Winnetka-Northfield Public Library District

Winnetka Weekly Talk, 15 Aug 1919, p. 4

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4 pe=es WINNETKA WEEKLY TALK, FRIDAY, AUGUST 15, 1919 | i IN MEMORY OF Shcly stays Of moisring Wponsoved she . 1s . | Classified Ads DINSMORE ELY he cup again in 1920. # Painting and D ecorating ] Rates for classified advertising in CHAS. R. BAKKEMO Teleport one winner o3s | THE LAKE SHORE NEWS WINNETKA WEEKLY TALK GLENCOE NEWS line first ingertion in any paper. Bo" ur line for eae h Suovesding fnsen i rs use HE ad "7 1-2¢ per Jine for insertion. e pear ii oh insertion im three papers. l8e er lime fer eaeh succeeding ingertion. inimmum charge on ome time Ad Oe. ount five average words Le lize. tisements for the ko ore Ey be at our offiee by Wednes- day noon; for the Winnetka Weekly Palk an@ Glencoe News by Thur noon. FOR SALE GAR CARS FOR SAL HUDSON in excellent condition; wm A to suit; right price for im- mediate sale. Phene Morris or Walsh Evanston 1048 or Rogers Park 761 for appointment. Address letters to * Bemson and Clark street, Evanston. Can be seen Sunday HWOrning at above address. LTG40-1te FOR SALE 5-ROOM COTTAGE; A-1 condition; modern improvements; let 62x93; two blocks from N. W. depot. Phone Win. 674-W. LT40-1te HOUSEHOLD GOODS R SALE_FLAT MAHOGANY DESK . ai i mahogany chair. Tel. Win. 536-R. ©1179 Asbury avenue, Hubbard gods. ELECTRIC CARS WOR SALE BARGAIN DBTROIT ELECTRIC, CAN be seen at Fashien Auto Ce. Benson and Clark streets, Evanstem, Sunday ornimg, er by appointment. hone vanston 1048. LTG40-1%e HREEP WANRBRED STENOGRAPHER--WE HAVE AN AT- tractive opening for a stenographer and typist; the position requires a girl of sufficient initiative to devel- op rapidly in the handling of some office details and the writing of simple letters without dictation. An excellent opportunity for a capable girl. Apply by phone, letter or in erson to A. W. Kinney, Auditor, avis Watkins Dairymen's Manu- facturing Company, North Chicago, Illinois. T22-1te WANTED--EXP. COOK; BEST WAGES Phone Win. 58. _T22-1te WANTED--MAID, WHITE, FOR GEN. work; no laundry; no heavy elean- ing; $50. 542 ongwood avenue, Glencoe. LTG39-tfs SITUATION WANTED IF YOU WANT AN: EXPERIENCHD gardener to attend to your flowers, vegetables and garden call Winnetka 694 and get expert service. T20-4te GARDEN AND LAWN WORK; PRIV. plaees taken care of; summer or all Walsh, 375 year around. J. H. Madison street, Glencoe. Phone Glencoe 251. TG16-tfe WANTED WORK BY DAY OR RVEN- ing work. Phone Winnetka 502-R. - T22-1te WORK WANTED BY THE DAY; RXP. | dawn, house and furnace man; handy with tools. Colding, Box 41, Ravinia, Illinois. T22-1tp a REAL BSTATE FOR SALE---7-ROOM garage on west Spruee street. Tel. 'Win. 558. T22-2tp WANTED TO RENT HOUSE WITH | | | WANTED--FURN. OR UNFURNISHED | house with garage for winter. How- ard M. Fenton, 215 Ridge avenue, Winnetka. T22-1te WANTED TO RENT ha WANTED TO RENT--7 TO 9 ROOM house after Sept. 1; long er short leases Address 5407 Greemwoed ave- nue. Phone Hyde Park 172. Mrs. Frazer. T20-0te LOST AND FOUND -- STRAYED---WHITE POODLE . DOG, hair elipped, red eollar, Bvanston license tag Wo. 404; finder eall HWv- anston 6888. _ LTG40-1te LOST--BLACK AND WHITE CAT, male, household pet; small leather collar and two bells attached; please return S. §. Cain, 1229 Scott avenue, Hubbard Woods; reward. Telephone Win. 1540. ___ ReR-1te -LOST--PURSE GONTAINING WATCH and several other articles: finder re- turn to 715 Willow street and receive reward. AE » 2 T23-1tp EHOST--C. AND N. W. RR. PASS IN black card ease; Sunday evening; finder please e¢all Winnetka 531-M. CRE ee T22-1te MISCELLANEOUS DOMESTIC SERVICE BUREAU FURN- ishes domestic help. Phone Bvanston _ 6998. oh ___ LTG37-tfe WE BUY ALL KINDS OF JUNK, OLD clothes and shoes. J. Golinsky, 1705 Forest avenue. Telephone Wilmette 1150. "He has his name on his wagon.' LT40-tfe NOTICE OF LETTING BY THE, TOWNSHIP COMMISSIONER OF NEW TRIER TOWNSHIP For the construction of a concrete road, sec..62, route No. 2-B, Lake avenue. Bids will be received at the office of the Township Clerk of New Trier Township at the Village Hall, Glen- coe, Illinois, until eight (8) o'clock . M., August 27th, 1919, and then publicly opened. Bidding blanks on Township Clerk's office. By H. H. SHERER, Township Commissioner, August 15, 1919. KENILWORTH POLICEMAN CATCHES BURGLAR TRIO Clement Ley, motorcycle policeman for Kenilworth, while riding on Sher- idan road Wednesday: night captured three burglars attempting to force entrance into a fruit. and ice cream stand on the lake frgnt at Sheridan road and Chestnut street. The men were given a hearing Thursday morn- ing and later confined in the County jail to await hearing before the grand jury. g The confectionery stand is conduct- ed by M. L. Sparr, manager of the Village theater. fila at the | A remarkable book, made up of the diary and letters of one of the Win- netka men who gave their lives in the great war, has recently been publish- ed by A. McClurg in Chicago. It is called "Dinsmore Ely, one who Serv- Through reading this book one comes to love and homor the boy who wrote it. There is the spirit of pure American enjoyment of living, com- bined with a lofty idealism that makes it ring true throughout. Dinsmore Ely was the son of Dr. and Mrs. James O. Ely of 'Winnetka, and was killed while flying over the Montdidier sector"in France. One sees Dinsmore as he starts out on board ship in New York. He describes his whole trip in detail; the seeing of spouting whales and mis- taking them forsubmarines;the pass- ing through. the danger zone with its stray crates and spars and car- cases of horses from wrecked ships; the sighting of a real submarine, and the zigzagging out of its path; and finally landing in France. He then tells of his joining the Lafayette Flying Corps of the French Foreign Legion, and of his training for aviation. His descriptions of trips in the air are vivid and fascin- ating. Here is an extract -from a des- cription of his first trip: "Sitting in the long, dragon-fly body, there was a moment to think. | Then the pilot gave the signal for the blocks to be taken away, and like some animal the machine snorted and quivered as if unable to realize it was released. Then there was a bound; a crashing roar of wind passed my helmet; a blurr of ground as we sped along the turf; and then suddenly the vibration stopped. The ground flew away beneath, and we mounted. I had thought to see things diminish gradually, but the earth fell away. We skimmed 'a grove of trees. I glanced up at the pilot to see how he controlled, amd when I looked down again I noticed a team of white flies drawing a match along a crayon mark. It Was a team of horses on a country road. Then the sense of speed was lost and we seemed to be drifting along like a cloud." Page after page of letters and ex- tracts from his diary show his life in France as those of us.who had to stay home have longed to know it. One tives there with him. One goes through the cathedrals and shops; visits Paris and the little villages; rides through the clouds; -goes-to-tliem hospital with bronchitis; enjoys the candy sent from home and his French godmother. When he writes to his young brother, Robert, to whose education he dedicated his insurance, one realizes something of Dinsmore's cleanness of mind and body. Im one letter to Beb he says, for instance: "Vulgar stories will keep you from becoming a strong man; once in a while you cannot help listeming to them; never remember enme, never tell one under amy condition, and people will learn to know you as a boy with a clean mind. Liquor will keep you from having a happy home; never touch it. Smoking will keep you frem being as strong amd healthy as God meéant you to be ... Swear if you must, smoke if you want to after you are a man, but for goodness sake, do not do it im erder to be a man or because other boys do it. If you cannot be a man you can't be a man with it . . . . If every American has to return to the United States and start producing, raising, and training soldiers for the next fifty years to beat the Ger- man, we'll thrash them, by God, if it leaves America a desert and Ger- many a hole in the ground." Before he went aloft for his final flight he seems to have had some premonition of the fate that awaited him. He had been up in a balloon a few days before in the silence and emptiness of the upper air. He says: "I had never realized the air was so empty and so still . . . As the sun be- @an to rise and the mist clear. the firing becanve intermittent, and finally ceased, and the appalling silence scemed to bear us skyward with its pressure. I shivered. I wonder if the soul shivers as it leaves the earth in search of peace.. I think I should prefer to have my soul stay down in the warm earth with my body and the kindly reaching roots and flowers and all the ants and friendly worms than float up in the everlasting si- lence." And then he ends his letter with this: "And I want to say in closing, if anything should happen to me, let's have no mourning in spirit or in dress. Like a Liberty Bond, it is an. investment, not a loss, when a man dies for his country. It is an honor to a family, and is that the time for weeping? I would rather leave my family rich in memories of my life than in sorrow at my death." Glidden Tour Revived, The American Automobile associa- | tion has authorized a transcontinen- tal Glidden tour for the summer of 1920. Charles J. Glidden, who in the without it, |} pleasant | number | LAT SERVICE STATION Be Sure to Say "Threaded Rubber" If everybody said "Thrsaded Rubber Insulation" when they bouglht batteries and saw to it that "Threaded Rubber" was what they got there would be a lot less battery grief. --Far fewer jobs of reinsula- tion that is so often necessary to get full life out of the plates of an ordinary battery. ; --Assurance of longer batter life. : If your battery is gettting to the peint where it shows signs of quitting it will pay you to get on the track of Threaded Rubber. Come in any timz and have a talk about batteries. Evanston Battery Station 1648-1650 Maple Ave., Cor Church St. Phone Evanston 4445 BATTERIES ECHARGED EPAIRED ENTED ENEWED 915 ASH STREET, WINNETKA FOR SALE North Shore Property Frem Evanston te Glencoe Vacant and Impreved HILL & STONE REAL ESTATE OPERATORS WINNETKA WILMETTE 524 LINDEN STREET 404 LINDEN AVENUE Tel. Winnetka 1544 Tel. Wilmette 1644 ERVICE UREAU IN HOME SERVICE House Cleaners EVERYTHING General III DD" MESTIC Decorating, Rug Cleaning, Disinfecting, Exterminating We remove coloring from Tubs, Bowls and Toilets Expert Cleaners, Dyers and Repairers of Fancy and Plain Feotwear. The only home shoe cleaning service en the Nerth Shere. We call and deliver anywhere. Valet service. Try our service and know the best PHONE EVANSTON 6998 1015 CENTRAL ST. = = NORTH SHORE LINE The splendid service of the North Shore Line gives to vacationists the op- portunity for a delightful week end trip to the noted resort districts of Wis- eonsin or Michigan. Michigan shere-line. Chicago Office 66 West Adams Street Phone Central 8280 Week Travelling over the North Shore Line, you cam quickly reach Milwaukee, where convenient connections can be Railway te many of the ideal lake resorts of Wisconsin. can change to the many steamship lines for points along the Wisconsin and Limited Hourly Service Luxurious, all-steel limited trains of the North Shore Line leave Winnetka for Milwaukee every hour. The trip is clean, cool, comfortable and speedy. No dirt--no dust--no cinders. Frequent Express and Local Service between Waukegan and Evanston. CHICAGO NORTH SHORE & MILWAUKEE RAILROAD End Outings VIA THE the Milwaukee Electric At Milwaukee you made with For Further Information apply to the Milwaukee Office 187 Second Street Phone Grand 1136 "4

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