Wilmette Life (Wilmette, Illinois), 6 Sep 1934, p. 16

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WILMETTE LIFE September 6, 1934 GOES EAST TO SCHOOL Mjiss Janet, McNulty, 720 Ashlanid avenue,, is Ieaving Sunday-v, September 16, to enter ber sophomore year at Connecticut college. Her sister. Fran- ces, leavek September 20, for* La Sall e junior college in ]Boston. RACK FROM, WISCON4SIN Miss Helen Hodgkins, 431 Abbots- ford road, returned. Sunday f rom Oconomowoc, Wis., where she- was thé guest of Miss Virginia jones of Washington, D., C., at ber parents' summer home. $595qEWN.IASH 595 Lafayeffe Model Se. lefore Fou suy EVANSTON NASH Cool 173.5 Senso.Ave.. 1I V2 BSks.N. of Devis "V' Station NORTHBROOK KENNEL CLUB Curtiss-Reynolds Airport DOG SEPT. 8and 9 Il A. M. to 9 P. M. sHOW . Aduits 50e .Cide 5 Free Parking Miniimun Deliveries of 150 gais, on No. 1, 2 and l ( 1222 central Avenue Lions Club: Favors Harbor Dredging In place of the usual, Tuesday luncheon meeting, the Winnetka Lions club, met last week at the Wilmette V. S. Coast Guard station where the Commander, Capt. M. A. Jacobson, gave> an interesting t alk on the work of the department. The club voted in favor of the pro- posed project of dredging the bar- bor. to ten feet to facilitate the operation of boats in and out of the harbor. A committee comprising Allen M. Klein, F. E. Phelan and Harry Roberts was appointed by President Frank N. Woods to draft a resolu- tion expressive of this opinion, to be inailed to tbe proper officiaIs. The Lions club at a recent meeting had as its guest speaker F. Clark, boatswain's mate, flrst class, from the Coast Guard station, who at that-time extended an invitation to the club to hold one of its meetings in the near future at the station. M.and Mrs. Arthur Long. 1106 Greenwood avenue, returned Mon- dav from a tivo weeks' vacation at laIs»er Park, Canada. -M NEW FUEL OIL PRICES Effective af Once Phono Wilmette 81 N 1-6~/4'Goi No.v 2~6/2,G0i NO. -3m"~60Gi No. 4 5/20 Gi No. 5 m"43/4@ ai No. 6-4¼ GaJ Try Braun Bros. service now. Have y our tank filled with Silver Flash oil at these prices . then you, too, will know why Braun Bros. serve more North Shore homes. than, any other oil company. Braun Bros. service costs you nothing ..and it relieves y ouof ail responsibili*ty.. DRAUN BRO.O0L CO. "For Fuel Use 011" 1' ____m Clyde B rown Holds 'One Man Show"' of LFam»ed'Ph.otographs Clyde Brown, 1710 Walnut avenue, Wilmette, is to have a "4one man show" of bis photographs in Chicago September 10 to 29 at O'Brien's art- galleries. This -is an announcemenit of double interest to the world of art, for Brown ranks importantly as an artist, and this is the first formai showing of bis work. Chicagoans are. thoroughly familiar with his pbotograpbs, however. Dean of the Daily'News art staff, his camera studies have been featured by that paper for more than 30 years. C. J. Bulliet, critic of the Dailv News, holds in high estimate Brown's contribution to art. "Clyde Brown is an etcher as well as a photographer." Bulliet says, "and sizes up a land- scape with an artist's eye I)efore pressing the bulb of his camera. Give Eff oct of Paintings "He 'selects' and 'rejects,' as does a painter, and 'organizes' his Iandscape as nearly as it ks physicallv possible. As a resuit, bis photograplhs very often have the effect. ini composition. of a work by a masterly painter. Sometimes tbey approach even the dignity of a Constable or one of the great Dutch masters of landscape. "Brown's photograplis, as enlarged and printed as full page reproduc-* tions in rotogravure, find their wav readily into the portfolios of Chli-* cago, Indiana, Wisconsin, Michigan and Illinois painters as suggestions for future work, and the painters often journ ey with their easels to the spot Brown's camera bas caught. Brown's photographs are defi nitely 'art.'" Select Sixty Photographs Sixtv of Brown's favorite photo- grapbs have been chosen for the ex- hibit, most of wbich were made in and about Cook county, aithougli several are included that were takeii at Gloucester, Mass. The exhibit will be free, it is an- nounced. Important Books About Germiany at the Library Books on Germany in the Wilmiette public library include the following: Henderson-Short. History of Ger- many. One of the best volumes on the period from 1517 to 1914. Gooch-Germany. An historical sumi- mary precedes an interpretation of the political, social and intellectual forces at work between 1914 anid 1925. Ludwig-Bismarck. The life of thù great German stàtesman of the l9tIi century. Hitler-My Battie. Hitler's ownl story of bis life and statement of his beliefs, aims and methods. Mowrer-Germany Puts the Clocki Back. An American journalist telis of the recent collapse of democracy in *Germany. Hoover-Germany Enters the Third Reich. A critical study of the Na- tional Socialist Party's regime ini Germa ny. Henri-H itler Over Europe. A sensa- tional analysis of the forces wvork. ing behind the Nazi regim e.. Samuel Wells of Marblebead. Mass., left on Wednesday of Iast week after a ten day visit with Mr. and Mrs. Willis Nance, 1054 Chero- kee road. Mr. Wells stopped to visit Mrs. David Owen and family of Lake Forest before rpturning home. -o-- Burton Smith, 205 Essex roaci, Kenilworth, returnied Tuesday f rom a week's visit with bis grandparents, September 6, 1934 WILMETTE L.IFE

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