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Leavenworth Sunday Herald from Leavenworth, Kansas • 4

Leavenworth Sunday Herald from Leavenworth, Kansas • 4

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Leavenworth, Kansas
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4
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LEAVENWORTH SUNDAY HERALD. A HANDSOME COMPLIMENT. WAR CLOUDS. SUNDAY HERALD. THE eur own laws.

Cheers We do want to have restored to us that which has been taken from us by violence and by fraud. A prominent gentleman of reoognized halt not kill;" and, on ordinary principles of government, it would be desirable to enforce that law before attempting to introduce further refinements. A similar consideration applies, as an ordinary rule of policy, to the The Land Tenantry Question ability and good literary taste, writing to his son in this city, pays Tub Sunday 3IY KMBRV Ae 1 IIUKSTON'. in ireianu. NEW A voice "We want our independence." Cheers 1 If we had our own people to look after the OPERA HOUSE W.W.EM1IKV.

T.O.THWUNTO.N. law wnicn lorttid taking a neighbor's prop Heuald the following handsome com erty against hit will, which Is Mr. rarnell Cttcraneits oflrlah Agitation and Extraot OrviCBi 101 Delaware Strout (Up BUirs.) pliment. We have not the pleasure of from EngUnb Papers, present advice to the tenant' farmers of Ire. wants and interests of the Irish nation, thnt distress which is likely to come upon the land daring the coming ge.iiun would never a pcrsonul acquaintance with tbo writer, land.

But, with the memory of a bard past A writer in the Belfast Examiner takes in their minds, the British people resolved but his public character Is so well and favorably known that the compliment is that they would waive these preliminaries possibly come npon it, and, therefore, we nave every right to proclaim that the present distress is brought about If the continued hold of the land war in this way 1 SUNDAY, NOVKMUEH 10, 1879. TI1K UI'MUUT HUBINKSU MAN, and endeavor to conciliate the Irish people "The lmd question has leaped to the front only the more appreciated: and deliberate hostility of the English Gov by considerable sacrlbces. I hey now had that, so far as Mr. Parnell and his friends can If there is a thing in the world of wun a suaien nouna, at tne same time shaking from about iti neck the strangling cord ernment to Irish prosperity the cause of all There la no Le'n: in the world fur exercise their influence, direct or indirect our woe and all our grief, Cheers 1 01 tenmt-rioht and tixity of tenure, and these concessions are deemed a mere excuse thought and newspaperaom wtiicn abhor, detest, loathe and despise it is low, vulgar, trashy literature aud vin for demanding more, and for demanding whom Tub Sukdat Herald fuels greater respect and admiration thnn for tbo upright man of business. No, not other rusty ideal of vested rights.

It now stands before the people in a new shape, or rather returning to the old and natural But how are we to get buck our legislature A Voice By the rifle. Cheers. How, I say, are we to get it back. Voices By the rifle. Continued cheering There are with the old violence.

It seems necessary dictive slung; and with just such to-day GRAND GALA OPENING Friday, 21 '79. ONE IWGHT ONLY. The management has, after careful study, and attended by an enormous expanse, chosen and secured for the performance the Celebrated HAVERLY'S NEW YORK JUVENILE PINAFORE COMPANY, direct from Ua7erly'f New York Theatre. is America cursed and bored. And here shape." Me estimates the annual value of to say that if this course be persisted in, we must, sooner or later, be driven to reverse for thu )hilitntliroiist, tlio niissionarj or lam pleased to compliment Tun Sun two means by which we can get it.

A Voice Dr. Mulcahy told us here some eroni raised in Ireland at 100,000,000, and draws at once this humiliating picture ol our method of policy. It will be requisite to tho martyr. One feels that bo could moro oiir.il bo a martyr than a man of hat IIeuald not only for its nent mechanical arrangement and style, but for declare that we will listen to Irish gnevan nme ago how to get it. fLoud cheers 1 me pasr, ana tnis prophecy ot the near ces as we hear no more of Irish violence and There are, I say, two means of getting back future 1" The oppressed cultivator was wil its chaste and olegant selections in mat that lofty uprightness.

And let us say Irish extortion. The murder of a landlord our legislature either by Dr. Mulcahy's sys ling, with an odd growl and a very respect ter. Such a paper should be a welcome instead of being the occasion for an act of distinctly that it not for ihu generous win or a constitutional system and 11 we visitor to tne homes and uresiues oi an Parliament in the interest of Irish tenants. can accomplih our end by a constitutional ful complaint, to wear his serf's life though, giving the profits of his labors to others, and bequeath a like faith to those he left behind man tint we feci this sort of respect.

lovers of morality, and can but be ap will have to be regarded as a conclusive rea system we are bound to follow it in prefer ence to that proposed by Dr. Mulcahv. Generosity seems to us a low quality, a son against attempting, for the present, to him, and the constitution of society hemmed fContinued tries of "no." pannn. legislate lor Ireland at all, J.et tne Irish be predated by all who love and foster rlovated thought and desire the amelioration, elevation and purification of our race. I cannot see why The Svndat him in, bound him, tied him with laws rigid content to seek their ends by the same meth I say that a constitutional svstera is in itself as iron, and enforced by all the military ods, and, in subordination to the same laws, mere impulse, compared with the lofty virtues wo speak ol.

It is not for the man who distributes charities, who be-stowes magnificent donations. That is sumcient and adequate to bring back oar as those with which the rest of the United Herald should fail to acquire a large nauvc legislature. and cheers 1 50 50 TRAINED SELECTED power 01 tne uovernment, preventing him ever escaping from his slave life. But a change has come over the whole scene the BOYS GIRLS 50 50 Kingdom is content, and there is no hard If we bad in Parliament twenty, thirtv. or circulation- for assuredly it merits a forty men such as Messrs.

Biecar and Par liberal patronage. If I mistoke not the all very well. We write not to dispar state of things described is rapidly passing ship from which they suffer which will not be patiently considered. But let them take nell men whom we could trust then there away, 1 ne tenant, a rent-payer, cannot hold character and intellectual status of the citiaeni of Eastern Kansas, I would say Mr. FarneU's advice, and it will not take would be some chance for Ireland winning la their charming rendition of his place any longer; neither can the land much to harden the people and Parliament oge it.

Wo wish thore were more of it and yet all may exist with a want of the true, lofty, unbending uprightness. This back that Parliament, without which oar that in location the projectors of The lord as a rent-receiver. The new phase of of the United Kinedom into a resolution life on which we are entering forbids both. Sunday Herald nave selected wisely country never can be prosperous, and without which the laid aad all land agitation H. HI.

8. PINAFORE, which they would gladly have avoided, and and nrudontly. I have long since learn is not the man, then, of whom we speak and annihilates both." He cites one ship carrying away 490, and another 397 farmers, wnicn tney nope taey Have not avoided too will be fruitless and useless, Cries of "An Irih Republic," and cheers. But it is be who stands, amidst all the long. Or Lass that Loved a Sailor.

ed to admire the vim, push, energy and force of character in the make up of Eastern and Central Kansas and wish for the people and The Herald sutcess and a farm in Berkshire of 870 acres, with houses and improvements, sold for 6,700. Refers to the olden time when 2s. 6d. was the Correipondenee Irish World. The meeting at Belfast, the eanital of the From a London Letter.

And now let me eive you one last speci interosts and perilous exigencies of trade, firm, calm, disintereste 1 and upright. men of the fine art of agency perhaps the RESERVED SEATS black North, was remarkable for two things first, the perfect eood order which ner- It is the man who can see another man's and abundant prosperity. most extraordinary of all. Close to this an common rent of leased land. This writer is very much in earnest, but he falls short and falls utterly when he talks of a price to be GENERAL ADMISSION i 25 GALLERY 50 cient town, the scene of so much vanished vaded the proceedings, the gathering and the populace outside.

distress as will as his own. It ia the man whoso mind his own advantage The Speculative Mania. paid to man the worm I lor what the Su splendor, the farm, upon which the stately ruins of the Dominican Abbey stand as The failure and flight of M. Phillippart Second, there were gathered on the olat- preme Landlord gives to Hii children for does not blind for an itstant who could rySecnre seats at Sam Dod worth's Cromwell's wreckers left them, is tenanted the speculative Frenchman who has kept the the rent of honest labor and thankful heart. form representatives from the three great religious bodies which compose the population ny a widow of the highest respectability, Prom tne Pall Mall Gazette Paris ISjurse in a high lever with hs Hanque Europienne for nearly year, will furnish Upon a holding of twenty five Irish acres.

of Ireland. The chair was filled bv Rev. Book Store. Box-Sheet low open. Doors open at 7 o'clock Cartain raises' at 8 o'clock.

The premoters rf the anti-rent agitation in sit a judge upon a question between hi nisei I and his neighbor, as safely ax the purest magistrate upon the bench ol justice. Ah how much richer than material for many an editorial, warning peo tne poor-law valuation of which is JE60, the Ireland have approached so near the coun rent was raised from 00 to q6. beine in pie aeiinst the folly of investing their capi sels of violence that it is almost a relief to Isaac Nelson, the Presbyterian clergyman of Belfast. Mr. Parnell, a Protestant, and Mr.

Biggar, a Catholic, were speakers-and the Rev. Father Cahill, the editor of We Belfast Catholic Examiner, also joined heartily with round numbers an impost of 4. per acre all tal in ballooning er ternrises that are based rind them turning their attention to remedial ermine how much noll-r than a train on nothing more substantial than the win round, including at least two waste acres which are covered by- the ruins, the river ROHIiFIl schemes which are, at least, no worse than visionary. And this is the worst that can be of majestical authority is tlmt simple ning words of a smooth-tongued adventurer. Itut the warnings will be wasted.

Phillippait the Presbyterian minister, the Protestant bed, and the road. This poor woman has said of the appeal, issued by Mr. Parnell and magnanimous and truth leader of Ireland, and Biggar, the Catholic struggled with more than the courage of a and his kind will find victims so long as men others, for support to the Irish National man against this merciless load of rent which remain eager to make fortunes outside the Wholesale Land Movement." The appeal, it will he member for Protestant Cavan. All that is very important and very encouraging. slow processes of legitimate business.

This Yes, il is the man who is true, true to himsolf, his neighbor and Lis God true to his conscience and who feels that the is yearly pressing her deeper and more deeply down. I saw her acre and a halt of oats, seen, is comprehensive enough and, if it rtally with a response from "all other ine resolution declaring for self-govern and in poverty, in greenness, in weediness it ment was moved ny the Kev. H. M. Cahill.

eagerness has been di played in the great commercial countries of the world, and it will douli'less last as long as human n.iture GROCERS nationalities," as well as the Irish, it is in slightest suggestion of that conscience would have done discredit to the Galtees. Catholic priest, seconded by Mr. Thomas linn, interrupted by cheers for the Irish possible to say thnt the fund required might not be raised. But, even those who are not is more to him than the chance of ac Thure are portions of the farm which would yield a richer return to cultivation but she remains what it is. 1 he most remarkable feature of the speculative mania is that men AFD DRALla IM Republic and the rifle.

only conscious of the futility of this move quiring an hundred estates. The people, tired of hearing a Mr. Roche lurst not break ground without the agent's and 'men who are among the shrewdest of ment, but feel also that this re-ult would be. praise "good landlords" for their liberality. fiat, and after that almighty nod was for a their kind in the transactfons of their every economically speaking, the worst thing that lew seasons vouchsafed the permission was 1, AltOIt STIUKK'-WAGKS.

could bel.ill Ireland, will prefer these coun WINES LIQUORS, FRUITS, CIGARS, set up the chorus of "God Save Ireland" and gave many cheers for the Fenians. "God Save Ireland" was uttered by one of the five suddenly and finally recalled, for fear of day lives, are apt to prove the easiest victims of the great financial swindlers. A man who would not lend tio to his next door sels of Mr. Parnell to hi? former ones. It is According to the old notion, those who wounding the place reputation as a grazing better to agitate for the purchase of Irish reman prisoners tried in Manchester on neighbor without receiving absolute security tenant-larmers' holdings, than to encourage received wnges wcro under a personal obligation to those who paid them that charge of killing Sergeant Brett on liberating against loss, will plunge into the wildest kind ground.

Here, therefore, with her sixteen cows and their depreciated produce, pressed by debts and losses, this woman, who supports a large family upon the most meagre Cor. sd A Cherokee the occupiers to stick to them blunder buss in hand. uoi. Kelly trcm the police van on the 23d November, 1 368. It was the response of of speculative enterprise if he in led to believe that the profits wdl be large.

He may is to say they wero under a moral obll From the Irish World KANSAS. LEAVENWORTH, gation over and above the obligation of know no'hirg of the character of the enter Captain Condon to the Judge's sentence of death. All the five prisoners then repeated Whoever is most to blame fir reducing prise, r-nd have no better assurance of its performing certain services. It was be fare, who dresses as humbiy as a peasant woman, who keeps no servant, who, herself and her children, toil from daylight to dark in the most menial offices, has to squeeze, and the words which have become the national Ireland a land most lertne. and her people success than the word of some plausible in lieved that a master could not only select dividual who has a faculty for commanding a people most laborious or permitting them to be reduced to a state of insolvency, bee expression to-day.

T. D. Sullivan, editor of the Dublin Nation, wrote a popular anthem, what servants he chose, but would paj gary, and starvation, it is proper that the true them what he chose; 'or at all events, borrow, and pinch, and fret to raise the bloated revenue of 4 an acre for a man who does nothing for the land. Her eldest son is, it appears, slipping into decline. 'It killed entitled "God Save Ireland," which has been set to the music of "Tramp I Tramp I Tramp The following is the chorus, which is now condition ot "the people at home" shall the confidence of his victims altogether out of proportion to his honesty.

There are no more cautious or thrifty people in the world than the French, yet they have bten twice victimized by M. Phillippart JOHN CHANCER, DKAUH IK ES Hardware, Cutlery, Tinware, 407 Dolaware Leavenworth, Kansas that it was the will of the masters, con now be laid bire to the whole Irish race, When, the other dny an Aus'r an viLage was sung by the various processionists the sidered as a body, that fixed the usual swept into ruins by a mountain torrent, the Anti-Rent meetings th.ough Ireland and averngo rate of wnges. The work within five years. In 1874 he organized the the she said, gloomily, 'this weary struggle, and I am afraid it will kill the Is there no possibility that the system under which such things are possible may first die Empress or Austria and her husband hastened Banque Farnco Hollondaise, becime Presi ing classos were, therefore, much in to the spot, and with their own lips offered 'Jod flare Ireland cried the heroes "God Have Irelat cried they all Whether on the callows high, Or the battle nld we die. dent of the Credit Mobilier, and started a sympathy to the sufferers, and better still un- the debted to their employers for giving them so much as tiny did, and it was number of other speculative scheme that promised to enrich everybody who would yes, friend, the possibility of killing this Oh, what matter if for Erin dear we fall When we recollect what miraculous effects tnke shares in them.

Money poured in on incumbent on all persons who roceived the singing of the Marseillaise hymn pro him from every quarter; the shares in all his lacked the coffers of the Empire, and dealt out material assistance to the destitute. Last week a great mountain flood swept unto death a whole village and a fertile and populous valley of Spain, and presently the king Alfonso, with his Chancellor of Exche monster is established, and the practicability also, and that very much sooner will It be accomplished than most people imagine. The landlords must go, and that quickly. wages to tako them with thankfulness duced on the fighting qualities of the ragged armies of the first Napoleon who marched to enterprises soared above par, and those who held them were looked upon wilh envy by their neighbors. But a crash came in a few Wednesday evening, October 15, in St.

months, and Philippart was declared bank quer, repaired to the scene of the great affliction and brought substantial relief from the Mary's Hall, Belfast, Ireland, took place a battles singing that grand anthem of liberty in full chorus marched victoriously through the serried legions of Europe's monarchs we should encourage the songs of the pro rupt, with 11 ibilities amounting to about grand demonstration, to which Mr. Parnell, state treasury to the sufferers. The Chancel 55,500 000. The people who had taken his M. by his presence, contributed not a lit cessions as they move together against the shares were out the amount of their in vest- lor of the English Exchequer is in Ireland.

He hears ef the distress of the entire inhabi GEOKGE T. BEVEN, GENERAL COMMISSION MERCHANT 222 Delaware Street, LEAVENWORTH, KAX9A3. IGEL cfcJ CO. DEALERS IN Drugs, Patent BRUSHES, Etc. Southwest Cor.

5th Shawnee LEAVENWORTH, KANSAS. abominable Landlord system." vestment, and hundreds of them were ruined tle to the success attending it. The hall was tants on the western half of Ireland. He is thinking this matter over I felt poetical, by the loss. The lesson was costly, but and struck out another street chorus as thus, to be sung to the air of the Cruiskeen Lau hardly instructive.

About a year ago Philip pirt reappeared and began to make arrange appealed to for "work" and for "relief for the destitute. His reply is, Things must be allowtd to take their natural course." And yet there are many good Irishmen mistaken ments for another colossal speculative swin crowded to excess, the platform, balcony, and ground floor having been taken possession of immediately after the doors were thrown open, by an eager crowd, whose warm sympathy was made plainly evident. From beginning to end the proceedings were and gratitude on account of the favor bestowed upon them by the generosity of their superiors. This doctrine, so convenient to employers, and so natural to the ignorance which formerly prevailed on tho matter, is now exploded, giving place to the grand idea of necessity, ami proving that the rate of wnges established In any courtry is tho conscquoneo tf the cir-cumstances in which that country is placed, and has no connection with the wishes ol individuals or classes. The discovery of this truth has exclud ed the notion of gratitude from the pecuniary Million between employers and cmjliyos, and shows that workmen who receive wages have no more reason dle He told a plausible story of the man ner in which he had been crushed by a con Irishmen, who are willing to continue the Landlord system of legislating in the Parlia spiracy among the leading railway managers The Land was made for Man, By the Mighty Artisan For every nan with shovel, spade, or boe No honest man shall dure ToaeizehM neighbor's share I So the Landlords and their bailiffs, They ust go I go I go I So the Isadlordx and their bailifl'i Tlur must go I ment of their own in the hours of midnight I of France just as he was on the point or From the Loudon Daily News acheiving a stupendous success in 1574, and, Mr.

rarnell is, we are ready to believe, as he promised enormous prohts in his new scheme, he had no difficulty in securing financial backers, many of his former vic sincerely patriotic; but he shows very little respect for his countryman at heme, in exhibiting them as poor relations, sponging on characterized by the utmost enthusiasm, and every evidence pointed to the conclusion that the demonstration was one of the most popular and successful held in Belfast jr many years past. Rev. Mr. Nelson took the chair amid great cheering, and said, referring to their kinsmen who have thriven better in tims being among the first to be won by his renewed blandishments. He organ zed the Banque Europienne.

He advertised the sale Oao. Kacffmamk. I W. Kaufman. raiTZ Lisus.

GEO. KAUFFMAN CO Railing Shop, Brass Founders and LOCKSMITHS, No. 304 Shawnee Street, (bet. Id 4th.) LEAVENWORTH, KANSAS. the world.

There is something shameless in this wholesale mendicancy. What the Irish of 40,000 shares of 500 francs each. The the land agitation subscriptions amounttd to four times the need more than anything else is, to be taught to rely upr themrelves. The whole drift of to be grateful than those who pay them A truth never dies. It surmounts mis number of shares ottered, and immediately takes it outlives revolutions.

It is the same The wholo process is the result of what Mr. Parnell teaching to encourage thTn to at Kinban and Kenmare, at Benadir and has already happened. It is now do depend on others. The economic objections to his proposal may be considered when any Benurris the same in London and New cisively proved that the reward of labor York it has no geography, no latitude, no body shows tne disposition to re longitude. It comes forth as refreshing water from the throne of the Eternal, and ferti depends solely on two things, namely the magnitude of the National Fund out spond to it.

It is difficult to suggest any ra ional explanation of Mr. Parnell's scheme. JOSEPH STERLING, Manufacturing Jeweler It may be that Mr. Parnell, the Irish agita of which all labor is pan, and the num ber ot the laborers among whom the tor, has freightened Mr. Parnell, the Iruh landlord.

He is, perhaps, angious to sell his estates before they are simply and inexpen- fund is to bo divided. The Ingullg Investigation to be Rf sauted December 1 1 St. Louis Republican. Washington, 6. The Senate committee on privileges and elections will resume the investigating of the charges of bribery against Senator Ingalls on the nth of December.

The President of the Wes. tern Union Telegraph company and the managers of the company's offices at Topeka, Atchison, Emporia, Wamega and Kansas City, have been subpoenaed to produce on that day all original telegrams and copies of telegrams received by them from January 1 to June 25, 1879, sent or received by Calvin Hood, David Auld, James S. Merritt, George R. Peck, Senator Ingalls, J. H.

Hallowell, B. G. Foster, F. W. Downs, Henry King, Cyran Roberts, A.

C. Dawes and H. M. Holden. An attempt will be made by the telegraph company to withhold the telegrams which the committee desires, on the ground that messages are private and inviolable.

On previous occasions when a similar plea has been entered by the telegraph company against the production of telegrams sransmitted by them for private persons Congress has directed their production. Several witnesses who failed to answer subpoenas directing them to appear before the sub-committee in Topeka will be required to attend the meeting of the full committee here next winter. AND D1CALKB IS This seems to be the present stains of thought on this subject. Still it is not impossible or improbable that this great sive'y conveyed to their present occupiers by a precess of mere transfere. If he can get the Irish abroad to give the purchase money to the Irish at home, the bargain might not be a bad one for the Irish landlords.

We do not say that this is the explanation of Mr. Watches, and Jewelry, (Repairing Fine Watches a Specialy. basic question of political economy may-yet bo subjected to important and radi Parnell conduct, hut it is what scientific 409 Delaware Street, men call a working hypothesis. It accounts for the facts so far as they are known. everybody became desiroui of purchasing.

A fever of speculation followed, and Philip-part flourished until a few days ago, when he slipped away to Belgium, leaving an indebtedness of more than 1,000,000 to remind the Parisians of his second advent and disappearance. It is the faehion nowadays to lauuh at the stories told about the Tulip mania in Holland, the French Assignats, and John Law's Wen' India Company, but is there any evidence that we are much shrewder in speculation than our forefathers Let the people who sunk millions in the oil regions of Pennsylvania fifteen years ago, and those who have before and since sunk more millions in the mining regions of the West, answer. There are thousands of people in all parts of the United States now dealing in railway and mining shares, although not one in a hundred of them has the faintest conception of the real value of the property in which he risks his investment. Other thousand are buying and selling wheat corn and provisions in the produce exchanges of our great cities without any regard to supply or demand, More than 90 per cent of them will quit poorer than they began, but their places will be filled by others equally eager and unwise. A break of to per cent in the stock market or New Yoik to morrow would "free.e out" innumerable small speculators who have talcn money out of their legitimate business to invest it in railway shares in the hope that they may get rich faster than their neighbors.

It is idle to moralize on the delusiveness of cal modification. This may be no loss than tho complete abandonment of the whole wages system, and in its place KANSAS. London Correspondence Irish World. LEAVBN WORTH, The fair of Billyshannon is the best in the substitution of common and mutual interests, a just and equitable division PH. ROTHSCHILD, that portion of Ulster.

The salmon caught in the falls of Lough Erne, above and below them, bring thousands 1 say a hundred and distribution of the joint proceeds of JOBBER Of lizes the land through which it flows. Enthusiastic cheering. Irishmen, wherever the voice of conscience calls us, at whatever altar we bend in communion with the Infinite, this night we meet to declare our conviction to proclaim our belief, that what is right towards our fellow creature cannot be wrong towards God. Cheers Ireland is a nation of slaves, kept in subjection by an army of occupation, while the more grovelling souls are kept in subjection by titles and gold. Hear, hear, and loud cheers.) In 1691, outside the walls of Limerick, whence William had fled, where Churchill was foiled, and Butler had died of a broken heart, Patrick Sarsfield stood on the bloody field as the equal of England's bravest, and signed an honorable contract on behalf of a people with its own Parliament and its own privileges.

How that contract was kept on the side of England let history tell. Hissing In 1782 the claim of the larger island, Britain, to make laws for the smaller island, Ireland, was solemnly renounced by act of Parliament. Grattan trusted to the honor of England, and was deceived. Flood, who was well acquainted with the tricks of office and the legerdemain of rulers, never relied on the promises of Albion, and was justified by the result. Loud cheering.

Aye, when the cannon of rhe volunteers had been laid up in store, when their muskets had been allowed to rust, then was Ireland once more made the slaughter house of a proud and cruel nation, which robs and ruins every land in which it obtains foothold. A Voice The Zulus, and cheers. But friends, I forget the business of a chairman is to hear others speak, not himself to waste time. When I awoke lately in Lei-trim I heard thousand pounds a year to the landlords. The fish is all sold in London the landlords pocket the price but if that poor "being in the bon" attempted to fish up a salmon, or labor and capital.

We shall watch tho discussions and from time to time present what wo find to be tho most reasonable views, economical and political, on this important question. even a trout or a perch for his dinner, straight Hats, Caps, Furs, would he be marched oft to prison, by order of a "board" of "magistrates," consisting of the land thieves and fish thieves of the place. STRAW GOODS, Neither the animals that are raised on Irish grass, nor the fish that breed and swarm in Irish lakes and rivers are to be tasted by Irishmen, though they shall drop on the Gloves, Umbrellas, EtcM Etc. roadside from sheer hunger! How is this? What principle in morals, in religion, in laws 304 Delaware Street, that hope, for each speculator, like every other gambler, fondly imagines that he will prove luckier than his fellows, and escape the common fate. Still it remains true, now as always, that the shortest and safest way to can there he relied on to support this unnatural condition of human existence? "It is the law of the land." We know that.

But KANSAS. Two-Cent Postal Card. The new two-cent postal card will be ready for distribution to the postoflices in a few days. A large number of samples, on different shades of paper and printed with different inks, have been sent to Washington lor the department to select from. The color of the paper will probably be different from the present cards.

The universal postal Hnion, to which the new cards can be sent, includes Great Britain, France, Germany, Greece, Italy, Belgium, Russia, Spain, Switzerland, Turkey, Norway, Sweden, Portugal, the Netherlands, Austria-Hungry; Servia, Denmark, the Argentine Republic, Roumania, Luxemburg, Montenegro, the British, French, Spanish, Portugese, and, Netherland colonies, Egypt, British India, the Falkland Islands, Ceylon, Greenland, Honduras, Hong Kong, and other places in China, Jamaica Japan, Liberia, Mexico, Newfundland, Peru, Persia and Trinadad. Canada belongs to the union also, but the special arrangement between that country and the United States remains in force, letters and postal cards passing between the two at domestic rates. LEAVENWORTn, competence lies in the pursuit of some honest the law of -what land, let us ask It is not Vienna Bread. The following is the recipe by which the celebrated Vienna bread is made: Sift in a tin pan four pounds of flour bank up against the sides pour in one quart of milk and water, and mix into it enough flour to form a thin batter; then quickly and lightly add one pint of milk, in which is dissolved one ounce of salt and one and three-quarter ounces of yeast leave the remainder of the flour against the sides of the pan cover the pan wilh a cloth and set in a place free from draught for three quarters of an hour; then mix in the rest ef the flour until the dough will leave the bottom and sides of the pan, and let it stand two and a halt hours. Finally divide the the law of Ireland, for when Ireland made industry and the avoidance ot speculative her own laws before the invasion of the Eng enterprise, (jamming is wicked because it dosen't pay.

St. Louis Globe-Democrat, D. A. HOOK AUCTIONEERS The nope of the South, Memphis Appeal. Small farms and diversified labor are the And dealers in all kinds of great needs of the South.

Our section wilt lish no man dug or planted for another. When a tiller of the soil fed a calf, or a pig, a sheep, or a cow, the animal was his own, and for his own use. When he digged the earth, the seed put in, and the crop which came thereout were all for himself himself alone. When he fished the waters he carried home his taking; to his own table, What is the native born Irishman to-day but a very slave, who dare not till the land his native land, who dare not fish the brook, who dare not eat of the pig, or the sheep, or the calf which he rears. become more thrifty and prosperous as soon as the huge plantations are divided into A sound through vaulted cave.

A sound through echoing glen, Like the hollow swell of a roshing wave Twas the tread of green-clad mcu. Cheering. It was only the British government marching troops into Carrigallen loud laughter because we attempted to complain of our sufferings and distress, and to demand a wiser legislation. Loud and enthusiastic cheering. Gentlemen, we proceed to the business of the evening.

Rev. Mr. Cahill being introduced, said General Merchand ise small farms, owned and occupied by industrious laborers, who become more substantial, law-abiding citizens as soon as they become owners of the soil. mass into one pound pieces to be cut in turn into twelve parts each. This gives square pieces about three and a half inches thick, each corner of which is taken up and folded over to the center, and then the cases are turned over on a dough-board to rise for half an hour, when they are put into a hot oven that bakes them in ten minutes.

(IS Delaware Street, Th aim of our Hie wonld be better, The discharge of our duty more true. If our foresight were as good aienr hindsight In the work we are called oa to dt. The Republican majority in Colorado was less than tbreo thousand. From the London Timta.J The first law of civilised life is "Thou KANSAS. LIAVINWOBTH, J.Lampwa.

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About Leavenworth Sunday Herald Archive

Pages Available:
56
Years Available:
1879-1879