Illinois News Index

Lake Shore News (Wilmette, Illinois), 11 Jul 1912, 1, p. 2

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.......... _._ _.....!&$>&$â-  A. "La ii Jji~M^ •Jr. WvmNH^' ^ Kaowe "Other wo**!*"; mad* allarrangements iA January, tout he cvlf wouh* J>e easier to me t&sm to stand a*bireach i 1% to©. She has #*K|»W widow there In y est*, end I guess she She ha* * prior claim on him. "1 would niofftave brought the suit M: $$**.â- :*&â-  been subjected to so «iaoll humiliation. My Mends and ii«l|^ibors are all wondering way r have not gone to Chicago, and my sit- ^ nation has been terrible." Before her husband's death Mrs. |f:|W(Pi|» liyed In Bvanston for several Mf#$* $*>â-  *?£ tolown Hotn for atH>ut ^;\tliA:;$*irSb and says she has known ManyvStudents Will Compete for$500Es^y Prize Donatde by N.W. Harrisâ€"Evfinston Man in Charge. LIMIT TO BE 10,0(f0 WORDS his mother and relatives lor fourteen years. She generally has spent her summerg 4n Chicago. HOME 6Y FUMES Fire that broke out at 1:56 o'clock f^lrriaay morning completely destroyed the home of Richard Thurland, 2647 &â- <â-  wi^_ -i-------ifvanstdn. The family avenue, escaped from the building without be- ing injured. The fire, the cause of which is un- known, had gamed much headway be- fo»e l&b fire department arrived and s^W house was soon to ruins. The wm- building was worth $1,500, and was miured for 15/MMJ. Five hundred dol- lari worth of furniture, which was destroyed by the fire, was not insured. ':ir FOUR SPEEDERS WERE ; CAUGHT THURSDAY illp of the hundreds of automobiles pasted through Bvanston Thurs- the police found only four that were traveling In excess of the speed •etieant Pestka and Officer Larkin pW»rw hoth mounted on motorcycles |%Pl^i6Ey,,and a close watch was kept oi <h§ motorist*. Bach policeman eaught a pair of speeders. . Seemnee of the small number of speeders that have been caught during past few weeks the police believe t very lllue trouble will be had : *hw remainder of the season, as the I motorists have evidently learned it is i! expensive to drive fast In this city. il VtDOU^ ABATED. , 'w^0t:%^^Bii^-- peddler, Was srreeted in E^anston for sell- ^> Jnf^ hto waree without a license. He ws# given a hearing by Police Magis- trate Boyer and: was fined ""' "*' Subjects for this year's essays on political science for the Norman Walt Harris prises ""have been selected and distributed in the universities and col- leges of the central stales. The competition- is confined to undergraduates of the universities and colleges in Indiana, Illinois, Michigan, Minnesota, Wisconsin and' Iowa, and the subjects selected are: "The Commission Form of Govern' ment" "The Work of Public Service Com- missions.'* "Child Welfare Legislation." The prises, which amount to $500 a year, were established by N. W. Harris, president of the Harris Trust and Savings Bank, to promote good citizenship, create, a wider respect for law and order and the Constitu- tion and to encourage a more exten- sive and thorough study of all ques- tions relating to public morals, fed- eral and state ndmlnistration, muni- cipal government and party politics. Limited to 10,000 Words. Essays must not exceed 10,000 words in length, and must be sub- mitted to the committee of judges be- fore May 1, 1913. The first prize is $250, the second prise $150 and the third prize $100. Judges in the con- test will be selected by the following committees: Prof. Charles H. Mer- riam, University of Chicago; Prof. John A. Fairlie, University of Illinois; prof. N. Dwight Harris, Northwestern University; Prof. John H. Gray, Uni- versity of Minnesota; Prof. Paul B. Reinsch, University of Wisconsin; Prof> Benjamin B. Snambaugh, Uni- versity of Iowa; Prof. Thomas F. Moran, Purdue University, and Prof. Jesse 8. Reeves, University of Mich- igan. In the contest for the years 1911 and 1913 the winners Were Percival W. ViesSelman, University of Minne- sota; Miss Byne P, Goodman, Uni- versity of Illinois, and Jens P. H. Jensen, Penn College, Oskaloosa, Is, v Study 4s Stimulated. "" ; Instractors in the various colleges in.' the eentral states say that since the study of political science has been greatly stimulated ajid that under- graduates take keen interest In the annual contests. ,â-  ::: "'â- <• /^v-'/-/ Prof. Harris of Northwestern uni. vorsity W$ receive the essays, which must be marked with a non dc plume, the author inclosing name and ad- dress* class and college in a separate envelope. The donor of the prises re- serves the right to hare -the best of the essays published tav su^ maga- slnes or newspapers as win Insure the moat widespread notice* of the work being done. y * AfdermanJames R.Smart Push" fjwl-jt is B0ifeved Eliminate the ^llml Pigs?1 MEET WITH DIFFICULTIES Bvanston will endeavor tb settle the problem of the "blind pigs' on the outskirts of the city by annexing the territory In which they are lo- cated and thus bringing them under the jurisdiction of the pollcer It is said that if the district were imder the authority of the Bvanston police the "blind pigs" could not last a day. Following the action of "_ Deputy Sheriff Changelon, who Is also a local alderman, on July 4, in haying a photograph made of Jacob Kuba, who had been stabbed, shot and beaten to London, July. 10;-?~Food cultista are Staggered by what they call the au- dacity of Dr. Solton Fenwlck, wh$ made an onslaught on their pet thee^ rtss. -'>-..-•' -â- -"... /â- â- â- â€¢â€¢ jv-o '•Many fallacies," said Dr. Fenwlck to the Institute of Hygiene, "are in vogue as to the value of foods. Choco- late, for instance, is regarded as very valuable. The truth; however, is that chocolate is not a food, but a sweet which takes away the appetite. "We have been giving chocolate to our typhoid patients for the last ten years. Their moan for food--thejf do not look on milk as a foodâ€"is in- tolerable, and they bave to be de- ceived. :' \ â-  -£-'x-/*-â- >"'< "The saying that fish Is a brain food was bora in the mind of ^l^rtoln doctor with more imagination.^ than scientific learning. It contains phosP phorus, certainly, but a bo^c of matches contains mere phosphorus than a ton "of fish. a pulp in a fight in one of the "bfindj some time in secretrand was well on ^"Certain fish Ire easily digestible, >under assim* its way for the annexation of the territory. Many obstacles confront those pushing the plan. Although all the residents In the territory are more than willing to sign the petition, most of the property is owned by peo- ple scattered over the entire coun- try from Florida to California. Let- ters by the score have been written to these persons but they have been reticent to sign for fear of an in- crease in their taxes should the ter- ritory be annexed. To 8how f*hotograps. ' Alderman dhangeion â-  decided 'it would be a fine thirig \o show, th6 state's attorney's office in Chicago Kuba's photograph to impress on the officials the need of wiping out 'what Bvanston considers the pest Spot of Cook county. *~; The Evanstoa authorities and the Four-Mile league complain that ~itj has been impossible to interest the state's attorney's office in the need of wiping out the lawless places, and the showing of the photograph as a "horrible example" might arouse needed interest, it was hoped.:«'&K& Alderman James K.SmarCwi^l also an official in the league, toW today of the quiet cam- paign that has been carried on for some time toward annexing the ter^ ritoify to the^ city of ^»i^i^:;;^^ 1 ^W#>ns>e -*>"&&'.;a majority M the residents of the district to sign a petition for annexation," said Alde>| ms^rsmas^ "and, 'irh^ls.*p^ moreT" difficult, to'get^.mfc^^^g^ property owners to sign. We haye been sendjiig petitions* to these pro> erty owneors, who Wt$ in abnost every state of the Union, and ti&sC *** making aB sorts of objections, mostiy on lujcount of a probable increase of tose.^^iih)*:sieeu^ ,|o'bie^tlto 'wtig Teal iwiy to close the lilind WpS**' 'h Chief of Police Shaffer aas also ordered that the patrol wagon or the Cod is too oily to be Hated. • * .;-.' / "*' '..• I:" >',.. :., ;'*'â- â€¢: "In spite, of the outcry against lob- ster, it is a good food. Crabs, how- ever, should be avoided, as well as mussels. Mackerel are actually poison- ous to some stomachs. The same is true of fruits. The latter have no food value, grapes and bananas ex- cepted. . " - ^."'.," '"'*â-  , "Frozen- meat is more tender than the home product, the reason being that the process of freezing and thaw: Ing breaks .down '.^ffXb^i'^^lfi, same res^h makes it dangerous to keepj^ fof It fa^mes easily tainted." M oneiat •Wietesii rt>*on*H lle'l&i-i |s^er.-is. hands fror ted rice inbv »r the< have h Eve (e relet it takini [positK W^itvtT font %p w?Ht« Soggff * Good* We, You'll Mske a Mfsttke. ;t*-< â- '•' k If T»tr P<r«» U> sjr. mm** MMemm* Pa-, July 11.â€"Wilfred Han mu^um, is authortry ft^ statement that the Liberty b*n mg place again, as the old crack has extended for more than sfit inches In Ibi-lsst-fow weeks, and «ie relk may cause It to i:$^^^-i0^im ^j*ojiis*:i^fr^ ^a Outerhridge, theTreaiWininsti-rr^ ambulance • shall not 'answsr5 calls * ^Q^>tspl|^r«j|tt^ ijfifts .hetesfter â- ' for ,tne;.:e!lsfrlc^;;b^;-tim** ^-:"' â€"â-  u#--.."C,JLi"";.:.';«iir .un'r:iuV.1 any of the brawlers who ^rj&ss o^er the city limits shall be at on«e ar- rested. ' ; :f •*•. ; :ofW^

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