Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Wilmette Life (Wilmette, Illinois), 28 Sep 1928, p. 63

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September 28. 1928 WILMETTE· LIFE Purple Faces Two · · EXPLAINS EFFECI'IVE Games in One 1 Bishop Lays Cornerstone of Theology Seminary USE OF REFRIGERATOR Hard Day Next Saturday ~ . . Food Preserving Devieea Fane- The task of meeting two varsity tion Famously If Housewife _ teams on the same day confronts the Employs Judgment .Northwestern football eleven when it The automatic refrigerator has come to stay, and, since it is here to stay, it behooves· the housewife to learn something about the use of the refrigerator, for 1t is true that the icebox and the automatic refrigerator require a different treatment of the foods entrusted to them. To begin with, there are two branches of this family: the automatic refrigerator operated by gas, and· the one functioning by electricity. In choosing between the two of them it seems to be a case of paying the money and making the choice. Neither is absolutely perfect and the knocker can find something to say against the utility of either. The advantage peculiar to this type of refrigeration is that it allows the housewife to buy a large quantity of food to keep in cold storage. Dainty little things for tea or vegetables bought once a week on the day they are least expensive in the market may be stored . in the refrigerator. The storage chambers are at a constant degree of cold, and the cold is a dry cold, making an ideal condition· under which to keep foodstuffs. The most important point to remember is that, while the temperature of each storage shelf is kept constant, the temperature of all the shelves is not the same.- The housewife should test her own refrigerator with a thermometer. placing the foods on the shelves in accordance with the temperatures. If the lowest shelf is coldest, at forty-five degrees or less, use it for the - storing of milk for the children, for me.1t, butter, and all creamy desserts and perishable foods that are likely to absorb other odors. On the next shelf, where the temperature is higher by one-half to one degree, cooked foods and the less perishable desserts and beverages may be stored. Eggs, salad dressings, lettuce and celery wrapped in cheesecloth, au gratin dishes ready for the oven, and fruit will keep fresh on the third shelf, while the stronger flavored foods, cheese, onions, fish, and the like may be placed on the top shelf with no fear of their sending their savors to the other foods. clashes with Butler university and Lo~ola university at Evanston Saturday aft~rnoon, October 6. The Purple varsity will clash with Butler in the first f;tme of th~ double bill and the Wildcat reserves will meet Loyola university of Chicago in the after piece. Both these v1s1tmg teams have strong aggregations and will place a severe test on Coach Hanley's pro-. teges. The Butler Bulldogs are coached by Potsy Clark, famous Illinois player, who has gained con3iderable recognition in the coaching field. Much of Butler's hope in the coming tilt will depend on John Cavosie, their backfield ace who is reputed to be _the best product seen at Butler in years. He is a sophomore weighing 195 pounds, a good kicker, splendid passer, and something of a sensation at reeling off yardage. Other backfield hopes are Francis Royce, 170 pound letterman; Maurice Baker, fullback letterman; Alan Fromuth, quar· terback, who does most of the kicking and passing; Oral Hutchins, good left handed passer, and Hubert Hinchman, fullback. BuUdoa Line Stroa1 The Bull<;log line is also something to talk about with several 200 pounders on the list. Robert Schopf, Willard Warth, and George Haftzger, all letterinen, will probably see most of the service at tackl~. The guards include George Fredenberger, junior letterman j WilJia!ll McCarthy, 190 pound sophomore, and Bill Bugg, 190 pound senior: Some fleet ends are include.d in the following quartet of veterans ; Alonzo Watford, fullback last year but now playing at a flank job; Herman Geisert, Howard Crosby and Wilho, Maki, nicknamed "The Fleet Finn." james Puett sophomore center, i~ the biggest ~an on ~he squad, '!eighing 210 pounds. Hamtlton Clark rs the other pivot man. Loyola expects m~ch from its sop.homores this fall wtth much promtsing new blood coming up ~rom the f rosh. Larry Faul, a halfback, ts a good prospect to replace Griffin. Downs,. ?f last year's eleven, is back and w1l1 hold down one of the backfield jobs. Other prospects are Malloy, Murphy, Etu, and Shanahan. Cornerstone laying ceremonies for the first unit of the $750,000 plant the Western Theological seminary is erecting in · Evanston took place Sunday afternoon. Bishop Sheldon M. ~ Griswold, suffragan bishop of Chicago diocese, officiated as the stone was swung into place. A procesSion of Chicago diocese clergy, trustees of Northwestern university, deans and faculty members of the seminary and the university marched from ' the deanery at 2145 Orrington avenue at the opening of the afternoon's ceremonies. Photos by Toloft Brilliant Lights Flood McCormick Road Jock, the Scotty, Is Fi1"st Class Student day jock starts out from the farm near MuskegOt~ Mich., where )'le has been spending his summer vacation, goes down the road in his best manner, sits by the. teacher's desk, and learns his lessons. Sometimes Jock puts on an air of injured dignity because his schoolmates try to spoil a good thing for him. Sometimes a pert woodchuck is just too much for Jock so he scampers off into the woods to give the fellow a good lesson. It peeves jock when his .schoolmates think she only sends them to open the the teacher should punish him but door for the erring pupil. Can't they see that he is doing a great civic good in punishing woodchucks? Jock's master i~ Col. Louis Waefelaer of 263 Green Bay road, Glencoe. The little Scotty is the mascot of Troop 23 of the Boy Scouts. Waefelaer is Scoutmaster of the troon. Jock h:1 s his own room in the Waefelaer home with his own especially made bed. The roo.m is decorated with many interesting trophies for ] ock'·s . particular amusement. 1ock is going to school. Every Preaching Mission to Be Held at Glencoe Church The Rev. Irving P. Johnson, D. D.,' bishop of Colorado, will conduct a preach· mission at the Church of St. Elisabeth in Glencoe each o'clock beginevening at 8 ning this Sunday, September 30, and . running through next Sunday, October 7, with the exception of Saturday, October 6. Bishop ] ohnBishop I. P · .Jo·nsoa son is a widely known preacher and will come to Glencoe with an established reputation in the religious world. Residents of the north shore, regardless of church affiliations, have been invited to the churclt of St. Elisabeth to hear him. A preaching mission, as defined in a recent bulletin of the mission committee of the dturch, is "a concentration ot spiritual ettort upon one place for a short. time." · Photo by Toloft A flood of light poured over McCormick road Friday evening when Pres. T. J. Crowe of the Sanitary district of Chicago pressed the button releasing current into the lamps lining the four and one-half mile boulevard which flanks E~anston on the west. Six hundred lamps of 1,000 candle power each are now in brilliance each evening giving the road the lightness of day. The new light·s are mounted on fifteen-foot standards at intervals of 100 ·feet and equip McCormick with a system comparable to that of the loop. This lightina project marks the concluding phase of improvement of the highway. I

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