Evening Star Newspaper, January 11, 1873, Page 2

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gt P 3 fromt bh, | prom Seeger wept ar Saag plape nl Tone. going into the to-night, e! out of the common. . eS; 1 get a seat a seat at the back of ; Prodgees et ae rdent + ¢No, there ain't,’ F Interavunes a og om “What !" cried the her Geket, and paid for It, you know All the music of the . Jady.’ ‘And to-morrow, phous ei 4 was snewiey Sivine 4 — How they gleam! § x oud to thi I they flee, the rushing years, audience as will taka to wild Past the haiting path of Aget Spetclamingorenis ent apeass a — combat wage lions in the Scri rt ta “<Wil-oh, will eyo that a None stayed?" Nene! , mo! How they tee! ‘ald, tebe How the vanished + in Down the chbing tide of Fimat freight and fears O’er a current swoll’n by tears Onward to the sea sul ‘To the ocean of the Past, “| a eee Shallbe rest? Ay? Nol pally ge PE sor Ser there wana short Let them gleam, and flee, and go, went up for Each its appointed cog discovered in a forest, Shining, somber, swift and slow! 8 round for In your heart of hearts re know wpst a —— Pomel nd that you handle those three brutes ey were o> many tabby ents: but ait | Ww comedion forbia ¥ ever should, for Pye a Sometimes, vou know, a man’s nerve must fail. | notion that if Idid, it would be the death of Come, now, Prasivowski, were you never fright- | me. I'm not anervous man in general wey, you are, = ened” superstitious either; but I'd give “Never but onee,” oe haul Lever made by a benefit ‘than “and then I thonght ft was all over with act before man.” He grew suddenly “A queer notion,” said the humorous Tidkli- mere recollection kin jt “inquiry. cNever hat onee,” he repeated, “and God grant I never again! When a manin ns. i “very queer notion,” echoed the gentle- “ae la Zouche. may be so Try trodes loses his head it's all up with tym,” Hi not @ fine actor, the walking n, belonging Father to that class of man, “Hew did it happen, old fellow?” Mr. | whois ptuously likemed to a stick, Tiidikine. = bis dramatic path hed been by no means strewn Herr KI Ropped teal his de- | with yet he was fain to tulate him- fore anéwertng the qu It was 4'0'c! rehearsal was the Queen's The- Now-tamer began in ‘words of peclibie, eI fave wears 420" and ont of our lodgings 4 . In the first, here at the north of the equator, the sun shines a in the forenoon on wil and south are far prefer- | the front, ai on ‘woul into the acme dawning, broke up abruptly at rear. Thus dampness is expelled and the whole 8 quarter Past Iwo. | ompter, walked home | ile’ te dry and the ais (ar purer for ityeo Tiddikins and de la Zouche, and told them mae had ‘happened after the fall of the’ cur- in. “ Pm Afraid there's sompe~’ ‘his forehead s acantty: ose said Mr. ime, j “A Dee in bonnet,” said lela Zouche. GuaPren I Tar taren Tim, was three years é life of the } nas Gaeta ae Sea ‘at a sea-coust town ‘tw “North ‘of. poorer te iS er ne Joo cold and swift for me. errant aie state, where 1 to my notion. I a GROOKRS. PRICE List oo GROCEBRInS ar BLPHONZO TOUNGE & COs. SUGARS. _ BEST NEW TORK those years vain “You kaow the beasts, and em; , and The bouse was nearly fuil the night, a “6 same,” Fiwe. ; Shadows ofthe fe tobe, * | three Pe got now—Brown, fast © plimspeo of mocnile water at | tride less well’ atiemded the epee oee | tase arene a eae Sa | Sorrow free. son. Old n’8 ® harmices ‘estab! the street where it opened on the | on the third a considerable falli was appa- baron epee RM De the biggest. It | Use them as God wills, and so, ‘not a sound in his head, the quay rent. Still it was a fair for Low- | “hall be a great deal beautituller, too,” she SUNDRIES. « Let them got | imbim than in an elderly jackass Jones ® "There was onty one shop at this hour, a | shore. There was a cl sprinkling tm the | . Pas: enmniiatien::<., so Me, for Ekppictons’ Journat. | deep otd dodger, but there isn't much crown of wild olive which would be cast at the | tobacconist’s at a corner. Prusinowski felt in | pit, a very good - The boxes had | *"Vou,can't,” said Katy fee overhead. “Clo- te: for ena ae him; feet of the lion-tamer by-and-by. his coat-pocket with a dim recollestion of hay- , a cavernous and sapect. The bax andi- | ver te going to be the most beautiful lady tm the | <8 the. for brate = Bever can be sure of, an 4nimal Grindoff did not bate a syllable of his part or | ing allowed Mr. Raymond to empty his to- | ence—the upper kdle-class of Lowshore, | \oig © 7 | p44 THREE TIMES will lick your hand one minute, and be ready the minutest detail of his stage business; not a | bacco evening, and then strolled | trades-people a lodging-letters—had _ ex- “But I'l be more beantifal,” eried poor little ti pee. _ ee pry ere of bis russet boot, or a scowl of ‘his | across the tobacconist’s ship. | hau: itself. Herr Prusinowski had brought Elsie; and 1’ be big, too, and know ¢ jody’ | pot og BY THE AUTHOR oF “LADY avDLEY’s seceer.’ | ‘Well, I got. first-rate heavily-corked eyebrows; but the rest of the ile he whs in the act of crossing, a mancame | a dramatic com secrets. And-everybody'll be kind, then, apd {ni SM ooxs “| he gallery would have never company, leae enthusiastic, seamped work | out of the shop and walked slowly away toward | port the tions, and to eke out hover Fu away aad Bide; ond Ghrowen'’t be | Cuseres 3. Fun Finer ‘tite = and the sightof the house e | to the best of their abilities, and the drama was quay. The lion-tamer ized kim ata | Lertalnment with. a cou joe ‘on anything dinpgrecshbas* a nil Bokinead , made me almost giddy. Perhaps it was | raced in one hour, ton minutes and ce, a after him. It was the peen- | diettas. ‘This pF el peo gg oe oy | —— “Positively the Ce his era evr Rad the heat of the place, which was like anoven; | seven by the prompter’schronograph. | pant of the stalls, a tall, angular figure in comedi a anxious to ¢ Le a for Eluie’s voice Prusinowski and f] ie perfor: os a as I'd been treat or being ‘Then came a ing overtureé—the ‘*Brown | moonlight, with more or less the air of a gen- | The. light comed! was ing jut Johnnie had ne) Gell et emcee, es the abers Brae et might! Hor the benefit of Herr | stood for off and on pretty well all day, I may | Horee"—during which the audiones cracked | teoune | Zouche, who lear iden as to her future. the laughesl « greet | paraiistal tow weloe tor ces Rennes tenner toes, Rudolph Prasinoweki. Under the distinguished | hreve taken « Hide than was good for me; | mi momentarily more excited; | It was an unjustifiable thing, of course; but | gentleman into Ropular aon jeceneg Dorsy’s arma very tight but oy Kp #, Sg coe een, | anyhow, I felt the spinning round ne, | and then the rove to slow music of & | Rudolph Prusinowski did not stop to consider | Siatthews—white ‘hat, pa that'wasalt’ was more explicit. ng om oi § eae a mt Dak ne ¥+ | just as if I'd been some T of a novice, in- | soul-appali » and revealed Brown, | the etiquette of the situation. He was resolyeil Tight-green trousers, cane, —— “J ‘mean to have turkey every day,” he do- SS his Serene Highness the Gra: hay iy of the old stager that I am. Jones and Robinson Picturesquely grouped in | to accost this man. He would have done the ances began “Delicate | aered, “and peddingn; tot Called ames Simeou Mudidle SS -» Mi. a yor | “5 looked at the family box 0. P., curious to | the stock primeval forest. same wherever he had met him. Ground.” and were to conclude with “The | CO" \: but baked’ on oth toon . and corporation of Sptmiiecam, and other au- | sce who'd taken it. There was only one le- | There wasa pause. The house applauded vo- | «I beg your pardon,” he said, at the stranger's | Seeret,"’ © farce of an ancient and respectable ey wet pee Be ae deal of pudding enavete ELPRONZe Younes evo. gust a 8 too eek Ge tone Como | man there, a man of fifty or. ute, with a | ci ly. There was something stirring in the | shoulder; ‘+I believe you were in front to-night | character. eat on them. ret g n shall be so big then that ’ arty. “ie be vary nme Aare the fare | Cadaverous lantern-jawed face, and fettered beasts might | in the stalls at the Qaeen’s?” The lion-tamer, who was a spoilt child of for- | Nobody will aay, “Three helps is quite enough fer | tale of trowhed headefand the elie of Perea, | ‘dish hair, very straight, combed neatly oneach | leap into the pit at any moment. It was quite a | | ‘The man tursed sod faced him. It was not a tune, had a supreme contempt for bad honses, | Pie yess? GRocens, os. Mi | Sideof his forehead. He was dremed in blac 3 for the gallery, countenance by any means, that | and with a flagrant injustice was wont to wreak “Oh Derry, you pig!” cried Katy, while the Fagg neg Me caren regular evening, dress, white choker and rown, who was it, yawned } long cadaverous mith the pale proaiinent upon the innocent few who did come to see him | ,. Creamed! with bowel Deny Tons quite Se pene ot perme phd <f | complete, you know, the instant that | and impelf out as if for slumber, with eyee and Iguk sandy Hale. The ight made | that wrath inspired by the guilty many who | "rt Teace-maler Clover soothed ‘him, | &4F 9° MASONIC THEPLA. beam decorated with the order of Rouge et Sete | ,%t,my eyes on that man, he gave me a| the airef having been untimely disturbed from { {¢ look more than Geually cadaverous: : avay. That is fo say, he punished the rere eee x iTm ame Fare itt bern i = tl poy ge oir | turn.” his adjor~dit Bap. Jones, whe was ofa lively | “Ves,” he mid; ‘I have been at the Queen’s | scanty but admiring audience by scamping hix ‘do. = i 1 ATE IMPORTATION. Blog! ‘iqnughess of Selzerwasserburg.| «That was queer fancy,” said Mr. dq ia| t ament, w his tail, and ped at | Theater this evening. Dear me! you are the . lepriving them of their just not sure about what L'il be,” replied | 24 eres be — the Hons? " hers of the | Zouche, helping himself to tobacco from the | an Ay. Bobineon stared full at the lion-tamer, 1 believe. This is really curious!” | due. The dramatic company were accustomed ‘beautiful, of equrse, and good if lean, | ENGLISH PrOK, a deaal Giaeghser ie eviont Wniatenees Rane Herr's guta-percha pouch, which lay open oy | audience, an If he really did and ap- | He spoke, in a formal, deliberate way, that | to.emply benches and barren dress circle. | | Act's wad da Gacy beta peel = om id ie wall. j preci was err Prusinowski’s weather was against Herr Prusinowski . RDS, sided by the experience of & ‘public career, | “\<Pethaps it was; but if the night was tocame | ° “The pit nye enrecone ag OPN a stirring | nerves. ‘These artisteeven professors of the | on this partioular evening, ‘The north winds seen aon Ta mene oe | mutase sCPLs ons, ws the, horvieriamt of fictionnap- | over, aeuimy P: ani, “ih, wes patiin Fall ocgheetin; 30 line thyser Uecded ser mate | omyou hy ke Kind of business with pape Tensor face a ape yes “ong ten you coall | sew 0) LE we ee oer sot Pomres in,’ 5; 1 in “You have iness with mo, | ini q :, 3 A Mack letters upon a yellow | hf own looks, I think, partiy the way he footed figure, broad-tho and | Herr Prustnowskl?” the steantger said interraga’ | of the carth, driving & eae favored: sleet betere atseee aban ab eae | wrinavrheske tof ‘the Queen's Theater, | at me; rest ence, all | muscular, in close-Gtting’ tlesh-colored raiment, | tively, the lion- for the moment | them, which well-nigh DI the adventurous | fines Se any at he thet ee ore j im the strocts aad market. | good-natured, to be put | ascarict girdle round his waist, and a leopard’s at him like # newly-awakened sleep- . The expressed. himself very | DAchine to darn the sta Renee Fa aud im the back slamsof | with a steadfast ravenous kind of look, that | skin over his shoulder. walker, Rtterly lost and helpleas. forcibly aboutthe weather, ashe took leave of | 1.4chine to put the bureandrawerein order, and Suniness | made my blood run cold. ‘That's a man who'd Be a good strong Sheffield knife inhis | “<1 wanted to ask you a question,” he his family before Out for the theater. | Wind never mew or knit garters or do ansihineg vad had os ‘by | like tosee something happen to me,’ I to | belt, but he had no appearance of being armed. | abruptly, rousing himeele withan effort. “This | The comedietta was just over ashe wentin at | ¥¢ Gin wamt to. Thats what Td to be pide yout could hecet ur | myself. His reception was tremendous. He stood bow- | isn't the first time I've. seen you. You took a | the , and he had todressimabarry. | 5Cnow I'll tell you what Imeen tedee 1m ast of | [didn't give way to the fancy all at oneo. | ing and moving bis lips in yague murmurs, with | private box at Manchester five years ago fur my ling into his raiment, and | Share it thoaaias thing?” auked Gor pointed | 1 began the formance; but I stole a glance | an air of being quite overcome by his ‘feclinge, Benent.” with scgriet and gold, while a “Oh, not” replied Katy, “quite ‘diatrent; ee 4 aetene pale- gentleman now | for nearly five minutes betore he could begin | «Idid,” replied the stranger. “<I congratu- | feeble little orchestra of four—clarionet, flute |...) 1 nto 9 ape iden’ tow — ie | siways found him looking at me | his ec. Hiseyes wandered all round | Iate you on the possession of an excellent | and two fiddies—played some old- whan Bie bak eh ie bo» Sobel Ged Se a Ee | ghee had lange light-gray oer, | the with the gaze of calculation, till they | memory, Mr. Prusinowski. You had a nartow | country-dance tunes, what time the gy, 1 A ae pss pw ae ee ee ete pe cl very prominent, Tean see thera | grew suddenly fixed, glaring at the stalls. escape that night at Manchester, 1 imagine. | regaled themselves ‘with prawns garter: | So heetie hemes tak ke toh end whose Macready and Marley were remom- wed every, move I mate, | | Now the stalls at ‘the Queen's Theater, Spin- | ‘One-of your animals turned restive.” The three lions looked: tremendously bigon the | ji, forgetting how very much ea bered as stoek actors, but a house which had a mouse, He never moved dlecum, were a delusion and asnare. Spin Yes.” said the lion-tamer moodfly, “that | small e, awiully real inst the back- — a : noone om, wil eee en ee a te exes from me-he never smiled, he never | cum at its hest was not an aristocratic town brute Hobinson cut up rough. Tlost my nerve, | ground of faded. scenery. Robinsom was ort of py hy Peg a SS SS an eaeenen { applauded; be sat in a bait attitute, | the Queen's was not the aristocratle theatet of | and he saw it. It was a narrow ecscape—a dis: | sorta. He was sensitive upon the subject. of ured fe the heated: tine Ste Be ee ee +! iron girders, | leaning over the front of the box, wal ¢, | Spitdiecum. Except on a mayor's bespeak or | appointment for you, wasn’t it?” weather, and had an especial aversion to high | (“1 Wea eee uke Miss Romar ia gee eager smi the | And he made me feel as if T had a ton weight | under masonic patronage, the stalls wore rately | “™*Excuge me, Lhardiy catch. your meaning.” | Wialt’rcthupe ome hereditary mr | Nese, aime eainar ann tite cn a - Bete eeltee ae the ie, emnemat inated Gross the | tied to cach of Mong Trae Pad never does | Samo nat Shere, they were, two long rows | | «You thought it was all over with me, didn't | Libyan sands or Asia's burning sky—persogaly | MOT, With afmor and bélunet on my hea, and Se ene ae ee | for some Sime, | ugh i Y 1 mover don= of med seats, covered with dusty red or Come now, Twente meow your, motive | he could know nothing of . havi wen | Paint pletoren, ting ‘or sealp—sculp—what is | 10 - worse. Brown and Jones behaved beau- | ¢ coming to at time—I want w | born in Whiteebapel—may have a im jf 3 9 ; fortune for its managers. There was asixpenny | but fust toward the last. when Thad to } | ‘To-night there were ‘fliree people tm all the | your mative for coming tosee me to-night.” | at such times at any rate the fact, cold or bins, | te iball ioe wonethteg nee ete. Sareee | Bi ete hones wae meres ere eaters were | put my head in Robinson's mouth to bring dawn | length and breaath of them—two fuled-looking | °<-Motive?” reposted he mtranger, fT should | ee mechan: At any rate the fact, cold or perenne nce Me hy Ring | y {hg house was never empty, andom Mandays | the curtain, I saw that the brute was inong 0” | elderly women im <aomicg, at one end. and | suppose the motive mast be sufficiently obvious. | The feeble little orchestra made a greatatrag- | °°* it; 20d reads abont me in the newspapors, nd Saturdays overfiowed with noisy human | jis nerty pers. I suppose the heat had put | in tho. miudie, in position that commanled.| People generally attend that sort of entertqin- | gle te produce #soul-inspiring chord, and came sha Weal ch ome Goteeamanbte ation life. ‘The andience at the Queen’s was critical, | iifmout—I kuow that the Fa | Syezy inch othe stage, s middie-aged man,"| ment, and everg sort of entertainment, Ingeatch | gut superbly, the. second viclin a tine in the | we OU an ormement to the family. but o ey ee eee “pouring down my face—or perhaps he didn’t | with & cadaverous face, prominent light-gray | of amuscment.' rear. Herr Prusinowski bounded on tothemage | hCople very Be eign gern % of lite and movement in the pieces, what | like the look of daverous gentlemad ir: | eyes, and tank reddish hair, carcfully dressed in | «Other people perhaps—not you. I know | from arocky set picce, and began his work ta. —. at Katy Did,” by Susan ati Past ing (oncen’s Heed Soa a wae tokeeemers. | the private box. Anyhdw, he turned nasty, | full evening costume. What a waaes fee Sesame ant I Watched yours, | stee languidiy, handling Robinson with a cer- | © J jut toe Lest batt gt ‘Bho Cmecn’s Hked stars. and was tolerabby wni- | and when I wanted to collat him, bounced away | He ‘sat in an attitude of extreme attention, | ge chacn mala as’ close as you watebed | tain amount of caution. | “a TAR-HEEL” ‘our sumber and give ms © est! belo Yersal in ite appreciation of these luminaries— | from me. pith his arms folded om the back of the seat in| me. It wasn't the face of aman thatcameé to | He had got through half his performance, and | 2 Pyeng " this week clamorous in their applaase Of some | “<The house turned as still as death all ina | front of him—he was in the back row-cand his De aniused.”” was leading the three liuns round the stage on | GOimg Back from Indiana te North PENNSILVANIA AVONUR stalwart Othello or loud-voiced Hamlet; vext | moment, and I could see the audience was ogee fixed on the Hou-tamer. For the moment | ° «You seem fo have a pecnlinr way of fooking | their hind’ fect, to the stirring music of the | Caroling. yee a week vaping entrance: upon the cuntartions of ned. I gave a look at a in precee ibys him seemed ‘to tarn Rudolph Prus-.} at things, ry. -Prusinowski,”. replied the in “Blue "—stirring even from | | Dr. Henty Victor Redficl’s Roilroed Letter tm N. . ETZGER, fee Fp ater amas fore a ot Mr. |'the bax. He was lean’ farther over ito stone. It was the man he had been » rubbing his bony, close-shaven chin | those poor feeble players—when he heard the Cinctnnoti Commercial | Reghad Menteanemey and bie cole mare | the enshion, with something like a smile on his talking of that day, thoughtfully. ‘flowever, to be candid with | opening and shutting of a door at the back of | Stuckaway ina corner, rolled up almost like 417 Beventh Street, Black Bess in the grand spectacular drama of | tage. Such’ a smile; I could fane; any one gays sweat broke out upon bis forehead; | vou, 1am somewliat interested in lion-taming. ¢ boxes, He looked up quickly. A gentle- | 4 all, was the cor who had paid, 50 a ee mae | oan fo see = man hung Tike that. bat be stamped his foot savagely angry with | Tam an idle man man ine dress was seating Bimgclf delib- | ccnts for having hhis boot pulled off ing to behold Signor Poloni and his striped Ze- |" « «Bray to not pe vrightened, laties and shbn- | himself for tls folly, muttered anoatheaud be- | mato tee erately in the eenter place,a pale-complexioned | "'--Pleaseread my ticket,” he said, handing it DEALER IN ee eee ETS: ale, sallow face, blue chin, | Hemens,” said in my broken English, (old | gan his business with the Mons—standing upon | please, ithout an occupation if in | man, with straight reddish hair. The Hon-tam- poser ym A man with 2, Pale, sallow face, blue chin, | sauerkraut, the pheclold at the lane, ht me backs, F round the stage upon all | a manner compelled to create an interest for | er’s heart turned cold. It was the man he had | I did 0, and asked where be was from. FOREIGN & DOMESTIC GROCE ee ee alt arate aye lounamg attitucie | dat dodge,) “id is nozing. Te vill toail | three at once, them through a kind of | litmself in things outside his own life. Taman | seen at Mauchester and Spindlecum, the mar | “Indiana,” he replied. UCERTES, Peer gp opposite the stage-doer uf 1 veesh;’ and then I Fx. Rol @ pretty | dance movement, peraces Hedicel ills as a set | amateur of wild-beast shows. ‘There was a man | whose presence, by some morbid fancy, ke as- lidfinna, and can ft Ht was most too an- Queen's. ——- - —- La 4 for ll smart cufl, and in to drag his jaws open. of quadrilles, with gar! Lot we and | called Green—you may have heard of him, per- | sociated with the idea of peril to himscli. Dur- natural, and F ventured fo ask him if he was Has Constanrie om Srone = — yell : poster wi ‘Of satebocy | 42 the brute snarled, turned wpou me and|in | otherwise disporting with them, the red-haired haps. I saw that man Green perform seventéen | ing the last three years he had been always | Lorn in ‘thet stare, . te ous. He @ little Cermag cthoaioeae we ant would have had his teeth in my | man in the stalls suicahey Nis every movement | consecutive times, J was peculiarly interested | more or less on the look-out fur this man, “No, sir,” he answered; “I was born in North |... about bim, also close-cropped, bine-chinned, I hadn't given the signal for the | and every movement of animals breathléss- | jn him bad never seen him—had begun tocongratulat- | Carolin FINE OLD WHISKI&S, qumuntia Leuven. tun sinc cemasentoe wat ed Bee bie eben | Pe, and Never stirring ‘by a hair's-breadth from | Yes,” said Prusinowski, “I know all about | himaclf upon the probability that le would fin- | ° My gubs wasvight, after all. He was a ver- . Sea weepeaaeaetae ee oe ee | tee aml helped to tackle him, We Bad | his attentive attitude, or turning hiscyes away | Groen.’ He was kifled—killed by witiger that | ish his publie career without ever performing | its¥le tar-heel. FINE OLD WINE, Reet thee Tans anette gtie into the back- | jim safe in les than. minute; but just at that | from the stage. he'd made a good deal of money-outi!.” || Verorehim again; and here he wax, in this t= | --How long have you been living in Indiana,” = by the lions, s — ne reneaee | One moment, before the curtain dropped, it was Then came the feature of the evening—a gin- He was,” answered the stranger; ‘‘1 saw &” mote seaport town, watching him with the same } I »&ked. id PURE samaica RUM. COOKING Wins, were pe in eat head | 28. RCAE as a wucher. gle combat between Herr Prasinowski and Rob- | err Prasinowski shuddered. eager eyes and hungry face,avatching as men Two years. _I*m just now going back.” aica o the h derision, oager for the | 7; 2ere wax a good deal of applause; penthat tnson—who was in the \bills, by the | ‘I thought so,” he said; “I thought as much. | watched the gladiators inoldem time, greedy fo: p> (Rows you like it up there? NEW ENG snl basineae of the craig ty eager for the | 14 done anything to deservedt, for the business | way, as “Moloch, the royal brimlled. on, pre. You’ye tasted biood.”” thetr blood. Me [ €Notso mighty well. A Southern man don’t EW ENGLAND BUM, echtun tunseasie oeaatn * said the | Of Putting my head in the brute’s mouth wag ir: ited to Herr P' wski by one of the native | «Upon my honor that-is a very unpleasant It-he could have bromght the entertainment | Wave a fair show. You sel was in the febol think that ought to hit ‘em up.” said the | the bill and the audience had been swindled out of the Punjanb'—at the end of which | way of putting i¢,” replicd tho stranger. #1; toan abrupt conclusion that instant, he would | :rimy four years, Pm willing to cackhowlonee SCOTCH Waiskr, Fer anne ner ay (he spoke excellent English | of that; but they evidently knew I'd been: in ‘gunder tho animal's jaws, | ivok ne these things entirely: from an artistic | have done so. “He would have willing! n- | that I aim wi fi vam to take sil ‘ai SMived tntlamguage tn the: moet ay to have Ac- | danger, and they called me before the curtain, into the red-hot.looking mouth: | point ‘of view. 1 hare heard it emecrted that | cathe people thei money, aud wucetined ane | {ats am whipped. but J all the trouble. Up in | STOCK 4ND ENGLISH ALR, PORTER, ge. aired the language in the most aristocratic »* | | looked up at thgt white-faced devil in the of that deadi which | men of your profession always do’ meet with | night's profits, to escape portorming before taal | tidiena they seem to tine teat ol aie Mean wasthetic circles.) “Khe Mikalo looks well, | private box. He was standing up, rubbing his sight of that one | some fatal accident gooncr or later. Since you |.man. He wan half inclined to pea sudden | should govagin the south. I don’t quite ac- bag or replied Mr.de la Zouche, the | Latin s satisfied Kind of way, as if he had Sxerything want seeetht push me so, closely, 1am bound to admit that | iiiness; bring down the curtain with an spology. ee them principles, and that makesdis- os . 7 = rad seen wi wan see; enough, Inson, otherwi loch, is | has formed one element of for me iu | but that wor confess: afraia | cord. democrats sorter held up for me, walking gentleman, “Was he a nice kind of | gust under him he said in alow, voice | temper, suffered his jews to be opened to their | tisis kind of performance. 1 can understand | cf Fron eee = = many about where I live. We only FOREIGN FRUITS. chap, the Mikad : | that me the shivers: widest extent, and the tamer’s head to repose | the ‘delight of the Roman ple; from the | «Don hii he muttered to himself, ‘he | polied thirty-four wotes iu the township out of Herr Prusi jturned his conten | ‘A marrow escape, Herr, Very well done | upon his tongue as on a pillow for half a dozen | cm down to the humblest freedman, jin | shan’t see that I'm afraid of him. i he | about three hundred.” = - SS ae ee indeed! T congratulate a ae seconds or eo, andl the curtain came San 3 20- thelr giadiatorial shows. I have a somewhat | called out to the orchestra, “faster and louder «You got in among the radicals, then?” a = “I gave a wi ave | ciferous ; but when the deneficiaire was | ¢! turn of j,and am prou ac--| and as the music quicke: ur an “*No; the surt about where I live are not old “You ain't 40 jolly green as to suppose { ever | undetstood if he didn't, made to the | called fore was no réspbnse. The prompter | knowledge a taste which conuects me witha | .acethe musle av : = | siraight-out "publicans. | cail them worse dan Splendid asmortment of set eves apon him,” he said, knoeking the ashes | house, and went off the ©. "Hobinson was | found him ing one of the wings, | classic age.” Robinson, alias Motech, resented the imperti- | rasdieais.” ont of his pipe. “I was never in Japan in my | quiet enough by this time. My man Joe Purdy | white to the lips. “I don't understand half that palaver,” said | nence with @#uppressed roar, anil trom that me- | -*Are you going to return to North Carolina? CANNED GoeDs. Hite; never mearer than a japan candlestick. | had walked him off to his box, and there he was | «Did you ever see a man tremble?” be asked, | Herr Prusino rudely; but I trust in God 1 | ment Redotph Prusinowski lost his presence o° | Yes; 1 can't be satisfied in Indiana. A 2 ‘The Mikado is a safe card, ho’s to ask | growling over his shin-bones, as mild a lion as | in a voice that shook so much as to be searcely | may never sce your face again.” @ tind and lost his temper. He was determine: | n poor man has little show there, I tell any 9 abouthims And so’s the Cham of } you’ uh ts one. ‘Only jet me get you safe | intelligible. “If you want to ‘see one, look at «Really, now! ” to bate not one of his tricks, to demonstrate to "Pears like the whole community is sus- Tartary: 1 always bring out them two for the | hack to London, my friend,’ says I, ‘and I'll | me.” “Because you are &@ cokl-blooded scoundrel, | that cold-blooded wretch im the boxestiat he | piciousor him. Then, I believe every man gets see Pilla pottorin Secs Rarong gitimate busi |-take you dows to Jamrack’s and swap youfor | — lie was shaking in every limb, Hke a man | and you would like to see me killed.” | was not afraid of him. He made the animal» | 2iong better among his own sort of people. The | PURE APPLE CIDER, ness. Tdid petform once before the royal ser- | seaming better tempered. Talent is all very | stricken with ague. “My dear Mr. Prusinowskl, that is a style of | go more work than usual, looking defiantly ai | orthern folks are different from tlre southerns xants, and got a fiver from the royal seckitary. | well; but temper’s worth all the talent in “Why, what's the matter, Cully?” asked the | ja: e which, it L were an ill-tempered man, | that watchful face in the boxes all-the while. heap different. They don’t even chew to- ‘That ts immediate patronage.” the ‘workL’ However that's five years ago, prompter, with more frictdliness of tone than | J might resent.’ Happily I am not an ill-tem- | ‘The little theater shook with applause, the pit | Vacco alike. Up there they tse what they apil MEDFIELD BUCKWHEAT. oo ask Me Tansee EELNE uowse, Cul- | and there's *Kobinson still performing elegance of diction. | ‘They're calling for you | pered man, so let it pass. You have no right to | rose to him, as the good old actors were wout to | ‘fine-ent.” I dont want any oritin mine- , ly.” remarked Mr. Tiddikins, the tow comedian, | me, The brute has such a wonderful gift like mad. You'd better go on.” remark that [should like to see you killed by | say; the gallery rang with beavos. | North Carolinians stick to the old ph Small man With & falsetto voice. his profession! and his heart and soul's in it too. | «I'm going, as rou as I can steady myself. 1 | one of those brutes of yours. Butif you sre | “Alvin a moment, at the last, inthe crowning | imtthat ain't the only difference NEW YORK APPLES. “I look forward to it, Tidilikins; and if it goos that animal in the middle of the day, | never neglect my business; but I’ve aturn. | destined to your death in that manner, | feat which was to conclude the performance. | j ouple have bigger hearts. They are j » over eight, IH stand a supper, mind that.” ‘t particular hungry, and berg a | Lnever thought I should come off the stage | which it is to be hoped yon are not, I freely ad- | the bravos changed to an awful shout of horror, iu considering” ‘They don’t make money thelr | ete Was a sulvlued murmur of applause. decent fellow enough; bat come im | alive ht.” mit that I should wish to be a spectator of the | No one could say how it happened, the brate’s | zor like the Yankees, “I know men about Indi- “ Bot or colt?” infaired Mr. de la Zouche. and his business, ro | you'll find out what a lion “Why, the animals were quiet enough.” catastrophe. It would not make the smallest | movements were too rapid tor human eyes to lis that have got enough of money to buy . ” replied the lon-tamer. ‘None of | js. He's the vainest’ beast out, aud euts up | “Yes. as mild as lambs; bat there's a man in aisfereace to you, and it would highly intordkt- | follow. Herr Prasinowskl was fying on te sage | Cut half of North Carofina, Wat still they are om | CHOICE BUTTER, fowls and ‘am, your pas and rub- | rough if he don’t get # round of for | front that's my evil genius. I wever felt super- | ing to me. Is this your way? No? In that | mawled and torn, the lion crouching upon him. | the hunt for more. Seems lke they can’t get | + me. A sirloin of beef at top, and a | every trick he does. But, Lord you, | stitious about anything else before—none of your | case, ht.” 5 | ‘The keeper and a couple of brawny scene- | cnongh. So much money, ortrying to get more, | Packed expressed for family use im email pails goose at bottom, a veal pie and a stewed | there’s no such thing as genius without vanity. | ghosts or that kind of rot—but I’ve got my faney hat ceremoniously, and departed | shifters rushed upon the stage; they dragged | or somcthing. makes them Cros, They won't | Received W. seal at eine, skies. and Rlenty of smoking-hot He's been a fortune to me firstand last-has that | about that He'd like to seo me killed,.| towarted toward the patch of moonlit water at | him from under the infuriated beast imsensibiec | stop aml talk like seouthers teen. Tf you ask | vere vegetables; a prime oll Stilton, and a bowl of | animal. Brown and Jones are nothing more a ive to sec it.”? .| the end of the street, leaving the lion-tamer | and covered with blood, and earried him to the | oncof them the way anywhere, he will nearly sated ip wos oo oO and as much champagne | than supers to him?” ‘<Prusinowskl,” said the prompter, ‘+I coulln’y | standing on the, pavement, transfixed and | <ressing-room, where the two rival surgeons o: | siiapyour head off A southern man will as von can swallow. with brandy and water to | You didu’t see any more of your friend in | have believed it of you. 1 thought you wag i | brooding. Lowshore came rushing into him five minutes ¢ Bnd give you the directions you want and j settle it on your stomachs. That's what I'll do, | the hox?” inquired Mr. de la Zouche, who was | man of sense.” It was just as he had. imagined—the man was | afterward. Surgery cow ing; his ribs | with vou a long time, and ask you abont your COFFEES at the Liou and Lamb, if the house goes over | particularly interested in these praises of the | But the prompter felt uncomfortable, nover- | an amateur of sudden death. ‘ erushed to powder, and there was per- | cope and your and if you won't come in eighty when the half-price to the boxes is in.” | gifted Robinson. theless, The human mind ts seeity Cpen'to | | The supper at the Lion and Lamb public | foration of the lung and hemorrhage. He and take adrink, and if you don't want tocome | ¢19tr ROASTED FRESH EVERY paY ‘his time the applause was /onder. “Curse him, no! By the time I'd changed my | aucomfortable sensations of this kind. house—a little io dive doors from he | breathed stentoronsly for about half au hour, |. stound tothe field andgee some of his stock, and | “Laimpas said you were « jolly zood fellow, | elothes he had left the house! Twentroundito | “Come, he exclaim neste los: | theater, and much affected by the actors—was | und then died, without ove ray of xeturming | aitthat. Butap vorth; 4 tell you, theydon't do, M- BATS, kr space, Bill,” said Mr. Tiddikims, “aud I don’t mind | the box-office to see if the box-keeper could tell temper.’ in — boc te ence, | @ gastronomic success, but not a ‘social one. | consciohsness. things on that style. They won't stop long | —. bow often I say it again. OM | me saying about him. No; he was: r. | who were clamoring hoarsely for their fayorite. | "The fare was excellent.’ The giver of the fenst “Strange,” the red-haired man used to | toanswer you civil in @ | sossicu auppon a Tt is to Be observed that Mr. Tiddikins ad- | He had taken his box that mornings f “You'd better go on.’ ordered Uquors one liberal scale, and eatalilon | say afterward, when he told the story 4s plea- | citiesevery fellow walks like the devil was after nA ) dressed the distinguished Kudolph by the sim- | there was no stall to be had, and paid his three Prusinowski wiped his damp forchead, pulled | and ‘drinkables disay with a celerity | sant kind of thing after dipner, and in some him. A northern man inacity wili walk faster pavawa AND VALENCIA OR: Nor pler coguomen Bill,ene of the playful li- | guineas without a question. } ime Me aed te tie re to'witness. Yet the banquet was hot | manner reflecting distinction “pon himself; | thena North Carolina borse can go, and they ‘TH + FIGS AN 4 censes of friendship. nodonbt. | “Now I daresay you'll think me an out-and- All right,” he said, and followed the prompt} a cheerful one. Nothing could, rouse Prasi- | the poor devil was the second‘of his trade I | will runover youit you dow't get outot the way, EXT GR MALAGA G “it womterful how those animals draw,” | out fool when I tell you I couldn't sleep that | ¢r to the wa ee Se oe nowski from the that had fallen apon aw led, and IT had come actoss him three | whieh a horse won't do. nore cownash pongle CALIFOR) RENCH Pi said Mr. de la Zouche, thoughtfully, as he were | night, nor many after, for thinking of | Darrow opening wi ‘at functionary made | him. ‘The actors did their utmost to begy timed at long intervals in the eourse of my trav- | tostave ahead and let every fellow look out for | i LES. contemp! the feasibility of Upon | dit man. I coukin't get his pale checks and | for him by pulling the heavy drop-scene a little | him into gaiety, with boisterous talic and laugh- | els in the north. Ttake ® considerable interest | himenlf. “irears tikes they dom care anything | 10 RANBE! his own as alion-tamer. “You've been | lank jawwand -gray eyes, with that horrid | on one “9 He bon nognd 8 Cerae ve a ter, racy anecdotes, and an unlimited amount | in that sort of thing; there's more excitement tor ane another. They ain’ al, and don’t go | FANCY GROCEBIRG. Tee Seasons. Prusinowski, and, egad. the took in out of my mind. pone mgt crossed py gd a of {nat humorous converse comme y 4 © [about it than in the drama. ‘Prusinowski was @ | in for a good time like we iu North Carolina. it eg A ia ain't tired of ‘em yet. They seem as t's & fellow ‘who'd go to see a man | appear renewed jogo ee et ‘chaff,” to which the theatrical ¢sbe- | very respectable fellow; had saved money, T be- | Feutthey get us on the money. They have fe . and . CaN ever. One would si they liked to | ay I said to myself. ‘That’se man who'd He was looking at stalls e time. | cially prone; but all their efforts failed. Once Teves and left his wife and children comforta bly | more moncy than we have, that’s a fact. | Soo conte por poems; i Ddeggar hazard bis fite Rone ye stand by to see his fellow-creatures hung, drawn ae. roped noite or twice he ‘did make some show of Gps = provided for.” “ | two people are alike only in one way, they have ee er aeLS GROCERIES at mo. = something in that,” replied the Herr. | Sua “quartered, aml enjoy. it cepectsl iy pe jurse him tterod tamer. gave a smart anewor or two, threw a + bot got to die and leave what they have, and | joueeaeet bpd “If it wasw't for the fee ed vag bus- | drawing.’ I hadn’t adoubt in my mind it claw at the tragic Fitz R: » when that |: posrrion of a RestpeNce Houses on tere we have the advantage, for we haven't | —————— ——_____ iness would be as fat as diteh-water. was him I made a mess of it at the great ies engaged ft bees and } running nearly auch to leave and be sorry for.’? “TEAS! TEAS! “Were you ever frightened?” asked the walk- | end.* i 8 a k of celery down thé coat-collar of | able to those located on those going east and ||“ ‘don’t like Indiana?” I musad. - ing gentiéman; “1 know “Did you never see him again?” asked fhe absent: de west ina sanitary estimate. J Ala you ib ot. ou obec reerezcc rar mi Se ae sick ot Indias The oid woman would " 1 eabth Howmet Newel “ty Sw, PURCHELL inh ‘ad ord 1332 F street, near jou. Pewerfal = OF a TICKET Acksr. Unioe raltrond tet teaice |» yileiding § een A | So eee ‘youhare scnottukes | Reateeea ee See:

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