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THE EVENING STAR: WASHINGTON D. C.. SATURDAY. JULY 26, 1890-SIXTEEN PAGES; THE NEW ST. MARY'S, |**5=26Gitity.met “""") iy PATR CLIO'S NAME. [Seats te pens |, ACCURATE Muasvuxamers, | scnoots FoR Danse maine BAT MEETS JIM. A London Establishment That Might |Two Bad Western Men Meet Each May 18, 1842, three weeks before Father Alig oo Tee sibnianes tion as Possibie. Well be Imitated Here. Other in Chicago. died, the pastorate was given to Rev. Francis +qq | Woman, with her prematurely white hair fram- | From the Phils Peean. | From na Zz The Corner Stone of a Handsome |. Tres who was succeeded July 17, 1889, by | Women who Make a Study of His) ing’ face ot glowing pink and white, where | "orate 22 pepo man reckoned « long be Dasloet a In the busiest and most fashionable thorough- fare in London is situated a school where the | as one ever saw at a ministerial convention, whole art of dress making is taught from be- | vet they both had recor ds larger than an in- ginning to end, as trades are taught at techni- | efficient police captain's term of office. One cal‘schools, The term is six months. The | was “Jim,” the sole survivor of the Allisom class rooms are open from 10 o'clock in the | bapthors, and the other was “Rat” Masterson. morning until 6 o'clock in the evening. A girl | They mot last night in a down-town resort and learns to cut, fit, sew, drape and make a dress | drank each other's health in foaming cham- in every detail in six months and is given ®| pagne. ty i the play of expression is constantly changin; rss < : : baa ei porcine pins pel abagree torical Subjects. Her productions are marked by a humor thai | ‘stance as “day's journes” and a shorter Edifice to be Laid Tomorrow. ee ee ee ie as, irresintiblo in ite, mirth, and. withal, | distance a so many “paces,” and the height Nov: : swootly sympathetic an juman, often im-| Of a horse as so “4 ” the church twas ‘heidi Odeon Hall, on tis | A FLOURISHING SOCIETY. | pressing the rath tat the source of nugiter | the arts ane secmaty tanah” the needs of A CHURCH WITH A HISTORY. | northeast corner of Pennsylvania avenue and a eo are mination of lengths and di 414 street. The hall was the property of Mra, Mrs. Julin Schayer is the author of the ngths and distances have become Ailer, who allowed it to be used for the pur-| Bright People Who Meet in Mrs. King’s PL pd a ne — ~ ~ writer ot prs and ape exacting, until now the art ' oug of the highes: easurit Puther Aligand His Work in Wasb- | Po free of charge. During the second and| pPartors—The Ladies’ Historical Se- a ‘ing almost become in iteelf a fiae * 8 , order, Mrs. Schayer is the mother of Nona ington—Some of the @riginal Mem- Seteee eked dee or Waskennien an fhe | clety—Its Methods and Ite Work—| Storch, who is a devoted studout of masic cod od In an address delivered diploma. The cost of learning is about $35.| «The inst time Isaw you, Jim,” said Masters ber» of the Congregation—The O14 | strovts, and it is said. that between, $6,000 and Topics Considered. een menader reads beautifully; the | Society of American Mechanice “ergs The endless complaints heard on every side 0 Building and the New One, paki Spec building, as will ale $40,000 ——— fords flow from her mouth like water in a | shear of Allegheny City gave some interesting | *T°™ everybody against incompetent drese eee ae from Father Alig’s estate and #15,000 collected HE Ladies’ Historical Society was | brook. eis aki illustrations of this point. “It has been very | @&KeF#, who send out ill-fitting and badly made en Morg and Wyatt ‘Doc? from the cougremstion by Father Glaab and founded by Mra. Horatio King, wife of poe ene = ey — oan —_ ‘ppropriately remarked,” says Mr. Brashear, | ‘T¢se% indicate that a school for dress making ‘ouand I had a row with the rustlers? OR FORTY-THREE YEARS the substan- | Mr. Frank Miller. Mr. Buchanan's Postmaster General. Her | aid she padi besos ths seid “that the arm of King Henry I, or the baste * | in New York would be a benefaction to sewing me nay ‘ did remember it. Poor tial brick edifice known as St. Mary's rae xe cHURcH. object was to bring together a circlet of | Mrs, Wm, H. Browne's papers are witty and | Corn, though possibly they furnished standecte | MIE ce ee tees | Meech Soothe te eee Church and located on 5th street between | The new church will be erected upon the ladies of literary tastes who could be | keen in the dissection of events, and she gar- | f00d enough for that time, would hardly sat- | clothes are rained aed! Siress makers, but | 4idn't know a gun from a derby hat, Wyatt G and H streets northwest stoad a use- | site of the old one, but will be much larger | sympathetic and helpful to each other and pur- | nishes the most solemn facts with a vivacity | 18fy the demands of our modern mechanics or fal monument to the peace and pros-} and handsomer and will be separated from | sue a course of study and grow in knowledge | | originality that endow them with a uew- oot makers, who work very often within the vs . Pega t " f si di _.. | born interest, imit of one-thousandth of ‘an inch and even Perity of the German Catholics of this city. It | the parsonage, which stands on the adjoining | harmoniously together. Probably there never Nira, Lawrence Weldon ts a clever writer | one-tenth of this apparently minute tity Was with almost a feeling of regret that one | lot, by 15 feet, so as to admit lignt to the | was a gentle soul with a beneficent desire in upon historic topics which seem to inspire her | with surprising unconcern and no lessencuraay, noticed the work of demolition of this old and — windows of the church and walle it that has realized all its hopes to the full so | with ® brilliant fancy that painjs in softened | Prof. Wm. A. Rogers has also shown that many interesting structure. On the 14th of April the | Poioms a Frectenr ele te tay motes entirely as Mrs. King in this instance, The | tints the things that have always been pro-| of our modern mechanics can calliper to one Workmen began tearing the old building down | with 9 central tower infront 163 feet in height. | first meeting was of eight ladies, who sep a hitherto in glaring colors, thirty-thousandth of an inch,” t t nee Mrs. Cleveland Abbe brings a genial method | These, however, mares to make room for a new. larger and more | The building will be of Gothic design. with | assembled by invitation at Mrs. King’s home, | ante sreit ay Breat fairness into. all discus- | when compared with those denaasied in mak- handsome church, the corner stone of which | large traceried windows, anglo buttresses with | wo, 707 H street, November 1, 1895, to form a| sions. Afra, Amen Draper. is a philosopher of | ing some of the latest appliances in use among will be laid tomorrow. ——— Pinnacles and three deep, rag reading circle. The Indies were Mrs. Asaph | the most generous and kindly school of crit- | astronomers, The science of astronomer ie If one but takes the trouble to inquire into | foprwayy, with carved caps end spandrels in | irall, fre, Henry Doubleday, Mrs. Francke | icism of the pust, and Mrs. J. H. Gilman's es | deed, has put upon thereto es eee aD the history of the old ehurch he is sure to un- | Georgetown blue gneiss, with » brick backing Bridget inthe kitchen wails the fact that | Earp. he's dead, too. Got killed in arow im eo erd ac bbtaher ooaee Darango. By jove, Bat, you and Lare the Young Women's Christian Association | OMY ones of the old gang left.” has a sewing depariment superintonded by « ‘Yer, and if it hadn't been for ‘Doc’ Holli« woman of excellent skill and artistic taste. | 487 we wouldn't be alive eit Tt was down Applicants are admitted between the ages of | '@ Tucson, Ari continued Masterson, turn- thirteen and thirty-five, and no sum is exacted | 1" toa third member of the party, “Wyatt for the teaching. The pupils according to | Erp was marsha! of the town at the time and their ability handle the needle more or less | ¥¢ Were his assistants. The rustlers were —- skillfully and leave the department competent | IMs to run us out of town so that cou! to do plain sewing and to make children’s | P®ve things their own way. Allison and I bad dresses. The clever ones of taste and skill | Ut arrested acouple of the toughestof the might make successful dress makers, but they | €®& When we wero attacked. We emptied our do not make dresses during their term of learn- | S¥"* into the rescuing party and didn't have ing. A little maid of thirteen years proved to | Snother shot left, We had {ost about given the be the best sewer in a class recently finished in | thing up when who shouid come riding down this department. The girl who wishes to learn | the street but “Doc’ Holliday. He had a shot- dress making must pick up the art as best she | €82 in his hand, and when he saw our fix he can in the establishments in which she works, | @smounted and came up under cover of his As an apprentice she runs errands, rips, bastes, | boT*e. The rustlers saw him, and sew his hems coh ases the general drudgery of dress | *80tgun, too. Talk about riot guns! Why, making, and at the end of six months has little | there's nothing im the world that will bring practical or helpful knowledge of the art. Per- | cfowd to terms quicker'a « shotgun with aps she is taught to make sleeves and does | CUPle of big charges of buckshot in it, Well, Williams, Mrs. T. M. Talbott, Mrs. C. M. Clarke, | says rie full a ee realism, although they ae = imposed j i a ; Mi el Lenman, Mrs. John M. Gregory | are often couched in verse, is can bo easily understood w! e corth meng interesting facts connected with aa sues inches thick made of the Peopcepee ome ae evatem in| _ Mra, W. H. Holmes, Mrs, Eastman and Mrs, | sider the sort of work which “Aspe tied Soa opkiamn ie beurre lame alent Pepe sible of the old material will bo | Poi reading and the best results in. their | Springer havo been prevented by, ill health | his turn, 1s expected. to do for us or which been prominently interested in it. rs ao pom aoe = maning chureh, | £tudy the ladics decided to take up periods in | from participating in the active work of the so- | he imposes upon himself in the interest of The water table, deoe ailte eg oe ne ce etopa | history and to read and discuss the events, art | city for the pust year, Mrs. 8. C. Hoff- Time measures, to take an illustra- ps Bey m loor = sre ent conga : and literature of the selected epoch, Hence | man, who died this spring, was the first mem- rie; By @ reached wonderful accuracy. When thei = the wretbs, ‘arches, | the name of historical was varned by the mem- | ber of the society to pass to the other shore. | the big bell strikes the houre of the dial we Tanne, Can a ee amis, tcring | bers. It is possible that never before was a| _ Mrs.Carl Barusisa strong and vigorous writer, | pull ont our Watches and are satisfied if they and band. tourses, panel werk copeags, eter | successful socicty run with ¥o little machinery | dissecting all questions with an excellent | re correct within a quarter of wnnocton ae, ang and courses, panel-work, copings, tc. | ay ig this one, with the cxception of the famous | method, Her article read’ before tt ocicty | tunately our astronomer at the Allegheny Ob- Juarriomade of stone from either the Senecs | bot Luck Cinb of New York city, that did not | lust season upon the “Institutions Gleaning in | servatory,” says Mev cwptthndey H - Paris” Was center = satiafled.” It theca “is note easily thet and nothing else for the rest of her life or eee ae eaprag oa — it, but the = a just : ave even a constitution to its name. vas a rly paper. = ‘e stars will but shine he is not| as long as she is loys T ivi roke and run when they saw ‘Doc’ advancing stone from Dauphin county; Lorn mau ae Somes Ge asian Mrs, Pitkin and Mrs, Wareare always sweet | content if the error bo sixty times less. ie.,.a| of work provente Regen tent from learaing | "ith. his shoteun, "Doct bad the reputation tori- | and gentle and eminently Iadylike in the doar | quarter of a second, and I recently saw the old sense of that word in their opinions of the | figures for soveral days’ ‘time’ work where the subjects brought before them. In their re- | errors were not greater than three onehue, will be built a stone turret inclosing a winding | A lady becomes a member of the “Histori staircase; tho one on the soath side conducting | eal” by signifying her accoptanco in writing in from the first floor to the choir gallery and the | answer to an invitation to join sent by the s0-| scarchos they find much of goodness in hu- | dredths of a second. We all_know other from the first floor to above the ceiling, | ciety, Sho may withdraw at any time by certi- | man nature in all ages to be theakful for. benefit of this time iceneattion to fant 8 BATS Recens to the upper part of the tower | fring her intention of so doing to the chair-| Mrs. Knowlton, Mra J.D. Langhorn, Mrs,W. | centers, und if human ingenuity could buthave The metal work of the tower and spire will | mn in writing, The officers are a temporary | O. Atwater, Mra, J. H. Outhwaite and Mrs, | the trains keep time with the stars we should be of copper, while the cross surmounting the irman and scribe. The ‘members presids, | Mendenhall will enter the lists for active work | Dever have the paradoxical phenomenon of twe SPARC Mill be gilt with pure gold leaf. | succossively, in the alpbabetical order of their | in the socioty next winter. trains endeavoring to occupy the some track at ‘The roof of the whole church, including the and are appointed at the beginning of | Mrs, J.C. Black, Mrs. A, E, Stevenson, Mra. | the same time,” spire and baptistry, will be covered with slate. | een ane - : ee . —— The side walk, freq “front of church, ‘will be | ‘2¢,¥ear in advance so that the program for | Mary E. Nealy and Mrs, H. W. Spofford have | To attain this degree of accuracy the astron- the whole system. waist hands make | Of being a killer in those days, and when he nothing but waists, the skirt makers devote | 8°t the drop on a man it was good-bye, Joha.” their time wholly to making skirts and those |, Probably no man in the west was better who are artistic and are apt at designing spend | Known in his time than Doc Holliday, He their time draping and arranging trimmings of | ¥®* bout fifty years old when he died of dresses. This system no doubt insures a per- | CoNsmption in Denver a couple of years fection and finish in each one’s work it might | Though never a quarrelsome man, during not otherwise have, but when an ambitious | !tter part of his life he was especially peace- girl with more verve, force and capability than | f@!. and used to say that all he wanted was to the rest leaves the ranks and starte in business | be let alone. In most of hia fights he had law, for herself then the grave mistakes of this sort | OF the sembiance of law, on his side. He once ; all the meetings may be arranged. The mect- | contributed much in past years to the pleasure | omer must be i i i of trai 5 told a friend of his in Leadville that he didn’t re ie cores retreats (as | nana ad ae riday daring the winter, | and profit of the society, but are no longer, by | ment which is all but porfertin tren tenien | 6000 inbeatinees erteae Meee at stein an know how many men he had killed in his life, . A » beginni: th the last Friday in November | reason of absence ft tl it, ther causes, j ° Fi a food, but he thonght th bet 4 bataf pavelta conten aac pecatils sess [ook ning with tho las Bi ay RE =a e from the city or other cau and adjustment, Its journals must be turned | ace, bat alamentablelack of practical knowl- | Dut he thought the number must excoed thirty. . | on the rol! of membership, 80 accurately and i $ The society meets at 11 o'clock in the drawing | Mrs, Abby Gould Woolson when here last | inthe right position tet i np pop rooms in Mrs, King’s home, and continues its | season took part one morning in the extempore | from zonith to horizon without’ swerving by exercises until 1, o'clock. Mra. King then | discussion that always follows the reading of @ | so much as a fraction ofa hair's beendth Roce rves a dainty collation to the members, who | paper, The subject was French and she gave so a and will be a worthy successor of the plairer but substantial and serviceable one which has given way to it. edge of cutting and fitting spoils her finest | However much he desired a qi confections. She may make dresses cheap and | 8d settied down it was impossible for him get numerous customers, and as there are ten | '© Obtain it. The story of his inst shooting incompetent dress makers to every good onc | fair is as follows: While in Denver about life after be THE INTERIOR. Y the true directi: : ‘a “ rh. seven years ag ard that a brother of one : = i i - | going out to mingle with a world whose ideals | was prized by the society. must not 3 i 5 ae was in town looking for him. Now Hollidal The land upon which the charch wae, Built) re ye the milddle and tworaide eaiog for | are not alware anlofty inv character as those | “Hey. AD. untiewtoy: Rey, Frank Sewell, | Mu Bet be toucted by the warm band and | mente und. irritations caused by ilfitang, and i badly made dressca, was not afraid of any man that ever lived, but ‘A echool tor dress making would make many | he Wanted peace and quict. So when he heard ahousekeeper independentof dress makers, Ty | that a man was lookiny for him he took « quiet she knew the art she could make her own | ‘iP to Leadville. While in asaloon there one drenses and be able te Geass Bother sndtann | might the man, who wns aguabler nomen becomingly with less expense, for the price of | AU=tin. came in.” Holliday was loaning against making a dress is often many times the cost of | te end of the bar, talking to the proprietor. the material, Plain women who haven't the | AUSt! walked up and accosted him. fatal gift of beauty could make themselves at-| _ “Now, see here.” said Doc. in rather « plead~ tractive by studying their defects and beat | ing tone, “I don't want trouble with anybody. was a donation from Gen. Van Ness, who was e four | they have evoked from the morning's stud Prof. Thos, Davidson, Dr. J. W. Gregory and | air, lest the insteae ee eed, Om Currents of Congressman from New York. The general | A500 ball foot so wigth Treas of iron] The daty of each member of the society is | Prof, Thox, Wilson titve lectared before. the | bythe urea ea rament be, thrown out of level was the lucky one out of many youngand dash- | Columns, from each of which spring twelve | to obtain historical information or to collect | socisty during the past year. Take another illustration: Ove of the diff ‘a sieve tee tend of Marcia is molded ribs, intersecting the center and cross | material pertaining to the subject under dis- Pa —-. =I cult problems upon which ed vero “3 a wise father, “crusty David Burns.” wae. an | "D% forming fan-shaped groining and making | cussion and bring it beiore the ladies of the | AN OUSING IN THE Woops, | {iltproblems upon | bah (m scontaey: ete Ree ey holder in the Distr ed ames | @ network of arches and ribs of graceful de-| society, All written communications are the — accurate determinstinn trons Gane? is the eee eee nn ee ian tote a eae ened | sign, extend down the side aisles. property of the society unless specially re- | A Champion Snake Story from the Cash= | gun. Not to go ine wee see ane of the an extensive plantation covering what is now | “the nave will be terminated by an octagonal | screed by their authors Ne foes sec collscted town Mountains, methods employed for this purpose it may’ be cur ouie coronene ai Nd house, | ®P8¢ and the aisles by arched recesses, forming | and no expenses. incurred that are not antici- pias said that they all resolve thenw est = 4 Thict is still standing back of the State, Way | ®**uctuary 30 feet in depth, with sacristics on | pated by the genial hostess, Correspondence of THe EvENIxa STAR. meelves in the en + A into a determination of the t semi- | Points and adopting a style of dress which will | Al! I ask is to be let alone.” i aud Navy Department near B street northwest. | for ot ties entero te orice Blaced on the TOPICS CONSIDERED. Ix tae Castrrows Mouxtarss, July 19. _ | diameter of the earth as viewed by an smegix. | subdue the oue and enhance the other. A Pd Ed ee lito perms After the new city began building up the sule | confeasionals on each side of the central en. |. 12 the five years of the rociety’s existence AYS come and go all too quickly, and = rete at the center of the sun. The ro- bap pel regen or agin bizarre, awa ee of his land made him very rich, and every- i S the ladies ii itudied Italy, its history, an- already I look forward with regret to- | Sults thus far obtained by the different meth- 2 Possibilities for making money at dress | ©". where his daughter was kuown as the “beax.| ce. The choir gallery will occupy tho tower | the ladies nave studie y, its history, an 8 1 dp making are not appreciated by the unskiliful. |. tle this thing peacefully,” cone Many women have retired from Dusiuess com. firmed Doc. ' «-As I said, I don't want any fight, paratively wealthy, and live in mach comfort if | 4!! 1 want is peace and . not luxury on the income derived from dress ‘euce ve d—d,” ejaculated Austin, and as making. The salaries earned by girls working | #@ *Poke he drow a revolver from his pocket. in shops and large dress making establishment, |, Before he could discharge it, however, he compare favorably with the wages earned in lay upon the floor a corpse, with « bullet from Other departments open to woieen. Sleeve | Holiday's revolver in his heart. bove the vestibules and will be | cient, art and literature, for two years: two ward the hour when this pleasurable | °’* or by different astronomers using the h _ - \d the spac 5 tiful heiress of Washington.” After obtaining | °™ A 7 : * i is Same methods, are fairly but not exactly con- several years’ social and literary training reached 5 the winding stairways in the | years to Greece, ancient and modern, and one outing must close. It is one succession | cordant. The angular measure sought is now 2 , turrets, year to France. Svime of tho original papers f Salighta: onl ibis 4 m cultivated family im Baltimore, Marcia re- : - k Glee" of new delights, only possible in a | agreed to be less than 9”. “It is almost con, turned to Washington, where she soon found | _,1he floors of the aisles and baptistry will bo | contributed have ‘beon sketches of “Horace, ; , cor abe gs : i tainly,” says Prof. Young, “between 8.75” and " “Cesar,” “Ovid.” “Charlemagne,” “The sibvl- | Tesion like this, From mountain to settlement ly,” ay iF, eon many admirers among the young members of | S620 wi? be’ of wobite MEE CAT HE watned line Books,” “Fall of the Westorn Empire,” | and from settlement to mountain my busy Caos bee ne mocond xt cree, which Yo a Dutch | Sass. The body of the auditorium will be | “Events that Led tothe Sacking of Rome,” | find their way. ‘This is literally a land of milk Fe nate ae etronomers, backed by the rn s ; z - skill of instrument makers, is taxed to elimi- ¥ insee around with “Italian Literature of the Twelfth and Thir- | and h —and butter milk. I find the peo- +4 xe elimi- “Doc” was not looking for trouble, but he fomily, oft ted the humble cottage and, | Wtiuscoted all around with cypress and the | ‘Italian | oa.” “Ds eee and honey—an i. poet | ante, isn more than the angle subtended by a | Makers earn from $5 to $10 a week, as much | | : ory: | ’ being bright and handsome, soon won Mareis’s | Pe¥# Will be made of oak. See es omoante and the Spiritual | pie correspond with the physical features of | singic hair ut the thetarcs of uearly 800 feck | and more than many down-town type writers | "Prepared for it just the same, ; All the interior walls are to be plastered and | Meaning of His Poems,” “Amerigo Vespuc Od ead raced, to her. | He built « large | she twolve large windows beautificd with stained | “Provencal Poctry and the ‘Troubato and costly residence near the little Burns | 210.0" “Phe Renaissance,” “The Women of It darn dove; nat Seenseak sae comeananes Mr. E. ¥- Baldwin of Baltimore, who designed | ‘-Ariosto,” “Airs From Sixteenth Century,” | tarmily whose surroundings indicated absolute Among the parts of an optical instrument th land with « large stone fence. He became wales me Ue LS roma tg italian Opera.” | want. Male and female t ey are hard workers | most diflicult to make mith vin mppeteteeets prominent in social affairs and in business and 5 ; joc! ch. See all, and seem to realize that industry accuracy—and at the same time among the ¢ one time was mayor of Washington, He was | 22¢ structure is to cost Ch Eo of which ‘Music of Italy and s at : yor of Washington. He was | orice from Father Alig’ sive is essential to success, All signs point to | most important parte—are the divided circles nown to ell fed, well bred and we nature by which they are environed—rugged | How would King Henry's arm or even a bar- | and generous, with homes cozy and comforta-| leycorm figure in measuring quantity so | ble. In all my rambles Ihave yet to sce a| minute as this? eas Gall a “Served the fellow right,” was the comment wwouk; diters vary from 643 to Gon, £10 to $12.0 | of tie town marshal ‘whon he beard of the carn from $18 to €20 a weck, sume equal to | shooting. “Any man that'll go up to ‘Dec’ those earned by many teachers in aristocratic | Molltday and take such chances as that de- schools. The forewomen who do skirt cutting | "°T¥©s £0 be killed. : d attend to the work room earn $25 a week, | , A* the shooting was done entirely in self and the forewomen who superintend the trim, | defense no action was taken in the matter by a oe 5, e he authorities and Holliday was allowed to a population of more than average | for measuring angles and the micrometer | ™ing of waists and special orders got from $20 | * ; Log read.” When his father-in-law, David Burns, —>— intelligence. The dwellings, large and small, | scrows for the finer measurements, A screw | ‘0 €90 a week. A well-known dress maker “on | & Denver tumolestod, where he soon began 80 died he left all bis property, constantly rising | Written for Tax Evexrwo stan. have their gardens and shade trees and flowers | so fine and so accurate that a slight fraction of | the avenue” charged @125 for making and | Ws away with consumption. in value, to the general's wife, telling her that Under the Trees, Prete tek ee in Italy,” “The Tusean Artists.” “The Archi- arranged tastefully. The wayfarer meets with turn will move its point invariably to the | ‘rimming of a simple gingham gown. The “+ Seon dress was daintily artistic and the trimming | MOON-FACED PIRATES CAUGHT. she had been a good daughter and would now Rilo r acheery greeting from every one he encou ame minute aistance is a vi i i eis ghia * In hammock hung beneath the trees orbs ee ae man al ters, Living is very cheap. Four or five dol- | froma bolt used in Lahde asnee ein yas exquisite embroidery, beautiful and sheer | worty Highwaymen of Chi. wi About twenty years ago the last piece of the | MY /ady swings these summer days; foal Gods ef the Gece Te Sette neyths | lars per month will rent @ comfortable house | To illustrate the difficulty of making such a | in texture, but the whole confection was not sii - mae Wales Burnsestate passed out of the control of the | _ “M4 ever, as the soft winds raise the Grecian Colowies and the Rise ef arectacs | With large garden plat attached. Flour is| scrow Mr. Brashear cites ae dno sa! which | elegant enough to cost $125. The wearer paid Captured or Killed. heirs. At an expense of £30,000 Van Ness | The leaves above her, on her face The Rise and Protoss af Athena’ potty, | $4.50 per barrel, corn 45 cents per bushel, | Prof. Rogers, who has diets, ‘uished himself | for the artistic skill, name and chic of the dress ote : built tomb, in imitation of the temple of | The light with shadow changes place: sane Game and Progress of, Athens,” “Olym: | putter 6 to 16 cents per pound—the latter for | among -Asaoricuas it snow si , attempted to | Maker, ee Rote Resta Centm, Vesta, on the lot now occupied by the George-| The shadow gently courses o'er Epythagorenn Philosophy,” “Aristophanes and | Dest creamery—eggs 14 cents per dozen, milk | carry success still farther und ‘feller Prof, | The manager of the New York Exchange for | _ The viceroy of Canton reports the eapture of town Medical College, on i street, but it was | Her brow, as touch of loving hands sci Gonaty “ The Cesk Theor ‘of the | cents per quart, butter milk 2 centa a gal- | Rogers employed upon the work of maki Woman's work says she “hopes some day to | ® large number of pirates and solicits rewards afterward removed to Oak Hill Cemetery. Van | Sooth fever-heated temples, nor Sieatn rly Greek Painting,” ‘Greek Fda. | /08,and other things in proportion. Ye gods! | screw two of the most skillful workmen of havo a school for dress a in connection | for the officers who specially distinguished Ness was not « Catholic, but his private secre-| Less gently on her hair's dark strands éation, he Alexandrian School,” “‘Woman- that last item makes my mouth water. The | Waltham Watch Manufacturing Com; , ata] With her art school.” She adds: “If a school | themselves in effecting their apprehension, tary, Nicholas Callan, was, and he suggested to | Is shed the sunbeams’ golden light. hood Among the Grecks, » “geeial Life in | D&PB8 here are simply amazing and at once | dollar an hour,” says Mr. Brashear, with the | Could be established where measuring, cutting, The coast of the Canton province has, it is — — a - = ‘And lo! my Iady’ssmile grows bright Greece,” “Medieval. Ger ., “Aristotle,” demonstrate the fatness of the land. The | instinct of an mployer, and when 140 hours’ | draping, trimming, correcting, sewing, making » . ‘a8 . stock are magnificent specimens of the best | labor had been expended i raise the value of his property; so a lot on 5th opr aioe His Writings” Byron's Visit Or Geeccen uc | breeding, and It is a pleasure to the oye to | was pronounced done: it erred ne tanta Street was given for the purpose, but, being @ } And as her hammock ‘neath the trees 1824," “Greek Independence,” “Rulers of the Dee ee) Coane oma ee ave tg Periodical drunkenness,” and was, German, Van Ness is said to have made itan| swings to and fro like happy boat ‘aval Battles of Modern | 8&®” P' - orefore, useless for fractions of a turn, up. matching, fitting, copying designs, manag. | Stated, been inf for many years past by ing work rooms and giving estimates and buy- | bands of pirates, who have formed themselves ing—in fact, doing everything that successful | into powerful tions and dress makers have to do—I think it would do ty hcholuhaa! She abubar on Gee 4 ry iy Hellenic Kingdom,” * Thi fi tai fs ., i country far and wide. The chief of all these Tae ciraeeh tomes "Bg Geed, to the land that | | Upon » crystal sea afloat Greece,” “Missolonghi,” “Battle of Navarino,” | Tay't, Solan gore eee sitapsther Yeats rea pega ment pemtiaer ol fans A. eather base pemeay be | societies, whose number is considerably over « church. The lot donated extended 45 fect | ¥Y May's dreamy fancies drift Greck and oman Colonies in France.” ““Mar- | not conceive of a happier spot in which to perfect, have the ability to superintend large work | hundred, was a notorious pirate called Tseng- rf ~ ‘o other scenes. The White Hills lift seilles and Its Historic Relation to France, dwell. > ok = along 5th street and was over 100 feet deep. ‘Their pine-clad ummits te the sky, “Origin of the French Language,” “Casar’a | 2¥®! as samee eat even oe accuracy as this does not onnee earn a $2,500 to | lu-yu-chuan, whose depredations had long ORIGINAL MEMBERS OF THE coxaRecatiox. | 7 ve Cumpsigts ta Gadi,” “Cotheliel'al Bhaian” _ ABOUT 83 5, | Pring us to the and of the wonders of mechan- | $3,500 a year. and they spend three or four | been the terror of the coast, Lust vear his The congregation was organized in the base- | pacn other cos teary ne ly chase “Clothildi, the Wife of Clovis, the First Chiris- | A few days since @ mountainoer drove into | ical skill. In spectroscopic ‘work the: best | mouths of every year ia Paris or London at the principal confederate, Tseng Ya-chieb, fell Each other o’er their sides; or high Cloth 5 of | the vill a sa 1k thon of te t | Spectra for some purposes are obtained not | best hotels. The buyers for a Boston firm have | lity the hands of the’ aathotitine whens ment of St. Matthew's Church on 15th and H| O’erhead, hung motionless in space, tian King of France;” “Early French History, e village smd stopped im front of the post | Spectre fer « the Dae, aot | an shan heals an Ieeoheh Garaek cab omie ne ands of the authorities, whereu; Streets northwest in October, 1844 (although | A broad-winged bird. Thus other days Fae ang Ok, Erancen’ Lolit Loro of | office. Isaw afew people clustering about hie | 7111 Prisms in “diffraction seh natn e 4 Paris last your were thought to be American an papenpert wupaeranns: rede a 7 9 66) en 1 668, - if i ic] y Me re e as before, pcan tal iad, tel masdlingal were! Kala ta | mtg ca ake es ee rae eae France,” “Roland of Roncevalles,” “Saracens | wagon, and curiosity induced mo to peep in, 6 heiresses, and a nobleman with more title than | after capturing twelve pirates the imperial Pocket monoy was assiduous in his attentions | troops came in sight of two pirate vessels, one until he learned one day that the ladies were | of which carried the Chicl ‘Ieng-lu-yu-chuan no heiresses, but two very able, successful | himself. A brisk fire was at onee opened om American women who had earned a sufficient | poth sides, and the pirate chief being wounded fortune to kecp them in comfortable circum- | and closely pressed, was obliged to take to the stances by their own industry and trustworthy | water and swim for his life. inal St. Peter's Church on Capitol Hill From ‘neath the trees, by @ pastor who came over from Bultimore | put nark! The wind beneath the trees and the Battle of Tours,” ‘Princess Isabella of | Coiled’ in a corner was a splendid specimen of | C2Dsist of fine lines ruled with a diamond upon “Establishment of Royal Authority in | the rattlesnake family, with an array of twelve | S18 “ie orto: Moraes et ee " ‘Mediwval Interior: rovencal Po- | rattles, This object lesson has had quite a x 4 A‘ . : shag pose : = campo : some years ago i % org spotter owen on! Dee Pag Srey ca = tion Ceremonies of France,” “Early His { reduce my danger fully 66 per cent by com- | of Years Mr. Rutherfurd was without a rival in Music in France, “Literature of France, bining three strides in one, and yet can hardly | this work either in this country or in Europe; un Finding ese chureh purposes for about two years while St. | Brightens with gleams from Paradise French Drama,” and “Joan of Are.” feel satisfied. but his achievement has been recently sur- | bility. hopeless he stabbed himscif. and was arrested Mary's was being erected. As organizing mem-| My lady's earthly sunshine. Low, topics and many more were illustrated during | Isn't it singular that one snake story recalls | P*88ed by Prof. Rowland of Baltimore, who has Lage ing condition. The vessels having boom bers of the congregation there were about | Soft music comes toher. ‘The reed discussion by pictures, the rendition of music, | another? Here is one well vouched for in this | ©°®8tructed a machine by the aidof which he Princesses in the Market, a, coventoen foreign gu d twenty twenty men with families and several young | Whereon the poet loved to blow or the reading of selections having a bearing | neighborhood. Once upon a time a thrifty | CD rule gratings of six inches in breadth, con- | Correspondence of the Chicago News. three charts containing the pirates’ plans of unmarried men. Among them were Phillip | Where beechen bows o’ershade the mead upon the subject. very meeting of the #o-| housewife, the happy possessor of two cows, | “ining 28.876 lines to the inch, Some of the| ‘There are not so many princesses in the mat- | campaign were amoug the plunder. May of Georgetown, Ignatius Miller, John | yingies with notes of warbler brown ciety is sot to music of a high and classical | the one white the other black, suddenly be- | Sclebrated ““Nobert lines,” now used as test | rimonial market as ou might on They |, Tseng's evidence was to the effect that ase Frieze. Jos. Heil, John Geo. Eichhorn, Geo. | That tor my lady droppeth dows order, both vocal and instrumental. Among | came aware that the former was not giving as | Piectsfor microscopes, are still finer, being are easily primate pgm cree ntatives of | PO7He ad Joined the rebels in the Canton a —_ a pence haem dale Beneath the trees. the ladies who have contributed to the pleasure | much milk as was her wont, This was curious, | ° the scale of 70,000 to the inch. province, and had subsequently taken up ard Geier, Henry arsteamp and Jobu an e i of the members, either by song or instrumenta- | because her calf was long since consigned to | ,, 1¢ would be easy to multiply instances like Peter Freeman. Wendell and Benedict Neff | My lady swings beneath the trees tion, are Mrs, Spooner, Miss Nettie Bradley, | the hands of the butcher “and in thoes leaps, this in which the requirements of scientific in- and Rudolph Eichhorn were in the choir, Wen-| Mia song and sunshine far away, the Romish church are three Bavarian and piracy as a profession. For nearly a quarter of three Belgian princesses, one Bavarian duchess, | a century he claimed to have been the undis- i Mise Katio Gilman, Mrs, Annie Louise Powell, | days milk was too abundant to make it | Yestigation have called upon the skill of the | gye Bourbon princesses,.four Austrian arch. | Puted leader of all the pirates in the Canton dell Neff still occupying his place there, For me are only skies of gray; Muss Huut, Miss Minnie Johnston, Miss Boutelle, | worth one's while to ateal it, ‘These circum. | aftisan and in which he has shown himself duchewes, » Sexon princess ands Wartem.| "ter and his yearly income, which, oxclu- PATHER ALIG. ‘The summer sunshine pales, for she Ne ee ie Meare? Aull Miss Warner, Miss | stancos roused our thrifty housewife's curiosity | equal to the demand. But science itself is con- | Pure princess, The Protestant girls wre tno | sive Of disbursements, he estimated at several ‘The first pastor was Rev. Father Alig, who | Holds half the sunbeams’ light. Yet free Chapman, Miss Moore, Mrs. J. D. Patten, Miss | and she found that a black snake, several foot | timually dealing with quantities more and more : tens of thousands of tacls, was shared in by u 5 f cosses of England, two of Prussia, three of officiated from the time of organization until | My thoughts are still. Light winged and feet | Stilson, Miss Bowell. Miss Parker of Boston, | in length, was the guilty party—she caught | minute and is becoming more and more exact- | frit M mise va pe olstein, one of Hesse, one of Anbait, one of | te, other members of the confederacy. He and ; i i i r ing in its requirements, There is, therefore, . died before be could be sent to Canton, but June 9, 1882. He belonged to a wealthy family | , THey rise above each barring bill Raneead ins He heaventpeine ee | Ree ee Rebate det erratirs always eborder land where there ffir for we ey ee his head was exposed to the public gaze, ax of nobility in Switzerland a "| a time, yet in nowise discreditable to the me. | 2 | wore also those of twelve of his followers whe and came to Americasine | ‘Then sudden are their flutterings stills ‘TES MEMDERS. Sl pest ‘The good woman did hor set ani | chanic, because it is the invariable precurser | tie# In he xireek church there ares Grecian | shared hie fate. Two other Parties of troops iy to see the country, | Foro! My lady's face. Her eyes Tee meeenboronip of tis) most) inferesting | Oo suming for help; but urtaing hevselroitay| OF MaNoeeN. 2 Fee ea val tures | Which were sent by Admiral Fang to scour Wis tong ote da thas sees | Giev antag tats Pacaatee society isnot a largo one, seldom exceeding | f° garden hoo she advanced upon the culprit, | _A® an instance illustrative of how exacting ans plat gael in. years none is re. | Beighborhood succeeded in capturing thirty- try was unexpected, but From ‘neath the trees. thirty-five in number. It includes in itsroll| She struck at the snake, erin § was at the mo- | these men of science are, some years ago Prof, | **¢ ed cligivie — —He9 P some ‘Albert Vie. | OB¢ Pirates aud three vessels, Several of the at the request of Arch- =O % Panes. | many of the literary women par excellence of | ment inflating himself with the sweet nectar of | Pickering undertook to determine the size of | Soc" iiging to far an Erince Albert Vic-| crisoners proved to be heads of pirate organ shops Hughes and Pur- —_+e-—____ the city, who work together here in swoet | life, and the better to facilitate the operation | the two minuto satellites of Mars. They are too | fhatng of'e wife for thet, unintemaning, pre | ations which have been ego Bath. cell, with wnom he bad & Terminal Correspondence. coord, and as one of ‘them postically says, | had placed one extromity just as far as possi- | stall to appear as anything but tiny stars, even | Ading of wife for that uninteresting per-| country for years. Altogether over forty oe ngereroe er ee “With no unworthy thought of fame.” Mrs. | ble from the other, ‘The result of the blow | im the largest telescopes. ‘The only way of es- good deal. It is believed that Princess Victoria | Pitate® were brought to justice, King, the founder and governor of the society, | was unexpected—the snake was hit near the | timating their size was, assuming that they of unpleasant differences | Madam most worthy of estimation: peppy temodeper: ‘great tact and. discrimination tail, with we rising results. A stream of milk | Were intrinsically as bright as the planet itself, iu certain churches in| after long consideration and much medita- | and endowed with fine executive ability; with | flowed from the orifice made by the incision, | to compare their apparent brightness with Buffalo, N. ¥., amd in| ion on the great reputation you enjoy in your | these lofty qualities she combines all the | ‘Tho thrifty housewife was greatly surprised, | that of the planet. Theoretically this was a Hamilton, Obio, after station 1 foal cain a 7 in Your | sweet domestic aud social graces, shrinks from | but she never lost her presence of mind. Ing | simple operation, It was only necessary to which, it is said, he had al- ion I feel a strong inclination to become | th, prominence of undue publicity, and while | moment she had discovered the significance of | Cover the bright disk of the planet, as it ap- ready procured his ticket | your relation om your approbation of this| hor bracious hand lends ‘in all things it isso | the phenomenon. The snake nursed on, ap. | peared in the eye-piece of the telescope, with a for his homeward voyage | declaration, With that expectation I shall gently done that each one scarce has known | parently unconscious of the loss of a portion of | thin metal screen, in which was a minute hole when Archbishop Eocleton induced him 10 | make preparation to remove my situation toa | the guiding hand was not her own | his teil: He, perhaps, was somewhat surprised | that could be varied in size experimentally un- come to Washington to found a Roman Catholic * : is rt i ble to satisfy himself, - | til the light received through it from the planet Church, He war precticully the founder of the | ™0F@ convenient location to profess my admira- | Mrs Asaph Hall is deeply learned in classical | that he was unable to satisfy himself, by ree just equaled that of the astellite, “The hecot * m ies | to call ik ing 1 ‘is manner. ‘Thi church, and the building itself was erected | tion, and if such oblation is worthy of observa- lore and the ladics love to call her the Mrs, | son of the milk escaping in a ° | the hole being then ascertained and compared e A - i hi ciety, bec: of first got a clothes line. The snake, a largely with money donated by him, so that the | tion and I'can obtain commiseration from one | somblante personally, ax Well asia other mart; | Wedting, wile all a ETO egy | with thet et the nerisited and compared of Teck will finally be decided upon; she is too cali “i Pretty and too clever to be yoked to #0 doughy SPAWNING FISH. a fellow as parent No. for Prince George, itis arranged, they say, that in| They Are ~~ Beyond One’s due time he shall marry Princess Mary, heir to xpectation, the throne of Hol present she is only ee fifteen years of age, but her neighbors all give | From Forest and Stream. her the charentar af being as likely ayoung| One day, while wading and casting for bass itl as over put her two feet into wooden shoes, | in Lone Stone inke, Wisconsin, I inadvertently he czar has but one danghter, and she is | stepped on the spawning bed of a rock bass, or about fourteen years old. Russian girls are not oved ee ae so reeaconagy yy an mand. 2 | the west. ‘The fish ran out, and « moment Inter “goggle-eye,” as they are sometimes called in congregation, from time of organization, has | Of your station it will be an aggrandization be- “seis i ffered ao targe! relation required. But who should mak 7 , ‘it been entirely free from debt, When he died in | yond calculation of the joy aud exultation of Seated many) cai beratine Rorte ber | cotati in ie improvised inke aint | She hele? Pi hole would not answer the | ‘lent for intrigue end politics _ seer exten ke os k ceo binc oe okey canon June, 18*z, he left all his real and personal Yours without simulation, great brown eyes havo the most kindly ex-| secured his satanic majesty. She did not dis pErpose, for the planct’s entire disk was hardly Sun Spots and Suicide. wrote fgg ture—it w Property to the congregation, “———— _ | pression and she has the simplicity and shy- | patch him, but tamed him and made him a use- | larger thi@m that, Prof. Pickering made in- que, sae Ge ees wut wp any THE CORNER STONE. AxswEa. noss of manner that characterizes all genius, | ful member of the family. In the treatment of | quiries fur a competent mechanic, and found a | From the Hartford Courant about a balf or three-quarters of » pound in The corner stone of the old church. whi Sir: I perused your communication with | Mrs, Hall prepared her two sons for college, | the wounded tail she showed her ability asa has just been torn down, was pares mee much deliberation and some consternation at | which they entered thoroughly grounded in| surgeon, She caused it to heal so that the Mech, + the great infatuation of your vivid imagination | Latin and Greek. The believers in Karma | aperture created by the hoe remained open. arch, 1846. The excavation was done by | * : ary 5 would not hesitate to declare this writer of Bhe allowed the snake to pursue his old voca- members of the congregation, among them be- | i Professing such veneration upon so slight | Odes to be « reincarnation of the wise Cornalia | tion of nursing, utilizing him as a sort of mill- ing Michael Keller, John Miller aud Mr. Kauf- | foundation. But after examination and serious | herself. ing machine, the lacteal fluid flowing into the man. Mr. Roth and Mr. Vandelehr being | Contemplation I supposed your animation was| Mrs. Almena B. Williams, who delivered the | pail from the opening in his tail, allowing him, masons, laid the foundation. The brick walls | the result of recreation or had sprung from | annual address this year at the Elmira, N. Y., | however, to retain enough to sustain life and mah who seemed to be as well recommended for this work as it was possible to be, for he had the record of having drilled a hole iength- wise through an ordinary cambric needle, and yeteven this skilled artisan found it impossible to drilla hole as small as the astronomer re- quired. The incident is related to show how, even with the finest mechanical work that is Some years ago an observant and specula-| weight—ran at my leg again and again, bunt tive gentleman at Rochester, N.Y., became | ing quite forcibly with its bead. posthoc 4 ‘ihe whole demeanor of the fish was one of sunvinesd of the) af on ietiente se Sanger An the went eheaeed, Resaeh eae it very plainly, and it could see me as well, but solar storms, vulgarly known as sun spots, and | jt showed no signs of moving off, and evident our terrestrial whirlwinds, floods, droughts, | meant fight. I stepped away from the nest ne abe path. Py Pb Pelun eae blizzards, &c. He ene 'y his ‘semecngge f had wg wegen heey oy oat oe yore aid by Win. and John McCulinm, while | ostentation to display your education in the | college, is a queenly woman of scholarly learn: | normal strength at the close of the perform. | now done—some o! which, as has been is | and had the usual unpleasant experiences sessor then abandoi fight, was Mr. Bergman and John Ardeeser did the — odd enumeration or concatenation of words of | ing. eee is : wi iter of magazine articles that | ance of his any. For this purpose she adopted | marvelously fine—science is still deman: of mmeig ag epee mantully by his guns— | June 15, 1 believe. We could see a good many pentering. ‘The bell which Lung in the to: like termination, though of great variation in | are held in high estimation. avery simple device—a rubber band placed | the artisan still finer work, and the history of | that is, by his sun spots. black bass nests shining on the bottom of the Is suid to have been a good one, having been signification, Mrs. L. M. D. Sweat, wife of an ex-governor | arouad the snake's tail about an inch above its/instrument making shows that little by littie| It sceme that these remote but formidable | lake near the shore. ‘The men of that cast by Mr. Kegister im Baltimore in 1857, but a yond Kom seompenen Ltr ap of Maine, is a most _iilertainin writer. Her | end, Srpxex Morais, || this demand is met. mischief a have power = Ky dao our — — as yy yw 8) were only ornaments and plication in so tedious an occupation of multi- | pa, that she reads before the society are —————-ce0_ - - ———+o+-—____ at here earth curren’ over | lying on t * there to To'clock. ‘The peculiar caaueeee plication and reiteration descrves commenda- | Felmg of wit and sparkling Lbrilliancy.” She A Romantic Marriage. Ladies Buying Shoes in London, human nerves and the human mind. In| upon their return, one or the other of the bass mounting the brick tower and looking like an | tion, aud thinking imitation a sufficient re- psec her subject with a piquancy of style | From the Detroit Free Press. From the Philadelphia Times, leading article in the Rochester Democrat and | would seize it and carry it off from the bed, and inverted balloon, was ingloriously calied q| ™Uneration and gratification I am without] that is alwa’ seajoyed by ie lean ‘There was quite a ripple of excitement on} Shopping in London isa joy. Ihave heard | Chronicle this week the sun-spot man points | the fish could then be hooked. I caught only “turnip top,” and hearsay says it was con- | hesitation Mrs. W. I ‘owne, Who was one of the | Saturday at tat Portage, Can., over a romantic | people object to the servility of the London | out that “the solar disturbance which appeared | one bass here, a big-mouth. structed in that odd shape to prevent any one Yours with great moderation, earlicst members of the socicty, is a writer of tahip and inge of @ river shop keeper. For my part I delight in it, | by rotation about July 4” was followed by in- climbing to the top and taking the cross on —————_ | mellifiuous verse. Her poems are ever youth- | COUT#bIP marriage Rainy settler. the Baby tense heat, with disturbance of the earth Defied the Court. This wooden steeple was taken down about ful in style, for she infuses into them her own | The groom was Robert Gill, the teacher of an | After the door Principle which obtains in | currents af ‘and then adds: From the New York Tribune. seven months before the work of demolishing A Mississippi Republican Shot. bright, joyful and lovable spirit, and they have | Indian school, and the bride Miss Emily Tay- the church began. Mr. John G Eichhor: , ed ‘itorious b; riti pote a of the coumsitice who bed charge on} T. M. B Cook, s well-known republican | been pronounced meritori 'y severe critics, | lor of Owen Sound, Neither of the contract- New York I like to feel that I am doing a great ‘The sensitives suffered severely from nervous | an amusing scene happened in the Sullivan honor to the place where I buy a shilling hand- ee pee The num- county, §.¥., court house the other day. The ji i wry J. Safford is the contrivutor of , but had cor- | kerchief and I like to be bowed in and bowed of suicides y correspondents the building of the cBureb. a jor sr sa temnticananencer agg Bhar RS ceric to the magazines for po tartare) Sec Soonoees The | out as if I were of India, And a little | of the Democrat and Chronicle was amazing. Ail | Wife of carnperd enya phoaereerd In August, 1847, the church was finished and | Yom Mise. Thursday by unknown parties. He | Fhich she is well known. She is quiet and un. | greom arrived seats is the! weelt to meet his | ta0ney does go a great wari And if you | came ins bunch and were ss much the effect | witness stand trusted her baby the first services were held in it on the 15th | ¥® ® candidate for constitutional con- pretentious in manner and has the sweet face | future wife, expecting her on Tuesday, but in | want to have your soul with delight go to | ef weather conditions as a bail storm. If the | the care of another woman, wee wee day of the same month. The building cost be- | yeation, and had made ® speech during the | Pri earnest woman. this he was’ disappointed, but on Saturday last | a boot maker's, You can get the most sensitives could only know that the, disturbing | below. ‘The child became restless after « tween $45,000 and 90,000, most of which wag | 2Y 00 the force bill, Mrs. J. Sayles Brown is a writer of deep | was more succetal ‘ihe train arrived at | Pronch all the Louis Quinze force was in the atmosphere, and that it and amnounced its desire to see its mother in posed does Bag although Mrs. Ailer also Mal; thought and she is adevoted student of Thomas | noon, and the citizens were oogipme le = _ Preah tag eon fo away in oe, Tyan Sh hich mist be contribu wely. practitioners Convicted. hing meeting and turned out in large num- when tries on depression with spirit, traced to hunger. After trying in vain On the wall behind the altar hungalarge| Mrs. Josephine Hatchard, wife of Dr, ar Gen. Rana brings her calm face with its [erstoses the avenc As teeseiaabepy ins ap will say in an ator bibetal tone: “Madame | stead of supposing that Srorything i going to wad ge hp 7 ETD cnd'sate icture representing the ascension of our | Thomas Hatchard, bas been convicted at | halo of snowy white hair, like a benediction, to | looking young lady jumped off the car, and her | col racer ge fepticg Then you feel as | the bow-wows. ney repre tag 2 time ng SE viour.which was painted in New York by Mr. | yiwaukee of being to her | the meetings,and, for all her seventy years, she | large dark rapidly sized up the crowd to | if you would like to buy outall the shop. He| This suggests e thought pe: of its judge Thornton jumped up Frederic 5. Agate after bis return from F riescuma.d is full of merry quips and jests that are always | see her ons. ‘Mr. Alex. Hocking of Elm | knew you, not by the strawberry mark oa your | the sun spots cause a os cried: the child out of coart” The welcomed and applauded by her associates. river acted as master of ceremonies and at = it by the size of your foot, and you | crimes as well—crimes oy especially? | woman the Mrs, Frank Doubleday is an artist of some | once took the young bride in charge. He in- 80 after this that you believe you can May is not be that heredity, ames, picture, with others, came into the possession | Mrs. Hatchard exposed her husband to the | renown. She Gary several years in study | troduced the pair, although he had never met | walk on the clouds, to say nothing of have been of Mr. Agate, his brother and first husband of | public and he was last week convicted as tho | abroad and has pictures in the salons of | the lady, and ewes Sreatty vege Prone said that the thanks- | died with » a Mrs. Duhamel of this city. Mr. 8. Murray, | principal in the crime. Thursday night he | Paris and also in the exhibitions in New York. The crowd | giving ually by people here tag ey And 4 who was's bauker and as greatly intorosed Wrote statement com exoncrating his | She is also a skillful performer upon the piauo- Feria shear | Thom one had Upped wat, “aotsitcare.” Now, | The for atin Sor ot ile moon they in the chareh, . Agate wife from in urder forte. wi marriage you give ry ‘care | minded ancestors HH pictare be donated to the chureh, ‘This was | Beardsley gyri and the blame on him-| iis. J. B, Rdmondsiean carnest searcher wore down | whether it is. sincere of not, provided he ears collet Go ipeses Seneieg” & mesntain. san Nan een eeenies Sat ee Aare self, but it was too as the case was in the | for historic truths. Her cont are|at the station, but of course none of them | it? I don't Pot L wish ve eusid inapert obeut £0 tip cnn Haat hse beck: Go culprit family should get into reduced circumstances '@ bands. Mra Hatchard’s mother, who | among the most valuable of the society's ar- | were looking for the job, At any rate the pair Se 6 ae a the Vo | time? Perhaps ovr oar A me $400 wus to be paid for the painting. Although in Chicago, faimted in the court room | chives. were tie * "nd hard shortly after the ar- | States, and I am sure everybody would be SS Saee us on Mr. Agate’s family were not Germans aud ' when the verdict was aunounced, Mra. L. O, Talbott’s treatment of a subject is rival of the willing to pay duty on them, interesting points,