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	<title>1,001 Chicago Afternoons &#187; Edison Park</title>
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	<description>1,001 stories of life in Chicago, based on Ben Hecht&#039;s famed 1920s newspaper column. New every M/W/F</description>
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		<title>#904: Kaage’s Early Edition</title>
		<link>http://1001chicago.com/904/</link>
		<comments>http://1001chicago.com/904/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Wed, 21 Mar 2018 16:40:48 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>Paul Dailing</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Edison Park]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[Picture two man-sized boxes on a darkened corner. One box is almost a shed, light-toned and covered in siding, like a home in one of the suburbs just a few blocks to the north. There’s a plaque on one side honoring a familial doyenne and a banner on the streetside paying tribute to a long-gone [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Picture two man-sized boxes on a darkened corner.</p>
<p>One box is almost a shed, light-toned and covered in siding, like a home in one of the suburbs just a few blocks to the north. There’s a plaque on one side honoring a familial doyenne and a banner on the streetside paying tribute to a long-gone anniversary.</p>
<p>The other box was propped half open, like a grade-school diorama. A chest-high stack of newspapers on a stool fronts a spread of magazines ranging from local dining to muscle car to naked lady.</p>
<p>Approaching the second box brought a visitor from the first. A man sauntered out of the shed with an old Chicago Tribune newsboy apron cinched around his waist.</p>
<p>“This the place that’s been here like a hundred years?” I asked.<span id="more-14974"></span></p>
<p>“Yep, 75 years. I’m third-generation,” the man said, looking at me expectantly.</p>
<p>It took a beat too long to realize my wonder and amazement was a trifle rude.</p>
<p>“Tribune, please,” I replied, letting the man get back to his daily duties.</p>
<p>Over the newsboy apron hung a belt-mounted coin dispenser, one of those nickel-plated money changers Metra conductors use to shunk out the proper pennies, nickels and dimes at a moment’s notice. The stars and stripes brim of a patriotic baseball cap peeked out from under a hoodie.</p>
<p>The man was skinny with some gray stubble on his face and eyes that, for lack of a better word, twinkled in the streetlamp light. It was because of his smile. Not a smile that reached his lips but an eye-smile, like the dad in “Danny the Champion of the World.”</p>
<p>He had been there since four in the morning and he was eye-smiling. He goes there seven a week, 365 a year in wind, rain or bone-snap cold and he was still smiling with his eyes.</p>
<p>Mike Kaage has worked at his family newsstand “since I was a kid. All through grade school, high school, then I became a partner,” he told me as he grabbed a paper off the stack and a local dining magazine I added to the order at the last minute. His grandfather bought the newsstand in 1943 for $100, according to <a href="http://articles.chicagotribune.com/2009-08-05/news/0908030195_1_newsstand-newspaper-boy-jcdecaux" target="_blank">a Chicago Tribune article from 2009</a>.</p>
<p>The family gets written about a lot. The newsstand is an oddity and a near-lone survivor, a love letter to the printed word and the heyday of newspaper journalism. Reporters love that sort of thing.</p>
<p>Mike Kaage loves it too.</p>
<p>“Yeah, I got 25 years to go,” he says of the stand’s future. “I’ll be 86 then and that’s when my dad got out of this.”</p>
<p>“Is he still…” I said, letting context find the next word.</p>
<p>“He’s still kicking,” Kaage said, understanding. His eye-smile flicked to a mouth one as he joked, “Not too high though.”</p>
<p>A black pick-up truck idled to the curb. Kaage wordlessly grabbed the proper paper and extended it to the darkness of the cab, plucking a bill from the hand that extended out.</p>
<p>“Mornin’, Ray,” Kaage said.</p>
<p>I didn’t hear if the pick-up’s invisible driver said anything back.</p>
<p>Even in the dark, the far-far-far North Side neighborhood of Edison Park is lovely. Toss a pebble to the suburbs, drop a dime at the local bars, restaurants and comfortable-feeling diners. The locals know the newsstand, even named the corner of Northwest Highway and Oliphant<a href="https://www.dnainfo.com/chicago/20130615/edison-park/kaages-corner-honors-edison-park-newsstand-for-70-years-of-headlines"> in its honor</a>. The shed and news-soaked diorama are legend, mainstay and sidestep en route to the Metra.</p>
<p>Newsstands across the city vanished and the papers that filled them keep threatening to, but these man-sized boxes on a pre-dawn corner linger.</p>
<p>Paper and a local dining magazine now in my clutch, Mike and I smiled eye smiles, traded names and shook hands.</p>
<p>“You new to the ‘hood?” he asked, his tone betraying two assumptions that won’t come across in words. I’ll translate.</p>
<p>He assumed I was from the community because the stand’s only purpose was feeding its people information. And he thought I must be a recent transplant. Because how could anyone live here and not be a familiar smile at the Kaage Newsstand?</p>
<p><a title="#693: News of the World" href="http://1001chicago.com/693/" target="_blank">Newsboys meet pressmen</a></p>
<p><a title="#191: The Afterlife" href="http://1001chicago.com/191/" target="_blank">Pressmen meet shooters</a></p>
<p><a title="#396: A Splash of History" href="http://1001chicago.com/396/" target="_blank">Shooters meet ed boards</a></p>
<p><a title="#642: The Brainstorming Meeting for tronc Inc." href="http://1001chicago.com/642/" target="_blank">TRONC!</a></p>
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