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North Shore News-Letter (1907), 7 May 1910, p. 2

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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 ”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 traffic has been to us as collectively tpo much‘v engrossed a nation. ’ ‘~ in looking rafter bur“ financial ‘ 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 first 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 traffic 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” ”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 ”we the peoplef’ were outwitted by the “OM CANWE TRUST. liquor dealers fifty 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 ”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 financially 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: Pacific 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 Clmmfimn of Fmr play, Li~ quor Dealer 5 Organ, publislhcs on its first page of last week' 5 issue DOWN WITH THE SALOONS Ric th'at the most appropriate thing Secretary Ba”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 first 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- isfied 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 AssocifitEEdito-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 fitted 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 'lfiodorn, up-zo-dgte Icigy is conscious. of itsell. conscious that. it is a city. It has a definite 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... Db”- chsses Importance of Civic Improve; meat. sugj what in the public mind the fol- lowing may prove interesting and re ”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 final 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 traffic has been. Slavery had acme redeeming featutcs; t: liquor traffic never had one. ‘ traffic. 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 (Infill-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“?! “”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.. ”'7‘” ed: “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 ”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 figures 5 . 'â€" for publication. that! have ob. no . I ”WM Need“. I“ I served. to prove wherein the pub-‘ ll - ’ by lishers' figures were wrong. ‘de Neither has be ofiered 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:”_Ho'c.n 5”“. 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‘fik t!"- United States and Germany have , , m 4 found their true personification in "a”: “autumn-.ahwmun. D1 (Theodore Roosevelt and Emper- tusm hon W W for William ll. two men of striko '- Mn. m Herrick fig 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:”_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 ”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 7:11”!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 ”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 ”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€"”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. < ”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. ”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” ”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€"- '7; u ' lowâ€"7 :00 » I “- 5- gym... nounâ€"7 M. A--__- ”7““ 11"“. MASON“: DIRECTOR I... OUNGBMATIONAL GRUB! IMATIONAL CHU} mo Ava. old um ”Allow (“not CHURCHâ€""1200} 1. ma (Trll I 92"”9“ D;

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