Illinois News Index

Wilmette Life (Wilmette, Illinois), 15 Mar 1929, p. 5

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March 15, 1929 WILM·I!TTB LIFE 5 90 NEW TRIER STiJDENTS ENROLL 'FOR EAST TOUR Stamp Club Exhibit at New Trier on March .19 An exhibit of stamps and coins of the l! nited States and foreign countries will be presented by the New Trier High school stamp club in the school library at 3 :3Q o'clock. Tuesday, March 19. Members of the club will lay open. for, inspection the best pages in their stamp albums. Several fine collections belonging to residents of the north shore also will be on exhibit. L. H. Sherwin, Wilmette stamp enthusiast, will give a talk at 4 o'clock on his specialty of British colonials. The exhibit is an annual event in the stamp club's activities, and the members have invited residents of the north sli01·e villages to attend. Nine Faculty Members to Accom· pany High School Pupils on Historical Ja~t Ninety New Trier High school students and nine faculty members will entrain Friday afternoon, March 22, at 2 o'clock for a week's educational tour of places of present-day and hi·5toric interest, including Washington, D. C., the Gettysburg battlefield, Old Point Comfort, Baltimore, Annapolis, Md., and Charlottesville, Richmond, Jamestown. and Williamsburg, Va. Donald Frisbie, faculty sponsor of the New Trier Tri-Ship boys' club, i15 in general charge of the tour. Other faculty members who will accompany the students on the trip this year are : Samuel Vernon, George Edwards, Roland Wehr, Miss Lillis Price, Miss Mae Fogg, Mrs. Margaret Moore, Miss Jes·5ie Sentney, and Miss Margaret Smallpage. Use ~uxurioua Train A special train with the finest equipment, including club and observation cars, will carry the New Trier party )f one hundred. The tour will be made largely over the Pennsylvania railroad lines. New Trier High school conducts the educational tours every two years during the spring vacation. This year the vacation extends from March 23 to April 1. The party will be back home for Good Friday, March 29. .. Following are the students who will make the trip: Charles A. Fleming Back From Tour of Southland Charles A. Fleming, who has been engaged in the carpentry business on the north shore for many years, specializing in remodeling work, has just returned from an eleven weeks' tour through the South in which he traversed every state in Dixie east of the · 1ississippi. Mr. Fleming declares he is fit as a fiddle for the rush of spring work. He is residing at 1012 Greenleaf avenue, Wilmette. Mr. and Mrs. \V. K. Wanner, 221 Lockerbie street, are receiving congratulations upon the birth of a daughter, Alice Margaerite, on Friday, March 8, at their home. Mrs. Wanner was the former Florence Gathercoal. -0- The :Sible and Works of Mary Baker Eddy and all other authorized Christian Science Literature may be read. borrowed or purchased at the Reading Room. THE PUBLIC IS CORDIALLY INVITED TO ATTEND THE CHURCH SERVICES AND VISIT THE READING ROOM PATRONIZE OUR ADVERTISERS ..dlllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllll "CARL'S" RIDGE NEWS Vol. I Publiahed in the interest . of Wilmette people and the Ridge Road vicinity by the March 16, . 1929 Gross Point Village The ladies Hall. promise a go9d time. "Darling, I lay my fortune at your feet." "But you have . no fortune." "No, but what I have will look immense besidr such dainty feet." The Wilmette Tailors will keep your clothes spic and span. They call and deliver promptly too. Stir your gravies w i t h a pancake turner, and you will never go back to a spoon. Easter is only 17 days away. Our stock ·of novelties, baskets, toys and candy is quite comMake your plete. selection early to avoid ment. · No: 10 disappoint- · I Girls Isabel Macalister, Katherine Ellis, Betty Vosburgh, Gertrude Lucke, Katherine Hernig, Dorothea W~st, Margaret Stowell, Georgiana Gonsah· es~ Mary Karker, Florence McCoy, Jeanette Henning, Louise Hubsch, Helen Basely, Janet Brown. Helen Brandriff, Marjorie Webster, Marion -oFlentye, Margaret French, Elaine Mr. and Mrs. John Wilds, 244 OxBlumenthal, Ernestine Herman, Max- ford road, Kenilworth, have returned ine Choate. Marjorie Ever's, Josephine from a two weeks' sojourn at Biloxi, Pridmore, Gene Paddock. Alice Burk- Gulf Hills, and other gulf resorts. hardt, Esther Mosely, Betty Bayless, Betty Holmes, Margaret Lindstrom, Jean Lindstrom, Mary Niestadt, Mary Elizabeth Ronan, Phyllis Fuermann, Barbara Brenneman, Margaret Gindele, Julia Crossley, Marion McGauran. Lil-avoid the usual spring rash by ian Leaf, Rosalie Roach, Grace Weber, allowing "88 to do your painting Eleanor Zemek, Charlotte Holg, Eieanand deeorailng now. or Burk. Jean Crossley, Dorothy Graham, Virginia Sandberg, Beth Brower, Lorraine Buggs. Dorothy Darby, Margaret Layer. Hazel Murphy, Mary Elizabeth McNultv. Ruth Kniep, and Jat1e Johnson. Mrs. R. J. Darby, mother of one of the girls, also will go. Mr. and .Mrs. Ira C. Darling, 256 Kenilworth avenue, Kenilworth, returned this week from a six weeks' trip abroad. Jane Darling is recuperat· ing from an attack of scarlet fever. -aKatherine Hepburn, 417 Cumnor road, Kenilworth gave a dinner party Friday evening before the Costume party at Bournique's dancing school. RIDGE AVE. PHARMACY CARL C. RENNECKAR, Editor. A small whiskbroom is helpful to sprinkle clothes and also to rub out wrinkles while ironing. Be ready for the Community Chest solicitor next Sunday. They are all working for a worthy cause. uHave you any Camel's hair brushes?" "No. It wouldn't be any use; none of our customers keeps a camel." Remember the Legion Auxiliary Party next Saturday night, March 16th, at the Hail! Old Ireland! St. Patrick's Day comes this week. And it is hard to celebrate these Volstead days. But we take off our hats to the Irish, the salt of the earth. A brick of Chapell's Ice Cream for dessert-SOc. Book s ·tofe·owner.: Aren't you worrying about the ten dollars you owe us? Student:Ileck,no! What's the use of both of us worrying about it? ~------------------------· WBYMOT! M. Portenhauser Painter and Decorator RIDGE A VENUE PHARMACY . · Opposite St. Joaeph'a School Boys Robert Ellis, Richard Barnard, Charles Greegard, Richard Streeter, O srar Cohn , Richard Schuettge, Farrington Schaeffer, Wa1ter Lindblad, Jack W eiller, Rae Goss. Lloyd Huguenor, \Vi11iam Gage, Lester White, Phil \'On Ammon, George Campbell, Jack Loeb, George Greaves, Kendall Garretson, Franklin deBeers, Ernest Solomon. Henrv Hart. Vance Soule, Tom Smith, Kepi1eth Moeller, Louis Weber, Edward Flanney, Vernon Wyle, Charles Robb, William Butz, Howard Bleser, Alvin Latt, Ed Skillin, John Bensonl and John Fetcher. 1030 Greenleaf Phone 2764 Phone Wilmette 316 ------------------------- LAWN aad GARDEN FOODS. CATTLE MAMURE 100 lb. bags IGORO LIMB riO lb. bags SACCO PLAIIT POOD !i, 90, 100 lb. bags SIIBEP MANURE 100 lb. bags WOMEN VOTERS' MEETING The Kenilworth League of Women Voters will hold a most interesting meeting Wednesday morning, March 20, at the Kenilworth club, at 11 o'clock. Laura Huges Lunde will speak on "The New Patriotism." A buffet luncheon will be served as usual and those expecting to remain for this are asked to notify Mrs. Thomas White social chairman, at Kenilworth 2075. Members may bring guests. VEX 100% plant food Fertilize afil you BONE MEAL 1!' lb. bags Lawn and Gardea PLANT FOOD sprinkle Grass, Flower and Vegetable Seed· MILLEN HARDWARE CO. 1219 W-.Imette AYe. Phone 3060-61 trililiette Garden Tool· and Equipment

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