WINNETKA TALK June 25, 1927 THE GEORGIAN-- a special kind of apartment hotel --beautifully appointed and convenient to everything you'd care to be convenient to! Arrange for Fall leases now! Did you know that this most comprehensive service is available for guests of THE GEOR- GIAN? Attractive Assortment of Candies. Novelties and Souvenirs Personal Nervice Barber shop. Beauty Parlor. Guest Laundry. Valet Department. Miseellaneous Telegraph Service. Arcade Shops Autos and Taxis. Cigars, Cigarettes and Railroad Transporta- Accessories. tion. Newspapers and Peri- Steamship Tours. odicals. Highway Information. Catering Department Fountain Breakfast Main Dining Room for Luncheon and Dinner. Private Dining ~ Room for Functions and Meetings. Valencian Ballroom for Banquets and As- semblies. [the (georgian "An Address of Distinction" Davis at Hinman--Greenleaf 4100 Byrnes Travel Service in the Lobby Copeland Manor Country Estates Libertyville, Illinois With a 21-cent fare on a monthly basis and other rates proportion- ately low, and with Chicago train service of less than one hour, Liberty- ville is today a suburb of Chicago. It is as near Chicago today as Evanston, Wilmette and Winnetka were a few years ago, and every day is growing nearer. Think of it, we can sell class A Residential lots in the above sub- division for as low as $950, Class B Residential lots for as low as $1450, and Business lots for as low as $150 a front foot. COPELAND MANOR is not only a part of the Village of Liberty- ville, it is only two blocks from the main North Shore Station--It is Libertyville, and promises to be what Kenilworth is to Wilmette, what Winnetka Heights is to Winnetka, and what Skokie Heights is to Glencoe, speaking in our own real estate language. Call at our offices for full information on plats, prices, etc., regarding the remarkable investments made available in the above subdivision. HEINSEN REALTY CO. Exclusive North Shore Agents Wilmette Office Winnetka Office 421 Fourth St. 720 Eim St. Phone Wilmette 2760 Phone Winnetka 254 Expect Big Enrollment at Tom's Tank Classes A record enrollment. is expected in the summer swimming school to be conducted by Coach Tom Robinson of Northwestern university. Hundreds of applications and inquiries have been received by Mr. Robinson during the last few weeks. Registration in the classes will open today and continue through Saturday. The classes are open to men, women and children. Special classes for all ages are on the schedule. Most | of the men's classes will be in the eve- ning. Children who measure 36 inches to their chin are eligible to enter classes. Special classes in life saving are to be a feature of the course this sum- mer. In his work Coach Robinson will be assisted by Bonita Klein and Walter Colbath. Miss Klein has been assistant to Coach Robinson for sev- eral years and Mr. Colbath, who is national collegiate fancy diving cham- pion, is well prepared to give instruc- tion to members. Classes will continue each day until August 13 when a big water carnival will be" staged in which all members will take part. The summer course has been conducted by Mr. Robinson for a number of years, during which hun- dreds of men, women and children have learned to swim. Mr. and Mrs. T. G. Kus and family of 1158 Hamptondale avenue, Hubbard Woods, left Saturday to spend the summer on the C. C. Maas estate on upper Nemahbin lake, at Nashota, Wis. They will return in September. ---- Mrs. Harry C. Watts of 434 Elder lane returned' with her children Sun- day morning from their home in Cali- fornia, after having passed:six months there. In Hotter | Weather More Milk As the mercury rises, par- | ents should be increasingly careful as to their child- | ren's food. Heavy, fatty | foods should be avoided. The children should drink plenty of milk. __PHONE 137 ENROLL AT COLLEGE Two Hundred Students From U. S. and Canada at National College Summer School Two hundred teachers, supervisors. parents, and undergraduate students from the United States and Canada have enrolled for the summer session of the National Kindergarten and Ele- mentary college, which opened on Monday. Many of the students are graduates of the college who have re- turned for additional courses, and the percentage of graduates of other col- leges and universities is also high. The series of lectures on "Experi- ments in Education" was opened on Monday by Dr. John J. B. Morgan, di- rector of the Northwestern University Psychological clinic, who has. a partic- ularly interesting outline of the work which is carried on by this clinic. In a brief introduction to the mental hygiene movement, Dr. Morgan ex- plained that the main object of the movement is to prevent people from having mental difficulties, just as we try to prevent them from having phy- sical difficulties. "Most of the queer attitudes and emotional responses ex- hibited by children may be traced, not to biological inheritance, but to the teachina of mothers, and others with whom they have come in contact. Peo- ple are not just queer. They are queer because some one has taught t§=m to be. They can unlearn what they have learned, and you can help them." "If we are to have any mental hy- giene at all it must be in connection with the school," said Dr. Morgan. "At present we have to have clinics be- cause teachers are not trained to han- dle these problems, but before long, courses in this work will be added to the curriculum of every teacher train- ing institution." Dr. Morgan explained that one of the first things necessary in the work with children who are making unusual or queer emotional responses, is to gain the confidence of. the child and be willing to listen to what he has to tell you, without trying to plant your own thought in place of his. Patience and a sympathetic understanding of the child are essential and when the trouble at the root of the difficulty has been discovered, some means of over- coming it must be worked out. "When you get a queer child do not simply say, 'Oh well, it's the mother's fault'. The child you get in the ele- mentary grades is still so plastic that vou can modify his attitudes and emotional responses and make them what you will. You have to take what the parents send you, and if you make a failure of it you, and not the parents, are to blame. Teaching is building personality, not merely teaching 1 arithmetic and reading. It consists in getting the attitude and emotion to- ward life which will help you fit into your job and into life, and the earlier you start in this particular field the easier task vou have." ANNOUNCE LEASES Hokanson & Jenks, Inc., 513 Davis street, Evanston, report the following reommercial leases: to Teddy's Shoe Stores, the store at 815 Davis street, Evanston, for five years beginning Tune 15, 1927. To Louis and Eva Grondek, doing business as the Evelyn Shop, specializing in ladies' ready-to- wear, the store at 81514 Davis street, Evanston, for a term of years begin- ning July 15, 1927. Mrs. J. H. Barnes of 238 Poplar street entertained eight guests Tues- day. Luncheon was served, followed by bridge. wp Merritt Nicholls, son of Mr. and Mrs. William Nicholls of 660 Pine street, has returned from the Lake Forest acad- emy. va is