n § Entered as Second Class Matter March 1, 1911, at the Post Office at Highland Park. Perred Phurtdsr of sath werk by the Udel! Printing Coropeny. Déell Bulldize, Highland Communications intended for must be writtem side of the paper oniy. t n ie on hiike (uy miinee. 2F Jn "ariter," ‘Ther sbould raach Ibt ie is Bubscription Price,â€"$1:60 per year Resolutions of condolence, -lll-mm-“d-m where an admission in will be at ad affaire am Jq_-% whiict ..‘-m regular TWENTY YEARS AGO + May 2, 1918 Rev. E, M. Umbach, pastor of Ebenezer church for the past two years, is leaving the 15th to enter camp Y.M.C.A. work . ... Mr. and: Mrs. Edward Huestic announce the marriage of their daughter Isabelle to Mr. Fred Tuhrenk!, Saturday evening . . . The Albert Larsons moved the early part of this week from the Cauley flat on Second street to the Huber house on Green Bay road, which they recently purâ€" chased . . . Moldaner and Humer are giving away a genuine Panama hat with each tailored suit order during the next two weeks . . . Edwin Lemkuh] has returned from the hospital where he had his tonâ€" sils removed . . . Ruth Schendorf, a very busy young lady, has within less than a year‘s time, knitted 26 sweaters for our boys in the army and navy. TEN YEARS AGO May 3, 1928 . After December 31, 1928, the Highland Park Post Office will be located in a new building to be erected on N. Sheridan road just north of the Moldaner and Humber building according‘to reports from Washington . .+. The official openâ€" ing of "Alden", the interior decâ€" orating shop owned by /Leon F. Harris, will be heldâ€"Saturday, May 5, the entire building having been completely remodeled . . . Mr. and Mrs. Ernest Johes of Rice street announce the birth of a son, April 28 . . . Miss Elizabeth Miller of Glencoe and Mr. Cedric Gifford of this city will be married Saturday, May 12 . .. The marriage of Miss LOOKING BACKWARD at pmflflnwm through files of The Press. Cleaning for Spring? DRAPES, SLIP COVERS, WEARING APPAREL Odorless Cleaning . . . Expert Hand Pressing Call Today! tten) NMet) WINNETKA 2050 GREAT WESTERN LAUNDRY CO. Office: 890 Linden Ave. Thursdayâ€"Friday Saturdayâ€"(Matinee, 2 to 4; Evening, 7 to 11) "WISE GIRL® MIRIAM _ HOPKINS, RAY MILLAND, WALTER ABEL, HENRY STEPHENSON. ALBC CRAIG. Sun.â€"Mon.â€"Tues.â€"(Sunday continuous, 2 to 11) Wednesdayâ€"Thursday May "BULLDOG DRUMMOND‘S PERIL® ROBERT TAYLOR, IAlYI?INv 01\%“. LIONEL BARRYMORE WALT DISNEY‘S MICKEY MOUSE IN TECHNICOLOR, "Hawaiian Holiday SPECIALTY, "King Without a Crown" â€" LATEST PARAMOUNT NEWS Friday, May 1%â€"Eighth Annual Spring Recital of the Pupils of *‘ tite. 4. C. Emima‘s School of the Dance. ooo cinrcolod o8 debt" rradh espalh Toane nrrant JOHN HOWA JOHN BARRYMORE, _ LOUISE CAMPBELL, Clive lmA::; ""Mo 'A!.I‘: Co: try."_RICHARD _ HIMRER E. E. 4 an * ntey," "8 AND, Harmonies" SCREEN %M the _ Words Right ® -u pf My Mouth" â€" LATEST NE NEWs w SPECIAL1Y ON GOLD MININC "Submarine Dâ€"1" "Big Broadcast of 1938" LEON ERROT COMEDY, "His Pest Friend" â€" PICTORIA LOONEYTUNE ‘CARTOON, "Porky at the Trocader LATEST PATHE NEws THE HICHLAND PARK PRESS Pat O‘Brien, Wayne: Morris George Brent Begins 7 p.m. and 10:30 p.m THE CHICAGO SUBURBAN QUALITY GROUP Two Great Pictures Spelling Drama and Humor! "A YANK AT OXFORD" in current insue Dorothy Elizabeth Hall ind Mr. Samuel Drew will take place Monâ€" day morning at Immaculate Concepâ€" tion church. Bellermine Club Dance to Be May 21 George McMahon and his orchesâ€" tra, who are wellâ€"known to many North Shore ‘dancers, will furnish the music for the second annual Anniversary Ball of the Bellarmine Club to be given on Saturday, May 21, at the Arlington Country CTub, located on Dundee road, two miles west of Wheeling. The ball given last year at the Arlington Club was enjoyed by evâ€" eryone who attended, and every efâ€" fort is being made by the commitâ€" tee in charge to outdo the succesâ€" ful affair of last year. The Bellâ€" armine Club was formerly known as the St. James Young People‘s Club. Jerry Nugent is the chairman of the ball, and Marie Leskie is coâ€" chairman. Assisting them is Phil J. Muzik as ticket chairman. The public is invited to attend, and tickâ€" ets are now on sale by the board members of the club, or can be purchased from Ambrose Cantagalâ€" lo at St. James Rectory. * Guy Viti Enters Real Estate Business Guy Viti, prominent Highwood citizen who served as president of the Oak Terrace school board for three years, has entered the Insurâ€" ance and Real Estate business in his own name operating an office at 226 Railway avenu:\ 1921 be has become widely known and highly respected. He was marâ€" ried in 1922 and is the father of eight children, seven of whom are students at St. James school and one who attends Mallineroft. His many friends wish him success in his new business venture. °s3 W. C. Fields, Martha Raye Dorothy Lamour Begins 9 p.m. LATEST METROTONE NEWS PICTORIAL REVIEW & cents per single copy Winnetka May 8â€"9â€"10 May 11â€"12 May 5â€"6 May 7 Mrs. S. J. Johnson Is President League Of Women Voters Repercussions of the excellent surrey of Highland Park‘s local government. by members of the League of Women Voters which was presented at the annual meeting held on April 20 have resulted in an invitation to present the reports to the State Convention of the League being held in Winnetka next week. They will be used as models for other Leagues throughout the country. The survey was the reâ€" sult of a year‘s intensive work and covers every phase of life in Highâ€" land Park and how it compares with other cities of its size as well as how it measures up to the high standards set by the League. Inâ€" troduced by Mrs. G. V. Gaidzik, program chairman, who presented the League‘s stand on each of the problems undertaken in the study, the following women gave the reâ€" ports which had been made up from facts gathered with the help of the entire membership. Mrs. Norâ€" man Meiners presented the material on Highland Park‘s local governâ€" mental setâ€"up. Mrs. Monroe Ottenâ€" heimer discussed our educational finstitutions, Mrs. George Lyman gave the report on our labor situâ€" ation and economic relations in genâ€" eral and Mrs. Wm. V. Briddle outâ€" lined what Highland Park does for the welfare of its children. Following the survey the retiring president, Mrs. Walter Rubens, gave her report and the nominating comâ€" mittee under the chairmanship of Mrs. Roy E. Wyle, presented the slate for the following year, which was unanimously elected. Mrs. J. S. Johnson was made the new presâ€" ident, Mrs. P. E. Ringér, second vice president, and Mrs. L. P. Halâ€" ler, corresponding secretary. The new precinet chairmen are Mrs. W. H. Gartside, Mrs. James Becker, Mrs. H. R. Pomper, Mrs. Walter Rubens, Mrs. E. R. Jerome and Mrs. C. T. Grimes. Highland Park will be well repâ€" resented at the Ililnois State Conâ€" vention of the League of Women Voters which takes place this year in Winnetka May 9, 10 and 11. The meetings will be held at the Comâ€" munity House under the leadership of Mrs. Lolita Bogert, wife of Proâ€" fessor Bogert of the Law School, University of Chicago, who is presâ€" ident of the State League. The program will open with a luncheon on Monday the 9th at which Goverâ€" nor Henry Horner will speak,. The subject for discussion will be "Ways in Which the League Proâ€" gram is Hampered by Our Presâ€" ent State Constitution." On Tuesday members will have an opportunity to see the City Manâ€" ager Plan as it operates in Winâ€" netka. At a luncheon Mrs. W. W. Ramsey of Chicago will speak on permanent registration. Mrs. Berâ€" nice Vandervries, a member of the State House of Representatives, will speak on "Advice from a Legisâ€" lator," and ‘Mr. Benjamin Adamâ€" owski, democratic leader in the 11}â€" inois House of Representatives, will discuss "Simplifying a Legislator‘s Job." Tuesday evening there will be a banquet at the Shawnee Country club at which Prof. Jerome Kerwin of the University of Chicago, Adlai Stevenson and Graham Aldis, all members of the Legislative Voters League, will discuss "What Can We Do to Make Democracy Work Betâ€" ter in Illinois?" On Wednesday, May 11, a final ‘n‘d' Shrubs and trees bring beauty Wvdmbgm D.ut don'td’.cxpdet .'l;_m to ve ar P nbder s prae paigy *n **" * ‘Trees and shrubs need nourish» mentâ€"a full diet of 11 clements that few garden soils can continually supâ€" PJ EVANS FEED stroreE | §374 Central Avenue FLOWERS, . _ VECGETABLES, .weflnï¬rublndlreunm- 11â€"clement "square meal." of one clement makes complete success _ ‘The most satisfactory way to feed is with the complete food. w"‘fl’..-..,,...".,".: flh.p:m“ py s aeih* "by mtatie 1. LAWNS, «us Frkss P. 124 luncheon meeting â€"will be, held at Community House at which Miss Marguerite Wells, president of the National League"of Women Voters, will speak. % * Highland Park members of the State Board of the League of Womâ€" en Voters are Mrs. A. F. Glidden, Mrs. Mare Law, Mrs. Maurice Polâ€" lack and Mrs. R. F. Simons. Doris Kleinschmidt to Model Costumes at Style Show Several distinctive costumes which she designed and made will be ‘modeled by Miss Doris Kleinâ€" schmidt, 2620 N. Deere Park, at the annual spring style show of the American Academy of Art, where Miss Kleinschmidt is studying dress design. The show will be held in Kimball hal} the nights of May 19 and 20. A Miss Kleinschmidt has named one of her creations "Parlor Pink," it being an organdie formal with three skirts in layers of pink, white and pink successively, giving a very soft effect. The second skirt will be adorned with artificial flowers. She will also exhibit "Waikiki," a summer wash dress of Hawaiian raw silk in a deep tangerine shade and ‘"Conchita," an afternoon dress with a white blouse, coral doeskin girdle and gray swing skirt. Miss Kleinschmidt is the ter of Mr. and Mrs. E. E schmidt. ~~ ‘Unlike most style shows, all the costumes exhibited at the Academy show are made by the girls who model them. Starting with the criginal design which they: create, the students cut their own patterns and perform every step of the work involved in completing the costume, Your Typewriter Man Larson‘s Stationery Store _ REPAIRS â€" RENTALS â€" SALES Highland Park 567 E. K. CATTON CALL IREDALE®S daughâ€" Kleinâ€" For Adult Charities "When your dime or your quarâ€" ter clinks into the box of a tag day worker, May 9th, you can be asâ€" sured that every penny of it will go to charity." This statement comes from Mrs. Arthur Brumback, president of the Chicago Federation of Aged and Adult Charities. PEASE PHARMACY HIGHLAND PARK THE NEW TELEPHONE DIRECTORY CLOSES SOON! « » » ORDER YOUR TELEPHONE NOW® The next local Telephone Directory goes to press soon. Have your telephone service installed at once so that your name, address and telephone number will appear in this new director{. The first place your friends or business associates will go to get in touch with you is to this Telephone Directory. Don‘t fail to be there. Telephone or stop at our Business Office.: Do it today. â€" [oomzr THE _ DIRECTORYT‘S YELLO® ucu] FHEN YOU NEED A HANDY BUYERS CUIDE ILLINOIS BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY In Highland Park call 9981 or stop at 17 S. St. Johns Avenue 16 M/M FILMB > FOR HOME â€" SCHOOL â€" CLUB RENT â€" A â€" REEL Phone Highland Park 181 DISTRIBUTED BY Mrs. W.~F..G, Ross of Qllcg will be in charge of tagging to. done in various towns from Evanâ€" ston to Lake Forest on behalf of the Because . Highland Park has esâ€" tablished a»Community Chest, tagâ€" ging is not permitted in this city. However, the Highland Park comâ€" muters are tagged when they get to Chicago. HECKETSWEILER STUDIO HIGHLAND PARK THURSDAY, MAY 5, 1988