■■■■■■■■ ■P^PP^WWW!" 10 THE LAKE ^HORE NEWS, WEDNESDAY, M/if 82, rtJH' the Lake shorenews SUCCESSOR TO THE EVANSTON NEWS PUBLISHED EVERY WEDNESDAY frT the -- jfw?^' EVAN8TON NEW8 PUBLISHING CO., 526 Davit St., Evanston. Telephones 585 and 586. WILMETTE OFFICE No. 5 Electric Place. Telephone No. 502. '■ti, ALBERT H. BOWMAN, Managing Editor ARTHUR ROBERTS, Associate Editor JAMBS LEONARD LEE, City Editor SUBSCRIPTION PRICE, $1.00 A YEAR. All matter for publication in any week's issue should roach our office not' later than noon on Monday. ^i^ilr^i^^^^^ Entered as second-class matter June 28, 1911, at the postofflce at Evans- ton, Illinois, under the Act of March 8, 1879. WEDNESDAY, MAY 22, 1912. Announcement is made that the Evanston theater will give a free matinee to the children of the Illinois Children's Home and Aid so- ciety, the Lake Bluff orphanage, and the Park Ridge orphanage, and lother similar institutions, at the performance of "Salomy Jane" tomorrow "afternoon. Inasmuch as there are several juvenile parts in the play the invitation will he particularly acceptable to the institutions referred to, and the William Vance company is to be commended for their thoughtfulness in the matter. . ■•■■ '■.■■■'\'.-."" / , ' . ■ ♦. ♦'i;* ♦;..'♦'■■■:.■ North Shore police magistrates and justices might follow the lead of fcJhicago judges in their newly announced plans regarding auto- mobile speeders with advantage. Judge Himes announced yesterday that he would fine first offenders $25 instead of $5, and would assess them the limit of $200 for subsequent offences, and by doing so has struck a very effective blow against the dangerous evil of speeding. Almost any man who can^ffojai^n-AutonK)Mle is periectly-jwillingto run a risk of a five dollar fine for the fun of a fast spin through for- bidden territory, but he will hesitate before facing a $25 fine, and will stop altogether before laying himself liable to a $200 assessment. This newspaper is a great believer in the maximum fine as punish- POOR GRAMMAR 3- - BETRAYS GIRL --BecauseSarah Hoffman forgot her- self long enough Wednesday to re- mark: "T*hose there laces wasn't no good" she is no longer "Miss Blank Of the Lake Shoredrive," but instead is an enforced guest "at the Clark street police station, Chicago. An alert saleswoman in Carson Pi- rie Scott & Co.'s store^ who decided "Miss Blank of the Lake Shore drive" wouldn't say "those there." is respons- ible for her arrest. The police say "Miss Blank" has been obtaining goods on charge acounts in different stores for months, until her profits amounted to_ more than JJuQOJL______ According to Detectives McGarth and Farrelly,who arrested the girl and later recovered a large amount of goods from her residence, Miss Hoff- man, who is 19 years old and good looking, has been posing as the daugh- ter or sister of various persons hav- ing charge accounts at the different department stores. By inventing a plausible excuse she is said to have obtained goods many times, her fancy running mostly to expensive laces. •H' <Mimk iSTATElBAN Kl nFiEW^NSTiON X"T^i%TrOMPAN\«M mmm _.....A T R U !b • i- wri i^-e^. • ^ « - - Tur ni nr<T BANK ON THE NORTH SHORE MEMBERS_MVL A COUNTY FAIR ment for all offenses which carry with thent a danger to the life and limb of pedestrians or private citizens and ^certainly if this maximum punishment is tempered with a more mild one for first offences, no ope can exclaim against an imagined injustice./ A county fair--not an imitation, but the real thing--is being adver- tised by the Christian Endeavor so- ciety of the Emerson Street Presby- terian church, Evanston, for Friday night. The young people are very en- thusiastic over their preparation and ^iSCrae day last week the editor of The Lake Shore News paid o fraternal visit to the office of our^stgemed contemporary, the Loca News, of, Wilmette. and, while honored by the privilege of shaking Aa^s_MdilLjhe„w^rjU^ publication, was -deeply pained-ptbe-ehTigtiaTrEiideavor-soclety to the ^a^-hisemaeiated appearance and the extreme fatigue with which he seemed to be suffering. Our visit, brief as it was, despite Mr. Rush's cordial reception and urgent requests to spend the day with him, ^elicited the information that our host had been laboring^on the "TiiosF biting editorial I have ever written, which, by the way, Mr. Bowman, ^f isaddressed toyon.'r but not for a moment did we connect that afore- mentioned "petered out'* appearance which we noted immediately ^ upon being ushered into his presence, with the strain of writing the rr- tribute to ourselves. But now we understand. Having been furnished by some half-dozen of our advertisers with marked copies of the Local News which had been sent to them by our dear brother editor,_and ^ having finally struggled through the column and a half of fine type devoted to us. we have come to the conclusion that the mithor had a -^perfect right tohi* emaciated^an44«iggardappearanee7^and are firmly ofdthe^opininn that -no other man ofour acquaintance could have been say that while they will not be able to install a loop-the-loop, that all the other usual features will be in evi- dence. Fakirs of all kinds ■ will be seen, Japanese, Hindus, Gypsies and many Americans taken from familiar cartoons--all of them out with the purpose--of^-extorttag--money from the unwary for the purpose of sending ^iramber of delegates^from annual Young People's Conference which is to be held at Winona Lake, Ind., from July 9 to 17. delivered of such a volley without having suffered even more severely thjanJVfi^lRush appears to-have done* Anxious inquiries, sent immedi- ately to the office of the Local News, brought the gratifying information that our most esteemed contemporary is up and about, and that he gives every indication of a speedy convalescence. "We trust by the time this paper reaches his desk he will have gained sufficient strength ^to make reasonably certain the timely appearance of the Local News next Saturday--or Monday--whichever day it is that the valuable paper usually gets into the mails. _+ ;<r ■;■ ■;::;v^y-:;>;::;;^rV:':^r/:;?-,;r jlnaslsJfoJrL^is in^n^tion^inihe Owens case, Judge iMcKiinL^y reKorted~to a molie^f relslfflu^^ to much criticism. Judge McKinley says in his decision that the e bench and went to-flnr^rmory nf TJgy: pr-fburth street and Wentworth avenue, he ceased to be a court and ^bwainle an^dMviduaV^ the same as anyone-else. By this form of reasoning Judge McKinley means ^atwJien^ Judge Owens left the bench and started to the armory he ceased to be a court, and if he ceased to be a court, he immediately i|jbecame an individual American citizen known as Mr. Owens, and as pan individual citizen he was subject to the responsibilities of indi- *fvidual:'actions.■"fVi:y^S^^0^&:-";K^n|s:/:T;:M::T.; .......r:~■---.-.■ : ■..; ^11 ** takes some very fine reasoning to distinguish the difference in ^sfll^ffect between leaving the bench and going to the armory, as Judge |l|ll|pwENs did, and leaving the bench and going to one's home, as Judge |g|§||^fcKiNLEY did. Is it the mere leaving of the bench which causes the IffP;:kludge to cease to be a court? It certainly can make no difference !:gg^ whether his destination after leaving the bench is to the armory or his |p:f: home. If the destination makes rio difference and Judge Owens be- £if*fg .came an individual citizen when and because he left the berich and f:M'S went to the armory, did not Judge McKinley cease to be a court and £&M--*e«lin6 an individual when and because he left the bench and went ggg home, and if Judge Owens became Mb. Owens at the armory, with- mm out judicial authority, did not Judge McKinley become Mb. McKin- ley when he left the bench and went home, and if so, did he have any more right to issue^ the-injunction-as an individual citizen than any otnerjndividual citizen, for according to his own reasoning he was^^not^ court and no one but the court can issue an injunction We «r^not trying to argue that the injunction was illegally issued but m-*!?.^ was right ii^ saying ■Mk. Owkws ^Heavmg the^bench and going to the armory ceased to lie a court, therefore, not possessed with anymore of his authorities anol powers as judge, then when Judge McKinleyleftliis bench and weM^omer^ie^iIso^^ possessed of any of his authorities or powers as judge, consequently, *?*JW™wto«eL could not haveJbeen rifi^tfnlly issued from his ham the sight 1 SS EFFICIENTADMINISTRATION The internal administration of thja^ta^e Jank of| Evanston is in >the hands of m& v&m*mQ mmy^ yeara of uuccessfujf ban king^-ex^er4|J^^|«rf result| none but thorougje^ conservative m|thodB^apiirollowed;^ yet always withJteEfigard to prog#esslvp|i^lPlnWd^ ing accommodltioi^||il^customeii^r*lxne building* up of their affall'liJL/^r We invite chSW?accounts in any amount, and on savings deposira from $1.00 upwards, pay interest at the rate of 3%, compounded ^emi-annuallyrN^ : ;p The Baker's -In-which-we^ We knead an Quite differeo , though, in form and size From the cc k-stove oven o'er which ake the many things which you need. XJOhe~Good"Housewife so often^rise- Try Our Baking. W"e Succeed! JOHN ERICSSON I 2003 Maple Avenue Phone 1974 :1**i h^r fe ItX&i^iS UlSS:-^ JiftM.'S ^ 1572 Sherman Avenun Ihjejjm^erials are soft arid durabl Waists, si V6ile, Corset Gombinatfon of Corset Gov^and Drawers.; stamped ori"Naui^ob^7rr;.i>'?5? Gowns, stamped on:,^7;xJ-;:;:'yiS^^ Nainsook................;. .77... 71