Lake Shore News (Wilmette, Illinois), 4 Jul 1912, 1, p. 2

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IWPIWfl^f^^SSfflp!!^ w y% v, fri â-  i. Ii j jfcl'l» Hi *i$r& to be Taken Jo Rid orj^ of tMsor* flerly Joints. CLIMAX TO WILD SEASON ^United action by county officers to oust the numerous "blind pijrs" that exist along; the western border of Ev anaton Is expected as a result of the murderous attack upon Rgoczki We- , .Sicsy If 14 Ashland avenue, Evanston, *JSjr Julltfs Aliper, a section hand em ployed by the* Northwestern railway, Sunday afternoon, following a Quarrel â- : %'e men had in one of the notorious JWt*. Wesick is still under the care of * physician and It is doubtful whether or not he will recover. Five ugly razor wounds are on his bead. The gashes are deep and even tf he re- covers from the loss of blood which ne suffered there will still remain the danger of Mood poisoning. The razor, which Ms assailant weilded, was a fasty one and unless the wounds are Ifttperfy attended to blood poisoning |V liable to set in at any time. joints girl* remain .-^-^^ e^aight wtoiiwjrouj** nowe and tiptoe to their Yooms, their par- ents i% total ignorance of where they have been. ♦ Nearly all .of the proprietors have been arrested•<^t l|ast 6>c* #* &P&* sheriffs uj&e/lorierB;«&$$«* ^a»B ton Municipal assoeiationf|B« suoh a thing as a small fine? does %dt worry them. The revenue from the sale of their drinks is great aid fn a few wee^ca they make enough to pay many such fines. The rioting Sunday was the climax to a wild season of revelry and unless the sheriffs, interfere* tMs week the scenes of la* Sunday will be repeat- ed .Thfrsdav - ^ at the end of the week. "SEE AMERICA FIRST" IS LATEST SLOGAN .tf>- '^'â- V\$£ 'SiwSfl â- *': f*ooa Just "Returned From nia, #s <rf Work 8#ng Do^ejnThalfSt^ WILL CLEAN CHICAGO Thompioa Ijejii '^^Sh|toi»*p^« cyciopediaii, lie.;" issued â- v ""' A readjustment Of')0!&/wu!fa,^ small reference reading,'j?0ot^; » ^ $j*re room and the larfe asaeihhly room become* the general reading room, thug haying a; l^t adapted ft the purpose.- -~~~ -'-'VV^.------- -t-t..1^ The public is always welcome to, the use of the Ctfirrett library,. Bun- day school workers and Christian* generally will tod it a great utore-ffj house of materials for their special needs. The doors ara'bpen during tfie summer from 9 to 12 a- m. and from 2 to in. m.# except Saturdays. .- ; . Running .Wide Open. ^During the past two months the lawless joints have been running • wide open. The proprietors apparent- «- • ly fee! immune from arrest as they have made no pretense of secrecy whatsoever in dispensing their beer and other intoxicating liquors. All kinds of drinks are sold at all hours Of the day and night, the bartender* paying no heed as to who the cus- tomer may be. Only one thing is de- manded, and that is the money. One of the worst features connect- ed with the existence of these joints ts the open games of chance which are connected with them. All forms of gambling is tolerated right in the dens. Here small boys, still in their 4eens, take their weekly pittances, and in a few minutes on Saturdays and Sundays squander it without one chance is a hundred of being success- , ffl at the game which they play. • . •<• - Havet Become Bold. Led on by their immunity from ar- rest, the owners have become more brazen eaeh day and they have now so fitted their joints that not only jnen ami boys may patronize them, but young women and girls of tender ages have been'Been frequenting the places. .. Qlrls Remain Late. - Here they remain throughout the ^afternoon and evening; sipping beer and other drinks and listening to the cheap music furnished by electric ndcpendence One of the greaUet advertising and promotion schem 5s for boosting Amer- ican scenery an'i passenger traffic that has ever beer projected was launched yesterday 'n the temporary organiza- tion of a 'Se« America, ^rat" asso- ciation. Passenger traffic officers of Chicago terminal rail and Rteamship lines and resident representatives of other rail and steamship lines met in the room of the Trans-Continental Passenger association in the transportation building, and E. L. Bevington, secre- tary of the Transcontinental Passen- ger association, was appointed chair- man of the meeting. After a general discus*"m, th° fol lowing was adopted: "Recommended, that aD organiza- tion be formed, to be known as the 'See America First Association'; that the membership shall consist of all carriers, both rail and water, cham- bers of commerce, boards of trade, civic organizations, hotels and hotel organizations, and others interested in the 'See America First' idea, and that the object shall be the" propaga- tion of the slogan, 'See America First.'" The chair appointed the following temporary committee or board of managers: W. J. <Black, passenger traffic manager, Santa Fe system; J. W. Daly, passenger traffic manager. New York Central lines; J. Francis, general passenger agent, Chicago, Burlington & Quincy railroad; C. A. Cairns, general passenger and ticket agent, Chicago & , Northwestern Tail- road; S. G. Hatch, passenger traffic manage]?, Illinois Central railroad; W. J. Cannon, assistant general passen- ger agent, Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul railway; F; H. Tristram, assist- ant general passenger agent, "Vyabash railroad; C. Wt Pitts, general agent, passenger department, Great Northern railway. "The greatest good that has come from the enfranchisement of women in California is to the women them- selves in the sense of dignity, useful- ness and responsibility for the com- munity's- welfare," said Miss Helen Toddr former factory inspector *>f Illi- nois and leader in the suffrage move* ment of the great west. She returned to Chicago Friday from California, where she organised the "civic center movement" and led the campaign for female suffrage. ^She is stopping at the Congress hotel for a few days before returning to the ccapt. REVEALS FOOTBALL ROMANCE & »?• Toui^ day of financial inde- pendence depends upon your ability to spend wisely that .wiiktnTTOtt earn. - - Kcbnbmy domes from It lir a rirtao in t1 prices and cofitly A che^kjaccount [time, givj & . . . accuracy, .honesty and your houge- roflt from the use of a check account wit^ the City •\ National Bank. mM.- & A romance that began on the foot- ball practice field, of Northwestern uni- versity has culminated in the marriage of Miss Mabel Perrin to John Alfred Manley at the'borne of tha bride's ioi- cle, Mr. Charles Johnson, Luveriae, Minn. During the fall of 1910, while Manley was captain of the Purple team, Miss Perrin was one of a hun- dred young women who daily marched to the practice field to witness the Mauley's daehing play Captivated Miss Perrin. The' captain also took bote and be&an to look for her at each practice. A sorority dance furnished an occasion for a meeting. The en- gagement was announced two weeks before Mr. Manley was graduated last June. Mrs. Manley is a member of the Kappa Kappa Gamma sorority. Her husband is a member of the Beta Theta Pi fraternity. The couple will be at home after Aug. 1 at 527 Ked- rie street, fivanston. To Study Chicago Parka ' "I went to California," she said Fri- day evening, "to help secure woman's suffrage, and was appointed by Mayor •Rolph of. San Francisco to secure all possible data from Chicago regarding its park and playgrounds systems, and that is why I am In Chicago now. "We began the work for female sat* frage on the coast by organizing:civic centers" in every city and village in the state. At these we held meetings, with prominent men and women as lecturers, not on suffrage, alone, but on city beautiful and other civic im- provement lines, and oar work pros- pered from the start, and^ through It California granted to women the right to vote. . ^ _ 'â- <• v,: . ' "We overcama abnc^t every possible objection. -We weYe called radical, were deemed not safer and it was said that our votes would destroy oar personal liberty and we would neglect our homes. All of these we overcame and have shown tha people that the right to vote has bettered their women and. communities^ Strike* Vital Spot. These civic centers are the founda- tion of progress and will do more than anything in securing suffrage, for' When you touch the whole community for its whole good you strike a vital spot that soon yields. "The women of California since their enfranchisement have stopped the ravages of the liquor traffic, stopped the white slave traffic, secured many prison reforms, and started re- creation oenters throughout the state that will build up communities and make better men and women. ~ "The progressive movement has come to stay on the Pacific coast Women are studying, thinking and helping everywhere and In every way in the work of cleaning California, The civic^centers are doing the work, and with civic centers established and maintained in a progressive manner Chicago -and other cities and states can be cleaned as thoroughly as Cali- fornia has and will be cleaned.** And Stand* there's flsftand Cake. - - far ttogry S»als. ArtitttWtththolLoUiPsPin Aad tofVt the Tune we sing, : Dousjb, re. ml. fe, eol, bt see? ;^ WaeirRollingO^tthcrPaiigM : ,; " JOKL9 awMi?*e â- $b4M:lJt04 v. ~-k« ;,iSjit»it . ~sW <-fi*>fc - l^ii^gt^h tm, left out! a: No. 1A Pocket MAKE IMPROVEMENTS AT GARRETT LIBRARY py ^J^PL^Jt â-  J/; lfcJaC-*:*,^fiL^P;. 'â€"â-  VMS" RUBBISH IN ALLEY; ARRESTED. . Christ Wichman, 1520 Washington street, Evahston, was arrested' Frl day on complaint of AUey Inspactor Rich- ard Lindsay. Wichman had placed rub- bish In the alle> hi the rear of his -^0mti Garrett's library is to become of large importance to general readers. Under tha guidance of Rev. S.. G. Ayres, whose genius made possible the greatest theological library in Ameri- ca, scientific methods are being intro- duced. June 1, with four assistants, he begun the task of classify log and recataloguing more that 25,000 vol- umes, to be finished about Sept, 1. Nearly 5,00ft new yojanaeB have toon accessioned since the work began. Under the new arrangement/the easy avallabilityof all books will be a pleas- ant surprise. . i-- 'â- 'â- "-...'â- "â- .."â- ' -â€"' The policy of the school is to secure Mefy «ieoio#oaUwoiil 'MiWi&'M wwn as isBued/and do3»€loas |i« oo^ Slips easily o r d i i et. Snai . an%sjk focus, the pict e. Snap|^hia it's olAed again, pictures 2a i4^ inobes. tee *12.0<> • AH the new goods from the Kodak City - Eastman N. C. Pflnu (the dependable kind) are ^in oar stock^Prompt developing and printing. 'am â- ^« sps^l*'* :hve mm "t?«&iz?ii *0m ce m nu weimesg; 708 Main St. Ti â- #(i fllatance jptortely •t^tFfc&fc'&ZM CHj $l$££iFrkr&$£ ^Wr^i. Wt* "TT" „^S5. Every operati where iteboul eratpr's hand# Yo1 reach all ove#the the line-spaJl and oa lever is enjprated hands frd ithe op-. |iave to â- a!teele» ^e yfekiug^ posit) un L. C. SI fK«»«4itt The Camera W. E/HOKTON Evaft* toa. Ill, Ml Befa-inS* xr at every pefatM$to Wof modern hiiAntmi Iwojfcsai^ Ifcc-T/tlaxfa^ _ Jmlth & Epos* in the lead; le that's ten j iting machine I , , the Book ahd C. SMITH &BM I23inrttiwttart«fi., (RITtH and 60/ ill Ph>oe.l075 H^B -it. mm â- Â»*# ± »*mm mm \an â-  >i jaw. but the into th rPOBs Watt •tber °i#k-.4ti tooaalS factor; anon*" * naiBtake. X| points in hufaiowl-; •^•ppl'^ §%!»?-

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