Lake Shore News (Wilmette, Illinois), 5 Aug 1921, p. 12

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12 THE LAKE SHORE NEWS, FRIDAY, AUGUST 5, 1921 Classified Advertisements R ATESâ€"10c p«r line for «*ch insertion. Minimum 3 lii Copy must bo in by Wodnoaday at 440 P. M. Rats* for the mim adrortlaomont In THE LAKE SHORE NEWS. WINNETKA WEEKLY TALK and GLENCOE NEWS, 20c par Unm. Black faea typ* charged doubU price. Public Library News and Reviews BY SLX G5M07HERLY. USRArUAN Hssa FOR »ALB-BK»L ESTATE Wil- rOB BAUtâ€"OFM8WW© I-IST OF lyrrs In cholc**t section; several excep- tional barir*in».. v<.« : r colonial home in ftneat loca- tion, vapor heat, til* »>*thJ **"* totbt and lavatory; fine wood #4 lot. radoced to !"£** t-iWj_-. fc _ S*.whrUk colonial; near ialt*. n. w. = h**t m* »>*««. «Ia»«ed pch-; ea«> terms: redoced to tl«000. Wonder- Si/leLu2=*Ne* re*;<»*•nee lrTveryllne«t Deb*. 2 l/ath*. « maater bedr.; maid » r^ JafK*-Wooded lot ijaraK* owner Jon*; must Jeff; IIT.M* Make offer. M Iv, BARKER & CO. End Of "J-" *#i Linden Ave. Tel m»tt#- ♦£•. ____________*£ES£La2S FOR HALB-11 K-.-KRAMB. OARAGE; < bed raw: jcreat aanFata, »'.'â- :"• y_rUataaco bur.jralow with «*raK*. tile raoff ^ar lake 120.000 f. -1 r. atucco h. w heat, i tar K**•> " be*h»TTW rma. £ and «- porches. bar«aln for eaah^*^W»*0' â€" • „__ . Ww 7 r brick colonial: 2 car gar., 4 bed rm». h. and a. porchea; ftne W«°hav^na farae liai of choice vacanta; buy now and «ave money . WILMETTE REALTY CO. A- J. Woodcock, Prop. â-  ___««• . irk St, Phone Wll. 1304 FOR SALE^K KNII,WORTH HEAl'TI- f?l" r .Stucco home strtctljr modern throuKhout: h. w. heat; 2 hatha; I Dorcbea exceptional lot; trees| and ihrubH; property In perfect condition. Price 118,500. Owner want* offer. FOR SALE -EDE X WASH I N O machine; good "'condition; cheap for ra>a. Phon» Win. 44. LTOJ>-ltc FOR a A LPâ€"M1S< RLH^KOCS FOR SALEâ€"SIX COLLIE FCPPIES; full blooded p*diiifr*-«r; very reaaon- able. Phon- Win. 1312. LT<»»1tc IJABY CAR" Phone Wil- LT29-UP FOR BALEâ€"EXGUSH rime*. ua*d very little m*it<? H71. FOR SALEâ€"MAN'S BICYCLE IN srood condition. Phone Kenll. 1553. __________________ L39-ltc V< > H «A LB-JOH N S O N M O T O R Wheel in perfect condition. Phone Wllroette 7".~-M_____________LTQ3&-ltp WAtTRD TO HlY-WUfKLLASEttlS WANTED TO BUY â€" SECOND-HAND furniture and other household rood* Hlirheat prices paid for same. Croat Furniture Stor*. 1004-6 Em«-r*on St.. Evanwton. 111. Tel. 18*. LTGlS-tfc 340 R. M. JOHNSTON & CO Linden Ave. Phone Wll -FOBâ€"SALE â€" AN OLD HOUSE splendid coTidTUoTJ-OTr-oiwr-or ton's b»-Ht streets; eairpf the track«. b*. had. Very I BUY HOUSEHOLD GOODS AND Clothing: of all descriptions. Phon*- Evanwton J03 and I will call. N. Fell. 1«44 Maple Ave Lta-17-tfc Main librar: \Y the author's other tales, ever since .the Beloved Vagabond, this if a ftc- Ition of humor, quaintness, and opti- imism. It leads up bravelyâ€"not to $ay brazonlyâ€"co a happy ending. At 'its center stands, as usual, a 'natures I nobleman*, whose simplicity, magna- loinuty, hopefulness, and modesty are _.»„' hidden under an unprepossessing ex- ' terior. Its plot is the history of the Ave: Hour*; eyerv a-t*. ,.p~ â-  â- -•• -; • t but ultimately successful pres- to 5JO. Wednesday and Satnrdaj JJP JJ g^ ^^ ^oodness oi hcart en:ng« trorn / to y .......... ajrain«t untoward circumstances; the that, human worthT however crushed to earth, will and who can prove that except Satur-ithe other FOR a ALBâ€".ALTO MOBILE* FOR. SALEâ€"OAKLAND CAR: MODEL 34-B. S'paaa. tourinjf: cannot be told from new; perfect running: extra tire; two bumpers and Hpotlisrht; Cheap if taken at once. Phone Wll- ro*tte 31.1. ___________ LTG3f-ltc FOR SALEâ€"PAIOE CAR IN FTNE condition; $<50; no dealer: Tel. Wll- m*ltf U7Z.______________ LTG39-2tC FOR SALEâ€" DOIXJE Kvanston 3<>05. CAR CALL LTGSS-ltc LOWT AJSD FOt \D U >STâ€"W E \> N E 8 D^A Y. JULY 27: child'* straw hat on beach. Reward. f'i\ Elmwood Ave., phone Wllraette â- l'1-^- __________ L39-ltc MI«tr-KLI.%.VKO|-.«( best transportation tohe ha/J. v »-r> flttle cashVeuuired. Phonj^wnmetje, TT73T~^ LT03^-.tc %fi.W> Bf'YS MY 7 ROOM HOME IN -Wfrm"tt«-: «-ast side; convenient^ to steam and ^l«-ctric lines; 50 ft. wood'-j ed lot; in fine condition: Ms bar- iraln; must leave town; $2,000 cash. Phone Wilm«tte 3>>8. L39-ltc PIANOS TUNED; paired; expert. REGULATED: RE- Phone Win. 509.J. T-TG39-ltc FOB SALE-CHOICE 100 FT. EVANS- ton corner; east of tracks; south of Davis 8t.; 1135 per ft.; mlaht dhrlda. Phone Wllmette 1473. LTG3»-2tc FOB BALEâ€"LOT ON THE EAST SIDE of Glencoe with a very tiny house; bargain. Telepbona «wn^r,^J.,m."U« FOB SALEâ€"7 -R. BT;N0AL0W: REA- sonable; 507 Oakdale Ave.. Ol»-ncoe; Ihone .Glencoe 559. LTG39Qtc AUTO RACES TO OPEN ILLINOIS STATE FAIR Program Announced for Annual Ex- hibition to be Hald August 19 to 27; Children's Day Im- portant Feature Seventh and La afternoon from 2 to 5 day). The lihra'-v extend* vacation; rtse a?am . pr^yfto^n^ Wamette fesid m :his is not true ?.. .^Ahy her. an who spends his vacation at: of town. I entertaining and appealing story. Any six hook* in the library, except .. â€"â-  .,;-•• tho'se mo*t in. demand, may he bor- J Misunderstood Children, rowed on each card from now until ;hv Elizabeth Harrisonâ€" September 15. [ 'The author of this little book has ==- â€"â€" |a nation-wide fame as the head of the MargOt Asquith: An Autobiography: Kalional Kindergarten College, Chi- i shraJii-then. a* I do now, trom|caco. ... t .t. exposing the secTets and sensation^ ; «;he makes a special plea tor tne of life.' This is one of the roost amus- jtudy-of psycholog>- for a better un inif sentences in the book that ha* oers'tanding of the child mind, for cau*ed hot discussion in England. the mjffht-be in each human soul. Is Margot Asquith a self-deceiver, or ___ \% \% now an accepted fact that does she deliberately delight in con-|a chJioTs bodily condition reacts upon tradiction** Like Shimei. the son of hj, mental condition, and the best Gera. she cast* stones a; the servants ; <cn0ol5 have already been trapsform- pf the Kiritr. and all the people andjerj by the. placing .of'the study of the all the mighty men. Htr own family children's instincts and interests upon of the book is Ui<j in « where. Derrick Merton | hoping to escape a nerv(T down. Here he meets T cess Aranensky, the strand ing woman who gives thP plot and its riddle. Ruined war, she yet has a per,!" and a private sitting room i! tet a room she keeps fiiy" Her gowns are - round h* she wears wound a long wonderful pearls. h £ . string of pearls that the stor? It is not a long storv, and so incident and intricacy 0f IC concerned, it is a slight one 1 is of course - beautifully writtnl skillfully developed, holding th. de'r's attention with » i flowers- her furs superb, and a which has the added ing entirely effortles; ,V!tu< ofj a scientific ba>is.' The mother who understands this law knows that what the child him- self feels, does, and thinks, is what makes him is not spare!. . . It was a turbu- lent family. Margot wa* a torn-hoy; she is a tom-boy in relating her ad- ventures with men and women. She describes her love-affairs at length: she puts her Ipvers under the micro- Bv concrete instances the reader is scope -She wd& dOutled on horse-] $^iQwn ^ow ignorance of this law- back in the street J at the opera. »n j Iauses friction between parents and the ball room. >he ha^ neitner mod-|rhjM re«ulting in much unhappiness. esty nor reticence: she counts h?r Thc'suggestions are decidedly prac- scalps exultantly. she !* greatly\fitkm] ^ furnish the parent with val- TRANSMIT 3,000.000 WORDS YEARLY IN WEATHER BUR Approximately 170 station r including their reciprocal di$S tion over 21 circuits, represent transmission by the Weather Bi of the United States Departnum Agriculture of 1909 reports daily, totaling more than 3 code words annually. The operation of this system i junction with the dispatch of I ited number of special messages day places in the hands of the in each section of the countryj tical ual problems. pleased with herself. She.>M?oncJ^fi'tWeriiS for dealing with her through the world sma*hjnir every- thing^ in her way, Vet this impetu- ous, bustling woman, to whom can- dor and rudeness are synonymous terms, enjoyed the close friendship of jowett, Gladstone, Symondsr^and Morley. \o ordinary woman could have been thus honor because she was merely extraordin- ary, could have held their__friend- ship and invited confidence. In her desire to entertain in print. *he may have shown her weaker *ide when she thought to show her strength. Leonard Merrick: The chair on the boulevard. It has often been said that all the tales possible to tell have lonj? since WASTRD TO Hg*T^-HOT:*K____ Wantedâ€"to~rent. at a reason- â€"o+rl«. rate: »uhhaxd^Wooda .or Win- netka preferred: « to 8 room house; poieWion about Sept. lat. Address Lake Shore News C-67,___LTGS^tfc WANTED TO I'.ENTâ€"RL'SGAI>AV OR â- mall hduae, N. rivanston to Olancoe; Address 2210 Wesley Av«-„ Evanston,. T<-1. Bvanaton M«9 LT39-ltc Springfield, 111.â€"The program of events-for the various days at the IU linois State Fair, August 19 to 27, was announced this week by the management.____:------------ The Illinois will begin at The hall and the grange, bv Archibald Marshallâ€" :*-~A leisurelv and perceptive study of the members of a rather large rttot forgetting-arpalc- hued governess, which gives one a 5fnt}P r,f farniliarity. a COmDleJ^nLC-SS of background.. The story is of the squire of Hayslope, a lovable man of a deep and sweet integrity, and his younger brother, Sir William, more The necessity of keeping roads in good condition is she modern' and'artisti^'*than"the"squire, fa report ^recently compiled by tl They are devoted, these two. but a trifle starts a quarrel and their fam- ilies are drawn in. Really this quar- rel and its results are wonderfully been told, yet one of the most enjoy- well done, and the character portray- firemen's tournament the hair Grounds on Thursday. August 18. the day before the opening of the State Fair, and continue over Friday. August 19. the first day oiâ€"the Fair. The tourna* merit will consist of spectacular life saving and other feats performed by expert firemen from all parts of the State. In addition to the tournament, will be given and the NfSH :r> ROOM FOR hwial attractions of the Fair will be FOR HKXT-HOOMH_ Writ RENTâ€"2 "LARGE COOI- Fl^t.V- lahed bedrooms; 1 block r.MW. or <-l«-f:trir Htatlon. Convenient to eata and very -TeaaOhable. Apply «Z9 • Park Aye._________________t/w-itr: ; ;t ),,,,,,) concert FOR RENT gentleman or lady employed, with private family, one block from trans- portation and cafeteria. Phone Wll rn«-tt<- 2270.. ________ FOR LT39-ltC RENT Ft;RNISHBD l'.""MS; hot. cold Wkter. Hhdne WI1. 1 Q*i>, able things about this entirely enjoy- able volume is its originality. .It is really quite impossible within the ne- cesxary rhrrits or a review to give anv adeouate idea.of this volume of twen- ty al is masterly. Look for no complex- ities or intensities, no Freudian mean- ings inserted into acjionA, t Kven among the young people n the book there is an acceptance of all known^ short stories. nr.n«> r,j M-hi^h 4t- p^^*****~~a1Td~To^nTT~~oT~v1ewT a column to it*elf. I make no new demands even W.% NTF.I>â€" ItOOH ,\ Ml BOIRP WANTED â- .-•â- R'»<»M. AND POARD FOR ejderly lady with congenial people In nrlvHt'- home or small boarding* houee o»i north shore: Winnetka pre- ffrr><l. Addr«-HH< Lake Shore Newa rr->2. _______ '________i,T3r«-it.p H Kl.l* \yt %'1 f *Dâ€"w.vix i.e ~ WANTED KVT'KRIENV'F.O DAf'S'D- rf-sH. good worker, two 'lays a Week, * u.m, to ." p. m.; %i: steady work. Call MO Waahtngton^oi phone o"U-n- ,„,. r,2._____________\__________l,TO^-2tr -'Dr.Ktions of Johnny Jones K.vposi- W A NT ED- v<.rvi;. 'MCI, To ASSIST ? \'-'!' C'Ompa n y tri^Ha pf>y Tf o flow. con- In jreneraJ houaework; . v> home eistijiig of 20 shows' and four ride-.: the speed program on the track: the Circus in front of the grand stand each evening. Alt oi thfese attrac- I be given daily no to anrl in- offered to the public On August 20; the automobile races will !>«- '..'iven. some, of th*- best driv- ^exs-in the country j>arti< ipatiuj/. Sunday Concert The principal feature of Sunday, August 21. will be a concert by the famous Favieu Band, so popular last year. Tnjs hand' has a complete or- gahization, including opera singers and instrumental soloists. On Monday, which will' be chil- dre,,\ day, will^begin the judging or from lack of persoectiv live stock in the main coliseum and jJie- vheep and swine coll seums: the nM'htK. '<! H t if WtlrrH-ttp^lj^a. • ri).-af Avi phone ^•Aiti: OF •n wood Ave. WA NT V. D -NI' R H TO M^\ 11 > K«' It W A fTk - * Inir nhlldren;, 1118 Foreat Av«*. Tel. W i 1 me i»<• ^ ~TTi ?. t> : L3 '> -11 c W> N.TED GIRL .FOR ehlld of four. 1031 Or. Phone WtlmeUe 20::*; WI'M %TIO% vv \\ti:i»â€"FJBW \i.i-: RKRf A'M.K Kl.DKRI.V WOMAN AS hotjaekeeper in urnall, family. Pro- teatani home fn » north Mtd«- suhurb. rwreferred. Addr«-MH LakerShore N.-wm i O-vi. - LTOM-ltp lti:M' WMTEDâ€"WALK---------- -JAR A VKSM COLLRGp BOY DESIRES f<;c h<r f<.r Ent'li."h Corripoattlon on eluding Friday. August 26V .Tuesday will be Springfield day and C ounty Fair day. • Veterans' Day â€"^----- Wednesday will be 'Veterans' day and Peoria day. A large crowd of Peoria people will be on hand that 'lay_aji/J tbe-Aeterans of all wars with f.»e admitted to the grounds free of VA~^special program of the north Bhdre. Oheatnut St. K. Nakaahlmd, 17", I'hon- Wlrm»-tka 771*. LTG39-ltp nil t ytt(>\ \V %\TKnâ€"MU.K r'RA fFl-'RIlt V o f NO â-  MARRIED man living irt WHmette wants posi- tion on north whore: 11 yars ex- perience: let clasa mechanic; hiKh t'r:t<U- 'ars. Address I/ik<' Shor<* â€"S*-w*â€"i'-H1. L3?»-ltp :ers rre sperjal l«n« «.\i.i:â€"M(il MlKH.li fi«»OI)S t'<». will I. WHITE ENAMEL HATH fixOir.-s: 2 cooking oil • n and oven; Co;il w;«t.-r heater; ' R'.nil. '±:>Z. I.'.s M.'lros.- Av Lwo'th,--------------------- {â- â-  A. }<.. the S. W. V. and the Amer- ican Legion will be presented. •Thursday will be Illinois, Govern- "r's and State Officers' da v. Covern- Ot Small and all the State Offic will gq to the grounds whe eXercrs^s will be held. _The. feature ofâ€"Frid will be the million dolla parade in which all the pnze-winn- mg stock will participate? Motion pictures will be made of this parade. ^1(' fair will end on Saturday, At,. lilV -A-ttgust 26. r Uve stock -^L3ft-itpiguM 27. with another series of auto FOR SALEâ€"I STKWART OAS RANOK; nv.hile races run by speed kincs of by Auk. 20. four burru-rH. rlyht hand America. oven. flrMt flaws eondiiion. Phone ! Win Win. 214 or call 27C Foreat A v. netka. LTO.'{!«-ltr 1 fine 20-KauRi- Wlncbeater shoi-irun, ni-vcr h«'«-n u««*d, S.r»0; 1 ladlex bicycle, 117. T'hnm-_WH.^ 1**6. __ LTOSS-ltS; FOR SAl^E v.o;DARTER SIZE VER~ nlv Martin bed. IncludiiMr niirinir and mattrean. S12. Rhone Wilmet»» Mtr, ______ L39-ltc Neighbor. •Use dft bos' gir.s you has," said TJncIe Eben. "an' don' try to be more nrfistie dan you honestly Is.__A good bnn.p. player is a heap more comfort to a comnlnnlty dana poor performer rn ih* violin " «erves less than While it is easy to say in his mas- tery of the technique of the short story Leonard Merrick is closely- akin to de Maupassant, while his whimsicality, his joy in life, bring him near to both Locke and Barrie; Leonard Merrick i« first. last and all the time Leonard Merrick. tmKjtre-aTr<t unapproachable. The spirit of in- carnate youth pervades this volume, youth whose way may lie through dingy streets but whose L'aze is fixed upon the _stars â€"whence comes many a stumble, maybe a comic episode. VV. L. George; Hail Columbia! â€"the '"random impressions of a conservative English radical"â€"holds for you the subtle humor and bril- liant entertainment inevitable in any piece of writing by this delightful novelisL and in addition a keen an- alysis of the American mind and life, impossible to "the native e. Mr. George t* often critical, but he is mvariably tactful and full of humor. After de'- lit'htful frankness throughout he concludes: "If I had.to be born again ....in spite of all temptations to be- """ ta othrer nations I should have been born an American." Gertrude Moor. Rrrfnrrds: Star- I omts: Songs of iov. faith and prom. ise from the present-day poets. This volume contaii^^rraTrv^oveiy thTiigs which should have a wide ap- peal. In the foreward. Mrs. Richards who has compiled the poems, save' ihere has never been a time in the history of mir^oartto^wfa^ was more insistent forâ-  u< to^empha- size the inspiring note of Kmer^on'. I message: 'Hitch your wagon* to r- star! In.thtsjggriod of reconstruc- tion following the awful cataclysm which has engulfed the entire world there is larger need than ever before -of an uplifting and sustaining fafHr ar. Joy. spirationâ€" Out ot this, thought has come the ti- tle of the book, 'Star-Points." The selections chosen from the Modern I oets _are such -as- wouht TTaturalTv tall.. ujHjer the points of my si Vision, Love, Beauty. A..,. with two attrijinti-r adda4, fu'i "j u never lose the association of the Star witb Faith and Promise. All these "Points" we must grasp and hold if we would be-ca^H4e-d-thxough -the- at)prehen ' the present time into the clear vision of a Xew Day ^The Mou n t ebartkj by William J. Lockeâ€" "None but a- very ^crabbed reader would object to such a thesis. Like hey on a world just come out of a war. There's not a stormy, really bitter scene in the entire book; yet by its very faith in the simple verities it keeps with- in its form and achieves that most difficult of all effects to achieve, a powerful simplicity. This last, note, written by Emily Calvin Blake, Wilmette, recently ap- peared in the Chicago Daily News. Starret: Charm of fine manners^â€" In these brief talks which were first addressed to small groups of girls. Helen Ekin Starret points out the ad- vantages of being well mannered. She says the root of good manners is good" behavior. Behavior is a reveal- er of real character. Self control may be acquired and through it self culture. Make genuine desire to do right your reason for your fine man- ners and there is no doubt those man- ners will have charm. Beauty and Mary Blair j Ethel Kel- ley. ; "This story dealf with tho.se wild young thing*; who at-.- monopoli :ng so much nev/sp'ijj'er ai/d magazine.! space of recent months and also with the families out of which they | come. Mary IitaiT'1 one oT *hemV is a young v.o;an;i of eighteen sooii- I isticated years, the ^aiigHTer of vvVll-I tii£do parents"v••;â- â- â€¢Â»- live in an apart- ment on River.,ide I)rivi. She has a sister who has ^one Greenwich Villagy-, and her father and mother have divested themselves of all sense of i esponsibitity toward their Children, the girls and their brother have grown up with a minimum of â€"re. training and affection. Mary goes to dances and restaurants at her own -sweet will, staying as late as she pleases and prevaricating about her doings if she thinks that course nejees-sary in orderâ€"toâ€"pursue her freedom. It is, in short, a vulgar, rr^household that is presented. The dialogue in which "most of the story isx written, is often cleverly managed, and' wimattract many^rea-: der< but beiieaTnthe' surtacF^ont knowledge of the weather conffl over practically the entire Ujj States and adjoining territory comparatively small cost. The messages are short, reason of the code words i tailed weather reports and fore They are transmitted without ference with the public service! important consideration in vie the strain imposed upon tele. and telephone systems by comma and private-interests. ENORMOUS TONNAGE HAl OVEl reau of Markets and Crop Estin United States Department of Ag ture. showing the extent to are used in hauling farm produci market. According to the report, shows the tonnage, of 11 pro hauled pn ennntry rnad«, givm yearly average for the period 1915 to J919^ there w:ere^ These-!! crops hauled for eve acres of land. The average tonnage of the 111 hauled on country roads each] for the period mentioned ami to 86.560,000 tons. The 11 cropij ferred to in the report are wheat, oats, barley, rye, flaxseed,] ton (including seed), tobacco, toes, and cultivated hay. Roman Use of Concrete, The Romans' discoveries in "eonfl mixing made it possible for tto make prodigious strides in engio •mg and architecture. At the I Vesuvius were Immense deposittj reddish sand or vo'eanlc ash po/.zuolana. which, when added t mortar, made hydraulic cement. gave to the Romans a cnncrei extraordinary strength and P*J enee. which hardened under wati well as in the air. iin-1 became basis of belr orrtlre system of hull ;--ees the implication of tragedy in the causes which have produced the "wild young things," like Mary Blair and her friends. " •I The classified pa constitutes a clear house of "Ww Elephante^' ^ Most people have white elephant discarded article wni either has served purpose or for om reasons is not eafl its room. of yoiirshasacashval The spirit of the Hichens. Time, Robert "In at least-two ways is Mr. Ro bejLt_ilicJie-ivs' new novel. "The~SpTF- it of the Time," very distinctly out of the ordinary. To-begin with, his wo principal characters are both of thmt middle-aged people. The scene to some one. want ad will a biiys^rarfewt^

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