Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Lake Shore News (Wilmette, Illinois), 15 May 1912, 2, p. 1

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

Phone 58* _o__- .... p»». ^EVANSTON, ILLINOIS. WEDNESDAY, MAY 15, i?18^f!|^ FIVE CENTS B.McNie^City Fireman, ~Durwg4 Past Year and Half Build* f ing Tiny Motor Car.? WADE^FOrV H IS JC HILDR EN :very Part ofMiniature Car Was Made by Mr. McNierWho Mas ^Turned Down Utuy Offers &-S-JF0 r --ks-Pwehasei-^fe^-- Itv? For the past year and a half A. B. [McNiel, 1615 Sherman avenue, Evans- Iton, member of the fire l department, [put all hie spare a^nents working on la miniature automobile, and as a re- Isuit of his long labor the tiny ma- chine, an exact reproduction of an [up-to-date roadBfter, is completed. Finding that the minutes passed [slowly while sitting around Number McNiel thought how with a refusal, however, Mr. McNiel stating that if the car was worth that much to some other man's chil- dren-it was worth that to his. Some years ago, when motorcycles were first on the market, Mr. McNiel built one and had the distinction ot owning tnw^rsrs^ NrTrC^ArWIU? [one station, [pleased his young son and daughter [w^uld^jJtJhjy^Jtaja [With that thought he started a4*|Vas^1n use. [long and tedious task. As soon as his daily work around (the station was finished he could be found in one corner busily engaged in working on some part of the little lotor car. Because of the smallness If ovory part to be-usedâ€"it was Inu issible to buy anything and-each karate part had to be made.-â€"-â€" |. JV Long and Tedious Task. It was a long job but the fireman stuck by his work and after many days he found that everything had been made and the car was ready to be put together. The motorcycle en- gine^ with which the auto is equip- ped, is the only part of the car that was not made by Mr. McNiefc The assembling of the machine also took much _tlme but now^the only thing the little car lacks is the finish- ing coat of paint. Nothing was for- gotten in the building and it runs like-a~hlgfai-pricedtouring car.^_^ The car is equipped with a two and three quarter horse power motorcy- cle engine which furnishes more than enough power to make it hum along. The frame of the car is exactly five feet In length, while from the ground to the highest part of the little auto the distance is but three feet. From the outside of one of the two seats to the outside of the other* the dis- nce^ Is two^aa^gjMfczhalLieeL^== H Ar the engine "tar air-cooled;~an imitation radiator has been put on the front of the hood.â€"A^waUr^cap^ stands on top of the hood in the same manner It does on a large wa- ter cooled auto. -Back of the two seats a neat little gasoline tank holds plenty of fuel for the car. The -machine is fitted with twenty Inch- -fjjjjj bicycle tires and wheels. To make* the job complete a small top has beea made by Mr. McNiel. I ^^THIade 'Children Happy.J'#^5I Mr. McNiel's ten year old daughter and five year old son are the proud- est children in Evanston. The builder At the regular meeting of the New Trier Commercial association Monday night, in the Wilmette Exchange State bank, the members of the organiza- tion decided to make an effort to in- terest the business I men of Glencoe, Hubbard Woods and Winnetka in the association. i! • A committee will make a trip to the three villages tomorrow and will secure a hall in which a meetlnfr canr he heldZIomeHnight next week«jHTbe association plans to take in all the towns in the township, and from pres- ent* Indications the businW men in the places not in the body at the pres- ent time are eager for such an oppor- tunity. H'.' Hâ- ;'. "...H s:-P""M .â- â- '..;-â- -. ;. The progress made by the credit rating department was the chief topic for general discussion at Monday's meeting: George G. Foster of the Foster gaiage spoke to the association members on "Motor Trucks." In his talk he gave much data showing-how the3)ist=ztrucks had^^revolutionized lainlc-and-dflliY^OLjxejy^pla E. P. DUNSHEE AND .li â€"^ WIFE TO MOVE After living in Wilmette for marly^r, a quarter of a century and spending more than half that time as a village official, B. P. Dunshee itf to leave WiK mette andâ€"makeâ€"his- home in Jliclu igan. The poor health that Mrs. Dunshee has experienced for some .time prompted the well known man to buy a farm ^n-the-state across-the-Wker Mrs. Dunshee spent some weeks in the south in search of health, and thinking that the change to the fine climate in Miohigan^would beneflt_her^ Mr. Dunshee made the change. The departure of Mr. and Mrs. Dun- shee will cause much regret through^ out Wffi their friends are many, and although it is for Mrs. Dunshee's health the change is to be made, the loss of the couple will be keenly felt. CO-ED RECEIVES if PARIS SCHOLARSHIP Miss Gula Elma Gamble, 520 Davis street, Evanston, has been awarded hundred-dollar Paris Y. W. literary scholarship to the University of- Paris, one of the larg- est and best universities on the con- tinent: This seat of learning offers five As;i Miss Gamble came iol^nltoh five years ago from Muncie, Ind., to attend Northwestern^ fttnlver8ltyi|| For one oUthe auto wiU tfnrh his rtangnh"' f y*** *h<* was an Inmate^s^oBe^of how to run the car, the operation be- ing most simple. Here, however^a difficulty arises. The car TaTToo small for Mr. McNiel to ride in and both his children, according to the tomobile, unless accompanied by au adult. The fireman will try to get a special permit from Chief-pf Police Shaffer allowing the girl to drive the car. The owner does not know whether he should take out an auto- mobile or motorcycle license for the machine. He has geared it so that the car cannot travel faster than eight miles per hour, g^ â- -â- - â€" irAIready many offenrr liave "bewi each year three scholarships to Ettg- and. American~girls, two musicrf-; scholarships and one^ literary, and Miffs Qftrnhlft was electedâ€"ont^of a great number ofâ€"applicants sent to that institution. fmSM. ^M^Mm Program fortheArinual Meet- It iiig^oW I linois Mayors1 Asgff fsociation, to be Held in|?|f T^r Evanston, Completed. fH§ BIG DEMAND FOR ROOMS Supply of Rooms for Visiting Mayors Is Too Small and Many Will Have to Seek Living Quarters in H -^ Chicago During Session, -â€"U The plans tor the annual meeting of the Illinois Mayors' association, which will be held in Evanston May 28 and 20, have been completed and the pro- gram has been aranged for the two days' session. . -jirThe meetings of the association will be held in the JEvaristbn theater through the kindness of William Vance, manager, who has donated the use^of~the playhouse forrthe two days. The program that has been arranged will keep the_mayorjaJmsy throughout their -stay/ .;HH;. Mayor Paden, who is in charge of the entertainment of the visiting mayors, has secured^our of-thebest speakers in this section of the coun- try to address the meeting. Dr. Frank Billings, Chicago; William J. Hage- nahy-WisconslntJDejan Walter T. Sum- ner, Chicago, and Edward Bartow, state water-expert, have notified the |nayor that they will talk. : Not Enough Rooms, -rfn-trying^o^secure-aecommodations for the hundred or more visitors a great difficulty has been met with as there are not enough rooms to be found to take care of the mayors. At the Avenue House~only"one"room could be secured as was the case at the Greenwood Inn. A limited number of the visitors will be taken care of at -privateâ€"residences but the large ma- jority of the chief executives will have to seek accommodations in^Chicago. The Evanston Commercitl associa- tion has notified Mayor Paden that the rooms of the association will be open to the mayors at all times dur- ing their stay and a smoker will be given the visitors Tuesday evening, May 28. â-  ' ,. The Program Arranged. The following is the program: MAY 28. 9:30 a. m., Registration. ^iuTXJO^C^m^Address^of^w9tebmev the Hon. Joseph E. Paden, mayor of Evanston. Response and president's annual ad- dress, the Hon. E. N. Woodruff/mayor of Peoria, president of the associa- tion. v ' Appointment of committees and presentation ll:M a. We Do of resolutions. m^-Address, "What Shall WithTbur Epileptics?" Dr. Frank Billings, Chicago. Jt2i00 noon^jlddress, "Public Utili- ties 4mdâ€"Suggestions for-Theirâ€"Con- trol," Mr. William J. Hagenah of Wis- the college dormitories, but the fol- lowing year her mother came to EJv anston and has made a home" during the past four years. Miss Gam- ble will graduate from the college of liberal arts thia JuheZIaj^ she ej. pects to sail for Paris Aug. 10, where she will enter -the university in the fcr~her ^spection-of-Evanston^munieipal serv fall. ^The line ^ofT study the^young woman contemplates pursuing is in philosophyHand the languages. She Ts^mtmg^neTselflaortO be a teacher, TmTte1^belTworker Tn^^ the YTW. C. AT ^Men who complain of being over- worked must be^wrongrfor IT ther con8in. 1:00 p. m., Informal luncheon at the residence piLM%jmdâ€"Mj^^ames A, Pattenr 3:00 p. choosing place of meeting for follow- ing year and action upon resolutions. 2:30 p. m., General discussion* of problems involved in the government ot Illinois cities:* 'i'^i&%';;i^W&$$r£M 1. "Purification of water Supplies." Discussion led by Edward Ph. IX, director state water siiirvey.pl 2. "Municipal Markets.,,?;pr;f;pl^i ' â-  3.' "Legislative â-  Needs/'- ;iif|;;:^l|| ^FQuestions-and anew 6:00 p. m., Chicken pie o!»fef"if "They drive native birds from vlt Ift^H lages and from' homesteads. Though' |f|CS'â-  they are occasionally valuable as de-/';HH stroyers' of noxious insects, all things. v; 'H-, considered, they do far more harm -H than good. Practical methods of deal- â-  Barton, I ing with them include destruction .of ^^g Evanston. Country, club^p^;&-^^/v%;;.;::;^^ 8:00 p7Hoi., Attendance *t North" Shore Music Festival. (Complimen- tary tickets.) -â- u:---..^.â- *?:-:w-^ m UNCLE SAM FAVORS SPARROWS FOR Fit) nests, shooting, trapping ii»d:rpoison--i^| ing. Of these trapping .is' unquestion-. ably -the â-  best; English sparrows are |||§ lood^d^atnMTth^ir:"u8e^^ mended because of their nutritive ^^ value and as a means of reducing :theiF1oumbers.'rH?"r7r^M "^ililisiii In specifying methoJas of prepara- tion for the kitchen the bulletin gives the following directions for dressing the little culprits: s "Cut off the legs, the winga~at~the outer joint and neck close to the body; strip oft* the skin, beginnin _____ at the neck, make a cut through the whpn hnnad, hrntip.dr | body wall extending from the neck along the backbone till the ribs are severed, then around between the legs to the tail, and remove the vis ecera. Sparrows may be cooked by Sl:©fe "Eat sparrowa; buttered and served on toast, they are as fine as quail." This is the latest advice of Uncle Sam to help his nephews and nieces reduce the high cost of living. The department of agriculture has issued a comprehensive pamphlet on the English sparrow^condemning him as a harmful pest and concluding with a number of recipes of his pre- paration for the kitchen. Most of the pamphlet is devoted to demonstrating the harmfillness of the sparrow and telling how to kill them. "English sparrows," says the re- port, "are noisy, filthy and destruc- any one of the methods employed for reed bird and quail." H 13 :H:"Hlecture ;po8tPONED...;HH;H Because of the severe rain storm yesterday it was thought wise to postpone Prof. Edgar White Burrill's interpretative lecture on Mr. Israel Zangwill's "The Melting Pot," at the Evanston Congregational church. In- stead, Dr. McEHveen preached on "Being Filled^ with^ihe^^ulliiej|R„ pf God."-H^~H7n.................. m., Automobile ride and ice plants. 8:00 p. mT, Smoker and good fellow- ship meeting at the rooms of the^Ey^ anston Cdmmercial association. "kH ;.â- â€¢"'" â-  MAY 29. HI 7Zi;0iu1>ia7~m7,HAddTeaBV ilTheJWorkot the Chicago Vice Commission and Rec- ommendations for Control of Vice in Cities," Dean Walter T. Sumner^chalr- man orco^mTEli Comments: Presldeht~Abram-â- -â- W Harris of Northwestern univereity also a membeiuof the commission. â€"InformaK remarks by members on

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy