Wilmette Life (Wilmette, Illinois), 16 Oct 1925, p. 20

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WILMETTE LIFE October 16, 1925 DISCUSS Proaraaa PROHIBITION F. Eraeat Johaaoa Secand aa Firat Speaker on Chicaco Forum Council "Can Prohibition Succeed?" will be the topic of the first forum meeting held by the Chicago Forum Council of ,,·hich Prof. \Villiam E. Dodd of the Cniversity of Chicago, is presi~ent, it was fl.nnounced this week by Fred A. ~foore, executive director of the forum. F. Ernest Johnson, who, as research secretary of the Federal Council of Churches, conducted an exhaustive . in,dependent · inquiry into the successes and failures of the Volstead law, w~ll discuss prohibition and answer the questions of wets, drys and neutrals at the initial forum meeting in the Apollo theater Sunday afternoon , November 1 at 3 o'clock. · Cites New Solution Mr. Johnson, himself a dry, aroused the. ire of some of his fellow drys when he announced his conclusion that prohibition thus far is neither as good as drys. have claimed· it to be nor as bad as the wets have asserted. What he learned about the Volstead Act, and what he thin) s should be done about prohibition will be discussed in the forum which opens a series of 25 addresses on contemporary iss ues hy di stinguished speakers on . uccess ive Sunday afternoons. · The council hringing ~1 r. Johnson to Chicago comprises among it s member Mrs. B. F. Langworthy, pre sident of the \Voman's Citv club, and \Vinnctka Village truste~; S. J. DuncanClark of \Vilmette, and Harold L. Ickes of H uhbard \ \' oods. Robina in Peace Talk Colonel Ravmond Robins will di scuss the "Outla\\'~\' of \\'ar,"on Armistice Sunday; :t\ov~mhcr 8; Louis Victor Eytinge, a former convict, will tell Chicago ho\\' it can control crime, on November 15. ·M agnu s \V. Alexander, president of the K a tiona) Indu strial Conference hoard \\'ill speak. on November 29 and Former GoYcrnot William E. Sweet of Colorado on December 6. Prof. Harry F. Ward of Union Theological Seminary, New York, who has just returned from a study of th.e situation in China, will dicuss condttions in that troubled land December 20. . J ·. A debate on the World Courf with Senator Hiram Johnson of California taking the negative on that much discussed question and a well-known champion of the Court 1 taking the affirmative, will be held December 27. The Negro problem as a southerner sees it will be the theme of Dr. M. Ashby ] ones, one of the most famous orators of the south and chairman of the Inter-racial commission. Dr. Jone s is a son of the chaplain of Gen. Robert E. Lee. I !UII-ItH.atiiiiiUIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIII ·~ YOU CAN TASTE the DIFFERENCE EXCEL ICE CREAM is so far superior to any other make that all you need to do is to ta'ste it and you· wilY agree with us. I GIVES MUSICALE The first meeting of the Neighbors held in Kenilworth Thursday was very enjoyable. Fredecick Wood had a most pleasing tenor voice and sang many delightful songs beautifully accompanied by Miss Kathleen Morris. EXCEL ICE CBE4M CO. Incorporated 1566 ELMWOOD AVENUE EVANSTON Phone Univ. 3087 Phone Wit. 3160 I --oThe opening meeting for the season of the North Shore Vassar club will be held at 3 o'clock, Monday afternoon, October 19, at the home of the president, Mrs. Donald J. J effris, 811 Bryant avenue, Winnetka. ~ ( =-.rll llllflllllllllllllllll l llllllll l ll L 11111111111111111 11111111111111111111. I !-----i A Modern North Shore Kitchen 1 · HOLLAND BULBS Darwin ~ottage, and Early Tulips, ( Hyacinths, Narcissi, Crocuses, etc., of exceptionally fine quality. Order early while assortment is complete. PEONIES Best varieties in strong ·clumps. PERENNIALS PHLOX and IRIS in Vigorous, Field-Grown Plants. New and choice sorts. Send to""'day for our catalogue. FRANKEN BROTHERS, Deerfield, Ill. TEL. DEERFIELD 241 . VISITORS WELCOME. Above is a view of the kitchen in a modern Winnetka home. The outstanding features are its roominess, its sanitary aspect and equipment, and the modern Kitchen Aid machine which is seen at the right. The housewife can now mix, beat, .stir, whip, slice, chop, grind, r.hip ice, freeze, in fact do all of the tedious mechanical work in the preparation of delicious foods all by electricity, with the aid of this modern machine, at a cost of about one cent per hour. This time and labor-saving machine is the most competent of housemaids. That is why Kitchen Aid is to be found in an ever-growing percentage of modern North Shore kitchens. Its success in communities like this has earned for it the endorsement of all the leading household magazines of the country: 41 Good Housekeeping" "Ladies Home Journal," and others. ' "Now the household does not seem able to get along without KitchenAid" says Mr. C. R. Crane of the Crane o. . There arc many other homes on tIll North Shore equipped with this mod ern ·labor saving. machine. Amon ~ them arc the homes of Mrs. \Vallacl Templeton, Glencoe, Mrs. Poff, \Vin netka, Mrs. Gertrude Bemis, \Vinnetka Mrs. C. ]. Bickl, Wilmette, Mrs. An drew McNally, Evanston, Mrs Maso1. Warner, Winnetka. These are only a few of scores of North Shore owners. You can get complete information about Kitchen Aid and a copy of the interesting book. "Aladdin's Magi~ in the Kitchen" by mailing the coupon below. c f I I l. -------------------------The KltchenAid Sale· Agency, 6 N. Mlchlaran Blvd., Ph. State 1471 Chicago, Ill. Dea·t Nl Please send me, without cost or obligation, a copy of "Aladdin's .Magic in the Kitchen," and complete information about K.ftchenAid. Name ............................ . Address ..................··.. · · · ·

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