Winnetka Local History Digital Collections

Winnetka Weekly Talk, 16 Aug 1918, p. 2

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WINNETKA WEEKLY TALK, FRIDAY, AUGUST 16, 1918 --- ~ 1 " r | $ : g : . | George R. Kelley of the 842nd F. A. | things will come. I wanted to have | T must help them the best I can with who has been at Camp Mills is now | {he Dispensary in order before I be what 1 have here. | Winnetka Weekly Talk ISSUED FRIDAY OF EACH WEEK overseas. by | gan to work but that was impossible. Your friend, | | Every day old men and women come | The Lnke Shore Publishing Company 1222 Central Ave, Wilmette, Ill Business Telephone. ..... Wilmette 1921 Editorial Telephone. ..... Wilmette 1820 | Winnetka Office Telephone. Winn. 388 SUBSCRIPTION.........¥L00 Strictly in advance A YEAR Address all communications to the] innetka 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 ance { uesday afternoon to insure appear- | 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 { Kntered in the postotlice at Winn Illinois, as mail matter of the second | elags. under the act of March 3. 1879. FRIDAY, AUGUST 16, 1918 Your Duty As An Intelligent Voter This is what is generally called the "off year" in Congressional elections. But, however well that term applies to the election midway between the presidential elections, it certainly is | not applicable this year. In the United States are to determine the November the people of personnel of the law making body, probably for the period of the war. It follows, then, that just two con- siderations should decide the vote of the loyal citizen, the record or re- putation for absolute loyalty which a candidate possesses and his ability to handle the important matters | which will come before the next | Congress. The men who are seeking re-elec- tion have left a definite record of capacity or incapacity for good serv- ice through the war period. There has been some evidence of an ade- quate statesmanship in some mem- bers of the present Congress, some evidence of the lack of that quality. Every voter must, if he is true to the charge which the country vests in him with the privilege of the fran- the work that has been done by the men --chise; acquaint himself with In the case of new men he will look into | whom he is asked to support. soieyy vid} the record made in war activities in | . - . | the community from which they come | ' | Wilson should President has said that politics be adjourned, even | for the | im= | that politics is adjourned, duration of the war. But it is possible to put implicit faith in that pronouncement because of the con- stantly recurring evidence of a very active state of political endeavor going on in all official circles. adjourned | That politics should be | for the duration of the war goes | without being said. But adores ment must mean absolute elimina- | | | tion of the question of party or par- | ty affiliation before it can be said | to exist. | The intelligent voter will do his | Gio Dipalermo of Battery F., 41st F. A. 8th Division, is now over- | seas. 1:C. 14th FE. A. Top Sergeant. FRENCH BOY WAIFS | that it would be recompense enough. | deries, we heard the cries of the new facqib : | open a door, which he did, | | | { I | | Alice | | to the chateau to see the doctor and | Barlow-Brown. William Bishop who is in Battery overseas has been made | APPRECIATE "HOME" | FURS NOW SHOWING A COMPLETE LINE OF FURS Gif Z FOR FALL AND WINTER i \ very article made in my own establishment by ex- (PASEECS ert furriers and every zarment guaranteed ANYTHING IN THE LINE OF FUR WRAPS MADE TO ORDER PROMPTLY LEAVE ORDERS NOW 1768 MEYER MILLER Venetian 15 EAST WASHINGTON ST, CHICAGO Phone Randolph Building (Continued from Page One) come to help them they are so pleas- | ed and ready to be. helped. will be slow work. Sometimes think it is almost a hopeless task, but yesterday I was rewarded in my persistence in having the windows kept open and the house cleaned up. | I had, for several days visited some | little girls who were sick with ton- Jut it | 1] | silitis. They are distressingly poor. The house as usual is one with the barnyard in front with a pile of manure in one corner, chickens run- ning about at random and going with you into the house. One house, CAST IRON FURNACES FROM FACTORY TO HOME Burns Any Kind of Fuel ECONOMICALLY DOUBLE GUARANTEE PLANS AND FOR FIVE YEARS ESTIMATES FREE HOLLAND FURNACE CO. Factories: HOLLAND, MICHIGAN CEDAR RAPIDS, IOWA H. C. REDMON, Manager 2913 HARRISON ST., EVANSTON Pnone Evanston 430 1629 containing two rooms, the first a very dark and dirty kitchen with the Orrington Avenue big fire place on the side, in which hung a soup kettle over a small twig fire. In the next room, the bed- room, was one bed for all, a table and a brokem chair. The children | were oh! so dirty, the mother also. Although quite young, she had very few teeth left. She was so pleased when 1 came the second time to see her sick children, that she wished that she could do something for me. I told her that if she would wash her children and clean up her house, The next day when 1 arrived there, the house was cleaner, the door-yard swept and the little girls had been washed. So I am hoping that grad- ually we can teach them cleanliness and the need of pure air. Monsieur le Cure, who is delighted to have sime one to visit the sick, CASTLES IN THE AIR become concrete realities if you found your success upon a bank book. A weekly will insure you against the small sum deposited The man with the bank account has a feel- inevitable "rainy day". ing of security sadly lacking in the "hail-fellow-well-met." A dol- lar opens an account with us and forms the habit. CAPITAL $35,000.00 Formerly BANK OF M. K. MEYER Established 1894 WINNETKA TRUST and SAVINGS BANK | Evanston Phone 5886 North Shore Distributor for goes with me to the new cases. On entering the room, he marches to the window and opens it and begins to tell them how much the fresh air is necessary for them. Even in his own home we see that the windows are more frequently opened. The other day on returning from several visits, Miss Nichols of Boston with us, he wanted to show us some ancient, embroidered, ecclesiastical robes that he-had-of the XViith siecle. The frontdoor was left open, and] while we were admiring the embroi-| addition to his household, the baby pig. The Cure was quite disconcerted | and rushed down stairs and put him out. As little ones, the domestic animal is so loved by the peasants, Py . r . | they form habits of entering the] house, from which it is hard to] break them. 1 was interested the | other day in watching a small goat and then | AT LAST! FREE TIRE REPAIRS We Will Keep Any Tire You May Buy From Us in Repair Forever No Matter How Many Miles It May Travel This offer is made on the following tires: Mohawk Tires: Globe Tires Fisk Tires PHONE EVANSTON 6272 SERVICE TIRE & VULCANIZING SHOP 1942 Asbury Ave. At Railroad Ave. Evanston Franklin Buick and H | | ! i I : | enter the house. | -- Taught Cleanliness | All the from the water has to be fountain in the i e a distance; wa- | bathing is scarcer. I am sure that some of these | people have never had a bath. Their | carried square, | sometimes it is quit ter being so scarce, skin looks as though it had never been kept open to eliminate the | poisons of the body. It is no won- der that at 40 years the women, who have toiled so hard, look every day | | of 70 years. However their faces | are clean and their cheeks rosy, | | which is not applied, as in Paris. | utmost to adjourn politics in his own particular case, trusting that there will be a sufficient number of his kind to produce the effect of a general adjournment. The intelligent voter--may his tribe increase before September eleventh--will base his selection of representation in the two houses of the Federal Congress upon the evidence of fitness for office. Those who follow this sys- tem of test will know that they hav e contributed their part towards the] adjournment of politics for the dura- tion of the war. Morris 1. Greeley, Jr., has received his commission as second Lieutenant. Lieutenant Greeley was graduated from R. O. T. C. several weeks ago and has since been sent overseas. Robert L. Barger who has been in the Aviation Corps at Great Lakes has won his rank as Ensign and is now in the Paymaster's Corps at Great Lakes. Our boys during the warm evenings | afe given a cold sponge bath in a |' tub. at the fountain in the yard. This is such a surprise to the vil- lagers adjoining the chateau. that frequently we see the gates opened and the people standing there watch- ing. All the boys love their baths, excepting one who cries. This morning 1 weighec them all, it was quite a procedure, as we had to go to the farm, upstairs in the barn. They enjoyed it. Nearly every boy had gained in ten from one-half to two he is the only one days, kilogrammes. We are working under great difii- culties, with plasterers and a carpen- ter constantly at work. An entire new tile roof has to be put on, new beams in one room, which had to be fixed. They found that it had three While there are only a few men at work from week to week, we see things accomplished. Since the beginning of the spring of- fensive, the railroads have been send- ing «ery hittle freight, so we had to do without so much. It is surpris- ing how well vou can get along with so little but it makes the work more difficult with so few appliances. Every day 1 keep hoping that our! ceilings. being Progress of the Telephone Art O industry in the country exhibits in larger measure the remarkable electrical progress of this age than the Bell Telephone System. Improvements in the telephone art are being made constantly by Bell engineers, both through scientific discovery and experience gained in solving every-day operating problems. Ever since audible speech was conveyed over the wire in the Boston machine shop forty-three years ago, it has been theoretically possible, to talk from the Atlantic to the Pacific. Until a few years ago, however, no candid telephone engi- neer would have predicted the accomplishment of such a thing. But it is being done every day. Y The Bell System gives the same painstaking attention to the smaller problems of the tele- phone business, assuring its patrons that the most approved operating methods will always be employed. CHICAGO TELEPHONE COMPANY Brothers -- a " RA -

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