I iO 2 WINNETKA WEEKLY TALK, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1918 Winnetka Weekly Talk ISSUED FRIDAY OF EACH WEEK by The Lake Shore Publishing Company 1222 Central Ave. Wilmette, Ill Business Telephone. ..... Wilmette 1921 Editorial Telephone...... Wilmette 192 ~ 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 '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 be | an admittance charge will be made or & collection taken, will be charged for | at regular advertising rates. | | ' Entered in the postoflice at Winnetka, Illinois, as mail matter of the second | elgiss. under the act of March 3, 1879. | FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 8, 1918 | | | Send Christmas Through The War | Work Fund ie When one sees the size of the box| which must contain the sum total of | i and LL War Emergency Union Activities --t APPLY FOR NEXT YEAR'S WAR GARDENS NOW Now is the time to prepare soil for next year's garden. garden soil is porous it will catch and hold more water {for your vegetables than if it isn't. The pro- ducts of a garden are more than 90 per cent water. So you need all that your soil can retain in a way available for use. Spade, as deep as you can without turning up your dirt. Leave your garden in the condition of a sponge--let it gather from win- ter rains and snows the greatest of all plant foods--water. .In the spring prevent surface evaporation by main- | taining a mulch. Stable manure is scarce, . it more than ever important to save 'use all available leaves. burning of leaves rank waste. Manure is hard to obtain, but every effort should be made to get it and put it on in the autumn instead of in the spring. Arrangements should be made if possible, for fine, well fertilizer for use next spring. There is a shortage during the war of commercial fertilizer and it should SO 18 18 When your a troops in battle, famous American "Ace" aviators in action, battling on many fronts--heroism and humors of the war, will be held in Com- munity House on Sunday evening, November 10. URGES THE USE OF STAMPS OF HIGH DENOMINATION | denomination of postage required on all mail. For | The | producing, transporting, and cancel- lin minimizing the number of stamps | | handled and affixed to mail the Christmas presents a man at he} bei he of food front may receive from his family Hot ve put op helore 73 p ang too 4 : is needed or when it will seep away. and friends at home one realizes that | (yick acting fertilizer applied in the the people of the United States can- not be very largely represented at the Christmas celebration of the sol- diars. The fact that one cannot give to the friend overseas, however, need spring will give plants an early start and help to produce early crops--a result all gardeners desire. Unused vacant land for garden purposes may be had without charge for use by making application to the not deter the interested American from including the soldiers in his Christmas list. There is a splendid way open for every one. ! Beginning on Monday the cam- paign for the $170,500,000 fund for United War Work will open, to con- tinue for seven days. In that week every American who has not receiv- ed one of the Christmas labels from the man at the front can and should make his Christmas present to the armed forces. work of the seven allied war activ- ities is in the very realest sense a gift to the men in the uniform and, if it is given at this time, it may very rightly be called a Christmas gift. There is a very definite limit to the | ; ; {especially important on new land. A contribution to the fund which is to provide for the] munity House. Applications for land should be made while there is yet time to proper fall preparation as make this is Hold Liberty Bonds Practically all the victories of the Allies from the first stand on the Marne in 1914 to the surrender of Bulgaria, Turkey and Austria may be condensed into the word "Hold!" Marshall Joffre's order of September 5. 1914, commanded the French troops to hold every inch of ground oc- cupied and die in their tracks rather than yield. | July the same principle governed the 'American Marines and Infantry. sort of thing that the men at the front con find use for. tions under which they live, constant- ly moving from place to place, no private quarters in which to keep their personal belongings, no way of caring for anything but the necessi- ties of their life and the performance of their duties, make it impossible for them to have many of the acces- sories that they enjoy at home. But through the organizations that pro- vide relief and recreation the soldier receives his relaxation and pleasure that stands for the things that home means Contributions to the fund to carry on this work is, then, contribuation to the happiness of the here. men in the service in the very same | way that the Christmas gift would contribute could it be sent to the in- dividual. A Christmas letter, with the mes- sage that the writer has put into the United War Work fund a sum to The condi-| "Hold!" That is the word for Lib- | erty bond subscribers. | F. O. Wetmore, president of the First National Bank of Chicago sums up the case in this way: |to the Fourth Liberty loan. Unless | the purchasers now hold and pay {for their bonds their action in buy- |ing has been of little benefit. Every | purchaser, therefore, to make his loyalty and liberality one hundred per cent must save and pay for his addition that grand and feeling of being the owner outright of the most choice investment in the world." ment pledge wins a real Marne vic- tory over temptation to "quit". A | subscriber who fails, needlessly, suf- |fers a terrible moral defeat. Knitters' Attention Those who desire wool from the Red Cross or have finished garments lto return are requested to call at | the Parish house before 4:30 P. M. las there is no one there at attend to | this work after that time. : War Emergency Union War Emergency Union office, Com- | immediately | At Chateau Thierry last | "The people Fesponded most loyally | {and liberally in their subscriptions | bonds. when he or she will have in | glorious | "A subscriber who keeps his pay-| represent. the gift that he would like | to send to the individual soldier, will | The Surgical Dressings depart- go far towards warming the heart that may be a little lonely under the soldier's blouse. Try it and see if there is not a double pleasure in giving in this way. WHEN GERMANY HEARS OF THIS SHE'LL SURELY QUIT Clarence S. Darrow, of Chicago, known to almost everybody in Illi- nois, is just home from a visit to the war front. "After looking at the battle from Vimy Ridge," he said, "two or three of us dined with General Mangin (the French General who has been doing brilliant things for 2 months) in a dugout. I wouldn't say we were under fire, but shells were falling-- not on us, but continguous--once in a while, "When the General came in we congratulated him on his successes. He smiled, and drew something from his pocket, patted it and said, "This is what is doing it; not my genius." ""This' was a gold mounted rab- bit's foot--which shows that he is a human being as well as a great general." Stock farming has taken a highly original turn in Milford, Mich. The stock exhibit at this year's fair con- tained no cattle, swine or horses, but consisted entirely of four skunks and a three-legged sheep, ment of the Red Cross shop is open for workers on Saturday morning as well as on all other week days. Winnetka Flyer Honored | The following letter of apprecia- tion is especially interesting to Win- netka people as Lieutenant Fletcher I. McCordick is a member of the 88th Aero Squadron, and has done all his flying over the lines with this unit. Headquarters Third Army Corps, American Expeditionary Forces, France. September 4, 1918. General Orders No. 20. I wish to record in General orders of this corps a tribute to the services and extraordinary devotion to duty of the 88th Aero Squadron, from the period of August 8 to Sep- tember 3, 1918. This squadron has repeatedly per- formed missions involving hazard, has repeatedly in the ac- complishment of its mission, fought largely superior enemy forces, and has under great difficulties, achieved excellent results. R. J. Bullard, Major General, Commanding. Official David O'Keefe, Acting Adjutant General. Second Newman Talk The second of the Newman war- time Europe traveltalks, subject "War-time France", showing our great | As a measure of economy post- masters and post office employees have been directed to encourage the public to use stamps of the highest suited to the amount example, a 3-cent stamp instead of three 1-cent stamps should be affixed to letters needing 3 cents postage; 1d a 10-cent stamp instead of five 2-cent stamps should be attached to parcels requiring 10. cents postage. Co-operation between post office em- ployes and the public in the sale and use of stamps of the higher de- nomination will effect a large sav- ing to the Government in the cost of 1] | ing them, and will benefit the public | | | This |benefit will be especially important {to business concerns mailing large | Guantities of letters and parcels, and |postmasters are directed to bring the | suggestion particularly totheir notice. Postmasters will cause this sug- gestion to be published in the news- [papers when it can be done without {expense to the department. WAR PERSONALS | Mr. Dupee Sidley who has been a student at Williams College is now in the officers' training school at Camp Zachary Taylor. Captain Wallace F. Downing, for- merly with company B, '36lst In- fantry, is now in the 3rd Battalion Army candidates school, France. Lieutenant Robert Elmer has been (made Lieutenant Commander. -- | Sergeant Willis A. Rounsville has | been transferred from the 33rd Machine Gun Brigade to the 1st company, 161st Depot Brigade. | -- | Harold IL. Dunbar has been trans- | ferred from company A, 12th Mili- {tary Police, Camp Devens, to the of- | ficers' training corps, Camp Zachary | Taylor. Li [Lieutenant Stanley Clague is now | "located at Camp Jackson 3rd Brigade | Hotel, F. A. R. D. Top Sergeant Thomas Hunter has lgone from Jefferson Barracks to the | [32nd company, Coast Artillery, Fort | | Standish, Mass. i lis now with Field | Artillery, France. the 33rd Heavy Captain Charles Glore is | Major. | Corporal Duncan Clinch is with the | {311th Supply Train, overseas. Lieutenant FE. H. Clark, Corps of Civil Engineers, has the duty of in- specting all work done by civil | contractors doing construction work |at Great Lakes. |HOW MANY LOYAL WOMEN ARE IN OUR COUNTRY More and more the Government is placing a high value on the assistance of women in carrying out its war- time measures. Many of the states were slow in registering their wom- len, and ghe indications are that be- {cause of this the Government will it- | self undertake the work of mobiliz- ling the women of the country, in or- | der to secure their most complete co- | operation. The women of Illinois, | however, are anxious to show the i Government that no form of compul- sion has been necessary to insure | their patriotism and to be able to {offer the Government a 100 per cent | registration, secured by their own ef- forts. 690,647 of the women of Illinois 'have already been registered and in every county in the state active pre- | parations are under way for a clear- |up registration in November, by the | local units of the Woman's commit- tee. Whereas a year ago, a record | was kept of only women who volun- |tarily registered, now each registerar |is requested to hand in, as well, a list of any women refusing to re- gister, and those names are kept in a separate file, that the entire woman population of a town may be ac- counted for. Massac county recently registered ¢6.4 per cent of its wom- 'men, and every county is striving hard for a 100 per cent record. Registration does not necessarily mean offering one's self for addition- al war service. If a woman is al- ready serving to her limit, in any form of war or civic work, or if a large family of children, or other exacting domestic or business duties, legitimately require all her time, no service is expected of her. But she is asked to register, since, in the eyes of the Government, registration is first of all a pledge of loyalty. Even if 'the war should come to a speedy close, no woman should claim this as an excuse for not registering, for the problems of the reconstruction period will be as many and as heavy as those of wartime, and women may find themselves able to help, even within the walls of their own homes, in ways which do not suggest them- selves to us now. For the honor of our country and its place in the Honor Roll of Illinois women, every one of our women should immediately get in touch with her local Woman's committee and ask to be registered. Near $15,000,000 Mark Sales of War Savings stamps at the Chicago post office and branch sta- tions are close to the $15,000,000 mark. Sales under the direction of the women directors in the various postal districts have been greatly stimulated by an honor award in- stituted by Miss Amy Marr, director general. The district making the largest sale each week is permitted to fly the War Savings honor flag on its carrier station. Brothers in Naval Service Leroy B. Hammond who has been training at the officers' school at the Municipal pier, Chicago, has been sent to Cleveland, O., for further training on lake steamers. His younger brother, Bertrand, has -en- listed in the naval unit of the Students' Army training corps at Northwestern University. The boys are sons of Mr. and Mrs' Guy S. i Hammond of 1 Crescent Place. NLL I td 2 TTT 2 dd ae Fe i ed ad A dd dd 2d ld 2d 2 2d rd Footbal AT EVANSTON Knox vs. Northwestern | | | Lieutenant Frederick W. Contin] | now a | SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 9, AT 2:30 P.M. Tickets for Stand $1.00 and 50c ODEJIOES OLIOL SOLO =I OIE OI O I COLUMBIA SCHOOL OF MUSIC CLARE OSBORNE REED, Director CHICAGO WINNETKA BRANCH KATHLEEN AIR, PRINCIPAL NEW BANK BUILDING PHONE WINNETKA 974 LINCOLN AND ELM STS. SCHOOL NOW IN SESSION Private and class instruction in Piano, Harmony, Ear-training, Sight Reading and Rhythm. Practice teachers to go to the homes. (+) [8 fmm---- 4 18) mmm { 8 } = { Ox Don't Worry 22 Soft Coal ! GET A PACKAGE OF Carbonoid Soot Destroyer It Removes and Consumes All Soot E. B. TAYLOR & CO. WINNETKA, ILL. Telephone Winnetka 999 Vollman's Market 796 ELM STREET We sell cheapest because we sell for cash. Only the best of Fresh, Salt and Smoked Meats at the lowest possible prices. FISH A SPECIALTY { | | | |} | | L IB The Cemetery Beautiful LANTED amidst nature's own beauty, man has created a beautiful park ceme- tery. The sunken gardens, the winding paths, and the imposing chapel makes this spot a vision of beauty. It is indeed a fit- ting final resting place for our beloved ones. MEMORIAL PARK CEMETERY and ANNEX Gross Point Road and Harrison St., V5 Mile West of Evanston We want you to visit this cemetery. You will find it interesting and attractive. You should reserve for yourself a family lot--all lots in Memorial Park are sold with full perpetual care guaranteed. Suitable easy payments --no interest. Don't miss this opportunity. YOU ARE INVITED to call or write to the main office, 703 Mar uette Bldg. and make appointment to have one of our representa- tives call for you in an automobile to take you to and from the cemetery. No obligation. Investigate NOW! Central Cemetery Company 703 Marquette Building, Dept. 8618 Chicago Our perpetual care funds are on deposit with the Trust Department of the Central Trust of Illinois. ~ ? A, r ¥ ------ -- ot As -- -- ~~ = Ie. Aer