WINNETKA TALK September 22, 1928 HITTITE WATCH QUR WINDOWS FOR DAILY SPECIALS Wn We put the EAT in MEAT TTT There are meats and MEATS as you all know--but when you purchase your MEATS here--and find 'Swift's Selected" branded on every piece . . . LEG OF GENUINE SPRING LAMB, Ib. .. ........ 35¢ SPRING LAMB, Standing Shoulder, Ib. ... LAMB ROAST, Boneless, Tbe tar cv. coines ss PORK ROAST, Boneless, Ib. POT ROAST, Boneless, db. .......... go: STEWING BEEF, Boneless, Ib. .. CHOICE SELECTION OF FISH EVERY FRIDAY Fancy Poultry for Roasting -- Frying -- Stewing -- Broiling National Market 802 Elm Street Special attention given to phone orders 21c 35¢ 42¢c 38¢ 28¢ Telephones Winnetka 55--656 then you'll know you're getting the best. y y g £g Clerks -- Courteous and Obliging. vice--as you want it! Winnetka Delivery ser- CREDENZA Victor All-Electric Orthophonic MiLroy Music SHor 569 Lincoln Ave. WINNETKA Style 8-35 Reduced to $285 WHETHER or not you're contem- plating a musical instrument of this nature . . . you positively should see this wonderful machine. The ORTHOPHONIC as you know, needs no introduction, but we will be pleased to demonstrate this marvelous instrument in your home. It is without an equal. Truly a beautiful piece of furniture. Everything for the Musical Home Brunswick -- Victor -- Columbia RECORDS Telephone 2129 2d Students at Horace Mann Hold Committee Elections This week was election week at the Horace Mann school when children of the "third, fourth, fifth, and sixth grades elected representatives to the various student committees, which work with the teachers as advisors. Following are the committees: ethics, playground, housekeeping, hall, as- sembly caretakers, assembly program, music, art and science, and journalism. Each committee elected its own chair- man at the first meeting. A new chair- man is elected every fourth meeting, and the committees are changed three times a year. The business of each committee is brought before the gen- eral business assembly, presided over by a general chairman who was elected this week also. Hold Atonement Services at Congregation Israel The North Shore Congregation Israel, Lincoln and Vernon avenues, Glencoe, has announced its services of atonement for Sunday and Monday. On atonement eve this Sunday, Septem: ber 23, Rabbi Louis J. Kopald will give an address on "The -Return" at 8:15 o'clock. His subject at the atonement morning service at ten o'clock Monday will be "The Pardon." The afternoon service of atonement begins at 2:30 o'clock on Monday. Trinity Lutheran Greenwood and Hawthorne avenues Glencoe Rev. L. Nauss, Minister Sunday, September 23 German service at 10 a. m. English service at 11 a. m. Text: IT Kings, chapter 20, verses 1 to 7. Theme: "The Lord Our Very Present Help in Trouble." Sunday School at 9 a. m. Sunday school teachers meet Friday evening at 8 p. m. in the church base- ment to discuss Sunday School prob- lems. Christian Fellowship Svenska Missionskyrkan Parish House Oak street, Winnetka John Bengtson, pastor. Sunday school ........... 10 a.m Y. P. service, Swedish ........ 4:30 p.m. Evening service, English ........ S$ p.m. Wednesday Swedish service ......8 p.m Friday Prayer meeting .......... 8 p.m. "Serve the Lord with gladness: come be- fore his face with singing." ADDRESSES ENGINEERS W. O. Kurtz of 1229 Scott avenue will read a paper on "Communication" Monday at a joint meeting of the Chi- cago section of the American Institute of Electrical Engineers and the electric section of the Western Society of En- gineers which will be held next Mon- day in the new Engineering hall at 205 West Wacker drive. This paper will be part of a symposium on Chicago's public utilities which will be given by a number of speakers. There's a satisfaction in knowing that your comfortable old shoes can be rebuilt and made like new at the-- ANNEX SHOE REBUILDER 8 Carlton Bldg. Art League Plans First Meeting of Autumn Next Week The North Shore Art league will have its first autumn meeting Thurs- day evening, September 27, in the Camp Fire room at Community House, Winnetka. Carl Kraft of Oak Park, whois well known in art circles will be at this meeting and will criticize the work done during the summer by the members of the Art league, which they have been asked to bring with them that evening. Tickets for the series of lectures to be given by Dudley Crafts Watson of the Art Institute under the sponsor- ship of the league will be ready for the members at this meeting. These lectures, six in all, will be given in Matz hall, Community House, and will benefit the North Shore Art league studio fund. The dates and the subjects follow: October 15, Art and Life of Scandina- via; October 22, Greece in It's Suprem- acy; November 5, Art and Life of Northern Africa; November 19, Mod- ern Architecture; December 3, Art and Life of the Slavic Republics; Decem- ber 17, Art and Life of Spain. Famous Psychologist Is Here as Washburne Guest Dr. T. Simon, of Paris, famous French psychologist and co-author with Alfred Binet of the first intelligence tests, was due to arrive in Winnetka yesterday morning as a guest of Supt. Carleton Washburne, of the Winnetka Public schools. Dr. Simon has been in Quebec and Montreal, and Winnetka is his only stop in the United States. He is sched- uled to speak to the staff of the Insti- tute. of Juvenile Research in Chicago at noon today. Tomorrow evening Superintendent Washburne is giving a dinner for him in Chicago to be attended by leading psychologists from Northwestern uni- versity, the University of Chicago, and the University of Wisconsin, as well as hy the heads of the Institute of Juve- nile Research and the staff of the De- partment of Education Counsel in Win- netka. On Monday afternoon Dr. Simon will talk to the Winnetka Public school teachers at the Horace Mann school. Waukegan Wins as Jinx Follows Winnetka Team For five innings last Sunday it seemed that the local ball players would end the jinx that has been following them for the last three games, and turn in a victory. The end of this inning however, saw the undoing of George "Lefty" Mills who up to this juncture allowed but two hits. The tide turned out to be a tidal wave, and the locals were buried beneath a thirteen to two score, by the Waukegan K of L. Miss Florence Taylor, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. William G. Taylor, 508 Cherry street, left Sunday, September 16, for Ann Arbor, Mich., to begin her college course at the University of Michigan. Complete Beauty Service Marinello Guild Registered Shop | 733 Elm St., Winnetka | Phone 822 i I a,