,fDr.McElve$tf||il|| Said to Havllffl """' of the' 'JV**:M)i R ollow£rsaiie Peeved With the Bvanaton convention of ie bull moose party over and its dele- tes to the state convention, J^hlch leets in Chicago Saturday selected, ie residents are wondering jeho the rogressive candidates foj offices will One thing is certain, and that is Hat several of those who attended the leeting at the Avenue House Satim ay afternoon have their eyes focused n political offices. Foremost among these stands Harry Nightingale, chairman. of the Evans- on bull moose organization. Though te has not lived in Bvanston long nough to have his name appear in e Evanston directory, the Evanston cademy teacher has made himself ex- emely prominent among the organ- ers of the Progressives. At the secret meeting held at the ome of Dr. McElveen Friday evening, t which time twelve bull moosers so rranged things that all' the others ho attended the Avenue House meet- ng had to do was to follow the path round out by the steam roller, Mr. nightingale was the presiding genius. ost to say as , .T d it h* should be permanent or- h|. who said s reel- 111... ft. It* • , thai t was he who had ,o who were to vas he who de<e1 he chairman of ionization, it was hat the lence should MW&W&kfa&: ',-,'• Has Political Ambitions. It has been known for some time hat Mr. Nightingale has political am- bitions. It is even said that he Is de- sirous of obtaining the seat now held by William E. Anderson. So far he haB not come out in the open and de- clared himself, though it is expected h. will immediately following the Chi- r«feO state convention. Another Progressive expected to ap- promlnently In the political field urge P. Engelhard, the perpetual * .atdate. "Carnation George" has (or office so many times that it ,d be har4 to count them., It is „f his means of exercise. Engelhard is looked upon by y us the bull moose candidate for i ss from this district. The fact he made such a persistent de- il«...» at the convention Saturday to b<. » minated as a delegate, ev.en th eh he wae not to serve, has led ni»..y to believe that he still has am- bit>.,..„, to unseat George Edmund [PVo,, . >%+ Ran Away from Him. -sh Mr. Foss ran several thou- s .. utes above him at the primaries at j ^e voters proved by their vote tba they preferred the present in- cuu ,ut to him such a thing does not *o. 'Varnation George" for a sec- ©ii»j Ae has become accustomed to beii opposed. That he wiH once agai appear in the Ting as a candi- date the lower house few will deny. ii. the high handed way to which tto .vention was managed Satur- day ^ in hurt the chances of the party in „. tall is admitted on aU sides. Wta ccurred Lm tifc ■*» chamber Be8;»>,. at Pastor Mcfiflveen's home PridB> uight, at which the delegates by a , it and dried process were de- cided upon by some twelve men, has leake« out and has done much to quiet the enthusiasm of Roosevelt follow- ers .u this city. - 0jo man, wno up to Saturday was * Bti-t ig advocater of the Roosevelt Policies, stated last evening it was the rawest thing "pulled ©ST here to some time. "The cry tip toSaturday/* •aid thia man, "was that everyhody :«hotu4 share J& the wttrktog* i$&£ R4**Sanizatton. m -t|*Di^^^|# »*» true and that &W&&W&Q&&, *bat they said; Thea^hey me* la soc- ket session at the home o* Dr. McEl- m&'&&vmti^to to JackaonviHe,. Miss- Irene Kolterman^ spent the last week in Chicago. ;. §,. .J%f|Ww|w^:'^s on the .'stole Bklw. Burli«« and famUy are spend- ing a few weeks in the east - r Miss Dorothy Killen has returned from a. week's visit to Chicago. .; Mrs. Pierson of Indianapolis*; Ind^ is 0»e guest of Mrs. P. if. Hortino. ; ■ Mrs. Kaart of Buffalo, N. Y^ iaj visiting Mr. and Mrs. P. Whitney. Miss WUury WilUams is spending her vacation at jfeimaii YMIe^ 111. Mr. Charles * Seifert visited nisi mother, Mrs. Julia Seifert, over Sun- day. ■-.,'■' '- "3. Mr. H. W. Tresch is spending a few weeks* vacation at Mineral Point, Wis. Mrs. Jas. S. Cushman of New York is visiting her aunt, Mrs. Robert Scott Reginald Buchanan has returned from a three weeks' visit at Lake Forest. Miss (Chloe Babylon of Ohio Is spending a week with Mrs. B. EL Vogler. Roland and Harold Gruver are spending the summer with relatives to Dixon, III. Mrs. C. C. Wortley and children have returned from a week's outing to Michigan. Rev. F. J. Haarth entertained < the choir of St. Raphael's church of Chi- cago Sunday. Mrs. Burling of Eldora, la., is spending a lew weeks with her son, fjdw^f Burling. Jas. Livingston is moving the Cal- houn *euse from Glencoe to his lot oh'. rjBifts^^-iyiitt^te*^ Mrs. E. Yeomans and two little sons are spending the summer at Woodstock, N. Y. Hubbard Woods, friends last Thursday. 1 ' Mr. and Mrs. A, E. Albright are spending the summer, to the moun- tains of E^JM^yw ';:a---i; ' Dr. W. U Ballinger sailed from Liverpool Saturday, July J7. He will be to his office Aug. 5,..x\...^>f.^ 'The senior choir of Sacred Heart, chnrch will go for an outing Thurs- day to Silver Lake, Wis...'., ••■^ :±r Mrs. R. Mats has returned. front Wllliamstown, Mass., after an ex- tended visit in that place. % Mrs. McDonald of Cincinnati, C, is spending a few Weeks with her sister^ Mrs. C. R. Shepherd. ' Mrs. C. M. Cowei of Ohio left Saturday after a short visit with her sister-in-law, Mrs, EL EL Vogler. Mr. Allan Shirley hae returned to his duties with the El Paso ft South Western railroad. Ell Paso, Tex. Miss Mary Ellen Ballenger of Exonomy, Ind., is visiting the family of Dr. Ballenger of Hubbard Woods. Mrs. A. L. 8tantonr formerly of New York, left Monday for Michigan to spend a couple of months with her son. Mr. and Mrs. Hugo Schneider, for- merly of Hubbard Woods, now of Highland Park, are the parents of a baby girl. Mr. and Mrs. G. A. E. Kohler left Tuesday for Holland, Mich., where they, expect to spend the remainder of the summer. Mrs. Andrew Davis and ~ her daughters, Mrs. Cornell of Glencoe and Mrs. Mahouey of Hubbard Woods, are Spending; the summer at Fltchburg, Mass the C. ft N. W. railroad are put- ting to a much-needed gate at Gage street The business men will cer- tainly appreciate it veeh and decided who the delegates should be. " "The convention itself was a farce. While the nominating committee was outside of the room, supposedly decid- ing upon wh,o to nominate as dele- gates, I took out a piece of paper and wrote their names down. The men they chose were exactly the same as I had written down.. Everything was prearranged and the convention amounted to absolutely nothing. The people had nothing to do with it, everything being in the hands of a dozen. "If such action is to govern the par- ty in Evanaton I believe at the elec- tion Roosevelt will not get half as many votes as be did here at the pri- maries. If this proves to be true there will be but twelve men to blame." Electric Cook ____ Stove Is Here Some ingenious Yankee has taken two perfectly simple ideas and by com- bining them has devised a contraption that Is amazing in its efficiency and convenience. Probably some relative left him a hay stove and an electric toaster and the Yankee, seeing them in juxtaposition, immediately tried to figure out how he could use them to advantage. He put the toaster inside the hay stove, turned on the current, and lot he had invented the electric stove! Since then he has substituted asbestos and aluminum for the hay and has in- creased the size of the electric ele- nient but the principle remains the same He has added an ingenious thermometer which turns off the cur- rent when the proper amount of heat baa been generated and the food goes on cooking by virtue of the Impris- oned heat He also added a time clock which may be made to turn on the electric current while madame is at the matinee, or before the house- hold Is up to the morning. There is uo more heat to the kitchen than is released by an incandescent light, and there fya<tftoWVfa&&**™ mT* generated to WeoeMag. ^;'. > Having named bto device the Cope- man Automatic Electric Cook Stove and built a factory at Flint, Mich., which is filling orders as fast as pos- sible the manufacturer Is holding demonstrations to various parts ot the country and will have a represen- tative In Evanston at the office of the Public Service Company for a few days beginning August 1. The cost of electricity is very low since current is used only until the required tem- perature is reached. Also the Public Service Company makes a lower rate than is enjoyed to most cities. Evanston and North Shore house- keepers are proverbially progressive and no doubt large numbers will at- tend the demonstrations if only to see what a great advance has been made over gas ranges, coal ranges and small electrical cooking devices. ti#^^ EVANSTON, MONDAY, thow Grounds-Greenwood DISCOVERED BY SUBURBANITES Hundreds of dwellers in the North Shore towns have gotten into the ha- bit of dropping into Stoeger's at 357 West Madison street, in the morning on their way from their trains to their offices and giving Mr. Stoeger an order for tid bits to be sent over to the Northwestern depot and checked at the parcel counter at his expense. They get their packages to the evening to take home. Or when the order is larger they have him send it direct to their homes. They find he has just what they want in the finest imported delicacies, good brands, all fresh goods, the choicest in the markets of the world. The number of Mr. Stoeger's North Shore customers is Increasing daily and will doubtless continue to increase for in addition to getting tost what they want, they get courteous and intelligent service. PICKETT. Dmky Demon of 0 X• . ■ •«• -^Sj»K el|-iSJS>«asSJ^|SJS^;>v^;: :Jr^■jViiiM ' ,i\i»mmtiJh0tf^im \jfi^^0if00i[jiif,i ,,<l|l,M.|i.'»t Onip man in Hmmon Hhtor? who 9Vr fougfit, banApmS^ m Spanish %vtl. TositiV ftotur* of 9V*rf **M**iom More performers, more cars, more eeats, bigger teote tlM» ear end ell other amusement undertakings, depicting solely4ro©ti«r scenes end incidents. Cowboys, Wild West Girls, Indian*, Mexicans, Rurales, Vacqueros, SenoriUs, Scoets, ■^kmrnm^^ Homesteaders, Pony Express Celebrities, Champione ot tbs> p Gun and Lariat, Bucking Horses, Buffaloes, Long-homed 8teere : united in an enlightening, spectacular tournament, differing radically and fundamentally from ail familiar others. MMf and perfect a sho<y as humanly possible 2P.M^ '. PERFORMANCE *fg&^ * -' m ADVANCE SALE OF TICKETS Positively No Advance in Price for Early Reservations 800-^ FOUNTAIN FOR SALE. " fountain, oak and onyx; com- plefaT hot android sodsw apparatus. Five tables/wiy chsmVo match. Soda tanksT**»aargisV liachinery, electric mixer, John V. Lee, BwCago Wd Ham-si, Evanston, Itef "Mamma, moAkeyf* "I 4on't know," the - people." IAL ANNOUNCEMENT orth Western Fi 509 W. MADISON jOffep. the No| * _. J .___.-ilifofnla Fn i^J^i v 4ilBlliOE CJ Basket Fruits ™™fc z. ' „ Our Specialty \6t HUM, UlgSrS, tlC. *W§M\~' 3K8£^#-3fc :>iAi'ra^- :.Ji.4^1V.,^AV;;-^^i'::Ss^k.-S.: