Illinois News Index

Wilmette Life (Wilmette, Illinois), 15 Mar 1929, p. 43

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March 15, 1929 WILMETTE LIFE LODGE HAS CARD PARTY TALK ON GAJWENING Mrs. C. D. Ewer, of 1'111 Ashland avenue, w~!l talk to pupils of the. seventh and eighth grades at the Howard school . next Tuesday, March 19. Mrs. Ewer will endeavor to interest the pupils in home gardening. \!nivenity Glee Club Air T rafJic Will Will Sing at Norabore Bring New ·Health N<;>rthwestern men's Problems, Report glee club will give university's a series of concerts Air traffic is likely to have a profound influence over future city planning, particularly from a sanitary and health standpoint, according to Dr. Thomas H. Leonard, acting director. state health department, who points out that the subject of airway terminals is already agitating the mind:; of both state and national legislative bodies. Both the airplane and the automobile will encourage a dispersion rather than concentration of municipal population so that mistakes in current plans for sewer, .water :md :.treet projects are apt to prove extremely costly for rising Mrs. B. F. Bilsland, 1228 Elmwood generations. avenue, spent last week-end with Mrs. "In the past railroad and waterway William Colin of Chicago, wl-:~lc Mr. craft have favored the concentration Bilsland went Covington, Ind. to see of municipal inhabitants into densely his mother, Mrs. John Bilsland. populated areas of limited dimensions. The automobile and espcially the airplane will encourage a spreading of community population over a wide aree1 . Municipal growth in the future is likely to develop with the airport as a !lnb · just a·.; railroad and steamship terminals have constituted the hub of community expansion in the past. "Mistakes in city plau.1ing in the past have cost prodigious amount3 in money, health and effort. Plagues of cholera. typhoid fever. dysentery and tuberculosis have added incalculably to the overhead incurred because of bad water supplies. inadequate and un3Cientific water and sewer systems and poor housing . . Valuable p~operty has been abandoned and streets have b P.en widened at tremendous expense because neither the magnitude nor the character of municipal gro\vth was anticipated 111 even approximately ac<.:urate terms. "The inevitable growth of airway traffic in the future will unmistakJblv encourage community growth around terminah but homes will be constructed o\·er wide areas. This will make necessary a nev; type of water and sewer· systems and a ne ·w technique in . such things a·.; quarantine enforcement. I "England was free from rabies for a hundred years bu .. after a century of vigilant quarantine of incoming dogs I at '3 team ship ports an infected canine got into the country in ·a plane . Now the problem of rabies i·.s open again. In fectect people can he tran spo rted in airplanes too so that large numbers of people might be exposed in a short time. "These questions relate to imp ortant problems that are just around the corner in community life . City and regional planning as well as legislation hearing upon municipal airp orts ought to give due consideration to these things in o'rcler to ayoid errors no lcs<; co·3 tb' than those committed in the past." Rebekah lodge, number 610, gave a card party Wednesday evening at Odd Fellow's hall. Bridge, five-hundred, and bunco were played, followed by reat the Norshore theater during the freshments. Mrs. Francis Duncan of week starting Ma-rch 16. About 50 Winnetka was in charge of the afmen of the total membership of 100 fair. have been selected by Prof. Glenn C. Bainum, director of the club, to take part in the concerts. They will sing a group of songs which will comprise classical, popular and collegiate numbers, beginning their program at 7 each evening. During the past three years the club has sung at both the Riviera and Chicago theaters, so the custom is not a new one. ' Milk is good milk Bow~an s resh milk with an -a r1Ch, f l {' er flavor. Unmistakab y ln odness is due to This extra go ke in bring.. t:he extra care{we ta to you. lt ing it {rom arm d d of de-a stan ar represents h' h has been lC pendab1\it - Y W . ft{ty years. famous {or over l today. See {or Order a bott e manY neigh.. yourself wf~y ,d~ endorse it. bors and rlen CHILDREN'S MOVIES "Rome, the Eternal Citv" and "0:aples and · Vesuvius" will ·be the featureq moving pictures on the program of the free entertainment for children to be giYen tomorrow at Field Museum of Xatural History. under t11e provisions of the J ame'3 Nelson :~.nd Anna Louise Raymond Fund. There · will be two showings of the films. one at 10 o'clock and the other at 1I o'clock, in the James Simpson theater of the museum. Other film.; to be shown are "'rhe Buried City" and "Our Animals and How They Help s." Children from all parts of Chicago and suburbs are invited. T · AN DAIR.Y COMPANY Mr. and Mrs. Percy Simon, 1023 Ashland avenue, and Mrs. Simon's mother, Mrs. J, C. Simon, returned last week from Hollywood Beach, Fla., where they had spent six wee~s. MILK THE MILK OF SUPERIOR FLAVOR

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