Illinois News Index

Highland Park News-Letter (1904), 13 Jul 1907, p. 1

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

IOIS I‘S In [In-ll From :30 than I F in Years F or ’Frisco Mayor. THAT comment and sentence of five years im. prisontnent against Mayor Egg3‘:gg: $Chmits seems to ' have met with a most enfhusia irithe citims a; that city. There it hardly an ottense endorsement from A » "We humane; that! that oi a citizen who has been en» “tamed with the that distinguished oflice and power . A big fat fellow who had been a butcher, and had .a wonderfully varied career, was convicted under the name of Castro as‘the most gigantic hutnbug and swindler, and yet there are thousands of living men‘ ‘wlgo believe that “Castro” was Sir Roger Tichborne. But quite recently the English papers report that one “W'illiam Campbell" who was a cavalry officer, of a gfeat city convening ‘ha‘ omcc and wwer innrvflied In a wotkhouse, and While sufl'enng from a b‘me' public fitunder and extortion bureau. Mayor Schmitz, ishy public‘npinion, charged with doing this on a large scale, and the Sam that he was convicted after an exhaustive trial of extorting $1, 775 from French . restaurant keepers is sufficient to prove that he was ji‘lf‘iMupt. May the good work against corrupt officials go on J‘ MASquerading Fools. Tm: Inc: for the unusual seems ’to hate no limits lust to gratify a prurient taste a fellow takes to the ’ great stature, less sickness, he confided to a member of Parliament the "secret" that he was the missing Sir RogerCharles Tichborne Bart, but he asked that the secret should not be divulged until after his decease. His story was that he was formerly. a subaltem in a Scorch regiment; that afterwards hegenlisted as a wprl‘v'ltte in another, was wrecked in the Bella, that it was he who shot Castro and fired at the servant, aft- erwards escaping into the bush, and that he was in England during the' Tichbor‘ne trial, in concealment, because of hi crime. The deceased man was of nd possessed etmversational talents. HIGHLAND’PARK {NEWS LETTER: l Motto for the runs! three veteran ltalitn soldier: who fought' m the wait of Edam withGaribaldi must have felt something of (1;: pk! patriot fire when they were greeted by 8.000 of their own nationality in Lincoln .Pm‘ on Sunday morning. July 7. Blood is thicker duo water, and new conditions and claims of another country does not stifle the feel- ing of old house patriotic fervor. The Chicago Audi- borium was crowded in the afternoon of Sunday to greet that otdgr‘fmembert of Garibaldi's red~shirt band. One of them wag blind from a bayonet thrust, but neveriheles's hé “iv, as one sees mentally, the honor (fine to his famous leader on the day which marked the centennial of Garibaldi’ s birth. Volume 20 O! :de anus. Jan-ca and aim. Wu! ”[30:51" My: Id (In! w... pang-til by a..- mic a! .5. HowA my ' Hut: nag]: law many way“ than ”3?“ 'linlian Patric?” Muster. runny-at! tint stud Bin: HONOR 1N OFFICE tau and of honor. ‘Mm‘ant of VM’CI reek HIGHLAND PARK, ILLINOIS, JULY stage in the drcn of a chorus girl. To accomplish Ihishehaahad lo laceinhis waist. cramp his No. 7 foot into a dainty high~hcel shoe and go 1hmugh oiher mesons uibody. He issaidtu tip the scales at I74 and yet to appear in a 22-inch corset. The said yOung man i JuliauD’Etince. mm hasappeandonthewm Lonthn. Parkand Ber. Iin. beginning in New York. ‘ There have been many excmable instances of young men donning masculine dress, but this map «mending of a stalwart muscularmanin the dressof a girl Induce-him In the mind of sanepeople to a feel- ingof din“... We idu‘ne this young athlete to get bétk to manly ways and not bring upon himself the contempt of men and women The Wont of such practicec'is that they attract other brainless youths. for such freaks are in- jectious. For there ls absolutely nothing ianlian's case to justlly this departure from a proper respect for whet is manly and what is womanly. Hem educated (we do not say graduated) at Harvard. and lithe son of a wealthy mine ownerâ€"~40 that no-circumstances‘ of need or at chance opportunity has led to the adomion of this crazy lad. Nor does he do it because helikee Wimwnfl “1 Wire fie greatest kind oifun tobe alady, but I have not found it a way to be perfectly comfortable. " mum-hug: Tan-«.mm'hliwhfiefo‘ Inpulrlhduyudi-mw --]. g. 11M. 0m- flat/oak “Time' s glory u , To unmask falsehood and bring truth to light. " So says Shakespeare, and yet there are things no toriously‘crwked that will not straighten out. There are, perhaps, in every part of the civilized world, men who still take different sides bn the subject of theta- mous or infamous Tichborne trial in which the great estate of an En‘glish heritage was involved. A big fat fellow who had been a butcher, and had a wonflerfuliy varied career. was convicted under the name of Castro as \he most gigantic humbug and swindler, and yet there; are ihousands of living men win; believe that “Castro" was Sir Roger Tichborne. An Old Story ReviV‘vcd. 00!- Outlook l3, Wuum E. Cun'rxs calls mention to the interest taken in voice music at‘ Amherst College. for] infer- entially reminds us that this is rather a rare instance of song culture 'for male voices. One of the things‘to be deplored in the rarity of singing by men. Here. and there a young man culti- vates .his voice, and finds himself so conspicuous in doing‘so. that the professional or many-making idea issugkested. Its yalue, as .5! Social asset. is hardly thought of. Young ladies are expected to entertain with song, but not so young men, or if they occasion- ally are, nobody is surprised if they descendinto buf- foonery or the merely comic. In the. chunéh‘ congregation fewlmeh sihg. arid in the Sunday school the average boyfixo haspused out of baby clothes into short pants regards it as ”riot manly," or at least not by“ to sing. So he": leaves it to the girls. ’ What a los: ghis is! Speaking generally ‘every boy with a normal mice can sing. The boy who can almost rival a Swiss mountain godel. as he yells as his playmate, can most certainly sing. And yet the choir master of the a'v erage church finds it extremely difficult to gm young boys in“) a choir where the training and the music would cust him nothing. Here is something worth the attention of parents and teachers. Lines Worth Preserving Thcdnmatic hum {or Mr. Rockefeller, in order to serve him wixh the requisite subpoena tu;appéar in the U. 5. District court excited great interest mruugh- Why Rockefeller Was Subpoenaed. £t3‘g. drains-In. mitiggmpwr‘m nunâ€"Immigrant." I-i9uiofi3~olnon§ §%?3rontgr3 KQQrO-ololo‘E-lâ€"od‘flr inuroraroloualgliro‘flâ€"Jlrh f‘r'igpg Anddnhiltmch'crmfluuduwfl- Why Don‘t Boys‘ Sing? ' MEN WANTED Number 28 -

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy