Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Winnetka Weekly Talk, 26 May 1928, p. 10

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WINNETKA TALK May 26, 1928 The suit that changed bathing to swimming Blonde, brunette - - your type determines the color of your Jantzen! Espuasize the beauty of your coloring when you don your swimming suit; Choose har- monious colors . . . created by Jantzen . . . dashing, youthful, flattering . . . most becoming to your type . . . blonde, brunette . . . whatever yours may be. Individuality! Not alone in col- or, but in style and perfect fit. And when you want to really swim, you're doubly glad your suit's a Jantzen. Flashing through the water like a dolphin, or at play, you're limb and fancy free. Your Jantzen scarcely lets you know it's on you! Tightly knitted from long-fibre wool by the Jantzen-stitch process, a Jantzen fits you lightly, comfort- ably, smoothly... without a wrinkle. Gives you that rare combination of smart appearance and freedom for active swimming. And being ex- tremely elastic, a Jantzen retains its shape. See the new models now on dis- play here! Newest is the Jantzen "Twosome." Solid colors, bright hues, distinctive stripes. Colorfast; being literally dyed-in-the-wool. Your Jantzen swimming suit is here . . . your color, your size. Ask to see the 'Jantzen Color Harmony Guide!" Z1CK'S "The Store on the Corner" Elm Street at Chestnut Phone Winn. 930 Realtors to Hear About Convention in Radio Message Realtors throughout the nation have been asked to tune in on a programme radiocast from Louisville, Ky. Satur- day night, June 9, dedicated especially to the Twenty-First Annual Conven- tion of the National Association of Real Estate Boards in Louisville, June 18 to 22. The programme, which starts at 8 o'clock, Central Standard Time and lasts until 9:30 o'clock, will be radio- cast through WHAS, the radiophone of The Louisville Times and The Courier-Journal and is expected to act as verbal invitation to the Convention to the 40,575 members of the National Association. Arranged through the Greater Louisville Savings and Building As- sociation, the programme will be sent from that organization's extension studios and will be under the direction of Gustav Flexner, secretary and man- ager of the association and a realtor. He has gained national recognition for his operatic programmes during the past year from his extension studio of the same newspaper station. The programme is planned to start exactly at 8 o'clock and to consist of a variety of music ranging from jazz to classical selections. Stunts of vari- ous natures are being arranged for one and one-half hours melange of radio merriment. Orchestras, vocal selections and The Greater Louisville Ensemble have lead- ing parts on the programme; Mr. Flex- ner said that complete details would be announced soon. The Times and The Courier-Journal Station radiocasts at 930 kiolcycles and 322.4 meters. Warn Against "Phoney" Telephone Solicitors The arrest a few days ago in Chi- cago of a man who had robbed a num- ber of houses after obtaining admis- sion by posing as a telephone installer, has prompted the Illinois Bell Tele- phone Company to issue a warning to the public not to admit to their homes persons claiming to be telephone em- ployees unless they show identification cards. Every employee of the Illinois Bell Telephone Company, who in the course of his work, is required to enter a telephone subscriber's home, is pro- vided with an identification card bear- ing his photograph, and the company urges householders to require persons claiming to be telephone employees to show this card before being admitted. Mother of Police Chief Dies in Lake Bluff Home Mrs. Marie Peterson, mother of Chief of Police W. M. Peterson, of Winnetka, and a pioneer resident of Lake Bluff, died at her home in the latter village, Monday, at the age of 78 years. Mrs. Peterson's death was due to a fall which she sustained on Faster Sunday, and from the effects of which she never recovered. The funeral was held Wednesday, at the residence in Lake Bluff. Burial was at Waukegan. A son, Carl, resides in Chicago and a daughter, Mrs. Bertha Finel, lives in Lake Bluff. Request Railroads to Put Scott Crossing in Shape Both the Chicago and North West- ern Railroad company and the North Shore Line have been requested by Village Manager George R. Young of Glencoe, to put the crossing at Scott avenue, in good shape. The companies recently made some splendid improve- ments of this nature in the crossings at Park avenue.

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