PAGE TWO Playground Activities Continue Until f August Twentieth Five weeks of playground activiâ€" ties have successfully been completâ€" ed on the playgrounds maintained by the Park board of Highland Park. Children who have been out of town or have been busy with other interâ€" ests during the first half of the playground season are still regisâ€" tering and it is hoped that before the season ends on Aug. 20 every child in Highland Park will have taken advantage of the reécreation progranm offered on the playgrounds. Registration will continue up to the final day of the season for the program has been so arranged that anyone may enter into the activities at any time during the season. Regâ€" istration to date shows a considersâ€" ble increase over that of last year. ‘There is no charge for the playâ€" ground activities as it is the aim of the Park board to provide recreation I’t" every individual in the communâ€" y. The feature of next week‘s proâ€" gram will be the Annual Playâ€" ground Golf tournament which will be held at the Sunset Valley Golf chub next â€"Tuesdzay morning, â€"Aug. 8. Teams will be selected from all the playgrounds to compete in this tournament. Sunset â€" Girls‘ tennis tournaâ€" ment .â€" boys‘ badminton tournaâ€" ment. The schedule of activities for next week starting Monday, Aug. 2 is as follows: Monday morning, Aug. 2â€" Boys‘ baseball, Ravinia at Sunset. Port Clinton at Lincoln. Monday afternoon, Aug. 2â€" Swimmingâ€"Sunset, Lincoln, Port Clinton to Central beach; Ravinia to Roger Williams beach. Tuesday morning, Aug. 3â€" Story telling and general program on all playgroundsâ€"Annual Playâ€" ground Golf tournament. > Tuesday afternoon, Aug. 3â€" Lincoln â€" Volley ball games â€" badminton and checker tournaments Ravinia â€" Scavenger hunt. Wednesday morning, Aug. 4â€" > Swimming lessons â€" Sunset, Linâ€" coln, Port Clinton to Central beach; Ravinia to Roger Williams beach. Wednesday afternoon, Aug. 4 â€" General program on all playâ€" grounds. . Thursday morning, Aug. 5â€" Boys‘ basebali â€" Lincoln at Sunâ€" set; Port Clinton at Ravinia. Thursday afternoon, Aug. 5â€" . Swimming lessons â€" Sunset, Linâ€" coln, Port Clinton to Central beach; Ravinia group to Roger Williams beach. Friday afternoon, Aug. 6 â€" Sunset â€" Girls checker tournaâ€" ment; boys‘ horgeshoe tournament. Ravinia â€" Badminton and volley ball games. Friday morning, Aug. 6 â€" General program< on all playâ€" grounds. 389 Central Ave. Phone Highland Park 172 also MEN‘S and WOMEN‘S RASMUSSEN Practically all sizes but not in every style SEMIâ€"ANNUAL SHOE SALE RED CROSS SHOES Short and Discontinued Lines $3.85 to $6.85 SHOE SHOP Birth of Child Ends Mystery at Hotel A week akgo Saturday a young woman entered the Park hotel in Highwood and wrote the name and address of Frona Wiese, Route 2, Box 68, Reedsburg, Wis., on the register, t hsn She. paid the" proprietor, Frank Fortunato, $3 to occupy a room for one week. Miss Wiese, 26, who said she was unmarried, proved to be a solitary person, rarely venturing out from her quarters on the third The proprietor and his wife were a little suspicious about the inactivâ€" ity of their Wisconsin guest. They recalled the time when a drug adâ€" dict registered at their hotel who never once to their knowledge left his room. She‘s in Pain Saturday at 3:30 a.m. Fortunato was awakened by a tap on his door. It was Miss Wiese who said she was in severe pain and would he "please eall Dr. A. L. Buck immediately." Dr. Buck arrived a short time later and with the proprietor and his wife went up to Miss Wiese‘s room. As they opened the door the cries of a baby were heard. Invesâ€" Mignting, Aiey _ discovesedâ€"thst Al= young. woman without anyâ€"assis. tance had just given birth to a boy. The doctor rendered aid, told Mr. and Mrs. Fortunato to keep the mother in bed a few days, and left. * At 8:30 a.m. the same day the patient arose, straightened up the bed and room and walked four blocks to a taxi stand. Being an acquaintance of the driver he asked her to answer phone calls for him while he made a trip. This she did and upon his return she asked him to call for her and the baby at the hotel, to be taken to the doctor‘s office. This is where William Steele, supervisor, came in the picture. The baby had no clothes. It was up to him to meet this need which he did. He also arranged to have the mother and baby taken to the County hosâ€" pital at Waukegan. Intensive organization of the esâ€" timated 1,800 grocery clerks and meat cutters from Evanston to the state lime under the banner of the American Federation of Labor will conimence soon. Accordingto â€" Harold â€"Rosa, â€"a Highland Park organizer for the reâ€" centlyâ€"incorporated Retail Clerks Inâ€" ternational Protective association, 250 clerks, chiefly from Highland Park south, already have taken out union cards. , Within the few weeks the Retail Clerks n:;miution along with its affiliate, the Amalgamated Meat Cutters and Butcherâ€"Workmen of North America, will concentrate on bringing employes from Highâ€" wood north to the state line into the ‘union fold. Libertyville and Deerâ€" field are included. Grocery Clerks to Organize Union Ground work was laid in the northern part of the county last week when leaders in the movement at a meeting of Waukegan clerks $ 4.95 SHOES and butchers ex; the ai f | M ue mew AF L. member, _ | i Union officials declare that the platform calls for a §2â€"hour we« minimum wages, and provisions 1 apprentices and journeymen. A mi imum wage of $30 weekly has be set for grocery clerks, while butc erg demand $40. There is a slidi scale for apprentices. Hold Victory Work Shop Sale * Friday, July 30 Orie of the finest homes on the North Shore will be opened for the Victory Workshop Sale on Friday, July 30th from 12 to 5:30 p.m. Mrs. Harry Hunin is donating her graciâ€" ous, rambling home overlooking Lake Michigan to this charity sale. The house, located at 1201 8. Sheriâ€" dan road, Highland Park, is set way back from the road, in the midst of a spacious, highly cultivated old park, one of the beauty spots of the North Shore. The Victory Workshop was started four years ago in answer to a long felt need‘. . . that of trainâ€" ing deaf and hard of hearing young people who have finished their acaâ€" trained for any occupation. Because. of the terrible handicap of deafness,; those unfortunate young people have difficulty finding . employment. Through the cooperation of the Board of Education and the W.P.A. rooms are now providéd at the Haven school in Chicago for conâ€" ducting the workshop. _ Girls are taught fine sewing, painting, and weaving. Boys are taught how to make furniture, The training has been so successful that many of the studentsâ€" have been placed in industry, and are holding jobs along side of normal, skilled workers. Several of the boys are in cabinet shops. One boy is earning a good wage as a professional weavâ€" er. Several of the girls are working in/lingerie and dressmaking shops. The committee, composed of thirty active, charitableâ€"minded womien, exâ€" pends a great deal of time and effort in raising funds to‘ buy materials and provide the car fare and milk. The women also:â€" work at the school, create the ideas for the articles made, and themselves play sales girl at all of the sales. The committee is headed by Mrs. M. Clarence Goldâ€" man, founder of the Victory Workâ€" shop. M While students are working at the Vietory, they get all the profitsâ€"on the merchandise sold. In addition, they are provided with car fare and milk daily. is a specialty of :ge Victory «Workâ€" shop. _ Other articles madé > are aprons, doilie sets, knitting bags, bathroom rugs, baby gifts, and novâ€" elties of all kinds. All articles are original, wellâ€"made; and reasonably, priced. Individually designed, hand !uinted.gg finished pursery furniture Miss Elizabeth Wells Robertson, art director of the Board of Educaâ€" tion, is vitally interested in the proâ€" ject, and is sponsoring the July 30th sale. Among the patronesses for the sale are:â€" Mrs. Robert Adler, Summer Robes regular $3.50 now $2.69 Mens Broadcloth Shirts, white and fancy values to $1.85 now $1.29 2 for $2.50 Boys Sleeveless All Wool Sweaters $1.00 Mens and Boys regular $1.00 | Now 79c Mens and Boys regular 85c Now 69¢ _ GARNETT‘S POLO SHIRTS Mens regular 50c Summer Sox 39c 3 for $1.10 Mens Catalina Swim Trunks regular $3.00 now $2.29 regular $4.00 now $2.95 OQOPEN SATURDAY EVENING TILL o: THE PRESS MEN‘S STORE Former sales have been held »at the homes of Mrs. George Pick and Mrs. Edward J. Loewenthal, Highâ€" land Park, at the Moraine and Chiâ€" eago Beach hotels, and various country .clubs. During the fall and winter seasons, exhibits and ‘sales are held frequently at Women‘s club land Park ,at the Morraine and Chiâ€" cago Beach otels, and various counâ€" try clubs. During the fall and winâ€" ter seasons, exhibits and sales are held frequently at Women‘s club meetings. A new type of nurdo:ugry. "Night Must Fall," is untf on the sereen with a techrijue as differâ€" ent from any employed before as was "The Thin Man." "Night Must. Fall" features Robert Montgomery and Deerpath Theatre Program for Week and will be shown at the Deerpath theatre Friday and Saturday, July 30 and 31. Besides Montgomery and Miss Russell, the cast includes three members of the original stage troupe, Dame May Whitty, Kathleen Harrison, and Merle Tottenham, and also Alan Marshall, and E. E. Clive. Girl meets boys, and so begins one of the year‘s most uproarious comedy â€" romances, "I Met Him in Paris"â€"which stars Claudette Colâ€" bert in the type of role which she made famous in her two previous smash comedy hits, "It Happened One Night" and "The Bride Comes Home." "I Met Him in Paris," which also features Melvyn Douglas and Robert Young, will be shown Sunday, Monday and Tuesday, Auâ€" gust 1, 2 and 3, at the Deerpath theatre. & :*: M M { the superâ€" blic schools, irs, George aman, Mrs. Alfred i1, Mrs. Dudley Mrs | Letter of Gratitude, \ Mr. and Mrs. Dooley Now that our‘.Golden W celebration is a thing of the past and we have settled down to the old custom of life, we find ourselves swamped with a volume 6f congratâ€" ulations and felicitations so great that â€"it is impossible for us to acknowledge our gratitude in a perâ€" sonal way, within a reasonable limit of time, much as we would like to to do may we, therefore, ask you, our good friends, to accept this letâ€" ter as our sincerest expression of grateful thanks to you for your kindness to us on the occasion of our celebration... Thanking you once again, we are, Dear Friends Miss Grace Arneson, 1327 Lawnâ€" dale ave., Chicago, broke both bones in her right leg below the knee Tuesâ€" day as she fell or slippedfrom the aige‘ ue Woges WiialaP tE â€". ... ljalls from Steps and Breaks Leg » Mr. and Mrs. William M. Dooley Prompt and Dependable â€" Call and Delivery Service Members of State and National Dyers and Cleaners © JOHN B. NASH, Proprietor We specialize in rebinding blankets and furnishing new ticking in feather pillows at f moderate prices FOR REAL COMFORT ... HAVE YOUR [ PILLOWS RENOVATED Cleaned and Carded Now! Our extra efficient cleaning methods will reâ€" store your blankets to their original newness. We guarantee to make them look like new, soft, fluffy and keep their exact size and shape. Let us save you the cost of buying new blankets. 327â€"29 North Green Bay Road, Highland Park With love from the bottom of our hearts, BLANKET CLEANING TIME BLANKETS PHONEâ€" HIGHLAND PARK Have Your ing down to the beach. She was atâ€" tended by Dr. Banfield and was later removed to a Chicago hospital. with a It‘s nourishing and healthful as well as deliciously refreshing on warm days. It‘s FLAYVOR IS DIFFERENT Appealing to young and old alike, even those who never could drink milk really e Mellody Farms. Phon> MELLODY FARMS _ DARY University â€"â€" . THURSDAY, JULY 29, 1937 COOL OFF Tastier Better Milk VIt~*,I~. A Whaâ€"I AMA enjoy milk from