THB MeHKNRT PLAIHDBALB*. KoHKffRT, OL &?**• :i:«-v- SECRETARY MELLON GIVES TAX CUT PLAN Provides ffffrfocfion of Tcxtf from $250,000,000 to $300," 000,000. NEW TAX PROPOSAL Changes in the Income-tax law proposed by Secretary Mellon, calling for reductions in present normal tax rates from 2, 4 and 6 per oent to 1, 3 and 5 per cent, and repeal of the 25 per cent credit for earned incohne, would mean taxes As follows: Proposed Rates No tax $ 5 : 15 # Net > 'Present Income $2,000 .V . No tax 3.000 7.50 4,000 ^*4... 22.50 5,000 87.50 vi5 6,000 .; .. 87.50 ; <<5 7,000 ........ 87.50 8.00C 127.50 105 9,000 167.50 135 10,000 ........ 207.5C 175 . Washington.--With the receipt of Secretary Melton's tax redaction recommendations, the house ways and means committee started worf on the new tax bill for 1926. All members of the committee* both Republicans and Democrats, are In favor of a reduction, the only differences of opinion being In the manner In which taxes will be slashed and the amount of total cut. that should be made. The plan submitted by Secretary Mellon, which will be the basis on which the committee will start to work, calls for a reduction of $250,- 000,000 to $300,000,000. Republican committee members want cuts of between $300,000,000 and $400,000,000, while Democratic committee members talk for reductions up to 500.000.000. The Republicans this year control the committee by a ratio of fifteen to ten. Summarized, Secretary Mellon's proposals are: 1. Reduction of taxes In the aggregate to the extent of from $250,000,000 to $300,000,000. 2. Reduction of normal taxes to 1 per cent, 3 per cent* and 5 per cent. Instead of the 2 per cent. 4 per cent, and 6 per cent of the existing law. 5. Reduction of surtaxes to a minimum of 20 Instead of the existing 40 per "cent 4. Surtaxes to begin at 1 per cent at $12,000 instead of $10,000, and run 19 20 per cent above $150,000 instead of 40 per cent above $500,000. - 5. Elimination of the 25 per cent 'deduction on earned income. 6. Reduction of and eventual repeal of the estate tax. 7. Repeal of the gift tax. 8. Retention of the taxes on admissions and on passenger automobiles. 9. Repeal of the taxes on trucks, tires, and accessories. 10. Repeal of the taxes on art works and several other minor Imposts. 11. Repeal of the provision for publicity of tax payments. 12. Enlargement of the board of tax appeals. of James Deering • Gives Million to Charity Miami, Fla.--Providing for an outright donation of $1,000,000 to charitable institutions the will of the late James Deering of Chicago, who died September 21, was filed in the Dade County court Provision is also made for the placing of $500,000 In trust, the Income to be used for the maintenance of the Miami City hospital. Charles Peering, "a brother, who Is named as one executor, Is given $175,000 outright. Villa VIscaya, the Deering estate to the south of Miami, Is to be divided between Charles Deering and Richard P. Howe, a brother-in-law. Mr. Deering Is to receive three-fifths of the estate and Mr. Howe the remainder. No appraisal of the estate has been made. Bequests to other relatives, friends, and employees total approximately $855,000 with the sains ranging In size up to $500,000. Three U. S. Army Flyer# i Killed When Plane Crashes ^ Cape May Courthouse, N. J. Three United States army aviators fell to their deaths near here when the Martin bombing plane in which they were flying from Mitchel Field, N. Y., to Langley Field, Va., crashed fcto the meadows after one of the two Liberty motors on the ship apparently went bad. The men killed flTere: Capt. ' Robert A. KInloch, Charleston, S. C.; Lieut. Abbott C. Martin, Reading, Mass., the pilot; Staff Sergeant Joseph Coulston, Norrlstown, Pa. A. G. PATTERSON LOCARNO TREATIES ARE MADE PUBLIC Patterson, head of the Alabama public service commission, «as elected president of the National Association of Railroad and Public Utility Commissions, succeeding Judge William D. B. AIney, chairman of the Pennsylvania public service coihmissldh. STOKES, MILLIONAIRE, IS GRANTED DIVORCE New York Socialist Charged Wife With Infidelity. New York.--James Graham Phelps Stokes, millionaire Socialist, was granted an interlocutory decree of divorce from his wife. Rose Pastor Stokes, by Justice Arthur S. Tompkins, sitting in the State Supreme court at Nyack, N. Y. Stokes charged infidelity. Mrs. Stokes was not in court and the suit was uncontested. Mrs. Stokes, militant Socialist and birth control agitator, started life in a London slum, came to America, and for years worked In a cigar factory. Later she became a reporter, married a millionaire, and barely escaped, on a technicality, years of imprisonment In a federal penitentiary for treasonable utterances. Evidence given by Mrsi Mary Craft, houjekeeper of a small hotel at Sharon Springs, N. Y., formed the basis of the action. J. Grossman, owner of the hotel, was named in the papers as co-respondent Sudden Death of Society Woman Probed by Police Los Angeles, Cal.--Symptoms tending to show that death was due to alcoholism were found In the post mortem examination of the body of Mrs. Craig Biddle, prominent society woman of Philadelphia. Mrs. Blddle's sudden death In her apartment led to an Investigation by the police and district attorney's office. Craig Biddle, the husband, was ques tloned by detectives, but "ould throw no light on the case. The couple has been estranged for some itJa said. i, France,Belgium and Germany Agree te Nonaggression .1 Policy* . London.--Results of the Lo6aroo security conference were displayed for all the world to see when seven treaties, which comprise Europe's newest and most promising preventive of war, were made public in the various capitals. The first and foremost of the agreements is the security pact, a mutual treaty guaranteeing the inviolability of the frontiers between Germany and Belgium and Germany and France, as fixed by the treaty of Versailles. It will be signed at London December 1, and, assuming that all the signatory governments ratify the pact, will become effective when Germany joins the League of Nations. By the treaty, Germany, on .her side, undertakes never to trespass upon the soil of France or Belgium, or make any warlike gestures In the demilitarized Rhineland area. On their side, France and Belgium proniise not to violate Germany's western frontier. Should either party violate the agreements set forth, the pact provides that Great Britain and Italy shall go to the aid of the aggrieved party, whether It be Germany, France or Belgium. The powers parties to the pact agree to submit all their future disputes to the council of the league, acting as a court. Of the other six treaties that have come out of the Locarno negotiations, Germany Is signatory to four identical agreements, one each with France, Belgium, Poland and Czechoslovakia. Germany agrees with each of her four neighbors to set up peaceful machinery to settle any disputes with them that do not yield to ordinary diplomatic treatment. These neighbors of Germany agree to submit any disputes they may have with Germany to an arbitral tribunal organized under The Hague conventions of 1907, or to the Permanent Court of International Justice. The other two treaties are between France and her eastern allies, Poland and Czechoslovakia. They provide that If Germany falls to keep her word with France, Poland and Czechoslovakia, and her failure is accompanied by an unprovoked recourse to arms, France and her two eastern ^allied shall go immediately to one another's assistance, Neither the security pact nor any of the other six treaties wig have the effect "of outlawing war. In point of fact, It Is made clear that there are circumstances In which war Is legitimate. The treaties simply strlve^to define these circumstances, limit their number and do as much as Is conceivably possible to prevent warUke conditions from arising. FURNESS TO WED Six Bandits Get $33,000' Pay Roll m Chicago Chicago.--Women were used as shields by six robbers who obtained the $33,000 pay roll of the West Pullman works of the International vester company at 1015 West Hundred and Twentieth street lAll the bandits wore masks and carried sawed-off shotguns, and they escaped In an automobile during an exchange of bullets, although none appeared to take effect 62 Hurt When Stand at Football Game Collapses Washington, Pa--Six of the 35 persons taken to a hospital after the collapse of a section of the bleachers at the Carnegie Tech-Washington and Jefferson football game remained there. Sixty-two were injured in the crash, but many were only slightly hurt and did not require hospital treatment i facNider Sworn in as Assistant War Secretory Washington.--The people of the nation are vitally Interested in natioual defense and would like to see the full provisions of the national defense act carried out, Col. Hanford MacNider of Iowa declared after being sworn in as assistant secretary of war. Ina Claire Gets Divorce Chicago.--Ina Claire, actress, who has been starred in vaMous popular divorce plays, was granted a divorce f 4|rom James Whlttaker, music critic Hind newspaper man, after she testified before Judge John R. Caverly that husband had been cruel to her. _ Drop* 400 Feet in Autogiro --The autogiro, air machine Invented by Senor de la Cierva, dropped 400 feet vertically and landed on the ground without bumping. | Author Robbed in Florida West Palm Beach, Fla.--Nina Wilcox Putnam, writer, was the victim of holdup on the Ocean boulevard, near Del Ray, In which she and her com panlon, It. W. Gauger, lost jewels and cash worth $6,000. Five yopng bandits Staged the holdup. General Doe Is Milwaukee.--Gen. Joseph B. Doe, assistant secretary of war under Presi- , deat Oleveland, died at his home here ,at the ::ge of seventy. Squier Loses Patent Suit Washington. -- The United States Supreme court denied Gen. George O. Squier, retired, a review of his suit against the American Telephone and Telegraph company seeking to force them to pay for the multiplex telephone device on which he holds patents. . Volstead Law Again Is * Upheld by Supreme Court Washington.--Again upholding the constitutionality of the Volstead act, the Supreme court handed down a formal opinion denying the plea of Terry Druggan, Chicago beer runner, for a writ of habeas corpus on the ground that the dry law was enacted before the eighteenth amendment was ratified by the states and w/is, therefore, void. The court declared that congress had the constitutional authority to pass the ..Volstead law prior to the effective date of the constitutional amendment and that congress has the right to enact laws intended to carry out constitutional provisions for the future. Druggan has been confined la the Cook county Jail. New York Stock Market Breaks After Wild Day New York.--In one of the wildest days In Wall Street's history, the gigantic bubble of speculation in the motor shares burst with dramatic suddenness. A frenzy of speculation ruled the stock market attended with scenes on the floor of the New York stock and curb exchanges which in point of confusion were beyond anything even the oldest of the Street's, brokers ever had witnessed. Girl Parachute Jumper Killed Near Niles, Mich. Niles, Mich.--Miss Dagmar Stegman, twenty-one-year-old parachute jumper, was fatally injured when she plunged 200 feet from a moving airplane lota Basson lake, six miles east of Nile*. .. Bandit* Get $7,000 Loot - Huntington, W. Va.--After locking 15 employees and customers In a vauYt, two bandits robbed the Guyanddtte State bank here,' escaping with $7,000. To Rebuild Forest Burlington Center, Maine.--James G. Eddy," retired lumber king, has employed an expert to coax into rapid growth a 30-aere forest which Eddy wishes to leave trf posterity on tlie ground where cutting the forests made his fortune. Lord Furness, one of England's wealthiest peers. It is said will marry Mrs. Thelma Morgan Converse. Lord Furness Is a prominent ship owner, an iron and steel -moo,, and a colliery p r o p r i e t o r . v •' X< . ^ C00LI0GE REFUSES TO INTERVENE IN STRIKE PRESIDENT TO CALL DISARMAMENT MEET Coolidge to Act After Study of Locarno Treaties. Washington.--President Coolidge will Initiate a move for a second armament limitation conference as soon as he has received full reports of the security treaties just approved at Locarno. As a matter of fact, feelers have been out on behalf of this government for some time and the President ROW has no doubt but what the European nations Involved will agree to hold a conference in Washington. He feels that the prospects of such a conference really accomplishing a great deal are very bright. The President, It was said officially at the White House, regards the signing of the security pact as the most Important step looking 'to the continuance of peace in Europe and the rescue of the countries from the danger of economic chaos since the acceptance of the Dawes plan, which. In turn, be regards as having been the most important step since the signing of the peace treaties. ^ 1 Mr. Coolidge has been waiting for an opportune tim€ to bring about an armament limitation conference for considerably? more -than a year. He made it -clear last summer, while h$ was spending a fortnight in Plymouth, Vt., with his fatlier that he was hoping "for such a conference, which might follow on the heels of the acceptance of the Dawes plan. Youth and Girl Slain; Jealous Suitor Suspected Kenosha, Wis.--Jealousy of a rejected suitor was intimated as motive for the murder of Madeline Latimer, nineteen-year-old Milwaukee - stenographer, and James Sears, twenty-five, Kenosha garage owner, whose bodies were found on a "Lovers' Lane" road five miles north of Kenosha. The couple had been shot to death while seated In Sears' automobile, parked at the roadside. The bodies lay in a ditch 300 feet from the machine, partly concealed by hastily strewn leaves and branches. President to Address Farmers in Chicago Dee. 7 Chicago.--President Coolidge will deliver the opening address at the American Farm Bureau federation's national convention in Chicago December 7, O. F. Bradfute, president of the federation, definitely announced. He will speak In the morning to the farmers at the Hotel Sherman and will be a guest at a luncheon of the convention guests. He will leave immediately afterward for the return trip to Washington, delivering his opening address to congress on the day following. * Sheriff Hoffman Given Jail Sentence and Fine Chicago.--Sheriff Peter M. Hoffman. Republican leader of Cook county, was sentenced to serve thirty days in the Dupage county jail and fined $2,500 by Federal Judge James H. Wllkerson for "willfully and knowingly closing his eyes" to the ont-of-jall excursions ef the two beer millionaires, Terrence Druggan and Frank Lake. Wage Act Unconstitutional Washington.--The Arizona minimum wage law for women was held to be unconstitutional by the Supreme court. Beggs, Utilities Executive, Dies Milwaukee.--John 1. Beggs. president of the Milwaukee Electric Railway and Lighting company, was burled at Harrlsburg, Pa., where Mr. Beggs started his career as an electrical engineer. Mr. Beggs died at St..Mary's hospital here. He was president anrt director of 53 corporations. Colonel Coolidge lU Again Plymouth, Vt--Col. John C. Coolldg* father of the President, Is confined to his home with neuralgia. Penn U. Turns Away 2J&00 Philadelphia. -- The University of Pennsylvania has turned away approximately 2,200 who sought admission as students this term. Dunes to Be Wilderness Cllfty^FaHa Park, Ind.--The sand dunes of Indiana, turned into a wilderness park within easy access.of 11,- 000,000 people, will be a -step forward tln national progress. E. L. Gardner of the conservation commission declared. Determined to Let Operators and Miners Battle to Finish. Washington. -- President Coolidge and has advisers are still determined to let tfte anthracite operators and miners fight It out to a finish without governmental Interference. The only condition which will cause the President to depart from this position is the development of actual suffering because of a shortage of fuel. So far no such condition has been brought to his attention, it is said. Should such an emergency develop, the government's action would be quick and certain, it Is declared. Just whut the official plans are for such an emergency is not disclosed. The government still is convinced that a settlement will be reached within the Industry without governmental interference. Although anthracite stocks are rapidly diminishing and the pinch of a lack of bard coal Is beginning to be acutely felt especially In the eastern part of the country. It is declared that there is no shortage of substitute fuel. John Hays Hammond and others who studied the situation in 1923, reported to the President that in the event of a hard coal strike there wpul$ be no lack of substitutes, and officials declare that this opinion is being borne out In the present strike^ The miners, under John L. Lewis, declare that the strike has now reached a crisis and some action will have to be taken 8 Planes Fall in Gale; Three Flyers Lose Livas Wheeling, W. Va.--Scattered by a heavy rainstorm encountered over the Allegheny mountains, 48 airplanes which hopped off at Boiling field, Washington, en route west, are all accounted for. One of the planes, an army machine, crashed to earth near New Salem, Pa., killing its three occupants; one ;anded at Roscoe, W. Va.,; five others who lost their way came <*own in pastures near New Martinsville^ W. tra„ while an eighth made a landing In a small valley east "f Wheeling. The killed are George H. Burgess ct Wilbur Wright field, Daytoa; Maurice Hatton, representative of a Dayton aero trade Journal and Verne Tlmm«s man, Dayton Herald photographer. Miners? Head Says U. S. Faces Big Coal Shortage Atlantic City, JN. J.--Support by the American Federation of Labor of the 158,000 striking miners In the anthracite field was accorded after President John W. Lewis of the United Mine Workers had addressed the delegates and stirred them to enthusiasm by bis recital of conditions in the industry. Mr. Lewis said the miners would not falter or depart from the policy laid down, and he warned the public that It was due to a "rude awakening" if it believed there was an ample supply of coal on hand. < "Hundreds of thousands of homes will be without fuel and will be unable to s^pure fuel," he said, "until It can be produced, at the mines and distributed.** „ William Green Re-Elected President of A. F. of JL Atlantic City, N. J.--The American Federation of Labor re-elected President William Green and his associate officers by acclamation; choee Detroit as next year's convention city; declared against formation of an independent labor party and opposed recognition of the Russian Soviet by the United States. Many other resolutions were adopted. The resolution proposing support of a movement to bring about a world conference of trade unions was defeated unanimously. Sandow, "World's Str&itg Man," Is Dead in London London. -- Eugene Sandow, once hailed as "the world's strongest man," died suddenly in London, where he recently had built up a practice as a health specialist, it is believed death was due to the effects of a motor accident in which he was injured some years ago. Authorizes Debt Funding Reval, Esthonia. -- The Esthonian government has decided to authorize Its minister at Washington to undertake a settlement of the nation's debt of $14,000,000 to the United States along the lines of the Polish-American agreement. Governor Condemns Subsidies Harrlsburg. Pa.--Federal subsidies to states were condemned as unfair and wasteful In an address by Governor Ritchie of Maryland speaking before the Pennsylvania chamber of commerce. Motor Pdot's Monument Bellefonte, Pa.--The Liberty motor of the mall plane In which Pilot Charles H. Ames fey to his death will be allowed to remain imbedded In the rock at the top of Kitten? as a monument » Illiterate to Be Counted Washington.--The bureau of education In the" Department of Commerce will take a census of Illiterates next year as a move In the campaign to ijrlpe out Illiteracy. Panama Drops Half Police Ppnama City.--All the officers and half the men of Panama's police force were dismissed by President Chlarl, who feals that the force failed in its duty during the recent riots. Envoy Pleads for Trade New York.--Ambassador Emitle Daeschner of France pleaded that every effort be made to stimulate foreign trade as essential to France in an address before the New York beat# of trade. Students Fight Fire South Bend. Ind.-T^o thousand students Of the University of N^trl Dame aided in fighting a fire which destroyed the mala building of the agricultural group. Baft 1JS00 Deer in Colorado Denver, Colo.--Colorado hunters killed 1,500 deer during the four-day open season. Mews Brevities I Um S, Sub Rams Mine Sweeper San Diego, Cal.--While maneuvering eight miles at sea off Point Loma In the problem of locating the United States mine sweeper Ortolan, submarine 25 came to the surface noqe up and rammed the Ortolan. Both vessels were damaged but reached port Canton River Mined Canton.--As a precaution against any attack from two hostile northern Chinese warships, now In the river, the Canton river has been mined. Waterway Survey Incomplete Washington.--The engineering survey of the Great Lakes to the St Lawrence channel is not completed, members of the deep waterway commission were told when they m^t with Secretary of Commerce Hoover. Kill Fifty Robbers Mexico City, Mexico.--Police in Mexico City and vicinity have shot 60 robbers recently and warnings are Issued that firm and quick punishment will be the lot of criminals la the future. of Illinois | nnmiuiiiimiiiHtiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiifi Forty-two persons were killed in industrial accidents in Illinois during August, the Illinois Industrial commission reported at Springfield. >, Capt. Frederick S. Mosher, banker and business man of Sandwich, and a Civil war veteran. Is dead at his home in Sandwich at the age of eightyfour. A conference on railroad crossings. mainly devoted to standardization of crossing signals, was held In Chicago by railroad, city, county and civic officials. Fred E. Carpenter, Rockford, county judge of Winnebago county, was elected president of the Sixth District Bar association at its meeting in Rochelle. No trace has as yet been found of Clinton Conlln, who mysteriously disappeared while on bis way from Decatur to the county Jail--a distance of 60 fleet A deficit of $224,059 will be faced at the end of the fiscal year by Chicago, despite the Increase of approximately $1,000,000 In the city revenue, It was estimated. An appeal for legislation providing for sterilization of morons in the state of Illinois was hinted at In a resolution adopted by fhe Northern Dental association at Dixon. -No hope is held out for the recovery of James E. Whitfield, University of Illinois freshman quarterback, whose neck was broken in a scrimmage with the varsity at Urbana. Thomas Schultz, manager of a grain company at Mllmlne, and Henry Born, also of Mllmlne, were killed when their automobile was struck 6y a Wabash passenger train near Bement An unidentified man and woman were Instantly killed and another man was struck by a Wabash train at Danville. The car bore a license Issued to H. F. Dorman of Freeport. Plans for educational week, November 16 to 28, by proclamation of President Coolidge, were announced at Chicago by Frank C. Cross, director of the National Americanism commission. The bodies of Harold Ford, fourteen, and Arriette Kellen, thirteen, were found on the Alton & Eastern railroad tracks near Wood River. The wheels of two freight trains had run over them. More than 3,000 persons witnessed the formal opening of the new Torrence avenue bridge which connects Chicago with Indiana. The bridge was built at a cost to Cook county of $2,500,000. Vernon C. Seaver, millionaire hotel and theatrical man, prominent sportsman and former commodore of the Chicago Yacht club, left Wilmette harbor for a trip around the world in a 55-foot power boat. Another chapter in the Leland case was closed when the Illinois Supreme court at Springfield, declined to listen to Mrs. Charlotte Leland's argument that her husband, Albert, should be given a divorce because of her confession of Illicit relations with Rev. Carl D.-Case. The refusal was on technical grounds. Bankers of eight counties in north central Illinois were told In annual group conference at Freeport that bank robberies In the state had been reduced 62 per cent In the last six months, as compared with the same period a year ago, because bankers of the state are organizing town guards to shoot the bandits and .posting $1,000 reward cards for their capture, dead or alive. Hundreds of officers of the Thirtythird division and attached troops were the guests of Col. Frank R. Schwengel and his staff when the convention of the National Guard association opened at Chicago at the One Hundred Twenty-second field artillery armory. Plans are to be laid for making Camp Grant the greatest permanent National Guard training site in the country with a capacity of 500,- 000 troops at one time. Taxes paid voluntarily and without protest, even though excessive, cannot be recovered by the taxpayer. This opinion was given State's Attorney J. H. Allio of Bond county by Attorney General Carlstrom at Springfield. Mr. Allio reported that the clerk of the board of review at Greenville, in extending the 1924 tax against a corporation, In error made the assessment value $50,000 rather than $20,000, which error increased the equalized value some $15,000. Corporations or individuals applying for permission to tunnel beneath a state hard road or to alter the hard road with a crossing, or in any manner, are to be put under bond to repair the road and keep It In good repair for a year afterward. This plan to protect the state hardroad system from deterioration by crossings and subways, or other alterations, became known at Springfield by the approval of the proposed form of bond by Attorney General Carlstrom. The death knell of Sunday movies In Urbana was sounded when Judge Franklin H. Boggs issued a writ of injunction closing local theaters on the Sabbath* An' appeal for further federal aid and co-operation in Illinois' war on cattle tuberculosis was made at Chicago to Representative Martin B. Madden, chairman-of the house appropriations committee, who made a special trip from Washington, D. C., to attend a conference of'federal, state and cjty officials at the Illinois Commerce commission offices. r ^ "Uncle Joe" Cannon, venerable statesman. Is enjoying the best of health, members of his family said after the elghty-nlne-year-old man attended the funeral of a fellow Mason at Danville. * The total yield of corn In Illinois for 1925 Is estimated at 378,982,000 bushels, as against 203,600,000 bushels in 1924, according to both the Illinois and federal departments of agriculture. In a statement Issued at Springfield it was said that practically the entire crop was matured anji out/ of danger from frost by October 1. BURGESS FLASHLIGHTS 'Your'J-lashlight Th» Mi of root B--hHght or am ilmhBtfct, Oapanda noon th« elect rioal.chemtcal and ro»- ehanieal tOdoer of th« battery a [Ml MM. That's why yoa can always dapand opoq Burse-- Flashlights acid Batteries. They wtB give you strong white light when and*wbsre yon want it. and as lone as you want It. A* YomrDtmltr iAuroess Battery Compah* _' General Sale* OAcet CHICAGO \ Canadian Factories and Ofitcen "*" Niagara Falls and Winnipeg Bad habits are sometime* tltoearded • after they are worn «ut. To Have a Clear, Sweet 8ktn ^ Touch pimples, redness, roughness or Itching, if any, with Cuticura Ointment, then bathe with Cuticura Soap and hot water. Rinse, dry gently an4h dust on a little Cuticura Talcum te leave a fascinating fragrance on skin. Everywhere 25c each.--Advertisement. A stiff lower jaw Is sometimes just as useful as a stiff upper Up. E VANS HI RE, At Ckitagti* Most BtuH/U Smt EVANSTON The Evanshire In Evanston is closer to Chicago's business, shopping and amusement center than are many Chicago hotels.. Surface, elevated and steam transportation lines, a block distant, make last time toChicagoV "Loop*. Thus at the Evanshi re you can have the convenience of location of a Chicago hotel in the environment of Chicago's wealthiest and most beautiful suburb. 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