WINNETKA TALK November 17, 1928 BARD & WARNER SUBMIT Two Exclusive Offerings in North Evanston's Beautiful Lincolnwood District The Home of Your Dreams Low Priced at $30,000 You'll love the arrangement; on the first floor--a reception hall, living room, dining room, kitchen, pantry, coat closet and lavatory; on the second floor--three large bedrooms and two baths. Substantial construction, proper insula- tion, gas heat, attached 1-car garage. Lot 6ox221. A bargain, too! A French Colonial Home Now Priced at $32,500 Its pleasing, substantial exterior is but an indication of the well-planned interior arrangement of nine spacious rooms and three baths. The garage is attached and heated. The spacious grounds, as well as the proximity of splendid schools make this home a fitting environment for growing children. BAIRD & WARNER, INC. Ralph A. Hunt, Manager 528 DAVIS ST. GREENLEAF 1855 Women Voters' News (Continued from Page 7) ber. The resolution was adopted by a unanimous vote and copies of it will be sent to Senator Deneen of Illinois and Senator Borah, chairman of the Foreign Relations committee of the Senate. The meeting was then turned over to Mrs. Benjamin Pfeiffer, Chairman of the Committee on Education, who introduced the speakers for the day. Mrs. Maurice H. Lieber told us what the leagues in Illinois, under the aus- pices of the state league organization were striving for: 1st, larger funds from the State Treasury for common school education; 2nd, a simplified system for dividing the State into school districts; 3rd, a mini- mum eight month term for all schools in the state; 4th, higher standards of re- quirement for teachers. Floyd Goodyear, superintendent of schools in Chicago Heights, discussed, "School Revenue." With a few strik- ing figures he pointed out why educa- tion was a state function and not a school district one; why Williamson county, for instance, with $1,400 assessed property back of each child in. common school could not possibly provide what Will county with $80,000 back of each child could. Winnetka, he told us, spends $40 on each child but Brookport can afford only $18 per child per year. Mr. Goodyear advocates a larger state apportionment for education and a different basis for taxation in the state than the present personal and real estate property taxes. The Executive Board of the League held its regular meeting at Community House Tuesday morning prior to the general meeting with Mrs, Brown pre- siding over this meeting also in Mrs. Ferry's absence. The December meeting of the league will be in charge of the International Relations committee, Mrs, A. J. Boyn- ton, chairman, with the Multilateral Treaty as the topic for the day. Dr. Will Durant, the man who made philosophy as interesting as fiction, will speak Friday evening, December 7, at_the Skokie school under the aus- pices of the Winnetka League of Women Voters. Dr. Durant, when studying for the priesthood, came across a copy of Spinoza's "Ethics." That changed the course of his career, for he found in it, and in philosophy, his chief interest. He gave up plans for the priesthood and instead became a student, later a teacher and then a lecturer on philos- ophy. Then after eleven years of preparation and three years spent in writing, Dr. Durant published, "The Story of Philosophy." Because he knew, and his publishers knew, that philosophy was one subject about which the public knew little and furthermore considered it be- vond their grasp, Dr. Durant was sur- prised when the book became an immedi- ate best seller, going through edition after edition until within five months after publication more than 72,000 copies had been sold. The secret, according to the critics, is that for the first time, philosophy has been made alive and interesting, told in such a way that the layman can under- stand it. Thus Durant was discovered, and im- mediately was sought for magazine con- tributions and lectures. His success in that field rivals that in the publication of "The Story of Philosophy" for he brings to the same scholastic zeal the humanizing elements of wit and sym- pathy. Mrs. Randolph Buck, the chairman of the lecture for the league, has announced that the following women have consented to be patronesses: Mrs. Walter Benson, Mrs. O. M. Knode, Mrs. Carl Zeiss, Mrs. Sylvian Hirschberg, Mrs. H. L. Ickes. Mrs. Ernest Ballard, Mrs. Herman But- ler, Mrs. Emerson Blaine, Mrs. H. A. de Windt, Mrs. William Hale, Mrs. John Montgomery, Mrs. W. G. Hibbard and Mrs. Frank Fuller. The committee from whom tickets for the lecture may be secured includes: Mrs. Lewis Northrop, Mrs. R. L. De Golyer, Mrs. Walter Buchen, Mrs. Roger Sherman, Mrs. Marcus D. Rich- ards, Mrs. Austin Jenner, Mrs. George Massey, Mrs. Edwin Brown, Mrs. Samuel Rice, Mrs. Robert Wright, Mrs. A. S. Anderson, Mrs. Gross Williams, Mrs. Dwight Green, Mrs. William Kurtz, Mrs. H. S. De Lay, Mrs. William F. Brown, Mrs. Morris Greeley, Mrs. T. D. Blake, Mrs. Ernest Tietgens, Mrs. I. M. Portis, Mrs. G. W. Nelson, Mrs. G. L. Friestedt, Mrs. E. R. Keeler, Mrs. George Parker, Mrs. R. C. McNamara, Mrs. H. D. Frankel, Mrs. W. G. Kelley, Mrs. F. A. DePeyster, Mrs Henry Urion, Mrs. C. C. McKinney, Mrs. J. R. Graff, Mrs. R. C. Biddle, Mrs. Elbert Clark, Mrs. Martin Stearn. MARTHAS TO MEET St. Judes Household, Order of Mar- tha, will have its regular sewing and business meeting on Monday, Novem- ber 19, at the home of Mrs. Peter Smith, 511 Provident avenue. The so- cial meeting, a card party, will be at the home of Mrs. James E. 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