ove to, but I‘m only e twp,successful plays Tho‘ as a matter of is usually the most dvantageous occasion l1 we have to say is 14â€" you like to drink wn‘s Talking" was endence high school May 22. chool boys, at Chiâ€" chers during Boys‘ zante" will be preâ€" vdod. ‘Evening high h school, Arkansas, last Tuesday. jCS day, June 6, 1929 Thursday, June 6, 1929 Copperhead" ‘which we still insist was forceful and very well done. Fond Farewells £«>: ‘Byâ€"way of closing the season and incidentally leaving the field of acâ€" tion at Deerfleld for good, there‘s a little in praise and criticiq‘m to say about â€" Deerfield‘s dramatic departâ€" ment and â€"its‘ activities.:> The Garrick club is rather an indefinite quantity, meaning simply that it is hard to say much about ‘it because is present organization has not been in work ing order long enbugh to give any definite results. It is still in the experimental stage. We really can‘t say whether this year‘s system was any better than that of last year. Next fall there will probably be another reorganization, though still along the line of competition.â€" The tendency is to make Garrick club an opportunity for mature artistic â€"achiâ€" evement instead of merely a pastime. The slump in ~Garrick activity toâ€" wards the last of the year was due largely to the inexcusable crowding of entertainment..: â€"We insist that there is plenty of time for everything in a school year if organized rightly and Garrick need not be cheated of its success, welfare, or achievement. The year‘s two big plays dlways afford a . proportionate thrill to all who areâ€"in the productionâ€"itself aflnd;t'!;:;t{). _p.m:â€"Funâ€"andâ€"Stories~ those who see it.â€" We hardly realiz¢é!important secret! â€"â€" _ _ _ RQp damatics â€"GOODYEAR â€"SUPERTWIST C is y s GORDS__ : with new improved Pathfinder Tread *But let us SHOW you the difference in Cuality Do You Know That â€"30x838} â€" â€" â€"â€" â€" $5.75 29x4.40 â€" â€" $6.75 30x4.50 â€" â€" $7.50 Automotive Repair Service There is very little difference between the PRICE of a guaranteed Goodyear and the cheapest tire that‘s sold* ' For Example | LES STANGER â€" GUS KLEMP 133 North Second Street how fortunate we are to have such a large stage with good if incomplete équ}pment and dramatic appreciation on the part of a large group so that we can put on mature and worthâ€" while shows instead of simple May Flower pageants, etec. We can do things in a big way. & t This is all made possible particuâ€" larly by Miss Comer who makes work a pleasure and sets the pace and type of our work, and who is bringing Deerfleld‘s dramatic ability up to a higher level every year. ; * Evanston School Head â€"â€"__â€" Dies; Buried at Ripon The bronze casket containing ‘the ashes of Dr. Wilfred: F. Beardsley, principal of the Evanston High school| for 23 years and member of the staff for 35, were interred Saturday mornâ€" ing, June 1, at 11 (standard time) at. Ripon, Wis., according to word from ths high school. Dr. Arthur Rogers of St. Mark‘s Episcopal church read the service. * 4 Dr. Beardsley was born in Albion, Wis., but came to Evanston at an sarly age to attend Northwestern uniâ€" versity +academy . and the university. Immediately after ‘being graduated hs joined the Evanston High school Taculty and was connected with the school until his break in health. Are your children listening in on My Bookhouse cS torytime over WMAQ? Every Monday, Tuesday, T HE P RES S There is surely no better way to prepare one‘s self for visiting a forâ€" eign city than to read about it. Peoâ€" ple, by reading, alone, have become more familiar with the twists and turns, the historic stones and great building of London thn$ those who live there habitualy. â€" Yet the best thing to read is not the usual travel or guide book. These, except for a few of theâ€" rarest, are to me exguisâ€" itely gepressing. They give the husk witholut the kernel. They tell ‘you where you are supposed to be thrillâ€" ed without being able to give more than the merest hint of why you should be thrilled. Among the slightly better than| the usual run of these, is Sisley Huddleston‘s "Paris ~Salons Cafes and Studios." It is a rather ramâ€" bling structure, but it â€" contains names, â€"anecdotes, the. chitâ€"chat which is passed on now and then: from the inner to the outer circle. It is impregnated, however, by that sigh, "There were giants in those days," which is inevitable in this kind of book, since by the time these intangible connections or groups have become ‘selfâ€"con#ious enough to. be written about them are gone. It is only in the last stages that such things are recognizables The artistic groups of today will be writâ€" â€"But a book which cries out to be: read before going â€"to Florence or Italy, anywhere, for that matter, is Rachel Annand. Taylor‘s brilliant, explosive work, "Leonardo the Florâ€" entine." Convinced as she was that Leonardo was closely connected with and deep influenced by his time, Mrs. Taylor has taken passio?ate care in building up a picture of that time. She has built a picture such as has never been done before, for color, for the extravagance which was the very keynote of that incomparable Renaissance period. § Speaking of the Florentines, she says, "Those insatiate eyes had an â€"organic craving for elaborate shiftâ€" ing patterns of sight and sound, and the sumptuous solidities of pomp in the sun and air, like the physical craving for food and love. Those Greeceâ€"drunken minds at any moâ€" ment threw mythic apologues, rose and white friezes, against the purâ€" ple evening . . . They: desired ~the masquerades because they were soâ€" lutions of colour, music sweet lightâ€" ed faces, rainbow â€"wings and gift armour, sweet fading words." Long study and real scholarship as well as artistry have gone to the writing ‘of this beautiful book on one of the most baffling minds and most intriguing ages of all: times. For London, so different from Florence and Italy, one of the "best recent books, it seems to me, is Lytton Strachey‘s "Elizabeth and Essex." Here once again, Strachey has proved that he, too, can reconâ€" struct an nge and a character. He has made Elizabeth and Essex and the court pass before us as in a magic mirror, the mirror which is his style. & *:*i% It i.t?i'wt the cold prim Elizabeth which Mr. Strachey gives. !l.]‘;)guLthe,Jnll,-_bjooded queen who swore, w spat, and who laughed tremendously when she was amused, It is also the Elizabeth who spoke fluent Latin, who read Greek, who danced superbly, who wrote exquisite prose. And it is the BOOKS AND TRAVEL fl ESTHER GOULDS &T RAVEL â€" â€" CORNL R ._ virgin of fiftyâ€"three who fell in love with the charming, adorable Essex ofâ€" twenty, wund whose jlong intrigue with him turned at. last into the strange baffling struggle, inextricably and disastrously mixed â€"with politics and military history, until it ended upon the block.. A London seen after readâ€" ing this â€"book of Mr. Strachey‘s is one enâ€" riched by a whole chapter of vivid history. RAYMOND â€"WHITCOMB 5 e RAMOND & WHITCOMB COMPANY 176 No. Michigan Avenue Chieago â€" Tel. State 8615 NORTH CAPEâ€"BALTIC SUMMER CRUISES S$.S. ""Carinthia‘"‘â€"â€" June 26 $.S. ‘Franconia"‘â€"â€"June 29 of schoolsâ€"and ‘colleges;, these cruises have conâ€" sistently attracted younger people arnd famâ€" ilies bound for a vacaâ€" tion together. They may be taken as a complete. holiday in themselves (generous shore excurâ€" sions â€" characterize the programs) or as a deâ€" lightful new way toParis. The routes include Iceâ€" land, the North Cape and Hammerfest, Trondâ€" hjem, the most beautiful of the Norwegian Fjords and the cities of Scan: â€"â€"dinavia and the Balticâ€" Bergen, Oslo, Stockholim, Visby,â€" Tallinn (Esthoâ€" Raymondâ€"Whitcomb North Cape Cruises for almost ten years have been the most popular Summer Cruises to sail from America. This year there will be TWO Rayâ€" mond â€" Whitcomb Sumâ€" mer Cruises to the Land of the Midnight Sun. The cruiseâ€"ships will be sisterâ€"shipsâ€"the newest Cunardersâ€"specially deâ€" nian capital), Helsingâ€" fors (capital of Finâ€" land) and Copenhagen. The ratesâ€"$800 upâ€" include assured homeâ€" ward accommodations by such noted Cunard liners as the "Aquiâ€" tania", "Berengaria‘" well as the "Carinâ€" ALLISY uol HUURanermeamteal 15