Lake Shore News (Wilmette, Illinois), 8 Oct 1915, p. 4

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tHS LARS SHORE W*WS, PRIDAT, OCTOBER I, lift SHOWING OF PURPLE WHS Nine Thousand Football Fans Find Purple Squad Is Deserving of Their Support. LAKE FOREST SUBDUED Interest Now Centers on _. Game Tomor- IN JELEVATOB __; / Taken to Evanston Hospital After Accident in Chi- cago, and May Lose It. 9E LAKE FOREST COLONY GETS AN ADDITION KEEPS UP HIS NERVE Kosldonts of Evanston and the north the number of about 9,000, reached a verdict Saturday on the character of Ike Northwestern toot- ball eleven. This verdict la satisfac- tory to the team and means that the wearers of the purple need not fear Jack of support this season. the contest with Lake Forest proved good amusement for the big crowd which attended the opener, but it did not reveal the real worth of the purple team. Lake Forest proved rather strong opposition at the start of the game, but the Presbyterians showed they could not stand the gaff, and during the latter periods the home team had things all their own way. The score, 27 to 6, does not rep. resent the strength of the two elevens. Maroons See Game. J With Coach Alonza A. Stagg and hi* aquad of thirty-five Maroon athletes elttlng In the east bleachers it would be foolish to believe that Coach Fred J. Murphy would allow hie Held gen- eral to open up with any of the more intricate plays he evidently has taught his players. AH that the "Old Man of the Midway" learned Saturday con- earning Murphy's men was that the purple have a number of fairly good backs and a line that will need to im- prove greatly to hold a conference team in check. The work of the Purple backs was a revelation to Northwestern football fans who In past years have been ac- customed to seeing a sluggish set of pigskin carriers. Little "Pattle" Dris- coll, a product of Evanston vacant lotr and the high school, proved that when he gains a little more experience he will be the equal of any back in the wesL He not only is strong on of- fense. *ut Is a sure tackier on defense, besides being a certain stumbling Mock' for any aspiring athlete who should break through the line and at- tempt to plant the oval back of the goal posts. Has Recovered from Shock and Is Resting Quite Easily Now. Dr. Arthur Rogers, rector of St Mark's church, Evanston. is at the Ev- anston hospital with -his left toot 8K0KIE. The president's cup and club cham- pionship was wes by Gordon Copeland when he defeated A. D. Edwards 1 and 1 In the finals on Saturday. The. directors' cup was was by Temple Williams,' who eliminated R. B. Scrlbner, 1 up. . . The members* cup west to R. L. Davis, who defeated 'M. W. Cresep, % The matches were, all 'closely con- tested, none of the winners being cer- tain of victory until the seventeenth bole bad been played. The choice score cups for the season will be played for a month longer, the contest closing on October 30. On dam A, Gordon Copeland, who had a choice score of 62 for the eigh- teen, withdrew as he has won the event for a number of years and he wished to allow the rest of the members a chance to win. Good scores in- class A follow: Frank E. Compton............'. .,..*$?. M. -PpNoyee........ ^TTmmTi.. »dd a A. Welworth....................60 In class B, Isaac McCurdy leads With a 59. J. D. Small Is In second place with SO. In class C, C. H. Meyer has a 65 and I. J. Shuart 66. The Saturday cup was won by L. B. Sherman, 91â€"19â€"76. Other scores were: C. W. Alison............. 102â€"28â€"76 F. C. Thomas.............93_i6_77 O. H. Scrlbner........... .107â€"30â€"77 "hot stuff' brigade when he the pepper cup by registering 91â€"18â€" 76. T. H. McGuire took the opion cup, with 86â€"8â€"78, while the tomato cup lodged in the possession of T. E. Dougherty, who shot 96â€"17-78. More than 490 members and guests attended the annual harvest dinner- Saturday night: â-  ' Underbill Full of Pap. Underbill, the fiery quarterback, proved the dark horse of the game Saturday. He scored all the touch- downs, four in number, and followed the ball as a bloodhound follows a scent. Every time the oval was fumbled, "Mush" was on top of it. This faculty of the Purple quarter Is likely to prevent more than one do 1 - feet for the Murphyites this year. fie - proved; he ^s* full of pop, »m< he manages to get every ounce of fight in the team into the game. He should prove a worthy successor to Wilbur p Hlghtower. The work of Norman and Crane was deserving or special mention. These ends were down the field on every punt and bagged their man before he could start up the field. Their tack Ung was sure, while Norman proved adept at handling forward passes. Patterson at full, and Williams as DrlBcolPs running mate, played good, consistent ball, and their -play will naturally Improve as they receive more-ftracttea. Two Strong Line Men. Stelnbrnnner and Randolph are two husky line men that McDevltt should tarn into towers of strength on both defense and Offense. These two men should, If they continue to play throughout the season, bolster up the line to such an extent that the short- comings of the other line men will not be so noticeable. The team seems to be possessed or tlm true fighting spirit, and if they maintain this spirit they will prove a hard team to lick. Fight a ad foot- ball go together, a bunch of star football players without the fighting spirit are about as sorry an uggrega- tion as one can see. \ Dr. Arthur Rogers. crushed, and Dr. Dwlght Clark, who is attending him, says there is small hope of saving it. Today he was resting easily. He has recovered from the shock of the accident and bears the pain with amazing fortitude. Mrs. Rog- ers and his four sons are with him. Monday at noon he was in Chi- cago on his way to the Monday meet- ing of the Church club in the Hey- worth building. As he entered the elevator the boy in charge started it with a Jerk that threw the rector to the floor. As he Tell forward his left foot extended over the edge of the car floor. The boy. seeing the doctor fall, hastily threw the car bock again, and the foot was caught in tho very narrow space between the car and the corridor floor. Went After Hlr» When the car was ralact *.. j u> standers had extricated the i./ot t.om its horrible poslton. Dr. Rogers had fainted. He was carried Into the club and revived. Dr. Theodore Pos- ter of the Theological seminary, an intimate friend and classmate of Dr RogorK, who took his place hero when he waa away last summer, helped care for the injured man He tele phoned to Dr. Dwight Clark, who got an ambulance at once and went to Chicago after him, accompanied by Mrs. Rogers. Dr. Foster, M.-o Koger« „uj i>, Clark came out with Dr. Rogers iu the ambulance and helped to make ulm as comfortable at, possible at the hos- pital. Dr. Clark brought along the shoe the foot was crushed In. Universal Sympathy. Or Rogers' two aotos, who a. o *t *k._ University of Chicago, came out at once, and the two others in the high .school awaited his arrival at the hos- pital. When the news spread through his parish there was a universal ex- pression of sympathy for both revtor and his family, for in his two years' connection with St Mark's he Las be come one of the cnurch's most gen erally beloved rectors. Dr. Clark says that the circulation In the injured foot has tden so cut oft that there is little hope <>r saving it. although no one can tell exactly what may happen If an operation should be decided upon, as now seems almost certain, it will be performed within a week, pnaslbly tomorrow. GLEN VIEW. The Glen View club was no place Saturday for a golfer with carnivorous propensities. Members competed In a vegetable tournament, and about the only delicacy overlooked was the fra- grant garlic. J. B. Hunter, with a card of 88â€"9-773, won the harvest cup, the chief emblem In the harvest festival. P. Berkey showed his leanings toward maize, by taking the corn cup with a card of 82â€"8â€"74. The potato cup found a home with R. B. Wilsey, who notched. 84â€"10â€"74. C. H. Ackert cap- tured verdent honors by taking the lettuce cup with a score of 97â€"22â€"75. The pumpkin trophy went to R. C. Vilas, who registered 81â€"6â€"75. H. Hopkins annexed the beet cup by shooting 96â€"20â€"76. J. P. Balmer, with 91â€"14â€"77, added the cucumber cup to his category. C. B. Doz dis- played a fondness for carrots by "in- ning the carrot cup, with a card of 95â€"17â€"78. A. F. Stevenson led the WMTMORELAND. Aided by an allowance of 11, D. L. jrJeQoiyer Won the blind bogey event at Westmoreland Saturday. He ken - a grots score of 94, which, minus his handicap, gave him a net of 88. H. T. Grlswold, with 101â€"16â€"86, took sec- ond. The ball .sweepstakes event was won by H. W. Armstrong with his card of n&m*m M:/' w%; C. L. Strobel, Jr., defeated O. K. Owsley, 8 and i. fn the semi-final round for the governors' cup at Indian Hill Saturday, W. G Walling ' defeated ' CV H. Conrad, l up, in the other match. B. F. Cummins, one of the pioneer golfers of Chicago, had low score in the qualifying round for the Owsley cup, his son, E. M, Cummins, being second with g*. Those who qualified were: • A. G. Cable, J; T. Cheney, B. F. Cum- mins, C. B. Abbey, J. Q. Byrne, B. P. Hinroan, Jr., J; A. Wesemer, J. P. WU- eon, '3t.,_JL T.-iWoodyatt, Qt Rldgway, H. R. Bute, W. H. Lyon, P. J. Bern- bach, R. D. Small. M. B. Schoenthaler. The semi-final matches for the presi- dent's cup were postponed. W. V. Kelley Is To Build a "Comfortable Summer Home," evanston. Fred Arnd, One of the most portly players In the Evanston club, won the members' cup by defeating H. S. Camp, 3 and 1, In the fine! on Saturday. H. B. Lawrence took the second flight cup from E. Van Petten, 4 and 3. In the third flightitf M. Rogers defeated F. W, Smith. 4 and 3. Results of play in the cup event for members oyer forty were as follows: W. W. Ross defeated J. S. Moore, 4 and 3; H. B. Lawrence defeated Dr. J. B. Beebe, 5 and 4; T. B. Telfer defeated T. N. Johnson, 4 and 2. Under forty^-E. Van Petten and H. 8. Camp postponed; G. B. Robinson de- feated D. W. Ellyson, 3 and; 2; E. R. Moore won from D. P, EUvson by de- fault; J. Orchard defeated T. J. Byrne, 2 and 1. ^' The qualifying round for the class handicap also was played, nearly all of the starters!getting placed. 8250,000 estate win be added to the Lake Forest colony next fall, when the country home of W. V. Kelley, president of the Mlehle Print- ing, Press company of Chicago Is ready for the owner. .•...-.". •A chain of artificial lakes has been completed as a background tor the house, and steam shovels and building apparatus are arriving at the estate dally. Work on the House will be started Immediately. The building will be located at the edge of a natural oak woods standing on the estate, and will front an arti- ficial lake and swimming pool cover- ing an area of an acre and a half. Mr. Kelley estimates that the house will cost $125,000 to build. The architec turn will be old English, and the ma- terial will ha either tile or brick. The Kelley estate comprises about 160 acres and Is on Green Bay road* about a mile and a half from Lake For- est proper. It Is flanked on the north by the estate of Leander J. McCormick and on the south by the estate of Darius Miller, late president of the Chicago.. Burlington and Quincy rail- road. Knoll wood Farm, Granger Far- well's residence, lies to the east. I will not decide on just what ma- terial the-house Is to be built of for a week or ten days," Mr. Kelley said to- day. "It will not be a pretentious resi dence. I am carrying out the scheme that appeals to me as a. comfortable summer home rather than an elaborate establishment." STATE BANK OF EVAN-STON a r p y GUN CLUB WILL A SPECIAL SHOOT PROTECTIVE BODY IN ANNUAL MEET Evanston and North Shore Protective Association • Elects Officers. 11,0 15 vans ton ana Norm tft.oic i .„ Uctlve association held its annual meeting Monday nlgiit at the home of W. J. McLaren, 1014 Foster street. The business meeting brought out the fact that the membership is Increasing and (hat the body is making progress In Its work A number of important ques- tions pertaining to the organizations were discussed. The following oftWo.s were elected for the ensuing year: President. W. J. McLaren; vice president. David Park; secretary. Mrs. H. C. Jones; treasurer, Samuei Weber; directors. Charles E Arnold J J Keegan and M. Corcoran. TICKET^ SCALPERS AKE ARRESTED AND FlNED Lake Forest Boys Wi.o Ti led To Sell Football Tick- ets Nabbed WOMEN ON WHEELS LATEST SOCIETY FAD A Number of the "Real Peo- ple' I Have Taken to Bicycles. Open Tournament, with Prizes, on Organization's New Grounds. MISS RACHEL BUSEY KINS0LV1NG I announces a series Imperial Roma. There are various estimates of the population of ancient Rome. One fig- ure given by Olbbon was 1.200,000. Baiter, in hie notes to Montesquieu's "Grandeur and Decadence /of the FOLDING CtiAlfR COVERS. !•««• Ront by th«« Woman's Sock., Uie VV'ilmette Baptist church, ;;•!],;*• covers for folding chairs. Apply to Mrs. Thomas Copeland or Mrs. Oscar Schmidt. Adv.,tf Sir Quite a Difference. George Rose, once turning Itemsna." gitej good reasons/for think-' corner, came suddenly upon some Ing that Rome's populatioD/was 2,000,. j young banisters who were In the act KM. The city bad wlthhi its walls. In of aping his walk and gestures. "Too the time of Tbeodoslu tiona, built* as * ru stories. 48.832 hablta- with several â-  sjes as wo#ne» A little girl, on being told by her other that when a child died an and took her up to heaven. thought deeply for a moment. and iumi sold;, Mamma, if an angel cornea j asking for me, say I'm net In." mistake, gentlemen," aaid the good- natured- wrt. accosting them. "That Is not the air of the Rose; It la only the stalk." i.„k.. , „i,»ore may »«u *.»...«..» 1 Jin tht. a arrestb made at N rthwest- ern Held on SaturJay afternoon. Coach Omer sent out blocks ot rr©*> tickets to seniors ia high schools and academies along the north shore. Some of these tickets went to Lake Forest academy Three ot th« J Rufus Wall- ingfords or the ciaas thought they could dlb./ose of tnelr tickets and then gain admittance under the wire fence. The lads were arrested by Officer James Shea and were brought before Justice John P. Boyer, Who fined them a dollar and coats each The boy» who were arrested are Percy Oke, Ernest Griffiths, and George Anderson A uuiuDer .J society Women ».*. o uhOfcon a nov 1 means ot exercise that la apt to berime popular and â-  very much la vogue. Its novelty is not In the thing itself, but In Its use by wo- men who o»u electrics, touring care or horses, or maybe all three. They have rtone back to the old foah toned bicyclt For the last few day* a number of ,nem have been seen on the streets, o,»i/arently getting a great deal of enjoyment oat of the new. to then,, means of locomotion. In recent years the mea have used the wheel as a meana of patting to work. Some young wome.. do the same and nurses find It a favorite means of reaching their eases quickly, but pleasure rid- ing, particularly by women, has not been in vogue for so many years that the present generation has forgotten that their mothers ever rode a wheel and liked it The new f„ .1 nas a number of recom- mendations. Among them is that of Its cost. It does not drink gasoline and the prlt. of one auto would now* adays buy a whole flock of bicycles. The fact that only one person rides upon one mm nine sometimes has its advantages. The Evanston Gun club will hold an open tournament next Sunday, Oc- tober 10, beginning at 10 oclock sharp. The program will consist of five /twenty-target events, shot from sixteen yards under the Shogren handicap; class shooting. There will be three merchandise prises in each event. Entry fee for each event $1, including targets. In the afternoon, beginning at 2 o'clock, there will be a 150-target event, shot in ten strings of fifteen targets each, from sixteen yards. The entry fee is $4.50, Including targets. The parse will be divided 20-20-20-20-20, class shooting. In connection with this event there will be an optional $2 sweepstake, divided 40-30-20-10; high gun. The uoual lunch will be served. K1VERS M'NEILL MAY GO AS CUSTOMS HEAD Avenue Musical ^OMAN'S CLUB. | EV Tuesday Mo HAROLD laflJIR PAUL ALTHOUSE . TiUpfT-(.f. Tuesday Mfeyaiag. December 14 ODEGOGORZA Baritone anuary 18 (AFT wo Tuesday Mornin ALBERT SPALDING Violinist THE PROGRAMS WILL BEGIN AT HALF AFTER TEN O'CLOCK - Seaaon Tickets. #6.00 Single Tickets, *3.Q0 Tickets may be procured from MISS RACHEL BUSEY KINSOLVING. 522 Kimball Hall. Chicago, or at Carrlck's Pharmacy, 601 Davis Street, Evanston C/olUoiui of Port of Chicago Said To Be in Bad Favor at Washington. Classified Advertisements TELEPHONE, WILMETTE. 1640 Wtat Ads m the Lake Shore News are charged tt the following rites Real Estate Classifications. 7V2 cents pet line. % All Other Classifications. 5 cents per line. •* Minimum Price, 15 cents. No advertisement charged for less than 25 cents. LOST AND FOUND 1X>STâ€"A turn to T. J., taker, oppoi _ CAT. RE- Ikirch, uarfer- ette d««r Re- w ltc CROWDS SEE SIX YfcAK CACTUS IN FULL BLOOM LITERAi f TEST WILL BE DEBATE SUBJECT UA»iver*uy Debaters Will Work uu This Question for Annual Contest. i.i . . fti. . jcIU collector ot ife<6 iKiil Chicago, and t^sident oi Lvanston, uuy lose hia federal Job if current gos- sip in Washington amounts to any- thing. A report, direct from the cap!- tol; ho.alds changes in Chicago fed- eral offices. This latest report, which has stirred Illinois political circles, had to do wuh Rivers McNeill. • According to the Washington story the collector i» in bad favor at the capitol and U likely to be succeeded by Joseph U^ Branch, a publisher, an old friend of Secretary of the Treasury McAdoo. He and the cabinet member were fellow students at the University of Tennessee. Air. McNeill was named as one of the "original Wilson men." Senator James Hamilton Lewis presented his name. LOST â€" CHILD'S GOLD^ and locket^-BWday, reward If retp&adtc Oakwood-av«f^w ilmeite. . mette .785-J. . . ^ « BOOT PROM FOR SALEâ€"US£D SEWIJ chines taken In trade^a*Our new dinger. Sipgtr, $5; ^ssaestic, U; White drophMi, flShfyhger^tfop- head, $14: ^dr WnRkyiiiTother bargains, ^sentterson Bros., 1522 Sherman-av. 48w-ltc FOR RENTâ€"HOUSES SCHOLARSHIP MEDAL TO NORTHWESTERN hay F. Newton Awarded Chemistry Fraternity Prize for Grades. Militarism. Whom the gods would destroy they first endow with loaded weapons and then fill their heads with foolfeh no- tions about defending.their honor.â€" A cactus of the nightly *»rict.v. which choose* to show its petals only once every six years, waa In full bloom Sunday night at the home of M. O. Peterson, 1419 Emerson street. Ev- anston. The entire neighborhood was there to see the floral phenomenon. The plant is tome twenty years old and is tr.-o feet high. The blossom at midnight was ten inches in diameter and wsa pure white. The bad started uufuiifing at noon yesterday, waa' in full bloom at midnight,' and waa l closed again today at noon. it.«t d«t«u.. i platform. Which Is tfte fining fieki for future politicians, tirame conspicuous on the Northwest- ern campus yesterday, when the ques- tion for the intercollegiate contest, in which Northwestern. Michigan and Chicago participates, was afisjevaced. The men win attempt to argue pro and con on the question, "Resolved: That congrebd should adopt the literacy teat for all European immigration." Try-outs for the contestants for the law school win be held in Booth hall. Northwestern University building, at Lake and Dearborn streets, on Novem- ber 4. Liberal Arts men will be heard on November 5 at Lunt library. In previous years men have gone to the try-outs without much advance prepa- 1b« chemistry department ot N*.. u. western university scores again. The Alpha Chi Sigma fraternity announces that the scholarship medal of the fra ternlty has been awarded to Roy F. Newton of the senior class of the uni- versity. , , This medal is awarded annually to thai'person, in institutions where the fraternity baa chapters, who has the highest standing in subjects taken dur- ing the sophomore and junior years. Last year was the first time the medal waa awarded and it was won by a Northwestern student, Henry Curme, son of Professor George O. Curme. FOR SALE, liable gas FOR SALEâ€"USED PIANOS TAKEN in trade on oar njlw pianos and players, Vose, i60Awheelock, $75, Chickering, f9fcssmeAe\ $120; Wei lington cahle,*$y5;7wIitneyyKim ball, $il5; 88-ftteLn^yei4/>295; other bargains yreasy payments. Pat terson Bros.. 1§22 Sherman-av. 48w itc Classified Business List GENERAL MERCHANDISE JEWELERS About the Limit In 8nobb«ry. dea of a snob Is a man on a who kiases the feet of the man on the round above hies, and ration. This time they will have a month of drill before submitting their kiake »* the man on the round below changes to the Jury. **"â-  ^

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