14 WILM ETTE LIFE, FRIDAY, JANUARY 4, 1924 • WILMETTE LIFE (Formerly The Lake Shore News) Established 1912 with which is combined I THE WILNKTTE LOCAL. NEWS KHtahlished 1898 ISVED I b FRIDAY OF EACH WEEK by LLOYD HOI I ENTER. INC. 1122 Central Ave., Wilmette, 111. Irpkonr .............WUaaett* 1020 IVBSCRIPTION $2.00 A YEAR f I All communications must be accom- panied by the name and address of the fcrlter. Articles for publication should reach the editor by Wednesday noon to Insure appearance in current issue. tResolutions of condolence, cards of anks, obituary, poetry, notices of en- tertainments or other affairs where an admittance charge will be made or ft collection taken, will be charged at regular advertising rates. have been bridged. Mountains have been removed. Take thought for the future. Entered at the postoffice at Wilmette, flllnols, as mail matter of the second lass, under the act of March 3, 1879. FRIDAY. JANUARY 4, 1924 Separate the Grades. Enforce the Traffic Laws. Build the Truck Road. LOOK FORWARD. Robert Browning, in his poem called "Epilogue," urges himself and his readers to look forward to "meet the unseen with a cheer." It is a poem most appro- priate for a new year's reading, emphasizing, as it does, the value of a courageous facing of the de- mands of life as they are present- ing themselves at the threshold bf the new year. Look forward! Failures and Successes are coming. We can be pretty certain of that. But the important question is, How tan we increase both the quan- tity and quality of these successes nd decrease the quantity and uality of these failures? Here s one way to do it. Reflect on the experiences of the past. Flunk of one failure. What caused this failure? Careless- Bess? Haste? Ignorance? Find the cause. Eliminate it. When # similar situation arises in the Coming year make sure that this pause is eliminated. i Think of the numberless in- stances of seeming failures that nave been transformed1 into suc- cesses. By irrigation, deserts have been made into gardens, apparently impassable NEW TRIER ALUMNI To what individuals shall a school look for encouragement, advice, and co-operation if not to its alumni? The alumni of a school have, as a rule, been members of the school for four years. They know the school's difficulties, re- sources, failures, successes, op- portunities, and ideals. They have been in its halls and class- rooms long enough to become very well acquainted with all these phases of its jlife. They are, therefore, well equipped to attack the problems that confront their Alma Mater. New Trier with a graduate body of 2,000 has done well to establish a strong alumni as- sociation. Such an organization can exert a tremendous influence on the plans and activities of New Trier. It can go far towards making our high school what it can very well become-- the Best High School in the World! ENFORCING THE LAW Major Denman, in his raids on moonshine sellers, is enforcing the law. Every good citizen is grateful to him for so vigorously doing his duty*. Laws are made to be enforced. And what should more zealously be enforced than those found in our national con- stitution and its amendments? It may be of value to set down just here the first section of the famous 18th Amendment, rati- fied legally on January 16th, 1919. It reads as follows: "XVIII. Section 1. After one year from the ratification of this article, the manufacture, sale or transportation of intoxicating liquors within, the importation thereof into, or the exportation thereof from the United States and all territory subject to the jurisdiction thereof for beverage purposes is hereby prohibited." Read this paragraph carefully, noting exactly the meaning of every word. You will then un- derstand just what it is that rivers'Major Denman is enforcing. Towards a Larger Understanding By 11. ASHLEY GERHARD „__. , (Rector. Christ Church, Winnetka) Misunderstood!" There are lives that have been wrecked upon the rocks indicated by that unhappy word. There afe careers, begun with great promise, that are today destroyed because some person, or some group of persons, either unknow- ingly or with malevolent intent, have fai'ed to understand. In- dustry is a battleground rather than the co-operative enterprise that Ood intends it to be. homes are centers of contention rather than havens of peace, communities are sending out jangling and jarring discords rather than joy-giving harmonies, nations are at war or are on the threshold of war--and more often than one likes to acknowledge the origin of the difficulty is to be sundin1" °f SimpIC' Unadorned' appreciative under- ,. °ne. of *« m.ore "agic aspects of all this is the fact that mmwm Oh, the rarity Of Christian charity Under the sun." mmm World War Veterans JOIN TODAY For the Disabled! EVERYTHING For the Able Bodied: HONOR MEMBERSHIP FREE To the Ex-Service Men's Anti-Bonus League, Inc. [Nan-Political] 19 West 44th Street, New York City Although I am whole-heartedly in favor of legislation which will provide in the most liberal manner for the generous care and compensation of every disabled World War veteran, I am strongly opposed, as a matter of principle and good citizenship, to the grantii.g of a Federal bonus to able-bodied Ex- Service men. I therefore wish to be enrolled as a member of the Ex-Service Men's Anti-Bonus League. Name Street City... State. Rank...................................... Branch of Service ...................... TBAB OUT AND MAIL TO Illinois Headquarters, Room 1922 Harris Trust Bldg., Chicago, Illinois Ask for pamphl t No. 10, "For the Disabled: Everything--For the Abie-Bodied: Honor." A local unit will soon be organized in your Community. Become a Charter Member by mailing in your application PATRIOTIC CITIZENS Help the Ex-Service Men of the World War defeat the proposed National Bonus. Patriotism Demands the saving of the soldiers dearest possession, HONOR, and the securing of Everything for the Disabled. Write your Senators and Congressmen to vote NO on Bonus Bin <PP1 Why The North Shore Line won the first Chas. a. Coffin Medal at the Convention of the American Electric Railway Association, October 11, 1923, Atlantic City, N.J. ^ _ Because of particular success in conducting a safety program, and actually reducing the number and seriousness of accidents. "In fostering greater safety in operation, this company has succeeded in reducing injury and damage claims to t^c?nt °f thegrOSS- The record was one accident per 16,081 car-miles in 1922. Lectures, safety meetings, safety recommendations, "Safety First Car" and first aid drill teamsare part of the company's notable safety work." From Report of Committee on A-ward CHICAGO NORTH SHORE and MILWAUKEE RAILROAD COMPANY Wilmette Passenger Station Telephone Wilmette 2514 ^pending op lers include: a new mi frence Webei Mr. Web ie James" v. less in New "V jnuary 6--An Town Clo> and Harry lois. ^nuary 6--Al ibo" for a FjApoilo. muary 7--E la Marlowe hhern for a tl Shakespearean "BOY First Nai Chica lere is that Alexander, has yet displ ton's story of flving around There is the ^esn't understa , 3ther who doe ither. his strict Warding family lame finally for* lie boy away t Hiich he may d Vith her own t |pse of time ch; Dint and ali is [Such a brief pves you but a jman qualities |cture. It is, in a natural bo [remarkable cr ^u will agree t adults suppc Ire. At the sa: irked, that t pecially Henn ther and Roc Ichelor doctor. |t to mention ene Jackson, Ld shows rare [If there's a b i>u like boys, o te a good "bo; Jnd take youi eighbor's boy i "BIG A Lasl McVic This second is taken for it lex Beach wl |anda for the lent. In fact t quotation fr elt on the subj< Mickey Benm jid, taken in cr iitorious fan His own brot gang w.ir and pon his new f< ie whose ac lould aoe. Th ire to grow ui pader results ii ion but only a ^nd tears. Intc ie probation c |he done fiend i each doing the the picture inn Tom Moore rang and the iral way he is i jlways convint iaracte.r. Chr father Dan. tl ken tor of the lut to" Mickey Ie is a tough 1