Wilmette Life (Wilmette, Illinois), 1 Feb 1924, p. 19

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high bank; the drive is a 150 straight carry to cross the low and river to the approach to the about IS feet above the River, [green is a mound green, rolling tound. Lll is 315 yards--a right hand 1¾. Each leg is a long shot the river to a rolling green sur- Jed by tees. | 12 is 525 yards across the river, 150 yards to reach high ground. WILMETTE LIFE, FRIDAY. KERR LIAR Y 1, 1924 actual yardage given, no additional yardage being given for bunkers, as is the case with many courses. A club house is to be erected con- venient to No. 1 tee and No 18 green. Plans for the building are now in the hands of the architect although a por- tion of the building material is al- ready on the site. A sewerage system has been installed and .a well sunk to provide drinking water. For the open- ing of the 1924 season, simple, tem- The Beautiful 18th Green [recti is trapped and a series of lounds on each side of the green the back. 13 is 300 yards to ;t valley green, foiling and full of sporty putting. 14 is 330 yards-- 1 'ft hand dog's lhe._jir_cen __.is. _.a . scries of large 'ancakes with undulations be- „ which will test the accuracy putter. is a short walk through the to Xo. 15 tee. The drive, is irds to a "U" shaped green at ,road. 16 is 333 yards to a large raised in the woods, trapped all sides >ack 17 is 267 yards with Fairway Ig through the trees on .each side, ring a straight drive to the green, shape of a large letter "W." 18 is a left hand dog's leg 447 to the home green in the edge woods near the club house. |h of tWe-18 greens are of different )s and contours and each one will [the ability of the golfer with of sport for the putter. •ing the 1924 season the course 'be played without bunkers, the >eing to locate these bunkers in manner as to force the- ~orfrr Jprovc his game year by year in of a hit or miss method that to discourage. Each hole is ired with a steel tape and the porary quarters will be provided, pos- sibly no more than a starter's house with checking facilities. The Northwestern Golf club, being a public enterprise and not organized for profit, can have only a playing membership, credentials being issued and club privileges granted ea^h sea- son in consideration of payment of an advance greens fee per annum. Club membership is available to ail properly recommended citizens of Cook county. Information is to be secured by com- munication with Charles F. Speed, sec- retary-and treasurer of the association .whose, address is the~&vanstun-Strect railways company offices, Kvanston, Illinois. Officers and directors of the North- western Golf association include: William A. Dyche. bus : ness m-itnger of Northwestern university, president; Harry P, Pearsons, mavor of Evans- ton and Fraferurk W. Pen field, County commissioner, vice-presidents; Charles I*. Speed, vice-president Evanston Street Railways, secretary itid t:e*surer ; Edward Zipf, Wilmette Villagt president, Harry M. Bachman, Wilmete Village trustee and Chicago ii!iuiagi r . United Steel Products com- pany, Thomas F. Leahy, president, American Hotel Register company, George kMtiW lei ,-eo\hUy^vyrrrnV; .%TWCI *-] Samuel Whealan, County commission- er, Frank J. Wilson, County commis- sioner, and William Busse, County commissioner, directors. \hwestern U. Realty Course To Be Broadened, Says Heilman direct result of a recent con- held in Madison, Wisconsin, ^cling educators, realty experts jprcscntatives of the National lation of Real Estate Boards, western--University--^c4voo4--of- tr. tesrrar^ • *g«nt of .iiuiir. own. „ 5ram of real estate instruction :t all of the approved sugges- [rnadc at the meeting and will }t a revamped instructional pro- it ..the opening of the second ter in February. Dean Ralph silman, head of Northwestern _crce school, and Brig. Gen. Na- r illiani MacChesncy, a trustee rthvvestern and also counsel for fational Association of Real Boards, attended the Madison fence and have approved of the curriculum which is to be ef- for students, Thursday, Feb- 1.7, 1924. first semester's course at North- rn was and is a great success. Heilman affirms, as over 200 is attended. The call for an ex- and revised course has been iistent he explains, that he and iculty have decided upon a con- ice of the studies. Various other r cstern universities whose rep- tatives attended the Wisconsin ig also arc entering the same 'ith added impetus and inspira- A feature of the Northwestern rsity course will be to explain the routine details of real estate tions and exchange so that the tyro can and will be benefited, ^ms that the field on this score large, as thousands of persons Itively engaged in realty ope 1 own property and occasiovinl'y in it. Not All D-alrri }t of our 200 regi^ercd students ll estate the current semester." Rented Dean Heilman; "at least •five per cn tit were not active dealers cfr employees of such h. They vyerc persons who know Ingcrs o* dabbling in real estate tt proper training, Few persons, lose money by reason of ignor- |of real estate laws or customs idtmt it. but it is a fact that >i are lost each and every year know anything about the business or not. They are anxious, perhaps, to leave town, or possibly an estate must be settled at once. They place their holdings on the market and face two ^R^-rs-^-F-ir-Kt, theylanger:Q___i tricky persons. odium, of course, attaches to losses, as persons occasionally are :d to sell realty whether they choosing dealing unfairly by them, and second, the danger of the other party fooling them or treating them unjustly. In either case, if the deal be fairly large, the losses may amount to considerable. There is an equal rhpnee of irregularity in, smaller transactions, as all of us know." At Northwestern, the revised course will include a series of sixteen class sessions, each of two .hours' length. The first session, on February 7, will be at '5:15 and the second at 7:15. ft is learned that many will attend 'he earlier session while others prefer the latter. As in the current semester -it Northwestern, the revised realty course will be under the direct super- vision of Prof. Aimer Allen Claar, J a -raduatc of the University of Illinois •nd of the law school of Northwestern University. Director Claar has taught in Armour Institute of Technology, in the Y.M.C.A. School of Commerce and the Northwestern University School of Commerce. Every feature of realty matters will < overed in lectures, including such •ooirs as legislative, valuations, com- missions or brokerage, listings, sales contracts, exclusive and otherwise; exchange contracts, execution of con- torts, bibliography on same; evidence of title, bringing title down to date; Clearing up objections to title; escrow, surveys, subdivisions, office manage- ment* dods. mortgages, bonds, vari- ous legal papers, closing of title, lenses, special clauses, termination and biblionraphy.; management, co-oper- nt'vc aoartments, theory of and prac- • •••"<'"; of todny in rda'ion to and lei r al considerations, and the management snrh properties. The lectures will " <•• d" 1 ivered M the Chir*»ro plant at Dearborn and I,akc streets. BEST BUY FOR 50 CENTS You can buy nothing else for fifty cents that will be worth so much as one of onr five-line Want Ads. It will bring back to you a priceless ring which i ** you lost, or it will sell for you at a nice profit your auto, or it will secure for you the invaluable services of a splendid cook. GET HOLLISTER TO YOUR Lloyd Hollister, INC. Publishers and Printers Winnetka 2000 Wilmette 1920

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