Lake Shore News (Wilmette, Illinois), 3 Aug 1916, p. 3

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THE LAKE SHORE NEWS, THURSDAY, AUGUST 3,1916. 3 1 ONE OF ARDEN SHORE'S FOLD SPECIAL ASSESSMENT NOTICE. *1 Of *8. a ir- er 16, n* ia- ir- sy »y, be )lf ill ap be ill ub y) ed lit n- a tt, n- he 11 JO- an •m li- nt m he ith by al $w IS rs. IBS ra- ck xe, on eg, tag the her md Uid ■107 c; ive- iese will lull Pri- hey i of den ' ot ber ads has the ter Old ev- ve- 1s., Sen hit ng nd ni- an ter ng ' a :ea jir ol- ra, re- im 21 !W ■J. HO ad >n, he re ir- nt 11- fe- al, st One of the Twenty Children Being C Competent Nurses ared for purlng the Summer Heat by in,the "Baby-Fold." of Miss Elizabeth Baird for the re- minder of the summer. Mr. Lawrence Vollman and Mr. Her- bert Collyer spent the week-end at tok lake. III. ! Mr. Q. Hazen Patterson of 719 Tenth street wt» return the latter part of tM*-'"rrr\ from a month's vacation at Oncks )», Mich. Mrs, Orvilla K. Vat- tenon, hit mother, returned from the same point last week. f !Wr Charles B. Lord, 515 Central «r, 'i u tey Is expected to return home Sundal* from A three weeks' fishing trip in northern Wisconsin. Mr. and Mrs. P. C. LitUe left the first of the week for a three weeks' outing at Mackatawa, Mich. -The Kenllworth club i held ah in formal dance Wednesday evening at the Assembly hall. On Saturday evening^ August 12, is, to occur the wedding of Miss Helen' Stearns, daughter of Dr. W. M. Stearns, to Mr. John W. McConnell of ffiooklyn, N. -Y: The ceremony will he performed at the residence of the bride's parents on KenilwortK avenue. MrV Henry Taylor will entertain at a kitchen shower Satudray afternoon for Miss Helen Stearns, who is to be a bride of this month. Wednesday afternoon, JSfrs. James Keith entertained informally in honor of Miss Helen Stearns, at her home. Kenilworth > proposal for the collection, removal and disposal of garbage, ashes, bottles, cans and miscellaneous Waste. Wilmette, 111., Aug. 2nd, 1916. Sealed proposals for the collecting, removing and disposing of garbage, ashes and miscellaneous waste, as de- fined in the Village ordinances, and bottles and cans, in the Village of Wil- mette for the year commencing Sep- tember 1, 1916, and ending August 31, 1917, will be received by the Presi- dent and Board of Trustees of the Village of Wilmette until 8 o'clock P. M. on Tuesday, the 15th day of August, A. D. 1916, at which time said propos- als will be publicly opened and ex- amined. I Proposals must be made out on blanks furnished by the Village Clerk of said Village of Wilmette, at the Village Hall, and must be addressed to the President and Board of Trus- tees of the Village of Wilmette, Illi- nois, and indorsed, "Proposal for col- lecting and disposing of garbage, etc." The ordinances of the Village of WMmette relating to the collection and disposal of garbage, etc., may be seen and examined, at the Village Hall in Wilmette during all business hours, and blank proposals will be furnished at said office. Any bidder whose proposal is ac- cepted and to whom a contract may be awarded will be required to enter into a contract in writing, satisfactory to the President and Board of Trustees of the Village of Wilmette, containing among other provisions the agreement on the part of the contractor to com- ply with all ordinances 6f the Village of Wilmette governing the manner of I performance of said work, and to per- form said work under the supervision of and satisfactory to the President and Board of Trustees of said Village of Wilmette. The Contractor will be paid in Cash for said work, in equal monthly in- stallments, during the Reriod of said contract, first payment to be made on October 1st, 1916. The contractor to whom the contract may be awarded will be required to furnish a bond to the satisfaction and 1600 Find New Life at Arden Shore First 6 Monifts 16th Year ill set- estab- oe. In olude 3dis- Everyone is interested ?ij» Arden Shore camp, which is now4 enjoying the most successful period b^fts most flourishing year,, , The camp, origin- ally planned to provide far^O needy Chicago girls and boys, * babies 'and mothers at a time, has taken care of more< than that number ,¥t every period during the summed p A total of more than 1,600 have enjoyed the iamp during the last"-"feWil&ntiife : This ■ lis the «ix«e%il^l;;ig^:'-.*fetjeiirhp has been conducted W X Arden Shore association. It sbegl! as an outgrowth of the Gad tlement, which in that y- Hshed a fresh-air camp at,C 1905 the camp broadened a Red Cross tent for guei posed to tuberculosis. It is oiutt the results of this ©amp inspired the late Theodore Sachs tof establish the Ed- wards Tuberculosis sanatorium at Naperville. The following * yeW the present camp "site of twenty^three acres, with a beach frontage of 350 •feet, was bought. > A few days ago there ^were 514 guests in camp. Eighty of these were mothers--one of them a girl mother with a three-weeks-old baby. The others were boys and girls of all ages and sizes, including twenty in the "baby fold" all under two years old. The largest possible liberty of the woods and beach is given all the guests, and to promote their enjoy- ment there are daily swimming les- sons, dancing classes, kindergarten exercises and sewing lessons. A mus'l- cat entertainment is given by north shore talent once a week and. some sort of dramatic or other entertain- ment every two weeks. On Sunday the^e assemble* wrobably the most cosmopolitan Sunday school in the country. |n the afternoon a regular veiper service is held. Eighteen thousand dollars a year is required to conduct the camp. At present the Arden Shore association treasury, lacks several thousand dol- lars of having enough to finish the year. \: If the World Were Perfect. If all the world were perfect, an in- tolerable sameness would be stamped upon humanity from one end 'of the earth to the other. "For the love of God,'* someone has exclaimed, "let me retain my defects! That is the only thing I really have." Moredver, there are some really quite captivating hu- man defects. But it is important to control them.so that they may never become obnoxious.--Anatole Le Braz, in the Outlook. approval of said President and Board of Trustees in the sum of Two Thou- sand Dollars ($2,000.00), conditioned for the faithful performance of the contract. The President and Board of Trus- tees reserve the right to reject any and all bids. OSCAR W. SCHMIDT, EARL E. ORNER, President. Village Clerk. ' L. S. BECKER, JOSEPH HEINZEN, P. W. ANDREWS, W. J. MONTGOMERY, ; WM. S. FREEMAN, H. J. HAACK, Board of Trustees of the Village of Wilmette. Village of Wilmette--Special Assess- ment No. 133. Notice \is hereby given to all persons interested that the President and Board of. Trustees of the Village of Wilmette, in the County of Cook, and State of Illinois, having ordered that a local Improvement be made consist- ing of laying a main.water supply pipe with all necessary crosses, valves, hy- drants, connections and special fittings in Dupee place, along a line seven (7) feet east of and parallel with the cen- ter line of said Dupee place from the main water supply pipe now in place in Gregory avenue where a connection shall be made, to the main water sup- ply pipe in Hill street where a con- nection shall be made, in the Village of Wilmette, Cook County, Illinois. Also for laying lead water service pipes, taps, stop cocks and spiral cast-iron extension stop-cock boxes in Dupee place between said points, together with the necessary connections with the main water supply pipe to be laid in DUpee place between said points, the ordinance for the same being on file in the office of the Village Clerk of said Village; and said Village having ap- plied to the County Court of Cook County, Illinois, for an assessment of the costs of said improvement, accord- ing to benefits and an assessment hav- ing been made and returned to said Court (Docket No. 133), the final hear- ing thereon will be had on the 21st day of August, A. D. 1916, at ten o'clock a. m., or as soon thereafter as the business of the Court will permit All persons de3iring may file objec- tions in said Court, and may appear on the hearing and make their defense. Said ordinance provides for the col- lection of said assessment in five an- nual installments, with annual interest thereon at the rate of five (5) per cen- tum per annum, as provided by law. Dated. Wilmette, Illinois, August 3rd, A. D. 1916. . H. G. DRURY, Commissioner appointed to make Assessment. SPECIAL ASSESSMENT NOTICE. Village of Wilmette--Special Assess- ment No. ^34. Notice is hereby given to all persons Interested that the President and Board of Trustees of the Village of Wilmette, in the County of Cook and State of Illinois, having ordered that a local improvement be made consist- ing of constructing and laying a vitri- fied tile pipe sewer, with manholes, and catchbasins, along the center line of Dupee place from the main sewer now laid in Gregory avenue, where a connection shall be made, thence north- erly along said center line of Dupee place to a point one hundred and thirty-five (135) feet south of the south line of Hill street; also for house drains of the best quality of vitrified tile pipe tof six (6) inches in- ternal diameter, and three-fourths (%) of an inch in thickness, to be laid in said Dupee place in the Village 9t Wilmette, Cook County, Illinois, be- tween said points, from and connect- ing with' the said main sewer to be laid in said Dupee place in said Vil- lage of Wilmette, the ordinance for the same being on file in the office of the Village, Clerk of said Village, and skid Village having applied to tie County Court of Cook Cotfhty, Illinois, for an assessment of the east of said improvement, according to benefits and an assessment therefor having been made and returned to said Court (Docket No. 134), the final hearing "thereon will be had on the 21st day of August, A. D. 1916, at ten o'clock a. m., or as soon thereafter as the business of the Court will permit. All persons desiring may file objec- tions in said Court before said day, and may appear on the hearing and make their defense. Said ordinance provides for the col- lection, of said assessment in five an- nual installments, with annual interest thereon at the rate of five (5) per cen- tum per annum, as provided by law. Dated, Wilmette, Illinois, August 3rd, A. D. 1916. H. G. DRURY, -Commissioner appointed to make Assessment. PROPOSALS. Wilmette Special Assessment No. 128. Wilmette, 111., Aug. 2nd, 1916. Sealed proposals for clearing of all rubbish and dirt, reshaping and re- moving the surplus material, paving with brick on a reinforced concrete foundation of an average thickness of seven (7) inches, and otherwise im- proving the roadway of Sheridan Road from the Northern boundary line of the Village of Wilmette to the East line produced North of Lot Eight (8) in Block Eight (8) in Inverness, a Re- subdivision of Westerfiel'd's Addition to Wilmette (except Blocks Nine (9) and ten (10), in said Village of Wil- mette, together with all intersecting and abutting strets back to the outer line or lines, as the case may be, of said Sheridan Road, and also the inter- section of Seventh Street, Greenwood Avenue and Sheridan Road, lying North of the South line of Greenwood Avenue and East of the West line of Seventh Street, in accordance with the ordinance and specifications for sa'd improvement, will be received by the Board of Local Improvements of said Village of Wilmette, until 7:30 o'clock P. M. on Tuesday, the 15th day of August, Ai D. 1916, at which time said proposals will be publicly opened, examined and declared by said Board of Local Improvements in the Village Hall in said Village of Wil- mette. The specifications for said improve- ment may be seen and examined at the office of the Board of Local Im- prove in the Village Hall in Wilmette during all business hours,, and blank proposals will be furnished at said office of the Board of Local Improve- ments in said Village Hall. Proposals must be made out on blanks furnished by said Board of Local Improvements, and must be ad- dressed to the Board of Local Im- provements of the Village of Wilmette, Wilmette, Illinois, and indorsed, "Pro- posals for Paving Sheridan Road," and all proposals must be accompanied by cash or a check certified by a respon- sible bank, payable to the order of the < of ANSTON OMestandLaitfestTri/stCQmpanyonfheMrthShore tesgy C<3BC^ BEGIN NOW TO ENJOY the com- forts that saving assures. With the knowledge that you ha%e a growing savings account comes freedom from worry about future comforts, and you enjoy more thoroughly your work, your friends and your Recreation. All deposits made in the Savings De-. partment of this bank on or before August Tenthidraw 3% intereU for the full month. W111.IAM A. tJYCHE.Presldent1 K.J.WALUNGFORD,Y.c*Pre«i > C.J. Luther, Ajst.C«M«r Tj5cHeiCEHHCiJi,V«ePi«ACMh. G.H.ToMUNSON,Assr.Cuh*.S«cy. LJ. KriAWJ A&t.Csshltr 35CTAID ON SAVINCiSK3% C. A. Thorsen LIVERY AND AUTOMOBILE 5ERVICf BUILDINQ MATERIAL Agent Ftre and Life Insurance III. Km. 261. Ret. 2&4 KtWLWORTH, 111 LET The Wilmette Repair Co. Do your carpentering, plastering and cement work* . Wuekrg&Thorp 318 Fourteenth Sj.,TeI.WiL871 or883 GOTTFRIED FROBERG PIANO TUNING and REPAIRING Phone Winnetka 244 All String Instrument* Tuned and Repaired *78 ASH STREET WINNETKA, ILLINOIS Painters and Decorators J. T. LtKAKl LO. Telephone 844* OSCAR TEETH Acme •f 4f>Ye»» WITHOUT PLATES See Syjlem We Sate You Half--All Work Made in Our Offices by Experience Unequalled in America WE HAVE BEEN PfKONAUT 40IEAXS AT THIS STAND Our Standard Teeth .... $8.00 Full Set Teeth----Whalebone ... $5.00 Teeth without Mates, per Tooth $5.00 Heavy Gold and All Other Crown* $500 Fine Gold Filling......$1.00 Adeice and Examination Free Dally S a. m. to 6 p. m. Sundays 9 to 12 Dw.M~CAesmtf£Browi DENTISTS S. £. Cor. Randolph and Clark St». CHICAGO Telephone Central 2047 EKSTRAND & CO. X^ot Inc.) Mason and cement work of every kind (large or small con- tracts) done all along the North Shore. Phone Evanston 2688 President of the Board of Local Im- provements of, the Village of Wilmette! for a sum of not less than ten (JO) percentum of the aggregate of the proposal, and no proposal will be con- j sidered unless accompanied by such i check or cash. The contractor will be paid in bonds, and vouchers, payable solely out of the assessment for said improvement. I when collected, in accordance with provisions Of the ordinance therefor,] and in the manner .prescribed by law.; The contractor io whom the con-! tract may be awarded will be required I tto furnish a bond to the satisfaction and approval of said Board of Local Improvements, in a sum equal to fifty (50) percentum of the contract price, conditioned for the faithful perform- ance of the contract. .Proposals will be received for the construction of said improvement as a whole; and said Board of Local Im- provements reserves the right to re- ject any and all bids. OSCAR W. SCHMIDT, JOSEPH HEINZEN, P. W. ANDREWS, W. J. MONTGOMERY, WM. S. FREEMAN, Board of Local Improvements of the Village of Wilmette. OneSix- Rooai Hone For Sale on Hawthorne Ave., between Olencoe Ttoad and Verhon Ave. Modern in every respect jviUi bath and large living porch, $5300. 1 UlOcllC Room House on Glencoe Road near Hawthorne. Batfc and all modern convcuiences, price $3,000. R. L. GONSALVES 1114 Merrill St., Hubbard Woods PHONE WINNETKA 425 $30,090 BLAZE WRECKS ENTIRE HEFFRON BLOCK (Continued from Page 1.) Considerable Difference. The difference between a newspa- per report and one which you hear from a friend is this: The newspaper has taken some pains to find out whether it is true, whereas your friend hasn't Lucille Too Busy. Kenneth, being reprimanded. for of hooking to a plug around on Wil- mette avenue. The blaze seems very suspicious. I cannot at this time give any definite explanation of the cause, but shall make an exhaustive Investi- gation of the conditions previous to the discovery of the fire. We , had three leads playing en the*blaW,^fore the Evanston company came ana they gave us two more. But the dense stnolce, caused by the burning tar paper roofing, and the yellow pine timbers of the structure, made It impossible at times to get close enough to the «*-« to do effective work." The tenants of the ?-Hiding today de- cline to state the -xtnt of their indi- vidual losses. Iho F rst National bank opened /""~ business this morning as usual, but in new quarters at 1141 GreenJeaf' avenue. Mascolino's restau- rant will open tomorrow. Oh, Hush! An authority on'zoology, Ellen VeK quarreling with his sister, a couple of vin. author of "From Jungle to Zoo,* years his senior, replied, "Well, Lucille says that there are only two absolute- always bosses me around just like she ly dumb animals in the world. They raised me." are the giraffe and the kangaroo. f>!~H^

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