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In despair I came on to this place, where information reached me yesterday morning that, contrary to all expectations, he had gone on the other line of railway to Galway, and taken the steamboat on Lough Corrib to Cong, after having telegraphed to his escort to meet him there. From Westport to Lough Mask is a long but picturesque drive.

Moore, "Digest of Int. Law," Vol. III, p. 211. Foreign Relations, 1901, p. 245. Johnson, "Four Centuries of the Panama Canal," Chap. Doc. U. S. Statutes at Large, Vol. XXXII, Pt. I, p. 481. Senate Doc. No. 51, Fifty-eighth Cong., Second Sess., p. 56. Johnson, "Four Centuries of the Panama Canal," pp. 162-171. Senate Doc. No. 53, Fifty-eighth Cong., Second Sess. House Doc.

Spanish Dipl. Corresp. and Docs., p. 206; Foreign Relations, 1898, p. 819. Senate Doc. No. 62, Fifty-Fifth Cong., Third Sess. Report of the Military Governor of Cuba, 8 vols., 1901. U. S. Statues at Large, Vol. XXXI, p. 897. Senate Docs. Nos. 405 and 679, Fifty-Seventh Cong., First Sess. Secretary Taft's report on the Cuban situation was sent to Congress December 17, 1906.

Buchanan never forgave Douglas for his part in defeating Lecompton, and more especially for what they alleged to be his treachery to his caucus bargain, in refusing to accept and defend all the logical consequences of the Dred Scott decision. Buchanan to Silliman and others, Aug. 15, 1857. Senate Ex. Doc. No. 8, 1st Sess. 35th Cong. Vol. I., p. 74.

Between Ballinrobe and Hollymount the country is agreeably fertile; toward Cong and Cloonbur, where Lord Mountmorres was shot, and in the direction of Headford, on the Galway road, there is plenty of evidence of prosperity. It is, however, precisely in the rich country lying east of Lough Mask that the greatest disinclination to pay rent prevails.

"Collected Correspondence," pp. 160-161. "Collected Correspondence," pp. 353-359. Ibid., p. 364. "Messages and Papers of the Presidents," Vol. VIII, p. 327. See Mr. Bayard to Mr. Phelps, Nov. 23, 1888. For. Rel., 1888, Pt. I, pp. 759-768. For. Rel., 1889, p. 468. See Foreign Relations, 1894, App. 1. "Affairs at Bluefields," pp. 234-363. Senate Doc. No. 160, Fifty-sixth Cong., First Sess.

In three or four days more an irregular army of fifteen hundred men, claiming to be the sheriff's posse, was within striking distance of the town. Senate Ex. Doc., 3d Sess. 34th Cong., Vol. They were not only well armed and supplied, but wrought up to the highest pitch of partisan excitement.

No. 5, p. 3. Thirty-ninth Cong., First Sess. Mr. Bigelow to Mr. Seward, Nov. 30, 1865, Sen. Ex. Doc. No. 5, Thirty-ninth Cong., First Sess. Bigelow, "Retrospections of an Active Life," Vol. IV, p. 42; Bancroft, "Life of Seward," Vol. II, p. 435. Sen. Ex. Doc. No. 6, p. 98, Thirty-ninth Cong., First Sess. House Ex. Doc. No. 93, Thirty-ninth Cong., First Sess. Dipl.

Clare is pretty stony. Again I saw fields from which stones had been gathered to form fences like ramparts. Again I saw fields crusted with stone like the fields of Cong, with the same waterworn appearance, but not so extensive. The little, pretty station of Cusheen seemed an oasis in a stony wilderness.

For some reason the landing place has been altered, and is now some distance from Cong, at which it used to be. This change is a drawback to Cong. There are mills at Cong that used to grind indian corn, but they are not used now for some reason or other, and are falling into ruin. The shifting of the landing place was done by Lord Ardilaun, the stoppage of the mills by him also.