AKE vol. vi. mo. *. News WILMETTE. ILLINOIS. FRIDAY, APRIL 16.1915. PRICE FIVE CENTS LniLn i Changes at Westmoreland W01 Make for Stiffer and Improved Playing â€"Never Was Easy. MANY BUNKERS ADDED Other Hazards Judiciously Distributedâ€"Turf Is in Excellent Condition. By Oeorge P. Thornton. Westmoreland players who were In the habit of turning in good scores at the end of Inst season may find It a little more difficult to keep up their reputation with the changes that have been made in the coarse this winter. George Kinsman, the agreeable pro- fessional at this club, walked around the course with me yesterday after- noon and pointed out the improve- ments which had been made. His con- nection with the club has always Beemed to be a matter of no little pride, but yesterday he seemed more than pleased In showing me around and commenting on the excellence of the course. there wasn't a mark on it. He re- thaf he woald to obliged to let row long, so that the balls » found easily. If he expect- ed to sell his the 11m painters* strike has not stopped ork on the clubhouse. Men were on of the place yesterday putting a sen hue to the shingles. Mr. _ house, which Is Just across tho road from the street ear station, la undergoing some repair, and will be PROTECTION AGAINST THE 5 Ml There has been some change In the personnel of the clubhouse staff.* Mr. II. C Niegelsen. for eight years man- ager at Exmoor club, will have charge In that capacity at West more land. Tom Kidelan la the new caddy master. He was at Beverly for three seasons. The cooking establishment la presided over by an ex-Fred Harvey chef. The din- ing room has been open since April 1, and those who have eaten there recently remark about the excellence of the meals. "Henry" la still supreme In the locker room. INDIAN HILL CLUB. Jack FntherJngham continue* aa professional. His services last year were so satisfactory that the club baa kept him for this season. A club maker of ability is to be found in James Smart, who will have charge of the golf shop. J. B. Brower Is man- ager. The club will not be open un- it: May 1, but a few players have been attracted to the course during the past few days of agreeable weather. Some delay has been experienced in getting the re-decorating and house- Down about 160 yards from the first tee a long ridge has been thrown up separating the road and the fair green. This Is placed there to catch a poor ball. On beyond number one bole a ridge of this same character has been placed to keep a bad drive from the number nine tee off of the putting green. This will be a means of saving the putting green, and also break some people of the habit of slicing. Mr. Kinsman says about 80 per cent of players niton-...When,asked why, hefw. said that most of them stiffen when they bring the club down to the ball, Instead of remaining easy and free and following the stroke through. Bunkers have been placed between the fair greens on numbers two and eleven, to form a sort of a boundary line and encourage players to keep down the center of the course. Two bunkers have been placed In front of number three hole and those to the right and left have been deep- ened. A bad pull will lead a player into trouble, but a straight shot and fair distance will put one In nice dis- tance for a second stroke.------- On number five the bunkers have been deepened In front of the hole. This will make the player try for the right and then straight In. This may break some of the habit of trusting to luck and the Wind to carry them across the bunker and land on the green. As it Is fixed'BjiJ it is a real "dogleg" shot. Bunkers have been made deeper on the seventh. Number ten Is going to be a tricky ond to play. This, Is a 340- yard hole. * The second shot will have to be pitched brer the mounds which guard the green. Bunkers also are placed quite close to the, tee and a toped ball herb will cause considerable trouble. There la no change In number thir- teen. This is Mr. Kinsman's favorite bole. He made it In three five succes- sive times mat fall The first time that he scored this one below par was when be wan playing with FTances Ouimet. After that the number thir- teen was one of genuine luck and he rolled It in at three so many times that it almost became a habit. The fourteenth la now a real three hole. A ridge'flfteen feet from the green and bunkers on both sides to catch a pull or slice will make a player earn bis nor H he is fortanate enough to make it. Fifteen ban n good bunker to the i«ft of the green and mounds IV) yards from the tee. Sixteen la quite the same as last season, except for n deeper bunker off the right of the green act- ing as a convenient pocket tor a slice. Sevesteem la the same. Mr. Kins- man is going to use the thirteenth tee and the fifteenth fair green for a prac- tice coarse. This will give his pupils both the drive up hill and down. The tart and greens are ta excellent The Chicago and Northwestern rail- road have agreed to furnish train service for Indian Hill. A station will be erected In the pear future and trains will be scheduled for this stop during the golfing season. An at- tractive station will be built and the name will be that of the club. $ DAY IN EVANSTON WEDNESDAY, APRIL 28 Merchants Prepare to Make this Bargain Day ExceejJ Camphor. Tar Paper, Cedar Chests and Other Preven- tatives Useless When Eggs Are Present BRUSH THEM WELL See That None of Larvae Are in the Garments When Put Away. The various substances used to keep away moths, such aa tobacco, camphor, naphtalene cones or balls, tarred paper, and cedar chips have no effect If the eggs are already pres- ent In the clothes, and entomology specialists In the United States de- partment of agriculture therefore rec- ommend a thorough beating, shaking, and brushing of all articles likely to attract moths, before they are laid cleaning done. The painters' strike away for the summer. The brushing has tied up the. work. of garments Is especially Important In order to remove eggs which may have escaped notice. If the" articles are quite free from eggs or larvae when laid away, the odor from the various repellents already mentioned or from cedar cheats and wardrobes will serve to keep the moths, away, litis odor, however, lessens with age, so that the protection It affords Is greatly decreased after a few years. For this reason when furs and other valuable garments are wrapped in tarred paper or placed In sacks of tarred paper these containers should be renewed every year or two. Airing and Sunlight Help. In general moths are likely to af- fect only articles which are put away {and left undisturbed for some Utile time. Apartments end closets that MOORE MAKES CHARGE NORTH SHORE IS LAX Probation Officer Says There Is a Lack of Moral â€" the Last One. t||ne "Apartmentsend *k**C«s , â- â- 'â- • .'-tV*-'â- â- •â- ;-;. ...*-.W»i»*-**>* M^:,*»iftafi>tlT aired and swept are Dollar Day in Bvanston will be Wednesday, April 28. On that day people will Journey from all along the north shore to take advantage of the wonderful offerings which the merchants will have on display. For on that day * dollar will go farther than on any other day this spring. It will be a day when economy will rule, when thrift wUl bring out every housewife and every man who has any desire to secure goods at ridicu- lous prices. The merchants are going into the day-^etermlneir to show the people the many advantages of trading In Bvanston. Windows will be decorated especially, extra help will be em- ployed, and dollar day bargains will be offered which will outdo anything ever offered before. Don't miss it Remember the day, Wednesday, April 28. _____________ WHEAT WINTERED WELL IN ILLINOIS April Crop Report Says 90 Per Cent Is in Good Condition. The crop report for Illinois, pre- pared by the bureau of crop estimates In cooperation with the weather bu- reau for April 1st, has Just been is- sued. Illinois wheat came through the winter to excellent shape. On the basis of 100 It la ranked at 00; for the-entimJInitedL States^ _88.8 per cent. The ten-year average tor April 1 reports, for Illinois Is 00 per cent For^rVe. Illinois. 03 per cent; the entire country, 80.6 per cent. The ten-year average on this crop ia 01 per cent. Ia the table of prevailing prices for commodities, wheat ia $1.33. corn (0 cents, onto 55 cents, potatoes 68 cents. 26 cents, chickens 11.7 cents. condition. Mr. farorably with any dob In tho middle wee*. They are large, unset of them thlrty-Sve yards across, and with tho exception of the seventeenth i •variety t tor tho since Mr. William S. PROTECT THE THEE*. In an effort to protect the oak. cot ton wood, and hard maple trees which canopy 8beridan road between WU- . mnjt Fii attests hi ^Vianetka the village Has filed a petition seeking to H. J. Nichols company i shovel to •rk. sanitary district is "connecting severs and the of tree* are being torn up « anjeveffL .. =* not apt to be seriously affected. In fact, airing and sunlight are probably the best aa well aa the oldest reme- dies. Where circumstances demand that the articles be put away, how- ever, a convenient and effective de- vice Is to place them In large paste- board boxes anch aa tailors use and gum a strip of wrapping paper around the edge so aa to seal up the box completely and leave no cracks. If the garments have been thoroughly cleaned before being placed In these boxes, no additional protection Is nee* essary and there la none of the ob- jectionable odor which la character- istic of so many moth repellents. Cold Storage Per Valuables. For valuable articles the safest place Is to place them In cold stor- age. Recent experiments have shown that the larvae of the clothes moth will reslat for n long time low tem- peratures If these are uniform. But that the alternation of low and high temperatures quickly results in death, it is recommended, therefore, that stor- age companies submit their goods to two or three changes, rafytag the temperature from about 18 degrees P. to 40 or 60 degrees Fahrenheit. After this preliminary treatment, they should be kept permanently at about 40 degrees Fahrenheit. Any temperature ton Howard Moore, probation the north shore, made a report of his work tor tho year to tho Juvenile Protective asaoetattoa at Community House In Winnetka last Tuesday. According to hla atataimat Highwood. Gross Point and Wllmette ham had many cases of immorality. High- wood baa become notorious for its places are lackmg in these towns, which accounto«^'0Tlnfp'ennseo. for their bad cij n aligns sootaay. Nine- teen co=;p:«iiii. regarding the beaches along the north shore have been received. - Mr. Moore whs quite frank In his statements of | the extremely bad morale in tho Mgroh shore towns and said that the parents were often of uo help in bettering conditions. Nine- teen boys had been taken In charge far Immoral practices and fifteen girls, the oldest being eighteen, and the youngest eleven. The boys ranked In age from fourteen to sixteen. A case waa cited spare tho mother, who drank heavily, turned against her children, forcing the daughter Into n life that le killing her with tubercu- losis. The colored creche, recently opened In Olencoe. waa established to protect the childen during their mother's absence whfc)B working. The North Shore club, colored, has been of help In contributing |S6 from a dance held in Glencoe. From Olen- coe to Evanston there have been twenty nine cases, with seventeen of them still on probation. The president of the Juvenile Pro- tective association la Ralph T. Leuns- bury. Mrs. Lloyd C. Whltma la vice- president; Oeorge J. Pope, treasurer, and the directors are H. l>. Faxon. Highland Park; Mrs. Gordon Ramsey. Glencoe; W. T. Taylor. Kenllworth; H. *> Brown, New Trier; Ffsnels Lackner, Winnetka. â- ------- '." *£'â- â- 'Jii . AN EFFORT TO ASSIST IE FAMILY DOCTORS National Bureau Wants To Improve Teaching on Consumption. NORTHWESTERN MAN AWARDEDMU&C PRIZE - Professor Oldberg Wins Highest Honor in Com- petition. WILL PRESENT His "County Chairman" To Be Given at Ravfnls Theater on Satur- day Night BETTER THAN A FABLE They Are Funny, but This Play Is of an Older Vintage. THIRTEEN UNLUCKY FOR COUNCIL MEET â€"~â€" The Date Seems to Have Kept the President and Trustees Away. For the purpose of securing more co- operation I from phyHiclans and nurses In the anti-tuberculosis campaign, the National Association for. the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis has inaug- urated n movement to bring the im- portance of this subject to the atten- tion of these two groups, according to announcement made from head quartan today: Among the nrst things which the as- sociation Is trying to do is to Induce the medical colleges and schools of nursing to give more Instruction, par- ticularly of a clinical nature, on tuber- culosis. An effort will be made also to reach the ir.dlviduni practitioners and nurses by special booklets prepared for title purpose. The clinical and other facilities of the various organisations affiliated with the National association will so far aa possible be made avail- able for the widest possible use la training doctors and nurses in tuber- The name Oeorge Ade guarantees a laugh. Just the same aa a trademark vouches for Quality and quantity In package goods. Oeorge Ade'a name to a story or a moving picture film'or a legitimate piny, la a bona-flde guar aatee that It Is going to be clever, tunny and worth reading or seeing. Arbuckle First ttar. Old aa It Is. hla "County Chairman" still proves a winner whenever pro- duced. In film, with Maclyn Ar- buckle assuming tho role which made htm famous on the stage, the audience roars. On the real stage In hands of amateure the subject la one which they can handle with tor greater ease and skiii than any other play. The "County Chairman?' improves with age. It la one of the beat friends of the play-go«r. Something like meeting an old acquaintance oh the street and exchanging a bunch of stories. The junior class In the College of Liberal Arts, Northwestern university. Is going to present this play tumor row evening at Ravinia theater. The east was carefully selected from an abundance of good jJ»*g§l?r* This group which has task of producing the L_ % near an «#•> new bbbbbjbsbbw we* *•â- •* a-- -^ - â- - working for almost two months in rounding It Into as perfect n dramatic offering aa amateurs can present.. The role of the county chairman Is to be handled by Leslie Bunch, * new man In Northwestern dramatics. He bad one previous opportunity to shine In "What the Public Wants.'* The story Is built around county politics with a couple of love stories woven In to make it seem rent and be more Interesting. Small town stuff with which Oeorge Ade la moat fa- miliar creeps In with almost line. "Uncle Bck" impersonated by Clifton Merry, is a character that Is Tho meetings of the village boards appointed for Tuesday evening. April 13. proved to be an unlucky date. Pres- ident Mills and three of the trustees were absent, leaving no quorum. Pour orders had been net tor the evening. Pint, tho public considera- tion of too scheme for a water main In Harbor street, west from Oreen Bay road; second, bids for the repair- ing of parte of Park and Vernon ave- nues; third, bids for construction of n Urge sewer system In tho Sylvan Newhall and adjoining subdivisions. and the fire equipment addition to the Village hall. .There waa a fall lobby of bidders end other Interested citizens, who were disappointed. Theodore Hausch was called to the chair, aid both boards adjourned to the next evening. Wednesday. April 14. THERE IS A VILLAGE ELECTION ON TUESDAY Voters Have Only One Set of Men to Cast Ballots For. - Prof. Arne Oldberg of the North- western University School of honored with the prise of tho Federated Musical Clubs for bis original composition. That prize won tor two saccesslve composer In the United States. Today and uamiirpw one of bis original compositions will bo played before the Chicago Symphony Orches- "Tbe object of thie campaign." says Dr. Charles J. Hatfield, executive sec- retary of tho National association, In making the announcement, is primar- ily toi secujrb more accurate and earlier diagnosis of tuberculosis on the part of physicians and to show nurses the great opportunities of service in the home care of consumptives. We shall also bo able to put tho average family physician in touch with the beat methods of treating tuberculosis snd with tho saunt recent literature on that subject, thereby affording to the gen- oral penile taereassd protection r Practically all of medical colleges and schools of ing of the country have _ approval of our plan and have offered to cooperate with us. While the profession generally baa un- the " against this of its prevalence, â- by student, and practicing pbysi- everywhere. No so much time and at from tho _ Wo shall try to make H umiun merry, •» » »wwww*w »»â€"â€" â- - __ . ...^__«__»„_„â€"j#u ^w. have a postomce. Florell Gore, as the hired girt. Is the typical sort of a servant girl to be found In a two by four village. Of course there Is the girt In love with alt traveling sales men, and she finally nabs one. because she wants to go to Chicago and be is perfectly willing to take her. Seme people who ought to know a little about college dramatics and who have been privileged to attend a re- hearsal say that the piny to going to set a record such as haa been held by the cast that presented "Father and the Soya" some three years ago. , SCHOOL ELECTION IB SET FOR Wllmette Is going to have an elec- tion on Tuesday. The average per son would not know It, for there Is ho political gossip. There Isn't any- thing that can be used for fuel for the political pot The supply waa ex- hausted mat year and moat every- body seems quite willing to allow things to run along this year without fuss. For toe benefit of those who- may have forgotten. It may be well to re- mind them that the election occurs on Tuesday. The officers to be votod for are president, treasurer, four true- toes and two library trustees. A proposition for $20,000 bonds to •quip the village with more Improved nre apparatus and the question of an- nexing a strip of territory In the southwest section of town Is, another question to be settled. TRAINS CHOIR HI BRIDEWELL S Arthur Ranous Doing No- table Work for Men in the House of Correction. IN CONCERT SUNDA' WUl Sing at the Evanston Hippodromeâ€"Has a Fine Voice; taken SPRING SYMPOSIUM ENDS MEN'S SEASON Club Will Take a Vacation While Out-door Sports Are Supreme. Arthur Ranoua. soloist for tho day evening concert ni the Hippodrome on April 18. puts bin mo» steal ability to excellent use In train* ing n choir of men to the House of Correction in Chicago. -At 1* Three Years. In asking him about this work, n rer porter for The Lake Shore Nawa found the very popular singer quite reticent when the subject Is himself, lie final- ly said that he had been doing thfa for three years, but bad kept It onto* under cover, not that he waa asharâ€" of hla work, but he did not think _ men whom he was rehearsing cared to have It known. Bishop Walter Sumner, then) Sumner, was the man who Intoi Mr. Ranous In this work. The numbers about fifty. Men who short terms to serve are not Into the organisation. Changes quite frequent, but the ranks are well filled with men who have voices. They are rehearsed ovt Thursday morning and sing nt after* noon service on Sunday. Mr. fUaoou says the men enjoy the work, and be himself finds it a rather Interenttel drreriton; Mr. Ranous Is regularly employee: as choir master of the Hpleconi church In Lake forest. He la ate a member of the Lexington quartet in Chicago. Last Sunday he gave i recital at the episcopal church I Lake Forest, with Mr. MiddleachutM organiat for the Chicago Symphouj orchestra, assisting. On March S sang in the opera "Snow-white. br the New future association at cheatra ball ta Chicago. Appeared Mere Before. Mr. Ranous has sung at the Evans ton Woman'a club three times, will also appear with the Lake Will Choose President and 4 Members of the Public School Board. club was held on Tuesday night session ended the winter program and attention will not be given to the ItoeTw^rTwWuud the *^ club and the baseball bat. The spring symposium, aa the ad vance notices dubbed it. proved to be quite es enjoyable as the March muster. Nlnlan H. Welch gave an Il- lustrated lecture. "A Chapter to the History of Liberty." At the banquet of the crab hut fall, thla same man spoke and he pleased his audience so much that they bad to have him back again before the year closed. Oliver Hlusdell, dramatic reader of ability, snd a man who has made a success In Boston and Philadelphia on the stage, entertained his hearers with eeeae ehotoe readings.------â€"• â€" John 8. Conrad, n soloist, showed that he know what songs pleased the men and. further, bow to sing them. ^^totoe club at Lake forest on Sat The announcement of his aace at the Sunday evening baa brought forth favorable Ho will have a program tttat bring out the best qualities of bin voice. BUSINESS MEN ARE PLANNING GOOD tho Wllmette public school board will be held tomorrow. The potts will he open hi the village hall from two un- til Sve o'clock ta the afternoon. Tho candidates are: fbr presidentâ€"Edward Zlph. Two members of the board Our risked mis un. Charles E. McKay, a Olencoe brick- layer, saw flames bursting from the of his little frame cottage he plunged Into the smoke- ailed hallway, shout in* for h is wife Oad two-year-old daughter. got him out of the house. _ to n blanket, and sent hlmto the St. Francis hospital to Bv- Ho was homed about the __ bands, and body, and his con- dhton taanMto be eert Mrs. McKay had token tbobvcbltd home, but McKay didn't know that. Making Arrangements Employers and Emploj to Get Together. A meeting of the New Trier Cos** merctel association waa hold to tho village bull on Wednesday night to farther perfect plans for the get* together stunt of the merchanto mat their clerks on next Wednesday night in Library hall. This meeting next week wiUbwh where the employers ployoea can forget about have n good time. A buSet to to order, as are several business subjects. The Commercial association to existence for a rRtio ruan two years, tertonlrttotar •ccompUshed a great deal of has broken down tho beartatac competitors, who friendly end congenial baat improved standards to a credit J lam system thaiThus otfnttaatort