Evening Star Newspaper, May 24, 1873, Page 6

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| bers. Kowsition wandered back, and throw | nymph, and lost hie heart, I he must Sewing and Reaping. SUMMER RESORTS. | _____ RAILROADS, down his hariial of drift; it was still a littie ave wn a nny Proposed i Are we sowing the seeds of kindness? TARR MURGT MOL GM..dncarclis Juncios. damp, and did not kindle readily. im the dark—to the wrong girl! There! did you They shall blossom bright ere long PAkkHURsT aes * ene Seencs x AMBEAED EY, ¢ yASHLNG- J workl arroen + Shivering still!” he said, restming bis seat | ever imagine sucha dilemma! Which would Are we sowing the seeds of dixcoru’ Ma I ' 25.8. Seaddsetman eS oe eat ae sees: eee te ak a benim sena ——— Ratiroad. Improvements have been made ALEAASDAia « FREDERICKSBURG &. B. rural of ¢ a ml of fire to warm you throu; ed. at did Rupert's friends do?” asl a- ae re iaeue for the comfort of guests equal to any sammer res. | bronaed infar antiqnity. SoGome under my plaidie.” Heres an_un- | cretia, letting the Ince glorioualy alone, A They shall ring forms eotsen grain Am Ex-Emperor's Story of His Own | {¢' {by comiort of cess (qi oli will Bod Gener af B and Suzih Serests. ais graniiec walk. aod tn claimed wrap”—winding it about her. “So | + He?_oh, he accepted the situation. What Ave we cowing f falnehood? 3 nes, House a desirable forthe summer. For far- | ~ Keeat trains for Alexandria leave a2 followe:—ti?, : they bave all taken themselves off, have they? | else could he do? Rupert says it’s Rossillon. Weehall yet reap bitter pain. There has just been published in Paris a book | ther information address cette 148, 7:28, 843, 9:58, 10:83, 1154 n, m., 12:55, 1.53, 2 a5) I don’t care—do yor Heavens! Lucretia, what's the matter?” i of two hundred and seventy pages, preten- | m222w* GEORGE BELL, Proprietor. ‘and 7.58 p.m «Not a fig,” responded Lucretia. “Pve run a needle in my finger clear to the Whatsce'er our sowing be tiously entitled “(Euvres Posthumes Auto- FATTON.—This beautiful and healthy -ummer | 4 20gM Ire Free Alenanarse arrive as follows — «I've half a mind to tell you a secret,” he | bone. The sight of blood always makes me Reaping we ite fruite shall eee, graphs Inedits de Napoleon III in Exil,” of Boicher's Gap. E 23803811 ‘ said, with a hand on hers, “it'ssodark and | faint. See, there’s a drop on Miss Glenhayen’s | RoR PRN Sos eR which thirty-seven pages are real, the rest pad- | and surrounded by the Bi ‘moun Fhe miahty captai lonely bere—a secret you haven't suspected, of | India muslin. What shall Ido?” How it Feels to be Drowned. ding. These pages give the Emperor's own ac- | tain, and withi & The brave reta course. Shall eu ‘Let me get you some arnica.”” Dr. Hoffman, of Dixon, Ill, who nearly lost | count of the jown to the surrender at | from Washingt; Cur, will be open. ” S | 4 4 the receptic «* You will please yourself, “No, thank you; I'll go up to my room and | pis life by the recent bridge disaster at that | Sedan. The manuscript from which this is + Ah! that sounds s0 like your cousin Lu—half | liedowna moment. Yakatl be all right pres | place, given the following vivid account of bis | printed is described as written by the hand of | fhe im oom, an ice-house, fillea with ice, aud ® ‘and far defiance and half assent”—rising and trying to | ently.” | experiences in drowning: the Emperor. It was originally joined to the Pinzein;the Reuse. “Ab elegant stage conch wilt also T now the gray ur; the embers into life; then he returned, Fon didn’t break off the point in your “My wife and I went tosee the baptism of | treatise entitled ‘‘Les Forces Militaires de la kept for t accommodation of boarders, and 6, Bole an heprg™ en and without another word took her in both | finger’ the converts, and took up a position on the | France,” which was published a year in | meet the trains at Hamilton Depot, W. ‘ B Or blue and baitie shaken seas of Trafalgar sothg ave BR. a whenever required. Those desiring to spend the 1 | between it and the abutment. We were sur- | sion in the assembly, and partly in answer to | Summer in the country will addrew. she had started and drawn’ away, or rather had | locked the door; but she did not lie down, nei- | rounded by people—men, women aud children. | the declaration of M. Thiers that the imperial Rowsd Hit P. 0° bese a Ve. cstonee; | made an effort to draw “Don't be | ther did she remember any hurt but that which | Suddenly, while Mr. Pratt was entering the | régime had neglected the army, and had not | gygo to Oo Ee oreo Ter ata. fi arling, the fire won't burn, and—and | Kate’s heedless tongue had wrought. All ber | water with a female, I heard a report similar to | known how to organize or employ the military | ,jn/isrecardts the place mistt had crushed or fashiowed | Iny flame will’ Love you!" happiness had vanished lik ° Itis too dark for the others to make | «'I think not; if I did it will work out: things | pridge about thirty feet from the first pier, and | view of the new army law then under di out this charming tableau,” be whispered; for | usually do; and yo she went to her room an * mirage, dissolved | that made by a small cannon, and in an in- | resources of France; but the Emperor conclu- — - nd coidiy points you out the coffined hones You love me! Impossible! You are laugh- | bya rude breath, « word; all this time she had | stant the water cloeed over me, and I felt that | ded not to publish at that time, and hence the | WEST END HOTEL, Voorn pes dine farmice could moe stand it me.” been robbing Lucia, she had been defrauding | something was pressing me down. A heav resent issue with a flourish of trumpets and at Saas * The hand disewns Let those laugh who win. Come, you surely | Rossillon. She had given her heart away when | weight appeared to be over me. I did not sin wenty francs a copy. r do not want me to do al the loving; say that it | nobody wanted it, and Rossilion had accepted | tothe bottom. I was perfectly conscious, and | The Emperor's journal begins by justifying oe is measure for measure! the giit from pure compassion. Buthow admi- | j ediately thought of getting out, if possible. | the disposition of the differeut corps at the «Pressed down and running over? On, it is | rably he had played the f lover! Well, | My fn contact wits. the trestle. opening of the war. An invading army taking too good to be true? It's like fairy gold. Are ere should be no more play; itshould bedown- | work, and, crawling up as if ascending a lal- e offensive against Germany mast, writes LONG BRANCH, N, J., A STEP IN THE DARK younure? are sou sure?”” she whispered back. | rightearnest hereafter. But bow could she der, I was fortunate in finding an opening | Napoleon, either advance on the left against = = “I thought if was—” But he stopped her | live without him? what should she do with her | through which I crawled and immediately arose Mayence, or to the right, crossing the Rhine, INGTON Weetern &: is . p 23 p.m, Pacific Express, th with kisses. thoughts. that had learned the trick of follow- | to the surface. 1 was then, as near as ican | and entering Baden. Metz and Strasburgare | WILL BE OPENED ON THE 19ru OF JUNE $B p. . ‘They were boarding at Mrs. Campte meDon't say another word, or I'm afraid you'll | | im, and would not be easily coerced? | jndge, about sev or eighty feet tro: i ne yates 4 ad . 7 , ad 5 ent) eighty feet from the | clearly the princi ints of concentration, Roudas ‘ ee ee Seite | revoxe it all. Ifit's too good to be true. you | Atow th dade! inky or clgnty pol 8 i daily W:33 pm. Soorhern & Sept delty, except an. e all, what should she do with the love | shore.’ I swam toward the bank, but when near | whence the respective corps should be able to Ayplications for rooms can be made . | dent hate me, You belong to me, for ever and | that she was about to take back? It seemed for | it my strength gave out, and I sank. While | unite, either for a passage of the Rhine or a | p. BILDEETH, No. 52 Broadw jeunes. He bad met I : . @ while as if there was no corner inthe wide | swimming, some person, who must have been | passage towards the north. An advanc8 trom | New York or bs addreaing Fi G summer before, and some symptoms ef “« If yon are sure you want me so long.”” workd bigenough to hide and hold it all. After | under the water, caught hold of my left leg, | Stras! would have added to the difficulties eee Qrous flirtation had developed them: ««] never was surer of any thing. she had in a manner composed herself, she | and grasped tight fora minute, preventing me | of the Rhine the defiles of the Black Forest, SBURY, uch. 13%. ™., Wemern Exp " n an Washington até “Doubt that the san doth move, wrote Rossilion a few words, telling him a little | trom going forward. The person let go as sud- | or else the siege of Rastadt, which did not ap- LDEETH. mals-tJunels_ —s maton ot 6:28 end bo Bat never doubt—’” ot that which he already knew, adding her re- | denly as he had taken hold, and I gave astroke | pear atavorable point. Moreover, concentra- se BOARD .—Those teh to exc! The smouldering embers flared int rets at having been the cause of so much un- | or two, when I encountered adress. Thinking | tion in Alsace had the advantage of permitting | 9 th ‘and dust of the city for cool, lite, and lit up Lucretia’s face, rosy ai ppiness to bim, and releasing him from the | it was my wife, who was standing beside me | Franee to unite seven corps d'armee at the pro- = LoUboe STiTeT Pavgh Tih *, with a warm color rip- | With happiness; glistened in’ the . engagement. Phe next night but one was | when the span fell, I grabbed it, but having | per moment, without disclosing his projects to | {i LOCDON INS TITCTE. which wil! be jing across her cheek arm! touch b ry ul touched the ringlets dropping about her | Christmas-eve, when she was to take the part | become enervated. I was obliged to let it go. the enei It is needless to enter into any | jarge and airy, aud every effort will be made to mi ar ateged ple | check with gold. “Another man, perhaps, | of Cinderella in the pantomime; and as there ' was almost exhausted at the time, and do not | discussion of this point. Itisconcladed with « | jsrerte the comfort and pleasite of guests, Bicunted nese, with a torrent id have dropped the hand resting conti- | W#s 0 ghost of an excuse for her to offer if she | know that the dress was that of my wife. I did | reservation which, indicating the inefficiency | on high round near the Leesburg and Aldie grate, wetia was, a0 some of he , dently in his, and told the whole story in a | Withdrew, it behooved her to dry her eyes and | not notice it particularly. My thoughts were | of the army and the Emperor’s ignorance of | about nine miles from the former place, with daily ght is but not Rossillon. sat silen p- | dissemble hersorrow. And Christmas-eve drew | almost solely confined to her, and I imagined | the fact, accounts for all that followed. communication with Washington. Charges reason Rnccted sald Lucie fated oat, Lucretin’s eyes | went after the revelation, and counted the cor, | down cold and crisp, ‘the ideal Christmas | when 1 saw che aremit was herd in “But’in order that it (the concentration) | able. For particulars address 000 0 were large and light, tender and serious, and | #s Was but natural. An instant ago he had be- | Weather, when good cheer and comfort seem so | “+-When I sank I'was still sensible to the sur- | should take place there, it was necessary for all | y.ro.gW PR A fringed with heavy lashes; her hair was a skein | lieved himself quite bappy, and now—was he | Comfortable. e northern lights coruscated | roundings. I went apparently very close to the | the corps to be equally read begin the eam Of gold that seemed alive in every thre her | altogether miserabl across the sky, which already resembled some | bottom. The current rolled me over and over, | paign. Since an army is a gi ight broidered with medieval a nd nd t which should smateatly sappert secu otecr | A’ WOOME ieataal Cake ter eoe a ae : Je 0 res d ora * he said, mighty arras embroidered with medieval de- | and my hands frequently came in contact with | of which should mutually support each otuer . furnished, >, four unfa: Soee ite, tak ceeone beaut ra Tr her fees | ing out the tell-tale ith signs; the gaunt trees were tasseled with icicles, | the gravel, I could feel the water running | and should act together; if even one part only | nished,and BOABD. ine beautfiul country ota =n te go aboard. Take my arm: the sand shps an- | the hedge-rows seemed set with jewels; great | down my throat and in my ears, and all at once should fail, the whole will be paralyzed, and it | Bome in a healthy locality. Quod refer Mould wear Uetter. “Youmay’ believe that Lis | Wer one's feet, and it Wark”. He stiis spoke | Hashes of ight splintercd fromthe ragged edges | exyerieniced the most delightful sensation. I | will be no longer posible to execute the general | “Sor Scnicalars apply to JOHN W. KINSELL, eretia had not forgotten Rossilion nor the symp- | a* tenderly as if the illusion had not been dis- | Of suow-drifts where the star beams touched | seemed to be at peace with everything, and | plan. Thus it was indispensable not only that | (et batictlere, apply to JOHN m7 im Waskixeton, November 8, 1878 toms, she had never met any man who socom- | pelled. They slid home under the quiet stars, | them; the frozen ponds reflected the glory a | perfectly happy. y, whole life passed before | the troops concentrated at Metz should be ready — — Trains between WASHINGTON and NEW TORE letely fitted into the niche of ber weal as he. | hardly conscious that they moved, passing a | thousandfold ,whenup came the moon and made | me like @ flash of lightning, the events appear- | to move, but that the corps mustered at Belfort are Fan ee follows: pix uring the time since they had parted she had | joke or singing a song, watehing the moon | # torch-light procession of the weird old elms, | ing insequence, the most prominent appearit should have arrived at Strasburg to strengthen THE TRADES. PRAT I Ti te received two offers of marriage, but he had | Come up to show the ragged reflections in the | i? their armor of ice, guarding the approach to | to be indelibly impressed upon my mi Cir- | that of Marshal McMahon, and that Marshal Se IEEE Cee oe ee Le die iat stepped between them and dimmed their glory. | dark water,the tide setting about the piers | the Glenhaven mansion. Inside the curtain is | cumstances Thad forgotten appeared vividly, | Canrobert’s corps de reserve should haverepiaced RACTICAL PLUMBING, GAS-FITTING ax: FOR PHILADELPHIA Very likely she might have accepted one awill, the black wharves rumning out te ot de disclosing the stage, where the step-sisters | and I did not want to be disturbed. I should | in Lorraine the troops about to entry Germany. SEWERAGE Teas Leave daily (except Sunday) a $a, a. 1.00 sod 8:3 the: i ¢ u . 0 ote . e | able terms, by JA’ if she had never knewn Kossillon, m » as it seemed, the ghostly shapes of a1 ire dressing for the ball. Cinderella is plaiting | have preferred to remain where I was. While | Unfortunately, the hopes formed could not be | #! Weastilon once known wae serie be ignored." | chored and deserted chipe fockingem the cwelle, | ate’s long hair, while Olive Glenhaven tr: i in the mast of a beatific reverie, thinking what | realized.” ome avenue, nent Gh etvect, . ON SUNDAY “Tam so glad that we meet again. he said, | Lucretia halt wished that they might keep slip- | & White silk, emboswed with forget-me-nots, my wife would do if sue were saved, and I | ‘The reason for this is very simple. ‘The Fe- | Freceneee D | lesave for New York at 80 p, m.,and Philadelphia coming to her side after his tea. “Introduce | ping on forever thus. Her happiness was so | }ooks over her white shoulders at the effect drowned, I felt a hand on my shoulder. I was | peror had estimated that he could bring $85,000 ‘Goes com for Sow York on 649 p.m. tata me, pray, to this cousin of yobrs. She startled | unexpected that she half feared to the mirror. Presently they are ready for con- | pulled out and placed on a rock. I was almost | men into the field, against the 430,000 mustered Wotice of Removal. t » me half an r ago, when Icame upon her | it should prove a myth, too sweet p smal they lock the door on Cinderella, who | insensible, but a came to myself. Oh, | by North Germany aml the southern states. . o"Throngh tickets to Philadel; ew York and the shrubbery, she isso like and | nature’sdaily food.” As for Kossillon, he tlit- | “isconsolately takes to the chimney-corner, and | how sick and wretched I felt. | This proved delusive. When he arrived at Boston can be had at the Scation st all hours ted about in’ his usual style, now dropping a | hides her face in her two hands. Lucretia feels | _ ++ After remaining on the rock about an hour | Metz, July 25, there were only 220,000 men in of the day. Malicious folks call me Lucia’: word ia, engrossed in a flirtation with an | €vety inch a Cinderella. Haven't they all gone | I was taken to my home. Here I commenced | the field, and there were many of them com- kee eee railroad advertisement s0@ do you think it’s so bad as. tha’ elderly Creesas—tor Lucia never left any lode | t0 the carnival of youth and happiness, and left | vomiting, and frequently ejected water and | paratively unequipped. The Army of the Mo- jellatiaeatieaens aaon won jugton, Baltimore, ’ unworked—now lending a hand with rope or | ber locked up in solitude and poverty of heart? | partially digested food until four o’cleck in the | selle—220.000 on paper—mustered only 110,000. B. SHARP, Ae* Master Transportation, i? There can be nothing but good in | rigging. now looking into Lucretia’s eyes, that | I#n’: Rupert this moment kissing blushing | afternoon. “I was taken out of the water about | Marshal MacMahon had but 40.000 oetot toy 000 tr COUE; Gene Ticket Agere the case. | mirrored the supreme joy of her soul, and won- | Kate in the passageway?—she can see them | 660 feet below the bridge. I was very thirsty | credited to his command. General Douay's . 8. KOONTZ, Agent, ington. ele But after the introduction she saw little more | dering at the freak of fortune that should so | through a{chink in the scenery—and aren't | after vomiting, and tried to drink some water, | Belfort corps was incomplete. Canrobert’s ALTIMO: aN On10 — ©f Hosillon during the evening, or of Lucia | choose and order his way for him, To Kossilton | Olive and young Earle flirting together behind | hut the taste was 0 disagreeable that I could corps was not up to the standard nuraber. The peste — B re on either. | it was already a foregone conclusion that he | the scenes? i 2 not bear it. The only way I could quench my | real strength of France was 165,000 less than the THE LUMBER BUSINES Wasninetos, Jan. 8, 1873. Considering that he was so glad to meet | should matey ‘Luere: He would have thought As she broods there, a soft light irradiates the | thirst was by putting vinegar into the water— mated strength, GTC est in,” she thought, ‘he might have staid fora soon of selling his birthright as of explaining | 4u!l_hearth-stone, and godmother, with her | about an ounce and a half toa quarter of a The passage of the Khine was, ander these She went to her room early, and | the situation and demanding a release, or of | Peaked hat, spangles, and sandals, appears, | pint. That struck me asa rather curious cir- | conditions, abandoned, but, yielding to the ia, who came up later, trilling an | giving her occasion to suspect it. Quixotic, if | 4Nd touches Cinderella with her wand. Presto’ | cumstance. I was greatly astonished at the | clamor for gicire and something to make a<how | HEKETOFQKE CONDUCTED BY THE UN- air from the Magic Flute pu please; but the mistake was his—the conse- | the rags drop away from her like witchcraft, | number of events that passed through my | on the bulletinsethe Emperor advanced on the a Sa we ++ Who is he. Lucretia? Why didn’t you ever | quences should be. Lucretia had only made | #04 the beautiful gold-colored satin, with its | mind while under the water. Nothing that | Sarre, where a brief advantage was won inthe | DEKSIGNED ON SIXTH STREET, NEAR she asked, taking the buttertly | the mistake of loving him. All his Christian | opening morning-glories, lights up the sad face, | occurred during childhood was evident, but | capture of Saarbruck by Frossard's corps. The SOUR. i: ink nen and regarding herself in the | and gentlemanly impulees nebelloc against al- | lends a glow to the pale cheek, and a lustre to | everything since [ was about nineteen years | capture enabled Frossard to prevent the Pras. | “2SSOUKI AVENUE, AND 8 STREET, BB lass as she spoke. --I= he any body in par- | lowing her to bear the burden of his ‘blunder, | the wan eyes; and so Cinderella goes to the | old appeared before me as it photographed. | sians, now concentrating at Treves, from mik- | TWEEN SIXTH AND SEVENTH STREETS euler? tn be a desirable perci You may think, very likely, that he could not | Dall, just axsbe did in the old tairy story, and | The sensation I experienced while the water | ing use of the railway asa means of transport « He is a Rossi * said her cousin, sleepil | have loved I dances with the prince. Kate dances too » with | was going down my throat was not unpleasant. | east, and assured the passage ot the river. The | NORTHWEST, WILL BE LOCATED HEKB- sjen't that € vay partner whose mustache is blonde, and whose | It seemed as if I was going on a j and | army waited here for two golden days, waiting Ana * It is asif yon sai the gracious circumstances of | bair is yellow, curling wonders | was surrounded by all kinds of beautiful things. | for that which should have been ready—tor the | 4F7#£R AT THE out mentioning if he . uty, and has lived to find his | Y#guely who he may g enough | While on the rock I felt very bad and desired to | formation of the army of Alsace by a jun . Bolterille The Kussillo: - i worn threadbare. And hi of us | t@ ask or to give him more than a passing | be let alone. The sudden transition from the | with the 7th corps, and for the resérve corps to enepolis Junction, Hanover and mean that. John Kossillon bas a sion | y thank our star that? glance: blonde men were never after Lucretia’s | beatific state in the water to the dry land seemed | arrive at Metz. August 4, the second day a'ter | cop, of a3th street and Obie a w r Ss Cre Jessup ‘Cut, and and brains; he can sing and dance a: etch.” | as and our first love! What a delicious | Model. Rossilion’s hair was brown as the burst- | to have a bad effect, and made me indifferent | the flurry at Saarbrack, came the news of Do. 70 e ° 5 AnEKPo! ‘And fist.” la t was at the time, to be sure; but what | ing chestnut, and a mustache would have in- | to what was going on around me. Several people | ay’s defeat at Wissembourg. The Emperor it. am oo Very well; forewa i an ectasy of retrospect at the present! terrupted the classic and expressive outlines of | came to me and wanted to take me home, bat [ | mediately ordered the army to c ntrate at Day tentue te 7 They agreed between them —and I befieve it | his face. While she is wondering where she has | told them to let me alone. T was so mix t I ‘able. | Metz, and placed Bazaine in command of the | _m9-1m NATH'L B. FUGITT, . | was T tia’s suggestion—that the engage- rn this blonde stranger before, the clock | The corpse of my wife was found after she had | three corps on the Sarre. PJeRalc & LAGiRFUSH, Good-night.” ment should not become public till her return | Chimes midnight, and Cinderella vanishes from | been in the water about three hours.” This is Napoleon's account of the evening of H . But to take care of one’s self was nosuch easy | home, whic ving him time to aceus- | the revel. The prince, nothing daunted, dis- the camp Had MacMahon had his 107,000 Succesese te ork in Kosstllon’s presence, as Lucretia had | tom himself to this change of base, ad — one of his followers to yor her; itis the instead of 40,000 at Woerth, the fortunes of the PRACTICAL COPPERSMITES, found to her cost—as she was finding day by | bim from some ot the restraints of an acknow- | blonde young man, who meets only a wretched Murder as a Religious Exercise. war might have been even then reverse; but F street, ¢ Ts she had proved dificult | ledged lover. little servant-maid, hurrying home, in the next About three miles from the little village of 30 i . Nn after Woerth the seme was against terrible 024-Im* Between Sth and 6th ets. northwest. ©f approach, Kossillon must have seen that the | _ “J suppose you will speak of it to Lucia,” he | *¢ene. Behind the curtain, Lucretia lingers a | Catskill, on the Hudson River, there stands a | odds, The Emperor sill found kimecit at the Bittle devotions whi inthe habit of dis- | said, smiling ih spite of himself at the droll side | MOment in the great bay-window, to look out | small weather-beaten house, ‘the home of a | head of 120.00 men at Metz, but iteas tone pensing liberally amd thoughtlessly to whatever | of the affair. WAINGsS. - , JOHN C. HOGAN, 713 Market Space, pretty g happened in his way had seemed to ‘ot unless you wish it. It is proverbial that Seen i Carintmas weather, wishing that | family of Germans of the name of Waltz. The | opposed to three armieseitherofwhichoutuim- | MengtcRse oP SGHIRGL Heese Cnty ane muntrs Residences. the Reais 5 was ended and oblivion begun. The | family, which consists of the father and the | bered hi - ountr: er to be the very words and actions tor which | Lu can’t keep asecret. With the best inten- | moonlight lends a fairy glamonr to the distant | mother and a son akout twenty-three years old, It is uninstructive to follow the narrative trom TENTS and FLAGS Yor sale or rent. she had listened and waited all her life; and | tions in the world, it will slip out.” hills and snow-crested fields; the frost glitters | obtains a livelihood by the cultivation of a | disaster to disaster until Sedan swamped im. | AWNING MATERIAL of all kinds for eale, nethaps Kossillon bac not the heart te dispel | ** Then she certainly doesn’t deserve to haye | OM the pane in fastastic imagery of summer- | ww eyard which surrounds the house. To this perial France and its army together. Tassory hs & time—that summer so far away, mis genuine MILDEW- BRAG. Sie iGHAM, HATTE! He never was seen to come out of the | moir is temperate inits tone, manly and digni- 1011 F Street, between aps inde! i bes to; that he has receiv. ‘ : fouse; nigbicions of foul play grew up inthe | tied. Here, by way of concluding tableau, the | the Spring Style of Brostway BLOCK, sod are you looking for your slip- | commun a ole Agent for t sion for the nonce, ally as there | the keeping of ours, he return i nd yet so pre- | house, on the second day of the present month, | of the surrender is told at length, the Emp-ror | PROOF AWsiNe might be no need % were certain | | Now Rossillon was one of those fortunate be- | Cious, Whose mere remembrance can warm her | there came an old German, of the name or Har- | being at great pains to explain how little part M CUNNIN the to part before many weeks, and time would be | ings who attach great value to whatever be- | Still. While she regrets it, someone pauses un- | mon Hulcher, and by practice a scissors- | he had in that transaction. Elsewhere the mes equally sure to dissolve the enchantment with | longs tothem. Ifa possession in years, they | Certainly there, in the half twilight, anc gentle touches. But how many things of | regard it with benign indifference; ifit is theirs, | PToaches her. whick we are certain prove themsely its worth grows with their growth and |“ Cinderell looking . ty, and on the sixteenth of May the | ex-lmperial author indulges in’a littie more pared to furnish New Hats made to order the baseless fabric of a dream! strengthens with their strength. It is a pity | Per?” asks atamiliar voice. She gtarts, and | father and son were arrested on the charge of | pathos and dramatic disposition of the scenery | {P6™, OF styles; aloo, an emortment of Tothe unwary heart Kossillon was aanger- | that such natures are rare, rather than that | turns to meet the blonde youth again, curling | murdering their guest. : than is necessary to historical statement, or ee ee ee : = ©us friend. his approaches were so like Fate's. | class whose appreciation of an object is in ex- | bis mustache and regarding her. Various evidences that Hulcher died a violent | even advisable except in a Bonaparte. AWNINGS, FLAGs, TENTS. His manners possessed « gracious familiarity | act proportion to the distance between them, | |“. 80 you don’t know me, Lucretia? A wig | death came to light, and under the increasing SE anion — Which flattered without offending, in virtue ot | whose blessings only brighten when they take | “4, mustiche make quite a success oi me, | pressure of this circumstantial testimony the | How A Danbury Astonishes his M. G. COPELAND, GREAT Te which jLucretia had seemed the tavored feo their flight. “Since Lucia was beyond Kos- | don’t they?” young man on Saturday promised to tell the Wife, j 643 Lontstans avenue, one door cast 7th street, PENNSYLVANia Rovte 1872 dan‘e of his ambitions and creed, of such sillon’s reach, he began to detect in ber attecta. |‘ Rossil.on! Oh, what made you truth. He was taken from the jail to his home, | _ It is very rarely indeed aman leaves his wite — cours. rows ashe bad tasted—a trick of nature, de- | tions that had passed for reawties; to discover manding sympathy in his pursuits and pros- | the shallows of her mind, the hollowness of her eee 10 which she responded In pason. It | heart; to rerceive a thousand « ~mter-charms. ou are not glad to see me’ and there made the following explanation: | in bed asleep and slips softly into the kitchen to | | AWNINGS for Btores, City and County Residences | TO regia Weer. 7 AND “Father is innocent, On May firstthe scissors. | surprise her by putting @ polish on the cook | "#Agrcss in style and fir GIN ‘Trains leave as follows: a you—” ory came to our house. I was down in the | stove. When he does, it isan event of some im- BOOMS DECORATED. = - 430, ‘es—no—how « How could gou never occurred to Lucretia to observe that | Once he hud seen her only in one light, and ai ; . After supper father and mother went to | portance in the family history, and the way he i Canvass made to order he had required no return of contidence on her | that so dazzling that it had rather misied him | _ “ Ob, I never thought of it’s being a mistake. | bed. Hulcher the Sscissors-grinder, went next, Hoes it affords material for edifying retiection | BANOING CLOTHS. oxnt-tr part; that he entertained no curlusity about her | than revealed Wer; now he wae begin ing to be- | [ ought to have known better—I—"” and I went to my room and opened my testa- | for days at atime. He tirst moistens the black- EB. TURTO: modes of thought and being, that her <oul lieve that he had painted her ‘in Luscetia’s | _“ L meant to-ask how For could waite me that | ment. As I laid down on the bed anevil spirst | ing by filling the saucer to the brim with water. | Jj, ~ eept so far as accident bad’ revealed it to him, | colors. Gradually ion was bringing out | Saucy letter of dismissal.”” . came over me. I went outdoors and got ahatchet. | Some of this he spills on his pants, but gen- CARPENTER, BUILDER, was @ mystery which he bad never cared to} Lu * strong points, ax heat brings out in- | | “* What else could Ido? T hope you will take | Hulcher was asleep, and I set the lamp | erally manages to get the greater part of it on = ” penetrate. visinle writing. Her shining qualities were be- | CaTe not to propose a second time in the dark, | down on the floor. My conscience fought | the carpet. Then he grasps the brush firmly in anD Bat the first evening was hardly the key- | coming apparent; the intimacy of their rela- | Mr. Rossillon. with all its might not to do the horril 2 act, | his right hand, and setting the saucer on the. note of the rest. Being the only gentleman | tionship was bringing into existence, or rather | _ ‘It is not very dark here; I can see your | but the evil spirit was the stronger. 1 took | floor where it is handy to step in. he goes to CONTRACTOR staying in the house at that ti they took | into play, fascinations of which he had never | f#ce; and I’m going to propose that you give me | up the hatchet and struck Hulcher on th work, and for the next fifteen minutes & most their pleasuring togethe: they galloped through dreamed, for which hitherto Lucretia had no | * Christmas present of—yourself!”” head with the hammer part. He made the - astounding complication of noises proceeds from light woods, and’ found out new pat demand. He had always thought her a nice | ‘‘ And Lucia?” falters Lucretia. , little noise. I then struck him twice with the | that kitchen. There is the whisk of the brash jays throngh green giooms where the partridge | sort of a girl, with plenty of common-sense and | , “ Lucia, thank Heaven, is a bygone folly. | blade. He struggled a little and then died. | as it glides over the smooth places, and then a was at home, and great fern fronds tossed in the @ pleasant manner; but when he came to study | | never loved her as I love you; { to the | sharp rap asit comesin contact with an unex- “ [nerer loved her ae I love you: it was a short- | I took the body out alone past the xp Fapasit comesin contact with a Wind and shook out their spices; where the | ber, to interest hitaeelf in her, to mabe lovee | liv cya sand I have you and the | stone wall, and then put a few blankets and | pected angle. There is a sort o neise Woices of Wirds, like distant cathedral bells, | her, he found that he had never known her. It | twilight at Echo Beach to thank for my escape. | stuf! over the body, Tleft the bode there auc, | made by Mimself, and which indicates eae GROCERS. €choed through the solitude, as ita hundred | was ike making a new acquaintance; for there | Wil! you give me my Christmas gift, or shall I | d lay; next day and the next night, when father | stove is occupying his entire attention, And | 7 = chimes were ringing; and sometimes they lost | are some women who never believe in them. | take it? : and mother were abed, I placed the body in a | this is occasionally relieved by sundry exclama- S. O'HARE & SON, their way, and sometimes a thunie selves, in their power of pleasing, hold them-| |‘: Hark! they are calling me: the curtain is | hole which I dug, and’ prayed for the man’s | tions which may or may not have reference to ‘WHOLESALE AND RETAIL GROCER: @vertook them, and made the air vocal, selvesin reserve, and never appear at their | @bout to rise. You may take it,” she answers, | soul that I had buried. I felt better then, f | the work in hand-such ass"Cuckt™ “C-b-r-i-s- i " ERS, Dlasted trees before their eyes; lighting the se- | best till some responsible person has indorsed | ‘°F J shall be late at the ball!”” cleaned up in the house, and so father thought | t-0-p-h-e-r!” ‘Merciful Heaven!” ‘Thunder BE. eret avenues of the forest; for an fnstattreveal- | them. It requires the magnetism of love tode- | _‘“ Takecare; there's a step here. Give me | in the morning that the Scissors-grinder had | and lightning:” and the like. ‘The final nolse a es, ing the flower in the calyx, the dew upon the | velop their power. Like plants, they refuse to | Your hand, darlin, n stolen the missing blanket. I found in his | is @snap of something like crockery, which is (Between M and N ste.) thors, the tangle of bough am! brier and climb- | blostom, or rather are incapable of blossoming, |‘ 4 step in the dark?” pocket #60 or $70 in bills and currency, and | Slightly moved with a proper proportion of pure ing vine, and hiding all as suddenly. Or they | without sunshine. “‘T wouldn't care if life were made up of | some silver coin. I took the machine dowh be- | English, and about thi ‘the the sharer ef his eknicked upon the. Black Creek that woun’ ee progress of events proved that one lover | *tps in the dark, if by their means you were in- | hind the fence, and locked up the bell in my | joys and sorrows makes her appearance in the NEW BUTTER! NEW CHEESE! tal 4 iB & crook rinth to the sea beneath an as good as another to Lucia, as h ile | duced to give me your hand.” trunk. Three nights afterward | went up the | picturesque attire a woman always assumes at 6 BANKERS AND DEALERS IN FOREIGN AND overhanging growth; or spread their table on | affections were easil ons And so the play ended in downright earnest. Fond near Coxmackie on foot and there lett part that hout—corsets and {hoop shirt predomina- ae ae) See: 2S: Se DOMESTIC EXCHANGE, gathered stran, hints of ro- a having unseltishly de- larper’s Bazar. of Hulcher’s machine, and nai a letter to ing—at spectacle e upon is as- | HAMS, SUGAB CURED HAMS léc. PEK LB. > nd danger from the drift that the tide | cided te save Lucretin's feeling, wae net ou ea the telegraph pole. I burned his clothes and tonlahing to the farthest ex me. The stove ave REMOVED to their new Banking House om of the autumn, boots.” washed up. It was 4 season of frolic happi- | tle surprised to find, at the e appears In a half-dress uniform of blacking and | 16 16 16 16 16 26 | cn thonies for : Ngee ed : I on the site formerly occupied by them. Bess, when neither seemed pre~ that he h: taki i Use of the Eustachian Fube. The truthfulness of this statement is sh es, and seems to be taki: “ Sonepat tat ach seteved'a mhoicsvme | samerime: "fic ee "Sryeotug Satins | Th chef emer the Fararhan espe toal | yy ofaer sar aat Mitettentae WOR? | luca at oat Sho aRtr the The ek Se en es O* BSE LOS sbare of attention. Yet, im the mean time, Fate | with Lucia had become a synonym for misery. | Ow @ free interchange of air between the ear | pointed out tothe officers the place where the | Of the house, apparently riveted to the enk Was silently settling the matter for them all. Fate, in opposing him, had offered him the | #04 the throat, and this is Sreeccingly impor- | murdered man was buried, and upon digging | Spot, standa there in his shirt sleeves, staring | C#AHAM FLOUR. wer ee 643 D STREET. One day Lucretia sprained her ankle in one | great opportunity of his life. Indeed, Kossillon | tt; and it is very im) t also t! SEVENTH, it its use | they found the mangled body. We must be- | With all his might at aspot in the carpet, ani | Becker's Wheaten Grits, Hecker's Farina, Rye Of their excursions, and was forced to drop out | Was sosure of himself and so delighted with his | 'm this respect should be understood. Persons | lieve, therefore, that this ang man did read | vainly endeavoring to comprehend how’ it all Flour, Barley Tapioca, Sago, Manioca, a: EECTIONS. wea tena <p werctog magoontne—wg ow of these jaunts by sea and land; one might say | experiment that he thought it no treachery to | WhO go down in diving bells soon begin to feel a | his Bible before killing Hulcher, and that he | happened, while ‘patches of agreeable lustre Duryea's Corn Starch. with Banking ‘ap2- that it was an unlucky thing for Lucretia, be- | write to his own familiar friend, to whom he | 8Tea* pressure in the ears, and, if the depth is | found comfort, after the dreadful burial, in | illuminate his face and shirt front; and stove | Wax Candies, Cross - 3 y. cause it taught Kossilion, who had not yet pene- | would have trusted his som! ffreat, the feeling becomes fan eet painful. | praying tor the soul of the murdered man. | blacking and raw spots equally divide posses- man Olive Ol Seana Bsessss Sees Ciel beneats the auxtece of hes cin “Thave taken a step inthe dark—no false | This arises from the fact that in the diving beli | This strange confusion of moral notions affords | sion of Olive Oi, Sauces, step, let me assure you. I fancied myself in | the pressure of the air is very much increased, | ground for much curious but unsatisfactory | om both h: CINCINNATI OLEINE SOAP J. H. SQUIER & Co., . 9 love. Youth can not wait even tor daylight. 1 | 1» order to balance the weight of the water | speculation. It is easy tosay that he was dis- | ping into i the ashes into the carpet B 1446 PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE, ived from Lucia’s fascinations. proposed in the dark to the wrong person, and | ®bove; and thus it presses with great force | ordered in his wits, but that is the vaguest of | # aor the from the brush. She | Duryea’s Satin Gloss Starch, Baker’: Chocolate, OPPOSITE WILLARD'S BOTEL, the sick angic had been Lucia was accepted. Laccepted the sftuation, and | Upon the membrance of the drum, which, if | explanation: takes it all in at glance, and with true woman: ‘Cocoa, and Cocoa Shells, Broma, Prune, WASHINGTON, D. © have been reverse!. However, when there was | have been happy in discovering that she is the | the Eustachian tube has been kept closed, has = sympathy says, -‘Well, I hope you are satish Currants, Baisina, Satins nothing better to do. the two were kind enough | one woman designed for me from the founda- | bly the ordinary uncompressed airon the inner | THE CLERGY OF ENGLAND seem to have a | ow.” And the expression of hia teec nite MEDICINAL LIQUORS Ree ae coe to gather about Lucretia’s sofa and recount | tion of the world: Few could do better in day- | Sidé to sustain it. Itis therfore forced inward | bottomless ca) Rag ret themselves into | more eloquently than words that he is.—Dun- = a Ss made everywhere; om their day's adventures, leaving how much un- | light.” and put upon the stretch,and might be even | scrapes. A - Dr. Hodgins has been sum- } bury News. Qid Port Wine, French Brandy Poop Bae ee recounted; they brought her bouquets of wild he familiar friend read this interesting | broker. Many cases, indeed, have occurred of | moned by nis clerk ‘for spitting in his face on Feat Wi lecture” Brats. ‘ flowers, -prays of red berries, keepsakes from | item to bis sweetheart—a bit of property ac- | injury to the ear, producing permanent deaf- | Sunday Svening just outside the church door.” Czar and Kaiser. — ¥, California Brandy. F. BRO: D, the beach. Hossillon had always a word of sy; quired since his last meeting with illon. | Bess, from descents in diving bells undertaken | Mr. Stewart, a Liverpool rector, is at odds with The London cea ed thus Erimiy describes Cc. S. OHARE & SON, pathetic sorrow for her lows of the summer | ‘* Moral,” said that young lady, “always pro. | DY persons ignorant of the way in which the ear | his vestry for putting up an obnoxieus cross, Weather. . roker, between MandN, | So.939 Penna. ave., Room 6, Washington, D.Oj a 213 7 . 2. pose in the dark. How do you like my hair ar- | 8 made; though the simple precaution of tre- | and at a vestry meeting there wasalmost sriet, r arrived at St. Petersburg on | —Z2-!" _1813 7th etn It was such a shame you could not have | rangedin thisstyle? Madame Alamende sa; quent swallow! uftices to ward off all mis- | The vicar of Landulph owing to disagreements, afternoon, on a long-promised visit to F BOUR: deen with us to-day,” he would say, regarding | it’s the very latest. Iwish you would take | chief. For, ir the Eustachian tube is thus | finds his fold reduced to ree, and has been cat oak cevetes aoe ew, Czar Alexan- Saw : her compas.onately: since he had begun to | some notice!” opened, again and again, as the pressure of the publicly told by one of his recalcitrant flock that It is an occasion which gives room for a RECEIVED DIRECT taste the ewests of love himeclf, he had more | ‘The sweetheart was a friend of Luerett Outside air increases, the same compressed air | ‘‘he talked nonsense,” which wasn’t a correct | eg pagcidiem - The Czar confers upon | trom the Mills in tendernes for her share of jits bitterness. “All Lucretia was to Christmas at the Glen- = — we — the inside of a tor a sheep to A > his shepherd. oid ved —- eo og and same, I ucretia’s lively imagination tor- | havens,’ andat New-Year’s Kossillon was to 'y membrance equall: en co} ation of Landulph met on | also the Iron Cross lerit, with the inscri| ‘, tured her with the probable result of all these | meet her at her own hearth-stone, where the | Pressed upon from both sides by the air, ‘and s9 | Easter Monday there was a row about matters | tion “For Valor, a semranicieliac oe aes ”’ and makes him beside a pres- Excursions, but she tirmly refused to believe in | engagement was to be made public.’ They had | '8 free from strain. The same precaution is ne- | and things in general, and especially coneeras ent of a portrait of himself asword, and an ink- ill sell to families 6@ cents per barre less than the suggestion. deacia baa & world full (of | arranged a programme at Mrs. Glenbaven'e for pve dig tremor fovea wdlager fmt ing the mecramental wine ig V eat declared ceodlugs pie mer oes Prices ‘EAS all marked down. b om she cared quite as much as for | Christmas-eve mes then there C or lat not enou, n provid the cel = —— Nowiion were ard iced. ould be | theutrteal: ty wind op produced upon the membrane, though in the | bration of the Eucharist. The church waciea | “moved and overwhelmed” fy rettect~ i A cet sould nat Uelicte'n ‘any thing'se “arae: Sue | arsaseare Sey ona'asaiserten ana Rate | ooRCttcoahag sce | Reece cote aet oe lige of cba tans meet meee ae a * any thing so unfair. She | Turnan were ‘one mort th _ from Pleasant Valley ‘Company, See ound, wih inns fai at everything | enum ane taaing Si aati sons wi meat t sane Seay ould come out right in the event; that true | as happy as two larks in building-time. Seve could net pase unrequited; that mi and “Ido , Kate, “that you and Ru- broken hearts were dreams of the novelist. together.’ ‘Truth to tell, Lucres.a was able to move abou: think it mach more im + t that ina es brief of time. ys = ees % space ime. Perhaps ia get on well with him, hed Lu- a GF ecalon: passion. emergency without all: GuostLy Brvt Rincino.—Extraordinary. 2 Bat the danger was tie ves, sides of the vase calianes tt ig coe peri ces in sige be m when Lucretia, for the the pressure tide; and, § Frank Fleury, in 8; |, Il. One night time since her accident, joined the party, strangest thing how his door-beil ‘rang, but servant found no- body at the door, and the thing was attributed which had been en! by _ op ph neg neighbor- to a mischievous » and very naturally, until DESTROYING A SCHOOL.—Colonel Higginsen in his paper on the “Education of Women,” in Boston on Wednesday, remarked that uring the short-lived experiment at a high serious i i ud Say ite bat cH i

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