are now on Cns * selection CTRICIA NS Pressing epairing St. Johns Ave. Tel. H. P. 919 es Stainless ture cCOR To orcelain table in 4 mPOre ed â€"inâ€" 18 Elm Place Park 214 TIgnition Units Repaired and Rewired Electric as floor Tel. H. P. 54 PRESSING EPAIRING nd delivered Humer ILTON OP DAIRY RVICE OS8, ER 8, 19984 ctory WDAY, Biography $ | "My House of Life," by Jessic B. wlopommm.†"Kagawa," by William Axling. : C h‘m’h’." [ _â€" E. C j "Cowman‘s Wife," by Mary Rak.. ; "Life of Hans Christian Anderâ€" | sgn," by Signe Toksvig. ‘% wellâ€"known , uMeNEY | CAE nmmdfcrflnh!tilï¬ â€™Â¢mnuonattbflm â€mm.lm,udv. 22 Miss Elsio A. Wygant of the Weanges Parker Schoo!, Will discuss mbodliorboyl_“ndl’hh of the past year. Ahoinmn _mmobnfllmd aâ€" ® lw'-d;‘nu;]". 11-‘7".1n‘i: n;‘.‘ tox ni' mm:m's room of ko S29° 0090 Miss Elizabeth Coolidge, Dr. N. S. â€.‘liul’rbcilhc.rnrn- Ts VCO 1_ iL. Aabl af fina avie viewed books in the field of fine arts ':guunmuov.y _ "Can | Prayer mmtin- ky Thomas Minsian, © CC x’h of An Idea," by Ralph ‘#«Challenge To Liberty," by Herâ€" m& and Social Progress," '.m:ngd.m of Decision," by _ "Reonomics of Recovery," by Toonurd kAyres. _ â€"‘.;~_ ._. . _ <â€" Michael F. Gallagher. f "The Future Comes," by Beard afi Smith. _ "Bow Instruments," by J. W. Gilâ€" tay. es s _ "Modern Photography, 1034â€"35," published by the Studio. f "Photography," by Louis Derr. "More Harbours of Memory," by “hobaddodtoflnlibm October are as follows: . enstosophy and Religion q..c\nthorusl,"hmeo "New Frontiers," by Henry W....." hy of the Region of ieago," by F. M. Fryzell. «Prospecting for Gold and Silver" Fine Arts s "Story © of England‘s Architecâ€" re," by Thomias Tallmadge. "Rameses To Rockefeller," by C: "Amaranth," by Edwin Arlington "Traveler‘s ‘Library," by Somerâ€" "American Song," by Paul Engle. "Good Wiriting," by Frederick and "Yellow Jack," by Sidney Howard. "English Journey," by J. . B. "Strong Man Rules," by George ï¬i‘:,g,ofh‘hnd,"by'l‘honu "Death of the Prairie," by Paul "Europe Between Wars?" by‘ H. "Something Human," by HICHLAND PARK PUBLC LL HICHLAND PARK ILLINOIS Mny,mm Science and Usefal Arts Last Book Talk the children‘s room of NOVEMBER 8, 19834 Rules Industry," by " by Travel _A Rare Treat Dr. Theodore W. Koch, the librarâ€" ian of new library, will speak on the discovery of famous literary in the liâ€" brary assembly on Monday evening, Novem 19, at eight o‘clock. He will te}l of the exposure of some fifty editions" of Dickens, Tennyson, Wordsworth, Kipling and o . â€" These items which have been ) accepted as anâ€" thentic first editions by scholars and eollectors, Dr. Koch will show to be very clever forgéries. The story, which is as exciting as a firstâ€"rate detective story, has literally thrown x# bombshell into the collecting game. ‘ _â€"‘The public is c attend.: * â€" Annonn:: ï¬j Among the ies to be shown at the Deerfield| Grammar School assemblies, as by Prinâ€" cipal Carl E. are: Winners of West (soon). . Robinson , Nov. 12. The Hunchback of Notre Dame, Jan. Tth. 1: Uncle Tom‘s Cabin, Jan. 21. King of Wild Horses, Feb. 4. Wreck of Hesperus, Feb. 18. | Life of Christopher Columbus, March 4. 1 ; Aladdin‘s Wionderful Lamp, March 18. f"*:: White Hell of Pitz Palu, April 1. â€"‘The Dress Parade, April 29. _ Julius Caesar, May 13. . â€" Rip Van Wlnx; May 27. Also many o reels on Nature \Stndy, Science,: Geography, and other subjects of general interest. "Proud and the Pnk." by Jules omains, f "*Cold Journey," Grace Zaring one. 7 "Nine Tailors," Dorothy Sayâ€" "‘wm In Birth," by Romain Rolâ€" â€"â€" Parents are inyited to sttend. Asâ€" semblies will held Mondays at Deerï¬eld(!l?dren Have Spook Party 9:15 a.m. The Courtship of Miles Standish, ALBERT LARSON E. x.] CATTON ,i 2 x t t T,y?e\mter Man @TATIONER e t discovery of £ in the liâ€" f on Monday m 19, at eight tell of the exposure t editions" of yson, . Wordsworth, ' . â€" These items en | accepted as anâ€" tions by scholars and Koch will show to be r es. The story, megdlool rdially ,"" by Joseâ€" invited to by 75th Anniversary | of A. and P. Compat To many an oldâ€"timer the T anniversary of the Great n & Pacific Tea Company recalls life and times of half and even th «quarters of m century ago, Mi letters come in to the : compa offices expressing nostalgia| for . with "China scenes" when eight even twelve horse teams of |maté new stores, and a week‘s supply tea was delivered to outlying ¢ tomers in little red ons, W after weeks and months of prem! hoarding, and when chromos M given away with a pound of These letters of half a century. have a double appeal today. | quaint customs of the past mre MA to the younger generation, and the oldâ€"timers they furnish pleai memories of the past. T A spry young man of e t& remembers the original s y coming in from New Jersey to there. Another rem ' up the Chinese scenes on / BUTTER .. SsUG COF Goos 400| FOOD MAR Pire O8l0 voup ||| MAPLE SYRUP t large bottle for ...â€"...â€"ssase. MACARONI or SPAGHETTI 3 full pound -,_... large jar DILL PICKLES PRESERVES jar for ......_..._..» Ma Brown Assorted Fla: Peppermint Chocolate CANDY & lbs. for ..â€"â€" Sunkist APPLES LEMONS Seedliess j GRAPEFRUIT & for Security Brand PEACHES large halves; heayy 8 SYR 22 SATINA package # boxes for & T 8E ay, Friday and Saturday Specials 1 m: 10â€"1b. cloth bag 933C FEE mornous _»r sure816 5 DUST _ . ww 15¢ § .____.be [ + AfC 48 ';;" Perhaps it is not #! that &o| men have volunteered for more reâ€" w miniscences of the last century than is| women. However, for the honor of ‘to | the fair sex, some have written in. MAt| Mrs. Laura B. Simonds of Auburnâ€" /\ |dale, Mass., in a charming letter of ive | reminiscence, about her childhood ind days in a small Maine village, {f le| writes, "When dancing in winter was lng | in our old kitchen, in summer on the l green betweenanh()ll*lndund’ Street, Des M« Around hg he dispute. His 1 tains that the: haltâ€"life size / carrying trays tle bridges and & cans Aï¬t. local artist. Who in Highland Padk can #ise to settle this question? Another man writes as a continâ€" wous customer he can remember fiftyâ€"six of the seventyâ€"five years of the company‘s existence. Still anâ€" other in his eighties today rememâ€" bers walking a mile to the comâ€" pany‘s only store sixty.two years 516â€"518 _ 19¢ c aHI 15¢ 10c 10c 10¢ S S "Quai® M B Mamaies ARRED M CCC _2â€"9__6_ _ g.g.LB. AVERAGE Mo rch Prepared cA : PRUNES 25¢ 18%(: FRESH PRUNE PLUMS ____ | ___â€"_â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€"â€" | PEARS | SLICED PEACHES 19¢ Fresh Ground STRAINED CRANBERRY SAUCE » ie 3 wWHOLE |PEELED APRICOTS 29¢ TOPAZ é Pure Creamery °* * ‘ * s , wucy MEAT speciars PORK LOIN ROAST LEGofLAMB | =â€"â€"â€"== Fresh Ground _BEEF wWILSON‘S CERTIFIED SWIFT‘S PREMIUM |(":4â€"KE FLO »12%¢ ARMOUR‘S STAR »19%c BACON 247C » 20¢ SLICED Will‘s, and the music WAas 8 PDOIG, . mms«m-ww'“"| mie beating time with his bones or| clappers made from the ribs of the fast beet critter we‘d killed for food.| uy,:u:‘tfh; be â€" interested u\ m-l "I mofmynryufliutmeï¬ou (I was born in 1873) is of getting ready to ‘go to Rockland‘ with my father and mother to get tea and coffee at The Great Atlantic & ‘Pacific Tea Co. We lived on a farm near Rockland and did most of our trading thereâ€"sometimes exchangâ€" ing fresh eggs, of which we had plenty,; for tea, which came loose and was put up in a bag for us. The coffee was always in a large bag, whole berries, which we shed and ground ourselves." The old "handsome presents" which were given as premiums did not always get cracked and thrown away. "There was a pitcher for which my grandmother saved tickets for a long time. When we moved to the east my grandmother gave it to my mother as one of her most cherâ€" ished possessions," wrote another feminine customer, Mrs. David A. Lucas of Brooklyn, recalling her childhood. "The pitcher has been ivith us ever since," her letter conâ€" and the music was a Addle, Crosse and Minced Meat or ORANGE Wellâ€"Pac Brand MANDARIN ORANGES Wonderfal for Red Heart diet A.BC.; J3 gans for ... Monarch FRES PEARS STRAINE] 4 doz No. 1/ Your choice 4 for 95¢ tinved, "and we have . _ My mother‘s first it packing dishes was ys ‘a safe place for the pitchâ€" er! It always traveled in state in a trunk, safely stuffed and padded in . Of course, I know its inâ€" value is not great, but as a of the third generation to ‘guardian of the pitcher‘ I do a high sentimental value on it, and would feel very badly to have any accident befall it." Iready scores of letters From 0 have come in, helping to roll back the mists of time that enâ€" shpoud the early days of the comâ€" P‘b- A&P hopes for even more ï¬f will shed light on the life and es of the 1860‘s, 70‘s and 80‘s. Hwd. 5578 â€" J. Cervi, Prop. CERVI LES AND SERVICE Motorcycles â€" Serviâ€"Lars E.‘"i‘;."‘.‘;."‘“wm Tubes, mï¬ D'm Waukegan Avenue, wood $1.00 Royal Gelatin » 19¢ The Want Ads 17¢ Your choice Free E.udzsc PAGE NINE 25¢ 25¢ 20¢ 4