32 WINNETKA TALK October 20, 1928 GREENLEAF 7000 FOVNIAIN SQVARE AN ULLRICH Pw EVANSTON WILMETTE 3700 Exceptional Values In Savage Ovenette $1.75 Bastes, roasts, toasts, boils or fries over any gas, electric or oil burner. Conserves and equalizes the heat. Takes just half as long as the ordinary top-stove oven. White Enamel Bath Stool, 98¢ Small, convenient stool for bathroom use. Washes off with damp cloth. Hard- wood enameled white. Stand on it to reach that top shelf in the medicine closet. Bird Cages and Stands Odds and Ends Odds and ends of wire bird cages and stands enameled in red and blue. $2.95 Stands, $1.98; $4.25 Cages, $2.49. $2.25 Universal Food Chopper; $1.89 Shears food .instead of tear- ing. Four knives for chop- ping, grinding, and crushing. Good for preserves, meat, vegetables and peanut butter. Fine 'grooved self-sharpening cutters--rust proof through- out. Pantry Set 98c¢c A most convenient kitchen set--containers for sugar, flour, tea and coffee. Enameled in colors to match the new kitchen color schemes. These make ex- cellent gifts for kitchen showers. Housewares "i "s a | Co 1 Ve Lifetime Waterless Cooker Self-basting cover of this cooker keeps in all the precious mineral juices of all vegetables and meats. Cooks roasts without shrinking. Prices, $4.95 to $6.50. Cookie Sheet $i Wearever aluminum. Gives you a large surface on which to bake cookies--so a lot of them can be baked at one time. An exceptional value! Regularly $1.65. Wash Your Dishes the Simplest Way - = = with a Conover A machine which rolls about your kitchen as easily as your teacart--washes, rinses and dries your dishes immaculately in less than half the usual time. No new plumbing is required, merely attach the machine to the " kitchen faucet, put in the dishes, turn on the current and that is all. Come in and see The Conover demonstrated TO HOLD OPEN HOUSE Alumnae Make Plans for Annual Home-Coming on the Campus The day of the annual Northwestern university home-coming -- Saturday, Nov. 3--members of the Associate alumnae will hold open house in the various halls and women's buildings on the campus, and will serve tea in Rogers hall, one of the new open dor- mitories opened this autumn, Rogers, Hobart, Chapin, Pearsons and Willard halls will all have groups of alumnae receiving in them; and the tea at Rogers hall will be informal with members of the board of managers serving as hostesses. These will in- clude the president, Mrs. W. T. Hall, Mrs. R. S. Breedon, Mrs. G. A. Pad- dock, Mrs. M. M. Hawley, Mrs. A. C. Fry, Mrs. J. S. Lewis, Miss V. E. Holmes, Mrs. Edward R. Ladd, Mrs. E. Parker Miller, Miss Louise Paullin, Miss Helen Nixon, Mrs. George B. Denton, Mrs. Ira Westbrook, Miss Jane Hutchins White, Miss Wren Staley, Mrs. E. A. Schulze, Miss Grace Hanbury, Mrs. W. H. Knapp, Mrs. H. H. Cooper, Mrs. N. A. Currie, Mrs. Carl Latham, Mrs. Walter Dill Scott, Miss Mary Ross Potter, Mrs. Florence Schee Robnett, Mrs. Perkins Bass, Miss Grace Hamburg, and Mrs. Robert B. Smith. At a meeting of the board Friday, Mrs. Melvin M. Hawley, who has been woman's building chairman of the general alumni association, was made chairman of the Associate Alumnae's standing committee. Mrs. Robert B. Smith was made corres- ponding secretary. lt was reported that $1,500 was cleared by the Sousa band concert. Morris Captures Tennis Honors at High School Morris hurdled the greatest obstacle between himself and the Fall Tennis Championship of New Trier High school by defeating MacLean, 8-6, 6-1, last week. Maclean gave the former Senn player a scare when he ran away with the first game and con- tinued to hold the edge over his rival until the score stood 6-6. Then Morris pulled himself together and, after win- ning the next two games and the first set, held MacLean down to only one game in the second set. The winner between the underclassmen, Kava- naugh and Hoffman, will play Morris for the school championship. While they are both good players neither of them would have any chance against Macl.ean's conqueror. "Roof of the World," Museum Lecture Topic "On the Roof of the World," a free illustrated lecture describing the ex- ploits of the famous Mount Everest Expedition of 1924, will be given for the general public Saturday, October 20, at Chicago Field Museum of Natural History. Captain John B. Noel, of London, who was official pho- tographer of the expedition, will be the lecturer. He will show stereopti- con slides made from the pictures taken on this expedition to reach the summit of the highest mountain in the world, which is also the most difficult to ascend. The lecture will begin at 3 o'clock, and will be given in the James Simpson theatre of the museum. POSTPONE EDITION The New Trier News, student news paper of New Trier Township High school, suspended publication tempor- arily last week. The paper will ap- pear in the future as a four-page weekly instead of a two-page semi- weekly, according to Robert Carpen- ter, faculty advisor of the publication.