22 WILMETTE LIFE November 8, 1929 !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!~ rKenilwor~h Sch~dule· Grid Games With Evanston Te·ams ATwAT~R IUNT ·s cREEN-ORID scoreless ties. Up to this week the ·Kenilworth goal line had not been crossed this season. ltloio Here it is · ~ · the greatest Kenilworth's undefeated grammar school football teams ,,..·ere scheduled to play both the Nichols school of Evanston and the two Wilmette teams this week. The games with Nichols at Kenilworth, originallv scheduled for Thursday of last week, were calkd. off on account of rain and postponed a week. This Sat1.1rday at the Howard school the \Vilmette bo\·s will furnish some stiff oppositinn for Kenilworth. In a previous m<:eting between these . two schools hnth games resulted in MURRAY . SEASONGOOD ·TO ADDRESS CONGREGATION . F am,o us Mayor of Cincinnati to Occupy Pulpit in Glencoe Temple November 10 ~lurray Seasongood, mayor of Cincinnati. will occupy the pulpit of North Shore Congregation Israel, Lincoln and Vern on a venues, Glencoe, Sundav morning, ~ovember 10, at ·11 o'clock. "Has Religion a Place in Politics?" is the theme upon which MaYor Sea songood \\·ill speak. · !\f ayor Scasongood occupies a unif!tte place in the civic and political life of American municipalities as he led the City· ).f anager Charter fight whichmade Cincinnati the first large cit\' in :\merica to be governed under -this plan. H.ussell \Vilson. in an article on \fayor Seasongood. which appeared in the Xational }.f unicipal He\·iew of February. say~ the following of ~fayor Sea:-ongt od: · ").! aynr SL·asongood's leadnship is rwt nwing to patronage or to the polit;cal priYileges that often emanate a mayor. It is entirely a moral leader ahtn-e all. ~fr. Seasnngoorl ship ar~Hb~·d good citizens f rnm their I kt!targ-y from being the worst I gon:rnl'rl city in the Cnitccl , tatcs. ('incinna ti has become the best l.!O\·erncd as a rule I am ·opJH)sed t o lll011Uilll'Jlts. nut ~nme claY Cutcinnati I ~lwuld raist" ont.: to ).laynr ·s~.:as<ll.lgood, a C~l l_tun· <~ gentleman .who impar~ ~d hi~ I pnlttical JClcal-. t<· l11s fcllow -c itJzt·n-.. llc has ~ul'fcrcd some (l i the pain:-. of ;t prophet. but he is Illll, n<~r -.!tal-l he he. \Yithout honor in hi s own cit\. ~f r. Sca:ongood is an c xctllcnt SJ->ca k cr, felicitous in phrase and cogent in logic. with an uncanny ahilih· of rc sur:·cct ing the apt anecdote. lie hit the t·xtra kYy with the bludgeo n of hum or and stabbed it with the rapier of wit." 1 ; .. \t thi s s_eT~· iec the Temple choir \\·ill . lllg the :\atJonal Anthems of 1\ussia, , German.\·, France, England and :\mer1 ica in ob. en-ance of Armi stice Da,·. I ThL' general public is itwitccl. - RECORD N. U. SONG "Go U Northwestern," song of the university, is now available . on a record by Ray Miller and his Brunswick orchestra, made after repeated requests· from fraten:tity and sorority houses on the campus. Miller's music is familiar to Northwestern students since he was located at Lincoln tavern from June until September. The tune is the first college piece to be recorded in foxtrot rhythm. - THE COMPLACENCY OF THE EARLY CHRISTMAS SHOPPER! Maddening /or the last tninute scrambler to behold. It's not a bit too early now to check over your list, shop leisurely, find the reall:v right thing .·. and then /eel superior. Tht:re are not . many days ahead when browsing is even a possible word. Whether it's a set of magnificent service plates /or one of your major gestures of giving . . . or an amusing novelty for the remembrance that's just a step above a cardl'ou'J/ find it here. And there are dozens of delightful gifts rangin~ between. set ever offered to the public improved SCREEN-GRID i l TATMAN In Cabinet of Your Choice $1 09;00 and up Less Tubes S17 Davis Street EVANSTON 625 N. Michigan Avenue · C HICAGO N E\V, different, astonishingly better - truer tone, greater volume, longer range, complete station separationand not a hum in a storeful! That is what this improved Screen-Grid does for youScreen-Grid as only Atwater Kent knows how to use it. Another Atwater Kent feature we offer - your choice of ~ot one but a dozen or more ' beautiful cabinets to harmonize with your own furniture. Open Evenings JOINS NEW LAW FIRM Dickinson. " ·ho has hrcn :1 prominent \Vinnctkan for 111anY Years, · has entered into partnc r::;hi i) - \Yith H cnry E. Colton, under the firm na;1~c of Colton and Dickinson with Ia~ uffices in X ashville, Tenn. ~f r. Dickinl snn ' ~\'ill conti~lll~ his arlili.ation, with I t hl' l1r.m of Dtckm son. ~nllth, I· arret!. ;u!C! \\ ha111 oi Chicago. .1 . ~1. --=====----- Your Photograph or mtniature, colored by us, ts sure to be a work of distinction. Special Miniatures 8x 10 Portraits (In Colors) $12.50 $20.00 North Shore Talking Machine Co. 712 CHURCH STREET. EVANSTON Univ. 4523 742 ELM STREET. WINNETKA II JosEph D. To1off Our Photographs Live Forever 518 D · S ~I 11 ._._._._._._._.__.._.1~-~-~ --~~~-~~~~-~ -~ --~ -·~ - ~-~~ -'-~-~-~-~-~~~~~~~-~~av~t~s~t~.,~E~v~a~n~s~to~n~~~~U~n~i~v~.~2~1~7~8~~ Winnetka 3474 '"I"'