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Wilmette Life (Wilmette, Illinois), 17 Sep 1926, p. 4

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WILMETTE LIFE September 17, 1926 ·~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ s· .aaDeusea Seller of Good Food HOLD SERVJCESfOR . road a son, Phthp B. Maher, of thP. PROMINENT ARC . sam~ address,. a~d a sister, Mrs. M~ry HITECT · Nooker of Mtchtgan. Dr. College, tor, I w~nn~aret~wMo~M~Elizabeth B. Mah.e~, of 424 Warwick = Ceatl'~l Aveaae aad Twelltb Sta-eet George W. M~er, Planner ot Kenilworth, Buried at Rosehill Cemetery Tuesday Funeral services for Georg-e W. Maher, for 32 years a resident of Kenilworth, were held from the chapel at Rosehill cemetery Tuesday of this ·w eek. Burial was at Rosehill. : Mr. Maher died at his summer home in Ganges, Mich., last Sunday. Mr. Maher wa~ a prominent arLhiteet and specialized in community planning and the design of beautiful huildings. He laid out the Village of Kenilworth, besides designinrr and biulding the schools and churches and donating a park, and also drew up the Village plan for Glencoe. He designed and built many beautiful homes and buildings along the north shore, among them the home for George B. Dryden and James A. Patten, at Evanston. and the Patten gymnasium of Northwestern university. He was consulting engineer to th e Kenilworth Plan commission and v,·as interested in the preservation of the Fine Arts building, in Chicago, being a member of the committee working for that purpose. Mr. Maher was born in Mill Creek. W. Va., and was 61 years old at the time of his death: He studied architecture in Chicago and later in Europe. In 1906 he was a member of the Kenilworth board of Architects and was ~resident of that organization in 1918. His last work was at Gary, Ind., where he. helped to.. draft the planning code. Hts health had been failing since 1920 and he suffered a nervous breakdown in 1922 as the result of overwork. Members of the immediate family merly ~astor of the Kenilworth Union church officiated at the funeral services. Phone- Grocery 510 -511-512.-513- Meat 514 Wilmette Youth Youngest · Freshman at Northwestern 11eet Charles W. MacSherry, the young-est fr~~hman at Northwestern univeristv thts year. He was born :\larch 1911, and while his frolicsome friends ~re out on the field kicking the sportive pigskin, Charles is. in the li, hrarr of his h<?mc at 219 Nmth stre.et, \\'il'!lette, readtn~ the latest hooks, 111, cludmg the classtcs. From ~arl~ boyhood ).lacShe;ry h~s s~1one 111 h1s studies, and havmg hts lugh averages at Loyola Academy now comes to Nor~h \\'estern as :1 member of that exc_Ius1ve group of preparatory school apphcants who can say, "When I was graduat~d from the preparatory school ~. was m the upper quarter of my class. Charles is said. to be extremely mo~est, with a cravrng for books. He ts entering Liberal Arts at Northwestern and is not only the youngest freshman hut is one of the highest standing. Ac·· cording to Dr. Ed'~' ard L. Clark, a~ sistant personnel dtrcctor, harlcs ts "accelerated three years," the .explanation of this cryptic remark bemg. "The average or normal age for a boy to enter Northwestern is estimated to b_ e eighteen. We have many .entering students who are below th1s age and arc accelerated one or two years but an accelertion of three years is, of course, novel and unusual." SI 00 SI.OO APPLES. For 15 Sl.OO AMERICAN FAMILY LAUNDRY SOAP. 15 $1.00 IVORY SOAP. 10 8 SI.OO CHIPSO. 4 SI.OO PALMOLIVE TOILET SOAP. 12 $1.00 COTTAGE BROOMS. StOO SAHARA TOILET PAPER. 12 Sl.OO CAMPBELL'S TOMATO SOUP. SlOO p~~~~~~r ~~~1~~ .~~~.r~: -~~~~~ -~~·. ~~ .s~~e. $}. 00 RICHELIEU MACARONI SPA- . $I 00 GHETTI. 12 7 OLIVES. ri oo 24 2 9 M~~~~~l ~~~?~~- :~~~: ..~. .·. ~ s I 00 VIRGIN CORN. ri 00 CD . · B~~~;~~!~ £~~~~~~- ~~~~~~. SI .00 Coffee in cans; 2 Ibs. . .............. . Extra fancy. cooking. Ills. . .......................... . L~rge Bars. ----·~ · ------·--------------·--------~----------SUGAR. '!'he finest quality of Cane granulated only. 15 lbs ............. . COFFEE. · J\1y o\vn blend. Equal to 6gc s· bars ......... . Large, oz. bars; bars ............................ . Proctor and Gatnble 's \ Vhite soap chips: large pkgs ............ . cakes for ........................ .. . 4 se\\·ed and the finest qua11ty of broon1 corn; each .... Fancy crepe; 6 ~·~ oz . .roll. rolls ......... . · 10 cans for ......... # · · · ··········· Miss \Vinogene Springer, 724 Forest avenue, is leaving Sunday for Sweet Briar college, Sweet Briar, Va., where she is entering as a freshman. and ·Extra large oz. pkg.; pkgs. Large Spanish Queen. oz. hot: bottles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ~ · , Bar1es Broth·e rs. Fruits & Vegetables 635 Main Street Phone Wilmette 159 Fancy Illinois. For soup .and fritte·r s; 10 cans for .............. ·. Dollar Days ARE ALWAYS POPULAR DAYS IN THIS STORE Blue Plun1s, 2 baskets ...................... $1 Seedless Grapes, 2 baskets· .................. $1 "fokay Grapes, 2. baskets .................... $1 Bl~te Grapes, large basket ................... $1 · Corn packers are having a hard titne. Too 1nuch ratn. Any corn packed last year is better than that \rhich \vilJ be packed this year. DINNER SWEET PEAS. Wonderful quality and a g-reat bargain; 8 cans for .. BABY STUART TOMATOES. No.2 can. Fancy quality; 8 cans for ....... . Packers of 'rotnatoes have 'vithdravn1 the.i r prices. Tofnatoes are not ripening. Canned ton1atoes are good property. SI 00 StOO ELLSWORTH CUT BLOOD BEETS. No. 2 can; 8 cans for ............... . , Cooking i\ pples, "Dutches"; 15 lbs. . ......... $1 Jonathan A.i)ples, 1 peck .................... $1 Peaches, 16 lb. basket ...................... $1 Oranges, S\veet and j.uicy, 3 doz ............... $1 RICHELIEU PACIFIC COAST SARDINES. Large~ oval; 15 oz cans. 5 cans SUNBEAM WHITE TUNA FISH · . There is practi·cally no White 1'una in the n1arket. 2 No. 1 cans $1.00; 4 No. 0 cans . . . . . . sI oo ~ Melons of all kinds. BROCKPORT HAWAIIAN SLICED PINEAPPLE~ ·:~~ i~:~~t~. ~~-. ~ -~~~ ;. ............. SI.00 $ $$ $ $ $$

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