On September 19, the members of the Briergate Community club met at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Walter C. Kurz, 2419 Berkeley road, presiâ€" dent John L. Robinson, presided. A number of subjects of civic interest were discussed. An interesting talk was given by Mr. James Hvale;â€"of the Valley Forge of Deerfield, on the history of wrought iron handiâ€" craft and the birth and development of this artistic industry at Deerfield. â€"Contributed. L "San Francisco‘"â€"the fourth in a Series of Seven Color Pages Illusâ€" trated by James Montgomery Flagg, appearing in The American Weekly, the Magazine Distributed with the SUNDAY _ CHICAGO HERALDâ€" AMERICAN. Rectors Guild Will Sponsor Noted Artist in Program Nov. 17 Skinner, who comes to the Highland Park high school auditorium on Friâ€" day, Nov. 17, sponsored by the Recâ€" tor‘s Guild of Trinity church, in a stage about her becomes alive with a legion of characters of her rare imagination. By the magic of her art, she conjures up a whole room full of arresting types. â€" her audiences have found, she does not walk alone in ber unique perâ€" When the gifted daughter of the beloved stage veteran, Otis Skinner, makes her appearance in her solo sketches, she works without scenery, employing only dark heavy drapes. But her settings are more real than painted canvas. She can make her audience see with her the sunlit porch of a New England resort hotel, Michelangelo‘s lofty frescoes in the Sistine chapel, or a tight smelly telephone booth in Times Square. Miss Skinner‘s "casts" are forâ€" ever allâ€"star. Her sketches are peoâ€" pled with silent unseen persons. They exist in the pauses, in the way she looks at them or in the manner which they seem to touch her. They become as vital to the audience as though they stood upon the stage. "This is real art that is seldom enâ€" countered," exclaimed one observer. So audiences go home after a Skinner recital with peculiar and joyous satisfaction. They have seen through the vexed mother, the difâ€" ficult youngsters at work on his arithmetic in "Homework"; thru the fashionable matron, they beheld the suitor of other days returned from China in "Old Embers"; and through the tired mother, they come to pity the poor family of city dwellers in "Sunday Driving." Briergate Community Club Holds Meeting COOKING AROUND AMERICA 148 South Second Street Tel. H. P. 1358 _ Highland Park :z, Che University of Chicago ‘ \/ UnIvERSsIcP? COoLLeEaGe l IN THE LOOP GREENSLADE Electrical Contractor Electric Shop EDUCATIONAL OPPORTUNITIES for ADULTS EVENIN G 8 COLLEGE, PROFESSIONAL, BUSINESS COURSES Twoâ€"Hour Sessions Once or Twice a W eek Registration: Sept. 27â€"30 Autumn: Oct. 2â€"Dec. 20 For Information regarding courses and public lectures address Late Afternoons Saturdays THE UNIVERSITY OF CHICAGO 1102, 18 South Michigan Avenne PUBLIC LECTURES Telephone: DEArborn 1473 and M Dway 006 Given at the Art Institute of Chicago CONTEMPORARY AMERICA IN FICTIONâ€"5 leeâ€" tures by PERCY H. BOYNTON (Oct. 10 to Nov, 7) AMERICAN HUMORISTSâ€"PAST AND PRESENTâ€" 8 lectures by WALTER BLAIR (Nov. 14 to Dee. 12) THE LEGISLATIVE WAYâ€"5 lectures by T. V. SMITH (Oct. 11 to Nov, 8) BUCCESS OR FAILURE IN MARRIAGEâ€"5 lectures by ERNEST W. BURGESS (Nov. 1$ to Dee. 13) . BIOLOGISTS 1OOK AT MANâ€"10 Mustrated lectures (Oct 11 to Dee. 13) NEW TECHNIQUES IN MANAGEMENTâ€"5 business lectares (Oct. 11 to Nov. 10) WOMAN MEETS THE LAWâ€"10 lectureâ€"conferences 2'.'A|N‘I‘UCIII(MB.DOQ.IIIM 00. (No single admission) The first of these loyalty services will be held next Sunday. The day will be known as enlistment Sunâ€" day. It is not to be a high pressure attendance contest, but rather a day on which Holy Communion will be observed. It will be a time of conâ€" secration and dedication to a new Loyalty to Christ and the Church. It is said by ministers and churches where this was done a year ago, that it was a second Easter experiâ€" ence for the church. All members and friends of the parish are cordâ€" ially invited to enter the spirit of that great day. The month of October has been set apart as a loyalty month at the Bethany Evangelical church. This is part of a movement that is being observed by all of the Evangelical churches in the Illinois Conference. It is also a part of the larger proâ€" gram sponsored by the national Laymans movement and the Federal Council of Churches. In this comparatively new field, you naturally have to be careful of the exposure, else the true color won‘t show correctly, Mr. Small exâ€" plains. His pictures are taken alâ€" most instantaneously, most in a fifâ€" tieth of a second. Color makes its own contrast, and so vistas that would be drab in grey tones emerge with added life on kodochrome film. Up until the time he began dabbling in color, Mr. Small did all his own developing, enlarging, and finishing, in the dark room he rigged up at home but now, of course, he has to send to Rochester, New York, to have his color film processed. And when the slides arrive in the mail, he has, by projecting the stills on a screen, the added pleasure of sharâ€" He "brings them back alive" and glowing with color. With the snap of a button he captures the halo of Loyalty Month to Be Held at Bethany summer sunsets, the textural deliâ€" eacy of cloud formations, the white foam of water churned by the bow of a boat, and goiden showers of sunbeams on flowers. All these and more H. H. Small brings back in his pocket â€" recorded indelibly on film exactly as snared by his camâ€" era. In color photography he‘s found a sureâ€"fire way of sharing and prolonging summer fun way into the bleak winter. Superlatives are inadequate to deâ€" scribe the realism of his colored stills, and it is no wonder that Mr. Small declares there is no finer way to keep ephemeral beauty intact. Particularly effective are his shots of clouds, which to him make up one of the most interesting manifestaâ€" tions of nature. Stenciled in his enâ€" during color collection is every conâ€" ceivable sort of cloud, the mare‘s tail, thunderheads, stratus, nimbus, and cumulus. Some of his landâ€" scapes remin done of Monet‘s imâ€" pressionistic painting and constitute sequences of pictures taken minutes apart while the evening or morning light changed. And still others you‘d swear are Corotâ€"like. October 8th will be known as comâ€" UnusuaL Sromies about UsUAL PEOPLE Rally Day Services The First United Evangelical church on Green Bay road and Laurâ€" el avenue is having a combined servâ€" ice of the Sunday school and mornâ€" ing worship service. A splendid ralâ€" ly day program has been arranged. Many Bibles and pins will be given in the line of promotion, also an object lesson talk by the pastor. mitment day, October 15th as stewâ€" ardship Sunday,, October 22 as Misâ€" sionary day and the 29th as gift Sunday. Each service will have a vital connection with the total proâ€" gram of the month. Those who have no regular place of worship are invited to share in the blessings of this great month. Mr. Small has his Highland Park home at 1111 S. Linden Ave. He is a former cesident of Minneapolis, Austin, and River Forest, but for 12 years he has lived here, working as assistant treasurer for the North Western railway. Music, another sideline with Mr. Small, is akin to photography, he will tell you. He has fine records of symphonic pieces, piano concerâ€" tos, and voice renditions. Ten years ago he devised a way by which he could hear his records through the radio, by a contrivance now quite common but then practically unâ€" heard of. His musical interests date back to religious grandâ€"opera going days, when he saw some performâ€" ances eight and nine times. Alâ€" though he has heard over a 100 difâ€" ferent operas, he claims he knows not one musical note from another, never having learned to play any inâ€" strument. the desultory method of passing around black and white snapshots. Color is the culmination of Mr. Smail‘s camera interest, which has mounted steadily since the day he acquired his first camera as a boy 15 years old. Before color work took his eye this summer, he busied himself with stereoscopic photogâ€" raphy, that is, threeâ€"dimensional photography. He ingeniously built himself a viewer that is unusual in that it has electric lights in back of the positive films to make more eviâ€" dent the illusion of depth, which is created by imposing practically identical pictures, %x1 inch each upon one another. His stereoscopic camera, a French Richard Homeos of the kind that few Americans own, has recorded scenes all the way from Maine to California. But he also makes it demonstrable that you don‘t have to stray far to take beautiful pictures, as Mrs. Smail‘s very own flowers come in for their share of unposed photos. The service will begin at 10 a.m ‘The First National Bank T he New Models T BE PR ES 8 Much interest is manifested annually when the new models in automobiles are ready for inspection. They are here and they are beauties. Perhaps, you have been waiting for them and you are ready to buy. If so, here is where we want to come in. We want to dl‘b your financing on reasonable, attractive terms. Won‘t you please call at the bank and have our Mr. Grant acquaint you with our plan? ~ Hayes, president of the Chicago Motor club, Three states have not yet reported their colors. possessions with thei pective colors: £ Pro8 Alabama, _ yellow on _ black; Alaska, black on orange; Arizons, Listed below are the states and WAUKEGA N COKE _ > THE FEDERAL DEPOSIT INSURANCE CORPORATION of Highland Park Mercer Lumber Companies â€" Deerfield dealer fo Frank Siljestrom Menoni & Mocogni FREE Paul Borchardt Highland Park Fuel Co. Service Cool even'mgs are * tem‘mder shat fAlâ€" wih 5008 be here‘ Start the season right . . . order a load of CLEAN, SMOKELESS WAUKEGAN COKE. Your home and furâ€" nace will stay clean longer with Smokeless W aukegan Coke. May we suggest that you have your heating plant cleaned and checked over by a competent furnace man. it will make it easier and more economical to heat your home. Recommended and Sold by red; New York, orange on black; North Carolina, marcon and alumâ€" white on marcon. O r e g o n, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 19899 white on blue; Pennsyivania, uitraâ€" Phone H. P. 178 RELIABLE LAUNDRY DRY CLEANING CO. Ask your dealer for