Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Sheridan Road News-Letter (1889), 3 Jun 1899, p. 13

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C U .‘O.’OOGUCMOOG.GWUW“QI Oi. tmm:mmuta¢uuu It. Booj. Neilnll bu rented hi- homo for the summer months. Kin- Curtis entertained I to. Mend: u to. Thundny oflut week. Mr. Juno- Hnnkoy Ill the good 0! hi. Mother, It. Pnuk Hunky, Tue-day. Mr. HI", DIV-Icy and family have (lion posses-ion o! Kali. Lodge for the summon ‘ Mr. Arthur Dobip and Min Lyon were the gue‘ob of Mr. H. lutdow the forepart of the week. The Bohemian Club took advuot- age of Decoration Day to 'go on a ’mu (1') to Fort She-tidal Park. Dn'Byron W. andllrd. Grim!) of Arlington Heights were in the village Sagurday looking after property .in- tenets, The provision of the ‘bicycle ordi- nance forbidding their use on the sidewalkaia in operation ‘after the first of J une. 7::CUODDD:D.: .IIDI§.:: .II‘OODODOOiIG:GIOD.IA The flag which unuafly graces the stafi at the fountain corner on Dec- oration Day was conspicuous by its absence. .Probably a case of invalid- V Mrs. Lewis Day and daughters, Blanche' and Dqtothy, returned'Mon- day from Colorado Springs, where they had spent the past three months. Mr. Larson’s, Glaucoe pupils in music joined with his' Winnetka pu- pils in a musicals held at. Mr. Hyde’s residence in Winuetkd Saturday of last week. Mr. Muzzoy, father of Mrs. A. .M. Tipton, was taken with a congestive chilL Monday and at film time this paragraph unwritten continues to be seriously ill. Mr. Henry Witt and Mr. Jacob Beck of North Vernon avenue have been recently grading and otherwise improving their premises. Mr. Beck has built n superior wire fence entirely around his property, a length of 1100 feet. (Home Department. TheVGlenooe Janiore ere repidly making: recordtor themeelvee.‘ So hr they have defeeted every teem which he: been hazardou- enough to challenge them. On Saturday of Int week and Tuesday of this they pleyed the S. C. C. Caddies. The were wee: Saturdey, Gleneoe 23, Caddies 18; Tueedey, Gleneoe l3, Ceddiel 5. They are still looking for fresh field. tooonquer, and the proverbial chip is carried jauntily on the shoulder. THE SHERIDAN ROAD NEWS-LETTER. _ At a meeting of the Women’s Reading Club’l‘huraday rfternoon of last week‘ the‘ following ofiicers were elected for the ensuing year: President, Mrs. S. R. Hurford; vice- president, Mrs. John Parry; second vice-president, ‘Mrs. _C. H. Howard; secretary, Miss Wright; treasurer, Mrs. G. J. Case; librarian,_ Mrs. Aehbel Ligare. A line of study was laid out for‘the year: From Septem- ber to January, “Russia;" January, “American Fictionf’ Fehruary,“En- glish Modern Fictiongl’ March, “80: ciology;” April, .“Education;” May, “Nature.” The ladies hope to. make this year interesting, and profitable. Excursion to Bufiaio via the’ Nick- el Plate Road, at one fare for the round trip. Tickets on sale June 11th; 12th and 1,3th, good returning to and including July 2nd, 1899, providing they are deposited with joint agent in Bufi'alo on or before June 17,1899. Do not mine this opportunity of visiting 31131110 and Niagara Fai'e at a very reasonable expense. City Ticket omee, 111 Adams street, Chicago. Depot, Van Buren Street Passenger StatiOn, Chicago, on the Elevated Loop. '10 Last Sunday night at midnight on the plaza at Park and Vernon ave- nues the Gleneoe dog: held a meet: ing to resent some scurrilous dog- gerel recently. published and for the consideration of other grievances. Jerry Flmde’rE-‘Dupfer‘ Eeq., by lndlmflon Meeting at Glancoe. First 0! the Season. reason of his dignified prawn; m enundtopmidb. Hotnokhinplnne on the plntform 9! Clemon- Dopfor’ 0 meat tho supported by vine rui- dean. 35mm: new 31nd, Fuller. Lion Schwoigor, Prince Bat- «whatnot-Hark”, “8 rt” Hurdow nnd Carter Hudson w and F933 1 Howard. The stand m also by the pro-once of Mend-Ino- Judy Day, Benin and Baby Brow-tor, Mnndntory McLeinh and Gipooy Timon A Hu- Tipton was requested to not as ”(any and reporter for the meeting: President Jerry, in a few baeeo profundo remarks, explained the ob- ject of the meeting. Personally. he had little- to complain of. Hie mae- ter provided him generously with lamb chops and tenderloin eteeke, plenty of iceweter in hot weather, and seldom restrainedghim of his in.- erty; but he knew many were lean fortunate and he wan ready to< lift his voice in their behalf. Like Bru- tne, he was not an orator and would leave to the more gifted the elucida- tion of the wrongs enlfered by their downtrodden race. He introdqu Sandy Fuller, qu-., who came forward with his acous- tomed smile and a graceful swoe 5.]: his handsome brush Sandy sai was no great howler himself, and of domestic griefs he had none. He was iuller fed than many of his neighbors, and he felt it his duty to voice their wrongs rather than his own. It was, true some of their peo- ple were liable to be a little too loquacious on pleasant moonlit nights, but God had made them that way, and if their “deep mouthed bay- ing Welcome home”- were wholly si- lenced, it would be missed by many who liked to hear it But among their entire colony there was not one either guilty or capable of such squawks, such whoops. bowls and catcalla‘as were to be heard from boys outside of school hours down to ' 10 o ’clock at night, calling and an» swering one another from diflerent and distant rts of the village, like Iroquois Ini mm on a war path. And then the daily riot and racket on the ball grounds near the Manse! “Compared with this,” he said, “our nocturnal concerts are a golden si- lence. ” Another thing: he lived in, the neighborhood of (pair. of Mexi- Groceries and Provisions ' Flour and Feed. G. A. HOL’STE, Telephone No. 12. Glencoc. Dealer In

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