l2 WILMETTE LIFE BOBBIE IVES DIES December 28, 1928 AftBM'I'IOM MR. COM'I'RAC'l'OR PROSPBC'l'IVE BOMB BUILDER $10,000.00 BUYS Nearly half acre lot in the center OF GLENCOE East of tracks and opposite Village Park and has most beautiful brge Oak and Hickory trees none to be removed for building. This vacant is surrounded by Beautiful Homes and is restricted to one house and located two blocks from local Electri'c Station and six blocks from Park Avenue Station, will sell on terms with substantial down payment or will give small discount for all cash for equity. Address Box A-23 5 care Wilmette Life. o· lm ····· ~- ········································· ·~ml TlfE(D)HDB · · · · · · CHICAG0-8tate and Jackson EVANSTON-Orrington and Church · · · * * · · · In Our Evanston Shop-Great Semi--Annual · · · · · · -· Deep Price Cuts on · · Lytton Hi Suits and F.URNISHINGS · · Overcoats REDUCED~ TOO! · · E'VE listed just a few of the wonder· Formerly up h ful values here. It's a great chance to W · ro $35 eac restock your boys furnishings at · such as you wilt' not find for many months · HE coldest, rawest days of winter are ahead of us. to come. Just take these below, for ex· T . So this Sale is mighty timely. Great, big, warm ample. · · Overcoats, smartly styled Suits with 2 pair of long · trousers that sold as high at $351 Everyone has the · · · · · · Evanston Shop Open Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday Evenings Bobbie Ives, son o{ Mr. and Mrs. Clifford E. Ives, 1630 Washington avenue, Wilmette, died Thursday at the age of one ye(!r and seven months,, at his home, after a brief illness. Services will be held tomorrow at 2:30 o'clock at the Ives' resi'dence with the Rev. Horace G. Smith of Wilmette and the Rev. ]. H. McArthur of Chi cago officiating. Burial will be . at Memorial Park. Besides his parents, Bobbie is survived by a sister, Virginia May, four years old. ---- Church N (Co!ltinued from page ew;--1 1~ ginners' departments; 12 noon-Senior department and Forum for adults. At the morning worship service at 10:45 Mr Loper's New Year's sermon will be "I ·believe in Youth" and his story for the junior members of the congregation will be "Booker T. Washington's First School." This church cooperates with the Sunday Evening Club which ~eets in . its auditorium at 7 :30. The Fiske Jubilee Singers will present a concert of southern melodies and spirituals. · On Thursday the Cozy Corner Circle, Mrs. G. B. Knepper, chairman, will entertain the children of its members at luncheon at the church at one o'clock. Mrs. Frank Adams is chairman of the luncheon committee. The Junior Choir will meet for rehearsal at 4 o'clock . The Senior choir will meet at 7 :30 for rehearsal. The Blue Birds will meet at the ch urch on Friday at 3 :30 p. m. llenrg C~Lytton 8 Sons First Presbyterian Corner of Ninth street and Greenleaf avenue At the regular morning worship Sunday, December 30, at 11 o'clock Dr. Herman T. Reinecke, pastor of the Third Presbyterian church of Pittsburgh, Pa., will occupy the pulpit. Sermon topic : "The New Year's Aim for a Christian." You will always find a cordial welcome at all the services of this church . Sunday school at 9 :30 a. m. Christian Endeavor at 5:30 p. m. Mid-week meetIng every Wednesday at 8 p. m. Wom an'~ SALE for BOYS and YOUTHS I - $2375 The r egular monthly meeting of the Missionary society of the Presbytery of Chicago will be held at Fourth church (Chest.n ut street and Michigan avenue) .January 4, beginning at 10 :30 a.m . January is Foreign Missions month. As three of the members of th0 Society hav0 been vi:--iting mission ·fi elds they will share with us !-;Orne of tb.eir rich experiences. Mrs. l\TcAfee has been in Guatamala and Mrs. Robinson and Mrs. Seller~ in Pale~tine and Syria. They will be the principal ~-;peakerR. A quartet of men from the Presbyterian Seminary will sing. Mrs. T. Lannen, Wilmette 1303, will take care of your luncheon reservations if made by January 2. savin~s Lytton Hi label- ask high school chaps what that means for quality! YOUTHS' SHIRTS Values $195 to $3.50 Unitarian Church Sunday, December SO Sermon: "Yes Happy New Year! But What Is Happiness?" Lytton Jr. "Longies" and Overcoats Formerly up to $25 $1575 Fancy figured and striped Broadcloths and Madras in sizes 12;/z to 14~. The patterns young fellows want, too. You save e at even mor. 3 shirts for . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . · $5 75 HOLD NATIONAL MEET N. U. Chapter of Tau Delta Phi Sponsors Convention Sponsored by Northwestern ~niver sity and the University of Chicago undergraduate chapters and local alumni, the eighteenth annual convention of Tau Delta Phi, national college fraternity, will be held at the Congress hotel. Two hundred delegates of tl-tc active chapters will be here for the day conclave, which begins Saturday. The convention, the first to be held in the middlewe.st since it was last in Chicago in 1925, will be opened with a business session Saturday morningand will continue with fraternal conferences in the daytime and social festivities in the evenings until Monday night, when a formal New Year's eve ball will be held. Herman L. Baskin of New York is national president of the fraternity and Joseph H. Salzer, a senior in t\le commerce school at Northwestern university, is president of the local chapter. JUNIOR SHIRTS, 85c ~h~~s 3 ~~~t.~ .. ~~ .. ~~ .. ~~·.~~· $265 Values to $3.95 Beautiful patterned Broadcloths in Junior ERE'S important news for mothers of boys from 11 to 15 years. Winter-defying all wool Ove11coats Suits with 2 pair of long trousers- clothes that sold ali season up to $25. Better come early for the best choice. H $2.45 BOYS' SWEATERS $365 Values to $5.65 Lytton Jr. Suits 2 Golf Knickers $885 Values up to $18 EVERY one of these Suits was made of sturdy woolens and tailored to the rigid specifications we insist upon ~n all Lytton Jr. Suits. They sold formerly up to $18JUSt figure what you save! .JUVENILE SUITS TOTS' OVERCOATS ValueB A II wool fancy Sweaters, sizes 2 to 8 years at $2.65; sizes 10 to 18 at $3.65. Just see what you save! -SPGRT HOSE, 85c They're cottons in fancy patterns. A limited quantity of wool Hose is included, too. They sold up to $1.50-now they're cut to 3 pairs for . · · . · $2 45 to Values 17.5 0 to 116.50 Sizes 3 to 10 years Boys' High Shoes Sizes 8~ to 13Yz. Values to $4.75. Pair Sizes 2 to 10 years · · · WOOL CAPS, $1.45 Valuea to 1!.45 TOTS' HATS $2.95 Values to $3 · 85 Youths' High Shoes, size!l $4 85 1 to 6. Values to $6.50. Pair · 1~.95 IEI··················································m, · · · Harold E. Spinney, Jr., 927 Ashland avenue, returned last week f.rom Lafaye.tte college, Easton, Pa., to spend the Christmas holidays. -oEdward Scheidenhelm is home for the Christmas holidays from Cornell university.