U There are m which, the inâ€" stant one hears achieve a sort of separate nee and regardless of their eomvhu' verification with "i"-ndmhblri;:â€"n'and ruthenti¢, sitting in the midst o!h:uryand (lirt:'orofwbieh ’:emznolittl:,.: pa "'l!-bfl'b: moment days of hi old ramance! |‘__ "ROAN STALLION, TAMAR Axp OTHER POEMS" ‘ he is one of those pitiful individuals who, deprived of the necessity for the struggle for existence, seems to be deprived of everything. _ We leave and Toresight.. iAfter he marries the beautiful and m:r» and totally unâ€" congenial daug of his tm"’ and goes into business for If, success comes . _ Everything he touches turns gold, until, become "S. Osgood Smith,"noted millionaire. His early though tacular, is ‘by. sou and foresight. he m beautiful and ï¬:r. and t congenial daug of his and goes into buszinace f~. he can. It is the end of rommance for li-ndm"hh energies ‘ defiâ€" nitely to b live in vae en on Cntiaapter 80 ve one on st.. but for Evelyn it is too far removed In its rigid y from the old life of easy pleasure among her friends at "Molla‘s," Evelyn breaks the covenant and poor Sam is left to zr: up‘ the threads of the old life as along until there comes the inevitable first romance. | This goes hard with Sam and he t over) his entire world to live .with the girl m&‘u existent | 4 It is an ting picture of New York at the of another. century which seems in some ways eons reâ€" moved from our own. Sam finds comâ€" panionship, . stimulation, .and & job in a hardware firm which pays |him hom.nuflei,udsdm,b:;udicréusly 3 ig | country , journeys to New York to make his home with his uncle. 4 â€" ‘ Sam ’-iï¬u the age of fourteen seemed ty eut out for a brilâ€" liant career business.. . Awkward, overgrown, , . â€" there is nothing : but Tnmnu work for him on the dreary farm in New England. But when is about twenty his mother: and father die, and the farm is sold, the only sister who was at "Pig Iron!" is a story of business of the t when opportunities lay about like lpose cohblestones on the streets of New York,. Opportunities as there mlnmt times for the person of | ability. © { Charles G. Nortis writes a businessâ€" lï¬om‘ In his series in which under titles usually of one word, he freats of a subject, he deals with MMM‘Mtdyandmt,hpn- ah-imï¬m Ward, im’.:,n& parodist of other people‘s turned novelist himself. ‘m Little Man‘" 'fl:;N in April. We wonâ€" der who rise to avenge his formâ€" er efforts. The ple of Chicago ought to be warned : *Gentlemen, â€"â€"Prefer Blonds®" in dramatic form is ominousâ€" l"ï¬_i' m ltblch;ld‘gb open in } | ' e ’the second. w im _ WRECKING Northwestern Military Academy PAGE S$1% Telephone 1589 Ridge Road, Highland Park. M WILL KRUMBACH A NOVEL OF BUSINESS American House Wrecking Co. By n-u-g-' Jet Boni & ,umlft" JUST PARAGRAPH®S GOOD POEMsS im Poot foruot] By Charles G. Norris E. P. Dutton & Co. udg other <building material being sold at a great saving. e BUY NOW AND SAVE MONEY All material being sold on premises. "PIG IRON* St. Johns and Ravine Avenues / ~MHighland Park, III, â€" , Doors and Millwork not sense 6th Printing! the great and clever rascal with a singular fate. $2.00. H. M. Co. A heartâ€"warming love story of youth and adventure. "A romance which challenges comftn’son with anything short of Kip ing', Stevenâ€" son or. Rider Haggard." â€" New York Times. $2.00 By ELSWYTH THANE A witty, wise and ironi¢c picture of the American stage ~by aâ€" distinâ€" guished actress. 1\ Henry Holt &:Co: ce . 1i (f Certainly this poet has a magniâ€" ficent gift. : Strong, with an almost terrible daring, his poems reach out beyond the limits of time or space as we know them. The â€" supernatural slips in quietly, the sea, the stars, the sky as truly â€" characters : as â€"those masterful hardly more than semiâ€"huâ€" man creations, Tamar and the rest. The reading of these poems is a great experience,. unforgettable. The pubâ€" lication is what the threadbare phrase proclaims a literary event. _ es a few copies of books he considers of ‘real worth. _ So "Tamar" â€"appeared, slipping in the back door so to speak, but it wasâ€"not long before she heard her name blazoned ftom the houseâ€" tops. The inconspicuous little volume had found its way into. the hands of reviewers and they saw "a new planâ€" et that has swum into the ken of the reviewer." Robinson Jeffers awoke to find himself famous and a line of pubâ€" lishers on his doorstep. § But the poems came into the hands of a printer who in the great heartâ€" less city amuses himself by printing facts, â€" live ~on â€" comfortably in our minds. . Such a story is that told of Robinson Jeffers, who came to New York after he had been writing poetâ€" ry for twenty years in California, to see if he could find a publisher. But publishers look upon poetry as does the cautious ipvestor in oil stock and they would not accept his wares, * Valentine Williams, author of "THE RED MASs3" presents LITTLE, BROWN & CO, HOME TALENT By Louise Closser Hale MR. RAMOSI Publishers, Boston RIDERS of the WIND poet has a magniâ€" _ Cleveland‘s Example _ g, with an almost |<_ In Cléveland, with a high pedestrian poems reach out fatality rate, less than 30 per cont of f time or space as | the victims were children, according The â€" supernatural | to the study.. This city has seventyâ€" Stokes, N. Y. Helen Carr, Milton Wright,; Elna Benson, and their committee, . _ guests from ontside the school will be ""“‘?&". at:r»thgar names have been diet Ampirr, jaote ons evimr oo "We <wish to emphasize the fact," said Miss Amborn, junior class adâ€" viser, "that the prom is not a formal affair,. _ All seniors and juniors are _ As at the s:nior hop, admlldoni'fl be by ticket only. Underclassmen. an This orchestra, the same one which played for the prom last year, is composed of seven fraternity men from Notth‘.w:hm‘ university. | A member of last year‘s prom commitâ€" tee said of this orchestra, "It is the best that we ever had at a dance at . Music for | the Deerfieldâ€"Shields junior prom on Friday evening, April 23, is to be furnished by the "Purple Kings of Jazz," according to inforâ€" mation given out by the junior class social committee last week. JE Two hundred thirtyâ€"one cities reâ€" ported 635 new playgrounds last year, according . to | the: Playground and R:creation association. | New athletic | fields number 132. w k H. 8. JUNIOR PROM Music To Be Furnished By the Purple Kings of Jazz; â€" Features mX Music will be furnished by Oak Pirk high school organizations. There are in Cook and Lake Counties about 2,40 members of the institute. These bers are all ‘high gchool or elementary school teachears. . | JAZL We se‘ " * The morning meetings begin at'i,l‘fi and the afternoon meetings at 2:00. In addition to the regular meetings there will be sectional meetings. Mr. R. W, Schneider and Mr. H.C. Wright of Deerfieldâ€"Shields wiH act as clfl:: man of the Industrial Arts and of t Intermediate and High School© secâ€" tional‘ meetings respectively. | Mr.;Raymond: Robbins »will speak during the morning session P:;}g Professor ‘William E. Dodd, ‘ sor Philip Fox, editor of the Elemenâ€" tary : English Journal, and Mr. C. C. Certain will appear on the afterngon program. } at Oak Park: high school April 19. There are to be both afternoon and evening ; sessions and the Parentâ€" Teacherâ€"association will serve a lunchâ€" eon at noon. i The Lakeé Shore division of the HIiâ€" nois Teachers‘ association will meet LAKE SHORE TEACHERS MEETING MONDAY, 19TH _ _Few Child Casualties \ > In 'Riv?a‘nd,_whieh has m&ny ggy-' grounds proportion to the poppuâ€" lation, the child automobile fatalities were lesy than 25 per cent of the total number in which pedestrians were inâ€" volved. ~Only: twelve children were killed by automobiles in the city durâ€" ing a three year period.ending Decemâ€" ber 21, 1924 _ i . ~In Toledo, very few child fatalities were found within normal drawing distance of playground locations. Toâ€" ledo < has <twelve playgrounds. The positions of the grounds were pm:d on a sbot map and circles of a quarâ€" ter mile and half mile . radii_ were drawn about each to <indicate their eflective,pm for the different ages of ‘children:‘ Out, of thirtyâ€"two child automobile fatalities during the three years, 1922â€"1924 inclusive, only four oecurred within the quarter mileg‘cir-1 cles and six.in the half mile distance. two supervised playgrounds. This low percentage of child fatalities is in marked contrast to the high;pe!pant. age in an eastern county, where lay> grounds are few and pootly dizrtbâ€" uted. f » } The investigations of the safety exâ€" perts in most of the cities cover the three year period 1922â€"1924 and show that cities with the most playgrounds had from oneâ€"third to oneâ€"fourth |as many «child pedestrian fatalities as adult fatalities * i7 hoi street/accidents to children are much fewer in cities amply: supâ€" plied _with well distributed . playâ€" grounds than in cities not so well supâ€" plied with these safety zones. This conclusion ‘of the National Safety Council enginsers is made public by the Playground and Recreation Asso+ ciation ‘of America, with which the council is coâ€"operating in its safety campaign. 3 # 1 “ PLAYGROUNDS W%'g SEEPE caance â€" _ CHILD FATAmeim‘x“‘ Chief. of Police Gets rewer where Tuey exisr) * m“aï¬fz"' Cities Having Recreation Parks ~ for Youngsters Report Less â€" Deaths From Auto _ THE atal street accidents 20 €. Jackson Bivd., Chicage FRIDAY, APRIL 23 HIGHLAND PARK PRESS, HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS rite far free booklet ~~ir a slave, and ground down by the Platocrats, unless he has a new one.â€"E. W. Howe‘s Monthly. â€"â€"> Not one Amecrican in ten takes decent ‘care cf an gautomobile; and so it soon goes to picces, and he feels Solovey, according to the officer, was working as a er on the gum home. :In ‘doing tl bo:“i= ( occasion to move a box . ivhicb the two bonds were secreted. The ‘box dropped from his hands, fspilling out the bonds, Frame says, ‘ and the carpenter saw them. f Frame got on the job immediately and wated for Solovey. He him Saturday as he was re 1 home. Solovey, according to the ofâ€" ficer, admitted taking the bonds. He was held to the grand jury, and the bonds were returned to their owner,. itiiuid,whmapom?m ing to get a $700 loan. | ‘y, Frame said, was the man trying to get the loan. The bankers investiâ€" gated to find that the bonds had been issued to the Highwood woman so the police were notified, * 1 © Nihoint . Soletey, ot" Rasinia, heing held in the county jail on a charge of larceny, Marshal J. C. Frame of Sfreey m ) cophin f ï¬...?“*""» High. turday on a comp! A 4 wood woman, (Mrs. Martha Wilson, who lost two $500 real estate mortâ€" gage bonds several days ago. I Phone 451 to those who come to our Nursery and get/the stock. _ { ; Freshly dug; roots not | dried out. Nursery is just west of Lincoln aveâ€" nue on Peterson road, Chicago. â€" _ Peterson road is north line of Roschill Tel. Main The land of the Peterson Nursery has been sold, and we have only this spring to sell off the sto is your: last opportunity.) |â€"â€" . â€" ; " .. v/> & . 3 * BIG REMOVAL SALI CASL ND .: CARRY â€" 60¢% Off Catalog Prices "B U TLE R‘S" Trees, Shrubs, Fruits, Vines and Perennials | **PETERSON NURSERY=~~>~ xh ae n ing exceptional values in Footwear in order to reduce our stock. . On this account we are starting our "Big Removal Sale" on Friday, the 16th, at which time we are offerâ€" On May 1st, we will move our Shoe Stock, where we are now located at 508 Central Avenue, to the Lencioni Building on North Second Street. : Comeandseefor yourself. B A R G A I N S ! Purer Because Carbonated Full Quart Brick a £â€" 50c Divizion : of National Dairy SS T 508 Central Avenue Barberry Syringas B-qktiwn Bridal Wreath Lila sls and quantitiee of other v Large clumps ‘of perennial fo o e on ICE CREAM | 20,000 Amur Privet Hedges; 30,000 Oth Shrubs SPECIAL This THURSDAY, APBRI Sumach Honeysuc Weigela |/ CoralberrÂ¥ Froebel‘s * This rea a9 a # &# # THU one their _ An prok on & to grap the On after fleâ€"be Tt with rrran a vol Curtii not h 1ne88, it,) 0 ly: @ had â€" Bend perie turn: infor ing 4 she 1 187 almi ngs, e kn the tiss grum| the hose rain 1C€ ied Jweq ig (A On da al LhÂ¥ i tar