Illinois News Index

Winnetka Weekly Talk, 19 Jun 1926, p. 35

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WINNETKA TALK June 19, 1926 It's the UNIVERSAL FOOD-DRINK! All over the world, people--young and old --find nourishment in milk. But it can do more harm than good unless, like ours, it is scientifically pure. Drink More Milk! PHONE 137 WINNETKA ® SANITARY _ DAIRY CO. Beauty Lies in Healthy EYES It's not so much the size or color of the EYES that makes them beautiful. Rather, it's the glow which radiates from them. Ur» lesskeptalwayscleanand healthy, EYES lack this alluring lustre. Millions of women throughout the world promote EYE health and beauty with Murine. It cleanses EVES of irritating par- ticles and keeps them clear and bright. Contains no belladonna. Our illustrated books on "Eye Care" or "Eve Beauty" are FREE on request. The Murine Company Nept. 33, Chicago RINE: EYES Dedicate Imposing Masonic Monument Sunday A monument of sheer mas- sive granite, so designed that it will endure for centuries, will be dedicated by Masons of Evanston and other north shore cities at the North Shore cemetery Sunday after- noon. The ceremony is to be- gin at 2. Former Governor A. O. Eberhart of Minnesota will be the principal speaker. Masters of Masonic lodges in Evanston and neighboring communities have been invited to make short talks. Hundreds of Masons are ex- pected to attend the dedication, and the general public is in- vited. The cemetery is on the Green Bay road just west of North Chicago. The monument is considered one of the most beautiful and imposing in America. It was designed by a 32nd degree Mason and carries out the symbolism of the Masonic order. It stands on a slope which faces the east. It is composed of three steps sur- mounted by three columns of pure Doric design. Masonic emblems are carved in the steps and in the architrave on the east side. The architrave on the west front bears the inscription, "To the 'Glory of Almighty God and in Memory of Those Who Have Passed the Unseen Portals." . Six carloads of granite went into the making of the monu- ment, at a cost of $20,000. The bottom step is a single slab of stone, 20 feet long, 6 feet wide and a foot thick. The next two steps are carved of one piece. The fluted columns also are monoliths, 3 feet in diameter at the base and 20 feet high. The largest single piece of stone in the monument is the cap stone which weighs 29,000 pounds. It took a crew of stone fitters with a derrick four days to put it in place. The Masonic section of the cemetery, like every other section, is laid out on the lines of a beautifully landscaped park with no resemblance to the traditional cemetery. Masses of flowering shrubbery and contrasting and blending foliage in every direction catch and at the same time rest the eye. At this season the place is thickly festooned with the white blooms of spirea. Seven varieties of spirea are planted and their blossom- ing times follow each other in succes- sion. Other shrubs likewise come into flower at different times so that through the spring, summer and autumn there is always a wealth of color. Contrasts in the masses of foliage are accomplished by the use of golden elders, red maples, purple leaved plums and elms, and many shades of ever- greens. In all, more than seventy va- rieties of trees flourish in the cemetery. In certain sections no stock grave markers are allowed. Tablets set flush with the level of the lawn are used so that the vistas of garden and park are not broken. In the sections given to the largest lots, flowering shrubs and trees are used to set off the individual plots, giving each a seclusion and beauty all its own. The North Shore cemetery was founded in 1917 by John Western, a former Evanston resident. Citizenship Course Is Boosted at C. M. T. Camp Maj. Gen. William S. Graves, the commanding general of the Sixth Corps Area, with headquarters at 1819 West Pershing road, Chicago, in speak- ing of the Citizens' Military Training camps to be held in the Sixth Corps Area, emphasized the very great bene- fits to young men who attend these camps in the training they receive in the citizenship course at the camps. Special attention is given to citizenship training in all of the Citizens' Military Traning camps, but particularly to the candidates in the basic or first year's course. There are still vacancies for young men in the C. M. T. camps in the Sixth Corps Area, it is explained, and those who are interested in securing an as- signment for the earlier camps that open at Camp Custer, Mich., Jefferson Barracks, Mo., and Camp Sparta,Wis., on July 8 should make application at once, as the time when applicants can be accepted for the camps is limited. Application blanks and further infor- mation can be secured by addressing the Commanding General, Sixth Corps Area, at 1819 West Pershing road, Chi- cago. Rainy Weather Halts Horace Mann Pageant The pageant, prepared by Horace Mann school and which it was planned to give Friday afternoon of last week, had to be postponed on account of the ificlement weather until Thursday of this week. It is not a very appropriate indoor performance, but in the event the weather man is not more favorable this week, it will have to be given in- doors, eventually, in as 'much as the close of school is at hand. ---- Miss Pauline Arnot, formerly con- nected with the North Shore Talking Machine company, 554 Center street, is spending several months in Denver, Col. Hub Provides Free Phone Service for North Shore Henry C. Lytton and Sons' Evans- ton store has arranged for free tele- phone service for patrons desiring to call the Evanston Shop of "The Hub" from the following north shore towns: Glencoe, Hubbard Woods, Winnetka, Wilmette and Kenilworth, it was an- nounced this week. Mr. and Mrs. William E. Davis, 1080 Private road, will leave June 25, for a few days' visit at their cottage on Lake Hamlin, Ludington, Mich. From there they will go to Boston, visiting Mrs. Davis' brother at his new cottage in Dufbury, Mass. Returning to Lake Hamlin, after a few weeks, they will spend the rest of the summer there. ---- Phillip Eisendrath of 527 Cherry street graduated from Northwestern university June 14. Mr. Eisendrath is working in the city and will be in Winnetka this summer. '

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