30 WINNETKA TALK July 9, 1927 | Public Views Work of Arden Shore at By JEAN TEN BROECK Come to picnic day at Arden Shore | camp Friday, June 15. Bring your own picnic lunch and join other north shore | friends in partaking of the coffee the | { camp will serve in its large dining { room promptly at 12:30 o'clock. For | ' the pleasure and interest of those friends of the encampment who will accept this invitation sent out by the Arden Shore association, heads of the . there and describe its progress. -- i an outing there 'will be impressed by i the success and scope of its activity. The annual picnic is the time pro- pitious to visit the camp, and the local committee is urging a large Winnetka ~ attendance. Those who have not seen | . the camp for some time will realize at | : once how it has grown and how im- y : proved is this spot deep in a wooded _ stretch at the edge of a bluff overlook- ing a wide beach for the sole use of its . campers. Not many years ago those mothers and children brought to Arden Shore from Gads Hill, one of Chicago's settle- ment districts, for a fortnight's outing such as the camp gives, lived in tents. One by one cottages were erected until now, we are told, all who spend the summer there are in cottages. Five- hundred at a time, these mothers and - children come for their brief respite from tenement living, and in recent years a new phase of activity has de- veloped in the winter camp for under- nourished boys. But what Arden Shore means in the lives of those much less fortunate than ourselves can best be realized by a visit to the camp, a philanthropy the north shore's own. LH Entertain for Visitors Several functions are being given by Winnetkans in honor of Mrs. Hubbard Keenan and her daughter, Julia, of Berkeley, Cal, who are guests in the Henry T. Stanton home at 698 Black- i thorn road. Mr. and Mrs. Stanton are { . entertaining for 150 friends at a dance ; 'at the Indian Hill club on Saturday 'night of this week, and Mrs. Harry ; C. Edmonds of 670 Blackthorn road is giving a dinner at the club before ithe dance. Other affairs have been given by Mrs. Frederick K. Hurlbutt, 1934 Pine street on Sunday night; Mrs. 1 Robert Bowen Brown of 806 Locust iroad who entertained on Wednesday ; :and Mrs. Richard Yates Hoffman of ;921 Pine street, who gave a dinner : Friday. | Have Small Home Wedding : In only the presence of relatives, 3 5 { Miss Marion Westphal of Dayton, s ; Ohio, became the bride of John New- . hall, son of Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin ' Newhall, at an afternoon ceremony in : the Newhall home, 429 Jefferson ave- ' nue, Glencoe, Saturday afternoon, June + 25. The Rev. Douglas H. Cornell of i the Glencoe Union church, read the * wedding service. Mr. Newhall and his , bride are on a trip in the East, and : upon their return they will make their ~~ home at 499 Jefferson avenue, Glencoe. Annual Picnic Day departments will take some time in the | afternoon to explain' the work done Seldom it is that the entire north | shore is invited to one large picnic, an | event that serves a purpose two-fold. | ' Arden Shore camp. is 'accessible by a | delightful motor ride and is in itself | a spot charming for picnicking. More | than that, those who spend the day in | Recent Bride Reick Photo In the garden of the William E: Davis home in Hubbard Woods, on June 18, the marriage of Miss Helen Davis and Henry E. Allen took place. The bridegroom is the son of Mr. and Mrs. Elisha Hubert Allen of Hubbard Woods. Penfield Home Setting for Charming Wedding One of the most attractive weddings of the season was solemnized in the charming home of Mr. and Mrs. Fred- erick Wadhams Penfield of Glencoe Saturday evening, June 25, at 8:30 o'clock, the Rev. Douglas Cornell of- ficiating. The romance begun in Chiro, Egypt, in the early spring, culminated in the marriage of Miss Evelyn Pardee Woods, niece of Mr. and Mrs. Pen- field, to I. Roy Martin of Cleveland, Ohio, before a gathering of old friends and relatives. The far end of the drawing room was banked with palms and wood- wardia ferns, and the mantel was exquisite with large vases of Pernet and Premier roses, arranged with blue larkspur and trailing white clematis, behind which white candles threw their reflection in a tall mirror. The wedding party consisted of Mrs. Calvin Smith (Miss Jeanette Reynolds) of Chicago, as matron of honor in a French pink chiffon gown; Miss Eliza- beth Hilton of Chicago, in orchid chif- fon; Russell Swiler of Cleveland, Ohio, and Robert Mann of Wilmette. The bride's attendants carried shower bou- quets of lavender sweet peas, yellow daisies, pink cornflowers and larkspur. The bride was gowned in ivory satin, with overdress of chiffon trimmed with rose-point lace, and wore a three-tier ivory tulle wedding-veil;, which repeat- ed the seed pearl girdle in an exquisite- ly simple bandeau of pearls around the head. Her shower bouquet was of gar- denias and valley lilies. Harold E. Hammond of Chicago played the Mendelssohn "Wedding March," and improvised during the arrival of the guests. Mr. and Mrs. Martin will be at home after September 1, at 13805 Shaker boulevard, Cleveland, Ohio. Wedding to Take Place at Westmoreland Club Westmoreland Country club is to be the setting for a charming wedding Saturday evening, July 23. Miss Frances Rising, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. P. A. Rising of Evanston, is to be the bride and the bridegroom will be Arthur Burnam Durham, son of Mr. and Mrs. Howard Durham of 431 Abbottsford road, Kenilworth. The service will be read at 8:30 o'clock and a reception and dancing will fol- low the ceremony. The wedding party will consist of six members, Miss Iska Morgan of Evanston, the maid of honor; Miss Emilie Durham of Kenilworth, the bridegroom's sister, the bridesmaid: the little twin flower girls, Frances and Marian Beeler of Winnetka; Jerry Cope of Champaign, the best man; and Walter Mead of Wisconsin Rapids, the groom's brother-in-law, the usher. A number of luncheons and showers | have been given in Evanston for Miss Rising. Miss Emily Durham will be hostess at a kitchen shower at her home in Kenilworth Wednesday, July 13, in her honor, and the bridal dinner will be given at the Orrington hotel the Friday evening preceding the wed- ding. Children's Midsummer Frolic of 1927 in July All children and their elders who at- tended the Children's Midsummer Frolic of last summer which was given by the National Kindergarten and Elementary college at "Craigie Lea," the home of Mrs. Andrew MacLeish in Glencoe, will welcome the news of another equally lovely frolic for 1927. On Tuesday, July 26, at 3:30 o'clock, the lovely gardens of Mrs. Douglas Smith at "Bluff Edge," 915 Sheridan road, Hubbard Woods, will be the setting for an altogether charming chil- dren's entertainment, when the Story Lady will lead her guests through the realm of story land, always so full of the lure of the unexpected. Friends old and new from ancient lore will ap- pear from out the mystic past to glad- den all with song and dance and rep- artee. Even with the first hint of another frolic, plans have been made to use this event for jolly groups of mothers and children to celebrate midsummer reunion. Attractive posters anouncing the frolic will appear soon and tickets will be on sale in each town and at the college office which is 2770 Sheridan road, Evanston. Arrive in Paris Cables have been received announc- ing the safe arrival in Paris Tuesday of the group of Country Day school girls who are to tour Europe accom- panied by Mrs. Julia Childs of the school. The group includes the Misses Margaret Emily Lynde, Helen Bell, Eleanor Cushman, Frances Alschuler and Joy Fairman. Hospital Benefit July 14 The St. Francis hospital auxiliary is giving its monthly afternoon affair of bridge, euchre, five-hundred, and bunco Thursday, July 14, at 2 o'clock. A door 'prize will be given and re- freshments will be served. The party is to take place at the Nurses' home, 319 Ridge avenue, Evanston. North Shore Invited to Arden Shore Picnic July 15 Lorna Doone Jaxon Soloist for Furst Musicale at Skokie Lorna Doone Jaxon, contralto of the Chicago Civic Opera company, will give the program at the first of this summer's Sunday afternoon musicales on Sunday, July 10, at 4:30 o'clock, at the Skokie Country club. Miss Jaxon has a mezzo-soprano voice of great range and exceedingly sweet quality, and critics have been lavish in the praise of her voice, her unusually attractive personality and beauty. Miss Jaxon has had ten weeks with the St. Louis Municipal Opera in 1922, concerts with the great Calve in Europe, re-engagements with the St. Louis Civic Opera, and she was soloist for three weeks with the Cincinnati Symphony Orchestra in 1924. Among other successes have been engage- ments with the San Carlo Opera com- pany, the Chicago Civic Opera com- pany and concert tours through the States. Miss Jaxon is especially well known and praised for her role of Carmen in the opera of that name. The glorious mezzo quality of her voice, her stage sense and personal charm have made critics proclaim her Carmen as the best heard in many years. The great Madame Calve, probably the greatest Carmen who ever lived, encouraged Miss Jaxon as her most promising pupil for that role. The program Miss Jaxon has chosen for July 10, gives the audience an op- portunity to hear her in the many dif- ferent types of songs that she does so well. If the superlative press notices given Miss Jaxon in all her appear- ance in opera and concert work so far are a criterion, north shore residents are going to feel it a rare and particu- lar privilege to hear her. Engaged An engagement of recent announce- ment is that of Miss Jane Allen Naugle, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Archibald T. Naugle of Chicago, to Billings Mecher McArthur, son of Dr. and Mrs. Lewis I.. McArthur, also of Chicago. Miss Naugle attended Miss Spence's school in New York City, and is a member of the Junior league and Ser- vice club. She made her debut a year ago. Mr. McArthur graduated from Yale in 1925. The Naugles, formerly residents of Winnetka, are spending the summer here. Dorcas Board to Meet The next meeting of the board of di- rectors of Dorcas Home will be held at the home, in Deerfield, Monday, July 11, at 11 o'clock. Following the meet- ing there will be a picnic to which all members are invited. Hostesses at Maisonette Mrs. Horace Armstrong, Mrs. Fred- erick H. Scott, Mrs. Buckingham Chandler and Mrs. Henry M. Dawes are the hostesses during the month of July at the Cradle Maisonette, 612 Church street, Evanston, the attractive tea room conducted for the benefit of the Cradle. Announce Engagement Mr. and Mrs. Samuel B. Fleager of 952 Pine street announced the engage- ment of their sister, Lisette K. Wright, to John Rhamstine of Chicago, at a dinner given Friday evening, July 1, at the home of Mrs. Ruth D. Killips, 384 Elder lane. PR