on rR a | WINNETKA TALK November 12, 1927 Shop and Save at the WINNETKA GROCERY Fruits and Vegetables a Specialty 574 Lincoln Ave. Ph. Winn. 876-77 Not alone good food, but prices so reasonable it hardly seems possible. Look over these items. ...but better still, visit our store and see other excellent values that are not advertised. FLORIDA GRAPE FRUIT, sweet and full of ¢ juice. 1 dozen, 35¢; 3 dozen for .......... 1 Spinach, fresh 5 per peck. ...... 3 C Beans, green and 5 wax per qt. ... 1 C Egg Plant, Large 5 each ci..sitiven 2 C Asparagus, fresh 5 per bunch ..... 1 c Brussel Sprouts, perbox ........ 30c Cauliflower, white, 5 per head, 20c es C Tomatoes, ripe, 5 per Ibs. evs on 1 C Celery, Kalama- zoo, per bunch. I! C Artichokes, large, fresh, each .... 1 C Potatoes, Red Ohio's, per pk.. 39c Lettuce, solid heads, each 10¢c od 5¢ Oranges, Florida's, per doz. <.:. ~. 35¢ Honey Dew Melons, ripe and sweet, BARCH = ovoid os 35¢ Jonathan Apples, 31%. ene 25¢ Cooking Apples, 3ibs. cou 25¢ Blue Grapes, per basket ..... 25¢ Lemons, very juicy, per doz... 49¢ Plums, free stone basket .....v 25¢ Bartlett Pears, basket ... uri 39¢ New Walnuts, perth sl, 39¢ Alligator Pears, large, each .... T5¢ Russett Pears Eforcs iiien 25¢ Five FREE Deliveries Daily Free Deliveries Nl e SIO] VANRINIC sConates~TelWin.344 Large Number of N. S. Women Try for Hockey Teams A number of north shore women played in the hockey tournament held at Lincoln Park November 5, trying out for the All-Chicago teams, which will be chosen November 19 to partici- pate in a mid-west hockey tournament at Northwestern stadium November 25 and 26. The list of north shore players included Mrs. Henry Tenney of Win- netka, Miss Bernice Bulley of Kenil- worth, Mrs. Hallett Thorne of Win- netka, Miss Elizabeth Lamson of Win- netka, Miss Peggy Waidner of Hub- bard Woods, Miss Virginia Wallace of Winnetka, Miss Marian Montgomery of Winnetka, Miss Peg Harding of Evanston, and Mrs. Lewis Taylor of Winnetka. The Winnetka White team will play the Wetomachek White team for the championship of the city this morning at ten o'clock at Washington Park. After the game, further trials for the All-Chicago teams will be held. This will be the second mid-west tournament to be held in Chicago, and teams will participate in it from Madi- son, Urbana, Milwaukee, St. Louis, and Battle Creek. Last year a mid- west team was chosen to go to the National tournament at Baltimore, Md., and from that team two Chicago players were chosen for the All-Amer- ican teams. Mrs. Taylor of Winnetka was chosen for goal, and Miss Waid- ner of Hubbard Woods was a wing on the reserve team. Mrs. Taylor and Miss Waidner are again trying for the Chicago team and with many others will hope to compete in the mid-west tournament. The National tournament this year will be played at St. Louis on the first week in Decem- ber. Teams from the north-east and south-east will compete with the mid- west. Mrs. Henry F. Tenney of Winnetka is chairman of the selection committee now considering the All-Chicago teams. Tickets for the tournament may be obtained from any player on the team and also at Adams' drug store. Flowers for Thanksgiving A very important part of Thanksgiving festivities is some- thing to please the eye in home decorations. As florists we can supply this need in cut flowers such as roses and chrysanthemums as well as in choice potted plants. Leave with us your order for floral and plant decorations early and we will deliver them on time. Henry Ilg Florist Flowers by Telegraph CENTER ST. AT PINE TEL. WINNETKA 313 Him MORE PARENTS TO GO TO SCHOOL THURSDAY Fathers and Mothers of Seniors and Juniors at New Trier to Attend Classes Parents of senior and junior students at New Trier High school will attend classroom sessions Thursday afternoon and evening, November 17, to obtain first-hand knowledge of the accus- tomed schoolday procedure, Classes will open at 2 o'clock and continue until 9 o'clock in the evening, with supper served in the school mess hall. At the close of the classroom sessions the parents will be addressed by Supt. Frederick E. Clerk in the Assembly room. These meetings--one for parents of freshmen and sophomore students hav- ing been held a week ago--have proved remarkably successful. They are sponsored by the Parent-Teacher as- sociation of the high school and never fail to bring a large attendance of in- terested fathers and mothers. Clerk to Give Talk Superintendent Clerk, in his talk in the Assembly room, will discuss the problems relating to the adjustment of the high school course to meet college and business requirements, The recent sophomore-freshmen par- ents' meeting recorded attendance of more than eighty percent of the fam- ilies represented. There were, in ad- dition to students, 790 parents at the supper served on that occasion. "Such attendance, at relatively in- convenient hours," said Superinten- dent Clerk in commenting on this highly successful meeting, "certainly speaks well for the interest in education on the part of the people of the com- munity." P. T. A. Officers Officers of the New Trier Parent- Teacher assocfation, which sponsors these parents' meetings are as follows: Allen E. Philbrick, president; Mrs. E. Lannen, vice-president; F. G. Kane, secretary and freshmen chair- man; Mrs, J. M. Sheldon, senior chair- man ; Mrs. Burt A. Crowe, junior chair- man, and Mrs. W. R. English, sopho- more chairman. North Shore Men to Attend State Municipal Parley North shore villages will be well represented at the fourteenth annual convention of the Illinois Municipal league, at Peoria, November 17 and 18. The convention will be held at the Pere Marquette hotel. There are 367 member municipalities in the league. Wilmette will be represented by Village Manager C. C. Schultz. Village Manager H. L. Woolhiser and Village Attorney Frederick Dick- inson are going from Winnetka. Winfred D. Gerber, president of the Village board of Glencoe and Village Manager George R. Young, and per- haps other members of the board will attend from Glencoe. At the Friday morning session Mr. Dickinson will speak on "Low Grade Gas at High Grade Rates." There will be an address Thursday afternoon by State Senator Arthur A. Huebsch, former president of the Vil- lage board at Brookfield, and on Thursday evening the convention will have the privilege of hearing A. R. Hatton, professor of muncipal govern- ment at Northwestern university and a former alderman in the Cleveland city council. United States Senator Charles S. Deneen will also be one of the speak- ers at the Thursday sessions.