Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

Downers Grove Reporter, 16 Apr 1896, p. 6

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‘1“ lat.“ Do wand Many. “An hour.” with 3 (ml: the to pal-0d Ind and M! u no to. me ill ova. 1". not! on. I'm turned upon Mu: with I tom's m ‘l’vo on. m In; About Ila w of m: 0- can: no. ll“, Nolan nu n- mynflmu hhleuthoplnot no hula. with onion dmlu mmm-mmnmmu Hmnmmwhmtmulh; In an... Nut nor-In at “r- Nlhmnmmuom ‘y uni-c mu and tar bo- Emmanu- vmmmm {Dana-incident“ V mans-4mm ' ' filled: "Allhldl" ”CI- “Will"!!! “or: "In "mmhmmem “gunman-3mm mum-am 0th. 'Iud slowly “mead In “0.0“”th " .‘Ih m by Colllnnood In mm All mlflcllt. m town! can, an VII).- vo, mum but our Ono-dent. humnmmmmuuho- ”II“..- www.ma-u- “g m Ion. Illa urinal m the magnummomum ‘rmmhaionnlmna ‘ unit a. whole virtually I club “you and line. mun nun: ”finuduorofmmamw “macro-rm 1 ”Inn'- that to you? Do u I bid mutant-0W" Pltmtumnn minimal“: “Mott” returned. "VOILMVM Mamba-u! mum-o1" mum the na- ml. . mmmmnmx . “not: It at. nub two noun .to II VI. bright gaming, an I light am" noon suon'r are m as ' row om acumen. www.m'u’bhlfium hum-um... man-num-umm IDMmm-mwm; Welshman-lull M announce-uncut“ m a. w mm mm men-meson“ ‘ a they quenched the sunset glow, (in. tho ah". tiring how-ward with w stop and flow: WWI. norm through the mind-I. am he at, u on Mon. "on n volu- stood Inpatient u an tun-hold 0! (ha doom Through the shadow: of tho evening. mnldly Ibo turned to listen with n doeorous pretense. be her cold. pntrlciu futures nur- mnd forth ludlflmncc: Plan no ll'l’l scheming. driving lot some potty and.” aid lhO. Th- I ma. nu upon-tum; "What I- n" at am to no?" ”I luvo won." he cried unltant: "l have saved 1 cause from wreck. Crushed the rival that I dreaded, not my foot upon his neck! Now It In: the may I. open. now It [at man all me mu. I III lender o! the index-u. I an master In tho lute!" And the voice or shouting thousand: um resounding In his ear. M be 'neath a stately uchm -mwnrd the goal or his desire. ‘l‘m he saw a woman’s azure lollln: MU by the are. (335g fit. Victor all In. Vain-hind." u 00- .um Poo-I - l'hc lfllhlll“ own (In. Inn-r”. onion ~11" llama of War-Cums": o! amm- Army. H R 0 I! G H t I: a crowded attests returning. at the ending of the day. H n a t o n o d o n o whom all saluted as he sped non; his way; In Ml eye a gleam of triumph, In hla heart I joy uln- Butler mind word dun“ I an. . gm gun-run: mm at Poun- m that N. {norm Iona, Almond ”.mtannmunvmndm mm. 11. m. an m m arid, ordered m In. nuudnt to W ‘9 and skin the mind. -m h Almond In and?" and urn-on of mm and Olin-Ilia; m at tho Cap- “ mm; m a Hon Kong; a. no In to”. gm! «0 In mused over an Vanni P333.» coda. Nam loom. lull-luau. Colon. and mu Dottie-nu n: all“ plum, non. of which. llko St. Helen. have m m a! an very and] no“ In at the lunch! um 110 Can- dln dell-In has only “on: 1.00 o! no «can [arm-mm me a All, and a. non! 4mm of In to the Atria. m and In. only added about 1.000 m to no ordinary mm.“ In (In: gm of no I‘m lulu n- ull-tho mtmtdmnn- in form um. and u no mm; «til-nurture "rel-water”: can...“ of tho thumbnail.“ and Bonny Illa real-cu at alum, mum: human and mpuru u nulls! and lay-0m Nation of Inn-try. Th any! «mm It!!! In. up an largest ”run «the Mtâ€" hlmr. ud tho-ow «nu-Gum Punjab ar‘a next with 10.00”“ of an two other cit-paw Bombay has an! we tidn IOI an Indra. the lunar Including Burma. . 98E; in II Inland. In!!! 0.00“- M- , ad (In rat. II “W Wile- dink Wimp!“ In no urvki lbw! “71:0“ nil. a tie; V81: Inacnl a on.- Inna-o Ann. not»! "turn. of the mm! of tho arm-n unyjt homo and um. 01- :Iwu o! an Indian and" um: ml the tore. ulna by colonial nacho"- uu. an (In ldhbaul Deal-nan. than than than on I: mad unfit- m... glean and In act-any un- lac Ill «um; «clash. of In. ro- ar". no ml Anon about 1.800 to mu ol mm cu- g? 5 l' i i to W lam mun... um- “ mum-cum- m- tutu-WWW ‘Ild mm and mm mm- lch. at «allay: 1.100 to (to “Hon “MMumuma-n nulm:8MtoMu-ym muon- «a all I” «no. In the cams-- my. In a low how- they were Iclt- tmd hog shout 4_ o'clock warty gt the mercy of tholr toes. 0! the whole ar- mada only eleven shimâ€"five French and m amnionâ€"anally mood. About 1:30 Nelson received 1 north] wound from tho mnlntop of tho Ro- douhuhlo, but lived to heat tho new: of victory. "In In! order m for tho Ihlpa t9 lfhg to! pfoty Italian I now whfc was evidently approach- ‘ log. He won I victim to his own oys- lm. which whordlutod caution and ovary other Ida to the Ilulo can at Inca-I. Hh Inca loved htu Jim to Napoleon's did and fought accurately for NI unreal. uh hll (not con- temporary. ho won I m or his own prof-atom had to III «tout equaled by no other Mull-n! of Gnu Dru-tn. no in am In hlo prlmo. Ind In many ulna: hlo lo. on" tho victory. The allied boats tailed to use their guns with either rapidity or precision. while their inner line drifted away to leeward Ind was ‘enveioped by the cue- ' The Victory hastened on against the Bucentaure, which carried the standard of Villaneuve, no that an the treacher- ous breeze would permit. and in turn attacked on the north. She, too. wu in advance of her consort). and was riddled before they could come to her relief. For I time the Redoubtable withstood the onset both of the Victory and the next in line. but three more British vessels coming up. the live ilnally broke through. ‘eapturlng the Bucentaure. the Redoubtnble. and the Santiseima Trinidad. which had so gal. luntly opposed them. Both the Eng- lish flagshlpe were saved in the end. but the lighting was terrific on both sides. To the oven-confidence of the ' British was opposed a dull timldity in their opponents. and in tho and this he- i gun to tell. i ’ throat): the enemy'l nuke. n was ex- pected. but though this was by pro- armament with Nelson. yet the Royal Sovereign. hevlnx annulled her comm. went too tar, Ind um Isolated- (or twenty minutes. bola; exposed to the are or an the enemy's ehlpe union could reach her and was nearly lost before she could maneuver or_eld could teach her. Instead of curling hle sells. Colllnxwood had cut his sheets, and the flowing canvas could not be put Into 1 WWIM ” an M‘l Dem. mt caused the old buck-faced clock on Whitetail m nut the m new of Alabama. the one with the mace figure- and the "no: man. tn m at the (tutu! moment? an the At- lanta Journnl. That I: the nation that may muons hue and them- ulm a they have looked It tho lunch or the dock. pointing tenth. lat In wash to 8:18. That m the enct use at night when mam Lincoln met his «lath at the hands of John Wilkes Booth and n 1 men! monument to Llaeoln'n memory the Intern at ‘nmod clock- ulnca then In" um ”mm the hand: pointing to 3:13. «only all of the painted clocks have the land: marking thnt time and it a (tuna tint the clock on the earner Mia know that It. For more than nymthntceloctmmmm puma» “sundown-who kn W Alon: mum" «not :‘tfl. am mm Wu humu- "wagon-«11...: Pun- It. Venom In t tuneful maker. with arm-date Hell. Ind- do” not belie" In medieval elm-unity for tho m (lath mtury airman. od. Two run m It. Woo-nu nu- ma the ammo! On. John C. Black. M Ctlcuo. An Int-roan future that It. Vroomn h (In (an that I. II a «not descendant of Count uncut. Pun- of mm. no um Minded by the on. of Mn dam. the million panoramas o! no uncouth century L‘ JV!- Woreeuer. Inn. This all m leafl- A‘l'l. ANTA’S OLD CLOCK. and has also studied at Oxford and Berlin. While In London he lived about a year at Toynbee Hail, the first or- ganized aocial settlement. where he had a splendid opportunity to study eorio elegy. While attending Oxford he filled the pulpit of the Holloway Congrega- tional church. and at the end or a year received a coil to become permanent lpastor oi! that church. At the some time he received a coil to the pastorate o! the Beecher church. of Elmlrn. N. Y.. c to succeed Thomas K. Beecher. brother of Henry Ward Beecher. He accepted the Elmira call. and was in charge 0! this march a year and a hall. At the end of this time Mr. Beecher was .0 improved in health that he resumed hie putorate. and Mr. Vroomnn returned to London. As a mutt at one o! hie pub- lished article: he received a call to the Salem Street Congregational church. or It". l'rgnl: II. Vtoomnn 0! Hanna 80' Ibu- ln Mun-nth Century Button- ror Nlututh Cont-u, Christian-â€" 00060.th o! I Count. IS A GIFTED DIVINE. H3 WILL SOON PREACH 1'0 THE PEOPLE OF CHICAGO. anu‘ EV. FRANK B. 9 Vrooman. o! 308' ( ton. to whom an In- ~ formal call has ? been extended by LL’ the Kenwood Pres- byterian church. of H. Chlcago, In a divine or national and In- : ternauonnl reputnv “on. Mr. Vrooman In a Harvard mnnq‘ ONROI N. CURZON. View the truth it; 331 than it ngamma tun-amount UAR]: NAIR. rmrt (Mt In was dying It Bombay. Indll. The report happily turned out M bu unfounded. m fnl- :- In”. lurk Train Is It meant lecturing In Sync. A my week- m must- ublc Anxiety vu- umuod becau- ol 1 All In. W" In. mum to Min-4. The other a! - man In aunt, lune. wished to send I Imp-uh m M cm to Portland. lune. OI 1c- cont of It. destruction of the bridge _u Baton dlnct m-Illuum with mm m moo-31bit. but the Want- en Union got the m through nll nu nus. and this '31 lb. II! R '1. do”. It m “banned rm Banach to North Slam. C. 8.. then to Han'n‘ Content, ‘16. It. Ilene. to Valencia. Ireland. theme: to Land'- End, England. thence “00than Mml thence to St. Plum. Imam. thence to Dnbm. In... tho-e- Io Man and tune. to Portland. t am pm aloe um. No new: at- tempt. to Mu III, on and an who tn- 0. thin I mu deal 0! mi Iéi: min will um um Ia- looa )M (or a. moon 0! suing the do. and pull. his amt. HI. IL not Is (Ivan to In. In unmet and In Illa It. Ilka may a m.-â€"unlnllv Commercial. com-on m. Ml Io Ilka M. to“, and In! Inn u our: day. Not a any m that the do; don not M drunk. ad um [emu nm to anger. h- hml the um and alum It cl. Th do: In I: nun old and in Ild. Ml homo Imnd the saloon II who to! A (fl-In. Inn-hm. A do; In um our lost: In I moon and Is I dmnkard. The dog ll only I Carson Is I dingo. Mr. Curson's statements touching the proposed Esi’lnian campaign pleased the ultra (cries and jingoes. While he speciously brought out the fact of the great danger of dervlsh incursions northward. no good reason was adduced for British aid to Italy, though. of course. the ssieguardlng of the math- ern entrance to the Suez canal was un- derstood. The opinion is general that financial interests are iomenting this Egyptian ioray as they did the disgrace- ful invasion of the Transvaal. Holders oi bonds want to he sure that the vic» I tor-lea oi Menslek will not lead to a gen- eral uprising in the Soudanese prov- inccs. thus creating a menace to exist- ing conditions in the khedive's domain: and (or this reason. as a protective and precautionary measure. the campaign is planned. But France and Turkey will surely have to be settled with. and the czar will have a finger in the pie. Baron de Courcei. the French ambassao dor, has not yet returned from Paris. whither he went Friday. after a speciai audience with Lord Salisbury. to inform his government or the British plans concerning Egypt. Canon believes in a vigorous campaign. ity. upecieiiy during the «petition. but one night a few mks no it stopped suddenly. it ind been mark- ing oi! the minute: as time! until the iime recorded was 8:18. Then the hand: named. it was quite: coinci- dence and superstitious people were in- clined to catch a tighter grip on the rabbit foot when they saw the time at which the clock humped. It was set In men} lln recently 3mm lube In a “ton-m:- MI Rickard. of Gmton. Ohm. has me Insane over religion. He was nabbed just in um to prevent Mm {roman-rm out A "command" to kill nu wife and baby , Inn at a. than». The Run!“ breathe- th. air or Europe and think. the thought of Asia. Hts met an on the threshold of the 20th mtnty, yet Ml had In sun In median] time; He mimics the ltyle or the West European. yet follow: the hnhtt of the Tatar. Hts aspiration: us never very hlgh, and his pinion: are often very lotâ€"Rev. Jmph Kraut-kept. (an in branch! round townrd the front end folded over gracefully. But the whole thing of diminishing the em a! tract nut elm: remain n puzzle to the male philosopher. An a num- wouid put it: "When the use of hav- ing no any nib. if they're always me! 7" The word "reef" aptly de- Icflbel what some women do to their dunes in rainy weather. earth. it h can no principle 0:: cause. a incl will (to our! on on side uni one on the other to «vi-lo from a mulch: lino. il a moon is blindfolded llld turned loo-o on 1 ml. tie and told to walk perfectly "night. to will describe a lame circle. But it a woman who in holding her drea- op with tho unkind sweep we" blindioided and told lo do the am lilo; the chance oi an outer oi [1'1" it! would in In grant that one would «crib. I my null circle indeed. mulenlatlemwinmicfl u- nlnboâ€"une attitude to row cool assume. when the an on won‘t mu it my loan. but will lean u. can. noun last on doe- it with boil am: at once. In um pose the left hand 'ltll a llltio Ml of the dreu I run may closely spins! the side. no elbow mien oil Into the middle E0! the street, swooping all comers be. for. it. not: new oilnn accompany this you. and the your tum v.17, "thumps-(contaminant: not only llfll‘. Int It leads to man the center of mvlty. and a. woman rubbl- uou umnht like I not!- mu crab accoun- for no plum at one. an m a appeal. and. at the n. mum dun clutch my unit In the plum umday "pom-- ileum cm." The If. h “hi“ to Mumnlunbymmknduo mm II (MI mutual. no «mm. u the union or wmchc mum-mwmuuumm ”muck. IIIIMIII (nun-m a 01mm. and lunch non contou- am to loop m ml perfect" unInL Till dre- clutch in especially «knot to an “out. 1 Sometimes the extreme and o! the lilo. 11nd: no II mm: It. Dru-I nor-ulna at a. mm by Gonna.” And I“: II n, I Irma who“ mu chm m mud by non. mm ny- Iu. on be m clutching II. It to hop It on! at an and. When the bell II‘NI ten Ibollshod chm III I cry I! dam-y from «om. "We've hold up our IrIIII (or In my "In." land they. ”that n III become I neon-l wan to II. II II IInn't “7!th to hold on to I”! IhIlI we do with our lunch? A hIIdtul It frock u w I Iona what I IIIIII; and II to I nu." And the amnion mm: “Won. hold onto an luau. anyway. It you To hold ill. on. “ Iona. do ii. clinch the mu: wildly. wrinlm the forehead with dupomo determina- iion. put the lot! am but “out n!- ma inchu nun tho Ihouldfl'l. also 3 hudiul or the are" n I point an in down :- you on men and union on to it with ii» “an med my with which (be drowning In: an hold of a flaw. Then continua your iriunpum clmr up or down Broadw-y. as (ho c.“ III, N. The lelt hand probably to the one with which the dress can he held up most rationally. I! there is onythlns at all rational in the system that makes It necessary to hold up a. dress at all. Then In the rlght hand nan he clasped the gloves. purse, hey. umbrella and my llttle parcels. and things thot have been a'c'qulred en route. It I: correct to hold out the purse n llttlo moro prominent than tha other thlnn. One reason for thh'ls that the wealth may lnlprou the beholder and the other ll um the one-k- thlef may hon leu trouble In omln; lt out from tho other elects. All In has to do to to sub wlldly at tho wornnn and he can't vary well Into- the mum. and then want for his nuance. * F THOSE unmiti- g n i e d nuisances who go around tell- ing how they make a. pnctico or study- ing human nature ever watched the way in which a woman holds her dress in the street they would tlnd lots a! deduction: to make as to her peculiarities In other ways. says the New York Herald. It‘ you show a philosopher how a woman 1 clutches her dress. no doubt he can tell you who she is and what she in thinking about. But tho ordinary man who sees a woman pass him on the street notices only how :he looks. ind drawn no inferences (tom the wildness or lameness of her clutch. iTHE SKIRT CLUTCHJ the am: am; Ind Ila-chum lunchâ€"Vl- “ II.“ at Dlulcm~h Doubl- Bootâ€"Th- l’orponduzulu flu; Al- ton-d by In Won-u. HOW THE WOMAN PEDEOTRIAN PnoracTe HER PnocK. ' MW (1M “Mum MIMI- MALI. PAPER FREE mu..MMM Hood's pm. 5'5! unto-human". MIMI. Mun-u; I. MIG». MID. I... Hood’s 'houomudohoduy ataxia..- Wyn-uuwmxmmum a hard My 0! phphlud mu] labor. I not any notch. but had hlpoaly h'nood'n III-pull- which cured mo! than-Ilsa. near-I‘ll and mu. Hood‘- hulpullhhum "non-cm that] MWBM‘INII lam ”howl. mun-um. than“ munch." “mam-.0“ \ President Isaac hawk of Sabina, Ohio.~ ‘ la highly rel ted all through that section. Ho m lived in (‘Iluton Co. 75 yew. and has been president of the Sublml Bunk 20 years. "c gladly mules to the merit of Hood's Saran.- parllln, and what ho says is worthy £3110; All Eula Work»:in fix: 'I ' mparll peculiarly c to their needs. It makes pure, 3:», ml blood. uml (tom thin mum nerve. maul, bodily and digestive urcngth. "1mm buy that. Hood's Ban-ps- fllln u a very good machine. “will, ulblood punk. llludonamgood my “an. to: ml mun-um (may um: plan of Flve-aixtha of the man at Oxloi-d and Cambridge universities are tecto- tale", ho Pilgrim-Enter Naming: Will be ready the early part of April. Everything in it will be new and on;- inni. it will contain articles by Capt. Chan. King. U. 8. A., arc-0v. Geo. W. Peck, of Wisconsin. and other noted III-item An entertaining number. well illustrated. Send ten (10) cents to Geo. H. Heaflord. publisher. 415 Old Colon! building. Chicago, iil.. tor a copy. ' 'l'o Pmono Bounty. ' It Is understood that the government or New Zealand will introduce a meas- ure for the exclusion of consumptive persons on the same lines as that deal. In; with smallpox, making masters at ships liable. I m "III-Pl Porno-u unsoundzulbbl. 0:11”: ‘poch: a hull. for $5. No potato h ‘ooruor: or one-halt lam! of Triumph. and one-III]! ham! 0! me for 8" ; 3 mm. for 86. To get thou low prices Cit I'M. Out and Bond the floaty lion: to the John A. Salter Seed Co.- Lo Cram. W11. and get Salaam Padl- age Pontoon _at 933qu cheap prices! Neuralgia 3666 inillidifll‘ist’h.’ 189i). ' W. N. Bank ; Saroaparllla {Mmtnm Wm. tor than I!!!

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