Wilmette Life (Wilmette, Illinois), 13 Jun 1924, p. 11

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Miss Helen Ruth Cuest of Honor · at Matllj1 A/lairs EGINNING with the bri~e party miscellaneous shower given by Miss Dorothy Bennet and Mrs. ·Howard Knight on Thun!iday, June '12 ~rth sho~e s~ial c!rcles wiU be busy W'lth affatrs glVen m honor of Miss Helen Ruth whose marriage to Harold McKenzie of Winnetka will be an event of June 28. On Tuesday of this coming week, Mrs. Fred Bulley of Sheridan road will give a kitchen shower. The following day, Mrs. Samuel Clark, 135 Fu ller lane, Winnetka, will entertain from 3 until 5 o'clock. On Thursday, Mn. C~rles Rockcastle, <:.:Iorence Newport) W'l~l be ~ostess at bndge. On Friday, Mtss &hth ~uey of Rogers Park, Miss ·Ruth's maid of honor, will give a luncheon and bridge at the Evanston Golf i:lub. The Misses Florence and Beatrice Pease are entertaining with a jam shower and bridge on Saturday, June 21, and on Wednesday, June 25, M,rs. Harold Ingersoll (Dorothy Karsten) will give a kitchen shower. B 100l is now ia · program are of this issue -o- Mr. and Mrs. Harry Vissering of 257 Kenilworth avenue, left Monday on the Railroad Supplies special train which follows immediately behind th~ Broadway limited, to attend the Railroad Supplies convention held at Atlantic City. On the way east they will stop to witness the flight of the "Shenandoah." Their son, Norman, who is with them, will attend the Yale boat races. Mr. and Mrs. Vissering will see their son, one of a group of six college boys, depart on the Santa Elisa, of the Grace line, which goes through the Panama Canal to Valparaiso. From there the party will go by railroad and with mule .p acks, across the mountains to Buenos Aires and Rio de Janeiro, returning to New York in September. Douglas Flood of Kenilworth is one of the six taking the trip. --oAn affair of interest to many in Kenilworth and Wilmette was the dedication of the new home and grounds of the North Shore Golf club. The grounds, though not completed, are now in very good condition for the members' use, and undoub~ly will develop into one of the most attractive golf courses around Chicago. Memben of this community are fortunate in having such an excellent ~ouqe within ten .minu~ reach. It ts satd that when finished, the clubhouse and grounds will represent an investment of nearly $500,000. --()- At the Sunday morning service held ·ast Sunday at the Church the Holy Comforter, two gifts to the parish, a pair of three-branch candlesticks and a red superfrontal, were blessed. Twenty-eight members of the Church school rc;ceived the John G. Baylis award, a gold pin, given to them for excellent attendance throughout the year. The attendance was very good, and the children who were present were impressed with the ceremony. -oThe Home and Garden club was entertained at the horne of Mr. and Mrs. Arthur P . Jenks, 54 Warwick avenue, Kenilworth. Mrs. Harry Oleson gave an interesting talk on wild columbine, and Mrs. Jenks on the long spurred columbine of which she has a large and interesting collection of every kind and color. --oThomas Napier, and his two sons, William and Harold, left last Friday to motor to Annapolis for the graduation of Thomas Napier, Jr. After he graduates, Mr. Napter will go on an extensive cruise in foreign waters. --oMr. and Mrs. George Frazer and family, 645 Abbottsford road, returned on Moaday from Emerald Park, !lcHenry county, where they motored to spend Decoration Day at their summer home on the Fox river. of M iss Florence Schmus, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Albert Schmus, 3lJ Cumnor road, who has been seriously ill with a streptococcus infection, is reported to be slowly recovering., -o- . --o- John Keith has. r~tumed from . the ~ Miss Mary Hannah returned home University of Ilhn01s, and Elbridge this week from St. Genevieve's school in Keith is expected home from LawrenceAsheville, N. C. ville, N. ]. Mrs. Claude Burnham has gone east to join her son, James, at Princeton. They will stay there for commencement. Miss Louise Robinson, instructor of music and art at the Joseph Sears school, who was injured in an ault>mobile accident a fortnight ago, is able to resume her work at the school. -oMrs. B. C. Hawkes left Kenilworth last Friday, June 61 for Minneapolis, to be the guest ot her sister, Mrs. James Jeffery. Mrs. Hawkes will return the latter part of this week. --o' Miss Jane Hudson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Henry Nichols Hudso~, 58 Warwick road, is among the girls re· turning from St. Mary's of-the-Wood school at Lake Forest. --oMrs. Charles Marks of Kenilworth announces the engagement of her daughter, Margit, to Bertrand T. Hammond, son of Mr. and Mrs. Guy Hammond of Winnetka. --oMr. and Mrs. Otto C. Owen, 205 Essex road, with their family, have returned from a pleasant automobile trip which included Lake Geneva, La Salle, Ottawa and Starved Rock. -oMr. and Mrs. Harry B. Crooks and Hallet Cole have motored to Knox college this week-end. Douglas Crooks, who attends that college, will return with them. --oMrs. Frank A. Gerould, who has been the guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Henry Taylor, Jr., 431 Essex road, returned to her home in Ardmore, Pa., Sunday, June 1. --oM iss Elizabeth Hannah left Wednesday for Ann Arbor, Mich., to be the guest of Douglas Flood at the "Deck" house party. --()- Mr. and J.rrs. Ira C. Darlq of 319 Mrs. John Marshall Roberts wu Essex road are planning to move into hostess to her bridae and luncheon their new home on Meltole aftllue club on Thursday ol last week. about Jwe 25. --oCiyde P. Ross is spending a week at the Traymore, Atlanti~ City, to go from thet'e on . a business trip to northem Vermont. Charming gowns for girls -o. who graduate this June. A. M. Lovedale and Gilbert Kelly They are simple and yet have returned from a week's fishing trip to iBass Lake, Mich. very lovely. -o-Mrs. Frank R. Young, 333 Cumnor Uaique SQie Shop road, was hostess to her hmcbeon, and bridge club on Thursday, June 12. 11· CENTRAL AVE. --oWD.J.a Mrs. Rose Reynolds has gone on a three weeks' motor trip to Cleveland. p._ ·'Round A .bout Eight or Later drop in at the Lake Shore Terrace. Dance to the rhythms of our Terrace Syncopators. Then enjoy an evening lunch with your friends. First Church of C~t, Scientist, Teath St. and Central An. Wilmette, JU. Services: Christian Science Reading Room llU Wilmette A.,.. Hours : Daily (except Wednesday and Saturday) 9 A. M. to 6 P. M. Sunday at 11 A. M. Wednesday: 9 A. M. to 7 :45P. M. Wednesday Testimonial Meeting Saturday: 9 A. M. to 9 P. M. at 8 P.M. The Bible and Won:· b7 K&r7 Sunday School 9 :45 A. M. Baker Eddy and all other author· Subject of the 'Lesson Sermon _ t·ed ~r~~~ ~~-~'1F~ IS "God the PreaerYer of Man" cllued. The P~blic ia conliall,. in'rited to a~ead the Church S.-.ice· and .wt the Read·n· J-· a-·· Announcement is made by Mr. and Mrs. Percy Bernard Eckhart of the engagement of their daughter, Eleanor, to Walter Lovell Turle, son of Mr. and Mrs. Walter Turle of Duluth, Mlnn. Miss Eckhart graduated from Vassar college on June 10. Mr. Turle was a member of the class of 1923 at Princeton. No date has been set for the wedding. --oDr. and Mrs. Henry H . Everett, who have been away from Kenilworth for the past three months, have returned to their home on Cwnnor road. Dr. Everett, who has been teaching at Rush Medical college for the last 18 years, has been appointed instructor of clinics in Laryngology and Otology at the University of Chicago. --oM iss Barbara Erwin, 621 Warwick road, left last week to join her classmates for reunion, and to attend the closing festivities at Vassar college. From there, accompanied by her sister, Miss Rachel, and by Miss Hasbrouck of White Plains, New York, she will tour through the Adirondacks. ·Mrs. Enos M. Barton, formerly of Kenilworth, with her four sons, two of whom graduated this year from Williams college, are going abroad for an extensive stay. They will tour England, France, southern Germany, and will go to Florence, Italy, where they expect to remain for the winter . -oM iss Berenice Bulley left Wellesley college on June 11 for Llewellyn Park, Orange, N. J., where she will be the guest of Mr. and Mrs. Harold Roundtree (formerly of Kenilworth) for a week or ten days before returning to Kenilworth to spend her summer vacation. --o. Invitation You and your friends are cordially invited to attend the opening of our new store located at 712 Church Street, Evanston, on Saturday, June Fourteenth, nineteen twenty-four, from three until nine. --o- Do It The Dry Cleaning Way SUMMER is no respecter of person' or · clothes. The air is full of dust and dirt-and that means spots-and Dry Cleaning. When you have your Clothes cleaned here in the scientific, no-odor metho~ you're assured of excellent work. Prices, let us add, are consistently low, when you consider the quality of our service. Dr. and Mrs. C. A. Waterbury of Waterloo, Iowa, wiU be tbe guests of Mr. and Mrs. Charles D. Howe, 2«) Kenilworth avenue, for a few days. Dr. Waterbury is here to attend the A.r.rican lledical convention held ~ Chicago this week. Mrs. Waterbury IS Mrs. Howe's sister. --o- Music and Flowers 712 Cllurelt St. EmtUton 554 Cntler St. Wlnnetia Francis H. Jack of Peoria has been the pest of his daughter, Mrs. A. McDougall for the past week. M~. Jack recently returned from a ~e~r s 10journ in Panama, where. he VISited his son Lieutenant Francis H. Jack, Jr., w~ is stationed there. -oAmong the Kenilworth girls graduating from Roycem~re this year are Paisley Ball. Harrtet Hamm, Mary GUlett from tbe upper school, and from lower, Bemice Cole, Phoebe Hedrick aad Barbara Holden. Schultz & Nord THE NORTH SHORE'S LEADING TAILORS ., 1152 Central Ave. PhoDe 310 the

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