: | | WaiNNETEKA "TALK Published March 8, weekly 1912, at by Lloyd Hollister, Inec., 564 Lincoln the post office at Winnetka, Illinois, under Ave.,, Winnetka, Illinois. the Act of March 3, 1879. Subscription p Entered as second class matter rice $2.00 a year. VOL. XVI. NO. 30 WINNETKA, ILLINOIS, OCTOBER 1, 1927 PRICE FIVE CENTS BUSY SEASON AHEAD | AT COMMUNITY HOUSE | Next Week Marks Beginning of Activities in Group Meetings | and Gymnasium Schedule | With vacations over, schools opened | and business in general settled down | for the winter season, announcement is | made that the season's activities at Community House will start next week, with the exception of the classes in English for foreign men and wo- men. The first of these classes will meet Monday evening, October 17. The first meeting of the Friendship Circle club will be next Tuesday eve- ning at 8:30. The enrollment in this | club last year was eighty-three. Any girl working in Winnetka homes will | be welcome. In outlining the work for the season of 1927-1928, Community House an- nounces that it stands ready to further activities which groups in the village desire, and to give young people op- portunity for development during their leisure time. It is democratic in spirit and aims to serve the people of the village in every way possible. Community Center It is an institution having many en- terprises which it promotes itself, and is used regularly by other organiza- tions which are units in themselves. Motion pictures are shown regularly Tuesday and Friday afternoon and evenings, with an occasional special performance on Saturday. The gymnasium schedule runs from the first week in October until after April 15. The use of the gymnasium is limited to those who have taken out memberships in the House. Community House uses many volun- teer workers, without which help it could not be the factor in the com- munity life that it is, and those wishing to share in this service are requested to communicate with the office. | Dr. J. W. F. Davies is chairman of | the board of directors and director of Community House activities. The other members of the board are, S. Bowles King, secretary; Ayres Boal, William C. Boyden, Arthur Earl Bry- son, Francis P. Butler, Arlan W. Con- verse, Harry N. Gottlieb, George D. Wolf and Carl H. Zeiss. House Personnel Associated with "Chief" Davies on the staff are Mrs. Eloise W. Wortley, assistant to the director; Miss Mary Williams, secretary: Mrs. J. D. Pierce, treasurer's assistant; Harry P. Clarke, gymnasium director: Mrs. Gertrude T. Ellison, and Miss Kathryn G. Flinn, office assistants: Magnus Martin, care- taker and Ludwig Martin, assistant caretaker. Free Tickets for Northwestern-Utah Game Saturday, October 8 Turn to pages 10 and 11 and read the instructions. Then get busy and send your answers to the Football Editor of WINNETKA TALK. Here's Community House 1927-1928 Gym Schedule Following is the gymnasium schedule at Community House for the current season: Monday Women's class. (Special Fee $5.00 including Thursday Class.) 1:30-3:30 P. M., Tennis. 3:45 P. M,, Social Dancing. 7:30 P.M., Young Men's class. 8:30 P. M., Business Men's class. Tuesday 1:30-3:30 P. M., Tennis. 3:45 P. M., Girls' Gynmasium class. 7:30 P. M., Young Ladies' class. 8:30 P. M., Friendship circle. Wednesday . M., Tennis. 3:30 P.M., Tennis. P.M. Young Boys' class. P.M. Young Men. 9--10 A. M., o > 30- NJ a [HY RNT Thursday 9-10 A. M., Women's class. 1:30-3:30 P. M., Tennis. 4:30 P.M., Older Boys. 7:30 P. M., Boy Scouts. 9 P. M., Young Ladies' Friday A. M., Tennis. 1:30-3 oR P. M., Tennis. 3:45 P.M Basketball--special. 8S P.M. dr as Men's class. Saturday 2-5 P. M., Boys. Evening--Reservations. basketball. = | at 898 Linden | t'me.. it Homesteads Give Way to Business in Hubbard Woods The Charles R. Scrimgeour residence avenue, which, at the was built several years ago was far out on the edge of the north shore residential section with little thought of business and apartment building encroachment, has finally been crowded out bv the march of progress and will ouietly retire to a more secluded section, in keeping with its early design and tradition. The work of moving will be started next week. in order that the site may he used for the erection of the new $200,000 Aparement and business block which the FE. Leonard company will very soon BS at this place. This will mark the second large hilding to be constructed in the same hlock in Hubbard Woods this season, and still a third is contemplated for the verv near futvre. directly south of the E. T. Leonard block. The Scrimgeour residence will he moved to a part of the Joseph Schaad nroperty on Locust street. just south of Vine street. where it will he relocated and mode rnized to acain be occupied hv the Se 'rimeeours, The excavation on the new site is completed and the work of moving will start in a few davs. There is another old residence on the new apartment site which is to be razed. and within thirty davs it is said work on the apartment and business block will actually be under way. Dean of Boys i Commissioners ASK U. S. TO ALTER | "POLICY" IN CHINA Military Protection of Mis sionaries Embarrassing, Says Reynolds The recent visit of Rev. Paul Rey- nolds to Winnetka has raised ques- tions of policy in regard to mission work which have prompted the calling of a meeting of the Winnetka Congre- gational church for Wednesday night, October 5. Mr. Reynolds has worked | for the last six vears as a missionary China. He is a mis- American Board of for Foreign Missions, but he is also one of the ministers of in. Fenchow, sionary of the | the Winnetka church, and his support is provided by the Winnetka congre- gation. Conditions which have come to a focus in recent months now make mis- sionary work in China so difficult that | Mr. Reynolds has asked his supporters | for help of a kind other than financial | in order to make possible a continua- crof. Frederick A. Kahler, member of the New Trier Township | High school faculty and for several | a veteran | years assistant dean of boys at the | school, has been assigned to the posi- | tion of dean to succeed Prof. George | A. Harper, who recently resigned from the New Trier faculty to accept a posi- tion in Tucson, Ariz. Mr. Kahler is a graduate of Princeton university. Congregation to Hold Series of Atonement Rites Day of Atonement services for the | members and friends of the North | Shore Congregation Israel are schedul- ed for Wednesday and Thursday of | next week at the Winnetka Congre- gational church. | On. Wednesday, October 5--eve of the Day of Atonement--there will be a service at 8:30 o'clock in the eve- ning, the subject being, "Standards of Civilization." Day of Atonement services, on Thursday, October 6, will be at 10:30 o'clock, the subject being "The Written Record." In the afternoon of that day there will be a children's service at 1:30, an afternoon service at 2:30, and a me- morial service at 3:30 o'clock. The first of the Friday evening serv- ices of the Congregation is scheduled for October 14. Rabbi David Fichman of New Or- leans is officiating at the Congregation Services. ATTENTION READERS! The monthly Real Estate and Builders Section, replete with all the news of realty deals, builders' oper- ations and other important infor- mation, will appear in WINNETKA TALK next week. This section which enables our readers to keep abreast of the activity in this field on the north shore is one of the big fea- tures of this newspaper. Read the Real Estate Section! tion of the work. Difficult Situation Arises According to Mr. Reynolds, the greatest difficulty that a missionary faces in China today grows out of the fact that he is an American citizen and ' that the American government has an- nounced its determination to protect him in his position in China by armed force if necessary. The Chinese are not unfriendly to missionaries. But the missionary who comes as the mes- senger of a gospel of peace has behind him the gunboats and marines of his country. This contradiction the Chinese cannot understand, nor will they much longer allow the missionary to work under such conditions. If missionary work is to have any chance of true success, Mr. Reynolds believes that it must in some wav be entirely divorced from the connection with military force | which has marked it in the past. Missionaries Embarrassed For some years the missionaries in China have felt their work increasing- Iy embarrassed by this situation. Sey- eral years ago several missionaries in north China joined in a letter to the American minister, at that time Dr. Jacob Gould Schurman, asking that, in case of danger, they be left to look out for themselves, and that if they were actually hurt, no punitive military measures be adopted. Dr. Schurman replied that, while he had the utmost sympathy for the missionaries in the moral dilemma created, the United States government had no choice but to provide military protection for its citizens, whether they wanted it or not. It is this declaration of American policy that Mr. Reynolds declares in China can prosper. He savs that the actual danger in which the mis- sionaries stand at any time is very slight, but that, whatever its degree. any attempt to provide military pro- tection stultifies the whole enterprise. A recent poll of the members of the American Board mission showed 124 out of 131 in favor of leaving the mis- sionary on his own responsibility. The government, savs Mr. Reynolds, will have trouble enough in providing oro- tection for those who demand it. Why should it insist on forcing it on those who do not want it, and whose busi- (Continued on page 7) == must be changed before mission work AY