WILMETTE Jote~b S. Monfort, son 'Of Mr. and Mrs. Jay R. Brown, 127 Seventee~th LIFE May 3, 1929 CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SUBJECT trttt, who is a student at the Aeroutical School of Engineering at Lintoln, Neb~ ha been spending hn spring ncation with his parents, and returned last week to school. The subject at the service in the AdOm New Kitchen Shop First Church of Christ, Scientist in Pots and pans gleaming with br!ght Wilmette Sunday morning, May 6, at color, gay imported crockery and hno11 o'clock is "Everlasting Punishment." leum patterns that illustrate ~~e tre~d Sunday school 'con~enes at 9:45 o'clock. of the times in the enterpnsmg kJtchen, make gay the interior of the Kitchen store which . opened recently at 509 Davis street, Evanston. · ·Kitchens have become more colorful and brighter year by year since America began to take on domestically the use· of color which has been peculiar to the European menage for generations, and the suggestions towards f~r nishings and equipping the model kitchen oi the prev:ailing mode that .thi s new little shop will offer are said to he well worth inspecting. The shop quarters are made to take the semblance of a kitchen itself, and it se<:ks to offer it self as a storehouse of suggestion and ad,·ice in kitchen 1 furnishing. Pots, · Pans in Gay Hues OUT-DOOR UFE EXPO OPENS AT·COUSEUM Sportsmen and Prospective Vacationists Interested in Variety of Exhibits By T. J. Meek Dotted here and there with cozy looking cabins, ideal camping spots and miniature fish-filled lakes and st reams, the two and one-half acres of Chicago Coliseum floor space devoted to the exhibits of the Out-Door Life Exposition and :Motor Boat Show, which opens on May 6 and continues until May 11, are ready for the inspection of thousands of sportsmen, natu.re lov<:rs and prospective vacationists ·who consider this hig annual Chica~o show as the first step tO\\'ard a summer replete with out-door enjoyment. The log-rolling, bait-casting and tree chopping contests that have always thrilled Chicago's sports enthusiasts are to be added to this year by the reap!)earance of the popular bait and fl ycasting competition on May 9. Chief among these will be Howard Chatt oi Chicago, twenty-one-year-old world's indoor bait-casting champion. who won his title at the exposition three years ago, but did not defend it in 1927, at which time "Curley" Moulton and A. ] . Xaugle were tied for first honors and in the cast-off :Kaugle won. Fast becoming the center of the rapidly growing ·sport of outboard motoringJ Chicago will also view with sati faction the proposed adoption of a Code of Ethics to govern some of the wild antics of over-enthusiastic water motoring fans who are using Lake Michigan and nearby inland lakes as a playground. Over six hundred dealers and manufacturers of outboard motors are to meet \ Vedne day, l\fay 8 -"Outboard ~fotor Day"-to consider the adoption of such a code. On the ame day visitors to the exposition will have an opportunity to closely inspect many improvements made on the 1929 line of outboard motors including the almost universal adoption of the silent under " ·ater exhaust and the addition of eYen more speed and safetv. The states of \Vi scon in, ~fichigan and ~finnesota and a number of Canadian cities will bring to Chicago some idea of the vast stock of lures they hold out fo r those who will hit the open highways in the near future. The scent of the pin · tre e, tl!_e glow of the campfi re, the sight of game, fish and animals, and perfect replicas of some of the garden spots of Na ture will also be included in an 'nspection trip to the Seventh NatiOI,a l Out-Door shmY. - · I -I The Preferred Setting For Social c//jfairs In June-month of weddings, parties and dances - The Orrington is at its loveliest ... offering you a charming setting for social affairs of all kinds. Make arrangements- now- to hold your June party at The Orrington. Our trained staff will attend every detail with meticulous care, making your function at once memorable and happily correct. For reservations call University 870 0 North Shore Contributes to Purple Golf Prowess Prospects for a strong golf t eam at Northwestern next year appear promising judging from the strong freshman sq uad which is working out this spring. The squad is the largest which ever reported for golf in the history of the sport at the university. Prominent among those competing for a position on the freshman team are: F. G. Damaski, Winnetka; Sam Arnold, Kirksville, Mo.; James Whitaker, Glencoe; William Lorimer, Crystal Lake, Ill.; Raymond Frederick, Chicago; H. S. Challis, Sewickley, Pa.; G. D. Scouller, Pontiac, Ill.; C. W. Christie, Washington, D. C.; G. F. Lictzow, Chicago; P. G. Wagner, Wilmette, and 0. C. Schmidt, Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. Alan C. Collins of Philadelphia have announced the birth of a son, Alan, Jr., on Saturday, April 13. Mrs. Collins was Dorothea Schmedtgen, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William Schmedtgen, 710 Greenleaf avenue. '; Gfk ORRINGTON E V A N S T 0 N'S LARGEST AND FI NEST f1 0 T E L ..