16 WINNETKA TALK October 30, 1926 | { Mr. and Mrs. A. C. Jewell of | pen, Ihma Keehn, W. J. Jones, E. B. Kill That | Locust street, have returned from ART LEAGUE ON WAY | Hatch, Elizabeth Millard, C. R. Mc- combination business and pleasure trip | Cordic, Elizabeth Otis, Tom Wilder, ( old | ) d a y | through the East. They included * . ne | Rochester, Detroit, Erie, Pa, and | Sneezing, coughing, eye-watering, many other cities in their tour, and aggravating colds relieved quickly | were gone about ten davs. and easily by Dr. Nabors' Cold Tablets. Is your head stuffed up? Your throat irritated? Act now-- | 8 ni TI 3 the slightest cold may lead to seri- CR ! ous trouble! Thousands are testi- | ul fying how Dr. Nabors' Cold Tab- [] LE lets, the time tested and reliable ] rm * | remedy of a famous physician, EET EE EE EE EE EE LEE EEL EEL break up the most stubborn colds i : when everything else seems to l fail. "I have been taking your cold |! Phone 0 Winnetka } tablets whenever I have a cold for |r ' the past two years. I had been i3 ' troubled with eold in my head | which sometimes caused infected 1 sinus. Dr. Nabor's tablets have never failed to elear up this con- dition within 24 hours," says Law- i Bauer Cab Co. (HTT AT RT TT] {HH fete = Erdman of Chicago. Easy H mmm mmmemm---------------- to take. . . * 1 Immediate Service |} MN ccssssssscsen enna -------- in, i ] ¥ in : \ 1 ! 9 | 1h ] y H | ¥ | 5 WEY IOI mnie COLD TABLETS 4 : III ULLI ILLS > | HM 1 Tne 3 ] 1 Yor Sale by Auams' Pharmacy and Community Pharmacy IO CO OCC ii Confidence! Every dollar that comes to this bank is an expression of someone's confidence in the integrity and in the facilities of this institution, and, as these dollars go back into the arteries of business. they represent this institution's confidence in the honesty and industry of our community and cit- zens. BANKING HOURS Daily Saturday 7:30 A. M. to 2 P. M. 7:30 A.M. to 12 M. Saturday Evenings 7 P. M. to 8 P. M. | : Hubbard Woods TTL. oi COC CCC Trust & Savings Bank | 952 Linden Avenue Hubbard Woods I CC IT TO BIGGEST SEASON | Exhibit at Winnetka Community | House Forerunner of Many Interesting Meetings By MARGERY WINDES Great variety of pictures, ranging | from oils, pastels, drawings, and etch- | ings, with subjects including land- | scapes, marines, portraits, garden | walls, cluded in the exhibition on display in Matz hall, in the Winnetka Commu- | nity House, during the last week, by the North Shore Art league. An unusually lovely marine, vivid in color, and displaying violent action of waves, hung on the south wall, almost | faces a stately temple against a blue | sky, on the opposite wall. A unique picture of a group of gaunt birch trees was hung near a delightfully intimate portrayal of a snug harbor with its | fishing smacks resting quietly. | On the east wall, alone, hung the portrait of the late president of 1 Wheaton college, done by a young man an accomplished por- | from Evanston, trait painter. kittens, of a child, and warm the heart of a grown up hung on the west wall There were many pictures, and many | artists, and all cannot be described. | Wind-blown clouds, quiet gardens, and unusually fine portraits were on ais- play. Many Artists Contribute The participating artists were, L. R. Rudolph Ingerle, Zada Walker Clark, Caroline S. Burnham, Vera Stone | Norman, W. M. Gourley, Urinah Ship- and temples in Italy, were in- | An imaginative picture of elves and | that would delight the heart | Nash, Percy Eckhart, Hugo Von Hof- | sten, Grace Brion, Edward D. Gourley, | Cora Gould Davies, Elizabeth Bolden- weck, Hazel Crow Ewell, Edith Boyn- ton, Charles Morgan, Eleanor B. Hatch, Winnifred Wilson, Mrs. John [Vennema, Mae Spooner Dickinson, | William B. Hale, Lionel Robertson, G. | Long Otis, John M. Frank, Allen Phil- | brick, Clara Byron Simpson, AE. Boynton, Elizabeth Engelhard, Marga- {ret M. Walker, A. J. Gourley, Edna M. {S. Johansen, Marguerite Taylor, Buell Mullen, Anita Willits Burnham, Edith Boynton, Howard Bede, Sam Otis. | A few of the ont tanding pic- tures of the exhibition were: "The | Silver Mist" on French Broad river, 'Hot Springs, N. -C, "by -Ru- dolph Ingerle, past president of the league, two charming water- colors by Allen Philbrick, a marine, and picture of Keene Valley, N. Y, by Percy B. | Eckhart, an interesting water-color of an ancient ship by Lionel Robertson, two marines by W. M. Gourley, two |Landscabes of the Skokie, by Hugo von | Hofsten, internationally famous for his | pictures, and two pastels, one of Bar- celona and the other of The Ancient | City of Rock, Aledo, Spain, by Charles Morgan. Show Skokie Sketches Glencoe was represented by artists, Unitah K. Shippen, Mrs. ward A. (Grace) Brion, and Irma Keehn. Mrs. Brion and Mrs. Keehn | studied this summer in a class con- | ducted by Frank Peyraud, which met | and sketched out in the Half Day | region. The two pictures on exhibi- {tion by Mrs. Brion, and the three by | Mrs. Keehn, were all sketched either lin the Skokie or farther west. Mrs. Shippen's picture is entitled "Summer Joys." The opening meeting of the North Shore Art league took place the first three Ed- (Continued on Page 19) Delicious Roasts . and they will turn out as you pray they will . . , . rich, juicy and tender. That's the kind of meats that you are always assured of when shopping at PE T ER S MARKET. TRY ONE OF THESE Rib Roast--Pork Roast--Veal Roast Freshly dressed Roasting and Frying Chickens. PETERS MARKET Phones, Winn. 920--921