The speaker is to be Abraham Dickenstein of ‘Tel Aviv, Palestine, who will speak on "The United Naâ€" tions‘ Ally in the Near East." Mr. Dickenstein is connected with several Palestinian enterprises, and will speak on recent industrial and agricultural developments in Palestine and her partition in the war effort. ‘ Current events will be given and there will be music. All members are urged to attend ‘and bring their friends. ‘The North Shore Zionist organizaâ€" tion will hold its first meeting of the season on Wednesday, Oct. 7, at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Joseph Rosen, 273 Greenbay road, Glencoe. Zionist Meeting to Be On ‘Near East‘ Typical Experience Then we walk miles back to our posts plus extra miles due to getting lost in the dark. Then we set up tents in puddlies that a ‘gator would flee from in horror. Then we are forced to crawl into the tents and roll over three times until thoroughly wet, then Look At Us! Now take us Gladiators. We spend five minutes strapping on several hundred pounds of field packs, bayoâ€" nets, cartridge beits, gas masks and just about everything but foot lockâ€" ers and our girl friends. Then we climb into trucks and go for hundreds of miles while the drivâ€" ers look busily for the bumpiest spots in the road. Finally we arrive at the most horrible piece of landscape that anyone could whistle up. Next, we proceed to set up heavy field pieces on swamp that quivers if a frog so much as twitches his foot in crossing it. After we are plastered with mud we walk miles back to the kitchen truck which is two hours late. corral with a crowd of ing on. Plain Gladiators Phoovie, Goffe‘s Men Claim Super Gladiator Title Sgt. Glen Rounds, former cowboy â€" artist .â€" author,‘ expresses his very original sentiments on gladiators, mosâ€" quitos and related subjects in the Fort Sheridan Tower, official post newsâ€" Gladiators, as I used to see them pictured, were fellows resembling Charles Atlas in structure who wore and a little fighting hardware. seemed to do little but practice inâ€" dividual defense measures with each other or a couple of lions in a big corral with dry sand underneath and Now me, I just work here, and my opinions are not greatly sought after but now that you ask me I‘ll tell you something that‘s been on my mind for some time. It‘s this business of us, of Capt. A. C. Goffe‘s outfit, beâ€" ing called "Gladiators." GLENCOE Thurs., Fri, Sat. Oct. 8â€"9â€"18 Thurs., Fri, Sat. Oct. 1â€"23 Geo. Montgomery, M. O‘Hara ""The Gentieman from West Point" mtar Roet. meers ELLERY QUEEN" Bonds While You Wait! OFFICIAL 1SSUING AGENT ""Escape from Hong Kong" .mflnmm;o:: ArnoMd ‘ "Johnny Eager" ‘"The Magnificent Henry Fonda, Don Ameche x & Andy Devine, Leo Carrilo By SGT. GLEN ROUNDS Leading drug and departâ€" Highland Park 08 applauding railbirds lookâ€" Oct. 4547 ## MOVIES ~AND AMUSEMENTS Many glamorous and comic headâ€" liners together with forty ice folliâ€" ettes are included in the Follies. The Service club, society group, is in charge of opening night and many of Chicagoland‘s society women are busy arousing interest for the benefit of their many charities. Among the members working on the enterprise are Mrs. Raiph J. Mills, corresponding secretary ; Miss Doroâ€" thy Herbst, director; Miss Nancy Leigh Bowes, all of Highland Park. A few of the charities benefited are: Salvation army, American Red Cross, Children‘s Memorial hospital, Infant Welfare society, Martha Washington home, Seeing Eye Reâ€" placement and St. Vincent‘s. Two new additions to this year‘s show are Betty Atkinson, acrobatic artist, and Norah McCarthy, Canadian skating champion. Heinie Brock as old "Daniel Bum" lends comedy, Frances Claudet who is director of skating routine for the show is a start herself, and the colorful Shipâ€" stads. The Shipstads and Johnson, origiâ€" nators of the show, bring to their pubâ€" lic for the sixth time another ice exâ€" travaganza outstanding in the amuseâ€" ment world. Ice Follies To Open for 15â€"Day Run At Arena Add all these, plus the 4,004 other things I forgot about our recent conâ€" voy and you‘ll have to agree with me that by comparison those old time gladiators had a lead pipe cinch. But we can take it. The Ice Follies of 1943 opens its appéarance at the Chicago arena, Oct. 13, for a fifteen evening run plus two Sunday matinees. Take three days of one variety or another of the above, add a whopping dose of equipment cleaning, plus the misery of the men who are still nursâ€" ing mosquita bites, plus the angluished cries from the drivers who had to wash the mud from their trucks. Also take a couple of pinches of mumâ€" bling from the fellows scraping rust from rifles that had ‘been borrowed by dudes who were on guard in the rain. Still adding, take the angry shouting of the cooks as the sand caved in under the field range. I have sworn statements from reâ€" liable soldiers who have seen the fiendish bugs turn men‘s dogtags over to see if their blood type was the kind that agreed with their pamâ€" pered stomachs. Many of the men now chalk their blood type on the outside of their tents at night to avoid being awakened by the conâ€" tinual rattle of the tags. 5 crawl out and take a hitch at guard. We then spend the night slapping mosquitoes and holiering "halt!" in high falsetto voices. From a distance the chorus of their plaintive cries float across the lonely marshes like the mating call of the loon. And if a man is able to get in beâ€" tween the dripping blankets for any length of time the mosquitoes go to work. Now ordinarily mosquitoes are no bargain wherever you find them. But you wrap your head up in your blanket, preferring death by suffocaâ€" tion to being caten alive, they start hammering with their feet on the outâ€" side until the victim looks out to see what kind of creature isâ€" stomping on him . Once h esticks out his head he is grabbed and yanked bodily into the open and then devoured. THE MILLION MARK That is the amount of War Savings Bonds sold to date through our teller‘s window. THE FIRSTâ€" NATIONAL BANK OF HIGHLAND PARK Member of the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation ~** We are proud of it. Here it is $1,000,525.00. This picture of the tropical garden in the Pacific includes scenes of flowâ€" ers, towering fern trees, "the most graceful tree on earth"â€"the cocoâ€" palms, picking and canning pineâ€" apples, harvesting sugar cane and taro, worldâ€"famous Waikiki beach, surfâ€" board riders, jetâ€"black sand beach, volcanic mountains a nd craters, Hawaiians, Oriental temples, "believeâ€" itâ€"orâ€"not" barefoot football, and "garâ€" lands of flowers"â€"the lei. Highwood Social Service to Meet The Highwood Social Service will meet Monday, Oct. 5 at the Highwood city hall at 8 o‘clock. Members: are urged to attend, as plans will be made for the campaign to raise funds. "Hawaiian Paradise," a ‘documenâ€" tary picture in natural color, produced only a few weeks before the attack on.Pear! Harbor, â€"will. be shown at Bethany Evangeilcal Church, Laural and McGovern streets, by . Julian Gromer of. Elgin, III., Monday eveâ€" ning, Oct. 12, at 8 o‘clock. Mr. Gromer is the photographer, lecturer, adventurer and traveler. The public is invited. There will be an election of offiâ€" cers and presidents of all organizaâ€" tions are requested to see that their representatives are present at the meeting. Motion Picture of Pacific Area To Be Shown At Bethany 'Gm.mm.-hn &F ot the Young Women‘s Chrisâ€" tian Association all over the coun try have a brand new warâ€"time job. It‘s making USO scrapbooks for the men in uniform. . Here are two of these ‘teen age gifls with pretty Patricia Peardon, star of the Broadway hit, "Junior Miss."." They invited Patricis to come and see their work because the youthful star who is the same age as thousands of Girl Reserves, married a soldier shortâ€"story writer herself four months ago and is parâ€" ticularly qualified to advise on what soldiers,like to read. _ Patricia, a vo-ny“(‘mo:uvunm u.-fr..é,-.......mm groom * Poter l*:fl' was so pleased with the nationsl vprof Left to right: Patricia Peardon, star Audrey Ax and Susan Belicher, Giri "We Know What a Soldier Likes to Read!" _ Sea Scout Ship 39 of Highland Park returned to its formal meetings and winter activities this week. On board its landship at the North Shore Yacht last ~â€"Monday evening, cighteen fully ‘uniformed sea scouts met with their skipper to plot the ship‘s course of the future. During the summer months all of the mates have been drawn from the ship into some phase of military serâ€" vice: Mate Roderic Smith is an enâ€" sign of the line stationed at Tower hall in Chicago, awaiting orders of the very near future; Mate Gunter Schwandt is an instructor at the Areonautical University of Chicago teaching military students; Mate Lesâ€" lie Rankin, an aviation cadet in the naval reserve air corps, has just been ordered to Lockport â€"for secondary flight training; Mate Michael O‘Brien is a second class petty officer in the naval reserve, stationed .at Glenview air base; Mate Bob Coleman is at Notre Dame university, having been enrolled in the naval unit earlier in the summer, and Mate Tom Stein is in the army reserve unit at the University of Illinois. The loss of these men has placed an added responsibility on the seascouts of â€" the â€" Highlander, according to Skipper Traver Hamilton, an ensign of the dental corps of the naval reâ€" serves, who states that he is going to raise a number of the seamen to junior officers rank to assist in the running of the ship. In his talk to the unit by Skipper Hamilton, stressing the growing imâ€" portance. of the training and inforâ€" mation available in sea scouting, it was said, "Sea scouting is not a miliâ€" tary organization, but what you will learn in seamanship, water safety, signaling and first aid this winter may well serve you and your country in the future wherever you may fit into the picture.. This is a time for added effort by all of you to do all you can." The Highlander has more than thirâ€" ty registered sea scouts at the present time and hopes to expand to fortyâ€" five members by the end of the year ; of the group five boys are registered as associates and are in the U.S. armed forces on active duty. Sea Scout Art William: was apâ€" FORMAL MEETINGS RESUMED THIS WEEK BY SEA SCOUT SHIP ‘The Girl Reserves are trying to mm.nmm-m include in their scrapâ€" books everything from mystery thrillers and light romances to corâ€" respondents‘ stories from abroad, mnuznpu--mm seller list humorous cartoons. They decorate the covers of the scrapbooks as their fancy dictates, and send them to the nearest USO Club, or to the National Y.W.C.A. office in New York, to be turned ever to the USO for circulation to service men eager for reading maâ€" terial. Very often these men are in distant regions of the world, far reâ€" mote from their corner newsstands and stationery shops and unable to finish that serial they started way back when. of the Broadway hit, "Junior Miss," Reserves of Orange, N. J. ect that she promptly adopted it as one of her major war activities. COUNTRY CLVUV B Golfers! BRIERGA TE Phone: Whitshall 6530 or Deerficld 506 ~ Weck days, after 3 p. m. .....: 75¢ "Rigoletto" will be heard on Monâ€" day night, November 9, with Joseâ€" phine Antoine, Anna Kaskas, Jan Kieâ€" pura, John Charles Thomasâ€"all Chiâ€" cago favoritesâ€"andâ€" Nicola Moscona, who will be making his Chicago operâ€" atic debut. Moscona is the brilliant young basso of the Metropolitan Opâ€" era who was born in Athens, Greece. His Operatic debut was made at Athâ€" ens‘ National Opera House in 1931, his Metropolitan Opera debut in 1937. On three different occasions he has had the honor of being chosen for solo work by, Arturo Toscaniniâ€"twice in performances of Verdi‘s "Requiem" once in Beethoven‘s Ninth Symphony. "glr-éh Novotna, who scored a raviata" triumph here in 1940, has beert signed for the coming season. In order to cooperate fully with the opera company in making the attendâ€" ance at this event an outstanding one â€"and to encourage the presentation of Polish opera and artists in the fuâ€" tureâ€"a Polish Opera Guild has been formed, which numbers ‘among its members many of the city‘s outstandâ€" It‘s no longer a seceret that the farce comedy has been the phenomena of the road since its inception in San Francisco. ~Broadway‘s very best slickers on public reactions have exâ€" cursioned to Chicago to make out the answer, and a halfâ€"dozen movie shopâ€" pers) have found reasons to come here and toss in offers for the film rights to this hit of the year. Sums up impresarios Lang and Roâ€" sen: "It‘s what they want . , . a funâ€" ny show . . . funnier, in its nonsenâ€" sical way, than anything uncovered The success of "Good Night Ladies !" can be credited to a knowledge of standout public choices during the first World War they cite, when the hysterical brand on nonsense reigned in the theater. Laugh plays stole the stage. Frankness sprung bodly beâ€" hind the footlights. It became an era of division seekers yearning for the pleasures that relieve taunt nerves and exhausted energies. Chicago Opera Notes Following announcement of "Lakâ€" me" as its preâ€"season ‘ opening night performance on November 7, the Chiâ€" cago Opera Company this week anâ€" nounced "Rigoletto" as opener of the subscription season proper. For the first time in its history, the Chicago Opera Company this year Auditions to give â€" two newcomcna‘ an opportunity to be heard with opera companw this fall got under way this week, as the opera‘s board of s be hï¬mi:'t":m cants to accepted Requests for anditions will be received up to and including Wednesday (Octoâ€" ber 7). Applications should be adâ€" dreue&::lln.WihOw-.Afl- m!bn.wm pointed officer of theâ€"deck for the next meeting, when regular instrucâ€" tion began. Thus the coâ€"producers describe their private opinions of their farce disâ€" covery, which coâ€"stars Buddy Ebsen and Skeets Gallagher with a stage full of pulchritude recruited from the Broadway stage and Hollywood stuâ€" will include a Polish operaâ€""Halka in its official subscription repertoire. Gen. ~Joseph E. Barzynski, Quarterâ€" master Corps, U. S. Army. is chairâ€" man of the new organization. After listening for weeks to . pulscâ€"feclers advance theories on the record breaking success of "Cood Night Ladies!" at Chicago‘s Blackâ€" stone theater, producers How s rd Lang and Al Rosen have reasoned that now after 24 weeks of sensational business, it would be fair and timely to submit their private analysis. has no message, we never meant it to adjust the world‘s crisis, and startâ€" ed out to create an entertainment that was all amusement. It would be a staggering bore to anyone who is allergic to laughing. The calculating analysists are fair enough to admit that we have devised a new high in escapist fun. ‘That was the goal. So we win, even by the concession of a strange breed who insist on discoverâ€" ing the answers to everything." in the last decade. You see, our play SPECIAL PEES daily fee) "Over Land and Over Sea," a seng composed by Alexander P. de Seversky and his wife and published five years ago, has bern revised and dedicated to the American air Torces. Seversky‘s "Viciery Torough Air Power" is being made into a feaâ€" ture by Walt Disney. AI"!'II all these years something new bobs up in the way of what !ldly'o&d e.ll. . w‘ ." October 10, mm throughout the country will present ""Here We Go Again," -mmxudu'zé:r!n: and Charlie McCarthy, Ginny Simms and the Great Gildersliceve. The hour is 9:30 a,. m. The admission prices everywhere will be 35 cents for adults, 25 cents for children. The novel feature is that adults will be admitted only if accompanied by children! *The Pride of the Yankees," Samâ€" uel Goldwyn‘s story of Lou Gehrig‘s life, puund--ttolfl} r«tmmumu‘ records fall one after the other, as pupl'en-dhblumryw“ and Theresa Wright in this very moving picturization of the career of the famous and beloved baseball "Abie‘s Irish Rose," is head man at home since he brought his son the prize match cover of the boy‘s colâ€" lection. It‘s the President‘s personal match coverâ€"solid blue, with a gold sailboat with the F. forming the masthead, the D. the mainsail,. and the R. the auxiliary sail. the new Fibber McGee and Orson Welles, who guestâ€"starred on the Stage Door Canteen radio program recently, said that one of America was David Selznick‘s that he play the part of ‘"Rochester" in "Jane Eyre." Welles turned it down, is determined to let nothing interâ€" fere with any plans the office of Coâ€". Ordinator of Interâ€"American Affairs may have for him. Few radio programs have atiractâ€" ed the aitention and praise that have come to the Norman Corwin series "An American in England," breadâ€" cast over CBS from Lenden. Corâ€" win has been hafled as "the greatâ€" cause he has pointed out the best in two great peoples." Metro did all right with its most recent opening. *"‘The War Against Mrs. Hadiey" made its bow in Washâ€" Time," called ‘The FBI Front." The film reveals the way in which Axis espionage activity was apparently permitted to go unchecked for a time, in order to atnass as complete a file of evidence as possible against the day when the guilty ones were by war bond onlyâ€"the prices being scaled from $25 to $25,000 per seat, about rounding up spies? ‘Then be Albert Dekker, who‘s just fnished playing a marine in ‘‘Wake Island," thinks it‘s rather amusing that the public believes him to be a foreignâ€" usually plays in pictures. He‘s as American as they come; his father was a colonel in our army, and Dekâ€" ker is a graduate of Bowdoin colâ€" er, thanks to the kind of roles he Released by Western Newspaper Union By VIRGINIA VALE