WINNETKA TALK March 24, 1928 Every Department Athletic Department Baseball time is just around = the corner. We handle offi- # cial Spalding goods. Baseball Bats Baseball Mitts © lig Gloves Indoor ¥ Outdoor Baseballs Office Supplies Every type of office supplies can be obtained in this store. We handle only the best qual- ity merchandise at low prices. Steel Files 8 Filing Equip- ment Desks and Chairs Typewriters and Supplies Desk Lamps Ledger Outfits Desk Blotter Pads Waste Paper Baskets Pencil Sharpeners Newest Books Crusade Fireflies by Donn Byrne by R. Tagore Mr. Hodge 8 Mr. Hazard Disraeli by Elinor Wylie ; by Andre Maurois Leave Me With a Smile Strange Interlude by E. W. Springs by Eugene ONeill Gift Shop Items Our gift shop on the first floor offers the following suggestions for your selec- tion. Desk Sets Candy Jars Decorative Pitchers Playing Cards Bridge Prizes © Tallies Greeting Cards for every occasion. [] (1 Stationery Supplies A full line of stationery and office supplies can be bought at the store or can be ordered specially. STATIONERY FOR HOME: STATIONERY FOR THE OFFICE: Pound Papers Typewriting Paper Economy Boxes Stenographers' Notebooks Gift Boxes with gay linings Notebook Supplies Note Papers Card Files Correspondence Cards Yellow 2nd Sheets Miscellaneous TOY DEP'T. ART DEPT. A complete line of toys on 3rd Free instructions given in newest floor. Spring decorations for the home. Coaster Wagons Parchment Shades Metal Tricycles Screens Kiddie Cars Lacquered Novelties Games of all kinds Text Books and School Supplies Chandler's FOUNTAIN SQUARE EVANSTON UN1v. 123 630 DAVIS ST. Timely Hints from Jack and Jill Theatre in Shakespeare Fund Benefit A special performance of "The Tam- ing of the Shrew" for the benefit of the American Shakespeare Foundation fund will be given by the junior com- pany of the Jack and Jill theater, 943 Rush street, Chicago, in the Gold room at the Drake hotel Saturday at 3 P. M., March 24. : The junior company is made up of children from four to fourteen years old and astonishing as it may seem to those who are unacquainted with the innate dramatic ability of children, this child cast handles Shakespeare's metered lines with complete natural- ness and comprehension. The child audiences which have seen the play in the Jack and Jill theater have taken the greatest delight in Petrucchio's high-handed methods with his dis- agreeable bride. After all, the basic story of "The Taming of the Shrew" is merely that of a badtempered per- son being liberally dosed with his own medicine, and everyone knows how children adore seeing the wicked given their come-uppance. Groups from several of the suburban schools have been active in.the plans for this benefit and are making up parties of school children to see the performance Saturday. Six Italians Carry Out Vow to Become Citizens A group of six friends camei td Glencoe from Italy soon after the war to make their homes on the north shore and with the avowed purpose of becoming American citizens. On March 13, Fred Sacco, the last of the group to obtain citizenship, was given his final papers. Oreste Amici was the first to become a citizen, getting his papers last fall. Since then Nar- cissus Ferraro, John Sacco, Joe Marchioretto, and Pete Marchioretto have obtained their naturalization credentials. EXHIBITS PICTURE Miss Caroline Louise Burnham, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Burnham, 1407 Tower road, received the honor of having one of her pic- tures accepted in the exhibition of paintings by artists of Chicago and vicinity, which is now on view at the Art institute. The title of the picture is "Rio Terra." C. N. Stokes, former instructor of mathematics at New Trier High school, recently stopped for a short visit at the home of Mr. and Mrs. B. N. Dox, 1116 Elmwood avenue, Wil- mette. Hope to Begin Work on Evanston Light System by Sept. 1 Work may start on Evanston's pro- posed $1,750,000 city-wide lighting sys- tem by Sept. 1, according to the lat- est estimates. At the meeting of the city council March 13, the project was turned over to the board of local im- provements by the council's lighting committee, which had mulled it over for almost two years. The routes and circuits and general building plans have been worked out by the engineers, and now it is up to the board and the art commission to select the type of posts and lamps and decide on other features of physical appear- ance. The council has indicated by resolu- tion that it favors 20-foot lamp posts around Fountain square, 18-foot ones along the principal business streets and boulevards and 15-foot ones else- where, the Fountain square posts to carry two lamps and the others one, "New Attitude Toward Sex"--Topic at Forum "Our New Attitudes Toward Sex-- Promise or Menace?" will be t ject for discussion at the m g the Uptown Forum Sunday evening, March 25. The speakers will be Prof. Arthur J. Todd of Northweste i versity and Dr. Edward N. man, a physician and psy gist. Both speakers have made tant studies of the sex problem. discussion period will follow the two addresses. This will be the final meeting of the season for the Uptown Forum, which meets in the Peoples' church at 941 Lawrence avenue, Chicago, at 8 P.M. GIVE DANCES Several dances will attract the younger set of the north shore this week-end. Pi Beta Phi is giving a subscription dance at the O g hotel March 23. Kappa Sigr is giving its subscription dance that same evening at the North Shore hotel, and Phi Nu Beta has selected Satur- day evening, March 24, for a formal dinner dance at the Sovereign hotel. GIVE DINNER FOR CAST Mrs. E. A. Rummler, 1015 Starr road, Winnetka, and Mrs. Louis A. Sherman, 1062 Ash street, Winnetka, entertained the members of the cast of the play, "Love in a Mist" and their husbands and wives at a dinner party at the home of Mrs. Rummler on Fri- day evening, March 23.