Wilmette Life (Wilmette, Illinois), 6 Dec 1929, p. 29

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December 6, 1929 WILMETTE LIP~ Peterson-Wend ell Wedding Event of · · D Th an ksgtvtng ay K~therine Hedglin Will Present Pupils' Recital Miss Katherine Hedglin of the Columbia School of Music announces The marriage of Miss Esther Peter- a recital to be given by her vVilmette son, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Otto and Winnetka pupils Saturday ·afterPeterson of Evanston, and Joseph E. noon, December 14, at 2:30 o'clock. Wend.ell, son of Mr. and Mrs. Carl I. The program will be presented in the \.Vendell, 104 Sixteenth street, Wil- Wilmette \Voman's club building. mette, was solemnized on ThanksgivPupils who will participate in the ing day at t~e Swedish Mis sion church, recital are Elsi~ Jane _von de.r Lipp~n, CHAI~S ~N~i',ff-BLE8 Evanston, with the Rev. J. W. Carlson Mary Ellen Datley, Shtrley Pttts, MarMrs. \.Vharton Clay, 430 Sheridan A 8 officiating. A re.ception for eighty-five · tha Leach, Bobby Mann, Lorraine road, .Kenilworth will be hostess to A D gues ts at the Ridgeview hotel, Evans - Beecher, Isabel Mat~ieson,_ Suzanne members of her Reading club at lunch- I WILliETTE 113! ~~y~n1mediately . followed the cer~- ~G~r~~~et~l,~R~o~s~e~m~a~r~y~K~Ie~tn~,~B~t~ll~L~e~r~sc~h~,~e~o~n~t~o~d~a!y~agt~h~e~r~h~o~m~e~.~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~-~ --~.~~~~~~~ Jean Gordon, Jack Lersch, Betty McNulty, Banda Watts, Ella Menzen, Jane Strom, Dexter Sharp, Marjorie Green, Regina Fontham, Margaret Stephens, Mary Louise Schaeffer, Jeanette Robertson, Wilma Menzen, Mary Janet Lersch, Eleanor Beechf'r, Frieda Salmen, Julia Lineberger, Maty Jane Farley, Peggy Anderson, Janet Mathieson, William Rolfing, Alice Leland, and Evelyn Strom. PASS BURNER ORDINANCE A new ordinance was passecl by the Kenilworth Village board Monday night regulating the installation of oil burners to conform with the latest recommendations of the National Board of Fire Underwriters. I000 J R £0 D L - The _ bride was gowne·d in egg shell satin· and wore an ivory colored tulle veil caught to a lace cap with orange blossoms. She held a large sha.wer bouquet of white roses and wh1te sweet peas. Miss Hildegarde Larson of New York as maid of honor wore a gown of apricot satin mad.e along princess lines. She wore slippers of the same shade and carried a large bouquet of yellow roses. The flower girl, little Lois Alm of Evanston, wore a deep pink frock of georgette crepe and carried a basket of rose petals. Donald Gustavson of Evanston, the ring bearer, was in a suit of white satin. The best man for Mr. Wendell was Da,·id Milberg of Chicago. The ushers included A. 1Ierritt Anderson of Evanston and Thomas Carlson of Chicago. Mr. and Mrs. \Yendell will return next week from their wedding journey and will make their home on Lunt ayenue in Rogers Park. ear TOMORROW,S Radio Radio's march of pros· ress has been rapid. So rapid, in fact, that unless one thinks twice, he finds his receiver out of step with the times, shortly after buying it. But there is a way that the radio inE. H. SCOIT, the designer of vestment can be proWorld's Record Radio Receivers tected- and those who take their radio enjoyment~ ;~riously have followed this 11 way 11 and have derived pleasure and satisfaction therefrom, far in excess of the slightly higher first cost of Scott Custom-Built Receivers. Scott Custom-Built Radio has always been several years ahead of its day. Evidence of this is the fact that receivers custom-built by Scott three years ago stand ready to meet today's best "factorybuilt11 receivers in any kind of comparative tests for selectivity, power, and tone. If history repeats itself-and from all engine-ering data at hand 1 indications are that it will-today's Scott Custom· . Built Radio will be the superior of the industry's best offerings three years hence. , E. H. Scott was th~ first to successfully utilize two stages of tuned intermediate frequency amplification in a superheterodyne receiver. By so doing, and by combining other features of advanced engineering 1 he earned for the first Scott Custom-Built Receiver the title of "Scott World's Record Radio." 117 programs from 19 stations- aii6CXX:Ho 8000 miles distant-were logged and verified during a 13-week test period. At that time, the rest of the industry was contenting itself with consistent 500 to ICX)() mile receptio~. Scott was one of the pioneers of screen-grid radio, and was th~ first to supply a screen-grid receiver which actually took practical advantage of the screen-grid tube. Scott Custom-Built ScreenGrid Radio now has a background of two years of success-while the rest of the industry is just making its screen-grid debut this year. Scott was thcz first to supply a real international receiver. The new Scott models, in conjunction with the instantly-attached short wave converter 1 tune from 14 to 550 meters-thereby bringing the music of both hemispheres to the drawing rooms of Scott owners. In all truth-Scott Custom-Built Radio, by virtue of being custom-built and because of the unfettered, advanced engineering it symbolizes, is the radio of tomorrowand the one radio you can buy without fear of the future. To house this jewel of advanced radio engineering you have the Kenilworth Grid Victors Collect Spoils Saturday \Vinning football teams of the sixth seventh and eighth grades at the Joseph Sears school in Kenilworth will be guest of the losers at a party to be held in the Kenilworth ~~ emorial gymnasium this Saturday night beginning at i o'clock. About ~ixty boys are :-.xpected to attend the affair, which wi!l be entirely inf orm al. The outstanding feature of the e\·ening's program will be the av.: arding of "K's" to mcmhers of Kenilworth's midget and lightweight football team s " ·hich represented the school in the )."orth Shore Grammar School Football leai-!"ue this year. - Supt. Harper Presides at Education Sessions Supt. J. R. Harper of the \Vilmctt e Public schools attended a meeting o£ the executi\'e committee of the Northern Illinois Conference on Supervision at DeKalb Ia t ""tck. This organization is composed of superinte ndent s and principals in the northern part of llli nois. 1'1r. Harper is the president thi s vear. Plans for the conference's an.nual spring meet ing were discussed h · the executive committee. It \Ya s de cided to hold the meeting the first Frida,· and Saturday in May. TO GIVE LUNCHEON Mrs. Guy F. \Vetzel, 116 Fifth stre ~~ t, will be hostess to several of her friends at a bridge luncheon Thursday, D';!cember 12, at the Oak Crest in Evanston. ~· Mr. and Mrs. \Valter I. Beam, 411 Sheridan road, had as their guests ov·~r the Thanksgiving holidays, the latter's parents, Mr. and Mrs. J. B. Driver of Lima, Ohio, and Mrs. Beam's brotherin-law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Harold Smith, of Lima, Ohio. -0- choice of 22 custom-built console;. Come in-hear Scott Custom-Built Radio-tune it-see it-and you will quickly understand why no one has ever challenged the records of performance Scott Receivers hold. Prices upwards from $21~ Home demonstrations can be arranged-or our illustrated brochure will be mailed you on request. S C 0 T T R AD I 0 SALONS Mrs. Albert H. Ullrich was hostess to her Evanston Music Study club Monday afternoon of this week at her home, 925 Lake avenue. -oMr. and Mrs. Roy 0. Walker, 504 Meadow road, Winnetka entertained nine guests on Thanksgiving day at the Shawnee Country club.

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