Illinois News Index

Winnetka Weekly Talk, 8 Dec 1928, p. 63

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62 WINNETKA TALK December 8, 1928 : : room. All young people of high school | December 22, at 7 o'clock in the Guild Kenilworth Union ge are welcome. room. Those of the Beginners' depart- Longmeadow Hunt -- ment will be held on the afternoon of the S Cl Church The Ladies' Guild meets Monday at 10 | Same day, at 3 o'clock. eason 0ses in Cenilw ; > 2 a wia | o'clock in the Guild room for work in Aon ora wp Aree g . .o Renillworth RYSRUS Sad W arwick road, | | rection with its regular program of Sous] gathering = the officers Nd W hirl of Activity Dr. Herbert L. Willett, minister | benevolence. Iede wig re aay, Micses I Th " a ies | " . dale, 42 Kenilworth avenue, "Thursday The Longmeadow hunting season of Sunday morning, December 9, at 11| Wednesday evening at 8 o'clock Dr. | evening, December 13. © | 1928 is gone, leaving memories of sev- o'clock, Dr Willett's subject will be, "The | Willett will give the regular lecture in - oral' fox-} ts 3 an 1 r. hard Church's Struggle for Unity." | the series on "Great Poets of the Ages." Dr. Willett's subject on Sunday morn- era X-hunts, and many long, h -- | The subject will be Sunday school at 9:45. Classes for all, | of the Divine Order." The last lecture and all welcome. A special installation | of the series will be given the evening of service for the officers and teachers of | December 19, on "Go the school will be held in connection with | Pantheism," a lecture Fennyson, the Poet | jo 'December 16, will be "On Being Religious." ethe, the Poet of : - : 3 that was omitted| Mrs. Fannie Cope, 535 Warwick the church service at 11. November 28. road, Kenilworth entertained eight The Young People's club meets at 6| The Christmas exercises of the Sunday guests for luncheon and bridge Tues- o'clock Sunday evening in the Guild' school will be held Saturday evening, | day, December 4. Where working together "18 everything IT1istheaim of the Bell System that anyoneanywherein thecountry can pick up a telephoneand talk toany- one anywhere else clearly and with- out delay. That is the meaning of universal service. To provide it, the means of telephoning must be uniformly good. This company, for example, has full access to all the improvements and methods that are continually being made. There are 5000 workers on the Bell staffs whose sole occupation ILLINOIS BELL is to develop constantly improving methods and equipment for the 350,000 employees of the Bell Sys- tem to use in serving the public. The results of the efforts are evi- dent, not only in .the extension of telephone service across the Atlan- tic, but in the constantly improv- ing local and long distance service at home. The Bell System accepts its re- sponsibility for a nation-wide tele- phone service as a public trust. TELEPHONE COMPANY BELL SYSTEM One Policy - OneSystem - Universal Service drag-hunts, which taxed hounds, horses, and riders to their utmost. But, although the endurance of horses and the skill of the riders were tested severely in many of the forty-five runs held this season, the year's record is creditable to a high degree to both. The Longmeadow Hunt has the simplest of hunt organizations, name- ly, the hunt is owned by the master and a few immediate friends and is supported entirely by voluntary sub- scriptions. All are welcome to ride and the field of riders is very democra- tic. Many farmers take a keen inter- est in the sport. Among north shore folk who ride regularly to hounds in the season or are interested in the sport as patrons or otherwise are the following: Martin Lindsay, Col. Albert E. Peirce, Ernest -S. Ballard, Donald F. McPherson, Mrs. Ernest S. Ballard, H. C. Alley, Peirce C. Ward, William G. Woolfolk, Ernest H. Hicks, Mrs. Donald F. McPherson, Francis P. But- ler, Mrs. Francis P. Butler, Henry Gardner, Arthur M. Cox, Walter F. Wallace, Harry E. Miller, Marshall Forrest, Mrs. W. A. Reid, Norman W. Harris, Mrs. Norman W. Harris, Vic- tor Elting, Dudley Cates, Miss Inez McKeown, Thomas J. McKearnan, Judge Clarence N. Goodwin, Godfrey H. Atkin, Mrs. William P. Sidley, H. A. deWindt, Mrs. Robert Laird, Har- old Zeiss, Lawrence Houghteling, John P. Hooker, Mrs. Arthur Cable, Ogden West, and Mrs. C. Colton Daughaday, Major R. B. Norheimer, C. Colton Daughaday is M, F. H,, John Hartnett, acting Huntsman, Tony Widmer, 1st Whip, and Crawford Duke, Kennelman. The plans for 1929 include spring hunting when weather permits, in- struction at Longmeadow Hunt club in jumping and in the customs and eti- quet of the hunting field, and regular runs throughout the late summer and fall season. Hunting in Winnetka was inaugurated in 1923, and since then has gained steadily in popularity among those local sportsmen and sportswomen who ride. Public Utility Regulation to Be Discussed at Forum The Kenilworth League of Women Voters announces through its columns the meeting offered by the Forum of the League of Women Voters on Sat- urday, December 8, in the Florentine room of the Congress hotel, at 2 o'clock. The meeting is to be held to ascertain the real facts about "Muscle Shoals," "Boulder Dam," "Electric - Power," "The Government in Busi- ness," and Canada's municipality owned hydro-project. Among the speakers are Donald Richberg, general counsel, National Conference on Valuation of Railroads, who will speak on, "The Importance of Public Utility Regulation to the Citizen," W. S. Vivian, Director of Public Relations, Midwest Utilities company, Chicago, "The Public's Util- ity's Stake in Electric Power," and Alvin Reis, member of Wisconsin's In- terim Commission on Ware Water Power, who will discuss, "The People's Stake in Electric Power." An informal reception will precede the meeting from 1:30 to 2:00 o'clock. The Norman MacLeish family re- cently moved to Winnetka from Phil- adelphia, and have taken up residence at 608 Elm srteet. Mr. MacLeish is the son of Mrs. Andrew MacLeish of Glencoe. NE Ava rr

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