Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Highland Park News-Letter (1904), 6 Jul 1907, p. 6

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H! But fliers are certain‘ hollow places. or pits, on some of the The health officer of Highland Park has vefy properly directed attention to dirt-heaps and back alley refuse and warned citizens to clean up! ’ Banish Mbsquitocs ‘And ' Fair Germs ' The spell 0‘ hqt weather which we have- recently experienced ought to include care against con- ditions which may seriously effect the public health. ‘ This is one of the new copyright stdries published by Me Clurg's of Chicago $31.50. We have secured the right tobdbiish it in our paper and thué add to the value which we aim giving to subscribers. According?!) announcement al- ready made we shall commence in our next issue the publicatiOn of this‘famous Stér'y and shall con; tinue to run it week by week un- til completed w "-50 I Yes: 5c pa Copy We: 1‘: Put 0’“. Highland I’tr‘. Ilka) a "all (lay out” Sheridan Road Publishing Co jou- W. Melt-Ann, “In” WlmMu'flw MJIL OUR SPECIAL STORY u'rumav. JULY 6; .907 bland Parchws-Lettcr . W. ”I‘m buo- ,, ._ “r um u’ulcul and my )income disappeared, ,1: my father med to buy stamps. puuhem on the letters, and I‘ had to tmdgq to the “I believe this system did more to un- dermine 'the moral fiber of the boys of Missouri thanzanytfiingl know. Fonu~ nately, my moral chajm'ct'er since has been rehabilitated. 4 u __ “When England in 1848 invented stamps. my feelings were decidedlxpnsi- Emir A (oak airline system ant. u." A 7 7 _ _,,, ,...-_.., -.â€" ways is abhorem. . - ,. "-‘Speaking postafly, my mind goes back tattle, days when it cost as muchgs .a_guarter to sendrletters to New Orleans. We did not have stamps in those days. Hy father fixed to give me the letten with the money to take them to,the post- office. This constituted my own spurge of indome, as it die for most of the youths‘ of Missouri. I pocketed the money and the letters went just the same, only the receiver had to pay. It is not .very clear why he waited until his present visit to England to push this matter. *Onc would have supposed-that he wOuld hag‘ohad at leashas-mueh infil‘rL ence‘with the l‘goveminent'of his own ~co‘imtryâ€"but if he succeeds in his pupo'se we must leave him to do it his Own way. . Speaking-in Men on July}, he said: n My mind it is nothing but downright nobbery to extort 31 a ,poudeor letters. If the poatofiice it in the robbery busi- near let it be on a decent scale. If it is going to rob the public, let us.do it for ‘ A ad of $1 A crime of magnitude w \ forgiven, but petty larceny, a!- . -LL,_,A But sometimes the hamorist is really serious and sane. And Mr. Clemens never undertook a more scnsible‘mission than in his meat advocacy of a two-cent postage between. the United States and England. , t Mark Twain and Ocean ' Postage One of the penalties of reputa- tion based upon humor is that the humorist finds it difficult to get people to take him seriously. If Mark Twain enquires after your health or says "Good Morning” you take it for granted that you ought to laugh. ,. - ous. sending forth vapors 6f fiver and germs’of disease and death. For the sake of beauty Jet, us have them fined up~for the sake of health .let usdo it'at once. ' gcmus m me even; of a season of hot weather. The pin holdenough of rain water to be breedingphccs of frogs and as they dry up they become the very nests'from which millions of mosquitoes swarm on a hat night. But worse yet, they may become pestilcnt and poison- vacant sites”whiefi are ’not ‘only unsightly. but are podtively dan- gerous in‘ the evenit of a season of intense earnestness ,and rare per- sistance. ” Finch ways the convinc ihg~ argumen‘tati've lawy‘éi-KW‘HB died young. whenhé iu‘ét reach satpe and Miss “Guardsâ€"well. we will not attempt to paint the lily. may be‘named with JohnBfiough; Gen. Neal Dow, John B. Finch, and Frances E. Willard. Each of them possessed strong personal traits. Gough was perhaps the greatest temperance orator that (vet lived; His was the oratory of‘ actionas well as language. Francis Murphy} may beAnamed with Of five great tempragce leaflets; who were distinguishéd by “there? successes ‘in. the latter half of last century the last of them has inst passed away. .as yet have not'a strong gripbn‘ life, and are therefore much more easily jarred lgose, the same milk is often fatal, particularly in warm weather. ‘ ’ V Particulars of this ordinanlte may be seen in our report of council proceedings and, the full textgof it will be published next week. Probably no one article in our whole food supply is' as easily centamlnated. and therefore as great a menace to the health and lives of any community, as milk, pine or impure. “The unfitness ‘for, use of vegetables or meat_ is; at once apparent to the sense of, sight or‘ smell, b’ut milk' may be" deadly without being apparent to either. Toadu'lts, impure milk is unpleasant, and its odhtinuons use harmful. To young children, whoj ,._....-â€"---.1 from the dangerwofjmpure‘milk supply wil} produce a feeling of satisfaction and a" sens; of se- the Ci on Tun “At that time when "I. with . > hymn“ was advanced to reduce my: to 5 m. “Em" cents to: than and IO cents for longdb' W1 m ‘V unces. the same cry was made which it became his t now raised. that the redlrtionvouldmin the puctofice. but the cry Ira: fake. ' The nductiun increased the ram ' ‘A . Com“ reductbninmebetmnthoUnited- . _ States and Great Britain to a penny The CW“ would have the same elect." 1", and. Th The Last of Them Ihc passage at an ordinance by City Council of Highiand Park Tuesday evening for thg pur- c of protecting the community New Milk Ordinance m..as well as language. 3w was characterized by earnestness and rare per- " ‘inch was the convinc- PASSED TILE couxcu. was one who - y, ,,,'_â€""-° 'lll’flul "mlxuriste. Twenty-four df the most prom- . hemmedleil relentismotthe country sat down atthat table, and- the splendid dial her was ~entirely free of animal food. The-guests included Dr. Frank Billings, ‘ Chicago, Dr. J; H. Kellogg. Battle Creek. Gen. George M. Stemberg, for- mer Surgemeeneral of the Army; Prof. Wiley. Chief of the Bureau of Chemistry, Washington, and other equally distin- guished men. ' The idea of the dinner was brought about through Hrs. Henderson's book: ~“The Arietocracy of Health." ' Dr. Kellogg, pf Battle Creek. Mich. 'th whom Int. Henderson} is alwayp in the eleven much, recently wrote tn cun~ gratulate her on the fact that Prof. Irving F fisher nf Yale, had, by the perusal of her work, become solnterested in the subject of dietectlcs an}! the new school The relation of food to health is a sob- ject worthy of the closest attention by the eminent scientists who are now giving thought to it. Rccentiy a dinner was given at the beautiful Boundary Cas- tic, Washington, 'D. C.‘, by indisting- ished Mistress, : Mrs. John B. Hendenon, who has taken front rank among physical culturists. Twenty-four (if the M mm.» 7". .â€".~ v-ul' nance of appropriation dfflfinances will be Dahliahed in full ncxt week. ficuhxi'as to Militia of house Mali. lie mmedv without a proviso that any such building might be ordered removed at any time. ’ v mun through one of the memben of the Council. The Council look the View that such a privelege mutt cane before them in the form of a petition lint full par-r “mal‘fii"'â€"A AA - Warn MAINS. The important ques- tion of an adequate watt! supply wag up. 1. G. Falcon of Evanston presented .an estimate for extending. the intake pipe for a distance‘uf 2500 feet. Thematter was refen‘ed to commitee for comideraflm 3nd bids; ' _ claim through ‘ the Clerk for "04!) day» ages Med by his horse falling through a hole in the bridge It Ravlnla. The claim was referredto the judiciary Committee. _ Considerable interest“ nunitestéd in the new wdlnancc for regulating sale'hf milk. The otdinince was passed by; mums-vote providing (hit persons selling the’ product of not more than (yo Com. must 'pay a license of $1.00 and 0016'! 315.0) a year. Rind South were nfcrred to the Street: and Alley Committee to secure estimate; Chas. Con-ell of Ravinia [vacated a Murphy was greatest as a tempe'r- anec reviv'alistwoving the masses in his great pledgc~si¢ning cam~ pnigns' in which many Thousands became his disciples. Vegetable Diet and Tuberculosis. m Milk-oydinance and the ordi- Cpuncil Eroceedings

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