Evanston |(^ii ^se% Felr lowship trl^l^itarn Medical Schoolftr Re- search Work. CRITICISES MEDICAL MEN Honor Tells of Physicians' Mopeiiss- ntss in Treating His Own and Other Familiesâ€"Says There is Great Room for Learning. James *."W^A hag nade "another gift to Northwestern university. This time it is a fellowship fund for re- search work in tuberculosis and in- fectious diseases. The fellowship has been donated to the Northwestern Medical School. This announcement was made Mon- day night by pean Arthur R. Edwards, who introduced the board of. trade operator at the faculty banquet to the cms* of 1912 in the Hotel La Salle. The latter's action, according to his owii admission, is the direct outgrowth of the recent death of his brother and son, both of whom suf- fered from the white plague. Room for Learning. In a speech at the banquet, Mr. patten urged the necessity f>l medical men proclaiming the school <Jrom which they Were graduated, as an evidence of efficiency. In turn he de- plored the creation of quasi-doctors, sent out by night schools. He de- clared also that doctors still had a great deal to learn. "The time will come," he said, when a physician will be asked, what school are you from?' It has been said that doctors know, nothing and sometimes I almost believe it. My t»on suffered many weeks, although the best physicians attended him. 'me prominent physician from the ....*h Medical college, I believe, vis- ited my boy thirty-nine times and then came to me and made the con- tusion, 'Mr. Patten, we know the germs the boy is suffering from, but we are powerless to destroy them.' Th- brother of Dr. John Scott, one of ,om own fellows, died after a few weeks' suffering. One doctor said he had indigestion and gave him castor uii Another said it was appendicitis aua gave him calomel, and the poor iuai. died. Not Worthy of^Name. inhere arc act many medical hools in America worthy of that name. Gentlemen, you yet have to learn a world of things. You must seek that knowledge and make Northwestern one of the best medical schools in America. Blow your own horn." President Harris approved Mr. itttten'8 suggestions and lamented the fact that there was a dearth of capable men In the United States to do research work. The largest class in the history of the Girton school received diplomas on Thursday afternoon at the Congre- gational church where the commence- ment exercises were held. The fol- lowing were rewarded: Ruth Barbara Jeffrie, Dorcas Orme Hbge. Jeanette O. Clark, Louise Otis, Isabel Burr Case, Emily Crarie Russel, Amy Larrowe, Laura I. Nichols, Vir- ginia Hopkins Sullivan, Rhoda Hecht, Dorothy Lee Bell, Eliazbeth Beckler, Ruth Marie Johanson, Marion Louise Smith, Harriet Chapin. Marie Louise Cams, Wilna Soverhill, Abigail Von Schlegell, Grace Martin, Julie Forrejft, Marie Sammons, Beatrice Ward King, Ethel Walker, Helen Ball, Florence Rehtmeyer, Eloise Taylor. After the exercises a reception was held in honor of the seniors and their guests at Knollslea, The clos- ing event of the school year was the senior dance at the Winnetka Women's club on Thursday evening. Of interest to those interested in the growth and welfare of the schoo is the fact that plans are now being drawn for a large gymnasium and swimming pool, which will be built in the near future. / Monday, June 3, the following pro- gram was given by students of the school: Piano Recital By Dorothy Bell, assisted by Wilna Soverhill, violinist, and Kathryne Green, soprano. Sonate, Op. 26.............Beethoven Andante con variazioni Scherzo Marcia Funebre Rondo Legacies...............Mildred Hill Birth of Morn.......... .......Leoni Noble Knights ............Meyerbeer Spinning Song ................Bohm March Grotesque ............Binding Schlumerlied ..............Schumann Valse Polonaise ........i...........Chopin Romance, from the Concerto in A minor ................Wieniawski Viennese Caprice ...........Kriesler Rondo C: priccioso .....Mendelssohn it evening the solons awarded the contract for the repairing of the broken intake pipe to Joseph G. Fal- con. ';â- •â- % . i. '!'â- ':,: The apparatus Is being rigged up for the summer by Mr. Falcon's men, and Work on fixing the pipe broken by icebergs will be started within a few days. The contract amounts to Mayor Paden appointed Rev. George Craig owart, John W. Thompson and Henry J. Wallingford to succeed themselves as members of the library board. The council confirmed the ap- pointments. George S. Moore was appointed as the master plumber member of the plumbers' board of examiners, while Edwin A. Jamieson was appointed as the journeyman plumber member. The council also confirmed these ap- pointments. - The aldermen confirmed Mayor Paden's appointment of Edward J. Mc Evoy as special policeman, to be sta- tioned at Calvary cemetery. The bond of Edwin J. Foster as a house-mover was approved by the solons. Mrs, Carter H. ••â- »** ,--,„................., must EiyeiTi Be Careful in Choosing the Material Then Teaift fhent WH'm Things to*:.W&iM$ii^ 'TMn|e^^;«^ â- mtimm Anna Carlson, maid, Whose kind mistress |a^.||wr^ every afternoon and moat evenings "off." providedher with ^Wi m WINNETKA GRADUATION THIS AFTERNOON This afternoon the graduating class of the Horace Mann school in Win- netka will receive their diplomas. There will be no class exercises this year. Mr. Samuel S. Greeley, presi- dent of the Winnetka Library board, will address the class. The following will receive diplomas: Clarence Affeldt, Isabell Carey, Edith Clark, Jirah Cole, Bertha Deily, Warner Ebner, Elisabeth Greely, Marian Hall, Landon Hoyt, Amy McDonald, Priseilla. Mcllvaine, Mary Meyer, George McKinney, Mary Elizabeth Nethercott, Charles Shea- han, EUa Trachsell, Louise Trapp, Guilford Windes. P. A. Buck, vice-president of the New Trier Commercial association, was born December 7, 1877* to Colo, Iowa. The following year his parents moved onto a farm at Franklin Grove, 111., where he remained until he moved to Evanston in 1892. Before enter- ing the grocery business he was for eighteen months connected with the Deerlng Printing establishment. Pre- vious to entering the employ of A. S. Van Deusen he was associated with several Evanston grocers. In 1899 he entered the employ of Mr. Van Deusen at the store in Evanston. When the Wilmette store was opened in 1905 he became the manager, a position he has since held. Mr. Buck was married July 25, 1907, to Miss Carrie L. Baker. He is a member of the Methodist church and the Royal Arcanum. He resides at 1215 Lake avenue, Wil- mette. CLENCOE MAN WEDS WILMETTE CIRL MANY TO CRADUATE IN WILMETTE SCHOOLS The following is a list of those who will be graduated from the eighth grades in Wilmette this evening at Jones hall. Dr. Wilson of the Presby- terian church will give the address of the evening. The graduates: Clark Haskins, Aura Whitley, Wil- liam Kleinpell, Marion McOmber, Lau- rence Schildgen, Rhea Miller, Vincent Marshall, Mary Singleton, Helen Os- good, Helen Nettleman, Elene Trent, Russell Johnson; Catharine Beaumont, Margaret Wheelock, Genevieve Grubb, Wllke Kleinpell, Emil Zaremba, Henry Boesch, Isabelle Wright, Lucille Mets- ler, Arthur Karst, Claudia Verhalen, Margaret Brady, Leon Williams, Wil- liam Mann, Albert Scbeidenhelm, Flor- ence Esentrot, Winifred Sheldon, Carl Doose, Charles Hastings, Russell D'Arcy, Charles Truax, Everett Car- roll, Bertram Arnold, Frank Psenicka, Miner Coburn, Hester Bulmyre, La- zette Hoth, Mary Latham, Adaline Hodgkins, Helen Cady, Hardy Wee- don, Katharyn Parsons, Ted Reynolds, Mary Drury, Ruth Van Ness, Rogers Weld, Clara Snydacher, Jane Stafford, Wendell Clark, Ruth Specht, Bruce Brown, Lyman Dunbar. farewe^|;l|i best of books and took her an bile riding at frequent intervals, wrote some disconsolate notes and disappeared. It is sup- posed she drowned herself in Michigan. , There is an apparent paradox. But now comes Mrs. Carter H. Harrison, famed as the most successful man- ager of servants in and around Chi- cago to brush away all cobwebs frott».^||^. r the "servant problem," to;: tum.:.thsA^^^ ;.,â- : problem inside out, and deny ^a#" t^g such a problem really exists. Mrs. Harrison has authority Uiifpe9^^Mg is shown clearly enough by the; fact ^^f' that the two maids she now employs7;f||j:..:; have been with her for seventeen .^^ms years, and seem determined to Ire- r^ main for seventeen more. I§| Created Her Servants. â- '\ ;|| "Any problem ceases to be a prob- , ^ lem,'! says Mrs. Harrison, "when it V| has been solved. That Is why, so :T|| far as I am personally concerned, : htjf there is no such thing as a servant | problem. Once there was, but I >g| solved it." â- ":;tf| Mrs. Harrison spoke with the man- fW ; ;« ner of one certain of what she saM»^jf-|| There was none of the hesitancy aj|d BUGGY RIDE THROUGH WILMETTE EXPENSIVE WILMETTE PEOPLE TO GIVE ENTERTAINMENT A buggy ride of three blocks in Wilmette cost H. A. Elklns of Chi- cago $7 Saturday night He was ar- rested by Officer Samuel Hotn for driving without a light. Elkins has no one to blame but him- self. He was seen in front of the village hall by Officer Hoth, wbo gave him three matches and told him to light the lantern on the-rig. instead of lighting the lantern he threw the matches away and droVe up tb^ street The policeman chased him tfiree blocks before hatching htm. He was &• taken before Police M^istrate John Final arrangements have been made -for the entertainment to be given in the Evanston theater on June 29 under the direction of Mr. G. J. Bichl and Mr. E. F. Kelley, for the benefit of St. Francis Xavier's church. The musical program will be under the direction of Mr. O. G. Corus, one of Wilmette's best musi- cians. The vaudeville part of the entertainment will be composed of some of Wilmette's best amateur tal- ent and several professional acts. One of the many features will be the drawing for a 1912 five-passenger touring car. The winner will be an- nounced from the stage on the even- ing of the performance. This enter- tainment promises to be one of the The marriage of Miss Olive Louise Nelson, daughter of Mr. and Mrs. John E. Nelson, 1028 Forest avenue, and Mr. Sidney Kimball Bennett of Glencoe took place on Friday even- ing, May 31, at the home of the bride. Rev. Roy E. Bowers of the Congrega- tional church read the marriage serv- ice. Miss Susan Wfttson of Wilmette attended the bride as maid of honor, and Mr. Reuben Bennett of Ravens- wood, a cousin of the groom served as best man. Little Beatrice Ben- nett acted as flower girl. Mr. and Mrs. Bennett, after motor- ing in Wisconsin, will return to Glen- coe, where they have a bungalow ready for them to begin housekeep- ing. WILMETTE LODCE TO HOLD ANNUAL PICNIC Arrangements for the third annual picnic for the benefit of the Royal Arcanum Hospital Bed Fund associa- tion to be held at Riverview picnic grove on Saturday, June 29, were completed Saturday evening last. Tha bed fund association has now been in existence nine years, during which time it has been the means of provid- ing many hundreds of needy members of the Illinois councils of the Royal Arcanum with proper hospital treat- ment, or in certain cases with home nursing. Mr. Wilford C. SbuTtleff of Lake avenue was.elected treasurer of the association and is chairman of the arrangements committee. KENILWORTH STREETS NOW BEING OILED Not to be outdone by the other vil- lages along the north shore, Kenil- worth is having some of Its streets oiled. By this method the dust nuis- ance is entirely done away with. The men have been warJdng/on the streets since the n*st of the^ weuK and the total absence of dust on the streets already'treated J* very *e*to*- WINNETKA PEOPLE HELP NAVINIA PARK The committee of Winnetka people named by the Ravinia Park club, an organisation to help maintain the park during the summer, has already start- ed work in interesting Winnetkans in the proposition. The officers of the Winnetka com- mittee are as follows: Mrs. Nathaniel H. Blatchford, chairman; Mrs. Charles G. Bolt*. viee^bjOri*^; Mrs. Freder- nasiness of manner with which nine ^ wealthy women out^of ten approach the subject of domestic servants. "I created my servants," said Mrs. Harrison. "At least I took the raw material and worked it up into the finished product And that is just what any woman must do if she wants to solve the problem for her- self. "Of course you can't solve the prob- lem if you make a mistake at the start. The first thing to do is to get the right kind of raw material That is a matter in which there is real, work for the woman who is seeking servants. She must do that care- fully. It may be a difficult task, but it is not impossible. "When It has been done the em- ployer has only herself to blame if she has trouble. You get a girl who has the making of a good housemaid and then you develop her. Ton teach her what her duties are and what are her privileges. Very soon she becomes an efficient and Intelligent servant. "Of course, you must treat her well. Kindness is useful when It Is ap- plied to good material. There isn't much use of bothering with bad ma- terial, t Servants Don't Abuse Privileges. "I have little patience with women who are always complaining about their servants. *Oh, but we wouldn't complain if we had servants like yours,' one of them said to me the other day. But she was dodging the question. How did I get mine? Any woman can have servants just as good as mine if she will take the trouble. "My maids have privileges, but no excess of them. I expect as' much from my setTiBit* « «*T woman, does from hew.; la* iy^t «no» than' most of themâ€"maybe iV* *+ m ^:-mm.'^ik;\J^i*^::W^&l£tiL± A^,i^:a^|gfcgsfcjis