mt N HEATING CONTRACTORS Hot Water, V apor, High or Low Pressure Steam Estimates on New and Remodeling Work â€" Repair Work a Specinity i. 733 GLENCOE AVENUE 89 CLIFTON AVENUE Telephone Highland Park 2637 Telephone Highland Park 2888 .D. MURPHY J. A. SCHWALL 105 N. Wabash Ave. Hâ€"Gï¬ï¬eâ€"ï¬ï¬ï¬‚ewa§ on a Sapphire Lake.... LAWSONIA MURPHY & SCHWALL . mer(foe 6’C0m»:qny l luncheon, dinner mdsup;;a;iam:f;g s i can Lawsonia is a deluxe hotel such as is not found elewhere m the entire Middle West. Rates that invite comparison, as low as $50 per week, per person, including all meals 25 miles west of Fond du Lac and Oshkosh on the â€" CNWARR A few hours by motor from CTheoga ~~~ Catering to a restricted clientele. Chicago Offic3» Promote and maintain good vision and eye comâ€" fort. Insure style, quality and individual suitability. Unequalled golf! Every summer sport on becutiful Green Lake. 22 miles of paved, private roods. through magnificent woodlands. Bob Dunlap and his Broadcasting Orchestra playing for COUNTRY CLUB MHOTEL M. £. Woolley. .. Manager _ GREEN LAKE .. .WISCONSIN B' ’!Tni'q I""", hed P “ Still and Many price reductions now in effect. Precision < Glasses PRESCRIPTION OPTICIANS 1645 Orrington Ave.. Eâ€"an:s> Chicago Stores: Almer 78 E. Jackson Bivd. Moving Picture Equipment â€" Microscopes â€" T. For information as to how you can help, please get in touch with Mrs. Monroe McKillip, telephone De.erï¬eld. 142, Your inquiry will be Are you a regular contributor to the Guild? Thursday is the day on which Deerfield and Bannockburn regularly sends in its contributions. Flowers, fruits, and vegetables are solicited. They are distributed among the sick and poor of Chicago through 28 charitable organizations. United Charities because of illness and otherâ€" problems in the home. Our funds are too meager to allow for the purchase of flowers or other things which cheer a sick person. Your gifts afford great pleasure to our families and also cheer our workers when they are able to preâ€" sent something so lovely to the poor and unfortunate." "All of the above mentioned, famâ€" ilies are receiving help from the â€"dren were in an auto accéident some time ago. At the time of the acciâ€" dent, the father wasâ€" working and the family selfâ€"supporting and now because of his injuries, he will never be able to work again. His daughâ€" ter is in a very serious nervous conâ€" dition because of the shock and inâ€" juries.. They both are confined to their beds and the mother, who has barely recovered from her injuries, is greatly worried. The beautiful flowers chered everybody in this home. j imagine what the sig‘ht of a bbt;q;xâ€"e!-t- of beautiful flowers did for this man. * â€" ChHeered ner greatly. _ ‘ , *"Another man, who at one time had his own home and garden in a suburb of Chicago, now lies incurâ€" ably iItT with tuberculosis of the spine. â€" In spite of his affliction and hopelessness of his situation, he is the hospital and life for her is \;ery drab. »Your beautiful _ bouquet "Mr. A. is in the Municipal Tuberâ€" culosis sanitarium. This poor man is burdened not only with the knowlâ€" edge that he 4s probably incurable, but also knows that his baby was recently_found â€"to be an "open tuâ€" berculosis case." His young wife is not tuberc ugg__fl%m;neggm;ggx_l esent but is â€"exâ€" remely underweight and has to be watched very carefully, so that she will not develop the disease. â€"She Howers that she not only telephoned but wrote me a letter telling me how beautiful they were. "Mrs. S. has been confined to her home since last September when her baby was born. She does not know when she will be able to resume supâ€" ervision of her household and as she is a very active woman, she frets constantly because she cannot help her children take care of the famâ€" ily. She was so delighted with the Residents of Highland Park and Deerfield, who have been donating generously of flowers, fruits, and vegetables to the Chicago Plant, Flower and Fruit Guild, will be inâ€" terested in the following notes sent to Mr. T. V. Purcell, Guild president, by Miss â€"Elsa Reinhardt, superintenâ€" dent of the Haymarket district, United Charities of Chicago. Flower and Fruit Guild Appreciate Contributions Sent â€"tâ€"â€"Anâ€"outdoor mitfstca The choir of the primary departâ€" ment of the Deerfleld Daily Vacaâ€" tion Bible school will sing at the eleven o‘clock services Sunday mornâ€" ing at the Bethlechem Evangelical church. The Junior choir will sing at the Presbyterian church at their Bunday mornipg services at 10:45," â€" Deerfield D.V.B.S. Choir Sings Sunday â€"The bandâ€"has a very fine selection of music and the community is inâ€" vited to enjoy it. If the weather permits, Harold Vant will} demonstrate one of his famous rag pictures. & cert is to be presented by the Prairie View Concert band, which has achieved an excellent reputation for itself in the past two years when it has played in many of the nearby towns, as well as in Deerfield. . The musical, which is to begin at 7 p.m., is to be preceded by a tea to which the public is invited. The young people of the churchâ€"wil} hold serve tea for a very small charge. their regular evening.â€"services at mes nocyame wenundy, zut 3 2000 PPCHVUL JHUZICOET PFUEIORHL TD UO be given Sunday â€".evening on the church lawn of the Bethlehem Evanâ€" gelical church, Deerfield. The needs. placed in the had ten new screens made for the church basement, which were used that evening. The money realized had ten new seirvea ice cream and Cake at tables on the lawn and in the church. â€"_This artive group of women had and following the play, me_m,i;éfg o} C_ir‘-c{e Four acted as hostesses at anâ€" The comedy entitled, "Miss Nonâ€" chalance," given last Thursday eveâ€" ning at the Deerfield Presbyterian church was cleverly and «apably presented by members of Circle Four. Mrs. William Neville, taking the part of Mrs. Granger, a widow, who owned a dairy farm, did so well, that Mr. Neville is afraid that someone may offer her a Hollywood contract. Her daughters, Lillie and Celia, portrayed by Miss Verda Varâ€" ner and Mrs. Walter Page, attemptâ€" ed to manage the farm while the widow went away to meet a friend. Mrs:â€"â€"Raymond ~Dobbins, as ~Edna Morrison; Mrs. Earl Varner, as Eliza Morris, and Mrs. Emil Fredâ€" ricks as Emma Morrissey complicatâ€" ed the plot by having such similar names, and a tangleâ€"resulted, which caused much mystery and exciteâ€" ment. Mrs. Chris Mentzer took the Play Given Thursday Is Cleverly Portrayed General chairman for the North Shore division of the Flower Guild is Mrs. Arthur H. Harrison of Deerfield. utdoor Musicale _ _= _ ~â€" to Be Held Sunday The lawn and church assembly fashioned THURSDAY, JULY 7, 1932 CC at s1X cream social for they will and