Peroria Riverman Peoria Riverman in Peoria Illinois
That is the correct spelling of the proper noun, referring to the Journal Star, the name of newspapers in the cities of Lincoln (Nebraska) and Peoria (Illinois).
Fox River Prison is a fictitious name. The series was filmed at an old prison in Joliet Illinois.
The state of Illinois was named after the Illinois River. The river was named by French explorer Robert Cavelier Sieur de La Salle in 1679 after the Indians he found living along the banks.Illinois is the French spelling for the Illinois and Peoria Indian word "iliniwok," meaning men or warriors and perhaps referring to members of the Illinois tribe.
My previous understanding was that South Peoria was the old name for the village of [[Bartonville, Illinois]]. However, things get confusing: First, there is '''Charles G. Harms''' (born in Peoria, September 19, 1856 to Daniel G. and Ahltje (Frerichs) Harms) was elected "Mayor of the Village of South Peoria" in 1889, 1890, 1893(?), 1896, and 1900. Second, there is '''Peter J. Eichhorn''' (born at Spring Bay, Woodford County, Illinois, November 17, 1867 to John C. and Magdalena (Rapp) Eichhorn), who was "President of the Board of Trustees of South Peoria" for three terms (1896, 1897, 1898). He lived at 1411 Howett Street, which sounds like a Peoria south side address rather than a Bartonville address; even though streets were numbered differently, Howett St. doesn't extend anywhere near Bartonville. Villages in Illinois officially have "board of trustees" and an elected "president", but the president is almost always called a "mayor" in popular usage; so at first glance, this source appears to attribute both men what, in more modern time, we would consider names for the same office in the same year (1896). I don't know know the difference between the South Peoria which Harms was "Mayor" of and the South which Peoria Eichhorn was "President" of, both apparently in 1896. To confuse matters more, the same source (published in 1902) refers to "Bartonville" in some biographies. (And then there's "South Bartonville", just to drive you nuts.) Reference: http://freepages.history.rootsweb.ancestry.com/~historyconnection/Peoria/Bio/02.htm citing ''Historical Encyclopedia of Illinois and History of Peoria County'', Volume II, 1902
Peoria Illinois doesn't have a Panda Express that I know of. We do have a Panda House Carryout at 1200 West Main Street. The Owners name is Tony Tram, a very nice young man that takes pride in what he serves. Excellent food at a very reasonable price.
* Federal Correctional Institution, Grenville * Federal Correctional Institution, Pekin * Metropolitan Correctional Center, Chicago * United States Penitentiary, Marion.
What a question this is about the amount of time that you would spend in prison for filing a 1040 federal income tax return under someone else's name. A taxpayer sentenced to ten years in federal prison following his conviction in June for the preparation and presentation of false and fraudulent income tax returns.
"Alcatraz" is the Spanish word for "gannet", a marine bird related to the pelican.
Early in the 1670s, French settlers coined the term Illinois based on an Ottowa dialect of the Ojibwe language word ilinwe-, to describe an individual that resides there as he speaks the regular way. The word came to them from the Miami-Illinois language.See the related link(s) listed below for more information:
Peoria journal star
Peoria journal star