Downers Grove Reporter, 11 Jan 1900, p. 3

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nut Mimi Damn “It at each actor In: the twenty- in Q Holland ad on n pine. and I mu- MI mu Ann-1!... He «no no on no non- 11. 17.7. HI- lcnnd tht autumn '~-~ol in. 7" 111121111311" m5 RoRRs. m van cl.“ muster-M- uni-“monuments: tin-man no at “with I“ ma mmmnrmnm 11¢th Rwan- I| m. . 14..an urn-gamma. w mmud-Tmmdmum (I. My. in. mg no Inmate mm o! Ice-flunk. Infilm pm I: Put. In (mm-co 0! II: an: m he at: II. ms (mu a. mug "public on m «on: let anal-manymulmu and III rm In"! The bummustlkknlluhm not “not“ We”. Tom's .1!va by mum “mu ll Ink“ Inn.“ at In In”: to M con-nut the once- of Cur-u. the (not our Ill- lulr. the "man at victory." and of the must he. In the Pro-cl Cum. Roche. Napohou aid my lunch directory plan and upedltlolu lot the Inn-Ion of Inland. ' Th ream II”! the Mm. bomb" on o comprlu rarty- time all and pm. on board ".00. noon. 45.000 and or arm. n- "no". ammunition. Mr. am from W. The am had mu- .on ma cleared the UM!" at PM" when I now- am» whfch mam Ibo um... and. the wall" coin-Mu foul. I»; won In" nuumd. A low at tho- mchd no point of (Inflation. hu- m I”. but an. Oren-Iv uh I... no Ifln'ld MM Kowloon at I'll-rho) "fund to uh I India in no mum of "who. (be co.- m II am at no "podium. no": In In um to do In by Tang. who 'u out it. nbmrd no «I. ship. liner-n m but to “mlfl (up puma-n o! Wolfe To... and. Inn on by ll. wank-5 m. the MI dim-Ion author- !“ new" "mum. to: me o! I... nw‘olmu I India. In Inland m a nu and mm on no” (In. flu-tort. TI. {m Indiana the clam- m at :- ”MI-try you; In I- u «MID-r7 In. and wlll me a II lam-alo- I. the Inufln n. um: and the «and I2 .uullbed than '- lnlnd'o his". "0 hi to: 3!. mum at 151qu cu nun-cl sum. and the following February (and him In Hurt. whence he Immo- dlntely proceeded a) Path. The all!- “eumea he In! encountered would one era-lid the hopes and heart of II." on [cu undunnud and mun-elm. Fortunately m Antenna ulnmer val Madly to Mn and Tan bdon long loud Mme" alumna; will Waite Tone was the non of a Dublin coachlnnker and the orgnniur or the Society or United Irishman. whose up- rlalng in 1798 came very near shaking o! the grasp of England. 0n nccount of his relations with the Rev. William Jackson, a protestant clergyman. who wu sent by the French government as Ill emissary '0' Ireland. Tone had to fly to America. and in August, 1795, reached Wilmington on the Delaware river. He was then about 30 yearn of age. But banishment from his native land did not sever his heart from it nor weaken his resolve to male it free. in A few day. be secured an interview with the French minister in Philadel- phia. then the capital of the United The sympathy which the Irish ex- press not the Boers toe-y in the int- ter'e struggle ageinat the British in South Africa he: a strong historical toundntiou, uys the New York Sun. One hundred years ago Holland. then known I: the Bntnvinn republic. risked its ell in an eilort to rescue lreinnd from the yoke oi England.- and though its sacrifices were unveiling lriehmen will ever nsteiully‘remember them. The story at this alliance between the Irish end the Dutch and the chlvulroua and sell-secrincing action at the letter my be interestingly receiled It the present time. The union Ives brought 1 about by Theobald Wolte 'l'one. whose undnunted energy. as restless an the see, and whose extraordinary genius tor agonizing and bringing to the old of his schemes cshlnets who were in- dilerent when not hostile, have scarce- ly 5 parallel in history. He was the lint greet lrishrepuhllcnn. All a. lath-'- lmnfl-y tor a. m .1 loan: Ann. I. lat-n! -A on».- 0! Put Rumpâ€"Ind o! Isl-via. HOLLAND one; mék‘zu ALI. ' ron manna. the mm “mm. mm mm m m mm mm .mm mum» ggmuWu-m‘um “no “final. run.- leeI h m.- Iyuulonh-dlumntlofimu IlhuAMaJ-mdthmm red-nun!” mun any I. nun ‘anMmyyâ€"nddnn dawning-u. Outlaw-halo of In on" It Mutton. which I. lull Mm-lnthnm-mm M- at m I‘m-u I“ opt-M “0M Am". willow-alder- nn um- Vim-own [and out 0' «meuvungom-pnm mod n all "(and Ch mm mmmwuunw.muu lacuna-«.mmdmn- dmnanhknflflllmn the ubfim twenty-mt: M cur- mm In. Ink.“ run-n? no. Ilc sol-o. our Vlllouuu. not arm-nutmmm-m oo- mllMdthundth-m a»... It l. - ulna hull. vile. con- l-lud Mr I. Mun. wmm I- Or «not. lI‘lO. win the m all In llnlnlu “on m Punch ao- ‘lul. At. that "-0. m (I. m ‘ll‘flWMIl-flfldm- pumm- with a. mu. world. (I. ml. 0! Put. Inc-loud man In null the aloha. no!“ the ml- in. lath"! all drum Ib- lnlo ll. Man. The Mo-olly nun drum n. aloha m- um M W no ”one. Illa below. All" a will. no Cor-no land a! un- «pullout. a“ l ”m. r--..- - v.7- _-___~ lot non for uuflurlu ran-nu m- ror the ale-Llano! cu- m lump: M-Ji A - Pomlu acme. Monthly. ,, , leis-tile Olaesilleatio- a ram va- 1 Ave (lo-lac I. This country- I The ilrst step in statistical tabula- tion is classification. and classification invariably starts irom an aseumption 01' real or supposed resemblance. Not to dwell on such fundamental distinc- tion: as those of color. race and ne- tionality. we encounter the more we. _ ciai resemblances oi agreement in re- ligious belief, agreement in industrial preference. agreement in political con- viction (as shown in election returns). aimiiar susceptibility to emotionaiism. aimilsr capacities for rational compro- heneion, similar imperfections of or ture. which result In lives of crime or pauper-ism. Remove tron: aocisl statio- tiea this postulate that blood kinship: or mental numblance between one ao- : ciai unit and another is the halls oi social phenomena, and the statieties themselves would cease to exist. Stat- istics reveal also the conaeiouaness which men have at their resemblances and their diilerencee. it is statistieslly known that the geographical distribu- tion of nationalities is not accidental or capricious. immigrant ltaliana. - mane and Scandinavians find their way to thoee parts at the country where men of their own blood and speech are already atahiiehed. Internal-Hues of men and women oi diaerent nationali- tlea ,sre statistically known to he treâ€" quent where no dilemmas of religion exist. and infrequent where dileteot nationalities profane dii'ierent taiths. The statistics at political eiectlona are quite as much statistiee ot the con~ sciousneu oi kind ae oi diflerenees of mental type iteeii. The most signifi- cant fact at all. however. has still to be named. It is this: From the Irli known be‘inninge oi statiatical ro~ search to the pmseat time every exten- sion of atatisticai inquiry has been in a large measure due to the consciou- nesa or kind. The first statistical lab veya oi communities oi which we have any record were such tvihai enumera- tione as those recorded in the hook at Numben. the avowed object 0! which was to ascertain the strength and re- sourced oi the various tribes by dale. leaaer gentile groups. and househoide. that heroic little utlon M the "II- of m naval powers. And this at! can. uncut became of not (IN-ut- cited allot“ on hehult of Inland. M‘dlfl“ OUR IMMIGRANTS. “hummmfinh m_. “mm .â€" m u, 1-=-n-2m--,tf- Ini- ’ ii 315 out! no: Ian. I. mu m Tit-nth ”It; at “was!” the fit lat-an. “Ionic-I’m.” nth-unmana- m Yuk-ovum m It. I! N 3:5! is l: 1.“. ubvltlhlcmb In! In! tho morn-mummy...- gamma- “no; Mutual” ‘10-. m a. hulll. It. Incu- ‘nnmg-mhu.“ gmâ€"yunfiumm Mhmlmhnlomucll- mm wul‘ny can “In mm III: II Hutton. All“! at W... muslin-dimly” huu Io' . lawn-4M m ILQMMAQMIMICM «blatant-touching»... mum-malty. Thou-u. alum, win-nub “ulna-who“ (“lemma-Maw Who mhmwmlnhwfll ram-um m not! Illa: I‘ll-.1! In: 11‘. III 9. garlic. .3:- 303 .- II 33.. he. 3 153 i- 5! tr... 0 I: f? Itsâ€"P-uulsntgt “â€"2. (to. :38. on mimwi. 2.4..” 2:93.38-5. tarâ€"arising. 3-. .0... :3... In 383 I. g R it-I88§on:o‘r.3 fl. .£.l._~-I-IE€€.I. {ti-50:38.8 c.2811... cl; 3-- '33. gain-3:310! an. i3 .3 uni-.8 I... la gray-.Br-zuoga‘i. 33.3 13.33 on... on... p.33- E» I 3-5.; 2": It. ‘3... égrnfltiiag 3:: not. 33; :3 3.853.80-303-‘3; 38.33:...30'33...‘ E! l It'll-5| II... I'D Illlppll preclus- 188 «on ‘2: ea in 331:8...330-52353- :- Eugtl. no... I .2. 81.3 2.332. .303. .- 3a '3 no. Sun-RSfEil-QEIEQQI ”Hutu-:3.- £3.08. nails“. .2 3.89.3. DIESE-EG'I‘.‘ ii§§§.i jgarguagiio‘. 8'... =3. 8 8i: i 8...! III-:8. s. tel-I. 1.3 3. 53.8 I .God, who can make no mistake. made man end woman for n aneciiie work and to move in particular wheresâ€"men to he regnnnt in hie realm; woman to be dominant in here. The boundary line between ltaly and Switzerland. between England and Scotland. is not more thoroughly merited then this distinction between the empire masculine end the empire feminine. Bo entirely dieeinlller are the fields to which God called them. that you can no more compare them than you an oxygen and hydrololl.‘ water end green, trees and etere. All this talk about the superiority of one; nee to- the other in an everlantine‘ waste of inlr and epeech. A Jeweler may have a scale so delicate that he can weigh the dust at dinmonde; but where are the scales so delicate that you can weigh in then: euection against eflection, sentiment ecainat sentiment. thought uninet thought. aoul .agelnet eoui, n men'e world against a women’s world? You come out with your etereotyped remerlt thet a men is superior to women In intel- lect: end then i open on my deeh the ewerthy, ironlyped. thunder-bolted writing or Harriet )iertlnean and Elluheth Browntu and George Eliot. You come on with your stereotyped re- mark about womn'e superiority to man in the item oi election; but i ask you where was there more capacity to love than in John the diecipleâ€"and Matthew Simpeoo the bishop and Hen- ry lienyn. the mleaionary? The heart of thoee men wee eo tern. that alter you had rolled It into two hemieoheree. there wee rootn atill ten to merehni the hou- of heaven. and net up the throne of the eternal Jehovah. l deny to men the throne intellectual. l deny to women the throne election”. He human haraeeolocy will ever deuine the aphasia; while there in en intei- ‘ lion by which we how when a man ‘ leiahiereelu.aadwheaewo-ania' ‘rALK ABOUT woman's use- Fumzss. M An nus-nu Alma or I’IIII that Hut Inn" In lnldod â€"â€"‘lh0 III-ll a. tall“! Won-n"â€" Ou. In ls. nowxm anovn" mun. W TALMAGE’S SEEM; 1:19.219 32:92:22“: i... am“ _ s. = mmmm.mw. WWI maniacâ€"cam»? ‘5}? ;%§ I :in 153: i :52; '3 igi if; 5; EL §5 3*? r E i! 33; geg, 3% 333.5%: 5%,: 3% 2% 3: When you went to get your mndeet idea of n queen. you do not think of Catherine of Rollin. or of Anne 0! England. or of Mario Theme of Ger- many; but when you went to [at your grundest idea of a queen. you think or the plain woman who not oppoliie your lather at the table. or walked with him nrm-In'nrm down “We unthwuy; sometime» to the thanksgiving han- quet, sometime: to the grove. but nl- ways together-soothing your Dent griels, correcting you: chllilieh way-l warduesn. joining in your intentllel eportn. listening to your evenint preyen. toiling [or you with needle or at the epinning wheel. and on cold ulchte wrnpping you up unlit Ind warm. And then nt last on that do! when she lay in the heck room dying. and you now her take thoee thin hand- with which she had toiled for you '0 Ions. and out them together in n d)!- in: prayer that com-ended you to the God whom she had taught you to trust â€"Oh. she was the queen! The chariots of God came down to fetch her: and he she went up all henveu rose up. You cannot think of her now without n rush of tenderneee thnt etirl the deep foundation» oi your eoui. end you feel as much a child again on when you tried on her lap: and if you could bring her heck main to week iuet once more your tune. on tenderly u ehe used to speak it. you would he will- ing to lnrow youreelt on the ground and the the nod that cavern her. cry- ing: “lather! mother!" Ah. she will the queenâ€"she was the queen! Now. can you tell no how many thou-end miles I women like that would here to travel down before she got to the hei- iot hon? Compared with this work of tuining hinge end queen- ior God and eternity. how ineigninant um nil thin wort oi voting (or elder-no no common council-ml. no eherile. nod constables. Ind Ineyorn. old peei- “out To note one eneh gruui won- enulhnvedeecriheti. how I“! mu: which to mix on: M W 3nd depth. tad length. no man. and magnitude. and eternity at noon- Ins. you would. with ununlnz syn. Ind trembling voice. and mum hand. write it out In than [our living capital; H-O-M-E. I"? "35 i ir§§5s i; x 5% mm“ a mum mum“ “.mmmm '35: "3‘ ii '3? MUN“ I saw thn people in holldu um]. and I Illd: "When do they put on wot-Hannah'- nrb min, Ind delve tn the clue. and "velar u the font!“ but noun" the unnam- not the robe. dld they put on. And I vandal“ III the Iuburlu. And I laid: "When do they bury the dead of this (mt flu?" and I looked along by tho hula than u would In most beautiful (or the dad to lloen. and 1 av cutle- and will and hula-call; but not 3 nucleu- nor monument nor um slab could Inc. Andlweutllto the mt dupe! o! the to" and I an: “WI“ do the poor wot-hip? when an m bonehe- 0. which they on?" and 5 vote- Iuvond: “W. In" no not I- am gnu city." A“ I W‘ out. looking to an no use. M '0" lb. bowl. of tho mnm; I“ IMMMMIIMIulm “mucumrdfllmu M W. I VII Millet... an! I at Mr tho W 01 I m m min“: “ “tantalum can. on an?" A“ at an mt One twilight. after I had been all!- tng with the chtldron [or aoma than. I lay down on the lounge to not. The children acid. play more. Chltdnn al- l“!!! want to play more. And. halt guleep and halt awake, I loaned to dream this dream: It muted to II. that I van In a tardlntant landâ€"not In Per-tn. although more than oriental lunurlnnca crowned the cltlel: nor the tmnlcaâ€"althonxh more than trov- lcnl trultlnlneaa tilled the garden; not In Italyâ€"although more than Italian aottnean filled the air. And I wandaud around. looking tor thorna and nottlel. but 1 round none or them gm than. And I walked Iorth, and 1 law the Inn rise. and I laid: "When wlll It not min?" and the and an not. And mm an: aunt o! '19!!!" ill our an land. I rally mu 1! ti. volume! tumtmunnchunh lnGoduthcll-Ihmulhownlm Ind the Inn. rookie-nel- of Imm- crlllclim. l mlly helluva that in one [month three-tourm- o! the mam. ‘ at our clue. would he clohd. and mm 1would be mnnln; lhroulh the cutter- o! the street- Bumndy. and 008m 1nd Heldnlock. and old Ponmnd Bom- ‘ dun Schnapps. tad lager beer. and you would one your “than. ind your law band». nnd your Ions. first. tron I drunlulrd'l save. and ”and. from I drunkard'a hell! To (Mp battle (or home let all women rouse them-elven. Thank God for our early home. Thank God for our present home. Thank God for the coming llama la haven. mane: PIO'NIOIIC. .3m-Mnmm mmmnmhfl‘ iii !;E!£555i£ I «hummusâ€"nun}. “Mausoleum uncut aha .tl'l MI. I Mar-1mm tum-lurid“ mama-imi- mum-mm" The am nuns-In min I!“ geld VII‘ of tho Chimp wu Ind. In! rock when lg b Bounced u the "China ~ ‘nocncy” Manor- 1- “t' build!" that Joseph 8. m . , bosmmumtormli‘; Slut district. Ir. mam he will be _| W WM ' one. to "a uno- o! m «macaw. The regular-m Alden-u n. r. Hm Wem. Julian 001m at n. I}; "ammonia-um! __1 The Allah! ml. m 5 um. will an an hm m and um:- um: be - swam. my Dublin-a will mum and Ill 1!. 8. Bout-ll. won-on curl-tau. m‘ ‘_ val enrolled for m m udunAruIIu-J.cwnul_ ‘5 em: women triad to In bar that the with! loud _ daemon". mum-sic mmnmmmm _ hcmflllllfl. II. . _ wvadhutfllwntulm Joule 8109.!“ Wu hold to (Mm museum that Chic-lohnwook. not" unmabynymi- . comm-lulu with... as! .. mmthodmtm no employ-d in m at "‘ Om'obnncl. otorooolu‘ , can. lay;- '_ ; Wfiumm (bu-I‘D“

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