Illinois News Index

Winnetka Weekly Talk, 7 Sep 1917, p. 6

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6 EEE ER KN WINNETKA WEEKLY TALK, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 7, 1917 EE RB RB = LIBERTY LOAN WILL * BE OUT IN OCTOBER Next Issue of War Bonds Will Be Made October 15--Known as the "Second Liberty Loan." BONDS MAY BE EXCHANGED Buyers of First Bonds May Exchange Them for Those of This Issue. Three billions of the original $5,- 000,000,000 liberty loan authoriation will be included in the "$11,000,000,000 war budget." This issue will be made October 15, probably known as the "second liberty loan." Part of this issue, it was learned, may be used to replace the original $2,000,000,000 liberty loan if investors holding the original 3), per cent bonds wish to exchange them for the new "4s." Part will be used to take up the $2,000,000,000 worth of short term certificates authorized and is- sued at the time of the liberty loan. By this plan only $1,000,000,000 worth of new money will have to be raised at this time through bond sub- scription. Allies' Loan in Spring. " The new $4,000,000,000 loan to the allies will not be made until spring. Secretary McAdoo has decided not to float this particular loan until Feb- ruary. The original authorization for the liberty loan was $5000,000,000. At the time war was declared ,the bill provided, if further, issues were made the first bonds would carry the same percentage as the second. McAdoo holds investors in the original issue are entitled to the change. Two Billions in Certificates. The $2,000,000,000 worth of short- time certificates have been handled chiefly through the banks. Mr. Mc- Adoo has been issuing from $250,000,- 000 to $300,000,000 of these weekly. Practically a billion dollars' worth has gone out. Every effort will be made to dispose of all these short- time notes by October 15. At that time the new bond issue will be avail- able and the short-time securities may be taken up by the bonds instead of cash. Secretary McAdoo will ask author- ization for issue of $2,000,000,000 worth of short-time securities for government needs. As many war sav- ings certificates will probably be asked. These latter plans are tenta-. tive and may not be needed if the war revenue bill now pending in Congress is increased. = EE EE COLUMBIA SCHOOL WILL OPEN WILMETTE BRANCH Concerts and Recitals Are Planned for the Coming Season. The fall term of the Columbia School of Music at the Wilmette branch will open on September 17. Miss Pearl M. Barker, who is prin- cipal of the branch school, will con- tinue to direct the classes, with the assistance of a number of new teach- ers. Classes have been arranged in piano, harmony, technic, ear-training, and special work will be given in the kindergarten classes. Miss Barker will give a number of concerts this season in Wilmette, the pupils of the branch school taking part. As an added feature the ad- vanced pupils of Clare Osborne Reed, director of the 'school and artist teacher, will present a number of her students in recital. | <0 0 0.0. EVANSTON STRAND BILLS PLAY, "WITHIN THE LAW" Photoplay Stopped in Chicago Will Appear at North Shore Theater. Bayard Veiller"s wonderful drama, "Within the Law," which has been screened by Greater Vitagraph, and is to be shown at the Evanston Strand theater next week, is an un- answerable argument against the small salaries paid to department store girls in many of the large cities throughout the country. This picture was not allowed to show in the theaters of Chicago by 'the city's board of censors. This announcement by the Strand man- agement gives the "movie fans" their second opportunity to see apicture in Evanston that the Chicago cen- 'sors have refused to permit at the city's theaters. ; EEEER 'Meatless Weeks. "There is to be a meatless week in Saxony in September and another in October. Full Garbage Pails in America Means Empty Dinner Pails for Many Workers By Herbert Hoover, U. S. Food Administrator Save the Wheat.----One wheatless meal a day. Use corn, oatmeal, rye or barley bread and non-wheat breakfast foods. Order bread twenty- four hours in advance so your baker will not bake beyond his needs. Cut the loaf on the table and only as re- quired. Use stale bread for cooking, toast, etc. Kat less cake and pastry. Our wheat harvest is far below nor- mal. If each person weekly saves Herbert Hoover. one pound of wheat flour that means 150,000,000 more bushels of wheat for the allies to mix in their bread. This will help to save democracy. Save the Meat.--Beef, mutton or pork not more than once daily. Use freely vegetables and fish. At the meat meal serve smaller portions, and stews instead of steaks. Make made-dishes of all left-overs. Do this and there will be meat enough for every one at a reasonable price. We are today killing the dairy cows and female calves as the result of high price. Therefore, eat less and eat no young meat. If we save an ounce of meat each day per person, we will have additional supply equal to 2,200,000 cattle. Save the Milk.--The children must have milk. Use every drop. Use buttermilk and sour mil kfor cook- ing and making cottage cheese. Use less cream. Save the Fats.--We are the world's greatest fat wasters. Fat is food. Butter is essential for the growth and health of children. Use butter on the table as usual, but not in cooking. Other fats are as good. Reduce use of fried foods. Save daily one-third ounce animal fats. Soap contains fats. Do not waste it. Make your own washing soap at home out of the saved fats. : Use one-third ounce less per day of animal fat and 375,000 tons will be saved yearly. Save the Sugar.--Sugar is scarcer. We use today three times as much per person as our allies. So there may be enough for all at reasonable price use less candy and sweet drinks. Do not stint sugar in putting up fruit and jams. They will save butter. If every one in America saves one ounce of sugar daily, it means 1,100,- 000 tons for the year. Save the Fuel.--Coal comes from a distance and our railways are over- burdened hauling war material. Help relieve them by burning fewer fires. Use wood when you can get it. Use the Perishable Foods.--Fruits and vegetables we have in abund- ance. As a nation we eat too little green stuffs. Double their use and improve your health. Store potatoes and other roots properly and they will keep. Begin now to can or dry all surplus garden products. Use Local Supplies--Patronize your local producer. Distance means money. Buy perishable food from the neighborhood nearest you and thus save transportation. Watch out for the wastes in the community. Full garbage pails in America mean empty dinner, pails in America and Europe. J If the more fortunate of our people will avoid waste and eat no more than they need, the high cost of liv- ing problem of the less fortunate will be solved. WILSON SENDS GODSPEED TO NEW NATIONAL. ARMY President Wilson hds addressed a final word to the men drafted for America's first great national army: "To the Soldiers of the National Army: "You are undertaking a great duty. The heart of the whole country is with you. Everything you do will be watched with deepest solicitude, not only by those near and dear to you, but by the whole nation. "For this great war draws us all together, makes us all comrades and brothers, as all true Americans felt themselves to be when we first made good our national independence. "The eyes of the world will be upon you, because you are in some special sense the soldiers of freedom. "Let it be your pride, therefore, to show all men not only what good soldiers you are, but also what good men you are, keeping yourselves fit and straight in everything and pure and clean through and through. "Let us set for ourselves a stand- ard so high it will be a glory to live up to it and add a new laurel to the crown of America. "My affectionate confidence goes with you in every battle and every test. "God keep and guide you. "WOODROW WILSON." | =0 0 -0. 0 Leaves for Alaska. Mr. and Mrs. George Zendt, who have been occupying the J. R. Har- per home, 719 Park avenue, this sum- mer, will leave Saturday for a five weeks' trip through Alaska. EEREEE Moves to Winnetka. Mr. and Mrs. Allen Higgins, Jr. of Fort Wayne, Ind., formerly of Wil- mette, have taken a bungalow in Winnetka for the coming winter. RB -U 0 Rev. F. E. Wilson Returns. Rev. and Mrs. Frank E. Wilson, 726 Eleventh street, have returned from a visit at Geneva, N. Y. EEE Sheahan in Service. John D. Sheahan, 604 Cherry street, left with the 14Jth artillery for "somewhere in the east" last week. I U. S. MEDICAL EXPERTS TO CARE FOR NEW ARMY Health of Drafted Men Will Be Pro- tected By Doctors. Rigid precautions have been taken to safeguard the health of America's young manhood drafted in the first call. for 'the United States medical officers, rein- forced by the ablest men in the coun- try in the medical profession, are personally surpervising the sanitary new national army. improvements at each encampment. Inspectors of high rank, under spe- cial orders of the surgeon general, already at the various camps, are making these sites safe against dis- ease. The medical officers now in charge of this work are to become the sanitary inspectors of the camps when the troops arrive. Medical in- spectors so designated will have the closest co-operation with local health authorities and with the officers of the public health service. Each will have a corps of assistants. The sanitary organization at each encampment will be as complete as possible. The organization will con- sist of divisional surgeons, who will be the sanitary advisers to the com- manding general; a divisional sani- tary inspector and regular surgeons who are sanitary officers of their regiments. The sanitary officers are to assist the divisional surgeons along special lines. In emergency cases that may arise sanitary squads are to be organized. These will comprise officers and men of specific prac- tical training in the purification of water supply, disposal of waste, dis- infection and the handling of out- breaks of communicable diseases. | =0 R00. Gold for Soldiers. A new Denver coined $10 gold piece, carrying with it a message of appreciation and confidence of the people of the state expressed through their legislature at its last general assembly, was presented to each of the 3,300 men in the federal- ized national Colorado national guard by Governor Gunter. WILMETTE GUARDS G0 WITH 11TH REGIMENT Local Company of New Regiment Left Chicago Thursday Evening for Camp at Springfield. HARBAUGH HAS COMMAND Rice and Rye Are Members of Wil- mette Commander's Staff. 'Wilmette men, members of the Eleventh Illinois Infantry, 65 strong, marched aboard their train Tuesday night and set out for Springfield to undergo the process of being made into soldiers. The company of Wilmette men, which was organized in record time, was without equipment, and, except a few of the officers, without uniforms, The men assembled at the First Regiment armory in Chicago and marched to the Van Buren street viaduct, where they entrained. Honor Stuart. The Second Regiment band ap- peared at the Chicago armory to honor Col. James Stuart. The com- mander of the new regiment was in command of the Second Regiment for ten years. Thirteen & the fifteen companies in the regiment left Chicago last night. The organization of this regi- ment was ordered when the last of the original eight militia regiments were federalized and the state was left without troops. Harbaugh Commands. Capt. George R. Harbaugh is in command of the Wilmette company, and Lieut. Fred A. Rye and Lieut. Arthur L. Rice are on his staff. The non-commissioned offices are held by Frederick R. Quayle, Raymond H. Lindman, Clement C. Mitchell, Byron B. Smith, Frank S. Robbins, Thomas V. Cook, George F. Appleyard, George W. Kibby, Frank B. Ambrose, Carle- ton D. Northam and Kenneth S. Sagg. The following men are members of the Wilmette company, which was re- cruited in less than a week: Ambrose, Ralph H. Antennie, George . Borgfeldt, Fred Bailey, Elvin M. Barrows, Virgil Bongard, Mathias Bowen, Cromwell Bottom, Russell H. Cook, Evart Chave, Austin S. Colton, Geo. A. Carlson, Hilding Dunlap, Wm. C. Dugert, Carol A. Eber, Arthur Greiner, Jacob, Jr. Hanson, John M. Hanson, Edward S. Hall, Thos. 1..D. Hoffman, Douglas T. Hopkins, Merwin C. Jones, Robert M. Kibby, Erwin J. King, Hoyt Liska, Otto Long, Albert M. Marble, Eugene C. Martin, Landon B. McDaniel, Robert, Jr. Moore, James F. Myers, Peter A. Norton, Howard E. Norris, Wm. D. Patterson, George H. Pierson, Leland V. Prescott, John S., Jr. Reese, H. Cortland Rindell, John H. Shantz, Frank L. Sherwood, Eugene W. Stafford, Edwin L. Sturgeon, Wm. J. Varney, Chas. W. Verrall, Clement. Wegfirth, John F., Jr. Weber, Max C. West, Herbert C. Wheelock, Raymond A. Wright, Arthur C. Hardware and Paints J. F. ECKAR 736 Elm St. Phone 484 LILLIE zrzrzzzzzzzzzrzizzzrzzzzzzzzazzdddddl 77 22777777777 777777777 777 7 dd Ld Zrii zzz, WANTED a Live Real | Paul Schroeder Estate Salesman with automobile, to sell Real Estate in the Central Part \ of Winnetka, Phone Wilmette 698 or call personally at Wil- mette Office of---- & Company 7777 < FOR SALE APPLE ORCHARD If! ples last year. 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