Wilmette Life (Wilmette, Illinois), 13 Jan 1928, p. 19

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The art a~d literature department of the Neighbors held a meeting on Tuesday, January 10, at the home of Mrs. Edwin Hedrick in . Kenilworth. There was a very · large attendance to hear the papers prepared by Mrs. Percy Eckhart and )Irs. Emory Andrews. Owing to illness of her mother, Miss Barbara Erwin, who is chairman of this department, was unable to be present and Mrs. Harry Harrison presided. The meeting opened with a· very excellent report of the current art exhibits by Mrs. Lyon Ross. She spoke especially of the memorial exhibit of Oliver Dennet Grover's· paintings and of several of the one-man exhibits at the Art institute, and of the beautiful display of pictures at the Arts · club Mrs. Andrews and Mrs. Eckhart continued the study which the department has followed this winter, of the Italian paintt.rs of the Italian Renaissance, reviewing the lives and works of Raphael and Giorgione. Mrs. Andrews gave ~ very clear and carefully written paper on Raphael and his marvelous paintings and she made her audience wonder how one man in the brief span of years which comprised his lifetime, could have accomplished so much and done such wonderful work. It is an inspiration to review the lives of these old masters and. to feel something of the atmosphere of the times in which they lived. Ms. Eckhart took up the life of Oiorgione at Venice, dwelling especially on the background of the Venetian school and its development through his predecessors. Venice was an isolated town, a unit, and into it poured the beauties and treasures of the Byzantine country. The Venetian school was slow in finding itself and the Venetians slow in expressing their own art, but when the school did, its growth and sudden rise was as remarkable as its tardiness had been. Giorgione was one of its outstanding figures. His life was short for he died when he was only 34. He worked with Titian and in a painting, "The Sleeping Venus," there is no doubt but that the two artists collaborated. Giorgione discovered the value of color, the color in shadow, and he associated art and pafnting and color with musical feeling which shows his very modernistic tnstinct. Giorgione was the bridge beJween the old school of art and the boots which followed. · ' The regular. meeting of the Neigh, flors witt occur next Tuesday afternOOn, when a musicale is scheduled. " located at Wilmette, State of Illinois, at the close of . on ~ day of December, 1927, as made to the Auditor of Pu lie Accounts · of the State of Illinois, pursuant to law. . ' Reaour.cea Cash, Other Cash Resources and Due from Ba ( 1-2-3) . . . . . . .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ... . . . .. $ U. S. Government Investments (4) ......... ·>. Other Bonds and Securities (S) .... ~. . . . . . . . . Loans on Collateral Security (6a) . . . . . . . . . . .. . Other Loans (6b) . . ................ · ...... : . . Loans on Real Estate ( 6c) ................ ~. . . Overdrafts (7) .......... Banking House, Furniture and Fixtures (9) ... ,. Customers' Liability under Letters of Credit (10) Other Resources ( 12) 0 ·········· 0 ·· 0 0. 0 0 41~ .37 37~71.57 ~ iA th : 831,11Z.Z7 · ',: . ,-,., .ISS,SZ1.1Z 333,221.35 ' . SZ7~121.11 . - : 3; ~~Si n. 1 · ·. '1· . J!f 0 o ··· o ·· o o . ·- · · · · · · · o · 0 · o 31,41l.ll. S,ZZS.II 31,17e.S4 Total Resources ......... o ······ o ~· $3,503,142.11 Liabilities Capital Stock ( 1) ............................ $ 110,081 Surplus (2) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 110,011.11 Undivided Profits (Net}- (3) ........... 0: ... 84,112.21 Reserve Accounts (4) . .: . ~~ 25,989.12 Demand Deposita (Sa) .......... ~ ...... ~-.· ~ $1,911,238.45 o ············· : o. o · / o ·· Time Depo~ita (5-.) .......... 0 0 ······ .- · · ~ o · ·· ~ · · ·· Dividends Unpaid (7) ......... Letters of Credit {8) ~ ~. Bank Acceptances (9) .................. ~ : .· Other Liabilities (10) ................... · ~· ~.. 3,6U.I7 · Total Liabilities ................ ! ·~. $3,503,142.11 o ········ .. · · · · ··················· · · $1,279,132.31 4,056.81 5,225.81 r ,t., · l i ·· I 4 ·· !f Leave KenUwortb for Remainder of Winter Mr. and Mrs. Mark Cresap of Kenii··Qrth have closed their home on Warick road for the balance of the winter Onths and have taken an apartment town. Mark Cresap, Jr., left early · the week to resume his studies at · e Hill school in Pennsylv~nia, and rs. Fannie Copf', Mrs. Cresap's 1other, left on Sunday for Lake Wales, Ia.· to be gone until late spring. Ms. ·Cope was one of the many in enilworth on the sick list during the . olidays. She is regent of the Skokie ·lley chapter of the Daughters of the merican Revolution and a very enhusiastic worker· in that field, atteadt· J the N · al qaeet4nas iq Wath.rton an t~ ~hlt coM'eJttrotts of · llinois. She wa~ organizer of this hapter two years aga. ' · · · I, J. M. Budinger, Cashier of th~ Wilmette State B . lc, do solettmly swear that the abov~ statement is true to the best of my ·~nowle_dge ~nd ~eli f, . t"") and that the ttems and amounts shown above corr . pond *tth t1te t ml and amounts shown in the report made to the Aud~t ·r .of Public Accounts, State of Illinois, pursuant to law. ; . · · t . .1 M. BUPJINGER, .Cashier, State of Illinois, l County of Cook. ~ ss. ' ·· y_ .of Janua~y, 192ft .. r Subscribed and sworn to before me this ~NK A. ANDREW~ :. J: u '" Notary Public. · ; · 12 I ; (' I "' ' I O .f f ·,·era S. A. WHEELOCK . I ;j 11 President PHILLIP HOFFMANN Vice-President J. M. BVDINGER Cashier F. D. ANDERSON Assi.Qant Cashier Miss Harriet Webster and Miss Marhe of Kenilworth spent the ·c1eK-eno in La Grange, visiting at the ;p_.......... home. , ' ·F. t. BATEMAN Wo W. BUCHANAN LYMAN M. DRAKE PHILLIP HOFFMANN BENJAMIN F. LEWIS ·Ditec·t'o" ta J;

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