Lake Shore News (Wilmette, Illinois), 20 Mar 1913, p. 8

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E«?I--':B Milium iiMinnm"......'"........." IWantAdDepartm ! TEV LaKe Shore Ne I TELEPHONES. EVANSTGN 555 ♦HiiiiiMM f ;«r:tw*'llt^ ,( :*.â€"•'* ' , Ami fssAMmit i.sWteeV D â- Â»'! HELP WANTED WANTED â€" COMPETENT ( one day each week. Wflmette 1180. WANTBD^JOMPBTBNT/MAID FOR p-$ general houaWwkr/Werencea. 616 jfe-.- Lake-av.. WllmeWPhone 123. ltp OF WANTBD--CQMPETBNT^RL FOB general Wfoework; gmaTN|amlly; no cUlvtii; good wage*. 124'PSBeat njienv., Phone Wllniette 1284 ,WE MtfjtE A SPECIALTY nurajC, governesses to care for chil Amf; alao coinMnlonsffor invalids North Shore "^ 1616 Benson-aj 882^ SITUATIONS WANTED CURTAtfCS WASHED, COLORED Hai|r^niended^Jlralrc,aBB work: i^called for and%jwrfrAd. M. R. Me- tritis, 1620 Dar^-avyTel. 1339. 6-tf Ifff Stir ANTED â€" RESIDENT WORK. shampoo massage, acalp treatment; •Jao^Aransforma|!|ns,^lpYfB and â- witches made #») *de/ Phone 4115. Mrs. William TO Oakav.. Evanston. He ITED â€" LAUNDRY WORK T i each weak. P. O. Box 107, Hub- bard^ood*. / »P POSITION ByYOVSQ old aa jgirdener or p. Box/f07, Hubbard ^ _________ltp COLORED MAN rj;ajlres:;fJace fr^man If fi ^| hooaeman s€4 â-  woods. Kl-s RIED, DB- private family aa 1 do other work; wife if desired. Address 1l44 Wilmette ave., Wilmette, Ill. J. S. Bridgforth. It FBR SALE-HOUSES """ ifj^«Al#^::iMOD^N two-ap^Hfittnt balldlt rTTAGE, ON Winter, 807 REMOVING TO EAST-WILL SEEL efceeHent kitchen cool stove^rwrfg1- erator^otheH wringer, gardenJlose, bedsteadttud Em y< lopadlla Britan- nlea (ninthN«ijHon), lit low prices. Call 1233 Hlll-Bt.. Wilmette, or tele- phone WUnietto ioi»>v. *tp FOR SALEâ€"MODERN NSW BIX- room house; good location ;Slarms reasonable. Alfred Olsen, 571 iff Wlnnetka. lttf BOARD AND ROOM self. O&JBva It's marveloue what you can do with electricity-. The girl was seated at the ptsno, and with both hands playing "Moonlight Bay." end the Tel-Electric _., â€" wa*. doing theNrorkof the other plan- WINNETKAr J4I- i ^ tst, and doing itsuperblywell. We lire In the Electric Age. We are close to the secrete of Infinityâ€" the secrets of life, of existence, of power! We have not quite arrived, but we can manipulate electricity, transmit- ting power to the piano by conscious Intelligence. The Tel-Electric Piano- player plays automatically by the pushing of a little lever. But "auto- matic" isn't the word, because the Tel* Electric plays the piece as a great ar- tist would play it^ as I have heard Paderewski play it,; It la no mechani- cal effect; no tin-pan amash, dash, straight off the reel, it Is played with reeling, with modulation. It Is being "interpreted." • • But if you wish to give the piece more accent, simply press another lit- tle lever, and you soften, subdue or emphasise at will. Slower, faster, al- ways and forever there la an instant response. You accelerate, you retard, you pause. • • There Is no squeaking of the bel- lows; no strenuous pumping and push- ing; no getting red in the face; no awkward, ungainly positionâ€"an atti- tude that distracts the listeners from the sweet melody of the music to the athletic industry of the performer. Well do I remember our old-time Ma- son * Hamlin-organ on the farm, and how the girls used to work it with their dainty tootsies. It was all right In its day. We were laborers, hewers of wood and drawers of water, and It was well that as we produced music brute force should play a big pari In the demonstration. * • The pedals, the bellows, the pumps, the gyrations of feet, legs and shouldersâ€"ail that belongs to a day that Is past. It was like that grand- father of the bicycleâ€"two wheels with a seat between that you bestrode, and ASBURY, 1&64 ASBURY^V., Pen suite with private bath and le rooui«/lexJWJent cuisine; lies, room, influtalAboard, $15 to $25 per week.'3TOrsV/F. C. Dlefen- dorf, Phone 2392. lf-tf MISCELLANEOUS FIRE INSURANCEâ€"ROYAKJNSUR- ance Company of Llvejpfol, largest Are Innuran^ company in the world. Insur^fowellljtos. household Kouft. rents; -^ests*aW Charles 'yt wightmwf a Co., resident agents. Phone 203. • ltc MONEV TO LOAN. vaneton tona^wWhvjysgre prop- ty. 1580 Sh»rn»an-av Electricity and Music and ironed out. Best of all, it aft** wears out. The children can not get hold of it and destroy it The damp does not affect it. When you get a piece of Tel-Electric musk, it is yours for a lifetime. The whole Tel-Electrlc idea Is found- ed on the very latest adaptations of electric and musical science. We H«e» in the Electric Age. We are laying hold on the secrets of Infinity. We are perceiving the unseen. We are utilising this great and unknown ele- ment of electricityâ€"the very secret of the gods on High Olympus. In its presence we are reverential. We' deign It a privilege to avail ourselves of each invention which the cunning genius of man has wrought. It is the Age of Electricity. What the next step will be no man can say. But while we are waiting for It, let us enjoy-^he sweet- est musle of the Masters as played by the great Virtuosi, modified by our own taste, with the help of the Tel- Electric. If perchance you are not ac- quainted with: this exquisite device, then breathe a prayer of gratitude to me for having called your attention to it, and write for literature which will gladly be sent gratis. Address THE TEL-ELBCTRIC COMPANY, 299 Fifth Avenue, New York. (An Editorial by Elbert Hubbard.) "What is electricity?" asked the col- lege professor. One hand went up, "All right. Mr. Jones.' said the pro- •*** *• aâ„¢"* *»* yonr tees as feasor, -you will please tell us what'*0* «** * the rate of six miles an GLENCOE MYSTIC WORKERS MEET. The Glencoe Mystic Workers of the World will hold their regular monthly business meeting Tuesday evening, March 25. After the business meeting an open meeting will be held to which friends are invited. Cards will be played, after which refreshments will he served. < REAL ESTATE br pjrfn e lmprov â- â€¢*M&'wre a is , investment in ch< liilsWiwaVes rented and Owner, Theo. 188 Bvanston. T NET proved Bv- side, alwa/s apartments. ,nii. * Phone 4tf you lectrlclty Is." * • Mr. Jones arose, stuttered, stam- mered, coughed and said, "Ah-" or...... now, Professor, 1 did know, hut really I have forgotten." And the professor replied, "What a pity that the only man who ever lived who knew what electricity Is has forgotten." Thomas A. Edison has recently said,' "Electricity is not power; electricity •1b a method for transporting power." * * Ernst Haeckel has said, "There is only one thing in the world, and that la, energy- Energy takes a myriad million forms, and the method of trans- mission from one form to another, when we finally understand It, will he discovered to be electric." "Wheh we know the secret of elec- tricity, we will know the secret of life," says Doctor Steinmets. . "Electricity occupies the twilight rone between the spiritual and the ma- terial," says Lord Kelvin. "God Is the Great Electrician; we are born, cry, dance, live, play, work, toll, enjoy, su£ tier, love," die, as He touchesrtfce elec- tric keys." I have made a great discovery. I find that I can play the piano with the aid of electricity. Not only that, but I can sit in my den, surrounded by my books, papers, manuscripts, and I can jplay the Steinway in the adjoin- ing room. I have a device tint plays: automatically, by the touching of a key with my finger-tips. I can stop BIX convent* up- Wilmette. £*f+tbe^laWi playing by the swme And then if I want to modulate the music, giving it my own expressionâ€" that Is, my own interpretationâ€"I manipulate a few little buttons, and behold, the piano responds Instantly to my thought, if i desire § certain effect, I can produce it at^sviU, reclin- ing, the time being, In my Morris chair. To enjoy music, you. must not be too close to it. The man who plays In a band does not hear the symphonjr. He is a laborer, earning hie daily bread by able-bodied effort. 1 am familiar with all sorts of play- er-pianos and piano-players, and from them I have received much fair. Through their help and benefit, I have gotten acquainted, in degree, with the work of the great masters. I am grate- ful for these clever inventions where- by I can play a piano by pedaling h> dustriousiy with both feet And these things have led me up to a pofhf where I have made this wonderful db> ^overy. It came to me witfrlTiniaY thrill of surprise and delightr-ihat I could attach a little electric device (which rests now on my table, within reach of mf finger-tips) to the Stein- way In the Roycroft mosi^room. More than that, we have a doss» pfsnos around the Koycroft Shop, and swreral of them have been fitted up so e* to attach the Tel-Electric Pleyess I car- ry the TelBlaoWc Player arMtnd from esse room to - another, or s^rasa the/ street, or ep to the chattel areenad the hiw j corner, i^ th«e 1 pky f«th»gWs and boys, or they ptey Jv^gjsa^ sn> â- Xe4s>eW';J^sips)IV':sEafg^- '& ffMr^v; ^(^saw hour. 'Then came the high-wheel bicycle that you pedaled and gained thereby a fine development of calf. Then came the motorcycle. Now we have the au- tomobile, six cylinders, with electric starter. Then we have the luxurious noiseless Electric. And so it is that the Tel-Electric Piano-Player is here to stay. It fills a want, .It cornea in answer t*:*jgrejit desire, and no one who owns a Tel- Electric Plano-Player can ever think thereafter of putting his feet under a piano, and agitating by human muscle a bellows In order to produce sweet sounds. The piano traces a pedigree to the hunter's bow, which some savage, in long centuries agone, snapped, and be- hold, the string sang! And other men twanged their bows, and behold, no two strings gave off exactly the same sound. And lol*at evening by the campfire, some savage genius put two strings, or three on a bow, and strummed them with his fingers. And then the harp was madeâ€"the harp with which David soothed the soul of Saul. And then somebody put a harp In a box and arranged keys that you struck with yonr fingers, and these keys, on being struck, liberated little hammers that ^Bew up and hit the strings of the harp; and they called the Instrument a "Harpsichord." And then we 1wt the Clavichord. Then ; and then the grand piano, which is only an immense harp, played with a mechanical de- vice. Then we have the upright piano. Then the pneumatic player-piano, played by bellows attachment, a sort of cross between the pipeorgan and the piano. And now, behold the mar- velous and miraculous Tel-Blectrlc The word "tol" means "front a dis- tance." The words "telegraph," "tele- Phbne" and "telepathy*' trace to the same common root And so with the aid of the Tel-Elec- tric Plano-Player you play from a dis- tance, if desired; or right by the. piano' if you prefer; or in front of It, if you .wfsh.'" The Tel-Electric is a oeantlful little apparatus, enclosed in a mahogany box, so amaU, so dainty, so responsive, so exquisite, and yet so strong, so dur- able, so simple, so effective, that you can not but remove your hat to revss> ence at the thought of the brain of a man who could conceive such a power- ful and effective instrument and put tt Into such small snaee. and such axnui- site forfflv ^^^^M^MM^Mi'V'1', The t^Efe<!tric can be attached to any piano. It does not interfere in the alightest degree with the faandrfaayms; of flee' jfffflsit' T'tii T*fTt'T*rr* Iffifw^ fust the hanie' fe» Ismd^sllymsi at yen *&m^'f^ ^ .:;v â-  v^^'fv^v^ TaemuetcfertheTelsleBtitolson a thU brass roll-« roll as thin aapa- pw, and yet vastly better than It nevw-JiMB exnn^nlsd em tht tt does net get won and tnv perfeet, and gtre oC an."' NEW TRIER NOTES. Mr. Chas. A. Hyatt, at present In- structor of swimming at the Univer- sity of Wisconsin, has been secured for New Trier. He will commence bis duties. April 1, giving bis entire time for the twelve months of the year to New Trier. He Is a grad- uate of Wisconsin and is now work- ing for hls» M.A. He has had experi- ence teaching in the west park sys- tem in Chicago. •The senior play, "Quality Street" is being prepared. It will be given in the new auditorium about April 16, PHONE 3898-2009 robmt â- lavlock, manaocn SSmBSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSS ALL THIS WEEK VIOL* ALLEN'S I**f BBJNATIONAL SUCCESS IVCNIR f»|«OTO :has. pcyton TO-NIOHT Week of March 24th The Gamblers â- mmmmmmmmfmmmmsmm'mm, :# '\&- '^iS&* 'mi IM£; :Mm 'lip! ffi,. Sfflll JAMES R SMART Citizens' Candidate for MAYOR For a Clean, Efficient, Business-like Administration. Your Support Solicited Jpr BUj^DER C< odeling &Cei 431 Sherma> TftMBMt 1187 RfOTOR oufwCastinf venue gvasMeo, llllaolt 1235 CMoSo Avenue I letgr OR PANC X F OR MS Easter Lilies, Easter El Jonquils, Tulj-fl\ Nestl or f» mfl^ot etil Get Your Orders in E ARlVJa** for Qatf Easter Special Woman's Exchange Ice Cream Dep't PHONE 988 .m^m^mmBmi2\^AViS^ STREET W6Ctewxn,I>yeairi Pneat Central 5319 me? m XTnnsnal Opporttuiity An eslaMJshsia 'â- 4%lfaitk- 'â-  fMffJtt^f^ {t&batiki iwfer«««ea. Show room m loop, lfaklng !\ri vr> Ty infliis Bjpsjntaiiisi, ttn rhnjifrmn tunt wherevwr ctv«sed peci^ IrrejPw an frets; many wefl klgs*vu8er» alsewhere. Prodacts^etifor roaapront 70%v (on eojssr To > Preterit fftoek^ aefmsg^aa to vottsg- and sharing in extra dividends moo. Aidreaw K, Dw en» atraiiete* Daily Hew* •«•â-  -r I'liliiu.ilW and 253 Upper Sets shelf |o not fit you that tY ONxToljienssvMrpiates that ^fort and si^lfacrion. ^^. [THE ONLY THp*€TWE DO. of cominc to ffftome aficrnoon, MATINEE, You will go home ink about. You will have some news to tell your friends and neighbors. You will have seen a dental office and dentists that you can rith pleasure, instead of fear and pain. We want you ui see some of our porcelain work. It will be a revelation to you.' We also want you to meet the jottiest dentist in the profession. lying around in old bureau drawers or on, right here in Evanston, just because tl so that they can be worn, we can replace can be used wi THIS IS* just try the novel! instead of going to j with something to Dentists

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