24 WINNETKA TALK wr s---- November 6, 1926 a -------- S "CAPTAIN APPLEJACK" New Trier High School Dramatic Club to Present Walter Hackett Play Saturday, November 20 By G. W. C. "Yo-ho-ho and a bottle of rum, Fifteen men on a dead man's chest, Fifteen men on a dead man's chest. Yo-ho-ho and a bottle of rum." What visions and dashing scenes that vigorous old ditty brings before the eyes of all boys--boys of sixty as well as sixteen. Pirates! Flashing cutlasses! Ransomed maidens! Gold! Mutiny! And all the other thrilling! things that go with the glamour of old- time piracy. And wouldn't it be a splendid ad- venture for anyone to have those visions come true and to see those scenes enacted before his very eyes? Well, anyone can make those visions come true. How? Simply by buying a ticket for "Captain Applejack," a play by Walter Hackett, which the New Trier Dramatic club is going to present Saturday evening, Novem- ber 20, in the high school auditorium. In this play Mr. Hackett has writ- ten a rollicking, adventurous comedy, | which tells how one Ambrose Apple- JUST A FEW WORDS To BILL the Washday Is Removed from Your Calendar and Your Mind CALL IN BILL TODAY-- HE'S IN YOUR NEIGHBORHOOD TODAY--AND EVERY DAY 20% Discount on work brought in and called for he Washington 700-704 Washington Strest Phone WILMETTE 1:5 Washington Laundry Laundry EVANSTON, ILL. john, becoming bored with the rut into which he has fallen, tries to get out of it. One thing that helps him great- ly and also shows him that ruts aren't so bad after all is a glorious piratical dream that he has. In his dream he is seen as Captain Applejack, a hearty pirate of the seventeenth century. And it is in this dream that the audience will be thrilled by daggers and villians and a fair captured maiden. However, this pirate scene is not the only one that provides thrills, for the rest of the play abounds with pistols and burglars and all sorts of escapades. And in between every two thrills in "Captain Applejack" there is a good, big laugh. One of the biggest of these follows when Ambrose, forgetting that he is no longer Applejack, the pirate, as he was in his dream, shocks his dear, respectable Auntie by telling her to "stir her stumps." So if anyone feels the need of get- ting out of a rut, let "Captain Apple- jack" help him, with his rollicking, chanty, "Yo-ho-ho and a bottle of Mr. and Mrs. Clarence E. Drayer, 1034 Elmwood, attended the Illinois- Pennsylvania game at Champaign last week-end. --Ye Olde Haylofte 626 GROVE STREET Corner of Sherman Phone Greenleaf 140 FAMOUS Served Daily $7.00 5:00 to 8:00 Sundays DINNER 12:00 to 9:00 MENU for SUNDAY November 7th Consomme' Julienne or Cream of Chicken, Princess J = Celery Mixed Olives Choice of Fresh Shrimp, Creole Omellette with Fresh Fruit Chicken Fricassee with Rice Roast Young Chicken Giblet Sauce Roast Prime Ribs of Beef au Jus. Asparagus Mashed or Fried in Cream Sweet Potatoes Rolls and Butter Hearts of Lettuce 1000 Island Dressing Sherbet Choice of Apple Pie with Cheese, Hot Mince, Pumpkin, Pineapple Pie, Fruit Jello, New York, Strawberry, Chocolate Ice Cream or Orange Ice. Coffee--Tea--Milk $1.50 The above Dinner with a Choice of 14 Fried or Broiled Spring Chicken, or a Large Juicy Sirloin Steak. No Cover Charge Sundaus or Dur- ing Dinner Hours on Week Days. HAVE YOU HAD ONE OF OUR FAMOUS 45¢ LUNCHEONS? Show Prevention Better Than Care in Social Service Eleven thousand nine hundred and thirteen families in which there were more than fifty thousand persons, mostly women and little children, were given help by the Family Service de- I partment of the United Charities of Chicago during the twelve months' period ending September 30, 1926, ac- cording to the annual service report of that organization mailed to its con- tributors this week. | Eighteen thousand four hundred and' fifty-nine legal cases of men and wom- en who through inability to pay regu- lar attorney fees would have been de- prived of justice, were handled free of charge by the Legal Aid bureau of the society, and $72,485 was collected by this bureau for its clients during the year, on claims for wages and miscellaneous debts due them, and which they otherwise might not have received. Even more significant than these two outstanding items in the Service Re- port of this city-wide general charity, and indicative of the emphasis now placed on prevention rather than cure in modern social work, is the item stat- ing that 9,505 of the 11,913 families ap- pealing to the Family Service depart- ment of the society for help during the twelve months did not need ma- terial relief, but were kept from be- coming dependent through their utili- zation of the services and resources placed at their disposal by the trained workers of the United Charities. Mrs. James Parker of Los Gates, Cal, is the guest of Mrs. Ernest von Ammon, 568 Elm street. Mrs. W. W. Shoemaker of 45 Green Bay road en- tertained in honor of Mrs. Parker at a card party Thursday afternoon. FOR WINTER WARMTH Give your children plenty of pure milk and they will be able to keep warm in spite of winter's chill. Then they can withstand the attacks of | dread disease. 4"