FEEL. AT HOME in ANY COMPANY FoeI the assurance ftha+ good gr>Ooming gives... be eonfident,'Pf.ypur beau- ty by coming boret WILMETTE BEAUTY SHOP 1200 Central Ave., Rnm. 202 2nd Floor Bank Bldg. WiI. 79 Workers will meet ini the lounge of the North Shore Congregation Israel in 1Glencoe, at 10 a.m: Wednesday, January 10. Resideflts of the North Shore have been invited to attend this meetin g at which Rabbi Môioron-Ber-. man of Temple Isaiah-Israel. and Hlarris' Peristein of Gleoe. wil ad- dress the group. Mr. Perlstein is cha irmnan of thée Jewish Welare Fund drive in Chicago. Rabbi Berman will tell of some of the Europanned and plans for meeting then. lHe willý return from Washington on January Cites Conditions Abroad, "Stories of the ýplight and priva- tions of thousands of men, womeni and- childrjen -in Poland are so des- perate as to be indescribable,". Mrs. Alschuler points out.' "The hunger, the cold, the' humiliation, and the çIegradgtion that theh dreds of thousands of people are experiencing daily have not been paralleled in 'history. "The present Jewish population of Warsaw is 500,000 as compared to 200,000 before the war, four months ago. No fewer than '80 per cent of these people, are ini urgent need' of help. The Joint Distribution' com- mittee, supported by the Jewish Wel- fare fund collected in this country, is mm. A~.Alhle 'serving 20,000 meals a day. Soon there will, be 50,000 mealIs served ~daily. elothing t -eeded nnd 'gradtr- ally these people must be brought to decent human standards of living. Great Burden Increases "England formerly sent large sums of money to help and support refugees. They also took many o! them into Eiigland, either on some temporary or permanent basis. War- ridden England can no longer send money out or take refugees in. In December, 1939, there were 96 familles on the rolls, and they were sustained at a cost of $3,981.; in De- cemnber, .1938, there were. 107 clients,. for a cost of $4, 273;, in December, 1937., there were "also 96 clients, the samne as 'in Decemnber, 1939, but the cost was higber, amnounting to The relief administration of the township is operating below büdjget- ary 'limits, he revealed. To date $1,700 less bas been, spent than was appropriated for relief purposes. dur-' ing the current fiscal year. In the .mrajority of cases., -he ex- plained, relief is not the soie source of. incomne for a family on theý rolis,* but it used to 'supplement other i- corne when that income fails below the minimum neçessary for suste- nance. Ail cases and their needs are reviexved every fortnight. A irlin e Steward ess ils North, Shore Bride. Miss Alice Pamp of Evanston was married Friday evening. De- cember 29, to R. A. Jacobson of Chicago. Miss Pamp's father, t he Rev. Frederic Pamp, pastor of the Mission Covenan t church, Evanston, performed the ceremony in the TOUR LOVED ONES A mavet oerbution ky Médical Sci.e e. ethe kPppineee of te.averae householdlbas boom modein modern HeaIeh Education. j Once again when the 'drive for funds opens, citizens o! the North Shore of Chicago 'will take their places along with civilized people of other villages, 'cities and countries in re- sponding to the 'needs of the suifer- ing thousands of people i Europe." Wilmeute Youth Hurt lias fIown 125,000 miles during her aerial career. She gradua ted from the nursing school of the Swedish Covenant hospital i Chicago, did duty there. She is a graduate of North Park High school in Boston. She was born in Omaha and bas also Iived in Salina, Kas. Mr. Jacobson, who is in the engi- neering department of the Chicago Burlington and Quincy railroa'd, is the son of the Rev. I.'W . Jaoonr '-J. A. may eall Mrs. G. L. Grirnrn,--1539' Elmwood avenue, it is explamned. Note E~'nomy'SoiscdIte Mr. and Mrs. John A. Taft of 201, by the Wohman's Club of Wilmette. Proceeds are dlrected to Philanthiroplc Cumberland avenue, Kenilworth, re- purpoies. tu sethe first ofthe week froma week stay in Rot Springs, Ark