Lake Shore News (Wilmette, Illinois), 19 Sep 1912, p. 10

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"***'â- ' .i* 10 THE LAKE SHORE NEWS, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1912. THE LAKE SHORE NEWS SUCCESS >» TO THE EVANSTON NEWS PUBLISHED EVERY THURSDAY :DY: THE BOWMAN PUBLISHING COMPANY 926 D«vl» St., Evaneton. Telephones 686 and 586. WILMETTE OFFICE • N©. 6 Electric Place. * Telephone No. 602. ALBERT H. BOWMAN, Managing Editor ARTHUR ROBERTS, Aaaociata Editor JAMES LEONARD LEE, City Editor »»> SUBSCRIPTION PRICE, $1.00 A TEAR. All matter for publication in any week's issue should reach our office not later than noon on Monday. «nt«red aa second-class matter June 28, 1911. at the postoffice at Brans- ton, Illinois, under the Act of March S. 1879. THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 19, 1912. NOV Is the Time to Buy Rdbl Bargains in High Grade \ / Used Machines. ^ Due to the tremendous densm Packard cars, a number of cars have been plajSjPeJith prices ranging fipfP »P Our li# includ^p I I passenger 17 passenKCKJmousine Six. 5 pasAnger , 7 passenger 5 passenger passenger ll. 7 passe** 5 passenger [Arrow. 7 passenger »bile, 7 passenger ______b Duryea, 5 passenger It will pay you to call at our salesroom and inspect some of these machines. If you cannot call, a postal will bring de- scriptive list.__________ Packard Motor Gar Co. of Chicago 2371 MICHIGAN AVE. NEWS VUA ,f Tel. NT AD8 BRING RE8ULTS A VOICE FROM THE PAST AND A WARNING "As the cool and deliberate sense of the community ought in all governments, and actually will in all free governments, ultimately prevail over the views of its rul- ers, so there are particular moments in public affairs when the people, stimulated by some irregular passion, or misled by the artful misrepresentations of interested men, may call for measures which they themselves will afterwards be the most ready to lament and condemn. In these critical moments, how salutary will be the inter- ference of some temperate and respectable body of citi-, ^ens to suspend the blow meditated by the people against themselves, until reason, justice and truth can regain their authority over the public mind?" If Alexander Hamilton, the author of the above lines, could re- turn amongst us today and listen for a while to the Walter Clyde Jones, the Charles Merriams, the Funks, and, among the lesser fry, the Nightengales, Graves and the EngelHards; if he could hear their preachments in favor of the initiative, the referendum, the recall of judges and of decisions, how comforted he would be. If he could go into the national era and hear one of the characteristic Roosevelt speeches denouncing all that the existing government stands for, and promising instant relief from real or fancied grievances as a reward for following him; if he could follow Johnson in one of his swings around the circle and hear his stalwart condemnation of all who do not agree with him and his master, how gratified he would be. Comforted and gratified because of the knowledge that our fathers, of whom he was one, did not fail to heed his advice and his warning to hedge the constitution about with checks and counters which will ultimately protect us against ourselves, when in times like ihe present, *'stimulated by some irregular passion, or misled by the artful mis- representations of artful men," men call for measures which "they themselves will afterward be the most ready to lament and condemn." ♦ *♦♦+'- COLORING THE NEWS FOR THE COLONEL We have had something to say about Sg fanner in which the Chicago Tribune is given to coloring the uews, both of a general char- acter and editorial, to suit the personal fishes of the publishers of the paper. We might have ineluofed the Chicago Evening Post in the same category, for we find in that valuable paper, which, t>y the way, is owned by our esteemed fellow citizen, Mr. J. C- Shaffer* a very elear illustration of the same kind of journalism. Each week en<i the Post has been giving what it evidently considers a.fair resume of the political happenings of the week in an editorial entitled "The Week in the Campaign," and last Saturday was no ex- ception to the rule, except for the fact that down towards the end of a rather over-long article, in a paragraph dealing with the recent nomination of Mr. Oscar Straus as the Progressive candidate for gov- ernor of New York state, there occurs a slip of the pen which may al- most be considered a naive plea of guilty to our charge of coloring the news a bright $|o-Roosevelt pink. The paragraph in the Post reads: "In this New York situation lies the most inspiriting of the many hopeful signs that the week has brought forth for the Progressives. The nomination of Oscar Straus for the new party governorJia§ had an astound- ing effect. The New York Evening Post, hostile to Roosevelt to the last gasp, has welcomed Straus with -' open arms. The World in a "Declaration of Indepen- _ dence" has promised not to support any man named by T Tammany, and in its news columns has given «very in- ^ " __"<Ucation of eventually swinging to Straus/' Now Teadragaih the last part of that last sentence, "and in its news columns has given every indication of ultimately swinging to Straus.*' Tell us, if you can, how any fair newspaper whose news columns;ftoirestiy depict facts as they are, could show "in its news Mumns1' indications of eventually swinging anywhere? If the es- teemed Post has eyes so keen for seeing such indications of "even- tually swinging, "is it not fair to assume that they have been trained '-to look for just such traits by an inborn habit of coloring their own lteWÂ¥tories to suit the editorial policy of the puT^catibhT Telephone 993-J Wilmstte MISS MfTlLELMER ...tteajafttr arfiano... Reference 1603 Lak IEBLING Wilmctte. 111. â-ºâ™¦#♦♦ ♦ ^Telephone Evanstofe 3638 / 3°o"lNTEREST ON SAVINGS 3C/ *#â- Â» th Shore Trust Company TE BANK CAPITAL. $100,000 \L 506 Davis St. LBfc^ S Oturopecialty ite from n Lake Makes loans on improved North Rogers Park to Highland Tark, county. ^-a^*\ \ttr Q Issues Certificate#BfT^pos.it for noVless t|an six months in i......iwwWy Mirâ€"A â€"wsr^^^JJjhiilfrL four percent interest j *&00^^^^ 4 Offers for invesMQl-fffst mortgages an improved real estate, netting trTMffvestor five and oneJjalf percent, in sums of $500 and upward $end for list. OFFICERS AND DIRECTORS J Fred McGuire. President qharles A. Wi«htman, Vice-President Ira J. Geer, Counsel R. C. Keller Arthur W Varcoe, Partner _______,-------------------------------------------------------iâ€"~> 1.in: it*---------; : : ! " BanKing Roetms Central Avenue and Sheridan Read Highland »«rk, HUn** AR10VB W. VKBCOB, Ca»M«r ».-•«.-.<• Shore Sanitarium Specialty if the Socnyjjil Treatment of Rh4w*?sm Wa Also Tm^lrv^i aAt^tomaeh Caaea. 223? SheimeWlve. Evanston, 111. Telephone Evanaton 281S______^^ RGAINS IN Victor VWma OUTFITS Victress XCaMtllMafjfeB R^PCaMMl, Mly $30 DlT'/'IWIV'li Sherman & Dempster D&lsltJSfft 9 St. :: Fvanston, III. Shop Phone 176 TH &JION Expressing ly and prompt- ibles for rent. EVANSTON Bookkeeping Typewriting Of ice Wok ArilhrnetitJ Pen ho pe' riReVnshlp (th\ndl jt ' an4tKvening Begin any lime Evanston Business College 634 DAVIS ST. CONTINENTAL AND COMMER NATIONAL BANK OF CHICAGO Statement of Condition at Close of Bus Wednesday, September 4, 1°12 RESOURCES _____the causes of t^SssSro1 correctly and at reaafpatjp pri ^tion AULTY EYE CpNDITIONS he, eye dis- vision. etc examination iroper correc- 1 fit glasses Time Loans...........\.....................$93^71,644.20 Demand Loans..........v............. ..... 2*948,661.41 Bonds, Securities, etc......................... /5,994,914.77 $134,515,220.38 U. S. Bonds to Secure Circulation. Real Estate..................... Overdrafts....................... Cash and Due from Banks. Capital............. Surplus............ Undivided Profits â€" Reserved for Taxes . Circulation.......... \ Individual Deposits Banks... IR. E. P. MONtyftN, Neurologist, 2d Floor 619 jAviS ST. EVANSTON 8,703,062.50 4,758.80 5,731.12 82,518,434.77 $225,747,207.57 $ 21,500,000.00 8,000,000.00 1,107,949.70 189,638.76 8,603,597.50 $ £1,393,849.23 104,952,172.38 186,346,021^1 *~ $225,747^2 07.57 OFFICERS SORGE M. REYNOLDS. President ..,,.. RALPH VAN VECHTJN, Vice President HARVEY C. VERNON. Ass t Ca i er ALEX. ROBERTSON/Vice President GEO. B.SMITH, Ass t Caahier HERMAN WALDECjt Vice President WILBER HiTTBte A*« t Casr- ~r ?OHNC CRAFT. j£e President H. ERSKINE[ SMI^. A«'t Caf JAMES R CHAPMAN. Vice President JOHN R. WASHBURN. Ass t C « WE T. BRUCKNfR. Vice President WILSON W. LAMPERT. Ass t WM G. SCHROBiDER, Vice President DAN NORMAN, Asst ^aanier NATHANIEL RAOSCH. Cashier FRANK L. SHEPARD.Vudltoi EDWARD S. LACEY. Chairman ol Advisory Committee 'ier hier j. ogden Armour ALEXANDER F. BANKS JOHN C.SlACK charlhb t. boynton e. j. bjtffington w. j. jehalmers alfrJd cowles C. CRAFT EDWARD A. CUDAHY IT. J. DUNHAM A.£T. EARLING ECKHART ,. H. GARY Francis a. hardy TKL 1573 MAPLE All EAWTOI, ILL DIRECTORS frank hibbard edward hines william v. kelley edward s. lacby . richard c. lake robert t. lincoln EAMES MacVBAGH W. H. MDQEL ROBERTV h. M'BLWEE SAMUEL M'HOBBRTS DARIUS MILi-WR JOY MORTON A. H. MULLIKEN W. I. -OSBORNE H. F. PERKINS UDS T. Â¥. PHILLIP^ E. A. POTTER _ WILLIAM H. REV GEORGE M. RE\fi. I*. RIPLEY ALEX. ROBERTS^ 'EDWARD P. R^;*L JAMES W. STEVE Vr JOSEPH T. TALBKK CHARLES H. THC â-  N RALPH VAN VEC*«TW CHARLES H.WEA\BR F. E. WETERHAl- >* BHLTON H. WIL^N Subscribe for the Lake Shore NeW •*V~73!trafe!~ J&MiafiSi ^fe^##^'^ilfM-fe# r^:: b:%>--:? h i^ai*,y h^i-iaaSssfe. "i-A ^^^^!^&££^

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