ous [=] WINNETKA TALK October 15, 1927 "2 I A Chosen Dining-Place of the Elect! . for breakfasts, luncheons, ban- quets, receptions. . . for every func- tion requiring faultless service and food choose THE GEORGIAN. THE GEORGIAN, with its exquisite appointments, offers the finest fa- cilities obtainable for successful entertaining. Dine here today! Ihe (georgian Davis at Hinman Evanston j / Make Reservations Now Telephone "Francis" Greenleaf 4100 Country Day School Board Names Three to Directors' Board The first meeting of the year of the Parents' association of the North Shore Country Day school was held last Monday evening. Lawrence Howe, the new president of the association, presided. At the meeting of the cor- poration preceding this session three new members were elected to the board of directors of the school. The new directors are: William B. Hale, Fugene M. Stevens, and Harry L. Wells. They are to serve for a term of three years and take the places of the three retiring members: H. Spauld- ing Coffin, Calvin Fentress, and Fred- erick H. Scott. The address of the evening was given by Headmaster Perry Dunlap Smith, who gave a general survey of the International Conference on New Education held at Locarno last sum- mer. Mr. Smith had been sent by the parents of the school to act as their representative at the conference and he reported that the other delegates at the conference were very much im- pressed with the fact that a Parents' association had sent their Headmaster. Mr. Smith's principal address at the conference was on the subject of Par- ents' Associations. This address aroused so much interest that he was asked to repeat it at a later session of the conference. His third address was on the subject of co-education. The three most vital problems up for discussion at the Locarno confer- ence were co-operation between the school and the parents, co-education, and the use of mental hygiene and psychiatry in school. The general keynote for the conference was given by Mrs. Beatrice Endsor, of E ngland, presiding at the first meeting, when she gave a definition of the true mean- ing of freedom of education. TRAVEL IN SIBERIA? SAY, IT'S JUST FINE (Continued from Page 13) the stations, I was certain to be hus tled aboard at the first stroke of the warning bell, and to be reminded in pantomime that I would be helpless if I were left behind, for I would find no one in the villages who understood English. I can't imagine more courte- ous, friendly, or good natured travel ing companions. "To comment intelligently on the poverty and misery noticeable in Mos- cow streets and Siberian villages, and to draw inferences therefrom as to the failure or success of the present gov- ernment in Russia, is impossible, un- less one had visited the country during the Romanoff regime and could com- pare present conditions with those of twenty years ago. Certainly I did not see the prosperity or general employ- ment which certain articles published in various newspapers and periodicals had led me to expect." Home Missions Leader to Speak Before Young People Rev. Lucian Marsh will be the speaker at the Young People's club tomorrow evening at 9:30 o'clock i the Winnetka Congregational church Mr. Marsh has had long and varied experience in the home mission fields of the central South and West and will tell some interesting stories about the work in which he has had a share Mr. Marsh is also addressing the Men's Bible class of the church at 9:30 Sunday morning. ENTERTAINS AT MUSICALE Mrs. Valona Brewer will entertain a number of friends at a musicale and tea Monday afternoon at her Chicago studio, 63 Bellevue place. REMODELING 566 Center St. R. E. CROSBY Contractor & Builder Building homes which are architec- turally correct and beautiful yet con- triving to make them cost no more | than structures called "Just Homes." Estimates and consultation cheerfully given and without obligation of any sort. REPAIR WORK R. E. CROSBY "Artistic Homes at the Same Price" WINNETKA INSULATION Ph. Winn. 2032 |