Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Lake Shore News (Wilmette, Illinois), 7 Apr 1922, p. 13

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;1|ffHltfg ^gyaW^^ajMWiytwy"â€" ~r*-~-*:j--• :â- â-  â-  â-  •i.m â- â- â€¢-..«â- â-  â- â-  â- -â- â€"~.-^â€"i-iy^â€"^.â€".^-^â€"mâ€"Sjg^iM'Miapg " -^â€".....,....." â-  ' ', •.â- â€";-;•',............. t'^Batlgro^ â- <â- .â- ,â- â- ;.;â- ..!:â- â- â€¢^â- Wm â- ;:â- â- "".;;,":-";';! •; 1922 esaa NEWS of the NORTH SHORE CLUBS â- â- #j'i rTi â-  ' ' . ===== AnnualGatheringofi ir Illinois Federation ofi II^WbmenonApHli^ Federation of Women's Clubs, will hold its annual meeting with the Edgemere Woman's Club, April 19th, at 12 o'clock in Huntington Hotel, 4526 Sheri dan road, Chicago. Luncheon 'Will be followed by reports, speaking, songs by Miss Ruth Andre, original poems by Mrs. Wm. M. Hopkins and the election of a president, two secretaries and four directors. The retiring president, Mrs. Auguste Babize, of Glencoe, .has encouraged the formation of new departmental study classes by presenting a series of ten readings, illustrating the character- istics of the various periods in the history of dramatic literature from 700 to the present day. A play written by Mrs. Babize, based upon the life of Madame Roland, hero- ine of 4he French Revolution, was pro* duced by a cast from Le Cenacle in executive board of the New the rooms of-the Gollege^lubi-and ^ America Shop wfirmeet Monday,April "walking rehearsal" of the play was 10 at 1:30 p. m., Room 921, Fine Arts given for the literature department of the Lake View Woman's Club. Her "Historic Outline" of the Provinces of France, written at the request of the State chairman of literature in 1920, has been used by district clubs for a study program. During the two years of Mrs. Babize's administration, the membership of the Ninth District has increased from 775 to 1USM:§MK0 An eighty-foot putting green, to be built by a professional and seeded by an expert, is about .to be constructed on the grounds surrounding the home oVMrs. Hathaway Watson in Win- netka. Mrs. Watson is president of the Woman's Western Golf associa- tion, and a member of the Indian Hill club, and her purpose in constructing such a green lies in the fact that the rules of the Western Golf association forbid the presence of children on the courses unless accompanied by a mem- ber. -----r;-Hrrr::...... The North Shore Catholic Woman's League will hold its annual meeting at Sacred Heart Hall in Hubbard Woods, at one o'clock on Thursday. April lSr-^7W>^'-^^^^:rX- The Building, Chicago Rich And Wholesonr 1$ IJuicK's StorypE Tow-Headed POSSIBLY there is a township among the fifteen hun- dred or more that go to make up the state of Iowa. "Its geographical reality is relatively unimportant since its material existence can be Jittle more convincing than its viviparity as the literary fabrication of Herbert Quick, whose new_Xanji to our know- ledge only) novel of note, "Vanda- mark's Folly" (Bobbs-Merrill) is hot off the press. â€"However much the action of the sturdy Dutchman who is the hero of Jhe book may savpr of foolhardiness, no charge ofindiscretion can be laid at the door of its author. This Quick is no bungler. So sure as his name is now comparatively unknown except to the most thorough readers of the magazine public, so certain is it to be Placed in the front rayk before the set the thinking world agog with its rag vivisection of a remarkable waB%=mind, Vandamark wWrmW serve to lubricate the machinery- of sanity and genuine enjoyment. Some will see in this story of the early mid- west and its pioneers merely a his- torical record of a little greater merit VandainarKTthan Churchill's "Crossing". Others will hail it as Main Street in a pleasur- able guise. It is neither. Greater than the character of Mark Sabre, more real than the~boy hero of the Crossing, and as true to^yotr^s^gnv be united with It in that holy wed- lock which binds the farmer to the soil he tills. Out of this black loam was to come my own flesh and blood, and the bodies, and I believe, in some measure, the souls of my children." So says Jacob Vandamark, and no American will read such^words with- out feeling a kindred thrill, binding him closer to the spirit of those early pioneers. Rich in the milk of human Kindness, wholesome to the palate as freshly baked bread, and as nourish- ing to the mind is "Vandamark'a wmyj^j£y&,;,,, ^ â- â- .;;... ;... --D.O.T.•, ANNUAL HIGH 3CHOOL VOTE - Jesse R. Gathercoal of Wilmette and Charlotte L. MoKenzie of Hubbard Woods are the two members of the New Trier Township High school board to be voted upon at the annual High school board election Saturday, April 8. There are no contests in this election. REAL ESTATE BOARD SESSION <^The regular monthly meeting- of the North Shore Real Estate Board of Suburban Chicago will be held Monday evening, April 10> at 556 Cen- ter street, Winnetka. The meeting is called, at 8 o'clock^__li__i,__^ [£â-  r A NEW DISCOVERY re "After using the telephone an aver- age of seven times each day for some- thing over a year, we have come to the conclusion that an operator treat- ed with semi-human courtesy will pay us back in kind with 100 per cent "in- terest" oil the trifling investment^-' Green Bay (Wis.) Press-Oazettejp ; ......â- r::^;!NEWS..BY . RADIO^^ A discovery that Harvard, Neb., didn't have a way of getting the latest news on the weather, crops and cur- rent events caused an old Navy radio operator to get busy. Now the Amer- ican Legion is issuing "hot off*the wire" news to the Harvard citizenry. OIL-BURNER 8TART8 BLAZ* A blaze emanating from the oil- burner in the First Church of Christ, Scientist, late last week caused some damage to the basement of the struc- ture. Local firemen extinguished the blaze. Mrs. Benjamin T. Roodhouse, 427 Laurel avenue, was called east early tkis^reek^owlng to the Serious illness lofJier father. WATCH Far the ; FULL PAGE NEXT WEEK PAGE THREE MmmimiwnwiHniiiuiM inhabitant Of UopherT>rairie, is the picture of this blue-jeaned, tow-head- ed Dutch lad with honest buttermilk eyes, crying, fighting, driving his way along the Erie canal, hugging the worn shoe of his dead mother to his breast, saving his own manhood out-of the degradation of the "water* frorft, and slowly plodding his way across the prairies in the wake of a rschooneriarawn l>y cows, to a marSEjN strip of Iowa farm. - "Prior to^thflT time i^btrtr courting the country; now I was to "been GENERAL BODY 1REBUILDING REPAIRING land PAINTING f : UllllllHIUIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIUIHItll BinimiiHutiiMMiiiiiinMiHmniHmiiiHiHHimmHiuiinm J^^m^o^WQRKMANSliXPi SATISFACTION GUARANTEED miutnnmmiiiiimiiniiiimiiitiu UIIIOIIIIUUnUIIUIIIIIHUIIIIR m ESTIMATES CHEERFULLY FURNIS|TEJ) | Chicago Coach & Carriage Company 4223 S. Michigan Ave. Chicago "'^"s^^SmmeB^^^^^^^R^fiS^^P^^F - enough Jot six contemporary novels; it has character Tn abundancer ot tne "soft that is bred of healthy ex- periences and orderly thought pro- cessed it is wholely lacking in the species of propaganda that is the meat ^rtfae-modern romanticist; its setting is the familiar background of the mid- dlfrowest in the unfamiliar garb of^Mfe early fifties; its theme that^of * colonization of the Iowa ptairies. "Vandamark's Folly" will never be what its publishers predictâ€"a second "If Winter Comes." Where the latter Your Shoes Flexi- ble and ^adMwmngr â€"-ifnot^oth flexible and good-looking/ your shoes would perhaps please^ yon more if they weTe^tSftTrtilever Shoes, which combtae-flexiDlUt3tJi?ithmodish =^sboe~deBlgnfog> â€"â€"----- U3antilevers^awjo w^proji ThT^lfiey fit your foot u«r glovo and look asâ€"dress jrtioned nrmetn Their arches are . flexible, concealing no metal like ordinary shoes. This flexi- bility of the Canttteyer arch corre- sponds to the flexibility of your foot It arch, which as yon-waHfcr nature designed to flex Come and see the trim lines of Cantilever oxfords, tfeei hornJcom- fortable they are _wAen yon aMp into the right size. Made »©£oniyT£2^ well, tfc^ •with the natural "aetiotf'Tjr^yonr* that in Cantilever Shoes yon can^t the most fun out ot watting andall the other enJoymen|s^jot springtime and summer. ^^^<^Q:-^^^^ We are the exclusive â- *?i*JS? itlleTeT-«hoes-in~-^to"-4tamxar^ (Come and see them. v^iMu^MBW^B s=mnmrmm^^M^ 529 Davis StV, cor, Chicago Ave lAANSTON Phone Ev. 6757 iddieKo ||pT»e Store For Children || 1160 Wibnette Avem* Iiig:pg;||i^ilmett^iii With 'wme^;*§teps';^SiSt â-  --: pety-hop, .ir".....mm,, ^^.« The little folk;-arer"j$mgW? :#"i:V shop â-  §m'. '$m â- â-  â- â- â- â- â- â- -.â- â-  ".Pf "'At'Kiddie W0k-folPEaster^* The girls and boys are fully "~........awaife"'"^'"'"..........'^m^-t' 7;riS:' Of «xquisitfe thing^§a^vatflf ^_^.-4ngL_4he4n--theT^||g^ ---rj|i '"At:.' "Kiddie .^Nook.rvSs^l:fdr|:l :,â- ,-;, Easter Wm Mmmlimmi JThe Springtime stirs eacti fluttering heart _^ M33a ^With love for togger^lfteifej â- â- .and', smart,:-' -;:--BSv--|il At Kiddie Nook - for Easterfi ?JThey needn't travel.^he-ci^| ^ .: to scour -;S':;C;tvSift J|or things they'll Jnds^ ^ ®i*;,,.happy '"hour?stkf & :^!mSM iMliciddi^l^o^^J^ §1111 Jusf'RiceivedBI New simplets Ginghams to the most exclusive styles of Silks, Crepes, Organdi< Linensâ€"-Frocks 16r^ aiw girl and any occasion- Wmmt mm m SSssp HI Haig Cartozian brings to this task TiianyTearsof experience^ ancf a love Ipf^HisJ work which embodies all that fe fine lin the^ True^pifit^J^rafts^ ^ He will'be glad to call-ancl^give you an estimate on the cleaning and repairmj ' your rugs.':;;^£Srv^^^^^ Xfrw&ffila^^I^ De^tiMeW Dear Kiddie Nook:? I am looking forward to i^Easter ^ith lots 61 |>leastir% i^or ^t have just bought all y new clothes fror^ j^u. IWill you print the Idllowing-" A, #, Ullrich. jaCN^ttN^QUARIJ, HVANSION tss :SS3k lIliESl ^^S'Â¥MljSp!||:-;:j&' itS^T. OKver Twist styles, •cnMastev^d^mgi- nality,^are ^votoW5 ourjboys. jamonggthe- =alfraxti6risBi:foT" fow^ We Know Spring ^tribute in your column ? f yisited"a shop one clayT It was^ a: mart so rarer reminding tne of a gar- den fair, when flowers begin to push theiyi wajf through beds of leary mold, the wand'ring sun- rays tinting everything n&t=K tottch^soT gold! W The Store For Children, Kiddie Nook, is where I chanced thisLday to look. 'Twas filled ^P with things for wear^aad play^^effeshmgF colorlul and gay^S I watched the jeflowe rare, and knew I'd found the place ever best to buy what- slightSr the ^.ifsffi |:MglKfea sSl :>^rjjtfi«.4s'»'«'^.r7 ^ wgJWg* m$% W!$sM

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