WI LM,E T T E HOSTESS AT BRIDGE Jane Nystrom, daughter of Mr. · and llrs. Albert ]. Nystrom of 714 Central avenue, entertained ~t bridge this week for Miss Audrey Hansen of Janesville, Wis. Miss Nystrom left yesterday for Portland, Maine, to attend the wedding of Carmeneita Dorti' cos of Park Ridge. Miss Dorficos is being married in her summer home. Miss Nystrom will visit in Hartford, Conn., before returning home. LIFE July 20, 1928 the west quadrangle for similar open houses. The fottrteen stone 'houess ·completed last summer on these tw.o quadrangles are for the use soro~~ ties. The _open houses are ~emg bUt.t sid,e by side with the sorortty h~>Uses with a view to a more complete mtermingling of all women att~pding the ' university: The houses on the two quadrangles were giv,en the award for arc~it~ctural excellence by the Art Commission vf Evamton for 1927. They have been judged by architects the finest block of modern living quarters for women in any Arnerican · university. VISITOR HERE I · Miss Isabel Macalister, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. ]. Nye Macalister of 918 Ashland avenue, has as her guest, Miss Florence Campbell of Kansas City, Mo. Several parties are being given by the younger girls of Wilmette for Miss Campbell while she is here during the month of July. -o-Mr. and Mrs. Charles A. Lundberg -oof 1010 Elmwood avenue are driving Mr. and Mrs. Hallett E. Cole, form- to Morris, Ill., with their son, Fredererly. of Rogers Park, have taken a ick, and their daughter, Mrs. Howard horne in Pasadena. Storch. -the &st .Hot Weather Drink Milk will quench one's thirst better than anything we know of-Keep an extra quart on ice. WINNETKA SANITARY DAIRY 818 OAK ST. PH. WINN. 137 One of the t~o new open dormitories now nearing com~letion on the women's campus at Northwestern university has been named in memory of Mrs. Emily Hatfield Hobart, wh? wa3 shot and killed by Chinese, Apnl 29, President Walter Dill Scott announced this week. Mrs. Hobart was graduated from Northw~s~ern in 1882. With her husbandt Wilham T. Hobart, she had been a missionary in China forty-six years. H~bart House, as the dormitory will be known hereafter, is on Emerson street and fills the space between two of the new sorority houses complete_d last summer . The other open do~mitory, at Orrington avenue and University place, has been named in honor of Mrs. Emma Winner Rogers, wife of Dr. Henry \Vade R9gers, who ~as president of Northwestern univ~rsity from 1891 to 1902. Mrs .. Rogers was one of the wunders of the Northwestern University Settlement and of the l niversitv Guild. She was in the forefront - of women's movements of her day. Hobart House and Rogers House will cost approximately $300,000, including the furnishings, and will be ready for occupancy \·r hen the fall term open s. Each \vill accommodate thirty-seven women of the university who are not sorority members. Rogers House is distinguished from the othen on the campus by a four-story tower. Completion of the se two new dormitories wilt fill up the open spaces in the U-shaped series of buildings on the east quadrangle of the women's campus. Space ha,; been reseryed on New N. U. Dormitory Will Be Named fl!r Chinese Missionary o! If You Want .to Be Cool Go to the Field Museum Regardless of how mercilessly the 3-..:!1 may beat down upon the city, it is always cool inside the marble temple which houses Field Museum of Natural History, declared Stephen C. Simms, acting director, today, in. issuing an invitation to the pubhc to come to the museum for relief from the heat. The temperature in the museum building is maintained constantlv between 68 and 72, even when · the mercury threaten3 to blow out of the top of the thermometer outdoors. "Not onlv is the museum actually cool-its white interior has a psychologically cooling effect the moment one enters the door," said Mr. Simms. "It is immediately refreshing to the mentally fagged as well as those physically fatigued by the heat." Further psychological relief fror;n the heat is offered by the museums exhibits sho·wing how Eskimos and polar bears live, in which the snow and ice of their natural habitats is f_aithfully reproduced as background. Lard V):as Illinoist most valuable exported commodity in 1927. - AT ALL FIVE Jl-IOPf ltUS .fE'AroN OUR SAlE 'ASJOQ.TMENT Of RUBY AND PEDEMODE FIDTWEAR FOR WOMEN ,..·Qi(LDREN I I! UNUSlJAL.Y LARGE' INCLUDING J'PORT SHOES· EVENING SUPPERS .fVI/JJ fANDAI.J' AFTER.NOON· C) J'LIPPER.f AND GOLF ~HOEJ' VALUES $12_.sg TO S F ECI AL SALE PRICES ON ALL Of I ~EnS SHots ·HOSIERYo HAND BAGS,. BOCJ<l.ES $87S ·10~·111J JIOW. IN TMRI~ IROUDI .... ! 26.5:Q July Clearance Sale Select your summer clothes where the importance of color, pattern and line is understood. Our business is to carry only modes that are original-not found everywhere "on sale." Dresses, $9.75 and $15.00 Coats, $24.75 and $44.75 Flannel Coats, $15.00 Alflft) I' F<U 13Y AT ALL FIVE SHOPS INCLUDING 76 EAST .MADIS~ SIREEL-_ _. ·I ______________________,. One Block West of the EVANSTON ~-D I i I i THE GREENLEAF 1338 SELLNER 1011 SHOP DAVIS STREET