THE >%MSB SHORE NEWS, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY U, 1921 P> Activitief s- iNortK JKore Chibs by RutK nyi&y^K DT was interesting to glance about the audience on Wednesday afternoon at the meeting of the Wilmette Woman's club, and discover just how many former students at Northwestern University, as well as old friends, to say nothing of aJormer aiate, Mrs. Minnie Starr-Granger Goodwin, had ventured forth to hear Professor Walter Dill Scott, now president of Northwest- ern University, give his address on "Handling Men." Perhaps it may interest all of us to know that the aforementioned Mrs. Good- win was a member of the same spelling class as "dear old Walter Dill,"'.a name attached to him by his former pupils and the^alumnae way back in the good old school days down in the southern part of the state. Needless to say, President Scott proved to be just as inter- esting and clever as we all expected, and when he insisted that his own address be interrupted long enough to report the re- sult of the election of the nominating committee for the spring election, there was much merriment. Mr. Scott- said -in-part; "One interpretation of the University stands out clear and prominently, namely, that of service in some phase or in some form. I am con- vinced that no interpretation is adequate except that of service, and service considered in its broadest and noblest implication." ___ The nominating committee appointed for the April election o officers for the ensuing year includes Mesdames Walter L. Lawrence, Wallace W. Kerr, J. Nye Macalister, Myron H. West and Samuel H. Vowell. March 8 to April 5 at the, Art insti- tute, in conjunction with the showing of architecture and applied arts. The designs will be selected from entries received in the competition offered by the Woman's National Farm and Garden association to students .and artists throughout the country. | "On the Traii of Our Earliest An-| cestors" is the subject of the lecture' to* be given by Professor James A. Breasted of the University of Chi- cago on Thursday afternoon, Febru- ary 24, at the Winnetka Woman's club. Prof. Breasted tells an un- usually interesting story of his ex- periences in the different countries where his work has led him and es- pecially in Mesopotamia and in Kgypt^- Mr* Lois Rawll will entertain the members of her bridge club at din- ner tomorrow evening at her home, 1314 Oak avenue, Evanston. HUPMOBILE Sales and Service A very Sensible Car for Sensible People GAGE MOTOR SALES CO. 1629 Orrington Ave., Evanston Telephone Evanston 5700 Arlington Heights Sales and Service Telephone Arlington Heights 9 Last Day of of pianos, grand pianos and players â„¢j| Will be Monday, February 14 "American Ideals in American Letters," will be the subject of an address by Franklyn Bliss Snyder on Thursday afternoon, February 17, before the members of the Woman's Library club of Glencoe. Mrs, Orville Thompson, soprano, will render a group of songs. .-©---------------1 â€" Mrs. Percy V. Pennyhacker, chair- man of the General Federation of ^Women's Clnh^has-a~&logan^ "Every club a training camp for citizenship." â€"~--------;..â- Mrs. Pennybacker has been putting in her time studying citizenship and Americanization. She says that she finds fault, not with women alone, but with Americaâ€"she says the same thing is the matter with both; no ritual in the national life. Voting, says Mrs. Pennybacker, should become a part of a woman's instinctive knowledge toward the rightâ€"and any woman who does not vote, or who does not take a first- hand interest in voting is a traitor to her country. <; Mrs. Pennybacker has mapped out a course of study which she hopes to install in every woman's club throughout the Union. ^_- The course embraces economics, history, government, and not least of these, duty to the foreign-born. In fact, this last is Mrs. Pennyback- er's greatest interest. Mrs. Pennybacker would have a club woman at every naturalization ceremony. She says that the alien who becomes a citizen should feel the dignity no less than the knights of old, who prepared for the rites of knighthood by days of fasting and prayer. ^~~ . = ~T7 She says that all traditions should be clung to by women, in particular, as it is through the women of the land that beauty of the home be- The Chicago Alnmi Pi Beta Phi sorority will give a card party- on Saturday of 4h4s=-week- 2:30 o'clock at the Union, League club. The proceeds will go toward the maintenance of the settlement school established by the sorority some years ago in the Tennessee moun- tains. ____/ •-â- _,___ Mrs. Howard C. Phillips of "Win- netka is a member of the committee" which is arranging for the exhibit of landscape design to be held from comes beauty of the state. To the Ladies of WILMETTE WINNETKA GLENCOE NOW SHOWING THE NEWEST Tailored Creations For Spring & Summer SPECIAL 25% Discount Below My Reasonable Prices. Harry Einhorn Suite 130 Mentor BMg. 39 S. State Street CHICAGO, ILL. Good Used Cars==Buy Now Prices will be higher in the ^Springwheh buying is Irish Ford Touring------â€" Oakland Roadster Buick Touring Chevrolet Touring Cleveland Touring Oldsmobile 8 Cylinder 7-Passenger Touring Willys Six 7-Passenger Touring. ..lost of these cars are overhauled and refinished. A small deposit will hold one until Spring and we will store it free of charge until delivery. If m STREET (-""*» ill 0J~ WM. T. WEHRSTEDT, Prop. Phone Wio. 165 562 LincoUu&»e., Winoetka PLAYERS $950 J. & C. Fischer for $745 $850 Hobart M. Cable for $695 $850 Clarendon for......$705 GULBRANSEN PLAYERS ^595 Player now.; .$495 $660 Player now..... $600 $750 Player now... $700 Easiest Player in the world to play -JJgRlGHT PIANOS $500 Patterson Bros. ... .$345 $475 Clarendon...... .. $360 $490 Clarendon.........$365 $490 H. M. Cable . $350 $525 J. & C. Fischer... $385 GRAND PIANO ^ Gulbranaen Trade Mark. $1,250 J. & C. Fischer. . . $995 Lyon & Healy Reed &Son. ... Baldwin "ttttt". USED PIANOS . $45 J. & C. Fischer77^$100 $65 Shubert...........$80 $85 SterimgrfT :....... $145 12 to 30 months to pay in Clinton........ ....$145 Bradford... .....$125„ Kingsbury Cable Player..$275 PATTERSON BROS. PIANO HOUSE Phone Evans. 654 Open Tues., Thurs. and Sat. Evenings 828 Davis St., E anston Telephone users are urged to replace the receiver promptly at the end of every conversation. If the receiver is left off the hook, either intentionally or accidentally, it completely cuts off your tele- phone from every other, and requiri the operators to report M_4ieisons_-_ calling that your telephone is out of By replacing the receiver on the hook at the end of each telephone talk, you keep your telephone door open 32 and assist i n maintain! n g good service. ILLINOIS BELL TELEPHONE COMPANY