bunches 9¢ prida, 3 doz, $1 2 doz. for . . 29¢ D BEEF ST SOaP â€"28 & 29 AP UR, 2 pkgs. FLOUR RY FLAKES Highland Park CLEANING NSER 24 N HASH UNDAY‘S CHICAGO D EXAMINER FEBRUARY 27 APS 5 for for for Phone H. P. 125 N OIL Wantâ€" Illinois 2~* 49¢ 3l¢ 19¢ 25¢ _._..3te 35¢ _35¢ _25¢ a1€ 27¢ 22¢ . 9¢ 19¢ 19¢ _ Te 49¢ 39¢ 17¢ 39¢ 217¢ 17¢ 19¢ 89c¢ 39¢ 19¢ 19¢ «+, 1984 2502 Ma.y Wednesday With Joe Penner, Jack O:H:Nul Spn'-k;.- + l Lynne Overman, Mack Go# Â¥ith Margaret Sullivan, Randolph Scott, Walter Connolly, Janet Beecher, Lo Elizabeth Patterson, Harry Ellerbe EArTopy, COMEDY, #DOORMAN‘3 OPERA" â€"â€" vrrarnong s ons NEWS the festival Mrs. Freeman‘s eighth grade have been learning the‘ Gettysburg Address. They are studying the government of colonial times in soâ€" cial studies. RIDGE SCHOOL The Girls‘ Festival Girls‘ birthdays in Japan _ are célebrated in March. The day is known as the Feast of Dolls. Dolls are seen everywhere. There are dolls of every size, but many of them can be enjoyed only during Miss Nelson‘s : fourth grade has been studying the ‘colonial times. They have made a large log cabin and each child is making a> small log cabin for himself. Mrs.. Harvey‘s fifth grade had charge of the assembly last Thursâ€" day, February 20th, They gave short talks about George Washingâ€" ton and illustrated their talks with colored slides. © Miss Paullin‘s sixth grade is studying Greek and Roman histo;y‘ Soon they will start on Engl â€"Mhe third and fourth grades gave a Lincoin assembly last week. They told stories about â€" Lincoln, such as how he saved a pig, and the way he studied. After the storâ€" ies they gave three scenes of Linâ€" soin life. Lincoln, as a boy reading in the evenings,; was the first scene. The second scene told how Lincoln walked three miles when he was a storekeeper, to return three cents to a poor woman whom he had short changed. In the third scene one of Lincoln‘s fine deeds he did as president was shown. We are all ï¬fnl to Mrs. Casperson and Marxsen for the splendid asâ€" LINCOLN SCHOOL NEWSs FROM THE GRADES Robert Boehm, Grade 8 Miss Hudson‘s kindergarten is studying transportation, They have made a train and a boat which look Miss Campbell‘s first grade is studying different ways of travelâ€" ing. They have>made an airplane like the China Clipper, only they tall it the Highland Park Clipper. The castle is now near compleâ€" tion and we are quite proud of our handiwork for it is perched up on top of a cliff. There is a real porâ€" tmeullis, drawbridge and ivy clingâ€" ing to the many towers ‘_und_ walls. _ Betty Hobbs THE LINCOLN ASSEMBLY: 'â€"‘a. we finished the story, we decided to make murals. There are now fourteen pictures telling of the story of "Ivankoe" in our room. The girls made the murals, and so the boys decided to make a casâ€" tle to show their ability. They first hunted in the reference books" for everything they could find about medieval |castles, then they drew plans for making the castle. As the project proceeded, the girls took mity on the boys and soon helped NEXT WEEK: "Fang and Claw" â€" " "I Dream RAVINIA SCHOOL AN IVANHOE The eighth grade of â€"Ravinia school have recently finished readâ€" ing "Ivanhoe," in the literature cass. Before we began our readâ€" ing, we studied a little of the hisâ€" tory of that time from the Norman Conquest to King John. WAY, FEBRUARY 27, 1986 Yith James Cagney. Margaret Linds â€"â€"lâ€"ti' rdo MEDy gney, Margaret Lindsay, Rica "SDY. "RECULAR KIDS" â€" VITAPHONE VARIETY â€" With Joan Blondell, Glenda Farrell, Hugh Herbert, EDY, "ROOPTOPE OF MANHATTAN" | Â¥I LATEST METROTONE NEWS . ~Saturdayâ€"Saturday Matinee and Evening ':l""'dty-'l'ne-d.yâ€"snnd.y W_tm 2 to 11 March 1â€"2â€"3 x "'I'OPH.AH , "I WANNA PLAY MOUSE" SCHOOL NEWS â€"Thursday Too Much" â€" "Rose of the Rancho" â€"â€" "MISS PACIFIC FLEET" "SQO RED THE ROSE" 272 E. Deerpath Ave., Lake Forest â€"Joan Sigrist. bRaAar 1 ‘COLLE OLLEGIATE" "FRISCO KID" . Grade 8. momstetra use nc ame tnvattrastrndanhers dicrmal + Ned Sparks, Frances Langford, Betty Grable, n, Mack Gordon, Harry Revel 7 CARTOON LATEST PARAMOUNT NEWS | Five (Titus): â€" $ | Virginia Gastfield £ Harold Pottinger ‘and Elizabeth Stadler have brought in the tulip, hyacinth, and crocus bulbs we planted . early in November. The glpnts thrifty and we hope to ave beautiful blossoms in a | D FIELD SCHOOL _ _ Grade (Card)) | We ate making an ice skating pond on paper. We cut people that ate ting on the lice. Dick irause eut out the Field House. lan Heafield cut out some flood aghts. Roy Greims cut out some nches.) We made snow around the ice. | Each one of us will make somethir% fqr our ice pond picture. When I sliding down the hill | I like show my skill, Andva I get coldâ€"and shiver > and 1 m C [I go h;; > my snowhouse Where it‘s warm and deep. | Then we saw some fine diagrams owing how the ore is melted and the slag is taken from it. The clear ore being then in liquid form flows into molds. This is what is called pig iron. News from First and Second Grade { A Big City We are making a city. t It ) many tall buildings. It has an airport. | It has all kinds of stores. \ We made apartment houses. | We gtreets and sidewalks. We play ‘with our‘ cars and trucks the streets. \The last time we had moving pictures at school we had one on iron, which I liked the best. \First we saw the iron <ore beâ€" ing mined and loaded into cars. These cars were then taken to the "drop" where they were emptied. There were bins right beneath the tracks and when a lever was pulled tï¬e bottom of the cars opened and the ore fell right into the bins. 'l;\il was quick work, | They love the dolls that their mothers and grandmothers had. Some families in Japan have big collections of dolls. And you would be interested to see how differently they are dressed. Some areâ€" in brilliant reds. _ ome year beauâ€" tiful kimonos. Dolls that represent the rulers and princes of Japan are honored most. a It kicks| and scolds wil It to run rigc v Until it hurts me like a 'I:i'e-bi and scolds with all its might. to run right up my back BRAESIDE SCHOOL Fogurth Grade "Jingles" â€" wo sliding down the hill BRAESIDE SCHOOL » . "Millions in the â€" Soon: "Captain B ; Cortez, Lili Damita .. LATEST METRO NEWS rt, Alan Jenkins VITAPHONE MUSICAL â€"â€"by . Marion Antes. Janet Beecher, 2502 Feb. 28â€"29 March 4â€" Feb. 27 + Grade Six Norwegian Fish The chief export of Norway is fish. The ‘Norwegians lie beside the sea. The fishermen can fish We have had much fun in Geogâ€" raphy test naming the states of our country. Woodbury Cole brought a pyzzle map. Most of us can name the state when the shape is held up. Some of them are real puzzles, W brilontnaif utd io ud vsctcichca â€"10% .. d school after an absence of six weeks. o Y!m Wolfe of the Eighth grade has been transferred to Chicago. Highland Pk. Glencoe â€" ~â€" Winnetka = Wilmette â€" â€" University â€" Distinctive weeks, Phones We are completely equipped to clean your rugs, furniture and draperies to relieve you of all worry relative to your house cleaningâ€"reweavâ€" ing oriental rugs, repairing and remodeling carâ€" pets, dyeing â€" fringing â€" perfect carpet laying, storageâ€"ozite padding and Bigelow line of new cérp,etiï¬g, Afmstro*ngs Linoleum. ‘ > GUARANTEED MOTH â€" EXTERMINATION 8 pe o tail iz in g ridding overâ€"stuffed furâ€" niture of moth life of all vermin by treating and fumigating with our speâ€" cial process. Expert cleaners of oriâ€" ental and domestic rugs. All rugs moth proof free of charge when we clean them. COMES _ " CHEERFULNESS! > Periodic cleaning not only restores the beauty of your rugs but gives you longer wearing servâ€" ice. Rugs are the habitat of disease breeding germs which form a menacing source of danger to your family‘s health. Protect their health with our skilled rug cleaning. ‘ You choose your rugs carefully for you hope they will last and last! But, what about their cleaning? Do you use care in selecting the proper rug cleaner? Our exclusive rug ‘cleaning methods and twentyâ€"three years of experience in cleaning and repairing Oriental and Domestic Rugs applied to your rugs will preserve texture and restore original newness. You can safely entrust them to our expert care. © â€"â€" 450 â€" 1632 Estimates Cheerfully Given Our grade had charge of the A‘;- sembly program Monday, Feb. 11?1. We gave a Lincoln program. | from freezing. However, winter and spring are the important fishing seasons. Each year about ten thousand boats catch cod on the famous fishing banks near the Lofâ€" oten Islands. | These mnds are off the coast of Norway. | by Audrey Ely | The weekly Réader is being nrinted in Braille (raised letter for the blind). A copy is being sent to us, and we will be glad to let you sgeel it. | ~RVUVG CLEANING North Shore‘s Leading Cleaners By JOHN B., NASH His program includes the Cesar French Sonata and the Tschaikowâ€" sky Concerto, with two groups of shorter pieces. Subscribers to these annual concerts regret ‘that this season closes so early, and the comâ€" mittees in charge of these is soâ€" \‘The last concert of the Winnetka Artist series this season is to be given by Bronislow Hufernean, one of the greatest violinists of the day, on Monday evening, March 2, at New Trier auditorium. Last Concert in _ Winnetka Series Takes Place Mar. 2 SERVICE Wednesday, ~March 4, Luther League dinner at the church. y meets in the church. Church ‘Board of Administration year. Blanks /for the voting may be obtained from Mrs. Bessie Nans, Winnetka State Bank. * liciting votes for the artists to be engaged for the 1937 season. So it rests with North Shore music lovâ€" ers â€"whom they shall hear next Zion Luthéran Church, Highwood Henry G. Hedlund Sunday school 9:45 a.m. English service 11 a.m. Swedish service 7:30 p.m. Thursday evening, Feb. 27, 1738 Sherman Av. 327 N. Green Bay Main Office and 747 Elm Street PAGE FIVE