Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Winnetka Weekly Talk, 9 Jun 1928, p. 34

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WINNETKA TALK June 9, 1928 FOVNIAIN SQVARE + EVANSTON UNIVERSITY 1024 PaRris-CLocK HOSE, $1.95 Honey beige, noon, pearl blush, moonlight chiffon hose with openwork clocks. 3 pairs for $5.50. SPORT LISLE HOSE Fine lisles with lace clockings--white, beige and champagne. $1.75. At $2 there are stockings of lisle with diamond patterns interwoven: tan or white. Imported Lisle Hose with embroidered clocks, in tan, $2.50 pair. WILMETTE 3700 WHITE STOCKINGS Gordon Hose with the flattering V shadows at the ankles, $2.50. Pointed heel stockings, $1.95. Plain square- heeled hose with picot tops, $1.95. All fine chiffons, GORDON HosE with COLORED CLOCKS, $3 White with red or black; noon with black clockings; champagne with green, blue or red clockings. Of sheer, fine silk. P1coT-EDGED CHIFFON STOCKINGS, $1.95 Exquisitely sheer--almost fragile-looking. But really an amazingly wear-resisting and sturdy quality And colors exactly to suit any summer costume: Shell Moonlight Gunmetal Kasha Beige Mirage You'll realize why these stockings have become Plaza Gray Rose Taupe White Rose Nude so instantly popular after you've tried a pair! $1.95--3 pairs for $5.50 GORDON SERVICE-CHIFFON HOSE, $1.65 3 pairs for $4:60 A practical stocking that the business woman asks for. tects the stocking against runs. Haze, Piping Rock, Dove Gray, Pure silk clear to the narrow lisle welt that pro- Noon, Matin, Daphne Lord's--First Floor Purple Athletes in Final Training for Chance at Olympics Northwestern university's Olympic team candidates in track, swimming and wrestling have entered their final period of training in preparation for the tryouts to be held the first few weeks in July. Ten members of these three teams are conceded good chances of winning a place on the team which will rep- resent Uncle Sam in the international games. In the 1924 games Northwest- ern was represented by four athletes. They were Ralph Breyer, Dick Howell and Sybil Bauer in swimming and Bryan Hines in wrestling. Coach Tom Robinson has five boys in training for the coming tryouts and expects several of them to land a po- sition. They are Wally Colbath, div- ing; Al Schwarz, free style; Don Peterson and Eddie Lennox, breast stroke and Dick Hinch, back stroke. Coach Frank Hill expects to take Rut Walter and Bill Droegemueller east to the track tryouts in July. Wal- ter seems an almost certain bet to land a berth on the team while Droege- mueller has a fighting chance. Three wrestlers, George LeFavour, Bob Miller and Ralph Lupton will go to Grand Rapids for the final tryouts. Coach Stuteville feels that all three will make a strong bid for a position on the team. Lupton 15 national inter- collegiate champion in his division and is the most promising of the three. Both he and LeFavour, who is a fresh- man, are lightweights. Bob Miller, also a freshman, is a light heavy- weight. Local Naval R. O. T. C. Men to Cruise Atlantic Fifty-five members of the naval unit of the R. O. T. C. at Northwestern university, most of whom live in Chi- cago or on the north shore, will leave Evanston Tuesday, June 19, on the first lap of the two weeks' cruise along the Atlantic coast on the battleship Wyoming, with the units from Yale, Harvard and the Georgia School of Technology. The Northwestern unit will join the ship at Boston along with the units from Yale and Harvard. From Boston the Wyoming will make a two day cruise to Halifax, Nova Scotia, arriv- ing there June 23. On the return trip Portland, Maine will be the next port of call. The Northwestern unit will disembark at Boston, July 4, complet- ing the two weeks' cruise. Those from the north shore who will go on the cruise are: Robert C. Jones, Evanston; Preston L. Kellenberger, Evanston; Jack H. Nahigian, Evanston; Horace W. Neill, Highland Park; Maurice Osborne, Wilmette; Richard T. Paynter, Glen- coe; William G. Peacock, Wilmette; John H. Reed, Evanston; George P. Turner, Evanston; Leon V. Ware, Ev- anston; Edward I. Bucklin, Jr., Ev- anston; Gordon W. Bullock, Evanston ; Frederick W. Crook, Evanston; Paul N. Culp, Evanston; Harry C. Edwards, Great Lakes; Elmer P. Eldridge, Ev- anston; Adam Elson, Wilmette; Pres- ton Farley, Kenilworth; Edward L. Fielding, Wilmette; David H. Fitzger- ald, Winnetka; John W. Gorby, Jr, Evanston; Eugene E. Husting, Wil- mette. CHRISTIAN SCIENCE SUBJECT "God the Preserver of Man" will be the subject of the services at the First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Win- netka, Sunday morning, June 10, at 11 o'clock. The first Illinois militia company was organized May 9, 1723, under orders of the King of France.

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