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Winnetka Weekly Talk, 26 Jan 1923, p. 13

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WINNETKA WEEKLY TALK, SATURDAY, JANUARY 6, 1923 13 and then put down on paper or papy- | efficiency. Why Coketown can be in-|bottom lies Ninevah and Babylon and |ergerm that given freedom, might ut- {3 'oe rus since the days of Plato; down even | duced to exist and why it labors and | Carthage and Jerusalem. terly and suddenly destroy mankind ! 1 Book Reviews to the Utopia that Mr. Wells once felt | starves and dies for the Country| And the remedy? Those who be-|and Mr. Mumford feels much the Ee for ten minutes was the greatest de-| House is due to Megalopolis, the city | lieve that world prohibition or univers- | same way about partial reforms. {1 By John Philip Morris sidirum. of Vanity Fair. From thence comes |al vacination or a single tax or dis-| Again, part of the contemporary {4 - These Utopias, upon examination |the styles that Coketown must wear, |armament would bring Utopia are |evil is that science and art have been 1A Any book which opens for us a new | have few common features with the ex- the books that it must read and the chopping at a single head of the drag-| divorced from common life and Cellini 4 viewpoint or which contains an em-| ception «that in each the land and |ideas of Nationalism and the Pride of {on which brought to the ground re-|no longer hammers out the swords he 14 bryo which may germinate into an |the natural resources belong undivid- | Labor and the other shibboleths that veals two heads where there was but | designed and Moab no longer uses the | | \ idea capable of benefiting the whole |edly to the community and the bene-| blind the eyes and minds of Coke- one. of : utensils he decorated. Each man vee I Morid ort culy one' Maw, deverves fits arising from them are communal town. Eliot Fieldings in Anne Severn fear- | must again become an artist, doing q El thoughtful careful consideration property." Mr. Mumford draws a gloomy picture | ed that if all the germs that make up | his work for love and loving his work { a The Story of Utopias by Lewis Som Then we get into the Utopias that indeed of our civilization and sees us [our diseases were discovered and des-|and striving to make his work per- i "9 ford certainly contains combustible.| men have made their goals, the Excel- | 5°18 headlong' down the toboggan |iroyed we might find that they in turn | fection, 1 ¥ ideas sufficient to blow old images out | siors of the modern men. They are that stretches down the hill at whose 'had been holding in check some sup- John Philip Morris. | i of our brains and seed thoughts| The Country House, Coketown and | Io ji enough: to replace the cleared mind | Megalopolis. The Utopias of posses- 17 [ patches. sion. "If we believe that a man who 1d "Ideas" says Mr. Mumford, "are |pPossesses a single house is fortunate, i more important than facts as long as | then a man who possesses five houses OUR : i we believe in them. The 'belief' that|'s five times as fortunate" and a man " the world was flat was once upon a| Whose wealth is an inheritance is 8 time more important than the 'fact' | more to be stiles Jian man who has i that it was round; and that belief kept | Won wea rough labor. § the sailors of the medeival world from | In order that the Country House NOWLEDGE | ye wandering out of sight of land as ef- Utopia of possession can exist it has h / fectively as would a string of gun-|been necessary to create Coketown boats." and in the dirt and the grime and thc Furthermore we really live in two | Pain of Coketown the only Utopia is ; ) worlds. The physical world without | ~~ > D NDUSTRY = and the world of ideas and ideals PA RON Ci ADDIS HEORHOO y within our heads. "And so a map of | In making arrangements for your win- | the world that did not include Utopia, | ter trip to California, Firion or Yogiroad ECONOMICAL i 4 ihe ides). is not Worth even glancing ieket Aent sell your Failroad, tekess) { : : a k our sle ping car reservations an | With these ideas as a base Mr. Mum- ps i an age through to destina- RANSPORTATION I ford first describes in meticulous de- ben, 1h o atiee OF Herghlibrnonil pride £ ¥ 1 " i i ake i m er { | tail that overlooks nothing. Pertinent to patronize your home Ticket Agent, i 4 and skips all the unessentials, each of | Chicago & North Western Ry. | 1 the Utopias that men have dreamed LTG10-4te OF LE i | SERVICE Fe PSE : ° ° { 3 Living Up To CHEVROLET CARS and TRUCKS | |, i Its Name UR funeral home was de- signed to be a real temporary home to those who had lost some loved one; a place where they would have all the comforts and privacy of their own home, and still, have the proper, facilities available. EL Nahigian Brothers, Inc Established 1890 LL I lll ~The comments and expressions of approval that we have heard > lead us to believe that our funeral home is truly living up to our high expectations. Annual January SALE of FINE ORIENTAL RUGS PHONE EVANSTON 600 ee et 906 ae CHICAGQ au AVE hp , TINCT | Cn ROY NERA BEGINS MONDAY, JAN. Sth : geri A ral AOE WITH PRICE REDUCTIONS of 25% to 50° on more than two thousand Rugs of all sizes, from the small mat and threshold rugs to the largest room rugs---all varieties. A Good Approach As in golf, so in business, the good re- sults of long, vigorous field shots may be lost by a poor approach. -- - TT ------ hada Your proposition has merit. You be- lieve in it. An earnest, straightforward telephone talk will put it through. It is not always necessary, and some- times it is not good policy, to disturb a busy man of affairs by a visit in person. But if you go directly to the heart of the matter in a brief talk over the Long Dis- tance telephone you can get favorable attention and, more likely than not, a favorable decision. This will be, without doubt, the most ad- vantageous sale of really fine Oriental Rugs that Chicago has seen in many years--irom the standpoint of quality, variety and value. Our recent direct importations from the rug weaving districts of the near East, as- sembled at Constantinople and Sultanabad, Persia, have been the largest in the history of this establishment--hence our statement in the first paragraph. Every rug buyer knows what the name Nahigian stands for in integrity, quality and value-giving, so any comment on this point is superfluous, The regular prices, as always, are plainly marked on each rug, with the reduced price ticket attached. Early attendance is advised because of the large response that invariably follows the announcement of this annual sale event. Rugs selected will be held for future de- livery if desired. These reductions of 25% to 50% bring the cost down so low that the question of whether or not one can afford real Oriental Rugs instead of machine-made domestics, is entirely eliminated. Get acquainted with the money and time saving features of our "station- to-station" service. It is explained in the current issue of the Alphabetical Telephone Directory. i A 28 and 30 South Wabash Avenue CRY ILLINOIS BELL TELEPHONE a) % BUYING OFFICES, CONSTANTINOPLE AND SULTANABAD, PERSIA COMPANY Nae? | OO RON ms |

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