Wilmette Life (Wilmette, Illinois), 12 Sep 1924, p. 14

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14 WILMETTE LIFE, FRIDAY, SEPTEMBER 12, 1924 intersecting streets ought to ~e regarded as a miscreant; that t~, the police should cut down h1s hedges to the proper limit and he should be forced to pay the costs. Any driver who on nearing a corner has been forced to peer anxiously between branches and leaves or to take a dangerous chance wilJ appreciate the : ot having hedges cut do wn to dtit humane limit. One auto collision in the past week was due direct ly to such obstruction. · We're with the Wilmette ( Woman's dub in their endeavor ~o bring about this very essential tmprovement. · And so when the opportunity machine from swooping and presented itself I at once seized tippin~. (Formerly The Lake Shore New·> it. I was on my way from Rome Having reached a fair altitude with E~~~~~eh,;d c~~~lned to London via Paris. Wh y not the pilot found it necessary to THE WILMETTE LOCAL NEW!I fly fr.o m Paris to London? ~ure "i rcle about in order to allow a Established 1898 enough, "Why not?" So in s tea d second p 1ane to pass a h ea d o f llltTED FRIDAY oF EACH WEEK of going the )and and water route him . " ' hen he began banking I LLOYD no~li!ITER. INC. T decided to go hy air. This th ought the plane was side-slip1222 Central Ave., Wllmlltte, Ill. momentous decision '""eant huy- ping and that my journey was 'hle11···e . . . . . . . . · . . Wllaette ~~ ing a ticket for the passage for sudden ly and unpleasantly endJVBICRJPTION ·2.00 A YEAR thirh: dollars. ing. But we soon resumed our ;,;;;,;A;;;;Il~c.;,o;.;m...,;m;.;u.;;n=lc=a=t=lo=n=m=u=e=t=b=e=a.=c=co = m = Th~ dav arrived . --rn a motor course, the plane and I, and the par~ led by the name and addreee of the hus with · eleven other J)r.OSJ)ec- landscape continued to d'e crease writer. Articles ror publication should · · d · · reach the editor by Wednesday noon to tive fliers I sped from the Grand 111 s tze an mcrease m area. Insure appearance In current Issue. hotel in Pa ri s to the air-field. I I cast man y "lances downward checkerResolutions of condolence, cards ot bought a lunch for $1.25, an out- noted ,especially the tbanke, obituary, poetry, notices of en- rageous price. ~iy luggage " ·as board appearance of northwesttertainments or other atralrs where France. The rivers were an admittance charge will be made or loaded onto the plane and I ern a collection taken, wl11 be charged at climbed in after it. mere silver threads. We rose re~ula.r advertising rates. Soon the pilot started the twin abon the douds and shot along Entered at the post otflce at Wll· mette, Illlnole, as mall matter of the engines. \Vhat a roar they made! at about ninety mites an hour. eeoond class, under the act of March After warming- up sufficiently he Far helow the . rippled English ·· 1879. threw in the clutch, and the plane Channel looked hke molten glass. FRIDAY, SEPTE~IBE R 12, 1924 trundled off across the field. And BCT- I longed for London. then the wheels left the ground, And by-~nd-.by the landingSeparate the Grades. arid I was flying at last ! Realty field came m v1ew and we went Et~force the Traffic Laws. do,Yn , dipping and circling. The Build the Through Traffic Road. FLYI:'\G! But I didn't enj.oy it. And the trip was over. I had flown! Widen the Business Tltorottgltfares higher I rose the less I enjoyed it I didn't eat my high priced DEFENSE TEST DAY until I wished I were back again lunch. The term, "Defense Test," may o~ ~father Earth. No use in misunderstood. It WJshmg: I was headed for the CUT THEM DOWN! easily be readily sugge st s the idea that an upper atr and England, and even If possible an ordinance ought enemy exists against whom we could I haye reached the pilot and to he passed limiting the height must defend ourselves. \~le be- made myse lf plain the flight of hedge s at street corners. come pugilistic to some degree. would. still. have continued. .-\ corner resident who allows WILMET TE LIFE . "BF.G BLACK DIRT FERTILIZER To Beautify Your Lawns LIME CRUSHED STONE To Dreaa Up Your Driveways Edinger & Sons Eatahliahed 1117 EVANSTON WILME1TE WINNETKA 7ZZ Elm Street Noy· ad Colfaz 1381 Lake Aftlllae E·...t· 5035 .Wilmette 141-MZ Winthl of "Begl regular two weE closed il months to Chi ~ Critic! have se1 nounce what " children shame overfiov eous ht fact it from th Marc C towing "Merto "Beg ridicule borcson aginati1 s h th WIDDetka MS It is well to know in a genera: way what we ·could do in case of ·war, but it is much better to know by a definite demonstration exactly what we are prepared to do. The animating motive is NOT militaristic any more than the motive behind a fire drill is to throw people into a panic. Corinne Roosevelt Robinson expressed the purp.ose well when she said: "There is nothing a~ gressive, nothing militaristic m an effort to prevent incipient trouble by measures that will make any trouble impossible ... It is to be a simple dentonstration that, should a sudden spark be thrown into our midst from any source, the trained firemen shall spring to their places to avert danger BEFORE it shall have become uncontrollable." be put into action. ~i~i:s ~~1i~~~ot:C~i;~l c:·;:~it~~u~:~ But the real of this des1re occasion is to try purpose out the nation's mobilization power, to find out ~K~n~?~'~,.~,n~g~~t~hit s~.l~~s'i'~ ·a~ll~o~\~v~ed~in~l~yjih~i~ ~ - ~h~c~'(~lg~e~s~t~o~g~ro~'~v~so~h~i~g~h~a~s~to~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ and tned to keep the sc reen the approach of autos on Cross Word Puzzle latest Craze i1 ·· Eat-lew Fallre EVElY WEEI i1 ·· . . . ,. ·"-=i -;;::::::-;~:....::.....,= Sunday Herald and Examiner I .TRY THIS ONE! I . . . . TRY .19&.£1 For Every Member oltheFamUy your wits on this new puzzle. It's one of a number The Sunday Herald and Examiner is going to print every week for your amusement. To show how it works, here is the solution of i) II ll f ~[l one of ~be ...finl~iona ._iven '-a- ... low: "12-84-A stream in A us- g I tralia." Now almost any geography ol' atlas would reveal the · ~ ~ ~~ fourteen-letter c o m b i n a t ion II[ It ~ ~ "Endeavour River," which fits in 1D ~~ the squares beginning with "12" a 1M and ending with "84." Here's ~ ~ ~~ another, with one of the letters II II ~ known: "21-22-T h e conclu - 1:11 ~ sion." In the 22 sq·Jare you al · ready have the "d" of "En ~ ~ ~ deavour." That leaves two letters to be found, and it ought ~ ~ ~ not to take long to f:gure out U 115 that the word is "end." There jU 11 are a few abb:-cviations and a · ~~ ~ few words that may require sr :IF II ID some digging in this Cross-Word. ~ ~D but most of them ought to be ~ Next U found with little trouble. ~~ ~ Sundav The H erald and Exam Ill II 11 iner ,;,ill g-ive you a new puzzle to work on. ~ D I" I ~ concer an OP(j of a v rific ni in a lesque In t is int ~ Kiss I' played Rutz-] dance tiful ~ Deem pany Rot the the s~ Georg man· " M , · "' ii L " · ,. "· SCHOOL BEGINS School begins next Monday. Time was when this simple and certain fact struck terror to the heart of the youthful student. It meant the end of vacation joys. No more long delightful days on the old farm, poking the pigs or ricing on the hay-rack. The family must pack up and go back to town. \Vhat a difference between the woods and pastures and those stuffy class-rooms and screwed-down desks ! But those days have passed. Children positively like school. It was only yesterday that I saw several live-blooded boys hanging about a grade school as if it realty were an attractive spot. One of the boys went into the building and the janitor had to drive him out. I, being weJI past the grammar school age, was allowed t,o enter. I went in just as the teachers' meeting was breaking up. What rather surpraaecl m as their youthful appearance and their amazing good looks. Moreover those of more experience were uniformly active and enthusiastic. Nowadays teachers are specialists-science, music, arithmetic, 4rawing, dramatics. And if a teacher is a real teacher and also a specialist then it's no w.onder that children like to go to school. ~- · ~-- Sbarpe· Your Wit·Just tantalizing enough to sharpen the wits, and to make it a sport all will enjoy. ;I ~ ·.. · " " " MH Sd·alat· the IntellectTakes you on a keen search for words lost to your vocabulary, brings you in contact with the new ones, brushes you up on your geography, until you unconsciously prepare yourself to occupy a higher intellectual plane. ,. ,. (Copyright, 1924, by tht Rfoll · ~~ p r lXII ' .- .. " Syndicate. In<'. l IHere Are tbe Hints I IThe Solation ~ HORIZONTAL. VERTICAL. 1-73-Tbe extreme northern point of Aaia. 2-38-A bird. 3-2()-Tbe ew1 · .. altlc: inaect. 4-14-Steamablp. 5-26--A vialble expreaoh., of wrief. ol · para. e-15-Aa artide. 7-l~Two. 8·29-M;dclay. Jlei~Yoa 9·17-Upon. 10-21-A popular cle-rt. 11-41-A county of Sc:ot'and 12·84-~~-- Ia AJ&t· .._.,._AttNcthrelp euttalo&a 27-57-Th- who atllllll by. WID Suece·8The mental stimulus, the enlargement of your Vocabulary, is a valuable educational factor, giving you greater selfconfidence, enabling you to hold your own in any conversation, be a more fluent talker, a better salesman or a more charming companion. .......l!i:... dectrtae -L" ol . ; 47-8S-Ta live . . . Ia. N-77-Firat ol author vi ,.A ~hlcky c.1. ===~··r·. -...o-Not .... M-7~At ...-L ·-n-r:w. Q..U-AWue. Q..7._A pefat e1 tile eem- · · · · DOW ~ou ·ee how HIGHFLYING Ever been up in an air-plane? o1 · reli~iaua eaet. 7o-n-JaJdala ttl .. .....,.. atata. 7141-"-aiaat. I have had that experience, and ·ing had it I'm done with it. s something past I enjoy it. ile it was going on I didn't aare for it. I thought that I'd lilCe it. Ever 'nee I had seen the planes skimming a few hundred feet above the ground on tbe Lake Front in QaicagD I had had a desire to a.ate. How delightful, said I to ~If, to soar above the sordid ltreets and realty ly. BE W1tch for t.he First Puzzle i1 I EXT SIIDIY'S ALD D ~x Ml ····· laterestla8 it ER Wilmette News Agency, 1 Electric Place, Phone Wil. 176~ ~·

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