30 WILMETTE I LIFE "" April 16, 1926 FARM BECOMES "CITY" Parents Endorse Big Tree Farm Near GJenayer Skokie Valley Station Bought for Subdivision - ASK YOUR GROCER FOR A FREE SAMPLE I I ' I I I Citizens' Camps PASTEURJZED COTTAGE CHEESE Whipped in Pure Cream Get acquainted with the cheese that never fails- to please. \Ve can 't begin to tell you how much better Dixie is than ordinary cottage cheese-we can't pict,ure the rich, zcst~ul.flav<;>r or the fine, smooth texture '~r hich arc the result s of whtppmg tn pure fresh cream and employment of infinite rare in the making. You mu st taste Dixie North Shore Cot tag{; Cheese to appreciate the full meaning of its deli ciousness . .., Do it today. It is our treat. Brlnkmaa'· Groeery ScJalo··er's Groce1'7 Ea·t End Market (·enthn<-rs Meat Market Wilmette Grocer7 Vaa Deu·ea Grocer,. · North Shore "Food Products Co. 427-429 S. Morgan St. Chicago NOTICE to Telephone Subscribers In Wilmette The new method of rendering telephone bills is now in effect in Wilmette. Please be sure ·to read the notice accompanying your tele· phone bill. We shall be glad to have you take up with our Business Of. fice any point upon which you desire further information. The attention of parents of young lhe plans arc all made an d the stakes men in Wilmette is directed to the acset for transforming the Big- 'l'ree companying informatio~ . issued ~his Farm another of the old rural land- week by the local recrt~l~tng orga~lt~a mark~ we st of \Vilmette, int(J "cit'y tion for the Citizens Mtlttary Tramtng lots.;. camp to be held at Fort Sheridan The purchase of this tract of forty- Augu st 3 to September 1, 1926. A t\H> acres by the u nited l~ealty com- sta tement reads: pany, of 111 \Ve~t \Va shington street, To tlw part>nts of ho,\·s 17 to 24 in Chicago, at · the reported price of I Wilm t·ttt·. $5.000 per acre, also establishes a ne\\' lia:-: your hov sig·111'd up yet for the high record sale . for acerage in this Camp, August ·:~ . to Sf'ptember 1, 1 !l2G: rapidly devel opi ng section which also at Fort Shf'ridan '! Hc:all whn.t somt: · · · 1 500 ' 1 · cf the parents of boys who hav a.tJS lllcludcd. 111 the , . acres now .>emg tcndetl have· to say about th ese camps prepared ior annexatiOn to the nllagc ,1 n~l Uw benefi ts to their boys: of \\'ilmette. 1. "I ~t>nt a g·ood boy to camp. I !-iatisfit·cl I g·(Jt a hettcr boy back, . This sple ndid tract on which is nm inasm uc h as he los t nothing and located the . tatclv old elm tree from gaiJ~t·d Jnueh." ~ which it long- ago derived it s distinc2. "Til t' last war wa~ had ennu~h tion as the "Big Tree Farm," lies on ~nd we lost our eld est son throug-h _1 t, the north side of the \\'ilmett -G len- but should hostiliti es eve r come n.g-am. which <~oct forbid, I want my r emainview r oa d, directly cast of the tracks ing boy to hav e some training; so that and across the road from the new he will bt' one of those who ttre Glcnaver stati on of the l\orth Shore traitwd at lt·ast in th e rudimentH o! E lectric railroad , soon to hr put in ~:iJit:n\· Schne e." 3. ..;l'ht· camp has done a g-reat .deal operation. toward making Edward self-r elian t. It will have 1,500 feet of business Be now knows 1 h~.: nwaning of obc<Hproperty on the \ Vilmcttc-Glenvirw ence. ·His room is a model for orderlin ess he is respectful to his superiroad and a plea sing system of streets ors. a'nd ht> is unu~ually industriou s.' ~1nd residen ce lots \viii complete the 4 "I think it is the finest thing plans which the Un ited Rea lt y com- t lta.t was t>vc1· put into operation for the dl·Vt' lopnwnt. of Y<?Uth." . pany are developing here. :;. "We also appreciate the htgh The recent sale of the Big Tree standard sl'f in moral, patriotic ttnd Farm was the first time it has changed social training-, and will be glad to hands since 1913, when it was pur- have Ht·nry a student at the n xt . rhased by the late Ed\\'in F. Bailey, (anlp." 6. "Th(: camp \\' US good !or h1m who gave it to his four grand-chil- T > hy. ically, morally and spiritually. 1 dren , Robert and Alice Clark. son and am os assur·edly willing he should · ar." d<~ ughter of Mr. and ~1rs. ]·,d\\'in H. 1 et urn n · 7. "He has put on weight, holds Clark, of 596 Oak street, \Vin'nrtka, himself Hl't't, and has been benf!fi ~c d and John B. and Katherine M ordock, in evt·ryway. ~Ty advice to mothers -;on ancl daught er of ~fr. and Mrs. everywht' t'e is, 'send your boys to a . Charles T. Morelock of 645 ).1 aple a,·e- C. 1\f. T. camp.' " 8. From President Coolidge: "These nue , al. n of \Vinnetka. hy whom . the camps an: an essf! nt ial to th e plan o! rt'retH sale wa . tnade . t!::ttional st'c·urit:-·. ~h e:-· promot e obedi <· nct· to law and n ·s Jwct for th e institution~ ··f a w e ll ordered society. Chicago Architect Buys '\ oung- m(·ll are h (· lped to physical 1th, m~.:n ta 1 vig-or and moral excelHome on Isabella Street lt<·a h-ncT. Soeial UlHl erstanding- and dem\\'illiam L. Dalrymple, of 1009 June - fJCTatic ft>eling are developed; love and way terrace, Chicago, through Charles t e vert>n<' e for thf' fla"' are th e natural (IUtcom e of th e training-. Co urtesy rn R Norman with the real estate firm act, sympathy in feeling, tol eran ce in of Kroll & Smith, 419 F our th street. thought are the ideals. ' -Calvin Coolidge" ha s purchased the re sidence proprrty of Major G<,o rg e R Harbaugh, 121 9 P. B. Cornell, 62-1- Isabella st reet a nd avt>nue, has blank applications. will take possession the latter part of Forest Any of the \Vilm ette physicians will this month . Mr. Dalrymple is an archi- give the required medic.al exa~i na tect with the firm of Henry Sugar and tiun without cha r ge, it ts explamed. Son, 110 south Dearborn st reet, Chi- ":!':ow is tht> time; send in your aprlication lJdore the quota is fill ed!" cago. The Cornells arc moving to Au- l\fa.jor Ha1·baug·h urges the yo ung men rora where Mr. Cornell for several of the comm unit y. months past has been conducting the business of the Nash and Ajax autoArt League Invites to mohilr agency. The North Shore Art league is ha\·in g· a large exhibition of painting a!Hl sculpture at Matz hall, , Commu'1tt y House, Winnetka. A dinner Thursday evening, April 15, opened the exh~it which will continue through April 25. The board being desirou s for the co-operation of the Woman's club s in the town s along the shore, has appointed day s when the women from those towns may be hoste sses to their fri.ends and town speople. Wilmette ha s ·M rs. R. R. Fontham of 121 Third been appointed Sunday, April 25, with street, is expecting her brother-in-law Mrs. J can Muir Coburn and her comand sister . Mr. and Mrs. Fred T . Wil- mittee to act as hostesses . son, to arrive from their home in Los Angeles Friday, April 23, for a stay D. A. R. MEETS MONDAY of about a month. The Wil sons will The Skokie Valley chapter of the sail May 22, for asummer of travel Daughters of the American Revolu abroad, returning to Amcrira in Octo - tion will meet at the home of MrS. ber. Karl Korrady, 557 Abbottsford road. --oKenilworth, Monday, April 19, at 2 ~harles Ray McCallum, Jr.. wa s o'clock. The progr..tm will ronsist of host to a group of ·his little friends reports of the convention held at Thursday afternoon on the occasion of Peoria. Mrs. Charles Jackson of his fourth birthday. Hubbard Woods, was the delegate --afrom the Skokie chapter at the conMrs. G. F. M. Ennis of Cape Town, vention. South Africa, is visiting her sister, Mrs. Victor Channing Sanborn of Lake Mr. and Mrs. Charles Ray McCal ·Forest. Mrs. Sanborn will entertain lum of 930 Oakwood avenue, motored her Kenilworth Bridge club Tut>sdav to Milwaukee, Monday for a two day while her sister is here. · visit with friends. · ENTERTAIN VOYAGERS Mr. and Mrs. Claude Burnham, 536 Roslyn road, Kenilworth leave W edne sday for New York to sail for Europe Saturday on the Olympic. Mr. and :Mrs. LeRoy Woodland, 336 Leicester road, gave a Sunday night tea for them. and Tuesday evening, Mr. and Mrs. Mark Cresap, 239 Essex road. · entertained at dinner in th eir honor . Exhibition at ·w innetka .- ILLINOIS BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY