A a TT Pr TV «ov f 4 J hy a Nl a A -- . Ea I ei 8 A FR PE EL A EIR SNR a a SR aes A En RS GL SARS ol a Sa a a | = 14 WINNETKA WEEKLY TALK, SATURDAY, SEPTEMBER 4, 1920 : i ---- Sh er EE a 1 The trad i ill not allow the | ber of housing sch in England . OFFER MANY PLANS Abo bi reased i the oat. and Wales numbered 10,673, Hori : side. The government is using a in all land for 800,000 houses. Of LJ g t FOR BRITISH HOUSING sort of indirect compulsion by pro- [these 7,120 have been approved with \ \ / hibiting 'luxury and unessential build- | an area for 550,000 houses. In Scot- . : J ; i a ing', so that if a man will not build land 103,000 houses have been author- I 'Offer Upward of 10,000 Schemes In- cottages he is not allowed to build | ized, the bids averaging about £1,000 volving an Annual Capital Expen- anything else. There are various |per house. This is roughly about J diture of $6,000,000 suggestions for speeding up the work, £200 more than it costs per house in mina including a guarantee to the trades | England." Attempts to solve Great Britain's | unions of employment for a term of years to men employed on housing ® Edwin OF ROCKFORD } brought forward upwards of 10,000 work, to ensure them against loss A Submits His Name as a f schemes involving an annual capital | of time in bad weather by a minimum ! expenditure of $6,000,000, according to | wage, wet or dry. In return the eo Olson Candidate for the Repub- lican Nomination at the » a report by a representative of the trades unions will be asked to con- Primary, Sept. 15th, I foreign trade bureau of the Guaran-|sent to dilution and the employment ty Trust company of New York. After of unskilled and semi-skilled labor, giving details as to various plans and | to give up their apprenticeship rules, the number of houses to be built in | and abandon all opposition to the each of more than thirty cities visited employment of ex-service men, train- the report says: ed or untrained. There are 'luxury "The program of the ministry of building' tribunals to hear appeals health--complete rehousing in three | against desicions prohibiting build- Regular years--is about one year behind, and | ings regarded as non-essential. a Republican is costing more than double the orig- £ ohore pre housing pond caimpalgny Candidate Tor Binds For) 0 Sworn: Ons inal estimates. all over the country. In London, sub- , f . "The ministry of health works in scriptions to the 6 per cent bonds are : derly, Economical, Business-like, conjunction with the office of works. | coming in at the rate of about 100,000 was nominated for County Judge Progressive and Patriotic Gov Where a local authority defaults, the |a day. While the local governments two years ago, but wasrobbed of that ernment of State Affairs--With- business is then entrusted to the of-| are issuing 6 per cent bonds, the office in the November 1918 election. out Fear or Favor, fice of works. British government charges 7 per Wlaciion crinals Seinen neither " i i i t. Borrowing in the ordinary wa party nor faction, and it is therefore : What is Beeping hack handing at dent wie Y Fay imperative that all good citizens Mr. Sterling was born at the present time is «he fact that there | for housing schemes not financed by I | goc 1 are Pt enough swilled men to do|bonds is usually 7 per cent. unite to protect their citizenship by « 3 eliminating election thievery. Vote even a quarter of the work wanted. On the 21st of July the total num for hire agin September 18, 1920. I ---------------- Dixon, Lee County, Ills., June 29, 1869, and is editor of the Rock=- ford Daily Register-Gazette. In 1916, as Chairman of the Republican State Committee, he Vote for the Present Coroner JOSEPH F. HA AS FOR LIEUTENANT directed the successful cam- . GOVERNOR paign in Illinois which resulted F F M A N = in record-breaking majorities . ore a Real Business Administra- for both the National and State | on; Runs County Office As . tickets. | . . Efficiently As a Private Office Republican Candidate for Coroner rs In the off-year election in 1918 he was elected State Treasurer i The real test which a voter should by 141,803 jorit | apply to every county officinl is, not y fT majority, y [1] how much money that official can As State Treasurer, during the first 16 months of his two-year spend, but how much he can save. term of office, he turned into the Treasury $604,735.57 interest Being a good 2 d 1i i i y . Dassing i PET E R M : H O FFM AN feito in we earned on public funds in his custody, far surpassing ail previous Make Cross in Second Squares Under Heading "CORONER blk vor he He believes in service and efficiency in public office. . . trait alone will His name will add strength to the Republican State Ticket at the Primary Election September 15, 1920 ue at Novoror clettion: york LHeient Your vote at the Republican Primary, Sept. 15th, is most respect- in the Record- fully solicited. er"s and Tor- rens Offices. The Recorder's Office and the Torrens Office arc the only WOMEN MAY VOTE FOR THIS OFFICE RE-NOMINATE JOSEPH F. HAAS county offices which commnete §° with private capital. To com=- pete successfully with private capital means a real business x administration and that is what ® ® the voters have a right to demand of every candidate for the office of Recorder of Deeds. The administra- tion of the office of Recorder of | Deeds and Registrar of Titles dur- R d fA ing 'he Inst four years has been a oar (0) S$SesSsSors business one from every standpoint. When Joseph F. Haas took charge of the Recorder's Office n real estate § Primary Election September 15th, 1920 boem was or in Cask Comnty. and transfers were being made at the highast rota thon Tom y= hen came the «umn in the real estate §| market during the war period. Now once more the real estate market is active and transfers are being made at a greater rate than every before v in the history of the country. With V OTE FOR a capacity of eight hundred to one thousand documents a day, the Re- corder's Office has bheei called upon to vecord from twelve kp ired to seventeen hundred documer's 1 dnv. ® K During the war period "hen the - > slump was on in the real estate market, instead of spending his ap- "4 propriation for the year, Joseph F. for COUNT A JUDGE Haas as a business man felt that ¢ he owed it to the public, first, to 'hice 1 i keep his skilled and trained em- Born Feb. 4, 1880, at Chicago, graduate of University o RO I ne ae Chicago, Ph. B., and Lake Forest University, LL. B. Ad- the service when needed, and, sec- mitted to Bar, 1901; Village Attorney, Forest Park, IIL, ond, to save money for the public, f) . } 3 i F, He succeded in doing both. He kept 1906-1916; First Assistant Corporation Counsel, Chicago, his employes, some of whom have Republican Candidate for To the Republicans of the Tenth Congressional District: since 1916. Member Cleveland Lodge, A. F. & A. M.; i RA J eR yen He licero Chapter, R A. M., Humboldt Park Commandery, for him to meet the crisis of the : : i T le: B. P. O. Elks, Royal real estate hoom which is on today. In November 1918, I was elected to succeed the Honor- K T.; Shriner, Medinah Temple; B. P. O. s, Roya EE ed Td ope Succ Arcanum, Chicago Bar Association. $25.000.00 in one year from his an- able George Edmund Foss as Representative in Congress for : Ja) appropriation, aul tured tit the tenth district in Illinois. Mr. Foss not being a candidate. Primary Election Day, September 15; 1920 did for the public what a business My term of office began on March 4th of last year and I Man Wud do I0r Bia huninesg have spent fourteen of the eighteen months which have ex- fRined he fees rowdived Wy titel pired of my term at the National Capital. The 66th Congress or releasin rus ee " . own IF tite he has turn- convened in extra session on May 19, 1919, and the first ed over every penny of the money 4 : crn regular session adjourned on June 5, 1920. Only two weeks ROBERT ISHAM In the Torrens Office, he institut- intervened between the extra and the regular session. ed the building of a real plant. For vears the experience of each exam- iner of titles had meant nothing to Since my election in 1918, I have tried to discharge my the public. When an examiner of 1 1 r I I I a duties faithfully and promptly not only on the floor of the to the administration of Joseph F. House and in the committees to which I have been assigned, t x . . . . . . < ' Hans he Jnl 18 ORDO ir but also in handling matters for my constituents with the = ent Registrar of Titles did not be- various departments in Washington. In consequense, many lieve that this was fair or just to . . . Citizen, Soldier, Engineer || the tax pavers. He believed that voters have voluntarily endorsed me for re-election. ' ' g the experience of every examiner of titles should 1} t 8 £08 C did f ti 2 TE te I am therefore a candidate for nomination on the Re- andidate for the subdivision hase title system, publican ticket in the Primary to be held on Wednesday, Ye - - . whereby when the title to a sub- ik . . f Repubiican Nomination division has once been determined, September 15th next. Ours is a Republican district and the it"dues mot Rave to he Sune, OrIF Republican nominee will doubtless be elected in November. again by other examiners of title. i : ; " for Through the saving of 'time ef- It is well known that influence and efficiency in the National ¥, W a X= F : ; AER a Beg Wy ig Congress depend very largely upon length of service. If elect- timately save thousands of dollars ed to another term, I feel confident of being able to render > through having to employ a less . . number of examiners when the work greater service to my constituents and to the country than ie finally completed. The same sory has been possible during the past eighteen months, but even of a plant in the private title in- a =] 4 : KUrANeS eompAly line been extimds for that short period I respectfully submit my work and rec- @ (1 e Wor n S comple . . Sr ole to one million dol1ars, ord for the approval of the good people of the 10th district. T R U S T EE The Saving of Juniie money by public officials means ower axes y : 7 3 : I er try Uoliar ai To the now wholly enfranchised women of the district, A ; gd menus A dollar lose to Je raed I extend my congratulations and express my personal pleasure axation. ose . anas e- : 5. An Engineer for an lr taxation. J He net ony by reason of the fact that the first legislative vote I cast as Engineering Job Taint i ey Congressman was in favor of the 19th amendment to the wards securing them. To those Constitution granting fall right of suffrage to the women of 3 3 H 3 voters who do not believe in pub B > 5 Sanitation 1s an engimeer- lic waste and extravagance by pub- the country. ing task, not a political job. [| lic officials and who do not want Respectfull 1 2 t higher taxes, a review of the record Ys am an engineer, nov a of Joseph F. Haas is as refreshing politician. as it is unique. He should be given CARL R. CHINDBLOM, a chance to keep up his good work, 5 Cc : $ and to do again what he has done : o S Last name on ticket for Sanitary | | pefore--give the voters a real busi- Representative m ongress, DistrictiTrustee. ness administration of the office of 10th Illinois District. Recorder of Deeds and Registrar Primary Election Sept. 15, 1920 | L2- Titles.