Illinois News Index

Wilmette Life (Wilmette, Illinois), 14 Jun 1929, p. 34

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34 WILMETTE LIFE June 14, 1929 WILMETTE LIFE by LLOYD 'HOLLISTER, INC. , 1232-1236 Central Ave., Wilmette, Ill. Cblcago otllce: 6 N. Michigan Ave. Tel. State 6326 Telepllone . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . · . . . . . Wilmette fiOt 8UB8CRIPTION PRICE ......... .... .. tt.OO A. YE.A.R AU communications must be accompanied by the name and address of the writer. Articles for publication must .reach the editor by Wednesday noon to Insure appearance In current Issue. Resolutions of condolence, c~rds of thanks, obltu- · aries, notices of entertainments or other atfatrs where an admittance charge Is published, wtll be charged at regular advertising rates. l~SUED FB.IDA. Y OF EA.CB WEEK and effectively for his community many ' north shore residents have good reason to know. Such a man, member of the community in the most excellent sense of that word, will certainly be missed. No one\ can quite take his place. There are no substitutes for such as he. The hest that those who remain can do is to carry on .t he work in his self-forgetful spirit. For a period of. ahout three months beginning the middle of June our north shore bathing beaches will be available for public use. On warm daYs dozens o f hathi~g Bathing Beaches enthusiasts will be disporting themselYes in the somewhat coolish waters of good old I ~ake ~'lichigan, or basking .on the sunny sands. On hot days, when the mercury has risen above the eighties and nineties. hundreds of north shore residents will haYe forsaken sultry homes and torrid streets for the cooling beaches. Those who haYe not recentlY 1iYed in towns away from a big body of water cannot justly appreciate the attractions offered in the summer months by our lake shore suburbs. In i11land communities there is Yirtually nothing that one cares to do on stifling July and .'\ugn st days other than sit and wait for whate,·er relief sunset may bring. Electric fan and lemonade can do little to les~en the discom fort. But "·hat a reiug-e in time of high humidity is the hig lake! The ycry first plunge into its liquid depth .- was1w~ a\\'ay the i11emory of hot hours in the s\\'cltering city. .\nd a good half hour\ ~oak helps one to absorb enough fresh coolness to last through the sultriest night. Strange as it may seem there are many :-;hore dweller. \vho Yisit the beaches seldom or nen:- r. \ Ve ach·ise them to break this fooli . h habit. Two days ago in a temporary tlt of fooli -h g·enerosit.' · \\·e handed a garage man a dollar tip fur itbtalling a battery. J I is speech of acceptance was a kn~Jck-out. Not So .\il he ..;aid was. "{;ot ten or twentY cents?" "\Vhat's that?" Bad said ~\·e. too surprised to completely understand. "Dollar's too much." was his brief reply. On demand we'll giYe you a note of intr oduction to th: ·- rare ancl refre . hi ng speriman of garage mechanic. Today. walking west on Creenlea f ;\ ,·cnue in \\"ilmette. we paused to pull down ancl take a whiff of a syringa blossom. An attracti,·e young \v<m~an sitting on the porch looked at · u ~ and smiled in a sympathetic way. A touch ui nature- You know the rest. These tw.o little experiences lead u. to btlie,·e in spite of OYergenerons san itary trustees and the close cnopcration of crime and politics that the better {eel ings are still ali\·e in human hearts. SHORE LINES which mayhaps or prehaps reach the bottom of the ,aforementioned col. With the Cubs playing haseball. the ponies galloping at Washington Park and the belated summer heating us up a bit, putting a fellow's mind to work ain't such an easy matter. Anvhow we ain't no col. conductor, which is some co~fes'si~n. Vve're just pinch-hitting for Mique, who's wearing out his two-pants suit on One of those seats at the Ball Park And who could pinch-hit, with any wise cracking, k~owing where ~1ique is at. while we are here sweatmg and swatting our typewriter. \\ ' ell that's a start anyway. ~Iique's sense of humor, (or what has he) opened the wav for a snappy comeback the other day. ~eems ~~Iique had something (maybe a sick raddio) he wanted to sell to the sassiety eel. Said sassiety ed. tried to be herself, which means getting a price, \\'hich cause d )fique to remark: "You can haH it for a song ." \\'nwie ~. l"p hops the fellow at th~ next desk to remon tratc: "For hca\'en's sake. don 't let the lady sing." Can a sassicty cd. sing? And how or why .! · M A YHAPS or prehaps this is the start of a col. North Shore Grade Separation ·will save life Let's have immediate action! President 1loO\·er recently emphasized most f orcihiY the fact that there now exi ts in the l:nited State~ a growing . disrespect for law. :\1 any had pre\'iously susNeed /or pected that such disrespect existed and was increa~ing. High Ideals hut the President's declaration crystallized the su~picion into a firm helief. :\nd another fart equall~· solid 1s that the cause of this disrespect is the wide-spread oppositiOn to the Prohibition amendment and to its enforcement. \\'e haYe no desire to di~cuss this amendment. hut "·e · feel. as the President docs. the seriou s nature of this growing dis1-rspect for ~aw. and along- with it the disrespect for high tdeals in man\' allied ficlds. There arc some who do not "y~ew with alarm" thi~ laxitY. some who seem tn think that there is no need for bolstering up the Jnyc of high ideals. 'Ve cannot agree with this easy-going- Yiew. Jdf'als will not keep up unless the~· are kept up. l ~nlcss ideals are It ,,·ed and appreciated they will sink to low Ie,·els. 1 list on· shows this to he trtte. . \ sun·e,· of the a~1nals of Greece and Rome 'Yill . rt'Ycal the fact th;1t the lowering of ideals with its disastrous results was caused hy loss of Inn' and respect for high ideal.. One o'f th surest mean~ of arresting this growing- disrespect for Ia w and disrerra rd for high ideal s is the formation and mai~tcnance of s uch school clubs as the Tri-Ship rluh of New Trier high school. '\ ·heren. ' r such c1uhs exist there is a center of health,· moral and ciYic life that is hound to he l;rnductiYe of great national good. for the hope of the nation i. the ambition, acti\'ity. and acromplishment of its young people. Taking a slant at an ad in the cola. of a con temp. we see that some one advertises a mahogany dress for sale. We've heard of wooden overcoats, but mahogany dresses seem to be something new·. Anyhow, the way these girls dress nowadays it's hard to figure out what they'll be wearing next. ] [a ha. it'~ raining and 11ique at the ball game. .\ iellmr ,\'lw bet on Xaishapur in the Kentucky 1h ·rhy and slipped us the tip. can 't get O\·cr what happene d. He lost his dough and so did we, hut \H' inrgot about it. He took it so hard that it drn\ l' him t<~ poetry. h~cad it and \\·eep: MY ALIBI TIJ,· .tifty-jifth flaby lws been nm i:wd zvon fly C!rd,· I 'un nr,scn, u 'i.C'nrthv on ()f the !Ht ' UI .1fa11 0' lVar. n,,. li.uhtninn fl<~slrl'd nnd the thunder crashed, T/r,· roi11 toured dmv11 and the deep mud splashed .·Is this g.,.,,.,. made racing lore. r ·(/1/ f)lf.l't'll hro!.·,· from tlzc far ()It/side Hut !Juillt'd th,· t ole -;('ith lzis rafid stride; Jl t' is /,·nni<'ll ns tr muddtr far and 1.vidc, . l11d dcscr<·cs it. II~· is ulldt·rsi~td fn,f fast a11d ga111c . l11d uil distu11as suit him just tlzc sal/lc lf "hrn he is fit. f?ut .\"ui.Jraf'UI'- Uilfur/.·~ 1 SiNd, Our north shore communities are made hY men and women. The Lake. with its inYi.sihle eastern shore:-; and its surface changing from hour to hour. Citizens and c1 mtrilmtes much to the attracti ,·eness of our comCommunities munities. Trees, large and small, . hruh!', Al '·"·crs. and grass-all contribute their share. Hut men and women Through its president, Roland Whitman, haYe realh· made our commt111itie. what they the N'e"· Trier Orchestral association urnow are_:_ fit places for liYing in the best gently inYites north shore \itizens to subsense of the word. scribe at the earliest possible date to the ()ne of tlw:-;e who han· been foremost in · orchc~tral series beginning next fall. ·The \\'ord "invites" emphasizes the fact that the making ot our c()mmunities wa s \ Villiam C. Boyden of \\'innetka. For almost a score attending- and hearing the concerts will be a great pleasure. The word "urgently" emof year. he worked for the best good of his home community, giYing freely and fully to phasizes the fact that subscribing for the the support and impn.JYement of Comn1unity series is a civic duty. "l\1ake your checks House. Onl · those who n1ost intimatelv copayable to } T. L. Street, treasurer, and mail operatNI with him can know just how inuch them to Mrs. B. K. Smith, 330 Poplar street, he rea.IJy did gi\'e. But that he did work hard \Vinnetka." . I .uu!la111 horse "-" a gallant breed, ll'us tit.· best horst' in the race. Uu t t"uuuht in u ja111 (.· lias and Attock) .·lt tht· /u ·ud of th e stretch he zl'as eight lengths bacl·, Hrrt yo u ouvht to sec lzim lnrrn up the track To lond in second place., -F. E. I ~quint in the papers that some Chicago policemen shot a snake which measured h\ dve feet ln)lg. hut it got :twaY. Now what kind of a "snake story" do you call that, we ask you? Fil up Space who does his stuff in the adjoining cols. tells us that he slipped the mechanic at a garage a buck for a little job and that said mechanic, eyeing him sadly said· that fifteen or twenty · cents would he sufficient. . But Fil hasn't looked yet to find out if his spare ti:re is still there. There's a couple of angles to that transaction. an ~ditorial writer. be \\ell merited. ~ravhe someone told the mechanic that Fit was In which case sympathy ~\'onld Twelve more days and another col. if we don't foul out. -THE OLD PLUG.

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