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Sheridan Road News-Letter (1889), 27 Sep 1901, p. 1

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:0 in the city. and In in- -ty and low, pricesâ€"Six Imptoved Rea! mixer BCVW' mg and Realm ; product! 9‘ M. 'anc Goofâ€"W “Jud we extend. a cor- 1»? our elegant flock thool Books, itationcry pd Supplies. I. 4 Doors In". d-wko. ta Flour and the unoxa hnnd Seal Brand Teal des rs now complett may. necessary to!!! ’s M- AHL.’ ER SHOES \T COST and PUT UP BY 3K5 . cunnmcs, NS are Dealer- GROCERY. ....Telephon¢_4bv Groceries an d manna M stock'bl rations faith: I term have min: on hr Miss Alice Feéscnden left for New York Monday. where'sha enters Miss ply’s school for young ladies, W tickets and (inns on Enere at Erskine's Bank. Madame Ganz, a wellknown sing- er 0! Chicago, win sing at the morn- ing service at the Presbyterian church next Sabbath. LAKE FOREST. _--r-\ Carl Arnold and Mrs. Wm. Davids Ind children, 0! 474 Oakley bouleg ward. Chicago, were guests of Mrs- S. Ifeeemnn last Friday ' We have been told that Banker Clarke will oppose the "Elm street improvement scheme. down the hill to the pumping station. We can hardly believe that, as he is a bnsif neee man of an‘ppbeed ability and discernment. . The_ Bostonian French Chocolate Grams. the tiniest cre‘sms in America, 50 cents per pound,at Dale'Sweetlsnd's. \ The' ordinafice for the improve- ment, macadamizing. etc. of Genital avenuu, west from the city building to the city limits. was approved by the county court. Now bids will be called for and the contract let as soon as possible so the work can be finished through this season. Last Sunday night Mrs. Caroline? Eerie Culblom died at her home'in Eighwwd, after a fingering illness. Mrs. Cnrlblom was an old and well- known resident of Hi‘ghwood. She is survived by five children. all of the name place. The funeral took place Wednesday afternoon, at" 2 o'clock, in the Swedish church, and the interment was made in ~the Mooney Cemetery. fiflflflflimfiflfilllfl: lfyou want. to know how much it] costs to paint your house, call on Brand ‘ Bros" or call up telephone No. 3:38. Thenmany friends of Major Hairy S. Vail yuill be glad to learn that his physicians think he is improving. He returned from the Maine coast nearly two weeks ago, but is still so low and feeble that he takes very little it any nourishment and sees no one bin his immediate attendants. One of his attendants tom us a few days since that we would not know him if we saw‘him, He had changed so. The chief difficulfy is of_the bean. always a serious gne, hence the solicitude of his friends. - b "mafia”;- At the public services in Holyoke, Mass, last Thursday, for McKinley, the principal address was by a woman, Miss Mary Emma Wooiey. She was introduced by Mayor Chopin. of Holyoke College. It was‘given in the city hall before the municide authorities of that .rich and cultivated Massachusetts city. 1-. --- mm 91...}. the address was Let us add that the address was worthy the’oecasion and the speaker. “Old Jasper,” the famed colored preacher, was right in his bold dec- laration, “The sun he do move”: And a good. many sons are slowly but surely moving out of their nar- row oonoeits and selfish prejudices into the open. That Holyoke inci- dent waea prophecy of the twentieth century, and so an omen of tremen: does as well is inspiring import. The Bostonian French pChocolate Creuns are again on sale at Dale Sweethnd’s. - VOL X. 34‘9ch let up om Advettis- mg. In these days we must advemm- to Inn-p bus- iness as well as to The best medium fur lake shun.- enterprises is the filGHWOOD. usuuui Mrs. Caroline . Davida The Clark family moved Mrs. A. P. Smith‘s Laurel home, Monday. :Mrs. Charles C. Ype gave a quie little dinner party to a few glues! last Saturday evening. , . The board of local improveman'» mat Thursday evening to push tlw xr‘ flatter“ of improving Central nveuu' ‘ The [nun y of Lucian G Yoe. least the younger members tllerec' are back in their own lm ely hmn - “\Vincauton,’ ’«lpwn on Hazel menu After having spent the summer (1 _“l8 seashore they can't. shut them melves up in Chicago yet. American lady‘s curse-ts, Bazaar. ' Mrs. Stackpole, of Bostqn, spending a couple of weeké with h parents, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Brown; on. Hazel avenue. S reached this city last Saturday. ‘8 firndnlutsiof friends wlm have t forgotten her though so long abse from the city. , Fall millinery at. Mix Kohl‘s. : The telephone cumpuny has he ‘doinga rushing huaiue'ss the p: week, and the following telephor have been installed: Mrs. A, Bot No. 35;, S. y! 'Millard,‘ No. 5- iNorenberg-fi Hiutz. Nuefifil; W. Neidliuger, ‘ No. 701; 'A., 1’. Du» No. 45451". C. Brown, N0. 25: ‘M. Bender, N0. 711;~E. J4 Nal l l l ~.l No. 80; Mayor Evans. No. 1.: John Heisman, superintendent? Highland Park Electric Light( No. 721; Mrs. C. J. Gray, No. 7 Highland Park Real Estate; D Highland Park Real Estate, n . Erskine Co. ' Mrs.M511kie and‘daughtgr. Dot ‘ Second street, were badly frightew last Saturday night. Between 1‘3 hours of 12 and - 1 they w» awakened by some one ringing 1. door be“; Mrs. Mulkie went to ' door, opened it and found some I I standing there, 'who insisted‘ u) going in and getting money, M Mulkie said ah‘e had no money, '1 her daughter being frighténed :x 1not knowing what harm they m5; ldo, offered her purse. After row ing the money the men left :1 made no further trouble. Insure Alyour‘propm'ty with D Insure ‘ your property \\'Iu| Erskine Sc 00‘. “Ross" C. Fletcher; only' 80] our postmaster, is a member of ‘~ 14th Infantry, U. S. A., and stati‘ «1 at Detroit. He had his furlough his pocket to come home for ‘a f weeks’ visit when President Mc’K lay was shot. It was immedixt moaned,“ were all the othen thé 14th,, end seventy-five pin’ men of the regiment acted as ‘special' guards , of the presid $2 ‘tomb in Canton till the body is curely placed in its final reef place. VAnd Ross was one of seventy-five men chosen as gnaw honor. 'Quite a compliment th: ? one of our Park boys, though duty be a sad and mournfnl r. Rosa expec‘ts to, have his furlm fenewed and be home as soon i“: lieVed at Canton. Real Estate Logms. D. M. Er #00. FORT SHERIDEAN! HIGHLAND ixRK, the Lmlie out o a'Venu Ft’timv, SEPTEMBER, 27’, 1901 {find 3W 1t he of to he in ine it approach of autumn. come two or three ram little chnlinoss in the _: turn their hacks ori the rush fur the city‘s steal lug tlrv midâ€"nunmmr month! oi June. July and August here. Mr and‘Mrs. C. C. You no more (think of return- ing to Chicago till nltur the Indian summer than they think of returning thither during. the burning hent‘ o! dogdays. And the family of Lucian (EL-Yea, alter neufli‘yher at the me ,shore, came hack this Week to spend the delightful Indian summer here. before housing up for the winter in‘ Chicago. Our society young men,‘ who have learned the planer-r do the name. Mr. E. Norman Soott, just back from hie European trip. instead ofrgoing into winter quarters in Chi- cago. came back to the Park for a month or nix-Weeks. Arthur St. George Boultox always spent the full autumn horehand many others have always done the same. Now what is there about the autumn in the country which gives it such pow- erful attractions. First of all Nature’s beauties are at their best in Aautumn. There is a beauty in the (yeshness, Hue luxuri- ant growth of foliage and plant in mid-summer, (so that Lem-.11 was cor- rect making.the perfbct day in June the acme of-torrestrial béauty. -But those éarly :summer days are the childhoud of the season; during nut» umn's Indian gummer nll nature oomes to its maturity. RAVINIA. {Beriahire‘l {(1:11}! old hills that in: spired Bryant ‘Thanntopaia. “To him who in the love or nature holds Communion with her visll‘yle forms, She speaks a various language." The deep green at Jung hag givm ' place to the rich and varied tints of ‘ autumn, which 0008 men can never V be forgotten," and not seen can naver be imagined. A spike of goldeurod may suggest it, as a hillside broak rippling over its pebhly bottom may suggest Niagara. The foliagv:j tho? falling lvavea, the ripe and risp‘ herbage lwuvath your (vet. the' late: of nunshine through the partial] de- nuded trees. all these and «rewiring akin to them, make an Indian Hum mar in tho muutry tlw climaxof the Rename delight. and they who {mine it 1099 the host the- seaaon lulu 4) he. «low Fiuully. for, purposes of health, the autumn in the country is worth ‘ as much. if not more, than all the gaxl oi the other mums combined. The air in pure and perfect. The dust and the other impurities oi the ‘ summer's utinmphere are gone. the early equinoctial rains have washed them to the earth, so thnt. the air is clean and pure. while thnt of the ‘oity. at the very heat. is polluted and poiaoned By the fumes and gate- at We: of Ming” afflu- naeemthe unifying masses 0! vege- table and animal mm, inae'parahle from city' life. Moreover, the de. pressing, exhausting heat of summer ie gone, and in its place in a pure air, eupenchanged with unadulter- ated oxygen and ozone, putting lil’e, strength and vitality into your phys- ical system every moment. no that you feel like a new person. Even more, not only does the Indian sum- mer in the epuntry give you all the Vitality and atrength and health your daily deeds require, but it will lay up in every fibre of your physical ’ being a surplus stock of these indis- GLENCOE. pensahlo qualities. on which your ex- hausted system can draw during the long winter. while you are shut up in your overheated city flats, sup. plied only with a depleted, oner. rating atmosphere. We come back to the point whence we started, the person who leaves the country before the Indian sumrner’s'cloae makes the mistake of his life for that season; he has spent his time and his money 1 form" unless than half the good he: might secure. THE mounts in AU‘I‘UflN. , Elsewhere we have spoken of the attractions of autumn. but the artiele was general and not local. Here in Highland Park all those attraetious exist, and nuper'added to them are our numerous ravines, the wonder and glory of our north shore. They are deep end broad and winding in their courses, filled‘ with trees and shrubhery, and‘ to lovers of nature rarely fascinating. There are many of them, eroesed and recrossed with bridges, rustic and artistic, and al, ways lending to thellske. Hencefiwe are not surpr'ued that so many of the summer boarders It the Moraine are remaining during the autumn. This hotd occupies In we not surprised that a aummcr boarder! 3‘ no remaininl (““38 This ml oomph” '0 .n which your ex- draw during “:9 on are shut up ci'ty flats; sup. depletéd. N19" idea fee! the alx 80f OI“ the col :n 4i u" in HIV ()I1 an 0| In .I n our article on “TM” we 1d we forgot to any the work was \TII 0F ELIZAIETII amount ’lpdaath M Kim Eliuboflt Kid- .‘oeeurm! Wodnelday swoon. Win-r 25. 1901, at her home on Ire] avelme. fins Madden was born in [round I came to this oodntry when vary ing. Her health had been vet, St for some time, und lat summit ‘ and her brother, Rev. J. C. Man. made an extensive trip to rope, where they visihd my fereut health resorts in Franco J Germany. , I‘hedeceased is wrvived by hot )ther. Rev. J. C. Maiden, puts! St. Maty’s church, Highllnd Pith, m week l was: fluo- m of trouble and w l' m ”will“ Illa light. . F‘d mmc Rocky "OI flight. (L B. CIII The funeral lurch this morning It 9:30, when 3 {ii reqpiem mass in co . «7. Father E. A. Kelly. of St. ucélin'n church, Chiago.praohod 'Iory impressive» m,uul-m fluted by Rev. B. P. Murray, 0! iglewo‘od, deacon; Bow. P.F.’A. YI'IIOO, of Chicago. nub-demon; Bu. mun, ot Lakeside. mu“! 0! cou- mies. Ind Rev. J. E. W, lebnnt at man- Tho rennin- wom taken on “no *1: England, and it noun up as though we were among tho pIIIItaina with brooks, and glans. ban of an autumn eveningto Ir in that apacioua reception Ibout the large open grate fin, I9 real oahen log: and wood ing take ua back to the home 0! touth. Don't miss the autumn lIe Moraine. Timm- are also hing drives all about finely idamized stream. the famed idan Road and the Eunoot golf .the Military Pout with a thou ; men in blue. with twenty- in {II daily each way to Chicago 1»me thirty-three whats on u- h trains. I he Moraine Kohl will hacpan I October 16, and My to 325 min to C 'pnt was nude. in city ilaca. on the blufl‘ on. hundred love and only I law mdl Iron w. and deep. lovely ruine- Ill it and in the midst ol 1 dom- Iat. - Ten ruds from the hotel an be in the avian, and a [more on the brow ol' the blufl ,5; down upon Like Niobium. me now than are churned with ace and its envitonmonh, Ind v glad to lrarn that mom’uo g“ for the lutuinn- It i. gvly fascinating to on. round uncarncmmmug tuna-n ”can” [encased is survived in hot . Rev. J. C. Madden, paw! aty’s church, Highllnd Pick, sister, Cogent, Ilno of thin WINNETKA. was held in St. Mary’s NO. 18. wore taken on tho salary when into!- LAKESIDE

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