mmm TO OUR FRIENDS AND: and muc ‘ PATRONS. ’ been our 1 In spite of mint decisions, even are decidedly optimistic. We be-j the decission of the Supreme lieve in'the Ameriean people, we 'Court of the United States†that- a. believe in the, old ship of state. license law was wrong and'li‘llegal, She will weather all storm‘s and,we have allowed the inicjuitons came» Safely' into port. But that'system to prevail- 'But an'we does not alter the fact that â€we are awaking. especially ih the the people have been and still areiSOuthern States, to a full con~ too careless in the performance of sciousness of the terrible * curse ourpublic duties: indit/idually and - the liQuor trafï¬c has been to us as collectively tpo much‘v engrossed a nation. ’ ‘~ in looking rafter bur“ ï¬nancial ‘ 4 iVe long- years this nation from we are no clarmist. Indeed we _of- our‘ f'national prosperity." Atlantic to th.‘ “Tomorrow shall be as this dav Except from, 1857 to 67, for a hundred years there has been no more serious. strenuous‘ startling events than have taken place dur-‘ ing’ the fourteen months of Presi-' dent Tafts administration; ana serioué conditions are still exist- ing. _ ' ' DUNN, WITH THE SALOONS. . ‘ â€"_ l The Champion ofFair ploy. Li quor Dealer’s Organ, publishes or that it should co~ its ï¬rst page of last week’s issur operate in every moral. estheti: in large letters the Ifollcwingr' cal, religious, and philanthropic :Ihe real “who“ before the peo- . ., is not saloonsor no saloons. It is enterprise, In this effort we ask . . . . V _ , , this: Shall we have open, legiti- the cooperation of the general , mate saloons. or' shall we have un- public Whether subscribers or not: defground dens? Shall we keep his your paper- we "03‘. YO?! the liquor trafï¬c openan‘d above ‘ e divert it into hidden channels?-â€"Publicity. We have arranged ,with Mr. R. That may be the question “l the I d Of HP by .t ,, . W; Patterson to represent the mm - u ‘C' y bl†â€0t m . . _ _ . _ ours. Ofcourse thatisjust what the Nan-Letter m solicmng subscrrp- saloon keeper wants, a Hlegitimate tions; ads, jobs and in collecting saloon.†a; saloon protected by We trust you will aid him in his law. That is just what the license work. ~ system has done {or a halfcen~ tury. There ' is just where â€we the peoplef’ were outwitted by the “OM CANWE TRUST. liquor dealers ï¬fty years’ ago. Then there Were fourteen states l p in this Union Wholly or in part un- Exceptirom’1857 to 67, for 3 tier prohibition. Butthe civil war ‘ hundred years there has been no turned affairs topsy~turvy~ 'l‘hcre i more serious. strenuous‘ startling .was a recrystalization of political u events than have taken place dur- parties; .and in a few short years 'V lng‘ the fourteen months of Presi-‘ the prohibition laws. if we remem- d jent Tails administration; and her Correctly, in every state bot zerious conditions are still .exist- one gaye place to a license. or an ng. ; . ' _ _' ‘ exeise law. . We think we have succeeded reasonably well in keeping the Nuns-Litter free from all ques- tionable reading niatter and ‘ads.’ We have desired that it should be educational, .â€"â€"~â€"_ First, ‘we‘ Cannot Cover expen- ses (leaving our own labor but of the question) by subscriptions alone. we must depend quite largely on â€ads" and job work May we not ask that the general public favor us as extensively as possible along these lines? I We do not complain f condi- tions~it ié more becoming that we should apologize for our faults â€"but we trustwe Will'not be mis- understood if we ment-jon two or three facts- I We take this means of express- ing our appreciation of the pa- tiencc shown towards the News- Letter, the kindlyinterest mani- fested in its success and the en-1 cquragiug comments which have come to us during the last few weeks. \ l Same weeks ago we 'called at- “39"}, . v - We h ‘tcntlon to the fact.that a gcod re- _ . V wrestl hablc family newspaper could not is lcgi be selfosustaining ï¬nancially m a 5 No! place the sizeof Highland Park (andi if dependent upon subscriptions been: alone. comm o w l a ' r ‘ Check: recuved for subscnphonme at gnce the printed Iabgl within TELEPHONE N0 92 ‘ “ ' w M Entered at the Post Qfl‘lce. Highland Park. LH. V W H. P. DAVIDSON, Frog } F. C. DELA) M PUBLISHED . EVERY Nari}; ,S’hdrt NPma-Evttvr. SUBSCRIPTXON, $150.4 Â¥EAR. 3 EDITORIALS ty."!Atlantic to th: Paciï¬c was engag- day ed in a cruel war over the slavery IPTXON $150AYEAR, 5c PERC W SATURDAY. MAY 7 1910 SATURDAY AT" HIGHLAND max} Jumms in large Icttus the :follcxvingr“ The real question beforé the p60- is 'not saloons‘or no saloons. It is this: Shall we have open.'legiti- Tie Clmmï¬mn of Fmr play, Li~ quor Dealer 5 Organ, publislhcs on its ï¬rst page of last week' 5 issue DOWN WITH THE SALOONS Ric th'at the most appropriate thing Secretary Baâ€inger,can do is to resign: If it did not save himself it wmfld at_lcas‘t 'rcliéw'e the em- baraésment Of President Taft. :, Iand In many instances they have sbeen grossly criminal ,) have been 5committed by. men in exalted positions, Many of us have not ' wanted to believe it but it; seems almost certain that Secretary Bal- linger has been far from inhocent - in the performance of his duties . as custodian of our national utiliâ€" ties. When the difficulties ï¬rst bégatn betWeen the Secretary and Mr. Pinchot the chief fol-ester, much as we admired Mr Pinchot. we could hardly belieIe that the Secretary of the Interior could be guilty of having at the price of a song battered away‘ the people 5 property to such. parties as the Gugenheims a d otheIs of that class. ' Little by little facts haI'e been disclosed \Ihich a're inevit- ably persuading the unbiased pub- :flc‘rrn» and much more abundant†has been our daily 50:12.80 self sat- isï¬ed and unwary have we been ghat every form of vice and mi- quity baxe crept in on us a d now We have the unsavory $33k of wrestling with evils whose name gs lggion. Z Not unffequently these evils 1 credited, and the date chat 3 week or two. NG Associï¬tEEdito-r. Glencoe . LIL, as 2nd Class matters ascic fl , .ciw f - that. '5 of d '11. Li‘ pl.an cson its ph i issue em“ ‘ path. a “n0' â€"-- Bee, nearby, and ï¬tted it up as a red ing and play-room (or the boys. What was the result? ’He converted um gang (if young maybe, with viciou- instincts, and dzveloped them intou group of well behaved boys. He di- i-ected their energies. into‘ promublo channels. . "A city which neglect: thu future in its development. must take the con- sequenbes. The penulty (or hilurb will be heavy in‘criujninulity and the consequent. expensc be upon the manl- cipality." ' ‘ "Small parks hue ’nn importnn . part in civic development. The younl I râ€"nnd the oldâ€"~mus_c hnve ,I place tc Vplav, to exercise. to get fresh air. ' Shut out the light and afraid you get n (lis'lrict where vice, fungus-like, will develop. Not only from the Immuni- tnrian viewpoint, but from the busi- ness point, it is wise for the city to guard well the health 0! it: people: ' “There should be a small parkor play ground in every néighborhood. They work wonders. Prof. Allan Ho-y hen, ‘0! the University of Chicago hhd an experience which points moral. He ‘vns annoyed by a crowd of boys who committed many depreciation: in his front yard. Instead of calling a police- man or usiné harsh measures. be in. vestigangd. He lived in ncongeued .l£-1“17. ‘ {ged on Speakitig especially of the impor' tance of small parka to'hellth and success. Prosecsor Mary-ism said: In an 'interview in The Chicago American, Professor Merriam Slid: “City banding hal been reduced to a science. The 'lï¬odorn, up-zo-dgte Icigy is conscious. of itsell. conscious that. it is a city. It has a deï¬nite plan of development and build: to tint plan. It regulates in I rltionol way its physicgl. growth. In 'the ‘old days cities grew like Topsy. A cow made. path. That pavh marked the line of a business thoroughfare in a grant city ‘years afterward. The modern city builders do not follow cow paths. The engineer has taken the place 0! the cow. The expert has. come to I‘dvise ‘ and direct in city nuildingfl. I Cuchao, April 15th. One 0! the most. active pnb‘iichle in ihia city in Pro! Charles E. Met-Hun; of the University of Chicggouvho be- believes in doin‘g things 33 well u in theorizing.- He in fur better: politie- and .he is in politics. He. is for in:- provwi physicnl conditions of the city, ‘ ‘and he is workinm upon n-pnclicnl basis. He is an aldermun from the Seventh Ward. chairmen of the Met- riam Commission end a member of the Executive Committee of the Nltionnl Municipal League. Professor Merriam, in Politic... Dbâ€- chsses Importance of Civic Improve; meat. sugj what in the public mind the fol- lowing may prove interesting and re â€Shall We have open legitimate saloons, or shit“ we have under- - ground dens†ask the Champion. -_ No! a thousand times no; neither - the one nor the other. The 58'. Icon must be extirpated root and '_ branch; Whether Local Option or ‘v’,$tate wide prohibition is thebetter method of reaching the ï¬nal solu- tion may depend upon circum- stances. We have no faith in Loeal Option as the complete remedy. 'It Is to much like try- ing to protect ourselves~ and our children from a rattle-snake by‘Chopping its rattles 05. State wide prohibition' Is what the liquor party is afraid of. No matter how sweeping a victory the friends‘of temperance may accomplish, they are morally certain to lie'down and takeanap; 'and the friends of the saloons Will seize the op- portunit ty -) steal away that vic- '5 tCry. Ihilation of the whole q business must be the watchword. f! As the mattcr'of parks is some- 'géstive. » City, Building As A Scion“. half so great an evil as tbq liquox trafï¬c has been. Slavery had acme redeeming featutcs; t: liquor trafï¬c never had one. ‘ trafï¬c. But slavery. nefcr. have tn import-m parent. The young 5}. have ,I placoto to get fresh air. and ail-add you get. :42. fungus-like, win} 209 Watt Central WANTED situ‘ation (Inï¬ll-08, ‘2 19 I9" Ind minors d Adda. duo-m 3:9â€"Mi ann III--- I! tilus. .. '7' - -- N -w- V“ Pull" 10:50am...“ 161' mâ€" ...., ,i d’ he went out "with the boy." and a", w. L wwg Wink“? some one in advance of his home Ditch-loo ' :15: Coming. carried a detailed and “WWW-mm Unto , true account of his doing; to his “.32? 2.11:“ W i wife. Upon his arrival at his own ' , home. in the ‘wee rma hours.’ So“, "gland." , wifey asked where he had been. â€" ' Steadyinz himself bya table to 4mm keep the room from whirling‘ too “W13“?! “â€22: M 1" fast, the inebriaite madea'lengthy hm_mim I i ’Mo‘ 0“. statement of just how he had . . CM CM“ spent the eve ' g. It didn’t tally with the f s a‘rhis wife had BIOâ€"The WOW V .V learned them.- no she stated her R“ ‘- G- M P“ F“, :‘ '" version. The man saw he war in 2%)!“ d M w la corner. but musteriné all his ' t I drunken dignity gravely announc4 so... '11.. â€'7Ԡed: “My dear. I've told a! git-am storish an’ I'm was“ hit ‘3 ~- , â€"Wnr. E. Tone in 'April Nnn- ‘ “2%“ w " tel In, NIP-Mom's Grand Gold 0min V â€stands pat†on the question of Content ’ : raising the postal rates upon mag- "0'56 by Local Tflenl I azines. He aflirms that thou!» ' - lishcrs' Ergument are unsound. So - FRIDAY far he has produced no ï¬gures 5 . 'â€" for publication. that! have ob. no . I â€WM Need“. I“ I served. to prove wherein the pub-‘ ll - ’ by lishers' ï¬gures were wrong. ‘de Neither has be oï¬ered any expl‘a. nonâ€"W wu- nus-n] nation of the fact that‘ Canada - M can carry her magazines for one ' In. "“1" WW†fourth cent a pound against the m: 10â€"h,“ Cult-nun m one centper pound use ahead , - ' pay. Mr. Hitchcock ind: me ; In. Hunk»; ‘ ‘9 of the story ofa man ho eyes 193%! somewhat given to looking upon law-12:? P32?" Hm I†the wine when it is red. One night mm" I‘M .‘l u. It--__~ mmnmm ‘gy in advancing the (one. and 52:â€_Ho'c.n 5â€â€œ. with a universal interest foray hSewadinl thing thing that might help the RW- WNW world's development.â€"-Interna~ M ‘ tional Conciliation. "is“;‘m 5" 5d†w The intellectual featuresof the " Wl‘ï¬k t!"- United States and Germany have , , m 4 found their true personiï¬cation in "aâ€: “autumn-.ahwmun. D1 (Theodore Roosevelt and Emper- tusm hon W W for William ll. two men of striko '- Mn. m Herrick ï¬g ing similarity. both of the highest Ream by can, I’m-idem. fl; optimism. gifted with a broad }‘ “2% am {.er sense of. practical philosophy. a 33"“? Mum" ’ g faithful belief and a tireless eoer- Note: from “R Treasurer gy ip advancing the good. and 2:â€_Ho'c.n gnu...“ with a universal interest forau BeSecuedinlllinob? » LI A. â€" rhino thin" and .._:_L. led-States. and both natiohs‘gil understand and honor the pride of member. because it is backed not by vain enthu'siasm but by strong reality. - Postmaster General One thing emphasized with Cu, Clea-l “Lalo } equal force In American and Ger- 1]“ man general education is patriot- ismâ€"one of the most pre- eminenI 3",“ u h M "b’ qualities of both nations. power â€We-- Pit-ari- who in] and similar at the same time. Fifty years ago the German pa- (triotism was rather morose; it had to look back with sentimentai veneration at past greatness. Now LAKE COUNTY W.C. CT. 1 (the German is proud of the pre- INSTITUTE sent power of his country. a pride which counts in a man 3 Me and M M all‘ A} work. I t is the same kind of pa MU 7:11â€!th trio ism which grows in the Unit- After illustrating what may be done. Senator Owen referred tr detailed estimates of the prolon- gation of human life in urine: countries. He showed that it Havana the death rate from Yel- low fever fell from 324 per 100.00( in 1880. 639‘ in 1896. and 428 it 1907 to l24 in 1900, 6 in 1901 not zero in 1902, I90}. and â€OIL-after American occupation. It mll perhaps be remembem that Senator Robert L. Oven 0 Oklahoma, not long ago made : Hspeech m the Senate of tho Unit ed States in behalf of a Nation Department of Health. of temuk able vigor and unlocked for eflect A NATIONAL â€PM? MINT 0F HIALTl-l. PAW Hitchcock m Educ? um; “It. knob]... WW.“ ‘0‘ 'oâ€"Phnic-l Culture» a Devan-u wan. Ribbon km W“ i“ Our “h.†Ind Univcrdd. ‘Dmâ€"Mamn'l Grand GM Couducud by Mini Scam: 4:me the Tn‘c in Women ‘ ~ Girln Mean an Mimic. ,4: um' um I. Homing [MING THU RSDAY. MAMâ€"â€Inca “I. A. l'. O y K1302! _..A.A , , ,7 mu nutty... IMflIM-vlvui u... aim"""'mâ€"nm To. not ‘ 'gr'( I. lâ€"Jocood Thw W cm! VII-latte A pawâ€"jun Orna- umm Ionianâ€"10:80. In...) mob-um C. In. Venomâ€"4:00 9- F." p n: mww cauncu or 3?. 4m ‘78 noly mamaâ€"7 :00 a. .- Imm Pennaâ€"":80. ‘ My schoolâ€"~11 noon. m Plumbâ€"m" .I‘l'. JOBIPII’S CHURCI “amâ€"{:80 a. I'll.. 8:0. t. ’m.. 14 Vapor-83. p. In. [wrathâ€"8:00 to l :00 p. In. Duly Innâ€"l». a ll. 0!!an mite: mumâ€"a. A. loll.- Innlny Ionianâ€"l0: u n. In. undo, School-12: 00 noon Noam-nu Snails-5" .0 9- ' I'M Prawnâ€"8. 90 M.‘ lochtiâ€"«OII . .- M1 MOTEL 9!"! 0143!! Carbonâ€"10:80 a. n r 3.0.1.“:le -â€"0- .30 'm.. M .1?†"ginâ€"1:80 manual) PARK-1L. o‘ “881‘ CONGRIGATIONAL hutchâ€"Victor J. m Pack ":00 s. n. r :m 331W: .0 m 'I D Dorm-4:00 Tue-any Wainâ€"8:“ :1: l‘rldny mu. Clanâ€"I: o p In. new mar maxedâ€"mu tutorâ€"r. J. Hum; Illaâ€"8:00 u. ll. - Innâ€"":00 L n. < â€NILWOITH UNION Ci! Pamâ€"Chas 1'. neutral. servantâ€"ll :00 1.... - Tho “fan-3'9 gum†M ‘0‘ Rainbow IronngtoI Inn. 1‘ :“l I . utSIIII in I III. -. (clued J y II lord-c let-rice Ind “menâ€"n :09 I. m in Chpcl. â€Ide- IId ( eon-IIhtII III III: Duoâ€"7: y) Thom-womanl- __CIuO-â€"1_1:_Opp. In. um HITHODIST IPL CHURCH. alum urn-alum CHU: Paterâ€"M. c. h. Sunday larvlooâ€" 0:00 I. a. Wednesday m W7 Mataâ€"in†(“Mirthâ€"4 :80 p. - Pm MIMI. 8: fl! CHOICE or IT. Ez'ul (W) In. White. Print in cut“. any mm. a . Could W'o:d Oct-o- Int a flit-inflict“. E MW-owO-l- "on" “than... - ll uremia-o- hymn“. I11 WI†â€MCI sum unto.â€" 0:“ g. I. and" [chubâ€"l :00 noon. Wed-alt! lvvlhr-M†D. II- um SCANDINAVXAN IN! exam ’ râ€"wvâ€"I-uv- w-- wvâ€"vv-' mam mm 10:80- 3....†Who. noon. weakly Punt I‘m-W0! 3.00 r. It. now CATHOLIC C80“ annual unm.. , m“ cumsâ€"um s: n.. 'lzl cal-‘- Wm Thur: coach. ‘ > ulna-pun cause: â€â€"- '7; u ' lowâ€"7 :00 » I “- 5- gym... nounâ€"7 M. A--__- â€7““ 11"“. MASON“: DIRECTOR I... OUNGBMATIONAL GRUB! IMATIONAL CHU} mo Ava. old um â€Allow (“not CHURCHâ€""1200} 1. ma (Trll I 92"â€9“ D;