"(women an wdk from theit homo clad: over to the city buildingon {good Iolid Inlh. ~ - The in main] reported twenty ï¬re. during the your 1W1, ï¬ve of - The council moi promptly at 8:“ ' p. III. and tuna! out n late! busi- At 9:40 the curtain fell, the‘alder- men, city â€attorney,†reporters, etc†turning their atop: hoï¬ewud. The major made his appoint- ments. \I‘he mayor,_ Shields and Everett were made "the Board of Local Improvements. A recess of ten minutes Was taken, while the city clerk, Aldermen Greenslade. and Woodrufl‘ counted the votes and reported the successful candidates. The votes were as We published them three weeks ago. Ham pm and Alfred St. Peter were paid 04(1) each on their con- tract fat than building. Supt. Ing'nlla, of the watéi works, reported into: pumped for March 7,553,700 gallons, or a daily aver, age of 243,670 gallons. One pound of coal [)leng 171 pounds of water. : Four galv’aoized ironvvgvaete paper boxes, two for each 'side “of the ‘t,racks to put old envelopes, dun- nlog letters, patent mediclho circu- lars, etc†in, so as to keep the streets cle‘an. They Have them at Lake Forest and thst is a college town. The Higlwood "emu and Bloom m é'owo’t mince passed lone time ago was repealed. as it. had run up agaizipt a snag. _ POF’" folks. . The judges and élerke of ‘eléction were ordered paid $97 . for their servicés at the recent municipal elec- tion. ' .By a ‘rising vote 311 the alderm‘en tendered ‘a vote of “make to Fred Greenslade for his free, peineteking, patient and ' valuable services as aldermaniaet year; end'he deserves them in buildings, canning ttoul lqee of ehout 81, 500 worth of prop- erty, while there were ï¬fteen ï¬res of burning leevee when the department wee celled out. , 'A 81,5“) ï¬re insurance policy was mg on the now building. farmiwnating achOol â€children and at». :5 253% ï¬mémï¬u‘“ For a wonder there was no poti- tiou or lotto: a! request «king for tone stanza, melon- or impouiblo Two ordinance- were pan-ed for moat Iidbwdbâ€"ono in front 0! Peter Dooloy’o 06°- and lo“ and tin nun? from Swootlmd’u dun: n": Farm unï¬ninmdnmiiï¬ï¬ 7‘7! a...» .. lhour, but Mr. Woodmfl said “no, it mould take too long (61' the fp‘ooky thinpto gqt out of town,†and so it w ï¬xed at ten miles. .~ Smith was working at the top of a thirty foot pole, soldering a con- nection, and had ‘a pot of molten metal containing about three pounds and in some Way it was overturned, striking him at the Waist and run: ning down inside of hie clothing. The metal ran down his right leg to “hie'ehoe top, where it lodged. The flesh was badly burned all the way ‘v’downrand at his ankle was burned’ to the bone. ' He will he laid up for some time. 7 ‘ “in Te... as cents. Goo. 3'. Cum- mings. cg-l Those elegant bouquet.- which Aldermen Warren, Morton and Tut- ner found (on their desks were duly appreciated, ospecially by. others ing, near Winnetka, while at work on the Chicago Telephone opmpany ’a line Smith is amarried man and lives in the hquoo that was. formérlyxused as the'Highland Park hospital. for babieé and children I. «saw ing the council and bespoke tor his successor similar co‘urtesies fiom the mayor and aldermen. Thereouncil is _§:O_lj§y (to lose rFred mi hopeuhe will returq some day. BADLY BURNED. Wesley Smith, of Highland Park, was severely‘burned Monday morn: llghhdhieeiguendleflhr 'Blie'rldinndedeonthueoona it. lione- objeoted to paying 11;. Byeong 10} cent- for hero-one when the manhunt- ere selling it for 10 cent, but the council paid, though banner they will purebue of_the who wanted just one carnation, you know, (0: their button-hole. A. W. Fletcher,'John Rudolph, Chine. w. Kirk, John s. Bell, Alfred StvPeter, A. E. Dorsey and other prominent citizen’s were pres: ent Tuesday night to see the old council out-and the new one come in. Wd down m is miles an Aldonnln Shields, below he had been in his pleee thin! minutes, bed I project under way for a sewer sep- ‘tic' uni down on the like ehore to purify the sewage before it enters the lake. [A good move. Motherâ€"Yeo one package make two parts of bab§ medicine. See direc- Alderman Greensladé made a' very in {- nothing md children n TEE SHERIDAN. ROAD NEWS-LETTER. Sabbath school class won over the soldier boys at Fort Sheridan in a baseball game. The score was 17 to 12 in favor of the class. It 'was a happy surprise {ornithe boys, for it wss theirlï¬rst game of the season, whereas the soldiers have been play- for a number of weeks. Ray Phil. lips and Stanley' Thorn Were the battery for the class, and played an A No. 1 game. At one stage of the game the score stood l/O/tb Zin'fa'vor’ of the soldiers. but the young men of the $1885 braced up, and at the seventh inning tied the score, mak- ing the game 11, to 11. The gains mug #Efllayed, When the soldiers could only add one run to their‘ecoren'vhereas the “class mafl‘e six runs. The game was interesting and excitingâ€"each team working hard to wih. The teams will cross bats again soon. Such was the cry last Sunday afternoon; after ‘the View}, of the young man in new. Phnttiehl's ‘Mr. Hately in the Mr. Jones house on the Sheridan Road south; W'. T. Baker in his own summer home at the Exmoor cluhgroundef Az‘ Tracy- Lay in his ï¬ne home on Vine avenue; James L. Mead in the Theodore Schwarz home on Vige. avenue; 0. 11. Merritt in the Dr. Bergen cottage next on Park evenue; Mr. Jackson in Schuyler M. Coe’a home on St. Johns avenue; the J'acobsons are installed in the Hipwell home on Central. Some men keep the Sabbath be- cause they hava formed the habit of keeping everything that comes easy and doesn’t eoet anything. It is only the editor who is not even grasping enough to go to church. HURRAH FOR THE SABBATH res-a. Will puy â€(oint- por poun. lpply u Nun-Luna qfltce. Mid-nonhu- tï¬hw-bomitqh! Bhoworhthopddaupuddon mmdon‘nkodn. Gnathor'uwly-inotyâ€"thm. Mina-homwwhul She an um ham m". expu- Iow young it walls teal, ' Sines gunman got her bicycle She's [ï¬ned ten‘ pounds in wright; She'll be 3 annual“: Or mom a sure a Mo. She biz-1y mie- Mg the ground. And climb. up 00â€,. um, Elie hasn’t put. on bloat-oh yet. ‘ But. possibly III. will. WANTQPLâ€"Oottqq up for m? GRANDMA‘S IN THE SW1“. hoi__xueven,.i min: 1;ng an LATE ARRIVALS. -â€"Somcnille Joann]. ’g‘ownhip. Dunne-Bi m It lie-fly. In†“W * fled end tend deuce.- to undemocratic county ebnventiotdc be held in the Toin Bell. in “lo ï¬llet. of Liberty- rvifle. Thundey. Key 15, Iâ€). It 2 p. In. for the following purpocec: ‘ To elect nix delegttee to attend the douccntie cute cooventioh at Springï¬eld, June 17,1902. To elect twontj- mo debs-kn to attend the Eighth det mm eonvenï¬on when called. To elect twelve delegate. to “tend the Tenth diettiet acumen-icon! eon- The basis of representation in said democratic convention will be one delegnte- for each twentyï¬ve votes or major fraction thereof out for Bryan and Stevenson in 1900. Thin will giseeaoh township in )he county the following representation: ' To take steps !or the new!“ of a democratic county tight to be voted for Nomi»: (, 19M. Klee to perfect the organization of the county control committee. includ- ing the election of oï¬ocrl for web term as the convention, when u- sembled, may determine. twp-v0 nn’v- -n.~ The severaltownships are advised to hold their town caucus on or be: fore May 14, at their usual places for holding such meetings By order of Democratic County Central Committee, Hang! M, Cononx,‘ Chairman. Thursday’s Tribune had a half- tone and a brief resume of Mrs. B. A. Fessenden’ 5 came? as e club woman. It said she organized and had just been elected president of the Park Woman’s Club the fourth timekand also that the club under direction had been instrumental in “shaping the politics†'of'the city. 18 that not going a “leetle†tbo far? Whe’rerdo Messrs. Knox, Cobb sud Phillips et 31' come in at this rate? Did they not help “shape the polities of- the villageâ€? Perhsps. it use to resist this feminine shaping policy that the people rose en masse and turned down their esndidstes in s recent election. Don’ t at! too In in shaping polities, it' is s risky experi- WA“ CALL. Delegates.