WILMETTE LIFJ: April 12, 1929 Mrs. John Clark Vaker, 347 Maple High School Girls Attend aveaue, will entertain her reading cirConference at Chicago U. cle lfonday afternoon~ April 15. -o. Forty-five New Trier High school lliss Helen Kirtley, CJZ7 Greenleaf girl's and Miss Lulu Wright, faculty avenue, has returned from a month's advisor of the New Trier Girl's club, attei1ded a conference of girls from sojourn in Florida and Cub~. twelve' suburban high schools at the University of Chicago Saturday, April Vote The Peoplea Party Tick·t 6. Miss Wright gave a talk before the conference Saturday morning on English schools. Mrs. Hastings Bradley, South African explorer, told of her' TUESDAY, APRIL 16 experiences, and Dr. Charle s W. Gilkey, dean of the new University of Chicago A Cross in tlae Circle Will Do It chapel, explained the architecture of the chapel, which is consider_ ed one of the finest examples of Gothic archi· tecture in the country. The afternoon was devoted to a tour of the University of Chicago camptts and a program given by five of the schools which sent representatives to the conference. New Trier furnished the music. Mary Louise Cotton played the piano and Lottie Kuenkele sang. Mr. and Mrs. George G. Moody and their nieces, Mrs. Percy Steadman an,!l ·Miss Gertrude Miller of Yakima, Wash., will sail Friday on the S. S. Rom a for Naples. TO LECTURE AT N. U. Talb at Summer Seeaioa WiD Be Opea · to Public; Couat Tolstoy Listed Among Notable ·speakers Count lllya Tolstoy, second son of Leo Tolstoy, noted Russian writer, Thomas E. Tallmadge, William Montgomery McGovern and Llewellyn Jones are among the prominent men who will lecture during th_ e summer session at Northwestern, according to announcement from Dr. Clyde L. Grose, direc- · tor. These lectures, which are open to the public as well as to the students, will begin July 1 when Count Tolstoy will speak on HRussia Before and Since Bolshevism." Count Tolstoy, the announcement states, is opposed to monarchism and advocates a representative form of government. Of the other lecturers mentioned, Mr. Tallmadge, an Evanston resident, is author of "The Story of Architecture in America," and Dr. McGovern is a member of the faculty of Northwest ern, but recently was of the Field museum and the London School of Oriental Studies. He will give an illustrated lecture on "University Life in England." Mr. Jones, literary editor of the Chicago Evening Post, will speak on "The Business of Book Reviewing." Lectures in French on the lives of Chateaubriand, Balaz, La Fontaine, Moliere, Rousseau and Voltaire will be offered by the department oi romance languages. Several lectures of interest to the student of religious education will also be given. STRAIGHT When You Moveor RedecorateWhy Not Have Would Use Sirea.m s as Transportation Aid for 1933 Fair The use of the streams, river.; and channels which run into the lake is suggested as. one of the means of solving the problem of transporting the millions of people expected to visit Chicago during the World Fair of 1933. "The people, through the county commissioners, have recognized the beautv of these water channels and their · surroundings · by establishing Forest Preserves along them," said Otto Kopp Jelinek, engineer in charge of traffic for the South Park Commissioners, who made the suggestion. "They are like blood streams, for they pass through every section of Chicago, bisect every highway and road leading into the city. Isn't it, therefore, logical that parking. camping and hotel sites be established at these intersections and visitors be conveyed to the World's Fair from them by water? "Picture yourself, a stranger, starting on one of these water courses from any of the camping or hotel ·sites. First through a Forest Preserve, nature's own artistry, then through the suburban Chicago-land, then through the more formal Chicago residential and apartment house district, the industrial tnd commercial belt, the skyscraper dis·rict, the Loop and then, the climax, the World's Fair itself. "This scenic excursion itself should be a great asset to Chicago and the fair, for it would show the city, not on paper, but living and breathing, a city alive, ever inspiring those coming to its gates. As a spectacle it would be a priceless addition to the many exhibits of the fair, for it would po~tray the very foundation of the city." Mrs. John S. Doig, 820 Oakwood avenue, Wilmette, returned this week from Florida, where she had been vacationing for the past two months in Orlando, Sarasota, and Ft. Myers. -oMr. and Mrs. D. R. Donlen of Evanston entertained eight of their friends at bridge last Saturday evening. A GAS RANGE IN HARMONIZING COLOR Your clean walls and fresh curtains deserve a new gas range of shining white or colored enamel. And your task of supplying wholesome, tempting foods for fickle spring appetites will become a pleasure, when you cook with a really modern gas range. ·1 The Turn of a Dial Saves Hours of 'Watching The oven heat control is a simple device which takes the guesswork out of baking; it regulates the temperature of your oven, measuring heat just as accurately as you measure the ingredients that go into your mixing bowl · . . Choose from many styles and prices at your Public Service Store. Moore, Crown and Clark- Jewel Ranges. Also, inexpensive laundry stoves. PUBLIC SERVICE COMPANY ·OP NORTHERN ILLINOIS 1141 Central Ave., Wilmette Phone Wil. 2899 JOSEPH W. KEHOE, District Manager