Illinois News Index

Wilmette Life (Wilmette, Illinois), 8 Nov 1929, p. 35

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

~ovember 8, 1929 WILMETTE LIFE J5 Dr. A. R. H~tton, professor of political science at Northwestern university and widely known authorit Y on the city-manager plan and c ·1 , 1 'II dd th ),· . I } c lart ers, WI a ress e J.\attOnal Confer.. . cnce on I mprovmg Government which will meet next week at the Stevens hotel. Four organizations \vhich arc conre de.c! to ~ave had more to do with the tmprovtng of government than any n.ther mediums will send representaliYeS to the ronference. f ncludcd will l~e the National Municipal league, (~ovcrnmcutal h.t~tarch association .\'ational Association of Ci\'iC' Sccrc: t~rics anc.l Proportional Rcpn'sl·ntat10n l.eaguc--which \\'ilt han~ the spon~orsh1p of num.cro.us.natitll.lal ami Chi rago groups mcltHilng \orth\\T~tcr 11 ttnivcrsity. Dr ll_atto'!, Bartlett 1125 ~ew Tri~r Students W1ll G1ve Addresses Join Photographic Club 0 at National M eetin~ .ne hunclred an<t t\\'enty-five student 1 · ~~· ·~~.~tn~d for the L~ns club at New is complete without . . n~r li~~h '_chool tins Year . The club ~s organt':cd tor the_ purpose of advancIll" the tnt~re ·t t 1 "' s o alllateur p 1otog· raplly in all it:-. branches. In ord.e r to · . . reta111 membership Ill the organization d . a stu cnt must subm it each month two photographs taken by himself. The first meeting of the club was held Tues-= See Franken's Masttr List of· Tulips in November I st issue of WILMETTE LIFE ~Ia" of this weL·k. Plans for the year Include the orga nization of various Plant your tulips before it freezes. They should groups in thr club for work in amabe planted (:i inches deep and 6 inches apart each way. tcur lllll\'_ing pictures, snapshots and othtr ordmaryyhotog raphy and cxperimenta~ work 111 dc\'eloping and print111g. ~tn: ral r~mera hikes arc planned and the club \Yilt hold a p~cture conte"t Telephone Deerfield 241 ;l, lt:-.tt<t l. ll . H. Herron IS the faculty First Sueet West of Railroad and Then ' South to the End of the Street :--jHl!hOr. ----------~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ NO SPRING GARDEN .DUTCH BU·LBS Order Now FRA'NKEN BROS., Inc. Will · Repreaeni Evanston Evanston will send to the conference, in addition to Dr. Hatton ~fa \'Or Charles Bartlett, president of the illi- ! 11ois Municipal league, who \\·ill gi\'c I the addre . s of welcome at a lunc-heon ; ~<:.,sion Tuesday, Xov. 12. , Dr. .H atton's talk wi II CIJIIlL' at the \\"ednesday morning meeting and \\'ill he C!ll the subject "Is the ~1anagc r Plan :\daptable to Counties?" This ::\ortlm·e:-. tcrn proic.., . . Pr, who ~· aml' irom Clen·land l\\·,, \var' :tgo. is as con\·er:;ant with pra~'tical J ·o lit~cs and go\'ernm~nt as. wit!1 theor~·· l I ~1 Clc,·e land he wa s act1w 111 mu111 · I r1pal gO\·crnment and \\·a:; author f it:- city-manager chartc.:r and leader of I thl' campaign for its :1doptinn. lie "t·n·e d as a member oi the cit\' cnun - , c il from 19..?3 until ht: camt' to . .\'nrth· I I we" tern. I I 1 alf measures never grew good apples ···and never h_roughtyou good milk A lot of science and a lot ·of care is needed to grow good, juicy· apples. And equal care is required to pack and ship those apples so that you get them with. all their goodness intact. Milk is even more "fragile." Only the greatest experience and care can pre· serve its goodness from farm to you. T'aken only from the choicest of dftiry cows, Bow· tnan's Milk is extra good at the start. And that extra goodness is never lost. Pasteurization, refrigeration and speedy delivery bring it to your table as fullrich in cream, as fresh and as pure as ""hen taken from the cow. It is this faithful supervision at every step which keeps Bowman's Milk so sweet and so good-so unmistakably s 1perior in ·flavor. Order a bottle today. See for yourself what a differ· ence there is. Author of State . ~egislation I le wrote thl' municipal lwn11.: rule jl f'(l \· i s ion~ of tl1c Ohio ~tate C(llhti tution, :1.11d hi..; i·;flurnct· l' '\lCIHkd hr\ '\ 1111J the state when he ~er red it,r six 'vars as COJbttltant on state con"titut i n tb a n d city chart c r :-; i u r t h L' .\'at ion a 1 \lunicipal kaguc . Jle draitecl the -.ta te-wide optional charter );l\n ft1r I Tncli~na and \\.yon~ing . He i:-. now pres1dent of the Cl11cag(l Gon' rnment 1 Planning commission . Speakers at the eonfcrence will include Pres. Robert ~f. Jiutchin~ and Charles E. ~Ierriam ,.of the Cnircrsity nf Chicago, Frank .T. Loesch, president of the Chicago Crime commission, 1928-29; Julius Hosenwald, chairman of the board of trustee~. Chicago Rurta u of Public Efficiency; \\' ;llt cr J. Kohler, governor of \Yisconsin. I l I l Mrs. Anderson Hostess of Benefit Card Party ).Irs. X. P . Anderson of E\·anston will \ l,e one of the hostesses at the anll ual philanthropic card part~' which the North Shore Catholic \\"omen's h·aguc will promote Tue~day, Xov: 12. I ~ t will be l;eld at the \V1~netka \\om - I' an s club. 'I he league will sponsor a play to he presented by the Loyola <:tltnmunitv players at the Glencoe school an(litoriu;n Fridav evening, 1\ o\·. 20. "Little Old New York" wilt be pre "l'llted, and proceeds will gn t0 the tlte U. S. war veteran-, at the Cn·a t I .akrs hospital. DANCE RECITAL SUNDAY Duncan Dancer:- \\·ill appcar in recital at Orchestra hall ~uncia\' a iter noon, November 10. under clircrti~lll oi lkrtha Ott, Inc. Thi:-; recital \\·Ill h.c the first of three to he prc:;enterl tlus ::.cason. The second and third prol.!rams of the series arc to be gi\'en \\. cdnesda v and Friday n·eni ng:o~ of next \\'eek. '1 ' 1H· I · BoWMAN DAIRY COMPANY MILK Telephone Wilmette 55 THE MILK OF SUPERIOR FLAVOR

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy