Wilmette Life (Wilmette, Illinois), 4 May 1928, p. 15

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

aOee · Ita · SeaiOD The Kenilworth club is holdin·g its last bridge luncheon · for the season this afternoon. · Mrs. ]. c: Carpenter and Mrs. E.]. Hicks are hostesses for the day. About 150 reservations have been made. Mrs. Thomas White has been general chairman of the card parties for the season and with her ~oble committee has given some delightful parties. The club has offered its members some very unusual entertainments and dances and all sorts of parties this season which has been one of the most successful in the history of the club. Herbert Taylor has been the president. The last dinn~r dance of the club season is Friday evening, May 11. It will be. as the committee ao nnounces, "One final fling before the warm weather drives us out of doors. And the o co·umjttee promises that the memory ·will linger Wttil next fall. Every effort is being made to make this a most enjoyable party." NOW AT GEORGIAN Mr. and Mrs. Charles Mock formerlv of Kenilworth, JVho for a number of years have resi~ed near San Diego, Cal., are stayi_ t:Jg at the Georgian in Evanston this summer. Mr. and Mrs. Mock together with Mr. and Mrs . Charles Meyer, own a large poultry farm in California to which they have devoted all of their time since leaving Kenilworth, and friends who have visited them there tell of their wonderful gardens and the s pIe n did I y equipped poultry accommodations they have installed on their property. .I -1 NO I I RETURN FROM FLORIDA Mr. and Mrs. John P. Oleson have returned this week from two months spent at Sarasota, Fla. Mr. and Mrs. Oleson own large acreage just O\lt_ sjde of that city and have spent a large part of their vacation planting and landscaping it. They are very enthusiastic over the climate and pleas- . ures of Florida and spend a part of 1 'every winter there. 0 · Coal Prices Are Down Wr advise our many patrons to lay in their coming wintrr's supply of coal now. May prices are thr lownt of tbr srason. Here il a real opportunity to save money. As usual we art preparrd to cltlivrr rxcellrnt coal. R.ral brat producing fuel, frre from slatr and dinkrn with a minimum of ash. · I Mrs. Lloyd Crossett, who has been with her daughter, Mrs. George Kings'ley of Cumnor road since the automobile accident in which ·Lloyd Kingsley was so badly injured, has returned to her home in Ge~eseo, N. Y. Reports from the Evanston hospital are to. the effect that Lloyd Kingsley, while he has still a long siege ahead of him at the hospital, is .,~aining steadily every day. --o-- 0 Give'" gout order now for complete fill. We gutUtmtee utiilation. 11 Mr. and Mrs. Mark Cresap have moved back to Kenilworth from town and have opened their home on Warwick ~oad. Mrs. Fannie Cope, (mother of Mrs. Cresap) who returned from Florida and Washington last week and was reported very ill, is better now and will soon be in Kenilworth again. Call On Us For Building . Materials Sand - Grav,J- Cement Tile - . Stepping Stones Screenings, etc. --oThe Home and Garden club of Kenilworth met on Monday of this week at the home of Mrs. A. W. Wakeley on Leicester road. A representative from the Waggstaff landscap_ e gardening company spoke on some o( the "don'ts" in landscapin~ and gardening. 0 Mrs. E. J. Hicks entertained at luncheon on Tuesday of this week in honor of Mrs. Edwin Hedrick's birthday. There were nine guests. M rs. Sidney B~J1 will entertain her bridge and luncheon club next week Wednesday at her home in Indian Hill. -o-Mr. and Mrs. Henry Taylor of Essex road have returned to Kenilworth from six weeks spent in California. -o-Edward Hamm, Jr. of Kenilworth is at Wesley Memorial hospital this week for an operation upon his nose. -o-- -o-- gK· o~tMa~A~~LEY Wnt Lake Avrnor and C. ~ N. W. Tracks Wilmrne Trltpbonn Of&ct 999 R.n. } 114 Pioneers of the New Skokie Va~y

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy