12 WINNETKA TALK June 16, 1928 Mr. and Mrs. W. H. Smyth and their | children of 43 Kenilworth avenue are leaving today for their summer home at Portage Point, Mich. where they will remain until the middle of Sep- tember. Mrs. Arthur E. Ruf of 1320 Maple avenue entertained a number of guests at luncheon last Friday. Among those present was Miss Helen Freund, the popular young soprano who will be heard at Ravinia this season. until 8 o'clock Saturday evenings. 2nd MORTGAGE LOANS We make loans for repairs, improvements, construction, refinancing or purchase of improved residential property. in convenient monthly installments in 1, 2, or 3 years. sentative will be pleased to give complete information. WILSHORE BOND & MORTGAGE CO. 1150 Wilmette Ave., Village Theatre Bldg. These loans can be repaid Our repre- Office open Phone Wil, 2181 uy - - Coal Now! Prices are always lower now than in ~ the fall or winter. Order now and save money Wilmette Coal & Building Material Yard (formerly Meyer Coal & Bldg. Mtl. Co.) Phones--Wilmette 1210-1733 Mallinckrodt Gives Diplomas to Class of Thirty Graduates Thirty students received diplomas, graduating from the Mallinckrodt Catholic High school for Girls, Ridge road, Wilmette, last Wednesday after- noon. The commencement exercises were pretentious, the Rt. Rev. Ber- nard J. Sheil, D. D., Auxiliary Bishop of Chicago, presiding. The Monsig- nori and clergy of neighboring parishes attended. Miss Blanche Keil was awarded the honor medal for scholarship. The graduating class was composed of the following students: Dorthy S. Baker, Anna M. Braun, Min- nie M. Coglianese, Helen L. Dupre, Viv- ian M. English, Elizabeth C. Faetz, Dor- othy A. Freihage, Florence J. Fuchs- steiner, Emily A. Geimer, Elvira A. Ger- stenbrand, Irene S. Hoffman, June D. Hoffman, Leona J. Hoffman, Margaret K. Huerter, Blanche M. Keil, Betty M. Ludwig, Angela M. Meier, Gertrude E. Meyer, Gretchen A. Miller, Margaret C. Nanzig, Marion E. Neely, Gertrude M. Payne, Marion F. Quaney, Mary F. Rich- ards, Dorothy M. Schinler, Mary B. Sel- zer, Anna Marie Shea, Marguerite M. Steffens, Anna E. Stordeur and Mary S. Van de North. The commencement program was as follows : Processional--Military March of Athalia Mendelssohn The Mallinckrodt Orchestra Greetings Miss Elizabeth Faetz Chorus--Sing Praise to God, the Lord Franck The Mallinckrodt Choral Club Piano Solo--Prelude in C sharp Minor Rachmaninoff Miss Helen Dupre Thei Last. TORKen ................ Miss Margaret Huerter Piano: Miss Geraldine Weber Chorus--Snow Legend Clokey The Dance of the Pine Tree Fairies Forman The Mallinckrodt Glee Club Orchestra--Pompee Valsante .... Poldini Conferring of Diplomas and Honor Medal Address .. The Rt. Rev. B. J. Sheil, D.D. Recessional--Grand March Isenman The Mallinckrodt Orchestra LECTURES AT NORTHWESTERN Frederick E. Clerk, superintendent of the New Trier Township high school, will give a series of lectures on high school administration. and personnel work, at Northwestern university this summer. The lectures will be for graduate students in the school of edu- cation at the university. PLAY FOR DIRECTORS' CUP The second round of the directors' trophy tournament will be played at the North Shore Golf club this Satur- day. On Sunday a mixed two ball foursome and medal play will be the features. Miss Frances Oleson is at home in Kenilworth from the Hillside school in Connecticut. Name Evanston Showroom 1620 SHERMAN AVE. IS OUTSELL THIS TELLS PART OF THE STORY WHY UTOMATIC THE NOISELESS OIL BURNER ALL OTHER OIL Address Prev. Used Silent Dr. M. R. Broman, 2614 Park Pl, Evanston 3,800 Gal. 2,846 Gal. B. Crawl, 904 Colfax, Evanston 3,886 Gal. 2,692 Gal. L. Carrithers, 810 Lincoln, Evanston Coal $250.00 $242.15 Geo. T. Steen, 1406 Gregory, Wilmette 3,750 Gal. 1,947 Gal. J. L. Wilds, 244 Oxford, Kenilworth 3,000 Gal. 2,600 Gal. Arthur Bonnett, 157 Robsart, Kenilworth Says less than soft coal H. V. Mesick, 331 Essex, Kenilworth Coal $425.00 $225.00 F. W. Henkel, 635 Walden, Winnetka Coal $450.00 $375.00 John Rygel, 811 Foxdale, Winnetka Says coal more than oil G. A. Peterson, 722 Elm, Winnetka Says less than soft eoal Where coal was used no Janitor services were figured in or ash removal expenses. Send for additional list of users' names and letters. To use Oil in the form of Gas to accomplish the above savings you should consider nothing but SILENT AUTOMATIC BURNERS . GREENLEAF 700 GIVES LECTURE ON CHRISTIAN SCIENCE Editor's note: Following is an extract from a lecture on Christian Science given Sunday, June 10, in the First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Winnetka, by James G. Rowell, member of the Board of Lec- tureship of the Mother Church, the First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Mass. The Discoverer and Founder It was the earnest study of the heal- ing related in the Bible which led Mrs. Eddy to the discovery of the fact that true Christianity is scientific. It was her spiritual mindedness, her fi- delity, her love for mankind, and her perseverance in the face of almost in- surmountable difficulties that made possible not only the discovery, but the establishment of Christian Science. This knowledge of God's all-power and ever-presence had healed her of an injury resulting from an accident, declared by her physician to be fatal. She was convinced that this under- standing would free mankind {rom every enslaving shackle. She had al- ways been a faithful, earnest student of the Bible, but with her healing and the discovery that accompanied it, she delved into the Bible with increased interest and with a definite object in view. She wanted to know the Science of her healing. She longed to help free others from the bondage of sickness which many years of invalidism had taught her is slavery indeed. In due time she gained some meas- ure of the desired understanding and was soon explaining the truth she had discovered to those who would listen. Many would not even listen, and many of those who did listen counseled her to drop her investigations. Mrs. Eddy applied her new-found knowledge to cases of sickness and it healed others as it had healed her. The early years following the dis- covery of Christian Science tested Mrs. Eddy's practical love for God and man. Any day she could have dropped the effort to clothe her diseov- ery in exact and concrete terms. How easy it would have been to give up. She had been healed her- self; she had brought health and com- fort to many others; why not be satis- fied. How easy to have become dis- couraged by the ridicule, the rebuffs, the lies of those animated by hate, and to have accepted the advice prof- fered by well-meaning friends to leave the subject alone. But Mrs. Eddy was as one working under orders. She had had a glimpse of the loving, ever- present Christ, Truth, and this sus- tained and encouraged her as her dis- covery unfolded and finally found full expression in the Christian Science textbook, "Science and Health with Key to the Scriptures." Mrs. Eddy's statement of Christian Science is a final revelation of Truth. She has given this revelation to the world in such clear words and illus- trations that any earnest seeker can understand and prove its teachings. She has presented the fact of the all- ness of God, good, and the nothingness of evil. Nothing more can be said. Just as Jesus himself did, she has de- manded demonstration as proof of un- derstanding. All that has been written or spoken truly on the subject of Christian Sci- ence has been based on the statement of truth as found in Science and Health. All that can ever be truly said on this subject will but present to thought in other wgrds and illustra- tions the same truth that Mrs. Eddy has already expressed in perhaps a thousand ways in her textbook. Grati- tude wells up in our hearts; but let us not forget that our sincerity is proved only by our deeds.