Winnetka-Northfield Public Library District

Winnetka Weekly Talk, 17 Mar 1928, p. 16

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14: WINNETKA TALK March 17, 1928 SR P. E. Gamron Establishes B ¢ y Sori Credit Manager Service efore : Gia Li Paul E. Gamron, for two years credit our pring Cleaning Jannger with the Chicago Herald and --Your furniture should be looked over before Examiner and for one year suiployed you start your spring cleaning. There are 4 - blishi Sap y me De Pow many articles that are probably scratched and a hii SH hg at 1215 oo worn and in need of immediate attention. i Wilmette, and has established it manager service for north Phone us--let us know your needs, and we'll Re have the pieces back to you when your house- shote, concerns, ste s cleaning iticompleted: The new company specializes in credit management for business of i : types, taking the accounts from H Grade Uphol i i i i i a : Re ies vig Hg Tod nd iy 0 Ba me Raia the tune they are first due and Supers and Repaired. Slip Covers Made to Order. = : vising their collection. They act in : : the same capacity and assume the same duties that a credit manager 3 UBBARD 00DS UPHOLSTERY Co within the company would have. In : A ° addition to his experience with the two Mrs. R. Halun companies mentioned, Mr. Gamron : y has had considerable experience with 397 Linden Ave. HUBBARD WOODS Ph. Winn. 3014 Chicago Collection agencies. Ng = = | Mrs. F. K. Copeland of 665 Prospect Tn Se . : = = EL | avenue has returned home after spend- ad ' ; . ing a month in Tryon, N. C., with her ; ; - . cousin, Miss Eva Woodruff. : ( ) ) 8 3 u 1 t B Miss Louise Wagner, daughter of I P S an Cc wx | Mr. and Mrs. Fritz Wagner, Jr, of hh : 384 Hawthorne lane, has been ill at bekiel ' 3 WwW home with grip this week. rong gaisincmcd N We carry Johnson's . + . and that's the number that Mr. Meltzer instructs each week. Ka N Paste Powdered and N 3 Although he has studied and played other instruments, Mr. Meltzer N I; ) WwW b N specializes in the teaching of the clarinet, saxaphone, the instruments N qui ax . ... but N of the brass family, the fretted instruments (banjo, mandolin, and N recommend the latter, N ukulele) and the drums. N because . . . . It cleans § N : . ' . N There remain 15 weeks to make a beginning on the instrument of I \ as 1t polishes, 18 quicker \ of your choice before the vacation days begin. The ukulele can be [K] N to apply and easier to N fully mastered in that length of time. Boy Scout Buglers can learn \ polish. \ the fundamentals of bugling and all the calls used in the service. N N : N N See Mr. Meltzer before buying your instrument. He will gladly advise \ Phone for the half \ aL N and help you in its selection. \ gallon size for your next N ; 5 N I tT |N floor treatment. N | N N WINNETKA STUDIO WILMETTE STUDIO \ \ Community House Wilmette Music Shop \ \ ; N N : Mondays and Saturdays Tuesdays and Wednesdays \ E. B. Taylor Co. \ Phone University 7615 for Appointment N N RIN N : Tm #N Hardware Join the North Shore Music Lieague--Next Rehearsal, \ 546 C S \ N ENTER OT. N March 24, at 10 A. M. \ \ N Phone Winnetka 999 \ 11 = N N T= = = yt Tat ON Nr ---- EM i'\ Er --_--_-- = et Ww Bak Testing with latest electro hydraulic machines < 2 , . oe hy Ho: 2 Flat rates for adjustments and relining. w < Tl Western Ave. HN of HH ... All work guaranteed. 3 T z a « al /& CLARK ST. CEN | BROOKS BRAKE SERVICE "Bron [war | B23 SHERIDAN RoAD Eero] 5630 Broadway CHICAGO SHERID EDGEWATER BEACH HOTEL PHONE LONGBEACH 4545 SPEAKS HERE SUNDAY Dr. Glenn Frank, President of the University of Wisconsin, in Wil- mette March 18 y The speaker Sunday evening. March 18, at the Wilmette Sunday Evening club will be Dr. Glenn Frank, president of the University of Wisconsin. Dr. Frank spoke last season and the sea- son before at the Sunday Evening club. His addresses have been con- sidered among the best in the history of the club. Dr. Frank was form- erly editor of the Century Magazine, and is at present a contributor to a chain of metropolitan newspapers. He was on the lecture platform for a number of years. He was also associ- ated for some time with Edward A. Filene, the great Boston merchant, in research and organization work. ? Dr. Frank was a member of a group headed by Ex-President William How- ard Taft which drafted a covenant for the League of Nations, considered by the Peace Conference at Paris, 1918- 1919. He is the author of "The Politics of Industry," "An American Looks at His World," and various studies in the Century Magazine. He was co= author of "The Stakes in the War," "The League of Nations--The Prin- ciple and the Practice," published in 1919. Christ Church At the 11 o'clock service in Christ church this Sunday morning the Rev. E. Ashley Gerhard. nastor, will preach on "God's Unbreakable Law." The fourth in a series of Lenten ad- dresses at the Vespsr service in the chapel at 5 o'clock will be given by the Rev. R. Malcolm Ward. assistant rector, his subject being: "St. Patrick: The Story of a Pioneer." Tuesday and Thursday mornings of next week the usual mid-week Celebra- tions of the Holy Communion will be held in the Chapel at 9:30. At the Tuesday service there will be a corporate Com- munion of the Visiting committee, fol- lowed by a meeting in the Parish office. Thursday afternoon at 4:30 the Chil- dren's Lenten service will be held in the chapel. The Lenten slides relative to the work of the church are proving very in- teresting. The Rev. E. Ashley Gerhard will preach at Christ church, Ottawa, next Wednes- day evening. The program of the Woman's Guild for next Monday follows the regular Lenten schedule: Litany service in the chapel at 10; sewing from 10:30 to 12:30; lunch- eon at 12:30; Lenten Study class under the leadership of Mrs. Joseph Halstead of Evanston at 1:15. The rector's Bible class meets each Wednesday morning at 10 at the home of Mrs. George Parker, 200 Linden street. The newly organized Boy Scout troop meets at the Parish House on Friday eve- ning at 7:30. Boys who are not already enrolled as Scouts are welcome to join this troop, which is. a member of the North Shore Area council. MRS. CHARLES BEST DIES Friends of Mrs. William Kies, for- merly of Kenilworth, will be sorry to learn of the death of Mrs. Kies' mother, Mrs. Charles Best, of Chicago. Mrs. Best died at the home of her daughter which is in Scarborough-on-the-Hud- son, New York. Many girls from the north shore took part in the dinner and program given by the Dramatic club of the Na- tional Kindergarten and Elementary college, on Wednesday, March 14. ---- Miss Dorothy Kahn, 1125 Gage street, will return home from Smith college on Wednesday, March 21, for a two weeks' vacation. --_---- Rollin Simons entertained two senior eirls' adviser rooms at New Trier with clever magician tricks on Thursday of fast week.

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