Lake Shore News (Wilmette, Illinois), 8 Jan 1914, p. 6

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Pawn of a Tomorrow" Is ly Different from Other iy$ Given This Season at Playhouse. ^ IDtDLY ENTERTAINING Players. " . ,■'. I '.* .Harry. Lv Mlnturn IttSBr; ttolt.v^.^A.-C. LV4»-8^*e Oliver Holt, his nephew..... Jeau Ciareriuuii • Chas.^D. Brown vllng Btirford.James%. Morton t^aee:.".............J. Hurley Itlj-.;•.>>■..j-...Upward Ewald ^iMByVVv .>.v'.-;.Bdwar*'-B**it .......Jean Clarehdoh ;,.'.'.':. .dale Sattcrlee _ iv.>Vv./..v.^^ Wilson :f;,,ir>./..Jape»'O. Mortoa .CbSs; D. Brown ...Cecil Alberta .......J. Holden ......Nelle Redd IM^vvv^^i.. Blllee Leicester ||»efiwireT^^?7^MiOt«»sell ........Florence Guise ,,.,,,;. .Blllee Leicester rc.-r.rrv^Bicbie Russell .'.....Alice Armstrong Sssnss. .accepted trowmtiP Plan He Decided Upon Other Architects May Be Adopted for Development. "The Improvement of the Park Sys- tem of the District of Columbia" Is the title of an illustrated document just issued by the United States sen- ate, a copy of which was received Mon- day by the Evahston Commercial as- sociation. The document Is an abridg- ment of the original report of the Senate Park commission, showing the commission's recbmnm elaborate park system for the national capital, .the. steps . already taken to carry out the plan • and the part re- maining to be accomplished, to make the American capital the foremost in point of beauty in-tho worlqV 8HQRgyEVy8> Wffl^PAY. JANUARY8.1»1» Dr. R. H. Gault of Evanston, Tells of Important Contribu- tions of Scientific Nature JoCriinlnolagKffeld. ^ MANY EXPERIMENTS TRIED The Illustrations are full page, half- tone engravings depicting, the plans for the capital and conditions, as they now exist. A series of the views show the great Lincoln memorial which population it would not compare very favorably with Paris as to park area; and it is to be remembered, first, that l^I^Wbrary in Sir Oliver HoltvhrafcBigtoB Ir^rowtBf ▼err^apidiy w}th the growth of the nation in^num. London house. $^t--';U%Appie .Blossom Court In ISast End of London. ^ • Act; III--Olad's Garret In the Lon- ;d^':;SJtims.";'■'>'-': ii^Aofc iV~-Young Oliver Holt's Apart- f||^ltt;5„r; ■'■'■■ :■':.■■■■-•'---- ---■ ■■ \pM*~?Kbk Present. Locale--Lon- :|j^^^glandV.•'.■ ^ .'■■'• • ^niof a^Tenwrrow^ia esv different from anything rSJeefc- has before, offered the people of Evans- tbn^dlfferent but most decidedly lh- !,i|r1«i^^;:.:eitrt^nina^v.; ,,;> ,]-.' ;.; !U ^«W.«» P?PM!«r.___„_. ., Thje broad popularity TlWhlcb, the aiUior.^.r.thf play* Mrs. Frances Hodgson Burnett, has achieved in the pagerpublic^mshesV- 'perhaps»_iLrebi> '■ffeatflftSsa:'ffewyUnnecessary In ajre? fievf d* t&e|(j»)iy^^ have mltaed reading;?Tbe Dawn of a ^^orrow^fl^d^aye-intereBted in the attractions: at Our .theater, we give a prlef resume of the play. ^'-■^e-r|aim|\wrtaitt on the first act discovers the secretary of Sir Oliver Holt In the library of his employer. S^t|i"tfce entrance of Powell, a servant of many years, one la acquainted with Sevlll condition of health from which Sir'Oliver 1b suffering, of the pleasur- able anxiety with which the nephew, young Oliv&rfi$itophe^asrestate ittlllf QHver, views the steady decline i^'i^TJlrBt of kin, and of the Heinp- ftStfl flit1rlj^" "'Kl"t* ""«""hrtV«--in the ' Ii'I'7£. -i~ Ui-»I^*r . fM.« jnnna»11at «nn Ttt Specialists upon the disorder by which fh Oliver has been atiauked, his hor- jor of the alow, stealthy, but steady fnroads of the dlBCaso and its certain end, hi* determination to forestall that end and the preparation for a galf-lnfllcted death, round out tho tirst get and proparc the way for Glad and Iff philosophy of cheer and faith. .:>'• Wests MfjthJ^idsnfa will shortly be erected, in Washington and for. which congress. appropriated O.bW at .its last session. -' -i Tie millions of citizens :«fith# United States have a right to expect "the very best teat, Is to be had" at their seat of government, according to tho commission's report. . f "It hi;.tni^.-saia'rin^-'r^rt;:^tfiait the resident population of Washington at the present time is much smaller than the population of such capitals as London and Paris, or such Ameri- can cities as New York and Boston, Goringt Under size and of somewhat with which Its park area is compared but even in proportion to its present bers and prosperity and, second, that its parks, like its public buildings, are not to be considered merely In refer- ence to Its resident population, but in relation tolike ■q^lBBsV of cltlssnf from far and near who come to Wash- ington expecting, and having a right to expect, that here, at the *eat <m government, they shall fltfd not mere- ly what to considered "good enough" in their workaday home cities, where ^ ' , m- at|ft fflftMifflfl* sincraTV ttitlast ■4fiJM& force be spent on commercial strug gles,i but Qe very nest that la to be h*|.";^i >: .! ? «* i* The park: commlsslott was com- ^f^^^f^^Tmrmo^r famoUB American artists in their 'several linear Augustus Saint Gaudens. New York; Daniel H Burnham. Evanston; Charles F.McKlm, Ne*i lYork, and line. Mass* Mr. Olmsted Is the sole surviving member of tho original commission which gavo to the coun- try the elaborate plan for Its capital's development. Friends ofVEvanston Official Assert He Has Earned Title by His Rulings. I Born in Apple Blossom court, the ft ry depths of the slums of the Bast Ibid of London, Glad has spent the 'f&sg Of her life. Taken to theTiospi- tal after a street accident, she encoun- ters • woman who brings to her the gospel of Christianity, which Glad has frtfced to a philosophy of "arskln'" lor 4he things one wants very much. |if the trouble in which she is Blunged W thej^acejf^JosV_of _ *he Hempstead murder made against paaily. Glad; is brought to an almost frenzied trial of the efficacy of the Htr|C^*» testing its working ahility in #0, attompt'-'-to save her "pal." How &-ttfjieit work and, incidentally, also *W&»* jinaterial change In Sir Oliver, who has been a.witness to the strug- «e* jhy giving him something etee to -thinV about, Is the story of the last three acts of the play, a Story inwhich everybody, young or old, will be In- &rmi&?-^-^r~z± :,:r--^r-.T" Players Perform Welt \ By Robert H. GSult (Associate Professor of Psychology Northwestern University; Managing editor Journal of Criminal Law and Orimin61egy.> y ■'.■"■ The year 1913 has not been lacking In positive contribution ota scientlflo nature in the field of criffiis^sgy. There, for instance, Is, .the maSalve work of Dr. Goring. "The English vlct;" a close analypfa «f S.000 con- victs In the English prisons, with re- spect to their physical and mental Wj$ dition, and social status. The l«resj ligation covered a period of ten yeaj* It is the most tboroughgoing negative reply that wc have to the Lombroslao theory that there is a criminal type distinguished by physical and mental characteristics. • Convicts are., says lower general intelligence than the normal population on tho Sneh characteristics, however, are not essential and we have no JustlQcation tor entertaining tho suspicion that In this month the soeslon will be fort maLand In ita early stages I win sur. render the gavel to my successor, whose duty, rather than mine, it will be to address the public on the pros- pects anil hopes of the association. ., % ■ ^Sfrvad One Year. I have served a3 president for one brief year, folldwing in that office men of snch prominence and} ability asJIr.jD. D. Macpherson and Mayor James R. Smart and those others whA ayjMtfsUjteceasd^^kem^-^n^^at^e^ any one is, by his physical makeup at any rate, "signed and sealed to-4«H^ deed of shame." There Is no occasion therefore for the sentimental reflec- tion, "Poor feilow. it could not have been otherwise." On the other hand it lends encouragement to the supporter of probation, parole, indeterminate sentence, and other methods by which we .seek to adapt the delinquent tc normal society. y" '.'._". Adopt System of the system of adult convict parolt by Which a prisoner* on certain eon, dltIons, may be released from confine ment under the oversight of a parch elBeerTTthe sy«tem'XfitTl^hltTon--:hi Which first offenders especially may: tinder certain circumstances, enjoy the privilege of suspended sentence; and the system of indeterminate sen.; sYederi(^" Law blmited, Jr.. Brook- [ tence^y-whteh- one^fottnd"g«tltynor crime may be committed to prison toi an indeterminate term, the minimum and maximum number of years being prescribed. Under such a plan the ex act time of the prisoner's discharge It Accompanying tho^oswnent wasTrfa matter to be decided by the conduct letter from A. 0. Mosss, chairman of the Special Park Commission commit- tee of the Washington Board of Trade requesting the assistance of the Ev- anston Commercial association In urg- ing upon congress^the importance of further execution of the,plans pro- posediby thecommhwioh. etc.. of the prisoner himself. Durini the year Maine, Oregon and Nevadt have adopted these systems wholly 01 In part and the principle involved u now applied in practically every state in the Union, Parole has usually beei denied to life prisoners. During th< year, however, .New_ Jersey, JB&nflsyl vania, Texas and Nevada have Includ ed them in |he operation of the law "The Golden Rule Justice" Is the sobriquet which has been given Jus- tice Harry M. Bartlett of Evanston by a few of his friends, who assert that during his term It will prove true. As an example of the golden rule policy, his friends point to a decision he gave Wednesday, when he settled a case against a dog owner who was arrested for non-payment of dog tax, in an unique manner. L^ M, Hayesr 1907 Darrow' avenue, was tbe dog owner arrested. After hearing the testimony of three police- men who had attempted to-collect the dog tax from Hayes, Justice Bartlett fined the defendant^ and costs. Then he entered this unusual order: "Pine remitted upon payment of costs. Jus- tice to take $2.25 out of costs and pur- chase dog tax license for defendant" The costs amounted to $3.25. Deduct Ihg ^he-cost of the dag tax, Justice Bartlett had a lone dollar left for his fee. At a bano^^giyeir m~a~Clflcago lio- R.DUTH! pr nltirlw President i6f EvanstoKSom- mercial Association Tells of Work Done by Cr^ni- zrtlonin19l3. r HltfEir Et0OO ^UEiRtt$ 1»0f(E^fTOHp^^ has * By Jaraes R. Outhie. ') ;'■ The *.. editor of The Wjys asked me to say a few wowte m # |ard to the Evanston Commercial as- sociation. In replying I find my self in a peculiar position. Inasmuch as | have presided at ari the regnlSr nttet> Ings of the association, save one, as Its prealdehtt On the last fhdrsa^w learned many things which I esteem to be of great value to me. and I hope that the administration, consist- ing of all the directors, ofilcers and chairmen of the committees, who have acted with me during the twelve months just past, have achieved some- thing worth while, not only to the as- sociation, but to the entire city* '■-" If I were asked Just what the main abject of the Commercial association is, I should say, to promote good feel tog and cc-operation, not only among the members of the organization, but between the association and all other organizations of whatsoever nature gin Bfanston.;---------^---------- ' Helped Flood Sufferers. It would be unseemly fsr ma to. , undertake to point to any ssseclflr achievement of ray own as preslderil 3f the Commercial association durinp 1918; but I cannot refrain from calling the attention of the public to the won ierful spontaneity with which th>. lirectora of the association and the association itself, to a man, responded last spring to the pitiable condition brought about by the terrific floods In Ohio, at which time $500, appropriated by the Evanston Commercial associa tion, was the first sum of money made tvaitabre To the sufferers, noTWtth standing the fact that millions wen ater raised by other organisations of a similar nature' and with a similai jplrlt throughout the whole United States. This $500 w„as only a small mrt of what the Commercial associa 'ion did during the weeks7 Immediate following that great-catastrophe The work of the players at the %-Uei recently, when Justice Bartlett and Van inatori is exceptionally good in "The Dawn Iti'a] Tomorrow." Miss Redd, as Glad, Is ever present In the three acts and plays her rdle, with a spirit which Won for her last night and must throughout theweekr-thospprecii^on applause of her audience. Kr. Slyke, as ^ir Oliver Holt^ also does unusually fine work in this week's play and bfsparjt is not-m easy one. The length of the cast makes it necesssry for some members of the company to^ play dupllcato igfi^ei^a^^ey-^l^seo>at=aAejDfc Selves most ct^ifal)Iy^Sfrth^frJ^ era! characters.^----- » --- Oorottiy Clark to Bfturn. week the management will "Little l*«l PaunUcjroy/* ] Next -present was named as campaign manager for Louis Hatley, 1528 Dewey avenue, for- mer alderman from the Fifth ward, who w ill ■ be a ■ candidate . for county commissioner at the next primary election, he was introduced as "The Golden; Rule Justice from Evanston." ^Justice Bartlett^0jaauct«rM^2l,r hls^home"in^Ay«rs-placer--Slnce~quail- fylhg for the office, lie has hoard sev- eral police l cases end hns given uh- usual decisions In . almost every in- stance. provided they have served a minimum of fifteen years. Honor System Is Used. The "Honor System" of dealing wltl convicts working on the roads am farms, etc., which attracted attentloi in Vermont, Oregon, and Colorado,,hat received more general adoption wltl gratifying results and we have the ex ample of prisoners a.% Great Meadows N. J., who were formerly dangerous characters at Sing Sing, working alone at remote points on the farm, and traveling alone by rail from one placi of working to another. In Pennsylvania Very recently pris oners have been given employment on the construction of a new prison in Center county and transported thithet and back again to the old peniten tiarles without chains and even with ont an ever present armed guard. It Illinois, too, we are beginning to wort prisoners outside upon a farm. In no previous year has there been so mucl. attention given to farm ishor for con victs as during the year Just closing. We are awaking to the realization that we allow Imprisonment for debt In America. Thousands of unfortu nates who are. unable to pay theit fines are imprisoned in lieu of pay ment on the theory that thus they ma) work off their fines. As ay matter ot fact, the state rarely, if ever realize* the amount of the fine over and above ttfe^cost lit incarceration.- Here ami there we are beginning to do better; Massachusetts, for instance, early in 1913 adopted a law compelling the lower courts in cases in which the defendant Is fined and unable- to pay. to Suspend commitment and allow time for payment:to be made. This should change the complexion of pr Is iut the promptness with "which that Ttim^was-flTst^ dispatchedrwar4ilustra *tvi andindicattve of theispirit whicl prevails throughout the entire organi- zation. There are scores of things which night be referred to in this manner but to recall a few of them is suffl dent to convince all the readers o! your paper of the real intent and pur pose of the men who have associates themselves together in this organiza tlon: The manner in which the light Ing of Davis street has been handled M. Colwell, and the cooperation of the Commercial association with the Evanston Woman's club, not only In the recent .Federation of Women's clubs convention held here in Novem ber, hut In many other things In wblch the women's organization has inter sited itself and has asked for our co-operation, are;among the number. This is in Figures Onlv for Loss of $43,000 by Texas Wom- an is Not Taken Seriously by PoiictOfflclais. The need of more patrolmen In the Evanston police department and the necesilty^t TlmaeaSe^nthe efaClen' of these ofilcers is made apparent by the annual report for that department which is being compiled by Sergt Enoch Moberg. From several stand- points the report for the police activi- ties Inf Evsnitoh in 1913 witi not'be as favorable as In years past. Probably the most appalling feature of the report-la the fact that the num- ber of robberies and burglaries in Ev- anston during the last year hate In- creased almost thirty per cent. With- out data for the month of December, a total of 409 cases of larceny and burglary were reported to the police in 1913. In 1912 only 319 cases were reported, or 99 less than the number reported for eleven months last year. ------Much Sto'cr. Property. The aggregate amount of stolen property reported to the police up un- til December 1. 1913, was $55,373.44. The total value of this-propertjrire> covered up until December 1 was $4,206.20. During 1912 the total value of property reported stolen was S14,- 479.80. Of this amount property val- ued-at $7,375.45 was recovered. An explanation Is due on the un- usual large amount ot stolen property in 1913. These figures are boosted by what Chief of Police Bhaffer believes to have been a fabulous loss of t43.5S0.0l by Mrs. Mabel Mills of San Antonio, Texas, on Central street on TO COMPILE CALENDAR f^iThejMlore 6. feaseTfa* Started at Work to Obtain 0a!a for SocIeMX__i, Before the close of the new year the IlllnolB State Historical society wl» have compiled a complete calendar of the historical documents now in the possession of the various counties of the state. Prof. Theodore G* Pease; formerly Of the.faculty of the Univer- sity of Illinois, and;now of the Uni- versity of Chicago, took up thlB work today and expects to* have it completed hyl 8e^mberjLJBemq_--;_^ii'_ To Complete Survey. The Historical society has decided to have Its survey completed Immedi- ately In order to lay before the Illinois Cen^rm^l^ommisslon-at-the^arliest ppi||^l<i^dsyv cbmpleto-datar regard- ing historical documents and relics Such as are desired for the exhibition during the celebration in 1918 of the one hundredth anniversary of the ad- mission dflUtadls to statehood". Ik addition to making the calendar of historical public documents, Professor Pease Is instructed to locate all mate- rial that will add to the fullness of the exhibition that is to form a feature of the Centennial Celehrailbn. A survey of the state In this man- ner was begun In WW. Professor Clar- ence B. Johns, now of Harvard Uni* yersity, putting in the entire year on the work and Professor John T. Sen- ning, now of Wesleyen University at Middleton, Connecticut, assisting him during the summer and fall. The two completed--er-survey--of--eighty=elght RAIDED HIS ROOST. V Whiter Leisenleweir, 1698 tv'ashiag. ton street. Eva«stoH, reported to th« police that his ; chicken roost hid oeen raided during the night and ttlrtes^*prteedr toying^ hens.-«ad:» rooater stoton." The pouttry was val- ued nt.$15. CHRISTMASTIME a Being the old tate done in Rtory and mime ■ tot thorn at »a^m . B KING'S RESTAUR ANT rorSO »«*rs tte name has stood for. pure. i*Ms? ^nefctckJU. ou Dinner ,oco»r..-T.bi.0^cfirb-'ck^ 5th AIEIUE Bet- MadisoB and Washington Sis. You Need Not Be 111 to Enjoy counties of the state and gathered a vast amount of valuable information Included^ among the fourteen counties remaining for Professor Pease to sur- vey is theT»uhtjrc^Cooknnd consid- erable of bis tlime will be devoted to that county, wl|lch Is said to offer a rich held for research of this charac- ter. .. i. I' «..•,•■ pasffdv L»w- The Illinois legislature passed a law in 1886 authorizing county commis- sioners and .other, county officials to turn over to the State Historical Li- brary or to thev University of Illinois l^rafy-deeuments-^ot-#urely histor' the night of March 1 last. The woman, it will be recalled/claimed that she Ml^n a faint In a deep snow drift.in cfeitrul street late at night and that wlnle sho was In an unconscious state, tho largo roll of money was lost from Iter purse. Because ot her reticence Immediately following the reported toss, the story was generally discred- ited. Not aa Heavy aa 1912. Deducting the„ reported money loss from.the aggregate sum the property loss In 1913 was not so large as in .1912. However, more thefts were re- ported, showing the need of many more officers on the force: Lost prop- arty reported totals $1,710.54, while a total of $768.87 of this property was found by the police. The total number of arrests up to ind including the last day in the year totalled 1,001. This Is 140 arrests less than were recorded In 1912. However, It-Is explained that in last-year's^re- port the number of cases in which the defendants were summoned instead of being placed under arrest, were in- cluded In the total. Last year a sep- arate list has been made of such pro- ceedings. Approximately 150 persons were summoned in 191& Instead of be- ing arrested. The total amount of fines assessed and collected during 1913 does, not equal that of 1912. Up to December 1 the total amount of fines assessed to- through a committee headed by W tolled $6^6B.50r^hile-aie-«oHectloni JEVAN8T6N HAS NEW BAKERY. One or the most notable of Evans ton's new buildings is the large build- ing erected on Custer avenue by C. H Putnam, the baker. The building far exceeds anything Evanston has ever possessed in the way of a bakery and Is far more advanced in construction and machinery than most of the baker- ies in this country. TonieTfcatmcntaari pwrwded ahn for Own who -.-.; -.■■- .>:-:.--,.\",i;;.$u».nOtUh-1 *■»<••>j- y>7<- ■"-■ Choice of Fifteen Baths. Maasago and Exercises. Sinttl*Treatments'.......".';...•>:,'.;..".;..•.,••!. » Ticket of Tweive Tre»4Jl^tt......:v>g,..._.||8.0P -y " .-i.".'..u::.. .•'. "-'------------_ Sherwood! Music School Founded by Wm. H. Sherwood 712 Fine Arts Building GEORGIA KOBER. President'.;.-: WALTER KELLER, Director Highest Standard of Artistry cat value. As a result of that legisla- tion, a wealth of material has been secured. Mrs. Jessie Plainer Weber, librarian of the State Historical LI- braryK spent several weeks in the musty vaults of the Sangamon county court house, which was once the state capltol building, and dug out many priceless treasures thjrt are now safely preserved In the library. Officials at other counties have placed additional documents in the custody of the HiS- torlcal Library and the^^ State Univer- sity until tbe collection has assumed impressive proportions. The greater volume of material of this sort, how- ever, still is scattered over the statoi in more or less precarloUB custody. Piano, Organ, Harmony, Counter Point Composition, Vocai, Violin, Public School Music, Musical His- tory, Schoql of Expression. Por catalogae^atfdfess;,: TESSIE K. READ ,.. Business Manager, . ,. 410 S. Michigan Avenue. ices OFFICERS^TATIjRJWIDiJtATt ^Thc^llCBnvere called to tho home ^otHwri P.^ ehiWs. 41411 Dwyls /street: Sunday I morning about 5 o'clock on the .report. thai■' tim* suRplcioiiR-look on affairs in Massachusetts where," ac- cording-to- 6averjinE,JFo88»...ln„.an._ad-. fftr^Mtef^l^ffBB recent rrigoa-A^sov elation Congress, 38 per cent-of-ja» commitments last year were ittlleu of ^_ payment of .fines.____^_.--^ . ,- i^_il^Vto;«r*t^|^^-r™^- ^There Isst strong trehd^tn the dlrec- UdnTof dlvbrcihg fBwxarTTaWcontrol of^prisoners from^^thSi machinery of government as far as possible. The method-of .parole'in the. hands of non- possible for any court, after April, 49i4,-to-commitpto a reformatory 01. pejaW7iim|itutto%; The^^"deltnquent must be placed ;in the hands of the State Board of Administration, which will place the ni!n*r-ln *h,B laatitu- tioh or that, acting under the advice of a bureau for research. .This bureau is composed of experts In psychology, medlclne,_a!nd sociology, who will be equaled $3,289.50 for that period. ■ In 1912 the fines assessed equaled 57.- 233.60, while the collections were $3,825.50. I.:.' ; Accidents on Increase. Accidents seemed to be on the in- crease In Evanston during ? the last year, a total of ail accidents being reported to the police. Forty-seven sick and injured persons were taken to the hospitals in the police convey- ances. The patrol- wagon---traveled more than 1,200 miles during the year while the speedometer on the police automobile registers more than 5,000 miles, most of which was on official police business. ; r >• Forty-five runaway or missing chil- dren were picked up on the streets and returned to their parents during the year. Two violations of the curfewr ordinance were reported. .■-■ August Leads in Arrests. More arrests were made during the month of August than any other month of the year. The following is the list by months: January, 27; Feb- ruary, 36; March, 47; April, 81;. May, 121; June, 102; July».;94; August, 133; September, 85; October, 53; Novem- ber^ lilj andrDecember, 181i > Complete Funeral-Casket, En- balmfnsj and Serviced-Hearse ard Carriage to any cemstory $6S.ftO. This etotb covered Cssket. lined with wb te . ilk. With complete f urn jabingB. only $30.00.' NOT IN ANY'tRUST^ We conduct furnerals in all parts of ______the City and suburbs. given sufficient opportunity to study each delluouent to determine the treat- ^ieatr:wwHS3-*e3icS5i^edbfesSfeu?e^is adaptation to normal society. The minor's parole and final discharge are in the hands of these authorities also. All these methods are in line with S^iov^edtfcatto quents we musiTapJ^eal^to 'the same motives as those that operate In the general population. We are concerned with arranging situations so that we No extra charge for distance Calls answered Immediately WEIMESCHKIRCH St.,Tei.toes Evanston If ' t"-i: George W. Mun W. Hsrrisoo 4517 59 t Ml WWII ST. Pupils fitted for Clifttcji, Recital, Concert, Ora- torio, and Opera. j Four thoroUgMy equip- ped assistants. Pupils booked at any time. , M r. Munro tests allvoices and supervises all work. Piano tttwer and Repairer 1117 Main St., Evanston - - Telephones Evanston 3476-JT an*44». v7 Official Tuner for NortHwestern School olMusift MUSICAL COLLE.GE .OP, ChwkifleM, Mtr. Oeo. StelBhssS. DIrcdor Plymouth DIdtf.. Broadway V Lelafld--College Entrance. 4706-08 Broad way .Tel. Eyewater S200 A SCHOOL OP MUSIC AND DRAMATIC ART ' M « WJS VIOLIN SCHOOL-Partial Schalarship To Talented PupHs. U^^a*^0*^ COACHINCr-Dondns; By Miw Olive Dspew J£ mmm0mfimm*mm0mmm0m&*+0es*!0*s&i a*lth-little Miss Dorothy Clnrh, who J |Dg • wen were seen loitering about {partisan parole boards is astep in this -sgia^ Chsft^as tic Uttla iord, i rived ao traee of the men was found, i ing to delinquent minors inakes it lm- where we kill hope. Classification of the persons arrested up^o^eeember-lrahows^o^nMdes4ind 2oVrfeni5iB3r^w-ni5rried-asd=TO nuurried. Thfr largest number, 38?rof this total number arrested, were be- tween 20 and 30 years of. age. Between the ageS of 10 and 20 years a total ot 121ijronths_wsre-arrested^^gent^tnsjh between <0 and 70 years-Ot Hgei, *he age period, were taken in custody dm> Ing the year. The contention made by some one recently that most crime was committed by peraons^Mfcr ,40.^years ot age does not hold in the police rec- may! make the most ■ efiecilve appeal ^t*- gfr-rin make no appeal^ord, as only-H8 of the l,00l-were-ot HpHE only thing cheap about bur caskets is the prrce, -14 We carry a,full line of Solid Mahogany,Circas- * t slan Walnut, Solid Oak, etc., as well as the iisual^ iMe of broad cloths: and^crepes^ For-the reason tltafc e Manufacture all of our own caskets, wecanrhnd do --guarantee a saving to the ptthKe-iroin-onc- thtrtffetQ; H&iic^aMH--=--M.-- ..----~--^~ ~- -.^.■■i-, "- ^Wia. H, Scott, formerly with j. L. Hebblethwaite ^ Evanston, is manager arid part^wner^f ^nc EtaOst ^tore and ^tpersbhallyBU persons oyer that age. Store Phone Evanston 98 Residence Phone Evnaston 2903 1007 DAYIS ST. Manager EVANSTON^ rt.L. " I

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