Wilmette Life (Wilmette, Illinois), 5 Oct 1928, p. 30

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W'l'l MET T E· · L IF ·E FRIENDLY TO SEW . The Babies' Friendly will meet .a t I :30 o'clock next Wednesday afteraoon in the home. Qf Mrs. Thorne L. J '. ' : . ~ ·O ctober 5, · 1928 Almond Tofy lcr Crt~m Snider-Cazel Drug Co. Edward, 1521 Lake avenue~ A new College Nighb Again program of work wiJI be started at · A N h this meeting. . An invitation is being . ttract to ors ore extended ·to · anyone who can give an With the advent of the fall semester afternoon to sew for needy children. at ·Northwestern university, the college nights which are given regularly every Friday eve~ing at the Norshorc theater during the school term, have again been resumed. Friday evening, Oct: 5, ~hi N~ Beta has arranged in conJunctwn wtth Al Kvale, the Norshore collegiate director, for an unusual program. The. following Friday night Phi Kappa Stgma will entertain Norshore theater-goers with another program. · · 1\ I Among the fraternal organizations that take part in the Friday night fun: fests are Sigma Nu, Monac?ans, P~t Ice Cream Moulds Delta Theta, Phi Mu Delta, Stgma Cht, Sigma Delta, Acacia, Phi Kappa Psi, Phi Pi Phi, Phi Epsilon Pi, Sigma Delta, Phi Kappa Sigma, Delta Upsilon, Wilmette Delta Zeta Sorority and Delta Delta Sorority. N. S. Art League to Hear Popular Talks b:v Dudley C. Watson Dudley Crafts Watson, who will be this year's lecturer in the cour~e arranged by the North Shore Art league, is a man widely recognized for rtis rare ability to make art popular. This Art institute extension lecturer has brought to many audiences a finer un derstanding and appreciation of all the arts. He draws his subject matter from his experience as an artist, critic and traveler. As a leader of European tours he has visited every country on the continent except Russia and . gained a limitless store of anecdotes· He has a dynamic personality which infuses his lectures with enthusiasm, humor and vividness. The result in many cases has been to inspire those who have heard him to application of art to every-day life as well as to the actual creation of beauty. Mr. Watson studied first at the Art institute and then worked in the studios of Sorolta at Madrid and of Sir Alfred East in England. For some years he was a teacher of water-color nainting- at the Art institute, ani since then has been educational director of the Rockford Art guild and of the Springfield Art association and direc ~ tor of the Milwaukee Art institute. His work as a painter is represented in the Milwaukee Art institute, the Public Library collection at Burlington, Ia.; and in man:v private collections throughout the middl~ west. The lectures he will give in the course of the North Shore Art league will start Monday, Oct. 15. They c.re to be given at the Community House in Wi'lnetka. His subjerts· will be : Oct. 15-Art and Life of Scandinavia; Oct. 22-Greece and Its Supremacy; Nov. 5-Art and Life of North Africa; Nov. 19-The Enjoyment of Modern Architecture ; Dec. 3-The Art and Life of the Slavic Republics; Dec. 17 -The Art and Life of Spam. Orders taken for. fancy Where Happy Living is a gracious ·art Dwell in this residential hotel, where quality lies deeper than elegance, where hospitality is a_- warm, ·~.oman principle, where happy living expresses itself as a pleasi~g, .gracious art. 1 In th~s . ~harming atmosphere, quietly ex· elusive, you will find a delightful flavor which not only attracts but ·also holds --those who are thoroughly critical in -· ~ their· way 'of living. Tltis is · evidenced by the fa~ that fully 70% of.· Orrington guests have lived here, continuously, ever since the hotel opened. A (I'UJ Mlh.Ju 1 to 4 rtHJIII suites are ·ow t~Mil-1 a61# at The o,.,.;,gt.,-some unfomisbeJ atUI with leitchmella. Li6tral discounts on long-term k4ses 11111/u Orringt011 r111es unusually allracti111. Jas. A. Patten Attacks Gov. Smith's Wet Plan James A. Patten, a Republican who has seldom taken a conspicuous position in interparty battles, came out Sunday with a long statement assailing Gov. Alfred E. Smith's proposals on the liquor problem. He said in part : "Instead of a clear, courageous plan to meet and correct the evils in the present situation, Gov. Smith offers a plan which his own party followers in Congress have already declared that they will not follow, which can never be operative, and ·which at best would double opportunities for graft and crime by permitting any state to enter into the business of manufacturing and retailing alcoholic liquors. It would further debauch government by putting the retail liquor traffic under control of the state politicians!' He declared that Smith's pro posal for state's rights over liquor legislation would require an amendment to the eighteenth amendment, which would require action by both houses of congress and ratification by threefourths of the states. He asserted this would be impossible, and that, even if it were possible, 't he results would be worse than the present situation. Mrs. C. B. Burpee of 815 Linden avenue wilt entertain Fridav at luncheon and bridge for Miss Ethel Becker, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Charles J., Becker of 1020 Hull street, Evanston, whose wedding will be an event of the near .future. -oMr. and Mrs. L. ]. Badenoch of 824 M utford avenue. Evanston, are receiving congratulations on the recent birth of a daughter. Mrs. Badenoch was formerly Miss Margaret Williams of Wilmette. ... { G)luJ ORRINGTON IVANSTON'S LAB.GBST AND PINIST HOTIL

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