Evening Star Newspaper, December 24, 1870, Page 1

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

4 . a | THE EVENI \TELEGRAMS TO THE STAR. PUBLISHED DAILY, sunday excepted, | Sd This Afternoon’s Dispatches. At The Star Bulldings, \ Associated Press Reports. cua or gor ees THE WAR IN EUROPE. EVENING STAR ‘NEN PAPER COMPANY. \% M sheath suit Sines oe tar conoid eres es ee ; >. aed Wrrs or Fouty » eh MONTH Copire | Fata ? a ier aa el eT Be a aaa er ie lee a G STAR. at the counter, Tw: Peer ™ 1 ee Bix Monthy are sent from the o Tas UERELY sTau-soulted oe Paw | V2, 36- N2. 5,548. WASHINGTON, D. C.. SATURDAY, DECEMBER 24, 1870. TWO CENTS, ("Ov rr't Fecencety 19 20 Broning Ser ' No JUNCTION. Loxrow, Dee. 23.—Yesierday’s announcement from private sources that (wo divisions of the = ing the surrender as having taken | armyof the Loire had effected @ janction,ay 73 When I was a plasterer, in Charleston, and | representing “5 a foer, & j » OP — ai = —— EVENING STA R AN HOUR WITH CLARK MILLS. Po tag let ms ag pew} ae aa a M Greet, (unghie) Oe ts pein ene got | Pearew: thout foundation. ALL'S OPERA HOUSE. a a F aformal | WEDNESDAY'S cTIE FROM Par atone: et Mining over‘ot the terrendered “forces on 4 | Borpravx, Dec. 25.—During epee id a surrender place és studying the points of bis horees. He had a | Thave told voce | from, Parison Wednesday Dacrot took macy large stable of 1ace-horees, and imported the | rag nic nRowzB FOUNDRY OF TRE COUNTRY | THE PRUSSIAN RETREAT FROM TOURS famous Argyle, tbat beat everything in those “Now I will show you my foandry,” ssid ‘The aici cep te oo Gaye. Afterwards I studied boree anatomy nd | Mills; and he led the way to that building, bat | »,7)« £encra) situation rsoonpalton af Teen ten action with Jobn Kobinson, the old circus man. | stopped to answer a question as to the moaning | retreat of the other Pra:sian forces toward= He had an excellent idea of = horse and | of the brass cannon scattered over the sward at | Oricane is said to be the result of the stratngtcal its muscalar aciion. Robinso! bo was avery | sixee and evens, giving the enclosure the ap- ena er ok aantan Ce ~y 4 sharp critic on equestrian statues “and pictures, | pearance of a di'apislated arsenal. These are pw been almost entirel only 1.50 “4 wrote me, after sceing my rtatae - —— moran a Ay lb ones ny soldiers there yesterday. Mantevffel undoubt- “itcoutd not be im- Bee numont, and areto be melted foi ly move ces forthe parpo-e of eppo- aoe or eres oe ‘said: ‘The | the statues. Most of them appear to have bad ony menet is i ea E18 KVEEIEC DOUBLE SHEET. | How Our Statues are Made. MISS KATE DENIN and (he Wational Theater vompane, in Daly's sea | Washington News and Gossip, | The Great Bronze Foundry of the Country. satiovsl Drasa ct MAN AND WIFE ‘Tue Prestpenxt received no vistors to-day. InTERNAL Revenve—The receipts from this ource to-day were $281,245.28, the Eastern Commission, and J.'E, Yeatman dent of the Western. Bishop Simpsonand See! jeory Ward Beecher will siand forth as the ‘ 2 representatives of the loyal pulpit. On the The National Lincoln Monument. | third section there will be me ‘THRER HISTORICAL PiGtREs, A . - cytes one at each corner of the monument, the first Lively Timo with Mil's’ Bull Dogs. representing the American Private Soldier, the ae second representing the part performed by Woman, under the figure of America caring for her disabled coldiers, and the third the Libe- Finst LiscteNant J. H. SYLYESTRR, enas- ed. has been bororahly discharged the ser- } Passengers to Washington by the Baltimore ce under the new army law. road who stretch their heads from the car win- cone oe my gers pocoding sing the mareb of General Faidberbe 2 old G m) was very fond of fine usage. s out one 2 som : BTe | comes Witeon, of the Land | “OWS t get a look at the dieimal alder-fringed | rated Slave, (in the person of Fred. Douglass,) | put Gem Pear) Gane, carte bintsd thoes | Cee easene et nite ee ee, | ces FAIDHERRE'S ACCOUNT Bis BMWASOKS—AFTSARENUON a pas * “weil known as the Bladensburg duciling | who, under the {ntluence of our American pro- r my care and management.” that, curiously enough, it had been disa vied VICTORY AT PONT NOVE q Si) WiGuT, j Offer, de peed fom | orcnnd, have their attention caught next by | erestiveism, stutids forth. not omy fred, bat can enim to know as Tauch alont the anat- | receiving a bail asize larger than irsorn cali- | BORDEAUX, Dec. 24.—In an official diapateh fh DRAMATIC CUX PANIES OF | whe conspicuous tomb and se cophagus o | ‘witured. On the fourth section there will be | omy and muscular action of t'e borse as any | bre. pluiub in its music.” Wo wicht nace telegraphed from Lille on the might of the 2. NAuw IH®ATER AND © tes 5 St tecniekiva i 7 acsaaa t 7 he THREE ALLEGORICAL FIGURES ving. Every artist has his spectality. t PAUSED TO MORALIC® . ~ the one: P Bus ant se APeEAR | Pcsighimereas = probahiy be | after by aucther, curloes okiect ne colleng: | representing Justice, Liberty and Eaantity, v attri fo compete with Powere, (0 | over the fact that these instruments of carnage | XSt (hat bis army cugagod the enemy at Pont — waing dine orerabe eH welder drablypes a stering to the crowning figure the martyr, 5: Fr Re, Gatinestion of See ware Neste: | eccustemed Sp vounit (orth death and destroc- | ae’ terre oe the evening. For the MISS BATE DENI ecting © Reco ors€. an Easvern | horse im bronze rearing from a pedes aaa ch he sae study of a life-t mat | tel wens te be ceucaienll toms the effigies of | greater portion of the time tt wes s artillers a | Cruise” dy € ha Deh uu S.N. and seeming about to spring into the open pees Bee use dar andes fenlinan Sane = my speciality I am quite as mac Sureethan phi = an Geeta st | os whlch cS aa teraiuated brs charge "3 RAMSC’S | Houway oR tie CkmKks—At roon to-day | MF. Semounding this bronze hors is a | AMO three | representing the firing on Fort ar man — You have Leen criticised for pnt- | men. batt we were tour nities from dinner, the | the French infantrs along the whe'c line. The 170, all of the Govewiment offices cared. in order to | 2TOUP Of buildings dominated by a large oc- | £iven. the tinct renresenting the fring on Fort | | Siar man — ye hour 4 fm. and we dul'nt. enemy were 4 eck, ond th . wel the | qiiow the c'erkes tlre to prepare for the Christ. | ‘€oWAl structure of brick,and which structure the third, the Congress abolishing slavery’ and SEO Le bain RUMORED DEFEAT OF GEN. CRATZY i si Sears on its root-augles aseries of busts, looking [Pe xabiiching civil rights in an attitude that a boree could not maintain | THE LARGEST nEONZE FOUNDRY IN THR COUN- at ‘MORE D DEF RAT 9 ry ona GEN. . Decens ac ite lerk in the | 0¥" “pon the passenger like so many gatgoyles As the cost of erecting a mowument Om this | for any length of time. TRE, ] . ent that Geaeral ee ee som an old world cathedral. This cisster of | tale cannot be less than Mills—Well, it is an attitude natural to a | the Chicopee foundry in Massachusetts coming Havre fay® @rumor is pre ive Mansion, has beet. appoi 5 ted gby the an Cbaury was defeated by the combined art irx bulidings is the summer residence, studio, THREB HUNDRED THOUSAND DOLLARS horse—the rampant position—and why should | next, Wood's in Philadelphia the third. | Sr the Duke of Mecklen*urg mod Prince Fret aes Ut _SERAORE DELPRES SOUCRRNET) | 150 ic cad atemlare Or . it would seem to be @ crasy enough undertak- | the criticism apply to horses more than to men. | The building is 43 feet by 70, and has such in- Charles, and is now in fall retreat. [n- ACK SHBP- | piace of dames T. Ely, reigned. shop, end soundrs In all the ce’ebrated groups of statuary where | ternal featur ‘ ~~ i men are represented ip action, the attitudes are mteeee ne cnotmons sronee thet wil such as could be sustained only for a motnent. } T8186 100.000 pounds of metal with ease. and thet CLARK MILLS, TRE SCULPTOR, ing. And vei the work is actually going on in —— Cherbourg gave a dinner party last | wbo, for goodor bad - thecritics iffer—has put | * WAY tt that there are (0,900 French troops 1 Secrerary F. ca te. 80 Cents LOOKS LIKE PUSINESS. cc . have capecity for much more; g | Mave. : might. to the members of the Committee on | lus stamp in pretty indellible charactere upon | 0 race the inet tae nerve based apou| well atic catecye oP nT © | Salad Sle pouemeet inet oaiioe asin | MORE “ABOUT ait eonriE FROM < ily Citcle and Gallery Foreign Relations in the Senate and of the creations of American plastic art, and aap eentasy Pe ey we srs 7 eS cannon eleven feet long can be taken whole and PAIS. ‘ ittee om Foreign Affairs of the H s whose name is identified with all the most coa- | “bY, Yankee, business ideas. For instance, “ACTION! ACTION! - ACTION: melted; and two large ovens for baking moulds, | Thorneacx, Dec. 24 Advices from Paris ou 4. BAND MUSHAL ENTERTAINMENT tous Seinnuer uk Session coe otk nace Sosiat ake ecaSa tk been all the material for the bronze (rebel cannon) | and the conventional horse on three legs, or | one 19 feet square aud the oiler 10 by AS the night of the 23 has wen received by a bar G m THR —— sf 7 ee ee ene a eens, ef has been procured from government, an item | fous, or with a prop under the belly, or with ite | TRE “WHAT 18 IT” ON THR CAPITOL DoMB. | loon which§ landed Beat Nultn There war uo BENEFIT OF TRE ORPHANS Owe TaoveasD Dorian Ronnery at tam | , Posing between the bebe tnes tan might | Of the value of $100,000 in itself. Next, | tail fastened to a rock, won't suit. I have Pointing to the larger one of these ovens, | engagement on that day, Thursday. bat @ gen a New Ortaass Custom Hot! Se ee eens Ooty OROBEU IGA, coca cal siends’ aon, Sihaivern? oP tee aimed to represent the horse in @ spirited, nat- | Mills said, ‘This is the oven use d in drying the | Tye! yngeerment was regarded ae imminent LIEU AND SARLORS CRERLN: ROME; | Kee hes recejeed £5:Yon Trenenny Department Be es ene rene See ealiynge Rety GMtEMAN t6 Me “timkarear | sat attitude, unsustained by any external sup- | moulds for the Goddew of Liberty on the dome yrthe combate of the ohat about 800 ailind’ oe 7 Seca ak Stes tm ENG wae sielin few | eee va ee suencesizor | 24 im bronae have been enlisted in the | port, as in nature. I gave months of study so | of the Capitol.” | wounded, and speak in glorious terms of th LINCOLN HALL, house, watch ammurt Cellnet Cane otto | (ns heciet eh eee eet | work! of raising the ‘mosey. Orr {ue Brose. | the muscular action of the rampant horse, with | Star mar.—Do you mean tosay that you | £feAt conlidence and order displayed by the na ‘TUESDAY EVENING DECEMBFS 97. 1870, | port, immediately made good Out of tis Owe | ecg tol when semured that trait, | Each canestrlan Bgure will cost $20,000; each er the anapiee a model trained to rear at alook. Visitors who | baked that abomirable °— tional geard. | INSURRECTION AT RHEIMS AGAINST *aw him rise on his bind legs whenever [turned | =. j1o1d on, i INSURRECTION AT. towards him, thought him a most sagecious lold on,” sald Mills, ‘1 am only responsible | THE PRUSSIA for the casting; the model, as you know, was Lonnow, Dec. 23-—Advices from Versailles a) o en trained to do it. * wnitr att hoes lee: barged: nico, Genk: | Cateliael by Crawbecd | safe that tix thousand Saxon left Saany with sonr horses are not self- balanced, but that they | Star man.—Well, what about that crazy head- | the intention to force » beg seesgy ml ave cast of her vier metal in the hind quarters. | the people are ppl ly oe fever ane. a yi eee iniles distant irom Mills’ by this straight rail, | pedestrian figur, » $10,000. Congress 1 ap es whereas it is difficultts male the eye believe [se igngreoe ct \tronge for these igares the 5 i e ths rgplis s Sociation is re - Pinal —ol TN, pellet it inane re tenog, | (hatitis more than half a mile. By tho turn- | COs to, the one-buif. ‘There is therefere to be hat the members of the Cabinet, General of | PKC it fs four miles, aud as there is no station | raised for each equestrian figure the sum of »4+ | the army and other high officials are to receive | 4t Mill's p!ace, it is by the turnpike that one | <10.000, amd for each pedesirian figure the snm smitnermosic | their ftiends this season, as the Speaker of the |, zets out there, #s we did day or two since. a | of $#,cW0; and enough has already been contrib- and are r i ' uted and pledged for some half dozen of the —I'll tell_you bow that was. You see, cen eee and without farmer formal | pleasant drive it is, over the beautifal series ot | Uted and plecg PORERaeS Se Ne ee tbe Crawford model orizinally wore the classic - . - ne wooded hills bounding the city, and which have ose = to the ped stal. Cap of Liberty; but Jeff. Davis, who was Sec- wi ments? ‘is reform is demanded from all SMOKY, PRACTICAL PITTSBURG, aa " . say The Cold Weather. «uarters, and let us hope that it will be carried | *¥ch capabilities for the finest park and land- oddly enough, was the first in the Meld with a Mills.—This is not true. The caste are hollow | reta:y of War, objected that the Liberty 7 es out. H.K. | scape gardening, as shown at ‘: Harewood,” | contribution of €2.000 for the: model and a | xcept the tail, and are entirely eelf-balanced, | #28 not Soma Lp bleep a 23 24.—The thermometer here, euacni a Re amy = Mr. Gorcoran’s country reat, and at the Sol- mee <a g | st in this model, (showing a small model of the | Yue" the cap the seed s! required At Greenbrier, AL JOHN A. Loan isin Chicago can- “ pledge of $4,000 mcre for the statue, for the ear in the times of ancient Ko: and it was eat Vir, to-da ii = for the United States | “iers’ Home. One catches here a prophe man of her choiec. Edwin 3M. Stanton. Th chon statue that balanced iteelf readilyon the | not, therefore. the proper emblem of Americans inia, iF. weseings Ss prevpetts tie the United States oe cr the vice. Edwi + Stanton. The d feet of the horse wherever placed.) and the | who were born tree. So Crawford went to work low sere. Ice br. Canreee. 3 | Senate, and thinks there is ne doubt of his nom- | #!\mPse inv saris erasers 32.000 for the model of the statue ot Stuart | \niy fastening of the foot to the pedestal is tha: and put a kind of helmet on his God4eas, with desi-t | ination in the caucus, but has feara that enough = @ os a ot a cume nest srems Philadelphs i 0 for Beech- |... to prevent mischievous persons from throw- | the skin of ae eagle fo placed over the bead | 2 = =: republicans will remain out of the caucus to | of unsurpaseed drives that the Washingtonians mostly 1.0m Brooklyn: and $2,000 for Uhase, ng off the statue with a crowbar. that the claws bung down by the side of the #D., Dee. 24.—Last night wae ATIONAL THEATER. hect his defeat. A telegiam from Chicago | uf the next decade will enjoy, over the series of trom Qbio, but fron Boston. MILLS’ START AS & SCULPTOR. face. On this eagle skin, over the top of the searon. The thermometer at EURDAY RVENING, D 10. | igh opponents sed wil probably be cartiod | ‘Asnifcent ills that form the rim of the basin | WHAT a. L1NcOLm amo WR. sRWARD THOCGHT | yg sou commence Jour arte cree in M Star men" Whats in the ous of the times “New Albany, 7 ems ay ik ute cfiect. ‘The democrats want the republi- er, pend — = emselves, anc soit | Mills saye that this monument was projected | SOuth Carofina that tried men’ Jn, hed oatrich feathers to | below; Kichmond,5 below; Evansville, 2 below; BY WILLIAM B FUPR, ean winority to go with them for Judge Law- rtist folk are a to ted ahae ttc oet | before Mr. Lincoln’s death, and he took Lis | Yet in Charlesto. 1 first made some plaster h deas of Liberty?” Union City, ind.- 12 below; Vincennes, 10 be- Hew York's favorite Kecitottor will recite | rence or How. Joseph Medill. waen'tzauck of © wurptise to #00 wist shoud | Dolce in Mascolns des to see. Heexpreaug | busts that attracted attention, especially one of that pute me in mind of | low; and Térre Haute, 11 below. OnE BuAce PRUPOET. we eaty gue G as” that makes | 0° the fent gate of Mills’ Lonse—a plain | UCSEN Bp for leased with it, and ackel aren, | Calhoun, which I afterwards put in marble ticttm made by an Irishman «Lo was look- : ebaresmeceatccurioees W churchyard” the Mert Lying rom te he ake: mteatnt uae | drawing be silown tothe Secretary of state, | Some of the citizens raised the money to send he, ‘wast kind of eird init thats gota | morning tt the ones pometer te a * 108 ash | plane rp aphdtoacs It would, we | “M2BiPe rownd to che right, indicating that the That he bad traveled over Eurove aud a | me to Europe, but on my way | stopped in n top of its head” There was « good deal | 4 below zero. At sunrise some thermometers ] thtak, pusalethe oldest resshitant to ramen effected at the rear. It | irdge of art.” > Warhington, and was introdaced by Isaac E. | of dissatisfaction atout this eagle-skin ostrich- | on the bills indicated as low as 19, aud © above OM peers dy hives ih a than tet Loomone too, for an eyuestrian ee Lagnage the plas. Ste Seward sald itolmes to Cave Jobneon, then Postmaster Gen | featber head-cress, and several Congressmen | atnoon. The weather is clear. oe Sib Bios bro oan Oangeas oie and who was president of the -lackaon | *?4 thers wanted me to alter it, but refused. = ‘ay worthy the latitad nothing it was Crawvord’s model, and 1 Bad no business | . ; ne te Int Tea a maajeyttion. | Dir. Johnson asked me | to change it. It ie, undoubtedly, an awkwaca | MC Atiantte ; : ; st hight the ther: nse e a mo looking #flair. A good many people who rea 11 a or =a ggg ea t, ted to ha history pt eaten ¢om lave an idea that some partof the | tage og a Stee | : a }OTAGON AT p scaffolding has been left about the Bead. The | ‘Poke the Kobert Lowe RVERY EVENING © INEE SA } thetrisky | whieh #6 bad oak a night, turning the | Goddees sands 300 rom the ground, pinin Kerr, dated ye AFTE ‘ ‘i pind and be: ich w y 8 med tome thatl | Steers ine —. are reported, bn Bernand>+ F r tom lunges at us + ree = ce ee onda on be too he fer the doi sEt t Saiecbace mar — . Mille, what is the hey could no ot © 1 rh . neces ¥ re er 5 = know about the ited to 4 bulldogs made their tor roe THE ULD WOMANS 7 LIVED IN A vould make ac m. So teraus:—1 would mak if it pleased ven te tgs began to look rather too We didn't co a great ways i Yo give distance, to stuly the id by the ree _ Enclosing this gre ut didn't follow the et a be helt re- A Mote? Burned, t of rooms used . 1 Yollowed natare. is attoundng New York®, Dec ther forp’s Park it dor by the ust=, &e and'ss knew very little abont the e- z, ey, wee cariy sentutions of that noble snim mos * ago there wa A k it part wretched buriesyacs. V Ewon- | be hes reas. v ’ tery of th man fig jet heenne h an phrase it is not only an or | ~ , were conver casts. that might pass for | on —S. ' jon Of Ohio. : and Tass ss tanv al as well A a RIDICTLOS:TY « 1 he exact » - 1 seem ty be well Your Jrckson was not in the classic style | What there is about it ty: t vrding to the corrected r R = — H noses distinctly per ° coal | e'ther? | weil p of American Liberty or av r H a ber Naru « e ag5-t9° winter pants at the he draught No; when J firet care to Washington I went | ;. ft. Seema ithe with j . —— HENBACICS Piano fface | Aboslan sty 3 : out a chimney. | to -co Crcesugh“estatue of Washington east | Patdto make out. From the west fro Specte Shipments. Ment. ubons 4 é House ot Ber the only way I can was bevond bts | of the Capitol. It seemcd to me a wonderful | ke on i | New Vor«, £ F then he went on to ed that he hadscen | work of art: but while f was looking at it oth waste —— | nuk out $2062 — € ations mode apon his premices ig the ashes of a sod-covered | came up. Sailone: “I never heard that Wasl oneud From the east front it pictures asquaw | eine Twiseri.—ponn | and Usings stolen, articles that native State. indice nga | ington wore a 1 in | ‘cula be of no pedsibic Use bat to the artist, uut ard, acting on that hint, he with a lobster on her head and papoose at | mt : ne ne . BEANSET LIRR AW INDIAR.” ber back, undertaking the diffenlt task of | New ¥ to the ori Seeieven re Senn mncmnacen S05: | toads. A tenace Marie, ted every pasposs 4e | Another inquired: “What are those things on | toting bree semieee pumkins and aroi) of sole- | aud Pen at he Entering the studio we were coutronted by | melting bis bronze. From that time he seems | Wis feet? Oh, id @ third party, “they | leather. From New Jersey avenue, south, it as evil ndry Se eet He eae oeg Of the apphancesased in | rust be moccasins—Indians wear moccasius.” | looms up in the shape of un aeazonien washer, | FriCe OF U.S. Bonds at Frankfort. the w COLLOSSAL Pi Pnes IN ri ASTER vis work. He has, for instance, awachine tor | Lipa as : % tivation: Thodeison a reduced or larger | [eM others came up of more cultivation; | woman bearing a prodigious FRaxK FORT, Dec. eat ful OF etiMy | at o4,. the nal Lincotu Monument copying busts o : aes A : starched clothes; and irom B stre-t perth it 7 he c “cave, by wliich the process ie greatio ceapiied, | ““There,”'aaid one, “is a work of art pronounced learned a sd body, the sls —Do vou recognize any of these His mode of taking busts does away with the | the most perfect that has been turned out of horse blanket hung over @ a Beno where the moncy got | Star man—Ob! yes. There is no mistaking | ‘edious and even dangerons gro ent to, ed ine in vogne. | italy for many years; but it proves an atter fail- ery point of Slew the J could hot mi ke @ vulgar he Chief Justice, or thatof Stanton. and this is The op about as simple as the ry: idealizes the Washington of age Wildase headdress ané distended eye- ~ | are here. be Thos. T. Caswell, 24 ca- \ A . bes ‘a7y look, that is master Thos. T. Caswell, 2d Assistant Ex: t observing, while % mpsop, and who ha: o_ nary py sin shaving. the people out of all sympath, or recognition. nt y England, that every beoaes = tuast ie ft? and. aa wags a * The old p-ocess,” “<wasto stretch | The fact is, the American prop neroms the Aosscete = he tnenne. Royle, ton, Gunner Tl ae veoan Sailmakes Pent ada woodbine twining | **Orke B® z pritendiggete seinen tim of his back, pour ihe mortar over | stard baving their Washingtone, Z | cas aan anbeeed a6 ha tee sa ll pee enough, where the | agerersive phiz—but sou have'ut made him | his face, put quills in hic hose to save him trom | Jackagns wif out bare-legged in togas and PM sii So seo Bete hr hd igen. DAMON CONCLAVE, No LS PL stalky enouph—or Stanion either. suflocating. and when the casting was removed | vials” In taking leave of Mills, we could not but en- | Atthur A. Boyd, ordered to the Michigan. core | —— Mills—You forget that the f or less of the eyebrows aril 1 were Said Mille: +1 determined, from that mo- i ling of cordial reapect | Lieut, Commanders Geo. W. Hayward and G. Te Be cower r Usiran Sratxs Cuxeexcy Accorxt von | elevated i Modine wotee wes oe Paar T isd have nothin toa “4 tertain feeling of cordial ct for the in. | WB. Glidden. detache wn the Na TEMPLE. f War cave repabia hat i care atal look to the | wont: that I would have nothing to do wit domitable old man who has worked Lis way up | and ordered to the Ter 1 EMBER 29.1470 0 gs 8 id iesidiees wily ey eat je that it gave @ painful look & THE TOVA Bi from the plasterer’s trowe! through so many | I’. F. Wilde. Master I y E ; nol pba od ier senility and that whatever else 1 ™y | oustacies, and who, whatever crit G MR. LINCOLN TO BB“ THOR.” : Filion works. they should a! be true to nature tMr. | and to American 1 tof his head iia works haat h s 1 of Landseer ¢ put ou a wry face, and sa t seems, | ~aljects, and in harmony with the pureuite aad * ‘ees ll me, just take aknite and astes of the people.” | date, $ t my throat, for I hear that taking a cast is said Mills, taughi rs shes Inte se at E ’ st about t same as taking live THE COLD SHA: The Frost King Supreme the Line Ie dey— Tne aid Hovering Ab; We note elsewhere som ing about the cold snap in this ¥. but keen as the winter | wind is in th's city to-day, the range ci the ther- me savagely. 1 was curio d of his host talk with him about ur T's DERCUMR rat's } should know It the hang of ae mometer is not 60 low here asat other poin tached from the rd ; ro A k visible Pe mith rar : the country, situated surther South. Disp | grdered te the Tenmeneoe. A ere inner in New York at wenton'to Brook= § or} Dok." . ; ow would you have him rey from all cections of the country rep i car oud oene =~} sage mae z rE } y the way, is noted i yntohear Beecher preach, just to get a good YENSING WITH CLAY bi nl = remely cold. Atsev- | (ominander C. Hl Me I ptergenie thetic DISVENSING WITH CLA mre He should have been represented outh—there have been | (mmander C. Hi. sos Star man.—Did be know you were the the aid of a k hand and accirate | wearing the graceful Roman toga, with a civie in plaster for scu’ wreath about hi ts head, « trancheon in his band, with the tedious process of modeling | 2¥ instead of : jay. and then moulding from clay to plaster ee ene SARE, ter cast in sections for the | "@ Should Lave been seated on the classic lion- Portsmoath, sud pl don wailing ke following, collected | Second Assistant. Ienelie 43 pd Assistant Fngincer John P. telly © Wi partment weather report of | ached from the Terror, acd placed on waiting this morpirg, will be of imterest in this connec- orders. Chief Engiveer W. W. Danza: tion t a . b 6 4 Dajuth, Minn., % a. m.—Weather clear ang | ‘Sched From duty as a member of th re Mille.—Not a bit or it. I did'nt want him to uton any SELP-CONE IOUS PULPIT ATTITUDES. { got just the Beccher 1! wanted. years after mouth Ro : : 2 blag examiners, abd placed on waiting orde reached the | Star man.—Whatis the idea of that scroll in | use of the foun heother arivantageszained | *#'!—‘ien the statue would have been credit- | C\d, Uermymeter Soe Unermensiet ions ey. John Sher. | Beecher’s hard? over the Clay jwocess is that the plaster model | able to the country. As for that man Mills, he | + barometer rising; wind S. W., blowing brisk- | PermMan, Who was styled | | Mills—He holds the Christian Ministers Com. } ueither shrinks or swells, and dees not require | has done more to corrupt the taste in pure art ly; cloudy. | rother, Samuel Sherman. | mission, which reads like this— ZatnK and covering with cloths to keep it in | than any other man in the country, and 1 give | _ Cleveland, © ,8a. m.—Parometer riing; ther- i nie man aud the other cousin | ‘ He hath annointed me to preach the gospel | conditon. But plaster sets «0 yuick that only hima Mick whepeets Loses mometer at’ zer; wind S. W., blowing gently; faut ae of his Tis settled at Watertown, Mass. and itis related of | 'o the poor, to set at liberty them that are | a skilful hand cen deal with it. coke: 2 . ‘ sloudy. Se te eh ee the Key. John Sherman that he prezched a | bruised.” I'wrote to Beecher to know what the RUSTS DY THE BARRET. Ted fo etal cei enan artist tenet tuo thin- | Chicago, IIl..8 a. m.—Thermometer 3 dag. be- : Bre are BBS BOOTH sermon uncer @ tree there. Samuel Sherman, a |» mbiem should be, and this was his answer. Skills ‘Riomatied ek-Ralkiae’ ail ‘dhe shinn tieiam, and Mills told the | iow zero; wind blowing freshly from S° Ws ; = young man, about 14 years of age, and adven- Star man.—And those are : Fromeexe aiking all the way— | stor rath against bis unclassical | clear. turous, emigrated to Counccticut. Samuel OREBESACKS through a series of rooms presenting the usual | work an if he rather enjoyed it. Mil's, how. Sherman was the ancestor of inv branch of the china! 2", | Cincinnati, o., 5 a. m.—Weather clear-and curious medley of artist quarters, but with a» = mg ay tie poops a0 i + Santer: mail raid upon ‘4 joga-business,” ea. He holds out a roll of green. eee os ste poerons a piss. |) ¥ home. He married and bad children, and jis | backs to the country in his right hand, aud Lis | ‘f OF metal—a golgotha of skulls, There mast common-seree ideas. Profeesion. [i aughae Pyantopted the iewal | sect rests upon a bag of cold, showing the basis | “AYE Deen thousands of these. Mm barrels, oron | ogy. cat's VERSION OF THE SU BaexDER OF profession. {!-auglter.) Zhat Jolin Sherman | upon which the issue of grechbacks was mate, | shelves, or strewn about the floors. Statesmen, URE. thei deg. Sheree ern doko, whe hed 9. con Danie! aie wASeels ianoukh woutulare: Poets, Criminals, Philauthropists, Inventors. | Mills told us about visiting Gen. Grant to get | _ St- Paul. Minn. 5 a. m-— Thermometer minus | sary of Regen eed eat And, frst, what Js “The National Lincoln | Copgressmen, Caucassians, Mongoliang,“-Fit- | from him the particulars of tie surrender of | ? dt; clear am q = nis, Mo., 7 a. m.—Weather clear and . | Satety and the Leg ‘biy. His | Monument?” and what are ita chances of suc- | teenth Amendments,” the Noble Red Man, | Lee, to aidhim in making an authentic repre- thermometer min youngest son, Taylor Sherman, settled at Nor 5 family.and scttled at Strat‘ord, Comecticnt, and lived there tifty vears after reaching his Terms reasonable jidren's parties. H WIL! terns for cb: D street, bet 3 sees where the thousand and one projects ofthe | 27d all other types of humanity were | resentation of that cvent in bass relief for the | “New Orleans, La., woud _ , rt 5 same 1 i 5 Darel ising; clear; wind N. rose Rad Uh. S. W dean ou of theseSios kak proven bpRe | sre have failed” ‘The Aasoctaton forthe ere | (oP EeMUOg, fon, the pparentiy’ in some | Motument. ‘This was quite interesting as giv- | deg.; barometer rise; Siear, wind N. E- drivers carry lean ——————— SS ee ercent uvon the coast of Connecticut. | ticm of this monument was incorporated by § system of g:adation, known only to tha seulp. | ‘Gen. Grant's own version of that historic thermometer 21 deg., with wird N. people a cent cheaper. TO THE PUBLIc. He also was one of those who inherited of | Congress in 1567, and bas for its officersSenator | ‘or, for he picked up a head, minus a pose and | affair. Rocbester. N. Y.., Se The ‘‘Snolligosters” are a Cleveland socie- aaeee the es as hich the 8 tate of Conneetcut donat ed | itarian as President; Hon. Jobo F. Driggs, Vice 7 ete get eagelld od xemered, Said Gen. Grant to Mills, “lee came in with nero AA blow: ty whose weakness is clam-bakes. . rs 2 ts We Western Reserve, and was one of those J ‘eo e wrong barrel.” 2 a 87 The improved ten-pins themse! res IN CONBEGUENCE OF THE DESTRUCTION | «hd went to the West to arrange testy ee Yorick-likeskull it might have Leen, he did not | t&* "8E of truce to see on wnat {the tery sat | ,.3oune Washtagton, N. H.,% a. m.—Barome- | ye ane im a sash BY FIRE OF THE the Indians. In 1808 he returmed to Connectic sxplain, but heldit thoughtfully in his hand for | Teeive his surrender. 1 stated the terms and | ter 28.57; 1 minus #0 deg; wind N., | "eo-neg at Ted, the choie CENTRE MARKET BUILDING cut. He went out azain in 189%, and made s 4 moment asif dubitatirg if the missing features | Lee said, ‘please reduce that to writing. blowing 70 miles per hour; cloudy. Cen gone, ’ 7 ‘a GS. partitic ; His son, my father, might be replaced, as a Cuvier would recon- 1 took some manifold paper and _made several ——+200+ en sung ye Iwill beat my Len a young man of 2) years, married Diary street an extinct animal from a fragmentary | copies, and handed one to Lee, saying, ‘There, 1 | ATTEMPT To Escarm rmom THE Rocxvitie | .67-Los Sal thinks s «theatre alt STALL No 10, NORTHERN MANHEL | {ost #! Nurwoe: in 1810. and their rone, but, apparently, thecase was hopeless—it | Petree tat te choot wel talked JAtL On Sunday afternoon that is to make it an paradwe.” a | families oti'l live there. My father went to Lan. | “SURPAS® ALL THE MONUMENTS or THE | 2° eve that is about oo ., | mer, imprisoned in our jail on pane DAILY. USTIL SOME BETTER acoon- followed b: mother and her WORLD A TRETOTALLY USTED aUST, lee readit and signed it,and then passed it | Charges. were together in the ‘of MODATION IS PROVIDED | k. That child was my brother, | in its wast proportions and grandeur.” It is to aud with 2 shake of the head he replaced it in | back tome aud I it. The manifold cop- 1 on Bunbaye sand GEO. M.OYSTE } = Sherman, of Obio. Iwas the | be located on the public ground near the Cap- e P tin | ies were then distributed to the several Get- ) pe in Finest Grosencl Wetter. | ty tather died and left us al! very | ito). ‘The pedestal will be of granite, and the | ‘Ye “*@e varrel. ersis. ‘The transaction took place in front of the eS skh | ¢ ter.] Tut friends came up ani z 1 >. ‘The busts in metal were those of special rarity | my tent under a tree, and with a little ping | with a per! » forcing their way ty the = } £4 ue and we all reached maturity, ard | Sguresof bronze. The whole structure will be | 14 vaine. as for instance a wonderfully perfect | table be(ween us.”* steps, rushing Miller's Kloman House | Set] mares soa the number of children we | seventy feet in height, of & triangular form, | £7? value. as for instance minutest seam in the | _ 2!il!8 says he was rather stazgered by the the feeing axD i rea\ly cannot keep on counting. [Cheers | With truncated angles. Crowning the main , © | simplicity of the atlair as detailed Uy General different DINING BOOMs, | T.. Gentlemen, the Shermans area | Column is a curious net-work of wrinkles on the face dis- Grant, and suggested to him that the resulted in the Bo. 420 SEVENTH STREET, } nume “wily, and | may safely assert that COLOSSAL STATUE OF AMRAHAM LINCOLN, played with more than p! be er accuracy. | had been educated by Trumbull and the other Bae others Opposite Odd Peliows’ Ha | the Z = ed the ame ue commandment—they | represented in the act of signing the Emanci- ot Siameed value are the heads Pathons and historic a. od the Uteral surrender Sheriff Ben- | wen th. increased and C - ee, ey na manner 2 gach or lone, PESE, wo sastty oot md I hove they have Perey otal u- | pation Proclamation. Sia equestrian statues of ieplaying in a Devon’ portraiture | of x sword on casior hundred dollars the texture Of ihe ekin and all the minntest dit- | Grent thought a moment, and said: “ Well, 1 replenishing the earth.” (Laughter and | the chief generals whose valor contributed to | tinctive points in of + : > the conformation of the head, | guces yon badd better repre*ont it fust as it the preservation of the Union will be poised on | as weli as the characteristic expression of coun. | anc educate the people up to that. The li cutting | that 1 pounds i ct bastions thrown out from the base of the angles. | ten: pees fo generally Jost when the process is | surrender of the sword is @ relic of the bar- in to be vesterday. at the Roose he we Steotee mart eee Damion acta Ta Conn! the deat | These have been selected, namely: Grant, | ealuful or teria Ga a wes pecp ey fe palpi | spiy took wae Md.) Sentinel, | atoms Jno. Veisar, euperintendent. sen ¥ DINING , “ - 4 ae 2 Tho! Sheridan, ward and 3 smaaiat cope cead also, unless S7-A Philadelphia lawyer was re? w! v cigars censiind eich the teas My a Ripa BS DE fer sree i er Bi pecan wb es ped | Star man—Mr. Mills, how does it happen thay | be Uehaved pretty weil, (But now timer a er the absence of | the court tor @ witnes:, aul wae to’? ’ y . seraas tt - sevorth. _— kb wet of : ‘opponen cham) recent entertainments t “ apps £ ‘from Minnesota, | about the middle of the monument, aretwenty- | S¢ uch of your work is in the equestrian line? | })).¢ the terme he Can go On fighting again? Tamenerelne that witnesses —aee in he fame es im ** s A MiLL Ee n} ured, one colossal statues of statesmen, pbilamthro ] Mille,—Well,1 bad slwaysa passion for horsct | Mills But, General, 1 have exeme picture Boe en any gentioman would treat a visitor

Other pages from this issue: