Public should decide which shops belong
Public should decide which shops belong
Naperville Sun July 06, 2010
Public should decide which shops belong
July 06, 2010
By Bill Mego, Columnist
Up and down the City Road, In and out the Eagle, That's the way the
money goes. Pop goes the weasel. Some people have written me, asking
whether I think we should allow this kind of thing in Naperville.
The Eagle is a pub on City Road in London, officially on Shepherdess
Walk, Hoxton. That's obviously not the part of the children's verse
they're questioning, because if there's anything we have in this town,
it's bars. In fact, in summer, nothing says "Naperville" like loud
drunks and un-muffled motorcycles.
And spending lots of money in bars is certainly not controversial. No,
it's that last line, what happens when he comes up a little short of
money and the tailor, or hatter, pawns, or "pops," his flat iron, or
"weasel." Yes, I know there are dozens of other interpretations of the
verse involving Cockney rhyming slang, etc. Please don't write me. I
already know more of them than a man my age should.
There are, in fact, a few snooty towns that don't allow pawn shops. So,
essentially, the question I guess I was being asked was: Is an
establishment that offers short-term loans collateralized by personal
property less morally suitable for Naperville than blowing all your
family's money in bars? Gosh, that's a tough one. So I thought I'd visit
Naperville Jewelry and Loan, 635 E. Ogden, near the northwest corner of
Columbia and Ogden, to see what a modern pawn shop is like.
I could have stayed in there all day. It's a light and airy showroom,
very unlike the pawn shops in old Sydney Greenstreet movies, filled with
some incredible, fascinating stuff, like a six-string banjo, a pinball
machine, iPods, a large DeWalt compressor, golf clubs, guitars, an arc
welder, jewelry, a small suit of armor and just about anything you can
imagine.
Of the two co-owners, Tom Brunzelle and Greg Holloway, only Tom was
there that afternoon greeting customers, but I'm going back often enough
that I'm sure I'll meet them both. Most of their business is free
appraisals, buying, and selling, although short-term loans are indeed
available if that's what you need. Their card says they also offer gold
parties, whatever they are.
I'd like to think that we're beyond the point where, in this sweet land
of the free, we think we have the right to tell a person what kind of
store he or she is allowed to open. That's something that a free market
society lets their customers decide. As long as entrepreneurs like Tom
and Greg see Naperville as the kind of place in which they want to
invest, our future is assured.



