Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park Press, 27 Oct 1927, p. 13

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a Miss Catharine Lay returned to her home at 1408 Régewood lane, Hubâ€" hard Woods, Wesnesday, after extenâ€" sive travel in Europe She axrived in w. 10, and jour, neyed to to spend a week with _ North Shore News ols Snmamics Aifindhebworsie A Smdb uhvage puaipnersix 4P Thst it Germany. While in Switzerland she the Hubbard Woods school. She visâ€" ited Miss Caswell‘s school in Geneva andâ€"attended a session of the League Bremen, a trip of two hours, and sailâ€" ed for America from the latter city. She arrived in New Yotk October 14, On Tuesday evening the choir of the Wilmette Baptist church tenderâ€" ed a reception to W. H. Barnes, orâ€" ganist, at the home of Mr,. and Mrs. Frank G. Guthridge of 917 Greenâ€" friends on her way home. M oofi en e n Pn of the church organ. and has ‘made gifts of two special stops to the comâ€" pletement of its equipment. In the course of the evening, the choir preâ€" sented to Mr. Barnes a beautiful trayâ€" eling clock with a gold face and red leather casing. Mr. Barnes respondâ€" dvitllwrwrhhr-lril. _ Mr, Barnes ‘has been the organist and masical advisor of the Baptist -â€"O-'infi;dtg. Mr. Barnes was marâ€" ried at the House of Hope Presbyâ€" terian church, St. Paul, Minn., to Edith McMillan Robinson. Mr. @ind Mrs. E. 0. Carlson of Hubâ€" bard Woods bave left for a thre¢ weeks‘ motor trif to Jamestown, N. Y., tw visit relatives and friends. On their return, they will motor to Caliâ€" fornia, accompanied by Mr. and Mrs. iml.â€"‘, Hamilton of Chicago. They plan to pass the winter months there. ‘The Rev. and Mrs. William B. Leach of Hubbard Woods celebrated their 45th wedding anniversary: at the Georgian hotel, Evanston, Monday night, Oct. 17, with a dinner. Guests were Dr: and Grace Leach Orcutt and the two grundchildren, Frances and D. C. Orcutt, Jr. Capt. William B. Leach and his bride couldâ€"not be presâ€" ent, having just arrived in New York o ie m o me enc e from their honeymoon trip in Europe. Dr. Leach was married to Emma R. Werthwein in Hampskire, IIl. _ Charles H. Wacker and his male quartet furnished the music. Mr. Wacker was a distant relative of the 44 thirtyâ€"seven years in active work, mostly in Chicago. Their first charge was to found and build Grace M. E. church, Elgin, HIJ. Their life in the ministry has been one of toil, yet splendid success. They live with their Orcutt, in Hubbard Woods. When Miss Helen Gertrude Eagle, daughter of Mrs. Waiter Roger Eagle of 1030 Forest avenue, Glencoe, beâ€" came the bride of Rodes Garth Dunn, soi of Dr. and Mrs. Freeland J. wmm,-m. 15, she wore a Patou model lilies of the vailey. Her maid of homor, Miss Natalie Gunlock of Chiâ€" cago, wore apricot chiffon, and a large brgwn velvet hat. Her bouquet was #mmfl,m-fl A.-Ad::atw.lhfllf' fow Black of Glencoe, and Miss Virâ€" m_u.”dm Their wete END «of coral chiffon, They wore hats to match and carried fi-dhfly“mn‘ breath. Monseigneur Fitzsimmons of Holy Nikme Cathadral read the service at 10:30 in the morning at Sacred Heart church, before only a few friends and relatives. Following the service the wedding breakfast was attended by a few guests, at the home: of the bride‘s mother. â€" * Mr. and Mrs. Dunn have motored east for a two weeks‘ honeymoon. After their wedding trip they will be at home at 618% Sheridan road, Evâ€" Announcement is made of the marâ€" riage of Miss Elaine Brown of Chiâ€" ... 1 dA â€"oestsw naad > on wC n N Mr. and Mra. Joe Thaimann of Wilâ€" mette, which took place October 26. m.‘.mmum eoast, and upon returning, Mr. and Mrs. Thaiman» will make their Mr. and : Mrs. Hartman of mu-e-u-m:.'gl-fl-.h" jast returned from a trip west, where they â€" celebrated their _twentyâ€"fifth To coired i Los Anaoles. fex at Los Angeles, San T. fack gauie .*‘~~ ~% SS Their son, James, who if a junior at the University of Hilinois, spent the weekâ€"ond with his parents. He was home for the Illinoisâ€"Northwestâ€" Shipman, Jr., and , i marriage of her daughter, Mildred, to Lawrence Arthur Porter, son of Mrs. Lenora Jane Porter of Missouri Valâ€" ley, lowa. The wedding took place at 5:30 Saturday at the Second Presâ€" Mrs. Dollie M. Nelson, 1737 Highâ€" land avenue, Wilmette, formerly of byterian church. riage of"Miss Elaine Brown of Chiâ€" cago to Lawrence Thalmann, sor of Mr. and Iln.m‘l'hhmnn of Wilâ€" mette, which place October 26. The young couple are motoring to the Pacific coast, and upon returning, Mr. and Mrs. Thaimann will make Ne Wist Belty" Miller apd" Miss Eagh their home in Wilmette nig. Moore, feaders of the Girl Scout troop in Glencoe, have returned from the National Convention of Girl Beout leaders held at the Waldorf hotel in New York City. The convention celeâ€" brated the thirteenth year of Girl Scouting, and was attended by 1,000 delegates from all over the country. It was unanimously voted to raise a memorial fund in memory of Julietui Tom, founder of the Girl Scouts, who | died last January, the fund to be used 1 for the promotion of Girl Scouting; and girl guiding throughout the| world. A new uniform was voted, to | go into effect in about a year. The| convention was closed with an address i by the chairman, Mrs. Herbert Hooâ€" ver. Next year the convention will be held at Colorado Springs, Colo. Miss Miller attended the Girl Scout camp at Camp Edith Macy, Briarcliff, Manor, N. Y., for ten days before the convention. She was given an intenâ€" sive course in advanced troop manâ€" agement; along with a nature course and instruction in leather work. Mr. and Mrs. William Noble of 1010 Oak street, Winnetka, announce the engagement of their daughter, Mary Elizabeth, to Carl F. Bishop of Winâ€" netka, son of Mr. and Mrs. Max Bishâ€" opâ€"of Tomahawk, Wis. The wedding day Mas not been set. Mr. and Mrs. Edwin H. Cassels of 750 Bluff street returned Thursday evening from French Lick Springs where they had passed about a week. Mr. and Mrs. E. O. Carlson of Hubâ€" bard Woods have left for a three weeks‘ motor trip to Jamestown, N. Y., to visit relatives and friends. On their return, they will motor to Caliâ€" fornia, atcompanied by Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Hamilton of Chicago. They pian to pass the winter months there. NORTHBROOK VILLAGE Announcement is made of the marâ€" â€"__â€" HALL IS UNDER WAY Fine New Municipal Building To Be Opened for Use About Christmas fortyâ€"acre tract in the southwesterly section‘ of the village, and which has negotiations well under way for obâ€" taining lake water from the new Glencoe pumping piant as soon as it is completed, is also boasting a new Northbrook, now witnessing the completion of its latest subdivision, a Village hall which it will formally dedicate about Christmas time. The new structure is located at the southwest corner of Woiters avenue and First street. The brick work is now underway. It is to be a comâ€" bined village hall and fire station. ‘The first story is being constructed with a view of adding a second story, when it is required, and Northbrook citiâ€" zens say they realize that if the lage continues to grow at the rate it has been forging ahead the past two years it will not be long. ‘The village board is looking. into the future in its building plans, even beyond the addition of a second story to the building now being erected, At such a time as it shall have been outgrown, it is the purpose of the municipal planners to use this buildâ€" week, by the loss of a beloved citiâ€" zen in the person of Mrs. Mabel Rowâ€" ley Barnett, who died October 15, at Glenn Springs Sanitarium, Watkins still larger and more upâ€"toâ€"date Vilâ€" WELL KNOWN GLENCOE WOMAN DIES IN EAST WGlen, New York. Christian W. Braun, one of the oldâ€" hhmnd-u'l-nfl!lbm est north shore reaidents passed quietâ€" her hus! Otto Raymond Barnétt; | ty away following a two weeks‘ period her sons, Lawrence Theodore Barnett dmlnl-l&a\h-odfl and Shorman Rowley Barnett, and at his home, 2135 Lake avenue, their families. Two children were lost m,u Monday of this week. in infancy. ‘There are two grandchilâ€" m-;lnuh-z-hm-mm- dren, Barbara Kay Barnett and LaW=] ducted from umlmh rence Theodore Barnett, Jr. :q“ w.a..:.:“m. was Barnett was the daughter of to rest Joneph comeâ€" fi‘.’ pm\lbfi-&‘"‘m born ul car mam m lt Opriton, OlMe.| rebromy 27. T001; in & 1og sabin io Glen, New York. Jr., PR S P h t s M EiesA t in came to live| cated on what is now Blum street in OPPOSES THIRD LAKE PLAN me= l Major General Jadwin, chief of the A: Engineers, in recent official Nine Property Owhers In That|th¢ Army Engineers, in recent officia‘ meCEOE E PGPECMT OPBERORCM EBC ECCC l £ - I L lity Petition Court statements, has made it clear that Â¥ For an early session of Congress called Action; Fear Damage for flood relief purposes, would have * To Land been a waste of time and energy, as as well as money. Because of the lack | s ==~=~ of exact data as to what should be ! Nine farmers owning land draining| done, and how it should be.done, the | into Third and Druce lakes last week| President has approached this flood filed a petition for injunction in the problem not so much with the thought circuit court demanding that the proâ€"| 0f "¢Pairing the damage that is done, posed construction of a dam to raise| PUt envolving of a plan of construcâ€" | the levels of Third lake 21 inches be tion which will make impossible the | halted to prevent the inundation of "?[‘.';"mbl"f "'; o “':"I:Pllfl-l e problem 0j tching t vees | their properties. â€" whass ‘::rnn]rl h.up.mn:n‘tl_ dninin.fi ‘The dam is proposed, according b‘ the bill filed by Judge Martin C. Deckâ€" er in bekalf of Carlisle Druce, Edâ€" ward J. Druce, Peter Christensen, Charles Parker, Edward Parker, Earl Barron, Phillip J. Exon, Clarence Dooâ€" little and Wilmer Bg'er, is to be erected on the channel that connects the two lakes which raise, it contends. the water level 21 inches higher than it was on August 10;1927, .. â€"_ . ; | LOVE OF EDUCATION IS | NOT FILLING COLLEGES | So Says Dean Gauss of Princeâ€" " ton Who Thinks Many Youths | _ Go for Playtime Blanchard; Charles Smale and Attorâ€" ney Coral Heydecker. â€" Anthony Fredâ€" son has the material on the ground and is ready to start work, the peti~ tion recites. There are two inlets to Third lake, it is stated, with one of them being in the form of a stream that flows through the lands of all the farmers mentioned with the exception of Brewer‘s properties which drain into Druce lake. â€"â€"Theâ€"petition is directed against M. A dam, the petitioners charge, would stop the natural drainage, causâ€" ing the land, which they hold as unâ€" der a high state of cultivation and valued in excess of $200 per acre, to become flooded, soggy and not conâ€" ductive to good crops. Immediate action is asked because the petitioners contend that the dam could be completed within a short space of time. _ ~"I believe there is one point which the public has failed signally to unâ€" derstand in the present ‘rush to the | colleges.‘ Many have told us that this El'u:ll results from a deeper realizaâ€" tion of the value of college education which was demonstrated during the war. It may be so in part. There is, however, another and a far simpler reason. Young men and yeang womâ€" Dean Christian Gauss of Princeâ€" ton is not sure that the buge increase in college enrollment is due to a comâ€" mendable desire on the part of Amerâ€" ican youth for higher education. Writing on "Should Johnny Go to College?" in the October Scribner‘s Magazine, he says: en prefer the society of other young men and women to the soviety of their elders. With the general obâ€" scuring of the colleges‘ original purâ€" pose and function, it has unfortunateâ€" ly become.a kind of glorified playâ€" ground. It has become the paradise of the young. _ M "If, nowadays, you give a boy of eighte@n the option of going into his father‘s office or of going to college, on the assumption that in every case they are equally good things to do, he will therefore in almost every case choose college. It is almost never good things to do. We have tried to explain .that it depends upon him." Ampelio â€" Castanedo, . who . with Francisco Arroyo and Marie Orits is under arrest charged with the dual murder of Guadalupe Gonzales and Julio Gerrera in Market street, Wauâ€" kegan, on the night of October7, has confessed that he fired the twelve shots into the bodies of Gonzales and Gerrera, Detective Sergeants Bart ‘Tytrell and William MacDonald anâ€" nounced last week upon their return from Pontiac, Mich. BRING BACK MEXICANS CHARGED WITH MURDFR The ~local detectives arrived at Waukegan with their .two prisoners Wednesday night at seven o‘clock after stoppihg off a day in Detroit where they searched for a second woman who i said to have witnessed the double shooting. ‘The Orits womâ€" «n was returned for trial by train Tuesday in custody of Mrs. Sarah OLD NORTH SHORE RESIDENT IS DEAD . ) NEED TIME TO PLAN Special Seasion of Congress Is Not Warranted, Says The problem of patching the levees 1 where breaks have occured, duining‘ areas where flood waters have setâ€" tled, and even that the restoring: people to their lands, is not an overâ€" elaborate undertaking, and can and could be figured in a relatively short space of time. President Coolidge, however, has let it be known, that the statues quo of the preâ€"flood period does notâ€"satisfy him. He has a natural averation to spending monâ€" ey for merely patching purposes, thus Jeaving the major problent nnsetiledy The problem of how"not owy=®#â€"re= pair, but to prevent floods is what the President has set before the army auâ€" thorities, but General Jadwin admits that he will need allâ€"the time up to the regular assembling of Congress to get that data into shape. WINNETKA WATER FOR GLENCOE TILL APRIL The Winnetka village council Tues-i day evening approved an agreement with the village board of Glencoe to furnish that village with water servâ€" ice from September 1, 1927, the exâ€" piration of the five year contract, to| April 1, 1928, at which time Glencoe expects to have its new wafer works plant completed. The rate is to he/ that now prevailing, 12 cents per) thousand gallons. It is also being:! planned toâ€" continue the connection of; tillage mains at Scott and Linden avenues, after the completion of thet Glencoe plant, for the purpose of proâ€" viding reciprocal emergency service,] it was explained. j 1+ NU 5 MILWAUKEE SUNDAY, OCT. 30th (oarâ€"TEmrace| Â¥ LAuE&'ggy | ?3 MAVE OUVK HOUSE ; Seem more LiXE \, | , a nome ! l M&"~ 4 Taxke it _ Ly. Hi Excursion trains stop at Wileon Avenae, Rogers Park, Davia Street (Evanston), Highland Park, Wanâ€" hayan and Kenesha going and reâ€" v. Hi Park 8:10 a. m. mm . . 9:40a. m. Returning L. Mitwankee 7:00 p. m. Buy your Tickets in Advance ‘Ticket Agent, C. & N. W. Ry. . â€" RELIEF IN SIGHT! OUR SWEET AND CLEAN LAUNDRY SERVICE Press Want Ads Bring Results â€" Telephone Highland Ryrk 2637 MURPHY & SCHWALL HEATING CONTRACTORS Hot Water, Vapor, High or Low Pressure Steam Estimates on New and Remedcling Work â€" Repair Work s Specialty 133 GLENCOE AVENUE s CLIFTON AVENUE Telephone Highland Park 2687 Telephone Highland Park 2282 %mwwmm \ known quality. ~Our honest gasoline will carry you farther â€"our honest oil will protect you from engine troublesâ€"serve you when you are miles away from here. And our prices are honest, too. 9 e o Tillman‘s Service Station 382 Central Avenue Serviceâ€"Miles Away Every minute two more Women buy Maytags. It will take you only a minute to learn the reason. Y a Maytag yourself. Prove with your own washing that a Maytag will relieve you of all wonder washer your entire week‘s laundering can be * MAYTAG HUBER ELECTRIC CO. ° _ serve no brands of unâ€" Corner Green Bay Road and Central Avenue ~ | Mobiloil Phone for Free Trial your home for Free Trial. Then test the it. If it doesn‘t sell itselfâ€"don‘t keep it. THE MAYTAG COMPANY . <© 50 Newton, lowa Telephone Wiknotte 1898 144

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