* fbupdmdgéadowd â€" Marge was a young woman who was at everyone‘s beck and call Besides accompanying soloists at concerts, she played 'edlll’g marches, played for my dancing class, and was the organist of a small town church. _ She loved it and was always willing and ready to serve. s One day there was to be a funâ€" eral in the small} town church. The congregation was assembled and Marge was at the organ, waiting for the signal‘to begin playing. She had with her a book of muâ€" sic containing a varied collection. The first four pieces were volunâ€" taries to be used in church, and when she was given the signal, she began to play the first voluntary. She finished it. No funeral to be seen. So she went through the secâ€" ond number, and then the other two. _ Still no funeral. ; The rest of Marge‘s book cofnâ€" tained nothing but dance music. Very oldâ€"fashioned dance music, at that, whichâ€" we used in teaching rhythm to the little tots at my dancing school, to which we were going next. . | Marge had started to play, so she had to continue. She gave me a wicked look, and turning over the next page, began to play an enâ€" ticing waltz, very slowly, with a little flourish here and there of her own composing. : From that she went into a mazurka, with the same slow tempo, followed by sevâ€" eral other pieces of tuneful nature. The audience sat as though spellâ€" bound. Thursday, March 14, 1946 In a pew all by herself, sat an Old Lady, a member of the church, who never did anything but find fault. She criticized the preachâ€" er‘s sermon, she found fault with the hymns that we sang, and didn‘t like the ventilation. in the church. Nothing was ever right and she felt it her duty to air her opinion, and that l6udly. > Women Voters to Hear Arthur Carstens Wednesday, March 20 "Late Flashes on Labor Manageâ€" ment Relationships" is the subject to be discussed by Arthur Carsâ€" stens at the next monthly meetâ€" ing of the Highland Park League of Women Voters, being held at 1:15 on March 20, at the Communâ€" ity Center. m 1+ Mr. Carstens, who is director of program for the Industrial Relaâ€" tions center at the University of Chicago, came originally from Montana. However, he is a graduâ€" ate of the University of Chicago. Following 1925 he was with the Civil service, ultimately becoming an investigator for the OPA. He has been a resident of Highland Park for the past two years. The Industrial, Relations center at the University of Chicago with which Mr. Carstens is now connectâ€" ed is one of several which is trying to bring scientific fact obtained from study and research down to the basis of practical living. This particular .center makes contact between. academic life and life in general by offering téechnical adâ€" vice to both labor and manageâ€" ment, by conducting seminars in industrial relations, and by planâ€" ning adult education classes in the downtown division of the universiâ€" the League‘s department of govâ€" ernment and economic welfare, of which Mra. Melvin Wolens is chairâ€" man. Following his talk, there will be a tea time with Mrs. Carol Baâ€" kers Summers, social committee chairman in charge. Square Dance to Be Held on Sm A square dance will be held on Saturday evening, March 16, at the YWCA, starting at 9 o‘clock. Mr. Panl will act as caller. Between 8:30.and 9:00 p.m. inâ€" struction will be given to those deâ€" siring it. On the morning of March 20, at 10, Mrs. Richard Loewenthal, presâ€" ident of the league, will conduct the usual monthly board meeting. Yachts that anchor in the lake When they could take Trips to Tripoli or Spain And then, again, Sail the southern seas to Rio And feel free!â€"Oh 7 How an anchored yacht must feel That Life‘s insipid and mul! A . W.M. IgO.*n_othor Music will be furnished by Olâ€" Music Hath Charms . . Anchored Yachts little church, so after the services Marge â€"and I had to follow the That made us among the last to reach the front door. The first person I laid eyes on was the Old Lady, coming straight toward us, with her hand out ahead of her. Having heard her scold other people, I felt sure that she would grab Marge by the arm, so she couldn‘t get away, and then pour out a torrent of biting words. Of course I couldn‘t say anyâ€" thing until she began to talk, and I almost passed out when I heard I think that some attention 3 Should be brought to bear at school ‘Upon the wellâ€"known principle : “‘Excentions prove the rule." I dreaded it, having had tilts with her myself, and I made up my mind that if she started to scold Marge, I would tell her we had something more important to do than to listenâ€"to her fault finding, and take Marge off with me. "My dear girl, I never in all my life heard such beautiful funeral music. That is the kind of music that would put my soul to rest." It‘s rash to state emphatically That this or that is so; I‘d rather seem less sure, at first, Than, in the end, eat crow. To the Highland Parker who deâ€" clares that, before she left on a visit, his wife ordered a bushel of wild cats sent to the house, we feel prompted to quote from the Satâ€" evepost: "Selfâ€"restraint is feeling your oats without sowing them." But when she can‘t see eye to eye With grownâ€"upsâ€"stupid, blunderâ€" _ ing folk, :iohâ€" Flings â€"arms and legs â€" terrific And screws her face into a mask; Such sturdy effort cannot fail To bring: about a lusty wail. His stories have appeared in the Saturday Evening~Post, the New Yorker and Esquire. At presâ€" ent, he is doing free lance writing, promotion and advertising. During .the spring term there The six weeks spring term of the North Shore Creative Writers will begin Thursday, Mar. 14, at 10:30 a.m., at the YWCA. â€" Mr. Jack Miehls will conduct the first three weeks in short story and fiction writing, followed by the last three weeks under Mrs. Donâ€" ald McGibeny in poetry and furâ€" ther prose criticism. Mr. Michls has had considerable newspaper experience, has been a publicity writer in Hollywood, and in Chicago has edited various club and trade magazines. will be a luncheon, at which Mr. Howard of the Highland Park News will be the speaker. * Our participation in the annual Midwestern Writers‘ conference will also be discussed. Registraâ€" tions are open both for the term and single sessions. . Anyone interested in joining the group or attending any meeting should call the YWCA, H. P. 675, for further information. Creative Writers Start Spring Term March 14 Catholic Drama Award Playwrights will have an additionâ€" al two months in which to enter the National Catholic theater conâ€" ference‘s Bishop Sheil drama award contest. The N.C. T. C. toâ€" day announced that the contest deadline has been extended from May 1 to July 1, 1946. The contest offers a $500 prize to the author of the best manuâ€" script. Judges are Leo McCarey, :ï¬n-llneuro!‘fddn;{ * _and ‘‘The . Belis..of E%h’:&â€"nm-twfl' such stage hits as "The First Leâ€" F Yankee" and Gene Buck, president of the Catholic Actors‘ guild. ‘There was no back door to the seem to feel that life‘s a â€"HIGHLAND LASSIE. The Protest Discretion â€"A L.O â€"R.B.0. Mrs. Renslow Sherer chairman of the Vassar scholarship begefit, invited her committee to a meeting and tea at the home of her mother, Mrs. Edwin C. Austin, in Glencoe, on Tuesday, March 12. Most of the fifty committee members from Chicago and the suburbs were there to discuss some new ideas which the committee is hoping will remain a secret until the very day of the benefit on Tuesday, April 2. Reports were given by various committee chairmen. . Miss Jean Faricy was wishing she had orderâ€" ed more of the gréy and fuschia inâ€" vitations to the spring fashion show as"so many people have alâ€" ready requested extra invitations. Among those invited from town were Mrs. Everett Van Nice, coâ€" chairman of the benefit; Miss Jeanette Higgins, Mrs. Charles S. Pratt, Mrs. Durmot W. McGrew, Miss Dorothy Wrigley and Miss riel MacChesney. Gives Tea for Vassar And from all along the North Shore came committee members who,after the business meeting and tea, listened to records of some of the songs they used to sing at Vassar. Among them were Mrs. Richard K. Agnew, Mrs. James E. Day and Mrs. Mathew L. Rockwell, all of Winnetka; Mrs. Robert L. Foote and Mrs. Thomas F. Geraghâ€" ty Jr. of Glencoe, Mrs. Edward H. Kellogg and Miss Mary Louise Wieboldt of Evanston, Miss Olive Robbins of Lake Forest, and Mrs. Louis Stirling of Highland Park. Mrs. Theodore C. Diller, presiâ€" dent of the North Shore Vassar club, was there, but Mrs. Robert H. Morse Jr., was not as she had not returned from her trip to Mexâ€" Concert to be Presented At Ravinia School Sunday, March 31 District 108 orchestra, directed by Earl Stricker, will present a concert at the Ravinia school on Sunday afternoon, March 31, at 3:00 o‘clock . Athough tickets are not necessary, a contribution by the patrons will be accepted. The revenue from the concert will be Lt. Comdr. Millard prepared for college at North Shore. Country Day school of Winnetka,â€"and Philâ€" lips academy, Andover, and was graduated in 1931 from Harvard, where he was a member of the Hasâ€" ty Pudding and Iroquois clubs. Folâ€" lowing a year at sea, he has been used to purchase muchâ€"needed equipment for the schools. ~Each_school in the district has hearses once a week. They provide music for assembly programs and other school activities, From these groups come the more maâ€" ture players to form the District orchestra, which also meets for weekly rehearsal This group learns types of music that can not be adequately handled by a beginâ€" ning group. . Not only does the District orchestra provide a chalâ€" lenging learning situation for the advanced players but it also enaâ€" bles the young musicians from the various schools to intermingle and Capt. and Mrs. Ralph U. Hyde, of Washington, D.C., announce the engagement: of their daughter, Mary Penniman Hyde, to Lt. Comâ€" mander Everett Lee Millard, USNR, son of Mrs. Everett L. Milâ€" lard of Highland Park, and the late Mr. Millard. on duty as gunnery instructor at the naval training station in Manâ€" One has only to attend the conâ€" cert to note how the music curricâ€" ulum is enriched for these youngâ€" sters through the medium of the District orchestra. hattan and at the naval base in versity. ~He was principal of the high school at Pleasantville, N. Y., high school band or orchestra. Approaching Marriage of Washington Girl to Lt. Coradr. Millard Lake Forest School Superintendent to Speak at Eim Place 7“.“â€,;:!;@., at Elm Place school, Mr. Frederick Quinlan will speak on Art and Edâ€" ucation. Supterintendent of Lake Forest public schools, he came from New York and received his education at Union college, Schenâ€" The wedding will take place in Washington on April 26. Katonah, N. Y. His subject will be "Punctions of Art and Music in the School Curriculam." He will state what kinds \of art and music are best, how much is necessary, and how to present the subjects. chairman, will introduce the speakâ€" er. Everyone is invited. " them for the of schools at T HE PRESS Ravinia Garden Club Exhibit Spring Flowers The Garden Guild of Highland Park and the Ravinia Garden club will enter exhibits in the twentieth annual spring flower show of the Garden Club of Illinois to be held at Marshall Field & Co., Monday, April 8, through Saturday, April 20. » It will be the fourth "Fashâ€" ions in Flowers" the organization has given as a war time show, which took the place of the large Chicago Flower show given at Navy Pier from 1933 through 1941. Seventyâ€"three community garâ€" den clubs, most of them in or near Chicago, will be represented at the show with one or more exhibits. There will be planted gardens and many classes of flower arrangeâ€" ments. Mrs. L. Th Warren, long a member of tb:?l:wtr show execuâ€" tive committee, will be the chairâ€" man of the show. Mrs. O. W. Dynes, chairman of the Chicago Flower show for many years, will be honorary chairman. Other comâ€" mittee members include: Mrs, Raymond Knotts, Mrs. J. Wilson McAllister, Mrs. David R. Howerâ€" ton, Mrs. George M. Kendall, Mrs. Albert °C. Ross, Mrs. Raymond Mrs. Archer Entertains Board; New Members of Infant Welfare Society Rohde, Miss Ann L. Lyons, Mrs. Bertha L. Downes, Mrs, Wilbur E. Fribley, Mrs. Henry W. Shedd and Mrs. Frederick Julstrom. _ Miss Elizabeth R. Howland is president of the Garden Club of Illinois, Inc. The 24 new members of the junâ€" ior group of the Highland Parkâ€" Ravinia center of the Infant Welâ€" fare sociéty were guests Tuesday afternoon of last week at a tea in the home of ‘Mrs. Ralph Archer, president of the group. Mrs. John Morrissy, membership chairman, and Mrs. Philip A. Wat. son, first viceâ€"president, presided at the tea table. Members of Mrs. Archer‘s board were also invited to meet the new members, who are as follows: Mrs. Lewis E. Baker, Mrs. R. H. Brownlee, Mrs. Mac F. Cahal, Mrs. Donald Dennett, Mrs. F. O. Dicus, Mrs. Graydon Ellis, Mrs. George D. Harrison, Mrs. Kenneth Lineâ€" berry, Mrs. Edward Loevenhart, Mrs. Norman P. Macinnis. ORT To Hold ~ 8th Annual Dance Sunday, March 17 Chicago Junior ORTâ€" (Organizaâ€" tion for Rehabilitation Through Training) will hold its 8th annual dance at the Gold room of the Conâ€" gress hotel, Sunday evening, March 17. â€" Music will be by Lew Mrs. T. â€"V. MecDavitt, Mrs. Charfes Morrow, Mrs. Herbert Rieâ€" gelman, Mrs. L. R. C. Robinson, Mrs. Homer Sams, Mrs. Henry C Schroeder, Mrs. surlin‘ ï¬n')w;. Mrs. John H. Kies, Mrs. Gustavu: DLCCCTCCZ AN0D. O ACTEY AUsCR Mrs. Lester Ball, Mrs. William Holâ€" man, Mrs. T. J. Connelly, and Mrs. H. F. Hendrickson. Eighth Graders at Elm Place Receive High School Pointers which is seeking to raise $250,000 as its quota towards the world ORT goal of $5,000,000. § ORT maintains trade schools, inâ€" dustrial workshopé, vocational and agricultural training centers for Jewish refugees in Europe and the displaced persons camps. Last evening . (Wednesday), Miss Betty Blaul, guidance direcâ€" tor at the Highland Park high school, was present at an Eim Place PTA meeting, when she inâ€" troduced the 8th grade students at Elm Place to the intricacies of high school registration, curricuâ€" lum and school activies. Saturday, March 16â€" 8 p.m. Saturday Evening club. Sunday, March 17â€" Diamond and his orchestra. . The proceeds will be given to the 1946 Chicago ORT campaign, A.°E. Wolters of the high school, George C. Steward, dean of boys, EVC PRBPEC PRBPCIgCC, CORn OP girls, who answered any questions put to them as to the business of the evening. dent of Elm Place PTA and Mrs. Monday, March 18â€" 8:00 p.m. OES. Tuesday, March 19â€" and Elyce Wednesday, March 20â€" 8:00 p.m. Great Books study. Thursday, March 21â€" 10:30 a.m. Creative Writers. 10 :30 a.m. Red Cross. T:80 p.m. Painting class. 10 a.m. Interfaith group. YWCA CALENDAR s of Â¥ the junâ€" d Parkâ€" ant. Welâ€" Tuesday the war, in which Mr. Elston servâ€" ed as a lieutenant in the navy, they lived in Philadelphia . He is now Mr. and Mrs. P. F. Lavedan moved from Hartsdale, N. Y., the first of this month, and are now living with their family at 195 Laurel © The family consists of two daughters, Denny and Dix, of high school and college age, reâ€" spectively, and a son, Pierre, aged 11. Mr. Lavedan is president of Liquid Carbonic corporation, Chicago. . , The W. H. Elstons, 245 Cary, are not really newcomers, having son, Johnny, 3% born in the ‘ o , Wwas Highland Park hospital . During for Marshall Field & Co., Chicago. Bradford Larson, Out Of Navy, Plans to Live in Boston Bradford Larson, son of the Alâ€" bert Larsons, 133 S. Green Bay, and a former lieutenant, has been released from the navy where he served for two years. . With his wife ‘and young son, Kent, he is now â€"visiting in Kansas City, Mo., Omaha, Nebr., Council Bluffs, Ta., and Springfield, Mo. The young Larsons plan to make their home Aute Reconstruction Co. Dynamic Wheel Balancing Body & Fender Repairing Auto Painting â€" Blacksmithing 322 N. First Highland Park 77 THE CHRISTIAN SCIENCE READING ROOM Maintained by First Church of Christ, Scientist Highland Park, Hlinois Fully qualifed by temperatment and 20 years extensive practice in the Probate Court 1. lb-fluohhh‘..-*.*m:vh.‘ï¬. him to serve as a fair and impartial Judge. 2. He will devote the full time during regular hours to the work of the office. c 3. He will holid Court three days of every week; oftener if there is any general need or demand for it. Willis A. Overholser, if elected, pledges himself, while patterning his administration of the Probate Court after the dfldâ€"ua-fljflmd&.n&hmbmm effort to perform the duties of his high according to these regulations: 4. On remaining weekâ€"days he will maintain regular office hours «t the Judge‘s Chambers for consultation with attorneys in regard to uncontested procedure and to handle emergency court matters. 5. Tohq&&w!q-a.ï¬'-u."*.o leaves without arranging to have another to substitate for him on court excepting, however, for emergâ€" :*o‘aflmhï¬o?-’h*-h-.o-‘fl-h those cases he will endeavor to provide the services of another 6. He will keep abrcast of current high court decisions and eb-.-h.om:". y 7. His will be to provide the highest service b‘tyz-‘qfl]*-h‘-h'hw the work of the Probate Court. CAST YOUR BALLOT IN THE REPUBLICAN PRIMARIES x OVERHOLSER A for quiet and study, where the Bible, fln:-‘ quiet thought y be read, borrowed, or purchased $ D A HL S PROBATE JUDGE Hours: Week Days m on reaulns tours daye enceptine. howaver, for amort» 43 NORTH SHERIDAN ROAD WILLIS A. Elks Will Hold St. Patrick Dance Saturday, March 16 A St. Patrick‘s Day dance will be held Saturday evening, March l(.h-g'nnh.u'o'el.et.hm hall. Election of officers will also be held on this date. 4410 ‘Railway Ave. H‘wood 2426 Vegetables â€" Monarch Finer Foods L We Deliver GLENCOE THEATRE . 630 Vernon Ave. Highland Park 605 Doors open Thurs.â€"Fri., 5:30 Show starts at 6 o‘clock. . Sat., doors open 12:30, show starts at 1 o‘clock. SUN. to WED. _ Mar. 17 to 20 Barry Fitzgerald, June Duprez "And Then There Were THU., FRL, SAT., Mar. 21â€"23 Robt. Montgomery, John Wayne ‘They Were Expendable‘ QUALITY ALWAYS Fresh Poultry â€" Meats â€" Fish 9:80 am to 5:30 pm 9:30 am to 9:00 pm 2:30 pm to 5:20 pm "Vacation from Marriage" "The Enchanted Forest" "She Wouldn‘t Say Yes" , FRL, SAT., Mar. 14â€"16 All in Technicolor Walt Disney‘s Page 3