Fm 48 WINNETKA WEEKLY TALK, SATURDAY, OCTOBER 1, 1921 5 AYER ELUATE RIOR AR ERROR EERIE ERR RRR WE FL lm ol Jocial Happenings ier i Winnetka.s Hubbard Woods. 3 . by RuthRisley = = iil | Rt is CT TT ween wee rl Err wan Tn Ion oud o Tana! ro -- "esas, Zr 0 M1 re frre TTC Fp) HEN MISS ELIZABETH PRINDIVILLE, danghter of @| Mr. and Mrs. James W. Prindiville, becomes the bride Bl of Robert S. Hotz, son of Mrs. Frederick T. Haskell, Sat- c urday, October 8, she will be attended by the bridegroom's sister, Miss Lila Hotz, as maid of honor. 'The bridesmaids will be Miss Isabel Watkins, who will be married to Alexander H. Revell Jr, October 22, Miss Catherine Rehm, Miss Emma Wyckoff of Buffalo, and Miss Virginia Hood of Minneapolis. The bride's little sister, Mary Ellen, will be flower girl, and her little cousins, Peter Prindiville, son of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas J. Prindiville of 229 Lake 'Shore drive, and Sheila Potter of New York, will be train-bearer. The bridegroom will have his step-father as best man, and ushering will be Mr. Revell, George Dunbaugh, William Horne Jr., North- am Whipple, and Tracy Buckingham. The wedding will take place at 4:30 o'clock in the afternoon at the residence of the bride's par- ents, and will be followed by a reception at 5 o'clock. Mr. Hotz has taken an apartment at 1342 North Dearborn street, Chicago, where he and his bride will live. An announcement of particular interest in North Shore and University circles is the engagement of Miss Ruth Moulding, daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. Thomas C. Moulding, of Wilmette, to Mr. Robert E. Wooden, of Evanston, son of Mr. and Mrs. C. R. Wooden of Centerville, Towa. The announcement was made at an Alpha Phi "cozy", given at the Moulding home on last Sat- urday afternoon. Miss Moulding was a member of the class of 1917 at Northwestern and her fiance was a member of the class of 1913 at Northwestern, and is a member of the Beta Theta Pi fra- ternity. & Mrs. Virginia E. Noe of 989 Ash street, announces the engage- ment of her daughter, Virginia Pocahontas, to Mr. James Turner MacMurchy, son of Mr. and Mrs. J. M. MacMurchy of Evanston. The engagement is announced of Miss Jean Alton, daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. Jesse B. Alton, 577 Cherry street, to Mr. Wel- lington Coolidge of Winnetka. The wedding will take place this winter. & b 4 On Tuesday, October 4, 1921, 8:30 P. M., at the residence of Mrs. Francis W. Parker, Jr., 656 Ardsley road, Win- | T netka, a musicale will be given for the benefit of the endowment fund of Simmons College, Boston, Mass. The hostesses will be Mrs. Francis W. Parker, Jr., Mrs. Willoughby 'Wallinf, and Mrs. Gayle Aiken. The program will consist of violin selections by Mrs. Norman Parker, of Evanston, accompanied by Mrs. Ev- erett Harris, and of vocal selections by Mrs. George E. Frazer, daughter of President Edmund James of the University of Illinois, accompanied by Mrs. William D. McAdams. Mrs. Norman Parker, who was Miss Natalie Patten, first studied violin under Lillian {Shattuck of Boston, Mass, - went to Berlin in 1910 with her sister, Miss Marjorie Patten, 'cellist, and studied there for four years, first un- der Willis Hess, in the Hoch Schule, later under Michael Press and Franz Wilcok, and with her sister studied ensemble under Anton Hopking. Mrs. Parker left Berlin just before the be- ginning of the war, and a Chremona violin, made by Storycni in 1785, which she purchased at that time, was to have followed her. This violin has just recently been obtained from Ger- many. mee 4 The wedding of Miss Lucile Esther Drake, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan C. Drake, to Ferdinand Leonard Larson, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Larson of Austin, will take place this evening at the home of the bride's parents in Wilmette. The ceremony, at eight o'clock, will be per- formed by the Rev. A. T. Stephanson of the Olivet Methodist church, an uncle of the bride. The bride, who will be given away by her father, will be attended by o of her sorority sisters, Miss Celeste Geherty, of Evanston, formerly of Winnetka, as maid of honor, and little Blanche Larson, a niece of the groom, will serve as flower girl. Mrs. Gevilla Colegrove Neukranz will play the wedding march, and Miss Edna Dav- ison will render two groups of songs, preceding and following the service. Mr. Fred Kusse of Chicago, who was with Mr. Larson a oreat deal of the time in France during the w will attend the bridegroom as best man. After a short wedding trip, Mr. Larson and his bride will make their homme at 373 Oak street, Glen Ellyn, Illinois. inten $3 oot Miss Madeleine McIlvaine, daugh- ter of Mr. and Mrs. William Brown McIlvaine of Hubbard Woods, return- ed early this week from Furope. ES, Mrs. Francis Peabody Butler will present her sister, Miss Margaret Hunter of Fargo, N. D,, at a reception given by Mr. Butler's mother, Mrs. Hermon B. Butler, at her residence in Hubbard Woods, Saturday, October 29, irom four to seven o'clock. The marriage of Miss Dorothy Brentano, daughter of Judge and Mrs. heodore Brentano, and Husted Mec- Cullough Meyer, son of Mr. and Mrs. Charles H. Meyer of the Shore Crest, took place at Fairwaye, on Indian Hill road, the residence of the bride's brother-in-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Frank J. Bersbach. The Rev. James Austin Richards read the ser- vice in the presence of the relatives and a few intimate friends in the house, after which supper was served in the garden. Mrs. John Canfield was matron of honor, and Miss Vir- ginia Wagner of New York, cousin of the bride, was maid of honor. Four little nieces of the bride--Joan, Helen, and Barbara Bersbach and Georgia Anderson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Randall Anderson of Bryn Mawr, Pa., were flower girls. Mr. Canfield acted as best man for Mr. Meyer. Mr. and Mrs. Meyer will spend the winter with her parents. SY Among the pre-nuptial affairs that will be given for Miss Prindiville, who was a debutante of last season, are a dinner party at the Saddle and Cycle club Monday, October 3. at which Mrs. Haskell will be hostess; a luncheon on Tuesday, October 4, given by Miss Watkins at her res- idence, 199 Lake Shore drive, Chica- go; a luncheon on Wednesday, Oct- ober 5, at which Mrs. A. I. Drum of Chicago will be hostess; a luncheon on Thursday, October 6, given by Miss Rehm at her residence for Miss Prin- diville and Miss Watkins, and the bridal dinner given by the bride's parents at their residence Thursday night, October 6. Mrs. John R. Montgomery of Hub- bard Woods is in the east, having ac- companied her daughter, Marion, who entered Wellesley College. Mrs. Montgomery met her elder daughter, Ellen, upon her arrival this week from Europe. Miss Montgomery spent the first year of her sojourn abroad in Paris and Rheims, working with the American Fund for French Wounded. The second year was passed in relief and educational work among the chil- dren of Albania, under direction of the Junior Red Cross. Before sailing for home, she spent two months in travel on the continent. Miss Montgomery will arrive home in Hubbard Woods the end of this week, leaving her mother for several weeks in New York. ---- Announcement has been made by Mr. and Mrs. Edward Bailey, 150 Linden avenue, of the marriage of their daughter, Harmon, to Ensign Carroll Lesley Tyler, U. S. N. The wedding took place on July 29, at the American Legation in Peking, China. Ensign and Mrs. Tyler will remain in China for the present, where he is stationed. They probably will come to the states some time during the early spring. Mrs. Tyler went to Shanghai several months ago to visit her brother, Lieut. Vaughan Bailey, U.S. N. ------ Mr. and Mrs. Benjamin C. Allen, with their daughters, the Misses Mar- jorie and Mildren Allen, left this week for New York. After spending a few days there, the Misses Allen will proceed to Dobbs Ferry, where Miss Mildren Allen will enter her first year. Mr. and Mrs. Allen will re- turn to their residence on Sheridan road the latter part of next week, and will move back into their town house the middle of October. 5 ---- The Woman's Society of the Con- gregational church will meet Wed- nesday, October 5, at 10:30 o'clock. Mrs. I. Harrison Mettler will give the reading. Luncheon will be served at 12:15, followed by an interesting program. All women of the communi- ty are invited The Society will be especially glad to meet newcomers. tf -- Mr. and Mrs. Lon C. Hill are being congratulated on the arrival of a baby boy, Wednesday, September 29, at the Evanston hospital. Mrs. Hill was Georgiana Owsley, daughter of the George Knox Owsleys whith whom she has been staying all summer. Mr. Hill came on early this month to join his family. ---- Mrs. Dwight T. Green of 797 Pine street, will entertain the Chicago Association of Kappa Kappa Gamma at a tea this afternoon in honor of the national grand president, Miss Sarah B. Harris, who will be married to Richard H. Roe some time this winter. ---- Mrs. C. T. Mordock and her daugh- ter, Katherine, of 645 Maple avenue, left Wednesday for the east, where Miss Mordocl: will enter Bryn Mawr college. JY Mr. F. F. Parsons, 518 Hawthorne lane, left Thursday for an extended business 'trip through Washington, Oregon and California. t | MISS DALGLEISH Announces the OPENING of the FALL DANCING CLASSES FOR CHILDREN at Winnetka Community House SATURDAY. OCTOBER 16 1.30: P.M. ool ode ob ode ode ob od oe ob ode oe ok ode ode cde ode oe ode obo ob oe oF oe of oe ob ob ob oo obo ob oF oe ol ol ole od ob of oe of oo op Be ER RRR RRR Bk ob Bok ddd dd ed BB Bo ooo oo oe ooo oo ooo oo eo FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST,GLENCOE, ILL Announces a lecture on Christian Science by John J. Flinn, C. S., of Evanston, Illinois Member of Board of L ctureship of the Mother Church, The First Church of Christ, Sc entist, Boston, Mass. at Masonic Hall Corner of Hazel and Vernon Avenues Glencoe, III. Friday Evening, October 7th, at 8 o'clceck The Public is cordially invited to attend LJ LJ Ld Ld Ld LJ Ld LJ LJ LJ Ld Ld LJ LJ Ld C3 LJ LJ Ld LJ LJ LJ LJ Ld LJ Ld LJ Ld LJ Ld + Ld LJ LJ Ld LJ Ld LJ Ld C3 EJ £3 LJ Ld Ll LJ Ll ES LJ 3 L L Fohoohdodohobobdob bb Rd bRbbbb Robb Robbed bbb bbb bbb ake Shore Terrace | WEEK DAY | 1 Here are two reasons that we are enjoying an excellent patronage. When the people find a place that they may get good food, served well, at fair prices--that place is popular. SUNDAY, OCTOBER 2, 1921 Menu 12-3 P. M. $1.25 Green Olives Celery Fruit Cocktail Puree of Split Peas Special Service Dinner, In- cluding Bread and Butter, Coffee or Tea, 65c per cover. MONDAY Roast Fresh Ham, Tot Roast, Potato Pancakes Sweet Potatoes or TUESDAY 5 "hick OULLEY Berkshire Ham Steak, Cider Halt Fried Sate en, C y Sauge Asparagus Tips Cream Sauce WEDNESDAY Bavarian Cabbage Waldorf Salad Vanilla Ice Cream or Lamb Chops, Grilled, Beech- nut- Bacon THURSDAY : Filet Mignon, a la Terrace Hot Apple Fie FRIDAY or Lake Trout Maitre d' Hotel Herkimer Country Cheese SATURDAY ' with Wafers Farm Sausage, Gastronome Tee or Coffee Chestnut Ave. and Sheridan Road. Phone Wilmette 2148-2293 Fred A. Miller, Prop. THE NORTH SHORE MONTESSORI SCHOOL For Children CONDUCTED BY MISS DOROTHY SEARS Will begin its Sixth year on Monday, October 3, 1921, in the Winnetka Woman's Club. . Hours 9 to 11:30 a. m. MISS GERTRUDE CUMMING, DIRECTRESS MRS. JOEL D. HUNTER, ASSISTANT For further information apply to Miss Cumming at the school between 10 and 11 a. m. eld ll LL LE LLL LLL ELL EE Er er Tr rT lll LL] Classes in BALLROOM AND AESTHETIC DANCING For Children MISS. FRANCES E. NORDBERG Winnetka Woman's Club Opening -- Thursday, October 6th and Friday, October 7th Phone -- Winnetka 851 and 1502 Possibility of Adult Class Opening at Later Date L777 7777777777770 772 Ed ddd LLL LLL LLL LLL LL LT TT dd ddd dd 2d 7 227 77 272 7 7 arr 7777777777 . A. M. CARY - Hemstitching, pleating, button covering, scollop embroidery- m ing, etc. Colors in hemstitching done in Hemingway's Pure m Silk Dyes. High-class work, quick service. Mail orders re- EH ceive prompt attention. No cheap material used. All kinds H of sewing machines repaired. " Open 8 a. m. to 6 p. m., closed Saturdays at 1 p. m. EH 1131 GREENLEAF AVENUE PHONE WILMETTE 2354 | Save time -- Mail your orders | CT a How Completely Are You Protected? The great increase in automobiles, with the even greater increase of loss by theft, etc., has caused insurance rates to go up and the degree of protection to go down. Lf Tf WENNS $ SMES CRE TMS SLEW DSi GS » NIC Sa sb eT Are you completely protected? 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