Illinois News Index

Winnetka Weekly Talk, 19 Jun 1926, p. 31

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WINNETKA TALK June 19, 1926 SAFEGUARD YOUR HAIR AND SKIN. CONSULT DR. MARTIN HAIR CUTTING THAT REPRESENTS YOU PERMANENT WAVING women who seek the beauty of correctly and individually waved hair Dr. Martin offers the most distinguished method for its attainment. Special prices, for a limited time: Bobbed Hair, $15. Whi Hair, $20. ice of the highest ee rendered at Dr. Martin's shops. RR he Highest ded oF the Porson Woe will be mailed to you without charge upon request. Dr. Martin's staff includes hair cutters of exceptional ability amd wids experience--truly artists. The Shops of Personal Service Dr. Joseph P. Martin's 1016 Stevens Building 1222 Stevens Building Central 1216 Dearborn 4635 Nature's Recipe for Rosy Cheeks GLASS of Bowman's Milk --three times a day--will put a new sparkle in your eyes, a new and naturai bloom in your cheeks. Makes you look better because you'll feel better. Amazing? Yes, but it is true! Bowman's Milk is whole milk-- rich in cream, fresh and pure. It contains all the precious ele- ments which doctors declare are so vital to lasting beauty and well-being. Paint your cheeks rosy from within! Nature guarantees re- sults. What could be fairer? DAIRY COMPANY MilR/ Mr. and Mrs. W. M. Morse, 433 Provident avenue, returned June 15, from a two weeks' stay at their cot- tage on Pelican lake. Their guests the first week were Mr. and Mrs. Frank Heuser, Oak street, and the second week, Mr. and Mrs. O. F. Freede of Milwaukee. Mr. Morse and Mr. Freede report fine fishing at Pelican, where they caught twenty pike during one morning. i Mr. George W. Gordon, 874 Lincoln avenue, and three children, left Thurs- day, June 17, for Lake Hamlin, Michi- gan, where they will spend the summer. Mrs. Gordon left Thursday for Smith college, Northampton, Mass., to attend the twenty-fifth reunion of her class. Janet and Sheldon Gordon will meet Mrs. Gordon and accompany her to Lake Hamlin the last of July. i Gi Mr. and Mrs. Frank F. Ferry, 391 Sheridan road, accompained by their children, Mary, Fred, Bob, Ned and Jeanette, left for their lodge at Land O'Lakes, in northern Wisconsin, Fri- day, June 18. Their daughter, Mary, recently returned from Carleton col- lege, Minn., -which she has been at- tending the past year. i 2 Mrs. Thomas H. Holton, 938 Pine street, is giving a kitchen shower at 2:30 today in honor of Dorothy LeBo, a teacher in the Winnetka schools, who is leaving the village to be married next fall. Twenty-two guests are invited, friends of Miss LeBo's. -- . Mrs. Robert Kingery, 809 Pine street, had as her guest for the week ending June 14, Mrs. Samuel McKee of La Crosse, Wis. Mrs. McKee left Monday for Versailles, Mo. in the Ozark mountains, where she will join her husband. 1 a] Mr. and Mrs. Henry J. Cary-Curr, 1051 Spruce street, left June 8, for a three weeks' motor trip to Washing- ton, D. C. Philadelphia and Balti- more. ---- Agnes Peirce, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. A. E. Peirce, 550 Cedar street, graduated June 10, from Kemper hall, Kenosha, Wis., where she has been a student for the past three years. Be Safe for the Beach! Classes in swimming and diving for beginners, swimmers, and ex- perts, from 6 to 80 years of age. Special instruction for those who need it. New Trier High Natatorium Opens June 21 for 8 weeks of teaching. Clear, sparkling, filtered water, free from dangerous holes and currents. Beats the Beach For -- Expert Instruction--Care- ful Supervision, Absolute Safety. & ho For Information EDGAR B. JACKSON 9 A. M.-3 P.M. Evening Calls Winnetka 2400 University 6448 oe Year Book Shows Rapid Growth of Utility Company Figures contained in the 1926 Year Book of the Public Service company of Northern Illinois, which now is being distributed to owners of the company's securities, show the com- pany's gross revenue to have increased $9,246,000 during the past five years. In 1920 the operating revenue amount- ed to $11,400,000 as compared with last year's total of $20,646,000. In keeping with this degree of prosperity, the company last August increased its common stock dividend rate from $7.00 to $8.00 per share. The above information is a portion of the annual address to stockholders, delivered by Samuel Insull, chairman of the company. This address, in sub- stance, comprises the introduction to the company's latest year book. At- tention also is directed to a substantial reduction in lighting rates for resi- dential customers, effective May 1, 1926. Comprehensive reviews of the year's development in the various branches of the company's service make up the subject matter of this book. Numerous photographs of generating plants, sub- stations, business properties, custom- ers' buildings, automotive equipment and employe activities, are included. A six-color map, showing the com- plete electric and gas transmission systems throughout the company's 6,000 square miles of territory, and the specific kind of service being ren- dered in the 278 communities served, is attached to the inside of the back cover. The cover of the Year Book repre- sents the agricultural, industrial and recreational facilities in the extensive territory served. This cover design ap- peared originally as a company poster and was the subject of much favor- able comment. PUBLIC TO VIEW GARDENS Under the auspices of the Lake Forest Garden club, the following Lake Forest Gardens will be open to the public Saturday, June 19, from 11 in the morning until 7 at night. One nominal admission charge will admit spectators to all four gardens; Mrs. Rockefeller McCormick, Mrs. Samuel T. Chase, Mrs. James H. Douglas. Mrs. William E. Clow. Saturday afternoon, June 19, Mrs. Daniel H. Burnham will be hostess to the members of the Art Institute Alumni association on the terrace and gardens of the Burnham home on the shore of the lake, in Evanston. ---- Robert Drake arrived in Wilmette from Dartmouth college Wednesday to spend his vacation with his father and mother, Mr. and Mrs. Lyman M. Drake, of 933 Lake avenue. EYE STRAIN Causes Headaches When Your Eyes Need Care CONSULT AN EXPERT I have taught the eye, its trouble, in a Chicago Eye College for over ten years. For the truth and right glasses at a MODERATE PRICE DR. J. J. LEWIS 7 West Madison St. COR. STATE 10th Floor 9 A. M. to 6 P. M. Phone Rand. 2825

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