WAVEKLAXI). A tale or cu.: C '. LANDLORDS. ;n:ii.M. "'I P I .. ..' :. i K'lvp-i t V i:i : f ' I in count rv 1. 1 no. mi- i)!.- I '. .1 . 1 . " '. . . , ' Csta'.i. -m .1 i i ....... : frofi i.i'i '. ' . . i,i A . A(:lli:u m-' t !.. i ;,- that tj.'-re . w i-rrv la Ariii-vic-i I ti. i t i ; i Influx 1 i' . .. . . . "f vil li's f .Is." v:i. .') V : 1 1 ? . i -r i : can .c.i:. a lie, Li i. f . ;.l ;is ! r j irif f.uv.i v.; ."! : ! :i i I think a;: 1 i." Frii.i the lisi:ii.-istn of important na tional affair we Ii!t'icvl to tlio arranjje UH'iiU foi- the twin::'. It, ; arranged fiiat wo wvr.s to iiK-eL ut Ulue IlMe in tha tvonii!;-: for tlie u"'.tlii)', and from there to M'.-j ua.- rrii-nl on their way U Liver P001- . rn.vi-TKit X X I X. FA i:f. WKI.U Tlie lM-nnlifiil ilrt-am of lif-! How few tcali.it t!u ir iilt-al! Tin eventful -veniiii hat h.'fl la-en I lie tlicnn- of conversation by a l.irjre einlr of friends, uml the one vent of life to the iiiunriliute actors, hail arrived. Tin? immense luill ut Ulue Kicle was filled with friends, vsigrr to witness he iirirria-e of Colonel Kn d Haynes, of the United States. to the lM-autifnl Annie Wren. Wh.-.t a f.ix'inatioii a wedding 1km for young; and old! The bridal party were to occupy ft liroad sIako or dais that had l.cen Ixnutifully lee orated for the occasion with more taste and skill than u-iiul ly the nrti.tR- hand f l.-idy Ifortense. There were flowers, verywhere. The room seemed a liower of bloom. A tinie w;ls to he led to the altar by her aed f;:ther. Sin wore, over a dress f white satin, a dainty rolie of lace, a veil f KtiiflNh point, a necklace of line jM-arl and .1 wreath of orange tlowers. nil white; and In this .nowy cloud Annie lookeil lore lovely than ever. Sir Wren, with bis lop.n w hite U.-ard. rrr.iin.h'd me of my childSii pictures of t!ie patriarch Moses. The Colonel was in a fall eveiiimj drc.-s nit. His eyes Li-spoke a happy future for my little friend. As they took their places before the altar I thought that they miht hallcinre t he li nest t; reek or Parisian t:ist for perfect ion of form, feature aud ciw ume. How t-hort the :eremony! How much it mean a it runs out in the year to come! , To some it bring a train of uninterrupted i joy and confidence; to other pain and dis appointment. Congratulation were offered, mingled with feelings of sadness; for on the mor- j ww our party were to separate. "It may i he for years and it may be for ever," was the refrain. Yet there was no murmuring with sighing. We grieved to be separated from the friend we had loved so long; but this was a happy closing scene for our holiday period. Now we must buckle on lite armor of life and take an active part. A. happy, joyous time of rest aud recreation it had been I A banquet had been prepared for the j losing. The great dining-room was bril liantly lighted. Illumination is a necessa ry accompaniment to joy; mist and shad ows are not welcome to the happy. The hall was gay with bird and flowers. The tuble Hashed and sparkled with glass, hina, gold and silver. From an ante room oamo soft strains of music as from some .olian harp. Annie, the beautiful bride, wa seated between her father and her noble young husband, while Mrs. Haynes sat by Wir "Wren. My sweet wife wa3 by my side, as bright a beam of sunshine as of old. The merry guests were all seated, and quiet conversation was the rule. The Duke of Melvorne sat beside his noble Duchess, still as charming a when we first met her in the mountains of the far away land of blue skies and broad prairies. Mr. and Mrs. LolLard were as jovial as ever, and many were the jokes we passed on our time honored guide. Lord Sanders, with Lis tall, aiivTular, over-dressed wife and showy tiaugl:L-rs were all conspicuous for the amount of diamond they wore and for ! their re.-erveil aaJ naughty uemca:ior. At dessert Sir Wren was called on to toast the newly married couple. "Von will not eicipe two sermons one from the bishop, which you have ji-.nrd," he said, bo.ving across the table to Bishop Bede, "ami now one from me. Listen, my onuarcn. Adore eaca other. J nappy. Now is ! he bidding ;iuuof h:pca:id trust; let not the chilling blight of discordant el ements blast the tender Mower. The world lacks ierfume: it lacks the charm of love. "We cannot love too well. We cannot please too much. To love and be loved what a miracle is wrought! Love, woman and a kiss are a circle; they form our untverse from the cradle to the grave. Exist brave ly for each other. Hide your anger; wound -may heal but the scars remain. Life is too short in its arrowy Sight for even an angry word. Love was a child six thous and years ago, and has a right to a long white beard though as youthful as ever," concluded Sir Wren, stroking his long beard as he resumed his seat. Melvorne was called to answer to the toast. "Civilization." "My friends, long life to woman. She is the central feature of civilization. He who trains a son train a man. He who edu cate a daughter educates a nation. Civ ilization has brought the university to tha poor man's door, in the newsboy's acheL Civilization has tamed the lightnings and conquered the elements, but woman is conquerable only tliron aer l,vo. Colonel Haynes w.is called ou for "America." "A welcome wor,i. my friend." said the Colonel. "I long to tread her fertile soil once more. Hut I go with a warning. I must proclaim to ti.e men in that free land thut they ;;re ivc.ving to the yoke of mpres.;..i r.it v, ill .--.cn be too heavy to lie.ir. I have seen t'e- effect of landlordism on a people lound in slavery to rent. Shall the beacon light of hope in our glorious union be darkened by this dreadful cloud Shall the land of free schools and free churches be changed to a land of igikirance a:;1! d'.'.'N-d.itioi;. No. a thousand time, no! blood of our forefathers cries out :i''sdnst it. I-t not History repeat itself. We ni'ist sound the tocsin and rouse our w&nle from the lethargvof slecD. There are aliens in America, silently stealing our land, our heritage and our freedom. Defeat to alien landlords is to lie my mot to evermore!"' "Waverland for Ireland!" was called. "My friends," I said, "I see in the mists of vanished ages a living, moving throng. Their fitful shadows sweep by us in a grand procession of stately king in golden char iots; of yellow-haired warriors rushing to Laltle with shout and war song, for whose sake king are ready to peril their crowns and men to offer up their lives. In Ire land, when England was inhabited by a jw!M. rovfn? trvosy, peonleJikT wild Tn- vfeii esia&ii.sriea in an mo tonus or roy eminent. Thetriid of nil disputes was net I led by a verdict of twelve men. In Music, t he harp was used by the Iribh people, and developed by them into the modern piano forte. In literature jmd art t ;..:;. iied; and from In! u-d came the ai;a:s' h-aileil soldiers ilia, broke, the yoke ol Km:ii.-;:j s!av ry from the Kaglisa Kerfs. While Knland was yet in slavery, t l:e IrS h v. ci e en) ;, : ng free schools, siis-t.:i:e-.S by endowment. They taught re l'::i.;:i. i '. !a-:gtt.- f "fid uii.ing. Ar- ... 1 ect to Ki'ig Solomon and I,1.. : to Ireland i'y the old prophets . taey .'led iroi'.i ...--syrian cajilixity, ' . . : n ; ii t t o t lie i ie o li-. ; "'! he youtliful ki:.g, Alfred t!. (Ireat, 1 drank depp from the fountain of knowl edge in Ireland. Literature and art be came to him a living purpose. He learnet to play the harp, ami in after year it en ; allied him to charm the Danish king I while lie was seeking points for attacking their armies. "When Alfred wa proclaimed king of Knglaud ho established a government founded on the principle learned of the Irish Parliament. It consisted of one chamber where nobles, priest, bards and commons ull met as equals, aud the king sat in the midst of them as president. At Oxford he established a school of learnin arid sent to Ireland for instructors. He repeated in England the works in, marble aud stone that he had learned in Ireland, and had his men build the tiointed roofs mid arches now called Gothic. "t'ur more tnan two thousand years Iri land was a free and prosperous nation, as idiorv and her ruin proclaim. I'irst the Dane made their descent upon the I land, capturing many places and driving Irish scholar into all parts of Europe. Af terward Knglaud realized that Ireland was a rich and prosperous hind, with every nda:it.':,'o of wealth and culture. The Irish wire a iirave an 1 intelligent peopl sup-.-rior ' o the Er-jli ;h in cvcryihiu.'j hut power. Superior ii'im'j?;- huvj c::qr:ered arid f',r oi ii""-" vd y.:-.rs Jru':;i l ii;.3 been made to feel that England is Ut mas ter and she is a lave. Then, amid the thunders of the Ameri can revolution, when the Ilritish Empire reeled before the blows of the allied forces of Iymis XVI and Lieorge Washington when 1'aul .tones, the ankce I'nvateer, preyed on English commerce and spread terror along the Scottish coast; when Ire land was without English troops and the only military force in all Ireland was the Irish volunteers, O rattan's parliament wa? called into existence. Then, like a giant released from bondage, the country again advanced, making rapid strides in prog- ress, until Lord Clare proclaimed i not a civilized nation on the fac 'There face of the globe which has advanced in cultivation, in agriculture, in manufactures, with the same rapidity as Ireland!' "For eighteen years that parliament met in one of the finest buildings in Europe, and made the laws to govern the Irish people. Then, again, the jealousy of Eng land, through treachery and fraud, de stroyed the Irish parliament, and Grattan, who had led the Irish people to freedom, lived to see her liberties crushed out by the sword and her parliament destroyed by gold. But though prostrate and bleeding, smarting under the sense of outraged dig nity, through years of eviction, famine, imprisonment and death, she has again determined to claim her rights. Another beam of sunlight has touched the living picture, and reveals a mighty man, whose hand is on the key-board of British poli tics! One who has brought forth a har mony of class and creed that resounds throughout the world, astonishing man kind!" The evening's entertainment was pleas ant and gay, with music and conversation. The grand good humor of our hast gave a tone of cheerfulness to the whole party. At a late hour the final farewells were said and the bridal party took leave of their friends at Blue Ridge. In the morning Colonel Haynes, his wife and mother and Sir Wren bade adieu to Raven's Park, but Stella, Myrtle and my self formed part of the company as far as Liverpool. There the last farewells were spoken while we stood on the deck of the great steamer that was to be their dwell ing place for the next few day. "Well Waverland," Mid Colonel Haynes as he took my arm for a short stroll on the deck before parting, "keep me posted a to the condition and progress of. the work in the British parliament, and I will send ou notes of matters in America. We shall be widely separated, yet I shall feel that we are co-laborer in the same great work. You are engaged In a long death struggle to loosen the fangs of landlordism from the brightest spot of rich green earth on the face of the globe! I go to America, to do what I can, by agitation aud work, to prevent the same monster from stealing the inheritance of the freest people in tJie world! Unlike chattel slavery, landlord ism is stealthy and deceptive! It charms as the serpent, and i as cruel as the grave. It starves anil debauches its victims to helplessness and revels amid the suffer ing. "ine curse ot Ireland is this same con densed villainy! This same cruelty, bru tality and terror, conceived in lust and per petuated by force! I have seen it with my own eye. ord cannot describe it. It does not recognize manhood, womanhood or childhood. Its hand is upon every cra dle in Ireland! Its victims are live mil lions of people who cannot get away. They are held down by the bayonet, while the landlords rob the helpless in the name of the law! "I believe Irish landlordism comprises all the villainies the devil ever invented, with chattel .slavery thrown in; for when a chattel slave is sick his master cares for him he is hi money! When an Irish tenant is unable to work he is thrown out upon the roadside with his wife and chil dren to perish. In short I have come to feel that this system that confronts us is legalized piracy! The old Saxon was a drunken, sensual brute, but he had his good points; he was not a perfect landlord, but when the Danes, born sea pirates, and the Normans, born land pirates, swooped down on England and mixed with the Saxon such men as Lord Sanders were cre ated; cold-blooded, cruel and far-reaching; with hi friOO.000 per year income from Lis farms in Illinois. He and his brather landlords have already larger holdings in America than they have in Europe. It makes the blood boil in my veins! Must we bit idle while these men enact the same cruelties in America that I have seen In Ireland. No, we are ready for work. This S3steui we go forth into the two hemis pheres to fight! You are led by the great est men of Europe. Your weapons are truth and justice! S'our friends have made a start. Thi hot furnace of perdition will not yield easily, you will be beaten once, twice, thrice. "Hint remember the story of Bruce and the spider; thirteen times are not too often to try! Follow Gladstone and Pamell. Keep h firm hand on the dyna- I janoioras here, nnrt tne monopolies in I America, and will ruin the cause of liberty by their impatience if permitted. The right of persons and property should Ik maintained. It is a lesson for old and young, rich and poor. No man has a right to le -! roy his neighbor's property, or to infringe on his m-ighlxir's rirhts, either as lan Words, monopolists or as dynamiters! i .Justice, rirht and a free ballot are theonly I w apons that can conquer tyranny in all its ! forms!" I The signal bell sounded, warning us that j the parting time had come. With clasped ; hands, fail heart and moist eyes, more ex pressive than word., we pledged eternal friendship. "Annie," Stella was saying, a we joined them, "write to me often. Tell me of the people and place that you see. We have had such happy times together. I almost dread to go back to Waverland now that you are gone." "Little friend and playmate," I said, A I bade Annie farewell, "the moors and mountains will miss the patter of your jm ny's feet, but you will visit a new country with a message of love and liberty, learned from the old home in Ireland. I wish you G l speed and a happy life." The final signal sounded; we were low, red from the great steamer, but watched our friends until they vanished from view. We crossed the channel and visited Waverland for a few days. In some parts of Ireland there hail been terrible need, almost amounting to starvation. In Con naught there had been less suffering. The tenants were hopeful. The new ministry wa agreeable to their wishes.. Mr. I'ar nell wa their chosen leader, hero and friend. Though quiet was maintained in Ireland, there wa an undertone of earn estness that told of settled determination. The only safe plan for England is to listen to reason. According to an agreement with Sir Wren, many things not valuable enough to take with him. yet through association too dear to be parted with. I had taken to V.verlaud. Annie's pet pony was one of '.a, !:.i;i ;s cn!:n.:ilted to i.iy care. The f.ir;ners on Sir Wren's e.-'ate were com-ter-ie-:! id !,iinpy. A way had been pro vided by which they were to buy the laud they tilled. Lady Waverland visited all her oh friend. Thev were a warm as ever in their raises of the "swate lady!" The lit tie school had been moved from the tenant cottage to a line, large build ing, erected for the purpose according to (he direction of Lady Waverland. She also had endowed it with sufficient funds to procure the best instructors. Thus all our tenant' children have the privilege of a free education. No wonder that, to the poor oppressed tenants, such a benefactor is an object of special love and affection. Her quiet, healthful influence also had a good effect on the home life of the people. Now, in stead of dirt and filth about the cabin3, all was neat and tidy. The pigs and cows were in the rear of the building, in some kind of shelter, and flowers were seen in the door yards. Our stay in Waverland was short. It was early in the year 1SS5. Parliament was in session, and each Irish member felt it his duty to fill his place at all times during the sittings. If Gladstone is beaten in his plans, there will be an appeal to the people. In that appeal, one party or the other will be beaten: but, in any event, the cause of British liberty will gain by the agitation. Ireland's causa is becoming national, and very soon every part of the rltish Empire must clasp hands in one universal struggle for British liberty! With the example of America in view. anter the struggle with cheerful faith in t Lie futurel THE EXO. Shooting an Alligator. The oars were stopped, resting in the water; the skiff half turned, drift- ng- in the sluirish tide: the Ions: beam of the lantern, with its oval disk of dim ig-ht resting far out on the surface, swept slowly around over the waters ookmj; for the two lost lights. len minutes or more thus passed, aud sr.d- lenly the two lost sparks iWeamod back in a new direction. A gentle, noiseiess push on the port oar headed the skiff toward them ajjain. "Donee uient!" whispered Paul. His associate, still more g-entl guided the boat to the left, till onlj' one light shoue from the obscure object in the water. This showed tiiat he had got ou its side, as was desired, because a forward 6hot always glances. Cautiousl' tiie sileut oarsman agaiu turned his craft to the right. Paul raised his long rifle ready to tire. The disk of the lantern on the water, contracting gradually, grew proportionately more brilliant. As it contracted the solitary light shining back on the water from its center be came larger aud brighter, till at last the eye of the great saurian glittered as if he had the Koh-i-noor" itself in his bead. Slowly, silently, nearer the boat moved, till within ten yards of the reptile. The glow of the lantern Hashed along the barrel of the rifle for a few seconds; then came the ringing report. The light ou the water in stantly went out. and the glow of the lantern, now shining in a circle only a few feet in diameter over the place where it disappeared, showed only a lew loamy buouies ana little pools. Thirty seconds passed i: silence; then an immense dark form bounded from the depths below above the sur face of the water, and. rolling over on its back, showed the broad, yellow white belly of an enormous alligator. The shuddering reptile remained other wise motionless for a few minutes; then, spasmodically stretching and stiffening its ugly legs and feet, and leaping naif its length in the air. fell back again, beating the water with its tail in blows sounding as loud as the report of the weapon which had slain him. "Moi tue li," muttered Paul in an accent of quiet triumph. His associate, after a few exclamations of more voluble admiration, rolled another cigarette, and quietly turned his boat off in search of other game. In a few bour3 of this huntincr five alliga tors were shot. Andrew Wilkinson, in the Cznturii. Care of Teeth by Africans. Africau savages have the best teeth in the world, and one reason for this is that they take such excellent care of them, cleaning them several times a day. For this purpose they use a short piece of wood, which becomes softened by rubbing in the mouth. Thu- I he v.'.' -agj ot a toothbrush is: 'As I remember my teeth constantly. ANK OF CASSCOUNTY Cur Main 1 1 1 VI a t'aid up capit il surplUH ' a if .:5 OFFICEli:- J It I'iinieie It rt Kamsey J. M. l'alteiMin 1 M. I'atleisoii, freslite!! : Vi.'f 1 re-,ileii: I Jisliei A-St ;i-tlle DIRECTORS ). H. Tan ele. .1. V. H Smith It. 15 r. M. 1'attei-on M. l'at'erson. ii.illiain, H. Kreit li r H. liari-ey t( I k GENERAL HANX1NC 73 AN SATED Account solicited. Interest a!lnwet or, ttim n-positi and prompt Mtent loimiven to ll ini uess enirintetl to its care. Perkins- ironstf, 217 21!), 221 and 2l- Main St., Plattsmouth H. M BOWS Nebraska Proprieto-, 1 he Perkins has renovated from top aow oce of the best been thtrou,-',:Iy tC .VOlioiu miu ' .- A hotels in the state iiourilers will M.50 and up. le taken by the week at 3C0D BAH CONNECTED 3il?21 ft i-5NESSKEAB IXZ naf;MM I"'-- Wlftpua EADSOISKSCURD oTnlmlar Y..r Cuh- pe,s heartl. Comfortable. Urutdwa, 2ivw York, Wi.te i-jg book oi ptoA& 1 illLlm :A PARKER'S .- t ." 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