Lake Shore News (Wilmette, Illinois), 9 Jul 1914, p. 5

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THE LAKE SHORE NEWS. THURSDAY. JULY 9, 1914. i FADS AND FANCIES OF THE MOTORIST NOTES SHEET CLUB GIVES OUTING TODAY Seventeenth Annual Picnic for Children of Chicago Com- mons in Kidder's Grove. Ml For men the lisle and mete stove* «ve very comfortable. They bare the clasp wrist strap and may be bad to ton or mouse gray. A portable teat garage la favor with tourists who camp en route It can be nude to fit any saacMae and protect ft la all aorta of weather. There Is a rear door as welt as ad- jactable flaps Jn front. There Is also a new model to a toilet tent that *e commodates the fbldlcg bath tab per- fectly. Iter the Piping Bock hata of white or tan felt women are adopting cm- boned leather bands rather than the the English "bold-alls." They may be opened oat flat and are excellent for carrying the extra blankets and wraps. They are made of brown -------- I waterproof material and have Chiffon nightcaps are the latest I toilet cases. wrinkle for the oatof-doon sleeper A bit of fresh air. a lot of fan and plenty to eat l*at is what aweits the children and women from the Chi- * capo Commons today. The NoyesL .«.«-■»■-■» Street Mothers* club Is brinp fll TCDCI1 WATFR Ing 350 of them oat to Evanston for ■ a day's picnic la the woods at Lin- coln street and Ridge avenue. Shoridsn Inn Gordon ^^vm; Mademoiselle Florence de Molenaar. instructor of the latest popular danc£» at special Tango Teas. Dally from 4 to 6 in our Open Air New Palace Dance. You are invited to attend. MademoisellfHeriolenaar will five FRE| INSTRUCTIONS at our popular Tango Teas every afternoon except Sunday. DANCING NIGHTLY, BEGINNING AT EIGHT SPECIAL ENGAGEMENT. Miss Bessie Kaplan. By Courtesy of Rector9! The picnic crowd will be brought, nut in special street cars. Permissionhas been granted to have the Chicago ■ Jggf street cars run Over the Evanston NEXT WEEK, MAY BE ---u -- who Is afraid of wandering beetles and bags. They are very fetching affairs, made in dainty colors as well as in white sad black. For outing trips women are wear-]head band. ing tan Russia calf btueher shces hav- ing flexible rubber soles. One piece curved glass goggles, giv- ing a maximum range of vision, have nickeled frames edged with chenille, leather tabs and an adjustable elastic Shattuck camp rolls are very like Linen cape coats come with or with .Traction company lines so as not to i necessitate a chaage of ears at How- out sleeves. A number have a con- ard avenue. The burden of handling Plant This W«ek-Full Supply Next if All Works Well. i: rertiblo coBa* which serves as a oust -30 people, most of whom are young as ft buttons close under! sters out on a lark, falls on a few of | protector, the chin. Bell em \ the assistants at the Commons, ana j J the city council of Evanston appreciat- ed the trouble they would have in are adopting the leather divided skirt, j getting their charges off and on the Gannel blouse, high boots and huge j cars a second time, so permission was soft hat. It is a very comfortable out-1 granted for the Chicago cars to run fit and with a loose leather sport coat \ over the local line. la very smart. Filtered water for Evanston next week. That to what the engineers say now. Definite, accurate, cut and dried Information on the filtration plant is! hard to get. Nobody wants to commit ] himself as to the exact time when the' August Days DAY NURSERY FILLS A LOSS Place To Care for Colored Chil- dren Established on Oak Av- enue in Operation a Month and Results Are Good. This is the seventeenth annual pic-; plant will be in operation. The report nic for the Commons. Mrs. A. X.; received this morning from the engi- W0EFULM00N PRINCESS BETTER TELEPHONE ]$*}?Z^ club, is in charge Of the arrangements. ■ She says that there will be plenty J Plant this week to test it out. and that lot entertainment fbr the little guests.'the regular supply for the city would! Games will be arranged and swings '„.,.... through the plant next week. ] Lee Lewis, city chemist, says t MADEHAPPYATRAVINIA SERVICE TO yHeTTE ..will be hung from all the friendly Fairy Tale in Dance Pantomine Company Will Install Fifty New umbs in the grove, no one who comes •» ' , , _ . #«» «!... niotii.- will In- .-illnu'ixl til f'l") Presented by North Shore Circuits at Cost of Children at Park. $12,000. to the picnic will be allowed to go away without eating capacity amount. CARE FOR ABOUT FIFTEEN Can Leave a Child There for Fifteen Cents a Day--Good Meal Fur- nished and Little Tots ? : Have Lots of Fun. A little "moon princess." who did! F»"y new underground circuits be- not know how to be happy, came to] tween Evanston and Wilmette will be Kavinia Park yesterday and learned j built this summer by the Chicago the secret. j Telephone company. The proposed im- A "Isiry tale In dance pantomime," I provement. which will Involve ah ex- arranged by Miss Doris Humphrey of)penditure of f 12,000, means the addl- Oak Park, was presented in the Ua- tion of more than 1,800 miles of tele-j guTamlng. and -Then vinia theater under the auspices of phone wire to the present underground ] dusk doth blur the page, well alt with j the Kavinia club for its first children's j ||Deg between the two cities. hearts too full for speech and think entertainment of the season. ' Telephone traffic between Evanston; it over."--Dorothy Wordsworth to It tells the story of a princess in and wilmette is growing steadily and Coleridge. the inoou who did not know how to be tne number of subscribers residing --..... .' ~-fr -------- happy. Children are brought from j alons thc DortD 8&ore between the two Mixed Metapho.-s. the earthy after the moon dancers fail | ejttej. Jn also increasing. The addition-1 a clergyman in an eastern town-: ThedayiwrseTy tog^eplorjii dren at 1720 Oak avenue, has been In operation a month and the progress made and the service which It has rendered is Up to the expectation of the women who started It. An average of fifteen children are taken care of each day. They are left at tho nursery to the morning by their mothers who go out to work. They are cared for until about 6 o'clock. A substantial lunch Is furnished the children at noon and a small luncheon at 4:30. The mid-day meal consists of a beef stow, or some kind of meat and gravy, two vegetables and milk. The afternoon lunch Is usually some cooked fruits, bread, butter and milk. It costs 15 cents to leave a child for a full day, and two can be cared for 25 cents. Small Pay for Matron. The matron Is paid IB per week From a Lover of Good Books. Tea, do you. send me a book • . . not a bargain book bought from a haberdasher, but a beautiful book, a book of caress--peculiar, dis- tinctive, individual; a book that hath first caught your aye and then pleaaed your fancy; written by an author with a tender whim, all right out of his heart. We will read It together in the the gathering Dr. W. that he is all ready to go to work at 'the plant with his testing apparatus and can move up there In twenty-four hours.'but so far he hasn't received no- tice to come. should be restful, lazy days, days when the call of the fishing ground, the golf course, the tennis court, the quiet of the country or the sweep of the breeze by lakeside or seaside, appeals to the town-tired imagination. Take your vacation in comfort, secure in the knowledge that if needed you can be reached, if in need you can make your necessities known over tie: 7 Nature's Adjustment. la the case of all fish which take ! care of their young, a curious adapts* j tion of natural law to circumstances ; to found. Those which take the great- j est pains and care in sheltering their ( offspring have the fewest eggs, per- j haps less than one hundred at a lay, | while on the other hand, species of j fish which pay hot the slightest atten- tion to their young produce hundreds of thousands, and even millions of at a single lay. to make her Joyful. But they are no more successful than the moon folk until an old messenger from the moon finds the happiest child in "Our Vil- lage," who invites the princess to dame and play with her and breaks the > The last scene shows the fairies and princess on a visit to the children of the village, all dancing In the moon- light Children who took part were John Weeks, Helen Chlnlund, Elizabeth Wilder, Elizabeth Bode, Eileen Wil- letts, Walter Grant, Harriet Krauth, Elizabeth Seamann, Caroline Sautor, Bruce Parkhlll, Dorothy 8auter and Virginia Harris. The children's entertainments are in charge of Mrs., Annette It. Jones. BLACK ART III WEST AFRICA Natives Freely Acknowledge Quilt, Even When They Know It Means Their Death. Early In 1911 a deputation from one of the larger towns of West Af- rica brought two prisoners, father and and she works from early morning until late at night. Additional help to needed, but there arc no funds to pay for a helper. The present matron takes care of the large bouse, does all the cooking and cares for fifteen chil- li run each day. Some of the children are very young and demand careful attention. The rent oh -the house Is lis per month. Subscriptions and help from the outside have furnished About enough to pay for the rent and ice. Soveral kindly disposed people have sent toys, books and cots for the babies. A swing has been put up In the yard and there is a vine-covered gar- den where the children play In the sand. Need Was Acute. Tho need of a nursery for tho col- ored people has been acute. Many iiiuTliws were unable work and add to the family Income by being kept at home by small children. Many who were forced to go, whether or no, locked their children indoors and they were obliged to take care of themselves the best way possible and to get their own food. Private care cost them about CO cents per child and tills ate a considerable hole in | their daily pay. The nursery baa been established by a few colored women who have the best Interest of their community at! heart. . Mrs. i«. Landers Is president' of the committee and the other mem- bers are Mrs. J. E. Priestly. Mrs. W. T. Mason. Mrs. Lash. Mrs. Kincaid and Mrs. Will Pollard. son, before the commissioner at Oban They were accused of having, in crocodile form, killed two women while the latter were crossing the river As they refused to swear their Innocence on the dominant Ju-ju of the town, they were brought before the "white man," who naturally de- cided that there was no case against them. The deputation, however, had not finished with the matter. On re- turning home another Ju-ju was In- voked, with the result that the son confessed that both he' and his father were guilty, and that they had killed and eaten seven other men and women. Strangely enough, people accused of this uncanny power nearly always acknowledge their guilt, even when fully aware that such confession will probably coat them their lives. Awa Ita, an old woman of Oban, was sua- dof Bonding out her familiar every night to lick a wound on her husband's ankle while he slept, and so prevent it from healing. The chiefs of the Egbo society summoned her before their dreaded tribunal, and she was condemned to death. al facilities, which will be ready for warned his bearers lately "not to walk Turtles Far From Heme. Drifting slowly with UleTonatortat current, a huge tree covered with bar- service before they are actuajfr need-jfa aallppery path.lest they be sucked.4 nftclerand in possession oMhree ed. will be adequate to care for growth: maelstrom-like, into Its meshes." This' well Into the future. The fifty additional circuits will Im- prove service between Evanston and wiimetta. They wM «i*o make .pos? sible a rearrangement of the present lines which will improve long distance service from Evanston to ;;:.*i.*its north of Wilmette and from Wilmette to Chicago. In addition the telephone company will increase underground facilities which serve subscribers re- siding along the north shore between Evanston and Wilmette. While the work is In progress, service will not be interrupted. The telephone company expects to complete the work of installing the new cables in August. Ha Lost the Wager. A man who prided himself on a won- derful Imagination that could conceive the biggest lies on record once made a wager that he could tell a greater falsehood than any man tn the town where he resided. The stokes being deposited, he proclaimed that-Jig once threw a nail with such force that It pierced the moon. "Aye, that to true," exclaimed another man. "I saw him do It, fort stood on tbh~etneT side soft] J3JJJg; "Icaaatfort caught the nail." Stock and White Net Colors. Strictly speaking neither black nop white Is a color, white being a com- bination of all the seven primary col- ors, and black being an absorption of all. Bodies that reflect all the rays of the sun are called white; those that reflect some rays and absorb others are called red, blue, green, etc.; those that absorb all the rays and reflect none are called black. Slightly Mixed Metaphor. An eloquent Irish candidate, speak- ing of a certain eminent statesman, said: "Ills smooth tongue Is that of a serpent which lures but to destroy, and which holds out sugar plums In one hand, while In tho other It holds an unsheathed dagger behind Its hack." rragments or i ime uount. Many persons have become truly ed- ucated merely by the wise use of odd fragments of time. A bit of poetry or a verse of Scripture learned while dressing In the morning; a few foreign words or phrases conned on the way to work, or between tasks; a great book read In snatches while waiting for meals; a dip Into noble literature I fct bed time; a studious effort to so- j cure contact with some nobler person u. .-?w?,t^LApp~.rw,^• .--Jthan one's satf aysry oay-by web Minister (calling on tomato of pris- , . these life ,B cnrlched Kone walla do not a prison make, nor "________, iron bars a cage." Kenney--"Well, they've got me hypnotised, then; that's all."--Dallas News. Common Origin of Language. All the subtleties of language, Bound- ing poetry and melodic phrase come from the stimulus Imparted to a tast- ing tongue muscle by the necessity Is a tar-gone ago of utilising our mouths to full capacity In enjoying what we were eating and to making noines while we did It Irony From John Bull. . Some enterprising firm had better start cheap excursions to America, so that we can see the old masters ocoa stoually.--London Globe. • Keck Istonsad Qv--Vlltosa,____ a 20-ton balanced reek overseas* the village of Thomary In France, metaphor suggests, that of another clergyman, who prayed that the Word might be as a hall'driven In a sure place, sending its .roots downwards and Its branches upwards. . _L___ Main Thing. At the end of o somewhat sweeping peroration the young lady said: "And now, Mrs. Smith, would you not like to have a vote and exercise the priv- ilege of citizenship?" To which, says the Glasgow News, the lady of the scrubbing brush made a typically fem- inine reply. "I don't know, miss," she said, agitatedly; "what would it cost?" Land Constantly In Motion. Most people know In a general way that large portions of tho United States have in the past been covered by the ocean, but it is perhaps not so generally known that the continent Is now rising to some places rod sinking in others. There Is every reason to believe that minor movements of the land are constantly taking place. ties was sighted off the Pacific coast recently by the captain of a San Fran- cisco steamer. The tree was 40 feet long and bad been floating so long that its limbs appeared to be perfectly petrified. Long Distance of the Chicago Telephone Company H. B. Gates, District Manager Telephone 9903 Wasted Day. Of all days, tbe one that hi wasted is. that on whim one has not Easy Way to Clean a Carpet Instead of sweeping your stair car* pet try wiping It over with a damp cloth. Use a teaspoonful of ammonia in *wo quarts of warm water. Your carpet will look clean and bright and there will be no dust. Fiction and History. The only form of fiction in which reaL characters do not seem out of place is history.--Oscar Wilde. Block to Progress, tfore of us would make good If oar neighbor would quit shoving.--Chica- go News. But Since He Can't? Too bad every man can't be like a thormometer that takes a drop top much at night, and still gets up early the next, morning. Daily Thought Be calm fh arguing; for fierceness makes error a fault and truth dis- courtesy.--Herbert. True. Gradual elimination naturally hat the least terror lor those most in favor, with those doing the ellmtnat- lng.-~Cleveland T^fder. ________.' ■■ K no wl sd se sTaowtodaw Is the antidote to fsjnv Bashful Papa. "A man is never successful until ha - - is able to borrow money. If he can oniw Rftmirfv I borrow It and escape paying It back. &JT& thorns, and he ,. more than success^ Father - I know of no other remedy than to has been very m***8™1- *° » f?J Thouaht for pass through them quickly. The long, very bashful. ***»•• ? *%?£*. A rolling stone gathers no moss er we dwell on our misfortunes, the when be borrows money1* ™ ■Jl j£ ££*% «„., U takes a fall out ■creator is their power to ham ue.- up enough nerve to ask a man to take, ButWto at^me. Voltaire, I It backy'-Sschjaff!* • " ^^ nKWimc*- -T-rTin;ir^ n -- ---- 1 i s i smaEgaaBBBBEsg 1 . 3 Baagssgaafflffl a msauasam -r. 1. -■ riming m naravim Correspondence Stationery Visiting Cards Shopping Cards • Wedding invitations Wedding Announcements Birth Cards Christmas Greetings Mourning Cards Club Announcements Club Programs Etc., Etc. ___%■'- ■ S - 1 This is the most complete plant between Chicago and Milwaukee i By FRANK R. GROVER, Esq. A book every lover of the Mackinac country should have. Beautifully printed in Sepia or India Tint stock, illustrations on Vellum Plate. From the press of the Bowman Publishing Co. Bound in Boards and boxed, per copy . . $1.00 Bound in Heavy Paper, per copy .... .50 See Display at CHANDLER'S 630 DAVIS STREET 32 North 5th Ave. Between Madison and Wushinuton Sts. CHICAGO, ILL. Popular Price Restaurant IlM si.i.hI ih« T.«t fur .'• Thirty Yt»r» Talking Machines JS Pmtch, German. Itafimm aria* SpanUk LangaareOmtflh mm ms wsm * mmktu ~ aassr*. «e» a* MiMftta «*9V. mr f Stoat J5S7. JAMES I.LIHS, 211 «l Uu SsnaA. Satis* Classified Business List GENERAL MERCHANDISE GROCERIES _ Fine fruits--In and out of sea- son--always form a part of our large stock: of Select and Fancy Groceries. Baker's Steel Cut Coffee Is Good. GEO. B. WINTER Quality and not Quantity--the best for the money--is our mot- to. Our large stock of groceries . is always select, and Fresh Fruits and Vegetables a speci- alty. A. S. VAN DFIfSEN an VMM GaafOMsaf JEWELERS AUGUSTRODELIUS Successor to Rodeltus A "Ksoert watcamsksr aJHtOyiHihin Repairing of compllcsted and clocks. Many years' espe* once with host kno* houses. Phone 2632. S27 Osvls MEN'S WEAR Clothes Rsadjf Made-Oothaa 1 Order. Packard Shoes far SoroHls Shoes for LedJrr Children. Gentlemen's lag Goods. HAYES * HAYE HOTELS THE AVENUE *rT*JBT HOUSE Sunday Dinner a 1 to 2:10 P. M. ***** N1* wmmmmmmimmmmmmmmmmmmnmi *mm NAStT A.WITSOSrSKT , Proprietor WIRING, REPAtMNG SUPPLIES GLENCOE, ILLINOIS rtaaa CleacM «M

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