May 11, 1928 ..: i, . , Will Report Meeting of Mrs. Anna W~ Ickes Heads Garden Club of America Nominees f~r Legislature By P. H. I Mrs. Gilbert Kelly, ·Mrs. Sidney Ball, Mrs. Grant Ridgway, Mrs. Bently McCloud, and Mrs. Hugh Foresman, all of Kenilworth, have returned from ~he annual meeting of the Garden Club of America at Cincit1nati, and wilJ report on the trip at the next Kenil""orth Garden club meeting which occurs on Friday of this week at the home of Mrs. Noble Gillett, on Roslyn road. The weather conditions in in. cinnati were perfect for the gard':! n · teetings and the entertainment of the attending delcg:-ttes was royal. The restrictions and limitation s of club mem berships to this Garden Club of America arc such that it is a pccial joy to be affiliated with the group and the pleasures and privilege s offered lw the association are invaluable. The ganJc1.1 movement ainong women in this country is a permanent and growing thing and has made cxten~i, t strides in making Amc,rica beautiful. Besides being the fin es t recreation a no interest a woman can have outside th \' four walls of her home, a garden help c. to make the home . Tlte official canvass df the electiqn returns from the Seventh district (including New Trier) not only dispell~d all doubt as to the nomination of Mrs. Anna Wilmarth Ickes for the state legislature on the Republican ticket, but placed her at the top of the list WINS ESSAY AWARD of candidates, it developed this week. Jack Broad of the eighth grade of As but two Republicans · and one Democrat were nominated for the St. Francis Xavier school, was awarded three offices of state representative in a prize for the best essay written on the district, it was pointed out, nomi- the subject of conservation. The Wit- nation in this case was equivalent to election. The official total of the ballots cast for the Republican legislative candidates showed Mrs. Ickes first with 51,985. State Representative William Propper is the other Republican nominee. mette Woman's Catholic club donates a prize each year for the honored pupil and the room the winner represents. The title of Jack's essay was "Conservation of our National Resources." IBED . ALE FIREPROOF WAREHOUSES at . EVANSTON, WINNETKA, HIGHLAND PARK Univenily 1381 STORAGE 'Talk Into Your Telephone,..Not At It LEAVES FOR CANTON Margaret Fitch, daug·htcr 0i and ~f rs. \\ illiam Fit ch of Cumnnr road. Kenil\\'orth, ,,·ho ha s been acting leads in the . tock company at Fort \\'ayn e, Tnd .. is closing her cngag·cmcnt there at thr end of this \\'eek and going on to Canton. Ohi o. ).fiss Fitch has had a very hard . cason, carrying leads in such plays as "Rain," "T r enr." "Smilin' Through," and " \Vhitc Carg-o." The company will open at Canton v;ith the last named play. ).f i:-;s ~[r. ,f T HE telephone user sometimes wonders why he does not hear the ·person at the distant telephone clearly. The chances are that the distant party is directing his conversation away from rather than into the telephone. The rubber mouthpiece on the telephone transmitter is designed to concentrate the sound waves when you speak directly into it. If you merely talk at your telephone, holding the transmitter to one side or several inches away from your lips, the mouthpiece cannot helr you, Rubber contraptions which are sometimes sold by peddlers do not improve transmission. They are more likely to impair it, as the telephone instrumect has been developed into its present form after ye trs of painstaking, scientific study by expert engineers. If the person you are talking with complains that he cannot hear you, try talking into the transtnitter as suggested. jJ Mr. and Mrs. Grant Ke ehn (the la tter formerly Miss ).[arjoric Burchard ). of t\ C\\' York are in KenihYorth with their small daughters, a. s guests of ~fr . and Mrs . E. W. Burchard on Oxford roacl . I\fr. Keehn's parents, ).1r. and ~f rs. George Keehn, formerly of Kenil worth, arc now in the Fuller house on the Indian Hill Golf grounds, for th e summer months. -0- Uiss Svbit Freeman of Da,·ton. Ohio. has been- the guest of her aunt, M r". Leon Allen of I\1elrose aYrt'tte. Kenii \\'Orth. this last week-encl. She wa ·' joinecl by her mother rarly thi s wed.:: and together they motored north to Leland, 'Mich., where they ha,·e a summer home. Fur Storage Have your furs remodeled or repaired while in storage at a greatly reduced pnce. REMODELING IS OUR SPECIALTY I ILLINOIS BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY BELL SYSTEM Fur Chokers offered NOW at reduced· prices. One Policy - One System Universal Service I. Bernstein Furrier ... 1912 Central Street EVANSTON University 1409