anh i! i % a8 = £¥ 36 WINNETKA TALK December 15, 1928 Elect R. W. Hayden 1929 President of Northwestern Links Ralph W. Hayden of 2327 McDaniel avenue, Evanston, is the new president of the Northwestern Golf club elected at the annual fall banquet Thursday at the Nroth Shore hotel. He succeeds Harry Bachman of Wilmette who has been associated with the course ever since its start, when he was the orig- inal architect. The other new officers are: Vice President M. L. Lane of Rogers Park, "The difference is in the ingredients" SIGNE CARLSON QUALITY HOME BAKERY Mrs. E. O. Ivarson, Ma who has been chairman of the sports and pastimes committee during the past year; secretary--George M. Hub- bard of Evanston who was reelected, and treasurer, Harry Bachman of Wil- mette. These will compose the board of directors with the chairman of the various committees who will be ap- pointed by the president in the next few weeks. Trophies to the winners of the major events of the past season were pre- sented at the banquet by Mr. Bach- man. Joseph I. Morrison was given the club championship which he will hold for a year and a gold medal watch fob. The runner-up for the championship, J. P. Strasser, was pre- sented with a silver watch fob. The cup for the women's champion- ship went to Mrs. Josephine Krudwig, and Herbert J. Frank received the president's trophy, a big cup to hold for the year and also a permanent trophy. Mr. Quick, the runnerup, was Near Fountain Square and the "L" Station 1577 MAPLE AVENUE Just South of Davis TO SERVE OUR MANY NORTH SHORE PATRONS Don't suffer with cough or bronchitis when E. O. C. cough syrup is guaranteed to relieve coughs of long standing. Pre- vents pneumonia. For sale by all good drug stores. given a merchandise certificate. M. F. Lane was the winner of a special trophy given by Commissioner Oscar Smith of Wilmette. Further development of the North- western course, which has land enough to offer varied possibilities, is expected for next season and the few years to come. The course has been considered as a site for the national public links tournament, and a possi- bility that it may be awarded that event in 1930 is reported by Mr. Bach- man. What the county proposes to do to develop the course will be fur- ther told in the spring. More club memberships will be ac- cepted next season since action has been taken not to close the lists at 75 as in the past year, but to make the limit 100, NEW COUNCIL OFFICE The office of the North Shore scout council will move within the next couple of weeks to a larger office on the third floor of the new addition to the Masonic temple. The entrance is at 21 N. Sheridan road, Highland Park. One feature of the new office will be additional space for the display of Scouting ideas. (CHICKEN dinners used to be largely dependent on luck. One never was certain whether a chicken was good, bad or indifferent until it reached the table. not what it should be. Phone your market now and ask for Sedalia Chickens Sedalia ~-Down in Ole Missouri Often what was otherwise a fine dinner has been ruined when it developed that the chicken was tough, or the flavor was Ford Delicious-- Always FORD SEDALIA CHICKENS have now removed that element of chance. Buttermilk-feeding to pro- duce tenderness and flavor, immedi- ate full-dressing and hard-chilling to preserve that tenderness and flavor --these Ford Sedalia features have brought to North Shore housewives chicken that is uniformly fine, that can be depended upon always. AVAILABLE AT THESE LOCAL MARKETS J. W. SCHLOESSER & CO. 402 Linden Ave., Wilmette A. S. VAN DEUSEN 1154 Central Ave., Wilmette LINDEN MEAT MARKET 409 Linden Ave., Wilmette NATIONAL MARKET 802 Elm St., Winnetka KENILWORTH MARKET 411 Richmond Rd., Kenilworth J. W. SCHLOESSER & CO. 718 Elm St., Winnetka DEAN & BROWN 91034 Linden Ave., Hubbard Woods PETERS MARKET 734 Elm St., Winnetka W. J. SCHNEIDER 346 Park Ave., Glencoe GLENCOE GROCERY & MARKET 313 Park Ave., Glencoe Democracy Failure? Dr. Durant Replies in the Affirmative By P. B. K. Will Durant, author of one of the "best sellers," The Story of Philosophy, gave an exceedingly interesting ad- dress, Friday evening, December 7, on a subject of vital importance to north shore citizens, Is Democracy a Failure? His answer was a decided Yes. He spoke under auspices of the Winnetka League of Women Voters. Dr. Durant's conclusion was, how- ever, not the result of indigestion nor of a gloomy outlook on life in the United States but on the contrary the result of the accumulating of a multi- tude of facts, a painstaking examin- ation of these same facts, and finally, a cautious generalizing. Dr. Durant gave an address that was in the true sense of the words both interesting and edifying. He called at- tention to the nature of the American republic years ago when there was little division of labor, when each family was almost entirely independent a thing as a real individual. He then went on to point out that because of increase in population and increase in national territory, direct participation in government was no longer possible. Political machines had taken the plage of individual American citizen, and state and municipal elections had for the most part become corrupt. He saw no prospect of improvement unless office holders were given as thorough an education in their chosen vocations as doctors were given in theirs. He declared that the great American fallacy lay in the belief of the average citizen that he was fit to hold any administrative position to which he might be elected. In clos- ing, Dr. Durant again emphasized his conviction that the only way to save democracy was by thorough education of our legislators and executives. Mrs. Hugh Foresman, 515 Essex road, Kenilworth entertained her bridge club at luncheon last Wednesday. TMilroy's Radio Colum Guess SANTA ill B9ks 3 Wyle Pani "RADIO for Christmas means entertainment thru the years, EVERYTHING FOR. THE MUSICAL HOME MILROY MUSIC Co 569 LINCOLN AVENUE WINNETKA OPEN EVENINGS PHONE 2129