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THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: _MINISTERS AND MARRIAGE Mss, Honry Ward Boocher's Advioo to Matri- monial Binders, ARE CLERGYMEN PARTICULARLY CAREFUL Js it Not Possihle That Ministers Could Greatly Redoce the Number of ‘ # Divorees? - What is Thelr Draperies, 4 ass and onyx tables, Responsibility? k . ) | Curtains, Parlor chairs, Hall chair. Reading chairs, | 1f the present generation could realize how | Portieres, their ancestors lived r their pecu B toms, their quiet sober habits—how stupld | ik gearfs, and undesirable such a life must rto | ull who have any taste for the 1ifé or genteel sociely of the present day! What & contrast, with the hurry and bustle, | 1o, 4 g the. continunl excltement, the constantly | [attan chairs, Larce comfortable rockes g changing fashions, and the extravagant en | I' I'\ & tertainments now so common! What! Only | lattan rockers, one weekly paper! No reporters to look | | h 3 - Sl and report the shorteomings of | Child’s chairs, Corner chairs, ] B their neighbors or tell of murders, suicides iy iv divorces, or the business dishonesty of the | * ‘Kids'” rockers, Divans, town! What a life it must have been, with e i Sofas, out sufficient entery among them all to | “Kids'"” half high chairs, ish and indulge in such > Leather lounges, s of that each individual selfishly | Costumers, - : claiming the right to keep their own | Corduroy lounges, vithin the narrow limits of their own fami- | Mahogany parlor chair Cretotne 150REEY Yies. How sorely was the public, the sews LAl ne lounges, hunters, defrauded! What could people find | Maple parlor chairs, Nothing better can be found for a home present than an article of furniture. Rug lounges, to talk about when one small sheet “eould carry all they knew? | Inlaid parlor chairs, Our stock, this season, is by far the largest we ever carried and our building at present, Tapestry lounges, But now, what changes have been wrought 5 { 3 i 2 Hall chests, Instead of one weekly newspaper, we may | ¢~ P is filled to its utmost capacity. b, g almost cxpect one cvery hour. Thepower of Gilt parlor chairs, I y 3 v Hanging hall racks, the press has brought us into close communi- | 15 & Iaving been obliged to buy a new stock during the months of October and Nov ! i % eation with the whole clvillzed world, ana | P'arlor lamps, ¥ & Y 4 ’ < ALl ‘ Standing hall racks gives such wonderful opportunities for in- | we found many factories whose fall trade had been light and we bought new styli T g ¢ ereasing knowledge that we should not com- | Imported shades, Umbrella racks, plain too earnestly if it has also given those ¥ many instances from 20 to 4o per cent discount. We therefore have who delight in gossip larger opportunities to | Curio table Intrude somewhat too rudely upon the sweet | i throughout our store, divacy of real home life. Curio cabinets, : 3 A Brass beds, 5 week brings before the pibite Having adopted a policy of marking all our goods at a low margin of profit in plain new topic for discussion or some question to | Fire screens, White iron beds, bo answered through the now unnumbered figures, customers cannot possibly make a mistake in price in buying here. Maple bureaus, newspapers. As this desire to investigate | liasuls, BOEA e 1t woild be strange 1f fiow-and | Goods bought now will be held for Christmas delivery if desired. Maple chiffoniers, Shaving stands, then there should not be some questions that Large wide chiffoniers, The Policy of Price Doubled Qur November Trade, Turkish rockers, Fancy rockers, Silk pillows, a4 Gilt chairs, sh goods in many decided bargains Chiffoniers ) e oo nimportant. to, notice, which on | 112Nging medicine cabinets, All goods marked in plain figures. can hardly vefrain from feeling were manu- : e factured for the simple satisfaction of seeing thl\mg cases, the question in print. % "Tis pl g to sce one's thoughts in | Carpets, e ¢ Small chiffoniers, A{muloru:.- .:...K.I.lx:‘.u\\m.h‘)m?w:-luh-u'l e Rugs : ]d‘r eS 3 1‘ erlC O', < ‘rr e ing some little attention of late, and perl Y Folding beds, deservedly ¢ “'ll h”;\ otad | Parlor cabinets, Sideboards, ; China cabinets, B A R | Dring s Furniture, Carpets, Draperies. - ARBeahotT Buffets, . Beecher 3 y To us thi ; ingular - | Cheval glasses, Bookcases, Dining tables, e nfotmna) : ; 0, Secretary bookcases, D | D or tanlds 1206, 1208, 1210 Farnam St, ST o not know butin the fifty | of Mr. =0 H .adies’ desks, Beech ministry 1 hut two or three i ) nstances where ere was o Card tables, ; B Men’s home desks, or momentary doubt c vith the pro- S . o }vrlu,_y B2l ok iny roariogs he: por- | Hall tables, Music cabinets formed, and these were almost immediately Explained, causing—with the exception of only one instance—not even a “nine days' wonder.” VIn 1880 the Board of Health prepared a “ipogistor,” which it was_expected would be Dy every ofticiant,” and by it they were woverned Beecher always used his “register, and kept several copies on hand. Doing so, Te could could not fail to be arveful. It con- tained 4 long 1ist of questions to be asked b the person oficiating, and the : 1o cac question was to he whitten in the ‘register Deforo ‘the mariage - ceremony s -~ S ) 2 S N e NS ) =) /R s ) ‘))‘ é‘ 1 ) { ) or instance, the date and D 4 how truly their useful- the world. Hi i 5 ‘ 4 s L0t bon danio tho tollowing qhstio 10 u N an . T he world. He put to sea ina wicker boat, | extent. Venerable, haunted and hallowed [ Man,” and T rou ar : . B ko (e sk st anc | 2 53 dopended upon thel MORE OF MAN AND THE MANX | sivine iuiseit up to the mevey of the winds | all, *Haltowed and ' venevable, for St. Pat- | andan hundred_years i Eohaver | nons ek Mondayy HoEtilny-nve vet iy %0 hi oach question.) ormance of those duties. and wi He was driven ashore here on i himself raised the begiinings of the | him who enters Ma e otes | ellers had resided on a farm near Table “Aud now join hands. In the presence of the most inaceessible coust of Man. The | church on whose site the half ruins of s splendid | A viows 1ts Ton | Fock, but ho rotired from uctive work six o and tese withesses you have mrvicd —_— ioly well or fountain' burst from the spot | great cathedral are now found. - Haunted e i i (s - EOD resume . the Ives, one to the other, i 25 . o qi . | where he first gained safe g =A e s i R als | save of his agricultur rests when his f marriages. inister of the gospel, ratify yotract. "Then | Topographical Peatures Seon While Sailing ; l:n \:aulhn:l(ll “.::;u:m:(r 5 ders i astle -'fxl‘.“ H;: :f :.I ey ’xl\“l"xlh un‘;l‘:l‘l’lrx "y netivit 1 illncss ovrtoole i, Ho was 6 vours b ages. 3 ST 2 ¢ : ) old ch and Cross. 4 A 2 oug dle d the misle g gay activitic e an sading mombor. . Oceu 5 Governor Smyth, laying bis hands on their Around the “Dear Little Isle.” . X : s these lofty e Miiond g Nraticsitiolloswd | lompasias Syt il ode sr AR Ror Ban Harbord [l Augaia i dn gleating mombebio ERLHOEIDE o of birth, adde as o civil magistrate, pro* hep followed the wonderful conversion and by these dismantled altars one \wport, o an h Bournamouthi oF |+ ook 2resoy tCHibt chisoh, A ae YT onal tound Vs T R i O | gitsonyiioninstesntiifioftiNALI| | riglton ; tTArariion Ot IIng b oehe IS s s a % ) 'y walls ous o RincTaAhoRs EYeen N ONT S . 2 e e e llo apahoe, while pli vith of B Bihiepp el en i, : | o ird sitting on tho sidewalk of one of | LAND OF MOUNTAIN, VALE AND FLOOD | St. Maughold church were built by this | ¢ 1 tigaaddenhgiConols otitho wed o course. s some true Manx color in | € SO WAL PERINE M Siher S C Mhe same questions wer ked of the d an hear the moanings of imprisoned nge old and wynds of the a around a pile of burning rubbish, got so LR Sl | the principal streets in Brooklyn, late at evangelist: and one of the strangest and | 13 4 ithe, roai et e old dologes tand wymdaiofithe ear the blaze th or clothes caught fin nd entered in the ay on the D 3 BAOL & es of Stanley, the triumph- of the e but Douglas is ess: near the blaze that her clothes caught - fire, Cregistor” bofore tho coremony. After the | MELY, ping bitterly. — Inquiring the most veuerable crosses in Britain, the cross of Germanus' that put to | tially a fashionable watering place the whole | Which burncd b erely about the hips marriage was solemnized the name of the | GHUse, she s aunt had turned her out- | Where Hungry Seas Gnaw the Crags About | Of* zhold, still standing in the anci rout the Suxons: in the bloody Flintshire | year round. ? and back before it was exti Hor ono oficiating und the mames of the wit. | d0ors, thatshe was u stranger, but o few | o Clt—reel Castle and the Old-Time 8 erccted to commemorate | ficlds. Haunted, more than all clse to e & mother's hands were 1 an at- S\enses wero pidded o tho list, A printed s in this country, was d ov o CalE- K esl ns PR ) ) om the sea and his | Manxland mind, because it is the abiding _ Manxmenand Thelr Land. fompt to save her child, who In o fow mp murriage certiticate—independent of the oue ore 1o go. teve for ¥ ) stletown—Characteristics n ion f.rn.\.,\_ people. One side of forall time of that most terrible of You must leave Douglas behind to com- | ments more would have been burned beyond given the bride—was attached to ove reatment, the ge n|.l:'u\:|.l\ felt that the of the Island Peasant. ! ;[ mfyh:uhlf relic contains a earving of powers of darkuess, the blacl pletely know Manxland. 'This is no venture- | recovery. ' these papers in the “Tegister,” and must | €l could not be left thore through the night, . Maughold; another of the Virgin and adful “*Moody Dhoo some task. You can walk to the remote For two years the belief has been prova- Wit tho. copy. of auestions and | and brought her to us and we gave her shel- Shid; and a later embellisiment ont third | “'Erom' el 1 Port Brin s a matchlessly | portion of she i o day. There | lent in Custer county that 11 SR he Board of Health i ter for the night. _ Copyrighted, 1892, side dopicts - the crucifixion, to which is | \ild and romunti I of coast. The never were finer . There never wi farmer, was a thi st the B oror of Healal Tn the morning we asked for an exp 5 [Copyrighted, 1892 joined the arms of man—the three bent legs, | & break in the lofty, pr 1. And | lovelier views. never were quainter, [ belief that Caswell was orc out of the svere honestly carricd out, there e ation. After many tears and c Ramsey, Isle of Man, Nov. e- | With the brave motto: —Whichever w hat a grand spot M Toin find en | more comfortable old inns, And there nover | county on pain of death. Caswoll loft, al Jtlo danger of c 5501 the part of | @ ald she had just come from Irel spondence of Tne Be vill always | Hhrown (o cast), fustands. The entire di hechnd spop fs WS Tlort Dun and on lvere Tore. slmpls, Genial, Hospitebla haopls | otk nrotonting bis imnocence. Last “}.‘,‘.,; B miltistar or other ofoln] » an to whom she had been long | have the Isle of Man clearest as a series et is it of unchangeable antiquity, | 4 he bay is an almost land- | than in Man el At 4 LA fof, from whose house she was to be g you AR superstitions. Ilustrative, the 9 e sed, s 3 casantr, acuous and _ listless ce o Btora of amusing ns Lo, D this funt thied to pinsnado her | have sailed around the island. Tt is only a | parish oL T o e Dinele0U oot shivas) Cromithol b BRNGROL RO Uouous cixnd, listices, or icen Mo SmanElio ! 5 A % . a ne boarding with her, and | little journey of seventy-five or eighty miles. ' 15 who “put out smoke,” that | headl: g e some: S e ; galnsk Casye dncont I8C B p,m,mm “But with r they u nephew boa L 3 3 0 ARk I n headland sweeps around and up from the | comes to sp, ys and | in Oklahoma. At the ¥ f | .:“1 the ulld lover, Jomny was u very | The steawers bring you from Douglas to | 5 WRORE pitations nosscan o .’l'”"” nd | & Once the ancient port was rich from | poke among their 3 anx folk | «1g's o wiso child that knows its own 1labor was spe pionce iundsome girl, and the nephew made her | Doyglys again in only six hours time. Pleas * Runic cross by the roadside is a pro- nd. Now it isa dark | o an hono Manxman is proud | fagher” has 7 i ion” i new and partially tlod Counsry, | ABCh troubies bub siie uld not Listen 0 | 4oy seill is it to. engage u smart littlo craf fape ol fomaletwaolentrionawho, fof cur ntique, sleeping within a bed of myrtle neesivy, his histo 5. Independ- | Foo e R o Musiiy ot ,.{‘f;““.fl‘ hero wer huworo o s vere a1l com- | and alone or with friends idle along at will | When Tis buimoed to sione: ded, tho | Lho fushionablo havasfound it out and'soon | once, his ¢ hangeless customs and —laws. | for whom u writ of habeas corpus was issued expe & g A . t and brilliant Palermo will hide | Indeed, T often think that much of his goo b aaroat sty s only o incident that fov a fow dayd threat: | 1lote the giosts al assembled, when (ho | with wind and tide, gaining much Manx long each of Tumsey | buy, exteinding . ness to the strunger comes from pity that | Speiae Hhomas 1. Mo 2 raher ot lithe e cause any 16" or anilety aunt called Jenny from the room in a state nine miles to Point of Ayre, the north g the stranger was not born in his sety. | Spring Thom - 1 X her o o ened Lo causeany troubls or anxfoty, ahd | 5¢%eraug” oxcitement, saying sho had just | oo ! Aine slich 0 ROINL Tol TG, e oM | iare Syave and Grag BIako Ceanolaas War | 4oois Eonses wis novborn inhis 2o hertys | atejiaty Cravford fon Lake City to Tonuds of the. newspr L went the | Of KAt O e g that the hride- | 0us skipper's tales, and coming closo to the | of unsurpassed Doty and ' futerest.Tho work at his trade of bricklnying, Ho ‘lofs fiu;s’"f‘;",r R Bewepanars aud Aukniabed | rdom,n goig on 1D the bont ab the ferry, | fishor 1ifo of tho countless halthid coves and | zed oliffs trace an almost, vermillion shore | goroe YOU tHe SheC ! HOEMAN | any steange land is in getting closo o the | 1o M0 404 the baby, losg thil nanbirolly 3 I T me, B O e : Thakbatwaenictia bl s ot hasan andtiho v, grauder, more grewsome still arc (LN g0 18] cetting close to in Crawford o sent_them money at inter- ut there was so little cause for blaming | htd fallen and been caught between boi R line bet \ anGetliotl R ERi e s Bt ) ; heirt of its common folle. That is easy here, a finally sent §0 for them o come Mr, Beecher, that ros - and | bud bridgo and killed, ' Sho_ guye tho poor h ' with a good mariue | Shimumerd d—;:"'l:'\n[lllli\u‘u'l‘\‘ll‘uilp‘u 5o/ A (he | ARevBRGITALIAIBNG e e You will be thrilled by Manxland scenes of | | I B o e v minds, le . nd s shock, 108t8 | ow, anx i i erentar/al AUSTRE 1001300 B 'solate o ife. illions of sea for der ittle land for fo C % " the countr . Shxioty that a this late period wo.c C | und then cruelly insisted that sho should | Manxland. T s 0.5 greater dis: | with ite modern w s and A sloony | ient i hotele !\'lrmv.-‘\i{'mfi':.|“‘.u',f»"u:|.\(‘.|- rents, flashing “" entrancing val- | B e O ey bacie 0 RS tho ontlines, whick ; ey the nephew atonce, and noone be | tanc < or seve s from highest | yot bright old faco has I like some | 3 /8T koeniso typical offur and sh ; s no L iy v nected with the marriage of the " y refused. The aunt phical configuratior nayesioleniupontihorslaontiohalower and ceuscless poundings of the “Atlantic, | COIe ubon 0.1 ious and impressive | come attached to the child, and i fact, re- a matter of history ; but I only allude to it to dismissed the guests; king herre- | o049 AR o ribbon and who, on waking, h : hunders of the everlasting battle | monuments of a heroic past. Fisherfolk L a (ni el et give Mr. Boecher's explanation of his con. | move her wedding . turned her out [ 1 de memorable, mischiof in her glad old eyes as i thunders of thoe everlusting bathhe | rihlunders, cach with their distinet garded it as their own.' Thoy rofused to Hection with the DItiful siory, us told by | into the street in the night, a stranger in a © two at sea, uglas, which shines [ hearts that made the frolic. To th it | e sogreat that even tho. son gull’s shilele | ¢ ricaold, changeless i are fivs tholiitoonoun, ond 1o Zaslicr WAt Dimself ut the requost of his yeople in & | Strange land? from its cre vith almost the bril- | and left, villas and villages innum ke h together. The wmurmurs of *the sea o zoogver - posseesion by weih - IASRAL rriay e prayor moting seon iter the | 1t was a strange story. We did not he- | liancy of Naples, the chicf mountain range | 4hil behind, but, o mile or two away, Consting along the castem shore most be heard £ shest mountain peak. Rug: event. 1 quote from. an account published | lieve that her aunt told the truth. The | shows at its best. It extends three-fourths | BGIGen gorse is blonded with the purples and i i Contrast is where mighty and clos themoxidugs ot 3 pincrs told of o such aceident, wnd loammis | of the slund's longth, almost as contrally as | ™ among the heights of North Barrule, s eI il But i s becuusc Manx follc themsolves ar “Just before the closeof the meetinga | where her lover hac rded his landlady | 'line could bo drawn, Along the West Cons amlet egnelsh. 1t isa littlo clus- | more winsome and gr nd than all fine sights disputo avose among the members of the | told us that he had gone prompily to the | * X5dGvery e R R e SAMRERE ORI - or canturies-old. stone cobtiuga or scenes that a loving, contented sense of congregation regarding Mr. Beecher house to be married, and was met at the | moiaire s o full view. - Thore is South | oAb rounding Point of Ayre your lls connect each. The old exultation gladdens every s of your in the marriage. A lawyer present, o mem- | door by the aunt and told that Jenny had | Barrule, the southernmost. Then comes the | Sebper, will his tales "und | dress of the ancient Manx are still pres progress through all the Bor of the ehurch, said he thought this the | Just been married to her nephew, and would | Gairn 4nd. Greeba, Between these is the | atiend closely to his little craft. It is o | by its two score inhabitants, Until rece ways. EDuAk L WAUKEMAN, w::‘sll:nl-ll p‘luM- rfir l;u- chur o der allow him to «-nu;x |lm- house. leading from Douglas, the "1‘1“1':5“‘" 8 006R1 AT lnl";"l::t;t':nm of the | the Manx language was solely s FROM TROUND AROUT US. 't tha _Beecher was losing his pop- he landlady said that the next morning pital of Man, to ancient | Gty o awes st 8 maelstic ] The folk are fishermen, God-| 103 A 78, L und his people on that account. | tho poor fellow, nearly heartbroken, gath- e oo hort, nCfias, ola Aahiing || cixeen it Ok ALH L cokipntiopy ShorManx.c good. All tho olden fuiries still 1 south Sioux City is to have a new flouring Dipon closing ho nsked Mr, Becehor 1o tell | ored. together all he had and loft for New | tows, reminding of Cornish S, Ives, & | Lbuy Hiburound tho northorn coast, wh them will vemain until the modern | = f ¥ uve & now fouring those present, as if talking in his own fam Yoaving no other address, Through | fiood” of lght seems to bresk each way | LY. {om sen o swarg gre strunge terrioss | v > ik Ay among s children, o story, which bo | 1hi formation wo found tho girl had not | through this deop, wide pass. Betwoon the | o, 5eh cobbles; swall polished s 08 follows: ved us, Heraunt lived near by, She | Cairn. and Greeba is the fomous Maux | ahanc,t® (i LT earD panakinty vr:-:.:::l“?{:lmhscr'x.l‘x.n|11|l{“u‘|;<l lI:Ilr‘l‘x:t‘l“‘l‘n: \ ..i.uu...vlwl I,nrnu up o lk.h‘nu,\' s | Mecca of Druidic origin, Tynwald mount, | Shangmg thelr position’ (:t':m ‘:II:.-““.:-|.:..\”.I,I{ 5 ound ho newspapers, | and leave the place or risk exposury laws of Manxland are still an- | g g i by 9 and 80 had read nothing velating o this | poor child so grievously tormented remained b foot ns quicksands. ' Botween Ayre light- tragody, aud only know of it from general | Dy our family, and then we bogan earnest prmlalied. house aud the novthern: base of the mou public conversation, which T could not avoid | efforts to find Robert. Letters inuumerable Seen While Saliing, ains, perhaps an eighthof the to; hearing, thut there was a misused wife, | were sent to New Orleans. We could findno | Colden, Sartfell and Beinny Phott group I8 an almost_ lovel' plain, 1 divorced, and n murdeved man, who wished | other address. A year passed by and no [ closely to the north, and thén comes Snae- ° rragh.” Themost primitive of the } pe he sun: while others ave constantly | © e T St c }0‘|{I\c|lh|' rallu-lln-rurl'm?uun ‘Iuthl:v womit | peply fell, mountain monarch of Manxland % Dousaniry "";;f'l'":" b Qe und *:"h‘ rounding the point into the bay. Small boats The total deposits in t ga_touks 3"\1\1»"&”;(« for’ whom he wus dying was i Returning from church one Sabbath morn- | ouly northern rival, giant North B s are most pronounced, —In more filled with the shining, silvery fish pass- | @ o 5 wore §329,071, 87, ovel ho could do’ Mr. Boocher was asked | o Jouny laughing and crying, exclamed, | Which breaks into sivage Maughold h hundred tiny “hamlets like the “auld | jug to and fro between the smacks and the ” M mary them. Ho he always | “Robert his come \ing, exclatmed, | LY Ramsoy bay. 1t s o strange feel. | clachans” of the Scottish Highlands you | shore. Buyers earts drive into the water | | The Touse of It A, duckson of Bariiy Wi LOVES 1 fecling of generosity for those 1n | yoi e 0 3 o e | g that you ean sco half the homes vl fnd fully nive-tenths possessing the | up to their axles, the readier 1o receive the | (¢ od by fire with all its contents. troublo, aud willingly compliod. *People [ RasOaN, SRR CHON, ANEy S aRE ] or™ the = ent Munx nation at (:'ll'" ‘;I'IN‘“-I“H' Ball' (town), as Ballavar- | fish, Not hundreds but thousands of wen, | There was no insurance. Thave made o wistake—as if 1 had nev Thot thawaak bafare ho stobped, .as usual, | -8, &lance, the top of Snae- ;“k“ jallakiunag, Bullabeaney, and the | women and children, all in a fine frenzy of tuy Tremmel of Cody, who shot und killed made one bofore!” Why, T am full of mis- | 4¢'the postoftice in New Orleans, and some | fell you can see thewm all, Besides, from tho ke 1 emulative industry, seurrying in all divec year-old sister November 14, hus been FOSTER'S PATENTS. ::ll;:;.:,“x{:l lln'hll‘rz‘l,llmn(mh': ouo man o ono coming incalled him by name. The | 3me l::‘l o you can 11‘,.\,‘{( lm into Ir “1‘\l\l‘:il\I;nL.:‘dm‘\:l\lvl‘hfl‘ \\"v&:“t ast your inter. tious, and clad in strange attive, fill up the | held under £1,000 bonds for trial for murder. OB 2 b ) libl J 5 . Jostmaster came forward, and after suitable | Scotland, England and Wales. e o divided between glimpses of | picturesque and busy J A few days ago workmen who wore digging o " i cautions in a certain divcction. 11 Lientification. gave him probably the langest | Costing to the north the ever cha strange old Manx hawmlés pecping from the TN U Ve watir worksmising iy Bonca to find 4 | LiCENSED UNDERFOSTER'S PATENTS, p my heart warm and my conseience pure, | muil o mun ever had at one time. Robert | Panorama of mountains coustantly in view, | mountain bases wheré flashes of foaming ‘ : cak found the body of a still-born child in & BEWARE OF and then do not hesitate to do for others | Jofg everything, and came on as rapidly as | frst como Laxey bay and village, the lat- | streims tremble like the'gorse tops upon the | These follkare ne all Wesleyan Method- | pasteboard box | what Jny perhaps wight shrink from do- | I sl one who reads must imagine, | 10 at the entrance to a witching glen, sur- hills, with the splendid mountain views be- | ists, They are as like the Cornish fisher |~ Nebraska sold to '05 will hold ITATI N l Inxi And us for being “careful of my ropu-'| {f'{hey can, the meeting between these two | rounded by moble hills, whose sides aro hind and above, aud the plainly discerned | folk of St. Ives as the herring of both:and | gheir sixth reunion Nebraska City, 10 tation," Lask you, Do you want yow' pastor | (ono1ud been so cruelly separated. thickly dotted with stone monuments loft by | Irish coast where the Mou none of their bouts ever put to sea on Satur- | commence Decemt 48 pers resoliitio to bo all the ‘tiwle waiching how long his | ¢ VE PR e 4 the earlier inland races. Here is also found | through the distance cover with pur r | day or Sunduy ; nor do they at any time ven o it th st reunion, held in Aubu nd where it fallst r. Beecher marvied them that evening, < smeraid grecn. Bi ! h passed at b ast reunion, held in Ono summer, when we were at the Twin | @14 none could rejoice with them more tru L Saim. called [ing Osty's e Smerma SUOSR. Sk Y Joat bew b ture upon r sea harvestiugs without | on Angust 15, Every Nebraska soldier is in- "\ v . ¥ vodk o vhich tradition and dim anx history | Peel le head and . Patrie > | goodly prayers and psalms. o be present.” Mountain house, couple camo from a dis. | than hedid Robert loft the next morving | dssign to the bones of the Danish prince who Miles of white straud thread aloug the o BORHY ik furthor to tho north,durk and g TiOR 4000 BRaRRLc s tance to huve Mr. Beecher marry th H or the south to settle up his affaivs there % o o4 en. 12 The annual convention of the Nebraska 0 r. er marry them. He ) more than a_thousand years ago gave the | to the brown old nest upon the rocks. like a | lies Castletown,now us of old among its dar : proparatory to taking his wife west, to a po g i i v ¥ D, sets at Minden De - 10ld them he could not legally marey them, | Preparatory 10 taking his jwife west, to 6 bo- | Manxmen freemen's rights. Older than | shiniug way of faith leading unfulteringly Lo | limestone rocks, with its uncient castle still airymen ting ieete at Minden Do, excepiing in the state where helived. They | Sition Gant Bac och ofeed BEkc TSI | Orry’s bones are the Laxey mines, the only a dateless antiquity. No cobweb lover will | more somber towering grewsomely above, | SEHIBEL =D AN B, (0 BOORE prasan aie wenmuuv troubled b& his answer; but | $ier BIe wis besetll SO Rt sorsow | ones of importance in Man, which possess be disgruntled that a broom of progress has is is the one famous Rushen casile, with | NEIILY fhe WAstifes SRORN RIARERY 5 un;lA dear friend, the govei nuru'l v A, the famous Laxey overshot water wheel, said | modernized Peel. Everything 'is old and el of Rushen abbey near, and ','.‘fi ey ".“r"'l“, T ety oonven: vr ire, being present said: “Now, R e R B wbuum largest in the world. mellow and dim. The hundreds of fishing of the murder of wicked King Regi- | 71 i e (7 er, you make the service as [Copyrighted, 1593.] J lihupu NTx milts further to the north.and | craft, forming with their old masts aw un- | nald by Ivar the good knight. The Danes [ U0nS everheid by the assoviation 4 Iunnlwu-un and do all but pronounc- o your Eraft will be abreast of Maughold head, | tique tracery before the to semt to be- | founded the castle, and it resemb sinor | Thomas O'Hara, o farmer living about six these young friends of yours man und - " tis a weird and grand old headland, and | loug to a forgotten age. Dark arve its walls, | of Humlet fame. Its uses now as i miles southwest of Battle Creek, left this wife—that I will do at the proper time.” Glasgow univorsity in regurd to the | the vicinity hus for ages possessed u vever- | narvow its streots, tiny its windows, grave | do not detract from its wlmost forocious place about sundown to g0 to his home. 1 'uu uests at the Twin Mountain house | medical education of women leads ull the | eatiul awe to all seafariug folk. This hes | and silent its people. grandeur. The abbey, the lustdoomed tosup- | the morniug he found dead in the roud the happy couple were assigned | others. Queen Margaret's college which is | been due to the miracles wrought at its holy P 0 Pression in Britain, is an offshoot of beauti- | some four miles from Battle Creek. His team X 9 TE GRAP "lll B sultabie position; then (ho governor and | aMliated with the university and recognized | well, and to the odor of sanciity left upon Fee) Castle. P Totioss nbbey, just across the chun. | Was found o mile farther on. It is supposed ‘ , or uum, m““.—d Mr. Beecher | by the court and the senate as the women's r v 8 v X Ay 2 biddi .oy ~ his team became frightened and ran away, ) « by the court and the senate as the women's | the place by St. Maughold. Tho Iatter was | Gray and old und more forbidding than ull | uel in Lancashire, whoto tho bones of muny ¥ .:;d‘mo m:.‘:.fi bu';g“i,mvmlvc degesimeus, I, Tadlckoa Al ax ‘uvm;uhfi ln.ltlu early lifo a gay and wicked Irish | else is its once mighty castle at the | a king of Man were willed to lie, throwing him out mm. ung him, told deu three prine color and fecling from your grave and sevi- Now you are sped around the Calf of Man And, after all, the real pleasure in knowing e — 1, Mary during the fish- | The corner stone of the new opera house at ing season i3 the rendezvous of the Manx | Elnwood has been laid wg fleet, If you are here at that Dora Evans, accused of burning m of it will remind you of the animated | an enemy at Ansley, has been acquitted by o in August at Wick in Scotland, or | jury. rwick In Shetlund The_anchorage is | * | By : 4 Dr. T, C. McCleery's crowded with heavil 0 fishing smacks, | g4 ixeter and secured $100 worth of whose brown sails shine like burnished cop- | JOEE ARE STAMPED pourselCalth by n-l-.-..w Converted by the preaching of the | harbor mouth. It stands on Patrick's Back at Douglas again fi« uch a contems Andrew Fellers, one of the ploneers of ihew o touching manner what duties'they | medical work. good St. Patrick, he determined to renounce | Bk, or St. Patrick’s bland, seven acres in pidtion as this of the “dear little Isle of [ Pawuee county, died at bis home in Table