rem 'itI From the Greeks the world learned how to make history. Had there been no Herodotus nnd nucydldea, there would have been no Macaulay or Ban- croft. Had there been no Bannock. In My. than would luvs been no Inna-pun. nu than been no no. And ville speaking of our philologi- cal obligation. lei no all your eun- iion to the feet that my of the in- tellectul and moral and theological leader! of the exec got much of their discipline and electiveoeu from Greek litemure. n in popular to oool It the dead Manges, but to per cent of the world's intelleetmlity would have been taken on it. through learned institu- tions our young men had not, under competent profemm, been drilled in Greek masterpieces Hesiod‘e "Weeks and Days,†or the eulogium by almon- ideo of the slain In war, or Pindor's "Odes of Viciory." or "The Recoliec- (ions of Socrates," or "The Art of Words," by Carat, or Xenophon} Ana- baolo. ‘ heat-he: and Pauline enharhatloa and Puma! tongues aaot seven trumpet- that acceded over Pat-on. hare cone to the world I- Mould. ayllletrk. pic‘ “We. phlloeophlc. nartvaled Greek. Instead M the glhherteh language In 'hlch many of the Iattous at the earth at that "me lahhered. Who can forget It and who can exaggerate lta thrllllug importance. that Christ and heaven were ltttrndm‘rtl to In la the language at the G’eeks‘.’ the language I- which Holler had sum; and Sophocles drama- tned and Hum dlalogued and Boer-tea dlocoursml and Lycurgns leglelated and Dallofllwm-s thundered his mtton on "The Crown?†Ererlntlng thanks to God that the water: of llte were not handed to the world II the unwashed m of corrupt languages from which] nation had been drinktag. hat to the clan, bright, goldee llpped. emerald~ handled chalk. ol the Hellenes. Learned Camus wrote a whole volume about the Greek verb. Phllologisu century after century have been measâ€" m‘ the symmetry of that language. laden vlth elegy Old â€Nipple. drum and comedy. Ody-ea! and Iliad: but 0,. grandest thing that Greek haulage ever mutated "I to give to the world the benediction, the contort. the tmdttatlol. the salvation of the Goe- pelattheï¬onotood. Porthat'care dehtorl to the Green. II 0w ï¬rst place. to owe to their lacuna" our No! Tut-went, All 0! II In mu "m" In Oml. "cop! the "on! o! Mailbox and (he. wrllloa In [In Amman humâ€. In noon pm Into am): by our amen umber. 13.01 To In Gmk lunuuo we own flu.» in: term "or pmrlml. the but Hun our wrhlm. "no but vh- Ioal "or IlmlH. All the parafï¬n In amt. All tho hind" In (Inn. The m on m Ian!" I. Gmk. The no" of nomk-Im- and Holman nu) cum and Joflhl bulls and Guilla- mum luv. to «airman-Mp and d!- plomry "an amount oi II. unri- cnln annual. wllch MI Involve I" Europe. And Indirectly all nation. I! I. "-0 for all chunks. all school; I" unlnnlun. I" arts. at! lummn Io Ion-d out In "to mow! oawluuc in IN Mlarulkm. "l on drum to III. 0min" to him twice a week, Paul practically Inâ€: ' l. the Apostle. tun bankrupt. I owe what I cannot ply, but i will pay In large a percentage u I can. "- h an Obllflfltiou (or what Greek illonture and Greek sculpture and Greek "chi. Munro and Greek prowess lune done [or me. I will pay all I can in lultall- menu of evnn‘eiilm. I am insolvent to the Greeks." Helm, u the inhubl- \, tents call it. or (have, u we all it. is iuixniih-nt in nine. nbout a third II lute II the unto o! No. York. but ' that it inch in breldtlt in m-In up in height. with its mount-inn Cylem. and Em. and 'l‘lyulttl, uni ’l'nl'hrn- ' m. curl: over an: thou-ml tut tn! “ovation. no! its Pursuant. over cult } thou-ad. Just the country tor mighty . an to be born in. (or in all Inci- tbo 9 most at tho intriiocuui uni nor-l , giant- were not born on the piniu. but , but for cradle the niley between two! mount-inn Thu country. no out ot'I I'h‘t‘h In more than (my all“ "call was In. tun nude in. input. upon ttu' rottd an no other nation. out it tail! hold. a Int mortgage 01 obtiutton upon all riviiilfli poople. While In 4898. But in brilliant Corluih. the 8"“ Acro-Coriulhus fortress frowning from the height of sixteen hundred and eigh- lr-six [031. and in the house or Gains. where he was a Street, a his Pl"? 0‘ “on“! near him. which he was taking to Jerusalem far the poor. in this let- ler to tin.- Romans, wluph Chrymstom admired be much that be had it read 01 the Greeks, I preach this sermon 0‘ Sympathy and protest. (or every in- ‘NHBEM person on this side of the sea. 8' Wen as the other side. like Paul. who wrote the text. is debtor to the Greeks. The present crisis is emphasized by "10 Kilns 01 the allied powers 0! Eu- rope, ready to be uuiimbered against the Hollenes. and I am asked Io speak out. Paul, with a mnster lnteiiect 01th;- From the Tut: “I Am Debtor mm. to the Greek. Inc to the lurbur|nm"-â€" Bnmans BIC-«Thermupylue and Bunk- or Bill. SYMPATHY FOR THE GREEKS. SUNDAY'S SUBJECT. TALMAGE’S SERMON. ’1‘ this time. when that behemoth of abominations, M o- hnmmedanism, u [- ter having surged use" on the car- casses of a hundred thousand Armen- ians, is trying to put Its paws lmon one of the fairest of all nations. that Also at Thermopylae, three hundred Greeks, along a road only wide enough for a wheel track between a mountnin and a marsh, died rather than surrend- er. Had there been no Thermopylao. there might have been no Bunker Hm. The echo of Athenian and Spartan he- roic: WI! heard at the gate: 0! Lack- now. end Scum, and Bannock- burn. end Lexington. and 0mm mmmmmabnwi- That won the vote of Cefllutachue, and soon the battle opened. end to toll run the men of Mlltladee fell upon the Persian hosts, shouting. "0n? Son: of Greere! Strike for the freedom of your country! Strike for the freedom of your ehlldren end your wives. for the ‘Ihrlnes at your father's gotta. and for the sepulchree of your elm! All, all are now stalled on the etrlte." Whlle only one hundred and ninety-two Greeks fell. six thousand four hundred Penlene lay deed upon the ï¬eld. and‘ many of the Aslntlc hosts who took to the war veeeele tn the harbor were com earned In the ehtpplug. Persian oppres- elon we: rebuked, Grecian liberty wee arhteved, the cause of elvlllntlou was advanced. and the western world and all nations have felt the herolce. Hod there been no Mlltledes. there might have been no Washington. "It ant rests with you. Cam-acne, either to enetnve Athens. or By Insuring her freedom. to via your-e" :- l-Ior- of Mar-thou. there ten thousand Athe- nians. led on by Mllttades. triumphed danger as Hwy are at this moment. It ‘they how the knee to these Medea, they are to be given up to lilpplas, and you know what they will then have to m!- ier; but It Athens tomes vlrtorlous out of this mutest. she has It In her pater to hevome the Int rity of Greece. You "He Is to decide whether we no to join battle or not. I! we do ntvt bring on 1 Killâ€? prmntly. some rarttons II- ‘ trlgm will .flsmme the Athenians and the city wm he Mmyed to tie Medan. but If we ï¬ght before there Is anything rotten In the mate of Athens. I helleve that. provided the gods will give (alt ï¬eld and no favor. we are nhk to get the best of It In the engagement." j l’unhemnn. all the world In ohll- um: to "MI-s more than It ran err-r pay [or No homic- In the mm. o! Ith- ‘erty um rtxht. l'nned Europa lolly Jul nut better think "at the 0mi- wtll not I‘M. There may he [hill-p hark and rartllattoun and temporary dole-t. but I! “new M rtght I" En‘ rape unnot pm her down. The other mmmr. bvlorr they open the port-hot" at their men-nf-I'ar nptmt that ID." Immo- Ind Imtler read at the mu. of flarathon. there In thorn-ad Ath- onmn. led on by Human. triumphed over one hundred thousand or their non-ten At that "no In Oral mnctt‘ of In In senor-la were (or hegthulhg‘ the battle and Ire were nut-at tt. Cam-uh!†presided at the cone" 0! war and had the decldtn. vote, and mltlades addressed hln. «ring: . “l"or to thin. “muting An. All . thlnp nut creep i Are but the echo of the voice dlvlu." ll urn- "(Mr a mu, thin (or Pull In nut-mp! lo mum: "temper-â€only (tom 3 mm In n Inna“. lorolu to Mn. and baton ()ml urinal-n, but Paul did It wuhom "animating, tn! the. arknowwud heron Ibo but till- llaunlshnl audience on lho plum III Indohleclunn In In 0min, call; out In In- onuou, "A. one at your own WI! tau um." "hath carp perplu'.’ ll low-ring du- lcr ulna? W! are MI omprlnu. and to Jon '0 “L" And Arum. one 0! [bolt own m. bu: urluon; The {not 13min, Paul had not much 0! his armorial power of expresdoa from me Greeks. That he had studied their literature was evident. when standlnl In the presence 0! an audience 0! Greek scholars on eru' "III. which overlooks Athena. he dared lo quole {run one of their oIvn Greek memcnher Clamba- or Annual. declaring. "A. cert-la ulna 0! your own pool- huvo uld. ‘lor we are also his olhprln‘.‘ " And he and. act-unle quot-Non. Cleaulhun. on. o! the pooh. hlvlnl wrluen: mar, there would have been no Milton. The modern wits, who are: now or have been out on the divine mission of mak- ing the world laugh at the right time. mm be traced hack to Aristophanes, the .Atheniun. and many of the jocositles that are now taken as new had their Silshatlons twenty-three hundred years ago in the titty-four comedies at that master of merrlment. Grecian mytho- logy has been the richest mine from which orator»; and essayists have drawn their illustrations and painters the themes for their canvas, and nithontfll now tut exhausted mine, Grecian myth- 0105)’ has done a. work that nothing else could have accomplished: Boreas. representing the north wind: Sisyvhllï¬. rolling the stone up the hill only to have the some thing to do oter usaln‘ Tantalus with fruits above him that‘ he could not reach: Achilles, with 11134 arrows; Icarus, with his wuxen wings.‘ flying too near the sun; the Contours. half man and hair beast: OrpheuS. with his lyre; Atlas, with the World on his back all these and more have helped literature trom the gmduate'a speech on (.‘Dmlflellt‘i'melll any to Rufus Choute‘s euloglum on Daniel Webster at Dartmouth. Tragedy and comedy were born in the festivals oi Dionyï¬ilfl at Athens. The lyric and etegiac and 0P1? poetry of Greece ï¬ve hundred years before Christ has its echoes in the Tennra'ons, Longfellow: and’ Bry- ants of eighteen and nineteen hun- dred years after Christ. There is not an Him-tire pulpit or editorial chair or protesuot": room or cultured parlor or ilili'lngl'nl farmhouse today in America or Europe that mold not appropriately employ Paul’s ejaculation and uni. “1 um debtor to the Greeks." There will he no relief from flowing poverty and distress until million at shut [Fly get back to the call all h- oonc producers. The solution at the W mblan lion .2 the Old d m nutâ€"In. A. J. Wdh. There never were two true religion. Every true Jew is It hurt a Christian. The word (3th is only another form oi the Hebrew word Menith. Both men the anointed. Au Hebrews who believe In the Meleiah my be celledâ€"â€" If i may make a wordâ€"Meaghan; whigh is Just another word for Chril- Hens. Judaism Is the my dawn of the morning; Christianity, properly under-toad. is the sun at houndâ€:â€" Rev. R. s. MacArthur. Then Ii your "Irritation of Christ'- neli-nrriilresirln troll some me at todaymtd your nor: of whet Chriu hes done tor yon doe; not quite fetch It: into the right way, but any to him. "Professormlloctorwlndne! Why no it that Paul declared he was a debtor to the 0min?†Ask your learned iriend to take his Greek Testament and translate for you, in his own my. from Greek into English, the splendid pemration oi Patti’s sermon on Marl Mill. under the power of which the scholarly Dionyains surrendered. mule ly: “The times at this ignorance. God winked it: but now rommandeth nil men everywhere to repent: Mention he hath nppolntt‘d a day In the which he ‘wlll Judge the world in righteousnese. ‘ by that man whom he hath ordained; whereof he hath given assurance unto all men. in that he hath raised his imrn the dead.“ By the time he ha: got through the trnnslation from the Greek I think you will see his lip tren- ble and there will route a nilor on his face like the palior on the airy at day- hrenh. By the eternal salvation of that scholar. that greet thinker, that splendid nun, you till have done something to help pay your lndehted- nea to the Greeks. And not to Go! the Fuller, God the Son. and God the Holy that. he honor and glory, and dominion and victory and my world without end. Amen. flesh In Inn and N- hom m mun. Bo flopped the nun-g IllQ- lu- nd Imam! nu dam-Mu butt! and and an m- 0! (ho In lulu banana. TM “purl-bunt cl ll. ulna In: Io Ibo men. all Noel-c a. cum-Mn". Who- â€. Hon-conv- Moodlu and Moto- body in pet a. 3 mm and an!“ 5mm, .34 me on QIclfl-d: â€III. (M. I. av- lul!“ I. "and: â€0|. vhf- lh fl!- fmnn no Ian I. I and the hon!" Win: an "Inner-(lot In no at "lull. to: mm". and what a an [m- which to Illuulnlo (M lat-harlot of our Christ. limping Ind hut-ml [Id broke. “4 Ion: and crushed II the work at a... ping Im- drmdlnl mm "m Ito-ll My. annoyed our small! Try not. a mm at tic-dou- salons; .- III- on that ma cup-Me of ounhro'ln all your nan-mun (or the (null, and I. ‘m I“ dawn and weep. Draw your 11- 3 [mutations from the duties. and u in lo III MI old nary. but Loyd" jug all Henna hunk: and to “a Greek dnlu will A" sum-def u [ï¬g story 0! Jun Hem-'orth'l. "0‘, than I» dilemce no Ion .- I and (in ion?" were down In tho um mu 0! I lulu. They he landed an Iron but“ with ml. and Jim Ila-swath. numb In nbon Md, In hunt. II. boom up by wl-dluo. who. tho wild- lu- brat. and no load mm m «scolding upo. (to two ulna. The. 1!. llama-on), noel-g that nut to corn]- death m the aim MI. throw Maud! I‘ll-II (to can 0! the whirl!" Illdllu, and um. II. no [Abor Prom.-. 30 Tue DOWN ERS GROVE REPORTER. lptl [Inn-h 23. Again the anti-department store hill struck a snag in the house of repre- nentatirrs when It came up. not the positions of the two portion were re- versedâ€" the objections come from the democratic wing. According to the nave-ant made lain evening Hr. Nohe moved the unanimous consent of the home to take up mete hill No. 27:. Johnson of Vo'hltenide inmtly object- ed. Nohe exam-ed that he only went- ed to have the mensore rend in the loose and retard. but Mr. John-on. who remained standing from the ï¬rst, still exclaimed, "i object." Snooker Curtis acid an objections were nnde‘ the house would proceed with the rog- ‘ ulnr order. Time the hill was quietly disposed of for at lent mother tiny. ‘ The republicans were nil ready to carry ‘ out their egreement with the busines- men made last night, but the unexpectâ€" ed objection from the democratic qw- ter blocked their program-e. Senntnr Humphrey, by unanimou- conoent. called up the Torrens lend ti- tle hill on second reading. The hm m nor-need to third tending, and node a metal order not out “my It 11:). o. I. Anon. a. hm- m to the order of second rndlng At Senator Hitler's request the M" wn nude a speck] order for next Waite.- dny at It a, In. in two nowapnpon. TIM house um. rhanglnx tho: tune M elm‘mg superior judges of Pool mum, no as to provide lnr (ha nleruml of 1mm Brennan's lurcoqmr In .1va of “Mayan Sen- ator Anthony called up the, house bill rrmsolidaung HIP supreme mun at Ottawa and 13km! that It be advanc'd by I rlslnx vmel The '0"..an mm veto lnlrmlmvxl among 01an By Sonalor llrannr‘ , To permit women 1. vol:- tor prosiclomlal Marlon. on drain- ngo qumulnns and at mnnlrlml elm-- â€on; The [allowing bills were pawl among mlwrs: Senalor Leoper‘n hm providing mat [he nfllmn who print the «Mr-in! ballot shall yubllsh the Imp. By a vow of 3! In 4 [be “1|.“an- mml mar» hm man! (he was“. rm links Inlor ll mine up In the low». when a poultry! “In develo’ad. Tm demon-al- umni! to Ion-e Ibo repub- lican lo a mo. no! to â€can plug on record I motion In adjourn tn «mat In the, shaman o! Lumen-M noun“ Northrml today Pmldent Pro T0u~ pore PM" presided over "no main. The Iona. John "solution on "no denim of William M‘ (Hum an mucurnd In Intending the election inv. providin- Nlrell '33- By unanimous consent the following bills were Introduced- By Mr. Allen of Vormiiliouâ€"Ceding to the United States the jurisdiction over certain lands and their appurtenances for the National Home for Disabled Volunteer Soldiers. exempting the name from tax- ation and to provide for the exercise of suffrage therein. By Mr. Brine- dellty-Requlring all conditions in in- surance policies to be expressed in bold letters and preventing insurance com- panion from limiting their common law liability. Several senate hill: were Id- vnnced to third reading, among the number being the hill appropriating 881,000 for the furnishing of the Sold- ier’a Memorial Hall in the Chicago Pub- lic Lihrary building. The bill of Mur. ray of Stark county amending the ex- emption law was passed. it provides that money due a debtor iron: the sale of any property which was exempt from execution, writ of attachment or die- treau for rent, at. the time at such Iale. uhnll be exempt from attachment and garnishment to the same extent at such property would be exempt had the some not been sold by such debtor. Mr.‘ Boyd’s bill amending the garnishment ‘ law prepared by the State Grocere’ no- soclntion came up on third ï¬nding. The bill provides that in all cases where the claim wan Incurred by the head of the family for family expennen. no more than 75 per cent of the wages of the debtor shall be exempt from garnishment. Mr. Salmons led the diet- ruuion with a ferocious attack on the measure. Speeches against the bill were also made by Torrance and Blood, the rlilef argument against it being that it tended to the oppmuion of the poor. The bill we: defended by Alechuler. AVery end Selby. Mr. McLaughlin. the «poem representative at the inbor- ing via-nee. spoke at length Ania-t the bill. Finally. on motion of Mr. John- son 0! White-hie, the bill In: recalled to second reading for the pnrpout of amendment. The home adjourned to lo o'cioi-lu‘ to-morrow morning. Inn-h u. in the house the resolution provid- inx for n luutiution of the can." of the depletion of the ltnie tree-my and of the management at the late in- Itiiution- run up u n wont-l order. but it: rotulderllloe In min poet- pound for one 'NI. It Sullivan by unanimom moo-u Introduced A bill um other thin:- that the illiterat- rotor may t-hu into the veil-'5 booth with hint any par-oh whom he may calcium to Int-int him in tho prep-rh- tln of hi: ballot. Ir. ltnnll'e hill mule: it unlawful to: In per-on to wear a uniform. hula or cable. at the United But-e "my. nation-i nerd of Illinois- er of the municipal police In um up on wood median. The ' bill In amended. on motion of If. Nepal". no u to main it unlawful also to our without authority the uniform. had..- or emblem of I carrot sorloty. Ir. “moody moved to airline out the charting rlnuu oi the hilt Thin use tout. ml the bill on Wred to third rndloa. Hhortlt before Imo- Mr. itch-1h pmipitntml the department store lain by momtinx that the non» hi0 hill lhirk-hfld mum- over noun ilm. before he Inhm up at «mm- and and I lint tlmv without Y'fPfFflI'P in rolmit~ . Fm Hoe of Chicago aloud noctu- Chluam-n £250 for a good pug. n. m {unlinked 1nd at note, '- pld. Then Pong Hon found cm i. bride in n elmly «mum Chm- m. Re mm m m, a“ now In and In our: tor a. w i III “a b n mm": M » Than I: trouble In the armory of (‘mmny (7 of the HM! "11th It Springï¬eld. Three p'rlntea. (or a joke, smeared llmburgcr ovar the armory, and now Capt. O'Brien an they nun have dhhononbie discharges. In. Jennlo Deacon, wife 0! J. W. Danton, o! Naomi-gum, has mad I bill for divorce. She claims Demon. who is I prominent human, I- ï¬nder of ï¬ll home than his wife. Ind she will lave him no hln horses. An «You in again being made to rosurrefl. the Pres: Ami-mm In rat. ton county. A former Pres Ascen- Uon In that county vent to an alt]..- ly grave. mssmm. Knnm. Indlnna and Im- nols all report gm: damage to til-tor what. Kentucky alone of the when. growing state: "390111 the crop mm name nun. John f‘onverse o! (WI-um, a well- known printer and (or many year» In «man and being "mine to work long- er, has sane to the Souk-I": Home 3: Quinn-y. II II"! Innmn u I» "I‘M" on an arm-r. Am; IN mm adv-noun I. mnml "mung mm- IIII tailoring: NmIIm’ In ran-In mm normâ€" Hons In han- I public 0.1, I)! place at bmlmm In um Male: lint-‘1 to prawn! IM- Mnllmlm (If m I“ idl’llâ€; flImn'n Io regal-In IM mph]- mom of rMIIIrI-I; t'orhnn'u to club- lIsh a tan «hp-run"! ll In Ifulnnfly 0! Illinois F'y'l In punish m \makm: false nudes In IM- book: 01 mrmrauons or fun autumn: In of- ltvrs IIwrvol; EMtMn's rognlaulg Iho salt- of IN: IA Moon's Inrrvaalng Ihâ€" «aun- n' Hu- le (‘mme â€ï¬lm In â€Mm mr annum. and Ull' M" of Mic-n of \‘r-rmlmon In anIhnrlxo cm- I,r Mama In grant am In Imam; for inaixwm nrnhnn rMMron Thn Hon-I- adjourned In m n. In. m-mnrmw. Tho Sonata moI at 3 p. In. wIIImuI I qno~ rum prPva‘. Nn mm": rm Iran:- acIM, and "am-mun!) an" I» mrlâ€" I In: of Ihn journal an ndhummmt In! 1.1an nmll Iomovmw II to a. m, con-Month Mun. II- Ion II II. way a! adv-ml o! huh. Ir. Nah mm: Inn to Iguana n Imam M". mm. that thin "I (Do In! II- ‘nunln um he Dun my!“ to Intro- dun. l'uulnnun mun-I in!“ 0)- mm. luv kimonoâ€"d A bill to 'num nn-Innurum- mun-Mn urn-Mm in now Incl munmon (mun m Ibo Intact Hum Irma Mun-max or al.- nlu of by truly or «hail. uy llanuy tar Omar-m a. pawn; Io- ulul In mq sun 0! "ll-run. TIM] Hum hlllu on an on." 0! Out "ul- Ing unv- rrod n In! "no and "lumen! to annual running. TM: Ion unn- Iwn mm mm o. m0 uni-r 0! IM mMnu, IM- Mryrlo mum- hm kill ‘ Innh on. The "mm :1).de u 6 o'floch, no "mun In: Inn at quoru- Ill pun- TM Hon-lo than nut-ml to lot any II 5 p. u. ohm, And m baby 0“!- dm lb notion. III-um "IIDW'O hm mud!“ tor the MINI.- at low-amp- h Coot Gout: and-r on (own-Mp urn-Muno- Ill ma 0 noeâ€" and Hm and adv-Ind to mu Ind- lug. was the toliowins: By Senator Bo- gardun-To protect trade and com- merce against unlawful restrictions and monopolies. The bill is as ioliowa: “Every contract. combination in the form of a trust or otherwise. or con- spiracy In restraint at trade or com- merce, in this state, is hereby declared to be illegal. Every person who shall make any such contract or engage in any such combination or conspiracy, shall be deemed guilty of a misdemean- or. and on conviction thereof shall be punished by a line not exceeding $5,000 or by imprisonment not exceeding one year. or both said punishments. Every person who shall monopolize or at- tempt to monopolize any part of the trade or commerce in the state ahail be deemed guilty or a misdemeanor. and on conviction thereof abail be pun- inhed by a line not exceeding 85.000 or by imprisonment not exceedin. one year. or by both said punishmenta, in the discretion 0: the court." Governor Tunnel- sent to the senate the follow- ing appointments. which were con- lirnwd: Trustees of the iiilnoia char- itable eye and our ini‘innnry, at Chica- go~Dr. J. W. Petlit. Ottawa. to sue-y iwed Samuel S. Page. removed; Dr.‘ .h‘rancls [3. Phillips. Bloomington, to‘ aux-med Dr. Arthur E. Prince, tern ex- pired; Dr. L. s. Lambert. Gaiesburx. to succeed Dr. W. A. i’ringer, removed The senate then adjourned. March 18. The teen oi the bicycle luggage bill were defeated in the iiouae, when the mceanre was untuvorably reported from the committee on roada and bridges. The iimtae, by a vote or CI to 27. non-concurred la the committee! decision and the bill war aeat to ita ill-at reading. Senator Baxter called the Senate to order I! D a. m. today with acarceiy a quorum preaent. Several report- trmn atoadia‘ committeea won 0(- lcred. anion. which were lira veranda blila prepared by tha Chicago real ea» tate board. _iiaaator Dania. Iaada an alert to have the blila united to ascend reading. but Senator Crawtord or. 'ul'o to- Put. Dr. Ward of Trinity Conq- abated for the not no“. menu! â€my and logic bridge university, m been follow and “(If at M twenty-ole mm, at m m In]! with luck to can. in ens-Mm u emana- W U! , flaky than. nlltlclnntnl an the hero 0! m. mum he precipitated. tonal:- m. rotunda In «am. a noun “,5 The nhulhnrro'. 1097170101 It.“ . hurried «nun at n tenth m, . down the Inellnn of run. with f ' ' nmduy. The "no the: Inn Ian 3 no Mane entangled In the branches of none Inn. nutter I j.- Mien. The tom fun not. now ‘- tarulned. u n Insured evident u on the "he hem-Inc tent 31‘ won†I)! CHI" â€Tied of ‘5‘ m ‘or prevented Iron renal!“ lb “'3‘; dealer: -the opposite Mend. "ii excitement at m. mu nae m ' the extreme. every one In!“ I , u the new. the deduction daring [elm being am nimble. Blondie. m. In: motionles- for n not! ".0, ‘ new In the element. my all)“, hcknnm: cheat «u: no. fro- the not concur. I movement, and n feeling of Nod malted nuphenï¬_ nirnuon It the "land“ I†. he completed Mn mun-I1 backward journey. AM n Blondln net on! nah m 1'- h «min with“: n “at. mum at Rh: In I. WW“ tum-crummm ilvllu! who at CMâ€: a. bun lot It my end in...“ W. OIIUIOAM: -M “mu-upoquu-mr _ all“: râ€" â€It" "I. hon-o In mun-um...“ rope. I: wu not until 1859 “I! ‘0 attempted the tent Hopnce performed at tho 100W Oardonl. Liverpool. Ha Ind (MI I anon-noon panormuco than. M '- lo perform nun In the anal“. Dur- : In. the Interval between the m unco- Iomo one wanted play“!!! that It would be 1 ï¬ne lhlu for III. to take I lion um. Capital “OI. thought Blondie. So he mm b the management Illl realloc- to it“! across my "on they I!“ to Ital I. to him. Th. lion chanc- Ill out†month old. Ild nu luv. u ‘1'. Sum" The uranium. m II I“ open llf. and II III Just. on!“ M who. tho no. no ulna I. I“ stunned to tho borrow. A "I“! a uh vu Mom-3. The MI. “I" C good dnl. tom-Mm throw-nun. “elm [mm-at. “I...†(on “and odd-uh that no. 0.- lml-Iould himonrthohmn‘ mmmttmm thh-lï¬zn‘hnï¬bb. panoo to M- Nimn Fall! on '3 um rope. which ten he no ; on June 10. also tron diaboioo the other 4" l' m- homo in South mm. It I'M" °‘ London. Biondin was born I†w m. m Franco. in 1324, which '3'“ him 18 years or ago. His nifllfllfl' M derived tram his tumor, who “I'm “Blondin†on account of the color 0! his hair. He commenced to†"m“ when he was four years of It. 0“ ‘0‘, year- luier save on exhibition MM the king of Italy. in 1855 he coluo :0 America. and when I! Nina" “II the idea struck him at crouilll OI ' rope. It was not until 1869 tilt ‘0 Guzman-ran TIGHT. - wuuaa man was 0mm BLONDIN THE \ lt'tcl o! llll Uteâ€"TI. m I to cm It. ill-gun 3“". m um: um. on a TI.» M Wanna-ml In“.