Tel. H. P, 2546 9â€"11pd eerbereinh in n lc in alne i old eenanelmeer c ereaighiciie s uie Special meeting of stock! Ts of the Perâ€" SUMMER BOARD FOR CHILDREN | norics manent Products Company, will be held :cvl.lgth. 1981, at 7:30 p.m., at m:“um n# â€" a) Highland take action m':'r.oluflo- ml%h!u the dissolution of the corporation. meetâ€" ing has been called upon written request of holders of more than twoâ€"thirds of issued stockof ‘company;~* © + Pentwater, Michigan. Board, room, laundry, horseback ?uiwhfl-cl.-bmt& _: Very reasonable. _ _ _ Addr.l'.l:i‘. xE WareeuL Oakwood Ave. ~Tel. H. P. 2848 _ _ National ?? Food Stores Under my personal supervision. Cucumbers l Hormel‘s Chicken Broth «» 14¢ Bananas ‘{#@ tresh Green Home Grown Asparagus Head Lettuce / New Potatoes 5 * 17¢ Fruits and Vegetables FRIDAY and SATURDAY Delicious Alsbama Red Avery@nere vwvomen Are Talking «T About the % ‘) NY _ MODERN COFFEE @PARACY . measure ) NP ssramnar \ sults in the art of coffee making i ) h ures the amount of coffee to make a delicious cup of coffee every time.> You will also reâ€" q. narionar ‘t. 20. . AMERIcaN !5°, o« .. Fort Dearborn or Hazel Peaches QuALITY GCROCERSK OF THE MIDGLE WEST sINCE 189° RUTH EWING, Secretaryâ€"10â€"12 HIGHWOOD 305 Waukegan Av Kosto "* St=m 9 . . 3 pig:. B1c¢ Pabstâ€"ett ansts, â€" â€" 2# #2* 35¢ White House Rice Flakes 2"*_ 21c Quaker Oats @2 . 2 zt 11c Mayonnaise skT&C, . . *4> 15c Corned Beef Hash "m* "s* 93¢ Blue Ribbon "mizns‘ ""%** 41c GROCERY SALE FOR FRIDAY AND SATURDAY Waukegan Ras Ripene m _ 3 %¢ HLERD COFFEE seats 21¢ 2 bunche:s 1 5¢ vecuum red tin. Swift‘s Sitverleat â€"Pure Rendered t 5c carton or tub Be 9¢ L ard $10,000 e ro: ‘llx.cuumal home f o room ; cenâ€" trally -m‘u east dt‘l':é forâ€"clear, â€"well locuted vacant or impro property from Glencoe to LaKe Forest. â€" Address "D.L." Press office. lipd TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN : I -â€œï¬ eall your attention to the Lincoln serial No. 28251, motor No. 28251, now %uuâ€"w-m.:ma 1981, notice of which has beer sent you on several times. Unless you arrange to dlehn-h.oauflarquwh{-: June 15, I will sell same to the highest bidâ€" der for cash, according to law. RoSk: HIGHLAND PARK l‘l“mfll! PARK T " Routh 8t. Johns Avenue WANTED TO BUY No. 215 2 on e + No. 2 can Brillo 2 a*» 17¢ Household Needs Crystal White the _ Kitchen Klenter «â€" Cleans Pots and Pams 10 bars LOUIS DRESDOW, 111% Highland Park, IIl T H E PR E S I was skeptical, I must admit, in my approach to the book over the palings of the fence erected around it by the enthusiastic critics quoted on the cover and Mr. John Galsâ€" worthy‘s foreword. Then the book began to speak for itself. And it speaks with a voice so authoritative, so sure and convincing that I found myself . echoing Mr. Galsworthy‘s phrase, after he has explained that this is the first book of this author to be translated into English, "It was highâ€"tirmge," Truly it Was.~° o It is a pleasant task, though a difficult one, to try to tell what one thinks â€"of the book by ~the Polish novelist, Ferdynand Goetel, "From Day to Day." Pleasant because one likes to think about it, difficult beâ€" cause one does not know exactly what one thinks. e £23 The fine spirit of coâ€"operation and friendliness that was felt all through this first board meeting of the new club year was an inspiration to all of the members in their club aspiraâ€" tions for the new club year. & A BRILLIANT WORK. "FROM DAY TO DAv" The club will be represented at the State convention of the Illinois Fedâ€" eration of Womens clubs which is to be held next week in Chicago by two official delegates, Mrs. Carleton A. Harkness and Mrs. Charles G. Mason. Highland Park Woman‘s club exâ€" tended a cordial invitation to the Lake County Federation of Womens clubs to hold its March meeting in the club house with the members of the Highland Park Woman‘s club as hostesses. o Mrs. Fred C. Funke, chairman of the house and grounds brought to the meeting a scale of rentals which was approved by the members. â€" Mrs. Funke also told of her plans to put the club house in order for the comâ€" ing year. $ garden classes. Mrs. Florence Thomas Dingle, chairman of the Home and Education department told of her plans for the coming ~year which are to include classes in French, lecture courses, legislation, American home, foreign relations,â€"citizenship, and community Mrs. Theodore L. Osborn, chairman of the Social Service department, hopes to carry on the fine work that was accomplished during the past year. Mrs, Osborn asks the coâ€"operaâ€" tion of all club members in this splenâ€" did work. The Social Service departâ€" ment is planning, as in the past, the usual philanthrophy dance to be given in November in the club house. Mrs. Fred H. Clutton will have charge of theâ€"tickets. Prizes will be given and delightful refreshments will be served. tion bridge as well as tables for conâ€" tract and the guests can arrange to play with their friends and guests. H. P. WOMAN‘S CLUB By Ferdynand Goetel. The Viking Press, (Continued from page 3) Invite County Group managers â€"of Encke‘s co is due to appear again in May. And if it gets too can count on Mr./ Shouse blaming it on ‘to President . Hoover. â€" e Two young, wealthy, desirable, talâ€" ented bachelors adopt a nameless waif who has been serving as model for one of them. They do it lightâ€" heartedly, never taking account of the ‘consequences. But there are plenty. However, in the end they are matrimony for one, a fortune more or less attributable, for the other, and for the waif adoption by the movie actress who talks like a waitress in a thirdâ€"rate redâ€"hot stand, and â€" her prince husband, the errant father. Yet if you don‘t mind that kind of brightness too much, you may find an amusing hour or so in the book. __Cecil Roberts is one of those inâ€" defatigably bright young men. In "Indiana Jane" he has been bright from start to finish. He makes his American movie star talk like this, "My â€"dear, â€"you‘d ~sure winâ€" the Benevolence Stakes at ten to one against." Oh "I feel like a flat tire . . ."etc., etc. While the young Oxâ€" fordian, the incurable cynic drops inâ€" cessant "bon mots" like pearls from his life, as "He‘s more likely to shine as a coâ€"respondent than a correspondâ€" ent," etc., etc. Instantly, one feels the power of the past, that strange period of exile, when the. men off in the remote priâ€" son camp felt forgotten by the world, what world there was left after the engulfing maelstrom of the war. There "Stach," the "I" of the novel, is sent to work on a farm on the barren steppes. â€" He meets the Polish girl whose father owns the farm and they fall in love. This love was the groat romance, the great passion of the author‘s life, but he thinks it is burâ€" ied with the past. His diary is taken up with other things, the wife and child to whom he returned, the poetess ~whoâ€"is in tove with him. ~~Then saudâ€" denly the old loveâ€"the novelâ€"reachâ€" es out into the present of the diary, and the two merge into one. est in the other, you are always sorry to have one leave off, but always glad to have the other start. Can one pay higher :tribute ? As I said before the methodâ€" while it is extraordinary would have served, in the hands of less than a master, at best merely as a startling trick. At worst it would have spelled death to any story. But in this case the interâ€" A BRIGHT TALE, â€" â€"~â€" TNDIANA JANE" The form sof the book is extra. ordinary, but not half so much so e; thuyhvhkhlr.mbrin. It is virtually . twonovels, ons & novel written of the past when the author was a Russian war prisoner in Turkestan, the other a diary keE The novel is written because "I can‘t help it.. It oppresses me top much. It must be written and then there will be an end of it." The diary is written in the same way that any expressive person might keep a diary, to help unravel the present‘s tangled threads. By Cecil Roberts. The Appleton Co. Thursday, May 14 931