Lake Shore News (Wilmette, Illinois), 13 Jul 1923, p. 18

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

18 THEXAKE SHORE NBWS FRIDAY, JULY 13/1923 Mrs. William B. Kunkel, 414 Abbotts- ford road, entertained at dinner Fri- day evening for Mr. Tibbitt of New York, and for Mrs. Dowdell of Colum- bus, Ohio, who arrived on Friday for a visit of two or three weeks. Mrs. Rogers of Pittsburgh arrived Monday also to be the guest of Mrs. Kunkel. Mrs. Bentley McCloud, 416 Cumnor road, and family, left Sunday to visit her mother in Omaha for a fortnight or longer. Mr. McCloud is away on a fishing trip in northern Wisconsin. Mr. and Mrs. Philip Maher are being congratulated on the birth of a son, born on the second of July. y Mrs. Gilbert W. Kelly, 412 Cumnor road, and her sister, Miss Riddleburger, left Saturday to stay three weeks at Atlantic City. Miss Elizabeth Kelly _^companied thenv-going oil to Wash- ington, D. C, fof a visit with relatives. _Mr. William H. Dent returned from "Toronto, Canada, Sunday. He is stay- ing temporarily in Wilmette, at 1021 Central avenue, until the home of Mr. and Mrs. Reichmann in Barrington is completed. Mr. Horatio Chandler, of the Kenil- worth Inn, left a week age to visit Mr. Fairchild Doty, of Highland Park, at the Three Lakes Rod and Gun club at _J^re?J^*kesl__WiSj_-___________________ Mrs. Andrew M. Taylor, of South Bend, Indiana, is the guest this week of Mrs. W. J. Taylor, 310 Cumnor road. Mr. Andrew M. Taylor is in Boston on a business trip. On the Fourth of July Miss Vir- ginia Johnston, 158 Melrose avenue, suffered a severe burn^ when, after hav- ing stepped on a cap, her costume caught on fire. Mr. Morrel O'Brien was the guest of his aunt, Mrs. Ralph S. Gromann, of Chestnut avenue, for a few days of last week, en route from Boston Tech, to his home in Phoenix, Arizona. ' Miss Martha Stevens, 330 Abbotts- ford road, returned Tuesday from the East, where, after the completion of her term at Abbott Academy, she visited among school friends and relatives. i Miss Phoebe Hedrick, 304 Melrose avenue, who has just recovered from the measles, left Friday to spend the Jiassysr *** - 0;-1-' ^---------"•â-  â-  • Mich. Camp on Chamber's Sunday evening. Mrs. Charles Httber Cotes and Charles Huber, Jr., of Seattle, Wash., are the guests of Mrs. F. E. M. Cole, 315 Essex road, this week. Mrs. Mark W. Cresap, 239 Essex road, had as her guests last week-end, Mr. and Mrs. William H. Rankin, of Now York, and their daughter, Frances. Mr. and Mrs. George Jones, 318 Ox- ford road, motored East last week to visit Mr. and Mrs. John C. Carpenter at Conoesus Lake, N. Y. Mrs. Joseph Joyce, 431 Essex road, gave a luncheon and bridge party Wed- nesday in honor of her sister, Mrs. O'Shea of New Rochelle, N. Y. â€"oâ€" The Home and Garden club met with Mrs. Frank W. Cherry, 422 Abbotts- ford road, Thursday and from there took a picnic lunch out in the country. Miss Hellen Reeves, of Warwick road, entertained twelve guests at tea Sunday evening in honor of her guest, Miss Lois McMonies. Mr. and Mrs. Percy Eckhart, 206 Cumberland avenue, arrived home Sat- urday after a three weeks' trip in the East. Mr. George E. Shipman, Miss Eliza- beth Shipman and Miss Alice Shipman, 432 Warwick road, went to White Lake, Mich., Saturday. Mrs. George Benson, 530 Essex road, entertained -atâ€"luncheon^and getf at the Park Ridge Gold club Wednesday. Mrs. Andrew J. Maloney, 517 Cumnor road, entertained at dinner and bridge Thursday evening. Miss Isabel Cline, 304 Cumnor road, entertained Mrs. Cline's Bridge club at luncheon on Wednesday. Miss Natalia Stern is visiting her sister, Mrs. Alexander S. Joslin, 531 Essex road, for ten days. Mrs. Elizabeth Martin, who has been visiting her sister, Mrs. Owen T. Reeves, left Friday for Washington, D. C. â€"oâ€" Mrs. George Brown, 337 Essex road, entertained the Duplicate Bridge club Tuesday afternoon. Mrs. Robert O. Law, who is a new Kenilworth resident on Warwick road, entertained at luncheon Tuesday. Mrs. Sidney C. Eastman, 255 Melrose avenue, entertained a few friends at tea Our Boy Scouts Wilmette Troop Activities I Mr. and Mrs; A. W. Dillirig and son have returned from a two months' trip in Europe, and are moving into their new home on the corner of Essex road and Cumberland avenue. i Miss Marie Blomeyer, 430 Abbotts- ford road, entertained seven friends Fri- day ^evening at a beach, movie and slumber party. ) Miss Laura 'A. Thomson, the guest tLiMrsJ Henr3r.Riggs Rathbone, left Wednesday to visit friends in Leland, Michigan. *** ' mJJrm?A £**• **?y Ja«ett, 534 Essex road, and Mr. and Mrs. Robert Burns, G14 Essex road, are leaving today for a week-end outing at Lake Geneva. inif!SS ManVLouise Grogan, of Wash- ington, D. C. 1S the guest of Miss Hellen Reeves and her aunt, Mrs. Owen T Reeves, of Warwick road. _ ' |Mrs. Caroline Ellsworth, ol the Kenil- 22& £?• u€iI *£°nday for Wequen- gismg, Mich., to be gone two months. She js-staymg at the Colonial Inn. Miss Brown, the, Camp Fire guardian, took the group on a beach party recently. Girls' picnic Mrs. Ralph S. Groman, of Chestnut avenue, was entertained by friends at a surprise party Monday evening. Mrs. E. M. Sweet, 320 Abbottsford road, entertained at dinner and bridge Saturday evening. Mrs. Robert B. Dyer spent last week- end with Mrs. Edward J. Phelps, 328 Leicester road. e Mrs. Walter D. Launders, 230 Ox- ford road, have gone to Glacier National Park, Banff, Vancouver and Lake Louise. Mr. Douglas Crooks, 615 Cumnor road, is visiting friends at Penalwood, Mich. Mrs. Fred D. Brait, 422 Essex road, entertained at tea Sunday evening. No, the library isn't changing quarters. The librarian and her as- sistant are merely taking the annual inventory. Welch s Cafeteria Wilmette 9 ^^pjmifm UVING EASIER At home you can't choice roast ef beef always tender and the right flavor. Troops 2 and 5 Camp Keewaydin, Onekema, Michigan, July 9, 1923. . "Tip jip!" That's the password in our camp. Anytime a boy gets in trouble, from losing out in the candy store to breaking a pencil pointâ€"that s the war cry. / . The camp has been, and is a success for both troops. Boys have graduated from camp tenderfeet to real hardy woodsmen who can sleep in all kinds of weather, eat under adverse conditions, hike long distances and are becoming acquainted with the conditions incident to living under canvass.' Reville is sounded at 6:30, 7:00 or even as late as 8:30 on Sunday. Taps always at 9:00 o'clock. So our boys are sleeping from 9% to 10 hours a night. We have had wonderful weather. A breeze is always blowing from some quarter and usually off the lake. Flies are all but unknown and many boys have discarded their mosquito netting as being too much trouble. The loca- tion of camp is ideal. The boys, War- ren Fuerman and Tom Riley, haveBke- come second class in camp. Six Boys are working on camping merit badges. Several of the older boys are leaving on an overnight hike tomorrow (Tues- day). Nearly every boy in camp has made a boat of one type_or....another*, many of them having novel and ingenious designs. A regetta was held yesterday over a fifty-yard class under a dying wind and heavy sea. It was a pretty sight with foi*ty boats, some headed out to sea, others stranded on the shore while the majority crossed the line grouped together. Our boys played ball with a private camp last week and were beaten by a score of 7 to 4. The return game will be played off this afternoon. The families near here have been very interested in the camp. We have had jce_creanv thanks-to Mr. Bennett, father of one of the boys, and six pies were donated by a family near here. Last night we pulled off a' snipe hunt. The initiated will understand the pro- cedure but for those not so fortunate a few words will explain. Some boys are elected as bag-holders. These boys flash lanterns while the rest of the boys go out to beat the bush. The bush beaters really circle around and go home. About ten-thirty several boys on the bags got tired and came in. The re- sulting taunts Were so noisy as to at- tract the rest. So about 9 boys were â- tri'lSw|igrt^:•^'^^^.J^'*^"^"V'â- â€¢", *"â-  'w^-i vtig*** ?*"' All of us are sorry that camp is so nearly over but prospects are that next year's camp will be a bigger and better camp. ICHOICE GLENCOE LAND BRINGS RECORD PRICE The record pifice was obtained by the estate hi Franklin Newhall in the sale of 5 Vfc acres on the Lake Shore at Glen- coe, located about four blocks north and east of the depot, to Curtis B. Camp of the Kellogg Switchboard company for $82,500, which was at the rate of $15,- 000 per acre. This parcel was the last of a tract of 40 acres purchased originally by Frank- lin Newhall in 1887 and has been consid- ered the choicest lake frontage between Glencoe and Chicago, owing to its deep ravines, fine woods and unusually fine bluff and beach. The land is completely isolated from Sheridan road^hy reason of the ravines and is connectea by a pri- vate road leading over a bridge. The un- usual feature of this sale is the fact that only one-half of the area of the 5V& acres is available for building purposes, the other one-half being taken up in ra- vines, bluff and beach, which, together with its privacy and seclusion makes it an extremely rare setting for a home and Sing Negro Spirituals at Church School Sunday Children of the Junior-Intermedi- ate department of the First Congre- gational church school will give an interesting program at the church Sunday morning, July 15, beginning at 10 o'clock. There are to be negro spirituals, reading of poems by Paul Lawrence Dunbar and stories of the work of the American Missionary association. Rev. B. S. Stoffer, assistant minis- ter of the church, will preach on Sun- day in the absence of Dr. Stephen A. Lloyd who is on a vacation tour in the Rockies. gives it special *attie, Mr; C&m# the si chaser, resides in Oak Park and # together with & lriend,i to erect!! beautiful homes on the property. % sale wa$ made by McGuire & %f,|«J known north shore realtors. â-  Community Club and Golf Course Soon to be Opeiiej Cold drinks and sandwiches wei* served last Wednesday from the grf of the Community Golf Course, Eva)j| ton. The regular restaurant, wHia will not be open until the middle ©{ the month, will be under the sttpja, vision of the Schwartz brothers, pj^ prietors of the "Pantry" on Ch«r«i street, when it too opens for businesj, The new golf course will not ^ open until the middle of this month in order that it may become as fitjj as possible. It will follow the drain: age canal between Sheridan road aftj Noyes street. Some of the holes art located on private property. PHYSICIAN MOV1 __ The offices of Dr. John Segswortijl have been removed to his new resides*! at corner of Wilmette and Forest j^l Announcement NORTH SHORE CATERER is now ready for; business at 350 Washington avenue, Glencoe. High class catering at moderate prices. Will prepare and serve lunches, din-r ners, etc. for parties of five or more. First Class References. First Class Work. 18 Months on Henry Ford's Private Car as Chef Have Served President Harding, Ex-President Wilson, Thos. A. Edison, etc. Telephone Glencoe 367 Our Dry Gleaning ^ and Our Superior Dyeing have made a hit with folks who know how to appreciate good work. Let ; us help to help in the conservation movement. We'll call for your work. New Trier Cleaners ^'^il^e^ 511 Main Street Phone 1949 EVANSTON BUILDING MATERIAL COMPANY EVANSTON, ILLINOIS Phone Evaoston 8996 Simpson St. and C. & N. W. Tracks 1559 Sherman Sat. Only PALACE Cash Meat Market WE HANDLE NOTHING BUT THE BEST OUR PRICES ARE NEVER HIGH Evanston Highest Quality Meats at the Lowest Pr Sat Only ices Very Best Peacock Hams ^^t / per lb. .;.. 261/2 and ZQ1/^ Fresh Dressed Broilers m*% per lb.___ 4f#4f» V^ Best Sirloin Steak sper lb. / â-ºV^cfiWi'Jl ' *'«"*â- ' fVery Best Porterhou , per'lbvy.^^' Very Best Pot Roast P«* M>...............v,4..... Fancy Leg of Veal ' P*r lb............• ••*,«» •'**,•-• Fancy Roasting Chickens +~^Der lb -________'XSMsmm •,# ^Jfrfci^tijl' ^~â€"Freslr Calves' Sweetbreads per lb................ "^^^:W6k"'be in ^tmrnew location % m* Jack Sprat Bacon; Sliced z " 3::poWds\:.^;;.^r;... Our chickens are selected of the best, freshly dressed By us, and are never over a day old. Fani leg of Spring Try bur home made :PureIJ,.,. Pork Sausage Meat, lib. IrS l§i si£?f ;i| Wl&MMMMsesmsSBM,

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy