Illinois News Index

Highland Park Press, 27 Jan 1927, p. 20

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ta "I h their 1 PAGE TWELVE â€"â€" jire: A. 0. Rigmg it flic:l::rl‘;rkad Saturday evening. es es On Wednesday evening Mr. and Mrs. Elmer Clavey were given a surâ€" prise party by fourteen of their friends at their home on Deerfleld Mr. and Mrs. Alex Willman enterâ€" tained at dinner on Wodmdty eveâ€" ning in celebration ‘of their | son Kress‘ fourth birthday anniversary. Twentyâ€"one guests attended, _ ___ " The Northbrook school was closed Friday morning for sixty people from Northbrook,. including: the five teachâ€" ers in the school, fortyâ€"five students, avenue; aunt in Chicago.. . =‘ Announcement is‘ made of the enâ€" gagement of Miss Mary Ellen Smit, daughter of Mr; and Mrs, M. J, Smit of 7216 Ridge boulevard, to Raymond Mrs. J. A. Reichelt, Jr.. was the luncheon guest of Mrs. Joseph Robâ€" ert Noél, of Oake Park, Thursday. F. LaPak, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. C. LePak of Deerfield, IIl., according to and members of the Parentâ€"Teacher asociation chartered a sfi bus to attend the lecture by Ca; Donald MacMillan in the Deerfieldâ€"Shields high school, last Friday Jmorn!nf. Just before reaching the | Gastfeld bridge, over the Skokie,‘a i truck "hogged" the road and f the bus into the ditch, No one was injured and another bus and pass motorists took the students to the high school in,time for the lecture. Deerfield t a small delegation to the morning lecture, and a large one in the evening, when the apditorium was filled a second time. Mrs. Smicer, mother of Mrs. C. G. Pettis, has returned from Massaâ€" chusetts, where she has sp;t several months. i f Mrs. Gladys Easton Page entertainâ€" ed the Young Ladies‘ club of the Presbyterian church, Friday evening. They are planning a progressive dinâ€" ner party. ; i4 Shirley Clark was hostess to the Friendly Five club Saturday afterâ€" noon. Jean Pettis will entertain next Saturday. Mrs. R. B. Patterson, of [Rosemary terrace, is convalescing from a two weeks‘ illness. 4 i Misses Jane and Martha Karch atâ€" tended a bridge luncheon at the hotne of Miss Martha Preston of Chicago, Saturday. R } $ _Mrs. Fred Labahn was a guest of her sister, Mrs. James Daugherty, of Chicago, Monday. Circle number three of Dorcas st ciety of the Presbyterian church planning to present a play, which is being coached by Miss Mlfiy‘ Page, in the near future. s‘ â€" The January meeting of the Misâ€" sionary society of the Presbyterian church met at the home of Mrs. Fred Meyer last Thursday ~afternoon. "China" was the #ubject of the afâ€" ternoon‘s discussion. $ Attractive new linocleum purchased by different departments of the Presâ€" byterian Sunday school has been laid on the floors of the church and new cushions have been purchased for the few by the Dorcas society, s surrrise rartv at their home on Wauâ€" kegan road, l‘eray evening. â€"â€"â€" _ About thirty friends and relatives of Mr. F. D, Clavey gave him a surâ€" prise party at his home Saturday eveâ€" ning. The occasion was in honor of his birthday anniversary. Cards and dancing were the features of the eve ning. , e A group | of ladies, assisted â€"Mrs. Frank Russo with the marking of books for the Deerfield public libra at the library on Saturday afternoo Mr. and Mrs. R. Knaak |were hos to a bridge party at their home o Grand gvenue, Saturday evening Twelve guests attended. / a Twentyâ€"eight young people of St. Paul‘s Evangelical church gave Rev. and Mrs. F, Piepenbrok & pleasant Misses Nelli¢ Knapp and Beatna Corson will be hostess to the Wilm Progressive club, which will meet it the school house on Wednesday af ternoon, Feb. 2}. 4o A _1 The Ladies‘| Aid soci¢ty of S Paul‘s Em:e!kcal church will m at the home of Mrs. Fred Horenberg: er on 'l'hmdnyA:ftmoon.fl Feb. 3. _ | Mr. E. P. QOsterman, Mrs. Annie Willman, Mr. and Mrs, Alex Willman and son Mr. and Mrs. Henry Paul‘s Em:e!rcd church wil at the home of Mrs. Fred Hore er on 'l'hundnyA:ftermon.fl Feb. Mr. E. P. OQsterman, Mrs. Willman, Mr. and Mrs, Alex W and son Mr. and Mrs. Osterman in Chicago, Sunday. ‘ _ Mrs. Julia Seyle of Everet * _Mrs. Julia Seyle of Everett was given.a surprise party on Friday eveâ€" ning in honor {of her birthday anniâ€" versary. Th guests attended, in-l cluding Mrs. S. S. Love, Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Gunckel and family, Messrs, Sam Lane, Andy Mortan, Berry De~l vine and Miss Arline Rog‘ow of Deer«/ field. ‘The Deerficld Men‘s club held their regular meeting at the home of the president, Mr. Jesse Strong, Monday evening. $ : The Children‘s Theater association, which had such attractive ribbons marked C. T. A. on the prize posters for "The Bubble Peddier" and "Twenty Minutes by the Clock" will mect at the home of Mrs. Nathan Klee Tuesday morning, Feb. 1, to make plans for the next play which will be the di ionh f M:u% Ward, rect of in March, in the Elm P&:‘Lool. ‘ . Mr. Harold Hansen of Thorp, Wis., who is en route to Detroit, Mich., and his Miss Rose O‘Connor has returned Deerfield News Continued from page 6 8 in the Northbrook school, weekâ€"end at the home of Hansen, On Monday morning the high school bus which transports the high school pupils from Northbrook went into the ditch, the second time ing the week. near the Werhane : ‘on Waukegan road. Bus : % much delayed, making. the pupils late also. _ $y Mrs. Nell Thormeyer, of Northâ€" brook, is the new teacher for the beâ€" ginning class of primary in the Deerfleld school. Kdty*g q:- motions were made Monday, an inâ€" novation in this school, whhht:in be closed Monday ‘so that the hers may have a visiting day. 1 . A sixteen piece orchestra, Dt:;poo- ed of students who attend eldâ€" Shields high school, in which Russell Patterson plays the cornets u.fid Walâ€" lace Reichelt the piano, will its first public appearance in the Alcyon theater© Monday and T y eveâ€" nings, Feb. 7 and 8. % Miss Keller, the girls‘ ‘teach= er in the high school, has & class of social dancing for adults in the Ravinia village house, which meets® Monday evenings. â€" | . Joseph Lincoln Gibson, who formâ€" erly lived in Deerfield in the hous» owned: by Fred Stryker, on Waukeâ€" gan road, played the part oi Henry Percy, surnamed Hotspur in the proâ€" duction "Henry IV" with North Shore Theatre guild, in the Highland Park Woman‘s club, Monday ?venha:. He gave a really brilliant ormâ€" ance, and was one of the outâ€" standing characters in‘ the , secâ€" ond only to that of Basil Syguy, the professional actor who played Prince Hal, â€" Sir John Falstaff (Samuel Otis) was a rare character, and Mrs. Cecil Barnes as "Mistress Quickly" had a lovely cultured voice and took her part with charm and understanding, and an entrancing smile. pi The evening audience. at the perâ€" formance of Tony Sarg‘s Marionettes im the Elm Place school last Thursâ€" day was largely an adult one, but no keener enjoyment could have been exâ€" perienced by those privileged to view. the wonderful production of "Ali Baba and the Forty Thieves." It seems alâ€" most incredible that mere ‘puppets could perform so agily, and the voices of those who pulled the strings were so well trained, and had accents so well suited to the parts, that the voices seemed to come from the little wooden headed dolls. Four of the forty thieves were negroes of the difâ€" ferent types of Congo nativesâ€"a Kafâ€" fir was plainly distinguishable among them. â€" The flock of sheep, camel, eleâ€" phant, and almost human donkeys of Ali Baba all added to the thrills of the play. AReal smoke came from the water pipe of the Sultan. As tickets were being sold in the high school for six, different entertainments of various natures, besides the checks for the Annual, and as Captain Macâ€" Millan‘s talk on the arctic came the following day, the audience in the iElm Place for the Marionettes was not nearly so large as last year for "Treasure Island," although Ali Baba GARRICK THEATRE TWICE DAILY, 2:15 and 8:15 TRIBUNEâ€""One of the Funniest| Picture: ever filmed. Best War Picture ever made." AMERICANâ€""Rocks Garrick with Laughs ‘und Cheers. Greater than the play." RANDOLPH STREET near CLARK The Motion Picture Triumph of the Age JOURNALâ€"‘Magnificent." American Employment Buâ€" reau of Highland Park MRS. W. S. SORSEN IN ALL IISBRANCflES I-pdrkd,udvlblw;atic V AL L P A PE R 8 J. A. Torstenson&Co. Telephone Highland Park 1205 FIRST CLASS HELP (WHITE) â€" FOR PRIVATE HOMES, â€" Wish to tutor children in all grades. Also give instruction in German MISS FLORA LEVY Telephone Highland Park 161 PAINTING DECORATING â€"TVTORING Central Ave. hland Park ne H. P. 2443 it. WM. FOX presents 547 Gray Ave. A N Dâ€" CGLORY PA nearly 1ive years, recior Ol oL. JuHSA= ,b;x church, will be pleased to hear of bara in 1924, after he had been forted to retire from the rectorship he lheld here for five years, because of Failing health. They have built a home in the Cdkoa\'ia gity where hely were‘ recently visited by Henry H. | Brigham of Glencoe who found Dr, Watson in much improved health. cpntly that, by Decree of November 19,|1926, the Pruid:z:‘of the Repubâ€" li¢ |of France had erred on him the) Cross of officer of the Legion of Tir. Watson, formerly rector of the American Church of Paris, and who still holds the title of rector emeritus of that chnrc,l;, is a thorough French enthusiast. e spent several years added recognition for him by |the ‘ hgovment.‘;'i . and Mrs. Watson went to Santa Sarita Barbara, Cal., received word lConfen'd on Him by the â€"~ French Govt. : lencoe and north shore friends of Samuel N. Watson, who was for ly five years rector of St. Elisaâ€" Or. e r. and Mrs. aWtson went to Santa THE HIGHLAND PARK PRESS, HIG 386 Central Avenue HUNITER S Phans GLENCOE & PASTOR HONORED CLEARANCE SALE OF TRUNKS | _ Lasts One Week Commeincing Saturday, Jan. 2 ' _ ‘90%.. L & } Discount _ c e e@ie t 3e > . ‘ Entire Stock _ _|â€" including _ of Honor Is in and knows . intimately the h ‘viewpoint and consciousness. Hig services in relief: work during and immediately following the World war won for him numerous citations "'}::â€"‘.'7 Watson is a. well FN) w ’ s including the Cross of Chevalier of the Legion of Honor. o s e Winnetka Garden club met af the home of Mrs. Rush C. Butler on ust road Wednesday afternoon, Jafuary 19, and <elected officers for Stephen A. Foster, first viceâ€"presiâ€" dent; Mrs. A. Ballard Bradley, secâ€" ond viceâ€"president; Mrs. Richard W. Walsh, secretary; Mrs. George Stanâ€" ley Parker, treasurer; Mrs. Rudoliph tz,; Mrs. Heyliger deWindt, memâ€" irls aré :Mmrvhouuhold arts. Ifibonbetm out if they get mdre artful than now. : f CLUB OFFICERS nual Meeting is Held and Other Business Receives Attention NETKA GARDEN y was elected president. officers chosen are: Mrs. Wardrobe Trunks _ Steamer Trunks _ Plain Trunks _ Dressing Cases f Suit Cases - Hand Bags Boston Bags _ â€" ' hn SPORT i9 chairman of membérship committee; Mrs. C. D. Daillas, chairman of proâ€" gram committee. * ) Mrs. Eddy, president of the Garden club of Evanston, gave a talk on civic work in Evanston during the afterâ€" The girls who have . pretty seem always ready to smile. (Not Inc.) PAPER HANGING and P. 3” Hanging a special. . 8 2503 Elisha Avenue PAINTING;, WHITEW ASHING CALCIMINING_ ~â€" . _ "Our Prices Are Right ___ _ wed Telephone 1578 §11 Washington Road E. 8. JAMES Lake Forest, IIL By Day or Job t 44 ies t eP ce THURSDAY, JANUARY 27, SA Courses in sal a.. ol sc or ‘two according lto a report i the Fesarat Upiad of To United States ‘duging the past y aoart 18 N. Sheridan Highland Park C pomnesitine DR. CHA E. GEIRSE os-mqu%ig msm? BY HOUR, BAY OR LENCI&_ N nno?.'é Phone Park 71 IN ;'.;gv"'"v’!g Washed IS by for t4 l s

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