Wilmette Life (Wilmette, Illinois), 28 Dec 1933, p. 35

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to you, f ellow residents of Wiimette, amount to tne cneaper esuiate, no one Tl to help save our trees,. 'whicb, right- knows how mucb. o fully speaking, are no more ours than The question now arises: Shall the CI yours. Any damage done to Lake ave- Village board kilt our trees, your trees, Cr nue by destroying the chief natural to save a few paltry dollars? Surely d, asset of Wilmette, the great oaks and your answer will be "No !" Vour opin- elms of the forest, detracts orail time ionin the matter bas weight witb the -a from the, beauty and .a ttracti veness of Villa ge trustee s, because they represent T' our village. your intereits. Witb your approval XVe wbo ive on the nortb side of they, will doubtless choose the alley CI the street Were invited to the Village ro ute. We residents of Lake avenue, hall, not long ago to participate -in a therefore, urge you, to cail tbemi up at b discussion on. routes for the :24-inch onice, as the contract is about to1b e tt water -main. from, thé lake to Ridge and telI thein to SAVE OUR TREES! et avenue. The .nost f easible plan, we Tree.ab were told, most. direct and cheapest, 1 think thaf J1shaI neyer sec would use our parkway, the only alter- A pot lottely as a tree. native being our aley at a cost of sev- si eral thousand dollars more. A treet whose hu'sgry mnouth is prest The Village board favor. the ar-Agasfte we arhsflhg way to save money. We favor -the alley breat; to. Save trees. Our recasons follow: 1. Because tre experts state that a A free'-thaf 1-oksaf ,God alilday, large ýwater main would act as a. drainl; And fiis her leaf v armns le Pray; the loosenied soil of the trench allowsa the surface water to fllow along the A4 fret' thaf may ti» summner u-cor outside of the pipe,.ilius ta1king tbe* A ,est of robins i her. hair;t nmoisture away froni the roots of trees. Tiis means sure death Io thet' re es, Lipon whose bosoin snow ha:s lain; eveni if thev could stand the shock, of Wkho initma tely hlives icitht rain. cut -roots, which is flot likely. 2. Because the difference in. cost is Joc'is are inqide.by -fools like me, niegligible. The parkwvay estimate takes But only God cati, inake a ftret'. no account of the expense of caring for (Jo yce Kilr. thetrecs hy tree surgeons wbîle the -Florence J. Butz. in the Southwest, gave to theni their art Inda A e C mig! o r craft of weaving. IndasA eC mn t The katchi na inaker, Pooiehuyowma IDon't Be Alarmiec- (Butterfly), is rnaking katchiflas such as Peacefl Lotare made by,-:the mnen of the Hopi Theyre eaceul ot.Pueblos as gifts to 'their childrefl that * j Uthe cbildrefl rnay, have an idea as to what their legendalrY heroes, katchinIas, 'fli Inian arecomng!looked like. These are flot used exact1-> fhe Ida a onungas dolis but as examples in .tribal or There was a time, the history books religious teachiflgs. These katchinaïs are tell us, that'suchi a cry struck terror made froin the dry roots of the cotton- in ýthe hearts of hardy pioneers, but ~o> re its sgnl orconsiderable deligbt TIhe Navajo WeaVers, Clincz-pah (De- it',ja sigal fo. onparting W oman). and Eekn-pah (Coniflg today,'for the -Indians are the same. ginWmfl r-mkn the Navajo Navjo nd ueblo 'craftsmen wb bankets and rugs. Th oo froni their visited Oak Park about, one, year ago own sheep is carded or combed and at todenonstrate the arts and.cat the saine tune, cleaned. The carded of teirtries.wool is then >pun on a distafi (the old- of theirtribes.est forin of the spiinning wheei> the They will be in the Evanston Store wool is dyed and %voven into blapkets of 'Marshall Field & comipany f roui or-rugs on an upright iooin. --rlv Tnuav 2 thoug Saur-Sandt Pa1nter ComtE; ~ I 112VY 2. thru-iSvprsmith adsand painter, en .Nor iwvrit'.'.. hicagô avenue and Lake Shore rive. It is designed particularly for )usifless men, Iawyers and account- ints interested in the preparatioil of returfis due, March 15, 1934. The lectures cover. the tax pro- edure from the filinig of -the return through the disposition of the ca se by.the board, of tax appeals. Changes in 1932 law made duriig, 1933, will be empbasized, and changes to be made >y congresS1 durîng its session com- mencing january 3 will ber discussed. William J. Luby,.C. P. A., is tbe in- structor. A group of young men including. Arthur, Willett of Evanston and SLocke Carruthers, of 1535. Walnt ,avenue, Wilmette, areami1ong the'stu- ary in Evanston who have driven to Newv York to spend their hoidays there'. Mrs. Joséphine Kelley of Jackson- ville, Fla.' is visiting ber daughter and son-in-la'w, Mr.. and Mrs. S. A. Williams of 515 Abbotsford road, Kenilworth. Betty Williams is visit- ing friends in St. Louis for the hQli- days. kegan. parents of Cedric H. Smith of 205 Essex road, Kenilwortb, are the ýSmith's guests for the holidays. Mrs.- Smith's, sister and fami'ly,, the junior George T, .Dyers', of $Kenil- worrth jnined themn for Cbrismas din- avenaue. Dr. and Mrs. Harold Schildberg and chiidren, 312 Sterling road, Kenu- lworth, spent their Christrnas with their, parents, at, Mendota, 111. Thei children were. to, remain fora short tinme after their parents returned. Frederick B. Thomas, forinerly of Winnetka,. now .of the Kenilworth. Inn, left-last week to. join his faniily who. are* spending the winter at their home at Gulfport Springs, Miss. Barbara Cerf, Who-attends the Uni- vest f Wisconsin, was .a, bouse I ges oerCbristmas of her rooni- mtCharlotte Moody, of 1235 Ash- land avenue. 0o The Warren Pease famnily,. 320 Leicester. roa d, KenilWortb, had Christinasdinner witb their'daughter, Mrs. ÉE. E. Sheridan of Evanston. --- Mr. and Mrs. J. J. Grimm, 417 Ab- botsford road, Kenilworth,. had a famuly dinn.er on Christmas day, with reélativ es, from Chicago. Arbor, Mich., will arrive this week to visit ber niother,. Mrs. Burt J. Denî- man of 21 Linden avenue. --o- Helen, daugbter of ýMr. and Mrs. Norton Booz, 919 Forest avenue, -,vill entertain at a bridge tea today (Thursday). -o- Mrs. Fred Lent and ber daughter, MNrs. E. D. Parmelee, mother of Mary, of Cleveland, formerly of Win- Mrs. S. Looniis Flypes, 480 Hazel netka, are guests of Mrs. HarrY avenue, Glencoe, arrived from Utica. Wolfe of 819 Greenwoad avenuie. N. Y., wherèï she lives with ber bus- band and soin, to spend Christmas, wihhe dugte adber famîîy' ur F iÇ iMES FAT Mrs. Mildred B. Mershon, 511 Wil- *i .1E tg B Ilow oad, Winnetka, bas had as ber guests for Christmas, her brother-in-- law and sister, Mr. and Mrs. Edward GUT ['RAT KRUSCHIN IHutting of Clear Lake, Iowa. FEELI heBaeit weaver, WaiseIo (Clouds Out coal to sand.- o!The Beat % also lives ln Zia Pueblo, ___________0~8AAAJD ~ .. and la niakiflE the type of boltta WOveO' miss Winified Adkins of 1112 Cen- Mr. and. Mrs. Clyde Ross, 1321 by men o! bis Pueblo' of Zia. The tral avenue is spending the holidays Chestnut avenue, entertained a smal 1000 years before the NaVJSarvdi

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