Illinois News Index

Winnetka Weekly Talk, 26 Sep 1925, p. 14

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14 . Lo tant i TL RE cn fT 2 NTT, JRE IES ENTE A § LRN NC JG, A TR ER SS th "WINNETKA WEEKLY TALK, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1925 Winnetka Weekly Talk ISSUED SATURDAY OF EACH WEEK by LLOYD HOLLISTER, INC. 1222 Central Ave. Wilmette, Ill Telephone... ......... Winnetka 2000 Telephone... .... cd. .c01n Wilmette 1920 SUBSCRIPTION $2.00 A YEAR All communications must be accom- panied by the name and address of the writer. Articles for publication should reach the editor by Thursday noon to insure appearance in current issue. ' Resolutions of condolence, cards of thanks, obituary, poetry, notices of en- tertainments or other affairs where an admittance charge will be made or a collection taken, will be charged at regular advertising rates. Entered at the post office at Win- netka, Illinois, as mail matter of the jocond class, under the act of March y 79. SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 26, 1925 Depress the Tracks. Give the Business Men Fair Play. Enforce the Traffic Laws. Build the Truck Road LAWN MOWERS Dear Jim: I just got a new-fangled lawn mower from Adelphi, Mich. Tt came by parcel post and weighs 7% pounds. My wife called at the local P. O. and got it for me by paying 46 cents charges. It's about the size of a medium sized floor brush and much the same shape. It's not like an ordi- nary lawn mower. Instead of the usual four or five rotating blades and one fixed blade it has 16 daisy shaped interacting cutters. The directions sent with the mower said, "Don't get discour- aged if at first this mower doesn't seem to cut the grass the way you expect it to. Remember the trouble you had with your first safety razor? And now it works like a charm? Well, give the mower an honest chance to make good. It will" T recalled my first experience with a safety razor. I couldn't get it to grip a single hair. T tried it at various angles, and the razor wouldn't work at any of them. But all of a sudden TI struck the right posi- tion and became an enthusiastic cenvert. So I said to myself, "Here goes for a fair trial of this wonderful little mower." I picked it up easily and carried it out. My wife. getting dinner at the time, said she wanted to see how it would work. The grass was rank and damp. Off I started, pushing what seemed more of a toy than a real mower. It clipped a few square feet of lawn and then got clogged up. My wife appeared at the window and said, "It looks as if you were pushing a stick." It did. But I kept on until I had cut almost all the lawn. Being just about all in by this time and dinner being ready, I left the lawn for the dinner table. After dinner I went out with new enthusiasm and pushed the funny little thing around again. But finally, get- ting no good results I returned it to the basement, lugged out my faithful old 48-pound clipper, and with its help finished the job. Next Saturday, I shall give my little 714 pound cutter a last chance to make good. Yours hopefully, BILL. PLENTY OF ROOM School has opened and one week of the year of work is completed. The children are re-adjusted to the ways of the academic year. Teachers and homes are back in the routine in which the educa- tional progress of the child is the chief concern. And the opening has been a most satisfactory event. In all our schools there has been found "plenty of room," a characteristic of the beginning of school that is far from being as universal as it should be. In the usual community it is a matter of complete surprise apparently that there are more children to be provided with seats this year than there were last. Rooms are over- crowded and teachers over-bur- dened. But we have none of that here. "Plenty of room" is the slogan of the north shore in all our departments of life. It is that that distinguishes us from less desirable places to live. One of the most difficult prob- lems of the great city is to find room in which boys and girls may grow up unhampered into the splendid men and women that they are capable of making. The ever increasing crowding that is a part of city life is crippling to the proper development of young people. The lack of any privacy, the want of any place in which to enjoy social intercourse with friends, sends young people into the street for amusement, ex- plains, if it does not excuse, the parked automobile, fills the dance halls and movie palaces. Any- thing to get away from home, not because there is any desire to escape parental supervision, but because there is no room in which to entertain friends. This is one of the most at- tractive features of life in such communities as ours, the fact that there is always "plenty of room" in which to expand. JOIN UP! Towns and villages in the im- mediate neighborhood of Chicago cannot longer escape being af- fected by what affects the metro- polis. Even though we may main- tain municipal independence we cannot keep ourselves from being, in actual fact, a part of the great whole of which Chicago is the center. Because of this identity of interest it behooves each group of citizens to become represented in the Chicago Regional associ- ation in order that development in the future may be directed along lines favorable to the outly- ing communities. We cannot ex- pect from Chicago that altruism which would consider the inter- est of others before its own. That is not the policy by which a great metropolis is created. We must see to that ourselves. It is characteristic of youth that growth is allowed to pro- ceed in hap-hazard fashion. Our nation has developed so rapidly that there has been little time for consideration of anything but what -immediately concerned the public weal. To beauty and cul- tural conditions we have given little thought. And the city is eloquent warning of the folly of proceeding longer by that policy. A definite life pian is necessary to the realization of the greatest possibilities of the community no less than of the individual. A planning association is obviously an essential to the proper direc- tion of growth in the district in the immediate environment of Chicago and membership in that body by representative citizens of every municipality concerned the only possible provision for the future. Men and women who have the vision to foresee what the conditions of the future will be should be chosen from each of the north shore towns to have a voice and a directing hand in the planning which will determine the character of the district along the lake in the years to come. MUSIC RECORDS A second call has been neces- sary to secure for the sick in hos- pitals at Great Lakes the phono- graph records which are neces- sary to full enjoyment of the in- struments which are to be found in the hospital. Tardiness in re- sponding to the call for contribu- tions has not been the result of any lack of sympathy for the en- listed men or real failure of our generosity. It is only a case of negligence on the part of the peo- ple who have records that could be given. During the war we learned to give when a drive was forward. When we were asked, we gave. We could then confidently rest in the assurance that where there was necessity there would be the effort to meet it. But the day of the Drive has passed, and there is none to regret its going. We must however, learn to do for ourselves what was done for us in those days of greater emer- gency. We must make it a mat- ter of personal concern to detect and to answer such needs as this of the patients in the government hospital without the stimulus or the compulsion of the public drive. THIS AND THAT Until We Find o Title HIS SAD FATE Sadly he sat all shining and tall, And adown his face did the tear drops all; wil flung were his locks, all golden and long; Fearless his heart, as his leg was strong. Yet he sat all day with a sad, sad frown, From his high seat never could he come down. Life for him was bereft of half its joys; He could never play football with the boys! --BARDOFY. (This being the predicament of a wild- haired chrysanthemum). THE DUMFULE WIFE or (She That Should Have Slapped, if Not Spanked.) With absolutely no apologies to any of Mister Curstmore's best fiction writ- ers. been ¢ | con's sadly humorous desk! That's The Way We Like 'em! We noted the following on the print- ed page of a north shore school gradu- ation program : "Cornet Solo--Short and Sweet." WE'RE OFF Oh, of course, as some may say, we are always more or less so, but this week we expect to be in Michigan! On our long awaited, indefinite, not to say hypothetical, vacation! But next week we'll be back, in per- son and full of pep, rarin to go! WOMEN KEEP FIT Well known physical direc- tor will give private instruc- tions in your home. Also diet and physico-therapy. For ap- pointment, or further informa- tion, address Wilmette Life A. 677. THE STORY SO FAR: Dumdora Dense, beautiful dau- ghter of one of the best families on the North Shore (if you don't care what you say) marries Faithful Steadfast Daniel Dense- more, the most eligible foot-loose male on the North Shore. Short- ly after marriage she meets up with an old flame of hers' Dap- per Denise De For, formerly a leading chorus man with Mister Zigfield's Institution, who is now a tea hound and pastry snake de luxe. Her husband goes out of town and she takes Dapper Den- ise out for a ride in her purring Triple X car. They are hitting on all eight or twelve somewhere between the Bull Frog Country Club and the Garden of Allah, when, >, Permanent fence can give. Now Go On With The Story Chapter VI. "But Denise dearie, where are we going to eat and WHEN?" cried the desperate child wife, as she put one wee russet gloved hand into the soft hand of her handsome escort. "Oh, very soon, girlie. I know the nicest and the quietest place out West," and Denise, the furtive-eyed, put her off evasively as he almost rudely pressed her lil hand in what might have been construed as a caress. "But, Deniseie dear. I'm so hungry and it is getting a'fully late," she wailed. Wordless they rode on into the night. For hours, it seemed to the helpless, hungry maiden. She was about to cry out in her agulsh,--"Oh why had she gone out again with Denise, when she had promised Danny that she never, never, would again?" when suddenly without any warning whatsoever the Triple X stopped short. ....(Cont. on Our Fiction Page). ... SYBIL MUST BE SLIPPING! Not having heard of our old friend and school mate having broken even a single record for some little time, we'd begun to wonder if Sybil Bauer had given up swimming or what--then we pick up thesport page of a recent paper and see where pore North- western School of Speech swim star was only able to bust five records in one day out Long Island way some place. WHY SHOULD IT? From a story regarding Paul Pry, President Coolidge's airdale pup, we culled the following statement by the more or less astute correspondent: "Three months of training with the marines didn't seem to make Paul any gentler... 00 4 Well, well, evidently the newspaper man who wrote the above has had very little experience with the Ameri- can Marines, sometimes gently termed, "devil dogs." Who Said Chivalry Was Dead ? A smart photographer from New work writes of the New York flapper's latest fad. Sez he: "On casual greetings and leavings, her sweetie kisses the back of her hand. That saves her from resorting to lipstick or powder puff as she would have to do if kissed on the lips or cheek." THERE ISN'T BUT TWO! We have at hand a news story to the effect that Robert G. Vignola, a mo- tion picture director at Hollywood, claims there are just seven varieties of jokes. But Mr. Vignola is all wet! There are but two kinds of jokes, funny and non-funny. Or to define more closely there is but one kind, be- cause if the alleged joke is not funny than it is not a joke. Of course, it all depends upon the viewpoint. To some people a certain joke is so funny as to be side-splitting, while the same bon mot may seem as sad as a funeral to some other person. Thus all the world's a joke to one per- son, while another may have forgotten how to laugh. So from the above bit of columner philosophy, one may gather that a column conductor is likely to find it pretty near impossible to be funny to all his readers. Ye Heave Ho! For one good joke! With seven times seven dead jokes lying dead on a col- Phone Central 7801 and Protection fromAmerican Chain Link Fence poy HOMES, gardens and lawns de- serve the protection and atmosphere of privacy which only well-chosen ornamental And right now is a particularly opportune time to secure the fence you desire in that we have inaugurated a Special Order Depart- ment in our factory at Libertyville to supply the needs of North Shore property owners. Advantages in cost and in erection service are nov 1 ossible, and if you are planning the fenc- 1.g of your grounds, this opportunity should receive your very serious consideration. American Wire Fence Company 7 South Dearborn Street, Chicago Factory: Libertyville, Tl. Radio Show. batteries. The New Radiola that is creating a sensation at the New York See It In Our Display Room Now. New Principles in Radio Developed by RCA This New Radiola Meets the Requirements of all Five Fund- amentals of Good Radio Reception Quality of Tone--Volume of Tone --Selectivity--Distance Range-- Simplicity of Operation new Radiola presented This herewith by RCA has behind it the research fa- cilities -- the engi- neering and manu- facturing skill and experience--of Gen- eral Electric and Westinghouse. This Radiola embodies new principles of ' radio reception -- achieves new stand- ards of performance --fulfills the re- sponsibility which America places upon RCA for leadership in radio. Radiola 25, a six-tube uni-control Super-Hetro- dyne, that uses the new power tube. space in the cabinet for dry batteries, but can be used with Loudspeaker Model 104 without With 6 Radiotrons.......... $165.00 It has Come in and See it in Our Display Room Now HORNER PIANO CO. Established 1907 1521 Sherman Ave. at Grove St. "Hornetr's Corner" Open Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday Evenings Greenleaf 464 - a a" {in | |

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