Illinois News Index

Wilmette Life (Wilmette, Illinois), 12 Sep 1924, p. 17

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Golfing Eventa· Fut· Workers Are Active Drawina to a Close With Kindergarten \VING to the inclement weather College Fund Drive 0 of Monday, the women's golf ORK and play have been very effectively combined by the North Shore alumnae and friends of the Natiohal Kindergarten and Elementary college all through the summer months. Beginning June I, this group has met each Monday, having been entertained in the homes of alumnae of the various north shore towns. The purpose of these gatherings has been the making of the very attractive baby articles which are on sale in the College Corner at 508 Davis street, Evanston. All the proceeds of these sales are for the College Building fund. , This north shore group, of which ldrs. Florence S. Capron of Evanston is president, and Mrs . Anna F . Murray of Evanston, vice president, has been very active during the past two years. having contributed largely to the College Building fund. As the time rapidly approaches for the starting of the two college buildings in Evanston, even greater enthusiasm prevails and the College Corner is becoming more and more popular among north shore and Evanston shoppers, es....::o-~v,, ... ·ally with those who are anxious to swell the building fund. Each week the stock of baby articles is replenished. Mrs. Fred Kingore . of 1716 Livingston avenue, Evanston, is executive chairman of the College Corner at 7748 North Haskins avenue, Chicago, and ~irs. R H. Schmidt of Chicago, is chairman oi the Work committee. Mrs. Kingore was chairman of the Doll department and Mrs. Schmidt of the Gift shop at the Toy carnival held by the alumnae at the Evanston \Voman's club last December. Alumnae and friends of the College from all the north shore towns. as well as from Evanston and Roger Park, attend these Monday meetings. During September and October the work shop will be located at 1414 Hinman avenue, Evanston, with Mrs. Florence C. Capron. The day and hour remain the same-Mondays, at 2 o'clock. Mrs. F . C. Nason entertained six- 1 section of the National Association of teen boys, t\Us week, at a chic;kell Real Estate boards. Ot~r problems dinner at Green Tree lnn, in honor which the sales manager has as his own of her son, Jack Nason. --oan d wh' Ic h WI'II be tak en up b y the Sales W events for Skokie Country club were postponed until Wednesday. The events for next week, September 15. are comparatively few. At nine o'clock there will be nine holes, played twice on second, to determine choice score. Korth Shore had several important results of last week's play. The first -oeighteen holes of the qualifying round Mr. and Mrs. Samuel Clark. 135 were played off. the next eighteen to be finished next week, and the final score Fuller lane, spent the week-end on announced. Besides these, the first round a tnotor tour in Wisconsin. of the match for the cluh championship was pla)·ed. which is an important con- S.-..ial Study Course Is test, to be completed within the next r-few weeks . Offered Sales Managers New Term Sept. S Sunset Ridge has had important tourHow to keep down mortality in a real ttaments and has still more to be played. estate brokerage sales force is one of STUDIO BUILDING l'llS SHERMAN AVE. Mrs. Huszagh won the net score of the topics that will be taken up for study Class A,honors while for Mrs. low J. Macy carried llb~y~·~t~h~e~ne~\~v~ly~o~r!g~a~n~iz~e~d~S~a~le~s~M~a~n~a~g~e~r~s~'~~==:=========:===::::=:::::===~==~~==~==~ oft the net score of I; Class B. There was a consolation prize for the one who has had lowest score for the season. This award went to Mrs. W. H. McKillen. Other interesting awards were made. The player of Class A, who had made fewest putts to complete score was Mrs. I. B. Connor, and to her was awarded the prize for that distinction. Mrs. Stanley ~o~ ers of Class B won the prize in a Similar contest. For next week, there is the qualifying round for the best Class A pla)·cr and best Class B player, to meet in a ioresomc. · division of commission, li ting, commission, advtrtisinr allowance, or1anizatioo · of the sales force, the proper handline of prospects, morning ~tings. A call for enrollment of the full body Miss Alice Shipman of \Varwick Managers' section for solution are: of real estate men eligible to membership road, returned Sunday morning from Selection of salesmen, zoning territory in the section has just been sent out by Sylvan Beach, Mich., where she has of salesmen, should salesmen be protect- Jl. L. Samuels, of Columbus, Ohio, been during the summer. -oed in handling prospects, compensation, c~irman. "Mrs. P . D. Rathbone of 523 Abbottsford road, was called to Derangi. Colo., Saturday, because of the . death of her sister, Mrs. J. A. Coppinger. EVANSTON BUSINESS COLLEGE beams Baaineaa, Slaortlaantl and Secretarial Coaraea Miaa Elaie Zeit Reaumea Dancing Canes Oct. 2 M Kenilworth Garden Club Invites to Ita Market .1 ISS Elsie Zeit, well known instructor in Grecian, oriental, toe and character dancing, will inaugurate the third season of her work at the Winnetka Woman's club on October 2. Classes will he conducted each week on Mondays and Thursdays, it is announced. :\fiss Zeit recently returned from Les Cheneaux. near the Mackinac Islands, 1'\orthern Michigan, where she had been resting and preparing for the new season of instruction. Her recital given last spring for the benefit of Winnetka Community House was one of the notable events of the pre-vacation socia l season in this vicinity. -------- "DON 'T forget the Garden Market which the K~ilworth Garden """Jub "VIti KLAN ANNOUNCES MEETING g of the North Shore ~Jan, Knights of the Ku Klux Klan, is announced to be held somewhere on the outskirts of the north shore on Saturday. September 20. A huge "firey cross" is to be erected to illuminate the field or "naturalization grounds" for the ecret degree work, it is explained. A laqce O,.Pen air ceremonia\ mcet- eva.. n;t'l 19, at 2 o'clock," n shore residents are reminded. "The committee," reads an announcement, "is hoping for favorable weather and the winds seems to be helping the mosquitoes to 'move on,' both of which conditions are necessary for the complete success of the market." Has Come to the .North Shore What Kitchen Aid Will Do far You :\1 lx<·s tlou~;"h fn·· bread. cakes, pic, glngt>r-b····ad, doughnut!!, ··ol111, t>tc. Mashes potatoes- two or two dozt'n, to a wondJ'OUII ftuft'lncsfl. · 1\lakes mayonnal11e (drops the oil KTadually), on e cup, OJ' as many as you T~MAAKR~~~ H w~~a Kindergarten College to Start Seuon Monday Kenilworth Happeaiap :\lr. and l\frs . Fred D. Breit. 422 Esst·x road. arc heing congratulated upon the birth of a daughter, Virginia Lorraine, on Scptemher 3. R EGISTRATION of the fall session of the National Kindergarten and Elementary college, Chicago, will be held on Monday and Tuesday, September IS and 16, followed on Wednesday afternoon with open house and a get-acquainted tea for "big and little sisters" in the dormitories. Advance registration of out-of-town students shows a decided increase over last year, and has made necessary the opening of an eighth dormitory. With the exception of three buildings. the college now occupies the entire west side of the 2900 block on Michigan avenue. In view of the fact that educators and school boards all over the country are stressing the value and necessity of three or four years of train ing for the profession of teaching. it is especially significant to note that proportionately the largest increase is in the registration for the third year work. -oRohert Osgood of 423 Essex road, who ha hccn very ill during the past week. is reported recovering satisfactorily. -ol\fiss Thcrc~a Backus. 249 Cumnor road, returned Friday from a visit at Kansas City, Mo. ~ Jack Rathhonc of 523 Abbottsford road. returned l\londay from Camp Adv(·nture, Chambers Island. --o:\lr. Howard Edmond. and son . Tom, of 37 Kenilworth avenue, arc driving to Xew York City. Rf'ats ('g-g-s anti Icings; batte·· tor pancakt>s, waft'le11, etc. W'hlps en-am m · t'Vapo··ated milk, mcrlngut>s, Icings, etc. Creams various othe1· Ingredients. Rt'atl! and c··eams fudge, fondants, e tc. \VIth attachment, It freezes lee t·reams, sht·l' bPts, mousses, or any frozen dessert. It g-rinds coffee, chh1s Icc, chops meat, nutK, raisins. etc. 1t strains soups, IIUI' CCS, through a t\ne Strains apple eaucc. It is not 1wceseary to part' or core the apples. This auds lmmPasu··ably to the flavor. It sllc<' R JIOtatoes (to any dclllred thinness) . Cuts shortening in pnst1·y. And It will retain the tt·mpl'raturc lclthcr hot or cold) ot whatever JH·odud It Is mixing. All r>t this It will do-and more: sl~:ve. like. --ol\1 r. and Mrs. C. G. Burnham, 536 OW :\lAKY pleasant thing.s do you i~agine yo.u may have missed because you couldn t find the t1me to gtve them, or you were too tired to enjoy them? There was the last Symphony Concert that came the day you had to do some baking-and your ht·ad ached so afterward you couldn't even think of music. There is that particularly fascinating book somebody sent you awhile ago and you haven't had a ~inute. to open it. . . Last week you promised to go shoppmg w1th one of your fnends and mu were just too tired to talk clothes. \\'·urse thau all- the other night when you wanted the dinner to be perfect, the mayonnaise was watery at:Jd the pie cru~t was tough-and of course you were tired and m1serable and dtscouraged. . . Th l\fust these conditions be accepted? Not a h1t of 1t I ere used to be a time when all the tiring, uninteresting, weansome details had to he attended to with one pair of human hands, but not in the se progres~ive times . 1\owadavs with Kitchen Aid in the houst·, there is time and to spare fZ1r ·so many plea sam things, barred out hcre~oforc . 'owadays. with Kitchen Aid in the house. there Js nt? uncertainty about the fluffiness of mayonna~se, about the flakmess .o ( pic crust, about the variety of g~d thmgs for cv.ery men~. W1th Kitchen Aid housekeeping doesn t mean all day 111 the kitchenand does m~an better things to eat-less money spent for food -every bit of food utilized-no u'OJit. Roslyn road, returned Friday from Eaton's Ranch, Wyoming. Does all the hard tasks Look over the list of Kitchen Aid accomplishments. See how it picks out the hard tasks, the arm-aching, nerve-di sturbing, ti!'lewasting tasks, all tho e things that have an element ?f uncertamty in them, and do<.·s them for you like clock work, wtthout ftaw or mistake. . The turn oi an electric switch,-that's your part of the work, the rest is left to K1tchen Aid. So versatile is its work that Jeft-overs heretofore thrown away arc made i1witing, eatable. The economy in using Kitchen Aid is 1· 11e of its strong points. The co~t of Kitchen Aid is but a !-lllall item add~'() to your regular hou~ehold expenses, a few dollars a month, on the Hudget Plan, until it i paid for. Once your ·, it savt·s consistently and uncea ingly for you, time, energy, money. . . . Don't vou want to know more about Kttchen A1d, thts almost magic dectrical machine-what it is ; what it does; how it olve your problem ; not what we say. but n:prints of the editorial article from the Tribune Institute? Send the coupon today for this information. Or, if y~)lJ prefer a dem n tration, a post-card or a phone call to . our Chtcago office will bring Kitchen Aid to your home at a t·me convet!·en~ to you. It cost · you nothing nor places you under any obl!gat1on. Address: Kitchen Aid Sales Agency, 7616 Korth Pauhna St. Phone : Rogers Park0!17. All the F acilitiea of a Great Metropolitan School of Muaic are Available in Your Neishborhood The 24th year of COLt:"MBIA SCHOOL OF MUSIC opens September 8, and classes in the WILMETTE BRANCH will respme on that date. Private and class lessons. Piano, key board harmony, sight reading .and ear training. What Leading Magazines Say About Kitchen Aid IN THb: LADIES HOME JOURNAL Tt·st Kitchen, Kitchen Aid was put through every possible test and acqu\tted ltst·lr 1!0 JWI'fl.'ctly that In the Fl.'bruary lt!I!Ut'. 1924, an entire edltOJ'ial page In the magazine wae devoted to telling the readers about It and what It could do. GOOD HOCSEKEEPI~G ln11t1tute subjt'cteu Kitch ·n Aid to every test known to Kitchen requirement with the same t~atll!factory results. They have given their official approval. The TRIDUNE Inl!tltute had the same expt'rlence and gave almost a newl!paper pag to the very practical merits of Kitchen Ald. MODERN PRIS('II.LA Proving Plant rt'J> ated the experiment and hundreds o! Intelligent housekeepers th countr~· over have addt·!l their Indorsements. The 8cptt>mber ll!sue of HOURE REAUTJFl'L llagaslne has commented on the vlrtul.'s of Kitchen Aid at some length. CRA R:\1 has the same favorable commt'nts to make on Kitchen Aid In an ('ditorlal revh·w of Its accompllehmt'nts. Allk fhl' namt's of us rs on the North ShOrt'. COLUMBIA SCHOOL OF MUSIC CLARE OSBORNE REED, Director 827 11th Street, Boule.ard Bailclina Alma Chialuad uad Philomena lrace T eachera iD a..rae MAIN SCHOOL, 501 S. Wabuh A·eaae, Chicaao Telephoae Harriaon 5130 Students in Branch Schools are entitled to all the free advantages offered by Columbia School of Music. P·········································· : Tro7 Metal Pro4h~eta Co., Tro)', Ohio 1 Gentlemen: . . . . I Plea e end me reprints o£ the ed1tonal article on Kitchen TROY METAL PRODUCTS CO., Troy, 0. Aid . : from Tribune Institute. :Kame .. . ................. . . .. .. . ... .. · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ····· I Street ..... .. ......... · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · · ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~IL~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ C~y .................. . .. ... ..... . State . .....·...·....·..·····

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