Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 18, 1888, Page 16

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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY, NOVEMBER ‘18 HEYMAN & DEICHES, 15181520 Farnam St. L.argest Cloak, Suit and IFur House in the West. GLOAKS. [SUITS.| XUIXS. Nprss G00DS Kid Gloves.| HOSIERY, | Handkerchiefs, § Seal skin cloaks fur lined clr- and Cuffs, Hemstitched embroidered We offer great intucements | culars, fur Collar We show the latest styles Muffs, B 2 S i THIS WEEK ON ies’ é sty s i Muffs, Boas, Robes. Secalskin s ' EK ONLY. . Ladies” all-wo regule in this department, of latest < v A full line of g4-button extra Ladies’ all-wool, full regular i 2 4 A e 5 Hats, Caps for ladies and gen-| v ghall sell our 48-inch Gl e [oe: (i Blael (|[Piode Handkerchicfs, white and and colors in Newmarkets, Ul- [ styles and material, tlemen, B NeLR L Sy { GSHINCIE 108, 1RDIACK kil eolored; 2 tor 35ci L o colored Henrietta Cloth at ¢1;{ fine Kid Gloves, in all colors 7 Our $18 Dresses now g1 SPECIAL NOTICE : colors, 25c. Silk inch uare hem sters and Wraps, Jackets and o D /9 Sealskins have advanced | regular, &r.20; finest goods titched Initial H ! 11 1'\ f ¥ T . > » e N < v ¢ N a8 ) . stitched Initia andkerchiefs ur $25 Dresses now $17.75. er cen : made re lmade. About zo different col- | and sizes, at 65c, worth g1.50. Children’s allswool Ribbed Gt g 3 I ) e maj arge | About 50 different ¢ 5 3 Gee, worth .00 Blouses, Plush Cloaks, Plush Our $32 Dresses now §22.50, ‘thases before the A ¥ Hose, 53¢ Al Al | Jur 832 $22.5 purchases before the advance ! grs in stock ESTOOE ure i Handkerchiefs, Our $50 Dresses now ¢32.50. | and offer the best at | i W . . I Pure lincn Handkerchiefs, Jackets; a Newmarket at the We gudrantee perfect fit the former low prices Fulll 48-inch Black Henrietta; 3 Silk and fur trimmed Kid m ,‘L““l"r L4 ;‘l\“" ‘”“'( -a- | 15x15, 2 for 25, . TUare » perfec on g I P 2S S ose @ teds Yo . ) I stock on hand. Seal garments ' different qualities, all worth oL L iy Ladies’ and Gentlemen’s . N . Oca arments lowest possible prices, cach Dress free of charge. repaired at short notice. $1.23, all at 85c. Mittens for ladies and children, Full line Silk Hose. Mufflc /“ - ‘ ] 3 - ) "t STRA = = i S e ” 3 ” i CL[N \Il\(.“ ““‘4 BI‘“\LT“‘LI paticnt of their sunless prisoning. | thread of silyor between the denser | under the influenco of these mirthful | (A Voice: *The nisiest in three king- | 0dd melee, but with pursed and smiling | kindly oo el i ) ‘ ) i | Hedge branches erackled from water | shadows of Mullangore, and, through [ revels. Where will one begin and ond [ doms!”}— mouth and positive radi b AR R D e o weipht s in tho frost buttles of am. | £oree and glen, botyeen elifl nd moun- | in telling thom as he sees and fecls | But mind thess trae words that T say: | from his white locks and beaming from | SOFRCRE F LTS LTS \ P | tain, then e ilentl its later | th O door to Wh lay's lab his blinking upraised and sightless old | Areyou glad or sorry that sou voted thab x g sronching winter. Here and there g | WM then creops silently upon its later | them ver every door to house, room, | When o'er your day’s labor, s blinking upraised and sightless old [ atre Sou S oF SOEEs LSOl o T Tho Wildost, Swootost, Wiordost | hrodehing winter. ve and there a8 | yvei iy to the mighty northern sea. | or burn, an apple paring was hanging, | Have a pipe for your neichbor, gves. Was theve i dance: thils Hals |[WAYE AWELG SHO aUSWOR10 Lhur question il 3 Spot in Nature's Realm. M LN R L d a trifle, would | [ the more outlining of this enchanted | and some maiden’s eager oye was [ 1f only a pipe of poor cli 1 Iowe'en nignt at that farm house on the | YoM Nee” T may hetp vou Lo make. up § RS come the hesitant pipe of stivring bird, | spot so 1nadequately fails nll power of | watehing for him who first pussed be- | 1or your sowl he ever will pray! ancient Kilmacrenan rond? As the [ your mind next tim y the patter of wild hares® feet th deseript ! 1 X 1d for that H [l’ had “1 have ye there, my fine sundown!™ [ raft f oak that shi ntury's | ° ¢ , aros’ foet upon the | doscription, w nspired pen could or that one the fairies had ave ye there, my fine ers of onk that shivered acontury’s | * vyt what an_ wwful lot o' money the DAY DAWN IN FAIR ENNISKILLEN. | clippery loaves, the half-caught, hoarse | ity limn its ever-cl onging formings, | chit¥ined ta' ler boloyed: Groups of | beanod S ‘")‘ SR ""‘;Hlfi“l his [ splintersund mould upon th ABUILING | highionsd. savelors susto. fon Mrinic, aaid i vosoninca of Middon watertalls while | E08mings and Hucd A mywind ting | 1ads on all-fouraducked their hends iu | 8oat; amid much applause; tnd all eycs }hends nnd hoola el this big hoarted Jihole Abuorsashelalddowt beHESRIEERES t e o o s B A e e tad 1slands reposo ulong the | buckets of water and brought out small WL S Rarsly pres o s s Ry P e o oA L inan Wi et X T § % RS el ; PN tering p blanched cli coin with their teeth, Lasses were allenge, Sorely 238C ooked softly down until their shining [ % 84 00 Pas s LR ties of Sight and Sound in the notes of distant carly chapei bell \tening precipic L through | busy cutting out alphabets with which | temporary expedient, to reach beneath | eyes went “out in the brighter dawn | F00 LRy NELVSERIEVERV) 2 | Ireland’s Most I pushed in through the fleccy folds of | the heather and sea-green sod. Away | the fuiries were to spell, in water | the fifthribof the pedagogue, I told | which lifted flaming concs upon the e tic Nooks, the fog. Learning these and countless | #mong the heights the golden caglo | basins, secretly-cherished ~names. | them this brief tale of Scottish valor, | peaks of fair Glendowan. GG Us: more by heart, then it was tramp, | Wheels above the gorges, or calls to the olen’ horrings—which must be | for the truth of which tradition, if not GAR L. WAKEMAN. RELIGIOUS. tramp, tramp, again, as if pushing | 2hoing peaks for” companionship in its | sult: wwst be hroiled without | history, will vouch TSRO S S o AfotnTreland. every step through impalpable banks of | solitudes. Tumbling burns quiver and | turning; eaten with hot tongs; was onee a great Scottish king, IMPIETIES. _From preacher to_printer; Rev. Hugh Oy ENNGSKT LLEN, Treland, Nov, 6.— | snow! And then fiasn, or show ecaseades like far flecks | and dreamed on, “‘without drink™—now , invincible, and given to g Pentecost, of Newark, is about to go [Special Correspondence of The B Ah, yes; here were the brave old | of lace, from within the shadows. And | made their appearance. Then the ngs over his own unchecked | qyag wicked book, “Robert Elsmere," s | UAGK 10 the tease.) There is & sovereignty of olation and ex- | Donegal questionc s tmo | overall the sound of rivulet, burn and | “bannock-baking™ and its wild mer: conquests. The king of Cornwall had | urnishing more texts for pulpit sermous than, [ | Palestine now has 510,000 inhabitants, nog R i TS Fa B || Ut vEETR CY Sy headod, | river, over covert and copse'and glen, | ment. Whoever turncd the bannock | dared his power, and for this daring | Le bible. | sy oL hiongd SULRHO R ST i g the 1figures standing neross the | over islet, bog and tarn, floods the Octo- | on the hugh griddle that hung from the | had just received asound dubbing. The |~ “Can you tell me what the ‘wolden rule’ | " BHTBER hohlaioa . ot P * | cenic glories of any land. A good staff v in front of their own invisible road. | ber sunshine, painting in unfound dyes; | erane was to wed her whose nimble fin- | conquering Scottish king, veturning to | is!» asked the Sunday school teacher. el te 85/ H bt et oo, abe THESRS or stick, a stout puir of legs, a receptive | sido farim-house, gaping and strotehing, | Vhere the silences are as unbroken by | ger kneeded its oaten meal, salt, soda | his Highiand castle laden with booty | *Yessim, promyuly replicd tie jowelors oft: | LU LR Boston. mind, and above all a eheory heart, | And “getting a fasto o’ the morn.” Bt | human voico s the vaulted skies and water. “Nut-burning” and “'sn "”"l Epici (L T WL L A “‘-‘L‘ 2B ech ey iR e Vot | he Rov. John Treland, who has jnst been 3 whatever one’s huek, are the rogal come | 10 ilquisition this time. Just two | whove. nd Glen Veagh! Noblest | apple” were going on merrily at the | custom, began a mighty drinking bout | = 3 e o ay | made arehbishop of St. Pal, has long been a ¢ panions for such loiterings. Thus one | Piotsant-fucod Irishmen, [ ather and of all Erin’s wondrous valle because | hob. The hazel-nut ashes in dainty | #mong his glad and wiiling cot Db o A -)'('.w.’(“m!”: DO Smday | leader of tho total abstinence movoument in 9 S e e RO LR IBe e e Vaor niElond iargiment tpbn ] undest one- fashioned by hand of the | packets “beneath the billows yield | In the midst of the orgies and bo Tis oyes vory piously, wha, on coming out a | the toman Catlolic church. 4 3 ament and s| or na- | anything; wondering at the stranger | infinit Artificer, and as yet un- [ charmed dreams; the burning ‘“‘snap- he sense of his greatness so po: the close of the service, shuts the pew door A long pastorate has been 7 tuve’s open-handed companionship. | and his brave speed through the fog; | smirched by the defiling haud of Gzin, | apples tell whether loving pairs will the king that he t peremptorily for and says, *“Good by ,-c..;m..,n\-u'l be back | Wabash, Ind. — The pastor of the g She nppoars ab her myriad” doors and || and wHbm no! dinlomacy! could escana | 'The entive A1y sassed rou b | sputter or mellowly age dufing wedded | his prime minister, und thus in the | et Suiday.” ian church has just begun the soventeenth windows which are shut tonoisy crowds, | Ml & breakfast of their simplo farc | Glen Vengh, and it was nightfall ors we | 1116 Then the the “dumb enke | presence of the assemblage addressed | Among the “want? advertisements of a [ Y0uF #long season for western church. / with radiant welcomings. You m B mdthitnoms iR thS AR Veiehia the farm house, whers quite. & SEdllt B DRI Gl S b } Bestoxipaver ) Fesentiviuppsarall ek tollow o O et ra o ME AN BSRLIREIC B maton edlediin y T e e e : od the farm house, whe a | “charm pies” with their buttons for old | *“Sandy, go ye out thus minute to a’th | inz: Wanted—A young married minister D O e oD ve satyr and even god with her for the | guide throush Glen Veagh, whether op | PUmber of country folle were already | puehelors. thimbles for old maids and | world, . Bid ilka kung grant my pow’r | fora pastor: in ‘a stull country villase b OGO CRER T IR G el B : 3 i g g ; 3 day; and poets can’ neyer sing as she nd by that her or | awaiting our arvival. The house itself | ringg for the lucky oncs who should | o'er him, or Ul gang an’ pull th* unce- | Dointments eno willing to worl hard for R e L AT i will sing to you, and you will sing in | must be ¢ 1 the doy waq | 108 somewhat larger than the arerage B TR A L e wae e Suse || E 1 ot e INFART(Shvorior I M il | acmLLealary A poL Bt ono, - i L § you, and 4 & S e e S S e T e H an( -swe sus- ] 5. The latest thing is said to be a Sunday | The American college in Rome was opened h § and from your soul to her, to tho mar- | 40ne, I would become one of thoso Who | Jarwe seaure re 7 o Ve sended and whirling between grinning | Poor Sandy could do no less than as | genool trust, the objeet of which is “to pre- [ on December 8, 1850, with thirteen students, { i Vo1 of yoursell, s hore before you. Knew | from the country roundabout_were to ltni:’-‘ll;-Ml:;:-‘13ii;\)::miul{:bu:-fll:l‘):wc‘it!\ foeaiore teeth snapped for bites, and | he was bid. “But passing out from the | vent the Mlidron teading in Sundiy schools s | gathered from different parts of this grea L taeia ;m\l:u u;n th lvhlvsnf that very farm- | poningt the thatches, where most of ‘L’g; }\wk;c‘-alh'u\\' y hair was singed; and a | eastle hall, in his perplexity he r When a Sunday school is about to give a fos- | hution, The American *"l“'*"'l* becamo oe. it * : house shiver and rin ith the inno- ¥ S R e t hundred other innocent delights; lea his king’s command to a friendly pi tival or excursion, it is well known that it in- | great favorites in the Eternal city. “IL \n\:; “thh ,;m,.. such_ roflection ns | cent hilaritics of an frish All Hallow l'll"\4E$lii§::‘l;'7lll:‘\|y’“:l\'l‘ll‘l‘ f\"xl;]:‘"-dd ““);L;"‘ ing to the move serious affairs of *post- | *“*Return and tell thy master,” s greascs very lurgdlv in_momborship just bo- | Bistop Ne wman, of the Methodist church, hese, tha e ing ¢ to- e. 5 £ ore ¢ e an’s: ol “ord T P o latter, **there i » king he ne'er | fore the evént. The trust will try uke | has evolved RoR 16! v OthTe . se At on the last morning of Octo [; e z . | nights in bunks. not untike sailorsiina | 2o knock” and ‘“forfe where | the latter, “there is one king he ne’er | 4pre 8 (RN T Sl YAO/IDRKOH] ¢ l%g\'.vll\. d an e which is worth conside) ber 1 had left the little humlet of Kil- | Ifyour faney bo a glowing ono, put it | veisol's forocustle. But aross the roud | oo for s el ng " was | will conquors sy, neer so much ag come | LN G Lard 2Teio Dencon Buckrag, | Warlata. -0 proposes the. establishmont of macrenan bofore daybreak, and came | 10,118 most forvent test in picturing the | g ter-walle o Then ere for the fighting; and the | in sight of hisgreat glory—the King of | o Gt B TE 0 S A SRS s I el i | Glendowan mountains to s the 1 gloriouly beautitul spot. within its | S aud sat. t viphis was oy eafe | Pouncing Irish lass from tho mountains [ Glad of any excuse for delay in his [ it is that with all the udvantiges we have in | standigs ou religious questions and v g | Hlondowan mountains to sco. the rising | powers of eroution, and_ you have not | :'the hospital sesvies. a5 also ready | insured her hatred if you did not over- [ dubious mission, Sandy atonce returned | learnng God's ways and what o wishes us | less disputes on non-csseatials in theological of the mists from the great valley of | then got even a glimpse of the magical |t e e e il JOUSE | come her, and a sorc” body or broken | with this sad hews to the king, who | todo, and how He wants us to live, and the | belief, 'Ho proposcs an assomblago of dole Glon Vough, and feast ‘upon the. von. | fuscinations of “Glah. Veagh. From | id buen wore lighted briliiantly, con- | bones if you did':—ahd then, amid deaf- | nearly expirod with rage at such do- | ten commandments aro so constantly and | gates trom ailseligious bodics. | drous charms of burn mnd mountain | Where we stood until the mists had van- $ \whose singular mame for an: Teishuen, | CHiRE clatter and chatter, the supper in | fiant and ill-timed audacity. Wild with easily broken?” And a small scholar in the |~ Mrs, Charlotte J. Nicholls, of Petersbor o, J lough and slon. chseads and. clifr. | ished, at the mouth of the pass through | John Rutherford Wi Lot asshinan, | the great room, piled up tables like fat | indignation he roared back end of the room replied: *!!Causeithey | Gan., recently jgove $12000 fo r d i g s cascade and cliff, | Glendowan mountains, hall way bo- Jo o alker, might have | 44115 in a plethoric market, various “Go ye. el lenape) % \n:‘-,m"nuu tables of stune. mortzage on St Andrews Presbyterian if good fortuno’ should bring wiuh | treen mountain top and valloy ovel; | 1 10 do with the lter fact—with | smoking, avfut; but with tho jolliest, | thus vopstart, King o Bravn s oo | Tl First Christian church of Albany must | ehurchi The Saiurduy evouing provious fg00C i odlas b cen mountain top und val oL | lamps, cnudles, and - even here | SmoKiug, awha; but with tho jollicst. | thus oopsturt kung o' Huyv'n, an’ bid | po given the palm for originality. Tho othor | Mrs Nicholls contributed u check for 8,000 n\"\;\llqfllfl day ; o clear .A:k_v _above. the whole might, TL‘. Iln.(lf resplendent ! 00q" there with an Irish “igplin: ax_x‘l;;. i at‘ l(lILW !-ml]"r: T broke bread | him beware o’ my wroth. Ef he dinna | night all its young folk were assembled, and | to the building fund of ul's Presbye And what a witching morning it wa R ed away to the north, | ter” or long sliver of bog-wosd ith in all your life.” Andoh, for | the minute lay doon his crown at my | thegirls put up at auction and kmocked down | terian church. With the presentation of the coly could your nand be seon bofons | Pending into surpussing purples wbovd | tontod * with & tallow: With s thoea | room in which to tell the tales hero, | fut, I'll pull him, collar an’ breck, frae | o tie highest biddor, and cach’ purchaser, | Nicholls lospital building and ‘s, €,000 en- Yo nd nesoon befor® | the suitoly bluo of Veugh Lough. To O oyt those | told, 1o give the songs here sung, to red | his ain thranl” no matter what he paid, had _the lady’s com: | endownment, her large gifts to the Queen's 3 g. aaliyour tondl[Iehel aEte Y DU O pYeaE DR T 3 h those constantly | produco with all their delicious floriture | — Departi : ke pany for the rest of the evening, us well as | college endowment fund, and her contribu- centuries old and as hard as Trish land- ofully outlined hoights of Glen- | 2y iying, came mystoriouslittle bundles | the quipsand jokes here perpotrated; | wheh b 1oiati oa tn. {f{fl?é“{‘{[‘i“r:lutn supper for two, of all manner of delicacies— | tions to church purposes, Mvs. Nicholls is lordism, beneath your fest. You could Behind and to the south, up- | ponsantmothe Hyedeeds l:fi:’.n,fl‘fi whilogosennslof Ve 1oy ea R OrEnEIy L | tee s A tullbhran s e e o e o BB Ra s asl] eakive BpoL e ofihiorieyl ety not mistak: at. t wha o | 16 dipped and rolled i atehles 2 2nas, vped | and the sen, clear as rock water an He ) A 208 — R ot m -ltll .O.llt(utl .l:u‘(\v.lt'\t.\ to the [ lands dippod an hli:;);;‘é iio} z‘::};dz}r:: with great effort at uonchalence in | 4y {_,““tlljf;‘:,“h:_\fi! bribsitoskywater and Il thy master, d the pries! = EDUCATIONAL ight or the loft, or bofore, only fancy, | Glonioivang valloy. which merod b some odd corner; making it easy | ine way.” ) “he can have both the king of heaven PEPPERMINT DROPS. : 5 quickened by the morning’s awaken S R YL IS 1["(1:1'5:04,"01"\" cnough to sce that whatever might be [ 5 W and heaven itself for the asking.” ¢ life, intensified by noar and far mysteri- | To the far west fron sonth o o ~\u & | the bounty of the night, each one had One soul was here with natty attire, ntly Sandy sped to the king | It takes labor to got capital, unless a man | o Francis Darlman hias resigned as Harvard ous sounds, could loonto and divine, | fomivg tha semnnem South to northind | boen “mindful of tho farmor’s small | and a smart kippen (switch) s token of | with these wondérful tidings, and a | steals it L R L U, { Tramp, tramp, tramp, bravoly as you | the Derryveagh ranges; whila througn | Purse and tho assemblago's concrete | authority, who to a dogreo was wild and joyous shout weut up within [ Even the probibitionists liketo have “full” . B b might,these grew i ravely 08 you | e onis ot Jisough | mighty decds—all much aftor the man- | the .ife of the joyous rustic bourd. | UhOgreat hallof the custle at tho an- | retume. = : Rev. Dr. J. T. DeWitt, for many year. might,t grew into the consciousness theigliin LR B 1eG | ner of our American countryside “do- | flated and deulLd h. ¢ had | nouncement of this bloodless victory. It The Fox sisters have *‘given up the ghost,” | professor of church history of Lane semis - 3 50 imperd S i e glitte: vs of lone Errigal, S ik b 3 ¢ ater readed, e yet had . 2D OLLLALD 3 _ The g ghost, profess v o) Lang b i as 50 imperative of recoguition, that, | 411 Dones Lol hviwlnf W, of | pation party. Within, e thing | wit and spirit that overrode | 4Uite upset the brave old king, who in- | 80 to speak. nary, Cincinnati, has accepted a_professor? ! despite yoursclf, over and again you | doun sosred above the mists: bu the home possessed shone as brightly | yhe undercurrent of ill-humor h stantly appeased and softened, gave his “You make me tired,” as the felloe said to | ship in McCormicl ‘Theological seminary, at would stop to listen, listen. Drip, drip, | lifted its huge, long baclk, monste .l“ th:,x faces u{ all who cmmne. — The ‘spying” presence created, and kept by lm}!_u.slu‘r lh'osc gracious c.yn_umml. 5 Lh: m.n‘\ uufx;,h._ T - S y rip from the leaves of the hedges into | even in the sunshine; and th loussuiioiscomod syl glandiblreling of superior canniness the Go ye, Sandy, wi' micklospood till | 1,8 reb Giscussion Lave yet arrived from ek o B e s of l o hodgos into | ovon s : and the with'cheory' llurry and heat: over pots f & 53 the | il o Huv'n, Bid him rest 17 | Failure” discussion have yet arrived from ed Dr, H.T. Peek to fill the chair of water-basins of rocl, the great drops | P0oish set a flinty wall to.the s | and kettles at the great fiveplace of the | ' yirestlessihogrts aboutihim i i’ mickle Tull | Salt Lake City. tin, made vacant by the death of Prof. S e T e st vight up from the edgo of tho glan. | See o aen s the grent fixeplace of tho | This was the national school-tencher, | REEE 3 OGS y Pho papers sy that “wine is disappearing | Short. Dr. Peck s very popular and his ) cliele 1 of its 2,200 feet in hejrht LORLE 128 savory odors “government ) 5 q f from the table. It goes under it, probably, | €lection causes much joy among the students, upon g until the very ohimas of the . Zht. [ bromised much for o later hour. Thoe SaEoyepAmen 1:hor fore’er his guid thr ; oitabloi e g f ShY208 LY { pon between islund, | by : nglish-Scotch mixture of | 'O h 4 with the drinkers. At_Brown university, on the evening of faivics wore rang in your cars boside | crags and copse, pourcd burns with end> | Liichen had boen given over to the bratality and cunning; that | 4 thot for his unco coveliby, e Soob | Einoimotud an by his coat. Social [ October 0, there was held in the chapel & road. Nota rod away, but invisible, molodics, Trom the Dooish side | joungsiers, who were already deep in | hoing who for beticr or worse has sup- snabolomputlitklihiy dngdomli standing to-day is based entirely upon the | memorial servico in honor of the lato Hon- T Oy o, bt v badol e jeg | their Halloweon charms and games; | planted ‘him of blessod memory, tho A hullabuloo now without arrested | Gut ef one's trouse Rowland Hazard, LL.D., a member of the > nig naking wimpled R AL 0 S | and_becoming one of them, like the | [rish **heage-schoolmaster.” In tl our attention, ‘“The byes' had planned | ~ Ghicago boasts of a romantic wedding in a | 202rd of fellows and the endower of tho from rocks to pools, from the,staccato of | FOCKY bed into scores of ensaudos, sepr- | o0 old man who “cared not for the | Lunuze T ivint cont, | & great surpriso. Sallying forth when | hansom cab. Wero the happy couple at once | Ciir of physics. tenor trills to the low barytono minors | Liot forming o dveamtul jsland, and,its | fall,” in Willis® *‘Saturday Afternoon,” | man, he ‘“was tho lifo of the avenin’, | the talos and " songs wero at their | drivon tou divores court) Atithakmonilng fof( tekcollege bpardiof of statoly psalms, Just ut my side, s | ful bosom of the Owoncarrow. Hedching | 200" Won place and honor. e e o o height, they had descended upon [ “D'vohwdabad spell today,” remarked | trustces of Princoton, Prosidont Patton an If snapping with its long noek fr Lo sk an b ol f e A Ay iy " 3 . upon all his neighbors and schola 5 | another Hallowoen party & few | the typewriter, as she und Webster's Un- | BOUnced that $50,0% had beon given o the B 2 g s long neek from be- | Lough Veagh itsclf, vou find it penne Of all brief periods of Trish pleasure, | UPO" ¢ & ang 8cn00 miles distant, and by main force | abridged corrected copy togethe college; 850,000 by Mrs. Susan D. Brown, of hind the curtaining mist, a goose | boetween walls nearly n thousand feot | Hulloween yiclds the sweetests b ) | evil one uvon the stranger who only | po 3™ s, Stured’ and brought a Addle 'Apolr.of skates ana 4o apple, however | oM. 40 o ussdl for scholarstine apd A wouldilies, ox aunelciguack, ot (door ot 1ER 0V lshor leldoyshair ceopnpmentaiithe. imost utrmlossiinad Manos Vished ull well. Storics, jests and songs | pogily nway; the whole crowd of de- | unlike they may seom, have Oho’ thing. in | 1 tovaied to. pirposcs st the dotormination e unsoon eabin. Bovond on hehing. a | Bidden by masics of copses in which | lights. It is the night of unbounded | B gono around, ap d done my | goneeq friendly rivals following after in | comuwon; both havo occasioned the fall of | of the trustees. ; £ Ungoen.soabin.. (Hovond s ® | mingle the ash, beach and alder, form- | mirth, witehing charm and sinless | PeSt With the rest. F if to set- | e | amation, And . here they | man At Dartmouth the new gov t expork £ &y hained dog,making adismal hewgagof | ing o velvoty sward over whieh ono | dream. Tt is than that the tondorost of | U i clums to superiority forever at | B0 0 (TR 00p and hurroo, ¥ | Wiien a raitroad car passes by, you can tell | ment station will soon be completod and p ; kennel door and ehain,leaped outand in | could scemingly safely tread. The burn | all of superstition’s, ecrie broods, the one effort, on asking fora pipeand none | (i 4ot s e by the nunber of open windows bow ‘many | roady for use. 1t is built of prossod. brio ) 1 baying to his peasant-master of un- | of Gl 600 feot within a | kindly Trish fairics; minglo with' hu. | being at Ius sorvice, ho rose 1o his foot | oY, 78, 10 B0 00m "wire the proces: | framet tong the pussaugers bave douned | with granite trimmings, and its architect- | timely footsteps. Over my head the | Mile from tholoughiand opposite the tor- | man inoods and wisit, and weavo their and nrathipttplclosetsulumptiniimen | foion iy acoivod with Finging choers, | ey wave. o ; ural beauty Io expicoted 1o add graatly to the | e d Iy e rent of Derrybeg is hurled over a pr ey T L i Sy, extemporaneously delivered these lu- ] ved vii inging choors, iey have been pouring an immens | town. Ous-balf the building wil be utilize estless abrasion of boughs whispered | {1600 1000 fost to roach the still w {\In‘.‘.'("](l’} ',‘"“’.,l,"l“'f’“h il tho warp and |45 508 Tines to the host: It was old Billy Drain, the blind fiddler, | quantity of seized liquors to the river | as a chemical laboratory, which will be very that tho leaves, from thoir very weight | ths in this mystic Valley of the Dosr. | 4 _of thought, emotion, dream and all the way from Belfast; hero now [ down in Maine, It wouldn't be astowishing | complete in all its appointients, and great d of fog-cupe, sighed and mou T 58 ‘Hmd M R qu.'h “‘”“]; J;. hlLll; n”m‘ntntv.“!\u:l his is an inse A.\;Hl.l! llu-:n’l. .ilylm l:ulh«-rlrunll \ ':Lr above all pedagogues and strangers; | therefore, if the vivors got high. hopes are entertuined of its working ofi , sighed ¢ ancd as : s the loug 5 us b it will ot grow youngerand tenderer m not much of u talker— hatless, coatless, breathless from the QIf “Gld Huteh,” the wheat speeulator, will Ciency. j BIG REDUCTIONS PIANOS * $800 EMERSON PIANO, $450. REMEMBER, i $750 EMERSON PIANO, $400 $700 EMERSON PIANO, $350 This Week []I]|y $1,000 HAINES PIANO, $500 $600 HALE PIANO, $300 | $550 HALE PIANO, $250, KIMBALL ORGANS. FOR $65 AND UPWARDS. For Cash or Easy Monthly Payments, Old Instruments Taken in Exchauge. Special Bargains IN PIANOS. Kimball Upright Piano, only 8225, Terms, 825 ¢ New England Upright Piano, only §210. Terms 2 Hospe Upright Piano, only §185. Terms, $20 cash and palance casy Stoddard Piano for only $.10; §10 cash and g5 monthly, Solomon Piano cheap at §23; $5 cash, balince $5 mo Lh'l)'. Burns Piano, worth §100, at §50; on casy terms, Gilbert Piano; can't be beat for $33. Rk ORGANS $.10; on montlily payments, Kimball Organ, worth §150: only ¢70; casy te on easy installments, ORG N q A Fine Pipe Org cost §400, only §63; best thing for practicsy Fine Melodeon for the sum of g10; for begi 5, 15‘ e On Easy Payments. ish and ¢10 Monthly, cash and s19 menthly,

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