Illinois News Index

Highland Park Press, 28 Jun 1928, p. 21

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¥° T eA i ue e on THURSDAY,, JUNE 28, 1928 was that of Miss Phyllis Ruf, daughâ€" ter of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur William +Ruf of Kenilworth, and Claude Kelsey Sanders of Evanston. The setting for this event was the Kenilworth Union church. The service was read by the Rev. Herbert Willett at 8:30 o‘clock, Saturday evening, Miss Isabel Scott is at present in Detroit attending the wedding of Miss Romayne Warren and John P. Wilson, Jr., both of whom will take part in @ Miss Seott‘s wedding next Saturday afternoon. A week or sc ago Miss Scott went east to attend the gradu~ ation of her fiance at Princeton and went directly to Detroit from there. She is expected to return to Winnetâ€" ka early next week and will crowd a gru? deal of activity into the few remaining days before she becomes the bride of Albert Keep. The last affair will be the bridal | dinner given Friday evening by Mr.| und Mrs. John Fdwin Scott for the| bridal parties and the two families.| The wedding ceremony is to uke[ place on the afternoon of June 30,} at the â€" Winnetka Congreglliontl‘ church and a reception will follow in the gardens of the bride‘s pnr:-n!x.) Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Scott, of 175 Sheridan road, Glencoe. ( Miss Scott will have as her attendâ€" ants, her sister, Mrs. F. Langdon Hubâ€" hard of Detroit, as matron of honor; Miss Elien Ewing of New York as her maid of honor; and as bridesmaids the Misses Eleanor Dennehy, Barbara Mettler, Emily Otis, Winnifred Smith, Ellen Stuart, Mrs. John P. Wilson, Jr., (Romayne Warren), Cynthia Wilâ€" son, Virginia Wilson, and Mrs. Donald Phelps Welles. Thomas, P. Field, George T. Bunker, Jr., of Chicago, and Frederick H. The men in the wedding party will be John P. Wilson, Jr., of Chicago, C. T. Williams, Jr., and Gordon H. Harâ€" per of Baltimore, A. Z. F. Wood of Terre Haute, Emory Ford of Detroit, Clement Hackmey of Milwaukee, F. Langdon Hubbard of Detroit, and Helena Crews Bradford, at‘a cereâ€" mony performed in candleâ€"light at the Union League ciub, Saturday last, beâ€" came the bride of Garold Clairmont Jenison, a resident of Oak Park. The bride is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William A. Bradford of 956 Greenâ€" wood avenue, Hubbard Woods. June 16. A reception followed imâ€" Cumnor road. The bridal party included Miss Helene Seibold, maid of honor; the Misses Katharine Stoip, Betty Harâ€" waod, Frances Stevens, Betty Taylor, Lois Basset, and Mrs. Arthur Ruf, hr“?l, ; Clifford Smith, best man; and h ushers, Frank Sanders, Walter Sghders, Granville Revere On Tucsday, Junc 26, Mrs. John: W. Scott entertained in her honor at} a sports party and funcheon. That | evening Mrs. Robert Cluctt gave IJ dinner and later took the guests to | Ravini®& for the opera. On Wednesâ€"‘ day evening Miss Eleanor Dennehy gave a barn dance for Miss Scott and Mr. Keep. Tonight brings the spinster dinner given by Miss Winifred Smilh, and Miss Emily Otis and Mr. Keep‘s bachelor dinner. tediately at the bride‘s home, 236 pay ?" _ But strangely enough, the answer cannot always be found in the auditor‘s books. For advertising is not a force by itself. It is and must be, as Mr. Braucher so wisely points out, a part of something else. _ It is tied up with a hundred thingsâ€"distribution, trade conditions, trade practice, competition, sales management, price, dealer and distributor relations, production, raw materials, and so on. The point is, that the mani{old uses and profits of good adâ€" vertising are only just beginning to be appreciated. It has beâ€" come a part of every business, as essential as salesmen or factories. The advertiser, knowing the stability which good advertising . has given to his business, is not surprised to see a reflection of this stability in his credit relations. Indeed, the study which | bankers are giving to advertising furnishes the advertiser this | new point of view toward his advertising space. | Now advertising to the advertiser is usually a purely comâ€"| mercial proposition, the success or failure of which is reckoned in | terms of dollars and cents. The final test is the question "Did it | The possibilities of advertising, to quote Mr. Braucher‘s own words, are so great that with its steady development it takes on constantly new significances. Within the memory of many newsâ€" paper readers, the viewpoint of the advertiser toward his adverâ€" tising has progressed from the mere announcement stage to the highly developed appeals of today. _ Advertising has a great public mission to perform, declared Frank Braucher, advertising director of the Crowell Publishing ; company, in a recent address at Harvard university. The more | it fulfills this task, he added, the more serviceable it is to the adâ€" vertiser and the more nearly ideal it is from the standpoint of the publisher. _ Charming among the June weddings Entered as Second Class matter March 1, 1911, at the post office at Highland Park, Illinois. under the Act of March 3, 1879. Published weekly by The Udell Printing Co. at Highland Park, Lake County, Hlincis 1 % The Higbland Park Press THURSDAY,, JUNE 28, 1928 North Shore News Jr. VALUE OF ADVERTISING ’ n““'(‘r.‘ | frocks A very small but pretty wedding was solemnized last Saturday afterâ€" noon, at the Winnetka Congregational church when Miss Vivian Elizabeth Knackstadt, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. L. Knackstadt of 878 Ash street, beâ€" came the bride of A. Luther Adams, The bride wore a simple gown of peach chiffon with a gardem hat to match and carried yellow tea roses and lilies of the valley. Her sister, Dorothy, who was her only attendant, wore orchid chiffon over pink with a large pink hat. Her bouquet was of pink roses. Frank Fulman of Riverâ€" side was the best man. son of Mr. and Mrs. M. L. Adams of Winnetka. The Rev. James Austin Richard officiated at the ceremony which took place at 4 o‘clock, with only the immediate families and a few close friends as guests. Mr. and Mrs. A. B. Seibold, 522 Forest avenue, Wilmette, announced the engagement of their daughter, Helene, at a dinner Monday night at the Lake Shore Athletic club. Miss Seibold is engaged to Thomas Shepâ€" herd, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Shepâ€" herd of Kalamazoo, Mich. Dr. and Mrs. M. C. Ruehl of 196 Green Bay road, Glencoe, announce the engagement of their niece, Miss Patricia A. Taylor, to Charles Russell Johnston of St. Louis. Mrs. Rueh) is giving an informal tea in honor of Miss Taylor today. Miss Seibold is a member of Pi Beta Phi sorority at Northwestern univerâ€" sity where she will be a senior next year. Mr. Shepherd is a graduate of the University of Michigan. No date has been set for the wedding as Miss Seibold intends to finish her work at Northwestern. Among the outâ€"ofâ€"town guests were the following: Mr. and Mrs. James G. Minert, Mr. and Mrs. Ira N. Danenâ€" port, Miss Julictte Brown, and Dr. and Mrs. William Haney. After returning from their wedâ€" ding trip, the Sanders will be at home at 310 Cumnor road, Kenilworth. Mr. and Mrs. Adams will make their home in Riverside after a short When Miss Helen Motty, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. N. Motty of Evâ€" anston, became the bride of William Beresford Renshaw of Winnetka she wore a becoming bouffant bridal gown of white satin frimmed in seed pearls and Chantilly lace. A train ever which hung the long tulle veil with its coronct of face and tulle fustened with orange blossoms. Her bougquet was of roses, sweet peas, and tilies of the valley. The maid‘of honor was attired in grven chiffen and ghe iresses of the bridesmaids ~ were of yeliow moire trimmed with tule, long in back, with bustle bows of green, and an »ldfashioned flower on the shoulder of each. The bridal attendants all carried shower bouguets of mixed The mother of the bride wore peach chiffon and Mrs. Sanders was in lace. The bride. was gowned in ivory satin made with a bodice of lace with tught fitting, long sleeves. Old lace bordered â€" the peacockâ€"shaped | train Lewis, Fred Bruce, Jack Reasner and Basset Ruf. owers to carry out the color of the trip. NUMBER 18 @â€"â€" The marriage of Miâ€"s Winifred } Seott Walz, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frederick W. Walz, of 1165 Park: { avenue, New York City, to Julian muronce Woodward, son of Mr. and‘ | Mrs. Arthur H. Woodwardâ€" of 65. I.&rd.«hq: roady took place Monday afâ€" ;trrmmn, June 18, in New York. The ; Rev.. Clifton .\Im-(m read the marriage service at 4 o‘clock in St. Bartholoâ€" ' mew‘s chapel, and a small reception | for relatives and a few close friends followed at the family residence. | _ The bride wore a simple frock of fpulvst orchid chiffon and carried a ; bouquet of white roses and orchids. Her maid of honor was dressed in varied shades of rose colored chiffon | and her bouquet was of pink roses, l The ceremony was performed beneath é.u bower of peonies and spring blosâ€" soms. Miss Ruth McBrady was her sister‘s maid of honor; Mrs. Edward Capps was the matron of honor, and Jean MeBrady and Frieda Salmen were the little flower girls. Adoph Salmen served his brother as best man, and John McBrady, brother of the bride, ushered. Mr. and Mrs. Alex Block of Willow street, Winnetka, was married to Sidâ€" ney Braverman, son of Mr. and Mrs. B. Braverman of Chicago, on Sunday, June 17, in her home. The Chureh of the Holy Comforter in Kenilworth is the place where Miss Catherine Hinman will become the bride of Perry B. Buchanan, son of Louis L. Buchanan at 8:30 o‘clock this evening. A reception at the close of the service will follow at the home of the bride‘s mother, Mrs. George W. Hinman, 576 Oak street, Winnetka. Miss Gertrude McBrady of Evansâ€" ton, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. J. E. McBrady of Evanston was married to Frederick Salmen of Winnetka Friday evening in the Lady chapel of St. Luke‘s church, Evanston. The recepâ€" tion following was held in the bride‘s home. winter in study. Mr. and Mrs. A. W. Payne left Winnetka last Tuesday and are sailâ€" ing from New York today on the Majestic. They will pass the sumâ€" mer in England and on the continent, returning in early September. the Arabic for Europe, to be gone over a year. Before leaving this counâ€" try Miss Greeley will attend her reâ€" union at Wellesley college and visit her brother, Sidney Greeley, at Framâ€" ingham, Mass. She will also visit her sister, Mrs. Walter F. Stiles, Jr., at Fitchburg. Mr. and Mrs. Stiles will accompany Miss Greeley to New York to see her off on her extended trip. Miss Miriam Dwight Platt attended the bride as maid of honor, and Miss Dorothy Adams Dunn was the bridesâ€" maid. . Waldon Moore served the bridegroom as best man, and the ushers were John M. Congdon, Ogden H. Freeman, Mebert Brucker, and Robert C. Hayes. Mr. Woodward and his bride will make their home in Ithaca, N. Y., where Mr. Woodward is on the faculty of Corneil univer sity, from which he was graduated. Miss Louisa May Greeley, who is head of the girlst department of phyâ€" sical education at the North Shore Country Day school, sails June 30 on The Doigs will spend a month moâ€" toring through the east to New York City, Washington, D. C., and the White mountains. After their trip they will return to Evanston to reside. Miss Rosalind Devere, sister of the bride, was maid of honor, and Edward Purnel) of Evanston was Mr. Doig‘s best man. Mr. and Mrs. T. B. Hardâ€" wick of Wilmette and Mr. and Mrs. Harry Green of Barrington, formerly of Wilmette, were among the number of guests who motored to the wedâ€" ding. Miss Frances Devere became the bride of James Doig, son of Mr. and Mrs. John S. Doig, 820 Oakwood aveâ€" nue, Wilmette, Saturday afternoon. The ceremony was performed in the garden of the home of Miss Devere‘s mother, Mrs. Mary Devere, at "Walâ€" nut Glen," Burmingham, Mich., by the Rev. Stephen A. Lioyd, formerly pasâ€" tor of the Wilmette Congregational church and now pastor of a church in Pontiac, Mich. John Sheppard of New York served as best man for Mr. Renshaw. Isaac Dixon of Princeton, N. J., and Harvey Knight of Evanston ushered. Followâ€" ing the ceremony a reception was held at the Evanston Woman‘s club. Mr. and Mrs. Renshaw are motorâ€" ing to Cape Cod and New York. They will be at home after August 1 at 1918 Main street, Evanston. Miss Jane Renshaw and Miss Eleaâ€" nor McDonnell, as bridesmaids, wore frocks of green taffeta and lace, and carried yellow daisies and butterfly roses. The matron of honor, Mrs. T. B. Tate of Lexington, Ky., was gowned in a bouffant frock of orchid taffeta and lace. She carried an armful of roses and daisies. The wedding took place Saturday evening in the Lady chapel of St. Luke‘s church at 8:30. Dr. George Craig Stewart performed the cereâ€" mony. of heavy satin and heirloom rose point lace fell from her shoulders under her veil of rare rose point which was brought from Eurpoe last summer by the mother of the groom. She carâ€" ried a shower bouquet of white roses and lilies of the valley. where she spent the Miss Margaret Hansen left Saturâ€" day to spend the summer at her home in Thorpe, Wis. Miss Helen Reichelt spent the weekâ€" end with Miss Alice DeBower at Gages Lake, On last Monday evening, June 18, at the home of Mrs. Piepenbrok, the J. O. Y. club and teachers of St. Paul‘s Evangelical church school enâ€" tertained in compliment to Miss Lily Saltenberger whose marriage to Paul Schmid took place on Saturday, A gift in the form of a beautiful mantel clock was presented to Miss Saltenâ€" The Mericle family are enjoying a two weeks‘ vacation from the tea store, Sunday the Misses Ruth Patterâ€" som, Louise Kersten and Tannis Greet, with Hans Bahr, Tommy Thomas and Donald Easton, spent Greer, with Hans Bal Thomas and Donald E: Sunday at Lake Geneva, The Clayton Fehr family have rentâ€" ed the T. J. Knaak apartment on Waukegan road, recently vacated by the Alvin Knask family. A large group of Deerfield people attended the commencément exercises at the Northbrook school, Friday eveâ€" ning. Alice Sherman way among the graduates. Mrs. Mary Cooksy returned Friday morning after spending a week at the home of her brother Mr. Eugene Tronjo in South Chicago. Mrs. Oscar Benz had as her supper guests on Sunday, her mother, Mrs. Mary Cooksy and Mrs. Anne Sherâ€" man. Miss Mae Titus is taying with Mrs. Jack Myers. In baking cakes, it makes a differâ€" ence whether flour is measured before or ater sifting. So always examine recipes carefully, noting directions this respect. Newer recipes invnrilflk;‘ specify the use of prepared cake flour sifted once before measuring, then sifted as many additional times as the Mr. and Mrs. James Macadie of Chicago were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Rx{lph Peterson, Sunday. Mr. and. Mrs. L. Soefker, Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Selig, Mr. and Mrs. F. Labahn, Rev. Piepenbrok and family, Mr. and Mrs. C. Bailey and the latâ€" ter‘s mother and sister, Mrs. Fred Horenberger, Mrs. J. Hueh] and Miss Barbara Huch] were among those who attended the dedication ceremonies of the new orphan home at Bensonville on Sunday afternoon. flufy cakes. whipping them. One way to be certain of success with smelets is to add a tiny bit of ning Chicege Mrs. w 1 «hn ue i Mrs. Ruth Frase and Mrs. Anna Willman visited the Emanuel Shrine No. 50, at Lake Forest. Frfda.\' eveâ€" to her home in Fargo, N. D., after <pending the past two months wih her daughter Mrs. Cromwell Owens in New York City is spending a few days at the heme of her sister, Mrs. B. H. Kress. Miss Edna Fritsch is teaching in a summer school in New York. Mr. Alex Willman while in Seattle, Wiaech.. last we with the Jacob Ira Hole of fis father this On Thursdiy Mr. and Mrs. John Hagieare visit ing their son in Troy, N. Y. Mrs. B. H. Kress was hostess to her bridge club at her apartment on Hazel avenue, Wednesday afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. Frank Russo and two children have returned from Nashâ€" ville, Indiana, Mrs. E. K. Williams, Mrs. Russo‘s mother accompanied them. Mrs. William Galloway is visiting her niece Mrs. Robert Welton in Norâ€" folk, Va. N. Y., and then go on to fie‘w i’o;l City for the remainder of her stay Miss Mary McGivern, daughter of Mrs. Bartholomew McGivern, 865 Pine street, accompanied by her aunt, Miss Rose Murphy, left Sunday evening, June 17, for the east for a stay of several weeks. She will spend some time with relatives in Binghampton, N. Y., and then go on to New York Mr. and Mrs. W. L. Ballard of Wilâ€" mette announce the marriage of their daughter, Day Macsherry, to Montâ€" gomery Major, Wednesday evening, June 13. Mr. and Mrs. Major are on their wedding trip and will be at home after July 11 at 215 Ninth street, Wilmette. I Mi T n Measuring Flour for Cakes Phursday evening, June 21. the AAld O, E. 8. Chapter celebrated fourth hirthday | anniversary. w‘mhers from Waukegan chapâ€" unded. Following the meeting, "ments were served on a table ow lurge and lovely birthday s uw ernter) piece. OF. J. Labakn of Centrab avs Deerfield News uy J. Labahn of Central avâ€" hostess at a luncheon on y. . The cight guests who were from Evanston and Ante ing en‘ several days \ family. Ellyn is viâ€"iting my axeman failed to show up, and I had to hew them down with my macheteâ€"and that was a blistering job. It was a good place to collect, and I finally located the famous caâ€" cique. It was a tough one to cut, but I brought out two sections of the trunk. I used my riding mule to pack these out, and I had to hikeâ€"the last mile in my socks, as my shoes began to drop off." heart of a fallen trunk that the ants and worms have picked clean of bark ‘and sapwood, and left to molder halfâ€" buried in the putrescent "Vitter, he writes. There is something uncanny about striking one of these seemingly ‘‘Well, the trail had to end eventuâ€" ally, and we got to camp at midâ€"afâ€" ternoon. And what a camp! It was supposed to be snug and waterproof, but we found it like a sieve, with a foot of mud inside. After cutting a few palm leaves I flopped in the mud and for a couple of hours was blissâ€" fully unaware of the bugs and mosâ€" quitoes crawling over my hands and j Hardships Encountered _ "I have returned from the mounâ€" tains .and that is really more than I thought likely at certain stages of the trip. Honestly, I never had such tough going in all my travels in the bush. Mud, mud, yellow slimy mud to the knees, swamps to the waist, rivers up to the hips, and currents so strong that the mules were carâ€" ried many yards below the landings. Rock and mud slides which in one case buried some of the mules to the belly and dumped all the packs, and rains so had that the trail was like a steam â€"bath. "Evening one day found my Indian guides and myself still four miles from our camp site, and we had to sleep in a shack in the swamps. Next morning the trail began to go up, and with a vengeance, too. At one point the Indian boys tried to force the mules into an impossible climb, and all of them started to slip. When the top one rolled over he started throwing the rest. I grabbed the tail of the mule carrying my pack, and pulled him out of the way just in time. Bloodwood cacique comes not from a live tree, but from rotting chunks and logs in the jungle, Cooper exâ€" plains. It is the almost imperishable mm-fiefinumuw the deep red, sound and solid 9 he says. In the mystic rites of the primitive natives, a piece of the wood placed over a bad wound is believed to staunch the flow of bilood and quickly heal the injury. They believe also that a bit of it behind one‘s ear will purge the blood of fever. Fanoma to conduct his explorations under the joint, auspices of Field Museum, Yaic, the New York Botanâ€" | ical Gardens, and the United Fruit} company. . Prof. Record gave l'rmprr1 the fragment as a clue, with instruei tions to attempt to solve the mystery | of the cacique,. The letter now Â¥eq ceived> from Cooper states that he| has obtained two cacique logs, one of } which will be sent to Field .\Iuseum.i and the other to Yale School of Forâ€"! estry. Cooper relates his adventures] as follows: | criptive of its glowing rubyâ€"andâ€"black colaration, in some light suffused with a golden sheen. Prior rto Cooper‘s disâ€" covery of two logs on the present exâ€" peaition. only one small fragment no bigger than a man‘s finger. obtained by a timber cruiser from a native and sun:lfh Prof. Record at Yale, was Cooper to Prof. Samuel J. Record, made public at the museum today. One of Rarest The magic woodâ€"*"magic‘ to the Indians of Panama who impute to it marvelous curative powers â€" is the Bloodwood Cacique, (pronounced kahâ€" seeâ€"key) one of the rarest woods in the world, according to Prof. Record, who is research associate in wood technology at Field Museum, and a member of the faculty of Yale Uniâ€" versity; School of Forestry. It is scarcely more than a name to white men who previously have penetrated the region, and even among the Inâ€" dians who prize and cherish it, only the wisest can recognize it, says Prof. Record. "Cacique" means chieftain, and represents the esteem in which the Indians hold it. Bloodwood is desâ€" known to exist outside Panama. Last December Cooper sailed for In the quest of this rare bit of wood, a collector risked his life in the steaming jungles of Bocas del Toro in western Psuama. This inâ€" trepid adventurer is G. Proctor Cooâ€" per, war veteran and forester. The story of the hardships he has endured in his search, such as tramping through miles of kneeâ€"deep, yellow. slimy mud, shoeless part of the time, and braving the perils of swamp fevâ€" ers to fall exhausted for a short sleep in the mud, unmindful of the attacks of mosquitoes and crawling creeping things, was revealed in a letter from A "magic log" will soon be exhibâ€" ited at Field Museum of Natural Hi§lury. Rare Bit of Wood to Get Which Collector Risked Life Is in Possession Field EXHIBITED AT MUSEUM MAGIC LOG FROM Finds Famous Tree I began to look for trees PANAMA JUNGLES =»4 were heard, but Institution of the 5,000,000 tons a week which are mined in the British Isles. A single drop of vil would take the Mauretania across the Atlantic. there is no reason why our descendâ€" ants should not still people the eatth. Dr. Jeans estimated that the use of the earth far exceeded the 300,000 years or so of man‘s existence. He said he believed it was in the neighâ€" borhood of 2,000,000,000 years. "A million million years hence so far as we can foresee," he declared, "the sun will still be much as now, and the earth will be evolving around it much as now. The year will be a little longer, and the climate quite a lot colder, while the rich accumâ€" wlated stores of coal, oil, and forest "Perhaps it may be unable to supâ€" port so large a population as now and perhaps fewer will desire to live on it. On the other hand, man kind, being three million times as old s now, mayâ€"if the conjecture does not distress our pessimists too muchâ€"be also three million times as wise." Radiation of energy, Dr."Jeans said, was annihilating the sun‘s mass at mn\eammmma-m Consequently as the sun has no source of repienishment, it must weigh 360, Illustrating the amount of energy made available by radiation, â€"Dr. Jeans said that the annihilation of a pound of coal a week would produce as much energy as the combustion 000,000,000 tons less "today than it did yesterday. ~ f in indicating that the universe is i Astonishing figures WMustrating the age of the carth, the size of the uniâ€" verse. and the radiation of energy from the stars. were given by Dr. J. H. Jeans. secretary of the Royal Society, in a recent lecture before the Royal Society of Arts here. Among the most remarkable of his computations were the following: The life in front of the human race is so enormous that humanity must be regarded as a threeâ€"days‘ old inâ€" fant who has yet to reach three score years and ten. bears on an iccberg that has loose from the icepack surr fihnh.-lhh-lfi-t away as the iccberg drifts to latitudes and ultimate extinet wed. "Our position is that of A heavy layer of black dirt has been spread on the campus and seeded: Numerous shrubs have replaced the vvergreens which last winter were frozen out. Edward B. Davidson, assistant business manager of the uniâ€" versity, announces that estimates are being submitted for turning the space, which someday will be used for build. ings, in athletic fields. A baseball dia~ mond, tennis courts and a possible football field are being considered. Work has alre ady been started on a huse 30â€"foot "N.U." emblem which will welcome serial visitors to Chiâ€" exxo. It will be made of crushed rock with flower designs to make it visible at great heights. THINKS EARTH OVER BILLION YEARS OLD FIGURES ARE ASTOX ISHING Radiation of Energy Tremendâ€" ous Factor; Density of Stars Heavy; Scientist Gives Many Facts jR A hundred elm and bass trees have been placed along Superior street, which divides the campus in half, and runs between the Montgomery Ward Memorial medical and dental building and the new Passavant hosâ€" pital. A hundred more trees will be set out next fall, completing a beautiâ€" ful drive from the lake shore almost to Michigan Boulevard. | forts to obtain it or locate its souree came to nothing, says Prof. Record. ’ With every evidence of willingness to | oblige, the Indians would point to any | decaying log except the right one. A dumping place for Chicago‘s unwanted tin cans and broken milk bottles a few years ago, McKinlock campus of Northwestern university is being transformed into a new link of the lake shore park system that will greet Worldt Fair visitors in 1933. McKINLOCK CAMPUS PART OF PARK PLAN tred specimens of other whods of Panama and Costo Rica, many of which have already been received at Field Museum. Study of these is exâ€" pected to reveal other hitherto unidenâ€" tified species, new to botanists the world over, Prof. Record states. l'l_»oper has obtained n‘venI hun~ Vague Tales F For years vague tales of this rare Densely

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