Illinois News Index

Lake Shore News (Wilmette, Illinois), 29 May 1912, 2, p. 10

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?|itpsf!g^^ ,»B?»gep!SSf;f3R?!w -#M -F.r .rh^^;4|S,;^ wr ■*- ■■■' # rttfJAKB SHOltti HEWS, WEDNESDAY. MAY 88, Mfc SIS She lake shore news IUCCBSSO* TO THB IVANSTOH HEW! • PUBLISHED BYBRT WEDNESDAY «=by tttt *¥ EVAN8TON NEWS PUBLISHINO CO., 526 Davie St., Evanston. Telephonee 68ft and 686. WILMETTE OFFICE No. 6 Electric Ptaee. _______ Telephone No. 602. ALBERT H» BOWMAN, Managing Editor ARTHUR ROBERTS, Associate Editor JAMBS LEONARD LEE, City Editor SO AT SUBSCRIPTION PRICE, $1.00 A TEAR, All matter for publication in any weok'a issue snould reach our office not aitar than noon on Monday. 5B55B5 Entered aa seoond-class matter June 28, 1011, at tha poatoffloa at Bvans- ton, Illinois, under the Act of March 8, 1870. WEDNESDAY, MAY 29, 1912. The lake shore, from Rogers Park north to Glencoe, is surprisingly well represented in the number of names which appear in the pages of the 1912-1913 edition of "Who's Who in America/' According to the average per population prevailing over the entire country, this ^j|; > territory, which boasts of only some 50,000 population, should have f^g?. about ten times that number. If any additional proof was wanted to 1 IE **ne effect that the towns along the north shore are composed of the I fc ^ very highest class of people in the world, this issue of "Who's Who" I 1 ^ would be conclusive. / I jgr* The accident on Lake Michigan Sunday, when a young book I p ' store manager came near being the innocent cause of the death of | p two university students, is one more argument for the close police ■ :. supervision of the lake front. Boys and young men, unless they are | I' known to be competent boatmen and swimmers should, under no cir- I | cumstances, be permitted to go onto the lake from north shore beaches. | |t f It is true that Lake Michigan is a souace of great beauty and attrac- I |r ; tiveness to all of us, but it is equally true that it is the source of great i:;}§£*'and grave danger, a constant menace tq the lives of the foolhardy, the careless, and the unwary. In fa.pt, experienced people have not been lacking among those who have lost their lives both by boating acci- % dent% and swimming fatalities. ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ ♦ , Evanston rejoices in the kind of student celebrations witnessed Saturday evening on Davis street. The two successive victories at baseball over Purdue and Indiana in two successive days gave not ■only the students an opportunity to rejoice but also all Evanston, for our citizens generally take a pride in the university and like to see it turning out winning teams. The Saturday evening demonstration was of the kind that every student community may welcome. There was none of the rowdiness or destruction of property which in some places follows a victory but instead a long line of fine, stalwart young ^fellows, and another of charming young girls, and with the natural ; spirits of youth they shouted and sung their victory. It did us all : good to see them, and to hea* them. The person who could not enjoy and relish such a spectacle must be a dried up old codger, who ought to retreat to a hermit's cell and stay there the rest of his days. ♦ *> <8» ^ ♦ The fact that citizens of Wilmette'and the "other towns along the lake shore approve of our endeavors to give to them a news- paper that is practically their own, is best indicated by the manner in which they are subscribing for The Lake Shore News "The proof of the pudding is the eating thereof," is an old saying, and it appears that the appetites of the north shore people have not been satisfied with the journalistic pudding that has been served to them heretofore. Subscriptions are coming to us at the rate of thirty to forty a day, which will soon enable us to guarantee to the advertisers m Wilmette and the other towns which this paper is intended to cover, a paid circulation large enough and repre- sentative enough to command their respect and merit their patronage of our advertising columns. The Lake Shore News does not do things by halves. It has no intention of inveighing the merchants of ; the towns where it circulates to sign contracts for advertising and tnen give them a circulation in name only. We are in a position now to guarantee to the Wilmette business n\en a circulation of several hundred paid-in-advance subscribers, and by the middle of June expect to put that guaranteed figure at 1,000 copied going regularly *ach week *£ paid-in-advance subscribers. As soon as the canvass is, finished in Wilmette, the circulation department will move its head- quarters farther north, and will then work Kenilworth, Winnetka and Glencoe in the same way Wilmette is now being canvassed. We want particularly to emphasize the fact that The Lake Shore News proposes to improve its news features from week to week, and that there will not at any time, be any backsliding in this feature of the publication. Our purpose is to help and assist the communities in which we circulate, and the editors will welcome communications and Jtuggestions from all who are enough interested in their home towns and the newspaper which strives to serve them to take the trouble to , address us. ♦ * ♦ ♦ ♦ A T-A-F-T L*A lAil^ld m.,an,returne<* from t*» West said.- "I have just found 12»W&J^wi" ^"S1? SAr* J??* «?°? "PuWiean president has is Commencement Exercises Ware Held Last Evening in Annie May Swift Hall- Many Attended. CUMNOCK GAVE READING The annual commencement exercis- es of the School of Oratory were held Thursday at Annie May Swift hall, and marked the conclusion of a year which reflects unparalleled credit both on the new graduates and their vener- able instructor, Dr. Cumnock. A class of sixty received diplomas, and besides these there were ten post graduates who completed the advance course. The Rev. George Craig Stewart op- ened the program with a short prayer and the audience was then treated to classical selections by the Evanston or- chestra, which, by the way, made e reputation on this, its initial appoar- ance. The mjor part of the program was rendered by Dr. Cumnock him self, who took advantage of the anni- versary of Dickens' birth to read strik- ing passages from "Nicholas Nicklo- by" and others from that author's vorka. The presentation of diplomas by the dean concluded the ceremonies. Beat Known In West. In pacing, it might be noted that the oratory school has come to be more widely known than any other in the middle west and her graduates are filling positions on Chautauqua platforms and in secondary schools of instruction throughout the countiy with credit to themselves and to their alma mater. SPEEDERS MAY LOSE THEIR MOTORCYCLES $•/>.■ .'5& ;# gl^een false to his name, T-A-F-T--Take advice from Teddy There i fgpio question that Eoosevelt made Taft president. ItoosWr.T ««M *n t - ---------------------- * president. Roosevelt said r» bacco and oil were bad trusts, but steel and many others were sood jfeles. Therefore, he brought the tobacco and oil suits and Tennessee Coal company to the steel corporation Taft gave the with the Sfeisfr f. * ~ rr * **?- ** VW*™U1 * J vu "» cauinei, ms attorney-general, or ig&ftkm trust biisting^oBcy, and the man ^rho made him is going to nn- r make him. *«!»?* V*yton> Ohio» where the National Cash Register eomnamr has ©,W0 employes, every man voted in the primaries against Taft be- e^ of the suit ag?"»t the eaah register W»«#1^ people an the toeet way talk against, aceumiilated wealth, tr^ ma^^lnmnesB, jot the people at worfejn the industries cannot be induced to vote for^ the smashing of the organisation whence they draw their wages. _ " 'Take ndmaetmT&w' may Metm 'DoS^ pat unified or un-i ^topreted pages of law against common sense.'0©od paEtiw has got to t>e^ m conunon ^sense and as to gopd polities%o» tap* Oahho* says that Boofflii^^ As a result of being arrested for driving their motorcycles at a speed far in excess of the speed law, R Jen- sen and H. C. Lane may have their machines taken away from them by the police. Both live in Evanston. Jensen, who has been arrested many times for speeding, was arrested again yesterday fOr traveling fifty miles an hour on his motorcycle. Lane's speed is said to have been forty-five miles an hour. "When the riders are given hearings the prosecution will ask the court to take the motorcycles from them or have them barred from rid- ing- 8PECI/L A88E8SMENT NOTICE. No^'ee is hereby given to all per- Bonf/nterested that the City Council iiof the City of Evanston having or- dered that the roadway of Warren Street, in the City of Evanston, from the east line of Ridge Avenue to the west line of Linden Avenue (except across Sherman Avenue and Custer Avenue), also the roadway of that portion of Elm wood Avenue lying within said Warren Street ani not included in the roadway thereof, be improved by curbing with sandstone curbstone and paved^rfHl limestone top macadam, the ordinance for the same bAng on file City cJerk^Mksaid City lav!*; Ippl Court Jbf (toy County, I assesgmentMf t the office of the and the said the County ois, for an of said im- ill] ,......... News Bureau. ...i£&«......... ' T V?^|^^^f^^^^^^^^ provesnent, a^sVFaing to the benefits, and Tin assessment thereof having been made and returned to said Court, (Docket number 682), the final hearing thereon will be held on the 14th day of June, A. D. 1912, or aB soon thereafter aa the business of the Court will permit. AH persons desir- ing may file objections in said Court before said day, and may appear on the hearing and make their defense. Said ordinance provide* for the col- lection of said assessment in five (5) annual installments with an nnal inter- est at the rate of five (6%J per centum per annum. HAROLD C. PYNK3HON, Supertatendentof Special Assassments "#at^tH» <Jftjr o* Evmn^ton. p_ sry sale and Retail* Branches: 2ltl Lincoln Avt., Ttl. Lincoln 10 4604 Sheridan Rd., Ttl. Rav$n»wood 3JI Evanston: 1918 Orrtngton Avi., Ttt. Evatukf Special car* taken ot laUtet' «venlst gowns and eloak». Draperies' and «w> tains a Hpeelaltj. OImm cttaMt M, ihsrt ~ b make a beautiful lawn to keep your lawn beautiful ;s A light application of Kal and Fall starts new grasses life and will give your lawn freshness and greenness that it the envy of your neighbors. Write for ear valuable booklet, The Kalaka Company ich nprticultujsts t tratf^BSajawVferized oiaturetothe seed. It'sprouts quickly and fairly ■hoofa^^ to produce a thick ,veJu&gJagjSjSS^o hardy that it stanatr^CTpUooly well the damaging effects of heat, frost, hard use, dry spells, etc. Ask your dealer for Kalaka. If he can not supply you, write'or phone us and we will see you get it promptly. Bow to Make a Lars." It's free upon request. aauft*jrfSt 4a.w~ei a^ssflssa IsVSjajsjs*. iSfifi UaionStoekYards. CHICAGO. We home a good seQino proposition for repreavntaUve Twr&wan dealer* and other dealers who sell tud. When a Come Heat at the What would it mean to you to have heat and dirt banished from your kitchen this summer--to be free from the blazing range, free from ashes and soot ?* .-stove With the New Perfection Own, the New Perfecfca Store is the most complete cooking device oa the suiktt. k is just as quick and handy, too, lor wsjim* sad iroamg. Itaaves It«ave*Fuel Itaaves--YOU &$ STANDARD OIL COMPANY " '(Aals^hu»^Ce*eisis*ke»i-^J-^--U.^-'-i'-i- - ^S W8$

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