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THE OMAHA DAILY BE HERE IS Pev 222 Avre through taking their Annual Inventory in all departments, and are making Reductions on nearly Two Hundred Thousand Dollars worth of the Already Cheapest Dry Goods in Omaha. THE PUBLIC can make $25,000 by investing in the goods to be placed, to-morrow, on BARR'S Counters at Reductions specially made for their rand Annual Stock-Taking Sale,Open this Week BARR’S RELY UPON UPON THEIR REPUTATION and WILL LET THIS BONANZA SPEAK FOR ITSELF. STOCK-TAKING I}.\Rt'..\.lNS \]ll(l\ TARING B\H AN STOC T \l\l\'(; B\l f\l\S STOCK-TAKING BARGAINS \H!(l\ TARING BAR CADNS ISTO[‘K L\'\I\l B RCAINS. N AFES6 TTandkerehitor Department. Fan's Illmk o Doy tents s L arti Baris Gonts® Faraishing Doy % live Dopar(y T30 aozen o Linen Handker s | ey Ranke Atfic per ¥ard—120n sards \ Lace, 1 to |2 dozen Gents o Scotsh Wool Gloves, |10 do ¢ Al-Wool Cashere | i t 15 inches wide, \\uu~ « ||II~4 a A ok Barr's Linen Depavtment, ) winted Linen Handkerchiefs, ) i ) r tay ay yard e Loe fornia Goit Gloves, | # 40 soo Linail Gloves, 1he por pale, 1 Eide . yards Hambure Fabroid A NG 1K ¢ ped Halt 8 e orel Kid Glo e per 200 yard= G- halt blea AR R ATk T ¢ Ay b L woe T, A Tia: worth 1 | \ » 2 e N 3 o 1 \Wool tlbves, pate, Linch halt bleached Table Damask, woTt ik ‘ +iuch fine Huck 1 ‘ 5 0 B Sk anan, “P\: ~w.u,.|“;fi<"(‘\'v'f” i xuv'\ i ‘I Iv"{”“.; 'v’ | I\;“":;h | ”‘| ~{xw sie ° N Barr®s Notion Department. ";m..~ Silx D partment. Apron Ch e Gingh i ¢ per ,um i Wings Bird<anag Feathers at nuf Bare's Black Goods Department. | aozen atsam viv pit { s ! Black Avmure Royal, oue regalar quality, #1 | P8 DYGER 008 A | Bares Dress Gooids Departments |y eceg oxtin e ATl Weol French Sateen at 0 ol el Halt Wool hoves, 10c per 3e; veduced 1rom 1. ya o S 1 1l Al Wool French Sute mel, 10e per vards 40 ple inch Halt Wool Tycoon Rens, : 5 Ll i 5 by rivbed, fu colors 3 N s 5 d 3 ench Sateen at wool ribhed hose, in black s Fla ol SInTg U et i i Barv’s Flannel Department., fuch ALl Weol se S QUL ot A » ot vegular made i ) ineh Wool Tricot Mistuves, v tH Ll kiU etk ahd I (olored Velvetcens, e o A It s 3 /. a ~Iln\.‘-Im',\hm.:l)\;»l. We have o fow camel’s hair o i varl w.w # i ; 0ol Nowmarkets ui ush s g eio” e Haviiod Cuan a Lass medicated Sca ‘l\ swien #1253 | 4 pte 4] ‘ 3 2 5| 0 stweaves at Bary and 31503 1 Y 1o close BY ORDERING immediately, through our mail order department, you can secure the same bargains as if here in person. All goods delivered free of express charges for 48 miles. Send usyour name if you wish our catalogue. ! FIRST WEEK of BARR'S ANNUAL STOCK-TAKING SALE. Don't Niss the Bargains : 16th and Douglas Streets, Omaha. - o | lodge him, ana sent tho disciplinca | tog ut not until they had killed | in the fleshy part of the Mojay OSSP THER CREEN RO other society actress whom people ave a character. narmoniously HUMAN BURNT OFFERINGS. |+ ops, erippled and docimated, flying | several Indians. They had” ossayed 0 | commencing at the calves of his logs GOSSIP OF THE CREEN ROOM tatking of. ~ Some one suid the other | painted 5 au advontogh back t the forts along the Missouriand | escape, but both their” horses weve shot | and continuing to his neck. - day wilen her prospeets were being dis- » actors,” but I think the danger T the Platte. He Imwhed in diabolie: }h'um lvlmh-xl- tlu*x‘x]\, :llx_n\ lur\ a full t‘Ym” . ‘*Some discharged loads of powder . cussed: I they would give her a boy ies i stroying of the proper relu- ndians | exultation at the frantic rotreats of his | hour they kept the fierce Apuches oft. | i naked flesi, as they did also | Fact and Fancy Sketches of Stage | pavt, put her in a picturesque mascu- | tionship hetween the scenery and. st Elicatediover By gty L bluc-coated encmies. All sueh und The Chiricahuas were in a_delirium Vorys, who, in all probubility, hnd and Foyer. line costume, and let her sing tenor, i TS T Ty TRy in Arizona. takings only resulted in rich har s | of excitement, and dismounting, it | been scared to death by this time, as he she’d make $500,000.” For Mrs. Bluine | i enti Il else is subordinate. of blood, plunder and scalps for » | seemed as il nothing short of tearing | never uttered a sound _or made a move, % is u vocal phenomenon. [t is not very .(Lu. 1 am afraid there is a tend- A SOLDIER'S TRAGIC DEATH. | wild myrmidous of the fierce Apache | the helpless Mojave and the soldier | and they left him for Hassabotch. They | BOOTH-BARRETT. ARRANGEMENT | uncommon to seo o man ably to sy Gyt s 00 THETuetoR Lo s et king. limb from limb would allay their terri- | would snatch up the burning tus falsetto soprano, cvery minstrel com- | roundings; he is merely used as a foil But so much for Cochise. In July, | ble animosity. However,the chieftain, ks and apply them to his l¢ BEMS, | o b ntic Life—Y : Mrs. Blaine | PBRY has one™or more, but a w o benutiful scenery [ ay ligure In Company With a Stoical Guide He { 1874, a band of marauding Apaches | 10 less a personage than Cochise him- | face and br ud in afew moments | A Bomantic Life—Young Mrs. Blalne | ap1¢ 10 sing a true tenor is very ancom- | on which lovely costumes can be ex- is Burned at the Stake—Horribla hldm]u,dm\ a lot of government stock ats| self, mwl'prc.l @’ consultation, which | his whole form was black and blisteved and the Cavd She Will Be—An mon, and Mrs. Blaine can do'it and do | hibited, and 1° was nota little afraid T el Iagictediion ort Larned, on the Zuni river. Gen- ended with the foreseen result—they | in the most sickening manner, and yet, Pixley's New Iiss it well. She is handsome, too; tall, { that when v ared with our com- QXLUroR; LBES cral Schofield was incommand of the | Wereto suffer instant death—to bo | despite this unutierable oxcruciation, Act blonde, well made, and with a certain | monplace stage settings our audiences the Vietims. department then and ordered ummedi- I)ul:uml to a crisp, theu and there! the Mojuve never once cried for merey dash and gallantry of manner that | would find sor i = ate pursuit, and a troop of cavalry under Captain Ralston, bound hand and | but continued his awful chant of dunh > would go well with a male part, and [ mght bo pleased with our acting, but Captain Ralston—I will call him by | foot, was moved toa convenient place | until all was over. Booth-Barrett Arrangements. would beyond a doubt attract. Butone | they would demand something in addi- Fortunes of th: Stake. that name—started after the bold red- | near these terrible scenes, and was “This horrible torment was kept up Chicago Tribune: Mr. 1 snce | Of her managers and backers said { tion. Luckily I found my fears ehimer- CAcHisg, Aviz, Jan. .—(Special | skins. guided by a Mojave scout, known | compelled to witness them' to their | for the period of an hour, and Hassa- | Barrett” proposes to bring out in Chi- | shrewdly “Ther is no sense |ical,and 1 féol und my comrades feel “Correspondence of THE | |—It. has | to the soldiers as Hassaboteh. close. o 9 y il i botch and Vorys were burned out of all | cago next October a new play by playing the ace when you've | that such ecomiums as we have rned fallen to my unlucky lot to chronic for two days thoy rode hard, unre- He said that it would be impossible | semblance of humanity. 1llinois author. he piece (as at pr the = king aund in ¢ been bestowed on us as actors, and AL By ks 3 Cnrone® | mittingly alniost, and_yet it was ' long | for bim to convey a suitable idea of the *Vorys was certainly dead long before | ent named) is *The Heir of Rone your hand. The tenor v and value them as such more highly ono of tht most horrible and revoling | gigy ) ioto the Chiricahuas, but from | demoniac aatag chise’s | that refief came to the Mojave, but his | vy the writer is Mr. Willinm | the maseuline dress are all very well any poor words of mine will ex- incidents of all our Indian wars—the | )0 pumerous indications, Captain Ral- | ediet was rec ¢ his fer J nerves finally lost their sensibility, and | v, who is known as the author of vturn, but what’s the ‘use of butaing to death of a private soldier by | ston knew that the ponies of the Indians | vindictive 'nllm\ 3 he no longer shrunk from the fire | “The Itajuh,” cug g 3 2 vy the value of the sym- — “a band of Chiricahun Apucheson the | were sorely jaded and he was confident The desert air was made to resound | brands applied to his body. | House of Mauprat.” Mr. rpoLt ¢ pathy J.hu\ B Y TS Mario as n Stage Lovor. desort plaius of Arizonn during the | of overhailing them somewhere upon with their unearthly yells and shouts “But at last his indomitable spivit { My, Booth will tempovarily di Sl s scapes 'S mumm o her? Argonaut:—About 1850 the famous o tor o gt e the broad desort of the Gila. If sueh | Of savage joy; and in less than half an | succumbed. and with a piteous moan he | theiv artistic part D, f el v She doesn’t want | te Mario was nt St. Petersburg sing- nternecine strifo that was carried on ¢ Lo % o5 b Tonce the only alternative 8 ve, two short black | sani to the earth, among the ashes and | cinl one will continue. — Mr, Booth, « in comedy now ~l..- vs her ex- in o company which numbered, by the government agwminst that trucu- | ro them was to » the dangerous | stakes were driv v s, | glowing emboers of his funeral pyre. | the sume time, will open in New Yor nee of life has been so hard and | among others, L he and his drugh- lent s king, Cochise during the | torritory in all haste, ere Coehise could | and Hassabote G Then a5 if the demon of hades were re- | i “Macheth,” aud it is expected that um that she can’t pm\ anything but | ter, then only o girl, but who afterwird yeurs 72 ] arshal his faithful braves. T all clothing, wero fust \null ‘-u;;ul'vly to | joicing over the brutul dead, the | Mme, Modjeska will share the honors | tragedy. And that's very well for the o the ated Mdlle, De Caters., * The story, which is vouched for in the imed in amidst the g them with thongs of buffalo hide. Apaches renewed their dissonant | with him Laudy Macbeth, Thi . Perhaps she doesn’t consider ay, in some opera, and during the {nutest particulars, and which is on | huis by the Apaches mecant ..4.11,,,\‘4 Then, for a brief space of time, every | clamor, and again began their devilish | however, is doubtful. At the elose of i nevertheless, that when sunl duo of passion, to her amazement minutest particulars, and ch is on G or of total anuihilation to the valiant | Avache was busy gathering the dead | antics about the dying warvier, Mr. Burrott’s Chiengo engagement ho o weeps on the stuge the audience | wlignation she he Mario, while record among tho archives of the war | ¢, cactus - and - acactu - stalks, which | TSgug the horrible, soul-chilling work | will take his new | {¢ sucoossful) e tha mothe she ¢ s whiisper so low that the department, was related to me yester- | - At last the Gila desert wa ched, | wbounded plontifully thore, never rest= | was all over ut last, and poor Vorys and [ the Brondway theater, New York, [ v abandoned by s reached only her own day, by a well known and popular of- | and expecting to shortly overhaul the | ing until huge piles were heaped about | Hassaboteh, whose faultless forms, had, | My, Booth and Mme. Modjeska w ntural 2} cava! Min bellal Ama me! fo ficer of the nrmy, whose name is wi cnomy, the cavalry, with Captain Ral- | their naked vietims. not more than an hour or two befores | on tour. ith he Ihat’s worth a lot of money. | 5o offended was she that after leaving held at his urgent request, as the tervi- | 5ton und Hassobotch at their head, / J 5 had all been agcomplished | gloried in the exurberance of health ¢ When that is over, why it will be full } the ge she refused o listen to the eld at his urgent request, as the tervi G Sog 4 Joc! e hat liar shr| var | ¢ ol 3 N A : Life, timo to work up to the use of her per- | tenor’s explanatic 1 refused to sing A swuck boldly out upon the arid waste. ave that peculiar shrill war | and strength, ley lifeless upon the § : imo 1o work u 1o Lot b s explanation, and refu ) sin ble experience [ am lubuut:ul"c]nlk‘ was About noonduy they veached n | scrcam of his people, and the Apaches | desert—a mass of hot, scorched, steam- go I'r : floating item | 5onul and voeal advantages.” with him again, days afterw: partly a personal one, and he desires stunted chaparral of seragy flourishing their guns, knives and tom- | iug and hideous flesh! at ) anisch is in an insano | N Irs. Bl worlks 1l however, from the w she heard unduo notoriety at this late day. acacia and ereosote, and drawing ahawks, began their torture dance. | Captain Ralston wasdriven that night ud cnd for one | yeijoy «d galley slave under Be- | Mario sing the same duo. und this time Cochise, it will be remembered by the | were slowly jogging around it, Brave after brave fell into tho whirling | and the next day to the Apache strong- who \Hl~,“'}"" l,"', ptisdicoinedy duson wition, an ., when he with . very ugly woman, who had as- readers of the daily papers of ten ye suddonly thoy ware brought to o halt, . | multitude, until the ontire war parly | hold witlin the Mogolion mountains, | of thut city. Chicugo theatrical peop aching, is writing o play in which | sumed the abandoned ., Again did g0, wis the king of tho Apaches, the | —AWoY o the ithward o body of | was numbered in its dizzy mazes. *The | but was ransomed by the goverument l\ln"“'llfl‘rI“i«.‘l“- ;}"":“*‘\\W:J";m\' ] sho will possibly appear in the spring. | tho tenor fill in his ‘wosts” with the ) 3 A0t BA0R6H W0 Timonntan iner seen approaching. | spectacle,” said Captain Lalston, “was | after a short imprisonmént. she played in Ger ) o Pixley's New Kiss Ac SUIC im pitss *Min oarn flercest, most blood hirsty and war-like | oy wero Indianeethere wis no (ie: G PR S IS A The name of 'l'lln"[n ier w mann at MeVicker’s, She was tol 1 (',\:"' .,“,‘,"3 A .|',.“ “\ll;;‘ jo | lo tadorol” ‘The J tood. The of all the red nations bevond the Mis- [ puting that poiut, but whether | countenances of those infuriated and | perished so miserably w 'd as- | the fortunc made by foveign actr Tt bt IR P s Y burning roonly 4 means of sissippi. ‘There is no donying it, this | Apaches, or a war parly of some other | maddeued beings receiving additional | o s ¥ BV i this country, and at once 1 I" {‘nT'm':v‘ )10 YiW e coman | Jeceping himself en train " of yetaining barbarous chieftain was really a re- | womudic wibe, hostile ‘to the Apaches, | ferocity from the appalling discord in ivod on o far ) /in- | studying English, which she rapidly thoro 1o ack, Tho other night the gal. | the emation necessary for the coutinu= markablo man, the superior of Tecum- | und not the governwent, Hossoboteh | which® they mingled their unholy (0% : { Hamlin ser " Ilory of the Groud opera house { his role. #oh, and tho equal of Pontiae or King | us yet could not determine, He could | voi y Mare 5. Y rod siarring: her gk the thine t could ho with the . Philip. He was determined and brave | see their stellated lance-heads glisten- Poor Vorys, he screamed in frantic - Manager Henderson ulso took an inter- ) it cou I th In Hard Luck, to recklessness, intensely lous, a | iug in the sunshine, their foatherod | horror, prajed and begged them o 1's Acid Phosphate. estin her. She went to Mme, Mod- emk their gratitudo to hor, tho | SU Anton Rubinstein is in trouble. natural orator, posscssing & brain of | crests vising and falling like the waves | spare his life, then to shoot him, for a | Relieves indigestion, ds i jeska, who recommended Huery sur-) L0 MAaFE LI BHEIECe 10 806, FID | The czar of Russia has commanded him wonderful fortility and invention. He | of the ocean, and their long hair and | while, but finally his voice died aw - gentus n manugor. Mme. Junisch HTMRY S IR0 0 MERVIGE Rlle I3 to_compose an oralorio on the recent was cruel, treachoreus ana vindiotive, | gaudy raunent daunting in the summer | in o despairing moan and I doubi . h torward acoused the Polish’ ety giouaust, DoSOL thel lon, and | rilrond accident in which the auto- and carvied on his warfare against the | i i whether he was ever conscious after ] aid the mimster to thelad | haying vuined he Wb the outset, e N e ao with a and his wife nearly lost their hves. Wwhite settlers with the remorsolessness | They rvode promiscuously, following | that. v 10 cents for attending to the | ! Lvigo, a8 Savgens was. ponnis [ 18WORL D O WIS BRaML BARS WAL I subject to which only thoe latg of a fiend. There was LR SARY O0R singlo warrior, Who, when | “Stddenly Cochise gave a single, | respiratory apparatus of the church | less v""“““"““"’ slipo: Mad)eelle | LUAKHIRTME, Q8. Rik, AGK DO% 8 5 'd Wagrner, amony all musicians, rous about him—on all so haplcss us to | he reached a point several hundred | short whoop, that rang above all the | organ, “Itain’t properlthat the worldly “E'U“f“"“""-‘- whioh, of courde was | Dasavip b BONC, nde Mits Bivlyy | ould L done justice. The shriek fall into his hands were inflicted the | yards from the motionless and statues- | deafening elamor, and caused an imme- | minded should have all the advantage, | vidiculous s misfor- | 18ugh, but s S lant forget to m of the motive, the crash when the most atrocious barbavities his devilish | que figures of the cavalrymen, uttered | diate cessation of the horrid orgies of | is it? Mme, Janisoh went from one misfor- ASIGILANL SRR TOLER KO IAKS train left the sk, the cries of the mind could conceivo, tho well-known Chiricahus shout of | his warriors. Stooping,he deftly lighted Vo, sir," suid Jobnny vaguol tune 10 angilior: no lass thap five m ',‘ uim.f AR i dieuity o | woundod anid dying and tho wail of tho the period of manhood, when through With the ringing alarm cry of his [ Vorys and the red scout, who at this | should have all the gheerful music, [ With hor. RAUAH. POOTNE K luulu-d LN AeiLR AR \w.hl T aguor splondid themes for Anheritance he became 'the controlling | nation Hassaboteh unslung his carbine, | moment begun to chant the weird and | is it mok ‘her, particularty rioh women | lockad as lf the dongiosk Would ooy stration of a weird and peculiar chief of the Apaches,Cochise had waged | and standing almost erect in his stir- | chilling death song of his nation. o, sir. whom sho could somehow fasoinate. | MR, oL, BY B 200 80088 0/ BiBLeR - What Rubinstein will do with a bloody and successful strife against all | rups, and without waiting for & com- reedily the yellow flames began to | **Neither |le|~1"htlf|.|L the thentre | Once she left America in disgust, but | 88 TEE0F GRUBTRE VA6 BOY ARC (Y his task is an interesting problem. B tavliita amiaxante’ | to the teirls 310 fire. a6 o - o o {ntaratic hould have all tk 1iti A was hired back by a speculative mana- | him before he knew where he was. — nigrants e or mand to five, sunt a ball among the ad- | ereep up through the interstices of the [ should have all the redfive and caleium His companions in the gallery ap- . tory of Arizona. He had sworn | vancing throng, A prulungmf shrieic | cactus stalks toward their prey, who | light, isit? ger only to meet failure once more. iy qox ,!“‘_mhlv 1 Whittier's Infernal Machine. n his life and the reputation of [ came from the Apache party, and n | stood seemingly as unmoved as images [ “No, sir.” Her Insanity is attributed to her | plauded enviously. Worcester Spy: Not long after .the his people, that no white man [ riderless mustang, k 1g up his heels | carved from stone, Vorys insensible, I | *“That being sotffed propose to in- [ financial troubles. It is """y."llk"“: Coquelin on American Audioncas. | close of the war of the rebellion @ should ercet his lodge within sight of | und snorting wildly, dashed from out | believe, tothe torments, and the Moj augurate a new era in the dis a- | that it was due to morphine, which she | pPhijadeiphia 1 I have been par- the Chiricahua mountains that over- | the line as his master writhed in his | heroieally chanting in lugubrious tones | tion of the gospel. “No, Johun ate habitually. A strange career, hers. | yiculurly pleased to find that American looked the hurmng grounds of the | death-throes on the desert sands, the song that told he ARt thera | this tin pan‘and put it down in vhe o In childhood n waif, in girlhood a popu- | qudience have come 10 see us, have ap- i Apaches from the duys further back | Of course the result was a pitehed | was no escape from death. lar, When I come tothe pass: lar idol, in middle life the wife of Count | plauded us, and then have come again | home, then in Amesbury. When the than history runneth, and, up to the | battle, and to abbreviate, it is not nec- “It was indeed a horrible spectacle | wa the end of the sermon, [ Von Arco, an Austrian nobleman who | i) see us, despite the fact that we have | cover was removed u pecu dnu\ of the commencement of the final | essary to stato that the aley w the fires growing brighter and fiercer | describing the yawning gates | 18 at this day prominent in the diplo- | gftored them no elabor tage decora- | jron points was visible, His n ar, his outh had been kept inviolate. | routed with heavy losses. The Apaches | and throwing the shadows of the half- | of the bottomless pit and the blue flames | Watic corps at Washington, ‘That mar- | tions or mountings. Our scenery has [ . ") beloved adopted daugh res of venturesome settlers had pe seemed to spring out of the ground, and | naked Apaches in grotesque shapes far | leaping from the seething sulphur, you | riage was in every way unhappy. The hm'n of the simplest, or costumes sim- . trated these proseribed limits for sily had the soldiers da contend with | over the desert, asthey leaped and | just touch a watch to the contents of | Actress was prac ically exiled with a } such as have helped to portray more . Teh or permanent lence only to find | them longor their fate would have been | danced and sereamed in wildest delight | that pan, That yellow stuff is the gen- | pension. There could be no divoree, | fylly “the c cters represented. I af, don’t touch it! Tt's some dre their 7r!n'us there, for Cochise was as [ total aunihilation. and exultation around their suffering | uine article of sulphur, and when the | for husband and wife were Roman | think the tendency to over elaboration plosive thing those soutierne watohful as an eagle, and the horrible As it was, some ten or twelve wore | captives. smell begins to work “‘1 through the | Catnolics. Gossips smd of Countess | of geen and oyer gorgeousness of | sent to kill you! Don't touch it!” To butcherios written up against his nawe | killed, and'Captair Ralston, a private i\ spot upon the great | floor, it'll do more soul-saving than | D’Arco that she was luxurious, sellish, | postuming is, from what [ hear, as ap- | pacify her 1t was buried decp in the are number!ess, Y seldier, named Vorys, and Hassabotch, | desert of the Gila appeared like some | three weeks’ revival meetings, Now be | mercenary and careless of what sorrow | payent in this country ason the other rdén. The next day’s mail brought The forces of the United States bad | the Mojave, were taken prisoners. uugodly arena or pandemonium, where | careful, Jobuny, for you ve got a heap [ She brought the families of her victims, | 5ide of the Atlantic, and itisatendency | a letver from friend, saying he had not infrequently beeu quh\ to subvert | Cuptain ' Ralston was knocked | the attendants of Satan had assembled | of moral responsibility on your shoul- | If this be true, she has expiated her ill- | which [ consider contains an element of | sent au inkstand quaintly modeled from the r-lzn of the fApache king, and | from his horse by rifle to perform their wicked and infernal | ders.” doing. Her descent from splendor was | danger for the drama. Not that [ would | southern balls and northe bullets “man, ‘iumur) encounters took ‘)l.cu' that struck him in the side, producin : ———— g was as sudden as her rise, A street wall'| counsel a return to the rude simplicity | picked up from the famocus Tennessee but e maintained his impregnable po- | however, but a slight wound. He m: A ne of terrible torture soon The use of Angostura Bitters excite- | ot the beginning of her caceer, she 13 | of earlier g ' in = this mm“ fiel From its ignominious gition among the ghostly ana une no resistance when the Chivicahuas ran | began. The frenzied Apaches heated | the appetite and keeps the digestive ors | now dying in an asylum, respect—far it, burial it was resurrected toa post of fl ored lc(‘e;uau of the serrated Chiri- | upon hum, the steel barbs of their lances red-hot | €ans in order. ,l) i. B, Siegert & Young M Blaine. sider that nistorical o J honor on the poet’s antique deslk, and uas sgainst every attempt to dis Hassabotch and Vorys were taken | iu the seething fire aud sent them deep | Sons, scle manufacturers. Chicago Times: Mrs. Blaine is the | of cost'mes is often an entias | still graces the garden voom, smull but heavy box cuine by express from Lookout mountain to the poet’s eried out in tevror: *Oh, Uncle (