Im^^m&^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^W^^^^^^^K^^^^^^^^^^^^K': S ^" â- " - )uc service ;adedbybudd i of Baker Brings About Changes |§§§Klitions caused by the' recent of Frank J. Baker, of Wilmette, resident of the company has a reorganization of the execu- uff of the Public Service Com- and accordingly on February 6 el Insull, president, resigned that and became chairman of the ], with general authority over company's affairs specifically rred by ammendments to the ws. tton I. Budd was elected pres- of the company. John G. Learn- nd Julius L. Hecht were elected presidents. incident with the election of the atter, Charley A. Munroe resign- s vice president to devote his to the Peoples Gas Light and company, of which he is vice- dent and a director. He retains josition as a member of the board lirectors and executive committee UBie Public Service company. John ulick, vice president in charge of ces of the Public Service eom- , continues in that position. r. Budd is now president of the ago Elevated railways and Chi- North Shore and Milwaukee oad and will continue in that pos- His election to the presidency e Public Service company is an- r step forward in an unusual ca- He was born in' San Francisco, ing to Chicago at the age of sev- ears. He graduated from the Shat- school at Fairbault, Minnesota, is now one of the trustees of that jtution. His first job was in the eying department of a steam rail- in Ohio and he has been assoei- with the transportation business since. 1892 Mr. Budd obtained employ- t in the shops of the Intermural oad a^t the Worlds Fair. He be- e a clerk for the~ Metropolitan ated in Chicago in 1895 at a salary 0 per month and from that point to position after position finally ming general manager. In 1910 as elected president of that com- y and a year later when the ele- d lines in Chicago, were consol- ed, Mr. Budd was chosen presi- t of the combined system. When ChicagOr-North^Shoreâ€"ancU-MiU | ukee Railroad was reorganized Tn 6 he was made president of that id. Upe is on the board of directors of £ Middle West Utilities company, Utility Securities company, North- st Utilities company, Eastern Wis- sin Light and Power company, ry Street Railway company, Pub- Securities Company of New Jersey 1 Lake Superior District Power pany. e is a director of the Union ague club and the Exmoor Golf b, a member of the-Industrial club d Western Society of Engineers ,jd vice president of the American ilway association. / Ir. Budd is a resident of Highland rk. ohn G. Learned has been associat- with -the-electrical industry since. 8, beginning his employment with Chicago Telephone company. Two rs later he became salesman -for Commonwealth Edison company. hile working in that position, he impleted a course in the Chicago w school and in 1902 was admitted the Illinois Bar. In 1905 he was de general contract agent for the rth Shore Electric company, whose iccessor is the Public Service com- ny. A year later he was made as- tant to the vice president of the mpany in charge of commercial and vertising and later became coramer- al and new business manager. Julius L. Hecht was graduated from e Massachusetts Instituteâ€"©t-Teeh-- [ology in 1904. A year later^ he- he- me construction engineer for the lorth Shore Electric company. In 07 he was made mechanical engineer charge of stations. In 1915 he was appointed superintendent of electrical production and in 1921 assistant to the vice president in charge of opera- tion with the duties of general super- intendent. He is president of the Western So- ciet^r0f. Eneineers, past president of the National District Heating associa- tion and a member of the American bociety of Me^h^nical Engineers and a director of the Chicago Engineers Copper Cooled Car Makes Hit at Automobile Show "The interest evinced in the "cop- per cooled car" at the Chicago Auto- mobile Show makes it plain to the casual observer that in this new model the General Motors company, Chevro- let division, has struck a popular chord in motorists ideals," says Mr. Jacobsen of the Northwestern Motor company at Evanston, dealers in the Chevrolet motor can "To answer the frequent query, 'does it replace the present line of su- perior model cars?' it must be said, it does not, in as much as it is an ad- dition, priced $200 higher than the present line. "It is the intention of the North- western Motor company to exhibit this chassis at the formal opening of the main branch now tinder construe? tion in Evanston. "A word about the car itself! It is the result of many years of experi- mental work, the process of ".joining copper and gray iron. Samples of this work and a thorough explana- tion of the benefits to be derived as a result of the discovery of this pro- cess, must be seen and heard to be ap- preciated. "Regarding deliveries of this copper cooled Chevrolet model it may be stated that production quantity will be announced in the near future." REMEMBER WAY BACK WHEN The grocer always put a potato on the mouth of the oil can to keep it from spilling? ___ ____ And you coulcnmy TcindTihg wood in bundles. Those were the days before electric lights and gas stoves. Former Resident Visits |§ | Friends in the Village Sebring Phelps, father of Edwin Phelps, and a former resident of the village, has been making a brief visit at the Phelps home at 260 Wood court. Mr. Phelps, accompanied by his wife and three daughters, has been touring the western states, stopping at points in Iowa, Colorado, Okla- homa and Texas. While the family was visiting at San Antonio, one of the daughters, Miss Izel, who MS'a graduate of the Baptist Missionary Training school at Chicago, visited a Presbyterian mis- sion, discovered the institution was sadly in need of an interpreter in Spanish, and subsequently complied with the mission's request that she remain to fill that position. Mr. Phelps, who has been here, is now enroute to Canada on a business trip. Mrs. Phelps and the daughters are to remain in San Antonio until his return, when they will again oc- cupy their home in Rockford, 111. CHICAGO MOTOR CLUB J. G. Stanton Wilmette Manager for Insurance Dept. and Membership Committee NORTH SHORE HOTEL Evans. 6400 $220,000 In Cash Returned on Policies In 1922 Skokie Motor Co. THE UNIVERSAL CAR Headquarters for - the North Shore 712-714-71S Elm Street Winnetka Authorized FORD Dealers What It Will Do for You The Cantilever Shoe will give you more comfort, more strength, more pleasure in walking, more happiness during the day, than" shoes of the or dinary type. Moreover, there is a style about the Cantilever which will Jookjifell oil your foot. Like the arch of your own foot, the arch of the Cantilever Shoe is flexible This enables your foot muscles to en- joy a freedom of action which is pleasureable and beneficial. By main- tainingthe strength of your arch muscles through exercise and free cir- culation, you are going to save your- self from unpleasant experience of women who suffer from weak arches, flat foot and kindred ills . The Cantilever Shoe will give your toes a chance to wiggle a little, straighten out and enjoy themselves Ten times will.you be thanked for this. nr will give your body an opportu- nity to recover its natural balance, it you have been wearing high heels too often; and possibly some of the in- ternal organs will welcome the im- proved posture. It will give your foot the comfort of & shoe shaped to the natural foot, and it wiH let yoTTen'jOy a good walk, with a sense of freedom and a lack of fatigue which may be a new expe- rience for you. The Cantilever Shoe will give you all these things without the sacrifice of good looks. ___. â- Try it, and see. On Sale EselmiveU on the North Shtfre «i? NORTH SHCRE B00TERY 529 DAVIS STREET Phone Ev. 6757 ^ EVANSTON, ^ g ^ ItLINOIS -To insure proper fitting^ Iwe^Jbav^ Read the Want Ads St % ';':;:: Presented by tMfl^:M^ North Share TTieatre^vtild EVANSTON WOMEN'S CLUB ~ Wednesday Evening - FEBRUARY 21st 3 Hill i H +>++++0+++>0++++++++++++++++++++++++<*+++++++0++>0++^^ •0+0+0>»*0++++»++0+0++++++++; inatalloa an X«Ray machine in our store. This service to ifou without charge. Out Cantilever Booklet Sent - on Request IT STARTS PROMPTLY IN THE COLDEST WEATHER WERSTED MOTOR CO. ^otK^ Phone Winnetka 165 __ COMPLETE SER VICE FOR ALL CA RS 1 ;3BMP^ !!^flftl'; â- For Business or Shopping Use the North Shore iiki§ A quick, clean trip from Wilmette into the very heart of Chicago, conven- ient to business hou- ses, theatres jUfppMi fillllp stiff? 'fAIUfllH â- __ Limited trains leave WUm^e^ £|1| every hour from 6:45~A.M. to 1:45 A.M., operating through to the South Side of Chicago. Express trains every thirty min- utes, operatin^aroundthe loop. Always a train to suit your con- - venience. _ _i-â€" Chicago North^^Sfiore^MilwaukeeB^B^ tE5^ NORTH SHORE Wilmette Ticket Office Passenger Station, JMlmette Aâ„¢*â„¢* Phone Wilmette 2541^ M.'UMS^Mj&k£i&MM:P?