Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Wilmette Life (Wilmette, Illinois), 3 May 1929, p. 3

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WILMETTE. LIFE SCHOOL HEADS TO MEET AT DEKALB MAY 10-11 ' DlRECTS POJ:'PY. SALEs Mn. H. T. Reiliaa Named:Cbairmaa of Wilmette l.epoa Aumliary Annual Poppy Sales Hen - Magistrate Notecl Teclmical Director GOeS to Ohio Poaition FoUowm. . · "Lilies of the Field" ,,. John Allen Stewart · The North Shore Theatre Guild is announcing that "Lilies of the Fieldv will be the last play. which it will pro· duce under the technical direction of Richard Woellhaf. 'Mr. Woellhaf is leaving the north shore early in tht summer to take up new duties as in;structor in Denison university, Granville, Ohio, where his courses will in:clude scenic designing and construe· tion and play-producing. Theatre Guil~ audiences, remembering the old English Tavern in "The Man with a Load of Mischief," the cabin scene in "The Dummy," and the moonlit Grace church with its shining window and heavy doorway in "The Old Homestead," should be most. willing to endorse his qualifications for the work he has chosen. The duties of the technical director of the Guild are not light. A ·complete workshop is maintained at the Evanston studio, and there all scenery is designed, constructed and painted under his direction. Furniture and hand-properties must be assembled and the whole made ready for the circuit. Stage-hands must be made familiar with the play and the set, to facilitate the changes that must be made quickly, . and lighting effects planned and charted to insure uniformity. Few Guild members realize the work involved in moving a Theatre Guild into town, setting the stage for a performance and striking and packing the set ready to mov.e to the next stand. It is a job for a real showman- almost a circus-man -and the Theatre Guild calls him the Technical Director. Three-Act ComedJ "Lilies of the Field" is a three-act comedy. For it. two complete sets have been constructed in the Guild shops. The first act is placed in the drawing room of the Vicarage in an English village. It is a horny place, but without any particular period or motif in its furnishing. The rest of the play takes place in the ante-room to the boudoir of a popular young Londoner. The room is "done" in the early Victorian style, almost "overdone"; it has the air of a room loaned to an exhibition. The sets have been designed in strict adherence to the story, and furniture in accordance with the general scheme has been supplied by William H. Hoops and company of Chica(l:o. All this, plus lighting equipment, hand-properties and actor's luggage, will be carried from town to town for the eight performances of the play. Superintendent and Principals Mr.;. H. T. Reiling has been apAaaociation to Hold Anpointed .chairman of the Wilmette nual. Meeting American Legion Auxiliary's Pop~y Supt. ) . R. Harper, Lowell F. Todd, principal of the Howard school, and Miss Margaret Hayes, principal of the Stolp school, will repres~nt Wilmette at the twenty-fourth annual meeting of the ·Superintendents' and Principals' Association of Northern Illinois at the Northern Illinois State Teachers' college in DeKalb, Friday and Saturday, May 10 and 11. The general theme of the meeting will be "Supervision." Prominent speakers and educators from Illinois and surroundint: states wilt talk on various phases of this subject. At the Friday morning session J. C. Brown, president of the Northern Illi nois State Teachers' college, will address the superintendents and principals on "Underprivileged Children," and Dr. Fred Engelhardt, of the University of Minnesota, will talk on "The Factual Approach to Administrative Problems." Speakers for the Friday afternoon session and the subjects on which they will talk are: Dr. R. M. Tryon. University of Chicago, "How l Would Supervise History Instruction;" Dr. Arthur Klevenger, University of Illinois. "\Vhat the \]'niversity of Illinois Considers Good in High Schools," and Dr. C. S. Berry, University of Michig-an, "Gifted Children." · Friday evening, Dr. Engelhardt will give a second addr.ess, this time on the subject. "Organization for Supervision." Dr. Alfred Lawrence Hall-Quest, author and lecturer, is also on the Friday evening program with a lecture on "Just .\ Vhat Is Supervision." Dr.Hall-Quest is scheduled to give a second address at the Saturday morning session, which will conclude this year's meeting. His subject will be "Teaching Children to Think." A second talk by Dr. Tryon, "A Summary of lmport~nt Developments in the Teacl)ing of History During the Last Decade" also has been announced for · Saturday morning. Supt. J. R. Harper, .of Wilmette, and Supt. Carleton Washburne, of Winnetka. are on the Superinte~dents' and Principals' association committee 0f seven which investigates school ·problems and tries them out scientifically. The report of this committee will be presented to the association Friday afternoon, May 10, at 1 :30 o'clock. Day committee, it was announced th!s week by Mrs. Arthur Johnson, president of the Wilmette Auxiliary unit, and will have charge of the Poppy Day program · here on May 27. . The Auxiliary's Poppy Day prc:>gram will include again this year the sale of American Legion Auxiliary poppie3 to be worn previous to and on Memorial Day in memory of those who have fallen in battle in defense of the country. The proceeds from the ·sale will be used by the Auxiliary in the welfare and relief work for disabled veterans. their families, and the orphans of deceased soldiers. "To begin with, the Auxiliary poppies are made by disabled men who are in gover.n ment hospitals." it was stated by Mrs. Johnson in announcing plans for the Poppv DaY sale program. "The one ce-nt they receive for .making the poppy, together with an extra quarter-cent paid these men for attaching the Auxiliary label, adds materially to the income of those men who are unable to do any other work. "In addition all profits made by the Auxiliary on the sale of the poppies are used for the relief of di·3abled men and their families who are not in the hospitals and to bring comfort to those who are. "Each of the official American Legion poppies bears the American Legion Auxiliary label." Mrs. Reiling will be assisted in the Auxiliary's poppy sale Wednesday, May 29, by the following Auxiliary Poppy Day committee: Mr3. S. Vanlnwagen, Mrs. G. A. Stone, Mrs. Stanley Peterson, Mrs. Norman Deno, Mrs. Harry W. Hopp, and Mrs. M. S. Newcomb. Police Magistrate E. A. Pettibone, elected to that office in the recent Village election, will formally . begin his duties Monday morning, May 6, in the court room .of the Village hall. Magistrate Pettibone is continuing his insurance business with offices in the Village hall court room. (Gibson Photo) Art Leaguers Will Hold a Sketching Outing on May 18 The exhibit of paintings hy members of the North Shore Art league now at the Winnetka CommunitY House witt close Friday, May 10, a;td exhibitors are to remove their works on that or the following day. The teague \vitl have its annual meeting and election of officers at 8 o'clock Thursday evening, May 16, in the Camp Fire room at Community House. After the meeting, there will be an informal program, with a discussion of next year's program. Final plans will be made at this titne for the sketching party that is to be held that Saturday, May 18, at the lodge in the Walton W ood·s. The lodge has been reserved for the exctasive use of the league that day. Members will bring their sketching materials and box luncheons, and coffee will be provided by the social committee. Three groups of cars will le"· the Pine Street entrance of Community House at 10, 11 :30, and 2 o'clock, with a member of the league in charge each group. Will Announce Lens Club Picture Contest Winners The annual picture contest sponsored by the Lens club of New Trier High school closed last week, and winners will be announced in the near future. All New Trier students were eligible to enter the contest. Photographs submitted wilt be judged on the basis of photographic skill, interest of subject, correctness of exposure, and formation of subject. Prizes of five, three, and two dollars are to be awarded to the winners of first, second, and third places respectively. ...--------------111!'1 Local Marbles Champions Train for District Meet William Wade, Junior Marbles cham pion of Wilmette, and Henry Borre. who captpred the senior championship in the recent tournament conducted b' the Wilmette Playground and Recreation board, are expected to enter the district marble tournament to be held ~n Evan'3tOtt Saturday afternoon, May 11. Winners in the District event will be eligible to enter the county tournament on May 18. the winners in which witl be sent to Atlantic City to compete in the national event. Pia,. at Stolp School Particular attention is called to the;' location of the Wilmette performano6 of this last play of the Guild season. Byron Stolp school is the place, remodeling of the Woman's club makin(l: the deviation from schedule necessary, and the night is Tuesday, May 14. . Mrs. Robert Stoddard is the local chairman in Wilmette, and she will gladly answer any questions with regard to the production or the general work of the North Shore Theatre Guild. '"'(""HERE'S nothing surer than 1 results from Classified ad· vcrtising in WILMBTTE LIPB. Thousands have tried these columna successfully. You can do likewise ! N. T. Junior Girls Hear Denison University Head President Avery A. Shaw, of Denison university, Granville, Ohio, addressed the junior class girls' assembly Tuesday at New Trier High school on the subject, "The Place of the Small College in Modern Education." Six former New Trier students-Harriet Mons, of Kenilworth, Marjorie Smith, Mr. and Mrs. William Holmes, 622 Ruth Arnold, :Margaret Ott, Lenore Central avenue, returned recently from Rennert, and Margaret Gilchrist, all a six weeks' motor trip through of Wilmette-are now attending Denison. Florida. MOTHER TAKEN BY DEATH Supt. Frederick E. Clerk, of K ew Trier High school, and Mrs. Clerk left Wednesday of this week for Long Branch, N. ]., where Mr. Clerk was called by the death of his mother. Plan Father-Son Banquet at English Lutheran Church A Father and Son banquet is to be held in the social rooms of the Wilmette English Lutheran church Monday evening, May H, at 6 :30 o'clock. The affair is under the auspices of the; , Men's Brotherhood in t~e ..parjsh\. l>.t,.· ! T. Q.ould Wickey of Carthage college will be the principal speaker.

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