Lake Shore News (Wilmette, Illinois), 16 Feb 1923, p. 11

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w .If 3" m ^THE LAKE SHORE NEWS,:FRIDAY, FEBRUARY |j92jfcs*^Mffiiaaa'a>g6iiM;" ST. JOHN'S LUTHERAN »8t len and Prairie Aves., Wilmette erman W. Meyer, M. A. Pastor Prairie Ave. Telephone 1396 LENT Lgain and again we come back ^o CROSS as the characteristic sym- the centraL i act,_thA cxowing^jman^ at ion of all that Christianity ns and is. And we come back at return, only to find in it a deeper uiing, a higher power, a fuller rev- ion of love and of sin, of man and od, of the mystery of pain and the 1 of holiness; to find that the old, story which touches the hardest, stirs the roughest, and is within :h of the simplest, and is new to oldest, ever grows with the growth bur minds, and deepens it roots_ in hearts." SERVICES :15 A. M. Sunday school and Bible ss at Library Hall. ;45 A. M. First service and sermon the church. I5S 1:00 A. M. Second service and ser- n at the church. angerous Inconsistencies : The Pro- t< seel Bible Christian who Makes ho H ort to Increase his Knowledge ot I E BOOK. & Text: John 5, 39 I Wednesday eve., at 7:45 Lenten ser- K at the church. uhject: The Great Tokeri of Re- nhrance. Luke 23, 43. Ip [onday and Friday at 4: Children's H sses at the church If [onday eve. at 8, Choir rehearsal. ft he meeting of the Illinois District It the Walther League, which took if? ce at Joliet last Saturday and Sun- fi r brought out about 750 young â- $$ heran people from all over the H te. St. Peter's church was host to convention, and with its large irch and parish house ^was fully :IH lllable of accommodating the large hering. The banquet on Saturday ning was attended by over 500, nig them fifty young people repre- ing the North Shore Zone of thi lther League. TheSe people had el§ie with a special purpose, namely mm of getting the 1924 convention for jinston. After a very animated and ly discussionâ€"it was either Bloom- on. Quincy or Evanston, 111.â€"Ev- ton finally won otrt by a large ma- le lay representatives of the Chi- ) Lutheran Loop Lenten Service mittee meet next Friday evening o'clock, at Room 312 Ashland k to develop all the- plans -and e all the arrangements for Ihe heran Lenten services to be con- fcted at Woods Theatre during the 1 two weeks of Lent. St. John's |1 be represented by Earl P. Gamron Carl A. Fick. ENGLISH LUTHERAN ____ie and Seventh street. William Guise, pastor ----- pervies for February 1, the First Sun- in Lent:â€" Hble School at 9:45 A. M. Classes all ages. /orship with Sermon at 11 A. M. pastor will preach on' the following fiect: "The Saviour's Cross." This fl| jly Lenten message will be based $j| a tire-Gospel for-the-Bay.---------â€" i he Mid-week Lenten service will ffield Wednesday evening at 8 o^clck. us use this blessed'season ^f^^the to strenghen our spiritual life and ify Christ who suffered for us. The ral theme for the series of sermons Wednesdays will be: *'Ih tlie Steps Jesus." A cordial invitation is also iended to friends in the community worship with us. "he woman of the Missionary society ? WEIGHT OF 0RRINGT0N 2Vi KMKTO SO. WCH Footings are completed for Victor Carlson's $2,000,000 Orrington hotel on Library Square, Evanston, atid steel construction has reached the second story, J. A. Scanlan, structural engineer announces. The new hotel will exert a pressure of two and a half tons per square inch on soil under the footings, Mr. Scanlan says. The four largest foot- ings contain 35 cubic yards of con- crete and two tons of steel. Footings are immense slabs of concrete on which the supporting columns of the building rest. So closely has Mr. Scanlan com- puted pressures that when the build- ing is completed it will not have set- tled more than a quarter of an inch into the ground. He distributes the weight of the building by widening the footings and spreading the pres- sure. If the columns bore on the ground, they would sink like a walk- ing stick into the sod. There are 79 columns, 66 main and 13 supporting the service structure. The largest footings are 31x7j^x4 feet and they are designed to sjjread the weight borne by two columns at the ^^ edges uf the lul.â€"No Pari ot the ad-IS New Trier Swimmers Bid For League Championship Saturday, February 10, the New Trier High School squad took Morton and Maine township high schools into camp. Morton was administered a double de- feat, the seniors winning 40 to 10, the juniors 34 to 16, and Mane juniors suc- cumbing also by a 34 to 25 count. New Trier has now defeated every other team in the suburban league and is on the road to another championship. teSS Read fa 1TNTIR V^^^M iMflkl* WltMBTTB-110$ inUIMC mVANBTOM-1043 \^W0i SOFT FILTERED WATER W*Af^S*M§SmM used in all our work is your guarantee of better work, softer, whiter clothes and longer life to your linen. , ':|' â- ' ^.-':'rff ROUGH~ DRY FAMII-Y SERVICITour specialty. PHONE WILMETTE 1105 or EVANSTON 1043 llll joining property owner's soil is used to support the weight of the great new hotel. Special designing has thrown the pressure of the outside column within the Orrington hotel lot. The basement walls are 16 inches thick, a third thicker than ordinary width, for extra protection. They go as deep as the footings. Income Tax Facts (Article No. 2) In the making of his income tax re- turn for the year 1922. a taxpayer, if smgler^s-allowed__anâ€"exemption of $1,000. A married person, or head of a family, whose net income for the year 1922 was $5,000 or less is allowed an exemption of $2,500. The exemp- tion allowed a married*' person or head of a family whose net income was in excess of $5,000 is $2,000. A head of a family is-a person who act- ually supports one j^r more persons living in his or her household who are closely related to him or her by blood, marriage or adoption. An additional credit of $400 is allow- ed for each person (other than hus- band or wife) dependent upon the taxpayer for chief support, if such person is under 18 years of age or in- caoable of self support because ment- ally nr physically defective. A single Wilmette Realtors Aire Progressive Realtors in Tacoma, Wash., Portland, Oregon, Evanstom, III. and other progressive towns have regular office hours, close their offices on Sunday and are doing a flourishing business. • Bimmm$ ,„.......JfpK This gives the RealEstate man an opportunity to get some" thing more than work 12 hours a day and seven days a week out of life. ~ " Wilmette Real Estate Men do not wish to be back numbers but they find it difficult to close their places of business if you Mr. Property Owner are going to become an active competitor by advertising your property for sale when their offices are closed. We therefore call uDon you to support the Realtors in their sincere effort to do business in a modern and progressive way. -â- ..'-â- -â- , -^^^^f^M The Wilmette Church Council and Public-spirited Citizens are back of the Realtors in this movement. fill Sffftll man whose net income for 1922 was $2,000 and who supports in his home an aged mother would have no tax to pay, but would nevertheless be re- quired to file a return. The fact that a person's income may be nontax- able by reason of the exemption does not nullify the requirement to file a return if his income was within the prescribed figuresâ€"$1,000 if single and $2,000 if married. The normal tax is 4 per cent on the first $4,000 of net income in excess oi the exemption, and 8 per cent on the remaining net income. The tax may be paid in full at the time of filing the return, or in four installments due on or before March 15, June 15, Septem- ber and December 15. PUPILS VIE FOR IORT LEAGUE CAMPAIGN^ Pupils in the Wilmette grade schools Monday of this week "fired the first guns" in the drive for new members for the Art League. . . Spurred on by the hope of obtaining the reward that accompanies the se- curing of the largest number of member- hips, each grade in the schools is mak ie woman of the Missionary society f * ± e|fort to come out with first hold their work meeting Friday of . W every ^eno on ^ week in order that they may more |»yenjenttyattend the United Prayer /ice to benrad~Ihe^slmTe--afterno?n |l :45 o'clock. The choir will meet on Friday eve- and thg classes as usual on Satur- The annual Congregational meeting fl be held Monday evening, March 5. sides the election of officers there will interesting reports and an address. >rth Shore Hi-Y Boys In Conference March 16 ihe third annual North Shore Old- Boy's Conference, held under the bices of the Evanston Hi-Y Club, the |w Trier Hi-Y Club, and the Evans- Y. M. C. A., will be held on Friday Saturday, March 16, and 17. ?he Conference theme is "Others," many very good speakers are on the Ogram, among them Dr. Stephen A. >yd, of Wilmette, Dr> John Timothy 3ne, of Chicago, and CoacrT "Glen ^istlewaite^of Northwestern universjjy. There will be a banquet Friday even- -at-wbich the various delegations will e an opportunity to give their school Us and have-a~good time -generally^â€" ?he conference is open to all north re boys 16 to 20 years of age. Reg- ations must be signed" by an adtilt_ der, Pastor, Sunday school superin- ident, of high school principal. honors at the close of the drive, on teb ruary 24. To the winning grade goes the covet- ed honor of having first choice of the new picures that are to be purchased by the Art League. Adult memberships in the league are obtainable from the pupils at a cost of 50 cents. Children's memberships cost 10 cents. The purpose of the league is to purchase the best art pictures for the decoration of the school rooms. The erec- tion of the new building on l/thstreet makes the need for newj>ictures more imperative, according loTnehibers of the organization. THE CHANGING WORLD The lighting of a hall with two thou- sand candles caused a sensation at a reception in Colonial times at Phila- delphia in honor of George Washing- ton It cost about $10 to burn these candles an hour. The same amount of illumination with electricity today would cost only 20 cents. . New Trier lightweight basketball men softenedlhe a^TeÂ¥T^ministered"to the heayt»g by Waukegan Saturday by bouncing the junior Waukegans 28 Iv, 7^The-4ieavy^eightsJ6sXiQ-.Waukegan 41 ta 32 after the local boys were ahead in the first half 17 to 12. The New Trier varsity_______ absence of two-star and Nelson, was handicapped by the tossers'in Fraser COURTESY CLEANLINESS - WHITE CASH 1189 WILMETTE AVE. ^ert/v*«™«^ PHONE 2779 SPECML WEEK ENDING FEMHIARTMTth. ROBERTS QUALITY.'. BACON 32C lfo. HONEYSUCKLE BRANDt , â-  -t^k^M HOMERrDAIRY^.. ^â€"j -^ By4he side^H- half side ieS [DShRAWflAMS %&1± 25c^i CHOICE NATIVE BEEF POT ROAST . 18c IE. NATIVE SIRLOIN STEAK FRESH CHOPPED STEAK 39c lb. 21clb. To Introduce Our Home-Made 100 Percent Pure Sausage Meat, Sellintf at 29c lb. We Will Give Away FREE One lbf of Sausage Meat With Every Purchase of »1.00 or Over] itminnimmiiiimiiHiHiin FREE COUPON FREE FOR ONE POUND MUSE'S I h 100 per ceotfore PartSaufageJIeat â€"â€"PEtiepJS^^SEASONED-^^ FREE This offer ends Feb717th. FREE PLEASE BJ^im^W^ QUALITY- LOW PRICE 1 :M FRESH FISH W AND 'IS ?*»$?' ;0$'S^0m il RECETVEH KClLY^ffl fWj-

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