Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, October 14, 1888, Page 14

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R e o R R THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: T o . XTE ) b ACORN 53 - Base Burners, The perfection of heating apparatus constructed on the latest scientific and hygienic principles. It was in advance of all lines in developing Nebraskas Perfect Radiation, | b s G e W v S APVLIIIEES mu D:ronmn:s AND TRUESES Bet facilities, appar tus and remedies for . . ] ] [ . “.;:u.n(‘.‘.v.(,.!T‘.,.\.l”,m.“:‘,‘:":"_‘:::;‘:‘v“mq,.«,..pm It was in advance of all lines in giving the people of lr(:u a 10“ an(l en l a 10“ LUAAS Ldsded bl LA UL UL : Omaha and the West a fast mail service. fr Cold Aer " - ! dations in the west ' Combined in the most artistic stove| e Ml yet produced. haiation, nlectsicily, Paralysie, Epiicpay, Kih the East into Omaha proper. cal Operation N No more cold floors and unhealthy at- Diseasos of Women a Speolaliy. It was in advance of all lines in reducing the time of i Book ON Disxases or WOMEN Frrk. mosphere, and the consumation of fuel UNLY RELIABLE MEDICAL INSTITUTE passenger trains between Omaha and Chicago. 8 - reduced fifty per cent. MALiNG A GFECIALTY O ) Call and examine the ACORN LINE which includes the ACORN BASE | PRIVATE DISEASES. It was in advance, and is the only line by which you can . All Blood Disenses sncces Y QBB feave Omaha in the morning and arrive in Denver the | BURNERS for hard coal, the ACORN SOFT COAL BASE HEATER,the | {reus sy reimitetinim ¢ ) A Fower, | Peisons unable o visit i may be ACORN OAK, the best Oak Stove made, all sold at prices lower than are | b dnficnia S or inssiments evening of the same day. . <ent by mail or express, securely packed, no asked for inferior goods. e e It has been progressive in the past. . :(‘Z"::"u;‘;‘[‘:‘\‘";’:Ivl’ll;’ case, and uL will send in BOOK TO MEN, FRE It will lead in the future. Upon Private, Specinl or Nervous Discases Tm. . I l T A e, S A coceles Wil Travel and ship via the Burlington. Omaha Medical and Surgical Institute, ot " 5 DR. MCMENAMY, Ticket Office, 1223 Farnam Street. 250, Telephone o Pf"- Lz!h ana Dodge Sts.. " ':!'A‘A_b_iA.NEB,_ Burlington urlingfon| Route Route CBRQRR e The Burlington takes the lead. It was in advance of all lines in running its trains from 2407 Cuming Street, Near Saunders Street, T (s e | Soie Agent for Acorn Stoves and Ranges. Burhngmn Route C.B.&0Q.R.R. Burfington PAID UP CAPITAL, $300,000. SURPLUS $40.000. W, G. ;\L_l'»Rl(;Il'l‘, AMERICAN LOAN AND TRUST COMPANY, Real Estate, 218 S.15th St,,Omaha, 6 " Savings Certificates with Intorest coupons attached. HOTEIL, To Glasgow, Belfast, Dublin and Liverpool cessful B b e SOUTH OMAHA, Corner Dearborn and Lake Streets, | From New York Every Tuesta, SPECMUSTS ndonosl(ed with, and bonds cortifled by the Union Trust Company ]’r(\ \()\\ CHICAGO Cabin pa y and 30, ae I3 t of New York. Drafts drawn on the principal cities of Europe. ot . Excurs Route CBRQAR. A. C. POWELL, casHIER. RRINIS MRS NS ERTIE Honss b ik ehconitl 2:,".,‘\]\,'_,_,’ ATy PALDWIN « ‘,l:’](:" :.‘J .\,\.‘{GH"‘“”‘ T e Timan, Lovat \'\'-‘w\'\'{\\.’f.:’. AR - ——— DIRECTORS: — = = = | ki ot {f,”\'m'{,”.lu:\ L Wi | JOUN BLEGEN, en) Western Ant 2 \‘:( S BXInA LT 0. M. CARTER, Pres, D. D. COOLEY, V-Pres. _ PHILIP POTTER, Sec. DEWEY & STONE "1«.'. ) $2 and $2.50 Per Day. | HARRY B MOORES, Agent, Oualia. ) Reduced Cabin Itates to Glasgow Iix- ) ). BROWN. ALVIN SAUNDERS, C. S. MONTGOMERY. ). FRED ROGERS —| FURNITURE. |- 1 have ulso on e tor et e et | A magnificent display of everything useful and aencos, i ShoolBouses, otels, ornamental in the furniture maker’s art, — bles, ‘vnuhu-w\rlwk« te., ranging in cost from - 300 ¢ 8600, ORIy 1ibness AN FEIALIE COMLAGIbEa bs g asea at reasonable prices. A1l persons wishing to build are kindly invited, I GUARMNTEED in - all cas hibition. ANd SKIN DISEASES) IES e REMARKABLE A10 PERMANENT, SUOBSTINATE CASES YIELUUNG Haplily neals, Centrally located: accessible PiivaTi way stations, theaters and basiness Street cars to all points of the city. 10 protessional prop lans and AHCHITEG i}.f.‘yi".,“fy"“'f."'.’u“' “"""'{,f.”,‘:',“?.’\‘.‘."‘C\\ Dites 1.4 nor TAPE WORM e s positiso on NI 1k | PRIVATE PIACTICE, the . the LEADING SPECOALISTS i H i CONSULTATION FREF | 1be b b the néhit 1 6167 per cent. ' s, 2 per cent more. 1among e oo o e e ST A PROF. BYRON F!ELD. TOPEKA, KANSAS. Treatment by correspondence, Send stamp Bushman Block, 16th and Omaha RANBLINGS IN OLD IRELAND, |22 ceased to bellow of James? [ Smart tri t from the ramparts of | his hor road ring with | land, confiscated from the forefathersof [ our civilized time is —compass- M,NES AND MINING. Hill copany has expressed its deter, as hie comes or | these who now serve them under a sys- | 1 andiovory SSbronth Asdriwn il mination to do s 3 De And indeed within the haif | £00s. Archivologists” or less sevious | tem of serfdom inealeul more v for Iveland’s freedom. It 3 i i Beautiful Pen-Pictures By an Ob- | coats, charging into the misty moun- | he ke wagonettes, \nmlw jaunt- ‘adations than th worst | among the people. At times it is start- ¥ T s Globe Democ There is a good servant Pedestrian. tains for offenders and the sake of the | ing car, long life to it! fortne m.luml forms of frican slavery ever | ling in its manifestation, patient as s EL PASO TRIBUTARIES, deal of talk in the Fort Benton and law’s awe, have come back in great | Woe of its fiory passnges; with eve T e A \Why o theso | these scourged souls ave. Over against | The movement to starta mining ex- ! Great Falls papers about the Sweet speed down the Bunerana road, in the | manner of men and women on every | miserable souls endure it? How can | the Scalp mountain the other day I was | change at El Paso, Tex., has developed ass Hills and the Wolf Creck districts IN WILD, cSWEET INISHOWEN. | sume way and for the same reason that | Manner of mission, flashing ac they get away from it? Holdings of | Sitting in a ant’s cabin for a bit, i, one of broader scope. At the lat- | and if what is said is true these seetions | and the family 1l gathered round, eight or ten of them, from the oldest ¥ Aas ung men, to the wee | projeet it was resolved to invite the co- will in time become noted as leaders of ¢ Pite men took a fine run from old | ¥ision like acapavisone 1 meteor plu zh- the mining s of the territory. oAt ing the earth at midday. The great | and Lough is alive with small cr rested in the , chiefly of peat-banks i, have been already through Yave limite | sons, who were est meeting of people int Remnants of a Race Nearly Extir- By the rude bridge that spanned the flood, Y aft atall | the cless labor and alway i} g ) AL 2 ; i A Paris Gibson, the St. Louis speculator, pated nes By the Roadside e T T e quests, and with smart tugs and tend taxed toilings, advanced in value by | child at its father’s This father | operation of all mining associations of | 4,0 Robert Vanghn reeently returned Digging the Soil * "+ once the embattled farmers stootl hurrying with passengers and m transformation into passably arable soil. 1451 noble man physically, mentally. | this country toward the forming of one | from the Wolf Creck district, where i hanafittad the Trish the old kingly “blood does b sams of light | slave, Whorever this labor has ine | through the suppréssion of gen e eyl e L S e | and shine grandly in figuro, fa T e from’ the huge steamers anchored off | But that has ne Moville. and eracked skulls at the hands of the lively lads of Inish- exchange that is to embrace New | they had gone tosee the work of devel- . Arvizona, Western Texas and | opment on their mines in that NocihorniMexioos to note the general progress T e And fired the shot hea with broken bones The white g houses and the red bulbs and snouts of | erensed th Mexic ion, Afoot in Ircland, owen. But might and want and time | Of fog bells and whistling buoyscontrast | mereiless master has advanced the rent, | gesture, even tone and every e of amp. Mr. Gibson says ho res ‘opyrighted 18 il re N S e rettily with the blue waters of the T e sion that can speak such evidence, Formal invitations have been sent to A rroater f ittty Copyrighted 1588, will rot out the heart of even the br i ot the eping it ever p at this hore inthis hat was that manner of | all mining associations in those soctions :;xl:u “_\‘\i‘l;h( T: wter faith than ever in CARDONAG estand freest; und gradually the rob- | LOUKD: And your wiy leads through | saving limit to the ter cial Correspondence of Tit - | bers of lands and_destroyersof homes | FLunge, sounds of strange e, Wl | no tgood” landlords in Treland, With eyesand heart wide open onocould | Bave "pushed thoir grasp in the name | {AUENL e, abin abose and vill be- | an incontrovertable and horrib] NabilavarcL hox . I distri Numeroug ve been discovered this summer, far as opened up they make a fing il , Ireland, Oct. wscious tribute. He was sitting | to unite and co-operate with Bl Paso. 1t [ 15} against the chimney angle, and had | has been decided to collect and main- | {4 been telling me their sto modest exhibit at El Paso, and S linator fe it SRS . showing, The conta ig nover tire of loitering wanderings in | Of the King, or th i\".‘-u-JLv.fl-Thfl'fi.-:.}‘xla pleasant dream. T e oy it will produce | Way, hesitant at timos g man- | wl has heon collected in thai line | DU Nert o | sonuun gl wild, swcet Inishowen, the most | mountains, and Taid lusting hold upon | 1passed anightand aday i bright, | and keep soul and body of the producer | filly the bitter undereurrent of his | Witl bo for ardedsio Dallssiiosiea bibis Th itions are now that northern districtof Treland. In form | all. Herc'and there a village has fol- | ¢lean, mountain-sheltered Moville and [ together. 2 thou s ““”"“ L Raby "“,“l ", e e s e Wolf Creck will be one of the greatest beon nearly ex- | Vicinity. in the meantime strolling to | In three sited | Sobr! inst highirente,i[ = & @008 “Gent, 0f @ rvom Mexican | oy phonate camps in Montana. likea square standing upon the inverted | lowed. Buta race r apex of one of its angles at Derry, at d. Foreign masters have built [ theend of the coust roadway to Inish- | ye 2 ? and custles. Bloodless agents | owen head, on the way passing the | the the south, its opposite angles pierces ruined fortress of ¥ o ik wring the lxm drop of blood from the | Fuined fortress of the O'Doher s days’ time T had S i L el e Coraelin luring tho } v 1 had 5 ps and increasing burdens of | mines has come into LsoTaurinEIthl RN o aiiRe R GO0 S R e two hundred huts and eabins in | 400 O ouths 1o feed; of their poor | past week, not oniy from the distriets | 0 Siea Grass hills tnite i the opine the | the wilds of Imshowen. The mere mens | yygpingy after edueation, and how, in | traversed by the Mexican Central road, | jo that they contain some of the_rich- 5 i tion of the words, *'Iam from Amc ¥ ssat in [ but as far west as Central Sonora. the Atlantic atthe nortn with brave | white slaves of @ In ‘he | the great Dungaree lig ; f est gold, silver and copy es in th : § e o " Tuidhowen, - Tha | the great’ Dungarco lighthouse: for | s v mugienl talisman opening. ever T itissitanesting Gonurnll gold, silver and copper mines in the Malin Head. Its oustern and western | st of the Owens, the O'Dogh- | rom the hali ‘mountain behind the T 16| bickeabialandiieldiio itz Rogleiover and Fermili) ,I;L' olisteldlaon tonn g op) | armitary. iSnegimansgisacen iyeurol sk angles reach into Lough Foyl and Lough | erties, the Tirconnells, huddle | head a marvelous view can be had with *Rually—now Ol M otre e i oneh tho hyent of an | from 8500 to 81,500 per ton. The miue | i “““‘I‘ ; fon could de obtained Swilly, the great northern occan estu- | i~ vile huts, ‘and dig the soil [ & gliss a clear cing the en- ye llu~.\\ml for the g it o by ieh Giabs, Lionohan | fFom only the purs fissure voinsof those angel might overhear and’ o them out of that, how, by twelve Duwrkee, who pay to American miners | yiying camp in Montana savings, o half-penny at a time, enough | two American dollars and board, and to | of the most fivored on had been got together to send, next [ Mex miners two Mexican dollars the two oldest boys to Ame without board. metals, They would be a credit to any and but few n show such pronounced evidences of great mineral wealth, The veins are varying in ) a : journey hom “Ah. now, but that’s to the southwest; the grim | the fine country, altogether!” gan point, at the Lough’s en- | 4id yo soe my Dennis?’ from the sea; Portstewart up wid my ould 1 . ‘, Aiffs; the grand e arvies. Perhups itis forty Irish miles [ like beasts that their masters may in | tire sweep of Lough Foyle for near from point to point of angle either way. | opulence discuss details of the terms of Access to this witching region is had | their lingering starvation. And so but for a few miles from Dervy along | While the grandeur s A Lough Swilly’s shores by railwa, it | land 1ift the soul to the very heaven u]um the our Katy’s th m- blessed i ] 4 et ) Pl xRNy s the o bless he years they coula At Chihuahua one of the smelters | (i) ) hy A ou will know its beauties you mus » | this is why there is a tinge of saduess Imn se; the romanti e y s ifin t i ) M b Aot width to eleven feet, and an il Jm“\]‘:\l»“::“‘:rufi“u:l l“\“‘lvlllllxl\':h"\'l:\lll' a tingo of “Aill‘l.l‘ll 1!‘1?- 5 e ol saints show ye our I? \hul, , whin out of the great cities and get a bit of | operated there belonging o an English | g, width vdEundonnted! baek!"—and a hundred \H\«- gro from the show land of their own (Ah, their | syndicate has blown out own; and what a crushing vef- | and all supplics sold. The *d | ytation are these two words [ state any reasons. In th P 4 rs have recovered Not a California Be ermanently profits of permanence us depth is ate refuso 10 | guined, Sabinal dis- SO rsvira s ars of the and, the d the dead lmlh.ln s island and, ) t purple outlin heyond. But a lon an who well knows the dangerous the eternal , swirls and rips of the wild [ mountains are from the t coasts, or, better than all, trust, as [did | good fairies *‘keening™ for and questions, with tremor gion of tears in them, wer upon me: and may 1 be forgiven where | f. e O trontone i tilat mining. matta lor 150 Irish miles of tramping, to yoar | glories of the region, there is a pathetic | ing cume on me to Know the people be- )II_}“,‘-\ hung s R e ‘r-::‘l‘;\l\:llllr\l‘illll']|l|l\"l(‘“nl"‘l'[r 114“‘ n‘x)uwn I.\’I"." from the tempornry depression of last Anybody n eatch cold this kind o own amgarious mood, stout legs, a blac smimilitude in the tonder legend of Tn- | hind the “mountains. 1 talked about | mild and comforting lies that I told | G4 Goa would spare the month. Only the b vis shipped to | weather, The trouble is to let go, like thorn stick, aud that most genial and | ishowen. them with everybody in little Moville | them. But one of the whole simple | (fihom to justonce to see that Paso and “it averages 700 ounees to | th W who caught the bear. We ads ample thing on carth, the hospitality of [ If you are a good walker you will cas- | Who would talk with me. host, a poor old woman living alone with | 560754 \would be enough: when the little | the ton. The importation of lead-bear- | vise our readers to pur of the the lowly Irish, Of this fame: ily reach Moville, on the region, celebrated the | some twenty miles from Der ws altogethe disposing of the enti st shore v, in one i | a goat and a pig in a hut, taened upon | M554%4 his of the | ing silver oves from the Sierra Mojada | Goodman Drug Co. a bottle of SANTA me. Had [ seen her Michael dar )58 his foot | by way of ation Oscalon, on"the | ABIE, the Californin King of Consuuip= knce, over world over for its fierce and warlike | day, and have time besides for the beau- | Inishowen p with & contempt- | who the next ble year would bring | fri6 e harmloss pilo of smouldering . continues undimin- | tion, Asthma, Bronehitis, Coughs and chieftains of anciont days, and, true to s of Lough Foyle,as the road strc uous snort. ye've no business | herout? I had not: but would 0 » chimney-base beside him., | ished., I past the total impor- | Croup Cares, and keep it Tis its prestige of olden prowess, forats all- | along its western edge all the fair v at all amongst thim. She was as a June day of del With 1 bound the man had the unhurt, | tation of such orcs was 1,393 tons, valued ensing to the taste and deg ) tha conquering spirit of to-day, “the Sir Walter Scott thought that nn\hlm' hey the divil's own smugglers, | that fatal denial. No matter” for my | ¢honeh seared and crying. child in his | at $85.251. The lead in the ore was | above compluints. Sold at $1.00 u Inishowen™ poteen, ust which the | could be morve favorable than this | from Stroove to Inch,” said the blue- | brilliant exposition of Ameriea’s g arms. and in tones of sweetest modula- | worth about $12,000, bott] ] #1.50. CALIFORNIA mightiest potentate has not power to | specimen of and. And that is | bloused coust-guard, illustrating at one its wide expuanse, its numhbe $ ‘was soothingly asking over and —— CA U2 gives immediate r stand on his feet one short day ornight, | true. The Iuishowen mountains in | stroke the mighty services to good gov- § LAt i Ah, where Michael agreeably | gentle descents, or here and there | ernment herendered America eptirely. And mo from | in bold headland spurs, come to the “They’re both paid by the blackguard e S S Nial, or | waters of the lough in lovoliest contours iint that kupes the poorsouls | though she did slam_the door When the | and formings. 1 old fish-wife, with arms | and wre unassailable de The Black Hills, The arrhal virus is soon displaced t my cushla machree?” | G Demoerat: The oid Duyy | by its healing and penetrating nat Tt was m first time T had heard in | smelter,of Galena, now belonging to the | Give it a tri Six months treatmen on me | 1o north Irelund’s most inexpressibly | Merchants' National bani, of Dead- 1.00, sent by muil $1.10. o through | yoyder te ushln ma | wood, Dak., has been leased toSheridan - few historic facts may be recalled. It derived its u Kinel Owen, a son of the G Nial of the Nine Hostage obe yOu €ross an an- 5 S LBl ; ! m of endearment, 5 s blush of the morn was breakiing over the | cientbridge, under which the streams one’s legs akimbo, and without | the little window fram her stern, white | ¢}y (heart pulsc, or throb’), and it | MeBratney, who, it is suid, will soon [ California Wine. fifth contury the latter bold monarch | foam and thunder down. Beyond, you | the knowledge of fear in her brave old | face, until the frills of her anciont can | {hivilled me. 1 could no better than say | start it up in the interest of the Queen | | The president of the Califoruin stata divided Ireland between his twelve | may stand and look sons, This region then fell tothe lot of | spires of Der 1 of viticulture says that th cle to the the sale of ( at ither w o .to the [ face. danced like wind-swept heather among The owners of the as a sort of solace to the general excite- ifornia o o L A A y or the white, clustered That settled the whole matter with | the hills. ment, 2y have enough Eoan, or Owen, wha gave it the namo | homes of Moville, with furm land, copso | me for . tramp over and wmong the [ Three things wera mafle most imn O onsy to know the fathora cushls | ore in sight to keep the smelter. run. | Wines in tho castern s bigh thnl::\ul’l“llnll‘l or'the Islund of Owen: us i\ml)n'll'u without number, sot like | mountaius, into whatover lucl or ad- | sive in_ these Tnishowdn wanderings: | ma chr ning toits full capacity, but 1t is bo- | Drice "“ manded by the retail d great loug Foyle und Swilly | bright fringes beneath you and above | ventures ight let e. vas y hospetality which was often be- > S eved t of mines i ( alifornia wine, " hesuys, | B Al A han ey ‘w“\h“nw B H]’]’““E A « ( hove itures it might lead m I was a | the hospetality which was often b He turned swiftly to me with a stern lieved fmines inthe L T e el f 0 0 A ge of the lough. And to | whole day walking the fifteen miles | wildering; the extraordinary bodily }wk“;,_“v\{ ,re_\'lft}m_'"‘l- which -ln ob the, broad expanse of [ through “the wild and interesting Trames of some af thesadowly falks and rfif,‘ ) ;\0.“ Jmll\: _Ill Tnu;m-x and De waves, there is an’ ever-changing view [ heights to Cardonagh. This is the [a touching, doggedly-patient faith in re of hisclinched fist that had a tand was put in lle ||l shape RETolon0us fgmilion dosn ending from | of beality and splendor, from the. cliffs | motutain-villy awpital of the entive | the final freedom of Ireland from Brit- 1d_savage grandeur in it, *'Tis year, but owing to a misun- }.u'“ branoh ")' e 2 orthern Hi- | of Benyevenagh, past the sharp escarp- | picturesque region. A thousand miles | ish domination. Who can fitly tell of | not the ehild. Befove God, the freedom | derstinding between the mining com- all, were the McLoughling: the | ment of the basaltic bluffs reaching to- | from mmhu but the cinter of the | this hospitality? Wihat other” race on | of ould Ir pany and the owners of the pl Di-Armid; the O'Deerys (hence Deery, | wards the Ballinasereen mountains | world, v description | earth is like thisone,which,individually It may | smelter had to shut down, The Gal hld almost rudely | lena distriet will unite in supplying the he repeated with a cr with ore. It is a forty ton milk, Yet the dealers demang of 100 to 500 per cent on It is this barrier we shall enc brealcdown, Instead of our maining a b it s cheap « the east acros v gallon. vor (0 make L or coffee, heaper t or Dorry, the original name of London- [ of Derry, with the dim far | vouchsafed h\ L tatt 5 i { It is the duty of every keeper to ey, 5 i - a tatterdemalion whom I- | and collectively with not a shilling be- | of the winds among the mountains. 1t | mines have been shipping thefr 4 ) derry, the ancient acropolis of the | heights green Antrim be- | found propping up the ancient market r tho body and AHb “woll at the " have been the nearcr plaint of the | to Omaha this summer, and the news | furnish wine Bk pad his gruests, ages, He could do it justas che and it is just as w north); the O'Cwcrcallain, and the | yond is there lack of life [ walls with his b . O'Cary ) yond, s s brawny shoulde O'Gormlys. The O'Dogherties, a fam- | on the way, nor in any scene | it istoa host of souls ho ily of tho great Conellian stock, from | upon which your eyes may rest. Andso t h who to have their Foot- | tiny holdings for bare existence, and oz, wheedle, blarney, | winds in the grewsome chimney. May | that this plant is likely to be putin op- ally | be there was an actual sob in the,cabin | eration is received by them with great - | that I heard. But from somewhere in [ satisfaction, will lie and almost phy you to partake of their genera om the ancient region of Tirconnell | sore pilgrims to the hol. s i H I 5 he would ma jomm the | ¢ n oly " wells trudge | who never had vision, save in the heart’s But of this tender- | the silence that followed after, came The Homestake company commenced flm’ie{\:-\ s lm]uw.llu-llxu.l' "l".’ “‘aisyest | patiently beside you. ~Small farmers | longing, beyond the meager activities rted traitof tho Irish I shall have | this, paying September 2 dividend No. An Absola nkers,” as the legends have it, in | with small produce in their carts and a | of this quaint and nest- like spot. But | more to say at another time. Often | By sweet loughs: on the mountains, n\h.\nv aggregating $25,000, The ORIGINAL ABI} OINTMENT time brought all these clans under do- | bit of poteen under their vests, roar | go where you may in any direction from | upon the road, occasionally among the | Where murmurous fountains ing $225,000 paid this yoar,and #4, . an )i p in large ) 0 n bo minion; though the rival houses over | songfully by. Ragged, all but naked, | Cardonaugh, by whi aud 15, G0 Wollte cure for ol sorc, burnes winding road- | peat-banks, sometimes in the fields, and Flow over the crags to the blue, circling [ to dute, and is an absolute cure for old sorcs, burns, ed destructive war with each other, | children from the cabins on the cliffs, | way X 8 e ation of Prof. Vincent' d o ] gt & it o ay, by hedgepath beaten trough-like y f evel y » cabins, [ have The publication of Prof, Vincent's wounds, chapped Lunds, and all skin erups do betimes in all lands where they | and with their great blue eyes full of | by bars feet through the contusics, by ::‘:‘m:: ‘nzml\) 112.”:?,,’“.} ¥ giant stature. | Q boréen: by fair river: port in London on the Blnck Hills tin in- | tious. Will posi cra all kinds of piles, ,lmy gather to this day. But finally the | unutterable longing, stand at the road- | mountain trail to the rocks and heather, | And I have wondered, realizing their | onrt fuces from want that has been, | terests has created considerablo intorest | 43k for the OIUGIRAL ABIELINE OF ‘Pirconnell branch prevailed over all, | side like the wild hedge-weeds that | or by winding rivers that have strange | hlaf-starved lives, what splendid form | and will bar oo D008 " | at Dakota and aroused the drooping | MENT, Sold by Goodmau Drug Co., at 28 and held their power unbroken untilthe | they are. Beggars mumble and moan | thrills in their voices they call | of men would they not be, had they a | There's a heart-sob I'm hearin’, hopes of those who are staling all their L final domination by the English and and pursue until conquest or a sugges- Seotch in Ulster, some 200 years ago. | tiye twist of your black thorn through the echoing glons, you will find | tithe the comfort in housing, care und | O gesolute Erin! faith on the tin mines. The report is | Chicago Tribune: *You don’t mean Droves | the cruel picture of Irish white slave food enjoyed by the meanest of their Hml rises above the hoarse sougs of the | variously commented on, but is, on the | to say, John, that you are going to have But Inishowen was ever a region unto | of swine for the weekly Derry fair meet | illustrated as I would to ¢ 3 vhole regar rable > | . t 4 strate ; A TRTEN b brutes. All these 3 whole regarded as very favorable to the | u steam-heatin gement b itself. The law prevailed—in the air | you, and the handsome grunters—for | lishman, as well . .:'.».;“L‘uu ”u\u-ri- ]\)‘;‘.‘:fl‘f‘\l.n ““”.'-»l.m.yw’.::g n..-..:u‘n l\‘mn' ‘“'"",“' ‘“{1“’,“ Wil nover ) e || BB SIRERE ‘Bak 1) above only, as it were. The bold chief- | the real Irish pig ready for the “flesh- | can, could see it for himself. There | head and heart if you come to Ireland. | ?%ny people triamphant o'r tyrauny be proof of the good faith of the Black T do, Maria" yaid John, with iron tadns and brawny followers gave more | er” is a8 pink and as fair as a brand new | would be but one party on the “Irish | You cannot eseape. them. But the cry | And. thy cushis m chree - i fills tin owners, the question of erect- | firmness. * T'am’ going” o kecp thoe | than one |'nmoun lmule~ to the Orange | babe—arc a long time getting out of | question” ever afte Lord This, or | out of the h heart for | “We are free!—We are free!” ing small mills to lu‘-l the ore h feet of yours warm this winter it i§ soldier, long after “Roarin Meg” | sight. A doctor, or an agent, in his | Sandy That, Esq., owns every rood of | the frcedom and opportunity of EDGAK L. WAKEMAN, being earnestly agitated, The \nggcrlwzta 81,0001

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