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About Omaha daily bee. (Omaha [Neb.]) 187?-1922 | View Entire Issue (Dec. 15, 1895)
TINS OMAHA DAILY JJIOI3 : Sl' DAV , I ) 13C112 1111511 1o , 18 * I,5 , n " t < r 151O Douglas Street. PT AV nf HOT THAV ir L * \ X Ul OJU > I.JL/rs. X Is unquestionably here. Our stock is by far the largest , our variety the widest , and our prices indisputably the most reasonable in the city. US JP FOR Magic Lanterns , 6-inch Rubber Dolls , Barnum's Circus , complete Silk Lamp Shades , English Semi-porcelain dinner All kinds and sixes of Christ knit dressed and hats. . 1UC in large box , i4-iiiches wide , sets , each piece marked mas Cards at y the . _ House that Jack Built. .2/OC worth $1.25 worth $1.75 "Made in England1' under- usual pi ices , ic to JpI-vO 13-inch dressed dolls lull - glaze decorations No. i Foot Balls I5c jointed bodies , moving The popular game of Large Bisque Globes for worth $9.00 Magic Lanterns of the best bisque he ad , worth 500 Parchcsi standard Banquet Lamp Pianos IOC ' Toy Ridgeway's ioo-piece English makes , UU worth $1.50 and $2.oo. , 250 IpO Large Tin Kitchen complete - . 15-inch dressed dolls , satin Crockinole Boards semi-porcp.lain dinner sets , in Large size red Toy . _ plete , worth 250 IOC drer.s , large hat , full best , $3 handsome green decorations , Tables 18c jointed bodies , worth $1.50 quality Banquet Lamp , extra high gold traced" , The Popular Brownie _ massive gold plated head worth $15.00 Shoefly Rockers Rubber stamps A C Swimming1 Frog , life like Checker Boards and foot , _ _ Ouija Boards . OoC in its actions , complcts. ,5c worth $6.00 . . - . IpOJL O Carlsbad China Cuspidors , Tiddley Winks 5c in neat decorations , Wheel Barrows 1OC worth 5oc Children's rocking chairs Brass Banquet Lamp , Onyx worth 750 Wood Dominoes 3C Christmas Tree Candles cane seat ? , worth $1.25 column , large open work . Carlsbad China Fruit Plales , Deunison's Tissue 2-wheel Red Carts oC 16 , 24 , 36 and 48 in box head and foot , with fruit decorations , Paper , Crepe Box Brooms , . worth . 6-inch Drums IOC Toy 4.38 worth 2oc full rolls . . . I /i > .id..L Toy Trunk Celluloid Glove Itox , silk with tray tluit llfli puffing around sides i , ' , out good Child's Desk look iinc IliiMiccI . . . . Key. In natural wood. . . Iron Chariot and Clowu s Onyx Tab'c ' , like cut , Gold Plated , Easel worth $7. oo , Black White Wnod Oiled lliirn-1 with I oz. botlle orn Child's Oak roidlns Bed , I'imipluto < Ef 25 Hoards. . . . Sna.ro nrtun , with gcnulno $1.50Glass Bell , Knnmolod 18c Toy ClothesPins $3.98 Zflb l1 Or . . . . Triple Extract Red 5 with miittrosv11"1 pillow calf hoiid , worth J3.00. . $1.50 painted. . - > UC Cradles. Pins . Chairs ramaST OF COMMERCE An Epoch in the Nation's ' Lifo to Bo Properly Observed. IN MEMORY OF THE JAY TREATY Sketch of the Inu.ortniit S.-rUc-e ItcinltTt-il liy tli % I'lrMt Chief .iMtloe . Tlie Ji ' ISHtiite n" l the I''ninlly Trmlltloim. ( CopyrlRht. 1895. by S. S. Mcflurc. ) NEW YORK. Dec. 12. Next Thursday , Dccemher 19 , has been set apart for the cel ebration of the centennial of the real estab lishment of the commerce of the United States , and , In this city nt least , the ob- bcrvanco that haa been arranged for will be unui'ual ' and Interesting. The chosen date Is not. In fact , coincident with any signifi cant date 100 years ago , but la the humlreth anniversary of the establishment of th ? New- York Shipping LlLt , a commercial newspaper of the ratification that was started lu consequence fication of th.e celebrated .lay treaty betwwn the- United States and Great Britain , the com mercial feature of which was the Initial step In the creation and building up of the com- mcrco of the young republic. The observance here will take the form of a banquet , to which hundreds of Invitations Imvo been la- biied , 100 of these bidden b-lng contributors to a forthcoming history of 100 Years of American Commerce , .ficludlng Chauncey M. Dcpew , Governor Levl P. Morton , Carrel 1) . Wright , Thomas L. James , Charles It. Flint , Sluyvesant Fish. Charles II. Cramp , James McMillan , Hedfleld Procter , John W Harper. 1'hlllp D- Armour , Clmrlea H. Tay lor , E. 0. lllackford , btsldet' other rcpre- xcntatlves of every department of human activity as developed In America , and inich distinguished men In politics , thu arts and bclcncss , literature , business and affairs and members of the government , Including the president , as these have chosen to Invite , The reception committee Includes Whltelaw Held , Theodore Roosevelt , John Jacob Astor , Andrew Carnegie , John I ) , Rockefeller and iijany others \\hono names are household wnril * . THE JAY TREATY. The Jny treaty wa ? negotiated In 1701 , rail- fled by President Washington the mine year and the United States senatu In 1895 , It went Into full effect after iitlllcatlon by the Drltlsh government on May C. 179G. Iy De cember , 100 years ago , a revival of business due to the moral certainty that the treaty would go through had set In , and ths date selected for the celebration Is probably as fitting an any that could have been chosen , At the time of the treaty's negotiation there was Imminent danger of a war with England , for which the United States wai- then totally unprepared , Many Americans had repudiated personal debts contracted In favor of Englishmen licforo the revolution , the British had refused to cxacuato the "western pobts , " there was much sympathy with the French In their ar with Eng land , and American ships were not only pre vented from landing at Drltlsh ports , but many American vessels had been destroyed by the llrltlsli on the ground that they were carrying contraband of war to th ? French. All this had stirred up such ant Intensity of feeling on both slde-s of the water that It teemed Impossible- avoid open liojtllltles. Washington was opposed to It and decided , cwlng to the evident unsnltablllty of Mr , I'lnclincy , then United States minister to England , to make the necessary negotiations , to send a special envoy to London for the purpoie of securing a treaty with the mother country. Hamilton was at tlrst choien for thin delicate tas-k , but owing to a certain lack of popularity on his part. John Jay , then the Urn chief Justice of the United States , was llnally selected Instead. In Die clearer light cf the present , Jay wai success ful oven beyond Ills own hopes. The treaty opened IJrltUh perU everywhere , the "weit- trn posts" wera evacuated and many otheri concessions were wen. Uut In order to secur * thes , tba United States had to make concessions ale , one of which was that certain debts owing to EiiKl'bhmen. not affected by the war , must be paid. This aroused the utmost in dignation In many quarters. Jay was abused with the greatest vituperation , was hanged In clllgy in many places , and when , at New York , Hamilton defended him before a big gathering , the latter was stoned by the pop ulace. All this In E.plte of the fact that In return for the Indemnity guaranteed to the English , they promised to pay for the ships and cargoes of American ownership destroyed by the British , and , In fact , did pay more than $10,000,000 under this agree ment. Jay bcre It all patiently and was supported to considerable extent In this city. During his absence ho had btcn elected governor of New York , and served In that place two terms , after which he declined reappolnt- mcnt to the supreme bench and retired to. private life. Ho died in 1828 , oged 83 , having been In retirement at the Bedford estate for twenty-nine years. His adult career was di vided , as Pellew , one of his biographers and a relative of the family puts It , Into these periods : Conservative leader , 1774-0 ; rev olutionary leader , 177C-79 ; conservative states man. 177S-7U ; president of congress , 1779 ; minister to Spain , 1779-82 ; psacei negotia tions , 1782-83 ; secretary of foreign affairs , 17SI-S9 ; chief Justice , 1789-95 ; envoy to Great Britain , 1794-95 ; governor of- New York , 1795 to 1801 ; retirement , 1801 to 1829. THE BEDFORD ESTATE. Colonel William Jay of New York Is today the most prominent representative of the family , and ho owns the old Bedford estate , with Ins old colonial mansion where Chlsf Justice Jay passed nearly thirty years of hie life , and where he died at last full of yearn and honored by the Judicious. Colonel Jay Is , of course , to be one of the most highly honored among thtt guests at the coming banquet. The Bedford estate embraces about 700 acres of land. It was originally SOO acres In extent , but 100 acres were sliced off for the accommodation of a neighbor named Pel- lew Minn years ago. The house Is three miles from the Katonah station , on the Har lem River railroad , and tonyonemiles from the Now York city hall. It Is well worth the whllo of any one wlio Is Interested In the places made sacred by th : < fathers of the republic to visit this estate and go over the house. The drive from the station re veals many beauties ; there are long rows of lms along the roadside , which la Indeed nl- mot't completely arched over by them , of such great age are they ; and the surrounding landscape Is exceedingly picturesque. The entrance to thf csUl ? Is through a gate which Is hospitably open to nil who choose to pass through It , Once lnslde > the gate the pilgrim to Bedford drives through a magnin- cent park of 100-year-old trce-s bsfore he reaches an cnclomrei of nearly 200 acres , at almost the highest point of which the fine old liouw la set , anil fiom which there are magnificent vistas leading off In every di rection. The present owner of the honee Is undoubt edly proud of his possession , as he should be , but he rpetfks modestly about It and nays he likes It chlelly because of Its associations. In th summer tlmo It Is occupied by his mother , the widow of the late John Jay , grandson of the chief Jubilee , At this 11 in EI of the year Mrs. Jay , as well au all the ether members of this branch of the Jay family , reside In New York , but It l.s kept open and r udy for occupation at all times. On ret holidays there are great family gatherings theie , as there was on Thanks giving day of this year , AVhen asked to dote to , Colonel Jay kindly gave the writer full p.i mission to vlfH and Inspect the estate , as he frequently does , to those who wish to see the lilacs where John Jay lived during his later years. years.BEDFORD BEDFORD HOUSE , The- main part of the- house Is about 100 feet long. Across the front there Etr.-tclies a magnlllce.it and broad piazza , which , In summer time , Is luxuriantly overrun with wlslarla , TliPie are also side wings which add mafrlally to the size of the house upon theground. . The height of ttu main portion la two stories , with an attic , and there la a pediment In front that has been built to hide the roof , which Is without windows. This Improvement was made by the- father cf Colonel Jay , who directed the aiclilt'ct to add to the brauty of tilt mansion. If possi ble , without materially altering its appeir- ancr. The gable ends of the houie are of t'tone , the slJe walla ar. of frame , filled In with brick , anil the whole In palnt'J a Ficr.ch yellow. Upon the lawn. In front of the mansion , stand four Immense linden treej , planted more than 101 years ago by the chief Justice himself , and today flourishing with as much apparent vigor as they evtr did , In spite of their great age. It has been said that the chief Justice built the house himself late in the last century and complettd it early In the present century ; but that Is not exactly correct according to fnrr.Ily traditions , for Colonel William Jay says a portion of the structure was already old when the chlet Justice first occupied it. In 1801 he made cxtendve additions and Im provements In fact , establishing the lious ; In about Its present form. Aside from Its historic associations the house would be a Joy to any one who likes old-time colonial comfort. A hall fully eight feet wide divides It , the dining room being on one sld > and the salon on the- other , whllo the music room opens from the salon. The library , which re mains much as the chief Justice occupied It , Is In a side wing. In this room stand the four qurlnt , high-backed chairs that wers used been Intensely American , notwithstanding the charges that were made of the culef Jus tice's partiality to the Drltlsh at the time of the treaty negotiation. SOME FAMILY TRADITIONS. There are many interesting traditions of ih * chief Justice In the Jay family , and Colonel - onol Jay knows tliem well and tells them Interestingly. He is a busy man , but he found tlmo a day or two ago to s < peak briefly of some of them to the writer. "Tho Bedford estate , " he said , "was part of Hi ? original Cortlandt manor. It extended from the Hudson river east to the Connecti cut line , and It reached from the Highlands to Sing Sing. H was divided up before the marriage of my great grandfather , and the piesent Bedford estate came to him through his wife. The chief Justice's boyhood was passed at Rye , In Westche-ster county , on the .shore of the sound. His father either built or bought the Rye house and moved there In 1745 , the year of my great grandfather's death. Tlily estate comprised about 400 acres , and It was left to another branch of JOHN JAY AS CHIEF JUSTICE , 1 l by th > chief Juatlca In Wall street when New- York City was th ? capital of the nation. The table which he used as chief Justice Is also In this room , and upon the mantels are the pistols of old Spanish make which he used when minister to Spain , besides many other trophies and relics. Up.n the walls hang en graved reproductions of the famous Gilbert Stuart portrait of the man who negotiated the famous treaty. The original cf this portrait trait Is in the salon , and the house Is filled with priceless paintings not only of ancestors and members of the Jay family , but alas > of many of th ? republic's fathers. For Instance , there- are the Triimbull portrait trait of Washington , West's uncompleted pic ture at the signing of the Declaration cf In dependence , TrnnibuU'g Hamilton , and portraits traits of Madison , John Adams , De Witt Clinton , etc. , all of which are prized mot highly by the pn'sent owner of thehouse. . It toimtlmes uo'inu strange that such a man as John Jay could have lived In the earlier , ruder days of this republic , but this Is fully explained when cne scrutinizes the high bred , Intellectual faces of his Huguenot and Dutch ancestors. These ar ; not hung In a special picture gallery , after the Eng lish fashion , but are to be found In various parta of the houua. and throughout the place the arrangement Is essentially colonial anil not English , for the Jay family haa ever our family , while ) the nJ"rd ! estate camto our branch , Deicnndcnts of the o her branch now own ll Rye estate , but do not live there , tlio 'present occupant blng a brother of the banker , J. Plerpont Morgan. The Rye house was taken down come years ago , but It was --replaced by a lmnd > Mne structure of cclonldl'MesIgn ' , furnlrned with the characteristic QrPilc temple columns. The family burying ground was established at Rye early In the family history , the bodleo of the ancestors being removed from New- York to the place. Our branch cf the family does not use that burial plac4 , however , one having bon established elsewhere. Sir James Jay , the only member of our family who had a title of nobility and who was a Tory during the revolution our family , like many others , having been divided In senti ment at that time Is burled at Rye. "Chief Justice Jay's llfn at Bedford , which was continuous during his retirement , " con tinued Colonel Jay , "was a quiet o'he1 In the main , according to family traditions , since , although he was visited from time to time by his friends and by men of contemporary emi nence , these visits were not frequent , owing to the dlitlculty of reaching the place. There were , of courtno railroads then , and nearly all who went to see him then , during which time he wag known to lila friends simply es 'The Governor , ' went there by carriage- It was a day's Journey from New York to Bedford In those old days , and the roads wer sometimes very bad. 'The Governor. ' however , managed to pass his time most agreeably among his books and picture ? and in the oversight of the estate. He also gave much tlmo to correspondence with his friends in public life , during the years of his re tirement , and he devoted much attention to his horses and such amusements as country gentlemen of those days enjoyed. " Colonel Jay proposes to keep the estate in his possession ns long as he live ! ' , and he takes great delight In preserving It In all Its beauty. "The Governor's" stable , which stands not far from the mansion , Is externally Just what It was , the colonel having taken especial palnu to preserve It In that form , al though Interiorally It has been fitted with the most modern appliances for the comfort and proper keeping of horses. The little stone building that was built to the rear of the mansion to serve as a school house and summer house for the children of "The Gov ernor , " Is also intact and has served to be a Joy to each tmcccedlng generation of chil dren who have grown up at Bedford. Like ins illustrious ancestor , uoionei Jay is roml of horses and driving , and for many years has ben known as one of the most prominent promoters of the noble sport of coaching In America. But he Is In every sense a man of affairs , and a busy one. He has a large law practice In New York and hlu energies are actively and effectively employed in many directions. OTT OP TUB OKDI.VMIV. The Paris museum contains moro than 20,000 stone implements , all of which were gathered In France. Tiie most costly horse barn In the world IH at Syracuse , N. Y. It belongs to D. E. Grouse , and cost $700,000. The ancients believed that purgatory's main entrance was through a cave.rn on the Island of Lonough Derg , Ireland , Fliifi-toottied combs of Ivory and brass have been found In Egyptian tombs which date back more than 1,000 years B. C , J. L. Allen , a telegraph operator at Loretto , In Marlon county , Ky , , has invented a rail road clock that Is u marvel of Ingenuity. It teglsters each train ao It passes and the time at which It passes , and an accompanying de- vie : gives warning to Incoming trains If an other train has passed the fetation within fifteen minutes. The room cf a certain self-possessed girl was entered * recently by a burglar. Without an Instant's delay the young woman caught up the only weapon at hand. She elevated It In so orthodox a manner that the Intruder , noting only the'ominous flashing of steel , took to Ills heels as effectually as If ho had ben aimed at with a rifle , instead of the family pair of ud&scrs. The stcry ccmes fiom Arizona of a Clilrlca- hua prospector who , while working a tunnel In that district , had put In a blast , lighted the tuse , and darted on' to Und the mouth of the tunnel blockaded with a big black bear and three cubs , It U salil the prospector was In a terrlblei dilemma , whether to bo blown up or eatti up , end became so chilled with fright that the air In the tunnel froze up In big chunks and the flro In the fut'i ' ) went cut. Those who wish to study begging as a Unc art are recommended to visit tha museum of the Mendacity Society of London , where they will llml a curious collection of the varied dodge * resorted to by the begging fraternity of that vast city. The collection Includes over 200,000 begging letters , many of which are models of Ingenuity , the work of profes- Eora of the art uf letter writing , who supply the article to order , and a photograph album of metropolitan beggars , The museum also contains a gallery of pictorial appeals , with suitable Inscriptions adapted to catch the unwary. It Is full of curiosities of the most Ingenious kind , Prof , John Flske gives on Interesting ac count In a recent magazine article of early colonial times In Virginia , As a rnlo , ho points out , the first settlers were "gentle men , " unused to work and Ignorant of the true requirements of the situation. The dis cipline of freezing and starving which came upon them reduced them to sore straits , not stopping short of cannibalism. A slain In dian's corpse was boiled and eaten ; and one man killed his own wife , baited her , and fed upon her for some tlme > , when ho was tlsd to a stake and burned alive , "Ami nil this , " says Prof. Flske , "In the section of our country since celebrated among gourmands and gourmets. " LAST OF A THESPIAN TEMPLE Old St. Elmo Theater Building Condemned and Being Tom Down , PLAYHOUSE THAT ONCE MADE A RECORD \ VlilliFnlrliH Danocil 1'poii ( InStauc \Vi-i-4' AXVIIfrliiB' In TlH-li- Illiioil In the lloily of ( InIIoiiNO. . Workmen are busily engaged In tearing down the large brick structure at 10G-1IO South Twelfth street , which was recently condemned by the building Inspector , This fact would attract but passing notice were It not fur the long list of startling events which occurred within the walls now partly demolished , and gave the place a history , or at least a notoriety , far more interesting than that of which most music halls can boast. > The building was erected In April , 1SSO , by one Jack Nugent , and In connection with the adjoining premises , was used as a va riety theater. The name of St. Elmo was gln the Institution , and for four years It flourished under this title , During this pe riod the place gained an unenviable reputa tion , but the tin.ill bltH of wickedness that transpired were not xuniclent to call forth protests from the good townsfolk who later cam Into evidence. Nugent was an Omaha boy , and had been a hack driver before embarking In the theatrical venture , Judg ing from the crowds bald to have been in nightly attendance at his shows , he must have been succ.jcdlng well from a financial standpoint. In addition to the box olllce receipts he made money by reason of an extensive bar room trade , It was early In 1881 that some Improvo- menU were madci In the plac : and the name changed from St. Elmo to the more Imposing title of Theater Comlque. Whether It was the change In name or whether It waa the appearance of some powerful Imp of dark ness will never be known , but the fact re mains that about this time there was In augurated a series of events that kept the police department extremely busy and stamped the place as a verltabl ? etrong- hold of his satanlc majesty , NOT REGULARITY BILLED. On the night of Sunday. March 9 , 18SI , during a general row In the bar loom , a man by the name of Keye shot and killed James Nugent , the bartender and the brother of the picprietor , and several others were moro or less seriously wounded. The "tu- cred concert" winch was on the boaids for that evening waa broken up , and , according to a paper of that Urn ? , "a seine of con- fuHon ensued- Men w re wrestling , shout ing and Hueuilng ; cyprlatu , who a few mill- 11 ley before were amusing a crowd by their antics and snide talk and seemed as though nothing en earth would affect them but money , were hysterically crying and wiping the paint and powder cff their blazed faces ; everybody seemed panic-struck , until the sight of revolv rs had the effect of clearing out the- bar room , " Keycs , It uaa said , had killed two men be fore ho tOiot Nugent. Flvo years ago he was sentenced to Ufa Imprisonment In the Texas penitentiary for having kllUd his sixth vic tim , or his third after leaving Omaha. During this reign of terror on the low slds three bodies were found In the river. In each Instance were found In the men't ? pock ets programs o ( the Theater Comlque , and led to the conclusion that the men had fool ishly entered the place with considerable bums of money about them. Late In 1883 the name way changed to the Buckingham. In November , 18S4 , Eflle Taylor and her lover , both of whom frequented the place , csught the city editor of thq Dispatch and administered a severe cowhldlng because he had allowed to be printed In his paper a few remarks about the place , in which Erne's name occupied a conspicuous place. Boon afterward Jack Nugent wau bfor the court OH defendant In a suit for wages. May Brown maintained that eho had been sent for and came to this city to accept a gooJ position at the Buckingham that had been offered her. After working several mouthy and receiving no money anil finding that she was used merely as a wine room decoy , she raised u gteat bl < ? row and some good people helped her along In her 'itit. There Is no record of Mays having received the money ! i earned. HIS POPULARITY WANED. So many criminal tricks wore turned anil the progress of so many shows was In'tr- ' tuptcd by the police that the Buckingham be gan to wane In popular favor. Not even tha brass band that used to parade the streets * every morning to advertise the pcrformnncis could draw the former crowds , and It was common talk that what money he did make , the proprietor gambled away. It was no surprise , therefore , that Jack should get Into a light with a liack dilver , because the cab- bio refused to wait many moons for the re turn of tome borrowed money. Early on the morning of October 1U , 1885. the caulilo got Nugent to enter the cJb , and rapidly drove to the river bank. Both men stripped to the waist , a tin horn gambler acted aa referee , and seme twenty odd fierce rounds were fought. When It was over , Nugent was picked up In an unconscious condition , and the erstwhile czar of the levee was carefully carried back to the Theater Comlque , to slowly recover from the effects of his heal ing. Both the muplc hall and Its proprietor now declined rapidly , and soon nfteiward the place was clowd by the shorlff. The bind returned one morning tliat fall to find a mortgage foreclosed , and everything , even the gaudy uniforms , seUed by the representa tive of the county. Finally , on October 29 , 1SSG , Nugent was sentenced to three months' Imprisonment for vagrancy. Hip pel , Shot- well , left him In his distress and fled from the city. Th ? last heard of Nugent wa a few years ago , He was tlun driving a utreet car lu Chicago , After the Buckingham was clowil It re- malnol unoccupied for a few months , ami then the V/ciiien'n Christian Tcmperanct union raised the tone of the place by taking possession of It. Many good acts word ad ministered , probably for thu first time within the memory of these wallu , during the two years thlo worthy organization held sway. In June , 1887 , Parlth & Colp took hold of the place and for eight inoatlin ran u i dined vaudevlllo entertainment. Since that tlmo It has been occupied as a cornlsh works , anJ moro recently as a carriage repository. TIIK LAST IKHIIOMM.V. Tlicoiloio I' . Punk In New York Hun. A glars of lager ; HC.UCC th ? drink To Kir the mint ! to tliomililH noetic , Yet blowing off the bond I think Of ilnys when life was ICCH itscetlr ; When fitting round thin tiiblu hum , Wo quaffed our niugH of ( iermun lie r , Ami tallcc-d of fiiniu with tongues pio- phutlc , It Houined mi easy tnnd to inn Whllo yet our minds weio mildly mellow , Whllo In Iliii Hhnilow of th ° nun Our glashes brightened i il nml yc-Ucw ; And pleasant p'cturcH ' Illttrd niHt Of miu Holit'iulnns In ibii past , Of every Jolly English fu.'low , Of Scottish ImrdH and Irlfli wits Endowed with everything but "Hlller , Of roaring mum and lousing liltn From Goldsmith , Burns nml Moore ami Miller ; Of CiermaiiH In their beery dona , Who iili-rcod incn'H liuarm wlili magic pens Of ( Jouthi ! and of glorious KchKler , And most of nil wo thought of Fmnce , Thu luiid of iifturUktt and ianl ! > CH , Where fume's loud trump and love's warm Heward the wit whose genius llu.ilies ; Whcio happy wrltem , cniulroy , giy , Luugh whllu they live , l.vo v/Jil'o they may , And all Ihu test IH dint mid And now hexldo this ( able hero I sit nlonii In painful iiilut | ; No comrades gather for their beer , Tj yum mi hour In liarnik-xh' riot ; No ready i hymen nml p'easant ( iiiljii ( 'cine bubbling forth from hearm-d lips , Defying doom's uncanny Hut , They paesed en quickly to their fate ; Thn phantom f.uno their giufcp fludcd , And hero alomt I Hit und wall , And till my hopes arc cowled and hooK'il ; Hut tills I know that whllo llfo lusted , We never thirsted , never fasted , And i1reume.il such royal dieamx as few did , . Ono Minute Cough Cure U harmless , pro * i ! u res Immediate results ,