CMPLD Local History Collection

Highland Park News (1874), 17 Dec 1897, p. 4

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Tax-2 L'xke Cunt.” hit but y‘e'u' had a vary succeasful sh )w. G we and entrance fees unwanted to $3. 765.95. They plid in premium: $3,407.17). Total r¢ceipts ware $5,- 709.15. and they haw, after p tying lll bills. including $1, 093. OJ on the debt incurreJ by rebuilding aka: the two years ago cyclone, just $10. 46, in the treasury. That 15 a gnoishow. ing and we are prmld of Lake County Tm: Scripture says “M'lu ‘shall not [he by bread alone," but the chief business of some Waukegan churches seems to be ithe giving of church supperE'with elabxate m3- uus. We have been told the way tofiome plwples' hearts is through their stomachs That seems to be the “kings highway” in the Bluff City. A Baltimore editor is somewhat excited over the statement of a prom- inent scientist, to the eflect that but- ter can be made without any cow. We have a suspicion nearly every time we take dinner in Chicago, that the buttei is wholly innocent of any past relation with a cow. The enter- prise of the West is something m H'- velous. This Biltimore chemist“ is u back number. Wusx H. C. Paddock started the Independent in 1892, a trifle ,over five years ago, most people shook their heads and said no paper could suweed in Libertyville. Perhaps it can‘t. but to-day the Independent stands in the fronit rank of the coun- ty press; indeed it is an honor to the press of the grate. It baa been en- larged and shows every Sign of pro:- parity and enduring vitality, has kept his teem-(k in)! add accu- rate, and he did this work for us while makiiig up the semi-annual account of stock and .hnsinem for; his department of thé wholesale house ”f Carson. Pirie, Scott (30. The Highland Park News. It has been awedained that the census of 1890 cost over eleven mil- lion donars; or evegy six persons enumerated cost the goverrimeut one dollar, or every family about eighty cents. The. enumeruwr did not get all this; half of it > was steal, or money wasted. a pile, )5 to 20 pages all 1d, of names and history pf the h' school (fibril Daniel Peak: nea'fly every word of which WI!“ be avazlfble when no come to writ; hit, Pause Published in the Inlcmsts o! lhghlud I’Irk. Highwuod Ind Radish. every Friday Afternoon by Evans Forresl. “mutual-g rum polo lulu!- “ m How many of our people know that Lake edunty once had a hang. ing all it’s own? Well it did Feb. 27, 1874, when Chris Rafi'erty was executed in the Waukegan jail for the killing of John O’Meara in a Chicago saloon. Ta: fire inspector, a state official with powar, has been in Waukegén looking me; their public buildings, halls, stores, etc. and he has ~ order ed fire escapee on about a dozen bf their building; and when he says, "Put them on‘” they have to do it He will be lune soon,{ as the grand jury in Bomber, took notice of these things, awarding to law Tux Ninws'begs knife to acknowâ€" ledge not only: Nmonal call, but Terms, .l-OO‘per year, 50 cents fur sh nmnlhs. 3o cams for three momhs. Entered at (he poihofiiée at Highland Pnrk, “L, ”second class unmet. Luns B. Hlnum, - - Emma. A. E. EVANS, - Brianna; MANAau‘. (Mice: in News linilding, :55 Central Avenue, Highland Park. Illinois“ FRIDAY, DECEKBER l7. We took dinner one day‘ last week at the Chicago Club, as the guest of one of it’s prominent members. The Chicago, we need not remark. is the highest toned Club in the city. It takes something besides mere money to get in there. it requires some blood and breeding and standing socially and morally. Well we met atfew such men as Marshall Field, Mr. McCormick, . several judges, Hugh T. Birch, and others, and that we enjoyed a royal dinner goes with- out the séyingi. It was a dinner which in it’s substance and serving showed that there is euchta thing living being reduced to a fine‘ :13: But perhaps the most surprisi g of all, was the fact thgt everything went on'fi's‘ thoughiié’v’v'ére' no: there! Our presence did not occasion it rip. pie, such is the culture and decorum of the club. ' ' Fred Sehdmieher his just re~ cpived a equipment of fine pet- tumés, imported and domestic: also a fin! assortment of fancy box paper A anmx paper tells us of a new army rifle at Fort Sharidnn which carri‘es a'sbot twp miles, has gone through ‘3‘ pm’s head, a uwug'hvoak tree md than bored 3 hale into a§elay bank deep enough {or In arteq‘ian We“. When reading such'gtartliig mam; it is best to 1'6 member that the oouutyshife his a score area of saloons which some- times supeéinduee vivid'iinsginations. A Fnzsgn statistician says there lire l0,000f libraries in; the world worthy of the name. We don"t know whetherh' halinclndgxi our‘ public library in its list or not If not, he better not come here to spend his next summer vacation. We move. t9 amend by making the list. 10,,0101 for ours is worthy and will be more so when some publiu‘apiriwd I citizens erect a nevfi library building (in Ha. zel park it) front of the churches. IT costs: the Lord Mayor of Lon- don somewhere from $50,000 to $150, 000 tbove his salary to extend the hospitalities of his position and perform the other social functions of his 01506.;Th3t is a little worse than in Highluhd Park. But then London has no Eimoor or Osooli club, or it skating-rink, or lots of other good things of‘lwhich We boast. Give he the “Peerless” city with its simple democratic institutions and life» We “gain call the attention of our city 0 cials to the shabby condition of the dressings on Dale avenue on either de of Central avenue. We were 0 r the north one Tuesday morniné and found on careful ex amination that it is about two inches below the. level of the macadam, and the water and the med covered it up entirely, so that a lady who came 'along ht the time was obliged to leave the crossing and walk in the street. The stone crossing at the Bingham-Cheney corner is in about the same condition and we hood ofl’ three inches deep of mud. The difliculty arises from the fact that these crossings are laid on a level with the street; when put in were filled in underneath with loose earth, not tamped down, and the constant driving over them beats them below the street level This can be seen in the ends of the plank crossings 0n Dale avenue. Om: of; our Lake county men, Wm. M. Odetfioi Gurnee isshippingBOOO pounds 0'! our choice county turkeys to Boston for the holidays. He sent 12,000 flunds for Thanksgiving. Lake 'céuntiy’s first. white settler came ougiu {834. Capt, Dan. Wright from utlahd, Vt., and now we aré sup lying cultured, aristocratic, baked- bhan, Boston with her choicest turkeysi The world moves “W-est ward the course of empire takes its way.” 5 _ v > ‘ ’ pakwood Wedneadnygludt. , V 1" Read the Newsmfl pétr year. jTin, Sheet-iron ad Furnace Work Done to Order. » attaching 1-,.“ 'K Our old friend, 18. " B. of Grafton, Vt â€"who has 05 to Washington, or oth r financial ioentros This objection' 1 a Serious, tif not fatal one, in the rur l portions of New England and oldgr sections .of the country. When our city first wont into issuing bonds, fie wrote a New England savings banh president '10 see if his bank did not 11.11 to in- ivest in gilt-edge muncl a]; bondé and his [only was, “Yes, 1 1111; time waver oomes when the bqsitleos de- ‘mandn of our home enulrp'l'ises do notluse it all." Savings hanks have helped make New Englanli the work- shop bf the nation Postal oavings banks would have taken 3:“ that cap ital away from those oommunitme State savings banks have kept it at house; developed home irldustrieamo that nearly every New Ehgland ,vil- logo is 111 manufactureingf one, - with prosperity, peace, and plenty, 11nd 1301119 to spare, to send 1; 2 boys and 'girls through college an then give them ’a start when they; came out west. ’ - .' not read all from that day to this, but it holds the same high place in our esteem now as then. Mn; Elvira S Gree spent. last weqh' m Chicago, with or daughter Mrs. J. R. McQuiston The special amnionoi hex 1Lsit_ at. that We was the death of Mr. McQuistbn’s mother‘, following so boon after that 0F W dumber a. few? #1911th #80 the daughter’ 3 remain: were taken from .thg receiving Thaw! yith those of her mother ré intoered m , We are glad to recprid the feet there 15 one lady' m termâ€"we expect there are others' In the Ossoli Club- who agrees with us magma Atlantic Monthly is the highest ade literary periodical 1n the wun‘ty. We sat up nights, after lesscm'a were learned, to read the first and subsequent numbers 40 years ago. We have Probably nine persons out of ten think and speak of it as a tax. If it was so, the tax wahld have to be leviedoh dogs awarding to their worth and not so mush a head. But the/supreme court,-â€"]03 Ill., 30 s. q. decides that it is‘ not a tax, but a liesnse for its wor‘ s are: f‘The license fee imposed under the pro- vision of the statute is in no sense a tax and is not therefore within the operation of section 1,â€" article 9 of the Constitution” * " 1 “It is sim- ply what it purports to ,1: license fee’ and them- it goes 0 to say that it' Is imposed unaer the lies-power and not under the tinting power of the state. Also, that (logs are vic- ious animals sometime a public nuisance and pest the same as a saloqn is. snd' is an evil which can ' not Well be wholly' exterminawd. The person who wishes? to lawn or keep one pays 11 line {or doing so. It is on this grou of the dog tsx being a license fee that the su- preme court holds th the person who keeps or harbors a dog is liable for the license fee, as iwell as the person who owns it, inst as the law holds not only the owner of the sa» loon, but the attendant gliable. If the “dog tax” was strictlyla tax then keepers of dogs could; get "out of paying the license fee try saying or the dog belonged to someone else. But it being a license fee the su preme court makes the keeper liable and it' 18 worth all, the bother of these suits to have i this fact clearly brought out. 2 /m AL SAW le 'nâ€"mnoc‘rAx. Fruits and Vegcuflu Rewind (buy. C.‘ A. KUIST, TIIE FINEST LINE UP XIIAS TIES .M. AND BVEIIGREENS IN NWN? OFFIGE AID YARD: ST. JOHNS “ENE. ‘II LUIIEII DISTRICT. Fancy firoderi’cs, Dry floods am! Crockery, BOOTS no SHOES. . ROBERTSON NOLAN, Lumber ind Building Material of All Kinds. Evans Bros” Vegetables and Fruits in nu Karletlcs. Valencia Raisins, Stuffed Dates, Shelled Figs, Plum Pudding, Malaga Grapes. Oranges, and Tangcrlncs. ’ ’Ha‘rd and Soft Coal, Sawéd and Split wm‘xm. GoodsthtBat. , 3,1 bland? mink. Pricumkamablc. f T - Stoves, 8111535,, ‘ We will fill your orders for anything you may want for Xmas. Just call at EVANS 3305' store and be :oonunped {that what we say is true. Also a fine line of LWHAT! DEALER TELEPHONE 67. Telephone 46. yon mvw’r same IN HARDWARE, MMWFmdM. St. Johns Avefiuc. Nuts, ' '(‘m'mumm 4H w-z-h Ifizhumq-herk '. Burn. lam Slnnin} Mr. and Mrs. Frank SI , 17h:- largvxt lim- 1:} f‘ 113639: in ”w Park mu Dflln- Swmfflahlrfi (‘ity (‘lerL Hunk} «ago \Vedmwiay. u‘mi .. h'3m. hedxd m»! {21H m I hf “H‘ “(igvr .- H )‘031 “am 1'1“»,- inal Allvgrmn mm}.- lho- fin-turf 3m; mu. ( ?’ iug \‘(mr urdPr with Fr mg (h)! R "Writ-k p 1m Effiklhf‘:h. nur J3 I‘rcx \Vu" wihy , I‘Iax Rmnua M in. L‘hur‘! 6‘1!me hush? rfib'n m.; Ppu'unh Lu 1;.“- Sunday «\Q'nmy 8173’) can «1 mar hum h In ‘ meetl'uz m“) \ «J: ‘2 l' snmzth 5Wc<l|m1 M '1 k 'J'IY 1. JR“ U \\L\~}.‘ .,; ,' as huh», nu (tn m: lA‘aL’i-A'. J ' PIflYt‘l-an‘k'11X'2 ’Imz'x 2 -r\'unc1- Huih'li. p. m.: \\ Ir lm‘gdav'n' '7 praycr mrmmgr; hanrnlm. a! (The: ((-15 (le at pastur‘~ Mud: Fm! { ml ‘u‘ i'xun. H. Hm'x‘n. {Kh' ". nun pun“ mg. 11‘ 4 p. :n ; .‘amlm " 0.4: .m: :a bx. 55.31); Cal! Mmhlnf. pa“ ix. musk: mus: Sum}. ' ”spin!“ ‘h: ”‘43 A n each mum 8‘ Sun .- (lnt't‘ xvru “4.x;- WIS: a. .J-m‘irz P c<L~v§ 5 V J11 (;f‘.‘lz.\'$i4 .':, Nu r.‘ ”Adda :3 Km: .‘I’A‘ddi'hL \Lv'x 1m! fa.” L “uni. Charm H ”4km Chcsknlnn, ' lr.’ Met"! M M' I.II( H 1‘ M 1m: \ is. em h \, U. 1‘.“ Lu]; alar mc Fm No. 0 me 1hr curd F'mn Hm smx‘ PLOT. : 1:. F0} it} HUX‘Iu Ilhg! ‘|n'(:' HOURS: .1qu “(mp “331"? Mimi. is wr'. - ‘4 Waging to 0m. HULLAV 3 (l NORTH“ [STERR H. R Mm} p‘ LLOYD M. BERG In it“ DR. FHMKUI B. W B‘xp Dlrutory of secret HIGHLAND PARK Pas, - 1mm a HI”) I .‘ R00" 1 HOOHLAN )fllh H v: mlh. n ; ,Ju l” u: Inches Cu» \‘4-xl'nc CNURCH DlRIELY‘: LOCAL ITE m ' 'F' lmx‘dm Arrnq 111' ndm .\ VI» or «It. in D» ass nh \f

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