Fidteran, cnaïrman of te seWer and. water commnittee. Driving of steel piling about the site for the filtered.water basin, %vork which %vas started on, February 20, i:s now, practically complcted. A, roadway has been buit onto the beach .f rom Lake avenue an-d, about 6,000 yards of exca-. ý..'.tion have beçn madethe report1 stated.. The bulk of the excavation has been for the filtered water basin, but the .,000 yards of dirt removed includes also> that takenl away f rom, the* road- way and the cûtt made into the bluff at the site of the sedimentationi basin., The contractor has, conxpleted con-* struction of a field office for himuself and the engineers and bas had an clec- trie powver line brought into site of the construction work. It is' the contrac- tor's intention, the report stated, to ope&a4. al construcItion ma.inWdIy pos- s ible with electric motors. WiliITest Cement, Steel On the recommendation of Tlrustee Tideman the Village board Tuesday îiight instructed Village Manager C. M. Osborn to issue an ordler to the engin- eers, Peàrse, Greclev and Hansent, authorizing thcm to enmloy the Robert W.r Hunt coinpany tu test the cernent, the steel intake pipe and the reinforc- iuîg steel to be' used iniflhc buildinig of the waterworks. Trustee Tidem n tioii. The bill. is to bc paid froin the -waterworks fund. Membèrs of. t le board disagrec(l as to whether or not the bill shouild be accepted, but after sonie(dis- C1',401 it was decided to pay it. May Finish Work by Jan. 1 Lresent planis cali for the completion X)i the watcrworks by Jaiuary 1, 1934. I f the work progresses as rapitly as it 1iasý beén, that goal should be reached, Tlrustee Tideman said in commentitig this particular day. This invita- tion is not, given specifically to reg- ular attendants at $Sunday worshi'p, but. to ail women of this communi- ty, there awaits a hiearty welcome' to whatever church they wish to attendl. :Nearly twol thousand ye4rs ago, a. woman. of Mrs. H. Ai. Bâsh Samaria wended her :way throughi the village streets iôo the Well of. Jacob, tbe well where, friends and neighbors congregated to discuss the affairs of the day. As she walked aluxig with th enwmty jar gracefully poised on bier shoulder, 1 imagine bier thoughts were ont the task before hier-that of supplying the physical needs of hier household. [ittle did she dreanl of the great moment tbat was to, corne into hier life-thie meeting of Jesus, The Man of Galilee., at this ver>' well whiere shie was acctlstonie(1 to going every% dav. 'She had corne to this well for soever ar<zn kctîz of thewaer i-iat 1 .rhall qizc' Iim »shall ncvzer thirst; but the zmati that 1 shall give hint shal! bc in him a , wehi of water SPranllg i u into czc;rlastvaig ile." *So in the centuries past, womnen like the woan of Samnaria have been seeking the truth and have found it ai. the well or fountain of inspira- tion-the Churcli. Nýeyer ini the history of the world week concerning the date for.such a caucus. An opposition ticketalso is being elected, it is understood. Terms' of the.,Village president,, Ralph R. Hawxhurst, and of three of the Kenilworth trustees, R ichard Wolfe, Harry V. Crooks and Henry G. Zander, jr4--expirc this. .spring. The holdover members of the Village boardare Richard C. Johnston,,W;ilt- ter A. K<noop and' Porter Fox. -The term of Police Magistrate George L. Rothermel also.expires.this spring. Obtain Funds to M'cet Dem ands on Postal Savings Postmnaster joseph E. Shantz an- nouticed Ttiegdày thatt 1e, bas re~n given authority to draw on the cen- tral accounting office of the postoffice departnient in Chicago in order to tneet demands for postal savings pay- ments, if there is not sufficient cash on hand at the local office to take care of these demnids. There has been no run on postal savings, Mr. Shantz said, but many residents have found it necessary to draw on these this makes it necessary to draw on the central accounting office in Chi- cago if the local postoffice cannot mieet its postal savings demands with cash on hand. PRESENTS PUPILS Ernau Akelv- gave a pupils' recital Friday afternoon, March- 3, at. ber i'resbyterian church, wilI preac!) the sermon, having announced hià topic, as "My I-kart ainAltar." The Boys' choir of St.. Augustine's church ivili provide a prograni of lenten musié. The cornmunity lenten observances started last Sundav with -services, in the, Wimette Baptist church with the Rev. David. R. Kabele, ninister of the 1Wilmette ,English, Lutheran church,; as the preacher. Choirs of the Baptist and Preshyterian. churches provided theimusic. The church was fillecd to capacity -for this i naugural service of the series which is spon- sored by the Wilmette *Baptist, First Congregational church, St. Augus- tine's tEpiscopal, English I utheran, First Presbyterian churches. Observe Woena' Day Sunday, March 12, ha.s been des- ignate~d as Wamatn% flay %inthe11 united Lenten program spo nsored by these churches. Last Sunday was Men's day. Stabsequent successive Sundays .will bear the designations: Familv day, Youth day, and Neigh- ')ors' day. Special features of inter- est are planned for each of these dlays. Sevics Rotat. The united evening services wilI ro- Circulate F'etitions for School Nominees Petitions are being circulated on behaif of Mrs. Leon T. Ellis,- 207 Cumberland avenue, and Harry J.' Williams, 205 Oxford road, to fill the vacancies on the Kenilworth school nus home for a Week WUfhl ai-> Hle was able to go out-doors y day for the first time. -by Geg Ferber. mvil i-t irge, -Jumnvi at ufnian and ASK AD-TAKER PmIRIIULLVVwc eaded 1w J. Lnceci isiu. 'Ill on the project is Tôorthen.