x I-RJCHARBï¬Am‘HEim';gg in . "Alias The Doctor" MARY ASTOR..JOEL MeCREA J ROBERT ARMmsTROoNGâ€"_â€" ERICH VON STROHEIMN®: | For love she tried * ‘to be GOOD]/ Thursday â€" Friday Tuesday â€" Wednesday May 10â€"11 Regis Sunday andâ€" Monday May 8.9 Sunday continuous 2 to 11 _ Phone 321 Thursday and Friday _ May 5â€"6 Saturday, May 7 Mat & Eve â€"Charles Farrell ty JxiaNiso ho. in TluudDaé and Priday Mmay Jâ€"0 L UBLE FEATURE _ â€" ‘Fireman Save My Child‘ J. E. BROWN "Gay Caballero" GEORGE O‘BRIEN COLUMBIA PICIURE 4 POLKA BROS. Supported DIX E:d biasu Pitts Lake Forest May 12â€"13 7| Three Pillowsâ€"$1.00 §/|~â€" sumoay xm 74G° Thoroughly Washed and Dried â€" â€" . B RAY BROS. f ; Fluffy, Sweet and Clean / § NR & o > k > PAVLILION â€" â€".\ 9 Reliable Laundryâ€"and Dry Cleaning Co. E| _ Dismond Lake , | CITY CLUB TRUSTEES C H MEETING TUESDAY Report on Dealing with Tax Matters; Letter to City Officers and Reply the following copy of the reply from the mayor: ~ At a meéeting of the trustees of the City Club of Highland Park held this week, reports of various comâ€" mittees on dealing with tax matters were presented and it developed that the most urgent matters for considâ€" eration at this time are those of the Salary and _ Appropriation â€" Ordiâ€" nances of the City of Highland Park. The trustees of the organization felt that the citizens of Highland Park can understand better what has been done in this connection by having before them copies of the following To the Officers of the Taxing Bodies Operating in the City of Highland Park, Illinois. . f Dear Friends: During the past six months, the City club has been making a study of the expenditures of the various taxing bodies whose activitiese are reflected in our tax bills and we have come to appreciate more and letters which went to the city ofâ€" Established 1899 Feather Pillow Special Two Weeks Onlyâ€"May 214 618 N. Green Bay Road HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS April 12, 19382 Mn insl THE PRES3 & \/ Funeral services were held Friâ€" day afternoon at the August Winâ€" ters home for Mrs. Max Winters and interment was in the Decerfield cemetery. . Rev. F. G. Piepenbrok officiated. Mrs. Winters, who was just twenty years old, passed away, Tuesday, April 26, at the Presbyterâ€" ian hospital, Chicago, where she had been for two months. Before her marriage on Nov. 14, 1928, she was Emma Bonn of Northbrook. She leaves to mourn her loss her husâ€" band, her mother, Mrs. Fred Schilâ€" kus of Northbrook, five half brothâ€" ers and one half sister and her grandmother, Mrs. Katherine Pantle lived, until her marriage. Mr. and Mrs. Winters had made their home, the past three years, with Mr. Winâ€" ters‘ parents, Mr. and Mrs. August Winters of Elm street. + Services Held Friday for Mrs. Max Winters CARD OF THANKS I wish to thank my friends for their kindness and sympathy shown and for their many floral offerings sent during my recent bereavement. ~Phone 177 â€" 178 â€" 179 ~Other jeading nominators and the number of their entriés follow: E. R. Bradley, Dixiana, Willis Sharpe Kilmer, Mereworth Stud, Howard Oots, Albert Sabath and C. V. Whitâ€" ney six eéach; Audley Farm, Dorwood Stable and Shandon Stud five each! Horace N. Davis, Marshall Field, Fred M. Grabner, Cary T. Grayson, K. E. Hitt, S. â€"W. Labrot, John Marsch, J. B. Respess and Three D‘s Stock Farm four each. first crop of winners last season inâ€" cluded â€"Osculator, Polonaise and Pompeius. The Greentree Stable of Mrs. Helen Hay Whitneyâ€"made it ~entries, the get of such prominent {stallions as Sir Gallahad 8rd, St. Germans, St. Vames, High Time, Upset. and Chance Play. _____._â€" â€"â€"â€"Morton L. Schwartz and Mrs. John William R. Coe, who races one of the largest strings in the country under the direction of â€" Bennett Creech, is the largest individual nomâ€" inator with an even dozen, the ma« ‘their juveniles for the Hyde Park. The former‘s included Union, a halfâ€" brother to Clock Tower, a possible star in handicap racing this season. Mrs. Whitney‘s nominations include Crowning Glory, a halfâ€"brother to Pairbypair, the 1931 winner of the event. ' £. ha f Two yearâ€"old â€"thoroughbreds are not neglected on the $700,000 proâ€" gram the Arlington â€"Park â€"Jockey club will offer racing fans from June 27 through July 30 at its beautiful course on the northwest side, three of the nine major attractions being given over to the youngsters.. The first of the trio to be offered, the others being the Arlington Lassie Stakes and Arlington Futurity, will Three Races for Them During Program from June 27th to July 30th TWOâ€"YEARâ€"OLDS TO l D.AR. RACE AT ARLINGTON tries, the Hyde Park will gross $24,â€" 275 should there be 15 starters payâ€" ing $500 each. Of this amount the winner will receive $21,775. Mrs. John Hertz‘s Pairbypair collected $20,675 in winning last summer‘s running, the third, of the event. . With $10,000 added and $6,275 alâ€" ready in the pool from the $25 enâ€" be the Hyde Park Stakes, which closed on March 15 with 251 nominâ€" ations from 95 different interests. § Every _ SATURDAY AND ~â€" _ SUNDAY NITE Adm.10¢c â€" 10¢ per dance y of which are by the sensaâ€" wWIGHTMAN‘S â€" . THURSDAY, MAY 5, 1932 As we a the problen juvenile au isfaction th â€"no home Matinee 0 leading titl a star pitc}h is one of Jo it is a ver; picture, an "After Ton ate selectio Charles Fa bring us which true unselfishnes THURSDAY, of a little straight. Miriam H Adults. "I all that ar face of ov highlights. photograph Amusing d "Shopwo _ SA Let us mm t C My C t10