Lake Shore News (Wilmette, Illinois), 16 Sep 1921, p. 5

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THE LAKE SHORE NEWS, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 16, 1921 mKmm^'m^nwmmmmvni ^mmwMWim ttH.MM.,..W.M<M,..M..H»M.»H,.H........................................................................ CORES uppn scores of young folks are leaving town within the next few days to enter various colleges in the east and middle west, or to resume their studies which commenced _____ perhaps a year'or two ago. A very large proportion of the class which graduated from New Trier last Tune is going on to college, and among those who will enter as freshman at Illinois in- clude Curtis Reed Parker of Hubbard Woods, Harvey Bowen Olnev Brown, Jack Burt, Merrit Fleming and Glen Gathercoal of Wihnette Josephine Hicks of Glencoe, Joseph Howard of Wilmette, Howard Jones °'KenlIw°rth' W* J°y and Lafal Markle of Winnetka, Harold Rice and Frederick Taylor and Francis Wright of Wilmette Frederick Schur, George Shipman of Kenilworth, John Sutter of Winnetka and Lad Stachel of Glencoe. Others will enter North- western university including Robert Wienecke and Elizabeth Heide- man of Glencoe Wanda Bruns, Joseph Davis, Florence Johnson, Stephen Lusted, Marion Mannerud, Isabelle Pope, Carleton Varney, Marshall Webber, Robert White and Richard Witt of Wilmette Gordon Canning of Hubbard Woods, and John L. Hamilton, Jr., and George Kershaw of Winnetka. Among other young people who are leaving shortly for various schools are Dorothy and Priseilla Lloyd of Wilmette, Oberlin; Jessie Lloyd and Audrey Stixrud of Winnetka, Smith ; Mary Lathrop of Glencoe and Mary Louise Scheidenhelm of Wilmette Welleslev' Walter Pattison Wilmette, Harvard; Kathryn Newey Wilmette' Sanrent s school: Winifred AHWinc w;i™«+«-o, r^,.^«j„i.._ u:n. *_*-. ' Mr. and Mrs. Mortimer B. Skinner, 723 Central avenue, will return home early in October from an extended sojourn this summer in California. â€"♦â€" Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Baker have sold their home at 1226 Ashland ave- nue and will make their home with JJrs .Baker's sister, Mrs. Max Zabel, 1247 Chestnut avenue. Mr. and- Mrs. Ralph Moody and family are residing at the home of Mrs. Charles A. Wanner, 629 Central avenue. â€"•â€" Miss Helen Anderson, 1106 Elm- wood avenue, is leaving this week for Chambersburg, Pa., where she will attend Penn Hall. ' â€" •â€" A meeting of the North Shore Alumnae of Chi Omega sorority was held in the home of Miss Hazel Rus- sell, 1009 Elmwood avenue, on Wed- nesday afternoon. , Mrs. M. C. Angle of Evanston, an- nounces the engagement of her daughter. Grace Edith, to Howard Parker Duffell of Wilmette. The wedding will be quietly celebrated in October. â€"•â€" Miss Madeline Hopkins of Ticon- deroga, N. Y.. has set Wednesday, October 12, as the date for her mar- riage to Mr. Lawrence P. Schaefer, son of Mr. and Mrs. Peter J. Schaefer, of 1501 Washington avenue. The ceremony will take place at 9 o'clock in the morning at St. Joseph's church. Mrs. Charles Harrison Smith will entertain the members of the Tues- day Luncheon and Bridge club at her , ,,r. -- . ~ ; ; -------- """'V ->v.v\cv ..iiiiiciie, home, 919 Forest avenue, on Tuesday Sargent s school; Winifred Adkins Wilmette, Gwendolyn Mills Win- of nex* week. netka, and Eugenia Moore Glencoe, Beloit college; Eloise Arms Wil- -♦- mette, National Park seminary; Kathryn Merrill Kenilworth, Brad- ford academy; Helen White Wilmette, Pine Manor; Jane Ham- burger Winnetka, Ward Belmont college; Homer Heuchling Wil- mette, Armour Institute; William KermnH Jn^ph MichaisU Wil- mette. TTniv<»r<!itv r»f "Mir-Ultv**, . r^-^^t.-. rr:___»i'„i .1 <-,. kiss Ruth Moulding of 1004 Green- wood avenue, has been appointed by the Alpha Phi sorority a Visiting Delegate for the coming year. She will leave October 1 on a tour of all of the colleges in the country, where Alpha Phi has chapters, to be gone until spring. â€"♦â€" Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Webber and family have returned to their home at 815 Forest avenue, after spending the summer at their cottage on Paw Paw Lake, Mich. Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Webber, Jr., and family are residing with them temporarily. • •â€"♦â€" Mr. and Mrs. D. H. Nicholes and son Richard, 816 Forest avenue, have returned from a week's visit with Mr. and Mrs.. Llewellyn Lodwick, Jr., at their home in Centerville, la. Accom- panying them bn their return motor trip was Mr. L. L. Lodwick, Sr., of Centerville, and Miss Amelia Meyer of Davenport, la., who. is now the guest of her sister, Mrs. Edward Maas, 822 Forest avenue. mette, University of Michigan; Dorothy King, Elizabeth Simmons, Arline Woodcock Wilmette, Harry Kuhe Hubbard Woods Uni- versity of Wisconsin; Charles Babcock of Wilmette and William McClmtock of Kenilworth, Dartmouth college; David Camelon of W'Tlmette, Harvard; Lawson DucklesHWilmette. Yale; Helen Eng- lish and Jeanette Hollister Wilmette, Rockford college ; Fen Germer of Wilmette, Grinnell college, and James Gibson of Wilmette who will attend Princeton. On Friday afternoon, September 23. Mrs. Jacob B. Olwin entertained in- formally with a college shower in honor of the Misses Dorothy and Priseilla Lloyd, who are leaving early next week for Oberlin college.----------- Mr. and Mrs. Jonathan C. Drake are issuing invitations early next week for the marriage of their daughter, Lucile Esther, to Mr Ferdinand Leonard Larson, son of Mr. and Mrs. A. A. Larson of Austin, which will take place on Saturday evening, October first m their home, 1226 Lake avenue. Rev. A. T. Stephenson of the Olivet Methodist church, an uncle of the bride, will read the service at eight o'clock. The parlor and porch of the Wo- man's club was a riot of fall flowers, Hrls and kitchen utensiles on Mon- day evening, this week, in honor of Miss Lillian Billows, who is to be married on the twentieth of Septem- ber. The evening was given over to unbridled nonsense and delicious re- freshments, and the girls all declared that is. which in reality their fall re-union, was the jolliest time they have enjoyed for many moons. The bride of the near future was delighted with the beautiful ar- ray of kitchen accessories which were presented to her in the form of a shower by the members of the Young Ladies' Auxiliary. After* her mar- riage. Miss Billow will make her home in East Orange, N. J. • .. â€"+â€" Numerous affairs are being- given in honor of Miss Lucile Drake, whose marriage to Mr. Ferdinand Larson is to be an early October event. On last Friday afternoon, Mrs. Arthur Taylor entertained with a kitchen shower in Miss Drake's honor in Edgewater, and on Tuesday evening the Philathea class of the Methodist church gave a suprise preserve show- er at the home- of Miss Jessie Gayi 929 Twelfth street. Besides receiv- ing, a number of lovely jars of canned bruits and jellies, Miss Drake was al- so the recipient of an electrical flat iron. _*_ A meeting of the Wilmette Branch brine Evanston Hospital association will he held Friday, September 23; at 10 o'clock, at the Wilmette Woman's cluhluMise. Surgical; dressings and hospital garments are to be made, and a lartr.' attendance is desired. Every- one is urged to attend. â€"*â€" The Misses Ruth Knapp, Elizabeth feirnnvns. Arline Woodcock and Dor- othy King of Wilmette, and Margar- et Bogardus of Hubbard Woods, are igxinj; Monday for Madison, Wis., { \l'\ they wil1 enter the University ot • v\ isconsin. Harry W. Dietrich has sold his borne in Winnetka and moved with his family to the southeast corner of Forest avenue and Thirteenth street, recently purchased from James J. Hood. â€"4>â€" Mr. and Mrs. George W. Springer of 724 Forest avenue, have retfurned was t from Frankfort, Mich., where they have enjoyed a several week's outing. â€"*â€" Mr. and Mrs. James Ogilvie. who have been the guests of their daugh- ter, Mrs. George P. Magill, 731 Elm- wood avenue, for the past week, re- turned last Monday to their home in Kankakee, 111, , â€"*â€" Mrs. Richard Allen has sold her home at 1137 Ashland avenue, and will move into an apartment on Ridge av- enue, in Evanston. this month. â€"♦â€" MiSs "Elizabeth Simmons of 1040, Ashland avenue, is spending the week- end with friends in Milwaukee, be- fore entering the University of Wis- consin next week. The Misses Joy Scheidenhelm and Dorothea Schmedtgen are leaving to- day for the east, to resume their studies at Wellesley. |lllllllllllllllll<ll!llllllll|||||IIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIIIIIIHIIIIMIIIIIIIIIII||||||IIMIIIIIIIIIIIK J PARKWA Y TEA SHOP I Chicago Ave. at Grove Si. % 1 EVANSTON, ILL. I I LUNCHEON 12:30 to 2 P.M. 1 1 Table <T Hole Dinner, 5:30 to I | 8:00 $1.00 - J Sunday 1130 to 3:00 PM) | 5:30 to&OOPM) $1.25 n.ll.MM..1.l«lll.|III(llll|.Illl,llll,III,llui,,(,l,,llll,(ll,l^||,|||||mm|m||(||m||||l Ml and" Mrs. C. AT Renneckar have returned 'to their home after a visit at the home ~Crty. Mo £' Mr. and Mrs fifth street. 4nâ€"Kansas Charles Travis, 125 u.,Mr, a»d Mrs. Fred Gardner White jno have been occupying the Church "ome ln Evanston this summer, mov- £ back to the Somerset hotel this ivi! Mrs' Skinner, mother of Mrs. hT-'tt ffU1 be at thc North Shore "eaJth Resort for several weeks. Miss Edith Ray Young Teacher of Piano Fall Term Now Open Telephone Wihnette 1385 Vocal Instruction Miss Gertrude Ulrich Pupil of George Nelson Holt, of Columbia School of Music, Chicago, ~~ is now accepting pupils for the fall term. 710 Linden Ate. Wihnette Telephone Wilmette 142 Correct Fall Millinery Hats Made to Order Under the Personal Direction of Mrs. Flinker Remodeling, and reblocking done, at reasonable prices. Open Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday EveningTdurihg the Fall Millinery Season, The Store of Personal Service MILLINERY and DRYGOODS 1217 Wilmette Ave. Jutlwest off the tracks Phone Wil. 2279 ~y 111 /*. The McAIlister-Worthen Co. furs 35% D IS.CQ.UNT - £"L ability to save our customers large 8Ums of money during the oast thirty^years enables us this season to offer high grade fur garments at the lowest possible prices. We are offering the newest and latest fur creations in wraps and coats made of Hudson Seal. Squirrel, Mink, Kolinsky, Beaver, Mar- ten, etc,3 We would suggest that you visit our estab lishment and look over th# many beautiful fur garments for fall artd winter. A deposit will reserve any garment for later delivery. Storage free RETAIL AT WHOLESALE PRICES GLASS & GLASS Eiffkih Flow ao 32 South Wabash Avenue, Chicago j The Cool Nights I will soon be here â€" better look over your blanket stock. We have the largest stock of the greatest number of good values ever offered in Wilmette â€" cotton, wool finish, cotton and wool, or all wool blankets, at prices far below those quoted for several years. 1 _______________________-_^ EXTRA SPECIAL â€" WOOL FINISH BLANKETS Extra heavy, 66 x 80, handsome plaids, in blue, tan or pink; regular $5.00 blankets; Special for .. .7. .77..77 ~............ $3.95 | {♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦^♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦**#++##+4,#+# ♦++♦«•♦*+♦++++++*, Fall Shirts Madras Shirts are thojnost serviceable. them in all weaves and patterns. BURNS TOGGERY Right Across From The Depot % Open Tuesday, Thursday, Saturday evenings We have. Good quality cotton blankets, large size, in white, grey or tan. Prices from $2.25 to $2.95. Wool finish blankets, plain colors or plaids. .Prices from $2.95 to $4.25. *♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦* Wftftl »â€"' ~»tfm mixftd Manhftts in handtomc plaids, all colors. .Prices from$6.50 to $16.00. ♦♦•♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦♦^^^J All wool blankets, soft finish, plaid or block pat- terns, all colors. Prices from $8.75 to $15.06.

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