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Text
vvith
all
the nevvs
i6®
FIRST
�~
"PEPPER" says:
The 59's are ON THE WAY!
RAMBLER
1>1
SKOKIE
8064 LINCOLN AVENUE
ORchard 6-9300
pae,,, &fi4tee,e
RAMBLERS
RAMBL~R 6 SUPER 4-DOOR HARDTOP
~tr NOW!
Yes . . . the 1959 Ramblers are coming and we're loaded
with brand new 1958's that have to go this month. So -take
'em while they last at the lowest price ever ... with the
famous Peter Epsteen king-size trade-in allowance, a minimum down payment and low, low, LOW monthly payments!
Don't Wait Any Longer!
DELUXE6-
eome 1" 7fKWI
THIS IS OUR ...
CUSTOM 6 OR, REBEL V-8-
FINAL PRICE -CUT!
SUPER 6 OR REBEL V-8-
064
Ll■col■
Ave., Skokie
o,eN
0A1Lv
·r1LL
10 P.M.
0Rchard 6-9300
�64 CARS SOLD IN TEN DAYS
-58 PONTIACS
MUST GO THIS MONTH
2-DOOR' SEDAN
Hyd ramati c, heater, d ir
li te s , etc.
s2475
1957 PONTIACS
·.i·,w::•·,.
··.. ·-:-..
2-DOOR SEDAN
With Hydramatic, Radio
Heate r, and White Walls :
PRICED BELOW OUR
ORIGINAL COST:
$1695. 00
/let 1ltoaeu / I ~
including 17 CONVERTIBLES and
9 ST A TION WAGONS
~ett ~ ~ , , ,
pi ~ea s ~
OPEN
DAILY
'Till 10 P.M.
�THE
I
·..__ _ _ _ _ _
THE ONLY JALOUSIE
WITH POSITIVE GEA/1TIIA(K OPE/IAIJON
lncornpora&fe!
offered!
Tbe figbfesf closure of any Jo/ousfe Ye•
I
••d
•onsfrucfed to offer
Designed
•on,p/ete Pl"Ofecfioo against tl,e rigor,
of our norfftern clirnote.
• • • Just PERFECT for your Porch, fornl/y
roo,n or breezeway enclosure.
consultation. No
Please .phoneh:::oeaver for estimates.
o&ligat,on w
inc.
�September 11 , 1958
TH E VILL AGE R
Rotary Speaker Traces Skokie's
Growth With Phone Directories
Chang es which have occurred in the Skokie community
as sho wn in the pag e s o f the
telephone directories were discu s sed a t a recent S kokie
Rotary Club luncheo n meeting .
Dr. L. W. Ruttenberg, Club
treasurer, i ntro duced the gue s t
spea ker, Thoma s E. Gause of
the Reub e n H . Donnelley
corporation ,
publishing and
a dvertisin g
s ervice s
firm ,
Chicago .
The s tory of the gro wth and
progre s s of the community as
tol d in th e page s of t he directorie s was dis cus s e d. In
1948 Skoki e ha d a t wo column
.directory; the re were 7 , 500
telephones . Today the Skokie
direc tory has three co lumns;
the community has 57,200
telephones .
Gause dis cussed the more
than 100 classific a tions in the
current dire ctory which did not
appear in the 1957 directory .
Su ch new headings appear as
" beds-concealed" ;
"lawn
maintenance' ' ; ''terrazza contractors";
"sewer floodin g
control systems"; "doughnut
shops" , etc .
Gause . brought with him a
copy of the first Skokie directory, printed in 1909.
The end of an era as shown
Fall Program At St. Peter's
St. Peter' s United Church
of Christ will begin its fall
recrea tion a l s chedule on Frida y , Sept. 12. The crusaders
recreation ( third through sixth
grade s) will be from 3: 30 until
3
~i-·
True Values
'·"!: ;.~ ~
in the yellow pages was discussed .
The speaker had with him
two directories from the 1930's:
1933 contained the headi ng
"Soft Drink Parlors". In 1934,
it was: "Soft Drink Parlors
See Beer Taverns . ''
Mu si c For A l l Occa si on s
by the
?
,
For the Large Family . . .
• Ex ce l lent Co ndition
• 4 Bedro o ms
• 2 Ba ths
• Basement Income Unit
• .½ bl ock from Lincoln & Ookton
• l ½-Car Garage
L Tucke r Trio
e-s
Phone UN 4 -0279
Hove Portable Electric
Piano, Wil l Tr av el
Bobby Ro bins on, bus. mg r.
•••
ONLY
$19,900
Krier Bros. Realtors
4954 Oakton St., Skokie
ORchard 3-5200
4: 30. At 4: 30 the junior choir
will rehearse . The junior high
re creation ( sev.enth and eighth
grades) will be from 7 until
9 p.m .
ON NEW 1958
CHRYSLERS • IMPERIALS
PLYMOUTHS
F ull Length Genuine
LEATHER
COATS
F ashioned for style,
versatility and warmth
Wi th Alpaca Zip-out
Lining
CUSTOMER
SATISF ACTION
IS OU,R
MOTTO
TRY OUR
SE RVIC E
With Quilted Zip-·out
Lining
$629,
5
•
LEATHER
JACKETS
$49.95
- - - - - - - - - - U S E D CAR SPECIALS--- ------.
AT OUR LOT AT 4220 N. CICERO
MU 5-. 703
3
Alpa ca Z i p-Out L in ing
56 CHRYSLER NEW YORKER 4-DR.
2- T ONE GREE N. "Pwr. steer. &
brake s, a uto . trans ., Rad . , Htr. ,
white wall tire s . . ..... . . . . . . . . . . . . . $1642.20
T hese coa ls were made
to sell up to $110.00
L ea th er coats· look
sm ar t in th e F all,
Win ter, and Spring.
57 PLYMOUTH 4-DR . HARDTOP
Sizes 8 to 16
Choose yours today from a wide selection.
IN SKOKIE
CHARGE ACCOUNTS
WELCO M E
•~"".:
5047 OAKTON STREET
O RC H A R D 5-8800
BRAS
&
GIRDLES
FITTED BY EXPERTS
OPEN
M ONDAY
AND
FRIDAY EVENINGS
'T I L 9 P. M .
VS
Wh ite & B lue Auto . T ra ns , Rad., Ht r. ,
White Wa ll Tire s F ull Pric e . . . . . . $1042. 20
54 PL YMOU T H SAVOY 2D R.
2-T one copper a nd wh ite .• Auto .
T ra ns . , Ra d . , !-ltr., White Wa ll
T ires . A real beaut y at ... . . .. . .. . $1642.20
Beautifully rich co lors in white , beige, black, blue.
at ~ ·
55 FORD V I CT ORIA
2 T one Gree n Rad . , Htr ., White Wa ll Tire s
F ull Pric e .. . . . ... . . . .... .... . $442 . 20
TOM LYONS
You r Mo st Conv en i ent Authorized I mper i al-Chry s ler Plymout h Dea ler
- REE LOANER SERVICE WHILE YOUR CAR IS BEING SERVICED
4201 N. MILWAUKEE
4156 N. MILWAUKEE
PAiisade S-6750
MUiberry S-3700
OPEN SUNDAYS
�September 11 , 1958
THE VILLAGER
4
Nilehi
Auto Schedule
Key members of the Niles Township Regular Democratic Organi•
zation are shown above as the y assembled at Oakton and Floral
Monday night for bus trip to Chicago and the Democratic state
convention at Medinah Temple . Committeeman Martin "Scotty"
Krier is in grey suit, second from right, among men sta11;dees.
Committeewoman Mrs. Ruth Janis , in dark dress, is fourth from
right in front row of assembled ladies .
NEW RESTAURANT
Charlie Wenk's, Inc . , Cantonese caterers from Highland
Park has opened a new restaurant a t 4417½ Oakton in Skokie .
Wenk's employs a staff of
Cantonese
experienced
13
chefs and provides a complete
catering service for private
and
organizations
parties ,
clubs .
Officials announced that the
new Skokie operation will be
patterned after the highly suc·
cessful Highland Park spot. It
will feature carry-out, pick-up
a nd delivery service.
"Don't Be Tied to Your Telephone"
24-HOUR Telephone Answering
Is OUR Business!
For Physicians, Dentists, Businessmen
and Individuals
PHYSICIANS' AND DENTISTS'
TELEPHONE EXCHANGE
Old Orchard P~ofessional Bldg.
OR 3-8606
64 Old Orchard - Sl<okie
Carlson Bu.ilding
DA 8·8187
636 Church St , - Evanston
SPECIAL VACATION SERVICE
Five Years
COME ONE ! COME ALL !
SEE YOUR FAVORITE STARS!
This Will Be One of the Highlites of the Season
Gala Grand Opening
_
I SATURDAY,SEPT.20th
Parents bringing high"school
students to the West Campus
by car on school mornings are
asked to enter the grounds
either by driveway I off Oakton
St., or by driveway III off Gross
Point Rd . , John Gach, West
Division principal has announced.
Drivers bringing students in
from the north, Oakton St . side
will turn and unload on the
· paved loop flanking the school
auditorium. Students will enter
the building through the auditorium foyer via doors 22 and
23.
Cars arnvrng from Gross
Point Rd. will turn into the
south parking area for unloading, and students will enter
the building from this point
via doors 3, 4, and 5.
Drivers coming to pick up
West Division students at the
close of any school day are
asked to use the same entries
to the grounds as for morning
driveway I from
delivery;
Oakton St. and driveway III
from Gross Point Rd. They may
park in the auditorium loop on
the north side and in the south
parking area on the south .
Students will then depart for
these loading points by the
same building doorways they
used to enter the building upon
arrival.
View of International Minerals & Chemical Corporation's new
administrative and research center, looking northwest across
reflecting pool in main plaza, shows, left to right, operations
building, operations annex and administration building.
International Minerals & Chemical Corporation form a 11 y
opened its $5 million administrative and research· center in
Skokie this week with a series
of open houses attended by a
total of more than 3,000 guests.
Employes played host to
their families and friends at
the new six-building headquarters Sunday. Community leaders
from Skokie and North Shore
area were Monday's guests
and Chicago civic and business
dignitaries visited the Center
Tuesday.
There are 600 employes at
the new headquarters center
of International, which is a
leader in the mining, refining,
and processing of non-metallic
ores and chemical derivatives,
with 68 mines and plants and
a product list that totals 60
items.
The center comprises five
buildings just completed and
a Research center built on the
21-acre site in 1951.
- - - O N E DAY ONLY----
~
_
1
~
Designed by Perkins & Will,
architectural firm,
Chicago
the center is the newest addition to the expanding greater
Chicago skyline and is described
as a new and unique concept
in business environment.
Harms Woods
Adjoining
Forest Preserve on the west,
the multiunit center fronts on
a central plaza with a patio
and reflecting pool, and is
landscaped to create a campus
atmosphere .
The center has its own heli
port, located atop its administration building, which puts
the city's major airports only
minutes away. The central
five-story administration unit
is the first office building in
the country with its own heliport incorporated in the original
design .
The company started in 1909,
producing phosphate and mixed
fertilizer, and has grown from
$5 million in annual sales then
to more than $100 million now.
Fall Fashions
0
·tt-ek
d
The Villager this week
carries a complete rundown
of fall fashions for men and
women-keyed to what Niles
Township residents can be
expected to be wearing.
pdud
.. . for the style conscious lass to
look casual with class! In sumptuous
north african glove grain leather.
white, blue, pink, orange, black,
moss and beige . sizes 7-17;
8-18. choose from this or 4
other styles equally chic .
regularly at $39. 95 ... this
week only
38
LANES
BOWL
ON WAUKEGAN ROAD AT CALDWELL
(JUST SOUTH OF DEMPSTER )
CHOICE LEAGUE TIMES STILL AVAILABLE
Also Teams and Individual Bowlers for Our Men's,
Ladies' and Mixed House Leagues
ORchard 5-9300
FREE BOWLING TIPS • SUPERVISED NURSERY
Societ y editor Sheryl Leonard
and chief photographer Norman
Knabush hav e collaborated on
a number of illustrated feature
articles on local and national
fashion trends.
special at $35.00
also full-length leather
coats, with zip-out orion
pile lining, the season's
i
§
smartest . . . regularly
at $85.00 this week only
special at $79.95
(\':;~;.;:.-:s~;::t"
«::"'
-::: ~, ~
and.. .
our unsurpassed alterations
For -example: the tricky little
item shown here-a belted
chemise blouse made in dripdry cotton with soft-rolled
collar, roll-up sleeves and
and matching belt, featured at
Margie's in Skokie.
I
_
~
l"""""""'•111•1•1111~1m1111u11111001:,~,:~~:,.11100111•1111~111:,~;:~~1~:~:1,:,:,::,:,1111m1111m11J
For more on the latest wordand picture - on fashions, turn
to the Feature Section.
�Published Weekly by Presscraft Co., 4846 Main Street, Skokie, Illinois
THOMAS E. BRANAGAN , EDITOR & PUBLISHER
ORchard 6-3535
E ntered as 2nd class matter May 7, 1958, at the post
office at Skokie, Illinois, under the Act of March 3, 1879.
Thursday, September 11, 1958
Volume 1 Number 22
M o rton G ro ve Trustees
~?.~~~.,~,~!.~ ~h~!:L.~~~,!~,~
in which Mayor Jack Koller
b
·1
an d severa l counc1 mem ers
came to verbal blows, the Grove
Auto Hotel located in th e
Classic Bowl building at Waukegan and Caldwell was again
denied a building permit by the
Morton Grove village board
Tuesday night.
Mayor Koller again urged
that the motel, to be operated
by Mr. and Mrs. Paul Alongi,
be given a building permit.
During the lengthy hassle, he
won Trustees Shea and Breese
over to his side, but Trustees
Geise, Meyer, Reiter and St.
Pierre voted against the permit.
Koller contended that the
Alongis had done ·nothing
illegal and were entitled to a
permit. He felt that they would
get it ultimately so why delay
the verdict.
The dissenting foursome said
they didn't want to be railroaded into making any fast
decision, while denying the
pei:mit, agreed to take the
matter up again for a final decision next Tuesday.
Their gripe was the way the
motel entrepreneurs went 3 bout
putting their project through.
While the building at Waukegan
and Caldwell was okayed for
business purposes, it was not
specifically okayed for a motel.
The dissenting trustees contended that the Alongis shifted
to a motel operation without
getting the village board's
approval.
Counsel Emanuel A. Rissman
pleaded that · the board give
his clients, the Alongis, a permit as they were suffering undue hardship. He contended
that the building commissioner
and fire marshall had okayed
building plant5 calling for a
motel and on this basis the
Alongis had sunk their life
savings of $25,000 into the
proposed auto hotel.
lengthy
What caused the
session were delegations of
property owners who contended
that it was not right for the
board to issue a permit for one
type of business, only to find
that the permit was being utilized for another p u r po s e.
Specifically, in this case a
permit was given for small
shops and business offices.
Later, without getting an okay,
the building owners leased the
gpace for an auto hotel of 17
units.
What finally satisfied the
property owners was a pledge
by the board to have a ruling
ready and passed next Tuesday
no interior or exterior structural changes can be made on
any new construction in the
village, without getting a permi"t from Mayor Koller.
This ruling will be a .. stopgap" measure until the new
zoning law and building code,
to be unveiled next week, is
finally adopted after public
hearings and debates are held.
I d
Port an
Cement
Opens New
Laboratory
The Portland Cement Assn.
Monday unveiled its new Skokie
structural laboratory, a unique
facility which may have a
revolutionary effect on future
structural testing laboratories.
Instead of housing testing
machines, the laboratory is a
giant testing machine in itself,
capable of exerting test forces
greater than 10 million lb.
The key to the laboratory's
capabilities is the 56 x 120-ft.
test floor. It is designed, using
design methods, to act as a
girder
hollow concrete box
in the longitudinal direction
and a Vierendel girder in the
transverse direction. The overall depth of this girder is 12 ft .
with the first floor slab joined
to the basement floor slab by
8- ½ ft. high webs. The first
floor slab is pierced by a total
of 690 holes, on 3 ft. centers,
by means of which loads are
applied and test , specimens
are secured. All test loads
are produced by hydraulic jacks.
This design gives the laboratory an almost limitless
Any structural
flexibility.
element from a short girder
to a full-size floor slab or roof
shell can be loaded to destruction.
The laboratory is situated
at 5420 Old Orchard Road.
(Editor's note: For a comprehensive feature and picture
story on the new structural
laboratory, and its amazing
capabilities, see next week's
Villager.)
UNSA FE
A charge of perm1ttmg the
structure at 6536 Milwaukee
avenue, Niles township, to
become unsafe from hazards
of fire and collapse is lodged
against George Eckhoff m a
County court complaint.
City-V illage Dispute Goes
Before the Circuit Court
G r1•ff•1n c •tes
I
Curfew Laws
For
d
ch·, 1 re n
Skokie Police. Chief William
C. Griffin this week called
attention to two local ordinances intended to protect
youn g ste rs from a n Y c r·m1
1 ·nally
·
me
me 1· d s t rangers m th e
"lla ge .
Vl
One ordinance deems it a
misdemeanor for anyone to
"loaf or lounge" in Skokie. A
fine of 3 to 10 dollars can be
given offenders.
A second ordinance cited by
Chief Griffin calls for youngsters under 15 to be off the
streets by 8 p.m. unless accompanied by a parent or adults
(unaccompanied youngsters can
be on the streets till 9 . p.m .
in summer time - from March
1st through August 31st).
youngsters are
Employed
exempt from the curfew law.
Children out "after hours"
are to be taken to their home,
according to the ordinance .
·
· h h f h --------------h
in the last municipal election.
W en ever one·etg t O t e
.
l ectors O f any city voting at
Scheduled to hear the case
e
· ·
·
t h e l ast prece d tng muntctpa z was Judge Harry Fisher.
election petition the corporate
Sponsors of the petition say
·
· ·
aut h ortttes t h ereo f to su b mtt
their interpretation of the law
·
.
t he question w h et h er t h e city
is that anyone registered to
·
·
s h a ll incorporate un d er t h ts
vote in the last municipal elec•
act to a vote of t h e e l ectors tn
tion is eligible to sign.
t h e city, t he corporate aut h orThe Skokie board said the
ll su b mit this question
ities sha
wording of the law clearly into a vote o f t h e e l ectors o f t h e
dicates that signees must actucity at an election to be held
ally have vored in the election.
in the city within 60 days from
Harry Levick, chairman of
the date of filing such petition.
a group called the Skokie Civic
A spirited and expensive
Federation, formed to push the
court battle seemed assured
referendum, said several attorfor Skokie today over the wordneys have given opinions that
ing of the foregoing passage of
the former interpretation 1s
the Illinois Statutes.
correct.
Sponsors of a petition for a
However, L. 0. Green,
referendum on whether Skokie,
veteran civic leader who heads
now a village, should become
an organization which has
a city went to Circuit Court
vowed to fight any such change
this morning for a writ of manin government, said:
damus ordering such an elec"The law is specific in that
tion.
valid signatures are only those
of persons who have voted.
Skokie trustees last Tuesday
The trustees had to follow the
night tossed out the petitions,
law. It seems a shame to put
saying 1,139 of 2,748 signathe village to the expense of
tures turned in by the pro-city
people were invalid because
all this legal business, for no
good reason . "
these persons had not voted
It was learned that the procity government people had
asked Judge Fisher to order the
village of Skokie to pay the
costs and attorney's fees of
their court fight.
Charge Dale Boy
With Manslaughter
A court will deter min e
whether Jeffry Bruce Dale, 13,
deliberately shot his mother,
Erna, 42, in their Skokie home
Aug. 18.
Young Dale reportedly was
ch a r g e d with manslaughter
Tuesday by the Cook County
grand jury. The action followed
lines of a recommendation by
a coroner's jury Aug. 27.
Mrs. Dale was shot twice in
the head as she lay on a davenport in her living room. The
youngster claims the shots
were fired accidentally.
However, Chief of Detectives
Martin J. Conroy of Skokie says
the boy changed his account
of the slaying three times. In
a·ddition, certain doubts have
been raised as to how two such
accurate shots could have been
fired accidentally.
Authorities said that Jeffry
had a record of vandalism,
petty theft and burglary a year
or two ago while the family
lived in Niles. The Dales recently moved to 4908 Carol
Ave., Skokie.
If convicted of manslaughter,
the boy would face a penalty
of 1 to 14 years.
CTA SUED
A Morton Grove man, injured in an auto-bus collision
last January 7, has filed a
$40,000 lawsuit against the
Transit Authority.
Chicago
He is Sheldon M. Richman,
7432 Arcadia, who suffered
injuries to the spine, neck and
chest in the accident at 20 E.
Van Buren street, Chicago.
The bus collided with the
rear of Richman' s car as both
vehicles were westbound on
Van Buren, the Superior court
suit charges.
PING PONG DROP
Skokie residents are advised
that on Wednesday, Oct. 1,
they should keep their eyes
on the ball - that is, the ping
pong ball.
About 5,000 ping pong balls
will be dropped over Skokie
by airplane on that day.
Recipients will find that by
cutting into these balls, they
will find small, white siips,
These slips will carry gifts
for-you from 20% off on purchases
to actual free merchandise
from shops m the LincolnOakton area.
Trustees OK
Sco oter Law
In an effort to thwart any
possible accidents or fatalities
to scooter drivers, the Skokie
village board Saturday passed
an ordinance that all drivers
of such vehicles must be at
least 16 years old and must
have an auto driver's license.
Additionally, the new village
law forbids scooter drivers to
carry passengers.
Effective Sept. 20, the law
calls for fines of not less than
$25 nor more than $200 for persons convicted of disobeying
the "safety scooter" law .
SU IT DISMISSED
Circuit Judge B. Fain Tucker
has dismissed a lawsuit seeking authority to demolish an
abandoned 3-story frame building at 7749 Niles Center road,
Skokie, after the structure was
razed by its owner.
Dismissal of the bill was
requested by Skokie Village
Attorney William Hennessy,
who filed the suit last July.
�6
September 11, 1958
THE VILLAGER
Community Chest Drive Missourian
Will Direct
Off to 'Good Start'
New Jr. High
PIZZA
Pizz·a - Spaghetti - Ravioli - ltolion Sandwiches
All Foods
with the
Prepared
Shrimps - Perch - Scallops - t:obster Toils
Crispy,
Before Your
Crusty
Very Eyes
Its
Southern Fried - Chicken at
Thin Dough
Ope n da ily S p.m. to 2 a .m. - Sat. S p.m. to 3 a .m. Sun. 3 p.m . t o 1 a .m.
j
L 2025 Howard
Best
.:
I
$.t. _Ample _Parking _ FAST DELIVERY_ BR 4-8500 ...J
x-acto "
Colonial Antique
its
Reproduction K
6 CllAJIMIIIG
Authentic
onversation Pieces
C
for your home
Our American forefathcn would be
proud to sec the faithful reproduction
of their slc.ill1 exemplified by these k.it1 .
Each was in1pircd by a valuable origi"aJ which was foun d on display in
museums and private ho me& in Wakefi eld, Mass.; Concord, N. H.; Salem,
Anyone
con make these c;intl que r e produc:tions
without apeclel s kill• or tool, . Kit• are complete
with· ;ne•cut porta, rub--on fln lah, nolla , aondpoper, etc. Included are ea s y-to-fallow Instruct•
Ions for assembly and fin i sh ing anywhere In the
home. Try one! It ' s funl (Or buy pre•ouembled
and fin i shed at slightly higher Qrice.)
M us. ; H ampstead, N . H .i W a ke-
fi eld , Va. i and Lcxing1 on, Mau.
T hese reproductions have the charm
and _practical application of t.hcir
origin.a.ls, plu, modem-day usage.
HOBBIES
MODELS
AMERICAN FLYER TRAINS-ACCESSORIES-REPAIRS
TOYS-GAMES-GIFTS FOR EVERYONE
4901 Oa kton St., Skokie
ORcha rd 5-1822
Fashioned for Fall ...
"The Niles Township Community Chest and Council is
off to an auspicious start,"
said Chest president Norman
Schack of Skokie today.
But, he continued, ''it is
the follow through that Counts.''
"Hundreds of Workers have
been furnished the material
and information necessary and
if each will thoroughly cover
every one of their prospects,
victory will be assured,'' Schack
said.
Calls are now being , made
on professional men, industry,
business establishments and
every residence in the township.
Niles Township continues
to enjoy a phenominal growth
and with this tremendous
development come greater demands on the agencies, demands
which can only be met if and
when the community as a whole
comes to their aid with increassupport for their larger budget
needs, said Schack.
"Favorable reports are already being received at the
Campaign Headquarters" at
4411 Oakton Street, Skokie,
said Lincoln Shonkwiler, general campaign ch airman.
The drive began last week.
As the Community Chest
drive goes forward, more of the
citizens of the Township are
"joining up" to help put the
drive over the top. Such a man
1s Joseph C. Bahover, who
has volunteered his help to
Kay Thompson, proprietor of
Employment Service,
A-1
Skokie, chairman of the township business and professional
division.
Here are key persons in this
year's Chest drive:
John L. S~herer, chairman
of the industrial division, of
Avon · Products Inc . , Morton ·
Grove, is assisted by area
chairmen L. R. An de rs on,
Lincolnwood, Les . S. Bryant,
Morton Grove, H. K. Sattazahn,
Ni 1 es, and J. Kappleman,
Skokie.
The business and professional division, under the direction
of Kay Thompson, has for area
chairman Dennis Rivelli of
Dennis, Clothes for Men, Leon
Penzik of Skokie Poultryland,
for Business, and Dr . Raymond
Bro, dentist surgeon, Skokie,
for the professional men.
Out at Old Orchard, the
business and professional men
w i 11 be visited by Leo W.
Martin, chairman, and a number
of other Old Orchard folks to
help him cover the field.
Myron Greisdorf, chairman
of the large residential division in the entire township,
1s assisted by Thornton B.
Stearns and Dr. Arthur Glickson, Cleveland; J oh n L.
Hagman, East Prairie; Barry
D. Oller, Fairview; Mrs. Norman
H. Jacobson, Golf; Arnold
Charles
Lincoln;
Bolnick,
O'Brien, Lincolnwood; Seymour
Primer, Roman Lach and Ed
Colby, all of Morton Grove;
Jack Slade and Jerry Sill, Sharp
Corners.
of
Oliver McCracken Jr.,
Liberty, Mo., has been appointed
by the board of education of
District 73½ to serve as principal of the new Oakview Junior
High school upon its completion.
Pending opening of the new
school, Mr. McCracken will
teach j uni or hi g h s ch o o 1
mathematics at Cleveland school
and will as s i s t the superintendent with equipping the new
building and planning the junior
high curriculum.
For the last three years, he
has been principal of the intermediate school in Liberty, a
suburb of Kansas City. He holds
a bachelor of science degree
from Southwest Missouri State
co 11 e g e and a master of
educ at i on degree from the
University of Missouri. During
the past summer, Mr. McCracken
served on the staff of the
College of Education at the
University of Missouri, teaching
educational psychology.
While on duty with the army,
he served in Europe for 30
months as a special investigator
for the intelligence corps, · and
completed the curriculum of the
Army Language and Intelligence
school at Ober am mer g au,
Germany.
Newcomers~ Club
Plans A Tea
A luncheon was held m the
home of Mrs. William Metzger
recentl y to complete plans for
the Skokie Newcomers' membership tea to be held on Sept.
13 from 1 to 3 p.m. The tea
will be held on the terrace of
- ~rs. Metzger' s home at 4231
Grove St., Skokie.
f':;;nd-shaped'\ GROSHIRE
I
A high fashion favorite,
Eisenberg Ice, is
created of magnificent
Austrian faceted cry• ·
stals, crafted with
precious-stone care,
to achieve unmatched
brilliance and richness,
Falkenhayn Jewelers
feature the entire line,
as advertised in Bazaar
and Vogue .
;~'\
>.{:::'\
~
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\ ~ .;:. .1,
.\
Oliver McCracken Jr.
\-\
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~~·) ·,cc· '. \ _
_ _ __ _ _ __
_ _ __
. . i. - in fact we married one.
. We like to see them in our store
i
i too. They know fabrics and good
design, and th ey nod approval when we
show their husbands 'hand-shaped' suits.
Pin $9 - Earrings $9
Open Mon. & Thurs. 'til 9
ENNIS M
gtiYtRJ
~lrok.iPA
~
OR chard 5-020 I
4927 Oakton St.
SKOKIE
ffYtl
eltJ
7935 LINCOLN • SKOKI E • ORc:ha rd 3-8645
Use Our Revolvi ng Charge P lan -30- 60 -90 Days
SQUARE DANCERS
Guest caller Bob Dawson of
Milwaukee opened the season
for the North Shore Allemanders
Square Dance Club on Monday,
Sept. 8, at Noyes School, Noyes
and Maple, Evanston. He will
be followed by another popular
guest caller, Dale Wagner of
Milwaukee, on Sept. 15.
Bill Bostrand of Chicago will
again be the regular caller for
the club, calling on the second,
fourth and fifth M0ndays. All
square dancers are invited.
Mr. and Mrs. Frank Mertes
of Skokie are serving on the
club committee. The club is
sponsored by the Evanston
Recreation Bureau.
�7
by Sheryl Leonard
Catholic Women's
Club Holds Tea
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W . C . MARTIN PHOTO
Mrs . Dean Thomas Pappas
It was her uncle, Tom
Vosnos, who escorted her down
the aisle and gave her away
when Elizabeth Nancy Vosnos
joined hands and heart in holy
matrimony with Dean Thomas
Pappas on Aug. 17, in a late
afternoon ceremony in the
Church of the Assumption,
Chicago.
The lovely young bride,
daughter of Mrs. Mary Vosnos,
6950 Dempster St., Morton Grove,
wore a silk organza gown with
peau de soi underskirt. A large
sash encircled the w a i st,
ending in a bow in the back.
Imported Ch an ti 11 y lace
worked into a leaf design
adorned with pearls, blended
into parts of the bodice and
skiri and around the scooped
neckline.
Her regal tiarra was of seed
pearls, hotding a finger tip
illusion 11eil. She carried a
colonial bouquet of blossoms
imported for the occasion.
The handsome bridegroom is
the son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas
Pappas of River. Forest.
Attending the bride were the
sister, Angela Schimski, of
New York, as matron of honor,
and Joanna Janos and Marie
Elaine Kuchusis of River
Forest, Mary Kohles, of Morton
Grove, Nancy Johnson, Denis
Paulas and Elaine Kalaris of
Chicago, as bridesmaids.
Ellenie Passalis was flower
girls.
The attendants wore pale blue
empire tr a p e z e peau de soi
gowns, with blue hose and
matching shoes and hat. Each
young lady wore a large flower
and kid gloves.
Attending the bridegroom
were his brother, James Pappas
of River Forest, as best man,
and ushers were George Pappa-s,
another brother, Charles
Vosnos, brother of the bride,
Plato Mantis, John Marks,
Edward Hensel and Joseph A.
Schimski, brother-in-law of the
bride.
Master James Vosnos of
Northbrook was ring bearer.
The mother of the bride wore
navy blue chiffon with matching
silk shoes and hat. The bridegroom's mother was gowned in
Hale blue lace with organ di e
bow.
F o 11 o w i n g the w e d din g
ceremony, a garden reception
was held in the Vosnos' residence followed by dinner in
Vosnos Restaurant.
The young couple went on a
trip to Hawaii for their honeymoon.
For a going away costume,
the bride wore a white, two
piece suit with matching shoes,
hat and accessories.
AmQOg the out of town guests
at the wedding were Mr. and
Mrs. Agase. Mr. Agase is head
coach at Mi chi g an S ta t e
University.
The Catholic Women's Club
of St. Isaac J ogues Church will
hold its annual membership tea
on Tuesday, Sept. 16, at 8 p.m.
in the school hall. All the ladies
of the parish are invited to come
and meet their neighbors.
An introductory talk by Mrs.
Edward J. Neville, Glenview,
will a c q u a int the newcomers
with the purposes of the club.
A short business meeting will
be conducted by Mrs. Robert
Gore, 9346 National Ave.,
Morton Grove, club president.
Refreshments will be served.
Mrs. Edward Ciessau, Jr.,
Glenview, is chairman of the
tea and will be assisted by Mrs.
Edward Bibo, 7530 Lyons St.,
Mrs. William Telrine,
7040
Wilson Terr., Mrs. Lud Shader,
7516 Palma Lane, Mrs . Bruce
Hendershot , 7442 Foster Ave. ,
Mrs. Clarence Brink, 9420 Sayre
Ave., Mrs. Willard West, 7406
Arcadia Ave., Mrs. Thomas
Parker, 7328 Lake St., all of
.~ orton Grove, Mrs. Robert
Moeller, Des Plaines, Mrs .
Aloysius Rehm, 8917 Harlem
Ave., Morton Grove, Mrs. Joseph
Flasch, 9233 Cameron Lane ,
Morton
Grove, Mrs. Robert
Mazurk, Glenview, Mrs. William
Sullivan, Glenview, Mrs. James
Adams, 7213 Emerson Ave.,
Morton Grove, Mrs.
Thomas
Blau!, and Mrs. John Butler
of Glenview.
Mr. and Mrs . Irving Kooperman,
7114 Keystone Ave., Lincolnwood, announce the engage·
ment of their daughter, Joy
Brenda, to Benjamin W. Tall•
man, son of Mr. and Mrs.
Willaim Tallman, 8313 Kilpatrick, Skokie . Miss Kooper·
man attended the University of
Illinois. A December wedding
is planned.
The greateat treasure in the world is a friend .
That's why we're so delighted at having Gladys
Erickson back in the States after a tour of
Europe .
Gladys, who received all kinds of honors in
Greece, is the type of warm, vibrant, vivacious
person who makes friends with the great and
lowly alike.
For the un-informed, she is also just about the
greatest newspaper women in the business .
And yet, with all the attendant excitement of
her trip, she found time to think about her-friends
and brought back some exquisite gifts .
A beautiful filigree ring from Athens . .
dainty, precious cameo earrings from Rome ..
a "modern art" hankie from Paris.
We shall wear these lovely gifts. with pride,
as we wear Gladys Erickson's friendship .
We're still Dan Sorkin's 8:15 to 8:30 fan every
morning. We particularly like the bit where D~n
recommends using the "yellow pages" to find
everything one needs for a wedding . · "Gowns,
flowers, photographers, jewelers, shot - gun
dealers . . . . . "
A few months ago, we had the opportunity of
of taking some pictures and doing a story on a
kindergarten bike parade from the East Prairie
School in Skokie.
One little girl caught our eye. There was a
sweet, pensive quality about her face that made
us want to photograph her alone . This we did
and the picture was published.
But when school started this week, Joan Carol
Fish was not among the throng of hustling,
bustling little ones . No longer will she be riding
her gaily bedecked bike, defying the wind with
big hairbow s in her hair.
For someone else saw the sweet purity of this
child and two weeks ago He called her unto His
arms .
The little heart could not stand the strain of
what should have been a routine eye operation.
We shall always be grateful for God's hand
that guided ours to single out this one child,
from so many, to photograph. What was a picture
of a charming child in a newspaper, became a
treasured memento for a mother.
I walk along life's highway . . . .. And as I
travel all alone . . .. . I dream that I might be a
queen . . . . . Upon a royal throne . . . . . Or,
perhaps a lovely lady . . . . . Dressed in costly
finery .. . .. An actress or a dancer . . . . . .
Someone great, who might be me . .. .. I think
how very wonderful . . . . . If I could just be
where . .. .. All was shining silver . . . . . And
gold sparkled from my hair .. . . . Than I smile,
for these things . . . . . Can hold no real
desire . . . .. They are as empty embers . . . . .
Lying dead upon a fire .. . .. Let others have
their costly things . . . . . There's nothing more
I prize . . . . . Then memories of a wondrous
love . . . . . I found within your eyes . . . . . Yes ,
you can have your throne, my queen . . . .. Your
silver shining bright . . ... I' 11 take the rainbow
after rain . . . . . And dreams of him ·tonight .
�September 11 , 1958
THE VILLAGER
8
NOTRE DAME MOTHERS
Skokie Chapter O ES
NILEHI STUDENT UNION
The mothers Club of Notre
Dame High School for Boys,
7655 Dempster St. Niles,
announces a "Welcome Te'\"
to open their new season.
The tea will be held in the
school cafeteria on Monday Sept.
15, at 1:15 p.m. All mothers are
invited to attend.
Program chairm,an, Mrs. Robert
Rafferty, will present the school
principal, Father James
d' Autremont, who will speak on.
the problems of teen-age boys.
Christian Science
Skokie Chapter 1015, Order
of the Eastern Star, will hold
its Advance officers' Night on
Sept. 16 in the V. F.W. Hall at
8 p.m. Mrs. C.P. Wiltjer will
serve as worthy matron and
C. P . Wiltjer as worthy patron.
Other officers advancing for
one night only are Mrs. Robert
0. Lowe, associate matron
and Mrs . R.R. Ruhnke, con~
ductress. Rob;rt 0. Lowe and
William French will be escorts .
Mrs . Clyde Drake , a past
matron, will be the guest of
honor. Mrs. Ralph Sheffield is
the worthy matron this year and
Ralph Sheffield the worthy
patron. All members of the
Order are invited to attend.
The Student Union group at
Niles Township High School
will hold their first mixer on
Saturday, Sept. 13.
Recognition that true substance 1s spirit u a 1 brings
individual growth and progress
- this fact will be stressed at
Christian Science s er vi c·es
Sunday, Sept. 14.
Bible readings in the lessons er mo n on •'Substance'' will
include the following (I John
2:15): "Love not the world,
neither the things that are in
the wolrd."
Mr. and Mrs. Albert Donenberg,
4440 Church St., and sons Bruce
and Jeffrey, are new Skokians.
Oklahoma's loss and Skokie' s
gain are Mr. and Mrs. Carl
Berger, 8520 Niles Center Rd.
Senior mothers A through M
will act a- hostesses under the
s
direction of social ch airman,
Mrs. J oh n Hes 1 in. All the
mothers will be given an
opportunity to meet the members
of the faculty informally at
this time.
Membership ·cards to the
Student Union cost $1 and
entitles holder to a reduced
price on the Christmas Dance
bid for Dec. 13.
The Union is · a mixer for all
classes,
including dances,
games, entertainment, refreshments and cinemascope movies
in the new Nilehi building at
Oakton and Eden's Highway .
Other dates on the Union
schedule of affairs are Nov.
8, Dec. 13, Jan. 10, Feb. 21,
March 21, Apr. 11 and May 9.
GROUP LEADER
Bonnie Fors, Class of 1961,
daughter of Joseph M. Fors of
4934 Mulford St., Skokie, will
be a group leader on the New
Student Week committee when
Lake Forest College opens
New Student weekend, Sept.
12 -15 .
A PERSONAL MESSAGE FROM JIM MANCUSO "I sincerely feel that you can not go wrong if you
buy a 1958 Chevrolet now. The new cars wi II be out
within a month and to the best of my knowledge there
will be another price increase. We have a very complete
stock of late 58's right now in every color .
every
model. I urge you to come in and buy now
. the
the buying was never better and the used car market is
about as high as it's been in a year."
TRADE NOWI
OUR STOCK OF
BRAND NEW '58 CHEVIES
WAS NEVER BETTERI
, l e t ~ -- ,ltt 1/todda
WE NEED USED CARSI
DON'T WAITI DRIVE IN NOWI
SKO....-IE
Ill .
Only Authorized Chevrolet
Sales and Ser-.,ice in Niles Township
CO II e 9 e H I II
All first grade room teas will
be given on Sept. 17 at 3:30
p.m. and second grade teas on
Sept. 19 at the same time.
Mothers are reminded to
watch for their invitations m
the mail.
Locations of the tea,. usually
in the home of the room mother,
will be announced in the invitation. All College Hill room
mothers for the year are as
follows:
Kindergarten a.m. Mrs. William
Olson, Mrs. Stanley Brook;
Kindergarten p.m. Mrs. Bernard
Marcus, Mrs. John Powers; first
grade, Mrs. Maurice Chalfen,
Mrs. Al Parker, Mrs. Ernest
Bram and Mrs. Herbert Schoen;
second grade, Mrs. William
Gar el, Mrs. J erty Smolka, Mrs.
Paul Kay and Mrs. John Johnson.
Third grade, Mrs. Standiford
Helm, Mrs. Samuel Victor and
Mrs. Will Sider; fourth grade,
Mrs. Harold Goldman, Mrs.
Seymour Reichstein and Mrs.
Jerome Spector; fifth grade, Mrs.
Murney Lazier and Mrs. Samuel
Miska; si~th grade, Mrs. Floyd
Brown and Mrs. David Feldman.
Ways and means chairmen of
each room will meet with PTA
ways and means chairman, Ira
Stabiner on Sept. 11 at 1 p.m.
in College Hill School to make
plans for the carnival to be
held Oct. 11 on the grounds of
the school.
On Sept. 11, at 8 p.m. , Cub
Scout Pack 22 will !iold •'Family
Night'' in the gym at College
Hill. All parents of t>rospective
Cubs (boys 8 years old .now or
to be 8 by Dec. 31) should
attend this meeting.
HEMOPHILIA PIONEERS
The Hemophilia Pioneers will
hold its opening meeting of the
year at 8:30 p.m. on Tuesday,
Sept. 9, in the Dr. Dolnick
Center, 6122 N. California Ave.
The meeting will be ca 11 e d
"Getting To Know You," to
welcome all new members, and
friends who wish to join the
group.
The Hemophilia Pioneers meet
the second Tuesday of every
month in the Dr. Dolnick Center.
New officers for the year are
Mrs. Louis Matz, 5034 . Troy
Ave., president; Mrs. Joseph
Schur, 7521 Kilbourn, Skokie,
vice president; Mrs. Paul
Stiefel, 7452 Kenneth, Skokie,
recording secretary; Mrs. Harry·
Hefter, 4835D Enfield, Skokie,
financial secretary; Mrs. Marshall . Smulson, 7625 Kostner
Skokie, treasurer and Mrs.
Burton Chapman, 7501 Kenneth,
Skokie, corresponding secretary.
TO
CHOOSE
FROMt
MANCUSO
Room Tea~ at
CHEVROLET
8130 LINCOLN AVE . SKOKIE ORchard 3-0020
C'
Member of the Skokie and Morton Grove Chamber of Commerce
New to the community are
Mr. and Mrs. Robert Leon, 10065
Frontage Rd. , Skokie, and their
daughters, Terise and Deborah.
New Skokie arrivals are Mr.
and Mrs. Mike Sereny and sons .
�September 11 , 1958
St. Peter~ s Club
To Meet Today
The first general meeting of
the Saint Peter's Catholic
Women's Club will be held in
the Rathskeller on Thursday ,
Sept. 11 at 8 p.m.
Mrs . Roger Schoeneberger,
pro gr a m ch a i r 1 a d y, will
introduce Dr. Louis Leone ,
popular local doctor, who will
speak on "Sex Education for
Children." A so-cial hour will
follow, and Mrs. Irving Day
reports the eighth grade mothers
will be hostesses . All are urged
to attend this meeting .
The executive board was
recently entertained in the home
of Mrs. Jack Geffinger, 9022
LaCrosse Ave., where plans
for the coming year were dis cussed. The highlight of the
afternoon was the delightful
performance of the honored
guest - eleven week old Michael
Ge Hinger.
On Sept. 10, president Mrs.
Milton Remke, conducted a
coffee hour for the chairladies
of the various standing committees to get better acquainted
with one another and discuss
mutual problems.
GROVE ORT
A combination opening
meeting <\nd membership affair
will be held by the Grove
Chapter of ORT , in the home
of Mrs. Ralph Menn , 8650 Avers
Ave. , on Wednesday, Sept. 17 ,
at 8:15 p .m.
A fashion show featuring
"Francine Fashions" will be
presented by Marcella Cowin
and. Frances Berger with mem bers of the chapter modeling
the lovely clothes.
In addition , a short film
depicting the
de di cation
ceremonies of the Dr . Aron
Syngalowski Training Center
in Tel Aviv will be shown.
J . Menn , father-in-law of the
ho st e s s, f i 1 m e d
th e s e
ceremonies on his recent trip
to Israel.
Hostesses for the evening
in addition to Mrs. Menn will
be: Mrs . Samuel Goodman,
7431 Churchill St. ,Morton Grove
and Mrs . Edward Ginter, 7912
LaVergne , Skokie. Mrs. Neil
Pollock , 8951 Lamon, Skokie,
is hospitality chairman and Mrs .
Daniel Dosik, 7407 Karlov,
Skokie, is the program chairman.
T HE VILLAGER
Cleveland Officers
Mrs . B.W. Levin, 8252 Karlov
.Ave., Skokie, newly elected
president of the
Cleveland
School PT4, announces the
following officers and commit te·e chairmen who will share
this term with her.
Mrs. Bernard Mick, first vice
president; Mrs ._ Stone , second
S.
vice president; Mrs . Conrad
Smart, third vice president;
Mrs. · James Smith , recording
secretary ; Mrs .• Maurice Cohen,
corresponding secretary, and
Miss Irene Squires, treasurer.
Committee
chairmen
are:
Mrs. H . Rothenberg, art; Mrs.
J . Stone, by - laws; Mrs . Albert
Fink childrens theatre; Mrs.
Shep~ard Gitlis, exceptional
child; Mrs . Robert Cal Elliot,
hospitality; Mrs .
Ernest
E isenberg, international rela tions; Mrs. Jerome Mueller,
juvenile protection; Mrs. Morri~
W. Wise, legislation;
Mrs.
Marvin Anderson and
Mrs.
Robert Greenfeld, library and
Robert Turton, program chairman; Mr. and Mrs. Lincoln
Shonkwiler, Mr. and Mrs. Arno
Stadelmann, program committee,
and Mr. and Mrs. C. Cal Johnson,
publicity.
If anyone is not on the
Kupples Klul:> list and wishes
in form at ion call Mrs. Roy
Burkhardt, OR 3-5928.
publications, and Mrs . Bernard
Mick, membership .
Other committee heads are
Mrs . Mary Killian , music; Mrs .
Conrad Smart and Mrs . · M.
Cohen, Newsletter- editor and
publisher; Mrs. Albert Rosen,
Mrs. Sam Berger and Mrs . Mac
Goldman ,
parent education;
Mrs . Brayton Smith and Mrs .
Marvin Langhaus,
Parent
Teacher Magazine; Mrs . C.E.
Eichhorn ,
parliamentarian ;
Mrs. Alvin Simon and Mrs. Sol
Pov lo , publicity; Mrs. Geraldine
Billian (7th grade) and Mrs.
Sid Kritzler (8th grade) rec riation; Mrs . James
Amos ,
(kindergarten to 4th grade) and
Mrs . Jerome Rosenfeld (5th
grade to 8th grade)
room
mothers ; Mrs. J. Russell Olson,
safety and health; Mrs.Clarence
Smyth , school education , and
Mrs. 0 . Harmining (girls) and
R .C. Welchko (boys)
Scout
representatives .
Mrs . William Klinke is social
chairman; Mrs. Yale Saffro,
summer round- up ; Mrs. Seymour
Wolf, Mrs. Richard Gilford and
Mrs . Marion Lage, ways and
means and Mrs . Jam Jenkins
and Mrs. Nat Somerman, Year
Book.
Newcomers
Skokie newcomers are Mr.
and Mrs . Julian Shapiro, 9042
Kenton Ave ., and their children,
Harvey, 8 , and Caryn , 3.
THIS
BEST WISHES FOR A
HAPPY & HEALTHY NEW YEAR-5719
HEBREW THEOLOGICAL COLLEGE
of t he
JEWISH UNIVERSITY OF AMERICA
7135 N. Carpenter Rd . , Skokie, I ll.
Dr. Oscar Z. Fasman , Pre siden t
Suburbia prese nts for the first time a corre~ated gro~p of Modern
Walnut Bedroom Furniture, so moderately priced that 1t amazes. For
instance the triple dresser, mirror, chest and bed pictured be low are
'
priced complete at a low
KUPPLES KLUB
Kuppl e s Klub of the Central
Methodist Church, Skokie, met
in Fellowship Hall on Wednesday , Sept. 10, for a pot luck
dinner.
Dr. Joelle Rentfro was the
guest speaker. Her experiences
in India as a medical missionary were her main topic as well
as an explanation of the Seventh
Day Adventist Religion of which
she is a follower.
Hosts and hostesses for the
evenin g were this
year's
committee. They are Mr. and
Mrs. Claude Cutlip, president;
Mr. and Mrs. Roy Burkhardt,
vice president; Mr. and Mrs.
Available al so are L ow Chests at $69.00
Corner Desks at $69.00
Bookcas e Bed s and many other pieces.
INTERIO R DECORAT ING COUNSE L AT NO EXTRA CHARGE
Open
Mon. & Fri.
'til 9 p. m.
•
Terms
of course
Su b urb a n Furnitu re Des igne d for Su b ur ba n Living
sub urb ia
flNE FURNITURE
8045 LINCOLN AVE. , SKOK IE
ORchard 4-9150
(Across from St . Peter's Church)
�10
TH E VILLAGER
FINER
ON-LOCATION
CARPET
CLEANING
NEW EXCLUSIVE DRY- CLEANING METH OD
DRAPERIES EXPERTLY CLEANED,
REHUNG and PLEATED
UPHOLSTERED FURNITURE
Ho Odor • Ho Fading •
Like Hew Appearance
Jane Stenson PTA
Store to Open
The Jane Stenson PT A will
have its school store open
again this year.
Mrs. Harold Kozem of 5342
Grove, chairman of the school
store, has announced that the
store will carry all general
items such as notebooks, notebook paper, pencils, crayons
and etc.
During the year it will be
open on Monday and Thursday
for the convenience of the children.
Mrs. Jack Hain, 5323 Davis,
chairman of the choral group,
has announced it is in dire
need of a choral director. If
any one is interested in directing this group, call her at OR
3-2416.
7846 Lincoln Ave.
Skokie
ORchard 3-8543
Any gne who enjoy s singing
may join this group. You need
not be a member of the PT A.
Anyone still interested in
joining the mahjongg tournament may still do so. Mrs.
Marvin Weiss, 9405 Long, states
there are still openings for
this group. The cost is 50 cents
a game , the money to go for
some item needed in the school.
If interested in joining, call
Mrs. Weiss, OR 5-4854, or her
co-chairman,
Mrs. Adolph
Heller, 9452 Lorel, at OR 3-
6719.
Mrs. George Peterson , 9315
Latrobe, chairman of the bridge
flight, is still accepting persons
interested in joining this flight.
This flight is to be broken up
into three groups , afternoon,
C"'/ening and husband and wife
groups.
If you still want to join, call
her at OR 3-4897. Sept 15 is
, the deadline for joining both
groups. The cost of the bridge
flight is also 50 cents. Prizes
or trophies will be awarded
in both groups in May.
SEP
TEMBER 1
REG. PRICE
$
Iso pr.
$ 135 pr.
$115 pr.
SALE PRICE
3 pr. $ 375
3 pr. $ 345
3 pr. $ 3oo.
1 pr.$ 125
1 pr. $l 15
1 pr. s100
Seamless. and full-fashioned . . . in new fashion
shades. Come in now for complete selection.
8017 Linco ln • Skokie• OR 6-0070
MOH. & FRI. 9 to 9 - Other Days 9 to 6
September 11, 1958
LUTHERAN SCHOOL
The Niles Township Lutheran
School started its new school
year in the school building of
J erusalem Evangelical Lutheran
Church, Fernald at Capulina,
Morton Grove, with an enrollment of 200 pupils for the eight
grades and kindergarten.
The Sunday School of the
church has been resumed and
all who wish to attend are
invited to do so.
HADASSAH
Skokie Valley Hadassah
opened the fall season with a
luncheon and fashion show
Sep~ 9, at the Devonshire
Field House, 4400 Grove St. ,
Skokie.
The m e m be r s who wore
fa sh i on s by Mr. Stanley of
Skokie
were: Mrs. Marcia
Schneider, Mrs. Margot Witcoff,
Mrs. Joan Bresnick, Mrs. Sophie
Lawter, Mrs. Zelda Blumenfeld,
and Mrs. Edith Cohen.
Speaker for the afternoon was
Mrs. Herbert Silton, all Chicago
membership chairman.
Officers for the affair were
Mrs. Hillard Weiss , program
chairman, Mrs. George Berliant
and Mrs. Maurice Leifer,
membership chairmen.
GAR DEN GROUP
The garden g roup of the
C q_ mmunity Club of Jewish
Women held a petite luncheon
at tQ.e home of Mrs. Arnold
Kalom, 7141 Keeler, Lincolnwood. Mrs. Filmore Markowitz,
3755 Crain, Skokie, president,
introduced Mrs. Frank Packee,
who spoke on flower arranging.
Members and . prospective
members received an itinerary
of the coming seasons events.
All members of Community
Club of Jewish Women are invited to become members of the
garden group.
Nilehi PTA to
Meet Sept. 17
Mrs. Sol Ashback, program
chairman, has planned that
Paul Houghton, acting super•
intendent, will present the
following of the school admin•
iinration; Dr. Stuan Anderson,
assistant superintendent; Dr.
Keith Kavanaugh, principal of
East D_vision ; John
i
Gach,
principal of West Division; and
Dr. Harold Olson , director of
public relations and publicity.
The theme of the year is
"Investing in the Future."
Mrs. George Schuyler, hos•
pitality chairman, has arranged
for the identity of the new
teachers at Nilehi by having
them wear green apple name
tags and other teachers wear
red apple tags to the meeting.
Vocal selections by the high
school music department will
be presented under the direction
of Hugh McGee.
All parents of students at
Nile hi a'r e urged to attend.
Parents of new students are
specially invited to ta1'ce ad•
vantage of this opportunity to
learn more about the high
school and the PTA organiza •
tion.
A social hour ·with refresh•
ments will follow the meeting
in the cafeteria. Mrs . James
Rhodes , soci al chairman , 1s 10
charge of arrangements.
JWV WINS PRIZE
The Monon Grove Jewish
War Veterans Post 700 and its
Auxiliary recently won se·
cond place for the best float
and decorated booth.
Newcomers in Skokie
New Skokie arrivals are Mr.
and Mrs. Barry Geitner, 4138
Church St., and their children,
Barbara, 11, and Howard, 9.
New Skokians are the Norman
Kushnirs, 4715 Church St.
�THE VILLAGER
Morton Grove Women's Club
To Float on Fashion Cloud
While most observers of the
stratosphere watch eagerly for
satellites to pass overhead,
members of the Morton Grove
Women's Club will focus their
attention on the launching of
"Cloud Nine . " This is the,
annual philanthropy lunc)leon
and fashion show presented
each year by the club to enable
the public welfare department
to continue their aid to needy
individuals and worthy institutions in the community.
Last May, the club presented
a check for $500, a portion of
the proceeds from last year's
luncheon , to the new Lutheran
General Hospital. Earlier in
the year, contributions were
made to the Hadley School for
the Blind and the Orchard
School for Exceptional Children.
"Cloud Nine" will be presented on Oct. 14, at Meo's
Villa Venice. Public welfare
chairman Mrs. James Emmett,
selected the Villa Venice.
In their desire to produce
an entertaining afternoon, this
year's fashion show will be a
preview of the styles in furs,
from the Wertheimer Salon in
Lincoln Village.
Models selected from the
membership of the Morton Grove
Women's Club. All the new
and exciting shapes and silhouettes, as well as· a wide
variety of types and shades
of fur, will be included in this
collection.
The commentary will be given
by Mr. Wertheimer, an expert
in his field.
Tickets may be secured
from members of the club or
Mrs. Robert H~mond, OR 53219.
In conjunction with the
luncheon and fashion show,
grand prize will be presented,
a $500 ch a r g e account at
Bramsons.
Bells Ring For
Lincolnwood PTA
To the theme of "The Bells
are
Ringing,'' Lincolnwood
PTA was host at a luncheon
held in Lincoln Hall on Friday,
Sept. 5 for aH room mothers,
tea ch er s and PT A board
members .
Planning the luncheon were
Mrs. Irwin Horwitz, 6628 Trumball, room mother chairman;
Mrs. Helen Wiksten, 6847 Kildare, social chairman, and
Mrs. Avers Wexler, 6519 Kimball, PT A president.
Assisting Mrs. Horwitz on
her committee were: Mrs. Sam
Krupnick , 4324 Chase, Mrs.
David Kahan, 3934 Estes and
Mrs.
Josh us Segal, 6434
Christiana.
Nile-s Church Women Sisterhood Plans Garden Par~y
Pre sent Fash ion Show
The Woman's Association
of the Niles Community Church
will open its season with a
gala fashion show and party,
''From Bustles to Bows.''
This will be staged at 8 p.m.
on Wednesday, Oct. 8, in The
Bunker Hill Country Club.
The latest designs in feminine apparel, to be displayed
by Weils of Skokie, will be
modeled by members of the
Association. As a contrast to
the contemporary styles, period
costumes from various private
collections are to be featured,
Door gifts, will be an added
attraction, and guests will enjoy refreshments s . rved at
e
small, decorated tables . The
public is invited to attend this
affair.
Chairman for the event is
Mrs. Donald E. Freeman, who
stated that Mrs. Jack Leske is
in charge of tickets which are
already available.
The membership committee
of the Sisterhood of Skokie
Valley Traditional Synagogue
began the fall season with a
special "get to-gether, get
acquainted" pany. Sisterhoo_
d
president, Mrs. Max Shiffman,
greeted members and guests to
their second annual garden
party held on Sunday, Sept. 7,
in the home of Mrs. Werner
Rose, 3421 Lee St. Skokie .
The afternoon featured a
petite luncheon foilowed by
fall fashions by Heide Apparel
Shop, 3345 Dempster St. and
Skokie Juvenile Shop, 3359
Dempster St. , with ladies' hair
styles through the courtesy of
Fountain
of Beauty, 3357
Dempster St.
Ladies'
fashions were
modeled by the following
sisterhood members: Mesdames
Louis Berlin, Robert Dosik,
Walter Goldberg, Lee Perelgut,
Maurice Cherman, Arthur Goldrich, Gerald Binder, and Herbert Leon.
Children's fashions will be
- - - - - - - -- - - - - modeled by: Keith Kanter,
Randie Brown, Judy Pitrak ,
Judy Siegel, Bonnie Manowitz , Marshal Block, Fern
Zukor,
Sandra Klayman,
Andrea Cohen, Howard Blatt,
Lissy Levin, Freddie Edinson,
Terry Nemerow, Linda Rose,
Karen Feldman, Gail Sultan,
Chuck Bloom, Dale Marcus,
and Loren Sue Rosen.
LINCOLNSHIRE ORT
The Lincolnshire Chapter
of Women's American Ort is
opening its fall activities with
a garden luncheon and fashion
show on Tuesday, Sept. 9 , at
12 noon in the home of Mrs .
Lester Yavitz, 4414 Lunt Ave . ,
Lincolnwood . Fashions will
be shown by Weils of Skokie
Lincolnshlre, a newly organized ch apter of Ort, is
headed by president Mrs.
Charles Kowitt, Membership
chairman , Mrs. Joseph Polorny,
is extending invitations to all
interested, to the garden pa:rty.
DRIVE-IN BANKING
is - CONVENIENT at
so
SKOKIE TRUST & SAVINGS BANK
FASHION . .. is our business
The jacket superb in Emba Autumn Haze, Natural, Golden
Brown, Mink ... perfect for sports . .. and the dressy occasion.
You don't even have to leave your car . .. or maneuver for a parking place . . .
or expose yourself to the rain and cold .. . No chore of lifting the children
from the car ... two efficient tellers to speed you through the line. Skokie
Trust and Savings Bank is the only bank in this area offering such convenient drive-in facilities. You'll find the entrance to our drive-in windows
on the Kostner Ave. side of our building.
Styled for L K-T, this deep-toned
and magnificent little fur in dark
ranch mink, is renowned for beauty.
Natural Quality Russian Sables in
Smart 10 skin stole arrangement.
Always in fashion.
One of America's Most
Distinguished Labels Since 1895
710 MAIN
DA 8-3333
Open Thurs . & Mon. fr.om 9 to 9
I
..UOO OAKTON - SKOKIE - Oltchord -4...UOO
MEMHI of the k-cfttNd hposit lftwronce Cotpo,otlon
BANK AND VAULT HOURS
Dally: 8:30 AM to 2 PM Satur~ay: 8:30 AM ta Noon Friday Evenings: 5 PM ta 8 PM Closed Wednesdays
�THE VILLAGER
Flower Show at Niles School
EVEN THE
HERMITS KNOW
A funny little guy walked into the
store . "I'm a hermit," he said.
"I've been meditating on an idea
that'll make us both famous . "
"So?" I asked.
He leaned over the counter. "Ever
hear of Kodacolor?"
"Oh, you are really out of it,
hermit, " I said . "Who hasn't heard
that Kodacolor is a wide-latitude
film for picture-taking under natural
or artificial light conditions?" (I
tried to confuse him . )
"Well," he said, "I got myself a
35mm camera a couple of years ago .
' Only one thing wrong with it. Can't
use Kodacolor Film. Seems you got
to own a roll-film camera to use
Kodacolor. "
"Let me get this straight, " I
said . "ls it your idea to have Kodak
make
Kodacolor Film for 35mm
cameras?"
ttThat's it," he said, jumping up
and down. "We'll be famous!"
0
I'm really sorry, hermit, ,, I said,
reaching for a roll of the new Koda•
color 135 Film. "It's jus t been
introduced."
I thought he was going to cry.
Then he s tarted twirling his beard
anit throwing gold dust all over the
counter. 11 Give me a case of that
stuff," he said . "I'm going back to
. the hills."
:•To meditate?" I called after
him.
"No, you dang fool," 'he said .
"To take pictures . " - THE SKOKIE
CAME RA SHOP, 8002 Lincoln Ave ., '
0 Rchard 3·25 30.
I
The first r egular meeting of
the Nile s P ublic School PTA
for 1958· 59 will be held in the
Niles Publi c School on Tuesday, Sept. 16, a t 8 p .m. A
short busin ess meeting will be
followed by instruc tion of the
Board of Edu cation members
and mem bers of the faculty .
In
conjunc tion with this
meeting the second annual
Flower Show will be open for
exhibition at 7 p.m.
. This year the committee is
hoping that 100 arrangement s
will be entered. All students,
parents and teachers are invited to enter exhibits.
The Grennan Heights Garden
Club of Niles will again be
the judges and award the
ribbon s for prize winning
entries.
Following are the classes
of entry: for children, class
l· arrangement in a cigar box;
2- song or book ti tl e (arrangement illustrating title); 3arrangement in a toy; 4- figures
made of vegetables. For adults:
5- miniatures (all measure·
ments must be 3" - 5" overall); 6- arrangem ents in a
kitchen utensil; 7· arrangement
in your favorite container; 8arrangemen t of fruits and
vegetables or vegetables; 9·
arrangement expressing Fall,
using either weeds , flowers,
foliage or seed pods, and 10horticulture specimen bloom
(1 -3-5 of a kind)
Refreshment s will be served.
1(/0HU!lt,
Kenton PTA Has
"lceb rea kers"
Eighth grade mo thers will be
hostesses for the ev ening .
Room Mothers are Mrs. John
Boyk, Mr s. Robert Cashatt,
Mrs . William Faehse and Mrs.
J ohn Morgan .
For Saturday, Nov. 1, a
dance wi th a Roaring 20 's
theme is being planned.
Frames-Fashions
For Service Club
At a fall fashion show given
by the Mother's Service Club
of the Chicago Maternity Cent er , mem bers will not only model
clot hes by Francine, 7914 Lincoln, Skokie, but also new type
gl a s s frames and various accessories as shown by Uhlemann
Optical Company of Chicago ,
This idea w i 11 coordinate
fashions and glass-wear for
every occasion whether afternoon or evening.
The membership tea and
fashion show will take plac e
on Saturday, Sept. 13, in the
home of Mrs. Ernest R. Katz,
5411 Oakton St., Morton Grove,
at 1 p.m.
Dr. William A. Tomlins on
will speak on the field o f
pedi atrics that the Chicago
Maternity Center is now sponsoring in conjunction with its
famous "home baby deliveries."
Commentat or for the afternoon will be Mrs. Robe.rt
Bentley, 9608 Karlov Ave . ,
Skokie. Among members who
will model are Mrs. Sam Levin,
3346 Capital Ave., and Mrs.
Jack Pearlmutter, 9021 Sleeping Bear Dr., Skokie.
in the
NEWS
Mr. and Mrs. Michael Mersbach,
4929 Balmoral Ave ., Chicago,
announce the engagement of
their daughter, Lynne Carol, to
Harold Kathe, Jr. , son of Mr.
and Mrs. Harold Kathe , 4917
Greenleaf Ave . , Skokie . The
couple plan to be wed at a 10:30
a.m. nuptial mass on Oct. 25,
in St. Peter's Catholic Church
VFW .Ladies
To ViewFi lm
The regular monthly meeting
of the Ladies Auxiliary to the
Veterans of Foreign Wars,
Skokie Valley Post 3854, was
held in the Post Home, Lincoln
and Jarvis Aves., Skokie,
Wednesday, Sept. 10.
Final
arrangement s were
made for the annual card party
which will be held Friday ,
Sept. 26 .
After the meeting, the aux·
iliary welcomed Mrs. Julia
Malloy of Orchard School who
showed the film" And Crown
Thy Good.'' Knowing the
wonderful work be_ing done at
the school and wishing to
know more about it, the Auxiliary invited the husbands to
view this film with them.
TOM THUMB
PLAYERS
Theatre Studios
FOUNDED IN 1946
LESTER NETZKY, DIRECTOR
11 :25 thru 11 :30 A.M.
Register Now fo r Classes in .. .
MONDAY THRU FRID AY
FOR
YOUNG
PEOPLE
brought t o you by
4
THRU
18
YEARS
DRAMATIC ART
BALLET
TAP
SINGING - DRAMATICS
MODERN BALLET
COMBINATION COURSES
AT SPECIAL RATES
ESterb rook
9-2300
am
1330
•
STATION WAGON PICK-UP AND
DELIVERY SERVICE AVAILABLE
fm
105
Staff ol Finest Artiata- Teacher•
ORcha rd
3-8543
Special Singing-D ancing-D ramatics
Course lor Pre-St !tool
Kindergar ten and First Grade Children
2323 WEST DEVON AVL
PHONE HOllycourt 5-2839 or ORchard 5-5534
A series of informal teas,
"kindergarte n koffee" and a
box l un cheo n, a rrange d by the
Kenton PT A, served as parentt eacher icebreakers for the
1958-59 Kenton School year.
Mrs. Frank Peacock, 4425
Concord Lane, program chairman, stated the series of event s
acquainted the teachers with
members of the PT A board and
the mothers with the school
life of their children and with
their teachers.
The box luncheon for the
board members and teachers
was held on the lawn of the
Kenton School on Friday, Sept.
5.
''Kindergart en koffee'' was
served at Kenton School . n
o
Monday, Sept. 8.
Other teas to be held at 1
p.m . are, third grade, Sept. 11,
and fourth grade, Sept. 12 .
Miss Marjorie Wedell, Kenton
principal, was on hand to as•
sist the teachers in orienting
the mothers. Mrs . Paul Solman,
825 5 Kilpatrick, hospitality
chairman, and Mrs. Ray Ferris,
8024
Kenton , refreshments
chairman, are handling all
arrangement s .
Women 's Guild
The Women's Guild of St.
Paul Lutheran Church began a
new season of activity on
Tuesday, Sept. 9 .
Mrs . Richard Siebman, newly
installed president, conducted
the business meeting. Mrs .
Richard ~eichert, program committee
chairman, presented
Marge Tansor, a member of the
Guild, who gave a demons tration on "Fall Flower Arrangements ."
Cake and coffee were served
by the following social committee for the evening: Mrs .
Carl Anderson, Miss Edna
Bartling, Mrs. Ralph Bartelt,
Mrs . Norman Aufdenkamp and
and Mrs. Clarence Baumann.
Hear Comedy
The Sisterhood of Skokie
Valley Trarutional Synagogue
will have for its first meeting
a comedy, '' A Hole in the
Head'' by Arnold Shulman .
It will be presented by "the
woman of a hundred voices,''
Sad i e Stem Merel, in the
Synagogue, 8843 East Prairie ,
on Wednesday, Sept. 17, at
8:30 p.m.
UPPER LINCOLN TEAS
Grade level teas for the
parents of 6th, 7th and 8th
yea r students will be held on
Sept. 17 and 18 at 1:30 p.m.
in the Upper Lincoln School
cafete ria . The PTA will be
hostesses for the event.
The 6th grade tea will be
on Sept. 18 and 7th and 8th
grades on Sept. 17. Paren ts
wilI be welcomed by Mrs .
Henty Feigenbaum , president.
Ralph Johnson, principal,
will speak on the curriculum
for e ach grade .
�Fall
Fashions
The Villager feature section is devoted this week to a comprehensive study of fall fashion trends. For several weeks, society
editor Sheryl Leonard and chief photographer Norman Knabusch
have been busy scribbling and shooting in the fashionable salons
of Niles Township and Chicago. They came away with an excellent insight into what the well-dressed ladies and gentlemen
of the community can be expected to wear this season.
We invite fashion-mind ed readers into these informative, photofilled pages.
It t, .
-
-
)
; )
f
i •
>
.;
'
-/
J
If ff •
Furs by Charles, Lincoln Ave. in Skokie, sets
the fall fur fashion para,ie with a 13 skin Cerulean
mink stole with double pleated coll a, and
blousant body, worn by Sheryl Leonard. Miss
Leonard. hplds another of the fabulous fur pieces
in this shop .... a siewart pastel butterfly stole,
with cupped collar, pleats · and bow in the back
to lend dramatic new fashion interest.
l
f
f
?,'•
)
.;
.,.
�\SKETCHES
BY
THORPE
A NEW ERA
IN
FUR FASHIONS
by Lee K. Thorpe
Pres ident, Thorpe Furs
Women are on the threshold of a new fur fash-
i~n era . Changes are occurring not only in the
silhouette, but also in the kinds of fabrics and
furs available. This is the year in which women
Skokie Valley
Children~s Theatre
CLASSES IN DRAMA FOR
BOYS AND GIRLS 4 thru 16
• Creat ive Dramati cs
• Voice & Diction
• Dramatization
• Public Speak ing
• Stage Product ion
• Co stume and Scenery De s ign & Execution
REGISTER NOW
•
5 11 2 OAK"TON
SKOKIE
OR 3 - 2560
Mem ber of t_ A merican Educational Theatre Association
he
NOW OPEN IN THE
GOLFVIEW PLAZA
SAVINGS ON TILE & LINOLEUM
ARMSTRONG
ASPHAL1
TILE
B Color
WE G,IVE
S&H STAMl'S
C Color
5¢ea.
7¢••·
8½¢ ea.
D Color
New Cork 7111
Pa'*etn
12¢ •••
All of Our Merchandise Is First Quality
SPEC/AL
fo r Se pt . on ly
SANDRAN.
STAINLESS
4" Black Rubber Base ....... 16¢Lin.Ft.
Spc . Set Chrome Recessed
usually ,priced
Bath Fixtures . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
•
$1.69 sq. yd.
Lighted 2 Door ·
Medicine Cabinet . . . . . . . . . .
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Gen . Stainless Steel
Wall Tile ...... ........ sq . ft .
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WE GIVE S&H flR'EEN . AMPS
$ll 95
VINYL
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$l 36
7026 Golf Rd .
$149 sq. yd.
"rOWN5-4422
_ olfview Plaza
G
JACK W
)(AN , MGR.
YOrktown
may enjoy the excitement of glamour and the
sophistication of style.
There is a silhouette for every figure a nd for
every age group: empire, chemise, trapeze, oval.
There are bold colors in exotic combinations .
Yes, de signers are enticing the style conscious
woman, offering her high-spirited fashion.
Women need no longer follow any one line to
be in style. This year the£e are no restrictions .
If a woman looks chic in a slim line she has
her choi c e of chemises; if she needs m.ore fullness there is the trapese; if she c an carry bulk,
there a re t he new widths with their deep-cut
armholes .
A woman may choose the pattern that flatters
he r - her costume may balloon at the hemline,
blouse at low or mid-body level, be shirred or
pleated high at the shoulders. She can decide
to enhance or disguise her waistline by wearing
the empire or relaxing in a low belted shift.
Fashion news is shap·e! But remember not
everybody can wear ev; ry line, even though she
may be a professional model. The average girl
or woman must look into the three way mirror
and see mor e than the clothes, she must see herself in th e cloth e s.
She will know which garment to buy when she
fee ls a glow of self-confidence and begins to
smile with s e lf-assurance.
Wide trapeze skirts make legs look young and
neat . The collarless, bared neckline, trendsetter of last year is not only in fashion but
flatters the w oman with a short neck. Tall
women can pamper their height with some of the
largest collars ever made.
The average woman can _
seek out her own
fashion and still achieve the perfec t fashion
combination - elegance and at-ease comfort . She
can feel relaxed and yet look sophisticated.
Generally speaking the waist line lifts. It may
be high belted or nipped close to the bodice, in
self belt materials or contrasting satin . The high
waist is a firm l y established fashion, but an
inch or two below the waist is wi t h us too .
Coats share the fashion spotlight a t last.
There are slim coats, coats with pleated backs
and cape effects, with collars that can be converted to cowls, shoulder yokes, t rapeze shapes
with a low belt a t the hipline, low necklines
and big necklin e s, collarless coats and larger
fur-trimmed collars, modified cocoon wraps, slim
shoulders or wide rounded shoulders-yes coats
are fashion news .
The fur industry is appealing to the woman
with a quick eye for the new fashion. Furs offer
the new big bulk look as well as the slim shape .
Today women can b enefit from t h e ge nius of fur
designers and dre ssers and dye rs who have c o mbined the i r talent s to offer the gre ate st selection
o f fur s in all price range s, in new and fresh
color tones, in e v ery wanted fur.
Persi a n lamb appears i n blac k and grey and
brown . Bl ack broadtail lends its elf beautifully
to shirring an d dr apery.
Beaver glows in ric h sparkling natural browns
or in half a dozen exciting h ue s which may be
redyed in later years to othe r fla tte ri ng tones.
All lengths a re av a i 1 ab 1 e , from the 22 inch
jacket to the 4 5 - 46 inch co a t .
Important are th e extrav agant linings , the fur
buttons , the st imulating fur on fur combinations .
Furs designe d like dres s e s and fabric coat s are
taking the high road. F all and w int er furs are no
long er limited to coats .
Small pieces ha ve come i nto their o wn , in •
ma ny furs other than mink - P er s i a n l am b
beaver, Alaskan s eal , fo x . Stole s a re ch angin~
their shape : there a re sca rfs a nd p encil s toles
and boas . Mink has ma ny n ew offeri ngs; there
are forty different vari a tion s within the 8 ba sic
color shades. Styles range from the na rrow extra
long garment to the very s hort .
Some fur highlights I predi c t a re: Mouton
trimmed with fox ; Persian lamb in black trimmed
with detachable collars of mink or fox ; spotted
fur s from cat to le~pard , self trim me d, a s well
as fox or beaver trimmed ;na tura l or dyed sheared
racoon with mink trimmings ; pony in bla ck a nd
brown; broadtail-processed lamb in ma ny colors ,
although I think black is best; skunk and all
other long-haired furs are good either as trimming or in coats; squirrel in natural hue a s well
as all t he new brown and heather tones ; nutri a
and alaska seal in breathtaking patterns; toasty
beige otte r highlighted with mink.
Of course, there is ermine and that famous
newcomer to the fashion world - chinchilla. All
in all there is a wonderful era of fur fashions
now to enhance every woman's beauty and make
her even more proud of her natura l charm .
�'TRAVEL FIRST CLASS' INTO NEW SEASON!
LEARN TO
ICE
SKATE
f
-/r,,,,, -ro-,.t..- POP -tAMsu-adu~~.J"~
de '¥"' -,d ~ ,>/ ~~~
ENROLL
NOWf
Oay and Evening Classes begin September 8th.
Basic - Advance - Figure and Dance Instruction.
Our Skate Shop is fully equipped for your skating needs
Ice Time available for private parties. campus and church groups. Ballet Instruction available In our "Ballet Studio".
Open House Sunday Sept. 7th 1:00 to 4:00 P.M.
,f/tllo,rl1/1~
ICE SICAnNG STUDIO • m
""""' •~-, Wi, .... ,
rn. •
HII.,_ HUI
H EADED SOUTH! Th is drip-dry dressmak er su it with pl eated skirt
hand les we ll in any cl imate ... a nd , it can be dressed up or down with
a cha nge of accessories. The lugg ag e, li ght in weight , is in easy-care
vi nyl t ha t is unaffect ed by hum id we ather and rough handling . It
com es in brig ht a nd paste l colo rs. Pe rfect outfit for foll vacation trave l!
WHETHER YOU WALK OR FLY.
GO AMERICAN!
ABOVE : An elegant, smoot h leather
pump topp ed with a fa shionable
bow ... set on a "just -high-e nough "
heel.
NEW DECOR NOTES!
For that up-in-the-clouds feeling
at a down-to-earth price ...
nothing does it like American Girl
shoes. Flying high fashion in
styles for everything you
do in high and medium
heels and flats.
$6.99
TO
$8.99
AIRLINES
1(/J - GOLF ROAD
A NEW LOOK - NEW FIBER combine in a carpet that serves as the
d ecorative-foundation for this contemporary d ining corner. To complement the neat, uncluttered look of this modern Scand inavian-type
furni t ure - this carpeting wos selected. It is a modern Acrilon acryilc
fiber . . . non-allergen ic with bu ilt-in soil resistance. Stains, even those
which have set, ore easily washed off with regular d etergent and water.
L70LF VIEW
SHOPPING PLAZA
Mon . , Thurs., Fri . 9 : 30-9:00
Tues., Wed . , Sat . 9 : 30-5:30
�by TOM BRANAGAN
FALL is best time of all . ..
to feed your lawn NUTRO
Fall fertilization is required to produce
thick green turf next spring. Grass develops
long compact roots for winter health,
ready lo burst forth with spring beauty.
1f y ou sow a w inter lawn,
· 11
ap ply NUTR O ju,t b efa re
or o• you oeed.
. .: : : /
.1,: ·..
·
Vegetable Growers Supply Co.
870 1 LINCO LN AVE. , MORTON GROV E OR ch ard 4-9300
Ask for NUTRO at your garden supply store
Your
Friendly
pre sents
on
9 ---
OIL DEALER
om
1330
fm
105
Monday
thru
Saturday
8 :30 a.m. - Today' s News Commentary
4 :25 p.m . - Sports at a Glance
8 :30 p.m. - News of the Business World
10:30 to
¢ 11:00 a .m.
10:30 to
11:00p.m.
l)
We have been taken to task by He 1 en Johnso o, one of our
readers, who urges us to "try to maintain good grammar . "
In a recent Letter to the Editor, Warden Ragen of Joliet declared : "You. can always be sure of a warm welcome at Stateville·. ''
Our accompanying editor's note said : "We're not sure who
(this) paragraph refers to."
The Villager's chiding corre s pondent said: "Fifth grade Eng~
lish classe s learn never to end sentences with a preposition . "
Miss (or Mrs.) Johnson softened her criticism by telling us th a t
genera lly she admired the paper.
We a dmit an infringement on one of classical grammar's traditional s tandbys. However, we must point out that some experts
on 1 a n g u age a dvocate throwing this particular rule out the
window . They include author Rudolph Flesch, whose "The Art
of Plain Talk" worked a minor revolution in the nation's college
composition classes and newsrooms a decade ago . Flesch's
theory -to state it over simply , perha ps - is that in language, as
in anything else , the shortest distance between two points is a
straight line.
He feels that communication between persons - and this includes the printed page - too often is cluttered up with a rchaic
language practices that get in the way of ideas .
Think about it for a while: Doesn't it seem more direct to say
"We're not sure who this paragraph refers to" rather than "We're
not sure to whom this paragraph refers '' ?
We assume there are other precincts to be heard from. (Or
should it be : We assume there are other precincts from which to
be heard?)
❖❖❖❖❖❖
In our A ug. 14 issue , which ga v e extensiv e coverage to Morton
Grov e Western Da ys, w e ran an oldtime parade photograph ind
inv ited readers to tell us when and where the picture was taken.
Fust e st with the mostest was Mrs . A . L. Robinson of 8718
Fernald Ave ., Morton Grove, who wrote: "My father , Charles
Blischke, w ho is now dead, is in the picture. It was taken A ug .
2, 1903 , on Callie Ave . ,,
Mrs. Robinson adds: "1 wa s born and raised right here in Morton Gro v e 63 years ago and rememb er w hen w e had six houses.,,
It is perhaps not entirely modest of us to do so, but we shall
also include this postscript: " T hank you for the pleasure w e
get out of your paper. It is read from co v er to cov er. ,,
Second prize goes to Dorothy Kuester of 8538 Callie Ave. ,
who had the location pinpointed more precisely, but was off a
bit on the date. She wrote that the photo was taken "at the corner of Lincoln and Callie in Morton Grove . " She guessed the
year was 1907, adding: "1 have lived on Callie A v e . 40 years,
and it has changed some . ,,
Reproduced herewith is the photo in question.
�Congratulations go to Bill Rudd for the idea he came up with
(or is it "with which he came up"?) to go along with the opening
of his new Cities Service station at Main and Skokie Blvd.
He issues "litter bags" for the contents of ash trays and
other trash that collect in every automobile . Then, when you
pull into Bill's place, he's got a big barrel handy in which (!)
to dump the bag .
He's shown below handing one of the bags to a customer.
❖❖❖❖❖❖
Remember the recent series we did on the near-miraculous
medical work going on at Baxter Laboratories in Morton Grove?
One of the articles described at length the ''artificial kidney
machine" that Baxter had developed.
A graphic account of how the machine was used in a dramatic
and successful effort to save the life of a girl, who had taken an
overdose of a drug was carried recently in Chicago daily newspapers.
The girl's blood was drawn from her body and run through the
machine in a purifying process lasting five hours. This eliminated
poisons the drug had deposited in the' blood stream and undoubtedly saved her life, doctors reported.
(Incidentally, the Baxter people tried to buy 500 copies of the
Villager issue which carried the original account, but unfortunately we couldn't oblige . After making our distribution through
the mails and on newsstands, we generally have only a few left
over.)
❖· ❖❖❖❖❖❖
Advertising man Ben Glassman of Skokie believes wholeheartedly in "spreading the word" - in bold type, if possible.
This is in the tradition of dedicated ad men. Anyway, when his
wife Joan had a birthday recently he headlined it on the front
pages of various Chicago ne wspapers, as per the scene below.
Left to right: Ray and Imogene Johnson, Joe Pawlish , Joan
and Ben.
We don't know how Ben manipulated those headlines - and we
also don't know how wife Joan took such blatant publication of
her age.
�ALL PHOTOS , WITH THE EXCEPTION OF HATS BY MARIE
WHICH WAS PHOTOGRAPHED BY W. C. MARTIN OF SKOKIE
TOYS?
ARE BY NORMAN KNABUSCH .
O ne of the Largest Selections
on the North Shore
Gals Really Go
--
"COPPER
PENNIES"
A new shade
for a bright
schoolgirl ....
a sleeveless
overblouse and
flared skirt of
Deerfield' s
brown wool
tweed (together
about $18) and
a neat off-white
cotton shirt
(about $5) By
Red Barn, in
preteen sizes
8-14
fJJlue ~ e n
HIGH HAT
Hats are r1s1ng, with soft silhouettes co·
starring with brilliant colors in fall millinery.
Globular is another shape new hats take as
the tall shares with the bloused to balance new
ready to wear. Softness is the rule, with many
hats that .can be folped like a handkerchief.
Empire is the word i,or millinery as in dress.
High drum crowns of ,Directoire inspirations,
empire poke bonnets, bloused mob caps, modified postillion crowns with close side rolled
brim - all can ride on the empire band wagon.
The lofty toque with manipulated crown,
draped, pouffed or tiered is still with us.
Mediums from furry bodies to real fur, from
satin to golden brocade and lame, go into these
new soft, high hats .
Returning is the pill box with new height and
roundness: Revival of small hats is marked . in
new versions.
And there are feathers - all over everything making for a truly, effeminate look.
1~ 4 ~
"From Heaven to Seven thru Fourteen and Sub-teens"
Lincolnwood
4723 Touhy
OPEN MONDAY AND FRIDAY EVENINGS
7949 BABB STREET, SKOKIE
½ block East of Lincoln; 3 doors South ofOakton
I
ORchard 4 -3910
where the accent's on
• 5-Hr. Cleaning
• Laundry
• Shirt Service
GUARANTEED Odorless
MOTH PROOFING
is a port of our
Dry Cleaning Process
Tatiana's green and rose printed velvet with
green ostrich plume and single rose to decorate
the front a la Parisian is worn by Bonnie Smith.
�Chicago Nor-Shore
Window
Cleaning
Service
MORTON GROVE
Floors Scrubbed
& Waxed
Fully Insured
IR 8-4320
VE 5-2834
ORchard 5-9120
Complete House & Office Maintenance
Hats by Marie features this side draped, soft
crown Simonetta velvet charmer. A Borreallis
jeweled pin dashes across the side bow. Marie
Buffehr of Skokie , models her own Model Hat
Co. creation. Sold locally, the hat comes in
almost 30 different fall shades .
Emme's evening beret, modeled by Nickie
Ellis, has black net completely covered with
black jet discs. A black satin bow is in the
center front of this attention getting " wig."
Substantial Reductions
on Floor Samples of
LOUNGE CHAIRS
ODD CHESTS
Here is your opportunity to find that odd chair
or chest and save a pretty penny, too! All
pieces combine fine quality with contemporary
styling.
Naturally, the Palmquist guarantee of satisfaction
covers every piece of sale merchandise.
·
5802 DEMPSTER
Morton Grove
ORchard 5-3099
Cf-jARGE ACCOUNTS INVITED
AMPLE PARKING
~Wdkm
A Chicago design by Luci-P uci is modeled by
Mickie Ellis . A multi-c olored feathered- wig hat
in tones of blue , iris, green and petunia.
DANCE STUDIOS
Mrs . Richard De v ens of the Chicago Hearing A id
Societ y models a Mr . Arnold for The Villager.
Soft brimmed hilt completely cov ered w ith white
egret feathers brushing the eye -brow, banded
with beige velvet ribbon mak e s for a real e y e
catcher.
On the left, Vickie Chaconas models a Maison
Virot, Paris, 1895 version of a befeathered
chappeaux. On the right, Mrs. Lawrence Dobson,
regional director for the Fashion Group of
Chicago, models the current v ersion in a Tatiana,
black velvet cap, with two long ostrich plumes
attached by a black velvet bow.
New Students' Classes Now Starting
Former Students' Classes Begin September 18
�WHILE YOU WAIT
Blueprints
OR
&
photost<!ts
Printi ng :- Mul t ig raph
.
I
wh•te prints MimeographissingngLithographinginging
- Typ
Cop1eS Mail Addre - Photography
Service
photo
PICK -UP
DELIVERY
NELSON PRINTI NG
HAIRCUTS
~for MEN in
a HURRY
NEWLY EN LARG ED
8 ~~~!!~
MANICU R-ES
SHOE SHIN ES
HOW TO FIND US
for Wolke &
Look
Dept. store
Schock
c o rner of
the
on
Oakton St. & Niles
Ave. (4937 Ookton).
We are 2 doors south.
A MAN'S-A MAN
Glenview 4 -3200
611 Milwaukee Ave.
Combination of
Hoircut & Manicure
by appointment if
you wish
MAL E
NO WAITING
Niles Avenue
Barber Shop
7949 - 51 N iles Ave.
(in Downtown Skokie)
Skokie
OR 5 -2152
Every man at some time or another likes to
achieve that ''rugged look.'' Now, with ruggedwear jackets and short coats in great profusion
on the fall fashion scene, he'll have his chance.
Among these are feather-weig ht washable
nylon and poplin blends lines with fleece and
pile. For colder days, there are big suedes with
rich linings and bold fleece collars.
Some of the collars are of real raccoon or
mouton .
The no w familiar suburban and car coats are
going conservative with regular buttons replacing the novelty fasteners of yesterday.
In sweaters, the Scandinavia n influence seems
to be here to stay with bulky bigness and a
hand-knitted look:
However, the gentleman must keep in mind
that sports wear - jackets or sweaters - is not
for business wear.
He has, in his "out-of-offi ce" time, such
handsome items to choose from as the striped
wool tweed sports coat with yellow wool challis
lining. It has a matching wool challis ascot.
Or there are the blazers in three and four-button
styles. Navy, of course, is perfect in fine wool
flannel. Navy with maroon stripes are quite big.
There are the highly individualiz ed two-button
sports coats.
As for colors - almost anything goes. Tweeds
in topcoats just cry for subdued burnt orange
on brown and bright reds to burgundy on grays.
Brown and black stripes team up as do blue
and black. Sports jackets go green - muted and
olive. Black and white bold herringbone patterns
in wool warm up to suburban coats.
Sweaters flash brilliant yellows, reds and
orange.
For those who prefer it, "Ivy" returns in the
traditional "natural shoulder" tuxedo with
flapped pockets and c enter vent. Most Ivy
advocates prefer the notched lapel jacket.
The man who must wear a suit to business
will be right in the trend that's been building
up the last two or three years. That is that
casual clothes just don't belong in business or
the daylight world of affairs, or vice versa.
But even if the man wants to keep things
informal, there is the consolation of built-in
comfort along with the elegance trend.
New suit models combine the best of the
English tradition with the Continental detailing,
together with America's own fames ease of fit.
For the dressier look, there are subtle weaves
of fine worsteds, blends of silk and worsted,
and suggestion of iridescent glow created by
blends of mohair and silk yarns.
Colors are in medium to dark shades of gray,
blue or brown.
The shoulder look is a natural one. Stripes
are popular, but are neat and small.
Feet can be nimble
and feet can be quick in
flexible, comfortable JUMPING-JAC KS.
More widths per size, plus exclusive
8½ - 12
12½ - 4
•""8 hlJ8 heel make JUMPING-JAC KS
. famous for fit. In styles and
colors youngsters approve.
8038 LINCOLN AVENUE •
$6.95
$7. 95
Bl_ack & White
Brown & White
SKOKIE •
ORCHARD 3--0650
An Ivy blazer suit in midnite blue with metal
blazer buttons and red paisley lining sets the
fall theme at the Dennis Store for Men in Skokie.
Dennis Rivelli is his own best model as he
carries a cotton poplin campus coat that is
plaid lined. .. a must for school, town or office.
�FASH IONS
FOR A' THAT
invites you to bring your
children to see our . ..
Left:
Elegantly smart is this fall iridescent woo/worsted suit ... single button, set-in pocket and
center vent. Trim, tailored, and so good for tht!
business man.
along with our second generarion
of young customers ...
for we have been fitting
growing feet since
the Fall of 1933.
Children's Scientific Footwear
5015 Oa kto n St., Skokie
OR chard 4 - 2555
Open Mon. & Fri. Nites - Free Parking ½ Blk. South
EVANSTON
WINN ETKA
CHI CAGO
$~
Right:
The newest in top coats is a new short length.
Notable is the lack of breast pocket. In warm,
practic al, lightweight wool. The brus_
hed felt
hat is a Dobbs' two-color style .
HUNT'S
SUPER SINCLAIR SERVICE
DEALER IN SINCLAIR PRODUCTS
GRAND
PRIZES
Watch for Announcem ent
and
Meanwhile ...
Come In
and Get
Acquainted!
Smartly styled and multi-purposed is this CoOrdo sports suit modeled by Jack Geren,. Skokie
police officer. The good looking jacket comes
in maroonandblackstri pes, charcoalgrey stripes,
char-grey plaid and char-brown plaid. Pants are
of a solid matching color of all wool. The outfit is featured by Larry's Men's and Boy's Shop
in Skokie .
We'll Treat You Right
'Ve'UI,, 'Ve'UI,, p,,,,, &
~~ .
�PYQTOS BY NORMAN KNABUSCH
FASHION
DECREES:
NO WAIST
According to fashion forecasts, it looks like
the ladies are going to go waist-less this season.
Waistline demarcation s will wander from high
to low, but seldom will hit the normal waistline.
The Women's Wear Daily's analy sis for The
Villager of fall-winter fashion trends shows that
although the trapeze and the chemise stand out
as th"e two main silhouettes, high waist treatments
promise to be most important in developing the
two shapes.
Compromise silhouettes with fitted fronts and
loose backs are in evidence. Variations on the
straight sheath include hemline flounces, tunic
effects, drapery and an ensemble built around
the unfitted shape.
Costumes are still important. Most emphasis
seems to be on the diversified shapes and lengths
of jackets.
For cocktail and evening dresses, skirt width
is more pronounced than in daytime clothes.
Fabrics were never more luxurious, including
soft satin and metal brocades, warp printed
velvets and satins, moire, crepes, chiffon and
taffetas.
In sportswear, the chemise plays an important
part, with torso outlined, silver slim hips and
very narrow skirts.
A youthful, flattering look rapidly gaining
popularity is the "double trapeze " - the skirt,
either pleated or gored and underscored with
stiffening, topped with a short boxy overblouse
or jacket.
Fall knitwear- sweaters, dresses and coats all subscribes to the slim and unfitted 1 in e,
varied sometimes by a bloused or oval back,
a high or low waistline marking big collars and
pleats occasionally.
In sweaters, the 1 on g, unfitted silhouette
prevails. There is much interest in shaggy surface yarns.
1k
{Jwda;,n,
Mr. Stanley of Skokie features this walking suit
by Monarch. Model Nancie Henr y effectively
wears the panorama t weed suit with new mohair
l<iMu ad- tlte $ ~ u
(#1,
1/ze :hanceM-' Wrnlulwp
a new approach to the study of dance
offering a complete education in all phases of dance
under a staff of artist-teachers
CURRICULUM
• BALLET
• MODERN JAZZ
loop surface . The coat, which can be worn separately, has a cocoon back, shaped by open darts.
The skirt, in true fall fashion, is pencil slim.
DRY-CLEAN YOUR
1(/att to 1(/att ~
/j
"I °" ea. DO-IT-YOURSELF
- drt,,way MACHINE
· _
RENT THIS PROFESSIONAL-SIZE
•BALLROOM
• CREATIVE DANCE
•ACROBATIC
• HAWAIIAN
NOW o 95
!yl2
eTAP
CLASSES BEGIN SEPT. 8TH
of dance in which you are particularly interested, please
call our registrar.
Classes may be taken in one or more specialized field, or in "combination classes"
as offered .
Mother and daughter classes . in Ballet - Tap - Modern Jazz and Hawaiian
Classes are carefully graded to insure maximum progress .
Special rate ,for two or more classl!s per week.
Folder of schedule and rates sent upon request.
*Special C lasses for Boys.
REGISTRATION
Now thru September 8th - in person or by phone
Studio Registration: Hours l pm to 5 pm
Telephone Registration: Hours 9 am to 9 pm
ORchard 3-2560 * ORchard 5-3547
5112 OAKTON STREET, SKOKIE
•
Raises Matted Pil• oncl reaches down dHply into the
carpet, actually lifting out dirt and grease.
"
Permits Immediate use of Cupet because it is ORY•
cleaned, MOT Shampooed .
•
Restores Original color ond resilience leaves carpet
Fresh ond Fragrant.
Phone ORchard 3-8543
Let Electricitv do the Work
24-hour rental of the modern DRY-WAY machine
and a 15-lb. carton of DRY-WAY cleaner
(enough to clean about 35 sq. yds. • - avera g e
living room and den) complete with s imp I e
instructions, Free Delivery and Pick-Up
Service ••••••
7914 Lincoln Ave.
SKOKIE
ORchard 3-8543
�TIME TO BUY ... TIME TO SAVE ON
111b
BUILDING MATERIALS
ALL TYPES OF FENCE MATERIAL
• Ced ar Posts
4 x 4 square cut (exclus ive
with us) . Al so round po s ts.
• Pickets
Clear Redwood
Waiting for a bus to schoo l or a club meetin g,
these girls are very much in fashio n. Left to
right: J udy Mroz, who was Miss Niles of 1958,
wears a two piece J ersey all wool costum e. The
drip dry cotton blouse has a tucked sleeve . Royal
blue is the co/or . Sandy Brueni ng shows to perfection a Dalton cashm ere sweate r with Evan -
Picone s kirt in grey. Beve rly Rosen mutter wears
a cashm ere blen<[ cocoon shaped c oat with the
new three button silhou ette . Gail Brueni ng is
quite at home in her two piece 100% wool Italian
import ed suit with the new, large It alian knit
collar. These out fits all feature d at Weils .
36", 42", 48"
F.H.A.
OPEN SUNDAYS, 9 A.M. TO 1 P.M.
WEEKDAYS, 8 A.M. TO 5:30 P.M.
•
IS
continuing
thru
the month
of
September
ev er yb od y' s
go in g
7941 LINCO LN AVE .
• • • • •
Roofing
Insula tion
Shelving
Ceiling Tile
Wall Paneli ng
All Types
• Hardware
• Doors,
Solid Core
Ho l low Core
Louvre
Term s
sale
•
•
•
•
•
•
Free
Deliv ery
our
fur
Fall cotton s really come into their own with
this Ship' n Shore "long look" blouse , shown
exclus ively in Morton Grove 's Dahm' s Depart ment St ore . B eautif ully tailore d with French -cord
border s on mitred collar and cuffs . Comes in
Smart as yo u please in her new trapez e, styled white with red or navy tie,· wedgw ood blue
with
with a dash of old-fas hioned charm. The pre tt y navy tie.
paisle y print for the yo ung se t can be fo und in
(contin ued on next pag e )
the Skokie J uvenil e Shop on Demps t er St.
• Millwork
• Pegbo ard
• Plaste rboard
OR 3-5078 .
HOUR S : 9- 6 DA I LY
�FASHIONS ( continued)
now do il yourself I
clean your own
only
rental charge
00 per 24 hours!
'1us cost of
llquld sltompoo
AMAZING NEW RUG CLEANER CLEANS
RUGS AND CARPETS SO FAST AND
EASY IT TAKES ONLY 1 HOUR TO
CLEAN AVERAGE 9 x 12 RUGS
Makes rugs and ca rpets
as fresh and clean
as the day you got them
5ofAS'I
a
JUST POtll
SHAMPOO Stl.lITIOI
ITU TAIi
Thro ug h
scru bb in g
acti o n
re move s a ll
d irt a nd
College fashions play a major role these days
at Weil's in Skokie. Arlene Pfaff wears an
Italian loop mohair two piece outfit. The skirt
is of all wool doeskin and blouse, in grey, of
pure silk. A Dalton cashmere sweater with 100%
wool doeskin erin green skirt makes for lovely
schoolwear for Bunny Chapman . "Mr. Mort"
always a popular name where women's fashions
are concerned, goes youthful in this 100% wool
Jacquard empire look dress that Ginger Golden
wears. The leather belt can be worn through or
around the dress.
YASEEN
IN DOWNTOWN SKOKIE
WITH OUR
SPECIAL WET
PICK UP VAC UUM
RUGS GET ONLY SURFACE
WET AND DRY OUT IN A
FEW HOURS
PAINT• WALLPAPER
4925 OAKTON STREE T, SKOKIE
ORchard 3-0124
distinctively Yaseen .. ..
2-piece sedion a f ... 519.00
white and g o ld lamp . 84.50
twin snack table s, ea .. 42 .50
wall mirror . .
64 .50
4853 OAKTON ST.
Just west of Skokie Bl vd.-in DOWNTO WN SKO KIE
Mon. & Fri. Eves.
Free Park ing
Lilli Ann, as always dramatic,
creates this suit with deep
flounced hemline which blends
wit} the so/t feminine silhouette . Also av ailable with
a straight skirt, the suit is
flattering in brown, green, red
or blue .
�HOME OWNERS,
APT. TENANTS
Nilehi student Marilyn Neuman wears a Petti
plaid overblouse with black bulk knit sleeves
and turtleneck. The skirt is plaid, box pleated,
of red, gold and black wool worsted. Slacks
are available in solid black or matching plaid.
The outfit is being featured at Toby's Oakion
St . shop in Skokie. Under the skirt, Helanca
stretch black skin tights are worn . . .. one of
the new "college girl" fashion ideas.
SAVE 20%
On Your Fire,
Burglary and Liability
INSURANCE
For Your Home
and Personal Property
PHONE: DA 8-4808
or HI 6-7368
WILBERT T. FINDLEY
1703½ CENTRAL ST.
EYANHON
1~;..,
SKOKIE= (Peter Epsteen Imports)
de ~el =(driving is fun again)
IL'auio. .._ k ~ -.. Wu f&i! J
.
Jrue
RENAULT
REGIE NATIONALE
(the greatest
fun car
you can buy)
IMMEDIATE DELIVERY
BANK FINANCING
RENAULT
4-DOOR
SEDAN
Completely continental- a Lilli Ann creation
fresh from a Paris design. Even the fabric, is
a Blin and Blin import from France. The new
controlled cocoon back is g ently gathered by
a wide belt in front. In De v il's Balck or in "Her
Majesty" fabrics from Britain in green, red or
cognac.
BUY DIRECT & SAVE
30% to 60%
COATS • SUITS
LEATHER COATS • RAINCOATS
The newest styles and fabria in fall coats
and suits at prices 30% to 60% less
than you would pay elsewhere.
Misses•, Juniors, Petite, Toll and Half Sizes.
lllus .: Ranch Mink
Trimmed Coat.,
Reg . Reta il $89.95
Children and Pre•Teen Coats and Sult,t-
Sacrificing Spring Coats and
Suits Below Our Cost
Our Price $59.75
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�THE VILLAG ER
FASHIONS ( continued )
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Open Daily 8 :30-b - Fri. 'til 9
SHERLOCK HOLMES inspired this
barrel cape of all-wool exaggerate d
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Past Inspires New , Clev er
Styli ngs in Drea mwe ar
Styles reminisce nt of yesteryear, live again in the new collection of dreamwe ar for · fall.
There are short-as-y ou-like
baby dolls . . . long-as-y ouplease gowns . . . classic and
novelty pajamas and ensem_
bles that take a subtle cue from
importan t fashion periods of
the past.
The rhythm of the Charleston is recalled in the flapperlook pleated flounces that trim
saucy, show-the- knee chemises.
For the "demure little girl"
look, there are baby doll chemises with matching panties.
Flowing waltz and full
length trapeze gowns whisper
of the romantic eighteent h
century!
The relaxed overblous es parody the gay champagn e era of
the Jazz Age.
There's a r egal air of beauty
about the colorful new Victorian roses and other discreet
florals that are lavished on
lovely peignoir gowns, or on
cozy flannelett es also frosted
with white eyelet.
Some of the pajamas shown
boast match-ma te, silli:y-finis h
toppers, or smartly tailored
corduroy coats ... perfect cover-ups for lounging and watching TV late at night.
Sleepcoat s are reminisce nt
of the day when you lighted
your way to bed with a candle.
Fabrics feature "softness next-to-th e-skin" in all styles!
Warm cozy flannelett e . . .
rayon challis, and cotton challis
are all used.
They are light, shrink resistant, and in many instances require no ironing.
Jutka
THE REFORM TEMPLE OF NILES TOWNSHIP
8610 NILES CENTER ROAD
SKOKI E, ILL.
ANNOUNCES HIGH HOLIDAY SERVICES
held at
pendin g comple tion of new school buildin g and auditor ium, will be
TEATRO DEL LAGO
SENN HIGH SCHOO L
5900 N. Glenwood Ave.
Chicago, Ill.
ROSH HASHONAH
14, 8:00 PM
Senn High Sc·hool Auditorium
Sunday evening, Sept.
Monday morning, Sept. 15, 10:00 AM
Teatro Del Lago
The Rabbi and Congregation of Temple
Judea extend a hearty welcome to newcomers in the Skokie area.
Sabbath and Sunday School commences Sat.,
Sept. 13 and Sun., Sept. 14. Registration
for Religious Schools at Temple, Sunday
mornings between 10 AM and 12 Noon,
and week-days.
and
925 Spanish Court
Wilmette , Ill.
GOODNIG HT! These or-. the newest pajamas S'len for fall. They feature both fosh i,,n 's up-to-the-m inute
Norfolk jacket ond the knid11r pants.
Comes in smartly checked flannelette.
YOM KIPPUR
23, 8:00 PM
Senn High School Auditorium
Wednesday morning, Sept. 24, 10:00 AM
(Note - Al I Wednesday services
at Teatro del Lago)
MEDITATION & LITURGICAL MUSIC
12:00 NOC-N to 2:00 PM
AFTERNOON SERVICE
2:00 to 3:30 PM
Tuesday evening, Sept.
MEMORIAL SERVICE
3:30 to 4:15 PM
CONCLUDING SERVICE
4:15 PM
ADDITI ONAL INFORM ATION REGAR DING SERVICES,
MEMBERSHIP OR THE SUNDA Y AND HEBREW SCHOOLS
MAY BE OBTAINED BY CONTA CTING THE TEMPLE
OFFICE AT ORchar d 6-1566.
"PICTURE" THIS! It's a bulky cardigan in the new "hip-huggin g""
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and gay new hues. Even her Kodak
wears bright new color this season.
�Se pt embe r 1 1, 1958
THE VILLAGER
RELIGIOUS
NEWS
Jews of Niles Township
To Usher in New Year
Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish
New Year, begins at sundown
Sept. 14, thus starting a 10
day period when Jews throughout the world ob serve the
religious New Year. The period
culminates with Yorn Kippur,
the Day of A ton em en t, on
W
ednesday, Sept.· 24.
Following are schedules of
t e mp l e s and s y n a go g u e s
throughout the Niles Township
area:
HTJC
The Nil e s Township Jewish
Congregation will usher in the
year 5,719 according to the
traditional Hebrew calendar at
solemn services of divine
worship beginning Sunday
evening, Sept. 14, at 8:30 p .m.
in the East Division of the
Niles Township high school, _
Lincoln and Niles Ave ., Skokie.
Rosh Hashanah, the Jewish
New Year, begins at sundown
Sept . 14 and is observed for
two days, ending a t sundown
Tuesday, Sept. 16.
The musical portion of the
s ervice will be chanted by
Hazzan Robert Zalkin with a
-20-voice choir which has been
t r ained by Hazzan Pavel
Slavensky . Florenc e Bush will
be the organist.
Rabbi Jaco b s will preach on
"Survival Goals for America"
at the s e r vi c e on Su n d a y
evening , Sept . 14. This will be
the first of a series ·of High
Holy Day disco~rses on the
g~neral theme of "The Goals
of Survival in the Age of
Sputniks, Satellites and Atomic
Submersible s'' . The following
morning at 9 a .m. traditional
devotions will take place. A
special children's service will
be held at 3 p.m.
The concluding New Year
services will begin with
traditional rites at 9 ,a.m. on
Tuesday morning, Sept. 16 .
The Holy Days are a ten-day
span devoted to r e l i g i o u s
self-examina tion . Traditionall y,
27
the period of contrition opens
with the observance, in home
and synagogue, of the religious
new year. According to legend,
this is the 5719th year since
the world's creation .
During the service on the
mornings of the New Year, the
shofar or r'am's horn, is
sounded as a call to cons cience.
In many J ewish homes, honey
is served a t the dinner meal in
the hope for a year of swe etne ss.
The High Holy Days rea ch
their climax with Yorn Kippur,
the Day of Atonement, Wednesday, Sept. 24, when those of
the Jewish faith spend· most
of the day in synagogu es
offering prayers which ask for
divine forgiveness for faults
and weaknesses . Many fast on
Yorn Kippur.
BHAI EMUHAH
Congregat ion Bnai Emunah ,
9131 Nile.s Center Rd., Skokie,
will herald the approach .of
Rosh Hashanah at its Sabbath ·
IN
servi ces on Friday evening
Sep t. 12 and Saturday morni ng,
Sept. 13. Both of thes e servi ce s
will prepare the congregation
for the forthcomi ng High Holydays.
The Friday evening servic es
a t 8:30 p .m. will be conducted
by Rabbi Melvin L. Goldstine
who will deliver a p re·- Rosh
Hashanah message . The Oneg
Shabbat following the . service
will be sponsore d _ Mr. and
by
Mrs. Harold Comitor and Mr. and
Mrs. Sidney Hirsch.
At the s ervices on Saturday
morning at 9:30 a.m., Robert
Kleinzweig, son of Mr. and
Mrs. Abraham Kleinzweig, 3844
Sherman, Lincolnw ood, and
Victor Kure , son of Mrs. Maria
Kure , 3838 Brummel, Skokie,
will c el e bra t e their Bar
Mitzvah.
The solemn rites ushering in
the New Year will be conducted
at the Co n gr e g a ti o n Bnai
Emunah Synagogue building on
(CONTINUED ON
DOW NT O WN
'YI.ow
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O PEN MONDAY AND FRIDAY EVES.
Free Parking Acros s the Street
�Septembe r 11 , 1958
THE VILL AGE R
28
YOM KIPPUR (CONTIN U ED)
8
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$
809
THE ALL-PURPOSE BAG
Sunday, Sept. 14, at 8:30 p.m .
On Monday and Tuesday,
Sept. 15 and 16, services will
be held at 9 a.m . in the airconditioned Evans ton Theatre,
1716 Central Street, Evanston.
A service will also be held
in the synagogue building on
Monday and Tuesday for those
who prefer it.
Tickets are available for all
High Holy Day Services at the
congregation office, 9131 Niles
Center Rd ., Skokie . For information regarding tickets,
membership a pp 1 i c at ion and
s ch o o 1 enrollment, phone
OR 4-9292 .
In add i ti on to the adult
services, three services for
young people will b e held on
Monday and Tue sday, Sept. 15
and 16 under the auspices of
Emunah,
Congregation Bnai
two for the children of the
re ligious schools, and one for
the pre-teen and teen age youth.
The youngsters, depending upon their age , will worship
according to the following
schedule: children 5 through
8, 9:30-11 a.m . ; children 9
through 12, 9:30-11 a.m.
Services for children from
age 5 through 12 will be held
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In preparat ion for the High Holy Day Services of Rosh Hashanah
and Yum Kippur that will be observ ed by Jews throughout the
world start ing Monday, Sept. 15, Rabbi Karl Weiner of Temple
Judea in Skokie, instructs some of the young members of his
congregation. The rabbi's son, James Michael Weiner 9, reads
from portion of the Torah to which the rabbi points; Bradley
Charles Price, 5½, holds the traditional ram's horn used in the
serv ice and Janet Ruth Price, 9, holds the Kiddush cup.
several ·today!
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Teens 13 through 17, 2:304:30 p.m .
Services for teens will be
held in the synagogue.
The youth service will be
conducted in the synagogue at
2:15 p.m. on both day s . The
young p e o p 1 e u n d e r the
direction of Henry Sokolowwill
the ms elves lea d the worship .
Tickets of admission are
nee ssary for this service.
They may be procured at the
congregation office .
NORT HW EST SUBURBAN
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button cuffs.
The North we st Suburban
Jewish Congregation of Morton
Grove will conduct its . High
Holy Day Services in the
American Legion Hall of
Morton Grove , Rabbi Lawrence
Charney ,newly elected spiritual
leader, wi ll direct the services
and prea ch the High Holy Day
sermons. Cantor Milton Fore·
man and the s ynagogue choir
will chant the liturgy.
A late R o s h H a s h a n ah
evening service will be held
at 8 p.m . on Sunda y night,
Sept. 14, at which time Rabbi
Charney will preach on the
Revival •
!!Opie, "Religious
Boom or Bust. ' '
On Monday morning, the
rabbi's sermon will be entitled
(CONT i°NUEO ON. NEXT PAGE)
�b
Sept ember 11, 1958
YOM
K IP P UR
(CO NTINUED )
''Growing Up To Ourselve s, ''
and on Tuesday morning ,
"Spending Days or Wasting
T hem . "
J unior congregati on services
for school age children of 7 or
over, will be held in Freddie's
Co 1 on i a -1 Hou s e in Morton
Gro ve , under the direction of
George Garber .
S t udents of the Hebrew
School and Sunday School will
be prepared for the High Holy
Day Service s at the Sunday
School on Sep t. 14. For infor•
mation on High Ho 1 y Day
arrangeme nts or school registration, call the synagogue office
OR 6-2570
TEMPLE JUDEA
On Sunday evening , Sept. 14,
Temple Judea will conduct the
beginning of the High Holy
Day Services at 8 p .m. Pending
the completion of ·the new
s chool building and auditorium
Temple Judea's Services will
be held as fo 11 ow s: Rosh
Hashanah
Eve : Senn High
School Auditorium , 5900 N.
Glenwood; Rosh
Hashanah ,
Monday , Sept. 15 ,
morning
servic es 10 a .m. in the Teatro
Del Lago Theatre; 925 Spanish
Court, Wilmette .
Yorn Kippur Eve Services at
8 p .m. in the Senn High School
Auditorium ; Yorn Kippur day,
Wednesday , Sept . 24, morning
servi c es 10-12noon ; meditation
period & liturgica l music, 122: 00 p.m ., afternoon service,
2 • 3: 30 p.m . ; memorial s ervice ,
3:30 ~ 4:15 p.m. , concluding
s ervi c e , 4: 15 p .m.
Childrens' servi c es will be
he ld in the temple as follows:
Rosh Hashanah: Monday, Sept.
15, 2:30 - 3:15 p.m . ; grades
3rd • 6th in the sanctuary;
grades kindergart en to 2nd • in
the Community Hall.
Yorn Kippur: Wed n es da y,
Sept. 24, 1 • 1: 45 ; g ra: de s
3rd • 6th • in the s anctuary ;
grades kindergart en to 2nd · in
the Community Hall .
The adult services will be
conducted by Rabbi Karl Weiner.
spiritual lea der df the con·
gregation. Cantor Lionel Godow
and the Temple Judea choir
will chant the liturgical music.
TRADITIO NAL
The · High Holy Day sea s on
will be ushered in at t he
Skokie Valley Traditio n a l
Synagogue , 884 3 East Prairie
Rd. , with afternoon and evening
s ervices on Sept.14 at 6:45 p .m.
Morning servi ces for both days
of Rosh Hashanah will begin
at 8 :30 a. m. and the second
day of the New Year, Sept. 16
will close with afternoon and
evening servi c es at 6:30 p .m.
The shofar or ram's horn, which
is sounded as an a wakening
call for Jews to come to the
synagogue , will be heard a t
both days of Rosh Hashanah .
Samu e 1 S . Berger, 892 1
F orestview Rd ., president of
the synagogue , announce d th at
the ri tual worship would be
conduc ted by Rabbi Kanter and
Cantor Sidney Gibbons,a ssisted
by an out standing volunte er
choir con sisting of: David P .
F eldman , Willard Aaron , Max
T HE VILLAGE R
Shiffman, Nathan Eckst ein,
and Art Goldrich .
The s ynagogue 's ritual and
s chool committee have arranged
for children's s ervice s to be
condu c ted a ccording to the ·
following schedule : t een age
services , 10:30 a .m. to 12:30
p.m. in room No . I , intermedia te
yo uth services , ages 8 through ·
12, 10:30 a .m. to 12:30 p.m. in
room No. 2, ~l ementary services ,
ages 4 through 7 , 10: 30 a .m. to
12:30 p.m . in room No . 2.
Yorn Kippur s ervices will
begin with the Kol Nidre prayer
on Sept. 23 at 6:30 p.m . and
will be followed by an all day
worship beginning at 8:30 a .m.
on Wednesday , Sept . 24 and
will include Yizkor or memorial
services, which will commence
at 11 a. m.
Sam Cohen, 9100 Ewing ,
Skokie and Morley Brickman,
9016 Kilbourn , Skokie , co-chair- ·
men of the building committee ,
proudly a nnounced that the new
sanctuary , which was rec ently
const r uc te d at a cost of
$300,000 will be available foi;
these servic e s.
T he synagogue ' s structure ,
whi ch also houses a Hebrew
and S u n d a y S c h o o 1 of 600
s tuden t s, will be in operation
and will be a _ epting new
cc
s tudent s thro ughout the month
of September . Informatio n may
be had by conta c tin g the
synagogue offi ce at OR 4-3473.
Churc h Resumes
Winte r Sched ule
St. P aul's Re formed Episco•
pal church, 7801 Har 1 em
avenu e, Niles, will return to
· i t s fall and winter schedule
Sunday School at 9:45 a.m .
Neighborh ood children are
in vit ed to attend Tuesday
afternoon meetings of the Girls
clu b and the Wednesday a fter·
noon Boys club sessions. The
Women's Guild meets on the
second T uesday of each month
at 9:30 a .m. at the church .
The church held its annual
picni c at Miami woods August
30. The barbecue supper was
prepared under the direction
of Mrs. Wil bur Siebold and Mrs .
B .A. James .
29
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Wome n's, Children's
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�THE VILLAGER
September 11, 1958
Billy Pierce of White Sox
To Make Skokie Appearance
Klat&i
CONSCIENTIOUS FITTING OF
QUALITY FOOTWEAR
SHOES
TWO LOCATIONS
6028 Dempster
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MORTON GROVE
NI LE S
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Billy Pierce, star Chicago
White Sox pitcher, will help
launch
Congregation
B'nai
Emunah' s Mens Club fourth
annual kickoff program Thursday , Sept. 25, in the synagogue
social hall , 9131 Niles Center
Road , Skokie, at 7:30 p .m. This
will mark Pierce's first appearance in the Niles Township
area .
A buffet supper for members
and their guests will precede
the program.
Players may come and go ,
ally autographed baseballs to
lucky door prize winners.
but Billy Pierce stays on with
the White Sox. Next week will
fnark the end of nine years with
the s ox, who traded away
catcher Aaron Robinson to
Detroit to obtain the best
pitcher the team has owned in
many years. Pierce has participated in five All Star games.
He has registered over 100
strike outs per season since
coming to the club, while compiling over 169 vi c to r i e s
against 130 defeats .
Pierce will present person-
Pierce
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Beau t iful h ar monizing emb ossed
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The Lincolnwood Bnai Brith
Men's Bowling Le ague opened
the 1958-59 season on Tuesday ,
Sept. 2, at Sunset Bowl, 7304
N. Western Ave., Chicago .
Nate Schulm an, 6956 Kolmar,
Lincolnwood, president of the
League , stated that the roster
of 192 members is the fa rgest
in their five y ear history .
Monday and Tuesday are
bowling nights. Applications
are still being accepted. Those
interested may contact Melvin
Seli g man, 6640 St. Louis ,
Lincolnwood ,
secretary, or
Irwin A. Schmidt, 3501 Crane,
Skokie , treasurer.
Star Bowler
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Among a number of tenpin
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Grove is John La wren c e
Kennedy, above.
A member of the CBA team
cha~pions , John a lso claims
the Cf.A Doubles crown. He
was elected to the All Chicagoland's first team .
Boasting a record seasonal
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in the el~ven years he has
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Kennedy has rolled six perfect games and four 299 games
in open play.
�Septemb er 11 , 1958
31
52
H
A
HE:
1$ NOT.
He.'s A HL6HCLASS
R
DOES HE
C>Dc
0
L
D
T
TOP SOIL AND HUMUS
$2 .50 yd. 5 yrds . or m o r e <leli vere<l.
BUTENSCHOEN BROS.
VA 4-18~ 6
-IF,HE DID HAVE;.
ID KILL 'EM/
HAVE ANY
PED16REES?
Landscape Service
Lawn-0-Dreams Landscaping Co.
BLACK DIRT - 7 YD S . $10
HUMUS - PULVERIZED 13L'AC K SOIL
ROTOTILL ING
Merion sod, w ho les ale and retail delivered,
a lso installed.
PA 5-2306
NIies 7-6543
V
LANDSCAPING
New Lawns - Re-Seed ing
Rotot ill ing
Tractor Work
BOB ROSS
OR 4-1 368
E
E
--- - - - - - - - - - - - -
PULVERIZED BLACK FARM SOIL
N
9 YD. LOAD,
_;__________ ______..:..,.------------------,,------------------.----------,,--~------I
15
Business Service
21
WIND OWS WASHED , STORMS HUNG
& rem oved . Profess: work PA 5-7348
.
VERMONT SLATE
AND
STONE F L OORING
Robby - ORch ard 3-1612
PARAMOUNT LIGHTS
I
La m p Sh ades Recovered,
Cleaned , Repaired, Made-to-Order
L amps of every variety I
1555 Sherm a n Ave.
DAvis 8-6677.
Want Ad Rates
35~
Stores- Offices- Cleaned
Scavenger Service
15D
LINE
Refuse Disposal Service
As hes, Garbage and Rubbish Rem oval
LICEN SED - BONDED
R easonable Rates. ORch ard 6-1760
Min imum - 4 I in~s
Building And Contracting
20
If Paid Within 10 Days of Publication
Otherwise Rate is 45, a Line .
Peterson Construction Co .
Designers
GUARANTEED PAID CIRCULATION
&
Builders
Building and Re pair
TUCKPOINTING
BU I LDING CLEANING
Metal cornices removed . Chimney repairs
a specialty. Free est. Fully ins.
MARTINELLI & CO. - MOhawk 4-5165
G. M. ORGLER BUILDERS
Repairin g , add itions, Cu s tom Cabinets.
P o r ches, rumpus rms.
Free es t.
NE 1-0459
of
Carpenters-Contractors
CARPENTER WORK WANTED . GEN.
Remodel'g, Porch Encl"s., Basements,
P aneling of all kinds. Top grade work.
L . J. DA YID
ORchard 4-7236
FREE ESTIMATES
22D
Gutters, Roofing, Heating
GUTTERS
ROOFING
DOWNSPOUTS
VENTILA TJON
HEATING
SL ATE and TILE
SHINGLES-DECKS
WINDSTORM REPAIRS
E. F. BASSING
CUSTOM
OR 5-4030
Electrical Service
~~;~!!Ei~~!~~m Jii~#/ti1~!ta~Jea"ti!~~ml 23
F lood Control Systems.
- - - - - - -- - - -- -- - - OR 4-2036
DARE ELECTRIC
in Skokie, Morton Grove, Lincolnwood and Niles
9001 N . Luna -Morton Grove
CEMENT CONTRACTO R
Driveways, walks, steps, porches,
SE RVICES, SWITCHES, OUTLETS
IND U STRI AL, COM M., RESIDENTIAL
ORCH A RD 4-1 956
FREE ESTIMATES
75
Pai nti ng and Decorating
platforms. Basements water pr oofed.
Serving cus tomers on N. Shore 36 yrs.
COMPLETE
DECORATING
SERVICE
Phone eves. J Unper 8-2448
AL 1-2618 JOSEPH KNEIP OR 3-3174
COLOR IS OUR .BUSINESS I
Not just painting and deco r ating, but
the right color or paper selection is
most important.
J. M . Eckert Decor ating Co. (Est. 1920)
5524 Broadway, Chicago
Com p lete Service, Prompt Quality W orkTelep hone - LOngbeach 1-543 7
m a n s h ip. Fin e Materials. Very Reasonable
MR. HA UBER - ALpine 1-2959
Rates. Free Design i ng and Consultations.
MR. ECKERT - ALpine 1-1199
A. J. Georgi Co.
Bldg., Remodeling , Repairs
Phone ORchard 6-3535
Deadline Tuesday Noon
V E RM ON T SL ATE
AND
ST ONE F L OORING
ORchard 3-1612
- - - -- - - - - - - - - - - - - , - - - - - - - -- -- - - - - -- - -' R obby
'
11
Dogs ·and Cats
Notices
Will
PO ODLES, TIN Y TOYS, W H ITE & CR.
Som e ch a m p ion sired. P ersonality p lus.
BR 5-0937
BOXE R PUPPIES - M ALE, 9 WKS. AKC
r eg. Best offer. V Anderbilt 7-659 1.
New meth od of weigh t con t r ol- Habit control-Self imp r ovement-Individ u al prob- POODLES, SMALL BLACK MINIATU R ES
lems - Alcoholis m - Den t al con dit ioning
h ome raised AKC. Reas. F Iilmor e 3-3398
- F r ee consultation.
OLD
MUST SELL I H EALTHY 3 MO~
2414 W. Lawren ce--S uite 201
ped. boxer. Tail and ear s clipped. Reas.
Lincoln 9- 9882
Phone LOngbeach 1-2383
Lost and Found
3
LOST-TERRIER
BLACK AND W H ITE
AN SWERS TO NA ME OF "BUFF"
ORchard 3-7199
11
Dogs and Cats
AI RDALES , B EAG L ES, C O C K E RS ,
Collies, D achs, Pekes, Poodles, Porns.
L I L ABNER KENN E L
Open 10-10
1944 Waukegan R d.
GL 4-611 1
GERMAN SHEPHEIW PUPPIES - AKC
r eg. Vet. super. 5553 W . Cortland. NA
2-3826
Business Service
WINDOW WASH ING
KITCHEN W ALLS - BATHR OOMS
F L OORS W A SHE D & WAXED
Honest - Capable - Reliab le
Good References. Reasonable R a tes
L OUIS B. K R ICK - LI 9-8461
UPTOWN
House & W indow Cleaners
Supreme W indow Cleaning
Residential - Comm ercial - Industrial
WALL WASHING - MAINTENANCE
SUBURBAN SERVICE - 8th YR.
Fully Insured - Bonded. HO 5-6544
Bu ild to O rder
• R E MODELING
• R E PAIRING
Reasonable Prices
TUxedo 9-7246
American Relaxat ion Clinic
RELAX-U-SLIM
15
TA 5-1495
AL 2-5999
20A
Cabinet Work
KITCHEN CABINETS
made to order. Replace your old counter
tops with Formica tops. Bookca ses and
all special cabinet work .
QUALITY WOODWORKING CO., INC.
7332 Milwaukee Ave.
Niles 7-7 533
21
Building And Repa ir
HAMM'S
REMODELIN G SERVICE
Dorm ers, attic room s, additions, basement
rooms, panelin g, patios, porches. 11 types
of siding. Free Estimates, No Obligation .
No Down paym ent.
F.H .A. F I NANCING. CALL
F Iiimore 5-4325
TUCKPOIN TING - BRICK REPAIR
AN D CEMENT WORK
N O J OB TOO SMALL
ROBERT D A VIES
ORchard 3-1367
NOR DICA D ECORATING SERVICE
Expert paperhanging & painting.
E xcel. references.
Free estima t es.
F ully Insu red
_
SP 7-6444
CHRISTIANSEN & CO.
Melvin B . Christiansen
FULL Y INSURED J OBS
INTERJOR - EXTERIOR
PA INTING - D ECORATING
1535 N. Springfield, C hgo. BE 5-1 657
Reverse the Charge W hen You Call Us
398
PLANTER BOXES - PATJOS
SODDING AND
TRACTOR WORK
"Green Thumb"
Garden Center
5697 ELSTON A VE.
RO 3-5787
ROTOTILLING
I .SPECIALIZE IN:
ROTOTILL ING
AND
PUL VERIZTNG
YOUR LAWN FOR SEEDING
For Prompt Service
and Free Estimates - Call
NICK SIRRELL
OR 5-1519
- OR OR 4-74 8 1
PULVERIZED RICH BLACK DIRT
7-8 yd. load - $15 ; Humus • $22; Merion
Blue sod sold in qu a n t it y & complete
landsca pe servi ce. Patricia n L a n ds cape
Se r v . Da ys TE 4-9721, eves. CA 7-4071
548
Lawn Mowers
- - -- -- - -- -- - ~ - - --
HAND & POWER MOWERS
Sharpened & Recond itioned
Authorized Hand &
Powe.r Mower Service
POWER MOWER RENT AL
$1.25 PER HOUR -
3748 Oakton St.
59
Musical Instrument~
NEW AND USED
Uprig hts .
...... ... fr om $ 69.50
Electronic Pianos .............. ..... .... fr om 265.00
Used Spinet s ... .
... from 365.00
...from 595. 00
Used Chord Organ s
Used Clarinets
...... :.from
99.50
Used Trumpe ts
........ from
89 .50
.... ..from 175.00
Used Saxo p hones ...
AUTHORIZED DEALER FOR:
Wurli t ze r, L o wrey, Co nn, Selmer
and Leblanc
" HUNDREDS TO CHOOSE FROM"
KARNES MUSIC CO.
906 Church St., Evans t on
70A
HOWARl'> sroPPED C>ATIN6
HOL.LY 6E(AUSE SHE WAS
--roo MUCH OF A 6 AtKSEAT DRIVER
!3AC> Aecur
6EW.JC:: A 0Atl<-Sf:Ai
DRIVER?HAT'S
so
DAvis 8-3737
Rug Cleaning
CARPETING & RUGS ALL WOR K
guar. Fully ins . TU 9-3207, a s k for Dick.
SAVE $'S
Clean all your rugs. Exe. r esults wit h
rental machines. $6 pe r day. Free del.
We also do location oleaning. OR 3-5 153
and Film avail. fo r Children's birthday
parties and Social gatherings, etc. CALL
after 1 p .m. ORchard 5-4761.
MAGIC SHOWS FOR ALL OCCASIONS
LARRY VALENTINE
"THE CLOWN PRINCE OF MAGIC "
WHitehall 3-0608
ORchard 6-1468
.Nursery Schools
Lad & Lassie Kindergarten
·*
OPEN FOR· FALL REG!
ESTAB. 1941-NEW MODERN HOME
DESIGNED FOR CHILDREN: 2-6 YRS.
PVT. PLAYGROUND-STATE LIC.
EXTENDED SERV . ½ & FULL DAYS
1501 HOW ARD-EVANSTON
(1 blk. ·w. Wester n) GReenleaf 5-1660
71
Draperies and Sl ip Covers
HANDMADE DRAPERIES: CUSTOM
Kirsch rods ; Slip Covers. Complete line
of fabric s. Cus tom quilted s preads. All
work by Amado in our shop. 26 years
on North Shor e .
PROTEX SLIP COVER CO.
601 Demps ter at Chicago Ave.
GReenleaf 5-7676
72
Upholste ring and Repairs
ARMANDO ' S REP AIR SHOP
BEFO{lE YOU THROW AWAY YOUR
old furniture, call ARMANDO. R epairing, uphols tering, and refinis hing all
kinds of furniture. Guaranteed.
815 Dempster, Evans ton
UN 4-91 82
- ~-~-=- =- =- =- =- =- =- =- =- =- =- =- =- =- =- =- =- =- =- =- =-~-=- =- =- =- =- =- =- =- =- =- =- =-:.-=-:----'"----iiiiiiraiiiiiiii=======:==::::::::::1---------=------~----...:., 73A
..
H
A
R
0
L
D
T
E
E
N
ORchard 5-7400
PIANOS
ORGANS
INSTRUMENTS
Sound Movie Pro jector
*
2 HOUR MIN.
Johnson Equ ipment Co .
Entertainment
47A
$32 .50
$18. 00
WE SPECIALIZE IN
CARPENTRY
REPAIRS - REMODELING
Porches, Patios, Car Ports ,
Rumpus Rooms, Panelling, Etc.
SWEDA BROTHERS
OR 6-0460
2 1C
DA VIS 8-1483
Vic's Jan itor Serv ice
$22.50
10 YD. LOAD OF HUMUS
10 YD. LOAD OF CINDERS
Sewing Machines
All Makes Sewing Machines Repaired
SALES AND SERVICE
Rentals and Demons trators
SINGER SEWING MACHINE CO.
807 Davis St., Evan s ton
UNiversity 4-8388 - 89
95
Situations Wanted-Men
Business and Professional
ACCOUNTANT 20 YRS. EXPER.
Tax, finan. s tmts ., Audits . Back work
brought up t o date. Reas. NE 1-9636
BKKPR., UNIVER. TRAINED. DES. JOJ3
with career pote ntial. Box !008, 1100 N .
La Salle.
97
9 -10
Help Wanted-Women .
Business and Professional
MUSIC & DANCE TEACHERS
wanted. Larges t NW Suburb school.
Part or full time. Write Press Papers,
Box 572, 5353 W . Lawrence
'
�97
Se ptem ber 11, 1958
THE VILLAGER
32
Help Wanted-Women
Business and Professional
98
Help Wanted- Women
Business and Professional
97
A-1
GIRLS WANTED
EMPLOYMENT SERVICE
MANY FIRMS IN THE
SKOKIE AREA ARE ASKING US FOR SECRETARIES,
STENOS, DICTAPHONE,
AND KEY PUNCH OPERA TORS. ALSO TYPISTS,
CLERKS AND MANY
OTHERS.
What Recession? It's over in Skokie.
W e h ave m any Secretarial positions availab le . Do come i n and see us.
KAY THOMPSON
$300-37 5- Stenos
T h is Skokie company has openin gs for
two Junior and one
t h ree ste nos
Senior - with som e beginn e r experience.
$260- Typist-Clerk
Youn g lady with some genera l office and
typing experience. Excellent opportunity
fur begin ne r typist.
ABOVE WEIL'S
5102 Oakton - Skokie
BOOKKEEPER
with experience in h andling
complete books. Good sa lary .
ORchard 5-7 900
ONE-GIRL OFFICE
NO SHORTHAND
$325
792 5 N . Lincoln -
ORcha rd 5-2300
AMBITIOUS WOMAN
O ur G irls Now Ea rn
$2 to $5 A n Hour
STENOGRAPHER-SECT'Y.
W ANTED for s m a ll e ng ineerin g company. Call
NEwca s lle 1-9292
G EN ERAL CAFETERIA
- - - - - - - - - -- - - - - -
Gi rl to Do Ge neral Office
Duti es- Som e Ty ping
FOR INTERVIEW CALL
NEwcastle 1-9129
GENER AL OFFICE_ _ __
IN EVANSTON
Bill ing j ob with a nationally known
company. Conven ient location, new building, air-cond itioning, fri end ly a ssociates,
good h o urs, pleasant sur roundi ngs . Noncon tributory pension and insurance, a n d
paid vacation.
Call DAvis 8-9400 or
BRoadway 3-2720
8 :30 to 4 :30 Weekdays
ALL POSITIONS 100 % FREE
Skokie Employment Service
7925 N. L incol n -
ORchard 5-2300
handle
vender
ex pid iti ng
progress reports for engineering projects, Good
VO ice
too and persuasive man ner.
Like to work with -detail.
• P L EASA N T WORKING CONDITIONS
• EXCELLENT E M P L OYEE BENEFITS
SUN ELECTRIC
Chicago
Rep ublic Mold ing Corp .
( At N. W . Hwy. & H arlem )
EXECUTIVE SECY
ADVERT ISING MGR.
$350
Here is an outstandin g opportunity f or
t he secr etary who e nj oys va ri ety in her
wo rk . Along with ge ne ral secretarial duties. you will a ssist · the Advertis i n g Manage r w ith various promotional pro j ects.
ALL POSJTIONS 100% FREE
Skokie Employme nt Service
7925 N. Lincoln -
ORc hard 5-2300
Girls & Women
LAYOUT
DRAFTSMEN
IMMEDIATE OPENING
Should Have Some
College Training in
Mechan ical Design .
All Employee Benefits.
Small Factory with Large
Engineering Department
Salary Comm ensu rate wi t h
(18-35)
Tra ining and Exper ience.
Precision assembly lite cl ean
interesting work. Appl icants
should be right handed, have
MAGNAFLUX
exce ll ent close v ision . En joy
CORP.
Micro - Assembly of Smal l
parts.
7300 W. LA WR ENCE
• 5 DAY - 40 HOUR WEEK
• PLEASANT WORKING CONDITIONS
• LIBERAL E MPLOYEE BENEFITS
SUN ELECTRIC
CORPORATION
6323 Avondale Ave.
Chicago
(At N. W. Hw y. & Harlem )
97A
Help Wanted- Women
Household
GENERAL CLEANING
ONE DAY PER WEEK. SOME IRONING . NEAR TRANSPORTATIO N .
CALL - ORchnrd 3-1691
V A nderbilt 4-9663
or TAicot t 3-2771
3 BEDROOM BRICK
$13,750
ON YOUR LOT-NO D ECOR AT I N G
L OTS AVAILAB L E
Help Wanted-Men & Women
WAITRESSES AND KITCHEN HELP
Days and Nights. Good wages and t ips.
SEE MRS. SCHLAU
Wooden Shoes Restaurant and L o unge
8100 Caldwell Ave., Niles
NIies 7-8180
1os___Fo _a le _u om ob i_ s _ __
_ _r_S _ _-_A _,_ _ _ le_
__
CHEVROLET IMPALA
'58 V-8 Hardtop, cashmere blue, n ear
n ew, 5,000 suburban miles, whitewalls,
powerglide, pus h button radio, deJuxe
heater & defr oster, othe r extras. $2595.
Call M,·s. Haney, 8 a.m. to 5 p.m . weekdays - ORchard 6-3537.
1950 2 DR. STUDEBAKER.
R eas. SP 5-3182
IVERSEN BUILDERS
3256 W . North Ave.
BEim ont 5-3036
SKOKIE - BY OWNER, IMMED . P OSS
DELUXE 3 BDRM. RANCH, lge. B rkfs t
Area, cer. tile k it., Patio, ga r . Fu ll bs m t.
gas h t., Alum. strms. - scrns. Was h .
dryer.
Wooded lot. Extras ..........................$26,500
GReenleaf 5-8472
BY OWNER
ELMHURST
ONLY $15,600 - Taxes $177 yr.
I ½ story frame - 2 bdrms. finis hed in
kn otty pine. Full bsmt., l ½ car gar
Auto. oil ht. L ot 65 x 245 . beau. land
scpd. with shrubs & fruit trees. Many
extras.
HAze l 6-7556
Private ly owned. Black. Radio and H eater. Good condition. Niles 7-6794 .
ARLINGTON HEIGHTS
$18, 950
90-day possession, 3 bedroom face brick
ranch, near h ig h sc hool, full basement
Ceram ic bath , built-in oven and ra n,ie.
deluxe featu r es.
LONG TERM FINANCI NG
Wtd . to Buy-Automobiles
106
USED CARS WANTED
6323 Avondale Ave .
- - - - - · - - - - -- - - --
G. W. Lindstrom Bldrs.
ANY CONDITION. TOP DOLLARS
paid. R and River Auto P ar ts. Ca ll
VA 4-9033 or VA 4-2186. ( Open Sun. )
CORPORATION
6467 N. Avondale
Chicago
(Near Harle m & Devon)
NEwcastle 1-4311
OTHE R S A VAILABLE
OPEN TILL DARK
Sa les Office at
90 14 P arkside D rive
a t Ballard Rd.
1 mile W est of Mil waukee A ve.
LAUND RY - CLN G. ROUTE M A N
N . Shore's Leading Laundry - D ry Cleaner has open ing for married m a n , 23-4 0
with 3 year C h icago area wo r k r ecord.
$90 week durin g training.
NELSON L AUNDRY
DRY CLEANING SYSTEM
Evanston
1572 Maple
'51 PLYMOUTH
• PERMANENT POSITIONS
Apply
RESERVATIONIST
LIGHT TYPING
WILL TRAIN
An ideal public contact position for t he
young g irl w ho wants that SOMETHING
DIFFERENT job. Skills and previous
experience are not as important as perso nality, poise and appearance. 8 :30 to
5 - 5 days.
W ill
N eat g irl in this department
who is a good typist
Top Wages - Company Benefits
PERMANENT
5-Day--40-Hour Week
Hours 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
For ou r planning department
ORDER WRITER
-----
GENERAL OFFICE
• Expiditer
Honeywell
8330 N . AUSTIN
MORTON GROVE
Ul03 PARKSIDE D R.
3 bedrm ., fu ll bsm t., oak tr im. N ew .t
r eady to move in ............... ..... .. ....... $39,000
NEwcastle 1-9129
Plea s ant W ork ing Conditions
Uniforms and Meals Furnis hed.
1st and 2 nd s hif t.
H ours to su it your co n ven ience
Apply Cafeteria Ma nager
Toy Party Plan Dem onstrato r s
N eeded For Fall Season.
N o Invest men t ! - No Deliveri es !
No Collections!
THE TOY C H EST
ORchard 5-4~ 15
LADY TO ASSIST M ANAGE R
W ork by appointment. Selling Sterlin g
Bavarian China and Tuscan stainless.
Car necessa ry.
GR 7-1095 or FL 2-7337
$45 • $96 per week to your p r esent income. Must be available eve ni ngs. Full
time men make big money with us.
Car essential
FOR INTERVIEW PHONE
ORchard 6-3535
25-45 Now earning $125.00 wk. o r less,
and not afraid to work. Car necessary
for local use. Call Mr. Brown, MErrimac
7-2 500, l to 8 p.m. interview.
Small office requires pleasant young lady
f or p hone and general typing. 5-day
week, bonus plan, excellent transportati o n , paid vacation, group insurance, etc.
CA LL - ORCHARD 3-0312
WM. W . MEY E R & SONS, INC.
83 11 NILES CENTER RD. , SKOKIE
experience .
NO PRESSURE
A DEAL THAT CAN'T BE BEAT
y
Successf ul Saleslad_ __
SWITCHBOARD-TYPIST
builder's
WORK FROM YOUR HOME
WOR K 25 HOURS A WEEK. EARN
$50-$75. Car n ecessary. GReenlea f 6-4781.
EARN
$15 TO $20 PER EVE !
ment. Electrical or Elect ronic
21 -40 years of age.
PHONE GIRL
ALL POSITIONS 100 ')'< FREE
Skok ie Employment Service
of automatic testing equip-
.'.~: ••
99
ORchard 6-3700
L ocal firm needs ambitious g-irl to act
as Girl Friday f or the owne r of s mall
progressive co m pany. Shorthand not requ ired, but applicant s hou ld type at least
50 w. p. m . Mod e rn working conditions,
rap id sa lary increases.
0
EMPLOYMENT SERVICE
5045 Oakton St. - Skokie
2ND FLOOR
2• 31 FA RRELL AVE.
.s~:;:o
! ;~"oid fi·r·e·~·'.:'. ...~t.t~~:...~~'.:'....~~
1869 WEEG WAY
FULL OR PART-TIME tei'.':: ·•~~!.'.. ~lll~:'. ...~'. .~..::.r:... $3;60
~
b . ~
8845 CH U R CH ST.
OPPORTUNITY
~ 8. 'J:;:;:o
J~"..~r gc::.: p~~t;:t> . .~...~~d. lll::... ."
add
Try ours on a Par t ti m e bas is for Skokie Syn agogue. Must be r eliab le .
PHONE - ORchard 4-3473
To be trained in the repair
OAKTON
A-1 EMPLOYMENT
OR 5-2850
Maintenance Man Wanted
Repairman
SEE US AT ONCE
This is a good pos itio n for t he wo m an
w ho has had p r ev ious ofiice expe ri ence
and wants to get into t he bus iness wodd
ag·ain . Some ll'gu r e aptitu<le.
L ht ht typing w ilJ qua lify you for this
position in loca l co mpan y. H ours: 8 :30
to 4 :30. T h is job has a lot of variety.
Age 21-28, Salary. Car furn. and exµenses. No exper. nee. Will train . No
traveling Aft. 6, HO 5-1044
• T. V. & Radio
Fer hie-Houses
See These
RANCH HOMES
in Park Ridge Manor
and Ballard Gardens
SALES TRAINEE
100 % FREE
$250-265- No Typin g
$260-275-F igure Cle rk
He lp Wanted- Men
Business and Profes1ional
98
Help Wanted-Men
Business and Professional
147
IMMACULATELY CLEAN 35 FT. TRAILer in Glenview's mos t des irable, pleasant
tra iler court. Su itable for young ma r ried couple. Bargain. Call GLenview 42251, evenings.
110A
Bicycles
COME TO BERKELEY'S
GUARANTEED NEW AND USED B I K ES ;
OTHERS AS LOW AS $5 .00 . PARTS
AND REPAIR SERVICE FOR A L L
UNiversity 4-5202
MAKES.
612 D AVIS, EVANST ON
BERKELEY'S
128
1237 N. Mitchell
Builder, $Pring 4-56 l l
House Tra ilers
109A
For Rent-Apartments
SKOKIE - 4905 LO UISE. D E L UXE 3½
rm. apts. Indiv idually controlled h eat
and ai r conditioning . Close to s h ops,
CTA transportation and schools. $140.
See to appreciate. For further infor m ation call ORchard 3- 7327
3 RMS. HTD. 8701 HIGGINS R D. - N R.
Dee Rd. TA 3-8138
SKOKIE--=:-BEAUT IFUL 6 R OOM, 3RD
fl oor apartment. 3 bedrooms, l ½ baths.
Ch ildren.
ORc hard 4-5598
46~7 Main St.
NEWLYREMODELED BSMT:-;;:-PT. - 2
rms. & bath. Semi-Furn. Nr. MilwaukeeLawrence. $65 m o. Nicely nrbhd. E m pl.
Lady. PE 6-04 39 aft. 7 eves.
DES PLAINES - BRAND NEW RANCH
APTS. 3½'s. Cer. bath, birch cab. kit.
H eated. L ovely quiet nabor hd. Only 4
un it bldg. Park in g facilities . Walk to
train, schoo ls , stores.
V Anderbilt 4- 6250
TOTH REALTY
e
- - - 61/ RMS. DELUXE APTS.
3 bdrms. Double Plumbing. 2nd o r 3rd.
Quiet
E xcel. Transptn .
Palmer Sq.
neighbo rh ood. AL bany 2-7097 .
2 1/:, RMS. - 3RD. F L . - NEWLY D EC.
$75 mo. h td . Call I R 8-5087 aft. 5 p .m .
6 RMS. DEL UXE APT. - HTD . ENCL.
Knotty p ine pch. Tile bath - Cab. k it.
2nd fl . Avail. Oct. l. $160 mo. Ch ildr en
welcomed. 'l'U xedo 9-7397
142
THE "PLUS" H OME
DES PLAINES
Plus Heated
3 bdrm. Brk. ranch family rm. Plus bsmt., Plus recreatio n
room. Plus 2 car ga r .
Short walk to train, schls., stores.
Only $22,900
J alousy Ht<!. breezewy.
4 bedrms. bs mt., alt. Gar., Lovely wooded Jot.
N r. sch ls., transpn ............. ..............$22,000
V Anderbilt 4- 6250
Toth Realty
GL ENV IEW
$2,000 Down - Only $16,500
Beautiful California Redwood
Face Urick Ranch
2 bdrms., Large liv. rm., birch cab. k it.
Separate din. area. Tile bath with g laiss
s hower doors. Gas ht. 60 x 167' lot
bordered by li'orest Preserves.
For Rent-Halls
UNDERHILL 7-8000
Luxembourg Gardens, Inc.
YOUNG MAN WITH CA R
FINE FOODS AND LIQUORS
. CATERING AVAILAB L E
ALL OCCASIONS
TO DELIVER DRY CLEANING
ORchard 4-71 99
BOYS!
Earn good m oney two or m ore afternoons
a week selling subscriptions t.o THE
VILLAGER. Good commission . Just try
it and see! Call Carl Krueger - OR 63535 for full details.
$$ CAREER $$ SALES $$
Chicago office of Nationally kn own Corp.
offers career posi tion due to expa ns io n .
Salary p lus commission. Age 22-35 . For
appt. p h . Mr. Bauer.
RAndolp h 6-6086
62 1 l Lincoln Morton Grove
ORchard 3-1930
SEEMAN REAL TY
CRYSTAL LAKE
NEW 3 BDRM. RANCH HO ME
COMPLETELY FINISHED &
DECORATED $13,500
$500. DOWN I NCLUDES CLOSING COSTS
WIX REALTY
SOUTHWEST END OF LAKE
CRYSTAL L AKE 2015 or GRAC. 7-287
-
LAKE ZURICH - BY TRANSF. OWNER
MUST SELL . I mmed. Poss. 6 rm. ~ bdrms.
partial brk. ranch, imp roved. 75 x 126' lot.
:l car gar., 4 appliances. .l!:xtras. Asking
64 Golf View Rd.
~18,00o.
GEneral 8-7420
B Y OWNER
LA GRANGE
8 ltMS.-3 BEDRM. REMODEL E D
HOME
Lge. cab. kitch ., rec r. rm. , gas heat.
r ·e nced ya r d . l ~" blks. to scbl. & shop.
MANY EXTRA::; .............................. $18,600
F L eet wood 4-2882
COME BU Y
PARK RIDGE
7 Rm. Brick- 3 Nice Bedrms.
Att. gar., large !iv. rm., nat' l fr p lc
formal dinin g rm., mode rn kitchen, family rm., paneled r ee r. rm.
Close to C. & N.W. R.R. and C.T.A .
ONLY $27,750
O wner Wants Quick Deal
C. E. HUNN, REALTOR
TAicott 3-5186
ARLINGTON HTS.
For Sale-Houses
147
PALATINE
LAKE PARK ESTATES
3 bdrm. ranch - on spacious grounds.
carpeted t h ru -out. Att. 2 ca r ga r . En- ,
closed porch has radiant heat.
Ma n y othe r extras. Reduced to s ell
P A 6-7000
Bople Realty
VA 4-6224
1967 Rn nd Rd.
R Od ney 3-5671
BY OWNER
Rooms To Accommodate
In-Laws or Large Family
2 yr. old deluxe 4 bdrm. home. 2 bat hs,
:l car gar., l:Jsmt.., Patio, Blacktop d rive.
Alum. strms. Sc rns. L ovely nabo rhd.
.Many extras.
On ly $26,900
CLearbrook 5-4218
�September 11, 1958
147
THE VILLAGE R
For Sa le-Houses
Co nvenienc e Plus Charm
There's somethin g about a redwood trimmed house on a tree shaded street that is
heart warmin g. Then t hi nk of the luxury
of 2 full baths; large Jiving room w ith
fireplace, plus built-in Philippine mahogany cabinets and bookcases. 3 bedrooms,
tiJe kitchen, and patio are oth er good
features. Priced in the 20's.
King's Court Corp.
936 Spanish Ct., Wil m ette
ALpine 6-0750
SKOKIE- $22 ,000 .00
4945 LEE ST.
(S.W . corner Terminal Ave. )
Gi·eenleaf Village
Three year old Tri-level nicely landscaped
on a large lot. 3 bedrooms - tile kitchen
and bath. Basement. Matching Redwood
garage - side drive. 1 Block to CTA 2 1/2 Blocks to North Shore. Near Public
& Parochial Schools.
KENILWO RTH REALTY
ALpine 1-5600
4 _ R M . - - X~
- __
E P-ANDABLE BRK~HOME --=-1 bath & kit., gas h t., alum. storms. 2
car gara ge. By owner.
NA 6-6940
or
TU 9-6713
PALATINE
BY OWNER
6 ROOM BRICK HOME
3 Kin g-s ize bedrms. Modern cab. k i t. 11/2
tile baths, full bsmt., oil heat. 2 car gar.
with rented inco m e apt. above. R e nt $65
per mo. 1 ½ acres beautifully ldscpd. 28
fruit trees. Many extras not listed.
Only $29,900
FLanders 9-0886
Twin Lakes and
Powers Lake, Wisc.
Just 65 miles fr o m Ch icag-o
Lakefront 2 bdrm. h ome, scrn. prch.
Ulil. rm ., gas ht., Gar. Nr. Town $17,500
Exceptional Lake Front Prop. • Completely mod. 3 bdrm. home on 320 ' ideal
beach in popular & conv. subd. This
executive type home inc ludes library, rec.
r m . in J;:,s mt. , 2 car gar. Will sell for
substan£ia l down paymt. & 4 ½ per cent
terms.
171
BEAU. SOFA, LIKE NEW SPring 4-5838 aft. 6
ELECTROLU X WITH ATTACHMEN TS,
papel' disposal bags, floor polisher and
scrub ber, like new, sacrifice $60; Hoover
Cons tellation, complete, brand new, never
used, $50. DAvis 8-5512.
WHIRLPOOL AUTO. WASHER - 5 YR.
old. Not in use. $30 or best offer.
CLearbrook 5-5280.
172A
173
O NLY $16,9 50
151
159
Resort Property
LAKE DELAVA N, WIS.-OWNE R MUST
sell summer cottage, fully insulated,
compl. furn., Has all conveniences. L oe.
on 3 lots. 160 x 126. 80 miles from
Chgo.
$7,500 OR BEST OFFER
Linden 4-6558
FOX LAKE YR. ROUND 9 RM. Lake
Front home. $15,500. RO 3-7623
165A
Real Estate (Out of State)
BUILDING FOR SALE OR LEASE. Muncie, Indiana. Center of Wholesale District.
Trading area of 350,000 population. 20,000
square feet in excellent condition. Rail
siding. Opportunity f o r manufacturin g,
distributive or storage bus iness. C. H .
Goddard, P.O. Box 1311 , Muncie, Indiana.
171
For Sale-Househ old Goods
DINING RM. SET, TABLE & 6 CHAIRS.
Good con. Reas. 6501 N. Luna, Chicago.
JUNGER OIL STOVE & 4 DRUMS -:_
$80. A-1 cond. AV 2-0245 aft. 4.
OIL HEATER (HEATS S RMS . ) - GOOD
cond. Also 5 gal. can & 3 drums. UN 7~161.
OK CORRAL OPE NS
Leag ue of Wom en Voter s
Discusses Mana ger Plan s
The OK Corral opens for
business today (Thursday ) at
4947 Dempster St., Skokie.
The Lee brothers, Mort and
Jerry, will operate the new
restaurant .
The OK Corral is designed
in western fashion. The exterior,
with its black wooden planking,
looks much like an old time
western cabin. Inside, the motif
is carried out with knotty cedar
paneling and painted western
scen es on the walls.
Barbecued foods will be
prepared in an open pit in the
dining room.
Sept. 17 and 18 are the dates
set for the unit meetings of
the League of W
omen Voters
of Skokie this month. The
voter's service committee wi 11
present the facts on councilmanager governmen t vs. villagemanager governmen t for Skokie.
A sound film entitled "Equal
Justice for All" will be presented by the judicial workshop
through the courtesy of th~
committee on modern courts.
Mrs. Peter Dunn, 7842 East
OF 1000 BARGAINS
New Electric Clothes Dryers,
$65 Value ...................... .......... ........... $17 .50
Chi ldren's Playpens from ..................
6.85
Butterfly Porch or Lawn Chairs
3.85
Aluminum End & Coffee Tables
2.25
to 4.25
Ne.st of ~- Wrought Iron Tables,
with G lass Tops ............ .
6.75
To.v Rubber Swords ..... .............
.25
Chi ld ren's Teeter-Go-Ro und ......
4.85
llamhoo L awn Rakes .............
.25
Bamboo Porch Shades, per ft. wide... .
.25
New Bar-B -Q Motors ....... .................
4.85
Sch ool Des ks, adjustable sz. ... .....
4.85
Plastic Dis h Pans or Waste
Baskets, Regular $1.79 ea. ............
.75
Me n's Non-Waterpro of Raincoats,
gual'anteed to leak in heavy rain ..
.25
Hundreds of Lamps, Shades, Books, Figurines, Vases, Planters, Radios, TV Sets, New
and Used Furniture, Knick-kna cks, and
Novelties Galore, and
999 OTHER BARGAIN S
ADDITIO NAL STOCK
WEEKLY
Come and browse every
week - Fri ., Sat. or Sun .,
11 A.M. to 8 P.M .
Like your thrifty
neighbor s do.
9246 WAUKEG AN RD.
MORTON GROVE, ILL.
4 OIL HEATERS - 2 JUNGERS, 4 RM.;
2 Sieglers, 2 rm.; 10 oil dru ms. 20 gal.
hot wtr. tank. 4849 W. Ainslie, Chicago.
1st fl. rear.
BARGAIN !'- ---;;G:;-U;:;N:;--;;T;:::Y-;-;P:ccE;:--:O°'""L-=B-=u"" ""N-=E
"I
R ==-R
comp!. Tank, controls & fit tgs, SP 7-7254
NEW & USED STORM WIND OWS. Reas.
Enclosed porches, patios, summer h omes.
784 7 Addison, Chicago, TU 9-4 511.
174
Prairie Rd., will be the hostess
at the Wednesday afternoon
unit at 12:45 p.m. Chairman
of the meeting is Mrs. Stuart
Bonem.
Th• Thursday afternoon unit
e
meeting will gather in the home
of Mrs. Bernard Kamin, 8737
Tn,imbull at 12:45 p.m. with
Mrs. Stuart Berman presiding.
Thursday evening the unit will
meet in the home of Mrs. Harold
F utransky,
8201 Lockwood
at 8: 15 p.m.
'
. . PU BL IC
NOTIC E
THE GREATEST SALE OF USED CARS IN
THE HISTORY OF FERGUS FORD STARTS
5 P.M. THURSDAY SEPT. 12th.
Special salesmen - Special finance men-used car buyers All on hand from 5 p.m. Thurs. to 9 a.m. Monday morning.
We won't close until Midnite.
58
58
57
57
57
56
56
55
Robby
Too Late to Classify
MAR'fiN'S LOCKSMITH SERVICE
Did you forget your key? Are you locked
out? Do · you want your combination
cj1anged on your loc k ? 24 hour service.
ORchard 4-3037
FO~D
USED TRUCKS
55
56
53
52
51
54
Internat ional Carry all . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Ford Pick up. It's Sharp . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Dodge Pick up, ½ ton, Clean . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Ford 1 ton express - Good Service Left . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Dodge½ ton Pick up . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
Dodge Route Van (Wa lk In). A Steal . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .
895.00
795 .00
595.00
395 .00
195.00
895 .00
WE HAVE A FEW 1958 TRUCKS Left-Sav e up to $1500,00
LOW
'BT<ING -HOME
BANK
RATES
eBACON
,-,
~
ffK~US
Continenta l Kit, power st.,
R. & H., Fordo ......... .. . 2295.00
WANT-ADS
th
I
/
SPECIAL - JUST CAME IN
Miscellaneous
VERMONT SLATE
AND
STONE FLOORING
ORchard 3-1612
I
...-,..
56 T Bird, 2 Tops, Power,
R. & H., Auto .. ........ . .. 2595.00
53 Chevrolet Corvette, All White,
outsta nding car. . . . . . . . . . . 1495.00
55 T Bird - Gorgeous Black,
Wtd to Buy-Mis<:ellaneous
176
.-
These cars are Safety checked for your
peac e of mind .
Fairlane Clb. ·Seda n. Le ss than 1,000 miles . A buy at .$2495 .00
Chevrolet, 4 Dr., R. & H. A Steal at . ......... ... . . . 1995.00
Ford Custom 300, 4 Dr ., Fu l ly eq uipped, · tutone, Clean 1395.00
Plymouth Savoy, 2 Dr., Full y equipped, Sharp .. ... . .. 1295.00
Ford Ctry. Squire, Power ste ering, R. & H. Auto. Nice 2195.00
Ford Ctry. Squire, Fordo., R. & H. Like New ..... ... 1595.00
Ford Reh. Wagon, R. & H., Blue, Locally owned ..... 1395.00
Ford, 6 Cyl., 4 Dr., R. & H. 2 Tone blue . . . . . . . . . . . . 895.00
HA VE YOU CUT GLASS
FANCYWAR E, HAND PAINTED
DISHES, FURNITURE TO SELL?
CALL PEnsacola 6-4075
For Sale-Vacant
BUILDERS • ATTENTION I
One to 60 residential lots located in
Morton Gr ove, Skokie & Mt. Prospect.
All improved, reasonable. For information call VILL AGE REAL ESTATE CO.
8348 Lincoln Ave.
ORchard 4-0220
GLENVIEW - 2463 FIR. 85 x 137 x 50.
l!eaut. trees, 2 blks. pool & park. Deadend paved st. All imp. with gas htg .
permit.
Custom home area.
Owner,
GLenview 4-015 6.
33
BARN
SPECIAL PRICE NOW!!
BUlLDS A 6 ROOM RANCH
HOUSE ON YOUR LOT
bedrms. As h paneled den. All face
brick and Lannon Stone exterior. Full
bsm t. Concrete driveway . D e luxe features thruout.
Financing Can be Arranged
Call Builder
IR 8- 67V6 or CL 6-3737
MORTON GR""c:""=--- - -OV E
Terri fic buy in a lovely 3-bedroom brick
ranch. 1 block from Golf View shopping
cel\J;er. Separate dining room, ceramic
bath, attached garage. Carpeting , drapes
and utilities included at only $22,900.
Owner moving out of state, wants quick
sale. Call today.
GLENVIEW' REALTY CO.
1141 Waukegan Rd. CL 4-0600
For Sale-Miscella neous
SELL "NO LONGER NEEDED"
ITEMS HERE
AT LOW COST.
FREE: REALLY USEFUL IT _M W O R_ H
_E _ _ _ T_
$1.00 or more, is yours free, if you send
Check, Cash or Postage Stamps for $2.75
for a one year subscription to THE
VILLA GER. That's 52 issues at a nickel
a copy! This offer good o nly until Sept.
15, 1958, and $2. 75 must accompany
order.
VILLAGE REALTY
BEST BUY
Office and Store Eq uipment
D ESKS, $20 - CHAIRS, $4
Filing Cabinets, $15 ; Typewriters, $25 ;
Adding Mac hines, $35
Steel Shelving, $8.95
5550 N . Broadway
LOngbeach 1-1828
Across From Twin Lakes P. 0.
Phone Triangle 7-3351
or write for infor. & pictures
OWNER LEAVING STATE
$pac. n ew 6 r m . home with- full bsmt.,
on lge. beaut. wooded corner lot. Many
outstandin g f eatures include carpeting,
built-in kitchen and partially furn., if
desired. Small dwn-pmt. and imm. poss.
T. P. MATHEWS, REALTORS
WOND ER LAKE, lLL .
PH. W. L. 3061
OPEN EVERY DAY
For Sale-Ho useh old Goods .
I
•
(.
We Guarantee
what we sell
Weekd a ys 9 a.m. • 10 p . m.
Saturdays 9a .m. • 6 a.m .
Su ndays 10 a.m . • 6 p .m.
~
FERGUS-FORD
--·---I
/~
I
/ /
.."
//
/ / /
·---·--·
=--=--=
:ft.ft:
882 8 NILE~ CENTER. R.D.-OR.4-8000
�Septemb er 11, 1958
THE VILLAGER
Successful
Summer for
MG Park District
WEEKEND
SPECIALS!
THURS. FRI. SAT. & SUN.
5th
Ballan tine's
SEPT.11
SCOTCH
14
13
12
MILLER'S BEER
$5 49
proved extremely popular onc e
again with a bout 4000 people
attending the nine free movies.
Sixteen inch so ftball increas e d in popula r i t y and
participation as 17 te a ms comThe Morton Grove Park Di s- pet ed in thre e different l eagues,
trict Summ er Playgro un d· compared wit h 9 teams in t wo
P rogram ended last week and le ague s la:st ye ar.
once again set a ne w regisIn spite of th e postpone tration re cord. This s ummer, ments a nd can cellations of
1664 boys and girls signed up a c tivitie s b ec ause of t he rain,
for playgro und activit i e s c om- att endance was s till good in
pared .to 1376 last year.
the large va ri e t y of ac tivities,
· The summer movie program making it another happy sum1.;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;;.;_.;_.;_•I mer fo r the many parti cipant s
in the Morton Grove Park
,..at;;:" FREE
P rogram.
'..UV,/ PARKING
b CENTRAL· UN 4 4900
AIR CONDITION~
SOc to 6:30 • Mon. thru Fri.
FRIDAY, SEPT . 12th
. "·\ WILLIAM(!)SOPHIA
1
LOREN
- HOLDEN
l
SKOKl,t~,.
FREE PARKING
OPEN -1:30 P.M. SAT & SUN
6:30 P.M. WEEKDAYS
LUXURY PUSH - BACK SEATS
TREVOR. HOWARD
on
eed's Prod11ct1
in Carol R
24 Bottles
24 Cans
FRIDAY thru TUESDAY
SEPT . 12 - 13-14-15-16
$339
$398
SUPER SUSPENSE SHOW
PARAMOUNT ~(S(NTS
JAMES STEWARr
KIMNDVAK~
IN ALFRED
ATION
AD
A HIGHRO PRESENT
~ $mimo/F
:
;": ·
~
3 for $10.00
.I.
F VERMOUTH
5th
98
DREWRY'S
BEER
98c
P:CK
VODKA
$ 349
5th
AMBASSADOR
SWEET or DRY
the greolesl name in
SAT. SE PT. 13th - 1: 30 P.M.
WALTE R "M cCO Y" BR ENN AN in
•~~LBTI GD• mT.! __
e
plus
GODIS
MY PARTNER
ROS,
WAR!l[R B presents
ICKARD
R
ANN£
RT
HERBE
TODD · BAXTER · LDM
i" CHASEA
tROOKED
SHADOW
A REGALSCOPE PICTURE
P
J I us - CART OONS & SURPRISE~
GET R EAD Y FOR THE
BIG LAUGH .RIOT!
-
HITCHCCCKS
CHILDREN ' S MA TINEE
Starts F RIDAY, SEPT . 19t h
C
SUNNY
BROOK
WHISKEY
STARTING WED . SEPT. 17
TME LAUGH OF YOUR LIFE·TIME!
TME LAUGH OF YOUR LIFHIME !
DON'T GO NEAR THE WATER
DON'T GO NEAR THE WATER
M-G - M · CINEMASCOPE · METROCOLOR
M-G - M · CINEMA SCOPE METROCOLOR
BLEND or STRIGHT
5th
ITALIAN
and American
GORDON 'S
GIN
a
s3-9
FOUR
ROSES
A ntique
5th$ 398
5th
Manischewitz
KOSHER
WINE
FULL QUART
98c
RESTAURANT
PIZZA
V ISIT OUR AIR -CONDITIONED SCHLITZ TAP ROOM
4919 Oakton St.
Skokie
ORchard 3-9704
I T A LI AN Ile AME R I CAN S PECIA LT IES
Air Conditioned
''With the
Golden Crust"
ANY COMBI NAT ION
YOU WISH
From $1 to $5
SPECIAL
10 oz. Ste ak
RIDLEY'S LIQUO R
L U N CHE S J#. SANDW I G HES ._ D I N NE R.S
Salad, Pota toe s
Coffee
Now
PIZZA
SERVED
at LUNCH
$1.19
WE DELIVER
P leas e g ive ½ hour noti ce and
y our pizza wi ll be re ady when
you come i n
OR 4-0452
OPEN DAILY 10AM
10 1AM. SAT
ANO
SUN . 4 PM - 2 AM .
DAIL Y LUNCHES 65¢ UP
8335 SKOKIE BLVD .
J U ST SOUTH
OF MAIN S T .
�TH E VILL AGE R
LLT Ticke ts
Go on Sale
Harm ony for The Mari ners
Jack Alogna , past presiden t
and season ti cket manager for
Lincolnw ood Little Theatre ,
announce s that residents of
Lincolnw ood will be given
priority in the purcha s e of
season tickets . The season
will consist of the productio n
of three Broadwa y sma sh hits,
"Harvey, "
"Country Girl , "
and "The Desk Set. "
A specia l letter with order
blank for season tickets is
being sent to all Lincolnw ood
homes. The price of a season
ticket is four dollars and represents a savings over single
ti cke t price . The sea s on ticket
also allows the purchase r the
selection of preferred performan c e nights .
All productio ns are held in
Lincoln Hall Audi torium which
has a limited seating capacity .
At pre s ent it is possible to
run each play for only· three
evenings .
The popular Friday and
Saturday
performa nces
are
usually sold out. This being
Lincolnw ood' s own theatre ,
Linc olnwood residents have
request ed and deserve the preferred da te s on a season
ticke t basis .
MG Thea tre
In Festiv al
Tryouts were held for the
Morton Grove Commu nit y
Theatre ' s one a ct play, ''Warzel Flummery. " The play will
be presented at the North Shore
Litt le Theatre One Act Play
festival on Friday, Sep t . 26
and Saturday , Sept . 27 , in the
North Shore Country Day
School, Green Bay and Dundee
Rds . , Winnetka .
During the festival, si x
drama organi zations from the
North Shore will present one
act plays. Ticket s for the
festival are $1 and are good
for both evenings .
On Sept. 13, a party will be
he ld in the Green Room of the
W etka Women ' s Club buildinn
in g, Oak and Maple Sts . ,
W etka, for members partici inn
in t he fe stival. Pro s pe ctive
memb ers and regular members
are urged to c o n t a c t Mrs .
Shirley Sluiz er, OR 3- 1251 to
make re s ervations .
A real old-fashi oned barber
shop quartet will entertain the
Mariners Club of the Westminster Presbyte rian Church,
4950 Pratt Ave., Skokie,
Saturday evening , Sept. 13 m
then ew Fellowsh ip Hall.
The quartet, members of
Skokey Men, a local chapter
of the SPEBSQS A, are local
men under the direction of
Owen Dimmick i. They will
provide backgrou nd music for
a silent movie , called "Gay
Nine ties," and will follow
with imprompt u songs.
The Skokey Men were organized in 1954 and have a
members hip of 145 , only 80 of
whom a:re singing members .
The others joined merely because they apprecia te this
type of music .
The regular pot luck s upper
will be held at 7 p.m. Reservation s may be made with Mrs .
Linwood ORT
The Linwood Ch a pter of
ORT presente d an origina l
musi c al versi on of " My Fair
Lady, " a t the fi rst regular
meeting held Tues day, Sept .
9, in the· Niles To w n s hip
Jewish Congrega t ion.
Cast inclu d e d Di a ne
" Cookie"
Weiss , Luc il 1 e
Yellen, Rita Holtzman , Rosalyn Gorsky, Dorothy Grob man ,
Marion Guren , Eunice Kaplan ,
Estelle Kornblith , Judith Levy,
Bunny Sabbath , Doris Shaw
and Jean Weiss.
Lucille Goss was accompanist.
SWEE T ADELINES
The Skokie Valley Chapter
of Sweet Adelines , Inc . will
participa te in "A Date with
Dixie" on Saturday , Sept. 20 ,
at 8: 15 p.m . in the L a ne Tech
High School, Chicago .
KIWANIS
Byrl Matheny, OR 3-8 176, if
you are not on a phoning list.
The serving c ommittee will
consist of chairme n, Mr. and
Mrs . Richard L. Nordstrom ,
Mr. and Mr s . Earl E. Hilland,
Mr. and Mr s . Edward W. Wilke,
Mr. and Mrs. J ohn F . Peyrot,
and Mr . a nd Mrs . Lowell C.
Warner.
[A·NTON
NAUTICAL INN FAMOUS PLATTERS
FARMERS, ONE HALF DISJOINT ED FRIED
CHICKEN just use your finsers to eat it
FISHERMAN'S, Broiled Baby Lobster Tail,
Filet of Perch, Fried Shrimps
BQ11t un,.,/ with, T o..,d Grt.n Sa/.,/ and Gulic Dr.,.ing,
Fr,nt:h Fdul Pol• to,1, .ltol/1 and Butt,r, (Farm,r'1 wirh Pta )
RESTAURANT
8007 Lincoln Ave .
Skokie
Comfortably Air Conditioned
Next Door to First Na tional Bank
Plenty of Free Parking
Featuri ng FIN E CANTON ESE
and AMERICA N FOOD
OR 3-01 8S for reservations
serving Breakfast, Lunch , Dinner
CHOP SUEY
AND MANY OTHER SPECIALS
TO TAKE OUT
C a ll in a dva nc·e - Your
Order wi ll be waiting
Tel. ORcha rd 5- 4886
3445 Dempster St.,
LUNCHEONS - DINNERS
Prime Aged Steaks
Prime Roas t of Beef
2 - lb. Maine Live
Lobster
Just West of McCormick
T HE HOME OF DELICIOU S
MOUTH WAT E RING DINNERS
TED GUY
at t he
Organ
FAS T EFFICIEN T
SERVICE
Women's and
MODERA TE
PRICES
Afr i can L obs ter Tail Men' s Cl ubs
Variety of Sea Food
Invited
Turkey, Chicken and
Chop Dinners
Reservati ons
OR 3-1969
OPEN 12 NOON -1A . M . AMPLE PARKING
NW COR . DEM PST E~ .8: WAUKEGAN RQ .
Re sto u ra nt and Loung e
4425 W. L awre nc e
Air Cond ition ed
MU 5-115 1
NOW OPEN IN SKOKIE
Cho ic e T ickets for:
All Stage Attraction s
"My Fair Lady" · -
At a recent meeting of the
Kiwanis Club of Skokie Valley ,
Leslie L. Lewis, Director of
Educatio n for Dartnell Publishing Co., discusse d the Far
Eastern situation . His subject
was "Can the U.S . Buy
Friends? "
·! 'So1.1tt, l>acific"
Charlie Wenk's
JUDY GARLAND
Li mited Engagement
AUNTI.E MAM E
"Around the World in 80 Days"
all other Theatres and Sports Events
"SOX & CUBS"
FAMOUS CANTONESE and
CHINESE CATERERS
EVANSTON
TICKET SERVICE
NORTH SHORE HOTE L DA 8-8282
From Highland Park
9-12 :30 .; 1 :3 ~ p .m .
Mon . t ltru Sat .
C los ed Sundays :
Ste p 011 t... Din e 011t
PARTY ORDERS FOR
FROM 5 to 500 PEOPLE
CHICA GO'S
Award -winni ng
RESTAURANT
COMPLETE, AUTHE NTIC SERVICE
Our beautif ul chaffin g dishes
supplie d free
De lic ious Ita li a n Spaghe tt i ... . $2.45
mea t s auce , parme sa n chee se
Pan Fr ied Ch icken . . . . ... . . . , $2.95
o range sher be t, co rn bre ad
Bro il ed Chopped Sirlo in .... . . . $ 2.95
ALL FOOD AND APPETI ZERS PA CKED IN
OUR ALUMINUM CONTAINERS . EACH ORDER
COOKED TO ORDER .
m u s hr oo m w i ne sauce
T own & Country Steak . . .. . . . . $3 .95
br o il e d bee f tende rl o in, oni on ri ngs
Shrim p d e Jonghe . . .. . . ... . . . . $3 .35
whis per o f ga rlic, wi Id r ic e
Bake d Sw is s Ste ak ... . . . . . . . . .$2 . 95
po n gra v'y, b u-tt ered noodl e s, she rbet
Incl ud ing outstand ing se lecti on of
s a lads a nd desse rts in this comp le te
·
7•cour s e d inn er menu .
In SKOKIE
4417½ OAKTO N
ORcha rd 6-3121
In Highland Park
1860 First St.
5970 North Ridge
EDgewater 4-5345
ID 3-1414
A comple te menu of appetiz ers and
tasty tenderl oin , chicken , shrimp and
lobs ter dishes . All prepar ed by our
4 expert Canton ese Chefs .
Please phone 15 minutes ahead for your carry -out orders .
�Teach Spanish at
College Hill
Ray Bonds Hear Stevenson
In Russian Baptist Church
Spanish will be taugh t fo r the
firs t time as a regular part of
th e curriculum in grades five
and six in the College Hill
3chool. Miss Elizabeth Mauer
will be the Spanish teache r.
Erling Tobiason is College
Hill's new custodian.
As in former years, a series
of teas will be given by the
room mother of each room and
her committee to honor the
t eacher and to enable parent s
t o be come better acquainted
P HOTO BY NICK BO ZNOS
with each other and to me et
their children's teacher .
A view of the crowd that showed up recently at the 4G Fairways,
"From Kharkov we flew 1500
All first grade room t eas
on Dempster St. just east of Waukegan Rd. in Morton Grove, to
miles to Tbilisi in Georgia
will be given on Sept. 17 at
watch Paul Hahn, golf' s famed trick shot expert, go through
where we found mountains and
3:30 p .m. Mothers will receive
some of his shots. Hahn put on an impressive and humorous
fruit anti an appearance like
invitations in the mail andisplay of links artistry.
southern California. Here we
nouncing the place of each tea.
were taken 60 miles to Stalin's
College Hill Principal, Mrs .
birthplace, Gori, also to a
Grace F rey and PTA president ,
collective farm . , It was a farm ·
Mrs . James Holme s will vi sit
of 5500 acres but 900 farmers.
each briefly.
They work on the incentive
All second grade room t eas
system as many units of work
Permanent by-laws of the elected new officers at its last will take place on Sept. 19 .
' per month as they care to do Central Civic Organization, meeting. In addition to Buckley,
First ·board meeting of the
being compensated accordingly.
Morton Grove property owners' they are: Philip Marzulla, vice year will be held at 1 p .m. on
Sept. 22 in the board room.
group, have been approved by president; Charles Claty, Sr. ,
"Another train r id e from
the by-laws committee and will treasurer, and Mrs. Sumner Member ship drive for PT A starts
Tbilisi brought us to fabulous
the same day.
be s ubmitted to the member- Nudel, secretary.
Soc hi, the greatest res at city
All parents of boys 8 years
ship fo r adoption at the
Membership in the organfor
Call
in the USSR.
old now or who will be 8 by
September meeting of the organ- ization is open to residents of
"The Russian people have
EXPERT CONVERSION
Dec. · 31, are invited by Cub
ization, according to Donald Morton Grove living north of
been v ery friendly and helpful
Scout Pack 22 to attend
with No Heat Interruption
J. Buckley, president.
Dempster Street and east of
even to privileged Americans
Family Night in the gym at
A regular meeting of the Austin Avenue except for the
Famo us Names - Qua I ity Comfo rt
under present tense conditions.
College Hill School on Sept.
group is scheduled for Sept. area east of Central between
M ueller C limatrol
Men and women have given us
1l. at 8 p.m. This meeting is
24 at Luxembourg Gardens Dempster and Church, whose
Armstrong
seats for ·example in public
not for children. Parents will
restaurant, he said.
residents are represented by
Bryant
transportation. They have albe given general information
The CCO membership, total- the North East Property Owners
ways been patient with our
on Cub Scouting along with
••d ofiors
ing nearly 150 home owners, Association.
some entertaining films on the
inability to speak their language
subject.
or make them understand.
On Sept. 19 at 7 p.m. sharp
"We are both well and safe."
ENGINEERS, Inc.
Lou Boudreau will address the
620 Mad ison, Evanston DA-2370
Ray and Hele n Bond
Se ven new classrooms, a
and private) will be invited to first pa·c k meeting of Pack 22
speech room, and a health room use these facilities. Supt.
in the College Hill gym. Late·
will be in use for the first time Eckhardt indicates that various comers will miss this colorful
7949 BABB ST REET, SKOKIE
in the Park View School. Cost trees , shrubs, and plants will speaker who must leave by
½ block East of Lin co In; 3 door s South of Oak ton
of this addition including addi- be indentified and feeding 7:30. Bobcats will be induct ed
tional to·i l e t facilities i s
stations for birds and animals at this meeti-og by Pack
$175, 000 equipped.
ORcha rd 4 -3910
of the forest will be constructed Master George Wolff and the
baseball trophy won by Pack
Due to the increased enroll- and stocked regularly.
where the accent's on
22 in the spring will be disment, nine new teachers have
The curriculum was revised
played.
been added to the staff and by the faculty last spring and
eight former teachers have been is being now printe1,
replaced. The average class
size will be about 28 at the
BARNES SPEAKER
beginning of the term.
Bill Barnes, of A. R. Barnes
The intermediate grades of
Robert Reinarts, 7318 East
the Grove and Park View Company, Skokie, spoke at. the Prairie Rd. ; Lincolnwood, is
Schools, with the co-operation Aug. 26 meeting of the Skokie general chairman of the T enth
of Robert Kelly of the Cook Rotary Club on his third annual National Chemical Exposition
County Forest Preserve District v1 s1t to Bohemian Grove, a being held Se pt. 9 through 12
will set up a nature trail through
camp area 75 miles north of at the International AmphiLinne Woods .
San Francisco, at Monte Reo, theater in Chi cago.
Th e show is s pon sore d by
When completed, the other California. The camp site is
schools in the township (public . in the midst of a redwood forest. • the Chicago S ect io n of the
American Chemical Soc iety and
will be held con currently with
• 5-Hr. Cleaning
134th National Meeting of the
• Laundry
Society. The expo sition is the
only one of its kind in the middle
• Shirt Service
offers the added convenience of
west, and fea tures chemicals
equipment.
Rein arts is a member of Queen
II
of All Saints Church, Vilfagei
of Lincolnwood Policeml\n's
Pension Board, ·and on the
GUARANT EED Odorless
SERVICE
board of director's of Combined
MOTH PROOFING
Community Chest and Council
Is a part of our
636 Waukegan Rd ., G lenv i ew
of Niles Township. He is at
Dry Cleani ng Process
½ Mi le North of Golf Road
present general sales manager
Glenview 4-1054
of E.H. Sargent & Company.
Dr. and Mrs. Ray Bond who
are touring Russia, informed
The V iilager in a recent letter,
of having heard Adlai Stevenson
speak in a Baptist Church there.
Following are excerpts from
their letter, written while on
''th e Black Se a S t e am e r
Admiral'' as they left the USSR
on their way to Bucharest.
De ar Friends:
W€ went both to Orthodox
and Baptist Churches. Both
·were crowded, the B apt is t
C h u r c h h av in g 6000 in 3
services. Adlai Stev enson spoke
in the Baptist Church Sunday
After visiting the
morning.
famous Exposition of Agriculture
and Industry and the U.S.
Are
You
the lucky Holder
Embassy we left Moscow Monday night by train for Kiev,
the Green City. It is th·e capital
of the Ukraine, prosperous
republic with 48 million popult tion. Kiev was occupied
by the Germans for over 700
days. Another overnite train
ride brought us to Kharkov where
we were greeted by a band and
floral pieces. We were dis appointed to find they were
greeting instead a troupe of
80 Polish actors and actresses .
Ready By-Laws for New
MG Homeowners Group
:gas
Permit?
Com/orf
Com/orl
New Classrooms For MG Schools
Reinarts Heads
Exposition
&«u TY S ~
"(/JJUlJJL-9.fL
AUTO RADIO
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SKOKIE'S LARGEST & FINEST
really new!
sub-teen
tab-collar
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298
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presenting ...
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Fall Fashions
sub-teen sizes 8 to 14
The "Ivy" look sta·rts fashion talk with the English-tab
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for sub-teens ... with sharp back pleat, tails that stay
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We have everything new for sub-teens by Ship'n Shore!
Men's Broadcloth Pajamas
$2.88 Middy or Coat style. Reg . $3 .49 Value.
Boys' Slacks (Wash 'n Wear)
.
$2.69
SPECIAL SALE PRICE! Polished Cotton
in sizes 6 • 18. Black, charcoal, or blue.
Boys' Sweaters
$2.49 ta 4. 95
Perry Como, Bulky knit; sleeveless or
long sleeves. Sizes 4 -18 .
Men's Perry Como Sweaters
$7.95
Lambs' wool & Nylon; S, M, L.
Men's Slipover Sweaters
$5.95
Bulky knits of Lambs' wool & Nylon in
sizes 38-44.
new twist !
roll-up sleeve
chemise
shirt .. .
Boys' School Shirts
$1.95 to 2.49
Gabardines, knits, flannels; 6 • 16.
Men's Flannel Shirts
Assorted patterns & colors .
$2.95
Men's Corduroy Shirts
Red, charcoal, navy .
$4 .49
Children's Blouses
$1.95 to 2. 95
Drip-dry fabrics & cotton knits in sizes
3 to 6x; 7 to 14.
SLY P'LATTIERV in a half-belted
beauty from CHARM magazine. Scroll emhroiremovahle white undercollar, pert how frame
your face. Buttons to below waist make dressing easy. In
Reltex tweedy Nub Duh rayon and acetate, crease-resistant.
Black, willow green, turquoise or mocha, alf with black Reeb.
12 to 20, 14½ to 24½.
ONLY THE
LOOK
Girls' Sweaters
$2.95 -to $5.95
Slipovers & Card"
igans . Beautiful new
fall colors . Banlon, Orlon, and Bulky
knits.
Girls ' Corduroy Jackets
$2. 95 & $3.95
Flannel-lined.. Sizes 7 to 14. Just right
for that in-between weather .
Children's Skirts & Sets
$2.95 to $7.95
Corduroy & Drip-dry fabrics.
Snow Suits - 12 to 24 months.
$8.95
Nylon . (Use our convenient Lay-Away
Plan).
SEE OUR COMPL ETE SELECTION
FOR TEENS!
Skirts, Blouses, Sweaters, Ja c kets,
Slacks, and Accessories
IS EIPINSIVE
$}095
•
•
•
•
it's a new
SHIRLEY.
TEMPLE
•
•
sizes 7 to 14
As seen in
Vogue
from our Shirley Temple
collection! It's Cinderella's lovely new dressup dress in lush textured plaid cotton ...
topped with a frothy front that dips waistdeep ! For girls who love to party and primp!
"SUNDAY NEWS"
!!
0
~ s79s
~
As seen in
Parents'
. .. for girls who say
" please mommy
. ,,,
.. .a chemise.
Right in line with a girl's fashion ideas! New
Cinderella dresses with really low torsos meeting
flapper pleats. In wonderful easy-care cottons!
Left: kerchief-collar dress in woven plaid and
solid color combination. Right : refreshing woven
checks with a trio of pockets and "hankies".
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Text
A resource consisting primarily of words for reading. Examples include books, letters, dissertations, poems, newspapers, articles, archives of mailing lists. Note that facsimiles or images of texts are still of the genre Text.
Dublin Core
The Dublin Core metadata element set is common to all Omeka records, including items, files, and collections. For more information see, http://dublincore.org/documents/dces/.
Date
A point or period of time associated with an event in the lifecycle of the resource
1958-09-11
Title
A name given to the resource
The Villager, September 11, 1958
Alternative Title
An alternative name for the resource. The distinction between titles and alternative titles is application-specific.
Volume 1, Number 22
The Villager: With All the News First
Creator
An entity primarily responsible for making the resource
Presscraft Co.
Contributor
An entity responsible for making contributions to the resource
Branagan, Thomas E., Editor
Publisher
An entity responsible for making the resource available
Presscraft Co., Skokie, Ill.
Description
An account of the resource
The Villager was an edited, published, and printed local newspaper for Niles Township.
Scan information: A3 Bookedge Scanner FB6280E, 300 dpi, 24-bit color scan, Master TIFF files created for individual pages, PDF/A and PDF files created from master files and OCR using Adobe Acrobat Pro DC, Skokie Public Library, Skokie, IL. Date of scan: 2019-01-09.
Subject
The topic of the resource
American newspapers
Newspapers--Local editions
Community newspapers
Advertising
Advertising, Classified
Advertising--Fashion
Newspapers--Sections, columns, etc--Comics
Newspapers--Sections, columns, etc.--Fashion
Social life and customs
Letters to the editor
Newspapers--Local editions
Newspapers--Sections, columns, etc--Comics
Newspapers--Sections, columns, etc.--Fashion
Skokie (Ill.)
Morton Grove (Ill.)
Lincolnwood (Ill.)
Niles (Ill. : Township)
Golf (Ill.)
Language
A language of the resource
English
Temporal Coverage
Temporal characteristics of the resource.
1950s (1950-1959)
Spatial Coverage
Spatial characteristics of the resource.
Skokie -- Illinois -- United States
Type
The nature or genre of the resource
Text
Format
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TIFF
PDF
Medium
The material or physical carrier of the resource.
newspapers
Extent
The size or duration of the resource.
40 pages
Rights
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No Copyright - United States http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/NoC-CR/1.0/
Is Part Of
A related resource in which the described resource is physically or logically included.
The Villager Newspaper Collection<br /><br /><a href="https://skokiehistory.omeka.net/exhibits/show/thevillager/thevillagerissues">https://skokiehistory.omeka.net/exhibits/show/thevillager/thevillagerissues</a>
Provenance
A statement of any changes in ownership and custody of the resource since its creation that are significant for its authenticity, integrity, and interpretation. The statement may include a description of any changes successive custodians made to the resource.
Skokie Public Library
Source
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From the collection of the Skokie Historical Society, Skokie, IL
Identifier
An unambiguous reference to the resource within a given context
TheVillager19580911
1950s (1950-1959)
1958
Lincolnwood
Morton Grove
newspaper clippings
Niles
Skokie