedule matches to
be played at Exmoor, Northmoor,
Knollwood
in
Lake
Forest
and
Lakeshore Clubs. He has announced
by

tied her at 60 with Mrs. Melnikoff.
Murial
Glickauf
also
beat
the

scholarships and awards, given out
after
softball,
swimming,
tennis
and trampolining.
Scholarships went to Nancy Bi-

Qualifying rounds for the North
Shore Tennis Center Tournament
will begin June 22 at Exmoor Country Club.
The
qualifying
tournament, for juniors 18 and under, and
for boys and girls 15 and under, is
the largest of one of 14 being held
in Metropolitan Chicagoland.

all players

efforts,

scoring
102-42-60.
Beverly
Lang
took low net of 97. Her 37 strokes

Playday at Highland Park High
School means
spring initiation,

at the HighCenter.

Juniors, Younger
Players Sign Up
For Exmoor Tourney

the
event
June 18.

Melnikoff

8:30—Santi’s vs. Strike ’N’ Spare.
Won

League tee-shirts can be picked up

that

Julia

husband’s

Scholarships, Awards Given At Playday

12

years old, will play at 10:30 o’clock
Monday,
Wednesday
and
Friday
mornings
in Sunset
Park.
Little
by registered players
land Park Recreation

side,

her

Marlene

Duman,

far

BANK?
1771 Second St.

right,

received

HGA

award

at Playday

“The Service Bank Of Highland Park”

HIGHLAND
BANK—POST

Member

Federal

OFFICE

Deposit

BLDG.

Insurance

Corporation

Winters

and Donna

Zeff.

PARK
IDlewood 2-7800

Thursday, June 11, 1959

�HPHS Graduate
To Work In Dallas

NIGHT FLARES
HARMLESS

Richard Purvin Bernstein, son
of Mr. and Mrs. Seymour Bernstein
of 360 Hazel
Ave., who grad-

A
uled

uates from High-

land

Park

High

School

will

today,

work

summer

this

Mrs. H. A, Lansman,
night flight
for Monday

has been schedevening at Fort

that

a second

either a helicopter or a fixed wing
craft. It will take place on subsequent nights until tests are accom-

Park

High

cludes the event as scheduled.
Necessary precautions
insure
that the flare and any attachment

Bernstein,

or-

Service

Park,

Na
in

Field

program

land

plished if unfavorable weather pre-

Bank
Tex.

the summer

Sheridan to test a new type flare.
The flare will be dropped from

the

for

Republic
tional
Dallas,

Miss Joslyn Green Leaves
For Norway On June 18

Green,

has

president of the
first Bridge Club in Highland Park

FREE

High School, was manager of the
varsity
baseball
team
for
three
years, has a varsity letter for wrestling and was head of the snack
bar. He is in the upper two’ per cent
of his class scholastically.
G. F. Baker Scholar
Selected as one of ten exemplary
high
school
seniors
in
United
States, Bernstein was named one
of the ten George F. Baker Scholars
at Trinity
College
in
Hartford,
Conn.
According
to
Dr.
Albert
C.
“These
Jacobs, Trinity president,
young men were
outstanding
chosen from a group of 254 appliof the
of the aims
One
cants.”
in
founded
program
scholarship
1958, is to encourage
September,
outstanding young men to consider
the possibilities of a career in the

word

student

School,
been

of

an opportunity to become

of

High-

Tuesday

and

Miss

Joslyn
by

Mrs.

or

drop

water

mechanisms

within

trolled firing

Fort

fall

into

Sheridan

the

C.

Green,

827

liner

to

Norway.

Miss Kay Herzog, the other high
school
student
selected
by the

the

con-

service,
months

area.

FOR

Joseph

Pleasant Ave., is busy packing today since she will leave June 18
from New York City to travel by

of. Highland

accepted

acquaint-

ed with the country and its people.
Miss Green, the daughter of Mr.

ocean

ASK

ganizer and first

chairman

of American

Committee

received

service
to
spend
the
summer
month in Norway. While there, she
will live with a family and have

will
spend
in Greece.

the

summer

A

DEMONSTRATION

without

obligation

on a
With Lectra Fuel Igniters
the
big,
fat
flame-spark
does not
jump an air gap!
Instead,
it
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supported. Think of a
man jumping a stream.
As he grows
older, or the stream grows wider, he
falls in.
But—lay
a plank across the
stream, and he crosses easily.
Lectra Fuel Igniters render old-fashioned
sparkplugs as obsolete as a Model T.
Instead of a small, spindly spark that
finds it harder and harder to ignite the
gas that gives power to your engine—
through this revolutionary new principle
Lectra’s tremendous
flame-spark burns
MORE of the gas, and results in better
performance than you have ever experienced before!
The
same
basic
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are used
in
making
Lectra
Fuel
Igniters
for all
makes of passenger cars and trucks, including foreign cars and small motors.
Engineers estimate a saving of from 6c
to 12c per gallon using regular gasoline,
Lectra Fuel Igniters are sold under an
ironclad guarantee and are insured by
a nationally known insurance company
to last for the life of an engine, without
tuning or re-setting, to increase gas mileage, horsepower and RPMs, and to provide quicker starting and faster acceleration. They maintain constant efficiency
and actually improve with use.
They
are already saving more than a quarter
of a million motorists on the average of
$100. every 10,000 miles they drive,
Prices:
Set of 6—$12.60.
Set of 8—
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postage prepaid. Payment to accompany
orders unless rated in Dun’s. When ordering please state make of car or truck
and year built.

field of business.
The Baker Trust was established
by the late George F. Baker at;
former vice president of the First
National Bank of New York.
the
12 years
the past
During
Baker Trust has provided funds to
proscholarship
general
support
grams at several liberal arts colleges throughout the nation. The
grant
to
Trinity
represents
the
first time that the funds will be
used to stimulate interest in the

business field.
Bernstein
economics.

plans

to

in

major

Colleae Graduates
(Continued

6)

page

from

St.
2023
D. Proctor,
Mary
Mrs.
Johns Ave.,—Bachelor of Arts in
of HighA graduate
philosophy.
land Park High School, he served
in the Air Force from 1950-54.
old
796
Cassidy,
Geneva
Mrs.
Trail Rd., Bachelor of Arts in history. She is a teacher at the Wayne

Thomas-Oak

MOTALOY

elementary

Terrace

school.
Miss Karen Sue Brehmer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Irving H. BrehAve.,—
Greenwood
2882
mer,

Bachelor

in _ sociology.

Arts

of

Served as chairman of the Student
Film Committee and was a member
of Tusitala, student literary magazine. Was a 1955 graduate of High-

Ordinary

She

English.

in

University

Altholz,
of Arts

graduate

a

is

messy

clippings. New

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Tore cuts evenly, cleans

up other clippings

in the
'X’ test

Houghtaling,
Eve
Nancy
Miss
daughter of Col. and Mrs. J. V.
Houghtaling, 1787 Clifton Ave.,—

The revolutionary new Whirlwind with Wind-Tunnel mowing will out-cut
any other rotary on the market, as proved by the “X” test comparison.

Bachelor

crisp cut. And the Whirlwind is a three-season workhorse, useful for spring
and fall clean-up.

arts

of

in

English.

Expanding wind-tunnel creates vacuum to freeze grass upright for sharp,

She

was editor of the Tusitala and received the McPherson prize for exGraduated
English.
in
cellence
from Highland Park High School
in 1955.
of

Miss
Mr.

Sarah Frelinger, daughter
and Mrs. C. F. Frelinger,

A_

1955

graduate of Highland Park
School, she transferred from

High
Mon-

Junior

1958

ticello

College

Jerome

C.

in

Prom.

son

and Mrs. Elmer Johnson,
Pl., Highwood. A graduate

land

Park

High

School,

ceived a Bachelor of
ness administration.
Thursday,

June

11,

Arts
1959

of

he

rebusi-

© Anti-scalp dish

@ Instant height of cut change
O55

641

Deerfield Rd., Deerfield

'

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with bag, chute
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DEERFIELD

Mr.

57 Elm
of Highin

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® Price includes all equipment

(19” Whirlwind—only $9.00 down)

1956.

Johnson,

® Ends clumping completely
® Bags clippings, leaves

*8

160 Lincolnwood Rd.,—Bachelor of
A member of Chi
Arts in speech.
Omega sorority, she was queen of
the

as well.

Wind-Tunnel Whirlwind out mows them all!

of

School.

High

of Chicago

clump, skip—leave

Proved

land Park High School.
Schwartz
Roxann
Mrs.
1863 Dale Ave.,—Bachelor

mowers

|

ctor’ stor
LAWN

=

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The action in the combustion chamber is
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Prices: No. 1 for passenger cars $15.00.
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large trucks (two tanks) $24.00. Delivered postage prepaid. Terms: Payment
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orders unless rated by
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Lectra Fuel Igniters and Motaloy are
two of the greatest products in the automotive world to-day. Let no uninformed
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1

inch

SALE
(Improved)
PARK)

REAL

ESTATE

Park.

3 bedrooms,

Deerfield
°
®

e
iy
| |

The

Lake

Forester

Sheridan

Tower

Published Every Other Friday
4 4

Tuesday, 4:30

P.M.

Week’s Issue.
CANCELLATION DEADLINE
12 NOON, TUESDAY

Ve

VV

VV

VV

Me

Mn

A

Mn

A, Ml, Ml

An

Mh

An

le A

a
Mr,
Ml
Mi Me
Se Li

Li

Ml

RANCH—PRICE
REDUCED —
bedrms.-professional
landscaping.
Call Mrs. Parkinson-WI 5-0248.

REL
i.

CHARMER
THAT DELIGHTS
|
OUS PEOPLE. 2 bedrms. plus

DEN.

Pine

kitchen.

2 full

_

|

Delightful

fireplce.

Bsmt.

KNOCKOUT

liv.

AIR

SPLIT

rm.

FASTIDIPANELED

baths,

with

Set

bay,

CONDIT.

LEVEL

panld.

$24,750.

where

quality

in top condition. $69,500.

&amp;

REALTORS
OPEN SUNDAY

Ma

._ Glencoe

144

Theatre

OAK

Bldg.

VErnon

5-0236

- $35,000,
8 room
stucco built by lumber‘man.
2 car sealed garage. Children’s play
:
house. Archery range. New heating equipment, Land enough for a second dwelling.
fs
On
one
of Highland
Park’s
two
approaches
to the lake. Sidney D. Morris,
i’
D 2-0219.

Page

46

FOREST
BLUFF

HANDSOME ENGLISH BRICK
on ravine half acre 8 custom
$32,500. Call Mr. Hastings.

Residence
built rms.

CUSTOM-BUILT BRICK RANCH—3
bedrm.,-2.
fireplaces-2
C.
T.
baths-$43,500.
Open
Sunday,
2 to 5. 290 Hilldale. Mr.
Strey.
rm.-rolling
Hastings.

CAPE
COD
in KNOLLWOOD
AREA—3
bedrms.-modern kitchen-fruit trees. $21,900.
Call Mr. Hastings.

HOMEFINDERS,
111

Green

Bay

Rd.,

and

Wilmette

Realtors
ALpine

Braeside.

3

Close

to

a

A

redwood
Park

Ee $32,500

split-level

Highlands.

4

in
bed-

rooms, 2 baths. Beau. grounds

....

Brick and redwood ranch. 3 bedrooms, 114 baths. Exceptional family room. Att. garage. ........ $35,500
Brick

Colonial

bedrooms,
Unusually
Cape

in beau.

11%

baths,

Braeside.

sernd.

fine grounds

Cod

Colonial.

3

porch.

........ $36,500

Best

E.

loca-

tion. 4 bedrooms, 214 baths. ........
Le Pee! SiN a Sol ale eRe AN ENE $39,500
Early American in E. central location. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. Family

te
sc

Stunning modern
rooms,
3 baths.

TOOMm,’

Brana.

California

$45,000

tri-level.
Unusual

NOW:

5 bedfamily

2..:..466684. $52,500

Colonial

in

finest

E.

lo-

cation.
5 bedrooms,
314 _ baths.
Stunning - kitchen 22:02)... $55,000
Magnificent Georgian
Colonial in
finest Ravinia location.
5 master

bedrooms, 312 baths. Finest details
MTEL
ON Gane
a gt
$140,000

H. and R. Anspach
REALTORS
463

Central

Ave.

ID

ON

LAKE

over

2 acres

On

ground

with

2-1212

MICHIGAN

more

of beau.

than

landsc.

300

ft. of

beach, this 10 year white colonial
home features exquisite views and
lge. luxurious rooms.
Each room
has a view of the lake—the
entrance hall with curving staircase;
spacious liv. rm. with frpl., porch,
sunny din. rm., lge. mod. kitch. and
bkfst. rm. and paneled library with
full bath.
The 2nd floor has 18x28 master
bdrm.
with
dress. rm.
and
tiled

bath; 2 add’l large bdrms. and tiled
bath, plus porch usable as 4th
bdrm.
A beautiful home
usual appointments.

PAUL
1925

with

many

PHELPS,

Sheridan

Rd.

un-

INC.
ID

1-1111

BLOCK

TO

2-45380

LAKE

Highland Park. 4 yr. old stone and clapboard Colonial,
deep wooded
lot. 4 spacious
bedrooms,
2
ceramic
tiled
baths.
Living room with bay window, paneled family room,
cabinet kitchen
with
breakfast
space.
Pine
recreation
room,
2 powder
rooms.
All
bleached
woodwork,
quality
built, air-conditioned. In the 50’s. Call Mrs.
Coulter,

BAUMANN-COOK,
551

Lincoln

Winnetka

Realtors
Hillcrest

(Improved)
SALE
PARK)

6-5000

REAL

ON

NEW
LISTING: Three bedroom two bath
brick and stone ranch on Sanders Rd. This
ranch built. on one acre in 1956 has mod.
kit. with eating area and living rm. with
fireplace
and
thermopane
windows
overlooking large rear yd. Built-in stone BBQ
off rear patio. Baseboard plus radiant gas
heat. Large oversized 2 car garage. $28,500

HIGHLAND

PARK

JUST
LISTED.
This
modernized older: home
ciousness throughout.
modern deluxe kitchen,
new gas heat. An easy

DON’T

4

723

St.

Johns

Ave.

GOELZER

ID

2-1484

and WILDE

NORTHFIELD—this
custom
built
brick
ranch, on a beautiful acre bordering the
Forest Preserves, has quality construction
and excellent detail. The 15x22 living room
has a stone fireplace wall and an adjoining
study. There
is a separate dining
room,
powder room, screened porch, 3 bedrooms
and 2 tile baths. One of the outstanding
features is the wonderful
family
kitchen
with every modern convenience plus a bar,
TV and a barbecue fireplace. It is heated
by gas and the 2 car garage is attached.
HIGHLAND
PARK —this
white
frame
ranch with 4 bedrooms, 3 baths and a paneled family room is the perfect house for
the growing family. There is a fireplace in
the combination living-dining room, a dishwasher in the modern kitchen and a pleasant screened porch. The lot is 94x129 and
the price of $34,500 inchides the carpeting.
NORTHFIELD—one
of the most fabulous
ranch houses in this area is now offered
for sale. It is the architect’s own home and
includes such features as a 17x33
living
room with fireplace wal of stone; a combination kitchen, breakfast room and famliy
room with built in bar,
and a barbecuing fireplace; a swimming pool of 825
square feet and a completely fenced back
yard. There are 2 bedrooms, a paneled den
or guest room and 244 baths plus an area
of 800 square feet for conversion to buyer’s
needs. It was built in 1955 with the finest
possible construction and is on a beautifuly
landscaped lot of 11/3 acres.

GOELZER

and WILDE
Realtors

790

Elm

Street

FIRST
Attractive

HI

6-5544

TIME OFFERED
brick
&amp;
clapboard

home in EAST Highland Park. Separate
living
and
dining
rooms;
screened porch overlooking a wooded park;
3 bdrms.
plus a small
room usable as nursery or dressing
room,
1%
baths;
basement,
play
area with fireplace.
Att. garage.
Early occupancy. Well priced for

quick sale at $28,500.
NINE

YEARS

NEW

Excellently built 6 room Lannon
Stone
home
on beautifully landscaped corner lot. Paneled
DEN,
screened breezeway,
2 large bedrooms; att. garage, full basement.
Owner has moved. A good buy at
newly reduced price. $29,500.

L. Ringer
Realty

457 Central

Co.

Realtors

ID 2-6600,

TAKE

spacious,
charming,
has quality and grabedrms.,. 3. baths,
big screened porch,
walk to the beach.
$42,500

OUR

WORD

BEDRMS.—ONLY $17,800
IN EAST RAVINIA

Earhart &amp; Co.
REALTORS
1899

Sheridan

Dorsey Husenetter
REALTORS

5

Large living room, separate dining room,
2 bedrms. on 1st and 2 on 2nd; full basement, new gas furnace and water heater.
2 blks. to shops and schools. House perfectly maintained.

$27,500

NORTH
HIGHLAND
PARK:
Would you
like a two bedroom ranch (built in 1956) on
a huge wooded lot for only ............ $21,000

SALE
(improved)
PARK)

Come see for yourself! You will agree this
is the BUY of the season. Owner has gone
to California and is anxious to have his
family join him. Located
on a_ beautiful,
woodsy street near excellent schools
and
transportation, This 4 bedrm.,
1%
bath,
brick
Colonial,
separate
dining room,
screened porch, full, dry basement with rec.
space is in APPLE PIE ORDER;
is now
$30,500

JUST REDUCED.
In Ravinia. Walking to
transportation, schools and shopping. New
3 bedroom, 2 bath split level. Paneled family room, Now. only): sha ass $25,500

WOODRIDGE:
Two bedroom brick ranch
on
large
gorgeous
heavily
wooded
landscaped lot. Att. gar., basement. Gas heat.

ESTATE
FOR
(HIG HLAND

SUPERB % ACRE PROPERTY
RAVINE DRIVE

DEERFIELD
NEW
LISTING:
Two bedroom
ranch on
nicely wooded 70x200 lot, Beautiful Geneva
silent cabinet
kitchen
with
Formica
and
stainless steel tops finished in 1957. Kit.
has CT wall, eating area, built-in clock, exhaust fan and %”’ vinyl tiled floor. The 14x
24’ living rm. has a fireplace with marble
mantle.
Beautiful
CT
bath.
Large
2 car
att. garage. Gas heat and taxes only $217.00.
The price
$20,900

BRAESIDE:
Three
bedroom
split
level.
Mod. kit. Family rm. with fireplace. Basement play area. Gas heat. ................ $27,900

wooded

LUXURY
SPLIT-LEVEL—9 conversational
rms. lavishly built. $66,000. Call Mrs. Nilsson.

2-5

KNOLL

LAKE
LAKE

RUSTIC BI-LEVEL—7
acre. $42,000. Call Mr.

J-H Kahn

a?
a

_bedrms.Call Mr.

well

_ speaks.
Beautiful WHITE
OAK
liv. rm.,
- separate dining rm. ST. CHARLES KITCH_ EN,
brkfst. rm., RED
OAK
DEN
plus
_
game rm. 4 bedrms.,
3 baths.
Luxurious

home

rms.-3
$22,900.

RANCH
ON ESTATE—Elegant but rustic
residence for sporty family. $47,500. Call
Mr. Degen-WI 5-1784 or WI 5-5550.

| back
from the street. See at $24,500.
_ SHORT
WALK
TO
SCHL.,
TRAIN
and
‘Shops. Only 2 steps up to 2 generous bed-

rms.

6

NEW
DUTCH
COLONIAL—4
wooded
acre-fam.
rm.
$44,500.
Hastings.

ESTATE FOR SALE cmproved)
(HIGHLAND PARK)

"Spa

baths-

AIR
CONDITIONED
LANNONSTONE
RANCH — Marble
fireplace-3
bedrms.-2
baths. $47,500. Call Mr. Degen-WI 5-1784
or WI 5-5550.

HIGHLAND PARK
608 Laurel
DEERFIELD
699 Waukegan Rd.
LAKE FOREST
287 Deerpath

i.
e
tn
ite A
an

|

A

bedrms.-2%
rm. $35,000.

THE
CONTEMPORARY
HOME—7
rm.
ranch with fam. rm. OPEN
DAILY-2400
Forest Glen Trail. Mr. Degen.

Ln

Ale dle de

Brick

E.

baths.

baths-

7 ROOM
RANCH—Fireplace,
pan.
fam.
rm., full basement. $39,200. Call Mr. DegenWI 5-1784 or WI 5-5550.
BRICK TRI-LEVEL—4
new carpeting-pan. rec.

in

1%
te

ICC HOR

8 ROOM
TRI-LEVEL—5
bedrms.-3
porch. $45,500. Call Mr. Hastings.

A

v Vurvvvvyv

Me

RANCH
— 4
perfectly
$18,500.
Call Mr.
Hast-

BRICK
&amp; REDWOOD
RANCH—6
bilks.
from Toll Rd.-7 rms. $34,500. Call Mr. Degen—WI 5-1784 or WI 5-5550.

IDlewood 2-4500
Windsor 5-4500
Lake Forest 2300
Al

bedrms.-2
Call Mrs.

NEWLY LISTED SPLIT LEVEL—9 rms.,5 bedrms.-fam. rm.-$38,500. Mrs. Parkinson
-WI 5-0248.

VVVVVY

‘
TELEPHONE
&gt; WANT AD SERVICE

FRAME
RANCH—3
rm.-33
trees-$34,900.

DEERFIELD

Copyis accepted with the underStanding
that
the
publisher
assumes
no
responsibility
for
omission
through
clerical
or
mechanical
error and shall be
under no obligation or liability
of any kind whatsoever, either to
the advertiser or third parties.
In the event of an error in copy,
on the advertiser’s request, the
ublisher will rectify the error
Y publishing the corrected ad
in the next regular issue without
charge. All claims for adjustment
must be made within five days of
the date of publication in which
the error occurs.

VV

RESIDENCE
Preserve view

COLORFUL
BRICK
&amp;
REDWOOD
RANCH—3
bedrm,-2 baths-G. E. kitchen$32,475. Call Mrs. Parkinson-WI 5-0248.

For Publication in the Current

VV

Highland

SMALL-FAMILY
maintained
rms.
ings.

DEADLINE FOR CONTRACT
ADS 3 P.M. TUESDAY
3
a
‘&amp;

CHARMING
FARM-STYLE
on one acre—3 bdrms.-Forest
-$26,500. Call Mrs. Hedlund.

EXPANDABLE
BI-LEVEL—2 _ bedrm.-pan.
fam. rm.-25 ft. porch. $29,500. Call Mrs.
Parkinson-WI 5-0248.

Want Ads will be accepted up to

|

Colonial

BONOUU

BRICK
&amp;
tart
oser.

will also appear in

Fort

grounds

Dutch

SHERWOOD
FOREST
RANCH—2
_bedrms.-den-fireplace-$21,500. Call Mr. DegenWI 5-1784 or WI 5-5550.

SMART
TRI-LEVEL—3
bedrms.-rec.
rm.fenced garden-$25,750, Call Mrs. Zimmermann.

Ads run in above publications
during the same week in which
Fort Sheridan Tower is published

mod-

ages tek sh, ee $28,000

Bedrooms,

Highland Park News
Highwood News

baths,

Modern brick in Sunset Park. 3
bedrooms, 114 baths, att. garage.

FINE LIVING—8 rms. near schools-2 acres
$35'600 divide)-modernized-REDUCED
to

Review

1%

Brick, stone, redwood split-level. 3
bedrooms,
2
baths,
pan.
family
room, breezeway, att. garage ....

PARK

ESFATE
FOR
(HIGHLAND

NORTHBROOK

ern kitchen, sernd. porch ....$26,000

HIGHLAND

This cost will cover the
insertion in all 4 papers.

REAL

(Improved)

PARK)

LISTINGS

Sate OSGeo

Minimum.

SALE

Brick... 2-story..in..central ,Highland

Beau.

| |
| |

FOR

(HIGHLAND

CHOICE

HAVE
YOU
SEEN
THESE?

5c each additional word
(For 55 words:or Less).

on

ESTATE
FOR
(HIGHLAND

Rd.

ID

HIGHLAND

2-0880

PARK

10% down can buy this lovely young ranch
house in desirable Woodridge area, 3 bedrooms, many extras, immediate occupancy,
low upkeep, priced in low 20’s.

SEYMOUR
655 Vernon
Glencoe

GRAHAM

REALTOR
VE
HO

Ave.

5-4121
5-0665

WONDERFUL BUY
;
Owner, leaving town, eager to sell his stone
and brick custom
built ranch
which has
everything, including white oak woodwork,
4 bedrooms, 212 ceramic tile baths, family
room,
stunning
tile kitchen
with
built-in
dishwasher,
stove,
refrigerator,
freezer,
washer and dryer; screened porch, recreation room,
attached 2 car garage. Large
grounds. Priced in 50’s.

LANG
712

GLENCOE

AMbassador
BY

REAL ESTATE
REALTORS
GLENCOE

ROAD

VE

2-7873

5-1971

owner:
older well built brick house,
consisting of 2 apartments. 3 large rooms
with bath, first floor, and 5 rooms with
bath on second floor; full basement, gas
heat, 2 car garage, conveniently located
in Highwood. Lot 75x150. Could also be
used as 8 room house for larger family.
Priced for quick sale in the low 20’s.
Call owner for appointment, ID 2-1500,
or ID 2-4579.

JUST

LISTED

Charming
English brick on cool wooded
lot, near Ravinia Festival Music. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, pine paneled fireplace and
bookcases, bay window in living room, enclosed living porch on rear, 2 car garage,

$36,500

QUINLAN
HI 6-0177

&amp;

TYSON,

INC.
AM 2-3153

OLDER
home loaded with charm, 2 or 3
bedrooms, living room, dining room, family room, off large paneled kitchen with
nook. 134 car garage, huge patio, low 20’s.
1620 McGovern, ID 2-1520.
ARMY
Officer, being transferred must sell
brick ranch home; three bedrooms, 2 ceramic baths, full basement, large living
room with dining area, attractively landscaped on wooded lot. $26.500; no bargaining. Telephone ID 3-0876.
OWNER; desirable 7 room brick, 112 baths,
basement,
2 car garage.
Ravinia.
Telephone ID 3-1457.
BY owner: brick house. Living room, dining room,
kitchen,
bedroom,
den, and
bath; second floor, 1 large, 1 small bedroom, bath, and 1 unfinished room, closed
stairway, 2 car attached garage, corner
lot. Near Lincoln School. If perfect condition,
$32,000 to $33,000;
meeds
some
repairs, $28,500. Call for appointment, ID
2-2069.
HIGHLAND
PARK.
3% year old 3 bedroom, 114 baths. Reduced from appraised
price of $25,500 to $22,000, or best offer,
for quick sale before placing with broker.
Lee
city July 1. Phone collect, ID
2-9016.

Thursday, June

11, 1959

�ESTATE
FOR SALE
tee gy

~ WOODLAND PARK
Attractive 2 bedroom ranch
living-dining
combination,
ann?
carport. Nice area,

576

Lincoln

Winnetka,

3 bedroom

Illinois

SHERWOOD

HIllcrest

6-1855

SHeldrake

3-1855

FOREST—$29,875

Beautiful split-level 3 bedroom
home,
cypress recreation room with bar, bath .and:}
powder room, brick car and one half gaTage, patio enclosed» with. jalousied windows
and aluminum screens and doors. Aluminum
‘storms and screens throughout. Air-conditioner in master bedroom. Living room and
hallway carpeted wall to wall. Hardwood
flooring throughout. Yard fully fenced in
for protection of children and privacy. Beautifully landscaped
with trees and _ shrubs.
Must see to appreciate. 1477 Arbor Ave. or
call ANdover 3-3017.
FOR
sale by owner. Low 30’s. Lovely 6
room, 1% bath, Colonial house. 3 exceptionally
large
bedrooms,
finished
large
recreation
room,
modern
kitchen
with
dishwasher
and
incinerator;
gas
heat;
beautifuly
landscaped
yard.
Dead
end
Street, perfect for small children. Walking distance to two schools. Seen by appointment. Telephone ID 3-0030.
BY OWNER
Two bedroom house, L shaped
with fireplace; full basement
on corner lot.
CALL
ID 2-7532

LIKE

BY

owner—facing Sunset Park, brick ranch,
100x150 corner lot, 4 bedrooms, 24 baths,
30 ft. living room, large paneled beamed
family room, secluded patio, fenced yard,
carpeting,
drapes,
and
dishwasher
included.
Immediate
occupancy.
$37,500.
Telephone ID 2-1883.
“eo
OWNER leaving state: must sell 3 bedroom
frame;
large living room with fireplace
and sun room, dining room, kitchen, basement,
oil heat, 2 car garage.
Lincoln
School District. For details call ID 2-0474.

BY OWNER
East Ravinia

Section

Highland Park, large wooded lot (85 foot
frontage).
3 bedrooms,
2 complete tile
baths
with
showers,
modern
kitchen,
screened porch, sun deck, tile roof. Ideal
location, 2 blocks from school, shopping
and trains. Quick sale. Priced in the low
thirties. Telephone
ID
2-4744,
for appointment.
®

ESTATE FOR SALE
(DEERFIELD)

(Improved)

MODULAR
DISPLAY
HOME

Waukegan
OPEN

and

oven,

family kitchen,

3 bed-

Deerfield
909

Road

Apple

ARNOLD
Building
711
WI

gas

heat,

large

areas.
Tree

West

to

Contractor

Orchard
5-1238

Deerfield
WI 5-1799

BY

OWNER. Have already purchased farm,
making immediate sale vital of 7 room,
14%2 bath home;
large closets,
screened
porch, full basement,
work
shop, large
fenced
yard
with
patio, 2 car garage.
Close to schools, transportation and shopping. Low 20’s. WI 5-3077.
BY owner:
2 bedroom
ranch house with
living room, dining room, kitchen, utility
room, wooded lot, beautifully landscaped,
private road and park, 2%
car garage.
Telephone WI 5-3862.

Thursday,

June

WI
12 TO

5-0984

6 P.M.

bedrooms,
1%
floors. $37,750.

Monthly-3
Bedrm.
Garage ........ $21,000.

with Family
Baths-Full

Room barBasement$26,800.

Neighborhood-Quality-Construction
in
this
3 Bedrm. home. Fabulous ontacreies
ek
Jalousie
Porch
$36,500.
Redwood
Contemporary-3.
Bedrms.-Completely air conditioned-Wooded
setting-Village
conveniences-Carpeted
............ $22,900.
Spacious
4 Bedrm.
Colonial-Huge
Living
Rm-Dream Kitchen-Family Rm. With Fireplace-242 Baths-2 car att. Garage ....$43,000.
Wooded 2 Acres with 6 Room
Ranch on
Top of Hill with unfinished Family Rm.
with Vista of Stately Oaks ................ $37,000.
We have
Call.

all

kinds

Evening Phones:
Ed Enerson CR
0084.

of

Vacant—Give

us

a

Nancy Sullivan WI 5-1393;
2-1360; John Coons PA 4-

OPEN

SUNDAYS.

2111

NEW

of

ranch

bedrooms,

1%

baths,

large

landscaped

yard,

dining

room,

Tage;

a

most

LN.

family

You

Briarwood

beautifully

kitchen,

attractive

living

area.

3

room,

attractive patio,
$29,750.

home.

826 Deerfield

On
114
wooded
acres
overlooking
golf
course,
large” beamed
ceiling living room
with stone
fireplace, family
kitchen
with
built-in te
=
range, 3 twin sized bedrooms,
bath,
car
port,
screen
porch.
Priced in the 20’s.
5

Five

Full

Bill
Dan

Binard
Cobb

MOTHER

room,

included.

nearly

High

wall

20’s.

to

$20,900

Waukegan

Rd.

Windsor

5-1670

trans-

frie!
thirtiesae|

Middle

a three

bedroom,

one ~

_

Cliff

Johnson
George Severin
Bob Hastings

heat. Heat bills including hot water —
average
upkeep

$135.00
with

Priced

a year.

maximum

Minimum —
Oe

charm!

in

You

Looking

for

ern

refreshingly

and

and

a RANCH

for

of room

for

plenty

erty?
room

something

very

mod-

different in

Combination
living - dinin
with fireplace. Ceiling high

heat. One-car
Priced in

40's!

REAL

THE

ESTATE

40’S

kitchen

ESTATE SIZE LOT
PROJECT SIZE PRICE! !

—

garage,

HOUSEHUNTERS

Looking for a two-story, four bed- |
room
Williamsburg
Colonial on
acre and a half of beautifully land-

fireplace

AVE

on

first floor. Two

large bedrooms and bath on sec- —
ond floor. Partial basement, gas —

Brand new custom built Colonial ranch on
90 foot
lot.
Living -room,
kitchen
with
breakfast area, ceramic tile bath, 3 bedrooms,
full basement.
$23,500.
2 blocks
north of Greenwood,
first block
east of
Stratford.

WAITING
‘

SUNDAY
70:3
BY

Three —

bedrooms, two baths, basement. Oil

with

REDUCED

gall

dishwasher.

fireplace, dining room, kitchen with
dishwasher, built-in breakfast coun- —
ter, powder room, bedroom, bath

6-2900

1064 LINDEN

Stream-lined

with

scaped grounds? Living room with

CO.

REALTORS
HIllerest

New split-level on nearly an acre. Beautiful
kitchen with breakfast area, 3 bedrooms, 3
baths, large family room, 2 var garage. May
be bought on contract. $35,500.

730

space)

Men

OPEN

REALTORS

Serve

for

Low

JUST COMPLETED

Benj. Piersen Realty

Owner

bath Colonial ranch in Lake Bluff?
Paneled living room with fireplace

bookshelves.

SEARS

wall

Very well built brick ranch in lovely residential area, walking distance to schools,
shopping and transportation.
3 twin bedrooms,
carpeted
living-dining combination,
kitch. wth eating area, full basement, fenced
yard, patio. Priced to sell.

5-5300

Fortunate the person selecting this
almost new COLONIAL on picturesque
winding
road
and
on 2/3
acre.
3 bedrooms,
214
baths,
a
“dream” kitchen and a 2 car att.
gar. See

PARK

new

garage.

and dining area, modern kitchen, |
patio. Two-car attached garage. Gas —

Time

BANNOCKBURN-—IN

Must sell nearly new brick ranch home.
3 bedrooms, living room,
panelled dining
room (or family room), kitchen with eating
area, full basement with beautiful panelled

recreation

Looking

WI

to

attached

the children in this 4 bedroom, 2
bath
home
with
separate
dining
room
and 2 extra family rooms.

TRANSFERRED

carpeting

Deerfield

breakfast

LINCOLNSHIRE

Bright cheerful ranch home built in 1955
by present
owner;
spacious
living
room,
dining L that will accommodate
all your
dining room furniture, wood cabinet kitchen with renklent, TEMS; utility room, garage
an
workshop.
uick
occu
3
$22,900.
sith
agen

OWNER

Rd.

with

4

It To Yourself

A yard for FATHER,

Immediate possession on this 3 year
old 3
bedroom,
brick
ranch;
CT
bath,
powder
room, carpeted living room with stone fireplace, large dining L, basement rec. room
Wucknur
Ms
cabinet kitchen with
at reakiast
$29,000, area, Pp plaster walls. Price
ced to sell

WOODLAND

ear

VIKING Realty Co.

ga-

attached

Owe

kitchen

ferred.
Priced 1th ich.

OPEN
MONDAY
THRU
FRIDAY
9 a.m.-8 p.m. SAT. 9 a.m.-5 p.m.

White Cape Cod with green shutters, large
living room with fireplace, separate dining
room, kitchen and bath on first floor; 2
bedrooms
(1 panelled),
bath
on second;
basement, garage. Priced for quick sale.

WI 5-5100

parking

in

4~

Liv-—

area, dining room, patio, basement —
with recreation area. Gas heat, two-

GUARANTEED
ADVERTISING
PROGRAM

LISTING

home

one bath, brick ranch?

Delightful

About Our

wooded acre. 11%
car garage. Now

$30,500.

Brick

10-5

John Coons, Realtor
in Deerfield
(Plenty

LINCOLNSHIRE
CAMBRIDGE

room,

Inquire Today

BRIARWOODS

Arizona. 1 yr. old 3 Bed_baths-Full
Bsmt.-Family
Traffic Pattern ....$25,950.

New Western ranch
b-q
3
Bedrms-114
Wooded
Lot

Looking for a roomy six bedroom, i
four bath, beautiful brick Colonial —
on small lot? Entrance

hall, living

room with fireplace, library wi
Eis d
fireplace,
dining
room,
kitchen, —

OWNER

Terrific buy! Transferred. Must sell, 3 yr.
tri-level, corner
lot, bsmt.,
3 bdrms.,
2
baths, GE kit., stove and wall oven, dishwasher, rec. rm. with bar, laundry rm., 10
closets, gar., patio, carpet., drapes, comb.
storms,
screens.
Near
schools,
shopping
and trans. $29,900. Owner, 525 Pine St.,
telephone WI 5-2733.

VIKING Realty Co.
SPACE

TO ENTERTAIN

In this lovely brick, custom
built ranch.
House has jalousied family room with builtin Bar-b-que. Beautifully finished basement
room and complete bar room, plus other
extras too numerous to mention. Located
in Deerfield’s most desirable area. Call today for appointment. $44,500.

NO

STAIRS

TO

CLIMB

In this lovely home with 3 bedrooms, living
room with carpet and drapes. Eat area in
kitchen,
washer
and
dryer,
12x27
family
room, car port with storage, all thermopane
windows. Terrific value at $23,200.

LOW

DOWN

3 Bedroom ranch with glamour kitchen including
range,
oven,
washer.‘.and
dryer;
screen porch, 112 car garage. All this for
$16,900.
9

OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY
am.-8
p.m.
SAT. 9 a.m.-5 p.m.

VIKING Realty Co.
826 Deerfield

Rd.

Deerfield

WI

BANNOCKBURN
Well back from road on 4 acres
of beautifully landscaped ground,
this brick and stone English Manor
house features spacious and cheerful rooms.
1st floor has tiled fl.

entr.

hall,

5-5300

lge.

liv. rm.

with

frpl.

&amp; picture window, din. rm., 20x20
family rm., modern kitchen, pwd.

rm.

and

2 car

garage.

On

2nd

fl.

is master suite with own bath &amp;
frpl., 3 addn’l bedrms., 1 pine pan.

and bath.
Basement

PAYMENT

owner:
Brick ranch, 2-bedrooms
and
glazed den, paneled, and cork floor, living
room
with
stone
fireplace,
dining
room, completely carpeted, cabinet kitchen with eating area, full basement, recreation
room,
also bar
and
cardroom,
patio and attached garage. Priced to sell.
Open to offer. Telephone WI 5-1355.

breakfast room, powder room. Two- |
car attached garage.
“ith
FEICOG TH ite Middle seventies _
so atG

BY

Lane

PEDERSEN

1343 Knollwood—Ranch,
3
baths, full basement, parquet

Looking for a well-built two bed-

Not Just Listed

bedrooms,
basement.

CONTEMPORARY
RANCH

Brick 3 Bedrm-2 Bath-Full basement-2 car
att. Garage-Breezeway-3 Fireplaces. $31,500.
Owner moved to
rm.
Ranch-114
Kitchen-Excellent

Property Sold &amp;

$18,500

John Coons
Realtor

RANCH

garage,

Road

$3500
_Down-$140.00
Ranch-Breezeway Att.

Do You Want Your

2-5

sunken
living
3 bedrooms, 2

LOCATION

623 Deerfield Rd.

rooms, 1144 baths, basement, carpeting, ceramic tile, slate entry,
fireplace, snack bar, birch cabinets, formica tops. Built-in range
glass

PARK

SUNDAY

SUNDAY

1337 Knollwood—Split-level,
room, panelled family room,
baths. $35,650,

Carr Realty Co.
701

Realty

1331
Knollwood—Split-level,
2
11% aa
panelled family room,

vacant.

Large
older
home
with
atmosphere
and
charm, 8 rooms, screened porch, beautiful
yard. One block from beach, 2 blocks from
school, 3 blocks from town. Be sure and
see for $42,500.

FABULOUS
Living room,

BATHS?

3 bedroom,
3 bath Cape Cod has livingdining combination, kitchen with all builtins,
screened
porch,
full basement
with
recreation room, gas hot; water heat, 2 car
garage. Close to schools. A buy at $27,500.

HIGHLAND
EAST SIDE

OPEN

3 bedroom ranch on 2/3
baths, den, fireplace, 2

REALTORS

owner, 2-bedroom frame ranch, birch
cabinet kitchen, utility room, garage, ample closets and storage space; convenient
to schools
and
transportation.
$17,900.
ID 2-6872.
AIR-CONDITIONED
Expandable 3 bedroom Cape Cod (all on
one floor), living-dining combination,
full
basement,
gas heat, unusually
good
construction,
low
maintenance
in convenient
location, Elm Pl. School Dist., many extras.
By owner, mid 20’s. ID 2-8270.
BY OWNER
Large living room,
large dining room,
3
bedrooms, new ceramic tile bath, half acre
lot, priced $17,500.
Telephone ID 2-5981.

WESTERN

size kitch-

Entrance,
living
room-dining
combination
with
brick
fireplace,
screened
porch off
living room, kitchen with beautiful breakfast booth, 3 bedrooms, utility room, gas
heat. Attached
garage.
Close in location.
All for $24,750.

BY

REAL

family

BRICK
CONTEMPORARY

living room
and garage,

WHEN you buy real estate, insist that the
seller furnish you a Chicago Title Insurance
Policy. Ask
your lawyer
or real
estate broker.

Beautiful

ranch,

en,
living-dining
combination,
screened
breezeway, attached garage, full basement.
Owner must sell, reduced to $23,500.

ESTATE

Avenue

frame

Piersen

Finest northeast location. Ready
to move
in. All are brick with plaster walls, hardwood
floors, tiled kitchen
with built-ins,
gas heat, garages.

A BUY

WARNER
REAL

Benj.

with den, large
kitchen,
utility
priced at $18,-

has 40 ft. rec. rm. with

frpl. Property
has many
addn’l
features, incl. 2 horse stall barn.
Close to fine school. Ideal for growing family.
For further details call

PAUL PHELPS, Inc.
1925 Sheridan
ID 2-4580

BUY from owner and save 6%! Sacrificing custom-built 4 year old colonial, due
to sudden transfer. Must sell this month!
3 or 4 bedrooms, 2 full baths, foyer, rec.
room, beautiful screen
porch
onto terrace and large fenced yard. Lots of closets and storage space, close to everything.
On shady quiet street, ideal for children.
20%
down, 25 year mortgage available.
20’s. Telephone WI 5-0294,

Looking for a brick Colonial farm is
house on seven acres near transpor- |
tation? Seven bedrooms, four baths.
|
Three-car detached garage. Swimming pool and a stable with four
stalls.
Priced in Pe etal High eighties

Parking Space Available
for Our Customers

Hart, Shaw &amp; q
Company

NEW
split-level brick and frame. 3 bedrooms, 1 bath, attached carport, on acre
lot. Offered by builder, priced $18,500.
Telephone WI 5-1795.
TWO
bedroom
ranch home, 8 years old;
garage and screened breeze-way, carpeting
and
drapes
included,
near schools
and transportation. $16,500. Owner, telephone WI 5-2278.

Mrs.

REAL

260

3

ESTATE
FOR
SAL
(LAKE FOREST)

(Improved)

C.

Ruth

Richard B. Hart, President
Howard
ReQua,
Vice President
es:
Stuart R. French
Milton McN. Traer —

E, Henderson

E.

Deerpath

Lake Forest 4040

BEDROOMS,
brick ranch, 2 car garage,
anelet basement,
gas
heat,
low
30’s.
elephone Lake Forest 3095,

11, 1959
ee

ee

—

Kenmore

135°S.

La

Thorsen

Salle

_

St25

RAndolph 6-7155 oy:

Member of the Evanston-North
Multiple Listing Service

Shore

Page 47

ei
in

�:

LAKE FOREST
IOR;

brick,

fine

appointments,

20

lly room, &amp; lg. family kitchen with
t-ins. Basement, gas heat, air cond, 2 car att. garage. beautifully landsecluded
patio,
many
tall shade
ELLENT
VALUE
is this BRICK;
3
-» living room with view of wood8 ft. porch, full concrete basement,
car garage. Walk to trans. LOW 30’s;

FAMILY

HOME,

neat,

NIALS— THREE
TO
CHOOSE—
M ALL—GOOD
CONDITION!
IN
COMPARABLE
RANGE!

BLUFF

FOR LARGE
FAMILY, just 3
; many bedrooms, 244 baths, 26 ft.
led family room, firepl., 16
ft. dinroom,
built-in kitchen,
porch,
2 car
gas heat,
carpeting,
int. shutters

K

RANCH—spacious

3

bedrooms,

eating kitchen, porch, full base., famroom, &amp; bar. Plastered walls, oak floors,
ol carpeting. 2 car attached garage, pripatio. 30’s.
E HOUSE on large lot near Village.
d used through living &amp; dining, picture
OWS
open
on
woodland
&amp;
ravine,
000
(offers).
COD:
black shutters, 22 ft. living
washer, range, refrigerator, all drapes
d. Lovely
shrubs
&amp; private patio.
Section in Libertyville) $18,500 (ofALS—129
Ravine
Forest
Drive.
poms, 214 baths.
bedroom house in Lake Forest.

Lindenmeyer,

H.

D.

Lake

Olson

!

Bluff

&amp;

4

969

Co.

Realtors
Waukegan,

Ill.

FIRST OFFERING
od frame on 100 by 250 wooded lot.
room, dining room, screened porch,
oms and bath on Ist floor; large pan-

playroom-bedroom
nt and

ID

good

2-story

South
nent,

on

five

Park.

RMING,

For-

baths,

full

$22,000.

suitable

on lovely,

large lot

seven

secluded

room

acres

in de-

le East section. $70,000—propean be divided.
RACTIVE

th remodeled

eleven

room,

REALTORS
378

Green

LARGE FAMILY HOME
BEAUTIFULLY APPOINTED
TWO STORY BRICK
COLONIAL
Entrance hall, powder room, living room
with fireplace, large screened porch with
adjoining
terrace,
dining
room,
panelled
den with fireplace, modern kitchen &amp; breakfastroom.
4 bedrooms,
nursery, maids room &amp; 3
complementing
bathrooms.
Full basement,
gas heat, two car detached garage. Planted
terrace and formal garden, large playfield.
High 70’s. Call Lake Bluff 5127 for app.

ACREAGE SITE
$8700
Excellent level building site on
blacktop road within city limits.
Features include underground gas,
water,

©

in

ilt-ins,

living

full

of our best values.

room,

basement

cabinet

with

kitchen

out-side

By laundry-work room, rec. area, gas
combination storms and screens, Sit_ On wooded landscaped lot, 100x150,
ed by lovely patio. IMMEDIATE
PANCY. Priced right at $33,500.

LAKE FOREST
SCOTT STREET-EXPANDABLE

1%

residence, close-in east location. Living

with fireplace, dining room, sun room,
n with breakfast
bar,
3 bedrooms,
yath on first floor. Large finished room
cond floor. Full basement, new heating
Screened porch and garage. Offered
OW TWENTIES and well worth it,

JOHN GRIFFITH, INC.
REALTORS
OFFICES

TO

SERVE

telephone

Located 1.2 miles north of Deerpath stop light on Winwood
Dr.

which joins
the west.

Waukegan

Clifford

Rd.

from

Leonard

EXCLUSIVE

BROKER

FOREST

DUNKIRK

2375

YOU

must sell, leaving town. 3 bedn ranch on 1% wooded acres. Fire, Paneled
walls, lake water, many
tras. $29,500. or make offer. 301 Little

Lane, just off Bradley Rd., Lake

RIDGE

AVAILABLE,
6
air conditioned,

ROAD

in oven;

SKOKIE—Bi-level. 3 bedrooms, 114 baths,
finished basement, combination screens and
Storms, garage. Owner wants immediate sale.
Lew 20’s.
MORTON
GROVE—Pleasing
2 bedroom
ranch on wooded lot near schools. Screened
porch, full basement, 112 car garage. Priced
for quick sale at $18,750.
WILMETTE — Westmont.
Corner bi-level
with attached 2 car garage, family sized
home with 3 bedrooms, 214 baths, dining
room,
breakfast
room,
family
room
and
complete GE kitchen. Carpeting and drapes
included. Immediate
possession. Priced in
the 30’s with low down payment.
Any of the above homes may be purchased
DIRECT from owner. Call ORchard 5-8383.

BUREAU,

Three bedroom frame bungalow on 100 by
160 ft. Jot surrounded by trees and shrubbery. Living room has cut stone fireplace;
dinette, cabinet kitchen, den; rumpus room
in full basement. House is well insulated,
has hardwood floors. 20 by 22 ft. addition
to 2 car garage has inside and outside fireplace with patio. Will sell on contract.

1-2353

Family
outgrowing
your present home?
Could you use 5 large bedrooms, 2% ceramic baths, with a family room and powder room adjacent to a charming kitchen
with built-in ranges and dishwasher?
If so, this could be your home. A warm
spacious
Georgian
Colonial,
fireplace
in
living room
and paneled, separate dining
room, full basement, 2 car garage, hot water heat, all copper
plumbing throughout
the house, blacktop drive, built in a prestige area of Northbrook.
Fully improved
lot and landscaped. Immediate occupancy,
full price, $41,600.

LAKE

Dorsey Husenetter,
723 St. Johns

CO.
6-6720

BEAUTIFUL

BLDRS.
CR 2-3919

PROPERTY

SCHWANDT REALTY CO.
REALTORS
Libertyville 2-2015
MUndelein 6-6720
PRAIRIE VIEW
2 acres—3 bedroom ranich, attached 2 car
garage. Middle 20’s. Immediate occupancy;
details, consult
G UY. VITI, Realtor
226 Green Bay, Highwood
ID 2-3933

BLDRS.
CR 2-3919

NORTHBROOK
APPLETON
COVETED

ESTATES
LOCATION

A Jules Marling Ranch. Most unusual interior; unique floor plan. 4 Bdrms., 3 baths,
11/3
acres. $94,500.
Call Mrs.
Reardon,
CR 2-0591 or HI 6-7180.

Storm Realty Co.
REALTORS
378

Green

Bay

Road

DELUXE

Winnetka

PRAIRIE VIEW
COUNTRYSIDE
ARCHITECT
OFFERS
own
designed
8
room one story modern house. Unique interior, 11 ft. ceiling, 40 ft. living room, 4
acres
on wooded
stream. 5 car garage.
$38,000. Telephone NEwton 4-3834,

carpeted, with

NEW Town and Country 5 room apartment.
2 bedrooms, tile bath, powder room, dishwasher, basement and attic, garage. $185
per month.
Available
after June
15th.
Telephone Lake Bluff 1919.
TWO
bedroom
apartment
for rent $150.
Call Lake Forest 2778 after 6 p.m.
APARTMENT,
214
E. Westminster,
2nd
floor; living room, one bedroom, kitchen,
bath. Available July ist. Call Lake Forest 1802 for showing,
ae
ATTRACTIVE 3 room apartment available
for immediate occupancy. Ideal for couple
or single
person.
$110
per month
on
lease. Contact broker, Lake Forest 485.

APARTMENTS TO RENT (Furnished)
(HIGHLAND PARK)
ONE room furnished kitchenette apartment,
share shower
bath
with one;
close to
transportation
and
shopping.
Telephone
ID 2-5481.
21%4 ROOMS,
$110 month, lease required;
in business district. Also one room and
bath, $70 month, Available July 1. Telephone ID 2-8117 or WI 5-1869.
2%
ROOM
kitchenette
apartment,
completely
furnished,
heat
and hot water,
parking, laundry facilities, child welcome,
near Fort Sheridan. Telephone ID 2-0358.
3 ROOM furnished apartment, private bath.
Inquire at 647 Park Ave. West, Highland Park.

suitable
use or

ATTRACTIVE
2 room and bath apartment
with a view, adults, no pets, parking, $90
including utilities. Telephone ID 2-7596.

ID 2-2468
only.

456

APAKIMENTS
TO RENT (Unfurnished)
(HIGHLAND PARK)

THREE
room
furnished
apt,
newly
furnished with private bath, and private entrance, all utilities paid. Telephone ID 3-

0893.
LOVELY
bedroom, living room
combination, kitchen, bath, parking space, $90.
Available July 1, one or two people. 13
Webster Ave., Highwood. Telephone ID
2-4395 or I D2-8230.
ROOM
furnished apartment, all utilities
paid. Can be seen at 614 Green Bay Rd.,
Highwood, near Fort Sheridan, before 10
or after 7. Telephone ID 2-2792 or ID 2-

400 PARK AVENUE
of distinction

EAST OF SHERIDAN ROAD

3 BEDROOM — 214 BATHS
AIR CONDITIONED
LUXURIOUS RENTAL HOMES
AVAILABLE SEPTEMBER 1, 1959
CALL ID 2-4115
THREE room apt. with inclosed porch on
first
floor;
working
couple
preferred.
Telephone ID 3-1627.
3 ROOM and 4 room apartments for rent.
Call after 5 p.m. ID 2-3187.
3 ROOM apartment with range and refrigerator included, Highwood
business district. Telephone Lake Forest
136.
ROOM apartment in Highwood, equipped
with stove and refrigerator, available immediately. Telephone ID 2-3802, between
8 a.m. and 5 p.m.
ROOM,
2 bedroom apartment, close to
transportation, for rent on or before July
1. Heat and hot water furnished. Parking
space. ID 2-1060. 442 Central, Highland
Park,
PLEASANT
garage apartment, private entrance,
car
port;
woman
to work
in
house, salary; man, experienced gardener
and handyman to work part time in exoe
for apartment. Telephone ID 2-

FOR
month
of August,
clean, attractive,
convenient East Ravinia location, screen
porch, adults preferred. Telephone ID 2929.
3

ROOM
apartment, completely furnished,
heat and hot water, parking, laundry facilities,
children
welcome.
Near
Fort
Sheridan. Telephone ID 2-0358.

APARTMENT
for rent, three rooms furnished. Available
immediately.
Call between 8 and 5 p.m. Telephone ID 2-3802.
ONE
room
kitchenette
apartment;
single
woman
preferred.
3 to 4 blocks from
shopping, trains. Utilities furnished, parking space. Telephone
ID 2-5589.
APARTMENTS TO RENT (Furnished)
(LAKE FOREST)
TWO
room
basement
kitchenette apartment; private entrance, walking ditsance
to town. Single person only. Call Lake
Forest 3555.

HOUSES TO RENT
(HIGHLAND

(Unfurnished)
PARK)

IMMEDIATE
occupancy, newly remodeled
2 bedroom house, 1 block north of Ravinia
business
section,
$160
monthly.
Telephone ID 2-5439,
4

MUNDELEIN,
blue and white 114 story
Cape Cod with heavily wooded acre of
ground, city water and sewers; business
frontage. House has 4 bedrooms, stainless steel Hotpoint kitchen unit, oil heat
convertible to gas. Low taxes. $18,000.
Call for appointment mornings, Lake Forest 3100; p.m., MUndelein
6-6630. Mr.
Streicher.

apartment

APARTMENTS
TO RENT (Unfurnished)
(LAKE FOREST)

STORE

F. LEONARDI
REALTOR

Address

4 room

glass
enclosed
porch,
garage
and
all
utilities included except electricity. Couple only, $150. Telephone WI 5-0120.

STUDIOS

2 AND
3 rooms for offices
Central Ave. ID 2-0150.

An

(Unfurnished)

(Vacant)

1300 sq. ft. with ample parking,
for medical or professional office
for any business,

1,

TO RENT
(DEERFIELD)

LOVELY two bedroom apartment overlooking park. Stove, refrigerator, garage included, heated, second floor, $110. Available July 1. Telephone WI 5-1210.

Realtors
ID 2-1484

CORNER

ID 3-1000

Looking for a little elbow room? Tired of
ranch homes built on 60 ft. lots that are
not ranch homes at all? Seen so-called family rooms that have beeni no bigger than a
walk-in closet? We
know
it’s rather discouraging. So let us stop discussing what
you have not been able to find in a home
you have wanted. Try this on for size, Mom
and Dad, the kids will love the space and
freedom of a % acre lot that has been landscaped and seeded. Dad, you will enjoy barbecuing in the family room with its paneled walls and tiled floors. Mom, you and
the children will enjoy the 3 bedrooms and
2 ceramic baths, kitchen with built-in ranges
and your separate dining room, a gracious
stone fireplace in living room, full basement
and 2 car garage.
Sensibly priced, $34,900.
Immediate occupancy.

POTEREK

STORES &amp;
TO RENT

anytime..after, Thursday.

(Vacant)

ESTATE FOR SALE
(LAKE FOREST)

OFFICES,

street. $225. 639

MODERN
2
bedroom
apartment,
birch
cabinet kitchen, ceramic tile bath, near
shopping and schools. $145 monthly, including everything but gas and electricity.
No pets. Telephone WI 5-2419.
3 rooms, modern;
living room, bedroom,
kitchen. Adults only. Close to shopping and
transportation. $110.
DONALD
N. ANDERSON,
AGENT
665 Vernon Ave., Glencoe

KNOLLWOOD,
unimproved
lot,
120x134
ft., on Woodland Road; 2nd lot west of
Northern
Ave.
$1,500
cash.
Telephone
EStebrook 8-8573.
LAKE
BLUFF
wooded
lot 100x124,
east
tracks,
easy
walking
distance,
schools,
railroads, parks, shopping.
Owner,
telephone WI 5-3718 after 6 p.m.

VIEW

5-2415,

APARTMENTS

DEERFIELD
APPROXIMATELY 5 ACRES
$16,500

REAL

NORTHBROOK

&amp;

WI

$13,000

ESTATE FOR SALE
(DEERFIELD)

end

5 ROOM furnished apartment, 2 bedrooms,
modern
kitchen and bath, only responsible people need apply, no pets. Telephone 1D 2-2975.

owner

LOT
for sale in Highland
Park, 68x192,
2 blocks from school, Old Trail. Telephone MOnroe 6-2417.
50x150 LOT,
West Central Ave. location,
zoned
single
dwelling.
$6,000
or
best
offer. Telephone
ID 2-0176 between
6
and 8 p.m.
LARGE
choice
corner
lot, Linden
and
Beech streets, east Ravinia section. Telephone ID 2-2821.
ks
HIGHLAND
PARK:
Most desirable, improved wooded lot in Braeside area, near
lake. 70x154. Telephone ID 2-8443.
50 FT. frontage. Temple Ave., zoned two
family. Telephone ID 2-9468 or all day
weekends,

JOHN

GRANDT
CR 2-3463

town

PAUL PHELPS. Inc.
1925 Sheridan Rd.
ID 2-4580

LIBERTYVILLE
In a refined neighborhood for fine people
this modified colonial home
has a living
room with fireplace, dining room, all electric kitchen with disposal and dishwasher;
two large bedrooms, 114 baths, den; hardwood floors and plastered throughout; recreation room in full basement; 2 car garage
has big screened porch attached. There are
many extras with house.

MUndelein

of

wishes to liquidate

MUNDELEIN

NORTHBROOK

&amp; POTEREK

INC.

SCHWANDT REALTY
REALTORS

Out

DEERFIELD-NORTHBROOK
AREA
Corner
101x200
lot. In neighborhood
of
moderately priced homes.
Priced right at
$2,495. Call for appointment to see. CLearbrook 3-5910.

4846 Main St., Skokie, Illinois

Libertyville 2-2015

paid.

REAL

by-owner
SERVICE

and

room
deluxe apartment,
2 baths, dishwasher, built-

quiet dead

Onwentsia, ID 2-5264.
3 AND 4 room apartments, heat, hot water,
stove, refrigerator and garage furnished,
1 block from town, adults only. Telephone

brick

WILMETTE—Sprucewood
Village. 3 bedrooms,
142 baths,
attached garage,
large
dining room plus breakfast room off kitchen,
newly decorated. Covered patio overlooking
beautiful landscaped yard.

ESTATE
FOR SALE
(Improved)
(MISCELLANEOUS)

GRANDT
CR 2-3463

face

serv-

Cozy year around 2 bedroom home on private lake. Living room with fireplace, cabinet kitchen, dining room, den. $16,500.

12 Scranton Ave.
Lake Bluff 816

meey

electric, and

bedroom

in

ice. Will never be any cheaper.

REAL

BEDROOMS
AND
TWO
TILE
} make
this charming 2 year
old

PARK—3

PRAIRIE

LAKE BLUFF east, 4 bedrooms, 114 baths,
living-dining room combination, large utility room, oil heat, gas available, aached
garage. 34% blocks from school. Owner
moving. Price $21,500. Lake Bluff 3693.

BLUFF

NORTH

Three bedrooms, full basement, contemporary frame ranch on %
acre; hardwood
floors, oil forced air heat. Priced right for
quick sale. Call Michael Dennee.

owner, brick split level
2 years old.
Three
twin
bedrooms,
den,
recreation
room, 112 baths, dining and living room
carpeted, fireplace, modern kitchen, full
basement.
$35,000 or best
offer.
Lake
Forest 4616.

_ JOHN GRIFFITH, INC.
‘Serving the area since 1904

one

Winnetka

BY

Kathryn Jaicks
Berenice Ressinger
Carmen Burgess

COD

Road

HIGHLAND

LAKE BLUFF. Four-year old brick ranch.
Three bedrooms;
living room with fireplace; dining room; spacious kitchen with
built-in oven and range, breakfast bar,
birch cabinets;
large ceramic
tile bath.
Plus full basement with receration room
and half bath; screened porch; 1% car
garage.
Gas
heat.
Rusco
combination
screens and storms. Carpeting and draperies included.
Attractively landscaped.
Low thirties. By owner. Lake Bluff 3931.

LAKE

_CAPE

Bay

538 CENTER
AVE, Lake Bluff, 2 blocks
from
beach
and
boating.
Fine
older
home,
rewired. 5 bedrooms,
214 baths,
screened porch, breakfast room, new 2
car garage and breeezeway,
double lot.
We
have purchased
another home
and
are anxious. to sell with immediate possession,
Exceptional
financing
available.
Call owner,
Lake
Bluff 2569
or your
broker. $33,000.
BY OWNER
5 year old. 3 bedrooms, 1% baths, living
room
with fireplace, oversized 2 car attached garage with workshop area, on acre;
city water; West Lake Forest. Mid twenties.,
Telephone ID 2-9468 evenings or all day
weekends.

acres. $90,000—property can be

LAKE

STATION

Storm Realty Co.

Colonial house on

_ GILBERT RAYNER
_ . REAL ESTATE
266 EAST DEERPATH
LAKE FOREST 382

C&amp;NW

parking lot close by. For full information
call Elsa Fitzgerald at LF 86 or HI 6-7180.

514

.

BY OWNER

LOCATION

One of the last pieces of beau.
ranch on large wooded corner lot in Sher- wooded vacant, conv. located. ApNorthwest corner of Western &amp; Illinois Rd. wood Forest. Air conditioned, Jarge_ living
75x78. ft. Includes 8.1m, house fully, insulated reom with. dining «area, :sappling’; finished. prox...1,1/5..acres with 320 ft. road
and basement recreation ‘room. Low
‘and ‘wéllmaintained
intained: Business. ‘zoning. "City ng
frontage. Sewer, water and paving
Pa

house

house,

older

41%

Full

Lake

room

2-car garage.

remodeling,

floor,

Call

114

YER ten room

on

2nd

storage.

OPPOSITE

tastefully

ed &amp; sep. dining room.
1st floor
n’s play
room,
huge
living room,
+, basement, oil heat. 20’s.

LAKE

BUSINESS

ROOM
UNFURNISHED
COTTAGE;
kitchen, bedroom, living room, small adjoining room, bath. 212 Sard, Highwood.
Telephone ID 2-4035.

SMALL apartment, suitable for one or two
people, stove and refrigerator furnished,
in central Highwood
location. Leonardi
Agency, ID 3-1000.
6 ROOMS,
unfurnished,
newly
decorated,
centrally located, reasonable. Call ID 23093 after 5 p.m.

THREE

THREE

TO rent: 2 bedroom house at $125 a month.

room

and

bath;

off street parking

area. Telephone ID 2-4419,
TWO
6 room duplex apartments, $80 per
month, 243 S. Central, Highwood.
3 ROOMS
with stove, refrigerator, utility
except electricity, close to transportation
and shopping;
couple preferred or two
women can share. Available now. Telephone ID 2-6683.
AVAILABLE immediately, suitable for one
or two. 3 room apartment and bath, near
Lincoln
School.
Stove,
refrigerator,
garage and utilities included. $90. Telephone
ID 2-2305.

bedroom,

ranch

style,

gas

heat,

basement, garage, nicely landscaped. Call
after 3 p.m. Rent $160. Telephone ID
2-3185.
349 Washington St., Highwood.
To see
call ID 2-1538.
BEDROOM
and sleeping porch
home,
garage, fenced yard; possession now. $125
per month, 583 Onwentsia. Telephone ALpine 1-2025 or your broker.
5 YEAR old ranch, 3 bedrooms, 114 baths,
gas heat, 2 car garage, for rent or sale.
Telephone ID 2-1692.
6 ROOM
house, 2 car garage, lovely garden, 144 blocks from beach; partially furnished or unfurnished. Telephone ID 30617.
‘
2

Thursday, June 11, 1959

�Ww:

TWO room cottage, nestled in woods, ideal
for couple. Rent $20
per week, includes
utilities.
Tenant
supplies
oil for stove
heat. Telephone WI 5-2058.

HIGHLAND PARK
HOSPITAL

HOUSES TO RENT (Unfurnished)
(LAKE FOREST)

NEEDS

LAKE
FOREST—3
bedroom house, good
location; available August 1st. $175. References required. Call Lake Forest 1126.

HOUSES
THREE

TO

RENT

(Unfarnished)

bedroom

house,

built

(MISCELLANEOUS)

in

kitchen;

REGISTERED
Full

HOUSES TO RENT (Furnished)
(HIGHLAND PARK)
COMPLETELY
furnished
deluxe
4 bedroom, 4 bath home; September 1 to June
15, 1960. $500 per month. Telephone ID
2-2821.
SUMMER
rental,
attractively furnished
5
room Cape Cod house in Sunset subdivision;
convenient
location.
Call
30571 evenings.

COTTAGES

TO

OFFICE

ID

79

after

5

PERSONNEL

ID

2-8000

CASHIER
We’re

in

If

school

Call or come

GENERAL OFFICE
Opportunity for steady full time
employment in small modern office
if you can handle any or all of the
following assignments: Switchboard, Typing, Billing, Secretarial,
Dictaphone, Filing. Ideal suburban
location, 5 day week, top pay and
benefits. Call A. Walsh, HIllcrest
6-6300.
wanted

with

5-9790.

experience.

Tele-

SECRETARY,
part
time;
shorthand
required Small pleasant office. Apply Mr.
Wilson
or
telephone
ID
2-6220.
Boy
Scouts of America.
FULL or part time secretary for small office. Enough variety to avoid any monotony; and our girls have always found our
work most interesting. Typing and shorthand the only essentials.
ID 3-0064.
PART-TIME saleslady interested in selling
attractive women’s apparel 3 or 4 days
per week;
pleasant environment.
Please
write P.O.
Box 589, Lake Forest.
—

Thursday,

June

11,

1959

MILE

Insurance

More

SOUTH

OF

ROUTE

in and see

IDlewood

ILLINOIS

SKOKIE

Culligan, Inc.

TELEPHON

ID

514

2-3310

Gard Industries,
1739 Harding Rd.

Ave.

BANK

starting

salary,

THE FIRST NATIONAL
BANK OF WINNETKA
739 ELM STREET
WINNETKA

BENE-

ligent girl who has an excellent
knowledge
of English
grammar
and moderate shorthand and typing
skills. Varied
duties
consist
of
handling administrative duties for

CLERK-TYPIST

composing

let-

Excellent
opportunity
for young
woman,
high school grad, interested in responsible
typing assignment in our Sales Dept. Should
type 50 wpm. for this position which also
offers a variety of duties. Modern office,
many company benefits, good promotional
and salary opportunities. Hours: 9-5, Monday through Friday.

ters from rough notes, and some AMERICAN HOSPITAL SUPPLY CORP.
editing. Practically all typing is 2020 Ridge
Evanston
UN 4-6050
done in our typing dept., so that
typing consists primarily of drafts WAITRESSES wanted full time. Phil Johnson’s
Restaurant,
Waukegan
Rd.
and
of
self-composed
letters.
Free
County Line Rd. Apply between 9:30 a.m.
lunches,
profit
sharing.
Salary
and 2 p.m. Ask for Mr. Kinast.
open.

Call

Bluff

3400.

Mr.

Johnson,

North

Suburban

Haynes,

HI

loca-

6-7400,

Lake

IF YOU
SALES GIRL

With sewing experience, full time. Apply in
person Arend’s Sewing Machine Co., 662
Central Ave., Highland Park.
WANTED for ‘September, qualified nursery
school teachers, full time and part time.
Please state your age, educational background
and
teaching
experience.
Write
Box J-35, c/o Highland Park News.
GIRL
or woman
wanted
for
all-around
cafeteria work in Deerfield industry. Telephone WI 5-1990, Extension 226.
EXPERIENCED
woman
to handle coffee
bar and soda bar, Lake Forest Hospital,

immediately, Call Mrs. Kellogg, LI 2-2491.

Are

a

Want

competent
full time

secretary

permanent

work

Would

like to work in this area

Prefer

diversity

of

duties

Have your own transportation

THEN
Should

Call LI

net

delay
2-4080 today

assembly

YOU

for

bo

of office

al
‘

DESIGNE

GIRL
*
PRINTER
*

THE

BROOKSHORE

Sunset Ridge Road
Phone CRestwood

Full time

chemical

Northbrook
2-1200

work for production

department,

line,

inspectors,

laboratory,
and
shipping
department.
5 day week, 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Excellent working
conditions. Interviews on June 12, at:
Gard Industries, Inc.

1739 Harding Rd.

Northfield

EXPERIENCED, FULL CHARGE BOOKKEEPER FOR HIGHLAND
PARK CONTRACTOR.
MODERN _ AIR-CONDITIONED OFFICE, ALL BENEFITS. TELEPHONE ID 2-8711.
TELEPHONE
SOLICITORS
Work direct from office. Evenings 6 to 9
p.m. Experience not necessary. Salary plus
commission. Apply at
ALL YEAR BUILDERS, INC.
3080 Skokie Valley Highway, Highland Park
ID 2-5423
HAIR
DRESSER,
MAN
OR
WOMAN,
EXPERIENCED.
SALARY
$175
AND
LIBERAL
COMMISSION.
APPLY
JACQUELYN
COCHRAN
BEAUTY
SALON,
DEERPATH
INN,
LAKE
FOREST,
700 N. MICHIGAN AVE., CHICAGO.
office,
3
days
a
week, convenient hours; typing not required. Telephone
ID
3-1516 Thursday,
Saturday, or Tuesday.

HELP

HOSPITAL SUPPLY

2020 Ridge

CO.

WANTED—MALE

WANTED: a young man to be trained for
shipping and assembly work in cleaning
plant. Apply in person,
Wayne’s
Lake
Shore
Cleaners,
454
Waukegan
Ave.,
Highwood.
DRIVER:
to take 1958 station wagon
to
Minneapolis before June 22. Please call
Mrs.
MacMillan,
Lake
Forest 475.

CLERK

Unusual opportunity for young man,
school grad. Work involves maintaini1
petual inventory cards. No experien
quired, will train. Good starting salary
many promotional possibilities. Full —
company
benefits.
Hours:
9-5,
[onc
through Friday.
‘

AMERICAN
surand

2-370

GENERAL BINDIN
CORPORATION
1101 SKOKIE HIGHW/
NORTHBROOK
INVENTORY

Experienced
or will
train; pleasant
roundings—5 day week, hospitalization
other benefits.

952

ment.

are looking for an intel-

of firm,

in

PASTE-UP
*
*
FOR OFFSET
*
*

BOOKKEEPER
good

opportunity

and

CRESTWOOD

OFFICE

CASHIER-CHECKER
for food store; full
time,
permanent
work.
Must
be high
school
graduate.
Janowitz
Foods, Lake
Forest 2700.

6-2112.

WAITRESS,
experienced, day, evening or
split shift; good wages and working conditions. Lake Forest 2527.

&amp;

ment.

Switchboard, reeeption, typing, and
general office. Permanent full time
manufacturing
Aerosol
position.
tion, Call Miss

pleasant working conditions. 5 day
week;
opportunity
for
advance-

THE FIRST
NATIONAL BANK
HIGHLAND PARK

2 partners

at once, Hillcrest

Permanent,

TRAIN)

SALARY

challenging

of fabricating

Young woman wanted, 21 to 35, for general
These men will carry new products
office work; must type. Ideal working con-A | through from the talking stage into p
ditions. Call or apply in person,
tion.
Products Co., Inc., B50 County Line Road,
Deerfield. Telephone WI 5-4300.
Call for personal interview

concern

HILBORN

for

JOIN
|
THE GBC FAMILY
LOCATED IN NORTHBROO
PROCESS ENGINEE

Inc.
Northfield

OFFICE WORK

GENERAL

Highest salaries paid to women for
our alteration room. Steady employment. Daylight, air-conditioned

Apply

man

ENGINEERS

for appointment.

BOOKKEEPER
WILL

one

SEAMSTRESSES

RD.

R

shift.

PRODUCT

Waukegan

desired.

process engineers who can handle

room,
congenial
atmosphere.
No
evenings. Experienced women only.

(WE

of

A

To sell women’s
apparel and accessories.
5 day week, permanent position. Good starting salary. Employees discount. Telephone
ID 2-0900 for appointment.

Duraclean Co.

laboratory

pre

Free life and hospitalization i
ance, vacations, etc. Excellent
Call WI 5-1990.

12, at:

SALESLADY

LUCILE

salary

age,

MILL OPERATOR

VALLEY

LAUNDRY

E

All em:

experience,

salary and

of the country’s leading manufacturers of push button spray products. Will train right girl for permanent position as lab technician.
Chemistry experience desirable but
not required. Interviews on June

GENERAL

DICTAPHONE
TYPIST
839 WAUKEGAN
DEERFIELD
WI 5-2000

aerosol

concern.

We have an opening on our 4
to 12:30 a.m. shift for an ex
enced milling machine operator

NORTHBROOK
CRESTWOOD 2-1000

2-9995

BELL

ucation,

day

cinating

Shore

electrical maintenance

Varied and interesting work in fas-

Local
girl for
interesting
office
work, full time; will train. Good
salary and working conditions.

Park

North

HI

only.

TYPISTS

68

NEAT GIRL

graduate

appointment

by

terview
6-7400.

and copy writing, for fast g

In-

transportation.

own

have

location.

Suburban

industry. North
Must

aerosol

fascinating

in the

company

2-3700

DEPENDABLE

Business

Rosander

Highland

EXCELLENT

Deerfield

Many

CRESTWOOD

1866 Second Street

FITS—We

G SHOES

Shoppers Court

Life

Come
in or call for personal
interview.
Employment office hours are 8:30 to 4:00
Monday through Friday. 8:30 to 12:00 Saturday.

lady to

our

SECRETARY

Apply.

phone Windsor

high

J. A.

career possibility, working with executives of young rapidly growing

Advancement

&amp;

the individual is a satisfactory subExcellent
experience.
for
stitute

GENERAL BINDING
CORPORATION
1101 SKOKIE HIGHWAY
NORTHBROOK

and are interested in a job with opportunity
for advancement,
we'd
like to talk to you.

PART TIME
SALESLADY

WAITRESS

And

p.m.

looking for a young

a

Job

FRIDAY

Intelligence, organization, and self
important
more
ability
starting
than shorthand skill. Potential of

NEEDED

work as a cashier
Office.

you’re

For

Hospital

Time

APPT.

2-3591.

WANTED—FEMALE

G AND

Group

OFFICE

FOR

Opportunity

essential.

RENT

LARGE single room adjacent to bath; one
block from shopping center. Gentleman
preferred. Lake Forest 1039.
COMFORTABLE large room, with kitchen
if desired, ideal for couple; would consider one person. Telephone ID 2-0348.
COMFORTABLE
furnished
room,
near
town and transportation. 208 North Ave.,
Highwood. Telephone ID 2-3769.
2 ROOM cottage, partly furnished; working
couple or gentleman preferred. Can be
seen after 4:00 at 246 North Ave., Highwood,
SLEEPING
room,
available
now;
near
transportation,
in Highwood.
Telephone
ID 2-3309.
FOR employed woman, large front sleeping
room, 1 block from business area; quiet
house. Telephone ID 2-5942,
EAST side near lake and main station for
one employed woman, comfortable front
room. No transient. Usual privileges, under $11. Telephone ID 2-1138.
ROOM for rent to employed lady, located
near hospital, very
large closet
space.
Telephone ID 2-0376.
1 LARGE and 1 small room to rent. Gentleman preferred. Telephone ID 2-8671.
ROOM
for rent. 278 Deerpath. Call Lake
Forest 452.
NICE large room for rent. Gentleman preferred. Call Lake Forest 5269 after 5 p.m.

HELP

but not
open.

WORKERS—Part

CALL

Sat.

or

Permanent

Interesting work in pleasant environment. Why commute when you
can work close to home?

ROOM to rent near shopping and transportation. Telephone ID 2-5208.
ROOM
to rent,
close
to transportation;
gentlemen preferred. Telephone Lake Forest

floor

With a Growing Company
Good Starting Salary

1, Mon. through Fri. 4:30-8:30
2. Sat. 4:30-8:30 p.m.
Sun. 8 a.m.-4:30 p.m.

rooms, by day or
PARK HOTEL sleepin
11 Waukegan Ave.,
week, free parking,
ghwood.
COMFORTABLE
room adjacent bathroom,
near town and transportation. Also small
2 room apartment. Gentleman preferred.
Lake Forest 2393.
SLEEPING
room, hot water at all times,
near transportation. Telephone ID 2-3786.
ROOM
for rent, kitchen privileges;
near
transportation.
Call between
12 and

Telephone

general

%

WANTED
to sublet: “Clean, quiet family
desires
to
sublet
house
from
July
8
thru Aug. 8. References furnished. Please
send description of house and your terms
fl hae
1610
Garland,
Flint
3,
ch.””

p.m.

time,

RENT

HOUSES
&amp; APARTMENTS
WANTED
(Furnished or Unfurnished)

TO

part

salary.

Experience preferable
40 hour week. Salary

NEAR Wild Rose, Wisconsin. 5 Bedrooms,
Modern sand beach, Deepwoods. $50 Wk.
June and Sept. $75 Wk. July and August.
Telephone ID 3-0080.

ROOMS

NURSES

and

good

GIRL

WORKING CLOSE TO HOME
IN A NEW MODERN OFFICE
HAS SO MANY ADVANTAGES

ASSISTANT TO
CREDIT MANAGER

excelent condition. $165 per month. Avail-

able immediately. Call MUndelein 6-0469.
TWO
bedroom
brick
home
with
dining
room
and full basement
in quiet residential
area;
lease
required.
$155
per
month. LI 2-2015 or MUndelein 6-6720.

time

duties;

Young Women

COE

Evanston

WILL train young college g
ates as Casualty Unde
This is a profession with
opportunity. Minimum
2
college and business expe
equivalent may be consic
Mr. Parker—FInancial 6-7

OFF SET PRESSMAN
*

Prefer

_

*

experienced all-around
re Fate ‘gt sine man

THE
952.

*

BROOKSHORE

Sunset Ridge Road
Phone CRestwood

ma

co

No
2-1200

CARETAKER
- MAINTENANC!
Assume responsibility for care and
nance of grounds and buildings of lar,
estate, 100 miles N.W. of Chicago.
supervise help. Year
around.
Hou:
nished. Excellent opportunity. Reply
detail age, background,
experience
status, salary requirements. All repli
strictly confidential. Write Box WLake Forester.
DESK
CLERK
For exclusive suburban hotel; single
preferred. Telephone Lake Forest
22

TYPE

setting plant in Chicago

bination Linotype
man, days. Write
Park News.

operator
Box J-15

LINO-TYPE
*

KLUGE
*
Part

THE

and
c/o

n
H

OPERATOR.
x

*

PRESSMAN
*
*

time—hours

*

needs

*

to

suit.

*

BROOKSHORE

952 Sunset Ridge Road
Phone CRestwood

CO

No:
2-1200

an

cor

�“7
/

* THE

City of Lake Forest will accept applications for appoint-

ment

to

the

_ Applicants
under

35

City

Hall,

_ Lake

Fire

must
years

of

220

Forest,

Department.

be over
age.

22

and

Apply

East

at

Deerpath,

Illinois.

* oe
eee &amp;
Ee

TELEPHONE SOLICITORS
| Evenings 6 to 9 p.m. Experience not neces| sary.
Salary
plus
commission.
Apply
at
ee
ALL YEAR, BUILDERS, INC.
nt

ID 2-5423
OLLEGE
student and
teachers, summer
about $75 a week. Apply 36 South
work;
4 State, Room 1013, Chicago. 10 to 12 noon.
35,
and
21
age
between
wanted,
N
afternoons, 5 day week, good pay. with
4
wing company. Telephone WI 5-1749.
ar time light delivery truck driver wanted, day time hours; may use own car or
station wagon. Telephone ID 2-2259.

part

jobs,

odd

do

to

boy,

school

HIGH

between 7
evening
Friday
Apply
time.
9 p.m. Columbia Household Appliand
ances, 1805 St. Johns, Highland Park.

WANTED—DOMESTIC

HELP

Couples,
$50-$60.
Cooks,
JOBS.
0 A-1
$400-$500. Maids and nursemaids, $45-$60.

Lincoln
6-5818.

fee. Shorline Agency, 525
No
- Ave., Winnetka. Telephone HI

garage apartment, private enSANT
'
in
to work
woman
port;
car
“trance,
salary; man, experienced gardener
house,
Telephone

apartment.

for

change

time

to work pat

handyman,

and

in ex-

2-

ID

top pay,
white;
cook,
EXPERIENCED
on “near transportation. References, Call Lake
_. Forest 2398.
| GOOK and light housework; good position
-

for

of three

family

adult

with

reliable

ex-

July;

ref-

perienced person with references.
wages. Telephone ID 2-2960.
GOOK

for

2

weeks

in

June

or

Current

erences. Top pay. Call Lake Forest 2398.
GENERAL HOUSEWORK;; reliable, expe-

|

woman, to stay. Own room, perae Leo
manent. 2 school age girls. Local refer_-

ences

|

required.

GLEANING

__ Fridays.

Telephone

for

2

house.

ranch

small

Telephone

year old child; light housework.

~

for

permanent

white,

woman,

2-3021.

Call Lake Forest _652.
girl

SUMMER

ID

as iD 3-0622 collect.
ay
| HOUSEMAN to do cleaning every

Friday;

eo - must have Lake Forest references, own
transportation.
Telephone
Lake
Forest
4439 after 11 a.m.

average
and

housework

light

a year;

months

time,

part

woman,

WHITE

6

care

of
te) child 2 yrs. Telephone ID 3-1078.
HOUSEWORK and prepare dinner, from 11
pleasant

children,

no

days;

five

7,

to

household. Own transportation. Telephone
Po)
ID 2-2524.
| TEMPORARY
cook, white, starting June
|Bal 25th through July; some cleaning. Ref,448

erences

Lake

_

required.

Forest

Mrs.

146.

Burke

Williamson,

HOUSECLEANING
every
other
Friday;
must
have
own
transportation
or walk

ane

Shore

-2-1186.

_—-

station.

Telephone

ID

d

CLEANING

and child care, 2 days a week;

must stay Saturday nights. References
quired. Telephone ID 3-0898.
COOKING
and first floor, references
quired,
family,
2 adults,
temporary
Oo
gienl current ‘wages. Telephone

rereor
ID

he COOK, serve, white, experienced, dinner for
:
small family 2 or 3 evenings a week. References. Call Mrs. Chandler, Lake For-

»

veest 3241,

_ RELIABLE
WOMAN,
help with cooking,
and
care of 2 school age children, stay,
own
room, TV, good salary, no heavy
cleaning. Telephone Lake Forest 1585.
OUNG
girl or woman to serve dinners
each evening 5:30 to 7:30. 440 Wisconsin

Ave.

Call Lake

Forest 2398.

CLEANING
lady, steady and reliable per‘son for 2 days a week. North Highland
Park. Call ID 2-0579.
IGHT housework, cooking, stay, must have
(gma
top salary. Telephone ID 2RSEMAID,
assist with one year old,
bes room, bath, TV, stay nights. Teleplone ID 2-6353.

‘EXPERIENCED

second maid,

serving,

ref-

erences,
stay,
one
adult,
no
thorough
cleaning. Telephone ID 2-0652.
ER’S helper, small house, one child,
+5 days a week. No evenings required. $25.

Telephone ID 3-0727.
LOCAL woman or couple
for

toddler

while

parents

wanted,
are

to care

away,

July

;
6 to 14. Telephone WI 5-0463.
_ CHILD
care,
general
light housework,

small
Lake Shore Drive apartment, year
old boy, stay, own room, bath, experienced, recent references, top salary. Telephone ID 2-7050.

TENERAL housework, plain cooking, own
room
and
air conditioned
ranch
asta

2

children.

Telephone

Hlllcrest

6-

‘WANTED.
man,
general
cleaner,
good
North Shore references; own transporta(

at
|

tion. Best wages. Telephone WI 5-0822.
RAL
housework,
one
floor,
new
Ranch home, no basement, boys 9 and
14 and new baby, own room, stay, references. Telephone ID 2-0077.
PERIENCED
cook, general housework,
modern conveniences, own room, bath,
TV,
two
adults,
stay,
A-l
references.

|
Telephone _VErnon: 5-0732.
| DEPENDABLE experienced woman to stay,
i

: sir
,

Ad

housework
and
room
with
TV,

plain
cooking.
references
Top

‘salary. Telephone ID. 2-5119.

‘

H school girl as mother’s helper, 5

hours

a day.

Own.

transportation,
bicycle
Green Bay Rd. area.

HOUSEHOLD GOODS FOR SALE

SITUATION WANTED—FEMALE

BABY SITTING

EXECUTIVE HOUSEKEEPER
SECRETARY,
COMPANION
Well. educated, cultured woman will manage large home for busy individual or semiinvalid; secretarial, accounting, nursing experience with State license. Free to live or
travel
anywhere;
adept
in
dealing
with
others. Drive a car. Excellent references.
Write Box J-30 c/o Highland Park News.
YOUNG mother will care for child in her
home at 122 Prairie Ave. Telephone ID
2-1170.
WILL iron in my home, pick up and deliver. Telephone ID 2-8671.

MOTHER’S HELPER, NO HOUSEWORK,
MERELY
HELP
WITH
CHILDREN.
ps
SALARY.
TELEPHONE
ID 2-

SITUATION

Skokie Valley Highway, Highland Park

3080

$

WANTED—MALE

WALL
WASHING,
$8 per room, ceilings
and walls, 10x14; WALLPAPER REMOVING,
$12 and up, 10x14. North
Shore
references. DAvis 8-6669.
BOOKKEEPER, familiar with double entry,
wishes account. At home or evenings. Call
MAjestic 3-1953.
EXPERIENCED
high
school
boy
wants
yard work, mowing,
clipping, etc. $1.25
per hour. Lake Bluff 2049.
EXPERIENCED young man will garden for
$1.75 hour or handyman. Telephone DExter) 6-7908.
EXPLORER
Scouts,
working
for
camp,
want garden work now through summer. 9
dependable 16 year olds available $1.00
. hour. Lake Forest only. Lake Forest
354.
EXPERIENCED
gardener’
with
college
training desires part time work. Call TRinity 2-2723.
TWO
boys
with
own mower
want
lawn
cutting jobs for summer. Telephone WI 50439 or WI 5-3475.
HIGH
school boy desires delivery service,
for businesses, cutting lawns, light janitor work, or odd jobs. Afternoons, some
evenings. Telephone ID 2-4779.
MAGIC,
recipe for a successful birthday
party: one magician, professional tricks,
prize winning games, crazy stories, souvenirs for all. Yup, NORTH
SHORE’S
FAVORITE MAGICIAN is back in town.
Dave Echt, WI 5-0774.
YOUNG
man
desires house job for outside work, references. Telephone TRinity
2-3500.
TWO
Senior boys, looking for lawn and
household work, own transportation and
equipment, 3 years’ experience. Telephone
ID 2-5323.
COLLEGE student desires bookkeeping job.
Has transportation. Telephone ID 2-3530.
HUSKY Lake Forest College student desires
summer
yard
work.
Experienced.
Call
Lake Forest 2418 after 6 p.m. Tom Strong.

CLOTHING

JUNE

FOR

WALLPAPER |
PAINT
PROTECT YOUR
INVESTMENT
INSIST ON QUALITY
PRATT &amp; LAMBERT PAINTS
EXTERIOR: chalk resistant white
&amp; 99 colors, 1 coat white, low lustre
black, white &amp; 99 colors, ete.

SALE

18TH

IF RAIN, ON
JUNE 19TH

CHOOSE

YOUR

DON’T MISS OUR READY TO PAINT
FURNITURE CLOSE-OUT BARGAINS.
Wallpaper-Murals-Picture Frames

PRICE

BREAKWELL

to pay for surplus articles of clothing

and

many

useful

items

at

DECORATING

THRIFT SHOP
675 CENTRAL AVE.
HIGHLAND PARK, ILL.

251

KIRSCH

GOODS

FOR

SALE

partial essilver, ori-

of art. Appraisers
for insurance
and gift tax. Phone us today. No
obligation on your party.
SPECIALIST
IN HOME
SALES
Either in Your Home or Our Galleries

Winnetka

HI

6-7444
2.

RAG RUG WEAVER
Rag rugs, hand woven for sale. Rugs woven
from torn and sewed used material. Telephone MUndelein 6-6337, 404 East Maple,
Mundelein.
SITUATION
WANTED—DOMESTIC
HOTPOINT electric range, 4 burners, oven
warmer, automatic timer. Excellent condition. Best offer. Telephone ID 2-5103.
THE CURTAIN DEPOT
VACUUM
cleaner, wash machine, chest of
North Shore’s Only Curtain
drawers,
an antique
what-not.
Can
be
seen anytime before 3:30 p.m. 243 So.
Laundry
Central, Highwood.
1825 Green Bay Rd., Rear
EXTENSOLE table, 20x42 inches, opens to
All work done hy hand; linens.
seat 8, with 4 chairs, 2 arm chairs, fine
for cottage, cheap 11th edition Encyclocurtains, blankets, drapes, etc.
paedia Britannica, fine condition, collector’s item; maple crib, fine hobby horse.
Telephone WI 5-3376.
MOVING—GIVE AWAY PRICES
Baby buggy; couch; arm chair; modern end
CLEANERS,
male
or
female;
couples,
table;
Magnavox
combination
TV,
radio,
maids, housemen. Experienced only. Mrs.
FM set; bedroom set in blond wood; set
Baker, Shorline Agency, Winnetka. HIIll- of golf clubs and bag; card table; books,
records,
toys,
barbeque
grill,
and
misc.
crest 6-5818.
items. 1515 Ridge Rd., Highland Park.
WANTED, summer job of light housekeeping and child care for 21 year old; ref17 INCH
Zenith TV, in good condition,
$30. Telephone WI 5-1630.
erences.
Write
Nancy
Scherer,
Greenwood, Wisconsin.
COMPLETE component Hi-Fi system, worth
$600, will sacrifice for half. price. TeleGIRL from St. Louis desires general housework; experienced. Telephone ONtario 2phone WI 5-1146.
LARGE
lounge
chair, light green,
feam
rubber and spring construction, good conWOMAN
wants 2 days steady work, Mondition, $25. Telephone WI 5-1828.
day and Thursday; references. Call MAjestic 3-2669.
GARAGE
sale, baby equipment, furniture,
clothing, some antiques, rummage. ThursBABY
sitting and light housework; prefer
day, Friday, Saturday, 10 to 5 only. 970
to live
in.
Experienced.
Write
Bertha
Windsor Rd., vicinity Deerfield and Ridge
Franti, Ewen, Michigan.
Rds. ID 2-4495, or ID 2-2596.
2 GIRLS desire day work, Monday through
WESTINGHOUSE
twin window fan; Eureka
pay:
references. Telephone DExter 6upright cleaner; table pad 40x60 plus 2
twelve inch leaves. Sunbeam cooker, ID
2-8530.
ELEVEN
window
screens,
34x5414,
one
storm and screen door, 3114x80; miscellaneous screens. Telephone ID 2-7158.
NEW
shipment antiques: dry sinks, chests,
dough-bin; tables; chairs and cupboards,
MAIDS
GENERAL
- COUPLES
etc.
Some in the rough, Copper; lamps;
Experienced with References
gifts; early American
reproductions; accessories; furniture; wagon seats; Deacon
LINDGREN EMP. AGENCY
benches;
planters;
tableware.
Betty’s
811 Elm St.
Winnetka, Ill.
HI 6-1047
Shop, 811 Waukegan Rd., Deerfield. Telephone WI 5-0137.
SEWING machine, practically new, all autoWOMAN
wants cleaning, laundry, no winmatic features of $400 sewing machine.
dows.
$10
and
carfare.
Mrs.
Lillian
In a modern walnut desk cabinet, $125.
Gregory,
DE
6-4062.
Telephone ID 2-9113.
EXPERIENCED
woman
wants day work,
KITCHEN
wall cabinets, used, miscellanereferences.
Monday,
Wednesday,
Thursous sizes. $10 each. Spalding St. Charles
day. Own transportation in morning. TeleKitchens, 3218 Skokie Valley Road, Highphone MAjestic 3-2508.
land Park.
EXPERIENCED
cleaning
girl wants
day
USED portable sewing machine, good conwork,
Monday
and
Wednesday.
Ruth
dition, reasonable. Telephone ID 3-1875.
Freeman, MAjestic 3-5498.
GOOD mattress and spring, $25; mahogany
YOUNG
reliable lady would like Monday,
bed, $10; three pair drapes,
$9; white
Wednesday and Thursday day work. Refchest, $15. Telephone ID 3-1086.
erences. Call DExter 6-7928.
LARGE
freezer, refrigerator, double oven
electric range, mangle, davenport, carpeting, rugs, draperies, match stick draperies,
BABY SITTING
vacuum cleaner and rummage. 588 SheriHIGH school senior would like to care for
dan Rd., Highland Park.
children
during the day;
excellent ref- MAHOGANY double bed bedroom set, $40;
erences. Telephone ID 2-8765.
small blond
bookcase,
$4; large round
mirror, $5; double decker doll bed, saxoWANTED:
local woman,
with references,
phone, pull up chair, lamps, dishes, etc.
to sit day or evening, occasionally, with
Lake Forest 2732 after 5.
children ages 9, 7, 2, and 8 months; also
some ironing. Telephone ID 2-6757.
CHROME
kitchen table and 4 chairs, $8;
WANTED: reliable, experienced sitter, Monelectric carpet sweeper, $4; Dina Chest
day evenings;
also some
weekend
evefoldaway
dining
table,
cost $300
new,
nings and occasional
days.
Ravinia
or
now $18; 4 chairs, $4; 3 yr. crib &amp; matBraeside area. Telephone ID 3-0895.
tress, $7; upholstered chair, $5; painting
MOTHER’S
helper, wanted part time, reeasel, clock radio, teeter-babe, twin box
liable, assist housework, care of children
spring &amp; mattress, double bed spread, $3;
ages 3 and 5. Telephone ID 2-9315.
baby feeding table, size 42 men’s suits;
zip-lined
coats; storm coat; size 12 black
HIGH school senior desires work as mothwomen’s coat, maternity clothes, size 1
er’s helper
ay
through Friday, 9
and
2
snow
suits, cheap. 820 W. Deerpath,
to 5. Prefer Highland Park Highlands
Lake Forest 3091.
area. Telephone ID 2-8216.

TELEPHONE

DAY

ID 2-8615

WORKERS

2-1418

309 Central Avenue, HIGHLAND
PARK—
SATURDAY
ONLY
9 A.M. to 4 P.M.
Brown Mah. Sheraton Sideboard; Pr. Down
Filled Lounge Chrs; Mah.
% Tester Bed;
Antique Pine Stencilled Single Bed; Mah.
Chest; Antique Walnut Rockers; Tiger Maple and
Cherry Cupboard
Top;
Sofa;
4
Maple Windsor Side Chrs; Pr. Ice Cream
Chrs; Drapes; 2 Good Electric Stoves; Misc.
Lamps,
Bric-a-brac, Picture Frames.

ental art, paintings, rugs and works

Linden

ID

SHADES

- APPRAISERS

We buy and sell entire
tates, furniture, crystal,

386

RODS

Miscellaneous
furniture:
Davenport;
cabinets;
RCA
radio;
rocking
and _ straight
chairs; extension dining table and chairs;
studio
couch;
wardrobe
cabinet;
sewing
machine
and
cabinets;
complete’
kitchen
utensils; every-day and better sets of dishes;
glassware—cut
glass
and
plain;
cutlery;
Westinghouse
electric
refrigerator;
Rexair
vacuum cleaner with all accessories almost
new; lawn mower, almpst new; metal deck
chairs; miscellaneous rugs; books
on Architecture,
art,
scientific
and
fiction
in
English and German. Can be seen any day
until 21 June 1959 at 1257 Forest Ave.,
Highland
Park;
phone:
ID 2-1002.

PICK GALLERIES
AUCTIONEERS

SUPPLIES

CONDITIONED
Ave. Highwood

PRIVATE HOME SALE

MAN’S pure silk suit, size 42; lady’s complete spring, summer wardrobe, size 10-12,
perfect condition,
reasonable. Telephone
ID 2-5564.
MATERNITY
clothes,
sizes
8-10,
infant
clothes, lingerie, size 32, maid uniform.
Telephone
VErnon
5-0844.
MOUTON shortie coat like new, size 12-14,
$25. Telephone WI 5-2879 after 6 p.m.

HOUSEHOLD

AIR
Waukegan

FOR
discriminating
buyers, Thurs.,
Fri.,
Sat. 1 yr. old Oxford of Kent din. rm.
table,
seats 24 open;
lib. table, black
marble top; unusual easy chair; brass &amp;
glass tea cart; curio cab., entire fam. rm.
of wrought
iron,
incl.
card
table
set,
chair, 2 lounges &amp; cor. table; chests of
drawers;
over size bed;
chaise longue;
player piano &amp; rolls; B.B.Q. &amp; elec. spit;
lamps;
spreads;
drapes.
153
Lake
St.,
Glencoe, VErnon 5-1119.
MOVING,
must sell Chinese Chippendale
sofa, 10 piece boy’s maple bedroom set,
Encyclopaedia Britannica, variety of chairs,
mirrors, desk, etc. ALSO GARAGE SALE
of miscellaneous
household
and
garden
items. Friday 9:00 a.m. to 7 p.m. and
Saturday 9:00 a.m. to Noon.
184 Wildwood Road, Lake Forest 3123.
FOR sale: two lawnmowers, good condition.
Call Saturday or evenings after 6:00 p.m.
ID 2-3559.
MOVING,
love seat, occasional
chairs,
gate leg table, shag rug, 9 by 12, electrolux, lamps, tables, all reasonably priced.
Clothing, dresses, coats, size 12 and 14.
Call after 6 p.m. Lake Bluff 1861.
ELECTRIC
stove in good and very clean
condition,
$20;
boy’s
Schwinn
20 inch
bicycle, $11; child’s school desk, $3. Call
Lake Forest 3136.
ELECTRIC dryer; wringer type washing machine. 320 Palmer, Highwood.
GARAGE
SALE—TV
set, $10; Hollywood
broiler, $3; toys; double waffle iron, $3;
school desks; beautiful yard goods; glassware;
girl’s and
ladie’s clothing; table
saw, planer and jointer, jig saw; box spring
and mattress, $10 each; many more bargains.. Telephone ID 2-7500.
TREASUR
hunting? Make this your first
stop, June 11, 12, and 13. 153 Lake Street,
Glencoe. For play, for home, for hobbies,
for wear, for children, etc. Come see our
bargain basement.
GREY
formica top kitchen table, 2 extra
leaves,
4
matching
chairs.
Telephone
VErnon 5-1033.
NORGE
refrigerator, good working condition, perfect for extra refrigeration. Telephone ID 2-8274.
PAIR mahogany 2 tier tables with drawer.
Usable as end tables or bedside tables,
$45 pair. Also, Hoover upright vacuum
cleaner with complete attachments in good
order, $20. Telephone ID 2-3454.
SKOTCH
KOOLER,
never
used,
Fiesta
dishes, pr. Windsor type chairs, pr. peach
taffeta comforters, child’s chest. Reasonable. 1835 Clifton. ID 2-6235.
CARPET, four weeks old, black and white
tweed, 72 square yards, $175.00. Hoover
upright vacuum cleaner, $12. Telephone
ID 2-8252.
CHINA—NOT ANTIQUES
Haviland, white with gold .............. 6 settings
Bavarian, interesting pattern .......... 8 settings
Wedgwood—Chippendale pattern ..6 settings
Wedgwood—Ullswater
pattern
....8 settings
Royal Doulton—Cavendish pattern 4 settings
EVANSTON ANTIQUES AND RESALE
826 CUSTER AVE., EVANSTON
DAILY 9:00 to 4:30
1% PRICE SALE
QUALITY MERCHANDISE
Resale shop. June 22-August 1, 9:30-5:30.
Monday and Thursday evenings til 9:00. All
types clothing, household items, miscellaneous. Ort Value Center, 1801 St. Johns Ave.,
ID 2-9504.
1959
BLONDE
Zenith
console TV,
cost
$248, used 3 weeks, $150; Hotpoint 1 ton
deluxe air conditioner, push button model,
cools,
circulates,
exhausts,
heats,
cost
ar used 3 months, $100. Telephone ID
2

CUSHION Lawson sofa, $50; 2 console
TV’s, 17 in., $35, 21 in., $65; $135 Kitta
pine chest, $45. Telephone ID 3-

ew

+3

“HOUSEHOLD GOODS FOR SALE
if,

DOUBLE

washer,

bed, $30; refrigerator,

$20;

folding

roll-a-way

$30;

Bendix

bed,

$10;

fibre rug, 9x15; chair. Telephone ID 24856 after 7 p.m.
FANS, electric, 2 small, $6 each, one 16 in.
commercial size, $35. Brand new bowling
bag, $5. Call Lake Forest 482.
MOVING.
Toro
power mower,
one year
old, $75. Large Melnor sprinklers, $7.50.
Hoover
$20. RCA
TV _ $30. Hide-a-bed,
wing chair, portable TV, $75. Hall mirror,
$15. Davenport,
tables and lamps.
837
Larchmont, Lake Forest 4872.
SHADES
of green couch, $25. Call Lake
Forest 3862.
BEDROOM sets, refrigerators, stoves, power
lawn sweeper and power mower, both for
$75.00; chairs, rugs, etc. Call Lake Forest
1105.
9 BY 12, 12 by 15, beautiful solid grey hand
made oriental rugs. In excellent condition.
Call Lake Forest 5066.
TWO
solid maple twin beds, springs and
mattresses,
good
condition;
worn
blue
leather chair, $10; wood and brass floor
‘lamp, $15; 3 way brass reflector lamp,
$10;
Cape
Cod
glassware;
single
pink
dust ruffle and pillow sham, pink Fortisan
draw drapes brand new, 45” long, accurate bathroom
scale. Telephone
ID
26994.
$55,
cushion,
3
75”,
davenport,
ROSE
matching chair, $25; or best offer, moving, must sell. Telephone ID 2-0978 or
Lake Forest 2715.
furniliving room
cherrywood
MOVING,
ture, dining room set, day bed, bedroom
set, misc. items. Reasonable prices. Telephone ID 2-8975 after 5 p.m.
DELUXE
white patio umbrella, 6 months
old, $32. Telephone ID 3-0876.
FIRESIDE
chairs;
permanent
card _ table
with 4 chairs. Best offer, telephone WI 55310 after 4 p.m.
MOVING must sell Baker dining room set,
excellent condition, Ige. 2 pc. sec. sofa,
living
room
chairs,
leather
chrs., fireplace equip., out door furn., drapes, dishes,
Ranch Mink coat, misc. items. VErnon
5-2582.
RUGS, grey wool, 171%4x11 and 9x12 Biexe 9x
10, grey 9x12. Wrought iron tea cart, and
step
table,
book-case,
adding
machine,
elec. animal clippers. Telephone WIndsor
5-3699.
Bi
CHILDREN’S racing car with motor, blond
rattan
chairs,
6
with
table
room
dining
bed frame, train or
chairs, Hollywood
housemiscellaneous
and
ping pong table,
hold items. Telephone VErnon 5-0844.
FOR sale: Plate glass mirror 4x6, excellent
Highland
Central,
1037
$25.
condition,
Park.
MOVING
THIS WEEK
:
Must sell now, at sacrifice prices, antiques
4
equipment;
fireplace
brass
solid
including
poster
bed;
Sheraton
sofa.
Also,
rug;
drapes;
books;
electric
mangle;
Airgard
window unit; boating
and
other sporting
equipment.
Telephone ID 2-0837 for appointment.
KNABE
console piano, $500; 9 piece mahogany dining room set, $500; davenport
and
matching
drapes,
six months
old,
$250;
Frigidaire
double
oven
electric
stove, $100; Baker drum table, $100, all
excellent
condition.
Telephone
ALpine
_1-0079.
8 FOOT Hydroplane, 5 h.p. motor, $150;
Spinet piano,
15 cu. ft. freezer, $125;
_ $150. Telephone WI 5-0817.
MOVING to smaller house must sell office
desk
and
chair;
upright
piano;
maple
dining table; other tables; lamps; violin.
Telephone WI 5-0766.
GOT and mattress in good condition, $5.
Telephone WI 5-0153.
SOFA, $75, condition like new, lovely yellow
upholstery; upholstered chair, $25, good
condition. Telephone WI 5-3164.
SALE in garage Friday &amp; Saturday: Lawson
sofa, 9x12
rug, large walnut
and
oak
desks, odds and ends of tables and chairs,
and typewriter. Telephone ID 2-2865.
FOR sale G. E. electric stove, $35; piano,
$15. Telephone ID 3-0370.
FOR
sale reasonably, walnut dining table
and 6 chairs, leather seats, lounge chair
slip covered. Telephone ID 2-6967.
21 INCH Motorola TV, beautiful mahogany
console, good condition, $50. Telephone
ID 3-1951 after 6 p.m.
MAPLE
bunk beds with mattresses. Like
new. Can be used as twin beds. Call after 5 p.m. VErnon 5-1788.

MISCELLANEOUS

FOR

SALE

“Jim Beinlich Trucking handles all
following services for Homeowners:

HUMUS

e

of

the

MANURES

5-1195.

GARAGES
AND A HALF WITH
DOOR, CONCRETE FLOOR
RAGE WINDOWS.

| CAR

OVERHEAD
AND 2 GA-

$695
NO

DOWN

PAYMENT

E-Z TERMS

WALSH
HOME

IMPROVEMENT CO.
2800 BELVIDERE
ON 2-8770
WAUKEGAN
IMMEDIATE CONSTRUCTION
FOUR
ts
Sy

SAM
SNEAD
WOODS,
medium
years old, excellent condition.
teen agers, $30. Telephone ID

for

Thursday, June 11, 1959

�‘

MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE

MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE

PAINT
One carton King-size Coca-Cola free with
every gallon Enterprise Paint. Exterior and
Interior Paint to suit your every need. Visit
our newly remodeled store to see complete
displays of glass, mirrors, shower and tub
enclosures, Window shades, Venetian Blinds,

ag

draperies, and Modernfold folding

oors.

LAKESIDE GLASS
1914 First St.

&amp; PAINT CO.
ID 2-7211

;
FOR BETTER LIVING
Aluminum Specialty Products. Combination
windows, doors, awnings, sidings, porch enclosures,
jalousies,
gutters,
fencing,
lawn
furniture, ornamental railings, etc. Quality
and price wise see us before buying.
THERMO-TITE WINDOW
CO.
708 WAUKEGAN
RD.
DEERFIELD
WI 5-1198
ID 2-1553
FOR rent: garden tillers, cub tractor and
attachments,
lawn
mowers,
etc.
Lawn
mower
sharpening
service,
and_
sales.
Telephone
ID 2-8029, 2070 Green
Bay:
a. Woody’s Highland Park Service Sta-

WINDOW

SHADES

Window coverings, such as shades, blinds,
bamboo
draperies,
are all on display at
Lakeside Glass and Paint Co. newly remodeled store. Quick service is available on all
standard items. Estimates are given without
obligation. Call us today,
or better yet,
stop in and visit us.

LAKESIDE GLASS
1914 First St.

&amp; PAINT CO.
ID 2-7211

HAYRIDE PARTIES for
mer.
Horses
boarded.
Northbrook. CRestwood

spring and sumHapps’
Hollow,
2.3131.

GLASS
Everything
in
glass is available
at the
newly remodeled Lakeside Glass and Paint
Co. Mirrors, specialties, Shower and Tub
Enclosures are all on display.

LAKESIDE
1914 First St.

GLASS

&amp; PAINT CO.
ID 2-7211

FOR sale, graduation specials: student desks,
limed
oak or maple,
$19.95;
chair
to
match, $11.75; Corona Clipper typewriter, $75.76; Parker 21 pen and pencil set,
$8.95. Chandler’s, Inc., 645 Central Ave.,
Highland Park.

SHOWER

&amp;

TUB

ENCLOSURES

Visit our newly
remodeled
store to see
complete displays of Tub and Shower enclosures, Glass,
mirrors,
Venetian
Blinds,
rancwag
draperies,
and
Modern
folding
oors.

LAKESIDE
1984

First

GLASS

&amp; PAINT

St.

ID

NEED

BLACK

CO.
2-7211

SOIL?

We are one of the North Shore’s largest top
soil and Nutri Soil dealers. We
are also
equipped for av Be and spreading soil.

VE

M

5-0513

BEINLICH
or

VE

5-1195

ALL TYPES MANURE
AVAILABLE
Large
supply of cattle, horse
and mushroom manure. We deliver any amonut.

VE

5-0513

JIM

BEINLICH
or

VE

5-1195

AIR-CONDITIONER, % ton, 110 volts, fits
window 27 in. x 17 in. or larger, deluxe
model, good as new, $75; boy’s 26 in.
bike, swap for boy’s 24 in. bike or sell.
Telephone WI 5-2972.
28 INCH
nine bushel capacity gas powered lawn sweeper, needs new bag, $40.
Telephone WI 5-2676.
4x8 FOOT two wheel trailer; clarinet. Telephone ID 2-3187.
REMINGTON model 32 over and under barrel only. 12 gauge, 28 inch, both full
ejectors and rib. New. Other guns. After
5 p.m. Lake Forest 2868.
$400
UNIVERSAL
gas
range,
used
3
months, 2 ovens. Best offer. Men’s clothing, sizes 39 to 42. Like new. Call Lake
Forest 3331 between 5 and 8 p.m.
DAVID
BRADLEY
garden tractor, 1 year
old, 6 h.p. with 3 gang reel mowers. Riding sulky and roller mows. Rolls 60 inches
wide. Lake Forest 4605.

STRAWBERRIES
PICK YOUR OWN
PAUL
14

MITCHELL

3220 Buffalo Grove Rd.
mile south of Dundee Rd.

Arlington

Heights,

CLearbrook

table

saw,

planer,

join-

ter and sanding disc, plus all attachments,
Coad Sears’ jigsaw, $25. Telephone ID 2-

PATTY

.BERG.

golf

WE
Open

SELL ON
Mon. thru
Sat. &amp; Sun.

Fri.
9-6

9-9

Bought at Auction
3 Truckloads of Pottery

bird baths, $2.95 each; jardenieres and vases,
25c and up; pitchers, 60c; steins, 20c. Good
buys in Hob Nail milk glass made in Sweden. Bedroom and living room sets; stainless steel sinks, $15 each; good buys on
linoleum and carpeting; children’s swing sets,
$19.50; new and used soil pipe, $1.50 &amp; up;
swimming
pools,
$5 and
up;
ping
pong
tables with nets and paddles, slightly damaged, $14.50; metal wall cabinets, $7 &amp; up;
54-inch cabinet sinks complete, $89.50; 42inch cabinet sinks, complete, $59.50; used
Remington
Rand _ typewriters,
$40;
office desks, $35; doors, $3 and up; structural steel, 6c a lb.; Many other items too
numerous to mention.

IN AND

clubs,

6

irons,

putter and bag.
xcellent condition.
phone ID 2-5919

“Thursday, June 11, 1959

plus
Tele-

SEE HOLMES
FOR NORTH SHORE’S
FINEST A-1 USED CARS
1958

Edsel
hard
heater, AT

1957

Ford

1957

er, Fordo., pow. st. 2.20.0: $1695
Pontiac 4 door hard top,

BROWSE

FOR CEDAR APPLE RUST CONTROL ON THORNS AND CEDARS
EQUIP
YOURSELF
WITH
AN
EVER
READY
GARDEN
GUN.
CAPABLE, LIGHT TO HANDLE
AND
NO STORAGE
PROBLEM.
ASK FOR A DEMONSTRATION
AT
ROGERS
NURSERY
AND
GARDEN MART,
176 AND 42A,
LAKE BLUFF.
FOR

INSTRUMENTS

WANTED

TOP
dollar for used spinet pianos. Telephone ID 2-2510.
PIANOS WANTED
ALL
MAKES—STYLES
TOP PRICES PAID
ROGERS
PARK _ 1-4400
BANJO,
prefer 5 string model but would
be interested in fine quality 4 string banjo
worth converting. Call MAjestic 3-7588.

WANTED

TO

BUY

WANTED
AT ONCE
Oriental rugs, French furniture, bric-a-brac,
antiques, and pianos. Top cash paid. ROgers Park 1-4400.
14 OR 15 ft. aluminum or fiber glass runabout, motor and trailer. Telephone ID 2477.

LOST

&amp; FOUND

LOST:
cat, small brown
and black tiger
striped, neutered male; also large orange
tiger in April, white cat in November;
in Deerfield Park. Telephone WI 5-5321.
LOST: pair of glasses with blue frames, vicinity of Highland Park High School or
car
hate School. Reward. Telephone ID
6, in Deerfield enTelephone WI 5-

RING lost, lady’s white gold diamond engagement. Vicinity Virginia and Barberry,
Highland Park. Reward. Telephone WAbash 2-2288.
LOST:
GEORGE,
the Robert Stuart’s beloved Siamese Tom cat. Please call Lake
Forest 3894. Reward!
LOST in| Highland Park, or Deerfield, prescription type sun glasses, in leather case.
Reward. Telephone ID 2-8384.

AUTOMOBILES

FOR

SALE

1958 BUICK Roadmaster 75, 2 door hardtop, with full power equipment, plus air
suspension. Excellent condition, low mileage. Telephone ID 2-1279.
1953 PLYMOUTH
2-door
station wagon,
recently overhauled; very clean, excellent
tires. $595. Telephone WI 5-0550.
1952 VOLKSWAGEN,
excellent condition,
new tires, $700. Telephone ID 2-8525.

1952 FORD

club coupe, V-8, Ford-c-matic,

dual mufflers, whitewalls, $300. Pure Oil
Station, Deerfield and Park Ave., Deer-

field.

radio,

heat-

1957

Ford 2 door, radio, heat$1095
er

1956

Ford

door,

conv.,

radio,

radio,

heat-

er, Fordomatic, pow. st. $1395
1955

Chevrolet 4 door station
wagon, heater and Pow-

1955

Mercury
conv.,
full
DOW OMe wd
$
Ford conv.; radio, heatCM
aetna ae $
Ford 2-dr.; radio, heat-

OTANAG
1955
1955

Lae

coy

$1095

ele Pe as

995
895

ae $ 695

Chevrolet 4 dr., Bel-Air,
radio, heater
Rambler station wagon,
radio, heater, Hydra. ....$ 795
Cadillac
4
door,
full
POWER? acct es $1495

1955
1954

1954

Chevrolet

1954

DeRtET
ena ee $
Pontiac Catalina, radio,

1954

Chevrolet

4

dr.,

radio,
595

heater, Hydra., pow. st. $ 695
Wagon;

NAGAR

aos

Pord:-2'

door

1954:
1953

Mercury
heater

Holmes
1909

595

2.).2)55.82. $ 595

2-dr.;

radio,

Motor Co.
Highland

ID

Open

$ 595

223 ak $

St. Johns

Open

radio,

aie

1953:/Pontiac: Wagon

SALE

ELECTRIC Magnis chord organ and stand,
cost $155, sell both for $85. Telephone ID
2-2821.
100 new and used spinets, grands, players
and practice uprights from $79.00.
We buy used pianos.
Monday and Thursday 9-9.
Sunday 11-5.
FIELD’S PIANO CO.
2921 W. Touhy
AMbassador 2-2023
ACROSONIC_
Spinet,
Mahogany
finish,
straight lines, 7 years old, used 3 years,
fine condition, $400. Telephone ID 2-2471.
COMPLETE
set of Slingerland drums in
excellent condition. Call WI 5-0549 after
6 p.m.
5 FOOT Grand piano, walnut finish, best
offer. Telephone ID 2-2510.
Hammond chord organ, so new that there
is not a mark on its beautiful Cherry finish.
The back of this instrument is completely
finished. Sold new for $1100. Come in and
make us an offer.
LOWREY ORGAN STUDIOS
1795 St. Johns Ave.
ID 2-2510
MUSICAL

radio,

Mercury 4
heater, AT

Re

EIGHT GRAVE LOT, ROSEHILL CEMETERY,
CHOICE
LOCATION,
JEWISH
SECTION,
BARGAIN
PRICE.
TELEPHONE ID 3-0997.

INSTRUMENTS

conv.;

top,

1957

1955

MUSICAL

AUTOMOBILES

SALE

full power, radio heater $1695

GOOD BUYS ON
MAPLE FURNITURE

COME

FOR

TERMS

3-9216

24” GIRL’S Schwinn bike, 2 tricycles, 12 ft.
family pool, Storkline baby carriage, excellent condition,
reasonable.
Telephone
ID 2-7203.
WHITE enameled steel cabinet, 24x48, for
mica top, brand new, excellent for utility
room, $20. Kenmore mangle, $40, a real
bargain.
1957 Mercury
outboard motor,
6%
h.p., sep. gas tank, $85. Top grade
fiber glass water skis, $35; genuine 100%
wool
Prudence
hooked
rug, 8x10,
$35.
Lake Bluff 4379.
GIRL’S 26 inch English type bicycle; play
pen and pad. Telephone WI 5-1104 between 9 and 12.
RIDING
mower,
Fairbanks-Morse
Estate
type, one season’s use, $125. Telephone
WI 5-4625.

YATES—American

SHOP AND SAVE AT
STOCKADE TRADING POST
WHEELING, ILLINOIS
516 N. MILWAUKEE AVE.
LEHIGH 7-0247

LOST: white purse, June
route to Edens Plaza.

III.

AUTOMOBILES

8 A.M.

Sundays

Park

2-8640
to 9 P.M.
10 A.M.

Daily
to 5 P.M.

1959 MERCEDES-BENZ
190 SL, one of three coupe roadsters in this
country, factory demonstrator, less than 1,000 miles, strawberry body with white hard
top and
black
soft top. Becker
Europia
AM-FM radio, new car guarantee. Substantial discount. Can be seen at Edens Motors,
680 Skokie Valley Rd., ID 3-2222.
STATION
4 door,
Sea

wagon,
1953 Ford V-8, custom
radio, windshield washers, price
make
an offer. Telephone
ID

1958 MERCURY
station wagon, commuter
series, power steering and brakes, $2100.
Telephone WI 5-2173.
1957 KARMAN GHIA COUPE
Carmen red with a raven black top, excellent condition.
Original. One
owner.
Sell
to first private party. Telephone ID 3-2222,
680 Skokie Valley Rd.
1958 VOLKSWAGEN, one owner,
bit hg
take trade. Telephone

1953 CHEVROLET
Bel-Air, 4 door, radio,
heater, power glide, whitewalls, best offer.
Telephone ID 2-8578.
ee
1953 CHRYSLER New Yorker, 4 door sedan, perfect second car, must sacrifice.
Keg offer. Ray. Telephone Hlllcrest 6-

‘
1959 SPRITE
By Austin Healy, radio, heater, immaculate
condition, radio heater, Tonneau cover, buttercup yellow. Original. One owner. Can be
seen at Edens Motors, 680 Skokie Valley
Rd., ID 3-2222.
FOUR door Super Riviera Buick. Mileage
4,797. Radio, heater, power brakes and
steering, ww. Lake Forest 3331.

CONVERTIBLE,
powder
blue
Plymouth,
1954, good condition, radio, heater, whitewalls, directionals, 2 side view mirrors.
Only $695. Telephone ID 2-0851.
1957 PLYMOUTH
Deluxe Model, 4 door,
Belvedere sedan, automatic transmission,
power steering, radio, heater. $1250. Telephone ID 2-1325.
1956 FORD
convertible
V-8, Fordomatic,
power
steering, radio, heater, whitewall
tires, new top. One owner, must sell. Mr.
Scelzo, 555 Chestnut St., Winnetka.
GOOD second car, 51 Pontiac, tires good as
new, motor and transmission in excellent
condition,
radio, heater,
$150.
Can
be
seen after 5:30. 2005 St. Johns, Highland
Park.
SACRIFICE
on
account
of illness 1957
Plymouth 2 door hardtop, power steering,
1/3 down, pick up balance in monthly
payments. Telephone ID 2-6113.
1958 MERCURY
station wagon, like new,
low mileage, priced to sell quickly. Telephone Hillcrest 6-4330, Maurer.
1951 FORD Country Squire, original owner,
41,000 miles, good tires, radio, best offer.
Telephone ID 2-5357.
NEED A CAR FOR SCHOOL
NEXT FALL?
For $45, a 1946 Ford 2 door, dual exhaust
kit, 2 engines, good tires, radio and heater.
Needs some
work. Telephone WI
5-2249,
before 7:30 p.m.
1955 FORD, 2 door, Custom Liner, 6 cylinder, standard shift, perfect economy car,
radio, heater, whitewall tires. Sharp. See—
drive and buy. Mike, HIllcrest 6-4332.
1950 PONTIAC Convertible; 1948 Chrysler;
good transportation, $80 each. Telephone
ID 2-9530.
1956
PONTIAC
Safari
station
wagon,
2
door, radio, power steering and brakes.
Excellent
condition.
$1,275.
Real
buy.
Telephone WI 5-3507.
1958 HILLMAN husky station wagon, 3000
miles, perfect condition. Call Lake Forest
2358 or may be seen at Kennedy’s Texaco
Station.
1948 CHRYSLER, 4 door, good body and
engine,
perfect
village
car.
Full
price,
$95. Telephone Hillcrest 6-4331.

USED
AND

MOTOR TRUCKS
MOTORCYCLES

1958 MOPED motor bicycle, excellent condition. $90. Call Lake Forest 5332.
1951 INTERNATIONAL
% ton pick up.
Excellent condition. $350 or best offer.
Telephone ID 2-0176 between 6 and 8 p.m.

AUTOS

WANTED

WANTED to buy, 1956 or 1957 Chevrolet;
must be clean with low mileage. Will pay
cash; private. Telephone WI 5-0550.
LOW mileage 1954 or 1955 Plmouth, Ford
or Chevrolet car. Call Lake Bluff 3279.

SHARE

RIDES

WOMAN driving companion for New York
or Connecticut, June 16. Call Lake Forest
3065; after Friday, ID 2-3770.

1958
DELUXE
Volkswagen, excellent condition. $1,445.
Low
mileage.
Telephone
ID 2-2442.

Now, two locations to serve you better for
custom clothes and alterations.
THE SILVER NEEDLE
HIGHLAND
PARK, ILLINOIS
1866 Sheridan Rd.
610 Laurel Ave.
Phone ID 2-7118
Phone ID 2-1774
LOOK chic for summer with shorter skirts.
Ask for Eda.
Zengeler
Cleaners,
Inc.,
1905 Sheridan Rd. Telephone ID 2-2800.

1954 M.G.-T.F.
Excellent condition,
radio,
heater,
whitewalls, white Tonneau cover, top and_side
curtains, jet black with tan upholstery. Original. One owner. Can be seen at Edens Motors, 680 Skokie Valley Rd. ID 3-2222.
1951
DODGE,
4 door
sedan, gyromatic,
good condition, perfect car for a woman.
Full price, $175. Telephone HI 6-4330.
1956 PLYMOUTH
Savoy 6-cylinder hardtop, 2-door; push button drive. Call after
5:30 p.m. WI 5-3225.
1956 PLYMOUTH
CONVERTIBLE,
only
16,200 miles; power steering and_ brakes,
push button drive, whitewall tires. $1295.

Telephone

WI

5-2297.

Auto

Body and Fender Repairs ~
All Makes - All Models
Complete Painting,
.
Undercoating and Touch Ups
ASK

FOR

ANTIQUES

your

car

the

LOANS
bank

Park

BICYCLES

BIKES—Boy’s

;

or Girl’s

Used

and

Reconditioned. Some like new—a ~
few Schwinns. Most, but not all —
sizes. Also repairs and parts for all
make bicycles.

CYCLE

&amp; HOBBY

SHOP

Central

486

=

2-13

ID

BOY’S 26-inch Schwinn bicycle, with large
basket;

perfect

for

paper

delivery.

$1:

_Telephone ID 2-7173.
eas
ONE boy’s 26-inch English type bicycle, $15
one

girl’s 24-inch

bike,

__2-2787.
LARGE

$10.

Telephone

I

tricycle in very good condition, $5._

Telephone

ID

2-4161.

3

20 in. bicycle, Sears model, excellent

condition,

FULL

$16. Telephone

ID

2-6784.

;

size boy’s English Hercules bicycle,

excellent

poem,

condition,

pump,

$35.

generator

Telephone

BLACK
BLACK

light,

Lake

rack,

Forest

SOIL

dirt, gravel and file, lawns grade

Ge

Dordand,

telephone

NEwton

4

BOATS
1959 JOHNSON
motor, 18hp electric,
remote controls; complete $395. Also

1958

Tee-Nee

Telephone

12 FT.

trailer,

ID

16

3-0880.

runabout;

foot

wit

Tilt-Bed,

;

8

steering wheel,

gear shift

controls, trailer, 15 hp Johnson, like new,
Ideal for youngster who likes to go fast—
safely. $325. Telephone ID 2-2787.
y

SNIPE

for sale,

phone

cheap,

needs

work.

Tele-

ID 2-7629.

ath.

BOOKS
WORLD

BOOK

Miriam

no

Booth

BUSINESS
HOTEL

er’s

lease

for

apartment.

finer

graduation

HIlcrest

gift.

6-3848

OPPORTUNITY
sale,

Good

25

rooms

plus own-

income.

Call after

3 p.m. ID 2-6703.
ACCOUNTING, bookkeeping and tax practice.
Accounts
being
sold
individually.
Telephone STate 2-4022.
ats

BUSINESS
LIGHT
types

SERVICE

general hauling. We also move Ld
of household appliances. Call ID
2-—

6098 or ID 2-4917.

an

SHIRTS

=

FAST, FAST SERVICE
if special service desired, try it t oday
WOO LAUNDRY
—
1875 St. Johns
Highland Park
FURNITURE
MOVING—Local
and Long
Distance—one piece or a truck load.
ing, crating, shipping.
Ward
Anderson,
telephone ID 2-0087.
DOES your swimming pool need pum
ik
out? Do it yourself or let us do it.
have the equipment. ID 2-9202.
$4 AN hour, or contract, for both. White
couple. For professional services. All types —
of housecleaning, landscaping and garden-

ing,

painting,

tuck

pointing,

etc.

Work

guaranteed.
Highland
Park
references.
Telephone HUmboldt 9-5000.
\
BOOKKEEPING,
accounting
and
income

Wide

experience.

Heinrichs, 685 Park
phone ID 2-1642.

Avenue

William

West.

C,

Tele-

CAMERAS

WESTMEAD
antiques,
having
completed
the new shop, has a choice collection of
Chinese and Far East antiques. Collectors
and decorators welcomed. We are in the
same location; on Illinois 42A, % mile
north of Illinois 120.

Finance
money.

FRECH

ID 2-5845.

Highland

ALTERATIONS

AUTO

JACK

487 E. Park Ave.

tax service.

1959 N.S.U. PRINZ
Four passenger car, radio, heater, 45 miles
per gallon, exceptionally good buy. Original.
One owner. New car guarantee. Can be seen
at Edens Motors, 680 Skokie Valley Rd.,
ID 3-2222.

KARMANN-GHIA
1959 coupe, black; ww
tires, radio, U.S. specs, low mileage, perfecti condition. Private party. $2,350. Telephone WI 5-5386.

GENERAL BODY SHOP
NOW OPEN

BOY’S

4332.

low mileWlIndsor

1957 THUNDERBIRD convertible, princess
white,
automatic
transmission,
power
steering, like new. Don’t miss this one.
Tur-Fon Auto Sales, 415 Waukegan Ave.,
Highwood. ID 3-1944,

FOR SALE

1959 THUNDERBIRD convertible, full power, cannot be told from new. Will take
trade, will finance, small down payment
to qualified buyer. 555 Chestnut St., Winnetka.
DAIMLER
1938
4-door
sedan;
semi-auto
shift, whitewall tires, side-mount. Prestige
looking car. Best offer. Telephone
WI
5-2297.
1955
CHEVROLET
Bel-Aire
convertible,
V-8;
Powerglide,
radio,
heater.
Private
party; low mileage. Best offer. Telephone
ID 2-4675.
1958
MERCURY
Montclair,
convertible,
full power, fully equipped, continental kit,
“Dream Car.’? Trade accepted and terms.
Telephone Hlllcrest 6-4331.
1953
CHEVROLET
4-door
sedan,
Model
150; radio, heater. Best offer. Telephone
ID 2-2760.
1949 PLYMOUTH,
$150;
good condition.
Call Lake Bluff 925.
1957 BUICK Super, 4 door hardtop, fully
equipped, one owner, Winnetka driven, superior condition, garage kept, must sell.
Hillcrest 6-4332.
1951 FORD
V-8 club coupe, excellent engine; best offer over $75. Come, drive it.
Lake Forest 4750.
1957 LINCOLN Premier coupe, full power;
private owner. May be seen at the Standard Station,
N.W.
corner of Deerfield
Rd. and Skokie. Call ID 2-9899.
1957 CADILLAC, 4 door, hardtop 62, suburban driven, very low mileage, garage
kept, extremely clean, full power,
must
_ sacrifice. Raymond, Hillcrest 6-4330.
MODEL
A, 1930, 4 door sedan, excellent
condition, reasonable. Telephone WI
5-

way

FIRST NATIONAL BANK
of Highland Park

and

save

MODEL 800 Poloroid camera, including exposure meter, print copier, and
flash gun, $100. Telephone ID 2-3154.

PHOTOGRAPHIC
aaarn

and

flash,

enlarger,
$10.

$30;

Brownie

Telephone

ID 2-

CAMPS AND INST.
SUNSHINE VALLEY

Beneoy

A credited member of
American Camping Assn.

18 acres of cool woods with paves lake,
heated swimming pool, all
vities of
terest to children are instructed individ
by adult counselors. 14 years of
satisfaction for boys and
portation provided. June

girls 5-10.
22-August

14.

INSPECTION INVITED
Open house Sundays in May 2-5 p.m.
Mr.

&amp; Mrs. J. R.
LAKE FOREST

31

Thompson

—

—

�CARPENTERS,
FOR

building

CONTRACTORS
that new

home,

&amp;

addition,

NO
job too small. Carpentry,
plastering,
kitchen cabinets, etc. Grant and Grant.
Call Lake Bluff 5015.
CARPENTRY—Why not have that new rec
room now! We specialize in kitchen, attic,
porch and basement remodeling. Now is
the time! Call us about your remodeling
problems. Free estimates. Telephone WI
5-4182 or WI 5-4454.
CARPENTRY, general repairs and remodeling. porch additions, etc. Telephone WI
§-1511.

IT

YOURSELF

RENT

A

REDUCING
BELT

AND
Free

MORTON

Waukegan

TYPE

ORchard

FURNACE

BASENJI

PLANTS

PLANTS

grooming

@

Under the personal]
Elaine Ortman.

of

all

furnished.
Telephone

InID

PIANO
INSTRUCTION
Winston,
staff-.pianist
at WBBM
Call WI
5-0244 after 7:30 v.m
SEWING
LESSONS
Basic and advanced. 9 to 3:30. Telephone
ID 2-9194.
SPEECH
THERAPY:
private
practice,
adults and children; former school therapist, 1957 honor graduate Univ. of Illinois. For conference—LB 2679.
PIANO
lessons and musical education
at
student’s home by an experienced teacher; graduate of European Conservatory.
For information call after 6 p.m. Telephone AL 2-4449.
JACK MOORE
GUITAR
SCHOOL
Guitar exclusively taught.
Private lessons,
group
participation;
instrument
furnished.
National and State winners,
1955-56-57-58.
tues
Park Studio, telephone HlIllcrest 6Hank
CBS.

@

Kennel

Shop

GARDEN

direction

tree re
Beinlich

SEWING

SINGER

OBITUARIES

Sales

for some

features all acces-

&amp;

Among

five

GERMAN
shepherd pups, AKC, for show,
pets, or breeding; we have one for you.
Telephone CRestwood 2-0355.
TOY poodles, white. Call MAjestic 3-4691.

den

Club

Garden

PRAIRIE

ACRES
LAWN

in

Pfister,

his death.

honor

first

of the

late

president

of

his

survivors

are

his

grandchildren.
Requiem

was

sung

in St. James Church

High

Mass

with

Power Mower Exchange

Sales and Service
Tired of Hard Starting
Tired of Trouble

Trade that balky noisy
mower now...
GET THE NEW LAWN-BOY
DELUXE by Makers of:
JOHNSON - EVINRUDE
AS ADVERTISED IN

Terry Alan

*

LIFE* LOOK
Saturday
Evening

Wik yf

Salbego

Little Terry Alan Salbego, infant
son

of Mr.

and

Mrs.

of Waukegan,

Service

dren’s

Memorial

Born

April

Frank

Salbego

died June 2 in ChilHospital,

Chicago.

12 in Highland

Park

Hospital, he is survived by his parents; a brother, Danny, 3; his ma-

ID 2-3811

ternal grandparents,

sPACE

Mr.

and

Mrs.

B. C. Bauner of Le Roy, IIL;. and
his paternal grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. Marco Salbego of 1885 Green
Bay Rd.
Burial was June 3 in Ascension

Cemetery,

Libertyville.

Rugged

Deluxe

LAWN-BOY

Balanced en-

Trims extra close front and
Easy to handle, lightweight.

FREE

YEAR WARRANTY
ACT NOW
* FREE DEMONSTRATION
* HIGHEST TRADE ALLOWANCE
* LOW DOWN PAYMENT

or cool comfo

PAID

ONE

LAWN-BOY MOWER REPAIR
SERVICE — Reasonable Rates
If your Lawn Boy needs service—
bring it
doctor.

with...

in

for

Dr.

Lawn

Boy

to

24” RIDE
MOWER SPECIAL

TRAMS

“ALL SEASON”
A

¢

Estimate!

guarantee

yardage

Call

NEwton

4-3213

Nutri Soil

HEITKOTTER

BROS.

Concept

in AIR

CONDITIONING!

be

is

to

most

located
or

* Operation

Easier

warm

practically

air heating
anywhere

Costs

are

WAS
NOW

Lower

HEATING

Estimate!

outdoors.

1741

Second

&amp; AIR

St., Highland

CONDITIONING

Park

$199.50

$178.88

systems
. . . basement,

BISHOP'S

Humus
Top Soil
Sand and Gravel
Lime Stone

¢ May

attic

prices

and

Installation

¢ Adaptable

T. CLAUSON

reasonable

New

WATERLESS COOLING

CARE

The finest in tree work, patios, landscaping
and maintenance. Insured. Satisfaction guaranteed. Telephone Lake Forest 3366.

52

in-

Lawn - Boy

gine.
side.

Grading, plowing, hauling, fill dirt, black
top soil, rotted cow manure, top dr
seed rolling. Telephone WI 5-0818.

Page

Park,

GARDENING

LANDSCAPING,

For

Mill
Gar-

$99.95

FRANK
VENA
LANDSCAPING
Call me for the finest in lawn care, tree
removal, top dressing, patio work, fertilizing. Telephone ID 2-5494 after 7 p.m.
GENERAL
LANDSCAPING
New lawns, black dirt, humus, top dressing.
planting, lawns fertilized, tree work, stone
work, patios, driveways.
A. MELCHIORRE
ID 2-0829

ELOF

Old

Men’s

club.

SHORELINE SCRAP &amp; PAPER CO.
We pick up paper and all metals, do maintenance work and haul. Telephone ID 31268 or ID 2-6578.

&amp;

3418
the

Highland

21”

For all types of junk brought to our door,
such as: Papers, rags, iron, metal, etc. Or
call IDlewood 3-1466 for free pick-up. We
specialize in industrial accounts. Hours daily
including Saturday, 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
HIGHLAND
PARK
WASTE
MATERIAI
1466 Berkelev Rd.

LANDSCAPING

of

of

vites all community residents to attend, Sunday at 3 p.m., the dedi-

burial following in Ascension Cemetery near Libertyville.

HALE TRAILER SALES
House trailers and travel trailers; we buy
and sel]. 1920 Sheridan Rd., North Chicago
(2 blocks north of naval base)
ROMANY
camping trailers for sale or for
rent. Collapsible trailers; can be put up
in 3 to 5 minutes. 106 Higgins Rd., Park
Ridge. Telephone TAlcott 5-5313.

sories.

time before

widow, Rose; two sons, Sargo and
Ossie, both of 313 Grove Ave.; and

MACHINE

TRAILER

Schaubert,

Eugene

152 and Modenese Society.

of
TRAILERS

V.

president

Rose

Born in Italy on May 22, 1891, he
came to this country 50 years ago.
He was a laborer, retired from the
building trade. He held memberships in the Laborers Union Local

Free Home Demonstration
Repair on All Makes of Machines

TELEPHONE

E.
Rd.,

Alfonso C. Digani

Tuesday

and

Honored Sunday

the

MACHINES

SEWING

Complete

First President

cation of a bronze plaque and the
naming of a section of Memorial

land Park Hospital. He had been ill

CEDAR
SHINGLES?
Don’t
Neglect
Them
SUBURBAN
ROOF
TREATING
SERV
Call ALpine
1-0377
Lloyd S. Crair

breeds

JUNK

PRICES

THE

Drive to OMAN’S FLOWER FARM, located 3 miles west of Half Day on Route 83,
1%4 mile south of Route 22. Open weekdays
and Sundays, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.

Kennel.

Expert

for
Jim

insured. FREE
ESTIMATES.
Telephon
ID 2-8750. ID 2-5481
WING’S TREE EXPERTS.
Cutting, trimming, removing,
feeding
and
repairing
spraying. Fully insured and bonded; free
estimates.
Telephone ID 2-6546 or KIm
ball 6-2292.

Japanese Yews in containers to plant now.
$2.00
and
$2.50
each.
Special
on
large
Ligustrum Vicari—75c each, while they last.

5-130?

Private inside heated stalls and
connecting
individual
outside
runs.

in effect
insured.

A resident of Highwood for 35
years, Alfonso Digani, 68, of 313
Grove Ave., died June 7 in High-

BULBS

Ground Cover Plants; Pachysandra, Ajuga,
Euonymus, Acuta, E. Coloratus, E. Kewensis, E. Vegetus, Baltic Ivy, Bowle’s Vinca.

on the
Highway

@

Men’s Garden Club

SURGERY

now

G &amp; N TREE EXPERTS. Trimming, feed
ing, repairing, guying and removal. Full:

ROOFING

North Shore’s newest and fines:

rates

moval. Completely
VE 5-0513.

A

®

®

FOR

&amp;

Hybrid Petunias, Marigolds, Asters, Impatiens for shade, blue and red Salvias, Zinnias, many others. Tomato and Sweet Pepper plants.

by professionals.

2-0015.

HIGHEST

BERNARD’S SEWER SERVICE
Quick service for clogged or slow main sewers, cleaned and opened with electric rod
equipment. We service any type drain. Also
catch basins and spetic tanks cleaned. LEhigh 7-0232, Wheeling.

GLENCOE
BOARDING KENNEL
VErnon

WINTER

SEWERS

PAINTING AND
PAPER HANGING.
Interior and exterior painting. For quality
workmanship
by
experienced,
reliable
men call W. C. Varney. WI 5-0654.
PAINTING
and paper hanging, reasonable
prices; free estimates. Telephone A. G
Priddy or Peter Gallos. Lake Forest 156
CONGER
BROTHERS
PAINTING
AND
DECORATING
SERVICE.
Paper hanging. Telephone ID 2-3452—ID 2-3053.
MODERN
DECORATING
Painting and papering, inside and outside;
free
estimates.
Telephone
TRinity
2-5055
or KImball 6-1807.

South of Dundee Rd.
Service Drive of Edens

pups, African hunting dogs, rare

unusual breed, odorless, barkless but not
mute, smiles. AKC, all shots. Telephone
MAjestic 3-0925. Buy now, boarded free
during your vacation.

PAINTING AND
DECORATING
Up to date methods
Careful workmanship
Color coordination
Interior and Exterior
BLOOM PAINTING CO.
ID 2-5544
PAINTING
and
decorating;
outside
spe
cialty. Fully insured. Lake Forest 3938
Telephone any time.
mterior
anc
PAINTING
and
decorating,
exterior, natural or bleached
wood
fix
ishing;
quality
workmanship.
For
esti
bere g call Eric Schneider, Libertyvill:

Boarding

REPAIR

GARINO MUSIC STUDIOS
Shore’s Finest. Instruction on accorinstrument
trial plan.

SERVICE

&amp; DECORATING

Glencoe

REPAIRS

INSTRUCTION

dion and guitar;
quire about our

PAINTING

4-8880

GUTTERS
replaced or repaired, cleaned,
ainted with A-1 rust preventative. Careful expert work. Also, wire screening supplied and installed. Telephone ID 2-6362.

North

GERMAN
Shorthaired Pointer, 1 male, 1
female, 3 months, permanent shots. Von
Grahenkruck breeding, top hunting, field
trail or show stock. Lake Forest 2613.
DACHSHUND pups, excellent pedigree, $75.
Red male, $100. Black female. Lake Bluff
1928.

PETS

CLAUSING ELECTRIC
All types of electrical work,
post lights,
wall outlets, new circuits, repairs. Reasonable prices. Telephone ID 2-6287.

&amp;

LANDSCAPE

TREE

PETS

GARDENING

Maintenance - Rototilling
Black Dirt - Fertilizer
New Lawns Put In
Old Lawns Top Dressed
WI 5-5117—after 12 noon

RENTAL

Rd.

ELECTRICAL

GUTTERS

NELSON

GROVE

TOOL
9210

MACHINE

COUCH
Delivery

&amp;

o1

remodeling,
be it large
or small, cal
V &amp; F Construction Co. Telephone ID
2-5477 or WI 5-2980
RELIABLE
experienced carpenter, Remoo
eling, paneling, porches and Hi Fi rooms
siding. H. Blomquist Construction,
tele
phone WI 5-2830.
CARPENTRY.
interior and exterior remodeling,
building,
additions,
built-in
cab
inets, floor, wall and ceiling tile, free estimates. Telephone CHerry 40620.
CHRISTO-CRAFT REMODELING
CO.
WI 5-3273
ID 2-2319
Remodeling and home maintenance is our
business.
Porch
enclosures, basement paneled
room
additions,
kitchen
cabinet,
or
just that one door that doesn’t close right.
All work guaranteed.

DO

LANDSCAPING

JOB

Less Trade-In

3 h.p. Briggs &amp; Stratton Engine—
24” Cut. Forward * Neutral * Reverse—Cuts 1 acre per hour—2”
to 312"
height— Chain
Drive.
HIGHEST

CO

ENGINEERS

Phone:

ID 2-0407

LOCALLY
OWNED

TRADE-IN
FOR
OLD MOWER

ist
TO"Cog A
STORES

YOUR

oe

NATIONALL®
ORGANIZED

Market Square

Lake Forest 3998

Thursday, June 11, 1959

�Pe

Looking

Forward...

”

Expectancy hits its zenith at this time of the year.
come.

This preface

has been

chosen

We are all looking forward to something new and exciting to
because........

DEERFIELD SAVINGS is Looking Forward, Too!

;

Have you noticed the changes, the activity, the excitement
taking place around 735 Deerfield Road, in Deerfield?
before

and

after

transformation.

photos

will

bring

Soon our beautiful

you

new

up-to-date

These
on

the

building will take its

place as Deerfield’s most elegant business “home.”

We

say “home”

because

in dedication to YOU
your SAVINGS

every square

who have enabled

foot will be built
us to build it. . . it’s

HOME.

We invite you to “look over our shoulder” as the construction commences.

We

plans and welcome

would
you as

be proud
a member

to tell you about our
of our growing

family.

We are Looking Forward to your visit.

&amp; LOAN ASSOCIATION

745

DEERFIELD

RD.e

DEERFIELD,

ILL.

Manatee

4
par

CERFIEL
AVING

]

�you'll

find

their gifts

in Highland

Park

at

Garnétt = Co.
ID 2-4700

dots,

and

stripes,

and

Dacron

too!

by

L’Aiglon

refreshing and
breeze, and o

light as a summer
breeze to care for.

1. Pin dot skirt with eyelet embroidered bodice. White with royal
or black, 8-14.
2. Striped
in
two
directions
for
flattery.
Royal,
black
or
green,

714.98
(Fashion

Corner)

there’s

sure

a

Van

to

please

wash'n

wear

to

be

Heusen

shirts

that

Dad!
really

need no ironing, with plain or
eyelet
collar,
both
with
dual
cuffs; or the cool-airweave for
hot
summer
days,
with
plain
cuffs. Give him his favorite.

isco

|
s

~*~

4.00
(Men's

I,

&amp;

.

—.

|

Store)

an elegant
Trio for her
first entertaining

Gifts
to

of

thrill

Beauty

June

to glamorize her bedroom

Brides
- 100% virgin

Dacron Comforter with lovely crepe covering - completely washable, non-mat_ ting, mothproof. Cut size 72x84.

Handsome gold decorated glass tea cart
with two shelves, polished brass frame.

9.95

34.95

100% virgin Acrilan blanket, so warm
and light, a gift she'll treasure. White,

Gold speckled glass casserole with
ished brass stand and warmer.

4.95

beige, green, blue or yellow, 72x90.

10.95
(Downstairs

Decorated

glass dip dish matches table

and casserole.

Store)

6.95
Shop)

i

(Gift

Two

Hours

Free

Parking

in Our

Lot - Hours

pol-

Daily 9 to 5:30;

Friday 9 to 9

�</text>
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                    <text>LP
Thursday

June

4, 1959

196

beth Keview

Second

Annual

Project

‘Chark-O-Chick’

Scheduled

For

JAYCEE
June

7

�The big bank that grew up
with Highland Park

re

Now,

you

get 3% interest
at the

First

Here’s good news for everyone.

National
Starting July 1, the interest rate on all

First National Savings Accounts goes up to 3%.
ow,

_.

So if you start saving

you will receive interest at the increased rate when

“January

1, 1960.

So don’t wait.

Come

it is paid on

in and start saving now.

The

FIRST NATIONAL BANK
Our 60th

year

Complete Banking
and

Trust

of

WEEKEND

High

la na

Park

Member The Federal Reserve System
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

Services

BANKING

HOURS:

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

�Bi...

Vol.

34,

No.

Thursday,

13

June

4,

1959

Village Board Committees

Aerial View of the Business District

May Be Settled June 10

Bd

The Deerfield Village Board will meet Wednesday, June
10 at 8 p.m. in the Village Hall. The impasse between Village
President Eldon Holmquist and five trustees is expected to
to an end at this meeting.

come

President Holmquist stated that
he wanted to appoint his own com-

Stanczak to Speak at
Deerfield Republican
Rally On June 16

mittees

took

Two
Deerfield
Republican
organizations — the Deerfield Young
Republicans
and
the West
Deerfield
Township
Women’s
Republican
Club
will
sponsor
a
Republican Rally in Deerfield on
Tuesday, June 16.
The Rally will be held in the
Deerfield American Legion Hall at
8 p.m. Tuesday, June 16.
Bruno Stanczak, Republican can-

didate

for

State’s

Attorney,

speak. Elected county
cluding Probate Judge

Sheriff

Norris

Treasurer

will

officials, inTom Moran,

Froelich,

Hugo

County

Schneider,

and

others will also be on hand.
“This Rally will give every voter
in Deerfield
sonally with

Herbert
the

a chance to talk
Bruno Stanczak,”

Garbrecht,

Deerfield

lis 19 Wie WOoscos istrict, looking north, with Waukegan Rd. at the right, as the area appeared several weeks ago. The street at the lower part of the picture is Osterman Ave. Jewett
Park is in the upper left. The big open expanse in the center is the Deerfield Commons Shopping
Center

now

under construction.

Deerfield-Bannockburn United Fund
Board Of Directors Has New Members
Eight new members have been elected to the board of directors of the Deerfield-Bannockburn United Fund to fill vacancies and terminations, it was announced today by Earl F.
Paul, board

chairman.

Register Bicycles
At Nearest School
Saturday, June 6
s

Bicycle registration will be held
by the Deerfield Safety Council on
Saturday, June 6 from 9 am. to

_12

noon

for

all

the

do not have ’58 —
for those who have
as yet.

bicycles
’59
not

that

license or
registered

The Safety Council asks the parents to see that their children bring
their bicycles for this safety checkup. The bicycles are checked to see
‘ that they are safe for riding. The
child is checked to see if he is safe
on a bicycle.
Places of registration are Wilmot
School, Maplewood School, Walden
and Deerfield Grammar.
Bicycles
may be registered at the nearest
school.

New Doctor Opens
Office In Deerfield
Dr. Harry Gerber has opened an
office in the Deerfield Medical Arts
Building at 763 Deerfield Rd. On
the staff of the Highland Park Hospital,
he is an
obstetrician
and
gynecologist.
Dr.
and
Mrs.
Gerber
live
in
Highland Park. Their children are
Adrienne, 12; Elliott, 10; Darryl, 7
and Joan 4.

They are Mrs. Melvin J. Pulver,
Robert D. Muir, John D. Austin,
A. G. Barsumian, Robert L. Seiler,
John E. Hale, Roland T. Robinson
and Richard Wilts.
Mr. Paul pointed
out that the
board’s current full complement of
32 members wiil enable the local
fund-raising
organization
to have
two directors from each of the 16
geographical
areas
into
which
Deerfield
and
Bannockburn
have
been divided.
To

Operate

Year-Round

One director from each district
will
serve
on
an
administrative
committee
and
the
second
will
function as drive chairman.

“Under

this

new

organization

plan,
the
Deerfield-Bannockburn
United Fund will be a year-round
operation,’
Mr.
Paul
explained.
“Thus, it can not only do a more
effective job of fund-raising, but
also be of greater service to the
community and our member agencies.”
Robert C. Gand, vice chairman
in charge of the 1959 United Fund
drive, reported that approximately
$33,000 was raised in last year’s
campaign, or 85% of the goal.
He said that the budget committee will meet soon to consider financial support requests for the 14
member agencies and also to complete plans for the ’59 campaign
in Deerfield and Bannockburn.

Since
several

this

from

the

filling

station,
way

The

Phillips
south

been

torn

for the entrance

Commons

from

taken

disappeared

just

has

was

have

scene.

postoffice,
make

picture

buildings

of
down

66
the

an

to

into the

Waukegan

Rd.

On Deerfield Rd., to the left of
the stop lights, the property west
of the Deerfield Savings and Loan
Association,
is being
emptied
of
three buildings. The former Spannraft tailor shop and the residence
are
now
gone
and
the
former
Bubert house is being dismantled
to make
possible
its removal
to
1157 Park Ave. at the corner of
Greenwood
Ave.
Savings-Loan

To

Build

This
open
space
on
Deerfield
Rd. will be location of the new
Savings and Loan building, which
will face both Deerfield Rd. on the

north

and

the

Commons,

on

the

south.
The
Deerfield
Commons
will
have an exit road south onto Osterman Ave. and another to the north
onto Deerfield Rd., both of which

can

be

seen

as

incomplete

at

present.
Parking

The
in the
picture

Spaces

Deerfield

Shown

Shoppers

Court

is

upper right center of the
and the parking lots of the

or

to

Lincolnshire,

and

Light

Oil

Sunday

about

663

of

Zoning:
and

10:25

p.m.,

damaging

public

case will be heard

to this,

President

and

sugPor-

not

Holmquist

Joseph

Brown.

Holmquist

he

new

ordinance

of

would

committees

refuse

has
to

stated

sign

the

regarding

selection

and

it

that

would

take a court order before he would
bow to the will of the majority, it
is reported.
Attorney Thomas Matthews,
according
to Royce
Owens,
village

manager,

has stated that the ordin-

ance can become effective without
a court order with June 10 as the
(Continued on page 18)

Jaycees To Hear
Joseph Koss Speak __ ;
About Brickyards
The Deerfield Junior Chamber
of Commerce will have its monthly
dinner meeting tonight at 7 o'clock
in the Legion Hall dining room.
Principal speaker of the evening

her

and

President

that

will be

property

and the men

Porter, Peterson, Wehle

Carl Jaeger

Rd.,

arrested

responsi-

suggested that they keep the committees of the past two years, substituting new trustees, Aberson and
Porter, in place of retiring trustees

car left the street and jumped the
curb. She was not injured but her
car was wrecked.
Mrs. Johnson
was

directly

Koss.

agree

surround-

when

are

been

and to whom

Public relations: Porter.
Legislative: Petesch.
Administrative: Wehle.
When five trustees would

become

Waukegan

trustees

people

man-

has

Planning Committee:
Koss,
ter, Aberson and Petesch.

Is Smashed

Co.,

by the

of village

board

gested for each are:

Helen
I. Johnson
of 1143
Camille Ave. knocked over the electric light pole in front of the Deer-

field

the

finance, etc.
His committees

Not Injured As

Pole

office

President Holmquist has suggested that the board do away with
committees that represent works of
the regular administrative
staff,
including sewer, water, police, fire,

ing Lake County areas is asked to
attend. Refreshments
will be
served.

Woman

his

ble.

fully
informed
on the issues
at
stake in the coming June 23 election,” said Mrs. Raymond L. Craig,
president
of the West
Deerfield
Township
Women’s
Republican
Club.
Everyone in Deerfield, Bannock-

burn,

from

office

when

the

Republicans

herself,

dignity

appointed

elected

Lake County resident and has served
12 years
as assistant
state’s
attorney during the past three administrations.
“Every Lake County citizen owes

him

away

ager

‘Questions, concerning the office
state’s attorney, Mr. Stanczak’s

to

in

approval of the board. They do not
want too much power invested in

qualifications for the office, and
other questions about Lake County
affairs are welcomed,” he said.
Bruno
Stanezak is a life-long

it

power

be made by the president, with the

Club.
of

invest more

of the village manager.
able to do so, he stated,

as president.
Five members of the board have
held that the appointments should

persaid

president

Young

and

the hands
Not being

Joseph Koss

trustee,

who

Rd.,

Deerfield

her

discuss the plans for acquisition
of the National Brick Co. property.

on Saturday.

village

of Wilmot

for

will

$375,000 REFERENDUM TO BE VOTED
SATURDAY IN SCHOOL DISTRICT 109
Citizens of Deerfield
go to the polls on

Public

Saturday,

Schools

June

of District

6, between

109 will

the hours

of 12

Deerfield State Bank adjoin the lot

noon and 7 p.m, to vote on a referendum

at

17 additional
the Deerfield

Residents of Deerfield will vote in
classrooms.
Grammar school. Those living in Highland Park

will vote

Craftwood

the

rear

of

the

Court.

There is a parking lot at the rear
of the Village Hall and land available just south of it on the Presbyterian
Church
property
which
extends west to Jewett Park. The
new Christian Education building
of the Presbyterian Church shows
up clearly in the upper center.

in the

Lumber

Co., 1590 Deerfield Rd. in Highland

necessary

Park.
The
board
of education
states
that these additions, with 12 classrooms added to Walden School and
five to Maplewood School, are both

cal

way

of $375,000 to build

and
to

the

provide

most
the

economineeded

ex-

pansion up through
1963.
Both
these
schools
will then have
18

classrooms

in each building,

bond

passes.

issue

if the

—

�galx

Pi

hela

SE aAGES

hg

fiyp

te payAiles

ON

ba

Sit

‘4Np A

TR

ee

_ From The President's Desk .. .
i To

The

Residents

of Deerfield:

‘things moved along like clockwork. To those of you who did
not come to the Jewett Park ceremonies, and then see the par-

missed

something.

There

was

an event that makes

Deerfield what it is, a delightful small town
in which to live.
As

one

looked

stood

at

at the

those

flagpole

countless

- made you realize the calibre of the
of which

More

than

looking

America

all the

is made.

words

spoken,

at those effervescing

ed}

youngsters, you knew why people
- fought to maintain their stand. And
_ then in the parade and at the cem_ etery,
came
the
true
realization

_ that this is what makes us want to
live.
_

_

A SALUTE TO THE AMERICAN
LEGION, AMVETS and others who
gave Deerfield the Memorial Day

services, even down to the pop for
the kids afterwards. You’ve set a
pattern,

and it is enjoyable.
Wilmot Road

IT WAS A GREAT RELIEF to
get most of those treacherous holes
_ on Wilmot Road filled. We are in
_ for a costly maintenance job on

_ that

- enough

road.
There
isn’t
money
to pave it and still main-

_ tain our
_ Manner.

other

arterials

in

a safe

So,
unless
a new
idea
- comes up, we’ll keep patching and
repairing until a few years later
we
have accumulated enough fuel
tax money for a paving job. In the
- meantime,
maybe
the
Township
will find a way to pay their share.

Then

we

enough

can
for

go

our

ahead—we
part

of

have

the

road

but not enough for the entire width
and length.
Correction
TSK! TSK! MADAME EDITOR.
You misquote me.
I recall that
when you asked me about how certain areas were going to comply

_ with the

new

ag replied

to

traffic ordinance,

the

effect

that

place

and

young

faces of children from every activity there is, you couldn’t help but
think that this is a wonderful country.
All
those
smiling,
beaming
freshly groomed faces said to you.
_ “This is my country, I love it.” It
‘material

atmosphere

it

I

quently happens that under impossible situations certain parts of any

law

may

not

be

enforced,

until

a

situation is corrected.
I don’t believe
I said
that
the
ordinance
would not apply to all sections of
the town.
And, again in your “Let’s Talk
it Over’
column, you state what
I’m sure was a misunderstanding
on your part.
In my appointing a
committee of the board to study a
Village Manager ordinance, I stated
“T hope
that they will consider
whether or no this subject should
be submitted to the Village in the
form of a referendum.” This is not
an opinion on my part one way or
the other.
But, I honestly believe
that
the
Committee
should
look
into the pros and cons of a referendum. After all, a Village Manager ordinance is a powerful instrument, and many communities have

waged hot contests on the subject.
Legion

OF

Hall Landscaping

LAST WEEK
THE CHAMBER
COMMERCE
invited the Vil-

lage Board to their regular dinner.
It was a good dinner, and the evening was enjoyable.
Our Trustee
Koss gave his plan of utilizing the
brickyard
to
the
audience,
and
some serious questioning and answering took place
afterwards.
I
was glad to see many points of the
plan discussed openly, and to see
so many people ask questions. It

was healthy.
A

committee

the C

of C

landscaping

Legion

was

appointed

president
the

Hall,

entrance

and

by

to look

see

into

to

the

if the

vari-

ous organizations who use the hall
wouldn’t join in on the cost. This
is a worthwhile project, and an appropriate one.
We
are getting a
notable
grouping
of fine looking

fre-

(Continued

on page

18)

DEERFIELD FORUM
Opinions

expressed

in

these

have

columns do not necessarily con_ stitute the opinions of the paper.
a Letters
should
be brief and

What

this

additional

dress

partment
* 17 more
sit.
-

The

needs

to head

is

an

the

de-

of Passing the Buck and
board members to staff

other

day a

citizen

of

Wil-

- mot Rd. fell into one of the holes
_ there about the size of Death Val_

_

|

ley.

She

was

looking

for

her

kid

who had suddenly disappeared riding his bike down the road in broad
daylight. After she, the kid and the
f bike had been
pulled
out, she
alled the village manager and asked

him

when

repaired.

the

road

“Not our street, lady,”
“call the township.”

would
he

300

words.

They

of the writer,

whose

name

will be withheld if requested
called

village

trustee,

than

should contain the name and ad-

_ Passing The Buck
To the Editor:
_

less

the

village

clerk

guess what??? —
owned the road!

So —
lage

the

manager.

Yep,

—

the

citizen called
After

he

had

and

the vilrecov-

meeting
(June 10)
so she
inform the village board.

He’s putting her No. 8 on the
agenda, he says, after telling her
that the board usually only gets

through Point 2. Which only goes
to show that while we may have
an administration, someone
ing to Pass The Buck.

be

Mike
1429

said,

(We

are sorry

Hecht
Central

that

is

try-

Avenue

our new

ad-

“Not our street, lady,” said’ the ministrators are not familiar with
township spokesman, “call the vil- streets but the customary way to
lage.”
“Not

so,”

said

the

village

man-

ager,” it belonges to the township.”
She

called the township back and

- said the village denies it owns the
street. “Not so, lady, we deny the
i aenial,’”’
She called the village manager

back and he denied the denial of
the denial. This went on for about

six calls.

for their paving if the subdivider
doesn’t do it. If motor fuel tax is

this citizen recovered,
4

she

to

cover

cost

of

paving

of Wilmot Rd. in the near future,
then you are very fortunate. We
paid

for

our

are unpaved
property

financing,

After
Page

get a street paved is for the property owners on that street to pay

promised

ments

street.

roads,

owners

either

or by

to

Where

there

it is up to the
do

their

own

by special assess-

cash.—The

Editor)

RARMT

Ne age

A OER

A

CURE
Pe
Uy
TR ee

OL ay Bey
eee
4

It Was A Big

i

Mosquito Control
For the second successive year,
the residents of the Deerfield Park
subdivisions are waging an all-out
campaign against mosquitoes, flies
and other insect pests.
The fogging program sponsored
last year by the Deerfield
Park
Civic Association resulted in such
effective
control
that
the
overwhelming
majority
of
residents

have requested
reported.

it be repeated, it is

Under this program every street
in the development and the perimeter areas will be fogged from
six to eight times during the summer season.
Ask

100%

Participation

Detailed information concerning
the fogging system is currently being delivered to all residents, as
well as a notice which identifies
the neighbor who will collect the
small charge per home. One hundred
per’
cent
participation
is
necessary to insure the required
number of foggings.
;

The mosquito abatement committee of the Association headed by
Dr. Vincent Sarley hopes to complete the solicitation of participants
in the program by June 15.
Inquiries
concerning
the _ program may be directed to Dr. Sarley at WI-5-3902 or to James Ashenden,
Association
president,
at
WI-5-5519.

Officer

Edward

Patten

Jr.,

left,

holds

a

knife

and

Police

Lt. Glenn Koetz has the gun found on the men they arrested early
Friday morning. The slot machines and some of the cases of
liquor found in the car are shown. The car in which the men were
apprehended had been stolen earlier that night.

Deerfield Police

Troop 52 to Hold

Hears Trustee Koss
Discuss Brickyards

Catch 4 Thieves

Court of Honor
Tuesday, June 9

President Eldon Holmquist and
members of the Deerfield village
board were guests of the Chamber
of Commerce Thursday evening at
the Legion. They were introduced
by Arthur C. Ullmann, president of

liceman

Chamber of Commerce

the

Chamber

of Commerce.

Village Trustee Joseph Koss gave
a detailed report of the proposed
purchase of the National Brick Co.
property. His map showed the four
sections of the property and colored areas outlined the M-1 manufacturing, O &amp; R (office and research), and municipal park areas.
His very thorough study of the
tract has covered a period of more
than two years. He believes, and
the board is unanimously agreeing,
that this purchase will remove
a
blighted area, bring re-annexation
to the village and complete control
of its operations.
Use

village

ered from the shock, he invited the
Wilmot Rd. citizen to the next
board
could

ORD

Deerfield Park
Subdivisions Plan

THE MEMORIAL DAY CEREMONIES this year were
the finest ever. Under the expert organization of Edwin Gillen,
ade—you

WEY

The

the

only

Of

Sales

Tax

opposition

questions

and

expressed

answers

in

which

followed Mr. Koss’ talk was the use
of sale tax money for any of the
financing.
Matthew

ant,

Rockwell,

favors

the

plan

project,

Koss stated.
Also a guest speaker
Michaels
of Highland

consult-

Trustee

was Ralph
Park
who

told of the need for money

at the concerts.

President
Ullmann
appointed
James
DiPietro,
Earl
Hurt
and
Richard Longtin as a committee to
assist with plans for the landscaping of the Legion Hall property.

The Chamber voted $75 toward the
fund. They hope to interest other
civic
groups
which
meet
at the
Legion in assisting with the financing of the work.

The

firm

of Maver

and

Rossett

at 1216 Deerfield Rd. was accepted
as a new member of the Chamber.
A representative from Deerfield
Boys
Baseball will speak
at the

June

meeting

of this group.

Lt.

Glenn

Edward

Koets

Patten

and

Po-

Jr., while

patroling
Deerfield’s
streets Friday morning about 2:05, stopped a
ear on South Waukegan Rd. which
had no tail lights. There were four
occupants in the car, armed with
knives
and guns.
They were Walter Cheass, 42, of
Chicago and three Puerto Ricans,
Angel
Pagan,
Luis Santiago
and
Angelo Santiago (no relation), who
had all been sampling the vodka
and open bottles of liquor in the
car.
Also in the car were 12 cases of
assorted liquors and four slot machines. The men were taken to the
Deerfield Police Station and locked up for the night. The following
morning they were taken to the
Lake Forest Police Station where
they were formally charged.
It was learned that the liquor
and slot machines had been stolen
from the home of Col. Robert H.
Morse of Lake Forest and the car
had been stolen from Chicago.
Creass, one of the four seized,

apparently

had

plotted

the

burg-

lary. He had previously delivered
liquor by truck to the Morse home.
Col. Morse was vacationing in Florida.

The four were held to the grand
jury, each on $5,000 bond. The

by the

Ravinia Festival group. He urged
civic and service organizations to
support the Festival, by gifts of
money and purchase of tickets, as

well as attendance

Police

A Court

The

order

up

invited to participate in this special
event. The program will be brief
but important to all Scouts.
There

will

professional

be

a

one-half

movie

of

lights of the Chicago

hour

the _ high-

Bears’

season.

Class of 25 Completes
First Aid Training
The Deerfield-Bannockburn volunteer firemen
sponsored a
first:
aid class in the Fire Station covering a period of 10 hours with Paul
Muzik as teacher which is now completed. A special extra lesson for
the class of 25 is being held tonight
by Mr. Muzik in the station.
Puerto
Ricans
made
their statements in Spanish.
“This is proof that Deerfield policemen should be in pairs in squad--

cars at night, so that they won’t
be killed. They shouldn’t patrol
alone,” said a spokesman
police department.

for

the

The Public Press, no less than Public
Office, is a public trust.

On The Cover

right:

will wind

DEERFIELD
REVIEW

Mr. and Mrs. Alfred G. Schultz
and Mr. and Mrs. Herbert Berman
posed
for
these
pictures
to
illustrate- the Second Annual Deerfield Junior Chamber of Commerce
fund
raising
project
which
they
call “Chark-O-Chick.”
Upper left:
The order is taken.
(Al and Elaine Schultz)
Upper right: The dinner is prepared. (Al Schultz and Herb Berman)
:

Lower

of Honor

the year’s activities for Troop 52
on Tuesday, June 9, 7:30 p.m. at
the Presbyterian
church, sponsor
of the troop.
All Scouts will attend in uniform
and members of their families are

is

de-

livered. (Herb and Goldie Berman)
Lower left: The dinner is delicious! (Herb and Goldie Berman)

Thursday,

June

4,

1959

Vol.

34, No.

13

Published Weekly every Thursday
PUBLICATION

699

DEERFIELD,
608

OFFICE

Waukegan

Read

ILLINOIS

Telephone Windsor 5-4500
HIGHLAND
PARK. OFFICE
Laurel Ave., Highland: Park,. Il.
Telephone ID 2-4500

MEMBER

National
Editorial Association:
Illinois Press Association
Local Subscription Rates—$3.50 per year
Domestic Rate—$5.00: per year
Single Copies—15¢
Foreign Rates on Application:
‘
‘Entered as second-class matter Novem
ber 27, 1944, at the post office at Deer-

rn
1

Illinois, under’ the

Act of March

9."

Thursday; June
4, 1959)
}if

8.

;

�»

i
N

We
‘

kiade Ma vinta

ak

yl

A

ne

eae Gt
Sei

bit Fan Ay
ing oe

iv

The annual tradition of mothers
of high school students of the junior class is that they act as hostesses for the reception for the high
school graduates. This will be done
on Thursday, June
11, when
the
Class of 1959, their families, guests
and
the members
of the faculty
meet in the student auditorium in
Highland Park at 9:30 p.m. following the commencement ceremonies.
Mrs,

Trabert

Heads

Committee

Mrs.
L.
Vernon
Trabert,
1005
Blackhawk Rd., will supervise the
arrangements
for
the
reception,
with the assistance of her co-chairman, Mrs. Joseph Herrmann, 1332
Linden Ave. About 25 mothers will
act as hostesses with Mrs. John R.
Kenney, 623 Jonquil Ter., as chairman
of this
committee.
Decorations of the auditorium will be under the direction of Mrs. C. Robert

Isely, who

St.

Johns Church

Branch

oads will be on North Ave.,
proved tract is six acres.

with

On Sunday, May 24, at Walden
chool, near Warrington Road and
Warwick,
Deerfield,
St.
Paul’s
United Church of Christ congregation of Deerfield, the Rev. L. L.
unyady
pastor,
and
St.
John’s
United
Church
of Christ congregation of Highland Park, the Rev.

E.

J.

Busse

the name
of Christ.

pastor,

united

Trinity

under

United

Church

The
constitution
and_
by-laws
were adopted unanimously at the
united meeting,
and Dr. William
IL. Rest,
president
of the North
[llinois Synod of the Evangelical
and
Reformed
Church
(United
Church of Christ) held a solemn
uniting service.
“The union of the congregations
together
with
the relocation
assuredly holds greater promise for
effective
Christian
outreach

into

our

ciate

pastors

parish,”

Pending
Hoard
of

109,

said

Busse

the

and

of the Chicago

extensions

River, inside Highland

of Warrington

Jaycees Take Orders
For Chark-O-Chick
Jaycees dressed in white aprons
and cooks’ hats acted as salesmen
last Saturday and will do so again
this
coming
Saturday,
taking
advance orders for their Chark-OChick
dinner,
which
they
will
cook, box and deliver on Sunday,
June 7.
Fund

Raising

Those

who

have

not

had a

before

Saturday
shows

ing

how

The

unim-

SUMMER

The

cover

the

work

is be-

Highland

Park.

Refresh-

ments, including cookies and punch
will be arranged by Mrs. Gordon
Terry, Highland Park, and her com:
mittee and Mrs. Reno Giangiorgi,

Highwood,

and her committee.

Richard W. Aaron, Bruce B. Abernathy,
Michael Robert Addison, Rose Ann Albert,
Allderdice,
Penelope
Richard Ellis Albin,
W.
Eugene
Alschuler,
Richard
Lawrence
Lawrence
Altman,
Eleanor
Jean
Altman,
D. Altman.
Lawrence Lionel Amidei, Gail Marcia AnKaren Leah Andersen, Darrell Anderson,
derson, Mary Lee Anderson, Michael Anderson, Peter Carl Arne, Frederick Matheson Asher, Beach W. Aten II, Robert William Atteridge, Heather Axelrod.
Charles J. Balkin;
S. Baker,
Frederick
V.
Roslyn
Ballantini,
Samuel
Lawrence
Banish, Arnold R. Bartlett, Carol Sue Beck,
David M. Beck, Jeanine Lunn Becker, James
Benjamin,
Anne
Linda
Beckman,
Duane
Samuel Edward Benjamin Jr.

(Continued

on

page

45)

829

Waukegan

Pat

Flanagan,

Pedagogue

CLASSES

Early

call WI-5-4663

noon.

Fordtran,

NOW

FORMING

Registration Advisable

Road,

Deerfield

WI

5-2050

done.

|Welcome..

sales-

666

asso-

will

at the door may

picture

Piano

but the access
Rd.

Ross. Ta-

Project

Hunyady.

congregation

man

Woodvale

John

This is a fund raising project for
the Deerfield Junior Chamber of
Commerce for their philanthropic
work,

Waukegan

approval of the school
Public
School
District

Trinity

Rd. and

Park,

Mrs.

JOHN SUTER

St. John’s United Church of Christ of Highland Park and St. Paul’s Church (formerly Evangelical and Reformed) of South Waukegan Rd., Deerfield, have merged the congregations and
formed a new church which is to be called “Trinity United Church of Christ.” They have purchased

property west of the Middle

and

ble setting will be planned by Mrs.
Henry
Mrs.
and
Walker
Robert

will be assisted by Mrs.

St. Paul’s Church

Joseph Hugh,
Mrs. Harold

Harold Phillips, Mrs.
Emmert,
Leon
Mrs.

Patterson

S te te
t 1h

High School Graduates To
Be Honored At Reception

be-

Road,

gin worship at Walden School beginning June 21st. It was decided
also to have Sunday Church School
at the same hour as Morning Wor-

Deerfield

ship.
During the interim, services and

board of trustees have been elected
at the next
eregation.

meeting

of

the

con-

At the first meeting of the steerng committee a pulpit committee
ill be appointed.

Deerfield

Seven-Day
The

Woman

Chamber

eeks,

to

encourage

this

executive
the first

promotional

awarded

lagher

dresses,

suits

and

to

of

Mrs.

1105

project

sectrip

was

Castlewood

Rd.,

9 A.M. to 6:30 P.M.
OPEN

the

Mondays

WEDNESDAYS

NO Price Change

ALTAILORS
FIRST COMPLETE
CLEANING PLAMT
fm, COEF REVLN

oo eee

ero

eee

~

by Ap 2 3 |
NEERSIELD

Qandd

Children

WI

1.25

—

Adults

1.75

5-9841

|
-

on

OPEN:

FOR THOSE WHO CARE

to

Gal-

trip

aiting
Closed

of

Margaret

Deerfield, a seven-day
reat Lakes.

4 Barbers — No

coats

and he’ll respond with praise

its stores.

Walter Glanville,
retary, reports that

in

shoppers

Rely upon

Proprietor

the world.”

Lake Trip

Northbrook

new

of advice.

for always smart like-

for the smartest “little wife in

Awarded

ommerce
is giving
away
seven
rips this summer, one every two
patronize

a word
ALPHA

BARBER SHOP

I

PATS

_It was resolved that the consisories of both former congregations
be the steering
committee,
with
Ronald Beecher and Richard Evans
o-chairman and Jack Harris and
Mrs.
Albert
Moen,
co-treasurers,
ntil the new church council and

Oe A

hhurch school sessions will be held
at both, present locations at the
sual times.

Thursday,

June

4,

1959

Page

5

�Paul Greenfield”
‘3

your good taste is showing in our

Mortimer Singe

Gives Grammar

School Diplomas

cool madras jackets

Five

Highland

ceive

Parkers

diplomas

at

will

re-

commencement

ceremonies
Wednesday
at
8:15
p.m. at Deerfield Grammar School.
Paul Greenfield, 1075 Hillcrest
Ave., president of the board of education of School District 109, will
present the diplomas to the graduating

class

Students

of

82

from

eighth

graders.

Highland

Park

are:

Tammy
Lou
Amerman,
Vivien
Clair, Ida L. Greenfield, Berry W.

Limberg,
Jeffrey

William
F.

Elected President,
County Associatio

C. Olendorf

and

Robin.

os tenn THEATRE
HIGHLAND PARK

‘4

Mortimer
wood

Dr.,

Singer,
was

1111

elected

Ridgé

president

o

Lake County Bar Association at it,
annual meeting Monday.
He wa
nominated for the high honor b
the past presidents of the associa
tion.

Singer,

Highland

Park

attorney

is the first local resident to hold
office in the association; he served
as vice president for the last yea
and upon the board of governo
for many years. He was chairma
of its committee on unauthorizec

practice

for the last seven

years.

Gin.
foaree-eongndl

PH 1D. 2-2400

COOL — FREE PARKING
Open Daily 6:30 P.M.
Sat. &amp; Sun., Open 1 P.M.
THURS., June 4—Last
“THE
FRI.,

DEFIANT

SAT.,

SUN.

June

ACADEMY
William

5 thru

AWARD

Holden,

Day

ONES”
and

MON.

8th

WINNER!

Alec Guinness

“BRIDGE ON THE
RIVER KWAI"
Feature Time—

Fri. &amp; Mon.—6:30, 9:32
Sat.—6 :20, 9:22
Sunday—1 :05, 3:50, 6:35,9:15
Mortimer

SAT., June 6—KIDDIE
Danny

Kaye

SHOW

in

“KNOCK ON WOOD”
3 Cartoons &amp; “Capt. Video”’
TUES., WED. and THURS.
June 9,10 &amp; 11
Sophia Loren, Anthony Quinn

“THE BLACK
ORCHID”
plus Alcyon’s Short Sketch Book
Starting FRI., June 12
Walt Disney’s
“SHAGGY DOG”

Singer

He also is presently vice chair
man
of
the
Illinois
State
Ba
Association
executive
committe
on unauthorized practice, on whic
committee he has served for man

years. He was elected to the boar
of the newly-formed Illinois Stat
Bar Association
Council of loca
bar associations at its annual mee
ing in Peoria last month.

Installation of officers will b
held in September but the prq
gram
as outlined
to the
annua
meeting will call for committees
elect to formulate their plans dur

ing

the

drive

next

three

to secure

months

for the

Lake

in
Cou

ty Bar Association the award of th
American Bar Association as th
leading bar association in its catg
gory in the United States, reporte
president-elect Singer.
Singer has practiced

land

There is supreme individuality in your choice of a jacket
tailored of the real India madras.

The authentic cotton is

Let us show you our well tailored collection.

Weeds gograss grows
greener!

Open

Monday and

Thursday

Evenings

Bonus® does two jobs. Kills
ugly weeds like dandelions,
plantain, buckhorn. Fertilizes
good grass, makes your lawn
greener, lovelier. Non-burning
Bonus is clean, dry. Apply with
the Scotts Spreader — uniformly
good results guaranteed!

7-9

Save

$5.00

Bonus for 5,000 sq ft, alone 5.95
Scotrs SPREADER, alone
16.95

Both

only $17.90

SHERONY
HARDWARE

595
Page 6

CENTRAL

law in Hig

continuously

since

192

and is associated in the practice o
law with his wife, Esther C. Singer
and his son, Alvin Ira Singer, ang
Paul S. Stern.

woven by hand and it is said that no design is ever exactly
duplicated.

Park

ID

2-5300

314 Green Bay Rd., Highwood
ID 2-2041

Local People
Named Officers
In Church Group
At
a recent
meeting
of
th
Couples Club of North Shore Co
gregation
Israel,
Mr.
and
Mrg
Hugo Melvoin, 358 Flora Pl., wer
elected presidents.
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Hart, 47

Pleasant

Ave.,

and

Mr.

and

Mrg

Henry
Bartenstein,
1173
Cave
Ave., were elected secretaries an¢
treasurers, respectively.

Other
were
and

Highland

Parkers

elected directors were:
Mrs.
Howard
Barron,

wh
Mr
100

Princeton Ave., program chairme
‘Mr.

and

den

Mrs.

Ave.,

Edward

Mr.

and

Ex,

1381

Mrs.

Li

Joh

Strauss, 77 Blackhawk Dr., Mr. ang
Mrs. Millard J. Grauer, 558 Broad
view Ave., Mr. and Mrs. Ferd Is

serman,

Jr.,

458

Sumac

and
Mrs.
Raymond
648 Burton Ave., and

Elliot

Tarson,

741

St.

Rd.,

M

J. Markma
Mr. and Mrs

Johns

Ave

_ Thursday, June 4, 1959

�oraine Council
Announces Summer

amping Program
Moraine Council of Girl Scouts
as planned its summer
camping
program. Brownie Day camp, north
heighborhood, runs from June 22
hrough July 3 at Fort Sheridan.
Council-wide day camps for girls,
all neighborhoods,
who
enter
trades 6 and 7 in September, runs
rom July 6-17 at Lake Bluff Site
Yo. 2, north of Tangley Oaks.
There will be a council-wide day
rip camp
for eighth
and
ninth
trade girls from all neighborhoods
om July 20-30 at Lake Bluff Site
0. 2, with a trip scheduled the
econd week,
All intermediate Girl Scouts, in
trades 6, 7 and 8, are eligible for
he
resident
camp
session
from
uly 1-14 and the second session,
ly
15-28
at
Camp _ Kiawassa,
Woodstock. The only visiting date
t resident camp for all parents and
ther guests from Moraine Council
s July 12 from 2 to 4 p.m. This
ate gives parents an opportunity
oO see camp in action and meet the
taff.
The council-operated troop
ng at Kiawassa is open to
ermediate and senior troops
br more girls plus at least one
ith “overnight” training).
essions begin on June 21.
For information on all
amping, scouts are asked

ult

the

WOW

camp

folders

campall in(five
adult
These

and

POW

bulletin.

Chairman

Awards:

*(Author’s

Name

Below

with paul leeds

State

tive affairs; Gerald F. Muzik,
Jaycee History; and Joseph
Youth Fitness,
Illinois
State
Active

Patten,

A vote of thanks are due the
many parents and students who
helped in the last minute arrange-

Jaycee

Aurelio Cecotti,

ments

Ronald Danielson, Ranald Guldan,
Rizzolo,
Donald
Rafferty,
Joseph
Donald
Nordmark,
Edward
Weil,
Robert Green and Philip Kuhn.
National
Jaycee
and_
Illinois

‘Spoke’”

Award

for

Outstanding

Spachner,

John

Stratford,

vice-

internal

Nordmark,

CIS

Daniel

Vetter.
These awards were given by the
outgoing president, Joseph Patten,
with the assistance of Miss North
Shore, Carolyn Judkins.
for
Plaque
Award
President’s
of the year,
Jaycee
Outstanding
Donald Mooney.
Past Office Certificates of Merit:
president; Donald Rizzolo, external
Faulkner,
James
vice-president;
secretary; Joseph Rafferty, treasurer; Philip Kuhn, internal director;

Left to right, Miss Doreen Donaldson, 1905 Elmwood Rd.,
new vice president and program chairman of American Association of University Women; Miss Dorothy Teare, 700 Park Ave.,

invented,

your

USE THIS
DISCOUNT
CERTIFICATE

===

body

possesses the divine gift of
the ability to think and
reason. Your body expects

help

more

' consult

you

quickly.

your

get

You

physician.

Then you take the medi*cines he prescribes exactly

HIGHLAND

Physician

to Phone

PARK

* RAVINIA

ID 2-2600
”

Famous

Cantonese

When You Need A Medicine

Pick up your prescription

This rich, wholesome,

Highland

Park

or

Ravinia

*Quotation by Christopher
Morley (1890-1957)

Thursday,

June:4,

1959

Carry-Out

Experts

To Ondn,
rout to a-t014 i

Stock

Your

as Cantonese

PONT

CALL TO-

. 24 Hour phone

DAY.

ser-

vice.
The Smart
BODY

Hostess knows

LOVES

EVERY-

CANTONESE

CHINESE
Especially When

FOOD
It’s from

CHARLIE WENK’S

AND

VIVI TW IVIV

Vi

es Waray

W71\Way

WORTH 20:

Freezer...
Food.

delicious ice cream has been known

as Chicago’s finest for many years. Still available
at original location too:
VALA’S ICE CREAM CO.
3335 N. Broadway — DI 8-8822

we'll deliver ice cream as well

—PHARMACISTS—

and

ID 4-1414

®

EARL W.
GSELL &amp; CO.

Catering

1860 FIRST STREET
HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS

ID 2-2300

if shopping near us, or let
us deliver promptly without extra charge. A great
many
people entrust us
with the responsibility of
filling their prescriptions.
May we compound yours?

from

Exmoor

day.

Committee

:

;
BS

Toward

Purchase of ONE

PINT

VALAS ICE CREAM
BAVARIAN

FUDGE

FLAVOR

has

again

ar-

active

young

fellow

*

at

only

*

“The toughest job in climbing
to the top of the ladder of suc.

Charlie Wenk’s

®@

Your

that

Highland Park's Exclusive Distributor

as he specifies.

Ask

some

$16.95.

Way

VRPT:

better

to

Packed

are

sick you get the best advice
possible

Hand

A

you

Carton

—announcing—

judgement

that when

staff

ranged for special $1.00 tickets.
They are available at Leeds Jewelers now,
”
*
*
It’s Graduation Week! And if
your graduate is going to receive
the traditional gift of a watch be
sure to see Leeds’ Keeping Time
Special this week. It’s our shockproof 17 Jewel watch with the
lifetime mainspring. Many models
for him or her at only $24.50. And
a special guaranteed
shockproof
water-resistant 7 jewel watch for

SEUININIIAIIAIAIAR

Proper
means,

Each

proper
judgeit needs help.

SHAW’S

weather

to the RecExmoor for
Especially
Senior class
and FRAN-

who came over and fed over 500
young people.
*
*
*
Wedding Anniversary greetings
to MR. and MRS. WALTER MICHELA who celebrated their 26th
and MR. and MRS. SERGIO CARANI who celebrated their 1st this
past week.
*
*
*
You should save some of your
money—It may be worth something

Activities

you to use that ability by
exercising
ment when

the inclement

*
*
*
The
Women
of
the
Moose
will be
mass media; Miss Jessie Hiatt, 734 Osterman Ave., international
relations. The women are pictured at the recent meeting of the serving a special Ham Dinner next
Sunday. If it is as good as the
organization at which new board members were appointed.
Tuesday Steaks or the Friday Fish
Fries it will be wonderful. It’s a
Robert Green, external director; tor of the Year: Warren Spachner. nice “family type way” to dine out.
*
*
*
Ranald Guldan, publicity director;
Following the dinner, presidentand Warren Spachner, state direc- elect Joseph Rafferty was sworn
With
LES
BROWN,
GERRY
tor.
into office by Remo Picchietti and MULLIGAN,
THE
KINGSTON
Outstanding State Jaycee Direc(Continued on page 54)
TRIO and many others in addition to the Symphony and Ballet
at Ravinia this year it will come
as great news to the High School
crowd to know that the Student

In addition to being more
complex, than any machine

yet

when

caused a quick change
reation Center from
the after-Prom party.
those members of the
who did the decorating

Jaycees: Donald Mooney, Laurence
Sassarossi and Robert Martin.
One hundred percent Attendance
For One Year Award:
Joseph Anthony, Gilbert Baruffi, Anelio Ceccotti,
Kenneth
Colinson,
Ronald
Danielson, James Faulkner, Ranald
Guldan,
Donald
Mooney,
Gerald
Muzik, Donald Nordmark,
Joseph
Patten,
Joseph
Rafferty,
Warren

“A HUMAN
BEING — AN
INGENIOUS ASSEMBLY OF
PORTABLE PLUMBING”
SES

KEEPING
TIME

Highland Park Jaycees were presented with the following awards
at their recent annual President’s
Night Dinner Dance.
Illinois State Jaycee
Chairman
Awards:
Remo Picchietti, Legisla-

Donald

Council
to con-

ASSOCIATION WOMEN APPOINT BOARD

Jaycee Awards
Given At Dinner

cess is to get through

the crowd

at

Dreier.

the

bottom.”’—Alex

*
*
*
When you’re uptown Saturday be
sure to take advantage of the biggest entertainment buy of all time.
MRS. THOMAS
LOEB
and her
committee for the United Charities will be selling tickets to the
Riverview Ramble at $3.50 for all
the rides you want on June 16th.
They will be on the Northeast
corner of First and Central all
day Saturday.
*
*
*
A great idea for a Hi Fi party.
Have some friends in who enjoy
good music but first pick up some
albums at the Public Library. In
addition to the classics they now
have a collection of the finest
Jazz records. We have been enjoying them.
*
*
*
For Graduation or Confirmation
give her a lasting gift of jewelry.
There are over 100 different styles
in pearl and gold rings priced at
$7.95 at Leeds in addition to the
many other popular Cultured Pearl
gifts.

LEEDS JEWELERS
491

Central,

Highland

Park

Page

7.

�Daughter Is Born To
Mr. and Mrs. Joe Vignaroli
Mr.

and

High

Mrs.

Joe

St.,

became

daughter,

Donna

May

11

The
aa.

infant

Vignaroli,

the

121

parents

of

Theresa,

at Highland
has

Morris

Art

Park

one

Morris
Highland

a

Receives

|

In Florida

born
Enzo,

honors.
Mitchell attended Highland Park
High School. His parents, Mr. and
Mrs. Claude Mitchell, resided here
for 31 years before they moved to
Sarasota in 1956.

Carl
Marcolini
of Italy is the
maternal grandfather.
Paternal
grandmother is Mrs. Zelinda Vignaroli of the same address.

Families Plan Temple Picnic Sunday

HP Lions, Jaycees

To Hear Talks Today

C. Mitchell, formerly of
Park, May 22 was award-

ed a certificate in fine arts by
Ringling School of Art, Sarasota,
Fla. He
graduated
with special

Hospital.

brother,

C. Mitchell

Degree

On

Ravinia Festival

Two
members
of the
Ravinia
Festival Association executive committee will speak on the Festival to
service clubs of the Highland ParkDeerfield area today.

Ralph Michaels, 90 Lakewood PI.,
talks at noon to members of the
Lions Club at the Recreation Center and at 8 p.m. to Jaycees in the

Moose
at

Lodge

on

Central

Ave.

Renslow

P.

Green

Sherer,

Bay
1765

Rd.
Lake

Ave., is scheduled to address the
Deerfield-Northbrook
Rotary
club
today at one o’clock.
Salutes

To

Pan-American

Games

Ravinia will give a musical prelude to the Pan-American games at
the July 16 and 18 concerts of the
Chicago
Symphony
Orchestra,
to

be

conducted

by

Carlos

Chavez,

internationally
famous
composer
and conductor.
Walter Hendl, Ravinia’s artistic
director, has announced that four
of the eight symphonic works pro-

grammed

21" WHIRLWIND S. P
t

by

the

Mexican-born

Chavez have been chosen for devotees
of Latin-American
music,
and all are Ravinia “firsts,” among
them Chavez’ own Symphony No.
4, the Romantica.
Rudolf Firkusny, pianist, will be
soloist at both concerts.
July 16 at 8:30 p.m.
Overture, “Leonore,” No. 3,
APOUB ie ese cb, oie. seasons Beethoven
Symphonic Poem, ‘“Sensemaya”
ARERR
GEESE eps aS tian ae er Revueltas
Danzas. Sinfonicas ................ Orbon
Intermission
Concerto for Piano, No. 1,
D Minor, Opus 15 Kisek. Brahms
Maestoso
Adagio
Rondo:
Allegro non troppo
July 18 at 8:30 p.m.

in condition

Getting

by the Women’s

Sponsored

Haas.

Family

for the Solel

left to right, Mrs. Cecil Lewitz, Myron

own

picnic chairman,

box suppers.

There

will

Symphony

righ Te

be

he etary ees amr

==

Suite

iti

Intermission
NT

RE ed oe a gad

thei

bring

families

that

from

Brujo,”

J

Ravel|

game.

baseball

the

Ballet

(‘“Love,

Amor

“El

the

Sorcerer”

naptennncenansnseanetanenseunonncanenncsntnnns
Introduction
Dance for Bewitching
The Magic Circle
Dance of Fire
Scene and Pantomine,

fane

Valses Nobles et Sentimentales
OS

the picnic wil

Mrs. Bernard Wein

a father-son

Cao” Chavez

Molto lento
Vivo, non troppo mosso
Rhapsody on a Theme of
Paganini, for piano and
orchestra 3.
Rachmaninoff

ge

requests

and

contests

Johy

and soft drinks will be available

No. 4, Romantica

RRNA

Allegro

races,

Ice cream

are

Lewitz and

Board,

Service

be held at Sunset Park between 3 and 7 p.m.
stein, Glencoe,

Picnic Sunday

Shure, Mike

Song
Finale,

the

Fall
Spiri

“The

Pro

Love”

of the Sorrow
“Morning

of Love

Bells”

Wind-Tunnel Mowing

ig

Power-driven—feature

packed!

Compare

this

mower

with any self-propelled rotary! This is the complete
mower for three-season use—spring, summer and fall.
No extras to buy! Leaf Mulcher, Chute, Grass-Catching

Bag

included.

Front

wheel drive

is easy

to handle—

better than rear drive for control. Built-in ignition switch
allows engine cut-off from the handle—all controls

mounted at your finger-tips.

© Mows Grass
@ Anti-scalp disc

@ Cuts weeds
© Trims close

@ Quick height-of-cut change
© Finger-tip engine controls
boo

$4

=p

ay

eS

Complete

TORO Rotary Mowers, low as $89.95
Also

TORO Reel Mowers &amp; Riding Mowers
of ALL SIZES at Sherony’s!

For LAWN CARE during JUNE
%

%
%

USE

these

Scott’s

Products

eGrerrle

NOW!

BONUS Weed and Feed—Use Now!
4-XD for Weed Killing Only.
Milorganite for feeding, also

Pleasurable Sunday drives end with brunch or dinner at The

Grass

Skokie. In the Marshall Field

Seed

Buy 5 lb.
or more!

SPECIAL!

Reg. $1.25 lb: -.... 69

Merion

Crabapple Restaurants at the north end of Old Orchard in

BLUEGRASS!

SPECIAL ... $219

Ib.

SHERONY
‘Page

8

Bay Rd., Highwood

country-style brunch is served from 10:30 a.m. to 1:30 p.m.,

from $1.50; traditional Sunday dinner from $2.25, and special
portions for children served from | p.m. to 8 p.m. Cocktails are

HARDWARE

314 Green

&amp; Company tradition, delicious

served during dinner hours. Whether it’s a special occasion or

ID 2-2041

not drive out to The Crabapple and Le Manoir restaurants soon.
Thursday, June 4, 1959

�U. S. Choice, Aged,

Blade Cut

POT ROAST. .Ib. 49c

CHICKEN

OF

SEA

CHUNK TUNA 2 cm 59¢
COLLEGE

Fresh

and “instant” products ready to solve meal problems in a hurry...
June Brides, let us help you ge? started.

NIK

Shoe String Potatoes ‘c= 23c

Scott-Peterson

FRANKS..... lb. 45¢

Manor House

Price

CANTALOUPE

COFFEE

FANCY

FRANCO

AMERICAN

SPAGHETTI

CUCUMBERS

COLLEGE

RADISHES
Serve

PABST

ASPARAGUS

BROADCAST

CORNED BEEF HASH

DOG FOOD:st«: 2 cos 31¢

WALDORF

TOILET TISSUE

Roll

Ass‘td.

STOUFFER’S

MACARONI © 2-00"Ps. 35¢

LEMONADE

FREE

ORANGE JUICE 2 cm: 45¢
INSTANT

DRY MILK

HOFFMAN

SLAW DRESSING
Thursday,

June

4,

1959

Btl,

NAPKINS

| NEW LOW a
} FORMAL FOLD “382

all-purpose

{

liquid cleaner

LARGER

oS

a

REG.

BORDEN’S

INSTANT

Potatoes ..

aye

LIBBY’S

PORK &amp; BEANS 2 * 23c
LIQUID IVORY w/se"coun89¢
Giant Size 79c

29c COMET

1812 GREEN

BAY

ROAD

Vriday Night Is Family

CLEANSER
8-02.

| DINNER

SCRAPER

“*29¢ OXYDOL

HOUSE

4eW

|

3 ne $ 1-00

Pies. 33

CROP

Colors 29

GLASSES
DISHES
SILVER

ane can 10¢

POTATOES .......

| DOESKiN

Pack

ELECTRASOL
Now Stops ti

FROZEN SPECIALS!

CARNATION

CANNED

OREO “""" 3'x$1.00

Fancy

BIBB LETTUCE

SNOW

49c

Beverages 12 c=: $1.00

TOMATOES
Extra

1014-02.

Bi

Economy,

CHICKEN A LA KING

Each

ee
OO

For

INN

Ses oH
BS 2

Low

Pan-Ready

Oe Sy,

New

PIK

Eviscerated,

FRYERS «Ib. 33.

INN

Chicken Noodle Dinners"
39c
Be a good cook! It’s no trick with new processed foods, baking mixes

Dressed,

With 5c
Coupon

2 cans 25c §

PLENTY

OF

-—

A CENTRAL

Night At Sunset —

FREE

PARKING

—

FOOD

Open

till

STORE
9 PM.

ALWAYS!
‘Page

9

�ae

an

Highwood Community
Service Meets And
Adopts By-Laws

Aleeten'e Fiactt Riders
THRILLING

OAKBROOK

ACTION

HORSE

Starts June 4-12 Noon, June
WESTERN-JUMPING,

Free Parking

_
Children

12

and

Highwood

6, 7—8:30 to 5 p.m.
HUNTER CLASSES

General Admission

PICNIC
31st

5,

SHOW

under

$1.00

Community

were

FREE!

FACILITIES

OAKBROOK
HORSE SHOW
GROUNDS
Street—1¥/2 mile East Route 83—HINSDALE,

Community

Service,

Inc., held an organizational meeting on May 25 in the Highwood

ILL.

submitted

The

by

the

By-laws

president,

Senior Center
North

Shore

nounces

1159

that

Mrs.

C.

O.

Lincoln

Ave.

S,

has

basis.

Joe

Rubenstein,

Budget

chairman

of

committees

with

plans

committee:

for

the
were

and will begin work

mediately
campaign:

a

imfall

chairman, Et-

tore
Lenzi;
Bruno
Amidei, -Mrs.
Stella Pigati, Mrs. Ray Suzzi, Edgar Bortolotti.
Screening committee: chairman,
Hubert
Amidei;
Sam
Somenzi,

Cesare

Caldarelli,

Blank,

Mrs.

Berry

of

Wilmette

Terrace

PTA;

Mrs.

Glencoe,

North

Shore

Bortolotti,

Somenzi,

and

Cuore

Highwood

of the

many

Ed’s

For

Women’s

Genoa City, Wisc.
* HAWAIIAN DAY
Effective June 12th, every Friday afternoon and evening Hawaiian luncheons—
Dinners.
Authentic entertainment from the “Islands” included.

* POLYNESIAN HUT
Grand opening June 12th .. . Free orchids to the ladies.

Presents for the kiddies.

Interesting products from the “Islands.”

FLOWER

SCHOOL

Grand opening June 16th . .. every Tuesday
Classes 1:30 - 3:00 P.M. — 3:00 - 4:30 P.M.

Hall

Barn

ALEX

ARRANGEMENT

size

for

use

in

for

a

group

studying under
Mrs. Lester H.

orna-

of

educational
chairman
Shore Weavers’ Guild.
Exhibit

They

will

weavers

the direction of
Blount, Glenview,
of

North

Today

present

and

evaluate

their work for the membership at
today’s meeting at the Northminster Presbyterian
Church,
Evanston, at 1 p.m.
Highland Parkers in the Guild
include
Mrs.
Sol
Gerstel,
Mrs.
Burton M. Smalley, Miss Catherine
McLellan, Mrs. G. B. Spiegel and
Mrs. Edward M. Steele.
includes Highland Park,
Glencoe and Winnetka.

of the

Patients

Wilmette,

of

Late

Records maintained

have

been

turned

over

by him

to

DR. JOSEPH L. GRAZIANO
who

will

maintain

1866 Sheridan

Clothing;

Road,

Tel.
All

the Rev.

inquiries

should

The

be

an

office

at

Highland

Park

ID 2-9005
relative

referred

to
to

such
Dr.

records

Graziano.

First National

Bank of Highland

Executor-Estate

Dr.

of

Samuel

R.

Park

Banfield

AN

ORDINANCE
TERMED
THE ANNUAL
APPROPRIATION
BILL IN AND
BY WHICH
THE CORPORATE
AUTHORITIES
DO APPROPRIATE
SUCH

SUM
OR SUMS
OF MONEY
WHICH
MAY
BE DEEMED
NECESSARY
TO
DEFRAY
ALL NECESSARY
EXPENSES
AND
LIABILITIES
OF THE DEERFIELD
AND
BANNOCKBURN
FIRE
PROTECTION
DISTRICT
OF
WEST
DEERFIELD TOWNSHIP, FOR THE FISCAL YEAR
BEGINNING
THE FIRST
DAY
OF
MAY,
A.D.
1959, AND
ENDING
ON
THE
THIRTIETH
DAY
OF
APRIL, A.D. 1960, AND
SPECIFYING
THE OBJECTS
AND
PURPOSES
FOR
WHICH
SUCH
APPROPRIATIONS
WERE
MADE,
TOGETHER
WITH
THE
AMOUNT
APPROPRIATED
FOR EACH
OBJECT OR PURPOSE.
BE IT ORDAINED
BY THE
PRESIDENT
AND
BOARD
OF TRUSTEES
OF
THE DEERFIELD AND. BANNOCKBURN FIRE PROTECTION DISTRICT OF WEST

ALEXANDER
DEMONSTRATIONS

For Reservations Phone BRowning 9-5222 or
Russell Congdon, Orchids, Inc., MA 7-3050

TOWNSHIP,

LAKE

COUNTY,

ILLINOIS:

SECTION
1. That the following sum or sums of money, or so much thereof as
may be authorized by law, be and the same are hereby appropriated for the objects
and purposes herein specified to defray all necessary expenses and liabilities, and for
all corporate purposes of the Deerfield and Bannockburn Fire Protection District of
West Deerfield Township, Lake County, Illinois, for the fiscal year beginning the first
day of May, 1959, and ending on the thirtieth day of April, 1960.
A—ADMINISTRATIVE EXPENSE FUND
For
stationery,
books,
records,
office
supplies,
printing,
postage
and
miscellaneous
office
expense,
etc.
$
100.00
B—LEGAL EXPENSE FUND
For miscellaneous legal services
300.00
C—FIRE PROTECTION FUND
1—For the purchase of fire fighting equipment
5,000.00
2—For rental of fire fighting equipment
100.00
D—FOR CONSTRUCTION
AND COMPLETION OF NEW FIRE STATION
5,000.00
E—FIRE
EQUIPMENT
MAINTENANCE
FUND
1—For expense of maintenance and operation of fire fighting equipment ....
1,500.00
2—For expense of maintaining and heating fire station
2,000.00
F—SALARY
FUND
1—For salaries of fire chief, firemen and miscellaneous agents, etc. ........
8,000.00
2—For salaries of trustees
1,50
G—INSURANCE
FUND
For insurance premiums
1,200.00
H—CONTINGENT FUND
For
contingent,
miscellaneous
and
general
unforeseen
expenses,
not
included in any item above
500.00
I—Installation, maintenance, rental and operation of a new fire alarm system
2,500.00
Total

INSTRUCTIONS FREE. Most naturalistic flowers ever made.
Complete cost of each lesson kit—$2.00

FLOWER

by

project

Convenience

The Medical

DEERFIELD

Presents

Town

the

enjoyed

miniature

mented surfaces has been the year’s

DR. SAMUEL R. BANFIELD

Community
DeBartolo,

HONEY BEAR FARM

FIBRE

Win-

this area which

Club.

Club;

groups

the

Wesley
MethClub; Mrs. Sam

Arte

activities

senior citizens from

Emilio

Nurse
Association
of
Deerfield
Township;
Mrs.
Wayne
Thomas,
(Continued on page 53)

(Open Friday Nites)

WOOD

speaking

The reduction of Colonial designs
to

ety; Miss Marie Battaglini, Visiting

Highland Park

%

arrange

netka,
will have
charge
of publicity for the center. The second
floor
of
Winnetka
Community
House is a busy place every week
day from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.—center

Darrell Sample, Wesley Methodist
Church; Mrs. Ray Suzzi, American
Legion Auxiliary; Mrs. Berry Eul,
Blessed Virgin Guild of St. James
Church; Joe Rubenstein, Robert’s
Clothing Store.
Steve Mocogni, Modenese
Soci-

PATENT PENDING

478 Central

Jim

Ed Linari, Highwood
Center;
Mrs.
Peter

Birds-eye two tone colors of navy/white,

Cobey’s

Oak

Cesare
Caldarelli,
odist Church Men’s

tan/white, grey/white, gold/white, It.
blue /white or all white. Sizes: S,M,L, XL.

to

speeches in Highland Park,
Mrs. Leeds Mitchell Jr.,

Bruno Amidei, Marconi Mutual
Aid; Art Fraulini, West Side Taverns; Mrs. Stella Pigati, West Side
Taverns; Ettore Lenzi, West Side
Groceries; Hubert Amidei, American
Legion;
Ozzi
Mazzetta,
St.
James Holy Name Society; Edgar

soft, weightless comfort and durability.

ac-

To date, volunteer speakers have

Eul,

Morningstar,

Mental Health Association;
Galassini, Highwood, VFW.

and you! Porous knit fine cotton with

just

cepted
her
appointment
as _ cochairman with Mrs. H. L. Tilton

Mrs. Elda Sernesi.
Mrs. Peter DeBartolo, 326 Green
Bay Rd., was elected corresponding
secretary and, due to the resignation of Miss Harriet Hustvedt, Mrs.
James R. Nardini, 317 Grove Ave.,
was elected chairman of publicity
committee. Board members present
at the meeting were: Mrs. Elmer

Superbly tailored to fit the occasion—

Husting,

presented the program of the North
Shore Senior Center to the Rotary,
Lions and Optimist clubs in Winnetka and to all the churches both
in Wilmette
and Winnetka.
Mrs.
Husting
will arrange
for similar

appointed

e Your choice of emblem
instantly attached’

in Evanston Today

an-

The tentative goal for the fall
drive was set at $15,249. The doorto-door solicitation will be on a

selected general
drive.
The following

your favorite sports

Center

engagements before various
along the North Shore.

315 Waukegan Ave., Highwood, was

e The Knitted Shirt
designed to accent

Senior

vers

Show Their Work

Post

Mrs. Joseph Koopman, 235 Jefferson St., and approved by the members present.

“pledge”

SPORTS
PREFERRED

Center.

Mrs. Husting Given

noted

flower

authority

$26,201.50

SECTION 2. The unexpended balance of any item or items of any appropriation
made by this ordinance may be expended in making up any deficiency in any item or
items in the same general appropriation and for the same general purpose, or in a like
appropriation made by this ordinance.
SECTION 3. This ordinance shall be in full force and effect from and after its
passage, approval and publication in accordance with the law.
SECTIO N 4.
That this ordinance be published in an official newspaper of said
district.
ANTHONY F. NOSEK, President of the Board of Trustees
Passed: May 4, 1959.
Approved: May 4, 1959.
Published: June 4, 1959.
Attest: GEORGE
W. WARD,
Secretary of the Board of Trustees
Approved as to form May 4, 1959.

FRANCIS

J. NOSEK,
(SEAL)

Attorney

6/4/59=+-134

Thursday, June 4, 1959

�»

“Cub Pack 150

earned by the
mentioned that

tinue to work on new awards
ing the summer months on a
untary basis if they so desire.

Awards Given
Cub

Pack

150

held

its last

Pack

day,

May 29. The theme of the meeting
was “Musical Hoe Down.”
Den 1, presented a skit entitled
“Spooks;” Den 2, a soft-shoe routine; Den 3, a song entitled “Old

Healy Had

A Pack;”

Den

8"

4

The

a

take-off

an

awards

advance
Scouts

Scouts who

were

Services At Woman’s
B’nai Torah

given

row

Reform

Sabbath

at 8:30

Eve

p.m.

DAY

Club
Temple

services

at the

Ridgelee

Rd.,

will

U.

S.

be

SAVINGS

For Boys and Girls 5 thru 12
Directed by Ted &amp; Al Fenn, Educators

Highland

host

hostess at the fellowship
lowing the service.

BUY

TRAIL BL AZER DUDE RANCH

will

tomor-

Park Woman’s Club. Rabbi Sholom
Singer, spiritual leader, will officiate at Bar Mitzvah services. Dr.
and
Mrs.
Harold
Balikov,
1790

and

hour

fol-

CAMP

SPECIAL FEATURES OF OUR COUNTRY
ESTATE LOCATED IN NORTHBROOK
Riding — Fishing — Boating
———
Swimming — All Sports
Overnighters —
Baseball Unif orms for Boys —
Crafts —
Bowling — Hot Lunch — Teacher Staff — Transportation
CAMP SEASON—JUNE 29 to AUG. 21, 1959
Reserve a place for your child now!

Phones—ORchard

BONDS.

4-9789

or

ORchard

4-3829

qualified:

Bobcat:
Doug
Sieverson
and
Todd
Dickens;
Wolf:
Tim Evans,
Tom Roth, Nick Fahrenholz, Tom
Malmquist, and Doug Tausz.
Gold
Arrow:
Tim
Roth,
Doug
Tausz,
Scott Lindsay,
Doug
Bell,
Jeff Cody, Ken Leavitt, Ed Fahrenholz, Chuck Tausz, Jeff Bell, Steve
Schroeder.

on

Spike Jones’ record, “Cocktails for
Two” which they dedicated to the
Cub-Master.
A graduation certificate was presented to Jim Schultz who is now
a Boy Scout.
Stu Shepherd, Hal Schramm and
Randy Shipley were awarded Webelo badges,
the
highest
possible
award in Cub Scouting.
Den
5
received
the
Honor
Award for the most awards to a
single den, at the meeting.
Cub-Master
Healy
pointed
out

Silver

Doug

arrow:

Tausz,

Cory,

Scott

Ken

Chas.
Exum,

Gustafson,

Healy,
Whit

Jeff

Ledhoff,

Chuck Tausz, Jeff Bell, Bill Krucks,
Steve Rollheiser, Mark Glass and
Steve Schroeder.
Bear
award:
Tom
Tubergen,
Greg La Buda, Chuck Tausz, Jeff
Bell
and
Mike
Thomas.
Lion
Award: Ken Leavitt, Peder Jacobsen, Steve Rentscher, Ron Silverman and Dan Walker. Service Star:
Bob Hahn and Randy Beming.

that the boys had worked very hard
during the year as attested by the
hundreds of awards that had been
=

following

to Cub

a skit and song of

did

and

All boys who attended the Scoutarama recently held in Northbrook
were
awarded
Camparee
badges
through their Den Mothers.

and skit, ‘Comin’ ’Round the MounDen

11,

B‘nai Torah Temple Will Hold

hold

prior to this date.

“Forty-Niners.”
Den
6 presented
songs on musical instruments they
had made. Den 9 presented a song
tain.”

August

letter will be sent to all Cub

showed an exhibit of various musical instruments made by the boys.

Den 5 presented

durvol-

Plans were being made to hold
an annual baseball party on Tues-

Meeting of the current season at
the Walden School Friday evening,

Chuck

boys. He further
the boys can con-

LAKE CAR WASH
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Removing grime and dull pigment with a special

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Address:

FIRST

Hours:
Sat.,

8:30

June

4,

1959

&amp;

ELM,

H.P.

Daily 9 a.m. - 6 p.m.

EVERY

$1.00 DAY
Thursday,

ST.

a.m.-6,

REMINDER:

ID 2-9222

Phone

Sun.,

9

a.m.-2

WEDNESDAY

p.m.

IS

(with 8 gals. of gas)
At LAKE CAR WASH

DEERFIEL

BAKERY &amp;
DELICATESSEN

dy
4
sie

813

WAUKEGAN

RD., DEERFIELD

wo)

NY
a,

Golf —

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TWO

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iN i og

MONEY

ARRIVALS

Birth

Announcements

A daughter,
Amy
Louise,
was
born May 27 in the Highland Park
Hospital, to Mr, and Mrs. Harold
A. Bennett of 1406 Central Ave.
She has a sister, Nancy,
12, and
two
brothers,
Thomas,
8,
and
Larry, 3. The grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Bennett of Sidney,
Vancouver
Island, British Columbia, Canada.
*

*

*

Mr. and Mrs. Richard E. Scheeweis of 1213 Woodruff
Ave., announce the birth of a son, May 27
in the Highland Park Hospital. The
baby has been named John Robert

and

his

brothers

and

sister

are,

Nancy, 5, Steven, 6, and Jerry, 3.
The
children’s
grandparents
are
Mr. and Mrs. Henry Merkel of Milwaukee and Alvin Busko of Wausau, Wis.
of

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3 Plus Tox and Retreadable Tires... Tubed Type Only

*

*

Mr. and Mrs. Harold Root Jr. of
Central Ave., became grandparents
when
their son Charles
and his
wife welcomed their first child, a
daughter on May 16. The infant,
Troessuia, was born in the Memorial Hospital in Las Cruces, New
Mexico. Charles Root, the young father, has completed his first year
at New Mexico A &amp; M College and
is now attending summer
school.
The maternal grandmother is Mrs.
Arline Goodman
Mertes of Deerfield. The paternal grandfather is
Harold Root Sr. also of Deerfield.

DEERFIELD
GIRL SCOUT NEWS

GW 122 7ide
US.ROYAL SAFETY
:
FREE

Bethlehem Guild
Circles To Meet
Study and service circles of the
Bethlehem Church Women’s Guild
will have their monthly meetings
on Tuesday, June 9 at the following locations and hours.
Circle I will meet at the church
to leave for a tour of the Bahai
Temple in Wilmette. Mrs. Arthur
Pagel is in charge of arrangements.
|- Circle 2 will meet at 1:30 p.m.

at the home of Mrs. Harold Sparks,
642 Hermitage Dr. This circle will
make and provide articles for the
girls at the Evangelical
Welfare
Agency.
Circle 3 will have a supper meeting at the home of Mrs. Michael

Baran, 557 Deerfield Rd. at 7 p.m.
Circle 4 will have Mrs. Ralph
Ward, missionary from Jordan, as
its guest speaker. She will show
her slides and talk on her work in
the Middle East. The location of
the meeting has not been decided.
Mrs. Harold Holth is in charge of
arrangements.
Members of Circle 5 are asked
to contact
their
chairman,
Mrs.
John Barnes or their secretary for
information regarding this month’s
meeting.
This is the final spring session
for the circles who
will resume
their study and work in the fall,
says Mrs. Hollis Johnson, retiring
president of the Guild. The last
spring meeting of the entire Guild
will be held on June 23 in the
Church Hall. The chancel choir will
present a secular concert.

Camp Kiawassa, resident camp of
the Moraine Girl Scout Council, is
being made ready for the coming
camping season. The work is being
done mainly by volunteers, spearheaded by Robert Turner in charge
of maintenance for the Camp Committee, assisted by Mrs. John Derby of 1039 Central Ave. and Mrs.
Maurice Allsbrow of 607 Jonquil
Terr., members of the committee.
On a recent weekend members
of Girl Scout Troop 146, their leader, and volunteers from throughout

the

council,

all participated

in the

planting of 500 evergreens at the
camp
near
Woodstock.
The
red
pine seedlings were presented to
the Moraine Council by the Conservation Department.
Active
in the planting
project
were Mrs. Derby’s daughters Jean,
Beth and Susan and Mrs. Wessly
Stryker
of 717
Jonquil
and
her
daughter Judy, a Girl Scout, and
her son Gary.

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Page

12

WI 5-1277

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OBA

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GLENCOE

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Hubbard

custom

Woods

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men’s

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wear

Center

RD.

VE
Thursday,

June

5-4188
4, 1959

A

�Tes

de

oaks

PAR ae ee oe
UgoBEENWey

Se

ERS

ny a PRE
e

ion

Se

;

A. E. WOLTERS PRESENTS AWARDS»
AT HPHS 2-DAY HONORS ASSEMBLY

Ort Women Hear
About Great Plays

Recognition is given thos e Highland Park High School
Students outstanding in character, scholarship, leadership and
service at the annual honors assembly. A. E. Wolters, principal,
presented 1959 awards Thursday and Friday in the main audi-

Northwood
American

of the various

school

or-

newspaper, Yearbook, classes, student council and members of National Honor
Society were
introduced to fellow students, faculty
and guests.
Karen Cheli and James Johnson
were elected marshals of this year’s
graduating class.
Cynthia Jacob and Eric Engberg
were selected to speak at the high
school commencement, and the following
students
were
chosen
to
speak at grammar school exercises:
Nancy Jo Michaels, Bannockburn;
Rosalie Ward, Deerfield Grammar;
Michael
Addison,
Edgewood;
Eugene
Altman,
Elm
Place;
Karen

Terrace;

Heather

Axel-

rod, Red Oak; and Sam Zell, Wilmot.
Top Ranking Students
Top ranking students of senior
class were announced
as Cynthia
Jacob, salutatorian, and Allen Wolf,
valedictorian.
Gold Keys were awarded to winners of the Regional Scholastic Art
Awards for Northern Illinois. Winners are Mark Rosenblum, Wallace

Whitson,

Robert

Bittner,

Nancy

Fredrickson,
Carole Brown, Lana
Borin, Donna Schmidt, Avram Root,
David
Ritter,
Penny
Kenniston,
Don McAvoy, Lynn Moore and Judith Pettingell.
PUBLIC

To

the

of

Proposed

Patrons

of

the

Bell

gives

Telephone

notice

to

the

sion

in

its

Chicago

and

other

exchanges

Metropolitan

Area,

and

tions

Illinois

Company

public

with

Local

Tariff,

relating

Exchange

the

it

A

copy

of
by

public

the

proposed
interested

Deerfield

Road,

Deerfield,

this

directly

filing

in

this

Commission

at

812

matter

Company

Commerce

the

Illinois.

this

from

be

at

Secretary

of

at

may

thereto
or

the

by

Illinois

Springfield,

Ili-

nois,
ILLINOIS BELL
TELEPHONE
COMPANY
By E. T. Laures, Manager
6/4-11/59—164
PUBLIC

*

To

the

Patrons

phone

Illinois

hereby

gives

filed

with

sion

in

Bell

notice

the
its

Chicago

Illinois

Bell

Tele-

Exchange

Telephone

Company

to the public

that it has

Illinois
Local

and other

Metropolitan
tions

the

Filing

Company:

The

relating

Commerce

and

the

Commis-

copy

of

inspected

by

business

office

1866

and

and

All

parties

obtain
either

any

interested

regula-

semipublic

filing

Park,

GO

in

with

from

this

be

at

the

party
at

CAMP

at

matter

respect

Springfield,

BELL

By

Rosander,

A.

may

thereto
or

RENT

vice

treasurer.

OR

BUY

A

HEILITE

IN COMFORT!

Camping

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{ 4

qe

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Double bed with innerspring mattress on trailer.

June

4,

1959

It's feminine!

Unusually strong, riveted, reinforced construction.
Adjustable double hitch — safe, easy to maneuver.

CAMPGROUND EASE
Tent sets up or folds down in a few minutes.
(Set up in less than a minute, if necessary)

25 cu. ft. clear storage compartment locks securely.
CONVERTS

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MOST

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DEERFIELD,
Orchard

MEET

IN AND

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CORSETIERES

TRAILER

¥

Mrs. Anita Glassman

EQUIPMENT
RENTALS

ILLINOIS
Shop:

Street

Phone:
AVAILABLE

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M. TIBBETTS, CAMPING
634

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CO.

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4

he

IMUMMENMJ

by

6/4-11/59—162

Thursday,

Pohn,

ANYWHERE

Ask
this

Company

ILLINOIS
J.

George

EVERYWHERE

the Secretary of the Illinois Com-

Commission

Winkler,

YOU DON’T HAVE TO “ROUGH IT”
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Illinois

interested

directly

may

St.,

information

addressing
merce

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of this Company

Highland

qZ

secretary; Mrs. Robert Magur, corresponding
secretary;
and
Mrs.

39)

on page

Maurice

Unusually strong doors used also as seats, tables.

rates

public

the

Second

Moya Watson was awarded a medal
as the outstanding typing student.
The
1959
National
Council
of
Teachers of English awards for excellence
in writing
and
literary

(Continued

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president, education; Mrs. Maurice
Daum, vice president, honor roll;
Mrs, Roger Weiss, vice president,
MOT; Mrs. Richard Blair, financial

Detach trailer simply, easily when set up in camp.
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services.
A

and

for

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student,

|

Kier, vice president, pro-

Mrs.

in the Chicago

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Area,

Tariff,

Maynard
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Single, rugged swivel wheel,
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Duplicates car tail lights, brake lights, turn signals.

NOTICE

Proposed

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party

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of

education

given

Now! The world’s most famous bra comes

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Sher-

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parties

Zanarini
for

David
Reilly,

Service

has

Tariffs

rates

office

All

Roger
tificate

first;

Deidre

1360

in the Chicago

in its General

business

obtain

Wing,

second;

:

Commis-

services.
inspected

to Kate

Gerstel,
third.

Epstein,

‘

“a

here-

that

Commerce

revised

to

check.
Winners
of the Highland Park
NEWS
Adcraft contest were pre-

sented

Byron

. at the NEW

New Personalized

Installed

wood Rd., vice president of education of Lake County Region, installed the following officers: Mrs.
Herbert Miller, president; Mrs. B.
H. Tatz, vice president, ways and
means;
Mrs.
David
Eichengreen,
vice president, membership;
Mrs.

:

New Merchandise

Company:

filed

Exchange

the

Mrs.

a $25

Owners

Filing

The Illinois Bell Telephone
by

Officers

New

NOTICE

Notice

Illinois

also received

Mo-

is New—

Se

Oak

Mark

“Great

|

RSE

Cheli,

The national medalist winners in
art competition sponsored by Scholastic Magazine were Robert Bittner, Mark Rosenblum and Wallace

Whitson.

heard

EVERYTHING

Women’s

Windsor

707

Waukegan

FREE: The counsel of an experienced camping

ID 2-8700

Road

5-0040

611
family.

OS

Officers

Ort

of

ments From Great Plays.’’ The program was presented at its recent
meeting
at Morton
House.
Mrs.
Roger Weiss of 1119 Hillcrest Ln.
was chairman of the luncheon.

torium, of the high school.

ganizations, clubs, Shoreline school

Chapter

CENTRAL

e

HIGHLAND

SE

4

PARK

Also available at The Pershing Smart Shop
4818-20 N. Western Ave., Chicago

Li

Page

13

�‘board of directors of District 106,

Baiinockburs School

presented the class to the high
school.
Mrs.
Donald
Ubl,
high
school faculty member, accepted.

Has Class Of 14
Graduates June 2
The

Bannockburn

mencement

School

com-

were

held

exercises

Nancy
student,
farewell

Moseley,

Tuesday evening, June 2. The Rev.
J. D. Parker gave the invocation.
Priscilla

Avery,

welcomed

the

group.

presented

the

class

W.C.

ent

co-valedictorian,

Jane

William Stewart gave the class
history; Peter Craig, the class will
and Sally Wilson-Weatherburn, the
prophecy. Music was provided by
the school chorus.
Edwin S, Avery, president of the

Schools —

FOR

bloom painting
company

ANY

county

schools,

superintend-

presented

the

di-

Graduates are David Lee Allen, Priscilla
Fowler Avery, Mary Jean Bodle, Fay Rachel
Carter, Rae Marie Carter, Richard Chesrow,
Patricia
Jean
Clement,
Peter
Christian
Craig, Jane Elizabeth Endres, Lynne Alexis
Gianaras, Mary Elizabeth Moseley, Rodney
Caughren Schnur, William Richard Stewart
and Sally Wilson-Weatherburn.

BUSES

Churches —

co-valedictorian.
Petty,

plomas.
Faculty members are G. K. Ergang,
principal;
Mrs.
Charles
Buening, Mrs, Paul Q. Card, Mrs.
E. A. Field, Mrs. Beverly Hansen,
Mrs. M. T. Hesterman and Mrs. T.
J. Tibbetts.
Class of 1959

Endres

gift.

CHARTER

of

Jo Michaels, high school
welcomed the class. The
was
given by Elizabeth

Clubs

OCCASION

Insured

Drivers

For Information

June Sale

call:

Deerfield

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

ANNUALS WILL BLOOM
ALL SUMMER IN YOUR GARDEN
We

still have a nice selection of hardy
planting this week-end.
OPEN

SUNDAY

UNTIL

For

Imprint style AR

plants for
CATHARINE ANNE CARTER

5860 Ocean Drive

2 P.M.

the

BEST

in Flowers

GREENHOUSE

1

1911 Ridge Rd., H.P.
ID 2-3400

Villa Node
IS

Imprint

style NS

Charter
nore.
HOTEL

NOW

Marilyn

Schmid

will

introduce

Assistant Postmaster’s Son
Is Reported To Be Improving

THE EXCITING NEW
CANO

The Wilmot School of Deerfield
Public Schools of District 110 will
graduate a class of 63 on Friday,
June 12 at 8 pm. The ensemble
will play the processional and recessional. There will be three songs
by the glee club and three orchestra numbers.
Earle Hodgen, principal, will introduce
the
guest
speaker,
Mrs.
Delbert Meyer, former principal at
Wilmot. The student speaker will
be
Barbara
Zimmer,
Citizenship
awards
will
be
given
by
Mrs.
Esther Massover.
Charles Caruso, superintendent,
will present the class and David
Whitney, president of the board of
education, will award the diplomas.

David Leslie Auth, Randolph Peter Bax,
Susan Ruth Brin, Thomas Glenn Benedict,
Susan Emily Busse, Dale Wallace Dingman,
Jerome Daniel Eames, David Carpenter Evans, Charles Edward Fargo, Margret Fine,
Peter Wendell Griffith, Robert Joseph Hanson,
Michael
Henry
Herschman,
Richard
Allen Holzmacher,
Joseph
Anthony
Hugh
Jr., James William Hyink, Tove Kaspersen,
Kenneth Leon Kelley, Robert Harold Lantz.
Richard Howard Meldahl, Julia Anne Netter,
Leigh
Karen
Palmer,
Bruce
Barnett
Postil, Lawrence Z. Sanders, Henry Newman
Staats, David Allen Stirsman, George Leonard Sundberg, Frederick John Teeter, Judy
Beth Thompson, El Nora Bertita Trabert,
Pamela
Scott Trettel, Betty Jane Wilson.
Alan Peter Breuer, James William Burnett, John Richard Cadieux, Kathleen Marie
Coleman, Robert Willmore Cossavella, Alexander
Craig
Davison,
Jonathan
Eaton,
Chase
Osborn
Ferguson,
Richard
Arthur
Fredrickson, Joel Edwin Fritz, Samuel Jerome Fosdick Jr., Margaret Penelope Hall,
James Brian Hansen, Joyce Irene Holderbaum, Kathryn Grace Holmberg, Alan Michael Jacobson, Charles Bell Kafadar, Mary
Lee Kieft, Eugene Lewis Kopp.
Peter Carl Meldahl, Cheryl Pamela Muller, Edward
Neil
Neunherz,
Reta
Carrie
Oestreich, Patricia Sue Quirk, Marilyn Mae
Schmid,
John
William
Stanger,
Michaele
Anne
Wondreis,
Mark
Thomas
Zahnle,
Keith Earl Zellet, Barbara
Jane Zimmer.

Remember ...

|

Commencement
To Be June 12

faculty
member,
Robert
Benson,
who
will accept
the
class.
Fred
Teeter
will
introduce
the
high
school student, Samuel Zell, who
will welcome the class.
The Rev. Paul Berggren will give
the invocation and pronounce the
benediction.
Class of 1959

WI 5-3852
DEERFIELD - HIGHLAND PARK
TRANSIT, INC.

IDlewood 2-5544

Deerfield Grammar
School To Graduate
83 On Wednesday

Wilmot School

Club

Vellum

Personalized

Fallon
Fisher,
son
of Newton
Fisher,
assistant
Deerfield
Postmaster, who was injured last month
in an automobile accident, and is
hospitalized in Savanna, IIl., is reported to be improving.

Stationery

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For information call porn
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Lenses

white or blue.

INSURED BANK INTEREST

ON
BANKS
Member

An excellent
up for yourself
don’t forget
Club makes a
ates or brides.

SAVINGS

EFFECTIVE

JULY

1, 1959

HIGHLAND
Federal

Deposit

Insurance

Bank—Postoffice Bldg.
iN}

HII \| AAI Ht HN HHUA

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TUUEHHAALLLUL Wit HTH Ht AAAI |TA

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On the North Shore Since 1895

==

His .

645

CENTRAL

AVE.

« ID 3-0230

Rd., Highland

for information

Park

or appointment

IDiewood 2-5150
1645 Orrington

Avenue,

UNiversity 4-3311

the

Holy Cross School
Commencement Day
Is Next Tuesday
Tuesday,
June
9, will be the
closing day for Holy Cross Parochial School. The pupils will attend
Mass at 8:15 a.m. at which the entire student body will participate in
the singing.
After Mass, the members of the
graduation class will be guests of

evening

John

at

O’Mara

The
the

Club

for

Evanston

8

o’clock,

will

the

confer

di-'

Rev. Edward Reilly
speaker. Benediction

Blessed

Sacrament

Class

1874 Sheridan

play

Reid Abernathy,
Tamie
Lou
Amerman,
Carla Sue Anderson, Roger Carl Bahnsen,
Luana Lynne Baxter, Gary A. Bena, Deborah Berggren, Edward Berthold, Karen L.
Blow, Diana Louise Bodmer, Wayne Fred
Brandwein, J. Michael Brillhart, Betty Lou
Broms, James W. Hall, Jerry Christy, Vivien
Clair, Donald B. Clark, Mary Irl Clayton,
Pamela Joy Cope, William A. Couch.
Sandee Felber, Carol Sue Finney, Anne
Fisher, Kathy Fountain, Larry D. French,
Ted
Gledhill,
Ida
L.
Greenfield,
Jamie
Gunther,
Susan
Henderson,
Michael
A.
Holland, Laurene
Marie
Hollmann,
Irene
Lydia Hosford, Linda Suzanne Hughes, Herbert
W.
Jacobson,
Dana
Marie
Jensen,
Vicki Ann Jensen, Richard Johnson, Jonathan P. Johnson, Phyllis Jane Johnson, Diana Star King, Kenneth R. Kinney, Judy
Kipp, Alan T. Kmieciak, Susan Joyce Kroll,
Joanne Kubalek, Tom Kwant, Marjorie Lynn
Laing, Cheryl Eva LeClair, Barry W. Limberg.
Steve Marianetti, Cheryl Gay McCurdy,
James E. Meier, Donna Rae Meyer, Richard Alan Mielenz, Kay Miller, Melody Fern
Moore, William C. Olendorf, Phillip Olson,
Peter Pansing, Dale Paquette, William Harold Pottenger, Charles F. Parsons Jr., Carole Payne, Ellen Petersen, Susan Pittenger,
Robert Scott Raughley, Robert A. Reimer,
Jeffrey S. Robin, Robert Gordon Ruppel.
Lyman G. Sandy, Barbara Sankey, Joan
Elizabeth
Schiffer,
Fred
John
Schroeder,
Raymond
John Sharp, Dean Stanger, Laverne Doris Sticken,
Steve
Stolle, James
Varner, Russell K. Walther, Tom F. Wands,
Timothy B. Wang, Diane Emily Williams,
Gary Woolley.

of the
low.

Phone

will

the class.
Vivian Clair will announce the
class gift. There will be singing by
the eighth grade class and some
instrumental solos.
W. E. Sheehan is superintendent
and Frank Whitcher is principal.
Class of 1959

plomas.
will be

the beet in gight—since 1907

Second St.

band

the class and Rosalie Ward,
school student, will welcome

That

optical company

Corp.

2-7800

nH

opportunity to stock
and the family. And
that Rytex Charter
fine gift for gradu-

PARK
1771

iDlewsod

Choice of blue, grey

ink.

cept
high

Rev.

Sheets and envelopes custom-imprinted with your name and address in choice of styles shown.
Fine quality heavy vellum paper in
or mulberry

school

Other classes will assemble
in
school to receive report cards. Sister Norbertina is principal.

Choice of:
200 club single sheets and 100
envelopes or 100 large empress
sheets and 100 envelopes.

HWA|

The

processional and recessional. The
Rev. Paul V. Berggren will give the
invocation.
“An Eighth Grader Speaks” will
be given by Joan Schiffer. Gordon
Shepard will present the class and
diplomas
will be given
by Paul
Greenfield, president of the board
of education. Miss Nancy Anderson
of the high school faculty will ac-

the Holy Cross Mothers
breakfast at Thorngate.

regularly 4.75

HOTEL
HIGHLAND PARK, ILL.
Pat Miller, General Mgr.
SKOKIE HIGHWAY-LAKE COOK ROAD
EDENS , EXPRESSWAY

Deerfield Public Schools of District 109 commencement exercises
will be held Wednesday, June 10
at 8:15 p.m. in Deerfield Grammar
School gymnasium,

of

will

fol-

1959

Barbara
Barth,
Lawrence
Biggam,
Patricia Bolster,
Veronica
Buckles, Kenneth
Dawson, Suzanne Delaney, Rosemary Duffy,
Fredrick
Enenbach,
William
Enright
and
Arthur Fink,
Carole Genevese, Thomas Haroski, Victoria Hart, Martin "Haugh, Donald Johnson,
Raelyn
Jones,
Penelope
Jordt,
Teresa
Kempf, Richard Keppler, Carol Krol and
Kathleen Landreth.
Mary
Lyn
Marxer,
Michael
McGuire,
Sherry Meyer, Maureen Miller, Walter Neilsen,
Nancy
Newton,
Richard
Nyschay,
Douglas
Pallagi, Michael
Riordan,
James
Runkle, Roger Salemi, Randy Walker, William Walsh, Leslie Wenthworth and Margaret Zook.

Episcopal Baptism
Kirk John Rustman, son of Mr.
and Mrs. John Edward Rustman
of 1515 Wilmot Rd., will be baptized Sunday, June 7 at St. Gregory’s Episcopal Church with the
Rev, J. D. Parker officiating. Sponsors

will

Earl

Jacob

be

Jacob

Rustman

H.

and

Rustman,

Marylyn

/Rustman.
Thursday,

June

4, 1959

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Thursday,

June

4,

1959

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¢ Telephone: IDlewood 3-2222
Page

15.

�ostly for Women
Golden Wedding Anniversary

DEERFIELD WOMAN'S CLUB AWARDS
SCHOLARSHIP TO JEAN ALTMAN

John Suter Will

Present Pupils In
A Piano Recital

Thursday, May 28, at the Honors Assembly in the Highland Park-Deerfield High School, Jean Altman was awarded a
$250 scholarship sponsored by the Deerfield Woman's Club.
Jean, daughter of Mrs. Frank J. Altman, is a lifetime resident
of Deerfield and a graduate of Deerfield Grammar School. She

A cordial invitation is extended
to the public to attend an afternoon
of music,
Sunday,
June
7, when
John Suter presents his piano pupils
at the
Highland
Park
Women’s
Club, 1996 Sheridan Road, Highland Park. The recital will start
promptly
at 3:30.
Following
the

recital,

tea

lounge.

Mrs.

Alvin

will

be

Schroeder

Ulrich

will

The

served

Richard
act

and
as

Deerfield

are Michael
Martha
and

in

Dexter,

Mrs.

plans to major in elementary education at Southern Illinois University.

To Head Group For
Doughnut Tag Day

the

For

Mrs.

Hyink

William

Mrs.

and

Mr.

will

Rd.

Stratford

1228

of

and friends on Sunday,

by their children

honored

be

June 7 in honor

of their Golden Wedding anniversary.

“Randall Vanderbeek,
Patricia Ann Porter
To Wed June 13

ia

y Word

has

been

approaching

received

marriage

of

of

the

Randall

- WVanderbeek, son of the Rev. and
Mrs. Bernard E. Vanderbeek
of
‘Holland, Mich., to Miss Patricia
-_ Ann Porter, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs.

Virgil

Porter

of

Charleston,

_W. Va., on June 13 in the Kanawha
_ Presbyterian

Church

in Charleston.

Young
Mr. Vanderbeek is in his
_ senior year at Duke University and
expects

next

to

enter

fall. His

~Vanderbeek,

medical

father,
was

the

school

Rev.

Mr.

of

the

minister

_ Deerfield Presbyterian Church
from 1942-48, leaving here to accept
ago

a call at Charleston. Two years
he returned to Holland, where

_ this

early

ae
;

where

ia

life

his

had

father

been
had

spent

been

and

Presbyterian

re

Church

in

that

city.

Vibe

i

ae

,

Mrs. R. R. Wolfe To
Be Hostess To DAR

+e
ag
" BS,

The

mn

aWp_ DAR
ing

cy

North

Shore

will have
on

Chapter

its Flag

Thursday,

of the

Day

June

11

meetat

1:30

p.m. in the home of Mrs. Richard
Russell Wolfe of 320 Portwine Rd.
The state vice regent Mrs. V. A.
Gill will be guest of honor.

dhe
ia

Mrs.

ib
AG)
Yi A

Raymond

Flinn

of

Spring-

field Ave. will be among the hostesses, with Mrs. Joseph A. Condon
a of Lake Forest, Mrs. L. A. Black-

bigs

burn, Mrs.
John McGuire
R. H. Herbst Jr., all of

er
ie:
ey

and Mrs.
Highland

Park.

aaa

Mrs.

4

H.

O.

Sudbrink

of

705

ay

Hermitage Dr. is flag chairman.
Mrs. Richard H. Thompson Jr. of
Bannockburn is corresponding seces
_. retary. Mrs. Wolfe, the hostess, is
i.
the senior president of the CAR.
ee
ses)

oe
‘

Tea

ei

Honors

Mrs.

Houston

ayy +

ast
x
yes:
eM Mrs. Paul J. Keller Sr. of North
A: faa
Bry
iP ky_ Ave., Bannockburn, was hostess at

a

tea

(Peggy
Colo.,

poe

for

Jo
who

Mrs.

John

George)
is visiting

S. Houston
of
Denver,
her parents,

Mr. and Mrs. William D. George
i
of 853 Westcliff Ln., on Tuesday.

byA
Bit

ae

5

Page

16

Mr. and Mrs. Hyink were married June
9, 1909 in Milwaukee
but have lived in this vicinity for

many

years, the last seven years in

Deerfield.
Helping
them
to
receive
the
guests
will
be
eight
grandsons,
John, James, Peter, and the twins
Thomas and Paul, children of their
son, Donald; and Robert, William
and Richard, children of their son,

Charles.

|

playing

John Agazim,
Busse, David

Holv

Cross

To Have

Suter

Mothers

Party At

Villa Moderne
The Holy Cross Mothers Club is
having its annual buffet supper and
installation of officers for the com
ing year on Wednesday, June 10 at
6:30 p.m.
at the
Villa Moderne,
Skokie
Highway
at County
Line
Rd.
New
officers
are
Mrs.
H.
W.
Abrahamson, president; Mrs. H. M.
Sarton, vice president; Mrs. M. D.
Houston,
treasurer;
Mrs.
E.
A.
Flynn,
recording
secretary
and
Mrs.
W.
F. Mack,
corresponding
secretary.
The retiring officers are Mrs. H.
B. Marxer,
president;
Mrs. T. J.
Johnson, vice president; Mrs. G. R.
Dunphy,
treasurer;
Mrs.
J.
F.
Doherty
Jr.,
recording
secretary
and Mrs. W. L. Greenlee,
corresponding secretary.
Mrs. T. C. Hammer is chairman
of the buffet supper party and her
co-chairman
is Mrs.
R. A. Feid.
They
are
being
assisted
by the
Mesdames W. B. Feil, A. P. Fink,
F. W. Garrity, W. A. Gillis, R. A.
Graw,
J. J. Hagan
and
Joseph
Happ.

Moving
Mr.

To
and

New
Mrs.

Jersey
J.

R.

Biles

have

sold their home at 1018 Warrington
Rd. to Mr. and Mrs. Everett Bersinger, who will be moving here
the middle of June. The Biles fami-

ly is moving

to New

Jersey.

will

for

fall,”

Mr.

states.

summer

workshop

An

Mrs.
Mrs.
hill

Fred

Fred

Rd.,

Faulkner

Faulkner,

will

serve

459

as

Brier-

chairman

of

the northeast section of Chicago’s
loop for “Doughnut Day,” the annual tag day which benefits the
Salvation Army. The drive will be
held in Chicago and approximately
150 suburbs surrounding the city
on Friday, June 12.
Mrs. Faulkner, a member of The
Salvation Army’s Women’s division,
will be in charge of organizing tag(Continued on page 18)

series

5, marks

on

foreign

the

policy

opening

informative

Chapter To Organize

Wells

D.

authority

It was decided to hold the meetings on the first Monday evening
of each month at the Temple. All
mothers of the chapter are eligible.
Installation
of officers will take
place on Monday evening, June 15
at Kipling School.

the

Burnette,
on

foreign

‘“‘Are the

a Real

$250

girl

annually

chosen

by

is

the

authentic

Japanese

luncheon

series,

at

Threat

to

New

this

workshop
a

is

recognized
affairs,

will

Nationalisms

International

Co-

Mr. Burnette is the vice president
of
Roosevelt
University;
board member of the American Association for the United Nations;
board member, Lake County University of Chicago
Alumni
-Club;
secretary of the Library of Living
Philosophers; chairman, Adult Education, of the North Shore Unitarian Church; as well as a mem-

ber of the

Citizens Advisory

of Wilmot

Further

Com-

School.

information

may

tained
by
calling
Mrs.
Francisco at WI 5-0685.

the exotic foods, doll favors, and
the use of chopsticks served to set
the

scene.

A short business
meeting
was
held and plans were discussed for
the benefit candle tea to be held

in the fall. It was

High

School
Have

be obCharles

Seniors

Picnic

announced

that

the
volunteers
for
station will be Mrs.

the
Sprague
Henry Staats,

Mrs.

and

Thomas

Wood

Mrs.

Ed-

mund Hoffman Jr. Following the
meeting
members
viewed
Infant
Welfare candles used in displays

the house.

Carl E. Bagge, 938 Hemlock St.,
spoke on the subject of Wills and
Trusts
to the
Status
of Women

study

group,

Deerfield

branch

of

the American Association of University Women on May 28. This was
the last meeting of the year for,
this committee which met at the
Bagge home.

Mrs.

Bagge

is

a member

of the

committee of which Mrs. Robert C.
Gand is chairman. The group had
been
studying
Personal
Money
Management.

Mr. Bagge

is in the legal depart-

ment of the Santa Fe Railroad.
talk included information on

history

of wills and

distributed
ject to the

trusts

and

His
the

he

pamphlets on the submembers of the group.

St. Mary’s Guild Elects
Officers For Coming Year
St. Mary’s Guild of St. Gregory’s
Episcopal Church has elected officers for the coming year. Mrs.
Richard

Mrs.

G.

Arvin

president;

retary
To

of

the Infant Welfare Society of Chicago at the May meeting in the
home of Mrs. Edmund Hoffman Jr.
with Mrs. Victor Turner acting as
co-hostess. Japanese menus’ listed

Talk To AAUW Group

operation?”’

Decatur

Mr. and Mrs. George Coffin and
three children of Decatur, formerly of Deerfield, spent the weekend
as guests of Mr. and Mrs. Leonard
Pullman of 1144 Linden Ave. and
with the Misses Madelina Urelius
and Mary McMurtrie of 1132 Linden Ave.

summer

discuss

mittee

From

of

a

Carl E. Bagge Gives

is being

The guest speaker to launch

Mothers Of Excalibur
A group of Highland Park and
Deerfield women met at the Deerfield Masonic Temple on May 18 to
organize a mothers club of Excalibur chapter of DeMolay. The purpose of the club is to assist the
members of the newly formed DeMolay chapter.

to

through

D. Burnette of 605 Sherry Ln., at 9:30

a.m.

Here

minimum

was held by the Deerfield Wing

of

June

from

Includes Luncheon

field.

of Mrs. Wells

School.
be

Japanese Program
By Deerfield Wing

Voters of Deer-

Tomorrow,

must

Pau,

offered by the Provisional League of Women
the home

High

selected

és-*’-

at the High-

The Deerfield Woman’s Club has
been commended
on, its interest
in the young women of Deerfield
and plans to continue its scholarship program. A fund raising party
for that purpose will be held this

LEAGUE OF WOMEN VOTERS BEGINS
SUMMER WORKSHOP SERIES FRIDAY
The

girl

.the

has’

high school. It is for the purpose
of furthering
her
education
toward a vocational goal.

appear.

early

Park-Deerfield

The

A

students from other
and
northern
and

suburbs

land

years

Club

a scholarship

awarded

Featured will be the two-piano
team
of
Darcy
Hagemann
and
Carol Schifter, who
appeared
on
five succesive Sundays when Mr.
Suter presented his students in a
mid-winter series of studio recitals,
also the brother
and sister twopiano team of Charles and Eileen
Dwyer.
Preparing for an early fall appearance
is
the
two-piano_
ensemble — eight hands — composed
of Susan
Dexter,
Patty
Nielsen,
Margaret Kies, and Mary Richards.
During the past year, David Bye
was presented in an individual recital and played recently at Deerfield-Northbrook
Rotary Club
luncheon when Mr. Suter spoke on
Musie Education.
“Other individual recitals are in

preparation

a min-

ister, to become the minister of the

: \

Mr. and Mrs. Donald Hyink of
1542 Woodbine
Ct. and Mr. and
Mrs.
Charles
Hyink
of Wheaton
have issued invitations for a reception and open house for their parents, Mr. and Mrs. William Hyink
on Sunday from 3 to 7 p.m. at their
parents’ home on Stratford Rd.

western

three

Grade School District 106 (Bannockburn), No. 109 (Deerfield), or
No. 110 (Wilmot).

Bye,
Charles
and
Eileen
Dwyer,
Susan
Dexter,
Darcy
and Sheryl
Hagemann, Meredith Hardy, Carol
Johnson,
Kathleen
Kahila
and
Mary Lu Loarie. Also:
Christine
Maitzen, Patty and Belinda Nielsen, Judy Rupple, Mary Richards,
Kipp
Scheer,
Ronald
Schroeder,
Joann Scoggin, Carol Schifter, and
Roger Ulrich,
In addition,
North
Shore

last

Woman’s

tablished

hostesses.

Adam,
Peter

the

Deerfield

Charles

students

T lois

Chl

—

Weddings

—

Engagements

J.
Mrs.

and

Kutzleben,

Dexter

is

president;

Bartlett
John

Mrs.

Jr.,

Warton,

William

vice
sec-

Von

treasurer.

Tomorrow

The annual high school senior
picnic will be held in Sunset Park,

Highland

Park,

after

senior

the

Friday,

tomorrow,

assembly.

Thursday, June 4, 1959

�Young

cople uA

Robert
Robert

School and PSorvkee

(Bob) Sandy, son of the
Sandys of 648 Elder Ln.,

was awarded

review

Guild’s

of

the

annual

a

Zhivago”

was

National

Katherine Kies, daughter of Mr. _

Science

Fellowship.

*

and

*

Scholastic

entered

novel
in

has

Deerfield
(2749

ward);
Anne

(1409

Port

Greenwood);

Clinton

Barbara
Jaffe,

Rd.);

Barbara

Edward

Weiner,

Highland

Laing,

Highland
Park

(188

Bernardi
Jr.,

Park

,Highland

Deerfield

(347

Sheridan

Dell
Rd.)

(941

Lane),
Other

Park
Wood-

and

Jo

Highland

Park area students at SIU not pictured include Jeffrey Schwartz
(676 Detamiate) 900 Ronald Maestri, Highwood (221 Michigan).

YDS.

John,

when

high

three
has

Make

degree,

majoring

he

was

school,

in

graduated

had

a

scholarships,
been

offered

choice

and

now,

a choice

Appointments

Now

for

CANDID
WEDDING
PHOTOS

Photographer
599 ROGER WILLIAMS
ID 2-3199

of

LAKE

8:30 a.m. t 0

$6.00

76 YDS.

reg. 10.95sq. yd.

$8.00

ass reg. 9.95 sq. yd.

$7.50

luncheon

118 YDS. ROXBURY ALL WOOL, beige tweed ... reg. 10.50 sq. yd.

$7.80

for

126 YDS. ROXBURY

$7.50

pad

Edens

near

Open
Thursday,

June

Champagne

attached

ALL WOOL,

pumpkin beige .. reg. 9.95 sq. yd.

1959

through

a

*

majoring

in. forestry.

He

—
~
—

Inc.

5:30 p.m.

You can have

as

a delightful

at The
litt le

Moraine
as 95c?

Served from 12 noon to 2 P.M.

daily except Sunday.

Sunday Brunch 11 A.M. to 2 P.M.

TELEPHONE

VE 5-2400
Saturday, 9 to 5 — Evenings

but

Sunday Buffet Supper 5 to 8 P.M.

Carpets

Tower

Monday
4,

LOOP,

ic So

Lewis

*

and

Lake Forest 548

32 YDS. MAGEE ALL WOOL, pink beige __.............. reg. 8.50 sq. yd.

foam

*

265 Market Square

$6.00

with

committee

6 days per week

_......................... reg. 8.95 sq. yd.

sandalwood

Pr Te. Au WOOk BOP

hazing

beige

NYLON

HEAVY

on

FOREST

36 YDS. ALL WOOL,

ROXBURY

adviser,

FOREST

$7.50

PONT

—

SPURTS sul
CHILDRENS SHOP
LAKE

87 YDS. 70% WOOL—30% NYLON,
Beige &amp; white tweed ..........-.-.....-.-o.
eee reg. 10.95 sq. yd.

DU

junior

—

government

recently clipped off 1.5 seconds
from the previous 50 yard back
stroke record as he completed the
two lengths in 28.8 seconds. Don
(Continued on page 44)

$4.99

100%

student

usher.

bondale,

TWIST, grey .. reg. 8.95 sq. yd.

63 YDS.

SHAG

a

with
and

AVE.

Clearance
sand

student

Donald Strand, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Richard Strand of 1241 Warrington
Rd.,
is a freshman
at
Southern Illinois University at Car-

$3.99

beige,

of

chapel

...........000000.... reg. 6.50 sq. yd.

pink

in athletics,

Will be open from

FOR DETAILS CALL
Percy H. Prior, Jr.

HEAVY COTTON

Champagne,

in

village

several scholarships, He has selected to do his graduate work at the
University of California at Berke-

Guhr

been

ber

reat

physics.

again

Carpet
271

ceive his B.S,

of

Julie

working

clerk, is flying out to California,
by jet, on June 11, to attend the
commencement
exercises at California
Institute
of
Technology,
where her son, John Price will re-

from

Julie Guhr, daughter of Mrs. E.
J. Guhr of 1145 Waukegan Rd., will
be among a class of 140 to receive
bachelor’s degrees on June 7 during Lawrence College’s 110th commencement exercises on the Appleton, Wis., campus. She will receive
her B.A. with a major in art.
A
member
of
Kappa
Alpha
Theta
social
sorority,
she
has
served the group as social chairman
and
athletic chairman.
She
has participated in the Lawrence
Art association, the Ski club, and
the
student
government
social
committee.
She
has
also
been
homecoming
chairman
for
both
Colman and Sage dormitories.
Miss Guhr has accepted a position with Marshall Field and Co: at
Old Orchard, Skokie.

active

representative,

*

Deerfield

be

the Dean’s List three times, mem-_

says Sophomore Richard
from the Highland ParkTheir second son, Roderick, is also
to Southern Illinois Uni- a student at Hamilton.
School graduates live at
*
*x
*
which overlooks a recreMrs. Trenton O. Price of 1267
Ct.,

will

At Colby she is affiliated
Delta Delta Delta sorority,

say and their youngest son, Douglas, are going to Clinton, New York
for the commencement
weekend.

Berkley

Lan-

shal,

Hamilton College and will go to
Michigan University next fall for
his law degree. Mr. and Mrs. Ram-

ational lake. Pictured, from left, are Sikorski, Highland Park (266
Park); Donald Strand, Deerfield (1241 Warrington); Donald Cole,

of 237

government and was a service mar-

cago Daily News as guest speaker.

“Looks like | started something,”
Sikorski, left, as he looks over freshmen
Deerfield area who have followed him
versity. All of the recent Township High
Thompson Point, SIU’s new housing area

and

she was

The awards were presented at
a luncheon at Carson Pirie Scott’s
loop store on May 23 with James
McCarthy, night editor of the Chi-

Robert
S. Ramsay
Jr. will
ceive
his
degree
on
Sunday

H. Kies

Boston, Mass. She was graduated _
from the Township High School |
in Highland Park in 1955, where

been printed in the Guild’s publication
of
prize-winning
entries
“Youth Speaks.’ High schools of
Chicago
and
the
suburban
area
participated in the tournament,

*

John

sociology

the

tournament by the Highland ParkDeerfield High
School
and _ has

*

Mrs.

dis Ln., will receive her B. A. degree this month at Colby College,
ins
Waterville,
Maine,
majoring

tournament.

His review of the Russian
“Dr.

under

Foundation

first place in the book

section

Press

ley,,

oe

\

by Appointment.

or
ON

THE

LAKE

ID

2-4444

Sid

Arne
©

HIGHLAND

PARK,

BILLINGS
Page

17

eN

�_ DEERFIELD DOINGS
ed!

Elected President Of
Bowling Institute
(Continued from page 3)
active date.
The five trustees, Koss, Petesch,

orter,

Aberson

nade

the

and

Wehle

following

would

have

ns for committees with the first
s, Aberson,

Planning:

village

Porter.

son,

Auditing:

rson,
(5)

License,

Petesch,

Police,

Health:

Petesch,

entirely

possible

(6

Aberson,

Koss, Peterson.

Trustee

Arno

matter

an explanation of the views which
1e and Trustees Aberson, Petesch,

the one last Wednesday night, I
I think

and

attempt

views with

about
to

the

presi-

dent’s point of view as well as that

of the five trustees, I frankly admit
at

I can not determine what caus-

2s the president to maintain the atde which he has adopted. I
onder if he is aware of what he is
actually saying to his Board of

Trustees and the citizens of DeerS

’ 2

“We

are a board,

elected by the

citizens of Deerfield in a manner
‘escribed by law —
procedure

Each

a democratic

in a democratic

country.

of us, including the president,
responsible

for running

the local

government in the best interests of
the village and are certainly en-

titled

to our own

ever,

none

of

opinions.

us

is

How-

blessed

with

rod-given, man-given, or self-given
hts which may be imposed upon

e rest

of the

non-democratic

members

as in

a

political set-up. The

illof the majority has been and
should be the basis of our way of

to comprehend

difficult

for

that a president,

airman, or leader of any demosatic group (particularly an electbody) would attempt to act conry to the will of five-sixths of
group. I recognize and respect
e president’s right to veto any
Measure which has been passed. It

as been

made

Committee

very clear that the

Ordinance’

will

be

etoed and this will be entirely
gal.
‘When at least three of the trusSs mentioned
‘compromise,’
it
as clearly apparent that there is
no middle ground. Then, of course,

the alternatives are for the five
eustees to submit to the will of
le president and one trustee, or to
ow the orderly, accepted and
procedure. I, for one, am un_ able to act contrary to my convicms which are based on a firm

ief in the democratic way of
. I do not question anyone’s
ight to have an opinion which I do
share, but I do question carrythe difference of opinion to the
nt of obstructing

the

I see

is secondary.

The

name

of

any

hours

of

have

such

an

Weavers’

should

be

in

1. If the

ex-

vetoed,

act as he

commencement
Remo

as

he

has

sees fit.

as passed

promised

is

public-

ally, then we should pass it over his
veto and appoint the committees as
per our wishes. We would then

2. If the
president
vetoes
the
ordinance, but then appoints the
committees as conceived by the majority of his board, I am perfectly
willing to let the present
ordinance”
“ ..,. by the president.”
stand for the time being until later
in this term.
“In any event,
accord with the

I am
four

bers

committees

who

desire

of the

since

many,

deliberation

have

that the committees do not mat. If they did not matter, we

in complete
other mem-

to be

set up now rather than wait until
September. I see no advantage to
waiting. We have no assurance that

the majority
“T

will be served.

believe

that

this

whole

ques-

tion needs to be settled at the June
10 meeting
compromise

and am unwilling to
democratic
proce-

Picchietti

Joseph

At the recent annual convention
of the Billiard
and
Bowling
Institute of America, Remo Picchiet-

ti, 29,

was

elected

president.

The

Institute
is comprised
of major
manufacturers and distributors of
bowling and billiard equipment in

the United

States

and

Canada.

Mr. Picchietti, son of the late
John Picchietti, is vice president of

DBA

Products

Co.

Inc.

of County

Line Rd., Deerfield, manufacturers
of bowling equipment and supplies
and is also associated with the law
firm of Cornell and Wolf of High-

land

Park.

peace

He

is a justice

of Deerfield

of the

Township.

Sisters Attend Funeral
In Vincennes, Indiana
Mrs.

Henry

Herchenroder

of

1028 Osterman Ave. and her sister,
Mrs. George Meyer of 1033 Osterman Ave., went to Vincennes, Ind.,
last week because of the death of
their brother-in-law, the Rev.
W. Schaefer.

Frank

The Schaefers had visited Deerfield occasionally and he had occupied
Church

the
pulpit
of St.
a number of times.

Paul’s

Works 45 Years

buildings in the area, and I think
we should all join in and help the
Legion complete their project.
Donation
line is on the right.
pose I’ll get shot. But, a good landscaping job costs money, and since
so many, many people use this hall,
a public response is in order, either
individually or through groups.)
Night Depository
I have
often wondered
if the
people know that there is a night

will

enable

you

to

*

*

side

deposit

Grant

Visit In Effingham
Over The Weekend
and

Forest

Mrs.

Ave.

Floyd

spent

the

of

week-

end with relatives and friends in
Effingham
and _ Louiseville,
Ill.
They
also visited
Mrs.
Stanger’s
sister, Mrs. W. K. Wilde of Mason,

who

is in the Mt. Vernon

Hospital.

Aid

Society,

which

is

place Nov. 5 at the new Guild Hall
of the Ambassador West. . . Mrs.
Seymour

Wolf

of 829

Holmes

Ave.,

assisted with arrangements for the
luncheon held May 23 at the Country Squire near Grayslake, given by
the Sisterhood of the B’nai Torah

Reform

Temple

of Highland

Park.

Mrs. Ambrose
quil Terr., was

Cox of 701 Jonelected treasurer

of the Highland

Park

Music

Club

27 meeting

in the

home

of Mrs. H. C. Sonderman, the president. . . The Fine Arts committee
of

the

Club

Highland

met

Park

Tuesday

in

nockburn
home
of
Phelan. Mrs. Gordon

Woman’s

the

Ban-

Mrs.
James
Fowler, 825

Beverly Pl., president of the club,
attended the board meeting of the
Lake

County

en’s Clubs

Federation

of

Wom-

last Tuesday in Munde-

lein.
Mr.

and

Mrs.

on

Monday

Michael

from

Seiler

Seiler, who will be a
at the University of Ari-

Arizona

this

Arizona

seems

fall

with

to beckon

Rioch

Grant E. Rioch, 1260 Meadow
Lane, a line foreman of Illinois
Bell Telephone Co., retired recent-

Born

has

in

been

Chicago,

in

the

all

his

service

construction

partment. He and his wife,
live at the above address.

de-

Esther,

Rioch enjoys gardening, fishing,
and raises prize dahlias. He plans
to move to Florida.

dan

is

the _

official

Steve.

.

the

Seil-

Deerfield

Greeter and sponsor of the Newcomers Club.
Mr. and Mrs. Richard M. Harvey
attended a recital at Grace EUB
Church in Chicago on May 14. The
Rev. F. G. Guither, former minis-

ter

of

Deerfield’s

ler Jr. and two sons, Curtis and
Richard, of 1142 Chestnut St., were

in Wilmington,
visit
Mrs.

Ill, last Sunday

Mr. Baechler’s
Dayton.

to

grandmother,

Mrs. Vierlyn Duerr, whose home
at 2265 Half Day
Rd., is being
occupied for the summer by the
Michael
Seilers,
has
gone
on
a

concert tour with the Swedish Glee
Club to Sweden. . . Mrs. James
Peterson

of

747

Chestnut

St., who

accompanied
her
mother,
Mrs.
Genevieve Dallas to Roswell, N.
Mex., last week for a visit, has
returned

home.

Miss
Virginia
Easton
of
747
Chestnut St. spent the Memorial

Day weekend with cousins, Mr.
and Mrs. Harry Rich, in Grayslake.
Mr. and Mrs. Neil Sheehan of
1020 Forest Ave. were hosts at a
party
Saturday
evening.
Their
guests were Mr. and Mrs, Thomas
Kerrihard of Jacksonville, Ill., Mr.
and Mrs. Robert L. Pettis of North
Aurora

and

Mr.

and

Mrs.

James

McDermott of Bannockburn.
Former Deerfield residents,

Mr.

and
Mrs.
Ray
D.
Reeds
(Irene
Hutchison) of Bakersfield,
Calif.,
have been house guests of their
cousins, Mr. and Mrs. Martin Mur-

phy (Arline Bleimehl)
Park

this

past

week.

in Highland
They

had

visited their son, Duncan’s family
in North Carolina and their son,
Walton’s family in New York and
are en route home.
Their third
son, Carter and his family, live

near

them

Reeds’

in

father,

California.
the

late

Mrs.

Samuel

P.

Hutchison,

was a former Deerfield

postmaster

in the

early

1900’s.

Plan Commission
To Hear Petition

ar-

Tucson,

to a Girl Scout camp in Michigan
for her vacation.
A post card from Deerfield, Mass. ,
for
which
Deerfield,
IIll.,
was
named way back in 1850, arrived
at the REVIEW
office last week
from Mrs. Robert E. Jordan of 50
Waukegan Rd., who has been on a
vacation trip in the East. Mrs. Jor-

ly after 45 years of service with the
company.
Stanger

and

making plans for a benefit luncheon
and
fashion
show
to
take

brother, Michael and the former
Abigail Adams, has decided to go

Libraryafter all

Eldon
Holmquist
Village President

Home

summer.
Susan’s
sister,
Sandra,
who was
also out in Tucson
in
March
for
the
wedding
of her

*

the
new
going up

his

. .

ers, for their daughter, Susan, is
going out for a visit there this

pay your bills and leave
for the Board at any time
is not open. The mail box
always locked, so there is
to worry about any envelmight want to deposit.
It
every morning.

Nice
to see
Township Hall
these years.

received

zona this fall, will work at Bucky’s
Boys Club in Bannockburn
until
he leaves for the West. Jeff Ferguson will be going to the U. of

of the Village Hall?
This opening
will take normal sized envelopes,
messages,
questions
the Hall
inside is
no need
ope you
is opened

where

Mrs, Robert J. Lagorio of 1300
Cedarcrest Ln., Bannockburn, is an
active member
of the Northwest
Auxiliary of the Illinois Children’s

mer, .
Steven
freshman

(They didn’t ask for this, so I sup-

which

in

Ariz., and will live at 2265 Half
Day Rd. for the summer months.
Married
recently
in
Tucson,
both
will
return
in the fall to
the University of Arizona to complete their senior years. Mr. Seiler
is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Robert
Seiler. The young couple will be
working
at Tennaqua
this
sum-

4)

depository chute on the south

Jr.

this past week.

rived

Deerfield Man

Eldon Holmquist
page

North-

exercises

McCraren

degree

at its May

dure.”

from

at

Church

and Mrs. Joseph McCraren and attended the University of Arizona

procedure.

Is Vetoed

ordinance

today,

Mrs. John Beckman Sr. of Wildwood, Grayslake, formerly of Deerfield, is in Tucson, Ariz., visiting
her son-in-law and daughter, Mr.

in this

advantage

Guild,

minster
Presbyterian
Evanston...

mutually
agreed
that which is a

democratic

let the president

Mr.
concerned. However,

of Mrs. Petesch’s class at Shimer
College.
. Mrs. Hans Hermann and
Mrs. Allen A, Ische are attending
a meeting
of the
North
Shore

for

“I feel that we should, of course,

904
is

Carroll, Ill., last weekend to attend the 25th anniversary reunion

of the maI believe it

and

no

will of the

‘Actually, now, the issue in question

ordinance

the president

(Continued

It is exceptionally

Riverwoods Rd. to Chicago...
Mr. and Mrs. Maurice Petesch of
1221
Deerfield
Rd. were in Mt.

and

need to leave it as is “
Appointed by the Board of Trustees.” The president’s signature is
not necessary after passage
over
the veto.

the situa-

see

Mackinac Island and points of interest en route were enjoyed by
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Holdren of 730 Deerpath Dr. on their vacation trip
the past two weeks ... The Richard Kottkes have moved from 2635

of the committee
do not choose to

If Ordinance

rter and Koss believe should be
(plained to the voters of Deerfield
1ich follows:
“Following
our numerous
disissions regarding the committee
appointments and particularly aft-

“When

present

to

can

changing
this
upon need for

has written

ould like to share my

with

manner.

Views

Wehle

This

bargain

Public Relations: Holmquist.
Explains

presi-

ordinance ready for passage in 30
to 60 days following the June. 10

Koss,

done regardless
appointments. I

Trustee

today.

the

manager

meeting.

(7)

are

—

Wehle.

) Public Works:

we

that

a partial
acceptance
jority point for view.

Wehle.

Fire:

manager

ily adopted

Porter,

Peterson.

) Judicial,

where

clear

future. At this point, however, I
am not willing to exchange a hast-

Personnel:
(2) Administrative,
Wehle, Petesch, Porter.

(3) Finance,

be

seems

dent wishes to have the so-called
Koehler report adopted. There is
no trustee on the board,
to my
knowledge, who does not wish to
have clearly defined duties for the

recommenda-

2d as chairman:
) Building, Zoning,

not

“It

The Deerfield Plan Commission
will meet Thursday, June 11 at 8
p.m. in the Village Hall, with Frank
Curto, chairman, presiding.
They will hear the petition of
Jack Krelsman of Chicago to rezone
from
R-2
to
R-7
multiple
family district the rear of the tract
at 1023-29 Deerfield Rd. The frontage of the lot of 82.5 feet has a
depth
of 152 feet already zoned
R-7.
The
remainder
of the
693
ft. depth is zoned R-2 one family
district.

Doughnut

ging activities in the loop area in
cooperation with three other sec-’
tional chairmen. She held the same
position last year.
Mrs. Faulkner made
an urgent
appeal for volunteers to assist in
manning tagging locations in the
loop. With the other chairmen, she
hopes
to have
taggers
on every
corner in the loop area to “sell”

the

little

brown

doughnut-shaped

tags.
“We appeal to everyone who can
give just two or three hours as a
tagger to offer her services,” said
Mrs. Faulkner. ‘“‘We must reach the
Doughnut Day goal of $160,000 so
that there will be no cut-back in
the
many
social-welfare
services

the

Salvation

the

needy.

Army

provides

for

Presbyterian Baptism

Bethlehem

Church is pastor of Grace Church.
The Guithers’ two children, Vaneva
and Geoffrey, played a duet at the
recital given by the ‘‘Grace Notes.”
Mr. and Mrs. Clarence A, Baech-

Day

(Continued from page 16)

Richard
Mr.
1141

on

Stuart

and
Mrs.
Waukegan

Sunday

byterian

Olney,

son

of

Edward
Olney
of
Rd., was baptized

in the

Church

Deerfield
with

Dr.

Pres-

Paul

Keller officiating.

Thursday, June 4, 1959

J.

�EM. Steeles
Cohbrate
5 oth

Frank Tagliapietras
Are Grandparents

Wits

Anniversary

of Mundelein.

Tomorrow Mr. and Mrs. Edward
M. Steele of 160 Linden Park PI.
will celebrate their fiftieth wedding
anniversary. There will be a family

party

at their home

which

clude their daughter,

will in-

Mrs. Maynard

Marks, her husband and four sons,
and their son, Charles E. Steele of
Meridian, Miss., his wife and two
sons.
The couple was married on June
5, 1909, in the yard
ent home. Mrs. Steele
ed from
Deerfield
School in 1904. She

BETROTHED
Announcement is made of the engagement of Sondra Ruth Bjelland,
daughter of Mrs. Clifford F. Bjelland of Minneapolis and the late
Mr. Bjelland, to Harry Mills Martin, son of Mr. and Mrs. Samuel I.
Martin, 1900 Green Bay Rd.
Miss Bjelland attended University of Minnesota and Mr. Martin
attended
Loyola
University
and
University of Illinois.
A September wedding is planned.

- Mr. and Mrs, Frank Tagliapietra,
571 Elm Pl., became grandparents
when a son was born to Mr. and
Mrs.
Eugene
Martin
Tagliapietra

of their preswas graduatShields
High
still is active

The

infant, Timothy

Gene, was born May 20 at Lake
Forest Hospital. He is the couple’s
first child.
Maternal grandparents
are Mr.
and
Mrs.
Gerald
R.
Adams
of
Peoria.
Great-grandmother
is
Mrs.
Beaulh Bowman, also of Peoria.

in the

Weavers’

Steele,

Sally Livingston
Miss
of Mr.

Guild.

who

served

on

Park

Board
of Highland
Park for 14
years, was until his retirement in
1953, treasurer of Steele-Wedeles
Co., wholesale groceries firm.

ston,

TRACTOR Fics!

Graduates

1391

Sheridan

Rd.,

graduat-

ed Sunday from Marjorie Webster
Junior college, Washington, D.C.

Miss Sondra

Save important money on special

flat-price installation offer...

R. Bjelland

Miss Livingston graduated from
Highland Park High School in 1957.

MORE

.

10

529%

DAYS

to homeowners in this area for
a limited time only

e Only yard-garden tractor
Drive,”
a multi-gear-pack
efficiency.

eBig Tractor power from tremendous
gear reduction. Gear shifts into three
speeds forward, plus reverse.

SEE IT ¢ TRY IT
FUN TEST IT TODAY
BUY FROM YOUR
AUTHORIZED SALES
SERVICE CENTER.

Mower

&amp;

&amp; Garden

Complete Mower
&amp; Engine
2210

installation offer of only $29.95.)

Sharpening
Repair

Skokie Valley Road
(U.S,
Highland Park, Ill.

41)

IDlewood 2-6116

savings on
need to in-

Weekdays: 8 a.m-8 p.m.

It means

Sundays: 9 a.m.-2 p.m,

that if you require 3-wire, 240-volt electric service into your home, you'll get
it. And if you need an electric range circuit inside your home, it will be added
and hooked up to your new range. It

KS»

&lt;=&gt;

WE TAKE
TRADE-INS!

means that for a fraction of the actual
cost, thousands of families will be able
to start cooking better, living better—
electrically!

Wind-Tunnel
Whirlwind
All

is eligible.

This special offer covers standard range
installation in any single family dwelling served by Commonwealth Edison—
Public Service Company.
(Details at

in ONE

without expensive

1—CUTS

THE

2—VACUUM
grass,

Your kitchen stays far cleaner, much cooler when you cook with
a modern Electric Range. And nothing cooks food faster. So start
with the “‘heart’’ of your new All-Electric kitchen now—during
“E”’ Days at your Electric Range Dealer’s. Get in on this special
low-cost Electric Range Installation offer and start cooking better,
living better—Electrically!

a! Extra!
Prices --°

ic
Extra-Specie
on new ectr

J

g tS Ohad days!

attachments

GRASS

clippings,

up

THE

leaves,
twigs,

etc.

3—-BAGS AS IT VACUUMS—
puts debris in bag.
EVEN
IN WET GRASS

Public Service Company
Peeerer) a
ret

Sten,9

TAN

Operation

CLEANS

LAWN—picks

your dealer’s.)

eT

with “Uniof proven

Center

below will have some spectacular values to show you. (Including a flat-price

to tell if your family

Fun

© A year ‘round work horse—hooks up
to 22 optional attachments
including
32” mounted rotary mower.

Power

During ‘“‘E”’ Days the dealers who sell
the famous make Electric Ranges listed

How

Sun... MORE
MORE Done!

M.S.S., INC.

Offered by Electric Range Dealers

stall your new Electric Range.

WHEEL- HORSE

Sally Livingston, daughter
and Mrs. Frederick Living-

Now is time to buy
an Electric Range

This means substantial
whatever wiring you may

Turn fe Work

at Dealers of These
Famous Brands
SRR

Se
@

‘Thursday,

SE

AA,

es poarenarans
ne

oS

eetete

setatatstatet

o

&lt;

@©Commonwealth Edison Company

June

4,

1959

te".

Ordinary
mowers
clump,
‘messy clippings. New Toro
cleans-up
other
clippings

skip—leave
cuts evenly,
as well.

Page

19

�|_

HEY KIDS!

YWCA Sponsors
Summer Bridge,
Tennis Lessons

|HAVE YOU
MADE

YOUR

Lessons will begin June 24, They
will be two hours in length, be-

GUESS?

ginning at 8 p.m., with one hour of

HOW MANY

a
|

fe

(PRINT

teach

in the “P-F”
Canvas Shoe
In Our Window

and

FIGURES,

and

count

women,

interested

bidteens

in a betheir

Course

for
19.

continue
will
Aug.
ending

course
weeks,

The
eight

Dr. Sheldon Rosenstein, 116 Ridge Rd., appreciatively|For registration, call the YWCA,
accepts $2700 check from Mrs. J. L. Bradshaw and Mrs. James |ID 2-0675.

. PENNIES

Evans,

CLEARLY)

Delta

City

Rosenstein

:

will continue for six lessons. Mrs.
Alfred Alschuler Jr., a graduate of
Sargent college of Physical educa-

tion, will instruct.

J. D. Davis Family Announces
Birth Of Second Son, Douglas

DEERFIELD PARK DISTRICT
Statement of Cash Receipts and
Disbursements for the Fiscal Year
Ended April 30, 1959
RECEIPTS

Hugo L. Schneider,
Collector, verge

Grandparents

he Vat Mecano

are

the

and

Mrs.

Frank

Frank

De-| Douglas has a brother, Danny,

Ave. address,

Hockett,

Grandparents

Cannon|

Bushes,

are

Decatur,

Ga.

the

3.

W.

and

S.

Mrs.|

Minnie Davis, Cincinnati, Ohio.

City, Colo.

onto

County
4 $23,770.85

gta

1,658.61
"$25,429.46

Ree
oc eNTS
saa
Salaries and Wages
C. D. Smith, Park Foreman ........$ 4,160.38
A.

H.

:

;

1%!

Kenneth

ae

Jr.,

f

Richard

‘

Series

courts.

School

Place

is a staff|Elm

The John D. Davis family, 3347
Mr. and Mrs. Maxwell L. Hockett,
Ave., announce the birth
355 Temple
Ave., are parents of Krenn
May 15 of a second son, Douglas
their first son, Frank, born May
13
at
Highland
Park
Hospital.|Lee,
at Highland
Park
Hospital.|
Milios of the Temple

a

sponsoring

is

also

“Y”

The

Delta}

Tri-D|class in tennis for women. Lessons

:

A Son, Frank, Is Born
To M. L. Hocketts

YOU Can Win This

Dr

ag Pee

Ys

of

Whirl,”

‘
of will begin June 22, , at 10 a.m., &gt; at
and Palate Institute

left Lip ;

presented.

Universit

Northwestern

member

proceeds of ‘Pearl

This amount,

din ner dance, was

Council

Alumnae

Area

of Chicago

members

Delta.

Address

ie

men

all others

8-week

no edit sence ubvare meatal

-

point

ginner’s class or modernizing
bridge, are welcome.

Name

ffi

Goren

|

ev
dy

the

ding.
College

2

IN

GUESS,

YOUR

lecture
with
blackboard
illustration and lesson sheets and one hour
of supervised play. Mrs. Garn will

PENNIES

=

i

Mrs. Isabelle Garn, Illinois State
Woman‘s Pair Champion, will instruct a summer bridge class at
Highland Park YWCA.

.........:.::---:s+0-0

Knackstadt

3,714.65

Klos

66.00

132.12

Pantle

Kenneth

36.00

Thomas Wilson

ify

:

36.00

Rizzo

Jerry

ie

1,037.58

Pantle

Total Salaries and Wages ............... $ 9,898.27
550.87
Public Service—Electricity ............
222.11
Deerfield Lawn &amp; Garden, seed ....
656.95
Charles E. Piper, insurance ..........
Illinois Association of Park Dis165.00
tricts, dues, registrations ..........
inSchool and Park Equipment,
108.00
stallation
Deerfield Garage &amp; Service Sta619.17
HON, - Gas BAG 010 2s sige censscedcalews
194.57
Shelly Andrews, janitor supplies ....
and
sand
Mocogni,
&amp;
Menoni
61.76
gravel
Deerfield Hardware &amp; Paint Co.,
147.30
supplies
of
Coca Cola Bottling Company
447.45
;
Chicago
534.38
....
oil
fuel
Company,
D-X Sunray

Ci,

‘

Village of Deerfield, water ..........

Pietro Plumbing, repairs and
installation
withService,
Revenue
Internal
holding tax
Highland Park News, legal advertising
Village Hardware, Inc., supplies ..
Deerfield Lumber &amp; Fuel, supplies

110.60

Di

City of Highland Park, refuse dis-

as

Bs

posal

‘

te ALL

L AST

"Y

CONTEST
SAT.,

THIS

Reiland &amp; Bree, Inc., truck pureee

JUNE

Bi

en
a

‘

3.

ai

ae

44.

a

TE ST

Ha

i

_

.

to

|

in

_ CUT OUT THIS OFFICIAL ENTRY BLANK!
Bring it to our store. Make your guess.
ENTRY BLANKS AVAILABLE AT
OUR STORE!

ADDITIONAL

&amp;

VEL

Page

20

pense

$34.75,

Court

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

Dewey,
Real

Dudley
oe

Kastrup,

|

om

i

varieties

add

color

GERANIUMS—flats

CLAVEY'S TREELA
HWY.

&amp; CLAVEY

HIGHLAND

FREE PARKING

RD.

PARK

PHONE

WI

5-0105

sean atei nae

a ereee?

240.00

50.00
;

177.63

convention expense
Estate Board, ap-

7.25
eae

service

18.50

secretarial

7.40
a
-

inee tne
BRE ANd SUPPHOS. ick sis
O. Z. O. Sales Co., small tools

4.5

and

supplies

Harris Trust &amp; Savings Bank, coupon

of flowers.

auras
5.00
100.00
250.00
500.00

8 res de office supplies ....
..........
Hardware, supplies

ey ram
uilders

Sas

2.00

for

repayment

sound system installed in fieldhouse $142.88

charge

‘

4723
11.25

$22,345.10
Total Disbursements
State of Illinois
County of Lake
Deerfield Park District
Deerfield, Illinois
I, Locke Rogers, being first sworn depose and say that I am the Treasurer of
Deerfield Park District, that the foregoing
is a statement as to said Deerfield Park
District of all corporate moneys received
and
from what
sources
received,
giving
items, particulars, and details, and of all
corporate moneys paid out, giving the name
of each individual to whom paid, on what
account paid, and the amount, that such
statement
is for the
fiscal year
ending
April 30, 1959.

wemanhinmiin hor

Subscribed

Shoppers

hauling

Dahl’s Auto Recchatruction, repair
;
parts

summer.

:

Deerfield

Gastfield,

Edith

SPOTS
SHADY
GARDEN

:

verblooming

SKOKIE

SHOES

:

a O

all
&gt;)

;

Commercial

Locke Rogers, repayment for post-

ROSES

11

issue of Deerfield Review.

i
5

vine edln) di databe bch dod Gi ren aah ci cmteks ha ma

aad
June

H.

.

each

FOR
PERFECT
IN YOUR

informa-

Saturday, ‘ une :
be announced
‘
°

bloom

*

See bicycle—get full contest
tion at G. &amp; G. Shoes.

Inner

in

and

38.60
332.32,
81.40

2,791.97

SUPPLIES nnn
1L FAGLOES,
Ww. Raredon, sonvaation ex:

00

$y

3-foot bushes,
budding and

etermined

be

:

Association of Park Dismerican
pe ggg oe CHIOB: sevapiissipitce
’ reget
Bulger, services .2.::..:..0:......ohn
C. R. Anderson, insurance ..........
Righeimer &amp; Righeimer, legal fees
Grover C. Elmore, appraisal ..........
&amp; Zimmer
Engelhardt,
Norman,
Manufacturers

SPECIAL!

GARDENIA

RULES

°
Girls.

and

to all Boys

,

1,963.67

mainte-

man, legal fees ........ccc-cccesesentoonsee

CON

o vag s, winner to
contest.
additional

ia

—

6

“
‘
Par
ee
In
isi final.
judge
of official
| 2. ; Decision
;
ge
.
“case of ti
eby

ia
i

open

Contest

e

iving

oor

ut

CLOSES

GUESSING
1.

*

equipment

and

chase

416.41

id

E. GROGAN,
26th dayJAMES
ot May.
188

6/4/59—161

Pace
bef

this

Notary
ary PaPublic

Thursday, June 4, 1959

r

�for all your lumber needs
Craftwood stocks the greatest variety of species,
grades and sizes of finishing and construction boards,
mouldings and plywoods. Kiln dried of course.
Special milling to your specifications and
courteous assistance in the proper selection of lumber to suit
your needs. Prices include delivery. Come in or phone today.

es

a

PINE BOARDS

PINE AND HARDWOOD MOULDINGS

You will enjoy working with Craftwood quality pine.
Three grades priced per lineal foot,

All these and many others in stock at all times
Clear

Pine

Size

Utility

Knotty

Clear

Prices

1am

3¢

—

S8¢

Per

1x3

AY

6

Running

= 1x4

a

Bb

te

14”

1%”

2”

= 14¢

17¢

= 25¢

21

24

12

Be

ne

NG

IE ou,

a

)

ai

Ce

A

a

ZZ,
eae

20

1x12

400

70

801.10

24

48

84

96

Y

EQ
LUMBER

Kiln dried, smooth, straight and even
Use it, you'll see the difference.

2x2
2x6

15

2x8

21

2x10

27

2x12

33

phat
4x6

ao
36

ZZ

textured,

23c

wi

Casing 24

Glide

ya

vols We KA

a

Ae

Ree

Corner Bead 34"

ee! eee

Cove *4x 34"

4

8

14

Il

Stops 13/8”

Bi

Re

UR

ae

1S:

ae

Sa.

eon

4.26

7.80

16.96

‘

Jambs 3° x 7’

Ro

Ash

23¢

Tea

Wee) eck

11.65

ee
9

9

ee
we

8.65

8.65

HARDWOODS
ies

Prices are per board foot, random width and length, surfaced

specializing

in home

41

two sides, Finest quality (graded FAS). In stock at all times.

:

Species

owner service!

PLYWOOD

are

a few

examples

priced per square foot in full 4’ x 8’ sheet.
For
Interior
Use.

Thickness
Rie
Per Sq. Foot . 14%
Per 4x 8 Sheet 464

For

Thickness

T/T

16%

Use or
Good
Both
Sides

Per Full Sheet

5,28

Per Sq. Foot

OSE
20
640

Species

65

Mahog.

Basswood

61

Phil.

Balsa

70

Maple

Birch

1.05

Butternut

We handle only U.S, Plywgod stock. Any size or
Here

Price

Ash

tm anamasconnaty

Outdoor

Oak

38c¢

Stool 21%”

:

available,

Birch

43¢

11

6x6

thickness

Wal.

21¢

6¢

2x4

b IR

Mahog.

14¢

Base Shoe %2x%

1.34

13” and wider in clear up to 24” usually available at slightly higher price,

CONSTRUCTION

Pine

Base 3%” Modern

35

1x 10

MOULDINGS

84

Mahog.

.80

72

Oak Red

.68

-78

Cherry

89

Teak

Chestnut

.60

Walnut

Cypress

1.82

60

Gesewood

2.40

TI
26
832

BR
30
9.60

Ble”
33
10.56

21%

OSI

28%

BIR

Be

37%

Bo BF =:'0 Bi

6.88

912

9.60

12.00

100 BF — 200 BF

CHART

1.10

Oak White

Ebony

38

Price

2.50
10,50

S48 stocked at nominal additional cost
DISCOUNTS
10 BF —
26 BF—

WOOD
1590
8 A.M. - 5:30

Deerfield

25 BF
50 BF

10%
20%

NOTE: These prices apply to
FAS stock surfaced . 2 gt

Sigg 2.) Beale wits aa pe eth
831/3%

cinidix cotins tec
Road,

P.M.—Thursdoy

Highland

until 9—Sunday

Park,

Illinois

10-1

Just west of Route 41—Phone IDlewood 2-0140

_ Thursday,

June

4, 1959
Page 21

|

�pos

Place

Field

Day

There

will

and

John B. Nash
&amp; Linoleum

Co.

Roger Williams
Ravinia

Section

IDlewood

its

at

races,

fathers,

will

this

have

annual

3:30

p.m.

games

and

year,

mothers

supper

for

the

food for the supper
the school grounds.

hot

dogs,

wiches,

626

today
be

Teachers,

sq. yd.
and up

hold

May

sandwiches,

fish

time,

beef

and

cole

and

will be sold on
Menu includes

barbecued

tuna

egg

slaw,

15

Sheridans,

announce

of Julia

Ann

Assists With Tour
Northfield Garden

2694

the

birth

at Highland

Edwin

side

Maternal
grandmother
is Mrs.
Lillian S. Brown, 2047 Green Bay

together

first

T.

Ave.,

Park Hospital. Julia Ann has three
brothers,
Richard,
5, Tommy,
3,
and Jimmy, 2.

movies before supper at 6:15 p.m.
children

INYL PLASTIC
FLOOR COVERING °
Carpet

will

Richard

Rd.

Mrs.

Stella

Smith,

ern

Ave.,

is paternal

2714

mother-daughter

Proceeds from the white elephant sale, bake sale and the sup-

and

milk.
Pop, candy, ice cream
potato chips will be on sale.

and

per

go

to

baseball

the

eighth

games.

grade

fund.

fun.
Tom

—

Old

Drives

Refinished

@

Expert Black Topping

@

Concrete
Call

Crushed
Stone
ESTIMATE!

Jack

pW

et

a aaa

jf

pat

service

o*

FIRST

PROFESSIONAL ARTS PHARMACY
. .- in the Doctor's Building

Made by Scotts.
BUGS

troublesome

HEARING

For Prompt,

and _ other

lawn

Park

We Carry a Supply of . . .

Clean, easy-

| to-use. Kills ANTS, CHIGGERS,

| CHINCH

Highland

Rd.

insects.

AID

BATTERIES

Free Delivery Phone:
Paul

M. J. Dray, R.Ph.

of

America,

is

on

a

Mrs.
Mrs.

Bernard

chairman;

social

chairman;

Mrs.

Sybil Leler,

and

Miss

Helen

faculty

representative

WHAT

DOES

to

from
11
to
5
p.m.
Saturday
through
arrangement
with
the
Chicago Horticultural Society. The
event will benefit the Society’s garden center.

Richard
Feature

Cushman Is Named
Editor, Spectator

Richard Cushman, son of Mayor
and Mrs. Robert S. Cushman, 739

Kimball

Rd.,

was

named

feature

editor
of the
Spectator,
student
weekly
newspaper
at Shattuck
School, Faribault, Minn.
the executive board.
New
officers will assume their
duties at the end of the present
school term.
AAAS

“hy

gs:

- 1895 Sheridan

Clubs

mm»
e
Cx

meee

%,
pa

secretary;

means

titi thhtttt-4444444%424-heereeyYer
bo hhh
revvvuvvvvv Lbh
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
VYUVVUVVUVYYY

alain

prescription

Blane,

Mildner,

Park

Highland

St.

pa

Old

Gollub, treasurer; Seymour Waldman, program chairman; John Harvey,
public
relations
chairman;
Mrs.
Melvin
Berlin,
ways
and

ID 2-0065
First

1931

Other officers elected are
C. J. Williams, vice president;

GaP ... CHOICE TOP SOIL
SILJESTROM FUEL CO.
1930

Friedman,

cere.

@

for FREE

R.

Briar Rd., is newly-elected president of West Ridge School PTA.
Friedman is a partner of Chicago
architectural and engineering firm
of Friedman,
Alschuler and Sin-

DRIVEWAY CONSTRUCTION
Areas

Men’s

The garden is open to the public

grade
classes are furnishing
the
food and conducting this affair of

2-8701

Parking

Lake-

the

of

and is noted for its day lily collection, its plantain-lilies, iris, and exceptional collection of peonies including
more
than
200
hybrid
types.

In cooperation with eighth grade
students, the mothers of the eighth

During the
supper
hour
there
will be a concert by the Elm Place
School band.
From
7 p.m. until
dark there will be father-son and

353

treasurer

committee arranging a visit to the
Elmer A. Claar garden in Northfield on Saturday. The Claar home,
in a sylvan setting with wild flower
woods, is at 617 Thornwood Ln.,

grandmother.

salad

coffee

Garden

West-

sand-

Engelbrecht,

Pl.,

Does

it mean

SWIMMING,

&amp;

SUMMER

FUN?

Does

MEAN
it mean

HORSEBACK

acquiring

RIDING?

Does

SKILL

at SPORTS,

it mean

LEARNING

through CRAFTS &amp; WORKSHOPS?
At MERRY OAKS, SUMMER
means all of these things to your child without an over-emphasis on any
ONE of these at the expense of the others.
DEVELOPMENT
of your child as a happy

It means the overall SELFindividual working within a

group.
The

MERRY OAKS summer activities are planned with an awareof what is needed to provide a well-rounded program. MERRY
OAKS ... an all-year-round school on 7 wooded acres for children from
4 to 9 years old... is staffed by qualified adults. Transportation, snacks
and lunches are provided. The summer outdoor program extends from
June 15th through August 2Ist, and registrations are accepted for any

ness

four

or

more

consecutive

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OAKS

SCHOOL,

3350

|

ID 2-9000
K.

Haines,

R.Ph.

|
i

‘|

(for use around patio,
barbecue, garbage can)

In

:

time

of

need.

RIGINAL

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Open Sundays

9:00 A.M. - 1:00 P.M.

RONALD
Page 22

WEINSTEIN,

BUSINESS

Director

E. SCHWARZBACH,

Funeral

BUSINESS

SHORTHAND

USE

(6 weeks)

SHORTHAND

(days only)

ENGLISH

COMPTOMETRY
Wm. H. Callow, Prin.
Day and Evening Classes
BEGIN ANY MONDAY EXCEPT SPEEDWRITING CLASS
WHICH BEGIN JUNE 8, 22; JULY 6, 20; AUGUST 3, 17

Adjacent
parking for
over 200

President
Funeral

SCHOOL

ACCOUNTING

LOngbeach 1-1890
LAURIE

OR

Courses:

SECRETARIAL

3019 West Peterson Road
WEINSTEIN,

Following

STENOGRAPHIC

be made in the privacy
of your own home.

HERSHEY

PERSONAL

FOR

The

Speedwriting

A

and arrangements may

Store Hours Daily 8 a.m. to
5:30 p.m. Wed. ‘til Noon

FOR

TYPING

... complete funeral consultation

Roger Williams
ID 2-4387

From

TYPING

GREGG

first in lawns

Choose

Director

EVANSTON BUSINESS COLLEGE
1718
W.

H. Callow,

Prin.

Sherman

Ave.
UN 4-3004

Car$e.n-

Thursday, June 4, 1959

sss sstss sts
ohhh

SCRUBBING,”

Holds Field Day

(Edwin Engelbrecht "

Heads PTA

Richard T. Sheridans Welcome

Julia Ann Into Family

eases
ee ee

'NEVER NEEDS

Elm Place School

�Region
Maynard
speaker

Wishner

today

at

is

keynote

fourth

annual

planning conference of Lake County

Region

of

Women’s

Ameri-

‘Methodtat Worien
guardianship;

health;
roll.
Mrs.

Mrs.
Harold

Mrs.

Ben
M.

J.

Bayrach

Brodsky,
Alschuler,

honor

install

mem-

cers:
Mrs. David Krichiver, president;
Mrs. Saul Z. Bass, Mrs. Ben Brod-

Con-

bership; Mrs. M. Weissman, MOT;
Mrs. David Krichiver, presidents;

Wishner, a member of a Combined Jewish Appeal study mission

Mrs. Harold Kaplan, publicity; Mrs.
Maurice Daniels, scholarship; Mrs.

that

Franklin
Cole,
special
projects;
Mrs. Jack Rubin, Tel A Viv; Mrs
Maurice Klotz, Tel A Viv.

can

ORT

at

gregation

North

Israel.

recently

Israel,

Shore

will

Mrs.

toured

give

Europe

a first

and

hand

ac-

count of the current situation
talk entitled “The Old World
the New.”

in a
and

Registration:

9:30

Maurice

Winkler,

program;

Luncheon will be served at 12:15
p.m.
Mrs.
Walter
Freedman,
na-

tional board member

A.M.

of the Chicago

and president

co-ordinating

cil of Women’s American ORT, will

Coun-

the

following

sky,

Mrs.

Jerome

Mrs.

Byron

Epstein,

region

offi-

Coopersmith,

Mrs.

Maurice

Klotz, Mrs. David Sparks, vice presidents; Mrs. Leonard Pullman, corresponding
secretary;
Mrs.
Sam
Rose, recording secretary; Mrs. HyHoward

Palmer,

Have Third Daughter

Install Officers
Installation of newly-elected officers
of the Woman’s
Society,
North
Shore
Methodist
Church,

Mr.
and
2707 Mavor

Mrs
Ln.,

baby
April

Joan

girl,
29.

Lubin,

co-chairman,

beth has two sisters, Ruth, 3, a

Install

Members

Highland

from

Parkers

Highland

Park

Following luncheon, two original to be installed include Mrs. Frank
skits will be presented by North- Sorg, first vice president;
Mrs.
wood and Deerfield chapters.
| Volney Hutchinson, recording sec-

Chynoweth,
Jean,

13

Oak

retary; and Mrs. Otis
retary of spiritual life.

Mrs.
and

M.

Mrs.

the Evening

Robinson

Circle.

Youth
Summer Theatre

Workshop
¢ Acting

and

* Voice

Improvisation

and

Diction

BAAD

Movement

white

Individual

DDD

Classes

Attention

Professional
Public

For

$25.00

Instruction
Performance

Free

Brochure,

Telephone

ID 2-5857

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firms you, takes inches off by actual measurement.
There is a style especially for you.

978 LINCOLN
OF WINNETKA,

Thursday,

June

4,

1959

HI 6-4750

Joan

iz:

Dodge,

F. Kritchever,
Jean

great
new concept

6;

Park.

months.

announce

CREATIVE
DRAMATICS

DO}

gavel to Mrs. Kenneth E. Olson,
Glencoe, newly-elected president.

treasurer.

registration will begin at 9:30 a.m.
Workshops
will be headed
by
Mrs.
Phillip
Malvin,
Mrs.
Alvin
Kamins, bulletin; Mrs. Byron Epstein, education; Mrs. Howard Palmer and Mrs. Hymen
Weintraub,
finance;
Mrs.
Harry
Rosenstein,

Elizabeth,

The baby’s grandparents are
and Mrs. Foster Rechel, Ba
ton,
and
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Howard

Mrs.
Byron
Epstein,
planning
conference chairman, and Mrs. Mil-

ton

John
N. Bent
are parents of

will be held Tuesday at 12:30 p.m.
in the church dining room.
Mrs. L. W. Walker, Glencoe, retiring president, will present the

men Weintraub, financial secretary;
Mrs.

| John N. Bentleys —

$22.50
White

Glenec
will

he:

�‘

YWCA

Mothers

Volunteers Honored For Hospital Service

Club

Will Meet Tuesday
The
meet

YWCA
Tuesday

Mothers
at

i

Club

the

“Y.”

will
A

pot

luck supper at 6:30 p.m. follows the
meeting. Entertainment will be furnished
by the
Kitchen
Kut-Up’s
Band.

Return

From

Bermuda

Trip

Mr. and Mrs. Oliver E. Weed,
2234
Linden
Ave.,
recently
returned from a spring holiday vacation trip to the Coral Islands of
Bermuda.
The
couple
sailed
aboard
the
Furness
luxury
liner,
“The
S.S.
Queen of Bermuda.” While in Bermuda, they were guests at a party
given by Chesley White, mayor of
Hamilton, Bermuda.

PARK
STORE
* 1D 2-8550

HIGHLAND
589 Central
*
WINNETKA
847 Elm
¢

STORE
Hi 6-5141

Among the 700 volunteers honored at the eighth annual
Volunteer Awards Tea held at Highland Park hospital last week
were these three who accounted for many of the 2,000 and more
recorded hours of hospital service. From left, Mrs. Julius Laegler,
Roslyn Ln.; and
566 Skokie Ave.; Mrs. Russell H. Clark, 2611
Mrs. Russell C. Vinnedge, 3292 University Ave.

TYPEWRITERS
ADDING
SALES

645

Bell

-

I.2

RENTALS

°

-

Son,

Born

MACHINES

CENTRAL

James

Ronald,

to J. M.

Hartys

Mr. and Mrs. James
M. Harty,
309 Oak Terr., Highwood, are parents of their first son, James Ronald, born May 16 at Highland Park
Hospital.
The infant has a sister, Susan, 2.
Grandparents are Edward H. Harty,
Waukegan, and Mrs. Clara McCor-

REPAIRS

ID 3-0230

mick, Monroe, Wis.

Dominic

Caranis

Birth

First Daughter

Of

Mr.

and

Mrs.

Announce
Dominic

Carani,

569
Skokie
Ave.,
announce
the
birth of their first child, a daughter named Mari Ann. Born May 10
at Highland Park Hospital, she is
the
granddaughter
of
the
Sam
Caranis of the same address and
the Alfeo Minorinis, 856 Deerfield
Rd.

BOYS and GIRES. ' on

¢&amp; Howell

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@ Twice as bright
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RIGID. WEDGE.

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From
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Sat.,

Now Bell &amp; Howell breaks the wattage barrier to give you a
radically new projection system—more than twice as bright as
ordinary projectors to bring out every detail in your movies.
Shows stills 4 times brighter than ordinary projectors.

COMPARE

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24

June

6

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Variable speed
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New f/1.2 lens
Automatic threading
Reverse, still projection

Noon

Central Ave.

‘Shows
G. S. Laing,

IN
IN

AMERICA
AMERICA |

Phone

Prop.

ID 2-0879
Thursday,

June

4, 1959

�by HIGHWOOD RADIO

i
erators.
g
i
r
f
e
r
d
e
us
to -orde
* g made-

sent appliance:

the best dollar-Sav ing deal of

hite—nieht

in black and

and talk

to the last

iv
OQ

0a
ia

0

2
4

Highwood

FROST-PROOF

FP-142.59
REFRIGE RATOR

Radio’s

BONUS SERVICE

PREE
e Normal

—make

Installation

today—and

e Delivery
&amp;

1-Yr. Service

a

5-Yr. Unit Warranty

HIGHWOOD

RADIO &amp; APPLIANCE CO.
For your convenience we are open:

Thursday,

June

4,

1959

2

;

1s

2631 Waukegan Ave., Highland Park —wcniey's tasoy tveninsy7% 9
of Moraine

save

Rd.—East

difference:

the

COMPLETE SATISFACTION

Blocks North

deal

:

Plus Your

1%

your

of Tracks

All Day Wednesday

AMPLE FREE

PARKING

AT

ALL

TIMES

ID

2-6260
Page

25

�FISHING

12’ Fiberal
Car Top Boot

$39500

6 h.p. Mercury

10% Down

tHE BOAT
*

First

=

—-

eT

eT

Street

—w

ID

HOUSE,

3-0880

Highland

sion, in competition with 146 contestants.
Neil received a gold medal and $100 cash
prize as winner in biennial 1959 National Piano
Teachers Guild.
A seventh grader at North Shore Country Day
School, Neil started piano lessons at the age
His competitors ranged in age
of four years.

Illinois

INSURANCE
of Every Kind

and

up to 16.

Sheridan

Office:

Rd.

Res.,

Park

from

ID

2-0093

ID 2-0037

Camp

at Interlachen,

piano

major.

Local Women

All courses are selected from the regular curriculum of the College and are equivalent in quality and in credit to those given during the regular school year. The
Summer Session faculty is drawn from the regular faculty of Lake Forest College.

ADMINISTRATION

Principles of Accounting
Business Law
General Finance

CHEMISTRY
General Chemistry
ECONOMICS
Introduction to Economics

First Year Course

Basic College Mathematics

Reading Course
(second year)

Calculus
Intermediate Calculus

MUSIC
Music Literature and Appreciation
Private Instruction
Music for Elementary Teachers:
Summer School Chorus

SPEECH
Public Speaking
Summer Theatre
(Limited Enrollment)

ART
Survey of the Visual Arts

PHILOSOPHY

ECONOMICS
Introduction to Economics

Basic Logic

Introduction to Philosophy

American Federal Government
International Relations

EDUCATION
The American Public School System
Educational Psychology

Introduction to Behavior

HISTORY

Educational Psychology

American

SCIENCE

RELIGION
Introduction to the Study of
the Bible
Living Religions

MATHEMATICS
Basic College Mathematics
Calculus

PSYCHOLOGY

Tests and Measurements

FRENCH
First Year Course

Reading Course
(second year)
HISTORY
European History
American History
Twentieth Century America

REGISTRATION:

SECRETARIAL TRAINING
Elementary Typewriting
Elementary Shorthand
SOCIAL

SCIENCE

History of Modern Thought
SOCIOLOGY
Principles of Sociology
Social Structure

Ist term, June

Brittany
present

PL,
905

for

PHYSICS
Thermodynamics

PSYCHOLOGY
Child Psychology
SOCIOLOGY
Group Behavior
SPEECH
Interpretative Reading

17
18

Crippled

Children

7 p.m. at Wilmette

{ili presenle

Group

Over
group
room

those
Club

hold

their

ve 5-3555

650

Country

Numbers

women

Club.

650

are

in

this

which
supports
the
Cast
and Brace shop of Michael

Reese Hospital and Medical Center.

call

They
also maintain
a summer
camp for Cerebral Palsied children
at McHenry. More than $50,000 has
been raised this year. Mrs. Shari
Rodnick, Chicago, is president of
the group.

glencoe

Mon. Appts. Available

For ICTHYOPHAGISTS
Just a few miles north
on the shores of

Lake

Michigan.

MATHONS

SEA FOOD
RESTAURANT

Fresh Fish from Our Own
e Live Lobster
e Lake Trout
e White Fish

Boats

e Lake Perch
e Shad Roe

e Soft Shelled Crabs

Chicken

&amp;

COCKTAIL

¢ 2nd term, July 31
Classes begin August 3

a

culminating fund-raising party, buffet supper and bazaar June 14, at

Steak

LOUNGE

MATHON
6

26

Rd., will be among
when
the
Chicago

History

For folder describing these courses in detail, write:
DIRECTOR OF SUMMER SESSIONS, LAKE FOREST COLLEGE
LAKE FOREST, ILLINOIS or Telephone LAKE FOREST 3100

Page

be

ENGLISH
English Composition
World Literature

POLITICAL SCIENCE
American State Government

Introduction to Social Science

Classes begin June

will

EDUCATION
Methods in the Elementary School

Money and Banking

World Literature
Modern Drama

he

SECOND TERM

NATURAL SCIENCE
Introduction to Physical Science

National Income Analysis
Problems of American Labor

ENGLISH
English Composition
English Literature

where

Public Discussion

POLITICAL

Supervised Teaching

Mich.,

SPANISH

MATHEMATICS
Introduction to Mathematics

Advanced)

BUSINESS

and

Help Fund-Raising Party, Buffet

Mrs. Irving Kornick, 344 Elm
and Mrs. Jerome
Sternberg,

Two Terms: June 17-July 31 + August 3- August 22

BIOLOGY
General Biology

after

heard

pete for metropolitan Chicago championship. He
plans to spend the summer at National Music

hair styles &amp; colors

ART
Drawing and Painting
(Elementary, Intermediate,

were

and high school winners in all sections, will com-

LAKE FOREST COLLEGE
SUMMER SESSION —
FIRST TERM

contestants

Saturday at 2 p.m. at Lyon and Healy Concert Hall, Chicago, Neil, with other elementary

Character

INSURANCE AGENCY
In Business 21 Years
Highland

Judges’ choice was announced

recordings
evaluated.

~ ANCHOR

1896

an-

Healy

and

nual music contest in the elementary school di-

nc.

Park,

section of Lyon

of piano

winner

—"

_—

Music Contest

keeil Levi
Irving D D.
Levin, son of f Mr. Mr. an and Mrs. rs. Irving
Levin, 278 Delta Rd., recently was named sole

Bal. 18 Mos.

Motor

1848

Levin Wins Lyon And Healy

SPECIAL

Clayton

Ave.

ONtario

2-3610

(Lake
or

Front)

Waukegan

ONtario

2-9437
Thursday,

June

4, 1959

�Ts

‘

he,

OW AG

Eniblem

Club ‘Officers Inslalled In ‘Colorful PY cenienies

SUNSHINE VALLEY
VISIT BEAUTIFUL

Accredited member of
American

FOR

Camping

Association.

CHILDREN 4

thru

11.

es

A wise Mother carefully investigates the site, pro- —
gram
and
director
of the
camp
to which
eo
intrusts
her child. SUNSHINE
VALLEY
offers
years experience,
18 acres of cool woods with a

private shaded lake. The HEATED instruction SWIM-~
MING POOL was built for teaching children. ach
have

INSPECTION

child

INVITED

lege
and

a wide

is

program

individually

of many

instructed

activities

including

where

golf

2-5 PM.
Location N.W. corner of

tion

able.

students.
No high school
clean sanitary facilities.

provided.
June

Toll Road and Route 22

Meals

22 —

Mr.

Aug.

and

LAKE

boys or girls. Ample —
Careful
transporta=

by experienced

caterer avail-

14th.

(Screened,

Mrs.

Fred

Rivett, guard; Mrs.

Hugo

Cortesi,

press correspondent and historian; Mrs. Herbert Moran,

organist; Mrs. Ben Helke, corresponding secretary;
Mrs. Thomas Roach, assistant; Mrs. Nicholas Miller,

Mrs. Maynard

Schramm,

and Mrs. Peter Carani,
recording secretary; Mrs.

junior past president; and Mrs.

Lloyd

Bergquist,

CASUAL,

treasurer.
Top row,
Harry Hall, assistant;

Mrs. J. R. Thompson

FOREST

3120

COMFORTABLE,

21'/""

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66"' long

.

$19.95

"Gin Rummy"
2-chairs with large
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$34.95

Settee
49'/,

wide,

$21.95

See BEACHCOMBER

Thursday,

today at...

tench Tobe

the [2dr] iA)

Seb SING

1672 skokie highway, highland
ID 2-8456
or
ID 2-7077
open

June

4,

1959

every

day

including

sundays

suburban
9 a.m.

CALL...

MENONI
&amp; MOCOGNI
2200

Skokie

Hwy.,

Highland

Park

ID 2-0850

dy
:

Club Chair
Full size,
28!/y'

Piled)

CAREFREE!

piveies

21’ wide by

|

—

vice president.

The all-weather, all-purpose redwood
group that's comfortable without cushions,
It's economical enough to fit the most
modest budget; handsome enough to grace
the most luxurious den, porch, patio.

$8.95

Stock

—

FM

BLACK
DIRT
Meehan were, front row, left to right, Mrs. William Russell, chaplain; Mrs. Raymond May, trustee; Mrs. John Dunham, marshal; Mrs. Meehan; Mrs. Al Marks, guard; Mrs. Raymond Sheahen, trustee; Mrs. J. Carl Arens, financial secretary. Second row, left to right, Mrs. John Kearney, trustee;

and

tennis. The counselors are teachers plus adult col-

Open house on Sundays

Mrs. James Meehan, 1970 Berkeley Rd., front, center, was installed May 9 as president of
the Emblem Club in colorful ceremonies at Elks Hall. Installing officer was Mrs. Edward Lencioni,
member of the local club and supreme district deputy of Northern Illinois.
Installed with Mrs.

Ai

to 9:30

park
p.m.

a

�(Advertisement)

Private Swimming

Pool for Waterbugs?

The James

K. Gaylords Are

Parents

Their

Of

O. D. Kanouse Installed As PTA President |

First Son

The James K. Gaylords of 670
Park Ave. W, are the parents of
their first son, born April 28 in
Highland
Park
Hospital.
He
has
been named for his late paternal

grandfather,
Highland

A.

Van

Goldman

of

of Chicago

is

Park.

Mrs. Melvin

Todes

the paternal grandparent. Mr. and
Mrs. Leonard Harris, also of Chicago, are the maternal grandparents. The infant has a great-grandmother, Mrs. Sadie Kantrowitz of
Minneapolis, Minn.
The Gaylords’
older child is a
daughter, Lee Ann, 19 months,

Kre you maintaining a private swimming pool for waterbugs in your basement,
tility room or kitchen? With all the rain and damp weather we've had
his Spring these nuisances are really ‘‘living it up.’’ But you can get rid of
hem easily if you call Household Pest Control. In fact the HPC Plan will put
hn end to moths, ants, roaches, carpet beetles, spiders and other insects that
ant

to make

your

None

home.

their

house

of

them

live

through

an

AVOID COSTLY
SEPTIC TANK
TROUBLES...

HPC

reatment. HPC chemicals are safe for people . . . murder for insects. And
he HPC Plan is inexpensive, too—as low as $17.50 per year for two complete
reatments inside and out for most 6-room homes . . . $2.00 for each
hdditional room.

Pest

ousehold

7

Days

a

Bi

Week

president;

Enzivator

3504

of

Dato

Wayne

Kanouse;

Mrs.

Richard

Green Bay Rd. School

reactivates sluggish tanks

O’Neill’s Ace

Hardware

2nd

ID

| Lectro-Matic cleans your sewer
and floordrains Electrically

Ave.,

center,

Thomas

recently

School

was

PTA.

in-

Pictured

O’Donovan,

2-1150

PTA

vice

president;

Warren T. Kelley is PTA

Holds Picnic Monday

An
old-fashioned
picnic
for
Green Bay Road School students
and
their
parents
will
be
held
Monday on the school grounds. In

Games
and races will begin at
6 p.m, and supper is at 6:30 p.m.
Each one is asked to provide his
own food and the P.T.A. will have

case

ice cream,

of rain, the picnic will be on

Tuesday.

free, for all children.

This

will be

the

of the

school

year

last social

as

event

Green

Bay

School students will be dismissed
June 12, following the Flag ceremony at aproximately 10:30 a.m.

Under New Ownership

mopping basements
i

Kanouse,

president

and Mrs. Glenn Tenney, PTA secretary.
treasurer.
stops odors
liquefies waste

1746

as

with him, left to right, are William Rothfelder, president School
District 111 board of education; Mrs. Robert Buhai, retiring PTA

. » USE

6-6173

Hlllcrest

— Phone
Control

O. Dean

stalled

New Du Pont

STATE

FARM

LUCITE ACRYLIC

ee

TRADE

MARK

INSURANCE

HOUSE PAINT
LASTS 50%
LONGER

RBQBRERARERERS SR

toeroe

%
ee
BRBy
hee
ae
B35?
Sone
%
9)3

FOR

INSURANCE

CALL

WI 5-1383
HENRY HAKANEN
825

Deerfield Rd., Deerfield

State

Farm Mutual Automobile
Insurance Co.
State Farm Life Insurance Co.
State Farm Fire and Casualty Co.
HOME OFFICE—BLOOMINGTON, ILLINOIS

eon
ae275
oR
oR
OS

LASTS 50%

or
ye:

:

LONGER THAN

REGULAR

HOUSE PAINT
... you don’t have to repaint for years!

ied

ead

os

ae i

SOLVES BLISTERING PROBLEM
... used with Du Pont No. 38 primer on
new or unpainted wood!
EASIEST PAINT TO APPLY
... thins with water—yet dries to toughest, most weather resistant finish
ever developed.

FREE

We Always
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Estimates

call ID 2-3220

DRIES IN 30 MINUTES
...SO you can repaint

DEERFIELD

=)

gTilt AS

=

~w
aa

Formerly

810

sfte.site

slte..site..site.

tite. .site

site.

oite..otte..slte...siie...olte...aite...siie.

GUARANTEED

am.

athe

site

the

.ofte.cfte._ofte

SEWER
Le
eg
er
or eee

and
rae

rr

DRAIN

CLEANING

WAUKEGAN

BUY

THE

RD.,

PAINT

R.

A.

Kole

same

a new home...

&amp;

WORTH

Your Welcome Wagon
Hostess will call with a
basket of gifts...and
friendly greetings from
our religious, civic and
business leaders.
If you, or others you
know,

Co.

WI

DEERFIELD

THAT’S

to town...or to

day!

PAINTS
GLASS
Paint

When you move

THE

5-2286

WORK

are

moving,

be

sure to phone Welcome
Wagon.
Highland Park
Cecile Casey
ID 2-0442
Deerfield. Bannockburn
Adalyne Sickel

WI5-1210 ¢

WELCOME WAGON

|

er

Thursday,

June

4, 1959

�Women

Complete Course, Graduate May 26
Lake

County

carpenter

apprentices

were

graduated May 26, at 7:30 p.m. in the student auditorium of
Highland Park High School.
The graduates included Daniel Callaghan, Encio N. Ferraro, Richard
Donald

N. Lindahl

Carlson,

and

Martin

G.

Robert

Giarelli,

Rizzolo,

Highland

Park;

Highwood;

Fred

Bart-

G.

lett, Jon Cugier, and Edward G. Young, Lake Villa; Dave B.
Buer, Zion; Jack Corcilius, Milton Ramsden, Larry R. Ruotsi,

Eugene Stoffel, and Donald Taylor, Waukegan.
Also, Paul R. Eckert, Antioch;
Norman
C,
Flament,
A.
David
Lunn,
North
Chicago;
Alvin
L.
Gillman, Winthrop Harbor; Dan J.
Hansen, West Lake Forest; Larry

Laycock,

Mundelein;

Kenneth

Township High School District No.
113;
Charles
Thompson,
Chicago
District Council apprentice coordinator for Lake, Cook, and DuPage

Counties;

J.

Forest;

Frank

Pieroni,

Lib-

ertyville;
Kenneth
Rudolph,
Arlington Heights.
Participating
in
the
program
were Mrs. James M. Tibbetts, pres-

ident

of

board

of

education

E. Durbahn,

Tickets

may

be

obtained

of

Custom

Home

&amp;

DRY

CLEANERS,

and

SAN

\

AMERICA’S

NO.

\

Plant:

Deerfield Call Enterprise

N

1616

RS

RT
LASTS TWICE AS

J ae
LONG

*Based

effort for one mile was

made

at 203.790

Ist to travel

the

ok

more

. In 1947,

in 1927...
than

mph

400

on

land.

Garden.

. . . Tex

a big

drive

Rickard

put

on

STREET

—

ID 2-1100

to build up the gate and about 300 from the fashionable

attended.

June

4,

1775 SECOND
1959

SAVE ON THE STANDARD

Cae

|Y

HIGH-CAPACITY
BATTERY
WHICH OFFERS SURER
STARTING

|Z

YY

D,

VOLVO

on a comparison

\|

SAVE UP TO $102.75 OVER FORD'S NEAREST

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= WITh
BEATER, RAD\O
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SAVE UP T0°St2 ON

OTHER ACCESSORIES

CONDITIONING YOU CAN SAVE $219.85

GU

DUD

Z

GW}

of manufacturers’

Tyq)

y

N

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NS

SAVE UP TO $55
NY
iaGAS AND gue
OIL
NS

iN

SSS

QQ

Mun

IN!

SS

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suggested retail prices

COME

ae

CASH

IN!

DURING

DIVIDEND DAYS AT YOUR FORD DEALERS
59

FORDS—THE

WORLD’S

MOST

BEAUTIFULLY

PROPORTIONED

CARS

%*

Women are great sports fans but the first time they were allowed
to attend a prize fight in this country was the Jesse Willard-Frank Morgan

‘Thursday,

ADIN OOS

NS)

wd
nay
THAT WAXING
NEVER
NEEDS

Y

GREENWALD

Segrave
*

GREENWALD’S,

CRI AR

y

7,

PR

The first recorded

Square

ce a aca

YN

CAR

Z

BOB

_. . Ist over 200 was Major

Madison

DIVIDEND

“Pht 7,

Ge

Ye
YWy

in 1898 by Chassedoup-Laubat in France, his speed—39.23 mph. .. .
The first man to travel more than 100 mph was Regolly in 1904 at 103.56

in

1

INS}:

Yy

T.MEMOS
x

By

fight

S| YALL)

NY

LEO

for women

Hurry on down! We’re giving
away special dividends now
during Dividend Days. We’re
dealing like crazy, too! Come
in... cash in on our extra
dividends. Find out about all
the dividends in the 59 Ford.

4‘WH:

/

SPOR

was

H.P.

eeceobame

Y

Yi

of London

AVE.,

WY

Wy

4, eA

Cobb

ARBOR

INC.

Ye,

John

Color

Improvement Co.

For You !

Ae

fast is fast?

ALCOA—Any

Dividends

512-518 Waukegan Ave., Highwood

How

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SIDING

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1227

USE
NN
{Dlewood 2-3310

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5-3526

VALLEY

LAUNDRY

Main

Palatine,
CLEARBROOK

ENCLOSURES

¢ Stationery
e Roll-up
¢ All Colors

ID 2-0252

the extra care we take in
laundering his shirts. Finished exactly to his taste, they
complete the bandbox
look
you admire!

Road

PORCH

AWNINGS

CARL KONSLER

KOKIE

at Wilke

Aluminum

the results!

FAVORITE

Rand Road (U. S. 12)
BRIARGATE 4-2236

Aluminum

~L &amp; K

}

the jewish burial ground of unsurpassed beauty
For Personal Memorial Counseling Without Obligation,
Contact
Harry Hershman, ID 2-6225

wonwinam 4, NOW in ALL COLORS! |

applaud

You and your husband will
both appreciate the results of

g

at the

hall, or, in advance, from Mrs. Walter Harms, ID 2-2983, Mrs. Joseph
Volpendesta,
ID 2-3568;
Mrs.
EIdon Soefker, ID 2-9839; Mrs. Howard Early, CR 2-2016; Mrs. Virgil
Prenkert, VE 5-1053; and Mrs. John
Catena, HI 6-7426.

for-

You'll both

eee

ilove

mer supervisor of the Lake County
Carpenter
Apprentice
Training
Program and retired teacher from
Highland
Park High
School who
formerly conducted a TV program,
‘‘Walt’s Workshop,” over a Chicago
station; Neil Hanson of Hanson and
Werhane, contractors, representing
the Lake County Contractors’ As(Continued on page 37)

Learmont,
Kenosha,
Wis.;
Lawrence
J.
McChesney,
Phillip
B.
Wilson, Deerfield; John W. Merz,
Wildwood;
James
W.
Niemeyer,

Lake

Walter

Women
of the Moose, No. 806,
are
holding
a home-cooked
ham
dinner Sunday for the public from
12:30 to 6 p.m. at Moose Hall, 1799
Green Bay Rd.

SWE

_ Twenty-eight

Of Moose —

Invite Public —
To Ham Dinner

set

HOLMES
1909

St. Johns Ave.

MOTOR
Highland

Park

CO.
ID 2-8640

If You’re Interested in An A-I1 Used Car—Be Sure to See Your Ford Dealer
Page 29

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May 1, 1958-April 30,1959

Annual Report-Highland Park Public Library

Expert Hair Coloring
. including all shades
of light blondes
Permanent

“During the past fiscal year the Highland Park Public Library again met the challenge
as an ‘All-America City’ through its active interest and participation in the cultural and educational activities of the community,” said Joseph M. Pollock, head librarian. More books, pam-

In Al! Branches Of Beauty

Culture

CLASSIQUE Beauty SALON
1815

St. Johns

1D 2-1603

Avenue
EXPERIENCED

and

circulated

were

records

OPERATORS

Every
phase
of service to the
adults, the high
school students,
and the grammar school tots was
studied and analyzed to meet this
growth. Every basic program was
expanded and popularized. Its efforts to maintain and expand high
standards of service to the community were accorded national recognition by Clifton Fadiman in his
book, ‘Party of One,” and by the
magazine, ‘‘Saturday Review.”
One system of measuring service,
of course,
is through
circulation

Laid End To End, Library Books Circulated

To Children Would Reach To Chicago Limits
“Tf all of the books circulated from the Children’s department during the past year were put end to end they would reach
to the city limits of Chicago,” said Mrs. Inger Boye, children’s
librarian.

Figures alone do not tell the entire picture of the library
serviceto the children of Highland Park. But—for the record,

MASSAGE

137,174 children’s books
and

the

schools;

Highland

ers

Ce,te

“

E

\

oo

Tru a known (aat shaving
that every time you
Is

done to the skin,
regardless of how
you shave.

"Zag

also

have

1| figures.

par-

crear

co-

Public

ally view a film.
The

outdoor

pleasures’

that

awaited children during the summer did not hinder them from participation in the Summer Reading

SPARK

has a ‘‘built-in”’
massage applicator*
designed to give

you a beneficial
massage every
time you shave.

for

numbering
the

795

program,

and

regis4,493

book reports were given. At graduation time 199 students received
gold

stars

for

reporting

on

12

books.

June 22 is registration date for children who want to participate in this
year’s Summer Reading Program built
on the theme, “Trip to the Moon.”

Although this program is of interest to all elementary
grades,

it should be pointed out that it is
of particular interest, to a child

Blue Spark helps
nature adjust
shaving damage.

finishing the first grade. Primary
teachers will inform parents that
the first grade child who does not
read during the long summer recess is apt to forget what has been
learned
during the year.
Consequently the child will have read-

ak
BE RADIANT ALL DAY

WITH BLUE SPARK
SHAVING CREAM |
0

ing difficulties at the beginning of
the second grade.
Aid

To

In addition
main
library,
brarian finds

brary

activities

to activities at the
the
children’s
litime to aid in li-

schools.

Here

they

are,

staff

mem-

bers who
are pledged
to
serve you and make available the many facilities of
the Highland Park Public Li-

is

seph M. Pollock, head librarian; Mrs. Marilyn Springer;
Mrs. R. J. Botker; Mrs. Inger
Boye,

Miss

children’s

Esther

librarian;

Kluss

and

L. N. Nysted; Miss Ruth E. Nelson, head
readers’ services;
and Mrs. K. L. Krellwitz. Mrs.
Charles Levy, not pictured, al-

a member

schools

once

of the staff.

A

total of 42,732 books were circulated from Braeside, Oak Terrace,
Red Oak and West Ridge schools.
The children’s librarian visits these

a week

to

give

guid-

ance, conduct a story hour and
provide needed reference service.
Along with this service the children’s department provides books
for use in the classrooms. At times

they are books on a given subject,
supplementary
to
the _ subject
studied in the classroom, and then
again, they may be
al reading.
In looking back

for recreationover

the

past

year, it is with pride that the children’s department has been able
to extend personal service to each
child that uses the library, despite
an ever-growing population.

Library

Hours

Beginning Saturday, Highland
Park
Public
Library
will
be
open Mondays through Fridays,
9 am. to 9 p.m., and on Saturdays, 9 am. to 5 p.m. This
schedule
will
be
followed
through June, July and August.

does

other

tion

Non-fiction

the

public

read?

Un-

the

pa-

communities,

of pamphlets

due

to the fact

that during the past two or three
years the library has made every
effort to expand its vocational guid-

ance material—usually in pamphlet
form—to meet the needs of students

preparing

for college.

Another method by which library
service is measured through its reference service and requests for old
magazines. In these two areas of

service a great deal of effort again
(Continued

Ray

Botker.
Seated,
from
left:
Mrs. F. E. Hunt; Mrs. J. A.
Brooks; Mrs. J. B. Jones; Mrs.

so is

Likes

trons of the library expressed interest
in more
nonfiction
books
;|than fiction. Heavy demands were
placed on the library for material
in the fields of psychology and social sciences while other fields of
knowledge showed moderate gains.
An unusual increment of 38.4 per
cent was recorded in the circula-

brary. Standing, left to right:
Mrs.
M.
W.
Golson;
Mrs.
Claude
Nathan;
Mrs.
|. J.
Schwarz, chief circulation assistant; Mrs. J. C. Frehner; Jo-

Summer

Schools

at the

What

‘\like

or

more books, while 150 were awarded blue stars for reading 7 or
more

total figure

of over 10,000 volumes. In March
of this year the adult department
/| hit an all-time high of 11,252 books
circulated.

value

visual

year’s

During a month’s time, the chil| dren’s room alone had a circulation

missiles
have been in the foreground all year,’ Mrs, Boye stated.
Saturday Story Hour
On Saturdays during the school
year, the traditional Story Hour
drew more than a total number of
1,000 boys and girls, all eager to
hear stories, poems, and occasion-

tered

BLUE

correct

This

257,577—an increase of 7.3 per cent
over the last year. While the average small public library circulates
about 500 books per day, this li‘| brary, at times, has recorded double
‘| that amount. On one day, March
7,
1,415
books
were
circulated!

OQ, the en

Like members of the Adult department, the children’s librarian
is busy during rush hours assisting
children in locating material for
their school assignments. The reference
questions
that
could
be
counted totaled 1,091. Since most
of this service is rendered during
a short period of time—after school
hours—many had to go unrecorded.
“Since the majority of reference
questions come from school children, it is only natural that this
category
reflects the
added
emphasis
placed
on
science
today.
Questions
concerning
atomic

Students

$10

their

a therapeutic

help

library

are

Program.

3

PRICE

like

the main

children

energy, jet propulsion, rockets and

In business or in
social life, a man’s
face has a priceless
value. Neglect or
abuse of it can be
unpleasant, costly
and regrettable.

Only

community,

The

circulated from
in

Highwood

borrowers.

since they
ordination.

shave, damage

and

were

children

ents,
read
more
nonfiction
than
fiction. However, for the third year
in a row, they out-did their parents by borrowing more books for
home use.
In addition to that “right book
for the right child” the tots borrowed 10,586 views and scopes for
pleasure and for fun. These View-

SHAVE!
:

4,043

Park

registered

of the

%, oa

were

classes

education

more

conducted at the library than any other year in its history. Mrs. Richard F. Kuhns, president
of the Library Board of Trustees, stated “The reports of the head librarian and members of
the staff mirrored the fact that the library was expanding along with the growth of the community and its educational institutions.”

Hair Cutting
Specializing

phonograph

and

magazines,

phlets,

Waves

on

page

40)

Patrons Are Offered

Unique ‘Vacation
Book Loan’ Plan
“What’s
a vacation
without
books?”’
asks Joseph
M. Pollock,
head
librarian
of
the
Highland
Park Public Library.
Beginning today,
offering its patrons

the
the

library is
advantage-

of taking a number of books on
“vacation loan,” a plan which has
been popular with vacationers in
past years.

Any

registered

adult

or

juvenile
borrower,
the librarian
said, may take any number
of
novels or non-fiction books for the
entire summer instead of the regular loan period. The library, however, reserves the right to issue
certain popular or recent books for
shorter periods.
To
keep
the
records
straight,

borrowers are requested to indicate
whenever

books

are

to be

checked

out as vacation loan, instead of the
regular loan period. The extended
loan
privilege
will
continue
through Oct. 1.
Said the librarian:

“Take

your

public

library

with

you when you go on vacation. Be
prepared
for rainy days,
or the
time the fish won’t bite, or just

for

hammock

reading.

Read

the

books
you’ve
always
meant
to
read, while you’re on vacation.”

Thursday, June 4, 1959

�fl RST SUMMER PLAY PRESENTED

j

OUR ONCE-A-YEAR SALE
OF SERIES BOOKS

AT THEATRE UNDER THE STARS

“A Hatful of Rain” was chosen as the first annual summer
play to be presented at Theatre Under The Stars on the campus
of Lake Forest College by a drama group outside the college.

%

The play, scheduled for 8:30 p.m.

by Triangle

Shelley

Winters,

Anthony

Franciosa

Ben

Gazarra

in leading

and
roles.

Tickets will be sold at the door
and are available by mail in advance.
Special rates to Fort Sheridan servicemen, Great Lakes Naval
Training Station and other military

bases.

Benefit prices will be avail-

LEGAL
HIGHLAND
PARK
ZONING
COMMITTEE
Public Hearing
NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
that a
public hearing will be held in the Council
Chamber in the City Hall, City of Highland
Park,
Illinois,
on
Wednesday,
June
17,
1959, 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
Mayor and City Council of said City, for
the purpose of considering
the following
matters:
1.
Amendments
to the Highland
Park
Zoning
Ordinance
of 1947, as amended,
reading as follows:
SECTION
I.
That Section 4-7 of the
Highland Park Zoning Ordinance of 1947,
as amended, be and the same is hereby
amended to read as follows:
SECTION
4-7.
Any
and
all property
which may hereafter be annexed to the
City of Highland Park shall, prior to the
election at which the question of such
annexation
is to be
submitted to the
citizens of Highland Park, be studied by
the
Plan
Commission
and _ tentatively
classified into one or more of the several districts.
Such property, when such
annexation shall become final, shall be
in the district as designated by the said
Plan Commission.
Within six (6) months
of the date of such annexation the Plan
Commission shall call a public hearing
for the purpose of zoning said annexed
property and within thirty (30) days after
such hearing shall recommend to the City
Council that this amending Ordinance be
amended so as to classify such property
in accordance with such recommendations.
SECTION
II.
That Section 14-8 of the
Highland Park Zoning Ordinance of 1947,
as amended,
be and the same is hereby
amended to read as follows:
SECTION 14-8 SPECIAL PERMITS: The
uncil of the City of Highland Park
may, by special permit, after public hearing held by the Plan Commission and advertised as provided in Article 22, and
subject to such protective restrictions that
it deems necessary, authorize the location,
extension or structural alteration of any
of the following buildings or uses or an
increase in their height, in any district
from which they are prohibited or limited
by this Ordinance;
provided
that such
buildings or uses will not have any serious and depreciating effect upon the value
of surrounding property.
SECTION III. That Section 14-23 of the
Highland Park Zoning Ordinance of 1947,
as amended, be and the same is hereby
amended to read as follows:
SECTION 14-23. Before issuance of any
special permit for any of the above buildings or uses the Plan Commission shall
report to the Council
of the City of
Highland Park regarding the public hearing thereon and also upon the effect of
such proposed building or use upon the
character
of
the
neighborhood,
traffic
conditions,
public
utility facilities,
and
other matters
pertaining
to the public
health, public safety or general welfare.
No action shall be taken upon any application for a proposed
building
or use
above referred to until and unless the
report shall be made
within
sixty (60)
days after the matter has been referred
to the Plan Commission by the City Council of the City of Highland Park.
If the
Plan Commission recommends against the
issuance of the special permit, then it may
be issued only by an affirmative two-thirds
(2/3) vote of the Council of the City of
Highland
Park.
SECTION IV.
That Section 15-1 of the
Highland Park Zoning Ordinance of 1947,
as amended, be and
the same is hereby
amended to read as foltows:
SECTION 15-1. The owner or owners of
any tract of land comprising an area of
not less than twenty (20) acres may submit to the Council of the City of Highland Park a plan for the use and development of all of the tract of land for residential and allied purposes.
The development plan shall be referred to the Plan
Commission for study and report and for
public hearing.
If the Plan Commission
approves the plans, they shall then be submitted
to the Council
of the City of
Highland Park for consideration and approval.
The approval and recommendations of the Plan Commission shall be
accompanied by a report stating the reasons for approval of the application and
specific evidence and facts showing that
the proposed community unit plan meets
with the following conditions:

Thursday,

June

4,

1959

to

groups

desiring

to

raise

for their organizations.

Advance

tickets and

more

mation are available from
Hamilton, 905 Central Ave.

Colonel

Aaron

Is In Seoul,

M.

inforCharles

Lazar

Korea

Army Colonel Aaron M. Lazar,
whose
wife, Clemontine,
lives at
2734 Lauretta Pl., recently arrived
in Korea and is now a member of
the
Korean
Military
Advisory
Group in Seoul.
Colonel

John
U.S.

Lazar

Marshall
Military

is

High

a

graduate

School

Academy

at

of

and
West

Point, N.Y.

NOTICE
SECTION
V.
That Section 20-1 of the
ttighland Park Zoning Ordinance of 1947,
as amended,
be and the same is hereby
amended to read as follows:
SECTION 20-1.
It shall be the duty of
the Building Inspector to enforce this Ordinance.
It shall also be the duty of
all officers and employees of the city and
especially of all members of the Police
Department to assist the Building Inspector by reporting to him upon new construction, reconstruction, or land uses, or
upon seemingly violations.
The Building
Inspector shall send a description of any
violations of the zoning
regulations
to
the Plan Commission within fifteen (15)
days after he discovers such violation.
CTION
VI.
That Article 22 of the
Highland Park Zoning Ordinance of 1947,
as amended,
be and the same is hereby
amended to read as follows:
ARTICLE
22
CHANGES AND AMENDMENTS
SECTION 22-1. The regulations imposed
and the districts created by this Ordinance
may be amended from time to time by
ordinances, but no such amendments shall
be made without a hearing before the
Plan Commission.
Notice shall be given
of the time and place of the hearing, not
more than thirty (30) nor less than fifteen
(15) days before the hearing, by publishing a notice thereof at least once in one
or more newspapers published in or with
a general cir:ulation within the City of
Highland Park. In case of a written protest against any proposed amendment of
the regulations or districts, signed and
acknowledged
by the owners of twenty
(20) per cent of the frontage proposed to
altered, or by the owners of twenty
(20) per cent of the frontage immediately
adjoining or across an alley therefrom, or
by the owners of twenty (20) per cent
of the
frontage
directly
opposite
the
trontage proposed to be altered, is filed
with the City Clerk of the City of Highland Park, the amendment shall not be
passed except by a favorable vote of twothirds of all of the elected members of
the City Council.
SECTION 22-2. Before any action is taken upon any application as provided in
this Article either by the Plan Commission or the City Council, the applicant
Shall deposit
with the City Clerk
the
sum of Fifty Dollars ($50.00) no part of
which shall be refundable, to cover the
approximate cost of the procedure
and
the clerk shall then cause the deposit of
this amount to the credit of the General
Corporate Purpose Fund of the City of
Highland Park.
SECTION
VII.
All ordinances or parts
of ordinances in conflict herewith are hereby repealed.
SECTION
VIII.
This
amending
ordinance shall be in full force and effect from
and after its passage, approval, recordation,
and publication as provided by law.
2. A request of John D. Garrity to rezone the property located at 1855 Deerfield
Road on the corner of Deerfield and Ridge
Roads from Class D to Class G, such property being legally described as follows:
That part of the N%% of the SW%
of
Section 27-43-12 E of the 3rd P.M. described as follows:
Beginning at a point
in the center line of Deerfield Road (so
called) Sly 79 degrees 45 minutes East
432.6 feet from a point in the W line
of the E half of the NW quarter of said
SW quarter of said Sec. 27 a distance of
1027.2 feet from the NW corner thereof.
thence N 79 degrees 45 minutes West
432.6 feet to said West line, thence south
on said West line 295.3 feet, thence east
of right angles 270 feet more or less to
said center line of said Deerfield Road.
and thence NEly on said center line of
said Deerfield Road to the place of beginning.
3. A reauest of Kelley and Spalding for
issuance of a Special Permit for the building and operating of a funeral service establishment on the following described property located immediately to the North-East
of that described in Item 2 above:
Lots 2, 3, 4, 5, in Schwennecker’s Subdivision of part of the North half of the
SW'% of Section 27, T 43 N. R 12 East
of the 3rd P.M. in the City of Highland
Park, Lake County, Illinois.
At said public hearing and at any adjournment thereof, an opportunitv will he
afforded
to all persons
interested to be
heard in relation to said matter.
EDMUND
L. ANDREWS
MRS.
MILTON
K.
ARENBERG
CHARLES
KEITH
SHAY
JERRY C. LEAMING
JOH N H. THOMSON

5/28-6/4/59—157

FREE

+

play will be presented

Productions, a newly formed amateur theatrical organization.
The play, now being cast, was a
recent success on Broadway with

able
money

Sees

June 25-28, will open two weeks
prior to the opening date of Lake
Forest College summer session theater series.
In cooperation with members
of the Stagers
of Deerfield,
the

WITH YOUR
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THE HARDY BOYS. Mystery stories, by Franklin W. Dixon. America's favorite young
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youngsters love these stories about a teen-age inventor; all are based on actual
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lm Buy — TOM SWIFT AND HIS FLYING LAB
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For ages 6-10.
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For ages 9-14.
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Mm Buy — VANISHING SHADOW. eidlisik -THE HAUNTED ATTIC

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her dreams to life. For ages 11-15.
m Buy — SILVER WINGS FOR VICKI Lec eein VICK! FINDS THE ANSWER
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m@ Buy — HONEY BUNCH AND NORMAN...
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HONEY BUNCH AND NORMA!!
ON LIGHTHOUSE ISLAND

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ELEPHANT
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For ages 12-16.
Mm Buy — THE THREE-TWO PITCH............. LEGION TOURNEY
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sips Bo a romantic-and exciting glow over the stories in this
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g

1833

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m Buy — CLUE IN BLUE.THE RIDDLE IN RED

"ade

SECOND

~

STREET
“The BEST

ID 2-3001
in TOYS

for GIRLS

and BOYS”

HIGHLAND PARK
Page

31.
oe

�aan
i}

}

Redeemer Guild

Service Mothers Will Meet
On Wednesday Afternoon

Culligan soft water

Plans Wisconsin

Service Mothers’ Club will meet
at
1:30
p.m.
Wednesday
at the
home of Mrs. Henry Nelson, 1628
Huntington Pl. Mrs. Enea Picchietti, 1449 Glencoe Ave., is co-hostess.

cares for

tender skin

Members

are urged

Trip Today
Redeemer
Lutheran
Church
sponsoring a chartered-bus trip

to be present.

Bethasda Home for retarded children
at Watertown,
Wis.
Bus
leaves church at 9 a.m. today and

Hair Cuts of Distinction

returns

SMITTY’S
BARBER
SHOP
Serving

1820

Highland

Park Since.

is|,
to

at

6

p.m.

Business

Session

Each traveler is asked to bring
her own picnic lunch. A business
meeting will be held on the Home’s
grounds. The Guild has sponsored

the home for many years.
The Guild hosted the Lutheran
Guild
Zone,

1900

2nd St., near the Jewel
Phone ID 2-0636

Welfare , Auxiliary,
North
on Tuesday at the Church

hall. Luncheon
to the business
\\| \| i||

was at noon
meeting.

prior

amazing offer...
“YOU DON’T HAVE TO
BUY ITTOTRY IT!”

|

75

wile

Phone

Park

FUEL

SERVICE

RADIO REPAIR

OIL
SALES

JEWELER

OIL

ID 2-0027

WATCH

SERVICE

TELEPHONE

Leading

Watch

and

Heating
Repair

AUTO

ALL

and

MAKES

PHONE
ID 2-3804

HOME

also

TRANSISTOR RADIOS
FM - AM - HI-FI
Sales and

Service

20th Century TV
and

RADIO

1858 FIRST ST., H.P.
Ample Parking in Rear
ID 2-8120

[SRE
:

HEATING

SERVICE

COMMUNITY
GAS

HEATING

SERVICE

A. E. Savage,

Of Boilers or Furnaces
BOILER SALES &amp; INSTALLATION

Windsor

5-0602

call Windsor

5-4427

1010 HAZEL AVE., DEERFIELD
Page

32

BROS.

Office

CO.

of the

444 Central Ave.

Highland Park

and

Nursery

West

Deerfield

SEURERRSSRERSRRERRREEED
DRESSMAKER’S SERVICE

MONOGRAMMING
Linens,

Blouses, Sweaters,

Towels,

Shirts, etc.

Pleating —
Buttons —

Hand

Belts
Bound

&amp; Machine Button Holes

Vogue
722

Main

Western. RR.

SERVICE

Fabric Shop
Evanston

UNiversity 4-3034

Plumbing

Needs

CALL
HAROLD

ROOT

PLUMBING CO.
WI 5-3600
—

New

If no

answer

call

WI

Call
VE 5-3100
SHORE-LAND
ELECTRONICS
Open

Work

685

Dishwashers
Water Heaters

Road

frrokkttloIItIIItIIt

34)

for the finest in

Repair Work

Deerfield

On

North

For Your

WI 5-0035

Carl Casel, Division Manager

Owner

OIL - GAS
DEPENDABLE CLEANING
If no answer

BRAUN

on page

,

PLUMBING

1885

her

Designers:

RAVINIA NURSERIES
Established

at

2-2028

ID

Inc.

OIL

ILL.

PARK,

» HIGHLAND

LANDSCAPING
CLAVEY

dance

SHORE-LAND
ELECTRONICS

GAS

Equipment

supper

REPAIR

Repair. Craftsmen

Jewelry

Official. Watch ‘Inspector

OIL AND

a

(Continued

cuselers

SHERIDAN

&amp;

CENTRAL

chair-

Call

Dede.

BURNER
—

—

Singer,

During this past year the Sisterhood has provided fellowship hours
after
religious
services
at
Fort
Sheridan, made regular visits to assist in the care of mental patients

2-3010

CORNER

We

at

ok Ga Os Dom
ID

TELEVISION

MUTUAL |
SERVICES OF HIGHLAND PARK,

Central

Highland

Mrs.

Citation read, in part, ‘“‘For outstanding
voluntary
services
and
support of the total chaplaincy program conducted for personnel in
armed forces and for hospitalized
veterans of the USA.”

MANURE—FERTILIZER

ei
482

when

home for 30 servicemen stationed at Fort Sheridan
and
Great Lakes. Mrs. Singer accepted the citation on behalf of the
Sisterhood.

- SPECIALLY PREPARED BY MACHINE. Easier to Spread
—Improves Growing. Most uniform, perfectly processed
soil obtainable . . . at no extra cost.

Call us today to try our popular Service.
There’s no equipment to buy, no work to do.

Tet

ess

SHREDDED
TOP SOIL

Only Culligan makes this

tation from hands of Chaplain
Ernest D. Lapp of Fort Sheridan.
Awarded
by National Jewish
Welfare board, presentation was
man of B’nai Torah Reform Temple service program, was host-

GET THE "FINEST!
BATHING!

Mrs. Sholom Singer, 1585
Bay Rd., left, receives ci-

made

|

LAA

TRY SOFT WATER

Green

5-0743

Friday Evenings

Vernon

Ave.,

VE 5-3100

Glencoe

ID 2-1110

ILL.

We Defy You To Lose Money
By Advertising On This Page!
Call
from

IDlewood

2-4500

and get the complete

one of our display advertising

story

representatives.
Thursday,

June

4, 1959

�Jae

Ae RPRTar

alt

OR
ee ees ee

coon

at

eaePee

SNe ve

Poppy Day Sale Is
Mrs. Louis A. Wagner, 1205 TayAve., who served as chairman

for the

annual

Poppy

Day

sale

of

the
Highland
Park
American
Legion post and auxiliary, has announced that a total of $741.88 was
taken in. Three hundred fifty dollars had previously been given to
veterans for their work on the poppies, which left a profit of $391.88.
Mrs. Wagner said the sale was
higher than usual thanks
to the
Highland Park residents who gave
generous donations. Working with
her
were
27
women’s
auxiliary
members,
14
juniors
from
The
Highland...Park
Presbyterian
Church and three junior auxiliarly
members. Orval Meredith served as
Legionnaire chairman of the sale.

Lencionis

Return

From

Florida

Mr.
and
Mrs.
James
Lencioni,
2659 Waukegan Ave., and the junior James
Lencionis,
188 Bloom
Ave,. and their sons, Jimmy
and
Charles, recently returned from a
ten day visit in Florida.
LEGAL NOTICE
PUBLIC
HEARING

OF

7

gm

Wh Sy

.

"

laa con

ee,

Lake Forest College
Spring Art Exhibit

Higher This Year
Credit Goes To You!
lor

.

ane ante

Notice is hereby given by the Board of
Education of School
District No.
113, in
the County of Lake, State of Illinois, that
a tentative budget for said School District
for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 1959
will be on file and conveniently available
to public inspection at 433 Vine Avenue,
Highland
Park,
Illinois,
from
and
after
8 o’clock A.M. on the 1st day of June 1959,
at
Highland
Park
High
School
in_ this
School District, until 8 o’clock A.M. June
22, 1959, and from
then will be on file
and conveniently available to public inspection at the Administration
Building,
1040
Park Avenue West, Highland Park, Illinois.
Notice is hereby given that a public hearing on said budget will be held at 7:30
o’clock P.M.i, C.D.S.T., on the 13th day of
July, 1959, at Highland Park High School
in this School District 113.
Dated this 25th day of May, 1958.
Board of Education School District No.
113 in the County of Lake, State of Illinois.
By Lillian C. Tucker, Secretary
5/28 6/4/59—160

Cuore Arte Bowling

Banquet Is Saturday

Albert A. Arenberg, 1214 Green
Bay Rd., is a member of Lake Forest College community art committee for Spring Art Exhibit entitled
“The New Chicago Decade:
1950-

1960”

to be held

at Henry

Durand

Art Institute until June
13.
Exhibit‘is open from
10:30 a.m. to
4:30 p.m. daily except Mondays.
Among
Highland Park sponsors
of the event are: Mr. and Mrs. Sigmund
Kunstadter,
1436
Waverly
Rd.; Mr. and Mrs. Walter F. Gips

Jr., 1185

Beech

Ln.;

Mr.

and

Mrs.

Morton
G. Schamberg,
219 Cary
Ave.; Henry X. Arenberg, 40 Blackhawk Dr.; Albert A. Arenberg, 1214
Green Bay Rd.; and Mr. and Mrs.
Miltom: K: Arenberg; 1870 Creseent
Dr.
“The New Chicago Decade: 19501960” is a review exhibition of postwar painters and sculptors of Chicago. The work of fourteen artists
will be represented
with several
canvasses of each.
Artists include: Cosmo Campoli,
George Cohen, Joseph Goto, Theodore Halkin, Richard Hunt, June
Adjudication

and

Claim

Day

Cuore
Arte
members
annual
bowling banquet will be held Saturday
at Hank’s
Supper Club in
Waukegan.
Members
may bring guests for
the dinner and dancing. For reservations, members are asked to call
Mrs, Everett Bellei Sr., ID 2-7288,
or
Mrs.
Joseph
Koopman
Sr.,
ID 2-3030.

Leaf, John Miller, Alex Nicoloff,
Seymour Rosofsky, Franz Schulze,
Evelyn Statsinger, Joyce Treiman,
Don Vlack and H. C. Westermann. |

FREE MOTHPROOFING during the
cleaning process. Protect your precious
garments... call us today!
HAVE

One
suffer

out
some

involving

One half
the home.
No

of every
accidental

at:

of

estimate

least

one

these

can

14 persons
injury this
day

of

accidents

be

made

of

will
year

disability.

occur

the

in

num-

ber of less severe injuries. Minor accidents happen every day.
Many people
believe they will suffer no major disability but weeks, months or even years
later

they

will

or
disability
accident.

turn

not

up

with

some

associated

illness

with

the

Chiropractors
call
attention
to
the
fact that the spinal column is the body’s
chief shock absorber—that a concussion
of force can jar the spine and cause
slight displacements of vertebrae which
pinch vital nerves. If the nerve pressure
is extreme, paralysis may result—if only
a small
pressure occurs, it may
take
months or years to produce noticeable
ill effects.
If you have had an
it will pay you to have a
by the Chiropractor soon
ious consequences later.

accident lately
spinal checkup
and avoid serConsult:

DELIVERY

608

SERVICE

524

WAUKEGAN AVE.
HIGHWOOD
Telephone ID 2-0125

Office

Thursday,

Closed

June

Thursdays

4,

1959

CENTRAL

HIGHLAND

5/28 6/4-11/59—159

Serving the North Shore Over 60 Years

|

Phone Today

. . . ID 2-455]

AVE.,
PARK

VALUE-RATE the ROCKET

man

who

value

Olds!

More and more medium-price
who

want

the

most

car buyers

for their money

joming the swing to Olds.

are

Why? Because they figure up all the extra
quality features and conveniences Olds has
as standard equipment. They carefully consider the economy of the Rocket Engine...
the low-cost maintenance of an Olds... its
higher resale value. But most of all they
ask themselves,

“Is this the kind
I will be proud
will give us the
and comfort we
car whose style

of car my family and
to own . . . one that
full measure of fun
want ... is this the
will stay in style?”

The overwhelming “yes” can be found in
the zooming sales success of the ’59 Oldsmobile. See your Oldsmobile dealer today
.. . Value-Rate the Rocket!

THIS

WEEK

dealers

displaying this sign have

Chiropractor
X-RAY

SERVICE

IDlewood 2-4400

Cornell and Wolff, Attorneys
1866 Sheridan Road
Highland Park, Illinois

Fredrick A. Mokrasch
@

WINTER

“Everything for the
Table”

EMILY
SMITH
CUNNYNGHAM
Administrator
with
The
Will
Annexed

goes

ACCIDENTS

IN YOUR HEAVY
DON’T WAIT!

QUALITY
MEATS and GROCERIES

knows
J)

BROUGHT
WOOLENS?

Notice

NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
to all
persons that the first Monday of July, 1959,
is the claim date in the estate of STELLA
S. 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 9 A.M.

The

ay

YOU

@
MINIATURE
With appraisal.

MODEL
..and

Rocket Road-Test

a free scale model of a
"59 Olds for you. All
you have to do is drive
in and have your present car appraised while
you VALUE-RATE the
Rocket on the road!

BY EVERY MEASURE...
THE VALUE CAR OF THE
MEDIUM PRICE CLASS
Page

33

�Frehner

BRUNO
¢ TUCK

M. ORI

Elected

President

Jacob C. Frehner, 3130 Priscilla
Ave., is the newly-elected president
of the Purchasing Agents Association of Chicago.

POINTING

© WATERPROOFING

A

resident

since

1941,

of

Highland

Frehner

served

Park

seven

years on board of education, School
District’.
111,
four
years
ago
as
president; three years on Highland
Park traffic commission;
and two
years on Highland Park sanitation
sub-committee.
He
is purchasing
agent for Bowman Dairy Company.

Chimneys - Fireplaces
Repair &amp; Cleaning

ID 2-4553

ORT

Sisterhood Cited
(Continued

from

page

32)

and provided luncheons at Downey
Hospital,
worked
with
the blind
and arranged social programs for
servicemen in members’ homes.

S. Henry Foremans Announce
Birth Of Granddaughter
The
S. Henry
Foremans,
1186
Linden
Ave., announce
the birth
of a granddaughter,
Karen
Beth,
born
April
23 to Mr.
and
Mrs.
Thomas M. Tullis (former Patricia
Foreman),
in
Lakewood,
Colo.
Karen has two brothers, Scott, 4,
and Randell, 2.

TV

670 Central

e

Brandeis University

At Drake

Mrs.

Ben

Ave.,

is chairman.

Brodsley,

3453

Summit

There
will be dancing
to the
music of Irv Duley’s music; entertainment will be by Billy Falbo.

Gerson

Elected

Rd.,

is the newly-elected
president
of
Merchandising
Executive
Club
of
Chicago. Gerson is merchandising
executive of Young and Rubicam,
Inc., Chicago.

for this Garden

Ave.,

H.P.

Party

Has

Luncheon
Tam
O’Shanter
Country
Club,
Niles, was the setting for Brandeis
University National Women’s Committee,
North
Shore
Chapter
spring luncheon.

committee,

located

in Wal-

tham, Mass., is the first Jewishsponsored university in the field
of higher
education.
It supports
the library of the university which
now is in its eleventh year,

Louis

Silver,

guished
speaker.

large
lection

Wilmette,

distin-

book collector, was guest
Silver discussed his own

and

very

and

valuable

advised

of establishing

house!
¢

Committee

The

President

Irving B. Gerson, 346 Sumac

at discount

the north shore’s smallest discount
Moley

Dance

Women’s American ORT announces a dinner dance to be given Saturday, at 7 p.m. at the Drake hotel.

(Advertisement)

No Mosquitoes
air conditioners

Sets Gala

on

book

a family

library.

Install Officers
Officers installed May 22
Mrs. Morton Pierce, Glencoe,

ID 2-2042

dent;

Mrs.

Morey

col-

procedure

Feldman,

were:
presi-

Evans-

ton, Mrs. Herman Harris, Glencoe,
Mrs. Lester Rosenberg, 275 Leslee
(Continued on page 38)

RAVINIA
WASH
592

Roger

TUB
Williams

IDlewood

Ave.

2-9771

Complete Washing
Mosquitoes

at North

Shore garden

parties have

become

Drying

a thing of the past

and

Service

since Household Pest Control division of Aerosol Exterminators has put its
new fogging equipment into operation. One treatment the day of your party
does the job, won't harm flowers or shrubbery but kills mosquitoes. HPC also
has a special plan that brings sudden death to ants, moths, spiders, waterbugs,

SHIRTS and
DRY CLEANING

for insects.

8:00

carpet beetles, roaches and all the other annoying and damage-dealing insect
pests that invade our homes. HPC chemicals are safe for poeple . . . murder
The

HPC

plan

is inexpensive,

Household
Phone

Hillcrest

too.

Saturday

Pest Control

8:00

7 Days

6-6173

STOP
EXCESSIVE ROLL

HOURS...
A.M. to 5:30

a Week

A.M.

Closed

to
on

P.M.

...

4:00

P.M.

Wednesday

CORRECT
SPRING SAG

RR,

The Genuine Plaster walls and ceilings of your
neighborhood schoolhouse give you a warm sense
of security . .. a protection from fire that comes
from no other material .. . provide you with a
glowing example of the sense of duty of school
officials and their architects who design wisely
and well , . . with Genuine lath and Plaster.

FOR the SAFEST, SMOOTHEST,
most COMFORTABLE Ride possible:

BE SAFE .. . BE SURE!

GENUINE

LATH
AND

BUREAU

FOR

PLASTER

OF

PLASTER

LATH
LAKE

for

LATHING

and

DAHL

‘
AS
QUALITY.

affiliated with the NATIONAL

GET A FREE

&amp;
CO.
BUREAU

PLASTERING

NOW . " availekls for
COIL and LEAF-Type Rear Springs

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GENUINE

REAR STABILIZER

ESTIMATE

x0

TODAY!

AUTO
NSTRUCTION

BUILT

on KATH ae

ePOTER

2058

FIRST ST.

ID 2-0077
+

Page

34

Thursday,

June

4, 1959

�The Homefinders say —
homeowning is wonderful in
Deerfield!
Deerfield’s

Village

Hall

A town meeting in 1848 was called to setile the future name of “Cadwell’s
Corners.” Should the settlement in the Indian wilderness be renamed “Erin” in
honor of its irish settlers, or “Deerfield” because of the large number of deer
roaming the area. Of course we know which name was chosen and in 1850
Deerfield became the official name of the village which was incorporated in
1903. Even today an occasional deer is seen in the Riverwoods section.
Deerfield is governed by a president, a six member board of trustees and a village manager.
Its community center, spacious park, fine schools and many

churches make it a real “family town.” With the completion of the toll road,
Deerfield has become even more popular and soon driving to the loop will be
a mere 27 minute trip via the tollway and Congress expressway.

Popular

Jewett

Park

For the homeseeker, Deerfield offers something unusual . . . the convenience
of good transportation and shopping plus the joy of truly casual living. Wooded
areas such as Homefinders’ Thornview offer acre sites where growing families
can enjoy compatible neighbors, golf course proximity and well-constructed

homes in a range of price and style.

Whether you would have voted for “Erin”

or “Deerfield,” you couldn’t help being in favor of this village’s Thornview area.

A

WOODED

4 bedroom,

area.

ACRE
212

surrounds

this

Colonial

in the

bath

To see it, call Mr. Hastings.

soon-completed
new

Thornview

AIR-CONDITIONING is just one luxury in this
3 bedroom ranch handsomely set on a corner site.
$47,500.

Mr.

Degen.

COMPARE!
dining room.

4 bedrooms, 212 baths, panelled
Child-approved street. $35,000.

rec.

room,

separate

CUSTOM-BUILT 5 bedroom tri-level with
rec area, screened porch, din. room, model kit. $45,000. Mr. Hastings.
PRICE

REDUCED

ranch,

perfectly

and

patio.

on

this

planned

$22,900.

delightful
with

Mrs.

3

handsome

bedroom
garden

OPEN

Parkinson.

DAILY

—

this Component

Home

For you with $40,000 taste and $30,000

with 3 bedrooms

budget.

and

family

room.

Mr. Degen.

For Deerfield homes
it’s the sign of salesmanship
The

THE

Homefinders:

Florence

Abbott,

Peggy

i

0

M

E

EF B

Anderson, Marjorie Adler,
Hilma
Cullander, Julian
Degen,
Gay _ Hastings,

Doris
Hedlund,
Hazel
Jensen, Lucile May, Jack
Mills, Peg Moser, Lillian
Nilsson,

Vera

MarStrey,
ZimKrue-

Developers and/or agents for Deerfield Woodlands,

Thursday,

June

INC
Realtors,

Parkinson,

Jeanette Jassman,
garet Ruby, Tom
Marion Ward, Opal
mermann and Cliff
ger.

4,

1959

fs

builders,

111

Green

ALpine

1-111]

Deerfield; Woodland Corner, Wilmette; Thornview,
Pebblebrook Road, Northbrook.

trade-ins,

management,

insurance

Bay Road, Wilmette
BRoadway

Deerfield; Partridge Lane, Highland

3-3333

Park;

Page

35

�The Robert N. Goldmans
Name First Son Gary Randall

Sisterhood Installs
Officers At Luncheon

Mr. and Mrs. Robert N. Goldman

PHOTO COPIES
AND
PLIABLE PLASTIC
LAMINATING
OF YOUR
IMPORTANT PAPERS

of 2620 Summit Ave. are the parents of a son, Gary Randall, born
May 7 at Highland Park Hospital.

They
13,

have

and

two

Leslie,

daughters,

Linda,

8.

Louis Goldman of Chicago is the
paternal
grandparent
and
Mrs.
Isaac Goldschmidt, also of Chicago,
is the grandparent on the maternal
side.

Powel’s Camera Mart
589 CENTRAL
ID 2-8550

Youngsters Race To Win, On
Se

Bicycles

SS

The
Sisterhood
of B’nai Torah
Reform
Temple
recently held its
installation luncheon at the Country Squire Restaurant, Gray’s Lake.
Officials of the Midwest Federation
of
Temple
Sisterhoods
installed the board of directors and
the
following
officers
who
will
serve the sisterhood this coming
year:
Officers
Mrs.

dent; Mrs.
president;

Northshore Garden of Memories
A Surprise Awaits You
THIS

BEAUTIFUL
Very

Green

If You

Have

GARDEN

Reasonable

Not Visited

Bernard

presi-

Gollub, corresponding sec-

retary; Mrs. Kenneth Levy, financial secretary;
and
Mrs.
Donald
Myerson, treasurer.

Mrs.

Prices
Phone

Kohlberg,

Theodore Kassel, vice
Mrs. Howard
Walton,

vice president; Mrs. Leland Winter,
vice
president;
Mrs.
David
Koch,
recording
secretary;
Mrs.

CEMETERY

Bay Rd. &amp; 18th St.

Martha

Jack

Klempner,

wood
Ave., was
luncheon.
Mrs.

DE 6-6500

edienne,

1365

Sher-

chairman
of the
L.
Osney,
com-

provided

the

entertain-

ment.

Winners in neighborhood bicycle
race, 4- and 5-year-old girls’ group
were, above, left, Laurie Fields, first,
and Janie Sangeman, second. Judge
is Richard Miller. Don McMillan and
Steve Sherman, shown left to right,
above, placed first and second in
boys’ group, ages 4- and 5-years. At

right Miller is shown with first place
winner,

Theres Nothing Cooler Than Ice

Kent

Branos,

and

second,

John Hughes Jr. They competed in
7- and 8-year-old class.

LAWN-BOY
By

Makers

of:

School

Johnson-Evinrude
AS ADVERTISED IN

tiie mele) &lt;
Saturday.

POST

Evening

Power

Highest

COAST

Mower

Exchange

Trade-In

TO

Allowances

COAST

Market Square

Lake

Safety

Officer,

STORES
Forest 3998

i

HUBBARD WOODS
ICE SKATING STUDIO
Why swelter on the course or on the courts.

Have fun, get your exercise,

learn

Register

JUNE

to

Ice

Skate

in

cool,

cool

comfort.

now,

classes

begin

15.

Daytime &amp; Evening Classes
Adults &amp; Children
Basic,

intermediate,

by America’s
Equipment and apparel

Free Daily Practice
for students
advanced

in classes

instruction

finest instructors
available in our Sport Shop

Mel-

3-4 years: Dale Dawson, Ed Mazen, Steve
Sherman, Donnie McMillan, Steve Sherer,
Brad Lake and Larry Slavin.
5 years, trainer:
Bobby
Lerman,
Todd

(Continued

on page

A dw —Atling
...and ice we've plenty of at

Ptl.

vin Moon of Highland Park police,
and parents organized the bicycle
races open
to youngsters
in the
area of Sunnyside,
Eastwood,
Southland and Midland Aves.
Participating, by age group were:

eo

ae

37)

Heemacks
YW) itt's

A lot of feet come to DeWitt’s...
All shapes and sizes. We get narrow
feet, wide feet, feet with long toes,
short toes, high insteps, low insteps
and, sometimes, combinations of these
...and do you know what we do?...
We FIT them!
The greater the challenge, the
better we like it... because it pleases
us to make boys and girls comfortable
and happy.
We pride ourselves on being fitting
experts and then, too, DeWitt’s shoes
are constructed to fit better. ~» and
fit better longer!
If your child has a fitting problem,
welcome to DeWitt’s! No fitting problem? Then it’s no more than ‘‘fitting’”’
that your child keeps on the right
path with DeWitt’s!

fit for a Prince!

FIT for Your Child!

Be different. Be kind to your guests and the Kiddies.
Throw an Ice Skating Party when the temperature soars.
Ice time rented for group parties—Church, club, camp
or just to cool off.
915

Linden

Ave.,

Winnetka,

Ill.

Hillcrest 6-4116

SSNseae

Page

36

Thursday,

June

4, 1959

�ff Riek ey

ae ee

fais County Carienter Aparentices
(Continued

from

page

tend night
Thursday
business
29)

sociation; Allen Danner,
representative coordinator of Lake
County;
and Ted
Kenney,
president, Chicago District Council of
Carpenters.
Guests included A, E. Wolters,
principal of Highland Park High

School;

Charles

Ellis, Lake

County

business representative; officers of
Lake
County
union
locals;
Lake
Country
Contractors’
Association
members;
other
union
members
and guests and contractors of the
graduates.

Instructors

at

the

apprentice

school
are
Franklin
Hendee
of
Mundelein,
Roland
Kehfbers
of
East Dundee and building trades
instructor at Highland Park High
School,
Joseph
Kral,
1010
Park
Ave. W, and Louis Ugolini of 1806
Elmwood Ave. The school is under
the supervision of Harold Carpenter of 2754 St. Johns Ave., chairman
of the vocational
education
department at Highland Park High
School.
Highland
Park High School
is
one of three high schools in Lake
County that offers apprentice training for the
construction
trades.
Waukegan Township High School
provides training for bricklayers,
cement
finishers
and
plumbers,
while North
Chicago
Community
High
School
offers
training
for
electricians and plasterers.

9:30

p.m.

tion

Dorothy L. Driskell (Mrs. Elwood
Holmes), 1000 Judson Ave., is ex-

from

subjects

hibiting as a member of the All
Illinois Society of the Fine Arts in
a show at Chicago Federal Savings
and Loan Association, 100 N. State,
Chicago. Fifty oils and watercolors
of Chicago scenes are being shown
by the members through June 15.

mathematics

Miss Driskell’s entry is titled ‘“Eve-

September

schooling

in the

through

use

includes

and

care

instruc-

of hand

and powered tools, roof framing,
exterior and interior trim and mill-

work
on

as

well

blueprint

review,
terial,

tions

as

related

reading,

estimating,
building

and

bills

codes,

a study

of

ma-

Birth

of house

Of

at Highland

Park

in the

Stockyards.”

Hartman, Brian
Joel Meyers.

from

Hughes,

6 years: Bain Norman

page
John

BETTS, BORLAND
&amp; Co.

36)

Perrine

and

Since

and Kevin Hughes.

BR

7-8 were Richard Slavin, yoyo —
man,
Eddy Weinrib,
Fred
Norman,
Kent
Bravos,
Jay
Hughes,
Mark
Nelson
and
Duane Frykman.
4-5 years: Janie Sangerman, Susie Gross,
Connie Weinrib and Laurie Fields.
7-8 years: Leslie Podell, Lynn Lerman,

Naomi

Sherer,

Michelle

ren Medoff.
9-10 years:
Norman.

Leslie

Meyers

Lerman

and

and

C. R. ANDERSON

Son

Hospital

he

has one brother, Michael, 5.
Mrs.
Florence
Bordner
of the
First
St.
Address
is
maternal
grandmother.
The
senior
E.
P.
Harts of 1622 Oakwood
Ave. are
paternal grandparents.

INSURANCE

5
ci

STOCKS

BONDS

Members
New

Ka-

York

and

Stock

Other

Nancy
ARTHUR

Exchange

Exchanges

PARTNERS
M. BET TS

CHAUNCEY B. BORLAND
FRANCIS P. BUTLER
LOUIS J. STIRLING
DAVID H. BETTS
JOHN P. WISE
HAROLD C. STEINER
ASSOCIATES
SAMUEL D. ROWE
RICHARD J. SHROSBREE
j . TRACY ALEXANDER

AGENCY, INC.
—

1896

KER
0)

plans.

Mr. and Mrs. Edward P. Hart Jr.,
1694 First St., announce the birth
of a son, Timothy John. Born May

16

ning

specifica-

Junior Edward P. Harts
Announce

(Continued

school on Tuesday and
evenings from 6:30 to

May for three of the four years.
The

| Bicycle Races

Highland Parker Exhibits
In Chicago Fine Arts Show

BONDS

Sound, Experienced Insurance Service
WIndsor
735

Deerfield

SIDNEY RUBENSTEIN
of Highland Park

5-0155

Road,

BORLAND

Deerfield,
111

South

La
Tel.

Salle

BUILDING
St.

CEntral

¢

Chicago

3

6-1474

"He bought me

almost everything --

These programs are financed independently
of the high schools.
Major portion of the expense
is

borne

by

the

-contractors

and

unions with a percentage derived
from state and federal funds under the Smith-Hughes Act.
The program is for young men
between the ages of 17 and 25 who
desire to become journeymen carpenters. The men are indentured
for a period of four years with a
contractor and during this apprenticeship they receive “on the job
training.” To supplement this training in actual construction, they at-

TTT

TIME

oh we

TO ACT

a

home,

mink,

sportscar...
THEN
THE

I SHOWED

HIM

DOOR!

HE FORGOT TO BUY ME A

Gas Light’
Naturally,

she wants

What woman

a gas light.

doesn't?

Wonderful g
symbol of ele
monds, ang

it. is as much a
iS TURKS, dia-

REAL

rYyco..

REALTORS
sh
BUILDERS --APPRAISERS

826

DEERFIELD

DEERFIELD,

Thursday,

June

rete

4,

Koad

ee

1959

cel of gracious™ Piaediorh living See
the many
different types of gas
lights now available.
PRICED

FROM

$49.95

3 wi

+ ¥

You're in dangerous waters
when
you try to sell your
property yourself.
List with
us and we'll handle the details.

‘ ee

Pas

(INSTALLED)

Company
“The Friendly People”
Page 37.

�SHUTTERS |
CUSTOM

MADE

Accordion
Students

appear

Students
of

Give

Louis

Sunday

Recital

Garino

will

at 2 p.m. in an ac-

® | cordion recital at Immaculate Cony|ception

2

|

public

School

is

auditorium.

The

invited.

Sunday

Performers

Norma

include

Menoni,

Larry

Shatiers

Anywhere

==

=

Match any Flatsh

=

We
¢ Vertical
¢

= =

everything
to safeguard
your health

quality you
can rely on

Shutters

y| li8

SHUTTER
HOUSE

PEASE
495

7600 Greenwood Ave., Chicago

PHONE:

a

every time

Make us your convenient, one-stop
headquarters for all health needs. It’s
so good to know that you can have
complete confidence in our up-to-date
stock of name brands. Our prices are
thrifty, too!

Buy Direct from the
Manufacturer and Save!

your Home.

from

page

Announces

34)

retary; Mrs. Leon
financial secretary;

Sex,
Mrs.

Alumni,

school

RA 3-3632
CR 2-5541

Formerly Crestwood Products

PHARMACY

Central

FREE

.
§

ID 2-0143
DELIVERY

Johnsons

Glencoe,
Seymour

Have

Grandparents
of the baby
are
Mrs. Francis Polimeni, 237 Llewellyn Ave., and Mrs. Lillian Johnson,
Oconto, Wis.

The

baby

has

two.

Joww

athletic

the

for

high

joint

Pro-

tournaments,

and

The summer discussion group for
college age students will have its
opening meeting June 24 at 7:30
p.m. The group is open to all college students including people who
are entering college in the fall.
James Schreiber, a student at He-

brew Union College
Ohio, will lead the

brothers,

5, and a

sis-

DOLLARS
--.

group

of

canteens.

Son

A son, Robert Allen was born to
the Harold G. Johnsons, 610 Green
Bay Rd., Highwood, May 6, at Highland Park Hospital.

Terry, 8, and George,
ter, Debbie, 3.

youth

students

gram of North Shore Congregation
Israel and Jewish Community Centers of Chicago will conduct program activities Tuesday afternoons
and evenings during the vacation
months.
Patterned
after
last
summer’s
program, the group will have theatre parties, beach parties, wiener

Anoff, Glencoe, assistant financial
secretary;
Mrs.
Isadore
Braun,
Evanston, National board member.

Harold

Its

Summer Schedule

Ln., Mrs. Harshel Seder, 240 Cary
Ave., Mrs. Irving B. Siden, 110
Lakeside Pl., vice-presidents.
Also, Mrs, Stanley Braun, Evan-

roasts,

Shoji Panels
¢ Louvre Doors
¢ Screens
¢ Room Dividers
¢ Fret Work

Samples shown in

Jim

(Continued

ston, treasurer, Mrs. Herbert Manning,
Wilmette,
recording
secretary;
Mrs.
Norman
Weil,
479
Pleasant Ave., corresponding sec-

Se ff

i

Angiuli,

Mathe,

Freund, Cherrie Martineau, Richard Azzi, Virginia Lee Garino and
Jerry Nustra.

We Install | | EE
==

Tom

Joint Program

Brandeis University

At Local School

interested
the Joint
0724,

may register by
Program
office,

calling
VE
5-

SENSE

AND

~--- JIM

DID

in Cincinnati,
group. Those

DIDN'T

§

Announcing
An Entirely New Concept

HIGHLAND PARK
SAVINGS « LOAN

REAL ESTATE SALES

ASSOCIATION

Designed to

Security — Service —

1811

INSURE AC'TION!
CALL

TODAY

about

Deerfield

Rd.,

Deerfield
CLIFF

BILL BINARD
DAN COBB

OF

Highland

Ave.

THE

SAVINGS

AND

our

WI

5-5300

JOHNSON
GEORGE SEVERIN
BOB HASTINGS

ID 2-0361

Park

LOAN

FOUNDATION,

INC.

MUFFLERS
“*

GUARANTEED
ADVERTISING PROGRAM

826

St. Johns

MEMBER

Satisfaction Since 1888

ie

~4

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FACTORY WRITTEN
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FOR THE LIFETIME
. OF YOUR CAR
GOOD AT MIDAS MUFFLER
SHOPS FROM
COAST-TO-COAST

. MIDAS MUFFLER SHOP
1535 Belvidere, Waukegan
MAjestic 3-8395
Open Daily 8:30-6 p.m.
Friday—8
:30 - 9 p.m.

Soa
Page

38

Thursday,

June

4, 1959

�A. E. Wolters Presents Awards At Honors Assembly
(Continued from page 13)

search

awareness were given to Jennifer
Dubach and Martha Lansmann.
Boys intramural trophy for the

four years was presented to Fred
Phillips; and the boys’ session with
the greatest number of total points
was announced
as Wallace
Hammerberg’s.
Latin Awards
Latin awards for receiving superior ratings in the state contest
and
David
Klorfine,
first
year
Latin;
Kenneth
Epstein,
Susan
Hirschfelder and Tom Phelan, second year;
and Diane Rubin
and
Nancy Silverman, third year. First
places were received by Kenneth
Epstein and Nancy Silverman.
In the tenth annual mathematical contest sponsored by the Mathematical Association of America and
the
Society
of Actuaries;
Roger
Levin
was
awarded
first
place,
Stephen
Cohen
second,
and
Michael Resnick third.
Those who have become master
musicians in the Triad Music Club
are: Peter Gorner, Darlene Hart,
Edward
Imhoff,
Roberta
Pollack
and Priscilla White.
Judson Marshall, as the outstanding senior in science, was awarded
the Bausch and Lomb award.
Robert Sandy received an award
for winning first place in book review class of the writers’ tournament of the Scholastic Press Guild
of Chicago.
Harvard Book Award
The Harvard Book Award, given
annually to the outstanding junior

boy, was presented to James Knoll.

Joy Schlesinger won a first place
certificate for her research
proj-

‘“Algae—Food
participated

Science

Fair

from
in

held

the

the

by

Sea,”

District

the

Illinois

Junior
Academy
of
Science
at
Glenbrook. She won a second
place
certificate for her project at
state
level at the state university;
and
she presented her paper before
the
Academy
and won a
third place
award.
David
Pepperberg
won
a

first

place

certificate

for

his

Condition-

were Louise Bradt by the American

were given to Susan Hemmingway

and

“Reflex

the District Science Fair and won
a first place certificate for his project at the State Science Fair. He
was selected to present his paper
before the Academy and received a
participant’s award. Both are freshmen.
Selected
to attend
the Illinois
Girls’ State at MacMurray College

greatest number of points scored in

ect,

project,

ing of a Rat.” He also took part in

re-

Legion

Auxiliary

of Deerfield,

Marie

Schilling

by

the

and

Highland

Park Auxiliary. The Vernon Auxiliary selected Barbara Patterson.
Daniel Demichelis was named to

attend

Boys’

State

at

Springfield

by American Legion Post No. 145
of Highland Park.
Nancy Wolff received the DAR
Good Citizenship award.
Girls’
Club
scholarships
were
given to Roseann Albert, Mary An-

derson, Karen

Cheli, Pamela Lenzi

and Connie Linari.
Kay Herzog was announced
as
the foreign exchange
student selected to visit Greece this summer.
Pat Floyd Award
Colleen Kelly was selected this
year’s
winner
of the
Pat
Floyd
award.
Winners of college scholarships
who have accepted such were presented.
Among
them
are
Allen

Wolf,

Amherst;

Emily
Lenzi,

Dale

Schmidt

Winter, Augustana;
Carroll
College;

Marshall,

Cornell

and

Pamela
Judson

(N.Y.)

Univer-

sity;
Richard
Bernstein,
George
Baker Scholarship to Trinity College.
Also, Karen
Cheli,
Ripon
College;
Beach
Aten,
University
of
Pennsylvania;
John
Scornavacco,
University of Wisconsin;
Cynthia
Jacobs,
Vassar
College:
Anita
Chizewer,
Wheaton
College,
Michael Anderson, Northwestern (Naval Reserve Officers Corps);
and
Alan
March,
Dartmouth
(Naval
Reserve Officers Corps).
The
following
community
and
memorial
scholarships winners
were
announced:
Sharon
Conn,
B’nai
B'rith;
Nancy
Bilow,
Chi
Omega;
Jean
Altman,
Deerfield

Rotary;

David

Slovick,

The PEERLESS
Architect Designed

cau.

PEERLESS HOME
1550

Park

Ave.,

\

Mineral
1029

Nrree

Park

Ave..

Delivery

Water
West,

NORTH

Directors

Community

SHORE

IDlewood 2-0042

personally

arrange

and

conduct

Thursday,

Shore

June

Chapel:

4,

1959

2100

East

75th

Street,

at Clyde

prior

to his

Lake

are

on the Yankees
play the Sox.

retirement.

HE

Featuring precise Prescription service —
Baby

Needs —

Cubs

will

IS

Surgical and sick room supplies

Vitamins ——- Cosmetics —

Films —

We

Deliver.

Roger Pharmacy
643

ROGER

WILLIAMS AVE.
Next Door to Ravinia

FOR

Henry

A. Stine,

EMERGENCY
CALL

1D 3-1212
Medical

Building

SERVICE AFTER HOURS
ID 2-9126

R.Ph.

35 yeors experience

25

HAVE

L. Sylvester, R.Ph.
years experience

YOUR

DRAPES
WITH

EXCELLENT

SERVICE

BY...

CLEANERS

Laurel

Ave.

(across

from

%

H.P.

ID

Library)

BONDED

2-1820

%

INSURED

==&gt;
—
——

el

———_f

—_]
——]

ey)
a as
ba

11)
ETA
TT

‘

aan
| ames maT)
ES

Fite)

HF

ee

—_——f
———4

Easy Terms
as low as

$2.25
per week

For the answer to your ques-

Avenue

years

MATTER WHO YOUR DOCTOR IS OR WHERE
LOCATED—-WE ARE PREPARED TO FILL
YOUR PRESCRIPTION

No money down
No payments
“till Fall!

All

tions about contact lenses—
write for our new booklet.

Ch

Pe

House of Vision
Craftsmen

South

Fox

the

Take advantage
of price savings
NOW!

continued research.

the

of

PRESENTS ITS SPECIAL ALL YEAR AROUND
JALOUSIE ENCLOSED ROOM

pioneering and

entire’ funeral—a _ service of warmth
and beauty, observing
customs and
ritual with reverence.

Nizzi

ALL YEAR BUILDERS

of our 20 years of

1865

Complete facilities in your community

John

and

+e LICENSED

types. Get the benefit

to the

for prompt service . . . Lee J. Furth,
Jules L. Furth, and their staff, will

Call Midway
3-5400

NO

487

Park

SERVICE

take

Mrs.

paternal grandparents. Nizzi is a
former Highland Park policeman
who served on the force for 20

Also...

COMPANY
Since

Sox

will

PORCHES
BREEZEWAYS
PATIOS
BIG DISCOUNT

Ctl

Funeral

the

Braves

the

DUFFY

(M.D.) first. If he says
you can wear them—
H.O.V. has all the newest

Jewish

Yankees

Stan A. Writz of Athens, Wis., is
the maternal grandfather. Mr. and

Park

See your eye physician

AND

the

born May 10 at Highland Park Hospital.
Their
other
children
are
Marsha Jean, 5; Sharon, 3; John, 2.

THAT PRESCRIPTION

Co.

Highland

ID 2-6800

tf,

Saturday

ALL

Spring

BUILDERS, INC.
Highland

Braves,

and

Nafe II, their fourth child. He was

(Small Extra Charge)

DRINK?

lenses ?

* KITCHENS
* BATHS

West

the

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Nizzi announce the birth of a son, Joseph

Carefully Cleaned
Handled with Ease
Pressed by Hand
Rehung &amp; Pleated

‘contact

ror:

* FAMILY AND RECREATION ROOMS
* ROOM ADDITIONS
* GARAGES

The Old Elm Little League officially started its season yesterday
at 6:30 p.m., although formal opening day ceremonies will be held
Saturday.
Four
majors
and
two
minor league teams will play.
Dick Rappaport will manage the
Reliable Laundry Sox team; Carl
Goldschraffe will return to defend
his championship with the Manilow
Braves. Tom Pape will handle the
McCallum Cubs and George Spero
will take over Clavey’s
Yankees.
Yesterday the Cubs were to play

WATER
N

Joseph Nizzis Announce
Birth Of Fourth Child

This Week

ENJOYING THE

\

WAY Means
and Supervised

PEERLESS

Glick

Little League

Season

REGULAR HOME DELIVERY
OF DELICIOUS PURE WATER

Sparkling

TOUCH!

Tom

Memorial;
Eric
Engberg,
John
Levy Memorial; and Martha Lansman,
Margaretta
Winters,
David
Connolly and Fred Phillips, Class
of 1959 Scholarships.
State Finalists
The finalists of the Illinois State
Scholarship Commission were announced to be Michael Anderson,
Beach Aten, Fredrick Baker, Pearl
Bloom,
John
Farr, Martha
Lansman, George Millen, Michael Resnick, Billie Rosenhouse, John Salasin,
Steven
Tatar
and _ Rosalie
Ward.
Those receiving National Merit
Scholarship
Certificates
of Merit
were
Richard Albin, Eugene
Altman, Jennifer Dubach, John Gidwitz, Roger Levin, Jeffrey Levinger, Michael Lewis, Judson Marshall, Allen Wolf and Karen Zuiker.
Of the students who took the National Honor
Society Tests, four
students received certificates: Richard Albin, Jennifer Dubach, John
Gidwitz and Roger Levin.
Members
of the
new
Student
Council
Executive
Board
were
sworn into office by David Slovick,
the
organization’s
current
vice
president, who was substituting for
John Newmann, president.
A farewell speech given by Ines
Gottschalk, this year’s foreign exchange
student
from
Germany,
highlighted the event. In her address she thanked the students and
the entire faculty for making her
stay in the United States a very
pleasant one.

Vl

with the CUSTOM

Elm

Opens

Woman’s Club; Anne O’Neal, Earl
Gsell to Northwestern University;
Allen Wolf, Elks State Scholarship;
Gail Anderson, Highland Park Hospital
Auxiliary;
Emily
Winter,
Highland Park Thrift Shop;
James
Johnson, Kiwanis; Mike Clement,

YOU

HOME IMPROVEMENT

Old

in Optics

1891 SHERIDAN ROAD
HIGHLAND PARK
135 NORTH WABASH, CHICAGO
©H.O.V,

Work

We

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Dormers

4

in:

Garages

Sidings

—-

Additions

Awnings
Storm

VISIT
SHOWROOM AT
or

We

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Call

Windows

SHORE RESIDENTS!
Jalousie Specialists!

Aluminum

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Month
Of June
for

Installed

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OUR
Today

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for

FREE Estimate...
Page

39

�eT

es

ee

I

eee

ee

ee

ee

ee

Judge Hulse Heads

oe

MAGIC SCISSORS
Beauty

)

that

Salis

Casual

)

. Comfortable

Call for Appointment
— ID

]|P AMPLE FREE PARKING
oie.

othe

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site

1394 Deerfield Rd., Highland Park
site

site._site..oite..siie..site..sfte..siie...siie...sihe...sthe...slhe.olie...tlie.

AAA

Thomas

School

ON

SAVINGS

EFFECTIVE JULY 1, 1959

BANK

of

Member

Bank—Postoffice

HIGHLAND

Judge Minard
He was sup-

Federal

Deposit

ported

F.

Michael

Bonamarte

Bldg.

1771

IDlewood

Second

St.

2-7800

playing

other valuable books and historical
North
the
to
relating
material
Shore and Illinois will be processed
students
in the same way. Many

Little League
activities at Old
Elm Park will begin soon with the
help of Highland Park Recreation
Center. To date, 61 boys have reg-

Park

and

reads

8.9.

Progress

ae

ee

ee

ee

ee

ee

ee

ee

ee

ee

ee

ee

ee

ee

ee

NS Human

Relations

Committee

Holds

were

ee

the

PARK CEMETERY

OME
OP

t

COMMUNITY MAUSOLEUM—EARTHEN INTERMENT
COLUMBARIUM—CREMATORIUM

Oy

ete

nea e ee

ee

S

em

a

RS

MEMORIAL

CHARTER

—

GENERAL

CARE

FUND

ee

ee

ED

a

PERPETUAL

and Harrison St., Evanston

Chicago: KEystone 9-4747; 9-4424

Evanston:

UNiversity 4-5061; 4-5062

mene

Se
ale.

Ridge Road

Greenhouses

-

ees

a

SLO

ER

ea

We Operate Our Own

tah
ty

el

until

pP

* Convenient to North Shore
and Downtown Chicago

¢ Parking adjacent to building

small or large attendance

¢ Funeral consultation and arrangements may be made in your
own home with our North Shore representative.

PHONE

NUMBER—VErnon

“

or LOngbeach

i

5206 North Broadway, Chicago
40

Some 100 residents of Highland
Park
are
listed
as members
of
North Shore Human
Rights Com-

formed

in

discs. Dur-

collection and 1,750 old books were

1946,

which

is

concerned with problems of human
relations in the shore communities
from Wilmette
through
Highland
Park.

the viewer to study miwere
that
documents

more than 9 books during the year.

either purchased by them or borrowed from another library. The
addition of this service has helped

Combining

to reduce

the

collection.
the
from
subscriptions
to
155
and 6 newspapers.

Highland

ACCENT

Park

patrons

patrons

borrowed

from

Highland

the

Highwood,

figure

ON

YOUNG

ADULTS

achas
department
adult
The
cented its service to the youth of
the community. Special trips were
made by eighth grade students to
the library for a short period of
instruction. These students, under
the direction of Miss Ruth E. Nelson, head of readers’ services, were

a tour

of the

adult

depart-

ment. This was followed by a short
period of instruction on the use of
reference tools that will be used
in high school
and college. The
following two or three weeks were
devoted to assisting these students
in preparing term papers.
This year saw the inauguration
of a film program for the youth of
the community. This program, under the sponsorship of the Friends
of the Library, emphasized films
based on classics while other projects such as the age of
and the age of air power.

ADULT

science

5-2221

1-4740
(Just north of Foster)

RIGHT

EDUCATION

the

book

collec-

FOR...

DUFFY

All

It is in this department that every
piece of material is processed before it is released for circulation.

This year, in addition to 4,030 new

books that were processed, it was
necessary to inaugurate revisions
in the Dewey Decimal System to
house new fields of knowledge. The

is

of knowledge

greatest expansion

in chemistry and astronomy. Another project underway is the revision of subject headings. Many
of these subject headings date back
to Victorian times and are no longer a part of a person’s vocabulary.

IMPROVEMENTS

INTERNAL

While awaiting the results of the

survey which is being conducted by
a team of experts from the Uni-

One

re-

keeping.

record

excessive

has

and

routines

general

duced

spent

time

reduce

to

has

the library

of Illinois,
ways

of this effort is rec-

outcome

keep
who
patrons
by
ognized
abreast of new publications. The
procedures in book selection, book
ordering and book processing have
been streamlined to such an extent
that books are available for circulation a few days after their official
publication date!

Modenese Bowling
League Presents
Season’s Awards
Ice Cream Parlor
Highwood
romped off with best bowling teain
banat Modenese
trophy
league
quet May 27, held at Hanks Res-

tion.

Cleaned!

went

award

game

and

individual

was

won

ID 2-1820

Individual high
Ori,

Dominic

to

high-3-game

award

by Leo Ori.
Team
Standings

Won
Highwood Ice Cream Parlor .......- 73
Ori’s
72
Angelo Fabbri &amp; Sons ................-- 69
Carlo’s. Tailor ‘Shop. «..:...0:....:-.
gam 68
Sernesi’s Tailoring &amp; Cleaning ..6612
Acme Liquor Service
.--66
Contri, Bros., Grocery: «....:.....;
Linari’s Mason Contractors
Jim &amp; Ed’s Clothing ..........
Sun Valley DBITY do cseccscrhecteheo
th aa
Highwood Ice
Carlo’s Tailor
Angelo Fabbri

Team,

3

Games

Cream Parlor
Shop
&amp; Sons

High

Team

Lost
55
56
59
60
61%
62
63
71
714
16

...........------- 2791
2704
2702

Game

Highwood Ice Cream Parlor ..............-.---- 1067
Coantti (Br8. 2 Grocery
ites
ack schenceces 959
Ori’s:
..
949

High

CLEANERS

487 Laurel Ave. (Across from H.P. Library)

taurant, Waukegan.

High

BLANKETS - COMFORTERS
Everything Heavy
Them

the direction of Miss Esther Kluss.

on

existing

DEPARTMENT

One phase of library work with
which patrons are not too familiar
is the catalog department, under

versity

HEAVY OVERCOATS
WINTER CLOTHES

Have

of shelving

amount

to store old and bulky news-

CATALOGING

found

Hardly a day goes by when
a
meeting isn’t scheduled in the Historical Room
of the Auditorium.
The library has played host to the
Great Books classes (for more than
25 years), The Writers’ Group, The
League of Women Voters, the various departments of City Hall, the
North
Shore
Film
Society,
and
many others. Most of these education classes work closely with the
adult department in selecting books
and compiling biblographies to be
used with the courses. The library
has extended inter-library loans to
these groups—as it does to the individual patrons—in order to com-

pliment

needed

papers.

STORAGE—$5.95— $300 Value Insur.
JUST

After the entire set of old newsmicrofilmed,
has _ been
papers

have used
crofilmed

withdrawn
There
are
periodicals

grams were devoted to current sub-

Film

Commentators
were
Dr.
Homer
Jack,
minister
of Unitarian
Church,
Evanston;
Edward
Holmgren, community services specialist
for Chicago
Urban
League;
and
Mrs. Jewel Rogers, practicing attorney who recently was appointed
to Illinois advisory committee
of
the
United
States
Civil
Rights
Commission,

mittee,

rpm

FILL - A - BOX

lee

Memorial Chapels
¢ Perfect accommodations for

Page

Bredin,

86-78

USE OUR

¢ Most Complete Funeral Home
in Metropolitan Area

SUBURBAN

member-

aE

A

if left

~

Re

a

age

HS

SEES

that will be burdensome
emergency is at hand.

board

Elizabeth

and

ing the course of the year 4,030
new books were purchased for the

given

Three outstanding leaders in human relations discussed the problems set forth in a film, ‘All the
Way
Home,”
viewed
after
the
business session.

place for yourself — and for them — a task

~

See

Nae

RE

cee

Just as you provide insurance or make a
will, so should you choose a fitting resting

;

;

for

Miss

View

*

iy
Al

Charles
Wenk
will
be
Tuesday to the board of diat her home, 3063 Summit

Rabbi Arnold J. Wolf, Dr. Donald
H. Atlas and Mrs. Sidney W. Mandel.

May Be Your Own!
a

de-

material for
and the like.

Theodore Cornell spoke on progress
of
tax
reports
relating
to
Highland Park Highlands; Members
were
briefed
on
dinner
dance
June 20 at Villa Moderne Motel,
and on annual summer picnic to be
held July 19 at Old Elm Park. Reservations for mixed league summer
bowling are being accepted by Russell Kiefer, recreation chairman.

ship

~

mo

assisted by the reference

partment in locating
debates, term papers

MATERIAL

The age of science has seen the
Microfilm Reader take its proper
with
along
in the library
place
other traditional items. The Reader, which was dedicated to public
use this year, was a gift of the
of the Library. ApproxiFriends
mately one-third of the old Highhas been
newspapers
Park
land
microfilmed and are available for
use on this machine.

Nominated

Brive Carefully — The Life You Save

were

REPORT

The library’s total book collection is 58,037; its phonograph record collection consists of 468 long-

Report

Four
Highland
Park
residents
were
nominated
for membership
on the board of North Shore Human Relations Committee May 28
at the association’s annual meeting
at Winnetka Community House.

Insurance Corp.

magazines

information to be incorporated into
term papers. Hundreds of students

Annual Meeting

PARK

old reference

were used by the students to locate

Main speaker was
Hulse of Waukegan.

by

5,000

ANNUAL
HISTORICAL

30)

most

Mrs.
hostess
rectors
Ave.

INTEREST

page

day
at
Wayne
auditorium.

istered.

INSURED BANK

from

was topic for discussion at Old Elm
Civic Association meeting Thurs-

Tax

:

LIBRARY

is directed to the high school student. During the school year, al-

.

2-3814

in Highland Park?”

Sr., Highland Park juvenile officer, and
Mark
Panther,
dean
of
boys at Highland Park High School.

ULTRA-NATURAL LOOK!
a4

PUBLIC
(Continued

‘Delinquency

Spring into Summer...
with

HP

Panel On Delinquency

Individual,

3 Games

Leo Ori
Joe Bartolai
Angelo Bernardi

Dominic

High
Ori

690
629
625

Individual

Game
264

Leo Ori
Joe Bartolai

Thursday,

259
255

June

4, 1959

�¢

HS Stars To Get Letters Friday At Sports Dinner
Awards in golf, tennis, baseball and track will be given out

tomorrow
Awards

night to high school athletes at the Spring

dinner in the school’s lunch room.

The

Sports

dinner, set for

6:30 p.m., is sponsored by the Highland Park Dads’ Club.
Guest speaker will be Frank Ivy, Chicago

The school
the following
awards:

has announced that
students will receive

Track—Varsity:
Michael Anderson, William Churchill, Stephen Cohen, John Farr,
John
Fox, Eric Goodman,
Nils Hagberg,
John Jashelski, Roger Levin, Allan March,
Frank Palandri, James Phelan, Daniel Pollack, John Ross, Jeffrey Rubenstein, Michael Walton, Kenneth Wyman
and Dale
Zech.
Sophomore awards in track go to Thomas
Berube, Kenneth Epstein, Edward Gamson;
William
Hutchinson,
Gene. Joffe;
James
‘Mitchell, James *Murtfeldt; John “Pettingell,
Stuart Rodman, Harold Samuelson, Anthony
Sherman, Benjamin Stackler, James Sternfield, James Sweeney, Richard Ulrich, William Walker, James Weinert and Michael
Zaeske.
Freshman numerals in track will go to
Bruce Aten, Richard Berube, Thomas Elias,
Michael
Field, Dennis
Giangiorgi,
Steven
‘Goodman,
Ronald
Joseph,
Edwin
Kemp,
Joel Lewitz, Robert Markey, Jan Persson,
Robert Picker, Dale Severin, Ricky Wagner, Robert Wildrick and Alan Wolf.
Track manager awards will be given to
Gary Auerbach, head manager, Barry Gilbert,
manager;
Richard
Henninger,
manager, and Alan Roufa, manager.
Varsity team members who will receive
awards in baseball are Grant Abrahamson,

Varsity Golfers
Trample Morton,
Take Championship
By trampling Morton, 13 to 2, on
the Sunset Valley Golf Course last
Thursday, Coach Ted Repsholdt’s
varsity golf team at Highland Park
High
School
won
the
Suburban
League
championship.
The froshsoph
linksmen
of
Coach
Ralph
Cianchetti were leading Morton 9
to
0 when
their
matches
were
rained out and were given credit
for a victory, since Morton had no
chance
to win
enough
points to
take the competition. This gave the
team a tie for first in the league
with Waukegan.
Hirsch

Is

A

Cardinals

coach.

Samuel
Bernardi,
William
Dever,
James
Duffy, Mace Fink, Anthony Gualandri, Jeffrey Hanson, Mavor Hedberg, William Holland,
Robert
Hollmann,
Walter
Hurley,
James Juul, William Keough, John Poser,
Thomas
Russell, Terrance
Somenzi,
Allen
Wolf and Richard Bernstein, manager; Lee
Loventhal, manager,
and Arnold
Bartlett,
head manager.
Sophomore awards in baseball will go to
Charles Adler, William Bodle, Harry Cummings,.. Harry, Henderson,
Joseph. Herbert,
Thomas
‘Inman,
Thomas
LaBuda,
Jeffrey
Leckie, Mark Panther, Robert Petzel, James
Ramsey, David Ricker, Paul Robinson, Jack
Secrest, Michael Seyl and Edward Sordyl.
Freshman numerals in baseball will go to
Paul Camp,
Joel Glickman,
Lewis
Goldstein,
Leonard
Gorenstein,
Glenn
Harris,
John Holder, Kenneth Holt, Thomas Homma,
Christian Isely, Steven Kadison,
Michael McLaughlin, Charles Pascal, Marshall
Ragir,
James
Roger,
Roger
Wallenstein
and Terrance Patrick; Lawrence Bernstein,
manager,
and Victor Reichman,
manager.
_ Golf awards—Varsity:
Beach Aten, Martin Gmeiner, Joel Hirsch, Anthony Lamanna, John Levinson, Stephen Oggel, Michael
Peck,
Gerald
Smith
and
Stephen
Tatar;
Lawrence Fish, head manager.
J.V. awards in golf will go to Daniel
Demichelis,
John
Lindquist
and
James
Nathan.
Sophomore
awards
in golf will go to
Richard Ascher, Steven Gross, George Cimbalo, Barry Grossman
and Joseph Hurst.
Freshman
numerals
in golf will go to
James
Anixter,
Ronald
Balsam,
Anthony
Davis,
Lee
Feinberg,
Paul
Kentor,
John
Lawrence,
Philip
Roth,
Michael
Smith,
Jeffrey Weissman and Lawrence Rubens.
Tennis
awards—Varsity:
Lawrence
A\lschuler,
Kenneth
Cousens,
Robert
Engelman, James Gray, Kenneth Lehman, Jeffrey
Levinger, John Newmann, George O’Connell
and Ronald Sheldon.
Sophomore
awards in tennis will go to
Steven
Atlas,
Arthur
Friedman,
Gerson
Gluck,
Jerry
O’Connell,
Ronald
Panter,
Robert Rosen, Steven Simons, Reinald Werrenrath and Alan Erdheim, manager.
Freshman numerals in tennis will go to
Harvey
Gould,
James
McGregor,
Robert
Rotner and Jeffrey Server.

High School Track ‘Go-Kart’ Races Start In HP Area
Herb Strange, 794 Central Ave., racing a “go-cart,”
Teams 4th, 5th
the three-mile course at Meadowdale Saturday and came
In Suburban Meet in parking lots last year, have moved to the big tracks
second

the first time

Highland
Park
High
School’s
varsity track team finished fourth
with 2114, and the frosh-soph squad
fifth in the recent suburban League
track meet at Evanston.
New Trier was first’ with 592% ;

toss

of

53

feet,

%

inch.

Yacht Club Postpones
One Race, Holds Two

120-yard high hurdles; Steve Cohen

The

jump.

The

mile

North

Shore

held two races

Yacht

Club

Sunday

in a strong

southwest wind with gusts up to 40
miles per hour. Andy Kaiser took
the second
and Larry
Cable the
third race.
Peter Weinert and Larry Cable
are tied for first with four points
each, with the final race still to be
sailed to complete the regatta. Robert Knight is in third with eight
points,
Joseph
Riddle
in fourth
with nine.

Jim
Weinert
was
a frosh-soph
winner in the mile run with a 4:46.,;
breaking the old record of 4:49.4
by Dave Hatcher of New Trier in
1958. Ed Gamson tied for first with
six others at five feet, six inches

relay

team of Jim Murtfeldt, Sweeney,
Gamson and Rodman placed third.

Cheerleaders Work Out At Highland Park High School )
ee

Joe

Ostrander,

from

sophomore

base-

ball coach at the High School, and
Fred
Cronkhite
of
Elm
Place
School will teach the school. Application blanks may be obtained at
the Recreation Center. There is a

small fee.

Thursday,

Susan Steinberg, captain, gives the signal and four cheerleaders from the 1959-60 squad go
into action. Left to right, Stephanie Rudo, Patty Ugolini, Judy Peterson and Vera Morandi, two
sophomores and two varsity squad members.
Ends

BANK
NTEREST
June

4,

1959.

2nd

Don
Avery
Ave.
has

Season

Jones,
C.
and

just

In

son

Jones

of
of

a junior

Track

Mr.
1655

and

Mrs.

Eastwood

at Beloit College,

completed

his

second

sea-

son as a member of the Beloit track
team.
mile.

ce

Entries

in the

three

classes,

ac-

cording to cubic inches, are as follows:
A
Class,
up
to 5.8) cubie
inches; B Class, 5.81 to 11.6, and C
Class, 11.61 to 16.5.

60 Golfers Turn
Out For Two-Day
Sunset Valley Event
More than 60 members of Sunset
Valley Tee Club took part in the
Memorial
Day
Flag
Tournament,
won by Joe B. Hurst of Elmwood.
His net of 68 placed his flag at the

forwarded

Field,

and will

be held twice a week there from
now on.
Many of the 100 Chicago Kart
Club
members
have
entered
the
races at Santa Fe Park, which started a month ago. Strange races his
Kart
there
every
Friday
when
“Karts” are featured.

Sim Bows,

1271

Ridge-

and 18th fairways.
Winners of the other two flights
were
Frank
Sordyl,
Recreation
Center employee, who outdistanced
Ted Pyren of 1155 St. Johns Ave.,
to
collect
took
first
place
in
Flight B.
J. F. Sachs, 984 Ridgewood Dr.,
was runnerup to H. Bembo of Barberry Ln., in C flight.
The Memorial Day event is one
of a dozen tourneys set for Sunset
Valley course this summer,
Members
will play to outscore
national champions on their home
course Saturday, in celebration of
National Golf Day. Scores will be

For Boys 11-15
Athletic

for

17

Rec Center Plans
Baseball School

School

held

trouble. Flags were left all over the

The varsity team had an exceptionally successful season, as they
won six meets in league play and
lost only one, that to Waukegan.
They won the district meet and the
Suburban League meet (the league
championship is determined on the
basis
of
dual
meet
scores
and
scores in the league meet), are the
state champs.

June 15 to July 31. The school will
be for boys 11 to 15 on Mondays,
Wednesdays and Fridays from 1 to
3 p.m.

out

called,

Strange was able to get his twocycle engine, normally raced at a
speed of 50 to 55 miles per hour,
up to 80 on the straight-away. High
speed
is possible
on
the
larger
track. Built a few inches off the
ground, the four-wheelers are not
likely
to turn
over.
Sports
car
handling in the steering wheel increases the safety, Strange said.
Racing
at O’Hare
Stadium
on
Mannheim
Rd., Strange
came
in
first on Saturday and Sunday. The
kart races were run after the fea-

19th green.

Medalist

The
Highland
Park
Recreation
Department will register boys for
a baseball school, to be held at the

are

wood Dr., was second with a drive
off the 19th tee. In contrast to last
year’s tournament, played in balmy
weather,
which
saw
the
winner
reach the 21st fairway, Saturday’s
rain-soaked
course
restricted
distances,
causing
long ball
hitters.
and high average golfers plenty of

In varsity play, Joel Hirsch was
medalist for the Parkers with a 75
while Joe Hurst shot an 81 to top
the frosh-soph. Ricky Ascher had a
chance to overtake Hirsch, but his
match was rained out with three
holes to play.

High

as they

ture and stock car events,

postponed its first race of the Memorial Day Regatta Saturday because of rainy weather. The race
is set for 2 p.m. Sunday. The club

3434; Niles, 25; Highland Park 2114.

races,”

in this area.

Northmoor Country Club is staging a tennis exhibition Saturday at
1:30 p.m, featuring Frank Parker,
former national singles champion
(Continued on page 44)

and Jeff Rubenstien tied for third,
fourth and fifth in the High Jump.
Dan Pollack, second in the discus
throw, John Farr, third in the mile
run.
Frosh-soph
scores were:
Evanston, 55144, Morton, 38, New Trier,

high

“Kart

At Northmoor Club

Palandri took a varsity second in
the shot put with a toss of 55 feet,
1014 inches in the state track meet
at Champaign.
Mike Walton was second in the

in the

50.

Golden Here Saturday

Morton, third with 3914.
Frank Palandri was the Parkers’
only winner, taking the shot put

a

of

Frank Parker Plays

Proviso East, second with 4914 and

with

in a field

ran

He

runs

the

mile

and

two-

Names of 1959-60 cheerleaders, as
announced by Miss Joan Harvey,
faculty sponsor, and girls’ physical
education teacher, are as follows:

ry Baum,

Varsity
squad:
Carol Katzman,
Colleen Kelly, Vera Morandi, Patty
Ugolini,
Lillian
Vanoni,
Susan
Wolff, seniors, and Annabet Hall

leadership,

and Susan
On
Hope

Steinberg,

Cheerleaders
and

juniors.

1771 Second St.

Martin,

A

Pe-

Stephanie

are rated

character,

loyalty.

Judy

Siegel,
Watrous.

on

skill,

personality

cheerleader

must

maintain a C average with no E’s
by six weeks or semesters and no
D’s
by
semesters.
Mrs.
Shirlee
Changnon is chairman of the girls’
education department.

the
sophomore
squad
are
Binner, Lynn Schecter, Sher-

BANKSY

Marna

terson,
Susan
Rudo and Alice

“The Service Bank Of Highland Park”

Member

Dow
and

champion
hole

to Omaha,

Neb.,

medal

Tennis

will take
play

part

Teams

IDiewood 2—7800

Deposit

Insurance

Corporation

Are

Led by tennis coach George Jennings, 845 Green
Bay Rd., Lake
Forest College teams played an undefeated season this year, winning
eight matches in a row.
It is Jennings’ first season at the
college.

PARK

Federal

18-

Undefeated At LFC

BANK—POST

BLDG.

in an

match.

HIGHLAND
OFFICE

where

Finsterwald, PGA
champion,
Tommy
Bolt,
USGA
open

Page

41

�ag

&gt;
;

W

/
i
;
j

These are mighty good ones — just typical

tov

Eaoy Qmmtr

Neutte

:

Jewel Tea Bags

ge ADs

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ome bake

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f

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Cub Pack 150

DEERFIELD BOYS BASEBALL
‘Seg

By Joseph
\,

F. Peyronnin

AAAAAAAAAN 01

Well, we defied the weather man and had our official open-

ing last Sunday—luck was with us—no rain.

|

Mr. and Mrs. Charles Healy, Cub
Master

i BRAD
ey
erst

Honors The Healys

it,

missed

vy who

marched

to Jewett

over

where

Park

Mitchell, president of the Park Board.

Mitchell gave a short snappy
ae ad
he few words to the boys welcoming
them to the parks. We then had a
s group picture of everyone taken on
Cif the Little League diamond, this
included

picture

Pis ; board

of

the

the

executive

Women’s

Auxiliary,

School

Grammar

Deerfield

at

met

we

For those of you

we

were

met

by

and

James

The flag was raised and

Deerfield
Manor News
By

August

Rodaniche

and

spectively,

Head

of

Den

Cub

Pack

Mother

150

and

their

pink

carnation

Eight telephone
northern
munities

Den

telephone

Mothers

award

for two years’

service. It was pointed out she had
completed basic training in many
other courses, served as an instructor as well as Chief Den Mother.
The
award
was
presented
by
“Chuck” Healy Jr.
Cub Master Charles Healy was
presented with a Scholar’s Award,
a gold arrow on the Scout’s em-

corsages.

aM h

Young

People

Canada.

exchanges

parts

presented special awards at a recent Pack Meeting.
Mrs. Clarice Healy received the

The many days of rain last week blem, for three years’ service as
kept Chief Walter Gerbert and his Cub Master of Pack 150. The award
athied
Owens,
representing
the
men of the Vernon Township Fire was presented by his oldest son.
_ Village government, threw out the
In addition to this award, Cub
Dept. from burning the weeds on
first ball. Then play began offiAsh St. as planned this past Sun- Master Healy was also the recipient
4 cially.
day. The chief however did have of the Trail Blazer award, one of
The
Women’s
Auxiliary,
under
i*
the highest honors that can be besome good news for all residents
|i the direction of their new advisory of the Manor and the area in and stowed in Cub Scouting. In attendpoard consisting of Sally Robinette, around Deerfield. He stated that a ance for this presentation were
ife:t “Barb” Keppler and “Sis’ Mc- cordial invitation is given to all to William Lankton, district commis-Guire, has developed a real solid
and
William
Trowbridge,
attend the big display of the vari- sioner
a Didednization this year. This organ- ous fire departments of Lake Coun- neighborhood commissioner.
ization is set up parallel to the
It was
pointed
out
that
Mr.
ty to be held Saturday, June 6 at
_ Association officers with an execuin addition to being Cub
Mundelein. The affair will be high- Healy,
tive
board consisting of Barbara
Master had received advance trainlighted by displays of the various
: Rentschler, president; Ruth Hen- types of new fire equipment now in ing, had served as an instructor and
| derson, Prep; Helen Holzmacher,
use for city as well as rural areas rendered many voluntary additionPONY;
Martha
Hamilton,
Major;
al services to Scouting.
and also a grand dress parade.
Moseley,
Intermediate;
” Eleanor
Cub Master Healy stated that he
The
president,
Earl
Simpson,
1 Nancy Le Bolt, Minor; Ann Yorwho was on hand to greet the chief, was pleased to accept the award on
don, finance; Grace Carlson, dance;
behalf of the Den Mothers and his
and his helpers, stated even though
Marge Emery, benefit; and again the proposed burning could not be committee.
r Barbara Rentschler, ordering food. a part of the spree party, it was
_ The team mothers are:
gratifying to find only FIVE ditchFor the PONY
League
Varner
es that are not in shape for inspec(Giants), Maundrell (Tigers), Wei- tion which will take place between
(Continued from page 17)
Ke -nert
(Braves),
and
Camp
(Red now and the 15th of the month.
oo
was a finalist in the high school
Legs); for the Major League VilleThe co-chairman of the BAR-B-Q
ef
rie
state finals while
at HPHS
and
man (White Sox), Ettinger (Yank- for
the
playground
fund,
which
_ ees),
Schlenker
(Pirates),
Ohman
will be held on June 20 has an- placed third at that event.
Richard E. Strand, Don’s brother,
- (Dodgers), Mandler (Orioles), Carl- nounced that a presurvey shows
is a senior
at Northern
[Illinois
3&lt;a] son (Indians), Benedict (Cubs), and that the donations
and
contribuy Fremling
(Cardinals); for the In- tions, will be far greater than last State University at DeKalb where
he is majoring in education.
termediate League they are: Hous- year.
*
*
*
ton
(White Sox),
Bell
(Dodgers),
The various motor clubs in areas
Dorinda
Bolton,
daughter
of Mr.
- Wade
(Giants),
Field
(Orioles), outside of Cook County have again
Blass (Yankees), Schultz (Cards), requested us as an Association, and and Mrs. George W. Bolton, 1405
‘Kiebzak (Athletics), Smith (Cubs), to pass the word on to all in our Valley Rd., Bannockburn, a freshat
Denison
University
at
David (Indians) and Neal (Pirates). areas, that we should once again man
Granville,
Ohio,
recently
particAs I do not know all of the first take time
out to write our lawg names I used none—but I assure makers at Springfield to vote ipated in the spring performance
- you that all of the team mothers against the motorist gasoline tax of the Modern Dance Club at Denia are Mrs. so if you address them as as a means of subsidizing the CTA son.
*
*
*
Mey /- such when you call to offer your of Chicago. Our representatives in
William
Darling,
son
of Mr. and
BY ‘assistance they can tell you the Lake County are Robert Coulson,
Mrs. Warren Darling of 925 Hemoa given name.
W. J. Murphy and Jack Bairstow,
We
have
been having
a little and of course ‘Senator Robert Mc- lock St., was home from Southern
ee
- trouble (2 inches of water at third Clory. The address for all of the Illinois University for the weekend.
*
*
*
base in Wilmot Park) so have had above, State Capitol, Springfield,
Richard
H.
Thompson
III, son of
to
postpone
several
games.
This Tl.
Mr. and Mrs. Thompson Jr. of 1560
matter was called to the attention
4
Mrs.
Kelly
Amedio,
leader
of
of the Park Board Saturday night. Girl Scout Troop 197, reports that Robin Rd., Bannockburn, will reSunday morning at 11 a.m., for dif- the last meeting for the season will ceive his Bachelor of Arts degree
ferent reasons Warren Flint and I be held Saturday, June 6. At this on Monday, June 8 at the 258th
went to Jewett Park and by chance time the various tours and plans commencement exercises of Yale
Conn.
we
saw Jim Mitchell, Dud Dewey for the summer will be announced. University at* New * Haven,
*
Fea”
i
|
and Chuck Smith. These men were
Mr. and Mrs. William D. George
so interested that they met over
of 853 Westcliff Ln. will be in the
4 at Wilmot that morning to survey
East next week
when
their son,
the
situation
and
resolve
action.
William,
is graduated
from
the
Monday the park board employees
Harvard Graduate School of BusiTroop
52
began corrective action.
ness.
“Bill” received
his B.S. at
David Lager, Scribe
Games reported during the week
at Greencastle, Ind. and
The
meeting
opened
with
the DePauw
are as follows with scores by inncolor guard consisting of Mike Kra- served in the intelligence departings:
mer, Tom Moore, Jim Schultz and ment of the U.S. Army for two
MAJOR
LEAGUE
ap
Runs Hits Charles Fahreholz. After that we years. He has accepted a position
|
Orioles
a4
worked on advancement and played with General Mills in Minneapolis,
White Sox
O46
2 base hit Pointdexter (2), McGuire.
a game. The meeting was closed Minn,

a

Deerfield Can Dial
Eight Additional
Exchanges Now

re-

were

50,000,000 phones in the U. S. and —

of

Lake

in the
County

GLENCOE!

have been added to the list of comwhich

directly,
Laures

and

Deerfield
can

T.

THEATRE—GLENCOE

numbers

to telephones

exchanges;

Fox

Lake

) CinemaScope

(JU stice 7), Grays Lake (BA ldwin
3), Lake Villa (EL liot 6), Lake
Zurich (GE neral 8), Round Lake
(KI mball 6), Wauconda (JA ckson

6),

Zion

(ME

Tr

reury

inity

2)

and

“COMPULSION”

Cary

Dean

9).

the

dial

and

system

improvement

here

is going

constantly,”
Laures
said.
dialing of long distances

very popular

among

SAT., JUNE

"Courage

‘Direct
calls is

“South

cartoons.

Bring a Picnic
$3.50 TICKET INCLUDES
ADMITTANCE — ALL RIDES — AND SHOWS
June

16th

CUT OUT AND MAIL TO
MRS. T. H. LOEB
401 Woodland, Highland

Park,

Please send............ tickets at $3.50
Enclosed

[] Check

[] Money

FS

dnp

_

Griftner

and

om

a)
com

4
2

NN

§
0

Peyronnin.

7
_ Dodgers
Pirates
| eae |
2.
base hits Sharp, Seketa, McKillip;
home run, Sharp; Umps, Folger-Brin.

mR

INTERMEDIATE
i:

PAX
aN Hin

oes
ie:

Cards
Dodgers

LEAGUE
Runs
19

2 Gane hits Schrader (2), Wickstrom;

base hit Schrader.
Pirates
9.
Cards
14
2 base hit J. Olson, Owens, Schrader
(2), Bob Anderson; home run, Mali-

Page

44

with the scoutmaster benediction.
On the weekend of May 22, 23,
24, Camporee
was held at Camp
Crown at Wilmot, Wis. We went out
Friday night and put up camp, Saturday
we
improved
camp
and
worked
on advancement,
Sunday
morning we broke camp and went
home,

44

zio.; Ump, John Koss.
Yankees
ae
White Sox
9G
Two base hit Roach; home run, Danielson.
18 AG |
Indians
18
Orioles
2 base hits Schramm, Dan Walker,
C. Lee, M. Rollheiser, D. Fields;
3 base hit, C. Lee, C. Bole. Ump.
John Koss,
Giants
ey
Pirates
62
No extra base hit; Ump. Kaczmarek.

Lutheran Bible School
To Be Held June 15-26

Enjoy a FREE
After

Church, 10 Deerfield Road, from
9 to 11:45 a.m., June 15 through
26.

A

pre-registration

be

given

on

‘‘tea”

Saturday

Dinner

will

afternoon,

June 6, at 2 o’clock. Parents in
the community are invited to bring

Drink!

Choose your favorite

cocktail at Patterson’s.
It’s served free with
any dinner from 5 p.m.
African Lobster Tail ........ $1.50
BQ

Chicken—Fried

or

aera d okra

i ale

....

Prime

i ibbsmcdae bcs ees
2.2..0328.520
ss 5
...................-

Private

PAT

Dining

1.50

ci

1.75

Filet Mignon ............-.---- 2.00
PHONE

LUNCHEONS
pee!
Leet’
Pork

Stash.

U.S. Choice Sirloin ..........

ay oe

All Fish Dinners ...........--- 1.25

Roast
Meat:
Roast

Ribs of Beef ......-- $1.25

T.Bone

1.25

Ln

ORDER

DELIVERED

c
715¢

Prime Ribs of Beef ........ $1.25

Daily Vacation Bible School for
all children from ages 5 through
13 will be held at Zion Lutheran

Order

eck ere cen atettenqahpebynbnustahhenptee

acl ees

ieee

Pidhveeg ei

aS

called

each.

Pleesrn@ bik cpliaclininc cisGinidhsn Dare cicic swish ap tubiensonetencennendgnetnntoserhentmtan

EE TEE,

Burnett;

Pacific”

with added attractions—plus

RIVERVIEW RAMBLE

ok

and

of Black Beauty”

Coming JUNE 25th:

Laures
pointed
out that direct
distance dialing by telephone users
is a feature now available to about
10,000,000
tele phone
customers
throughout the nation. These customers can dial directly to about

a3 nee

Bolster

darkness.

1 SHOW

plus Cartoons &amp; Comedy

our customers

aaa

Umps.

- Dodgers
‘we ‘ Cubs
_ No extra base hits reported; umpires
Bs
not reported.
ee Pirates
_ Cards
4 - 2 base hit Rohan,
R. Miller, Em5m ' mons
and Brandt; Umps Brin and
Knackstedt.
Indians
White Sox
ey
2
base hits, Moore, Keppler; Umps

6 —

2:00 P.M. Only

on

DEERFIELD
BOY SCOUT NEWS

oh -

Dillman

CHILDREN’S MATINEE—

of

here and in the years ahead more
and more phones will be added to
the long distance dialing network.”

eS

Stockwell,

Bradford

and then the five figures.

“Expansion

Varsi,

Diane

Welles,

Orson

Calls from Deerfield telephones
customers to these exchanges formerly
were
handled
by
long
distance operators. Now these calls
can be placed simply by dialing the
first two letters of the telephone

name

5-0605

VErnon

2-0605

ID

with WI nd-

telephone

dial directly

these

dial
E.

today.

customers

now

can

manager

announced

sor

two-party

here

telephone

Telephone

in

one

customers

Savings Bond.
if held to ma-

Hold on to your
You'll get $4 for $3
turity.

VE

Room

FREE

5-1611

for Parties of 50

PATTERSON'S

STEAK 4X HOUSE

their children for this pre-registration.

Included

of the
ing,

school

crafts,

in

the

curriculum

will be Bible

music,

and

For
further
information
Wayne R. Johnson, intern,
church

office,

WI

teach-

recreation.

phone
of the

CUT RATE LIQUOR STORE
OPEN

7 DAYS A WEEK

INCLUDING

Edens, Skokie &amp; County Line Rd.

HOLIDAYS
VErnon

5-1611

5-2009.
Thursday,

June

4, 1959

a

gs

hs

�hy

Rees

cn

pw

eae

ea

Choice Tickets
Man”

Highland Park High School Lists Graduates For Year 1959 q

for:

“Garden

District’’

“South Seas Adventures”
“Diary of Anne Frank”
Cubs

(Continued

&amp; Sox Games

And ALL Sports and
Stage Attractions

EVANSTON
TICKET SERVICE
NORTH SHORE HOTEL
DAvis 8-8282

New!

Fried Oysters!

9—12:30;
thru Sat.

Mon.

1:30—6 p.m.

Closed Sundays

at Muzik’s

ZESTO

ICE SKATING
OPEN

HIGHWOOD
ID 2-9718

YEAR

AROUND
Register

Last

Times

“GREEN
Thurs.,

Tonight!

Classes Now Forming

MANSIONS”

June 4th at 7:00
Air-Conditioned

Hubbard Woods
Ice Skating Studio

- 9:30

915 Linden Ave.—Winnetka, Ill.
Call Miss Thomas—HI 6-41 23

FREE
ATO ovine
FRIDAY,

JUNE

tear

4Y

Deborah KERR

(7

T stockCAR RACES
SUNDAY "NITE

5th

y

rosin

g

CINEMASCOPE

T

METRO COLOR

aler

sy .\ 04 |

HILDREN’S MATINEE
Sat., June 6th at 1:30 &amp; 3:20 p.m.
Full-

i

a

West

Washington:

Green
MA

Bay

Karnival

JUNE

: F511)

|

Cook,

Hwy.

Free. Parking

D.

Craig,

Charles

—

Children

EVENT

Installing . . . Latest in Hi-Fi

Barry

Stephen

Golden,

Greta

DON’T LOSE YOUR
DIAMONDS

THIS

25c *

WEEK

Centennial Belles Race
Amateur Women Drivers

Your Rings and
We Check Them

Jewelry
FREE.

In.

1. H. NEMEROFF
JEWELERS - OPTICIANS
Highland Park
Tel. IDlewood 2-0630
Across from bank over 35 vears.
We do our own diamond setting.
Have your diamonds set in modern settings. Payments arranged.

MIKI

III

II HEISEI

MUSIC

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

Lake-Cook Road

OPENING
thru

and

5 thru
ONE

A

—
——On

Our

THURSDAY,

JUNE

June

w\tw\.

June

23

Wide

SCHEDULE

27-Aug.

9

“MOST HAPPY
FELLA
Star

—

to be

announued

Aug.

10-Aug.

June

26—"TOM

Thursday,

June

THUMB”

4,

1959

Thom-

Troop

Holds Picnic

ities was held recently by Troop 33,

Kathie

Callen,

Linda

Cervetti, Jill

Hocking, Patty Massa, Cheryl Mae
Mordini, Cheryl Nustra, Maria Ruffolo, Vici Scornavacco, Julie Shelton and Jane Tamarri.

SII IAEA IAAAAAAK

Park Ave?
Bay—Highland

OPENING

JUNE

thru

June

Park

19

28

A | @) “i
ae
BROWN
» HARVEY

BELLS ARE
RINGING |

showing 2 to 4)

begins at 7:24 and 9:31
2:00 - 4:00 - 6:00 - 8:00

Chicago

10:00
Exhibit In Our
Lobby by

Charles

Snyder

tt

.

Aug.

to tk ttn
6

JULIE WILSON
BABES

in ARMS

a

oe

ee eR

JILL COREY

;

III

July

27-Aug,

I ote
2

Louis Armstrong
and

‘his Concert Group

“(Sold

out July.27-&amp;

.

28)

kkekkkkkkkkkkkkkk
Aug. 17-Aug. 30:

Joan Fontaine

eo

HILARY
.
Pre-Broadway

Run

KKKKKKKKKKKKKKK

WS

oe

oner
OQ

New York HitaPlays
“to

SER OU

GIGI

{OSI

GREAT STARS

I City
SUN

YESTERDAY

and

Name
y Address
SRG

19

KEKKKKKKKKKKKKKK
July 20-July 26

Please send me
coupon books at
$18 each book.
Enclosed please find
iy Cheek: FOreS.hs wa, pene

iY

6-July.

PEGGY CASS
BORN

for $18

(are)

Premiere
24-Sept.

July

_

awe

eRe RIN

MI

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nk

Mine me

me

MY

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MCT

|

Highwood, in Memorial Park. Mrs.
Irving Massa is leader of the troop.
Mothers and other family mem-.
bers of Brownies were guests for
the picnic fare and softball game
which followed the feast.
Members of the troop are: Rosemary Albert, Nancy Bauden, Bon- —
nie
Buck,
Angie
D’Astici,
Paula
Caldarelli, Beverly Cassai, Francigene
Fortunato,
Lyn
Barnabei,
Jeanne
Digani,
Sharon
Domenco,

Skokie and Green

Pail hag:
ghland Park

23

Star to be announced

BRAVO”

Brownie

West
bet,

MUSIC “Theatre

SOI
II
I

at 7:24 and 9:31

and

19—’RIO

Wilde

A picnic celebrating the close of
a successful year of Brownie activ-

III AI IIA ASAI

Exchangeable
for top price seats at
either theatre Sun. thru Fri. 50c additional on Saturday nights.
May be used individually or in groups.
Offer expires June 15
All seats
reserved
at both
theatres.
Admission books available
at Bank of Highland
Park
Phones: ID 2-1160; VE 5-4040

I

July

Weekdays—’’The Mating Game” begins
(Saturday Matinee one
Saturday Evening—‘‘The Mating Game”
Sunday—"'The Mating Game” begins at

June

Charles

TENTHOUSE THEATRE

6 Admissions

Vivian Blaine
PAJAMA GAME
ISIS

TEMPEST”

Thompson,

—

FOR CHOICE SEATS
REGULAR BOX OFFICE PRICES
Sun.-Fri., $3.50, 2.90, 2.40, 1.90
Sat. Eve., $3.90, 3.40, 2.90, 2.40
Save on Pre-Season Books

KkKKKKkkKkkKkKKkKk
July 13-July 26

Screen——

Metrocolor

12—"THE

Lynda

%

‘i

—

son, Carolyn
Mary
Thorsen, Charles
Dechant
Trexler,
Stuart
Charles
Unger
Jr.
Linda B. Vanoni, Arthur Venturi, Gordo
E. Vines, John Edward Visoky.
William
John
Wachholder,
Terry
L.
Walker, Gail Annette Walsh, Rosalie Ann
Ward, Steve Ware, Lionel Albert Watson,
Linda Weil, Ronald Charles Weiland, Fred
Kipp Weinert.
Caryl Ann Weintraub, Karen Weis, Kathreen Ann Weisel, Richard I. Weiss, Allen
James Weitzenfeld, Sondra Lee Wells, Kir- —
sten Werrenrath, Nancy Jean Wertheimer, © id
Susan Wilson.
Emily
Martha
Winter,
Margretta
Ann
Winters, Judith Ann Winthrop, John Wolens, Allen Edwin Wolf, Henry C. Wolff,
Nancy Kendall Wolff.
Donald Earl Wurm,
Barbara Lin York,
Edmund Arthur Young, Roger Alan Zanarini, Samuel Zell, Jeffrey O’Toole Zellmer,
Karen Ann Zuiker, Carolyn Irene Zuppann. | a

Mail Orders Now!

42

Paint. Your Wagon

—

WEEK

29-July

John Carradine

11

Starring—Debbie Reynolds, Tony Randall, Paul Douglas
From the novel “The Darling Buds of May” by H. E. Bates

June

16.

IIIS

house, Valorie S. Rossman, Julie Ann Rubel,
Jeffrey
Carl
Rubenstein,
Rubin, Ron Allen Sackheim, John J. Salasin, Eugene G. Sandler.
William Allen Sangerman, Robert Dominic Sassorossi, Hermia Saverslak, Melinda.
Saverslak, Suzanne C. Schechter, Geri Judith Schinder, Peter Joseph Schlenker, Dale:
A. Schmidt, Susan Olivia Schnadig, Mary
E. Schroeder.
Jeril Lynn Schwab,
Margaret Ann
Schwalbach, John Alexander Scornavacco, Stephen Lawrence Seiler, Sue Carole Severson,
Anne Tweed Seyfarth, Dennis Earl Sharna,,.
Michael Stephen Shaw, Flora Jeanne Shriver, Elliot H. Siegel.
Walter Allan Sleeman, David Scott Slo-—
vic, Gerald W. Smith, Richard W, Smith,
Robert
Eugene
Smith,
Robert
J. Smith,
Dale
Fidel Snavely,
Richard
Evan
Souders,
Elizabeth
Ann
Spertus,
June
Allene
Spivey.
Mary Elizabeth Stearns, Sandra Ann Stevens,
Sally
Wynne
Stillson, Margaret
R.
Struve, Richard I. Stone, Marla Ann Tarrson, Steven Andrew Tatar, John Anton Tazioli, Sharon Ann Terrill, Julia Starr Thomas.

POLICY

Panoramic

—

Park

SHOWBOAT

“THE MATING GAME”
in

IAI

JONES

Open Daily 6:40 to 12 Midnight—Curtain at 7:00
Sunday Continuous 2 to 12 Midnight—Doors Open 1:40

JUNE

IIIA

Edens—Highland:

JUNE

\y DEERPAT
THEATRE

III IAAI

Theatre

bet. Skokie

North Shore’s Most Beautiful Theatre
Lake Forest, Illinois —L. F. 2106 of 4744

FRIDAY,

D.

Lee
Goldt,
Richard
Jeffery
Goldwach,
Sheila Benita Gomberg,
Berna C. Gorenstein,
Ines-Alexandra
Gottschalk,
Carol
Gloria Gould, Sandra Eileen Grabell.
Roberta Gray,
Howard
Greenberg,
Antone Gualandri Jr., Mary Alice Gustafson,
Susan Gail Hadden, Barbara Sherry Hammerman, Denny Wiley Hampton, Star Lee
Hanck, Geoffrey C. Hanson, Darlene Lee
Hart, Mavor Richard Hedberg.
Barbara
Louise
Heinz,
Michael
Brown
Helding,
Herman
Douglas
Henkle,
Carol
Ann
Henley,
Jill
Henner,
Joel
Stephen

Bring
- °

Plus

STEREOPHONIC
SOUND

pe
ie

George

between

Skokie

Brothers of the
Brush Week

12th

“IMITATION OF LIFE”
Now

-

$1.25.

ADDED

St.

Rd. &amp;

3-9540

Adults

FRIDAY,

ee

WAUKEGAN
SPEEDWAY.

f-length color cartoon

Plus a Kartoon

Hirsch,
Susan Hirsh, Janet Elaine Hitchcock,
Joel
Irwin Hochberger,
Janis
Lou
Hokin, Allen G. Holder, William Gordon
Holland.
David A. Homeyer, Judith Susan Horwitz,
Ann
Elizabeth
Houghtaling,
Phyllis
Jean
Huffman,
Walter
Edward
Hurley,
Ellen
Elizabeth
Hussong,
Frankee
Dee
Hutler,
Edward Allan Imhoff, Leslie Ingham, Mary
Dee Isador.
Cynthia N. Jacob, Sharon Elizabeth Jaeger,
Martha
Lutcette
Jahn,
Faith
Elinor
Johnson,
James
Leonard
Johnson,
Jeanne
Marie
Johnson,
Penny
Johnson,
Mardith
Tauren Jones, Susan Joseph, Alan Joseph
Joyce.
Rebecca Kahn, Thomas Edward Kilfoyle,
JoAnn Kinzelberg,
Geraldine Louise Kinzle, David Carl Klein, Liselotte H. Klein,
Barbara
Eve Klevs,
Leland
A. Klinetop,
Donald Ralph
Klos, Kenneth
Knackstadt.
Martha Ann Koeber, Myron Terry Koenig, Maxine
Carole
Koenigsberg,
William
Walter Kohlberg, Jacqueline Margaret Koss,
Judith Frances Kraft, Kay Marlowe Kraft,
George Dennis Kramer, Frederick J. Krase.
Roger
H.
Kritz, William
Frank
Kulp,
Jeanne Kurtzon,
Barbara
Kushen,
Karen
Sandra Kwant, Anthony L. Lamanna, Martha A. Lansman,
Karen
Mardell
Larson,
Dean Howard Lausche.
Barbara
Ann
Ledlie,
Kenneth
L. Lelli,
Marcella Ann Lencioni, Pamela Jean Lenzi,
Louis Robert Lenzini, Nancy Marie Lenzini,
Christine Elaine Leuer.
Jo Ann Levin, Roger Paul Levin, Jeffrey Emmet
Levinger,
Howard
B.
Levy,
Peter John Levy, Michael E. Lewis, Constance M. Linari, Stanley L. Lind Jr., Carol
Ann Lipman, James Edward Lipman.
Cynthia Marion Listek, Linda Jane Littenberg,
Walter
U. London,
Sandra
Ann
Looney, Lawrence Anthony Lucenti, Sheila
Sue Lynch, Norman E, Macht, Joseph Will
James Magnani.
Patricia
Tommie
Manahan,
Frederick
Lewis Mann,
Allan Wayne
March, Allan
G. Marcus, LeRoy R. Marinell, Mary Lou
Marko,
Judson B. Marshall,
Lesley
Ann
Marshall, Gertrude Ann Martineau.
William
Halsted
Massover,
Susan
Putman
Maxwell,
Vincent
Anthony
Merrick,
James
H. Mayer,
William
Forsythe
McComb, Melinda Lou McMullen, David EIliott Meyer.
Patricia
Ellen
Meyer,
Ronald
Everett
Meyers, Nancy Jo Michaels, Penny Lee Michaels, Jacqueline Vita Migdal, George LeRoy Millen Jr., Wendell Lee Moran, Alfred Moser.
Don Eligio Natta, Robert Ellis Neiman,
Sandra
Lynne
Newbrough,
John
Michael
Newmann,
Robert Michael Newton,
Carol
Evelyn
Nye,
Janice
Dorothy
O’Connor,
Kathryn Anne O’Neal, Rose Onesti.
Gail Sydney
Oppenheim,
Harry Darwin
Oppenheimer II, David Reay Palmer, Susan Elizabeth Parker, Norman Joseph Pattarozzi, Michael Steven Peck, Sandralee M.
Pedrucci, William
J. Penninga, John Joseeph Peradotti, Barbara Joan Petersen.
Patricia
Jeanne
Peterson,
Judith
Aline
Pettingell, James Michael Phelan, Barbara
Sue Phillips, Diane Phillips, Fred L. Phillips, Robert J. Piacenza, Betty Rose Powers,
James S. Prill, Charles Puckett.
Rick L. Pullin, Thomas
Robert Pulver,
Betty Ann Quinn, Barbara Sue Rady, Patricia
Dorothy
Rau,
Judith Anne
Reeb,
John J. Reid.
Ann Gardner Reinach, Michael D. Resnick, John Myer Richards, David E. Ritter,
Randolph A. Rizzo, Richard F. Roach Jr.,
John
Michael
Robbins,
Rosemary
Rodenli
Carol Frances
Root,
Mary
Dollar
ose.

Cretors.
William H. Dever, Marcia Dicus, Donald
Rowland
Drescher,
Leroy
Herman
Drew, Tom Charles Drewes, H. Frederick
Driscoll Jr., Jennifer Kay Dubach, Theodore
Eaton,
Russell
Thomas
Ekelmann,
Eric
Jon
Engberg,
Marla
Lee Ettington,
Lynn Ewing, Elizabeth Gene Eyles.
Phoebe
Fabricant,
John
Edward
Farr,
Marianne
Fell,
Jeffrey
Osborn
Ferguson,
Karen Kay Ferrel, James E. Fields, Mace
J. Fink,
Susan
Merle
Firestone,
William
Fleming, Nancy Ann Fortunato, Gail Elaine

Gmeiner,

in M-G-M's *

Z,

3)

Margot
Ann
Frank,
James
Alexander
Frederick, Ralph A. Freund, Lois Frances
Gamson,
Barbara
Adele
Gans,
Janann
Southerton
Gardner,
Michael
R. Garrity,
Donna Jean Gherardini, John Wood
Gibre
John David Gidwitz, Alexandra Gilen.
Bonnie
S.
Glazier,
Martin
Leonard

—Rossano BRAZZI
Maurice CHEVALIER
|

page

Fox.

tld CERTRAL- UN 44909

3

Carol

Now!

BSy

from

Karen
Elaine Benvenuti,
Michael
Elliot
Berk, Henry Michael Bernard III, Samuel
James Bernardi Jr., Howard
B. Bernstein,
Richard Purvin
Bernstein, Frank Bertogli,
Assunta
N. Bertucci,
Geraldine
Ann
Berube, Ameriga Bianchi, Nancy Mae Bilow,
Jean Ann Bischoff, Robert B. Bittner.
Pearl
M.
Bloom,
Ann _ Louise | Bock,
Laura Jane Bollenbacher, Lana Anne Borin,
William Thomas
Bresnehan,
Judith Lynne
Browar,
Carole
Rita
Brown,
Janet
Ann
Bruce, William Edward Bruce, Norma Jean
Brugioni, David Earl Bye, Josephine S Bye.
Lynette
Peard
Carey,
Nancy
Forsythe
Carey,
Richard Allen Carr, Dolores Ann
Casorio, William E. Casselman
II, Enzo
Castelli, Karen Marie Cheli, Giselle Chesrow, Anita Leone Chizewer, Rosemary Cholewa.
Nancy
Christensen,
Thomas
Edward
Clarkson,
Michael
Richard
Clement, Stephen M. Cohen, Mary Beth Cohn, Jeanne
Patricia Condon, David M. Conley, Sharon
Mae
Conn,
David Allan Connolly,
Mary

Cees eoSsetesessesesesS|

“Music

Bey

Announced
Page

45

�Pa IV

hafta

rr

Christian Science Building Is Completed
Deenfi ol, d

eee

Cheeks

HOLY

CROSS CATHOLIC
CHURCH
| hand” will be read, including this passage:
North Waukegan Road
“And looking round about upon them all,
Rey. John O’Mara, Pastor
he said unto the man, “Stretch forth thy
Rev. Edward Reilly, Assistant
hand.
And he did so: and his hand was
Rectory, 724 Elder Lane
restored whole as the other.’’ (Luke 6:10).
Windsor 5-0430
Correlative selections read from “Science
and Health with Key to the Scriptures” by
Sunday Masses: 7, 8, 9, 10, 11:15 and
Mary Baker Eddy will include (313:23-26):
12015
“Jesus of Nazareth was the most scientific
Weekday Masses at 6:45 a.m. and 8:15 a.m.
First Friday of each month, Masses at man that ever trod the globe. He plunged
beneath
the material surface of things, and
6:45 and 8:15 a.m.
found the spiritual cause.”
Saturday: 4 p.m. and 7:30 p.m. ConfesThe Golden Text is from Revelation (15:
sions.
3): “Great and marvellous are thy works,
Lord God Almighty; just and true are thy
FIRST PRESBYTERIAN
CHURCH
ways, thou King of saints.”
824 Waukegan Road
Phone Windsor 5-0775
Rey, Paul J. Keller, Ph.D., Minister
NORTHBROOK
METHODIST
CHURCH
Meadowbrook Sehool
SUNDAY, June 7
Rev.
R.
W.
Thornburg,
Minister
9:30. a.m. Morning Worship.
9:30
am.
Church
school.
Nursery
for
For information call Windsor 5-4351.
children 1, 2 and 3 years. Kindergarten for SUNDAY
11.
a.m.
Church
School
and
Worship
children
4 and
5. Classes
for all other
grades through high school.
Service. Nursery for pre-school children.
9:30 a.m. Adult
Bible class under the
B’NAI TORAH
leadership
of Elder
Richard
Thompson—
Lincoln School
Tuxis room.
Highland Park
11 a.m. Morning Worship.
Sholom Singer, Rabbi
11 a.m. Church school. Same as above.
Joseph
Burns, Cantor
4 p.m. Youth Vesper Service.
7 p.m. Tuxis meeting—Tuxis room.
For information call Windsor 5-2243.
7 p.m. Jr. High Westminster Fellowship
meeting. All the 7th and 8th graders are
REDEEMER LUTHERAN CHURCH
1731 Deerfield Rd.
invited to attend—lower
west room.
MONDAY, June 8
Rec. 1817 Green Bay Road
Highland Park, Ml.
3:45 p.m. Girl Scout troop 90—lower west
room.
SUNDAY
9 a.m. Sunday School and Bible classes.
8 p.m. Adult Bible class under the leaderShip of Elder C. E. Piper—room 5.
10:15 a.m. Worship services.
TUESDAY, June 9
NORTH SHORE
3:45 p.m. Girl Scout troop 11—lower west
room.
UNITARIAN CHURCH
Rev. Russell R. Bletzer, Minister
7:30 p.m. Boy Scout troop 52—lower west
Ferry Hall Chapel
room,
Lake Forest
WEDNESDAY,
June 10
For Information Call WI 5-1972.
3:45 p.m. Girl Scout
troop
124—lower
west

room.

7:30 p.m. Tuxis
ary.
8 p.m. Chancel
ary.

choir

rehearsal—Sanctu-

choir

rehearsal—Sanctu-

ZION
LUTHERAN
CHURCH
10 Deerfield Road, Deerfield
Rev. Paul V. Berggren, Pastor
Wayne
R. Johnson, Intern
Telephone Windsor 5-2009
THURSDAY, June 4
p.m. Final instruction class for
school youth.
SATURDAY,
June 6
2 p.m, Daily Vacation Bible school
registration

fourth

high
pre-

QUAKERS
SOCIETY OF FRIENDS
Sylvia
Judson,
Clerk.
SUNDAY
9:45 a.m. Sunday School.
10 a.m. Friends meeting
in Deer Path
School Library in Lake Forest.
For information call Windsor 5-1774.
IMMUNITY BAPTIST CHURCH
1250 Waukegan Road
Rev. Robert Humrickhouse,
Pastor
Office Telephone:
WlIndsor 5-0708
We Preach Christ
Crucified, Risen and Coming Again
THURSDAY
7 p.m. All Church Visitation Program
SUNDAY
9:30 a.m. Sunday
School.
There
are
classes
of Bible study for all ages and
nursery care for babies.
10:45
a.m.
Morning
Worship
Service.
Nursery
facilities
are
provided
for
the
young,
6 p.m. Young Peoples Fellowship. Programs are provided by the youths themselves.
7 p.m. Evening Gospel Service.
WEDNESDAY
7:30 p.m. Mid-Week Prayer meeting and
Bible study.
8:30 p.m. Choir rehearsal.
and
Zion
Seniors
at Jewett
Park West.
Freelancers and Zion Juniors at Maplewood
School.
TUESDAY, June 9
7:30 p.m. Youth choir rehearsal.
8 p.m. Board of Trustees meeting.
WEDNESDAY, June 10
7:30 p.m. Boy Scout Troop 150.
8 p.m. Adult choir rehearsal.
THURSDAY,
June 11
8 p.m. Women’s
Guild meeting in the
church parlors.
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY
Maplewood School Auditorium
Clay Court, Deerfield
SUNDA Y—11 a.m. Services.

cared

for

during

Church

service,
SUNDAY
SCHOOL—9:30 a.m.
For phy up to 20 years of age.
WEDNESDAY EVENING MEETINGS —
8 p.m. Including testimonies of healing
through Christian Science.
are welcome to attend these services.
tit. further information
call WlIndsor 5-

SUNDAY,

WBKB-TV
Jun e:7

Fa 9:45 ie a.m.
‘rayer.

PROGRAM

“Perfect

Eyesight

Through

JUNE
7 SERMON
The scientific basis of spiritual healing
will be brought out at Christian Science
services Sunday in the Lesson-Sermon entitled “God the Only Cause and Creator.”
Luke’s account of the healing by Christ
Jesus of the “‘man which had the withered

Page

46

Holy

Communion.

‘

9:30 a.m. Holy Commurson on first
third Sundays.
:30 a.m. Morning Prayer on second

tea.

are

GREGORY’S
EPISCOPAL
CHURCH
Wilmot and Deerfield Roads
The Rev. J. D. Parker, Rector
Rectory Telephone—Windsor 5-1881
Church Telephone—Windsor 5-1678
SUNDAY

&amp;§ a.m.

SUNDAY, June 7
8 a.m. Celebration of Holy Communion.
9
a.m.
Family
Worship
Service
with
celebration of Holy Communion. Complete
Church School at this hour.
10:45 a.m. Family Worship Service with
celebration of Holy Communion. Confirmands will receive first Communion
at this
hour,
Complete
Church
School;
Nursery
care is provided during this service only
for children under three years of age, in
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Forslin,
829 Apple Tree Lane,
MONDAY, June 8
7 p.m. Softball games: Bethlehem Church

Children

ST

Sundays.

:

welcome

win

M.

THE
BETHLEHEM
CHURCH
(Evangelical
United
Brethren)
Rev. Eugene M. Wykle, Minister
801 Rosemary Terrace
Church—WI_
5-0078
Parsonage—WI 5-2221
THURSDAY, June 4
7 p. .mYouth Choir rehearsal; Boy Scout
Troop 51 Court of Honor.
SATURDAY, June 6
é
6 p.m. Couples Club progressive dinner.
Meet
at
Christian
Education
building
promptly. For information call church office.
SUNDAY,
June 7—Children’s Day.
9:30 a.m. Services of Divine Worship.
9:30
a.m.
Church
School
for Nursery
through 6th grades and adult classes.
;
10:55 a.m. Services of Divine Worship
with special sermon for children who are
urged to attend with their parents.
10:55 a.m. Church
School for Nursery,
Kindergarten, Primary and 7th through 12th
grade.
MONDAY, June 8
7:30 p.m.
Church
School
officers and
teachers meeting.
TUESDAY, June 9
Circle 1 will visit Bahai Temple. Other
Guild members
invited. Mrs. Arthur Pagel in charge of arrangements.
1:30 p.m. Circle 2.meets at home of Mrs.
Harold Sparks, 642 Hermitage.
7 p.m. Circle 3 will have supper party
at home of Mrs. Michael Baran, 557 Deerfield Rd.
8 p.m. Circle 4 meets. Circle members
call Mrs. Holth, WI 5-0267.
WEDNESDAY, June 10
7:45 p.m. Chancel choir rehearsal.
GRACE

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

THE HIGHLAND PARK
PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
ID 2- 2-1695
William Atkinson Young
Rev. J. A. Miller
Ministers
Dr. William Atkinson Young,
minister.
Laurel, Linden and Prospect Aves. ID 21695. Sunday services and Church School,
9:30 and 11:15 a.m. Youth groups at 10:05
a.m. and alternate Sunday evenings.

Mr.

curate,

Ed-

Wappler

re-

ceived his Bachelor of Divinity deawarded

Deerfield
Bible Fellowship
1043 Wilmot Road
Every Sunday evening at 7 o’clock, the
Deerfield
Bible Fellowship meets at 1043
Wilmot Rd. Public is invited. Bible messages
on current events along with Christian fellowship.

Curate

its new

Wappler.

and

WASHBURN
CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH
Half Day
Rey.
Lewis
Wakeland,
Pastor
Route 22
SUNDAY
9:30 a.m. Church School.
9:30 a.m. Worship Service.
11 a.m. Worship Service.
A nursery is provided for small children.
Telephone WI 5-4179 for more information.

Dr.

will

gree

52

New

The. Rev. J, D. Parker, rector of
St. Gregory’s Episcopal Church, attended
graduation
ceremonies
at
Seabury-Western Seminary in Evanston on May 28.
From
this class, St. Gregory’s

and

9:30 a.m.
Church
School
children will
attend adult service. Nursery care provided
for pre-school children.
TUESDAY
8 p.m. Vestry meeting.
5:30 to 10 p.m. Youth group “Fun Party.”
WEDNESDAY
8 p.m.
Choir practice.
THURSDAY
Afternoon, Girl Scouts.
Evening, Boy Scouts.

For
4-3060

To Have

cum

laude

the

and

Henry

also

was

Benjamin

Whipple scholarship.
On June 20 he will be ordained
to the Diaconate and will be presented by Father Parker. After his

marriage in Alabama, he will return to Deerfield and take up residence

and

Gregory’s

assist

in

duties

parish

on

July

Bethehem

in

St.

8.

Church

Receives Members
Received into the membership of
the Bethlehem
E.U.B. Church on
Sunday, May 17, were Mr. and Mrs.
David Carr, 1000 Springfield Ave.;
Mr, and Mrs. Maurice Miller, 1010
Hillside
Ave.
and
Mrs.
George
Schmid, 748 Deerpath Dr.
On
Sunday,
May
24, the Reverend Eugene M. Wykle administered the rite of Holy Baptism to

Nancy

Lee

Winfield,

First Unit To Be
Occupied Sunday

Italy Ils Theme Of

St. Gregory's Church

daughter

of

Mr. and Mrs. Robert Winfield, 827
Rosemary
Terr.;
John
William
Brandenburn, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Chester
Brandenburg,
1707
Chatham
Circle;
Camille
Ann
Carr,
daughter of Mr. and Mrs. David
Carr, 1000 Springfield Ave.;
Jamie
Lee Hartz, daughter
of Mr.
and
Mrs. Donald Hartz, 450 E. Dundee

Rd., Wheeling,
NORTH
SUBURBAN
EVANGELICAL
FREE
CHURCH
Deerfield Masonic Temple
Rev. Howard Hermansen, Pastor
711 Waukegan Road
SUNDAY
9:45 a.m. Bible School.
11 a.m, Services.

(Evangelical &amp; Reformed Church)
Rev. Laslo L. Hunyady, B.D., Pastor
638 Waukegan Road
Windsor 5-3508
THURSDAY, June 4
There
will be no Afternoon
Circle of
the Women’s Guild today.
SATURDAY, June 6
9 to 10:30 a.m. Junior confirmation class.
SUNDAY, June 7
9:30 a.m. Church School for children age
3 through high school age.
11 a.m. A Day of Reminiscence. Worship
Sacrament of Holy Baptism. Nursery facilities provided for small children. Visitors and
newcomers are cordially invited.
5:30 to 8:30 p.m. Youth Fellowship Picnic
at Jewett Park. Bring your food and beverage. Watermelon and potato chips will be
supplied. Your friends are cordially invited.
WEDNESDAY, June 10
8 p.m. Church School Staff meeting at
the home of Mrs. Charles C. Kapschull, Jr.,
519 Ryan Place, Lake Forest.
THURSDAY, June 11
8 p.m. Picnic Committee at 638 Waukegan Rd.

Bethlehem Couples
Progressive Dinner

The

For the monthly meeting of the
Couples Club of Bethlehem Church
and the final session for this term,
the group will meet for a progressive
dinner
at
6
p.m.
at
the
Church’s education building on Saturday.

The

food, decorations

and enter-

tainment of the evening have all
been planned on the Italian theme,
from the grape juice punch to the
gelato for dessert.
Mr. and Mrs. George Buss and
Mr. and Mrs. Willard Roth are cochairmen for this event, with 36
couples who will either entertain
in their homes or help serve the
main
course
and
dessert
to
be
served at the church. Couples will
have five “progressive jaunts” during the dinner as they go from the
appetizer to hor d’oeuvres, to soup,
to the main course, salad and dessert. A program of entertainment
has been planned for the group following the dinner but the local cast
has not been announced.
Course chairmen:
Punch—Mr.
and
Mrs.
Harold
Dusenbury;
Hors
d’oeuvres—Mr.
and Mrs. John Carlson; Soup—Mr.
and Mrs. Ambrose Cox; Salad—Mr.
and
Mrs.
Philip
Craig;
Main
Course—Mr. and Mrs. Jan deJong
and Dessert—Mr.
and Mrs. Richard Oller.

Other

business

will include
year’s officers
ed by Mr. and
chairmen of
mittee.

of

the

evening

the electing of next
from a slate presentMrs. George Stanger,
the nominating com-

Rowland

B.

Drescher

B. Drescher,

48, of 1345

Linden Highland Park Hospital. He
had been ill since January.
Funeral
services were
held
Thursday at a chapel in Wilmette
with the Rev. Paul V. Berggren of

Zion

Lutheran

Church

officiating

and burial was in Memorial Park
Cemetery in Evanston.
He received his degree in Mechanical Engineering at Rensselaer
Polytechnic
Institute,
Troy,
N.Y.

and

since

1937 has been

employed

by the Republic Flow Meters Company of Chicago, Il.
The Drescher family moved
to

Deerfield in September, 1957
Mr. Drescher was transferred
Pittsburgh, Pa. where he had
district manager, to Chicago
come

assistant

sales

Society of

Rd.
William
P. Allen
of
Park is First Reader and
rence
Winship
of
590
Ave., is Second Reader.

Highland
Miss FloWhittier

This
Sunday

first unit comprises
the
School room, but until the

church

wing

is

added

date,
both
church
school will convene
porary

a

in

high

beams
which

design,

vaulted

at

and
here.

a

later

Sunday
Contem-

the

interior

ceiling

and

has

cross

of softly finished driftwood,
has also been used for the

rostrum,

Walls

are of brown

brick with wood

matt

trim. The drop-fix-

tures for lighting are of brass in
modern design. There will be parking space adjacent to the building,
with drive and turnaround. Architect is Albert Nemoede of Downers
Grove, Ill.

In addition to the Sunday School,
the first floor
reading room,

will also house the
which will soon be

open to the public,

and the clerk’s

room. A nursery for the care of
small children is in the lower level.
Christian
Science
Society,
a

branch of The Mother Church, The
First Church of Christ, Scientist, in
Boston, Mass., was first organized

in May of 1954, when rapid growth
of population plainly indicated the
need for a church home within the
Village.

The first services of the newly
organized Society were held Octo
ber 24, 1954, in Maplewood School
auditorium, Clay Court, and have
continued there since that date.

OBITUARY
Rowland

Christian Science

Deerfield will occupy the first unit
of the newly completed building on
Sunday morning, with church services and Sunday School. The new
structure is located at 155 Deerfield Rd. at the corner of Brierhill

when
from
been
to be-

is

“The
Christian
Science service
simple and may be easily fol-

lowed
ing

by

the

the

newcomer.

service

are

Conduct-

two

readers,

members of the church, who read
citations from the King James version

of

the

Bible,

and

passages from the
ence,” it is stated.

correlative

Christian

Sci-

Gives Invocations
At Commencements
The

Rev.

J.

of St. Gregory’s
gave

the

D.

Parker,

Episcopal

invocation

at

rector

Church,
the

Ban-

nockburn School graduation ceremonies on June 2. On June 11 he
will also give the invocation at the
Township High School commencement in Highland Park.

manager.

He is survived by his wife Mabel
and two sons Robert and Donald,

Mrs,

O.

Mrs.

William

all of Deerfield,

Nutley, N.J.

and by his mother,

C.

Drescher

G.

Thursday,

and a

Davis,
June

sister

both
4, 1959

of

�PHONE YOUR WANT AD.

WELL CHARGE IT
ree cae

WANT AD RATES
“i SAE LY fe
5¢ each additional word
(For 55 words or Less)

25c Service charge for blind ads
Ads

containing

56

words

more

are charged

at the rate of

$4.90 per column inch.
Contract rates for 4 or
consecutive
on request

This

more

insertions available
| inch Minimum.

cost

will cover

insertion

®

or

the

in all 4 papers.

Deerfield Review
Highland Park News

Highwood

News

The

Forester

Ads

run

Lake
in

above

publications

during the same week in which
Fort Sheridan Tower is published
will also appear in

Fort Sheridan Tower
Published Every Other Friday
Want Ads will be accepted up to

Tuesday, 4:30 P.M.

DEADLINE FOR CONTRACT
ADS 3 P.M. TUESDAY

REAL

ESTATE
FOR
SALE
(LAKE FOREST)

LAKE

PERFECT
LOCATION
this 3 bedroom;
tiled bath, lg. living room, cab. kitchen,
basement. This house on large lot near village &amp; schools. 20’s.
DELUXE
RANCH.
study, dining room,
room, soda bar, lg.
car att. garage. 30's.

FINE EAST RESIDENTIAL,
3 bedrooms,
2 baths, living &amp; dining room, porch, basement, gas heat, garage. Lower 30's.
YOUR
opportunity
to purchase this immaculate older home in good condition with
1%
baths,
living
room,
dining
room,
3
bedrms., study, base. &amp; garage. Low 20’s.

VV

VY

TELEPHONE
WANT AD SERVICE

REAL

ESTATE
FOR
SALE
(LAKE FOREST)

LAKE

LANE

Quinlan and Tyson,
ALpine

2-3755

_ Thursday, June 4, 1959

Inc.
1-6700

A livable,
older
two-story,
brick
house on beautiful lot. Living room,
dining room,
den, bedroom,
new
kitchen,
enclosed
porch
on
first
floor.
Three
bedrooms,
bath
on
second. Large basement with lavatory and fruit cellar. Oil heat.
Low

GRIFFITH,
the

area

LAKE

FOREST

ESTATE AREA, choice east location. ATTRACTIVE
CONTEMPORARY
RANCH
on secluded wooded acre. Large living room,
fireplace wall lined with book shelves, 3
sunny bedrooms, 2 baths, partial basement;
oo t00 for MINIMUM MAINTENANCE.
42,500.

SEVERAL choice sites in Golf View Sub.
near school and golf coment
each lot 4%
acre or more. From $9,500

High

Thirties.

GRADUATE
A large, brick Georgian house with
seven
bedrooms
and
six
baths
wishes that a couple of wise parents with
six or seven
children
would
come live in it. Beautiful
grounds, lovely large rooms. A real

INTO

Middle

Sixties

A
One
of the best values in Lake
Forest.
Two-story,
lannon
stone
and frame Colonial house on over

acre

of beautifully,

landscaped

ground.
Living
room
with
fireplace, dining room, cabinet kitchen, delightful playroom with builtin closets, bedroom, bath, screened
porch and terrace. Three bedrooms,
two baths on second floor. Basement, gas heat, new three-car detached garage with large storage

area.

Low

Sixties

BLUFF

509
MAWMAN
AVE.—1%
story
brick
CAPE COD in a beautiful wooded setting;
3 bedrooms plus den or 4th bedroom,
2
ceramic tile baths, fireplace in living room,
separate dining room, cabinet kitchen with
built-ins, full basement with laundry room
CN recreation
area,
natural
gas
heat.
SUBSTANTIAL
OLDER
RED
BRICK
4
bedroom house near the Village, park, and
school. Living room with fireplace, dining
room, sun room, full basement, oil hot water
heat, attached
garage;
recently
decorated
throughout. Realistically priced in 20’s,

JOHN
TWO

GRIFFITH,
REALTORS

OFFICES

678 Western
Lake Forest

An unusual,
remodeled, Coach
house with a flair. Foyer,
living
room with fireplace, dining alcove,
modern kitchen, utility room, family
room,
screened
porch
and
greenhouse. The second floor has
five bedrooms, three baths. There
is also a separate little apartment
with living room, kitchen, bath and
bedroom. One-car carport.

an

LAKE

Ave
485

TO

INC.

SERVE
12

YOU

Scranton Ave.
Lake Bluff 816

FIRST TIME OFFERED
BUSINESS
LOCATION
- N W
CORNER WESTERN &amp; ILLINOIS
RD. 75 ft. frontage

NEAR

CITY

ESTATE
FOR
SALE
(LAKE FOREST)

on Western

PARKING

LOT.

Ave.

In-

cludes 8 room
house, fully insulated &amp; well maintained. 5 Bdrms.
B-2 Zoning. Call Elsa Fitzgerald,
Lake Forest 86.

STORM REALTY CO.
378 Green Bay Rd.
Winnetka
Hillcrest 6-7180
CHARMING
well built 2 bedroom
brick
ranch.
Living-dining
room
combination
with
fireplace,
kitchen
with
breakfast
counter,
full basement,
enclosed
porch
patio, 2
car
attacched
garage.
Owner
transferred. Call Lake Bluff 2745.
NEW frame ranch type house, 6 rooms and
attached
garage,
on
large
corner
lot;
plastered. Offered by builder. Priced to
sell. Lake Bluff 1916.
BY
owner.
Knollwood
6 months
old
3
bedroom ranch. Ceramic tile bath, modern built in kitchen, gas heat, combination
storm
and
screens, 2 car garage.
Will
finance. Call Lake Bluff 2766.
LAKE BLUFF east, 4 bedrooms, 114 baths,
living-dining room combination, large utility room, oil heat, gas available, attached
garage. 314 blocks from school. Owner
moving. Price $21,500, Lake Bluff 3693.

Entrance hall, powder
room, pi
with fireplace, large screened
adjoining
terrace,
dining
pte ta: pal
den with fireplace, modern kitchen 4
fastroom.
4 bedrooms, nursery, maids room
complementing
bathrooms,
Full base:

gas heat, two
terrace
High

at $175.00

monthly.

bedroom,
bath and a
nished house in Lake

One

four

half unfurBluff avail-

able July 1st at $185.00 monthly.
Parking
for

Space
Our

Available

Customers

BEDROOMS, brick ranch, 2 car ga
aneled basement
gas
heat,
low
Telephone Lake Forest 3095.
LAKE
BLUFF
east, new 6 room
ranch, 2 full ceramic tiled baths, 7
ets, 3 blocks from Lake Michigan.
price $23,500, easy terms.
ID 3-0766

REAL,

ESTATE
FOR
(HIGH LAND

6

TERRIFIC

Excellent level building site on
blacktop road within city limits.
Features include underground gas,
water, electric, and telephone service. Will never be any cheaper.
Located 1.2 miles north of Deerpath stop light on Winwood Dr.
which joins Waukegan Rd. from
the west.

UNIQUE
small house
in unusual
ravine
setting for small family.
Newly remodeled, ash paneling.
Under
$20,000. Offers. Lake Bluff 3237.
IF you have ‘need of a 3 bedroom brick
ranch home with plenty of extras, don’t
overlook
this opportunity
to buy from
owner
at ‘sacrifice. Call DExter
6-2239
after 6 p.m.
THREE
bedroom frame house with basement, 2 years old, dead end street, near
grade school. In 20’s. Call Lake Bluff

Hart, Shaw &amp;
Company
Richard B. Hart, President
C. Howard
ReQua,
Vice President
Mrs. Stuart R. French
Milton McN. Traer
Ruth E, Henderson
Kenmore Thorsen
260 E. Deerpath
135 S, La Salle St.
Lake Forest 4040
RAndolph 6-7155
Member of the Evanston-North Shore
Multiple Listing Service
\

Clifford
LAKE

BROKER

FOREST

DUNKIRK

2375

SPLIT

LEVELS

$27,500

i

to

$89,500.
NOT A PROJECT—
ALL INDIVIDUALLY BUILT
Call us for details; we will
happy to show by appointment.
CHOICE EAST LOCATION
This Colonial home with 5
be
rooms and 3 baths is the PERFE
family home. NO CHAUFFE
ING children to school. Dad
WALK
to the train. Spend |
Summer

days

relaxing

on

ne

beaches. A home that provid
delightful way of life for the w
family. $39,500.
;
HERE

IS

A

REAL

BUY

Owner is moving and must sell thi
charming, youthful Colonial ho
Top EAST location near chur
school,
transportation,
shoppi
and LAKE. Living rm., dining
powder room, kitchen with ea

area; large screened porch
looking beautiful yard and
for

bar-b-q’s.

baths

on 2nd.

4

bdrms.,

Paneled

o
p

2

recreati

room,
F.A.
GAS
heat.
OU
STANDING VALUE—$45,500.

L. Ringer
457

Realty Co. Realtors —
Central
ID 2

TO

MATCH

NEWLY
LISTED 7 year old, perfect co
dition, face brick Bi-level with family r
on first level. Large living room with cral
orchard
stone
fireplace,
separate
dink
room, excellent wood cabinet kitchen
generous eating area, 3 twin size bedroos
and 2 baths. Wonderful basement area p
fect for recreation room,
attached
ga
on lovely wooded lot with 104’ front
Finest
construction
$29,

3 BEDRMS. — $2,500

DOWN

PLUS FAMILY ROOM off living room
this 4 year old brick ranch. Immediate
session! Located in Elm Place School

trict in Sunset Terrace

area. Only . $18,

now!

Earhart &amp; Co.

Leonard

EXCLUSIVE

SALE
(imp
PARK)

In different suburbs, prices rangin

HARD

ACREAGE SITE
$8700

nate P

3

Call

Realtors
6-7274

car detached

and formal garden, large
pla
70’s. Call Lake Bluff 5127 i

You no longer need lament

Ist

(imp

BEAUTIFULLY APPOINT
TWO STORY BRICK |
COLONIAL

1904

A delightful
mid-Victorian,
farm
house
with
newly
added
living
room with large fireplace, country
kitchen,
bedroom,
bath,
dining
room and enclosed porch on first
floor. Three bedrooms and bath on
second.

NOT

anenensiiin deeattintene

REAL

INC.

since

VACANT—East of Sheridan Road; 161 foot
frontage, heavily woooded in secluded area;
over 400 feet deep. ALL IMPROVEMENTS.
AN EXCELLENT BUY at $15,500.

Hart,
Shaw
has
nice
homes
for
rent!
One three bedroom, one bath unfurnished
house available August

LISTING

Hillcrest

(Improved)

Twenties.

L. Ringer
Linden

ESTATE
FOR
SALX
(LAKE FOREST)

Serving

HOUSE?

3 bedroom, 3 bath Ranck, 6 ycears
old set on beautiful 5 acres. Large
living rm. with fireplace,
dining
“L.” Den
with fireplace, kitchen
with built-ins, utility room. Excellent closet space. In area of many
fine new homes.
For appointment to see please call:

999

Almost new deluxe brick ranch. Choice convenient location. Artistic liv. rm, with 3way raised hearth frpl. Lg. din. L, stunning
birch cab. kit. with brkfst. area. 3 spacious
bdrms., 2 baths, pan. rec. room. Plenty of
closets. Beautiful
landscaping.
Low
taxes.
Convenient
financing.
An
exquisite home
for a particular buyer at $56,500.
Call Mrs. Webster

AMbassador

Ill.

Winnetka

485 E. WESTLEIGH

4-2600

NEW

(improved)

Beautiful white brick Colonial ranch, ideally located on a wooded acre. Top location.
Wonderful for children. 3 bdrms., 2 col.
cer. tile baths, pan. family room, jalousied
den, living rm. with frpl,, din. rm., and
kit. 3 car RES.
Priced $44,000.
Call Mrs, Ludwig

UNiversity

Co.

Kathryn Jaicks
Berenice Ressinger
Carmen Burgess

FOREST

845 WALDEN

&amp;

GILBERT RAYNER
REAL ESTATE
266 EAST DEERPATH
LAKE FOREST 382

HIGHLAND PARK
Laurel
DEERFIELD
699 Waukegan Rd.
LAKE FOREST
287 Deerpath

j

Olson

REAL

JOHN

WHY

969

Well designed modern five room
house with 2 baths ,on over one
acre of wooded,
ravine property,
East
of
Sheridan
Road.
Partial
basement, 114-car detached garage.
$42,000.

i

IDlewood 2-4500
Windsor 5-4500
keke Forest 2300

ES,

VT

(Improved

buy as it is priced in....Low Fifties.
Bluff

Excellent five room custom built
solid brick residence on well landscaped half acre in wooded section,
overlooking Old Elm Club Grounds.
Large
basement,
gas heat, Pella
Rollscreens, 2-car attached garage,
plus many other fine appointments.
$36,000
including
carpeting
and
draperies.

rae

VV

excellent

ATTRACTIVE
NEW LSTINGS

REM

TV

D.

&amp;

Lake

Waukegan,

RES

FV

sections

Realtors

CANCELLATION DEADLINE
12 NOON, TUESDAY

VV

good

Lindenmeyer,
H.

For Publication in the Current
Week’s Issue.

OO

FOREST

DELIGHTFUL BRICK with finest appointments on a most lovely landscaped wooded
lot. This house must be seen; it has basement,
2 car garage, gas heat, and large
family room on 1st floor; the most modern
kitchen you can imagine!

2: RENTALS—in
condition,

ESTATE
FOR
SALE
(LAKE FOREST)

1% baths, 3 bedrms.,
porch, a huge family
separate laundry &amp; 2

FOR NEWLYWEDS
or small family—this
3 bedroom house with 20 ft. living room
and dining or family room, tiled bath, cab.
kitchen, &amp; garage. $18,000.

LAKE

REAL

BLUFF

SELDOM A NEWER HOUSE with so much
charm,
space,
&amp;
convenient
livability—4
bedrooms, 214 baths, DEN, 26 ft. FAMILY
ROOM, 2 firepl., 16 ft. dining room, porch,
2 car garage, fenced yard, gas heat, carpeted
1st level. 2 blks. to trains &amp; school bus at
door to St. Mary’s. See this house at 427
Pine Court.

Mrs.

Copy is accepted with the understanding
that
the
publisher
assumes
no_
responsibility
for
omission
through
clerical
or
mechanical
error and shall be
under no obligation or liability
of any kind whatsoever, either to
the advertiser or third Parties.
In the event of an error in copy,
on the advertiser’s request, the
ublisher will rectify the error
publishing the corrected ad
in the next regular issue without
charge. All claims for adjustment
must be made within five days of
the date of publication in which
the error occurs.

(improved)

_ REALTORS

1-2353
1899

COUNTRY
living, we have it. Three bedroom
ranch
in woods,
near toll road.
Leaving town, must sell. Priced $29,500
or best offer. 301 Little Mellody Lane.
Just off Bradley Rd. Lake Forest.
BY owner, brick split level
2 years old.
Three
twin
bedrooms,
den,
recreation
room, 114. baths, dining and living room
carpeted, fireplace, modern kitchen, full
basement.
$35,000 or best
offer.
Lake
Forest 4616.

Sheridan

OPEN SAT., SUN., 12 TO 5
Deluxe 4 bedroom,
brick ranch; 2
ceramic baths, 1 with shower; huge bed
and paneled den; living room with s
fireplace
and
large dining
area;
mo
kitchen with nook; big utility room; scre
porch;
all same floor. Fenced yard —
fruit trees, barbecue and rustic storage
in.
1 Block
to
Lincoln
School.
O
offers
at $49,500—buyers
only.

O Link

Road,

1 block west of Green

Page

�vOR

.

te

: ESTATE

FOR

SALE

(HIGHLAND

131

S.

DEERE

Open

PARK)

THE

‘ A quality home

cr

porch,

family bdrms.,
rm., and bath;

_ We

2-5

BEACH

in a choice

EAST

with

dishwasher,

pwdr.

rm.

4 large

.

ID 2-6600

HIGHLAND

Just

reduced:

w/frpl.,

sep.

Three

comb.,

Braeside.

180x60
in
rec. room
level. Liv-

kitchen,

breeze-

RENTAL

Attractive
set Park.

t reduced: Stone English Tudor on large
‘wooded grounds. Nine rooms. Separate ri
ing room, large family room. 5 Bedrooms,
baths. Basement.
Gas heat. 2 Car gaTage. Choice east location.
$34,900

114 baths. Completely furnished including piano, silver, linens, etc.
July and August. $265 a month.

dining

ON
On

and
WARNER
76

Lincoln

Winnetka,

Avenue

Illinois

HIllcrest

6-1855

SHeldrake

3-1855

‘W LISTING—2
Bedroom
Ranch,
pery maintained
and
featuring
kitchen
with bountiful. cabinets, utility room, large
closets,
built-in
dressers,
fenced
garden,
garage, workshop.
Just $18,500. Call
. Hastings.

JOMEFINDERS, Realtors

1 Green Bay Rd., Wilmette ALpine 1-1111

OPEN

wonderful

family

SUN.

2-5

set

on

home

beautiful ravine property. Lovely
ving rm. with fireplace, Family
rm. with fireplace, dining rm., card

Tm., screened
2nd floor has

_ with bedroom,
quarters.

Convenient

to

schools,

Linden

with

1925 Sheridan Rd.

HIllerest

Realtors

6-7274

EXQUISITE

RANCH

on

beautifully

land-

Y%

acre. 4 bedrms., 2 deluxe bas.,
GE
WALNUT
DEN.
Tiled
kitchen
ith brkfst. space. Full bsmt. Circle drive.
w cost at $62,500.

OTLESS COLONIAL in Lincoln Schl.
Distr. on a lovely wooded lot. MODERN
INE
JEN.

KITCHEN,
brkfst.
3 bedrms. 114 bas.

EAST

RAVINIA

brick

oak fireplace
nd. porch, 3 twin
ALORE. $32,500.

rm.
Only

PANELED
$31,500.

split-level.

Liv. rm.

wall, wide
dining L.,
size bedrms. CLOSETS

Park

Ave.

ID

lencoe

Theatre

Bldg.

VErnon

5-0236

PARK

NO

STAIRS

TO

CLIMB

In this lovely home with 3 bedrooms, living
room with carpet and
drapes. Eat area in
kitchen,
washer and
dryer,
12x27
family
room, car port with storage, all thermopane
windows, Terrific value at $23,200.

THE

OPEN MONDAY THRU FRIDAY
9am:
pm...SAT..9
a.m.-5. p.m.

VIKING Realty Co.
Rd.

Deerfield

PARK

DEERFIELD
Fresh,
young
and
beautiful tri-level with
lots of growing
space.
4 bedrooms,
214
baths, panelled recreation room and many
added features. Priced $34,900.

SEYMOUR

GRAHAM

CHARMING
In a quiet

WI

5-5300

REALTOR

Ave.

REAL
ESTATE
broker will
locate the property you want.
sure it with a Chicago Title
Policy. Ask your lawyer.

6

RM.

wooded

BRICK

area close to

Lincoln
School
this
3 bedroom
brick home offers perfection in detail and decorating. Good size liv.
rm. with frpl., din. rm., mod. panel.
eating kitch., 3 bdrms., lge. new
tile bath,
unusually
fine walnut
panel. rec. rm. with bar and powder rm.
Flag patio, post and rail fencing,
2 car gar. Low cost gas heat and

$33,500

PAUL

PHELPS,

1925 Sheridan Rd.

INC.
ID 2-4580

HOME
The way you want it—pretty and perky—
located
on
WOODED
PROPERTY,
in
Highland
Park.
Living
room
with
book
shelves and fireplace, dining room,
DEN
WITH
SHUTTERS,
and
a_ wife-designed
kitchen
with
ANTIQUED
WOOD
CABINETS;
3 bedrooms,
114 baths, and
_attached
garage.
Good
taste
is
reflected
throughout. $31,900.

PORTER &amp; WEINRICH
REALTORS IN WINNETKA
62

Green

Bay

VE

5-4121

help you
Then inInsurance

"

wu

cout

*

Rd.

OWNER
being transferred must sell brick
ranch
home.
Attractively
landscaped
wooded lot, carport with attached utility
shed, 3 bedrooms, 2 ceramic baths, full
basement, large living room with studio
ceiling
and
cathedral windows,
kitchen
includes stove and refrigerator. 1 block
from commuter station. Telephone ID 30876.

Beautiful

BY OWNER
East Ravinia

Section

Highland Park, large wooded lot (85 foot
frontage).
3 bedrooms,
2 complete tile
baths
with
showers,
modern
kitchen,
screened porch, sun deck, tile roof. Ideal
location, 2 blocks from school, shopping
and trains. Quick sale. Priced in the low
thirties.
Telephone
ID
2-4744,
for appointment.

HI

6-2600

REAL

ESTATE FOR SALE
(DEERFIELD)

DEERFIELD:
CAPE
COD
FRAME,
with
Livingroom,
large kitchen with eating area; 4 twin Bedrooms, lots of closets; 2 full Baths; Basement
with paneled
Recreation
Room
on
nice landscaped Lot.
$22,950
Split Level, large Livingroom; comb. Kitchen &amp; Diningroom, built in Oven &amp; Range;
3 large Bedrooms, large Closets; tiled Bath,
and Powder room; Basement.
$25,500
STONE &amp; FRAME
RANCH:
Livingroom;
Diningroom; birch cabt. Kitchen, built in
Oven &amp; Range; 3 twin Bedrooms, all dble.
Closets; cer. tiled Bath &amp; Powder Room;
full Basement;
Gas Hotair Heat; carport.
$26,500
DUTCH COLONIAL FRAME: Livingroom,
Fireplace; Den or T.V. Room; Diningroom;
modern birch cabt. Kitchen, Powder Room;
2nd
Floor: 4 twin Bedrooms;
full Bath;
Basement;
2%
car Garage
with screened
Porch.
$28,500
CUSTOM
BUILT
STONE
AND
FRAME
RANCH: Living &amp; Diningroom; birch cabt.
Kitchen, built in Oven-Range &amp; Refrigerator; cer. tiled Bath &amp; Powder Room;
3
lge. Bedrooms,
plenty
Closets;
Basement,
paneled Recreation Room;
att. Garage.
$32,800
OWNER BUILT LANNON STONE-BRICK
SPLIT
LEVEL:
Vestibule;
Livingroom,
Fireplace; Diningroom; comb. Kitchen-Dinette; 2 cer. tiled, Baths; 3 extra large Bedrooms; lots of Closets; Basement, paneled
Familyroom,
Fireplace;
paneled
Den
&amp;
Laundryroom; Gas Hotwater Heat; screened
Breezeway; att. 2 car Garage on 166x236
landscaped Lot.
$48,500

ARTHUR C. ULLMANN
REALTOR
216

Waukegan

WI

Rd.

5-3200

440
BR

ANDRUSS

Green Bay
3-2550

Rd.

Realtor
Kenilworth
AL
1-7300

BY

owner, 2-bedroom frame ranch, birch
cabinet kitchen, utility room, garage, ample closets and storage space; convenient
to schools
and
transportation.
$17,900.
ID 2-6872.
LET us show you the finest ranch home in
exclusive area. Former Tribune Home of
the Week. Beautifully landscaped on 150
ft. frontage. 7 rooms, full basement,
3
fireplaces, 2 baths, shower stall, screened
Pern
patio. The Kempf Realty, WI 5-

AIR-CONDITIONED
Expandable 3 bedroom Cape Cod (all on
one floor), living-dining combination,
full
basement,
gas heat, unusually
good
construction,
low
maintenance
in convenient
location, Elm Pl. School Dist., many extras.
By owner, mid 20’s. ID 2-8270.
BY OWNER
Large
living room,
large dining room,
3
bedrooms, new ceramic tile bath, half acre
i ion
BELOW
$20,000. Telephone ID

owner—facing Sunset Park, brick ranch,
100x150 corner lot, 4 bedrooms, 2! baths,
30 ft. living room, large paneled beamed
family room, secluded patio, fenced yard,
carpeting,
drapes,
and
dishwasher
included.
Immediate
occupancy.
$37,500.
Telephone ID 2-1883.
BY owner. Modern bi-level, 3 bedrooms, 11%
story studio living room, beautiful paneled
family room with built-in storage. Wool
carpeting,
drapes,
storms
and _ screens.
Flawless lawn, lovely landscaping, fencedin yard, tool shed. $24,500. Low
down
payment. ID 2-7048.
OWNER leaving state: must sell 3 bedroom
frame;
large living room with fireplace
and sun room, dining room, kitchen, basement,
oil heat,
2 car garage.
Lincoln
School District. For details call ID 2-0474.
HIGHLAND PARK, lovely 7 room, 3 bedroom, 2%
baths plus high, light basement rec. area with 2 car garage. Lovely
treed lot, 100x300 on private road. $42,000.
Greissinger
Realtor,
KEystone
96447 or Lake Forest 4736 evenings.

L. Ringer
Winnetka
999 Linden

Hillcrest

Realtors
6-7274

NEW LISTING—See this 9 room Split-level
with 5 bedrooms, 24 baths, 20 ft. living
room—perfectly detailed home, carpeted and
landscaped.
$38,500.
Call Mrs.
Parkinson
WI 5-0248.

See OUR FULL. PAGE
AD OF DEERFIELD
HOMES ELSEWHERE
IN THIS ISSUE
HOMEFINDERS,

Realtors

111

ALpine

Green

Bay

Rd., Wilmette

ing

area,

9-ROOM COLONIALS

BY

OWNER:
transfer
forces
immediate
sale, custom built 4 year old colonial.
3 or 4 bdrms., 2 full baths, foyer, bsmt.
with
rec. rm., full of built-in storage,
screened porch, terrace, lge. fenced yard,
louber doors, cork floors, Loads of closets,
cupboards,
drawers.
Located
on
wooded lot close to schols, park, transportation, shopping.
On beautiful, quiet
peek tee street. 20’s. Telephone WI 5-

built-in

oven

and

range;

third

level, 3 twin size bedrooms,
ceramic tile
bath with double vanitory, attached garage.
$34,600.
New

3

bedroom

bedroom,

2

1%

bath

bath
split

ranch.

level.

$37,750.

$35,650.

ON AN ACRE
Exceptionally well built. brick ranch home;
living room’ with stone fireplace, separate
dining room, large kitchen with eating space,
3 twin size bedrooms, 114 baths, full basement, attached 2 car garage. $29,000.

4 BEDROOMS—
2 BATHS
One and a half acres wooded property. This
custom built brick and redwood home has
wonderful family room—farm type kitchen
with fireplace. Owner transferred. A real
buy. $29,500.

BRICK

SPLIT

LEVEL

Best value in village. 3 twin bedrooms, 24%
baths, full basement, large panelled family
room, spacious living room, built-in oven
and range and dishwasher, spacious living
room,
attached
2 car garage,
beautifully
landscaped. Low 30’s.

OWNER

TRANSFERRED

Must sell nearly new brick ranch home.
3 bedrooms,
living room, panelled dining
room (or family room), kitchen with eating
area, full basement with beautiful panelled
recreation room, nearly new wall to wall
carpeting included. High 20’s.

WOODLAND

PARK

3 bedroom ranch home; living room with
fireplace, large screened porch, 1% baths,
dining
room, kitchen, full basement
with
fireplace, bath,
swimming
pool. Beautiful
large lot. Low 30’s.

ON

WOODED

LOT

First time offered. Faced brick ranch home
with brick garage and concrete driveway,
full basement with panelled recreation room,
bedroom, bath, laundry and storage; living
room, fireplace and dining area; twin kitchen. $33,500.

3 TWIN

BEDROOMS

Very well built brick ranch in lovely residential area, walking distance to schools,
shopping and transportation. Carpeted living-dining
combination,
kitch. with eating
area,
full basement,
fenced
yard,
patio.
Priced to sell. Low 20’s.

BRICK

BI-LEVEL

Charming 2 bedroom home featuring a living room with cathedral ceiling and fireplace, separate dining room, enclosed porch,
2 bedrooms and bath up, attached garage,
large wooded lot. $21,250.

$17,500
Built in 1951, this pretty 2 bedroom ranch
home has large living room, kitchen with
eating area, utility room, enclosed porch,
attached garage, gas heat; low taxes, exc.
neighborhood.

OPEN SUNDAY 2-5
2566 HICKORY LANE
3 bedroom brick ranch, 11%4 baths, sunken
living room, full basement, porch, 70 ft.
patio, 2 car garage, 12 wooded acre. $37,900.

Benj. Piersen Realty
REALTOKS
730

Waukegan

Rd.

Windsor

NEARING

1-1111

Two
now
under construction. Entry hall,
living room with fireplace, separate dining
room, kitchen with built-ins and eating area,
family
room,
laundry
room
and
powder
room on first floor; 5 bedrooms, 2 full baths
on second floor; attached 2 car garage and
basement. $38,500. Nordic Construction Inc.,
telephone WI 5-1620.

Realty

Finest northeast location, plaster walls, gas
heat,
lower
level,
large
basement,
main
level, entry hall, panelled family room with
thermo-pane
doors
leading
to rear yard,
powder
room;
second
level, large living
room with dining L, tiled kitchen with eat-

RANCH
Excellent large rooms in this 3 bedroom 2 bath ranch, set on lovely
wooded
lot. Separate
dining rm.,
cab.
kitchen
with
built-ins
and
large eating space, screened porch.
Full basement, att. garage. Close to
new school.

Piersen

NEW BRICK
oF Ltt LEVEL

NORTHBROOK:
FRAME
RANCH:
large comb. Living-diningroom, knotty pine cab. Kitchen, 3 twin
bdrms., all double closets, enclosed porch,
tiled bath, 2 car garage, on 100x388 ft. lot.
$19,950

FOREST

$3,750 CASH
will buy this lovely 6 year
old brick split-level in finest neighborhood.
3 bedrooms, paneled family room, beautifully landscaped and fenced yard.

ANN

Benj.

(improved)

DEERFIELD
SHERWOOD

A

L ESTATE FOR SALE
REAL
ESTATSEERFIELD)

ESTATE FOR SALE (Improved)
(HIGHLAND PARK)

CUTEST

3 Bedroom ranch with glamour kitchen including
range,
oven,
washer
and
dryer;
screen porch, 1% car garage. All this for
$16,900,

Deerfield

REAL

3

BY

10% down can buy this lovely young ranch
house in desirable Woodridge area, 3 bedrooms, many extras, immediate occupancy,
low upkeep, priced in low 20’s.

A

REALTORS

2-6776

Relaxed
living with more
time to enjoy
raising your family in this 3 bedroom, 2
tile bath ranch with large family kitchen,
patio, 2 car garage.
%
block to school.
Priced in 30’s.

Vernon

!

Situated
on
half
acre,
close to schools.
House is 7 years old. Has separate dining
room, large kitchen, closets galore and full
basement. Call today for an appointment.

ID 2-1212

Idlewood Realty
1550

my

BATHS

$25,500

un-

A QUALITY HOME JUST REDUCED TO
THE
RIGHT
PRICE.
SEPARATE
DINING
ROOM,
DEN,
FOUR
BEDROOMS,
THREE AND ONE-HALF BATHS. CLOSE
TO TRANSPORTATION AND SCHOOLS.

655.

J-H Kahn

many

Beautiful split-level 3 bedroom
home,
cypress recreation room with bar, bath and
powder room, brick car and one half garage, patio enclosed with jalousied windows
and aluminum screens and doors. Aluminum
storms and
screens throughout. Air-conditloner in master bedroom. Living room and
hallway carpeted wall to wall. Hardwood
flooring throughout. Yard fully fenced
in
for protection of children and privacy, Beautifully landscaped
with trees and
shrubs.
Must see to appreciate. 1477 Arbor Ave. or
call ANdover 3-3017.

HIGHLAND
Tc

landsc.

FOREST—$29,875

HIGHLAND

L. Ringer
999

over 2 acres of beau.

PAUL PHELPS, INC.

sitting m. and bath,

and transp.
A GOOD BUY

MICHIGAN

bdrm.
A beautiful home
usual appointments.

porch, cab. kitchen.
2 master suites each

2 other bedrooms and bath, maid’s

shopping
as

ID 2-1212

LAKE

SHERWOOD

_ SEE OUR FULL PAGE
AD OF DEERFIELD
HOMES ELSEWHERE
IN THIS ISSUE

333 MAPLE

Ave.

bdrm. with dress. rm. and tiled
bath; 2 add’l large bdrms. and tiled
bath, plus porch usable as 4th

ESTATE

5 BEDROOMS—2

2 bedrooms,

ground with more than 300 ft. of
beach, this 10 year white colonial
home features exquisite views and
lge. luxurious rooms.
Each room
has a view of the lake—the
entrance hall with curving staircase;
spacious liv. rm. with frpl., porch,
sunny din. rm., lge. mod. kitch. and
bkfst. rm. and paneled library with
full bath.
The 2nd floor has 18x28 master

BAIRD |

REAL

kitchen,

REALTORS

REALTORS

be

room,

Central

Dorsey Husenetter

‘

SALE
(Improved)
PARK) —

brick Cape Cod in SunLiving
room,
separate

H. and R. Anspach
463

ESTATE
FOR
(HIGHLAND

VIKING Realty Co.

826

Modern kitchen with dishwasher—large paneled family room with fireplace. Basement.
heat.
$27,900

DEERFIELD
APPROXIMATELY
5 ACRES
$16,500

REAL

modern

way, att. garage on middle level. 3
bedrooms and bath on upper level.
All in excellent condition ....$28,000

SUMMER

in

room,

3-YEAR OLD
SPLIT-LEVEL

PARK

bedroom

dining

kitchen w/dishwasher; pwd. room,
screened
porch
on first floor. 3
generous bedrooms, 1 tile bath on
2nd. Excellent closets throughout.
2-car garage.

ing-dining

Company.

cmproved)

PARK)

On
beautiful
grounds
Sherwood
Forest. Pan.
with full bath on lower

L. Ringer
7 Central

SALE

etn

+

In choice
central Highland
Park
location near grade and parochial
schools. Brick 2-story. Living room

3 tile baths, maid’s
recreation room; 2

Realty

FOR

ae

$26,000

invite your inspection.

ai

ESTATE

DRIVE

location with Private Beach Rights
akes this home perfect for the
criminating buyer.
Attractive spacious living room,
DEN, large dining rm., breakfast
Screened

REL

(HIGHLAND

PARK

Sunday

ENJOY

(Improved)

j

5-1670

COMPLETION

THE
EXETER
626 Dimmeydale,
$39,850
3 bedroom, 2 bath brick ranch, large livingdining room with fireplace, maple kitchen
with oven, range, eating space. Large family room, basement, good closets.
THE

4

PLYMOUTH,

bedroom,

2%

1433

bath

Ambleside,

brick

and

$41,500

frame 2

story. Large living room with fireplace, dining room; walnut finish kitchen with eating space, oven and range; family room.
Master bedroom has double dressing room
bath, good closets, basement.
Both these houses are in Scatterwood, Deerfield’s fine home
section. Take
Deerfield
Rd. to Warrington, (2 blocks east of Waukegan Rd.) North on Warrington to end,
left on Woodvale
and again left on Ambleside, South 1 block.

L-C
Northfield

HOME

BUILDERS

345 Walnut

St.

Hillcrest

6-3622

Thursday, June 4, 1959

�TE DEERFIELD)
FOR SALE
John

REAL ESTATE FOR
1%

Coons

Realtor
In outstanding Maplewood
School district
is this six rm. brick ranch. 3 bdrms., center
hall plan,
full basement,
carpeted
living
room, huge family kitchen, full bath and
powder rm. Excellent financing coeoees $25,950
A picture book 3 bedroom ranch with outstanding
view
of old wooden
bridge.
If
you are looking for an excellent home in
low 20’s—come
out and
see this. Many
extras. Priced
$22,900
Outstanding ranch in East Deerfield—Stone
fireplace in living room,
dining room,
3
twin bedrooms, recreation room, jalousied
porch, full basement. Wonderful neighborhood.
Price
$36,500
Built on side of hill, wooded 2 acres, 6
room ranch; 2 baths, full basement can be
made into family room. Overlooking wooded
grove
37,000

STUNNING

REAL

ESTATE
FOR
SALE
(Improved)
(MISCELLANEOUS)

EAST

GLENVIEW

STORM
378 Green

WI 5-5100

CHARMING

RANCH

Living room-dining room combination, kitchen, 2 bedrooms and family room with fireet:
plus garage and car port. Reduced,

CONTRACT.

3 bedrooms
Full basement
Garage and breezeway
Oak floors
Fruitwood kitchen cabinets
Built-in range, hood and fan
Fully insulated
100 amp. electric service
Full acre lots
Quality throughout
at a low price

NEW

Phone
full
1%

LISTING

Brick ranch. 3 bedrooms, living-dining combination with fireplace, large kitchen, bath,
screened in porch and garage. Lovely neighborhood. Priced right at $24,750.

Carr Realty Co.
REALTORS
701

Waukegan
OPEN

Road

WI

SUNDAY

THREE

12 TO

5-0984

DEERFIELD
UNUSUAL VALUES!

1. Three year old tri-level. 3 bdrms.,
2
baths, large family rm., laundry rm., plus
basement.
Kitchen
w/built
in G.E.
oven
and range; also eating space. Planned landscaped lot w/screened
patio. $31,500.
2. Brick ranch on beautiful landscaped lot.
3 twin size bdrms., plus den or 4th bdrm.,
1% baths. Sep. dining rm., kitchen w/eating
space. Full basement, $39,000

ALpine

&amp;

ORR,

1-0228

GReenleaf

EVANSTON—An
improved
home
for
a
large family. 5 bedrooms, 2% baths, fireplace, den with built-in book shelves, desk
and filing cabinet, rec. room, large porch,
2 car coach house garage. Owner wants immediate sale.
Any of the above homes may be purchased
DIRECT from owner. Call ORchard 5-8383.

by-owner

5-1080

BY OWNER. Haye already purchased farm,
making immediate sale vital of 7 room,
1%
bath home;
large closets, screened
porch, full basement, work shop, large
fenced yard with
patio, 2 car garage.
Close to schools, transportation and shopping. Low 20’s. WI 5-3077.

4846

Thursday,

June

4,

1959

St.,

Skokie,

SUMMER
Attractive
ps lake.
own.
20

NEW
contemporary
house
on 2 wooded
acres in estate area; large living-dining
room
with
cathedral
ceilings,
fully
equipped
kitchen, family
room,
3_ bedrooms, 2 baths, oversized 2 car garage.
$44, 500. Telephone WI 5-0623.

BUREAU,

Main

acre

FARMS

MARTIN
BALDWIN

—

A.

2

HOMES

6-6720

—

AMbassador

REAL

VE

2 lots
$1,500

KAHN

REALTY
ILL.

Bldg.

LOT, 60x164, in Sherwood
Telephone ID 2-4840.

REAL

ACREAGE

Theatre

_
VErnon
Forest,

ESTATE FOR SALE
(DEERFIELD)

of 2 rooms
and a 3 car

5-0236
$6,000.

(Vacant)

DEERFIELD-NORTHBROOK
AREA
Corner
101x200
lot. In neighborhood
of
moderately priced homes.
Priced right at
$2,495. Call for appointment to see. CLearbrook 3-5910.

Forest,

a limiting

STORES &amp;
TO RENT

IMMEDIATE
OCCUPANCY

STORE
suitable
use or

of distinction

6 Rooms (3 Bedrooms)
27 foot Living Room

By
INTERIORS

ROOM apartment with range and refrigerator included, Highwood
business district. Telephone Lake Forest
136.
3 ROOM apartment in Highwood, equipped
with stove and refrigerator, available immediately. Telephone ID 2-3802, between
8 a.m. and 5 p.m.
MODERN
unfurnished
2 bedroom
apartment. Telephone ID 2-2975.
4 ROOM,
2 bedroom apartment, close to
transportation, for rent on or before July
1. Heat and hot water furnished. Parking
&gt;
ID 2-1060. 442 Central, Highland
ark.
2%
ROOMS,
1 bedroom,
$120,
available
July
ist. 709 Deerfield
Rd.
corner
of
Green Bay Rd. and Deerfield Rd. Telephone ID 2-8164.
ATTRACTIVE
3
large
room
apartment
with private bath, stove and refrigerator
furnished; laundry facilities, parking. $115
a month. Telephone ID 2-1877, after 6
ID 3-1278.
3 ROOM apartment, enclosed porch and garage.
Working
couple
preferred.
Telephone ID 3-1627.

Waukegan

Rd.

Vas
WIndsor

5-1

Available June 15, first floor 5 room heat
apartment in 2 flat building; garage.
Ten:
must do necessary yard work, etc. $100
month. Ideal for family of 4. Near s
shopping, park and transportation.
;

D N. ANDERSON,

665

AGENT

Ppby ,, Glencoe
)
-211
MODERN
2. bedroom
apartment,
cabinet kitchen, ceramic tile bath;
shopping and schools. $145 monthly.
cluding everything but gas and electric
No pets. Telephone WI 5-2419.
939 DEERFIELD Road, 2 bedrooms, s
rate living and dining room, epi
breakfast area, near shops ‘and tra
tation. Telephone FLanders 9-0748.

Vernon

APARTMENTS
TO RENT (Unfurnished
(LAKE FOREST)
rh
NEW Town and Country 5 room apartn
2 bedrooms, tile bath, powder rola
washer, basement and attic, garage.
per month.
Available
after Te
Telephone Lake Bluff 1919.
IMMEDIATE
occupancy, attractive ga
apartment,
3 bedrooms,
2 baths,
room,
kitchen, large closets. p00
;
one
car.
Adults
only.
Rent
$2
month. Lake Forest 387.
TWO
bedroom
apartment
for rent $
Call Lake Forest 2778 after 6 p.m.
THREE rooms and bath, centrally iq
$100 per mo. incl. heat.
FIVE rooms and bath, excellent
$125. per, mo. incl. heat. bat
Forest 382.

Tiled)

Completely Air Conditioned
Full Basement
Gigantic Closets
One Block to Lake
Close
To
Transportation
and
Shopping
Dishwashers
Double Ovens
Double Door-12 Cu. Ft. Refrigerators
Clean Gas Heat
All Formica Kitchen Cabinets
Formica Counters
Pella” Windows
Marbellette Floors
Master T.V. Antenna
65 Gallon Hot Water Heaters
Patio for Outside Enjoyment
Interior
Materials
Correlated
SIEGEL

REALTORS
730

3 BEDROOM — 212 BATHS
ATR CONDITIONED
LUXURIOUS RENTAL HOMES
AVAILABLE SEPTEMBER 1, 1959
CALL ID 2-4115

BETTY

(Unfw

Benj. Piersen Realty

F. LEONARDI
REALTOR

(Ceramic

ID-

suitable for one or two

TO RENT
(DEERFIELD)

STUDIOS

ID 2-2468

2142 Baths

Telephone

Town House, 2 bdrms, 1% baths me
1 bdrm. apartment .............. $132.50 to $137.

EAST OF SHERIDAN ROAD

3

APARTMENTS

factor.

CORNER

Address

apartment.

apartment,

Bluff.
is not

for

people, stove and refrigerator furnishec
in central Highwood
location.
Leonard
Agency, ID 3-1000.
2% ROOM newly decorated apartment, | n
cludes living room, bedroom, kitchen
stove and refrigerator, tile bath, ga
ID 2-1692.
.
6 ROOMS,
unfurnished,
newly decoratec
centrally located, reasonable. Call ID
3093 after 5 p.m.
:
2 BEDROOM second floor apartment, con
venient
location,
near
schools,
tr
ns
shopping district, $75 per month, Te
pays heat and utilities. Leonardi Age
ID 3-1000.
AVAILABLE
immediately, 3 room
ment
and
bath,
near
Lincoln
Scho
Stove, refrigerator,
garage,
and utilit
included. $90. Telephone ID 2-2305.

Libertyville

400 PARK AVENUE
An

SALE (Vacant)
PARK)

REALTORS

bed-

APARIMENTS
TO RENT Seas’
(HIGHLAND PARK

5-1971

EAST RAVINIA—Most unusual ravine lot,
—e
the tree tops. Convenient. $12,-

J-H

spacious

BASEMENT for rent for storage in business
district, 1x.
Call Lake Forest 234.
1, 2 AND
rooms for offices only. 456
dled
abe ID 2-0150.

GLENCOE

2-7873

ESTATE FOR
(HIGHLAND

3

ID 3-1000

NEW
LISTING—2 magnificent WOODED
LOTS just subdivided. In choice estate area.
83x237 each.
$11,500-$12,500.

Glencoe

433 GAGES LAKE RD.
3-0880
GAGES LAKE,

Lake

BEAUTIFUL

HIGHLAND
PARK..... Most desirable, improved wooded lot in Braeside area, near
lake, 70x154. Telephone ID 2-8443.

Illinois

residences.

VEHLOW,

have

1300 sq. ft. with ample parking,
for medical or professional office
for any business.

REAL ESTATE
REALTORS
ROAD

5

FRANKLIN PARKER
JUstice 7-5031
Box 425, Fox Lake, III.

GLENCOE

GLENCOE

about

of this type.

Price

Spacious brick Colonial perfect for growing
family.
5 bedrooms,
2 baths on
second
floor. Near beach and transportation. Beautiful grounds. $37,000.

INC.

HOME

modern

MUndelein

EAST
CENTRAL-ULTRA-CONVENIENT.
Beautiful wooded lot, 75x200. Among lovely
homes. $15,000.

2 bedroom furnished, on
Lake rights. Price, $5,300.
farm;

Should

ARCHITECT
OFFERS
own
designed
8
room one story modern house. Unique interior, 11 ft. ceiling, 40 ft. living room, 4
acres
on wooded
stream.
5 car
garage.
$38,000. Telephone NEwton 4-3834.

712

Estate

rooms, 24%.baths,
and the other
usual necessary rooms to complete

JOHN

PRAIRIE VIEW
COUNTRYSIDE

DEERFIELD — 3 bedroom
ranch
home,
large living room with separate dining area,
full basement with lots of storage space,
large back yard, fenced.

SERVICE

Upper - bracket

VIEW

CO.

ROOMS
with stove, refrigerator,
except electricity, close to transpo:
and shopping; couple preferred. Ava
now. Telephone ID 2-6683.
3 ROOM apartment and bath for ren ‘a
ba
floor, in Highwood. Telephone
7
PLEASANT
garage apartment, private
€
trance,
car
port;
woman
to work ©
house, salary; man, experienced gard
and handyman to work part time in

SMALL

acres. Prefer a substantial stone or
brick home on 1 level, or will consider a 2 story home.

Around

REALTY

3

1658

WANTED

WANTED

MOUNT
PROSPECT
11 rooms, 5 bedrooms, 2% tile baths, 20
closets, center hall, 2 fireplaces, wall to
wall carpeting, Florida room,
15x30 birch
kitchen, panelled recreation room, all air
conditioned. 2 car electric eye garage, dozens of built-ins and extras, shade trees, 7
years
old, country
club section.
$49,500.
Telephone CLearbrook 5-1705. By owner.

LANG

(Vacant)

garage.

4-1763

HIGHLAND
PARK—Air
conditioned
3
bedroom face brick ranch on large wooded
corner lot in Sherwood Forest. Living room
with picture window, dining L, sapling finished walls in basement
recreation room.
Low 30’s.

Realtors

ESTATE

Also living quarters
and bath for a couple;

6-2900

2-2015

125.
2081

change

REAL

a home

CO.

BARRINGTON-BUILTMORE
This is for that one out of a hundred that
appreciates and wants quality instead of the
usual run of homes with the same old look
in congested
area. This darling home
is
exotic, original and unique. On one acre of
paradise all of it’s own. Strictly an adult
home, planned for outstanding formal or informal entertaining. Indoors and outdoors.
Also with perfect SET UP for those who
may even love to have their in-laws living
with them. $42,900. For more details call
DUnkirk 1-3031.

WILMETTE — Sprucewood
Village,
first
time offered. Executive’s home in park like
setting, 3 bedrooms, 2 powder rooms with
connecting
tub and
shower,
large dining
room, spacious living room, breakfast room,
covered patio, attached garage, fully carpeted, and all drapes included. Owner moving to larger home
in Sprucewood.
Low

&gt;

McGUIRE

HIllerest

BY OWNER

3. Well
maintained
ranch
w/living
and
dining rms. 3 twin size bdrms., 2 Cerarnic
tile baths.
2 car garage.
Recreation
rm.
Large lot. Convenient location. Gas heat.

ESTATE

REALTORS

HAVEN
CORP.

BRiargate

REAL

REALTORS

Libertyville

HIGHLAND
PARK — 3 bedrooms,
11%
baths, bi-level, (never more than 7 steps
up or down), panelled family room, pleasant
yard with sun and shade. 20’s.

6 P.M.

See

50 by
Forest

ISLAND
LAKE—Wooded
lake
front lot
with sea wall, $40 front foot. Nice resinr fe surroundings. Call CRestwood 2ae &lt;

ROAD,

bedrooms, 214 baths, screen porch
and a 2 car att. gar. Come see it

SCHWANDT

12 Noon to 6 p.m. at
2251 Heathercliff Dr.
1/4 Mile No. of Buckley Rd.
and 1/4 Mile W. of O’Plaine Rd.

STREET

COUNTRY

quiet and beautiful, with lots of
neighbors close by, this 4 year old
EARLY
AMERICAN
home
is
charming
beyond
description!
3

SEARS

ESTATE FOR SALE
(MISCELLANEOUS)

40’s!

Like new 2 bedroom, 1% bath, brick veneer
home with attached garage. Paneled den,
oak floors, plastered throughout.
1580 sq.
ft. living area. Priced at $31,500.

WITH

MEADOW
HOMES

THE

REAL

LIBERTYVILLE

$18,950

SALE

IN

PRAIRIE

MODEL OPEN
DAILY &amp; SUNDAY

Living-dining combination, 3 bedrooms,
basement, garage, plastered, gas heat.
blocks to school. All for $24,500.

ON a WINDING

At

$22,000

END

BANNOCKBURN

One
year old,
3 bedroom
contemporary
frame with carport on 100 by 200 ft. lot.
Birch
cabinet
kitchen,
hardwood
floors,
beamed ceilings. Transferred owner has it
priced at $15,500 for quick action. Immediate occupancy.

SEE THE
“RANCHO”

Frame
Colonial,
basement,
garage,
living
room with fireplace, dining room, 3 bedrooms,
porch,
wooded
lot. 2 blocks
to
churches
and town.
Low
down
payment.

DEAD

ONE of the loveliest homes in the
area, this 9 room SCHOLZ RANCH
is in a choice residential location
and secluded setting. It is arranged
for the fullest enjoyment
of indoor-outdoor living. Separate dining room, 2 extra rooms. 4 bedrooms, and 2 baths. Low 40’s. See

OFFICES,

County’s
Popular
Subdivision

COMPLETE

DUPLEX
zoned improved lot
Ryan Place. Telephone Lake
after 5 p.m.

DEERFIELD-LINCOLNSHIRE

today!

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE (Vacant)
(LAKE FORE

ESTATE
FOR SALE (Improved)
(MISCELEANCOUSS

or Lake

Winnetka

BEAUTIFUL
MEADOW HAVEN
Lake
Most
Prestige

REAL

CO.

6-7180

LIBERTYVILLE

10-5

Deerfield Rd.

HOUSE—

REALTY

Bay Rd.
Hillcrest

John Coons, Realtor
in Deerfield
623

et oaae

We have: am-easy:.to. care was 4 yr. old. face
brick ranch on a private’ lane,: overlooking
forest preserve. Large living rm. with fireplace wall panelled in mellowed birch, dining area, streamlined kitchen with eating
area, 3 Bedrms,
2 ceramic
baths,
large
utility rm, 2 car garage, Radiant heat, low
taxes. A ‘charming home in fine condition.
34,900

Have All Kinds of Vacant
Give Us a Call

SUNDAYS

GLENVIEW

Beautiful brick colonial in exclusive area
on 4% acre. House entirely air-conditioned,
carpeted, There is the much desired family
room overlooking a formal garden, family
sized dining rm, large liv. rm. with colonial
bay window,
dream
kitchen
&amp;
breakfast
room, 3 Bdrms, 2% baths, recreation rm,
2%
car
gar., many
extras.
Replacement
value would be over $60,000. An outstanding
buy at $54,500

Call Nancy Sullivan
WI 5-5100 or WI 5-1393

OPEN

Chipewreds

YEAR
old 4 bedroom bi-level. 2%
baths, panelled family
room
with fireplace,
built-in
oven,
range,
and_
dishwasher, wall to wall carpeting, patio, garage,
large landscaped lot. 414%4%
loan
available.
$33,500.
1657
Cranshire
Ct.
Telephone WI 5-2779.

THINKING

COLONIAL

This new spacious family home for value
is incomparable. It’s convenient to the tollway as well as Loop transportation, the finest schools, churches
and shopping.
You
will find:
A magnificent studio living room
4 large bedrooms
2% ceramic tile baths
A charming, completely equipped
kitchen with a large eating area
A lovely panelled family room with
fireplace
A full basement
Natural gas heating
2 car attached garage
The owner will consider a contract purOffered at $43,000
chase

We

SALE

(DEERFIELD)

locati
‘

APARTMENTS TO RENT r (Furnished)
(HIGHLAND PARK
ONE room furnished kitchenette apa
share
shower
bath with
one;
close
See
"ai
and
shopping.
Telep!
ID 2-5481.
2%
ROOMS,
$110 month, lease requi
in business district. Also one room
bath, $70 month. Available July 1.
phone ID 2-8117 or WI 5-1869
PLEASANT
2 room and bath apartm:
lovely
view;
adults,
no
pets; par

or including

utilities.

Telephone

I

75

yt

2%

ROOM
kitchenette
apartment, _
pletely
furnished,
heat
and hot
we
parking, laundry facilities, child welc
near Fort Sheridan. Telephone ID 2FURNISHED
apartment, kitchen, bedr

and

private

bath.

1658

McGovern; ;

land Park.
ROOM
3
furnished
apartment, fear
Sheridan. Call ID 2-2792 or ID 2-57

NEWLY

furnished

2

room

apartmen

block to transportation. Telephone ID
3971 or ID 2-9184.
3 ROOM furnished apartment, private
Inquire
at 647 Park Ave. West, |
land Park.
3 ROOM cottage, completely furnished,
per month. Utilities furnished except
and gas. 546 Green Bay Rd. in
wood. ID 2-0885.
FOR rent: first floor 24% room apa
summer months; parking space, util
Telephone ID 2-4056.

APARTMENTS TO RENT (Furni:
(LAKE FOREST)
SUBLET
for
summer.
Available imme
iately, to Sept. 15th. Completely. furn
4 room apartment, air-conditioned.

Lake

Forest

3412.

‘

HOUSES TO RENT (Unfurnished)
(HIGHLAND PARK)
A

SMALL home ideal for older coup
working couple. Living room and dit
bedroom,
kitchen,
bathroom,
au
gas hot water heat, garage for one
2
Available June 1st. Will rent to respons
ble people only. $89.50 per month,
Cal
ID 2-2871 between 9:30 a.m. and 12 no
6 ROOM ranch house, breezeway and ga
attached, lake view, carpeting, lar,
rent $200. Telephone, GReenleaf 5- 71

�Fe |

HELP WANTED -FEMALE

id

phone ID 2-5439.

DROOM
and
sleeping porch
home,
ge, fenced yard, possession now. 583
entsia. Telephone ALpine
1-2025 or

SES
oom

TO RENT (Unfurnished)
(DEERFIELD)

house,

full basement,

‘Permanent

to

all

Opportunity For Advancement
Group Hospital &amp; Life Insurance
And

12

WI 5-0984
6 P.M.

TO

house,
3 bedrooms,
2 baths;
, carpeting, stove and refrigerator
ided. Immediate occupancy. Telephone

TO

RENT

(LAKE

(Unfurnished)

FOREST)

room,
two bedroom
house, vacant
1. Shown by appointment only. Telee Lake Forest 760.
E bedroom
brick ranch.
114 baths,
eation room with bar and fireplace,
heat; near schools and trains. $200.
_ Forest 4433.

%

MILE

for

; Passe

month

with

of

terrace

July,

and

porch.

SES &amp; APARTMENTS

5

bed-

Local
work,

Telephone

J-10

c/o

AM

for
interesting
time; will train.

SKOKIE

TO

with

Telephone

ID

2-3310

room,

adjacent

ID

Park

2-0348.

HILBORN

TO

Chestnut

can

work

OPERATOR

Sat. &amp; Sun.

8 a.m.

to 4 p.m.

but not
open.

close

essential.

OFFICE

(5 p.m.-1:30

Mr.

WI

Magli,

5-2660.

Briar-

(Div.

of

Smith-Corona

~ GENERAL OFFICE
can handle any or all of the
Switch-

Typing, Billing, Secretarial,

aphone, Filing. Ideal suburban
tion, 5 day week, top pay and
its. Call A. Walsh, Hillcrest

experience.

Line

Tele-

Sy

SP

ao

PANINI

I

Ry
ah tas
ete ventas Gas

Ce

gaan

iean | amen

¥

at

vacations,

working

benefits.

have
lunch

Call

conditions.

Inquire

FRED HARVEY'S
LAKE FOREST OASIS
On Illinois Tollway
59A and 176.

between

Hwys.

Inc.)

Roads

Personnel

Ill.

SECRETARY
FOR
SALES
DEPT.
DICtaphone experience preferred. Good typist.
Salary
open.
Company
benefits.
Phone
CRestwood 2-5700, Randolph Lab.
SECRETARY,
part
time;
shorthand
required Small pleasant office. Apply Mr.
Wilson
or
telephone
ID
2-6220.
Boy
Scouts of America.
FULL or part time secretary for small office. Enough variety to avoid any monotony, and our girls have always found our
work most interesting. Typing and shorthand the only essentials. ID 3-0064.
LEGAL stenographer, part time. Telephone
ID 2-4070.
WAITRESS wanted, full or part time. Call
CRestwood 2-4358.

unity for steady full time
yment in small modern office

SS wanted with
e Windsor 5-9790,

Marchant,

County

Deerfield,

Deerfield

assignments:

and

willing to learn. We

insurance,

Excellent

Many

a.m.)

KLEINSCHMIDT
Waukegan

APPT.

WAITRESSES
CASHIERS
COOKS

Challenging opportunity for alert
woman
to handle detailed assignments.
Must
have
legible
hand
writing.
Paid
hospitalization,
life
insurance, pension plan, etc.

WANTED—FEMALE

FOR

facilities, coffee breaks, etc.
WI 5-1993 between 8 and 4.

RD.

good

typing

Ridge

SUPPLY

Evanston

and

steno.

Ill.

JOIN
GBC FAMILY
IN NORTHBROOK

ENGINEERS

PRODUCT

DESIGNERS

These
aw

men will carry new products right
from the talking stage into producCall

UN

OFF
Prefer

AMERICAN
2020 Ridge

skills.

She

learn personnel work
and
be able to deal with the
One girl office. Call WI 5-

1990.
EXPERIENCED
general office, typing and
dictation for interesting work in art and
interior decorating gallery in Glencoe. 5
day week, good salary, references. Call
VErnon 5-2322 for appointment.

HOSPITAL
Evanston

SUPPLY
UN

interview

2-3700

SET

*

PRESSMAN
*
*

experienced all-around
ood rate os Bt
man
+

THE
952

BROOKSHORE

Sunset Ridge Road
Phone CRestwood

man

CO.

Northbrook
2-1200

Radial Drill
have

We

Excellent
opportunity
for
young
woman,
high school grad. Position offers good starting salary and many promotional possibilities. 45 wpm typing ability required. Congenial office atmosphere, company cafeteria
and full range company benefits. Hours: 9-5
Monday through Friday.

personal

GENERAL BINDING
CORPORATION
1101 SKOKIE HIGHWAY
NORTHBROOK

4-6050

TYPIST

for

CRESTWOOD

CORP.

MANICURIST
wanted, full or part time
at Willis Presents, 661 Vernon, Glencoe.
Telephone VErnon 5-3555.
IMAGINATIVE HIGH SCHOOL OR COLLEGE GIRL wanted as leader for small
neighborhood day camp meeting 2 mornings a week. References. Call ID 2-7330.

a man

an opening for

who

has had over 6 months experience
on a radial drill to work from 4
p.m. to 12:30 am. Free life and
hospitalization insurance, vacation,
etc. Good pay. Call WI 5-1990.

CORP.
4-6050

YOUNG woman wanted, 21 to 35, for general office work; must type. Ideal working conditions, Call or apply in person,
DBA Products Co. Inc., 350 County Line
Road,
Deerfield. Telephone
WI
5-4300.
SALES GIRL: WHO LIKES DOLLS AND
TOYS to help us in our busy toy shop.
Full or part time. Permanent.
Surprise
Shop, 338 Park Ave., Glencoe.
PART-TIME saleslady interested in selling
attractive women’s apparel 3 or 4 days
per week;
pleasant environment.
Please
write P.O. Box 589, Lake Forest.
TeleEXPERIENCED
waitress
wanted.
phone ID 2-2232.
GIRL
or woman
wanted
for
all-around
cafeteria work in Deerfield industry. Telephone WI 5-1990, Extension 226.
SALESLADY
—
Full or part time. We
have
an
opening
for
intelligent,
well
groomed lady with or without experience,
Selling children’s apparel. Permanent, 5,
4, or 3 day week. Top salary. Substantial employee
discount.
Highland
Park
ID 2-8655.
BEAUTY OPERATOR
EXPERIENCED.
A
TIME
CALL LAKE
FOREST
1917
EXPERIENCED manicurist wanted for exclusive barber shop in Ravinia. Telephone
ID 3-1217.
YOUNG
lady, attractive. Part or full time,
drug and cosmetic experience. Must have
own transportation. Telephone ID 3-1212.
WAITRESSES, full or part time, for Highland Park’s most beautiful busy restaurant.
Excellent salary, meals and tips. ID 280.
HELP

The girl who works for me in personnel is getting married. We are
interested in hiring someone with
would
should
public.

2020

HOSPITAL

CLERK

Our office has an opening for a girl

CLERK
of 911
Harold

2-8000

Roads

PROCESS

to home?

PERSONNEL

someone

Some experience helpful, but not necessary.
No shorthand required, but must have 50
wpm
typing
speed.
Excellent
opportunity
for career minded young woman interested
in responsibility and varied duties. Good
starting salary and full range company benefits. Hours:
9-5 Monday
through
Friday.

AMERICAN

who likes. to work with figures and
is very accurate. It would be desirable if she could do some light typing, but we will consider training

St.,

PART TIME

d,

postFull

Interesting work in pleasant environment. Why commute when you

ID

839 WAUKEGAN
DEERFIELD
WI 5-2000

RENT

WANTED

appointment,

wing

Weekends,

CALL

MAIL CLERK
Duraclean Co.

pene and part time waitresses wanted.
Club,

SWITCHBOARD

Experience
preferable
40 hour week. Salary

TYPISTS

WANTED

ED, garage to rent, vicinity
itford
Rd.,
Deerfield.
Call
th, WI 5-0267.

d Country

time.

group

boat.
Call
at 745
ield, after 6 p.m.

HELP

Ave.

if de-

3E stall for rent, suitable for storing

GARAGE

SECRETARY

e.

RECORD
KEEPERS

suitable for

kitchen

or without following

good

duties,

CLERK-TYPIST

To sell women’s
apparel and accessories.
5 day week, permanent position. Good starting salary. Employees discount. Telephone
ID 2-0900 for appointment.

), sleeping
room;
will
consider
g with elderly person or children 2
nights a week. Call Lake Bluff 5321.

GARAGE

floor

TECHNICIAN

Full

SALESLADY

2393.

ROOMS

general

ASSISTANT TO
CREDIT MANAGER

NG
room for men.
Cooking
op. Call after 4:30 p.m. WI 5-0268.
NG
room, hot water at all times,
transportation. Telephone ID 2-3786.

ar

time,

NURSES

Typing, filing, general office and
=
machine
experience
desirable.

514 Waukegan

RTABLE room adjacent bathroom,
own and transportation. Also small
apartment. Gentleman preferred.

Forest

Full

Inc.)

Line

for top notch
opportunity
challenging
A
process engineers who can handle all phases
of fabricating and assembly of office equipment.

EXPERIENCED SWITCHBOARD-TYPIST
FOR MODERN HIGHLAND PARK. OFaii ALL BENEFITS, MR. GRAFF, ID
-8711.

RENT

“large comfortable
two,

REGISTERED

Marchant,

County

Deerfield,

THE
LOCATED

wages
Paid vacations
Group Insurance
CALL IMMEDIATELY
ID 2-8768

salary.

LAUNDRY

HOTEL
sleepin
rooms, by day or
, free parking, 31 1 Waukegan Ave.,
wood.
for rent, kitchen
privileges;
also
artment. Near transportation. No chil1. Telephone ID 2-3591.
2 or

office
Good

and

on.

NEEDS

VALLEY

LUCILE
ROOMS

With

HIGHLAND PARK
HOSPITAL

LAB

2-9214.

Hiighland

girl
full

Smith-Corona

ENGINEERS

HAIRDRESSERS
(4)
MALE
OR FEMALE
Good

salary and working conditions.

TION owner of 7 or 8 room home:
are looking for a house in southeast
hland Park,
middle
30’s. PRIVATE
Box

ILLINOIS BELL
TELEPHONE

68

of

qualified

NORTHBROOK
CRESTWOOD 2-1000

WANTED

FESSIONAL man, wife and 2 girls de3 bedroom furnished house, one to
year lease, any time before September
up to $250 per month, established in
ime community for 25 years, Best care
id references. Highland Park or south
of. Telephone ALpine 1-9543.
couple wishes apt. on estate with
ent, in exchange for ground care.
ref. ORchard 5-0392.
couple needs 5-6 room apartment.
mable rent. Good
references.
ORd 5-0392.
executive
needs
three bedroom,
lished house
in good
location. 2
en, no pets. 6 months to 1 year
pancy July. 1 to 15. Top rental
Telephone SEeley 3-5110, Ext. 253,

ONLY.

ROUTE

for

(Div.

Waukegan

Culligan, Inc.

Northbrook

NEAT GIRL

Lake

_ (Furnished or Unfurnished)

TIES

OF

openings

Opportunity for older man to age
55. Must be experienced in all
phases of janitorial work. Paid hospitalization, life insurance, pension
plan, etc.

women.

DEPENDABLE

SES TO RENT (Furnished)
(LAKE FOREST)
LABLE

SOUTH

Immediate

a.m.

KLEINSCHMIDT

TYPISTS

and

GENERAL BINDING
CORPORATION
1101 SKOKIE HIGHWAY
NORTHBROOK

VI 5-2051.

CLASSIQUE
SALON
1815 St. Johns Ave.
‘ID 2-1603
BEAUTY

Deerfield

2-3700

5 p.m.-1:30

Pleasant air conditioned shop. Near
transportation. Apply

In

More

CRESTWOOD

m

BOUSES

Many

Come
in or call for personal
interview.
Employment office hours are 8:30 to 4:00
bercag through Friday. 8:30 to 12:00 Saturday.

REALTORS
aukegan Road
PEN SUNDAY

Job

With a Growing Company
Good Starting Salary

2 car ga-

large lot; walking distance
niences, $150 per month.

Service
Representative

WORKING CLOSE TO HOME
IN A NEW MODERN OFFICE
HAS SO MANY ADVANTAGES

broker.

JANITOR

BEAUTY OPERATOR
MANICURIST
SHAMPOO GIRL

Young Women

DIATE occupancy, newly remodeled
droom house, 1 block north of Rabusiness
section,
$160
monthly.

TOOL DESIGNERS
DRAFTSMEN
Positions

require

of initiative
Our
be

own

open

from

and

a

high

good

employment

Saturday,

9 a.m.

to

degree

judgment.
office

will

6th,

1959

June

12 noon.

If more

convenient send your resume to

FRANK

G. HOUGH

CO.

7th and Sunnyside Libertyville, Il.
EXPERIENCED
salesman
to sell
Fords in Deerfield, Northbrook
area.
Leads
furnished.
Good

commission

plan.

$100 per week

guarantee.
Demonstrator
and
hospital plan available. See Dick
Mau, Holmes Motor Co., 1909 St.

Johns Ave., Highland

Park.

WANTED—MALE

MEAT company needs man to deliver and
work in plant. Contact Harold Holth, 911
Stratford, Deerfield, telephone WI 5-0267
for details.

WANTED: high school boy, grass cutting all
summer, and man, garden helper. Telephone ID 2-0652.
CARPENTERS-UNION,
rough work, year
around, see Carl, 239 Pine St., Deerfield.
Telephone CRestwood 2-1870.
ARCHITECTURAL draftsman senior, school
and
commercial.
Salary
commensurate
with experience and ability. Stanley D. Anderson and Associates, 270 E: Deerpath.
Telephone Lake Forest 345.
BUSINESS
IS GREAT
You can become a part of this if you are
interested in a bright future, for an appointment call COrnelius 7-0443.

SUMMER

HELP

We need 3 industrial engineering
students for summer work. Must
have had a minimum of 2 years IE
work in college.
Tractomotive

Co.

Deerfield

WANTED:
a young man to be trained for
shipping and assembly work in cleaning
plant. Apply
in person, Wayne’s
Lake
Shore
Cleaners,
454
Waukegan
Ave.,
Highwood.

WANTED
Telephone

chauffeur for Limousine
‘Lake

Forest

service.

4550.

Thursday, June 4, 1959
iaehish er bath,
ktA a) ede

�ta

AD

dj

Fs oo ca

i

.

LINO-TYPE OPERATOR
*

*

HIGH

*

KLUGE PRESSMAN
*
Part

THE
952

*

*

time—hours

*

to

*

BROOKSHORE

Sunset Ridge Road
Phone CRestwood

YOUNG

man,

school,
for
camp;
must
Lake Forest

HIGH

suit.

*

school

junior

or

maintenance
have
own
3120.

senior,

CO.

Northbrook
2-1200

senior

in

high

work
at day
car. Telephone

male

or

female,

for

engineering
office,
afternoons;
duties,
copy typing, telephone answering. Lake
Forest

4300.

\

DISTRIBUTOR

turer

Sive

ence

for

has opening

training

with

necessary,

only requirement.
chard 6-0330.

HELP

West

Coast

for man
pay,

no

ambition
For

Manufac-

21-35,

special

experi-

and

interview

exten-

neatness
call

OR-

WANTED—DOMESTIC

50

A-1
JOBS
Cooks,
$50-$60.
Couples,
$400-$500. Maias and nursemaids, $45-$60.
No
fee. Shorline
Agency,
525
Lincoln
Ave.,
Winnetka.
Telephone
HI
6-5818.
WOMAN
for cooking and downstairs. Experienced. White. Top wages. Telephone
Lake Forest 2242.
IF you are the RIGHT, thoroughly experienced, COUPLE looking for a wonderful
position in adult
family,
our home
is
yours for life; excellent salary, no laundry.
ID 2-1640.
PLEASANT
garage apartment, private entrance,
car
port;
woman
to work
in
house, salary; man, experienced gardener
and handyman, to work Be fa time in exvasa
for apartment.
Telephone ID 2-

school

GENERAL

housework,

live in, own

$60
A WEEK
HOUSEKEEPER
Must like children. Air conditioned home.
Own room, bath, TV. All modern convenienees. Must have excellent recent local references. Telephone ID 2-2928.
YOUNG couple with infant, new house with
latest appliances want woman to cook and
care
occasionally
for baby.
Call Lake
apie 4936, 8 a.m. to 10 a.m. &amp; 5 p.m. to
p.m.
and

and light housework,

Mondays.

Call

ID

Sundays

2-3424,

EXPERIENCED,
temporary or permanent,
white, general housework, cook. One in
family,
references
required.
Write
Mrs.
Alfred Granger, 891 North Sheridan Rd.,
Lake Forest. Give telephone number.
$50 TO $60
NURSEMAID
Air conditioned
home.
Must
have
excellent local references. Other help kept. Telephone ID 2-2268.

ursday, June 4, 1959

like

summer

SECRETARY desires part time
physician’s office. Telephone
after 5 p.m.

position in
ID 2-6863

COTTON

and

silk dresses,

$1.00

hour.

Lake

Forest

354.

See

story

this issue,
RELIABLE young man desires garden work,
wash
windows,
clean
basement,
lawn
work, any odd job around house. Call
MAjestic 3-7533.
TWO
boys want work cutting lawns, any
size. Telephone WI 5-0095 or WI 5-1366.

LAWN

and

garden

work

wanted

THE

and

18. VE

curtains,

blankets,

TELEPHONE

drapes,

ete.

ID 2-8615

CLEANERS,
male
or
female;
couples,
maids, housemen. Experienced only. Mrs.
Baker, Shorline Agency, Winnetka. HIllcrest 6-5818.
MAN desires yard work or housework.
phone DExter 6-8479.

Tele-

COLORED
woman wants 3 days a week,
cleaning, ironing or child care. 6 years
a Highland Park, ONtario 2-3628 after
p.m.
EXPERIENCED
laundress will do ironing
only in own home. Telephone ID 2-9184
or ID 3-0893.
WILL do cleaning and ironing, 3 days week,
Monday, Wednesday, Friday. Have reference. Call DExter 6-9072.
EXPERIENCED lady wants day work, good
references.
Telephone
MAjestic
3-4797,
ask for Jerline.
YOUNG
reliable
lady
desires
Monday,
Tuesday
and Friday
day. work,
experienced. Telephone REpublic 7-1321, after
10 a.m. Friday.
WISCONSIN
high school girl desires job
as Mother’s
helper
for summer.
Stay.
Telephone ID 2-1324 after 5:30.
HIGH school junior girl seeks summer employment;
clerking,
waitress,
drive
ins,
general housework, baby sitting, etc. Call
Lake Forest 4688.
WILL
do ironing in my home, $1.25 an
hour. Call Lake Forest 2082.
HOUSEKEEPER,
experienced.
Colored
woman
wishes
housekeeping
work,
A-1
references. Will take day work or serving.
UNiversity 4-5060.
WOMAN
desires day work, 3 days, experienced,
references,
own _ transportation.
Telephone DExter 6-5808.
BABY

SITTING

REFINED lady would like part time sitting
in your home. Telephone 1D 2-4444, ask
for Mrs. Talios.
WANTED:
responsible woman to baby sit
and do ironing Friday nights. Telephone
WI 5-2737.
EXPERIENCED
young
lady,
24, college
background, wishes to care for children,
weekends.
Swimming
lessons thrown in.
Telephone MAnsfield 6-0506.
WANTED:
baby sitter for Saturday, June
6 and later dates. Own transportation or
oh
aya Park resident. Telephone ID 2ve
HIGH school girl wanted for baby sitting
week day mornings with 14 month old
child. Must be reliable and live within
walking distance of 1231 Cavell in Sherwood Forest or have own transportation.
ID 2-7226.
WANTED:
responsible experienced woman
as baby
sitter for week
end evenings.
References, Own transportation desirable.
Telephone ID 3-1978.
MOTHER’S helper, experienced high school
or college girl, 16 or over, to assist with
light housework and care of 2 year old
child. References required. ID 2-5583.
RELIABLE girls wants to baby sit Friday
or Saturday
evenings.
Good
references.
Own transportation. Call after 5:30, DEIta 6-1740.
EXPERIENCED high school girl wants baby sitting work, steady for the summer.
Telephone WI 5-0143.
SITTER
wanted
7
Saturdays,
June
20August
1. $50, 12 noon-12 midnight.
3
children, ages 7, 5, 1. Telephone Lake

Forest 4558.

SALE

of

art.

Appraisers

and gift tax.
obligation on

for

°

No

SPECIALIST
IN HOME
SALES
Either in Your Home or Our Galleries

886

Linden

Winnetka

COFFEE
and

Friday,

1926

Spruce
Come

6-7444

CLUTCH

Garage

Thursday,

HI

Sale

9:30-4:00

for fun—with

251

Waukegan

Ave.

ce Peana i

GARAGES CAR AND A HALF WITH
OVER
DOOR, CONCRETE FLOOR
AND
RAGE WINDOWS.

e

NO

DOWN

$695
WALSH

E-Z

PAYMENT

HOME

IMPROVEMENT CO.
2800 BELVIDERE
ON 2-8770
WAUK
IMMEDIATE CONSTRUCTIO

SUPPLIES

Highwood

ID

PAINT

2-1418

One carton King-size Coca-Cola free
CUBIC foot Philco refrigerator and 50 every gallon Enterprise Paint. Exteri
Ib. freezer combination, excellent condiInterior Paint to suit your every
tion, rose drapes, 2 panels, 50x168, rea- our newly remodeled store to see co m
sonable. Telephone ID 2-2091.
displays of glass, mirrors, shower a
GARAGE sale; girl’s 20 inch bicycle; lamp
enclosures, Window shades, Venetian
table; clothing; 3-way TV console; radio;
Bamboo draperies, and Modernfold .
hose reel; file drawer;
other miscellan- doors.
eous. 565 Cherokee, Highland Park.
LAKESIDE GLASS &amp; PAINT |
PAIR small fireside tables; what-not shelf;
boy’s
work
bench;
train
table;
8xil
ID
braided rug; mahogany desk and chair;
lamps. Reasonable. ID 2-5881.
FOR BETTER LIVING
GAS
range; refrigerator; club chair; golf
Aluminum Specialty Products, Combi
clubs; Baby Tenda; all in good condition.
windows, doors, awnings, sidings, pore
Telephone ID 3-0148.
jalousies,
gutters,
fencing
closures,
LARGE light finished oak office desk; G.E.
furniture, ornamental railings, etc.
phonograph with loud speaker; bathinette;
and price wise see us before buying
birch convertible high chair; birch potty
THERMO-TITE WINDOW.
chair. ID 2-7060.
708 WAUKEGAN RD.
WI 5-1198
SALE, June 6 and 7, 9:00 to 5:00. French
living room pieces and dining set, beds, FOR rent: garden tillers, cub tractc
desks, lamps,
tables,
appliances, linens,
attachments,
lawn
mowers,
etc.
dishes,
silver, bric-a-brac,
clothing,
133
mower
egg?
i
service,
and
Laurel Ave., Highland Park.
Telephone
ID 2-8029, 2070 Green
Rd. Woody’s Highland Park Servi
FINE leather couch, maroon, excellent for
tion.
:
office or game room, $150; corner cabinet, $75, fine condition; down filled arm
HOOVER factory repairs. Belts 45c,
chair, mahogany frame, $25. ID 2-4696,
for $1.00; Reconditioned Hoovers, —
New Hoovers, $49.95; Freeman’s
MOVING—MUST
SELL
Sales and Service, 648 Western A’
Davenport, good condition, $55; matching
Forest 519.
:
chair, $25; carpeting with pad, 12x18, $190;
marble top coffee table, $25; vanity table
with plate glass and 3 way mirror. Other
household goods. ID 2-0978 weekdays afetr
WINDOW SHADES |
5, all day weekends.
BEDROOM
set, mahogany, 4 poster type Window coverings, such as shades
double bed, mattress, springs, large dress- bamboo
are e all on
draperies,
er with matching wall mirror and chest of Lakeside Glass and Paint Co. newly
drawers, $50. Call Lake Bluff 3195.
eled store. Quick service is available
BEST offer takes beige wool wall to wall standard items. Estimates are given
or be
carpeting and padding, 13x18. Buyer must obligation. Call us today,
stop in and visit us.
remove. Telephone ID 2-4306.
MOVING:
mahogany bedroom set, double
LAKESIDE GLASS &amp; PAINT
bed, pull-up chair; blond bookcase, 10 cu.
ID
ft.; refrigerator; enamel top kitchen cabinet;
formica
kitchen
set;
knickknack
shelves,
lamps,
dishes,
etc.
reasonable.
HAYRIDE PARTIES for spring and
Lake Forest 2732 after 5.
er.
Horses
boarded.
Happs’
HOTPOINT electric range, 4 burners, oven
Northbrook. CRestwood 23181.
warmer, automatic timer. Excellent condi- PORTABLE typewriter, Smith-Corona {
tion. Best offer. Telephone ID 2-5103.
Deluxe,
case included, like new;
CARPETING,
draperies,
Simmons
twin
$55 (lists at $120), Tleephone WI :
hide-a-bed,
porch
and
den _ furniture,
tables,
appliances,
fine
copper
antique
wood bucket. Many other miscellaneous
GLASS
items. Thursday, Saturday and Sunday, 9
a.m. to 5 p.m., 588 Sheridan Rd., HighEve
ing
in glass is available
land Park.
bic
geome Py
Lakeside Glass and *|
EXQUISITE
ANTIQUES
Victorian
gentleman’s
chair,
lady’s chair, Co. Mirrors, specialties, Shower an
Enclosures
are
all
on display.
a pair of rosewood slipper chairs, one pair
unique small Victorian tables, small oxford
LAKESIDE GLASS &amp; PAI
mahogany chest, Chinese lamp, pair modern
ID
hanging
lamps,
floor
lamp,
one
oriental
1914 First St.
prayer rug, pair gold spreads, 3 pairs short
hand blocked draw drapes. By appointment.
AIR CONDITIONERS
Telephone ID 2-3613.
Easily installed — you_can do it yo
ATTENTION ALL BABIES
only
$199.95.
Freeman’s Air (¢
1
hp.
Cute little toddler is selling her like new
ditions? Sales 648 N. Western.
play pen, auto bed, Teeter Babe, Infanseat.
FOR sale, graduation specials: student
Best offer. Telephone ID 2-8908.
limed
oak
or maple,
$19.95;
BEIGE
wool
rug,
1%
years
old,
9x19,
match, $11.75; Corona Clipper t
matching
stair
and
hall
runners’
with
er, $75.76; Parker 21 pen and pene
pads; foam rubber studio lounge; studio
$8.95, Chandler’s, Inc., 645 Central
tables; mahogany dining room set; baby
Highland Park.
crib. Telephone WI 5-3374.
3% YEAR old RCA Whirlpool washer and
dryer;
Revere
tape
recorder;
WilcoxGray tape recorder; portable sewing machine; living room furniture; one year old
remodeled store to st :
dinette set; one year old bedroom
set; Visit our newly
complete displays of Tub and Shower
bathinette. Telephone WI 5-2379.
closures, Glass,
mirrors,
Venetian
BEDROOM
2-piece chaise longue; mahogBamboo
draperies,
and
Modern
|
any bookcase; mahogany wall what-not;
doors.
;
3 pairs 2% yd. chartreuse drapes; green
floral lined drapes, 7x17 ft.; child’s play
LAKESIDE GLASS &amp; PAIN
table with chair. Telephone WI 5-5484.
ID
1984 First St.
ORIENTAL
2 yard runner and matching
throw rug, 41 inches wide; carpet sweeper; upright vacuum
cleaner;
several taNEED BLACK SOIL?
bles from
$10;
lady’s
summer
clothes,
We are one of the North Shore’s la
“
size
12-14;
hiking
shoes;
lamp
shades;
soil aod oy
pia be yen ie are
miscellaneous. Everything good condition.
equi
or
grading and
spreading
1436 Crowe. Telephone WI 5-1601.
sie
jiM BEINLICH
GAS range, bassinet, crib and mattress, baby
or
VE 5-0513
scale,
youth
mattress,
odds
and
ends.
EVERGREENS
for sale, low
s§
Telephone WI 5-0609.
Pfitzer
Junipers.
State
inspecte:
Fairview, Deerfield. Telephone WI
12

1914 First St.

DEERFIE

9:00-1:00

St., Highland

e

READY TO PAINT HARDWD. FURNITURE BARGAINS: EARLY AM. DESK,
$25.75, BOSTON ROCKER, $10.75; VAN, $7.95; 3 DR. CHEST, $26.75; BOOK
CASES, MUSIC CABINET, ETC.
PRATT &amp; LAMBERT PAINTS
WINDOW SHADES &amp; GLASS

BREAKWELL

insurance

Phone us today.
your party.

t

ROLLER &amp; PAN, $1.25; 9x12 PLASTIC
CLOTH, 60c. GREAT LAKES EXTERIOR
WHITE, $4.99 GAL., INTERIOR ALKYD
FLAT WHITE $3.99 GAL. PLUS FREE
9x12 PLASTIC DROP CLOTH WITH
1
GAL. ORDER—&amp; 4 in. BRISTLE BRUSH
WITH 4 GAL. ORDER

DECORATING

tates, furniture, crystal, silver, oriental art, paintings, rugs and works

13

DEPOT

FOR

AUCTIONEERS - APPRAISERS
We buy and sell entire partial es-

for sum-

Shore’s Only Curtain
Laundry
1825 Green Bay Rd., Rear
All work done by hand; linens,

SALE

5-0166.

GOODS

3

and

PICK GALLERIES

WANTED—DOMESTIC

CURTAIN

14

NEW man’s blue Palm Beach suit, size 40
long. Best offer. Telephone ID 3-1047.
MOVING:
must
sacrifice
ladies’
suits,
dresses, and cocktail dresses, size 10; size
14 teen age dresses and suits. Men’s top
ee and jacket, small. Telephone ID 2-

mer months.
Experienced.
References if
_required. Call Lake Forest 1838.
WALL
WASHING,
$8 per room, ceilings
and walls, 10x14; WALLPAPER REMOVING,
$12 and up, 10x14. North Shore
references. DAvis 8-6669.

North

12,

Nutria coat, $50; several other coats and
clothing, sizes 14 and 16; ladies’ shoes, size
742; purses, etc. Maid’s uniforms, size 16

WANTED—MALE

EXPERIENCED man desires general cleaning, steady,
1 day a week;
references.
Call TRinity 2-3500.
EXPERIENCED. 9 years foundry, colored
man desires work of any kind; farm, factory or gardening. Call after 6, ONtario
2-0173.
HOUSE
job or outside work.
Jamaican,
good worker. North Shore references. Telephone GReenleaf 5-3686.
EXPLORER
Scouts,
working
for
camp,
want
yard work now
through
summer.
Nine dependable
16 year olds available

sizes

16. Telephone ID 2-1208.
SACRIFICE FOR IMMEDIATE

HOUSEHOLD
SITUATION

room

and TV, no cooking, 2 girls, ages 10 and
6. Telephone ID 2-9493.
COOK and general housework, experienced,
2 adults, top wages, recent references, stay
or afternoon through dinner. Telephone
ID 2-1671.
CLEANING
woman
wanted
on
Monday
and Thursdav, own transportation. Telephone ID 2-5997.
RELIABLE experienced woman for cleaning
and ironing 2 days a week. Own transportation.
Local
references
required.
Call
Lake Forest 952.
TEEN
aged girl to assist with children 3
days a week through summer. Lake Bluff,
Lake Forest resident preferred, Call Lake
Bluff 1671.

COOKING

would

job; iy oye Park area preferred. Telephone
2-0703, after 5 p.m.
EXPERIENCED
young
lady,
24, college
background, wishes to care for children
weekends—swimming
lessons thrown
in.
Call MAnsfield 6-0506.
COLLEGE
girl desires work
as mother’s
helper,
experienced
with
children,
references. Can begin work June 15. Write
or call Margaret Shimmin, 516 Maple St.,
ne
Michigan. Telephone HUdson

SITUATION
WILL meet top wages for experienced cook,
may stay or go, adult family; recent North
Shore references required. Other permanent help employed.
Can
accommodate
employed husband willing to give one day
of work
per week
in return for room
and board. Telephone ID 2-1936 for interview.
SECOND
MAID
serving, downstairs only. Top wages. References. Telephone Lake Forest 550.
EXPERIENCED
cook,
white;
top
pay,
near transportation. References. Call Lake
Forest 2398.
COOKING
and
general
housework;
top
wages to thoroughly experienced person.
Family of four, two grown children. Live
on place, have room for employed husband;
references. Telephone
ID 2-4482.
HOUSEKEEPER,
stay,
own
room,
TV,
good salary, no laundry.
2 school age
children. Telephone ID 2-0367.
RELIABLE woman to do general housework
who would like to work from 11 to 7;
local woman preferred or own transportation. ID 2-3801.
COOK,
light housework,
adult family, 5
day week, stay; must be experienced, references required. Top salary. Telephone
HIillcrest 6-7211.
EXPERIENCED woman wanted to do shirts
in her home. Telephone ID 2-9158,
RELIABLE woman for cleaning and ironing every Thurs.;
references. Telephone
ID 3-0470.
COOK and light housework; good position
with adult family of three for reliable experienced person with references. Current
wages. Telephone ID 2-2960.
:
COOK
No cleaning; white. Top wages; references.
Telephone Lake Forest 550,
COOK for 2 weeks in June or July; references. Top pay. Call Lake Forest 2398.
THOROUGHLY
experienced
woman
for
cleaning and ironing, Mondays, Thursdays
and Saturdays, 3 school age children, permanent, references. ID 3-1087,
GENERAL
housework,
woman
to Stay 5
days, own room, bath and television. Excellent
salary,
no
laundry.
VErnon
51150.
HIGH
school
or older
girl as mother’s
helper
wanted.
David
H.
Rosen,
1500
ort
Ave., Deerfield, telephone WI 5-

senior

Park

fare.

CU. FT. Crosley Shelvador refrigerator,
ice-water tap on door and freezing comyey
5 years old. Best offer. ID 2-

RAG RUG WEAVER
Rag rugs, hand woven for sale. Rugs woven
from torn and sewed used material. Telephone MUndelein 6-6337, 404 East Maple,
Mundelein.
REFRIGERATOR, 12 cu. ft., freezer chest,
$115;
single
metal
bed, complete,
$20;
ee in good condition. Telephone ID 2CHINA,
108 piece Johnson Brothers Old
Britain Castles, pink in color, open stock;
brass 3-way pole lamp; 2 modern leather
cushion cane back pull-up chairs; maple
game table; pine wood
box. Telephone
WI 5-5783.
PRIVATE
HOME
SALE
Items too numerous to mention. Antiques:
jewelry; gold eagle wall sconces; solid brass
fireplace equipment; doll collection; 4 poster bed;
Sheraton sofa; red oriental rug.
Boating and other sporting
equipment. Refrigerators.
Double
laundry
tub,
slightly
used. Rummage.
Telephone ID 2-0837 for appointment.
AUTOMATIC ABC washer, 3% years old,
new timer and motor, $35. Telephone ID
3-0521 or ID 3-9876.
MAGNAVOxX radio and record player, perfect condition.
Also electric fans. Call
Lake Forest 482.
MOVING
to California. 8 piece oak dining room set, $75; davenport, $90; Hidea-bed, wing chair, French tables, antique
chairs,
poster
bed,
$15;
antique
desk,
Frigidaire washing machine, radios, Karastan-Kerman rug, $95; fireplace screens,
outside furniture.
837 Larchmont
Lane,
Lake Forest 4872.
NECCHI sewing machine in mahogany desk,
a B U Nova $100. Kenmore sewing machine, mahogany cabinet $25. Call Lake
Forest 1138.
KENMORE dryer, $50, with vent; Hotpoint
automatic wash machine, $60. Telephone
ID 3-1318.
MASON HAMLIN small baby grand piano,
small antique buffet, deal wood table and
chairs,
drapes,
love
seat,
lamps,
old
prints. Telephone ID 2-1752.
LARGE
redwood
picnic
table
and
2
benches, $15; studio couch, $15; corner
table,
round
coffee
table,
suitable
for
roe or den, $10 each. Telephone ID 2MOVING:
modern
dining room set complete with pads, blond modern bedroom
set, new mattress; Kroll baby carriage;
upholstered toy chest; boy’s bicycle; armless
green
chair;
brown
lounge
chair;
modern step table; brass adjustable fireplace screen. Reasonable. Telephone
ID
2-7432.
MODERN
grey sofa, good condition. Telephone ID 2-3194,
GOOD used Kelvinator. electric range, $35.
Telephone ID 2-9169.
SACRIFICE: 2 piece curved sectional sofa,
walnut step table, model HO guage train,
best offer. Telephone ID 2-2964.
ONE double bed, bookcase headboard, box
spring and
innerspring mattress,
almost
new. Telephone ID 2-3157.
GOOD
Coldspot electric refrigerator, $40;
small gas stove, $20. Telephone ID
31025.
SACRIFICE
FOR
IMMEDIATE
SALE
Double
maple
bookcase
headboard,
bed,
maple dresser and night stand, $50; brown
and tweed sofa, $75; large yellow lounge
chair, $45; bleached step end tables, $35
pair; art wares. Other miscellaneous. VErnon 5-0166.
3 PIECE bedroom set, and 1 odd chair,
$35.00. Telephone ID 2-1385 after 4 p.m.
WHITE
point Venice 314 yard table cloth
with a dozen napkins, service for 8 Community flat ware, gold band crystal ware,
Kenmore
electric
roaster
and
cabinet,
maple
bookcase,
tole
tray,
light
grey
drapes with silver thread 4 pair casement
length. Telephone Lake Forest 2609.
DELUXE Maytag gas range, fully automatic
oven, excellent condition, $50. Telephone
Lake Forest 236,

1914 First St.

SHOWER &amp; TUB ENCLOSl

MISCELLANEOUS

FOR

“Jim Beinlich Trucking handles all
following services for Homeowners:

TOP

SOILS

e

HUMUS

ALL

SALE
of

the

e

MOVAL
e GRAVEL
DRIVEWAY
REPAIRS @ WRECKING OF ALL TYPES
ae
Jim Beinlich—VE 5-0513 or VE

MULTISPEAKER
portable 4 speed record
player, excellent condition, $30; Emenee
golden pipe organ, 2 octaves, new, $12.
Telephone ID 2-7300.
66 GALLON electric hot water heater, $30.
Telephone WI 5-0059.
EUONYMOUS
Vegatus, 4 year roots, 50c.
30 Sanders Rd. at County Line, Deerfield.
METRONOME, perfect condition, $10; spincast rod and reel, new, $13; 35mm Kodak
camera
outfit,
excellent
condition,
$35. Steve, ID 3-1047.

TYPES

Large supply
room manure.

VE 5-0513

MANURE

AVA

of cattle, horse
and
We deliver any amonut.
M BEINLICH
:
or
VE

EXPERT ceramic tile installations, For
sink tops. Garages. Low

rates; ful

anteed work. Snazelle, Lake Forest
NUMBER
125 Harley-Davison
moto
good running condition. Deluxe b: “alk
set, maroon and chrome. Extra leaf.
Lake Forest 4881.

LAWN sweeper, $15; 1958 Craftsman, I
used, need space. Lake Forest 4336.
ELECTRIC stove; like new modern ct
other chests. Drop
leaf table;
straight
and
upholstered;
double
dressing table, bookcase,
china
ca
rugs.
Magnavox
console;
guitar; |
Lake Bluff 3245.

GIRL’S 20 inch bicycle, like new;

11 porch shades; large lamp shade;
equipment;
drapes; lady’s suit, size

Telephone WI

5-0541.

TORO
“Sport Lawn”
Jawnmower,
reel type. $50. Telephone WIndsor

i:

ars

�baer
ye

MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE

AUTOMOBILES

_ SHOP AND SAVE AT
STOCKADE TRADING POST
-_ WHEELING, ILLINOIS

SELL ON TERMS

Open

Mon. thru
Sat. &amp; Sun.

Fri.
9-6

1958

9-9

1957

Specials for Week
All Furniture Mart Samples

1957

heater,

t at auction 3 truckloads of pottery:
baths, $2.95 each; jardenieres and vases,
and up; pitchers, 60c; steins, 20c. Good
ys in Hob Nail milk glass made in Swe. Bedroom and living room sets; stainsteel sinks, $15 each; good buys on
leum and carpeting; children’s swing sets,
9.50; new and used soil pipe, $1.50 &amp; up;
’
ing pools,
$5 and
up;
ping
pong
tables with nets and paddles, slightly dam“peed, $14.50; all purpose paint, $2.49 a gal.;
paint, $3.49 a gal.; metal wall cabis, $7 &amp; up; 54-inch cabinet sinks complete, $89.50; 42-inch cabinet sinks, comete, $59.50; 4 drawer filing cabinets, $18;
d Remington Rand typewriters, $40; off
desks, $35; doors, $3 and up; structural steel, 6c a lb.; Many other items too
erous to mention.
rd

IN AND

deluxe

1958,

with

many

ac-

_cessories; like new, save $125. Telephone
WI 5-5625.
OLF CLUBS for sale. Set of four MacGregor Tommy Armour woods, top pro
line, used one season. Sell for half original
ce. Telephone WI 5-2195.
ING
power
mower,
twin blade,
6%
horsepower,
Wisconsin
motor, _ slightly
used, like new. Excellent for lawn of an
acre or two. Price, $175. A. Lange, 909
North Harlem Avenue, Oak Park.
UR
SAM
SNEAD
WOODS,
medium
t. 2 years
old,
excellent
condition.
awe
ve teen agers, $30. Telephone ID

rf

WER

mower

Sulkey,

pneumatic

INSTRUMENTS

FOR

SALE

FOR

sale: Kay tenor banjo, like new. Tele-

TOP

dollar

one

ID

for

used

2-2510.

WANTED

spinet
.

”

pianos.

Tel

can

PIANOS WANTED
ALL MAKES—STYLES
TOP PRICES PAID
ROGERS
PARK
1-4400
WANTED

TO

BUY

WESTERN
saddles, shotguns,
old pocket
_ watches,
collection
of
smoking
pipes.
Write Box U-15, c/o Lake Forester.
WANTED
AT ONCE
—
Tugs, French Eggo
bric-a-brac,
,» and
pianos.
Top
cas!
aid. ROgPark 1-4400.
.
4
#6
"ay
for large dog. Call Lake Bluff

| DOG
403

LOST
LOST,

&amp; FOUND

miniature

parrot

‘Mike,’

814

in.

long, green with yellow under wings. Vicinity Arbor and Berkley. Reward. Tele-

phone

ID

3-0415.

: Wyler lady’s watch, black band, in
ighwood. Reward. Telephone ID 2-6385.
LOST, girl’s blue frame glasses on way to
or from
Edgewood
bus. Reward.
Tele_
phone ID 3-0078.
» coon hound, male, black and tan,
ai
Tony. Boy’s pet. Call Lake Forest

LOST,
|

Monday,

wrist

watch

May
in

25th,

Deerfield,

ladies

diamond

Highland

Park

or Lake Forest. Reward. Mrs. Druley,
Lake Forest 3530.
LOST, vicinityof Lake Bluff, boy’s grey
_

glasses, imprinted “Border,
L.B. 4382.”
eward. Call Lake Bluff 4382.
female
Weimaraner,
fawn _ color,
named Lisa; lost May 26th West Lake

Forest.

Call

Lake

Forest

3910.

LOST: brown dog with white chest and
_ stomach, short legs, long body, and long
bushy tail that curls over back. Answers
to the name of “‘Biff.’”? Reward. Telephone
ID 2-5000, ext. 3170.
UND: Boy’s Timex wrist watch in May
in Deerfield. Owner will pay for ad. Tele-

phone WI 5-0753.

FOR

SALE

8 BUICK Rozdmaster 75, 2 door hardtop, with full power equipment, plus air
suspension. Excellent condition, low mile-.
age. Telephone ID 2-1279.

7952 PONTIAC 8, two-door; radio, heater,

ood tires, well maintained. Only $200.
elephone ID 3-0168. 2788 Port Clinton

, Road.

Ford conv., radio, heater, Fordomatic, pow. st. $1395
Chevrolet 4 door station
wagon, heater and Pow-

1955

erglide
1955

has

$1095

Chevrolet 4 dr., Bel-Air,
radio, heater
Rambler station wagon,
radio, heater, Hydra. ...$
Cadillac
4
door,
full

1955
1954
1954

Chevrolet

1954

heater
Pontiac

4

dr.,

Catalina,

895

595

Highland Park

ID 2-8640
Open
Open

8 A.M.

Sundays

486

&amp;

to 9 P.M.
10 A.M.

Daily
to 5 P.M.

1958 CHEVROLET CONVERTIBLE
Impala, Anniversary gold. Automatic transmission.
Fully
equipped
including
radio.
Suburban
driven—low
mileage.
Original
owner. Telephone WI 5-5265 after 6 p.m.

Used

HOBBY

Central

and

SHOP
ID

SOIL

iapstrake fully
14 ft. wood
OUTBOARD
equipped, 25 H.P. Johnson, trailer. Call
Lake Forest 9933 or after 5, DElta 66756
24 FT. sail boat, 110 design, needs paint,
will sell cheap. Telephone ID 3-0553.
14 FOOT aluminum boat with trailer. Boat
has windshield and speedometer. Trailer
and
has 2 sets of wheels, big wheels
small wheels. Telephone ID 2-7062 after
;
5 p.m.
8 FOOT pram, mahogany planking, fiberglass cover, in A-1 condition. Telephone
ID 2-2634.
USED
BARGAIN—NEVER
1959 Bell Boy 14 ft. fiberglass runabout,
fully equipped, including 35 hp. Mercury
electric starting motor and Gator Tilt-bed
trailer, $1,395. Can finance. ID 3-0880.
17 FOOT Thompson Lancer, 50 hp. Evinrude, gater trailer, fully equipped, $1800.
Telephone ID 2-5797, weekdays after 6:30
p.m.
plank
MAHOGANY
14 FT. STREBLOW
run-a-bout, custom interior, 35 hp. Evinrude motor, Gator trailer, battery, remote
control. Has been used only 10 hours.
When new, $2195, will take $1495. Telephone WI 5-0144.

BOOKS

WORLD BOOK
no finer graduation gift.
1959 NASH Rambler station wagon, heater, Miriam
Booth
Hlicrest 6-3848
whitewalls, push button automatic transmission, good condition. Telephone DExBUSINESS OPPORTUNITY
ter 6-2338.
1955 PONTIAC 2 door, low mileage, one
HOTEL lease for sale, 25 rooms plus ownowner, radio, heater, call after 6 p.m.,|. er’s apartment. Good income. Call after
WI 5-1967.
3 pm. ID 2-6703.
T-BIRD, ’55, $1800. FRI.-SAT. LAKE FOR- ACCOUNTING, bookkeeping and tax pracEST 1890.
tice.
Accounts
being
sold
individually.
Telephone STate 2-4022.
1958 VOLKSWAGEN, perfect condition. By
owner. Telephone Libertyville 2-8678.
BUSINESS SERVICE
1959 PLYMOUTH
Savoy,
standard
shift,
radio, heater. Less than 5000 miles. Call,
LIGHT
general
hauling. We also move al
Lake Bluff 1861 after 6 p.m.
types of household appliances. Call ID 21954 FORD
convertible,
dark blue, V-8,
6098 or ID 2-4917.
straight shift with overdrive, radio, heater, whitewalls,
fog lights, undercoating,
good condition, one owner.
$770. Telephone WI 5-3278.
1953 DODGE Meadowbrook, 4 door, radio
and heater, $225. Telephone WI 5-2493.
1957
OLDSMOBILE
convertible,
radio,
heater,
power
steering
and
brakes,
in
if special service desired, try it today
good condition.
Price $1700. Telephone
WOO LAUNDRY
WI 5-2274.
1875 St. Johns
Highland Park
1953
PLYMOUTH
2-door station wagon,
recently overhauled; very clean, excellent
tires. $595. Telephone WI 5-0550.
FURNITURE
MOVING—Local
and Long
Distance—one piece or a truck load. Packing, crating, shipping.
Ward
Anderson,
SHARE RIDES
telephone ID 2-0087.
DEERFIELD
teacher wishes transportation
DOES your swimming pool need pumping
with National College student. Telephone
out? Do it yourself or let us do it. We
WI 5-1597.
have the equipment. ID 2-9202.

SHIRTS

FAST,

FAST

SERVICE

ALTERATIONS

CABINETS

Now, two locations to serve you better for
custom clothes and alterations.
THE SILVER NEEDLE
HIGHLAND
PARK, ILLINOIS
1866 Sheridan Rd.
610 Laurel Ave.
Phone ID 2-7118
Phone ID 2-1774
LOOK chic for summer with shorter skirts.
Ask for Eda.
Zengeler
Cleaners,
Inc.,
1905 Sheridan Rd. Telephone ID 2-2800.

KITCHEN
REMODELING
MAKE
YOUR
KITCHEN
A SHOW
PLACE
Over 6,000 installations supervised. Attractive Maple, Ash, Oak and Birch cabinetry.
Durable beautiful pastel shades in metal
kitchens if desired. Careful planning
and
counsel, Call PEnsacola 6-7166 for estimate.

CAMPS
SERVICE

Auto

Body and Fender Repairs
All Makes - All Models
Complete Painting,
Undercoating and Touch Ups
ASK

FOR

JACK

487 E. Park Ave.
Highland

FRECH
ID

Park

AND

SUNSHINE

WM. RUEHL &amp; CO.
GENERAL BODY SHOP
NOW OPEN

2-5845

IT

INST.

RENT

REDUCING
BELT

AND
Free

INSPECTION

INVITED

house

in May

Mr.

&amp;

Sundays
Mrs.

LAKE

CARPENTERS,

J. R.

FOREST

2-5 p.m.

5-2980.

4-3213

Humus

Top

HEITKOTTER

&amp;

JOB

BROS.

OUTBOARD

RENTAL
ORchard

4-8880

PAINTING

WOOD

WELL seasoned firewood split nicely.
Lake Forest 790-Y-1; if no answer
MUndelein 6-6566.

Cal.
cal)

REPAIR

FURNACE

&amp;

replaced or repaired, cleaned,
GUTTERS
painted with A-1 rust preventative. Careful expert work, Also, wire screening supplied and installed. Telephone ID 2-6362.

HORSES

MOTORS

BLOOM

&amp;

DECORATING

PAINTING

COMPANY

® Up to date methods
®

Quality

@

Sensible prices

workmanship

IDLEWOOD

2-5544

PAINTING
and
decorating;
outside
specialty. Fully insured. Lake Forest 3938.
Telephone any time.
PAINTING
and
decorating,
‘terior
and
exterior, natural or bleached wood finishing;
quality
workmanship.
For
estiSiren
call Eric Schneider, Libertyville

&amp; PONIES

OPPORTUNITY for expert rider. Owner of
3 year old well mannered thoroughbred
wants him trained for hunter. Owner will
board horse at own expense. Please only
qualified person answer. Box W-20, c/o
Lake Forester.
disposition,
gelding, good
bay
QUALITY
has played tournament polo, can carry 200
Jerry
See
horse.
riding
excellent
Ibs.,
Lockwood Stables, Highway 22 West of
Ill.
View,
Rt. 45. NEwton 4-3930, Prairie
or
EXCELLENT saddle horse, suitable child
western
priced. Also
Reasonably
adult.
saddle and bridle. Telephone WI 5-4079.

INSTRUCTION
GARINO MUSIC STUDIOS
North Shore’s Finest. Instruction on accordion and guitar; instrument furnished. Inquire about our trial plan. Telephone ID
2-0015.
PIANO
INSTRUCTION
at WBBM
staff pianist
Winston,
Hank
after 7:30 p.m.
5-0244
WI
CBS. Cali
Call Karrates.
reasonable
LATIN tutoring,
en Lauter, ID 2-4116 after May 27.
SCHOOL
GRADE
TUTORING
Graduate
SCHOOL.
HIGH
THROUGH
desires
e
experienc
tutoring
with
student
to tutor mornings; qualified for teaching
Geometry,
—
Algebra,
French,
English,
and
History,
European
and
American
be298
Forest
Lake
Call
Philosophy.
tween 9 and 4 for personal appointment
and references.
Spanish teacher graduated from
COLLEGE
University of Madrid, will teach Spanish
or
morning
and conversation;
grammar
evening. Call Lake Forest 934.
two
in grades
subject
any
tutor
WILL
through five. 11 years elementary teach4122
Forest
Lake
Call
.
ing experience
after 5 and weekends.
COLLEGE student desires summer tutoring,
elementary or secondary levels, individual
or group. 2 years experience, B plus student. Telephone WI 5-1880.

JUNK

HIGHEST

PRICES

PAID

For all types of junk brought to our door,
such as: Papers, rags, iron, metal, etc. Or
call IDlewood 3-1466 for free pick-up. We
specialize in industrial accounts. Hours daily
including Saturday, 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m.
HIGHLAND
PARK WASTE
MATERIAL
1466 Berkeley Rd.

LANDSCAPING
FRANK

SERVICE

SCOTT ATWATER 16 hp. outboard motor,
6 gallon tank, controls, power prop, bailo-matic, used one season. Excellent condition. Telephone WI 5-1598 after 6 p.m.

ENTERTAINMENT
HOOKED RUG EXHIBIT
By pupils of Geneva Lapham. June 5 and
6, 11 a.m. to 4:30 p.m. weather permitting.
Vail and Jack Country Cottage, Long Grove,
Illinois.

GUTTERS

LANDSCAPE

TYPE

&amp;

VENA

LANDSCAPING

Call me for the finest in lawn care, tree
removal, top dressing, patio work, fertilizing. Telephone ID 2-5494 after 7 p.m.

LANDSCAPING

ge

PAINTING AND PAPER HANGING. Interior and exterior painting. For quality
pieced
by
exverienced, _ reliable
men call
W. C. Varney,
5-0654.
PAINTING and paper hanging, reasonable
rices; free estimates. Telephone A. G.
riddy or Peter Gallos. Lake Forest 156.
CONGER
BROTHERS
PAINTING
AND
DECORATING
SERVICE.
Paper hanging. Telephone ID 2-3452—ID 2-3053.
MURALS painted. Work dune by qualified
artist. Ideal for any room in your home,
Samuel Elis Brown, 251 Wentworth, Glencoe—Telephone VErnon 5-2174.
_._.
MODERN
DECORATING
Painting and papering, inside and outside;
free
estimates.
Telephone
TRinity
2-5055
or KImball 6-1807.

PERSONAL
HUSBANDS:
dinner given
1799 Green
day, June 7,
children 12

aaa

PETS

GLENCOE
BOARDING

ACRES

@ North Shore’s newest and finest
Boarding

LANDSCAPING,

LAWN

Kennel.

@

Private inside heated stalls and
connecting
individual
outside
runs.
@® Expert grooming of all breeds
by professionals.
@ Under the personal direction of
Elaine Ortman.,
@ Kennel Shop features all accessories.

BEAGLE hound, 18 months, field champion
line; adores everything, but mostly running rabbits and hearing his own voice,
ID 3-1976.
POODLES, 9 weeks old, all black, medium
standard,
pedigreed;
reasonable.
Telephone INdependence 3-3329.

POODLE
puppies,
miniatures,
wormed
and clipped, AKC.
Forest 4534,
CUTE
ken.

8 weeks,
Call Lake

kittens to be given away; housebro956 Ringwood Rd. Lake Forest 3171.

old.

BEAGLE
erg

CARE

Merrill, Dela864-R-2.

EXTREMELY gentle German Shepherd female, 14 months, all shots; adores children. $45. Telephone ID 2-9214.

puppies,

Write

Geneva, Wis.,
evenings.

Grading, plowing, hauling, fill dirt,
top soil, rotted cow manure, top
seed rolling. Telephone WI 5-0818.

KENNEL

Glencoe
VErnon 5-1302
South of Dundee Rd. on the
Service Drive of Edens Highway

weeks

PRAIRIE

take your family to a ham
by the Women of the Moose,
Bay Rd., Highland Park, Sun12:30 to 6 p.m. Adults $1.75,
and under $1.00.

BASSETT pups for sale. Jim
van, Wisconsin. Telephone

GARDENING

puppies,
Females,

or

D.

call

registered,

AKC,

McPherson,

Lake

6

Lake

Forest

3145

11 weeks old, AKC reg$25; males, $20. Call LI

black

T. CLAUSON

The finest in tree work, patios, landscaping

3120.

Soil

Nutri Soil
Sand and Gravel
Lime
Stone

Maintenance - Rototilling
Black Dirt - Fertilizer
New Lawns Put In
Old Lawns Top Dressed
WI 5-5117—after 12 noon

GROVE

Rd.

ELOF

Thompson

CONTRACTORS

NEwton

SCHIPPERKE

FOR building that new home, addition, o1
pat.
be it a,
or small, call
V &amp; F
nstruction
. Telephone ID

2-5477 or WI

Waukegan

A.

18 acres of cool woods with private lake,
heated swimming pool, all activities of
interest to children are instructed individually
by adult counselors.
14 years of proven
satisfaction for boys and girls 5-10. Transportation provided. June 22-August 14.
Open

Call

MACHINE

COUCH
Delivery

TOOL
9210

GENERAL

VALLEY

yardage

A

New lawns, black dirt, humus, top dressing.
planting, lawns ferti
, tree work, stone
work, patios, driveways.

A credited member of
American Camping Assn.

prices

guarantee

NELSON

YOURSELF

FIREPLACE

BOATS

1949 SUPER Buick, 4 door sedan, Dynaflow,
good tires, best offer. Telephone ID 2-

AUTO

DO

MORTON

and file, lawns graded.
telephone
NEwton
4-

For reasonable
and

NO
job too small. Carpentry,
plastering,
kitchen cabinets, etc. Grant and Grant.
Call Lake Bluff 5015.

2-1369

GIRL’S 26 in. Schwinn bicycle. Good condition. $20. Telephone Lake Forest 2830.
ONE
boy’s 20-inch bicycle, one girl’s 20inch bicycle. $10 each. Call Lake Forest
1116.
16 INCH cenvertible bicycle, used only two
days, $10. Telephone ID 2-7159.

radio,

Motor Co.

1909 St. Johns

Girl’s

BLACK

radio,

Word | 2: G00P ...c225055..5 06.053 $
Pontiac Wagon

Holmes

CYCLE

BLACK dirt, gravel
Chuck
Dordand,
3442.

heater, Hydra., pow. st. $ 695
1954:
1953

or

Reconditioned. Some like new—a|
few Schwinns. Most, but not all
sizes. Also repairs and parts for all
make bicycles.

Reward.

IST,
Omega
Seamaster
man’s
round
j watch, 14K with gold and alligator stretch
band.
Handsome
reward. ID 3-0439 or
ID 2-7935.

AUTOMOBILES

1956

bas-

USED PIANO
BALL reconditioned baby grand—Best
offer. Telephone ID 2-2510 or ID 3-0072.
‘GRAND
piano, 5 ft. 7 in., ebony black
- lacquer, , gore inns
condition.
Call
Lake
Forest 3
phone ID 2-6187.
———
MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS

AT

Ford 2 door, radio, heat$1095
5 yee ae

tires,

cheap. Telephone Lake Forest 1780.
EN GLISH
baby carriage,
also baby
sinette. Call Lake Forest 3806.

—
USICAL

BIKES—Boy’s

1957

BROWSE

offer will take approximately 70 ft.
cyclone fence, 5 ft. high complete with
2
gates, posts and hardware. Telephone
wake Forest 477.

JHOP-SMITH,

hard
top, radio,
AT
conv., radio, heatpower
4 door hard top,

full power, radio heater $1695
1957 Mercury 4 door, radio,

GOOD BUYS ON
MAPLE FURNITURE

COME

Edsel
heater,
Dodge
er, full
Pontiac

LANDSCAP"NG &amp; GARDENING

&amp; JOB

CONTRACTORS

CARPENTERS,

_

RELIABLE experienced carpenter. _Remod:
WESTMEAD
antiques,
having
completed
cling, paneling, porches and Hi Fi rooms
the new shop, has a choice collection of
siding. H. Blomquist Construction, tele
Chinese and Far East antiques. Collectors |
phone WI 5-2830.
and decorators welcomed. We are in the
same location; on Illinois 42A,: 14 mile
CARPENTRY, interior and exterior remodcab
built-in
additions,
building,
eling,
north of Illinois 120.
inets, floor, wall and ceiling tile, free est
mates. Telephone CHerry 4-0620.
AUTO LOANS
i
CHRISTO-CRAFT REMODELING
Finance your car the bank way and save
ID 2-2319
WI 5-3273
money.
Remodeling and home maintenance is our
FIRST NATIONAL
BANK
Porch enclosures, basement panbusiness.
of Highland Park
cabinet, or
kitchen
additions,
room
eled
just that one door that doesn’t close right.
guaranteed.
work
All
BICYCLES

FOR NORTH SHORE’S
FINEST A-1 USED CARS

17-0247

WE

ANTIQUES

SALE

SEE HOLMES

516 N. MILWAUKEE AVE.
LEHIGH

FOR

and maintenance. Insured. Satisfaction guaranteed. Telephone Lake Forest 3366.
ROTOTILLING, gardens only. R. Landau.
Telehpone WI 5-0764.
SEVERAL beautiful growing evergreens for
sale,
reasonable.
Telephone
WI
5-3613
after 6 p.m.

IRISH terrier puppies, registered, sired by
champion; 3 healthy males left, 10 weeks.
419 Birchwood Ave., Deerfield; telephone
WI 5-4167.
STANDARD
poodle, AKC,
8 month
old
female; housebroken and shots. Telephone
WI 5-0477
HAVE 3 adorable weaned and housebroken
kittens; no charge to family who likes
animals. Telephone ID 2-4404 for appointment.

Thursday, June 4, 1959
;

i

�PETS
REGISTERED
6 month
female
Beagle;
trained. $50. Telephone ID 3-1447.
GERMAN
shepherd pups, AKC, for show,
pets, or breeding; we have one for you.
Telephone CRestwood 2-0355,
FOR sale by owner, 2 ten months old male
beagle pups, AKC litter registered, have
iS all shots, $35 each. Call ALpine 1976.
BOXER, 2% years old, fawn colored female,
__AKC registered. Telephone ID 3-1490.
POODLES,
AKC,
puppies,
matrons
and
stud. Reasonable. Waukegan. MAjestic 34691.

PLANTS

PLANTS

&amp;

FOR

BULBS

THE

GARDEN

Ground Cover Plants; Pachysandra, Ajuga,
Euonymus, Acuta, E. Coloratus, E. Kewensis, E. Vegetus, Baltic Ivy, Bowle’s Vinca.
Japanese Yews in containers to plant now.
$2.00 and
$2.50
each.
Special
on
large
Ligustrum Vicari—75c each, while they last.
Drive to OMAN’S FLOWER FARM, located 3 miles west of Half Day on Route 83,
% mile south of Route 22. Open weekdays
and Sundays, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m.
Annual flowers for sale, large variety. Open
every evening after 5 p.m. and all day Sunday. Telephone ID 2-3936.
ANGELO
GUALANDI
125 NORTH AVE.
HIGHWOOD, ILLINOIS

SALE

ALL remaining rummage (toys, clothing, furniture, bric-a-brac, etc.) at 689 Pine St.,
Deerfield, now at % price. Telephone WI
4.

ROOFING
CEDAR SHINGLES?
Don’t Neglect
Them
SUBURBAN
ROOF
TREATING
SERV.
Call ALpine
1-0377
Lloyd S. Crain

SEWERS
QUICK
service on clogged or slow main
sewers. Cleaned and opened with electric
rod
equipment.
We
service
any
ve
drains. All work
guaranteed.
Call
high 7-0232.

SEWING

SINGER

MACHINES

SEWING

Complete

Sales

MACHINE
and

Service

Free Home Demonstration
Repair on All Makes of Machines

TELEPHONE
TRAILERS

&amp;

ID 2-3811

TRAILER

sPACE

HALE TRAILER SALES
House trailers and travel trailers; we buy
and sell. 1920 Sheridan Rd., North Chicago
(2 blocks north of naval base).
TREE

SURGERY

WINTER
rates now in effect for tree removal. Completely insured. Jim Beinlich
VE 5-0513.
G &amp; N TREE EXPERTS. Trimming, feed
ing, repairing, guying and removal. Fully
insured. FREE
ESTIMATES.
Telephone
ID 2-8750. ID 2-5481.
WING’S TREE EXPERTS.
Cutting, trimming, removing,
feeding
and
repairing,
spraying. Fully insured and bonded; free
estimates.
Telephone [ID 2-6546 or KIm
ball 6-2292.

LEGAL NOTICE
June 18, 1959
NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
by the
Board of Zoning Appeals of the Village of
Deerfield that a public hearing will be held
by said Board
in the Village Hall,
850
Waukegan
Road,
Deerfield,
Illinois
on
Thursday,
June
18,
1959
at 8:00 P.M.,
D.S.T., to consider a request by Mr. Har&lt; old Gleason that a variance be granted from

the requirements of the Zoning Ordinance to

permit the construction of a porch connecting the existing house and garage, said garage being located 3 feet from the side lot
line, on the premises commonly known as
706 Deeerpath Drive.
At said
hearing
and
any
adjournment
thereof, all persons interested are invited
to be heard.
BOARD OF ZONING APPEALS
By: Lewis B. Walton, Sr., Chairman
Publish:
June 4, 1959
6/4/59—166

LEGAL NOTICE
June 18, 1959
NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
by the
Board of Zoning Appeals that a public hearing will be held for the purpose of considering a variance from the Deerfield Zoning
Ordinance—1953, as amended, at 8:00 P.M.,
D.S.T., on Thursday, June 18, 1959, in the
Village Hall at 850 Waukegan Road, Deerfield, Illinois.
The variance as proposed seeks to consider the request of Mr. Robert A. Davis
to permit the construction of an addition
to, and connection of, the existing house and
detached garage within five feet of the north
lot line, being a combined total side yards
of 11%
feet, on the premises commonly
known as 942 Alden Court, Deerfield with
variations to the side yard requirements as
provided in Section 7, C 2, of the Deerfield
Zoning Ordinance—1953, as amended.
At said hearing,
and any adjournment
thereof, any person interested is invited to
be present and be heard.
BOARD OF ZONING APPEALS
By: Lewis B. Walton, Chairman
Publish: June 4, 1959
6/4/59—167

Thursday,
Ht

oy ss

June

4,

1959

Confirms
Last

Members

Sunday

worship

at

service,

the

21

10:45

students

a.m.

were

confirmed and received into membership of Zion Lutheran Church.

Students

from

Highland

Park

William J. Saielli Serves
At Naval Air Station
William
trician’s

son

J. Saielli,
mate

of the

Burtis St.,
the Naval

and
Highwood
include
Dorothy
Joyce Blank, Marcia Jean Grinde,

Kingsville,

Jackson,

pilots

Margaret Rose Herbert, Karen Lee

seph

Hybrid Petunias, Marigolds, Asters, Impatiens for shade, blue and red Salvias, Zinnias, many others. Tomato and Sweet Pepper plants.
.

RUMMAGE

Zion batheran Church

Janet

Stanley

Louis

Ostrand,

Kiehl,

Robert

Jo-

Earl

Powers,
James
Harold
Sullivan,
and Thomas Edward Urban.
These students have met. weekly

primary

aviation

airman,

William
Highwood,
Auxiliary
Texas.

purpose

through

U.S.

J.

elecNavy,

Saiellis,

45

is serving

at

Air
The

Station,

air conditioners

at discount

the north shore’s smallest discount
Moley TV

e

670 Central Ave., H.P.

house!

©

1D 2-2042

station’s

is to train student
an

advanced flight
using the latest in
aircraft.

training program
fleet

type

as a class since October, 1958, to
study the teachings of the Church
and May 24 completed their study
with examination. They will receive
their first sacrament of Holy Communion on Sunday during the 10:45
service.
Vacation Bible School
Daily vacation Bible School for
all children from ages 5 through 13
will be held at the church at 9 to
11:45 a.m., June 15 through 26. A
pre-registration tea will be given
on Saturday afternoon, at 2 p.m.

Mrs. Floyd Levine
Finalist In Contest
Mrs, Lloyd Levine, 18 Valley Rd.,
was a finalist in Mrs. Illinois contest held last Tuesday in Chicago.
She serves in the court of winner,
Mrs. Vivian Grimm of Edwards.
As a contestant, she was required
to bake a ham, yeast bread, make
a cake and a gelatin dessert. Other
competitive
events
included
setting a table with a floral centerpiece and styling hair.
She has been married for over
nine years. Her children are Cheryl,
8; Mark, 5, and Mitchell, 3. Active
in her local PTA
and
Women’s
ORT, she sings solo in the choir of
Beth
El
North
Suburban
Synagogue. Being 5 ft. 9 in. tall, she is
in demand for modeling at amateur

fashion

shows.

signing

her

own

She

also enjoys

de-

clothes.

Community Service
(Continued

from

page

10)

Visiting
Nurse
Association;
Mrs.
Elda
Sernesi,
Italian
Women’s
Prosperity Club; Mrs, Robert Turelli, secretary; Mrs. James R. Nardini, publicity chairman; Miss Harriet Hustvedt.
LEGAL NOTICE
OF
PUBLIC
HEARING
Notice is hereby given by the Board of
Education of School District No. 113, in
the County of Lake, State of Illinois, that
a tentative budget for said School District
for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 1959
will be on file and conveniently available
to public inspection at 433 Vine Avenue,
Highland
Park,
Illinois,
from
and
after
8 o’clock A.M. on the 1st day of June 1959,
at Highland
Park
High
School
in this
School District, until 8 o’clock A.M. June
22, 1959, and from then will be on file
and conveniently available to public inspection at the Administration Building,
1040
Park Avenue West, Highland Park, Ulinois.
Notice is hereby given that a public hearing on said budget will be held at 7:30
o’clock P.M., C.D.S.T., on the 13th day of
July,
1959, at 1040 Park Avenue,
West,
Highland Park, in School District 113.
Dated this 25th day of May, 1959.
Board of Education School District No.
113 in the County of Lake, State of Illinois.
By Lillian C. Tucker, Secretary
6/4-11/59—160

LEGAL NOTICE
June 18, 1959
NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
by the
Board of Zoning Appeals of the Village of
Deerfield that a public hearing will be held
for the purpose of considering the authorization of a special permit, as required in the
Deerfield
Zoning
Ordinance — 1953,
as
amended, at 8:00 P.M., D.S.T., on Thursday, June 18, 1959 in the Village Hall at
850 Waukegan
Road, Deerfield, Illinois.
The authorization of the special permit as
proposed seeks to consider a request of Mr.
Arnold Pedersen, for the erection of a temporary sign to be erected on the following
described property in the Village of Deerfield, as provided in Section XVII, (4,C,) of
the Deerfield Zoning Ordinance—1953,
as
amended.
Lot 20, West Deerfield Manor, being a
Subdivision of the E% of the SW%4 of Section 29, Township 43 North, Range 12 East
of the 3rd P.M., in Lake County, Illinois,
Commonly known as 903 Apple Tree Lane,
Deerfield, Illinois.
At said hearing,
and
any adjournment
thereof, any person interested is invited to
be present and be heard.
BOARD OF ZONING APPEALS
By:
Lewis B. Walton, Sr., Chairman
Publish: June 4, 1959
6/4/59—165

LoTs OF CHOCOLATE drinks around. But the wonderful one is
Borden’s Dutch Chocolate Milk! So deep-down delicious and
chocolate-y because Borden’s makes it with real Dutch cocoa

—the extra luscious kind brought all the way from Holland.
Kids really go for it, and you can be glad. For Borden’s
Dutch Chocolate Milk gives em good milk nourishment in
every drop.
And what do you know! Borden’s Dutch Chocolate Milk
—all ready to enjoy—costs less than the chocolate drinks you

have to mix and fuss with. Pour some soon. You'll find it
at your favorite food store.

© Borven co,

�OBITUARIES

Highland Parker
Dies At Age

Caesar

101

May

756

in

about

35

one
one

Mrs.

ago

to

Mrs.

Menkey’s

100th

birth-

day
celebration,
many
of
her
friends greeted her in her home in
Ravinia and she received congratulatory
Dwight

8

Mrs.
Menkey
is
survived
by
two daughters, Mrs. Onyxe Wilson,
formerly
of 406 Roger
Williams

Roberta

Theresa,

Wesley

circle

the

home

603

Skokie

the home
Prairie
p.m. on

of

meets

for

Mrs,
Ave.;

Tuesday

Charles
Faith

at

at

Hope

Dinner

Tucker,

Dan

Gruber

and

circle will have

Dance Director

Editor

If

another $500 (a total of $1,000) of
local tax money to try to keep a
running

through

Highland

Police Report
On Dog Bites

Jaycee Awards

Night June

Eagle

Scout was

from

winners
are
and
Robert

awarded

page

the gavel then was turned
him by the past-president.

to

7)
over

to

First
official
act
of the
new
president was the presentation of
a Jaycee
past-president’s pin
to
Joseph
Patten.
Mrs.
Patten
also
was presented with a token of the
club’s appreciation, a bracelet inscribed:
“The
Hostess
with
the
Mostess.”

a

Of Moose

Slate Chapter

Catena

of

Winnetka,

+e.emakes
the

sense!
IJNVSIANT

CAR

Instantly ready to move effortlessly through
heavy traffic, or zip into the tightest
parking place, the “instant” Morris gives
family transportation with over
40-miles-per-gallon economy.

Mrs.
Sherry
Ave., by

eyelid

A product of The British
Motor Corporation. Makers of such

fine cars as:

MG, Austin, AustinHealey, Sprite, Magnette

Episcopal
To Have
ONLY

$1611.00

and Riley.

LAKE

COUNTY

517-519 S. Genesee, Waukegan,
Page

54

service outlets

IMPORT
Ill.

throughout

the U.S.

MOTORS

June

and

underlip

Intern

Is Honored

21,

lacerations.
home

where

Seminarian

In Duluth,

Minn.

Wayne R. Johnson, intern seminarian of Zion Lutheran Church,
flew to Duluth,
Minn.,
Saturday
to participate in 35th anniversary
services
at the Duluth
Lutheran
Church of which he is a member.
Mr. Johnson, the first intern semi-

and,

Day

at

Youths
Party

narian

from

that

church,

is to be

given special honors in the services.

will

June

be

12,

Scout

Court

of

Honor

night,

held

the

following

at

the

Parish

House.

Mrs.

for

the

Only the Want
values

|

and

Ads

offer amazing

opportunities

able elsewhere.

Read

them

not
now!

avail-

K. E. Miller

The club is limited to 7, 8 and
9th grade Navy dependents of the
Great Lakes Training Center. During the winter the club meets bimonthly and in the summer monthly. Activities
include
a one-hour
dance
lesson,
one
and
half
one
hours of games plus dancing contests. Top
hit records
are given
away during each dance to contest
winners. A graduation ball is held
each
May.
Eight
trophies
were
awarded on May 15.
Mrs. Miller has received five letters of commendation for her work
in Navy youth activity groups in

Forrestal

Night” party next Thursday from
5:30 to 10 p.m. at the Parish House.
Boy

Club

Burton
Walter

The youth group of St. Gregory’s
Episcopal Church will have a “Fun

The

MAjestic 3-8575

on

Srnanek, 11, 864
a dog owned by

Lutheran

Picnic

that,
[llinois
on June 14.

Dance

Cited

Bitten at the Nathan
Wyles were visiting.

Among
other
June
events
planned for Women of the Moose
is the annual Children’s Picnic at

Grove

afford

addition-

to run at large.
James Elwell, Gurnee, a TV repairman. Dog owned by Lawrence
S. Spitz, 1530 Indian Tree.
Elizabeth Nathan, 4, 505 Groveland Ave., by a dog owned by John
M.
Wyle,
811
Judson
Ave.,
left

Miss Barbara Elwood, 810 Laurel
Ave., and her publicity committee
members, Mesdames William Winters,
Anthony
Porco,
Marshall
Meckley and Miss Dirce Picchietti,
together with their guest, Mrs. William Horton
Jr., will hold
their
annual committee dinner Wednesday at Rustic Manor.

preceding
Moosehart

could
and

Teen

fourth year.
A former resident of Forrestal
Village, Mrs. Miller organized the
Club
three
years
ago
with
the
thought of providing young teenagers
with
a
worthwhile
social
activity. During the three years the
club has grown from some 30 members to about 70.

MacKay, 937 Pleasant Ave. The
owner was cited for permitting dog

to hold a cake walk during the social hour that will follow Chapter
Night festivities.

Buffalo

Road

Owner

Howard Early and Mrs. John Hollander, Northbrook,
and Mrs. Joseph
Volpendesta,
987
Deerfield
Rd.

Children’s

patronize

lage

Police report that the following
persons were bitten or scratched
by dogs during the past 10 days.
All dogs have been impounded for
rabies testing.
Kermit G. Welton, 1832 Sunnyside Ave., bitten on the side ef his
face by his own dog at his home.
Cited for no current dog license
for the animal.

17

Mrs.
John
MaclIntire,
Glencoe,
membership
chairman, will be in
charge of the Chapter Night program June 17 for Women
of the
Moose No. 806.
Assisting Mrs. MaclIntire will be
Mrs. Virgil Prenkert, Glencoe, Mrs.

John

Milwaukee

better transportation
al cars.

The membership committee plans

Over 550 sales and

would

Women

picnic on the Roy Russell farm,
Duffy Ln., Deerfield, on Thursday.
Husbands are invited to the picnic.

MORRIS

commuters

the railroad in Deerfield and be
willing to pay an increase in rate,
(as they are proposing if the North
Shore Line is kept running) surely

William Rau by Joe Isendrath.
Milton Schachter,
1202 Lincoln
Ave. S, is troop chairman.

class award
Schachter’

Mrs. Kenneth E. Miller, of 1045
Kenton Road, Deerfield, has been
selected to direct the Forrestal Vil-

that amount.
Just why should our tax money
be spent to try to keep a railroad
through another city?

From what fund and how is it
legal for Deerfield to vote money
to pay lawyers’ fees to try to keep
a railroad running through places
that are outside Deerfield?
Deerfield village trustees voted

railroad

Gruber.

(Continued

6:45

The

the

Patience circle meets on Wednesday at 8 p.m. at the home of Mrs.
James
Bench,
1110 Chestnut
St.,

Deerfield;

to officially open DeerVillage Manager Royce Owens throws out the first ball on Sunday
Joseph Peyronnin, comLeague;
Major
,
president
Miller,
Ray
field Boys Baseball. Left to right are
Mr. Owens, Warren
president,
Minor
league;
Johnson,
James
Baseball;
Boys
Deerfield
of
missioner
Orioles
in
the opening game.
the
for
pitcher
McGuire,
Flint, league representative, and Roger

at

of Mrs. Mabel Olson, 241
Ave.,
Highwood,
Wednesday.

and

Park. The money is being used to
hire attorneys and North Shore
communities
are
also
spending

Cook,

circle,

6

Let's Talk It Over......

Moss.

the co-operative effort.
All the circles of the Wesley
Church will meet next week. The
Morning

Gregory,

Honor And

First
Sumner

day at 8 p.m. Several decisions will
in preparation

7,

With

Randy

Methodist Church will meet in joint
session with the component body
from the Bethany Church on Tuesto be made

Baruffi

Holds Court Of

Fred

need

H.

Boy Scout Troop No. 35 held its
annual cookout and court of honor
on Tuesday
at Sunset
Park
for
members and their families.
Cooking
was
done
by
Lloyd
Moon
and Paul Lassman.
Second
class awards went to Steven Bachem, Jeff Boyden, James Freund,

Wesley Church Meets
In A Joint Session
With BethanyChurch
of

granddaughter.

Scout Troop 35

Ave., now residing in Whittier,
Calif., and Mrs. Jill Jones, 660
Judson Ave.; a granddaughter, Mrs.
Virginia Wilson Fabre
and two
great-grandchildren,
Peter
and
Marguita Fabre of Whittier, Calif.
Funeral services were private.
Burial was in Rolling Prairie, Wis.

board

a

Danny, 3. Other survivors are her
parents who live in Arlington, Va.;
two sisters; and one brother.
Services will be held in Virginia.

Governor William G. Stratton. Until her eyesight failed, she was an
artist.

official

and

Her survivors included her husband, Louis; four children, Steven,

messages
from
President
D. Eisenhower and Illinois

The

Club

Lake.

Mrs. Roberta Haske Baruffi, 31,
of Fairfax, Va., formerly of Highwood, died May 31 in Fairfax after
a month’s illness. She had lived in
Fairfax for five years.

join

their daughters,
At

Gun

at
a

brother, Leo J., of Phoenix;
sister, Mrs. Lena Nottoli, of

Chicago;

W. Menkey,
Park from Wisyears

Alpine

he lived
He
was

Survivors are his widow, Mary;
one son, Victor, of Highland Park;

Sept.
24, 1857,
she
and
her
husband,
the
late
Frederick

econsin

died

Born

in Town

been

Herrmann, Wis.,

Mrs. Menkey
came to Highland

Italy,
Rd,

of the

Round

74,

Ariz.

102

would

years old.
Born

Benvenuti,

Phoenix,

Church yesterday. Burial followed
in
All
Saints
Cemetery,
Des
Plaines.

she

have

in

Funeral services for him were
held
in
Immaculate
Conception

Dean

Ave. In September

28

member

died on the morning of May
oS
= 28 in her home
at

Benvenuti
J.

April 9, 1885, in
427
Green
Bay

Mrs.
Mathilde
Derge
Menkey,
one of Highland Park’s oldest resi-

dents.

J.

Caesar

Village.

She

organized

and directed a 50-voice Girl
Choir for four years. A “Girl

Thank
to

You

Badge”

was

awarded

her for this work.
Mr. Miller is the former

ager

of Forrestal

Scout
Scout
:
man-

Village.

Thursday,

June

4, 1959

�MATTR
on

Pp
ages

-

nea

MN
oe.

hi

ee

-

As

om

’

&lt;

oa

FIRST

‘28

*36
Special

Selection of innerspring mattress and
box springs. Mis-matched units, some
complete units. You‘ll find some famous
names - all wonderful bargains.

grouping

oi
i,
Se

st

i,

Se,

ow.

Es

*“
7

“AS

of tufted,

firm

com-

Posture

fortable innerspring mattresses. Some
have matching box springs. Here’s your

opportunity for quality bedding
standing

eg

aa

THIRD GROUP

SECOND GROUP

GROUP

a

firm

construction,

air

vents,

handles for easy turning. Take your pick
of these fine quality, buoyant comfortable mattresses at this unusually low

at out-

savings.

price.
haiahiabdeiieiiceen
in sil

WESTINGHOUSE

G IE Cv. FT.
with
STORAGE

6°"

75

lb.

storage

”

frozen

space!

$199.95
From
of

top

this

to

bottom

handsome

every

cubic

Westinghouse

inch

is work-

ing for you. ..no wasted space anywhere.
Freezer chest holds 75 Ibs., 4-full width
deep shelves. ..plus large storage space
in door.

oe

\e

we

.

Co

...OR

wiLee a

SHELVES

eee

FOR

PENNIES

4gies

:

dt

Se

Yee

‘

er

BIG CU.
9
FT.

OPEN DAILY TO 5:30 — MONDAY &amp; FRIDAY EVENINGS UNTIL 9 P.M.

lumber
SINCE

This

BUY

PER DAY ON BLUMBERG’S

big

spacious,

family
deep

size

Westinghouse

shelves,...a

full

width

has

four
freezer

chest, full width chill tray...and look at that
storage space in the ‘“‘pantry’' door! Buy it
on long convenient terms...or by the METER
Free delivery and installation.
PIAN

WITH TRADE

659

CENTRAL

®

4

1900

ee,

furniture

AVENUE

—

HIGHLAND PARK

“JUST SAY CHARGE IT”

ID 2-9400

9

�Sale

June

from
to

name

tapes -to

linen and
everything

camp

clothes-

bedding-we have
they need for

Special! nylon tricot
Half Slips
for

Girls

only 2.89

7-14

lace and
from.

SE
Rios
He cee kau 3.95 - 8.95
TO
is ae oe ok obs so be
Ee 1.25
Blaevelises BIGUGGE oo. kk es oe FIR
1.95
eee Ng
ki
CAN 5 aes 8 75c = 89c
Kall m@nties 2. ccc
eee ee teren 79c = 89c
bee BNE i io vee cass he ks 1.95 - 3.95
WE BO OIE SG
ee ecco n heres 1.25

for

Boys

Sur

Wonks,

Dbl:

knee

Te,

Flannel pajamas ...........-eceeeees 2.95
Poplin jacket, flannel lined ...... 3.95 - 4.95

Te

Sonor

we 3.95

Subteen

sizes

es

Oh

lined, 8-16

2.95 - 3.50

4S.
ew ees

some. snort,

B14

..

sa

ee

es 2.95

understorts,

G16

. .

so

wee

es os 75¢

sweaters,

0.

8-16

(Lingerie)

EHR 3.95

3. io.
ea

patemeas, 8-16...

pleat,

es 1.25

8+)

Flannel

kick

........... 2.95

Wns,

Pullover

Girls

8-16:

8-16

ee

antes;

Teett Sea

.......-+++++ 4.95
..........506- 59¢

oe

Sweat

Corduroy TAGs

snes he bee

jeans,

jackets, flannel

Tate

iu.0 bs

4655 06a. Ses 1.95 - 3.50

Poplin

eee
Fk OR Ere es Ga ais 5.95 - 8.95
oe
ea’ Pete
es ee 1.95 - 2.95
tbs CR
er
a Fe be oa 0s
eS 3.95
Orlon cardigan sweaters
White cotton crew socks

Tex’n

back

trim, 3 styles to choose

1. Proportioned sizes, white only.
2. and 3. White, or maize, blue, pink, navy
and black. All in
S- M-L.
Regular 3.95 values

8-16
6-16

2 for 5.50

embroidery

3.95

ee certs 2.95

.........008. 3.95

8-14

eT
EERE eS LPO GE Peete 4.95 Sisewelnss lovee...
sc dd a + 0 oo Sere
Das
SNOT Foca. ovat eae chee ee
is es ics cee Be oo og 3.95 WN
ts
Orlon cardigan sweaters .......+++06.

Camp

8.95
2.50
3.95
5.95
5.95

Linens

and

Bedding

Muslin sheets cot size 54 x 90

Infants’
Crawlers!
Bibs!

all wool Blankets 62 x 84, green, blue, khaki or grey
feather Pillows, camp size

1.79 or 2 for 3.50

Laundry Bags, 19x 30.......

Order
Cash’s

NAME

woven

TAPES

names,

6

Cash’s printed names,

Allow

2 weeks

now

doz

..... 2.75

8 doz.

.....1.25

Cardigans!

for delivery

(Notions)

Famous

name

cotton

at substantial

you'll

find

it in Highland

Park

at

Crawlers
dots,

or

ID

navy

or

toast

Infants

bibs

in

mint

or

Reg.

50c

2-4700

or white

sweater

with

in

blue

Free

Parking

in our

Lot - Open

Daily

blue

blue,

trim.

1.59

Hours

white

3.50

check.

39c
Cardigan

(Infants)

Two

with

Regular

2.59

arnétt — Co.
PHONE

in

S-M-L-XL.

knits

savings

until 5:30,

Friday

nights

until 9

yellow,

Reg.

white,

1.95

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                    <text>Thursday

May

28,

1959

CCl; Held

Keview

ws

he eee
aN

en

25)

SM

2

LS

SS

Loe

my

Memorial
Parade

Day Services And
Begin Saturday

Morning in Jewett Park

�The big bank that grew up
with Highland Park

—caeaammcem™

soso

|

3% INTEREST
SAVINGS
PAID ON ALL

your savings earn more
at the First National

Now

Effective July 1, all Savings Accounts at the First National will start
earning 3% interest. This means you can now take advantage of all
the First National conveniences and have your savings earn more besides.

Now

is a good time to start.

Come

in soon.

FIRST NATIONAL BANK
“The

Our 60th

year

Complete Banking
and

Trust

of

WEEKEND

High

la nl

Park

Member The Federal Reserve System
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

Services

BANKING

HOURS:

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

:

�Vol.

34, No.

Thursday,

12

$375,000 REFERENDUM ON JUNE 6
TO BE VOTED IN SCHOOL DIST. 109
Citizens of Public Schools of District 109 will go to the
polls on

Saturday,

June

6 between

the

hours

of 12 noon

and

7 p.m. to vote for a $375,000 bond issue. This referendum is
for the addition of 17 classrooms for Walden and Maplewood
The polling place for citizens who
live in Deerfield is the Deerfield
Grammar School and for Highland
Park voters, it is the Craftwood
Lumber Co. at 1590 Deerfield Rd.
in Highland Park.
Paul

board

Greenfield,

president

of education

trict

109,

states

of

that

of the

School

his

Dis-

board

has

before it the very important

prob-

lem of recommending school
ities for the year ahead.

facil-

viously made. We have had 1,195
children in school who just fit into
the classrooms available. Gratifying, indeed, for farsighted citizens
who provided these schools ahead
of the amazing
growth
of Deer-

field,’

he

The

said.

forecast

for

the

year

ahead

(1959-60) is 1,462 students who will
require

46

lowing

year

classrooms.

In

(1960-61)

the

the

fol-

predic-

tion is 1,781 students who will need

59 classrooms,
Leading authorities, Mr. Greenfield explained, recommend a maximum of 25 students in a classroom.
This table shows classroom size and
the forecast:

te

Forecast
Average
of
Classrooms
Number of
Year Enrollment Needed Children Per Room
1958-59*
1195
41
29
1959-60
1462
46
32
1960-61
1781
59
30
1961-62
2130
67
32
1962-63
2490
82
30
*Present Year Actual

.

After
exhaustive
board
of
education

that

12

studies,
the
recommends

classrooms

be

added

to

Walden School and five classrooms
to Maplewood School. They believe
that this is the most inexpensive
way
to
expedite
expansion
with
heating and water facilities already
there, as well as land expansion on

the

school

park

grounds.

Timetable

“Enrollment for the year ending
this June exceeds all forecasts pre-

The proposed timetable:
(1) Pass referendum, June 6, 1959
(2) Design new additions, Aug. 1959
(3) Award contract after bids, Nov. 1959*
(4) Foundation poured, Dec. 1959
(5) Classrooms ready, fall of 1960
*(Hope to get best building price in offseason)

“We

said

must

Mr.

keep

what

Greenfield.

we

cient

and

classrooms

ahead

an average

of

growth,

of less than

30 in

each classroom. The present average is 29.”
“In
brief,” he
concludes,
“we
want
adequate
facilities
for
all

schools from kindergarten

through

eighth grade for Deerfield, the fastest
growing
community
on
the

North Shore.”

The

all

Village

day

Hall

Friday

will

(tomor-

row)
because
the
following
(Saturday) is Memorial Day.

day

President

Holmquist

advised

The board, by a vote of 4 to 1
(with President Holmquist voting)

the

approved the up-grading of 19 lots
on Deerfield Rd. of the Briarwood

the same committees which served
during the past two years and substituted the names of the new trusJohn
and
Porter
Winston
tees,
Aberson in place of the two retiring trustees, Carl Jaeger and Joseph Brown.

The

absent

trustee

on

May

20

was Harold Peterson.
Work accomplished at the May
20 meeting included the retirement

of $10,000 of the $175,000

bond

is-

sue for the Village Hall from the
one-half
of
one
cent
sales
tax.
Deerfield
has
received
approxi-

mately
fund
gust

$94,213

sales

tax

since it was started in
of 1955. From this fund

Authe

equipment

from

of the building, air-con-

ditioning,
pistol
been used.
An

the

ordinance

range,

etc.

of a previous

have
board

has safe guarded this fund by allowing its use just for the new Village

Hall,

planning

poses

but

to

the

use

since they

present

it for

state

board

is

other

pur-

that

the

monthly amount*has‘increased.

Country

Club

to

R-1,

which

per-

mits country
clubs
and
appurtenances thereto, such as swimming
pools,
snack
bars,
parking
lots,
“pro” shop, etc.
David Fisher, president of Briar-

wood

Country

Briergate)

club

will

told

the

comply

Club

(formerly

board

with

that

the

the

swim-

ming pool regulations: which will
be put in pamphlet form passed in
an ordinance next month.
Briar-

wood Club was given permission to
construct its
snack bar.

ter to
quiring

pool,

bath

recently

wrote

a let-

Commissioner Pasley inabout litigation now pend-

ing in the Lake County Court between the Drainage
District and
Harold
Friedman,
developer
and
head of the Chicago Construction
Co. and enclosed an article from

the
REVIEW
months ago.

published

many

Litigation
Attorney

letter

and

“The

Park.

Memorial Day services will be held Saturday at Jew
The parade will begin to form around the flag pole

10 a.m.

answered

explained

as follows:

of

Union

the

Drainage

District No, 1 vs. Kuch &amp; Watson,
et al., is a suit for damage which
arose through the alleged failure
of

Mr.

to

provide

Friedman’s

struction

for

Central

sub-contractors

proper

headwall

a sewer

Ave.

con-

outlet

at the

bridge.

“The second case, which is referred to in your news article, is a

by

one

of

Mr.

Friedman’s

against

the

Drainage

District seeking a mandatory injunction, or, as the case now stands
in County Court, an order directing

the

certain
in and

Commissioners

to

remove

portions of the spoil bank
about the Cadillac Subdihave

been

joined

in

house

and

on

co-motions

before

Judge

to

dismiss

Hulse.

Until

these procedural motions have been
determined, there will be no trial
on the merits in either case.”

Honor

Buried

Roll

In Deerfield

Soldiers of all wars who lie buried in the Deerfield Cemetery are:

loway,
Herbert E. Jenney,
Theodore
L.
Knaak,
Jacob
Martin,
Thomas Mitchell, M. Russell, Silas
H. Sherman,
Lewis P. Todd
and
Benjamin H. Webster.
World
War
I veterans
buried

Theodore

Bonn,

Irving

Danner and Carl T. Anderson.
Gold
Stars—World
War
I

Veterans

whose

in

World

War

I

Raziel

included

Frank

DeKisser,

Louis

Schultz, Russell Neargarder, LeRoy
Wheeler and Lewis Yore.
Gold Stars—World War II
Veterans who lost their lives

World
wood,

in

War II included Craig HarRichard Kamminga, Glenn

Hoffman, Russell Frost, Raymond
Ott, Robert Stahl, Leland Plagge
and Charles McAleer Jr.
Korean War Gold Star

Dean Moen
conflict.

died

Attends

Convention

State

in the

Korean

He
walks

72%.

cuts

on

Waukegan

Rd.

for filling stations and the ‘“‘blighted
areas”
where
old _ buildings
exist.

He
the

said

that

business

no

expansion

district was

of

necessary

in the near future as he felt that
the space was ample. He said it
“was

not in the picture”

field

would

ever

become

that Deer-

self suf-

ficient but would retain its small
suburban shopping district, serving
just the day to day needs.

crack filler, etc., according

to bids

for

received
from
Morton
Salt
Co.,
Skokie Valley Asphalt, Peter Baker
and Sons,
Coy Lumber
Co.
and

000

In discussing acquiring land for
off-street parking and business district throughways,
he estimated
that

$165,000

would

be

necessary

for the northeast quadrant; $60,000
the

for

$18,000

northwest

the
for

quadrant;

southeast
the

lot

on

sector
on

field Rd., a very moderate
estimate of $373,000.

Baptist

Chure!

Commander Edwin
Legion Post.

The

Rev.

Paul

V.

Gillen

©
i

Berggren,

pas-

“America” by the DGS

band.

—

Then will follow the assemb
for the parade and the march
Deerfield

Cemetery.

mot School
play.

The

marching

band

w
We

The service at the cemetery
include the reading of the names
of the veterans of all the wars wl
lie buried there and those w

gave their lives in World

Wars

and II and the Korean War,
Commander Howard Lewis of
Deerfield Amvets Post.
The Rev. Humrickhouse will
fer

a prayer.

(Continued

on page 5)

Deerfield Lions
Elect Wolf As
New President
The installation dinner for new
officers of the Deerfield
Lions
Club is scheduled for Monday

Ill., May

Officers elected on May 18 wh
will be installed are J. Hows

14, 15 and 16. U.S. Assist-

ant Postmaster
speaker.

General

was

the

ning,

June

15.

“

Wolf, president;
Michael
first vice president; Arnold
sen, second vice president;
Wigle, third vice president;
Emmett, secretary; Clarence
sen,

Baran,
Pede
A
Geors
Ped

treasurer.

Edward
Tanielian is the
twister; Robert Richey, lion tam
Richard Riley and William Burns

plan consultant, held the fifth work- are directors.
for Deerfield on May 19 in the DeerDelegates to the convention
section concerned commercial and in- French Lick, Ind., June 10-14 will
proposed land for new streets in the be Ralph Dunham, retiring presi-

discussed the slanting sidein the business district with

curb

Community

opening welcome and introduc
of honored guests will be made

Deerfield Postmaster C. M. Willman. Jr. attended a convention of
Illinois Postmasters
at Rockford,

At Fifth Workshop In Master Plan
Matthew Rockwell,
shop on the master plan
field Village Hall.. This
dustrial zoning, parking,
business district.

ceremony

tor of Zion Lutheran Church, wil
give a brief address.
ia
There will be a presentation
flags followed by the playing

the

families lived in

West Deerfield Township
or who
were employed here before going
into service and who were killed
Bergma,

raising

Legionnaires and Amvets partici
pating.
The
Deerfield
Grammar
School band, will play “Star Spa
gled Banner.”
The invocation will be given
the Rev. Robert Humrickhouse

War of 1812 is Capt. E. Bell, who
died in 1850.
Blackhawk War (1832-33) is Joh
the
Kinzie (Indian) Clark, who died in
The
1861.
tion
Civil War: Peter Bess, Johannes
by
Danner,
Harry
Edwards,
Nelson
Hall, John J. Huck, James M. Gal- the

are

flag

open the services at 10:30 a. m.with

Matthew Rockwell Makes Report

The board
adopted
a ‘‘model’’
traffic code, with many sections to
be filled in later.
Edmond Klasinski, public works
foreman
recommended
the
purchase of materials from motor fuel
tax funds from suppliers for salt,
seal
coating,
pre-mix
patching,

(Continued on page 38)

The

The

there

Marshall

case

pending

at

reappointed

has

he

that

trustees

editor

filed

The next regular meeting of the board is sched10

Jr. is attorney for the

both these cases and they are now

grew out of a disagreement between President Eldon Holmquist and five trustees on the appointment of committees for the
June

The

vision.
“Issues

At the adjourned meeting of the Deerfield Village Board
on May 20 there was no mention made of the differences which

Wednesday,

J. Marshall
board.

suit

Deerfield

closed

two other commissioners are Ray
Dahlgren and Forrest Pasley. W.

corporations

Village Hall Closes
For Holiday Friday
be

15. He will serve until the next annual election on Sept. 1, 1959. The

‘“This includes

a full school day for all from first
through eighth grades, with suffi-

Village Board Committees

uled for
8 p.m.

Be Held In Jewett Park

The board of commissioners of
Union Drainage District 1 (west
ditch)
has
appointed
Kenneth
West of 1026 Sheridan Ave. to fill

have,”

Nothing Is Settled Yet On

coming year.

Memorial Day Services To

KENNETH WEST
APPOINTED DITCH
COMMISSIONER

the vacancy left when Earl Cardinal moved from Deerfield on April

Schools.

May 28, 19!

$130,-

and
Deer-

total

He

recommended

no_

enlarge-

ment of the two-family and multiple dwelling zones, but provision
should

be made

homes

to allow “paying

keep
up
character
hoods.
He

hood

business

Mr.
persons

guests”

to

the
appearances
and
of the older neighbor-

suggested

in the
village

for use of the older

that

a

district

future
plan
near the toll

Rockwell,
in

the

neighbor-

might

west
road.

with

of

approval

audience,

said

be
the

of
that

three cul du sac streets should be
opened

for

through

traffic.

Plan Commission members present for this workshop were Frank

dent; Christos Cosmas, Allan Adelman, John J. Miller, George Emmett and Clarence Pedersen.
—

Ordinance Forbids Burning
On Parkways And Streets
. The.
passed

Deerfield
an

Grace

Knack

tary to the commission,

is secre-

Bo
May

material on any parkway
or to burn grass or any

ble material
street.

upon

or str
comp

any parkway
os

Assistant Postmaster Fisher
Injured In Auto Accident
Newton

Fisher,

assistand

D

field postmaster, was seriously
jured in an auto accident on Ma

Trustees Joseph Koss and Winston | operation,
Mrs.

on

which states that it is “unlawful
deposit grass or any combust

Curto, chairman; Mrs. G. F. Clampitt, Carl Bagge, Lester Moate and. 9 and is in
Peter Weinert. Also present were pital, where
Porter.

Village

ordinance

the Savanna, IIl., ho
he underwent a spin

Postmaster

man

Jr.

has

not

had

port

on his condition.

C. M, Wi
a recen
'

« ="

�DEERFIELD
a Opinions
|
|

expressed

Letters

should

ot Queens

be

And

brief

and

Garbage

Village of Deerfield and the other
to West Deerfield Township. When

soll To the Public:
is!
|

Chicago is taking
losing a visit from

no chances
the Queen

of
of

_

England and has ordered stoppage

|

of garbage

|

Central

loading

Railroad

on

tracks

the

Illinois

in Grant

_
Park to be sure that only lake
_
breezes blow the Queen’s way.
eSi
Village officials say they are
Cees
about to vote $10,000 of our money
to purchase the National Brick Co.
and

|

start a test run on garbage

dis-

posal.

|

Before

they

take

this

step,

we

|
_
|

hope they will please
consider
Deerfield’s queens who live here
24 hours of 365 days in the year.

_

Deerfield’s

fe

their

queens

princes

|
healthful,
free
of

and

wish

to

rear

princesses

in

a

attractive community—
germ bearing garbage

_
trucks and trains which will dump
in a big deep hole.

a
Bs

Mrs. W. J. Loarie
853 Oxford Road

Ee Wilmot Road Needs
| To the Editor:

Paving

It

a mountain

|

isn’t necessary

to fall on some
im

phone

calls,

nig garding

for

and

condition

that

pleas

of

take up a problem

re-

Wilmot

Eagapped from County Line Road
| Telegraph Road are hopeless
| this time.
So we

to

to
at

the

field

of

Wilmot

section

Road

just

Road,
north

I refer
of

Deer-

paired met with sympathy but none
could authorize the repairs because
half of the road was owned by the
township. A call to the township revealed that the section to which I
referred was owned by the Village

Deerfield,

and

thinking

I was

getting more sympathy, I checked
with the recorder of deeds at the
village hall. This section was an-

nexed

to the

Village

of Deerfield

in April of 1957 and was such a
well kept secret that the map in
the office of the Village Manager
did not show that it belonged to
the village.
For the more than 200 children
who use this stretch of road to get
to Wilmot School,.shouldn’t it be
made safe? Must we wait until one
is killed or hurt before someone

the

village

hall

will

have

the

guts to stick out
his
neck
and
authorize the road to be repaired.
No one will take the initiative and
each continues to pass the buck.
We’ve had the sympathy. Anyone
for tea?

Mrs. Robert R. Parrish
1600

closer

Montgomery

Road

Jaycees Plan Chark-O-Chick
_
_
_

section of Wilmot which is ALL
VILLAGE
PROPERTY
and does
NOT require Township FUNDS or

|

avote of the Township. Such a prop-

ih erty

|

does

truly

exist,

though

one

would suspect it to be a well guard-

ed

secret.

This

property

begins

550

-

ft. north of Deerfield Road, continues
north through Friedman’s
_ Subdivision to a point just past

_

Greenwood

this
-

Ave.

This

section,

at

writing, is virtually impassable

and.a disgrace to the Village. Even
greater, it is a hazard of large pro-

portion to the 200 or more school
_ children forced to use it 4 times
each day.
_
This section of Wilmot cannot
|

continue to be used in its present
condition

|

_

__

or at its alarming

rate

of

deterioration.
In the interest of safety our chil-

ment, no-man’s land if one followed instructions he would be met

head

has

on

by

been

an

automobile

which

to drive

off the

forced

Sy road in order to proceed at all.
‘If
any one thinks that the taxes

|

the

mer?
Well, the Deerfield

guarantee

on

Wilmot

assessed

are

less

than

those

on paved streets, or that

a

JayCees

can’t

from

these

breather

appliances
ALL
summer,
but we
can give you one day free of cooking and dishwashing the CHARKO-CHICK way.
It’s so pleasant to enjoy a charcoal-broiled half chicken with cole
slaw, potatio chips, bun, honey and
other surprises— delivered— when
you don’t have to prepare it your-

self.
Look

for

salesman
May
30,

calling WI

the

in
or

CHARK-O-CHICK

your
place

area
your

Saturday,
order by

5-4663.
H. L. Berman
1300
Charing
Cross

Bids Opened For
New High School
Bids on the new high school for
West
Deerfield
Township
were

opened last Thursday by the board
of education of Township
High
trying
to adjust modern
automo_ biles to backwoods trails, then he School District 113.
The bids were Joseph J. Duffy
| is mistaken.
We
are not asking for a super Co., Chicago, $2,838,579.
_ highway either. The proposed 27
Power
Construction
Co.,
Oak
|
ft. wide thoroughfare would be fine Park, $2,961,892.
| if funds were unlimited but we
William E. Schweitzer and Co.,
_ would settle for less width happily Evanston, $2,933,131.
|
if it were only passable and safe
Keno Construction Co., Highland
for our children.
Park, $3,248,888.
This problem is solely that of the
Hansen and Werhane, Highland
a Village and now we beg for a quick
we

/

are

enjoying

and perhaps

fore

some

the

concrete
child

challenge

of

solution be-

inadvertently

be-

comes the victim of red tape and
_ short sightedness.
A
Mrs. Morris Courington
We

c
_.
|
_

910 Wilmot Road

Tea And

Sympathy

Park,

$3,223,421.

Chell and Anderson Co., Chicago, $3,009,119.
Mercury
Builders Inc., Forest
Park, $3,109,971.
Sumner Sollitt Co., Chicago, $3,210,000.
S. N. Nielsen Co., Chicago, $3,-

To the Editor:

For

some

time,

I thought

that

Wilmot Road, like Gaul was divided
in two parts, one belonging to the
Page 4

a personal

The new school
be completed
by
1960.

reducing traffic accidents during
the Memorial Day weekend.
Chief Petersen said cars from

department
stantly

is expected
September

to
of

will be on patrol

during

the

long

for traffic violators

endanger

the lives

and

his

conwho

°

avant

property

Residents

of

under arrest.
“Strict enforcement prevents accidents,”’ Chief Petersen said, ‘‘and
I want
to
see
Deerfield
come
through
this
holiday
without
a

single serious mishap.”
Chief Petersen gave this advice
to holiday motorists:
“It’s easier to say ‘take it easy’
than it is to. practice it. But we
must curb the desire to rush and
hurry. Whether at the wheel or on
foot take time to move safely to
avoid
endangering
yourself
or
others.”

At

that

time

the

monthly

It has been our belief
tremendous
increase
in

that the
the rev-

enue, plus the foreseeable further
increase in revenue due to unpredicted growth, justifies the use of
surplus sales tax revenue for capital improvements.
It has been my

Editor

St.,

South

Chestnut

St.

and

parking

on

Orchard

St.,

it

parkways.

It was just recently that residents in the 1100 block on Chestnut
St. tried to comply with the village
and took their cars off the streets.

Tax

How can an ordinance be passed
when the village president states
that this ordinance does not apply
to every location?

Safety should be the watch-word of
the board and until every street is
widened to allow an easy flow of
traffic there should be no law prohibiting parking on parkways.
A very sensible section of the ordinance
forbids
parking
on
any
street between the hours of 2 a.m.
and 6 am. for any period longer
than 30 minutes, except physicians
on emergency calls. To make this
possible, the ordinance should allow parking on parkways.
The ordinance, with the exception of the parking on parkways,
is thorough and comprehensive for
the needs of the community.

Deerfield
is
better
off with
private scavenger service.
Any tax
supported
municipal
government
operated
service
can never
compare with private enterprise. It will
cost more in the long run to have
municipal
garbage
pick-up
and
poorer service.

Deerfield is better off with an
ordinance than a referendum because the voters can select the men
board

and let them

Too

hands

to

much

of

sit

power

a village

| referendum.

on

the

village

set the policy.
is

put

into

manager

tax

*

*

is

to

&lt;

*

We approved the issuance of a
permit to the Briarwoods Country ,
Club for a swimming pool, a snack
bar and a parking lot, with the provision that the Club will meet the
intent of the ordinance that we
have proposed on the building of «
swimming pools in Deerfield.
This reminds me that someone
asked
whether
or not the
Club»

could be sold for a development

of

homes.
Yes, it could be, but if it
were, the entire area would then

automatically

which

become

zoned

R-l,

is our largest category for*

lots, 20,000
course, the

square
owners

feet.
Then,
would have

of
to

submit plans and designs to the *
Plan Commission before any work
could be done.
A public hearing
would be held and all thoughts on
the
proposed
development
fully |
explored.
These things take a lot of time,

anyone

wishing

have

small

plenty

and

be

Club

along

to

be

heard

of time

heard.

exception,

to take

There

that

part

Waukegan

is a

of

now

the

zoned

R-4 would not be subject to the R-1
reclassification in the event of a
change in the Club.
I mention all.
the foregoing only because when
one person asks a question, there
must be many more wondering the |
club

property

The Deerfield Chamber of Commerce will have its monthly dinner meeting

tonight

at 7 o’clock

*

the

purchase

Co.

of

the

-

*

of any land for either*=

or streets.
It does mean
Board recognizes the need

more

wants

off-street

the

subject

parking
brought

and’

to the

public.
(Continued
The

Public

Press,

on page
no

less

ie

5)

than

Public

.

Office, is a public trust.

DEERFIELD
REVIEW
May

28,

1959

Vol.

’
34, No.

12

Published Weekly every Thursday
PUBLICATION

699

will be
in Jew608

OFFICE

Waukegan

DEERFIELD,

field Cemetery under the auspices
of the Deerfield American Legion
and Amvts Posts.
‘Left to right are Howard Lewis,
Harold Root Jr., E. Raymond Frost,

*

proposed and requires it be considered at a village meeting when ™
the final Master Plan is presented.
The approval does not provide for

Thursday,

ett Park with the parade forming
there for the march to the Deer-

nor-

that the Board accepts the plan as ”

property.

Memorial Day services
held Saturday at 10 a.m.

the

tee serving for the purpose was
adopted and made a part of the re~,
vised Master Plan which is soon to
be finished.
This approval means

National

On The Cover

than

A PARKING
AREA PLAN
as*¥
recommended by a public commit-

in

the Legion Hall dining room,
Arthur Ullmann, president, will
introduce
Joseph
Koss,
village
trustee, who will explain the plans

other

mal uses for a country club.

for

Lewis Thompson, Ralph Dunham,
Earl Hurt, Theodore Niemi and Ara thur Martin.

the

by

revenue

sales

be used.

parking
that the

Will Meet Tonight

Brick

Village
President
Eldon
Holmquist has appointed three trustees,
John
Aberson,
Arno
Wehle
and
Harold Peterson as a committee for
the purpose of drawing up a village
manager ordinance for adoption by
the Village Board. He also suggests
that it might be in the form of a
referendum.

wish

of determining

the

the purchase

Chamber of Commerce

for
Manager

they

has the prerogative
how

same. I know of no activity on the

board?

Village

Supported

Mr.
Holmquist
has
appointed
three trustees, Arno Wehle, Winston Porter and Maurice Petesch as
a committee to study the desirability of municipal garbage collection
against private scavenger service.

Just what is this double talk by the

(

fund up to three year’s requirements. The Board may want to go
higher, and each Board in session

a look

seems a very foolish move on the part of the board to try to
stop

Now that we have used $10,000
to retire that amount of bonds, Ia
believe the Board will agree with
me, that we will again build that

would

An ordinance regulating traffic was passed by the Deerfield
Village Board on May 20 which prohibits parking cars on parkways. With the bottleneck and dangerously narrow path on
Chestnut

personal thought that if we always
have on hand three year’s requirements for bond redemptions
and *
interest, we are amply protecting
the taxpayers of Deerfield.

and

Let's Talk It Over......
North

PO)

of Deerfield:

revenue from
the
sales
tax was
down
around
$1200.
Today is is
consistently over $3000 per month.
Your present Board has accumulated a sizeable fund for the repayment of the bonds, but it has also
authorized the expenditure of sales
tax revenue for public capital improvements. Many items that were
not originally called for in the Hall.
the shooting range, the air conditioning, part of the municipal garage,
and
some
furnishings
have
been
obtained
with
sales
tax
money.

drivers.
warning tickets are being
during the alert, Petersen
Instead, he has ordered his
to place violators promptly

The

°

bonds.

holiday,

watching
other
No
issued
said.
men

oF

the use of sales tax funds to pick
up these bonds which were said to
be available at an appreciable discount from the original sale price.
The term is 1973, so there we not
only save 14 years of interest, but
we also saved several dollars per
bond on the maturity price.
IT
SHOULD
BE
RECALLED
that when the bonds were issued
for building the hall, the Board
then in session went on record that
the sales tax would be used only
to pay for the retirement of the

appeal

tinue
through
midnight
Sunday,
virtually every police officer in the
state is participating in an all-out
law enforcement program aimed at

With

Editor:

Mother, isn’t it too hot to cook?
Wouldn’t you like to seal the oven
and close the stove for the sum-

dren have been told countless times

_ where they should walk, but on this
_ stretch
of no-sidewalk,
no-pave-

|
|

To

the
statewide
Traffic
Condition
Alert which goes into effect today
at 6 p.m.

don’t drive after drinking.”’
During the alert, which will con-

bridge

ae

WE HAD WHAT TO ME IS A MEMORABLE event
at the last meeting of the Board. A call had come from one of
the banks in Chicago saying that they believed they could pick
up some of the longer term bonds outstanding on the issue
used to build the Village Hall. The Board quickly authorized

Police Chief David J. Petersen
said today he is working closely
with state and county authorities in

has issued

te

To The

In Traffic Control

He

aa

From The President's Desk...

phone calls to any who

the

might be able to get the section re-

of

+
ait
ee
fi P= AR
ET ere
oh,
eet ses
‘

to all drivers to “drive with caution at all times and above
all,

to

Ave.

Numerous

7

aanm
a

at

on

Greenwood

in

of us to know

inquiries

the

I speak

«il

And State Cooperate

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

columns do not necessarily constitute the opinions of the paper.

Soe
ae
Pe EMREi
¥
a pC
ay)

Boerticid Police

FORUM

in these

8

.

od

Tyrer
BR
aig ceace aS See
et
ide dd
SA:
AL The
pe
t
:

Road

ILLINOIS

Telephone Windsor 5-4500
HIGHLAND
PARK
OFFICE
Laurel Ave., Highland Park,
Telephone ID 2-4500

ve
III.

MEMBER
National
Editorial Association
Illinois Press Association
Local Subscription Rates—$3.50 per year
Domestic Rate—$5.00 per year
Single Copies—15c
Foreign Rates on Application.
‘6Entered as second-class matter November 27, 1944, at the post office at Deerfield, Illinois, under the Act of March 8,

1879.”

Thursday, May 28, 1959
.
‘

Rae

bi

ry

Nik

ne

a

ape

yong
EEA RS
Sena

�Belgian Carillonneur Visits Deerfield

New Building To Be Occupied July 1

A new administration building for Deerfield Township
School

District

113,

which

is under construction

Park.

The

soon

will

have

two

schools

at the athletic field on Park Ave.,

10-room, $96,960

High

to control,

Highland

structure will be in use by July 1,

school officials say.

‘Mayor’ Of Deerfield

Court Approves

Arrested And Fined

Detachment

TE

Staf

Nees,

Last
week
the
police
while
cruising and looking after the welfare of the Village came
across
Mayor of Deerfield wandering aimlessly
across
the
yards
in
the
Woodland Park section. The police
picked him up and took him to
the local police station where he

Bellmaster,

at the

right,

is director

of the

International

Carrillon

School,

“Jef

De-

nyn,” at Mechelen, Belgium. He was a guest in Deerfield this past weekend at the Gerard M.
Fritsen home, 605 Waukegan Rd. Dr. Nees is pointing to his home on the globe.
Left to right are Gerard Fritsen, Evert M. Fritsen of 1155 Waukegan Rd., Mrs. Gerard Fritsen,

Yvonne

Fritsen,

Mrs.

Staf

Nees

Gerard
and
Evert
Fritsen
ar”
two of five brothers, members of
Petit &amp; Fritsen, bell-founders since
1660, with factories at Aarle-Rixtel

in

Holland.

The

foundry

makes

carillons, chimes, tuned handbells,
church furnishings, tower clocks,
memorial
plaques,
church
bells,
electrical ringers ship and school
bells.
The two Fritsen brothers have
lived in) Deerfield
since October
of 1957, where they maintain their
offices, The three other brothers

reside

in Holland.

Staf Nees is a distinguished Belgian carillonneur, who is making
a concert tour in the United States.

He is a performer, conductor, composer

and

educator.

His tour of 37 cities includes
concerts
at
National
Carillon,
Washington,
D.
C.;
Church
of
, Savior,
Cleveland
Heights,
O.;
House
of
Hope
Presbyterian
Church,
St. Paul, Minn.;
Church
of St. John the Divine, Houston,
Tex.;
Memorial
Church,
Grosse

Pointe Farms,

Mich.;

and

Mrs.

Evert

Fritsen,

with

Staf

Eldon Holmquist
(Continued

from

page

*

standing.

*

NEXT
FORMAL
MEETING,
JUNE
10th. Why don’t you come
out and see how your Village is
governed?
Eldon Holmquist
Village President

The Firing Squad from the 586th
Signal Corps of Ft. Sheridan will
fire the seven shot volley followed
by taps.
The parade will form again for
a march back to the American Legion Hall where refreshments will
be served to the paraders, who will

be in uniform.
Graves
of
the
soldiers
were
marked by flags previous
to the

In

former

years,

of

charge

this

during

has
the

The

been

past

school

Want-Ad

interesting

facts

tunities.

Don’t

dispensed

with

and

miss

Mayor,

For

First Presby-

in

of 76 bells

the

tower

Kirk-in-the-Hills

to be

of

the

(Presbyterian)

October.

the

This

carillon

largest

ment in the world.
tice keyboard will

cast

is

reported

bell

instru-

A 76-note pracbe supplied.

Village Presidents Invited
To Waukegan Centennial
Among

the

honored

guests

Thursday, May 28, 1959

week

unaccompanied

(Mayor

is

a

on

Minard

orders
Hulse,

increased.
Some petitioners
fire

4.4

trucks

miles

Trees Burn Near
Construction Work

would

by

a

of
and

County
join

testified
have

to

gravel

miles by paved
the
center
of

which

the

that
travel

road,

or

5

Rte. 22, to reach
the
territory
for

detachment

is sought.

They

stated that on April 1, 1957, their
properties
were
annexed
by the

City of Lake Forest, and might be
more effectively served now by the

The Deerfield-Bannockburn volunteer
firemen
‘were
called
to
Colwyn
and Wincanton
Rds. last

(Continued on page 38)

golden

new station on Everett road. That
station lies 1.3 miles from the cen-

ter of the
Vernon

area

Fire

detached

from

the

District.

oppor-

It

doesn’t

pay
when

to

gamble

purchasing ~

health-giving pharmaceuticals,

that

with or without prescription.

BE SURE

Look

of the quality of the

drugs you pay for . . and the care
with which it is compounded.

ee

Lindemann’s
by ethical

E. R. SQUIBB &amp; CO
PARK, DAVIS
3rd Generation

Hair Cut &amp; Style

Public’s

Our
MANICURIST
is at
YOUR

features drugs manufdctured
drug firms. . . including:

LILLY

to

tives of all communities have been
invited to participate.

last
Judge

ABBOTT
e PFIZER

Permanent

including

The celebration begins June 19.
The following day is designated as
“Lake County Day” and representa-

Ver-

non Fire Protection District were
allowed to detach from the district

is filled with

SPECIAL!

a
OUR

attend
the Waukegan
Centennial
celebration on June 20 will be EIdon Holmquist,
president
of the
Village of Deerfield and E. LeRoy
Hall, president of the Village of
Bannockburn.

the

the Style Cut

at

Bloomfield Hills, Mich., a suburb
of Detroit, and the brothers expect

to be

a

home.)

innew

to have it completely installed by

property

in

Evidence revealed in their petition that the toll road had formed
a barricade to east-west travel in
certain sectors and the travel distance to the Half Day location of
the Vernon Fire Department had

on

it!

Blown”

is

Mayor

NATURAL
“Wind

Township
land

Lake Forest Fire Department jurisdiction,

friends
still living
in Woodland
Park, where Mayor is perfectly at

me

carillon

controls.

$6

Vernon
whose

came

and is now the property of

Petit &amp; Friedman Ltd., recently
was awarded a contract for a cast
stalled

fined

Eight
owners

pennies

terian
Church,
Jackson,
Tenn.;
Michigan
State
University,
East
Lansing; First Evan. Luth. Church,
Green Bay, Wis., all of which have
the Fritsen carillons.

bell

Saturday

was

of loitering

proper

family

Vernon Fire Dept.

QUALITY and SERVICE

year.

section

his

court

Deerfield

children carried flowers and placed
them on the graves of the soldiers,

but

until

Cocker Spaniel dog given to Robert S. Alexander when Mr. Alexander assumed
the Mayorship of
Deerfield.
The
dog
was
named

(Continued from page 3)

services.

held

for him.
In police

by

Memorial Day
4)

There
were
many
other items
acted upon, but only the ordinance
regarding swimming pools need be
mentioned.
We recognize that this
ordinance may not have every possible precaution in it. However, it
is based on ordinances adopted by
many communities, and has specifications that if met the permit applicants will meet state health requirements.
As newer restrictions
are needed, we will amend the ordinance, at least we have a
start,
and a good one at that.
*

Nees

was

From

SERVICE

_ Always!

BEAUTY
CORNER
BEAUTY SHOP
666

Waukegan

OPEN

For Appointment
PHONE:

WI 5-1525

Serving the
Needs!

LINDEMANN’S

Rd., Deerfield

MONDAYS

Now

Pharmaceutical

ex

__ PRESCRIPTION
800

Waukegan
Deerfield

Road

PHARMACY

WI 5-0022
Page

5

�PTA Honors Teacher

CIRCUS TICKETS
Tickets for Adams Bros. cirat
cus to be held tomorrow
Highland

Field

letic

=|!

SAVINGS

2

1959

1 ,

JULY

EFFECTIVE

Ve:

be

a

Federal

Member

Insurance

posters;

;

and

,

:

ticket

circus

at the

HIGHLAND. PARK STORE
589 Central.

==||8 p.m. Proceeds benefit High== |f land Park Hospital. Circus owners, Mr. and Mrs. William Grif-

Corp.
1771

* . 1D 2-8550
we

program.

a

é

WINNETKA STORE
847 Elm * HIEG-5141
for

Gg Moria

Day

«

presided.

Congregation Israel PTA
Officers Installed Tomorrow
Israel

Congregation

Shore

of

Association

Teacher

Parent

North

will participate in Sabbath services
tomorrow evening at the Temple.
Rabbi Edgar E. Siskin will install
direcand
officers
newly-elected
tors, Mrs. Harry M. Yeager as PTA

«

and

years

two

next

for

#

ee

After services the PTA will be
hosts to the Congregation in the

’

“THE FUTURE IS
LIGHTED FOR US WITH
THE RADIANT COLORS
OF HOPE”

ea

es

%

was special guest. Arthur Caplan,
:
:
711 Lincoln Ave. W, PTA president,

/

;

years,

a din-

tors,

ere

H

40

at

newly elected officers and direc-

Fit?

Shirt

Sport

Perfect

for

Ti ner given by Lincoln School PTA

president

ns

=

e

Looking

i M.

fith, former publisher and journalist, promise
a high calibre

St.

Second

last

honored

of

night

108

District

School

k Ave. || Was

performThree
there.
wagon
ances scheduled are 2, 4:30 and

Deposit

(Margaret)
Ted
Mrs.
}|who has served on the faculty

education
rough mem- }| or faculty and board of
age ernie
who
bers of sponsoring service clubs, }| members. Dr. Margaret Ratz,
}|is leaving the faculty to accept a
Lions, Rotary, Kiwanis and Jay-

ti
ON

ay

:

: nt

School Ath-

Park High

For 40 Years Service
Harvey,

meee

+(Author’s

Name

_

Below)=——

In every corner of this
earth, research scientists,

| +

physicians and chemists
are patiently searching for
better ways to treat dis-

ease. Old drugs are being
re-evaluated to determine
New
additional benefits.
chemicals are being created with the hope of discovering a future use for

SALE!

20

2

|

| «

them.

i:

As fast as they are clinicthese new disstocked in our
department. If
been sick for
give up hope.

|«

soon a new medical discovery will cure you. Mean-

]}+

ally proved,
coveries are
prescription
you have
long do not

Some

On All Color and
Black-and-White Films

day,

very

perhaps

while, depend on your physician for relief.

SPECIALS

35mm

embodied

Roll

MOVIE,

16mm

MOVIE,

Mag.

$6.60

Now

textured Bemberg®
perfectly,

$5.28

Service
‘

drip-dries

quickly,

a

Monday

Thursday Evenings

VOL

Highland

PF

Park or Ravinia

Vacation
Take

more

Film
than

our

Hair Cuts of Distinction

SMITTY’S

enough

:

g

Paes

it processed and waiting upon ||| 595 Central Avenue =
Page 6

z

ee

for full credit.

your return.

|*

FAA
ORES A
AR
OT
A

Plan

We also supply mailing
bags so that you can send in
your exposed film and have

:;

,

film with you on your trip
and return any unopened
film

[w

‘

by John Fiske
*Quotation
(1842-1901)

ih

Remember

®,

with-

CO.
&amp; STS—
GSELL
—PHARMACI

AMERICA’S MOST BEAUTIFUL SPORT SHIRT

7-9

let

or

us,

EARL W.

fs)

@

sacks

and

near

promptly

aeRO:

3 ee

|by

shopping

filling their prescriptions.
May we compound yours?

Ks
,

:

us deliver

by

|
Vs

hi

Open

ie

requires

’

e

out extra charge. A great
people entrust us
many
with the responsibility of

minimum of ironing.

Handled

pach

if

smooth

rayon. It launders

24 HOUR || srrav.o-TRAV’LER
KODACHROME
PROCESSING

soft, silken

fabric of imported cotton, Dacron, and

$2.28

Now

$2.85

in a silken

When You Need A Medicine
Pick up your prescription

} body length ...incomparable fit

$1.64

Now

$2.05
8mm

sleeve length, with proportioned shirt

KODACHROME

ID 2-2300

ID 2-2600

Strad-O-Trav’ler has your correct

$1.64

Now

... but every

Phone
Ask YourD Physician
PARK « toRAVINIA
HIGHLAN

; i*
Stradivar

shirt gives it to you! The

KODACOLOR

$2.05
35mm

$1.08

Now

$1.35

:
atarity

y.

4

Perfect fit in sport shirts is

a

oe

BLE
i

NMA

eo i

HE:

Hei

HEL

SER

ID 2-5300
nee

iS ARB

a

OF THE

KODACOLOR

ER

~

SOME
620

:

"

.

Highland Park

SHOP

st, near the Jewel
|. ‘osc’sna
Phone ID 2-0636

_

Thursday, May 28, 1959

�Turn Yard Work

Art League Head

Campbell Chapters Observes
Sororis Amicei Night Wednesday

Staff Acti on

Sororis Amicei Night will be
served Wednesday at 7:30 p.m.
Campbell Chapter O.E.S. in
Masonic Temple. Serving in
East will be Mrs. Martha Brandt

into

WHEEL- HORSE
TRACTOR t...!

worthy

matron

and

Edward

KEEPING
TIME

obby
the
the
as

with paul leeds

Ohr-

mund as worthy patron. Social hour
and refreshments will follow.
week

Congratulations to E, H. LEMKUHL who won the strand of Cultured Pearls in the Homemakers
Week drawing at Leeds.

magazine.

Miss

Griffes

spent

her

sopho-

*

more
year
in the University
of
Maryland’s overseas program studying in Germany at the University

of Munich,
Scotland
burgh.

rector

Christina Griffes of WarVa., has been appointed di-

of religious

education

with

with “Uniof proven

special responsibility for children’s
work at The Highland Park Presbyterian Church.

eBig Tractor power from tremendous
gear reduction. Gear shifts into three
speeds forward, plus reverse.

Another change made in the professional staff at the church is the
appointment of Mrs. P. O. E. John-

son, 430 Park

&amp;

M.S.S., INC.
Power

Mower

&amp; Garden

REGULAR HOME DELIVERY
OF DELICIOUS PURE WATER

ENJOYING

2210

WATER

Sharpening
Repair

Skokie Valley Road
(U.S.
Highland Park, Hil.

41)

IDlewood 2-6116
Weekdays: 8 a.m-8 p.m.
Sundays: 9 a.m.-2 p.m.

THE

YOU DRINK?
Sparkling Spring
Mineral Water Co.
1629

Park

Ave..

West,

Free Delivery

Highland

WHAT
Does

Park

IDlewood 2-0042

DOES

it mean

SWIMMING,
through

SUMMER

FUN?

&amp;

Does

HORSEBACK

CRAFTS

&amp;

MEAN
it mean

TO

RIDING?

WORKSHOPS?

YOUR

acquiring
Does

At

CHILD

SKILL
it

at

mean

MERRY

#

June

ONE

of these at the expense of the others.

OAKS,

SUMMER

DEVELOPMENT

It means the overall SELF-

of your child as a happy

individual working

within

OAKS...

an all-year-round school on 7 wooded acres for children from

June

15th through
or

more

August

consecutive

Call LAKE

21st,

and

registrations are accepted

for any

weeks.

FOREST

2113 or write MERRY

OAKS

SCHOOL,

3350

Music

uts

EVEN

AS
debris

IN

IT

John

WET

HERB

Carradine
13 to 26

&lt;

4
4
@
.
4
4
q
4
4
4
&lt;

=:

models
Lucian
And

gift. of
more

for

Sunday thru Friday

Blaine

tional on

Sa

that

B

Music Theatre

Ba

HAPPY

Sun.

thru

Our

warmest

10 to 23

Music Theatre
Chicago Premiere

Theatre

} Babes in Arms
|
JULIE

with
WILSON

Lapin

Star to be announced

Music

$2.90,

$2.40,

Tenthouse
Pre-Broadway Run

HILARY

at Both Theatres

with

Joan

between Skokie and
Green Bay at
West Park Ave.
Highland Park

Fontaine

New York Hit Plays
and

Great Stars

Suburban Telephones: VErnon 5-4040
IDlewood 2-1160
Chicago Direct Line: RO 4-7579

BELLS ARE
RINGING

at Tenthouse

TO BE ANNOUNCED

Box 277,

find my

send

me................ coupon

check

Highland
books

at

Park,
$18

Ill.

each

others.

young

book.

Enclosed

please

fellow

to

*

*

band

again

playing

at

the

Villa

Moderne

the dance

music

fer

*

ok

“If somebody
make

some

steals your

more.”

*

*

Student

Union

re-

sumes again Saturday nite at the
Retreation Center. In addition to
the well-stocked
2

juke

box for dane-

ing there will be a showing
movie—The
Glenn Miller
Have you joined?
*

*

of the
Story.,

*
our fam-

ily always goes—-to the Memorial
Day
Parade
Sponsored
by
the
American Legion and VF'W. Take
your family uptown Saturday and
join in the traditional observance.
Everybody loves a parade!
:
*
*
*
For that girl graduate Leeds
Jewelers has an extensive stock of
Cultured Pearl jewelry that she
will be thrilled to own. Pendants,
pins,

earrings,

charms

and

lets with prices beginning
up

brace-

at $2.95

to $50.00.

LEEDS JEWELERS

for $

491

Name
City

Leeds’

and

MUSIC THEATRE and TENTHOUSE THEATRE
Please

Elgin,

many

congratulations

*

his Concert Group

PRICES

TENTHOUSE
THEATRE

between Skokie
and Edens at
Lake-Cook Rd.
Highland Park
Adjacent to Villa
Moderne Motel

at Leeds

Bulova,

It’s a nice custom—and

OFFICE

Reserved

different

MR. and MRS. STANLEY SIKORSKI who celebrate their 25th wedding
anniversary
this week-end
and to MR.
and
MRS.
DOUG
KRATZEN
who
celebrate
their

(50¢ addi-

Fri.—$3.50,

400

rugged

Teen-agers!

Louis Armstrong
Fe

the

be sure

we recommend
Leeds’
17 jewel
shockproof,
lifetime
mainspring,
water-resistant watch sale-priced at
only $24.50.
‘
*
*

thunder,

ONLY

FOR $18

your

brands

and

*

thane ter stitatats

July 27 to Aug.
Tenthouse

Sat. Eve. Only—$3.90, $3.40, $2.90,
All Seats

announced

eS
Aug. 24 to Sept. 6

BOX

MUSIC
THEATRE

FELLA

August

19

Books

in
giving

a watch

Omega,

*

Saturdays)

REGULAR

July 27 to August 9

Star to be

June

Offer expires June 15
May be used individually or in a group
Tickets good at both theatres.

with

MOST

16

6 ADMISSIONS

Pajama Game

1

Opening

are

than

Picard

Quote:

JILL COREY
meshed

If you

of famous

with

TENTHOUSE
THEATRE

Save on Pre-Season

Theatre

Vivian

CASS

GIGI

ROGERS’

MUSIC
THEATRE
June

GRASS

Thursday, May 28, 1959

PEGGY

Tenthouse

YOUR

Music

skip—leave
cuts evenly,
as well.

q
4
&lt;

future?

traditional

*

graduation

the. North Shore Hadassah Juniors
who will be ‘‘having a ball’ at their
May Reign Dance.

with

Theatre

July

bag.

Ordinary
mowers
clump,
messy clippings. New Toro
cleans-up
other
clippings

‘Born Yesterday

July 20 to 26

Opening

SEE

including

*
a

This Saturday nite finds the Paul

Tenthouse

with

etc.

VACUUMS—
in

:

HARVEY

with

2—VACUUM CLEANS THE
LAWN—picks up leaves,
3—-BAGS

to see the

&lt;

July 6 to 19

WAGON

twigs,

there

4
.
4
4

&lt;

Tenthouse

JONES

PAINT

GRASS

clippings,

*
Is

4
&lt;
&lt;

¢

can utter a
It’s a matter

of practice.

near

.¢

June 29 to July 12

Operation

Acts!

*

plaint, but too few
graceful compliment.

c
4

q
&gt;

Everett Road, Lake Forest, Ill.

SHOWBOAT

without expensive attachments

grass,

a

4 to 9 years old... is staffed by qualified adults. Transportation, snacks
and lunches are provided. The summer outdoor program extends from
four

4

&lt;

The MERRY OAKS summer activities are planned with an awareof what is needed to provide a well-rounded program. MERRY

ness

q
4

q

16 to 28

ALLAN

20 Big

A favorite quote of mine: “Everypody knows how to express a com~.

9

group.

Music Theatre

Wind-Tunnel
Whirlwind

THE

*

4

means all of these things to your child without an over-emphasis on any

with

1—CUTS

P.M.

*

22nd.

WE TAKE
TRADE-INS!
in ONE

4
«
4
&lt;

LEARNING

Sat 34

All

&lt;
&lt;
&lt;

SPORTS,

\

&amp; Engine

sec-

retary. Mrs. Johnson for the last
seven years has been assistant in
education on the church staff. She
is the daughter of the Rev. Matthew Mueller, late pastor of Zion
Presbyterian Church
at 40th and
Lexington
Ave., New
York
City.
Her brother, the late Theodore F.
Mueller, was publisher
of News-

Center

Complete Mower

as church

4444444444444

BUY FROM YOUR
AUTHORIZED SALES
SERVICE CENTER.

Ave.,

eh e444

SEE IT ¢ TRY IT
FUN TEST IT TODAY

8:00

Mrs. Alex Brown, 3499 Old
Mill Rd., was elected president
Does he belong to the Chamber
The
daughter
of Lt. Col. and of North Shore Art League at its of Commerce? Make him promise
Mrs. J. S. Griffes, her father is recent annual
dinner meeting. to take you to the annual theatre
post
chaplain
of Army
Security
Mrs. Brown for many years has party at the Music Theatre on June
School at Vint Hill Farms, Warbeen a devoted worker of the 23rd. ALLAN JONES will be singrenton. He formerly was post chapLeague. She has served as one ing the wonderful music of Show-.
lain at the N.A.T.O. Signal School
boat.
of its board members.
at Ansbach, Germany.
*
*
*

beh

e Only yard-garden tractor
Drive,”
a multi-gear-pack
efficiency.

4:30 and

AAA AAAA AAA AAAAA AAA AA AAAAALSA
BAAABAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA

e A year ‘round work horse—hooks up
to 22 optional attachments
including
32’ mounted rotary mower.

Miss
renton,

Sponsored by the Service Clubs for
the Hospital Building Fund. Shows
at 2:00 (bring the pre-schoolers),

AA

Fun

.

ioned circus under the big top at
the
High
School
athletic
field
on West Park Avenue
tomorrow.

in

of Edin-

~~

Sun...MORE
MORE Done!

her junior year
University

She
received
her
Bachelor
of
Arts from the College of Wooster,
and her degree of Master of Arts
in religious education this spring
from
McCormick
Theology
Seminary of Chicago.

44444444444444444444444444444

MORE

and

at the

+

Be sure to see the good old fash-

Central,

Highland

Park

State

Page

7

|

�M/

LAKE
NOW
WORTH

OF

Deals

more

2

‘|

ever

/|

Notice is hereby given by the Board of
Education of School District No.
113, in
the County of Lake, State of Illinois, that
a tentative budget for said School District
for the fiscal year beginning July 1, 1959
will be on file and conveniently available
to public inspection at 433 Vine Avenue,
Highland
Park,
Illinois,
from
and
after
8 o’clock A.M. on the 1st day of June 1959,
at
Highland
Park
High
School
in_ this
School District, until 8 o’clock A.M. June
22, 1959, and from then will be on file
and conveniently available to public inspection at the Administration
Building,
1040
Park Avenue West, Highland Park, Illinois.
Notice is hereby given that a public hearing on said budget will be he'd at 7:30
o’clock P.M:,
C.D.S.T., on the 13th day of
July, 1959, at Highland Park High School
in this School District 113.
Dated this 25th day of May, 1958.
Board of Education School District No.
113 in the County of Lake, State of Illinois.
By Lillian C. Tucker, Secretarv
5/28 6/4/59—160

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

High School Teacher !
Appears On Panel
Miss

SIX!

ALL

NEW CAR MAKES

35,000 Sq. Ft.
CONVENIENT

Devall,
“Trends

OPEN

Speaker

High

School

Educa-

tion for Family Living” was
panel
topic.
Guest
speaker

Mrs.

Evelyn

Millis

Devall,

the
was

nation-

ally
known
speaker,
author
and
consultant on marriage and family
relationships.
An exhibit included illustrative
material and text books used in the
teaching of family life education.

COMFORTABLE

AUTOMOBILE
ABOUT

LAKE

DISPLAY
MOTORS

Mile

and

AREA!

...

FREE
Chassis

or 2-Yr.

during

GUARANTEE!

DAILY.

SHORE”

. . Weekdays:

Up to 1/2 OFF

Lubrication

your ownership
of the car.

9-9,

Sat.

Sun.

9-6,

LAKE MOTORS
Chrysler
se
Dp
e Ltr
Imperial
.
DeSoto . . . Plymouth . . . Rambler
1766- 1778 FIRST ST., HIGHLAND PARK « ID 2-2500
SS ~

ies %

in

Guest

ID 2-6944

EXCLUSIVE

HOURS:

home

EVANSTON

on the NORTH

of BRIGHT,

INQUIRE

&amp; LABOR

the

of Highland

UNDER ONE ROOF!

Dealer

Auto

“The LARGEST

PARTS

of

Park
High
School
recently
appeared on a panel of home economics teachers at a luncheon in Chicago.

Rambler
Dodge
DeSoto
Plymouth
Chrysler
Imperial

35,000

Neff

department

from...

Invites You to CHOOSE

MOTORS

100%,

Frances

economics

FOR!

COMING
LAKE

than

1!

LEGAL NOTICE
PUBLIC HEARING

SS SS

ES

SSS

SSS

SS

EE

SS

SES

SS

SS

SS

=
SF

FF

~—-~
FF
ee

Fe

COATS

-

DRESSES

SKIRTS

= -

BLOUSES

—

Pedal Pushers

Bermudas
—

Not

All

Sizes

Available

—

ee

Thursday,

May

28,

1959
wily F

�MEN
sagsOPEN

Kleenex =
Paper Napkins

MEMORIAL

THURS. &amp; FRI.
until.9

|
|:

r

2 pkes. FoR 39

p.m...

This Week!
*¥GERAGE

Hot

or

Mild

Barbecue Sauce 4 °::= $1.00
ASSORTED

FLAVORS

BEVERAGES

_ Cherry, Cola, Orange, Root cago

nt

1-lb.

Pkg.

en

PAPER PLATES

,

sz"

GELATIN DESSERT

é

6 meA9e
SAUCE

3-lb.

EXTRA

FRYING

CANNED

HAM

—

POPE

SPAGHETTI SAUCE.

$2.69

.............- EO)

DRESSEL

,

JUICY—TANGY

LEMONS
TENDER, SWEET
CORNG

5 a Re

BEANS

Pe

Be

19

: i

Pes. O9C | New Low price
PASCAL CELERY ret 2 tor 29¢

$1.09 | cone purreeep

ye PO TO ee nc ee

49c

FLORIDA

GREEN

PARTY PURTS.

* SCOTT PETERSON
°FRANKFURTERS 2

Rolls

TOMATOES

LEMONADE
FRANCOIS

st. 39c
39¢ t|
1 00-ft.

FANCY

49

49c :

FOODS

" FRESH DRESSED FRYING

‘CHICKEN LEGS
Nee

%.

RAPINWAX
FROZEN

“CHICKEN BREASTS .. » 59c

j

\) — GRILLITE CHARCOAL LIGHTER

or MOLASSES

-

DRESSED

:

89c i!) Kraft Miracle Whip

» LIBBY’S BAKED BEANS

"FRESH

;

2° $1.19 | LEMON JUICE .%49¢

|, DIXIE

TOMATO

MARSHMALLOWS “%: 29¢

bag 69c

eee

VEGETARIAN,

CAMPFIRE

FOLGER’S
COFFEE ©

i Been OnewiRe lin

ade

"&lt;2 Ade | DRY ONIONS ........ 1+ O00"

Maxwell

&gt; INSTANT
rT) COFFEE
House

New

Giant
Size
10-oz. Jar

$1.39

READ

POTATO SALAD
COCK

2

Tall

29c

Cans
Thursday,

May

O’ THE

WALK

FAMILY

RIPE OLIVES
PET

CARNATION MILK

GERMAN
1-Ib.

Can

SIZE

4 com $1.00

FOOD-HILLS

Horsemeat &amp; Gravy

1812 GREEN BAY ROAD
-— A CENTRAL FOOD STORE
Friday Night Is Family Night At Sunset — Open all 9 PM.

2c: 45¢
Case of 48

a

28, 1959

25¢

$9.35

i

PLENTY OF

FREE

PARKING

—

ALWAYS!
Page 9

�SMOKED HAMS
Cut

HALF HAMS

FROM

NO CENTER SLICES REMOVED
from

16 to 20

100°

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ke. ate

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LAD

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1859 -1959

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231° 4
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by

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VA

GZ

i
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Hams

BUTT HALF

SHANK HALF

G

Ib. Size

q

r

|

1

SUPER
RIGHT

ee]

AMERICA'S DEPENDABLE FOOD MERCHANT

Zh

"4

*

TE

THURSDAY, MAY 28th, and FRIDAY, MAY 29th, YOUR A&amp;P SUPER MARKET WILL BE

UNTIL 9:00 P.M.

OPEN

DAY

ageing

CLOSED ALL DAY SATURDAY,
eT

CANNED HAMS

Chicken |fie
Cooked Hams

67

AM
CRE
ICE
MARVEL | CRESTMONT

= 69: = 79

Campbell’s Beans “... 2's. 29
.
Sniders Catsup ‘nie’
Wrigley’s Gum

etn. of 5§

Spearmint,

Doublemint

20 pkgs.

for barbecue

box 99c

Semi-Boneless, 8 to 12 Ibs,
Whole or Half

Smoked Picnics
Canned Picnics
cx.
3. “I”
Canned Hams
_i:...
aR eg
hart ~ on aie rsa -~
Super-Right

6-LB. SIZE

9 to II LB. SIZE

and thighs

4 to 6 lb. Size

‘TOMATOES
Fresh, Ripe,
Flavorful
Red,

|

?

(

14-072.
tube

Juicy

Beauties

10 .°, 59° Bing Cherries *:2!:*
Sweet Corn Sow © so 29¢ Valencia Oranges :::
Red Potatoes {.‘

lorida

BEVERAGES
“- 10c

Yukon

Club,

Strawberry

(PLUS

ME

GREAT

ATLANTIC

&amp;

PACIFIC

TEA

DEPOSIT)

8

1859

AMERICA'S

DEPENDABLE

FOOD

MERCHANT

All Prices Effective Through May 29th

Pepsi

Never
Cola

1959

Never

Heavy
Too

5

pe

39,

Sweet
(Plus

King

Size,

Mild

Pall

For the Holiday

Illinois

Stores Only

cin. of

10-Ib

beg

59:

$

09

10 packs

Outing

Charcoal

Deposit)

Mall

Cigarettes

COMPANY

Super Markets
10

Refresher

Kola,

Root Beer, Ginger
Ale, Sparkling Water,
Cream Soda,

Page

A Sparkling

20-Ib.

bas

90:
Thursday,

May

28,

1959

�iS Yat

)

| B'nai Torah Open Meeting —

Sisters

Will

Plan Spring Lunch
North
Shore
Committee
of
Jewish Big Sisters will have a
spring luncheon meeting at Pavillon

on

Wednesday

Greta

Wiley,

felevision

will
the

present

12:30

former

mistress

current

at

her
best

of

Be At Recreation

Center

meeting

Wednesday

Highland

Park

at

8:30

p.m.

Recreation

Cen-

actress and

ter.

ceremonies,

there will be an exhibition of table
tennis by Steve Isaacson, inter-

“From

of
the

Terrace,” by John O’Hara.
A true case history also is given at
each meeting which illustrates how
a Big Sister has given her friendship and guidance to a Little Sister.
aMrs. David Weinstock, 70 Oakvale
Ave., North Shore chairman, has
announced that guests are welcome, For reservations, call Mrs.
Leonard S. Zieve, ID 2-1981.

good

Brotherhood of B’nai Torah Reform Temple will hold an open
at

p.m.

dramatization
seller,

a

Following

election

of

news"

officers,

Good News™

collegiate
champion,
and _ open
table tennis play by the members.

: SHUTTERS |
CUSTOM

:

B

MADE

We Install

m

Shetters

1

only strapless

UP,

stays PUT,

you,

rounds

that stays

while

you

|

it lifts

beautifully!

—

EE

Aaywhere

DECORATING?

The

(THE

LATEX

BACK*

CAN’T

BUDGE!)

HAUHUUAUORULEATEONEEUE
TUUREAGUULNUEEDTTOGHIULE

Match any Finish

(EE
¢

Vertical Shutters
¢ Shoji Panels
¢ Louvre Doors
¢ Screens
© Room Dividers
¢ Fret Work

Under everything you own—

Buy Direct from the

by day or night

4

gd:

Manufacturer and Save!

SHUTTER
HOUSE

bloom painting
company

7600 Greenwood Ave., Chicago
Samples shown in
your Home.
RA 3-3632

PHONE:

IDlewood 2-5544

CR 2-5541

¥

you'll want to wear fun-loving,
young-loving Good News.
The

latex back hugs gently
so the fabric front always stays up.
It’s the answer to

Formerly Crestwood Products

Fo

cool, cotton-lined

your strapless bra problems.
Choose yours from our fabulous
Good

_| , ANFAVORITE SPORT.MEMOS

NO

News

OTHER

BRA

y

By
4

5.

»

6.

4]

a

BOB

THIS

BACK!

GREENWALD

of Queensbury

rules:

Ses

9.
10.
11.

satisfaction.
A man on one knee considered down and if struck is entitled to match.
No shoes or boots with springs allowed.

8
h

Marquis

Man hanging on ropes in helpless state with toes off ground shall
be considered down.
No seconds or other persons allowed in ring during round.
Should contest be stopped by unavoidable occurrence, referee to name
time and place for finishing.
Gloves to be of fair-sized, of best quality and new.
Should glove break or come off, should be replaced to referee’s

7.

12.

“Lace Crystal” nylon, lifted by scallops
of foam. Hook-eye front. White.
$6.50

Circular-stitched

1775 SECOND

STREET

—

classrooms

coaching

at High

ole

SPANISH @ GERMAN
FRENCH @ ITALIAN
ANY LANGUAGE

School, College and graduate

518

Davis

Street,

day, May 28, 1959

Evanston

Custom
Intimate Apparel
2-434]
5-4341

Warner’s®

Shops

P utlGen

Stork
Club

Complete
Formerly at 1902

CUSTOM

OF LANGUAGES
FRanklin
GReenleaf

Grand

Pee

ievel,

2 or 4 hours per week
10 hours per week
Private Lessons or Small Groups

BERLITZ SCHOOL

ih

Git ‘é

REGULAR COURSES:
INTENSIVE COURSES:

207 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago

$6.50

new and young from

ID 2-1100

Spend 2 hours daily with us this Summer—June to Labor Day and
thrill to a new language by Fall. Also special Children's classes
and

contour-lined

black.

SPEAKce
Air-conditioned

cotton,

for lasting shape. Hook-eye front. White,

The contest in all other respects to be governed by rules of the
London Prize Ring.

GREENWALD’S,

*,

HAS

4, A
More

.

selection today!

Open
654

CENTRAL

Sheridan

FITTINGS

BY MISS

Selection of Maternity Wear
RUTH

Friday Evenings ‘Til 8:00 P.M.
HIGHLAND

PARK

ID

2-0410

�LEGAL

INSURANCE

PARK DISTRICT OF HIGHLAND PARK
STATEMENT OF RECEIPTS AND DISBURSEMENTS
FOR THE FISCAL
YEAR ENDED APRIL 30, 1959.

of Every Kind and Character

RECEIPTS
General Taxes Revenue, $63,725.50; Golf
Course
Revenue,
$64,266.50;
Bathing
Beaches Revenue, $14,860.20; Sunset Woods
Revenue, $295.00; Special Assessment Costs
$4.00; School Rinks Maintenance Revenue,
$2,118.86; Miscallaneous Revenue, $2,326.53.
DISBURSEMENTS
Ace
Hdwre
Store, Tools,
$81.18,
Supplies $140.06; Advance Transportation Co.,
Delivery Serv. $3.25; Acme Sales &amp; Service,
Steam
Cleaner
$503.00,
Supplies
$29.00;
Agundes, F. Payroll $210.20; Alliance Hose
&amp; Rubber Co., Supplies $60.00; Amer. Bi-

“ ANCHOR
INSURANCE
In

1896

Sheridan

Highland

AGENCY

Business

21

Rd.

Office:
Res.,

WHENEVER

Dishes,

laundry,

showers

..

.

tion of an abundant supply of
hot water. Hot water that’s so
vital to the health and needs of
your family . . . so vital to the

operation

of modern

water-

using appliances.
If you

are

by

an inadequate supply of hot
water, and if your clothes aren’t
getting really clean because you
hot enough,

let

us end these hot water frustrations with a new Rheem
FOR

‘‘Demand-Rated”’ water heater.
New engineering and advanced
design features assure you of
instant hot water on demand,
all the time . . . and you can
also enjoy the economy of heating water with gas. Costs only
pennies-per-day for clothes,
dishes,
Water

showers,

children

Heaters are our business

. . . your assurance

inconvenienced

get water

ID 2-0093
ID 2-0037

IT’S WASH-UP TIME...

even behind Johnnie’s ears...a
Rheem ‘‘Demand-Rated’”’ Gas
Water Heater takes them all in
stride in its constant contribu-

can’t

Years

Park

model to fulfill the requirements
of your home. Call today eee
terms can be easily arranged to
fit your budget.

EVERY PLUMBING NEED...CALL A PROFESSIONAL...
YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD RHEEM PLUMBING CONTRACTOR

PLUMBING
Page

County
12

of proper

installation and the correct
Rheem water heater size and

DI PIETRO
398

NOTICE

Line Rd., Deerfield

\

THE RHEEMGLAS
IMPERIAL...
with the exclusive
Rheemglas lining that
resists the wearing
action of tough, hot
water chemicals... the
best you can buy.
Carries new 15 year
warranty.

CO.

LEGAL

LEGAL NOTICE

NOTICE

tumines
&amp; Asphalt
Co., Supplies $42.78;
American City Magazine, Subscription $4.00;
Amer. Inst. Park Exec., Dues $52.00; Amer.
Ldscp. Archt., Supplies, $1.00; Amer. Legion Post No.
145, Rental $27.00; Amer.
Playgerd.
Device
Co., Eqpt.
$45.60;
Amstam
Sup. Div., Equipt.
$28.48;
Amstam
Sup.
Div.,
Supplies
$47.00;
Amer.
Rose
Society, Dues $5.50; Ansell Simples Ticket
Co., Supplies $66.88; Antes Sign Co., Signs
$55.00; Arwell Inc., Exterm. Serv. $75.00;
Ansterman, Leonard, Eqpt. $273.00; Armco
Pipe Co., Walls $456.24.
Bahr’s, Plants $9.20; Baily &amp; Hines, Inc.,
Equpt, $88.80; Baker &amp; Son, Peter, Paving,
$3,140.10;
Bartelman,
J., Payroll
$616.73;
Beaufils Sup. Co., Tools $138.50, Supplies
$59.55; Bergman, M., Annex Exp., $20.00;
Beilei, M. $20.00; Baylan, D. $20.00; Bishop
Heating
&amp;
Supply,
Mtce
$109.14;
Boehm &amp; Co. E. W., Supplies $35.31; Borchardt Fuel Co., Supplies $47.32; Botker,
B. H., Payroll $878.20; Boyden, E. P., Payroll $898.25; Bowman Inc., Welsley, Print-

ing

$4.00;

Boye,

Needles

Co.

Supplies,

$29.40; Brand Bros. Supplies $108.62; Bridge
E. M., Payroll $875.75; Brown, Wm., Payroll $1397.93; Burg, F. D., Payroll $628.30;
Burdette, Paul, Equipt. $330.75; Byers Printing Co., Polling Booths $152.70;
Carlsen &amp; Co., Frank A., Services $30.00;
Carpenter, Chas. Licenses $12.00; Catholic
Bishop of Chgo, Ins. $72.50; Central Camera
Co., Eqpt. $66.27; Central Tire Co., Eqpt.
$20.78; Tools $6.10, Supplies $77.65; Chambers, John W., Golf Prizes $669.00, Payroll $2,418.00; Champion
Rec. Egqpt. Co.,
Playgerd. Eqpt. $206.20; Chandlers’, Supplies
$57.76;
Chapman
&amp;
Cutter,
Legal
Serv.
$75.00; “ Cherry.
Blec.:
Prod.)
Blec, - Bxp.
$24.00; Chgo Decal Co, Supplies $109.89;
Chgo. Fence &amp; Egqpt. Co. Tennis Courts
$2,818.75;
City
of
H.P.,
Service
$89.16,
Supplies
$62.70,
Water
$645.31,
Eqpt.
$239.07; Clary Corp. Supplies $70.00; Cliffer, Harold J. Prof. Serv. $60.00; Clow &amp;
Sons Inc, J. B., Supplies $83.91; Cole Nursery, Shrubs $40.00; Cole, V., Annex Exp.
$25.00; Concertapes Distributers Inc. Supplies $4.49; Columbia H. H. App., Supplies
$15.90; Commerce Petroleum Co., Supplies
$23.84; Continental Ill. Nat’l] Bk &amp; Trust
Co. of Chgo., Service $31.00; Corwith &amp;
Co., N. Ins. Bond $50.00; Craig, Norman,
Payroll $3,248.06;
Davis,
E. W.,
Payroll
$365.75;
Davis
Inc. Geo. A., Equipment $3,680.35, Grass
Seed $272.70;
Tools $55.86, Supplies
$2,035.90; De Grazio, E. A., Payroll $720.25;
Diamond
Tool
&amp;
Horseshoe
Co.,
Eqpt.
$58.16; Don &amp; Co., Edw., Supplies $234.54;
Douglas,
Gene
Payroll
$910.60;
Drinka,
D. S., Payroll $544.00; Dudley, R. M., Payroll
$78.75;
Duffy,
G.,
Annex
$30.00;
Doetsch, Bros. Supplies $72.75;
Edwards, P &amp; W. Constr. Co. Trenching
$200.90;
Elstrom
Constr.
Co.,
Carpentry
$1,765.50; Employees Mut. Liab. Ins. Co.,
Ins.
$948.67;
Engber,
Russell
L.,
Legal
Serv. $1,240.00; Engineering Testing Corp.,
Prof. Serv. $50.00; Esserman,
N., Annex.
Expense $25.00; E. W. Sales Welding Service, Supplies $42.18; Exor Motor Service,
De. Service $3.00;
First National Bank, Rental $15.00, Supplies $52.62; Flax Co., The, Supplies $19.76;
Fosbender,
Wm.,
Payroll
$2,124.00;
Freeman, Myles, Payroll $662.50; Fritz, D. H.
Payroll $7,576.98; Frech, B. Annex.
Exp.
$20.00; H. B. Freberg, Annex. Exp. $25.00;
Elec. Exp. $30.00; Freberg &amp; Co. Harry B.
Ins. $163.09; Fredrickson
Storage &amp; Van
Co., Del. $3.00; Frenzel Bros. Co., Black
Soil $36.00;
Gagen,
M. H., Payroll $633.30;
GameTime Inc., Playrd. Eqpt. $1,051.48; Gamlin, H. N., Carpentry
$77.00;
Garnett
&amp;
Co.,
Supplies
$2.10;
Garwood
Ind.
Inc.,
Supplies $4.62; Gen Elec. Co., Tools $22.20;
General Parcel (Del. Serv.) $2.85; Gil Bosers Eqpt. Co., Eqpt. $199.08; Gilbert M.
Elec.
Exp.
$25.00;
Gold
Seal Mfg. Co.,
Supplies $54.15; Golden, Ellen Elec. Exp.
$25.00;
Gourley
&amp;
Co.,
John,
Supplies
$11.59; Golfdom, Subscript. $3.50; G. B. C.
Sales Serv. Supplies $12.10; Grabar Elec.
Co. Supplies $143.56; Grant, C. F. Payroll
$50.00;
Glant,
H.,
Annex.
Exp.
$25.00;
Greene, V. Annex Exp. $25.00; Greene, V.
Elec. Exp. $30.00; Greenwald’s Sport Shop
Eqpt. $12.75; Gresham, R. E. Payroll $2,622.57; Grinnell Co. Inc., Supplies $111.10;
Haedt, D. L. Payroll $2,236.30; Hafner,
C. R. Payroll $712.50; Hamblin, Wm., Payroll $1,932.88;
Hayes,
Joseph
C., Archt.
Service.
$1,000.00;
Heating
Serv.,
Serv.
$22.65,
Supplies
$38.50;
Hermes
Plastics
Inc. Supplies
$67.21;
H. P. Auto
Parts,
Supplies $9.41; H. P. Civic Assoc. Annex.
Exp.
;00;
HH. P.
Lor. Co., Supplies
$74.28;
H.
P. News,
Publishing
$559.85;
Subscription $6.00; H. P. Pharmacy, Supplies $27.01;
Hill &amp; Stone, Ins. $667.94;
Hines Lbr. Co. Supplies $528.27; Holland,
G. Annex. Exp. $20.00, Elec. Exp. $30.00;
Holmes Motor Co. Supplies $21.09; Howell
Tractor &amp; Equip. Co., Eqpt. $82.09, Supplies $56.90;
Ill, Assn. Pk Districts, Dues $175.00; Ill.
Bell Teleph. Co., Phones $1,046.36; Inman
Paint Spot, Supplies $36.77; Inman, D. K.
Payroll
$305.25;
Innes,
O.
Payroll
$421.20;
Iredale
Storage
Co.,
Cartage,
$75.37: J. &amp; K. Addressing Service., Serv.
$112.31; Jefferson, Jo Ann, Payroll $525.83;
Johnson, G. E., $81.84; Jorgenson, F. Annex Exp. $20.00; Joselyn Mfg. &amp; Sup. Supplies $294.95; Julian, M. $574.20; Keener,
F. V., Payroll $582.40; Keifer &amp; Co., Adolph, Supplies $50.74; Kelling, H. W. Payroll $4,714.66; Kelly, Rose, Annex. $20.00;
Kent, Clinton, Equipt. $57.00; Klemp, S.,
Elec.
Exp.
$25.00;
Klinn,
Sid, Supplies
$17.95; Koehler, Serv. $12.00; Koos &amp; Son
Co. N. -S.,' Fertilizer, $1,913.26; Kral, G.
Annex.
Exp.
$25.00,
Elec.
Exp.
$30.00;
Kuiper, H. H. Payroll $813.23;
Lake Motors Inc., Supplies $74.66; Larson, A. Annex. $20.00, Elec. Exp. $25.00;
Larson
Stationery
Store,
Supplies
$60.24;
Largo, A. R. Payroll $1,942.44; Laurie, M.,
Annex
$20.00, Elec.
Exp.
$25.00; Leach,
David,
Lifeguard
tests $50.00; Lehmkuhl,
E. H., Payroll $262.62; Leidesdorf &amp; Co. S.
D. Audit $700.00; Leonard Serv. Station, G.
Serv.
$71.11;
Leask, C.,
Amnex.
$20.00;
Loyal Order of Moose, Annex. $12.00, Elec.

$12.00; Madison Sup. &amp; Equipt. Co. $48.35;

WI 5-0044

Martin, C. D. Payroll $949.38; Mayer Inc.,
Geo. Co., Supplies $170.18; Mayer Paving,
Cement
work
$6,922.45;
Moyland,
K. J.,
Payroll
$183.33;
McCafferty,
D.,
Payroll
$66.96; McIntyre, T. D., Payroll $611.55;
McMaster-Carr
Sup.
Co.,
Tools
$165.20;
Supplies $455.42; Menoni &amp; Mocogni Inc,

&amp;
Cement
$1,070.07;
Supplies
Gravel
$487.51;
Meyer
&amp;
Wenth
Inc,
Supplies
$22.80;
Michigan
Shores
Club,
Supplies
$8.00; Midwest Propane Gas Co., Supplies
$3.00; Miller Bros., Supplies $9.00; Miller,
H. C., Supplies $111.72; Moore, G. Annex.
$20.00;
Moran
Plbg.
&amp;
Htg.
Co.
H.A ,
Plumbing $1020.00,
Eqpt. $31.74, Supplies
Co.,
Machine
&amp;
Parts
Motor
$187.96;
Egpt. $68.28, Supplies $36.85;
:
Subscrip, .
Pks.
State
Conf.
National

Nat’l

$10.00;

Golf

Found.

Services

Prof.

Nelson |
$4,496.53;
Thomas
Neary,
$9.00;
Motors, Supplies $22.00; Nelson, Irene, Elec.
Top
Ctry Club,
Northmoor
$25.00;
Exp.
soil $651.00; N. S. Off. Machines Co., Sup+,
$389.13;
Fuel
Co.,
Gas
S.
N.
$17.15;
plies
O’Leary’s Eqpt. $110.40, Tools $7.65; Oggel, L. L., Payroll $789.10; Olsen Yee
Annex $25.00, Elec. Exp. $30.00; Olsen, J.
M. Annex $20.00, Elec. $25.00; Olson, Edw.
A., Masonry $5,645.00; Olson Motor Serv.
Egpt. $28.80; Olson Printing Co., Service*
$1,156.60;
Palmer, P. W., Payroll $2,557.93; PanamaBeaver, Inc., Supplies $18.27; Paratone Co.,
Subscript.
Mtce.,
Park
$16.50;
Supplies
Supplies;
Greenhouse,
Pearson’s
$3.50;
Exp.
Annex.
$58.50; Peerless Home Bldrs.,
$15.00; Permalawn Products Co., Supplies
$158.11; Peterson, M. R. Payroll $3,865.00;
Pettibone &amp; Co., P. E., Supplies $167.30;
$36.52;
Supplies
Mart,
Camera
Powell’s
Prior,
$36.05;
Service
Shop,
Print
Press
Serv. Co.,
Public
Supplies $20.00;
Percy,
PayM.,
A.
Quirk,
Electricity $1,796.79;
Quirk, T. J., Payroll, $5,roll $1,651.48;
Reid,
118.52; Ramey, B. J. Payroll $223.50;
J. J. Payroll $503.33; Reiland &amp; Bree, Incx
Eqpt. $3,125.00, Supplies $528.39;
$40.25;
Co., Cleaning
Reliable Laundry
ae oy
Rink,
$13.00;
Eqpt.
Reels,
Rink
Annex. $25.00, Elec. Exp. $30.00; Roberts,
‘
D.
Roberts,
$4,694.89;
Payroll
Cliff,
Inc,,
Son
&amp;
Roberts
$5,440.00;
Payroll
Rokeby”
$15.00;
bond
Surety
W.,
Geo.
Co., Fertilizer $75.00; Roseman
Chemical
Tractor &amp; Egqpt., Supplies $69.05; Rotary
Electric, electric work $171.57; Rustic Man,
The
Supplies $10.00;
Scanlon &amp; Assocts,
Supplies $121.19; Schacter, Louis, top sol
$2,Carpentry
Bldrs.
Scheskie
$123.00;
839.00; Scheskie, Ida, Annex $20.00, Elec.
Exp. $25.00; School Dist. No. 108, Annex
$12.00, Elec. Exp. $12.00; School Dist. No.

107,

Tools

$45.76;

Schramm,

G.

Annex

Service,
Lndry,
Highland
Scotch
$25.00;
$335.95; Shore Line Blue Print Co., Services $72.14; Shelley-Andrews Co. Supplies
$113.80; Sienerth, S., Payroll $4,339.90; Siljestrom Fuel Co., Fuel Oil $1,473.67; Si;
monsen’s Nursery, Shrubs $228.00; Sinclair
Refining Co., Gas $1,817.86, Oil $314.97,
&amp;
Printing
Singer
$607.49;
Oil
Heating
Skidmore &amp;
$225.50;
Services
Co.,
Pub.
Skid$453.82;
e
Insuranc
T.
E.
Co.,
Son
Skidmore,
$311.27;
Payroll
J. M.,
more,
J., Elec. Exp. $25.00; Skidmore, Selma, Annex $20.00; Elec. Exp. $25.00; Slovic, Px
Payroll
W.,
J.
Smith
$871.45;
Payroll
Supplies $14.40;
S.,
S.
Smith,
$476.25;
of
Society
$16.00;
Egpt.
R. W.
Snyder,
A.
Amer. Foresters, Supplies $0.75; Sordyl,
s,
L., Payroll $6,709.50; Spring Hill Nurserie
Plants $31.29; Standard Oil Co., E. Spray
$712.50;
Payroll
D.,
Strand,
$2,826.00;
Straub, Ione, Elec. $25.00; Swift &amp; Co. John
S., Printing $15.20; Synnestvedt &amp; Assoc.
R. shrubs $121.00; Syson, H. K., Payroll
se
$1,605.80;
Tallman Eqpt. Co., Tools $5.72; Tazioli
Thomsen
$785.00;
(wrecking)
Venturi
&amp;
Supplies
$6.31,
Eqpt.
Sup.,
Automotive
Co.,
Chem.
Thompson-Hayward
$287.90;
,
Fisheries
Springs
Three
$120.00;
Spray
Supplies $12.08; Twentieth Century kT Vs
Co.,,
Floor
&amp; Radio, Service $26.78; Town
SupCo.,
Paint
Tropical
$112.00;
Mtce,
plies $319.48; Troy Sunshade Co., Supplies

$9

;

U. S. Post Office, Mailing permit $169.76;~,
United Pencil Co. Pencils-golf $100.00;
Vandervoort, Jr. R. C. Payroll $672.80;
Vandervoort, Sr. R. C. $935.00; Vaughan’
Seed Co. Supplies $4.41; Vegetable Growers
Sup. Co., Fertilizer $54.00;
Walters,
Anna,
Annex
$20.00,
Elec.
Sub-_
Sun,
News
Waukegan
$25.00;
Exp.
script. $9.45, Add. $10.74; Waukegan Steel
Sales, Supplies,
$110.75; Weeks,
Edw.
Bis
Prof. Serv. $87.50; Weeks, H. Elec. Exp.,
$25.00; Weil Pump
Co., Supplies $13.00;»
Wendell, M. D. Geo E., Prof. Serv. $30.00;
Westerbeek
&amp;
Sons
Inc.
Bulbs
$310.04;
West, Jeanne K., Service $65.00; Wett, Bra
P., Payroll $77.00; Wel-bank Halperin Fence
Co., Inc., Ice Shaver $650.00; Eqpt. $220.00;
White &amp; Assoc. Inc. H. L. Egpt. $70.30;
Supplies
$32.41;
Williams,
A.
J. Payroli
$5,136.01; Wingert Pottery Co., Inc. $23.56.4
ILLINOIS MUNICIPAL RETIREMENT
FUND
RECEIPTS
Received from Taxes: $2,124.44
DISBURSEMENTS
Illinois Mun. Ret. Fund. $6,229.41
j
BOND
REDEMPTION
FUND
¥
RECEIPTS
Received
from Taxes
$11,684.43
DISBURSEMENTS
Continental Ill. Natl. Bank &amp; Trust Co.a
Principal $10,000.00;
Interest $1,300.00
SPECIAL ASSESSMENT FUND
WARRANT NO. 7
:
Collections for the fiscal year ending,
April 30, 1959 $584.79
DISBURSEMENTS—NONE
SPECIAL
ASSESSMENT
FUND
‘
WARRANT
NO. 9
RECEIPTS—NONE
DISBURSEMENTS—NONE
STATE OF ILLINOIS )
“
COLUNTY OF LAKE )
PARK DISTRICT OF )
HIGHLAND
PARK
_)
I, C. F. Grant, being first duly sworn,
depost and say that I am the Treasurer of
the Park District of Highland Park, that
the foregoing statement is a true statementy
as to said Park District of Highland Park of
all monies received and from what sources
received, giving items, particulars and details, and of all monies paid out, giving the
name
of each
individual to whom
paid,+
on what account paid, and the amount that
such statement is for the fiscal year ending
April 30, 1959.
C. F. GRANT
Treasurer
of the Park
District
of Highland Park.
Subscribed and sworn to _——
me this
22nd day of May, A.D. 1959.
EDWARD
D.
GOURLEY,
Jr.
Notary Public
5§/28/59—158

Thursday, May 28, 1959

|

|

�Snack Bar Aids Foreign Student Program
LOOK

WHAT

i

the

BUYS AT
ul fife suburban

LUAU FOLDING TABLE
a.

* 60-in. long, 24-in. wide

Sea

¢ Easy to carry, folds compactly

Highland Park High School Snack Bar will complete its second year of successful operation
within the next few days. Behind the serving bar, left to right, are Michael Addison, 794 Dean
Ave., vice president Boys’ Club; Richard Bernstein, 360.Hazel Ave., manager Snack Bar 1958-59,
and Jonathon Leon, 211 Pine Point Dr., manager Snack Bar 1959-60. Snack Bar was established
in 1957 for the purpose of earning funds to bring foreign students, under auspices of American
Field Service, to Highland Park High School.
Thanks
sponse of

eration

to the enthusiastic
students, Snack Bar

has

raised

nearly

reop-

$1,400

during current school year, enough
to bring two students to the high
school next year.
Foreign

Students

Anne-Marie

Dallas

France,

and

Leon

tevideo,

Uruguay.

Miss

Dallas

of

Toulouse,

Gerner

will

reside

of Monwith

Kay
Kay

air conditioners

Herzog

Herzog,

To

the DeaTio

suburban

1672 skokie highway
highland park, id 2-7077
open every day to 9:30 p.m.

S and GIRLS! PARENTS!

Mr.

side Pl. Gerner will make his home
with Mr. and Mrs. Robert N. Gottlieb, 229 Lakeside PI.

Selected

os

Mrs. Myron E. Herzog, 444 Sheridan Rd., will spend the summer in
(Continued on page 15)

and Mrs. Maurice Weigle, 185 Lake-

Two foreign exchange
students
will arrive in Highland Park early
next fall and will attend the high
school for the full year. They are

* Marbleized top with new drop
leaf feature

Greece

daughter

of Mr.

and

at discount

the north shore’s smallest discount house!
Moley TV

e

Choose
TYPING

FOR

TYPING

670 Central Ave.,

From

The

PERSONAL

FOR

H.P.

Following
OR

ID 2-2042

©

Courses:

SCHOOL

BUSINESS

Speedwriting

Many
Attractions for

USE

Everybody!

(6 weeks)

SHORTHAND

INGE CUSHION

“P-F"

GREGG

SHORTHAND

MAGIC

(days only)

Flyers

are

RIGID

the

* POSTURE
FOUNDATION

only

WEDGE

(A)

‘all

canvas

shoes

that

helps

strained foot and leg muscles, increasing
you to play your best . . . and run

STENOGRAPHIC

your

fastest

...

with

a

prevent

built-in
tired,

comfort, helping

May

ENGLISH

ACCOUNTING
3

Evening

Classes

Wm.

H. Callow, Prin.

BEGIN ANY MONDAY EXCEPT SPEEDWRITING CLASS
WHICH BEGIN JUNE 8, 22; JULY 6, 20; AUGUST 3, 1

EVANSTON BUSINESS COLLEGE
1718
W. H. Callow, Prin.
Thursday,

May

28, 1959

Sherman

Ave.
UN 4-3004

29th

Flyers

COMPTOMETRY

Day and

1-5 p.m.
FRIDAY

longer.

SECRETARIAL
BUSINESS

RAVINIA SHOE STORE
471

’

Roger Williams Ave., Ravinia

Mei

Phone

_

ID 2-0718
Page

13

�oe

bake anal:

High School Stu dents

Are Invited

To Informal Dance Tomorrow Night

comfort

on

High school students are invited
to attend an informal dance at
Highwood’s Community Center to-

annual Highwood Policeman’s Ball
drew another full house of local
residents.
Sunday
afternoon
an-

morrow
from 8 through
The week’s top 40 tunes

witness the graduation exercises of

in
No

will

the
one

be
*

new

the

*

*

Community

member,

Mrs.

Tina

Volpendesta, was nominated to succeed the retiring board member,
David Santi, who recently resigned

his post after being elected to Highwood’s

Board

of

Volpendesta’s

Aldermen.

name

was

for confirmation. When approved by
that body, she will be sworn in at
the next regularly scheduled monththe

*

Center’s

*

Board

*

when

six

major

in

afternoon,

1959”

drew

dren,

admitted

events

three

Starting off with a matinee
day

days.

on Fri-

“Dansations

a good

house

at

half

of chil-

grade

evening

school

more

students

informal dance from
10:30 p.m. Saturday

Light-weight

to

than

than

School’s

500

kindergar-

persons

jammed

Misses Mary

Mazzetta

Catchpole’s

dancing
*

and Camille
students.

*

*

Highwood’s
Community
Center,
as part of its coming summer recreation program, will once again

offer local youngsters,

in the five

through eight year old age grouping, an opportunity to attend Kid-

die Kollege Klasses each weekday
in the Center.

Classes

are

expected to get under way after the
third

week

college

in

June,

or

instructors

school to
scheduled

when

return

their local homes.
will be classes for

girls nine through
%

Baseball

the

from
Also
older

12 years of age.

*

*

programs

for

boys

in

Highwood

125

jor league, PONY league and PREP
league baseball. This trio of pro-

attended

an

7:30 through
evening, the

grams

the

will consist of Little Ma-

will

take

care

of boys

ages of nine through 17
(Continued on page 18)

from

and

iS Ringing...

Dip-front waist long-leg pantie
long-leg

hand

for

price

wear

Net

on

the Center
to witness
the final
presentation
of
‘“Dansations
of
1959,” the musical revue put on by

of

this gala stage presentation.
Friday

more

morning

The biggest weekend in the history of the Highwood Community
Center
occurred
during the past
scheduled

St. James
class.

Mrs.

submitted

to the Board at its meeting last week

were

front waist.

into

night.

Highwood

board

weekend,

Power

Center
since
wearing blue

admitted

tomorrow

ly meeting of
of Directors.

Controlling

was

During the afternoon
and evening an art show was held in the
downstairs rooms
and attendance
was heavy, especially during the
afternoon
hours.
Sunday
night

Center

LONG

house

dance
held
early April.

jeans

on control

full

the
ten

building

LONG

other

featured as music for the evening.
This is the first high school

A

on

11 p.m.
will be

Pantie

with

for your Spring

comfortable

dip-

fashions. Same

| as

As you enter this shop on the right side, you will
notice a flat bell, black &amp; scarred, laying on the counter
... among the bushels of hosiery &amp; baskets of toiletries.

shown, with dip-front waist.

This bell has been plucked by such luminaries as
Diamond Lil, Regis N. Pfinster &amp; Sean O’Casey. It has
been said that it heralded the approach of Caesar, the
opening of the Oklahoma territory &amp; triggered the count
down at Cape Canaveral.

Long “Magic Oval” Pantie
with extra control
Illustrated.

Comfortable

step-in

Style with Satin

Lastex

front

and back panels. Wonderful hip controlling power net elastic.
Average rise with 2/2"’ cuff top. Can't Ride Up—tEver!
Also

available

_ Long-Leg

in extra

long-leg

style with

long

rise. $12.50

Perme-lift Magic Oval
“can’t ride up—ever”

panties fe
aa

salle

A

By using this bell not only will one be blessed with
ringing in the ears but will be announced into a shop
crammed full with unusual &amp; distinctive mensware
&amp; sheer shopping enjoyment.
Come on over... &amp; give a ding.

TOT

478 Central
(Open Friday Nites)

You’ve
fort

never worn

and

control

Long-Leg

“Magic

panties with
as

these

Oxal”

such

lasting com-

all-new

“Perma-Lift”

Panties.

curves into the lithe, unbroken
slim

fashions

these

panties

no

and

matter

select

require.
remain

how

the

You'll
you

style that

coax

your

Hair

lines that today’s
marvel

in place

active

They

and

are.

matches

at the

never

Come
your

Styling

Bleaching

up,

Permanents

in today
figure

Park

Tinting

way

ride

Highland

Manicuring

to

perfection.

Evaughn
Beauty

578 LINCOLN
HI 6-4750

:

Soha

(Open Friday evenings by appointment only)

508

ID 2-2330

Central

Thursday, May 28, 1959
pag
at

�~ HIGH

SC HOOL SNACK BAR AIDS FOREIGN STUDENT PROGRAM

(Continued from page 13)

Greece.
country
land

She will travel to that
as representative of Highwhere

she

is completing

her junior year,

and

Snack

Service.

Field

American

the

School,

High

Park

Bar

p.m.

hungry

of

students

foods

are

offered

including

a

pizza,

hamburgers,
cheeseburgers
and
hot dogs during the winter months.

Soft

drinks,

available

candy

in

all

bars,

etc.,

Operation
It has been
North
Shore

studying

club is represented on the Foreign
Exchange Student committee, and

10 to 15 workers

the Snack Bar on assigned

Jonathon
dent

Leon

manager

was

1959-60

STi LAATANHA

the

Highland

Park’s

glencoe

Mon. Appts. Available

Snack

cmmmeccn cae

offer

HT

FULL

LINE

Geraniums

COPIES

OF

BRIDES
BRIDES
BRIDES

960 HALF

.. . WI

DAY

(HERE’S WHERE
LISTINGS,

BEDDING

V4

THEIR

WHERE

East of Waukegan

SHORE’S

COMPLETE
FOR

Rd.

TO

THE

FINEST,

SELECTION

MOST

OF

HONEYMOON

GIFTS
HOME:

Fil

atl

Mile

FIND

GIFTS)

NORTH

(Rte. 22)

DEER FIELD

=ee

HERE’S

BUY THEIR

etc.

5-5818

RD.

TO

PLANTS

— Pansi es — Tomatoes,
as well as perennials

PHONE

OF YOUR
IMPORTANT PAPERS
Powell’s Camera Mart
ip

ve 5-3555

DE VRIES G REENHOUSE =

stucom-

PLIABLE PLASTIC
LAMINATING

Central

of

call

other
are

reason

AND

589

kind

hair styles &amp; colors

Studied

reported that
high
schools

A

PHOTO

this

to

days.

chosen
by

for similar
administra-

(till presenls

are

the major clubs of the school. Each

from

tors and faculty for
fund-raising project.

understanding that it would be discontinued at the first infraction of
any regulation, said Miss Hildreth
Spencer, faculty sponsor of American Field Service program. After
two years of student management,
she reported, teachers have only
the highest praise for this project.

seasons,

Richard Bernstein, student manager 1958-59, says that credit must
go to the splendid cooperation of

supplies

Bar operation, hoping
cooperation from their

eration of the Snack Bar, with the

Operation

At Highland Park High School
every school day from 3:30 to 4
variety

mittee from a list of highly-qualified persons submitted by Junior
Session and classroom teachers.
It was with some misgivings that
high school faculty in 1957 gave
temporary permission for the op-

Sure to win!

CLOSED

SILVER,

CHINA,

GLASSWARE,

LINENS,

CUTLERY,

SHADES,

FURNITURE

LAMPS

AND

(ANTIQUE,

OCCASIONAL AND SUMMER

SATURDAY

&amp;

CLOCKS,

BAROMETERS,

BASKETS,

DECORATIVE

PRACTICAL

ITEMS

PIECES)

WASTE
AND

OF

EVERY

DESCRIPTION.

SUNDAY
PRICES

MAY

SUIT

POCKETBOOK
AN

Bread gives them
zip and zest

TO

HONEST

EVERY

. . . AND
VALUE,

bread

wins

favor with the

af

enriched

to

healthy and
gives

them

ergy,

too!

kids!

30, 31
HANDSOME

ALL DAY

AT

high
It’s

keep

them
strong...
lots
They'll

of

NO

with

for
meals

EXTRA

CHARGE

PACKING

OR

WORLD-WIDE

AT

NO

EXTRA

FOR

.
LOCAL

SHIPMENT

COST

en-

GRACE

sandwiches,
and

GIFT-WRAPPING

enjoy

our tasty white and rye
\ breads

ITEM

INCLUDING

STURDY

; *. Our

EVERY

snacks

HERBST

. everybody does!
Ya

DEERFIEL
813 WAUKEGAN
Thursday, May 28, 1959

WINNETKA

BAKERY &amp;
DELICATESSEN

RD., DEERFIELD

563

wi

5. 0068

Lincoln

(Open

Ave.

9:15 to 5:15—Monday

Hillcrest

through

6-1811

Saturday)

�Mostly for Women

Furniture Refinishing Is Topic For
Deerfield Unit Of The Home Bureau

Deerfield Center

Greets Guests At Party

Meets Today To
Plan For Party
The regular May
Deerfield
Center

Welfare

Society

meeting
of
the

of

of the
Infant

Chicago

will

be
held
today
in the
home
of
Mrs. Wirt Ramskill, 1112 Meadowbrook Ln. A salad-luncheon will be
served
at 12:30.
Final arrangements for the formal dinner-dance to be held the
end of June will be discussed. Mrs.

#\Paul

Brown

of Brierhill

Road

is

general
chairman
of
the
dance
which is to be held at the Lake
Forest Academy. Mrs. Arthur An-

dersen

is president

of the

Center.

\A/illiam Raue And

Nancy Zack Plan

August Wedding
oe
The Women’s Guilds of St. Gregory's Episcopal Church

!

review, on May

Mr. and Mrs. S. E. Zack of Lake
Forest announce
the engagement
of their daughter, Nancy Lee, to
William T. Raue, son of Mr. and

Mrs.

Felix

is Ln.

rector,

of the

wife

standing,

Parker,

J. D.

Mrs.

House.

Parish

book

and

luncheon, style show

held a
19 at the new

C.

Raue

of

649

Elder

Zack

attended

St. Theresa’s

shown greeting some of the guests, who include, left to right, Mrs. College in Winona, Minn. Mr. Raue
G. Francis Burrill, wife of the Bishop of Chicago; Mrs. Aurel H. will be graduated from Ferris InMuntean, wife of the seminarian who is assistant minister at St.
Gregory's Church; and Mrs. Charles L. Street, wife of Bishop Street.

stitute,
June.

Grand

Rapids,

Mich.,

in

The wedding is planned for Aug.

Deerfield Unit
Poppy Day Funds
Benefit Veterans
The

Deerfield

Unit

A

Auxiliary

appreciates

the

support

given

Poppy

one

of

the

the

women

on

to a $50

Deerfield
sold

Tag

poppies

1055
ris,

and

of

the

first

checks

to

field,
League

drawn against this amount was $25
to be used to provide a bus trip on
Wednesday,
of

May

27, for two

groups

veterans

from

hospitalized

outside

the

hospital

be

of

the

spent

Child
erans

money

for

will

Rehabilitation

and

Poppy

lected

Day,

and

being
1958,

in

paid
$280

the

last

by

the

was

col-

Auxiliary

The
picnic
sponsored
by
the
Tenth District of the American Legion and Auxiliary for orphans of
veterans in Lake County Orphanages was held Sunday, May 24, in
Adler Park, Libertyville.

is

furnishing

a

flag for the Boy Scout Camp Ma_Ka-Ja-Wan on behalf of Deerfield

Post

in

program

connection

with

undertaken

by

a Legion
the

in

H.

A. Harris

of

Ln,
and
the

Mrs.

of Women

Voters

of Deer-

represented

the

Deerfield

at

the

convention

held

may

At Chevy Chase Club
Mrs.
Ave.,
of

the

Paul

WSWS Will Give
Mexican Fiesta

And Travel

1219

will

be

program

for

the

Woodruff
in

charge

third anof
meeting
nual spring luncheon
the Woman’s Society of Christian
Service of the Northbrook Methodist Church. Mrs. Nylin has served
this past year as the society’s vice
chairman
program
and
president
and will introduce “The Artisans”
as the guest speakers to the lunchChase
Chevy
at the
guests
eon
Country Club on Wednesday, June
10 at 12:30 p.m.
Mrs. Lucille Veneklasen, writer
and lecturer, together with Mrs.

Proud,

artist,

will

sent a program of duo-portrayal
narration and sketching.

preby

The Artisans will review “Give
The
Lady
What
She
Wants”
by
Lloyd Wendt and Herman Kogan,
of the
growth
of the
story
the
store.
Marshall Field &amp; Company
Mrs. Nylin has announced that all
reservations for the luncheon must
1
June
Monday,
by
made
be
through Mrs. Roy Lettermaier at

CRestwood

2-4584.

Program

A Mexican Fiesta luncheon and
travelog will be given by the Women’s Society of World Service on
Tuesday at 12:30 p.m. in the Fellowship Hall of Bethlehem Church.
for members and their guests.
Mrs. Eugene Kieft, president of
the WSWS, will direct the meeting
which will follow the luncheon with
Mrs. Arthur Pagel giving the devotions.
Mrs.
Arthur
Merner,
who
has
made
many
trips to Mexico
and

(Continued

Nylin,

Deerfield,

on page 17)

Lincolnshire Garden
Club Forms Corporation
The
Lincolnshire
Garden
Club
has received a charter of corporation
from
Secretary
of
State
Charles F. Carpentier. The incorporators are Joan Wilson, Laverne
Fridrich and Jeanne Nelson for the
purpose of “learning as much as
we can about gardening.” The incorporation address is 2100 Cambridge Ln. The correspondent
is

Rosetta Buescher
land Dr,

at 3239

ing based on a workshop she attended in Libertyville on this subject.
Using
a picture
frame
to
illustrate her points, she will provide helpful hints and some of the
“do’s and don’ts” of furniture refinishing.
Co-hostesses
for
the
meeting
will
be
the
Mesdames
Richard S. Gilbert and Thomas F.
Zahnle.
Another portion of the evening
will be devoted to a white elephant
sale. Members are to bring white

elephants worth approximately one
dollar, unwrapped, which will be
auctioned

After
this
meeting,
Deerfield
Home Bureau will adjourn for the
summer months and hold its next
meeting in September.

Mrs, Thomas

Cumber-

RECEIVE DIPLOMAS . . .

Tenth

Attends

Democratic

Regional
Mrs.

Conference

Harry

Sholl

16

me

ie

of

1720

Tril-

lium
Ln.,
west
of Deerfield,
is
vice president of the Democratic
Woman’s Club of the 13th Congressional District, She attended the
Democratic
Women’s’
Regional
and’

The

in

Cleveland,

O.,

May

23.

Gilpins

Move

To Lake Forest

waft

:

Mr. and Mrs. W. Douglas Gilpin,
who have been living in the R. H.
A. Green home at 1350 Aitken Dr.,
Bannockburn, temporarily, are now
getting settled in their new home
at 1137 North Green Bay Rd., Lake

Forest.

Mrs.

Green

is

living

Bannockburn

Mothers

Of Eighth Graders
Receive
Special

Diplomas
diplomas

grade

were

mothers,

nesday, who would
children
in
the

no

given

last

Sanders

longer have
Bannockburn

Rd.,

with

luncheon

served

for

66 including the hostesses.
New officers of the Bannockburn
Mothers Club are Mrs. William B.
Denniston, president; Mrs. Robert
J. Lagorio, vice president; Mrs, C.
Robert
Isely, secretary and Mrs.
Frank W. Moynes, treasurer.

Hostesses for the day were

Mrs. William
orthe

to

Wed-

School. The meeting was held at
the home of Mrs. C. V. Stewart of

There will be a board meeting of
the Deerfield Woman’s Club at 9:30
a.m., Tuesday, June 2, at the home
of the club’s new president, Mrs.
Locke
Rogers,
1250 Linden
Avenue. The program
and fund raising benefits for
1959-60
will be
discussed.

DeMolay Mothers Will
Organize Monday Evening

in

Evanston.

B. Denniston,

left, president of the Bannockburn

Mothers Club is presenting diplomas to mothers of eighth graders.

Left to right they are Mrs. Percy Wilson, Mrs. James
and Mrs. C. V. Stewart.

C. Schnur

Mrs.

Richard Vaga, Mrs. Van L. Phillips,
Mrs. Edward J. Jordan, Mrs. Neal

Blair, Mrs. Reid Olson, Mrs. Franklin King
loy.

and

Mrs.

Thursday,
Page

in obtaining
about
Home

Bureau, may call Mrs. Zahnle at WI
5-0753.

Conference

Woman’s Club Executive
Board Will Meet June 2

DeMolay
Mothers will
on Monday evening at

F. Zahnle, who was

elected the new unit president at
the last meeting, will preside at the
September meeting. Mrs. Ernest T.
Becker, was elected new vice president of the unit.

eighth

The
ganize

off,

Mrs.
Robert
Gullen,
program
chairman,
will give members
an
outline of the subjects of the lessons to be presented to the club in
1960, using
information
provided
her by the Lake County Board advisory council meeting on May 18.
Attending
the last meeting
of
Deerfield Unit was the Lake County Board president, Mrs. J. Melvin
Johnson,
who
discussed
personal
property taxes.

Anyone
interested
further
information

Allen E. Wolf, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Edwin D. Wolf of 457 Hermitage Dr., is valedictorian
of the
1959 senior class. Cynthia Jacob,
daughter
of Mr.
and Mrs.
Stanley Jacob
of 1360 Ridge
Rd.
is
salutatorian.

Deerfield Masonic Temple.

District.

Har-

Provisional

Methodist Women
To Have Luncheon

Two graduates of the Deerfield
Grammar School, District 109, now
seniors at Township High School
District 113 in Highland Park, will
be
graduated
with
the
highest
honors in their class.

ler and Mrs. Scheer attended.

Unit

p.m.

day at 8 p.m. in the home of Mrs. Glenn Likes of 1406 Somerset Ave. Mrs. Likes will present a lesson on furniture refinish-

In High School

year over $600 spent to carry on
these programs; the difference being earned by the members of the
Auxiliary putting on dinners, and
other ways and means activities.
For the dance at the Hospital on
May 14, cakes were furnished by
Mrs. Robert Broege,
Mrs. Albert
Bennett,
Mrs.
Joseph
Schuessler
and
Dr.
Dorothy
Hunter.
Mrs.
Broege, Mrs. Bennett, Mrs. Schuess-

Deerfield

1:30

Dawe
of

given

at

of Mrs.

Albert

be

Two Deerfield School
Graduates Lead Class

Welfare Work assisting vetand their children; the cost

of the poppies
Auxiliary.

1

will

Women

Church

Mon-

Bureau will meet

Deerfield Unit of the Home

22

grounds

collected

June

of

bring guests. Mrs. Harris will give
additional
information
at WI
53613.

are eagerly looked forward to and
enjoyed,” Mrs. Carl Scheer states.
All

Illinois

conven-

May 19-21 in Peoria. Members

Downey Hospital. “These chances
to drive around the neighboring
communities and see some of the
world

recent

League

president

League

be

the

Meadowbrook

Mrs.

collected $375.
One

of

the home

gift from

of

the

Monday,

businessmen,

1,800

of

Voters

of the Ameri-

Legion

In addition

report

tion

can
Day.

8 in St. Patrick’s Catholic
in West Lake Forest.

Women Voters To
Hear Report On
League Conclave

The

Elizabeth

Miss

Tews

Chit

anaes

Weddings

ened

Engagements

Philip

May

28,

J,

Mal-

1959

�‘Park
Hospital.
They
have
two
daughters, Ondrea, 3, and Marcie,
1. Mr. and Mrs. O. W. Bilharz of
Washington,
D.C.,
and
Mr.
and

Mrs. Charles G. Snyder of Lamont,
Ill.

are

the

grandparents.
*

A
Mr.

son, Peter
and

Mrs.

*

*

John,

was

born

to

James D. Hourigan

of

1426 Woodridge Ct., May 22 in the
Highland Park Hospital. Peter has
two brothers, James, 11, and Mark,
3, and a sister, Susan, 9. The children’s grandparents
are Mr.
and
Mrs.
Albert
C.
Krotz
and
Mrs.
James J. Hourigan, all of Buffalo,
Nix
*

*

NEW

ARRIVALS

Birth Announcements
»
Mr. and Mrs. Charles J. Poremba
of 942 Brookside Ln. announce the
arrival of a daughter, Susan Elaine.
She was born April 28 at Lake Forest Hospital. Susan has a brother,
Charles
Edward,
20 months
old.
The grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.

“edward

A. Laing of Deerfield and

Mr. and
Calumet

Mrs.
City,

Stanley
III.

*

*

Poremba

of

*

+

A son, Steven, was born to Mr.
and Mrs. Rudolph H. Horvath of
3340 Deerfield Rd., May 14 at the
Lake Forest Hospital. Their other
“children
are
twins,
Dawn
and
Gregory, age 4, and Jan, 15 months.

LOOK WHAT

The maternal grandparents are Mr.
and Mrs. W. R. Will of Saskatoon,
Saskatchewan, Canada. The paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs.
J. Horvath of Brookfield, Il.
*

page

THE

16)

spent months at a time when her
husband has been there on business, in Mexico City, will take the
audience on an arm chair trip to
the country “South of the Border.”
The

trip to Mexico

continuing
North

is part

series of study

American

N.Y.

Klipp

and

Mr.

of Rochester,
*

*

and

Mrs.

*

are Mr. and Mrs. George Everhardt
of Park Ridge, and Mrs. Fred Hees

erine Hulburd.
She has a
sister,
Barbara, 8, and her brothers are
Michael Anthony, 6, and Richard,
5. Mr. and Mrs. Richard E. Welch
Sr. of Bannockburn and the Harold
A. Wamplers of Highland Park are
the children’s grandparents.

*

*

Mr. and Mrs. Roy Klipp of 1700
Montgomery
Rd.
announce
the
birth of Perry Elizabeth. She was

born May

23 in the Highland

baby

has

been

named

Theatre

Workshop
and

¢ Voice

and

Improvisation
Diction

* Mime

N.Y.

Mr. and Mrs. Michael Wampler
of 2045 Half Day Rd. welcomed
their fourth child, a daughter, May
23 in the Highland Park Hospital.

The

Summer

by the

¢ Acting

Syracuse,

a

Youth

of the

WSWS.

John

presents

of “Our

Neighbors”

SCHOOL FOR
CREATIVE
DRAMATICS

Kath-

* Body

Movement

¢ Makeup
* Scene

Classes

Individual Attention
Professional Instruction
Public Performance
For Free Brochure,
Telephone ID 2-5857

Park

Hospital.
They
also have
a son,
Gregory, age 3. The grandparents
are Dr. and Mrs. L. P. Ransom of

The

Want-Ad

interesting
tunities.

section

facts
Don’t

and
miss

is filled with

golden
it!

oppor-

The Want-Ad

section is filled with

interesting facts and golden
tunities.
Don’t miss it!

*

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Vogl, 916
Castlewood Ln., became parents of
a son, May 13 at Illinois Masonic
Hospital.
The
infant
has
been
named Robert Allen, and he has a
sister, Nancy Jo, age 6. Mrs. Marie
Vogl of San Francisco, Calif., and
Mrs.
Ethel
Abbott
of Rochester,
N.Y., are the grandmothers.
*

*

*

Mr. and Mrs. Charles G. Snyder
of 702 Osterman
Ave., announce
the birth of their first son, Charles
Greggory, May 21 at the Highland

+6°°

the Dia
24”

(

%

from

Donald Hans was born May 19
in the Highland Park Hospital to
Mr. and Mrs. Hans Rentsch of 2015
Sanders Rd. The infant has a sister, Linda, 2%. The grandparents

*

Mrs. Donald E. Roettger and two sons, Andrew, 5, and
Brian, 10, are visiting Mrs. Roettger’s parents in Sonning, near
London, England. They went over on the USS United States and
will fly back.

Fiesta

(Continued

*

of Palatine.

y

WSWS

tlio
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“a

the Plaltlijo

suburban

1672 skokie highway
highland park
id 2-7077
open every day to 9:30 p.m.
Thursday,
Tease ah
Acs

re

May

28, 1959

ht
70 EAST

WALTON

hid, Silon
PLACE,

CHICAGO

¢ SUperior

7-6950

oppor-

�a

NEEDS

SCRUBBING,’
ae

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Geese

as

Sacred

Heart

Meets Wednesday
Sacred

elected

Zenzola

and

SANDRAN ..
VINYL PLASTIC .
FLOOR COVERING °

tini and

Tony

Carpet

626

&amp; Linoleum

Co.

Roger Williams
Ravinia

Section

IDlewood

2-8701

will

mittee;

Mrs.

John

Officers

Peter

Paul

Mordini,

social

Ugolini,

a

at HighMrs.

com-

publicity;

Mrs. Joseph Giannasi and Mrs. Gus
Gentillini, kitchen; Mrs. O. RabatMrs.

Aldo

Castelli,

In

Altar.

Park

Women’s

cast

of

“Hansel

and

Republican

Club,

to

be held Wednesday at 2 p.m. in the
home of Mrs. E. Montfod Fucik, 57 |
S. Deere Park Dr., are Mrs. piveapet*
Makelim, 589 Lyman Ct., gener

chairman; Mrs. Carl Howard, 261,
Lakeside Manor Rd., house chairman;

Mrs.

Sumac

Howard

Rd.,

Lausche,

reception

369

chairman;

Charles Husting, 1159 Lin-

coln Ave. S, tea chairman.

Play

At Western College for Women
in Oxford, Ohio, Misses Sandra and
Susan Baarsch of 2380 Riverwoods
Rd. were among those selected for

the

i:

Committee members for Program
and Membership tea of Highland

and Mrs.
Are

ne

Program And Tea

hold

Center.
include:

Guglielmi,

Sisters

John B. Nash

Guild

Community

recently

Mrs.

sa. yd.
“hisA aad

Heart

Evening

party at 8 p.m. Wednesday

wood

-IGOP Women Slate.

Guild

Gretel.”

Afternoon’s program will includ&amp;
“Spring
Planting,”
highlights
of

the National Conference

of Repub- ,

lican Women
which was held i
Washington, D.C., April 12-15, and

attended

by

The play was given by the Young
People’s
Theatre
for some
3,000
area school children and also pre-

man, president,
Parkers.

sented at two neighboring schools.

Verne

Guest

Mrs.

Baldwin

New-

and other Highland

of honor

will be

Dixon, Lake

Mrs.

La

County Republi-

can chairman. Public is cordially
invited to the program tea.
;

Highwood Activities
(Continued

from

page

14)

the three are expected to be in full

TELEVISIO

RADIO

WBKB-TV

WLS, 890 k.c., 6:45 p.m.
WNMP 1590 k.c., 9:15 a.m.
Sunday, May 31

Channel 7 ¢ Sunday * 9:45 a.m.
Sunday, May 31

“A Very
Present Help”

ed with any ladies’ ball teams this
summer.
A
local
independent
ladies’ team, the Lake County Merchants team, will compete in the

Wilmette
local

league,

diamond

but

this

not

on

thes

season.

Hittin
HT

os

“Gaining Freedom
From Disfigurement”

swing early in June. Local girls
will play in a Little Lassie Base- *
ball league.
*
The Highwood Community Center will NOT sponsor or be affiliat-

vie,
{

(

oO

“

a

~s

Park

every Fri. Eve,
‘Til 9 P.M.

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Thursday, May

28, 19

�Miss Loretta Lenzini Becomes Bride

Turnabout Dance Scheduled
Friday At Trinity Church
Annual Turnabout dance of Canterbury Club of Trinity Episcopal

$399

Church will be held Friday from
9 to 12 p.m. Dance will feature jazz

and

the

blues

with

“My

TED BROADLOOM

Blue

Heaven” as the theme. Teenagers
are invited.
Co-chairmen for the affair at the
church are William McComb
and
Nancy Carey. Committee chairmen
are
Susan
Blair
and
Anita
Chizewer, decorations;
Judie Kraft,
floor show; William Price, tickets;

ews
Open

SQ.

YD.

Carpets
VE 5-2400

Edens near Tower

Mary McComb, refreshments; and
Elizabeth Thiele, refreshments.

PER

Monday

through

Evenings

by

Saturday,

9 to

5

Appt.

Richard R. Roewert Family
Announces Birth Of Raymond
Raymond

Expert Hair Coloring

Roy was born April 22

to the Richard R. Roewert family,
Libertyville, at Lake Forest Hospital.
Raymond
has
two
sisters,

(Continued

on page

. . . including all shades
of light blondes

20)

A Got fo

Permanent

Waves

Hair fouting
ol

Day

SUN

Family Portraits by
Percy H. Prior, Jr.

1815

please make appointment
before June 5th

Bett’s

Mr.
Miss

Loretta

and

Lenzini

Mrs.

became

Albert

Maid

the

4

of

honor,

Miss

Norma

The
Rt. Rev.
Msgr.
James
D.
Gleeson officiated at the ceremony
at which Miss Audrey Amick, Deerfield, was organist and Mrs. Rich-

ard Bartoni, 205 High
wood, was soloist.

After the ceremony, a reception
was held at American Legion Hall.

wood. She is the daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Gene Lenzini, 233 Highwood Ave., Highwood,
and he is
the son of Mr. and Mrs. Allen C.
Harder, 2026 Deerfield Rd.

y

Photo

Easton

Morelli, 1543 McDaniels Ave., and
bridesmaid, Miss Rita Rettig, 220
Highwood
Ave.,
Highwood,
were
gowned
identically.
They
wore
white pique dresses with aqua embroidered bodice and aqua sashes.
They carried sprays of aqua daisies
with ivy leaves.
Mr. Easton chose Remo
Piazzi,
235 Highwood Ave., Highwood, to
be his best man. Ushers were Robert Easton of Wheeling and Allen
Harder Jr., 2026 Deerfield Rd.

bride of Albert M. Easton of Wheeling on May 2 in a morning ceremony in St. James Church, High-

r¢

M.

St.,

High-

The

The bride, given in marriage by
her father before an altar banked
with all white flowers and greens,

¢wore

a

chantilly

lace

and

lily

of

mother

dress

with

wore

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After a wedding journey to the
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(Continued on page 20)

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645
CENTRAL
AVE.

Chandler's
ON

THE

NORTH

SHORE

SINCE

ID 30230

1895
Page

19

�Roewerts

Have

(Continued
at 351 Maureen
School

bride
and

on page

20)
St.

Mallinckrodt

(Continued

Members
of
Band Saturday

Garino Accordion
entertained mem-

Pamela,

James

bers

Society

ternal

High

nia Club, Chicago.
Students
participating

were

Norma

Rich-

Dr., Wheeling.

attended

School. The groom attended Oak
Terrace School and Highland Park
High School.

of

Steuben

Menoni,

at Germa-

Jerry Nustra,

(Continued

DEERFIELD
BOY SCOUT NEWS

Wed At St James.

on page

14,

from

and

page

Patricia,

grandmother

is Mrs.

19)
13.

Ma-

Agnes

Clavey,
Deerfield,
and
paternal
grandparents are the Roy R. Roewerts, Libertyville.
Mrs. Elmer Clavey, Deerfield, is the infant’s aunt.

31)

By

Troop 150
L. Paquette,

Dale

Deerfield
Manor

Scribe

ciation,

help

of the Zion Lutheran Church. After
we lit a campfire, we played games,

on

advancement

an election
Arrow.

for

the

and

Order

the

on

advancement.

We

held
as

at Camp

Camp

then

a busy one
and

24, our troop
Camp-O-Ree

Wilmot,

Crown.

now

Friday

on

was

sat around

the

going.

We

and

had

fire

ot

Ry

3

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describes the FIESTA POOL . . . built of time-proven GUNITE .. . any
shape ... any size... constructed and serviced by a local contractor serving this area over 10 years.

rHone FHESTA POOLS row:
Division of KLEINPASTE and

Phone

ROLLENE,

LIbertyville

General Contractors

2-2892

the campsite

with

camp

field

y 4
GALA OPENING
MEMORIAL

newly

decorated

‘

where

adults

forest

setting,

you

of the Santa

MaRoad,
Deer-

Road.

the

received

oiling

from

of

Fran-

from

the

professors

of

from

being forwardew®

president

would

like

all in

The Vernon Township Fire Dept,

to help if needed.

The
game,
authorized
American Contract Bridge

will be held every Friday evening,
with the monthly
master point

tional

are

game

504

on

t&amp;

has just notified the secretary, that
this coming Sunday, May 31, they
will burn the weeds and clear the
lot for the youngsters, bounded by
Ash, Milwaukee and Pekara Drive.
The chief, Walter J. Gerbert and
his assistant, Alfred Kruger, woul
like as many men from the area,
that can be on hand around 9 a.m.

find their

from today’s jet-propelled world into
a happy, whimsical world of make-believe. Here
you'll find all the fun, fantasy and charm

Simpson,

Stancliff, road commis-

reply

The

ville, and Wheeling. New duplicate
players are especially welcome, it
is reported.

transported

of

the area, to remember that the office
of the
Association
is open
Monday through Saturday from 16
until 2 p.m. to help any and all
residents of the area.

Glenview, Northfield, Northbrook,
Bannockburn, Mundelein, Liberty-

own childhood dreams come true, In a

Fairyland

to

to the health department as being
among
those not supporting
the
program, which primarily helps the,
youngsters more than the adults.

Highwood, Lake Forest, Lake Bluff,

DAY, MAY 30

Earl

before

their names

Response has been good, and the
game will attract duplicate players
from
Glencoe,
Highland
Park,

(CAL, Pavshic
A, child’s paradise,

A

Opening night for the Deerfield
Contract
Bridge
Club
is Friday,
June 5, with actual play scheduled
for 7:55 p.m. The
game
will be

at the

due

progress

the University of Illinois, has been
received by the president, proving,
beyond a shadow of a doubt, that
the various excuses given by our
three doubting “thomases”’ that the
spray used in past control, had anything to do with any alleged damage these folks have
claimed
to
their plants in an effort to keep

Wesley Bridge Club
To Start June 5
In Deerfield

sonic Hall at 711 Waukegan
less than a block south of

that

the

sioner, that the township supervig.
or, George Stancliff has been appointed to do the inspection job
on the ditches in Deerfield Manor,
by the County Superintendent, A®
M, Amstutz.

articles made of wood. That afternoon we worked
on conservation
and played King of the Mountain.
After the evening meal, we played
Capture the Flag. Later that night
we sat again around the campfire
and
ate. We
got up bright and
early
on
Sunday
morning,
ate
breakfast, broke camp and returned
home.

held

area,

cis (Chuck)

popcorn, marshmallows and cocoa.
Saturday morning, after eating, we

improved

the

the roads.
Word
was

of setting up the tents

getting the campfire

later

known

night

rains

have the Spree Party this aSturday
around noon, yest, he means Memorial
Days,
as a survey
shows
that most
of the fellows are o
that day, and can enjoy the refreshments
as well knowing that
they are putting the final touches

practiced marching in preparation
for the Memorial Day Parade.
On May 22, 23 and
participated
in
the

announced

to the president,

The May 20 meeting opened with
inspection. We played games and
worked

has

of the

the seeding of the ditches have advanced to the stage of first inspe¢
tion.
This makes it possible according

held
of

Rodaniche

The executive board of the Asso-

The May 13 meeting opened with
setting up a campsite in the back

worked

News

August

the

third

Claus legend brought
to life with startling realism.

Carol
Y

by
the
League,

Friday.

from

Addi-

4

information

Mr.

and

Willow

is

Mrs,

Ave.,

available,

Neal

Mosely,

WI

5-3410.

make

a

Block sia Nagel
uf
+3

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;

f
‘I

.—

Santas

&lt;&gt;;

Village

AT EAST DUNDEE,
ROUTES

A

25 AND

72

GRAND OPENING
MEMORIAL DAY, MAY 30

VPIistestaeaa.

Xn

é7

NN

aR

The Dundee Santa's Village is located at the
junction of Highways 25 and 72, justa pleasant

yl1

“Hiehland Park

-tihe..tihe...siie..2te..0te..sie..stie.
sie. sie. .sie..titie. sie. sie sie. sie. sie. sie. ses
2

TAKE THE
NORTHWEST

Just

as

you

provide

will,

so should

you

insurance
choose a

or
fitting

etal,
oll
tls
Sais:

The

Accordion Band Makes
Chicago Appearance

Son

resting

place for yourself — and for them — a task
that will be burdensome
emergency is at hand.

if left

until

the

MEMORIAL PARK CEMETERY
COMMUNITY MAUSOLEUM—EARTHEN INTERMENT
COLUMBARIUM—CREMATORIUM
PERPETUAL

CHARTER

—

GENERAL CARE

FUND

4

We Operate Our Own Greenhouses
Ridge Road and Harrison St., Evanston
Chicago: KEystone 9-4747; 9-4424
die

tithe adie, sities ste alii

aie atin atin nian aie

tn

Evanston: UNiversity 45061; 4-5062
oie sian atte oii

tlt

i

ett

i

ttn ain alan ein)

Thursday, May 28, 1959
a:

�for all your lumber needs
Craftwood stocks the greatest variety of species,
grades and sizes of finishing and construction boards,
mouldings and plywoods. Kiln dried of course.
Special milling to your specifications and
courteous assistance in the proper selection of lumber to suit
your needs. Prices include delivery. Come in or phone today.

:
|

PINE BOARDS

PINE AND HARDWOOD MOULDINGS

You will enjoy working with Craftwood quality pine.
Three grades priced per lineal foot.

All these and many

b
,

|

others in stock at all times

Clear

Pine
Prices

Size
1x2

Utility
3G.

Running

1x4

Bi

Foot

1x6
1x8

Per

1x3

Knotty Clear
wee 1) BAO.

RE

1%”
de:

oars

Vinee: ee

Bae

1%”
2”
17E &gt;. 54

SS

eg

ae

12
16

24
832

42,
56

48
62

67
89

1x10

20

40

70

80

1.10

EEUS

24

48

§4

96

1.34

8
11

MOULDINGS
Base 3%4" Modern

a8

Base Shoe 72x%

:

we

LUMBER

Wal.
48¢-

Sere

Casing 214"

13” and wider in clear up to 24” usually available at slightly higher price.

CONSTRUCTION

Pine Mahog.
Il4¢ ) 2i¢.°

Birch
33c.

Oak
28¢

Ash
~ 28e

ee

OT

ee

ee

II

16

34

26

19

19

Ccoiver Wed ta

G2

Ue

ee

ee

ee

ae

Cove 4x %"

4

8

14

Il

9

9

Stops 1 3/8’

5

9

18

14

11

11

18

RO

Ree

Be

ee

Oe

4.26

7.80

16.96

11.65

8.65

8.65

Stool 2%”

Kiln dried, smooth, straight and even textured.

Jambs 3’ x 7

ee

Use it, you'll see the difference.
2x2
2x4

ear

6¢
11

2x8

21

2x10
2x12

27
33

4x4
4x6

25
36

6x6

Al

HARDWOODS
biscd
BpectariZIng
Paria}
in home

Prices are per board foot, random width and length, surfaced.
two sides, Finest quality (graded FAS), In stock at all times.
-

Species

owner service!

:

FIR

PLYWOOD

We handle only U.S, Plywgod stock. Any size or
io
Dbciaay Here en : ag aiage
priced per square foot in fu
x 8 sheet.
For

Thickness

Interior

Per Sq. Foot

Use.

Per 4 x 8 Sheet

For

Outdoor
Use or

Thickness

Per Sq. Foot
Per Full Sheet

cat: tia

Fy

FZ

3/4”

20

26

30

33

4.64

640

832

9.60

10.56

1/8/81!
16%
5.28

21%
6.88

28%
912

5/8

33
9.60

Species

Price

Ash

65

Mahog.

1.10

Basswood

61

Phil.

Balsa
Birch
Butternut
Cherry
Chestnut
Cypress

.70
1.05
84
.89
.60
60

S4S

2?

. 14%

ee

Price

stocked

Mahog.

Maple
Oak Red
Oak White
Teak
Walnut
Rosewood
Ebony

at nominal

additional

.80

72
68
78
2.50
1.32
2.40
10.50

cost

7

8/4

387%
12.00

DISCOUNTS
10 BF — 25 BF

10%

NOTE: These prices apply to

26 BF —

20%

placings
ran

50BF

Si
ota _
‘Allow 48 hours for dulhvery,

50 BF — 99 BF
25%
100 BF — 200 BF 331/3%

|

Good

ve

Both

‘Oe

Sides

CRAFT

WOOD
1590
8 A.M. - 5:30

Deerfield

cians chiens ine
Road,

P.M.—Thursday

Highland

until 9—Sundey

Park,
10-1

Just west of Route 41—Phone

Thursday, May 28, 1959

Illinois

IDlewood 2-0140

peme

44

�Young

cople oe

Shou

Vernon Legion Post To Have Parade

Cub Pack 50 Will
Have Family Picnic

and SNawice

In a recent meeting of the committee of Deerfield Cub Pack 50
and at the suggestion of the den
mothers, it was decided to hold a
family picnic. This event will take
the place of the Pack’s usual annual Circus.

The

picnic will be held Wednes-

day evening, June 3, at 6:30 p.m.
The location is the Forest Preserve
area on Green Bay Road, just south

Line

Road,

on

the

east

side of the street.
All members
of the family are
invited to attend. Each family is to
bring its own food and beverage.
Awards will be presented to the
Cubs who have earned them
for
this period. This will be the final
Pack meeting of this season.
“Tf you desire any further details
for the picnic, please contact the
program
chairman,
Henry
Hershman, WI 5-1786, or assistant Cubmaster, Bill Bradley at WI 5-2655,”
Mark
Bloch,
publicity
chairman,
states.

Joins Deerfield
Real Estate Company
Learning

to candle

eggs

Illinois University poultry
Des

Plaines,

man

of

left,

2835
*

and

during

James

Riverwoods
*
*

Col. Matthew Merkle, professor of
air science of the 225th AFROTC

located

at the

Dame

in Notre

sity of Notre

Univer-

|

Dame,

!

Cadet Nottoli is in his first year
at Notre Dame in the College of
Arts and Letters. Upon graduation
he will be commissioned a second

lieutenant

in

the

U.S.

son

exercise

are David

of Mr.

and

in

Air

Force

and will serve a minimum of three
years on active duty.
“Cadet Nottoli merited this promotion on the

Joins Weiss Company

Mrs.

M.

R.

Hoff-

visiting

Irvin
Mrs. W.

in

on May
this
*

Stephens,

until
*

son

L. Stephens

of

June

Mr.

*

and

membership

is de-

termined on the basis of achievement in scholarship, student activities, and co-operative spirit.

Miss
logy

of

Clifford,

major,

her

is

a junior
presently

sorority,

Chi

psychopresident

Omega,

and

secretary of the Class of 1960. Her
past activities include service on

the varsity
membership

Gershuny

advertising

executive on the Swift and Com‘pany and Bell and Howell accounts
at
McCann-Erickson,
joined
the
‘Chicago headquarters of Edward H.

‘Weiss

and

Company

this week

‘vice president and chairman
Plans Board.
Gershuny,

37, lives with

as

of the

his wife,

Jean,
and five children
at 830
Northwoods Drive, Deerfield.
Gershuny decided to move to
Weiss, he said, because the Weiss
organization
offered
him
an unusually good opportunity to make
use
of his varied
experience
as

head of his own agency, aS a marketing consultant, and as an account

supervisor.

Page 22

000

of 941 Wauke-

*

cheerleading
squad,
in the Women’s Ath-

letic Association,
and
recording
secretary
of
dent Congress. She has
the college honor roll
of her six semesters at
est.
*

*

a

post as
the
Sturanked on
during all
Lake For-

*

Pvt. Ronald Peterson, son of Mr.
and Mrs. Arthur E. Peterson of 735
Chestnut St., sends word that he
is coming home after 13 months in
Korea, where he has been stationel
with the U.S. Army.
*

*

*

William John Binard, son of Mr.
and Mrs. William J. Binard, 708
Hermitage Dr., recently was elected chaplain of Alpha Phi Omega,
national men’s service fraternity at
the University of Miami at Coral
Gables, Fla. Binard,
a junior zoology major
in UM’s
College
of
Arts and Sciences, is a member of
Lambda Chi Alpha, National social

new

C. M.

Will-

that another
be placed on

commemorative

stamp

Nancy Sullivan
Mrs.
John
Sullivan,
formerly
with Earhart &amp; Company, Realtors
in Highland Park, is now associated
with John Coons, Realtor in Deerfield, 623 Deerfield Rd.
Mrs. Sullivan joins John Coons
of Glenview, formerly of Wyatt &amp;
Coons
and
Edward
Enerson
of
Northbrook in selling real estate
in cooperation with the Evanston
North Shore Board multiple listing
service.
She attended real estate
courses
at Northwestern
University.

has been

Scouts

will

be

for the
gram.

Deerfield

Girl

Scout

pro-

“United States Postage 4c’’ across
the bottom, in a lettering style suggested by P. T. Barnum type, a series based on lettering fashions of
the 1850’s.

authorized.

Collectors desiring first-day cancellations of the 4c Silver Centennial stamp may send addressed envelopes, together with remittance
to cover the cost of the stamps to
be affixed, to the Postmaster, Virginia City, Nevada.

covered by Patrick McLaughlin and
Peter O’Riley. The central subject
by ‘Silver Centennial
at the left and top, and

Demonstrate Radio Transmission

She is a volunteer in the physical
therapy
department
at Highland
Park Hospital, a meber of the Deerfield Stagers and other civic organizations in Deerfield.
She and her husband John have
been living at 1330 Holly Lane in
Deerfield since May,
1951.

Savings-Loan Bowling
League Has Banquet
The bowling league sponsored by
Deerfield Savings and Loan Association held its banquet on May 22.
Their guests were Mr. and Mrs.
Kenneth Weir of Bannockburn.
Final standings of the league:
First
place,
Insurance
department;
second
place,
Title;
third
place, Pay out; fourth, Accounting;
fifth, Savings;
sixth, Loans;
seventh, Inspection and eighth, Tax.
fraternity

and

tional German
*

Delta

Phi

Alpha,

na-

honor society.
*

Ray Burnett (seated),

W9VIN,

demonstrated

how

he and

other

amateur radio operators transmit messages from Station W9JAM,
for visitors at the Electronics Supply Office, Great Lakes, on
Armed Forces Day, May 16.
Observing

*

Lt. Clarence A. Juhl, son of Mrs.
Arthur Juhl of 1302 Deerfield Rd.,
is training in the Primary Basic
Navigator Course at Harlingen, Air
Force Base in Texas.

Deerfield,
nical
of

Division;

Highland

Mundelein,

the

assistant

demonstration
head,

Commander
Park,

director,

are

Material
H.

(I to r) Harold

Determination

E. Beckmeyer,

Purchase

head, Stock Finance

we

and after the parade. The money
raised
from
these
sales will go

The design of the stamp, based
on
an
old
print,
depicts
Henry
Comstock at the Mount Davidson
site of the rich silver deposit dis-

is framed
1859-1959,”

Girl

be booths set up in Jewett Park
and
on Waukegan
Road before

City Post Office, Nev.
The stamp
will
be
0.84
by
1.44
inches
in
dimension,
arranged
horizontally,
printed by the rotary process, electric-eye perforated and issued in
sheets of 50. The stamp will be reproduced
in shades of black and
white to simulate the color of silver. An initial printing of 120,000,-

gan Rd., is coming home this week-

tion, for which

Gershuny,

A

15.

end for the summer from Albilene
Christian
College
in
Albilene,
Texas, where he is finishing his
third year.

Postmaster

Deerfield

selling soft drinks, popsicles, and
chocolate milk during the Memorial
Day
program.
Mrs.
John
Eisinger,
1300
Central,
West
Neighborhrood
Chairman
for the
Girl Scouts, announces that there

will be issued through the Virginia

15 and will be

area
*

Marilyn
Clifford,
daughter
of
Mr. and Mrs. Walter L. Clifford
of 908 Fair Oaks Avenue, recently
was inducted into Kappa Alpha, a
local honor society for junior and
senior women at Lake Forest College. At a later meeting she was
elected president of the organiza-

Samuel

Deerfield

man
Jr. announces
commemorative will
sale on June 9.

A/Cpl. Joseph R. King, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Joseph King of Libertyville, formerly
of Deerfield,
who is stationed at the Marine base
at Twenty-Nine Palms, Calif., ar-

rived home

Deerfield
Girl Scout News

Stamp To Be Issued
In Virginia City, Nev.

of

basis of his outstanding performance in his required duties and continued demonstration of officer potential,” said Capt. Nino C. Moretti,
AFROTC
information services officer.
*
*
*

*

Samuel

Commemerative

a Southern

W. Percival

Dr.

class. Announcement of the promotion was made this week by Lt.

Ind.

course

Persson,

James J. Nottoli, son of Mr. and
Mrs. V. A. Nottoli of 1520 Wilmot
Rd., has been promoted from cadet
to the rank of cadet airman second

detachment

a laboratory

production

Mary Lou McCloud, Gail McCloud and Gennie Youngberg
(left to right) all of Prairie View, are practicing the drum majorette routine they will perform in the Vernon American Legion Post
parade on Memorial Day, Saturday. The parade forms at 10 a.m.
at the Chicagoland Airport, south of Half Day, and will proceed
north on Milwaukee Ave. to the Half Day Cemetery where appropriate ceremonies will be held.

“a

of County

Branch,

Supply

Division;

and

Financial
Thursday,

Werness

of

Branch,

Tech-

Corps,

USN,

Tom

Control
May

Ryan

of

Division.
28;.1959

�B’nai B’rith Holds
Hospital Bowling
Banquet Tonight

portant

girls,

and

and bicycles.

bicycles

desirable.

only provide

are

im-

They

transportation

not

and

en-

joyment, but also provide good
training in discipline and responsi-

bikes. As parents, we

should

make

every effort to be sure that our
child, first of all, has a bicycle in
the proper size, mechanically safe
and properly equipped. Secondly,
we should make sure that the child
knows
the
requirements
for
bicycles operated on city streets and
that he or she can
ride safely.
There is nothing more frightening
than to see a youngster trying to
learn how to ride a bike with no

supervision,
training

using

the

street

as

a

course.

The police department, with the
excellent
cooperation
of
school

authorities, conducts bicycle clinics
in the fall and spring each year.
The department inspects the bikes
for mechanical condition and equipment
and tests the children for
their ability to ride.
Reports
from
the clinics show

that 50 per cent of the bicycles fall
below the satisfactory standard in
mechanical
condition,
and
about
.08 per cent of the children can’t
ride safely. Unsafe riders are usually found in the lower age bracket—

and

(Continued

first
on

grade,

page

Let-

29)

TYPEWRITERS
ADDING
,|

SALES

645

-

MACHINES

RENTALS

CENTRAL

-

»

REPAIRS

ID 3-0230

BETTS, BORLAND &amp; Co.
Since

a

1896

~

BROKERS
STOCKS —

BONDS

Members
New York Stock Exchange
and Other Exchanges
PARTNERS
ARTHUR M. BETTS
CHAUNCEY B. BORLAND
FRANCIS P, BUTLER
LOUIS J. STIRLING
WISE
HAROLD C. STEINER
ASSOCIATES
SAMUEL D. ROWE
RICHARD J. SHROSBREE
J. TRACY ALEXANDER
STEPHEN W. BACHAR
POTTER H. CARROLL
HERBERT HIDER
HUGH J. O’CONNOR
SIDNEY RUBENSTEIN
of Highland

Park

BORLAND
111

South

La
Tel.

Thursday,

BUILDING

Salle

St.

CEntral

May

¢
6-1474

28, 1959

Chicago

3

Arrangements

by

Irving

S.

are

being

Saverslak,

handled

3153

Uni-

versity
Ave.,
chairman
of
the
lodge’s veterans program.
Eighteen awards will be made to
outstanding
bowlers
of the
hospital. More than 250 patients participated in the tournament. Danc-

ing

and

entertainment

will follow

@
@

Areas

—

Old

Drives

Refinished

Expert Black Topping
@ Crushed
Concrete
Stone

Call for FREE

ESTIMATE!

Gia0UE&gt; ... CHOICE TOP SOIL
SILJESTROM

FUEL CO.

ID 2-0065
1930

First

St.

Highland

Park

HMMMLb ddd

CALLLEAECC000@@9Z0OCO0AABA0A0G000AAA00000O00OO0OO0O0A0A0A0AAAAEK

kindergarten

the presentations.
Serving as co-chairmen are: Albert J. Freedman,
3193
Summit
Ave., and Jerry Kohn, 1349 Arbor
Ave. Invitations to attend the banquet have been extended to Mayors
Robert Cushman
and John Frantonius
and
City
Manager
Ralph
Snyder. Nathan M. Gomber, Windy
Ln. is president of West Highland
Park B’nai B’rith.

pital.

bility, if the youngsters are properly instructed. The parent is responsible for the instruction.
Our ordinance
requires bicycle
riders to comply with all applicable
provisions of the traffic ordinance,
and in addition sets forth special
regulations
that
apply
only
to

+

second
annual
Bowling Banquet
for patients of the Downey hospital,
Downey,
today
at
6:30
p.m. in the Pavillion of the hos-

Parking

DIRECT

FROM

DOWNTOWN

CHICAGO
TO SHOW IN THIS

CIRCUS

THE
LARGEST

The Combined

COMMUNITY

Service Clubs of Highland

BENEFIT of HIGHLAND

PARK

THIS YEAR

Park for the

HOSPITAL

Proudly Presents

COMBINED
ONE DAY ONLY!

FRIDAY
MAY

High School Athletic Field
W.

PARK

AVE.,

HIGHLAND

PARK

3 SHOWS—2:00 - 4:30 - 8:00 p.m.
RAIN

BEAUTIFUL
NEW

BLUE

s

OR

SHINE

BIG TOP

ALL

&amp; WHITE

ings

3

Come

ACRES

&amp; ACRES

JUNGLE

BRED

OF

Out and

CANVAS

4

DAWN”

Palomino

TEMES
SEATS
REAL
AERIAL

See the Big Show

—

HUGE

LIVE

THE HAPPIEST

Set Up!

OF THE YEAR

CARAVAN

WORLD'S FOREMOST PERFORMING

Baby

Stallion

Daring

Elephant

Young

“Little Bertha”

Girls on the

TWO GREAT SHOWS COMBINED _
|

FLAMEPROOF

WATERPROOF

|

MOTORIZED

LIONS!

JUGGLERS &amp; TUMBLERS
“GOLDEN

AND

“SEEING IS BELIEVING”

|

Ri

COMPLETELY

FLYING

TRAPEZE

| 3

TIMES

Complete and Undivided
TEDDY

BEARS

ARTISTS

WIRE

DOGS

MERRY-GO-ROUND
WALKERS

COMPLETE

OF

PONIES

WESTERN

REVUE

NOT A CARNIVAL!

CHIMPANZEES
CONGRESS

eit

CLOWNS

ABSOLUTELY

NO

GAMBLING

I

and

come

DRIVEWAY rermenpsasees:

ff,

grass, flowers

boys

spring

Society Board

GAMES!
ptt

To

of

—

leaves,

arrival

LEE

the

Climaxing 30 weeks of tournament
play,
West
Highland
Park
Lodge of B’nai B’rith is holding

ELL

With

On

Dr.
Russell
H.
Johnson,
745
Broadview Ave., is a new member
of the board of directors of Chicago
Dental Society.
He was installed
May 19 at Hilton Hotel ceremonies,
at which Dr. H. H. Hayes, Chicago,
discussed a “Blue Cross” plan for
dentistry. Dr. Hayes was installed
as president.

BUY

TICKETS

The

FROM

ANY

Highland

MEMBER

Park

JAYCEES —- KIWANIS
or ROTARY

OF

- LIONS

CLUBS

LOW

FAMILY

PRICES:——

ppp

Does Your Child
Know How To Ride
His Bicycle Safely?

Dr. Johnson

Children 60c — Adults 90c

3300
700

VAs

POLICE ADVISE...

GENERAL ADMISSION SEATS
With Positively NO EXTRA CHARGES
\

RESERVED

SEATS——50c

Additional

/MHMMH@@]MEHHTTH@THTHT@HEEEEHHTEHHHEETEXTHXTEEEUMMM,
Page

23:

�\

Your

smart

j Ke) ee
wey

ie

te,i

ii

skye

La

Bid, Sommecr any A

pire

rt

ate |

me

ee

a
,

Efe)ae
"

A son, their third child, was born
April 23 to Mr. and Mrs. Robert E.
Barker, 901 Barbury Rd., at High-

rate the best

land Park Hospital.
Their other
children are David Scott, 14%, and
Roberta, 3.
Maternal grandparents, Mr. and
Mrs. A. J. Schrader of Roseland,

Ill., are visiting
at this time.

with

the

Paternal
grandmother
Anna Barker of Chicago.

Fe

Count

.

services to keep your
wardrobe looking lovely!

on

our

oa

Your

clothes

superior

sparkle and freshness they
had when new, when you
.

let us clean them. We get
perfect results every time
. . . at modest cost!

JUST

PHONE...

ID 2-3310
Bisse.

FOR

|

all

Fast Pick-up Service ! !

KOKIE
VALLEY
LAUNDRY &amp; DRY CLEANERS, INC.

aa

Main Office and Plant:
IDlewood 2-3310 — Deerfield Call Enterprise 1616
512-518 Waukegan Ave., Highwood

is

Mrs.

start several

hundred

dollars

under

the many

hood
dan.

services

area

Arnold

pin

North

is given

by

land

Park

A
GnA it

i

‘

Neighbor-

igh

of North

Center,

in

In closing, Margaret Pierce was
given a camera by her parents and
neighborhood service team to take
this
Round-up
Colorado
the
to

Harrington
Yost and Harry
Pierce
were
recognized
in commemoration of their seven years as
fathers of Girl Scouts.
Girls of Moraine Council were

She is the only girl from

summer.
North

L. Levins

Have

On Mother’s

DAY

NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to all persons that the first Monday of July, 1959, is
the claim date in the estate of DORATHY
L. FIDDER, Deceased pending in the Probate Court of Lake County, Illinois, and
that claims may be filed against the said
estate on or before said date without issuance of summons.
All claims filed against
said estate on or before said date and not
contested, will be adjudicated on the first
Tuesday after the first Monday of the next
succeeding month at 9 A.M.
RAYMOND
FIDDER,
Administrator
Behanna and Engber, Attorneys
1935 Sheridan Road
Highland Park, Illinois
IDlewood 2-4304
5 /14-21-28/59—135

OF

RECEIVING

to

Neighborhood

chosen

be

for Round-up.
J.

CLAIM

to

Mrs. Kenneth Ingram, Mrs. Yost,
Irwin
Mrs.
Pierce,
Harry
Mrs.
Kramsky, Mrs. John Vyn and Mrs.
Fred Spanier.

providing meeting space and custodial service to the whole council.
Captain
Joseph
Campbell
was
awarded a pin in thanks for all of
the help he gave the Neighborhood
in providing facilities for larger
parties and meetings.

ADJUDICATION AND
NOTICE

given

of service

hours

nyside Ave., leader of Senior Troop
troops
eleven
the
73, presented
and leaders receiving badges. Then
Mrs. Marks made award presentaKoopman,
Joseph
to Mrs.
tions
Robert
Mrs.
Marino,
Nick
Mrs.
Schram and Mrs. Edward Nelson,

BIDS

for
for

printing
Notices,
advertisements,
etc.
the City of Highland Park.
Sealed proposals will be received by the
City of Highland Park, Lake County, Illinois, until 12:00 Noon Monday,
June
8,
1959 in the Council Room, at the City Hall,
1707 St. Johns Avenue, for printing at rate
per line for all notices, advertisements, reports, proceedings and miscellaneous matters required to be published by law in a
newspaper of general circulation in the City
of Highland Park. Bids to be addressed to
the Mayor and City Council of the City of
Highland Park and endorsed “Proposal for
printing all Notices, etc.”
The City Council reserves the right to
reject any and all bids.
By order of the City Council
May
11, 1959
ROY MILLEN
City Clerk
§ /21-28 /59—143

Son

Day

Mr. and Mrs. Jacob L. Levin, 465
Sumac Rd., are parents of a son,
10
May
born
Daniel,
Lawrence

Hos-

at Edgewater

Day)

(Mother’s

pital, Chicago. The infant has two
brothers, Michael, 6, and Stephen,
4: and one sister, Sharon, 2.

Maternal

grandparents

are

Dr.

Chiand Mrs: David H. Ascher,
cago. Paternal grandmother is Mrs.
Otto Levin, also of Chicago.

TO

BIDDERS

Sealed proposals will be received by the
City Council on Monday, June 8, 1959, until 12:00 Noon
C.D.S.T.
in the Council
Chamber at the City Hall, 1707 St. Johns
Avenue for the furnishing of:
A Surety Bond
for the City Treasurer
of the
City
of Highland
Park,
Lake
County, Illinois,
and, at that time will be publicly opened
and read.
Specifications
and
proposal
forms
are
available at the office of the City Clerk,
City Hall, Highland Park, Illinois and all
proposals shall be submitted upon the forms
so provided.
The Council, at a subsequent meeting will
award a bid to the lowest and best bidder.
Further, Council reserves the right to reject any or all bids, to waive any informalities in bids and to readvertise.
ROY MILLEN
City Clerk
5 /21-28/59—144

“low-

“Fashion

VALLEY

RD.,

HIGHLAND

TRUCKS...THEY

COST

LESS,

DOLLARS

0

ios ORY

---- MARGE

DID

SENSE
DIDN'T

HIGHLAND PARK
SAVINGS « LOAN

SNVINGS 447
SAFETY OF
YOUR SAVINGS

Security —

PARK

TOO!

ne
x

ASSOCIATION

INC., 680 SKOKIE

STUDEBAKER

en eee sy
Wet

the hospital in the past year.
Mrs. Harrington Yost, 1691 Sun-

Fort Sheri-

Recreation

1110

than

for

Don Skrinar, Highwood director
of recreation, received similar
award for his cooperation and help
in allowing troops to meet at High-

1811

THE

hae

thanked in a letter from H. R.
Rodde, formerly of Highland Park
Hospital Foundation, for their more

Discover what you'll save at

SEE

Vv

400 Prospect Ave., chairman

a Girl Scout

V-8's in the Mobilgas Run with 22.28 miles per gallon. And The Lark “6” does
even better. Available as a 2-door and 4-door sedan, hardtop and station wagon.

MOTORS,

Ry aebewareeT
Fy ais

Hosts Girl Scout Council

William

General

awarded

ENJOY A DEMONSTRATION DRIVE TODAY in the V-8 that outscored all

_EDENS

ete
Ty
eat

NOTICE

so-called

the

i Re
ae

WO Sil isp tana

welNeighborhood, May 17 introduced guests and delivered the
of
orhood
Neighb
coming address at Fort Sheridan when North
.
Awards
of
Court
held
the Moraine Girl Scout Council

NOTICE

BY STUDEBAKER

priced” field. Cuts costs of insurance, gas, maintenance! a
approved by Harper’s Bazaar. — Fun-drive it—nowl

ae

&gt;

Prices

.

; 4"

Mrs. Lester Marks,

was

. Lark by Studebaker is America’s
Convenient, stylish, roomy..The
newest sweetheart! (Fastest rising sales curve in the industry) ~ 5
Shorter than most cars, it handles and parks easily, seats six graciously.
—_

Tt

At North Neighborhood Court Of Awards

council.

&gt;

ie)

a

is

sour, COME TQ CARE
for me FAR Ne

CRAMPeT ar en eT

have aided Girl Scout movement
but who are not affiliated with the

DARE to COMPARE.

~

yh

Special recognition was given organizations
and
individuals
who

NOTICE
TO BIDDERS
City of Highland Park
Lake County, Illinois
WATER
DISTRIBUTION
SYSTEM
Sealed proposals will be received by the
City Council at the City of Highland Park,
at the City Hall, 1707 St. Johns Avenue,
Highland
Park,
Illinois, until 8:00
P.M.
Central Daylight
Time,
June
8, 1959, at
which time and place they will be publicly
opened and read aloud, for additions to the
Water Distribution System.
The work comprises the construction of
approximately 2300 linear feet of cast iron
pipe water main complete with meter vault
and other appurtenances.
The
Instructions
to
Bidders,
Proposal,
Form of Bid Bond, Agreement, Specifications, Plans, Form of Performance Bond,
and other Contract Documents may be examined at the office of the City Engineer,
City Hall, Highland Park, Illinois, and at
the office of Greeley and Hansen,
Engineers, 14 East Jackson Boulevard, Chicago
4, Illinois. Copies of these Contract Documents may be obtained from either office
upon the deposit of Twenty-Five Dollars for
each set.
The amount of the deposit will
be refunded if the documents are returned
in good condition within 30 days after the
opening of bids.
Each proposal must be submitted on the
proposal
forms
included
in the Contract
Documents and must be accompanied by a
certified check on a solvent bank or trust
company,
made
payable
to the
City of
Highland Park, in an amount of not less
than 10 per cent of the total bid or by a
bid bond of like amount, on the form set
forth in the Contract Documents, as assurance that the bid is made in good faith.
_The City of Highland Park reserves the
right to reject any or all bids, to waive any
informalities in bids and to readvertise.
BY ORDER OF
THE CITY COUNCIL
CITY
OF HIGHLAND
PARK
By R. W.
Snyder,
City Manager
Dated
May 11, 1959
Highland Park,
Illinois
5/21-28/59—142

the

ee

Barkers

me

retain

Poe

Fort Sheridan

William Blake Barker
Born To R. E. Barkers

clothes

7)

St. Johns

MEMBER

OF

Service —

Ave.

THE

SAVINGS

Satisfaction Since 1888

Highland
AND

LOAN

Park

ID 2-0361

FOUNDATION,
Thursday,

May

INC.
28,

1959

5

�BN
y AK

CR i ee
Sie sadat Pyfo
tipe |
4

aS

Sie ANS

One Flight—Fr om
rahe
‘a
;

7

:

a; ra

H

eis

ae

eh

ae

nh

&gt;

3

.

Sn

:

7

ighland Park City Hall To Florida
ee

ree

m

LOOK

WHAT

31

995

BUYS

AT

the Plaltliio suburban
3-PIECE REDWOOD
BAR-B-Q SET... 6’ LONG

full six-foot length

* complete with 2 separate benches
*

A

a

Among

the 30 members

of Composite

Company

9-15,

Great

Lakes—naval

reserve

$32.00

VALUE!

officers

Glenview.

Edwards Jr. and
left to right, are

Front

row,

from

left, are

Commander Warner M. Washburn, Captains Harry C.

Anthony F. Nosek (Bannockburn), and Commander
Commanders Robert E. Carroll (Deerfield),
Ralph

James C. Boyden. Top row,
E. Pottker and
Warren
C.

Zellmer.
L. R. Guentzes Name
Their Daughter Mary

skokie highway,

highland

ID 2-7077

ID 2-8456

or

Y»

|

park

open every day including sundays 9 a.m. to 9:30 p.m.

Mr.
and
Mrs.
Louis
Robert
Guentz
of Freemanstur,
IIll., announce
the birth
April
21
of a
daughter, Mary Katherine, in Car-

ondale,

redwood

the rcjtift]) suburban
1672

+

kiln-dried

* built for rugged outdoor use

from Lake County who spent Thursday, Friday, Saturday and Sunday at Fleet Sonar School, Key
West, Fla., were these seven area men. Highland Park take-off point was City Hall, flight take-

yoff,

certified

* seats up to ten adults

$399

Ill.

Maternal
grandmother
is Mrs.
Margaret
O’Brien
of Geneva,
II.
‘Paternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Louis. E. Guentz,
599 Vine
Ave.
Mr.
Guentz
is a graduate
of
Highland
Park
High
School
and
recently graduated from Southern
Illinois University in Carbondale,
‘Il.

ews

Drive Carefully — The Life You Save
May Be Your Own!
PER SQ. YD.

Carpets

" Edens near Tower
Open

VE 5-2400

Monday through Saturday,
Evenings by Appt.

9

to

5

Stock up now...
SAVE IN WARDS
BLANKET
LAYAWAY SALE!

SLADERSTAZION CO.

CRAKE HEMTALS EXCAVATING
ETRUCKIRG BIGHLAND PARK LL,
AOR WALLOON 83785

Buy those fine blankets you've needed
now, at a savings...

.

Put just 50c down

+ And Wards will hold them for you 'til

Nov. 1, when you need them. Shop now.

100% ORLON
Plaid pattern.

BLANKET
Nationally

94
10

adv. price, 13.95. Now...

HEIRLOOM BEDSPREAD
Twin or full size. Nationally
advertised, 16.95; now...

oe

@
@
@

|

EXCAVATING
GRADING
ROADS
@

CRANES

ID 2-3785
Thursday,

May

28, 1959

AUTOMATIC BLANKET
Acrilan blend. Save $6 on

@ WRECKING
@® DRIVEWAYS
@ PARKING LOTS
RENTED

GLADER &amp; TAZIOLI
EXCAVATING CO.

94
12
94
23

single-control, twin size...

Your Copy of
Our Summer
Sale Book!!
1854 FIRST ST.
HIGHLAND
PARK

ID 2-8830
Page

25

�day Low Fhices On Your Everyday Needs ®3
HOLIDAY
INDOORS

Whether you choose a regular smoked ham or a quick

FOR YOUR CONVENIENCE
YOUR FRIENDLY JEWEL
FOOD STORE WILL BE...
E

i

HORMEL READY-TO-SERVE
a ams
:

oat

SHANK HALF

N

to eat.

:

Shop at Jewel this week . . . the friendly folks there wa
to have a part in making this Memorial Holiday the most pleasant

49:

your memory.

PREMIUM

SMOKED .....

HAMS

EVENING

28 &amp; 29 'TIL

9 p.m.
MEMORIAL

Ib

SWIFT

FRIDAY
CLOSED

cooking ‘ready to serve ham” set your oven at 325. Bake till the me
thermometer reaches. 160 for regular hams or 145 for ready to se
hams, which, you see, really do require cooking before they're goc

10 TO 14 LB. SIZE

THURSDAY

MAY

FEAST=
OR OUT

BUTT PORTION

*°:

LB. 45¢

DAY

Check Lidl For Feeotca 1

Tater (beng Some Y [hese /

Jell-O sen",

@ 1 |Ye

Angelus Marshmallows ‘2 19
Libby’s Beans Vii".
Realemon
c

Juice
&amp;

%:

‘ene
a

�w

3a

~

eo

ad

Poa 4

Ls

Hawaiian

Punch

_ Wisk Detergent

°° 342 $]00

Hamburger

« 59-

8¢ OFF
LABEL

19

or 39x

—G.0.S. Suiett
Hunt’s Tomato Juice

Hot Dog

%. 10:

19:

:
Strawberries

Brown

Paper

Pickles

Tableclot

Plain, Kosher p+,
or

PICNIC

TIME

Dill

jar

Pkg

of 2

qt.
lar

reg.
2/49¢

y2

14 oz.
btls.

Sandwich Cremes ©, %”

DEWKIST-FROZEN

39:

a

CHERRY
VALLEY

Heinz Ketchup

Guuilild
Frew one 2

i

JEWEL

Buns i&gt;

Salad Dressing

Campbell’s Soup 3273'S" 39:
Ma

Buns

Premium Mustard
Morton

‘:

‘df

Salters

Domino Sugar

re
HANDI
PACKS

Hae 0 Blah Busy /
ROOT

‘

Highland

Park

isa SPRAY

ranberry Sauce

er
2, Alc Che
FLORIENT
ae

Roll

Waldorf Tissue
Dash

LABEL

Controlled

Sudser

c

33c

. ;a

2 i. 63° por

Dri . Glo Poli‘sh

can

‘“"

79

6 °syOz. 49 c

c
4.38 Oz.
can 49

Copper Cleaner

res. of Be

Ivory Flakes

2

Lge.
Pkgs.

69¢

4 Rolls

bois Sane

"

tse,

65

Pkg.b

2.09

co

vee

Floral Room Deodorant

a

ig Cans
Sang

ASSORTED COLORS

OFF"

Paper Napkins |

|
“3¢ OFF” LABEL

SCOTT
Jumbo Towels

“25¢

Hudson

Beverages

BROADCAST
;

1826 N. SECOND | TRYPreITtWITHBooFRIEDt CHICKEN

OTHERS

Yummy

ee

Visit Your Friendly Jewel At

BEER AND

Ivory Liquid Detergent

72.07 69¢

| ‘

Joy Detergent

22 Or

Scie eum Seon

1h

American Family Flakes
iitiae Tetnity Metergent

$2"
Soe.

ct
Tide

2

Fe

�Fee

it

een

Barth 3, Susan Bass 3, Michael Baumann 1,
Richard
Bernstein
4,
William
Bevan
1,
Robert
Bittner
4,
Georgiana
Boren
1,
Louise Bradt 3.
Lynnette Carey 4, Giselle Chesrow 4, Anita Clair 3, Stephen Cohen 4, Kenneth Cousens 2, David Cowan 1, Connie Crabb 2,
Anthony Davis 1, Sidra DeKoven 3, Karyn
Domoracki
2.
Rona Echt 1, Kathryn Edmonds 2, Susan
Ekelman
1, Robert Engelman
3, Kenneth
Epstein 2, Greta Fell 3, Timothy Fiocchi 2,
John Fox 3, Erwin Freund 3, Arthur Friedman 2, Randy Gabel 1, Kenneth Gaines 2,
John Gidwitz 4, Barry Gilbert 2, Jean Goldberg 3, Robert Gordon
1, Michael Gottfried
1, James
Gray 2, Steven Gross
1,
John
Halperin
1, Susan
Hemmingway
1,
John Henderson 2, Mary Henderson 3, Susan Hirschfelder 2, Gary Hogrefe 1.
Christian Isely 1, Alan Jacobson 2, Martin Johnson
1, Steve Kadison
1, Frances
Kahn 2, Barbara Klevs 4, Linda Larner 1,
John
Lawrence
1, JoAnn
Lee
2, Frank
Lennox 2, Nancy Leonard 2, Barbara Lerner 3, Anne
Lev 3, Michele
Lichter
1,
Jerry Liebling 2, Elizabeth Little 1.
Carole Magnus 1, Georgia Marks 1, Judson Marshall 4, Rebecca Miller 1, Gail Mortimer 3, William Olson 2, Anne O’Neal 4,
David
Pepperberg
1, Thomas
Phelan
2,
Robert Picker 1, Jane Rademacher 3, Gershon Ratner 3, Ann Reinach 4, Joy Reznick 3, Jeffrey Robertshaw 1, Lucy Rogers
2, Randy Rosner 2, Barbara Rubenstein 3,
Diane Rubin 3, Burton Ruder 1.

s..

ars

are announced by administrative office.
Honor roll is based on the

a

following point system:

A—3

points;
B—2
points;
4—0
points. First honors indicate 10
points earned for 4 solids; 12
points for 5 solids. Second hon-

ors show 8 points for 4 solids;
10 points for 5 solids.
Students

Here’s

What

Our

Box

Storage

Service

Means

to You!

Everything you send beautifully cleaned, carefully stored and
immediately insured.
Fill the box we furnish with all the woolens
you want returned clean in the Fall. Of course, you pay nothing ‘til
_ garments are returned.

- Our

Usual

Low

Cleaning

Charges

Will

Be

Added

to

Storage

Earning

Ist Honors

5 Solids:
Jennifer Dubach
4, Barbara
Gans 4, Joslyn Green 3, Scott Hermann 3,
Kay Herzog 3, Michaele Hicks 2, Cynthia
Jacob 4, David Klorfine 2, Martha Lansman 4, Jeffrey Levinger 4, Henry Lowe 2,
Susan Maxwell 4
Jill Nathanson
3, Heidemarie
Rupp
2,
Nancy
Silverman 3, Benjamin
Stackler 2,
M. Elizabeth Stearns 4, Rena Wadt 3.
4 Solids: Roseann Albert 4, Eugene Altman 4, Alice Asher 1, Stephen Atlas 1, Joanne Austin 2, David Barnaby 3, Mary Lou

North

Cost!

Shore’s

SUNNY
DAY

Finest

ACRES

CAMP—AGES

41-12

Located in nearby NORTHBROOK
All activities on our grounds
Athletics

¢

Archery
°¢ Horseback Riding
Fishing—on our grounds
e DELUXE SWIMMING POOL
¢ HOT LUNCHES — served in our dining
Bowling

°¢

For Information—Call

y

hall

2-2450

or RO

1-0649

(Advertisement)

No Mosquitoes

Serving the North Shore Over 60 Years

CR

for this Garden

Party

Phone Today . . . ID 2-455]

2226

Green

Bay Rd., H.P. —

AMPLE

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PARKING

"Ws another “FIRST” at HAGERSTROM!
SOOO

THE

OHOOPH

OHH

CH

ALOE

LATEST

CASUAL
COMFORT.

PANT

ARM

HEOE

0008

IN

¢(ERTS

{AW AO
GACY,

CHAIR

| (SESS

$29.95 | XG

3

Mosquitoes
since

at North

Household

Pest

Shore garden

new fogging equipment

into fresh, modern,

into operation.

Household
Phone

pink, yellow, and turquoise.

Hillcrest

Make

TABLE
SESE

EES

We’re Open SUNDAYS 1

to 6 p.m.

_ Milwaukee Ave., 2 blk. N. of Dundee Rd., Wheeling, III.)
Daily 9 to 6

PARKINGistieestigg
SPACE
PLENTY

We Foes

a

Schechter

1, Su-

Earning

2nd Honors

its

Week

Gregory

Francis

Joins

Francis E. Weeg
Gregory

Family

Francis was born to the

Francis E. Weeg family, 1460 Ferndale Ave., at Lake Forest Hospital
on April 28. Gregory has two sisters, Kathleen Jo, 6, and Jeanne
Ann, 5.

a ¢

your dreams come true

|,
|

ORDER

THESE

VY

Superbly-Install

FEATURES

VY

Workmanship

UY

Luxury

Including

COMPLETELY
Automatic

Constant

Filter and

Circulation

of

Living

at Budget

Swimming

Y

cation
A Beautiful Va
low

as

No

Money

Own
Spot ! n Your

FOR

CONFIDENTIAL

CALL
for
(i

Down

Back

Yard

APPOINTMENT

LI 2-7420 OR WRITE JANE

JAYNART, INC.

INSTALLED!
Skimmer

Prices

(if desired),

ing
Excellent Financ

Water

of Co mmunity

Concrete

cal Reliable Firm
by a Lo
anteed
Fully Guar
an d Material

Y

as

Reinforced

ed

$1995 °°

NOW!

TOF
Hazards

VY

begin

Are HERE!

Installatio n—

manent

CHECK

Prices

ED

ADVERTIS

LY

POOLS

Custom aun
Freedom from

Y

|
|

You'll find a wonderland of beautiful gifts in the
Hagerstrom Studio and Patio Showrooms!

|M HOURS ‘ Thursday
Ridey 1 “tilte 69

Days

AL
AT LAST..-- NATION

foesfe
COFFEE

put

One treatment the day of your party

AQUA

SOCCCEOCEHOE

has

2, Lynn

“GET IN THE SWIM!”

BE
4yfyjyjp
|
OTTOMAN
$11.95

of the past

Exterminators

7

e Exclusively Styled @ Versatile

eoeeos

a thing

Students

Pest Control

fam

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we

become

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STRAIGHT
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of

Sandy

5 Solids: Elizabeth Eyles 4, Robert Joseph 3, Jillian Krueger 3, Nancy Neal 2,
Gregory Norwell 3, Elisabeth Smith 3, Jane
Stallmann 3, Lois Steel 2, Allan Weitzenfeld 4, Bruce Winograd 2.
4 Solids: Roger Adam 1, Michael Addison 4, Richard Albin 4, Lawrence Alschuler 4, Frederick Asher 4, Frederick Baker 4,
David Baltimore 3, Sharon Baum
1, David Bellamy 2, David Benson 1, Susan Berger 3, Michael Bergman 1, Samuel Bernardi
4, Penny Berning 3, Lawrence Bernstein 1,
Charles Bierfeld 2, Joan Bixby 1.
Kay Blosten 1, Stephanie Brent 2, Carol
Bronson
2, Hope
Brown
3, Mary
Ellen
Brown 2, Lois Buchman 3, Ernest Carani 2,
William
Cargill 2, Stephen Carl 1, Lawrence Carlson 1, Dolores Casorio 4, William
Casselman
4,
Pattee
Cohen
1,
Charles
Cowan 3, Mary Ann Credi 2.
Timothy Dawe 1, Marcia Dicus 4, Kathlyn Domoracki 2, Paula Eisen 2, Thomas
Elias 1, Eric Engberg 4, Susan Epstein 3,
Alan Exelrod 2, Phoebe Fabricant 4, John
Farr 4, Barbara Fiedler 1, Elisabeth Field 1,
Joan Fingold 1, Jill Frank 1.
Edward Gamson 2, Lois Gamson 4, Judith
Gans 1, Don Geman 2, Joyce Geminer 1,
Edward Gibbs 3, Alexandra Gilden 4, Joel
Glass 1, Martin Gmeiner 4, Lewis Goldstein
1, Barbara Gollub
1, Charles Gordon 3,
Leonard
Gorenstein
1, James
Gottlieb 2,
Carol Gould 4, Harvey Gould
1, Robert
Gould 2, Martha Graham 3, Susan Graham
2, Steven Greenfield 3, Robert Grossman 2.
Matthew Hall 1, Judith Hammerman
2,
Star Hanck 4, Tom Hargreaves 1, Florence
Harmon 2, Glenn Harris 1, Kathleen Haugh
2, Patricia Helding 1, Carol Herman 3, Lee
Hesler 3, Mary Hexter 2, James Holbrook
3, Robert Hollmann 3, Joseph Hurst 2, Ellen Hussong 4.
Susan Johns 1, Hunter Johnson 1, James
Johnson 4, Ron Joseph 1, Susan Joseph 4,
Rebecca Kahn 4, Margaret Kehrwald 3, David Klein 4, James Knoll 3, Kent Lawrence
1, Pamela Lenzi 4. Joel Lewitz 1, Constance
Linari 4, Arnold Litteken 3, Ann Looby 1.
Daryl MacIntire 2, Gloria Madian 1, Lynn
Maestri 2, Eva Maiorano 1, Susan Mann 3,
Allan March 4, Allan Marcus 4, Lynn Marcus 1, Sheldon Margulies 1, Robert Markey
1, John
Markoff
1, Richard Marshall
1,
June McGhie 3, James McGregor 1, Mike
McLaughlin
1, Richard
Meyers
3, Susan
Mordini 3, Dorothy Morris 3, Lynn Moses
1, James Murtfeldt 1.
Kathleen Najowski 1, Robert Neiman 4,
Frances Nelson 2, Gerhart Netzer 1, John
Newmann
4, Suzanne
Newton
1, Harry
Oppenheimer 4, Patricia Oswald 1, Norman
Parker 3, Susan Parker 4, Barbara Patterson
3, Kenneth Pedersen 3, Adrienne Pedrucci
3, Judith Peterson 1, Barbara
Phillips 4,
Roberta Pollock 3, Susan Price 3.
William
Ramsey
1, James
Reinish
1,
Frank Riback 3, Robert Rigler 1, Stewart
Rodman 2, David Rosenfield 1, Joan Rothenberg 1, Nancy Saletra 1, Trudy Sammet
2, Donna Schmidt 1, Betty Seltzer 1, Ann
Seyfarth 4, Ann Shapiro 1, Michael Shaw
4, Peter Shaw 1, Flora Shriver 4, Judith
Singer 1, David Slevyan 3, Stephanie Soubie 2, Paul Strub 1, Betty Swigart 3.
Lee Tabin 3, Steve Tatar 4, Judy Tondi 3,
Patricia Ugolini 3, Carl Urist 1, Margaret
Vance 2, Martha Wagner 1, William Walker
2,
Michael Walton
3, Rosalie Ward
4.
Barbara Weigle 3, Linda Weil 4, Thomas
Weinberg
1, Rachel
Weisbard
1, Nancy
Weisbard
4, Ann
Winkley
2, Mary
Beth
Winter 2, Alan Wolf
1, Laurence Yellen
3, Robert Zartler 1, Donna Zeff 3.

pests that invade our homes. HPC chemicals are safe for poeple . . . murder
for insects. The HPC plan is inexpensive, too.

casually comfortable furniture.
Available in white, green,

7
4
J

parties have

division

Robert

zanne Schechter 4, Marie Schilling 3, Geri
Schinder 4, Joy Schlesinger 1, James Sebben 2, Susan Shurberg 1, Richard Sklar 3.
Jan Slater 2, Allan Stern 1, Neil Stone 1,
Thomas
Stone
3, Anna
Tatar
2, David
Temkin 2, Katharine Thomas 2, Carol Turner 3, John Warton
1, William Weiss 1,
Jeffrey
Weissman
1, Laurel
Whitted
1,
Peter Williams 3, Janice Young 1, Richard
Zwirner 2.

does the job, won’t harm flowers or shrubbery but kills mosquitoes. HPC also
has a special plan that brings sudden death to ants, moths, spiders, waterbugs,
carpet beetles, roaches and all the other annoying and damage-dealing insect

Magical plastic cord and
handsome tubular metal
designed

Control

oo

© OOD

ane

‘By Administrator

Highland Park Honor Roll Announced
“Honor Roll” students at
Highland Park High School
for the fifth six-weeks period

iiss ene

LIBERTYVILLE,

AT

p. 0. Box 376
ILLINOIS

_ Chicagoland's largest selection of Weathervanes and House Sigas'
Thursday,

May

28,

1959

or

A

Page 28

ARs

i

�‘

ar Pe

ee
Aaa
mE AY

Se

a

epee
Pca
oh ity

se

Tra
AN
Bat

:2

y

——
pieNS ventas
Lae .
ae

MAYORS INVITED
TO WAUKEGAN
CENTENNIAL
Mayor Robert S. Cushman, Highland Park, and Mayor John Frantonius, Highwood, will be among
guests of honor at Waukegan Centennial celebration next month.

June

20

has

been

designated

“Take County Day” and representatives from all communities in the

\

Highland Parker
Appears In Play,
‘Brave New World’
Mrs.

Irwin

Kramsky,

1699

of

Schmidt,

played the role of

Miss Foster, superintendent of the
Fertilizing Room where babies are
conceived and “decanted” — born

county have been invited to the
celebration.
Waukegan’s 100th birthday party
will be an 11-day-long celebration

tion of Aldous Huxley’s novel about
man’s future social behavior as he

which begins June 19. There will
be a seven night pageant in musi-

mass. population.

cal comedy form about the town’s
history; two water shows featuring
Cypress Gardens’ water ski team
and the Flying Boatmen of Knox-

method
values

which utilizes the narrative
of novel
or short
story,

“Brave

New

ville, Tenn.
Jack Benny, internationally famous Waukeganite, plans to return
for festivities.
POLICE

ADVISE

(Continued

be

repaired

lives with

23)

atomic

and

the

child

Forest

business

Daughter,
To

W.

Mary

J.

of

Schmidt,
for

who

a year

scholarship,

was

ap-

18

studied

on

in

a Fullbright

one

of the

Niko-

Fantastic Results
Lasts Days! Even

Through

was

Opportunity

directed

Jr.

of

knocks

CHARTER

2017

FOR

pay

day

BUSES

Churches —

ANY

INSECTS &amp;
RODENTS

WI

has three

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7 Days A Week

TRANSIT,

PARK

INC.

Deerfield

standing in water!
Lectro-Matic cleans your sewer

New Du Pont

and

LUCITE ACRYLIC
HOUSE PAINT
LASTS 50%
LONGER

Kim

Officer and Mrs. W. J. Baruffi,
1233 Woodruff Ave., Deerfield, are
parents of a third daughter, Mary
Kim, born May 7 at Highland Park
Hospital. Mary has two sisters, Rita
Marie, 5, and Rose Ann, 4. Grandparents
are the James
Murphys,
1826
Sunset Rd.,
and
Mrs.
Ann
Baruffi, Lake Forest.

Uhlemann’s new
easy-to-wear

WI 5-1749

5-3852

Under New Ownership

Baruffis

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call:

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Our Service

Drivers

For Information

Ave., at the Lake

Clubs

Ask About

OCCASION

Insured

Marie, was born

Couple

every

when you buy U. S. Savings Bonds.

other children: Linda, 5; Joey, 2;
and Donna Jean, 1.
Grandparents are the O. J. Lit-

district,

-

Rain .

Alwin Nicolaid of the dance troupe.

Schools —

Ann

Rd.,

automation.

Simon

Hospital.

parents and bike rider courtesy.

Born

Deerfield

lais dance troupe.
Previously
Miss
Schmidt
had
performed with a group of fellow
music students in a dance satire,
“The
Bewitched,”
choreography
and staging for which was done by

A Daughter, Ann Marie, Is Born
To The Eugene M. Melchiorres

with
cyclists
running
into
and
knocking down women whose arms
were filled with groceries. Those
accidents could have been prevented by the proper instruction from

Third

problems

World”

by Mrs. Lester
Westgate Terr.

When riding on the sidewalk, the
cyclist must exercise due caution
and yield the right of way to all
pedestrians.
Last year, the city had a 100 per
cent increase in bicycle-pedestrian

the

and

adapta-

Miss
Europe

A Chamber. Theatre presentation,

CEPT
in the business districts,
where riders must walk their bikes.

in

age

res, 3316 Western

given further training.
Our ordinance permits bicycles
to be operated on sidewalks EX-

accidents

Play is stage

1897

on the Steve Allen TV show.
Her
previous appearance was March 22.

May 10 to the Eugene M. Melchiorpage

ters listing the bicycle’s defects or
the child’s inability to ride safely
are
sent to parents
asking
that

bikes

bottles.

A daughter,

...
from

from

Miss Beverly Schmidt, daughter
Dr.
and
Mrs.
Theodore
W.

peared for the second time May

Elm-

wood Ave., appeared in Friday, Saturday and Sunday performances of
“Brave
New
World”
at
Skokie

Civic Theatre.
Mrs. Kramsky

‘

Highland Parker Appears
2nd Time With Steve Allen

floor

drains

Electrically.

SSHSE

MARK

LASTS

50%

HOUSE

PAINT

LONGER

THAN

REGULAR

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UHLEMANN

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66

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1874 Sheridan
Phone

Rd., Highland

for information
IDiewood

1645 Orrington

2-5150

Avenue,

Evanston

UNiversity 4-3311

Thursday,

May

Park

or appointment

28, 1959

BUY

THE

PAINT

THAT’S

WORTH

THE

WORK

lie.

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Page

29

�Fortunoto

C. R. ANDERSON
INSURANCE

AGENCY, INC.
—

735

Deerfield

BONDS

Piacenza,

87, who

has

daughter

and their families in Highland Park

5-0155

Road,

Fortunoto

Ralph Scornavacco Receives 20-Year Pin

Takes

To Italy

been visiting his sons and

Sound, Experienced Insurance Service

WIndsor

Piacenza

Jet Plane Home

and.

Highwood

jet

Deerfield,

Ill. .

since

August,

Saturday for his home
Italy. He flew on one
planes

from

left

in Modena,
of the new

Chicago

to

Milan.

During his stay here he visited
at the home of his son and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Piacenza, 2698 Logan St. Other children

are

sons,

Angelo,

Sam

and

Dominic in Highwood,
and a
daughter, Mrs. Louis Mansrivna of
Highland Park. He has 13 grandchildren and
in this area.

5 great-grandchildren

Opportunity
when

you

knocks

buy

every

AVOID

TANK

TROUBLES

...

Ralph

| Enzivator

\y
4

2 ays
Sey ae
ey cS
Ths aah?

Pag

stops odors
a liquefies waste
reactivates sluggish tanks

O’Neill’s Ace
1746 2nd

Scornavacco,

assistant

chief

of

Highwood

of-service

pin.

At Scornavacco’s

left is his wife, and

Hardware
ID 2-1150

More
fighters

LoS
2

ners

S

fs

than
85
and their

Highwood
fire
guests attended

the
banquet
held
at the
Highwood fire station May 20. Dinner
was cooked and served by members

Pe pease

ST
sx“10 225inde

Ft

BFS

peek

ge
axel,

Ps ane

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In addition

3337

Sa;
¢ Most Complete Funeral Home
in Metropolitan Area

EES:
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eZ

“7

¢ Perfect accommodations for

small or large attendance

Vow!

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all wool beutiful Holmes wilton
and Guaranteed Mothproof
see new mosaic-inspired “CADENT” in
breath-taking colors at

¢ Parking adjacent to building

From the looms of one of the oldest and finest carpet
weavers, a swirling pattern in two levels of tightly looped
all-wool pile. “Cadent” is timeless, wonderfully suited

to traditional or modern decorative schemes. Its pebbly
texture and sturdy virgin wool defy time and wear...
furthermore it’s guaranteed mothproof for the life of
the carpet! Nine lovely decorator colors... brown, green,
grey, aqua, copper, gold and three lively beiges. Come

in and see this unbeatable carpet value for yourself...

made

by Mrs.

The

of

Charles H. Sheahen,
the

Rev.

Site

Carpet
120

Vee sthees

Bay Road,

Winnetka

Hillcrest 6-3336

Hillcrest 6-6120

Monday and Thursday 9 A.M. to 9 P.M.
Daily 9 A.M. to 5 P.M.

SUBURBAN

PHONE

NUMBER—VErnon

or LOngbeach

5-222]

1-4740

5206 North Broadway, Chicago

-~..tf,

(Just north of Foster)

30

AND

Funeral

Boylan

of

and William

C. Hennig,

fire

marshal and assistant fire marshal
of Highland Park; and Orlando
Rosevear and Dewell Walters, fire
chiefs
of Lake
Forest
and
Fort

Sheridan.

Lt.

Roy

Dransfelt

on

page

rep-

34)

NORTH

SERVICE

and beauty, observing
ritual with reverence.

Chapel:

CNV)

1865

Complete facilities in your community
for prompt service . . . Lee J. Furth,
Jules 1. Furth, and their staff, will
personally arrange and conduct the
entire funeral—a service of warmth

3-5400

Shore

Since

SHORE

Call Midway

South

COMPANY

Directors to the

Jewish Community

2100

East

75th

Street,

customs

and

A Surprise Awaits You If You

at Clyde

THIS

BEAUTIFUL

Green

GARDEN

Reasonable

Bay Rd. &amp; 18th St.

Have

When you move
to town...or to
a new home...
Your

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Very

Page

Duare

Cal

Chicago — La Grange
CARPET EXPERTS AGREE THAT CLEAN CARPET WEARS LONGER!
WE OFFER YOU THE FINEST IN CARPET AND FURNITURE
CLEANING!

E.

tribute to Scornavacco were Joseph

Specialists Since 1920

Green

auxiliary.

Arthur

River Grove sent a congratulatory
telegram, and a message was received
from
Reno
Giangiorgi,
Scornavaceo’s
former
chief,
who
was hospitalized that day.
Among others who attended the

* Funeral consultation and arrangements may be made in your
own home with our North Shore representative.

you'll want a houseful!

oD)

the

to his years-of-serv-

(Continued

BPN Mihas Dheo thir

of the de-

ice pin, Scornavacco was presented
with a special gift by his fellow
firemen, and ladies of the auxiliary
gave him a leather-bound scrapbook inscribed with his name. Presentation
of
the
scrapbook
was
president

"

* Convenient to North Shore
and Downtown Chicago

Auxiliary

partment, who also furnished
lovely floral decoration.

Memorial Chapels

eX

at far right is

Ray Tamarri, Highwood Fire Chief.

of the Ladies

¥e

Volunteer

Fire Department, was honored guest at a banquet May 20 tendered by the department in recognition of his 20 years of service.
Mayor John Frantonius (photo above) presents him with his years-

.

oe ee
j Bs

os

ob eg

day

Bonds.

COSTLY

SEPTIC

=

pay

U. S. Savings

Not Visited

CEMETERY

Welcome

Wagon

Hostess will call with a
basket of gifts... and
friendly greetings from
_our religious, civic and
business leaders.
If you,. or others you
know, are moving, be
sure to phone Welcome
Wagon.
Highland Park
Cecile Casey ID 2-0442
Deerfield: Bannockburn
Adalyne Sickel
WI 5-1210

Prices
Phone

DE 6-6500
Thursday,

May

28,

1959

�ers
chan:
7"

With

Memorial

coming

up,

¥

different

has

Mrs.

For

on

the

a

un-|{

lift up

your

heads

and

:

Junior
class is equally
happy,
however,
due
to the
success
of
“Bali
Ha’i’—the
Junior
Prom.
Everyone was impressed by the fine
music of Dick Marx and the beautiful decorations due to the efforts
of Sherry Aver and Avram
Root
and others on the decorations committee.
Session

W.

Cruttenden,

viewed

Ralph

Mangino,

seaman,

were

membership

tea

last

And

school

so,

as

draw

May
final

near,

23,

of Mrs.

home

887

ard

two

weeks

may

guile,

of

William

Koretz,

given

by H.

attending

E. Hanson’s

The Want-Ad

a

at

interesting

Bes

sake

ew

ares

ae
54

Ch
as

sc

ome

House of Vision *
Craftsmen

in Optics

WABASH,

CHICAGO
©H.O.V,

_—

ID

Street

HOUSE,

a

ye

CALL

WI 5-1383
HENRY HAKANEN
825

Deerfield Rd., Deerfield

State Farm Mutual Automobile
Insurance Co.
State Farm Life Insurance Co.
State Farm Fire and Casualty Co.
HOME OFFICE—BLOOMINGTON, ILLINOIS

Thursday, May 28, 1959
eee

ae

DELIVERY SERVICE —

nc.

pate.

ae

3-0880

Highland

FRIDAY

MAY

Fi
THE

Park,

608

Illinois

CENTRAL

HIGHLAND

AVE.,
PARK

29

EXCITING

NEW

cedure MOTOR
HOTEL

Situated in the quiet suburban setting of Highland Park, Illinois . . just a few minutes from Chicago's
Loop via expressway... the new Villa Moderne has all of the facilities of a luxurious country club
and the convenience of a metropolitan hotel.

¢ 100 spacious air conditioned sound proof units, including executive and bridal suites ... kitchenette
and studio apartments.

¢ Magnificent
pools.

¢ Five modern and completely functional
meeting, conference and dining rooms
accommodate groups of 10 to 500.

* On site heliport landing field.

¢ Golf. .. riding... badminton
bowling.

¢ Cocktails

in the colorful

FLING.

business
that can

e

outdoor

and

heated

indoor

swimming

THE FOUNTAIN ROOM ...
overlooking the outdoor pool... where dining is a gourmet's delight.

i

.... shuffleboard...

setting of the H/GHLAND

¢ The Highland Park Music Theatre with famous stage
and screen stars in Broadway musical productions:

¢ AMPLE

FREE

PARKING.

For information and reservations call Broadway 3-3366 or Vernon 5-4000

Our thanks to the following firms

Burge Ice Machine Co.
654 W. Washington Blvd.
Imperial Restaurant
Co., Inc.

Supply

123 North Desplaines
G. &amp; M. Electrical Contractor
2206 N. Western Ave.
&amp;

Pre-Cast
Inc.

Building

2800 W. 38th St.

2324 W. Ogden Ave.
Louis Gaile Plastering Co.
4922 Altgeld

White Way Electrical Sign Co.
1317 Clybourn

Merchandise

Hamilton Glass Co.
2750 W. Grand Ave.

Morton Textile &amp; Furn.
23 S. Franklin

C. Madsen &amp; Co.
2737 N .Clybourn

Co.

Duo

Plaza

Hardware

Bed

850 N. Michigan

Doetsch Bros.
35 E, Palatine Rd.

The Wall-Fill Co.
Sliding Glass Doors
39 S. La Salle St.

Blvd.

Howell

Anthony Dvorak
3843 N. Kedzie

Radio Corp. of America
Mart

Esko Roofing Co.
2651 W. Washington

302 N. Ada St.

5325 W. Touhy Ave.

Tile Co.

A. H. McGrew Lumber Co,

Sections,

Bobbe &amp; Co.
911 W. North Ave.

Ravenswood

Thos. H. Litvin Plumbing Co.

Standard Securities
“Manaqement Corp.
69 W Washinaton St.

for their help in building the beautiful new Villa Moderne Motor Hotel.

6250 Broadway

H. G. Prizant &amp; Co.
3508 North Clark St.

FOR INSURANCE

“Everything for the
Table”

&lt;=

General Contractor
Morris Handler &amp; Co., Inc.
2720 West Chicago Ave.

INSURANCE

QUALITY
,
MEATS and GROCERIES

10% Down
Bal. 18 Mos.

*

Interior Desiqn
Marion Heuer
20 East Cedar

FARM

it!

*395°
tHE BOAT

Architects &amp; Engineers
Evdnev H. Morris &amp; Assoc.
134 North La Salle St.

STATE

oppor-

|
oe pe ea
wae MI le
aeegy
4 Ls
1
ee

1891 SHERIDAN ROAD
HIGHLAND PARK
135 NORTH

miss

golden

:

lenses ?

For the answer to your questions about contact lenses—
write for our new booklet.

Don’t

and

©

of

‘contact

continued research.

facts

SPECIAL

OPENING

TGF

See your eye physician
(M.D.) first. If he says
you can wear them—
H.O.V. has all the newest
types. Get the benefit
of our 20 years of
pioneering and

Virginia

is directed
870 Broad-

section is filled with

look
First

and

AnJim

ar

C\

ay

Mathe

Motor

a

But all agree that it will take many

Larry

tunities.

6 h.p. Mercury

1848

20)

Julie

Martineau,

12’ Fiberglass
Car Top Boat

and the
had.

page
and

FISHING

Ses-

By Monday morning, only effects
of the Prom remaining were headaches, eye bags and empty wallets.

Cherie

Freund,

But
that
was
Saturday
night.
Sunday morning found the Junior
boys and their dates at the home
party
sion.

Thomas

Lee Garino. The band
by Mrs. Louis Garino,
view Ave.

White,

C.

Azzi,

from

the
at

Thursday

Ogden

1959.

we

by

guests

Band

(Continued

Forest.

USN,

aboard
the Pacific Fleet attack
carrier, USS Midway, operating out
of Alameda, Calif.
to forget

made

and

son of the Ralph L. Manginos, 560
Chicago Ave., is serving as a cook

years

articles

handicapped
the

back on a year well spent
many good times we have

Party

pled,

Lake

shout

“‘We’re going to graduate soon,’”
the beginning of June means their
dreams have come true.

Walter

Accordion

Bob-O-Link Rd., and Mrs. J. Jerome
Miller,
1400
Hill Ave., are
members of Chicago Aides for the
Handicapped.
The organization, affiliated with
Illinois Association for the Crip-

weekend
taken

atmosphere.

Aide To Handicapped Group
Holds Membership Tea

derclassmen it means final exams,
|!
report cards and summer vacations.
But for seniors, who
have
been|}
singing, “When
you’re down
and

out,
od

Day

school

Cook Por Co rrier
SENN,

Hyland Electrical Co.
623 W. Madison St.
ayaa

MOTOR HOTEL
At Skokie Highway-Lake Cook RoadEdens Expressway.
Pat Miller, General Manager

[i

v3

�gba
eR

$399

‘TUFTED BROADLOOM

pe
Edens

Monday through Saturday,
Evenings by Appt.

Giant

PER SQ. YD.

VE 5-2400
9 to 5

Staff

is

headed

need.

Munski,
by

Hope

Lit-

1960,

is

publiBrown

DeKoven.

Other
staff members
include
Lois Buchman, business manager;
Sue Epstein, Bobby Pollack, senior
editors;
Nancy
Silverman,
Jody
Green, copy editors; Clarence Redfaculty

editor;

Jeff

girls
sports;
Louise
freshman editor; Melody

sophomore

of

School

staff,

Dembo,

photography; Avram Root, art editor; Bobby Schwartz, Anita Clair,
organizations; Sue Mann, activities;
Lee Tabin, boys sports; Anne Lev,

ORIGINAL

time

High

Robert

and three associate editors, Fred
Rickles, Jane Stallman and Sidra

man,

In

Park

Yearbook

announced by John
cations adviser.

Carpets

near Tower
Open

Highland
tle

editor;

and

lLandreth,
Reichman,

Pat Dwyer,

on

Oakes

Ave.,

licity

Jordan,

recently

Club

of

929

Mari-

addressed

Pub-

Chicago

at

eon meeting in Wabash
the Palmer House.

a lunch-

Room

tor of the development, Channel 11
TV, presented a slate of officers for
the

coming

dan

was

year,

after

introduced

which

by

junior

editor.

In order to become a staff member students must have attended at
least 75 per cent of the eight training meetings. Major positions were
elected by those who attended the
meeting.

DIRT
(Screened,

3019 West Peterson Road

aa
tL

uya

Adjacent

parking for

HERSHEY WEINSTEIN, President
RONALD E. SCHWARZBACH,

ID 2-0850

Cars...

Funeral Director

more

Piled)

MENONI
&amp; MOCOGNI
2200 Skokie Hwy., Highland Park

over 200

LAURIE WEINSTEIN, Funeral Director

Stock

CALL....

LOngbeach 1-1890

Car

Longer wheelbase. Bigger car. All this at no extra cost:

wall-to-wall carpeting; self-adjusting brakes; larger, more
luxurious interiors. Big-car ‘feel’ and ride.

:

Jor-

William

Humphreys,
Chicago,
program
chairman.
Jordan explained industrial uses
(Continued on page 33)

and Sons inc.

minutes from the North Shore

of

Edward Morris of Chicago, president of the organization and direc-

es

...adewish Funeral Chapel only

James Pollak

R. O. Jordan Speaks
Before Publicity Club

Staff Of Year
Book Announced

&gt;

,
(

Elected President,
HPHS Senior Class
James Pollak was elected president of Highland Park High School
senior class, 1960, at annual all
school elections held May 13. Serving with him as senior officers will
be Grant Abrahamson, vice presisecretary;
dent; Mary Henderson,
Robert Gagen, treasurer; and Carol
Katzman, social chairman.

a~

er
/

Other class and extra-curricular
officers for the coming school year
are listed below:
Junior
Class:
Jeff
Leckie,
president;
Lucy Rogers, vice president; Lynette Maestri, secretary; Susan Hirschfelder, treasurer,
and Nancy Zacharias, social chairman.
presiBurton Ruder,
Class:
Sophomore
dent; John Warton, vice president; Susan
McLaughlin,
Michael
secretary;
Siegel,
treasurer; and Jeanne Hurvitz, social chairman.
Bachle,
William
Seniors:
Club:
Boys’
Daniel Demichelis, Robert Giangiorgi, Eric
GamEdward
Goodman, Robert Hollmann;
son, Pat Hayward, Robert Kaplan and Mark
Panther, sophomores.
Girls’? Club: Judy Tondi, president; Greta
secreMary Hexter,
Fell, vice president;
tary; Barbara Sturm, treasurer; Lillian VanHammerman,
Judith
oni, social chairman;
publicity chairman.’
Varsity Club: Daniel Pollack, president;
Robert Engelman, vice president; Bruce Anderson, secretary; Alan Frost, treasurer; and
Bruce Miller, social chairman.
Highland Park Girls’ Athletic Association:
Suellen Bilow,
president;
Jean Goldberg,
vice president; Betty Seltzer, secretary; Judy
Gans, treasurer; Helen Warner, social chairman; and Aviva Holland, publicity chairman.
Garrick Club: David Kleiman, president;
Dorie
president;
vice
Reichman,
Melody
treasNelson,
Frances
secretary;
Gilden,
chairman.
social
Edmonds,
urer; and Cathy
Walter Peters, presiBoys’ Rifle Club:
dent; Don McAvoy, vice president; James
Sebben, secretary-treasurer.
presiScience Club: William Davidson,
dent; Joy Schlessinger, vice president.
AuerBand: Dan Harris, president; Gary
| bach, vice president; Frank Lennox, secretary; Ed Sheftel, treasurer; Elizabeth Swit | gart, social chairman.
presiSue Overman,
Girls’ Rifle Club:
dent; Pam Krueger, vice president; Paula
Israel, secretary-treasurer.
presiJensen,
Lance
Club:
Archeology
dent; Jo Ann Lee, vice president; Kathleen
Haugh, secretary; Mary Ellen Brown, treasurer.
Creative Arts Club: Avram Root, presipresident;
Wishnick, _ vice
Barbara
dent;
Dorothy Diver, secretary; Linda Beauchamp,
secding
treasurer; Sue Shurberg, correspon
:
retary.
president;
Charles Cowan,
Bridge Club:
Harvey Ring, vice president; Nancy Silverman, secretary-treasurer; and Paul Kentor,
tournament director.
Orchestra: Frank Riback, president; Rich
Rahn, vice president; Elizabeth Field, secEd
and
treasurer;
Zahnle,
retary; Doris
Sheftel, social chairman.
Stage Crew: Michael Freedenberg, presivice presi(Cole) Hollenback,
Jim
dent;
dent; Howard Wax, secretary; and treasurer
to be re-voted.
Pep Club: Barb Thiele, president; Valerie
Magnus,
Carol
president;
vice
Sedgwick,
secretary-treasurer; Rita Ronzani, publicity;
and
chairman;
social
Harmon,
Florence
Barbara Weigle, senior class representative.
will
tives
representa
sophomore
and
Junior
be re-voted.
presiGlathart,
Elizabeth
Library Board:
dent; Scott Herrmann, vice president; Julienne Paquette, secretary; Carolyn Egbert,
Joanne Hall, Merry Sosnay and three to
be selected to executive board.
Mathematics Club: John Vollertsen, prespresident;
vice
Gottfried,
Michael
ident;
Randy Gabel, secretary-treasurer.
selected
be
will
Officers
Club:
Triad
Daniel
Gorner,
Peter
Bass,
Susan
from
and
Harris, Barbara Isely, Merrel Keyes
Priscilla White.

~

First Child Born
To Romano Oris

Mr.

ess money

Mrs.

Mr.
and

and Ford, two V-8 engines and Economy Six operate best
on regular gas. Edsel saves you money
when you buy it...when you drive it!

and

Mrs.

The king-size value now in the low-price field.

YOUR

LOCAL

EDSEL

DEALER

Edsels are also at many Mercury dealers

of

Mrs.

Aurillo

Ori,

421

Central

Ave.

LAWN-BOY
.

By

Makers

of:

Johnson-Evinrude
AS ADVERTISED IN

LIFE* LOOK

Saturday

poesT

Power Mower Exchange
Highest Trade-In Allowances

COAST TO COAST STORES
Market Square

Page 32

421

F. S. Lampert

Bvening

SEE

Ori,

Romano

Deerfield. are maternal grandparents. Paternal grandparents are Mr.

Now priced down with many models of Plymouth, Chevrolet

Edsel

and

Central Ave., became parents April
27 of their first child, a daughter,
Ramona Ann. The infant was born
at Highland Park Hospital.

Lake Forest 3998

Thursday,

May

28, 1959
i

|

OCAPEL

OREN Gr i

AA
ea
a anaes

�iS

dane

NS

AUTHOR,

INVENTOR

(Continued

from

page

sound

and

32)

GET THE FINEST!

idl
of stereophonic

outlined

its entertainment values. To the delight of the audience,
strated
sound
using

pared

by

his

he demontapes
pre-

partner,

James

C.

Cunningham, 771 County Line Rd. | =
and

lips

Tapes

himself.

of Holland

and

made
RCA

for Phil-

featuring

Edward R. Murrow were used.
It was announced
that

Jordan’s

for the totally blind

=SPECIALLY

=—

at the meeting

telephone

TOP

and

deaf

Highwood

Post 4741

Easier

to

Spread

uniform, perfectly processec

MUTUAL

SERVICES OF HIGHLAND PARK, INC.
Phone ID 2-0027

of

the release of his most recent book,
“The Sound of High Fidelity.”

past commander

MACHINE.

MANURE—FERTILIZER

has

pointed out, along with mention

BY

Most

soil obtainable .. . at no extra cost.

invention

been installed in 35 Chicago homes.
His recent
citation for contributions to the blind, previously announced
by the NEWS,
also was

Leo Mordini,

PREPARED

Improves Growing.

SOIL

TT

EAOAEROEAR

OA

|

of Vet-

erans of Foreign Wars, places his commander's cap on Emilio Galassini, commander, who was installed with other post officers,
May 18. Looking on approvingly, from left, are Bruno Amidei,
quartermaster; William

J. Jennings,

adjutant;

and, far right, John

Heick, post chaplain.
Deerfield

Township

Voters

Association

Deerfield Township voters Association is holding its annual meet-

ing

tonight

at 8 p.m.

at Highland

Park Recreation Center.
In addition to electing officers
and executive board members, the
association will consider endorsements for candidates for office of

Meets

Tonight

state’s attorney. Candidates to be
voted upon at June 23 special election are Bruno Stanczak
(R), in-

cumbent,
and Richard
(D), 2660 Roslyn Ln.
Alfred

side

Pl.,

N.

Bederman,

is chairman

G,

Kahn

372

Lake-

of

the

asso-

ciation.

ow can I
learn to pray?

YOU'LL

LOVE

THE

BEAUTIFUL,

NEW

(AS REFRIGERATOR

THE TRUTH IN THIS
GREAT BOOK
wi’
Meee

|

CAN

TEACH

YOU

TRY

TO PRAY EFFECTIVELY

BEFORE

YOU

BUY—

The RCA Whirlpool gas refrigerator of your choice
will be installed in your home for $10 down. If at
the end of 90 days, you're not convinced of its
superior performance, the refrigerator will be removed and your $10 refunded. If you buy the refrigerator, the $10 acts as the down payment. Pay

#-You can learn how to pray, how to com-

mune with God, how to listen for His guidance, if you

will read with an unprejudiced, receptive thought the
truth contained in this great book, Science and Health

with Key to the Scriptures by Mary Baker Eddy.
In the first seventeen pages of the Christian Science
textbook you will find an inspiring explanation of

as little as $8.78 per month for 48 months

(model

no. EGC-9).

prayer. Countless thousands, through the study of this

chapter, have learned how to pray intelligently and
are receiving the answer to their prayers, as evidenced
in improved health, harmony, supply, and well-being.
Find this out for yourself! Read, buy,* or borrow
this book at the Christian Science Reading Room
nearest you. There you can read it, together with the
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COME ... AND LEARN TO PRAY!

Ask about RCA Whirlpool PROOF OF SUPERIORITY at:

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*Science and Health can be purchased in red, green, or blue
binding at $3 and will be sent postpaid by the Reading
Room on receipt of check or money order.

“The Friendly People”

Christian Science
READING
Reg. U.S. Pat. Off,

1773

Second

PETROPOULOS

ROOM

St.

Highland

3440

Park

Information concerning free public lectures, church services and

Sunday School is also available.

rod

¢

Pumenaey,
4

May

28, 1959

Grend

Gurnee

BROS.

HIGHWOOD
2631

RADIO

Wawkegan

Ave.

Highland Park

BE SURE TO ENTER RCA WHIRLPOOL GAS REFRIGERATOR DRAWINGE

ie

�RAVINIA
WASH
592

Roger

resented

Williams

Ave.

2-9771

Complete
and

Service

HOURS...
A.M. to 5:30
Saturday

8:00

A.M.

Closed

police.

were
the Rt. Rev.
Msgr.
James
Gleason and the Rev. James Shea

and the Rev. Darrell
latter two chaplains

Sample, the
of the fire

dini, Dominic Cantagallo, Samuel
Minorini, James Hickey and Jack
Peterson
were
present,
as were

P.M.

4:00

30)

brother, John R. Scornavacco.
Aldermen David Santi, Leo Mor-

...

to
on

Highwood

page

department. Two retired firemen,
Paul Musik and Ole Englund were
present as was the guest of honor’s

Washing

SHIRTS and
DRY CLEANING
8:00

from

Seated at the speakers table also

TUB

IDlewood

Drying

(Continued

P.M.

Wednesday

Raymond

L. Unbehaun,

Dr.

N.

Ray

Tamarri

was

WINDOWS

master

PORCH

AWNINGS

CARL

CALL

US!

ARBOR

AVE.,

MAKES

20th
CENTURY
TV &amp; Radio

COMMUNITY
SERVICE

A. E. Savage,

Owner

Of Boilers or Furnaces

‘Page 34

Mr.
oni,

DEERFIELD

T.

left to

and

a

Lencionis

third

April

Miss

Son

Mrs,

Edward
St., are

son,
23

Dene

at

T.

Lenci-

parents

Michael,

Highland

of

born

Belts

Hand Bound

&amp; Machine Button Holes

Fabric Shop
Evanston

UNiversity 4-3034

science

Conception

School, was in charge of the science
class exhibits. Jose Villa Arce III
originated and directed the exhibit,
assisted by Cavell Thomas, Michael

Taft, Michel Wright, Vito Fiori and

Maternal
grandmother
is Mrs.
Charles Johnson of Deerfield. Pa-

ternal grandfather is Anthony Len-

ton

cioni,

1401 ‘Division

Hospital.

—

WATCH

REPAIR

sons

are

Gary,

18,

St.

was

loaned

by

Highland

Park

&amp;

Call

SHORE-LAND
ELECTRONICS

abalone
HIGHLAND

SHERIDAN
ID

Inspector

PARK,

ILL.

2-2028

for the. North

for the finest in

Western

SERVICE

R.R. |

and

For Your

aE
NEARY

EMER

NW

Nursery

TEE
RN

NN

MATER

WI

5-3600

Repair Work

If no
SC

AN

PR

—

New

Open

Work

685

Dishwashers
Water Heaters

Road

EEE
A

Needs

HAROLD ROOT
PLUMBING CO.

1885

Deerfield

Plumbing
CALL

WI 5-0035
West

Call
VE 5-3100
SHORE-LAND
ELECTRONICS

PLUMBING

Deerfield

Shirts, etc

Tast,

at Immaculate

Bernadette
DeLamar.
Miss
Tast
said students worked six months on
the project displayed at Immaculate Conception School. The skele-

2-1316

Watch

Established

Highland Park

On Linens, Blouses, Sweaters,

of

and

Other

Park

Daniel, 13.

CENTRAL

Office

MONOGRAMMING

is one

Hos-

pital.

F. D. CLAVEY
RAVINIA NURSERIES

CO.

Ty eT TTT T TT TT PELLETLL
DRESSMAKER’S SERVICE

Bernadette

Zey,

Catherine

teacher

Yager

LANDSCAPING

BROS.

444 Central Ave.

right,

Susan

GAS

Equipment

Buttons —

for,

Cuniffe

Holy Cross schools.

Third

and
1357

aay

Carl Casel, Division Manager

722.Main

AVE.,

and

Welcome

JEWELER

PHONE
ID 2-3804

If no answer call. Windsor
HAZEL

AND

Heating

Vogue

5-4427

Sue

Cw. B. Dew
- Official

OIL

Pleating —

CLEANING

of attention

Cote,

Leading Watch Repair. Craftsmen
and Jewelry Designers

BOILER SALES &amp; INSTALLATION
Windsor 5-0602
1010

Edward

_ TELEPHONE

Towels,

OIL - GAS
DEPENDABLE

Conception

ID

iafeoehhied

OIL

ETE
E ELT
HEATING SERVICE

focus

Jeanette

many science exhibits recently viewed by students of Immaculate

Color

SERVICE

BRAUN

ID 2-8120
HEATING

ENCLOSURES

BURNER
—

skeleton,

DeLamar,

Inc.

1858 First St., Highland Pk.

GAS

was

H.P.

for

Prompt, reasonable
efficient service
in this area 10 years.

tributed by Albert Pierantoni,
cut by the guest of honor.

FUEL OIL
OIL

SERVICE
ALL

evecon-

I.

SALES

V/7/\

of ceremonies throughout the
ning. The anniversary cake,

Improvement Co.

HERE
SERVICE

an-

DICK LATTANZI
1227

TELEVISION

pastor,

hour will be

held on the church lawn, weather
permitting, immediately following
each
service.
A
special
summer
church school with provisions for
toddlers and children up through
sixth grade
also will meet
each
summer Sunday at 10 a.m.

ALCOA—Any

Colors

KONSLER

ID 2-0252

Young,

a fellowship

ALUMINUM
SIDING

¢ Stationery
© Roll-up

K Home

Atkinson

nounced

Beautify Your Home
With Fabulous .. .

Aluminum

L &amp;

liam

The

Custom

e All

Park Presbyterian Church. Dr. Wil-

NOW in ALL COLORS!

Aluminum

STORM

Beginning June 14 and continuing through Sept. 6, a single service of worship will be held at 10
a.m. each Sunday at The Highland

C.

Risjord and Alfonso Burgoni, representing city employees and departments.

Chief

O-O-H, Not Halloween - Science Exhibit

PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH
SUMMER SCHEDULE

Receives 20-Year Pin

answer

TL EL LEBEL EEE
NAPE

MIE

LR

ERS

67 PHA

call WI

EPEC
RS

“ROR

APS

SER

EE LT TT EET
ASP

Ave.,

VE 5-3100

5-0743

EEL

Friday Evenings

Vernon

RTPA

ATAU

EE
RRA

Glencoe

ID 2-1110
EEE RELL

BS.

NSA

ONE

ELEE EL
ER

NS

BA

OR

We Defy You To Lose Money
By Advertising On This Page!
Call
from

IDlewood

2-4500

and get the complete

one of our display advertising

story

representatives.
Thursday, May 28, 1959

�Betrothed

Beth El Sisterhood
Will Hear Of Jewish

Women

In Literature

Paul Barnes, radio and television
personality,

will

present

“Jewish

Women in Literature” Tuesday at
12:15 p.m. at meeting of North
Suburban

Synagogue

terhood.

Beth

El

Barnes,

known

a Thousand

on

Chicago

for

several
Mrs,

Sis-

Luncheon meeting will be

held
at
the
Synagogue’s
munity Hall, 1175 Sheridan

as

ComRd.

“the

Voices,”

has

television

Man

of

appeared

and

The Joseph Alberts Celebrate
Forty-Fifth Anniversary May 24/%

Local Garden Club Makes
Appointment At Meeting
At the luncheon meeting recently held
at Mrs.
George
Reeves’
(formerly of Highland Park) Lake
Forest home, appointment of Mrs.
J. M. Maxwell of Fairview Rd. as
publicity
chairman
for
Highland
Park Garden Guild was made.

luncheon
WI
596

is Mrs.

Gerald

Schwartz,

5-0814.
Mrs.
Leo
J. Weisel,
Braeside Ave., program chair-

man,

has

planned

the

afternoon.

Mr.

Winefield

Ben

Fox,

212

a dinner party. Members
bert

keeper

of

the

archives

of

the

chairman

holiday
for

RAYMOND

© WATERPROOFING

|}

Chimneys - Fireplaces
Repair &amp; Cleaning

dren,
the
James
Alberts,
245
Prairie Ave., and their two chil-|7
dren, and the Roger Alberts, 247/77
Central Ave., and their two children.

he sides

P.

You

KW

SS
AY

=.
sd
NW aneveee
anne:

Cleaning

Like
It

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removing and rehanging service.

Duffy

BLONER

487

Laurel

Ave.

Cleaners

(Across from H.P. Library)

ID 2-1 820

Representing

Chvestors
Diversified Services, Inc.
FOUNDED 1894

The wedding is planned for Sept.
5. The couple plans to return to Columbia,
Mo., to finish their last
year.

section is filled with

interesting facts and golden
Don't miss it!
tunities.

oppor-

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a

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FOR A SMOOTHER
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Patios —
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Sidewalks
Sand

—

—

Floors

Gravel

ID 2-0944

8

May

24

28, 1959

Hour

Phone

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BLACK TOPPING

Thursday,

%

dinner

Carmen Alberts, 145
and their three chil-

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Hwy.
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124

at

il
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let, call or write:

Mr. McCollom will enter his senior year at the University of Missouri School of Engineering where
he will receive his degree in industrial engineering. He is president of the Industrial Engineers
Club, and vice president of the Society for the Advancement of Management. He has spent three years
in the U.S. Marine Corps.

present

|@ e TUCK

with|

&amp;

emphasizing common
stocks. The securities
for this fund are chosen
with objectives of longterm capital appreciation possibilities and
reasonable income. For
a free prospectus-book-

Sigma
Phi,
national
journalism
honorary; secretary of the University of Missouri Young Democrats
Club; advertising editor of the student literary magazine, Behind the
Mask; and a member of Psi Chi,
national psychology honorary.

The Want-Ad

explain

diversified

Theta

family

included the
Prairie Ave.,

Blackhawk

Investors Stock Fund,
Inc., offers an open end
mutual fund with professional supervision of

Miss
Winefield
has
completed
her junior year at the University of
Missouri
school
of journalism,
where she is a member of Sigma
Delta
Tau
sorority.
She
also
is
president
of Gamma
Alpha
Chi,
honorary
advertising
fraternity;

Sunday

M. ORI

radio

Interested in
Stocks?

Mr. and Mrs. Alex H. Winefield,
1263 Glencoe Ave., announce the
engagement
of
their
daughter,
Carol, to Philip Gordon McCollom.
Mr. McCollom is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. H. G. McCollom
of Kansas
City, Mo.

anniversary

BRUNO

years.

tany Rd., will
table.
Reservation

Carol

Albert, 245 | @

Prairie Ave., celebrated their 45th
wedding

Rd., will offer the invocation and
Mrs. Jerome Sternberg, 965 Brit-

Miss

and Mrs. Joseph

406 GREEN

PRICES

BAY

ARE

ALWAYS

ROAD

—

LOW

—

—

—

VISIT

OUR

SELF-SERVICE

— — — — — — —

DEPT.

HIGHWOOD

�rystal Isall SY,
A

future

Crystal

into

medical
funds

SD eceneheh

provide

a

future

of

through

the

the

research

it raises.

Benefit

enefit —

segpanncraces

event—December’s

Ball—will

glimpse

At

work-

ers, hoping to make up a $100,000
DID

YOU

All the
air

KNOW

Moraine

public

rooms

deficit

are

discuss
Mrs,

Some of these are delightful party
rooms where your next luncheon,
shower, wedding or banquet can be
served in comfort and at
reasonable prices.

ON

THE

LAKE

¢

MIGHLAND

Beautiful

PARK,

ID

Michael

Reese

Institute
from
for luncheon at

the Chicago Yacht Club recently to

conditioned?

TELEPHONE

for

Medical
Research
ball proceeds, met

THAT...

2-4444

ILLINOIS

their

plans.

Florsheim

Co-Chairman

Heading the predominantly Highland Park group was Mrs. Harold
Florsheim of Sheridan Rd., ball cochairman with Mrs. Alfred D’Ancona Jr. of Glencoe, who made her
announcements of the winter party
against a spring backdrop of sparkling Lake Michigan, viewed through
the Yacht Club’s glass walls.
She described it as ‘fa unique
party, a kind of family prom
at
Christmas,” with adults gathering
for cocktails at 7:30, dinner at 9
o’clock and dancing, and a young
people’s group (18 years and older) coming in later for dancing.
“Community
support,
unfortunately, hasn’t kept pace with prog-

(Continued

on page

Carpeting
for your

27)

new

Mrs. Donald L. Stein, left,
members of the Michael

and Mrs. Robert L. Friedman are
Reese Medical Research Council.

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Taking down and rehanging
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Washington provides personalized
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see

Ahm

*

Ni

oy the Ad
a eet
5

;

—
Rt

RG

‘

,

ith

=
asc

7

wo isi.

lntaliatiatiiiaiiitaaaaaiiitiiiaa
aR
ae
aig Pr

i

TRE ~_

di

ie

apes

,

and

DAY

$100
CAR

so is

WASH

With

Purchase

of 8 Gallons

$1.00
of Gas

WEDNESDAY SPECIAL!

LAKE
CAR WASH
Mrs.

John

S. Wineman

hears

plans

from

Mrs.

Harold

S.

Florsheim,

right,

ball

* (Far right) Yone)
Nathan, guest speaker, Mrs. Ralph Michaels and Mrs. Joseph E. Nathan ‘study”
future through crystal ball containing research microscope, a table decoration, at planning brunch.
(Continued

from

page

26)

ID 2-9722

|}

GALLERIES

WILSON

ress at the Institute,’ Lionel Nathan, 115 S. Deere Park Dr., Research Council chairman, told the
gathering. He explained that the
Institute receives no financial support from the Michael Reese Hospital
or from
any
agency.
The
Council was thus formed in 1951,
to enable ‘experimental
research
in surgery, allergy study and other
fields to continue. Research there,”
he said, “benefits all of us at some
time in our lives.”

Ist &amp; Elm Sts.

co-chairman.

—

|
I

Antiques
Formerly

at

and

615

White

North
Barn

Michigan

Antiques,

Ave.,
Long

Chicago

Grove

| ie
4

unwanted
Announce the Opening

clover?

|

.:

Of Their New and Greatly

K ANSEL

SPREAD

ENLARGED

GALLERIES

4

clean, quick, easy way to
delete

clover without

your

to

harm

:

grass.

sorrel)

(wood

ee)

and

Located At
)

A

ilson 'Oalleries
/

URMIDEED Maly tte aA AEE Or 89c

Le

SES
*

+

wild honeysuckle.
TBS

eA
Absa

ae

|

Also knocks out poison ivy,

oxalis

i

ioe

be
i

y/

BLUFF

pale

Scotts.
first

Park.

"

in lawns

HARDWARE
447

Roger

ID
Store Hours

Williams

5 ied
-

Daily 8 a.m. to

Open Sundays
9:00 A.M. - 1:00 P.M.
Thursday, May 28, 1959

(\

?

|

WOODS

NNETKA

2-4387

5:30 p.m. Wed. ‘til Noon

UBRARD

4
4
3

Highland Park, Illinois

ID 3-2300

LENCOE
ODRID

SKOKIE VALLEY (U.S. 41)
AND CLAVEY RDS. AT
EDENS EXPRESSWAY

Ample Private Parking

ih ciysteaamcae

€

WILMETTE

v

\

EVANSTON

CLOSED MONDAYS

a

�_ DEERFIELD DOINGS

i
__ Mr.

moving

and Mrs. Victor Grillo are
from

1149

Camille

Ave.

to

cago and have sold their home
Patrick Woolever of Freeport
. The W. C. Olendorfs of 1103
crest are making their annual
to Fennville, Mich.,
er months, Bill Jr.,

for
age

the
13,

ill be an apprentice at the Red
arn
Theatre (summer stock) at
augatuck. Bill Sr., whose avoca
m

is

painting,

will

have

an

ex-

hibit of his oils in still life and
enes of Saugatuck, Mich., at the
d Town Art Exhibit in Chicago
June 13 and 14,
The Perry Mehans have moved

om

Ramsay

rizona.

.

Rd.

. Mt.

to

Prospect

cation of the new

and

Mrs.

C.

Scottsdale,

home

E,

is

the

home

for

who

Sanders

e moved from 610 Warwick Rd.
has
Beckman
George
. Mrs.
red to the home of Mr. and Mrs.

eph Schuessler of Linden Ave.
has rented her house at 914

Woodward Ave.
of Evanston.

to

Fire Department |
(Continued from page 5)

Donald

Kirsch

LaFayette, near Oakland, Calif.,
is to be the new home for Mr. and
Mrs. William H. Griffith, who are
moving from 860 Appletree Ln.
Mr. and Mrs. W. McMillan Rey-

nolds

of 3120

Deerfield

Rd.,

west

of the village, will be among the
attendants at the wedding of Mr.
Reynolds’ sister, Miss Anne Reynolds of Lake Forest and Cornelius
(Neal) Kennedy on June 20 in the

Church

of the Holy Spirit in Lake

Forest.

Thursday evening when trees were
burning in the area where Valenti
Builders are constructing houses.

Fire Chief Fred Grabo inspected
the incinerator at National Food
store which has had the chimney
heightened.

Tickets

for

the

annual

benefit

of the fire department will be in
the mail the first week in June.
The dance will be held June 27 in
the Fire Station.

Mr. Weber’s

sister, Mrs. Jacob

950

Sunset

Miss

Clara

Ott

Here from Cross Plains, Wis.,
over last weekend as houseguests

of

of Mrs, Paul M. Dietz and her sister, Miss Martha Karch, both of
925
Deerfield
Rd.,
were
their
brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and
Mrs. Frank Saeman and their son
and daughter-in-law, Mr. and Mrs.
Francis Saeman.
Mr. and Mrs. William Weber of
Washington,
D. C. are guests of

by her niece, Mrs.
Laurence
A.
Dondanville of Moline, Ill., were
here
several
days
last week
as
guests of Mr. and Mrs. Laurence
A. Dondanville Jr. of 731 Westgate
Rd. Miss Ender’s home is now the

convent

Ct,
Ender,

for the

chial School.
Moline.

accompanied

Holy

Miss

Cross

Ender

ek

Paro-

lives

in

ae

A circus is coming to Highland Park and proceeds will benefit the hospital. Sharon Hart, age 11, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Eugene Hart of 246 Waukegan Rd., Deerfield, a patient at the
hospital, smiles brightly as the clown (A. S. Lowe) and Aaron S.
Bauer visit her to tell her about the circus which will be in Highland

Park on

Friday,

VILLAGE

tomorrow.

BOARD

(Continued

from

page

3)

Pioneer Products.
The purchase of 100 up to 500
water meters caused considerable
discussion as to which of two companies
made
the
better
meter.
Trustee
Aberson,
Robert
Bowen,
public
works
commissioner,
and
Foreman Klasinski, were appointed
as a committee
with
manager
Royce Owens to determine the purchase, without advertising for bids.
The vote was 4 yes, 1 no and 1
pass.
Water amendments were changed
to increase water rate to apartments where only one meter was
installed.
The purchase of a station wagon
as a third car was tabled until trustees could learn more
about the
village
finances,
which
are
re-

ported

INTEREST WILL BE PAID
| ON ALL SAVINGS ACCOUNTS
INTEREST PAID ON JUNE
Deposits

Made

Before

June
June

Ist &amp; DECEMBER

Ist Will
1,

Earn

Interest

Ist

as of

1959.

Save in a Commercial Bank and receive the Highest
Rate available... plus constant
safety.
aite..sthte.

Let
a

cite.

olte.

site. .olte.

ste. .site.olte..sliee

ste.

.olde

olte..slte.

site.

see.

availability

slee..slte..shhe..stte..slie..slie..cle...alte..ollie....telliar.

us handle the transfer of your account from any bank
savings and loan . . . anywhere in the United States.
ce

a

HEELING

a

a

a

or

i

STATE BANK

— Service and Security Since 1921 —

WHEELING,

and

ILLINOIS

Each Account Insured to $10,000.00 by Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.

Adams
Brothers Cigcus will be
at the High School “4thletic Field
on West
Park Ave.
in Highland
Park tomorrow, May 29, with performances at 2, 4:30 and 8 p.m.
Sponsors
are
Highland
Park
Rotary,
Lions,
Kiwanis,
Jaycees
and
other
organizations
of that
city for the benefit of the Highland Park Hospital fund.
It will be the traditional
oldfashioned
circus
with
an assortment
of acts including
acrobats,
wire walkers, performing animals,

clowns,

etc.

Emmett

Feature

is

a

son

of

Kelley.

OBITUARY
Mrs.

William

Mrs.

Isabel

widow

of

the

Kist
Woodman
late

Kist,

William

90,
Kist,

formerly of Deerfield, died May

24

at Ozona, Fla., where she had lived

by some as “good” and by for many years since leaving this
others, as “uncertain.”
area. Funeral
services were held
Subdivision plats, units 2 and 3, yesterday in Clearwater, Fla. She
Deerfield Park (Chicago Construc- will be cremated and her daughter
tion Co.) with properties lying east | will bring the ashes to be buried
of Hovland subdivision and on the beside her husband
in the Lake
west
side
of Willow
Ave.,
were Forest Cemetery.
approved for a change in zoning
She is survived by her sister,
from R-3 to R-1-A.
Miss
Josephine
Woodman,
who
Trustees Joseph Koss, Winston made her home with her in Ozona;
Porter and Harold Peterson were two daughters, Mrs. Ray
(Isabel)
appointed as a committee to discuss Claussen of Ozona and Mrs. Rusnegotiations with Alfred Gastfield sell (Marley) LeVelle of Chicago;
for the purchase of land for an four grandchildren and two great
easement
into the new
shopping grandchildren.
center
from
Deerfield
Rd.
This
easement will also involve properJewish Men Form Softball
ties of Amelio Fragassi and Bruce
Team In Highland Park
Frost but details of the negotiations were not made public.
The Brotherhood of B’nai Torah
The village is paying for another
Reform Temple of Highland Park
lawsuit. The board agreed to pay will
hold
an
open
meeting
on
Byron Matthews, attorney, $575 as Wednesday, June 3, at 8:30 p.m. at
half payment of the Liebling trans- the Highland Park Recreation Cencript.
Village
Attorney
Thomas
ter.
Matthews stated that the master in
Edwin
Slavin of 630 Appletree
chancery who heard the case of the Ln., Deerfield, announces that the
village against the Liebling subdi- B’nai Torah softball team is in forvision, has sided against Deerfield, mation and tryouts and practice are
but it would be up to Judge Ber- held
every
Sunday
morning
in
nard Decker to make the final de- Highland Park.
cision.
The

master

areas and new

district passed

plan

j
for

parking

roads in the business

with

some

stipula-

tions. President Holmquist stated
'|that this did not mean the village
was going to buy these properties
designated
as streets but that it
was a plan for the future.
The
board
approved
billboard
requests in the 500 block on Waukegan Rd. (Mercurio property) and
for Valenti Builders at 534 Deerfield Rd., both 8x10 ft. and, not illuminated.
There were many subjects on the

*

agenda
because

Many

which
were
not touched
of the lateness of the hour.

will be

on

the

June

docket

regarding
sidewalks,
widening
of
streets, Wilmot Rd. paving, BleitzNixon property, Chestnut St., Journal Pl., Crabtree Ln., Landis subdivision, Scatterwood subdivision.
Also
municipal
versus
private
garbage collection, village manager
ordinance, rules of procedure, personnel policies and salaries, County
Line sewer, sanitary sewers versus
storm
sewer
infiltration and
rehabilitation program, etc., etc.

|

�srammar School
(Continued
Eighth

from

grade,

Bill Hanson,

440

EP,

ecord,

:63.9);

oP.
Sixth

grade,

page
yd.

(new

:65.6,

38)

run,

Walter

100 yd.

old

Zanle,

dash,

:12.9,

Louis Boilini, E; :14.0, Carl Baum,
RO; :13.9, Jeff Lehman, EP.
Seventh grade, 100 dash, :11.8,
Jim
Grossfield,
RO;
:12.2,
Tee
Newbrough,
RO;
:13.0,
Howard

Weisel,

100 yd. dash,
OT;
:12.3,

12:2,
Fred

p.m.—Strike

record

:57.0)

old Slovic,

record,

Tee Newbrough,

Paul

Powell,

Jim

Har-

;

grade,

440 yd. relay,

Billy

Your

:52.8,

Newmann,

©

the Happiest

Summer

TRAIL BLAZER
An

exclusive

day
Al &amp;

Smith

Prosperity

will meet in Highwood

CHILD PHOTO
SPECIAL!

Club

Community

—§8

Center at 8 p.m. today. Mrs. Joseph Cassai, social chairman, has
planned a Mother’s Day program.
The elderly mothers
of the club
will be honored. Refreshments will
be served by Mrs. Tony Crovetti
and her committee.

Reg.

Wallace

of

at West Ridge,
Torah
vs. 400

at Sunset Park,
Jane Lanes vs.

Val.

All photos taken in your home

GARY

VA

4-0260

Glen-

EASY

36%

$14.00

Selection of proofs mailed to you.
No Salesman
For Appointment Call

event. Low gross winners were Mr.
and Mrs. George
coe with a 43.

x I

He rata

EST.

COOKE
LO

19

1-0485

Years

LIVIN’
in your own
backyard!
make

Dad

feel

like a

real chef!

Bosley, Ken Brecker.
DAY

Child

vs.

Women’s

Jay Levy, Joe Welk—E.
Eighth grade, 440 yd. relay, :56.4,
Larry Rosen, Ricky Carlin, Harry

DAY CAMP
1 Give

Spare

Diamond No. 1
Nite Game—Mary
Santi’s.

Gross-

Field—RO.
Redman,

38)

Italian

Diamond No. 1 at Sunset Park, 7
p.m.—Jaycees vs. McDonald Bldrs.

old

Relay, :60.6, Neil Hirsch, Ricky
' Schreyer,
Steve
Dounie,
Artie
Eighth

’n’

Corona.
Diamond
No. 1
Nite Game—B’nai
Club.

field—RO.

Charles

page

Italian Women’s Club
Meets At Center Tonight

&amp;

John Carlson, Stuart
(new

from

Builders,
the
league
champions;
Santi’s, 400 Club, Strike ’n’ Spare,
and
Tourney
champ
Mary
Jane
Lanes.
Schedule for games follows:
Diamond No. 1 at West Ridge, 7

Jim
Tuthill,
Jim
Vance,
John
Daub—E,
Relay,
:62.2,
Rusty
Scheskie,

Darcy Leclair,

Event

(Continued

Teetar, W; :12.3, Charles Redman,
E.
Sixth grade, 440, :60.1 (new record, old record :60.4) Louis Boilini,

Bennett—D.
Seventh, :56.8

Glader

Valley

In Sunset

Softball League

E.

Eighth grade,
Jeff
Goldman,

Wally

Score

First place low net winners in
Sunday’s mixed Scotch foursome at
Sunset Valley Golf Club were Mrs.
Melvin
J. Cummings
and
Wally
Glader.
They
scored
45-14-31
in
the nine-hole, two ball foursome

:63.3,

record,

Mrs. Cummings,

GIVE HIM
BARBECUE SUPPLIES

CAMP

of His Life!

DUDE

RANCH

camp for boys and girls 5 thru
Ted Fenn, Directors-Educators

12

years

From

SPECIAL
FEATURES
OF OUR
COUNTRY
ESTATE
LOCATED
IN NORTHBROOK,
ILLINOIS

DEERFIELD LUMBER

Riding
(corral with horses), natural lake for fishing &amp; boating, overnighters,
baseball uniforms for boys, swimming, all sports, crafts, animal raising, planting
section, bowling, golf, hot lunches, transportation, teacher, staff, etc.
CAMP
SEASON: JUNE
15 thru AUG. 23, 1959
Satisfied Highland
Park References Furnished Upon
Request

PHONE ORchard 4-9789 or ORchard 4-3829
RESERVE A PLACE FOR YOUR CHILD NOW!

A Complete Line of
Barbecue Grills

¥ BUILDERS
¥ HOME OWNERS
¥ CONTRACTORS

FIRE STARTERS

TAKE TIME TO
COMPARE!

FIRE MITTS
as

Pe

S

FREE
CHARCOAL and

With

Each $15.00 Purchase
a pound of

~ BRIQUETTES

SSS

BARBECUE
TOOLS

GIVEN BY BOB FOLGER
VENTILATING

HOODS

(Limit 1 to a Customer)

No other kitchen ventilating equipment can compare in features
and price, Rids the kitchen of all cooking odors, all smoke and
grease vapors, Pays for itself again and again by saving clean-

ing, redecorating
@
@
@
@
@
@
@
@
@
@
@
@

DEERFIEL

costs. Phone E &amp; H Distributing Co, now for

further particulars. No obligation, but "compare

before you buy!"

Twin Grease Filters—eliminates danger of flash fire in duct
Easy to Clean Removable Filters—no bolts, screws
2-Speed. Quiet, Powerful Biower
Only Hood with Built-in Safety Switch—no wall installation
No Special Connectors or Fittings
Simple Installation (for new or remodeled homes)
Heavy Gauge sieel-smooth, one-piece seamless construction
3-Coat Baked Enamel Finish
Can Be Color Matched with Kitchen
All Equipment Conveniently Located Under Hood—not inside cabinet
Takes Only 3 '"'xl0"' Shelf Space
ONE YEAR GUARANTEE ON EVERYTHING

SEE

YOUR

DEALER,

OR

CALL

Thursday, May 28, 1959

éolN

&lt;0)

MR. NEWELL

E &amp; H DISTRIBUTING CO., INC.
7923 Lincoln Ave.

LUMBER &amp;
FUEL CO.

Phone: ORchard 5-4770

io

—

Skokie, lilinols:

612 Waverly Ct.
Deerfield
WI 5-3220

�Ch arches

Deerfield
FIRST

PRESBYTERIAN

CHURCH

824 Waukegan Road
Phone Windsor 5-0775
;
Rev. Paul J. Keller, Ph.D., Minister
‘THURSDAY, May 28
10 a.m. Cancer dressing group.
7:30 p.m. Boy Scout committee meeting—

room

_
nie
___

7.

~ SUNDAY, May 31
9:30 a.m. Morning
9:30
a.m.
Church

children

Worship.
school.

1, 2 and 3 years.

Nursery

Kindergarten

for

for

children 4 and
5.
Classes for all other
grades through high school.
A
9:30 a.m.
Adult Bible class under the
leadership
of Elder
Richard
Thompson—
_Tuxis room.
11 a.m. Morning Worship.
11 a.m. Church school. Same as above.
7 p.m. Tuxis meeting—Tuxis room.
7 p.m. Jr. High Westminster Fellowship
meeting. All 7th and 8th graders are invited

_ to attend—lower

west room.

MONDAY, June 1
3:45
p.m.
Girl
west

_

troop

90—lower

Adult
Elder

TUESDAY,

Bible class under the leadC. E. Piper—room 5.

June 2

9:15 a.m.
Meeting of kindergarten teachand mothers—Kindergarten room.
3:45
p.m.
Girl Scout troop
11—lower
west room.
_
7:30
p.m.
Boy
Scout troop 52—lower
ers

west

room.

WEDNESDAY,
June 3
3:45 p.m.
Girl Scout troop
124—lower
west
room.
7:30
p.m.
Tuxis choir rehearsal—Sanca
thary.

}

8

va.\s'faary.

p.m.

Chancel

choir

rehearsal—Sanc-

HOLY

CROSS CATHOLIC
CHURCH
North Waukegan Road
Rev. John O’Mara, Pastor
Rev. Edward Reilly, Assistant
Rectory, 724 Elder Lane
Windsor 5-0430
aed Masses: 7, 8, 9, 10, 11:15 and

“1

Weekday Masses at 6:45 a.m. and 8:15 a.m.
First Friday of each
6:45 and 8:15 a.m.
_ Saturday: 4 p.m. and
sions.

THE

month,
7:30

HIGHLAND

Masses

p.m.

Confes-

PARK

William Atkinson Young
Rey. J. A. Miller
Ministers
6:30 p.m.
Summer
Club picnic at the
Lakewood
Place Beach.
Members
are to
bring their own hamburgers and hot dogs.
8 p.m.
Young matrons group meeting.
Dr. Young will speak.
_ FRIDAY, May 29
6 p.m.
Annual Father-Son Beach Party
sponsored by Boy Scout Troop 324.

' SUNDAY, May 31

9 a.m. Quartet rehearsal.
9:30 a.m. High school choir rehearsal.
9:30 a.m.
Worship
Service.
Provision
made for toddlers under 3.
9:30 a.m. Church school classes for three
year olds up through 8th grade.
10:05 a.m. High school classes.
10:45 a.m.
Adult choir rehearsal.
11:15 am.
Worship
Service.
Provision
made for toddlers under 3.
11:15
a.m
Church
school
classes
for
three year olds up through 8th grade.
12:30 p.m.
Session meeting for the reception of new members.
3 p.m.
Tuxis
picnic
for high
school
youths.
- MONDAY,
June 1
7:30 p.m. Summer church school training
workshop for teachers and leaders.
TUESDAY, June 2
8
p.m.
Program conference in the Varsity Room for representatives of all boards
and organizations of the church.
THURSDAY, June 4
11 am.
Woman’s Service board meeting.
COMMUNITY
BAPTIST CHURCH
1250 Waukegan Road
Rev. Robert Humrickhouse,
Pastor
Office Telephone:
Windsor
5-0708
_ We Preach Christ
Crucified, Risen and Coming Again

RNY
, iy

Mp

p.m.
a

.

( (Jesus Is Mine),
e), chil -

Club

{ Pm. a

Seapaig

.m.

Chums

AY

Jr.,

my

Program.

girls 6-7.

9:30

int. Pandey School. Classes of Bible
for
ages,
10:45.
am.
Morning
Worship
Service.
facilities
are
provided
for
the

young.
6

9:45 a.m. Bible School.
11 a.m, Services.
7 p.m. Services.
WEDNESDAY
8 p.m. Bible study and prayer.
CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY
Maplewood School Auditorium
Clay Court, Deerfield
SUNDAY—11 a.m. Services.
Children
are cared
for during
Church
service.
SUNDAY
SCHOOL—9:30 a.m.
For pupils up to 20 years of age.
WEDNESDAY
EVENING MEETINGS —
8 p.m. Including testimonies of healing
through Christian Science.
All are welcome to attend these services.
+ fl further information
call WlIndsor
5-

p.m. Young People’s Fellowship.
pa pas. Fe gy
ice pave meeting.

p.m.

Evening

MONDAY

Gospe'

ice.

f

_ 3:30 p.m, Chums, girls 8-10.
7
p.m. Pioneers, boys b-14.
TUESDAY

ite crete
5

.m.

Fails,

NESDAY

agi
7:30 dy
p.m.
8:30

p.m.

.

8

Mid-week
Choir

/-10,

prayer
praye:

meeting
tin,

and

rehearsal.

QUAKERS

e

SOCIETY

OF

Sylvia

Judson,

FRIENDS
Clerk.

SUNDAY
9:45 a.m. Sunday
10
a.m. Friends

School.
meeting

in

School Library in Lake Forest.
For information call Windsor
GRACE

LUTHERAN

For

further

information

Page

40

Path

5-1774.

CHURCH

(Missouri Synod)
Walters Ave. at Fourth
Northbrook

43060 or Windsor 5-1323.

Deer

call

WBKB-TV
PROGRAM
SUNDAY, May 31
9:45
am.
‘Perfect
Eyesight
Through
Prayer.”’
MAY
31 SERMON
How the armour of righteousness enables
man to withstand the attacks of evil will be
brought out at Christian Science services
Sunday.
In the Lesson-Sermon entitled ‘Ancient
and Modern Necromancy,
alias Mesmerism
and Hypnotism, Denounced,’’ passages read
from the Bible will include (Ephesians 6:11):
“Put on the whole armour of God, that
ye may be able to stand against the wiles
of the devil.’
Correlative passages to be read from “‘Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures”
by Mary Baker Eddy include (571.15): “At
all times and under all circumstances, overcome evil with good.
Know thyself, and
God will supply the wisdom) and the occasion for a victory over evil.
Clad in the
panoply of Love, human hatred cannot reach
you. The cement of a higher humanity will
unite all interests in the one divinity,”

St.

CRestwood

The confirmation

NORTHBROOK
METHODIST
CHURCH
Meadowbrook Sehool
Rev. R. W. Thornburg, Minister
For information call Windsor 5-4351.
SUNDAY
11. am.
Church
School
and
Worship
Service. Nursery for pre-school children.
B’NAI TORAH
Lincoln School
Highland Park
Sholom Singer, Rabbi
Joseph Burns, Cantor
information call WIndsor 5-2243.

For

REDEEMER LUTHERAN CHURCH
1731 Deerfield Rd.
Rec, 1817 Green Bay Road
Highland Park, Ml.
SUNDAY
9 a.m. Sunday School and Bible classes.
10:15 a.m. Worship services.
NORTH SHORE
UNITARIAN CHURCH
Rey. es
R. Bletzer, yenes toad
For

Information

Call

WI

5-1972.

ST

GREGORY’S
EPISCOPAL
CHURCH
Wilmot and Deerfield Roads
The Rev. J. D. Parker, Rector
Rectory Telephone—Windsor 5-1881
Church Telephone—WIndsor 5-1678
SUNDAY
§ a.m. Holy Communion.
9:30 a.m. Holy Communion on first and
third Sundays.
9:30 a.m. Morning Prayer on second and
fourth Sundays.
9:30 a.m.
Church
School
children
will
attend adult service. Nursery care provided
for pre-school children.
WEDNESDAY
8 p.m.
Choir practice.
THURSDAY
Afternoon, Girl Scouts.
Evening, Boy Scouts.
WASHBURN
CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH
Half Day
Rev. Lewis
hoe gpg
Pastor
Route
SUNDAY
9:30 a.m. Church School.
9:30 a.m. Worship Service.
11 a.m. Worship Service.
A nursery is provided for small children.
Telephone WI 5-4179 for more information.
ZION
LUTHERAN
CHURCH
10 Deerfield Road, Deerfield
Rev. Paul V. Berggren, Pastor
Wayne
R. Johnson, Intern
Telephone Windsor 5-2009
THURSDAY, May 28
7 p.m.
Instruction class for high school
youths,
SUNDAY,
May 31
8 a..m Celebration of Holy Communion.
9
am.
Family
Worship
Service
with
complete Church School also at this hour.
10:45 a.m.
Family Worship Service with
the Rite of Confirmation.
Complete Church
Scoool. Nursery care is provided during this
service only for children under three years
of age, in the home of Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Forslin,
829 Apple
Tree Lane.
Bus
service is provided by the church for this
service only.
3-4:30 p.m.
Adult instruction class.
MONDAY, June 1
7 p.m.
Softball games:
Trinity and Zion
Seniors at the Deerfield Grammar School.
Redeeemer Lutheran and Zion Juniors at
Maplewood School.
7:30 p.m.
Last in the Post-Easter
10week sessions of the School for Christian
Living.

TUESDAY, June 2°

Church

Brethren

United

Evangelical

class of Bethlehem

was

received

into ©

membership on May 3. Left to right, front row, are Thomas Wands, Ellen Petersen and Richard A.
Holzmacher; second row: Roger Bahnsen, Marilyn Schmid, Carol Finney and Diana Bodmer; back
row: Russell Walther, Susan Busse, Dean Stanger, Mary Lee Kieft and the Rev. Eugene M. Wykle,
minister of Bethlehem Church.

Participates in B‘nai Torah
Religious

at

Dr.

Ay

SUNDAY

room.

8 p.m.
ership of
_

Scout

NORTH
SUBURBAN
EVANGELICAL
FREE
CHURCH
Deerfield Masonic Tempie
Rev. Howard Hermansen, Pastor
711 Waukegan Road

School

Program

Anita Russell, daughter of the
Max Russells of 708 Appletree Ln.,
is among the children of the B’nai
Torah Religious School, who will be
in the closing day program on Sunday at 10 am. at Lincoln School in
Highland Park.
The congregation of B’nai Torah
Reform Temple will hold Sabbath
eve services tomorrow at 7:30 p.m.
at Braeside
School
in Highland
Park.

Presbyterian Session
And Minister Will
Discuss Separation
The

Commission

bytery

met

Presbyterian
negotiations

the

the

Session

the Commission

Pres-

Deerfield

on May

4 and

recommended

should

be

that

entered

be-

tween Dr. Paul J. Keller, minister,
and

the

Session

looking

toward

dissolution of the pastoral relationship.

The

7:30 p.m.
Youth choir rehearsal under
the direction of Wayne R. Johnston, Intern.
8 p.m.
Miriam Circle at the home
of
Mrs. Clarence A. Tharnstrom,
1201 Warrington. Martha Circle at the home of Mrs.
Gerhard Von der Linden, 1000 Rosemary;
Mrs. Norman K. Erickson, co-hostess.
WEDNESDAY, June 3
7:30 p.m. Boy Scout Troop 150.
8 pm.
Adult choir rehearsal under direction of Dr. William J. Peterman.
THURSDAY,
June 4
7 p.m.
Last in the series of instruction
classes for high school youths.

voted

to

ST. PAUL’S
UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST
(Evangelical &amp; Reformed Church)
Rev. Laslo L. Hunyady, B.D., Pastor
638 Waukegan Road
Windsor 5-3508
THURSDAY, May 28
at the
7 p.m,
Junior
Choir
rehearsal
church.
St.
7:30
p.m.
Steering
Committee
at
John’s church.
SUNDAY,
May
31
9:30 a.m. Church School for children age
3 through high school age.
11 a.m. Morning Worship. Nursery care
provided for small children.
Visitors and
newcomers are cordially invited.
THURSDAY, June 4
1:30 p.m. Afternoon Circle of the Women’s Guild.

nockburn,

THE
BETHLEHEM
CHURCH
(Evangelical
United
Brethren)
Rev. Eugene M. Wykle, Minister
801 Rosemary Terrace
Church—WI
5-0078
Parsonage—WI 5-2221
THURSDAY, May 28
7 p.m. Youth choir rehearsal; Boy Scout
Troop 51.
SUNDAY, May 31
3
9:30 a.m.
Service of Divine Worship.
9:30 a.m.
Church
School
for Nursery
through
6th grades and adult classes.
10:55 a.m.
Service of Divine Worship.
10:55 a.m.
Church School for Nursery,
Kindergarten, Primary and 7th through 12th
grades.
during
both
Family
balcony
available
services of worship.
6:30 p.m. Youth
Fellowship.
MONDAY,
June 1
7:30 p.m. Joint board meeting of Bethlehem Women’s Guild.
TUESDAY, June 2
12:30 p.m.
Women’s Society for World
Service Mexican potluck luncheon for members and guests. Program on Mexico.
Call
Mrs. E. M. Wykle for further luncheon information.
ae
7:30 p.m. Church Council of Administration.
WEDNESDAY,
June 3
1:30 p.m.
Women’s Bible study at the
church.
7:45 p.m. Chancel choir rehearsal.

of

with

majority
accept

of

the

the

Session

recommenda-

tion.
Dr. Keller has announced
will

state

ter

to

his

the

position
Session

turn from
which was
May 27 in

in

that he
the

upon

mat-

his

re-

the General Assembly
held May
18 through
Indianapolis, Ind.

Dr. and Mrs. Keller have built
a new home on North Ave. in Banat 461

The

Presbyterian

Hermitage

the Kellers,
months,

will

Dr.,
be

Manse

vacated

rented

by

for

six

To Take Communion
the June 2
and Rosary

Holy

Cross

meeting
Society

Church

hall,

of
in

the
the

Mrs.

Erich Lademann,
out-going president will hand over the gavel to
Mrs. Raymond Marshall, new president.
On Sunday, June 7, the women
of the parish,
all of whom
are
members
of the Society will receive Holy Communion in a body
at the 8 o’clock Mass.

Because there are no meetings
during the summer months, the
next meeting will be called in September.

ler’s vacation this summer, Dr. and
will

take

Important

“Since
pre-registration
is
important to the success of the school,
parents in the community who are
interested in having their children ,
attend the two-week
session, are
encouraged to bring their children
to the party,” states the Rev. Paul
V. Berggren, pastor of the church. .

The Acolyte Guild of Zion Lutheran Church held a dinner in Evanston on May 16 where officers
were elected for the coming year.
They were installed at the May 17
service of worship.
George Werness is the new presi-

dent;

Mark

Neugart,

secretary-

treasurer, both of Deerfield. Retiring officers are Dennis Cliff, president, and Donald Fielding, secretary-treasurer.

New members are Thomas Lyons,
Bernhard
Olson,
Conrad
Petzel,
Randall Petzel, Bruce Stocker and
Ralph Stocker.

Holy Cross High

Club

Officers

John Loarie is the new president of the Holy Cross High Club.
Other officers for the coming year

Cedric Voll and Melvin Slattery
have been appointed by the Presbyterian
Session to secure visiting ministers during Dr. Paul KelKeller

Pre-Registration

Elects New

Will Select Visiting
Pastors For Summer

Mrs.

A Daily Vacation Bible School is
being planned
at Zion
Lutheran
Church, 10 Deerfield Rd., for a twoweek period, June 15-26, Monday
through Friday from 9 a.m. to 11:45
a.m.
A “registration
party”
will be
held Saturday, June 6 at 2 p.m. at
the church at which time children
will be enrolled and parents will
have an opportunity to meet the
teachers.

Lutheran Acolytes
Have Annual Meeting

Altar-Rosary Group
At
Altar

Lutherans Plan
Vacation Bible
School, June 15

their

trip to their summer home
sapoiset, Mass.

annual

at Mas-

are Judy Mandel, vice president;
Sue Burgett, secretary and Robert
Schultz, treasurer.

At the May 24 meeting, John
Loarie, the retiring treasurer for
the past year, gave a financial report. Dancing
and refreshments
followed

the

business

Thursday,

May

meeting.

28, 1959

�is
‘

K

hi

4

.

ee

‘

é

S ¢

ke

4 ,

7

&gt;

Page
‘
‘

}

$1200 to $8400 per year.

DEERFIELD BOYS BASEBALL
By Joseph

Peyronnin
ww

Well, next Sunday is the big day, our official opening.
We

expect everyone in the program

to meet at Deerfield

Grammar

School at 1 p.m. Sunday, May 31. We will then proceed in
a
group out Whittier Ave. to Longfellow then west on Longfellow to Waukegan Rd. and north on Waukegan Rd. to the

Little

League

diamond

in

Jewett

Park. We hope to be met by both
the Village and Park Boards and
have our opening ceremonies.
A
picture will be taken of the whole

group and if Mrs. Pettis will continue her kind cooperation, we will
have it in the Deerfield REVIEW.
The various Scout troops of this

area
the

will furnish

color

guards

for

parade.

Last week
I received
a letter
from the Police Department of the
Village of Deerfield. Naturally, as

would

be normal for any good law

abiding citizen, my first reaction
was “what did I do now?” Below
the letter is quoted:
“Dear

donated

to the Deerfield

Lit-

tle League from
myself
and the
other
members
of the Deerfield
Police Department.
“We are the first ones to stand
behind
the work
being done
by
men like yourself and the others
working with you. We feel that this
helps to keep our Juvenile problems at a minimum since this gives
the boys something constructive to
be doing in their spare time.

“Any

time

I or members

of this

Department can be of help to the
Little League or any other organi-

zation please feel free to call upon
Respectfully

(Signed)

ARTHUR
Police

This

was

J. CRUMPLER

Department.

wholly

a complete

yours,

unsolicited,

surprise

to us.

it

go out of your way to thank them
for their thoughtfulness.
A letter

appreciation

them, but each
individually.

is

being

should

Sally Robinette

-

and

sent

thank

her

to

them

helpers

have just about completed the reorganization of the Women’s Auxiliary.
Because my phone was so
busy last night there was not the
time to call her and get a full report of the meeting held May 25th,
but it is my understanding that we
have a new president of that organization and that all of the program is outlined.
Next week we
will give a full report on this activity.
Mark Bloch reports slow progress with his merchants’ canvass.
The funds received from this canvass are used to support PONY
league activities in the main and
that is why
we
carry the word

“MERCHANTS”
on the shirt
fronts. We need volunteers to call
on

the various

merchants

to advise

them of the program and to ask
for their financial help. Some of
the contributors to date are Shore
Line Blue Print, David S. Barrow,
Deerfield Bakery, L. W. Hayes Paving
and
Supply,
Midge’s
Super
Service,
Liebschutz
Liquor
Co.,

Country Squire Men’s Shop, Briarwood Country Club. To these people we extend our thanks for their
contributions.

There

have

been

more who have contributed and
acknowledgments will be made at
a later date.
Grace Carlson is in need of help
for her dance committee—especially some of the fathers, so don’t
be shy, call her at WI 5-1530. How
about a little help?
A few of the teams are not getting

any

help

from

the

fathers.

One man cannot handle 15 boys all

Thursday, May 28, 1959
\

the

whole

Our

problem.

next general

held Thursday

meeting

will be

June 4, at 8 p.m. at

the Legion Hall. At this meeting a
nominating committee will be appointed for selection of the next

executive board.

As this is impor-

tant we hope that everyone will be

“Watch

for

passage

of

portant bills.”’

these

im-

on June 30, with Pierre Mon

George
P.
Simon,
409
Willow
Ave., Deerfield, has been appointed to the newly formed Public Relations Advisory Committee of the
Ravinia Festival Association, it was

guest soloist.

announced

Mr. Simon will work with members of the Deerfield women’s coupon book committee in promoting
Ravinia
attendance.
Their
campaign is already under way.

The

Robert S. Ramsay, president of
the Deerfield State Bank, attended
the Illinois Bankers Association’s
May

19-20.

The

group

attempts

to

in St. Louis,

voted

to

weaken

Ravinia

Festival

will

open

The

Mo.,

oppose

the

all

financial

strength
of the national government and thus lower the purchase

«ie

Chicago

Symphony

Orches

tra will give three performances
week at Ravinia this summer,
1
der world-renowned conductors.
a six-week period. The last (

enth)

week

of the

season

will

bh

devoted to six performances by
New York City Ballet Company.

festival of jazz will be included
the season, with Gerry Mullig
and

his

modern

jazz

group,

given

to

the

Studs

Story

Terkel

Ravinia’s fourth

the

Bl

annual

Art Ex-

will

power of the dollar; continue to
believe in and support the inde-

pieces

of sculpture

pendent
dual system of banking
that has served the state for more
than a century; and to keep pace

art editors and seven galleries ©
the area. The art exhibit, in t

the

in the

fast

ever-changing
growing

conditions

economy,

midwestern

show

of

commentating

hibit

with

artists,

paintings

by outstandi
chosen

by

five

Casino
Building
on
the
Ravin
grounds, will be free to all Rav
concert audiences.

Deerfield Sets Up
Justice Courts

LEARN

The office of police magistrate
was
removed
from
Deerfield
on
May 1, according to instructions by
Thomas Matthews, village attorney,
because Deerfield now includes a
small section of Cook County.

CHRISTIAN

CAN

Sitting as judges since May 1 are
justices of the peace elected by the
township.
The justices are being
regulated by Village President Eldon Holmquist, who has set up Walter Page as “first” judge and Mi-

George

as

“second”

From

Senator

seems

well

on

“The

Court

Bill

Administrator

No.

318)

has

bill

already

passed the House
of Representatives and
is pending before
the
Senate Judiciary Committee. This
measure, if passed, would provide
the long-awaited business administration of our Court system under
the Supreme Court. The bill would
grant authority to the Court Administrator to transfer judges to
areas where they are most needed.
Thus, backlogs of cases—especially

in Cook County—could be reduced,
and we will be able to effect a more

efficient

use

of

our

judicial

strength.

“The

other

legislative

reform

would eliminate the Justice of the
Peace fee system, reduce the total
number of J.P.’s, and place this reduced number on a salary.
“This series of bills (Senate Bills

859
your

the
Peace

through
Senator,

evils
fee

of

865,)

sponsored

would

the

system

tice’s fee depends

end

Justice
where

upon

this Kree

lecture

Science

and

the

Dignity of Man
of Denver,

Member

Colorado

of the Board of Lectureship of The Mother

The First Church

of Christ,

Thursday
First

Church

Scientist,

in Boston,

493 Hazel

Avenue

Highland Park, Illinois

by

forever

of

the

the

Jus-

his decid-

ing
for the
plaintiff. The
bills
would place from 3 to 15 Justices

of the Peace in each of our counties and fix their salaries at from

Church,

Massachusetts

- June 4 - 8 p.m.
of Christ,

Little children lovingly cared for
during the lecture.

||
|

by ARTHUR P. WUTH, C. 8. B.

the

road to passage. Two principal proposals are of particular interest.

(House

HELP YOU

Christian

“Legislators have recognized in
the close popular vote the strong
public sentiment for changes in the
administration
of justice.
Consequently, a judicial reform program

legislation

SCIENCE

McClory

A letter from State Senator Robert McClory on the subject of the
administration of justice follows:
“Judicial
reform
by legislation
may become a pleasant reality at
the present session of the Illinois
General Assembly. This would be
accomplished without the necessity
of any constitutional amendment,
which measure
was narrowly defeated last November.

by

HOW

judge,

with the next positions
(if any)
taken by the other three, who are
Bruce Frost, Anthony Mercurio and
Eugene Seyl.
Letter

Attend

ir

Kingston Trio, Les Brown and
Band of Renown, and two evenin
with

Declare Policy

convention

today by Julien H. Col-

lins of Kenilworth, chairman of the
Ravinia Festival Association.

Illinois Bankers

68th

one of the most famous conduc
in the world, conducting the Cl
cago
Symphony
Orchestra.
I:
Stern, renowned violinist, will be

there.

So,

when you see a member of our police department make it a point to

of

the poor manager is left alone with

chael

us;

was

So check up with your team

“Township and County officials
are supporting these innovations in
the ancient J. P. system. If enacted,
Illinois will have gone a long way
toward achieving major reforms in
the administration of justice. And
those who worked for the Judicial
Amendment will not have labored
in vain,

Appoint Deerfield
Man For Ravinia
Festival Publicity

Sir:

Along with this letter you will
receive 10 Wilson baseballs and one

bat,

alone.

manager to see if you can help in
any
manner — he will appreciate
your thoughtfulness. We are trying
to overcome the “baby sitter” complex that develops
when
parents
send their boys out to play ball and

—

“These
bills are the result of
studies by the Judicial Advisory
Council, a body composed of lawyers and legislators, upon
which
your Senator serves as a legislative
member.

Scientist

�FINE

GLENCOE

DIAMONDS

1

eee
We

Carry

PAYMENTS

the

AS

1. H.

Leading

LOW

AS

A

Tel.

THURSDAY,
May
“RALLY ROUND

Park

IDlewood

2-0630

from bank

over

ID

Open Daily 6:30 P.M.
Sat. &amp; Sun., Open 1 P.M.

- OPTICIANS

Highland

THEATRE—GLENCOE

COOL — FREE PARKING

WEEK

NEMEROFF

JEWELERS

Across

Lines

$2.00

35 years

FRI.,

thru

MON.,

2-0605

29-June

e 6 BIG

“UP PERISCOPE”

ad

$158.00

TUES., thru THURS.,

aoe ©to0 $13¢Seat 00

June

ONE OF THE oH ONES!

SHORE

Mon.

“The Sheepman”

Woods

Studio

915 Linden Ave.—Winnetka, Ill.
Call Miss Thomas—HI 6-4123

BERN DAY CAMP

High School Physical Director
CROSS SWIMMING INSTRUCTOR

All Day—9

“FIRE-POLICE”
BENEFIT SHOW

Hubbard

Ice Skating

1:30—6 p.m.
Closed Sundays

thru Sat.

RED

June 4

Classes Now Forming
~~

HOTEL

COACH

Thursday

AROUND

Now!

8-8282

9—12:30;

2-4

YEAR

Register

EVANSTON
TICKET SERVICE
DAvis

KEENANpg
STRITCH
uss mewn TINDA CRISTAL

OPEN

&amp; Sox Games

NORTH

BOOK”

Fri. &amp; Mon., 7:20 - 9:30
Saturday—5: 15 - 7:26 - 9:37
Sunday—1 :42 - 3:45 - 5:48 7:51 - 9:50

ICE SKATING

for:

And ALL Sports and
Stage Attractions

DAYS

Feature Time—

28-Diamond Set,

Cubs

5-0605

TONY CURTIS
peat

1

JAMES (Maverick) GARNER
EDMUND O’BRIEN

Plus Alcyon “SKETCH

VErnon

FRI. thru WED., May 29-June 3

28 Last Day
FLAG BOYS”
May

Choice Tickets

“Music Man”
“Garden District’
“South Seas Adventures”
“Diary of Anne Frank”

to 4:00 — Mon

thru Fri. — June

15 to Aug.

7

Boys—6 to 14 Years
Pontiac all-steel station wagons
Swim Instruction—Cookouts—Educational Trips
Baseball — Football — Track — Basketball — Sox and Cub Games
Self-defense Instruction — Popular Group Games — Fun
24 Years of Developing Boys— College Trained Counsellors
Call Coach William Bern
1092 Cherry St., Winnetka
Hillcrest 6-3851

Glenn Ford, Shirley MacLaine

SIDNEY 0 POITa
IER’ &lt;&lt;
New!

Fried Oysters!

Enjoy a FREE

COMING ...
“THE MATING GAME”

After

ZESTO

Feature Times—7:28

STARTING
Walt
Disney's

HIGHWOOD
ID 2-9718

OPEN

JUNE

- 9:33

LAST

TIMES TONIGHT!
“REMARKABLE
MR. PENNYPACKER”
Thursday, May 28
at 6:10 - 8:10 - 10:10

12th

“Shaggy Dog”

SIT wsakinc

Memorial

AND

African Lobster Tail ........ $1.50
Chicken—Fried or BQ .... 1.25

Teen

Breaded
Shetty 7. 1335
All Fish Dinners ............-- 1.25

«US.
Choice Sirloin ........ 1.75
Filet Mignon .................. 2.00

LUNCHEONS

1716 CENTRAL: UN-4-490°

SATURDAY

Starts FRIDAY, May 29th

Day

AUDREY HEPBURN
ANTHONY PERKINS
“GREEN
MANSIONS”

Until 2 p.m.
,

as
Wiehe

el
AOE sinner cbdsinn

Prime

Ribs

cna

M-6-M presents

SUNDAY

Beef

Private

PAT

5c

Dining

in Flowers

GREENHOUSE
1911

|

Ridge Rd., H.P.
ID 2-3400

THEATRE

COMING

POLICY

Open Daily 6:40 to 12 Midnight—Curtain at 7:00
Sunday Continuous 2 to 12 Midnight—Doors Open 1:40

Friday, May

29 thru Thursday,
—

On
Fannie

Our

ONE

WEEK

Panoramic

OPEN

For

SOON

Your

PATTERSON'S

Aa HOUSE

Dan

Turner,

John

Gavin,

STOCK CAR. RACES :
~ SUNDAY NTE

Screen

Dee,

(Saturday Matinee 2 to 4 one showing of ‘Deer Slayer’’
based on the novel of the same name)

Saturday Evening—"’ Imitation of Life’’ begins at 7:15 and 9:37
Sunday— Imitation of Life’’ begins at 2:30 - 4:52 - 7:14 - 9:36
5—"THE

June

12—"’THE

TEMPEST”

June

19—*”RIO

BRAVO”

42

MATING

GAME”

from

Exhibit In Our
Lobby by

Charles
Snyder

"WAUKEGAN
- SPEEDWAY

You

“West Washington St, between
Green: Bay. Rd. &amp; Skokie Hwy. :
‘MA 33-9540.» Free “Parking o*
‘Adults

$1 25 —
Added

Children
Event

DEMOLITION
RACE

25c

SARATOGA

Child’s

$1.95

Fine Selection

O’Herlihy

June

5-1611

¢ Veal Parmigiana ¢ Chicken A la Cacciatore
¢ Ravioli
¢ Lasagne
¢ Veal Scollopini
e Pizza, etc.
¢ Spaghetti
Dinners

— SCHEDULE —
Weekdays—"’ Imitation of Life’’ begins at 7:15 and 9:37

Page

TRY

CHARCOAL

Sandra

HOLIDAYS
VErnon

CRG STEREOPHONIC SOUND

June 4

Color

Starring—Lana

INCLUDING

in the wonder of

Hurst's

Eastman

7 DAYS A WEEK

Edens, Skokie &amp; County Line Rd.

...

“IMITATION OF LIFE”
in

for Parties of 50

Enjoyment!

—

Wide

1

in CinemaScope and METROCOLOR

DEERPATHS

|

5-161

CUT RATE LIQUOR STORE

M-G-Menesanra
DEBORAH KERR + ROSSANO BRAZZI
MAURICEAAAsCHEVALIER
NAS
OOO

COUNT YOUR BLESSINGS

North Shore’s Most Beautiful Theatre
Lake Forest, Illinois —L.F. 2106 or 4744

©)

FREE
VE

Room

LEE J. COBB

BEST

1.50

DELIVERED

.......- $1.25

SESSUE HAYAKAWA
HENRY SILVA

the

2.

PHONE ORDER

a anor a auesreat
of

Henk

15¢
75

CINEMASCOPE « METROCOLOR
Co-Starring

For

Drink!

Choose your favorite
cocktail at Patterson’s.
It’s served free with
any dinner from 5 p.m.

UNITED ARTISTS
Released thru

at Muzik’s

Dinner

Portion

of Imported

BROILED STEAKS

*

RIBS

Available

Wines &amp; Liquors
*

CHICKEN

Can Charge It:
e SARATOGA CHARGE
e DINERS’ CLUB
e AMERICAN

*

SEA FOOD

EXPRESS

Attractive Cocktail Lounge — Seating Capacity
Air Conditioned
¢
Plenty of Parking
@

Recommended

by

Saratoga
“North Shore’s

Duncan

Hines

150

@

440 Green Bay Rd.
Highwood
ID 2-0440

Finest Restaurant

&amp; Lounge”

Thursday,

May

28, 1959

�Library Shows Year's
Top News Photographs

Adjudication

The traveling exhibit of 15th annual “‘News Pictures of the Year”
photo competition, sponsored by
Encyclopaedia Britannica, the NaAsso-

Photographers

Press

tional

of

Mis-

journalism,

will

at the Highland

Park

University

the

ciation

and

souri’s

school

be on display

of

Claim

Day

Notice

EMILY
SMITH
CUNNYNGHAM
Administrator
with
The
Will
Annexed

Public Library June 1-15. This is
the third year the library has sponsored the display in Highland

and

NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
to all
persons that the first Monday of July, 1959,
is the claim date in the estate of STELLA
S. 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 9 A.M.

Cornell and Wolff, Attorneys
1866 Sheridan Road
Highland Park, Illinois

Park,

5/28 6/4-11/59—159

WE PAMPER PRECIOUS FURS!
ow
pa

Your furs really have it soft in
our modern cold storage vaults
. safe

moisture

from

and

moths,

theft

Repairing
BUY NOW!
AT BIG
AL

fire,

heat,

all summer

long!

&amp;

Restyling
SMALL FURS
SAVINGS!

JACOBSON,

Mgr.

(‘VICTOR BROS. FURS
wy
(2

458

Central Ave., Highland
IDlewood 2-0351

Park

—~7

VISIT

Casual clothes are the order of the day, Memorial Day, May 30,

seacinad

at The Crabapple Restaurants, Old Orchard in Skokie. Enjoy

BEAUTIFUL

SUNSHINE VALLEY
Accredited member of
American Camping
Association.

INSPECTION
INVITED

Open house on Sundays
2-5 P.M.
Location N.W. corner of
Toll Road and Route 22

FOR

CHILDREN 4

thru

able.

provided.
June

Meals

22 —

Mr.

by experienced

Aug.

and

For more formal dining Le Manoir Restaurant specializing
from

cuisine will be open

in French

5:30

p.m. to 10 p.m.

on Memorial Day.

avail-

&amp; Company’s Crabapple and Le Manoir Restaurants are located in Old Orchard at the North end of the Mall.

Marshall Field

J. R. Thompson

FOREST

Special

to 6 p.m.

14th.

Mrs.

LAKE

caterer

complete, $2.25.

children’s menu, 75¢. Cocktails and dinner served from 1 p.m.

11

A wise Mother carefully investigates the site, program
and
director
of the
camp
to which
she
intrusts her child. SUNSHINE
VALLEY
offers
14
years experience,
18 acres of cool woods with a
private shaded lake. The HEATED instruction SWIMMING
POOL was built for teaching children. We
have a wide program of many activities where each
child is individually instructed including golf and
tennis. The counselors are teachers plus adult college students.
No high school boys or girls. Ample
and clean sanitary facilities.
Careful transporta-

tion

Buffet dinner,

the delectable Ranch

3120

EDENS MOTORS, IN
On Skokie between Clavey and Deerfield Roads
e SELLS THE NEW
IN

STOCK

——

ALL

LARK

MODELS

e SELLS THE NEW
IN

STOCK

——

LANCIA

FLAMINIA

e SELLS THE NEW
IN

STOCK

——

Phone: IDlewood 3-2222

190

4-Dr.;

APPIA

4-DR.;

APPIA

VIGNALE

CONVERTIBLE

MERCEDES-BENZ
SL,

TWO

TOPS;

190

4-DR.

e SELLS THE FINEST USED CARS
1959

ALFA-ROMEO;

1958

JAGUAR

3.4; AUSTIN-HEALEY;

1957

JAGUAR

ROADSTER;

VW’S

TRAINED MECHANIC PICK-UP and DELIVERY
FOREIGN AND IS TO SERVICE ALL
FREE LOANER SERVICE,MPORTED CARS

e We Appreciate Your Business e

EDENS
On

Skokie

_ Thursday, May 28, 1959

between

Clavey

MOTORS,
and

Deerfield

Roads

INC.
IDlewood

3-2222

�CERVICE|

My

YOU'LL FIND IT IN TH

2,.

PHONE YOUR WANT AD . . . WE'LL CHARGE IT
|

REAL,

WANT AD RATES

| |

5¢ each additional word
(For 55 words or Less)

Ads containing 56 words or
more are charged at the rate of
$4.90 per column inch.

|

Contract

|

rates for 4 or more

consecutive
on request

insertions available
1 inch Minimum.

|
_ |

This cost will cover the
insertion in all 4 papers.

|

© Deerfield Review
®

Highland Park News
The Lake Forester

|

©

Highwood

z
|

Ads run in above publications
during the same week in which
Fort Sheridan Tower is published
will also appear in

_

|
:

Tower

Published Every Other Friday

Want Ads will be accepted up to

Tuesday, 4:30 P.M.

&amp;
BY

;

a
at

838

Omission
j

through

clerical

oe

IDlewood

2-4500

“o

Windsor

5-4500

Lake
"ie
a
x
y
von

Beautiful 2 bedroom
brick ranch.
Living
room with marble fireplace. Finished breezeway.
Full basement. Gas heat. Gorgeous
landscaped lot (owner spent $6,500 on landscaping), private dead end street. Very attractive mortgage commitment. ........ $27,500

REALTORS
St. Johns

1.

${

2.

$

2 BEDROOM CAPE COD—Separate dining room, 24-ft. Living Room with fireplace, full basement,
gas heat, garage,
beautiful
grounds,
many
other
extras.
$19,500

3. 4 BEDROOM—2
TILE
BATHS—East
Ravinia. 2 blocks from shops and school.
Porch overlooks wooded yard ....$24,500
BEDROOM
PLUS
FAMILY
ROOM
bilevel—1 block to Lincoln School, about
4 years old
$27,000
$3,000 to $4,000 cash down on contract.

(Improved)
6.

BEDROOM,
2
BATH,
BRICK
RANCH—Full
basement
in
northwest
Deerfield, about 3 years old. Contemporary design
$26,500
5 BEDROOMS,
2 BATHS—1
public
or
parochial
schools.
zoned for 8 apts. or medical

NORTHEAST—
ONE STORY

_ first time to close estate. 30 ft. pan.
ay. rm., with frpl., 2 good sized
_ pan. bdrms., bath, kit., half baseLow

In
me

taxes

PHELPS,

af 1925 Sheridan Rd.

|

heating

INC.
ID 2-4580

AIR-CONDITIONED
Expandable 3 bedroom Cape Cod (all on
one floor), living-dining
combination,
full
basement,
gas heat, unusually
good
construction,
low
maintenance
in convenient
tion, many extras. By owner,
mid 20’s.
. ID 2-8270.
2g
iat

Page

44

Sheridan

ID

Road

SHERWOOD

ANN
Green
3-2550

2-0880

FOREST

ANDRUSS
Bay

Rd.

SALE
(improved)
PARK)

will

ap-

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE (Improved)
(HIGHLAND PARK)

VACANT

FOR

463

Porch Overlooking
Ravine
Hidden in The
Woods
Yet Only Three
Short Blocks
To Ravinia Station

Beautiful

BUILT

2-1212

RANCH

HERE

IS A REAL

BUY

because owner is moving and must
sell this charming youthful colonial
home.
Top
EAST
location
near
churches, transportation, shopping,

Living rm., din-

ing rm., pwdr. rm., kitchen with
eating area; large screened porch
overlooking
beautiful
yard
and

patio for bar-b-q’s. 4 bdrms., 2 tiled
baths

on

2nd.

Paneled

recreation

in

just

Realty
Central

GOELZER

Co.

this

but

SPACIOUS
a way

DESIRABLY

of life

LOCATED

five bedrm.
home
in Elm
Place
School District. Large rooms with
high ceilings, elegant millwork, circular stairway are just a few of the
fine features of this well kept, family home. Beautiful living rm. with
unusual fireplace, DEN, pecky cyporch

and

summer

and WILDE

NORTHFIELD—this
custom
built
brick
ranch, on a beautiful acre bordering the
Forest Preserves, has quality construction
and excellent detail. The 15x22 living room
has a stone fireplace wall and an adjoining
study.
There is a separate dining room,
powder room, screened porch, 3 bedrooms
and 2 tile baths. One of the outstanding
features is the wonderful
family
kitchen
with every modern convenience plus a bar,
TV and a barbecue fireplace. It is heated
by gas and the 2 car garage is attached.
HIGHLAND
PARK — this
white
frame
ranch with 4 bedrooms, 3 baths and a paneled family room is the perfect house for
the growing family. There is a fireplace in
the combination living-dining room, a dishwasher in the modern kitchen and a pleasant screened porch. The lot is 94x129 and
the price of $34,500 includes the carpeting.

WILDE

Realtor
Kenilworth
AL
1-7300

SOUTHEAST
location, lake view, private
beach, outstanding living room, separate
dining, library, powder room, tile kitchen
with
eating
and
laundry space,
master
bedroom and bath, all on first floor. 3
family bedrooms and full bath upstairs.
Double garage. Low 60’s. ID 2-3902.

790

Elm

Street

HI

6-5544

OPEN
SAT., SUN., MON.,
12 TO 5
Deluxe 4 bedroom,
brick ranch;
2 large
ceramic baths, 1 with shower; huge beamed
and paneled
den; living room with stone
fireplace
and
large
dining
area;
modern
kitchen with nook; big utility room; screened
porch;
all same floor, Fenced
yard with
fruit trees, barbecue and rustic storage cabin.
1
Block
to
Lincoln
School.
Owner
offers at $49,500—customers only. 920 Bob
O Link Road, 1 block west of Green Bay.
OWNER built, 6 room, 2 story, face brick
with 2 car garage. 3 bedrooms, 1% baths,
separate dining room, full basement, gas
heat and many extras. House located in
center of three 40x130 foot lots. Beautifully landscaped including tall oak, elm
and blue spruce trees. Screened summer
house and outdoor fireplace. In the 40’s.
423 Broadview Ave. Telephone ID 2-0791.

BY OWNER
East Ravinia

Section

HIGHLAND
PARK,
by owner, attractive
7 room ranch, ideal location, beautiful 1%
acre, full basement. $28,500. Low down
payment.
ID 2-3449.
HIGHLAND PARK, lovely 7 room, 3 bedroom, 242 baths plus high, light basement rec. area with 2 car garage. Lovely
treed lot, 100x300 on private road. $42,000.
Greissinger
Realtor,
KEystone
96447 or Lake Forest 4736 evenings.
OWNER, desirable 7 room brick, 112 baths,
basement, 2 car garage. Ravinia. $24,400.
Telephone ID 3-1457.
HERE’S
chance
to beat
inflation.
Very
charming
Cape
Cod home,
all on one
floor. Large living room with fireplace.
3 bedrooms, large bath, modern kitchen,
large screened porch overlooking a row
of pines. Plenty of privacy. Full basement
with large panel family room and fireplace. Attached garage
and half. Very
easy to maintain and low upkeep. Reduced to $31,500. Call ID 2-2871 between
9:30
a.m.-12:00,
except
Sundays.
REAL

ESTATE
FOR
SALE
(DEERFIELD)

porch for loung-

ing. NOT TOO LARGE
CARE. $54,500.

(Improved)

Glencoe

Theater

4In East Deerfield’s Walden school district
an excellent Ranch. Crab Orchard fireplace
in living rm, Good size dining, 3 twin bedrms. Ceramic tile bath &amp; powder rm. Excellent Kitchen with breakfast space. Jalousie porch, Full Basement, Outstanding ash
5-0236 panelled Recreation Room. Attached garage. Mid 30’s.

Bldg.

VE

SPECIAL NEW LISTING: Well-planned 2
bedroom
ranch
with
fine
kitchen,
many
closets,
garage
with workshop,
many
extras. $18,500. Call Mr. Hastings.
SPECIAL
PRICE
REDUCTION
—
Now
just $25,750 buys this perfectly maintained
Tri-level set in a lovely fenced yard.

HOMEFINDERS,

Realtors

111

ALpine

Green

Bay

Rd., Wilmette

HIGHLAND

1-1111

655

Vernon

GRAHAM
Ave.

REALTOR
VE

5-4121

HIGHLAND
PARK
Custom, built ranch, 24% years old. 4 bedrooms, 3 baths, recreation room, gas heat,
dishwasher, range, new carpeting and drapes.
$44,250.

712 GLENCOE
AMbassador

REAL ESTATE
REALTORS
ROAD

2-7873

Excellent
3 Bedrm
tance
to
separate
basement,
doors to
Nancy

PARK

SAVE time by going to a real estate broker. Save worry by insisting on a Chicago
Title Insurance Policy that protects your
ownership.

LANG

Contemporary
Redwood
Ranch
in village
(sewer &amp; water) 3 bedrms, air conditioning,
Carpeting included. Located in one of Deerfield’s most scenic areas. Price $22,900.
Financing on this Brick &amp; Frame
Ranch located within walking distrans.
&amp; shopping.
Entry
hall.
Living
Rm,
Family
Room,
Full
Tiled bath &amp; Powder Rm, Sliding
Patio, More Extras, Price $25,950.
Sullivan
OPEN
Closed

10% down can buy this lovely young ranch
house in desirable Woodridge area, 3 bedrooms, many extras, immediate occupancy,
low upkeep, priced in low 20’s.

SEYMOUR

John Coons
Realtor

FOR EASY

REALTORS
2-6600

5-1670

press Rec. rm. 314 baths, breakfast

J-H Kahn

Realtors
ID

and

AND

a house

L. Ringer
457

Phone Owner
ID 2-5131

GRACIOUS
Not

Windsor

Highland Park, large wooded lot (85 foot
frontage).
3 bedrooms,
2 complete tile
baths
with
showers,
modern
kitchen,
screened porch, sun deck, tile roof. Ideal
location, 2 blocks from school, shopping
and trains. Quick sale. Priced in the low
thirties.
Telephone
ID
2-4744,
for appointment.

In Perfect
Condition and
Completely
Modernized
Low Thirties
With
Small
Down
Payment

Liv.-Din. rm. comb., beautiful kit.
with bkfst. area; 3 bdrms., tiled
bath. BASEMENT;
piping in for
2nd
bath.
Breezeway
to garage.
Lovely property. A wonderful opportunity as owner has moved away
and wants to sell. $29,500.

Rd.

OWNER
being transferred must sell brick
ranch
home.
Attractively
landscaped
wooded lot, carport with attached utility
shed, 3 bedrooms, 2 ceramic baths, full
basement, large living. room with studio
ceiling
and
cathedral
windows,
kitchen
includes stove and refrigerator. 1 block
ae
commuter station. Telephone ID 3-

Built by One
of Our Best
Architects

Please

OWNER

730 Waukegan

Screened

Anspach
ID

Benj. Piersen Realty
REALTORS

SALE

ALTORS
Ave.

Central

The Cutest
Bedroom House
In Ravinia

Two

Best East central location. 82x160,
somewhat irregular. Nicely wooded.
Close to schools and transportation

H. and R.

BE SOLD

Brick split level home
in excellent location.
3
bedrooms,
2 baths,
large
fully
equipped: kitchen, partially finished recreation room, porch, 1 car attached garage.
$23,900.

Realtors

Small down payment will buy this bright
and shiny white brick bi-level. Paneled family
room,
modern
kitchen,
3 bedrooms,
fenced backyard. $23,750.

440
BR

buyer

IF YOU
CAN
FIND
A BETTER
HOUSE AT THIS PRICE, BETTER
BUY IT. In beautiful north Deere
Park,
8 rooms,
3%4
baths.
Fine
kitchen. All in excellent condition.
$39,500

GOELZER

REALTORS
1899

ESTATE
FOR
(HIGHLAND

rooms with 2 baths, low cost gas
heat
and
taxes,
perfectly
maintained. Call Mrs. Tyson. In the 40’s.

Farhart &amp; Co.

costs.

excellent loc. surrounded by
ei scal cc aacl $24,500
MOTOS aoe

PAUL

_
_
_
_

and

block to
Multiple
building.
$24,500

On 100 feet of attractive prop.,
offered for
one story home
| this

REaiL

MUST

room. FA GAS heat. OUTSTANDING VALUE—$45,500.

4 BEDROOMS,
1% BATHS, modernized
older home includes a large family room
and separate dining room on Ist floor.
Fireplace in living room, basement. Gas
heat. Low taxes. Elm Place School District
$18,500

4.3

discriminating

school and LAKE.

OTHER LOW DOWN
PAYMENT BUYS

|

ESTATE FOR SALE
(HIGHLAND PARK)

ment.

2-1484

IN RAVINIA—Large living room, separate
dining room, 4 bedrooms, 1 bath and plumbing is in for second bath. If you are looking for a home in low income bracket, this
is just for you! Call today.

5.3

*

ID

Ave.

NEWLY LISTED—
$17,800

HIGHLAND PARK
608 Laurel
DEERFIELD
699 Waukegan Rd.
LAKE FOREST
287 Deerpath

REAL

PARK

1765 BLOSSOM—
HIGHLAND PARK

‘

Forest 2300

BUENA—HIGHLAND

Come see the interior of the “Doll House.”’
Huge dining-living combination with thermopane
window
overlooking
large
heavily
wooded: SOx300 ft; 1Ot) ooo cine
c, nl
J

or

y

PARK

Beautiful wide and deep wooded lot, 80x
200 ft). Stone English Tudor. Nine rooms
(including large family room), 5 bedrooms,
3 baths, basement, gas heat, 2 car Ores

Dorsey Husenetter

p
TELEPHONE
WANT AD SERVICE P

:

CEDAR—HIGHLAND

0|

New
brick and frame split level. 3 Bedrooms, 2 baths. Finished family room. Very
convenient
$27,750

mechanical
error and
shall be
under no obligation or liability
of any kind whatsoever, either to
the advertiser or third parties.
In the event of an error in copy,
on the advertiser’s request, the
ublisher will rectify the error
y publishing the corrected ad
in the next regular issue without
charge. All claims for adjustment
must be made within five days of
the date of publication in which
the error occurs.

fa

large new 1st floor family
3 bedrooms, modern kitch$28,500

”

723

SALE
(Improved)
PARK)

preeiate.this.true.Cap Code house
sitting quietly in a bed of roses, 7

Top location. Immaculate condition inside
and out. Three bedroom, 1% bath, brick and
frame Colonial.
Modern
kitchen, separate
dining room. Full basement. Brick garage.

CANCELLATION DEADLINE
12 NOON, TUESDAY

f

The

WARRINGTON—DEERFIELD

445

ESTATE
FOR
(HIGHLAND

CHARM!

622 PLEASANT—
HIGHLAND PARK

DEADLINE FOR CONTRACT
ADS 3 P.M. TUESDAY
For Publication in the Current
Week’s Issue.

Copyis accepted with the underStanding
that
the
publisher
assumes
no_
responsibility
for

A

You'll love this
room with F/P,
en, gas heat

3443

News

Fort Sheridan

REAL

1024 MARION—
HIGHLAND PARK

25c Service charge for blind ads

|

SALE _ (Improved)
PARK)

—Drive By—

20 words
for only

%

ESTATE
FOR
(HIGHLAND

CALL WI 5-4500

VE

5-5100

SUNDAY
Memorial

or

WI

5-1393

10-5
Day

Member
Evanston-North
Shore
Multiple Listing Service

John Coons, Realtor
in Deerfield
623

Deerfield

Rd.

WI

5-5100

DEERFIELD-LINCOLNSHIRE
YOU WILL LIVE BETTER ELECTRICALLY IN THIS TRULY ALLELECTRIC
HOME.
A
Beautiful
Colonial-design Ranch home completely automatic and as modern as

tomorrow!

GLENCOE

WI

3 bedrms., 2 ceramic tile

baths, family room and
Offered at $46,500.

2 fireplaces.

5-1971

HOKANSON
MODERN
3 bedroom bi-level, 142 baths,
family room with bar, jalousied porch, 2
car garage, reasonable. Information: telephone ORchard 6-1287.

&amp;

JENKS,

Realtors
513 Davis

Street

Thursday,

GReenleaf

5-1617

May 28, 1959

,

�REAL ESTATE FOR SALE (Improvea
sa
(DEERFIE LD)
itt

Benj.

Piersen

NEW

,

REAL

Owner
transferred. Must
sell nearly new
brick ranch home. 3 bedrooms, living room,
panelled
dining
room
(or family room),
itchen with eating area, full basement with
peautiful panelled recreation room, nearly
w wall to wall carpeting included. High
0’s

$18,900
Zt listed this well built little charmer, conEnient to trains and shopping. Living room
with fireplace, 2 bedrooms, wood cabinet
itchen with breakfast area, full basement,
sairage, gas heat, plastered walls, beautifully
Endscaped.

; DECORATOR’S

LARGE

Beautifully maintained 3 hedroom ranch. 2
aths, large kitchen, full basement, 22x28
ecreation room with many built-ins includmg mirror back bar, fenced patio, excellent
neighborhood, carpeting and drapes includd. $25,900

WOODLAND

PERFECT

SCATTERWOOD

Waukegan

BEDROOMS

SUNDAY

. Ceramic

tile bath

new

Windsor

5-1670

A.

Three
year old tri-level. 3 bdrms.,
2
aths, large family rm., laundry rm., plus
oasement.
Kitchen
w/built
in G.E.
oven
and range; also eating space. Planned landScaped lot w/screened
patio. $31,500.
Brick ranch on beautiful landscaped lot.
twin size bdrms., plus den or 4th bdrm.,
1% baths. Sep. dining rm., kitchen w/eating
space. Full basement. $39,000.
3. Well
maintained
ranch
w/living
and
ining rms. 3 twin size bdrms., 2 Ceramic
ile baths.
2 car garage. Recreation
rm.
Large lot. Convenient location. Gas heat.
’

ALpine

&amp;

ORR,

1-0228

Realtors
GReenleaf

5-1080

to

6

P.M.

AREA

with

with

fireplace

built in oven

dining
rooms.
jn low

with 4 bedrooms,

room
and 2 extra family
A ‘‘must” to see and priced
40’s. See

SEARS

REAL

ESTATE

CO.

REALTORS
Hillcrest

6-2900

LINCOLNSHIRE
Luxury
living!
7 room
California
ranch,
3 bedrooms, huge living rm., dream kitchen
completely
equipped
with
all appliances.
Finest appointments
thruout.
This elegant
home built in 1958 must be sold due to
illness. Asking in low 50’s.

McGUIRE
ALpine

1-0228

&amp;

ORR,

Realtors
GReenleaf

_ Thursday, May 28, 1959

5-1080

WI

Telephone

Mrs.

lot

Mrs.

1084

Moran—WI

5-0645

PITTENGER

Everett

REAL

Rd.

ESTATE

Lake

Forest

249

VIKING Realty Co.
5 BEDROOMS—2
$25,500

BATHS

Situated
on half
acre,
close to schools.
House is 7 years old. Has separate dining
room, large kitchen, closets galore and full
basement. Call today for an appointment.

LOW

LOW

PRICE

$15,900
Well planned 2 bedroom ranch, convenient
to shopping,
transportation,
and _ schools.
Newly painted. Gas heat. Immediate possession as owner has bought another home.

IDEAL

FOR

YOUNG

MODERNS

$17,500

MEMORIAL

DAY

MONDAY
THRU
9 a.m.-8 p.m.
SATURDAY
9 a.m.-5 p.m.

FRIDAY

VIKING Realty Co.
826

Deerfield

Rd.

6-3622

contractor, new bi-level in Deerfield
area, situated on lot 131x235, 3 bedrooms;
3 baths, 2 in ceramic; fireplace; 27x10
country kitchen, gas oven range and rotisseries; paneled family room with outside entrance; double garage, landscaped
and
side
drive.
Quality
construction
throughout. Many extra features. $37,500.
Terms
available. $4,500 down,
open to
reasonable
offer.
Open
for
inspection.
For appointment, call DAvis 8-6346.

dining

Deerfield

WI

HOMEFINDERS,

Realtors

111

ALpine

Green

THIS

Open to inspect all week. 3 bedroom bilevel, pan.
family
room,
2 fireplaces,
2
baths,
birch
kitchen,
screened
patio
and
attached
garage.
Immediate
possession.
eri
Call owner for information,
WI

Bay

Rd., Wilmette

1-1111

BY

OWNER: Have already purchased farm
MAKING
IMMEDIATE
SALE
VITAL
of 7 room, 1% bath home; glazed and
heated
porch,
walk
in
closets,
large
fenced yard with patio, double detached
garage.
Close to school, transportation,
and shopping. Low 20’s. Anxious for immediate offer. Telephone WI 5-3077.

REAL

ESTATE
FOR
SALE
(LAKE FOREST)

NEWLY

new

black

top

modern

drive.

Nice

Gas

garage,

back

yard.
$24,500

Living
room with fireplace,
dining room, cabinet kitchen, powder
room and screened porch on first
floor.
Basement
with
recreation
area.
One-car
detached
garage.

$34,500

DAY

PRIVATE

three

six year

age. Two-car
N@Oti
iiss

bath,

old,

FOR

screened

Newly

five

SETTING.

bedroom,

three

with
fireplace
and
window,
screened

porch, kitchen, pantry

and

powder

room on first floor. Four bedrooms,
two baths
on second floor. Bedroom,
bath,
playroom
and_
attic
storage
on third. Full basement.
Oil heat, two-car detached garage.
A child’s paradise! .............. $70,000

20 ft. living. room,.16

FAMILY

BRICK

H.

room,

kitchen,

pantry,
breakfast
room,
powder
room and screened porch on first
floor. Gas heat. Two-car attached

Ff
gy o (EVM

as

te

fy at eee

$75,000

HOME: 3 or 4 bedrooms,

Six bedroom, four and half bath,
brick house on over two acres. Entrance
hall,
guest
bedroom
and
bath,
living
room,
dining
room,
family room
and
large
screened
porch on first floor. Oil heat, twocar attached garage. ............ $80,000

Our

Available

Customers

Hart, Shaw &amp;
Company

CITY PARKING LOT. In8 room house, fully insu-

Richard B. Hart, President
Howard
ReQua,
Vice President
Mrs. Stuart R. French
Milton McN. Traer
Ruth E. Henderson
Kenmore Thorsen
260 E. Deerpath
135 S. La Salle St.
Lake Forest 4040
RAndolph 6-7155
Member of the Evanston-North Shore
Multiple Listing Service
C.

Lake

Olson

Bluff 969

&amp;

Co.

Realtors
Waukegan,

Ill.

JOHN GRIFFITH, INC.
Serving the area since 1904

LAKE

BLUFF

RAVINE
AREA;
NEW _.=§ EXCLUSIVE
LISTING:
White
brick Colonial on acre
site near schools and village, Spacious foyer, living room, separate dining room, tiled
kitchen, breakfast
room,
charming family
room with fireplace, 6 bedrooms, 314 baths.
Gracious
porch
and
walled
patio.
Good
basement area for family hobbies. Gas heat;
excellently maintained.

LAKE

FOREST

QUALITY
BRICK
tri-level in Northmoor
Sub. 3 bedrooms, 2 baths; knotty pine recreation room,
AIR
CONDITIONED.
Gas
heat, oversized 2 car garage. Nicely landscaped lot. Priced right in low 30’s.
Charming brick and redwood COLONIAL
on high 2 acre tract in exclusive location.
Entrance hall, living room with fireplace,
dining
room,
large panelled family room
with fireplace, kitchen and powder
room
on ist floor. Four bedrooms and 3 baths on
2nd floor. This fine home features generous
sized rooms, excellent workmanship, and is
2 perfect condition. OFFERED
IN THE
re,

M.

GRIFFITH,
REALTORS

OFFICES

678 Western
Lake Forest

TO

Ave
485

C. Lackie

1380

|

YOU

Scranton

Lake

Mary

W. Paul LeRoi 104
Gordon Lackie 2834
N. Starosselsky 1181
Donald Kelley 1082

|

INC.

SERVE
12

NEW

—

H.

Ave.

Bluff 816

Griffis

339

June Enos 1117
Frances Rutgers 1075
Nancy Appleton 3974
Helen Bryan 105

LISTING

6 room brick including 3 bedrooms,
basement,
modern
kitchen,
ete.
Good Lake Bluff location offered

at $29,500.

YOU

Space

D.

JOHN

Six bedroom, five and a half bath,
brick Colonial. Entrance hall, living
room with fireplace, library with

.

baths,

WONDERFUL
SPLIT LEVEL—3 extremely large bedrooms, 24 baths, living-dining
with fireplace, &amp; lovely carpeting &amp; drapes.
No screens to put up ever! The kitchen has
range,
oven,
&amp; eating space
for family.
Lower 30’s.

TWO

dining

2%

living room-dining
room,
eating space in
kitchen.
112 baths, enclosed
porch, huge
family area developed &amp; sep. laundry. 2
car attached garage. Private outdoor patio
&amp; barbeque. Lawn sweeps vista views from
all sides. $36,500.

FOR

fireplace,

SPACE

bedrooms,

room, cab. kitchen, tiled
Garage &amp; patio. $18,000.

Colo-

and a half bath, delightful family
home on five beautiful acres only
ten minutes walk to Market Square.
Living
room
graceful
bay

3

:

CHARMING

living—4

ft. dining
3 bedrms.

attached garage. Gas
eee
$69,500

listed

porch.

BLUFF

OF

FAMILY

air-con-

brick

SPECIALS

Ave.

STORM REALTY CoO.
378 Green Bay Rd.
Winnetka
Hillcrest 6-7180

off

LAKE
ABUNDANCE

nial ranch on an acre and a half
of ground. Living room with fireplace, dining room, kitchen with
breakfast
area,
large
screened
porch and utility room. Attic stor-

for

$37,500

PATIO

Mrs. Lindenmeyer,

Parking

5 Bdrms.

FOREST

bedrms., 2 baths (one off master), living
room, firepl., dining room, kitchen, dishwasher, disposal, full base., 2 car attached
garage. Large lot. In 40’s.

RUSTIC

bedroom,

(Improved)

FAMILY HOUSE, all lg. rooms (7), with3
bedrms., base., garage; oil heat &amp; firepl. in
living room. 20’s.

GOOD
market

on Western

maintained.

ESTATE
FOR SALE
(LAKE FOREST)

baths, DEN, and family room, 2 fireplaces,
16 ft. dining
room,
kitchen,
disp., range
&amp; oven, Carpeted ist floor. 26 ft. FAMILY
room, porch, 2 car garage, gas heat, and
fenced yard.
'

Newly listed three bedroom, two
and a half bath, two-story Colonial.

FIRST TIME OFFERED
BUSINESS
LOCATION
- N W
CORNER WESTERN &amp; ILLINOIS

lated &amp; well
'B-2 Zoning.

kitchen.

two-car

MEMORIAL

GILBERT RAYNER
REAL ESTATE
266 EAST DEERPATH
LAKE FOREST 382

RD. 75 ft. frontage

one

LISTED

Modern
1-story
house
in Northmoor section on large lot. 4 bedrooms, 2 baths. 2-car attached garage. Gas heat. Priced in the 40’s.

NEAR
cludes

bedroom,

furnace,

(Improved)

Older 10 room frame house in excellent
location,
off
Green
Bay
Road, secluded, yet within walking
distance to town, Priced in the 30’s.

5-5300

ENJOY
SPACIOUS
LIVING
Two 9-room colonials, now under construction. Entry hall, living room with fireplace,
separate dining room, kitchen with built-ins
and eating area, family room, laundry room
and powder room on first floor; 5 bedrooms,
2 full baths on second floor; attached 2
car garage.
$38,500.. Nordic
Construction
Inc., telephone WI 5-1620.

HEADLINE PARADE THRU
708 HERMITAGE
DR.

room,

heat,

SPECIAL
NEW
LISTING:
Handsome
3
bedroom
ranch
including
paneled
family
room with sliding glass doors to rustic garden. A fine home
on
1 acre—priced
in
the 30’s. Call Mr. Degen—WI
5-1784.

3 bedroom brick ranch with dazzling kitchen including range, oven, washer and dryer.
Breezeway and 114 car garage with concrete
drive.
Full storms
and
screens.
All this

OPEN

HOME
BUILDERS
345 Walnut St.
Hillcrest

BY

2-6878

four

bath, older house in eastern location, ideal for young married cou|ple.
Living
room
with fireplace,

ditioned,

COMPLETION

Both these houses are in Scatterwood, Deerfield’s fine home
section. Take
Deerfield
Rd. to Warrington, (2 blocks east of Waukegan Rd.) North on Warrington to end,
left on Woodvale
and again left on Ambleside, South 1 block.

Northfield

McKinney—ID

listed

5-5700

THE
EXETER
626 Dimmeydale,
$39,850
3 bedroom, 2 bath brick ranch, large livingdining room with fireplace, maple kitchen
with oven, range, eating space. Large family room, basement, good closets.

garage

possession

CLOSED

separate

Rds.

NEW
contemporary
house
on 2 wooded
acres in estate area; large living-dining
room
with
cathedral
ceilings,
fully
equipped
kitchen, family
room,
3 bedrooms, 2 baths, oversized 2 car garage.
$44,500. Telephone WI 5-0623.
TWO
bedroom
ranch home,
8 years old,
garage and screened breeze-way, carpeting
and
drapes
included,
near schools and
wine
$16,500. Ower,n telephone

L-C

2-car

. $24,500

not a year ’round one in this lush
location. Magnificent trees and a
swimming
pool nearby.
SCHOLZ

RANCH

Deerfield

OWNER:
ttransfer
forces
immediate
sale, custom built 4 year old colonial.
3 or 4 bdrms., 2 full baths, foyer, bsmt.
with rec. rm., full of built-in storage,
screened porch, terrace;.lge.,fenced yard,
_louber doors, cork floors, Loads‘
of closets, cupboards,
drawers.
Located
on
wooded lot ‘close -to schols, park, transportation, shopping.
On beautiful, quiet
ig.
street. 20’s. Telephone WI 5-

porch

. Immediate

DEERFIELD-LINCOLNSHIRE
a summer vacation, why

&amp;

heat

for

Instead of

&amp;

Newly

ESTATE

THE PLYMOUTH, 1433 Ambleside, $41,500
4 bedroom, 2%
bath brick and frame 2
story. Large living room with fireplace, dining room; walnut finish kitchen with eating space, oven and range; family room.
Master bedroom has double dressing room
bath, good closets, basement.

off kitchen
gas

. Oversized

DEERFIELD
UNUSUAL VALUES!

McGUIRE

kitchen

room

. Screened

room

. Half acre wooded

REALTORS

12

5-0984

(painted white)

living

WILLIAM

THREE

brick

. Economical

Attractive 2 story colonial, less than one
ear old, entrance hall, living room with
stone fireplace, dining room, built-in oven
and range, dishwasher and disposal, powder
room, 3 twin bedrooms, ceramic tile vanity
id
large screened porch, basement. $36,-

Rd.

WI

. Panelled

. Utility

COLONIAL

Waukegan

Waukegan

NEARING

Road

1. 3 bedroom

ery well built brick ranch in lovely residential area, walking distance to schools,
shopping and transportation. Carpeted living-dining
combination,
kitch. with eating
area, full basement
with large recreation
area, fenced
yard, patio. Priced
to sell.
‘Low 20's,

730

DAY

DEERFIELD - BANNOCKBURN

. Brand
range

Benj. Piersen Realty

1 to 6

REAL

BRICK ON 90 ft. wooded lot. 3 bedrms.,
tiled bath,
paneled
wall in living room,
firepl.,
18 ft. enclosed
porch, full base.,
att. 2 car garage. $33,000.

OUR

Four

20's.

3 TWIN

Sunday

REAL

REALTORS

OPEN

is charming contemporary ranch has spaious living room, dining room combinaion with stone fireplace, family size kitchpn with built-in oven and range, 3 bedooms,
ceramic
tile
baths,
2-car
port,
screened porch, overlooks golf course, High

MEMORIAL

Carr Realty Co.
701

1% WOODED
ACRES

AREA

Brick and frame ranch. 3 twin size bedrooms, 142 baths, spacious living room with
fireplace,
dining room, large kitchen,
attached garage. Area of fine homes. Owner
will help
finance.
Bring
us your
offer.
$29,750.

PARK

Open

(improved)

LAKE

BY

Living-dining combination,
3 bedrooms,
3
baths,
finished
rec -room;+~large
screened
schools,
Close: to
garage.
2° car
porch,
churches, and. _shopping::. Beautifully’ “kept;
your’dream house, $27,500.

CLOSED

ONE year old 3 bedroom brick ranch. 2 car
attached garage,
family size kitchen with
built-in
appliances,
beautifully
finished
hardwood cabinets, fireplace, landscaped; in
Briarwood section of Deerfield. Priced to
sell, $32,000.

ZANDER-OMMEN

CAPE COD

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE
(LAKE FOREST)

TWO year old ranch on beautifully wooded
lot,
150x300.
2
bedrooms,
large
den,
screened-in patio, 2 car attached garage,
fireplace. Must be seen to be appreciated.
$36,000.

LOCATION

Frame
ranch.
3 bedrooms,
screen porch,
family size kitchen, living-dining combinagarage; full basement.
attached
tion and
Owner must sell at $23,500.

bedroom ranch home; living room with
ireplace, large screened porch, 1% baths,
Hining room,
kitchen, full basement | with
ireplace, bath, swimming
pool. Beautiful
arge lot. Low 30’s.

ON

FAMILY

See this 4 bedroom, 1% bath, bi-level. Living room-dining room combination with carpeting.
Partially
finished
recreation
area
with attached garage. In nice neighborhood
of young people. A steal at $23,500.

BRICK

DREAM

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE (improved)
(DEERFIELD)

See this charming brick ranch with 2 car
garage, gas heat, and family kitchen;
on
wooded lot, 100x200. Priced right at $17,500.

TRANSFERRED
Attractive 2 year old brick and redwood split
vel. Living
room
with
large dining
L,
nily room, basement, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths,
uilt-in oven and range, refrigerator and
lisposal,
attached
garage,
circular
patio.
Beautifully
landscaped
corner
property.
Muick occupancy. $31,500.

ed
enacts

WOODED AREA

Realty

LISTING

ESTATE FOR SALE
(DEERFIELD)

vacant
is coming
on the
now. New, choice Lake For-

est listings

from

Call Lake

Bluff 4057

STUART
32 Center

—

$8500.

&amp;

or 166

CO.

Exclusive Agents
Ave., Lake Bluff,

Illinois.

Baird &amp; Warner
LAKE FOREST
ONWENTSIA VIEW.
Fine, wondefully built Brick and Stone Contemporary Ranch home on heavily wooded
acre looking out over Onwentsia. Ten bright
rms. with 342 Baths. All electric Kitchen. |
Central
air conditioning
and
2 car gar.
Charming, almost new, this home ideal for
either large or small families. Delightfully mi
different. May we show you? In the seventies. MR. REYNOLDS

Baird &amp; Warner
522 Davis
GReenleaf

Street
5-1855

Evanston,
HOllycourt

Illinois
5-1855

NEW frame ranch type house, 6 rooms and
attached
garage,
on
large
corner
lot;
plastered.
Offered
by
builder,
$17,000.
Lake Bluff 1916.

Page

45

�Pe

WAL

seid? ds aoc
et a

‘

is

Va

REAL

ESSFATE

(MISCELLANEOUS)

WOULD
YOU
LAKK FRONT

ACREAGE SITE
$8700

and

nae

Located 1.2 miles north of Deerpath stop light on Winwood Dr.

Clifford

oe

Rd.

from

If your children would like to have a pony
and other pets, we have a 3 bedroom Brick
Veneer Ranch on 1 acre. There is a barn
with corral on this well landscaped acre,
situated just outside Mundelein. $22,500.

Leonard

EXCLUSIVE

BROKER

FOREST

DUNKIRK

2375

If you’re interested in a Good Investment,
let us show you an. acreage just west of
Waukegan. The rent from the house on this
property will about cover your payments,
after initial down payment.

1-2353

eer
8)
Sema
A piece of property in Libertyville (zoned
business), where, after initial payment, the
house will bring in enough to make
the
payments.
Either of these properties
are
priced at $26,500.

"J
BLUFF East, 3 bedroom ranch, lot
“f
ry on deadend street near grade
a Geom FY pine are
transferred. Call

JUST
8 room

_ COMPLETED

COLONIAL

: cluding

4 Bedrooms,

baths.

Wooded

RANCH

in-

3 ceramic

tile

acre,

EAST

Lake

large

thermopane

large

porch.

Tage,

gas

sliding

Basement,

heat.

2

Black

car

top

ga-

drive-

Call .
JO or

.

oe

Call Lake

Bluff 4057

.

“STUART &amp; CO.

ae

Exclusive Agents

32

Center Ave. Lake

H.

D.

Olson

&amp;

Co.

Waukegan,

BY OWNER

Bluff, Illinois

ESTATE FOR SALE
(MISCELLANEOUS)

OFFICES,

(Vacant)

STORES &amp;
TO RENT

STUDIOS

MODEL OPEN
DAILY &amp; SUNDAY

2 AND
3 rooms for offices only. 456
Central Ave. ID 2-0150.
ROOM office for rent, 310 North Green
Bay Rd., Highwood. For information call
ID 2-4620.
FOR rent, one shop suitable for garage or
storage on Central Ct., Highland Park.
Telephone ID 2-0540.

12 Noon to 6 p.m. at
2251 Heathercliff Dr.
1/4 Mile No. of Buckley Rd.
and 1/4 Mile W. of O’Plaine Rd.

APARIMENTS
TO RENT (Unfurnished)
(HIGHLAND PARK)

MEADOW
HOMES
Phone

1,

2

HAVEN
CORP.

BRiargate

342

PARK—TOWN

4-1763

3

ARCHITECT
OFFERS
own
designed
8
room one story modern house. Unique interior, 11 ft. ceiling, 40 ft. living room, 4
acres
on wooded
stream. 5 car
garage.
$38,000. Telephone NEwton 4-3834.

BARRINGTON COUNTRYSIDE
HOME

HIGHLAND
PARK—1335
Sherwood
Rd.
$25,500. Open 1 to 6, Thursday, Saturday,
and Sunday. 4 yr., combination brick split
level, 3 bdrms., 144 baths, patio, semi-finished rec, rm.

Close in small farm estate, 4 bedroom Colonial, 2 car garage, small barn. Many trees.
Orchard and vegetable garden. Extensively
landscaped.
$110,000.

Sunday

1%

baths,

closet

space,

HOUSE
1-5

Air

basement;

Cond.,
avail-

able July 15th, for 2 years. Partially furnished if desired. EXCELLENT EAST LOCATION. $300 per
month.

Realty
Central

Co.

Realtors
ID 2-6600

ROOM apartment with range and refrigerator included, Highwood
business district. Telephone Lake
Forest
136.
; 3 bedrooms &amp; push-button kitchen.
3 ROOM apartment in Highwood, equipped
:
ts many fine extra features. $43,500,
with stove and refrigerator, available im6
Mr. Strey.
mediately. Telephone ID 2-3802, between
‘tel
8 am. and 5 p.m.
SPECIAL PRICE REDUCTION: Now you WILMETTE—523 Washington St. Gracious
5 ACRES
4 ROOM apartment, heat furnished, second
wn
own one of the most unusual homes on home.
5 bdrms., 2 full baths, 2 powder
floor, no pets. In Highwood. Call after
the North Shore. This brick and redwood rms., lge. modern kit., separate dining rm., A most attractive 3 bdrm. 2 story residence,
3 p.m. ID 2-3039.
§Split-level
with
4-5 bedrooms,
214 _ baths
and 2 car garage. Very clean and in excelliving rm. with fireplace; close to beach.
unfurnished
2 bedroom
aparta spectacular living room
with firelent condition.
Partly
wooded.
Desirable MODERN
ment.
Telephone ID 2-2975.
e and balconies.
A home the discrimin- DEERFIELD—3 bdrm. ranch on lge. land- oe
10 more acres available. $45,ating buyer should not miss. $66,000. Call scaped lot. 244 baths, spacious living rm.
3 ROOM
and bath, heat and water fur_
Mrs. Nilsson.
nished, in Highwood. Call ID 2-6154.
with fireplace and dining area, breezeway
“oy
WALTER MELROSE
with barbeque, completely finished bsmnt.
4 ROOM
apartment, heat and hot water
with bar. Low 40’s.
furnished. Telephone ID 2-3187.
West Signal Hill Rd.
Barrington
DUnkirk
1-1395
314 ROOM
one bedroom apartment avail111 Green Bay Rd., Wilmette ALpine 1-1111 DEERFIELD—Perfect for the young family.
able,
stove
and
refrigerator
furnished;
3 bdrm. ranch home, lge. living rm., sepwill decorate to suit. $110. Telephone ID
arate dining area, modern kit., full bsmnt.,
BARRINGTON—nestled
in the crest of a
ais
BY OWNER
2-5041.
hill is this custom built home in secluded
5 year old, 3 bedrooms, 1% baths, living fenced back yard. Low 20’s.
SMALL
fix-it shop and garage with four
wooded
paradise,
dramatic
living room
room with fireplace, oversized 2 car at- SKOKIE—2 story, 4 bdrm. home, lge. living
room apartment on second floor. St. Johns
with 17 ft. window wall overlooks breath
tached garage with workshop area, on acre,
Ave. Telephone Libertyville 2-2350.
room
with
fireplace
and picture window
taking panoramic view of Japanese garden
city water, West Lake Forest. Mid twenties.
overlooking Evanston golf course. Panelled
and bridges which lends enchantment to 5 ROOM apartment in Highwood, heat and
:
lephone ID 2-9468 evenings or all day family rm., patio, modern kit. with builtwater furnished; second floor. Rent reathe
winding
spring
fed
brook
in
ravine
- week ends.
ins, separate dining area. Low 40’s.
sonable. Adults preferred. Telephone ID
below. 1 acre lot, 8 rooms, 2 baths, 2
_ LAKE BLUFF east, 1%4 story stucco.
4
2-5950.
kitchens,
massive
fireplace,
recreation
bedrooms, 1% baths, living-room dining NORTHWEST
EVANSTON—10
rms.
5
room, bar, garage, 80 ft. patio and bal- 4 ROOM
apartment, heat and water fur_ room.
combination,
large
utility
room,
bdrms., 214 baths, living rm. with fireplace,
cony
across
entire
house.
2 complete
nished,
stove
and _ refrigerator;
second
‘ Sgt
tees
ax rac
available.
rec. rm. den, separate dining rm. Anxious
levels. $42,900. DUnkirk 1-3031.
floor.
Telephone
ID 2-5799 after 4.
iE
8.
ocks from school,.
Low 20’s,
to sell. Low 30’s.
4 ROOM
apartment, gas heat, no pets, in
__ Lake Bluff 3693.
aes
Highwood. Call after 3 p.m. ID 2-3039.
Any of the above homes may be purchased
REAL ESTATE FOR SALE (Vacant)
LAKE
BLUFF, 4 year old ranch. 3 bed- DIRECT from owner. Call ORchard 5-8383.
4 ROOM,
2 bedroom apartment, close to
(HIGHLAND PARK)
_ rooms, ceramic tile bath, cabinet kitchen,
transportation, for rent on or before July
_
combination storm and screens, low main1. Heat and hot water furnished. Parking
_ tenance and taxes; immediate occupancy.
a
ID 2-1060. 442 Central, Highland
ae aa
at $16,000. Call owner, Lake Bluff
ark.
ROOM apartment, no pets, no children.
One of the last pieces of beau. 314Stove
IX room house on business property.
B
and refrigerator. Near town
and
SERVICE BUREAU, INC.
owner,
Telephone Lake Forest 3787..
P
wooded vacant, conv. located. Aptransportation. Telephone ID 2-2738.
rae) UNTRY
living, we have it. Three bed4846 Main St., Skokie, Illinois
prox. 11/5 acres with 320 ft. road AVAILABLE, sub lease, deluxe 3 bedroom,
_ room
ranck
in woods,
near toll road.
2 bath apartment, air conditioned, dishfrontage. Sewer, water and paving
Leaving
town, must sell. Priced $29,500
washer and built-in oven, quiet dead end
or best offer. 301 Little Mellody Lane.
street. $225. 639 Onwentsia, ID 2-5264.
in and paid. Out of town owner
EAST GLENVIEW
Just off Bradley Rd. Lake Forest.
NICE
3% room apartment with garage, near
wishes
to
liquidate
................
$13,000
“ay owner, brick split level
2 years old. Beautiful brick colonial in exclusive area
Lincoln School, suitable for school teach=
Three
twin
bedrooms,
den,
recreation
ers or family of three. Under $100. Teleon % acre. House entirely air-conditioned,
room,
1% baths, dining and living room
phone ID 2-8166, after 6 p.m.
carpeted, There is the much desired family
carpeted,
fireplace, modern kitchen, full room overlooking a formal garden, family
3
ROOM apartment, 671 Vine Ave., High‘a basement.
$35,000 or best
offer.
Lake
sized dining rm, large liv. rm. with colonial
land Park. One block from the hospital.
Forest
4616.
bay window,
dream
kitchen
&amp; breakfast
Call ID 2-3621.
LAKE
BLUFF east, new 6 room_ brick room, 3 Bdrms, 2% baths, recreation rm,
2%
ROOMS,
1 bedroom,
$120, available
ranch, 2 full ceramic tiled baths, 7 clos- 2%
car
gar.,
many extras.
Replacement
July ist. 709 Deerfield
Rd.
corner of
_ ets, 3 blocks from Lake Michigan. Full value would be over $60,000. An outstanding
Green Bay Rd. and Deerfield Rd. Teleprice
$23,500, easy terms.
buy at $54,500.
HIGHLAND
PARK...... Most desirable, imphone
ID
2-8164.
Hi
ID 3-0766
proved wooded lot in Braeside area, near
PRIVATE
garage apartment,
unfurnished;
lake, 70x154. Telephone ID 2-8443.
GLENVIEW
living room, bedroom, kitchen with dining
area; beautiful wooded residential section.
THINKING
OF A SMALLER
HOUSE—
$100 a month. Immediate occupancy. TelCLOSER IN?
ephone ID 2-0639.
HIGHLAND PARK
We have an easy to care for, 4 yr. old face
ATTRACTIVE
3
large
room
apartment
brick ranch on a private lane, overlooking
Choice lot in lovely area, reduced to $10,with private bath, stove and refrigerator
ae
forest preserve. Large living rm. with firegt ap
000 for quick sale.
furnished; laundry facilities, parking. $115
place wall panelled in mellowed birch, dina month. Telephone ID 2-1877, after 6
ing area, streamlined kitchen with eating Other good yalues in vacant.
ID 3-1278.
area, 3 Bedrms,
2 ceramic
baths,
large
“ay
ce hall, powder room, living room utility rm, 2 car garage, Radiant heat, low
BEAUTIFUL
2%
room
newly
decorated
WwW
fireplace, large screened porch with
LANG REAL ESTATE
taxes. A charming home in fine condition.
apartment, stove and refrigerator in kitchAW,
ining
terrace,
dining
room,
panelled
en. Responsible couple only. Garage in4,
REALTORS
_
den with fireplace, modern kitchen &amp; breakcluded. Telephone ID 2-1692.
- fastroom.
'

brick

CIAL

ranch

NEW

LISTING:

with

2

Custom-built

fireplaces,

Ceramic

33

Realtors

ar

by owner

NORTH

RIDGE

PAUL PHELPS,
1925 Sheridan Rd.

ROAD

INC.
ID 2-4580

LARGE FAMILY HOME
_ BEAUTIFULLY APPOINTED
TWO STORY BRICK
COLONIAL
fig

cK 4

bedrooms,

_ complementing

|
Ey,
_

nursery,

maids

bathrooms,

Full

room

&amp;

basement,

3

heat, two car detached garage. Planted
and formal garden, large playfield.
High 70’s. Call Lake Bluff 5127 for app.

cn

3

BEDROOMS,

brick

ranch,

o
basement,
gas
elephone Lake Forest

2 car garage,

heat,
3095.

low

30’s.

OWNER

transferred.

Georgian

on

large

beautifully landscaped
lot. 2 plus _ bedrooms, ceramic tile bath, separate dining
room,
basement play room, garage. $17,-

ia

700.

~Page

Telephone

Libertyville

REALTY

Bay Rd.
Hillcrest

CO.

Winnetka
6-7180

GLENCOE, 595 DUNDEE RD.
Brick ranch, 5 years old, 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, full basement,
2 car attached garage, porch, patio, fenced play yard. Low
ba
Telephone VErnon 5-0910 or ID 2-

712

GLENCOE

AMbassador

2-2199,

GRAYS
LAKE, custom built ranch, stone
and brick, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, beautiful
kitchen,
natural
gas,
air
conditioned
throughout including screened and glassed
porch.
Full basement.
Ideal for young
married or retired couple. By owner at
$26,000. Telephone
BAldwin
3-4259,

ROAD

2-7873

VE

5-1971

ESTATE FOR SALE
(DEERFIELD)

(Vacant)

Approximate 2 acres choice Woodland Park
tract, ripe for subdividing, ideally located
among beautiful homes in park-like area;
last available large. tract in this beautiful
section.

PAUL

M.

WADE

3 ROOM

WI

5-1430

APARTMENTS

TO RENT
(DEERFIELD)

furnished

floor

2nd

apartment,

share bath, $115 a month,
all utilities
ers block from town. Telephone ID 21227.
NEW, modern, furnished kitchenette apartment, utilities included, laundry facilities.
Good
location. Available June 2. Telephone ID 2-1170.
Kitchenette apartment located in
MODERN
business district of Highwood. Telephone’
Lake Forest 136.
close to
apartment,
furnished
4 ROOM
transportation, nicely furnished, all utilities included. $125 monthly. Telephone ID
2-4718.
1
apartment,
furnished 2 room
NEWLY
block to transportation. Telephone ID 29184.
ONE room furnished kitchenette apartment,
share
shower
bath with one;
close to
Telephone
shopping.
and
transportation
ID 2-5481.
furnished apartment, share bath
3 ROOM
with one person. Telephone ID 2-1231.

garage

FURNISHED

apartment,

112 blocks

from stores and station, toward the lake,
large light combination, living and bedroom, 20x14, kitchen and bath, no children
or pets. $95 monthly. References. Telephone ID 2-6413.
Modern. brick
AVE.
JOHNS
ST.
1155.
building; a comfortable small unit, 2%4
room available. Suitable teacher or similar person. Private bath, stove and refrigerator. $80. See Mr. Ek on premises
or call ID 2-0474.
furnished apartment, Highland
214. ROOM
to
Convenient_
included.
utilities
Park;
shopping, transportation. Telephone ID 27862, after 5 p.m.
private
eni
apartment,
2 room
SMALL
in
trance,
private
bath;
nice
location
Highwood. Telephone ID 2-3008.
ed enclosed porch; all utilities paid.
phone ID 2-6138.
’
2 MODERN furnished rooms, private bath,
Telprivate entrance; near transportation.
ephone ID 2-7149.

APARTMENTS TO RENT (Furnished)
(LAKE FOREST)
ee)

ON
Green Bay
Rd. furnished or unfurnished
3 room
apartment
with knotty
pine living room and wood burning fire-

place.

(Unfurnished)

MODERN
2
bedroom
apartment,
birch
cabinet kitchen, ceramic tile bath; near
shopping and schools. $145 monthly, including everything but gas and electricity.
No pets. Telephone WI 5-2419.
FOUR
room apartment, second floor; one
bedroom, ceramic tile bath, modern cabinet kitchen, stove and refrigerator, heat
and hot water. Adults only. Immediate
occupancy. Telephone WI 5-1961 or WI
5-1373.
;
TWO
bedroom
modern apartment;
deluxe
kitchen, disposal, built-in oven, ceramic
tile bath, picture window overlooks large
eee Fema air-conditioned. Telephone WI

All

utilities

furnished.

Immediate |

occupancy. Call Lake Bluff 238.
SUBLET
for
summer.
Available immediately, to Sept. 15th. Completely furnished’
4 room apartment, air-conditioned. Phone
Lake Forest 3412.
‘
TWO
room apartment may be rented furnished. or unfurnished. Available immediately. Call Lake Forest 2128.
WEST Lake Bluff. 3 rooms and bath, private, adults only. Call Lake Bluff 2722.
Available June 1st.
THREE room furnished apartment $80 per
month. 20 Scranton Ave., Lake Bluff.

HOUSES TO RENT (Unfurnished)
(HIGHLAND PARK)
NEW house. 3 bedrooms, den, 2 baths, fireplace, 2 car garage. 2 year lease, $250
a month. 870 West Park Ave., Highland
Park. Telephone ID 2-5994 for appointment.
A SMALL home ideal for older couple or
working couple. Living room and dinette,
bedroom,
kitchen,
bathroom,
automatic’
gas hot water heat, garage for one car.
Available June ist. Will rent to responsible people only. $89.50 per month. Call
ID 2-2871 between 9:30 a.m. and 12 noon.
MODERN
3 bedroom bi-level, 114 baths,
family room with bar, jalousied porch, 2
car garage. Telephone
ORchard
6-1287.
LOVELY 6 room Cape Cod house in Sunset
Terrace
subdivision.
2
bedrooms
and’
den. Telephone ID 2-1626 between 2 and
5 only.
IMMEDIATE
occupancy, newly remodeled’
2 bedroom house, 1 block north of Ravinia
business
section,
$160
monthly.
Telephone ID 2-5439.
’

HOUSES
2

TO RENT (Unfurnished)
(DEERFIELD)

BEDROOMS,

attached

location. $150. June
phone WI 5-2004.

HOUSES

garage; close

ist

possession.

im

Tele-

TO RENT (Unfurnished)
(LAKE FOREST)

2 OR 3 bedroom, full basement, year around!
home.
Private boat
landing
with boat.
On Pistakee Bay near Fox Lake. Children
welcome., Available June 11. Telephone
RAvenswood 8-7320.
FIVE
room, two bedroom
house,
vacant
July 1. Shown by appointment only. Telephone Lake Forest 760.
ATTRACTIVE 3 bedroom brick house, 1%
baths, 2 fireplaces, garage, gas heat; near
ore
and trains. $200. Call Lake Forest

HOUSES TO RENT (Furnished)
(HIGHLAND PARK)
.

GLENCOE

BEAUTIFUL
lot, 50x163,
Elmwood
Dr.,
Highland
Park. Close to schools, transportation, shopping. Quiet neighborhood.
$6,500. Call owner, ID 2-7774.

REAL

_ REAL ESTATE FOR SALE (Improved)
a
(MISCELLANEOUS)
_

STORM

378 Green

APARTMENTS TO RENT (Furnished)
(HIGHLAND PARK)

3

ACRE

Sie

-~ HOMEFINDERS,

2

2 bedrooms, tile bath, powder room, dishwasher, basement and attic, garage. $185
per month.
Available
after June
15th.
Telephone Lake Bluff 1919.

3 FURNISHED rooms and bath with heatTele-

L. RINGER
457

HIGHLAND PARK—3 bedroom face brick
ranch on lovely wooded lot; lge. living rm.,
dining L, finished bsmt., air conditioned.
Low
30’s.

Open

bdrms.,

good

PRAIRIE VIEW
COUNTRYSIDE
Ii.

INC.
ID 2-4580

ISLAND LAKE—wooded lake front lot with
sea wall. Private estate, nice surroundings,
$40 front foot. Telephone CRestwood 20225.

WITH

3 bedrooms
Full basement
Garage and breezeway
Oak floors
Fruitwood kitchen cabinets
Built-in range, hood ané fan
Fully insulated
100 amp. electric service
Full acre lots
Quality throughout
at a low price

representing

or 166

REAL

$18,950

. MUndelein 6-6720
MICHAEL
DENNEE

_ Way, seeded lawn. $67,000.

PAUL PHELPS,
1925 Sheridan Rd.

At

In Libertyville, we have a 3 bedroom, full
basement, CAPE COD on approx. % acre.
Naval Officer Owner has this well landscaped property priced at $17,500.

units,

NEW Town and Country 5 room apartment, —

ROAD

Over an acre. A bargain at ..$12,500

SEE THE
“RANCHO”
COMPLETE

MUIR

The
last piece
of beau.
wooded
prop. Surrounded by fine homes.

Lake County’s
Most Popular
Prestige Subdivision

In Mundelein, we have a 3 bedroom COLONIAL RANCH
with attached garage. Has
12x12 Family
Room
with fireplace. Well
landscaped
lot is 55x168
ft. Transferred
owner has priced at $15,950.

Forest. Living room, dining room,
built-in kitchen, paneled den. 3

KING

BEAUTIFUL
MEADOW HAVEN

pier?

eis es, RO
be es
Overlooking
beautiful PISTAKEE
LAKE,
we have
a 3 bedroom,
2 bath,
BRICK
RANCH with 16x24 ft. breezeway, on a 60x
200 ft. Lake Lot with private beach and
pier. $32,000.

ice, Will never be any cheaper.

Waukegan

LIBERTYVILLE

A HOME
ON A
with private beach

We have a 4 bedroom, 2 bath, full basement, Solid. Brick &amp; Frame, with attached
garage. From’‘the large Living-Dining Room
you have an enjoyable view of the Lake
through 2 big picture windows. You must
see to appreciate the low price of $28,500.

lient level building site on
op road within city limits.
re tures include underground gas,
We ter, electric, and telephone serv-

which joins
the west.

LIKE
LOT,

3

WEEK
rental, July 24 to August 16. 3
bedrooms, 2 baths, Ravinia. Telephone ID
2-8511.
JUNE 15 to September 15 or up to November 1. 4 bedrooms, 214 baths, sleeping
porch, screened front porch. Telephone ID
2-0921.
FURNISHED house in Ravinia. 7 rooms, 2
baths.
Air-conditioner,
dishwasher,
etc.
Available
about
July
15 to December.
$300 month. ID 2-0461.

HOUSES TO RENT (Furnished)

(DEERFIELD)

FURNISHED
7 room
house,
1%
baths,
available June 1 or June 15 to October 13
or October 15. Telephone WI 5-0466. -

Thursday, May 28, 1959__

46
iy

Wt

by

yore Maan

Rae ae

�MVATLARLE

lor thot

room house with
Forest 3373.

HOUSES

&amp;

and

porch.

APARTMENTS

(Furnished

Lake

WANTED

WANT
to rent: Rooms,
apartments
and
houses —
nee
of MUSIC
AND
TENTHOUSE
THEATRE. Telephone ID
__2-1160 i
10:30 a.m.
2 LOCAL businesswomen desire unfurnished
4 room apartment or small house; best
of references. Call ID 2-3999 after 6 p.m.
WANTED,
one or two bedroom furnished
apartment for period June 10 to August
10, in Highland Park or Ravinia. DEla&gt; ware 7-4163.
WOULD
like
garage
apartment
in
exchange
for services.
Employed
as day
worker;
references.
Telephone
VErnon
5-0754.
WANTED
to rent, furnished apartment or
small house in Lake Bluff for summer
months by 3 adults. Call Lake Bluff 1721.
YOUNG couple needs 5-6 room apartment.
Reasonable
rent. Good
references. ORchard 5-0922
WANTED
to rent lower flat or house, or
would
consider cottage on farm in exchange for part time out-door work. Call
Ray, Lake Forest 3388.
WANTED
to rent, unfurnished six room,
3 bedroom.
1%
bath home.
Will give
lease. Deerfield,
Wheeling
or Arlington
Heights area. M. Tillman, 7353 Harwood
Ave.,
Wauwautosa
13, Wis.
Telephone
Greenfield 6-8644.

YOUNG

couple

ROOMS

for

TO

ground

ROOMS

or Come

if you can handle any or all of the
following

See

In Northbrock
Mrs. McDermott
2029 Walters
CRestwood 2-9996

Pleasant work
small
office.

on
No

quired.

vacations,

and

1549

Paid

cost records in
shorthand
re-

W.

WANTED

WORKING CLOSE TO HOME
IN A NEW MODERN OFFICE
HAS SO MANY ADVANTAGES

Ave.

ID

Job

With a Growing Company
Good Starting Salary
Opportunity For Advancement
Group Hospital &amp; Life Insurance
And Many More
Come
in or call for personal
interview.
Employment office hours are 8:30 to 4:00
oe
through Friday. 8:30 to 12:00 Saturday.

Y% MILE

SOUTH

OF

production

ROUTE

68

control,

2-5180

LUCILE

and

HELP

WANTED—FEMALE

WAITRESSES, TOP SALARY AND TIPS,
EXCELLENT EARNINGS. MEALS AND
UNIFORMS FURNISHED. NO NIGHTS.
APPLY
MILLERS,
349
PARK
AVE.,
GLENCOE. VE_5-9846,

PART TIME OFFICE WORK
PERMANENT |

Winnetka Park Dist. Office, Village
Hall, Winnetka, Ill. Office hours 8
to 12, 1 to 5 p.m. Monday through

Friday. Telephone HIllcrest 6-2160.

Central

TYPISTS

Full
time,
salary.

CLERK-TYPIST

SECRETARY

AMERICAN
2020

HOSPITAL

Ridge

SUPPLY

Evanston

UN

CORP.
4-6050

4

Full time
chemical

THE FIRST

work for production line,
department,
inspectors,

laboratory, and shipping department,
5 day week, 8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Excellent working conditions. In-

NATIONAL BANK
HIGHLAND PARK

terviews

on May 29, at:
Gard Industries, Inc.

1739 Harding
WAITRESSES Day
HOSTESS-CASHIER
Must

Howard
Skokie

have own
Apply in

Rd.,

Apply

Restaurant
Highland

Northfield

PART TIME
SALESLADY

transportation
person

Johnson’s
Valley

or night
Part time

Rd.

Park

G AND
Shoppers

TYPIST
FOR
BILLING
DEPARTMENT.
Accurate with figures, good memory, enjoys detail work. Salary open. Company
benefits.
Immediate
openings.
Phone
CRestwood
2-5700, Randolph Lab.

FULL time and part time waitresses wanted.

Court

G SHOES
Deerfield

TEMPORARY
HELP
FOR
SUMMER.
VARIED OFFICE DUTIES, INCLUDING
SWITCHBOARD WITH GROUP OF MEDICAL
SPECIALISTS.
EXPERIENCE
AND/OR
COLLEGE
BACKGROUND
ol
ee rma
CALL MISS LOCKWOOD,

Call for- appointment, Mr. Magli, Briarwood Country Club, WI 5-2660.
MEDICAL TECHNICIAN
for top salaried
position.in doctor’s
office in Highland
KITCHEN, counter, grill and sandwich help.
Park;
ex:perience
necessary.
Telephone ID
No Sunday or holiday work. Dini’s .Foun2-7880.
tein &amp; Re
452 Central, ID 2-9724.
-

ay, May 28, 1959

(Div.

floor

duties,

postFull

SWITCHBOARD
OPERATOR
Weekends, Sat. &amp; Sun. 8 a.m. to 4 p.m.

Interesting

CALL
ID

work

in pleasant

Why commute
close to home?

PERSONNEL
2-8000

when

enviyou

FOR

APPT.

FOREST

PERMANENT
FULL TIME
5 Day Week
Generous Discount
Health Insurance
Air Conditioned Store

Congenial

Surroundings

GARNETT
LAKE

Smith-Corona

and

and

plan,

for

alert
assign-

Line

pay,

steady

with

experience

and

fe

wi

E. B. KAISER CO —

Inc.)

INVENTORY

Roads

in fas-

May

29, at:
Gard Industries,
1739 Harding Rd.

employment

ness to work.

Inc.
Northfield

CLERK

Unusual opportunity for young man,
school grad. Work involves maintaining p
petual inventory cards. No experience
quired, will train, Good starting salary
many promotional possibilities. Full
ra
company
benefits,
Hours:
9-5,
through Friday.

AMERICAN
2020

HOSPITAL

Ridge

SUPPLY

Evanston

CO

UN

1-€

SHOE SALESMAN _

Chemistry experience desirable but
on

LABORERS

men

ucts. Will train right girl for permanent position as lab technician.
Interviews

Restaurant

2114 West Lake Ave. Glenview, ll.

Il.
work

MAN |

Valley Rd.
Park, Ill.

Top

etc.

Marchant,

County

interesting

required.

Johnson’s

YARD

detailed

GRILL

SHOP WELDERS
MATERIAL
HANDLERS

cinating aerosol laboratory of one
of the country’s leading manufacturers of push button spray prod-

not

DAY

Experience
Walters

not

Shoes,

necessary.
499

Appl

Central,

Hig

land Park.

OFFICE

SALESLADIES
LAKE

of

&amp; CO. —

have own transportation
Apply in person

450 Skokie
Highland

have legible hand
hospitalization, life

Deerfield,
Varied

time.

Typing,
filing, general office and
ing machine
experience
desirable.
time.

handle

pension

good

TECHNICIAN

ronment.
can work

to

Waukegan

CLERK-TYPIST

Young woman, high school grad, preferred
for this position offering varied and interesting work. Must be neat, accurate typist.
Shorthand not required. Congenial, modern
offices. Good starting salary and full range
company benefits. 5 day, 3742 hour week.

woman

ROEBUCK

Howard

KLEINSCHMIDT

NURSES

general

Must

RD.

opportunity

ments.
Must
writing. Paid
insurance,

NEEDS

LAB
DEPARTMENT

2-4600

HIGHLAND PARK
HOSPITAL

Full

2 or 3 days each week. Typing essential. No bookkeeping. Telephone
ID 2-4500.

ID

benefits.

STEADY

MAIL CLERK
Duraclean Co.

Challenging

in:

601 Central Ave.

(5 p.m.-1:30 a.m.)
CO.

open

SEARS

839 WAUKEGAN
DEERFIELD
WI 5-2000

&amp;

WANTED—MALE

Paid Vacations
Group life insurance
Group hospitalization
Profit sharing

CLERK

Ave.

REGISTERED

@
@
@
@

RECORD
KEEPERS

IBM

Many benefits.
@® Paid Vacations
@ Group life insurance
® Group hospitalization
@ Profit sharing

601

Many

HILBORN

full or part time. Call

APPLIANCE
SALESMAN

To sell women’s
apparel and accessories.
5 day week, permanent position. Good starting salary. Employees discount. Telephone
ID 2-0900 for appointment.

SALES DEPT.

TY PIST—-CLERICAL
Winnetka Park District has a permanent position open for a clerktypist. Bookkeeping experience desirable but not necessary. 5 day
week, pension plan and vacation
privileges. Salary according to experience and qualification. Apply

HELP
Positions

CATALOGUE

ROEBUCK

wanted,

CRestwood 2-4358.
SWITCHBOARD
and receptionist, 30 h
week, afternoons only; good salary,
coe Medical Center, VErnon 5-2650.
LADIES’
locker
room
assistant,
m1:
months through Labor Day, private co
try club, Northbrook. State experience
reply. Write Box H-90, c/o Highland P
News.

SALESLADY

Positions open in:

SEARS

Ave.

part time. Telephone
Leas

WAITRESS

514 Waukegan

.

ONE room kitchenette or single room with
bath for elderly gentleman, must be first
floor. Would prefer near business district
and
transportation,
in
Highwood
or
Highland Park. ID 2-1773.

stenographer,

2-4070.

MEDICAL
assistant,
diversified duties, 5
day week, 35 hours, light bookkeeping and
typing necessary. Telephone WI 5-0077.

departments. If you are interested
in this type of work and have clerieal background we will train you.
Working conditions are pleasant,
pay is good with free life insurance
and group hospitalization, profit
sharing and other benefits. Call
personnel, WI 5-1990.

2-3700

GENERAL BINDING
CORPORATION
1101 SKOKIE HIGHWAY
NORTHBROOK

2-3310

We are extending our operations
and have openings in the personnel,

VALLEY

LAUNDRY
ID

Park

EXPERIENCED SWITCHBOARD1S
FOR MODERN HIGHLAND PARK OI
Laat ALL BENEFITS, MR. GRAFF, LU
2-8711,
ne
ID

holidays

Clerical Female

Young Women

CRESTWOOD

Local girl for interesting office
work, full time; will train. Good
salary and working conditions.

SKOKIE

Lighting
Products, Inc.

ILLINOIS BELL
TELEPHONE

Permanent

NEAT GIRL

LEGAL

insurance.

Barnes

812 Deerfield Rd.
WIndsor 5-9996

RENT

ADULT student wishes room or apartment
at reasonable rent in Lake Forest area;
summer
or fall occupancy.
Write Box
hag
Ne The Lake Forester, Lake For-

450

Switch-

CLERK-TYPIST

In Deerfield
Mrs.

assignments:

board, Typing, Billing, Secretarial,
Dictaphone, Filing. Ideal suburban
location, 5 day week, top pay and
benefits. Call A. Walsh, HIllcrest
6-6300.

HAIRDRESSERS (4)
MALE OR FEMALE
—
With or without following |
Good wages
Paid vacatic
Group Insurance
CALL IMMEDIATELY
ID 2-8768

DEPENDABLE

time

employment in small modern office

care.

PARK HOTEL sleeping rooms, by day or
week, airy parking, 511 Waukegan Ave.,
Highwood
SLEEPING oer sitting room, hot water at
all times, near transportation, suitable for
couple or 2 people. Telephone ID 2-6682.
COMFORTABLE front room on East side,
centrally located; for “yd
bo woman;
no
transient.
Under
$11.
Usual
privileges. Telephone ID 2-1138.
FURNISHED
room, large or small, near
town and transportation. 208 North Ave.,
Highwood. Telephone ID 2-3769.
‘LARGE comfortable room and bath, kitchen privileges;
no transients.
$10. Telephone ID 2-1745.
SLEEPING
room for working man, convenient bathroom, laundry Bet
ng basement kitchen. Telephone WI 5-4087
FOR rent, nicely furnished homulike sleeping
room,
ample
drawer
and_
closet
space, hot’ water. Telephone ID 2-0405.
ROOM
for rent, kitchen privileges;
also
apartment. Near transportation. No children. Telephone ID 2-3591.

z

Call

wishes apt. on estate with

low rent, in exchange
Good ref. OR 5-0932.

est,

Service
Representative

or Unfurnished)

HELPWw:

-FEMALE

GENERAL OFFICE
Opportunity for steady full

CF JUG, 5 box.

terrace

WANTED

aie.

HELP

&amp; CO.

FOREST

881

WANTED at once. Experienced switchboard
operator for summer; some typing. Telephone ID 2-6062
WAITRESS,
‘experienced, day: evening of
split shift; good wages and working conditions. Lake Forest 2527.

WAITRESS
wanted with experience. Telephone WIndsor 5-9790.
COUNTER girl, high school education and
store experience necessary. Apply in person, Wayne’s Lake Shore Cleaners, 454
Waukegan Ave., Highwood.
SECRETARY
FOR
SALES
DEPT.
DICtaphone experience preferred. Good typist.
Salary
open.
Company
benefits.
Phone
CRestwood 2-5700, Randolph Lab.
TELEPHONE
SOLICITORS
Days—part time; work direct from office.
Salary
plus
commission.
Experience
not
sernstiy'
Apply at
ALL YEAR BUILDERS INC.
3080 Skokie big Bignyeys Highland Park

PART time dental assistant; experience preue
but will train. Telephone ID 25530.
SECRETARY,
part
time;
shorthand
required Small pleasant office. Apply Mr.
Wilson
or
telephone
ID
2-6220.
Boy
Scouts of America.
SWITCHBOARD
operator,
day. and
evening; summer months through Labor Day,
private country club, Northbrook.
State
experience in reply. Write Box H-95, v/o
Highland Park News.
FULL or part time secretary for small office. Enough variety to avoid any monotony, and our girls have always found our
work most interesting. Typing and shorthand the only essentials. ID 3-0064.

JANITOR
5 p.m.-1:30

Opportunity
55.

Must

a.m.

for older man
be

experienced

to ag
in

phases of janitorial work. Paid hos.
pitalization, life insurance, pensia
plan, ete.

KLEINSCHMIDT
(Div.

of

Waukegan

Smith-Corona

and

Marchant,

County

Line

|
Inc.

Roa

Deerfield, Tl.
MAN
one day a week, lawns, stable,
dows, general handy man. References
quired.
Experienced
with
lawns.
Te!
phone ID 2-6711.
KITCHEN, counter, grill and sandwich h
No Sunday or holiday. ‘work. Dini’s F
tain &amp; Lunch, 452 Central, ID 2-9724.

DRIVER

4

For Highland Park route, good eaiary.'§
commission. Telephone ID) 2-2800.

Page 47

�HELP

_

SITUATION
WANTED:
someone to iron in my home
Or yours; must do excellent work. Telephone WI 5-1639.
;
MAID, experienced, general housework, personal laundry; must like children, must
have North Shore references. Own room
and bath. $55. Telephone ID 2-8628.
WOMAN
to thorough clean every Friday
in small modern home, close to transportation;
recent
employment
record
required. Telephone ID 3-1684.
EXPERIENCED
waitress
from
June
5th
to Sept. 15th. Recent references. Call Mrs.
Stanton Armour, Lake Forest 420.
COOK,
experienced, white, must have recent references,
and like children. Call
Lake Forest 4880.
SWEDISH
lady
needs
competent
young
woman, Scandinavian or German, as mother’s helper,
im modern
fully equipped
house. No heavy cleaning, light cooking
required.
Two
adults, 2%
year child—
own comfortable
living quarters. Applicant may accompany family to Fire Island
Beach
for summer
months.
Call
Lake
Forest 1883.
COOK,
white,
experienced,
recent
references, current wages, one in the family,
other help kept. Please telephone Lake
Forest 43.
RELIABLE young girl or woman who likes
children, to do general housework, live in,
5%
days,
experienced
preferred
but
a or yg to help beginner. Telephone ID 2-

Full time work for production line,
chemical
department,
inspectors,
laboratory, and shipping department.
5 day week
8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Excellent working conditions. In-

:

OY

WANTER—MALE

i)

terviews

on May 29, at:
Gard Industries

1739 Harding

Inc.

Rd.

Northfield

ENGINEERS
JOIN
GBC FAMILY
IN NORTHBROOK

THE
LOCATED

PROCESS

ENGINEERS

A challenging
opportunity
for top notch
process engineers who can handle all phases
= * Samm
and assembly of office equipent.

PRODUCT
_
Pe

DESIGNERS

These men will carry new products right
pesh from the talking stage into produc-

on.

Call

for

personal

WOMAN
for general house cleaning, one
day a week, and occasional baby sitting.
Local,
white,
with
transportation
preferred. ID 2-1319.
HOUSEKEEPER, light cooking, own room,
ranch house, stay if possible, 2 adults.
Telephone ID 2-1903.
COOK,
housekeeper for two adults, small
new ranch house, top wages, white, references. Telephone ID 2-5450.
GENERAL
housework,
pleasant
girl for
permanent position. Good working conditions in Doctor’s home.
Current salary.
References. Telephone ID 2-2937.
CLEANING
woman wanted every Friday,
Own transportation preferred. Telephone
ID 2-5747.
RELIABLE
cleaning
woman
with recent
references for small ranch house. Tues.
ed Fri. Current wages. Telephone ID 2-

interview

CRESTWOOD

2-3700

GENERAL BINDING
CORPORATION
1101 SKOKIE HIGHWAY
NORTHBROOK
OFF
Prefer

*

SET

PRESSMAN

*

*

experienced all-around
ne ses py right man

man

*

THE
952

r

BROOKSHORE

Sunset Ridge Road
Phone CRestwood

CO.

Northbrook
2-1200

RELIABLE
experienced woman for cleaning and ironing 2 days a week, Monday
we! gr coe
references. Telephone WI

Electrician
_ We

have an opening for an experi-

enced

industrial

engineer

to

work

from 4:30 p.m. to 12:30 a.m.

Machine Repair
We need a man who is experienced
in the repair and maintenance of
turret lathes, radio drills and

- automatic

other

machines.

Free life insurance, free hospitalization, vacations, and other bene-

fits. Call
1990.

Personnel

Dept.,

WI

5-

_ TELEPHONE
SOLICITORS
_ Evenings 6 to 9 p.m. Experience not necesSary.
Salary
plus
commission,
Apply
at
ALL YEAR
BUILDERS,
INC.
3080 Skokie Valley Highway, Highland Park
ID 2-5423

I NEED

a man

who

is experienced

in ce-

ment work and some storm work. Telephone ID 2-4177.
_ EXPERIENCED or will train. Apply in person
except Friday
or Saturday.
Sunset
Foods, 1812 Green Bay, Highland Park.
GENERAL maintenance of builder’s office
and Model Homes. Must be dependable,
os Salary and benefits. R. Singer, ID 2:

AUTO
body combination man. Salary or
commission. Lake Motors, 1766 First S t.,
Highland Park. ID 2-2500
.

RELIABLE

high

misc. work one
Forest 2916,

school

LINO-TYPE
:

&gt;

_ 50

_

ak

*

*

WANTED—DOMESTIC
Cooks,

$50-$60.

serve,

experienced,

evenings a week for
references. Call Lake

WOMAN
\e

CO.

Northbrook
2-1200

Couples,

$400-$500. Maids and nursemaids, $45-$60.
No
fee. _Shorline Agency,
525
Lincoln
Ave.,
Winnetka.
Telephone
HI
6-5818.

_ COOK,
_

suit.

K

BROOKSHORE

JOBS.

eg

dinner

2

small family.
Forest 3241.

or

3

Local

for cleaning 2 or 3 days. White.

SF rigad required.

WOMAN

Telephone

for cooking

rienced.

White.

and

Top

Lake

For-

downstairs.

Ex-

wages.

Telephone

Lake

Forest

_

WANT

experienced

mo

thorough
cleaning;
references.
adult. Telephone ID 2-0652.

_ EXPERIENCED

2242,

second

cook,

maid,

general

serving,
One

housework

_
for 3 months; country place, other help
employed. Call LI 2-1495.
i! WAITRESS, white, experienced; own room
and
bath,
current
wages,
Recent
ref_. erences. TV. Telephone Lake Forest 612.

_ COOK
_

and

general

SITUATION

housework;

top

wages

to experienced person. Adult family, 5 day
week; stay or go. References. ID 2-3560.

WANTED—FEMALE

RESPONSIBLE,
experienced,
high
school
graduate desires child care for summer
ir ree
references.
Telephone
WI
5ts
HIGH
school junior girl wants year-round
Saturday job; prefer office or store. Personal
references.
Telephone
ID
2-7511
after 4 p.m.
GENERAL office work, typing, assist bookkeeping, or selling in retail store; college
student available for summer. Telephone
ID 2-2914.
LICENSED
nurse
available post hospital
cases and new mother. Also proxy mothering, and baby sitting. Professional references. UNiversity 9-0175 evenings.
COLLEGE girl seeks summer employment;
neat,
attractive,
experienced
as_ typist,
waitress, and supermarket checker. Have
transportation.
Available
June
5. Telephone ID 2-8976.

SITUATION

to

Sunset Ridge Road
Phone CRestwood

A-1

and
Lake

*

time—hours

HELP

yard
Call

PRESSMAN

*

THE

for

week.

OPERATOR

*

952

a

2K

KLUGE
Part

boy

day

OWN
transportation,
experienced
reliable
cleaning woman wanted 1 day, references,
school child and new born. Telephone WI
5-2714,
CHILD care, white, stay, light housework.
Telephone CRestwood 2-4358.
CHILD care and light housework for Thursday, Friday, Saturday and alternate Sundays. Call ID 3-0713.
GIRL
or woman
for general housework,
3 half
days
a week;
prefer
Monday,
Wednesday,
Friday mornings. Near Ravinia Station. Telephone ID 2-8163.
NURSEMAID.
Permanent position for experienced woman, with recent references,
to care for 2 small children; includes their
cooking
and light laundry.
Own
room,
bath and TV. Lake Forest 2968.
WEEKEND mother’s helper, white; must be
pleasant and
reliable, able to fix children’s meals and join in activities of 4
children. $20 per weekend.
Please telephone Mrs. Brown, Lake Forest 3172.
IF you are the RIGHT, thoroughly experienced, COUPLE looking for a wonderful
position in adult family,
our home
is
yours for life; excellent salary, no laundry.
ID 2-1640.

WANTED—MALE

TRUCK
hauling;
tree
removal;
rubbish;
clean out basements;
yard maintenance.
Bill Pyatt, ID 2-5177 or VErnon 5-0057.
MAINTENANCE
work,
painting
and repairs. Call WI 5-1492 after 6 p.m.
MAN
desires to haul black dirt, do yard
work, mow lawns; also will work Holidays. Call after 6 p.m. MAjestic 3-7612.
LAWN
mowing, trimming, gardening, etc.
Experienced. Dependable high school age.
$1.25 per hour. Lake Bluff 1726.
EXPLORER
Scouts,
working
for camp,
want garden work now through summer.
Dependable high school age. $1.00 hour.
Lake Forest only, Lake Forest 354.
A YOUNG man wants to do lawn mowing.
$2 per hour. References. Call before 3
p.m. MAjestic 3-9483.
EXPERIENCED
man desires work. House
or yard or servant party. Telephone Appley, DExter 6-1053.
HIGH
school senior
would
like summer
job, Highland Park area preferred. Telephone ID 2-0703, after 5 p.m.
HANDY man, years of experience in painting. Have own tools. Call ID 2-8536.
GENERAL office work, typing, assist bookkeeping, or selling in retail store; college
student available for summer. Telephone
ID 2-2914,
BOY, 14 years of age, wants yard work in

Deerfield and
WI 5-0979.

Bannockburn.

Telephone

THE

HOUSEHOLD

WANTED—DOMESTIC

CURTAIN

Shore’s Only Curtain
Laundry
1825 Green Bay Rd., Rear
All work done by hand; linens,
curtains, blankets, drapes, etc.

ID 2-8615

CLEANERS,
male
or
female;
couples,
maids, housemen. Experienced only. Mrs.
Baker, Shorline Agency, Winnetka. HIIlcrest 6-5818.
WIDOW
will work as companion; experienced, college graduate, can type, drive
car, light housework, free to travel. Best
references. Write Box J-5, c/o Highland
Park News.
EXPERIENCED
GIRL wants summer job
caring for children and doing light housework.
Write
Dorothy
Bartosiak,
Owen,
Wisconsin, or telephone 517-L.
CUSTOMERS wanted 1 day a week by experienced white couple; expert gardening
and landscaping, painting, walls, windows
and paper,
housecleaning,
maid
service
and ironing. $3.75 an hour for both. Telephone HUmboldt 9-5000.
GIRL desires day work Tuesday and Friday;
good references.
Call MAjestic
35721 after 7 p.m.
ye.
MOTHER’S helper available June ist. Beth
Lehto,
17 years, Stephenson,
Michigan.
Telephone PLymouth 3-4356.
SCANDINAVIAN
couple,
cook,
butler,
houseman; experienced. Adults only. Write
Box H-85 c/o Highland Park News.
WOULD like 3 days a week, general houseot
references. Call mornings, ONtario
GIRL wants day work 3 to 5 days a week.
References. Call DExter 6-5922 ask for
Lucille.
THREE girls, 17 and 18 and High School
Graduates, wish summer employment doing housework or caring for children. We
have
had
experience
previous
summers
and will work for $45 a week. Call Owen,
Wisconsin 430-W or 411-W.
HOUSEKEEPER,
companion,
Highland
Park references, salary secondary to good
_ home. Telephone ID 2-3550.
EXPERIENCED woman desires Wednesday,
Friday and Saturday. General cleaning and
ironing. References. Telephone ONtario 20674 after 4 p.m. Ask for Mary Gardner.

BABY

SITTING

REFINED lady would like part time sitting
in your home. Telephone ID 2-4444, ask
for Mrs. Talios.
RELIABLE experienced baby sitter wanted.
Telephone WI 5-3304.
BABY
sitting job wanted by high school
girl for summer months. Telephone 505M, Judi Ciolkosz, Withee, Wisconsin.

CLOTHING
BROWN
broadtail
E34
condition,

HOUSEHOLD

FOR

SALE

jacket, size 12
$25. Telephone

GOODS

FOR

or
ID

14,
2-

SALE

PICK GALLERIES
AUCTIONEERS - APPRAISERS
We buy and sell entire partial estates,

furniture,

crystal,

silver,

ori-

ental art, paintings, rugs and works
of

art.

Appraisers

for

insurance

and gift tax. Phone us today.
obligation on your party.

No

SPECIALIST
IN HOME
SALES
Either in Your Home or Our Galleries

886

Linden

Winnetka

HI

6-7444

2

PIECE
sectional,
ynal,
good
condition,
gold
covering;
2 junior
dressers.
Telephone
ID 2-3731.
9x12 AND
12x15 handmade oriental rugs,
plain gray; the ultimate in rugs. Telephone Lake Forest 5066.
FOR sale: conventional type washing machine; reasonable. Call Lake Forest 3730
after 4 p.m.
SCREENS and frames—seven 41% ft. by 6
ft. 9 in. panels; two 2 ft. by 6 ft. 9 in.
_ panels. Two doors with hardware, clearpine custom millwork frames. Excellent
condition; ready to install, Close in your
rR
for summer.
$60.00 Lake
Forest
GOOD used Kelvinator electric range. Telephone ID 2-9169.
AUTOMATIC
electric
Frigidaire
clothes
dryer,
$25;
Hollywood
box
springs,
frames,
and mattresses, $50. Telephone
ID 2-7692.
13 CU. FT. Crosley Shelvador refrigerator,
ice-water tap on door and freezing comsy
5 years old. Best offer. ID 2BED, maple spool with mattress and springs,
$25 complete;
Roll-away bed, $5. Telephone ID 2-5331.
NORGE
refrigerator,
excellent
condition;
reasonable, Telephone ID 2-4804.

AUTOMATIC
new

timer

3-0521.

KENMORE
me ae

ABC
and

washer, 3'4 years old,

motor.

$35.

FOR

PAINT-UP

DEPOT

North

TELEPHONE

GOODS

Telephone

ID

dryer, $65, with vent; Hotpoint
wash machine, $75. Telephone

UNUSUAL
FURNITURE
BARGAINS
Must dispose of our large house full of
furniture, etc. immediately. Real bargains
in living room, dining room, kitchen, bedroom,
porch
and
lawn
furniture.
Piano,
drapes, curtains, rugs, linens, dishes, etc.
Sale Saturday and Sunday, May 30 and 31.
133 Laurel Avenue, Highland Park.

SALE

ROLLER &amp; PAN, $1.25; 9x12 PLASTIC
CLOTH, 60c. GREAT LAKES EXTERIOR
WHITE, $4.99 GAL., INTERIOR ALKYD
FLAX WHITE $3.99 GAL PLUS FREE
9x12 PLASTIC DROP CLOTH WITH
1
GAL. ORDER—&amp; 4 in. BRISTLE BRUSH
WITH 4 GAL. ORDER
®

e

e

READY TO PAINT HARDWD. FURNITURE BARGAINS: EARLY AM. DESK,
$25.75, BOSTON ROCKER, $10.75; VANITY, $7.95; 3 DR. CHEST, $26.75; BOOK
CASES, MUSIC CABINET, ETC.
PRATT &amp; LAMBERT PAINTS
WINDOW SHADES &amp; GLASS

BREAKWELL

DECORATING
251

Waukegan

Ave.

ID

THURS., FRI., ONLY 10 A.M.-4 P.M.
195 ELDER LN., H.P. (NEAR SHERIDA
Upright
piano;
odd
chairs;
rugs;
Rom
weber
buffet;
antique
candlesticks;
chil
den’s equipment, furniture and toys; cloth
ing, size 12 and hats; trays and bowls;
paints; interesting odds and ends. ID 2-1951
PRIVATE
HOME
SALE
|.
Items too numerous to mention. Antiques:
jewelry; gold eagle wall sconces; solid brass
fireplace equipment; doll collection; 4 post
er bed;
Sheraton sofa; red oriental rug
Boating and other sporting equipment. R

frigerators.

Double

used. Rumma: ge.
Telephone ID 2-0387

laundry

tub,

:
for appointment.

MISCELLANEOUS

FOR

2-1418

WAS
ABLE
TO RE-ORDER AT
SPECIAL PRICE NAME BRAND
DE-HUMIDIFERS
WITH
HUMISTADT, $139 VALUE, ONLY $89.95. SAND R TV, LAKE FOREST
3264.
EVERYTHING
EXCELLENT
CONDITION
Custom Lawson loveseat, hand loomed fabric, down filled, $95; Lawson sofa, down
filled, $85;
Provincial breakfast set, $65;
4 drawer mahogany chest, perfect for any
room, $35; grey cotton shag rug, 9x12, $25;
odd chairs; lamps; misc. Give away prices.
639 Onwentsia Ave. ID 2-5264.
STUDIO
couch
and chair with matching
slipcovers—both for $35. Also odd chairs,
hand lawn mower, $5; assorted tools, hose
and
rake, leaf burner
on wheels. Call
Lake Forest 1817.
2 BEAUTIFUL old crystal candelabra; modern dresser; chest; desk; single bed and
mattress; night stand. Reasonable, Other
furniture
and
miscellaneous
household
goods. WI 5-0853 evenings.
RAG RUG WEAVER
Rag rugs, hand woven for sale. Rugs woven
from torn and sewed used material. Telephone MUndelein 6-6337, 404 East Maple,
Mundelein.
LIGHT
green
sofa, 2 rose barrel
back
chairs, 1 gold occasional chair, 1 knee
hole desk and chair, Duncan Phyfe dining room
set consisting
of 2 captains
chairs, 4 regular
chairs
and
credenza.
Can be seen in Highland Park. Information, telephone ORchard 6-1287.
REDWOOD 8
ft. picnic table, 2 matching
benches,
$19;
chrome
kitchen table, 4
chairs, $26; single kitchen table, $8; light
weight folding door for 32 inch opening,
$4; 36 inch under counter kitchen cabinet, $9; Telephone ID 2-8513.
REFRIGERATOR, 12 cu. ft., freezer chest,
$115;
single metal bed, complete,
$20;
a
in good condition. Telephone ID 2780.
FINE
mahogany
dining table, 42x60,
extends to 100 inches, holds own boards;
China also. Telephone ID 2-2785.
IMPORTED wool rugs, gray, 17x11—9x10;
wrought iron tea cart and steptable; deep
fat
fryer;
2 bookcases;
miscellaneous.
Telephone WIndsor 5-3699 after 6 p.m.
MAHOGANY 4 poster bed, full size, complete,
also
dresser;
Frigidaire
electric
stove, all very reasonable. Telephone WI
5-1263.
1948 G. E. refrigerator, excellent condition,
$40; chrome dinette set, $12.50; new baby
car bed, $3; lawn mower, good condition,
oo
sharpening, $7. Telephone WI 520” REVERSIBLE window fan, twin beds,
birch end table, pair table lamps, round
shadow box. Telephone ID 2-2919.
COMFORTABLE
lounge
chair;
channel
back
chair, excellent condition. Walnut
lamp table; oak dining furniture; radio
ak
player; maple bedside table. ID
DELUXE
Big Boy barbecue,
largest size
with
cover,
never used.
Will
sacrifice.
Girl’s Timmy Tuff coats, sizes 12-14. ID
2-5889.
SHOWER
stall complete with fittings, like
new,
$15;
one twin type mattress
and
springs, excellent condition, $15; mahogany double bed complete with spring and
mattress, chest of drawers to match bed,
all excellent condition, $75. Telephone WI

slighti

SALE

“Jim Beinlich Trucking handles all
following services for Homeowners:

SUPPLIES

Highwood

HOUSEHOLD GOODS FOR SALE

SALE

of

the

TOP SOILS e HUMUS
e MANURES;
@ PEAT MOSS e LAWN ROLLING
TREE
REMOVAL
e
RUBBISH
RE
MOVAL
e GRAVEL DRIVEWAY _ REPAIRS @e WRECKING OF ALL TYPES
PHONE Jim Beinlich—VE 5-0513 or
VE

GARAGES
CAR AND A HALF WITH
DOOR, CONCRETE FLOOR
RAGE WINDOWS.

OVERHEAD
AND 2 GA-

$695
NO

DOWN

E-Z TERMS

PAYMENT

WALSH
HOME

IMPROVEMENT CO.
2800 BELVIDERE
WAUKE GAN
ON 2-8770
IMMEDIATE CONSTRUCTION

PAINT
One carton King-size Coca-Cola free with
every gallon Enterprise Paint. Exterior and
Interior Paint to suit your every need. Visit
our newly remodeled store to see complete
displays of glass, mirrors, shower and tub
enclosures, Window shades, Venetian Blinds,
Bamboo draperies, and Modernfold folding
doors.

LAKESIDE GLASS
1914 First St.

&amp; PAINT CO.
ID 2-7211

FOR BETTER LIVING
:
Aluminum Specialty Products. Combination
windows, doors, awnings, sidings,
rch enclosures,
jalousies,
gutters,
fencing, lawn
furniture, ornamental railings, etc. Quality
and price wise see us before buying.
THERMO-TITE WINDOW
CO.
708 WAUKEGAN
RD.
DEERFIELD
WI 5-1198
ID 2-1553
FOR rent: garden tillers, cub tractor and
attachments,
lawn
mowers,
etc.
Lawn
mower
sharpening
service,
and _ sales.
Telephone
ID 2-8029, 2070 Green
Bay
Rd. Woody’s Highland Park Service Station.
Ower °
Lawns
rolled
and fertilized
with
over
equipment. Mushroom manure sprea
lawns and gardens.
Jim
Beinlich—Glencoe—VErnon
5-0513.

HOOVER factory repairs. Belts 45c, bags, 5
for $1.00; Reconditioned Hoovers, $19.95;
New Hoovers, $49.95; Freeman’s Hoover
Sales and Service, 648 Western Ave. Lake
Forest 519.

WINDOW

SHADES

Window coverings, such as shades, blinds,
bamboo
draperies,
are all on display at
Lakeside Glass and Paint Co. newly remodeled store. Quick service is available on a
standard items. Estimates are given without
obligation. Call us today,
or better yet,
stop in and visit us.

LAKESIDE GLASS
1914 First St.

&amp; PAINT COs
ID 2-7211

HAYRIDE
PARTIES for
mer.
Horses
boarded.
Northbrook. CRestwood

FOR

sale,

Northeast

spring and sumHapps’
Hollow,
2-3131.

corner

of

Old

Elm

and Skokie, well-built frame building, 12
MOVING—best
offer:
antique spool bed,
by 28. Ideal for guest house or used cat
Friday only. 1137 Deerfield Rd., Deerfield.
office. Must be moved. Telephone PEnsaTelephone WI 5-0043.
cola 6-6186, Chicago.
RATTAN
furniture, complete room,
sofa, WOMEN’S
complete
set registered Patty
2 chairs, lamps, tables, etc., all in. good
Berg ‘Signature clubs, 4 woods, 7 irons;
condition. Telephone WI 5-0965.
excellent condition. Telephone ID 2-6618.
CHINA,
108 piece Johnson Brothers Old PORTABLE typewriter, Smith-Corona Silent
Britain Castles, pink in color, open stock;
Deluxe,
case included,
like new;
price
brass 3-way pole lamp; 2 modern leather
$55 (lists at $120). Tleephone WI 5-1831.
cushion cane back pull-up chairs; maple
LADIES’
GOLF
CLUBS
game table; pine wood
box. Telephone
Set of Patty Berg
autograph
irons plus
WI 5-5783.
putter, $30. Telephone ID 2-5919.
4 ICE CREAM
cabinets of different caused 30 gallon garbage cans,
pacities, can be used as household deep SLIGHTLY
$1.65 each while they last. 530 Waukegan
freezes. To see call ID 2-4672.
Ave. Telephone ID 2-2747.
MOVING
in one week, must sell 21 inch
Royal, $65; Westinghouse
console TV, $25. Hide-a-bed couch, $25. TYPEWRITER,
range, good condition, $35; flat top desk,
Large
blond
wood
storage
closet, $25.
$105
2
cold
frames,
$4. Telephone ID 2Modern
walnut junior dining room set,
excellent condition. Telephone ID 3-1958.
CAR bed; car seat; rocker; tricycle; baby
clothes;
other
miscellaneous
items
too
numerous to mention. Make offer. TeleGLASS
phone WI 5-3291.
ZENITH
FM-AM
radio phonograph com- Everything
in
glass is available
at the
bination,
blond
console
model,
$45. | newly remodeled Lakeside Glass and Paint
Double bed complete, good mattress, $35. Co. Mirrors, specialties, Shower and Tub
White chest, $15. Telephone ID 3-1086.
Enclosures are all on display.
WORN blue leather easy chair; 2 solid maple poster beds; 70 ft. wire fencing; bath- LAKESIDE
GLASS &amp; PAINT CO.
room scale; incomplete set English Castle
1914 First St.
ID 2-7211
blue dinnerware;
wood
and brass floor
lamp. ID 2-6994.
AIR CONDITIONERS
2 PIECE
maple
couch
and
chair, loose
cushions, good condition, $15; ideal for Easily installed — you can do it yourself.
1 h.p. only $199.95.
Freeman’s Air Con—
home or porch. Telephone WI
ditioner Sales 648 N. Western.

Thursday, May 28, 1959
¥

�MISCELLANEOUS FOR SALE

WANTED

SHOP AND SAVE AT
STOCKADE TRADING POST
WHEELING, ILLINOIS
516 N. MILWAUKEE AVE.
LEHIGH 17-0247
WE
Open

SELL ON

TERMS

Mon.
Sat. &amp;

Fri.
9-6

Specials

thru
Sun.

9-9

for Week

All Furniture

Mart

LOST

Samples

Selling out all used merchandise at bargain
prices to make room for 4 truckloads. of
new Furniture Mart samples.in bedroom and
living room sets; stainless steel sinks, $15
each; new
3 piece sectional living room
sets, $169. 50 and up; good buys on linoleum
and carpeting; children’s swing sets, $19.50;
new
and
used
soil
pipe,
$1.50
&amp;
up;
swimming
pools,
$5 and
up;
ping
pong
tables with nets and paddles, slightly damaged, $14.50; all purpose paint, $2.49 a gal.;
house paint, $3.49 a gal.; metal wall cabinets, $7 &amp; up; 54-inch cabinet sinks complete, $89.50; 42-inch cabinet sinks, complete, $59.50; new enamel paint, 5c a can;
4 drawer filing cabinets, $18; used Remington Rand typewriters, $40; office desks, $35;
living room sets, used, $20 and up; books,
Sc each; doors, $3 and up; structural steel,
OG.-8 1b;: sectional bookcases, $3 a section;
many other items too numerous to mention.

IN AND

AUTOMOBILES

BROWSE

FOR

SALE

DEMONSTRATOR

SALE

LAKE COUNTY
IMPORT MOTORS
59

59

Simca Montherly 4-dr. sedan; reclin. seats, ww, H.
Sales
mgr.
demo.
Was
$2100. Full price
Morris 2-dr.; ww, H, leath-

er intr., slightly used for
demo. purposes. New car
war. Was $1785. Now ........ $1585

FOR sale, graduation specials: student desks,
limed
oak
or maple,
$19.95;
chair to
match, $11.75; Corona Clipper typewriter, $75.76; Parker 21 pen and pencil set,
$8. 95. Chandler’ s, Inc., 645 Central Ave.,
Highland Park.
BEST offer will take 150 feet of wire fencing with cedar posts. 581 Green Bay Rd.,
Highland Park.

"D9 Triumph Sta. Wagon, H,
brand new. Was $1998.
59

Triumph
sedan.
$1850. Our price

SHOWER

D7

Jag. MC cpe.; OD, full
chrome wire wheels. This
one has been in stock too
long, and excellent car
needs only a good home.

&amp;

TUB

ENCLOSURES

Our

LAKESIDE

GLASS

&amp; PAINT

1984 First St.

CO.

ID 2-7211

PATIO
all year solid wood
stained
and
varnished,
2 oversized chairs, matching
two
seater,
oversized
matching
picnic
bench, $35. Lake Forest 1026.

WAS
ABLE TO RE-ORDER AT
SPECIAL PRICE NAME BRAND
DE-HUMIDIFERS
WITH
HUMISTADT, $139 VALUE, ONLY $89.95. SAND R TV, LAKE FOREST
3264.

»

+

NEED BLACK SOIL?
We are one of the North Shore’s largest top
soil and Nutri Soil dealers. We are also
|
equipped for grading and spreading soil.
‘4
JIM BEINLICH
VE 5-0513
or
VE 5-1195
EVERGREENS
for
sale,
low
spreading
Pfitzer
Junipers.
State
inspected.
150
Fairview, Deerfield. Telephone WI 5-0314.
8 FOOT
overhead garage door and a 16
foot overhead door, good shape; 11 wall
radiators, light weight, make offer. Jim
Beinlich Wrecking, 671 Dundee Rd., Glencoe. VErnon 5-0513.
ALL TYPES MANURE
AVAILABLE
Large supply of cattle, horse
and mushroom manure. We deliver any amonut.

JIM

VE

BEINLICH

or
5-0513
VE 5-1195
CRAFTSMEN
table saw,
sand,
repulsion
induction motor, never used, $150 value,
reasonably re
storm windows. Telephone WI 5-1181

MUSICAL

INSTRUMENTS

FOR

SALE

USED PIANO
KIMBALL
reconditioned baby grdnd—Best
offer. Telephone ID 2-2510 or ID 3-0072.
120 BASS Comerano accordion. Like new.
113
Baldwin
Ave.,
Waukegan,
or call
ONtario 2-6937.
MUST sell fine baby grand piano, beautiful
walnut finish, excellent condition, $425.
Telephone WI 5-0582
USED INSTRUMENTS
LOWREY

organ,

ACCORDION,

Heritage,

black

Dallape,

LOWREY ORGAN
1795 St. Johns Ave.
MUSICAL

mah.

TOP
dollar for —
spinet
phone ID 2-2510
PIANOS ‘WANTED

USED
Call

size.

WANTED
pianos.

MAKES—STYLES

WESTERN
watches,

Box

saddles,
collection

U-15,

BUY

shotguns,
c/o

of

old

pocket

smoking

pipes.

Lake

Forester.

WANTED
AT ONCE
soma
rugs, French furniture, bric-a-brac,
anti
“4 ar parce. Top cash paid. ROgers

iain May 28, 1959

es

1958
1958

Edsel
hard
top, radio,
peaters AP
tis Sake $1695
Triumph
TR3
roadster,

Healey,

primrose
tires, show

D5

"55 Jag.
ww
58

blue-

Ford

1957

heater, full power .......... $1795
Dodge, radio, heater,

TR3

MC

1957

1957

Mark 4 door, radio, heat-

cpe., baby
Rdstr.,

blue,

white,

black leather intr., R-H,
ww, Tonneau, 1 owner, 9000 actual miles

"57 TR3_
blue
new

"ST TR3

58

Radstr.,
intr.,
cond.

blue,

OD,

R-H,

like

$1895

Rdstr.,

green,

blk.

intr., 1 owner, lowe mileage, mint cond. car _$495

dn.

Karman
ww

dn.

Ghi

cpe.,

R-H,
$595

"57 MGA Radstr., old English
white, red leather intr.,
ww,

wire

wh.,

H,

Ton-

neau

$1895

OVERSTOCKED!
ABOVE
CARS
MUST BE SOLD.
NO REASONABLE
OFFER
WILL
BE
REFUSED.

LAKE COUNTY
IMPORT MOTORS
517-519

Waukegan

AT

1957

Ford 2 door, radio, heat$1095
er ...

1956

Oldsmobile
full power

1956

Ford 9 passenger Country Sedan, full power ....$1495

1955

Chevrolet 4 door station
wagon, heater and Pow-

convertible,

1955

OTBHAS es
a
ee $1095
Dodge.4 door «.....-:......-2. $ 745

1955

Rambler

1954

radio, heater, Hydra. ....$ 895
Cadillac
4 door,
full
power

station

wagon,

...

hard

Buick

1952

Chevrolet 2 door ............ $ 295

S. Genesee

St.

MA

Johns

Open

8 A.M.

WM. RUEHL &amp; CO.
GENERAL BODY SHOP
NOW OPEN
Auto

Body and Fender Repairs
All Makes - All Models

Complete Painting,
Undercoating and Touch

ASK

FOR

Sundays

3-8575

1953 BUICK Riviera Roadmaster. Full power. Metallic red body, white top. Red
vie and black nylon interior. $350. ID
1959 RAMBLER,
American
2 door, red,
radio, heater, less than 2 months old, received company car. Telephone GLenview
4-8247.
1959 ALFA ROMEO GIULIETTA SPIDER,
2 seater sports convertible, alpine white
with black top, demonstrator,
new
car
guarantee. Can be seen zt Edens Motors,
680 Skokie Valley Rd. ID 3-2222.
1958 Chevrolet convertible, slack with whiteMeng radio and heater. Telephone ID 3-

AUTO
your

car

1956
VOLKSWAGEN.
Call
Lake
Bluff
5146 after 6 p.m.
1957 MERCURY Mt. Clair, Dg power, very
clean, R-H, ww, red and white, sharp.
Wife of serviceman must sacrifice. Call
Lake Forest 2208 evenings.
BEST offer. Good
condition, clean, 1952
Special Buick, economical, standard shift,
7 tires; motor aaa
overhauled. Telephone ID 2-0613'
1958 DELUXE
Volkvenaea: excellent condition.
$1490.
Low mileage.
Telephone
ID 2-2442,
1959 THUNDERBIRD,
convertible, power
steering, brakes, seats, windows.
Alpine
white with white top. Almost new.
nsider trade. HIllicres{ 6-4330.

Park

bank

and

save

need

pumping a

or let us do it. We

CAMERAS
16

mm.

picture

camera,

3 lenses

include

made

wide

in

angle

and telephoto lenses, filters and adapter
rings included, leather case. Best offer.
ID 2-8273.

NEW

1959 model,

8 mm

Bell and Howell

movie camera in leather case; never been
out
of original
wrappings.
$25.
Ideal
graduation
gift.
Telephone
ID
2-6850.
LIKE
new Yashica-Mat camera,
withhall
accessories. Must sell quick; best offer.
Telephone ID 2-3916.

CAMPS AND INST.
SUNSHINE VALLEY
A credited member of
American Camping Assn.
18 acres of cool woods with private jet
heated swimming pool, all activities of interest to children are instructed individually
by adult counselors.
14 years of
satisfaction for boys and
Is 5-10.
portation provided. June
22-August PY
INSPECTION
house Sundays
Mr.

INVITED
in May 2-5 p.m,

shied

&amp; Mrs. J. R. Thompson
LAKE FOREST 3120.

CARPENTERS,

way

pool

it yourself

BOOKKEEPING,
accounting
and
inconiae
tax service. Wide experience. William C,
Heinrichs, 685 Park Avenue West. Telephone ID 2-1642.

2-5845

CONTRACTORS

a —

&amp;

FOR building that a"
Stak ae a be
V&amp;
¥ Construction
__2-5477 or WI 5-298

ete

RELIABLE

carpenter.

=

JOB

3 yp

a

Fetes

eal

Remod-

eling,

paneling, porches and Hi Fi rooms,
H. Blomq uist Construction, teleshan WI 5-2830.

BICYCLES
Daily

10 A.M. to 5 P.M.

1930, 4 door sedan, excellent
reasonable. Telephone WI
5-

1959 MERCEDES-BENZ,
190 SL, one of
three
coupe
roadsters
in this country,
factory demonstrator, less than 1,000 miles,
strawberry body with white hard top and
black soft top. Becker Europia AM-FM
radio, new car guarantee. Can be seen at
Edens
Motors,
680 Skokie
Valley
Rd.
ID 3-2222.
station
heater,

swimming

Do

siding.

1949, CADILLAC, 2 door. Good condition.
Dark green, $250, Telephone Ft. Sheridan,
D 2-5000, ext. 4160.

1954 FORD
hee hasan

your

out?

have the equipment. ID 2-9202.
%
ACCOUNTING, bookkeeping, tax service—
any part of $5, 000 to $45,000; ce gs
long term
credits. Telephone
STate

Open

LOANS

the

DOES

Ups

ID

and

2g, crating,
telephone ID 2-0087.
SEPTIC tanks and grease traps pumped—
modern equipment—prompt service. iden: .
Casselberry
Co., Lake Forest
1378.
:

FRECH

FIRST NATIONAL
BANK
of Highland Park

Park

1952 FORD
2-door;
radio,
heater,
good
tires, 66,000 miles, good motor, good second car. Lake Forest 324.
THUNDERBIRD,
1955, one
owner,
low
mileage; Fordomatic, power assists, Turquoise, soft top, radio. Will accept trade.
$1800. Private party. Call Friday p.m. or
Sat. ONLY. L.F. 1890.
UNUSUALLY dependable 1950 Dodge business coupe, light gray. Telephone Lake
Bluff 2978.
1956 CONVERTIBLE
Chevrolet, excellent
condition; power steering, whitewall tires,
only 21,000 miles, radio, heater. Best bid
over $1300 gets a bargain. Telephone ID
2-3663.
COLLECTOR’S
ITEM
Four
door
convertible,
1951
Frazer,
all
leather interior, electrically controlled windows, Hydramatic drive; fully equipped and
customized.
Perfect condition.
ID
2-8592.
CADILLAC,
1952,
62,
4 door,
metallic
green finish, power steering and brakes.
Must see to appreciate. Call HlIllcrest 64330 or see at 555 Chestnut, Winnetka.
THUNDERBIRD
1956,
white,
two
tops,
automatic transmission, full power, radio,
heater. Call WI 5-3178.
1958 BUICK Roadmaster 75, 2 door hardtop, with full power equipment, plus air
suspension. Excellent condition, low mileage. Telephone ID 2-1279.
VOLKSWAGEN
1958, low mileage, excellent condition.
Priced to sell. Can
be
seen at Mobile Station, Deerfield, or telephone ID 2-2423.
1955
DESOTO
Fireflight
sedan,
power
brakes,
steering and
seats. By original
owner.
Must dispose of this week. ID
2-0085.
1955 BUICK Special, 2 door, power steering and brakes, radio and heater. Best
offer. Telephone ID 3-0198.
STATION
WAGON,
1958
Mercury
Colony Park, all power equipment, private
owner. Telephone ID 2-5174.
MODEL
A,
ne

JACK

487 E. Park Ave.
Highland

Finance
money.

to 9 P.M.

SERVICE

SERVICE

MOVING—Local

Switzerland.

WESTMEAD
antiques,
having
completed
the new shop, has a choice collection of
Chinese and Far East antiques. Collectors
and decorators welcomed. We are in the
same location; on Illinois 42A, 1% mile
north of Illinois 120.
FOR sale, 3 genuine antique pieces. Call
ONtario 2-1469.

AUTO

FURNITURE

BOLEX

ANTIQUES

top ................ $ 495

Highland

RIDES

ALTERATIONS

$1495

1953

St.

BUSINESS

SALE

Now, two locations to serve you better for
custom clothes and alterations.
THE SILVER NEEDLE
HIGHLAND
PARK, ILLINOIS
1866 Sheridan Rd.
610 Laurel Ave.
Phone ID 2-7118
Phone ID 2-1774
LOOK chic for summer with shorter skirts.
Ask
for Eda.
Zengeler
Cleaners,
Inc.,
1905 Sheridan Rd. Telephone ID 2-2800.

1954 "Ford:2 door. 625 iiss $ 595
1953 Pontiac Catalina ............ $ 445

1957 OLDSMOBILE Holiday 98, full power,
low mileage, real sharp; going into service. $2095. Call ELliott 6-7429.

Only

$1795
A

radio,

Pull POWEY ese hee $1745
Pontiac 4 door hard top,
full power, radio heater $1695

Open

tutone, new
room
condi-

enthusiasts.

convertible,

SHARE

ID 2-8640

tion, Was $199’. Now
Porsche super cpe., 1 for
the

.3.0id.1.408 $2095

1957

1909

$2495
metallic

heater?

FOR

DEERFIELD
teacher wishes transportation
with National College student. Telephone
WI 5-1597.

FORD

Full price

55

AUTOMOBILES

FORD,
1956
Sunliner
convertible,
power
steering,
radio, heater, unusually
clean.
‘Will
sell outright
or trade.
Call
Mr.
Maurer, Hillcrest 6-4330.

Holmes Motor Co.

Tele-

TOP PRICES PAID
ROGERS
PARK
1-4400
grand piano in excellent condition.
Lake Forest 3969.

WANTED
TO

Write

Lady’s

STUDIOS
ID 2-2510

INSTRUMENTS

ALL

finish.

price

sALE

FOR NORTH SHORE’S
FINEST A-1 USED CARS

er,
AUTOMOBILES

FOR

SEE HOLMES

radio,

&amp; FOUND

FOUND,
chartreuse parakeet in Braeside
area, week of May
16. Call ID 2-8963.

Visit our newly
remodeled
store to see
complete displays of Tub and Shower enclosures, Glass,
mirrors,
Venetian
Blinds,
—
draperies,
and
Modern
folding
oors.

*

BUY

FOUND,
2 small kittens tortoise color at
Old Elm and Green Bay Rd. Call Lake
Bluff 838.
LOST, blue and white parakeets, last Friday, south end of town. Call Lake Forest

GOOD BUYS ON
MAPLE FURNITURE

COME

TO

WANTED:
portable typewriter in excellent
condition, for high school student. Telephone WI 5-1639.
WANTED:
Circulating fountain bird bath
for patio. Telephone WI 5-1639.
COMPLETE contemporary living room with
lamps,
chairs;
almost
new
Foodorama,
electric stove 40 inches, refrigerator 33
inches. Bedspreads. ONtario 2-1567.
HAND lawn mower in good condition; station wagon
roof rack; Kodak
postcard
siez camera, No. 122; National Geographic magazines, 1930-1953, Teleph
Lak
Forest 3373.
wis dunaaa go

wagon,
9 passenger,
$650. Telephone WI

CYCLE &amp; HOBBY SHOP
486 Central
ID 2-1369

interior and exterior remod-

eling,
building,
er ype
bsSe
inets, floor, wall and ceiling tile
&gt;
mates. Telephone CHerry , Seton
wave
BEE 1
ache

Bp
aah, ©

fala
1
and home natdiialial is our
business.
Porch enclosures, basement paneled
room
additions,
kitchen
cabinet, or
just that one door that doesn’t close right.
All work guaranteed.

CARPENTRY
BOY’S
light weight 26 inch bicycle with
gear shift; girl’s 26 inch bicycle. Reasonable. Telephone WI 5-0604 after 6 p.m.
16-INCH_ boy’s bicycle, training wheels included; good condition. $8. Telephone ID
2-2934,

ROOM

ADDITIONS
CABINET WORK
FENCING
For estimate call Halvor
ID 2-1587, after 6 p.m.

Ulvenes,

BOATS
NEW 10 ft. Fiberglas Dingies, $125; choice
of moulded-in colors. Flotation tanks, oar
a
bow ring, 76 lbs. Telephone WI 57 z “i P. MARTIN
outboard. Motor twist
shift. Perfect condition. Used little. $110.
Telephone ID 2-1369.
17 FOOT sloop. Penn Yan, Vampire, needs
work, ideal for off beach sailing, make
offer. ID 2-3889.
17 FOOT Thompson Lanser, 50 h.p. Evinrude, gater trailer, fully equipped, $1800.
oe
ID 2-5797, weekdays after 6:30

BLACK
BLACK
rad

dirt, gravel
Dordand,

CARPENTER WORK
New,
remodeling
and
additions.
Jalousie —
windows and doors. Combination al
;
doors, windows. for free estimates telephone a
ID 2-6466.
fies
NO
job too small. Carpentry,
plastering,
kitchen cabinets, etc. Grant and Grant.
Call Lake Bluff 5015.
CARPENTERS—UNION

Rough

work.

See

Carl

Deerfield; telephone
COrnelia 7-6646.

CARPENTRY,

SOIL
We

PATIO

do

all cement

blacktop,
raeepone
4

DO

Grey,

Green, Blue, White
$2.00 and $3.00
Book Covers
P.O. Box 356
Highland Park, III.

IT

BUSINESS

finer

3 p.m.

ID

$10

OPPORTUNITY

2-6703

plus
Call

ownafter

LOCAL
high
gallonage
station for lease
with major oil company;
available now.
ween
Standard Oil Co., ONtario 2-

repairs

SERVICE

EAGHT general hauling. We also move al)
types of household appliances, Call ID 26098 or ID 2-4917.

per

TOOL

stone

ID

2-

free

Park

delivery.

RENTAL

Rd.

ORchard

dressmaking,

4-8880_

s

suits,

alterations,

—

drapes, slip covers, etc. Irvin G. St ph in
941 Waukegan Rd., Deerfield; aac ar

:

WI 5-0689.

WELL
Lake

WOOD

seasoned firewood split nicely.
Forest 790-Y-1; if no answer

MUndelein 6-6566.

ELECTRICAL REPAIRS
able

LAUNDRY”
Highland

work, seal

GROVE

DRESSMAKING
SEWING:

All

if special service desired, try it today

St. Johns

Telephone
2

work,

month,

9210 Waukegan

wall

FAST, FAST SERVICE
1875

etc.

remod-

WORK

CLAUSING

SHIRTS
WOO

and

WORK

FIREPLACE
BUSINESS

or

RENT A
REDUCING MACHINE

graduation gift.
HIlicrest 6-3848

HOTEL lease for sale, 25 rooms
er’s apartment. Good income.

St.,

YOURSELF

MORTON

no

Pine

2-1870

install basketball courts.
ID 3-1268 or Ronzani,

Enhance Your Telephone Books
Book Bound Covers

WORLD
BOOK
Miriam
Booth

239

oe.

general

CEMENT

and file, lawns graded.
telephone
NEwton
4

at

CRestwood

eling,
porch
additions,
Windsor 5-1511.

BOOKS

gg
1952 hardtop coupe, economy
ed with plenty of unused mileage left.
ill sacrifice. HIllcrest 64330.
SPEED Equipment,
off T-Bird ’55, Edelbrock Man. with 3 No. 97 Strombergs,
$50. Mallory ignition, $20 (both with exchange of stock equip.) Traction Masters,
Skirts,
$20.
Five
Dayton
Wire
Wheels
w/knockoffs and adapters, $80.
me
aa 1890 Friday p.m. or Sat.

CARPENTRY,

BIKES—Boy’s or Girl’s Used and
Reconditioned. Some like new—a
few Schwinns. Most, but not all
sizes. Also repairs and parts for all
make bicycles.

types

of

outlets,

ELECTRIC

electrical

new

prices. Telephone

GUTTERS
GUTTERS
painted

&amp;
Sh

ID

or

post

repairs.

lights,

Reason-

2-6287.

FURNACE

replaced
with

work,

circuits,

—_—

REPAIR

repaired,

’

cleaned,

rust
oe preventative.

Care- — a

ful expert work.
wire screening
plied and installed.
a. Telephone 1D 26362.

Page 49

�INSTRUCTION
GARINO MUSIC STUDIOSon

|

North Shore’s Finest. Instruction
dion and guitar;
or. about our

instrument
trial plan.

PETS
InID

PIANO
INSTRUCTION
Hank
Winston,
staff pianist
at WBBM
CBS. Call WI 5-0244 after 7:30 p.m
CHICAGO
elementary school reading specialist has time available to teach reading
and arithmetic
in her Deerfield
home.
Telephone WI 5-2439,
COLLEGE student will accept limited number of girls between ages of 9 through 13
for summer instruction in sketching, water
color and ceramics. ID 2-6483.
LATIN
tutoring
during
summer
in your
home.
DUnkirk
1-0652 after 4:30.
LATIN tutoring, reasonable rates. Call Karen Lauter, ID 2-4116 after May 27.
JACK
MOORE
GUITAR
SCHOOL
Guitar exclusively taught.
Private lessons,
group
participation;
instrument
furnished.
National and State winners, 1955-56-57-58.
Oma
Park Studio, telephone HlIllcrest

PRICES

PAID

For all types of junk brought to our door,
such as: Papers, rags, iron, metal, etc. Or
call [IDlewood 3-1466 for free pick-up. We
specialize in industrial accounts. Hours daily
including Saturday, 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m
HIGHLAND
PARK
WASTE
MATERIAI
1466 Berkelev Rd.
SHORELINE
SCRAP &amp; PAPER CO.
We pick up paper and all metals, do maintenance work and haul. Telephone ID 31268 or ID 2-6578.

LANDSCAPING
FRANK

&amp;

VENA

South

of

Dundee

Drive

® North

of

Rd.

5-1302

on

Edens

the

Highway

Kennel.

Private inside heated stalls and
connecting
individual
outside
runs.
Expert grooming of all breeds
by professionals.
Under the personal direction of
Elaine Ortman.
Kennel Shop features all accessories.
MALE
Irish water
retriever training.

spaniel, AKC,
starting
Call DElta 6-3361.

PRAIRIE

ACRES

LANDSCAPING,

LAWN

CARE

~hggors
plowing, hauling, fill dirt,
top soil,
rotted cow manure, top
seed rolling. Telephone WI 5-0818.

reasonable

black

prices

and

guarantee

yardage

Call

NEwton

4-3213

FOR

BULBS

THE

Nutri Soil
Sand and Gravel
Stone

HEITKOTTER BROS.

GARDEN

Hybrid Petunias, Marigolds, Asters, Impatiens for shade, blue and red Salvias, Zinnias, many others. Tomato and Sweet Pepper plants.
Ground Cover Plants; Pachysandra, Ajuga,
Euonymus, Acuta, E. Coloratus, E. Kewensis, E. Vegetus, Baltic Ivy, Bowle’s Vinca.

Drive to OMAN’S FLOWER FARM, located 3 miles west of Half Day on Route 83,
Y% mile south of Route 22. Open weekdays
and Sundays, 8 a.m, to 8 p.m.

SPRING

PLANTING

SALE!

ELOF T. CLAUSON
May 29 thru June 6
The finest in tree work, patios, landscaping
and maintenance. Insured. Satisfaction guaranteed. Telephone Lake Forest 3366.
ROSES: Potted Tea and Climbing
ROTOTILLING,
gardens only. R. Landau.
Roses, Reg. 2:50 reduced to $1.65.
Telehpone WI 5-0764.
Potted Hybrid Roses, Reg. $3.75
LAWNS top dressed, fertilized, seeded. For
Sale, evergreens, ornamental shrubs, hu- reduced to $2.50... excellent buys
mus,
fertilizers,
seeds.
ALpine
1-0493,
for the man or woman who loves
Martin.
ROTOTILLING—Lawns
and gardens. Call | roses.

WI 5-0354

PAINTING
BLOOM

&amp;

PAINTING

@ Up to date
®
@

DECORATING
COMPANY

methods

Quality workmanship
Sensible prices
IDLEWOOD

2-5544

PAINTING
and
decorating;
outside
specialty. Fully insured. Lake Forest 3938.
Telephone any time.
PAINTING
and
decorating,
mterior
am
exterior, natural or bleached wood
fin
ishing;
quality
workmanship.
For
esti
Herr
call Eric Schneider, Libertyville
PAINTING AND
PAPER HANGING.
Interior and exterior painting. For quality
workmanship
by
experienced,
reliable
men call W. C. Varney. WI 5-0654.
PAINTING and paper hanging, reasonabic
rices; free estimates. Telephone A. G
ddy or Peter Gallos. Lake Forest 15¢
CONGER
BROTHERS
PAINTING
AND
DECORATING
SERVICE.
Paper hanging. Telephone ID 2-3452—ID
2-3053.
MURALS
painted. Work uune vy quanfied
artist. Ideal for any room in your home.
Samuel Elis Brown, 251 Wentworth, Glencoe—Telephone VErnon 5-2174.
SUBURBAN
HOME
PAINTERS
Experts in painting and paper hanging. Interior and exterior. Call Roy Carlson for
free estimate. ID 2-2699.
PERSONAL
HUSBANDS:
dinner given
1799 Green
day, June 7,
children 12

take your family to a ham
by the Women of the Moose,
Bay Rd., Highland Park, Sun12:30 to 6 p.m. Adults $1.75,
and under $1.00.
PETS

EXPERT
grooming for miniature and toy
poodles. Pick up and delivery only. For
_- appointment call Lake Forest 1648 after

6 p.m.

“Page 50

GARDEN SUPPLIES:
Such
as
Seed, Fertilizers, Tools, reduced
25% from
item,

reg. list price marked

on

NURSERY STOCK:
Such as evergreens,
shade
trees, bushes, etc.,
33% reduced from list price...
walk
in the field
and
tag your
plant.

TOWN &amp; COUNTRY
LANDSCAPERS, INC.
Routes 45 &amp; 83, Mundelein, Illinois
Telephone MUndelein 6-0600
ROOFING
CEDAR
SHINGLES?
Don’t
Neglect
Them
SUBURBAN
ROOF
TREATING
SERV
Call ALpine
1-0377
Lloyd §. Crair

SEWERS
QUICK
service on clogged or slow main
sewers. Cleaned and opened with electric
rod
equipment.
We.
service
any
type
drains.
All work
guaranteed.
Call LEhigh 7-0232.
SEWING

SINGER
Complete

MACHINES

SEWING
Sales

MACHINE
and

Service

Free Home Demonstration
Repair on All Makes of Machines

TELEPHONE
‘TRAILERS

&amp;

ID 2-3811

TRAILER

Rovelli

lengthy
Born

illness.
Oct.

been

14,

1884,

a resident

oPACE

HALE TRAILER SALES
House trailers and travel trailers; we buy
and eel], 1920 SheriJan Rd., North Chicago.
(2 blocks north of naval base).

in

Italy,

he

of Highwood

32 years.
His survivors include one son,
August, of the same address, one
daughter and one sister in Italy,
and 9 grandchildren.
Rovelli was by profession a laborer in building trade.
Funeral services were held Sat-

urday at St. James Church. Burial
followed in St. Mary’s Cemetery in
Highland

Park.

Mrs. Kathryn

TUNING

WHY
don’t you
have that piano
tuned
right, for a change?
$9.50 will do it.
Satisfaction
guaranteed
or
no _ charge.
Telephone ID 3-0608.
PIANOS exactly TUNED
and REGULATED by KARL
LANGER,
piano tunermusician. Lake Forest, 153 Atteridge Rd.
Telephone Lake Forest 4063 between
8
and 9 a.m. and p.m.

PLANTS

Beinlich

Tito Rovelli, 74, of 438 N. Central
Ave.,
Highwood,
died
last
Thursday in Elgin Hospital after a

for

Japanese Yews in containers to plant now.
$2.00
and
$2:50
each.
Special
on
large
Ligustrum Vicari—75c each, while they last.

Humus
Top Soil

Tito

away. Call Lake Bluff 2883.
DACHSHUND
puppies, 7 weeks old, AKC
registered. Call Lake Bluff 1928.
SCHIPPERKE
puppies, registered AKC, 6
weeks old. Call CHestnut
8-4046, Lake
Geneva, Wis., or Lake Forest 3145 evenings.
FRENCH POODLE
10 month old girl, housebroken; loves children. $50. Telephone ID 2-4346.
MALE
Siamese
kitten
and
apricot
toy
, Poodle puppy. Call Lake Forest 3067.
ATTENTION
HUNTERS:
German
short
haired pointers, Von Strauss blood line,
registered AKC and field dog stud-book.
Call WI 5-5930.

&amp;

Jim

OBITUARIES

had

PLANTS

insured.

VE 5-0513.
&amp; N TREE EXPERTS. hanes aso
feed
ing, repairing, guying and removal. Full
insured.
E ESTIMATES.
Telephone
1D 2-8750. ID 2-5481.
WING’S TREE EXPERTS.
Cutting, trimming, removing,
feeding
and
repairing.
spraying. Fully insured and bonded; free
estimates.
Telephone UD 2-6546 or Kim
|
ball 6-2292.

old healthy kittens to be given

PIANO

Kleinschmidt Hosts Meeting

in effect for tree re

rates now

Completely

G

Shore’s newest and finest

Boarding

LANDSCAPING

Lime

KENNEL
VErnon

Service

moval.

GARDENING

Call me for the finest in lawn care, tree
removal, top dressing, patio work, fertilizing. Telephone ID 2-5494 after 7 p.m.
GENERAL
LANDSCAPING
New lawns, black dirt, humus, top dressing.
planting, lawns fertilieed, tree work, stone
work, patios, driveways.
A. MELCHIORRE
ID 2-0829

For

BOARDING
Glencoe

10 WEEK

JUNK

HIGHEST

GLENCOE

accor

furnished.
Telephone

TREE SURGERY
,
WINTER

Mrs.

595

Harriet Wagner

Kathryn

Onwentsia

Harriet

Ave.,

Wagner,

died

at

age

71 on Tuesday in Waukegan Hospital after a lengthy illness.
Born
in August, 1887, in Evanston, she
had been a resident of the Onwentsia address for 45 years.
Her survivors include one son,
Frank J. Wagner of Highland Park;
three daughters, Mrs. Kathryn Foster of Highland Park, Mrs. Elizabeth
Klein of Miami Springs, Fla., and

Mrs.

Marilyn

Moran

of

Highland

Park. Others are two sisters, Mrs.
John J. Price of Chicago and Mrs.
Grace Johnston of Van Nuys, Calif.;

12 grandchildren,

and

three

great-

grandchildren. Her husband,
Frank, preceded her in death.
She was a member
of Blessed
Virgin Guild of St. James Church,

Highwood.

Services

the church

yesterday.

were

held

at

A half-century of pioneering work in the development of
global communications is represented in this picture. Left to right
are Brig. Gen. Earl N. Cook, chief of research and development
division, office of chief signal officer, Washington, D.C., director
of the signal corps orbiting relay experiment; Edward E. Kleinschmidt, inventor of the teletypewriter, facsimile, stock ticker and
other printed communications equipment and president of Kleinschmidt

Division of Smith-Corona

Cub Pack 250 Will
March In Parade

Cubmaster Robert Leonard has
asked that it be announced that all
Cubs of Pack 250 assemble in Jewett Park at 9:30 a.m. on May 30
preparatory
to marching
in the
Memorial Day parade. All boys are
asked to be in uniform.
The next
pack meeting will be held in the
Third grade teacher at Ravinia fall with the boys being advised as
school, Miss Olive Lindstrom, 39, to the exact time and date.
The last meeting before the sumof 727 Homewood Ave. died Friday
in Highland Park Hospital after a mer vacation was held by Cub Pack
250 at the Maplewood School on
brief illness.
Born in Highland Park on April Friday, May 15. As entertainment
14, 1920, she was a graduate of for the parents Dens 2, 4 and 6 preNorthern Illinois University at De- sented a skit and a gay frolic of
Kalb. She had taught at Ravinia song entitled ‘Musical Hoedown.”
for the past 13 years. She had also “This proved to be a fine conclutaught
at Vancouver,
Wash.,
for sion for a very busy year on the
two years and at Franklin Park for part of the dens,’ reports T. C.
the same length of time, She was Wright.
In addition to the regular busia member
of National Education
Association and the American Asso- ness it was announced that Mrs. L.
J. Schoeffmann
has accepted the
ciation of University Women.
Funeral services were held Mon- post of head den mother.
Awards
were
presented
to the
day in the chapel at 1913 Sheridan
boys:
Rd. Burial followed in Northshore following
George Surgent, gold arrow and
Garden of Memories. Rev. Paul G.
two silver arrows; Jimmy Blacker,
Gerth officiated at ceremonies.
Among Miss Lindstrom’s surviv- bear badge and gold arrow; Stevors
are
her
father,
Fred
Lind- en Wright, gold and silver arrows;
strom, 727 Homewood Ave.; two sis- Erich Almasy, bear badge and gold
ters, Miss Grace Lindstrom of the arrow; Chuck Altmeyer, gold and
same address; Mrs. Lorraine Var- silver arrows; Greg Staton, gold arner of Pine Glen, Pa.; and an aunt, row; Ricky King, gold and silver
Miss
Agnes
Heckman,
who
lived arrows; Jay Brown, gold arrow.
Randy Bleyer, gold and silver arwith the Lindstroms.
rows and assistant denner badge;
Joel Williams, wolf badge and gold
Rabbi Philip Lipis Re-Elected
arrow; Steve Olson, gold arrow and
National Association Officer
denner badge; Mark Schoeffmann,
Rabbi Philip L. Lipis of North gold arrow; Johnny Kroegel, bear
Michael
Meehan,
bear
Suburban Synagogue Beth El was badge;
re-elected National vice president badge and gold and silver arrows;
of the Military Chaplain’s Associa- Thomas Marshall, gold and silver
Thomas
Schelling,
wolf
tion for the third consecutive time arrows;
and denner badge;
Randy
and for the fifth time in the last badge
nine years. The Military Chaplain’s Anderson, assistant denner badge.
Jeffrey Werner, lion badge and
Association embraces chaplains of
all faiths and denominations
and gold arrow and two silver arrows;
Hardman,
wolf
badge;
its membership is almost 2000 cler- Stephen
Douglas Hanson, wolf badge;
James
gymen.,

RAVINIA THIRD
GRADE TEACHER
DIES FRIDAY

Hen-

Inc. of Deerfield;

Marchant

ry McDonald, president of Chicago chapter AFCEA, secretary and
general counsel Kellogg Switchboard and Supply; and Davis §S.
McNally, vice president and general manager of Kleinschmidt,
Deerfield.
This picture was taken at the regional meeting of the Armed
Forces Communications and Electronic Association on May 21 at
Tam O'Shanter Country Club at which Kleinschmidt was the host
company.

Deerfield Explorer
Post Canoes Shoot
Rapids Down State
Twelve

canoes

manned

by

Ex-/

plorer Scouts of Post 53 covered
22 miles of the Vermillion River
over the week end of May 16-17.
The trip was started at a point on

the

river

just

north

of

Streator,

Ill., east of Leonore and after a
full day
of shooting
rapids
the
overnight camp site at Bailey Falls

was reached in time to set up the
tents

and

before

The
exciting

get

supper

night

fall.

next

day

than

the

on

the

fire

was

even

more

first

with

many

tricky rapids and a faster current
on the river. The trip was terminated at Jonesville where the Ver+
million joins the Illinois. Explorer
Adviser E. L. Small led the group
assisted by W. J. Loarie, E. J. Cos+

savella,

F,

W.

Baarsh

and

P.

C.

Weinert. The Explorer Scouts were
R. Mentzer,
C. Jones,
R. Cossavella, W. Reeb, J. Loarie and P.
Armstrong.
Also included
in the
group was young W. Weinert.

On

May

24

two

of the

post

53

canoes were entered in the canoe
marathon
down
the
DesPlaines
River.
One
of
the
canoes
was

manned
by
Fred
Weinert
and
Philip Armstrong and the other by
Mr.

Cossavella

tal

of

the

107

18

tyville

and

canoes

miles

A

to-

participated

son

in

trip

Bob,

from

to

Dam

No.

was

alive

with

canoes.

not

official

by

early

2.

Liberty-

The

river

Although

afternoon

it

appeared that the team of Weinert
and Armstrong came in third place.

Dearing, silver arrow; Charles Eddy, ass’t, denner
badge;
Thomas
Kube,
silver
arrow
and
denner
badge; Gary Mack, wolf badge, gold

and

silver

arrows

and

denner

badge;
Joe Rockey, silver arrow;
Jim Gesler, wolf badge and gold
arrow; Dirk Hansen, ass’t denner

badge.

Thursday, May 28, 1959

�SAVINGS

and

why

FRIENDLINESS...
in a business
We

our

Rarely

atmosphere

welcome
patronage

you
at

and

do

on

find

friendly

a par

with

that

our

utmost

With

policy...our

Federal

reserves,

certified

FOR

&amp;

Loan

careful

SAVINGS

ee Your

dividend

Insurance

management

lending

audits...and,

makes

paid

$10,000

mortgage

investment

being

to

your

savings

account

in Lake

will

County

at DEERFIELD

our’
SAFER !

receive

the

for savings.

SAVINGS

makes

this

possible.

OUT

YOURSELF !

Let us arrange
transfer

$ 20,000,000.00.

your

independent

DEERFIELD

Careful
FIND

grow...

offices.

to maintain

conservatively

annual

HIGHEST

NOT

to

warmth

in our

Savings

EARNINGS.

WHY

exceed

continues

SAVINGS.

account...our

AMPLE

Association

now

you

do

DEERFIELD

each

Loan

assets

will

SAFETY...
on

and

of your

of

our

no

inconvenience

s

for the

investment

funds
to

‘

to one

accounts

SAVINGS

&amp; LOAN ASSOCIATION

free

parking

savings

at

or

you.

raga

CONVENIENCE...

*,

745

behind

forms

both

at

ou: customers are provided with ample
our offices, or with handy postage-free

if they

prefer

DEERFIELD

DEERFIELD

to Save-by-Mail.

SAVINGS

RD.

e

AND

save

Choose
steps,

one
too !

DEERFIELD,
Windsor

ILL.
5-1911

es

DEERFIELD

�serves

up

sunclothes

Family

fuser

on

the

Plan

Oe ON ee
so

‘ae

Sa.

eG

BS cg eset
Po
Ya

sn Begg

-

wy

hyo?
o

be the most admired family on the
beach
in these
authentic
TARTAN
PLAID GO-TOGETHERS, made for summer
fun
and
frolic.
‘‘Quick-Care"
cotton
poplin
in black
and
white
Forbes plaid.
1. Her swimsuit with vertical shirring,
Fulty: lined. ° 70-16:
cca
cas 10.95
(Fashion

2.

His

Swias

white

Corner)

knit

WEARS.

GA

sport
os

(Men's

3. Pre-teen
overbinued,

:

A

girl's
white
25 Wiki
B64.

broadcloth
cess 3.50

tn

ss 4.95

Dept.)

(Children's

ey

8 4.95

Store)

s6ONN ) 56 08s ok

Jameicn

%

shirt,...3.95

a

4. Her white knit shirt with bandana
oak

BAR

it;
Jamaicas

with

&amp;

wR

Beer

ee

you'll

find

Jantzen

in

Highland

Park

Siies « FetO

a
LET'S

Also

GO!

BGUS6

CIRCUS TOMORROW

2:00 p.m.
het
Ma
ie

4:30 p.m.

8:00 p.m.

HIGH SCHOOL ATHLETIC FIELD
Sponsored by the H. P. Service Clubs
FOR THE BENEFIT OF
THE H.P. HOSPITAL BUILDING FUND

Last
Two

Hours

Free

2
Parking

Days
in our

of

our

Lot —

Open

ee

ee

. . . vas

.......... 3.95

cs Be

eae

eee

et

(Boys Wear)

May
Every

a os 5.95
bee Fis

4.
Jamaicas

—

2-4700

ID

Day

White
Until

5:30 —

half

6.95

es

di9

trunks,
6. Boys’ Forbes Plaid swim
3.50
oe ee
hak OU
‘
nm
2.95
2 &lt;9 es cuesbe
Kel Spart shirt...

cog

Phone

Sar

5. Girl's swimsuit with shirred back

/)

at

front

Corner)

(Fashion

,

cen 3.95

Pos

pockets,

2

:

Sale!
Friday

Nights

Until

9

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                    <text>=

VOW

ie

&gt;

wD

CE

S

Thursday
May 21, 1959

seen

SOON

There

Fun

At

Will

Fair

On

Wilmot

Be

A

Big

Saturday

School

�The big bank that grew up
with Highland Park
a)

Re
4
cee

Hf

Starting

st

aaa
a
on

Eis
g

r¥

July

Ist

*

a

DETERS

atin

gtr

hk

Se

sar Sree
a

Oe

ve

a

3

%

INTEREST

|

eat

ta

Eee

nai

a

iS

a At

ah

ay ok ar

&amp;

on all First National Savings

accounts

~
‘~

We

are

happy

National

will

to

announce

be

increased

the
to 3%

creased rate will be on January
why

interest rate on all savings
starting July 1.

1, 1960.

accounts

at the First

First interest payment at the in-

So start saving now.

;

It’s another good reason

it pays to bank right here in town at the First National.

;

The

FIRST NATIONAL BANK
Our 60th

year

i

Complete

Banking

Trust

Services

and

WEEKEND

of

High

la

nd

Pa

rk

Member The Federal Reserve System
The Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

BANKING

HOURS:

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

�aipitisuilian

Vol. 34, No. 11

Thursday, May

Committee App ointments
Cause Village Board Rift
At the previous meeting a big
rift developed between
President
Eldon Holmquist and five trustees
of the board, Trustees John Aberson, Winston Porter, Arno Wehle,
Maurice Petesch and Joseph Koss.

Police Lieutenant

away

with

committees

»

rate
that

motion

replaced

an earlier

¥

4

vote

on

April

15 and

when

the

5

to 1 vote took place on May 13 he
declined to sign the ordinance. He
stated that it removed respect and
dignity from the president’s office.
Former
Village President John
D. Schneider spoke from the floor
and urged the trustees to allow the
president
to organize
his board.
William Hinchsliff, former village
trustee, agreed with Mr. Schneider.
Following
are
the
committees
suggested by the trustees, with the
chairman listed first:
Building, zoning, planning: Koss,
Aberson, Porter.
Administrative, personnel: Wehle, Petesch, Porter.
Finance, auditing: Porter, Aber-

_son, Peterson.
Judicial, license, health:
Peterson, Petesch, Wehle.
Police, fire: Petesch, Koss, Wehle.
Public
works:
Aberson,
Koss,
Peterson.
Public relations: President Holmquist.
Other actions of the board included:
(1) Approved bills of $68,433.54.
Held up payment of furniture for
better accounting.

(2) Voted additional $500 for attorney fees to fight abandonment
of
North
Shore
line,
if
threefourths of 17 communities vote another $500.
(3) Entered contract with Kay’s
Animal
Shelter in Morton Grove
for catching and holding dogs.
(4) Approved permit to move former Bubert house from 745 Deerfield Rd.
to 1157
Park
Ave., to

make

room

for

new

Savings

and

Loan building.
(5) Authorized bids be taken for
maintenance
and
materials
from

motor

fuel tax.

_ (Continued
Bh

Ve

oh

on page

5)

John W. Carlson, president of Tractomotive Corporation
of County Line Rd., Deerfield, announces that plans have bee
made

of three
date.

per

cent

will

by Allis-Chalmers

Manufacturing

Co. to acquire Trac

motive through an exchange of stock. This exchange wo
involve 2.25 shares of Allis-Chalmers for each share of Tract
motive.

Tractomotive
725 employees

has approximately
and
has
135,000

square feet of manufacturing area
located on 38.6 acres in Deerfield.
Its stock is unlisted.
Mr. Carlson said the board
of
directors of his company will meet
soon and he anticipates that all

legal matters will be completed

be-

fore June 30, 1959.
He stated that the association of
Tractomotive
with
Allis-Chalmers
would be highly beneficial to the
employees, customers and dealers.
For many years Tractomotive has

begin

Deerfield Banker Goes
To St. Louis Conclave

worked closely with Allis-Chalmers
Robert S. Ramsay, president of in design, engineering, manufacthe Deerfield State Bank, went to turing and sale of construction maSt. Louis, Mo., on Tuesday, for a chinery products so that joining
two-day convention of Independent the two organizations was the naBankers of which he is a member tural sequence of events.
He said he felt the diversificaof the committee. They are oppos-

By a 5 to 1 vote, members of the
board
passed a motion made
by}
Trustee
Wehle
stating that com-}}
mittees be appointed
by the village
trustees.
Trustee
Peterson
gave the one NO vote.

This

by the

ending June 30, 1959, will be at the
old rate of two per cent. The new

Porter,
Aberson
and
Planning,
Koss,
Petesch.
Peterson, Wehle
Zoning, Porter, Harold
and Koss.
Public relations, Porter.
Legislative, Petesch.
Administrative, Wehle.

motion on April 15 which stated
that the appointments
should
be
made by the president with the approval of the trustees.
This failed
to pass as it was a 3 to 2 vote but
it needed a 4 to 2 vote to become
an ordinance.
President Holmquist declined to

announcement

that the practice of crediting interest to savings accounts during
the last week in June for the period

that

represent works of the regular administrative
staff,
leaving
Royce
Owens,
village manager,
in command.
This, in his opinion, would
leave the following committees desirable:

¥

In a joint

south Lake
County banks,
presidents of the Deerfield State Bank,
First National Bank
of Highland
Park and the Bank
of Highland
Park, report an increase in interest

paid on savings accounts to three
per cent for the period beginning
July 1, 1959 and ending December
30, 1959.
Robert S. Ramsay, president of
the Deerfield State Bank, states

President
Holmquist
had _ suggested that the board consider do-

ing

Allis-Chalmers Manufacturing Co.
To Acquire Tractomotive Corporation —

Deerfield Bank To
Increase Interest
Rate On July 1

The Deerfield Village Board met last night, too late for
a report in today’s REVIEW.
They were finishing up an
agenda of 30 specific items which had been presented the previous week on May 13.

21, 195BERG

ing branch

banks,

Mr.

Ramsay

stat-

ed.
|
Lt. Glenn Koets
At a meeting of the Deerfield
Village Board on May
13, Glenn
Koets received the rank of police

lieutenant,

as

recommended

by

the board of police commissioners,
He received his new badge from
Trustee
Maurice
Petesch,
with
congratulations,
also
from
Chief
David Petersen and the trustees.
The other lieutenant is George
Hall. Lt. Koetz joined the Deerfield Police Department in 1955.

Formulate

Plans

For

Memorial Day Parade
The annual Memorial Day services will begin at 10 a.m. at Jewett
Park on Saturday,
May
30, with
the line of march being formed.
Leaders of all groups which are

planning

to march

are asked to at-

tend a meeting on Friday, May 29,
at 8:30 p.m. in the Deerfield American Legion Hall dining room for
brief instructions.
Edwin Gillen, commander, states
that groups wishing to participate
may call the Legion Hall, WI 5-0738
evenings.

Retiring

Village

Honored

At

Dinner

Village officials and their wives
of the outgoing board and the new

board

had

a dinner,

preceding

the

May 13 meeting at the Chalet.
The retiring trustees are Joseph

Brown
going
Paul.

and
police

Vacancy On
Ditch Board

Carl

Jaeger,

magistrate

The

out-

is

Earl

Drainage
Exists

and

Forrest

Pasley,

both

of Deer-

field.
There should be a report from
them soon on a lawsuit which has
been postponed many times during
the past year.

of Allis-Chalmers

its

operations

and

would

the

size

aid

the

12 in the Township

Highland

Park.

and

Mothers

of the high school,

18 grade

the

Through

Clubs

PTAs

grade schools in Deerfield
high school.
Andrew

Bradt

chairman,

of

reported

and the

Deerfield,

that

the

high

school board of education, District
113, had approved the use of the
high
school
publication
‘Highlights”
for
conducting
a public
opinion poll on the name of the
new high school. Also, that the next
few
the

would

probably

be

a

mailed

weeks after the beginning of
He further stated
fall term.

well as making the final decision
on the choice of a name.
The 80-acre tract is inside the
and that
Village of Bannockburn
the village’s postal address is DeerIt is also located in Deerfield.
field Public
Schools
of
District

109.
Residents of New
Trier Township have never allowed the people of Winnetka to usurp the name

it

“Winnetka

High

called the TRACTOLOADER

outlined.

It was

decided

that

not
was

each

of the grade school districts represented at the meeting,
108, 109,
110 and 111, will appoint one member of a publicity committee, and

that

that

committee

of

It was pointed out that the high
school publication “Highlights”
“is
mailed to some 13,000 residents of
School District 113, and that the
inclusion of the ballot on the fall
issue can be accomplished
at no
additional expense to the taxpayers.
Those representing the Deerfield
schools were Mrs. Oben Holt, Mrs.
Marvin Schaid, Mrs. J. D. Dowdall,
Mrs. Ambrose Cox, Kenneth Griffiths, and John Roth.
Mrs. S. R.
Keare
represented
the
Highland

Park High School PTA, Mrs. Alfred
Cowan
represented
West
Ridge
PTA, Mrs. Richard Hedberg represented
the Wayne
Thomas
PTA,
and
Albert
Jacobsen
represented
the Red Oak PTA.
Joseph Powell

and Mr. Bradt represented the former Citizens Committee for High
School
Expansion,
initiating
the
program for naming the new high

four

meet May 25 to organize and
up to its program for supplying

will
set
ar-

a

carry-over

from

last

year’s referendum.
One interesting bit of information was presented covering a survey conducted among college and
university directors of admissions
to determine their attitude toward
the name
Higfhland
Park
West,
Deerfield High School
and
some
other names.
This survey wil] be

covered

in a later article.

co

struction
machinery
dealers
throughout the world. These uni
equipped with loaders, range in
weight from 6,000 to 23,000 pounds

School in and

Early in September, the steering
committee
is scheduled
to meet
again to select the most popular
names
to
propose
to
the
high
school board. The board will then
choose
those
names
it believes
should be placed on the ballot.

as

which

is sold through Allis-Chalmers

ticles to the papers,
starting
in
late summer. These articles are to
discuss the pros and cons of popular names, both factually and fairly.

school

To Organize on May 25
While specific names were
discussed, the general program

‘

One of Tractomotive’s principal
lines is a rubber-tired wheel loader

are

in

logging,

schools
intermediate
and
schools
and three parochial schools of District 113 had been invited to send
were
Attending
representatives.
representatives
of
three
grade
schools in West Highland Park, all

issue

High

John W. Carlson
:
Tractomotive plant to increase its
operations both for production and
sales.

The steering committee for naming the new high school
met Tuesday evening, May

and call
School.”

A vacancy exists on the West
Drainage Ditch board. Earl Cardinal, commissioner, moved to Lake
Bluff last month.
The two other
commissioners
are Ray Dahlgren

of

H. S. EXTENSION COMMITTEE TO
CONDUCT PUBLIC OPINION POLL
ON NAME FOR NEW HIGH SCHOOL

that the high school board would
handle the counting of ballots as

Officials

Farewell

tion

use

in

mining,

construction,

pit

and

quarry

industries.

;

(Continued

on

page

5)

Jaycees Will Have

Chark-0-Chick Day
The

Deerfield

Junior

Chamber

—

of Commerce will hold its second
annual Chark-O-Chick day on
day,
7:30

June
p.m,

7,

from

11:30

a.m.
ey

This is a fund raising affair for
the

The

Jaycees

prepare
then
1,800

and

The

civic

like

were

Jaycees

dinners,

Last year

—

over

delivered

orders

deliver

work

beavers to

box chicken
them.

dinners

late

their

work

deliver

many
filled.

and

for

men

could

plan

to

a complete

not
cook,

bo

charcoal-

broiled dinner consisting of onehalf chicken, barbecue sauce, p
tato chips, coleslaw, bun, honey a \
cookies.

.

Early orders may
calling WI 5-4663.

Complaints

Appletree

be

Received

Lane And

placed

by

Against —

Court

The Deerfield park district work

ers
some
Ln.

are

very

much

disturbed

a

of the residents of Appletree
and

Appletree

Ct., who

are

ing the Wilmot park as a dumping
ground.
Charles

Smith,

park

superint

dent, reports that some of the resi
dents of that area are throwing all
their grass cuttings and other ref.
use in the park. He hopes they re:

this and that the neighbors
jsut who the culprits are.

find

�rom
Ee

More Commemorative
Postage Stamps To
Be Issued In June

The President's Desk...

M

| To The Residents of Deerfield:

i

Deerfield Postmaster C. M: Willman
Jr. reports
that the postal
department
will issue a 214-cent
Bunker Hill regular postage stamp,

em
The “Changing of the guard” has been accomplished. The
_
new board which all of you helped elect is now in session and
| has assumed the responsibility of directing the good ship Deer|
field for the next two years. We had a get-to-gether dinner with
_ the old board, the new board, Mr.
and Mrs. Earl Paul, the outgoing

|

magistrate,

i

Catherine

“4

editor,’

e

The

» fae

Bx

the

the village clerk, Mrs.
Price,

and

Mrs.

the

Pettis,

village

detained

Mr.

Price

manager.

from

attending.

exchanged

pleasan-

Be

tries,,

think all had a good time getting to

know

rife,

each other. From

went

to

the

official
was

~

ran

Village

good

to see

and

took

I

the former

A

|

other

citizens

future

village

last

of Deer-

has

had

in the

BOARD INAUGURATED A

NEW

SYSTEM

with

its first meet-

-

public

meeting

for

discussion

|
_

ean hold all meetings in a public
fashion, although it should be un-

|

derstood
must

_

that

be

of

some

necessity

private

ensued,

The

per-

was

offered

unfor-

and

all

committees

passed

were

to

Elsewhere

there

in

this

issue

I

This can be in the form of caucus

aside from the public meeting, or
in a private meeting before the public meeting.
Under the statutes of Illinois, the

stamp

is

0.75

The
stamp
will
feature
the
Bunker
Hill Monument
and
the
flag adopted by Massachusetts at
the outbreak of the Revolutionary
War. The wording “Bunker Hill’
is arranged
in two lines in the
Postage”
is in
one
line
the bottom, all of which is

in

white

face

To

Print

across
shown

Gothic.
120

Million

The St. Lawrence stamp will be
0.84 by 1.44 inches in dimension,
arranged
horizontally, printed on
the Giori press in red and blue
on
white
paper,
and
issued
in
sheets of 50. An initial printing

signments.

has
are

the emblems of both nations, the
Maple leaf for Canada,
and the
Eagle for the United States, enclosed in interlocking links superimposed over a background of the
Great Lakes. Across the top of the
stamp
is the wording
“St. Lawrence Seaway” and across the bot-

'
|

for discussional purposes, and from
which the public may be excluded,

In the meantime, the work of the
village must go on. I am confident
that during this interval all employees and committees will work

as

long as no executive action is
taken. Such meetings could be few

for the good of Deerfield. There is tom, “the United States.” To the
a lot of work to be done, and not left of the design is the lettering

village

|

board

may

hold

meetings,

and far between. As long as it is understood that discussion by the public

would

be

severely

limited

too much

in

' meetings until discussion is invited, there isn’t much reason why
most

ed

meetings

with

the

we

are

how,

couldn’t

public
going

be

conduct-

present.

Any-

to try it.

THE
NEW BOARD GOT QUITE
if A FEW ITEMS voted on and out of
_ the way in its first meeting. The
clock
advanced
itself until
_ eleven, but it was worth it.

after
Many

items were handled and eliminated
from a lengthy agenda. Then, however, we got stalled on a question

much

of who appoints the members of
_. the various committees for the

|

board.

|

board

A recess
could

was

called,

attempt

to

resolve

the president

|

majority of the members

|

see

eye

be
|

of the board

to eye

on

the

Board

that

had

and

a

could not

procedure

certain

Be changed

pretty

well

committees

to

that

the

would

board

be

without

calling

one

on

_

|

the

phone

the

I was called

next

day,

and

the board. I was not happy about
members

of

|

without

calling

also
on

the

board

and

I

was not able to settle my mind
the

committees

and

members

they had selected.
I was told that perhaps action on
Page4

there is always

Eldon Holmquist
Village President

Karl Berliant Is
Elected President

Of Democratic

Club

At a recent meeting of the DeerDemocratic

Club

elected

Karl

president.

Ber-

Other

officers
are
Robert
vice president; Mrs.

Demichelis,
Peter Stade,

recording

Richard

secretary;

Cro-

secretary;
treasurer;

The board of directors includes
Daniel
Walker,
Theodore
Bloch,
Mr. and Mrs. William Reilly, Alvin

Eskin, David Rosen, Mrs. William
Loeb, Mrs.
Joseph O’Connor, Alvin
Chess, and Donald T. Morrison.
A
meeting
of the
board
is

Doughnut

Tag

Day

Set For Salvation

meeting

all members,

this

planned for Thursday evening at
the home
of Mr. Rosen
at 1500
Central Ave.

told of the wishes of this part of

|
be

member

the board, the village president

a ‘i or the village manager.

in

Martin Silverman, parliamentarian.

think

_ leaving the board to set policy and
see that policy was carried out.
‘Certain members of the board
|
of

community,

but

martie,
corresponding
Mrs, Arthur Bandemer,

further
about
eliminating
some
committees and putting more re_ sponsibility on the village manager,

% met

it.

a lot more to do. Let’s do it!

liant was

just a little, and that desig-

suggestion

accomplished,

growing

field

agreed

nated
chairmen would be named.
_ The board had asked the president
_ to
name
the
various
members,
which he did in letter form, with
a

to do

its

followed. At a previous meeting

the

in which

so the

differences before opening the subject to the public.
_
IT WAS UNFORTUNATE
that

_

time

The water program must get under way, the sewer expansion program, the widening of Chestnut St.,
the paving or reconditioning of Wilmot Rd., the brickyard situation,
the
over-all
road
program—all
these things must be handled.
And perhaps even more critical,
is the parking situation in Deerfield. This requires the help of the
business men, the board, and the
public. All in all we have a lot to
do. The past two years have seen

Is

Army

Royce Owens, village manager,
has approved Friday, June 12, as
Doughnut
Tag
Day for the Salvation
Army
in Deerfield.
Mrs.
Golden Reed Basinger of Oak Park,

“Postage” arranged vertically, and
the denomination ‘4¢’’ appears in
the
lower
right
corner
of
the
stamp.

Letters

should

ers. Reports of
turned is heart

those

of lack of workpoppies being rebreaking news to

hospitalized

veterans

who

helped fashion them as they know
this indicates a cut in the quota
they will be allowed to make for
1960 Poppy
Days—for
many
the
only chance to earn any money for
themselves all year. They cost the
Auxiliary seven cents each.

formerly
chairman

Twenty

of Deerfield,
of

the

per

tag

cent

brief

To

To

of

listening

we
to

had

a

the

pleasure

Deerfield

Gram-

mar School music concert, performed remarkably well by the
students.
Certainly all who observed “A
Musical Trip Around the World”
(on May 14) and even those who
were unfortunate to miss it, owe a
vote of thanks
to Frank Jacober
and Mrs. Ruth Burkholder for providing Deerfield residents with an
admirable example of what dedieated teachers can do.
Virgil E. Jensen
646 Hermitage Drive

Who Are Dumping Trash
Out On Sanders Road?

is suburban
day.

of

all

pro-

ceeds collected in Deerfield stays
in the village, in deposit in the
Deerfield State Bank, for use in

this community, for those in need
and not on relief.

the

Club

Village

Property

4

Board:

At the conclusion
of an adjourned public hearing on April 23,
Winston Porter, retiring chairman
of the Plan Commission, dictated
a recommendation
to the village
board of trustees and the president ©
to grant the petition to upgrade
zoning for the Deerfield Rd. front-

age of Briarwood Club (Briergate)
and to advise the officers of the*
club that another public hearing
would be necessary for a swimming
pool,

tennis

courts

and

snack

bar.

Frank Curto, who has since as-™
sumed
chairmanship
of the Plan
Commission, also noted that Deerfield
zoning
laws
designate
that “
private
clubs
are
permitted
in
mulitiple family districts only.
I am sure that you will bear this

in mind

when

the board

Residents of Sanders Rd., south
of Duffy Ln., are complaining that
motorists are throwing out garbage
and bags of rubbish as they ride
along the beautiful countryside.

the
has

There are fines for throwing rubbish along the highways and the

borhood—a
long
apartment zone.

sheriff’s office has been
to be on the lookout.

They

Letter Regarding

Briarwood

the Editor:
again

300 words.

will be withheld if requested

and

Open

Once

less than

should contain the name and address of the writer, whose name

Praises School Dist. 109
Music Department Concert

permit
before

that
your

considers,

Briarwood
board for

Club
swim-

ming pool, tennis courts and snack
bar because
Briarwood
Club
is
situated in Deerfield’s finest neigh-

notified

way

from

the

Mrs. W. J. Loarie *
853

Oxford

WOMEN TAKE TRIP TO STUDY
SITE OF FUTURE HIGH SCHOOL

Road

=s

Some of the women of High School District 113 who have
beeen concerned about Bannockburn’s recent rezoning of acreage

near

the

new

high

school

site

for business

and

industry

made a field trip to the 80 acre high school site Wednesday,
May 13. Mrs. James Tibbetts, president high school board, who,
could

not

take

the

topographical maps
Mrs. Tibbetts

is located
boundary

“If you can spare an hour or two
tomorrow
(Friday)
to help
sell
poppies,
please
contact
Mrs.
Joseph
Schuessler,
or
any
of the
Deerfield poppy workers, on any of
the main corners in the Village,”
Mrs. Carl Scheer states.
“To those whose loved ones returned from war service and are
in good health, this provides a real
opportunity to express your thankfulness by helping those less fortunate, who are still suffering from
the ravages of war,” she said.
The funds collected are used entirely for rehabilitation and child
welfare work to make life a little
easier and happier for those still
hospitalized and for their families.
Deerfield has been given a quota
of 2,200 poppies to sell. Last year
several hundred popies had to be

sent back because

be

tour,

met

explained

just north of Deerfield’s
om Waukegan Rd. The

She said that play fields, tennis
courts, and an exhibition field will
be located to the north of the building. At present, there are no plans
for the area near the north middle
branch of the Chicago River, which
lies in a flood plain area.
Underground

for

the

and

explained

the

school.

which were abloom with large tril-*
liums,
violets,
and
other
wild
flowers. The men
explained that
the
high
school
owns
about
2

acres on the east side of the River,
10 of which are wooded.
The
were
Harry

~

women who made the trip
Mrs.
Harold
Sparks,
Mrs.,
Abrahamson,
Mrs.
Frank

Payne, and Mrs. Willard Loarie of *
Deerfield; Mrs. Richard Crawford,
Mrs.
Robert
Aitchison
and
Mrs
Gerald Kramer of DelMar Woods;

Mrs.

Theodore

Jardine,

Mrs.

nold
Thorsen
and
Mrs.
C.
Amerman of Highland Park.

ArPaul
*-

Work

The women met representatives
of the high school who were there
inspecting pipes and work which
is beginning on sewer and water

facilities

women

that the

school will set back about 500 feet
from Waukegan Rd. and about 15
feet from an access road which will
abut the southern boundary of the
property.

Start

the

and blueprints of the school.

school
will
be
situated
on
the
southwest portion of the site which

Poppy Tag Day
Helpers Needed
For Deerfield

have

stitute the opinions of the paper.

upper right corner and ‘214¢ U. S.

of 120 million of these stamps
been authorized.
I
Reproduced on the stamp

you will see those assignments.
hope that in the near future the
board can get together and agree
on a procedure and committee as-

discussion.

Hill

100. The color of the stamp will be
blue.

be

expect

Bunker

by 0.87 of an inch in dimension,
arranged
vertically,
printed
by
the rotary process, electric-eye perforated
and
issued
in sheets
of

vious committees should continue
in session, and the new members
of the board be appointed to fill
the spots of the retiring members.

and

for final action. It is hoped that we

rhubarb

and

new ordinance.
I HAVE SENT A LETTER to all
board members stating that all pre-

ing. There had been no previous
- discussional meeting, and it was
agreed that we would try to hold a

_

committees
for them.

agree

tice for a good many years. So, we
were back to the troubles we had a
month ago. I cannot agree to such
an ordinance, for I believe that any
business
must
have
a president,
and that the president must be able
to name
his committee
chairmen
and committee members. Temporarily, at least, I cannot sign the

two years.

‘THE
ie

the board

not

named by the board, and not by
the president as has been the prac-

= field. This was one of the largest
audiences

I could

by a 5 to 1 vote stating that in the

It

audience,
along
with
William
Hinchsliff, former trustee, Joseph
Powell,
chairman
of the
caucus
campaign, members of the caucus,

many

real

ordinance

president, John D. Schneider in the

and

Lawrence
Seaway
Opening
commemorative
stamp
through
the
Massena,
N.
Y.
postoffice
on
June 26.

tunately, and to the extent that an

the

place.

we

offered,

to name those
sons indicated

there we

Hall,

ceremonies

and

could

but when

lections

|

|

conversation

the 23rd in the Liberty series,
the Boston, Mass., postbe held for a through
met in official office on June 17 and a 4-cent St.

board meeting,
such request was
denied me. Inasmuch as I was not
in accord immediately with the se-

“ye

wives were along, but business

Everyone

proposal

week,

DEERFIELD FORUM
Opinions expressed in these
solumns do not necessarily con-

Harlan

Philippi, principal designate of the
new high school, Earling Zaeske,
administrative
assistant
of plant
operations, and Lloyd Devereaux,
building and grounds superintendent, were making these inspections.
On the east side of the River the
women
found
a beautiful
woods

Children Break Windows
In Maplewood School

Ye

Children, throwing marbles, are
reported
to
have
broken
many ‘
large windows
in the Maplewood

School
The

two

Public

weeks
Press,

no

ago.
less

n
than

Public

Office, is a public trust.

“~

DEERFIELD
REVIEW
Thursday,

May

21,

1949

Vol.

34, No.

11

&gt;

Published Weekly every Thursday

On The Cover

PUBLICATION

699

DEERFIELD,

There will be a big Fun Fair at
Wilmot School on Saturday. Susan

608

Lees, Keith Griffiths and Kent
Griffiths, went over to the Surprise Shop in Highland Park recently,
to
get
acquainted
with
some
of the circus
animals
and
had a great time.
They
predict
there
will be
a
great time
at Wilmot
School on
Saturday, too.

Waukegan

?

OFFICE

Road

ILLINOIS

Telephone Windsor 5-4500
HIGHLAND
PARK
OFFICE
Laurel Ave., Highland Park,
Telephone ID 2-4500

”

Ill.

MEMBER
National
Editorial Association
Illinois Press Association
Local Subscription Rates—$3.50 per year
Domestic Rate—$5.00 per year
Single Copies—15c
Foreign Rates on Application.
‘sEntered as second-class matter November 27, 1944, at the post office at Deeree
Illinois, under the Act of March 8,
1

oe

Thursday, May 21, 1959
Xe

ES

ea

ie

�t

Holy Cross Students |
Win District Prizes
—
..
i.
For Poppy Posters
kek

Wilmot School

ye
me

A

Fun Fair To Be

¥a

4}

Held Saturday

Yy

(Picture on Cover)
circus wagons will be

At
the
held
Home
13, a

rolled

into the Wilmot School gymnasium

done

on
Saturday
when
the
Wilmot
School District 110 PTA holds its
annual Fun Fair.

pital during the past year was pre
sented
cepted

It will open at 10 am. with a
motorcade
and
band
music
as
Uncle Bob of WGN-TV is escorted
through Deerfield to the school.

habilitation

Kenneth
and means

Griffiths, of the ways
committee, is general

chairman of the
states that there

Fun
will

Anderson,

Warton,

*

»

Plan Commission To
Have Joint Session

* With

Highland

The Deerfield
will hold a joint

Matthew

Rockwell

Speaks

Recently Matthew Rockwell, plan
consultant for both Highland Park
and Deerfield, with Laurence Dondanville and Marwood Rupp, both

#

Deerfield,

spoke

Park meeting.
In the course

*’Rockwell

”

at

a

of the

Highland

evening

recommended

at

the

to

outskirts

Mr.

High-

of

the

business district. . . but there was
no such recommendation when a
Deerfield doctor wished to locate
‘on South Waukegan Rd., recently.

4

4

~~

Firemen Set Date
For Benefit Dance
The Deerfield-Bannockburn volunteer
firemen
have
set
Saturday, June 27 as the date of their
dance to be held in the fire station. Henry Tuttle is chairman,
Tickets will be sent out to all
householders and the firemen hope

*

«

”

the

(9)

(12)

used for needs of the department
including a hose drying rack.

tain

notice

tection District was
last week’s REVIEW,

what a very small
for this vital and

Fire

of the

Pro-

published in
which shows

tax is levied
necessary de-

partment. Buying the dance tickets is the way loyal citizens can
show
their
appreciation
of
the
work of the firemen.

Fred

Grabo

Thursday,
May
‘

Sr.

is

fire chief.

21, 1959

by

Bids

$500.

financial

service was held for

Auxiliary

passed

away

The
School

two

members
during

boys

who

the

had —

past year.

from

Holy

Cross

he

parents, Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence W,

—

Raredon

—

of

1100

Fair

Oaks

Ave.,

ing of 700 Appletree Lane.
The Auxiliary members attending from Deerfield were Mrs. Al|
bert Bennett, Mrs. Robert Broege,
Mrs. George Jacobs, Mrs. Joseph
Schuessler and Mrs. Carl Scheer.
— 4
Mie

workmen.

from

one

on

page

3)

of the

petroleum

(13)

Authorized
map

plan

Abolished

in the

appointed

police

(Continued

trustees

products

bringing
up

to

the

date

position

of

for
cap-

department

Officer Glenn

and

Koetz

as a

lieutenant. The other lieutenant is
George Hall.
(14)
Approved
Days, May 21-22.

Legion

Poppy

(15) Turned down applications
for two more scavenger services as
ordinance
allows
only
two. Discussed tax-paid service instead of
private scavengers. No action.

(16)

Held

over

Firemen Get Variety
Of Emergency Calls

Tractomotive

were returned to the oil companies.
The village has been purchasing its
petroleum products from D-X during the past few years. Bids were
returned so that the companies can
figure
without
supplying
underground equipment.
(10)
Approved
expenditure
of
$128.56
for
acoustical
tile grills
from sales tax fund.
(11) Asked for an audit of the
sale tax fund.

The proceeds of this dance will be
legal

|

chairman.

ee

is supervising

as to why he was voting to buy his
own equipment,
Trustee Peterson
said he did not own them.

master

Deerfield-Bannockburn

_

who

Left to right in the front row are Mrs. Victor Hanson Jr. and her daughter, Libby; Mrs. Carl
Reeb, Mrs. L. L. Peterson, president of the Garden Club of Deerfield; Mrs. J. E. Vandivere, president of the Garden Club of Illinois; Mrs. Anthony Nosek, president of the Bannockburn Garden
Club. In the back row are Mrs. Arthur Vyse, Mrs. Delbert Meyer, Mrs. Walter Whitehead and Mrs.
LeRoy LeGrand.

that residents will buy the tickets
whether they plan to attend or not.

The
ri

architect,

of Illinois have been asked to contribute funds for the landscaping of the pla187 miles of the Illinois Tollway.
Bannockburn Garden clubs participated in the project and last Thursday witat the Deerfield Tollway plaza. Wallace G. Atkinson, at left, is the landscape

questioned

Commission

Members of the Deerfield commission
are Frank
Curto,
chairman;
Mrs.
G. F. Clampitt,
Carl
Bagge,
Lester
Moate
and
Peter
Weinert.

¥

Garden Clubs
za toll gates of the
Deerfield and
nessed the planting

located

Plan

on Saturday, May
23 at 10 a.m.
in the Deerfield Village Hall.

-

se

land Parkers that business and professional offices be removed from
the main business section and be

Park

acre-

and Mr. and Mrs. James L. Flem-

6) They tabled the acquisition of
the Frost property and Gastfield
property for an easement into the
shopping
center
from
Deerfield
Rd.
between
Fragassi’s
and
the
Village Hardware.
It was referred
to a committee—Trustees
Porter,
Koss and Aberson.
(7) Village Clerk Mrs. Catherine
Price was requested to notify insurance
company
which
has
the
public officials bond that the term
of Earl Paul as police magistrate
has ceased to exist.
(8) The board approved the purchase of a gasoline pump and tank
for $210 and relocation of an air
compressor for $75 to be charged
against the sales tax.
The pump
and
tank,
already
underground,
were purchased from the D-X Co.,
of which Trustee Peterson is manager
of
the
local
plant.
When

Highland

to Deerfield Unit and
by Mrs. Albert Bennett,

am

sharing. The prize was presented to _
Tom Raredon and Richard Fleming —
who
were
accompanied
by their —

(Continued

Plan Commission
meeting with the

Hos-

in the District (in the 7th and 8th |
Grade class) which they are also

Village Board

Park

Veterans’

bids

for

police

Tractomotive
front-end
booms

from
also

3)

The

manufactures

shovels,

‘for

page
rippers,

pipeline

side-

construction
at-

was

tachment to crawler tractors. Since
1945,
when
Tractomotive
was
founded
in Findlay, Ohio, it has
been a major supplier of this equipment to Allis-Chalmers.

A

and

log

loading

equipment

for

Tractomotive Corporation moved
from Ohio to Deerfield in November 1948.
The Deerfield plant will become
part
of the
Allis-Chalmers
Construction Machinery
Division and
complement
production
at
the

Springfield,

Ill.,

and

Cedar

Rap-

ids, Ia., plants.
Crawler
tractors
and motor
graders
are manufactured at Springfield
and rubbertired earth moving
equipment
at

Cedar Rapids.
Tractomotive’s new name will
be Deerfield Works of Allis-Chalmers
Manufacturing
Co.
Present
plans call for continued operation
of all local facilities after the effective transfer date without major changes in personnel or policy.
Mr.
Carlson’s
title
will
change

from

president

to

‘‘general

ger of Deerfield Works
Chalmers Manufacturing

mana-

of AllisCo.”

station
wagon.
The recommendation was
for the purchase
from
Bernard-Chevrolet at $2,561.19.
(17) Approved Kleinschmidt rezoning to M-manufacturing (5 to 1)
with a 25-foot buffer strip.

firemen

462

the

Ct.,

burning,
gas

in

of Mrs.
out

at

to

of straw

13.
the

Ave.,

1:40

on

overs at last night’s meeting.

at
the
May

14,
The firemen answered a rescue
call on May 17 at the T. R. Grutza
home, 2160 Stirling Rd., Bannockburn when he cut off a finger in a
rotary mower.
John
Liske
of 556 Longfellow
Ave.
has
re-joined
the
fire department
as
a regular
member.
New
reserve members
are Richard
Lundquist
of
569
Whittier
Ave. and John Shaeffer of Deerfield Rd.

to

12

noon,

able

until

to vote

Monday,

at the

elec-

states that the Town Hall
Deerfield Rd., will have a

at 602
special

registration day on Saturday, May
|
23, from 9 a.m. to 12 noon, in adregular
weekday —
dition
to
the

90 days

30 days

in Lake

County

and

in the precinct.

7 ig

Residents Warned To Use
Caution With Itinerants
“Let the buyer beware,”

is good

advice for Deerfield residents who
buy from door to door salesmen.
Before they enter into a contract
for house repairs, etc., they had
better check with the police.
Even
though
they
(salesmen)
have a permit to solicit in Deerfield. . . that does not mean that
the officials in the Village Hall
approve the work or the product.
A permit is necessary for peddlers
and salesmen but it is not a guarantee of workmanship or product.

+

Be
make

sure

of

by

having

spic and span
rely

the

upon

RANE

eREe

impression
your

clothes

condition.

ALPHA

You

The

Junior

Youth

FOR THOSE WHO CARS

Fellowship

of

will have

its

Church

last meeting for this season on Sunday,
ship

May 24 at 6:30 p.m. in fellowhall. The group will welcome

the sixth graders who
regular

The
ment,

members

program

September.

includes

a song fest and

ed games.
low.

will become

next

entertain-

get acquaint-

Refreshments

will

fol-

se

you
in
can

for quality

cleaning.

the Bethlehem

The Briarwoods
swimming
pool permit and rezoning were held
over and it was expected that those
items would be among the hold-

—

25, for those who wish to reg- —

nois,

am,

(19) Released the escrow agreement of $1,669.75 for underground
water and sewer improvements for
Jonquil

9

May

McCarthy

Bethlehem Youth Fellowship
Will Welcome Sixth Graders

on

ing,

called

(18) Passed ordinance annexing
Hickox property on south side of
County Line Rd. in Cook County.

Lee’s Construction Co.
Terrace, vote 5 to 1.

|
—

mornings.
To be eligible to vote, a citizen
must have resided one year in Ili-

basement

James

Springfield

firemen

called
a pile

May

leak

home

at 1033

were

where

The West Deerfield Town Hall
will be open each weekday morn-

ister to be

vol-

Cumnor

Davy To Reaister
For Next Election

tion of June 23 for state’s attorney.
Mrs. Kenneth Vetter, town clerk,

Deerfield-Bannockburn

unteer

May 25 Is Last

een

.

3
2

Hertel,

Martin,
Koehler,
Saul, Hamilton,
Netter, Herrmann, Laconte, Mueller, Fordham, Wood, Loel, Demain,
Lutz,
Durava,
Pierce,
Schwartz,
Trettel and Burnette.

Downey

er contest were awarded first prize —

and
surprises
for everyone.
The
program
includes movies,
bakery
shop, white elephant booth, comic
book sale, green thumb section and
many
games
including
bean
bag
tossing,
bowling
ball
game
and
others.

terson,

e

in Deerfield who shared —
second prize in the local poppy post-—

Fair, and
be prizes

There will be a lunch counter
so that visitors may plan to stay
all day.
Assisting Mr. Griffiths in the activities will be the Mesdames Florsheim, Dahlstrom,
Wagner,
Beinleck, Koskey, Case, Pulver, Entz,
Hageman, Schechter, Resnick, Pat-

at

A memorial

the

bs

the Tenth District Meeting of |A
American
Legion
Auxiliary
at the Lake Zurich Legion
on Wednesday evening, May —
citation for outstanding work
|

et ie

¥

The

g

Te
4 i

�LEGAL NOTICE
GASOLINE BIDS
Board of Education
of

The

High School District No.

Township

113, Lake County,

Illinois, invites bids on approximately 17,500
allonsof regular grade gasoline, as needed
rom time to time throughout the school

year

une

30,

installed
_

Avenue,

_

times and

1960,

to

1,

be

on the school
Highland

1959,

delivered

and

Park,

ending

to

premises,

a

tank

St. Johns

Illinois,

in such quantities as may

at

such

be re-

quired.
:
_ Net price to the school should be clearly
Stated exclusively of taxes from which the
Bchool as_a public taxing body is exempt.
Bids will be received up to 3:00 P.M.

C.D.S.T.,
Office

Monday,

of the

Board

to be in sealed
Oline Bid.” The
to

June

of

8,

1959,

Education.

at

the

Bids

are

office and bidder must submit bid on bid
sheet.
Railroad weights will govern.
The dealer
shall weigh each truck load of coal and
shall deliver a weight slip to boiler room
of school with each truck load of coal
dumped into school’s coal bin.
The Board of Education reserves the right
to reject any or all bids, or to purchase coal
from sources other than from the successful
bidder for the school year 1959-60, should
exigency of the occasion require.
TOWNSHIP HIGH SCHOOL DISTRICT
NO.
113, LAKE
COUNTY,
ILLINOIS.
By L. C. Tucker, Secretary
Board of Education
5 /21/59—155

envelopes marked ‘“‘GasBoard reserves the right

reject any or all bids.
TOWNSHIP HIGH SCHOOL
NO.
113, LAKE
COUNTY,
By L. C. Tucker, Secretary
Board of Education
5/21/59—153

LEGAL NOTICE
FUEL OIL BIDS
The
Board
of Education
of Township
High School District No. 113, Lake County, Illinois, invites bids on approximately
11,000 gallons of No. 2 fuel oil as needed
by the Highland
Park High School from
time to time throughout
the school year
beginning July 1, 1959, and ending June
30, 1960, to be delivered to the Administration
Building,
1040
Park
Avenue
West,
Highland Park, Illinois.
Net price to the school should be clearly
stated, exclusive of taxes from which the
school as a public taxing body is exempt.
Bids will be reecived up to 3:00 P.M.
C.D.S.T.,
Monday,
June 8, 1959,
at the
office of the Board
of Education.
Bids
are to be in sealed envelopes marked ‘Fuel
Oil Bid.”
The Board reserves the right to
reject any or all bids.
TOWNSHIP HIGH SCHOOL DISTRICT
NO.
113, LAKE
COUNTY,
ILLINOIS.
By L. C. Tucker, Secretary
Board of Education
5 /21/59—152

DISTRICT
ILLINOIS

LEGAL NOTICE
COAL BIDS
The Board
of Education
gh School District No. 113,

Barer

of Township
Lake County,

, invites bids for the purchase of
enately 2,800 tons of coal to be de-

ered in the school’s bins throughout the
; School year 1959-60 as ordered by the Build-

si ing Superintendent.

-

Sealed bids are to be in the office of the
Board of Education at the high school loted at 433 Vine Avenue, Highland Park,
inois, by 3:00 P.M. C.D.S.T., on Monday,

June 8, 1959.

velope
Bid

Bids are to be in a sealed en-

marked ‘‘Coal Bid.”
sheets must be picked

up

in

said

VILLAGE
OF DEERFIELD
NOTICE
TO
BIDDERS
PETROLEUM
PRODUCTS
NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
that on
the 4th day of June, 1959 at Two o’clock
P.M., C.S.T., sealed bids will be received
at the office of the Village Manager, Deerfield Village
Hall,
850 Waukegan
Road,
Deerfield,
Illinois,
for the
furnishing
of
Petroleum
Products
in
accordance
with
specifications on file and available for inspection at the above address.
No bidder may
withdraw his bid until
July 10, 1959.
Bid must be submitted in a
sealed, plainly marked envelope.
The Village Board reserves “the right to
waive informalities, to reject any and all
bids, or to accept any portion of any bid
it deems such action to be in the public
good.

BY ORDER

Royce

OF THE VILLAGE
W.

Owens,

Village

BOARD

Manager

5 /21/59—150
LEGAL NOTICE
FUEL OFL BIDS
$
The
Board
of Education
of Township
County,
Lake
113,
No.
District
School
High
Illinois, invites bids on approximately 7,
gallons of No. 2 fuel oit as needed by the
Highland Park High School from time’ to
time throughout the school year beginning
July 1, 1959, and ending June 30, 1960, to
Field
School’s
to the High
be delivered
1080 Park Avenue West, Highland
House,
Park, Illinois.
Net price to the school should be clearly
stated, exclusive of taxes from which the
school as a public taxing body is exempt.
Bids will be received up to 3:00 P.M.
C.D.S.T.,
Monday,
June
8, 1959, at the
office of the Board
of Education.
Bids
are to be in sealed envelopes marked ‘Fuel
Oil Bid.” The Board reserves the right to

EFFECTIVE JUNE 1, 1959

reject any or all bids.

TOWNSHIP HIGH SCHOOL
NO.
113, LAKE
COUNTY,
By L. C. Tucker, Secretary
Board of Education
5 /21/59—151

DISTRICT
ILLINOIS

ORDINANCE
0-59-28
Zoning Amendment
BE IT ORDAINED by the President and
Board of Trustees of the Village of Deerfield, that:

Pursuant

to recommendation

by the Plan

Commission,
made
after a public hearing
following due notice as required by law,
the Zoning
Ordinance
of the Village
of
Deerfield—1953,
as amended,
be and the
same is hereby further amended by placing
the following described property:
That part of the East 476.18 feet of
the S%2 of the SW% of Section 33, T 43
N, R 12 East of the 3rd P.M., and of the
East 476.18 feet of the South 12 rods of
the N%
of said SW%
of Section
33,
lying
Southwesterly
of a line 275 feet
Southwesterly from and parallel with as
measured at right angles to, the centerline of Waukegan Road, excepting from
said premises the South 435 feet of the
East 200 feet and excepting the South
788.62 feet of the’ West 276.18 feet thereof and also excepting the North 25 feet
thereof
ALSO
that part of the SW%
of the
SE%
of said Section 33 beginning at a
point
in the
center-line
of Waukegan
Road,
750 feet Northwesterly
from
its
intersection with the South line of said
SW'%4, SE™%
and running thence Southwesterly at right angles to said centerline, 440.20 feet more or less, to a point
in the West
line of said SW%
SE%
467.03 feet North of the Southwest corner
thereof;
thence
North
along.
the
West
line of said SW%,
SE%,
356.78
feet more or less, to its intersection with
a line 275 feet Southwesterly from and
parallel with as measured at right angles
to the center-line of Waukegan
Road;
thence
Southeasterly
along said parallel
line 163.13
feet more
or less; thence
Northeasterly at right angles to said parallel line 275 feet to the center-line of Waukegan
Road,
and
thence
Southeasterly
along said center-line, 153.21 feet to the
point of beginning,
excepting therefrom
all that part of the said SW'%4,
SE%,
beginning at a point in the center-line of
Waukegan
Road
750 feet Northwesterly
from its intersection with the South line
of said SW14, SE™%, and running thence
Southwesterly
at right
angles
to
said
center-line, 250 feet, thence Northwesterly
at right angles to the last, described line,
153.21 feet; thence Northeasterly at right
angles to the last described line 250 feet
to the center-line of Waukegan Road and
thence
Southeasterly
along
said centerline 153.21 feet to the place of beginning,
in the Village of Deerfield, Lake County,
Illinois
in the M-Manufacturing District, and the
Zoning Map of the Village of Deerfield is
hereby amended to effectuate this change.
PASSED:
This 13th day of May, 1959.
G. E. HOLMQUIST, Village President
Approved:
'
Attest:
CATHERINE
B. PRICE,
Village Clerk
Published:
May 21, 1959 in the Deerfield
5 /21/59—149
(Paid

Bethtehem Youths
To Skate And Swim
The
Bethlehem
Church
Fellowship has planned a

and

swimming

party

Youth
skating

for

Friday

evening, May 22. The young people
will meet at the church
at 6:45
p.m. From there they will go to
the Playdium in Glenview.

The

regular

Sunday

meeting will be held at

evening*
Jewett Park.

A softball game will begin at 4:30,
followed by other games.
Each |
youth will bring his own lunch and*®
soft drinks will be provided.
Sunday, May 24 will also be

monthly

meeting

of

the

Youth
Fellowship
for
those
in
seventh
and
eighth
grades.
The

group

will

meet

at the

church

6:30 with the sixth grade
as incoming guests,

INTEREST PAID ON JUNE
Deposits Made

Before June
June

Ist &amp; DECEMBER

NOTICE OF HEARING
Deerfield Plan Commission
NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
by the*
Plan Commission of the Village of Deerfield, Illinois, that a public hearing will be
held by said Commission on Thursday, June
11, 1959 at 8:00 P.M., DST, at the Village
Hall, 850 Waukegan Road, Deerfield on the
petition of Jack Kreisman, Chicago, to rezone to R-7 Multiple Family District the
following described property:
That part of the North East quarter of
Section 32, Township 43 North, Range 12,
East of the 3rd P.M., described as fol-

lows,

to-wit:

Commencing

on

the

Ist Will Earn

tiple Family District for a depth of 152 feet

more or less, the remainder of the property being zoned R-2 One Family District.
The petitioner seeks R-7 zoning for the entire tract.
At
this hearing,
and any
adjournment
thereof, any person interested is invited to«,
be present and be heard.
DEERFIELD
PLAN
COMMISSION
By Frank T. Curto, Chairman
5 /21/59—156

Political

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tunities.

L.

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KAHN-STANCZAK DEBATE
will be held as scheduled...

Democratic candidate for State’s Attorney
and

Bruno W. Stanczak
Republican

Jewett Park in Deerfield

lad

— Service and Security Since 1921 —

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Interest as of

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Each Account Insured to $10,000.00 by Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.

Sunday, May 31, 5 P.M.
Everyone’s invited,
including the Republican candidate...
Election

June

23

Last Day to register: Monday,
Are You Registered?
(Paid

Political

North®’

line of said Quarter section at a point
1539.12 feet West of the North East corner of said Section and running thence
West
82.5 feet; thence South 693 feet;
thence East 82.5 feet; and thence North,
693 feet to the place of beginning, except
the
North
152
feet
thereof,
in Lake
County,
Illinois.
The above described property, at 1023-29
Deerfield Road, is presently zoned R-7 Mul-

Ist

1, 1959.

|
¢

Bruno W. Stanczak

INTEREST WILL BE PAID
ON ALL SAVINGS ACCOUNT

at

students

Last night | saw upon the stair
A little man

the

Junior

May

25

Advertisement)

Thursday, May

21,

�Democrats To Meet |

Deerfield

In Jewett Park

New

Sunday Afternoon
The Democratic Committee
the election of Richard Kahn
Lake

County

the

State’s

Democratic

sent

Mr.

May

Attorney

ticket

Kahn

” Sunday,

at

24

at

will

a

meeting

5

p.m.

in

Kahn

re-

naval

for

The election takes place on Tues-

» day, June 23, from 6 a.m. to 6 p.m.
all

in

in

precincts

County.

Lake

Pacific

fices

in

Mr.

two

Mr.
are
~+~ Ln.

East,
and

West

Mrs.

moving
to

The

1154

Connecticut

» Phoenix,

1207

Zimbert

Dartmouth

next

Burns

from

North

Richard

from

Donald

moved

and

week.

family

Deerfield

Ariz...

. Going

has
Rd.

to

Mr.

A 960

and

Mrs.

Central

Harold

to

Cross

Village, Mich., for the summer
*

. .

are

Mullens

Virginia
nine

Deerfield
City,
the

Co.

is

Mo.,

to

of-

manager

1940

office

was

clerk-soliciting

Kan-

Railway
steno-

district
to

chief

agent

office

in the

in

Feb-

ruary 1941.
He entered
military service in
August
1942
and
was
honorably
discharged in February 1946. Mr.
Cramer returned to T &amp; P as travel
freight agent in Chicago and was
further
advanced
to commercial
agent in October 1953, which position he held up to his present appointment as general agent.

.

Holy

fil

Dolores

presenls

*

hair styles &amp; colors
2

call

ve 5-3555

Available

Ld

LAWN-BOY
By

Makers

of:

Johnson-Evinrude
AS ADVERTISED IN

Highest

Commanders

of the Tenth

District

of the Ameri-

can

were

Legion

honored

meeting for Legionnaires
wives

held

at

the

at

Post

has

the

had

was

among

those

Dis-

The

past

tunities.

Secretary

Village Cleaners
Deerfield Bakery
Lindemann Drugs
Gillen’s Beauty Salon
Fragassi TV
Lauterburg &amp; Oehler
Ed Flvnn Insurance
Ben Franklin

facts
Don’t

and
miss

is filled with

golden

oppor-

it!

1 11x14

AVOID COSTLY
SEPTIC TANK

(Not

to be

confused

POST

Mower

Trade-In

Exchange

Allowances

COAST TO COAST
» } Market Square

STORES

Lake Forest 3998

*

Heavy
with

Our

....

Oil

light oil tints)

DECORATING?

and

ED

626

Roger
Ravinia

IDlewood

For

be

‘

this week-end.

*

*

*
“When

up with

care

you get
and

wor-

Appointments

in

your

home,

call:

Zeloof-Stuart

PHOTOGRAPHY
ID 2-8425

Hardware

Appointment Deadline: May 27

his band
tening

will be providing

and

A

com-

enter- —
party —

*

for

presentation

in

a couple

we are featurwatch with a

mainspring

for

him

or

her—17 jewels and specially priced
at only $24.50. And at Leeds you
have your choice of band and Free
Engraving at no additional charge!
*
*
*

os
eo

The Circus comes to town next
Friday for one day.
The Service
Clubs of Highland Park are bring-

¢
¢

Birch Cabinets
Slide Alum. Thermo
Doors to Patio
Kitchen Exhaust Fan
and Hood
Shoji Door
Gas Warm Air Heat

¢

100 Amp. 220 V.

¢ 2-way Fireplace
¢ Built-in Range and
Oven

¢

Electric Service
Indirect
Cove
ba

¢

¢

Sunken

Three Bedrooms
1% Baths
Basement

°
°

* Oversize Garage

*

Concrete

Patio

¢ Family Room
Living Room
Barbecue in Kitchen

Breakfast

Bar

Section

.
°
¢
e
°
¢
¢

Slate Entry
Carpeted Living
Room and Hall
Oak Floors in
Bedrooms

Vinyl Floor in

Family Room
Ceramic Tile
Formica Tops
Aluminum Screens
and Combination

Doors
¢ 2\4-ft. Roof

Lighting

ARNOLD

Planter

Overhang

IMPROVE

YOUR

Ill.

&amp; Triple Track

HOME
Windows

circus to town

and

benefit of the
Fund. 3 shows

4:30

8:00

Our

*

good

CHAMBERLAIN

go
and

GIAIMO

to

FRANK

the

forme

who

—

“walked

down the aisle” last Saturday. And
our anniversary greetings to MR. —
DOMBECK

who

celebrate

this

week.

:
*

They’re
the
July

LOUIS

&amp; LIVING
We

*

wishes

BARBARA

are

Hospital
at 2:00,

o’clock.

*

*

*

WI 5-1799

—

the proceeds

for the
Building
and

—

three ring

*

best way to keep them
is with a paper weight.

WI 5-1238

711 Orchard

ing a real old-fashioned

We were discussing our bills the
other nite and we decided that the

PEDERSEN

Deerfield,

Double

*

of weeks. At Leeds
ing the shockproof

Grane

¢
¢

music.

planned
for
the
upper-classmen, —
Should be a real great nite!
|

watch

HOME

plus lot

*

dancing

and

the lis-

bo including Dick will be
taining at the after-prom

*

From $16,500

*
¢
¢

*

It’s not too early to select and lay- —
a-way that traditional graduation —

Open for
Inspection

*

Saturday is Junior Prom Ni
one of the country’s greatest mod- —

ern jazz pianists DICK MARX

ID 2-1150

Williams
2-8701

will

ry, it’s a good time to get your taith

NEVER NEEDS

Co.

who

A favorite quote:

Furnished

&amp; Linoleum

and
JOE
DOROTHY 2

DOSTALEK

lifetime

Carpet

anniversary

celebrating 25 years of married life

all wrinkled

Per:

Toceitin's Sports Huddle
DiPietro Plumbing
Midge’s Texaco
Liebschutz Liquors
Winner of ist half—Liebschutz Liquors.
Winner of 2nd_half—Village Cleaners.
Championship Team—Village
Cleaners.

John B. Nash

*

silver

greetings
to
HELEN
VOLPENDESTA
and

Discount

SENSATIONAL
CALIFORNIA RANCH MODEL

sq. yd.
and up

*

warmest

*

1746 2nd

VINYL PLASTIC
FLOOR COVERING

The

lifted.”

O’Neill’s Ace

SANDRAN . .

to another!

low.”

Regular Price
Less Father’s Day

.

“Joe”

for the next year. As they say in
show biz—‘It’s a tough act to fol-

DAY

Med.

one

Highland Park Jaycees will be celebrating their annual “Presidents”
nite banquet Saturday at the Elks
Club. JOE PATTEN will be turning over the president’s gavel to
JOE RAFFERTY,
who takes over

SPECIAL

com-

i liquefies waste
reactivates sluggish tanks

Flynn,

section

FATHER’S

stops odors

League

Woant-Ad

interesting

Enzivator

Cross

with paul leeds

From

two

manders for whom a very impressive
Post
Everlasting
Memorial

TROUBLES

KEEPING
TIME

Le-

15.

trict
Commanders.
They
were
Charles Kapschull, who served during the years 1930 and 31 (now living in Texas) and the late Woodrow W. Fisher who was killed in an
automobile accident July 21, 1956
on his way home from a district
meeting almost at the end of his
term of office.

He

by

Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Schuessler
and Mr. and Mrs. Carl Scheer represented Deerfield at this meeting.

and their

Libertyville

Friday, May

arranged

of Waukegan
to their mem-

gion.

District

News

| SCRUBBING /

tid te Role) .&lt;
Saturday
Evening

Power

Past

held,

glencoe

Mon. Appts.

oat!

The

was

August Christensen
Post, to pay tribute

of

Deerfield
:

ories and the outstanding service
they rendered the American Le-

Deerfield

freight serv-

freight

Chicago

District Meeting

Kenton

as

promoted

service

gion Home,

employed

of the

Past ‘Commander
Honored At Tenth

moved

of

Pacific

of perishable

He

4, and

1050

was

and

November

in the

their

Lee,

a native

and

Texas

in

and

months,

Bowling

Ave.

with

last November.

Cramer

downtown

» Going

Cramer

Northbrook

sas

ice.

Mrs.

Paul,

Mr.

Co.

Chicago.

children,

Rd.,

by

Railway

and

James

clerk

weeks.

several

for

duty

serve

called

been

4 to have

Appcintment

from

reported

is

who

Stanczak,

Bruno

on
the

opponent,

Republican

his

with

and

debates’

chair

“empty

giving

on

Gets

Richard M. Cramer has been appointed general agent of the Texas

pre-

Jewett Park Fieldhouse.
It is understood that Mr.
“Nis

for
for

Man

sador

Install!

*

*

available now. Tickets to
28th
performance
by

ARMSTRONG,
of

down...

jazz,

performance

at

is

the

ambas

Tenthouse.

sponsored

Thi

by

the

Foundation for Hearing and Spee
Rehabilitation.

Custom

PORCH

AWNINGS

IDlewood 2-5544
_ Thursday,

May

21, 1959

&amp;
ft
iv
CARL
ID 2-0252

ALCOA—Any

Colors

Home

Improvement

cultured
Jewelers

1227

ARBOR

AVE.,

H.P.

Color

pearl
there

ring.
are

more

At

Leeds

than

1

My

from
:

LEEDS JEWELERS —

Co.
ID

*

different
styles to choose
priced from $7.95 to $89.50.

DICK LATTANZI

KONSLER

*

About the most popular gift fo
that gal who is graduating or being confirmed is the solid gold and

ALUMINUM
SIDING

e Stationery
e Roll-up
e All

*

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ENCLOSURES

491 Central, Highland Park |

2-1316
Page

7

|

�=OALE

morth

Shore

SIDELIGHTS
From

New Addition

Here

and

There

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Chuck Grant of the Grant and Grant store in Highland
Park tunes a new Hi-Fi stereo switch panel recently added
to the store. The new equipment will make it possible for
customers to compare various speakers and amplifiers instantaneously.

WOW AVAILABLE IN 14” SIZE TO FIT 1957-58 CARS
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6.70-15
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planning session
- « business
luncheon ..
-«
banquet ..
.«
special exhibit
SN
. the Villa
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door-to-

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Ask Your Physician to Phone
HIGHLAND PARK ¢ RAVINIA
ID 2-2600
ID 2-2300
When You Need A Medicine

Pick up your prescription
if shopping near us, or let
us deliver promptly without extra charge. A great
many
people entrust us
with the responsibility of
filling their prescriptions.
May we compound yours?

EARL W.
GSELL &amp; CO.
Highland

Park

*Quotation

or

Ravinia

by Alexander

(1688-1744)
8

THE

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THE

IN

door salesmen are making
about
the
food _ supplements they try to sell. They
sometimes
promise
that
certain
diseases
can
be
cured by their products.
These people, who have

Vitamins,

2:25"

U.S.

Health officers are concerned about the extrava-

no

U.S. Royal’s Fumous Lifetime Guarantee Applies

a

Business

not realize
do. That is
mins
and.
aids should
tained from

NOW AVAILABLE IN 14” SIZE TO FIT 1957-58 CARS

a future,

“FOR FOOLS RUSH IN
WHERE ANGELS FEAR
TO TREAD”

U.S. Royal’s Famous Lifetime Guarantee Applies

6.70-15
Blackwall
Tube Type
Plus Tax and

with

Bond.

Excellent

Potential

To Right
V

Individuals

Time

Study
Engineer

\V/ Tool Designers
VY Draftsman
Employment
Sat., May

Office Open

23,

9 a.m. to

1959,
12

from

Noon

Frank G. Hough,
7th and

Co.

Sunnyside

Libertyville 2-4000

TTI
Thursday,

May

21, 1959

�‘FROZEN, FOOD CARGO SALE
/4

Spawn of the North, fruit
of the land—

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7

;

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+1 teeat

LEMONADE

MEAT PIES

Chicken Breasts | 2

pics’ 69¢

rs. 9G.

cans 21

Med Ee

SASS
CHERRY

.

Swanson’s

Birds Eye

Birds Eye

Wy

Si)

OR

Hey

nn

:

APPLE

ae

STRAWBERRIES 6 22: 95¢

sn:

ge SUNSET

‘

Symphony Sliced

Stock your freezer at
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%\Z\.

+ acargoof ¥
‘

fern

;

“ee BSc

‘PET RITZ PIES

, Bee St se EGGS 3 = $1.00) ||| ‘waierecr |
ALCOA ALUMINUM FOIL

+ | MAXWELL

SUNSET'S GRADE A LARGE WHITE

Ist5Ribs

HOUSE

COFFEE

aut
ELBERTA PEACHES “?s:.* 39c

Con $1. 19

&amp;

HAWAIIAN

TOMATO

VEGETABLE

onion sour
Sek

Corton

3 9c

MIA

9. 35 |/|/ SPAGHETTI
MAMA

..05.3i262..4

BEEF
VEGETABLE .. Ps Fikes. 35 Cc

»

...0on purchase

of 2 regular

Offer

one coupon
Ss
=(8¢)

limited

or

VALENCIA

TANGY, FULL OF JUICE

LEMONS _..vmen39c_

Thursday,

May

21, 1959

STRAINED

) . L

,

to

BABY

per family.

COUPON EXPIRES

By:
;

a
7 &amp;~$1.00

HEINZ

bio

1959

1812 GREEN

FOODS

BAY

ROAD

——

A CENTRAL

Friday Night Is Family Night At Sunset —

Cash redemption value 1/20 of 1¢. Coupon non-transferable
and void if taxed, licensed, prohibited or restricted by law.

AMON

:

RIPE

&amp;

41 larger size Chiffon Liquid
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RED

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BIBB LETTUCE » 49c_
ORANGES — vm=»49¢_

2m 39¢

_ LIQUID CHIFFON... win nis couon 49¢ | Carnation Milk

SAVE $+

B

WATERMELON a

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es NOND000000000000000
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COUPON

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3 cans’ 49¢

2 29 |||| GLO-COAT .....*s0. com $1.29

* cueex ves

9 im.29¢

BANANAS

WESSON

39¢ |||! TOMATO PASTE 5 &lt;x: 49c| &amp;

, smeses oom

«

es

“LIPTON Soup Mixes

*'

Pkg.

o

CREAM OF CHICKEN SOUP .....

8%
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sae

COTTO SALAMI
eye

“cans $1.00

PUNCH

CAMPBELL'S

OME: -c00 AOR

?

Oscar Mayer

oe

af) 3* Siancet |||) TOMATO JUICE
et fn Mee &lt;n

™ Qe

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TN

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6 sas
Jars 57

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FOOD

Open

STORE

till 9 PM.

PLENTY OF FREE! PARKING — ALWAYS!

Page

9

�Ss Phices On Your Everyday
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Take this coupon to any Jewel Food Store

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Yummy Ice Cream

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Take this coupon to any Jewel Food Store

Beef Short Ribs

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|
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== J

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$

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are

WITH THIS

gi

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COUPON

”

i

JB

coupon $1.39

This coupon good only through May 23
Limit

|

|

Maxwell House Coffee
2lb.

|
|

1G

= 390 mer

SSOUSSSSURSSRSRESERSESURSSDSSDESESSBESRG SHDN a

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Dean’s Cottage Cheese

Can

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HIGHLAND

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2 4g ma

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without coupon 4/98c

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without coupon 59c

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10°

to any Jewel Food

4 Oz.
Cans

a

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one

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per customer

13

23

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This coupon good only through May 23
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Take this coupon to any Jewel Food Store

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Plumrose Danish Ham

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Limit one per customer

|

Pork Chops

without coupon 2/42c

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END CUT

THIS

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Pork Steaks

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�HIGHWOOD COMMUNITY CENTER HAS
Grammar

school

PLANNED

dance

Friday,

School

Meanwhile
Donald
C. Skrinar,
Center director, has returned from
his vacation in Florida, from where
he was called to San Bernardino,

*Calif.,

when

he received

word

his

cee:
*

*

*

Community Center’s board of directors met in the Canteen rooms
last night. It acted upon the resig-

* nation of David
eligible

’ that

to

he

Santi who

board

is not

membership

is a Highwood

#

now

alderman;

swore in Joe Belmonte, who succeeded
Howard
Roshto
on
the
board; and gave final approval to
the Center’s budget for coming fis-

cal
year.
The
budget
followed
closely the proposed expenditures
okayed for the
said Skrinar.

present
*

*

e

Grammar

%

students

Elm

4

Place,

St.

:

James

FOR

ANY

Mazzetta
Most of

and Cathe par-

(Continued

on page

12)

Oak

Ter-

NEW

Quality

Looming

$

deter

. | DEERFIELD - HIGHLAND PARK

tackless

ey)

YY

ee

Wey)

y (y 6

x

Sey)

YY)

Ay

Protect your furs

just as you

would protect a fine piece of
jewelry.
INSURED

Pickup

&amp;

Delivery

PHONE:

&amp;

Oy)

Wy)

1)

\Cy)

Ay (})

og

XS

Formerly Crestwood Products

Rurvier

Make it a habit to read the Want
Ads every week
paper aside!

walk

on

sheer

Xe

twist that
ly woven
assures lovely, lasting
before
Never
wear.

5

such

&gt;

beautiful,

=
a

to-hurt DuPont carpet
nylon at such a low
price, “Freee tonal
bers are bound in with
a strong, rubberized

$

S

wear out under normal

con-

=

back for extra wear.

—4

ditions of wear and care for

@s

=

a period of 5 years.

=

ro Y etaus
head.

afleom

ome “walk:

Na

pig

isL a term-

rd the
or

one

neck,
Or

be

Irri

AVA

AQHA

LN

AQ

DECORATOR

13.

TA

COLORS.

&amp;

12

FOOT

15

}{

WIDTHS.

r

in saitize

it is A xf songs
more

slightly

d

4)

Edens

0

e

displaced,

nec

i= ne

ical

Tower

VE

5-2400

co

verteodrae

th

near

Phone
oO

=

arpets

f

Pp

en

Monda

y

throu

Saturday, 9 to 5
.

Evenings by Appt.

Teflonta the Vagitn Nerve: somatiing: bm
stomach or liver pains, nausea, emesis,
fast heart beat and other upsets of internal organs.
Headaches, in a majority of cases, are
speedily and often permanently corrected
by the Chiropractor.
Relief, generally,
is immediate.
The Chiropractor
corrects the
CAUSE
of headaches, following
the physical symptoms disappear as
functions are restored to normal

basic
which
body
again.

Arrange for an appointment soon so
you may benefit from this modern method of natural healing. Consult:

BLACK
DIRT
(Screened,

Fredrick A. Mokrasch

Chiropractor
@

&amp;

{

+
se

Due to the flexibility

a dnd Hittating
tie cervical, wecven.”
to

PA

IN

f

bers in the neck.
»

PAR PAR

A

Research reveals that the most common cause of headaches is the compression and irritation of delicate nerve fi-

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ay

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Rigs .

”

HEADACH

Panels

——

S

p&gt;

Shutters

¢ Shoji

Samples shown in
your Home.

510 Central Ave.

=

x

Vertical

COLD STORAGE
VAULTS
THOROUGH CLEANING

Tailor

WEAR

YEAR

5

yn)

El

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y (}) (t) ay /}

;

=
oa

any Flalsk

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* Fret Work

M. BELMONT

&lt;=
a
=&gt;
=

=

aarywhere

:
|S
|e

¢ Screens.
Pan
¢ Room Dividers

Deerfield

—_

=
=
=

We
Shatters

Buy Direct from the

Te AG ts Wek ond

INC.

by

a

4) 5

sQ.

7

MADE

Jastalt

|E=
==
|g

¢

ID 2-4840

WI 5-3852

TRANSIT,

Mrs.

BELMONT'S

Drivers

For Information call:

CUSTOM

|

Not this year—my fur coat
is going into storage at

PRICE

LOW

NEW

— Clubs

Twist

Nylon

NEW

SHUTTERS

¢

Problems in Navy inventory
control currently being solved
by a UNIVAC at the Great
Lakes Electronics Supply Office are discussed by Mrs.
Francois J. Olmer, 33 Green
Bay Rd., and Mrs. Thomas R.
Richards (right), Lake Bluff.
Visitors viewed the device at
the Armed Forces open house
Saturday.

OCCASION

Insured
y

and

— Churches

Schools

‘

%*

is

grandmother

Maternal

by Misses Mary
mille Catchpole.

from

™

Eunice Changelon, of Kankakee, | ®
and paternal grandmother is Mrs. ®
George
Olander,
677 Broadview | }
Ave.

*®

school

ere x

has two brothers, George Jr., 12| @
and Robert, 7, and three sisters, | ¢
Mary, 12, Carol, 8, and Karen, 4.| @

“Dansations of 1959,” a musical
extravaganza that features “girls,
girls and more girls,” according to
Skrinar, will be presented at the
Center Sunday, with curtain-raising time 8 p.m. More than 90 girls
will
appear
in singing,
dancing,

Edgewood, Immaculate Conception,

eee

Lynn, at Lake Forest Hospital. Jean | 7 if san

comedy and other acts, all directed

fiscal year,

Aap ‘ hes
Ye PTC
ee
L

765 Kimball
Rd., announce
the}
birth May 16 of a daughter, Jean

kinder-

race schools have been invited to
attend an informal dance at the
Center tomorrow evening from 7:30
through 10:30 p.m.
Open to students in grades six
through
eight, the young
people
will dance to music from records
played on the new juke box which
will be set with the week’s top 40
tunes.

father had suffered a stroke. Skrinar said his father is resting com-

ny
TET
.

Dr. and Mrs. George A. Olander, | ¥

garten graduation ceremonies Saturday afternoon and Highwood Police Department’s annual ball Saturday night; the
ORT-sponsored Art Fair Sunday afternoon and evening and the
“Dansations of 1959” are just five of the major attractions at
Highwood Community Center this weekend.
®

aRe

‘| Olander Family Welcomes
Daughter, Jean Lynn

Discuss UNIVAC

FOR WEEK

St. James

Sy YR
EEE

TUE
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FULL SCHEDULE

ba eaSy 8
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te

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PA RR
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X-RAY

SERVICE

524

WAUKEGAN AVE.
HIGHWOOD
Telephone ID 2-0125

Office
Thursday,

Closed
May

Thursdays
21, 1959

@

Stock

g

h

a

|

Baxcalownger
PATENTED

The BarcaLounger is scientifically
designed to cradle the body in
any position from sitting to fully
reclined. And right now we have
the BarcaLounger styles and coverings that you'll want most in
your living room! Come in now
to see our wide selection. Ask for
- a no-obligation demonstration of
BarcaLounger’s
relaxation. Try
it—learn why it’s the “world’:
most comfortable chair”!

Budget
Liberal

Price
Terms

m

AS ADVERTISED IN
SATURDAY

EVENING POST

SUNSET
SETTER HOMES

AND GARDENS

ihE NEW YORKER

Piled)

CALL'......:

MENONI
&amp; MOCOGNI
2200 Skokie Hwy., Highland Park

ha

y

Somenzi &amp; Pottker Furniture Co.
334-36-38 GREEN

BAY RD.

HIGHWOOD, ILL.

ID 2-1455 —— ID 2-2722
Page

11

i

�| Hwd.

Community

(Continued

Center

from

page

11)

ticipants are local residents.
A special dress rehearsal at reduced prices will be presented tomorrow at 3:30 p.m. for Highwood

INSURED

BANK

ON

INTEREST

BANKSY

JULY

1,

Federal

Deposit

PARK

_IDlewood
LAH

HTT
HU THATTTOTATA TUTTE

|

take

]

HUAATAVVAHHHALVUGAALAEHAAHH

early

Oak

and

Commu-

Queens

next

Terrace

late Conception

Second St:

2-7800

Hi
HEAHANCANGUAETTEYTETETTGTVGEVTUVTEYETAE
HIT
HAA
A

place

James,

1771

|

didates for Kings

Corp.

Bank—Postoffice Bldg.

the

week

and

will
at

St.

Immacu-

schools.

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

EET AE EATER CATTATTAT
ATTA

Mrs. Horace §. Vaile, 112 Maple Ave., May 11 was reelected president of Lake County Tuberculosis Association. At
the same time, Leo Mordini of Highwood was elected to serve
a three-year term on the association board as director from

Deerfield Township to represent Highwood.
Mrs. Ralph A. Trieschman served
as a member
of the nominating
committee.

*

8 through 11 o’clock. It will be a
dress-up “date” affair, held exclusively for seventh and eighth grade
students. Balloting for school can-

1959

Insurance

*

announces

nity
Center’s
annual
Grammar
School Prom will be June 6, from

HIGHLAND

Member

WT

*

Skrinar

SAVINGS

EFFECTIVE

|

youth.
Tickets
for
Sundays
performance will be available at the
door.

MRS. HORACE S. VAILE RE-ELECTED —
PRESIDENT, LAKE COUNTY TB CHAPTER

At the annual dinner and business meeting held in Lake County

Tuberculosis Sanatorium, the new
$24,000 mobile X-ray unit of the
Lake County Tuberculosis Association was inspected for the first
time.

Because

of delays in getting the

new unit since the old one broke
down several months ago, the Association is behind in its X-ray schedule. But Mrs.
Vaile assured
the
NEWS that all school children who

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

had positive reactions to the tests
given earlier this year will be Xrayed before the school term ends.

“Lake County this year collected
more money by the sale of Christmas seals than ever before in the
history

Mrs.

of

the

Vaile.

organization,”

“We

have

the

said

finest

tuberculin testing program in
state.”
She further stated that there
only three or four counties in

state

whose

Tuberculosis

the
are
the

Associa-

tions own their
County
is one

mobile units. Lake
of them.
All the

others

upon

depend

the

State

Illinois to do their school
munity X-rays.

Mrs.
annual

Vaile

will

meeting

attend

of the

of »

and

com-

the

50th

Illinois

Tu-

berculosis
Association
to begin
Monday and continue through May
29 in Chicago. Since this meeting
is in conjunction with the national
association conference, also being
held in Chicago this year, she will

conference

as

well, Mrs. Trieschman also will
tend some of the meetings.

attend

the

national

at-

St. James Mothers’
Holds Annual Party

Greet Spring

witha...

St. James
Mothers’
Club
will
hold its last meeting of the year
and annual party tonight at 8 p.m.
at Highwood
Community
Center.
Each member may bring a guest
and is asked to bring a gift donation. Mothers of the Kindergarten
and first grade children will serve
refreshments.

MAGICUT

Call for Appointment— ID 2-3814
1394

Deerfield Road

Club

Highland Park,
Our Own Parking Lot

BETTS, BORLAND &amp; Co.
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Page

12

A

Min Mi

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New York Stock Exchange
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PARTNERS

ARTHUR M. BETTS
CHAUNCEY B. BORLAND
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WISE
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SAMUEL D. ROWE
RICHARD J. SHROSBREE
. TRACY ALEXANDER

at 45.
Cobey’s

478 Central
(Open Friday Nites)

E VANSTON

summer

brush painting.
July.

Park

800 Greenwood Blvd.
Evanston.
GR 5-5310
Bus Routes I-3-7

ART
C ENTER
Adult

Highland

except Sun. &amp; Mon.

classes

in painting,

Japanese

Children and Teen age classes.

June and

111

South

La

BUILDING

Salle

Tel.

St.

©

CEntral

Chicago

3

6-1474

Register early. Classes limited.

Ee
the jewish burial ground of unsurpassed beauty
For Personal Memorial Counseling Without Obligation,
Contact
Harry Hershman, ID 2-6225
Rand Road (U. S. 12) at Wilke Road
Palatine, Illinois
4-2236

Park

BORLAND

sculpture,

Schedule on request.

BRIARGATE

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Open daily 10-4

CLEARBROOK

New

Mortgages
(Max.

30

Yrs.)

Refinancing
Construction

Loans

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A.

P. McRAE

Phone: Lake Forest 1804

5-3526

Thursday,
j

5

May
Me

21, 1959
‘

‘

un

.
—

�idies Will Be Lions’ Guests
At 30th Anniversary Dinner

St. James Plans

Kindergarten Picnic
And Graduation Days

Ellard

Schweiger,

Ellard

president

’ last

this coming
~Johnston,

Duncan,

was

of Highland

Thursday.

Serving

Lions

with

him

Sherman

1st vice president;

James

vice president;

L. C,

Brand, 3rd vice president; Gerard
Dinkeloo,
secretary;
Eugene
R.

“Peterson, treasurer; Frank Anderson, tail twister; and Richard Kleeburg, lion tamer.
Directors elected

“are the Rev.
Otto

by

Cortesi.

Slate

nominating

ominations
the floor.

George

for

Darrell

two

was

Zinglar

Ravinia
Annual

garten

School Holds Its
Fun Day Tomorrow

teacher.

The

Rt.

Rev.

Ravinia School will hold its annual fun day tomorrow. This will
include all types of races, train
rides, games, and a Nike Missile

diplomas

display.

Baldwin, Hubert Amidei, Charles
Zanotti and Joseph Wilczek are the

Mrs.

Chairmen

James

Bolt,

Ave., and Mrs,
367 Flora Ave.

of the

event

465

J.

to

Memorial

graduates,

Park

8:40 to 11:40

are

kindergarten

Gutman,

in Highwood

am.

room

(Continued

1550

James

mothers

on page

PEERLESS HOME

from

Mesdames

PEERLESS

ror:

* FAMILY AND RECREATION ROOMS
* ROOM ADDITIONS
* GARAGES

The annual kindergarten picnic
will
take
place
on
Monday
at

Broadview

Clark

cat.

Msgr. James D. Gleason, pastor of
St. James parish, will distribute

WAY Means
and Supervised

Park

Ave.,

* KITCHENS
* BATHS

BUILDERS, INC.

West

Highland

Park

|

ID 2-6800

in

15)

and

submitted

committee

were

years

Sample

The PEERLESS
Architect Designed

ter M. Coronita, S. L. is the kinder-

elected

Park

year will be

2nd

2 p.m. in the gymnasium
of the
Highwood Community Center. Sis-

President

Schweiger

with the CUSTOM TOUCH!

St, James kindergarten graduation will take place on Sunday at

___ Highland Park Lions will celebrate their 30th anniversary
“with a dinner and program next Wednesday at the Fort Sheri_dan Officers Club. Special guests will be Lion’s Ladies.
&amp;

HOME IMPROVEMENT

and

no

presented

from

Is Serving

With

“Airborne Early Warning

Squad.

George E. Zinglar, chief aviation
machinist’s mate, U.S. Navy, son
eof the Conrad Zinglars, 1369 Deerfield Rd., is serving with Airborne
* Early Warning Squadron 11, based
on Argentia, Newfoundland.

DIRECT

FROM

DOWNTOWN

CHICAGO

CIRCUS

THE
LARGEST

The Combined

TO SHOW IN THIS
COMMUNITY THIS YEAR

Service Clubs of Highland

Park for the

BENEFIT of HIGHLAND PARK HOSPITAL Proudly Presents

~

Under

New

ound

Ownership

aSEDPAINT

THE

WORLDS

HOU
AZ WHITE
Ends
White-

COMB

Staining

High School Athletic Field

Problem

3 SHOWS—2:00 — 4:30 - 8:00 p.m.

W.

PARK

4.

run-down

$741

“"Your Complete Paint Store’”

4

’

PAINT

&amp; GLASS

Formerly R. A. Kole Paint Co.
810

Waukegan

WI

Rd., Deerfield

Come

&amp; ACRES

DAWN”

Out

and

OF CANVAS

Palomino

ursday, May 21, 1959

the

See

—

LIVE

TEDDY

HUGE

Show

Set

THE HAPPIEST
HOLIDAY
OF THE YEAR

Up!

MOTORIZED

CARAVAN

FOREMOST

PERFORMING

Baby Elephant “Little Bertha”
Daring Young

Stallion

BEARS

_

WIRE

|

Girls onthe

FLYING

TRAPEZE

3

MERRY-GO-ROUND

WALKERS

COMPLETE

| _—— _ CHIMPANZEES
CONGRESS

BUY

Big

WORLD’S

TIMES

BIGGER

TICKETS

OF

FROM

CLOWNS
ANY

The Highland

MEMBER

or ROTARY

WESTERN

ABSOLUTELY
OF

Park

CLUBS

PONIES
REVUE

Ee

j

NOT A CARNIVAL!

JAYCEES — KIWANIS - LIONS

PAINTS

IS BELIEVING”

Complete and Undivided

ARTISTS

DOGS

COMPLETELY FLAMEPROOF
AND WATERPROOF

:

REAL
AERIAL

29

TWO GREAT SHOWS COMBINED

SEATS

5-2286

Buy the paint that’s
worth the work

“SEEING

TIMES
MORE

Shades, Artist Supplies

DEERFIELD

BIG TOP

BRED LIONS!
JUGGLERS &amp; TUMBLERS

Picture Frames, Custom Framing,
Window

PARK

SHINE

&amp; WHITE

“GOLDEN

?

a

FRIDAY
MAY

JUNGLE

on

dark colored surfaces.

may be tinted.

OR

ALL

ACRES

“chalking”— pre-

@ Brilliant white—

!

BLUE

HIGHLAND

3 Rings 3

@ For white wood areas on
brick and masonry houses

vents white

AVE.,

RAIN

NEW

' @ Resists

t-

OG
G

ONE DAY ONLY!

BEAUTIFUL

«|

Cy

LOW

NO

FAMILY

Children 60c —

3300
700

GAMBLING

GAMES!

PRICES:——

Adults 90c

GENERAL ADMISSION SEATS
With Positively NO EXTRA CHARGES
RESERVED

SEATS——50c

Additional

r

�Allen

Edwin

Receives

FRITZ ATTENDS
PARK CONFAB

Wolf

Merit

Scholarship

A meeting of park commissioners
and executives from the northern

Highland Park Elks Club an-

half of Illinois was held Friday and

nounces. that Allen Edwin Wolf, a
senior
.at. Highland
Park
High
School,
has
been
awarded
the

Saturday

with

award
an

extra
said

is made

outstanding

curriculum
James

academic

Waller,

Park-School

and

Theme

record,

exalted

Sun... MORE
MORE Done!

Fun

for

the

Cooperation
regional

meeting

was ‘“Park-School Cooperation.”
David H, Fritz, superintendent
of local parks and secretary of
Park District of Highland Park,

ruler,

“Wolf was considered with many
other applicants from the entire
Northeast District of the Elks,”
he said. Wolf is the son of Mr.
and Mrs. Edwin Wolf, Deerfield.

MORE

Lombard.

150.

to a student

activities

at

Jointly
sponsored
by Lombard
Park District Board and the Illinois
Association of Park Districts, attendance
was
estimated
as over

Elk’s
Merit
Scholarship.
Official
recognition
will
be
given
Wolf
this week at the Scholarship Assembly.

The

Lake County Doctor’s Day Observed Here

was

co-conductor

of

a round

discussion

on

and

Protection.

Police

Personnel

table

Practices

_
Doctors at Highland Park Hospital were presented with red
carnations to wear on their lapels on Doctor’s Day. First to receive his “gift” was Dr. Burnell V. Reaney, 861 Kimball Rd., chiefof-staff of the local hospital. “Pinning” was done by Mrs. Harry~

e A year ‘round work horse—hooks up
to 22 optional attachments
including
32’ mounted rotary mower.
° Only yard-garden tractor
Drive,” a multi-gear-pack
efficiency.

with “Uniof proven

By Bob

Garber, 1081
Carol Ct.

Contoure

eBig Tractor power from tremendous
gear reduction. Gear shifts into three
speeds forward, plus reverse.

Hair

SEE IT ¢ TRY IT
FUN. TEST IT TODAY

BUY FROM YOUR
AUTHORIZED SALES
SERVICE CENTER.

&amp;

M.S.S., INC.
Power

Mower

&amp; Garden

Center

Complete Mower
&amp; Engine
2210

Skokie

Valley

Highland

Mr.

Sharpening

Do

Hair

or

James

Prominent nose ... Do bring
hair forward to cover most of
the ear. Wear top hair in soft

hair

curls

ear and chin . . Don’t shorten
face
by wearing
hair flat on
top-don’t let it fall heavily on
neck ..

or

high

bang.

Don’t

pull

hair back away from
ears or
wear
in chignon
- avoid
low
bangs.
Narrow forehead .. Do expose
one side of forehead to make
forehead seem wider . . Don’t
wear center part or crowd forehead with waves on both sides. .
Uneven hairline . . hide it with
soft wave or curls , . Don’t show

soft

ends

possible

at back ..
Long neck

Road

soft high

Park,

Ill.

hairline

IDlewood 2-6116
Weekdays: 8 a.m-8 p.m.

. . Do

. . Don’t

lower by long
waves...
...

Too

CONTOURE

wear

small

make

bangs

a

covers
it

look

of

low

medium

some
neck
and

chin

Do

wear

..

Don’t

. . Don’t

On

that just

wear

wear

chignon

. . . Do

length

so

to

to head

. . don’t

cut

harmed

NOW

left is Mrs.

Sidney

Kaplan

of 412

heat

your furs!

Educational Fund and
Shore Mental Health

Society as well as study problems
in traffic safety, mental health,
public
relations,
and
legislation
that has to do with the medical
(Continued on page 15)

and

Furs Now!

dust

Store them

in modern, refrigerThe cost is low.

with us...

AT

hair

can Medical
North Lake

Precious

‘til summer

vaults.

BUY

NOW!
BIG

SMALL FURS
SAVINGS!

VICTOR BROS. FURS Re”

have

AL

fullness around face and
. . Don’t wear hair long
upswept

wait

have

curls

keep
as

Your

Don’t

ated

hair

or

close

..
HIGHLAND

COIFFURES

Store

Short neck . . Do wear hair
short and cut close to nape as

Repair

bang

fullness

hair flat or away from face...

down—avoid

(U.S. 41)

or

High round forehead . . Do
use soft bang to hide where
forehead

At

The
event
was
sponsored
by
Woman’s Auxiliary of Lake County
Medical Society.
The
auxiliary
is composed
of
wives of doctors in the county who
carry on recruitment programs for
medical careers, support the Ameri-

above ears but show at least tip
of ear to lengthen line between

it by pulling hair back and flat
TOD: «4
Low forehead

curl

Rd.

ee

Marks

Don’t
with

Sheridan

JACOBSON,

Mgr.

458 Central Ave., Highland Park
IDlewood 2-0351

PARK

Sundays: 9 a.m.-2 p.m.

All

in ONE

Operation

without expensive attachments
1—CUTS

THE

GRASS

2—VACUUM CLEANS THE
LAWN—picks up leaves,
grass,

3—BAGS
puts

AS
debris

IN

IT

twigs,

etc.

VACUUMS—
in

WET

bag.

GRASS

Don‘t wait until winter to have your furnace
cleaned or repaired. Be ready for the first chill
blasts of Fall by having your heating plant
checked now. Whatever your needs— from an

annual inspection and clean-up to a new installation — we will handle the job to your complete
satisfaction. AVOID LAST-MINUTE RUSHES
... CALL NOW.

@

Repairs on All Types of Oil Burners

@

Annual Clean-Up

@

Emergency

@

Yearly Service Contracts

y

EVEN

clippings,

THE RIGHT MOVE!
MAKE FURNACE REPAIRS NOW!

la

Wind-Tunnel
Whirlwind

=

WE TAKE
TRADE-INS!

Service
FREE ESTIMATES

ON

ALL

INSTALLATION

AND

and

REPAIR

Inspection

Service

WORK

f

BRAUN BROS. OIL CC
Telephone —

Ordinary
mowers
clump,
messy clippings. New Toro
cleans-up
other
clippings

Page 14

skip—teave
cuts evenly,
as well.

Sales &amp; Service Office, 444 Central,

[Dlewood 2-3804

Highland

Park

|

Carl Casel, Division Manager
Thursday,

May

21, 1959

�}

Pace”

but when

from

she went to pick it up it

s|had disappeared. Police said they
‘Don Giovanni”
were referring the case to post ofby Mozart, and
Dr. Garber
“Tl Lamento
Di
Federico”
from fice authorities.
+ “L’Arlesiana” by Cileo.
Minor-injury Accident
A native of Chicago, Dr. Garber
Albert Laskin, 50, of Chicago,
has been singing since the age of
nine, and has pursued a vocal ca- clerk in a local grocery store, was
” reer while practicing medicine. He knocked down by a car, police rehas performed in recital and radio ported, at 10:10 am. Friday as he
in this area. While serving as a cap- was crossing Central Ave. Driver
of the car, Mrs. Hermine
Price,
tain in the medical corps during
1141 Linden Ave., received no ci“the Korean War, he had his own
said she
radio program over the Far East tation from police who
Network, “Enchanted Moments in took due precaution by looking to
rear before backing from parking
Music.”
Laskin,
who
was
crossing
*
He also has performed in Kansas space.
diagonally between crosswalks, susCity, Milwaukee, Omaha and New
York, and served as a cantor for tained minor injuries to his arms,
police reported. There was no dam14 years.
*
age to automobile.
Dr. Garber received his Bachelor
of Science from Northwestern University
and
his
medical
degree
, from the University of Illinois. He
is a member of the Phi Kappa Ep« silon fraternity and the Planned
Parenthood Association of Wauke-

agan.

;

He
also
is a member
of the
American Medical Association, IIlinois State Medical Society and the
yYAmerican
Academy
of Obstretics
and Gynecology.

St. James
¥

Dog

a dog said to be owned by Irving
Gault, 1274 Glencoe Ave. Police rethat

the

dog,

the

from

Community

left thigh.

page

Center

William Barner of Waukegan, vice
president; Mrs. C. J. Foley, also of

Parking

secretary; Mrs. Herbert Topper of
Waukegan,
corresponding
secretary and Mrs. Robert Robbins, also
of Waukegan, director-at-large.

Ross Fosbender Helps Production
Of

Rockford

College

Fosbender,
son
of the
R. Fosbenders, 453 Naida

Pl., was

in charge

Rockford

Old

Drives

@

Expert Black Topping
Concrete

@

Call for FREE

Crushed
Stone

ESTIMATE!

Gian?

... CHOICE TOP SOIL

SILJESTROM
First

St.

Highland

recent

of the play,
Anouilh.

stu-

CAMP

“An-

GLEN
THE

HEART

EAGLE
4
WEEKS
All

land

and

trips, etc. Supervised
tion write or call

TYPEWRITERS
-

FUEL CO.

ID 2-0065
1930

IN

SALES

Refinished

Park

of the properties

College’s

dent production
tigone,” by Jean

—

Play

Ross
William
for

Areas

@

Waukegan, treasurer; Mrs. Frank
Brundza of Round Lake, recording

163

W.

water
24

MANCHESTER

OF

EDEN

THE

PINES

RIVER, WISC.
FOR BOYS
9-15

sports,
hours.

horseback

Trained

8
WEEKS
riding,

counselors.

CAMP GLEN EDEN
DR.
Telephone LE 7-2193

archery,
For more

riflery,
informa-

WHEELING,

ILL.

MACHINES

RENTALS

-

REPAIRS

Chandler's
645

CENTRAL

°

ID 3-0230

THE TRUTH IN THIS
GREAT BOOK
CAN TEACH YOU
TO PRAY EFFECTIVELY

OF SPECIAL ELECTION
DISTRICT NUMBER
109
COUNTY,
ILLINOIS,
*
*
*
id
NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
that
a
special election has been called and will
be held in and for School District Number
109, Lake
County,
Illinois, on Saturday,
e 6th day of June, 1959, at which election
Piziere will be submitted to the legal voters
of said School District the following proposition:
Shall the Board of Education of School
District
Number
109,
Lake
County,
Illinois, build an addition to each of the
present school buildings now owned and
used by said School District for school
*
purposes
and
commonly
known
as _ the
“Maplewood
School’
and the “Walden
School,” respectively, and issue bonds to
the amount of $375,000 for said purpose,
‘said bonds to be of the denomination of
$1,000 each, bear interest at the rate of
not to exceed
six per
cent (6%)
per
annum,
payable
semi-annually,
and _ become due and payable $25,000 on Decemfeber | of each of the years 1960 to 1974,
inclusive?
That for said special election said School
&lt; District
has
been
divided
into
two
(2)
election precincts, the boundaries of which
and the polling place for each are as folWows:
ELECTION PRECINCT NUMBER 1
That part of School District Number 109,
Lake
County, Illinois, lying outside
of
the corporate limits of the City of Highland Park, Illinois.
® Polling Place: Deerfield Grammar School,
Deerfield, Illinois.
ELECTION PRECINCT NUMBER 2
That part of School District Number 109,
Lake
County,
Illinois, lying
within
the
corporate limits of the City of Highland

S.

President,
LILLIAN
Secertary,

GREENFIELD

Board of Education
C. ROOT
Board of Education
5/21/59—148

21, 1959

25%

Wall Sculpture
Framed

You can learn how to pray, how to commune with God, how to listen for His guidance, if you
will read with an unprejudiced, receptive thought the
truth contained in this great book, Science and Health

Framed

T0

Originals

70%
OFF!

Reproductions

Candle Sconces

with Key to the Scriptures by Mary Baker Eddy.

Lavabos

In the first seventeen pages of the Christian Science
textbook you will find an inspiring explanation of
prayer. Countless thousands, through the study of this
chapter, have learned how to pray intelligently and
are receiving the answer to their prayers, as evidenced
in improved health, harmony, supply, and well-being.
Find this out for yourself! Read, buy,* or borrow
this book at the Christian Science Reading Room
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King James Version of the Bible, in an atmosphere of

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*Science and Health can be purchased in red, green, or blue

THIS

Christian Science
READING

need

PRAY!

binding at $3 and will be sent postpaid by the Reading
Room on receipt of check or money order.

* Park, Illinois.

Polling Place: Craftwood
Lumber Company,
1590 Deerfield Road,
Highland
Park, Illinois.
Voters must
vote
at the polling place
ydesignated for the election precinct within
which they reside.
The polls at said election will be opened
at twelve o’clock Noon and will be closed
at seven o’clock P.M. on said day. (Daylight Saving Time).
By order of the Board of Education of
School District Number 109, Lake County,
Illinois.
Dated this 16th day of May, 1959.

SPECIAL SALE OF
WALL TREATMENTS!

learn to pray?

at 8:30

NOTICE
SCHOOL
LAKE

May

are:
For-

est, president; Mrs. Ray Johnston
of Lake Bluff, president-elect; Mrs.

ow can I

13)

a.m. In case of inclement weather,
the picnic will be scheduled for
ere following day.

Thursday,

Richard
Ave. on

of Lake

Picnic

(Continued

PAUL

its owner’s

property, reportedly bit
Seeger of 1251 Glencoe

charge of the picnic.
Mrs. Baldwin has asked that all
children attending the picnic meet

‘at the

on

Harrison

ADDING

Bite

A
citation
was
issued
Friday
morning for no current license for

ported

Glenn

oe

4 Sua

Mrs.

GT

1783 St. Johns Ave., be-

Wat

ery Store,

Dr. Harry
Garber,
tenor,
1080
tween 6 and 8 p.m. last Thursday,
Sheridan Rd., will appear Sunday
according to police. Police said no
at 3:30 p.m. at
pec
‘| one witnessed the theft.
Thornes
Hall
Gwendolyn
Tegeder,
603
Glen» with
Communview Ave., reported to police the
ity
Symphony
loss of a package containing two
Orchestra
conpairs of drapes, valued at $38, deducted by Dr.
livered via parcel post to an apartLeon Stein.
ment building in which she formerDr. Garber
ly lived. She said manager had telewill sing
two
phoned her a package had arrived,
arias,
“Dalla

DRIVEWAY CONSTRUCTION

RARE

OPPORTUNITY

Whatever you do, DON’T MISS
TO

1888 Sheridan Road

ROOM

SAVE!

®

Highland Park

Reg.
U.S. Pat. Off.

1733

Second

St.

Se

Two Thefts Reported Doctor's Day
Dr. Harry Garber
A collection of three dozen ball
(Continued from page 14)
Sings Two Arias
point pens, said to be worth $18.75, field.
Sunday In Chicago was stolen from Larson’s Station- Officers of the Auxiliary

Highland

Park

IDlewood 3-0300

Information concerning free public lectures, church services and
Sunday School is also available.
Page

15

�Mostly for Women
Among Those Who Were Models

»

vig

Democratic Women

CKarles

Attend Luncheon

Wrds

Almost 300 women attended the
annual spring luncheon given by

the

Democratic

Women’s

Club

of

the 13th Congressional District on
Wednesday,
May
6, at the Villa

d’Este

Women’s

The

of Zion

Guild

Lutheran

a fashion

held

Church

show recently. Among those who modeled were, left to right,
Teri Rupp, daughter of the Marwood Rupps, Mrs. Don Neugart,
Carol Clark, Tammy Rupp and Jackie Sipera.
NEW

Deerfield ORT To
‘nstall Officers

ARRIVALS

Birth

Announcements

Mr.
and Mrs. Leo
Sazonoff
of
1531
Central
Ave., announce
the
birth of their fourth son, Jonathan
Fredrick on May 11 at the Highland
Park
Hospital.
Their
other
sons are Peter, 11, Michael, 8, and
Richard, 6. The paternal grandfather, Julius Sazonoff, lives at the
Central Ave. address.
*

%

*

Mr.
and Mrs. James
W. Casebeer, 1538 County Line Rd., became
parents of their first child, James
Walter. He was born May 14 in the
Highland Park Hospital. The grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Henry
Pantle of Deerfield and Mrs. Bon-

nie Casebeer

of Detroit,

*

*

Mich.

*

Mr. and Mrs. Lyle W. Petersen
of 1226 Wilmot Rd. announce the
arrival of their first child, Kimberly Ann, May 10 in the Highland
Park Hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Joseph
Zahnen
of Chicago
and Mr. and
Mrs.
Jens
Petersen
of Deerfield
are the grandparents. Andrew Wenderling of Deerfield is the great
grandfather.
*

%

%

A son, David Allan, was born to
Mr. and Mrs. William C. Liebler of
620 Apple Tree Ct., May 5 at the
Lake Forest Hospital. Their other
children are Billy, 6, Anne, 4, and
Carol, 2. The grandparents are Mrs.
Anne C. Hoover of Pittsburgh, Pa.,
and Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Liebler of
York, Pa.
oe

*

%

Mr. and Mrs. Charles J. Eddy

of

1125 Williams
Ave., became
parents of a daughter, May 6 at Lake
Forest
Hospital.
The
infant
has

been
she

named
has

Julianne

a brother,

Agatha

Charles,

10,

and

Dunning of Grand Island, Neb. The
paternal grandparents are Mr. and
Mrs. Ross Bates of St. Joseph, Mo.
*

born

*

daughter,

Susan

April 25 at Lake

pital to Mr.

and

Mrs.

*

Lynne,

was

Forest HosT. R.

Grutza,

2160 Stirling Rd., Bannockburn.
She
has
two
brothers,
Robert
James, age 3, and Michael William,
Page

16

Cary.

Among

the

dis-

tinguished
guests
were
Thomas
Bradley,
13th Congressional
committeeman, and Richard Kahn, candidate for state’s attorney.
Mrs.
Harry
Sholl
of Deerfield
was elected first vice president in
charge of the membership.
The membership approved the establishment of a 13th Congressional District campaign fund to support the Democratic candidate.
Mrs. Eugenie Anderson, Ameriea’s first woman ambassador (Denmark)
was the guest speaker. In
her
discussion
of foreign
policy
she concluded by saying that in
order to competently combat the
communist crisis in the world, ‘““We
must show the will to win the cold
war by peaceful means... we must
elect Democratic leaders with vision who will engage the American
people in this program.”
Among
Deerfield women
in attendance were the Mesdames Russell Bletzer, Daniel Walker, Martin
Silverman,
William
Weil,
Gino
Pedrucci,
Don
Cowgill,
Raymond
Resnick, Joseph Furo, H. A. Harris,
Charles
Francisco,
Karl Berliant,
Arthur Bandemer, William Reilly,
Robert Aitchison, Jules Beskin, and
Julius Solomon.

Two
Plan

Garden Clubs
Flower Show

A joint meeting of the Amateur
Garden Club of Deerfield and the
Deerfield
Green
Thumbs
Garden
Club
will
be
held
at 8 o’clock
Wednesday evening, May 27, at the
home of Mrs. Edward H. Higgins,
636 Hermitage Dr. Plans are being
formulated for their flower show
for next September.

IN WAIKIKI

Visit

In

Mrs.

William

Rd.

F.

and

Weir

her

of

niece,

*

*

*

Janet,
Mrs.
ling,

4, and Kathleen,

2. Mr.

and

Lee McClelland of Mt. SterIll., and Mr. and Mrs. James

E. Hagan of Chicago. are the grandparents.

Mr.

and

Saturday when Miss
Geiman, daughter of

Mrs.

Louis

M.

Geiman

of

Chicago
became
the bride
of
Charles Evans Pope Jr., son of Dr.
and Mrs. Pope of 405 Deerfield Rd.,
Deerfield. The marriage was solemnized
in
St.
Jerome’s
Catholic
Church in Chicago.
The bride wore an ivory peau de
soie gown trimmed with lace. Miss
Eleanor Pope, the bridegroom’s sister was the maid
of honor. Her
frock was of soft blue organza.
J. Robert Geiman, brother of the
bride, served as best man. A wedding breakfast was served in the
Edegwater Golf Club.
Mr. and Mrs. Pope will live in
Chicago on their return from Sea
Island, Ga. and Virginia Beach, Va.

by John

Gilbert’s

band.

The theme is ‘‘East Meets West”
and
the
decorating
committee
headed by Mrs. Dey Watts includes
Mrs.
Clifford
Speare,
Mrs.
Warren Jackman, Mrs. Allyn Franke,
John Kroegel and Allen Root.
Hosts for the evening will be

Mrs.
Mrs.

James
Wetzel
Donald
Herr.

Mandler

a8

their

reports

on

past*

the

activities.
nominated officers are Mrs.
L. Craig for president,
Raymond
Mrs. Howard E. Green Jr. for vice
president, and Mrs. Nevin L. Fidler
for corresponding secretary.

Rrida!l Shower Given
Joyce

Ward,

daughter

of

Mr. and Mrs. George Ward of 714
Osterman Ave., was honored at a
niscellaneous shower on May 9 at.
the Villa Park home of Mrs. John
Meschick,
Miss Ward’s marriage to R. Gerald Fox, son of Mr. and Mrs. Ronald S. Fox of Westchester, will take
place in Deerfield on June 6.
Miss Ward is a senior at Lawrence College and Mr. Fox is work,
ing
for
his
master’s
degree
at
Northwestern University.

Dr.
and

Engaged

chairman.

The Towne Club To

Meet Next Thursday
The
Towne
Club
will
meet
Thursday, May 28 at 12:45 p.m. at
the American Legion Hall for refreshments and bridge. The club
meets on the fourth Thursday of
each month and will continue during the summer.
Hostesses will be Mrs. Charles
McCready, Mrs. Frederick Walker,
Mrs. Walter Kopp and Mrs, Bernard Smith. The hostess commit-

met

hold

are

give
year’s
The

and Mr. and
Mrs.
James

is publicity

May

11

The
Deerfield
Welfare
Society

The
John
R. Kinseys
of 1568
Oakwood Pl. celebrated their 25th
wedding anniversary and Mr. Kinsey’s birthday on a trip to Hawaii.
Pictured above are J. R. Kinsey,
his parents, Mr. and Mrs. L. B.
Kinsey of Long Beach, Calif., who
accompanied them on the trip, and
Mrs. J. R. Kinsey.
The Kinseys flew out to California, April 18, stopped with his parents in Long Beach and the four
then flew to Hawaii.
They
were
photographed at Waikiki.

Babcock Jr., publicity chairman.
The meeting will honor officers
and the committee chairmen will

Miss

Members
and
guests
of
the
Deerfield 100 Club are preparing
for the last dance of this year’s
series to be held Saturday from
10 p.m. to 2 a.m. at the Highland
Park Woman’s Club. Music will be

provided

The annual meeting of the West®
Deerfield
Township
Women’s
Republican Club will be held on May
28 at 9:30 am.
at the home
of
Mrs. Andrew
Bradt, 454 Margate
Terrace. This is to be an informal
meeting for members and those interested in becoming members.
“A baby sitter will be provided
for those mothers with pre-school
a
to see
expect
so we
children
great many of you,” said Mrs. R. Feeg

For Joyce Ward

‘East Meets West’
Ils Theme Of Dance

at

the

home

of

To Meet May 26

Helen Galloway of 1126 Springfield
Ave., were Sunday guests of Mr.
and Mrs, LeRoy Weir in Waukesha, Wis.

Mr. and Mrs. William J. Hagan
of 680 Indian Hill Rd. announce
the birth of a daughter,
Jeanne
Louise, May
15 in the Highland
Park Hospital. Her brother Kevin,
was 7 years old on the day she was
born.
She
also
has
two
sisters,

present on
Nancy Lou

Deerfield Wing

1742

Miss

age 2. Mrs. Florence Heth of Wauwatosa,
Wis.,
and
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Thad Grutza of Milwaukee, Wis.,
are the children’s grandparents.

Girl

Mrs. Philip Ruth to make
plans
for this meeting.
Guests
and
new
members
are
welcome, Mrs. Herman Pack states
and will provide additional information
by calling her at WI
52502.

Waukesha

Deerfield

Chicago

It was a very small wedding with
only the members
of the family

tee

This afternoon at 3 o’clock, the
board of directors of the Highland
Park Hospital will present awards
to the hospital volunteers. This is
the eighth annual tea honoring the
volunteers.

Republican Women .
To Meet May 28

P ope Ar.

Dr. and Mrs. William Burns,
and Mrs. Charles Foelsch, Mr.

Hospital Board Has
Eighth Annual Tea Today

and

a sister, Michelene, 3. The maternal
grandmother
is Mrs.
Julia

A

Deerfield chapter of the Woman’s American ORT will hold its
annual
installation
luncheon
on
Saturday, May 23 at the Country
Squire restaurant near Grayslake.
Mrs. Theodore Bloch will be installed
as
president
succeeding
Mrs. J. N. Peterman,
Other offieers are Mrs. Gerald Flegel, Mrs.
Howard
Gould
and
Mrs.
Arnold
Winograd,
all as vice presidents;
Mrs. Meyer Mirkin, treasurer; Mrs.
Robert Grodinsky, recording secretary;
Mrs.
Jerrold
Flaschner,
financial seeretary and Mrs.
Lawrence Stein, corresponding secretary.
The luncheon will be followed
by a fashion show of casual clothes
staged by a Northbrook company.
Mrs. Herman Kaplan of 684 Appletree Ln., Wi 5-3059, is in charge
of reservations.

near

é.

Tews

Club

ae

Weddings

—

Engagements

its

monthly

Wing
of Infant
of Chicago
will

meeting

Tues-

day, May 26 in the home of Mrs
Edmund
Hoffman
Jr, 407 Brierhill Rd. This will be the Wing’s
first luncheon meeting
and Mrs.
Victor
Turner
will
act
as
cohostess.
On Monday, May 18 the Deer-

field Wing

board

met

in the home

of Mrs. Chase Smith Jr. on Indian
Hill Rd. It was reported that volunteers who worked at the Infant
Welfare Sprague station were Mrs.
Joseph
Perry,
Mrs.
Fred
Balzer
and
Mrs.
Edmund
Hoffman
Jr.

They assisted in the examination
and care of 29 infant and preschool

children.

Frances

Ann

Glathar

Mr. and Mrs. Albert W. Glathar
of Denver, Colo., announce the engagement of their daughter, Fran-”
ces Ann, to Edward Ruxton Stanwood, son of Mr. and Mrs. George
H. Stanwood of Bannockburn. No
date has been set for the wedding. :
Miss Glathar and Mr. Stanwood
will be graduated from the University of Colorado at Boulder in June...
Mr. Stanwood will be commissioned
as an ensign in the U.S. Navy upon
his graduation.
Miss
Kappa
where

Glathar is affiliated with
Kappa
Gamma _ sorority,
the
engagement
was
anh-

nounced

May

5 at a dinner

at the

sorority house in Boulder. The traditional box of candy was passed.
She is also a member of the educational honorary, Kappa Delta Pi.

Mr.
Delta
naval

Stanwood

is affiliated

with

Tau Delta fraternity and the
honorary, Star and Sextant.

Thursday,

May

21, 1959

�Enjoy Florida

AY

Vacation

Robert Broeges of 802 Deerfield
Rd. has been chosen to attend Premier Boys State, sponsored by the
Illinois American Legion, to be
held

June

21-28

at the

nomic

Building

State

Fairgrounds

on

*

-|

Youth

the

in

*

Eco-

Illinois

Springfield.
*

Allen Wolf, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Edwin Wolf of 457 Hermitage Dr.,

a senior at Township High School
District 113 in Highland Park, has
been awarded a scholarship by the
Highland

EVERYTHING
New

is New—

Owners

... at

New Merchandise

the

NEW

New Personalized
Service

Park Elks Club.
*

*

*

Evelyn
Wood,
daughter
of the
Fred C. Woods of 640 Warwick Rd.,
was chosen a princess in the court
of the queen at Roosevelt University in Chicago, recently.
*

*

*

Jacqueline Frost, daughter of the

Dr., Lincolnwhere they

were there during
a

lol

“

ho hhh

hhh

Young
sae

v

bn

hn bh

cliffe

hh

nb

cople J,

innate

Pvt.

They

Prince Philip’s visit to the island.

hhh

hn

hn

nb

tn tn

Sa

ee

OO

hh

Pe

OOOO

hb

| a

dh

she

bo

Pee?

Roger

er

Baughmann, son of the R. R. Baughmanns, 924 WestDeerfield today after spending a two week furlough with

a

-

F

¥

Calif.

~

Ave.,

Army

arrived

Base,

last Sunday

spending

Forest

*

*

h

:
he was
elected
grand
Kappa Sigma fraternity.

*

Rd.,

*

Jan James
daughter
Mrs. ; Jam es O. J

of

Mr.

and

NS aleecidh sf fqierieek?

"

Alpha Phi sorority at Lake Forest
College
:

ok

ok

Bannockburn,

sociation,

*k

is

a freshman

founded

in 1952,

Attends

*
Zally,

received

Award

Naval

for

the

of Mr.

Chicago

outstanding

ROTC

at the

Tribune|

work

festivities

Colle ge,

at

LEN:

Appleton,

and
is a councilor to freshmen Wis.,
women.
Joyce, in her third year at Lawand|rence, who has attended summer

*
son

weekend

in

the

University

sessions,

also,

semester

to go

gree.

Her

has

just

one

to receive

sorority

is

Kappa

of | Theta.

yan.

Rosalie

Ward,

Joyce’s

more

her

de-

Alpha

sister,

a

A sophomore majoring in elec-| senior at the Township High School
trical engineering, he is also a|in Highland Park, will enter her
member of Sigma Phi Epsilon so- | freshman year at Lawrence College

&gt; cial fraternity at the Salt Lake City | this fall.
school,

At

Loyola

Academy,

Chicago, from which he was
ated in 1957, he was active
4, ball and golf. He was also
“winter quarter honor roll
university.

Utah

Dr.,

Leverick,

Huachuca,

is

stationed
*

® St.,

is

a

College,

at

Fort

sophomore
Colorado

son of Mr.
of 825 Pine

at

from

Colorado

Springs,

Colo.

on

Flowers

flown

.

May

Library

and others. Mrs. Board

at-

Ribbon

pancake

Visiting Parents

lightweight

Mrs.

John

George)

Houston

and

her

(Peggy

little

Jo

course

in

from

j

reasonably

the light girdle that treats you

nylon

leno elastic,

Sizes 26 to 36.

Cali-

Ribbon, nylon, front panel

flattens your “tummy”

Also without Hi Rise.

are visiting her parents, Mr. and
Mrs.
William
D, George
of 853
Westcliff Ln., while Mr. Houston is

a training

—

new slim line of the season.

daughter

fornia.

Control

to an elegant smooth, willowy look . . . perfect for the

tended
a May
Fiesta
benefit
at
Normandy House on May 15, staged
by the Literary Club.

COME

IN

FREE

BLACK

gently

but firmly.

reinforced

AND

side

WHITE.

Ask for No. 825.

(without obligation)

FOR

for

the

A

Figure Analysis

at the NEW

priced, too!

Day

Family Portraits by
Percy H. Prior, Jr.
Photographer
599 ROGER WILLIAMS AVE.
ID 2-3199
please make appointment

before May 28th

_ Thursday, May 21, 1959

For

the BEST

We Now Deliver to ALL North Shore
Suburbs and Chicago . . . direct.

653

LAUREL

ID 2-8700

in Flowers

AVE.,

H.P.

611

CENTRAL

e

HIGHLAND

Also available at The Pershing Smart Shop
4818-20 N. Western Ave., Chicago

In

panels.

had Special

Hawaii

PROM!
They're

Fiesta

Mrs. Howard Board of 1306 War-

Bahr’s have
in.

acts as

determin-

rington Rd. is a member
of the
Women’s Literary Club of Chicago
which is affiliated with the General
Federation and the Ninth District
of the Illinois Federation of Woman’s Clubs, Friends
of American
Writers, Friends of Chicago Public

taking

*

Robert Bruce Broege, son of the

AGA
es aba

than

at Lawrence

Bali-Hai..

*

Robert E. Johnson,
and Mrs. T. J. Johnson

rather

*

%

son of Mr.

Arizona.
*

She preferred a scholar-

at Lawrence

weekend festivities
May 9 and 10.

and Mrs. Gus Leverick of 534 Her-|
mitage

ship

gradu-| Illinois
State
Scholarship
Comin foot- | mission.
on the|
Mr. and Mrs. Ward and Gerald
of the Fox, Joyce’s fiance, attended the

i

re

the
Pvt. Thomas

in|

of the
Valley

at Denison
University, Granville,
O. Her father was installed as a
member of the board of governors
of the Dads’ Association at the annual luncheon for fathers during
the May Day-Mothers’ Day weekend festivities at Denison. The As-

balidin'

Engineers.

at

RP

*

Dorinda Bolton, daughter
George W. Boltons of 1505

Day

Combat

in

broth-

engineering

he has been assigned further duty

y has

|

in

with

the

Delta

Jacqueline’s

an advisory capacity in
ing university policies.

G. Daniel

*+

Lake

Frost,

is majoring

Joyce Ward, daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. George Ward of 714 Osterman
Ave., was honored at the Mothers’

Mrs. J. W. Zally of 941 Cedar St.,|

4

attended

Oakland,| per of Gamma Epsilon chapter of

after

Wood,
Leonard
training at Fort
Mo. and will be stationed in Calito
embarkation
awaiting
fornia
where
Hawaii,
Scofield Barracks,

*

mF

Recently
ecently
scribe of

at} soc¢ Ln.

visiting his parents. Bill
his basic and advanced

¥ 10 days
received

re,

Bernardi,
son
of
Joseph
Bernardi ,

‘Sheridan

Oakland

School,

*

Pvt. William
Mr.
and
Mrs.

1017

High

of Kappa

Michigan State. Commencement exercises will be held on June 7.
Mr. and Mrs. Frost were in East
Lansing with their son and daughter for the Mothers Day festivities.

his parents. He has finished his basic training at Fort Leonard Wood,
Mo. and will report to Fort Ord, Calif. tomorrow for advance training.
Dick, a graduate of Highland Park
College
and
was
employed
by
Abbott
Laboratories
ial
AI:
Wiivinain before joining

leader

State.

CCCCCUCCCCCCCCCCCCr

Richard

left

was

the sorority sing.
Her marriage to Donald Sawyer, |
son of Mr. and Mrs. Donald Sawyer
of Birmingham,
Mich.,
will
take place on Aug. 15. Mr. Sawyer
is majoring in geology at Michigan

geo nyn, ihitencin,

stopped at the British Colonial Hotel in Ft. Lauderdale, Fla.

ape

Mr. and Mrs. Ray E. Frase of 3227 Cumberland
returned on Monday from a vacation trip

TR AEE

shire,

EO

“:

Bruce Frosts of 726 Waukegan Rd.,
was honored recently at Michigan
State University at East Lansing,
when she was selected as a member
of the 1959 Club. She was selected
by a group of 62 seniors for her
outstanding interest and service to
the
University.
Majoring
in art,

PARK

�Mothers

S

eine ee
Shows

GREENHOUSE
1911 N. RIDGE RD. — ID 2-3400
We're located North of Berkley Rd., just south of Park Ave. West

WE WILL BE OPEN SUNDAYS AND
MEMORIAL DAY from 9:00 a.m. to 2 p.m.

eo
Special!

&lt;P

oe

Each
By the Dozen

Our 64th Year...
supplying plants
for North Shore's
finest gardens

Chicago Junior School,
Lakewood Friends Meet
At Elgin School

Mupcialion
pike

Chicago

Today

Academy

will be

held

today

at 2 p.m. at the school.
In recognition of the opening
St. Lawrence

Seaway,

of

the show,

en-

titled “Your Passport to Fashion,”
will feature a collection of foreign
imports. It is given for the benefit
of the scholarship fund.
Members of the Mothers’ Association
from
Highland
Park
include Mesdames David Axelrod of
Moraine Rd., Robert Brown Jr. of
Lineoln Ave., Robert L. J. Gillispie
of Lincoln Ave. S, John H. Harmon Jr. of Fairview, Harry S. Temple of Laurel Ave., Norman Vance
of Hawthorne Ln., Emil Zarich of
Half Day Rd., Phil D. Missner of
Waverly Rd. and Mrs. Robert Wilson of Park Ave.
Following the show, tea will be
served in Reid Hall.

at the school

at 12:30

p.m.

Charles

is to be

F. Grant

Nink,

ANNUAL

SALE

faimous-for- ff

The

a water

second vice-president

chairman);

2

bal-

Mrs.

secretary;

Harry

Mrs.

(social
Lazarus,

Thomas

Hall

of

Deerfield, treasurer; Mrs. Herbert
Michael, ways and means and Mrs.
Howard Bede, by-laws.

Highland
nounces

Park Emblem

a

Spring

“Bouquet

of

Club an-

Luncheon

Fashions’

and

show

Wednesday
in Elks
Lodge
Hall.
Luncheon will be served promptly
at 12:30 p.m.; fashion show follows
at 2 o’clock.
Public is invited to come
and

bring

a friend

to see the latest in

spring styles.
Tickets may
Mrs. James
E.

As-

be obtained
Meehan Jr.,

from
1970

sisting

her

Mrs.

Berkeley Rd. (ID 2-4729), Mrs. Wil-

Walter

M. Lillie, also of St. Johns

liam N. Russell, 308 Washington,
Highwood
(ID 2-4410); Mrs. Martin Tinesti, 1864 Green
Bay Rd.

as

co-hostess

is

Ave.
Business meeting will follow a
dessert luncheon scheduled for 1
p.m.
Members
will sew for the fall
bazaar and there will be a bake
sale for the benefit of the Commons.

cei

Kade

Head Shgh Schoot
PTA _ 1959-1960
Mrs.

Spencer

Keare,

1270

4

Lin-

den Ave., was elected president
of Township School District 113
PTA, known as Highland Park High®
School
PTA,
at
April meeting,

Presented

the

association’s

the

nominating

by

committee and elected also were
these officers: Mrs. A. G. Bradt,
1st
vice
president;
Mrs.
J.
R.
Haugan, third vice president; Mrs.
(Continued on page 41)

Ms,

B. L: Se hiedaheen

Hostess Ie (tab

Emblem Club
Has Spring Party

will open

Commons.

program

p.m.

in their new swimming pool.
According to Mrs. Harlan Borin,
publicity
chairman
of the
club,
newly-elected officers are: Mrs. Alfred T. List, president; Mrs. Russel
B. Smith, vice president (membership
chairman);
Mrs.
Mark
Van

her St.
Johns Ave. home tomorrow
to members of the Ravinia Auxil-

iary of the Chicago

Lake-

let given by the girls of the school

Mrs. C. F. Grant Opens Her
Home To Chicago Commons
Mrs.

School,

wood Friends will make their annual visit to the school in Elgin on
Monday. Luncheon will be served

Annual fashion show given by
the Mothers’ Association of Lake
Forest

Junior

Wires

(ID 2-2918); Mrs. Benjamin Helke,
1121 Deerfield Rd. (ID 2-3371).
The luncheon honors all mothers of Elks and Emblem members
and they will be guests of the club.
Admittance is by reservation only.

Mrs. Bowen. E. Schumacher will
be hostess at her Linden Ave. home
on Monday
at 11 a.m. when the
Senior group of Highland Park-Ravinia Center of Infant Welfare Society of Chicago meets.

Assistant hostesses for the
will be Mrs. Gerald D. Stone

day
andy

Mrs. Russell Vinnedge at the morning sewing and Mrs. Marvin L. Anthony, Mrs. Theodore D. Hazen of
Lake Forest and Mrs. Kenneth Lar-+
rance
at the
afternoon
business
meeting.

Luncheon
committee
includes.
Mesdames
Burton
M.
Smalley,*
chairman; Woodward Burgert, Clarence H, Goelzer, Paul V. Jester and
Edward A. Roach.
‘
A.

M.

Bridells

Birth

Of

Announce

Granddaughter

The Albert M. Bridells of Half’
Day Rd., announce the birth May
9 of a granddaughter, Linda, born
to the Henry Scheeles of Lafayette,

Ind.

Mrs.

Scheele

is

the

Jessime Bridell.
Paternal
grandparents

former
¥
are

the

Henry Scheeles of Sheboygan, Wis.
There are five great grandparents:
Mr. and Mrs. Robert J. Blauner,&lt;

NOW

sale ends Tuesday, May 26

Clifton Ave.; Mrs. Scheele Sr., Sheboygan, Wis.; Mrs. Zaegal of Sheboygan; and Mrs. J. C. Bridell of
St. Louis, Mo.
hy
Mrs.
Scheele
is a graduate
of

OPEN

Highland

IN OUR

NEW LOCATION
and ready
to serve your decorating needs

Worth a trip to town for savizgs like these!
Beautifully fashioned nylons in sheer to sheerest weights, newest shades. In perfect Belle
Sharmeer leg sizes. Come in or telephone,
OS get eb Bare Cee a ee sale price, 1.66, 3 prs. 4.95
Ree. TOS:

Purdue
tended
Purdue

WE DELIVER ALL FABRICS and
DRAPERY HARDWARE IN THIS AREA.
890

Linden

Ave.,

Hubbard

Woods

High

School

Uhlemann’s
ID

°

Park

2-3430

did iv és Pons sale price, 1.41, 3 prs. 4.20

Service Weight
WAR. LO
ert te) sale price, 1.17, 3 prs. 3.50

and

|

University. Mr. Scheele atLake
Forest
College
and’
University.

new

&lt;a

easy-to-wear

CONTACT

3

Lenses
highland

park community

nursery school

SUMMER SESSION
(register

for

4 or

8 week

session)

PHONES:
BR 4-5900

@

HI

GR

®@

ID 2-1675

5-5300

6-1788

JUNE 8 to JULY 31
@ 2,
M

3 OR

5 MORNINGS

PICNIC-LUNCH

ONE

PER

DAY

mM OUTDOOR PAINTING,
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e comfortable
e full satisfaction—

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Have your eyes examined by an
Eye-Physician (M.D.)

UHLEMANN
optical

company

the best in sight—since

1624 ORRINGTON AVE., EVANSTON
492 CENTRAL AVE., HIGHLAND PARK
evanston

store open

monday

and thursday

9 to 9

Director:

Mrs.

Martha

Struve

Phone: ID 2-3301 or ID 2-5972

’

1907

PHONE for appointment or Information
Highland Pk. IDlewood 2-5150
1874 Sheridan Rd.
1645

Orrington

Ave.

Evanston

UNiversity 4-3311
Page

18

Thursday,

May

21, 1959

~

�s
Me
t

i

TRAINING CLUB
HOLDS ANNUAL
SHOW SUNDAY

North Shore PTA

Sponsors Dance
Saturday Night
The

of

Parent

North

Teacher

Shore

Is-

rael, 840 Vernon Ave., Glencoe, is
sponsoring a dance Saturday called
“Parents’ Terpsichorean Antics.”

19th

‘Training

‘from

8:30

Highland

Annual
by

North

Club,

a.m.
Park

Lake

held

at

was

held

8:30

Recreation

1991

Show,

Shore

until

As part of the show,

was

Dog

Dog

Sunday

p.m.

inB

‘Stray’

RERUN

scheduled.
A few tickets may be purchased
at the door. Co-chairmen
of the
dance
are Mrs. Seymour
Jensky,
1854 Clavey Rd., and Mrs. Seymour
Stern, Glencoe.
Ticket committee

POOR

ovs’
east

Elks

GET READY NOW!

Local
membership
already
has
made reservations through proper
channels
and
Waller
extends
a
cordial
invitation to any “stray”
Elks in the North Shore area to
attend the dinner.

the evening. A dance contest, with
trophies for the winners, is also

The

Seashore Dinner

Calling

Dancing will begin at 9 p.m. to
the music of Irv Dulcey’s orchestra
in the Crown Room of the Temple.
Games will be played throughout

sponsored

—

Members of Highland Park Elks
Club will host a Seashore dinner
May 30 at 6:30 p.m. at the Elk’s
building, according to James Waller, exalted ruler.

Association

Congregation

Elks To Host

CHECK

OUR|
4

includes Mrs. Walter
Scheslinger
and Mrs. Lawrence Hollander, Winnetka.

at

Center.

a tracking

Telegraph

test

Rd.,

Forest.

Miss Marie

Schneider, Glenview,

was chairman of the show. Stuart
Abbey, president of the club, says
show
complied
with
rules
and
regulations
of American
Kennel
‘Club.
Mrs.
Michael
Kay,
1640
Park
Ave. W, is a training director and
a show judge for the training club.
She is authorized by the American
Kennel Club.

DID

recently

were

THAT...

as 2,000 meals in one day?

Why

don’t you let us serve just one to

you SOON?

Have you tried our Saturday

night Roast Beef Dinner (all you can eat! !);

Members
of Psi Upsilon Mothers’ Club of University of Illinois,
meeting recently at Chapter House
in Champaign, elected Mrs. Sidney
Frisch, 256 Ivy Ln., as president for
the coming year. Mrs. Eric Johnson,
Rockford,
is
vice-president,
and
Mrs. Burson Horn, Skokie, secretary-treasurer.

mothers

KNOW

The Moraine frequently serves as many

Mrs. Sidney Frisch
Elected President
Psi Upsilon Mothers

The

YOU

our Sunday Brunch, Sunday Buffet or any
of our other Moraine feature meals?

TELEPHONE

ID

Stop

2.4444

here

camping

en-

tertained at the fraternity, house.
Sidney Frisch Jr. is a freshman
at the University of Illinois and
a graduate of Highland Park High

ON

THE

LAKE

‘e-

HIGHLAND

PARK,

ILLINOIS

School.

before

your

trail. You’ll

needs

for a successful

socks

to sleeping

Tee

Shirts with

bags!

camp

boy

hits

the

find everything
season
Also

he

. . . from
available—

emblems!

All top

quality, and at prices you'll approve.

NA IY ei GCOTTONS
y

69

Cotton

Linden

Hubbard

Avenue

IN THE

HUBBARD

WOODS

VErnon

and

The

North

FASHION

Woods

CENTER

5-3181

Shore's finest shop for Boys and

Young

Men

Linen
Gale Products Division

$14.95 up
LAKE

FOREST

sizes 10-18

TS 8
Shirts
Shorts
Blouses
Tenms dresses

Bathing suits

DUTBOARD MARINE CORPORATION —
Invites

et
are

Dresses

gr
SaM

}

Dealer Inquiries
Opportunity ahead...with America’s fastestgrowingline of outboard motors. Asa Gale “Protected
Franchise’ dealer you'll be part of an exciting growth
in an expanding, youthful market. You'll have products second to none, promotion support on every
level, and the backing of the nation’s largest manufacturer of outboard motors. Let’s talk it over.
Write John Pogue, District Sales Representative,
Suite 1500, 360 N. Michigan Ave., Chicago

265 MARKET

» May 21, 1959

SQUARE

1, III.
6

PHONE LAKE FOREST 548
Page

19

�OO

aE

Ree

Pen

DETER

Neca

MR.
Do

¥

need

a Sales Manager,

Administrative

Assistant?

Several Highland Parkers attended a board meeting May 5 of newly
organized Women’s Division of the

Age

34, M.B.A., Thorough knowledge sales and supervision to industrial and O.E.M. 4 years selling metal fabrication, 7 years sales
wa

manager metals.
cluding
Desire

Experience in overall company management

production,
medium

figure income.

purchasing,

or small
Write

advertising,

company

Box V-80

with

c/o Lake

credit,

growth

cost,

potential.

Yo

a y ee oP a ENE a ingToma
Ate

sitetfi

PTA SENDS |
University Friends Form New Division OUT
INTEREST
QUESTIONNAIRES

PRESIDENT:
you

URNa

a

Ae

American Friends of Hebrew University. It was held in the Covenant
Club, Chicago.
Plans
were
discussed
for
the
luncheon June 16 in the Drake Hotel to honor Mrs. Edward R. Murrow prior to her departure with
'| her husband for an extended European trip. Mrs. Murrow visited He-

inetc.
Five

Forester.

brew University in 1958.

The board also heard a report
from Mrs. Robert Kaplan, Glencoe,
who recently has returned from a

visit

to

the

University

where

she

was present at dedication of the
Eleanor Roosevelt Chair in Humanities.
Highland Park members
of the
new
organization
include
Mrs.
Philip L. Lipis, vice president; Mrs.
(Continued on page 38)

Interest questionnaires to be used
to help determine types of future
programs and activities of Green
Bay Road School PTA have been
mailed to membership.
Committee
asks
these
be
returned by tomorrow; results will be
tabulated and made known at a fall
meeting.
New
executive
officers
of the
group
are
A.
G.
Hansen,
1919
Spruce St., president; Mrs. P. H.

Prior

On with the Lights!
Sheer

bra-girdle

Jr.,

1010

:~Princeton . Ave.,

first vice president;
Dorsch, 650 Central
vice president; Mrs.

son,

1621

Berkeley

Miss Mamie
Ave., second
W. B. David-

Rd.,

secretary;

and H.’ B. Marder, 1694 Elmwood
Dr., treasurer. See picture, page 27.

set

Moraine ORT Holds
Art Fair Sunday,
Highwood Center

by

warner’s’

Moraine chapter of ORT is sponsoring an art fair Sunday at Highwood
Community
Center from
2
until 10 p.m.
On exhibit will be original oils,

The prettiest set in a month of undies,
concocted by Warner’s
so you'll feel as
free asa summer breeze.
For the lift and curve you love,
this mere slip of a bra;
for cooling down curves,
a minimum of sheer, sheer girdle.
A simply beautiful set—
stop in today.

water

colors

work.

Foreign

including

and

custom

and

framing

domestic

Divitti,

artists

Cortez,

Turner

and Buffet, will have work on display. Prints also will be exhibited.
The art committee includes Mrs.
Melvin A. Goldberg, 3291 University Ave.; Mrs. Judd Goldfine, 3313
University Ave.; Mrs. Paul
Solomon,
3116
University
Ave.;
and
Mrs.
Lee
Solk,
3349
University
Ave.
Refreshments will be served.

21-14: Sheer nylon marquisette
edged in lace, plunge front. White.

,7

$3.95

we %
' $ory

726: Nylon elastic marquisette with
plain marquisette panels. Front edged
‘in satin. Side zipper, White.
$10.95

REGULAR HOME DELIVERY
OF DELICIOUS PURE WATER
%

ENJOYING THE

ead

WATER
YOU

DRINK?

Sparkling Spring
Mineral
1629

Park

Water Co.

Ave..

Free Delivery

West,

Highland

Park

!Dlewood 2-0042

CHRISTIAN
SCIENCE
- ANS INTERNATIONAL
DAILY NEWSPAPER

Good Reading
for the
Whole Family

- News
- Facts
- Family Features

Complete
Selection of Maternity Wear

Shops

The Christian Science Monitor
One Norway St., Boston 15, Mass.

Custom
Formerly
654

CENTRAL — HIGHLAND

PARK

Open

at 1902

Friday

Intimate Apparel

Send your newspaper for the time
checked.
Enclosed find my check or
money order.
1 year $18 (J
6 months $9 []
3 months $4.50

Sheridan

Evenings ‘Til 8:00 P.M.

Name

ID 2-0410

ID 2-1300

Address

City

Zone

State

PB-16 ,
Page

20

Thursday, May 21, 1959
et

ae

|

ON

foal an

ee

;
|

�- Curriculum Changes
While keeping basic progression

Education To High School Board

of

courses

during

first

Township High School District 113 board of education,
at its meeting last Monday evening, heard a 90-minute report
by Leslie Libakken, administrative assistant and student council adviser, in which he gave a resume of the curriculum, now

For example, biology may be a
freshman subject for selected stu-

and in the future.

and

He

equal

said,

to

‘In

or

many

ahead

areas

of

we

are

other

top

Libakken

recently had

E. Wolters, superintendent, at a recent faculty meeting when he said
we are a “good school,” but ques-

an oppor-

tunity to talk with principals in
Philadelphia at a meeting centering
around secondary schools, and to

visit

a number

of the

“top”

tioned

students

to

enter

we

resting

on

our

Regarding point 4, Libakken reported up-coming budget requests
an overhead projector—a visual aid
that permits teacher to address students face-forward while manipulating charts, graphs, pictures and

East-

colleges

“Are

laurels?”

ern schools of this level.
On the negative side he said it
is his opinion that:
1) Highland Park High School is
not taking advantage
of advance
placement courses which would per-

mit

will be

other

explanatory

material

at

height clearly visible simultaneously to as many as 300 students.

in

classes above the average freshman
level.
2) is lagging in implenmentation
of sectioning or dividing students
into classes commensurate with native abilities.
3) currently is not fully utilizing
team teaching under master teaching plan.
4) is not taking advantage of advances in techniques beyond movies and film strip level.

Plans

are

being

considered

for

“closed TV circuit” teaching, recognizing
success in this type of
teaching depends upon the projection
of instructor
personality
as
well as progression of subject matter.
In

for

the

a

budget,

language

too,

is

a request

laboratory

that

lifts the study of languages from
humdrum
‘This is a cat” phrases
and grammar to the ability to communicate through spirited conversation.

Not Standing Still
“But we are not standing still,”
Libakken said. We are taking steps

of Every Kind and Character

accelerated.

dents;
in industrial
shop is being added

woodworking;

drawing

to meet the challenge voiced by A.

schools in the East and in certain
areas, they are ahead of us.”

INSURANCE |

through

fourth years of high school, some
courses for ability-proven students

~ ANCHOR

arts a metal
to carpentry

INSURANCE

mechanical

will be taught

In

all industri-

between

teachers.

After

Office:

—Heard reports from Mrs. Helen Philipson, health teacher, and Miss Lulu Lasswell,
school nurse.
—Reviewed student group insurance.
—Raised
no objection
to entering into
agreements with School Districts No.
106
and No. 107 ‘“‘whereby this School District
would
continue to provide the same bus
service next school year as at present.”
—Rejected
providing
bus
transportation
for summer school pupils.
—Moved to employ Eugene L. Small as

The standard of the world in

Responsiveness

on page

prescription

service
dee

a

pn mieleoe

FIRST

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. . - in the Doctor's Building
1895 Sheridan Rd.

Highland

We Carry a Supplyof . . .

HEARING

AID

BATTERIES

For Prompt, Free Delivery Phone:
M. J. Dray, R.Ph.

23)

A man, new to Cadillac ownership, recently reported great
delight at the quickness and agility of his 1959 Cadillac.
And, indeed, it’s a pleasure to find that a car of Cadillac’s
substance and. stature does respond so promptly to its
driver’s commands. Be it a sudden burst of speed for passing
or a gentle movement into a tight parking area, the 1959
Cadillac is second to none. Visit your Cadillac dealer soon

OR

AUTHORIZED

CADILLAC MOTOR CAR
2050 FIRST STREET, HIGHLAND PARK
Thursday, May 21, 1959

tact ot

Mey

pocsnmns

LOCAL

ID 2-0037

einen

ame ee

YOUR

anh.

ID 2-0093

Pel

to learn about the world’s finest miles between start and stop.

VISIT

Be

sev-

eral years these ideas seem
“to
have caught on in all departments,”
said Libakken.
These
new
ideas
will
result
in
a=
eurriculum
“adapted to more of the needs of
ALL
of our students,” they concluded.
In other business the board:

(Continued

Years

ons

students opportunity to retire basic

tion

AGENCY
21

Res,

two classes of eighth graders
as
compared
to one this past year;
summer
school courses will give
subjects.
“I’m really excited the way these
things are loosening up,” Wolters
said as Libakken drew a vivid picture of intra-department coopera-

Business

1896 Sheridan Rd.
Highland Pork

al art students; business education
will be up-graded and broadened;
high school algebra will be taught

A SOTA
Met 5,4 i

ibakken Reports New Ideas

Se

CADILLAC

DEALER

DIVISION
Phone

ID

2-3442

i

Park |}
ee

1 |

ID 2-9000|}

Paul K. Haines, R.P

�ene

_
eet

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1959

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OUR 28th YEAR
Serving the North Shore

of Tracks

For your convenience we are open:
Monday &amp; Friday Evenings—7 to 9
All Day Wednesday

AMPLE
PARKING AT

FREE
ALL TIMES

ID 2-6260
=

lis:
Page

22

Thursday,

May

21, 1959.

ny

�Hit ACen
)

Bicycle Registration
At Schools, June 6

Continued

the local schools on Saturday, June
Brewer

education

Safety

is

a member

committee

of

of

the

Council.

At a recent meeting of the Council,
the
traffic
committee
questioned the feasibility of placing a
mirror on a tree at the exit of the
Duraclean
Co.
driveway,
for the
safety of pedestrians.

County

Line

Leon

Silverstine,

from

page

21)

Sudden

Joel
A

J.

newcomer

J. Liska.

Rd.;

The parked car of John McKirksey, Gunnton, Miss., slid into the
ear of William Seiler, Deerfield, at
Longfellow
Ave.
and
Byron
Ct.;
Lubbert Schuetz, Deerfield, backed
his car into the car of Louis Bian-.

He

to Deerfield

has

accepted

Deerfield

unwanted

Presbyterian

Women’s
Association will have a
Mayflower luncheon today at the

church.

Margaret

Peterson

clover?

will

give a puppet presentation of Pilsrim’s Progress. Mrs. Arthur Vickerman had charge of reservations.
Mrs. E. W. Zimmer is president.

K ANSEL

SPREAD

administration building.
-et next regular meeting of board for
May 25 and special meeting for presentation
or bias
cn
construction
of second
high
school for 8 p.m, tonight.

Death

and

are

now

their

new

home.

getting

(Continued

on

ANNOUNCES

quick,

easy

way

to |

delete clover without harm

to Moths!

to

your

—

grass.

is Joel

settled

page

27)

first

in

in lawns

RAVINIA

Not any
The suburbs used to be happy hunting ground for hungry moths.
more though — not since Household Pest Control division of Aerosol Exterminators launched their ‘‘atomization’’ attack with new chemicals and new

HARDWARE |

weapons. Just call Household Pest Control. They'll not only put an end to
your moths, but their HPC Plan will get rid of ants, roaches, waterbugs,

447

spiders, carpet beetles and all the other damage- dealing insect pests that
invade our homes. HPC chemicals are safe for people. . , murder for insects.

The HPC

Plan is inexpensive, too —
inside

and

out

as low as $17.50 per year for two com6-room homes.
. . $2.00 for each

Pest Control—Phone
Days

a

HI Ilcrest 6-6173

Roger Williams
ID 2-4387

Store Hours Daily 8 a.m. to
5:30 p.m. Wed. ‘til Noon

for most

7

For Your Convenience

Open Sundays—9

We

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|

Week

. 26

opening of his Spring and Summer
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CORRECT
SPRING SAG

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of—

Urns

Meet

a posi-

Household

®@ Flower

The

Women
Luncheon

Liska

plete treatments
additional room.

Selection

For

Also knocks out poison ivy,
oxalis (wood sorrel) and
wild honeysuckle.

chi, Waukegan, at 945 Central Ave.
There
were
two
accidents
on
North Waukegan Rd., each with one
occupant and different times. lst
Lt. A. J. Lampe of Glenview was
not injured when his car went out
of control near Northwoods Dr. W.
J. Rohlering, Lake Forest, was in-

Highland

Park.

the

Get

tion as copy and account executive
with Hanson and Stevens, Inc. in
Chicago. He was previously associated with the Blackhawk Manufacturing Co. in Milwaukee.
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Liska and their
four
year
old
daughter,
Robin,
moved to 1133 Davis Ave., Deerfield, on April 28 from Milwaukee

Pearl M. Davis, Highland Park, was
turning into a driveway near 944
Deerfield Rd., and her car was hit

by

a

clean,

Accidents
Accidents
reported
this _ past
month were those of H. A. Brettmacher, Fox Lake, whose car was
hit in the rear by Richard Bowder

on

BF

(Advertisement)

Also recommended was a 30 mph
speed limit on Wilmot
Rd. near
Woodland Park School. This is the
same speed limit adjacent to Wilmot School. Further investigation
into
Illinois speed
laws
will be
made to determine if a lesser speed
may be provided. Erection of proper signs for this area was also suggested.
Thomas Wolf of the Northwestern Traffic Institute gave a talk
on the background of traffic law
and enforcement.

of Highwood

Tease)

s.

6. Richard

the

oie ie

Presbyterian
Today

teacher of general science, replacing William
Heck;
Arthur
E.
Gjertson
as
additional
teacher of science; James E. Hunt as teacher of Latin.
—tInvited Frank M. Conley, member of
board of education, to give out diplomas to
graduating
seniors at June
11 graduation
ceremonies in auditorium.
—Discussed
attending Tri-County School
Board
Association
meetings
and
dinner
Wednesday
at Conrad
Hilton Hotel,
Chicago.
—Returned architect’s bill for correction.
—Named committee to consult with Mrs.
Lucille Knoche of Chicago on furniture and
furnishings for new administrative building.
—Approved
payment
of
$10,923.30
to
Kiendl Construction Company for work on

The
Deerfield
Safety
Council
will have bicycle registration at all

FARO

A

Libakken Reports

Hore From ‘Wiscontin

RF

Mabe

Safety Council Plans :

ih He

g:

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J

Page 23

�C. R. ANDERSON
INSURANCE

AGENCY, INC.
—

735

Deerfield

recently

Deerfield,

retired

after

43

years

A Highland Park
bowling
team
of from
Strike
N’
Spare goes to Buf-

service with the company.
Born in Chicago, all his service
has been in the construction department. The Riochs plan to move
to Florida.

5-0155

Road,

Bowlers Leave For Buffalo

Grant E. Rioch, Deerfield, a line
foreman
in Highland Park office
of Illinois Bell Telephone Company,

BONDS

Sound, Experienced Insurance Service

WIndsor

Women

G. E. Rioch Retires
From Illinois Bell

III.

Help defeat the threat of communism by buying U. S. Bonds.

falo,

N.Y.,

part

in the Wom-

en’s_

International

Bowling
The

to take

Congress.

national

tour-

nament was held
early in May. Left
to right, Miss Darlene Field, Miss
Janice Crovetti,
Mrs. Martin Tinetti,
Mrs. William
Rus-

sell and Mrs.
Charles Crovetti.

Exhibitors At High
School Given Awards
Edward
Gorenstein,
406
Mrs.
of
Woodlawn
Ave., art chairman
Highland
Park
High
School
and
vice president of the Art Institute
Alumni

Association,

announces

that two of the exhibitors in the
recent art show at the high school
have
received
awards
for
their
work.
Richard Talaber, Chicago, a student
at
the
Art
Institute,
was
awarded
$5,000. Another
Chicago
student,
Heather
Cortebein,
received $500. These were independent awards, connected with no contest or competition.
NOTICE
TO BIDDERS
City of Highland Park
Lake County,
Mlinois
WATER
DISTRIBUTION
SYSTEM
Sealed proposals will be received by the
City Council at the City of Highland Park,
at the City Hall, 1707 Si. Johns Avenue,
Highland
Park,
Illinois,
until 8:00
P.M.
Central Daylight
Time,
June
8, 1959, at
which time and place they will be publicly
opened and read aloud, for additions to the
Water Distribution System.
The work comprises the construction of
approximately 2300 linear feet of cast iron
pipe water main complete with meter vault
and other appurtenances.
The
Instructions
to
Bidders,
Proposal,
Form of Bid Bond, Agreement, Specifications, Plans, Form of Performance
Bond,
and other Contract Documents may be examined at the office of the City Engineer,
City Hall, Highland Park, Illinois, and at
the office of Greeley and Hansen, Engineers, 14 East Jackson Boulevard, Chicago
4, Illinois. Copies of these Contract Documents may be obtaimed from either office
upon the deposit of Twenty-Five Dollars for
each set.
The amount of the deposit will
be refunded if the documents are returned
in good condition within 30 days after the
opening of bids.
Each proposal must be submitted on the
proposal
forms
included
in the Contract
Documents and must be accompanied by a
certified check on a solvent bank or trust
company,
made
payable
to the
City of
Highland Park, in an amount of not less
than 10 per cent of the total bid or by a
bid bond of like amount, on the form, set
forth in the Contract Documents, as assurance that the bid is made in good faith.
The City of Highland Park reserves the
right to reject any or all bids, to waive any
informalities in bids and to readvertise.
BY ORDER OF
THE CITY COUNCIL
CITY
OF HIGHLAND
PARK
By R. W.
Snyder,
City Manager
Dated
May 11, 1959
Highland Park,
Illinois
5/21-28/59—142

ee

ee

Just as you provide

ee
eS

MEMORIAL

24

Fashions

North

Shore

President

Mrs.

will be shown

by

a

shop.
of

Sheldon

the

organization

Karon,

913

is

Rolling-

wood
Rd. Committee heads from
Highland Park are: Mrs. John Benjamin and Mrs. David Reiff, invi-

tations;

Mrs.

Harvey

Walden

and

Mrs.
Richard
Kaplan,
Wilmette,
fashions; Mrs. Jerome Glenn, program; Mrs. Harold Eisenberg Jr.,
Wilmette, luncheon; Mrs. Kenneth
Gutner, decorations; and Mrs. Michael Weinberg Jr., publicity.
Children modeling in the show
from Highland Park include Craig
Axelrod, Maureen Karon, Jane and
John
Rappaport,
Karen
Resnick,
Jan Shulman
and Michael Weinberg.

CITY

OF

BOARD
OF APPEALS
HIGHLAND
PARK, ILLINOIS

APPEAL

NO. 296

NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
that a
public hearing will be held in the Council
Chamber in the City Hall, in the City of
Highland Park, Illinois, on Tuesday, June
2,. 1959: at 7:30. o’clock: P.M., C.D.S.T.
Said public hearing will be conducted by
the Board of Appeals of the City of Highland Park for the purpose of considering
the application of Mr. Selwyn Zun for a
variation of the requirement of the Zoning Ordinance
regarding
front
yard
set
backs for
Lot 8, in First Addition to Ravinia Forest, being the Northeast corner of
Delta Road and Dell Lane.
At said public hearing, and at any adjournment thereof, an opportunity will be
afforded
to all persons
interested to be
heard.
APPEAL
BOARD
John
N.
VanderVries,
Chairman
Arthur C. Ropiequet
Sidney C. Weil
Samuel T. Lawton,
Jr.
Edward C. Schweitzer
Kenneth B. Lacy
John A. Dienner, Jr.
5/14-21/59—139

insurance

or

make

a

PARK CEMETERY

COMMUNITY MAUSOLEUM—EARTHEN INTERMENT
COLUMBARIUM—CREMATORIUM
PERPETUAL

CHARTER

—

GENERAL

CARE

FUND

We Operate Our Own Greenhouses

Chicago: KEystone 9-4747; 9-4424
ee

Page

Rds.

Ridge Road and Harrison St., Evanston
@ BORDEN Co.

a

*

On Saturday, 12:30 p.m., North
Shore Junior Alumnae Association
of Alpha Epsilon Phi is presenting
a
children’s
fashion
show
and
luncheon at the Holloway House
Restaurant,
Skokie and Glenview

will, so should you choose a fitting resting
place for yourself — and for them — a task
that will be burdensome if left until the
emergency is at hand.

ee

If you want to make a hit with your “home team”
—just come up with Borden’s Rich Milk! It’s the
big league winner, every time, because it tastes so
good. Remember, Borden’s Milk costs no more
and you'll find it at your favorite food stores.

Junior Alumnae Plan
Children’s Fashion
Show And Luncheon

ee

ee

ee

eee

ee

Evanston: UNiversity 4506];
i

Re

Thursday,

May

45062
a

a

21, 1959

ae

�Today And
Tomorrow
:

At The Grand

Opening

Of The New

»
aH
~*~

‘

ewly

Remodeled

And

Enlarge

a

~

~

We're so excited about our new

A

roost

that

we’re

giving

the

joint

away today and tomorrow, May 21

*

and 22.

So slide on in as you

down Skokie.

Man!

It’s the

CONG

‘al

bat

most!..

ce

Our

New

Restaurant

|
2

GAL

|

¥

a

;

CROWN
AT

EDENS

Breakfast,

Too!

;

MOTORS (next door north)
a free gas coupon.

just ask

for

Me

t

O

Fo

e

\4

Here’s

de

Ur
Uncle

un

Lee himself

the unicycle, water
!

he ain’t (he’s one

wings

. . . the

and

of the few

man

Broasted
men

Fr

who

invented

Chicken.

in America

Crazy

who

gives

away food and still makes a profit). Fortunately, he has
lots of blue chip ‘stocks, else he’d lose his entire loot by

R
i

giving away

great food at such

(Editor's Note: You

A.
1

Lee

r

with

1

é

.

every

sandwich

sold

today

and

tomorrow.

i
;

,
8

R

™

14,650 Skokie Hwy.
pe

e

”

Yami. N.of Clavey Road

;
Phone

Orders

Open
e

7

Days

I

A

Week
°

e

Daily 6 A.M. to Midnite
a

Fri.
Thursday,

May

&amp; Sat.

21,

1959

6 A.M.

to

1

A.M.

'
I

|

fe

oenienen pn ago

ricnlag
le

SHRIMP DINNER
Breaded

Served with Zesty Sauce,
Potatoes and Cole Slaw
95

Di ales

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

ty

Piatt

opbtcnsk?

ee

35

i de oteebeaiets Ka wae

35

.60

ee

-50
-70

Lar

Mushroom ........ OR

1.50

.
Pemeenwle

Hades

ot

65

i Mecctetudhaie fs,

35

Fudge .........-.

-40

FOR PICK-UP ORDERS
Just call us ten to fifteen min-

Par

Le

ies

Float

30c

15¢ - 25¢

OGG

DRINKS

................ .10-.15

oie

125

Root Beer

LOR

OR

ave

ahead
your

: ee

eden RO ee

inert

aden:

Breakfast
a

Eggs—Any

Orders

Style—

With Toast &amp; Coffee .... .50

with Rdieon, Faas

&amp; Coltes Te iggaarara 65
wit

am,

ftoas

&amp; Coffee -................... 15

10-15

-10-.15

Golden

.10-.15

with

12-.24

order

Ye ae Sa

Root ‘Beer
Beer

ICE CREAM CONES
10c Pepsi-Cola

Plain Cheese ..... 65.
heese
&amp; Sausage 75

“50

Vanilla

.

PIZZAS
Small

4

eae

Root

.

Carton

ee
oe
a

.......................... 30

SHAKES

biackbuy

SIDE ORDERS

Slaw,

HH

MENUS!

Pisin Shaker 07777 (B8- Hot—Enaetly whenready—Piping
you staat IM
:

pent, age Potatoes ...... 3
ole

A

Chocolate

XTRA RICH THICK

gavong

French Fried Jumbos

A

Fried

Bar-B-Q Beef _. .45

rae

EO

with

_..... 40

MILK

ES

ALL

Kosher Hot Dog .... .30
chee GEE Se oer
50

d Roll

insanely ridiculous prices.

live so long!)..

YO

Potatoes and

_..... gov

Cheeseburger

LIVERS

Sl

Hamburger

YS

END

Served

Served with Fr. Fried Potatoes,

I

I:

Norn

should

SS

TO

ee

BROASTED

:

wa

CALL

Chicken

CHICKEN

|
I

"

Broasted

PN

MENU

1.98

French Fried Potatoes Cole
Slaw and Roll

i

|

.

V4 ee

’
i

EY

THE

GRO aren euenen
Broasted Chicken

Whole
v2

i

A

HERE’S

|

-

be

For

Just cut out the picture of our founder (he’s the guy clutching the daisy below)
and bring it in today or tomorrow. We'll
trade you the picture for a 45 pop record!
You don’t have to buy rT nuthin’ nohow! (Matter of fact—we'll give you the record without the picture if you get mean about it!)

¥
FREE

Is Open

Pancakes—

with Coffee 40
Bacon

offee .... .

with Ham &amp;Coffee ...... .65
Page

25

�ork Will Produce May 23 Junior Prom
,

Committees

Name

4

~~

pen

&amp;

Thomas Stone, president, left

Class officers pictured above

and far right met March 6 to
name co-heads of 6 prom committees: Susan Merrell, secretary, left to right; Miss Mar-

Elite

e
ee

Prahl ? sponsor:

Donald Keare ie
f

president
fe

ae
..

4

and

.

to right; Gale Lansman, social
chairman; Mrs. Loraine Cardebigaa

isi

Bali Ha’‘i’

for the prom.
muring south

Hie: sponsor; and
treasurer,
ierson,

ae

FON

ay

is the name the publicity committee pictured above selected

Setting is to be a tropical island against the backdrop of murseas. Committee members, left to right, are Sidra DeKoven;

Kay Herzog, co-chairman; Susan Mann;
co-chairman; and Anita Clair.

Michael

Mary Bile
complete

the group

that set the wheels

‘a motion

for Junior

Prom.

Paradise; Michael Walton,

$

;

Contestants For Queen, King And Members Of The Royal Court

|

&lt;

’

“¢

On the night of the Prom one of the students pictured here will be
crowned King to reign with the Queen. Left to right are Richard Emmert,
James Juul, Bruce Dierking, Jack Peterson, Kenneth Mack, Bruce Miller and,

From this bevy of lovelies nominated for Prom Court will be chosen one
- to reign as Prom Queen. Left to right are Carol Katzman, Gale Lansman,
~ Mary Loevenhart, Susan Merrell, Moya Watson, Ellen Server, Patricia Ugolini

and Barbara Greenfield.

William Keogh.

;
{
a»

(sd

TICKETS

REFRESHMENTS

Ticket Committee

Mary
en.

Henderson
Decoration

Co-heads

are

and Robert Gagcommittee

mem-

bers (picture left) are, standing,
Susan Hixson; and seated, left to
right, Sharon Aver, John Fox, Catherine Meierhoff and Rita Ronzani.

Barbara Thiele, committee head, with her helpers. Left
to right, Barbara Betterman, Nancy Silverman, Susan Baldrey
and Karen Kinney.
reabiant

Thursday, May

al, 1959

od

�DEERFIELD DOINGS
Mrs.

Donald

E.

Roettger

and

two

sons,

Brian,

10,

and

Andrew,

5,

of 1550 Woodbine Ct. have gone to Sonning, near London England, to
visit her parents. They went over on the U.S.S. United States and
will fly back. They arrived in LeHavre, France, last Wednesday and
from there went
husband while he
the United States
don. Brian will be
while in England.

to Southampton,
was stationed at
Embassy in Lonattending school

Miss
Virginia
Easton
of
1747
Chestnut St. attended the annual
reunion luncheon of the Blaisdell
Illinae (University of Illinois) on
Saturday in the Veranda
private
dining room at Marshall Field &amp;
Co. in Chicago.
Miss Easton is on
the
committee
for the
luncheon
next year.
Mr. and Mrs. David Whitney of
1319 Central Ave. enjoyed a vacation over the weekend of May 8-10
at The Homestead at Hot Springs,
Va. Mr. Whitney attended a World
Book advisory meeting, combining

business

with

pleasure.

.

Mr. and Mrs. William J. Morrison and their little daughter, Mary
Melody,
are moving
on May
26
from 1026 Greenwood Ave. to 1023
West Crescent Ave. in Park Ridge
where they hope their friends will
call on them in their new home.
Mrs. Morrison is one of the founders and a charter member of the
Green
Thumbs
Garden
Club
of
Deerfield.
Their Greenwood Ave.
home has been bought by Francis
Carr.
Oak Spring Lane in Libertyville
is the new address of Mr. and Mrs.
Joseph W. King who moved
two

weeks

ago

from

869

Rosemary

Terr., after living there since 1939.
Their son, Joseph, was home from
the west coast on furlough to see
their new home ...
More couples planning to move
include
Mr.
and
Mrs.
Michael
George, who have sold their home
at 1142 Deerfield Rd. to Mr. and
Mrs. William A. Bixby and their
two little daughters who are com-

England.

Mrs.

Roettger

met

her

SUMMER SCHOOL
REGISTRATION
SATURDAY
S.

S.

mer

Stunkel,

school

School

from

Columbus,

O.

...

The

Georges have bought a new home
at 1156 Myrtle Ln., north of Greenwood Ave. and west of Chestnut
St,
In the

near

future

the

Carlsons will be moving

Robert

from

K.

1329

for

District

registration

ing

director

of

THIS

High

announces

for

A Surprise Awaits You

Applications

School

will

Very

be

accepted

beginning

at

9

High

a.m.

Ses-

sions meet daily, week days, from
8 a.m. to 12:30 p.m. School begins
June
15
and
continues
through
Aug. 7.

The
Howard
D.
Olsens
have
moved from Highland Park to 2901
Farner Ct., west of Bannockburn
... Mr. and Mrs. George Lindsay
moved from 540 Hermitage Dr. to
1415 Hackberry Rd.

Classes to be taught include typing, industrial arts, home economics, review courses in arithmetic
and
English,
and
instruction
in

string

instruments

viola,

violin

and

including

Safety Council Plans

Married

jured

Arm

Couples

Chair

To

European

Take
Trip

A tour through Europe by Maxwell Coker, illustrated with slides,

will

be

shown

through

the

cour-

tesy of the American Express Co.
at
the
Deerfield
Presbyterian

Couples Club dinner meeting
day,
tomorrow
evening,
at

his

car

1360 Waukegan

when

Rd.

church. Mrs. Oliver Joy and Mrs.
Fred Lindenmann are in charge of
reservations.

Hold
You'll
turity.

on
get

to
$4

your
for

$3

Savings
if held

Bond.
to

CEMETERY

Prices

f

Phone DE 6-6500 ‘

O28

Memorial Chapels
* Most Complete Funeral Home
in Metropolitan Area

¢ Perfect accommodations for
small or large attendance

* Convenient to North Shore
and Downtown Chicago

¢ Parking adjacent to building

* Funeral consultation and arrangements may be made in your
own home with our North Shore representative.

23)

a tree

near

SUBURBAN

PHONE

NUMBER—VErnon

5-2221

Gealtl thie

Maud A. Adams, Glenview, made
a right turn from Waukegan Rd. at
County Line Rd., and her ear collided with
one
owned
by Jacob
Grosch Jr.

Frithe

Mr. Coker lived in Europe for
28 years and has taken 18 round
trips to and from the continent,
traveling in every country except
Russia.

hit

Reasonable

bo

cello,

Here from Roswell, New Mex., to
visit her son-in-law and daughter,
Mr. and Mrs. James Peterson of
747 Chestnut St. is Mrs. Genevieve
Dallas.

page

GARDEN

Green Bay Rd. &amp; 18th St.

bass.

from

Not Visited

in

Park

Waukegan
Rd.
to
Dallas,
Tex.,
where Mr. Carlson has been transferred. They
have found
a good
home for their little pony.

(Continued

BEAUTIFUL

summer _ school

at Highland

Have

that

classes by elementary students in
the area completing eighth grade
this semester will be Saturday.
auditorium

If You

sum-

Township

113,

Northshore Garden of Memories

Save up to $102.75 over Ford’s

or LOngbeach

5206 North Broadway, Chicago

(Just north of Foster)

Save on aluminized muffler that

Save up to $62 on other accessories

nearest competitor,*
on a Fairlane 500 with heater,
radio and automatic transmission;
with air conditioning you can save

1-4740

nee

normally lasts twice as long

Save on body finish that never needs waxing

$219.85

ma-

Culligan soft water

cares for
tenders

Save on the standard
high-capacity battery which
offers surer starting

Save up to $55 a year
on regular gas and y/

The world’s most beautifully proportioned
car. The Galaxie Club Victoria—just
$52 more than a Fairlane 500 hardtop.

:

*Based en a comparison of
manufacturers’ suggested retail prices

PU)

UH

YN

SOMA
©

TRY SOFT WATER

=

BATHING!

g

oe

Only Culligan makes this

5

amazing offer...

|

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=

al

money-saving ideas on how

eZ|

8

to buy and run your new car

C

SEDANS

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=

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Z

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If You’re Interested in An A-1 Used Car—Be Sure to See Your Ford Dealer

;
Page 27

�Elected President
CUB PACK 350 OF
BANNOCKBURN HA Osteopathic Ass‘n
PINEWOOD DERBY

RAVINIA
WASH TUB
Roger

Williams

IDlewood

Ave.

2-9771

and

and

to

Saturday

8:00

A.M.
on

5:30

P.M.

Winners
follows:

...

to

Closed

4:00

P.M.

CENTRAL

HIGHLAND

Make
Ads

AVE.,

it a habit to read the Want

every

week

before

laying

paper aside!

PARK

pinewood

in

each

your

Bannockburn,

lst;

Bannockburn,

2nd;

group

were

Carlson,

William

Paul-

son and Peter Busse, all Deerfield,
in first, second and third, respectively, in the eight year olds.
Gregory Jordt, Richard
Franke
and Jeff Krase, all of Deerfield,
in first, second and third, respectively, for the nine year olds.
Joseph Soprani, Deerfield, Les-

lie

RESA \LE VA LUE
New homes
are

well

are like cars in many
built

they have good

they

won't

RESALE VALUE —

Bannockburn,

Bruce

Zook, Deerfield, for first,
and third, respectively in
year olds,
Ribbons
were
awarded

second
the 10
to

all

will

school
of Frank

Officers

following

be

band

pre-

under

Jacober.

Installed

new

officers

will

Mrs. F. C. Ritter, president for
the year 1959-60, who. served as
vice
president
this
year;
Mrs.
Harry Henderson,
vice president,
and Mrs, Roland LeClair, secretary,
who
were
elected
at the
April
meeting: Robert C. David will continue as treasurer for the second
year of his two-year term.
Paul
Dr.

W.

J. Mauer

Jr.

as

A Deerfield physician, Dr. William J. Mauer Jr. of 964 Brookside
Ln., was elected president of the
first district of Illinois Osteopathic
Association for 1959-60 and was installed May 13.
Dr. and Mrs. Mauer
and their
two children, Kathryn, 4, and Billy,

14%,

moved

to the

village

in

Sep-

tember 1958 from Chicago.
Dr. Mauer was graduated from
Evanston
High
School,
attended
U.S.
Naval
Academy,
Annapolis,
Md., and received his professional
education
at Chicago
College
of
Osteopathy
from
which
he
was
graduated
in June
1956
and
inwinners and first place
ners received trophies.

race

win-

its

Greenfield,

president

newly

by

elected

the

School

Board of District 109, will be introduced to the PTA membership
by Mrs. Oben Holt, retiring president.
The
annual
luncheon
for
the
teachers
and
staff
of
the
four
schools
in the
district,
Walden,
Maplewood, Kipling and Deerfield
Grammar
School, was
served by

the PTA Board on May 13 at Walden
School,
with
Mrs.
James
Schultz, PTA
in charge.

hospitality

chairman,

terned at Chicago Osteopathic Hospital on Chicago’s south side.
He is a member of the American
Osteopathic Association and is also a Mason, Knight Templer and
Shriner.

| greater stability!

CO cisids

they

Davies,

direction

The

Carl-

Judges
selected
the
following
winners for the best designed cars:

program

the

be installed:

Harris,

William

by
New

Lagoria,

Peter

thause, Deerfield, 2nd; Bruce Zook,
Deerfield, 3rd.

BEF ORE anh buy

the

as

son, Deerfield, 3rd.
Nine
year
olds, Richard
Ried,
Deerfield,
1st;
Gregory
Jordt,
Deerfield,
2nd;
William
Denniston, Bannockburn, 3rd.
Ten year olds, Willard Askew,
Bannockburn,
Ist;
Richard
Ben-

William

musical

derby was

Eight year olds, Robert

Wednesday

SERVICE

IDlewood 2-4400
608

A.M.

annual

A

sented

climaxed
by
the
championship
race for the class winners. Robert
Lagorio is grand champion of the
pack; Willard Askew, second place
and Richard Ried, third.

HOURS...

8:00

“Everything for the
Table’’
DELIVERY

The

SHIRTS and
DRY CLEANING

GROCERIES

The
final
District
109
PTA
meeting for the current school year
will be held this evening at 8 p.m.
in the Grammar School auditorium.

George

charter to Mrs. William Denniston,
president
of
the
Bannockburn
School Mothers Club, the sponsoring organization of the pack.

Drying Service

MEATS

Grammar School

Schmid, assistant district commissioner, presented
the Pack
350

Complete Washing

QUALITY

meeting,

Meets Tonight In

.

592

At the last pack

District 109 PTA

respects. Unless

hold

up.

And

unless

they are a poor buy!

The homes that have the highest resale value are those
with walls
TER.
be
keep

and

All real
a

fact.
their

ceilings
estate

That

of GENUINE

records

is not

merely

atiractiveness

cause homes

and

longer

AND

PLAS-

surveys

LATH

prove

this to

because

such

than

others,

homes
but

be-

built with lath and plaster are recognized

by real estate
homes — well

appraisers
built from

and banks
foundation

as well
to roof.

built
Last,

but not least, PLASTERED walls are the easiest to
repaper, redecorate or repair — the easiest to restore
to their

original

freshness

and

beauty

to

attract

the

eye of any second buyer.

—

GENUINE PLASTER
FIRE RESISTANT © SOUNDPROOF
BETTER RESALE VALUE

Knock on the wall!
YOU CAN TELL IF IT’S

GENUINE

LATH
AND

PLASTER
re

me

is LATH =
PLASTER

BUREAU FOR LATH
G PLASTER OF LAKE COUNTY
affiliated with the NATIONAL BUREAU
for LATHING
Page

28

and PLASTERING

6

9

Wheels

are five inches farther apart.

stance,

not

the

car,

gives

you

This widens

road-hugging

the

stability,

less lean and sway. Only Pontiac has Wide-Track Wheels!
SEE YOUR

LOCAL

AUTHORIZED

Pe iERSEW

PONTIAC

DEALER

CONTIAC

i

PEAS

1949 ST. JOHNS AVE., HIGHLAND

PARK
Thursday,

May

21, 1959

�i

HP Delegates Are
Attending League

‘New Residents
New
are

Several women
from
Highland
Park are among the 400 delegates
of the 69 League of Women Voters
groups attending the annual state
convention in Peoria this week.
Mrs. Clarence Goelzer of 969 St.
Johns
Ave.
is chairman
of the
nominating committee. Officers for
a two-year term will be elected dur-

ing the
Tuesday

convention which
and ends today.

began

Attending
delegates
and
alternates include Mrs. David Joseph,

president

of

the

Highland

Park

league,
and
Mesdames
Maurice
Weigle,
Raymond
Perlman,
Fred
Phillips, Morris Root, Harry Janis,

Donald

Schiller,

Alfred
Donald
Harold

Preskill,
Jerome
Solgon,
Larson,
Spencer
Keare,
Cole, Lionel
Gross, Ferd

Kramer,

Stuart

Sam

Bernstein,

Chaimson,

delegates

are

to

hear

Mrs.

Robert J. Phillips, president of the
national league, and former Illinois
State president, speak today at the
closing luncheon session. Walter H.

Blucher,

executive

director

Southeastern
Michigan
tan Study Corporation

night

on

day’s
quet.

“Modern

Planners”

New
Among

the

suggested
study

for

Society of Certified Public Account-

at

|

14-16.

Chicago.

Price

June

C.

D.

Washington,

North
Central
Division
covers
military construction and water re-

development,

Permanent

including

Mississippi River and Great
navagation,
in
12
Great
States.

Lakes
Lakes

Judith

Wood-

honored

‘contact

at

meeting of Chicago chapter of National Association of Accountants.
As a part of its chapter activities
each year, a special night is set
aside to honor the past presidents
of the chapter. Krueger was president during the years 1931-32.

voin

is

chairman

committee

of

the

on professional

society’s
conduct.

See your eye physician
you can wear them— _
H.O.V. has all the newest |
types. Get the benefit —
of our 20 years of
pioneering and
continued research.

Waves

For the answer to your questions about contact lenses—
write for our new booklet.

Hair Cutting
Specializing

and

statutory

revisions,

state

support

gram

for education,

of

adequate

a foundation

statewide

formity of assessments as a
for state aid; and continued
port of school redistricting,

pro-

unibase
sup-

In All Branches Of Beauty

Culture

CLASSIQUE Beauty SALON
1815

St. Johns

Avenue

7

ae

“Stouse of Vision

ID 2-1603

EXPERIENCED

WILSON

OPERATORS

Craftsmen

of

measures

135 NORTH

WABASH,

GALLERIES
Antiques

to

tax structure
of

Announce the Opening

Of Their New and Greatly

Is Elected
I. Hexter,

ENLARGED

daughter

of the Myron Hexters, 910 Judson
Ave., has recently been elected
president of next year’s sophomore
class. A graduate of Highland Park
High School, Judith was president
of her dormitory this year.

ON MONDAY

GALLERIES
MAY

25, 1959
Located At

=
ht

CaN

Leet

ttae

[son 16a

vies, i)

os

AUKEGAN

w

LE

3

Wagon

Hostess will call with a
basket of gifts...and
friendly greetings from

_our religious, civic and
business leaders.
If you,. or others you
know, are moving, be
sure to phone Welcome
Wagon.

v

:vi

y j

ot ;

g CLAVEY ROAD
ODRIDGE

SKOKIE VALLEY (U.S. 41)
AND CLAVEY RDS. AT
EDENS EXPRESSWAY

LAKE Forest

i! (|

@ HIGHLAND PARK.

Highland Park, Illinois

ID 3-2300

SITATION

Highland Park

Cecile Casey

Ed

RR,

When you move
to town...or to
a new home...
Your Welcome

Fy wa

eran
a Po

Wi

ID 2-0442

Deerfield- Bannockburn
Adalyne Sickel
WI 5-1210

WELCOME
«4
4,

Meh

mbar.

Ample Private Parking

WAGON

[Sehr
be
ps
see

Date PRP

yj

tee

Thursday, May 21, 1959

iN

ST

in Optics

1891 SHERIDAN ROAD
HIGHLAND PARK

items

are the

University Class President
Miss

was

. including all shades
of light blondes

Engineers in the office of the chief

ban-

improvement

Hexter

recently

Krueger
241

Expert Hair Coloring

The league is urging support of
court reform through constitutional

Judith

Hotel,

Rd.,

W.

Krueger,

+

(M.D.) first. If he says

house

carriage

at 160 Park Ave.
Col. Brown was chief of research
and development for the Corps of

sources

Beach

land

Edward
W.

Col. H. E. Brown

Patton’s

of engineers,

Edgewater

As an official hostess for the convention, Mrs. Melvoin will help arrange special trips and entertainment functions for wives of CPA
members attending. Charles Mel-

and
Colonel
Mrs. Brown and
their four children will live in

the

_j|ants

Of

Edward

Items

an equitable

for Illinois
and
election laws.

Col.

the
is
Brown
new deputy diengineer
vision
North
the
of
DiviCentral
of
Corps
sion,
Engineers, U. S.

Army,

Service

Mrs. Charles Melvoin, 974 WildE. wood Ave., has been appointed a
/|member of the Ladies Committee
_|for annual convention of Illinois

Herbert

To-

annual

program

support

Mrs.

CPA's

Park

of the

by local leagues

and

provide

Tools

new

and

Metropolispoke last

at the

Program

Col.

Accountants Group Honors

Homer

Rosenberg,
J. C.
Grun,
William
Schram, Alan Jacobs, John Grunebaum, John Black, Reuben Stiglitz,
Ben Rau and H. J. Merzdorf.
The

To State Committee

residents in Highland

Brown.

Of Voters Meet

Mrs. Melvoin Is Appointed

CHICAGO
©H.O.

�yOiSy

x

YOUR

CHILD GUIDANCE

CAR IS

An

Earning

Fund

for

members

of

Community

Centers

of

Ln.,

of

Bernard

will

Dance

Shore

Child

will be held

Pump Room
East Hotel.
Dr.

Dinner

North

Guidance

the

be

honored

Center,

and

coming

year

at the

Ambassador

Shulman,

227

Ivy

for his work

officers

will

unit

Sunday

at the

GROUP

be

for

the

installed

by

Warren

DINNER DANCE

Taradash,

past president.
Officers from

clude:

Mrs.

president;

219

Highland

Nathan

Mrs.

Warren

Mrs.

Shulman,

Mrs.

gram

Jerry

chairman;

Park

Paul,

of ways

Bernard

The

St.,

Taradash,

and means;
social
Mrs.

clergy

the

what to do
You knowthatcar noise means
trouble —probably disturbing

he,

muffler

In

proBert

Kleinman, social chairman.

someone who will work quickly

of need...

SONS inc.

and

so that you won’t have to be
ee

without your car.

You'd

like

to

feel

|

when

the work

muffler
and for
you own
Your

is done your

troubles are over once
all... for as long as
your Car.
Midas man will do all

_ of these things for you.

And there's a Midas Muffler

a _ Shop near you.

and arrangements may

gs
sits
= cers

sessions,

to attend

LOngbeach 1-1890
HERSHEY
LAURIE

WEINSTEIN,
WEINSTEIN,

Funeral

Director

E. SCHWARZBACH,

Funeral

HERE
SERVICE

;T

prt,
Director

announced

recent-

cars...

noted Yiddish folk writer
morist,
Monday
evening

JEWELER

—

p.m.
Dramatic sketches will be presented by the Players Company of
the
Jewish
Community
Centers,
who will enact “The Convoy” and
“The
Liars,’
two
examples
of
Aleichem’s work.

an

OIL

BURNER

SALES

—

OIL

cast

:

? ep

chem

We Repair ALL MAKES
AUTO and HOME
RADIOS

RADIO

1858 FIRST ST., H.P.
Ample Parking in Rear
ID 2-8120

.

Equipment

HI-FI

| 20th Century TV
and

GAS

PHONE
ID 2-3804

also

Service

BRAUN
OIL

BROS.

444 Central Ave.

Highland Park

MONOGRAMMING

GAS

On Linens, Blouses, Sweaters,

HEATING

SERVICE

A, E. Savage,

Owner

Towels,

OIL - GAS

_ DEPENDABLE CLEANING
;
BOILER

Of Boilers or Furnaces
SALES &amp; INSTALLATION

Windsor

5-0602

If no answer call Windsor 5-4427

|

1010 HAZEL AVE., DEERFIELD

_ Page

30

writer

and

as

a

man.

as well as the solemn and festive
occasions, with a wit behind which
often lurked a touch of sadness.
There

is a story,

stated

news

re-

Meyerson and Mrs. Geraldine Linn
in the presentation of this library
event.
Program

is

open

to

all

interest-

ed. Refreshments will be served in
the Library.

REPAIR

SHORE-LAND
ELECTRONICS

HIGHLAND PARK, ILL.

ID

Inspector

2-2028

for the

for the finest in

Shirts, etc.

Pleating —— Belts

Buttons —- Hand Bound
&amp; Machine Button Holes

Vogue
722

Main

Fabric Shop
Evanston

UNiversity 4-3034

North.

F. D. CLAVEY
RAVINIA NURSERIES

For Your

Inc.
Established

and

1885

Nursery

Deerfield

Needs

CALL

HAROLD ROOT
PLUMBING CO.
Repair

Road
If no

Work

5-3600
—

New

“4

SERVICE

R.R.

Plumbing

WI

WI 5-0035
West

Western

PLUMBING

Deerfield

COMMUNITY
|

a

honoring the Yiddish writer, identified himself
as “The American
Sholom Aleichem.”
Samuel J. Baskin, library chairman,
Mrs.
Oscar
Hillel
Plotkin
and Vincent B. Dickson, are assisting Bertram B. Moss, Mrs. Edwin

LANDSCAPING

Carl Casel, Division Manager

C2000 RSPR ERR
DRESSMAKER’S SERVICE

SERVICE

“Official Watch

Office

CO.

‘[SESEEESRGGSS EES

HEATING

as

Aleichem wrote of daily Jewish life

Apewelers

SERVICE

AND

Heating

Sales and

Speaker

Dr. Edgar E. Siskin will present
appreciation of Sholom Alei-

Leading Watch. Repair. Craftsmen
and Jewelry Designers

-

Siskin,

sciences and Newcomb, women’s di-

WATCH

TELEPHONE

AM

and huat 8:15

lease, that Mark Twain, acknowledging an invitation to a banquet

CORNER CENTRAL &amp; SHERIDAN

-

Is-

the 100th
Aleichem,

stuand

superior
of arts

study at the University of Paris. He
is a sophomore in the college of
arts and sciences.

Mad

Library

Congregation

Call

—

FM

Hillel Plotkin

Shore

Cw. B. Dow

FUEL OIL

RADIO REPAIR

TRANSISTOR

Oscar

North

Dr.

Europe in August and return in
July, 1960. Rosenbaum, one of 45
Tulane
students.
selected,
will

Adjacent

President

The
of

as the

vision at Tulane, spend their third
year of college studying at selected universities in Europe.
Students have choice of 25 universities
in
six
European
countries. The
students
will sail for

3019 West Peterson Road

RONALD

TELEVISION

invited

Under the program,
dents in the college

of your own home.

Open Daily 8:30-6 p.m.
Friday—8 :30 -9 p.m.
FOR
CAR

weekly

lane University,
ly.

be made in the privacy

MAjestic 3-8395

THE MUFFLER GUARANTEED
a
LONG AS YOU OWN YOUR

always

for study in the Tulane-Newcomb
Junior Year Abroad Program for
the 1959-60 school year, Dr. John
H. Stibbs, dean of students at Tu-

... complete funeral consultation

MIDAS MUFFLER
SHOP
1535 Belvidere, Waukegan

“

are

Stanley
N. Rosenbaum, 406
Green Bay Rd., has been selected

you've

made a good buy—that you’ve
saved money and time as well.
You wantto be sure, too, that

counseling

Stanley Rosenbaum
Plans To Study In
Paris Next Year

trouble.

You want to take it to someone who knows what to do—

maintains

free

democratic principles.
The Center meets each Saturday
morning through the month of May
at the Haven School in Evanston
and will resume in October.

ORIGINAL

time

Center
a

Sholom Aleichem
Will Be Honored
On North Shore

intent. rael is commemorating
of the Center is to teach a new anniversary
of Sholom
tradition of child-rearing based on

sec-

Rotblatt,
and

supports

service to families with problems
and is open to everyone. Parents,
educators,
and members
of the

in-

vice

| and you're wondering
|

Guidance

and

vice president
retary;

Beech

IS SUNDAY

Call
VE 5-3100
SHORE-LAND
ELECTRONICS
Open

Work

Dishwashers
Water Heaters
answer call WI 5-0743

685

Friday Evenings

Vernon

Ave., Glencoe

VE 5-3100

ID 2-1110

1 Lecbadel-aleledabedidubelededebiteleLtdbbodetihit
LET ELEEELEELET TELE ET ELT ELT CEE
LT EL ELT EET LL

We Defy You To Lose Money
By Advertising On This Page!
Call
from

IDlewood

2-4500

and get the complete

one of our display advertising

story

representatives.
Thursday,

May

21, 1959

�CARTONS
OF KING SIZE COKE
NO
You

carry home

a FREE

gallon of high-quality
Plus, great ASSOCIATED

carton

of King-Size

Coke

Enterprise paint from
savings during our

CiZE

LIMIT
with

every

ASSOCIATED!

REMODELING
SALE

fi Our Newly Remodeled Quarters
WE pe

¢ Folding

Doors

¢ Shower

&amp; Tub

ON

DISPLAY

e Mirrors

Enclosures

¢ Bamboo

Drapes

¢ Window

Shades

Dy Rian
® VENETIAN BLINDS

=—"

The

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House
The

finest quality

house

you

can

metal,

brick,

cement,

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LOW

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Compietely washable.
Beautiful modern colors.
Odorless.
Brushes clean up with

buy!

Available in self-cleaning or non-chalking finish.
Ideal for wood,

the

Newest

Washable Beauty fer all Your Rooms

WHITE

paint

&amp;

Coloring
on

Whitest
Paint Yet!

WONDER

Latest

Paint

stucco!
4

water.

H

FREE

LATEX
SAVE

$1.20

Gal.

Reg. $5.49

carton of King-Size Coke with every gallon.

Free 49c Brush Comb

Save

*1?? Gal.

With
4

All Purpose Gray
PORCH AND FLOOR
ENAMEL

Quart

——-)

$15.58

|

1

used again and again!

$11.01

ALUMINUM
SALE

Only

Quickly cleans all hardened
brushes and rollers. Contains
no acids, caustics. Can be

Save

EXTENSION

Quart

Sav a brush

Super

A tough, high-gloss enamel
that resists heavy traffic,
rain and sun. Use inside or
out. Easy to apply. Gallons only.

16! weoD

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- 16

EXTENSION

FOOT
LADDER

Lightweight, balanced and safe. Rounded top
guards protect siding.

LADDER

First-grade fir rails,
SAVE $7. 49 hickory rungs. Light,
easy to handle size. Save almost 14.

a

| LAKESIDE GLASS &amp; PAINT CO.
@4 VENETIAN BLINDS

—

OPEN

DAILY

WINDOW SHADES

8:00

A.M.
- 5:30

FURNITURE

12:00

NOON

TOPS

WED.
— 9:00

P.M.

~

FRI.

AUTO

GLASS

MIRRORS

1914

Ist STREET

ID 2-7211

AJ
——

Thursday,

May

21, 1959

a

_—

Nw

Page

31

�Deerfield 4-H Girls
Form

House To Be Moved

Clubs To Learn

To Park Avenue

Cooking And Sewing
The

Deerfield

Dears

4H

Club

reorganized
recently
with
Mrs.
Nicholas Locante as leader. The
club meets on Saturdays for advanced

sewing.

Karen

Sebben,

Olson

is

president;

vice president

and

Suzie

report-

er;
Stephanie
Gullen,
secretary;
Claudette Raven, treasurer;
Ruth

Schwab,
The

recreation.
Deerfield

Marigolds

for

one

of

the

girls

a demonstration

in

Rd.

and

preparations

are

being

made to move the former Bubert
house
at
745
Deerfield
Rd.
to
1157 Park Ave., at the corner of
Greenwood
Ave.
Removal of these buildings will
make
room
for the construction
of the new Deerfield Savings and
Loan building.

4H

Club has been organized for a beginning cooking class with Mrs.
Matthew
Midle
as leader. Each
week,

Deerfield
Construction Co. has
razed the former Spannraft house
and tailor shop at 739 Deerfield

is

hostess

her

home.

Registration of eighth grade students

in

burn

who

classes

Nancy

Feid

is

vice

president;

Linda

president;

Carol

Feid,
secretary;
Karen
Zahnle,
treasurer; Debbie Grodinsky, recreation; Laura Midle, publicity.

Deerfield
wish

at

the

at 9 a.m.
the
C.

to
high

Stunkel

summer

group
viola,

Bannocksummer

school

will

May

in

Highland

is

director

be

23, in
Park.
of

the

school.

Courses
dustrial

and
attend

on Saturday,

auditorium
S.

typing,
Danielson,

Attend Party At Roosevelt University

Register Saturday
At High School For
Summer Sessions

are

being

offered

arithmetic

review,

arts,

economics,

home

lessons
cello

Courses

in

music,

and

bass.

begin

June

15

in

art,

inalso

violin,
and

con-

tinue
to August
7 and
are
11%
hours each to cover one semester.
The fee is $15 for each course.
Swimming registration must be
done by mail before June 1 and
applications have been mailed to
eighth graders.

everything

to safeguard
your health

Mrs.

With the Chicago

skyline as a background,

Wells

of 605

Chicago,

D. Burnette

Sherry

Tractomotive Wins Safety Award

Make us your convenient, one-stop
headquarters for all health needs. It’s
so good to know that you can have
complete confidence in our up-to-date
stock of name brands. Our prices are
thrifty, too!

They were among those seen at
a party given May 7 in honor of
the cast and production personnel
of Les
Ballets
Africains
by the
Woman’s Committee of the Eleanor
Roosevelt Diamond Jubilee dinner
scheduled for May 27. The dinner,
sponsored by Roosevelt University,
will be held in the Hotel Sherman
and will honor Mrs. Roosevelt for
her contributions to freedom.

fitted

Henry Hoeffer, right, of the National Safety Council, presents
award of honor plaque to John W. Carlson, center, president of

Grooming

for

to keep

We'll

put

your

our

calls

expert

clothes

lovely

wardrobe

in top form . . . the better
to win you compliments!

Tractomotive Corporation, for an outstanding safety record in
the construction machinery industry at Tractomotive during the
past year. David B. Murphy, Tractomotive’s safety director, who
was intrumental in the firm’s safety program, looks on.
The
National
Safety
Council’s
highest industrial safety award—
the Award of Honor—has been bestowed
on Tractomotive
Corporation, County Line Rd., Deerfield.
In a letter of congratulations to
John
W.
Carlson,
Tractomotive’s
president, Howard Pyle, president
of the National Safety Council, cited the firm for its low injury rate
in 1958. Tractomotive’s record is

77%

better

than

construction

ma-

chinery per rates established by the
Council for injury frequency, and
97%
better
than
par for injury
severity.

It’s fun to be popular...

and so easy, too, when you

The Award of Honor highlights
a continuous, energetic, plant-wide
safety program developed by Tractomotive and enthusiastically supported
by
executive,
supervisory
and line personnel,
Attending

General

Assembly

Dr. Paul Keller, minister of the
Deerfield Presbyterian Church, is
attending the General Assembly in
Indianapolis which began May 18
and continues through Wednesday,
May 27. He will give his report to
his congregation
on Sunday,
May 31.

always look your best! Let
us help by giving your

clothes
had

the

when

JUST

“dazzle”

they

PHONE...

Member

Of

in the

Bowman

Old Timer’s Club
Robert

canton

Or-

J.

Rd.,

Dairy

Elected

McCrae

of

Deerfield,

1232

was

Win-

more

than

25 years

of continuous

employment.

ae
Service

! !

KOKIE VALLEY
LAUNDRY

Main

X

Office

&amp;

DRY

and

CLEANERS,

INC.

Plant:

IDiewood 2-33 10 — Deerfield Call Enterprise 1616
512-518 Waukegan Ave., Highwood

*

Thought it might be interesting to give you a resume of the Marquis
of Queensbury rules so will devote this and next weeks column to them...
1. Stand up in approx. 24 foot ring.
2. No wrestling or hugging.
3. Round of 3 minutes with 1 minute between.
4. 10 seconds allowed if man falls, must get up unassisted, other
man retires to his corner.
More rules next week.

1775 SECOND

announcement

finances.
is used
village.

By BOB GREENWALD
Have you ever wondered just what the Marquis of Queensbury rules
are? ... Thought I would check up on it and find that in 1872 at a
tournament in London the first fight was fought under these rules ...
Boxers wore gloves, fought 3 minute rounds with wrestling, throwing,
gouging barred.
_

GREENWALD’S,

the

Hollingsworth,

STREET

—

ID 2-1100

This
on

by

director

monthly

arterial

ADJUDICATION

M.
of

H.
state

allotment

streets

AND

CLAIM

in

the

DAY

NOTICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to all persons that the first Monday of July, 1959, is
the claim date in the estate of DORATHY
L. FIDDER, Deceased pending in the Probate Court of Lake County, Illinois, and
that claims may be filed against the said
estate on or before said date without issuance of summons. All claims filed against
said estate on or before said date and not
contested, will be adjudicated on the first
Tuesday after the first Monday of the next
succeeding month at 9 A.M.
RAYMOND
FIDDER, Administrator
Behanna and Engber, Attorneys
1935 Sheridan Road
Highland Park, Illinois
IDlewood 2-4304
5/14-21-28/59-135

Thursday,

May

4

elected

seargeant-at-arms of the Bowman
Dairy Co.’s Old Timer’ Club, at the
annual
dinner
held
recently
in
Chicago.
Club
membership
is
limited to Bowman
employees of

to

FAVORITE SPORT M at

FOR

32

membership

Deerfield’s
allotment
from
the
Illinois state motor fuel tax for
April amounts to $3,315, according

ID 2-3310

Page

for

der of the Arrow.
Scoutmaster R, N. Becker had an
induction ceremony for Jim Schultz
who
was
given
his
tenderfoot
badge. Other special awards were
given to Tom
Ohlson
and David
Lager.
All played the game “‘steal the
bacon.” The colors were then retired.

Deerfield Receives $3,315
In April Motor Fuel Tax

new!

Fast Pick-up

¢)

Troop 52
John Murtfeldt, Scribe
The meeting was
opened
with
the flags and
the pledge
of allegiance.
Three representatives from the
Order of the Arrow told the purpose and history of that organization. A secret election was
conducted to vote for the Scout most

ID 2-0143
DELIVERY

Good

of

Ln.

DEERFIELD
BOY SCOUT NEWS

PHARMACY

Central
FREE

Klapman

21, 1959

z~

PEASE

left to right, are
Julius

and Mrs. H. A. Harris of 1055 Meadowbrook

quality you
can rely on
every time

495

Ln., Mrs.

�Come to our party...you may win a color TV!

|

|

GRAND OPENING
Now

through

Saturday,

May

23

AT THE LAKE FOREST OASIS ON THE ILLINOIS TOLLWAY

er

‘

Di SCOVE

a

TO LLWAY

TR AVEL

Come and see the world’s most modern service stations .. . built

!

Now’s your chance to try Tollway convenience. There’s

¥
‘

ot
sf
a

side of the tollway where friendly, courteous attendants care
for your car in a dazzling new world of automotive service.

re

if

nothing like it to speed you south around Chicago to the
Northwest Tollway, the Indiana Toll Road, or north to
the Wisconsin state line. No stop lights or signs, no in-

tersections, just smooth

travel all the way.

Come and see the newest way to dine when you’re on the road...

i
Ae

.
yi:
:

FREE
Gi FITS FOR
ALL i
Ladies... Hawaiian Orchids! Men... Magnetic Coin
Holders! Children... Suckers, Popcorn! Everybody...

unique, new “‘Over-the-Tollway”’ restaurants, run by the worldfamous Fred Harvey restaurateurs.
Relax with a sizzling
steak dinner... or just a cup of coffee...as you watch the

i

y

Soft Drinks, Coffee!

&amp;

VALUABLE
Gtand

y

tension-free

and operated by Standard

Oil. There’s one station on each

E
:

tollway traffic pass below.

PRIZES!

Pri
see's
ze.
as oe chee
..
ce
LY RCA

Color TY

2 First Prizes. ......40-++.-.17” Admiral Portable TV’s
2 Second Prizes.....+.++.+++...Schwinn Hornet Bicycles

e

2 Third Prizes. .....0+.seee+0e+++.-.GE Clock Radios

eo

Nothing to buy...no need to be present for Saturday’s

io

drawing.

: :

Employees of Standard Oil Company, Fred Harvey
ond their advertising agencies, and their families,
are not eligible for these prizes,

Just be sure to register when

you

visit us.
R

3 § T A

U

R A

N

T

SERVICE
Thursday, May 21, 1959

Page

33:

�‘A’is
te

pray 61

COTTON DRES
for play or parties
$5.95 up

Shorts
Shirts
Bathing suits
$2.95 up
LAKE

sizes 3-14

FOREST

LORIENS St
Jim Michael, golf ‘pro’ from Glencoe, is shown giving
members of Lake County ORT Golf Club tips on proper clubs
to use. Mrs. Norman Foster, left, Mrs. Nathan Berkson and
Mrs. Jacque Berkson listen and watch. The Golf Tea, held recently at Mrs. Nathan Berkson’s Dell Ln. home, encouraged

Pique tennis dresses
$5.95 up

members

to

begin

heard ‘Hints On
265 MARKET

SQUARE

PHONE

LAKE

FOREST

their

golfing

season.

Over

Better Golf’’ and saw Michaels’

35

members

demonstra-

tion.

548

struction of a three story addition to the
North end of the present building at such
site, such addition to extend the existing
building approximately twenty-five (25) feet
NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
that a | North.
At said public hearing and at any adpublic hearing will be held in the Council
journment thereof, an opportunity will be
Chamber in the City Hall, City of Highland
afforded
to all persons interested to be
Park, Illinois, on Wednesday, June 3, 1959,
at 8:00 P.M. Said public hearing will be heard in relation to said matter.
conducted by the undersigned, the Zoning
EDMUND L. ANDREWS
Committee for the City of Highland Park,
MRS. MILTON K. ARENBERG
designated
and
appointed
by the Mayor
CHARLES KEITH SHAY
and City Council of said City, for the purJERRY C. LEAMING
pose of considering the application of Villa
JOHN H. THOMSON
St. Cyril, 1111 St. Johns Avenue, Highland
5/14-21/59—138
Park, for a Special Permit allowing conHIGHLAND PARK
ZONING
COMMITTEE

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

PUBLIC

SPEAKS FOR ITSELF
ONE DRY TELES WHY

HEARING

PS

Fe ace ‘

Ss

A yardstick shorter outside, seats six, stunningly styled—hence, the

fastest rising sales curve in the industry. —

Easy to handle, turn, park.

Prices start several hundred dollars under the so-called “low-priced” field.
alt Low insurance and maintenance bills. In the Mobilgas Economy
Run, The Lark V-8, with automatic shift, outscored all V-8’s—22.28 miles

per gallon average. The “6” tops that. Past See it, drive it!
Avallable as a 2-door and 4-door
sedan, hardtop and station wagon.

ALL the time .. . on ALL

PHONE

ID 2-4551

dry cleaning!

TODAY!

Discover what you'll save at
EDENS
SEE

Page

34

MOTORS,
THE

INC., 680 SKOKIE

STUDEBAKER

VALLEY

TRUCKS...THEY

RD., HIGHLAND
COST

LESS,

TOO!

PARK

Serving the North Shore Over 60 Years

Phone Today . . . ID 2-4551
2226 Green Bay Rd., H.P. — AMPLE FREE PARKING
Thursday,

May

21, 1959

�for all your lumber needs
Craftwood stocks the greatest variety of species,
grades and sizes of finishing and construction boards,
mouldings and plywoods. Kiln dried of course.
Special milling to your specifications and
courteous assistance in the proper selection of lumber to suit
your needs. Prices include delivery. Come in or phone today.

PINE BOARDS

PINE AND HARDWOOD MOULDINGS

You will enjoy working with Craftwood quality pine.
Three grades priced per lineal foot.

All these

Size
Utility
Prices
1x2
BG
Per
1x3
AY
Running
1x4
5%
1x6
8
Foot
1x8
11
1x10
13
1x12
16
13” and wider in clear up to 24”
Pine

Knotty
w=
i eee
h&lt;~
12
16
20
24
usually

others

MOULDINGS
Base 3%” Modern
Base

in

stock

at all

times

Pine
14¢

Shoe 42x34’

Mahog.
21¢

Wal.
438¢

Birch

Oak

Ash

3

7

11

9

7

7

11

16

34

26

19

19

Corner Bead 34"

8

14

18

15

12

12

Cove 34x 5’

4

8

14

Il

9

9

Stops 1 3/8"

5

9

18

14

11

il

15

19

52

35

27

27

4.26

7.80

16.96

11.65

8.65

8.65

Casing 2%"

Stool 214”
Jambs 3’ x 7

Kiln dried, smooth, straight and even textured.
Use it, you'll see the difference.

wy!

many

Clear

Clear
112”
2”
1%”
8¢
14¢
17¢@
25¢
&amp;
24
35
38
32
45
24
48
67
32
62
89
40
80
1.10
48
96
1.34
available at slightly higher price.

CONSTRUCTION LUMBER
2x2

and

6¢

2x4
2x6

iT
15

2x8

21

2x10

27

2x12

33

pay

4x4

to

6x6

Al

6x8

44

HARDWOODS
Prices are per board foot, random width and length, surfaced
two sides, Finest quality (graded FAS), In stock at all times.

specializing

25

insta

in home
owner service!
LRM
ELD MOINES,

We handle only U.S, Plywqod
thickness available. Here

stock. Any size or

are a few examples

priced per square foot in full 4’ x 8’ sheet.

Species

Price

Species

Ash
Basswood
Balsa
Birch
Butternut

65
61
.70
1,05
.84

Mahog.

Price

Phil. Mahog.
Maple
Oak Red
Oak

White

Cherry

.89

Teak

Chestnut
Cypress

60
60

Rosewood

Walnut

Ebony

For
Interior
Use,

Thickness
4
Per Sq. Foot
, 14%
Per 4 x 8 Sheet 4.64

Sie.
20
6.40

WIS
26
8.32

BLE
30
9.60

3/4’
33
10.56

For

Thickness

1/4”

878"

bi

BA

SBS

Outdoor

Per Sq. Foot

16%.

‘21%

28%

33

37%

Use or
Good
Both
Sides

Per Full Sheet

5.28

6.88

9,12

9.60

12.00

S4S

stocked

at nominal

additional

1.10
80
72
68
78
2.50
1.32
2.40
10.50

cost

DISCOUNTS
10
26
50
{00

CRAFTWOOD
1590
8 A.M. - 5:30

Deerfield

BF
BF
BF
BF

— 25
— 50
— 99
— 200

BF
10%
BF
20%
BF
25%
BF 331/3%

NOTE:
FAS

These prices apply to
stock

surfaced.2 sides

random width and length —
Allow 48 hours for delivery.

ciniese cole i
Road,

P.M.—Thursday

Highland

until 9—Sunday

Park,

Illinois

10-1

Just west of Route 41—Phone IDlewood 2-0140

Thursday, May 21, 1959

Pee

Page

35

�ADJUDICATION

AND

CLAIM

DAY

Wilmot School Has Science Exhibit

NOTICE
NOTICE IS HEREBY GIVEN to all persons that the first Monday of July 6, 1959
is the new
claim
date in the estate
of
THOMAS
J. PETERS,
Deceased, pending
in the Probate Court of Lake County, IIli-

air conditioners at discount

the north shore’s smallest discount house!
Moley TV

e

670 Central Ave., H.P.

e

nois,

and

date

without

against the

ID 2-2042

that further claims

may

be filed

said estate om or before
issuance

of

summons.

said

All

claims filed against said estate on or before

said date and not contested, will be adjudicated on the first Tuesday after the first
Monday of the next succeeding month at
9 am.
ESTHER
G. PETERS, Administrator
Behanna and Engber, Attorneys
1935 Sheridan Road
Highland
Park,
II.
IDlewood 2-0304
5 /7-14-21/59—129

a&gt;)

5) ¢
any of these famous
nated.&lt;=

The Wilmot
ence

world.

electrical
Marcia

Electric Ranges

of District

110 held a science

exhibit

Gerald

R.

demonstration

Agenbroad

and

Firak

by,
Harlan

is science

left

to

Baker,

teacher.

right,

Above

Patrick

is an

Emmett,

sales department

of of

Public Service.

ADMIRAL
FRIGIDAIRE
GENERAL ELECTRIC
KELVINATOR
SEARS’ KENMORE
MONARCH
NORGE
PHILCO
RCA WHIRLPOOL
HOTPOINT
WARD'S SIGNATURE
WESTINGHOUSE
‘

School

recently and demonstrated principles and processes of the sci-

Among the winners were Robert Lantz and Jon Eaton
who built a car which they are proudly displaying and which
won third prize.

Start Cooking Better, Living Better—Electrically
Now a new Electric Range can be installed at a fraction of actual cost.

rt

| DURING

Your dealer is
offering standard
installation

“599°

Limited time only
— This money-saving
5

range

installation is available to Commonwealth
EdisonPublic Service Company
customers living in single
family dwellings. Your
dealer has leaflet describing
meme: Ai taetalation.

&gt; LOOK FOR BIG RED “E” FOR SPECIALS AT YOUR DEALER'S &lt;

CO Public Service Company
© Commonwealth Edison Company

Page

36

Michaele Wondreis an dEugene Kopp are exhibiting a furnace which they built. Dale Dingman (not shown) received
a prize for his solar furnace exhibit. First prize winner for her
funicular railway exhibit was Timmie Driscoll. Second prize
winners, not shown, were Tandel Brown’s oil field and Fred
“eeter’s electroplating exhibit.
Another third prize winner was Deanna Davis for her
2mbryology of a chicken project. Over 100 excellent projects
were shown at this year’s fair, Mr. Firak reports.
Thursday,

May

21, 1959

�MEET

Howard

THE

Weiner

WHEELS

Arthur

Mann

Stuart

Perom

AT EDENS MOTORS |

Distinctive automobiles and skillful,

in pleasurable driving
— from the

responsible service is the pledge of

economy of the Lark to the distinc-

Howard Weiner, Arthur Mann, and

tion of the Lancia or Mercedes —

Stuart Perom to the customers of

we place our experience and abili-

Edens Motors. Whatever you want

ties at your service.

.
C
N
I
,
S
R
O
T
O
M
S
N
EDE
On Skokie between
ane

Thursday, May 21, 1959

Clavey and Deerfield Roads

Phone:

IDlewood

3-2222
Page 37

�African Violet Society Meets
For

FAST
PHOTO
;

meeting

W
OF YOUR
IMPORTANT PAPERS
| 589

Central

Mart

ID

2-8550

Hold

=&amp;

HSER
LEE

North

at the home

You'll
turity.

i

Shore’s

on
get

to
$4

your

of Mrs. John

for

$3

Savings
if held

Bond.
to

ma-

Finest

CAMP—AGES

Bowling

e DELUXE
¢

HOT

For

*

412-12

Archery
°* Horseback Riding
Fishing—on our grounds
SWIMMING POOL
—

served

Information—Call

in

CR

our

The final meeting for the chapter
year
and
Suburban

election
of officers
of
B’nai B’rith Chapter will

dining

2-2450

hall

or

EE
ET
ee DEEL

RO

1-0649

Pee

EET Lp pe

Freeman,

1233

Glencoe

Ave.,
escaped
injury
Sunday
at
10:10 a.m., when his bike went into a car, police report. According
to their report, Mrs. Mindell F. Un-

ger

of

1345

Lincoln

Ave.

on

Glencoe

S,

was

be held Wednesday at the home of
Mrs.
Seymour
Cousin, 256 Oak

driving

Knoll

driveway
over the sidewalk
and
parkway, down into the car.
She swerved to avoid him, police
said, but the boy struck the right

Terr.

Mrs.

Carl

Reinish,

president, and Mrs. Joséph Libman,
chairman of the day, invite the
and guests to luncheon

north

when

the

boy

rode

out

Ave.

from

a

fender of the car and fell onto the

past president of B’nai B’rith No. 6.

°

LUNCHES

David

Elections Wed.

The following officers for 195960 will be installed by Mrs. Frederick Solomon, 411 Woodlawn Rd.,

Located in nearby NORTHBROOK
All activities on our grounds
_ Athletics

Chapter Meeting,

membership
at 12 noon.

SUNNY ACRES ‘
DAY

Boy Injured When
His Bike Hits Auto

B'nai B’‘rith Holds

Contest

King, 666 Lotus PIl., at 1:30 p.m.
Members will submit Violet plants
in unusual containers to be judged
by
Mrs.
Stephen
Mueller,
Deerfield.

PLIABLE PLASTIC
LAMINATING
Camera

And

North Shore African Violet Society June 3 will have a dessert

COPIES

AND

Powell's

Dessert

Mrs. Lester Arbetman, president;
Mrs. Irwin Baskes, administrative
vice persident; Mrs. Sidney Schultz,
vice president; Mrs, Jerome Glenn,
vice president; Mrs. Robert Ballis,
vice president;
Mrs. Robert Zall,
recording secretary;
Mrs. Samuel
Robbins,
corresponding
secretary;
Mrs.
Herbert
Lapine,
treasurer;
Mrs. Ear! Price, financial secretary;

parkway. He suffered abrasions of
the left shoulder and back. He was
released
as “not seriously hurt,”
according
to police,
after
being
taken to Highland Park Hospital.
Police said no ticket was issued |
to Mrs. Unger.

Mrs.

Jack

Rubin,

sentinel;

BRAESIDE PTCA
ANNUAL FIELD
DAY IS SATURDAY
The

through

Braeside

Field

Day

fifth

grade

will

start

at

2:30 p.m. under the supervision of
Andy Voisard, physical education
director of Braeside.
Spectators
are
asked
to bring

picnic baskets for the 5 p.m. picnic
supper. Cold drinks and ice cream
will be sold by the PTCA. At 6 p.m.,
there will be a softball game for
the fifth grade boys and a soccer
game for the fifth grade girls.

University Friends

Mrs.|

Samuel Smith, historian; Mrs. Carl
Reinish, counsellor; and Mrs. Roy
Server,
Mrs.
William
Rubenstein
and Mrs. Howard Goldstone, trustees.

annual

will be held Saturday at the school
playground, according to David L.
Elias, 183 S. Deere Park Dr., chairman, Field events for kindergarten

(Continued

from

page

20)

Herman Winograd, financial secretary;
Mrs.
Myer
Hatowski,
Mrs.
Jerome Margulies and Mrs. Joseph
Wortheimer.
NOTICE

OF

RECEIVING

BIDS

for
for

WLS, 890 k.c., 6:45 p.m.

WBKB-TV
Channel

7 * Sunday

Sunday,

“God

* 9:45

May

WNMP

a.m.

1590

Sunday,

24

k.c., 9:15 a.m.

May

24

“How Lives Can
Transformed”

!s Our Refuge”

Be

printing
Notices,
advertisements,
etc.
the City of Highland Park.
Sealed proposals will be received by the
City of Highland Park, Lake County, Illinois, until 12:00 Noon
Monday,
June
8,
1959 in the Council Room, at the City Hall,
1707 St. Johns Avenue, for printing at rate
per line for all notices, advertisements, reports, proceedings
and miscellaneous matters required to be published by law in a
newspaper of general circulation in the City
of Highland Park. Bids to be addressed to
the Mayor and City Council of the City of
Highland Park and endorsed ‘‘Proposal for
printing all Notices, etc.”
The City Council
reserves the right to
reject any and all bids.
By order of the City Council

May

11, 1959

ROY MILLEN
City Clerk
§ /21-28 /59—-143

May

15,

1959

Mr. Roy Millen, City Clerk
City Hall
Highland Park, Illinois
Dear Sir:
I wish to state that I personally did not
contribute anything towards my 1959 election campaign.
Very truly yours
FRED
E. GIESER
Subscribed and sworn to before me
this 15th day of May, 1959.
FRED
A. EHRENS
Notary Public.
§/21/59—145
Mr. Roy Millen
City Clerk
City of Highland Park, Illinois
Dear Mr. Millen:
1 hereby certify that the following is a true
statement of my campaign expenses both for
the Primary Election held March 3, 1959,
and
the General
Election
held April 21,
1959, for Councilman of the City of Highland Park, Illinois:
Personal
Campaign
Expenses
$73.50
Yours very truly,
BARRETT
K. MASON
Councilman
Subscribed
and
sworn
to before me this
13th day of May, 1959.
ROY MILLEN
Notary Public
5 /21/S59—146

Shop Wards Sale Book now, for
big savings on colorful, comfortable outdoor furniture for better sum-

mer living.

Here’s a typical value:

NOTICE

3-Pc. Set:

We

FREE

Always

Answer!

Call ID

Estimates

2-3220
® Sturdy

tubular

steel,

in

smart bronzetone
® Weather-resistant

finish.
Saran

plastic seats and

backs.

SEE IT ON

® Handsome pattern of contrasting leaves on white.
® All pieces fold for easier
carrying and storage.

DISPLAY TODAY

TO

BIDDERS

Sealed proposals will be received by the
City Council on Monday, June 8, 1959, until 12:00
Noon
C.D.S.T.
in the Council
Chamber at the City Hall, 1707 St. Johns
Avenue for the furnishing of:
A ‘Surety Bond
for the City Treasurer
of
the
City
of
Highland
Park,
Lake
County, Illinois,
i
and, at that time will be publicly opened
and read.
Specifications
and
proposal
forms
are
available at the office of the City Clerk,
City Hall, Highland Park, Illinois and all
proposals shall be submitted upon the forms
so provided.
The Council, at a subsequent meeting will
award a bid to the lowest and best bidder.
Further, Council reserves the right to reject any or all bids, to waive any imformalities in bids and to readvertise.
ROY MILLEN
City Clerk

5 /21-28/59—144

STATE

OF

rere
6S

Your Copy of
Our Summer
othe.

olhe

site.

olte..stte.

Sale Book!!

side. .slte.olte..nitee..oller..tollar...talliear
tal... telllite. taller ....tellirte elle... teller... ellis.

UARANTEED

ee

ote.

and

DRAIN

CLEANING

7 |

Sl

SEWER

a

i

nite

a age 38

1854 FIRST ST.
HIGHLAND
PARK

ID 2-8830

COUNTY

OF

COOK)

ROBERT S. CUSHMAN, being first duly
sworn, deposes and says that he made no
expenditures in connection with his campaign for Mayor of Highland Park, Illinois,
for the term beginning May
1, 1959, and
that to the best of his knowledge no person,
firm
or corporation
made
any
expenditures in that connection on his behalf.
Further affiant sayeth not.
Robert S. Cushman
SUBSCRIBED and sworn to
before me this 23rd day
of April, A.D. 1959.
LAURA
V. MURPHY
Notary Public
§/21/59—147

Thursday,
a
¢

f

May

21,

1959

�|

CELEBRATION SALE

cuveeet
/

jf

NEWLY REMODELED

i

4 BIG NEW DEPARTMENTS TO SERVE YOU
|
STEREO &amp; HI-FI RECORDS
|
RCA &amp; MERCURY STEREO SALE ve
ONLY

$1

.00

AT

REGULAR

DIAMOND

PRICE

$1 698

STEREO

$2.49

$26.98

MonLY
e ELLA

MANTOVANI

CATALOGUE

ON

SALE

SALE

ONLY
YOUR

STEREO

99¢

ON eee

RECORDS

AT

FITZGERALD

© JERRY MULLIGAN

‘

NOW!

4.98 L.P.’s only $3.50
3.98 L.P.’s only $2.50
HEAR

JAZZ

List

SALE

COMPLETE
ONLY

|

788 LE ay Reise

ALL NEW STEREO RELEASE

MANTOVANI

VERVE

SALE

Di

25.00

CAPITOL STEREO SELECTOR SALE
ONLY

NEEDLE

|

@ LIONEL HAMPTON
e¢ AND MANY OTHERS

$5. 95
OUR

NEW

1

STEREO

LISTENING

BAR

0O04404440440444044044444444444444444444444444444444444444244444444444444444414444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444%0400000000000OOO%
hbbtb4444444444444444444444444444444441444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444444%
AAA
AAA
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
SL
MAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAA
A
AAIAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAALAA
AS

MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS &amp; ACCESSORIES
BONGO

ut a

UKULELE

:

Hi ARMONIC

CUSTOM

SALE

aiccaottees

AS

20%

10%

OFF

OFF

ony

.

COMPLETE

20%

Cena

on

PILOT

STEREO

STEREO

AMP,

SYSTEMS

Ss

decree hv gaherye
You

MAGNAVOX
MAGNAVOX

See

15%

on

FISHER

STEREO

$378.90

SYSTEMS

SEE
DD DDD DDD

OUR

PORTABLE

PHONOS

N

Onl

CONSOLE WALNUT ........-2:-.-cc----2eeseese2e0 $279.00
STEREO RADIO-PHONO. .........--------------- 349.00

uc

$195.00
265.00

349.00

HI-Fl

295.00
89.50

Net

AUTEG.-

15

By

PERG

Only

$ 85.00
45.00

‘ne je

224.00
57.00

67.00

i
eae

SRA

210.00
80.00

COMPONENTS

BOGEN: SRAWATT AAA che
oe Ee ee $99.50
WAT
STEHEG AMP bo
9.9
ae BVH SIAL uci ateah a ....--2------os--oe++0+ Bi
~AMP. COMBINATION
249.50
SISHER : TUNER-PRE-AMP ccc. ca

633.8

Pay Only $539.00

CONSOLES
PHONOGRAPHS

PILOT STEREO PORTABLE PHONO. .........-..-ccc-eecceeceeceee 250.00
VM HI-FI PORTABLE PHONO cdiicsidics--seatiavlaracaa dasarde 119.00

"$633.85

You

&amp;

PILOT STEREO CONSOLE-8 SPKiiu

FISHER 40-WATT STEREO AMP. nnn $189.50
ARRARD 88 STEREO CHANGER _
54.50
PICKERING STEREO CARTRIDGE .............. 29:95
2 JENSEN STEREO SPEAKERS
IN WALNUT ENCLOSURES occcc-c-ccce-cocecoeee 359.90

ips

ETC.

RCA STEREO PORTABLE PHONO .........--.----cc-eeeeeeee-e- 100.00

48.00

Pay Only $300.00

CONSOLES

INDIVIDUAL
SAVE

REEDS,

RADIOS

HI-FI

aes 50
shine
;

Ga ea
ocd

4B" WicFT SPEAKERS obi cute

A ADA

OF STRINGS,

DEPARTMENTS

.....--ccccccceececcoeee

ie2ee

Aaa

AAA

STOCK

COMPONENTS
AUDIO

PILOT 40 WATT

»

$7.95 _ rec. $9.95

INSTALLATION

SPECIALISTS
SAVE

SALE

SHERWOOD: SWAY GPK, SYS) LX aekinesccbiiecse 218.00
49.95
en
VidA. CHANGIN SRB SS

NEW

STEREO

SWITCHBOARD

&amp; STEREO

SOUND

90.00
37.95

ROOM

ADAAAAADAAAAADD

Tasice
Graduate

TRAVEL DEPARTMENT
your

to

graduate

matched

.

:

&amp; GRANT

a GRANT

Ne

Orne

1230 W. Maple PI.

Gee

luggage set with

THESE SKYWAY
EXCLUSIVES...
A

newly-designed

leD

Loc

handle

that

keeps

your

identification

locked inside and visible . . . luscious Spring colors executed
Koroseal®*

, , , stay-bright, triple plate chromium

Matic® hinges that pop lid open, keep it open.
Weekender,

$20; Juliet, $17.95.

LIMITED SALE
BUY

NOW

Thursday, May 21, 1959

Skyway

Shown

Prices plus Federal

safely

in tough-to-scuff
Locks® . . . Lift-o-

at right: Pullman, $30;

tax.

GR ANT
708

CENTRAL

&amp;

GR ANT
iD

pity be

PARKING IN REAR
Enter

on

Green

Bay

Page 39

�‘

: saclle.

AND

Funeral

Jewish

NORTH

Directors

Community

SHORE

COMPANY
to the

Since

1865

SERVICE

Complete facilities in your community
for prompt service . . . Lee J. Furth,
Jules L, Furth, and their staff, will

Call Midway

personally

3-5400

arrange

and

conduct

the

entire funeral—a service of warmth
and beauty, observing customs and
ritual with reverence.

South

Shore

Chapel:

2100

East

75th

Street,

at

Clyde

Avenue

SHREDDED
TOP SOIL
SPECIALLY PREPARED BY MACHINE. Easier to Spreade

-—Improves Growing. Most uniform, perfectly processed
soil obtainable . . . at no extra cost.

MANURE—FERTILIZER

OF

HIGHLAND

Phone

PARK,

of the Court for “May Day is Lei Day In Hawaii,” to be presented by
School tomorrow for students and Monday

in the auditorium for their parents. Left to right:
Anthony, king’s attendant; Andy Naiditch, queen’s

at 8 p.m.

standing, Eddie Brodsky, kahili bearer; Ricky
attendant; and Bobby Baizer, kahili bearer.

Seated, Jeff Buhai, king, and Leslie Bennett, queen. Miss Updike is exchange teacher from Hawaii taking the place of Miss Lillian Patterson, currently teaching in Honolulu. There will be girls’

MUTUAL
SERVICES

Pictured are members

Miss Updyke’s sixth grade class at Edgewood

hulas,

boys’

crowning

INC.

ID 2-0027

comic

hulas,

of the king and

Hold on to your
You'll get $4 for $3

instrumental

queen.

Savings Bond.
if held to ma-

turity.

demonstrations,

singing

VFW
Holds

Auxiliary Of Post 4737
Rummage

Sale Tonight

VFW
Auxiliary of Post 4737 is
giving a rummage sale at the Post
home,
667 Central
Ave.,
tonight
from 7 to 9:30 p.m., and tomorrow
from 9 a.m, until 1 p.m. The Mesdames Ray Mann and Mark Caroni,
both of 1997 2nd St.. are the chairmen,

For

MEMORIAL DAY
WEEKEND

of

Hawaii's

national

anthem

All participants will wear real orchids and carnation

For The

and

leis.

Second Daughter Is Born
To Mr., Mrs. Jules Becker
Word

has

been

received

from

California of the birth of a second
daughter,
Elizabeth Jane, to Mr.
and Mrs. Jules Becker, formerly of
Sherwood Forest.

They

have

a son,

Glenn,

and

daughter, Donna. The Beckers
now residents of Ross, Calif.

a
are

Graduate...

POTATO SALAD
BAKED BEANS 38c Pt.
BAKED HAM ‘Ib. 75c
HAMBURGER &amp; HOT DOG BUNS

place

A8c Dozen

ML

They are looking at the right

for

the

world’s

finest

typewriter.

NWS
:
PLACE YOUR ORDER EARLY
We Will Be Closed All Day, Sat. &amp; Sun., May 30-31
BAKERY &amp;
D

E E R

813

WAUKEGAN

F
RD.,

E L D
DEERFIELD

DELICATESSEN
WI

5-0068

Market

Square

Lake

Forest

Thursday, May 21, 1959

�Parents’

Guild

of

Mrs.

(Continued

Immaculate

Conception School will meet tonight in the school gym.
Dr. Robert Jans, president, will
conduct the meeting. There will be
a talk by Sister Eileen, school
principal, a color movie on “Ireland,’

and

the

installation

ficers for the coming

of

of-

year.

Mrs. E, William Immerman will
present
prizes for attendance
at
meetings. Mrs. Frances Weeg, Mrs.
Anthony
Schmeig,
Mrs.
James
Meehan
and
Mrs.
Arthur
Fox,
room mothers, will be hostesses,
assisted by all first grade mothers.
Plans for a Guild-sponsored bake
sale June 7 after Masses will be
discussed, as well as plans for the
closing party of the year. Mrs. Ed-

mund Amendola, finance chairman,
is

in

charge

of

all

fund

raising

events.

"Wild West’ Keynotes
Cub Redeo Saturday
Cub Scouts of West Ridge, sponsored by P.T.A., will hold their
annual
Cub
Scout
Rodeo
Saturday at West Ridge School Play-

ground area from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.
This annual fund-raising event
for the two packs is considered
the highlight of the year, said a

pack
It

full

spokesman.
will

feature

western

western

regalia

horses,

and

an

im-

promptu
band
composed
of cub
scouts of the two packs.
Events
start with a parade
at
9:45 a.m., beginning at the corner

of Clavey

Rd.

and Ridge

Ave,

continuing
to
the
school
Rodeo
starts off with
a

and

where
Bobcat

ceremony.
Additional festivities will be performing clowns, all types of games,
a magic
show,
obstacle
course,

DAY

Give

Spencer Keare
from

chairman;

Mrs. William

:

Kulp,

ways

and

means;

day
Al &amp;

Mrs,

Sam

Smith, student activities; Mrs. Mor-

tingill, circulation.
Also, Mrs. Samuel Seltzer, music;
Mrs. Edward Sorenstein, art; Mrs.
Harold Newmann, scholarship; Mrs.
John Thompson, assistant scholarship, Mrs. John Thomson,
assistant; Mrs. Bernard
Pollack,
Sand
wick Memorial; Mrs. Donald Rigler, personnel;
and
Mrs.
Russell
Johnson, budget.

Other board members,
mothers,
are
Houghtaling,

Fourth

Sgt.
mack

the

1C

Resident

Child
and

In Va.

Mrs.

birth

May

Belvior,
Mrs.

7

of

Va.
Womack

SEASON:

Highland

JUNE

Park

their

is

fourth

the

Domenica
and

the

ternal

Mordini
late

of

Enrico

grandparents

former
Mrs.

Highwood

Mordini.

Pa-

are

and

Mr.

Mrs. W. W. Womack of Humboldt,
Kan,
The
infant’s sisters are Diana,

21%, and Lorettera,
er is Jerry, 314.

114; her broth-

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

DE VRIES GREENHOUSE
offer

A

FULL

LINE

Geraniums

OF

BEDDING

PLANTS

— Pansies — Tomatoes,
as well as perennials

PHONE

960 HALF

...

WI

DAY

etc.

5-5818

RD.

(Rte. 22)

DEERFIELD
V4

Mile

East of Waukegan

Rd.

ii
|

&gt;

also class

ward

WITH

and

Paul

Ammerman.

"Gold

Standard"

of Cooking

Performance

THIS...

American Legion Post Holds
Everlasting Ceremony Tuesday
At the Tuesday meeting of Highland Park Post 145, the American

Legion,

the Post Everlasting

Cere-

mony will be held for all members
who have passed away during the
past year.
The, meeting
will be
open.
Friends
d relatives
are
cordially invited to attend. It will
be held at the Legion Memorial
Building at 8:15 p.m.

Deluxe GAS

Range

horse
shoe.
pitching,
baseball
games and pony rides. Hot dogs,
ice cream and soft drinks will be
served. Blue jeans is order of the

day for parents.
Cubmaster of Pack
Bluford,
325
Sumac
master of Pack
134

Cole,

1276 Eastwood

Summer

34 is David
Rd.;
Cubis John
W.

Ave.

NOW

of His Life!

DUDE

RANCH

camp for boys and girls 5 thru
Ted Fenn, Directors-Educators

12

15 thru AUG.

References

Furnished

23,

years

(with

trade-in)
at

North Shore
Gas Co.

1959
Upon

ONLY

249"

CAMP

Request

PHONE ORchard 4-9789 or ORchard 4-3829
RESERVE A PLACE FOR YOUR CHILD NOW!

DOLLARS.
---- JOHN

MODEL

DID

CP-36-DXT

This 36-inch Gold Star gas range is priced so you can own it now!
features like these help make your cooking rate higher than ever.

HIGHLAND PARK
SAVINGS « LOAN

Thermo-Set

*

Tri-set top burmers

*

Four

*

All burners

*

Built-in leveling legs

*
*
%*
*
*
*

*

Glass

* Automatic oven-broiler ignition

ON

giant

bummer

12,000 BTU

oven

SALE NOW

guaranteed

top burners
for life

door

Large porcelain-enamel oven
Silicone oven-door seal
Removable oven bottom
Lighted backguard with timer
Clock and convenience outlet
Smokeless broiler

AT:

ls Company

ASSOCIATION
Security —

“The Friendly People”

Service — Satisfaction Since 1888

1811 St. Johns Ave.
Highland Park
ID 2-0361
MEMBER OF THE SAVINGS AND LOAN FOUNDATION, INC.
Thursday, May 21, 1959

Stellar

*

top

SEE GOLD

a
Ef

‘

Mesdames
J.
B.
Walter
Davies,

Get a New

Olson

Wo-

announce

Bridget Mordini of Highwood.
Maternal grandparents are

Riding
(corral with horses), natural lake for fishing &amp; boating, overnighters,
baseball uniforms for boys, swimming, all sports, crafts, animal raising, planting
section, bowling, golf, hot lunches, transportation, teacher, staff, etc.

CAMP

Va.,

child, a daughter, Lorraine Frances,
at De Witt Army
Hospital, Fort

SPECIAL
FEATURES
OF
OUR
COUNTRY
ESTATE
LOCATED
IN NORTHBROOK,
ILLINOIS

Satisfied

Bernard

of Warrenton,

Thomas Picker, Albert Malmquist,
Irving Goldberg, Ralph Stolkin, Ed-

the Happiest

exclusive

as-

Mrs. Harry

ris
Kaplan,
co-chairman
student
activities; Mrs. Arthur Blair, PTA
News editor; Mrs. Robert Lauter,
assistant editor; Mrs. W. L. Pet-

TRAIL BLAZER
An

18)

Schwab,

sistant social chairman;

DAY

Child

Has

Henry Fordtran, treasurer; Mrs.
Ralph Pottker, publicity.
Also, Mrs. L. B. Trabert, social

CAMP

Your

page

Former Highwood

SXUPEUAVENOQUGVOQNONEGNENENDOENEOU
ENED ON ENEG ENERGY 22

ot

- Parents Guild © is
Meets Toniight

STAR VALUES

AT YOUR

GAS

RANGE

DEALER, TOO!

�HS

Golf

Team

Brings

Home

Four experienced Little Giant golfers brought home the
State championship from Champaign over the weekend with a
combined

total

of 637

over

Joliet

Catholic’s

617.

It was

State

Championship

Yacht Club Starts Season With Clean-Up

the

seventh time Highland Park High School has taken the championship, more frequently than any other school has won it.
The

win

from

was

last

a

year’s

proper

meet,

revenge

when

the

team went into the second day with
a five-stroke lead over Joliet Catholic, and then blew it, to wind up

Highwood Pony
League Signs Players

with a 634 to the winning 637.

Highwood’s

Veteran
senior
players
Joel
Hirsch, Marty Gmeiner, and Tony
Lamanna, with Steve Oggel, junior,
and alternate, John Levinson, also
a junior,
qualified for the state
meet by winning the district meet
May 8 at Sunset Valley with 297

for 18 holes,
Coached
The
sholdt

By

Repsholdt

team, coached by Ted Repof the high school, remem-

bering last year’s defeat, didn’t let
up on Saturday, and despite a high
wind, shot a 326 to win. Levinson
and Oggel had 79’s, Lamanna shot
an 82 and Gmeiner an 86. On Friday, the Giants shot a 311 total,
with Levinson carding a 76, Oggel
a 77, Lamanna a 78, and Gmeiner

an 80.
Arlington

Heights

shot

a

661;

Peoria and Urbana tied for fourth
with 662. The linksmen were
to
play in the Suburban League Meet
at Wilmette
tomorrow
and meet

Evanston

here

Monday.

Community

Center

is signing up boys in the 13-14 yearold
age
bracket,
to
play
Pony
league baseball. They are asked to
report tonight to Memorial Park at
6:30 with their baseball gloves.
Candidates are needed to play in
the Norshore Pony League. Tryouts
have been held, and tonight’s call
is for boys who have not yet tried
out for the league. A tryout-practice session is set for Sunday at 4
p.m,
when
newcomers
will
be
joined by boys who have appeared
for earlier sessions. A pre-season
game is slated for the Memorial
Day weekend.
Little Major
and
Little Minor
baseball leagues in Highwood are
signing
prospective
players from
seven through 12 years of age today after school at Memorial Park.
In case of rain, boys are asked to
report
to
Highwood
Community
Center. They may also sign up Saturday from 9 a.m. to noon, or from
1 to 4 p.m.

os

Clean-up at Park Ave. beach begins for mem bers at North Shore Yacht Clubhouse. Tidying
up the sign on roof are Charles Ronzani and Roger Vignocchi. On steps are Herb Maier with Bill
Fleischmann (Commodore of the club). In foreground are Jerry Bacik and George Marshall. Standing, Mr. and Mrs. Edward Weeks and Miss Jo-An MacMillen and Miss Madelyn Lencioni.

H.P. Dads’ Club Hears John Chickerneo On ‘Football’ Lil’ Giant Nine
“If you don’t care whether you win, why keep score?” In
Defeats Evanston,
New Football .Coach Visits School
ball coach at Highland Park High School, condensed his footSpot
ball philosophy in an informal talk May 12 before the Dads’ Earns Tourney
these

words,

John

Chickerneo

of

Sharon,

Pa.,

new

head

foot-

Club.

He told the Highland Park fathers, meeting to expand their
program and elect officers, that a
sound football program,
properly
run, “is more than just a part time

set up.”
“I feel it requires
10 months,
possibly 12, to develop. You can’t
pick it up in August and discard it
in November.”
A coach needs to
counsel, to give advice and listen
to players’ problems
all through
the year as well as in season, he
believes.

New Highland Park High School football coach, John Chickerneo, right, is greeted by C. S. Stunkel, who becomes principal
of school July
met students.

1.

Chickerneo

talked

to Dads’

Club

here

last week,

He returns in June.

Cronkhite Coaches Rec Center Little League
Fred Cronkhite will supervise the Little League junior
baseball program for the Recreation and Playground Department this summer.
On his staff will be John Scornavacco,
Frank Karger, Steve Rosenbaum and Ron Sackheim as assistant coaches.
All players will have a chance
to play in inter-park games. Minor
league boys, aged 8, 9 and 10, will
play at Sunset Park, Lincoln Park
and West Ridge
School
Monday,

ednesday and Friday mornings,
from
9 to 10:30
am.,
starting
une

15.

Major

3 / I
Page

42

league

players,

BANK

NTEREST

boys,
10,
11
and
12, will
play
Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays
at Sunset Park at 10:30 a.m., starting June 15.
Old

Elm

Has

Program

Old Elm Civic Association will
conduct
itts
own
Little
League
(Continued on page 44)

He Learned From The Greats
The philosophy
Chickerneo
detailed was part of the wisdom and
experience
he garnered
learning
football under great coaches like
Jock Sutherland,
and by leading
a once-unsuccessful
Sharon
High
School team into victory.
Sharon’s
situation in 1951 was
comparable to Highland Park today, when, “You feel you’ve been
down for a number of years and
want to start winning.”
He outlined the plan used:
“In
Sharon
we
talked
to the
mothers . . . some of them were
against competitive sports, afraid
their sons would be hurt. So we
bought
the best equipment.’
He
added, with a grin, “It used to take
a hard head to play football. It takes
a smart head today.

“Then

we

had to sell the young-

sters on the game.
The
attitude
had
developed
that
they
didn’t
want or have to have good football
because they lived in a prosperous
community
as though
you
have
to
correlate
good
football
with a slum area! I don’t believe
this at all. Where people live has
nothing to do with it.”
The thing needed, he said, is to

BANK?
1771 Second St.

Evanston’s baseball team fell to
the Little Giant nine for the second

time

last

week

as

the

Wildkits

show youngsters from their fresh- bowed to the Parkers, 5 to 4, in a
man year on, by repetition and ex- game here Friday. On the previous
ample, that “they can do it.”
Wednesday
(May 13) the Parkers
Football will be played
at the defeated the Wildkits 5 to 4, in
high school under the same federa- the final game of the district tourtion rules used in Sharon. Players
ney. This earned them a berth in
will practice two hours after school, the tourney.
four times a week, have an offenBob
Hollmann
was the Parker
sive-defensive session once a week, pitcher Friday with Jim Juul and
and a weekly film showing of the Terry
Somensi
sharing
catching
game played the day before.
duties. Evanston got seven hits and
The film shows up weaknesses,
made two errors while the Little
helps players to study the opposing
Giants had six hits and made seven
team and reveals any possible play- miscues.
er injuries suffered.
The Parkers scored two runs in
“We
discuss
the
game
we’ve the first inning, and one each in
played, then forget it. On Monday,
the fifth, sixth, and seventh frames.
there’s a new game, a new situa(Continued on page 44)
tion to study.”
Because he is always “having to Grammar
School Winners
prove football doesn’t take away
Winners in the Grammar School
from _ scholarship,”
Chickerneo
meet,
sponsored
by
the
uses
his skill as a mathematics track
teacher to figure out which way Varsity Club, letter winner organiat
Highland
Park
High
high school grades go before and zation
will
be
announced
next
after the season. They go up and School,
than
stay there, in season, then fall in week on sports page. More
the next two six weeks’ post season 200 entries took part in the meet
terms. The new coach thinks this is last Thursday.

because “when a boy is in training,
he

does what he has to do... .”
The
job
on
Highland
Park’s
team will need cooperation, Chickerneo
indicated.
He
thinks
the
Dads’
Club
could
help
develop

community

interest in the school’s

football program.
He expects things to go well because “most football coaches are
optimistic. Most of us are ready to
accept any kind of a challenge.”
Chickerneo got a warm welcome
at the meeting from A. E. Wolters,
principal,
Sid
Luckman,
former

“The

Service

Bank

Of Highland

Park”

HIGHLAND

BANK—POST OFFICE BLDG.
Member Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation

.

16-Inchers

Practice

P|

hg
9

-

*-

«

4
p&gt; &amp;
&gt;

Tonight

The Recreation Department’s 16inch softball league starts practice
tonight at Sunset
Park.
Regular
league play begins next Thursday.
Chicago.
Bears
quarterback,
and
Sidney Stackler who served as temporary chairman of the club.
Luckman
said
that
Highland
Park was fortunate to have as fine
a coach
as “Chick”
at the high
school and commended Wolters for
his choice.

PARK
IDlewood 2—7800
Thursday,

May

21,

1959

&lt;

�DARA
AAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAAEAAAS

Deerfield
By

By Joseph Peyronnin
WUNDERS

control

25 with

the official opening of the season to be May 31 at Jewett Park.
The scheduling of the games has been a trying task for the
league heads because of a lack of adequate playing fields. We

that he will be able to get a substitute. If you think that this program is any good for the boys and
should be continued then report as
requested for if you do not I am
afraid that we will have to cancel
half of the baseball program immediately for this year.
John Koss is finalizing his father
and son night program. He is having excellent cooperation from certain fathers who have come to his
aid. Grace Carlson is following up
on the various locations available
for the annual dance. A big problem here is to find a place large
enough to hold the potential attendance.
Mark Bloch is having a

problem with his merchants canvass. Many fathers were asked to
help, by letter, with a request that
they contact Mark. He heard from

m?

couple and when he called
there were
many
reasons

they could

not help.

It would

be hard to say that they were justifiable.
We
members
of the executive
board are not too appreciative of
the general remarks heard at times,
though very complimentary, about
the good job we are supposed to be
doing.
This comment can be appreciated
from
a person
who
is
contributing time himself; but then
a parent will have a boy in the program and will himself have some
time to work in the program and
fails to contribute
any time, the
sincerity of the thought is questioned.
A few
men
and
women
cannot
operate
this program
for

some 500 boys.

We

need help from

everyone
in some
manner.
It is
the old attitude which we used to
express
as
“let’s
you
and
him
fight.”
If you believe in the program
and
want
it to
continue,
please help when called upon.
It has come to our attention that
some people are not fully aware of

how

the

program

is financed.

We

are not linked in with the United
Fund and the recreation program.
For those who do not know I will
once again say that we receive absolutely no, repeat no, funds from
the United Fund or the Recreation

Program.

The fact that the recrea-

tion
tax was
passed
contributes
nothing
to our
program
immediately as these funds will not be
available until next year and even
then it is questionable that we will
obtain financial assistance from the
recreation board.
So far as the park board is concerned, they help as much as they
ean, and we are grateful, but as
their funds are low they are able to
perform
only
essential
maintenance.
All of our finances are deThursday,

May

21, 1959

dedica-

ted to PONY
league activities. It
is a small price for the merchants
of the community to pay to have

boys

of the

community

in an

how

the USO

time

kept the servicemen

the

OITUARIES
Charles

Roll

Mrs. Katherine Roll, 78, widow
of the late Charles Roll, died April
18 in the Zion Home. Funeral services were
held
April
21 in the

Deerfield
al was

funeral chapel

in Ridgewood

and buri-

Cemetery.

mately 35 years. She is survived by
five children, Mrs. George (Helen)
Mrs.

and

Herbert

Russell

of

Deerfield,

(Mildred)

Batt

of

Glencoe,
Marshall
of Hazelcrest,
Ill. and Elmer of Gary, Ind. Another daughter, Mrs. Dewey (Margaret) Deal preceded her in death.
There
are also 10 grandchildren
and 15 great grandchildren.

John

C.

will

be

announced

grass

in,

are

requested

to

do

so at once. Mrs. Vincent Goodwin
reports from the hospital that her
husband is somewhat better, as she
attempts to finish her ditch and
signed
up
for pest control.
Mr.
Goodwin was the board member of

their block.
Mrs. Kelly Amedio,
of Girl

Scout

troop

troop leader

197,

the young-

this week, the executive committee
is asking all to help in this drive.

services were

held

S HE ne 0 NY

Drive Carefully — The Life You Save

May

24” RIDE
MOWER SPECIAL

at

May Be Your Own!

er, Oliver, have resided on Sanders

13 in Fourth Presbyterian Church,
Chicago, for John C. Bilek, 63, of
939 Deerfield Rd., who died May 9.
He retired four years ago as a manufacturer’s representative for the

warpware

314 Green Bay Rd., Highwood
Phone ID 2-2041

1884 on a farm near Aptakisic. For
the past 10 years he and his brothRd. They are brothers of the late
Chester Wolf.
Surviving
in
addition
to
his
brother,
Oliver,
are
two
sisters,
Nodie and Nelda of Libertyville.

CONVERTIBLE

CONSTELLATION

ceived many well wishes from the
parents of the girls on their recent
gift program.
As Poppy Day gets under way

Bilek

Funeral

SU

est in the Moraine council, has re-

She was born Oct. 6, 1880, in
Darmstadt,
Germany,
and
had
lived in this vicinity for approxi-

Sticken

date

as soon as Francis
(Chuck)
Stancliff finishes rounding of the roads
for the oil, as he has been doing all
week. All who have failed to get

off the
corners,—there
is some
similarity here. Hope you will help

Mrs.

and

CLEANERS

&gt; ae

the

organized program, keeping them
busy at something rather than just
hanging around unoccupied during
the vacation
period.
Remember

~ HOOVE

(Paid

Political

e

Advertisement)

VOTERS ATTENTION! |
You must be registered by May 25, 1959 in order
to vote in the special election for States Attorney © .
on Tuesday, June 23, 1959.
It is necessary to register:

metal trades.
Surviving are his wife, Marion T.
Bilek; a son, John T. and a daughter, Mrs. Marion B. Kirkpatrick;

also his parents, Mr. and Mrs. John
M. Bilek, a sister, Mrs. Ethel
and seven grandchildren.

Welton

Roscoe

Funeral
coe Wolf,

Beck

Wolf

2.

services for Welton
74, of 375 Sanders

Northbrook,

1. If you are a first-time voter and are or will be
21 years of age by June 23, 1959.

were

held

RosRd.,

$1 99°°

Monday

3

afternoon in the Lauterburg
and
Oehler
chapel in Deerfield
with
the Rev. Wayne Hess of the North
Northfield EUB Church officiating
and burial was in North Northfield
Cemetery. He passed away May 15.
Mr. Wolf was born August 23,
WHEREAS,

the

or unclaimed, were
municipal

officer

NOTICE OF
following described

delivered

charged

MAKE, COLOR and TYPE
Schwinn,

Black,

B.

Phillips,

Red-White,

Original

St.,

26-in.

B.

the

keeping

G.

Schwinn,

Try-Cycle,

Sport

Blue-White,
Jr.

Model,

Streak,

Black,

G.

24-in.

Blue-White,

26-in.

3.

12-in.

name

by marriage

or

If you have moved or changed your address since

Market Square

County 90 days, in the State for one year.

and have

such

of the City

property,

Lake Forest 3998
abandoned,

of Highland

lost,

stolen

Park,

the

SERIAL NO.

ohne
296636

26-in.

your

To be eligible for registration one must be 21 years of age

Coast to Coast Stores

of

have changed

the last registration.

SH39292

24-in.

B.

Engine—

G191652

26-in.

Schwinn, Red-White, B. 26-in.
Schwinn, Cream, B. 26-in.
Schwinn, Red-White, G. 24-in.
J. C. Higgins, Maroon-White, B.
Fly Eagle, Red-White, B. 20-in.

&amp; Stratton

If you

otherwise.

24” Cut. Forward * Neutral * Reverse — Cuts 1 acre per hour—2”
to 312". height — Chain Drive.
HIGHEST TRADE-IN FOR YOUR
OLD MOWER

to the Chief of Police

with

Briggs

Trade-In

PUBLIC AUCTION
bicycles which had been

Schwinn, Red-White, B. 26-in.
Blue,

h.p.

Less

RIAA

that you cannot make it call him so

why

generally

‘us.

It is asked that you men call Don
at WI 5-2263 to confirm whether or
not you will be there. If you know

only a
others

are

ELON I

p.m.

funds

AEN

1:30

to complete

These

ASIST

at

from

None
A9503
AS55818
None
None

lived in the precinct not less than

te

afternoon

with rakes and shovels
the necessary work.

contributions

EI

Saturday

cash

turned

30 days, in the

ER

asked that all fathers who have received a groundskeeper assignment
for Wilmot park be at this field

need

be

over to the various doctors that are
cooperating with the County’s program for a healthier place in which
to live. This includes having covers
on all trash recepticals and keeping rubbish out of the ditch in this
area, as the mosquito is bad enough
so far as the youngsters are concerned.
A Spree party will be given free
to all the volunteers that will join
with the officers and friends to climax the seeding of the ditches on
the sections, such as vacant area
on the north end of Pekara Dr. and
the area bounded by Ash and Pekara facing Milwaukee
Ave. The

Residents of Shields Township may register at the Supervisor’s Office at 580 N. Western Ave., Lake Forest, Illinois
at 580 N. Western Ave., Lake Forest, Illinois, between 9 &amp;

4 weekdays
Voter’s

and 9 &amp; 12 on Saturdays

Registration

Dept.

in

the

Lake

.. . or Room
County

Court

he AN

‘cooperation of the fathers. Don has

We

the merchants each year to help defray
the
costs
of the
program.

will

who
propest

A

tn

Don Brandt, head groundskeeper, with
the
assistance
of
park
board personnel, is doing an excellent job at Wilmot field. This
field should be in good shape by
next week provided we receive the

rived from sponsors, parents and
the merchants of the community.

program

Bp HEE TRIAL OFFER
NOW

Rodaniche

102,
House,

— |

ce

still have not confirmed all dates
and will not be able to do this until we find out which
night the
Prep League team will need Jewett Park.

August

The names of all residents
have not taken precaution to
tect their children under the

To answer the question that is so frequently asked, we will

begin playing official league games the week of May

News

=

DEERFIELD BOYS BASEBALL

Manor

Waukegan, Ill.
If there are any questions
Lake Forest 902.

regarding

your

registration

call

None

None

None

AND, WHEREAS, within five (5) days thereafter due notice was given to the owner
a aang person legally entitled to the possession of the aforesaid bicycls as required
y law:
AND,
WHEREAS,
the aforesaid bicycles have remained unclaimed by the owner or
other person legally entitled to the possession thereof for a period of thirty (30) days
or more from the day when! such notice was given and, under the law, it has become
the duty of the undersigned, A. L. Schwinn, Chief of Police of the City of Highland
Park, to cause such bicycles to be sold at public auction to the highest bidder, for cash:
THEREFORE,
NOTICE
IS HEREBY
GIVEN
that the bicycles above. described will
be sold at public auction to the highest bidder, for cash, on the 20th day of June, 1959,
at 10:00 A.M.
(Central Daylight Time), at the City Hall,
1707 St. Johns Avenue,
Highland Park, Illinois.
Any such bicycle not sold at this sale may be offered for
sale and sold at any subsequent sale without further notice of publication.
DATED at Highland Park, this 21st day of May, 1959.
5/21/59—154
A. L. SCHMIEG, Chief of Police

Sponsored by:
Thomas

Bermingham

Robert Milton

Republican Precinct Committeeman
Shields No. 1

Republican Precinct Committeeman
Shields No. 5

Phone Lake Forest 971

Phone Lake Forest 511

(Paid

Political

ie

Advertisement)

Page

43

|

{|

�MTS

a

||
}|

Interested in
Stocks?

For

the

Fansteel
offers

Stock

tween
eering
lected
three

Inc., offers an open end

| | mutual fund with pro|

| fessional supervision of

4 |

|

diversified

will

| emphasizing common

play

Be-

now and June 17, six EnginScientist Trainees will be sefor on the job training plus
years at Lake Forest College,

be

paid

books paid by
starting salaries

during

the

ras

West
Northwest
Hwy.
Barrington, Mlinois

| | Call Collect DUnkirk 1-3210
Representing

Ohevestors
Diversified Services, Inc.
FOUNDED 1894

training

Little Giants were
Glenbrook

the

in

the

slated to

Monday,

Reserve Officers

42)

program again, Monday and Wednesday nights and Saturday mornings at Old Elm Park. John Scorna-

Leave

vacco

Company 9-15, Great Lakes—naval
reserve officers from Lake Coun-

of

the

Recreation

ment
will
assist
Old Elm coach.

and

John

DepartPiacenza,

To Train

Thirty

members

ty—left

Jaycees

To

for

Coach

from

group

Sonar

of

Composite

Glenview

training

School,

Key

last

night

at

Fleet

Fla.

They

duty
West,

will return Sunday evening.

a game

Shore games
coached
by

naval

slated for Wednesday,

Tonight

the

Little

May

Giants

face

the Parkers

win

last

they

night

the

regional

would

Seven

In
The

Enter,

The Jaycees will choose the better
players from the Ree league and

game

advance

Seven

Ill. State
seven

Latin

Coach

will

act

as

the two groups.

High

stein made highest score in second
year Latin.
Rated superior were Diane Ru-

finals of Illinois State Latin Contest at Loyola University, Chicago,
placed in superior division.

bin,

third

and

Nancy Silverman was top scorer
in third year Latin; Kenny Ep-

year;

Tom

Sue

Phelan,

Hirschfelder

second

Susan Hemingway

year;

Black-Top

and

fine, first year.

Seal Coat

group,

meeting

USNR

officers,

weekly

1946.
Among

area

group

Edwards
mander;

50

has

been

on Thursdays

since

residents
are

Captain

active

in

Harry

C.

Jr., who is group comCommanders
James
C.

Boyden,

M.

consisting of about

reserve

Ralph

E.

Washburn,

Captain

Pottker,

Warren

Anthony

Warner

C, Zellmer;

F. Nosek

of Ban-

Commander

Robert

nockburn

and

E. Carroll

of Deerfield.

Commander
Anthony
Schmieg
did not go because of conflicting
naval reserve duties.

Nancy Houghtaling Awarded
Prize For English Scholarship
Miss Nancy Houghtaling, daughter of the J. V. Houghtalings, 1787

Clifton
12

at

tion

Ave.,
the

was

recognized

annual

at Lake

Honors

Forest

May

Convoca-

College.

Miss

Houghtaling, a senior, received the
McPherson Prize for Excellence in
Scholarship in English, presented
to her by Dr. Arthur W. Voss, head
of the English department.

Driveways
STATE

SEAL

FARM

he

JET

and

and David Klor-

KEN-WICK &amp; CO.

6-4900

The

a.m.

School students who May 2 entered

CORPORATION

co-

Each Saturday from now to June
13 (except May
30 the coaching
staff of the Highland
Park Recreation department will conduct a
baseball
school
at
Sunset
Park
for all boys
signed
up for the
Little League.
The
Minors
meet
at 9 a.m. and the Majors at 10:30

Rate
Park

Cronkhite

ordinator between

Finals

Highland

will be handled and
the Highland
Park

Jaycees,
independently
from
the
Recreation
Department
league.

to the sectional tournament next
Monday, Tuesday, and Wednesday,
May 25, 26, and 27. The victory
over Evanston last Friday put them
in sixth place in the league.

Director

Ill. DExter

here

Lake County

page

Highland
Park’s
Little League
players
who
compete
in
North

FANSTEEL
Metallurgical Corporation
Chicago,

three

in

from

that contest they were to meet the
winner of the Maines-Niles tilt in
20.

You have had 2 years of mathematics, one year of chemistry

North

and

42)

run

North Chicago there and on Saturday, May 23, will end league play
with a game at New Trier. Should

Your prime military obligations
have been fulfilled;

Personnel

page

one

to meet Leyden East Tuesday in
the second round of regional play
at Arlington Heights. If they won

and/or physics in high school;
5. You are between 22 and 27
years old.
Our present employees who can
meet these requirements will be
given prime consideration.
ONLY SIX APPLICANTS WILL
BE CHOSEN
lf you are interested in this opportunity and can meet these requirements, obtain a copy of your
high school transcripts, also your
college transcripts, if you have
previously attended college, then
call or write for an appointment
and personal interview to:

ZONE MANAGER

”)

Program.

inning

The

States;
You are a high school graduate;

| | RAYMOND P. BLONER
124

Technician

from
got

(Continued

sixth.

young

ing and Sales.
YOU CAN QUALIFY IF:
1. You are a citizen of the United

| | for this fund are chosen

‘l

for

Wildkits

fourth

period, with permanent career positions later in Research, Engineer-

_ | | stocks. The securities

tion possibilities and
reasonable income. For
| | a free prospectus-bookig | let, call or write:

year

Corporation

opportunity

with tuition and
Fansteel.
Liberal

securities,

| | with objectives of long||
term capital apprecia-

consecutive

The

in this area to enter our En-

gineering

Fund,

fourth

Metallurgical

the

men

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eet

Fred Cronkhite

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Insurance

Hough,

Libertyville

May

Our Giant 42 ft.
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1959

RD.

G.

FRIDAY,

On

Employment Office Open from
9 a.m. to 12 noon on Saturday, May 23,

aie

6-8-10

50c to 6:30

Starts

Rates...
Group

at

1716 CENTRAL:

Operators

openings

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pik CONDITIONED

required)

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Starting

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NOW

Mechanics

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GERANIUMS &amp; ANNUALS

Program

OPENING

Deerfield Rd., Deerfield

State Farm Mutual Automobile
Insurance Co.
State Farm Life Insurance Co.
State Farm Fire and Casualty Co.
HOME OFFICE—BLOOMINGTON, ILLINOIS

Welders

Assembly

Have Mr. “Eb” Inman help you select
the best roses for your needs.

is

Retirement

is Approximately

ROSES

i.

and

CALL

ae

Libertyville 2-4000

CHILDREN’S
SAT., May 23

©

MATINEE
2:00 P.M.

“ESCAPADE IN JAPAN”
&amp; Kartoon Karnival
FRIDAY,

“DESIRE

MAY

29th

UNDER THE ELMS”

9
21,aS 195
Thursday, May
7
A A ae
Sify att Aa Mees

y

�FINE

DIAMONDS
G

Watches and Silverware
We Carry the Leading Lincs
PAYMENTS AS LOW AS $2.00 A WEEK

COOL

I. H. NEMEROFF

from bank

over

Cte

35 years

|

“SOME

an

CAME

E

F

ICE
OPEN

ID pean

atl

Now!

FULL WEEK

oe:

Oe

oe

pee

RUNNING”

GARY

i COOPER

FRIDAY, May 22 for One Week
LEO McCAREY'S
THEFLAG,

NORTH

SHORE

HOTEL

DAvis 8-8282

9—12:30;
Mon. thru Sat.

Call Miss Thomas—HI 6-4123

1:30—6 p.m.
Closed Sundays

At

4

pe

&amp;@

TICKET SERVICE

Woods

Ice Skating Studio
915 Linden Ave.—Winnetka, III.

MARIA
SCHELL

;

Boys!

Stone Aderbetions

EVANSTON

Classes Now Forming
Hubbard

for:

“Music Man”
‘Garden District”
“South Seas Adventures”
“Diary of Anne Frank”
poet Poe preps

Register

FRI. thru THURS., May 22-28
ONE

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SKATING
YEAR AROUND

ne

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Park

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FREE

«Pek Daily £:30 PAM.

JEWELERS - OPTICIANS
Highland

—

L

E-Blanond S.
Other Sets to $1500.00
Bs

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Be

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¢ Veal Parmigiana « Chicken A la Cacciatore
¢ Veal Scollopini
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¢ Spaghetti
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a U.S.

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Seating

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it a habit

every

week

to

read

before

the

Want

laying

your

paper aside!

any dinner from

Prime Ribs of Beef ........ $1.25
T-Bone Steak -_.............. 1.50

All Fish Dinners. ‘1:25

‘Filet Mignon... 2.00

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thru Fri. — June

15 to Aug.

7

Pontiac all-steel station wagons

— Track — Basketball

Shore’s

Most

THEATRE

Friday,
|!

-

ey

ss

=

if

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— Sox and Cub Games

Beautiful

Theatre

POLICY

Noa.
“a

based

on

FS

Meyer

Levin

RIDE!

Thursday,

Our edo
gers
2 — On One Program

1—

the

novel

by

Dillman

28

Screen
— 2

2—

based

YOUR

on the novel,

“The

Blessings”

| Str

Rossano

ts adrian

Weekdays—’’Compulsion’’

May

“COUNT

Starring—Orson Welles,
Diane Varsi,
Bradford

100

22

Dean Stockwell.

begins at 7:00 and

by

Nancy

Deborah Kerr
Brazzi,

f

Chevalier
10:35

“Count Your Blessings’’ begins at 9:00, one showing
(Saturday Matinee ‘‘Count Your Blessings’ 2 to 4, one showing)
Saturday Eve. ‘’‘Compulsion’” begins at 7:00 and 10:35
“Count Your Blessings’’ begins at 9:00, one showing
Sunday—"’Compulsion”’ begins at

together for the first time!

:

2:22 - 6:01 - 9:40

WORLD'S LARGEST AMUSEMENT PARK |
OPENS 11:30 A.M.—WESTERN AT BELMONT—AMPLE PARKING
CLOSED

21, 1959

No.

May

“a

IT!

“f
THE

ase os EI
pebope

.
o,f

NE'S

ANGIE DIGKINSON-WALTER BRENNAN

On

=

“|

WILD

TECHNICOLOR® From WARNER BROS.

May

Physical

to 14 Years

|

MARTIN!

?

Thursday,

&amp;

Open Daily 6:40 to 12 Midnight—Curtain at 7:00
Sunday Continuous 2 to 12 Midnight—Doors Open 1:40

te

Plus

Restaurant

Lake Forest, Illinois —L.F. 2106 or 4744

.

RICKY

Rd.

UEERPAT

Ona

DEAN

School

North

hoe

Edens, Skokie &amp; County Line Rd.

Bay

Self-defense Instruction — Popular Group Games — Fun
24 Years of Developing Boys
— College Trained Counsellors
Call Coach William Bern
1092 Cherry St., Winnetka
Hillcrest 6-3851

for Parties of 50

Is Wild”

Car y:

‘
scat

Swim Instruction—Cookouts—Educational Trips

GAME”

ae

Finest

to 4:00 — Mon

Boys—6

FRIDAY

RO

Green

BERN DAY

Baseball — Football

Private

@

RED CROSS SWIMMING : INSTRUCTOR

FREE

Ribs of Beef ........ $1.25

Shore’s

COACH

AER

Sinatra

STARTS

:

Roast

LOga

High

Reynolds

“THE MATING
&amp; “The

75¢

a

“North

U.S. Choice Sirloin .......... 1.75

seeinasa EM pagan, tO Oe

Wadi Lileks

THEATRE

ba waster tie
:
Open 7:30 Weekdays
——THURS., MAY 21——
Debbie

+4

LUNCHEONS

OUTDOOR
!

Mena

;

150

5 p.m.

African Lobster Tail ........ $1.50
Chicken—Fried or BQ .... 1,25

atid hn

Hines

440

Sa

Capacity

of Parking

Duncan

Choose your favorite

cocktail at Patterson’s.
It's served free with

« SEA FOOD

CHARGE

¢ DINERS’ CLUB
e AMERICAN

“West Washington St. between
Green Bay Rd, &amp; Skokie Hwy, |
“MA 3-9540 - Free Parking - |
Adults $1.25. — Children 25c *

Available

‘
\
Wines
&amp; Liquor
s

of Imported

CHARCOAL BROILED STEAKS
You Can Charge It:

FURLOUGH”

Child’s

MONDAYS

EXCEPT

LABOR

“Count Your Blessings” begins at 4:12 - 7:51

May 29—"Imitation of Life”
June 5—"The Mating Game”

Exhibit In Our
Lobby by

on
y

DAY

|

Me

Page

45

�Be Decfold Churches
Rhy

&lt;4

9b

ea

4

alt

FIRST

lis

lt

824

Rey.

nl

i

Waukegan

Phone
_

nl

i

PRESBYTERIAN
Paul

_ THURSDAY,

Keller,

i

|

5-0775

Ph.D.,

May 21

i

Road

Windsor

J.

i

CHURCH
Minister

12:45
p.m.
Women’s
Association Mayflower luncheon.
Margaret Peterson, teacher at North Park College, will present a
ippet show, Pilgrim’s Progress.
-RIDAY, May 22
7:30 p.m. Couples’ Club dinner. Illustrated slides on a tour through Europe will be
shown.
DAY, May 24
9:30
a.m.
Morning
Worship.
Laymen
ay.
9:30
a.m.
Church
school.
Nursery for

|

children

_

1, 2 and 3 years.

children
4 and
5.
grades through high

_

9:30

a.m.

| leadership

of Elder

_ 11am.

Morning

ye

11

a.m.

Church

Bible

R.

CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SOCIETY
Maplewood School Auditorium
Clay Court, Deerfield
SUNDA Y—11 a.m. Services.
Children
are cared
for during
Church
service.
SUNDAY
SCHOOL—9:30 a.m.
For pupils up to 20 years of age.
WEDNESDAY EVENING MEETINGS —
8 p.m. Including testimonies of healing
through Christian Science.
All are welcome to attend these services.
oe further information
call WIndsor
51416.
WBKB-TV PROGRAM
SUNDAY, May 24
9:45 am.
“God Is Our Refuge.”
MAY 24 SERMON
The spiritual identity of the man of God’s
creating will be brought out at Christian
Science services Sunday in the Lesson-Sermon entitled “‘Soul and Body.”
Initial selections to be read from the Bible
include
these
verses
from
Psalms
(90:1,2):
‘‘Lord, thou hast been our dwelling place in all generations.
Before
the
mountains were brought forth, or ever thou
hadst formed the earth and the world, even
from
everlasting
to everlasting,
thou
art
God.”
From “Science and Health with Key to
the Scriptures’ by Mary Baker Eddy the
following will be read (280:25-30):
‘Rightly
understood, instead of possessing a sentient
material
form,
man
has
a_ sensationless
body; and God, the Soul of man and of
all existence, being perpetual in His own
individuality,
harmony,
and
immortality,
imparts and perpetuates these qualities in
man,—through Mind, not matter.”

Kindergarten for

Classes
school,

Adult

H.

for

all

class

other

under

the

Thompson—Tuxis

Worship.
School.

Laymen

Same

Sun-

as above.

_ MONDAY, May 25
3
3:45 p.m.
‘west room.
£. : 7:30
p.m.
lower floor.

Girl

'U
3:45 p.m.
- west room.
7:30 p.m.
‘west

Scout

Trustees

troop

1,

Girl

Scout

troop

11—lower

Boy

Scout

troop

52—lower

room.

WEDNESDAY,
May 27
_ 9:45
a.m.
Meeting
of
Scouts—lower west room.

_

90—lower

meeting—Room

3:45

p.m.

Girl

west
room.
aq
7:30 p.m.
8

p.m.

Scout

leaders

troop

of

Girl

124—lower

Tuxis

choir

rehearsal—Sanc-

Chancel

choir

rehearsal—Sanc-

ry.

ny fs

MOLY
ers

PBa

ai

CROSS CATHOLIC
CHURCH
North Waukegan Road
Rev. John O’Mara, Pastor
Rev. Edward Reilly, Assistant

Rectory, 724 Elder Lane
Windsor

5-0430

Sunday Masses: 7, 8, 9, 10, 11:15 and
ty
a
Pein?
2:15.
i
Weekday Masses at 6:45 a.m. and 8:15 a.m.
py
‘4

First

6:45

and

Friday

8:15 a.m.

_ Saturday:
i,

of

4

p.m.

each

and

month,

Masses

7:30

p.m.

aN sions,

at

THE
BETHLEHEM
CHURCH
(Evangelical
United
Brethren)
Rey. Eugene M. Wykle, Minister
801 Rosemary Terrace
Church—WI
5-0078
Te
Parsonage—WI 5-2221
_ THURSDAY, May 21
vad
7 p.m. Youth choir rehearsal; Boy Scout
i, .roop’ 51.
_ FRIDAY, May 22
Youth
Fellowship skate and swim party
iiaa # Playdium.
ats
UNDAY, May 24
Services
of Baptism
9:30 a.m.
Service of Divine Worship.
9:30
a.m.
Church
School
for nursery
a through 6th grade and adult classes.
10:55
a.m.
Service of Divine Worship.
10:55
a.m.
Church
School for nursery,
_ kindergarten, primary and 7th through 12th
grades.
_
Family
balcony
available
during
both
services of worship.

6:30

p.m.

Jr. Youth

Fellowship.

ONDAY,
May 25
7:30 p.m. Family Day committee meeting.
TUESDAY, May 26
No
B-Men meeting.
_ WEDNESDAY,
May 27
;
1:30 p.m.
Women’s Bible study at the
~ church.
Y
7:45 p.m.
Chancel choir rehearsal.
8
p.m.
Annual
Conference © briefing,
Woodale.
COMMUNITY
BAPTIST CHURCH
1250 Waukegan Road
Rev. Robert Humrickhouse,
Pastor

Office

Telephone:

Windsor

5-0708

hy
We Preach Christ
oy
Crucified, Risen and Coming Again
_
THURSDAY
|
§ 4p.m. J I M Club (Jesus Is Mine), children 2-6.
7
p.m. All Church Visitation Program.
FRIDAY
4 p.m. Chums Jr., girls 6-7.
SUNDAY
|
9:30 a.m. Sunday School. Classes of Bible

Study

10:45

_

for all ages.

Nursery

a.m.

Morning

facilities

are

Worship

provided

Service.

for

the

young.

6 p.m. Young People’s Fellowship.
6:40 p.m. Pre-Service prayer meeting.
7 p.m. Evening Gospel Service.
MONDAY

3:30

p.m, Chums, girls 8-10.

7
p.m. Pioneers, boys 14-14.
ie
6-TUESDAY
ke
3:45 p.m. Guards, girls 11-14.
sh
6:30 p.m. Pals, boys 7-10.
WEDNESDAY
7:30
p.m. Mid-week prayer meeting

Bible

8:30

ei

study.
p.m.

Choir

and

rehearsal.

QUAKERS
SOCIETY OF FRIENDS
Sylvia

|

B’NAI TORAH
Lincoln School
Highland Park
Sholom Singer, Rabbi
Joseph Burns, Cantor
information call Windsor 5-2243.

Confes-

Judson,

Clerk.

SUNDAY
-—s-9:45 a.m. Sunday School,
10 a.m. Friends meeting in Deer Path
School Library in Lake Forest.
| .-—s
For information call Windsor 5-1774.
|

GRACE

For

LUTHERAN CHURCH
(Missouri Synod)
Walters Ave. at Fourth St.
Northbr
further information call CRestwood

| 4.3060 or Windsor 5-1323.
Page 46

For

REDEEMER LUTHERAN CHURCH
1731 Deerfield Rd.
Rec. 1817 Green Bay Road
Highland Park, Ill.
SUNDAY
9 am. Sunday School and Bible classes.
10:15 a.m. Worship services.
NORTH SHORE
UNITARIAN CHURCH
Russell R. Bletzer, Minister
F
Chapel
Lake Forest
Information Call WI 5-1972.

Rey.
For

Congregations Plan Union

The congregation and friends of
Zion Lutheran Church will asseimble for a potluck supper in the
church social rooms on Saturday at
7:30 p.m., sponsored by the Couples
Club.
Taking reservations for the
supper are Mr. and Mrs. Theodore
L. Johnson at WI 5-1036.

NORTHBROOK
METHODIST
CHURCH
Meadowbrook School
Rev. R. W. Thornburg, Minister
For information call Windsor 5-4351.
SUNDAY
11.
a.m.
Church
School
and
Worship
Service. Nursery for pre-school children.

”

Bete:
aa

ee

|

NORTH
SUBURBAN
EVANGELICAL
FREE
CHURCH
Deerfield Masonic Temple
Rev. Howard Hermansen, Pastor
711 Waukegan Road
SUNDAY
9:45 a.m. Bible School.
11 a.m, Services.
7 p.m. Services.
WEDNESDAY
8 p.m. Bible study and prayer.

St. Paul’s And St. John’s | '

Lutheran Couples
To Have Potluck
Supper Saturday

ST

GREGORY’S
EPISCOPAL
CHURCH
Wilmot and Deerfield Roads
The Rev. J. D. Parker, Rector
Rectory Telephone—WIndsor 5-1881
Church Telephone—Windsor 5-1678
SUNDAY
$&amp; a.m. Holy Communion.
9:30 a.m. Holy Communion on first and
third Sundays.
9:30 a.m. Morning Prayer on second and
fourth Sundays.
9:30 a.m.
Church
School
children
will
attend adult service. Nursery care provided
for pre-school children.
WEDNESDAY
8 p.m.
Choir practice.
THURSDAY
Afternoon, Girl Scouts.
Evening, Boy Scouts.
.
WASHBURN
CONGREGATIONAL CHURCH
Half Day
Rev.
Lewis
Wakeland,
Pastor
Route 22
SUNDAY
9:30 a.m. Church School.
9:30 a.m. Worship Service.
11 a.m. Worship Service.
A nursery is provided for small children.
Telephone WI 5-4179 for more information.

Dr.

Vayhinger

The guest
ning will be

ger,

a

To

of

the

faculty

of

Garrett
Biblical Institute
on the
Northwestern University campus in
Evanston, Dr. Vayhinger
holds a
degree in clinical psychology and is
an ordained minister in the Methodist Church.
‘Dr. Vayhinger
is one
of the
great pioneers in the field of uniting psychology with the work of
the
Church,”
the
Rev.
Paul
V.
Berggren, pastor of Zion Church,

stated.
The subject
talk will be
Maturity.”’

of

Dr.

The congregations will meet separately, at first, then will come to-

gether

6%

Rev.

resolutions

for

drainage

ditch,

with

the

the

proposed

trance

to

the

through

Wyatt

North

Ave.

property

proposed

and

west

The

en-

would

be

of

has

PARK

J. A. Miller

THURSDAY, May 21
Woman’s
Association
luncheon
meeting
at the church.
10:30 a.m. Sewing and hospital dressings.
11 a.m.
Bake
sale in charge
of Mrs.
Carl G. Howard’s group.
12 noon.
Luncheon in charge of Mrs.
John N. Barbee’s group.
12:45 p.m.
Business meeting.
1:30 pm.
Program.
ZION
LUTHERAN
CHURCH
FRIDAY, May 22
10 Deerfield Road, Deerfield
7:30 p.m.
Husbands of the Young MaRev. Paul V. Berggren, Pastor
trons’ Group will paint the Toddlers room
Wayne
R. Johnson, Intern
in the basement.
Telephone Windsor 5-2009
SUNDAY, May 24
9 a.m.
Quartet rehearsal.
THURSDAY, May 21
9:30
a.m.
High School choir rehearsal.
9:30 a.m.
Northern District’s Pastor’s
9:30 a.m.
Worship
Service.
Provision
Meeting in Mundelein.
p.m.
Instruction class for high school
made for toddlers under 3
9:30 a.m. Church school classes for three
youths.
year olds up through 8th grade.
8 p.m. Meeting of Board of Deacons.
10:05
a.m. High school classes.
FRIDAY, May 22
10:45 a.m.
Adult choir rehearsal.
Boy Scout Troop 150 leaves for weekend
11:15 a.m.
Worship Service.
Provision
Camp-o-ree at Camp Crown near Wilmot,
made for toddlers under 3.
Wis.
11:15 a.m, Church school classes for the
SATURDAY, May 23
in the three year olds up through Tth grade.
9 am.
Acolyte
Guild
meeting
7:30 p.m. Summer Club meeting.
church parlors.
MONDAY, May 25
9:30 a.m.
Choir school and confirmation
7:30 p.m.
Meeting of Session.
class.
7:30 p.m.
Potluck supper for the entire TUESDAY,
May 26
congregation,
sponsored
by
the
Couples’
6:30 p.m.
Tuesdzy Evening
group will
entertain
St. Martka’s’ Guild.
Club.
WEDNESDAY, Mey 27
SUNDAY,
May 24—Trinity Sunday
7:30 p.m. Choir rehearsal.
8 a.m.
Celebration of Holy Communion.
THURSDAY, May 28
9 a.m. Family Worship Service with public examination of confirmands.
Complete
6:30 p.m.
Summer
Club picnic at the
Lakewood
Place Beach.
Members
are to
Church School also at this hour.
bring their own ilamburgers and hot dogs,
10:45 a.m.
Family Worship Service with
public examination of confirmands.
Com8 p.m.
Young Matrons group meeting.
Dr. Young will speak.
plete Church School; nursery care is provid-

not

For

and

meet

possible,

in

until
min-

Laslo

Hunyady,

Church

announced

the

next

minister

of Deerfield,
his new

several

call.

months,

the union is consumated, the
ministers will alternate in the
pit.

in

Deerfield in the vicinity of Dimmedale and Ambleside Rds. The east
boundary is the drainage ditch.
Dr. William L. Rest, president of
the North
Illinois Synod
of the
Evangelical and Reformed (United

Christian

Rev.

of St. Paul’s

the

subdivision

if

ister of St. John’s Church of Highland Park, has received a call to
Immanuel
Evangelical
and
Reformed Church at Ft. Collins, Colo.,
and will be leaving on August 1.

The

streets

Coons

buildings

School,

the new church is built.
The Rev. Edward J. Busse,

line on the boundary of Bannockburn and the south boundary on

ST. PAUL’S
UNITED CHURCH OF CHRIST
(Evangelical &amp; Reformed Church)
Rey. Laslo L. Hunyady, B.D., Pastor
638 Waukegan Road
Windsor 5-3508
THURSDAY, May 21
7 p.m.
Junior
Choir
rehearsal at the
church.
SATURDAY, May 23
Junior
Confirmation
9 to
10:30
a.m.
Class.
SUNDAY, May 24
9:30
a.m
Church
School
for children
age 3 through high school age.
11
am.
Festival of the Holy
Trinity
Worship.
Nursery care provided for small
children.
Visitors
and newcomers
in the
community are cordially invited.
3 p.m.
Special congregational meeting at
Walden
School, near Warwick
and Warrington.
TUESDAY, May 26
8 p.m.
Evening Circle of the Women’s
Guild will meet at the home of Mrs. Donald
Brown, 628 Greenwood, Northbrook.
Mrs.
J. Bulger and Mrs. D. Brown are hostesses.

HIGHLAND

on

present

Walden

They will also vote to purchase
acres in Highland Park, west of

the

ed during
this service only for children
under three years of age, in the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Konald Forslin, 829 Apple
Tree Lane. Busi service is provided by the
church for this service only.
MONDAY, May 25
1 p.m.
Deborah Circle at the home of
Mrs. J. H. Rustman, 1555 Wilmot Rd.; cohostess, Mrs. Stanley G. Petzel, 1159 Waukegan Rd.
7:30-8 p.m. School for Christian Living.
TUESDAY, May 26
7:30 p.m.
Youth choir rehearsal under
direction of Wayne R. Johnson, Intern.
8 p..m Church School staff meeting.
8 p.m. Ruth Circle at the home of Mrs.
Charles A. Texley, 1131 Camille Ave.; cohostess, Mrs. Maurice DeWulf.
WEDNESDAY,
May 27
7:30 p.m. Boy Scout Troop 150.
8 p.m.
Adult choir rehearsal, under direction of Dr. Peterman, minister of music.
THURSDAY, May 28
7 p.m.
Instruction class for high
school
youths.

THE

vote

the

the transfer of both church properties to the newly formed Trinity
United Church of Christ.

Vayhinger’s

“Attaining

to

of Trinity Church

under the name

uniting of the two churches
of Christ.

Speak

speaker for the eveDr. John M. Vayhin-

member

A special meeting of the congregations of St Paul’s Church
of Deerfield and St. John’s Church of Highland Park has been
called for Sunday at 3 p.m. in the Walden School to discuss the

if
two
pul-

St. Paul’s Church Established 1875
St. Paul’s Church was established
in 1875

on Waukegan

Rd.

at Oster-

man Ave. The church and parsonage which are on this tract will be
Church of Christ), will preside.
The proposed constitution of the sold if the two churches unite. St.
new church will be submitted to a John’s Church, also to be sold, was
vote, They will also vote to leave established in 1884,

EPISCOPAL WOMEN’S GUILDS
WIND UP THEIR YEAR'S WORK
’s Episcopal

Church,

There are three Guilds at St. Gregeroy

which will be winding up the year’s work this month. St. Agnes

There

are

in
at

21

eighth

the
Zion

grade

The final meeting for St. Mary’s
Guild is to take place next Wednesday morning at 9:30.
Mrs. Shellman, president, reports that officers for the coming year will be
elected.

stu-

1959
confirmation
Lutheran
Church

who will take their public examination in Bible history, church

St. Agnes’

class will make

its vows

of

faith and be received into church
membership through confirmation
on Sunday, May 31. On the fol-

first

communion.

Baptists Youths To

Get Awads
The Awana

Sunday

Youth Clubs of Com-

munity Baptist Church will have
an award night on Sunday
at 7
o’clock, All personal awards that
have been earned up to this time,
as well as those in the camp contest, will be given.
Going

To

Camp

The Rev. James Strauss and Mrs.
Strauss, workers with the Youth
Gospel Crusade, will present a program with gospel magic, films and

Parents

dren
will
attend
which visitors are

of the

the
service
also invited.

chilto

R.

G.

Matheson

St.

Ag-

vice president; Mrs. J. R. Gedney,
secretary and Miss Dorothy Simpson,

treasurer.

Other chairmen
Cramer
and
Mrs.
bridge tournament;

ner,

square

are Mrs. J. R.
Richard
Moss,
Mrs. Dale War-

dancng;

Mrs.

R.

H.

Weisert and Mrs. W. B. Conner,
Gift
Corner,
tea
representatives
and Mrs. S. M. Cornell, Christmas
pageant.

Baptismal! Service
The

Deerfield

Community

Bap-

Gospel Center of Chicago in a baptismal service.
The Rev. Robert Humrickhouse
reports the baptism
of Mr.
and
Mrs. Dwaine Pierson, 645 Timberhill Rd.; Mary Catherine McCurry,

daughter

of Mr.

and

Mrs.

William

McCurry,
1708
Pear
Tree
Ln;
Kathryn
Thorstesen,
daughter
of

Horenberger

of

a,

tist Church dismissed its regular
service on Sunday evening, May
17, to join with the North Side

Hazel
Ave.;
Gayle
daughter of Mr. and

The
Tuxis
Society
and Junior
High Westminster Fellowship, both
youth groups, held a joint meeting Sunday evening at the Deerfield Presbyterian Church.
Guest

was

for

Mr. and Mrs. I. H. Thorstesen,

Presbyterian Young People
Hear Of Aviation As Vocation

speaker

officers

nes’ Guild was held May 5 in the
home of Mrs. Willis Conner of 1326
Meadow Ln.
Mrs. Frank Hascom
is the president; Mrs. Kendall Cole,

‘Is Held By Baptists

One member from each club is
expected to receive a free week at
Camp Awana, located at Fredonia,
Wis., for maintaining the highest
standard for the particiular club
and meeting
minimum
standards
covering all clubs.

illustrations.

of

Officers Elected

Co-chairmen
of
the
program
committee are Mrs. R. F. Babcock
Jr. and Mrs. J. T. Lindholtz.
Mrs.
Blaine Dorsett heads the hospitalLo,
ity committee.

lowing Sunday at the 10:45 morning service, the class will receive
its

Guild

Election

history,
liturgics
and
catechism
doctrines) at the 9 and 10:45 a.m.
services
of worship
on
Sunday,
May 24.

The

will

St. Mary’s

St. Anne’s Guild will hold its
last meeting before summer, this
morning at 9:30 in the church.

Class Of 21 To
Be Confirmed At
Lutheran Church
dents
class

and

today

meets

5, St. Anne’s

Guild met May
meet May 27.

819

Horenberger,
Mrs. David C.

of Cary;

Sharon Gau-

witz, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Paul

Gauwitz,

712 Hermitage

United Airlines who
ation as a vocation,

Thursday,

May

Dr.

told

of

avi-

21, 1959

�HOLMES FORD
EXTRA DIVIDEND DAYS!
BRING HOME A FREE
WEBER

Barbecue

Kettle

$55.00 VALUE
with THE PURCHASE of A NEW FORD or a
HOLMES A-1 USED CAR
THURSDAY, MAY 21 thru MONDAY, MAY 25 ONLY
Enjoy Extra Dividend Driving in Any One of These Holmes Top-Conditioned Used Cars
1958 Ford Fairlane 500 Club Sedan
Ford-o-Matic, radio, heater

1955 Chevrolet 4-door station wagon,
radio, heater, auto. transmission

1957 Mercury Montclaire 4-dr.
Full power, air conditioning
1957 Chrysler

1955

Plymouth

radio,

heater,

Hardtop

Full power

1957

Dodge convertible,

1957

1955

Ford 2-Door

radio,

heater,

transmission

auto.

transmission

1955 Mercury 4-Door

full power
1957 Ford
full power

Suburban,
auto.

Convertible,

Pontiac 4-door Hardtop

radio,

heater,

1955

Pontiac

radio,

heater,

auto.

transmission

hydramatic

full power

1954 Chevrolet Bel-Air 2-Door
radio, heater, power glide

1957 Ford 2-Door,
radio, heater

1954

1956 Dodge
automatic

1956
radio,

Suburban,

Ford Victoria

radio, heater,

transmission

Ford Country Sedan,
heater

1956 Buick
full power

Roadmaster

4-door

Open

Evenings ‘til 9

—

Saturday and Sunday ‘til 5 p.m.

Huge Savings on Company Driven 1959 Fords!

HOLMES MOTOR CO.
HIGHLAND

PARK

ID 2-8640

�eB
ey

CALL WI 5-4500

PHONE YOUR WANT AD . . . WE'LL CHARGE IT
REAL

WANT AD RATES

GILBERT

hrs

oo...

Tee

Ads
containing
56
words
or
more are charged at the rate of

OO

®

Os

more

insertions available
1 inch Minimum.

Deerfield

one

baths.

© Highwood

News

®

Forester

The

Ads

run

Lake
in

above

JOHN

publications

during the same week in which
{Fort Sheridan Tower is published
will also appear in

Fort Sheridan

Tower

Published Every Other Friday
Want Ads will be accepted up to

_ Tuesday, 4:30 P.M.
_

the

LAKE

JOHN

McGUIRE
Lincoln

Ave.

&amp;

ORR,

48

4 bedroom
$27,500

FOREST

OFFICES

678 Western
Lake Forest

TO

Ave.
485

INC.

SERVE
12

YOU

1380 June Enos
M. C. Lackie
W. Paul LeRoi 104 Frances Rutgers
N. Starosselsky 1181 Nancy Appleton
Gordon Lackie 2834 May
§S. Becker
Mary H. Griffis 339 Donald Kelley
Helen Bryan 105

1117
1075
3974
981
1082

Dn
A,

(Improved;

Realtors
Hlllcrest

6-5010

Two-car

attached

PERFECT for large families—just see this!
5 bedrons, 2%
baths, 30 ft. living room,
break. room, 2 car gar. LOW 30’s.

LAKE

SPACIOUS 4 bedroom, brick, 2 t. baths,
sep. dining room, FAMILY room, base., 2
car att. Low taxes. 3 cares. Owner desires
quick sale.

listed

half

three-story

Colonial

acres.

on

Entrance

brick

four

and

a

hall,

living

room with fireplace, porch, dining
room,
breakfast
room,
kitchen,
powder room. Three bedrooms, two

baths

and

large

den

on _ second

floor, two bedrooms and bath on
third
floor.
Full
basement
with
laundry room and storage. Three
car attached garage. ........ $86,000.00

THE
Seven
bedroom, four bath, brick
Colonial on six plus acres. Living
room with fireplace, dining room,
den,
butler’s
pantry,
kitchen.
Large attic. Full basement. Three
ear
detached
garage.
Swimming

1670722 [PMRBRA GE Bech Seiahiee anes abpyeND OT $90,000.00

Excellent
level
building
site
on
blacktop
road within city limits.
Features include underground gas,
water, electric, and telephone service. Will never be any cheaper.

Colonial
house
on over eighteen
acres. Living room, dining room,
pine paneled library with fireplace,
kitchen, breakfast room, recreation
room,
bath,
screened
porch
ana
swimming pool. On Second floor:
Master suite with bath, three bedrooms, two baths. The third floor
has a children’s
playroom,
three
bedrooms and two baths. Four car
detached
garage
with
apartment
and a guest house. ........ $125,000.00

Clifford

FAMILY

LAKE

Leonard

EXCLUSIVE

BROKER

FOREST

DUNKIRK

2375

1-2353

Parking
for

LAKE BLUFF East, 3 bedroom ranch, lot
90x100,
on deadend
street
near
grade
school; in 20’s. Owner transferred. Call
Lake Bluff 4325.
MODERN
brick ranch, 2 bedrooms, automatic kitchen and laundry, wall to wall
carpeting. Near Green Bay Rd., north of
Lake Forest. By owner. Telephone Lake
Forest 4565.
538
CENTER
AVE.,
Lake
Bluff.
Two
blocks from beach and boating. Fine older home. Rewired. 5 bedrooms, 2!2 baths,
screened porch, breakfast room, new 2
car garage and breezeway, double lot. We
have purchased
another home
and
are
anxious to sell, with immediate possession.
Exceptional financing available. Call owner, Lake
Bluff
2569, or your
broker.
’

QUAINT
in
bedrms., 114

Space
Our

Available

Customers

Hart, Shaw &amp;
Company
Richard B. Hart, President
Howard
ReQua,
Vice President
Mrs. Stuart R. French
Milton McN. Traer
Ruth E. Henderson
Kenmore Thorsen
260 E. Deerpath
135.S.: La ‘Salle: St.
Lake Forest 4040
RAndolph 6-7155
Member of the Evanston-North Shore
Multiple Listing Service
C.

features, tastefully
garage, tall trees.

Lindenmeyer,

H.

D.

Lake

Olson

&amp;

Bluff

969

Co.

Realtors

Waukegan,

Ill.

SUMMER

LIVING

THE BIG SCREENED
PORCH
OF THIS
CUSTOM BUILT HOME will be your summer
headquarters.
Every
detail
of its 6
rooms is designed for comfort; full basement
with fireplace, separate dining room, 3 big
bedrooms, 2 baths, excellent storage, handsome paneling, dream kitchen. $43,500. Call
Mr. Strey.
SIT ON THE PATIO and enjoy the wooded
Half Acre surrounding this versatile brick
ranch. This impressive home with easy access to transportation and toll-way features
a slate floor in entrance hall, handsome living room, kitchen with island counter, family room plus 2 king-size bedrooms and 2
Ceramic biths. $38,500. Call Mr. Davis.
A BIG PORCH OVERLOOKS THE ROLLING WOODED
ACRE
surrounding this 7
room Bilevel in a delightful area. If you
need a 3 bedroom home, luxuriously detailed for casual living, see this one this
weekend. All reasonable offers will be seriiously evaluated. Call Mr. Hastings.
PRICE REDUCED. If you are looking for
an
out-of-the-ordinary
Lake
Forest
residence, here is your home. A stunning splitlevel with 4 bedrooms, 214 baths and unique
entertaining areas, including balconies and
37 ft. living room. Now $66,000.
KNOLLWOOD
AREA—Lake
Bluff—Don’t
miss this 3 bedroom
charmer surrounded
by 22 trees, including peach and cherry. Inside s a modern kitchen, 3 bedrooms, full
basenent, and 2 car garage. All for $21,900.
Call Mr. Hastings.

HOMEFINDERS,

Realtors

111 Green

ALpine

Bay

Rd., Wilmette

JUST
8

wom

1-1111

COMPLETED

COLONIAL

RANCH.

in-

cluaing 4 Bedrooms, 3 ceramic tile
baths. Wooded
acre, EAST
Lake
Forest. Living room, dining room,
builtin
kitchen,
paneled
den.
3
large thermopane
sliding
units,

large porch.
rage,

gas

Basement,

heat.

Black

2
top

car

ga-

LARGE FAMILY HOME
BEAUTIFULLY APPOINTED
TWO STORY BRICK
COLONIAL
Entrance hall, powder
room, living room
with fireplace, large screened
porch
with
adjoining
terrace,
dining
room,
panelled
den with fireplace, modern kitchen &amp; breakfastroom.
4 bedrooms, nursery, maids room
&amp; 3
complementing
bathrooms.
Full basement,
gas heat, two car detached garage. Planted
terrace and formal garden, large playfield.
High 70’s. Call Lake Bluff 5127 for app.

3

BEDROOMS,
brick ranch, 2 car garage,
paneled
basement,
gas
heat,
low
30’s.
Telephone Lake Forest 3095.
ESTATE

Lake

Bluff

STUART
Exclusive

4057
&amp;

FOR

GOELZER

(Improved)

PARK)

and WILDE

HIGHLAND
PARK—Located
in the Lincoln School district this red brick colonial
provides comfortable living for the growing family. The 1st floor has a living room
with fireplace, dining room, kitchen, breakfast room, sun room, and a full bath. The
spacious
2nd
floor
has
3 bedrooms,
a
screened sleeping porch, and 2 tiled baths.
There is a full basement, gas heat and attached garage. The price is $35,500.
GLENCOE—For
the family in need of a
sizable house, we would like to suggest an
inspection
of this beautiful 2 story with
stone exterior. The
1st floor has a living
room with 2 paneled walls and a fireplace,
separate dining room, modern kitchen with
breakfast area and a powder room. On the
2nd are 4 bedrooms and 2 baths and there
are 2 family bedrooms or servant’s rooms
and a bath on the 3rd. Extras include a slate
roof, stone window sills, copper gutters and
downspouts and hot water gas heat. The lot
is 90x150, the price is $69,500, and the property is conveniently located in the Central
School district.
HIGHLAND PARK—This good ranch with
4 bedrooms, paneled den and 3 baths, is
within easy walking distance of the West
Ridge and the new Red Oak schools. There
is a fireplace
in the combination
livingdining room. The lot is 94x129 and the price
of $34,500 includes
the tacked down carpeting. It has gas heat, a screened porch
and a detached garage.

GOELZER

and

WILDE

Realtors
790

Elm

HI

Street

MODERN

6-5544*

RANCH

On nearly %
acre overlooking
Old Elm’s fairways—modern architect designed ranch with many unusual and attractive features.
r
Liv. rm. with frpl., and entire
wal of picture windows overlooking flag terrace, din. area, latest
mod.
kitch.,
large
brick
floored
family rm., frpl.; 2 bdrms., and exquisitely designed tiled bath. Daylight lower level with partly finished double rm., frpl. Oversized
2 car gar., radio doors.
The design takes full advantage
of
the
sloping
contour
of
the
ground and beautiful views.
Executive

leaving

PAUL
or

SALE _

(HIGHLAND

town

_$36,500

drive-

way, seeded lawn. $67,000.
Gall

(Improved)

FOR
sale or rent by owner, 5 bedroom
house, 120 Woodland Rd. Telephone Lake
Forest 3073.
LAKE
BLUFF
east,
new
6 room
brick
ranch, 2 full ceramic tiled baths, 7 closets, 3 blocks from Lake Michigan. Full
price $23,500, easy terms.
ID 3-0766

REAL

LOCATION
MINDED 3
bedroom, 2 full
baths, living room, frpl., dining room, porch,
western patio, 2 car att. gar., 1% acre. 40’s.

Mrs.

ESTATE
FOR
SALE
(LAKE FOREST)

modern way, spic &amp; span 3
baths, base., gar. LOW 20’s.

ENJOY

ACREAGE SITE
$8700

Located 1.2 miles north of Deerpath stop light on Winwood
Dr.
which
joins Waukegan
Rd. from
the west.

CHEERFUL house, fine
decorated, base., porch,
20’s.

ALL
Georgian

FOREST

EXCELLENT, brick 3 bedrooms, tiled bath,
18 ft. perch (enclosed), base., 2 car garage.
Woded lot. 33,000.

Two-story white frame farmhouse
on three beautiful acres. Four master bedrooms, four baths and study
on
second
floor.
Paneled
living
room with fireplace, porch, dining
room
with. fireplace,
playroom,
modern kitchen, laundry. Basement
has a recreation room with fireplace.
Two-car
detached
garage
with three room apartment on second
floor.
Kennels
and_
storage
barn. Lovely orchard and garden.
OU Cy Seago Ae atic
A
$85,000.00

Newly

BLUFF

REAL

SUBSTANTIAL
brick,
3 bedrooms,
1%
baths, DEN
&amp; family rec. rooms, 2 car
garage, porch, vista views, 3 yr. old. Immed.
occup. 30’s.

A ROELO i Liss Sasa eds ovo ous ees $75,000.00

Scranton Ave.
Lake Bluff 816

Sn

Li

Ml

hl, Le Ml

Mt, dll,

a

TWO

BY OWNER
5 year old, 3 bedrooms, 1% baths, living
room
with fireplace,
oversized 2 car attached garage with workshop area, on acre,
city water, West Lake Forest. Mid twenties.
Telephone ID 2-9468, after 6 p.m.
,
7 ROOM
house, remodeled,
living room,
fireplace,
dining
room, cabinet
kitchen,
- utility room and powder room, upstairs—
2 big bedrooms and bath, wall carpeting,
half basement, 2 car garage. $20,000, by
owner. Telephone Lake Bluff 4786.
FOR. sale—by owner, 4 room cottage, full
basement, gas heat, modern cabinet kitchen. Telephone Lake Forest 2732 after 5:30
weekdays.

Page

LOCATED
decorated;

dry in basement.

(Improved)

DELIGHTFUL 3 bedroom, 1% baths, base.,
poseite garage &amp; boasting full dining room.
PB.

FOR

BLUFF

GRIFFITH,
REALTORS

ESTATE
FOR
SALE
(LAKE FOREST)

UNSURPASSED
4 bedroom,
DEN,
2%
baths, FAMILY
room,
2 frpl., porch,
2
car garage. Independent or togetherness for
the latge family desiring an efficient home
realisticly priced.

Brick two-story Colonial. Approximately seven acres. Four bedrooms,
three baths, paneled library, dining
room, living room with fireplace,
screened porch, kitchen, recreation
room with fireplace, shop and laun-

1904

APPEALING
COLONIAL
on quiet street
near
park.
Three
bedrooms,
2!
baths,
screened porch. Realistically priced in MIDTHIRTIES.

LAKE
FOREST
- Now is the time to see this Early American
country home in all its beauty. Over two
acres of woods and flowers on private lane.
The
house
custom
built
in
1951
has
8
rooms. Many unusual features such as polished brick floors, fireplace and hand hewn
beams in dining room, combination green_ house-porch.
Large
modern
kitchen.
Less
than
an hour’s drive to Loop. Call Mrs.
Campbell.
567

INC.

since

COUNTRY

Brick two-story Southern Colonial.
Approximately
one
and
a_
half
acres. Four bedrooms, three baths,
living room with fireplace, study,
dining
room,
kitchen,
breakfast
room, Basement
has a recreation
room with fireplace, utility room.
Two-car attached garage $80,000.00

JUST REDUCED: Ravine property; NEAR
GRADE SCHOOL; 5 room house; $16,000
—offers
:
CONVENIENTLY
house;
attractively

REAL

(Improved)

LIVING

IN DUPLEX ZONE: 3 bedroom home with
partially finished second floor. Convenient
location. A well cared for residence with
good
income
potential.
Offered
in LOW
TWENTIES.

HIGHLAND PARK
608 Laurel
DEERFIELD
699 Waukegan Rd.
LAKE FOREST
287 Deerpath

ESTATE
FOR
SALE
(LAKE FOREST)

414
40’s.

Compact 4 room cottage in excellent condition; MODERN
KITCHEN; full basement;
screened porch. An ideal small family home,
very reasonable to maintain. BELOW
$15,000.

Copy is accepted with the underStanding
that
the _ publisher
assumes
no
responsibility
for
omission
through
clerical
or
mechanical
error and shall be
under no obligation or liability
of any kind whatsoever, either to
the advertiser or third parties.
In the event of an error in copy,
on the advertiser’s request, the
publisher will rectify the error
by publishing the corrected ad
in the next regular issue without
charge. All claims for adjustment
must be made within five days of
the date of publication in which
the error occurs.

_ REAL

area

LAKE

Week’s Issue.
CANCELLATION DEADLINE
12 NOON, TUESDAY

IDlewood 2-4500
Windsor 5-4500
Lake Forest 2300

middle

GRIFFITH,

Serving

For Publication in the Current

|
|
|

the

NEAR
LAKE;
Large
family
home;
Ist
floor, 6 rooms, powder room, 2 porches;
2nd.
floor,
4 bedrooms,
heated
sleeping
porch, 244 baths; WOODED LOT 175x125;
GOOD CONDITION.

DEADLINE FOR CONTRACT
ADS 3 P.M. TUESDAY

TELEPHONE
+ WANT AD SERVICE

6 bedrooms,

in

Kathryn Jaicks
Berenice Ressinger
Carmen Burgess

Review

Highland Park News

|

acre.

Priced

ESTATE
FOR
SALE
(LAKE FOREST)

LAKE

GILBERT RAYNIER
REAL ESTATE
266 EAST DEERPATH
LAKE FOREST 382

This cost will cover the
insertion in all 4 papers.

OC

OE

mately

REAL

INC.

Charming, older Brick and Frame
house newly listed, located in secluded,
private
area
on approxi-

25¢ Service charge for blind ads

- consecutive
on request

RAYNER,

Two excellent houses are available
in the South Park section, modestly priced in the low 20’s and ready
for immediate occupancy.

5¢ each additional word
(For 55 words or Less)

$4.90 per column inch.
Contract rates for 4 or

(improved)

ESTALE
FOR
SALE
(LAKE FOREST)

166

PHELPS,

1925 Sheridan

Rd.

INC.
ID 2-4580

CO.

Agents

32 Senter Ave. Lake Bluff, Illinois
BY owner, brick split level
2 years old.
Tiree
twin
bedrooms,
den,
recreation
pom, 14 baths, dining and living room
arpeted, fireplace, modern kitchen, full
lisement.
$35,000 or best
offer.
Lake
brest 4616.

Beautiful

BY OWNER
East Ravinia

Section

Highland Park, large wooded lot (85 foot
frontage).
3 bedrooms,
2 complete tile
baths
with
showers,
modern
kitchen,
screened porch, sun deck, tile roof. Ideal
location, 2 blocks from school, shopping
and trains. Quick sale. Priced in the low
thirties.
Telephone
ID
2-4744,
for appointment.

Thursday,

May

21, 1959

�e

!

REAL

ESTATE
4

SALE (Improved
PARK)

FOR

NEW
white

living

Very

2-story

w/frpl.,

nice kitchen,

rooms,

ENGLISH

PARK

brick

room

room,

NEWLY

LISTINGS

SUNSET
Modern

with

sep.

dining

3 twin-size

bed-

114 baths. Att. 1-car garage.
lovely

peanen

grounds.

thruout

HIGHLAND

eae
REAL, ESTATE FOR SALE (improved) REAL
(HIGHLAND PARK)

Well

main-

-22.030 $28,500
PARK

HIGHLANDS

Brick and redwood

split-level, only

Living

room-dining

birch

cab.

area.

4 bedrooms,

patio.

Call

Mrs.

NORTHEAST
On

room

comb.,

large

eating

kitchen,

2 baths.

Mann

$34,750

HIGHLAND

PARK

100 ft. well landscaped

glimpse

of

Large

lake.

Brick

and

9

stone

BRAESIDE

baths.

heat.

Screened

All most

Aronson.

porch.

attractive.

...--

$36,500

REALTORS
Central

Ave.

EAST

IMAGINE!
in these days of inflation, getting a perfectly darling 2 bedroom Cape Cod house, SEPARATE
dining room,
24 ft. living room
with fireplace, full basement, gas heat, garage, beautiful grounds, good location and
many other extras for olny
19,500
Don’t miss this!

A
Cozy
acre.

ID 2-1212

Ww

HIGHLAND

PARK-BRAESIDE

This 3 bedroom
spilt level (just 5 years
old) has been made even more _ attractive
with the addition of an 18 ft. x20 ft. first
floor panelled family room with fireplace.
‘ Desirable dead end street
$28,500

HIGHLAND

PARK

Brick Ranch—3 bedrooms.
with eating area. 3 years
handle for around

#

,

DORSEY
723

St.

Johns

Modern kitchen
old. Possible to
PY

&gt;

ON

LAKE

lge.

luxurious

Each

has a view of the lake—the
enA, trance hall, with curving staircase;
spacious liv. rm. with frpl., porch,
sunny din rm.., lge. mod. kitch. and
bkfst. rm. and paneled library with
full bath.
The

bdrm.

2nd

floor

with

has

dress.

18x28

rm.

master

and

tiled

bath; 2 add’l large bdrms. and tiled
bath,
plus
porch
usable
as 4th
bdrm.
A beautiful

home

with

many

BUY

ON

2-0880

PAUL
PHELPS,
Sheridan Ro.

INC.
ID

2-4580

HIGHLAND
PARK,
by owner,
attractive
7 room ranch, ideal location, beautiful 12
acre, full basement. $28,500. Low down
payment.
ID 2-3449.
HIGHLAND
PARK,
3 bedrooms, bi-level,
2 baths, corner lot, recreation room, garage, extras. 2895 Southland.
Telephone
ID 2-8999.
GET
free copy of booklet
“Things You
Should Know
About Buying a Home.”
Write Chicago Title and Trust Co., 26
N. Utica St., Waukegan.

Thursday, May 21, 1959

VIEW HANDSOME
LAWNS AND SUMMER LIVING through the picture windows
of this long-low-and lovely 3 bedroom ranch.
You'll like its maintenance-free G. E. kichen and 2 C. baths. A fine home for $32,475.
Call Mrs. Parkinson, WI 5-0248.
YOU
OVERLOOK
2
#£DELIGHTFUL
ACRES (which permit additional residences)
from the porches or every window, when
you choose this quality 8 room residence—
carpeted; new gas furnace, baseboard heat;
modern kitchen with dishwasher &amp; eat spot;
side entrance study; card-book area; loads
of closets; spacious rooms.
Near Lincoln
and Immaculate Conception Schools. High
40’s.
PRICE
REDUCED—Now
just
$25,750.
Buy this perfectly maintained and _ professionally landscaped
Tri-level with 3 bedrooms, paneled rec. rm., double garage. SEE
IT THIS WEEKEND—can
be rented for
$250. per mo.

Green

Bay,

in without spending
FOR $46,500.

a dime.

Realty

Co.

ALL

house,

WINNETKA
3 bedroom home on lovely wooded parkway
in east section, walking distance to beach,
Greeley and New Trier schools. Completely
re-decorated. Mid 30’s.

440
BR

Green
3-2550

Bay

1 bedroom
garage, all

Realtor

Rd.

property

BAUMANN-COOK
Realtors
551

SPLIT

Kenilworth
AL
1-7300

Priced

Benj. Piersen Realty
REALTORS
Waukegan

Rd.

Windsor

NEW

attached

BARACANI

6-5000

he

Bldg.

NEAR

VErnon

5-0236

GLENCOE
FOR THE
GROWING
FAMILY
This brick home
is
A HOP
SKIP
AND
JUMP
from beach, shops and schools. 4
master bedrooms and a single bedroom on
second with more space on third. Beautiful
solid oak throughout will convince you that
this is am outstanding buy at $37,000.

712

GLENCOE

AMbassador

REAL ESTATE
REALTORS

brick

5-1670

OWNER leaving state: must sell 3 bedroom
frame, large living room
with fireplace
and sun room, dining room, kitchen, basement,
oil heat, 2 car garage,
Lincoln
School District. For details call ID 2-0474.

ID 3-1000
REAL

living

~

room

with

SPLIT

sep-

LEVEL

Best value in village. 3 twin bedrooms, 214
baths, full basement, large pannelled family
room, spacious living room, built-in oven
and range and dishwasher, spacious living
room,
attached
2 car garage,
beautifully
landscaped. $32,900.
N

4

BEDROOMS—2

BATHS

One and a half acres wooded property. This
custom built brick and redwood home has

wonderful

family

room—farm

en with fireplace.
buy. $29,500.

Owner

type

transferred.

kitch-

A real

$17,500
Large living room with dining area, kitchen 2
with breakfast space, utility room, dryer, 2
bedrooms, bath, enclosed porch, taxes $250,
gas heat, $100, black top driveway.

$28,500
3 year old 3 bedroom, 2 bath brick and
frame split level, large family room, kite
with panelled wall, built-in oven and range,
spacious living room, wonderful closets.

NEARING

COMPLETION
me

Very attractive brick and frame split level;
large living room, dining L, birch cabinet
kitchen with built-in oven and range, dishwasher, 3 bedrooms, 214 C.T. baths, large
panelled family room with fireplace, 2 car
garage, beautiful lot. Mid 30’s.

ESTATE FOR SALE
(DEERFIELD)

Benj. Piersen Realty

1

TO

Waukegan

HIGHLAND PARK, lovely 7 room, 3 bedroom, 242 baths plus high, light basement rec. area with 2 car garage. Lovely
treed lot, 100x300 on private road. $42,000.
Greissinger
Realtor,
KEystone
96447 or Lake Forest 4736 evenings.

ES
WIndsor

5-1670

DEERFIELD:
CAPE
COD
FRAME,
with
Livingroom,
large kitchen with eating area; 4 twin Bedrooms, lots of Closets; 2 full Baths; Basement
with panelled Recreation
Room
on
nice landscaped Lot.
$22,950

HOMES

4 bedrooms, 11% baths, living room-dining
room combination with carpeting, kitchen,
recreation area, attached garage.

%
acre rambling
lot, 3 bedroom
ranch,
living room-dining combination, breezeway,
2 car garage. Owner says bring an offer.

BRIARWOOD

ESTATES

Owner must sell very attractive brick and
frame
ranch,
3 twin size bedrooms,
1%
baths, spacious living room with fireplace,
wall, dining room, large kitchen, attached
garage, in district of fine homes. Owner will
help finance. No reasonable offer refused.
Price, $29,750.

WI
12

TO

—

DUTCH COLONIAL FRAME: Livingroom,
Fireplace; Den or T.V. Room; Diningroom;
modern birch cabt. Kitchen, Powder Room; —
2nd Floor:
4 twin Bedrooms;
full Bath;
Basement;
2%
car Garage
with screened
Porch.
$28,500
CUSTOM
BUILT STONE
AND
FRAME
RANCH: Living &amp; Diningroom; birch cabt. |
Kitchen, built in Oven-Range
&amp; Refrigerator; cer. tiled Bath &amp; Powder Room; 3
lge. Bedrooms,
plenty Closets;
te
paneled
Recreation
Room;
att.
OWNER BUILT LANNON STONE-BRICK ~
SPLIT
LEVEL:
Vestibule;
Livingroom, —
Fireplace; Diningroom; comb. Kitchen-Dinette; 2 cer. tiled Baths; 3 extra large Bedrooms; lots of Closets; Basement, paneled
©
Familyroom,
Fireplace;
paneled
Den
&amp;
Laundryroom; Gas Hotwater Heat; scree:

Breezeway;
landscaped

att.

2 car

Lot.

Garage

on

166x236

$48,500

FRAME RANCH:
large comb. Living-dining room, knotty pine cab. kitchen, 3 twin

bdrms.,
tiled

Road

SUNDAY

“

NORTHBROOK

Carr Realty Co.
Waukegan

$25 io

STONE
&amp; FRAME
RANCH:
Livingroom;
Diningroom; birch cabt. Kitchen, built in
Oven &amp; Range; 3 twin Bedrooms, all dble.
Closets; cer. tiled Bath &amp; Powder Room;
full Basement;
Gas Hotair Heat; err

5-0984

6 P.M.

all double

bath,

2 car

OWNER:
transfer
forces
immediate
sale, custom built 4 year old colonial.
3 or 4 bdrms., 2 full baths, foyer, bsmt.
with rec. rm., full of built-in storage,
screened porch, terrace, lge. fenced yard,
louber doors, cork floors, Loads of closets,
cupboards,
drawers.
Located
on
wooded lot close to schols, park, transportation, shopping.
On
beautiful, quiet
oe
street. 20’s. Telephone WI 5-

closets,

garage,

enclosed

on

100x388

porch,

ft. lot.
$19,950.

ARTHUR C. ULLMANN~

REALTOR

5-1971

5

Rd.

(Improved)

3 bedroom
ranch in Woodland
Park, entrance hall, living room
overlooking
garden, kitchen with eating area, basement, attached garage, hot water heat.

OPEN

|

ID 2-2468

$23,500

701

Charming two story, 2 bedroom house, set
among tall trees on beautifully landscaped
lot. Paneled 13x27 living-dining room with
fireplace and wall to wall carpeting. Large
kitchen
with
stove
and
refrigerator,
gas
heat, comb. alum. screens-storms. Screened
porch opens onto flagstone patio with BarB-Q and fenced yard gives complete privacy. 2 car garage. One block from Wayne
Thomas School.
Offered by owner at $21,000
2875 Greenwood Avenue
IDlewood 2-8516

é

F. LEONARDI
REALTOR

REALTORS

VE

2-7873

SUN.,

bi-level,

cathedral beamed ceiling and fireplace,
arate
dining
room,
small
den,
kitchen, utility room,
att. garage,
rooms and bath.

730

In northeast Highland
Park,
corner
lot,
across street from Port Clinton Park. 20
year old 7 room (342 bedrooms) 2 story
brick and frame dwelling with attached garage at 2713 Port Clinton. $29,500. SHOWN
BY APPOINTMENT
ONLY.

GLENCOE

ROAD

SAT.,

LAKE

Ideal location, frame
ranch, 3 bedrooms,
large living area, screened porch, kitchen
with eating space, attached garage.

HIGHLAND
PARK
EAST
Near Ravinia Park where THE
BREEZE
brings the MUSIC
right to your door. 7
room brick Colonial, perfect condition. Also
a lovely
family
room
with
hand-pegged
floor and many built-ins. Facing patio and
beautiful grounds. Gas heat, garage. A remarkable buy in the 30’s.

LANG

i

Attractive 2 story colonial, less than one
year old, entrance hall, living room with
stone fireplace, dining room, built-in oven
and range, dishwasher and disposal, powder
room, 3 twin bedrooms, ceramic tile vanity
bath, large screened porch, basement. $36,500.

BRICK

OPEN HOUSE 11 TO 7, two story red brick
with 2 car brick garage in rear. 6 rooms,
3 bedrooms, 1% baths, full basement, gas
heat. Frontage 120x130 on three 40 ft.
lots. House on middle lot. Sides beautifully landscaped. Near schools, churches,
transportation. Total price, $49,500. 423
Broadview,
ID 2-0791.
BY
owner,
brick 3 bedroom,
1% baths,
separate dining room, 2 car garage, choice
Ravinia location, PRICED MID 20’s FOR
QUICK SALE. ID 2-2552.
BY owner—facing Sunset Park, brick ranch,
100x150
corner
lot,
4 bedrooms,
2%
baths, 30 ft. living room, large paneled
beamed
family
room,
secluded
patio,
fenced yard, carpeting, drapes, and dishwasher
included.
Immediate
occupancy.
$37,500. Telephone ID 2-1883.
OWNER, desirable 7 room brick, 112 baths,
basement, 2 car garage. Ravinia. $24,400.
Telephone ID 3-1457.
HERE’S
chance
to beat
inflation.
Very
charming
Cape
Cod home,
all on one
floor. Large living room
with fireplace.
3 bedrooms, large bath, modern kitchen,
large screened porch overlooking a row
of pines. Plenty of privacy. Full basement
with large panel family room and _ fireplace. Attached garage
and half. Very
easy to maintain and low upkeep.
Reduced to $31,500. Call ID 2-2871 between
9:30
a.m.-12:00,
except
Sundays.

JOHN

Situated on a beautiful lot, just % block
to lake with PRIVATE BEACH
RIGHTS,
this superbly built stone and shingle home
will appeal.
5 bedrms.
OUT
OF
THIS
WORLD
KITCHEN,
lge. summer
porch.
Owner’s
transfer requires immediate
sale.

Theater

LISTING

$21,250

Exquisite
Cape
Cod
cottage.
One
floor,
wooded
secluded lot, 132 ft. frontage,
2
B.R., large L.R., den-panelled dinette, basement. New gas heating plant. Low Taxes.
Short walk to shops and trains. Ravinia
area. Price $28,500. Telephone ID 2-2119.

to

LAKE

house, full basement,
plastered. Good buy.

J.

(Improved)
oe

REALTORS

bedrooms.

NEW
LISTING.
High on a
hillside, this
white brick and shingle Colonial home has
four twin size bedrms., 2%
tile baths, a
DE
LUXE
STREAMLINED
KITCHEN,
brkfst. area, screened porch and is sure to
please
a family
who
wants
CONVENIENCE. 3 biks. to station, 4 blks. to school.
Priced at $39,500.

OPEN

LEVELS

Two
attractive brick homes built in 1953
and
1955, large living room
with dining
area, 3 bedrooms, recreation room, garage,
screened
porch,
gas heat,
both
in West
Ridge School district. Low 20’s.

730

HlIillcrest

Winnetka

ay

ESTATE FOR SALE
(DEERFIELD)

Charming

CHARM-PLUS

BY

2

Lincoln

,
=

7 Gs

Benj. Piersen Realty —

Highland Park. 4 yr. old stone and clapboard Colonial, deep wooded
lot. 4 spacious
bedrooms,
2
ceramic
tiled
baths.
Living room with bay window, paneled family room,
cabinet
kitchen
with
breakfast
space.
Pine
recreation
room,
2 powder
rooms.
All
bleached
woodwork,
quality
built, fine condition. In the 50’s. Call Miss
Hedberg.

Real Estate
ID 2-8077

Glencoe

FOREST

ANDRUSS,

1-1111

REALTORS

Small down payment will buy this sparkling
white brick contemporary bi-level. 3 bedrooms plus family room. $23,750.

ANN

ALpine

income

2 large

OE

ID 2-6600

SHERWOOD

PK.

D.

Realtors

Central

Realtors

Wilmette

HIGHLAND

MARKET

4
Family
bedrooms,
2 baths,
maid’s room and bath, which can
also be used as family quarters.
House
tastefully
decorated,
perfectly maintained;
you can move

un-

usual appointment.
1925

ID

Excellent family house in good
EAST location. Large living room,
attractive
dining
room,
library,
powder
room,
MODERN
kitchen
with eating space; scr. porch accessible for dining and lounging.

2-1484

room

SPEND
SUMMER
on the screened porch
of this easy-to-care-for 2+ bedroom home
with a fenced garden and fruit trees. You’ll
like its paneled den, living room with fireplace and full basement. $21,500.

4 room
sell.

MICHIGAN

rooms.

BIG TREES surround this easy-on-the-eyes
brick ranch with 3 bedrooms, rustic paneled
rec. room,
carpeting with
3T, air conditioner. Priced in the 30’s. Call Mrs. Nilsson.

111

(mmproved)

PARK)

i

MUNDELEIN

L. Ringer

On over 2 acres of beau. landsc.
ground with more than 300 ft. of
beach, this 10 year white colonial
home features exquisite views and

YOU
OVERLOOK
THE
FOREST
PRESERVE
from this charming
country style
home on a wooded acre. Here’s up-to-date
living with a 3 bedroom, living room with
fireplace, separate dining room plus paneled
G. E. stainless steel kitchen with built-in appliances. $26,500. Call Mrs. Hedlund.

HOMEFINDERS,

FOR SALE

(HIGHLAND

BLOCK TO LAKE

THE 25 FOOT SCREENED PORCH is just
one plus feature of this expandable Bi-level
on one acre. It has 2 bedrooms, paneled
family room with beamed ceiling and 2 jalousied walls, plus birch cabinet kitchen.
Priced in the 20’s.

FOX

Road

BEST

457

»

BEAUTY

ESTATE
1

REL

LIVING

SUMMER
HEADQUARTERS.
will be the
patio of this brick and frame ranch completely landscaped with 33 trees. See the
elegant living room, large kitchen and family room, 3 bedrooms, 2 baths. A new listing
for $34,900. Call Mrs. Moser.

REALTORS
Sheridan

HUSENETTER
ID

w

Ww

Earhart &amp; Co.

REALTORS
Ave.

’

in this all brick 4 bedroom, 3% bath English home situated on beautiful ravine property in Elm Place School area. Generous
living room with fireplace and imported tile
floor—den with slate tile floor opening onto
a most
spectacular
terrace
and
screened
porch with magnificent views and complete
privacy. Completely remodelled kitchen with
all luxury details including built in ovenrange
and
dishwasher
adjoining breakfast
room. Large recreation room with fireplace
and
powder
room.
OWNER’
TRANSFERRED. Asking
$55,000

1899

*rwo bedroom ranch on over % acre heavily wooded
lot.
Extra
large
living
with
Thermopane picture windows facing private
rear yd. Built in 1956, the low taxes &amp; heating cost makes this a very attractive buy at
21,000

w
CLASSIC

Elegant Stone English Tudor on divine wooded grounds.
Nine
rooms,
including living
room with fireplace, separate dining room,
large family room, 5 bedrooms and 3 baths.
Choice location. Priced to sell fast. $36,500.

PARK

BUY

?

RAVINIA

HIGHLAND

REAL

country cottage on approximately
%4
Rural living within city limits—only

Mrs.

H. and R. Anspach
463

Attractive and well built 4 bedroom,
1%
baths,
brick
Colonial.
Beautiful
Living
Room with fireplace, separate Dining room,
Kitchen, Screened porch overlooking lovely
grounds.
Ideal for growing
family.
Near
school and transportation. Owner moving to
| California.
Consequently,
this
house
is
pricea’ for @uick sale. yon
Ure
$32,500.

Gas

Call

CHARM

WOODRIDGE

$35,500

A traditional red brick Colonial on
unusually well landscaped grounds
with lovely gardens. 3 bedrooms,

14%

IN

lot with

ranch.
Living
room
with
frpl.,
brick family
room
with
bar-b-Q
type frpl. Large family type kitchen. 3 bedrooms, 1% baths. Att. 2car garage. Immediate possession.

BEAUTIFUL

COUNTRY

ESTATE FOR SALE (improved)
(HIGHLAND PARK)
ENJOY SUMMER

Authentic manor house on large beautiful
landscaped ravine lot in east Highland Park.
First floor, spacious living room with fireplace, dining room, butler’s pantry, kitchen
and breakfast room, powder room and exceptional family room with fireplace overlooking garden and large terrace. Second floor,
master
bedroom
with
fireplace,
sleeping
porch and bath plus 4 bedrooms and 4 baths.
Separate garage has charming 3 room apartment with large screened porch. Priced to
sell. Owners moving out of town.

2 years old, on exceptionally nice
property overlooking golf course.

y

LISTED!

ix

et

216

Waukegan

Rd.

;

WI

5-3200
tg

DEERFIELD

ee,

DEERFIELD
Fresh,

young

and

added

features.

beautiful

tri-level

with

lots of growing space. 4 bedrooms, 2%
baths, panelled recreation room and many
TRI-LEVEL, 5 bedrooms, 2'% baths, living
room, dining room, wall to wall carpeting, kitchen with built-in oven and range,
panelled
recreation
room,
attached
garage, combination storms and screens, by
owner. Telephone WI 5-1641.
NEW
contemporary
house
on 2 wooded
acres in estate area; large living-dining
room
with
cathedral
ceilings,
fully
equipped
kitchen, family
room,
3
bedrooms, 2 baths, oversized 2 car garage.
$44,500. Telephone WI 5-0623.

SEYMOUR
655 Vernon

Priced

$34,900.

GRAHAM
Ave.

REALTOR
VE 5-4121_ ;

4

TWO
bedroom
ranch home, 8 years old,
garage and screened breeze-way, carpeti
‘
and
drapes
included,
near schools
an
transportation, $16,500. Ower,n telephone ~
WI 5-2278.

Page 49
reap.

�be

ESTATE FOR SALE
(DEERFIELD)
ENJOY
EH IN

SUMMER

THE

ng new
oiyey “sg
le
garage.

REAL ESTATE FOR SALE (Improved)

(Improved)

(DEERFIELD)

LIVING

WOODS

in

this

WHITE
brand

Dutch Colonial with 3-4 bedete Pus basement and douunus
new home
priced to

sell. Call Mr. Hastings.

.

ITERTAIN ON THE PATIO of this kingize brick. Tri-level on a quiet street for
ren. You'll like the fine new carpeting,
bedrooms, 2%
baths and wood paneled
. room, $35,000.
OFESSIONAL
LANDSCAPING
will
summer
almost garden-free for the
wner of this frame and redwood ranch.
be delighted with the excellent floor
entrance hall with direct access to all
g areas including the dining room with
ulted ceiling and 18 ft. picture window.
the young mother, the kitchen provides
ew of both front and back yards. Live
rily with its snack bar and dishwasher. A
nderful house for a modest $22,900. Call
rs. Parkinson—WI 5-0248.

OMEFINDERS,

Realtors

111 Green Bay Rd. Wilmette ALpine

NEARING

1-1111

ing

room

COMPLETION

with

fireplace,

maple

with oven, range, eating space. Large
_Toom, basement, good closets.

kitchen

fami-

THE PLYMOUTH, 1433 Ambleside, $41,500
bedroom, 214
bath brick and frame 2
. Large living room with fireplace, dinroom; walnut finish kitchen with eatspace, oven and range; family room.
ister bedroom has double dressing room
ath, good closets, basement.
Bot
these houses are in Scatterwood, Deerfield’s fine home
section. Take
Deerfield
to Warrington, (2 blocks east of Waun Rd.) North on Warrington to end,
on Woodvale
and again left on Am-

de, South

~L-C

1 block.

HOME

‘
orthfield

BUILDERS
6-3622

JUST THE
HOUSE
FOR
HONEYMOONERS
1 planned 2 bdrm. ranch within walking
ance of shop., trans., and schools. The

house

in town,

$15,900.

YOU
ASKED
FOR
WE
FOUND
IT

MORE

HUSENETTER
REALTORS
ID

St. Johns Ave.

DEERFIELD
THREE TERRIFIC

2-1484

VALUES!

1. Three
year old tri-level. 3 bdrms.,
2
baths, large family rm., laundry rm., plus
basement. Kitchen w/built in G.E. oven and
range;
also
eating
space.
Planned
landscaped lot w/screened patio. $31,500.
2. Brick ranch on beautiful landscaped lot.
3 twin size bdrms., plus den or 4th bdrm.,
1% baths. Sep. dining rm., kitchen w/eating
space. Full basement. $39,000.
3. Well maintained ranch w/living and dining rooms, 3 twin size bdrms., w/2 ceramic tile baths. 2 car garage. Recreation rm.
Large lot. Convenient location. Gas heat.
$44,000.

McGUIRE

ALpine

&amp;

ORR,

1-0228

Realtors

GReenleaf

5-1080

contractor, new bi-level in Deerfield
area, situated on lot 131x235, 3 bedrooms;
3 baths, 2 in ceramic;
fireplace; 27x10
country kitchen, gas oven range and rotisseries; paneled family room with outside entrance; double garage, landscaped
and
side
drive.
Quality
construction
throughout. Many extra features. $37,500.
Terms
available.
$4,500 down,
open to
reasonable
offer.
Open
for
inspection.
For appointment, call DAvis 8-6346.

IT

year new, 3 bdrm. ranch with nat. frpl.,
base., att. gar., near schools, trans.,
uptown. Only $21,500.

EED

DORSEY

BY

345 Walnut St.
Hillcrest

priced

Drive by this brick and frame Colonial at
838 Warrington Ave. Take a good look at
the
beautifully
landscaped
&amp;
maintained
home. Then call for an appointment to see
the interior, when again you'll be pleasantly surprised.
Modern
kitchen with eating
area, extra lange separate dining room, living room with fireplace and powder room.
There is a screened and glazed porch with
unusual privacy. Upstairs are 3 bedrooms
and a bath. Full basement, brick garage.

723

EXETER
626
Dimmeydale,
$39,850
droom, 2 bath brick ranch, large living-

LOCATION

BEDROOMS? ? ?

; 5 bdrm. 2 bath house with 8 closets,
eating area in kit., gas heat, full base., on

¥% acre, is only 7 years old. $25,500 to a

DEERFIELD-LINCOLNSHIRE
By transferred owner, California contemporary, 8 rooms, 2 baths, over 2,000 sq. ft.,
built in appliances,
sliding
glass window
walls, to patio from
living room,
family
room, and dining room. Distinctively decorated, fully landscaped, wooded half acre,
many extras, year and a half old. Low 40’s.
Telephone WI 5-3177.

nrifty buyer.

OPEN MONDAY
er

THRU FRIDAY

9 a.m.-8 p.m.
SATURDAY
9 a.m.-5 p.m.

REAL

KING Realty Co.
: -€ “Deerfield

John

Coons

Realtor

in

THE

SUBD.

Tr
outstanding
Maplewood
school district
is this six room brick ranch with full basent. Carpeted living rm., family rm., full
h amd powder rm., excellent financing.
Mid 20.s
icture book three bedroom ranch with
standing view of old wooded bridge. If
are looking for an excellent home in
20’s come out and see this. Many exPrice
22,900

a real nice home,

we

are of-

OPEN

of vacant

SUNDAY

...

Why

not

10-5

John Coons, Realtor
in Deerfield
3

Deerfield

Rd.

WI

5-5100

/ERFIELD-LINCOLNSHIRE
i
ry Living! 7 room California ranch, 3
edrooms, huge living rm., dream kitchen
npletely
equipped
with
all appliances.
appointments
thruout. This elegant
ne built in 1958 must be sold due to
ss. Priced in low 50’s. Owner open to
er!

~McGUIRE
\Lpine 1-028

&amp;

ORR,

LAKE
of

in

a

MUNDELEIN...

THE

LADY

OF

YOUR

Thornbury

Village,

just off St. Mary’s

WEST

SHORE

MUNDELEIN

Call MUndelein 6-6720
Michael Dennee
Jo Dennee
representing

H.

D.

Olson

1%

story

baths,

and

cabinet

ating area, living
sun parlor, screened
enced yard, patio,

to sell, low

Page 50

20’s.

a

half,

kitchen

3

with

bedrooms,

separate

room,
dining room,
porch, full basement,
double garage. Priced

&amp; Co.

Realtors

Ill.

_.
GLENCOE, 595 DUNDEE
RD.
Brick ranch, 5 years old, 3 bedrooms, 2
baths, full basement,
2 car attached
garage, porch, patio, fenced play yard. Low
thirties. Telephone VErnon 5-0910 or ID 2-

“

11%

baths,

room,

and

brick

THE

and

KING

40’s

clapboard

a screened

porch

2 attached

garage.

SCHOLZ

game

built RANCH

FOREST

dining
room,

plus

baths.

bedrooms,

and

&amp;

OFFICES,

AIR CONDITIONED
almost new
brick RANCH on % wooded acre,
3

SUMMER

114

WINTER

INC.
ID 2-4580
RESORTS

rent by week or month, one guest
FOR
cottage, on Eagle River chain, AccommoLarge
furnished.
completely
5,
dates
porch, fireplace, boat, fine beach.
Call
ID 3-1492.

FIND

with full basement, separate
room,
panelled
FAMILY

ROAD

PAUL PHELPS,
1925 Sheridan Rd.

in-

cluding 4 bedrooms, 2 baths, separate dining room, den and a family room. Carpeting and drapes included in $42,500 price.

LAKE

MUIR

The. last piece of beau. wooded
prop. Surrounded by fine homes.
Over an acre. A bargain at ..$12,500

DEERFIELD-LINCOLNSHIRE
9 room

SKOKIE—4 bedrooms, lovely living room,
fireplace, picture window overlooking Evanston Golf Course, paneled family room, modern kitchen with built-ins, powder room on
1st floor, 114 baths on 2nd. floor. Low 40’s.

1,

STORES &amp;
TO RENT

STUDIOS

2 AND
3 rooms for offices
Central Ave. ID 2-0150.

only,

TO RENT (Unfurnished)
sYamiMENTS
(HIGHLAND PARK)

SEARS

REAL

in the most
In the 40’s.

ESTATE

3

CO.

by-owner

An

advance appointment
tour of inspection.

MARTIN

A.

is necessary

VEHLOW

for

REALTY

433 GAGES LAKE RD.
BALDWIN

3-0880

GAGES

PRAIRIE VIEW
COUNTRYSIDE

a

ARCHITECT
OFFERS
own
designed
8
room. one story modern house. Unique interior, 11 ft. ceiling, 40 ft. living room, 4
acres. on wooded
stream.
5 car
garage.
$38,000. Telephone NEwton 4-3834.

LAKE, ILL.
REAL

ESTATE FOR
(HIGHLAND

BARRINGTON COUNTRYSIDE
HOME
33

Close in small farm estate, 4 bedroom Colonial, 2 car garage, small barn. Many trees.
Orchard and vegetable garden. Extensively
landscaped.
$110,000.

5 ACRES
A most attractive 3 bdrm. 2 story residence,
and 2 car garage. Very clean and in excellent condition.
Partly
wooded.
Desirable
se re pm 10 more acres available. $45,-

WALTER
West

Signal

Hill Rd.
DUnkirk

LIBERTY

MELROSE
Barrington
1-1395

VILLE

If you
appreciate
a distinguished
home,
good neighborhood, finest construction, this
home is for you. Features 14x20 master bedroom
with
separate dressing
room.
Well
lighted
living
room
with
fireplace
and
French doors leading on to large screened
patio for plenty of summer living. See this
house today and buy for everlasting comfort. Many nice features left for your surprise. Priced in the lower 30’s for a quick
sale. Call Mr. White.

Baird &amp; Warner
504
DU

E. Main
1-1855

St.

CHOICE
COURSE

GOLF

ACRE

Barrington
Til.

SALE (Vacant)
PARK)

SITE

90x266 heavily wooded sloping site
with
magnificent
view
of
golf
course in area of fine homes. Fully

improved.

Unusual

Telephone

ID

NORTH

buy

at $12,000

2-8711.

RIDGE

ROAD

One
of the last pieces of beau.
wooded vacant, conv. located. Approx. 11/5 acres with 320 ft. road
frontage. Sewer, water and paving
in and paid. Out of town owner

wishes to liquidate

$13,000

PAUL PHELPS, INC.
1925 Sheridan
50

Rd.

ID 2-4580

FT. frontage. Templa Ave., zoned two
family. Telephone ID 2-9468, after 6 p.m.

REAL

ESTATE FOR SALE
(DEERFIELD)

(Vacant)

Last desirable large tract in choice Deerfield
(North)
location,
approximately
2
acres with beautiful woods; ripe for small
subidivision. Near schools. Water and sewer
uninstalled, but available.
PAUL M. WADE
WI 5-1430

APARTMENTS

TO RENT
(DEERFIELD)

(Unfurnished)

Me)

‘

MODERN
2
bedroom
apartment,
birch
cabinet kitchen, ceramic tile bath; near
shopping and schools, $145 monthly, including everything but gas and electricity.
No pets. Telephone WI 5-2419.
BEAUTIFUL
air
conditioned
3
room
apartment, picture window, modern kitchen and bath. Available June 1 or 15. Telephone WI 5-0064, after 5:30 p.m.
ROOM
apartment,
second
floor; living ,
room, dinette and bedroom with wall to
wall
carpeting,
stove,
water
and
heat
furnished, walk-in closet. Ideal for coueve $125 per month. Telephone WI 51305,

APARTMENTS

TO

RENT

(LAKE FOREST)

(Unfurnished)

IMMEDIATE
occupancy, attractive garage
apartment;
3 bedrooms, 2 baths, living
room,
kitchen, numerous
closets, space
for one car. Adults only; no pets. Write
Box W-5 c/o Lake Forester.
AVAILABLE June ist. 4 room apartment,
291 E. Illinois Rd. Lake Forest 2700.

APARTMENTS
TO_ RENT (Unfurnished)
(MISCELLANEOUS)
5

ROOMS, Hubbard Woods, available July
1st. Choice apartment, 2 bedrooms. Convenient to bus, and N.W. train. $145 per
month. No pets. VEnnon 5-0716 or HIIlcrest 6-4186.

APARTMENTS TO RENT (Furnished)
(HIGHLAND PARK)
ROOM
furnished 2nd floor apartment,
share bath, $115 a month,
all utilities
erg block from town. Telephone ID 2ROOM
apartment in Highwood; kitchen,
private bath. Prefer middle aged woman
or couple. Telephone ID 2-1159.
4 ROOM furnished apartment for 3 months
or longer. Telephone ID 2-5873.
3 ROOM furnished apartment, with or without garage; reasonably priced. Telephone
ID 2-0499 or ID 3-1743.

Thursday, May 21,
e,

sk

456

ROOM apartment with range and refrigerator included, Highwood business district. Telephone Lake Forest 136.
3 ROOM apartment in Highwood, equipped
with stove and refrigerator, available immediately. Telephone ID 2-3802, between
8 am. and 5 p.m.
4 ROOM apartment, heat furnished, second
NORTHWEST
EVANSTON
— Ideal for
floor, no pets. In Highwood. Call after
growing
family,
10 room
home,
5 _ bedREALTORS
3 p.m. ID 2-3039.
rooms, 2%
baths, living room
with fireplace, large rec. room and den, Low 30’s.
apartment, utilities furnished,
ROOM
314
Hillcrest 6-2900
stove and refrigerator. Telephone ID 2All above for sale DIRECT. For owner’s
6949.
information,
or appointment
with
owner,
unfurnished apartment in High3 ROOM
CALL ORchard 5-8383.
wood. Telephone ID 2-2676.
WHEELING
apart2 bedroom
unfurnished
MODERN
3 bedroom
ranch, combination living and
ment. Telephone ID 2-2975.
dining room, bath, electric kitchen, breezefurwater
and
heat
bath,
and
3 ROOM
way,
garage,
all
improvements,
carpet,
nished, in Highwood. Call ID 2-6154.
drapes,
washer,
dryer,
electric
stove
inapartment, heat and hot water
cluded,
gas
heat;
small
down
payment.
4 ROOM
SERVICE
BUREAU,
INC.
furnished. Telephone ID 2-3187.
$16,500.
2 bedroom apartment. Apply 805
LARGE
4846 Main St., Skokie, Illinois
NORTHBROOK
VICINITY
Central Ave., Highland Park. ID 2-0229,
includes
2 bedroom
ranch, combination living and 27 APARTMENTS:
one 4 room
dining room, bath, kitchen with eating space,
stove, heat and water, $95; one 5 room,
Highwood.
$90.
utility room, breezeway, 2 car attached gawater,
stove, heat and
EXECUTIVE DREAM
rage, lot 100x200. Only $14,000.
Telephone ID 2-3485 or ID 2-0885.
upstairs apartment and garage,
ON GAGE’S LAKE
ROOM
WM. EDWARDS
stove and refrigerator furnished, utilities
ONE OF LAKE COUNTY’S
transportation. $105 a month,
near
paid;
CARR REALTY
Telephone ID 2-9283.
403 Dundee Rd.
LEhigh 7-0800
FINEST LAKE FRONT
Evenings CRestwood 2-1519
one bedroom apartment avail314 ROOM
HOMES
furnished;
refrigerator
and
stove
able,
will decorate to suit. $110. Telephone ID
Push button Kitchen
GRAYS
LAKE, custom built ranch, stone
2-5041.
Large Comfortable Living Room, Stone
and brick, 2 bedrooms, 2 baths, beautiful
garage apartment, gas heat, loFire Place, Picture Window
kitchen,
natural
gas,
air
conditioned 4 ROOM
cated in Highwood. Telephone ID 3-0316.
Automatic Gas Hot Water Radiant Heatthroughout including screened and glassed
fix-it shop and garage with four
SMALL
porch.
Full basement.
Ideal
for young
ing
room apartment on second floor. St. Johns
Paneled Den, Built In Bar
married or retired couple. By owner at
Libertyville 2-2350.
Telephone
Ave.
Dining Room, Picture Window
$26,000. Telephone
BAldwin
3-4259.
Bath
Three Bedchambers,
Two © Full
BEDROOM second floor apartment, near
Rooms, Mirrors
schools, shopping, and transportation, $75
in the crest of a
Screened patio Porch, Rear Patio, Pro- BARRINGTON—nestled
plus heat and utilities. Leonardi Agency,
hill is this custom built home in secluded
tected Entry Walk &amp; Hall
ID 3-1000.
wooded
paradise,
dramatic
living room
Full Basement, First Floor Utility Room,
upstairs apartment, 2 bedrooms,
ROOM
with 17 ft. window wall overlooks breath
Double Door Hall Closets
kitchen, living room,
dining room,
and
taking
panoramic
view
of
Japanese
garden
Two Car Oversize Garage, Workshop
included. Available July 1.
Garage
bath.
and bridges which lends enchantment to
Three
Lake
Front Lots,
Sandy
Beach,
Located at 1962 Green Bay Rd., ID 2the winding spring set brook
in ravine
Clear Water
5743, after 4:30 p.m.
below. 1 acre lot, 8 rooms, 2 baths, 2
Sail Boat, Motor Boat, Row Boat, Built
room,
2 bedroom
apartment,
close to
kitchens,
massive
fireplace,
recreation
In Boat Dock &amp; Basin, Pier
transportation, for rent on or before July
Deeproom, bar, garage, 80 ft. patio and balAutomatic
Laundry,
Dishwasher,
1, $160. Heat and hot water furnished.
cony
across
entire
house.
2 complete
freeze And Many Extras
Parking space. WI 5-0645.
levels. $42,900. DUnkirk 1-3031.
Many Other Luxury Features
1155 ST. JOHNS Ave. Modern brick buildThis Pictorial Home with its inviting private
ing. Immediately available, 3 rooms with
LARGE summer or year around home, furbeach is nestled amidst Huge Shade Trees
modern tile bath, stove, sink, and refrigernish.
Loon
Lake,
$12,000.
Owner
will
on a gentle, landscaped and terraced bluff
ator, $90; and 2 rooms with bath, stove,
consider financing. Telephone WI 5-2222,
on Gages Lake—Peace and Quiet prevail
sink and refrigerator. $80. If required on
Leininger &amp; Assoc.
on a country charming
street which is
lease, will eventually furnish both.
dead end.
ROOMS and porch, first floor, stove, electricity and utilities furnished. Near transNear High and Grade School Buses, Toll
portation
in Highland
Park. Telephone
Road, Transportation and Shopping.
ID 2-1853.

Thermopane windows
spacious living room.
See

NORTHWEST EVANSTON—Charming Colonial
home
across
from _ Lincolnwood
school.
Lovely
living
room
with
picture
window
overlooking
landscaped
garden,
modern
kitchen, 3 bedrooms, 214 baths.

3 bedroom,
11%% bath, CAPE
COD
on a
100x125
ft. wooded
lot. Lake rights. Included are stove, refrig. &amp; carpeting. This
property
is priced
low
to
close
estate.
$16,500.

Waukegan,
owner,

.

built

IN

COLONIAL in a beautiful wooded
2-3 acre setting. 3 large bedrooms,

WEST
WILMETTE — Decorator’s
home.
Mahogany paneled family room with fireplace and bar, 3 bedrooms, 2!2 baths, G.E.
electric kitchen. Will sacrifice. ‘Mid 30’s.

PARK,
..

Custom

ranch home on beaularge bedrooms, 22
room with fireplace
kitchen, most attracwith complete bar.

(Improved) |

OUS)

BANNOCKBURN

WILMETTE
—
523
Washington
Street.
Charming home, 5 bedrooms, 2 full baths,
2 powder rooms, spacious living room with
fireplace,
separate
dining
room,
modern
kitchen,
convenient
location
to
schools,
transportation and beach.

Road...

3 bedroom, 1% vanity bath, New England
Colonial on 1 acre +. Has 14x19 ft. Liv.
Rm. with fireplace, Din. rm., Custom Cab.
Kitchen with built-in oven &amp; range. Attach.
garage (finished). Asking price, $30,950.

IN

(MISCEL

DEERFIELD—3 bedroom ranch home, living room, separate dining area, large modern kitchen, large lot with fenced back yard.
Low 20’s.

LIFE

would love this DELUXE 6 room FRAME
RANCH with attach. gar., in the country on
approx.
2 acres,
located
near PRIVATE
LAKE and a GOLF COURSE. This home
has many fine features and is priced under
$39,000.

Realtors
GReenleaf 5-1080

OPEN house Saturday and Sunday, 1 to 6.
724 Osterman, telephone WI 5-3077. By

PRIVATE

4 bedroom,
2 bath,
SOLID
BRICK
&amp;
FRAME with attach. 2 car gar., on 75x160
ft. lot, has PRIVATE pier and beach. Entrance to Full Basement from beach as well
as by inside stiarway. Priced BELOW 30’s.

ring one of the best deals in months in
three bedroom ranch at $22,000. Call!
fe have all kinds
ve us a call!

LIBERTYVILE:.......

Custom built 3 bedroom, 1%4 bath, BRICK
VENEER RANCH with attach. 2 car gar.,
on big landscaped lot. Has 13x23 ft. L.R.
with
C.O.
Stone
Fireplace.
Birch
Cab.
iKtchen has built-in range, oven &amp; dishwasher. Full basement has 15x31 ft. Rec.
a
with fireplace &amp; bar. Priced in. Low
dit

ON

Deerfield

ou want

ESTATE FOR SALE (Improved)
(MISCELLANEOUS)

IN

5-5300

WI

Deerfield

Dd.

3 BEDROOM bi-level, 75 ft. lot, 1142 baths,
large
living
room,
kitchen,
close
to
schools,
shopping,
transportation.
Mid
20’s, by owner. Telephone,
WI 5-2477.

DEERFIELD—Lovely
tiful landscaped lot. 3
baths, spacious living
and dining L, modern
tive finished basement
Low 40’s.

FOR SALE

REAL ESTATE

(Improved)

BY OWNER

COLONIAL

Seldom is it possible for us to offer such
an immaculate home at this definitely low
“Sell Today”
price. There
are four bedrooms, a modern knotty pine kitchen with
Formica tops and eating area. A separate
dining room, lovely living room with fireplace, a screened &amp; glazed porch, full basement and a one car garage. Call today for
appointment to see
24,500

TOP

REAL ESfATE FOR SALE
(MISCELLANEOUS)

:

�Berit

*

+

TO RENT (
TO IGHLAND PARK)

- HOUSES TO RENT Furnished)
(LAKE FOREST)

NEW, modern, furnished kitchenette apartment, utilities included, laundry. facilities.
Good
location. Available June 2. Telephone ID 2-1170.
FURNISHED
detached
garage
apartment,
1% blocks from stores and stations, toward the lake. Good light and view, ideal
for couple without children. References.
$95 a month. Telephone ID 2-6413.

3 ROOM

furnished lovely third floor apart.

ment in private home to pleasant couple in
exchange
for low
rental and
8 to 10
hours a week gardening and handy man
services,
references.
Telephone
ID
25589.
FURNISHED 3 room apartment and bath.
Heat and hot water. Private entrance, no
children, couple preferred. ID 2-2637.

MODERN,

beautifully

furnished,

4

room

apartment, carpeted, conveniently located.
ID 2-0287 or ID 2-5873.
MODERN kitchenette apartment located in
business district of Highwood. Telephone
Lake Forest 136.
ATTRACTIVE 2 room apartment, ceramic
tile bath. Beautiful view; adults; no pets,

parking,

$100.

ID

2-7596.

2

ROOM furnished apartment, utilities furnished, close to transportation and Fort
Sheridan. Telephone ID 2-0497.
2 ROOMS
and bath, furnished. 1658 Mc' Govern, ID 2-2854.

APARTMENTS TO RENT (Furnished)
(LAKE FOREST)
ON
Green Bay
Rd. furnished
or unfurnished
3 room
apartment
with
knotty
pine living room and wood burning fireplace. All utilities furnished.
Immediate
occupancy. Call Lake Bluff 238.
SUBLET
for
summer.
Available
immediately, to Sept. 15th. Completely furnished
4 room apartment, air-conditioned. Phone
Lake Forest 3412,
PARTIALLY furnished apartment for rent,
June
15th
through
August
31st,
$70.
Telephone Lake Forest 4856 after 5 p.m.
HOUSES
TO RENT
(HIGHLAND

(Unfurnished)
PARK)

3 bedroom
home,
living room with fireplace, separate dining room, porch, kitchen
has dishwasher and eating area, 3 bedrooms.
gas heat, 1 car garage. $200 per month.

ANN
440
BR

ANDRUSS,

Green Bay
3-2550

Realtor

Rd.

Kenilworth
AL 1-7300

HOUSE for rent, available June 1, in northeast Highland Park, few blocks from lake.
Telephone ID 2-6568, after 6 p.m.
NEW house. 3 bedrooms, den, 2 baths, fireplace, 2 car garage. 2 year lease, $250
a month. 870 West Park Ave., Highland
Park. Telephone ID 2-5994 for appointment.
8 ROOM older home, 2 baths, oil heat, near
shopping, schools and transportation. 475
Laurel Ave.,
Highland
Park.
$150
per
month. Leonardi Agency, ID 3-1000.
A SMALL home ideal for older couple or
working couple. Living room and dinette,
bedroom,
kitchen,
bathroom,
automatic
gas hot water heat, garage for one car.
Available June 1st. Will rent to responsible people only. $89.50 per month. Call
ID 2-2871 between 9:30 a.m. and 12 noon.
MODERN 3
bedroom bi-level, 1% baths,
family room with bar, jalousied porch, 2
car garage. Telephone
ORchard
6-1287.
RENT WITH OPTION TO BUY. 7 room,
1% bath home on beautiful wooded lot on
East side. $165mo.
or will sell with low
down payment. MR. O’CONNELL.

Baird &amp; Warner
576 Lincoln Avenue
Winnetka,
Illinois

HOUSES

Hillcrest
SHeldrake

6-1855
3-1855

TO RENT (Unfurnished)
(LAKE FOREST)

ATTRACTIVS 3 bedroom brick house, 1%
baths, 2 fireplaces, garage, gas heat; near
pte
and trains. $200. Call Lake Forest

HOUSES

TO

RENT

(Unfurnished)

(MISCELLANEOUS)
WHEELING

3

bedroom

country

home,

$125

3 bedroom California ranch
2 baths, $160 per month.
2 bedrooms,
month.

close

WM.
403

in,

with

garage.

per

month.

$150

EDWARDS
7-0800

FURNISHED.
June, July, August,
possibility of continued rental, 5 bedrooms,
2% baths, beautifully landscaped 4 acres,
completely
fenced,
easily
maintained.
Walking distance to train. Rent $500 per
month. Please give name,
address, telephone number and references. Write Box
H-55, c/o Highland Park News.

TO RENT (Furnished)
(DEERFIELD)

FURNISHED
7 room
house,
1% _ baths,
available June 1 to October 1. Telephone
WI 5-0466.

HOUSES TO RENT (Furnished)
(LAKE FOREST)
for

summer

2. bedroom
only,

June

Call Lake Forest 1079.,

house
18

to

, May 21, 1959

for
August

rent
23.

of July, 5 bedand porch. Lake

HOUSES
&amp; APARTMENTS
WANTED
(Furnished or Unfurnished)
WANTED:
Partly
furnished
Aug. 1, for married couple,
ers, in Lake Forest or Lake
phone Lake Bluff 2954 after

apartment,
both teachBluff. Tele5:30 p.m.

WANT
to rent:
Rooms,
apartments
and
houses for ror
of MUSIC
AND
TENTHOUSE
TRE. Telephone ID
2-1160 after 10:30 a.m.
WANTED
to rent: small furnished apartment by business man. Telephone DAvis
vis 8-3476 daytime, ID 2-8510 evenings.
WANT
to buy home
in 6 to 9 months,
minimum
4 bedrooms,
extra
room
for
den in Lake Forest or Lake Bluff. Range
$20,000 to $25,000. Lake Bluff 2755.
WANT to rent for summer months ground
floor furnished apartment or small house
Se! 3 adults. Call Lake Bluff 1721 after
p.m.
NICE
responsible
bedroom house,
$200. Telephone

YOUNG

You would counsel your own group
of customers
arrangements

APARTMENTS

fitting color telephones to decorating schemes.
You’d
also help
them with any other telephone
needs.
Illinois

HOUSES

TO

Bell

TO

job

near

In

Deerfield call or
Mrs. Barnes

NORTH SHORE
GAS CO.
ID 2-6000

WI

Windsor
In

Lake
Miss

Excellent
perienced
meeting

day-to-day

of

Smith-Corona

and

see

9995

ILLINOIS BELL
TELEPHONE

Line

SwitchSecretarial,

SALESLADY

Levi,

Pleasant work
small
office.
quired.
Paid
and insurance.

1549

W.

Howard
Skokie

or night
Part time

Park

Rd.,

Restaurant
Highland

Park

TYPIST
FOR
BILLING
DEPARTMENT.
Accurate with figures, good memory, enjoys detail work. Salary open. Company
benefits.
Immediate
openings.
Phone
CRestwood
2-5700, Randolph Lab.
Birchwood
phone ID

WAIT RESS

Club, 1175 Park Ave
3-1131, after 1 p.m.

West.

Tele-

open

ID

Central

Ave.

RICH

COSMETICS
Morton Gro

NEAT GIRL
Local girl for interesting
off
work, full time; will train. G
salary and working conditions. |

SKOKIE VALLEY
LAUNDRY
ID 2-3310

514 Waukegan

GENERAL

AMERICAN

&amp;

CO.
ID

2-4600

Ave.

TYPISTS

For work in our Purchasing or Sales D
These positions offer good starting s:
and promotional possibilities. 45 wpm
ing ability required. Shorthand not
sary. Full range of company benefits. ¢
pay subsidized cafeteria, 5 day, 37% |
week,

2020

Many benefits.
® Paid Vacations
® Group life insurance
® Group hospitalization
® Profit sharing

601

CLAIRE

6901 Golf Rd.

2-5180

in:

ROEBUCK

BENEFITS

DEPENDABLE

Ave.

SEARS

FOR

AVON

on cost records in
No
shorthand
revacations,
holidays

CATALOGUE
SALES DEPT.

trasnportation
person

Johnson’s
Valley

and interesting typing jot

ASK

We are extending our operations
and have openings in the personnel, production control, and IBM
departments. If you are interested
in this type of work and have clerical background we will train you.
Working
conditions
are pleasant,
pay is good with free life insurance
and
group
hospitalization,
profit
sharing
and
other
benefits.
Call
personnel, WI 5-1990.
Positions

450

881

MODERN OFFICES
AIR CONDITIONING

2-7640

THE FIRST
NATIONAL BANK
HIGHLAND PARK

have own
Apply in

FOREST

37% HOUR WEEK
MANY COMPANY

Products, Inc.

nights.

clothes.

CLERK-TYPIST

Must

GARNETT &amp; CO.

in a relaxed, congenial atmosphere
Must be fast and accurate. Dicta
phone experience desirable, but n
required. Light filing. Call the Admissions Office of Lake Forest
lege, Lake Forest 3100, for appo

Clerical Female

WAITRESSES Day
HOSTESS-CASHIER

PERMANENT
FULL TIME

Lighting

Unlimited
No

ID

FOREST

TYPIST
FULL OR PART TIME

CLERK-TYPIST

es-

Well groomed lady, permanent position
in
beautiful
store
selling

Mrs.

|

Duraclean Co.

ID 2-4500.

apparel.

APPT.

ment.

Telephone

5 day week.

FOR

LAKE

Il.

WORK

bookkeeping.

Telephone

2-8000

|

OFFICI

SALESLADIES

Inc.)

Roads

GENERAL
OFFICE

office hours: 8:30 to 4:00 MonFriday; 8:30 to 12:00 Saturday.

OFFICE NURSE
WANTED
FOR PERMANENT
POSITION.
WILLING
TO
TRAIN. 5 DAY WEEK. TOP SALARY
TELEPHONE ID 2-4650.
WAITRESSES, TOP SALARY AND TIPS,
EXCELLENT EARNINGS. MEALS AND
UNIFORMS FURNISHED. NO NIGHTS.
APPLY
MILLERS,
349
PARK
AVE.,
GLENCOE. VE 5-9846.

Marchant,

Varied

sential. No

on your

PERSONNEL

ID

TYPISTS

Typing

discount

CALL

Air Conditioned Store
Congenial Surroundings

PERMANENT

30%

filing, general office and
oe experience
desirable.

Interesting work in pleasant
ronment. Why commute when
can work close to home?

excel-

Dictaphone, Filing. Ideal suburban
location, 5 day week, top pay and
benefits. Call A. Walsh, HIllcrest

2 or 3 days each week.

We need women to work in our inspection
and packing department, and on our plastic
fabricating machines. If you don’t have the
necessary experience we will train you. There
are openings on both shifts and we offer
good starting wages, opportunities for advancement and steady work in a modern
plant.

GENERAL BINDING
CORPORATION
1101 SKOKIE HIGHWAY
NORTHBROOK

and

DOWNTOWN DEERFIELD
WI 5-2000

opportunity.

ing,
are
time.

@
@

NORTHBROOK
CRESTWOOD 2-1000

WOMEN

2-3700

5-1200

following
assignments:
board, Typing, Billing,

Culligan, Inc.

better women’s

time.

CLERK-TYPIST

5 Day Week
Generous Discount
Health Insurance

STENO

APPAREL

TECHNICIAN

LAKE

OFFICE

duties,

floor

@
@
@

RENT

TIME

NURSES

general

GENERAL OFFICE
Opportunity for steady full time
employment in small modern office
if you can handle any or all of the

TYPIST

PART

Full
time,
Salary.

Full

challenges.

County

Deerfield,

call or
Larsen

Forest

REGISTERED

KLEINSCHMIDT
Waukegan

283 East Deerpath
Lake

NEEDS

LAB

for an excapable of

Pleasant surroundings
lent company benefits.

(Div.

see

opportunity
clerk-typist

5-9996

Forest
Helen

HIGHLAND PARK
HOSPITAL

CLERK-TYPIST

inAnd

812 Deerfield Road

WANTED—FEMALE

CRESTWOOD

and general office work, have interview and make application at
our service building located on
Lake Cook Road, half mile west
Rt. 42A (Waukegan Road).

their
is

If you’d like to work near home in
a modern, air-conditioned office—
with people you’ll enjoy—come in
and see us.

SHARE

ONE
single room within walking distance
of business district; man preferred. Telephone ID 2-2684.
COMFORTABLE
bedroom
for
employed
gentleman; near transportation. Telephone
ID 2-2952.
ROOM
for rent for gentleman,
space in
yard for car. 5 blocks from town. Telephone ID 2-1293.
FOR rent on Market Square, clean, comfortable bedroom for employed lady. Call
Lake Forest 1953 after 6 p.m.
STUDENTS—have
rooms for 5 or 6. Private beach, bath, entrance, and cabana
on Lake Michigan. 20 miles north of Lake
Forest. $75 monthly. Write Box H-75, c/o
Highland Park News.
ROOM and board for older woman in exchange for baby sitting at night. Telephone WI 5-1445.
SLEEPING and sitting room, hot water at
all times, near transportation, suitable for
couple or 2 people. Telephone ID 2-6682.
ROOM
plus garage for employed woman,
conveniently located near town or hospital. Telephone ID 2-6474.
COMFORTABLE front room on East side,
centrally located; for employed woman;
no
transient.
Under
$11.
Usual
_privileges. Telephone ID 2-1138.
FURNISHED
room, large or small, near
town and transportation. 208 North Ave.,
Highwood. Telephone ID 2-3769.
TWO sleeping rooms, convenient bathroom,
laundry
privileges,
private
basement,
kitchen. Telephone WI 5-4087.
COMFORTABLE
sunny room
for gentleman; bath to share. Telephone WI 5-2097.
ROOM for rent, $25 a month, close to town.
Telephone ID 2-1621.

Employment
day through

like

home.

PARK HOTEL sleeping rooms, by day or
week, free parking, 511 Waukegan Ave.,
Highwood,
ROOM for rent, within walking distance of
eT
a district; parking. Telephone ID

HELP

here

they also like the idea that they
don’t have a long, tiresome trip to
the Loop—instead,
they have a

COLLEGE caliber young woman to share 3
room apartment with same. Call ID 3-0019
after 6 p.m.
WILL
share 3 bedroom, 2 story Colonial
house with single male or older couple.
My wife and children have gone to Europe for summer.
Maid
service, kitchen
privileges, TV, etc. Telephone WI 5-2808
after 6 p.m. or weekends.

ROOMS

girls

jobs a lot because the work
teresting
and
challenging.

family wants to rent 3
unfurnished. Rent up to
ORchard 4-1978.

&amp;

in their telephone
and advise them in

x

_

SWITCHBOARD OPERATOR

LADY

Want a job where you’ve got to
use a lot of judgement and tact in
solving customer’s problems?

VERY responsible ex-North Shorite desires
house for approximately 1 month. Must
include
ist week
of August.
Excellent
care. VErnon 5.0958.
TWO or three bedroom house, unfurnished,
$150 to $175, by responsible middle aged
executive and wife with two daughters, 8
and 12. CLearbrook 3-2630.

per

HOUSES TO RENT (Furnished)
(HIGHLAND PARK)

FURNISHED

AVAILABLE
for month
room house with terrace
Forest 3373.

appliances,

CARR REALTY
Dundee Rd.
LEhigh
Evenings
CRestwood
2-1519

HOUSES

LAKE FOREST, outstanding rental or buy,
executive’s 4 bedroom, 2 den, 2% bath,
10 year old, Lannonstone Colonial, RENT
June through Labor Day or by year. Top
location and schools. Reasonably priced—
option to BUY.
Call owner, Lake Forest

HELP WANTED -FEMALE

HELP WANTED—FEMALE

Ridge

HOSPITAL
Evanston

SUPPLY —
UN

HOUSEWIVES
and teachers, part time
full employment. Local assignments. Tel
phone after 5 p.m. and on week ends.
HI
crest 6-3848.
ed
BOOKKEEPER for Real Estate and T:
Departments.
Attractive modern
ai
ditioned office. References required.
Mr. or Mrs. Anspach at ID 2-1212.
MEDICAL
assistant, diversified
duties, ‘
day week, 35 hours, light bookkeeping
ar
typing necessary. Telephone WI
5-

�ar ieee apc ag

COSMETIC
PACKAGING

- GOOD

Positions

STRATING RATE

ASK

FOR

AVON
6901

Golf

CLAIRE

RICH

COSMETICS

Rd.

Morton

Grove

open

-

_

Full time work for production line,

- ment.
5 day

|

week,

Excellent

8:30

_ terviews

on May
Gard

and

cinating
of the
- turers

ucts.

to 4:30

Inc.

Rd.

Northfield

interesting

aerosol

work

of one

country’s leading manufacof push button spray prod-

Will

- manent

train

right

position

as

girl for per-

lab

technician.

Chemistry experience desirable but
not

aa;
4
1739

required.

Interviews

on

May

(at:
Gard Industries,
Harding Rd.

_

A

rare

chance

to

break

into

the

IBM

_

field. Previous key punch
experience not
necessary.
Excellent
salary in a _ position
with a bright future. Complete training in
a
modern air conditioned office.

ASK

FOR

AVON
“3 6901

CLAIRE

Morton

Grove

To sell women’s
apparel and accessories.
5 day week, permanent position. Good starting salary. Employees discount. Telephone
ID 2-0900 for appointment.

Days—part

time;

PRODUCT

work

direct

Call

and

shipping

from

depart-

ment,
5 day week
8:30 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Excellent working
conditions.
Interviews on May 22; at:

Gard Industries Inc.
1739 Harding Rd.
Northfield
CLERK

Unusual opportunity for young man, high
school grad, as inventory clerk. Work involves maintaining perpetual inventory cards.
No
experience required, will train. Good
starting salary, full range company benefits.
5 day, 37% hour week.

AMERICAN
2020

HOSPITAL

Ridge

SUPPLY

Evanston

CORP.

UN

4-6050

office.

STEADY
Must

NORTH SHORE
GAS CO.
ID 2-6000

GOOD PAY PART TIME, 3 men to start
in
sales dept. of national organization.
Must be neat. Age 18 to 35. Evening and
Saturday, car necessary.
Mr. McKilJen,
$45 per week
plus bonus.
7 p.m
sharp, Friday, Karcher Hotel, Waukegan.

GRILL

Johnson’s

450 Skokie
Highland

MAN

Restaurant

Valley Rd.
Park, Il.

LINO-TYPE OPERATOR
*
*
*
KLUGE

*

Part

THE
952

PRESSMAN

*

*

time—hours

*

to

*

*

suit.

BROOKSHORE

Sunset Ridge Road
Phone CRestwood

CO.

Northbrook
2-1200

Call

LIFE
GUARD
PRIVATE, POOL
GOOD
HOURS
MUST CHA-CHA
between 6 and 7 a.m.
ID 2-2623
OFF

Prefer

SET

p.m.

PRESSMAN

*

experienced
datatad ars 5

THE
952

*

or

*

all-around
right man

man

*

BROOKSHORE

Sunset Ridge Road
Phone CRestwood

CO.

Northbrook
2-1200

DRIVER
For Highland Park route, good salary plus
commission. Telephone ID 2-2800.
GENERAL
handy man wanted for garden
work, full time, Le Wa Farm. Telephone
Lake Forest 256.
HELPER
wanted
with landscaping.
Telephone after 5 p.m. ID 2-3229
GARDENER’S
helper wanted immediately.
Phone Lake Forest 1473 between 8 &amp; 9
a.m.
FULL or part time kennel man to start immediately. Apply in person at Deerfield
Animal Hospital, 749 Deerfield Rd., Deer-

field. *

LINEN
ROUTE
MEN
FOR _ ESTABlished supply route. Must be H.S. grad.,
draft exempt and under 30 years of age.
Union wages. $95 week. 5 days. Free health
and welfare for employee and family. Pension fund,
paid vacations, free uniforms.
Good chance for advancement
with large

national

organization.

Morgan Linen Service,
Northbrook.
CRestwood

Apply

Inc.,

a.m.

9-12.

Techny

Road,

2-0483

I NEED
a man, 21 to 30, to help me in
my business, full time; clean interesting
work. Car necessary. Call ORchard 6-0332.
TELEPHONE
SOLICITORS
Evenings 6 to 9 p.m. Experience not necessary.
Salary
plus
commission.
Apply
at
ALL YEAR
BUILDERS,
INC.
3080 Skokie Valley Highway, Highland Park
ID 2-5423
GARDENER
for 3 days a week;
white.
Three
room
apartment
available.
Call
Lake Forest 566 after 6 p.m.
WANTED, driver, steady position for young
man, with paid vacation, and other benefits. Apply at the John B. Nash Carpet
Company, 626 Roger Williams Ave., Highland Park.
MAN for general, thorough, heavy cleaning,
1 day a week, experience and references
required. Must have own transportation.
ID 2-5578.

HELP

WANTED—DOMESTIC

50

A-1
JOBS
Cooks,
$50-$60.
Couples,
$400-$500. Maias and nursemaids, $45-$60.
No
fee. Shorline
Agency,
525
Lincoln
Ave.,
Winnetka.
Telephone
HI
6-5818.
GENERAL housework, family of 4, to stay,
3 4
week. Current wages. Telephone ID
2-7073.
WOMAN, white, live in, assist care of aged
woman and some light housework. Three
adults, good home. ID 3-0584.
COOK, or second maid, experienced, recent
references. Finnish preferred but not necessary. Call Lake Forest 2781 after 10
a.m.
COUPLE,
thoroughly
experienced,
temporary or permanent, family 2 adults, must
have references; current wages. Telephone
ID 2-0231.
MOTHER’S
helper wanted, capable young
girl who loves children, 5%
day week,
top wages. References. Call ID 3-0128.
WANTED, temporary nursemaid, June 10th
to July 23rd. White college girl acceptable. Call Libertyville 2-0103.
CHILD
care, white, for summer
months,
children 6 and 3. References. Call Lake
Forest 3241.
COOK,
serve, experienced, dinner 2 or 3
evenings a week for small family. Local
references. Call Lake Forest 3241.
WANTED,
experienced
second maid, references. Write Box W-10, c/o Lake Forester.

CARPENTERS — Union—rough and trim
work. See Carl or Ernie, 239 Pine St. or
1300 Hackberry Rd., Deerfield. Telephone
CR 2-1870.

WANTERD—MALE

High school education, not over 30
years of age. Apply to C. J. Skid- more,

DAY

have own transportation
Apply in person

Howard

METER READER

Page 52

2-3700

work for production line,
department,
inspectors,

laboratory,

i

ss

interview

GENERAL BINDING
CORPORATION
1101 SKOKIE HIGHWAY
NORTHBROOK

—

1644 Central Ave.

personal

INVENTORY

SECRETARY
for Sales Dept., 9-5; good
typing and shorthand essential, neat appearance for public contact. For appointment call Miss Green, ID 2-4444.
Clerk-Typist. To perform duties of receptionist, cashier, and typist. Ability to use
Dictaphone.
Also
-Clerk—to perform duties in the Accounting
Section.
Bookkeeping
training
and/or
experience required. Ability to type. See or
call Mr. Jungherr, City Hall, Lake Forest.
Telephone 2600.
LAKE FOREST College business office desires secretary with knowledge of short\
hand, typing and bookkeeping. Interesting
varied
work
in congenial
surroundings,
Telephone personnel office, Lake Forest
3100, ext. 59.
WANTED,
reliable
experienced
secretary,
shorthand and typing necessary. For work
in art and interior decorating gallery. 5
days
weekly.
Good
salary.
References.
Telephone
VErnon
5-2322
for appointment.
WOMAN
for pantry work, 6 days a week,
off on Mondays.
Call for appointment,
Mr. aa
Briarwood Country Club, WI

a

for

CRESTWOOD

Salary
plus
commission.
Experience
not
necessary. Apply at
aan
ALL YEAR BUILDERS INC.
3080 Skokie Valley Highway, Highland Park
ID 2-5423
diversified
FULL
or part time secretary;
ID
pleasant
work.
Shorthand
required.

HELP

DESIGNERS

These men will carry new products right
through from the talking stage into production.

HILBORN

COUNTER
girl, high school education and
store experience necessary. Apply in person. Wayne’s Lake Shore Cleaners, 454
Waukegan Ave., Highwood.
SECRETARY
FOR
SALES
DEPT.
DIC- taphone experience preferred. Good typist.
Salary
open.
Company
benefits.
Phone
CRestwood 2-5700, Randolph Lab.
arent
TELEPHONE
SOLICITORS

-

ENGINEERS

ment.

Full time
chemical

SALESLADY

LUCILE

PROCESS

We need a man who is experienced
in the repair and maintenance of
turret lathes, radio drills and other
automatic machines.
Free life insurance, free hospitalization, vacations, and other benefits. Call Personnel Dept., WI 51990.

RICH

COSMETICS

Golf Rd.

2-4600

A
challenging
opportunity
for top notch
process engineers who can handle all phases
of fabricating and assembly of office equip-

Inc.
Northfield

KEY PUNCH TRAINEE

ID

WHY NOT JOIN
THE GBC FAMILW
LOCATED IN NORTHBROOK

in fas-

laboratory

Ave.

CO.

ENGINEERS

In-

22; at:

WOMAN
for cooking and downstairs. Experienced. White. Top wages. Telephone
Lake Forest 2242.

We have an opening for an experienced industrial engineer to work
from 4:30 p.m. to 12:30 a.m.

&amp;

WANTED—DOMESTIC

S{TUATION WANTED—DOMESTIC_

WOMAN
for cleaning 2 of 3 days. White.
References required. Telephone Lake Forest 2242.

Machine Repair

ROEBUCK

Central

p.m.

conditions.

Industries,

1739 Harding
Varied

a.m.

working

601

HELP

WANTED—MALE

Electrician

Many benefits.
@ Paid Vacations
@® Group life insurance
@ Group hospitalization
@® Profit sharing

SEARS
a
es

in:

APPLIANCE
SALESMAN

AUTOMATIC AND MERIT INCREASES

_ AIR CONDITIONING
MANY
COMPANY BENEFITS

HELP

WANTED—MALE

NICE woman wanted for cooking and downstairs work. No laundry. Own room and
bath. References required. Call Lake Forest 1265.
WOMAN
wanted to do ironing in her own
home, pick up and deliver, or half days
in my home. Telephone ID 2-3521.
MONDAY through Friday, 11 a.m. through
dinner, own transportation, general housework,
plain
cooking,
personal
laundry,
$50. Telephone ID 2-6365.
GENERAL HOUSEWORK, stay, salary $50,
must
like children,
references required.
Telephone ID 2-2812.
COOKING
and
general
housework,
top
wages to thoroughly experienced person,
4 in family, grown children, live on place,
room
available
for employed
husband,
references. ID 2-4482.
GENERAL housework, stay, own room and
bath, Monday off. 2 boys. References. Call
ID 3-2330.
SUMMER
Mother’s helper for light housework and child care. Call ID 3-0713.
COUPLE, general housework, personal laundry, plain cooking, must like children, 5%
days, current wages, own quarters; can
start any time you are available. References. ID 3-1267.
EXPERIENCED
cook and general housework, compact small home, 2 adults, no
hi rig or heavy cleaning. Telephone ID
GENERAL
housework
and cooking;
stay
or to come at noon and stay through dinner. 4 days a week, own transportation,
7 a
small home. Telephone ID 2YOUNG
woman to live in, general housework
and
child care,
5%
days.
Telephone ID 2-9345.
GENERAL
housework, plain cooking, no
laundry, 3 school age and 1 pre-school
child, stay, own room, references. Telephone ID 2-4068 collect.
COOKING
and general housework. References required, modern home. Adult family. Must want to work alone, no heavy
cleaning. Lake Forest 1012.

WANTED,
second maid, white, with references. Serving and upstairs work. Current wages. Mrs. Burke Williamson. Telephone Lake Forest 146.
HOUSEKEEPER,
European
or Scandinavian, under 50, to assist with children,
lovely home
near lake and train, own
room, bath and TV, $50 for experienced
person, other help. Telephone collect, ID
2-7187.
RELIABLE
woman
to help Mother
with
2 small children for the next 4 to 8 weeks.
Light housework and laundry. Prefer live
in. Top salary. Call ID 2-6053.
LIGHT
housework,
assist care of 4 year
old, stay, good salary, references. Telephone ID 2-8488.
WOMAN,
with
own
transportation,
for
housework
on Friday,
in family
of 3
adults. Telephone ID 2-4966.
GIRL
or woman
for general housework.
Monday, Wednesday, Friday morning. Expert cleaner. Near Ravinia station, Telephone ID 2-8163.
HOUSEWORK, plain cooking, stay, 5 days,
must be experienced, other help, references,
near central station, good
salary. Telephone ID 2-1358.
EXPERIENCED reliable woman for cleaning, ironing, 2 days a week, references,
own transportation. Telephone ID 2-5578.
RELIABLE
cleaning
man,
half
days
or
whole days. Telephone ID 2-4573.
4 DAYS
general
housework,
experienced
in caring for children,
references,
own
__ transportation. Telephone ID 2-8520.
WOMAN
wanted
every
Monday,
general
housework and child care, references required. Telephone ID 3-0678.
EXPERIENCED man wanted every Friday,
year around, housework and yard work,
references required. Telephone ID 3-0678.
EXPERIENCED
house
worker,
Monday,
Wednesday
and Friday, own transportation. Must like children. Must have references. Telephone WI
5-1918.
GENERAL
housework,
cooking,
experienced woman
under 45, new air conditioned home, 2 school children, own room,
bath, TV., 5 day week, recent references,
good salary. ID 2-5381.
y's
COOK,
FOR
SUBURBAN
FAMILY,
SCHOOL
AGE
CHILDREN,
MAID
AND
CLEANING
MAN
_EMPLOYED, RANCH HOUSE, OWN ROOM,
BATH AND TV., TOP SALARY FOR EXPERIENCED
PERSON. TELEPHONE
ID
2-7130 THURSDAY
EVENING
OR SATURDAY
AND
SUNDAY.
HIGH
school
or
older
girl
as
summer
mother’s
helper
to start last week
in
June. Mrs. Richard T. Birr, 1425 Charing Cross, Deerfield. Telephone WI 5-5133.
SECOND
MAID
serving, downstairs only. Top wages. References. Telephone Lake Forest 550.
COOK
no cleaning, white, top wages, references.
Telephone Lake Forest 550.
GENERAL
housework, 2 school age children, 3 days, sit 2 nights, experienced and
references required. Telephone ID 2-8049.
MAID for ranch house, near station, school
age child. Excellent job for qualified person with good references. Telephone ID
2-5056.
GENERAL
housework,
experienced,
references required, full time, room, meals,
good
wages.
Le Wa
Farm.
Telephone
Lake Forest 256.
CLEANING lady, 2 days a week, Tues. and
Fri., references, call Mrs. Douglass, Lake
Forest 4951.
WANTED,
housekeeper, experienced, small
family,
other help,
references
required,
top salary. Telephone Lake Forest 2612.

SITUATION

WANTED—FEMALE

EXPERIENCED high school senior desires
child care for summer months. Lake Forest area preferred. Lake Forest references.
Kay Jensen, Libertyville 2-0272.
FRENCH
college girl needs position June
and July as tutor in French-German, companion or nursemaid. Willing to travel.
Highland Park references. Write Elizabeth
Bouton, Hastings College, Hastings, Nebraska.

SITUATION

WANTED—MALE

TRUCK
hauling;
tree
clean out basements;
Bill Pyatt, ID 2-5177

removal;
rubbish;
yard maintenance.
or VErnon 5-0057.

HIGH school boy wants any kind of work
for summer. Write or call Dick Bunk,
Kendall, Wis.
EXPERIENCED
cleaning man, fine North
Shore references, available Monday, Thursday, Friday, Saturday. Telephone WAgner 4-8655.
WILL do lawn cutting and
phone ID 2-2749 between

trimming. Tele7 and 9 p.m.

DAY work. Telephone MAjestic 3-5862.
HIGH
school boy wishes yard work, reliable, experienced, $1.50 per hour. Telephone ID 2-4849.
MAINTENANCE
work,
painting
and repairs. Call WI 5-1492 after 6 p.m.
RELIABLE high school senior wants yard
work during summer. Has own transportation. Phone Lake Forest 1403.
SCHOOL boy would like jobs cutting grass,
we tg own lawn mower. Telephone LE
YARD
work or cleaning by the day. Experienced. References. ID 2-5557.
YOUNG
man wants part time work, gardening, etc. Nights and week ends. Telephone ID 2-8173.
FULL time summer employment wanted by
17 year old Highland Park high school
senior. Has Social Security card. Please
phone John Wallenstein, ID 2-2376.
FOOD service supervisor, purchasing agent
and chef, 16 yrs. institutional experience,
sober and reliable, prefer institution or
school, available after June 2nd. Call Lake
Bluff 4278 after 6:15 p.m.

THE

CURTAIN

North

Shore’s

DEPOT

Only

Curtain

Laundry

All

1825 Green Bay
work done by

curtains,

blankets,

Rd., Rear
hand; linens,
drapes,

TELEPHONE

etc.

ID 2-8615

CLEANERS,
male
or
female;
couples,
maids, housemen. Experienced only. Mrs.
Baker, Shorline Agency, Winnetka. HIIlcrest 6-5818.
all
girls would like summer work,
FIVE
about
16.
Write
Betty
Hollister,
441
Thorne Lane, Lake Forest, for information.
GIRL 16, 2 years experience, wants summer

job,

child

care,

light

housework.

-

Write

Rosie
Bunk,
Kendall
Wis.
Telephone
Kendall 79.
GOOD reliable woman desires day work, or
what
have
you.
References.
Telephone
__CRawford 7-4725.
EXPERIENCED
lady
desires
ironing
or
typing in my home. Telephone LIbertyville 2-0292, ask for Mrs. Miceli.
HONEST white couple. What you can’t or
won't do, we do. Skilled odd jobs. Any
kind of dirty work. Look like new brass,
shampoo
furniture,
rugs,
floors,
walls,
windows; clean, waterproof basement;
garages; gutters; antiques restored. Professional
gardener,
landscaper.
A-1_
refs.
Phone HUmboldt 9-5000.
WANTED:
light housework and child care
for summer
months,
19 years of age.
Roberta Becker, Kenosha, Wis. Telephone
OLympic 2-5442.
WILL do ironing in my home. Call after 6
p.m. ID 2-4337.
WANTED,
day work, $10 a day and cartt
experienced. Telephone CAlumet 5EXPERIENCED maid, laundry or cleaning,
with good references. Telephone FAirfax
4-5944,
WANT job as mother’s helper, light housework, child care, will stay every weekend, colored, age 18. Telephone MIdway
3-7113.
TWO
girls, college juniors, wish summer
work. Child care and or general housework. Both have local references. Telephone ID 2-8337.
GIRL desires 3 days general housecleaning.
ee
references. Telephone
ONtario 2383.
WANT
Monday, Wednesday, and Friday—
general housework.
$1.25 per hour and
transportation. Telephone ONtario 2-9826,

ask for Mary.

YOUNG German lady desires day work and
husband would like one day, live in. Telephone ID 2-5000, ext. 2153.
PLEASANT young woman desires 5 days,
go nights, good plain cook, love children,
top references. Telephone HUdson 8-1238,
BABY

SITTING

REFINED lady would like part time sitting
in your home. Telephone ID 2
, ask
for Mrs. Talios.
BABY sitter wanted, summer or permanent,
girl 16 or older, or woman, from 10 a.m.
Friday
through
10 a.m.
Sunday,
sleep
over. More
pay if willing to do light
housework.
References
required.
Telephone ID 2-6582.
TWO
high school girls available for baby
sitting. Live in. Write Joan Hantula, 851+
Sunset Rd., Ironwood, Mich.
WANTED,
experienced baby sitter, days.
Telephone Lake Bluff 4110.
WANT responsible woman to baby sit with
infant, Saturday nights. References. Tele- _
phone ID 2-4421.
WANTED,
reliable girl or woman
from
Highland Park or Deerfield area to baby
sit Saturday nights. Telephone ID 2-2797.

P

x

HELP

WANTED—FEMALE

CLOTHING

FOR

SALE

FUR jacket, sable dyed squirrel, beautiful
and in perfect condition. $45. Telephone
ID 2-9025.
BROWN
broadtail jacket, size 12 or 14,
oy
condition,
$25.
Telephone
ID
2-

Eo

HELP

MOVING to Phoenix, must sell lady’s storm
coat; camel hair coat with zip-in lining;
storm jacket; all sizes 12 to 14; men’s
storm coat and car coat; girl’s grey coat,
light blue leather trim, light blue timmy
tuft lining, size 10, excellent condition.
Telephone VErnon 5-2582.
GRADUATING senior offers to sell yellow
floor length formal and hoop; four ballerina length formals in white, blue, pink
ne Da
sizes 9 and 11. Telephone WI

HOUSEHOLD

GOODS

FOR

SALE

TWIN
bedroom
set; Chrysler
air conditioner; desk; chair; etc. Telephone VErnon 5-1752. Saturday 10 to 7 and Sunday
all day.
BASEMENT
SALE
Large
Frigidaire
dehumidifier;
maple
antique table; electric stove, good condition;
miscellaneous items. Telephone ID 2-1189.
QUALITY traditional furniture to sacrifice
for
space.
Small
bookcase;
steptable;
unique drumtable; loung chair. Telephone
Lake Bluff 2762.
COPPER
screen and pipe work for 12x15
porch. Gray armchair and rose velveteen
sofa,
all in good
condition.
Telephone
Lake Forest 34.
HOSPITAL
bed and mattress; Thor mangle, good as new. Call Lake Forest 1639.
DOUBLE
spring and
mattress, one year
old, like new; lounge chair and ottoman,
$25;
Scott
radio
and
phono.,
original
price $1200, sell for $100; drapes, bargain
prices. Telephone ID 2-2703.
:
OAK
dining set, refectory table, 6 chairs,
and buffet; maple bunk beds with mattresses, new; maple knee hole desk; channel back chair; RCA radio record player; Underwood portable typewriter; snow
tires. Telephone ID 2-3685.
+

Thursday, May 21, 1!

�GOODS FOR SALE

HOUSEHOLD

PICK GALLERIES
AUCTIONEERS
We

Buy

- APPRAISERS
and

Sell

Entire and partial estates, furniture, crystal,
silver,
orental
art,
paintings,
rugs
and
works of art. Appraisers for insurance and
gift tax. Phone us today. No obligation on
your part.
SPECIALIST IN HOME SALES
Either in Your Home or Our Galleries
886

Linden

Winnetka

HI

6-7444

STEINWAY

MODEL
B. GRAND
PIANO
perfect condition
MASSIVE
HAND
CARVED
CHINESE TEAKWOOD
cabinet
settee, rocker, desk and chair,
stands, mandarin chairs and
marble top round table
_ FROM PRIVATE COLLECTION
Write Box H-70, c/o Highland Park News.
9

PIECE
dining
good condition.

SACRIFICE—2
$75; and HO
ID 2-2964.

room set
Telephone

for sale, a
ID 2-0499

piece curved sectional sofa,
gauge train, $25. Telephone

ALL
kinds
of
household
furniture;
antiques; refrigerator; garden furniture and
tools
including
leaf cart, etc.; hearing
aid. 302 Ridgeland Ave., Waukegan. Telephone ONtario 2-7914.
FORMICA
table and 4 plastic chairs; 2
wood yard chairs; metal yard gate: in——
wardrobe dresser. Telephone ID 2DESK—by Knoll, solid birch, honey colored,
contemporary, 3 drawer, plate glass top,
excellent condition,
height 2914
inches,
width 24 inches, length 48 inches, $65.
Telephone ID 2-7350.
HOOVER
vacuum
cleaner, deluxe model,
very reasonable. Telephone ID 2-7148.
MARBLE top tables; large antique mahogany chest, small mahogany antique chest;
cherry
drop
leaf table;
antique
maple
wall cupboard; small walnut end tables;
antique china; also Haviland pieces; cut
glass and crystal stemware; etc. Evanston
Antiques
and Resale, 826 Custer Ave.,
dy
ge Daily 9:00 to 4:30, Saturday
te)
MOVING, must sell 8 month old ay
ing machine. Telephone ID 3-0959

wash-

FOR sale: Sofa and matching chair, Carpeting,
other
furniture
and
household
goods. 650 Central Ave., Apt. 304, after
5:00 p.m.
EASY
washer,
spin dryer, perfect condition, $40; 5 ‘drawer men’s chest with mirror, $15; telephone table and stool, $8.
Telephone ID 2-1175.
SACRIFICE, BRAND
NEW
Kittinger traditional knee hole desk, blond mahogany
with
black
leather
top,
original price,
oh
will sell for $350. Telephone ID 2BEAUTIFULLY
made to order, luncheon,
bridge sets and towels; knitted garments,
custom made; unusual ‘antique pine furniture—for
instance:
set of 6 cage-back
Windsor chairs, $60 each; open Thursday,
Friday, Saturday. The Little Attic Shop,
644 North Bank Lane, Lake Forest.
PRICED FOR QUICK SALE
Antiques, including Chippendale style sofa;
Early American grandfather clock; 4 poster
double bed; oval-back rocker; dressers; doll
collections;
gold-eagle
sconces;
brass fireplaces equipment with fender. Other household goods imcluding china and glassware;
rugs; drapes;
books;
refrigerator; window
unit air-filter; sporting equipment.

~

By appointment, call ID 2-0837.
ORIGINAL oil paintings and some engrayings, $1.50 to $50.00. Large round table,
$7.50. Girl’s dressing table, frames, miscellaneous. Telephone ID 3- 1421.

|a

%

FOR porch or terrace—peel cane table, 30x
42%, 4 chairs and corner table, 28 inches
square, all for $35. Call ID 2-4116.
SIX year old crib; playpen; Ps
new baby
buggy. Telephone WI 5-413
HAND
crocheted
bedspreads
and _ table
cloths; automatic Frigidaire washing maoe
and miscellaneous. Telephone WI
-1834

MOVING,

must

sell living

room

sofa

and

chair,
excellent
condition,
reasonable.
Telephone WI 5-0326
BELL &amp; HOWELL 8 m.m. Turret camera,
1.9 lens, priced at $40 for quick sale;
also 2 modern
floor lamps,
$10 each;
Nesco electric roaster, $15. Telephone WI
5-2472.
MOVING
to small
apartment,
must
sell
household
atricles;
some
antiques;
furniture;
picture
frames;
bric-a-brac;
old
shutters; antique bed; old glass collection;
Kenmore
automatic
washer;
also dehumidifier; lots of rummage. 1137 Deerfield
Rd., WI 5-0043
RUMMAGE
SALE—689
Pine
St., Deerfield. Beginning Thursday, May 21, for
1 week. Also clothing, toys, fine furniture,
Pc - Wigiap ins bric-a-brac. Telephone WI
84.
DINING
ROOM
SET—Finest
mahogany
drop-leaf EXTENSOLE table (extends to
seat 14) custom pads, 6 Chinese
Chippendale ladder-back chairs. Sacrifice due
to move, $150. Also rugs, chests, misc.
Telephone WI 5-2984.
FRIGIDAIRE
electric stove; mahogany
4
poster bed and dresser. Call WI 5-1263
after 5 p.m. or weekend.
SACRIFICING
Custom
Made
Silk Draw
Drapes, like new, all fully lined, Kirsch
rods included. 1 pair white background
floral, covers windows 15 feet wide, 95
inches long. 2 pair lilac, each pair covers
5 feet wide
windows,
95 inches long.
Double
bed dust ruffle to mach.
Best
offer. ID 2-4200.

hursday, May 21, 1959

GOODS

FOR

SALE

MISCELLANEOUS

THURS. THRU SAT.
MAY
21, 22, 23—10 a.m.-5 p.m.
1880 Lake Ave. ——HIGHLAND
PARK
Furnishings contained in the home of
DR. AND MRS. E. M. GHERMAN
apd finished Minipiano; 90-in. tufted custom
made
Lawson
couch;
loveseat;’ far
Eastern design coffee table &amp; end table;
Chippendale
arm chrs.; plant stands; end
tables; silver lamps; other lamps; Antique
English Queen Anne writing desk; French
Prov. hall console; lavabo; extensol table;
2 pr. host &amp; hostess chrs.; formica kitchen
set; Chinese chest; peeled cane porch set;
Simmons
Hide-a-Bed;
French
Provincial
twin
beds;
writing
desk;
pr.
Bergeres;
chaise; hanging shelf; refrigerator; Hotpoint
auto. washer; 4 card sets; steel shelves; golf
carts; handsome smoked glass mirror: humidifiers; sun lamp; Hollywood beds; maple 4 poster twin beds; boudoir chrs.; service
plates;
inexpensive
gas
stove;
bird
cages; maple twin beds and chests; clothing; rummage. ID 2-3535.

Sale

by

HAZEL

ANN

STUPPLE

KENMORE
automatic
washing
machine.
$70. Telephone ID 2-5635.
LIVING
room, dining room and bedroom
furniture. Must be sold. Telephone ORchard 6-1287 for appointment in Highland Park.
2 PAIR antique red brocade inner lined draperies, matching valences, $25; mahogany
bedroom
suite, twin beds, box springs,
dresser and chest with plate glass top and
mirrors, dressing table, $125; bunk beds,
springs and mattresses, $25; lounge chair,
$15;
new
teeter-babe,
$2;
stroller,
$3.
Telephone ID 2-2481.
2 PIECE
sectional, good
condition,
gold
covering;
2 junior
dressers.
Telephone
ID 2-3731.
PINE Deacon benches; Antique wardrobe;
cupboard; pine hutch; early American reproductions.
Antiques;
gifts
for
every
occasion. Betty’s Shop, 811 Waukegan Rd.
Telephone WI 5-0137.
FRENCH
Provincial
junior
size
dining
room
table
and
4 chairs with custom
made pads; two 275 gallon oil tanks, all
in excellent condition. Telephone ID 29184.

FOR

SALE

GARAGES
CAR AND A HALF WITH OVERHEAD
DOOR, CONCRETE FLOOR AND 2 GA
RAGE WINDOWS.

NO

DOWN

E-Z

WALSH
FOR BETTER LIVING
Aluminum Specialty Products. Combination
windows, doors, awnings, sidings, porch enclosures,
jalousies,
gutters,
fencing,
lawn
furniture, ornamental railings, etc. Quality
and price wise see us before buying.
THERMO-TITE WINDOW
CO.
708 WAUKEGAN
RD.
DEERFIELD
WI 5-1198
ID 2-1553
.,
AIR CONDITIONERS
Easily installed — you can do it yourself.
1 h.p. only $199.95,
Freeman’s Air Conditioner Sales 648 N. Western.
FOR rent: garden tillers, cub tractor and
attachments,
lawn
mowers,
etc.
Lawn
mower
sharpening
service,
and
sales.
Telephone
ID 2-8029, 2070 Green
Bay
5 d. Woody’s Highland Park Service Staion.

“Jim Beinlich Trucking handles all
following services for Homeowners:

of

the

TOP SOILS
e HUMUS
e MANURES
@ PEAT MOSS e LAWN ROLLING e
TREE
REMOVAL
e
RUBBISH
REMOVAL
e GRAVEL DRIVEWAY
REPAIRS @ WRECKING OF ALL TYPES
iy
Jim Beinlich—VE 5-0513 or VE

GUNS—V.
H. Parfker 12.30 full, 2 Remington 20 gauge pumps, 2 sets of barrels,
“1
set rib, other guns. Telephone
Lake

Forest 2868 after 5.

MUSICAL

9-9

9-6

for Week

Mart

Selling out all used merchandise at bargain
prices to make room for 4 truckloads of
new Furniture Mart samples in bedroom and
living room sets; stainless steel sinks, $15
each; new
3 piece sectional living room
sets, $169. 50 and up; good buys on linoleum
and carpeting; children’s swing sets, $19.50;
used soil pipe, $1.50 &amp; up; swimming pools,
$5 and up; ice cream chairs, $5; ping pong
tables with nets and paddles, slightly damaged, $14.50; all purpose paint, $2.49 a gal.;
house paint, $3.49 a gal.; metal wall cabinets,
$7 &amp; up; 54-inch cabinet sinks complete, $89.50; 42-inch cabinet sinks, complete, $59.50; used upright piano, $50; new
enamel paint, 5c a can; decorative ribbon at
50c a 100 ft. roll; 4 drawer filing cabinets,
$18; office desks, $35; living room
sets,
used, $20 and up; books, 5c each; doors,
$3 and up; structural steel, 6c a lb.; sectional bookcases, $3 a section; many other items
too numerous to mention.

IN AND

BROWSE

Attractive

LAKESIDE
1984 First St.

Book

Covers

White

Highland

WINDOW

Park,

&amp; PAINT CO.
ID 2-7211

H.P. Sunbeam Rotary lawnmower. Excellent
condition.
Reasonably
priced.
Whirlpool electric dryer. WIndsor 5-3838.
OUTBOARD
motor, 7 144H.P. Good condition. Call LI 2-1118.
FISHING equipment, complete for ice and
open water fishing, including lantern and
windbreaker.
Best offer. Also, mounted
fawn; garden tools. ID 2-1293.
AIR-CONDITIONERS, two % ton window
units;
30 inch
attic exhaust
fan
with
automatic ceiling shutter. ID 3-1978 after
6 p.m.
24 STORM windows and screens to fit window 28%,x46'% inches, best offer; Detecto
yin scale, like new, $5. Telephone ID 2-

PAINT
One carton King-size Coca-Cola free with
every gallon Enterprise Paint. Exterior and
Interior Paint to suit your every need. Visit
our newly remodeled store to see complete
displays of glass, mirrors, shower and tub
enclosures, Window shades, Venetian Blinds,
Bamboo draperies, and Modernfold folding
doors.

LAKESIDE GLASS
1914 First St.

&amp; PAINT CO.
ID 2-7211

WOULD
you like portrait of your child,
but hesitate because of expense and repeated
sittings? Professional
artist does
large living pastels from favorite photo
and
single brief sitting. $25 unframed.
Telephone ID 3-1875.
BABY
carriage, deluxe Thayer
with new
pad; bath seat; misc. baby items. Telephone ID 2-7088.
BEST offer will take 150 feet of wire fencing with cedar post. Telephone ID 2-6715.
BUMPER pool table, $50; men’s leather golf
bag, complete with 3 drivers and matched
irons, numbers 2 through 9. Jack Hutchison brand, $30. Phone Lake Forest 2060.
LAWN
mower for sale, Bartlett ball bearing self sharpening. Used % season. Call
Lake Forest 963.
BEDROOM
set with single bed; boy’s 26
inch bicycle;
girl’s English bicycle;
set
silver table ware. ID 3-1124.
LIGHT
wood dinette set, 4 chairs and 2
leaves, $35; 1 older reel type power mower,
$20. Telephone WI 5-0204, after 4 p.m.

GLASS
Everything
in
glass is available
at the
newly remodeled Lakeside Glass and Paint
Co. Mirrors, specialties, Shower and Tub
Enclosures are all on display.

LAKESIDE
1914 First St.

$1
CAR

GLASS

&amp; PAINT CO.
ID 2-7211

&amp; PAINT CO.
ID 2-7211

1st

LOST

LOST:

TO

&amp; FOUND

fur

jacket

in

old

$1

SPECIAL

*59

2-9722

LIKE
new Marshall Field’s English baby
carriage, original ee $134.95, reasonable.
Telephone ID 2-6474
JUKE Box, 12 ne
automatic. ner sell
this week. $35. Telephone ID 2-4200
SLIGHTLY
used 30 gallon haan cans,
$1.65 each while they last. 335 Waukegan
Ave. Telephone ID 2-2747.
PHILCO
air-conditioner, % h.p., 110 volt,
1954
model,
excel'*-t
condition,
little

for

instal-

lation. Telephone WI 5-1120.
ROTARY LAWN MOWER CRAFTSMAN,
20 inch, self propelled, aluminum housing,
3 h.p., B and S 4 cycle engine,
1957
ay
$65. Telephone WI
5-5375 after
p.m.

MUSICAL

INSTRUMENTS

FOR

SALE

Simca Montherly 4-dr.
dan; reclin. seats, ww,

ae
1s

seH.

intr.,

FOR

SALE

USED PIANO
KIMBALL
reconditioned baby grand—Best
offer. Telephone ID 2.2510 or ID 3-0072.
APARTMENT baby grand piano, Lyon and
Healy. Mahogany.
Good condition. Call
MUndelein 6-6630.

slightly

used

for

purposes.

New

car

war. SAVE
Triumph
Sta.
Wagon,
H,
brand new; sacrifice from

No

WASH
ID
Park

ready

Field!

$200

list price $400
’*59 Triumph sedan, new; sacrifice from list price
one

will beat our

above

cars.

THE

BELOW

SOLD

AT

price on th

CARS

ALL

MUST

COST.

No

BE

reason-

—

able offer refused, trades accepted.
57

Jag. MC
ecpe.; OD,
full
chrome wire wheels. This
one has been in stock too
long,
and
excellent
car
needs only a good home.
We guarantee to sell this

one

$300

less

comparable

Jag.

than

any

in

Chi.

area.
55

D5

Healey,
metallic
blueprimrose
tutone, new
tires,
show
room
condition; sacrifice
Porsche super cpe., 1 for
the enthusiasts. Needs
very
slight
body
work;

any

offer

55 Jag.
ww

58

considered

MC

epe.,

baby

A

D7

’*58

222,

blue,

Rdstr.,

leather

white,

intr.,

R-H,

ww, Tonneau, 1 owner,
000 actual miles

TR3

Ddstr.,

blue
new

.

_.$

$1795

TR3

black

OPPORTUNITY

with accessories.

Marshall

LAKE COU NTY
IMPORT MOTORS

59

Beautiful
hand
carved
dining
room _ set,
made by V. Coquantin Suc. Paris early in
19th century. A solid walnut extension table
and 8 high back chairs with caned seats
and
backs,
also a magnificent
buffet to
match. In addition a Chinese Oriental 9x12
rug, wine color.
Offered
for quick sale.
pti
Lake Bluff 1286. 501 Prospect
ve.

used,

BUY

DEMONSTRATOR SALE

D7
RARE

1-4400

box, reward. Telephone ID 3-0666.
LOST: black purse, vicinity of Park Ave
Contained
lipstick,
comb,
coin
purse.
Telephone ID 2-0264.

demo.

ATLAS of east half of Lake County, Current issue. Reasonable. Telephone WI 50645.
HAYRIDE
PARTIES for spring and summer.
Horses
boarded.
Happs’
Hollow,
Northbrook, CRestwood 2-3131.
BOY’S
and girl’s Deluxe 20-in. bicycles, $20
each; 2 year crib and mattress, $10; Trimble bassinet, $8. Telephone ID 2- 8733.
ENORMOUS
quantity
of
beads,
pearls,
rhinestones,
sequins, jewels,
shells, felt,
yarn, and findings. Bolts of ribbons, silk;
straw, and trimmings. Hundreds of plastic
boxes. Wonderful opportunity for bazaars,
dens, and hobbyists. Private party liquidating. 890 E. Old Elm Rd. Call Lake
Forest 4436.
KENMORE
30-inch gas range with 25-inch
see-in oven;
new
standard
Relaxacizer;
8 mm, Universal movie camera, 2.5 lens.
Telephone WI 5-3946
VANITY
dresser with
large
mirror
and
bench; Universal 6 burner double oven
range;
2 dressers;
1949
Pontiac;
1957
Plymouth
Suburban station wagon. Best
reasonable offer. Telephone
ID 2-6244,
LENNOX furnace for oil heat; space heater; also oil tank. Best offer. Telephone
WI 5-2236
GOLF clubs, bag and cart, $40; Storkline
high chair, $8. Telephone WI 5-2261.
BRANDT dropleaf table—sleigh bed; Lawson
love
seat;
lounge
chair;
Victorian
hall piece; dinette chairs; chest; dressing
table;
double bed;
piano;
guitar; Magnavox. Telephone Lake Bluff 3245.
A

Tele-:

FOUND—bicycle, owner may have on description. Write Box H-80, c/o Highland
Park News.
LOST: Persian cat, yellow male. Frank Andreerson, 2712 Port Clinton Road. _Tele-phone ID 2-2682.

DAY

LAKE
CAR
Elm.
Highland

and

WANTED
pianos.

WESTERN
saddles, shotguns,
old pocket:
watches,
collection
of
smoking
pipes. —
Write Box U-15, c/o Lake Forester,
WANTED
AT ONCE
Oriental rugs, French furniture, bric-a-brac,.
antiques, and pianos. Top cash paid, ROgers Park 1-4400.

er

With Purchase of 8 Gal. Gas

WED.

2-2510"

Sales mgr. demo. SAVE __.$500°
"59 Morris 2-dr.; ww, H, leath-

IS BACK

WASH

5

D

—

ENCLOSURES

GLASS

|

&lt;n

and so is

SHADES

LAKESIDE GLASS
1914 First St.

TUB

KILROY

II.

Window coverings, such as shades, blinds,
bamboo
draperies,
are all on display at
Lakeside Glass and Paint Co. newly remodeled store. Quick service is available on all
standard items. Estimates are given without
obligation. Call us today,
or better yet,
stop in and visit us.

PARK.

AUTOMOBILES

&amp;

SALE

reo

Visit our newly
remodeled
store
to see
complete displays of Tub and Shower enclosures, Glass,
mirrors,
Venetian
Blinds,
Bamboo
draperies,
and
Modern
folding
doors.

Blue,

INSTRUMENTS

WANTED

COME

adabeahs «

Ave.

ROGERS

Samples

HOOVER factory repairs. Belts 45c, bags, 5
for $1.00; Reconditioned Hoovers, $19.95;
New Hoovers, $49.95; Freeman’s Hoover
Sales and Service, 648 Western Ave. Lake
Forest 519.

Telephone

St. Johns

ORGAN

TOP
dollar for used spinet
phone ID 2-2510.
PIANOS WANTED

SHOWER

Green,

LOWREY

1795

Lawns
rolled
and
fertilized
with
power
equipment. Mushroom manure spread over
lawns and gardens.
Jim
Beinlich—Glencoe—VErnon
5-0513.

2%

SALE

Sun.

Specials

STORKLINE crib and chest, good condi-

FOR

&amp;

FOR

INSTRUMENTS

is

AVE.

Fri.

INSTRUMENTS

USED

TERMS

thru

All Furniture

HOME

Highland Park
$2.00
Chicago or Chicago Classified $3.00
Other sizes
$2.50
The Sew Handy Co.
P. O. Box 356

MISCELLANEOUS

Mon.
Sat.

SALE
472 Elder Lane, Winnetka—near Sheridan
Thuts., Fri.,
Sat.,. May
21-22-23, ' 9to 5
Moving
to "Calif. Sacrificing
residue furnishings of choicest quality. Queen Anne
mahg. fall tbl., $85; Satinwood commode,
$175; Venetian commode, $100; French sofa,
$135; Oil paintings; Silver floor lamp; Fr.
brass andirons &amp; screen. New custom-made
drapes, 8 pr. 84 inch; Pr. hall Chipp. chrs.;
Lk-new choice bdrim.,
10x12 moss green;
9x11 rose beige; incl. paddg. Magnavox TV;
complete French bdrm. in aqua, incl. dbl.
bed, van. &amp; bench, chest of drs., pr. nt.
tbls. Choice mahg. "desk, leather top. Contents of beaut. interior- “dec. family room,
incl. pr. sofas; many occ. chrs.; 6 captn.
chrs.; harvest tbl.; poker tbl.; end tbls.;
coffee tbls., all in beaut. antique oak. Wrt.
iron firepl. ‘set; two Frigidaires, lg. &amp; small,
no
freezer
top;
porch
furn.
Aluminum
chaises; Ik. new Universal gas stove; Nesco
cooker; garden tools; ext. ladder; dehumidifier. Clothing,
size 12. Much
misc.
Sale
conducted by Margaret Ewing, Winnetka.

CLOTHES
HAMPER;
sewing
cabinet;
2
mahogany end tables, $15 ea.; 2 mahogany end tables and matching cocktail table, all glass tops, mew, $35 ea.; barrel
chair, $20; mahogany
drum
table, $25;
2 modern
leatherette chairs, $5 ea.; 2
kitchen
chairs,
$2.50
ea.;
Reo
power
mower,
reel type; hand mower;
bric-abrac; dishes; misc. Telephone WI 5-3038.
LARGE lounge chair, perfect condition, all
foam rubber and spring construction. $35.
Telephone WI 5-1828.
DAVENPORT,
$100;
French
Provincial
drum
table, light fruitwood,
$35. Both
excellent condition. Telephone WI 5-1314.
HOTPOINT
DISHWASHER;
WESTINGHOUSE
RANGE;
FRIGIDAIRE;
tees
NILE
FURNITURE:
HARVARD
FRAMES;
DRAPERIES;
ETC.
9-5 SATURDAY.
1291
LINDEN
AVE.
HIGHLAND PARK.
CHIPPENDALE table and 6 chairs, 2 arms;
credenza; vanity and corner table. Telephone Lake Forest 5304.
BRANDWEIN
sleeper couch
with $59.95
mattress, $40; mahogany corner cabinet,
mt be mahogany desk, $15. Telephone Lake
Forest 3139.

SELL ON

Open

TERMS

IMPROVEMENT CO.
2800 BELVIDERE
ON 2-8770
WAUKEGAN
IMMEDIATE CONSTRUCTION

MUSICAL

SALE

516 N. MILWAUKEE
LEHIGH 17-0247
WE

PAYMENT

FOR

SHOP AND SAVE AT
STOCKADE TRADING POST
WHEELING, ILLINOIS

$695

Grey,

tion; reasonable. Telephone ID 2-5446.
MOVING,
MUST
SELL, couch, matching
chairs; sleeping couch; ‘old, new tube, 21
inch TV; misc. tables: Jr. walnut dining
room set; good 3 wheeler; old 26 inch
girl’s bike; misc. items. All reasonable;
must
sell. 1958 Castlewood,
ID 3-1958;
prefer mornings.
MODERN furniture, Aalto design blond extension dining table; lamp table; hanging
shelf; 4 blond dining chairs; single pedestal 3 drawer desk; wall mirror, blond;
blond
mahogany
tadio-phono
cabinet;
King
size headboard,
twin
swing
bed
frames; 2 Kilim oriental rugs, pads; turquoise rug, pad; dark finish steno chair;
2 folding card tables. ID 2-1129.
GAS stove, perfect condition, broiler never
even used, reasonable; shag rugs; modern
cabinet kitchen sink. Telephone ID 3-0187
CHAIR, lounge, loose down filled pillows;
excellent condition,
$45. Telephone
WI

MISCELLANEOUS

-

HOUSEHOLD

intr.,
cond.

OD,

blue,
R-H,

1,-

a

drk.
like

TR3
Rdstr., green, blk.
intr., 1 owner, low mileage, mint cond. car __$495 dn.
Karman

Ghi

cpe.,

R-H,

ww

$595

57 MGA Radstr., old English
white, red leather intr.,

ww, wire
neau

wh,

OVERSTOCKED!

H,

Ton-

ABOVE

MUST BE SOLD. NO
ABLE
OFFER WILL
FUSED.

dn.

3
“3

$1895

CARS —

REASON
BE RE-

LAKE COUNTY
IMPORT MOTORS
517-519

Waukegan

S. Genesee

St.

MA

3-8575_

in|
1955 CHEVROLET,
Bel Aire V-8, pow
glide, 2 door. Very low mileage, origi
owner,
excellent
condition,
priced
for
quick sale, $925. ID 2-8044.
1953 PLYMOUTH, 4 door, good condition,
$200. Telephone Lake Bluff 1266.

Page 53
fxs

�AN

- AUTOMOBILES FOR SALE
OPPORTUNITY
TIME

AIR CONDITIONING

to
of

display at

Cadillac
2050 First St.

|

1957

Car

Now, two locations to serve you better for
custom clothes and alterations.
THE SILVER NEEDLE
HIGHLAND
PARK, ILLINOIS
1866 Sheridan Rd.
610 Laurel Ave.
Phone ID 2-7118
Phone ID 2-1774
LOOK chic for summer with shorter skirts.
Ask
for Eda,
Zengeler
Cleaners,
Inc.,
1905 Sheridan Rd. Telephone ID 2-2800.

the
on

Div.

Highland

ID 2.3442

CHEVROLET

convertible,

Par

‘

— - 7954 PONTIAC Chieftan, 4 door sedan, 6
_
cylinders,
syncromesh
transmission,
_radio and heater—excellent condition, $550.
Call after 6 p.m. Lake Forest 2075.

AUTO

957 CHEVROLET convertible, black with
white top, V-8, power glide, whitewalls,
good condition. Telephone ID 3-0249.

cover.

Call

Lake

Forest

877.

Tos 7 DE SOTO Sportsman, full power, low
_
mileage, car kept in perfect condition by
original owner. Color black and white.
Offered at half of purchase price. Telephone Lake Bluff 1916.

955

BUICK

convertible,

power

,uto

R sale by
Roadmaster,

full

#87

excellent

condition,

just

gtd

and

few

trong Fg. con run-

Hydramatic

1957

BUICK

Fully

equipped

Perfect condition.

drive.

ID 2-8592.

convertible,

power

aged SOvEL

ew

A Ford piports coupe,

Metallic

etal

red

and

body,

black

OLDSMOBILE

white

nylon

interior.

1950, yellow,

98

$100, Telephone WI 5-1407,

1957

JAGUAR,

XK140

top. PRed
$350.

ID

FORD

vole.
red

Hydramatic,

car. $275. Telephone

tioning,
oer
Bary .
_

4 door hard

station

ID 25119.

top,

air condi-

wagon,

commuter

Series,
power
steering,
power
brakes.
tinted glass, whitewalls, other extras, ex7 ata pan,
low mileage. Telephone

1957

)
VOLKSWAGEN

gl Laenee

2-door,

Telephone

WI

one owner,
5-1512 ‘ake:

1957 ; KARMAN
GHIA
cou pe, whitewall
i
s,
_ raido, carmen ted with a raven black toe,
excellent condition. Original. One owner.
Il to first private party. Teleph
'__3-2222, 680 Skokie Valley Rd. sage

_ CHEVROLET,

1958,

V-8,

4-door

Standard transmission,
radio,
eet
condition. Telephone’

58

JAGUAR

3.4

Litre,

sedan:

heat
Wr 3.1492

automatic

:
mission, _ whitewalls,
immaculate
un
tion, original, one owner.
Sell to first
private party. Teleph
it
Skokie Valley Rd. ee

USED

MOTOR

ED

pen

ae

TRUCKS

1949 CHEVROLET
%
ton truck,
new tires, good running condition

valve job. ID 2-9894,
CHEVROLET

truck.

14
1954 CHEVROLET
excellent
condition,
5000, ext. 4166.

AUTOS

Telephone

4

54

6

not

HOUSE

inc.

INSPECTION

INVITED
in May

Mr.

Sundays

Have

your

tuned

up

CONTRACTORS

ROOM

ADDITIONS
CABINET

For

estimate

WORK

call

MERCURY

Halvor

CEMENT

DO

IT

dirt, gravel
Dordand,

finer

YOURSELF

ID

graduation gift.
Hllcrest 6-3848

plus
Call

ownafter

SERVICE

2-4917

if special

FAST
service

SAM
St.

WOO

SERVICE

desired,

try

it today

LAUNDRY

Johns

Highland

Pari

WANTED
FURNITURE
Distance—one

ing,

oon

free

MOVING—Local

and

Lon.

piece or a truck

load.

Pach.

maeee

ELOF

GROVE

NELSON

PAINTING

BLOOM

&amp;

HORSES

Wird

Andersop

&amp;

PET Burro, excellent
manners,
7 years
call ID 2-1769.

Cat
cali

REPAIR

repaired, cleaned,
preventative. Care-

PONIES

i gala

BY

DAVID

ESTIMATES

JUNK

PAID

For all types of junk brought to our door,
such as: Papers, rags, iron, metal, etc. Or
call LDlewood 3-1466 for free pick-up. We
specialize in industrial accounts. Hours daily
meluding Saturday, 8:30 a.m. to 5:30 p.m
HIGHLAND
PARK
WASTE
MATERIAL
1466 Berkelev Rd.
INSTRUCTION
GARINO MUSIC STUDIOS
North Shore’s Finest. Instruction on accor
dion and guitar; instrument furnished. In
oe about our trial plan. Telephone ID
15.

Shop

COMPANY

BASENJI pups, loves children, show, hunting and pets. All shots. AKC. Telephone
MAjestic 3-0925.
BLAK Labrador puppies, male and female,
AKC,
excellent
field
trial
breeding
$100.00. OLiver 8-4619 (Algonquin).
GERMAN
shepherd
puppies,
Champion
parents, from 6 weeks to 3 months. Telephone ID 2-6115.
IRISH
terrier
puppies,
AKC
registered,
sired by champion. Wonderful
dog for
children. 419 Birchwood Ave., Deerfield.
Telephone WI 5-4167.
BOXER,
female,
5 months,
shots,
ears
clipped, $75. Telephone Lake Forest 3887.
BASSETT puppies available June 10th, champion blood line, AKC.
Telephone Lake
Forest 18.

PLANTS

L.

BULBS

PERENNIALS—
Large field—grown
ready. Giant Pansies
flats and boxes.
GROUND

clumps now
and Violas in

COVERS—

Pachysandra,
Euonymus,
Vegetus,
E. Coloratus, E. Kewensis, E. Acuta,
Ajuga, Baltic Ivy, Bowle’s Vinca.

PFITZER JUNIPERS—
$2.50 each, JAPANESE YEWS in
containers, $2.00 and $2.50 each.
Crimson
Pygmy
Barberry
and
Ligustrum Vicari, $1.00 each.
Many

others; we grow our own.
FLOWER

FARM,

Flower Far,
of Half Day

Drive

located 3
on Route

83, 14 mile south of Route 22.
weekdays

&amp;

Sun.

8 a.m.

to_

8 p.m,

T
PIANO

WHY
7 DAY

don’t

you

TUNING
have

that

piano

right, for a change?
$9.50
Satisfaction
guaranteed
or
Telephone ID 3-0608.

717-4725

PAINTING
and
decorating;
outside
spe
cialty. Fully insured, Lake Forest 3938
Telephone any time.
“AINLING
and
decoraung,
{mverlor
«abs
exterior, natural or bleached wood
fi:
ishing;
yuality
workmanship.
For
es.
a
call Eric Schneider,
Libertyvill
PAINTING AND
PAPER HANGING.
Ip
terior and exterior painting. For quality
workmanship
by
experienced,
reliable
men call W. C. Varney. WI 5-0654.
PAINTING and paper hanging, reasonabi:
prices; free estimates. Telephone A. G
Priddy or Peter Gallos, Lake Forest 15¢
CONGER
BROTHERS
PAINTING
AND
DECORATING
SERVICE.
Paper hanging. Telephone ID 2-3452—ID 2-3053.

PETS
EXPERT
grooming for miniature and tos
poodles: Pick up and delivery only. For
appointment call Lake Forest 1648 afte:
6 p.m.
BEAUTIFUL
Basset puppies, AKC
registered,
sired
by
Champion
Slow
Poke
Hubertus,
to
daughter
Best
of
Show
Champion
Lazy Bones, $100. Telephone
ID 2-1993.
.BASSETTS and Beagles. Also stud seryice.
Phone GLadstone 1-1758.

*

—

CEDAR SHINGLES?
Don’t
Neglect
Them
SUBURBAN
ROOF
TREATING
SERV.
Call) ALnine
1-0377
Lloyd S. Crain
SHINGLES MISSING?
DAVIS ROOF REPAIR
ID 2-5698

*

SEWERS
QUICK
service on clogged or slow main
sewers. Cleaned and opened with electric
rod
equipment.
We
service
any
ind
drains.
All work
guaranteed.
Call
high 7-0232.

SEWING MACHINES
SINGER

SEWING

MACHINE

Complete Sales and Service
Free Home Demonstration
Repair on All Makes of Machines

TELEPHONE

DECORATOR

Experts in painting and paper hanging. Interior and exterior. Call Roy Carlson for
free estimate. ID 2.2699.
MURALS painted. Work dune by quantica
artist. Ideal for amy room in your home.
Samuel Elis Brown, 251 Wentworth, Glencoe—Telephone VErnon 5-2174.
EXTERIOR and interior painting and deco
rating. Hubert Johnson, ID 2-1770.

tuned _|

will do it.
no _ charge.

ROOFING

OWENS

CRAWFORD _

HOME

&amp;

ANNUALS—
Flats of Hybrid Petunias, Carnations, Snapdragons, Dwarf Marigolds, Ageratum, Alyssum, Salvia,
many
others. Impatiens, Ceraniums, Lantanas, Tuberous Begonias.
Tomato and Vegetable plants.

Open

2-5544
se cecmaten

features all acces-

sories

to Oman’s
miles west

WALL WASHING
WINDOW CLEANING
EXPERT PAINTING

FREE

North Shore’s newest and finest
Boarding Kennel.
Private inside heated stalls and
connecting
individual
outside
runs.
Expert grooming of all breeds
by professionals.
Under the personal direction of

OMAN’S
DECORATING

PAINTING

SUBURBAN

physical condition and
old. For information

PRICES

Call

gardens.

-8592.

WOOD

FURNACE

&amp;

and

Up to date methods
Quality workmanship
Sensible prices

REPAIRS

WELL seasoned firewood split nicety.
Lake Forest 790-Y-1; if no answer
MUndelein 6-6566.

GUTTERS

SERVICE

;

4-8880

EXCAVATING

GUTTERS
replaced or
painted with A-1 rust

LANDSCAPE

ROTOTILLING—lawns
WI 5-0354.

@

:

Maintenance-Rototilling
Black Dirt-Fertilizer
New Lawns put in
Old lawns top dressed
WI 5-5117—after 12 p.m.

GENERAL

ORchard

T. CLAUSON

IDLEWOOD

RENTAL

BROS.

The finest in tree work, patios, landscaping
and maintenance. Insured. Satisfaction guaranteed. Telephone Lake Forest 3366,
ROTOTILLING,
gardens only. R. Landau.
Telehpone WI 5-0764.
PFITZER Junipers, 3 foot spread, $2 each,
dig yourself. Telephone WI 5-1298.
WHOLESALE
nursery supplies and paints
by dependable white couple. 30 yrs, experience. Expert
gardening,
landscaping,
painting, house cleaning and maid work.
All work guaranteed. Lawns and flower
beds
made,
tree
planting,
stumps
removed. $3.95 hour for both. HUmboldt
9-5000,
SEVERAL beautiful growing evergreens for
sale,
reasonable.
Telephone
WI
5-3613
after 6 p.m.
MODERN
LANDSCAPING.
For the best
in lawn maintenance
and garden work.
Telephone Jock Vena, ID 2-5266.

delivery.

SPECIAL
performance
of Hawaiian
program called ‘“‘May Day Is Lei Day In
Hawaii,’ Monday, May 28, 8 p.m. Edgewood
Jr. High
School
Auditorium,
no
admission charge, public cordially invited.

HIGHEST

SHIRTS
FAST,

MACHINE

Rd.

general hauling. We also nove a!
of household appliances. Call ID ?
or

HEITKOTTER

®
®
@

A

FIREPLACE

OPPORTUNITY

BUSINESS

1875

Waukegan

Park

and file, lawns graded
telephone
NEwton
4-

no

BUSINESS

Ulvenes,

CLAUSING ELECTRIC
All types of electrical work, POST LIGHTS,
wall outlets, new circuits, repairs. Reasonable prices. Telephone ID 2-6287.

SOIL

HOTEL lease for sale, 25 rooms
er’s apartment. Good income.
3 pm. ID 2-6703.

2-

ton pick up truck,
Telephone
ID
2-

Highland

BOOK
Booth

GARAGES

WORK

month,

4-3213

Top Soil
Nutri Soil

outboard

BOOKS

LIGHT
types

per

NEwton

Glencoe
VErnon 5-1302
South of Dundee Rd. on the
Service Drive of Edens Highway

Elaine Ortman.

Humus

PATIO WORK
We do all cement work, stone work, sea
blacktop,
install
basketball
courts.
Telephone
ID 3-1268 or ID 2-4297.

9210

NEW 10 ft. Fiberglas Dingies, $125; choice
_of moulded-in colors. Flotation tanks, oar
locks, bow ring, 76 lbs. Telephone WI 52384.

WORLD
Miriam

JOb

CARPENTER WORK
New,
remodeling
and
additions.
Jalousie
windows and doors. Combination aluminum
doors, windows. for free estimates telephone
ID 2-6466.

ELECTRICAL

BLACK

Call

GLENCOE

BOARDING KENNEL

Kennel

CARE

For reasonable prices
and guarantee yardage

ID 2-1587, after 6 p.m.

TOOL

ID 3-0880

BLACK
Fag

&amp;

FENCING

MORTON

St.

LAWN

Sand and Gravel
Lime Stone

CARPENTRY

$10

now!

First

ACRES

2-5 p.m.

FOR building that new home, addition, o:
remodeling,
be it lange
or small,
ca
V &amp; F Construction
Co. Telephone IL
2-5477 or WI 5-2980.
RELIABLE experienced carpenter. Remod
eling, paneling, porches and Hi Fi rooms
siding. H. Blomquist Construction, tele
ohone WI §-2830.
CARPENTRY, interior and exterior remod
eling,
building,
additions,
inets, floor, wall and ceiling til
mates. Telephone CHerry
CHRISTO-CRAFT REMODELING CO.
WI 5-3273
ID 2-2319
Remodeling and home maintenance is our
business.
Porch enclosures, basement paneled room
additions,
kitchen
cabinet,
or
just that one door that doesn’t close right.
All work guaranteed.

Quicksilver

Open Mon. &amp; Fri. eves. till 9
Sunday by Appintment
1848

PRAIRIE
LANDSCAPING,

&amp; Mrs. J. R. Thompson
LAKE FOREST 3120.

REDUCING

DELAY!!!

GARDENING

Grading, plowing, hauling, fill dirt, black
top soil, rotted cow manure, top dressing
seed rolling. Telephone WI 5-0818.

VALLEY

house

all

Tow Rope

DON’T

ae
ID

SUNSHINE

INST.

SPECIALS

Pack Mercury
motor oil

like

1956
CHEVROLET
convertible
or
195
_
Oldsmobile
Super
88, 2 door, A
tks
excellent condition, low mileage, private
party. Telephone WI 5-0874.

Page

but

Skis

Polyethylene

6098

AND MOTORCYCLES

(1946

Most,

the BOAT

radio,
used as

full power, immaculate condition.
sae at
Pes! ae first private
Telephone
-2222. 680 Skokiei

1958 MERCURY

6a»

BOATS

Water

with

1949 DODGE,
fluid drive, equipped,
1
mileage 2 door. Excellent piste died’ tives,
_ first $135 takes. Telephone ID 2-1321.

_ 1957 DODGE,

and

or Girl’s Used and
Some like new—a

Schwinns.

AND

RENT

vison
nga) abe 25,000 miles,
Seco:
car, go
condition, one
Telephone WI 5-2572.
cra
\ 1953 PONTIAC,
4 door sedan, 35,000 ac_ tual
miles,
mechanically
perfect,
ideal

aon

way

rti

roadster,

Victoria,

bank

WEEK-END

black leather interior, never raced. Original
One owner.
Sell to first private
Vaticy
arty. Telephone
py
ID 3-2222. 680 Skokiei

_ 1953

2-584:

FIRST NATIONAL
BANK
of Highland Park

20,000

riginal
miles,
Can be seen at 10 Deerfield Rd., Deerfield. $500.
94
1953 BUICK Riviera Roadmaster. Full
pow-

_ er.

ID
Park

BOY’S 20” Schwinn, reasonable. Telephone
1p
06.
BOY’S 20 inch bicycle, $12. Telephone WI
5-2597.
2 GIRL’S bikes, 26 in., 1 very good condition, $15 and one perfect condition, $25.
Telephone Lake Forest 3573.

wer brakes,
automatic
transmission.
ermillion red with snow white top. Must
sacrifice.
Original.
One
onwer.
Sell to
first private party. Telephone ID
3-2

680 Skokie Valley Rd. &gt;

FRECH

CYCLE &amp; HOBBY SHOP —
486 Central
ID 2-1369

steering,

CAMPS

CARPENTERS,

LOANS

the

ME 17-5557
OR 3-6058

WI 5-0925
CL 5-6478

Open

Ups

&amp;

FRANK
VENA
LANDSCAPING
Call me for the finest in lawn care, tree
removal, top dressing, patio work, fertilizing. Telephone ID 2-5494 after 7 p.m.
GENERAL
LANDSCAPING
New lawns, black dirt, humus, top dressing
planting, lawns fertilized, tree work, stone
work, patios, driveways.
A. MELCHIORRE
ID 2-0829

18 acres of cool woods with private lake,
heated swimming pool, all activities of interest to children are instructed individually
by adult counselors.
14 years of provem
satisfaction for boys and sits 5-10. Transportation provided. June
August 14.

sizes. Also repairs and parts for al)
make bicycles.

, fine
transportation.
.
Telephone
ID 2-4850 after 6 p.m.
m
951 HUDSON 4 door sedan, radio and heater, g
tires, excellent running condition, $125. Telephone WI 5-4449.
xs
COLLECTOR
ITEMS
(aed
door convertible,
1951
Frazier,
all
ather interior, electrically controlled win; and customized.

car

BIKES—Boy’s
Reconditioned.

Ave.

ies

your

25 issue of

LANDSCAPING

A credited member of
American Camping Assn.

BICYCLES

4

dows,

Park Ave.
Highland

Finance
nnoney,.

PONTIAC 1951, radio, heater, Hydramatic,
od

JACK

AUTO

the

thing for second car. Only $350. Telephone ID 3-0886.
956 LINCOLN Premier convertible, a low
mileage, classic beauty. White with new
_ black top. Full power.
Premium
whitewall tires, only $1,850. ID 2-8357.
j
55
955 CHEVROLET, 4 door sedan, 6 cylinder standard shift, mechanic owned, best
offer. Call after 6 p.m. ID 2-5151, 3337

Western

E.

Living

PLANO
INSTRUCTION
Hank
Winston,
staff pianist
at WBBM
CBS. Call WI
5-0244 after 7:30 p.m.
LATIN
tutoring,
reasonable
rates,
call
Karen Lauter, ID 2-4116 after May 27.

Distributors:

SERVICE

FOR

original owner,
1953 Buick
2 door, whitewall tires, radio,

power,

May

Body and Fender Repair:
All Makes - All Models

ASK

Radiant

NUTRI-BIO
LIFE

Complete Painting,
Undercoating and Touch

steering,

brakes, windows,
seats; radio, new top,
good tires, low mileage. Telephone ID 24833, 921 Pleasant Ave.
1958
THUNDERBIRD,
power | steering,
brakes,
seat and
windows.
Extra clean
sey low mileage. Telephone VErnon 5-

For More
See

WM. RUEHL &amp; CO.
GENERAL BODY SHOP
NOW OPEN

8 M G A
red roadster, only 5 months
use. Good condition. WW,
wire wheels,
radio,
heater, luggage
rack,
seat belts,

_. tonneau

DOES your swimming pool need pumping
out? Do it yourself or let us do it. We
have the equipment. ID 2-9202.
ACCOUNTING, bookkeeping, tax service—
any part of $5,000 to $45,000; majority
oe
term
credits. Telephone
STate
2-

WESTMEAD
antiques,
having
completed
the new shop, has a choice collection of
Chinese and Far East antiques. Collectors
and decorators welcomed. We are in the
same location; on Illinois 42A, % mile
north of Illinois 120.
FOR sale antique halltree, $25; mrakle top
dresser, $50. Telephone Lake Villa, ELliott 6-2691

1955 PONTIAC deluxe 2 door, low mileage,
one owner,
very clean inside and out.
Radio, heater, hydramatic, whitewalls and
a
extras. Call after 6 p.m., WI 5-

SERVICE

SEPTIC tanks and grease traps pumped—
modern equipment—prompt
service. Wm.
Casselberry
Co.,
Lake
Forest
1378.

ANTIQUES

excellent

condition; priced reasonably, can be seen
at 1415 St. Johns Ave., weekdays after
5 prog all day Saturday and Sunday. ID

a

ton,
during

ALTERATIONS

come in and view
used Cadillacs, now

Motor

%

ay.

AT CADILLAC
fe
invite you
finest selection

BUSINESS

AIR conditioner, perfect condition,
At
Call
Lake
Forest
2521

FRAILERS

&amp;

ID 2-3811

TRAILER

SPACE

HALE TRAILER SALES
House trailerg and travel trailers; we buy
cad sell, £920 Sheridan Rd., North Chicago.
(2 blocks north of naval base»
2 TRAILER HITCHES, FRAME MOUNT,
FITS MOST LATE MODEL CARS, TELEPHONE HI 6-1696 AFTER 6 P.M.

TREE SURGERY
WINTER
rates now in effect for tree removal. Completely insured. Jim Beinlich.
VE 5-0513.
} &amp; N FREE EXPERTS.
Lauren,
feeding, repairing, guying
and removal, Fully
insured.
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:

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: them

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anywhere—SAVE

Turn

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steel

7 Socialize and relax in this perfect setr ting. The —
one both Lit
ya
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a
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J
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2. Gigi Young's elegant party
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beautifully
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(Fashion

Corner)

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broadcloth
sundress
and lace trimmed bolero needs

little
ironing.
By
Cinderella
in blue or pink, 7-14 ....7.95
(Children’s)
4.

Little

or

no

ironing

needed

with this cotton broadcloth lace
trimmed
party sun dress for
We 3-OK 3 oi. 65s ee soe 4.95

last 3 days
once-a-year

(Children's)

5. Kate
Greenaway’s _ satin
striped cotton with sparkle buttions, 7-14. Pink: or blue 7.95
(Children's)

6. Nylon sheer over nylon organdy bouffant, lace trimmed.

reg.

Two-tone

reg.

pastels, S-M-L

. .8.95

(Lingerie)

7. White
cotton
eyelet
over
stiffened
nylon
net,
ribbon
trim. SeMek oc oi ek Rss 5.25

reg.

(Lingerie)
(Hosiery)

you'll

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find

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�</text>
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