The El Paso Journal from El Paso, Illinois (2024)

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The El Paso Journali

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El Paso, Illinois

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6

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WESTERN PUEBLOS An Attempt to Preserve the Curiiu Rock then spread thin imported earth as far by lit fl i 1 the bee I a 1 a cup of coffee shall and erip East send yon dried so like zine Some of your an account of in Tuscany an American strei 1 oft afford to have tricky or 'dishonest patrons whom he knows he mast watch all the time He would rather let them keep their money and have nothing to do with BL Louis Globe Demo £0 W' it JLf COQUETTES THE ThomM Stevens Give the Result or Hl Observation During His Trip The average English girl takes life too seriously to ever soar to the altitude of the American girl as a born co She carry coquetry to the length that the American girl does and do it with the same impunity even were she equally skillful which she is not The soil she flourishes in is hardly so suitable for the favorable development of the art nevertheless there is no doubt that she 'does the very best she can under the circ*mstances The same thing may be said of the rench girl If she had as much free dom as the American girl the rench girl would be more apt to peep over her fan at a dude in a theatre than the for mer Shut up and chaperoned as closely as the rench girl is the American girl would have to be equally demure and unseen as much of a nonentity The first taste of real freedom the rench girl gets is after she is married It is then that she makes her debut ui the world of flirtation All her pent up projiensines for coquetry are then let loose and she quicklv shows the world nught have been" had she enjoyed the same freedom as a girl that is accorded to her as a married woman The Germans don flirt much rau lein has greater opportunities than mademoiselle has but there isnt much chic and sparkle about fraulein She flirts of course but she does it in a mild matter of fact fashion There is a vast difference between coquetry Germany and America as much as there is be tween lager beer and champagne rau lein is a methodical businesslike mortal her qualifications to fill the position of wife and mother are admirable but as a coquette she falls far behind any of the others mentioned thus far Honest as the day is long and practical throughout whatever inclination she may ever have possessed for flirtation is offered up as a willing sacrifice upon the altar of her marriage There is a good deal of coquetry among the Hungarians and in the lower Danu bian provinces of Slavonia and Crotia the maidens seem almost to the manner born One would scarcely tldnk there was any such thing as coquetry among Turkish women considering the arbi trary social conditions under which they live As a matter of fact however there is a good deal of flirtation going on a surreptitious manner The Moslem lady coquettlahly inclined has to be very careful any Bluebeard detectmg the least impropriety might cause her rum and even nowadays her death if the other party was a Giaour Tho Turkish lady runs very great risks and flirts under most decided difficulties The extent of her flirtation with a rank would be the stealthy removal of her yashmak to let (him see her face whSn meeting her at some unfrequented spot If a very bold coquette this risky performance would be supplemented by a smile The same difficulties have to be over come and the same dangers braved by the ladies of Persia They too coverup their faces when public and they too would get into senous trouble if detected flirting with a er'enghi The Persian lady would actually be in danger of her life And yet when walking in the sub urbs of Teheran I have seemtho veils quickly raised on some lonely street and have time and again been the recipient1 of forbidden smiles These venturesome coquettes were literally smiling at the risk of having their throats cut! tit was all pure flirtation too no more signifi cance in it tlian in the eyes the American lady at the theatre made at the two dudes not a bit The only country where positively escaped anything in the shape of flirta tions was in Afghanistan In that fanatic cal country the women are practically invisible a I used to sometimes catch glimpses of female heads closely veiled peeping cautiously at me around the chimneys of then flat roofed houses but a single glance in that direction and the heads would dodge back out of sight as quickly as though dodging a bullet i In India coquetry is confined chieflv to" the Nautch girls They understand the art to: perfection and when performing before a sometimes afford him more pleasure by their coquetry directed at himself than by the dancing itself The Chinese as a general thing are horribly matter of fact and realistic But there are coquettes even among' tho Heathen Chinee 1 I had quite a flirtation directed at me by a not unhandsome1 rnMcn nno Aarim In Duang tsi She was all the more inter esting because I had up till then seen little disposition among her countrvwo men iv mi one waa i a roausiue tea hitUm where I halted for refreshments The golden lily her tiny feet bandaged prettily with red and blue ribbon came 1 and sat beside me and helped herself to tea and peanuts sunflower seed cakes and sweetmeats and smiled and chat tered like a Celestial parrot I stayed there about half an hour during which time the golden lily had chattered and giggled incessantly and when 1 finally moseyed off she waggled her hand good by and till was out of sight and hearrng Thomas Stevens in New York Mail and Express Wiington Critic 1 In 'Christendom ever receives barren rocks are beginning to undergo a change and it is probable that ten years hence will be deserted Of the ancient or deserted pueblos those of Choco canyon New Mexico ate thernost remarkable yetdiscovered Of the inhabitants nothing is known but there is reason to believe that the Zunis are their degenerate descend ants Their relics prove that they were mentally superior' to any Indians of the present day yet they fall far short of civilization There arc found in Choeo canyon the remains of thirteen HlimpriRP Ktonf (M'tftlnrt ia unique ana uuraoie ana wnose out lines prove their builders to have been capable of devising elaborate archi tectural plans in advance and working industriously to a given end The walls of some of these structures are still standing to the height of three and four stories More curious still are the ruined vil lages of the cliff dwellers and fortheir preservation Major Powell suggestion goes a little further The metropolis of the cliff dwellings appears tq have been in Canyons Do Chelly amDelut Muerto winch are practically Northeastern New Mexico These can yons united are fifty miles long and in the caves and weatherings along the way are found more than one hundred and fifty groups of dwellings many of which are as well preserved as on the day theyXwere finished Some tiny caves held not more than two or three families wlnlq some mammoth openings contained villages almost cities with public structures which may have served as places of worship and castles of defense Some are easily accessible to vigorous climb ers while others are beyond reach five or six hundred feet above the bot tom of the canyon with blank stretches of vertical rock intervening Maj'or Powell suggests that these canyons be set apart as a National park after the plan of the Yellowstone reservation The nearest railroad point is seventy miles distant and the intervening country unlike most of the arid region Isboth'jiracticable for a good wagon or railroad and interesting to the tourist The canyons are now the summer home of about twenty five Navajo fam ilies whoso united labors aS tillers of the soil is about as much as wop Id be expected of one industrious white man or a hotel it is suggested that one of the sbnped projections of took be hollowed into rooms corridors halls and bedrooms with windows and bal conies looking up and down the can yon with delators and modern con veniences about which Navajo guides with burros and ponies would wait in readiness to escort tho tourist to distant points of Ar Spa Mont 1 Alleganers a line unite the Banka and Depositors It Is generally supposed that banks are eager to receive deposits from all sources and pay little attention to the character of the depositor provided they get their money This is a very great mistake Good banks are not in the habit of opening accounts with every man who wants to deposit with out knowing something of their cus business methods It is almost as hard to become a depositor in some of the strong Eastern banks as It is to get position in one of them and the depositor must come highly recom mended before his money is accepted The fact is the relation between a confi va sp 4 itlic Ki MEDICAL PROGRESS Example of the Knowledge Produced the of the Last ifty Year England may without boasting claim that she has taken the lead not only in gaining knowledge of the conditions which are concerned in the production I of particular diseases but that she has I also been first in modifying her laws and creating a public health admin islration in response to this teaching i Dr Thorne took as an illustration of I the Inch had been conferred I on te community by these changes the reduction the death rates from OUR WOMEN ABROAD 1 The Experience at Some American Girl Who Married Italian Noblemen It is now ten years since a former Consul of the United States in said to me: parents and guardians ought never to allow their daughters or wards to come over and pass one two or throe years as the case may be in the study of music for th opera or otfipr professional sing ing without some elderly female rela tive to accompany and protect them andwlsortharthey may appear respect able the eyes of respectable people This same Consul told me of instances where great trials and in one case how positive harm had come to those either neglecting or being ignorant of European manners and customers A young lady might travel from one end of the United Spates to the other or might stop any length of tune for study or any other purpose wherever she pleased with perfect impunity aud without any improprie ty but it is different here and the woid of caution and warning had reason in it But I wish a word of caution and warning might be raised for the benefit of marriageable young American ladies and widows who do not come here to study Many such come accompanied by a weak maternal relative who is dazzled by the title ami the show of some Baron Count or Duke who ten to one is an impecunious younger son of some old fanulv run to seed If he had money besides titles he would marry one of his own country women and ask no favor of the foreignei Recently a most eminent professor of one or our universities was over here for the purpose oi seeing a young lady relative of his who ivas on the Continent with het mother and had been carried away by one oi these noble men wliosg aflections had scented money from afar But no change was made despite the good professor counsels and as he left Italy he dropped me a line from (onio saying that "neither advice common sense counsel nor any thing else could prevail with an American girl when got undpr her All this is too true readers may have seen the way one of our Consul found in a niailhousi iady who had trnlv given her heart and money to one of those impecunious ad venturers and who then had had her shut up in an asvluni when she was no more insane tnan trie soundest person in lorence All Italian husbands are not bad men I have seen some ns happy domestic relations between husband and wife as I have ever seen anywhere and I should judge that there is greater domestic felicity here than any other Latin nation but as a whole the standard of family life and happiness from the very manner of contracting marriage is far below that of Anglo Saxon countries The impecunious dandies with a roman tic noble title have found out the weak I ness of the American and the English girl and they tako advantage of it In 1882 I noticed in the bank of Messrs Turner Co an English lady I should say of twenty five who accompanied by a sickly looking father was engaged in depositing some money I could see that she was the stronger character of the two and a person of determined will I was informed that she was in love" with an Italian but that he would not come to terms until he had made it a condition of marriage that all her money should be assignedto him as he how to invest it in Italy to the best advantage! And she turned over every centime to him Nqt six months after her this poor lady from opulence was turned adrift if ith only siiffiient money hire a few furnished rooms at Sorrento and I was applied to tt recommend persons to go for pension inorder that She might earn her living Only this year a respectable widow lady residing here in Naples allowedherself to be carried away by the atten tions and the polite bearing toward her iof an Italian gentleman She consult ed mere than one person land among others Mr Camphausen our present American i Consul and they all 4 in answer to her Shall I mar ry responded in the language of Mr celebrated' It was however of no use she went and did and in less than a month the scoundrel tried to strangle her and has since heaped all manner of indignities upon her In one sense she was a little wiser than her English Bister and many of her own She did not assign him her money and hence the great ire of Mr Impecunious Italian Cor American Register Recovered His Property A gentleman crossing Broadway near Cortlandt street while getting out of the way of a heavy truck dropped something and immediately began an anxious search for iti have lost his saida passer by joining in the search Another concluded it was his pocket book still another jmngincd valuable papers and finally quite acrowd had collected and all were eagerly groping in the mud here it said the geutleman fetching a sigh of relief as be picked it up It was a half smoked cigai cigdr cost me ten said the gentleman 1 Then the silence became so great that the roar Af the streetcouhl' be plainly heard Nl Sws Discouraged Man out of that" exclaimed an officer as he found a man in a doorway on Grand River avenue the other night no use old fellow" replied a voice "I say come An4 1 MJL have all your cossxr arresw and arraigned three times this week and the judge refused to send me up It is evident that Tve got to go to work or starve and please let a discouraged man Detroit ree IYm I experience oi sinnii pox nan provided data by which the extent of the useful ness of vaccination might be better de fined The Vaccination acts passed in Queen reign had led to a vast saving of life and especially of child life and these had especially jlrotected those who are unable to guard their own interests had been found to consist of at least two differ ent typhus and enteric fever the former largelv due to the xirowd ine of neonle in houses anil of honsns Charles de btiuie4 Rus sian Minister Ims returned to' Wash ington for tho winter but with1 Muct ancc His accomplished wife will spend thq winter in Europe working in her graceful and modest but singularly ef fective way for hisrausfer to "so mo European court Gossip stys that Mme de Struve made her husband what he ls for when he first knew her she was a bright beautiful young lady ofthe high court circles of St Peters burg and ho was a poor enough Consul at some Eastern city She had him made Minister to Japan before 'sho married him then she secured a trans fer for him to Washington and it i now expected that sheWllba equally successful in making him the Russian representative at some European Cap Chicago Tnbune 4 are fond of giving advice to wntera It ia not so expensive as giving a check Writer mg ji people iu iiouses iiuu oi nouses on a site where air and light were shut out the latter mainly due to excre I mental pollution Each required its special means of prevention and these had been applied with astonishing re sults London had spent fourteen mil lions of pounds in the improvement of unhealthy areas and among the results might be cited the almost complete dis appearance of typhus from the metrop olis Enteric fever had enormously diminished and this hud been brought about through the adoption of methods which the new knowledge showed to be necessary I urther investigation had indicated the difierent channels by which disease could be dissemi nated Ballard and Michael Taylor had demonstrated the part that milk could play the diflusion of enteric and scarlet fever Power and Klein had shown how milk scarlatina had its igin and had proved the urgent need for human and veterinary medicine to work together for the saving of human life Buchanan had taught that phthisis the scourge of the British Isles Was chiefly dependent uoon conditions of soil which would be removed These are but a few examples of the addi tions to knowledge which the work of the last fifty years has produced 1 Not least in importance must be reckoned urn ueveiopuient or a system or precise investigation which will confer in the future even greater benefits than those experienced in tho past and to the perfecting of which the new president of tho Epidemiological Society has con spicuously contributed Lancet lioutM Qi th West The American Association for the Advancement of Science adopted a resolution recommending to Congress that some steps be taken for the pres ervation of the remarkable archaeolog ical curiosities of the West Prof Powell and his associates of the Geo logical Survey have been giving the subject considerable attention The plan most in favor contemplates the passage of an act reserving certain designated spots where these pueblos and other curiosities exist from appro priation and settlement under the land laws thus stamping them as Govern ment property am! leayjmg more elab orate and expensive undertakings to the Some of the pueblo tribes are rap idly dying out and others are chang ing from the quaint people they were a lew years ago to very commonplace savages The pueblo of Silla fifty miles west of Santa which a few decades ago gave shelter to one thou sand souls now contains but little more than one tenth that number Acoma a much better known pueblo IQ 1 ti ani'frel i i UVJVl AHO Uiuni LVVVI1S I of Arizona built upon the tops of high I certaln ifty 1 ftYDAHpnrft nf ini iwv hail nrAriHml GENUINE LONDON OG A Reliable American Tourist Deecanta on Its Strange Pecoltarttlca It was the first real log we had seen As London is a large city 6f course it can afford to have a good sized fog It was so dark we did not get up till eleven The fog was then very and full of where you would poke your head out of the win dow to see hat was the matter Children below us were making fog men putting hats on them and pipes" in their mouths Men had fun press ing it in their hands and fog balling each other Street cars had extra horses to assist in pulling through the fog and they would leave long tunnels along the route down which one could look piifi'i it caVed in We heard it intimated that landlords stuffed their bed ticks with it as it made soft spnngy couches to rest upon and bet ter than straw and corn cobs It was the woist fog that you ever attempted to shake a stick at If you went to talk out of doors your mouth would fill so full of fog that you could spit it out onlv with great difficulty Merchants would sweep it otl the sidewalksand shovel it away high enough so that a mau with a plug hat could walk under it ion could take a cross cut saw and saw it very well It was so dense that we would have been in the same fix if we had been the bottom of the sea The cast weight ot it broke down a number of roofs in the city A man fell out of the third story window of lus hotel by accident but came dowm through the fog so slowly that his ft lends had to jell to him to hurry up oi down as thev were tired of waiting foi Inin and were afraid he would have to stay up there When we went out in town we had to hire a man to push us along The fog was so thick that we look far enough back to sec who he had got to push him A reliable Englishman told us that a century ago during a similar fog the squadron hoisted anchor in the Thames and sailed up town solely through the fog He said to tins dav that street is called and in another street they stianded bv the fog getting lightei ami in consequence the street was named Aslam on probation I will not swear that this is altogether so or more so I went down the treet smoking a cigai thinking I was making a good ileal of smoke but tound the cigar had gone out the same moment I had You could get a double handful of the fog and squeeze all the water out of it and families did this to save water rate Our eoat pockets would get so full of it that we had tp scoop it out We a section of fog you can see what it Jooks I Bellaw in Drake's Maga 'f' Ex Empress Eugenie A M'M fitill hnnutifnl 'SV they show that they have shod many a tear and are sadly Indeed standing Uiere to let her pass before na'T thought of nothing so much as hpr womanhood Alone forever alpno with her broken hopes and the memory of her dead boy her life and her love gone at one bio wkAVe watched her at the foot of tlie stair withdrawing the hand from the helping walked ay WllM JlUvll gl UUvXUl Her figure is8tiU flue or seemed so A Diifl li RdovA iHMiinni hirht hurt ura beautifullv though onlv in seome simple soft merino or casfii TMfiA th mi ah It A rnnrnlruv rrnwn first but as I taw her later in the day 1 A Wtulw WBbUUlCTa vQtlviuQwU Lv not entirely that Tt was a pleasure to te io see her and a bit of good fortune Cor Detroit ree Press (ata very late hour with deep can I leave AN ODD LITTLE STATE The lxhlnu Club Which Entertained La inyette In July 18S The most novel and humorous enter tainment given to Lafayette and his suite was at the in Schuylkill on July 25 1825 a short time before he returned to iance The club or fishing company that invited him to their little domain then within seven years of its one hundredth birthday was the oldest club in Amer ica It owned one acre of land on the beautiful river fenced in and improved with buildings suited to its purposes called the "State in Schuylkill and it had an independently organized Gov ernment and a code of of ibrown The 1st of October was itsannual elec tion day when it chose a Governor five members for its miniature legisla ture a sheriff and a coroner The Gov ernor appointed a1 Secretary of State On these KimportanUocca8ions'' the club Usually feasted on barbecued pig pi epared by the sirloin steaks and the products the gun The steaks ere cooked over wood coals quickly being turned and served the "instant they were ready thereby losing none of their flavor and juices Neither fork Tor knifeiwere ever allowed to penetrate the meats of these Schuylkill epicures but beef steak tongs Imported from England'! were jiscd in turning them The vari ous fish: were boiled or broiled with the greatest skill and '''ceremony The highest officers of the Statq were often seen battling with a twelve pound sal mon or nailing a shad to a board to be roasted before the fire The coroner was an important personage In tho club kitchen and inspected all the work of the citizens who were nppoint ed in turn to market for the banquets The dub had a famous punch bowl with a curious wooden dipper and to this bowl the says brought theirmale infants to be bap tized by the Governor as the bowl was large enough to admit of total immer sion The heir so baptized would nat urally inherit the citizenship 1 Magazine of American History Is said that the 'Russian Govern ment contemplates thd attachment to its legation in this country of an en gineer officer whose duty it will be to report to his (government upon the de velopment of engineering science in the United States with special prefer ence to marine engineering (to savr you at church last Sunday Miss Smith" 8ittar did Photqgragher aaaaaiM SUtMH fHaniwveCri 'TVT' vvm rlf you could raise yonr ehin a ana what an atrocious looking hat she had on (After a pause) There Misa Smith it is over and I think we caught a very pleasant predion otin IN THE AR WEST Had Mad rom Pennylvunla Ron Aero a Bad mad in Wyoming AJrejlay near ort etterman Wyo for dinner Another covered waron headed wesL was already camped there and a boy was taking care of the horses while a girl about fourteen years old was busy frying some bacon over a fire near the wagon to sceure'TRT acquaintance with the girl and asked her if she and her brother were travel ing alone no" she replied "pap and mam are in the wagortl Pap's laid up mam him in an all bunged up Other feller was a sight quicker 'n pap 'lowed he was but he did make some lively motions! was the a fight Say I want to know if thy men keen gittin wuss the furder west you "Well hard to say Do they seem about it When we lived back Pennsylvania pap he could liek any man in County 'an he used to do it too days ourth of Jtnys an' camp Three months ago we pulled out for the West says pap: shall leave a 'line men on cl utches from Lewiston la to Bozeman tie together the the Rockies by pies! I shall the West with spavmed busted up fighters! I shall shut up the op tics am! flatten out the smellers oi these Western galoots learn that the bad men all roost west the Pap said he was pizen on Western blowhards they wanted to sing low when he had Ins boots was ho as successful as he ex pected to be? "Not by a good bit He pounded a man all to pieces near Pittsburgh licked two more Ohio '1 hey seemed to get tougher in Indiana but pap whaled a livery styible man at De catur an' chased a ippeeanoe County farmer a mile a half When we struck into Illinoys they peared to git still wuss pap only kinder tired out three or four of 'em lick Then win crossed the Miss'ssippi at Burlington a man that as lorulin lumber down by the river kinder tired pap out Then at Ottumwa man that run a pert ly near licked pap reg la at Osec ola he'd got pounded if he run Still he git hurt much till wo strtfrk got still worse did ain't no name foi it At ic i Tnont one of the county commissioners come flown where we was camped put it nil overpnp in about ten minutes an! nt Lomr Pine nat shook his fist at A A ss lithe conductor of a passenger train that was goin past the conductor iStoppcd hi? tram coflie over whaled pap till he squealed At Val entino the principal of the schools EftichiWcdf him out tho school yard it When we tried tO camp there at eioVhauron fie picked ou the mayor a Jlittlo while tliov was to trade iXyi limjflAC nn fhn i va It 8 xt Visv IUUJU1 up J' kACU AU to him his coat or a word Still pap wasn laid up till WO BtrUcksWvoniino' Baek hern at a Lusk pup got with a little feller bout religion' lumped up a fc( couple timos told the little feller to out ho was a then pap wont for hliu with his down gosh you otter seen the motions that little feller made! I Pap was heked he" got wind but somehow tho cuss wns so little lie him in place like he oitei the conse kenec was tni'hnd to him into the fix up soni" plasters for him i uh him with hoss I know to become 11111 if ho It in In It Hint the furfler west wo git rxtJirs ikriida llustr zwtv 3A' ou iUJWnniBU AVI we git up to Bozeman that hate to bury pup Pap a if ho could strike a Quiker settlement he would 5 be all light but there seem to be none ont this Way To a man up a treo ii looks sit pap was a busted com Carruth Chicago 1'1 munity! Tribune A REMARKABLE TALE Snake Will Not Llro on Soil rom thp 1 morale! laic a James rancis Hogan dn his book Irish" relates that one of the prettiest spots on Sydney Harbor has a curious and ro mantic history At the beginning of the 'century it was chosen as his place of residence by Sir Henry Hays nn Irish Baronet who had the misfortune to be transported for abducting the lady on (Vhoni he had set his affections but who did not see her way to recip rocate his tender passion Though technically a prisoner Sir rank and social position caused him to be treated by the authorities as a priv ileged person and ho was allowed a full measure of freedom on giviug his word of honor that ho would make no attempt to leave the colony and return to Ireland Sir Henry accepted his fate philosophical resignation and commenced to build anew home for hlmsolf on the beautiful estate which he had purchased and called Vaucluse But though the place was and still is one of the loveliest spots on earth it had at that time one seri ous and annoying drawback It was infested with snakes 4 One day however a bright idea struck Sir Henry as ho was cogitating on die subject and wondering if there were any practical means of ridding himself of these unwelcome intruders He resolved to try a bold and' re JmkaBULexPfUjmentHB would see wcrcvuxu wtv nnuauJ Su xiirick pro hibition of snakes on Irish will wnnU XIII always dines alone No the we soil if transferred kzn vi a tn fnA ntnr sin a fha TT hlgherhoBors thaato be invited to par cordinglysent home tor a number of of cup of I 1 of Rnd they wrived The Roya! Iriih Conitabalary The men who compose it are almost exclusively Irish for the post part the sons of Irish farmers or tradesmen drawn from all parts of the country ir respective ot Catholics Prot estants and Presbyterians are equally wel come to its ranks but perbaptf the pwi' portion of the first named religion is uuvuii iixjjvi uvuu wa me vuvai Birengtn they are all men who before enroll ment must show that they possess a fair education and whose character has been carefully inquired into they enroll vol untarily and eagerly and beyond the re quirements of ono notlce are unaer no ooiiganon to remain As a rule they do remain for many years marry Irish women and when discharged settle in Ireland and possess the goodwiU uw murrays Magazine CnRf fo fiAlAtiAA A thick coating of flowers of sulphur ow the affected limb for one night bAid to cure the sciatica The skin should ba thoroughly cleansed first The remedy cAAjjprt? euvugu io warrani bitulL Chkgo Herald in Sydney7 in due course Sir Henry as it would go around his residence with the result very gratifying to him self that his domestic precincts were never afterwards troubled by snakes although the other portions of the es tate continued to be infested by the reptiles Succeeding occupants of Vaucluse among them the distin guished statesman Wentworth all agree in testifying to the singular fact that a snake was never known to cross the charmed circle of Irish earth Donahue's Magazine A A mAh Bi hv Auk A A 2 i wat 8 By I I "Ip Im i 1 Sj'v lUa test JA f'J 1 I AB 1 I 'Ji fl iSiii th Er I MSI i irt i 5 1 BiH 4 rdB JB'r 4 i ui 'ts aw It iV a eskSs' aw 1'M 4 if I jS 4W ot 4 i I KvJ io fdk fr 4 tit si 11.

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The El Paso Journal from El Paso, Illinois (2024)

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