WINNETKA TALK September 18, 1926 FOR RENT -- NEW 7-ROOM home, 4 bedrooms, extra lav- atory, % block to car, only $80. Possession now. Hurry up! SUN PARLOR, 6 RM. sleeping porch; hot water heat; lot s50x173; double garage; zomed two flat; short distance to Steam; $13,600 $2,000 cash. Terms to suit. FRAME; The only $50 per front foot lots left for sale on Park Place is listed with us. 133x142. Half cash, a regular bargain. L. TC. REGOR & CO. 1614 Sherman Ave.--2930 Central St. Character Plus Earning Capacity --1Is all the collateral you need when you borrow money here LL any bank wants to know when it lends money, is that the amount will be repaid. That's all the Evanston Security Finance Corporation wants to know, and as soon as it is convinced that the character and the earning capacity of the person requesting the loan is straight-forward and fair, it usually takes about 24 hours to complete the transaction. You can borrow up to $1,000.00 and pay it back in weekly, semi-monthly or monthly payments. For example-- Suppose you need $100.00. It costs you less than $8.00 to make it if you repay promptly, and you pay back the $100.00 in fifty equal weekly payments of $2.00 each. Monthly or semi-monthly payments may be arranged. . OFFICERS C. M. McDONALD LEE NELSON FRED G. BROOKS President Vice-President Sec'y-Treas. and Mgr. DIRECTORS Lee Nelson C. M. McDonald Fred J. Schuett W. L. Dormand Thomas E. Williams E. A. Brown Fred G. Brooks Evanston Security Finance Corporation 628 Grove Street Phone University 252 Bank depositories: City National Bank of Evanston and State Bank and Trust Company. Character Plus Earning Capacity is the Basis of Credit Ford Makes Denial of Rumors of New Car There is no truth to the rumors that Ford is about to put a new car on the market, according to a telegram from Edsel Ford to Gaston Plantiff, eastern district manager of the Ford Motor company. "A telegram has just been received from Edsel Ford, president of the Ford Motor company, in which absolute denial is made that a new Ford model is soon to be placed on the market," said Mr. Plaintiff, "We know that it is very generally rumored that the Ford Motor company is about to in- troduce a "Light Six" or a "Light Eight." There positively are no grounds for these rumors. You can say positively there is no new Ford model coming along, and there is no new Ford car going to be introduced." Mrs. W. G. Weil and daughter, Nellie Louise, 608 Willow road, have been spending several weeks in Burlington, Towa, and have just returned. ---- George Beyers, son of Mr. and Mrs. Henry W. Beyers, 707 Hill road, will attend school at St. Edward's hall, Notre Dame university, South Bend, Ind., this next year. Ind : ie EiPSadence Hat i PHONE WILMETTE 364 831 RIDGE AVE. WILMETTE, ILL. HOLD SERVICES FOR PROMINENT ARCHITECT George W. Maher, Planner of Kenilworth, Buried at Rosehill Cemetery Tuesday Funeral services for George W. Maher, for 32 years a resident of Kenilworth, were held from the chapel at Rosehill cemetery Tuesday of this week. Burial was at Rosehill. Mr. Maher died at his summer home in Ganges, Mich., last Sunday. Mr. Maher was a prominent archi- tect and specialized in community planning and the design of beautiful buildings. He laid out the Village of Kenilworth, besides designing and biulding the schools and churches and donating a park, and also drew up the Village plan for Glencoe. He designed and built many beautiful homes and buildings along the north shore, among them the home for George B. Dryden and James A. Patten, at Evanston, and the Patten gymnasium of Northwest- ern university. He was consulting engineer to the Kenilworth Plan commission and was interested in the preservation of the Fine Arts building, in Chicago, being a member of the committee working for that purpose. Mr. Maher was born in Mill Creek, W. Va., and was 61 years old at the time of his death. He studied archi- tecture in Chicago and later in Europe. In 1906 he was a member of the Kenil- worth board of Architects and was president of that organization in 1918. His last work was at Gary, Ind., where he helped to_draft the planning code. His health had been failing since 1920 and he suffered a nervous breakdown in 1922 as the result of overwork. Members of the immediate family who survive are the widow, Mrs. Eli- zabeth B. Maher, of 424 Warwick road, a son, Philip B. Maher, of the same address, and a sister, Mrs. Mary Nooker, of Michigan. Dr. College, for- merly pastor of the Kenilworth Union church, officiated at the funeral serv- ices. Mr. and Mrs. Harry M. Mess and their daughter, Mary Jane, 982 Pine street, have returned home after a summer spent at their cottage on Lake Hamlin at Ludington, Mich., and three weeks at Benton Harbor, where they visited Mrs. Mess's mother. Om Mr. and Mrs. N. L. Hurd, 518 Sunset road, have as their guest, Mrs. Hurd's mother, Mrs Anna F. Jensen, who has been abroad since May, touring throughout Europe. Mrs. Hurd's sis- ter, Mrs. E. M. Fitzgerald of Detroit, Mich., is also being entertained by Mrs. Hurd. 5Y%%% MONEY Have funds to loan on choice im- proved North Shore Suburban res- idence property at 5% % interest. See us on renewals. E. G. Pauling & Co. 5 N. La3alle St. Main 0250 NorTE SHORE HOMES INC. Builders of Better Homes WILMETTE, ILL. Plan We Will Finance & Build B Chicago Office - First National Bank Bldg. &% Phones Wilmette 2427 - Randolph 1438 Fal For You Ls A TH