WINNETK A TALK April 24, 1926 TO PLAY IN CALIFORNIA Miss Phyllis Eileen Barry, 211 Maple Hill road, Glencoe, is closing | a very successful season with a spe- cial series of concerts to be given in California. Miss Barry leaves Mon- day to be gone four or five weeks. = Shampooing, Potter and Van Duzer, Baker, | Paddy Driscoll and a host of others have shone brilliantly in football at Northwestern university. Also re- member that Walter Dill Scott played football with the Purple in the early nineties. He is now prexy and the 'most loyal of them all. BOYS, YOU CANT GO WRONG ON THIS TRIP! (Continued from page 1) kings in the great hall of which was signed the peace treaty ending the World War. One should see the Grand emma anEnnasnnaanannans | Trianon, the Petit Trianon, the Dairy 1 Farm and the magnificent grounds | fronting the palace. A trip over the battlefields of | | France is intensely interesting. Much | of the wreckage has been repaired, yet Beauty Culture Maria Lagerquist, Prop. 794 Elm Street, 2nd Floor, Franklin Bldg. Permanent Waving--W ater Waving Marcelling--Scalp Treatments Hair Dyeing--T inting-- Bleaching Facials--M anicure--Swedish M assage For Appointment Phone Winnetka 762 Hand Dried City on June 30 on President Roosevelt, returning to New York August 1. While abroad the boys will see the sights of interest in each of the countries visited. An extensive motor trip through the Shakespearean country will be one feature of |] ] ] 1 » He . 1 i ' 1 ] i 1 : velt and the Romagne Cemetery in 1] N ] 1 * ] W ] ] ] 1 ' 1 1 g 1 | visit to England. | there is still abundant evidence of that terrific struggle. Great sections where the fighting was most fierce still re- main as they were on Armistice Day, softened somewhat by the hand of time. A visit to the bridge at Chateau Thierry, the grave of Quentin Roose- the Argonne will never be forgotten. Sail on June 30 The party will sail from New York the steamship the Shoes of Quality for the Whole Family = BLOMDAHL & SUNDMARK 805 Elm Street Winnetka 1108 Call and Delivery Service The best of all Desserts--Bernitt's Ice Cream There's no dessert that's half so welcome as Bernitt's Ice Cream. For years it has been the favorite dish at parties and banquets, beloved by all, young and old. To please all present, order Mrs. Bernitt's Ice Cream for your next social occasion. All Orders Packed in Ice and Delivered at Your Door Mrs. 992 Linden Ave. Hubbard Woods Winnetka 2512 University 2052 To insure prompt delivery on Sunday phone your order early! Bernitt's Ice Cream Kitchen 1330 Sherman Ave. Evanston DR. GLENN FRANK IS SUNDAY CLUB SPEAKER President of University of Wis- consin is Final Speaker of Current Year Dr. Glenn Frank, noted orator, author, educator and president of the University of Wisconsin will address the Wilmette Sunday Evening club Sunday evening, April 25, on "The Spiritual Quest of a Restless Genera- tion." Dr. Frank is a graduate of North- western university. He became editor of The Century Magazine in 1921, which position he held until 1925, when he accepted the presidency of the Uni- versity of Wisconsin. He has lectured in the United States and Canada since 1912, was a member of a group headed by Ex-President William Howard Taft that drafted a covenant for the League of Nations which was considered by the Peace Conference at Paris, 1918-1919; is a member of the American Socio- logical society, American Economic as- sociation and the League to Enforce Peace. Among the books he has writ- ten are: "The Politics of Industry," and various studies in the Century Maga- zine. He was part author in "The Stakes of the War," "The League of Nations--The Principle and the Prac- tice." The Chicago Daily News carries daily a syndicated news article, "Un- conventional Views of Life," by his pen. A special musical program will be given this Sunday by Porter H. Heaps, organist, Paul Beekhelm, pianist, and Miss Anna Nyberg, violinist. The 1925- 1926 season of the Wilmette Sunday Evening club ends with this coming evening. Last Sunday night the Nominating committee appointed to select a Gener- al committee for the next year was as follows: G. T. Hellmuth, R. B. Swigart, George Turner, J. R. Harper, and Stacey Bennett. Evanston Famed as Home of the Drama League of America Since the Drama League of America was started in Evanston fifteen years ago, the eyes of the nation have beer on the city as the center of the drama study movement. The League was the outgrowth of the work of a little group of Evanston women who had been meeting for 15 years informally to study the drama. It was founded April 25, 1910. The League has branches all over the United States. Evanston still has its Drama club with a membership of several hundred women which brings the foremost peo- ple of the country connected witl: things dramatic and things literary as speakers to their meetings, and which, with the School of Speech of North- western university, fosters a "Town and Gown" movement that supports play- writing classes, a playshop where these plays are produced, and a Children's theater, and is working towards a Lit- tle Theater for the city. The North Shore Theater Guild play- ers, known widely for their excellence of semi-professional dramatic produc- tion, include a number from Evanston and the association supporting it has large local membership. These are but few of the organized dramatic activities of the community which are as numerous and varied as those of any other community of the country. The first life-saving station on the north shore was organized at and by Northwestern university. Its history will thrill you with stories of heroism in which Northwestern students took leading parts. _, pil \ eS ee! im EE ta