WINNETKA WEEKLY TALK, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1921 Social Happenings Pei Mr. and Mrs. Carl E. Miller will give a reception on Monday after- noon, December 26, at their residence, 7 Indian Hill road, to introduce their daughter, Miss Virginia Miller. Miss Miller is attending Bryn Mawr college. . ---- Mrs. J. Allen Haines is leaving to- morrow for Boston, with her sister, Mrs. William P. Martin, for a short visit with her aunt and will then go to New York, returning in about two weeks. tits Mr. and Mrs. Lloyd F. Hollister who have been residing at 474 Chest- nut street, for the past year, moved into the Hanson house at 798 Cherry street, early this week. Ri Proceeds, as yet incomplete, from the piano fund benefit given last week at the Woman's club house, have reached the $350 mark, the total re- ceipts to date, being $338. py Mrs. William T. Fenton enter- tained at a tea-dance at the Drake for her debutante granddaughter, Miss Beatrice Fenton, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Howard W. Fenton, yesterday. ---- Mr. and Mrs. Forrest MacGibbon were hosts at their home, 738 Lincoln avenue, last Saturday evening to twelve guests from Chicago, at din- ner and cards. a ER Mr. and Mrs. James W. Harris, Jr., who formerly lived at 1055 Chat- field road, Hubbard Woods, are now residing at 6418 North Fairfield ave- nue, Rogers Park. The East Willow Street Circle will meet in the home of Mrs. Lewis C. Norton, 370 Walnut street, on Tues- day at two-thirty o'clock. Mrs. J. V. Stixrud will be the assisting hostess. LUPE The Pine Street Circle will meet Tuesday, November 8, at two-thirty o'clock, at the home of Mrs. James Keddie, 1004 Pine street. JR Mr. and Mrs. J. Allen Haines have closed their house at 854 Prospect avenue and are at the Ambassador for the winter. esi ces. The meeting of the Scott Avenue Circle with Mrs. William Moulton, 1161 Pine street, will be held Monday afternoon at 2:30 P. M. i Woman's Club | The Winnetka Woman's club met November 3, in the club rooms. Mrs. Gordon presided and made the fol- lowing announcements: The Drama Study class will meet next Monday at three o'clock. Mrs. Ernest Ballard will read a paper on the French theater. Miss Myra Reynolds of the Chicago university will give her sec- ond lecture on "The Theater in tthe 18th Century" next Thursday morning at 10:15 o'clock. The Music committee's next con- cert will be given on Wednesday, Nov- ember 16. Mrs. Norman Wadsworth Harris will give a piano recital. The Civic Study class changed its hour for meeting to 3:30 Wednesday afternoons. This class is decidedly worth while. They have now come to the study of our own state of Illi- nois. The subject of taxation will be taken up next week. A very gratifying sum was realized by the card party which was given last week for the benefit of the piano fund. Mrs. Walling announced the Garden club will meet at her home next Thursday. Miss Frances King will give a talk on "Color in Gardening." The annual roll call for the Red Cross has begun, and instead of mak- ing a house to house canvass, this year, representatives will be at the various meetings in the village to re- ceive subscriptions and annual mem- bership dues. Mrs. Porter announced the new or- ganization, The North Shore Theater Guild. Their object is to promote the drama and its best development. The | first performance will be given at the Woman's club on November 10 and 11. The play will be Edna Ferber's "Twelve Hundred a Year". Mrs. Foster, chairman of the Civics and Philanthropy department, then introduced Prof. McLoughlin of the University of Chicago, whose sub- ject was "The Disarmament Confer- ence". His address was replete with sound and fair minded logic. The speaker said: "The World needs breaking away from all shackles of Bourbon diplomacy. We must stop spending money: and human energy on armaments. You can do more by kindness than you can by force. The situation calls for Intelligence, Thought, Conscience and Good-Will. Great Britain and the other nations are looking to the United States for help in solving this great question." At the close of Professor McLough- lin's talks, Mrs. Ballard introduced the following resolution which was voted to be sent to our represenatives at Washington. "Whereas, the women of the Win- netka Woman's club believe that the success of the Conference at Wash- ington for the limitation of armament will depend in large measure on the pressure of the public opinion of the peoples of the nations involved and are further convinced that this public opinion should be based on accurate information and not on ignorance fed by rumor, therefore, be it Resolved: that the Winnetka Woman's club go on record--first, as being in favor of limitation of arm- ament, and second, in favor, that full publicity be given to the progress of the Conference in its various stages and, be it further ! Resolved, that the secretary be in- structed to write to our Represent- atives in the House and Senate and to the State Department at Washing- ton to that effect". The following women were hostess- es for the tea which followed the meeting, Mrs. Theodore Brown, Mrs. Harry Craig, Mrs. John Edgar Free- man, and Mrs. Vernon Welsh. Parent-Teacher Activities Under the auspices of the Winnet- ka Parent-Teacher association anoth- er step in our development of the public school was accomplished last week. Milk in the individual bottles, equipped with a straw is now being served in the morning to all who wish it, at a most moderate charge, owing to a most generous arrangement with the Bowman Dairy company. The first of the teachers' monthly dinners took place in Community House Wednesday evening of this week. Twenty teachers were pres- ent and it is hoped the affairs may prove so popular as to become a reg- ular monthly event. ARCANUM LODGE ANNOUNCES IMPORTANT SESSION MONDAY The next meeting of the Winnetka Council No. 10, Royal Arcanum, will be held Monday evening, November 7, in the local council's headquarters, Rooms 9, 10 and 11, Community House. The meeting is called for 8 o'clock and it is the special desire of the Regent that the meeting start promptly at that hour. Therefore all members are especially requested to make a point of being early that the business in hand may be disposed of with dispatch. Important matters are to come be- fore the meeting of vital interest to every member. A big delegation of visitors is expected from neighboring councils. J. F. Eckart and others will give a surprise. Subscribe For Your Local Paper | "NO INDUSTRIES" -- re URE | Relief and Aid Society Notes The annual meeting of the Win- netka Relief and Aid society was held October 10, in the Winnetka Public Library. The minutes of the last annual meeting were read and approved. Mrs. Victor Elting, pres- ident, in her report, spoke of the great amount of good accomplished generally during the year. After the secretary's report the re- port of the treasurer, Mrs. Henry Gardner, was read. The total re- ceipts for the year were $3,713.68 and the total disbursements $3,700.39. Miss GCarretson, visiting nurse, gave a very interesting report of the year's work, her many visits to fam- ilies, calls to patients, her hours spent on the physical examinations of our public school children, children's den- tal work, attention to the weighing of babies at her office in Community House. Mrs. de Windt, chairman of the Visiting Nurse committee, spoke most | enthusiastically of Miss Garretson's' work. Mrs. Odea, chairman of the Finance committee, reported an in- crease in the appropriation by the Village Council for our organization, and that the response to the Novem- ber, 1920, appeal was not enough, so that in April reminders were sent to those who had not subscribed. Mrs. Otis, chairman of the Housing com- mittee, reported that due to the very fine work of our Village Council, con- ditions were most satisfactory. Mrs. Stein, chairman of the Used Clothes committee, reported a profit of $546.26 on the sale of used clothing donated by the people of Winnetka. Miss Kate Dwyer's assistance in the good work of this department is greatly appre- ciated. After the election of officers and directors for the ensuing year the meeting was adjourned. SAYS HUBBARD WOODS (continued from page one) opinion was expressed relative to the proposed establishment of an in- dustrial area west of the village, but the speakers agreed on thz principle points of discussion. About 100 Hubbard Woods property owners attended the meeting which taxed the capacity of the "council rooms. The Zoning commission an- nounced before the session adjcurn- ed, that no definite decision on the questions raised would be made at present, but promised that every question would be given careful con- sideration. Property owners in the Indian Hill section of the village will be heard at a meeting in the Village Hall, Wed- nesday evening, November 9. Tonight DOUG McLEAN "PASSING THROUGH" FOUNTAIN SQUARE EVANSTON Continuous Performance 1:30. to 11 p. m. Telephone Evanston 3030 I. TEACHER, Mgr. We Can't Show All the Pictures, But the Ones We Do Show Are the Best SIR THEATR Monday, Tuesday, Wednes- day, Thursday NAZIMOVA m CAMILE Adapted by June Mathis from the Dumas Master- piece Added Monday and Tuesday Larry Semon Comedy "THE STAGE HAND" Added Wednesday Harold Lloyd Comedy Friday--LON CHANEY in "THE PENALTY" Added--Good 2 Reel Com- _edy and "International ~~ News" COMING ELSIE FERGUSON mn "FOOTLIGHTS" WM. S. HART in "THREE WORD BRAND" WM. H. BRADY'S "LIFE" South Water Fruit Market "BUY HERE AND SAVE MONEY" 561 Lincoln Ave. WINNETKA, ILLINOIS Phone Win. 392 You can always save something by trading here; while prices are low, quality is the highest. SPECIALS Sweet Potatoes Alligator Pears Artichokes Potatoes 6 Ibs. 25¢c 25¢ each 10c each 39¢ pk. Fresh Mushrooms ................... 59c Ib. Dromedary Dates .................. 25¢ pkg. Fresh Lettuce ............ 5c, 10c, 15c head Fresh Honéy ...................... 40c comb Home Grown Celery .............. gschunch Lemons... ..... ......c.cvrvaeens 35¢ doz. Catliflower: 0)... iiss odd oid 20c each Casaba and Honey Dew Melons ...Low Price Eee Plant... 0... 5h oa nidh oii 20c and up Wax and Green Beans .............. 10c qt. Yellow Turnips Cooking Apples Beets and Carrots .......... c.ivines.: 5c Ib. Fancy Baskets, select fruit ...... $3.50 and up Grape Fruit ....3 for 25c; large size, 2 for 25¢ Bananas ....... 0. co. eins 30c and up Florida Oranges ................ 48c, 58¢ doz. California Blue Goose Oranges 38c, 49c, 59¢ dz. PR 6 for 25c Jonathan Apples California Pears California Sweet Grapes BUY HERE and SAVE MONEY ORDERS OVER $2.00 DELIVERED FREE 0 Sti od HABERDASHER IS THE RIGHT MONTH TO REPLENISH YOUR DRAWER OF SHIRTS. WE SPECIALIZE IN SHIRTS RUNNING IN PRICE FROM $3.00 Everyone has that spe- cial drawer, and this is the time of year when the hard wear, and ma- ny launderings of sum- mer seem to begin to show the most in the shirts. You will find every kind of a shirt in our | stock -- except a poor one. Imported English Mad- ras -- made to resist wear -- to make the ut- most possible trips to the Laundry. Soft Silks -- Crepe -- pussy - willow -- from the least expensive fi- bre to the finest grade of corded reps. Collar attached shirts in plain white--pongee color and others, just as popular now as ever. Domestic Madras and other weaves, everyone a woven shirt -- and with fast colors and patterns. 2o paAYS STREET ABERDASHER