Illinois News Index

Downers Grove Reporter, 26 Aug 1897, p. 3

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Coupled vlth this came advice: from Mexico indicating that the fall in the prloe of silver has produced a business paralytic there. that merchnntn and lmelnm men generally are compelled to suspend business operations or ere ; at least neatly crippled. end the amount at money which the lexical government nnd the great business anâ€" dertakings oi tint country Inuit have "t in order to meet their interest elm-gee which are payable in gold is bringing the Mexican government to con-ider seriously adopting the gold standard. it is perfectly clear to the average observer, putting aside any political views or wishes. that the trend of events is so pointedly in the support of Republictn theories as to currency, end Republican pledges ot prosperity under protection, the: it only rennin: to the members of time party In the date: where elections are to be held this yen to get their voters to the poll: 1nd time inure sweeping Republican it In in Ohio and Ion-a. that the free silver element at the Democracy is put again clearly and mnspimously upon remrtl in advovnr-y oi the tree silver proponitlnn as the sole sentiment oi ita national ambition. Advices tro- those ntntn show that the Democrats aired] on seeing that they mmlr a great mis- take in not only again espnulng the silver cause. hnt in making it the chief and only expression of their views upon national subjects. since the con- ventions in those adopted the l6 to l proposition as the chief plank oi their platform silver has fallen rapidly and iam prodncta hare advanced with equal promptnm. At the same time business activity has inrressed through end of those states. Letters received irons leading hnsiness men, Democrats as well as Republicans. throughout lowa and Ohio. show there a marked improvement in business conditions, Inanniactories increasing their force! and now running full tllne and over- time, thonssnds of men being put at work at living wages. farmers getting increased price: {or their wheat. wool, and other farm products, and the gen- ‘ ernl repudiation of the calamity cry and the theory that only the tree coin- age of silver can bring prosperity to the people of this country. Tho alum whlch are hut not acu- rlufly “Ir-rung nllenuon In 0M0. lawn and ”urn-ml. Ollo and Ion In the mum- of nmclnl luomlol at It. pm! none!" must of tho Incl. mt In tho-- mm the Douocnu Ian glued mm mm lo the nlulo monocl- uo- o! the (m Incl unllnllod column at nIIvn. coupled with In unml cul- nmy cry whlcl Im- bnu an mum-lug "alum of Ihclr pollllnl nun-Ica- In moon Ind out of mu II In put ultra“. The planar-n II In". (to nllln hunts been ulooled only was: In no tulle-l long": In m-lr unicorn-y M II. I. In I vllhml-walllu-lorany- nllor-nnllol pmposlllon. whlle lha Mnrrluad pit-"mm. Inn-«I by m- at llmu and mailing normal. who av llu- upmcllag alarm. unnamed not; an Ibo nilvor quesllon ll lhe mt Ip- mowd Dorm-nun!» ntylo. In vmdlng lvlnx llt‘h mu any-hotly rn ”name Ill-l It IIQ'IIJ nnylhlng m- may choose upon (My money almuon. “Va-Manon Currenponuence.) A vhlcl subject 0! dhwuulon In Washington Jun now Is the polltlcnl 11me which are In progress In various amen. Thou are con-Idorod $90018"! Impartial. because of their MM“ upon the politic-I complexion a! the Called Ema: unllo. In unnl nun. loci-Inn": which are to choc-o I United flute- mentor are to be elect- ed In pan. or In full It the uppmchlu due denim, and Islam! caller. In ad: or nae-o nut". wtlcuurly than. which ltc rlooo and In which ml: w- ly hu how 0! plain. control of the lesbian"! by the mm can u the approaching Hermon. Free In": flu of Ohio An lulu; I "(In [or LII. ~‘l‘hey fluvo Kl- dot-0d I’mo falling. to (I. Ext-lulla- at All til-o. STATE CAMPAIGNS. .NOZ<.P¢CA=¢. >2 )(Z.Dl° 2‘1... H102 “23mmt THE LESSON OF THE PAST. The farmers of the country should give their attention clouly to a few contrasts. The free tnden made I greet row over the auger bounty and the tin-plate duty. Thelr contention wne the sheer impoeeibility that we should produce our own not and un. Alma: every fame: in Americn know! thu we mu noon prodoee all the can: we mm end an e hun- Whnt of the price of wheat In the fu- ture? Is the rlse now so remarkable In the msrkets n temporsry slnlr? Will wheat go down spin when there are good crops on other continents? It In, of course. true that heavy crops elseâ€" where will reduce the prlce of whent. simply bee-use they will reduce the de- mand for lt. There can be no help for thet. But the xrowlng of wheat can be uncle profitable. The first notable influence will be found In the Increase by nanny millions of the consumers 0! white bread. These mlmans were Intro- duced to the better hreedetufl o! etylll. nation by the low rates thnt preynlled. end they have acquired a tnste for It. The same Influences that have enlarged the wheat-producing lands and cheap- ened the production have found new mstomereâ€"«zonsumersâ€"therefore mar- kets. 80 thls great matter or white breed for the world wlll adjust Itself handsomely, The people who attempted in make the peopie believe a in! months ago that Secret." Sherman h period of artive usefulness are paying nothing more on that subject. Sec- retary Sherman‘s expressions of View! on current political topics are clear. crisp. and vigorous. and «rile I re- Ipouslve chord In the hart: of every American citim. A In: dsys sun there wrs strnnxe dtsnstchss tron Mateoâ€""Gold st 126 not rent premium. Business yu- stnsd.“ Why shank! hnslnsss he par- alyzed in s tree silver country. s "M- Inotslltc mnntry" mus Mexico. by n mmtnm on gold? How does It hspâ€" pen that [we sliver Is not the medicine to care this trouble? The old tanner: who hear the votm of the silver sat-«hers telling how the mid sund- srd hurts the toners on the (am and In the shop shouM ssh for Ill snswer to this question snd Insist upon setting It. , While (he dllulon of tho ulna at All“ by the meulol of numb. no no broader spam-um of memory Co mlculmn, with helium 01 mil. port-Hon from remote minus. Intro- ducing new omm-a of luppllec In the nation. reduced the price or that and than rum: were beyond the cal- \ml of the tumors. mm won tum In the “rum [ha-unin- ol which they should lu- wn-ihlo. Thy round to be “um“ lo 0.1de the the“ am: an thelr on Int-d. Ind cannula! nu- unc- ermr In lint partial" that has dnmnpd nu acumen mnmu plu- len. [A the lumen have «finally oi crops. The money II drculntlon In the Unl- ud Bum nu hem-ed about. 8m.- 000.000 II the put you. the price of Ionian product. bu advanced. Ind (ho Ina-mm of the country ha "all! In- provcd Mlle the amnion- tut uo< (Ila; Inn. (he [no ooluu of ”he! would hfln‘ In Inert-u of noon at prim lo the people of mu country. People who are Inumlnx tint the n- unt great sold developments are n more mutt-r 0! mod luck to than op- poalns the Is to l theory we Isl-taken. It In more than luck; It In the logic of oven“. The (Act that the world pro- for- goId to the bully white metal In It. modicum of actuate bu stimulated tho production of [old ovuyvhon unj tll ll mm- Illcly to supply tho new of the wotld (or I money metal. The Clevelandite Democrats are mk- Ing large accession: to lhe|r nnkl everywhere, and expect to poll I. much larger vote tlall year than Int. The Populist: ol the country are thoroughly disgusted with the treatâ€" ment which the Democracy have given them. and are developing the greatest hostllity to further attempts at fusion. POLITICAL DRIFTWOOD. These nontradiciory statements from the editorial And advertising columns of the World lead to but one conclu- sion. One of them in false. In It that the advertised announcemenis in your paper are misleading in the people. Mr. Pulitzer? Or in it iim you In delib- entely deceitful in your editorial col- umn? These questions nut be at- ma between you-loll no mt adva- This In the advertised annonm meat 0! one of the urgent 811!!! an- no department atom. We can hardly reconcile how the Dingley Mil “will increase the cost of living" when um large store, which selIe almost every poulble erticle of daily demand end consumption, announces that "we have cut our regular prim In hall." This same statement was hurled about the country by the free-trade wen: In the {all of 1890, and «the «entry while the McKlnlcy 1m! '1' In farce. Comparing It 'lth the aver, tlaing columns ot the World a few dun after the Dinghy mm went Into enact to were nurpfltod to find an only two of the large department stores were advertim In the World, but we quote tron then both 8 {0|- Iowa: Liberia reduction have been In“. throughout our entire store; In you. cm '9 have cut our regular prion II In". This was from the advertisement of n vary large depart-lent new on Bmdwty. It given the "e direct to the editorial mum! of In. rumma- that the new urll bill "will here“. no coat of living." We quote min: We cannot remember t time when prices were more (notable to cum-- m rm .0 an... The one thing nbsolulely rerun Ibom. (he new mm bill I: that n will lime-so the coat of llvlugaflm World, The Divided Democracy. Free trade has been betrayed in the house or its triends. Mr. Bailey of Texas, the Democratic leader in the house, has repudiated the Democrntie doctrine of “tree raw material.” A eon- ‘eiderable number 0! Democrats voted for some or the Protective ienturee oi the Dingle-y bill. and the Atkintn Con- etitutlon. In a recent ioeue, raid that the time had come to correct the error people made in considering tho Dem mtie party a tree trede perty. We hove more reepect (or the iomi‘ht 0! these men than tor their consistency. They It lent have read the cine of the tines end have eeeu that tree truie in e "deed dog" in the future politic: of this country. "ewe they on tryiu to rid themuivee or my part or lot in thet economic iniieey by whhtem men! they can. in any rue, however. '0 en lied to welcome the. iron the dreary output. at tree trede into the mm o! Protcetion. We mine then .- pioneer- In the semi nove- neht of the people 0! the south tom the adoption oi the round principiee at the America smell or Protection. The recent enormous fall in the price of silver is driving Mexico to consider the advisability of going to the gold standard. The example of Japan, Rus- sia, Peru, and, in fact, all the intelli- gent nations of the world is having its effect upon the statesmen of that conn‘ try, and, (allowed. as it is. by the busi- ness troubles growing out at the great (nil in the value of silver, warns them that they must. {all in line with other civilized nations if they expect to main- tain their business and financial stand- his. 111.1 ‘ When Bryan assumed with an afâ€" fectation of solemnity, to be a student and a man of deep thought. he begged the people who came out to see the show to “study this silver question." He had looked into it. Oh, yes, he had even studied it! And he said wheat would soon be down to twenty-five cents a bushel if silver were not made free at the mints! The people have had an object-lesson in the rise of wheat and the fall of silver at the same time. and as the country rises in pros- perity Bryan taiis. tired million: a year for the tiller! 0! our no", and that We are also deep in the tinâ€"plate monulacturing business. and that ion; hetero this presidential term in out we shall produce in our shops all the tin-pinto we want. and there are from twenty to twenty-five millions a year [or American working- lnen to earn and distribute. Now, these are the things that give a boom to prosperity. Contrast this with the vulgar falsification that low silver made'whent low, and all that rotten- neas of the Democratic Imagination. Dodo Ian‘- lo- It“. DOWNERS GROVE REPORTER, Dr. lot-a- u once. Emerson. Longieilo'. Lowell ma Oliver Wendell Homes wars smong the Americas who visited Prof. his: Muller st Oxford, snd of each of then. eminent men he has rusted some rhsr- uteri-tic sneedou in his "literary Reminiscences” in Cosmopolis. One oi Prolesnor Inller's pleusnteet memo- ries is of Doctor Holmes, who carried his vii and ireshness oi feeling to the last year of his life. iliurtrstlve 0! his faculty of finding delight. in everything is the following: When we come in lingo-lea College, writes Professor Muller, Doctor Holmes 'nnied to see nnd measure the eims. He was very1 proud of some aims in America. and he hsd actually brought some string with which ho ho matured the im- est tree he new In his on conniry. He proceeded to measure ass of our “humane.“ composed of Agnes Hm. Inna-l proflaent, Indianapolis. Int: Id. 8. Hum“, nation] secretary. man-up- olh, Ind; Annie Wmamyer, Suntan Pt: Charity Rm (tr-lg VII-mo. Wu; Bun: 3. Laval. Elem. Ian: Input Ray Vienna, manna-.111; Plum L. (Jovian. mercury. Gene", Ohio. u member 0! the Ohio Guam Bulld- lng committee. and ha been connect- ed with the nan-gem! of the home ever um. The board of director- I- Her brother. Mr. “me "on. was I net-lung one" lot Joll- Brown's mmy. He Inn alums-l - lulu. Mummers” rank ll the Union n.1, “cl AM {ha war was appointed at- loney-menl 0! Kansas. A! the "no at not husband's death In I!“ he wu I disslnmhm hwycr Ind badge 0! Massachusetts. Ind judge ad- mate of the 0. A. R. In. Plum L Gowns, the man of me home bard, In flan I Daughter 0! the Revo- lutlon. and mo of 11:. Hull R. Coulee. 3 member of the 0m Inland Ind mu Ohio VoNMeer Infantry and a finding church cotter lad when man of Geneva. SI. was nmhled by the governor of Ohio. cm: six others. Illa-en gently, but Italy. no In I man: at mum. and In I Inâ€" bcf o! "to hunts: of the Anem- luvohuon by right of line “on -â€"n (mutual-murmur nd ('0 ml-mndfnlhen who fought u Bul- kor Hm. In. ("l-n ll. nil-mu, the amt "ml-Ind": of m tone. in or NM!“ lurked nbmty n4 Ind In car- Ing [or I" m W1. am- hl, nlecflonu, will gm- 0! speech and long. she has won all team. at II Italy no. and I: In ":0th health. Scrotum «kn In odou- Ian-m. ‘l'lcn no u m! duty-fol: la- mum. .030 M the. with nnrhblo war "cord- “ nr-y Inna. The old- i It is located on the famous Western Reserve on the line of the Lake Shore and Michigan Southern railroad. There are now twenty acres of land. five hav- lns been purchased last year. There are line drives, wail-kept lawns, with flowers in abundance. besides gardens and orchards. The main building was erected and furnished by the Ohio legislature at a cost 0! $35,000. it is known as the "Ohio cottage." and is a. model 01 perfection. it was dedi- cated on July 17, 1890. with elaborate ceremonies and turned over to the Woman's Relief Corps. 'lne two origi- nal buildings were used (or a semi- nary. or these one is now titted up for a hospital. The home in maintain- ed by a per «pita tax assessed on' every member of the W, R. 0.. and by contributions from friends. either cut: or supplies. Also I percent-go oi pen- sion received by innate: in muind at them, to be Ipplied to the support 0! the home. One writing of It says: “It In really one a! 12m wonders o! the world. The hall has never been told. and you will never realize what. a. grand In- ltitutlon ll In an“! you vlslt It.” (Special Letter.) 0 C H K“ [TABLE institution In the la n d in m o r a worthy of benefits or gins from a pn- ytrlotlc people than the home founded and Vuupported by {the National Wom- Ian's Rellvl Corps, ml Madison, Ohio, for those whom cruel war lclt Mthout support. or proâ€" tectiou. NATIONAL W.R.C.HOME .Oâ€"IO .ZOMâ€"D<S .P‘ HIDPODZPa FZflnvâ€"L-ZO‘: 0-- 0! cm um Phllunthroplo and ' Nam-a can-nuc- I. u.- Lamâ€"unno- Who Inn-to 13â€"4th Gourd Ar- “alumna“. 1'". NATIONAL "Olfl. MIC-l Opportunity. There in one feature oi Huh I. n mining country nightly diluent troll moot other-I. In addition to the chin. ot-tarviuorneotiuduch ”vio- lanen. you luv. s mm: o".- tnlfly in trout-Ix. 3 Frank Wright shot himself on In: wife'- crave a Bolleloncnine. Ohio. He hm promised her tint he would never Innrry min, but but! become cum to n young woman of springlold. llaâ€" Iloctlon convinced him that dent]: was better than to bmk the fin: who. In" OI. Pro-In. In” the m LAIAR GBEINOARD. run of ill life. however, be In found an «mm. In communal vltl In In! nlulm Alum ho renal-d u the um until to mm of m. to found the to ma. His book- won all of 3 religion: tm, and the DIN. Whmammtmmdh- light. Ho aid he could reveal It m m. '50 [and an the old In wu mun . mm. It new to h 3 Met! no!" um I. no, only on I: but He “mum Ila ran-mu. longevity “limo in mm. im- uo‘. Tenant. nhltl. II. m-n. lla- mm to pram". Ila Inc-III. ma 01 Ill Ruddy Ibe- um, he never lull Io “can Delight!" co mm wheel through the locum. u some ml. I. nun. he never annual in not. at cm the need. All through Illa In N a vm good 3mm; Oreo-M an (in the Im 10 "an o! his mum llfo Ore-pm wu lick in! m II III "'0. 0| Mn Inldndll MM. will. mm. may (or Ila non! My. In Ml suddenly m. A panick- I. u.- Ind collated to Anna; At no I, o! I: "an In wont to 8!. look I“ mum with bl. m. Solo-oi. when I. In um "all“. Greensard was born in Werbelnn, Russia. in the year 1793. Ilia parent- were hardworking people, not noted tor longevity. He was reared I black- smith Ind upon: his younger days in the burden! kind of vork. ”nouns! romniuinx at his HIV" (or Into in night. When 2. year- oid he married. m. wife lived to "the an oi 10. Mint her dull: the old man loom for the society of his chiidrcn. not! of whom Lani GPOQn'II'd ll Alum-t In. In" ' of Asa. Latin Greengard, residing with hll son. Solomon, in St. Louis, Mo.. is the oldent Jew in America. Tail. muscular. firm of step with flowing beard and hair, he looks the venerable patriarch of nlblical history. He is 104 you" old, but carries his age easily. on hand Ihouiders that time has failed to bend. On Nov. 15 next he will celebrate hit one hundred and iliih birthday. Perhaps I ought not to repeat what he said to me when We parted: "l have had much talk with people in England; with you I have had a real conversation." We understood each other. and wondered how It was that men so often mlsunderstood one an- other. I told him It was the badneal at our language; he thought It was the hadness of our tempers. Perhaps we were both right. when he leund that it was inner then his American (int. he Itood below i: admiring it. without a slnsle word of envy or disappointment. I had. however, n great (right while he was staying st our house. He ind evi- denty done too much. and after our first dinner-party he had level-Illa. shivering fits. and the doctor whom I sent for declared at once that he must keep perfectly quiet. and attend no more parties or any kind. I had him several days all to myself. and there were few subjects which we did not discuss. We mostly agreed, but even where we did not. It was I real pleas- ure to diner from him. We discussed the greatest and the smallest questions. and on every one he had some wise and telling remarks to pour out. OLDEST JEW IN AMERICA. the Mule-L The an I. “amalgam Rook [shad directm wlll‘meo! n.- wheu between the 15th Ind sou. d Bantu-bur to mire action on the curb tmy dividend. “a by um um I! «I probmy be denounntod am at earning- hava Inert-nod uncle-fly“ U. war-at putting the stock Incl ‘. m the c per cent mm. It In. I“. aim much at all Im a h (rather Ic- thu “I...” I“), ‘- thomdelruM-thhhlm > y and“ on m It you!“ up: Q an mm the “and“ at 1‘. Jones and C. 1'. Hayden" ref-nod I. Join the hurt Tine In our... 00- nonllnmm for I while null . e... lam-.0 from the "II-oh sate haul went more and Ind tn fourteen 00. 1min to agree to abide by the m a In no out «Mr- W m o.- eomotl. but to Ian the we on“ agenda. together with (In-pr, I‘D. miter l 00.. who write fro- Clue-fl mmmumm-cumm. true: no struck. This wool. low". emu to moral canal, th- at up“ all. with em gram fury. fun.- day dreulm print-II In huh. ”I loam was natural all our 1. low: by D. l. lull-c Ion. which rand I- van a blunt: "Cut nun. [mulesâ€"Flam m Mal. '0 wlllmenlhardolmuoumb nimble mine-I, ildudlnl am building- and stocks of M. '0 no the leader- of 10' price. In the um.- eut companm. etc." Imnneâ€" rue-I Mu hon thrown wide open min u Wanna. m. Ram won. derhredo'thenmu-O Joli". Ill-r110 duo board a! W‘ do“ III on: In scale. u the JOIN Woo- tov no any. Int-"MI“ a.- vlcu no on «mm Io ”rob. yr Hid (In Mn mum on (to n- uance-u a! no gunk hr. 1". Hot at gamm- mm- cu unc- cl our 90 (foot county m'llh an have been out an- since III. 1". mm In. no! [Inn out n] “tor-â€" “on about who u wm mu, ht I“! nun In mm. and from M n u only In. (In no result. 1'." an a Inn "It" at Clea-d. um I“ fmmh men, windy-lit fro- CI- run. mvmd o! "in. that out» than Content therein-mu!” 9y 1m It In ml]! "In.“ M m; mm cm "(on on um any at chm. Nu 'm "In union to I!" (am mvleu who an th. I clan 9mm mml and when Meals at. ready to var-m ma- vmh «may a.- ptoynm In run they urn "stunt a "hefty. Tho "minty u to I). "ma 0' their ",qu "out prison “In the porch In none. I 3m! deal d unreal and anxiety to the 1.40. h- In... AImn.-~ Aaron 5-m- nn In” In mu lulu! (I. Innue- Av-y on It. not“ (III the mth tum by the «nu unnu- Inurfm m talc and Im bad-.1 ‘no "I! uni-u In toll“ II- “M u a. mm at to: must u! Ira-Am. a. utmmlnwmmlufi on“. but] Inn.“ tho I“ 0! lb my mum I. u- utm .u and Own-l Doolln‘l wanton to not! ob.- Qullcy Talurl-.'Poflfl I. Pull. 11 year: old, baud III-u" in I no. on no second hot or uu fully rd- ulom hen. II. had been dbobdkfl. 5nd Mn hotter, It I- u“. out III to tho room A: A punish-at. no I“, run found hum Iro- lho m d I clmtdootbynunoJl-MW ol the loot. The com-«‘- M n- mmdnvmmummnum Mound had mummy In.“ ll.»- North-7 A upon-lei election In: hall In Grundy c'mnty u) an the "me: In tho oflko of Iluo'l Attorney, no Oilfi- uoln; Attorney, 8. (P. Btoughn. hum mined (o ICCODI the dam or eon-w judge. I. la. Clover VII the Down“. And Goons w. uuuon the Republic:- nominee. A vary "(M mm In no!“ on bolt lid". and the election I. ch... Hum u prob-My oloclod by I up pm, or m. [Alchneld Teloarnmrerl. Jouph amine. wire of one o! the molt lon- mont busineu men or this ally. Ill thrown [mm a buggy and to bully ha lured th-t her llle In In danger. BM rash-rd . broken nrm. broken law. b.- 5160» Internal Injuries. Cllnton Tainanâ€"Benjamin How. In! of Kenn". um county. dlod lud- denly. Mr Howard was In his av- enty-eighlh year. He Wu 3 voter“ o! the Mexlcan war, being Ileutenlnt d Company E. Fourth reglment llllnoh volunteers. Mount Vernon Telegram.â€"â€"Mourl. Crsckel 1 00., dry goods dealers, hue sold their stock at dry goods, shoes and notions to George Hall and John M1 Issac Goodbourn of Grayvllle, sad the latter took possession of the store. Dixon Telegram.â€"~Adolph Hotter: 0! Arlington. "L, while here Int. M‘M tried to throw him-cu In front of all engine at the llllnol- Central depot. but was prevented by the drum cm. He was arrested and confined in MI. sycamore Telegram.~'l‘ho finnu'l tournament held here was largely u.- tended. Sycamore took first Infill”. Second money was divided between 00- neva and Bamvla. Aurora.~â€"â€"The corner none of the now United Evangelical church. at the cor- ner of Clark and Fourth streets, VII laid Aug. 15. ‘ Inn DIN Hippo-Inga cum cm, Bough-n. rumba. cut-Ind. obituary “d Ibo-unmoun- Iva-h m- that, lumen nt tho In". ' ILLINOIS NEWSIMH. RECORD or much coma. 0' THE waax.

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