Evening Star Newspaper, December 29, 1877, Page 7

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OLD MAN GRAM. most faultless j on nose fairly quivered with angry HOLIDAY GooDs. _| STEAMERS, &e. Cloud of rich, golden-brown nair taatacemed | “2pene sqrament snd Tea | Pele my life to you, Katharine,” wis the Bonn. T? Stable Ahead Par Norice. > | Pror Poromac — ~ LANDINGS. — to have arranged itself; while a full and | contemptible behavior yesterday. .I reply; “you will not surely leave ime in this All Distances to b.°*¢ Wagon. = &) F “Vester meven th eamer rounded though slender figure of medium | ber whit I said to you at our last interview. | way?” [From the Turf, Field ang Ferm.) — a Oe Captain, Wa * height was Cad mw nr d up in an attitude of | I hear you take kindly te your victuals. Look “You owe me nothing!" she exclaimed, The biack mare May Bird, by 2 Wilkes, LARGE as quae wii be rea: ~ Sng reguistion nabiimenie; Bei opie scldes | ""iiconming John's undlagaiion enjoyment of | Sum kimecit” “ows Save Gowe as much fof | py Hiyndyk x) Hambietoutan, See | Cee Re DAY C0008 | DATas THURSDAY “e : John's undis 0) Seif. “ > Rests, ant brags, noticed what Kate Carneth had on. | nis “vtetuais,” Carroll coukt uot restrain his | And. "wish this monstrous falsehood trem | Rlember of Robert Bouner’s celebrated static | JUST RECEIVED. = She has been on the turf fora number of years, n ed beeen of hietaas The artist's eye was fascinated at once; the | amusement at his fair advetsary’s continued bar on her lips, Katharine burst into tears. ase A . : A id justly has beet as one ot the | artist’s ear was thunderstruck, Breathiesslv | thrusts at what she evidently considered the roll gathered her closely in his | 3" sou ~ | _ 600 hotties of LUBIN'S EXTRACT, at 50e..s0id — | WRs,tntruder, confronted the tiot astonished | weak point in his armor ad arms, and whispered, as he kissed’ the tears EStcclies lee bas oat areas eats ae pre Sy Ms, socenonressene vollins, and burst forth -— | pounded up wit! shing eyes. away: he . se ; a | chook here: Mr. Hollins: you're the fellow ‘Are you laughing at me,sir-or amy note? | "My darling? Say that you love me, and | {Out When she was able to get there, neverthe- | yt" FFLERS et Boe wh at twelve years old. want—ves, sir, you.” d Isn't it written and speit tike a lady? It was unexceptjonable in all but the matter: and it was quite evident that the redoubtable will be my own true wife, and Lam satisfied.” | 1s she has won some of the hardest contested en°s and Chikiren’s White ies, Gentlemen — =o »é races: vitnessed in the country. Her | HDK ‘im boxes. wnarsO-tr a You are mocking me!” cried Katharine, as Wo Fy : 7 fancy bar BO |. HB. KILLMON, Agent, waren idlgnation siruggied in her quiver: record of 2:21 in harness, 2:19% to saddle, ts line of KID GLOVES, all the new ————L___ ia ‘re 7 t this “ere pocket" Mrs. Carneth!” he reptied, seated. Allow | aot ces | sedis, cheap, Katharine was by no means uneducated. | ing volce. * What is there in common between.| not Macfue ae te ae eo ee does Kare of Ladies CLOAKS. Elegant | WY T*TER ARRANGEMENT. sit ur peach-butter on my “Tam laughing, Mrs. Carneth, at my friend | us two? Haven't I seen from the wuiNg | at a season of the year whentoat time is out of | Cloak My little key w 5 s! Tain't to be come over | Rollins,” was the somewhat hypocritical rep! that we never could be anything toeach other, | ihe question in the cold climate of the New T found in a rag sh in that way. I've come on business, and I | “he does take kindly to his victuals, and would | ai ly av war Why do you per. | England states, she won a Wagon race at Mys- A place to sleep and» job tovto, (ont want any of your fooling. I've been told | it not be somewhat cruel, to deprive him of so | seeute me with your hollow offers of love? | serie “tales, she won a wagon race a pd And managrrio make my shilling two. that you 1 ditin’t use to pull it even with | an enjoyment?” | What am I but a wild, untutored creature, Yesierday, a gentleman said to us: “It is ru. Aud thet» stwars Joe, and I just come to ask you if you did say | He did not dream, when his erratic compan. | whom your Srand relations would flout—whom | mored that’ Mr. Bonuer has purchased May s+ Now see w | You, yourself, wo ion knocked over his hewn | an) ratus and ind, soon despise and hate? as a Jhase was astonished at the imperturbable | took herself off in a whirlwind, that she had | And yet I might have been diflerent—1 have | Bd as a mate for Music, with the view of In his den ate tcher"s shop | calmness of the acclimated John, Who merely | restrained an almost irresistible desire to | been cheated of my happiness. Oh! my wasted, | 323; ne 4, double team which will eclipse the DAY. TEURSD, Ite ites in hi sks, replied: strike him in the face. As she vanished, he | wasted life!” and she sobbed wildly. team, Small Hopes and Lady Mac, at Fleetwood ap m. 1 rusks, “1 am not at all surprised at your hea: 4 1 innnisten to me, Katharine,” he replied, with | Park’ We replied at the time that we knew : oe to pick sad cea, this; but Idid not say so. Lonly said that infinite tenderness. |“ [have seen you at your | nothing of the sale of May Bird, but felt satis. | anaes SON eS TRS a arth in his tough okt Jaw, had heard you did not live happily together, | forgotten on the hillside: and, rearranging his | very worst, and yet I neither hate hor despise fied from what we had seen with our own eyes j Ru Woon. tenes Bir whet’ ter ‘ terrible tusks! and wondered if the report was true.” materials, he soon produced a spirited sketch, | you. Your glorious dower of beauty, your | that it was not necessary Mr. Bonner to Bib. 5 ‘i ii « E awn, | ch ho Gi B06 lone that afterward bloomed into an exquisite cabi- | noble nature, have led me eaptive—and love purehase Mr. Walker's mare to maki ateam TUESDAYS, ne. | net picture, universally admired at the exhibi- | will soon teach you all that you need: learn. h Would pull a road-wagon in : that Cone river. if. he has grown “ tion as **Cross Purposes.” | Your present life is not your natural sphere : uld, with John Taylor, Music, Molsey Cosriceen gray. er stagnant life with his | — And at his work the artist pondered: “Who | and, transplanted to 8 congenial soil, you will a, Wellesley Boy, Erie, Pocahontas and o'clock a, m.. growled old mar e stamp of the ly foot, | will play ‘Petruchio’ to tame this ‘Katha. | bloom with fresh grace and beauty, the fairest mnand, make several teams ead . of the bare, “dimy jenere | tines! Not John Rollins, surely, for she eould | flower there.” Sunline ua with So whe im tomas bee s | the Company"s Wharf, foot of scene oi sedis Gone wine gestive of scene: a beauty | wind him with the greatest ease around her ey walked home in twilight, Katharine a anon a Saas [might have 9 wife to make my broth, epic yo nan anil | little finger. Poor Rollins! he soliloquized, | with downeast eyes, and a fine eambrie hand. ae ay ene Bees one oo Peer e ees | protic oh A call me father. 7 z “What an unfortunate entanglement!” kerchief, with “Chase Carroll” daintily em- hour we met Mr. Bonner, and on | Invite attention to thetr large and varied collection | "B. J. ACCINELLY, Agent. be aft-r my ehiak, ye ed Nemesis paused for two or three | *Chgse Carroll concluded that the shooting of | broidered in one corner, bound upon her arm, a. trem Gia that lee of valuable and elegant | he? sn hs. and resumed: his friend had been indefinitely postponed | and feeling so utterly quiet and subdued ¢ ay Bird for ® f ph Rw Jobn Kelias, Pil tell you what? | when, one evening soon after these events, | she almost wondered at her own identity, | phased May lind for #4, but not cence | IT altermatcty tesve Pier 6! Rat gee c dt come here and manage this | John Rollins entered the ehtown opera | Almost her last slang was uttered to her com: | [ir® Gacmutice mee Gees Which recently SUITABLE FOR HOLIDAY GIFTS, j ES sttermesety business, but I just toid him Lcould pan my | house, where the most promiscuous and varied | panion that afternoon, as she informed him | jndiced him to add ‘ 1, Keen Jim, | In Cloth, Calf and Morocco Bindings, and’ com- | evers SATURDAY - 0 own mineral; and Pll thank attend to | entertainments were held. in devated attend: | that “she never would have thought he'd pan Caviar anh otheee te section. He | prising editions of all styles and prices of | SATURDAY at 6 0. yours. rt want a SI ance on Mrs. ¢ out so wel d tha 1 ned that his contest had been with the |)... 0 the works of the best authors in same day mmodore, and that he did not propose | POFTRY. FICTION. THE DRAM T OUR HABITS. | to keep up the siruggle himself now that the | BIOGRAPHY, ESSAYS, TRA (as IMPU- | blaze of bea at is what I John was about to speak DENCE !—eapital lette HOW WE G HISTORY, Freight take lowest rat oe a. aken at lowest rates. For information St (tice over Metropalitan Bank, 15th atreste say. You just mind your own affairs, and Te iter shat ae Commodore Was in his g Whatever rival- URAL HisTORY, SCIENCE, ‘ke. F ret P.A- DENHAM, Agent, Water street, mine "t.” (with rising in hings that are novel are liable to be regard- | ry existed must. b on by th nd | ENCYCLOPEDSAS, itr 7 gait p ea Y The ewe drew fre | GALLERIES OF ant, es Se) St ee = old — | s that his son Alley would drive ITH SCRAP PICTURES, LYDE'S 3 CX PRESS MeteaL ; as thous | his horses against. the time made by the som of ALL THE LATE HOLIDAY BOOKS oe The last word was a t shriek; and, apable of better things | tee deat Gaon ae ee oe A full assortment of BIBLES. and PRAYER | PHILADELPHIA xp ne dead Commodore, He also gave us nt of and PHIL ALEXANDRIA, WASH with-a final stamp of als nt that evening Ww inission to make public a tact that we Ret |” BUOKS, and PRAYERS and HYMNALS in | INGTON AND GEORGETOWN, sail: | the gi or fury, ent ‘f na donna mi F Known for nearly two m ‘ and acompiete stock of | Connecting at Philadelphia with Clyde's Line my head, contortions, nned with Lanter The lady it j MaisnGa whe. During Mr. Bonner’s absence in Kentucky, ‘ILES AND TOY BOOKS, for Boston, Prowidence, and New slike a deat gE parasol, breaking | mnths. | | | i i wer, we visited es TUMISTAAS aid NEW YEAR RDS. Dave. ing. ver she att ; Tarrytown, ny with sev and NE EAR'S CARDS, - a gar whieh h were mide id with a genticinen, at in judging PHOTOGRAPH ALBUMS, Saturday, at 22m, hand during the | i ly displ gentlemen in judging PORTFOL a. t between Music and John T lriven by Mr. Alley Bouner. Was very close between ihe t chon Musie in fit of uncontrotiab he replied, with | ud nd adaptability to circum. | and then too! ried men Know so well how | ing the whole | to assume quickly.“ Drop your waist, so covering the rent, Nl tell you, at che n ACKGAMMON BOARDS, j os INKSTANDS, Ere. Etc. | © held a oe - pseutat the | }USSELL'S ICE CREAM of Joh | FOR THE HOLIDAYS. semation api to 3. 1, JOUNSON All the usual flavors, Fancy Creamsand Rasp- | Sari’ Wachingrn Dera ee ARO Bee verry Tees in figure molds, Charlotte Ruse, Jelties, | ler street, Geurgetown, D.C: Wit E CLYDE &c., at 427 NEW YORK AVENUE. 415-1m ha eS SRS oe deed she replied, shedding y all look like'a fright. 1 Ver dire toappear on the street again. eteh! I shall be the talk of the whole a ty, inquired cited his friend's risi- anger of her trying to shoot | bilities, he heard that t ly had confided to i jousiy. him the astounding faet that “she had a was the easy never was real m: Now see where Dam," beast + dust see where Dam to-day | their lives, and M id,” remark. | yyke yn 2 pd man Gram — “It eannot be helped, Lam afr: Qreactan FOR HOLIDAY TRADE. Norte GERMAN LLOYD. wouldn't mind doing it, - 1 bat | ed the gentleman rueiully. "We must ze : yee : carwen but Edo not think she will consider ft fhe added. was enough to | home somehow. And really, my dear. 1 think Gils, John, Taylor was bald op —F5 STEAMSHIP LISh BETWRES NEW TORE, - r oft her head—but she | the dress will look quite nicely it will be a ft ich. - etcamers < une ois she? what is she? where does she | novel yhow.” han Sane a ew tee be Sy son > poured rapidly from Chase Carroll's ad of hers, it seemed, a ge “My ; exclaimed the lady, wring- person with dowacast eyes that | ing lier hands. “It will be utterly Spoi ‘The skirts will sweep up unutterable filth ment of facts should be suf- | | TONLET SETS and VASES; new designs, at all Passage: verybody that it was not | Prices Ye ork to Southampton, La ficient to convine ‘Katherine Baring Carneth’ she writes herself; not a bad name, either, and she comes Bi . r r i pcessary ¥ obert ” er te chase na. be : (1 hate that kind!” parenthest will be loaded with mud, and Rin nine ees Oe ee at ee nee CHAMBER SETS; beautiful stytes, $00 got stcorage, $30. currendy of good blood—well connected, [ believe, in | speaker, vindictively). was. boarding at, the nd little sticks, and du team performance of Mr, W. H. Vanderbilt “ and, though pure American to the back. | same. hotel, and so entwined herself in a orth wag : ; s 2 Bowling Green, N. York. bominable person! The struggle next year for the wagon-team su- | | TEA SETS; entirely new patterns at astonishing —— —_——.. a said the | premacy will be ¥ atched with no Hitile interest Sgures. MERI AN LINE OF STEAMSHIPS by the people of New York and elsewhere. In ft c “ sail every rect this connection, itr pd Othe Piaved Water ing Pgh yan — eae Ha Pn —_ ic ne. Widow of Joe Carneth—a rather bad | stealthy and unsuspected n lot, who ruined himself in the Invincible mine ng Joe th two years ago, and then blew his brains out, if ly with quite av: he had any. Lives alone with her father, old | But the jeweler of whom nner about the he presented her se- ple set of mal i it was boug! is so bad as that.” poor man, trying to smile.“ But see here. dear?) Lamas unfor be interest ng to state | and other Plated Ware of Rogers’ best . 4 that it is universally conceded that-Mr. Robert Baring, in that dismal house on the ¢ afriend and admirer ¢ ari how ridiculous you hav sented oe enn steal danse GERS* . Cabin, intermediate and steerage tickets 1. it sh 3 formed her. of the pu and the 1] have battered it out of ail s Fd Gag at all dictanon Hite sate at | LERT TOES BECOME Een, TABLE Cue crs, 14m F strect. Aloo, Ageats foe tie thee One Tis quite as well t Pile made a Uee-line. as she expressed ft, for | parasol. It looks—it looks like a section of a | H'mtic up to two miles ever’ made DYany een, : ey ya + ee ‘ icktt give him trou | | friend and rival's trunk. badly-used stove pipe. Lam ashamed to be | {aman haAmety i b Il these goods I will sell at astonishing LOW TO _ fitin a deal of trout | j amped down in that trunk,” she | seen‘on the street with it roaawann FIGURES. YUNARD LINE, j ne po ia pontl ned. the any mile, to re — rhe ool... - he stick is broken off nearly up to the Net . view chances silvery Ie : shade. “I'dare not go out ‘without It, but-it | 127d eee ston,” the Sicamers ot this fine takes specie the town because of his peculiarly man ; looks so absurd that [shall be the laughing om 418 Seventh street, ‘On the outward pasange frase Queenstown manners—in such marked contrast got ‘em stock of all we meet.” ack plainly show. New York or Boston, crossing the meridian of a *E. In Harper's Magazine for erality of Ranehtown residents. Whata sin- | an 3 went y from home. The | pauai By way of conclusion, we alate Opposite Odd Fellows’ Hall. | gt 43 lat. of nothing to the north of <8. | 1 nectio | fel et ith ms ry ime On t omeward crossing meridie se it is Mr. Bonner’s opinion that two ROTHERS, pesmge Ls bag ee Gimnidity a be harn together to beat 2:18. Mens = of 60 at 42 lat., or nothing to the north of 48. HIS WESTERN KATHARINE. | | ; became bold. Marching out to the street, the = ae - 1015 PENNSYLVANIA AVENUE, THE BRITISH AND NORTH AMERICAS a ‘i ; | ex. na sort of hor- | went on their way looking as if nothing TRAITS OF SUMNER. BETWEEN SEW DORK UNO LEV RRP: (Bla R. Church in Appleton’s.} r strangely-be: Id about five | ii happened. Peopie stared at them curiously m . CALLING Av CORK Hakbone o> Treo P nd the wind at Raneh- | 9 He had the misfortune, 5 _but itdied. She | but they were known and respected, ai rerett Hale, ta Boston Book Buitetin.) Conner LiTH STREET. From New ¥ | From New Yore, town was out on its daily “bender.” It was was pis wilt sing or whistle, perhaps, if Husion is | there were no smiles and no. ‘que: ‘ Jnore loyal “ Abyssinia, Jan. 2| Abyssinia, Wed., Feb. altogether a vicious and i-regulated wind. de. | made to it, and then leave the room ruptly | tions. “The ladies of Paris occasionally look | than Mr. Sumner had in Mass We beg to announce that our arrangements are | Parthia... Wed. Jan. 9| Parthia... Wed. lighting in and bent on confusion: With his own fortune and that of | foran hysterical burst of wevping. For this | around for a back ladies they | Side the city of Boston. TI | now complete, and that our display of ina......Wed..Jan.16) China... Wed. and it eame sweeping down throngh the nar- worried the latter in the most amia- | i Katharine reall atender heart that | have passed. It M chusetts, which is, th: Seythia. Wed. gan-38 | Scythia - Wed. row valley like the wolf on the fold. Down it | ble manner possible into her grave: and then 1s never found its right master yet.” other part of the in Fine Bindi HOLIDAY BOOKS Batavia Le I came through th *p Colorado cajious car- | gathered up his r perty, which |“ You seem to hold the ke id his friend, } the ‘Kward in Fine ings, and ns ee ing all before it in its mad caree | consisted principal + Katharine, | curtly ; : but by no | FANCY GooDs RATE OF PASSAGE. Cabin. $00 a ou fruiteans, crinotine and paper and rags in | and wended his ne won- | | Jolin Rollins smiled ; but it was the same pe- | at the Countes | in Russiaand Crushed Morocco, gold, according to accommodation. The $60 €very stages of dirt, all the nameless articles | derful seheme in his brain for charming gold | cull ile that had before followed certain | remark. “It swe | Tae Thich goto make up the picturesque bulk of | out of the mountain-tastnesses: with seacely | re of Carroll's. in her rear. | JUVENILES, PRAYER BOOKS, Tiekets to Paris, Bid. suburban debris, ha m started with giddy reck- | r to the workers. I think | re some verses, | ALBUMS, POCKET BOOKS and WALLETS, | tickets on favorable terms, Jessness on a mad dit ce through the tow | the miners fairly hate thim: h ;, always rals-| © that I got possession of Us | persy eS | “CHESS, CHECKERS, CRIBBAGE, Steerage tickets to and from all he inhabitants were not visible—expe: | ii hem to the | ne c they would y ion o} upted and de- | PLAYING © : rates. ough pane i waxbersence iy t | Minny ness ania ea Heshowst have, is wa Datuched all political combinations: whieh ii | gag poheAXING CARDS, WRITING Desi, | Beil” Ging, Havre. Antworp. an ber pars sible, w . Ki | ented,some wo : | complain of trug in the market ; but there »bserve the Countess’ parasol! The touched. The this bold pub- aie ‘i — t_aud at the Company’ Streets were quite de: iy - | Some marvelous crusher ; some open-sesan | te grace and pathos about th is down to the tip of the Countess’ nose. J . Of absolutely | Win be on exhibition DECEMBER 10th. and | office, won Home py & ‘both steerage mond-eyed ¢ & with aspect of | the granite portals of the ench t directly to Carroll's heart. W There's utility for you. What is ashade for ny political ambi which we cordially invite every ove to inspect be- | cabin, to OTIS BIG E LOW, 6u6 7th street. thoughtful he gulch near by, | but they all prove a delusi 13 but to keep the sun off? What is the use of a | that time, who believed’ what they be: fore making their selections. | jangs-ly CHAS. G. FRANCKLYN, Agent, Tepresented in the entire region. | ‘old man Bai is now s! and dared say it: sufficiently well. “Because of yard of stick? It is an unnecessary weight, nd it serves to let the sun shine in under the | this, t ri had the plaj erew to Womanhoe What was wind What was di made him Se nem? What was rain? | ; “ait, ator. Because of this, | tomes prise ne = main Seureeat the generally? re were shade. It is the s pate, RAILROADS. v > | they kept him in the = Shining nug; deep, there were | wild rose, full of gi | The Co be happy. All this time a great number of the people OLIDAY GoopDs, | => asaeeaene Ale OD alka. Sparkling gralas of precious ore’ to be had for | sultore tar apa | ; “By Jove!” Temarked. the gentleman wis | Who knew lim personally could hardiy abide | JL 5 BALTIMORE AND ONTO BAIL ROAD, y dug on stolidly. and let | It was said that h r n her, looked at him, “the Count’s hat is a stunn him. They ealled him arrogant, which he was LADIES’ SES F8o, ~ . her wishes, and that her temper was—well, with knitted’ brow: thistime. Looks as if it had been aceidenta f They called him awkward, which he DRESS GOODS, &c. NATIONAL LINE AND SHORT ROUTB To THE whatever it was, it did not prevent Joe Carn: like the pestilenc eth, the richest speculator in Colorade hat is there elongated. That’ it. j was. He had none of the elegances of social > life. He would put a thorn into the sensitive | go qnateJusttecetved ak Ladies’ Beaver | | oe Regtrne by Cloaks, up to $40, | sore of a politician as easily as he would tread Al peabe ee) iso, Blankets, Shawls, Silks, and fine Dress u art. Studied carel nd | about me, T wonder, that is so repulsive? Has | you know. Seems to be stiff, too. That's a " .. | Seems to have a supertiuous amount of vac: articular se do you allude?” | um: but what's a hat unless you have enou His NORTH A WEST. NORTHWEST AND SOUTHWEST. she ever Spol to you of me?’ “To what owner of the Invincible. from laying fleree | to the Ranehtown beauty. Joe was of nondescript houses, some just put up—oth- ers just tumbling down; but with no atte y's dress, and he would never guess he haa wounded either. He would talk W. W. BUBDETTE & CO. he loaded asked Rollins Soasper anny. anete are | of it? Wonder where the Count got it? | | t , at the rural harmony that ean beaut costly presents, he paid the old | several of that persuasion in Ranchtown.” invention, probabl ast like hit about himself, if it happened to be necessary | No. 928 Trm Sr. | fogs. These poor dwellings stretch off singly | man's debts ‘and fually Katharine consented | Carroll started and reddened’ he twody knows how to dress tastefully eqaai te | 0 illuminate his. object, as readily as hie | Ne. 906 K St. WW. gh } ng into the dim disiance—makingone shudder for | to marry him—though telling him, with her | tensely provoked at himself. the Count. It is the hat of hats. It is the | Would talk about Julius Caesar. Ps ps he } the frightful loneliness of those whom fate has | usual frankness, that she didn't love him, and “Tallude.” he continued, with forced ealm- brightest and most artistic and most valuable | borrowed this habit from the French. There EDUCATIONAL. j Set solitary in such uneanny places. didn’t want to marry any one. This did not | ness, “to Mrs. Carneth; itis not pleasant to | hat that ever came from the maker's.”” Was no real conceit in this, but critics thought oa ALAN Ads. | it, 3 . , Hagers- The beauty of the distant view stands ou! prevent her, however, from becoming Mrs. | be an object of dislike. . This was centuries ago. A week after the | there was. The truth was, that he was always = - | town, Point of Rocks and Way Stations. against these forsaken-looking houses in bold | Carneth: but it probably saved her from any | | She has uot spoken of shooting you.” re. | event all Paris had a peculiar, parasol absorbed So profoundly in his object, that LECTIC SEMINARY. — Mr. and Mrs. Z. | 8:30—New York, Philadelphia, Boston and Baltde Telief, and seems to rebuke the irreverence of | very serious grief when, two or three years | marked John very coolly. “*It strikes me that | likewise the trail and the stove pipe hat. Since | thought very litile of himself, or other people, Pot te oe ke for both sexes | more Express, Parlor Car wo New York aa@ With suet unsightly Pxcresconees. yanime | afterward. her husband made such a melodra- | she cuce sald there were the makings of @ | then they have traveled alloverthe world,and, | Who Were pursuing it together. So the great | JANUAY 2 1877. at 1494 Q st. near 14th. It 0200 ae Le Clactanatt, Ci ont Fu fith such unsightly excrescenees. A turbu- | mnatic end. leaving her about as penniless ay | man in you, if you could get rid of your non. | dear children, they are with us yet. “We | aim Was gained, what matter who stumbled | Will imelude Academie and. a new ane peecticn | OM eate Mepe ee a ‘Branca, Jent mountain-stream cleaves the canon just | she was before. As to what she is, you have | Sense . .¢ | Stepped on one of ‘them a moment ago. Our | or even fell on the gg All this has been | method. For particutars, see circulars'at book | except Sunday, Through car for beyond the town: and the dark firs fringing | seen for yourself—exceedingly pretty and free Again_a crimson streak crossed Carroll's ged with another of them, re. | perfectly well known by the men of his | stores: Bureau of Information, 1427 F st.. and | Parlor Car to Gratton, and ng Care to its brink, and clinging for support tothe frow from the slightest approach to affectation, but | brow. This hz eae oe then, a ntly to make another ion in | OWN time; and it comes out all the more ex- | at 1313 Corcoran st. 415-1m uch ashe d T—worth the x But, alas! we are not a count.— | Quisitively in the biography, because Mr. ing rags. are bent like tense bows beneath the | awful “bad form’ even for the west. Shoots, | ed him very = as J sky. continued assaults of the fierce winds. On the | smokes, whistles, plays piano, writes poetry, | making over! ‘a8 conscious of an attrac- | [Rochester Democrat. rerce, his biographer, who is of a younger CORRIDOR. Prefecvors) ‘Penmanship, | 9:00—*Baltimore and Way Stations. (Qn Sunday felt side lies ac i puthern | and talks siang, gossine, does & good dont hese a similar to that which a lithe, flery mus. | [#echester Democr — ‘eneration, does hot seem to understand it Eiiocping sud chant-iinnd tonshr in cet ed ee ge) slopes already Fs ng life and there, but, as she herself Would phrase it seas for thejeye ote Mexican horse-tamer. Torture in India. ee ana —— to think a people easy courses of lessons. T! — of bud and bloss« nks | ‘out-bucks’ every Woman in nehtown, ai er indomita was at first her greatest a = saa . - who dislike r. Sumner, or who teed. Lessons io-) and crest are whit a living pic | isthe leading character of the town, Now. charm: but afterw saw better things in | PRISONERS SCALED CRUELLY AND DONE TO | nim, disliked the cause which he sustained. | Schoo — Feige | 210 Baltimore. Euicott City, Annapolis ane ture of May nestiing at the teet of December. | n't fallin love with her, Chase; for I think | her. She was the incarnation of health, ‘life sis Mr. Sumner never had the slightest sense of = 1:30—New York and Philadelphia, Baltimore Ex- No outlet from this mountain fastuess seems | of marrying her myself some day, when she | and hope. She was tolerably well educated, in From the. Times of India.) humor. He would tell stories of his conversa- | Q\PENCERIAN BUSINESS COLLEGE, press, (On Sunday to Baltimore only, stop- sight; but the eastellated roe reforms—as she undoubtedly will. spite o her slang: had a fresh, elastic nature, | _ The following facts, elicitedat the trialat the | tions with President Lincoln, in which the | A inl Ping at all stations.) are pa pair, and through the ec} Chase Carroll shuddered at the thought. | that knew not how to repine; and bore with | Tecent sessions in North Arcot of a ease in | President was making fun of him all along, daughters Seal’ educated Ti con- | 220 Baltimore and Way Gtations, (Winchester there ¢ against ‘the pure hori Marry her! Outside of his buried hopes, the | beautiful patience the vagaries of her peevish, | Which five natives were charged with having | and he never once guessed it. “I talked to the | Genfcg‘instraction and henelog I pen} cL te aa deeper azure of the remote plains shin very idea Of this western anomaly to fall in | broken-lown old father. i murd five of their caste people, show | President for hours,” he said once, “and after tions. English , Busi- press. F ok vin Relgy. . lik it. love with was altogether repulsive to his fas- He met her coming out of hovels—heé look- | that torture is not yet extinet in that part of tl all, he got up and something which seemed | ness Penmanship, Business Forms, Book! } | 4:35—*Point of Kocks, Frederick, . OF | tidious tastes. Hi. other shudd ideal woman An- | ing for beauty, she for sufte asthe hateful | Went with open-handed but tself, “The wife of an Italian | rosity, and was both criticised ssed over bh 1z—where she | World: The prisoiers’ prereeers | Sif Thad not s a Elocution, Physical E: ac. small quantity of cumboo, and the deceased ae ree en eae. een | dee ‘4 " hh, su: \s i Day tu ‘Winchester and Stations, On Sui was, he hardly knew what fun was. Nothing per quartér, or $8 per month, payable on enter- to Point of Hocks and Way Stations only. i r. Pierce's picture of his | 1. A student’s quarter or year begins at time of | 4.40. a and three others bein; faet obtrude spected of having had re droll than } 4:40—*Balt! . Annapolis and Way r cation, Sut | opera singe: At such times the little basket on her arm | @ hand in the robbery, they were, by the orde! He was defending a man for send- | (tay Fevers deneibt eee That | 5:90—*Philadeiphia, Norfolk and are all blind but the artists. | “Don't elevate your aristroeratie nose,” | was in piquant contrast to exaggerated | of the first prisoner,who Was the village reddy lenge. So, “with his characteristic | strated circular, giving particulars, sent on appli- yy A HE One of them, Chase Carroll by name, is not | pursued the placid John: “ is no hypo- | masculinity assumed for the feminine purpose | (headman,) seized and tied, some to the trank’s ness,” he had to review the celebrated | Cation. Genastemir teats Sosa an artist property—his wonderful gift of brusit | crite, whatever her faults’ may b vd that, | of drawing attention from herdeeds of mercy, | of trees, and others to large stones. In the | English’ and French duels, Incky was. the | “di-3in H, C, SPENCER, Principal. 6:50—*Baltimore and Way Stations, muly worn asa sort of orna- | Jet me tell you, is a great deal fora woman. i | | One day a ease of unusual wretchedness had | first case the feet of the unfortunate victins court, indeed, if he did not go. back into tour- ——- s mon 6:55. Columbus Express. Sleeping aiast charm, like that of | mean by this that she despises little, under- | brought tears to her eys; and, meeting were tied above ground, but the mode adopted | naments and the history of chivalry! One has ae DCLDENT OF MONG, me a for- nded doings of all sorts—would not i a &6 face wate = os eS ee pectin) tk ee = ly to repro¢ ee in emery the unicipal J REMINGTON BAT Aa a E timore oe r for effeci—and, rather than put the best | suddenly claimed “I wish tha ere bound e! aces exposed to the rt of those days, with Judge Thacher on ¥ ‘assistants, Circulars: ‘Music stores. . yy There se 1 ne earthly reason why e | foot foremost, if it did not happen to com swear! “I will just say ‘d—n* once—there!” | Scorching rays of the sun, with their hands tied ench and Mr. Parker for the eommon- = . = Slerping cn oe ae Kicoarg: Carroll shoukd be an artist. He hed fortune, | its own accord, she would be far 1 and she Was off like the swift-flying deer. above their heads, The whole five having been | wealth, to see why such men did not, at the | ———-——— 9:30-"New York, Philuielphts and Balt family. friends, everything to recommend him | hoof for the i i firmly bound, cold water was, by the orders of | plush. form. a ve high conception of the ESSONS IN aco ntéeucdtan ‘Express. Sleeping Car to New York, and strew his path with roses: and he might | { she saw John Ro vatehed his friend with a sort | the; ner, poured upon the ligatures, | judgment of the oung attorney, who at 23 and Grock, by FREDERICE. MUSSAEUS, Special Sleeping Car wo Pblsdelphia. hever have been good for anything, as he cer- nd making for art, | of inexp! et Ranchtown had | with the object of tightening the bonds, the: | years of age favored them with ‘such a plea. | formert bE oly So" gines | “Dally. Other traius dally, except Sunday. tainly never would have become acquainted you, mind,) throw herself | be able points, and he | increasing the suffering of the suspected rtunately for the world, in times of crisis | jorinwest. With Ranchtown, had he not fortunately been | upon you without a word or a Seream, and re- | fully expected Carroll to have be Visited by what is popularly known as a “dis- | ceive the death-dealing missile in her own long ago; but still he lin; n disgusted | After this the first prisoner poured se: tist could | Water ov men do not ask whether their leaders are men t or not, but whether they are men of 1877 the hands and arms of th breast. ave told himself what he was waiting for, | rs. The object of thi s and principle. In Charles Sumner, » lovely, this little soulless thingon | - And a woman,” said Chase, quietly, “who, ut he gradually fell into the habit of going to | sion of their guilt, and a statement implicating | Massachusetts had a man who was not afraid. hall the love of a deep | if she did totlike you, wo mes of | others. After the men had suffered exeruciat. = 4 A EY ae : maf hesitate to po tha Vgimg ~ playing —— eae ; oy for eighth rye ; t —— —— ity. so ethereal in her re. {you herself. John—John? Tam sorry to | chess with him. On thesevccasions Katharine | ing agony for eight hours, and were released, ‘ihe biow came of her | outyou hers gone—such infatuation is'un- | Would Invariably absent herself, going cithes | twas found that one of them was lend ans Two Disappointed Brides. Jopemen: ular opera tenor, a huge | worthy of you. With or without a pretext as soon as he ap- | the others were unable to move. Two of them | WEDDINGS THAT DID NOT COME OFF—A MIN- mans of and fat, he was utterly | “Jona sinlied, but his smile was neither ehild- peared. and remaining until his departure. He | died in hospital, whither they’ were sent for ISTER'S DAUGHTER FAINTS. Stunned. soextremely novel a sensa- | like nor bland: it had a world of meaning in it | Was baffled at every turn, and provoked at him- | treatment; one expired in his village, while [From the Cincinnati Enquirer.) tion to Cha rrell to be deprived of a k which his a did notsee. Histhoughts | self an a Katharine, he tried in vain toshake | the fifth was able to give his evidence before | There was to have been a wedding. at the babyhood al- | were busy wit having fre pair of blue dilated eyes— | off the spell that seemed to bind himto Ranch- | the committing magistrate, but never rallied thing he wa Ways had the moon when he cried for that | just the kind ote yes that always had power to town as w ith iron bands. But fate one day seut | from the effects of the torture, and died after (carte scmek hake Soasliee: is ty of las donly realize the astonishing fact by y him out of his sober senses—and a cloud | 4 crisis in the most unexpected manner, ie case co e court of ses- y Al arrett jiece Blow degrees, “When the truth finally came | ot'suuny: halts Dut, this he told himsel{c wee sions. ‘The medical evidence was sickening in | M&¥¥, Aun Barrett, the ni a home tolim he felt that life was over ail that part of it that was worth havin; 4 : tleast. | the admiration of the artist and not of the | Up the valley, where a noisy brook flowed, | itsdetails, as it is described how the arms, | 224 Ollie Brown. a clerk in Washington. ab a 8 some - Hours reserved for Private Lessons and Classes. He’ | man. ‘The latter shuddered with abhorrence | where the sloping hills were gay with violet, | hands and lower extremities of the victims | HviUitions had been sent out some time be: | Hours seeerved for Erivate Lewons and Cl ‘Was not living atallin the world he had thought | at the personality that materialized these ex. | gold-and-erimson cactus-flowers, and the snow- | had'beeome gangrenous, and how the fingers | ¢ be bride assembled to do honor to the | 3P-™.; other week days between 12 and 1. 0c! self in—it had turned out quite another | quisite belongings. clad“ silver-heels ped over two moun- | had rotted and ‘dropped off. The authority | tyent. planet: and at present his one desire was to | “the next day Chase Carroll met Mrs, Car. | talus of deep purple Blog Katherise Careerh | ca Tae rn pea ae OEY uitiog prneeaa peraeboea on ote ae BMY ae ste nw Sunderland's” Church, get away from it. neth face to face in the principal street of | sauntered Pasta leserted mining village that | Went in a great measure to deterthe s) ators exhibition, and the Rev. Father was ‘year a Sa Or It is astonishing how readily forgotten or | Ranchtown. He raised his hat with a courtly | lay, in its weird desolation, likea blot upon the | of this wholesale murder from interfering on ready, When it was discovered that ie- advantages of see new cir- Neglected friends will rise to the surface of ww; but the lady passed him deflantly, her | flower-gemmed hill-side. behalf of the tortured men. The court con- groom Was not on hand. ine prtnn, icin, or ASE One's memory when there is any particular | hands in the jaunty pockets of her outer gar- | | To her came Chase Carroll, hurrying from | victed the first, second, fourth and fifth pris. | Sternation. prevailed, and there was xB, 131 4s st. 8... need for them: and. in one of his many reve | ments, heels clinking. ribbons flying, and | the opposite direction as he caught a glimpse | oners, and sentenced the first to death and the | to and froig search of the absent amen hat YOUNG LADIESBOARD- ries over his wrongs and sorrows, the deserted | whistling like a mocking-bird as she went. of her charming face and sunny hair; and then | others to transportation for life. no trace of him could be found, and in agony me CcpoRNE ty [pAnemepesne. lover suddenly bethought him of a certain She called out over her shoulder, as an after | and there he told her of his love and his desire SS Miss Barrett put off her bridal robes, the of Ts nO term John Rollins—an excellent fellow at college, | thought, ‘Got your boots blacked, ain't your” | for her improvement. * EXECUTION BY THE GUILLOTINE.—A friend ny dismi: and the house which was (00L OF 907 Sth ot. Int exten horadotwo or tite years, | a Sunda fudsacuce song genuine anche | “unde awiened® geal 2ar tn Hake | SieeeuParh Sudiuc tac ugtr Mets | Fo hare een tae arene of miethand recy | (SOLON MOSS) Pains tae jo two or three yeat fas y indulgence among gen neh- . Rat s 7 * Sineter he had sent: numerous Invitations to ie := rine, and come to me, my ideal of ail that is | prison and in the public street, It took place | heard fp mae: Henge patter tee (with Tree lessous, &c..) $3 to$18. suglé-ly Chase to follow him; but, being a poor corre- | Carroll almost tore his hair with disgust. | beautiful and loveable.” i rr 3 the gray of dawn, and at the precise hour he had run off to Washington. Of even acknowledged V noone to take this beautiful, half- ‘Thank you very much, sir,” replied the | indicated Tn the sentence. A squad of soidiers | “The fuilowing lette th particulars ES. ee crications. Now. however, while won. Wid tniug tn band and take a civilied princess, wlth. a mock courtesy, “but £ am | Med outof the gates. and in a twinkling put | another affair somewhat siallar im shesuetor THE TRAD dering what to do with himself, John Rollins’ | woman of her? quite ‘satisfied with myself as tam. As to | together the machinery of the guillotine, some | {ote above, ‘though in this case the intended virtues stood out in a very prominent light: — being ‘your's’ I'd rather be my own—and I | of them sprinkling sawdust on the pavement | bridegroom and Ranchtown, Colorado, appeared the one Seino a few days later to one of the hills | have certainly given you no reason to sup- | while it was being put up. Before this was 820 o. a. m. and 4:90 p. m. formance of his contract: itawas aways raving about the veewsrthe | Meuwc'“fat of easy graces large straw net | "Carrol could not chy thigs and with’st ar | het ad sncedtioner sa Ne spitaad Stine | wAthoua, Wut. Dee. 1i-—ihe Ute town of grand cafions, the gorgeous wild flowers, and filled ‘with fscoms Iying near—smail, | of ineffable disdain, ‘Katharine was pursuing | marched out. a ateter religious exercises here, has been in a flutter of excitement since } I a Ee shoaler, she siddenly tuted ray Bison, the criminal with his hands bound | wasto have taken place Wainente eee —_ — He eat lanes ona quictiakes venlid: | “At the same time a bullet whizzed by, graz- | terthea ferthe his eae Gene orward over the James Chisman, a youth of twenty summers, Inthe law office of the former, discussing © : : those death-like arms and gazed into into the aerating he ty was for she ‘of the i it SovPinenh ganna ace tee | REP te nd reunites | So agate manta ge | ar a ks Rea eat se ence ot fae | ins eRe aaa | cate Zea eau ae ares | rtaeine al eer p see torah explain, en the caement | toad regarding eta Shoat enti | er Ci'ike Rina and thereon the threshold sod | "For answer, Katharine smiled and drew py Xrm. Your. | parts yoknown au ncaruation of the tembest ingly was the | famom walf expected. but Business ike slip Sanday note, ialnted, if i 4 i i d § He fi i i i i i i ed p pearls g shot forth thunder- Tes pees, wo ot note. bits ot abuses Chile the delleate nostrils of a Want seer”

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