€Q WINNETKA TALK March 16, 1928 Johnny's Golf Hints The mashie is probably the most abused club of the entire set, but can be played accurately if a little time is given to the shot. The mashie having considerable loft sometimes makes it easier for some players to get height into their shots when all their irons fail. I have very often noticed golfers trying to get as far as 200 yards with a mashie, which is impossible, as far as its correct use is concerned. A mashie is made for approaching up to 160 yards, and if more distance is at- tempted you are under-clubbing your- self. The most common error in mashie play is fast swinging, which is the root of all other bad faults, such as overswinging, topping, slicing, etc. The correct grip is very essential. Take a firm hold of the shaft with your left hand so that all the knuckles are visible. The right hand should also be well on top of the shaft so that the "V" formed by the thumb and the fore-finger should point directly to the right shoulder. The ball is played out on a line mid-way between both feet on taking the stance. Keep your knees bent slightly as this will enable you to make a free pivot. When mak- ing the pivot do not allow your hips to sway to the right but turn in a cork-screw fashion. Start the club back with your left hand and keep your left arm perfectly straight. Your left hand should be in the same position at the top of the swing as when your club was behind the ball. All the knuckles should be visible, ex- cept that the wrist is broken a trifle. Keep your right elbow close to your body and keep it pointing toward the ground. Start the downstroke or hit, with your left hand. The right will get into the shot automatically at the moment of impact. Be sure your weight is on the left foot at the finish of the stroke. Always prevent yourself from hitting too hard, take a smooth sweep directly through the ball. so the divot is taken after the ball is hit, and no power will be lost. Practice makes perfect, and a little time given to mashie practice will be well spent. Mrs. Seymour H. Olmsted of 783 Foxdale avenue, and her son, have re- turned from the Evanston hospital, where they have been confined with scarlet fever. Mrs. Olmsted returned home Friday, March 2, and her son the week before. AT VERY L 0 A N S LOWEST RATES On Vacant and 2nd Mortgages P. W. Bradstreet & Son 788 Elm St. Winnetka 162 Kenilworth Club Social Calendar Recognizes Lent This Friday evening the Kenilworth club is giving a dinner dance with Mrs. Wendell Clarke and Mrs. Jacques de la Chapelle as hostesses. Announcements for this month and the first part of April say, "In keeping with the custom usual at this time of the year, and hoping to please the great majority of the members of the club by so doing, the club's social ac- tivities have been considerably cur- tailed during the present Lenten sea- son" There will be no party on March 16, and none in April 6. There will be a supper bridge on March 23, and, by special request, a young people's dance during the usual spring vacation, March 30. The club asks for ideas or sugges- tions which would be helpful in making the club activities more attractive and it is not amiss to say that instead of giving criticism or of being able to make suggestions the members feel that the club has been most attractive this winter and the various committees have given more than could possibly be asked or expected. The parties have been varied and arranged to make every one satisfied and happy. Winnetka Boy Impresses in Illini Grid Practice Robert C. Martin of Winnetka, guard for three years on the New Trier football team, is working daily on the Illini football squad under the direction of Robert C. Zuppke and his assistants. Bob won his numerals in freshman football this vear and gave the varsity linemen plenty to think about during the fall season. Concerning spring practice, Bob re- marked, "They sure drive us hard out there, but it is good for a fellow if he can stand the grind." Bob stands 5 feet, 11 inches and his weight of 170 pounds gives him a good chance for a position on the Illini foot- ball team next fall. Capt. Charles A. Perry, Gold Rusher, Succumbs Capt. Charles A. Perry, 94, pioneer Chicagoan and one of the California gold rush forty-niners, died Wednes- day, March 7, at his home, 272 Sylvan road, Glencoe. He was the father of Chesley R. Perry, secretary of Rotary International. Mr. Perry came to Chicago in 1840. In the civil war he was captain in the Third Wisconsin cavalry. Funeral services were Friday. Mrs. Robert Kingery and her small son, Hugh McKee, spent a few days this past week visiting Mrs. Kingery's aunt in Kansas City. 1020 SPRUCE ST. Home Grounds --and give you a year to pay. F. C. Broderic Landscape Architect North Shore Representative ' for Stark Bros. America's Oldest and Largest Nursery Subdivisions Any size proposition can be handled--Supply any quantity of Nursery Stock--Meet any competition for equal values TEL. WINN. 2235 Parks Cemeteries Winnetka Helps These Little Tots MINENT scientists tell us that the mould in which the life of each one of us is to be lived is shaped during the first three years after birth. A child's reactions are established by the time it is three to five years old; re- education after that period may be pos- sible, but it is very difficult. The Infant Welfare Society of Chi- cago, knowing that the social, sexual and physical well being of the child in the first three years determines the character and usefulness of its adult life, is not only insuring sound bodies for the children whom it cares for but is studying them as potential citizens, giving trained expert attention to the factors in their lives which make for usefulness. The society has stations in the poorest districts of Chicago with a corps of doctors, nurses and dietitions. The ex- pectant mother, the baby and the child from two to six years of age are ex- amined at the stations by the society's doctors and station visits are followed by home calls by the nurses and dieti- tians who see that the mother under- stands and can follow out the doctor's instructions. "Keep the Well Baby Well" is the society's slogan, and the object of its whole health program is the prevention of suffering and death and the develop- ment of physical handicaps in Chicago's needy little children. Retain Psychiatrist In addition to its health staff, the society has a psychiatric social worker to handle behavior difficulties. Self re- liance is developed at an early age and the problem child assisted to fit into the proper place in the world about him. Little Jane was brought to Chicago Commons station when one month old, a poorly nourished baby weighing seven pounds. Her mother followed instruc- tions and the baby gained regularly, but she was an only child and the over anxious mother and grandmother hovered around at meal time coaxing her to eat more than she wanted, offering a bottle if she refused food, so that at two and a half Jane had still the habits of a WITHOUT L 0 A N S COMMISSION On Desirable Homes and Apartment Buildings John Hancock Mutual Life Insur- ance Company A. D. LANGWORTHY, Loan Agent 112 W. Adams St., Chicago little baby, demanding to be fed, crying for a bottle and wearing diapers. Her behavior was on a par with a baby of fourteen months or less although intel- ligence tests showed her above normal. Then a brother was born and Jane felt displaced. She refused to eat or sleep but lay in bed biting her nails, and pinched and bit the baby when left alone with him. Then the mother sought ad- vice at the Infant Welfare station and a plan was laid out and followed. Jane's father and overindulgent grandmother were interviewed and urged to give Jane a chance to grow up. The bottle was stopped, toilet habits established and Jane was allowed to help feed and bathe the baby. The attention she had secured through her baby habits was shifted to praise when she helped herself and every effort was made to give the little girl the feeling of security which she felt she had lost when the new baby came. At four years she had left her baby ways behind her, but only with a hard, un- ncessary struggle. If her mother could have looked ahead when Jane was ten or twelve months old, she might have replaced the useless habits gradually before they became an issue in the family circle and spared them all a trying period of readjustment. Jane is the little girl sitting at the right of the line in the picture. Winnetka Station The Chicago Commons station at 955 Grand avenue, where little Jane was helped out of her difficulties and started on the road to a happy, useful life, is supported by the Winnetka and Kenil- worth branches of the Infant Welfare society. Last year this station cared for 130 expectant mothers, 374 little babies and 201 children of the two to six age. The death rate among the infants was less than 6-10 of 1%. Tells Business People How Congress Functions The daily routine of a United States Congressman was the burden of a talk given last Monday evening before the Wilmette Chamber of Commerce by Representative Henry Riggs Rathbone of Kenilworth. Mr. Rathbone gave an extremely interesting account of a typ- ical day in the "House." He is a candi- date for re-election as Congressman- at-large from Illinois. Miss: Anne Whitmack, Wilmette librarian, enlisted the interest of the business and professional people in the local library, emphasizing the need for enlargement of facilities to render more efficient the functioning of the library departments. Robert Stoddard called the attention of the Chamber members to the forth- coming annual Community Chest cam- paign which is scheduled for the week of April 1,