Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, December 9, 1888, Page 16

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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE DAY DECEMBER 9, 1888, ~SIXTEEN PAGES e Emanst TN 99 CEINT ST OX.ED 1209Fmnst Christmas Presents in Endless Variety at Surprising Low Prices. Monday and all Next Week Great Bargain Days. Albums for 25¢ up to §7.90 oEEEEEERE == | Toys for 5 Gents Up. B ™ cvery conceirvable style and shape. Wagon Loads of all kinds. Scrap Books s ong | S e = & |Boys Sleds, | rosseaman AutographAlbums™* *** | o R il | Girl's Sledg Ladies' Pocketbooks, e e Dressed Dolisl,m dressed Dolls Ladies’ Hand Satchels| @ 82 d8=nge* = s At all prices and in all new and desirable styles. at lowest prices. Picture Frames [ e .- .| gy S gii@ B i~ i Toilet Sets, | o™ ™ And Easels| " |& ¥, 7 . S e T Work Boxes|" i : = P g 4 AR ¢ \ S Ch I n a and Our basement is full of bargains aS e S’ Including Work, Shopping, Lunch Z , 3 ® ¢ 3 & l;.) 3 | 3 3 : 3 that will swrprise you, Visit the i Sevap Baskets. ete.. at | Ay : i v y IR N L ‘ M WI I IOWWa re owr usual low and pepular pric’s 4 1 A B E AN : X aSS are Bascment. ChristmasCards] ~& & "~ | [Decorated Lamps A complete list of desivable books for old and youny. Raphael T: s : B ; i g ; I T A 2 al , ! . Raphael Tu 3 R : Stand, Hangingand Piano Lamps, not an old :tyle in the lot. In- Cliristmas Cards. are of Superior finish and we sell them at prices vy : : SEe e i ity oo TR nE e low as are asked for muc's inferior goo-is, N : S spect our ‘"" JELid R ese g i J s 4 3 are the best and prices the loiwest. Silverware and Jewelry in all the latest navelties at manufacturers’ prices. Boy’s Express Wagons, including wood and iron frame, 10c up to $3.95. Manicure Sets, Odor Cases, Cuffs and Goliar Sets, Smoking Sets, Shaving Sets, Etc., Etc. '\ 1909 Farnam Stroet, THE 99 CENT STORE 1909 Farnam Street N 't e W ed fan 3 IDUC NAL. THE BOYNE AND BLACKWATER | of the tortuous stream. Just above | countics may bo alinost wholly tr nd the left are «ous burn, | costs that those mottled cubs may live. | remain three offthaRwy logllca 1amily EDUCATIONDL ells, is the ancient church of St. | Two miles from the Boyne's source ave | s glen, lofty heigl v riso the hoights of the Boyne, | but there arc d Harvard has about one hundred be 7 The couples alr live on §600 a year. :‘\‘Ofl‘lllmlr‘l!\y\l :\l'l‘lx"\w"itsm renm}:w of | found the almost leveled ruins of Mon- and upland meadow s ing 1o stand the woods at 1ts s il inithe visl i ¥ L 2 Cros: its spec- is, most celebrated in medicval the Boyr wns deen he few miles of sk 3 {ihas X snteen hundred students are reg- A Lazy November Day on Their | imen of oldest style of monumental | history, Below. are the stili older bt « ond, it breaks into follow, were it not for the wild | A thii S in as Pt 0N | jgered at the University of Michizan. < Historic Shores. stone to_be found in Ireland, and its | better preserved remains of Kinnafs 2 ‘ F 75 i irds of lreland, your pilevimage would | e HarEet S0 N e nted by all right- to have one of the g‘lf:-"ns";'f”,‘l‘;;“" W overhang- | castle, i ; awre structura, | The orange and “on - aresti be dismally lone with only the Wraiths | fholine wives 4 birthday presents to their g ash. Then near the riveris Kells, | Here at Kinnafad, “the head of the | the overhan. i of past centuries about you. But far in | deserving husbands. The text on them is as IRELAND’S DEPARTED GRANDEUR. | “head-fort™ in anciont times, mosi | long ford," theve were. dus out ot iho | along this witohing way, ; ol the juckdaws scurcy and | follows: 2::»’1“0 mti’i‘\(lfihrliu n;ncu_l th “Hll‘ riyer bed, showing that a great battle [ in with antiquity. history, endor and High above them the field- 200 B ory, with its house of | was fought at this place in ancient [ silence. Tothe lef and be- | f nd staclings wheel and gather | ¥ . 3 Eied Bloried Tuins of Castle ana Hani— | St Columbiille,its cxtuordinarily por- | timcs, ano of the Hinost colloctions 1n. | yond. tho. haights, rises a slendor the winter campnign. The white- N1GUTOARD: : e e Haad Marringes That Were For a ect and beautiful specimen of that mys- | (reland, specimens of which :- | houette agafust the st Hlue of® 1 ' 1 pheasant vises from the copse Mr. (thohusband) has on requestiand [ sl B tery, the Irish round-tower and 'its | served in the Dublin Royal Irish November sky. That is the grea . and whirring seeks the denser as a roward for good beliavior, permis iestfor fihe AT R great Cross of Kells, whose. perfection | emy’s museum, of Irish prehistovic re- | round-tower of Domaghmore. It 1s 100 | forost depths. The blue hawk hoers on to stay out ufter 10 o'clock. 5ohg0) itweniy:asvant orofclargynign raig. of sculpture gives it rank as one of the | mains, and weapons consisting of spear- | feet high. and it gives certai 1 the sedges for prey. The white- o R naMincteemine most maryelous of Burope. Bolow, | heads, war-uxes and brazen sword vis hose wonder stod ousel sagely sits upon water- e e g Hlata confiscation Reev. Dr. MeCosh will_delivor n course of Afoot in Ireland. ;'10,‘“;‘ s reached, authentic record | blades similar to those of the ancient of Lreland’s past, in shadowing orn stones, and, as if suddenly recol- S ihis pass. lectures to the students of the Ohio Wes- DROGIEDA Troland.Nov, 96, —[Special | OF Which is had at us early a dato as tho | Phaenicians. On Lord Landsdowne’s | its feet ruins of the ancient church of | lecting its vocation, dives for'its long this year. i d ! 52301 »; LSp 28 year ()l”'.l!e world, 3370, This was the | estates a little further down the | that name, built on the site of the first | s2arch for food upon the river’s bottom. oo ee DEDCERM o 1 Baughman, of Xenia, O., has given orrespondence of Tie BEE.J—From | pagan Tailtean, where thewncientfairs, | Boyne, — are found, mot only | church of the g plain Eehnach, | The white-collared reed-sparrow sits : g o Tranolacos | 0.0 tolondow; sfiprofessurghipRin Beldely toward Kells, on the sinuous Black- FRigge, betrothals and marriages were | illustrations of the | areadful | which owed its origin to Ste Patrick | hidden upon swaying rush and sounds | ., s, Ann s 8 uv\rlu ‘,"’“_"fi',“" u-lu (| n.mu,lu(_. o water, across to ancient Trim on the ’"“1‘;"5"001311"“‘:11- Tho_latier held | work of Irish evictions, but the ruins of | himsolf. [n lovely piciuresqueness the | its monotonous, ceaseloss call. With a | variety of incidents and sudden changcs TS A A Ly P S, ypper Boyne, along past sleepy Navan, | 8904 for but fa year and a day.” 1f the | the great domiciliary Abbey of Bally- | old canal pusses wnder amossy mill-arch | w and splasii, vhe lone mud-hen | heart is seldom equaled by that va rlied saisthdenta SOneRI i Betasoy Ay & couple found hell instead of heav bogan. At Clonard, which was once | so tremendous and massive that one's from ¢ to riverand from | creature woman. She had p husband, a | 3 & at those two rivers’ confluence, and | gach other’s soe i 5 bt 0 g J J 4 A AL g L) Xan 4 reend. Dhe lattor ro- | €M B s and A,Ilu‘?ul'm‘l s society during that pe the most distinguisk bishop's see in | with feudal reminders, con- ek again, rtling seramble roand a uhul ’tl'l.ll\.“ he T oriro: e E LR 0 y 0 gheda and | they were at liberty to walk in the | Ireland, and where was built her first | juv feval senses of cour s pand noise intensified by the riv turnedifrgmis wyhalinseinony anit | members r n, one of whom i Dr. Oliver the sea, is a more beautiful region than | centerof Rath Dubh, or the Black Fort, | cathedral, is sccn a most ancient [ and inner great gallervies beyond. © But lc nees. While ever and O Thto the fair Annie Wendell Holmes, It was @ cluss of famous the loveliest vales of all England can | stand back to back and depart, one at | tumulus; here in 1136 the chief poet of | cmerging into the sunlight, you find in- sedge-warbler from among | Faye MOT 0" Al Mes, Willoughby and | men. disclose. Within it are more ruins of “,h" “"‘;l'.h, and_the other at the south | Ircland, O'Daly, wa ripped to his | stead only seene on © of “increasing | the veeds and rushes not only pours out | jor lover decamped witn the money.” The | Amony the students at Princeton college s castles than may be found along the zate, a divorced and free couple. With | skin” by Brefueyans; it wus the scence [ n al =plendor, with perhaps the | its own soul insw st notes, but, 25 | husband and the sailor overtook the pair. | onc seventy-two years old. He is studying s ai O o T > what a longing for the old duys some | of one of the bloodiest battles of 174 cing contrast of a thatehed cabin, | the most fovgivable of all plagarists, | The husband captured his wife, and Jack | for the ministry, wnd expects 1o graduate whole lflmmflf! the legen -l‘nuntc have stood within the ruinsof Rath | and there is still to be seen one of the | set like ram inst the | thrills you with the stolen melody of | captured the bulk of the mons > y | this term. e Rhine. And with it, in impressiveness | Dubh! They are 1,000 feet in diameter, | oldest and finest baptismal fonts in | emevald of fives and the onyx of black | countless — other bivds. Wand wasllisphye-thotsalion Lecnusorhe foh Sl ‘Tho Hopkins memorial f(;l‘ml'f;’;z Witllan of acclesinstic remains, frequency jof | Tailtean was one of tho four royal resi- | western Europe. The massive walls, | cliffs above. You may rest” heve bit, | along and thus feasting, you pass Beau: oneyiunale o usiagd bosanan ko RALSEx otions haalreastad S0 esliogi R memorable historic places, and number | dences of the earliest Irish kings, and | vound towers, lofty steeples, quaint |as I did, by a bright peat iiv vhile | pare demesue: the ruins'of Castle Dex- | {ORTTR G Ot ey, As for Mrs. Willouzhby, | dormitory is to be begun soon. and richness of glovious medieval and almost divides with Tara the record of | architecture and the historic memories | the hospitable lock-keey fe | ter, gloom an Drear, the pagan voyal | giie fell into her deserted lord’s arms with e iR aarta aa at tand AR oa 0100 a1 SR A e P ancient glories and splendor. At Don- | of ancient Trim, would require a vol- | compels you to quafi a posset, [ cemetery of Brugh no Boinne: stroll | joy, and covered his face with kisses of veal | 5op “pupils at her public schools this yeur, pagi 4 y ‘BO q X aghpatrick, a short distance below, | umn for adequat ption. Purther | and yon might hear w wonderingly through the numberless | af and still $.000 children cannot be admitte can be compared. It is truly surpassing | whose name is derived from Domnach- | down-stream is Scurlog’s castle, one of | lips more legends and fuivy tu he | ecclesiastical ruins of Slane, upon whose —— for lack of room in some of the wards, 5 5 Padral A 4 i s I | in fascination and interest. ’adraig, or the ancient church of 1 the ancient impregnable fortresses und | Boyne than ever Carleton or Croker | heights St P el fir the RELIGIOUS, ‘The University of Virginia has no ¢ ; S ¢ preg i : g Patrick b On a November day, as fair as May {l““‘k‘h'—:lfi rom whose u-:lc-n-x[m watch-towers of Meath, many of its | spun of the Irish midland mounta eross of christianity in win- = i 0 of Phit ‘.l“ll < .lull) x‘.l, |; llm‘mmr. piIeE i % ! _ eights the eye sweeps over the forests > walls ¢ els st sors s warm, poetie s er 5 t vhere o dr. Smith, president of Trinity collc son is said to have been the founder of Loth. aver brought to any clime, my most en- | of Fietarton: tha. hills. of Tare and | meoanreg: maor are Tehnd thasomale | e o inte 10 st outh, It i f dor past tho —spol whove tho ) Dr B, B et accopted the ussistant | A movement is now on foot at the university At N e e 1 , the hills o ara an standing; below are found ¢ a pleasant thing to stand on the mossy | weuk-hearted James lost Ireland to tford, his not yet accep 10,04 i B 1K chante ncing pilgrimage in this region was | Screen, and the noble plains of Meath, | chral mounds and ruins of T id- | old loch and ch the gurgling and | the Irish, and the vict have c'of Ohio, to which be was recently | to sccus el G1BIIOR mudo.l It was not Indian summer upon is found one of the most s]])lcnlhd way between Trim and v , | seething of the waters below, where | reared the most conspicuously in- 5 - : T l,l‘r.us{\h xm.‘fi’: of |r:.‘ Mussachusgial the Irish land and in the Irish sky. ent military vaths of Ireland. Four | majestic ruins of the grc jan | they sweep beneath the cumb y | sulting monument of modern time henee Is 8 chrlatian com e o1 church, | danis of Amerioan eollegus B i But there was a warmth, a lull, a hush, "’l;l?‘ “"l”’f“v rings of eircumvallations, | monaster known as s | arched stone brid From loitc « | deep tmong the vast sepulehral mounds [ Hurst of (e ACGEECAl o seen a copy of Y LTI 17 and yet a glowing life, in landscape, and its lofty central mound, can still be [ “Old HBridge” Abbey, 50 | and reverie here you awaken Ne s and v 01y seripty ation on the Prevention of distinctly traced. Tradition has it that arfeotly wrved that the diff h il »s whove th as 4 > t > y ir, that beat, in per! P : SR : 5 1 serfectly preserved that the diffe glimpse through the trees above the a8 ) The bishop of Maine has the smallest reyv- "k‘{,""“ Alx; hakkesh, ‘I“"‘{fl‘“;". on | this was ociginally the celobrated Rath | halls, galleries, closters, courts und dor- | foot-path, of splondid sweop of rivor ‘ptian pyramids; and 05 tho Shudows | enoe o r Piomeoopal bishops, I boing but - with one’s own pulse, a_palpable throb- | Airthir, erccted by the benign Couall, | mitories, can be traced; at Clady arc [ and the magnificent ruin of the De- sr. come to the end of the *pl £1,300 per y Phe bishop of bing from loving nature’s heart, It is | after his gift of his own to St. Patrick. | some remarkable subtc e ey eastle of Dunmoe, its walls and t Boyne’ river, upon whi Y his the largest, $10,000 per year. a0 st Year and a Day—At Do- New York IMPLETIES, They haye drame a such rare hours that the walker | 'rom Donaghpatrick toward Navan the | tures und the ruins of Clady church culars still vising an hundred feet | rose and fell, wi y $ | In 1830 the Catholic population of the pheyihave maier | HonRiey drinks, feeds, indeed feasts, equally | river banksand contiguous landscapes | und bridge, the underground structures | above a noble” eminence. At its fect beginning to gleam from > | United States was 50.000; it fs now about ten | and wiat will tho clovgy say Row! upon the crackling of & hodge-row bush | literally swarm with® ruins of custles, [ having been identified us the remains | the Boyne leaps over aweivand turns | heights, towers and turrets of ancient | millions, or two Lt o) Hmes 1o aupbse . - Ghotho hoy s 890 £ 4. BeR I ATINSY and the sound of mighty cascades; | churches, and the half-effaced remuins | of a “prehisto roglodyte village; | the crooning boits of a squatty little | Drogheda by the Tvish sea. it was fifty-cixht years ugo. JoWover WA mIE e A PR o i AL 3 M ARE M S y oning } BquURLL) gheds 1 el g e N hange going on in | 0f a_ president. There is no discount on on the tremor of a wind-whipped leaf | 0f military and ecclesinstic antiquities. | near where the Boyne breaks between | thatched ed mill. Thousunds of IDGAR L. WAKEMAN, As illustrative of the cliange going 98 W | 1y, njel or Elijahs. and the rush of sweeping AR s, on | Perhaps the great moat of Navan is of | jnnumerable dainty 1slands at Bellinter | rooks wheel and cawaround the ghostly ascailin the west, the Chicwko o imost "entirely | “In tac soup” is o new phiraso which is those half dozen blades of grass growing | the most conspicuous interest. 1t is | are vuins of castles with square keeps | pile, which, with notree uear, cuts in- CONNUBIALITIE S, one e L the contral part of the | Yhaving a large run in the east, Everylhing the chimnoy out of u cabin’s roof: | tremendous, is in part formed out of u | and circular flanking towers, ty) tensificd and sharpened outlines into - Hiatebf Kansas, minister and congregation | 8 ‘in the soup,” the only exception being, of thatehing and’ the splendid castle of | nutural hill, and its noble outhiues can | those erected along the the blue background of sky. The John Ashlerly, of Clyde, O., has got around | going along to the new neighborhood. course, the oyster in the church festival ruin; on the gaunt children of Irish [ be easily followed. the ancient English pale: whole place is instinet with olden | to'vemdvrying the wives he’ wus divorced The outgrowth of the union religious ser- 4 equalor and the great lords that make 1t is said of the source of the Boyne, | hillsof Athtumney, overlooking glovies — from, He picked up No. 2 the oth viees in Berlin for the last thirty years is the Pewrent—Your sermon *On Econ- them s0; or on the half crushed pebble [ that “the sacred well from which “the | are the decaying walls vers of that Vet ) and there aré two more to be heard from. appeal of Prof. Stucke - pastor, ¥ this mol ctor, Wwas u senvible of the Irish road and the vast, mist-pur- | river flows, with its half-fabulous le- | mostsplendid sixteo pile,the - Ang.{rom the masar whaol A The eccentric bachelor, of Ann Arbor, | £100,000 from Am: of which §25.00) hus | dlscourse hank yaui 1§ Sled sun of on lrish sky. In such | gonds, serves to conncct tho earliest | fortross of Sir Luuncolot Dowdall, who [ That, fashing. plays teath ol Dunmoe, | Ay, who, thres wtonths ko, s wibledt | hen raiscdy Sthe workIn WOt 1o 1 JUlilice Gi the contribution husier morning and mood I tramped from early [ historie period with preceding times, | upon the news of the defeat of the Irish Ao aficlony sfund deth steal—~ I, 0.0n cendlion it U0 MATEY WAL, [CRHANOR OF BRI IR ok SR IAER e fa¥ dTnathaLioally) ==Uilam dawn, from Tara’s hill across to the olil | und marks a period shrouded in mystery | forces &t the battle of Boyne, heroically | while at a sharp bend of the river at | p.,s; o from . woman, young | | A very excellent suggestion has been mado | rible accident, terriblo, wasn't it! " Bix men Trim road; then by road and field aud | and Druidism;” and of the river itself | burned his castle rather than permitits | the right, upon another lofty eminence, | yud old, in nearly all parts of the country. o R A & aLliors Dlown Lo atoms with mibro glycorme? Uns past ruin to the older road to Kells; and | that, *so memorable in ancient history, | desecration by a victorious foe. All | are the imposing ruing and still-used Joseph Shipe, aged tw five, and Marg- | Now York that on the 6th of December th dertaker etul “Hearirending! Nob while yet the yellow mormng suniight | andso rich in monuments of the past is | this and incomparably more can be | graveyard of Ardmulchan church, or | aret Do i Woro ongaged to 0o | churchos of the country should unite in a | enough left of the I al. i colored the roof-thatches with bright | it, that we fear not to assert that the | found and enjoyed behind the meeting | the church of Maelchu's height, so old | married thirty-five yoars ago t Ten- | centennial thunksgiving for 100 years of Do not Ii to be ré pon a fellow russet and puce, the roof-slantings with | history of Ireland might be written in | of the Boyne and Blackwater at moldy | that we at least know the plucs nessce. Ielatives ‘objected because of the | christiun song, This year ’i“"i“‘.‘“'} |4fj;y|; orwhisper by kicking bt ‘h, ave i ll‘n’l”‘ll\?]t pink purple, and the upper heights of | tracing its bunks,” ~Its most ancient old Navan. Ancient, moss-grown, | laged and burned b, ¢ | girl's ,"_rl!!h,“(nnl ln..- 1y4.1Arx-lv}5u-_' \\'ualultf:-:(v anuiversary 4|‘| ( :‘ :]l:"n“\\ ‘* ;‘.\‘; ‘A\\.‘”I‘l‘!l;‘ d | you all ml I‘.\;-‘.:“t;lll; 19 .80, A4 A0 -‘»M); (ol spires and towers, with saffron-gray, I | pames were Righ and Boan, derived | indolent, straguling — along the | one thousand S P .'.A'.']"flm.f'\"\.l,f.',, ‘:r!v‘l.\ (ol‘l‘.;“:n"m'm :x A'n fl;nlr;“\‘: ,“",'.-‘\‘J ] 'xl;‘_w“l' ] low gomuecs puL 0f pinptytio 40 Hok sk e pehind an Irish cart, an old Irish | from Boin, or Boaun,an ancient Tuutha | lines: of massive, ~ hidden = walls, | erag, surmounted by foudal ruins wnd | Feteiod BEGE WOSE 00 “Bla” Ceremony | ' pornaps the latest body of christians 10 | b icscd. ) woman, and an old Irish ass, in lonely | De Danan princess, who wore upon her | recking with filth, and the picture of | crumbling chup ols, or crowned with ma- | \iich made two loving and patient hearts m\lu|-( ,I“‘Il'i’l‘m(:l AR O oA (i tho: Agent—tlas the relizious press much of @ pride‘and isolate elation,into thequaint | righ (wrist, or fore-arm) many brace- hesitant but certain decay. Navan sits | jestic forests, now greet the i Won- ( one was performed last Sunday | ot e ealltios tho priests of - that | Howing in tiis community ¢ Old citizen (in and,moldy old Irish city of Navan, lets of gold with which deserving bards | between and at the shores of the streams, | drous profusion; and suddenly, through | [ ouise Balfe maintains that marriage With | faith have, during several years, held spevial | o wiisper) =Woll, the parson is all rixiity Behind this to the northwest along | were rewarded. Pagan tradition re- | hugging close the sides of the now [an open reach in the foot-path trees, some men is a failure. he has tried it rvices on Thunksniving d bis y but they do say thal Deucon Pusicy i8 the Blackwater, and to the southwest | lates that this princess, from overpow- [ ampler Boyne, which leaps away from | the noble Stackallen bridge is scen, ce, and has just cleare self by law | Cardinal Gibbon, of Baltimore, issucd Vu‘h:K mighty fond of huggin' the women wiicn he along the Boyne, for leagues in either | ering curiosity, sought a secret forb! d- | its taint, and quaint, cramped arches, | swailing its length ac the deep, om both, “And I will not give up my 1{.].-.‘- ter to the clergy of his diocesc .M.L,T,[,!: tha gets a chane X dircction from both streams, ave con- | den well of Nechtem, the king of Lein- | through secenes of wondrous interest and swift stream. Loitering at the approach | dom .m-ll;l.l "h'h“l(‘ill mr}‘-n p:mm\‘]\:,M!unwh““ llm the day appo; u-la IVH 1‘\."- I‘:n:\?l‘;- “5 nl‘l-“cl Mrs. Blinks—*‘You did nobly at .w’.f;'n stantly recurring clusters of ruins and | ster’s bard, and defied 1ts mystic powers | beauty, often us noble as, and evermore | o its seven great urches where white :mm o A AR A0 Qanata A hxlv |;‘xl:n‘;';|’:’: PRAYRE AR B Pt hority, Tt | to-day h‘fl”i‘.{:-?fufl” '.’f::‘:;:.v. puriag t; Whquities. set ‘in as faieand lovely | by walking thrice azound it to the left; | improssive from the widdle-ngo and | highways swoop grandly down from | Sine “Mila bewutics are’ so' egotistical, | iy probable tiut Thankssving was never be soruoi you lstencd ationtively Lo every toral scenery—if the presence of wlmruul»on her eyes burst,as was threat- | dim-world tales they tell than you may | the forest-hooded uplands, and where | particularly N Al Iy observed, either as regards | oM™ A N S Way he pitched Tnto orrible serfdom did not haunt it—as | ened of any encroacher, and threo | anywhere find in thesame distaice upon | another lock seethes and_ roars, there A special from L o Ky TRy FouT raphical or denominaional extent. b, O e inis tnd. Minits and Jinks ever met the eyes of man. The Black- | mighty wavés uprising formed a river | the Rhine. flash ope of the trecs by th Drothers married (o four sistors by the same - | Just did me good.” water, which must not be confounded | which swept the princess into the sea. A cenwury-old canal follows the river | two mounted trainers with a el minster was the ord furnished not loug | - a0 '.:“‘J'(‘Tf:,':‘;v‘:h In singing do not blow on tho head of the with the splendid Blackwater of the | Ever after the river was called Righ, | bank to the sea, and Fiemish scencs are | two-score mott fox-hounds, panting | ago, when George “u'.l'u-nlwrfvlr was xlw;.fr women e kus 1I.ln“»‘.‘ lous trades wis bOKU | erkon who sita in front of you, 1t may ex- south of Ireland, runs out of the wierd, | Boan and Boyne. Its fabulous source is [ now and again recalled, Between the | whelps at theiv last coursings before the rwltl to 2\1:5: ‘l“-‘«:‘t:m::’\\:;ulnrl«“_h!‘fl‘”ml_h» \f_“-m “wu O, O e wife 0f o | DB lim to_ puoumont Ii 18 not prover 1o island-studded Lough Ramor, 1n county | this very well, the well of the Blessed | canal and the “‘salmon-full” stream 1s a | chase; and the bitter reflection comes f;‘,l‘\;‘“"l e ermnn Luthorans of Zim. | cabinet-maker, b belig | Put pool cheoks, buitous, ox .)Yn‘r‘klm chips la Cavan, From its source to its conflu- | Trinity ‘of to-day, close by the hill of | & grassy, unused way. The ash, beech | both to myself and the peasant beside | o b ongregution. Tiirty years g0 | well kuown to'the Workmen's ¢l In \I‘xlvx‘rl‘--'::”“l'»m< pmposed i you hege .St ence with the Boyne, one of the finest | Carbery, couutr Kildare, aud scyamore trees spreading above are | me who turns to look at the young pack | thoy settled upon_adjoiniug farums, ten wiles | stitute union. As a memorial of her work '“I enk ity .);““ .y e RUDY, B00H fale OuN old roads of Ireland, the great northern From this hill, upon which stands the | leafless now, But they sweep into the | from Beauparc, that two-score Irish | fioin the city, and their familics have grov has been decided to 4 .|”n\;:§ ol T A D o et o s ing road to Kells, winds along its banks, | ruins of a once magnificent castle, with | valley’s distance with hint of royal | families could be kept from eviction | up together. Two years ago the first coup which 4,000 has been promised,to procure gl pow on thi® side und uow on that shore | & glass the topography of seven Irish | summer sun and shade. To the rignt | and ostarvation for what it annually | of brotiers and sisters were warricd. There | ceutral oftice in London.

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