Wilmette Life (Wilmette, Illinois), 26 Apr 1929, p. 28

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28 WILMETTE LIFE April 7.6, 1929 --RICBADQUARTBBS f~r the IIORTB SHORB~-· JOHNSON OUTBOARD MOTORS BOATS for all wea RUNABOUTS RACERS CANOES Come in and inspect our stock of New and Used Outboard Motors and Boats. We represent the foremost boat builders and the JOHNSON OUTBOARD MOTOR CO. We will be pleased to take you for a demonstration. 11 Get into this clean, safe and exciting aport.,, The . Chicago Illinae club announces for the program of its annual Spring luncheon at the Allerton, Chicago, Dr. Robert Harver Gault, who has recent· ly returned from Russia, and Charles L. Morgan, artist-architect. . Tables will be arranged by classes in groups of five years, which will insure the reunion of classmates and school friends. The luncheon will be held in the Italian room of the Allerton hotel, 701 N. Michigan avenue, Saturday, May 4, at 1 o'clock. Tom Sellery, son of Roy A. Sellery, 908 Ashland avenue, who attends Beloit college, has been spending the spring vacation with his father, and returned to school Monday. He has had as his guest over the week end a school friend, Gilbert W. Dopp, of Oconomowoc. Wis. Health Agencies Plan to Join in May Day Program Mrs. Theodore B. · Sachs, superintendent of the Chicago Tuberculosis Institute, announces that the institute is cooperating · with the American C h i 1d Health association in its celebration of May Day. T h e institute does not confine itself to this one day, however, b u t promotes special child welfare activities throughout the spring combining these with its own Earl~ Diagnosis campaign, with the State Health week program, and the National Negro Health week. It has an especially attractive window display on the subject and is using the May Day seal and other illustrations in its printing. President Herbert Hoover, chairman of the American Child Health association, is author of the following: The Child·s Rill of Rights SUPPLIES PEACOCK MOTOR SALES PHONE GREENLEAF 6789 I .... 11~5 CHICAGO AVENUE .... BVAMSTON - - -- - - - - - "The ideal to which we !';hould l'>trive is that there should be no child in America, that has not been born under proper condition, that does not live in hygienic tmrroundings, that ever suffers from under-nutrition, that does not have prompt and efficient medical attention and inspec tion, that does not r eceive primary instruction in the elements of hygien e and good health. . (signed) Herbert Hoover." A Dining Room Service to Please the Critical The Orrington dining room is the favorite eating resort of those who are critical in ways of living. Here is a cuisine of distingu_ished character . . . a service that anticipates your every need . . . and a cheerful, homelike atmosphere for which this hostelry is famous. Weekdays or Sundays, you are invited to enjoy The Orrington. Table d'hote luncheons and dinners, spilling over with goodness, await your visit. HOURS: 7:00A.M. to 8:30P.M. The following resolution authorizes the c.ampaign: Joint Resolution DESIGNATING MAY 1 AS CHILD HEALTH DAY: RESOLVED BY THE SENATE AND HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES OF THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA IN CONGRESS ASSEMBLED. That the President of the United States is hereby authorized and requested to issue annually a proclama- · tion setting apart May 1 of each year as Child Health Day and inviting all agencies and organizations interested in child welfare to unite upon that day in the observance of such exercises as will awaken the people of the nation to the fundamental necessity of a yearround progr.1m for the protection and development of the health of the nation's children. · Many Elms and Shrubs Enhance Estates Acres , In addition to several hundred elms and several thousands · of flowering shrubs which were planted in the parkways and borders of Indian Hill Estates, East, last autumn, Bills Realty, Inc., is now planting an additional one hundred large elms of 4Yz to 6 inch diameter, sufficient to make· several fine trees on every lawn in Indian Hill Estates, East. On landscaping alone, in Indian Hill Estates, there has been spent more than $60,000 in shrub and tree plantings, which when fully grown will present an appearance of seclusion and delightful vista, unique on the North Shore. There is no area so large on the North Shore, according to F. W. Bills, which has been developed with so much of English hedge landscaping and of fine elm planting, and tulip bulb and other annuals and perennials as is true in these two large acreage developments constituting Indian Hill Estates. ' E V A N S T 0 N'S LARGEST AND FINEST H0 T EL GIVING MUSICALE Mrs. Randolph H. Lamprey, 730 Washington avenue, has invited the pupils of Miss Anna Chinlund of the Columbia School of Music to present a musicale at her home tomorrow alternoon.

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