}Flect Ch les Glass g you thkt he posâ€" eations ;Id that he IL;\ office # the best ghould f@lly realize ithis offik to whom who willllook after tablished] office, and }ALL BL!fTRlC RS Qf' id wonty of your emished ecord durâ€" ression, mfiany of us and we not have | Charle} Glass has » and can| be dependâ€" id should have for a proughlyf acquai legal r§atters, and g\q‘e ha requ_eq'ted on the[ballot, but the Tegf#1 right of s Glass ih the Indeâ€" > Magisgtrate, and e nis n HURSDRY, e Mgg{ltrate, even r on thk ballot. | ger ighwo Chatles Glass HIGHWLAND PARK 374 ntral Avenue . P. 3380 sults 18, If you have any king to do in your home town, get t and nails, and start somet ing construcâ€" tive.â€"Florida Timesâ€" t‘ 4 Hacksaw blades, fo putside the wall of a Western jail, were evidentâ€" ly the property of e uraged taxpayer trying to cut his way into a refuge.â€"Detroit News. Hold Institute April 20 f The Lake County in‘s Christâ€" ian Temperance Unio l':rl‘l hold an institute on Th y, | April H& from 10 a.m. to 4 p.ré. at the United Evangelical rch Greedp Bay Road and Laurel] Avenue. Miss Hood will talk on law enforcement, There will be severdl er (good speakers. â€" Everybody| in rested is welcome. I | | Frederick Moor Next Speaker _ School life, filled with gay com mencement â€" festivities, | balls and romance, is skillfully ov#n into the plot. Specialties, such as zypuyt barn, garland and tap dances com! bine in adding to the} celebration. | Special â€"scenery d | elabora costumes have been ted to add to the attractiveness of the perfo The sixth and last of the séries lectures sponsored by the Si hoo of the: North Shore| Co atio‘ Israel will take place n W : evening, April 19, 1938, at the Tem ple, Lincoln and Véxtnon Avenues, Glencoe, at 8 p.m. F 'c‘( Moore, journalist, diplomat, authonmand lecâ€" turer will speak on *Persqnal Adâ€" ventures in Foreign Affairs." is lecture was originally|scheduled fo March 28, but dueto|the fact that Mr. Moore was asked ito tr&vel thru the United States ‘with Mr. Matâ€" suoka, chief Japanes del?gnte to the Geneva conferencg, from March 23rd to April 13th, it Wwas J:cesury to postpone his appéearance until April 19th. . Mr. Moére was hborn in New Orleans and bdgan his newsâ€" paper career; as correspondent in Washington when Th e Rooseâ€" velt was president. is gaid that Frederick Moore, for many years asâ€" sociated pressman in Rekin, and who later organized the f reig$ service for the New York Times in the Orient is the one may who can tell us about China in sugh a way that we will understand to some extent "what the shooting |s all about." Fromp 1921â€"1924 he seryed as adviser â€" Tickets may be c Mrs. Simon Ruwitch, Road, Highland Park Temple office. _ ; | The story of the gperétta takes place on the campus ‘of & fashionâ€" able school on comméencement day, The plot centers argund Maryida, whose mother does lagndry work to keep her two children in school. Wealthy school friends punder the pretext of a rich aunt, offer to send Maryida to school fo th?following year. Contrary to her| brother‘s wishes, Maryida gra fulny accepts the offer, eager to show Professor Breakeasy, a profou liever in heredity, that she is no. oramus. Maryida surprises qgveryone with her splendid work asd is crowned Queen at the next ,mlponcqme'nf of the school. â€" 8 |s> | mance. to the Japanese goj was a member of the gation to the Washi1 ence in 1921. He ha tensively in China an tically all the Chines speaks with authorit concerning the Orient. ural gift for accura and statement, whic him to a remarkable scribe to his kountryn:{ political and social Asia :) . | Oak Terrace Scli Operetta Will Friday Nigfl The girls and boys grade of the Oak Te Highwood are hard a operetta, "Ask the be presented in the a day evening, April direction of Miss 811‘ son, music director. _ Lecture Se FREDERICK MOORE perétta takes of a fashionâ€" ncement day. und: Maryida, ndry work to of the eight ace School 0 work on the oféssor," to ditorium Fri+ 1, finder the nche Thomp! Be on . _| t, April 21 e observation has, qualified degree to dei en the presen ‘connitions h? _some extent s all about." ved as adviser ernment and apanese deleâ€" igton Conferâ€" traveled> exâ€" I kngows pracâ€" leaders. He y mltJ matters He has a natâ€" ool btained â€" from 340 Mora'inj or from th from ian divoteg a considerable part of his weekly entertainment |program to "putting across" a ge of vital importance to evety. listener he ‘is| to be commended | and his words are deserving of |eyeryone‘s thoughtful consideration. Cantor:. Glad to meet| |you, Mr. Dickson. Is there anything I can do for you? sf t Carifor: Yesâ€"and sq\n guys drive along as if you cars. | _‘ Dickson: I‘m a pr driver. I only had 01:;[ Wit into a pole., || ~antor: Well, it‘ wasn "ault, because I know ~raph pole_never hits »xcept in‘:e\i\d:fevnn. Dickson: Sometimes y K, Mt Cantor, yo\’v& time. | i Cantor: I knowâ€"the myay some motorists rush through; _ you‘d think they were late for th&y acciâ€" dent.| You look to be @hqgut thirty. five years old and you‘ve got about thirty five more years tci liyeâ€"that‘s about seventeen million| minutes more+â€"now you‘re willing to risk those| seventeen million| minutes speed‘ng. around a curve |dr beating a red|light to gain one ute. How WOuljnyou like to invest| seventeen million dollars to make 4 e dollar ? Dickson: Mr. Canto4,| verybody speedgâ€"only I had the lh$ d luck to be caught. _ o q Vant & Selig, the eld Aetâ€" nliu&s‘. were so impressqd | with Edâ€" die .Cantor‘s recent ; broadcast ; in which he stressed the importance of highway safety that: they| obtained permission to give it . T further publicity. Here it is: L 4 Wallington: Eddie, t fl' of mine, George Dickson.| | Cantor: Listen, my g man, I can‘t get anybody off fdr |speeding, and even if I could, I wouldn‘t.© I‘m sorry | ta tell you this,| but even though . you‘re Jimmy‘s iend, as far as I‘m concerned,, eding is just as serious a crime. ttempted assault.‘ What if you }?1} a pedesâ€" trian ? 1 Dickson: . Mr. Cantoi those| guys walk along owned the street. : Diékson:f didn‘t know | that. It just shows you â€" ong half of the world: doesn‘t know hpw)|the, other half lives. i‘ | Cantor: You know why/}~ Because one half rides in au biles and the other half ia,ufni;, to\ come out! You have no idea how regkless peoâ€" ple have become. : I oneg saw ‘two cars hit into each othe use they aimed for the. same rian. And I‘ve seen a motorist with a train iin order to the train at a crogsing. It would fine {-hiixg if he beat the train beat himâ€" ately it was a tie. Dickson: I‘m in a litt’ jam, Mr. Cantor. I just got a | ticket ‘for speed;;!g and I thought' u: might help me get off easy. t gee it‘s my third ticket and I may) have my license‘ revoked and I ithpught â€" with your connectionsâ€"â€"t couldâ€" Carntor: You‘re wron bile gccidents have be¢c serious factor in this Pc it hasg stopped being a pe ter of you or me. Did that tvery minute in t people are injured by) ; and évery ‘eighteen min body | gets killed by a!| are statistics, my de you can‘t blame the cause 85 per cent of afc penâ€" 6n nice. clear days. can‘t blame the automob 96 per cent of accidents } »ars in perfect conditi automobile company j sitting up nights wor it safety devices. They gi1 derful brakes. Why don the nedestrian a break Di¢kson: For that Cantor, women are than men. â€" Cantor: lhats whi thinksâ€"but how woul know , that twentyâ€"five the jdrivers in this women, and they cau per cant of the acciden ninetyâ€"two per cent a men.|| â€" | $ f Cantdr: That‘s true accidents happen on‘ | the family is out for and ‘backseat drivers work. F once saw a f« head| from the wheel, wife in the backseat a shut |up. T know wh and don‘t you forget i one minute afterwar handed ‘him a flute w and told him to move tenor section. © Di¢ckson: Well, some other driver‘s fault. personality essential; age 25 |1o 35 preâ€" terred. Must be able to furnish good refâ€" Sattier, North Shore Hotel,| Evanston, â€"to represent old, bakery in this \district. Experience negessary as good standing in murnifty. | Good Â¥ddie Cantor and WMjn : nationallyâ€"k1 Reliable That‘s wh at ||everybody [ u like) to }‘ râ€" cent| of ‘country. are e |only eight Lu; The other e |kaused by g [The worst unday when & ood time |put in their m turn his ldok at his 1 (say, "Aw, t||I‘m doing "/| And only , ||St. Peter ith) six holes ver into the thfl train, or ut)| unfortun« )n .| | Automoâ€" opte such a try that etgonal matâ€" d| you know day two | ontobiles nutes some« r. _ These ‘ pian. And weather, beâ€" bc’ ents hapâ€" s.;| And you bile, because pen with tter, â€" Mr. e drivers . | Every engineers out new you wonâ€" you give he pole‘s t a teleâ€" rotor car s it‘s the some â€" of if they _ of : you whed the careful cident. I an‘t help to make a friend girl. The drivenr of the car was unâ€" hurt. â€" He ‘hd@d} been ,d:iving for pleasure. | Bu am sure he can never sit behi wheel again withâ€" out seeing that dbar little girl laugh: ing and playing before him. . Cantor: | HoWw] can you finish a stew? Here ;: e recipeâ€"take one regular, natur@l) born fool; add two or three drinks of bootleg liquor and mix the two i high powered moâ€" tor car. Afterithe fool is thoroughly soaked, place His foot ori the gas and reledse the ke. _ Refmove fool from wreckagg,jplace in black, satâ€" inâ€"lined box apd garnish with flowâ€" Cantor:| Liftén, (I once drove through a; to where txneyrhad & very beautiful gnd human sign for motorists. | It! gaid, "Please Drive Slowly . . . W$ Love Our Children." That affected jnp.more than all the fines, threats gnid regulations I ever saw. Drive Slowly . . . "We Love Our Children} {There had been a tragedy on that very spot where the sign.stood. â€" Alittle girl had gone out to play;: $ She inever left the sidewalk. | Sudgenly, the mother, who was preparing dinner in the kitchen, heardja) shrill, pierting cry that cut her thrgugh the heart. She ran into the $tfeet. There was a crowd hurrying |toward a car that had. swung onitd the sidewalk. The mother becamg |frantic, |a sudden fear seized hdrjas she pushed her way through thp crowd. | There on the ground. before her lay the crushed, lifelegs} form of| her little ~_Dickson: Mr; Cantor, 1 â€" er â€" I Mto thank] you for what you‘ve said towme. Iin] going to court toâ€" morrow and avén if my license is revoked, I‘ll be shtisfied. | _ . Cantor: I thin it’h time for all of us to start t ing.a‘ little about others. _ We it haNo cut out over by a Pw n joy rider. / Dickson: Buk.how can |you finish a stew like t 3 * Dickson: 8t like to have 1 driving and and . :. 4: 940â€"960 W Don‘t de planting your new lawn another day or yoy‘ll miss tï¬a spring ‘rains that mean so much rich, beautiful lawn; Choose at once m gobd) seedâ€"the Boulevard Brand conâ€" uln!nï¬ rla Bent at 40c a pound or the Lincot r| smnd at"25c a pound, See your Gealer tod H Mixed| Lawn Grass Seed LincoLx Pank Whit ’si$1 Julla King .:. .0 i}.sls .3 clldul es 4 Gobeli ...,..f......._....$1.00-$1 Gsell‘s) hocolqtes,................. \_1| _‘ Names Put on Easter Eggs Fresh Strawberry Brick, by Badger ... ... .. Try Nuâ€"YÂ¥im, the new fertilizer, positively will KQT burn lawns or plant life. fo Tune arl W. Gsell & Co: > We T/ April Showers Bring May Lawns! . 'UBLE? KAY NUT DEPARTMENT Let us make up your order fresh for Easter at Special Prices. _ >,‘ You How to Grow a Lawn uron St., CHICAGO for booklet, "Six Steps in Making a Good Lawn" â€" VBBM "Spring Time Frolics" Thursdays at 7 P. M Fridays at 5 P. M., Sundays at 6 P. M. Mr., Cantor, people when they go‘out y‘re only human, IVER JOHNSON., Inc. | CHC | Pharmacists is and Operated by Registered Pharmacists _ |‘ venue â€"â€" _ 899 Roger Williams Ave. THE PRESS E A S l An assortment of delicious candies as delightful as the gladsome seaâ€" son they represent, packed in a hox eloquent in its beauty . . ... ... our comforts orâ€"our pleasures, But just moderate them. (‘That motorik | â€"he could have had just as nice drive with the speedométer registerâ€" ing thirty miles an hour as fifty, So, whenever in the future you put y0 foot on tsl:e gas, remember that . sign "Drive Slowly .. . We Love Our Children." i| B The next meeting will Wednesday evening, April lowing the meeting there cards for members of the Star. Fritz Bahr is dons prizes for the evening. _ About two hundred mem friends ‘attended the birthday of Campbell chapter last Wed day evening in Masonic hall. program which consisted of a y broadcast, the past matrons an trons beipg the "stars" of theiw ning, was very cleverly p Much credit is due the past o% who <were headed by Mrs. | Scliueidexf, for the evening‘s suce« Watch later editions of thei,H: land Park Press for further det Many Attend O. E. S. e Birthday P Ping Pong Club To Sponsor Champio The Highland Park Ping f championship will . be played ‘ last Saturday of this month. / &râ€" rangements are heing made by he local club. . i Phone Highland Park 22 4 EVERGREEN n Hooks Fairwa Nursery / it i SHRUBS PRICES LOWER THIS YEAR T ER Phone MOQONros 6580 and Phone : [I ‘EASTER GREZET%*IGS N â€" to HOUSEWIVES â€" [ /empting for «Richelieu~â€". Richelieu Boneless COD FISH SANTI BR Strictly Fresh EGGS Free 3 dozen Bbund New Florida White Select POTATOES 6 Ibs. ... : ...: .. 2B Genuine 1933 | | i SPRING LAMB â€" Hind Quarter average 5 to 8 lbs; lb. ... L f...l. SEEDLESS RAISINS 15 :o0z. pkg; 2 for : REAL BEER 2 bottles pound pound pound Fresh Twice Daily SLICED BREAD Mickelberry‘s ORANGES PURE PORK LINKS Fresh Dressed BROILERS Premium â€" Star or Approved HAMS â€" Whole or Half Fresh Dressed CHICKENS 16 oz. loaf Phones 117 â€" 118 144 lb. average | Per Case | Plus $1.00 for case jarge California Navel lorida Juicy lorida Seedless RAPEFRUIT resh olland â€" Brookfield â€" Blue Valley UTTER | RANGES for ALIBUT STEAK voy â€" Edelweiss â€" Blatz or Atlas â€" S A A _ AFPAVLALZRSLOYS Railway and Hixh;zf Aven HIGHW (Plus‘deposit for bottles) 1 Moth Proof &edariz' ~~Bag with $2.00 Pu mun'rg v.jv gm uy _ at LOW COsT/with _ HILI. EVERGREENS &'ll'.:lll 'ht* 1 @ation planting, THURsSDAY, it $2.65 <24¢ 44 â€" 19¢ 14$c ©23¢ orage 25¢ 25¢ 43¢ 18¢ 25¢ 49¢ 17¢ 19¢ very 13, 5¢ Its