Omaha Daily Bee Newspaper, December 23, 1888, Page 13

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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY, DECEMBER 23, 18388--SIXTEEN PAGES. P Y| PR | — 3§ o | "OUR HAT' "OURHA E And Furnishing Ih‘p ts ] And Furnishing Dep'ts, Are repleto with ol the Lot l l Ava reploto with all tho Latest Nov- elties, and at prices far bolow ~“BROWNING, KING & CO.+ | - Largest Manufacturers and Retailers ot Fine Clothing in the World, Wish You a Merry Christmas THE PEOPLE ARE QUICK TO RECOGNIZE MERIT. Because we manufacture for them clothing that is well made and trimmed, and when such BAR- GAINS as we offer are brought to their notice they take advantage of it and profit therby. We sell our clothing at a lower figure than you will have to pay for inferior goods that are simply “CATCHY" to the eye, but defective in quality,, and made only to sell and not to wear; “TRASHY” clothing on which the middlemen can realize a big profit, but which gives the purchaser poor satisfaction. We manufac- ture nothing but what will GIVE ABSOLUTE SATISFACTIONin fit, style. quality, and at prices that defy competition. BROWNING, KING & CO el —1® S, W.Corner 15th and Douglas Sts., Omaha, Neb. @0 OUR HAT | ‘oUR HAT [ And Furnishing Dep'ts. And Furnishing Dep'ts. Are reple te with all the Latest Nowv : s prices Are replete with all the Latest Nov- clties und at prices far below elties and at prices fat below “LOW WATER MARK “LOW WATER MARK.” )| I [ Jimm Bl S f STAAQ sces, and then winding gracefully [ human habitation as if to help and | starvation, eviction and unutterab 1 There is always a ci N\ ‘Ov \ having first informod President Carnot THEBIRD'S CHRISTMAS CAROL [ Dicemia fomor steops, as if “to souch the | chenr, pouring upon the crispy ate its | wrong, its’ dredful offensivenoss mado | c faces ubout the fire-place, w STORIES OF FOYER AND STAGE | 8 v, S ttae ok S Chveraat ot And what entrancing | golden notes and awakening, like some | alone possible by great walls and armed | strange weird, ever old and ever new, s0 touched by the gracious condescon- scenes are ready for him who will walk | sudden sense of abseat love, th o men, it is mliluh‘\l : pm“btlcl manu o of | tales :‘x!;mn;diln;; ']x rclli;,vl\rm‘h T’uIn]nnuL. : on of 1\l1;n|~, le.ti.lwmlx u;;ll'r‘(‘fl to hroli 2 ese grand old roads! For nature-lover | of v summier days, On ever; rejoicing. But it is still a timo [are told, while the hal rhts dance urn on December 17, that he, too, shei Myriad Songsters of tho Irish Way- | Hl¢e £ G ok Fortet Lot b s | and surangely enough’ only o “winiof | with tho gontry and nobility for grent | fuiry-Liks among the i lened, cen- Nows 8nd Gosstn of [Actors) BNd | ¢ iva, the Arst ihot ever sHodAIDILS Side. tramp, you may feast on gray, drear | daysin Ireland, the beautifully-plum- | feasts and magnificent excesses. This | tury-old thate o mid- Actresses, Plays and Authors. lic.” ¢ around which the heather never | aged field-fares gather in me dn‘:v lxnnl :m\tvmrb-ho\l.-iu N.zt,;ds its llolk lr\nxl sorvants nwhl.'n 2 all roy thl.ultht‘ Oraboinlio I enslotta Ll fades; river of murmurous, sinuous | field, timid, hesitant, wary, with alert | to that one; or the gentry froma dozen | “tea-breakfast” is had; those who have @, B S g i THE TRAGEDY OF THE WRENS. Stncss and beaaty: cubins innumor- | sentinels postud to give instant warning | congregate | ab - anothor. With | saved onough brow grow bowls of | JOE JEFFERSON A SPIRITUALIST. | Somoof us uro acoused of manner: able, with their uwged hopeless, but | of danger,and one longs to know the s the gl entlemen qlmuun;; 2 punch; those who have not, get along snid William Crane w,(.c“'tl, in an in- e ov r;hur-\p‘lu:l{hs inmatos; l‘u‘nloL-) \\'it,l; aret of ltht*u v mlL Inwxlnnu} talos. | athlot quito ~\m~1| upon Lllo_sti;‘r'ul;: poteen; | Booth and Barrett and Thefr Pecu- | terviow, “but at the door of no comes 5, vonderful old trees, shops, homes, and [he ustrous! umaged phes v ng, | and a y comes in, Trish ro e = P, z 2 5 Christmas Customs of High and | Mool O e N ouses | scorning —the ° domosne pre Countryside gossip and firtations, Tl | ing with all 1is liberal Biliiity basine, | Marities- Blanche Roosevelt's Fas- dian whoieyaranon a namollnsiugelt Lowly, in Cabin and Castle—The with mournful tokens of the rare and | wanders in woods of ancient gu)wlh, the sweet and sacred time. Great state But Christmas time in Ireland is one cinations—Crane in the Hen- ::"'l‘”‘t :l\‘l'u":‘;“v}:{::‘t!yfl io hl Iu‘l'&)" H\ . ll: Great Candle—The Peat Fire roaring mirth that once held sway, but | skulks in copse and hedge, or haunts | and pompousness mark this coming and | of unspeakable loss to the bird families cletta — Notes. sttt L g Christinas Roysterings. still standing sturdy and gaunt within | the borders of meadows and shrubbery, | going over the reawakened road ;und | of tiny wrens. This tragedy of the sound egotistioal if I point this motal negleeted grounds where cuttle browse | flashing in his bowildering colors bef not the least interesting study is found | wren should have a luminous’ place e A B e D for winter food; mansion of the rich and | hungry peasant’s eyes, or rising with a | among the pallid, lip-compressed peas- | literature. Half a million Irish chil- Booth and Barrett.. S Pl }ztonh:cri‘fi it T Copyrighted 1888, f d, or fearing and vhere noble | sudden whirr to startle and delight you | antry, appearing in apathetic resent- dren with kippens and clubs are beat- 'The Broadway lblom.«‘n.ulms of New 51“‘)‘;“(] “5"1 Rikope 7 alobashlL Chri Time in Ireland sts hide approachc ity and | upon the road. The rook. that endless | ment along the way. At the castles it | ing about the hedges for victims, York city, says the ago Herald, AR T e ey e isith BristmasiLim; splondor; castles of that i victim of the *searecrow,” *‘clapper” | is the same, save that the retinues are | crcdly protected during every other | most obsorved and identified just now | YOUug ling S0AR Wa0, Voo 8 Feridyeiomaliealise, aronics wero parelled out' to erown-ud- | and all manner of oxterminating strata- | greater, the feasts more tremendous, | day yren is now sought | are Eawin Booth and Lawrence Barvett, [ 0 country for the third ov fourt RELAND in the | v ade serfs, and mighty | gem, more isy, watchful and | and more respeet is paid to proprieties rocious ing and it is truthful, though 1 I, t0 ‘_‘\':{f‘ ”“;lt’h“:fi“fil “Iu"tghh'lmfl»nn holi- | structur: e by these new-made | voracious than in summer, helps swell | and form, It should however be added | Come huntin' the wren, says Robin to Bob- | say that they look like a pair of negro | £IFEY FIETE FRUAE 5 & SAME O CREI esto perpetuate theirown servitude: | tho Irish midwinter throng. Jackda for what good there may be in it that | = bin; ; minstrels. }n is alll vory well to thinle || 7 SODR O 1T O, SECTs S e ties of o luter day raised as exquisite | quite as at home in ancient towns that asido from profuseand extraordi- | Come huitin’ the wren, says Richard to | of Edwin Booth posseasing tho ideal | €103 Wik " toclistionto it st bo=s architectural monuments to enlightened | mouldering ruins, proud of their stution @ hospitality to kind and degree, an | 1tobi > o face of a hamlet, and of Barrettas an 5 & e o | greed and tyranny; and both set'decp or | and manners, AETERL T, e G showing of gift-making to | Come luntin' the wren, says Jack Tilaone; | embodiment of diguity, but that is their Y‘!" "f“"'!'l‘ "r““,”‘ o ived *‘“ th > Tho | high 1 demesnes of as magnilicent | foreign government or home rule, have | ser 8, tepunts- and itradesmen, as: | Como huntintthe wroen, anys gyery onel aspoct on the stage, where their lack of [ York, and the few he was in that aspect, The| AL 1and cultivated beauty as can be 0 do than any other th 0o 1 arity fothe poor,is made; a | The w i r, according to stliness is not observable, and whoere | W Jupanimacy. straits and priva- | found by man: moors of darl, dreadful g tho dr ot charity which though seldom refused, | the superstition, 1t must be found; its umes do not consist prinei- | O} g _*,“g"l‘ll’{’}”' 0. tions of fully | blackness and sterility; slaces of Treland, and ¢ ally uf Ire- | bears too many scourging reminders 1 little bo. be-ribboned and shiny sillc hats and plaid ,‘”“g"_‘ BinC I}lqu\n»'-ll\ d to ,-n‘x to t‘l‘\la 1,000,000 of her | gurgling, seething, v a | lnnd’s winter, a save bot- | with it 1o strike one spark of gratitude led in o rush yor hung from a . e 3 i ””glf‘l‘l:‘“\’l_{ '“M'h\hlul illix‘x‘” it 'wfiynud ) ? Frelind 5 solo fuol, and her prohistoris | ter than desolation complete. Their | in the consciously-wronged Irish life ! h thisstrange hing | 1-shayen faces ¢ ( ) e a0s, ad had, seldom on /a8 forests which stand upright and perfect | complaceney as they gather upon eastlo | and heart. In the cities, throngs surge alms-gi r aloft, hordes of | jops, mnm\ d by long use of pe 'A“'”\"“ o Bl - \\il-‘*.L atifiod to 5 000 inhabita beneath the mire; bridge of greatest | walls, the shts of cr o | and crowd with elation or despair in | ¥ ¢ ie to their uniqueness. Booth looks som- | Bear this ; Jut Jou ““)”LI"hlerxm it, are also in their direst sense and | age and quaintest arch; lonesome,pailid | ruins, or v fthin tho lofty wi their faces, as with us, But nowhere \‘Vl:lmm fie wren through frost and suows: | bro and roticeat, while - Barrott is still eurad himishasdg) a“nlg cross, cut clear and sharp against the | gloomy towers, —as if 5 | else on this earth does Christmas-t We hunt ‘ll‘x W ln-« m; ‘uwhw.ynlmnll s stifl and crved, These ors I) At o ot j'l) \'m tVOb 4 A i hazy brown mountain-side; deserted | of ~comprising all -~ the “Marlk g such shuddering, et down and s ool gy g Looula nob g0t thas youpg man (Rl ing one even in the Irvish winter; [ 8 hding in wretched solitude | leys” of the air, win for them a certai pitcous poverty to stand, b A.nu home xl... olly tro est of showing off, and it 18 not to bo llli \(‘ ru| ,m.‘: of the play nn'd and the blessed hold that Christmas- | and decay; ruin of splendid | admiration and respeet. The sparrow | and hunger for the glories of home- \ II-L-'-‘I« in Imhl( h ~llnm~ presumed for an instant that they aim m“" m'l‘(‘]“l‘i“})m:' ‘::Hun uhu.unur we;i time has tak upon the universal | proportions and antiquity screamed | is hereas it is everywhe windows open, or the wonders of shop- at homes, and ave given | a¢ {ho personal ‘exhibition in thus con- u persan. vas grati- g IROFASNR 8l LR ZEapN ; h R T T 6 a0l whan niGht somes. hola uah e ey fying to my pristi® pride, but mortifys christian world heart, blended with | Over by daws and halfl hrouded in | vicious, hickering windowsiablaze with “h‘““‘ RARNL o ltos bvar tho 05adt wransing: ooy a | Apicuouslywalking in Brondway inglo my lnnocent vanity regarding that marvelous compensative power of and I 1d there and all about, | graceful host ver-husy lives, ately-forsglien humans nEvEr | WA 5 108400 13 ¢ S i i " a1 ower in brightest or savagest mid-winter | blackbirds, seem to make of Ir Qwr or known. l\wgw\ ('* ! i ndr qum p.m’n f" describe. : Blanche lluumv(ll. my own fame, utilizing tho most trifling pessibilities | days, glimpsos of Ireland’s matchless | the oontincut’s blackhird haunt. They | den, forlorn, bare-footéd in’ mid-winter, | I OVgls 0f thissirango castom cuns | Cucrent Lit o: che Roose- The Prima Donna and fer Peta, for human joy whieh the Irish natuse [ green.. When one experiences it all | feed chisfly upon the berry of the hu with the slush and suow fr nos e "}:“H i ;“ i [""’ “““h Yelt, ono of our us A n girls, Manpleson’s Munuu 5t The prima DOSSCSBER; A provides a quality | and endeavors to hold it in a single | thorne and holly, but never upon the i dless ficsh, they are ten times ;] 19 “'i'\ “" Rk ‘h ARE: "L" i i to hd one of the most interesting | donna gancrally had u parrot, a pet dog of Ghuistim cheor which is | thought, the certain reflection comes mqu hawthorne Though full of | te 1 soul-Holding monuments w.i EiY00 SLEiiO L SURDORTAL, RtRECRYR 15 in Furope to talk to. It is doubt- | or an apg, whic » loves to fimm- flo ‘rising o those whose | thatin noland where one may wandey f wonderful cecentricities, th re ever > surpassing inhumanity of govern- Wi W g, § Tilton v CWPI€ | ful if u golebrity has apped on the | tion, and earrics w r W vor she gften surprising o thoso whose |4 (i) stmas-time can there bo found |'songless in winter here. Along with ) christian man. UYL RR Qs other side during the last te s | goog, Tlma di Murs vover, trave ives are measurably filled | gy 0n surpussing blending of, and such | these are the wren and robin., The i 18 undoubtedly an almost 1 4 ALH v-‘)mm she hus mot met. Sho v ed with o menager Her immense with bounteousness —and content. | gpiiking contrast in, the grandly deso- | former has grown into the heart of man | universal reverence for the move sucred EDUCATIONAG Y0Py QPOW)G ‘ope. She s | Newfoundland dog, Pluto, dined with Of the out-door life of the Irvish win- | late ip scenes of wonder and marvelous > v land. hardy, | side of the Christmas-tide, and [ truly IDVOATION! reminiscence P « She has | her overy day. A cover was laid for ter, where it can be separated from the | sweetnessand in scenes of winsom ve, it is friendly yet timid withal, | know that at least the Irish peasantry v, Dr. W, B of Memphis, has ac- | been feted in every o ul, and \Ilr is | him as for hér, nud he had learned to light. But your heart would faston to 1 while secking & nearness to the | have an innate reverence for all that fs | ¢épted the ciiancellorship of the university | the only person living who | eat a fowl from a plate without dropping tho lowly things of Ireland, instead of | haunts of men is, @s with some human | snered and good, Christmas is not geu- | ¢ . ; tended o bhall at Battenberg ace [ any of the meat or bones on the fHoor, or o4 what is impressive It would | souls, most piteously alone, when ol observed in its highund holysange |, The Gceorgin legisiature has appropriated | without the previous formal ceven on the tablecloth, The intelligent afid tervor, a Burroughs o a Thor- | ¢4 chapm in the little places: the tiny | est those whoso love is & vo- | in Ivelund, It iva timg for much thay [ Wi s miilien dotlaes for, the publi schools. | tion. - Sho has some litorary repu animal hated traveling in the dog truok, Ban might furgish o winsoma volume. | hurns and dingles; the little struggling | land, the Christmas-t; Htragedy 15 tender and \\‘.nlhy but also gye fo N will be' 110 ,’“‘,_\W forun oducation | Putit s not this to which she owes her | und he would ‘resort to any deviee in Phe Trish roads, though humid iith | hamlets, where all who give them life | the wren” is one of the most grotesque plorgble gxeoss, | raflon the | test fc ars in Gieorgia, remarkable position. She has a genius | order to join his mistress in her firsg- wet from froquo nt rains, dusty from a | must know of you as you pass or linger; | yot pathotic lm“'"')‘b yneus the s el A TR evalywhe nand | tition or the Harvard Glge club and | for HHIH' al faseination, — ‘The person | class eaviage. Once he sprang through Wasl? ional cold and bracing | the q\mln\h\%lq chepels; the low- voofed | olden ustoms children of | procurable; and a tiny of the jinio gl ig be pormpitted tomako § wost- | i ¥ Bh. heard from whohns cver ve- | aclosed window and cut himself se- e " d and DI | i lowdy foll and, if you loved | the pogsuntr R cllaleu of Iistletos conspicuously T | S i BT gnten B tho fuoutty. | sbived Blatohd Rovataly, Myroovar \vl-'l but hio gained tho companions weather, o whitened from center 10 | yho road, fiold and sky, the Iiish birds | dearly loved of all. 1t lives in under- | the homes of the more favored classes. | Lhe Tollowiig” iékforiincos fwo promised: | ghe kad a kifkek of always knoving (hi S8 (e Geveted di Murska, wall with the frost of early morning, | of an Irish mid-winter, brush and hedges, and beneath the ivy | Rich or poor, catholic or protesiuut, Naw Youk, Decembor 33; Philadelphin, De- | pight person. It she " wants o thing hv most eXy ]l\" of l% ave ever a source of exhiliration and Starl 3 in myriads, They | of castle walls, feeding upon the stacks | every family wil ssogs o Chrl hlaber 861 saausth, Docomaer M ne, sho immediately meets the per- | Murska's pots were the parFbtd, — On delight. Here one will sweep up and 3 where, re oarne’s | and paddocks and even about the doors s-hlock” “of & ash, is the Brooklyn's special committee on industrial | 500 Who can be of use to her. Pei |-\r‘ ata hotel in Birmingham, England, » starling \vuhiluiwus--lcs.s wail of, *'I | and ~thatches, The great aflc av, 3 in the | education reports to the board of education | L&l about he ,l{m ‘(m-..:m- her e the re W i ks the kid ofu f o oan't get out!” *‘Ican’t get out!” It is | shown by the people can any d sh peat banl® and bogs. This is to | In favor of Leaching sewing in the public | indiscretion. She doubtless conquer .1 valuahle h h,, which thi to the eye the brown walls of its side | JH\* 8 VRRYY e 3 B ) B ! ' ; 0t 55,000 irl Tl > gl vl 1 D X y W o y within a half dozen years that they | seen along the roands, wheve, pe 3 Ireland as the Fule-log to lugl and | schools, There arcabout 35,0 1sin these' | Sardou, and he said will make hotel-k 7 ). The hotel climbing like delicate russet pires to | have remained all the year. They | upon window ledges, or even coming | it !ml'nshl‘:u,]ll’ for the o coming | Sehools., Tho above cominitido has existed | you; I will write o play with you.” Bhe rima donnn wers where the way 15 lost in the hazy edge | formerly only came when the sparrow | confidently into the interior of cabins, | of every heart: the home may owu. | Hv2, 400 ‘,'““\m, ! yoars, aud has acted de- | s about thirty, and very handsome. slways of the most nlarmiug propore of & brown-g A Millet, with | departed, and the naturc-wise Irish | tho boggnred, starved ponsantry may | Passing the Clwistmas at home, is a | "PLe yulo. corporation eonsists of twenty —— tions. She had the most extruordinaty his 20 of rude still- [ peasant eyeing their rushing ingather- [ be seen dividing with this trusting win- | sentiment an@ #determination morve im- | member 1st be Connecticut clergy A Moist and Salty Scene, whims, and when afriend, in ordeyp 9 R 7 o S P R P et ul)uul‘llhu |l<.|l1:i. mlnlx‘n und;:d lml-hu.,r fllclr]rvuxlx\l_\' {uu(l. But the | pressive and unvarying, save with the » others six are elected by t ‘utes’ London letter to the | show the effect of parsley upon ‘F"u"ro!s, 28 ‘ d ruins, would savagely mutter, *‘The | robin repays all, t the approach of | [rish nobility, than in any other land B v s’ standing, two are | D York that M Lo one of hep ¢ this soonio reach en canvass. Here an | aivil take the same, for it's winter that's | fair weathor—and its welcome prophe- | 1 kuow. And on Christmas eve itselt s the governor and lieutenant gov- srformanc s had son: | 10 KI5, num:ng Would aatidd t'i‘nns"afl! Ivish winter rond swails along and | wid ’em!” Beneath the cottage thatch, | cies never fail—it mounts the limb of | there cannot be found among the lowly state of C Quneinens, "l"“ the | gidop, seuniary sueceys, o 'f.v | consolate lady but a post-mortem ex- through an avenue of beech, yew aud | in lonely round-towers, and even in | topmost homeside tree, 1ifts its thank- | clusses a human soul not & lost one e fho prosident aud seere- | ¢y, g papiobéntation on Friday | smination of the remains, This was b sycamore, where twilight always lies, [ €8ves, their winter numbers seem | ful head, and pours from its sha that is not there or sometime there | ™ Apout twer tudents will acograpa Will not be the last after all, *“Durini | Glasgow,and the examination was mad where now the brown leaves eddy and | EFeater thun those of summor, as they | throatu flood of lute-like notes. Then | within the glow and warmth. With the | tio Vale Gee and Ban o slybs on thefr the enti’acte M. Gounod fell on his v y and no doubt learnsd swirl, and spring watchingly from dark congifegate within easy observation by | Irish h):fi will gy, “Faith, the robin’s | humble lage vh and | ern trlp durjng the Tolidays, Beginnmg | knees in the diva’s dressing voom and | Scotch practitioners. Finding in the ek, & ‘I LI X _A ). ; W homc:lduv'flllfl.l'{.mtlsldl: lvluldm I'ull of | calling the sun!” and Irish hearts are always with the peasantry in the south with a doncert on Christmas night at Cleve- | shed salt teavs, erying, ‘Do not leave | purrot’s maw some green matier for corners upon passing cavts or humans, life the winter long, gay and bri glad, A ‘ X p and ~ west, the *Christmas mold, lana, seven performances will be given, in- | me, Juliette! If you go I shall be in the | Which they could not satisfoctorily mo- and the bare old limbs above ery out in | even almost tivesowme with their thr Of the Irish Christinus-tide itsell, | or huge, long candle, weighing | fudiag copeorts at Chicago Bt Baul and | ituation of a fathor, who soes his [ count, they cume :, aftor a long deliboras- their wild keens for tho dead year, | like calls unld impish mimicry, they | there is little in the life and customs of | from one to two pounds, if its price | (8GR 00¢ SRV RHL D6 ERIeHAOA BY | firiaan.days' old child perish before his | tion, to the conclusion thut the hird There, they ereep down together, cross- | S4'Y° uutyml y for :h: che un’»l | the great and powerful, better than the | needs be begge d or stolen, is a pri 5 | tions during their visits to these cities, eyes. Come back to me, Juliet had been eating the green wall paper 1up aa thow pas & huddled mass of | | Kinter enlivening, but many a meanest echo of the genuine Christmas | requisite for Chriscmas eve, It will There is again to be a quarterly .mmmm Swear you will return!” Thereupon | of the sitting room and that she arsenio d thatch ror yond: e '] these b birds are found within the | cheer which so pervades and distin- | simply i ocably be had. The bog- | with Princeton colloge, as well as one named | Mme. Patti also burst into teavs. The | contained in the coloring matter kad and thatch, Over yonder you can see a | peasant’s Christmus pot. The sweetest | guishes the whole people of old Eng- | deal block is fived; the doors are flung | after it. The Princeton Coll Bulletin, | atmosphere of the dressing room be- 1sed its aeath. The cost ol this opin- chalky way winding and gleaming | of all birds to poet ordrenmer, thesong- | land. Tlu‘j they are revelry and mirth | wide open for friend, mendicant, or s"wru)‘gu be_issued, u-ml.uma_mumuuuxm camo moisty and steamy from oxcess of | ion wns threo guincas, which Mile, i through dreary wastos of boggy peat. | thrush, is also heve at Ci ’ . | and astounding drinking, but thoy have | encmy to enter with cead mile failte (a | Of PADers, roports of public or spectal lec- | lyohry mation, In a voico quivering | Mursici paid withoul & murmur, Lu;:rl og ’humdh;d(lon [retreate along | in them fi“ but a gad mockery “of the [ thousand times ~welcome); the mam- [ (7o HOLes op orgnal work college work, | With omotion Mme. Patti said: *Cher | nyd yrustees of G -~ TH3 N NEREE S - M he life and shine of u suuny day, | peace and good will to men which best | moth candles is lighted to burn out, but | p; repbiacs ) » ¢ rrand maitre, je reviendrai.' T \@ trustocs of Cornell have approprigted side, loosing itsolt in witching dofiles, | {t'comos to hedge, Or-twig, or laaflces | glorify the duy and Ume, For while | never bo oxiiuguished; and whilo thero ;,ff{"i{’fié‘.‘.'fi"{.’.’é Tosutey ity Eahecst adier, B A niecr, o aloash M | 880,003 for w uew ehowical shoaeiy or suddenly veaching the edge of preci- | brauch of sycamore, and ever near to | that sortof cheer is in \ae midst of | is constant going aud coming it is | partwents, lobbies announcing the happy nes "“flnt‘.u 040 compleie the | SRR Christmas mood. But nature’s hand is a lov- e R RGREe unfortunate condition of those to whose ntor can only be an added dan- on and over inereasing swells of upland, Beyond, another threadda mountain-

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