.1an Phone 8400 '.4tT0nAY. M'Rll. " Bug-in Mg JOHNNY ARTHUR - SALLY STARR tu' N IN Y, APRIL " LAUREL 81 HARDY in “HOUSE G “mun; rrrsirii." iiiixésigrv ------ EDNA FERBER'S Baturdnr, April " Show: T-tt Sunday. April 20 Com. 2." “THE SKY SKIDDER†RUDOLPH VALENTINO mun, runny APRIL 17-18 JANET GAYNOR - CHARLES FARRELL with , LAURA LA PLANTS . JOSEPH SHILDKRAUT Imusmv. riin.iuirritGir ___ ,_ _ _"' Ail-till? J."l.'."fl'" PEARL “They Learned About Women†Comedy - News . Novelty “SUNNY SIDE UP" “HIT THE DECK†rt " the e'," y. of the S."/. of " my... 21. 'NGGii; " North. In. bl "m In! P... hound-d and " lull-m»: Rama“. u I most 50 n. north at tho with “M of [on or PUBLIC run-mo - Is "any owns um g - and that the lollovrlnl than!“ eh in new Ell-I... I: Ch:- "A" may!!! it sound a I Olin "C" "ridnp. Ute Ind ' mm. Ind bur-In tbe up". uan Ind norm-dbl ‘. to clan-"ll "numb, and n- .ti-m " (nak- "tat Imm- Lhm of building- d-iilud fl- and. but“. nuidonthl, Ind :livide the "(in City of "lit- " Ilinlriru fur the putâ€! " ", Mt In until-rub to which nlvnctun-I In" wnlorn; to building's. at “than". Ina- In" lellr of web dink!- nd to "we“ with" to and nmolkllnl " will" build- Inn in men I my " to "old I uni “ninth-M llwlully tm, rv, hall to pvuvhh m-nh- lo! I: u linen-ha!" in the loll"- “PERSONALITY†"t"iowlBoAr", malt "TODA Y AND YESTERDAY" JACK OAKIE - POLLY WALKER Also moti ALCYON SELECTED TALKING PICTURE Io Council Chamber , " 'lettnttd Parr, I» ui, of which “Id " an Odin-nu malnu- And “an inn: to mm- the use " bl I animal-c an “A mnmndlu n picture mum! of change and progress VAN tk SCHENCK Highland Plrk d by ihe t for that "am-.- Au lt, nub“: awn-d. Iii-h- with also aid KRK of and†" I dete- at u u. want in Wand along "id hm " ft. north) (mm the Inna-l, line of right of my ot the Chm and North Br. Ces; than with. annual Mth out line of uld See. N. to I point. " n. may wuuny trom the aid water}: MM " v†u men-wed " HUM. - to In†vqtnly line; than“ autumn-av], par-Ila] with Add mainly Mn- of right ul In! to I point I“ ft. aunt: of aid soul-h "I. a! N.B.% of Sun 1]. u muted it right will. to It“ noun: ling; than“ we“. parallel with uld will line. " feet; than“ north “on; I lin- Devwmlkular to uld math line " ft.; the“. “It parallel with laid mu: line of N,CU M Section " to I point. to h. an. of the went ling of “kl out 'A " 3.l.l6 of H.156 of Seal-m 21: than“ moth. 9-:de wlth said went line n! the up: 'd, ate" tto feet to a win: In a“ “no " Nit north at tooth line of tCE.!; of Sec. 2t; than all Ila»! all-l Hm so teet north. to the poll“ " begin- ning. in "In Olly of Hind-ml Pull. [Ah " Int PM. lying north of the loath no (at thereof: out o! the “I no tet thereof Ind not " the risk: " way of m Chlmo and Northwemterrt Ry Co.; all in the cm at Ilium-mi lurk. Ink. Cm, Ill. At In" public hurl»- " opportunity will be "orrtrd to " nonun- lnm-ud In the than-ed uh" mentioned to it hard in uln- um. to aid proposed amendments. 6-T lligfgjnngl I'yre_zrrrAtLtL9rrnrnitt- also that the following dncribld granny which E nut! wad I. Chan "A" “Hamill prawn, be umen! u I Clu- "D" Dbulci: All that part ot the an $9 of th- IN at W um. trt Bee. in}. a T, MI. ' mid H.156 ft. an to. north) from any ot the Cm; than rightly Iron u mural line'. than: Iva-hr], iinq m "THE EAGLE" Bug-in Matinee 2-4230 if%ir.C. f Imam: H. xuan‘ 15010110 M. Minn LOUIS P.. LEVEBONE. son BT. jinn. AMY" Sol Sinus. Mgr. APRIL â€-2243 Continuous 2-H APRIL 24-25-26 ADMISSION toe . Me I'll Pill! tGt Ind Thirteen artists will take part in the Festival this year, five of whom are new to Festival audiences. Those who are making their debut’s to North Shore patrons are Frederick Baer, baritone, Nunetto Guilford, lo- prano, Raymund Koch, baritone, Wil- liam O'Connor,' tenor, and Jeannette Vreeland, soprano. Nanette Guilford, a prima donna of note, has been connected for a num- ber of years with the Metropolitan Opera company. She is of the rising number of young American nrtiats who are nehieving world renown. Miss Guilford will sing on the pron-m of the evening of May 19. The North Shore Festival was of. ficially started this week when the sale for course tickets opened in Lyon and Kelly’s Evansmh More. Season or course ticket: may be purchued up to April 30. Three of the newcomers will appear on the opening program of the series, Monday evening, May 19, with Madame Schumann-Heink. Mr. Bur, Mr. O'Connor and Miss Vreelnnd will appear m the first time, while Madame sehumann.Heink is making her fourth appetrance at the felti- vals. Frederick Baer is a nutive of New York. He made .his debut in 1923 and achieved instant success. Within two years of his 'offleia1 debut he had earned a wide reputation as a landing exponent of oratorio, opera in concert form, concert and recital program. His musical education was begun in his realy year when he studied the violin. William O'connor, now a resident of Chicago. is a ntttive of Kansas, a graduate of the state university there in law. He gnve up the practice of law in his home town to come to Chi. cago to study voice. He has appeared with the lending choral societiel of the city. Raymond Koch, who I150 resides in Chicngo, has had, a wide experience in opera. He has: also made numer- ous appearances " soloist with the nation's leading symphony orches- has. Women occupy a wider shhere than formerly, but nre doing their best to reduce it. North Shore Festival Ticket Sale Is Begun' 13 Artists this Year Jeannette Vreelnnd made her debut in the season of 1922-23. She is one of the better known singers lmong the native American gopranos. Dur. ine her second season she Ippenred six times as soloist with the New York Symphony, and has since ap- peared with many of the eoutttry's leading orchestral. . FRESH AND ROTTEN MANURE AND BLACK SOIL Reuben Lloyd Telephone H. P. 535 THE SCOUT MOVEMENT-GUN. ING THE YOUTH or TODAY (By Hermann Hagedorn) It would be interesting to know, if it were possible to record such elusive things, how many thousands of times during these past 10 years, elderly folks .have watched boys and girls go by in their neat Scout uniforms, and have said to themselves with I pang of regret, "Oh, it there had been Scouts when I was their size!" Oh, if the unorganized, and undirected, lone- ly ehildhoird they knew had only ex- perienced the galvanizing contact of these sane) simple ideals of vigor and service and joyous fellowship in God's outdoors'. How different the story might have been." What shining pages might stand in the place of the sombre leaves that memory turns so hurriedly and furtively! The Scout movement is a benedic- tion to boys and girls alike, a gift to u distracted and harried world so op- portune, so needed, that even one who was skeptical regarding the interven- tion of the deity in man's daily affairs might be tempted to suspend his doubts and speak of Providence. At a moment in the world's history when the traditional ties of eeelesittstiea1 and parental authority prove no. longer adequate to control the im- pulses of youth; at a moment when youth is ruthlessly examining all ac- cepted doctrines with. a passion for reality and a hatred of sham which no preceding generation within the meory of living men has known; at this moment the Scout movement has come, reasserting fundamental ver- ities, but reasserting them in terms which youth can understand, can measure by its own experience and can prove to be according to the. plain facts of its daily life. To ears on which (because of the over-seriousness and buncombe of generations of theologians, remote from realities) the word "ttoodnese' falls without appeal and the word "sin" drops without treneratintt undue terror, the ikoubnt6vement his come with the words "be elenn," “be square,†"be ture." These words rep- resent values which any boy or girl can measure, and indicate a standard against which the thought: and not: of every day can be set for the judg- ment of reuon and conscience. Youth is safe, the country is sofa, as long as there is on adequate per- centage of boys end girls who Iccept the Scout oath and law and strive to live by it and accept the responsibili- ties toward their own minds and bod- ies and toward their felltrw-erertttures which that oath and law impose, To parents who are troubled because the authority of the church and the home seems to have grown tenuous and la. efteetive, the Scout movement comes like a messenger from on high, to guide the eozer hearts of youth back to the ancient Ind unchanging veri- ties. Girl Scouts Thursday, April IT, 1930