3] £1 Thars.â€" 14â€""THE CROONER" > David Manners Dflwi:z:L'O?!tt l;-"-"ï¬f PAL THE KING" â€" Tom Mis the times!! Eq 2 0 00 CLUB_BR@\KFASTS 40c, 60c¢c, and 75c DELICIOUS FOOD You are cordially invited to visit the R authorized © Chrigtian Sc.ence Lterature j DINNER 90c, $1.00, $1.25 and $1.50â€" SPECIAL THURSDAY CHICKEN DINNER $1.00 . and the prices are moderate . . . . in keeping with the timasg!! â€"Brerpath Jun Including Satardayâ€" Also Sundayâ€" | And Holidaysâ€" Reduced Prices CHRISTIAN SCIENCE READING ROOM "BLONDIE OF THE FOLLIES" First Chureh of Christ, Scisntist Highland Park 43 NQRTH SMERIDAN RoaAD Open: WEEK DAYS 9 am. to 6 p.m. SUNDAYS 2:30 to 5:30 for reading only * _ Highland Park 21400 RBerrpasth Jnn â€" Start Tonightâ€" _â€"__Adults Alwaysâ€" EDWIN BURGESS, Manager how you can save more than half the exâ€" pense of maintaining a large house . .. NEW WINTER RATES Plan now to close your house and spend an enjoyable and economical winter at this old English inn ... Let us show vou + JOHNNY J. JONES‘ 50c â€" Marion Davis â€"Hillie Dove rrature m.y be read, borrowed or purcnased. Maincained by TT October 16â€"17 ILLINOIS THEB‘PRES 3 ‘ Bernardini \Baruff Bartiet Benvenuti(c) sidered one of the fastest teams in their neighborhood. There will be a small admission charge and it is hoped that a large crowd will turn out to back up their local team with The Chicago Merchants are comâ€" posed of a group of Harrison Tech graduates‘ and workers at the S. Oakley Avenue Market. «‘The averâ€" age weight of the team is about oneâ€" hundred eighty pounds and are conâ€" Refiepnninnrmitmatemiosn wrepsene umm The game ended with the Indians in posses:ion of the ball in the Panâ€" ther‘s tertritory. m t Play Merchants Sunday | This e~oming Sunday the Highâ€" wood Indians will meet the Chicago Merchants, at the Highwood field, at twoâ€"thirty p.m. When the second half started, the Indians came out a new team and never did.the Panthers manage to get into their territory. The Panâ€" thers were forced to kickout of _danger every time they had possesâ€" sion of the ball, and in the third quarter they were forced to attempt 2 nunt from behind their own goal line.~ _ . A bad nass from the center caused the Panthéer‘s kicker to fumble and Canitani recovered for the Indians, making the score 8â€"0 in their favor. *Arnuâ€"hout the first ~halfâ€"with the Indians m=king continual gains to the goal line, but being held by their onnonents every time a touchâ€" down was in sight. In the first quarter. after an exâ€" change of runts, the Evanston Panâ€" thers were in possession of the ball on their own ten yard line. A few line vlunges failed and Evanstor was forced to try a punt. The ball was snanned., and before the Panâ€" thers had a chance to kick, Brassa tackled the runter behind the goal line for the Indian‘s first score. . The score remained â€"the same The Indians gained two hundred ninetyâ€"one yards and scored fourâ€" teen first downs, again:t the Panâ€" ther‘s seventyâ€"nine pards and two first downs. Ossian Carlson and Don Bartlett did all the ball toting for the Indians with continual gains throuch their opponents line, while the Indian‘s line held out their opâ€" nonents so that they were forced to try some end runs. Outplaying their rivals in all stages of the game, the Highwood Indian‘s football team succeeded in defeating their heavier opponents, the Evanston Panthers, by a score of 8â€"0, on the Highwood field, Sunâ€" dav. Oct. 9. The lineup: Defeats Panthers 8-0; Plays Merchants Sunday LH LT LE RE RT W The fall luncheon of the National College of Education, alumnae assoâ€" ciation, will be held at the Hamilâ€" ton club, Chicago, at 12 o‘clock on Saturday, Oct. 22. The Oak Park and Margaret Farrar chapters, as hostesses, willâ€" present Mr. Julian Arnold, lecturer, traveler, and exâ€" plorer, as the speaker on "Famous Persons I Have Known," and Miss Anne Trimingham of Oak. Park will diregt a short musical program. "private opera" and subsequently asâ€"conductor of the London Philâ€" harmonic orchestra. The story of his threeâ€"fold career since these deâ€" buts has been one of cumulative sucâ€" cess, and when he made his first tour of this country in 1909, he was already the distinguished figure which he is today. Plan Fall Luncheon of Alumnae Oct. 22 reputations, he now added a third, and presently as a eonductor also distinguished_ himself, serving a _ Rachmaninoff was born in Oneâ€" ga, Russia. At the age of four, he showed musical interest, and his first lessons were taught him by his mother. At the age of nine, his family moved to what was then St. â€"Petersburg,;â€"and~young Rachmaninâ€" off was entered at the Imperial Conâ€" servatory. Three years later, he was studying at the Moscow conserâ€" vatory under such teachers as Zviâ€" eref, Siloti, Taneyef and Arensky. Here he won the gold medal for his oneâ€"act opera "Aleko," which was produced at the Moscow opera in 1892. Rachmaninoff made his first appearance as a pianist in Moscow and won immediate recognition as in interpreter. To these growing it naturally affords them more freâ€" quent opportunity to hear this comâ€" manding musical personality, who, as a pianist registers an impression wholly unforgettable and as a comâ€" poser is one of the towering creâ€" ative forces of the times. This calamity which forced Rachâ€" maninoff from the soil he so much loved, has had an advantage for at least American musicâ€"lovers. For Sergei Rachmaniniff, famous Rusâ€" sian composerâ€"pianist, who will be heard Oct. 31 at the New Trier high school, Winnetka, now makes his home in the United States. This has been since the downfall of the old regime in Russia, when the Rachâ€" maninoff estates were confiscated by the revolutionary government, and the composer and his family had to flee from Moscow. They found asyâ€" lum forâ€" a time in Sweden, then pressed on to Denmark, finally reaching the United States. hmaninoff Now _ a Resident of U. S. THURSDAY, 13, Mrs. ville, W Mr. an home in afternc Many | cussed, day for Park b 26 and giving evening the Hi has ca of the Calif., from ing S with | ter M Gro i home Au d ments cation two n rie T nue, 1 this y Delta Ri Me To Mrs