Lake Shore News (Wilmette, Illinois), 16 Jan 1913, p. 3

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liWOVAT first Time Been Indul Winter and spring >: novation in Northwesta||; r tics, will be commence*!! f track to the gym on ^ I noon between 6 and 6 Jp I local track offers the|| | amities afforded to Wi* I leges in the west t0 |(:'during the wtoto#q0$i.^ t months. ThlB new i00§ $ the marked imp^mO0^k i Purple has shown In ^ A; .cent years, andr;'w^|i*»liit..... I flyanston »ggee^l^^^§^0^^. '?■ conflict next -favtl;".-: ^^f^'; ^^SWf^°f* bunch of practiced players Large Number to -4__or the men ott'l^^iji||,„Ti...v;r,.,ft,^ ^ following were «$ifil0i^^i0ji^^$ Sjjractice: H. B.. Gilal^S^ fvQ. B. Hltfitosjfel^^^ #" Cruse, C. McPli<B«t|s|rsJi' :-'^-liiiPS^|#IW " and B. Kraft CK tb* fTWto»A te*m, | which was the best tha* local fan* ■;'; have seen in auBt^^j^^0^0^,$O^ (■■ lowing were expeetefc'f#^1^00:^1^. U the 'varsity men:. ^M^iUl^SkW*. t 8harp, H. a ■ Shn^'^^B^^^ * 'Smith and C. Ststm^^'k^^f^'-^ nothing, if not ap- afternoon, before part of which from the grand opera Pim Methodist church, ©• "Tha Art of Fonetting." tlMta -'Wefe some tiUaga la the last year^ record .that , .we'd better forget He said: . % ^^^ L# oryl « Is tha ligatiire that binds aU the evenU and experiences of one's life toto the one bundle we call pe^ sonality. 'Without this »-* wonderful power we could hardly be persons. If bereft of memory we could not know what occurred a moment ago; aye, not know that we were existent a moment ago. As it is, ideas are most fleeting. They elude consciousness, in spite of our interest and volition to retain them. But without this retaining faculty of memory our only mental possession would be the event of the quickly passing moment that ceases to be even as we speak. Memory gives unity to our lives in that which connects our past with our present It gathers all our experiences into one sheaf , in that it binds all our yesterdays to our to- day. It is the power by which we identify ourselves with ourselves. ' ft "If It were not for this wonderful faculty there could be no mental or moral progress. Locke,' the philoso- pher, years ago said, *Without menu Coaehing The practice '^m;1^§^;m^^r^^tmrt ,ww ^ ^^ „K________ days and Thursdays between 6 and;;;t j ^ ^^ iB a perpetual infant' To ac- Mm^mm^l^^M ihrs, Employee of Public ce Company, His Own Life. LEAVES NOTE IN GERMAN Does Not Assign Any Particular Reaton for the Act--Leaves Three Children. 3 Fred Buhrs, who has been living at the home of Mrs. Sophia Pruter, 1912 Lake street, Bvanston, committed sui- cide Sunday night while on duty at the 'Public Service company's plant on Grove street by taking carbolic acid. ■ -v >■/■.■■* ..•;•'■}<?. His body was found in the rear of the building early this morning by Charles Holts, 172* Central street, an- other employe of the company. Buhrs left a roughly scrawled note in Ger- man, while it does not assign any par- ticular motive to the act, lays some blame on Mrs. I>ruter, with whom he has been living for some time. The note; translated, reads: "Mrs. Prater is the one that drove me to my death. That is all I have to say. But my poor children." -- "^£^i^fL,..^iJ. Buhrs has been employed at the public Service company for several years. He ia a widower, and about 55 years old. He is survived by two small children, and a married daugh ter in Chicago. ■■-'•'vv^^f^t'Sl: %ttillt llSfipp!^ H.W. Corner State and W mmm ^sfsffsi* o'clock. Director Hammett will have general charge of the men and wiU take an active part in the eoacbint:. Grady, who is coaching the *varsity basketball team, will help out, and will be used espedftUy to instruct some of the prospecUve Wekers In that branch. Omer WiU also devote some of his time to aasfilting the men to get a good start for the opening of the season next fait time in the history of football .at Northwestern that has been held. This metlwd of cosjCIi- ing the men out of season has de- veloped championship teams at other schools, Wisconafrtft^ year being in large :%i&t&-&&* training that the men ha4 last aprins in preparation. *i»candldatea win be taught all the elementary things about the game and wffl also be drilled in fomatioiis, and wiU «et need to working. together. ^^W^SM^k- *■ ■ quire knowledge we must use this power. By it we recall the ideas our minds "have thought, and by it we recollect the truths we have grasped. And because • of it what we nave learned we may always know. facts and truths learned In the past are by it held in the everlasting present "But it isn't remembering, but for* getting, that I want to talk to yon P&VV4 CHICKEN THIEF - MAKES mi A chicken thief commenced opers> tions in Evanaton Saturday night and made two hanls. The places he fobbed were the coopa in hack of the residence of Mr. K. Mllliekt, lf*S Wat- street and M. B. Sargent, 14SS the New Testament It declares that God Is not fate, but Father; that He Is not retribution, but love, and that love at its best is forgiveness. If God forgives-then we can forget YOUR HEALTH'S 8AKt Uvtog causes Jmany deaths MagneticMinerall y*tdr4 your true friehd. A &:mygw*te^$QH cago office,, 112 No. La Salle street Phone MaUTlWV p :|tl en der Jbwier avenue. At the first place the thief got thirteen enJekene and at the last twenty-four, In geek «na-Hsi «bicken8 were killed aefOM tiwy were carried away, the ceope with blood. The ^Wcken owners In ttet their guard,________ tor a clew to 9m «*i^?#^^v-^. OrRCER 8AVKS3 CHICKKM COOP. B^riy Friday moraine ail incipient fire alongside ef a chlckeA coop In the nar of the residence of Fred Qoode- "■■■t 14©4 Warren avenne, a^ranston, ^wight forth the heat eflosts of Ofikwr H«ehes of tlM loesa f«llee fotee In «ttaguislnns die Maea. TIm fwe nad til i» tbe iiratl^jjo^ There are sorrows, defeats, failures, sine we would like to forget, them is grievous onto us. The remembrance of them handicaps and diswwagea us. When the eock crowed Peter lememhered. So some occurence recalls to our minds some disloyalty to truth; some betrayal of right, some baffled aspira- tion, some unfulfilled hope. Some unim- portant thins happens and the cur- tain is rung up suddenly on the stage of our minds, and then #e behold, re^ enacted, some sad tragedy of this past and hear again the walling music of our remorse and retret We would like to forget; we would like to ctose the book of failure forever. Cnn we? "In one of lord Lytton's minor tales ha describes a magic mirror, which unveils to the beholder the scenes of his past life in a serene and pleasant atmosphere. Every particle^ of the discouragement vexation and failure Is eliminated. And the observer sees only what la agreeable. But a vindictive wltcn appears and by some strange peases empoisons the magie mirror. Then the observer wmm M» port to aetual facsimile. Bvery^elQj nent of pain and care la revro4nced In the phantasmlc picture, tt oay we eonkl destroy that vtodtetlve wltcn. If we could forget the painful and re- member only the pleasurable .-The ancient poets sang of the rItot Lethe that flows and eatrlea to theseaofoMtvion anything we wow mm It in ^gardens of ^*«f~ Does it#r*eflswn«»? Tee, it does, m poasinte to forget the y«* MoiKlay Eyr; Gleasei s iytaT M. W. «te- MillMrt ThSMk. Sat, »m. -- --- Viltodto Fulhrton or W«brt» At^ Martha Office PaeaeW 1046 HUBB WtfkSTAfeotttatat Hair Gooes Maet to Order tMiifo,'/ PI $W^-*t g; TEETH ^-WITHOUT HAS '?^P*/-. It of the Madison St. Bridge S:| &:tfi^i tfsfeg Ifyoti want ii^1f^^% ^»;.-3-:;. -t Rccommendecl by Doctors to Disilxi^f. jsmuSM ft^*^ 3^SflS^

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