Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, November 25, 1888, Page 12

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i Manager has just returned from the East where he has made extensive purchases for all departments, and closed out a great many ODD LOTS from one-third to one-half their original cost. week, commencing Monday, will be a Grand Harvest of Bargains for the people of Omaha and vicinity at BARR'S. We might call this a sl aughter sale, for the goods were slaughtered by the Jobbers and Importers, and we propose to slaughter them too. The coming It would take this entire paper to enumerate all the bargains we have for you, but we can't refrain from quoting some, to give a faint idea how cheap they are. season’s, you can safely invest your money in them. BANNER WEEK IN DRESS GOODS DEPARTMEN s feel proud and ave very enthu- siastic over the great treat they havo for you. 40 picces d5-inch all-wool Amazone cloth, full line of colors, would be called cheap at 75c¢; our prico 40c per yard. 30 pieces 38-inch all-wool stripes and plain Cheviots and Fouiles, worth 50c; our price 25 20 preces 45-inch Novelty Stripes, silk mixtures, formerly sold for $1; our price 5c. 15 pieces, another lot of those popular 54-inch all-wool Asabet suitings at 50¢ per yard. 30 picces Moire, with plair novelty, at 75¢ pe CLOAKS. A question often asked of us is, “Where dg your cloaks come from?” We don’t mind telling you that they come from ounly the best manufacturers. 44-inch all-wool French to match. The latest vard, worth $1.2 BARR'S Mail Order Department isthe largest in the West. i the count, We seleet their best styles and these are not sold to oth Omaha houses. Henco, you see, they are exclusively ours and what pleases us is that Omaha ladic preciate the styl Within the past few days we have received 48 additional new styles just out. We have just purchased from New York auction sales twothousand dollars’ worth of I'urs which we offer atone- third their original value. The stock comprises ladies’ and children’s Muffs aud Boas, Collarettes, Capes, Fichues and Stolls NEL DEPARTMENT. best quality 27-inch Eider Down Clonking, in cream, pink, wine, blue, brown, cardinal and grey at 50c a yard. Just opencd—Seal Sncques and New- markets from the best manufacturers in v. Before making our pur- chases we thoroughly investigated the price, style and quality of all manufac- turers. We can with confidence say to you that there are NO BEITER OR CHEAPE LADIES® R DEPT Ladies' Quilted Satine Skirts, $1. choup at $1.50. All shades Ladies’ Fascinators, 50, worth 7se, 5-hook, extra long, Tadies’ Satine Corset, in white and drab, 50c; cheap at (TN HOSIERY DEPARTMENT. Children’s and Misses’ all-wool regu- lar made Hose, sizes from 43 to 84, in seal, navy and wine, 10¢ a pair; worth 20¢. Ladies' all-wool regular made Ho in seal. navyand wine, 15¢; cheapat2 LINEN DEPARTMENT. 8-4 Raw 1k Table Covers, clieap at §8.00. Embroidered Mantel Drapes, $5.00; worth #8.50. Jap Silk Table Covers, embroidered in gold, $10.00; worth $20.00. 25.00; mbroidered Piano Covers, #.00; cheap at 8.0, Look at our 2,00, $2.60 and $3.00 a dozen Towels. They arve bargains, OUR MOURNING DEPARTMENT has its share of the odd Iots advertised among the Dress Goods. You want to look through this extensive stock. BARI SENTS' FURNISHING DEPARTMENT. This week we are showing a complete line of Gents’ Underwear. Just received another case of Dunham’s Camel’s Hair Shirts and Drawers which we offer at 81 cach. 5 LACE DEPARTMENT. Just received an elegant line of popu- lar priced Fur Trimmings which it will pay to examine before purchasing else- where. Y DEPARTMENT. and Chilaren’s Trimmed Felt Hats for 76 Ladies’ Untrimmed Felt Hats As Barr's only buy good goods and nothing but this ltest shapes, for 63 SILKS. A large importation of French Silk ) Noveltios m Persian hand loom Friczes Uand Princess cffects. Just arrived, beautiful combinations, colorings, for street, reception and evening wear. 3 worth $1.25, Barr ¢ Silk, guarantoed co satisfaction; $1.25, 81.50, $1.75 .00, NOTION DEPARTMENT. 300 dozen Barbour’s 200 yard spools, 6e per Just reccived Linen Thread, English Bristle Tooth Brush, 5 rows, } worth 15, for be. ] Best Worsted Braid, all colors, worth { 5e, for 2¢. Lodies’ Warren Hose worth 35¢ a pair, for 15c. 3 yards Embroidery for he. 1 Elegant Hand Brush, polished back, J worth'100, for 5 Supporters, itle, 2 dozen Special attention is paid this branch. The object of this department is for the convenience of those at a distance that all may enjoy our low prices. on application. We deliver free of express charges 48 miles from Omaha. Send for catalogue. Samples sent WM. BARR DRY GOODS COMPANY, SIXTEENTH AND DOUGLAS STREETS, OMAHA. | A WEEK WITH THE GYPSIES. Pot-Luck With the Wandering Romany of Ireland. ARMAGH'S DEPARTED GLORY. The Outcasts of the Outcasts—The Lazy Vagabond Life They Lead— A Gypsy Feast—Romanics in High Places. Afoot in Ireland. KILMESSAN, Ireland, Nov. 13.— [Special Correspondence of THE BEE.] —Where the winding Callan and the murmurous Ballinahone rivers, after traversing warm and glowing land- scapes, join in placid flow within northern environs of picturesque and anciont Armagh, I first oame upon my old friends, the gipsies, in Ireland. Many a trace of them had I already found. Many o ‘trail, familiar to my eyes, hinting of their recent presence, had been discovered. Many a patte- ran, or guide for their following pil- grim kind, unknown to gentry or peas- ants, had I descried with something like longing for their outlaw compan- jonship, Muny atale of superstitious dread concerning their grewsome lives and ways had 1 learned in hut and cabin, And many an nssertion, from the le d, who often know less than all, that there were none of the wander- ing folks in Ireland, had I silently list- ened to, Butin months of tramping over mountains, on endless highways, inlanes und by-paths, by shining loughs, through smiling valley and by voiceful 8Y , never before had I come face to face, hand to hand and heart to heart, with any of the tawny orew, until from the crumbling tower above St. Patrick’s cathedral, upon the veriest heights of Armagh’s hills, Tespicd the ragged brood, and hastened to their sky-cov- ered homes as fust as ever my good legs could carry me. And it was an odd re- flection that nccompaniod me on my way. Armagh, the old, storied in bis- tory, glowing with ecolesiastical tradi- tion, the Eumbain, EFamania. Aem- huim-uw, or ‘‘noble city,” of 300 years before the christinn era; Armagh, the Ardmagha, “‘the lofty plain” on the summit of Druimsalech the *‘hill of willows” of St. Patrick’s time and la- bors: Armagh, whose ancient college was once the most famous seminary of Europe and from which issued learned men of all nations to enlighten in art, to diffuse christianity and instruct bar- barians in all lands; Armagh, site of olden royal palaces, environed by_won- drous ruins, seventcen times burned and seventeen times soventeen times plunaered and ravished by contending hosts; 2 gh,upon her lovely heights, Burpassing in age, iore and radiant and bloody history; from hevcathedral hills down past her roofs of slate and thatch, #its like a boggared princess at the threshold of her own vanished glories, voicing but sobbing echoes of a lum- inous past; just as the the tatterdemal- don Irish gypsies at Armagh's gate wore a beggared and spectral type of a once ancient and glorious race, o camp was hiddan from stragglin roudway passers by a few furze-povere hillocks, I climbed these where I could survey the little community a bit before becoming one of it. The entire group- ing was an eloquent picture of willful, vagabondism, or of helpless, ng destitution. For an inst the sight conjured up innume scenes of eviction where Irish families, driven from their wretched homes and clinging to their scant betongings, stragglod by the roadside in their first heart-rending, desperate amazement at the awful blow from landlord power and English law. Descending into the camp, I wandered about for a long time as if one of the many curious daily visi- tors. It was about mid-day, and the meager food the camp afforded, in strik- ing contrast to that of the high-living American gipsies, was being served to several hungry groups. Settling in my mind at which one the chief of the band was located. I came quickly to his side, and after passing the usual Irish greet” ing of “Fine day!” however suuny or gloomy may be the weather, tossed him a half-crown, sat down on the ground besido him, and unceremonlously asked for a share of the beggarly repast. Without protest and with much preten- tious gipsy servility, a portion of stir- about and a bit of half-raw meat were handed me on a battered pewter plate. I began eating the food, which was b ter than we mauy times got with Sher- man from Chattanooga to Atlantain '64, with evidences of hungry satisfaction, and, with a kindly glance at the chief’s shaggy-hoaded wife, remarked, in tones of praise: “Your raunie’s beenship at the pau- " (Your wife is grand at the ket- . e., a splendid cook). A flush of responsive gratification 1 into the haggard old face and o light of human good will flashed into her keen old eyos; but gipsy wariness both. as instantly_extinguished them The gipsy himsell was upon with the auickness of a striplin, “Ruflie feck mal” (The de his secret alarm at he wzuago in his surp ring it from anoth torted, proceoding man- tirabout. “‘Ruflie lee shan droms lur Gor- ilence! May the evil ; buta hard road for 1 with the Wy chals (No. iss gipsic the rest “Quera?” (Who are you?) he asked, trembling with excitement, the whole dy astir with the extraor- vy parley. “*Abeen rinh Gorgio chal;” (A true man and the gipsios friend); T answered oarnestly, chewing the half-cooked meat with valiant energy. That_half-crown I had given him fairly flow back to me. Ah, the never- failing sensc of gipsy honor to- ward their kind, or to one who has befriended the race, was as quick and kecn among these shrikes of the Irish roaddide hedges, as I had over found it among the rich gipsy princes of America. He had me in his rough old arms in an instant. I could scarcely get upon my feot and name my AT S work, before from twenty to thirty men, women and children wore showering greetings, blessings and caresses upon me in a most embar- rassing and stifling degree. It brought the sunlight into their wary, hunted faces marvelously. It lighted up the raggod dingle with glorious welcoming and friendship. In truth, for the time it was a spell of lightsome goodnass in these castawanys' dreary lives, that I reverontly thanked God for the power of transfusing into even the momentary consciousness of the fewest and lowliest that live. i - Gy For nearly a we remaiged a mem- barof this gund. q{hmugh %hm 3 l?r\?x:t which is absolute if Eiven at all, their lives and ways, and ti o lives and ways of all gipsies in Ircland, were as an open book. Two facts gained are im- portant in general gipsy sociology; one disclosing & marked peculiarity of Ivis! people themselves. They are not, all told—and this includes the skulking city Romany unknown in their various town vocations as members of this outcast race—upwards of 5000 gips in all [reland, of whom barely 1,000 follow the precarious but romantic life of the road. Irish Catholics, including even the most ignorant and superstitious of the peasantry, without exception hold them 1n something like a terrible de- testation, and will have none of them, save in their least offensive character of traders, tinkers and beggars. With fine scorn they will perhaps hold con- verse with thom at icy distances on a purely commercial basis. They will occasionally permit a Gipsy to mend a kettle, pot or pan, all the time shower- ing glib and awful reproaches upon him for his uncanny mode of life, while therr hospitality is so boundless that they would not turn the ‘devil himself from their doors, even if his horns and hoofs were disclosed through the gauzy guize of a ‘‘traveler” or mendicant. But let a Gipsy, spac-wife or fortune- sller once slip into an Irish cabin and i of her black-art conjurings, » of war will at once rise above Calling upon all the cata- that spot. gory of saints in one shrill and _mighty breath of fierco minor appeal, the Irish mother will treat this female Gipsy cheat to such a whirtwind of evections, may be heard for half a league away, Why, the very thatching would be pulled from the” roof if necessary, to speed and force the battle for the home against her grewsome wiles. And my Gipsy friends the world over know this fact so well and bitterly, that univer- sally with the race Ireland is termed. in recognition of its barrenness for their purposes, the sallah lodlie, or unlucky and accursed territory. In consequence, tho few Gi are found in Ireland are al forlornest cla: of their ra as it were, the outcasts of outcasts. Tracing the reasons for their remaining in such unfriendly environment and existing in such beggarly vagabondism, the cur- ious fact is made apparentthatin nearly all instances the families, or bands, o3 they are found here to-day, are descend- ants of those who have, in a sense, been banished from more favorable territor- ies by their own kind: and have become attached, as do all human beings save Irish landlords, to that something in ene and clime, and love of place ¢ven povorty, which holds the heart closely to this emerald jewel of the sea. Gipsy laws and edicts are inexorable. ‘The former powerful Romany families of England and Scotland (and to illust- rate their real power I have ouly to in- stance the Smith family of the present day, residing at Honiton, Devonshire, England, who are worth in lands, town properties and London and Northwest- ern railway.stocks, upwards of a million pounds sterling), now chiefly trans- planted to America, have had to do with this. Insubordination; offenses against Gipsy equities; unendorsed marriages between and women of unfriendly and scores of other causes of similar import as grave in their results from the stand- point of gipsy law and ethies as erimes and offenses against our own laws and ethics, have made of Ireland, which never warmed to these uncanuy pil- grims, & sort of permanent penal terri- tory for gipsies whom gipsies of other and more favored lands w{ll not tolerate near them, Strange as this may seem, its truth is beyond cavil, as its effects are inevitable, But these Irish gipsies malke the best they cam of their beg- E{rl] condition of ‘pennance, with all at sodden, yet often cheery, trust in the fatalism so distinguishable through the ages in the Aryan and Semetic races to_ which tMey surely owe their origin. Neither are there wanting in- dividual instances of comparative pro- gress and uccom‘)lishmmn under des- perately unfuvorable conditions among this forlorn folk in Ireland. A Dublin barvister is a gipsy. In Beifast a gipsy holds a_responsiblo position in a spin- ning mill; another is a caretaker of a leading church; another owns a road- side inn near that city; while another is a rich dealer in the famous and un- savory quarter of old Smithfield mar- ket. At Cork a gipsy is responsibly employed on the little railway running to Blarney. At Galway another one keeps a lowly inn; another is an angler ‘‘coacher” for entlemen who come to fish salmon in the Corrib; and v.hruupihout the west many of the drovers and graziers are gipsies. They are also found employed in various ca- pacities, with no questions asked con- corning’ their origin, about the many daily and weekly markets and at the regular fairs of Ireland. In one of the midland counties a glpsy 18 the agent of a large estate; and to his credit no eviction has ever occurred upon it. At many of the castles of the Irish nobil- ity—and there are more splendid cas- tles and desmesnes in Ireland than gen- erally supposed—many are employed as gamékeopers, for which stealthy and sylvan vocation they possess peculiar qualifications; while, more power to them for it! no hungry gipsy can camp near by without tasting the flavor of milord’s pheasants or rabbits from the always plothoric preserves. Some are rs of jaunting-cars in the larger Others arc dealers 1n the noted hendal ponies of the Antrim coast, acting as middlemen hbetween the breeders and the Irish and Lnglish markets. At the annual Dublin horse fairs, gipsies, quite unknown as such to the management, breeders or the pub- lic, control a mijor portion of the heav- ier dealings, and practically inspireand rofit py all the valuable kering and jockeying for which this greatest of all horse fairs affords such extraordinary opportunity. All these, of course, hide their despi. origin, and are always .anything that is Irish, as varying gencies and necess may arise But with these wind-whipped gilgrims of the hedges who had so boisterously welcomed me, and with their kind throughout all Iretand, the very acme of careless, listless - vagabondism is reached, If du-,km'ln;i and dukering (fortune telling) bring tood enough for the day, well and good, If not, then they will beg n,ur‘hu in a hedge by a smoldering five, if peaj, bog wood, or deud branches may be begged or fered, and starve like hibernating ani- mals until driven to some sort of o tion. To be sure each one is a tinke euch one weaves rude baskegs of willow, each one is dextrotis #% beuch, tub and broom-making; bijt # thousand upon thousands of honest folk would annually starve in Ireland, uader the present in- famous system of -landlordism, if the very skin were worked from strivers' ‘bones, were it not for the saving power of American money, my not altogether houest, and altogether vagabond, gipsy friends, ‘content themselves with the least posaible strain of moral and physi- cal effort. So, to exist with them eve for a few days, it foll to my willing lot to replenish’ their lurder.” A fat gipsy larder means & great gipsy feast. A feast is hardly a feast in Treland, let alone other countries without ‘“'a drop to drown vief and lift '&y"' Song,dancing and uproarious roys- ring were the consequence, And the penalty, for punishment has aslong legs as joy has short ones, was the descent upon our camp of the crushing arm of British law in the form of & squad] of royal constabulary who, with their **Move on, ye gipsy dogs!” put us all to flight in a lively but dejected cavalcade down tho winding Newry road. And wo were u motley crew. Spao- wives, fierce and tall; older hellyons, muttering and wailing as they hobbled along; mothers hugging ragged chau- vies to their breasts; maidens with the stride and strength of men; old men beyond a century’s age; hairy fellows from middle age to youth; with our gaunt, voiceless dogs, our tinkers’ wheels, our miserable carts, our mourn- ful goats, and lank, scraggy asses; all spocding toward the myrtle-loving south, camping by day, trayeling by night,but ovar hustiadiawddriven path. lessly on. At Markethill, near the splendid castle of Gosford, we turned from the Newry road to the sout crossed the head waters of the Cushar river; trailed past lofty Deadman’s hill; touched the sunny edge of county Louth, passing through Louth town and quaint Ardee; crossed the fair valley lands of Meath, winding through olden Kells, and through ancient Trim,where in Hugh de Lacy’s castle once lived King John of England and where Rick ard imprisoned his own and Gloucester’s sons; and finally along the Dublin road, by hittle Kilmessan, came into a hidden dingle the gipsies well knew. where a rude temporary camp-house was made. And here we separated, with m hand-pressures and with eloquent tongues and ¢ I for my tramp to the hill'of Tara and through the Boyne country, and these tawny, hopeless waifs for their endless tramp without rest or home, until the: pitched in the silences eternal. EpGAr L. WAKEMAN. e PEPPERMINT DROPS, How should charity be represented! In re ho *Maiden’s Prayor usually has some- thing to do with a him. A new wrap for ladies is callea the Gro 1t'is only worn when they go out. “George, dear, what kind of fruit is borne by an electric light plant?’ “Electric cur rents, of course.” TN oxperience Of azes Focs Lo prove that, Nowever it may be with marriage, courtship is not a failure, It is said that good bread can be made out of chestnuts, A good many paragraphers malte not only their bread, but also their but- ter out of them. The daughter of the American secretary of war has married an _English statesman, and England will now probably live in less terror of our army. A Boston paper say campaign has interfored general lecture business.’ the presidential term, Prof. Wiggins, the weather prophet, is in dignant. He received by mail notification of his olection as an honorary member of the Ananias club of Boston, Mass When_your mother interferes with your play, Johnny, by spauking you with a trunk steap, you are perfectly justified in alluding to the affair as leather wuddle, An eagle salling half & wile above the carth can scea field mouso; but, while that is pretty good, it is beaten by a cliap in this towa who can see his tailor a mile away on a cloudy day. Thanksgiving da r. that “the presidential riously with the Don't lengthen is celebrated at the end of November, because it is thought that those who safely pulled through the wear and tear of a political campaign may be in a truly grateful mood I dou't see why the people should com plain of us," says the Lob-tail street car di rector; “'we give a ride and an_exhibition all in one. You drop the nickel in the slot and see the company save a conductor's wages ! *Is that woman next door crazy!” inquired @ patent medicine man offored to sell her some of my great specific for iucreasing the appetite when she pushed me off the stoop, set the dog on me, and ran down stairs for a' dipper of bolling' water.”! “'No, sho's not crazy,” was the reply. ‘“She keeps bourdiug bouse.” CALUMET BY THE LAKE-SIDE. Beauties of Lake Michigan's Bays and Promontories. GREAT NORTHERN COPPER MINES Visit to a Sportsman's Paradise— Pecullarities of the Heteroge- ncous Population—Corn- wall's Large Quota. M higan Copper. For the Bee, Let the reader take his map of the United States; let his eye run along the northern boundry and itsirvegular con- formation as it meets the great lake system. It creeps far out here in a huge promontory and cape, and sinks backward there into. a bay—asafe har- bor for the menaced shipping. He pauses instinctively ata poiut which ex- tends far into Lake Superior. It has an ugly look even here upon the map, and its ugliness would be augmented an hundred fold were the reader standing upon the deck of a steamer which was trying to “round” the point. During past years “Keewenaw Point,” the ex- tremity of the upper peninsula of Michigan, made for itself a history in its warfare upon all manner of lake t. To be obliged to pass it filled every seaman with alavm, for many a staunch vessel had gone down upon its sunken rocks, and a thousand brave men had become food for fishes, This is the northern boundery of the famous “copper district” of the United States q const 18 low d rocky but as it stretches inland the gruond rises abruptly heré and there in th stony hillocks, These stand out against | luke, Six miles to the southenst, upon a background of green, for this néck of | Toreh lake (which isan arm of Lake land is covered with magnificentforests | Superior), are Lake Linden of trees which are i to this | ton, The populatfon is about 8,000 latitud Hero the [ souls. Upon each sido of Portage lake, smok south and worth, are Houghton and pant lives, or subsists, by means that | Huncock, having respectively 4,000 and I O are incomprehensible to” the ovdinary | 5,000 population. Railroads conneet ¥ mortal, th Backward, inland, some thirty miles, the peninsula attains its greatest alti- tude, 600 feet above the lake level. Standing upon this obscrvatory with a field glass, you look lakeward,” At the north is the point we just left. The water is never still. Thenever-ceasing northwest wind which gently fans your cheek lashes the loke into | tunes are made in a few years, The sreat waves, and @ line of | soil is capablo of successful cultivation, A capped breakers stretehes | but the very fow farmers, All out and oul as far as the eye can reach. | eatables are brought from ‘“below,” Do you wounder that the sailor droads to | which means Detroit, Milwaukee or soelc a channel for his passage? The | Chicago. Prices rule high on every- eastern coast is six mil vy and the | thing, and wages are made proportion- western eight,which give the peninsula | ate to these. 1 had expected in this a breadth of fourteen miles. We paper to take the reader into some of of the wate are situated | th r mines, Ten standing upon th works at Calum the world’s great miles to the south lies Portage lake, nestling between two chains of hills, always calm—a harbor of refuge for the storm-hound ma Portage lak oxtends within three miles of Lake Superior on the west. Eighteen yoars ago the United States government eaused a canal to be digged conuecting the t#o, 80 thut now Keewo- naw point is scldom seen except by the curious visitor, and he must Inake rland. The upper lake trade y the route. A government ation is maintained at the nal, and many an act of uoble daring in the saving of lile aud property is recorded of this dauntles crew. Here is the sportsman’s paradise, Innumerable brooks that rise in tha springs that abound in these miniature mountains contain myriads of specklod trout, while the larger streams and the lakes have nearly every other species of soft-water fish. hears here of the marvelous ‘‘catches’ would make the ordinary liar turn grreen with envy. abundant. quail he takes his rifle also, for ho may sturns. The population of the peninsula nums bers upward of thirty-five thousand souls, and a more heterogeneous peopla does ‘not live on the earth. nationalities are this small aren. northland works by the ulation native arly all professional men. contributed a very large auota—so arge in fact that the prevailing dialect is Cornish., school room, everywhere. Eyen the grave yards possess it. Upon a headstone in the Hec! be seen the inscription: Upon the shores "of the lake are nus merous small settlemonts which wera [ built up during past yoars when tha wor ing mines numbere them 1 or huve remained, and to-day eke out a seanty on *““tribut or cities have a town of situated twelve met, United which citizenship the thought of this peopls is fully ab. Copher mining is the industr Peninsula, and murkoet the mines and of, but this article is already too long ferrcd to another time, ne Tho sion to d been their privilege to say what the country shall Luve to eat throe times a day, and that's woro power thua the mon ever Had or will Ty licenscd ws captains of vesscls—ol York harbor, the oth It was Greeloy ing wom they will, The stories ono Game of all kinds is 1f the hunter goes out for shot at a decr or bear before ha Eightoen represented within The dweller of the side of the colored individual, and a ‘‘washeo allee samee™ scrubs the linen of both. " Of this pop- less than one hundred aro born Americans. Thesc are Cornwall It is heard in the street, 1 cometary may Ior cannot come 0 wo, But us can go to she.” o twenty in- f n,and were scattersd all peninsula. As these proved { le and have been abandoned, ople who settled about either moved to the towns xistenee hy working theso holos 0.7 Wour prosporous town s builded here—Calu- )00 inhabitants, is miles north of Portago all, Tn schools and churches cities are the equal of any in the Stutes, and in all matters in are involved the interests of st of the times., of the ‘e aro o fow small farms :ns, out of which for- show him the glorics and that pleasure must be do- { F. L. HAYDEN, e 1en of this country have no occa- | nand their rights It has always 1 e e— women have recently been ularly My i on the Mississippi not many years ago that Horaco {d, rathier “prophetically, conceru- 1, Lol thew be ses captaivs, it

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