ow hy | "pose that ought to be carried on into! WINNETKA WEEKLY TALK, FRIDAY, JUNE 6, 1919 'Winnetka Weekly Talk ISSUED FRIDAY OF EACH WEEK by The Lake Shore Publishing Company 1222 Central Ave. Wilmette, IIL Business Telephone. .... Wilmette 1921 Editorial Telephone. ..... Wilmette 1920 Winnetka Office Telephone. . Winn. 388 SUBSCRIPTION. ........$1.00 A YEAR Strictly in advance Address all communications to the Winnetka Weekly Talk, Wilmette, Ill Anonymous communications will be passed to the waste basket. The same applies to rejected manuscript unless return postage is enclosed. Articles for publication should reach this office by Tuesday afternoon to insure appear- ance in current issue. Resolutions of condolence, cards of thanks, obituary poetry, notices of entertainments or other affairs where an admittance charge will be made or a collection taken, will be charged for at regular advertising rates. Entered in the postoffice at Winnetka, Nlinois, as mail matter of the second elass. under the act of March 3, 1879. FRIDAY, JUNE 6, 1919 An International Holiday For two years we have lived in the midst of great events. Almost every day has brought news of something monumental in the development of the world. We have had thrills, and thrills, and yet more thrills, until we had almost ceased to respond to any stimulus. Even today, after nearly seven months since hostilities ceased, history is being made in large bits every day. The fate of peoples is be- ing decided and the character of the world of the future is being settled in very important ways. The great nations of the world have been, still are, indeed, associated in the greatest event of history. They have fought and crushed the force that threatened to destroy our free- dom and to strangle the development of democracy. Now they are striving together to evolve a disposition of the people who have been released from oppression that will ensure the greatest possible degree of oppor- tunity for the individual man. For the first time in history there North Shore Communit Ravinia Club Project and Military Highway ies' Association Boosts The following resolution was pre- sented and unanimously adopted at the Annual meeting of the Board of Directors of the Association of North Shore municipalities held at the City Hall, Highland Park, Friday evening, May 23, 1919. The Associated Muni- cipalities are: Waukegan, North Chi- cago, Lake Bluff, Lake Forest, High- wood, Highland Park, Glencoe, Win- netka, Kenilworth, Wilmette, Deer- field. The commandants of Fort Sher- idan military post and Great Lakes naval training station are invited honorary members. WHEREAS: it has been demon- strated to the satisfaction of the Board of Directors of the Association of North Shore Municipalities that the spirit exhibited by the manage- ment of Ravinia Park and its activ- ities, is of exceptionally high order, and committed to the best interest of the north shore, and WHEREAS: Ravinia Park has presented to the North Shore com- munities as well as Chicago an op- portunity for the enjoyment of en- tertainment of the highest character, and is now recognized nationally as the center of the artistic in produc- tion of open air performances, and WHEREAS: during the period of war activities at the Great Lakes naval training station . and Fort Sheridan military post, the manage- ment of the park has carried out a program of patriotic service of great magnitude and rare achievement, therefore be it RESOLVED: that ths Association of the North Shore Municipalities by its Board of Directors express its appreciation to those who have so splendidly and consistently maintain- | ed the high moral plane of this enter-' prise and the physical beauty of the premises in a manner consistent with its surroundings, and further be it RESOLVED: that this association commend Ravinia Park most heartily to the citizens of our municipalities and urge upon them its hearty sup- port, moral as well as financial, which will tend to perpetuate to our' com- munity the rare open air privileges offered to us amidst delightful sur- roundings and further, RESOLVED: that chis resolution shall be spread upon the records of this association, and that the press of each community be furnishzd a] copy and requested to publish same. The following resolution was pre- sented and unanimously adopted at the Annual meeting of the Board of Directors of the Association of North Shore Municipalities held at the City Hall, Highland Park, Friday, evening, May 23, 1919. WHEREAS: the Board of Directors tion of the North Shore Muni- cipalities has been directod to the mecessity of a suitable highway along the north shore between the Great Lake naval training station and Chi- cago and, WHEREAS: the completion of such suitable highway which will re- lieve Sheridan road and the road through the center of the Fort Sher- idan reservation of a large percent- age of traffic depends upon the ac- quiring of easement from the United States government, covering certain land on the western boundary on the north end of said reservation, be it therefore RESOLVED: that the Association of North Shore Municipalities by its! Board of Directors hereby request! the Congress of the United States to grant such easement which will al- low the completion of the improve- ment of McKinley road in Fort Sher- idan reservation and further RESOLVED: that the Association by its Board of Directors officially concurr in the belief that such im- provements is essential to meet the future demands of motor travel along the north shore in times of quiet, as well as during any disturbance either local or national, and further RESOLVED: that this resolution be spread upon the records of this association and that a copy he for- warded to Carl R. Chindblom, rep- resentative. attention of the of the Associa- has been a great common cause unit-, ing the foremost nations of the world. | There has been-a bond forged that! ought to be strengthened as the vears| go on, a community of ideals and pur- the future. | To typify this union there should be some means of common expres- sion of its existence, somes occasion upon which the people of Great Bri-! tain, France, Italy and the United | States shall unite in observance of | the day which brought success to] their common cause. Some day should be designated to be observed | by.all the allied countries as an in-| ternational holiday, a day held sacred | to the men who have died in the great cause of all the nations, a war which has brought a new ideal of | social justice to all the nations, an| event that has ushered in a new era of international relationship. There are many dates that might be chosen, many significant occasions that hold equal importance to all, the peoples concerned. It might be armistice day. It might be the day on which peace is signed. It might be the day upon which America recognized the cause of the countries of Europe as her cause and elected to throw the mighty force of which she was capable into the balance with the allies. The occasion commemorated is a matter of little importance. It is the spirit of the war, the spirit that has made France sacrifice to the limit of her endurance, that has made Bel- gium choose devastation to dishonor, that has sent the Briton from the fa? cornars of the earth into action in defense of the ideals of democracy, that drove the Italian to conquer the | heights of the Alps, that sent Ameri- can youth over three thousand méles to help to destroy the menacing head of Prussianism. This is what the war has meant to the mations engaged in it. It is what an international holi- day should mean to 'the people of { of four years of the hardest sort of Syrian Relief Committee is striv- ing to collect for their charg- es a sufficient amount of clothing to afford some measure of decency, if not of comfort. For four years there has been no supply of wearing ap- parel provided for the Armenians and the Syrians. They have had nothing with which to make good the ravagzs that the peace is anything but a peace of victory, that their part is anything but the dictation of terms upon which they are willing to permit Germany | to give up the fight before she ex-] periences the horrors of war upon her territory. There has been no in- tention of negotiation among the al- experiences, nothing to use to pro- | vide for the needs of the life that | they have been compelled to lead for the period of the war. A few weeks ago a canvass of the used clothing supply was made by the Red Cross with which for the needs of the stricken people of Belgium and northern France. Many car loads of all sorts of apparel were sent to the seabord, thence to the othear side. The need here was great, greater than we in our comfortable homes can imagine. Only five carloads of this supply went to remote Armenia, because of the difficulties of trans- portation at that time. But in these Christian provinces of the nzar east there is desolation. One dress must do sometimes for ten people, so it is said by those who have worked among the sad people driven from their homes, made to endure unthink- able indignities and hardships. There must be in the Village many stores of unused clothing as yet un- touched for relief work. There are garments hanging in clothes presses that could be made into comfortable for materials to provide clothing for the destitute Christians of the near east. There are shoes that have lost their freshness, but still have many wezks of service if properly applied to the need that ex- ists for them. There will never be a better time, nor a worthier cause in which to make use of these hoarded garments, kept because there is a belief that some time they may be This is the time of times to Your nzed will never be greater than this of the Ar- useful. put them to service. menians and Syrians. Germany's Mistake About Peace Creat Britain, of France, of Bel- gium, of Italy, and of the United States. ~ Clothes For The Destitute There is to be a.collection of used clothing for the benefit of the Ar- menian people made destitute by the war carried on against them by the Turks and the Kurds. The Armenian- | The demands that Germany is mak- {ing of the representatives of the al- | lied governments are not of a char- | acter to set very well with the people who have fought to make it possible for the terms upon which peace is to be re- | established upon the earth. There is tno feeling among the allied peoplas their countries to dictate lies, a fact which Germany seems not | to have | Itiis that the should surrender any of their rights grasped. anthinkable allies | to impose terms of peace. The only salvation for Germany, as well as for the rest of the world, lies in con- vincing the German people that they have been thoroughly beaten in war. So long as they think that peace was sought by the allies as well as by | them, so long as they have any ground for considering the event of the war anything but complete de- feat for them and full victory for the allies, there will be the Prussian spirit with which to deal again. The representatives of tha allied governments have agreed that the terms of peace are just. There can be no reason for receding from them unless there should be suggestion of some minor details whose change would not alter the result but make payment more easy for the German people. Aerial Photo Surveying an Engineer's Work The whole problem of photographic surveying from the air is dominantly an engineering problem. Photo- graphic technique is of course an essential part of the work, but it is a subordinate part, for the best photo- graphs are valueless as map-making material unless they are accompanied by the requisite enginezring date. Projections, adjustments, and other detail of map-making technique are as necessary in photo-aerial survey- ing as in other surveying, and all! map-making work should therzfore be the work of experienced gineers. Next, Please! Storekeeper--That stick of the w.ndow is a quarter. imy--How long can 1 lick it Tor a penny: --Doys' Life. candy Way Back Home bad luck the other night? Jim--No. Tell me about it. johin--The door blew - off his chicken coop and all the chickens went home.--Boys' Life. One leading city of thz Southwest formerly had extensive brewing in- terests, it being a distributing center for the principal stock-raising sec- tions of Texas. With the coming of Connor. ton. Tales of Troy--Colum. --Bond. Apaches--Sabin, prohibition the beer plants were paralyzed temporarily, until an in- genious brewer converted his malt factory into a milk depository and distributing agency. 'Now other brewers are also operating as emerg- ency dairies, with the result that many people who used to drink beer The Blue Aunt--White. Boys Own Book of Great Inven- tions--Darrow. Little Brother and Little Sister-- Grimm. , Happy Jack--Burgess. are finding the wholesomeness in an abundance of milk. NEW BOOKS AT THE LIBRARY JJ Aduits Selected Articles On a League of Nations--Phelps. Wiring for Light Croft. Economics of Efficiency--Brisco. Birds of Town and Country--Hen- and Power-- N.J. FELLOWS REGISTERED - OPTICIAN Eyes Tested. Frames Fitted Lenses Duplicated Frames Repaired Phone Winnetka 85 Room 3 Prouty Bldg. shaw. Concealing Coloration in the Animal Kingdom. Effective Business ner. History of Suffrage in the United States--Porter. A Writer's Recollections--Ward. While Paris Laughed--Merrick. The Cabin--Ibanez. The Shadow of the Cathedral-- [banez. : The Rising Tide--Tarbell. The Squire's Daughter--Marshall. The Honor of the Clintons-- Marshall. Walking Shadows--Noes. A Land-Girl's Love Story-- Roh- Letters--Gard- Free! 5s: Free! This ticket and 35c is good for 25 Penny Pictures in 5 positions and 25additional pictures free, making 50 Pictures for 35c to you and as many of your friends as accompany vou when this ticket is presented. If you receive extra tickets, kindly distribute them among your friends. NOT OPEN SUNDAYS Not good if presented after June 16 Morris Photo Studio 829 Davis St. Opp. L Sta., Evanston BRING THIS COUPON mer. Tales of -Secret Egypt--Ruck. Dawn--Porter. The Prestons--Vorse. The Sky Pilot in No Man's Land-- The Undefeated--Snaith. The Apartment Next Door--Johns- The American--Dillon. White Man--Chamberlain. The Duchess of Siona--Goodwin. Juvenile Adventures of Odysseus and the American Boys' Engineering Book Fighters for Peace--Parkman. Mother's Nursery Tales--Pyle. Jolly Book of Funcraft--Beard. Two Alike--Delano: General Crook and the Fighting Keineth---Abbott. VOTE TODAY FOR INCREASED SCHOOL FUND Polls open to Men and Women HORACE MANN SCHCOL, 2to 6 p. m. Saturday, June 7. - Give our Teachers a living wage Vote FOR the increased school fund. Endorsed by the Village Council, Woman's Club, Parent- Teachers Association, Board cf Education, Superintendent cf Schools. fh TiN ES HARRY MITCHELL SPECIAL SALE Suits Made to Order Only $50 Extra PANTS Free With Every Suit You can save from $30 to $75 by coming to Chicago to see my goods znd at the same time get the Best Suit you ever had on your back. HARRY MITCHELL 16-18 East Jackson Boulevard Between State and Wabash, Chicago your sandwiches-- 796 Elm Street 2 7 2 7 7 EE 2 7 ZZ 2 2 ddd Lelia 2d Picnic Requisites This is the time of the year when you'llwant to be in the woods-- Such trips mean picnics--picnics mean food--Sandwiches, etc.-- We have the most choice meat, the very kind you'll enjoy for VOLLMAN'S MARKET Winnetka, Illincis 7. LLL 2 ddd 2d dlr ddd ddd quantities. olf oe oe oe of of oe oe of of oe oF Be oR oR oe Boob cB oB oR BRR of oe os oe of of oe 30 oe oo oe of ole obs oo oe oe od obo ode of ode cde ob oe ode of Bek ode oe ode od ce de deo ode ded dodo do Bo Boke le pe oR oe of oe of ods oe oe oF of of oe obo obo of of ode ode ob odode lod odo look pb lod bokeh ok ok do de dob RB dod Bb oR, E. B. TAYLOR & CO. Hardware PHONES WINNETKA 958--989 LARGEST HARDWARE STORE IN TOWN. We are able to give our customers low prices because we buy in large » Seddoddob bok ob dR dob Rob F RRR RRR