l’ubï¬uhed cvety m Mac a “Kb laud Park. “1.. and Whm "L. by!†Nun-Letter 8 “(II .55 C ' :1th .eumt Am... Prom? Block. Entered 18:1):va a lithium Park “second. ‘ m. ' . Adamant nun I“. known on W at on.» mm. konttwortl Kenilworth in pmbab. ‘ Ev“ an " l: tinting n‘mie‘take in W.†way that has built to it: borders on Both sides and sought in vain per: mission 10pm through its earned precincts. No part .11 the earth is too sacred any more for the legiti- mate uses of the general public. The exclusiveness by which ,Dr. ’Francila long held Paraguay locked against . the rest of the world, as if that @0111? ‘ try werehis private and personal possession. and which for centuries shut out the rest of the world from docking at his cyclometer when he ._ gets home. iéfiiéin'g (angina ii) {111 necomodation with the electric high ' ' Considering the recklessness with which many of the riders make the hill; hetween Winnetka and High- land Park, the number of serious accidents issurprisingly small. The various.“ warning." 'oi'gna placed at the top of hillé appear to be regard- ed in the light cidevic'eo for improvâ€" ing the landscape. Yet on the whole, the hicyclera are a Very orderly cou- tingent and usually show a disposi- tien to comply with the regulations ‘ . â€of the ditferent North Shore teams. And the municipalities, on'their part Cmna, has had to 8"†way beforwhave come to no longer regard the more enlightened conceptions of the relations of communities? to one 1111‘ other and of the rights of the world-. wide public. ‘The communities north of Kenilworth want a cotnpeting‘line to Chicago; they have a natural right to it' that Kenilworth isbbound in‘good fellowship and in morals to respect. No municipality been right to refuse such a natural, reasonable, necessary use of its territory for the transit of a large section of the pub- lic as is now asked of Kenilworth. ' .It 13 well underflood that it is not a question of detail, of reasonablecom- pollution, of any adjustment ol.°dif- ~ lerencee’ in matters of thin kindâ€"~but ‘is a'determination that Kenilworth 1 as in days of yore. _ no longer occurs. ,‘veatmont: - wheelmen as an unmitigated nuisance The wholesale ï¬ning of wheelmen forpetty Offenses ‘ The city authori- _ ties have learned to regard the ad 'vertiaing value of the bicycle proces- sion that daily windle its way in and out among our towne. Each wheel- man is an eye-witness to the won- derful advantageeof the North Shore as a residence district. It is Safe to any that some of cor most anhetnn» tial residents were ï¬rst imbued with y, a desire to own a home on the lake plum. while making a bicycle trip over Shendan Road. By all means the wheelmen should betyrented with liberality It will be 11 paying in- North Shore Publishing Co. A Courier of North sumo imam. Tmmnwpm, MBA WAN, MAOâ€. TERMS 8|... PER YEAR. SATURDAY JUNE 17. OFFIL’U: Wham-ch. THE SHERIDAN ROAD NEWSâ€"LETTER. 1mm: permit any such highway to pan through its territory. Bad! a petition is not worthy of an enlight- ened community, owing rho oqmity we all one to one another to a pub- 1k rclnï¬oo of this ï¬nd. W In! The Vï¬eriden road I. the hu lost none of its He’d-u ‘ popularity as 3 Wing wane thie'year, to judge (tom the long prooeeeion of bicycle!!! that come oath-om Chicago «my Sunday as well enduring the week. On I ï¬ne afternoon every variety of wheelma‘n may he teen from the him and proper individual, who site bolt nprightgand tries to look digni fled‘whiie p‘edniing along‘et the rate of four miles an hour, to the vari- colored searcher who flashes by with chin Its-etched out over the handle bare and legs going “mind like an electrician. The letter. young man ï¬nds the‘ehief delight of the trip in - looking at' his cyciometer when he _ gets home. mm The time In approach- OI lug, on the North in. Pint. Shore at least, when £50?th Ieboola trill end the school year by the flute! June. Cannot the variant school boards in this diltrict Image matters 30 the year I†wlllseo this change that is do. ï¬nd I), ï¬lmed everyone. in effect in Ill 111015850"! school†A teacher of“, â€erect experience in school , mind one o! the most competent public school instructors 0n the ‘N065 Shore, laid this week to a re mutive o! the Nun-Ln": that run. her belief. um “ the public whoolnehould ell clone by June Ist. for no work is done in J um; to amount ‘0 â€l‘hiPz' b! “*9 Pupil“ Probably nine out of every ten permâ€" teachers included â€" are opposed to the idea of compelling the ehildren to attend school in the hot weather that invariably comes during June If it is true that the pupils (lo-not make ’shtiefaetory ad- vaneement in their studies in this month, what beneï¬tedothey receive? When Riley wrote Oh! The old wlmmtn' hole! In the long. lizy days. ‘ When the hum~drum of school made so many run away. he did not tell the whole truth auto flue cause of the “run aways.†The‘ old "swimmiu’ halo†and the old red, school hoinse are fast becoming relici of by- -gone days. How can the cus~ tom of keeping school In June also be ralegated to the things that have been. Perhaps the school ohildren by a little organized action can came this reform to be accomplished. Would it notybe well for V them to make the attempt? ’ I . The Glencoe mosquito map, as far‘. as returns have been received breaks the record. The oldest inhabitant has nothing to say In the language of A’ifre‘d Austin, or some other “poet iariat: †' The ardent South's warm breath mm «Inlet w hungry life Them. bloody,- mindo (i hate Inflock of this shore: W cali- euch summer evening. with hit heniywhettai knife. Andean: from each. reluctant. in. tribute There in a want of orange! blossom in the Glencoe air. It_oeems to be waitedfrom the west side. of our'gm.