10 THE LAKE SHORE NEWS, FRIDAY, MARCH 11, 1921 ^iiiniiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiititiiiiiiiiiiiuimimniitiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiittiiiiiimiiiiiiiiitiiiiiitiifiiiiiiiaiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii......iiiiiiiiriiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiin.....hiiiiiiiiiimihiiiiii church. The choir has been working on special music for several weeks. The Sunday school has a fine pro- gram coming. A large number will Jiej^ceivejd into membership. A num- ber willbe baptized. The sermon will be right, even if Dr. Rapp has 1 grippe, and if we all help we can make this one of the best days our church has ever known. new folks. YOU are invited if you are young in spiritj_Jtniajfters riot who you are; walk right into the Methodist church where the young jjeopje are, Friday night any time la?ter*eTgnT~oJdOcl^^ made welcome and given a good time. Miss Myrtle D'/Vrcy will lead the Hpworth League meeting »ext Sun- day night, and Mr. James Melville, who was recently elected chorister will assume the duties of that office. If you have never attended an Ep- worth League meeting in Wilmette, come and see just what .the young people are trying to do. Mrs. Decker, 622 Greenleaf avenue, entertained the Fourth Division Mon- day afternoon, March 7. The Anti-Saloon League will not send a speaker to present their cause to our people this year, but they ask that all contributors continue their contributions in order that the league may have sufficient funds with which to combat the efforts of the wet forces, to nullify the Eighteenth Amendment. Eternal vigilance is the price of prohibition enforcement. The erection of the soldier's mem- orial tablet has been made an affair of the, church and Sunday school jointly. The tablet will be put up with suitable ceremonies just as soon as it can be finished. Funds are not to be solicited for this purpose, but as .every man, woman and child, in the church and &unday__school would like to feel that they had had a per- sonal part in the erection of this tablet, the opportunity will be given ' >r all to take part, by giving any amount from one penny to one dol- lar. No more than one dollar will be accepted from anyone; otherwise we could not all take part for the tab- let will not cost over $200. â€"Mr?. H, K, Batanla, SQJ Elmwood avenue, entertained the Second Divi- sion at luncheon on Tuesday, March 8. The Wednesday night Prayer meet- ing is growing. Last Week we had one of the largest and most inter- esting meetings of the "Parable sene,^-^ _otr ought ta seeâ€"who come*. Dr. Rapp had an extra large Bible class Sunday. The women were in again. Why not ask Brother Rol- lands to come with them? The debate at the Epworth League meeting last Sunday Trigiitâ€"attracted1 considerable attention, and the ques- tion ; "Resolved, That All Young Men Should Count On Getting Married," was handled by Waldo Wynekoop, The subject for the sermon Sunday morning will be "The Employed Life" continuing the series on "ThlTtHTrff^ tian Life" upon which Rev. S. A. Lloyd.^pastor, has been preaching ea^h^un^ayTultHg^CeTrt:---------â€" Members of the Baptist and Con- gregational churches will meet joint- ly at the Congregational church for special evening services beginning Tuesday, March 15. and continuing through the two weeks just prior to Easter Sunday. The services will be led *by the pastors, Rev. F0rancis C. Stifler and Rev. S. A. Lloyd, and it is hoped that there may be a large at- tendance at these meetings. "^- The Covenant class will meet with Mr. Lloyd Sunday aiternoon at 3- o'clock in the church parlors. There will be only one more meeting of the class^after next Sunday. Mrs. Cotton, director of music at New Trier High school, is rehearsing the Guild. No outside speaker will be present. Prior to, during, and after the Guild meeting tlie_,Central Ave- nue Circle will hold a Food and household Utilities sale in the church. _The___women are urged to do their marketing for the day at this sale for there will be a great assortment of meats, soups, breads, cookies, cakes, pies, and many other things on hand, besides household utilities which can be purchased at less trouble and expense than were they to be bougfn elsewhere. The Camp Fire Girls will have a. special booth of needlework, of their own making. The Neighborhood Circle will meet Tuesday, March 15, at the home of Mrs. William Durgin, 1045 Elmwood avenue. Mrs. Edward Burge and Mrs. Arthur Howard will assist the host- ess. ST. JOHN'S LUTHERAN BAPTIST CHURCH for the affirmative and William-Reih-1 each Sunday afternoon a i&orus made hold, Jr., for the negative, in a man- UP of. PeoPle of high schbol age and Our~clioir~1i_5 outgrown the capa- city of the choir-loft. We could have ten or fifteen more singers if we had any place to put them. New choir chairs will help some. The Woman's Home Missionary so- ciety will give a dinner for their members and their friends on April 8. Keep the date open. More de- tails later. It is planned to make Easter a big day, long to be remembered, in our ner that was worthy of the time and the place, and gave evidence of a fine sense of the fitness of things on the part of the debaters. The judges gave the decision to the affirmative but commended the negative on* his creditable showing. The duet by Misses Edna Davison and Margaret Stafford was a good musical num- ber. The Epworth League will give a St. Patrick's social in the church Fri- day evening, March 11. The social chairman promises new eats, new drinks and new games and he hopes^ that"the old members will bring some older in preparation for special Easter music. Rehearsal begins at 4 o'clock prompt and is held in Pilgrim hall. The FiresidVgroup meets each Sun- day afternoon at 5 o'clock in the church parlors. All young people of high school age are cordially invited to attend these informal meetings. Come and meet with us next Sunday afternoon. The Woman's Guild will hold it': March luncheon at the church to- day. The program is in the hands of the Missionary department and will consist "oTshort talks by members of With the completion of the main floor, and the work now rapidly pro- gressing on the roof., the new build- ing at the corner of Wilmette and Forest avenues, is being rapidly brought to such a measure of com- pletion as to give hope of occupancy by the first of May,â€"â€"_____L_______ In order to meet the building pledge which they made, the Sunday school has adopted a plan by which each member of the various classes is to purchase a stone, as indicated -on- a chart of the church, displayed at the opening session of the school last week. ------â€" Our union meetings with the Con- gregational church will begin next Tuesday evening. These meetings should not onily deepen bonds.^of fellowship in the commtffifty, but should give all who participate, an opportunity to bring themselves into the spirit of the Easter season. Mr. Stifler, the pastor of the church, is acting this month as preacher at the evening service of the First Bap- tist church of Chicago.. Sunday afternoon, at 5:30 o'clock, the Intermediate Young People's so- ciety will have charge of the program, at the Senior society meeting. This is one of the annual occasions which illustrate the close harmony in all the Young People's work of the church. The ,class to be confirmed at St John's Ihis year numbers 21 of which two are adults. The children will be publicly examined in the doctrinej_ of the Christianâ€"faith in the service Sunday, March 13, at 11 A-M. All those confirmed here in past years are particularly invited to this ser- vice. The pastor's sermon subject will be, "Christ, our Anchorage." The Confirmation of catechumens will take place on Palm Sunday March 20, at 11 A. M. This service, ab ways solemn and impressive, will be further beautified by special music- Thursday evening Lenten services at 7:45 o'clock, always .find the church filled to capacity. The sermon sub- jects for the next two services are, "Rearing .the Cross to Calvary", and "The Inscription on the Cross". "The Builders" young people's league has taken charge of all church decoration during the coming festival season. _ The religious instruction of children- will be resumed immediately after Easter. Classes every Monday and- Friday at 4 o'clock. Instruction in English only. Now is the time to en- roll. Any child eight years of age or above may enter. MANAGES DRUG COMPANY â€"^v-an_^£r^v^ona4d-_V-Simmons^- who had been residing at the home of,Mrs. Simmons' parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Carnahan, 700 Central ave- nue, left last week for Litchfield, 111., where Mr. Simmons has assumed the management of the Morgan Drug company. Mr. Simmons was a phar- macist at the Wilmette Pharmacy, Central and Wilmette avenues. An ex-service man with eight bars on M» Victory medal has been en- rolled by Argonne Post of the Ameri- can Legion at Des Moines, la., in s membership campaign. George Lean- der^ the embryonic Legionnaire, was with a supply train attached to the Mallet Reserve of the French Army. He tod_parrin~t_e^omme defensives. Aisne, Montididier Noyon, Cham* pagne-Marne, Aisne- Marne, Somme and Oise-Aisne offensives and also served in a defensive sector. unday Under the pressure of daily affairs few are accustomed to read lengthy addresses in their completeness. Those who failed to follow President Harding's inaugural address to its very conclusion missed this gem: "If I- felt tta^CTe4s=te=be-^€^ the executive for the America of tomorrow, I would _=^^skioB^4be=bu_der_^_ "But here are a hundred millionsT^vI^^ concern and shared responsibility, answerable to God and country. The republic summons them to their duty and I invite cooperation. "l^accept my part with singlemindedness of pur- pose and humility of spirit, and implore the favor and. -^qidance of God in his heaven. With these I am un ^afraid^nd confidently face the future. "I Jiavejaken th^solemrTo^^ passage of the Holy Writ wherein it is asked, 'what doth the Lord require of thee but to do justly and to love mercy and walk humbly with thy God?' This I plight to God and country." The Wilmette Baptist t John's Lutheran Church