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Te Lev fer At | (oan all er of diners who 1 » then Pere Brillat-Savarin was the high I know by sages we are teld PROPOSALS. pai U step STATES IRGiNIA. and pertorm ' \ | | enter Cafe They are past = To reckon riches vile; bosom friend Ue poe oft, pay pee the Post Dergurwexr, Fim not asage—and so, of gold : je match was | clients of this < restaurant-which, ac- wilt be = ‘Decne | Oite ot Vd bkea pretty pile, agninns her, | cording to these elders, is & compliment to the “ m4 Mf It is not avarice: O mo: ie | establishment, for aver that the young rail ofthe Ubiied yo For "s sake I'd haveh so; ve. - have uncultivated and hence c to . a im the Brat ot 1m the bes Or Nie; be antes iy ledge of food aif drink. ‘The two elderly F the schertulee of depararteraea merine Beaucoup d‘amonr; ‘ape | diners saunter in and leisurely take their : Sy Decisions announced on or be- Only love—much love! . mysterious end, far off | They have been themselves sines SO ea stean colony, is too well known to need Drealkfast for the Fepaet thie day in gentle (Bidders shoutd examine carcfu frndéne ™ and be was a | remtition, Bulwer gave her away at the altar, | ont-of-door exereise, for wothing aimoys' them instructions anmered Se ims soubtae meted And I would be a bard divine, countenance of the | aml stood by her in a window at Crockford’s, in so much as not to be hungry at the ap; a cack o draft with bids f @5.400 and upward | record shoald be that Her praises to prolong; resort looked | P.ccadiliy,on the bright Juve morning when | hour. They select their snow-white table near boda 4 — the pe nistered the oath te a dal, yast- Aad ink m name with mine, with especial favor. Lady Blessington was Sc eens Secon Victoria pamadiay on hee wi one of the windows ‘on the boulevard, | learned has ed up by the way. Isap- ° Tn newer-dying song; three ‘oller than Bulwer, and when, in | to ba crowned in the hi y. That night | fnerder that the right mans pieced sndeaks | bose L ought to bé sorry, bat Lam not auch y nos Vet if I = ae , 1890-731, he began to frequent her saloons, was ph oe a host of friends, promenaders at the same time that the | Yours truly, Horace Greecer. INSTRUCTIONS TO BIDDERS AND PosTMas- ‘Foe laurel wreath of fame, trentpenres sane, ae ee — sane ep Dore ant — met at her Sesto is gratitied with nourishment. They settle a — ee ‘tis be sure, > Lander Crab z ives comfortab! in thoir easy leather to Oe incorporated om cae Beancoup @’ : Hobineon, tm his ty, extravagant way, that The iiuminations were alight tho, deoworks Ste iok oitnael aja geared ts 10 the extent the Department may dene Owy love—mueh love. she was ‘‘by far the most beantiful woman he | dazzling and glimm:ring in bonor of the coro- with the bill of fare, withou what they 1. Seven minntes ever saw, aud was so deemed at the court of | na‘ion; it semed like @ eelebration in honor want, well knowing’ that they require time for die. cee gare stowed to each intermediate nt iv." She was full of lively ancedote, of the little queen of poesy. Bulwer falt reflection. Inen ordi: Festaurant he fires ‘imchester by 9am; mail- or epwouhed, for ane orth ag Le And I would bea ered king, agreeabie talker, an of no slight | as, to the her health at | O@his« Monsicur desire” like a shot, bat here hester daily, except Sunday, at 3.3) i» routes where th» anode of ‘That Sophie might bossa merit and vivacity, and was never tired - | supper, he called her his “daughter,” in allu- | fe ‘ally retires to leave them to that mod pected yrben winenan royalty eould bring about Byron, whom she had known well, | sion to the part he Aad borne at the marriage: which the importance of the subject de To my darling queen. buat whem she does not to have great ceremony; rushed home with tears im his eyes, | mands. Their sight is not moge as their pa- Ambition? No; for her alone admired. = wor, ie , most ming, shut Sanden ae oqpenet, and wrote per- ba mk greg have “ype the = » with siscen: crept through -glasaes. scan, asa ammedan ¢ ie ve : had “a ~2 id W -y-"’ Asfor D’Omay, be | window-shatters. When the news of poor L. ‘oran, the choice bit of literature which the | lecting sewers will be constructed along South Back © ¥ Beaneo: mour; was, to Robinson's eyes, “a - | E. L.’s strange death, which was apparently | waiter-has left with them, and taste of the hap- | and West streets, and will intercept all these and Friday at am; We regularity in the delice Only love—mach love! man, of stately person.” A! ¢ frequent- | suicide, reached England, the friend of ber pines of anticipation. To the gourmets this ix | cToss-town sewers. At the lower end of the Arrive at Rock Enow Springs by 12.99 pm. ~ - P * ers of her saloons were many, if not mwst,of | youth and young womanhood hastened to rais: | the preliminary pleasure of the dinner, and is | city, at the Bat’ery, they are to be top feet ia eau ie, a ‘ oer wa te made for gripe TY. the literary men of the day, Disracli, Lover, | & subscription, which he himself headed. with counted as ouc of its features. Having corer | wide and seven feet high> antwal oo coheed Depcts br Coutele Sore. ch of Sach caplasione, Hehe fe Yot why, O why, would I possess M wxlor, Rogers, Hood, Moore, Camp. | @ generous amount, to support her widowed. | fully read through the bill of fare from potage | in size as they advance northward. The esti- y Depot Wednisday aud Satur- ‘These shining gifts of Fate? bell, and a host of others. Sir Thomas Law- | poverty-stricken and desolate mother. With | to desert, there{s discussion asto seiomnobe cake | inated: caste ek the improvement is one hun- For love has more of happiness rence was often seen there, and painted a por- | a traitso generous and heartful, we m: 7. | discussion of an easy kind that rather sharpens | dred ard sixty thousand dollars a mile, the le by T pm; Than fortune, fame or state: trait of her, which preserves to posterity a face | erly part from the honored author of “My | than dulls the fine edge of appetite. Were they | North river sewer being two and a half miles, Leave Dovesvilie Weduentay and Saturday at So let them go; I'l! not repine: of singular loveliness and spirit, Bulwer found | Novel” and of “Richelieu.” seated in the Foreign Affurs tment, on | and the East river sewer three and a quarter A The treasure still is mine: her a detighttal friend—one who hea-tily ap Gzoncr M. Towze. | the otherside of the Seine, they the taken | miles long. ‘The construction of these sewers is rrive at Broadway Depot by 13m. ©, "tis, be sure, preciated him, and trumpeted his praises tn are RE a Sa for diplomats discussing each separate provision | to be I, ng with the building ot | 4732 From Hambangh’s to Front Royal, $miles and Beaucoup d’amonr; rust the regions where he desired most to be ree- Modern “Criticiam.” of an international ereaty, the city’s new’ docks, which, however, is a slow ery og @nly iove—much love.” ognized. he went to Italy, and after bis A TRUE PEN PORTRAITURE. At length the selections are made; or ex- | process. In addition to these, extra sewers are Leave Hambaugh 's Wednesday and Saturday at [After Beranger by John G. Seer. return, when away from London, he kevt uy The Toledo Biade thus revels im the realms | ample, a si Wam; Arrive at Front R with Kady Blessington ‘a lively aid spariling lence. ese letters hav eminiscences of Bulwer-Lytton. teen printed, and in them are gilmpses of the —_—_ novelist’s nature, habits, hopes, }, emotions. le soup, a carp ala Chambord, a | also to be provided in Canal, Vesey, and other of modern “criticism.” The effort illustrates | capon ‘stutted with Perigord truties, a pleasant | principal streets, to carry off the overfiow from the admirable adaptation of this noble art tocla- | ala Sainte Alliance, tenderest of asparagus | the heaviest storms. At present there are fre- cidating productions of the humblest character. | with sauce a Yomazome, a dish of ortolans a la | quent floodings of cellars in the lower tsof oral by pm; Leave Front Royal Weducadsy abd Saturday r Arrive at Hambangh’s by 3.30 pm. * ~ Readers who carefully follow this master in his | Provencale, a pyramid of meringues ala ya- | the city when heavy rains eccur, which the From Appleton's Journal.) Writing on one occasion, he says, am now | analysis of “Jack and Gill,” will readily per- | nile. and finall LA bit of Brie cheese—for the | present sewerage syotem fails to prevent, but | 4733 From London to Gum Spring, (n.o.,) Stiles ard Edward Bulwer-Lytton seemed to have com- | goin, plunge into histories of China, light | ceive what a wonderful thing modern “criti. | great Savarin has laid it down that a dinner | these improvem-nts, it is thought, will secure a back, once a week . ‘i bined, in character and good-fortune, all that, | my pipe, read a Page, and muse an hour, and | Cism” is: without cheese is hke a pretty woman with only | needed reform in this particular. The collecting — po Lemon: a8 men are apt to suppose, produces earthly | be very duil and melancholy f of the Jack and Gill went up the bill, one eye. And the swift but smoothly-gliding | *ewers are regarded as valuable adjuncts to any om Spring Seturcey as 7 ng. aft Ssrhi"tna ou is rncetne Gouna se | SS ethien ee gecenene jaf tile | Siegel pal rater rater hemyOig Resoal omromme ths | inn hat aay be adopted, m tbo fans to wit we aS , Pl mm or- roul . ‘en long t» roke hi r 2 rear, its | Utilize the sewerage of the c Ger o'the baronctey before he tas past his | chatne —— oe 4 ack fell down and bi iscrown, horn of plenty in the rear, which pours out ag y mate. } And Gill came tumbling after. treasures year ln and year out before the most 1 a —_ : nt PPR rae Union is | “4 Frem Baptist Valley to Roob, 25 mites and back poral way anual tee contract manhood; ample wealth was his, for, as | Once, when rusticating ‘ai the a G condacti tifa i 3 ti —The amento Uni wee % rin agreeaily ts. ‘the favorite of his mother, he received all that | Dorsct?" he gives on sutinn of te a fy aoe | pana ceneon Pe cer BE eget tey Sem oe ee responsible for the following: A few days ago agtist Valley Monday at 7 a.m; for vtolating the pot fice tate or thevheving ths even his luxurious tastes required; he was alion | tine: «My avocations are as stmuple as my his- | Ine rythmical and tenceacey qualities of the | cellar by heart—that celebrated cellar which | & YOUNG man who has a fondness for hunting, pie ate tS Charge etn Department, tor refasing to de SF PE ‘an morting, ie St | verse. Observe the perfect measure: Funs midway under the middle of the street. | fonciuaed that he would take out a dog whic’ Arrive a! Bapust Valley by Spm. dont tor remuing an cope meee a at five, dine aud gel chiand went in. fs a fei belongs produ e ‘see ¥ : ote. for through the evening as I ' etimes The inst pastor, the first Gorn bektes, pat | they pleasure of the penser marae: a he would do ying game. Accordingly he | 35 From Shiloh, bj ne’s Store ( Snartey ont a the mei Packaweeconvey ing ullilabio y @ proof.” He wapan incorrigible | that is fully com in the next verse,which | They say, “We are not pressed; Je Grove out on the turnpike road, toward the Tule Springs (his A #. The Postmas well as writer of novels, and his let- | is hypercataicetie: ‘ our leisure, for we alwayshaye the time to di House, and after he had traversed several miles, sod back, week. fer abound with allusions to, and dashing wit- To get—a pail_of wat—er. They are ot the highest guild in gastronomy, | {hally'got a shot at a crane and Killed it. "Un? ie and Satuniay et 6 am; feuch nothing which did wet tors intoene mere | aoan acther eiit see ens viva Mine bast | atite ert Siisinstance, would exac tly ANI the | and ‘are able to discover the superior flavor Of saan fice pee Sun, asker Ecave Lecdstown ‘Toseday aud Saturday at = —— | quotation, a weiter In Bentley suits Belner | incomplete foot of the first verse, thus prodic- | the leg of the partridge on which it has slept, dog : : ncial Dies he little Knew through life; death seldom | -worked his to eminence—worked it throug!: i rarely followed oy pm, ing @ grand iambic diamer, and leaving the | and on what latitude A grape Was ripened from didn t show hunting qualities worth a cent, Arrive at Shiloh by 8pm, eating the shcotist had either to retrieve the bird him- aecond verse a delightful tripody. the wine they sip. In they expsrieace ms crossed his threshold; defeat his | fafluse, Tidicule. His facility is ouly e = i self or go on without. He took off his coat, pants, | 4796-Frem Miller's Tavern, by Ent efor Yet Hulwer was fur from being a hap- | the result of Practice amd study. “Te wrote at Pimentel rl The compiste, and the secmatinn of tatrect: | and aboes, Inkl: them by the site of the sragon tii Moun Zioat 3.) to Tappebann | in the giddy eminence of his | first very slowly and with great difficulty, bat Jack—fell down—and broke—his crown, ment; in drinking, in addition to these sensa- | #24 steppedfinto the water. After he had tra- Leave Mificr's Tavern Welsseday ot 8 0m: is old age was spent in a morose se- | he resolved to master the stubborn instrament And Gill—eame tumb—ling aft—er. tions, those of guitnration and the last—the af- | Yersed @ considerable distance, he happened to Arrive at tock by 12 m; P . Which indicated that permanent fag ns aerated did tt He hae practised writ- | Observe the pleasing aid highly musieal ef- | ter taste of pestame oF fragrance which fora | 100k back towards the turnpike, a old? rave Ti neck Wednesday at 1 p | had settled down upon his soul. Castinga glance | ing as an art, and bas rewritten some of his et-'| ect prodaced yy the addition of the fractions! | time remains pleasant wit and gentle cachin- | bishorse was traveling off for town! A second Arrive at Miller's Tavern by 5pm. back along bis remarkable and réally says, unpubl! |, dine or ten’ timesover. H»| foot, er: nation are courted as auxiliaries to lengthen the | &'@nce showed him somet a hundred fold earcer, but one great seems ever to have | writes three hours a day—from ten till one-- * And Gill—came tumb—ting aft—er. clond asta shadow upon it; and that was the cloud | seldom later. He writes very rapidly, averag- which lay always between sunshine and his | ing trenty pages a day of novel print.” A pay bis hours of writing, and the length of his daily: m amd public amd long-continued quar- | application to the pen, coincided with the lit- Rich snesoeded tt, were sertainiy well cal- erary habit of his rival, Charles Dickens. Som: culated to embitter the most flourishing wordly | of the essays spoken of ‘as having been so many good-fortune. tumes rewritten, were doubtless published ma He appears to have met the young lady who appetite and promote digestion. An honr an) | Wore. That failure of a d 0, who wouldu't Let ‘us now tarn our attention to what aro | abaif to two hours Isdesoted to the repast, ant | 0 after the crane, had pleked up the shoatist's really the essential elements of poctry the na~ | when the end it reached three bottles of their | Pants, and was travelling — joyfully after v t ao Fi Mangohick, by Etna Mills,to Hanover 9. Payments will be made - H..5 wiles aud back, twice a wer dratis ¢ ks e Mangutick Tuesday aud Friday at 1 Arrive at Hanover C,H. by 12.29 pm; Leave Hauover C.H. Tharday aad Friday at lpm; Arrive at Mangohick by 3.30 pm. 738 From Snfflk, by Nurmeyeville and Holy Nock, 6 Be iS mites and back, Ewice a wee Leaye Suffolk Tuesday and Satufday ai 12 vat Somerton by 4p i; Leave Somerton Tuesday and Saturday at7 am; Arrive at Suffolk by Mam. ture of the thought and the quality of the senti- | dear friends from the cellar are pleasantly at | t#¢ wagon, head and tail up, ai evidently feel- Suenee, Fret, the ahoeatt att ieee poche ork under thelr omsieestor ty ‘anetetinn ‘diges- | "8 that he was doing a big thing! The hunter highly imaginative. This is highly imagi tion, In their gentle exhilaration they feekthe | WeBt ashore, put on his hat, coat and boots, and tive: need of locomotion; they maunter out on the | Mastevedafter his faithful dag. Ie had to travel Jack and Gill went up the bill, boulevard arm in arm, amt find each otuer and | O¥st # m2 mera he overtook the wagon, and ‘To get a pail of water. jg | Aiithe world delightfal, They lounge to the | {? his morti ig mo a Was met while pursuing ‘The poet imagined that they did, and in this | Rue de la Paix or the Madeleine and back to iy, duc anes horse’ rg widow struck with the consists, very largely, its poetry. Again, Jack | the Cafe Napolitain, renowned for its coffee, to fe Inferred eens wardrobe, requestel didn’t fall down and break his crown, and Gill | where they take seats at one of the ontside ta: loohi ike th oe rk in —— he was going. didn’t come tumbling after. The poet simply | bleson the broad asphalte, and sip fragrant a9 ns Raed that!” It “pen not met the man imagined all this, and hence it is all the more | coffee to a fragrant cigar. According to thom | b€ probably never would have told the story. tic. Again, this 1s an upward flight of imag- | the coffee pushes the dinner, which is followed Grol S zi 4 es of i nation. ack and Gill wont up the hil, They by thosectamental tiny giamw of coguas ta ie pone M,; Baan, M. D., writes of<Over. taxing the Brain,” in the Independent. He also went np to get water, which makes the con- | turn, to push the coffee. Thus the dinner | gayarSThe ratty of eke’ cee pemtent. | He eer tore airiking. It would have been | marches in its single-fle diseiplins from soup | worker should ever beta oben natce leap, fammon Place and matter of fact to godown | to cognac, like the queen entering a popmar | and as much as taedble oy the folding of the the hill for water. theatre. Or it is a construction of regular | hands to sleep. By day and by might, after inNotice that in the next line it isnot the imag- | layers, whose cellar Is soup, the ground floor the | heals. before, early or late, in the horse car Notion, toa ene eat Beene folldown. | pisce de resisionce, the wppor stories tho Hghter | Sron the ferry-bost we teedun tiene eee Notice, too, the resalt. He did not break the | courses, and the érowning of the edifice coitee | Gudve'tede ange! from h connection of the story; he did not even break | and cognac; the chimneys being the wines the Hight of the poot’s fancy; he simply broke | which run through them all—after leaving te years aftcrward in the remarkable series, unde- is wife at the house of Miss Spence, an | the name of “Caxtoniana,” which he contribu - odd little maiden lady, at whose mansion in | ted to Blackwooa. Little Quebec street, Mayfair, a select literary Lady Blessington never wearied of descant- goterie was wont to assemble weekly. Miss | ing upon Bulwer's genius and social virtue. Spence had written, in conjunction with the fu- | Sle told N. P. Willis, the first time he ealled ai ture Lady Bulwer, a novel calied “Dame Re- | Gore House, that he was envied and abused b> becca Berry,” and was noted for her pleasant | ali the literary men of London, for nothing ex chit-chat. and for the high old-fashioned tur- | cept that he got £500 for his books, where the: ban che always wore. Bulwer’s appearance as | got £50. Bulwer, aware of this cause of th» @ Literary Hou caused Miss Spence to invite him | abuse he received, affected a pride, which som + to her conwersaziones; and there he became fa- | called puppyism, but which Enay Blessington miliar with—if, indeed, he did not for the first | considered “only the armorof asensitive mind.”’ time behold—“the beautiful and gifted Rosina | She described liim as one of the frankest and Wheeler.” The Whartons say of this brilliant | gayest of men among his intimates, open to bor young Irish lady: “Te a perfect beauty of face. | Isliness with those whom he thought appteciat with her maguitichut figure, she added great | him. ‘‘Bulwer’swife,” added the countess, wit, great liveliness, and power of apprecia- | you know, one of the mot beautiful wom } 439 From Pattonsvitle, by Cedar Point, te Snemts- ville. <n. ©.), 99 miles and b ones 4 week, ™, 2 Nottoway C. HE, by St. Mark's Charch and Marshall's Store (n, 0.), to Olive Bravich (n. 0.), 7 tniles and back, ouco a wee Leave Nottoway C. H. Tharsday at7 am; Arrive at Olive Branch by 12m ab re 43 p.m te font B7-A veterina: be geon who lives at Wil- Leave Olive Branch Thursday at 1 pm. | required by “4 . - se | r] “5 iscrown. We may suppose it was afterward | ce!)ar—to warm and brighten. mington tried to nder” his mother-in-law > Sotto * * * emcy of sack gus. tion.”” Bulwer hinsselr, at this time, was ‘‘atair | London, and his house t the resort of both f repaired. We have as good right to suppose this |" ue happy twain, according to Lavater, are | by dancinga polka with herunti! she sot ware. reap ice iinet asain according to stanton S05, oe i man of aristocratic elegance, fall ot wit | ion and talent.” In the same interview, Lady | nthe poet had to imagine it at all. And now | born gourmets; they have round and square | €d up, and then iving her all the icod lemon- | 4741 From Thaxton’s, by Coonsville(n. 0.)and Sandy 2. Bis and fancy.” His attachment for Miss Wheeler | Blessington spoke of Disracti as ‘a bit of'a cox- | the final catastrophe : faces, sparkling eyes, small foreheads, short | ade ahe could drink Ford (a. 0.), to teviile (i. 0), 49 malos soon became passionate, and it seemed as cor- | comb, about whom there is reserva, aad who Aud Gill came tumbling after. noses, full lips, and round chins. They eon- | gg-The Newburyport school epmaatiase awe SS eS as & dial a love-match as London society had seen | is the only joyous dandy Lever saw.” Willis: | This ic perfectly harmonious. We should na- | gratulate themselves that they are what they attempted to investigate tleschool-house ghost ryed i ‘wesday and Saturday at 7 for manya day. She apparently worshipped | own impr: of Bulwer, when he was able t» | turally have expected it. We may su that | are; that they are not absent-minded business | They necount for the s by an ill-working Arrive at Stewarteville by 12m; a his genius, he her beauty and wit. Meanwhile, | judge of him by personal Inspection. was not 8» | Gill was leaning on Jack, and t! at, therefore, | men, nor ambitions men, who eat and think at ventilator, but the mik ed little boy did uot eave Stewartsville Tuesday aid Saturday at) waded ation any 4 met wholly faresahie te min Wien De | hts strictures upon Bulwer Shieh raisee cag | RCH tack tell Giti, by necessity, wont tumb: | the same time. ‘The aphorisas of thelr high | reveal himself to them. Ao Shek CRS SF eS omen") comet Le oon, iss r. y rer Wi “al such an “Tel ; . Morgan, having seen her at Lady Cork’s, my | outery Rgainst his book, “Peneilings by th: | jneaiter; oF we may suppose that Gill loved | priest are often on tongues, such as, Tell m 87 It isn’t often that a man who hasbeen shot —s an action for damages against a defend- ant for shooting him; but Henry B. Reanick did this in Kittery, Me. ‘The court sent the case to a referee, who decides that for popping at said Remick the said shooter must pay him 4.509. ——_—_—X—K—K—K—KKX_ll————— INSURANCE COMPANIES. PsurYocring THE MUTUAL BENERT? pam Katey ES J. stancay Joy Afrive at Thaxton’s by 6 pm, e From W i. Leave that, while Jane Porter, the authoress or | Way,” in England. He describes him (1433) as “Thaddeus of Warsaw,” ‘looked the Muse of | not handsome, short, very much bent in the Tragedy, Rosina Wheeler seemed the Muse of | back, slightly knock-kneed, and as ill-dressed + Comedy; but, shortly after, the lively little la. | man for a gentleman as might be seen in Lon g seems to have taken a pique, for she speak< | don. His figure was slight and badly put toge- her as “handsome, t, and anamiable, to | ther, and only comely featare was ‘‘th deilge by her style and manners. She and ail | smailest foot I ever saw aman stand upon,” he emi-csprite looked daggers at me.” Tv | Buthis head, phrenologicaily speakinz, was speak of Lady Bulwer asa d-mi-esprit was cer- | fine one, with a retrea‘ in, , but broad and well- tainly unjust; her real brilliancy of wit had | defined’ forehead, amt whole air one o! been fully ae led: by the ¢ritical circle | marked mental superiority. His nose was aqu hich she moved. The coterie. at Miss | line, far too large for proportion; bere is Lad+ was delighted with the match. This | Bulwer’s caricature” on paper. Willis though le was composed, according to the Wha: that Bulwer tried to conceal the bigness of hi- tons, of “reviewers chiefi ind dilettante a nose by an immense pair of red whiskers. His thors; sundry olf ladies calling themsclves‘hon- | complesion was fain his hate pretesc enn Zack more than we can tel!,and that, when she | what you eat, and I wil) tell you what you are,” saw him fall back and break his crown, in a fit | and ©“'The fate of nations depends on how they of sheer desperationshe threw herself afver him. | are fed.” They belong to anextensive brother. Either hypothesis would fally aeeount for the | hood. ‘The stranger brethren may not recoz- facts, but Tam inclined to accept the latter, it | nize each other away from the feast, but trom being the more poetic and thoroughly consonant | the moment they sit opposite each other over a with the patheUc nature nature ofthe secne. | savory dish or a toothsome glass, the recozui- Lastly, tet us study the sentiment, tion is mutual; as soon even as the incense ack and Gill went up the hill. a soigne rises to their nostrils, the ties Here, we see that Jack and Gill were indus- | which bind them are revealed. Phen thay ss trious. "It requires an effort to go uphill. This | happy, for next to eating a good dinner is the Was probably a long, steep hill, At any rate | pleasure ofa comrade to eat it with—a comrade We may suppose it was. If it was, it would re- | possessing the genius of the palate, who is able quire all the more effort to go up it. We have | to precy Thm through ail the delightful iaby- uo evidence that Jack and Gill repined. Itis | rinths of taste. A companion of the basst not said that they went up the hill under pro- | kind, who eats tolive, is worse than none, for test. They appear to mh ory up cheerfully; | his presence wounds the sensitive soul of him =) M4. The route, the service. the yorly pay. the name { Trep te Omega,é miles and back, | and rer th dder tenis wis Cy cave Wil Trap Wedncalay and Saturday at 15 A iy 1iive as Omega by Da ve Onwege Weduewday am; “Arrive at Wolf Trap by 9.4m. 4143 From Lenrel Grove to Cartersbargh, 4 miles - . and hack. twice a week. Leaye Laurel Grove Weduewlay and Saturday at Saws Artive at Uartorsburgh by 12m; Leave Cartersburgh Wednemiay and Saturday atipm: tive 1 Grove by 5pm. any bid which may be doomed Arrive at Laurel Grows by 5p i dinregard th Wide of ail Prpted pr writ Saturday et 7.30 Euaraiteed by two rexponeitle ind gnarantoe be sepned ‘eu0.4e re 4 > = 4 From Summerfield, by Spring Valley, to Ste- | ders. fact at 4 2, hon 349) erable,” but with a gone-by demeanor, and in- | and bright auburn; his ‘eye not remarkable, d wh: 1 f ch 1 industry is here Vie = , be NSURANCE. phens' @reek, 9 wiles and back, twice a week 6. T bow be ferior professional musiciais.”” Besides Bulwer | mouth contradietory of all talent.” Wien ti taught us! The object of their going upthe | Wie,tven to eat ee ee eae 1 Liave Summerield Tuesday and’ Saturday es 4 Pisoni ote fe — so he ne peaprohed mee! seeneiigiae | come nunc’ Uateeae betes opat coice | Mtl wae to get a pail of water. What they : THE EQUITABLE. LIFE ASSURANCE Alvive at Stephens’ Creck by 7 pm; J inet By or PeTso. led gi he a voice ited to. it mat! cave Ste > rs . Beaus-czzrite of the day—Lady Caroline Lamb, | “exceedingly lover-Ike and éweet, with conjecture. 5 have sometimes thocghe, tae A Memorial of Horace Greeley. Seely Te Se ¥ of Byron and the wifeof Melbourne. | ful tui s quite delicions; aclear ia With her Bulwer became inUmate, and he met | was the soul of sincere’ and car. , a 2 Doth af Mise Soence’s ant at thy | Went,” His ggnversation was of Miss Benger, the authoress of “Ett quick, various, haif-<atirical. im Doughty ‘Srcomipa: certified check or draft on same solvent nation CUR PEP pay jot he amount. (8-0 law Congres of Juve , Ti. The contracts @re to be eecuted an. they wanted it to drink, and have again sup- | HIS FIRST AUTOBIOGRAPHY, WRITTEN aT rue posed they were getting it for a sick compan. AGE OF THIRTY-POUR. . - aki, on ai The New York Ledger for March 8 contains her purpose would have been praiseworthy. | Horace Greeley’s first autobiography, wi at 2m; Arrive at Summerfield by 3 pm. Ge Fi Danville, by Hall's Cross Roads and = "Garden, to Riceville, 3) miles and back, twice The business of thie Ge has for years been the largest cf any similar tustitttion in the wrcjae F. BEveR, Gemma Ae 7ENTU STREET. : v thhe Nat diay al Jmme Ys ‘ ee xk. ter be com. Seth of Bohemia, street. Lady | and difterent from others—in short, bright and | It is not stated what became of the water when | in 1845, and never before pubilsl The HEYER & BISHOP, Leave Danville Wednesday and Saturday at 7 ostmasier Genera! mae pr Caroline liked Bulwer because he was a disc nal. «He seemed to talk as if lis cout n: they ‘fell down. Perhaps it is not known. Pos Ledger says that this sketch of the first thirty- Insurance Agen ts om “pares ple of B: |, and wished to be thor help it, and affeeted every one with his spirits. J cessor of the author of ‘The Cor: sibiy in the general overturn it was spilled—but | four years of Mr. Greeley’s life was written at at Ricevitte by. ree degli: Toredar and Priday at 7 am; Arrive at Danville by 6 pm. r om Independence, Longs Gap, Clem’s O86 Free he tod Flak Midge, te hye Walley oo miles atid back, once a wnck Ti When, soon after, Willis spent an evening 2° | this would detract nothin; from the honor due | the request of one of his ollest friends and ad- friends, no doubt—especially “the ol: | Bulwer’s, he found him living in a fashionable | to them for going after ite mirers, without a view to publication. A few Jadies whe called themselves honorable’ ”—hai | quarter of London, and a house loaded down The misfortune which overtook Jack and | characteristic from this interesting much to do with bringing the handsome and | with elegant luxury, which betokened the ex- | Gill is singularly impressive. It shows the un- | literary fragment are given below: clever young couple together, little thinki abits and generous self-indulgence of @ certainty of ai! things earthly. uietly retarn- GREELEY AS A SPELLER. . that they were thus encouraging what wasto “Pelham.” The parlors were Se ae far- | ing down the hill, bearing the pail of water and * © * Iwas first sent to school when just ning misfortune of both their lives. | nisked, the library 3 model ot and cosey-} suspecting no evil, suddenty they fell. Tt is not | three years old; und if you should ever happen ‘They lived together for several years tm appar-| ness. It was there that Willis saw Augusta By- | stated that a serpent tempted them. It is not | to pass through “the High Range” of Lowion- ent tranquility; but, from what hassince tran-| ron, the sister of the poet; and, among the com- | even stated that they sipped. ‘The record is | derry, near an old weather-beaten school-house, . it is clear that very early in their wed- | pany were Shiel, the Irish orator, with whom | simply that they fell; we can only imagine the | which was red thirty years ago, you can easily existence domestic dissension arose, ani | Bulwer was intimate, Albany Fonbi: ®,lonz | cause, and say E No. 405 SEVENTH STREET, Wasuineton, D. NDON ASSURANCE CORPORA LORS m AS mii or ty “Teter parties By Verne ae wotier thot they will b eal Oetforw the service awarded bo them thro the whede contract gra <M. Section 269 of the act of June 6, tsr2. ive That contracts for the transportation of tie met Sunil be “awarded ized 172)—the oldest Tnsnrane . the world.) Cas A ETS, 5 Cotte rt e213. 296,480 CONSE Titus Fis anseiawe? CUES, Casm Assets... 09 — memes eeveneens-- 9684 OOO NATIONAL FIRE INSURANCE COMPANY, oF HaRrvoarp, a Arrive at b ‘rom Martin's Station to Drapersville. » Be 9 io Teatlng ights Eagle Ser ah Renee Weeh a Cal! | ek Sh "eckiovecak tas Ser apes | Case agwere er katisen inpeplpenineeed | oe ir ife soon jitively un- | one of lead lights Englis! Tiodical and infantile achievem ir. ny = he °F — Rappy. What the caunce of diangloomsent ideal literature; the reformer. Rati of Dur Door. Knockers. Tyas my forte, as smatural fora child ot tena, | TRADERS’ FIRE, (NSURANCE QCOMPARY, | as From Boral Rerrat (Mt. Airy Depot)to Biack | fon bis tha’ Propose fo leamaport, the all is not more definitely Known to the world than | ham; the old Earl of Clarendon, the Prince dv die an icular reason, we wonder, | clous memory and no judgment; aud L recollect | Osu acseas, cinvit U8 he: bondey $600,000 hick (Dart 2 cj S mallesiand beck.” | “ccleruy, coraunipy ond mare.” me! those of the Byron troubles; but the lady, la Moskowa. (a sonof Marshal Ney,) and Sir | why those sensibly contrived, thoroughly effect. | that it used to be the custom that the head of NATIONAL FIRE AND MARINE INSURANCE ons We See Sor the entire mal, homwever Hat, Maree no pains to lay her side of tae un- | John Bowring. The company stood or sat about | ive, generally mnteresting, afd ofteneextremely | the first clase and the mext should choose sides Se pa rece 5 a happy stery before the public. A woman of | engaged in conversation, which from time to | OudiSt and artistic old-fashioned door-knocker= | fer a “spelling mateh” once a week or 80. | (..5 Assets... cere 283,000 Leave Black Lick Se and Saturday at undoubted courage and spirit, aswell as beauty, time was interrupted by a duct or. solo from a hh. ve gone so éntirely out of use? Why | Now, I could spell well enough to be “:head Rew a popular opera, execu! Lady Bulwer did not shrink from making b ingers hired for the {ntlegant and complicated modern | among thirty or forty nambsinlls, whose in- quarrel with the baronct @ public one, buteon. | Secasion hor was there aay me shaeld the inslegent oud somplicn 4 neing. Willis de- 4 bh: ly usurped its place m | capability of learning to spell is even now a tinued for years to manifest, in various ways, | clares that, meeting Bulwer a Gege-bell beve 6 entirely oon P 2 1 A Arve at Rural Betreat by 2.39 pm. EQUITABLE LIFE ASSURANCE SOCIETY oF Nuw Yor, ond ered, except for sat Fomten. in Auikcaa a 2 bal to amterf : Blacksburgh, by Price’: Fork (n.0.),to | terms ts | jays after- knocker was ser- | puzzle to me; but J had not wit enough to | Cas AssBT8..0..0... cece: 20,000,000 | 049 From " te ra PA ag her utter detestation of the husband whom sh« | ward, In Regent street, he looked “uncommon | U8 country? Certainly the knoe) ‘any doubi | Choose good spellers. On the contrary, would | — deciBve.tt owan's Ale 1 0.) 1 matios once | declared she had “loved deeply and devotediy | seedy." and adds: +He is either the worstor th: | Sout there belng some one at the dove whens | choose ‘little clildren, my” playmates, who AB You DeURED? - for years.” As long ago as 1539, but a very few | best dressed man in London, according'to th: brass or iron knocker was pounding away. Not | conld not spell at all. After patience and ‘Nt PPLY TO THE OLD fetsciscas sponta? hy eno cf | sed‘ast? fate Se is" ance CP, | hee net ovetmaby in tne Misha nu | cmelied fon ten tutmurta twas oaad | ‘PeankeRRGee RE CoMPany, | fiisdh ic assaults upon him by the pul of | add r in life, wer with 2 t ‘bor 1 | nece: , C . O. famous novel of “Chevely, of, The Man of | the most sombre plainnces. It wes materia: | Heat the noise, but every one in the housec t | mext choose sides. Some of” these spelling Inconrona’ nonies 131818. hear it. Therein was the knocker hospitab h was bolilly issaed under herown | to see Bulwer in the House of Commons in 1833 g he be the coming of « | matches were held in the evening, and it was mame of “‘Lady Lytton- Bulwer.” This descrip~ | and 1865, and in the House of Lords, to which | *hpetnedd to all the houschold the coming of ky visitor. : dias houschold | difficult to keep sucha baby as 1 awake. When Hon of what was plainly intended to be, under | he had recently risea, in 1868. He then had the | yc7l.,, but betlaps now-a-days the houschold | (Neh te seh Same L hiad to be waked up to the guise of fiction, a picture of the Interior of eppearance of being a man of some fifty yea! whole family need not go tothedoor, And a | spell it; and I have lately found a story quite areal fashionable English home, is ample evi- | tallish, straight, stiff, and proudly sedate. Hi- | bell unless it is centrally placed in the house, ix current that I could aud did spell just as well dence of sate Setar Martie genius, and tom , Sombre _— i stg r “fair,” but was | often wonderfully ineffcctive, How well we ili Site ene) Safficiently refutes Lady Morgan's *‘sem:-wit’? | yellow and wr! ; Ww e almost cadaver- to LINDLEY NU Snaineation. Ita portrapal of charaater, its in- | Gaz eopect of bm eetere eoaed ete really far | Know that!—we who have shivered on brown- | Lx Omce in the building of the National Bank of bre zie. 106 D strect northwest. No charge Brodhead, af worth die On Metdiie: tie Bredl . H. Bradley, .'H. Wi or, We pass | ‘s mice, Dr D M CHARLES BEA go goo From Viekersto Price's Fork ( ya back, once a week. Leave Vickers Saturday at 5p Arrive at Price's Fork by 7 Leave Price’® Fork Arrive at Vickers by 5 pm. 4751 From Gladeevile ( AN INTENSE BLOCKHEAD.” Vack, onee aw hard tome, ‘I ithe Wednesda: stone stoops and white marble front steps in Ske er ee Sat — Leave Gladewv! : teusity of fecling, its force of language, its de- | from proportionateprominence of hislong aqui- winter, and scorched and steamed upon them | Commenced at six years of age, and havi ra TH NATIONAL METROPOLITAN Arrive at Grandy Th x seriptive power, mark her as a gem'us alinos: | line nose. He now wore a mustache with his igh ‘didn't | little schooling, wasted the best part of what I ~ FIRE INSURANCE. L runds - able to compete with her huahand wn the Meldof | “heavy red whiskers” Which bat themeites | summer, while Bridget or Dinah (w ioe " Artiveut Gi 9 ionable romance. The authoress leaves us Toredidn’t | had for several’ years before I discovered that become a dull brown, plentifally sprinkled with | hebPthe belt) kept us waiting for the welcom: | UF standard authors om that autject know Fay and upon bis chin he grew an imperia}. | opening of the door. But with akuocker, how | nothing about it—Lindley Murray especially, is Hale was stil thick, but no trace of istic | different! If Biddy was indoors and neither | the ee ene” Lercech Sex risest tos i e 4 yas a vv 7 " ou; fo a eng nigeria *Speetactes partially conceatel | eat nor dead, she must hear the wrapping, Bo | OUP aid nat tl tenor loans That obteaates theton a or pontracts for the servior proposed for 1 the accepted bids, thelr legal liabilities Will be enforced inet them. “2 Present contractors, and parame known at the Palrecnter Gal ooctihonee GP Get DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA. ORGANIZED AUGUST 26, 1870. CASH CAPITAL... ,8100,000 ia not a shadow of doubt that Lord de Clifford is Bulwer, and Lady de Clitford herself. fio “straight, stiff, obstinate brown hair” of ti: former, his nose, which “was so aguiline that nm. 02 From Lyncbburgh, by Bighee’s Shop, to Per- Piro Bote miles aud back, thres thoes & week Leave Lynebbargh Tuesday, Thursday, and Saturday at 2 p mj " ST ore part of the house she se 9 A . stantially in the forms above if ic had appeared on paper, instead of on abn. | the large, but now dulled and glasay blae eyes, | PAGed nervett’ As ners thee at at | of perception put me back sadiy.and Thad to | Omce tn Suepbept Bulldog, No. 208% Penney pinvest ‘perros Store byT > _ ee a I fea man face, it would have been pronouneed a | and the whole appearance was far from pre- not pretend she did not hear it. The bel! may | learn what I know of grammar after I hadde- | ,oois svenue. OSES KE LY, t — stipe h ocees JNO. ALS CRESWELL, caricature,” his “rag-bag of a mind;” the do- Pomenin - On the former occasion referred to. | be in » measure to her a private > . voted more time to it than it should Leo re- WM. B. TODD, Vico President. arrive at Lynchburgh by Ba. Jantl-+.6t oatmaste: General scription of him asa “Caligaia in his clem heard him address the House in an eloqiten’ | ringing out its call to her yy Bins ng | quired in all. weeks with the books we | SAMUEL CROSS, Hocretary. SS ey, and a Praco in his displeasure’’—betray the | and evidently earefull-prepared speech of halt on gn ‘alone for its auswer. Not so the knocker. | 10W have, are worth ten months with sach as RAILROAD exaggeraicd likeness of the hasband by the in- | an hour. His manner was quiet and subdacd. | 7 ‘a public voice, it calls aloud to everybody | learned from. — HS . A dignhant wife. Nor were the i made | his voice no longer “‘lover-like and sweet,” but in general, and if one person in partleular “DAVY HALE’ tec ree een oR “ile ‘Toceday and Saturday aND against the novelist detailed less expli¢itly than | rather harsh and ig, and bis declamation | (Biddy) does not do her duty, everybody in gen- * * « 1 spent a —— erert rth, reat the shape of bis nose, or the stiffoes of bis hau- | hum-drum; occasionally a spark of the old aui- eral ay know it.—# rom Home and Socieiy; Scri)- | ®t my father’s, but worl atmy » ose en prrienet Bordon by 4 pm: Real Estate Mortgage Combined. teur. In effect, Lady Bulwer accused lier lord | mation appeared, when he drew hims-if up t> | SPs Vul puonaty could find work in Jamestown, tangs Leave Boyaton Monday and Fridny st®am; with having « violent temper, with personal | the full height. and, for the moment. seemed a patel county, N. Y¥.; Lodi, Cattaraugus county, N. Arrive ai Forksville by 4pm, < brutality, and with the far more serious aime | very orator in motionas inspeech; but thespark A Prince of the Press. Y.; and, last and longest, at Erie, Erie panty, a of conjugal infidelity. She virtually acknow!- | soon vanished, and he was again Pelham grow The London a notice of the | ¥a- Here I stayed tive months, and, ning edges that 4 just jealousy on Ler part, followed | oli, the exhausted and melancholy beau and rsd Company furnishes to the pablic en investment: by retatiation against that jealousy on his, was In ts 720Gold Bonds the Norther PactBe Rati-, f je 2 ; | at a vory low estimate, was finally offered. a FORM OF PROPOSAL, GUARANTEE, AND witof the past straggling through an imposed sacitanion tiene aemaasenes Erie meices rtnership by the editor and printer for whom ts in CERTIFIC security which combines the ready Bog.tiability, tue the real bo’ of the whole difficulty. The | task. Yet said there was nothing worked. The concern was a very one, convenience, and the high credit of oa real bottom whole diffiealty. . Yet, & sit- . 4 the and of @ real ee- wovel also gives the evidence of the lay that | which betdikened the least low of mental vigor | Sor Targa ii a teheeeniio tn te but it looked as though should, have the work road bond. with the, sll and afety of © Af the husband at one time acknowledged his guilt, | or of rhetorical reaouree. His sentences were as County of ‘and not many milesfrom ‘do inst another man’ > " mortgage On land worth ef least twice the amed.( and begged to be forgiven; that he was se for-{ sounding, his maxims as clear cut and anti- 5 herbi mo howe te core mim fined fe rather unwisely, [ suspect. Late in ‘oaned. iver, Only to transgrem worse than before, and | thetical, the whole structure of his speech ss 24 fett hor s 4 July, 1331, no more work in thai quar reupon she feft him forever. “Cheve- | consummate & work of the disputative art as his nds are beautiful and extensive. The young | 497 setae city, reaching here a few ‘They are offered at par in currency,and sick! © not stop short with presenting as repul- efforts, when he was a rising hope of the fey wo has married the heir to this goodiy a 4. nder age, with $10 in my pocket, and PROB IT tw those exchanging § a». s ea of a distinguished ancestry, be beech 2 two hundred miles. | and of eg iam’ sceer eon ped a ies ne os 62S ee Me clothes were scanty ‘and seedy, m appear. a3 [oophtege ereonpes oe Ger sun Gets ‘Tho bento ero-o Get and enly eesteng on the, TORE Te nae Meeting miEhe be held to be excus- | dress wae Couspicnously piain, almost stiff and | Gratcousior the Earl of iiteliae Fxi | Buee green and unprepossessi Thad a abie, if not justifiable, ina wife who certainly jal, thongh there was something about pion, 5 a ministeri: oe ae ‘work, sud beep. it. (Davy the attire of the neck which seemed a suspicion ir children the best of had | Hale, of the Journal of Commerce, insisted Sardie st snteee. ey nnd yt asy —— courage to resort ponders that i was a runaway apprentice, but he was in a in the debate on | 5eF uw wail of genteel prev Jalty “A TRIBUTE TO THOMAS M’RLRATH. tne Coreen of ateca amctation W'koranane | outue Dart impscutions clengre ‘Fhey as-| 1,040 matters gradually brightened. with vaind still keen as welt | missed all Sl prone ona hal pag the Log Cabin, a ‘campaign paper, moe ee'nere,| WB Soquired an Sireulation eighty ing ty a gossiping West-E: aie - ean whatever could palllate the literary castigation of the hus rela- fivesmnd friends. More than one bitter thrust is dealt to Mrs. Lytton-Buiwer, nove! mother, a lady who was revered and honored all who knew her, and it ts i I : i ? F i =) nina” wale and rent. ee = z E. TURTON, CARPENTER, BUILDER, OONTRAOCTOR. i | 5 ro F j 4 F Hi iE ‘Marketable Bonds rrectred in ex- uma . was the taveter, at thle highest carrent prices. ro i i $ : i JAY COOKE & CO., sanxcas, —~ bore these and it is but. jugt say that his friemts were all slong conv a ht 5 2 This | existence of this pretty little woman the water rose in the western rivers, putting | editor have ine pub-, ‘burdens bre onime. Our business is now yd. has been measurably so ever izath care inte the concern. In about by her own infirmities of temper. Pl-assor ted and 4 dw thet Laty Bulwer's more serious cli: saiest, and that the separation was rrsultev! im the births of a son | needed such a friend as Bulwer seems to have | lovers under the paii of ng | prosperous, r. The daughter, aiter havin | been. She was wayward and wild, and was | oung ladies with boats from chamber windows. | since Mr. Me