STORE. :1 mm“ a is leadtr r. L6 .2 HINTZ. incur pro {EATING Zardw'are†UIST, TAKEN Dem EREI). CORSET. “Fm MATERIALS. and Encflsh Pom Fancy Ni“ 5. Etc. Hymgoto :eia Water. SEEIT? The a diu’ Bun Store. Trade 36 LAKE FOR EST. qunuuumiumuf 3 “:3de i n::¢.u:§£§§§.¢.§t¢¢t§§ Scloous and. Boulevards. ‘ ' And so the. s‘albon of Chicago] has had its eye blackened someâ€" what in Judge Clifford’s court. The TimesHemld, how'ever, inl commentipg oh the decision} makes Use of sdme rather peculiam oxpressibné. For inslgance: “The. decision of Judge Gliflérd ans: mining the validity of the b01119. vard saloon ordinahce,‘which was owned last July, is in Rm iniérest 'of civic decéncy, cleanliness‘ ‘and good order, and will be highly émtifying to those public-spirited citizens who have labored to re- sist .t'be encroachment of, the an. Icon trafï¬c upon‘ our boulevard systems." . , Again: “As a matter offnct A TEMPERANCE ADDRES. Ye friends of moderation, Who think a refomtion. Ur morn] renovntion. Would beneï¬t. our notion, With all its dissipation. ' In every-rank and motion. A cause of degruiation. ‘ 0! which your oberniion, ' Hives ample demonstration: \Vho see the ruinetion, Distrust nod desolation, .The open violntion of moral obligation. The wretched habiun Without mom 0:- nny regulation. F or common maenhtion. .\ scene of deprivntion. (7 L‘neqnnled in emotion, ' . 1' he frequent down-soon ' ‘ Hf SlbeH) ordination; The crime of depredntidn Defying legiaiuion; , ~. The nwfnl profanuion .0! common wnvemuoï¬. The menu! tberruion' 'l‘ he dire infatnniion, . . ‘ ‘ \\ an. every rad grating!!! uf maniac -despemion:iâ€"- \‘e who with Wiion Behold this devastaiion. And utter condemnation v I)! all inehrintion. y ' Why sanction its duration, _’ ' pr show diapprohntion ‘2 Of my combination ‘ ' For its Wminntion? We deem t dcvlntnï¬on That offer: no temptation By any palliation 0! this nhominntion. The only and foundation; . ' And under ibis persuasion llold no communication ' \\ ith noxious emanation ()1 brewen’ fermefltntion. 0r poisonous pagination Of spirits} distillatihn.‘ . Not my vain iibuion Producing stimuluion. To ibis deiorninntion , We coll eonnidorhtion. And without hedtntion Invite cooper“. 1 Not doubting island! Wil‘] mind your estimtiat'. And by communion Alon-d you cowl-ï¬nal; For in participation With-Elli! usoeintiim. You inny by meditation Insure the_ preservation 0f n more genention From all eontuninntian, And my each indicntion 01 such regeneration . Be the theme of exultntion 'l‘ill its ï¬nal corinnmmntion. n a,u I r VOL Sever let up on Advent- um. In the“ d!†one must ndremsnobeev 5†Incas as we“ a :0 The best medium (or hie shore enterprim is the BY J. N. HUIE. H. D. HIGHWOOD. the city should never 'L'ha've‘ t ated tlie disï¬gurement" mid sptglmettt of its ‘boqievards, sa’loons, ‘ Them never was slightest warrant in civic dye; or; politics for granting Iioex‘xé run saloons On- tbese ' pie. idljiveways. The bonlévard (. Ehop is an offensive blight on_ of the ï¬nest driveway systel the world, and it should be (I Whew! Hiathe Tiéies H 111111 1051‘. its head?« What? Thé 1011- 1131111111 dramshop an 2“ 111k†sive blight." Is that the 1111) the gilded 51110011 is to he he ed? A1111 111111,'too.; 11ft" he 11a: imid' his ‘bygti liéexisé?" H1311 Ices the Times Herald, or any 3111-1; 3111111111] 11111141 favors the kg 1 zing‘ of the. 31110011 call it 11 "1|i96i;111'e-‘ ment" 111111 11 despmlment" the 'bodiévards? By_ the way. i the salmn~especinlly if it i1...“ the :‘ a‘bigh- tuned" and the owner .. 9111's diamond studflany g ate! wicug or any mOré ah 111mm. hity Ii“. the boï¬levag 11111111111151 blank leogï¬in, the “1011 111176,†15' a Hung 11nd 1111 incongruity when H1 need to locate on some street those sides are lined with madest 'wel; glings and neat cottages, the ard- 29111-111111 homes of men and 1 men iare striving to rear fnmil 13 of boys and girls in respectal Is there a single father or n owning and occupying a In Highland Park who would moment object to a saloon door. particularly if it‘is‘ ‘ mixed" and helps out out lil in the‘ matter of taugs’? W course not. Haven’t the: shown by their vote that t1) Have u] the saloonmprovide ‘ regulated.†" “Poisoning. probably re} from eating disintegrated nearly resulted fatally. to 8i} hers of the Filly family whc near lire depot at Lake El Wauke’gan Daily Sun;' No; the Sun kindly explain v; means by “eating disinfe food"? Perhaps the editor; Sun has been reading a “Mrs. Partingtpu’a" sayir' "‘Ike’é.†‘ I †"‘Bott Brotherfs Saldon,‘ We ï¬n- est in Cglhmbus, 0., evi‘ploys. twelve bartenders, who sée all handsome young men. EV" y one of these has tg sign a‘ bluff absti- nence pledge defore he can‘ ecure employment in the. plum -â€"The Emancipator. Scotty Moran and Frank nder- son, of Highwmd, were eat ï¬ned 8100 last week for conduct lg slot machines. Forty seven of the gran trunk railroads now discriminate gainst drinking employees. FORT SHERI DAN: EIGHLA)‘ *3 PARK. FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 23. rmen Jit3 ? [ )theri ue in! gfor ai “ next! nigh-g wally} y, of3 g}; 3ust “11'“ 179B s to ' will m it â€rated 3f the no of g. or sin [M u 1 one lt'i‘ng de- 1'th it is . PMII in vm. . Some pooPIce aee‘m puzzled that in a strong probibitibn Mate such strung petitions for a E 10ml option law should go up to the legislao. tare. now in session. Look at. it ’n moineut. The grant mionty of th$se petitions go up frmn the large manufacturing towns of Bruttleburo, Bennington. Rut- lnnd. Burlington,- St. Albans, White. River Junction, Bellows Falls. Newfson. Richford, etc. Now. if you! will look at. your-1' inap you will see that all thesei towns, eXcept‘ Rutland, are what:i are known as “border towntlf"1 that is, they-are on then box-clm'l1 line. of tlxe‘ata‘te, next to New Hampshire, Massachusetts, New York and Canada, and the whisky and beer reshlents of those towns- have been for yeara'in the habit} of going across the line into those 1 other states for their intoxicanta; They want the saloon ,at home in ‘ fthei‘r own towns, as the beer and {whisky folks ‘here want a saloon linthe Park, an as not to. be com- [pellal to go away from home for their drinks. But the farmers and the resi- dents of the hundreds of country villages all over the state don’t want any saloons, not even for the ibénetit (‘1’)! of the drnnkards and lmoderate drinkers of these big itowns. Rntland has always.- so} lgfar as we know, been rampant for} iwhisky and beer, and 'Rntland is iin many respects the cesspool for ley, N. Y, as St. Albans, Rich- ’ford and Newport are the the en- trepota for the cheap whisky of ~Canada for all the, Northern part of the stats, But the people, the masses, hsving: lived peacefully and 'prmipe‘roosly for over ï¬fty years without saloons dont want them now to ruin their sons and 'l'raise a generation of druukarda. Mugérlï¬yivm In Minna-polls. In the rect at election in Min neapolis to? Mayor there were three candidates, Ames, Rep; Gray,Dem.. and Dea'h, Prohibf The vote was Ins follow's: Ame-s, 17 292; Gun, 12. 732, and DenimI 9,.140 At ‘he presidential elec- tion of 181W) Hennepin county polled 26,7 ‘3 for McKmley, 20, -! 50'?) for B , an, and 150 .for Lev- ering, Prollwibitlonist What are the facts, and what is the inter- once? Am'es is notably a corrupt man and nttetly unï¬t for such a position. Butso strong has be- come the (lowinant par’ty that ijlist such mall are able to foist themselves in'to power by the use of corrupt methods and ecu-rupt- ing (institutions. especially the mm Ihop. Inferghm. Doubtlesa a large proportion of the vote fecently given to the Prohibition candi- SUPPLEMENT RAVINIA. because théy had suddenly beé oome outï¬tted, but because they could not swallow their own party candidate. date for mayor ‘ It is also naturjfly inferred that the rush to the Prohibition party is due to the hot that in the Re- publican party then an thou; ands of ‘voters .mod, to become Pufohibitiu'niots on the tint good provocation. younger men than loan-self, that their feet stuck out of the dormer windows, but when they died the old gl‘obe want jogging dong. and not one person in ten millions. went to the funeral or even heard a! thpir death. Be as smart I: (that Young MC Remamber. 8m. that the world in older than you by covert! years; that for thousands. of years it has been so full of matter, better and of their death. 89 as smart as you can. of course. Know a much as you can without blowing‘ the packing out of your cylindnrf heads. Shed the light at your! wisdom abroad, but don’t dude people with it. And don't, imi- gine a thing is so, simply because you ‘say it is 90. Don't be too sorry for your father because he known so much lea than you do. The world has great need of young men, but no grentur ueéd than the! young men have of it. You!“ clothns ï¬t you better than your‘ father-‘9 Bt'himâ€"they cost ante money, they are more stylish; your moustache in neuter, the cut of iyour hair is better, and you Ire i pnettier. ob, bulimia than “Pa." IBut. stops moment. yhuug man, .and reflect. The old gentleman {gm the higgut nhry. md his GLENCOE. homely scrambling sign-tore on] the busine- end, of u check. will 1 drain more money out of the bunk 3 in ï¬ve minutes then perhaps your‘ handsome autograph can do dup‘ ing the balance of your mortal life. Young» men are useful, and they are nlsn ornamental. and we all like them, and it would be im- possible to successfully engineer a picnic without themâ€"but they are no novelties, son --oh, no, nothing of the kindâ€"they have been here before. Don’t be so modwt as to 3shut yourself out. but don’t be so fresh that you will have to be put away in a cooler ‘ to keep from spoiling. Don't be afraid that your merit will not he discovered. People sll over the'world are look-I ing for you, and if you are worth ï¬nding, they will find you.~ Selected. Tm: Highland Park Electric Light Company has ï¬nally ‘won its suit agahst Jan, Huxhble. ' 'Get your ulondnn primed 1t tin Nth-Linn ofloo. - ho polled not, M W†Val m K? . The pulpit of Chicago thistle!- ed quite vigorously lat 8:“ against came. All right! but there wens to be dilemma of 'opinion among reformat no to method- of reform. some guy; “Preach the gospel and lot the politics 1nd the police tom regu- late thought.†The cry of other. in; "Save the} aty, and the mlvution of the soul and thoufety of the people willtake one ‘of lthemlelves." It has been pretty well demon- ,stnted that 90 per cent ofthe [crimes committed an tumble to ltbo liquor Me. Very well! Suppose we adopt both of the ideas suggelted above, And to be- gin with inviting the thou-ands of minioteu of the gospel in this country to vote hereafter with I party that believe: in thou-hing "the Ieg‘nlased uloons. ‘ Jews preached mm and salvation to the mm of Sun- riu, but when he found n gang of corruptionilu in the Temple nut- in; it "a den of thieves" he and (frantic mm. Years ago he". often made havoc of the sheep. - The {Inner- would at such tinel herd their flock. nights. but they did not neglect to osmium the bean. m loan. ' Do not keep the aloha-let boxe. of your love and teatime-I, sealed up until your Mend-1m dead, but ï¬ll their. lives 7!“ a sweetne- nowâ€"speak approving Indcheer- ing words while their can can hear them, Ind while their hm cu: be thrilled and pads happier by them. The hint thing! you will any that they are gone, any before they go. The Raven yuu mean mundfor theircoflu, be- stow 110'. and to brighten and sweeten their earthly hone: below they leave them. If my friends have Ikhuter boxes laid away. full of fragrant perfumes of â€mp-thy Ind Iflec- tion, which they intend to break over my deed body. I would rather they would bring them m,in my retry and troubled hours. and open them that I may be refreohed and cheered while I need them and can positively enjoy then. I would rather have A plain ooï¬n without a flower. and a funeral without w analogy. then a life without the sweetie-s of love and (sympathy, let a. burn to en 7642: your calendm printed at the Nm-Lmn once. quart-mimomq WINNETKA. IXKESIDE