fo CHURCH AND SOLDIER v WINNETKA WEEKLY TALK, FRIDAY, MARCH 14, 1919 RELATIONSHIP, TOPIC Dean B. I. Bell, Chaplain at Deten- | tion Camp at Great Lakes Station, To Speak at Sunday Even- ing Club OPERA STAR TO SING Miss Margery Maxwell, North Shore Favorite, To Rendar Several Vocal Selections Dean B. I. Bell, chaplain of the De- tention camp at Great Lakes naval station, will be the speaker at the joint meeting of the Wilmette Sun- day Evening club and the Wilmette Church Union on Sunday, March 16. Dean Bell is a well known speaker and having been stationed at the Great Lakes for the past two years, has a very interesting discourse on the relationship of the church with the men returning from active serv- ice. Special music for the evening will be sung by Miss Margery "Maxwell, | soprano soloist of the Chicago Grand Opera company. Miss Maxwell has appeared a number of times in past seasons for the Sunday Evening club, and is one of the prime favorites of the north shore. $2 THIS GIRL SHINES WHEN IT COMES TO TELLING STORIES Lucille Drake, chairman of Miss the program committee of the Standard Bearers of the Wilmette Methodist church, has established a reputation as a champion story teller. That is, of course, the stories she tells are all true and very interest- ing because they have to do with the great war and present conditions. in Europe. 7 Miss Drake a few weeks ago was one of several contestants in a prize story telling contest held .at the Methodist' church under the auspices of the Standard Bearers. She won in a walk away. Last week this same young woman proceeded to the Gran- ville avenue Methodist church in Chi- cago to represent .the local Standard Bearers 'ih the 'semi-finals of an exciting inter-church story swapping contest. She again was an easy winner. ! On Thursday evening, March 20,! come the finals in the big contest | and among the contestants will be Miss Lucille Drake. It is confidently expected she will come away with the honors again thus putting Wil- mette on the true story-telling map. The finals will be conducted at the Ravenswood Methodist church. There will 'also be a banquet and rally of the society upon which occasion a prize of $5 will be awarded the local society whose representative wins the honors in the contest. If you would attend this banquet carry along a fifty cent piece to pay your way and also notify Mrs. F. A. Buck, 1215 lake avenue, in advance, to se-| cure your admission ticket to the] eats. The Standard Bearers of the local church, according to an announce- ment this week, are conducting a course of study of conditions in Foreign countries. The society: also announces that memberships are open to all young | men and women of the Village over | the age of 14 years. The present officers of the local so- | ciety are: President, Miss Esther Steinke; vice president, Miss Ida Genesley; corresponding secretary, Miss Helen Kelley; recording secre- tary, Miss Rebecca Fitch; treasurer, Miss Ardenea Meyers; Miss Lucille | Drake is program chairman 1 F. A. Buck, supervisor. go Money in Pigs There is profit in boys' pig clubs. A Tennessee boy, according to a government agricultureal report. re- ceived here, took out a membership in a pig club. He purchased a pig for $50. She farrowed seven pigs, part of which the boy sold for $133. With this money he purchased a boar of excellent breeding, which he ex- hibited at the East Tennessee Divis- ion Fair, winning the grand cham- pionship of the breed over all ex- hibits. He won $87 in prizes, $45 of it in competition with experienced | farmers. His animals are now valued at $525. This, with the money from | sales and prize winnings, amounts to | $745, from which he deducts $157.65 for feed and care, leaving a profit of $387.35. $: Attention Norwegian Lutherans Norwegian Lutherans of the north shore who arc nct affiliated with any church organization have been asked to make the Norwegian Lutheran church at Winnetka their church home. The congregation is com- paratively new having been organized about a year ago. Services are held Sunday afternoon and Tuesday even- ings. Information concerning the church can be obtained by calling Winnetkai630. The meeting place is in tlie parish. house at Linden and Qak streets. : i April 18, Arbor Day | Proclamation | | Governor Lowden issued a procla- | mation designating Friday, April 18, | and Friday, October 17, as bird and] arbor days in Illinois. The proclama- | tion follows: | "Trees are a vital factor in the life of nations and the life of men. They are one of the greatest resources of | our wealth, but they are more than] that. Without them most of our | rivers would run dry. Without them | many of our fertile fields would be-| come arid wastes. | "Without them much of the beauty {in several waters and then in Removing Ink Stains To remove black ink stains, the ar- ticle should be washed immediately milk, letting it soak in the milk for several hours; the stain will disappear. Washing the article immediately in vinegar and water, then in soap and water, will remove all ordinary ink stains. & Friendship and Freedom There can be no friendship where there is no freedom. Friendship loves a free air and will not be penned up in strait and narrow en- closures. It will speak freely and act and the charm of life would disap- pear. It is hard to think of a real home without trees. He who plants a tree today, under whose shade men and women may rest and children | play a hundred years from now, is| a benefactor of mankind. | "You cannot think of trees without thinking also of birds. For it is in the branches of trees that these little feathered friends of man find their | fairest homes. "The birds of the air have been] always deep objects of interest to| mankind. Their beauty delighted the eye, their songs have cheered the hearts of. countless generations of men. | Junior | Boys ~Join the Jackies vas | COMMUNITY HOUSE Saturdays, 11 to 12 A. M. "It 1s only recently, however, that we have come to know that they are an indispensable factor in the econo- my of the fields, Without them the multitudiuous insects of Summer time would endanger every waving field of grain. "The trees and the birds! Let us teach our children in the schools to plant the one and protect the other and to love them both. ~ "Therefore, in, pursuance acts of the General 'Assembly, IL. Frank O. Lowden, Governor of Illi- nois, do hereby designate Friday, of the 17. 1919. as arbor and bird days in Illi- 17. 1919, as arbor and days in Illi- N. J. FELLOWS REGISTERED OPTICIAN Eyes Tested. Frames Fitted Lenses Duplicated Frames Repaired Phone Winnetka 85 Room 3 Prouty Bldg. nois." MARSHAL FOCH MASTER | | i 1919, and Friday, October | | OF "SIT TIGHT" GAME | In a recent issue of 'the house] magazine of the National Biscuit | company there appeared an editorial] entitled "Sitting Tight," inspired by | the great human qualities of Marshal | Foch. A copy of the magazine was | sent to the Marshal who has ack-| nowledged it by inditing on his per- sonal card this message: "Sinceres remerciements," meaning "sincere| thanks." Terse and to the point, as| is the man. "The most unassuming | great man I ever met," says Charles | M. Schwab. | The editorial was as follows: "The peace for which the free peo- ple of the world have had to fight is won. Truth and justice and right have triumphed and eternally will triumph. There is a God! "Large against the background of the war's end looms the figure of Ferdinand Foch, whose fame will last until man has run his course and the river of time is dry. A mili- tary genius? Yes! But more than that a man--one who thinks little in terms of self but much in terms of hu- manity. "Silent, sincere and master of sit- ting tight is Ferdinand Foch. Tt is only a few months back that the Germans had the armies of the allies backed to the wall. In those critical days the whole world somewhat querulously asked: 'Where is Foch?' "Foch has heart as well as brains. He sat tight because he knew thou- sands upon thousands of human lives depended upon his every de- cision. Men of his type do not take long chances--only fools and gamb- lers and German military leaders, to whom soldiers are cannon fodder, do that. "Foch sat tight, letting the world pass such comment as it might. He knew that he would be responsible for the result--and he accepted that responsibility seriously. Foch waited | until the chances at least were equal. | The world knows what happened but it little appreciates, now, the lives he saved. "There is a lesson here for every- one. It is to sit tight until you are! sure you may go ahead with the mini- mum chance of disappointment or failure. "Unless you have something worth while to offer when a subject is pre- sented, sit tight. If you don't know what it is all about there is all the more reason you should sit tight, for in that way you will be learning something instead of displaying your ignorance. Sit tight, but say the right thing at the right time. Criticize when you can criticize, when you can suggest something better for the thing you tear down." $n $s. Real Merit Manifest Real merit of any kind cannot long be concealed; it will be discovered, and nothing can depreciate it but a man's exhibiting it himself. Tt may not always he rewarded as it ought, hut it will always be known. --Ches- terfield. so, too; and take nothing ill where no ill is meant; nay, where it is, twill easily forgive, and forget, too, upon small acknowledgments.--Penn. "A Little Learning" The following are some of the an- swers recently given in a school examination on "general knowledge." "Gravitation is when an apple falls on the floor." "Benjamin Franklin invented lightning." "The place where they keep all kinds of wild animals is. called a theological garden." "One of the most important inventions of modern times is the North Pole. JOHN M.COZART VETERINARIAN 2020 GRANT STREET TEL. EVANSTON 1001 EVANSTON In a Class By Themselves These Two Cars THE ESSEX AND THE HUDSON SUPER-SIX We carry the complete line Tel. Evanston 578 Louis J. Sherland Co. 1019 Davis Street i | bl THE ES SERVICE. CHICAGO OFFICE every 30 minutes over the town between Evanston and Waukegan. will find this a very convenient service. 66 WEST ADAMS STREET, PHONE CENTRAL 8280 GREAT WHITE WAY With its thousands of brilliant electric lights, its unexcelled Motion Picture Theatres, Cafes and Restaurants, its artistically arranged display windows, its clean streets and pleasure seeking crowds, the Heart of Milwaukee offers the visitor attractions comparable with Broadway, New York. Especially on Saturday and Sunday Evenings, the Wisconsin Metropolis presents a sight not equalled in any other city in the Middle West. To visit Milwaukee's Great White Way, go the Electric Way. limited trains maintain an hourly service daily direct to the center of Mil- waukee, and on Saturday afternoon, Sunday and Holidays, there is a train NORTH SHORE LINE, Express Service There is an express train every 30 minutes, which makes one stop in each Persons traveling short distances FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION ) APPLY TO NORTH SHORE LINE MILWAUKEE OFFICE 187 SECOND STREET PHONE GRAND 1136 36 all steel THE ROAD OF (o