Evening Star Newspaper, December 21, 1872, Page 3

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bere was the rollof m ends T bad left it in my greateoat y, there were the ‘yg up ic the hall, The Tension in Charles Dickens. | Poruason se Ruty of exasperation. to which _PROPOSALS. er sent by Maclise, Stantield and | Friend.” Andit was precisely the extraordi- 5 : ; ; § 5 ee suing the iast de> NEE WATIONAL BANK O 7 rosa. RDEES.VS POST! a how did or tore on [From the Spectator.) — vine ak Hg - * par gud Fn 1S PO SEE ° ihe r | Bt A great scu'jtor, commenting to the present | “Hig very idleness, as ‘orster well #uy%, c esc a A think bat leke cwo Drown Ditds axe we | lakt sek idettac tee | ab riantaieatmmnetsine carat | Wer “strenuous,” like his work. He walked | ely Drraxtwent. Dee 12.1672. Leit ine canyty mest. : (foci Sapir Piiptc oor await tal ata DES HAS Seat RapeAety to “the | cighteem miles it four Bours aud ab a ee maseee ior ya sort of sneak, | Whij-cord™—" tho race-hor-e tenvoa"—in @l) fall heat of a glowing wumier Au the young ones are afar and awas, | gid Dargiee bat been only geet staresk | tao 5 cilthe softer and ¥ Stes a sort of relief for the strain of i = Fach sings with bis chosen m: nn that gre: ee EE nani af tae Toit Water eon | 2 the (aOgEIRBSG ENS peenca aver. und er occasion, Mr. Forster sa, ‘Tw gh’ is cloving Vightsome Ls; with long tails. bolted with the spoils o: rt rall, but i only the keen, strenuovs, driving, pur pose- heugt the ¢ fs lave. 3 taken the paths t look sis uruing elements in it Jett. ‘The -econs rol- es | ‘a front, and this | coat, be'd have been a tict zv 5 | Deen Seale Se enna | °Tis & remDling step comes down the path Labsd out ‘the bag of money. | s miperabiy guid insecyrs—iw wig agg I shiuld | Bape wt Blea} osstyae ac cdate og Gtaries Dy cen. | You could er-t = pe vg) oe et Wasn't, asisastal,on tae lett hand | Lave beet ufferly and es ved Premed. force. It is like reading tie biograpay of a Chanced is our thought of the zrave old earth | —————__ Hteepe : the ‘ud strain go | Tbat ic keeping im trast our dead. Love's Bedreys. j eetereaek ae hols toe nome iste tae, whith | Pa : A BREACH OF PROMISE Casein LONDON WiTH | the book covers. There is no rest in the man’s aoa, in the middle of © comely face: that 1 mense fair; AN AMBRICAN DEFENDANT. i ure, even whem he is professediy ne: He to London jast to try Sees ebeeesares omen,” | In the Court of Queen's Bench, on Desember | Proposed to himeelf to write a bork like | the efiect of reading “The Chimes” to his luti- a Nf ne Den gncfut brow. } 4,008 the Londen way Nowy, ihe cord, of | ~The Vicar of Waketeld.” He couMd dust, 45 | mate triende,, Between Mila nd Strasbourg F STREET, Par Sha cba in st aatoms Ds vs. Winans was brought tu aciose. Mes have written a pl et or | he was in bed only once for twe or three hours ows a Dook to understand, | ——. lamp at the oat Bengeuet ‘putlantine and Mee HAL var 4 fe Bate ot Latina Sas bot 8 t meh of ig: x ptke ney er apa te Between Sixth and Seventh streets, mo bri, y night; the tt . Sergeant Parry and Mr. Mur- joldsmith’s ease aud leisurely Uterary air. Hi ceep su Drodi, \. ae facteuesl 1 your hand, t : down. the streaming pive- Set aes deteeannt: The was ap action 2 hover, relax "a grea? element | dash sate the +diterehly of Sie Doky Nesaand Collections mate S23 Exchange furnished om al? sa the worn gull w * “— of marriage, m whien the fie genius, anda very great m | Out of it withia three weeks wi ighiy char- Sat Ore eS eter Srcces word iauansesuaee, cot tien details of ations, isdue fo hele Constant | acterietictot the Wight preestre ‘ot Ls Bervous | D. L. EATON, Cashier. Tv own true wife, who is dearer now } wcllt for publication in these | strain, which » aimost veutiment, cision. Apropos uf matter, ‘omtet | 5, gm. sQuisR GEN. ADRIAN R. Root, Moc asl teat aay \ Columns Tt may be. bricdy stated tose ene leet it mattiioet aed cleans Oe eee ee | says very traly that “in ail intellectual. labore | SS uate Ool'r Iagsroal evs Butiaie, ¥.¥ | 7 i P plainuf, Elizabeth Dri was in 1853 en- | and not anfrequently lends a forced ring to the | bis will prevailed s0 strongly when he fixed it | B. s aie enaseives clearly bel — | gaged @s bookkeeper assistant at the | great st of ali bis faculues, nis bumor. The | on any object of desire, that whate'se its aitain- | DANKING BOUSK UF po ey bank, rain of all my pros | Ectablishment ot Messrs Truetitt, batr-drewers | Clography is, of coures, amasing reading | ment micht exact was mevar duly measured, SQUIER @ ROT, any and | mites Tales aett What conid f do? to | a4 perfimers, in Bond street and Barlington | Whether the’ moral. tension ts justitied or in | and this cad to frequemt strain and ancommon 1416 PESNSYLVAMLA | @upina ¢ | arn? Zee blow that bad fallen unos me | Src .Ue, and became acguainted, as customer, | execns, it is alerae there, and theretore even } waste of what mo mn could less afford to (Opposite Willard ay yorteest Rar ba oramotiy, | Se Deere Seek st hed Se eeten ee eee th the defendant, Clivton Winans, anAmeri- | if we kre anuoved and repelled, our attention Everything he did, be did with this fanbe Gace ae | hed and Say nothing analy atoce ie Nees | can resident in the country, andone of afirm | never flags. But Mr. Forster is not as Las. | imperions resolve to let his volidion take. its nee of ibe contract, to Jurpish on extra gtan- « that are over left aft | Knew uf ty having scscived thet mones note | Of brothers carrying on business in London,and | ticlous as be might have been in inserting the | owe was, and ttled Mine De deepen nee tity of etampe Bot wateeding "s supple tor thane They Hit usa lamp of hght; w of my Baving a str ots eh roprietors of what are called the ‘‘cigar ships.” | would-be eomic letters of his friend, and per- | the greatest mistakes of his life. He liked, to months, Pou Sed shall God's sunshine clear throagh t! | bat Black. the man who had deposited it | Herit is said, visited Truciitt’s almost daily, | hayeom that very account, Be gives a pichere have everything just as he imagined it. His Guliak o'sk a = ee " © | mint "Black had gone to Awerica a bitad. | Paid the plaintif® attention, and offered ‘her | that is the more complete—complete in its un- | mind stratued atemely tegart tan cation ee ane franc smut SS Sa a eee ee ae rice e bund: | narringe. She consented, but the union was | conscious as well us ta ite conesions contriba- | ideal he summoned up In his tancy, notaing | Tere, aire, manta pee = cnose, pd there 9 more nig | vote at gi Seentes Pee ee erst te | putofl trom time to time, until, ashe said, his | tion to our Rnowledge of the great humorist. | elge would eetiecy tim dora memes i wrens ‘ard boxe, P Close to my side, dear wife that I love, | tones ssi} Spenin cog Ring bry goal sons dh brother bad settled an income as = Dickens = 8 a see Sonh ie eek mneok ee wee coders ad M. Taine | bound on fhe etere we and corners with merlin. sed : toon | di : ene. is : c ai PO ne a ed gl mg | ing, bang up my bat as usual,cversthing would | {he mcantime he proscod, her to beeoma his hig still hppar macohing charpie on ts lmacelin coerk eine sha Charity } Papers iuclowed ia et wpanalin et eos ‘Till the morning star shall shine. go on ae before. If Black vetarned, my Gord | 1) tuchionable siyle.98 Mr. sod Mra. Custon | the pallicaier end in vide Yee mee cee its | captured, and whom she lost at the ver j she camete ve be tranamitied may” ee i a (Cham Journat | good as his. The et ere ee | Davidson, in Manchester street, Manchester | ste wift current, none the less easily for | wae meant for “a gloomy mauiac, one 50 Sree poeaes Agen — ———— od thee thawen tome: Bat Tdon’t think Js uare, sud in October, Isi7,a child was born | the enormous wealth of detail which he enatches | powertully drawn 'as to make us “shudder. —— . : I retained thie theaght long. Do you ever carit The intimacy continued until some time before trom all sides wherewith to enrich it. If he | But there is something quite just in M. Tain | In addisien, the contract F will bs required to Burglariously and Feloniously, | sider how much resolution and force o wil it | Ze intimacy co ember, isd, when the de- | fails to hit the mark, and talks excited non- | general criticism that Dickens does dei | | farwah late, direct the same for ‘va pac SF pe 2 Cee Te ee ee ne seams tes) | fendant married a widow, a Mrs, Smith, who | sense, asin the silly letter about hie pagsion for | madness of “fixed ideas” with extraerdinary seri ‘with the dallp lists foreuanee [From Chambers’s Journal. tion? I'd neither the one nor the roeste 4 represented to have an income of £6,000 a | the queen in the first volume, and many a little | power. It 1s the secret 6f his marvelous de. | the Agent of the Department: We had just locked ap the safe, and T had | {ould have broken down st Joldtiel bea jo An, sllowance varsing in amount trom | note in this, it ia nevertheless all in the same | scriptions of murderous fealing -of Jonas | sther bleak speguiced, te at the key inmy pockct—I am the ant- | have met that fellow’s eye and told him to <5 4 month was continged tor soma | vein, jocosity stretehing eagerly towards a | Chuzzlewit’s for example. ale of Sykes" wan- | Sige: alee, wee Sat of the North and South of E panic at | Doren Bat Bis matey. ¢ throngh all the | time, and the intimacy with the plainti! was | given ‘aim, though the aim is falsely taken. | derings a‘ter the murder of Nancy, aad, apatt, | eh cceeer reperee reutien 3 Ke Padeey Branch, W.. Yorks—I hal got my | sraunin’ States Fede eee erengt all the | revewed three months alter thi defendant's | Consider tor inetence thn enseen ey tuken. | dering murderous schoolmaster in Our’ Matual hat on, aud had taken up my umbrella, when | joe ropberp tion to dinn | marriage. “A robbery!’ cried she, clasping her hands; Dr. Sergeant Parry, for the defendant,ex- | Mr. Forster: : + Claspi 5 n ty of bis-own mind for the tension san ne Bender of stamps low gd and to be insued dur r : y capaci or jour years canttraced bt Se ee ene : b she pressed his deep regret’ that the case had ever “Devonsntne Lovor, January 17,18it. | of Pxed ideas Wile: enetlon tite eons ee H is eotimated to be two am fin tume?™ be I shook my head. | ‘@n¢.8re, the men gone? been Drought into court, and, admitting thet | «Farrow CountayMgn!—The appeal with | powerfully. Antellectually, indeed, he hard y “Deuce take it!” he said: ‘and i'm off to SY | one . p the plaintift had @ moral claim, and her child | which you have honored me, awakeus within | understoud anything ee though sosse nt ths rpool by the next train, and then to Psercr intted the rents ack, metgmette | every cluim on his client. Bat for the un- | ny ircotenoone aa ae eee actly to bo | fixed identon to whieh he tacked his pictaree a” SOO Gae Tet ootceee eee Farmamable contact of the pialatiat Se'epplying Imagined than deseribed. | Heaven bless you, | were eo delightfully itmap—aein: poor Mr, Med. > 7 . the | & . + | to hisclient’s brother, forcing her way | I shall indeed be proud, my friends, to respond | die’s an veller's case ae en nee eee te Teck Se, Ce tee SAG ater at 'cheyt0, Taben | Toner Hotel, and Gomanting mare money | Lenn Tequisition. ‘I had withdrawn trom ‘Then I told her the story of the twenty-two | than had been agreed upon, the s'lowance of | public life—! fondly thought torever—to pass “ Well, then, what is to be done? Here's Tove Bethe of ene, come dae inna Bags 201 | mousand pounds. She wouldn't believe meat | £0 @month would bave been continued. and | the evening of my days in uydropathical par- | Mr. Forster's sdmimble: honk wilt eects no necessity would have arisen for this public | suits, and the contemplation of virtne. For | carr: one trait of Dickens right home to ever days. Well, you'll Dave to take ‘em up,” he | Sfst; but whem she heard the whole story he | Thvestigation. 2 which latter purpose, I had bought a looking- | devourer of his biography. that ait the vets, Oorner ren street and ns Avene anio; ‘I can’t dnless you take the money in to- | 7&* rightened enough. Yetshe had wits about | It asin of Sergeant Parry's ad- glass, But, my friends, private feeling mast | and muscles in Dickens’ nature were always on | PAYS PER ORME Ime ‘DEPORT. nigint. Mer Fou act run of tothe town hall, Jack,’ | dese, Mr. Sergeant Ballantine said, feeling the | Sverield to a vera sence or pectic daty. ‘The | the stretch towards some eager end. A mind Finew that those drafts were coming due, ou mast run 0} » Jack, ited n from y 2 dificuity of resisting a verdict against him on | man is lost in the invi! guest, and I comply. | with less rest and less easy play in it, in spite of ra Paty that OOF manager was a little auxioas | [est telecrarh to all the mations fe Lorian, | the action for breach of promlec, which was all | Naracey wet sed aver apetre ea ean. | ith eee rest and tes Taugliter, is hardiy con. “%. Liz ec a : - abe ¥ were rather heavy, and | 7 d . this | be had to contend for, be had agreed On the | in-law; babies; with all the sweet (and chaste) | ceivable. tha ether samt: an thane eine meee . | and everywhere! Oh, do go at once, Jack, thi: (} , part of the plaintid to take £1,500. delights of private life; these, my countrymen, ann REA ES’ ‘ENTS. Black, too, (that was the man with the maney- | ,°"7, moment. Every second lost may be ratn | P# hie Lord Chiet Justice expressed an opinion | are hard to leave. But you have called me Hyacinths in Sponge. L _— eg bag!—Biack was a capital customer; and not | : that the compensation was very inadzyuate. | forth, and I will come. Cor Distal Onsale Geattousa r * only a good customer himselt, but he brought | 0 Vilene place: with So Teeeee ieee |. A juror was then withdraws. The pisinti®t | Fellow countrymen, your friend and faith- | yy, oeanetter twats winle tye rete war. | 905 905 good secofnts with him, and we were a young | p\fa coment of stoner Daten ee een | is to be paid £1,5cu under a judge's order. TOLCervADs ccd am CHARLES Dickans.”” | ing tro tn tho cosy liveary at Eelerbyr I ase Branch onic eS to meet the drarta | Fortico to get to. the police office, but to the ———— SSS e idea is forced a1 e gayety is ann \ 10, is question—What do for m: 4 7 A Desperate Encounter with a Pan- | ral, but the whole letter is written up to the | Myself this question What cam I do for my | Side, which wasn’t classical at ali, but of the ru- Ss vorite science this winter? hat offering can sryhow, and I shonld have been a great fool to | Se. mnie style of architecture, and you went the: idea, and you see the straining whip-cord even | = vl - a I bring to my sweet mistress, whose breath is along a number of echoing stone Passages be {From the Portland Oregonian, December G | in that-bit of laborious comedy. The proclama- Way just because it was after-hours. So | counted it all over; there was about nine- sma~ | fragrant with the odor of spring flowers, aad : . A. professional hunter, named Mepzs, was | tion about the piratical repiblicatton of his 3 ou tia ine cart teen thousand in cheques and notes, and threo | “ye Jon reached the superintendent's afice. out bunting this week on Martin's Island, own | works, put forthon the eveot the appearance ut | fine Geno t = in gold. hy be sald, *l thine hase ho did tha: | te Columbia. ‘The hunter was accompanied | * ickleby,” (pp. 76, 37, of this volume,) is “Ah, distinctly { remember, so 4 “Come aud heres glass of beer with me.’ | “Aly he sald, pindiiae ~ | by. young hound only, which started ome | another bit of labored pleasantry of the sam It was in the bleak December!” tits currest daily requiaitines trem the Desart. said Black, ‘un the way to the station.” |” Obt said I, how thankful I Then you at & Little distance away in the dense | kind, a violent straining after apscudo-comic | gag /t, plustering without, but warm and Sent, without Bindzanct or Seley I put the bag of mouey in my des e eet Ms nh srang ohana brush. Repzs ran from the thick timber in | idea’ But his true and most macwelous ofort ‘ . a it up. Ewould come back presen can put your hands upon him and get back the money. “I want the money back, Mr. Saperin. | Which he was stauting toward the edge of the | of bumor have all the same swittranmne ear, | Comorting withIn. Books, ‘magazines, an’ i logues were lying in generous profusion on edin the sate. I walked to th e' lying in gy Li Q PS Biack; we had some beer together, and | t@hdent—never mind him. I wouldn't mind in- | Hater. A clear space of several rods divided | rent in them, though of course, when the tide | {yt study table near me; the dear partner of | 3% Office anderMasonic Temple. Jem sack; we had e beer together, an: ‘Will be Turther required to keep in repair Giemrlle aud plaice: frm which seatops may be ted. to renew the same whenever . s r {he brush and the river margin. On reaching | js triumphant, and sweeps all sort of rich spoils | {Be study table near distant friends, and in STIN P. BROWN, required, and should gow 4: then he went off, America wards, and Lon tho | Qu0v retina morbeck ee ee ee et CoMld | the bank Bepzs halted and placed himseit in ag | Liiumbhant, and sweeps all sort of rich spoils | myhands was a package of hyacinth bulbs | AO Garner WoW, arenue and 28h street, Spy tine to take tbe SS ee Fou see, 1 was | OULfrr said the superintendent, soverely, ‘tho | attitude of defense. In a few micamerun | wore—by which we usually mean force not | Witch T was about to piace in‘the old pese Wnrorxeate Dratan 1x |W Mulngtoa,D.0., rather in the babit of calling for a glass of | Police ain't scen into the world to get people's | Boubd emerged from the timber and came run- | Guite adequate to its purpose. The exjuisite | Such glaeses that for’ forty years had heen OLESALE DA: ae be cycntls, from the force of habit, I amie | BoReY back; nodhing of the sort. “We aren't | Me toward ite master, Iramediately tollow- | iustrations which he gnihers trom all uarters | Naked glasses shat or torty years hd been LUMBER, LINE, CEMENT. SAND, Re.. Bo.. to se m the force of habit, I'd almost | Poing to encourage composition of felony; an! ne the dog, =~ = Sater ae eke eee ¢ ins Bee a beac eee Span arin round balls to open their bearts.and premature- | EUMB DIONE for Building. Maceduuteine am Smeg ae tke q | a8 for putting our hands on ene peng ho poche gsr Eee te iis chonvice fav yee ach og ineseone - ak toon me ‘Mrs oe their sweet incense to the Giyer or all Paving purposes delivered in any part of the Dis- 7 a hy 8 ' je ant d ink .. ‘tn hh ~ifob ". good q s ra-party that night, the first cour mar- | the liberty’ of the gahjectis fort Where's You; | Dal took effect in the jaws of the animal, bat | Gamp’s conversation and life, abundant and | SP, ly aware of the nncertaintyof the task | “BEAL ESTATE bonght and sold and tn- riage it began at six o'clock, and [’d prom | the Hberts, | did not inflies any, serious injury nor retard its | amazing in their abundance anilin the variety | ,untally avs Knowing well that oftentimes, | vested Se ths teens cee ant maney te ined to be home an hour earlier, to draw the | “vas obliged to confess [hadn't any; wherent | Sdvance toward the reer Coping, Nopzs | and subtlety of their shades as they are, are ail | Pith the crentent care send eee ee | after give my itentign- and will be at my corks and help to get tiings ready. And bers | to superintendent looked at me contempt- | retreated into the water up to arm-pits. | collected to convey the same drift, and all sug- pricious litle beauties will not yteld up their | ice rom teu &.m. entil four p.m mar! it was six o'clock, and bad to go all the way | {i,j uPerinte he wounded and infuriated animal sprang | gest to usakeen eye on the stretch, ranging | Pricious before the warm epringsiin has invited EW OFFICE. OF MANUFACTURE, ETC, back to the bank. E «Now, let’s ace into thism atter,’ said he, a after and tackled the hunter. xs doa, nga Over its various stores of mouldy associations, | {hem to his love feast, [made the inquiry: “Is | ired to be All the way back 1} went as hard as I coal! | ter neg ‘made some notes ona bit of pap to the rescue of s greets eee Aer #9 | to pile up monthly-nurseisms of e' ery kind. Mr. | there not some better way to accomplish this | JUAN BOYLE 4@ Ce., ft However, the mamey was all right in my | ‘itow came they to know you go! the mones va | Warm (or the pant ner that it’abandoued R Forster auotes, for instance, in this volame one | sgme result—some substance in the grest lakes, | Real ESTATE AND NOTE BROKERS, . aud now I'd put it in the safe. “Teli Mr. | How came they and turned ob the hound. Hops waded o3' | of the very best and also one of the very first oF | atory of ature more closely resembling the | be 005 anne cae Cousine’—our manager, you know—I said to the | 5°resia't aidn't know. foward We bens, Curnied stound 0g fired tho | Mrs. Gasp’ spesches: he very last case | *0!t, warm bosom of the earth than the hard. | (opposite Treasury) servant wh yethat L want the keyof | «'An but I know, said the superintendent. | second barrel of sekshot and took sheet in the | gen Mt: Harris,’ I says, at the very Inst case | Cony Starsne tetire nt ay oe oe pesite Trease the safe. it in your pocket, s+ «you went forget a giassof aleatter sou leit tha | load was large Pere nut lice onsc: In the | seever JiSteg toe when ik was bats young | whispered, “Try wocl, cotton. moses,” ee, | a HANDSOMECT Ei Siggp mOUSR o you; “4 | yank, young may? re ther’s side. ly disable the anieal, whien | BCTeon. ‘Mrs. Harris,’ I says, Beet med bottle | ut to each of these i found objections. ‘The | so0th A ctreet, between 2d and 34 streets, with all with the rule gulations of the North and | “"| was obliged to confess I had done s0. der Reichert ye arp hte gy v0 Sone xaimney pleco, and don't ask moto take | constituent partsofeach were not shat i wanted, | tes modery upsotemeets, 2. : South of Engl. Bank, which say that the a» “ That's how property gets stolen,’ said b Nh tenes ihe of le ai pe ae i precede od put ay lips to it whon igh | ‘The power o} apillary attraction was not saff- | oad one tame on, balenee, Bs ng \- 3 countant or cl cashier shail be responsib'e | iccking at me severely, ‘And what's more, you | the eee ona tea mbes 3 disposed.” ‘Mrs. har 2) she says bad pint] | \d for many other reasons | ving poe for the duc custody of the cash whilst it i in | notia dlase wah airiesd?— Aha know nea he tolved to revcue it If possible. Ho had dis- | ever there was @ sober cretur to be got a ewer, and I was about to give | OS ee the depot. with bit Rossession im the day-time, and that at mght | ang perhapsyou uot talking to this ftiend vf | charged both barrelsof hts gun, and cast asid: | egtsteenyence a day for working-people, and | nen suddenly a sprite from old ocenu'e | Busteeey, all moneys and secur: shail be carefully e- bis large bowie-knife in the edge of the timber | three: x for" gentletolks’—nigit-watching, »peared, and shouting, “I bring | read’ and cured within the of whish ehall be sc- dese Cia when he started to retreat to the w g | Raid rs. Gamp, with emphasis, being a extra | you narcognt tusundiy sae ‘Springing: | cured by two keys, one of which shall be in the i; And mentioned about the moacy | time, however, was tobe lost, an 1 itp charge—\vou are that inwallable person.’ ‘Mra. | 1o'cr fuer Sith am enetey a i, custody of the manager, = the — in that oe”? ~ | inte the river to save his dog. By this ti Harris,’ I says to her, ‘don’t name the chai ef the acceuntant or cashier. at, you say as ' : ai” The ely.” panther had lost much blood and was growing | for it I could attord to lay ail my fellow- = . Then this oe depend upon it, was in tho | Weak from exhaustion, The hunter, who wa: | out for nothink, I would gladly do it, ele is the Sumer of Coplilasy steveten ner ne There, I own, tha regulat'o.s | crit at the time, and he beard nd he & powerful man, seized hold of the panther’s | love I bears ’em.’” admitting treely the fruitful atmospherethrough sreebecure. They were drawn up by som:- | lowed you back w the bank; and you hav head, and after a Herce tussel, broke itshold Now, any one can see that the wonderful | Admitting! tiny apertures; a powerful abaorbent | body without ony library skill; 1€ they'd con- | cot binds, but a wire-netting over the window, | the bound. humor here ts masinly dus to the datightral in- | 0 oS ator of mbinture: ead besides all this salted me about ‘em. I could have suggested @ | Sn anybody outside can see you counting ou’ | A long and desperate encoauter ensued b tensity and extravagance with which Dickens | Sh"rynrat eubatanee seul ‘doubtless filled with good many improvements. Waatthey meant to the gold and silver.” tween the hunt panther, and the doz At | could abandon his imagination to the train ot | Dirogenous matters, which, dissolving in the fay Was, that the safe was to be secured by two rel 3 “a true,” I eaid. last Repzs succeeded in keeping the animal's | associations proper to a thoroughly seltish and | water will act as fertilizers to the plants or tf Bie the one with the cakes Rot intarchangea- | «Yee; Fece if ally exid the superinten dent | nose under water until it was quite doad, alter | mouldy pereda or tine cass ie Taker fost | they be not there in sufficient quantity, they Die the one with the other, was to be in the | cust as soe saw it. “He follows you up. from | Which he drew the body to the shore and tainted | tive professional pride in laying out her fellow- sen bo placed in the water with the same reealt Sustody, Sc. Now you understand why I wanted | tere to onder, aud hesees you patyour'mmes | {rom bi nde and exhaustion. ‘The hunter | creatures. Itis the singleness ot his eager and | MAy be, manure. Good; 1 will try it. 1 did't Bir. Cousins’ key. into your coat-poeket and then he follows soa | Was severely lacerated in the conitict, and has | streuuous Search, as he follows up every cross. | = sha ‘with great success aed Re tt ce yee: “Eh, my home, and when all's quiet, he cracks the crib. , “carcely heen able to leave his bed siuce. Tuc | thread of association that his enormous power Scouwhio Git sued tees beautifal experimentean Ob, it’s all in a nutshell; and that’s how prop- | hound is badly tor ot observation had given him, never deviating | testify. = exty goce. And then roujoome to the police.” for a moment from the two leading \deas—sal- xe. | my dear wite, 1 exclaimed, «Eurek Of the maz ufactare, storage and issu> of toe -tamys, E RS Eo ee eee you had one key, what did you epartl }, Safes, and Vaults Where (ue stamps Bre maxvfactured and stored, for the a he contractor of inspect, arnish ico hae CT z ‘The conirect cannot, In euy cae, be lawfally ‘Uaustarred oF Br gued. BESERVATIONS. ‘The Postmaster General reserves the rigbt to re- sect any and ail bids if ie his jutgment the interests f the Governp ent requi ‘elec the right to apnul aid the servant, opening her me wide ‘and what might you want Mr. Cousins’ key tor?” last as stupid as you, you see. I was mii ion. there ehall be a tel: Po cs " r don't yas Fisk's Fate fih greediness with a cant of benevolence, and | 1 procured a large, coarse sponge, such as 5 ~ - with the git Lown always getout of temper | go ater him andenten nine’? Ve! ONTT" | oro ee etony OF THE STABBING ON THR protessioual detail of sil kinds~ that helps ties | coachimen tne fn washin out tatee incLe ne Se Sees Raa een non Frith shove Yorkshire people. If you ask ‘em | 8°. Gh we know our own ‘busines, sir; you STarRs. toptle up the character into so wouderfal an | Suu'two long, with a share kntie wo wet PAYMENTS. 7 the simplest question, first they open the'r | jeaye if allto us, weshallhave Joo tight enor | Stokes, now on trial in New York charged | embodiment and illustration of these two inserted the bulbs in the openings, whit ip Paymentefor stamps a-tnally mouths and gape at you. When you've re- | if uct for thin job, anyhow, for tho text. Wen | with the murder af Jatase Fishy Je esisral ta, | Cmmodment and’ Mastration of dogroe en- | Consequence Of the Clarita eee willbe made quarteriv, aftor proper peated the question twice, they shut their | give him a» bii of rope, like.” following to a reporter: deavoring to explain away his geulus, but only | Cosedover them emitting outy the pamtste and adjustment of acconnts. - See te reach ee fran ete gehen the idea | © Tcouldn't put any fire into the man, do what | ‘As Ged shall judge me,I did notexpoot to | urehor tercnd feature of it—the constructive Ati vo pee AGRESMENT—BONGS Seems to reach the thing that does du i 2 | ) were flex ac, | 1¢0uid; Le was civil, that is for Yorksbireman; | meet James Fisk that Saturday ai‘cruoon; | | power of his mind—bis accurate and omuirorous ice Gens awost & ome in for brains, and excites asort of reflex ac- | tmpamive; he'd do what was right. I'd givon | bad no idea of coming across kim at all that observing faculty being taken for granted—de- | f2juwe concentric ¢ numbering fifteen in all, tion. for, by Jingo! instead of answering your | tnd information, very well, all the rest was Lis | day; I had not seen him before for some time, | pendedon the extraordinary tension he coald then placed the whole thing in the top of a question ey goand ask you one. Aud that | business. ‘4 and I had heard that be was still sick of the | putonone or two leading threads of associa- large vase, capable of holding nearly two gai- makes me so mad. mie © ® Very deuse | Sof came home miserabi2, despairing. I: | small-pox. I was at the Grand Central hotel | tion, by the belp of which he deew fone tas lons, and’ filled the vaso by” pouring "wet; race, those Yorkshire people. | Was just daylight by this time, and as 1 opened | with some friends looking for othet friends, and | reesourcce what they, and they alone, demanded. 3 “Why, toopen the said, you stupid,’said I | they de ts through the sponge until about one-half of the and Pian: tl ere, thi ‘bris of our feast was re- | 1 was rambling to and fro about the hotel when | No man was ever more able to stretch one or Spprovel and acce «Where is he?” weciets cha losnet tue ieuee salon ee picked | I met him accflentally by the merestaccitont, | te nsng te conception so tightly, and to ex- | tponge was below the surface waterwas oh ened bonds with ‘Dom wi Teried inuTage, “What shouid 1 | BoBe# Ot the chickens, the melted ‘residam af | eo help me my God.” (This Inst sentence very | clude so complesiy. all distorting peltoness 3 iy | Kno erie in . * at shoul + i warmed 60 as to produce a bottom heat, so very the jellies; whilst about everything hung the | solemmly.) “I had been very seldom to the | fromthe ficld of his vision. It was the soureo | falut emeli or sour wise. Teat down amt ‘all | Grand Central hotel, only thees tear cutee, | eam power and the source of the limitations ou | REcessar vegutatites tan heen = i dust thou Know he were at that house? | this wretched mess. and leanod my head on my | my life, 1 believe, abd enly ones tetore ie the | ote power, is produced his great successcs— | room f; Was not allowed ty intone Ab! so he was. I'd nearly forgotten that he arms in dull, miserable lethargy. Then I | second story; so that 1 knew nothing about the | Pecksniff, Mrs. Gamp, Moddle, Micawber, In two or three days the bulbs began to shoot Ticanbe ph the, guests at my wife’s party. | sprang up, andas 1 did 991 caught sight | interior of the hotel at all. While rambling | Toots, and a hundred others, 1t produced also, their bright green spires upward, giving | Haary: L Couldn't get the sate open. and 1 | ofmyscif in the locking-giass. Good Heargns: | around I met James Frek wad he met me; we | when applied to types of character that would seomtenal snaten aad is ton en three weeks didn't ike to leave the money in my desk, s0 t | Yas this wretched, hang-dog fellow myseli? | met face to face, and the moment he saw me he | not bear so keen a tension of one or two strings, they were five or six inches hi, ‘About this FRE Shin mY Pocket. and took tt home, thinking | Dida few hours’ misery’ change Peay Tate it tat oka, tie had his pistol | ali the failures due to overstraining, like Little | {hey were five wks Gea eee d give it to Cousins with my key, tO putit in | thas Why.l was a ery folo Feady. 1 saw it Just as plain as Ise that seal- | Nell, Carker, Mrs. Dombey, Dombey, and a the pongo, I scattered a few thimticetal ot the sate when he returned. andso I should be thought to be. skin cap of yours on your knees there. More | bundred others. You see tho atrain of the race- fabs boul over thn puvinen kereoee ee A nice mess I got into when I reached home; | piieve this story of © robbery? Why, the po- | plainly, for the light Was much brighter and | horse in all he did; and in creations which, | Which atmost tani 1 hppa for you see it had been arr: Kenat Naz lice didn’t believe in it, else they'd have taken « | clearer than itis here.” I raised my-pistol: he | Gah hin wade ie tn of observation, could | Cred itentirely with @ One mene ibe wean, go up stairs and drese before anybody came; | (iitcrent tone. No; A should be looked upon as | fired and J fired, aud I knew no more, so great | be produced under the sharp tension of the one adding greatly to the tesety ot thc eemoriment! Sil that then our room was to be made ready | 's thict by all the world. Was mny exeltement, until they brought me into | or two humorous conceptions devoted to each Dostting to antond tho ineet yop for the ladies to take their bonnets of—for they ‘Then my wite came down stairs, and, with a | the présence of Mr. Fisk. Even theu I did not | creation, he succeed triumphantly; while ; were not all —— People. Well, you never touches, restored a little order and sanit know that he was wounded. He seamed calm | wher ask pou for, if 1 did know d g i i of all classes, such as 4 ness of the discovery and the enjoyment of its Fonte il to cuter tate r fe f the creation wanted @ loisurely, re- | Deanty, | non hod ieiarea ne eae baie es ae ieee Ge such @ thing! When i got hom? and crept | store i enough, and was halt sitting en a sofa. He | iective, many-sided mood of mind he tailed. | beauty, 1 now ety orn beg ey : ve an Bg EF up-rtairs to drest—the people had all come, to echt eee ene ant song | Dever said I shot him or killed Misa, oraayihing | Ie°seuthons tar Passages, the string is almost | Where it soon became an object of intrest ta rene lis Ookeren thtard'may fe saaled ade gps 7 Donnets; and ve porte Mace ara nea | bread and butter, and atter f had‘oaton ani | ofthe kind. “He merelyeaid to the omecr whe | atwesnernc rian Parmnges; the, string is alm te, | Sree cima ati ean aa een Be Dro : * | ibe requiced agrecmentant bonis sre executed ne Sonee shouts on Tae ease ay and bale | Grunk, 1 diane Goakqubese bod, "| asked him if he recognized me, «Yes, 1 know | of course, compelled to admire Little Nell, the | ST! win ewrerty | Ottoman and Broche pr ee ‘bea! : : : : me, 4 _ adiant than * Solomon in all nis ud see 2s ot the man; it isMr. Stokes,’ Nothing mere. Ha | pathetic elements in the Christmas Stories, and | ZOTET glory, ee Cees eae neene ONE Ge TARE: | Oooo ead sen tid Dees etre ean | aveniosked atmos cemenial etn fashion, | soon. But theae are the repelling things to all | wuolaed thelr shining petals, fling. t ge} tere ee ene aa tenny Giant like Se: | Sod, and colt tata a oben Ee at ee ea ee eine Taree nor angrily, almost tonterly. | true lovers of Dickens, rather than the attrac- | With fragrance y Latge nine eG pettunl terae Perform My toilet among all these feminine | Sousa lrwar cays lene ioe eee I felt almost they COOK ae ecet? | tous. Even in the death of little Paul Dombey, | “Mey "a ueualls large size and sere) ete eas lathe een an eee te the doce; aa0 my | Stier ail, ant porters iinet een bat he waved bis hand, and they took me away, | perhaps his closest approach to true pathos, | 2 ecxPe a eS ee a Sats a and I never kn: w anything about that woundin | you feel paintally the undue stretch of the sont be ag 5 H i E i i " j ‘One remarkable feature of the process is the i 2 Tr ig | theabdomen unt'ithe next day. 1 thought all | timent, and turn away a little sickened.” Itis ‘ Pretty well, and had just gotone of my legs into | Smet cent see tag Are eee No MONET. the time that i had only wounded him slightly, | much worse in the ease of most other of hie third of March Teed oer ee pee Faltio At the Tasch ene en of woe aop! each & | Wr Borrow souse of Cousins.” that itwas ail a smail matter, and I wanted to | efforts of the same kind; and Mr. Forster's pubis cera ee seutling a y into the hall. They were tie | him @ sovereizu last | €etom ball at once. 1 had mot the slightest idea | ‘Life™ shows that it must’ have boen so, from | te top shelf of my little green-house, nearly our trump cards, who kept their owa of Killing James Fisk, and no man wag more | the ostentation of Dicken’s own feelings in | {tzeR to death, but etill striving to shoot out & ; } , bright green point to tell us that spring is nigh- ‘Hiere’sa man withent re- | S9rFy to hear of his death, tor with all his faults | speaking of these efforts. He tells you “how Bo pg ee 7 Pawn his watch’? ‘19 | Jim had good stuftin him, and no man knew it | much he weeps over them, how cat up he is | }tuou gi oud tr thom nthe erage, Sta Mrs. Btarkeby inoet affectionately; Feowld hear | tel! You the trath, that’s what I did the wee | Better than I, for T know both sidos of him. | with his own patson ti roar ore cent eine ot | and now, in thirteen days from planting: they Hime, Marksby most affectionately; | before. and the money was all gone, ‘Then | But he wasarmed that afternoon, and I shali | the glace and effort. When he ts speaking of are eight and fen inches high, and skowing «Bet celightad! ly; how nicely, how | U2der these circumstances,’ vou'll add, ‘it was | Prove it this time; and shall prove what was Bis Toally great efforts of humor he is altogether | Hower stalks and bate Pethe past two or matally soc erisage cryin hy ae% | immoral togives party” Batsonirbestny | sone with the plstal_ prove ik tothe carreras | TRTOMUy gree have no focling thon that he is | ‘oreo dayathey have gema ere eee reer Dave ineedo nice Sine er ets nce” | mind, the Ten Goe Eied Keon GTe ne taast | of tas ori tos Gea Daag D mselt ap to the polnt, and proud of | in"twontetocr howe” Te Teally seems like nso tieB Be-staira, dear, do!” said my wite; ‘you | Maht, and dee wowereinfunds, ad Scanxix 4 Daata Caaunen— | Poe tie the practical side of Dicken’ life maglo. now the room—my room, right hand at the top s y ¥ 3 a very amiable young lady of this ‘ow, what does this mean? Is it really of the stairs, . = - P | man—the P- B-—to give you soma moremoney | Uity Jia atter s longand lidgering ilitess, with | {hat this nervous tension comes out most enti ina i ei cusly. What a fume he falls into when the sale | ; Something new,” or is itan old thing, tried I heard a tlutter of femaie wings on thestairs. | OB the watch. Sell ithimright out. Itmustie | that fatal disease, consumption. She was ic | OBS long ago und discarded as useless’? . What was Todo? If 1 could have managed | Worth at least ten pounds, for it costthirty. ani | {2a Porvession of her faculties, and conversed | 0X CUU2zlewit does not come up to his expecta. | !°78 the other leg. I wouldn't have miuded. bat | | You've only had five on it. Seil the ticket” | tions, and bis publishers hint at putting in f. J fee before me a long line of interesting ex- e , : | "Yer ei cuereeen uae, sian tak relatives, Almost to the instant when | the clanse empowering thom co eee eee petiments, but I intend to keep at them. ““Faint couldn't. hadn't worn those Greae-things for fe cask pocket Of say oven *ayainthe | she peacefully fell asleep. She was a girl of | (1G,clause empower for the expenses of ant Sipe Cee fale ene nay; and If be whe wor- & good while and I don't get any thinner asi | Jittle cash-pocket of my brown greateont. | over twenty years Of age pnd had aigeytere shipOneach number: I am so ititated to | Ships the fair goddess of fruits and flowers, ae aie ne, Be the life of me.I couldn't pop wh ler mag — ooged lost _ = | a2 cramplery character. id for am eae wrote to Mr. Forster, ‘so rubbed in the’ tens — win ed smile, he must woo her with a pose of that other leg at suck short notice. juu couid ve you another; an few terrors. me months ago an a: fo whom of ti and resolate he ‘What could € do? 1 could only rush touts | Brook-, the pawnbroker, was a respectable fei- | ahe was greatly attached died. aud half cn'roce | ‘efest part of my eyelids with bay-salt, by what Remi | | The experiment with th lip br door, and set my back against it. low who perhaps would help me out of my di. before this young girl died she said to her weep- | 1 tld you yesterday, that ‘& wrong kind of fire Hh Owing, I thine te aor pe von oi wro! successta! 4 you this wasour house-warm'ng patty? I thing | culty. Iwent to him aushp ing relatives whs Were aroundithe Dede -raehe | is burning Ya my head, and L donk think 1 oos nt try’ them mext your with Tresher vi 0 write. Nevertheless, 1 am tr: In dition. Zot. Did I tell you our landion! had-atteres phe station. I felt likea ticket-of-leave man as | Mggie was here a few moments ago, but sho p 3g: tm case | gna better bulbs. ‘Iewill nov. “ J went into bis shop, but I put a good Lace spor hae gon want to, go and be af rest, but oe tie mornlag: salt yoa"bs arins “7u2 {2 | force tulips into premature tnoommee ite can’t leave until she retarns with me. J t leave until she comes back for me. She | (ewhere after dinner? ‘I am bent on oe house for us, making our bedroom larger b adding a slip that had formed a separate room’ ithink not. And vet I ought to have told you “Brooke,” I said, “that watch—you know ths can HI z i high credit of EBBAPEA STAT sears hyacinths and crocuses, in our = " baad Be =8 ORPHAN asYLun, all these circumstances, to enable you to under- | tichet—it’s stolen. conversed calmly with those about her, gave | @emoney.” “In his disappointment aod Yeas tbrrie rote : Ill try this | of @ real estate seortinas'on toad ores a least, sete eg — 7 sand the catastrophe thot linens | . Brooks gave a most portentous wink. He was | directions relative to the memorial gitts tenes Sod thand Get or nomet on wince 20,50 yo Tesults in your | twice the snnoust leaned So rormeear Eee ees <a Thar pate door opened outwards. 1 tocgocten | & slow-speeched man, with arediace, anda | relatives and the manner of her Wariel: od hardened into fixity which no disssasion ey, Cu. REEse. amine 5 that peculiarity—never having hada room so | temendous corporation, then, with eyes brightening as if recognizing t. When the “Christmas Carol” dose ae constituted beto dnever willagaie. The | on he says, “my lad;” “thou'rt wrong | some loved one, to all others present unseen, ceeding" door went open @ crash, and [ bounded affe her spirit passed from its earthly tenement.— | Jieid 8s he bad hoped, we have the same sort of ~ on . tburet again: absurd mistake backwards into Mrs. Markby’s arm: Smeii- | | “What do you mean?” I said, coloring up | Belituere American, Dee ite 7 . Confine- Sfeseritamee ne coerce nes | chal wie tae ae aiet see’, | Ean arene Gam te Gy Horo: | meson einer Rees tere | Sane ri ed resco bi il ve stolen ence, it “4 4j ae Ruwm-tid-itimity-tam-de-de! The masicstruck | it aren't how; ‘ave gol it here. Thisee noe iy | sisting of broken bricl saewta sae Teaccared | esis. trols Delores 1 should never got up — perdosier avian, Up tor the dances as f hopped back into my sort o’ chap comes tn, and he he Seat baae fever. I ? accounts = agg Toom. (I bid my head stasuget the bolaters ats! | SE ee ee Or a eee ee ee eenee DAT. Viena the Lat me, and ‘cause of it. ond | Minded tan, Ven, i burt won geet setae, | Rare.tickets” Now, yon know the act don't | {me weeks 4',l00 loads have boon Se godin six thousand coples show a profit of | minded Sire. Marky ee.* 8004 deal more | allow us to give nought in that kind of way pe, Spano tweuty acres to be tilled, which. | £230! And last four will as much Chant lets ae tid the saty we bat ine | RES dnd tn Pea ee as ce uare 4 oak at | Suan area t Swouly aeres tbe led, waicn. | $200! “And the last four will Tel pons abe pomeppren po with Pantomstmts action, "and | te man: “My lad, you aren't coma honest by | f ths. About three hundred teams are | thousand, ie Mi Spedectal thing | iets, e We wed my hi r 1 - Lf week = rhe ¥ fi rn such intolerable anxiety and ! . " Safeae RE con wee CUBE RARE States |, Reman eee pact | Reha i atte ae ata | eae Perea Se! “ap ek well pi y now. Smal! cities Beeeeactgaes aeeteetl ele | "Skane ned ume aor norm | Mebane nc Faeind we gee woe | eregMaeeiee ieee a | Be Set ae thet, coarse. dense and coarss. I told ‘em so. | Doyou think I'd hexpose acustomer? I kvow | ™ tgp achi te mg veal aiver? ahatrd * - mosegiens uit next Jane come and find me { I ®7"It is complained in Connecticut ¢! ve, I shal ba a eng to gran —_ oe fear peng 4 repeal of the Weary law was unwise, ay ge When the are defeated at law, but Soauter ana ta itt” just like that. | Will probably be, from the farmers especially, a men of straw cannot pay the cosis, 0 ‘ato my vraia, staring me Ud been | Andaway ho went like a lamplighear’™ seed Goment Be lis re-senctment. pageant Ivo tanaion ‘of isopaa dy shot, came a noise, asort of dal! barstix * | | counter, overpowered hile Livingstone is ho I wasn't really certain at fitst whethet [teal | wineeek Gown om the _ Solar and.an ier oes to make life desirable, | *!Pelntment: but thes ouly laughed the wore. The guests were gone, the lig slumber had fast visited my e: Ba “My feelings about the — is the feelin heard a noiso or only dreamed of it. 1eatap | ‘And what's more,” went on Brooks, ‘ho | im the interest of science, thoughtless Danbur: se z in bed and listened intontly. Wasit only m= | never took boys are adorning the canine dix with | Somuion, I suppose, to three-fourths of ie ree ree thamping in my ears, or were thoes tenn. | coat.” os UP the money I'd lent him for the apliteticne, me eat fecting part of the community in our happiest jar beats the tramp of somebod. moattied : “What all possible countries; and that is, that it is IT cried. S77 sad tableau, but not an uncommen te rong than of Then t beard an un found—creak. | A very nice brown coat he put up with | A*small” looking owes Outslions courve to the mack reatae eras oy BATE e- creak, creak—a door bel ned siowly and | me. About fit you, 1 should thiuk. Ses, here miserable apology for aman, crazed by drink, | {°shail not easily “forsee the eee’ 2, ed ponse, cautiously. Allina momnent the idea dashed | it is.’ area! and ‘the air reso: ‘ , week aaeulting — a ing Sesoand | anxiety, ana ible injustice of the ‘Carol into my bead—Twenty-two Thousand Pounds. You see, all this dancing and junketing aud greatcoat, case, wi in asserting the plainest right Pp tied round with my | withawan features, one | on earth, { was really treated asif I Iaughing and chating. had completely driven ‘@ dart at ned | hand her th ‘ Tr out of mind als thangkt of the large sum I had Seomopeneare Rostoge ieee inthe ne =a Tae & ae ce ee renees. ¢ ee is ish m7 walk of the | 4 ia of Wasbington. Terms easy. | tc; acres each,om the same Ager Department th the preseuc: the coutractor or his reyresentat!ye, STAMP AGENT. An scent <! the Department ©.ll have enperrision !

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