Lake Shore News (Wilmette, Illinois), 25 Mar 1921, p. 5

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

THE LAKE SHORE NEWS, FRIDAY, MARCH 25,1921 â- â- BSSSSB 0 LOVELY wedding is to be solemnized tomorrow evening at the home of Mr. and Mrs. Charles McCue, 631 Washing- ton avenue, when their daughter, Miss Lorraine McCue, will become the bride of Mr. John Sumner Crossley of' iale, Pa, Rev. Stephen A. Lloyd will read the service at 8:30 o'clock. The bride will be attended by her two sisters, Mrs- Frederick Armstrong, of Duluth, Minn., as matrdtTof honor^and Miss^Maf^ garet McCue, who will serve as maid of honor. Other members of the bridal party will include the Misses Mary Crossley of Homes- dale, Pa., sister of the groonwXillian Simpson, of Norfolk, Va., Felicia Urner of Baltimore, ^Md.> Margaret Ellen Northland, of Union City, Ind., Mary Frances Schedell, of Red Oaks, la., Julia Kries, of Northampton, Mass., Ora Whitley, of St. Louis, Mo., and Dorothy Anderson,»of St. Louis, Mo. Mr. Clarence Calloway, of Homesdale, will attend Mr. Crossley as best man. Miss Eloise Bedlan will play the wedding march. Following the ceremony and reception, Mr. Crossley and his bride will leave on an extended honeymoon trip, and will be at home after May 1, at 6612 North Ashland avenue, Rogers Park. Mr. and Mrs. Philip Vaughan Bright, of 731 Ashland avenue, will entertain with a dinner dance on Easter Monday at the Ouilmette Country club for two hundred guests. On April 20, Mrs. Bright will give a luncheon and bridge at her home for fifty friends. "Billy** Russell of 1009 Elmwood avenue, and Brewster Kimball of Glencoe, started out Monday morn- ing on- a hike to Milwaukee, where they are planning to spend the week with friends. As yet, iter word has been received as to just how far the boys "stuck it out" and how many "lifts" they were able to obtain. Mr. and ; Mrs; George Bird enter- taine<T atdinner at their home, 1010 Chestnut avenue, on Saturday evening for Mr. and Mrs. E. Jackson Casse who are spending a few days at the l\dgewater Beach hotel. Miss Virginia Beymer, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Beymer of* the North Shore hotel, who is a student at National Cathedral school, Wash- ington, D. C., arrived on Wednesday, bringing a guest. Miss Bingham Oliver of Birmingham, Ala. A number Of delightful affairs are to be given this coming week to hon- or^Miss Virginia Olwin, whose mar- riage to Mr. John Rutherford Nich- -oteeni is to take-placeâ€"onâ€"Saturday of the Wilmette Woman's club .to be 4tdd~©nâ€"tbeâ€"eveningâ€"©f-^~Pue*dayT *â€"M4s*^KH^es-Gut^4April-S,-at-the-c4ubhou9e, in-the fornv of two short plays. 4er is givingâ€"a-4>r4dge4unehe6nâ€"at her home, 1001 Lake avenue, to- morrow; on Sunday evening, Miss Katherine Scheidenhelm. will enter- tainwith a buffet supper; on Monday afternoon, Miss Margaret Couffer will entertain at bridge at her home, 903 Lake avenue; Mrs. Wilbur G. Glover of 1245 Forest avenue, is enter- taining at bridge on the following afternoon ^Tuesday ^evening; Mis^r Betty Dafter is giving; a dinner at the Kvanston hotel; Wednesday, Mrs. J, ft, Olwin, will entertain at lunch^ eon at the Illinois Athletic club and matinee; the following day, the Misses- Grace and: Edith Cooper of 824" Lake avenue, are entertaining~at~ Itjpcheon at the Arts club in Chicago for the girls in the bridal party; Thursday evening. Miss Katherine Scheidenhelm is giving a dinner for the bridal party; and on Friday even- ing Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Brant Olwin will give the bridal dinner. â€"♦â€" Affairs being given this week for Miss Lorraine McCue include a luncheon at the University club given by Mrs. James G. Wray of 618 Wash- ington avenue, on Wednesday, follow- ed by a matinee party given by Mrs. McCue. That same evening, Dr. and Mrs. F. L. Hinckley entertained with a dancing party at the Beach View hotel in Rogers Park; a dinner party was given last evening at the Ev- anston hotel by Mr. and Mrs. O. C. tin re will be a luncheon at the Con press, given by Mrs. Inez Hurst, and this evening, Mr. and Mrs. McCue will give the bridal dinner at the Edgewater Beach hotel. Tomorrow noon, Mrs. R. Bronson will entertain at luncheon at her home in Rogers Park, and Mr. and Mrs. Frederick Crossley will entertain the bridal party at dinner at their home, preceding the weddingâ€"ceremony^ which is to be read at 8:30 o'clock. A delightful program in charge of the Young Woman's _A^Jli-%Ty__hasL been arranged for the next meeting Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Allen, and Miss Katherine Win ship, of 803 Chestnut avenue, will return to the village on April 8, after spending sev- eral months in Ormund, Fla. They are coming home by way of Washing- ton, D. C. . Miss Ruth Watt, daughter of Mr. and Mrs, Frank Watt of Kenilworth, a student at the National Park Sem- inary in Washington, D. C, will spend the holidays with her school friends. Miss Adeline Mitchell of Hacken- sack, N. J., formerly of Wilmette. â€"♦â€" Mr. Eugene Pattison. 823 Ashland avenue, returned home early this week from Lake Forest Academy, ac- companied hy two classmates, Messrs. Warren Hastings of Fort Worth, Tex., and David Russell of Little Rock, Ark., to spend the Easter vaca- tion. mette Woman's club will give a con cert on the evening of Thursday, March 31, at 8 o'clock, to which all members of the Woman's club and their friends are invited. The pro- gram will consist of piano numbers by Miss Ethel Flentye and Miss Pauline Pettibone, advanced pupils of Madame Eda Goedecke, They will play solos and two-piano pieces. Vocal numbers will be given by Mrs. W. A. Dazey and Mrs. Charles Evans, and artistic solo dancing by Miss Faith Hoffman. The concert will be given at the Woman's club and all music lovers will be welcome. â€"♦â€" Members of the A-O-Ki-Ya Camp Fire chapter were-entertained-at two delicious dinners this week, which Mr. and^Mrs^C-W. Pierce^ a nd Mr, The McAllister Store iiiimmiiumiiiiimiiiimiiuitmimiiMtMmiiimHHijmitMitmmmitiiiM Pure Linen Crash Toweling Stephens' heavy linen crash, 18 inches OC^ wide, unbleached, 33c; bleached, per yard OOC ~ Ladies' Bloomers Well made from good grade sateen; colors: black, naw, gray, blue, green. Sizes 27 and 29. Sell regularly at 31.50 to 31.75. Specially QC^ priced at ... . . . . . « fa% Girls1 Underwaists Well made from good grade muslin, taped buttons, a reg- ular 50c waist, ?Gj» for......OVC Girls' Combination Waists and Drawers Bloomer style, good grade material, sold at 75c ca and 85c, now . . «*vC Rubber Household Aprons Just received another lot of rubberized percale aprons, in a variety of patterns and colors. At the f?/special priceâ€"-.â€". . *â€"*-â€"•â€"r > * i . . OUC Rubberized percale bibs at 10c and 15c. Infants' pants, pure gum rubber, elastic waist and knee. At the special price, . . . 39c The McAllister Store 1148 Central Avenue, WILMETTE, ILL. and Mrs. B. C. Calloway and family ^f~920^nden^avemieirWfl«-have^€ett vrinteringrinâ€"Florida^â€"left-Orange XJitjrbyHmotor on March 16, and ex- pect to arrive home on April 2. Mr. and Mrs. John Hartman of' 1305 Sheridan road, have returned from a stay of several weeks in the south, stopping in St. Petersburg, and later in Biloxi, Miss. â€"#-r Mrs. James D. .Buchanan entertain- ed at dinner on Thursday evening of this week at her home, 1320 Central avenue, for a group of twelve out-of- town friends. "The Flower Shop", one of a group of Harvard plays, has a cast made of some excellent amateur talent in the Misses Marjorie Crabb, Helen Bell, Nettie Smith, Dorothy Lyons and Dorothy Golden. The second playlet entitled "Our Aunt from California." by Madeline Demarest Barnum,"sounds very much Itkena" goodold^ comedy, and the various character parts will be im- personated by the Misses Eunice Wright^Norreh Lyons, Marcia Lau- er, Gladys KueTzow, Marion Boyden and Winifred Reinboth. Announcement is made of the mar riage of Miss Elizabeth Lading, ThjL^ujucto Phone 2491 1215 WILMETTE AVENUE were prepared by those members ..... .........,.., - Eastman, 1014 Lake avenue; today,.aspiring to the *•*"!* of firemaker, On nue, Chicago, »" Thursday, March 31 " ^ ^ -'Monday evening one group of girls'^ gave a dinner at the home of Miss Frances Howard, 1055 Wilmette ave- nue, and again on Wednesday even- ing, another group entertained at the home of Miss Jane Cornell, 624 Isa- bella street. Miss Luella Burt was the guest of honor at the affair on Monday evening. â€",â€" Proceeds from the benefit party given on the afternoon' of St. Pat- rick's Day at the home of Mrs. Wendelin P. Seng, 401 Lake avenue, amounting to $355 will be forwarded this week to the European Relief headquarters in Chicago.-1~Aniong those who subscribed for one In- isible Guest were Mesdames Louis Crush, George Schildbach, A. G. Keck, Charles Bunte, A. Bechtel, H. Burnham, J. Budinger, S. Budinger, George Ludwjg, John Cooney, Henry Weihe, J. H. Winston, M. J. O'Brien the Tranquilla club and the Terminal Grocery and Market. â- ' • Aside from the fact that the affair was such a splendid financial success, let us add that there were one hun- dred and eighty-seven women in at- tendance, one of the largest social gatherings of its kind ever held in a private home in the village. ~HM rr.Joh«HRi41offnfiani accompanied by her daughter, Miss Phoebe Hoff- jnan*_of 1231 Greenwood avenue, will leave on KorSTlS for Washington, D. C, where they will attend the Nation- al convention of the Daughters of 1812. As president of the Illinois State society of the Daughters of 1812, Mrs. Hoffman is one of the delegates from Illinois. Mrs. James A. Lowry and her daughter, Miss Gladys Lowry of Mrs. Perry L. Smithers entertained with a birthday party on Saturday afternoon last, at her home, 711 Lake avenue, in honor of the seventh birth- day anniversary of her sons, Ames ind Austin. _^____"_ Mrs. Frank j. Baker and two chil- ircn, 507 Lake avenue, are **9****â„¢ 6 return home early in April {**â- * ^asadena, Cat, w3 pending the winter. 1720 Walnut avenue, are also plan- ning to attend the convention. Miss Helen Bruch will arrive Fri- day from *Wellesley college, and Messrs. Merritt and Ralph Bruch will come from" the University of Mich- igan or the same day to spend the Easter holiday with their parents, Mr, and Mrs: Louis Bruch, of 1201 Greenwood avenue. Mr. and Mrs. E. Jackson Casse, who have been spending the winter iy^ Hamilton, Ol»are making thetf home at the Edgewater Beach bote for a few days prior to their depart- ure for New York City, where they expect to locate permanently. ♦ " Mr. Donald Pattison returned to his home at 823 Ashland avenue, last evening from the University of Illi- nois, for a week-end visit. .- â€"•â€"â-  Mr. and Mrs. Frank W. Teegarden of 1102 Central avenue^ are spending sometime in Biloxi, Miss. Laning- of Evanston to Edward Braun of 629 Prairie avenue, on Tuesday evening, March 15. â€"♦â€" â- â€¢ Rev. and Mrs. John Gray Rhind of Remington, Ind., will arrive on Mon- day to spend several days _as_ ihe guests of Mrs. Rhind's parents, Mr. and Mrs. T. E. D. Bradley, 1104 For- est avenue. Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth H. Burns of 16i7 Ridge avenue, announce the birth of a daughter, Mary-Jean, on Saturday, Mareh 19; Mrs. Burns was formerly Miss Virginia Austin. Cook County Woman's Christian Temperance Union will hold a Spring Institute in the Garfield Boulevard M. E. church, corner of Emerald ave- The Philathea class of the Meth- odist church was entertained in-J formally on Monday evening at the home of Mrs. Fennieri A. Buck, 1215 Lake avenue. The Misses ^ra^ Whitleyn. and Dorothy Anderson of St. Louts, Mo., arrived on Thursday to be guests at the home of Mr. and Mrs* Charley McCue. â-  â-  I Ann Hatha way I Violiniste y- (Earl i£. fttntor Ota JnterUir iewrainra anb jfarttiaipra SUGGESTIONS DRAWINGS ESTIMATES Cheerfully â€"Submittetlâ€" In our store we carry a full line of WALL PAPER^ and PAINTS for home use Announces the Opening _^ da ClassinWilmette on Saturday PHONE GRACfcLAND i : "....... SCHAEFER Wants You to Cal 1 Him for LSEBALL MAGAZINE LIFE BOOK CULTURE bj 4 5'- SPRING OPENING time to have your nigs pleaned and repaired.â€"___â€"„^_ Our washing process removes the dirt and dust and gives you a per- fectly clean rug with its natural color. Our work guaranteed and prices reasonable. Call us up for an estimate. Aram K. Mestjian Oriental Rugs and Carpets CLEANING REPAIRING 607R.R.Avc PhoncWa.1949 , WILMETTE. ILLINOIS i nmrif nnrwiiM^- l^ttBlft^lltt^ttM^MiBi^^Mi^BMMiiM MaMaaiaaM-MMH^^H

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy