Lake Shore News (Wilmette, Illinois), 29 May 1913, p. 7

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^^l^fSP^'fe^^^P «S«!£*»SC3B« Wliat t»ttOMitiiiii<«Hf! Lake Forest •fw« ^J£*m&^m:mml"m* '^MMtS^r"the llvftle The 0«wii|i^<^.'jM^|M^^^ ueBdav. Mi* Samuel *. fcbase l» Ihalrman of.'thegolf cWmittoe ral I""' |OU8o following rthe f«"M%, Mr. and Miffe Owoii Smith, of 60 illevue place, Chicago, nre^ewar« ...» at the Q^wenwla chib. Mr and Mrs. Bartrand, WalKer,of 9$ Lake Shore drive,' are at U»f Qft- rentsla club for tfr:<tW^f^0^i Mr and Mrs, Mather Lewis will sail or Europe early in June t^ be gone ft' reaf# They, will spend moat of their \m In London and Berlin. They jve leased their home, "Meadeaide," w Mr. and Mrs. Edgar J. Eiblein of jhicago during their absence. Countess Cizycka, who has been in IVgshington for more than a month „ the guest of her mother. Mrs. Rob- ert W. Patterson, at the laiter's teat. jence in Dupont circle. is«ow a guest tot a few days of Mrs. Thomas Mc LauKhiin. About the middle of June the countess and her mother will ^nie to Lake Forest to open their gommer home. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur, Meeker and tnelr family have closed their Chi- cago residence apd are at Arcady farm, their Lake Forest country home for the season. Mrs. Meeker spent a part of the winter In Santa Barbara. Cal., with her younger chil- dren, and returned to Chicago but a fortnight ago. She is one of theiar-| dent devotees or outdoor Htf shtfher girA^wt^f^ pride. Miss Kalherin* Meeker, who has been attending school in the east, m are of pi Weddings arf tafcto tieia*&^ jnat now. One of the most interesting of thea* fill he tie marriage of Mias Harrlel McClure, daughter of Dr. and Mr£ |»uiiea Gore King McClure, to Robert Douglaa Stuart, son of Mr. and Mrs: Robert Stuart Of 4850 Woodlawn avenue, Chicago. Invitations for the wedding, which will take place In the take Forest Presbyterian chorea on June 10, were issued Monday. The father of the bride Is president of Mc- cormick Theological institute and former pastor of .'the church In which his daughter will be wedded. The ceremony wilt occur at 4 o'clock and will be performed by the bride's father. This will be followed by a re- ception at the family home, "Glen Hame," on Deerpath avenue. For the accommodation of the guests special coaches on the Chicago A Northwest- ern railway will leave Chicago at 2:55 p. m„ arriving at Lake Forest at 3:40. Returning the train will leave the north shore suburb at 5:40, arriving in Chicago at 6:45. Present at the marriage will be an elder daughter of Dr. and Mrs. McClure, Mrs. Dumont Clarke of Manchester, Vt., whose mar- riage took place two years ago in the same church. Members of Evanston Com- mercial Association, Boy Scouts and City Council to Surround Him. SERVICE AT M. E. CHURCH jj What People Are Doing in ~~^HigMand Park Highland Park hall will have Us opening dance Saturday night. Mr. and Mrs. Martin J. Insult an I their daughter, Miss Virginia, have moved from the Virginia hotel to the Moraine hotel. Mr. and Mrs. James H. Channon ol 672 Rush street, Chicago, have taken i bouse in Highland Park for the rammer. Mr. and MrB. E. V. Price, who spent the winter in Europe, have returned and will open their hew Highland Park home, "Bonlta Villa," the first of Juno. Mrs. Walter Baldwin entertained at dinner. Tuesday evening in honor of Mr. and Mrs. Roland Hastings, the tatter formerly Miss Ruth Beebe of New York city, whose wedding tool: place early in April. ____ Mrs. Marshall Sampsell is home from New York city. Mr. and Mrs. O. Dickinson Street of New York city, the latter formerly Miss Evangeline Wean of Highland Park, are receiving congratulations on the birth of a son. Mrs. Street's mother, Mrs. Frank Lincoln Wean, is in the east visiting her daughter. Former Governor and Mrs. Charles S. Deneen have rented the home of Mr. and Mrs. Earl Spencer in High- land Park for the season. Mrs. Spen- cer and her daughters,'" Miss Gladys, who will be graduated in June from Vassar, and Miss Ethel, who is attend- ing school at Chevy Chase, near Washington, will sail on June 10 aboard the liner New Amsterdam from New York for England. They will visit with relatives until September. 'RHODES SCHOLARSHIP EXAMINATION SOON President Edmund J. James of Illinois University Names Date for Tests. President Edmund J. James of the University of Illinois, chairman of the Rhodes scholarship committee of Illinois, has Just received notice from Hon. George R. Parkin, secretary of the board of trustees of the Rhodes rahlps, that the next Qualifying examination for all candidates for an Oxford Rhodes scholarship will be held October 14 and 16, 1913. This examination correspond!* to the entrance examinations required by many American colleges. From the candidates who pass this exami- nation a scholar will be selected for Illinois, who will begin work at Ox- ford in October, 1914. Papers will be set in this examina- tion in Latin, Greek and mathematics, «nd only those candidates who pass In at least Latin and mathematics will be eligible for a scholarship. A Rhodes scholar is appointed for * period of three years and receives the sum -of fifteen hundred dollars etch year. A Rhodes scholarship at Oxford is therefore a prize of greater money value than any scholarship at My American university. The candidate for a Rhodes scholar- ship must be an unmarried male cltl- «en of the United 8tates with at least Ave years' domicile; most by the first ot October, 1913, have passed his eighteenth but not his twenty-fourth ' birthday; and must have completed st least his freshman year at some "recognised degree granting univer- sity or college. OFFERS REWARD FOR RETURN OF LOST BABE Plans are being completed for one of the most elaborate observances of Memorial day that haa ever been known in the history of Evanston. Al- though the ranks of Civil war veter- ans are thinning fast, memoers of other patriotic organizations are shouldering the duties which formerly devolved upon the "Grand Army Men." However, the remaining war veterans who are physically able to participate in the march and the other exercises, look forward to Decoration day this year with much interest. Mayor Chooses Staff. At the Evanston council meeting Tuesday night Mayor Smart named the following members of the council to act as an escort In the parade: Dyche, Eastman, Congdon, Turnock, Changelon, Klngsley, Hinckley, Top- llff, Witt, Knapp, Hummelgaard, Burns and Chandler. Alderman Carter will be absent from the city, and Corpora- tion Counsel McNab Is planning on * trip to a nearby trout stream. John Hahn, John H. Moore, RobertH. Mc- Coll and William J. Hamilton wUi represent the other departments of the city hall. Mayor James Russell Smart has announced a part of his staff as fol- lows: Scouts, Dr. S. V. Balderaton, J. W. Burdsal, Jr., H. W. Carlisle, Dr. Charles H. Hurlburt, W. J. Morehouse, Andrew M. Nelson, E. B. Wilson and A. B. Raffington; representatives of Evanston Commercial association, Peter Randlev, W. J. O'Connell, C. D. Macpherson, J. R. Duthie, H. E. Chan- dler, George A. Kearney, E. C. GallU, Hurd Comstock, W. J. Hamilton, W. M. Colwell, A.' H. Bowman, D. N. Ol- son and C. H Bartlett, chairman of the Ways and Meant conrmitfcee. Rep- resentatives from the city council will be chosen in the council meeting to- night Unless a heavy downpour of rain prevents, the parade wilt form at the Mrs. Catharine Waugh McCul- loch Is Interested in Hunt for Chicago Baby. Mrs. Catharine Waugh McCulloch, Evanston's prominent woman attorney and club woman, Is now engaged in a search for a "stolen" baby for a young Scandinavian girl, the facts of which present all of the salient points for an unusually interesting bit of fiction. The old adage Ibaf Truth Is stranger than fiction is asserted in this in- stance. Two years ago this month the five- weeks-old Infant of a Scandinavian girl was taken from her in a West Side hospital in Chicago. The story goes that the infant was secured by a physician and placed In a home where death had Just taken a new- born babe from a mother. This move was made to save the mother from in- sanity because she was worrying to such an extent over the loss of ber Church street, at 9:15 o'clock Friday morning, and march promptly at 9:30 o'clock. The Formation. Tho formation will be as follows: Eight pollcpmen. Mayor Smart, grand marshal. Marshal's aids. Evanston Boy Scout Drum and Buglo corps. Grand Army of tho Republic. W. P. Turner, commander., Spanish war veterans. William Scott, senior vice-com- mander. Wllmette Boy Scouts. A. H. Rice, scout commissioner. Evanston Boy Scouts. Wm. M. Green, scout commissioner. Automobiles. The line of march will be eaat from the library to Chicago avenue, south to Davis street, west to Maple avenue, south to Dempster street, east to Hln- raan avenue, north to the First M. E. church. In case of rain Friday morning the parade, will be called off. In that event the services at the church will start promptly at 10:30 o'clock. The speaking by war veterans in the public schools will not be conduct- ied this year as has been the custom Ynthttt. , *>^atetion of mtrtt badges to »*- anston Boy Scouts, Mayor Smart Address, Mr. L. A. Gaskey, Spanlah war veteran. Second song, "Battls Cry of Frise- dom." â- _'â- ','"' â- '"-â- : ..â-  :"â- ':â- â-  :-'v Reminiscences, Comrade Joseph F. "Ward of thePWfcrlP^^ ; h :f^s|*; Third song, ♦'Marching Through Georgia,"' ' . /"/'"^ Address, Comrade Hartweli Osborn, Junior vice-commander of the PosC Fourth song, "America." ? -i* Benediction. ,V ' \/'va4|' Taps by Boy Scout buglers. Mr. Charles N. Stevens, director of music ""::*$il ' Cemetery Service. Services will be conducted by veter- ans of General John A. Logan camp No. S40, G. A. R., at RosehlU cemetery at 2 o'clock Friday afternoon. Mem- bers of the John A. Logan Woman's Relief corps will also conduct service* on the soldiers' plot at this hour. Comrades Moss and Lewis, accompan- ied by Mrs. Moss, will decorate the graves ot war veterans, burled In the Niles Center, Northfield and outlying cemeteries. Veterans who attend the services at Rosehlli plan to go on the 1:22 Northwestern train unless autos are provided. . An effort -is being made by Dr^John ImppelnWe* sejpuVe^utee to t*jWd Friday morning for Ifcflrm veterans who are unable to march In the parade. It is also his intention to se- cure autos to take the old soldiers to the cemetery in the afternoon. Next Sunday members of the John A. Logan Post, Q. A. R-, will attend the services in the First Methodist church in a body. The members will be attired in full uniform and will meet at the post headquarters at 10: IS a. m. to march to the church. The Evanston ^oy 8coa,ta..wUi as anbe south oi» vis street, east on Davis street to Hln- man avenue, north on Hinman ave- nue to the church. ESE aUESTIOR f'fi.W ii%" i'JJ Ing following a preliminary hearing public library, Orrington avenue and conducted IN SERIOUS CONDITION. , Henry Kaop, the ilx-year-old son •* Mr. sad Mrs. P. B. Ka*P, 111S **•* >r street, who was struck by a mc- igmuuir. â€" --------------------- tsrtyci, Hddes by H. Lawson, 1124 ^ras-added to the Nelson family,, when â-  - irma, ths 11-year-old daughter, was strnek by an anto In Sheridan road. Min place, Frjdsv aJgfct ie in a aerl- °» condition. ..pS'"'Si.- ".'..if AN UNLUCKY DAY. C. C. Nelson, »28 Chicago avenue. Evanston, reported to the police that his bicycle, vetoed at $20, had been stolen from In front of his workshop. An boor later more woe churcb, where hundreds of them In chorus, will sing, under the direction own offspring. In securing the In ^ wo ^_m m______------ fant from the Scandinavian girl, the t Jn fonner years. However, the School physician obtained her signature. In chjidren will be urged to take part in her weakened physical condition it 1", tne exercises at the First Methodist said she was not aware that she was " *- signing away her own child. When she recovered she started a search for the babe, but the two years' hunt has failed to reveal Its whereabouts. The aid of Mta. McCulloch was en- listed last week by a Chicago club woman who had become Interested in the girl's case. A reward of $50 will be given by Mrs. McCulloch for Infor- mation which will lead to the location of the ctlld. .;,;: "The president and secretary of the Japanese Exclusion league of Califor- nia are onder indictment as parties pants ta the dynamite outrages In "Los; Angeles. That fact reveals the nature of a good deal 0* anti-Japanese propaganda now being caneed on In California." So said Dr. Geo. Hln- man at the Current Events class at the Congregational church Sunday morning. Dr. Hinman haa lived for five years In Ban Francises. He wee for twelve years a mlsamnarr In Japan. He Very frequently came In contact with the Japanese officials. He regards the Japanese not as a hin- drance, but as a help to the develop- ment of the Pacific coast Oppeettienby Officials. The bulk of the opposition against the Japanese he said was from the offi- cials of labor unions. Los Angeles, a city that baa never been favorable to labor unions, la exceedingly friendly to the Japanese. It has more' Japanese in It than any other American city. But San Francisco, which has been the hot bed of militant labor union- ism, is quite unfriendly to the Japan- ese. The labor unions pat up lurid posters upon which is printed in red letters, "Fire the Japs." But even In San Francisco the Japanese have many friends. The committee of management of the Panama exposi- tion protested against the paasage of any unfriendly laws agatnat the Jap- ^ lanese. All the influential men In the _____ *VKeburches and In the universities and Ington avenue to Da- ,n tne pbUftIlt0rOp|O m j^t socle- ties regard the Japanese with favor. Vblume 23 of the Immigrant commis- sioner's report, which goes into detail regarding theo Japanese on the Pacific coast, is favorable to the Japanese. But the enemies ot the Japanese make more noise than their ffiends. Dr. Hinman gave quite a fine his- torical sketch of the coming of the Japanese to California. He said: "Ninety-five per cent of the Japanese of , America are .in California; sixty-five per rceA>%rMthe Chinese of America are in California. These J orientals came because they were so- licited to come. The big railroads and mining corporations wasted cheap la- bor. They paid the ships that brought these orientals a bounty. In 1857 the mayor of San Francisco in order to express his good-will, had some American books printed in both Jap- anese and Chinese. These he freely distributed. "With the icming or the dema- gogue, Kearney, ill-will began to be shown to the oriental. In the fall of 1907 President Roosevelt requested the Japanese government to give ho more passports to Japanese laborers. It Is difficult for Japanese students coming to this country to get certifi- cates that will enable them to enter. The question of how much cheap la- bor should be allowed Into America, is to be determined by economists. But there are undeveloped resources In California which need cheap labor. The large areas of land owned by ab- sentee landlords Is more of a menace to California than the Japanese are." Miss Flora Starr, who is taking a very active part In the "World In Chi- cago" exposition, and who has spent not a little time In Japan, presided. She, too, was pro-Japanese. The very great majority of the large audience that attended tho class was enthusi- astically In favor of the Japanese. Mr. B. K. Warren, who Is the chairman of the executive committee that Is ar- ranging for the World Sunday School convention In Zurich, Switzerland, said he had just received a letter which said that the Japanese would like to have the next World Sunday School convention held in Toklo. He said that the delegation of Sunday school workers that Is now visiting Japan were everywhere being kindly received. NIWiWAN^WMWIINailltULTgJ GLEN VIEW MAN IS HELD TO GRAND JURY Charged With Defrauding Aged Nurse, He Had Little to Say in Court. ----"At-*""" Peter W likens, who resides near Glen View, charged with defrauding Mrs. Mary Scbloegel, a nurse aj the state hospital at Dunning, of $943.50 In an alleged sale of real estate, was held to the grand jury Monday morn before Police Magistrate Boyer in Evanston. Ball was fixed at $2,000. The cane, in whlcb an investigation was made to ascertain why prosecu- tion was not conducted Friday when it was called, presented a badly mixed set of details. Mrs. Scbloegel, the only prosecuting witness, was in court Mon- day and told her story of how she bad paid out $943.50 of her earnings in payments to Wtlkens for an acre and one-half of land near the Glen View golf club. After she had made pay- ments aggregating that amount, she discovered that Wilkens did not own the land." In some manner City Prose- cutor Mclnerney of Chicago or some of his assistants first took up thi rase for Mrs. Schloegel.- Then she was advised to come to Evanston and se- cure a warrant for Wilkens' arrest. She made two trips before she se- cured the warrant before Justice Boyer of that city. Inasmuch as a state warrant was issued by Justice Boyer, he notified the state's attorney's office following the arrest of Wilkens, of the date ot t»it- preliminary hearing. Tlia* date was last Friday, but when the case was called no one appeared to prose- cute. The case was continued until Monday morning. Mrs. Scbloegel asserted at the hear- ing that she had not been notified that Wilkens was under arrest until Sat- urday. On the witness stand she de- clared in addition to paying the .. ^___... $943.50 to Wilkens on the land deal she of Charles N. Stevens, as the veterans. ^ ^ ^ ^^ ^ ^ a and other, march Into the edifice ob m ^ boy ^ ^ OUm V|ew School children and other, who teh ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^^ to contribute flower, to decorate sol^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^ ^.^ dlers' graves may leave them at the, ^ ^^ ^ ^ ^ ^ WiJkea, public library Friday morning. The program which will be given in the First Methodist church at 10:80 o'clock Friday morning follows: Called to order by Commander W. P. Turner of General John A. Logan Post, G. A. R. Prayer. Chaplain McClure of the Post, First song, "Battle Hymn of the Re- pooHe." Introductory remarks, Comrade W. B. Cbttreh, patriotic Instructor O. A. H. (who will also present the speak- ers and preside daring the exercises). failed to get her any work, according to her statements. Borne of the money paid to Wilkens, Mrs. Schloe- gel stated, she borrowed from an Ev- anston bank. NO MAIL DELIVERY FRIDAY. The Wllmette postoffice authorities have received notice from the post- office department in Washington, D. C, that carriers will be given a holi- day in Wllmette on Memorial day. No deliveries will be made all day. Mails win be dispatched as usual. usicSchool - WnHiBSp^tk^ Voefi; vkrfh*. Pnbll4ftohc^l Mwie/llasiaa Mat. l»rftJe|»M:!tf-lapiN^ "'Sl>a^ '.....!â- " ******* %m IfVi'lrsir^:** forjkillmh Jarmcat* #*#• you gka? hare Wot ^M^^^':^^^^^^^^^, 622 Davis St. ffHi Telephone Uke View S347 IHBRIDAH « mmmm w Liner^SmM Mtde of the finest workmanship surprised to you can get I. 1012 Ccntrtl Street %*â-  m LADIES' TAILOR _ AND IMPOsXTK* Telephone 1829 :;.|«s% ^ore closing our for iki Sfrmme we offer regularly $50 to Any & mt for. These suits will of course be- made with our usual careM H. ROPINSKI & CQ^ -GRADE LADIES' TAILORS | 508 DAVIS STREET, Near Hinman Avenue Phone 1778 Bvanston .*5a Fitf of 'Em and •i t THE CLOVER, 208 S. Wabash Av< THE GURNEY» 23 S. Wabash Ave] THE MADISON, 221 THE [I N. Wabash Ave. tVERTOO S. Wabash Ave. [Madison St./near5tj You can't go wrong on any of thesJfive restatfrtthTs. All under one nuWagement. All run separately. Tnetfreall exceptionally pleasant places toeefa CHOOSE THElON &!:'•; â-  fiSj*, â-  â- ...â- ':â- ' ^M -4-r;â€"- .1 ki-S4w

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