Illinois News Index

Wilmette Life (Wilmette, Illinois), 22 Oct 1926, p. 43

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

October 22, 1926 WI L M E T T E L I F E To Be Among 40,000 at Saturday's Take Part inClash Campand ~emorial The Northwestern-Notre Dame foothall game Saturday will be played before one of the largest and most color- · ful crowds that ever attended a grid contest in the middle ,\,est. Among the many guests of national prominence who will he present at North- : .; western's new stadium arc Vice -President Dawes. General John J. Pershing and Mayor DeYcr. Gen. Per shing \vill he the gue st of Vice-President Dawes during his visit in Evanst::m and wi II occupy Dawes' box at the game. Special ceremonies hct \\'een halve s will he held in which General Dawes, : General Pershing, Ma vor De,·er and I others \viii participate. The !'-J'orthwcstcrn and Notre Dame hands will aid in the ceremony. At this time the large audience of i 40,000 persons will al so pay tribute to the memory of \Vatter Camp, the "Father of American Football." The \\'alter Camp creed will be read while , every one in the big stadium stand s with bared head. · Never in the· history of football at Northwestern has there been such a great demand for tickets as there has been for Saturdav's game. Thousands I of orders for tickets were returned when the supply ran out one week ago. A similar demand for ticket s is also being made for the Chicago-Northwestern game. Ducats for thi s contest were almost gone early this week and E. B. Davidson, ticket manager, announced he expected the supply to be , exhausted by today. Forty-eight thou- ! sand will be the s~ating capacity of the stadium for this event. w. ELCOME i. STRANGER! Welcome to Our Village and ·Welcome to Our Churches Many new residents have come into Wilmette during the present year. We who have lived here longer congratulate both you and ourselves upon the wisdom of your choice of this community for your home. We bid you welcome as 9eighbors and friends, and hope that your residence here will be increasingly happy as you take more and m~re part in village affairs. The backbone of any community is the number and the strength of its churches. They make for upright, stalwart, outstanding force of character of those affiliated with them. Moreover, they exert an unseen yet potent influence up~n the community in whole, making it physically~ morally and spiritually a better place in which to live. We welcome you to our churches. Select one of these for your Church Home and, through the contribution of your personal interest and attendance, aid us in making Wilmette more and more an outstanding ideal community of Christian homes. Mrs. Samuel lnsull Is Lead in "Runaway Road" The Repertoire Theatre company " ·ill present Mrs. Salllucl In sult and her company in a nc\\' A111crican comedy, "The Runa\\'ay Road," hy Gretrhen 1 Damrosch Finletter, at the Studebaker theatre, Chicago, for an indefinite engagement beginning Monday night. November 1. Back of this plain an- ! nounccment is something of more than pa _sing interest to theatre-goers of this vicinitv. It will be recalled that a year or so ago, Mrs. Insult. former!~·~ so favorably known on the professional I stage a - Gladys \Valli . appeared both in Chicago and in :t\ew York in a revival f "The SC'hool for Scandal." Her success on her nturn to the stage was quite out of the ordinar~·-not alone in Chicaao but in N'ew York as well, where sl~e appeared in the play ninety-five performances. establishing a record run for the Sheridan masterpiece. This outstanding achievement has had a significant result. The Renertoire Theatre company, an Tllinois corporation, hac;. as it is well known, taken over the Studebaker theatre for a term of years. Here. during a portion of each seas-on, Mrs. lnull and the best company players obtainable, will appear in new plays chiefly by American ~uthors, and occasional !e-, vivals of standard plays and classtcs. It is not in anv seme a "hhrh-brow" movement, nor an effort to "uplift the drama." It is just meant to give that section of the public, who still love the spoken drama, the best that can be obtained, so far as seasoned professional jud~ment goes, in plays and players, it is explained. 1 I Directory of Churches: The Wilmette Baptist Churdt Forest and Wilmette Avenues The Fll'st Presbyterian Church Ninth Screet and Greenleaf Avenue Rev. Francis C. Stiller Rev. George P. Magill Fint Congregational Church Lake. and Wilme'tte Avenues Rev. Stephen A. Lloyd WUnette English Lutheran Church Greenleaf Avenue and Seventh Street Rev. William Guise St. Augustine's Episcopal Church 1 140 The F~rst Methodist Church Lake and Wilmette Avenues Rev. Horace G. Smith Wilmette Avenue Rev. Hubert Carleton St. Joha's Lutheran Church Wilmette and Park Avenues Rev. Herman W. Meyer

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy