3 ! i : i i N WINNETKA TALK September 8, 1928 4 i Ethel Lathrop Naricy Director of Highland Park Music School and Associates announce the re-opening of the MUSIC STUDIO AT 585 LINCOLN AVENUE, WINNETKA on Monday, September 10th Early enrollment is advised in order that suitable time may be reserved For Information i TELEPHONE WINNETKA 1852 oR HIGHLAND PARK 1138 N re. - x --- 7 B) = 5 -- __ € _--_--_----_--_------ L nn MARIAN KEENEY Former member of Ravinia Opera Ballet under Ruth Page and pupil of: Adolph Bolm of Imperial Russian Ballet--Alexandra Maximova--Edna McRae--Ernest Belcher--The Denishawn School. Announces the re-opening of her School of the Dance FUNDAMENTAL INSTRUCTION IN THE ART OF DANCING CLASSICAL -- CHARACTER INTERPRETATIVE -- TOE Special Instruction for Wee Folk--Women's Classes in Rhythmic Exercises and Body Culture. Special Class in Tap (clog). ON OCTOBER 6, 1928 Winnetka Women's Club -- Winnetka Community House REGISTRATION--Winnetka Community House SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 15TH, 11:00 A. M. to 1:00 P. M. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 29TH, 11:00 A.M. to 1:00 P. M. STUDIOS: For information phone Winnetka 1698 or Winnetka 1998 or address 523 Hawthorne Lane, Winnetka. ig HACIENDA DE LOS CERROS - SANTE FE SEPTEMBER Month of Golden Sunshine In the High New Mexico Rockies The July and August rains are over and hardly a drop should fall this month. Streams will be low and clear; trout ravenous for the well-cast fly. Dove season is in full swing with thousands of these speedy birds gathering in the bottom lands. The bridle paths are firm and dry, the aspens up along them just beginning to turn. The breath of purple sage is spicy on the gentle breezes. The sun is bright and even strong at midday. Nights are crisp enough for open fires and sets of blankets. Crimson chili hangs drying from adobe walls in Indian pueblos. September in New Mexico is the finest month of alll---And Los Cerros waits with all the comforts of a modern ranch resort to make your stay perfection. May we send a booklet? At The Mouth Of Santa Fe Canyon NEW MEXICO GIVES LECTURE ON CHRISTIAN SCIENCE Editor's Note: Following is an ex- tract from a lecture on Christian Sci- ence given at the Winnetka Masonic temple under auspices of the First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Win- netka, Friday evening, September 7, by Richard J. Davis, C. S., of Chicago, a member of the Board of Lecture- ship of The Mother Church. The First Church of Christ, Scientist, in Boston, Mass. The subject was, "Christian Science: A Reasonable and Practical Religion." No Law of Incurability For the encouragement of humanity, Christian Science declares that there is no condition, however serious, in which a man may find himself, where God and His love is not instantaneous- ly available to help and deliver him; no problem, however intricate and per- plexing, that infinite Mind cannot solve. Founded on a simple platform, --the allness and omnipotence of God, --it declares that there is no evil con- dition, no false belief or incorrect thinking that can stand before the one God. Christian Science has come to destroy the belief and break the spuri- ous law of incurability. There is no law of incurability, no incurable dis- ease. Do you question this? Do you doubt this statement? Reflect, for a moment, where acceptance of such a condition or belief leads us. To the unescapable conclusion that there is a condition in creation--an incurable disease--that can defy the Almighty; that we have in disease a reality, eter- nal and indestructible as God, and that God is helpless to prevent and destroy it. Impossible! Hear the word of Isaiah: "Fear thou not; for I am with thee: be not dis- mayed; for I am thy God: I will strengthen thee; yea, I will help thee; There's a satisfaction in knowing that your comfortable old shoes ean be rebuilt and made like new at the-- ANNEX SHOE REBUILDER 8 Carlton Bldg. yea, I will uphold thee with the right hand of my righteousness . . . I will bring the blind by a way that they knew not; I will lead them in paths that they have not known: I will make darkness light before them, and crooked things straight. These things will I do unto them, and not forsake them." The Healing of Jesus Remember that when you invoke the power of God to heal you are invok- ing omnipotence, all the power there is. Should it be expected to heal? Certainly. And you are thinking as did Jesus when you know that your prayer, because it has its origin in God, is the very presence of Immanuel, or God with us; that beihg the power of God, it does not return unto itself void but prospers in the thing where- unto God sends it. Jesus never claimed that he himself, the human man, healed the sick. He always said: "I speak not of myself: but the Father that dwelleth in me, he doeth the works." The power in all true spiritual healing is divine. It is God alone who heals. No real Christian Science practitioner would ever take unto himself the power to heal. It is not some personal power possessed by a human being. On the contrary, true practitioners are for- ever turning the thought of those who come to them for help away from per- sonality to divine Principle, in order that the seeker for Truth and healing may see that God alone is the strong deliverer. The Christ Understanding We are asked to-day, How is it that people are healed in Christian Science and what is the power back of these healings? This, my friends, is the same question that was put to Jesus cen- turies ago, and the answer is still the same. It was the Christ, or spiritual and exact understanding of God, of Truth, Life, and Love, reflected by the Master, which did the work, and it is that same spiritual, scientific knowledge of God and man, reflected in measure by students of Christian Science to- day, which is manifested in multitudes of healed and regenerated men and women. IN WINNETKA AGAIN Mrs. John H. Cleary of 826 Lincoln avenue, is home after a season spent at her summer home in northern Michigan and a trip east the latter part of the summer. Mrs. Cleary and her son-in-law and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Roach and family, who spent the summer at the Cleary sum- mer home, motored through Canada and to Cleveland where Mrs. Cleary left with her granddaughter, Lorraine Roach, on an eastern trip. Miss Jenny Boomer, sister of Mrs. John IL. Hamilton of 412 Walnut street, returned on Friday of last week from Europe where she spent the sum- meg touring England, Belgium, France, Germany, Italy, and Switzerland. to the final painting. FURNITURE--of all descriptions CABINET WORK 897 Linden Ave. --Upholstering-- Our service includes everything from cabinet work UPHOLSTERING--AIl Kinds of Furniture MATTRESSES--SLIP COVERS Repaired--Renovated--Made to Order ANTIQUES--INTERIOR FURNISHINGS HusBaArD Woops UpHOLSTERY Co. Mes. R. Halun HUBBARD WOODS made to order Ph. Winn. 3014 it UE NSS BE oC se NON SIRI Se shen A