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Downers Grove Reporter, 7 Oct 1897, p. 3

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Why, It means our children departed are our: yet. sud um cord of mach- ment reaching Icron the pan will hold us and] It bring- ” tomb" in the place. :- Jacob Ind Joan m What a strong and nnl’alllng thlng ls paternal attarhment! Was It not ll- moet tlme (of Jacob to forfit Joseph? The hot suns of many summers had blazed on the heath; the river Nlle hnd owl-flowed and receded. overflowed and ”mm again and again; the seed had been eovn Ind the harvests reaped; our: rose and net; years of plenty and years of (amine had passed on; but the love of Jacob for Joseph In my text is overwhelmingly dramatic. Oh, that In a cord that Is not snapped, though pulled on by many decades. Though when the llttle child explred the par- ent may not have been more than: twenty-five your: of age. and now they are twenty-five. yet the ylelon o! the cradle, and the chlldleh flee. end the am utterances of the Infantile line ere fresh toâ€"dey, ln unite of the passage of n hnlt century. Joseph was as fresh In Jacob's memory he ever. though at seventeen years of age the boy had at..- apmred from the old homestead. I found In our family record the story of on intent that had died llfty years before. and laid to my parents: "What is this record, and who! does it mean ?" Their chief answer m e long. deep nth. It was yet to them n my ten. der sorrow. What doe- thnt on mean? in that in" delirium the old tint: mumbin numbing Ihol‘ll his Inn Jo- nph. iiv nan: "\‘nu don't m- Jo- nph. (in you? my drar son who Iu law-n dud m long? You don‘t mean Jo- nph. do you?" But an" they but fully munitatmi him. and the news "a roulrnwd. the lean begin thrir winding way an“ the crossroads of 'ihe wrinkles. and the mutton lip: of the oid man quiver. and he brings his boat lingers together .1 he urn: “Jo- «vh is yet nine. 1 will go and see him lwiore I die." It did nnl lake lire old man a great while to gel ery. i warrnnl you. lie pm on his best clothes lhal lbe shop- hcni‘g wardrobe could nflnrvl. He got into lin- wagon. Ind limugi: line aged are cautious and like to ride niov, the wagon (lid not get Along last enough {or this old man; and when the wagon um: the old man met Joseph's chariot “mung down in meet him. Ind Josevfi gm out of the chariot and got into the van"! and lhrv' his arms nrmmd his father‘s not‘k. it was an antithesis of royalty and ruslirily. of simplicity and ml), of Mini almllon and paternal love, which loam us so much in doubt whether we had better laugh or cry. that we do both. 80 Jacob kept the resolution of like tubâ€""I rill go and see him before i am" Tho «nun-run In Infill. drumlnx our the out when ho hum u Iuon rumbling lo the trout doot. Ha nu up and m to the door to no who in Irrlvod. and lulu loo. About can from Supt can. In and IIIMIIICO lo film that Joseph. lune-d M Dela. dead. In "flu in u mum value. will: all the lavomun of prim mama. an In llm lulu II no amulet! unplro o! III "I. wotldl The Inw- Ill loo Ind- dcn 3nd lo" find [or the old an. and In: (‘IIN‘II «bun. and he has a dual look, and Ma null (Illa out of Mn Mun-l. and In would In" dropped had um lho mm taught him and led lam In A 1mm" and put mid valor on ML law. nml fanned him a "Hit. ‘ Among the mud old people of whum we have record was Jacob, the shepherd of the text. Bu: he had a bad lot of boys. They were Jraluus and ambition”: and every way unprlnclnlod. Jua-nh. huwever, seemed to be an ex- Npllou. but he had been gone many young. and [he probablllly wua that he mus dead. As norm-Hum: now In a house you wlll find kept at the table u vu- canl rhalr. a plum, a knlfe. a fork. for name deceased member of the lumlly, lo Jnc-ub lu-pt ln hln heart a place tor hls belovul Jowph. There all: the old nun. (he lluck a! one hundred and (on U you: In their Mum hula: nllght- ed luau mount: to leave [In mulu of link claw on forehead and cheek and temple. Illa Ion. bend won down over In: cheat. HI: 010. In none- th dim. and he an Ice unhor when they we cloned lhnn when they arr own. {or he an m elm huh Intel (to Una when Mammal Mhol. hl-l wllc. wu llvlu. and NI ehlldnn‘ Ihooh the Oriental IMO with lhclrl Deni-MM. tlme, look no little or his own medl- clue. that he lived to one hundred and forty years. A man of undoubted vera- Cily on the witness stand In England swore that he remembered an event one hundred and My years before. Lord Bacon speaks of n countess who had cut three gem of teeth, and died at one hundred and forty years. Jos- eDh Crele. 0! Pennsylvania, lived one hundred and forty years. In 1857 a bunk was printed cumninlng the names of xhlruusvwn persons who llved one hundred and forty years, and the names of eleven persons who lived one hun- dred and fifty years. [mono-l from tho Tut: cue-b. Chap- ter xu'.. Var-u 28. I! Fallow-x “I wm Go Ind See "In Baler. l 010." â€"chob'| Gnu Yul-I. TALMAGE’S " SERMON 'RUSTICITY IN A PALACE BUNDAY'S SUBJECT. alnce passed hundred year .ntone. In ‘ times people disliusulshml longevity. In centuries Rite!“ sons llved to ‘ age. Galen. most celeb physician of ACOB hid celebrated his medi- the mue- those were for the l, per- great the long 10mph did not any tint, but be rushed out to meat his father with per. feet abandon of :flectlon, and brought him up to the palace, 1nd introhced him to the emperor. and provided for all the rut of his father's Mn, and nothing w“ too good for an on an while living; and when ho was dad. loan. with mining mm. m hi: from. He would shock In the Egyp- tian court with M: manner: at table. Besides that, he might get 3ch on my hands, and In; might be qumlous.|nd he m‘sht talk to me as though I were only 8 boy. when I am the second mm In 111 the realm. 0! mum, he must not suffer, and I! there In famlne In Ma countryâ€"and I hear there {3-1 will send h'lm some provisions; but 1 can't take a mm from Padanaram and introduce hlm Into this polite Env- uan court. What u nuisance n in to [me poor rel-Hons!" By this ilmi you all notice what kindly provision Joseph made for his father Jacob. 10mph did not my, "I can’t have tho old man ground this plnce. How clumsy he would look cllmblng up these marble stairs. and walking over these mosaics! Then. he would be putting his hand: upon come at these frescoes. People 'Uifld wonder where that old grmhm came when your old yereou cone to vlalt you. Your Ilule children stead around with greet wide-open eyu. wood-rill how anybody could he no old. The per- eeta cum etey my den. for they on a little route-a. and «Molly et alum-ll. because they sleep better la their own bed; but while they terry you eon-how feel there in e Mellon , the in every room la the home. They are e llttle kettle, and you make it n eatyummtorthen.andyoe realm they will probably not whit you very often .perhape lever unto. You no to thelr room utter they have retir- ed at Illll to on it the Hun are properly put out. for the old people on: dmtetul candle and lamp better than the modern Apparatus of lllumluntlon. in the morning, with real interest in their health. you nit how they reeled lest night. Jmeph, in the historical «one o! the. text. dld not thlnk may more of hlt tether than you do of your parente. The probability ls. heiore they leave your house they hull spoil four {children with hlndnenea Grendiather and grandmother are more lenient and ludulgent to your children than they erer were with you. And that won- dere o! revelation In the homhr in. pocket at the one and the sleeve of the ,other! Bios-ed Is that home where Christian parent: come to visit! Whatâ€" ever may have been the style 0! the Ilrt‘bltt‘rture when llwy ante. it is e i palace before they leave. If they vl’sit lyou Mty times. the two most memor‘ [ able t‘lslta will he the first and the last Those two plcturee wlll hang In the hell of your memory while memory lasts, end you will remember just how they looked. and where they eat, and what they said. and at that figure or the carpet. and at what door sill they parted with yon. glrlng ’0'! the iinal goodrbyt Do not be embarrassed ll your father come to town and he her. the manner: at the shepherd, and tr your mother come to town and there be in her but no sign 0! roatly mlillnery. The wife of the Emperor Theadoelue said a wise thing when she said: "Husbands, remember what you lately were. and remember what you are, and he thank- fol." I am often asked as pastorâ€"and "61'! motor is asked the question- "Wlll my children be children in heaven and forever children?" Well. there was no doubt a great change in Joseph from the time Jacob lost him and the time when Jacob tound himw between the boy of seventeen years of rage and the man In mid-lite, his tore- ]head developed with the great busi- ness of state; but Jacob was glad to get back Joseph anyhow. and it did not make much dinerence to the old man whether the boy looked older or looked younger. And it will be enough joy for that parent it he can set back that son, that daughter, at the gate of heaven, whether the departed loved one shall come a cherub or in full-grown iangelhood. There must he a change wrought by that celestial climate and by those supernal years, but it will only be from loveliness to more loveliness, and from health to more radiant health. 0, parent, as you think of the darling panting and nhlte in membran- 'ous croup, i want you to know it will‘ be gloriously bettered in that landi where there has never been a death ; and where all the inhabitants will "‘8 ion in the great future as long as God! : Joseph was Joseph notwithstanding the qpnlace. and your child will be your ichlld notwithstanding all the rainins I splendors oi everlasting noon. What a i thrilling \ lslt was that oi the old shep- herd to the prime minister Joseph! I 'see the old country man seated in the {palace looking around at the mirrors and the fountains and the carved pil- i lore, and oh! how he wishes that Rachel. his wife, was alive and she could have come with him to see their eon in his great house. "0h." says the old man within himself, "1 do wish Rachel could be bare to see all this!" i visited at the farm house 0! the [other of Millard Fillmore when the son was president at the United States. and the octozenarinn iarmer entertained me until it o'clock at night telling me what great things he a“ in his son's house at Washinltoo. and what Daniel Wehuter said to him. and how grand- iy Mill-rd treated his lather in the White lion-e. The old man's face no illumlned with the story until sinoat midm‘ht. He had just been visiting his son at the capitol. And i suppou it was somethin‘ oi the some joy that thrilled the heart or the old shepherd as he stood in the polar. oi the prime minister. it is a (rest day with you brought touthor. That 1. on. thin; that makes old people die up". They renllzo It In reunion‘wnh than from whom they have long been separated. Nellâ€"I don't cuppa-o the gin who myriad Jack Rawhide will ever an. ”other idle mm a Jon; as she lives. Bale-«Why, dear? Nellâ€"8M m-nmmodni-wm-m I thank God I my mm In my'm “Over the lame to tho palace." [At the Inmtetul world sneer u the maiden aunt. but God ha e throne ‘ burnished tor her errlvel. and on one side of the: throne in heaven there In I use conulnlac two Jewell, the one brighter than the Kohlnoor of Lon. don Tower. and the other let-(er than any rimmed ever found in the ele- tflcte ot Golconde~the one jewel by the lepidery ot the palace cut with tho words: “Inasmuch as ye did u to “then" the other Jewel by the up. Mary oi the palace cut with the words: "Inasmuch u re dld It to mother." "Over the mile to the Poor-house" II the exquisite blind of Will Carleton, who found en old women who had been turned 01 by her DI'OIDON‘II lone; but I of Fur on: and Lookout lountnll. and Chmllorsvmo. and Cooper Shop Hospital; and though single m. has been honored by tho fact that the am standout Ina: of the Bibleâ€"John and Pull Ind Christâ€"mo cellbnten. n nickname. God com her daughter. and henven culls her aunt. and I can her domesuc mnrtn. A half-dozen ordlnm women have nm as much no- blmy u could he found In the man- est Joint of the mu. finger or hot let! ‘ hand Although the world has stool nix thousand yearn. (his In the Int; npotheonln of maldenhood. uthonn In I the long 1an of those who hove do- cltoed Inning. that they might be qonlifiod for some especinl mission or. the names of Anna Ron, and flor- garet Brecklnfldge. and Mnry Shelton, and Ann Btherldge, and Georgian. Willotn, the “(on o! the bottloaoldn [I almost every clrclo of our mar“ than in been some queen of self-ne- ttle. (0 final: leveled hand after low- eled Inna wu altered In matings. In! tho slated on the old place bean-o of "lo an. of fillll obllgatlon. nntll no health was me and the attractive“. of personal presence had unload. Bmul look” any all Inch 3 on. by A“ have I would like to III. the rel-u at the slat-noon who "nun! W that they alum “all” to end unit; The bmul wall all: Ilene ult-eurlflclu one: pen- Ilu or "lulu; but ll you hue he a any announce- no they luv. I“. Xeallpoe would luv. been a "gel competed vlth you. I! ll cult: to uh cue of he mlllcilng. mph. children (an of one chlldlll old nan. Among the but women of our lead are none 'ho Allowed en. bloc. of III. to use any whlle they were at: In; for mm penal; Whlle at“ mm“- were asleep. llny Vere m- ln; flu old men‘s (Pet. or lucklu I. the mun around lhe luv-ml moan. While other meldene were In the cot"â€" loo, "my were dancing utendenee up- on rheumum and spreadlnx plum for the lane back or the ”Mouths. Ind been" mnlp le- lor lnsomnlg l rejoice to remember tint though my father lived In a plain house in most of his dun. he died in I mn- sion provided by the Mini piety at I non who had achieved 3 fortune. The" i the octo‘ennri-u at and the non-nu ; wound on him. and there were plenty Lot homo Ind plenty at curing. to 103"! him. and I bower in which to III. on long summer Ala-moons. amu- ing our the put; and thou in not I room in tho how when he vu net voioouo. ad that. won nmiui il- umnuu of all son.- to uni. hill; and when lilo had wood, the neith- bon can. out I“ "M I” hood! mlhic, um curriod hi. to tho vii- ion luhpolnh. And not him do“ ho- lldo I). Rachel with whom I. I“ lived lion ihu hail A century. “on your menu- with tho old mic Tho pnhohliity u. that tho when“! they tunic-nod Mblfl.‘ you [man om then I Christin pom-up d kindly consultation. Lot Jouph ll- vido with Jacob tho mum loll- d Duh-mm‘iofluolthlar] It." In other words. such an lngnto ought to hnvo a flock of crown {or pall- beuen. I congratulate you it you hon the honor or providing for and pannu. Tho blessing of the Lord God 0! Joseph And Jacob will be on you. It the [other have lerge propertnufl he be wise enou‘h to keep it in his own name. he will be respected by the heirs: but how often it is when the non iinda his father in lamina, as Joe- eph found Jacob in famine, the youns people make it very hard for the old man. They are so surprised he este with a knife instead of a fork. They ‘nre chagrined at his antediluvinn ho- ‘bite. They are provoked because he cannot heir as well as he used to. and when he asks it over again, and the son has to repeat it, he bowls in the old man's ear. “I hope you hear thntl" How long he must wear the old cost or the old hat before they get him a new one! How chagrined they are at ht- independence of the English grammar! How long he hangs on! Seventy year! and not gone yet! Seventyâ€"live yearn and not gone yet! Eighty years and not gone yet! Will he ever go? They think it of no use to have a doctor in his last sickness. and go up to the drug store and get something that make- him worse. nud economize on n coilln. and beat the undertaker down to the last point, giving n note for the re- duced nmount which they never pay! I have oillciated at obsequiee of aged people where the family have been no inordinately resigned to Providence that I felt like taking my text from Proverbs, "The eye that mocketh hi. hll ‘ father. and relnseth to obey its mothâ€" ‘ er. the ravens of the valley shall pick ‘ it out. and the young eagles shall eat 1 nth-r- unnnu to the many can.- tery. Would' God all children wot. :- klnd to their parents. DOWNERS GROVE REPORTER. Table showing Imports and custom: realm In the five months preceding the and-ant of the VII-on law: In those months. and show clearly the ndvnntngec under which the Wilton luv operated In the first months of its existenca and the dlndnntam under which the Dinghy law now labor: In the first months of m operations. This is in mrhed Mli’tll with the operations at the second month at the Wilson Inn. The net sent into elect. ss did the Dinghy int. within 3 law dnys oi the close of the «slander south sud its operstlons were thus reinstated from the tint day of the month follow- ing its onscitnent. u in the, an in the statements which urn bring mate with retorenre in the llinuloy luv. The Wil- son I" in it: comm! month produced A deficit at "1.5731”. while It now mms probable ihnl then- wlil be lit- tle if any doikli in the mad nonih of the iiinglt-y law. The! the ill-airy law should hat-p Mn able in its llrst two mnnlhu oi vipers-lion to have pro- dnrevl as mm-h or anything like as murh rvyennn mt «ll-i the “Mean in- in the two (ormmndlng months at its operation in remarkable. and is at it no" an I’Villl‘l‘lttl‘ that thr- lllnglry luv When the business of the tonntry rent-hes its normal rnntlition. will he an ample revenue provinrer. During the months prior to the llnnl ennrimenl of zinc,- Wilson law all rlntinhlr goods up- on whit-ll the rntrs ni duty were re- Iim‘ml or removed were lu-lrl hath hy importers In order that they might route in under the ape-rattling or that law. The result was an enormous in- rronse in the rustunm revomlns under that law the minute it went into "Mr- ntion, indeed. the matoma receipts in its ilrst month, September, 18!”, user'- Inrger than in any Hoptnmilt’r during its entire history and were only extwrled in total amount. on two or three "(Ta- stone prior to the lnrnxh of foreign . goods which preceded its final repeal. l 01': the other hand, foreign goods were rushed into the country as everybody lrnmvs. at an almost unheard of rate during the tire months preeeding the enactment of the Dingley law, the ef- fect being to almost paralyze the im- portation: during the first few weeks after its ilnal enmnwnt. The increase in importation: of foreign goods in the live months between the inauguration not President McKinley and the emet- ment oi the Dingiey in: was “05. 347 - 032 in excess of that for the corre- ‘ spondlng months of the preceding yesr, an increase of nearly to per cent over the normal lmportstlons ot the corre- sponding period at the preceding year. The mulch for surprise then. Is, not thst the receipts under the Dingiey lsw have been light. but on the contrary. tint they have been as heavy as they sre, up to this time. and that this not. laboring Is it did under especially ed- verse circumstances, should have been able to outrun the Wilson law, which came. in under such especially invoruhle circumstances as regards the customs end of its business. The following tsâ€" bles compare the. importstions during the five months preceding the enact- ment of the Wilson and Dingloy laws respectively and the customs receipts _ "*"‘.‘r (Washington Letter.) The 50mm] tumult m the opterulluu o! the mm turtfl‘ luv ht llltt-ly In rollc-vo ”VIIIOI'I’BUC blutcmnt‘n and orator: at much a! the mil-plus anxiety with which they httve haven-d tho t-ountry ln re- gard to rem-Int; tlntlt'l’ thnt nature. It ll now umurrnt llut the mvt'mmt ol the mud month at the opeutlon ol the Illnglny law \vlll rt-ttt-h twenty tnll- Mom of tlolllhl. which I- more than that at tho u-roml munth of that Wll- Ion lav, nut that therr will he little. l! any. mow tor the month. The "nun" In the Int titan-um day: In the mouth nuuumlad tn "5,802,055. Ind It |I outta-loci hy "usury upon- thu the total (or the mouth II" he ”0.000.000 In round numhon, while the umdttumn It" probably tu- llttle It uy ll cum nt that mm. fro-nary tin-eu- (‘l-uu Hula I! An, III-INN. In: Hmplamlu-r, annllmllnd- Inn: alu- \‘nul .huuunl a! tunin- UMII I’rl ha Um l'ouulr’. THE NEW LAW l5 DOING GOOD WORK. RECEIPTS ARE GOOD. MORE USEFUL THAN OUR YACHTS. We hope so. This was the intent and vurport of the chinley mm of 1800, and it in gratifying to learn. from an “marinara foreign loam, can such a arm-um mu u hit: to quickly mam . the End of It. It seems only to be a question of time when Great Brluln must mane to at- pon any tl-n mates to the Unlmd States, and that time may probably be here very aoon.~lron 1nd Coal Trader Re- view, England. Under the Democratic volley of Free. Tnde it was impossible "to pun money out of the pockets" of Americana be- cause there was no money in "Mr pockets. Now they are getting we" lined min with American dallarn am! a" ”patriots" are pleased to contribute their Ilttie mice: to Uncle Sam’s treas- ure chest. I-” In ‘l‘lmlr POI-Ian. The new Republlcan monster not only pulls money out of the when of all consumer: who remain at home, but It puts In paw Into the trunks of all returning travelernrrWHmlngton, N. C.. "flesungn." "W9 lun- lm'n walrhlnn ll very Must-l1." mlrl Assistant Sort-Mary Nov- pll. "and l Mn nn dmlM whalvrnr lhnl HIP. new law will gin us an unplu- u-vnmw all" "to Irmwry Ivmlm'n r9 [urns la in nnrmnl umdl'llm. l haw Man slmlying llmsw nmlnmq mallvrs for many ywam In my long vorviI-I- In this «lop-"mom, and It In my vIv-llbormn jmlgmnnl nflvr n rarnlul llllll)’ M llur wnrklnxs 0! HI» nr-w law «lnrlnn "I0 ‘ lwn m'mlhs that H has hot-n In mwra» Hnn. rnmpatlng NH wnrk with Hm! "I mlwr lama. for I haw 1mm lhc wnvk of many of lhvm. that ”w nu“ n‘msurv will gh-n m lho lrranvry all lhr- I'PYPIIIIP whirh ll nwds as anon aq normal Imel- nm rnnrl'xlirmu rolurn. Indm It In surnrlnlng (0 mo that ll has comm. pusher! as mmh an It be. olurlng tho past um mom!" ln flew of tho advem ormdlllnnn under whlrh It wont Illn op- erauon, and nohody, whazewr his ml‘ Him or polltlral vlnwa or ‘Imhvlllonn may he. who will study It: normal! thus lar unfunny In Um light 0! all condllkms. it seem tn me. an Inve‘ any douht upon this subject." 3 II will In ma from the sum lnhlou "at UM llnpmlulhml o! (”nun maul- In the Mn manua- arming the amul- meal 0! that [”01le law I!" ”N.- OOGJN. “Mn-l only ”85.086.0N I. (In mrrupondlnu Me mumb- mlur tn the 00mm”: or In» Wilma Int. 1‘on lino umd tho awn-mama; In main 0! Ibo! you me by “05101.0”. slowing um (he lawn-Um of Ila mu- bum“ the lawn-nun. M Pro-Mont lama!” Ian! (M ntnlnu a! m. "In!” hm rm now than "00.- ‘ 000.000 In nun- M I!» normal. It will Iloo be no. "on It. canton. mm- In (hm an mlla of “not.“ In- ponuuo- prim In the «mu-om of the Manny I" "n- m (in mm. mono of «In an mama um" to IM nun-«mm or m- Wllnnl I", and that In") ”0.000.000 INN: mutt-r Mull-arr drowns-lama ImM Mm M» ml- lnwd 4mm mo. mull-n 0! Annual. sanctum". Drum". Nmrmln-r. nml IM- ‘ "mm" a! "n- prmm your vml munh ml during IM- Mnmhs M Martin, Apr". M". .lunr nml July. and mat Ibo- hint Ivy law I" ”ma mhlml M um minus! 0! “0,000,000 an month I‘m lhn MM firt- months 0' Mn nwraHnna Thu th- mnqlny lav mmle M «mm» In "I "W‘nm- pmdmiux mlaHHM mum Imr- mal mnrlllmns h nut duuhtod by "w lronnury «1M4 ink Murrh. "‘97 Apr” ..... May ....... Juno ...... July.......‘ Apr”. ISM .\Iu_\' ...... Juno ----- July ...... Angina . .. Salim-infill 49,:umfixd 'l'ahlo- ulmwlng mumrluliunn uml um- Innm rI-m'ipho «luring ”w- Iumuhn pr!“ rmllnx (In! Nut-tmI-ul a! ”w "Inuit-y luw: Gm. H. WILLIA M3. 8331006.“!- lnumrlul [mu-L lh-m-iplu. 5 60,090,037 3 l0.l?6,fi9l MLSIZ. Z7 9,798.0“? “1.753.“? 8. 553'. 87!} J03,M§5 8. 42". 338 m ' .wttfiz 3101700.!“ 8.421338 I l.h0l,9l~l ('uulumn (‘Imlunm Last week's report coverlng the "i neon failure: In the Unlted snug i more encouraging than any wild in been preeented-flnce the I'M w .1 dency of buunne thch can. Chi III I Innugunuon a! Pullout [cm The enure number of hill. all“ ; reported Inc vefi 'u my)“, VI“- wu less than hell the I“ In " Wdhl not of mm. the am you at We“ Thr- vlsll of Son-lor- Manlla and I’M- llgrrw lo the mil-do 0! Japan m It quire why allwr ha been Ill-mono!!!“ awmn 00 ”no boon a anal loan of um and labor. Natl lhoy lakrn the tran- Mn, In numlno (hr mm" of lhe ll‘ row-tor ol lhn mlnt. which mur- Ch valm- ol Japan'n allnr ulna dnrlng "M pant low )‘r-anl. they would have (on-cl ll pnllroly nnnaroaaary tn take the“ lrlp arms the Pacific lhonah "pal mlaht ho, a rory convonlent lrlp for al~ mm! anybody to take prodding QM ‘allver tum saw fit lo pay uponau. The erort. of mo dlrvctor at m: tall! ahowa that lhr Japaneao sliver yen. whioh was worth 83 l-m conta I- II“, was only 1mm. 47 no can In 181, all 0! whlrh should have been It‘d“! Information for anybody who wand rold farts wllhmn a forelzn inflict I an «tron-Imminent. Benton Pam- grew and Mantle hula. mum! to by- or the people of lhla country with at maul! of tholr Interview wlth (I. ll- Iado, the publlc say be ail. to val along wlth the Information 31m II (Ia followlng (able. until "IQ allm m we: are heard nu: Thou mph the no mum will Hr. Bryn-'0 alpha-Hon of the a. In Mr Mum-v In tho mm at M mum do wall In Inqnln of M- “In! IM- udunw of vmi. "a an the al- num- In that In the to I ohms. llurnlll The" In no "mu! 0! any rmnlllvrnhk' Hum-p Im II rod. yr: prim of Imol have adv-M any [101' "M. nlnrn [M hegllnll‘ d “- Irv-Mr, 1m, vhll» silver has It". (truly prr rent. In the line “In. TM than” «mm! In our "ammo 0' on“ I. in... A“ M in mm m Imam unmanâ€" mlnlhrmrnllnnlumu nytlmfnrnmmd nan. “I'M- “ I. nut-l mm '1“ a. Mdflkflu durlu ti. Dyson-“c fi- mum-1mm. than mum: (.107.- lnnd Ill «0.de to all both "'7 not mad Hun lo lot-p up the .II‘M‘ mmm my". l- l: 1h» Dluuloy III or the full of nllver vim-h In the cum 0! Mule. M I" farm pnulucu II the In: Ill" any»? 'l‘hvre bu hon no acct-lot II which nllvar In. mm not. mildly «nu during "u- nonlh o! Ann-t. And no (In. In which all um mm tun Adv-need more ram] m- «r- m: Aug-at and unto-bu. fine. It. "Inlay In: vnl Illo eunuc- no“ the “no that m- ulnuc a... I! night In ml to all no- It. not. far “on" um "um“ Intel. «â€" plnlnlu "an "no. a! a]. canon] u. Vlflrfl, In it that terrible "numoy power" that is dl'neryil'iR the crops nil over the wuriti fur thP purpmw of giving Amer- ican furnu-N higher prln'fl and thus hhuwing thorn lhl' luhiity of the when!- mut-uliwr thmry? Them- In iult u murh urns» in unsuming that the mo.- oy gum-r muhl mutrul the wind Ind m-ntln-r nmi gruushopncru And 0th.? mum at inn-Inn xrnln shortage. n It mm to iuillllllll' hut {all that n handful u! (innm-irrn im-«tui In name my."- rlmm net-wt chnmiu-r in Iondon of oim-whrn- muid control the ital-lath). ui tiw ”mum“ and most inu-iiiunt II- tlouu at tho world in Min" of an (old standard. In um- ”and tiny tn any and that to weak durlnl tho entire ramp-in of "06. Nu honor ovldonrc of the ”fun! rc- mrn ut buuluosu ncllvlty could be fuuml llmn lhv oillflal reports of bank (:lmn'um-l-s (or the week ending Sop. u-mlu-r 18. They show the clearance: in In- fully 1m)- pPl‘ cent greater lhln at this linw a year ago, and seventy- fiw [u-r m'nl. In Moons of those at the mrrvxpumlhm week two years no. 'l‘lu-y uru greater than at any tlmo Mllt'l‘ January, 1893. Iicportn iron! the autumn" districts, North and South continue to uhuw Increased activity. Three in“ cordage mills at innit. Ohio, which have been out of operation for seven! years, are being reâ€"opened with 3 full force of men. The Wand paper mill- ut Malone, N. Y.. which have been ldl. (or two years. hnve been re-openod; the Bridgeton, Pn.. woolen mills, which have been closed nearly three yearn. have resumed operations; two of the Ohio valley railroads have given or~ (lt’l‘fl for one thousand new box can each. for use in the businou which in [wing offered them. and which they are now unable to handle: the Clevellnd roiling miilu report a large order [or bar stool from Birmingham. England. and nn 0th paper mill reports a con~ iruri of aovorni thousand tons of prlnt paper for Um Japanese trnde. REPUBLICAN OPINION. Value at Valu- cl Sliver You. Gold You.

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