Wilmette Life (Wilmette, Illinois), 3 Jan 1930, p. 7

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January 3, 1930 Opera Club Will Hear M assenet,s "Don Quichotte" The Civic Opera club of Wilmette holds its next meeting ·Monday evening, January 6, at Shawnee Country club, with a dinner at 7 o'clock followed by the program at 8:15. The schedule has been changed since the last announcement, and the Max Oberndorfers. will give a musical interpretation of the fantastic new opera of Massenet's, .. Don Quichotte," which is one of the novelties that have been sta;ged this season by the Chicago Civic Opera company. It will be given again later in the season. Mr. and Mrs. Oberndorfer will present a condensed version of the entire score of the opera which takes the old, well known story of Don Quixote, and tells it in a modern, dramatic, unusual manner. The music is descriptive and beautiful. Massenet is considered one of the ·outstanding writers of modern opera and UDon Quichotte" is considered one of the striking, musical dramas of the mod.e rn school. Members of the Civic. Opera club plannj_ng to hear the program are urged to be present at the dinner. The sound pictures of Chicago Civic Opera stars which were to have been the feature of Monday's meeting will be shown to club members the end of january. OUr (ireat ]anuarj Offering thousands of Stein-Bloch, Charter House and Other Fine Suits ··. at Drastic Cuts · sso and '60 Suits-Now $ so '65, . ,75, sis SuitJ~Now $ so · .. Funeral Rites Held for Mrs. Sarah E. Goodwin Mrs. Sarah E. Goodwin died at the home of her daughter, Mrs. David L. Anderson, 1317 Maple avenue, Wilmette, Christmas morning at the age of 81 years. She had been ill for about a month. For the past ten years Mrs. Goodwin had lived most of the time with her daughter in Wilmette, although she occasionally visited another daughter in Detroit. She had lived in Chicago about 20 years before moving to Wilmette and prior to that time had spent most of her life at Belle Fontaine, Ohio, her birthplace. Surviving her are two daughters, Mrs. Anderson, of Wilmette, and Mrs. Morse L. Hume, of Detroit, Mich., and one son, Edgar L. Goodwin, also of Detroit. Her husband die9 thirty years ago. The funeral services were held Saturday afternoon at 2 o'clock at the home of Mrs. Goodwin's cousin, E. \V. Patterson, at Belle Fontaine, and burial took place at Belle Fontaine. ]. E. 0. Pridmore, architect, is president of the Iroquois Memorial association which held its twenty-sixth memorial meeting Monday at the Iroquois Memorial hospital. Edmund W. Pridmore, 339 Oak Circle, Wilmette, is secretary and treasur~r of the asso- , dation. · Thousands of fine Suits, all in this season's stylesevery one taken from our· o~n hand-picked selections. What were outstanding values at their former prices -become simply overwhelming at such decisive reductions. It is our belief that such an opportunity has not been equaled in recent years for purchase of the world's finest Clothing-in such varied selections-at such attractive prices. NoM..,tl Left.(Mn ac! Alldlit_.._.... lau 1 .... v. . .,.. · the o-.r.. ....... ... ",.,·Jr~~-"= ~nd -This (}real Jale of 0 V E R .c 0 A T'·S Presents the Smartest Styles ~and Colors of the Season .... JSO, J60.and J65 Coats. Now Here are Coats conforming tn every respect to the rigtd standards of our liner quan~ · Coats tailored in our own controlled Stetn-Bloch and Charter House manufacturin& plants as well as from ~ther leading and respected makers. Dress Coats, big Ulaten, street Ulsters, Blue Coats, dark Oxfords, fine imported fancy weaves, Coats to meet the taste of any man accustomed to wearing $so, l6o and 16 5 Clothea. CORRECTION The price of Bijou hosiery, as adver· tised last week in this publication by La Jeunesse, Inc., is $1.95 per pair. TH E;....JHUB ~ ·. HENRY C. LYTTON It SONS STATE 11·tl JACKSON, CHICAGO ORRINGTON t1N CHURCH, BVANST~N

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