Wilmette Life (Wilmette, Illinois), 1 Mar 1929, p. 22

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

WILMETTE iLIFE March 1, 1929 Aak for Old Trappllll· for "Homestead" Revival In the late '80's "The Old Homestead" broke records in the leading. English and American cities. In mid- March it will be staged by the North Shore Theater guild· in Evanston and the north shore towns, providing a return to the times in the theater when plays partook of the simple, natural presentation of American rural life quite remote from the "'problem" play and the intellectual novelty of the stage of today. "The Old Homestead" has its plot woven around the story of the Prodigal Son-the adventure of the father seeking his wayward boy in the great City. Costumes of the days gone by are being hauled out of attics all along the north shore to outfit the cast, and properties of the period are being sought and ass em bled. A general appeal for these ·'relics" of the period between 1875 and 1900 has been issued. Those having them are asked to call the guild at University 4728. Mrs. I. K. Stover, 1044 Ashland avenue, returned recently from Wallingford, Conn. where she had been visiting her son, Henry, at the Choate s~hool, for about ten days. TRAVEL OFFICE MOVES North ·shore Bureau O&en Complete Service ia New and Lai'Je Quarters in E...a...toa Smile at Bad Weather! ENJOY FRESH AIR with NON-DRAFT GLASS VENTI LA TOR Inexpensive Free Installation A call will send our Representative A LARGE ASSORTMENT of Mirrors, and Plateaus, reasonably priced. See this large display. VBTBBDIA.RIAII I'RA.IIK B. ERWDI Specializing in the treatment of your best friends the ILMILTOII Guss Co. "Dog aad Cat" All Calls Receive My Personal Attention LADY ASSISTANT OP BVAIISTOII 914 Cbleqo Ave. Ualv. 96S4 Would you have yourself. served a sandwich on a sunny platsance in France on a certain day in March? Would you ·5et sail in an airplane leaving Chicago within a couple of hours? Would you have a sudden travel whim or fancy materialized with speed and excellence after the manner that the best travel bureau in Chicago might administer to your desires-and per~ haps a little bit better? Such service a'3 this, and every other sort of service that enters into the province of a high class travel bureau, is being offered in enlarged space and with expanded opportunity by the North Shore Travel service, affiliated with the State Bank and Tru·3t company of Evan!'ton which moved this week into new quarters on the ground floor of the state bank building, Evanston. The bureau, established somewhat more than two years ago by the M i·3ses Edna M. True, Catherine B. Hooper and Stella Tuttle (now Mrs. George Whipple), has grown to proportions that have made necessary this enlargement of space and service rapidly and securely. The bureau offers highly personalized service. The Misses True and · Hooper, who are now the proprietors, have made many trips abroad, and go f'Very few months to in'3pect the new h avel routes and accomodations. Tickets for travel on all steamship and air lines and railways may be purchased there and every detail of travel arrangement made t ... I I l I 1100 Ridge Ave. Wilmette 3347 North Shore Meri Speak at · "Landscape" Meeting The Mississippi Valley chapter of the American society of Landscape Architects, of which F. A. CushingSmith of Wilmette is vice-president. held its annual meeting February 22 and 23 af the Hotel Sherman. Ihe program, which was arranged hy Mr. Smith, included an address by Robert Kingery of Winnetka, secretary of the Chicago ~egional Planning association, who discussed regional plans for Chicago; an address by Dr. Allen D. Albert, who discussed plans for the Chicago World's Fair. There was also a talk by Harold Hill Blossom, landscape architect of Boston, on the subject of "Spanish Gardens." Everythin~ ·roo Want in a Fuel Evanston Cage Entries Defeat Kenilworth Teams Basketball teams representing the featherweight, lightweight, middleweight, and heavyweight divisions of the Joseph Sears school, Kenilworth, dropped all of their games to the Nichols school of Evanston last Friday. The games were a part of the North Shore Grammar School league's basketball schedule. This Friday, March 1, Kenilworth plays the Haven school of Evanston on the Haven court. HEAR INAUGURAL ADDRESS Students of New Trier High school will hear Herbert Hoover's Inaugural address over the radio in a special ascalled next Monday sembly to be _ morning, March 4, at 11 o'clock. The Monday morning class periods will be shortened to allow time for the assembly. A large representation of New Trier High school students attended the annual mardi gras party !'l>onsored by the French club of the school. The party, which was an all-school masquerade dance, was held in the mess hall last Thursday evening, February 21. · The full-value fuel for home heating. All heat-no smok~, soot or dirt-little ash, none worth sifting. Delivered clean-burns clean. Lighter to lift--quick to respond-makes furnace tend.. ing easy. Costs less to buy and less to burn. Enjoy this greater fuel con~eQience and economy. Phone for. a supply NOW. Our ~e f'uel adfJi·orv ··e"'iee wour ,e,.,.aaeal ··U.f'tutUIR a···re· Edl8ger a Sons Kutten Brother8 Wilmette, Ill. 7ll Main St., Wilmette, Ill. '.Phone: Wllnu·te Ul Phone: Wilmette 1 Wilmette Coal a Balldln~ Material Yard 1101 Lake Street, Wilmette, Ill. Phone: Wilmette 4!00

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy