CMPLD Local History Collection

Highland Park News (1874), 22 Jan 1897, p. 3

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A,,O. Fay Lodge, A. F. and A. M. _Reg- ‘hlar m‘egt‘iwgg nights first and ghird Monday in each modifi, at Masonic hall, Qver M. Moses 8!. Son's store. ' Fromthe north , .\ . 12. 47, 3.14 p. m. From the south, 7. 3o. 9 12, u. 39 a. m.. 12. 07, 3 25, 5:37, 7. 29 p. m 2» DIPAITUKI For the south, 6 50, 9. 30 a m , 12. 47, 3 l4, 5 33: 7 29 P m- For the north . 9.12, 11.39 a. m, 7.29 p. m. Mail pouches close 15 minutcs before the departureof trains. W. M. DOOLEY. Postmaster. Independént Order Foresters, Court High~ land. Meetings firs't and third Thursdays of each momh in Forestcr’s Hall. Modern \Voodmen of America Meetings first and third Friday of each month in For- csters’ hall. Jno. Finney, V C.; Fred Greensladc, Secnctary. Highland Park Council No. 1066, Royal Arcanum. Meet in Fores‘ers‘ hall second and fourth Mondays of every month. Regem, Charles H. Baker; secretary, Frank B. Green. Miss Page is spending a few days with Mrs. Bingham on Prospect avenue.“ Regular services will be conduct- ed in thearmy chapel at Fort Sheri- dan Sunday afternoon at 2 o'clock by Pastor H. H, Thoren. Mrs. John Snyder has been suffer- ing Witli an anack of the grip the past week. This cold Weather makes large (19- , wands on the purses of Chicago‘ charitable people. Yes, but they‘ will save it all in lower-priced ice; next summer. There will be nu‘ Ussoli club this week. Being an Italian plant, from the sunny clime of that fair land, it could not endure the rigors of our uld~fashiuned winter Weather. Postmaster Dooley has a set of china, Haviland we presume, so that cold or rainy or extra busy days he sets up a little private restaurant for the comfort ofihimself and his as- sistant. " ' Mr. Denman has rented and occu- pied the flat over Rnfl’eu Baker's office. He moved in just. as this cold snap set in and found how goOd it was to be on neigh‘lmrly terms with a coal dealer. a little pleased last Lord’s day morn ing to see Supt. D. M. Erskine. Jr. and Mrs. Erskine in their accus tamed place in church and school We hardly know whirl] was the hap pier. the school. or tlu- superintend out and his lH‘ldP. It is putting the case mildly when we say the teachers and pupils of theBaptist Sunday schgol A were not Directory of Secret Societies. HIGHLAND PARR‘Poswr-‘Plce. LOCAL ITEMS. Al‘unL. THE HIGHLAND PARK NEWS: People are smart out in Nebraska; at least one man is and he is an editor. When a man dont pay for his paper, he quietly introduces a local and sets the man's name bottom up senor (mop has gone to Omaha for a few days. According to the niost. reliable in- formation we can get, there are not far from 500 water pipes. pumps, etc. frozen up in this city. Nearly every' home, except Ruvinook. has one or more of thaw interesting incidents. m , August Benson. the me man has enlarged his artificial pond. cleaned it out and filled it a short, time ago with Lake water so as to have good ice therefrom. He has also enlarged upwards the size of his ice house so that he'can store a much larger quan- lty than before. When Fred Schumacher looked under the front windows of his drug store Saturday last \\ here he kept has apollinaris and other harmlesg beverages, he found a dozen or so bursted bottles. and the beverage in a solid state. 21h they sell milk in Siberia. A Massachusetts man has just re- signed his position as post master after fifty years service. If the public library of his town profited as it should by our scale. it has' re- ceived at least $16000 worth of books from him. quite a little library itself you see. Some Lake County statistician has estimated that this cold snap will put from $75,000 to $100,000 in wages'iii harvesting ice into the pockets of workingmen inside our county limits: of course most of it is done over on the west side of the county in Anti- och and adjacent town-s. This is one of God’s way of helping lots of poor men pay their bills. Some tWenty years ago when the ice crop on the Hudson failed'We wrote a paragraph to the effect that, New York ice men use the inexhaust- ible supply of Lake Champlain, and New York papers at once asked what lunatic is writing for the RutA land Herald. We lived to see mill- ions of tons of ice stacked along the shores of Champlain for New York market and now it isa regular thing. We once saw a ship in Boston harbor loading with ice for far away Cal cutta: today they make it on the spot as wanted in India. Sixty years ago when enthusiastic men were talking about heavy trans Atlantic steam- ships. the eminent scientists of the day proved the utter ' impossibility of the thing, but the enthusiasts went ahead with their ships. “The world. he do move,“ said Elder .las. per. and the old negro was right. ALLEGRETTI and "PLO W’S CANDIES. \Ve make a Specialty of com- pmuulihg prescriptions, using only thexpurést drugfli f0 1' Prescription James McDonald, These candias are ordered in small quantities and are always fresh. Dry quds, Groceries, , _ Flour, Feed aha Wood. are sold at one price. St. Johns and Central Ave BAGGAGE AND ME (PARCEL DELWEHY; To or'trom any Ptrt of (My. DUFFY BROTHERS. 'We also hai'e the 50L;- agency HIGHLAND PARK. ILL. W; keep but the best goods. and all FRED W. SGHUMADHER. Trunk. Parcels HIGHLAND PARK, ILL. 3 City Express. 05.41.53 IN Dru‘gge 25 cum. IO (cuts. I“ ju In) “x m fol an alt th Mi rm ur wa a b 'whl Ink) th‘ WE 1101 con WM (12:) Fe] to 1 Iva bui ‘it 8 mai exp mg fro out are [11f

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