Winnetka-Northfield Public Library District

Winnetka Weekly Talk, 19 Nov 1921, p. 12

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12 WINNETKA WEEKLY TALK, SATURDAY, NOV. 19, 1921 Winnetka Weekly Talk {SSUED SATURDAY OF EACH WEEK by LAKE SHORE PUBLISHING COMPANY 1222 Central Ave., Wilmette, Ill. 556 Center Street, Winnetka, Ill Telephone .... «cc oeovvee Wilmette 1920 TelepRONe ..ccev ssn Winnetka 388 SUBSCRIPTION. ....... $2.00 A YEAR All communications must be ac- companied by the name and address of the writer. Articles for publication should reach this office by Thursday afternoon to insure appearance 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. Entered at the postoffice at Winnetka, Illinois. as mail matter of the second class, under the act of March 3, 1879, SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1921 \ Early Holiday Shopping Retail stores in many places are al- ready putting notices in their win- dows saying "Do your Christmas shopping early". This year there is a very strong added reason for such a policy. deal about the severe pressure brought on Formerly a great was said store clerks and mail and express employes by the habit of buying Christmas presents during the brief period before the holiday, and then sending them all in a heap. It is a most inhuman and preposterous prac- tice, and all that has been said pre- viously applies now. This year, if people would start right in today and buy their Christ- mas stuff, it would do a lot to help trade. Many factories are still run- ning on short time. If the merchants could by the first of December clean up a good share of their holiday trade, it would enable them to go ahead and buy new stuff. This would set to work a lot of people who otherwise would be idle or employed only on part time, and would help them get through the hard times of winter. There is bound to be more activity in trade after Christmas anyway. The big holiday rush always turns a lot of goods into money and permits re- newed buying and sends a thrill of energy into the work of manufactur- ing production all over the country. Now the question arises whether the country will get that new impulse of activity in January as the result of a big clean-up .of goods in Decem- ber? Or can it come in December, as the result of a big clean-up of goods in November? If a lot of people who have been finding fault with poor business would simply get busy and buy now the things they will buy any- way next month, it would produce a big busirfess revival at once, and bring prosperous times one month nearer. Any merchant on the north shore would tell you that a rush of buying in November would permit him to place new orders for stuff a month earlier than he otherwise would. The Cost Of Crime The thieving business is lively. Crooks got $1,500,000 by robbing a mail wagon in New York the other day. Many people who carried pay- roll money through the streets have been robbed, and the carnival of crime still goes on unchecked. More guards will have to be provided when cash is transferred through the streets. The easy going times when big sums could be sent from one business place to another and through the mail trains without much protection, have gone by. There are too many vultures lying in wait, hoping to make easy money by threat of murder, or through some one's negligence. The cost of ade- quately protecting valuables from the orowing ranks of criminals is becom- ing very considerable. And this is only one of the minor items of the cost of crime. There are also the bills for police, jails and the courts. Some day people will wake up and conclude that if they would spend [ O SS Tg OLE=I OI more money on schools, less would have to be spent on guards and police and jails. For criminals are largely uneducated people. The Home Owners It is commonly said that the United States is becoming a nation of peo- ple who live in rented dwellings and have no homes of their own. In large 'cities, anyway, wandering tribes of 'nomads drift around from one apart- pment to another. But as a whole there are more home owners than some of us have realized. The 1920 census figures show 10,- 866,960 who own their homes, com- pared with 12,943.598 who rent. The farmers and other country people, are a class that still provide many home owners. There needs to be more effort to induce people to own their Corner of Central Avenue and Tenth Street, Wilmette. FIRST CHURCH OF CHRIST, SCIENTIST, WILMETTE, Announces AFree Lecture on Christian Science by William D. Kilpatrick, C. S. B. of Detroit, Member of the Board of Lectureship of The Mother Church, The First Church of Christ, Monday Evening, November 28, 1921, at 8 o'clock IN THE CHURCH EDIFICE ILLINOIS, Michigan Scientist, in Boston, Mass. The Public is Cordially invited to attend. REVERSED ORDERS Buck privates had the pleasure of dwellings, through loan associations and otherwise. When folks acquire a stake in the soil, they begin to make permanent improvements and work for community improvement. seeing former commissioned officers doing kitchen police at an American Legion banquet at Terre Haute, Ind. WESTERN UNDERTAKING CO. FUNERAL DIRECTORS WE STRIVE TO PLEASE Our constant desire when called is to render the most EFFICIENT and COMPLETE SERVICE and to supply FINE FUNERAL FURNISHINGS at the very LOWEST COST. CASKETS as LOW as $35 No charge for distance H. F. UNSER MANAGER 1022 Davis St. Evanston, Ill. Phone Evanston 98 Phone Wilmette 280 BUILDING i Headquarters | 3) Best 'CREO-DIPT STAINED 30 Colers They last twice as long as brush- coated shingles or natural weod; are proof against dry rot, decay, worms and weather. They save the time, muss and odors of staining on the job--and cost i Best for roof or side walls We carry a few colors in stock and can order 17 Grades Come and see Samples of Colors on Wecod-- I and get our Prices. i (Your name and address) fF Shingles on Earth Sor looks and wear special colors as desired. SHINGLES 16-18-24-Inch less. Cut from selected live cedar, preserved in creosote and stained in permanent colors with best earth pigments. No waste--no wedge-shaped | shingles. Hubbard Woods Lumber & Coal Company Scott and Linden Avenues HUBBARD WOODS Winnetka 451-452 Telephones:

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