Evening Star Newspaper, August 1, 1891, Page 7

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THE EVENING STAR: WASHINGTON. D.C. SATURDAY. AUGUST 1, 1891—SIXTEEN PAGES. 7 GEORGE WASHINGTON | stent op Sater Smut oh Gevgreor | of re minnie vil coer Rare the estas YOUR ELUSIVE NECKTIE. e vagabond ington wus then on Capitol Hill. Sam Harrison | pianist, however, will meanwhile practice some with _Whs How Its Traditions! Waywardness May Be Smith was president, Wm. A. Bradley, cashier; | mew music.” ‘The second part commenced Milly was ® pro-| the Subdued. ———— Geo, Calvert, Com. Ti cr. Sam’! Smallwood, zakiTee tabernacle, the great Mormon meet- 1 i$ itle body, no ee He woul ~s From the New York World. . * . Pred. May, George Blagdon and Dr. Ed- where the el oungers mis- 3 <DREDS UNDREDS A Letter From the First President to yard ‘Cutbosk were among | the directors. | eed ¢ the Songregation and Sts ‘uth fea the en mother, never, nee, ‘dreams nother fe, | another way vo HERE ARE HUXDREDS AND UNDIES : PE poe triotic Bank was on Pennsylvania avenue at Canyon,” he describes aso ting ‘as they were | herself thicket men today y the First District Commissioners, | between 9th and 10th street: Joseph Pearson, “sick-looking picture beside that of Mr. hero | and presently could watch the rider coming | necktie They depend upon the deft fagersaf resident, and Overton Carr, cashier; Robert Bieretads bus perhape it will do. It was the to her, wore | down the road. ly. - -_—-— F Brent, Phineas Bradley, Daniel Carroll of | best they bed’ berte? tore” Goinioas m tree, elated to see that this shot, at least, eventually went to the | she likened him toa THE NATION . Duddington, Edward de Krafft, William Gun- | press followed on the program. “fueskowbegan oven, the troes being all newly planted and | hed gone home: she shivered . Butin ture. On such ideals stumbles poor | heart like lead * NATIONAL CAPITAL. | ton, ‘Thomas Hughes, Samuel Pleasanton, Pur- | (Me.) Clarion cay Although histiple is differs rer pod trolad nr ‘the | ® second ahe tbink of Mike an ia eee ser Winn and Notley Young were directors. | ent Washington Irving's, we cannot be grazing w peaks steadily: will marry poor The Washington Orphan Asylum was on 7th | blind to the fact that Mr. Irving's style is dif- | houses, while the noble old forests around are “I hadn't zs ber though: The Cause of His Solicitude—An Agreement | street between Hand I. Mrs. Gen. Van Ness, | ferent from bis.” The mention of Artemus | so distant that they make only a blurred wall. | to think al clouded face Wien eh Owners the Troub! iter- = Lee, wee _—— = = Maj. Tart recalls Dan Setchell, 5 comedian of rare | But when the May sun paints all the bare ae in ly irees uniform of shirt sleeves on the heels of - eaton, Mrs. msay, lec! Mrs. UMOF an nt wi name passed was ni stocl horse «@ cruel cu! SS Sets Feces om O88 Boetare—Aute- I Te iin Leruedy Mok. ‘Tenge wee’ diear-| eater orp Mo spent @ vacation |STound and every humble garden no place Nevertheless she married Mike. She married | reared and ehi Sraphs of Prominent Stage People. tresses of the asylum. Tho Washington Colon- | with ts at bis home in faine and they | Where grass grows and flowers wave can be | fron soe 7cuee, him him because the Allertons wanted her to marry | seething passion in the man broke ization Society was organized at that early day; | kept the neighborhood of their rural retreat in| dreary. Mra. Michael Agee'’s garden was|afraid!” She bit lips nervously; she|him. She went to him as she would have ran | lashed the beast in’ ng Ragas ids Bushrod Washington, president; Wm. H. |e ferment by their practical jokes, ending | aflame with Jacqueminot roses and daintily | pressed the fingers of both hands hard on the | intoa house afire or jumped into the riven to | terror and then lashed him into sul Written ‘or Phe Evening Star. peguiord, Henry Clay, Andrew Jackson, John | Dan's visit by summoning the neighborhood to | blushing with Cathering Mermets. Her bed of | €dge of the table. “I think agreat deal of Mra. | please them, and, I dare sup, with not so heavy'| The poor creature's mouth was dripping; EFORE RETURNING TO MR GLOVER| Eager Howard and other distinguished men | chain Setchell in an ox cert as araving maniac | DUS! pretoae f lovely tints | Allerton’s and your opinion, and before, when | & heart, for her fantastic bereavement was real | eyes glared, every limb trembled. ] = —m Spee were vice presidents; Francis S. Key, Walter | to be taken to an insane asylum. ee you considered I ought to marry Mr. Agee, I as death to her. Kime looked down at him grimly and laughed. the very interesting volume he so kindly | Jones, Rew’ Dr. Lowrie, Rev. Dr. Hawley and DISTINGUISHED NAMES ON A SUBSCRIPTION xis. | before Col. Allerton’s eyes, to which he paid | Gid like you told me; now—it is different When her day-dreams were gone, she re- | “You've concluded to behave, have you?” said Joanel me, the readers of Tue Sra will be | other managers. The Washington Library was ‘Among th left by Mr. Thomas Sess- | 2°t much more attention than the cows nib-| “Now you want to please yourself—eh?” alized how precious, how dangerously sweet | he. “D— you, I'll show you who's master!” pleased by some further extracts, especially «| incorporated by Congress in 1814, and con- mg the papers 1 dieses bling on tho other side of the fence or the old| She returned no answer. “Her wretched eves | they had been. But she resolutely kept her| Mildred stepped out of the thicket. “Will letter from Washington, dated Charles- | tained about 2.000 volumes well selected, among | f0Fd is aeubscription list signed by John Quindy | Bung on le ove st fa handsome head over | §*¥e the planter a pang, and he was glad tosee | fancy (the fancy of Mike Agee's wife) from va- 20?” sald she. | She pulled off the ring that he ate soeran.peayudiboangy which is aspiendid edition of “Greek and Ro- | Adams, Levi Woodbury, Secretary of Treasury; | ST®Y horse bhing. Tuteh | the door swing ajar. iil eslenurates pretty | grant roaming into those disloyal paths. She m her and flung it in the dust. She did | same Mig’ 7, B10, referring toseme Gidierences | iS” Lscacgraphy,” presutted. through, the | De: 3-0. Glauncll, cons city postmaster; Benja- | the rails and baring his long teeth for a cluteh | poy of ton’ or eleven, in whose bright face at | was an honest little thing. poor Milly! and che | not fnew whes wairith ber en: che wes we between the commissioners and the original | French minister by the King of France.” What | min Ogle Tayloe, Francie P Blair, Peter Hag- | at the floating tendrils of honeysuckle on the | pov one noch it letect no difference from the | burned up, with many tears, her sole relic of | longer herself; a sensation of witt relief and Tig uuditor: Gen. Jessup, Richard Smith, | porch. ‘The cows were amazingly fat for the | face of achild of his years in general. It was | the past, three silk handkerchiefs that she had P Gen. Washington says, after acknowledging the | the building on 11th street, south of the nue, | Samuel Harrison Smith, Martin Van Bure season and country; so was the horse, betrayed | Only the absence of any token of impression at | hemmed most neatly for—well, not for Miké, | “I don't guess you will show me or my horse . s HTal a tit b: | K. Paulding, Secretary of the Gen. & noise that informed one of his affliction. He | since she stuffed them into the flames, and | or my son, though! You've shown plenty. I seotigt of letter fours the coms | of existence awit swallowed by an eatinquake. | Macomb, S° KPolascte, Scereisry ot War; | By bis teoth to be much older than his igareand eh P saw Col. Allerton and ran to him gayly. The | held them there until the'last wrinkle of the | believe everything I've heardabout you—e man this directory was published, sev- | Judge Crawford, Col. James L. Edwards, com- | briskness would assert. planter had brought a book of Novaree and | cinders was stil, Her conscience reproached | that can treat a horse so! There's your ring fo, the Rev. Mr. Matthews was | missionor of pensions; Henry D. Gilpin, Attor- | | Col. Allerton plucked # handful of clover for | some sweets, which the boy,after thanking him | her for the waste, but it could not her | rolling in the dust, and I don’t want to ever see John’ Seesford, treasurer; Wm. W. | ney General; ap Wm. Edw. Stubbs, | him. "You won't look so fat and happy tong, in childish way with a kiss, at once ran to | hand. you r van vm counare. Sam’! Harrison Smith, George E. Iron- ‘on Vail, Gen. Jno. P.Van Ness, Maj. 8. R. Hob- | old Spike! | Not if he gets holdof you.” While | show to Mildred. Having been toe school for | But, although she resented her new condi-|° He jumped off his horse and would have ran | mothers, wives, sisters or sweetheart AS @ rr. Edward Cutbush and George Sweeny | bie, assistant postmaster general; John T. Sulli- | be spoke he vented a portion of the irritation | the deaf and dumb he could chatter very | tions and was indescribably afraid of her hus-| after her, would have pleaded with her, but be- ere directors. Some trace of it should be | van, owners relative to the boundaries of the city. | has become of that library? The trustees owned | ner, fl unforeseen and un- to darken, perhaps lestroy, the fair prospect which it presented | th , It ready-made ties are purchased, stiff tm x. Hunter, marshalof the District of Co- | that he felt_for reasons best known to him-| nimbly on his fingers. ‘The planter clumuily, | band at first, she found herself growing less | fore be colt cern hee te eee waving her | T°" mhen T loft Georgetown, and which the | found, for 1 remember it until, it seems to me, | lumbia; J. K. Barker, Rev. Geo. Cookman, the | sclf—in a vehement jerk of the d ecbell: /*A | coal bis atepmotiar as nicbty ue be moved miserable all the time. Mike was one of na- | band to hail s pasting wagon. construction and lacking the easy repose end instrument then signed by the cpm- | as late as 1850,when it wasa literary rendezvous cntnens Preacher lost on. the President 1. | fool s errand; of course it's a fool’s errand!” he | their fingers in snewer to his delight and ques- rare gentlemen, | he was gentle v to her ina sy me you speak to me, I'll tell all about you,” | artistic finish of a hand-tied scarf. “ wa d _ d its catalogue tained a number of ver: rabam, Phili Fendall, Jesse Mille1 grunted. tions. iis eyes sparkled and his pretty mout at she did not know enoug! men and screamed. sect dad Cheatin as pues actin: [meaeation Weee. Whee Mie tener tans | Gneatiine nas Wet ee ‘The vibrations of the bell set a white curtain | Darted in coctaeel sane bis P World to rate at its real value, but that did | “You will tell? What the devil is there to town Carrolisburgh so plainly descril ‘ed he took a very deep interest in it. | of the general land office. As Mr. Wm. H. at the window trembling, then a thin hand left] “ Colonel Allerton involuntarily ce his | soothe her bruised nerves. Wien within a year | tell?” howled Kime. *You heard me swearing. The pain waich this occurrence occasioned 18 | (ah'¢ some one inform the public where the | Tison’s name was on the list, I asked if he could | the curtain, and in @ second a small women | thought: “Can ‘you bear to have hi i con- | of her marriage he fell sick her heart yearned | That’ t, to break off a marringe because the more sensibly felt ax I had taken pleasure | books and property of the library bas gone? Temember what it was for, but he could not. | opened the door. fiding and less happy than he is now?’ over his weakness and his patience: when he | you find out I can swea on veral states t isa voicefromthelong past. | Mr. Sessfordhas | | There was nothing to bespeak asecond glance | “Mildred answered hastily: “Judge Kime will | died she mourned him sincerely. “She did met |? olen fovea on ibis Macaustee sak sak ta eae wen bosubpary< telanbempreae framed a certificate of indebiednens for $1,000, | frome stranger in ler pervon, except a certain | nop eee gene ee says he | go back to her dreams; rather, she bluched to | too,” replied Mildred, firmly, and spoke "ok to relate the agreement and fanded the | gett Sessford was foe number of years treas-| isgued to Blodgett and indorsed, and signed | dainty neatuess in dreds anda delicacy of fea- | shall be just like a son to him. He isvery fond | remember them. But a yeur after Mike's | another word. N ‘or has she spoken to him since. — ae bene ompal Betag all commie rel a = = aie | by the commissioners—Thomas Johnson, Dr. | ture not uncommon in Arkansas faces, yet did | of him,” death she met Judge Kime ‘at church fair.| Col. Allerton secretiy plumes himself on his to the public welfare ‘and. to the interests of | satcua! oa. sutegrapies Poo eg Chtained #| Stewart and Dan. Carroll. ‘This bond o¥ cer- | one look twice on Mildred Agee he might be | “catenet Allerton, turning to the boy, spelled | She had never seen him before, he living in an-| arguments. “‘Ididn't have the least idea she | ificate is issued in accordance with an act of | attracted by her wistful blue eyes and by the | on ‘his fi “Gay, how do you like Judge | other town, although not ten miles away. For | was eo struck by them,” he confessed to. bie indavidanls, it was generally | actresses of the day. Many of them are orders | viz 7) pk Green font Ingers, “Gay, how do yor ig J y benetited” by the | for sente for friends wad: Others wetten are | Congreve authorizing a loan of @500,000. Why at made one forgiv t smart of other thinge, hat mado one forgive « mouth t00 | Kime the frst time in her lite {ke Came neur swoon- | wife. “Fact is, sho was so stabborn I went off x sai it was left unpaid or if repudiated I do not chin too long for beauty. ‘The child's face clouded; flashing back came | ing. Judge Kime was the unknown hero of | all kinder knocked ina heap. but when 1 drove F hoiicrs, °f the Property reserved 0 | book prepared for that purpose. The auto- | know: but therbinin ait erent might, was—Col. Allerton perceived it with | the roply. accompanied by a scowl: “I am | her dream? by tho cemetory, and eaw her coming back from Le words cited by Messrs. Young, Peters, | RTAPL# are particularly interesting, as many of | with interest, produce goodly sain mingled compassion and furs—trembling ex-| atraid of him. He whips hip horse Ahigh hat, a black frock coat, a stiff white id her eyes all bunged up and Sinaen coe - nd Stodd Cae yg = ee | those whose signatures and expressione of J F. Corte. | ceedingly; even her voice shook over her civil! “Gay saw him once when the horse was balk- | linen shirt, with a frayed coliar and blue neck- overed with her best Jack roses, cs. ty <I sat nag t will these gentle. | S=dness are here have gone over tothe vast | —_——- declaration that she was right glad to see him. | ing and Judge Kime had to punish him,” Mrs. | scarf, rather too much cologne, and a florid to myself: ‘Something's up. Women Sen ext this war given as the prociee boundary, | met Fam amens them E. L. Davenport, | Wuttea or The Eveninx Rn No, you're not, Mildred,” remarked the | Ages struck iq bess J manner, these may not cut a splendid figure in | don't go to strewing flowers and crying over Fs ma hag aonshaen these ne thet boa Pena Wheatldy mo James W. Wallack, The Echo. Planter, bluntly; “I know you understand too | © Mike was ways so gentle with animals, I | the imaginations of girls in another social rank, | No. 1 when they're aiming to marry No. 2 next in @ sense unconnected with the general ex well what I have come to say to you. me ue Gi ii rf . i but they did in Milly. “He isa perfects gen- | month.’ ” «| with play bill of March29, 1862, ““The Stranger,” | it was morn in the vale, and far from up above “Won't you rest your hat on the bed?” she | Bepwen to see the hernyt sone Di YOu eran tho thought, Here'wed ate intper-| "Mildred herself only said to. Mrs. Allerton: THe rinet woveMEyT. fasion or without tae qualifications, which, if I | Walluck as Mro ellen aed Sorte Here cyas | Bright Reaven looked down upon me aud my love; | gaid, meekly. Bhe held the door wide, motion- | SERED t0 sir; Judge Kime told me.” gonation of her youthful dreams, the splendid | “I didn't rightly know how [felt about Mike. | A dress tie—that is, for full dress—should ale saston og wuuhont te analiteations wich if | Wallack aa Mis. Hater, and The Honesmoon, | And the fowerm the sun, and theta inthe a Becta seesoaat MOWT bed, the principal | | The colonel was wise enough vo rofrain from | lover for whoo appearance she had ceased to | Mike was a gentleman, but he atdu't ook Ike mapebsitel hy ths comer’ ie caine Sao a J - be « b a aressed us aud kissed us and welcomed us there, | object in the room. :01 t. ji ot: | hope, feeling herself too worn and old and un- | one; and Judge Kime looked like a geutieman, efor bad no map before me | jolando, ‘Susan Denin oer ne detiw dewy | ‘The planter declined; be eld his bat stisty Sel Ben a ee ee te ted his last shot: | Bove. 4 “ planation of my ideas wwe upon that oc ection? Will they not reco as Juliana ‘and | As we tripped hand in aoe 7 ; > ' ; | four-in-hand and ailor-knot are easier to ; ae “Well. Mildred, if Ican’ attractive. but he wasn’t one; and I'd rather have the Fontion, that Prsadene hie ete ten any ob- | Humphrey Bland as Solomon; Maggie Mitchell sca in his hand; but he contented to sit in the up this match, ee ies Ta iets | Ofcourse she had heard the gossip. Mike, of them, and the Lord | construct and have remained in favor longer pep tea nea Gat if the metrop- | nd Lotta, the two evergreens of the | ang called to the echo far over the lea. rocking chair with the red plush cushion, and | make I think you can't find fault with. It is | half jocularly, bad narrated the “Kime faniily than any other style—that is, of course, et nea Aco auech ground whet | drama, written thirty-odd years ago, in the | ang the voice that came back to my love and | to lean his head against the best tidy. just this: Suppose you let me have the guardian- | quarrels (which had their ludicrous phases)| She has not even explained why (in a cir- poor r feng id States to cceupe’ "Did | BeYdey of youth. J.B. Hoberts, a capital myself Mra, Agee sut opposite him, beside the table | ship of Gather and settle ome property on | t0 her; but it was impossible for so unworkily | cuitous manuer) she bouht ecttary Lowes of I not, moreove: that before the city | Chotjowee ene we — Meal’ “hens | Westie ocheeet sites Wines eas Bhi are [hereon beamed the opalescent white shade of | hin. Now, the law,if Mike hadn't made a will, | ® ei Mitead bo sioations| Sins Shis ooth- | Saal Kime, or why she peta bim almost as could be laid out and the spot for the public | friend,” Grace Greenwood, and friends be | Who dwelt amid castles and treasures of gold; sf “Bio Ldecloes ft > Bibl os ae tie would have given you one-third of the prop- Mer se heady te man eee reid pull ‘is | much as she pete old Spike. coarse tere robes leccled the huigiue ¢atet | “shown good seats,” and Forrest, an order for | Who ianghed and grew merry at marvels he told, | Ste “Biography of the Bible, and erty and Gather two-thirds; suppose that you | Wile around the room by her hair or slung « ———ro c E old bound selection of poems on “Mother, . cup of coffeo at his daughter. And when*he : Se “Let the hole of my declaration he tanen | ett 618 May, 1864, “Coriolanua.” and Jack | And spoke tous children and shouted with glee | ¢a-€0ld Lound selection of poemeon room Soamsithnthecronae not ebiny co nace | quoted postry and guve Rar the bloeaet rant A MYSTERY SOLVED. Sa7 ist thos elugeompared | mets, December 31, 1863, the best Caleb Pium- | From the mystical tealm far over the lea rhich were very neatly papered) wero further | much. And if Kime is’ an honorable man, or | Volume that decked the center table sho felt | s1ow t sake @ Socalea Dt with the instrument # abs -ribed, ects ee ee ee mn cea cos ia eae cole) aid ake a my | Sdorned by those reproductions of water colors | oven a decently honest man, he will be quite | that it was atrocious to suspect such a noble | 2 wants whee Chien, with some oth ¢ cir :umst .nces wh Charlotte Cushman, February 19, 1861; James pl . 7 BY | that the art periodicals send forth on mission-| willing to agree to this Wher ae yousas?” | minded being of accepting bribes. As for the | From the Cincinnati Enauirer. alluded to, let any impartia! man ji ea ween caesar Sere ten | sey weenie ws eve aa my beautiful bride— | TY, daty through the world. toomity. | «ql Sensitive lips shut fights; then, | Wore stories about Kime, honest, Mike would | Make. your skirt of light erisp silk, some Thad reason toespect that dificalties would | ¢.'W. Couldock, the veteran, and from fam: | While the heavens rejoiced in eclestial eecora cWel, Mil Mees. beet Smee ing to leave that to Judge Kime,” | not have dreametl of teiling them to ® good wo- | pretty color—scariet, if you like, or bright atiee ie the comverancen. When the | Glenn, Joe Jefferson, Barney Williams, whose | And radiant, transcendent, gay nature adored, ‘ ment was presented I found no occasion rs i 1 ve ong, $0 SS oEein cose intonanen eee | ee een in many hearts, and his | As we reveled in love, so Joyous, so tree, 't don’t look well for me to be making | ™4n. _ blue. Let it come half way between knee and conditions like that. IfIcan'ttrustamanenough | Yet, in fact, hersecond marriage was as much ver—“well, | to trust him with my money and my child I | a0 affair of the conscience as her first. ‘Shehad | ["kle. Doyouknow how to make the skirt? tious sigh and nodding the black curls that showed here and there a thread of wife, who survives him: | And called to the echo far over the lea. Milly, I reckon the shortest way is the best way | can’ i married Mike Agee because she felt it her duty | J¥8t a pair of scant bloomers, either balloon- Whole was surrendered upon the condition Milly, I n the shortest way vay | can’t trust him with me. And if I can trusthim | ™arried see because she felt it her duty ‘ whic eb sen expetmnd H ad I discovered — a the oe Ce | Aud the voice that replied to onr rapturous mirth, | out. You know what I am hero for; I hear you | with myself I reckon Ican trust him with the | to Ler kind friends, the Allertons; abe wasabor, | ing or holding by elastic about the leg. On Position in the subscribers to contr : “gar ° me a kn Sankt? — 0 Elmer Kime bees ‘as s0 fall of pathoa. Caroline Richings and | E0t"aueltg and thrilling the creatures of earth.— | aro thinking of getting married agnin other things. tomarryElmer Kime because she owed that much Views I should then have pointed out the each leg sew a ruffle half way above the knee, a fentences and the impolicy of the measure. full rufile, or, better still, a knife plaiting that Peter Richings “the Washington” ct ihe © of enchantment, the still voice of love, || Mrs. Agee writhed in her chair, while a| “You have been talking with him about it; | to her owr ideals. It was not that Elmer kime's Whose melody stirred e’en the angels above,— burning flush crept up to the roots of her | have your” melodious voice awakened novel rapture in her ; Jo c i 4 & : s 1 It Crom the whole, shall hore and expect that | Shoes name f ean neither pronoonee mi Tr; | Called softy fo1us—t0 my bride ant to me bean studying abeas In re | oT | qa tuet the way E feel mysctf,” returned mi | heart ib wes beconse che bed atvays pctared | 15.00 Tote Oo taeeeea at, It 3un wnt the business will be suffered to proceed, and private box for Senator Cicke | From the mystical reaim far over the lea. been studying about it. Grea, with s forced sharpness that set on her | rich © voice thrilling her. It was not that she Ho Sco ‘of sash | nei Mines Ghip bots Game. the Gp the more oo as they cannot be ignorant that the olen eg law mp The colonel made no effort to smothera sigh, | timidity like fierce airs ons hen, found lis flamboyant gallantries so sweet | ruffle under this just about the knee of eacl mong those able to tk 2 farther consideration of a certain measure in @ | Guy Fennu, whose mannerisms in Pyiniad eq | fas night in the vale, and Istood there alone _| eather it rolled out of his portly frame with an | "[\ses," seit'ahe colonel, gloomily. He gave |to her soul; it was becuuse she thought | leg and falling to the edge of the bloomers. | able to manage Saas = wee Oe Reighboring state stand postpones, for what | Forrest wild; Jon Brougham, with ’a eepitg | 42 @9 Dleeding heart wept in the wind’s solemn | impetus that gave it a hken ‘© snort. | up the fight at thatmoment,although he stayed | that a aerehnd {hem sweet. She | Then sew skirt this same length and of the peo reason ig left to their ow2 information and con- | picture, “we may not lock upon ‘hic Hn keen sed sel you frankly, Cam terribly sorry, | half an hour longer, using every argument that Lae gees Solent cal pic Ses en | maaan nidaclal bs lass Bia LE a Machen Jecture.” Sgnin:” Lady Dos, the widow of Sir William | 424 my spirit was dying ‘neath the cold tomb of | Mildred,” said he- him, col Cn ie cliticas gov of kindness and) ponies THE AGREEMENT REFERRED To. Don, and here is @ note from that great song- | night ‘You do not know him, colonel She met them all in the same manner; plainly | Sctitious glow of kindness and partisanship | matter what —— no flash of white can sug- : of that, Milly. I tell yo ve i Showed to her fancy like love. As she gazed | gest exposure. The white articles of wear are The agreement alluded to by Gen. Washing- | stress, E. Parepa Rosa. Her kindness is shown | 48 it reached out to her, ms life and my light. es He pede gtr Homan ereey es pomes arene ere iran that hadi bean, os | withe bosry heat Ste tee aon Geese highs ton, and aheut which some trouble had arisen, | even 17 this order: “Admit two with seats, very | And I dreamed of the daye that hed long ceased to | U6 Tactae” A tudte that is suspected nl wert Mildred would keep faithfully in the track pre- | herself that he was worthy any sacrifice. She | ® reach the step up is the ruffles on the lifted was signed by nineteen of the principal pro- | 8°%!,” and another’“Admit two, Fra Diavola, bs how justly" — pared for her. Did he not remember the ab- | Could see Gather playing with the old horse | log fall in a mass about the leg and down to the Sane een é =» on her first visit here, under the management | And cailed to the echo far over the lea. ‘No, Col. Allerton, I couldn't forgive even | Pinto dependence that they all could place in | that had been hers for five years. She remem- | other leg, looking as if one’s skirt clung kindly. a aie rari er esong | of Mr. Bateman. I bad the pleasure of seeing | And the volce that cried out o'er the earth as {t you for saying that!” Mildred’s literal devotion toa duty Pre ointed | bered how kind Mike hud always been to the | The whole thing gocs on at once and Tose not Moreh, 1701, ond presen gtm on the 30th | a good deal of her, and on one occasion, when alept “Well, you know se well as I that the talk | to her? When she bad beer: in his own family | Horse because she loved it, and because its in-| soil any sooner’ than would the usual dark 4 i a caeaehed an ee fe 12th of Ancil, | itt Brough, Bateman, Mr. Hatton and’ some | roid of anguish 80 deep,that cold nature e’en TrePti | and scandal were 40 loud he failed to get a re- | “helping,” in the days when Mildred Broyles, | stinet had onco suved lier life. Alike was as | petticoat, and it is prettier than tho + 8 ETS conver in tract drake | Others, we had lingered rather long st the sup- | ana it moaned and it webbed through the darkness | nomination, and when he nted the slight | though Capt. Broyles’ daughter, had only her | kind and gentle with animals as a weman; he | You can lift your dress with impunity and not President of the Unitxd States, or commission | Rory methine tie, 02, she had « rehearsal of night and carried himself and his dirty linen off to | own slim hands to keep herself, and had made | Ws the sweetest tempered man in the world, | be afraid of lifting the skirt at the same time. er or sch persor or persons as he shall ap- | Jon'tmention it. I leave, you gentonen et, | A8 is taurmured of souls that could ne‘er reunite, | the republican camp, and got the post office | Greaun. aught school or “helped” in fami- | anyhow, | Had Mike only had a proper educa point. by good and eufficl mt deeds in fee sim-| reluctance and Ineed no rehearsal: wake me | ADdit trembled and sighed as it whispered to me "| on the sly, you know how much difficulty he lies just as the oceasion swerved, she could al- | tion and begun earlier to dress himself ‘up and A Life Lesson. pie, the whole of our respective lands which he | out of sound eleep, put the music 1 am to sing | From the mystical realm far over the lea. had getting his bonds filed, and how, finally, | wavs be trusted. naveniowuininer kane today, tontSRt | rom the Raneas City Journal. may think proper to include withta the lines of | before mer Til site: ir ome at —Currorp Howanp, | they fired him —" ATMS Alecia ce eee eet Mel took tuna) “che. kan Aceh Soll te oe tile girl, don't eryt coulisieas followieg: Th! Precious nates ieceataae to cae oat y Boyhoole Home" een Se The colonel looked at Here she was, | not any one that I feel safer t0 leave thins Se en ee ee "iit Rant Groken you? Wa pew sanper sad iecctag ae a q 4 ee afraid of him in every nerve of her—he wasnot | with.” For all her gentle waysand her ter her dead husband an ques. mouse, be laidoffin whermannerie pleases, Henne re, | fom the opera 6 ‘hue Lore os fons Be | Ingenious Houlthan’s Exploring Expedition | only the greatcet mau of the gountzy side, Lat ahe bad her opinious ‘and could cling io them, |Woned the rights of the lover that she had Are things of ag ages tai number of squares be may think proper | with the Wil tuamcme: ‘and Its Unexpectedly Disastrous Result. | also her most powerful and kind friend, her} “Well, Mildred,” he said finally, “I reckon | Chosen. Would Elmer be so kind to worn-out Bat caildish troubles will soon pass by; for public improveme.te or other public usc mcombrs a From Munsey's Weekly. kindest friend, excepting possibly his wife—yvet | you'll get me dut of temper if Istay talking here | #nimale? There he came riding down the ‘There! little girl, don't ery: pool owpat ay ceive ay amyl pe! RIsTOR!, LUCILLE WESTERY, ETC. Pope er pebp agent ppm bg ig Touch fonger, and I don't want’ to set tna | street on his beautiful new horse. “She had not a & joint property betweoa the trustees on bebait Ristori, writes “Li Arte © una scrutilla dell in- him. What irrational, inscrutable creatures | friends, for you will need all your friends if | ¢xpected him. She ought to feel glad to see Se nd oe ph Of the public and e.ca ~.esent proprietor, and | telligenzo de Deo,7” December, 1366, Lucille| 4 women are. He wished that he had let | you marry Kime, so I'll jast say good evening, | him. Why didn't she? “He looked like a pict- "Mm gel the same shail be fw equally divided | Western, Haselm: the conductor of the Hortense go (Hortense was Mrs. Allerton); but | and ask you to think it over and let me know." | UFe, With his coat buttoned up and his black Of your sehool-ritl days between the public .nd uals. As soon which rendered so beau besides her bad cold there was something that. | Mildred did not eay that thinking it over | Curis. Why wasn't she prouder of him? “I Afe things of long ago; as may be the city shall off. For the Robert.” “Le Daw fsa last recourse, he had decided to tell Milly | would make no difference. ‘That was not her | Will marry him now, no matter wha: lies folks But life and love will soon come byy which would more properly be told in his own way. Her obstinacy was of the mild and | tell about him,” said she; “but—I wish I had ‘There! little girl, don't ery! person. He cleared his throat and charged | shrinking sort, that, like dough, recedes at a | Known about Mike's trusting me so and—loy- ‘There! little girl, don't ery! streets the prop ensation. but f oe shail receiv the squares or form which shall be taken for pubi . Hermans, the basso of that troupe, George C. Jordan, “Gen- buildings | tleman George,” who made his first appearance down on the subject in much the mood in which | touch, but instantly and dilently rises again, | ing me 80, before. . They have broken your ki or any Riad of f improvements or uses the | it the little theator over Joc Shillington’s book~ he used to lead his cavalry during the war. She got up, paling a little, not eatag hig, to |. Guther saw him coming and slipped off the ad oo — Propfietors whose lands shall be taken shall | store. His last appearance here was to support ‘Well, Milly, {'ve known you since you were | stay, as she would usually have done,and shook | horse. Instead of greeting him the child ran Of your youthtul dreams the rate of £25 per acre to be paid | Kate Bateman, and he made a most successful a baby "mm \d I was glad when, after your'| hands. round the house. i Are things of jong ago; @ public. tour. One of the handsomest men that ever hard ‘times, Mike's mind turned to you. I| His last words were: “Now, Milly, you think | , Elmer Kime was 4 tall man, with a dark, thin But heaven holds all for'which you sigh; would su .ove this agreement trod the boards of a theater, and capital actor, L thought he was making a wise choice and I told | it over. Don't commit yourself.” The little | face and fine eyes; his manner was very pleas- ‘There! Uttle girl, don't cry! ugh, Dus the difteulty of which Washing- | Pinning fame ins long residence in England. | «gee de old bloke asleep on de balcony! 1 |b oS ae ee eee one SOREe deaf and dumb boy was ‘clinging to his hand | ing and bis voice soft. At first sight he looked Soon Weare tae. nged when others | His Capt. Hawkesly, and the leading characte? | petisee Ill oot pore ne toon eet ‘ow what in thunder have I said to while he epoke. thirty. but if one examined his face the fine ary Warner.” which Miss Bateman played so mp squirm and get red!” thought the honest man. “Kavenswoo it a Mildred, from the window, saw him jump | ¥Tinkles abouthis eyes showed his fifteen ad- Ferns on a Dinner Table. Mildly he went on: don’t suppose Mike | into the buggy and drive rapidly away. She | ‘ditional ye: rf i first From the Boston Sunday Herald. would have thought of marrying again if Hor-| knew that he was both hurt and angry and | _After the first words there was @ pause that 7 tense and I hadu't sort of “put it. into | slowly the wears gece is ee yen She | Kime found pleasant enough, with his arm | A very beautiful table decoration was seen at his head. Fact is, I don’t think his first|brurhed them away. “If 1 don't trust him | about Milly's waist and the mocking bird's trill | adinner party given last week bye hostess ever made. him very happy; she had @|enongh to suffer a little for him I don't | floating on the cool breeze. He eyed the nent | noted for her taste and originality. The cloth, tight of sickness and ran to the morphine | guess my love is worth much,” she said. “Col. | g4*den with approval; perhaps it might be bet- | which was of the finest damask, displaying bottle for every pain she hed. until things went | Allerton doesn’t know him, but 1. wish I tef to rent hisown farm and come here to live. | Yeu or feona the center apestig on iee sky west and crooked, you know. But Mike| could have toid him If it was not for | He whispered in Mildred’s ear: “Say, boney fsitely di fis of ths froma, white tas was glad enough he did marry you after-| that" Hastily she took a photograph out of | You. Won t let Coi. Allerton do me # meanness | quisitely drawn wreath o ronds, wi ward. He appreciated the way you took hold | her pocket, the picture of handsome, | Behind my back, will you? border was formed by sprays of the most deli- mo. 4. of things and all your pains with poor Gather. dark, smiling man—her lover's -p t| Ob, Elmer, he was here today; he wanted | cate maidenhair variety, had been ordered of a| Now, the proper way is for the wearer to tle There is something else, Milly” (he cleared his | tho face bent above it was white and scared, | M6 to do like yon ssidPhe would about Gather.” | great linen house in Belfast, with ithimself, and the same portion of the scarf b throat again), “it may make a difference that I| not in the least such face as a loving woman nd you told him—’ erence to the decoration of living ferns, in- | rarely comes onan edge twice in succession, tralto with the German troupe; shall be forty for in your feelings toward | pends above the picture of any dear one. “It | “I told him I could trust you to do right by | tended to be used for “a summer dinner | thus causing the tie to last longer and retain © Matthews, in his line unsnrpased. On one| . UL. me, but I believe that J ought to tell you, for I| would be—awful if now—if now I were. to like | Gather and me, too parts.” The table was circular, and in the | better appearance. La page of the book are names that will recall de- 's a good chance ter swipe de old gent’s | hope it may make you see things about Kime in | Mike best!” She shaped the thought that| “fbat's my brave girl! You know why, | center stood one of the giant tulip vases, now | The iatest move is the tying of the “Ascot 1 memories. The Seguin troupe—Ed- wipe. another light. When Mike came to die—| haunted her into words with inexpressible | derest; you understand the reason for my | 80 fashionable. This graceful receptacle was K Shepherd, took the law Proceeded to carry out the desig: «- he io. From Bs man Crowe,” January 45, 1870. Clara Louise by the corresr Gen. Washingt. . bo movement was made toward t the city without con and sapervis inet letter in re Was written at Pi He says: city of Wasi gain “In kind remembrance, he building of | 3 Williams,” December 2, 1870, and the approval | Carlotta Le Clercq. ' a beautiful’ ac- President. His | tress who supported Fechtar, whose autograph fe atfaire of the city | dated February 11, 1871, fixes the date of his the 3d of March, | last appearance. What a success his was and » relative to the most forgotten. He was in hisline a great decision and | 8ctor. Here is Lord Dundreary, Ned Sothern thern), in 1872; Marie any. The fires rn Law touching the if the ex- strument 4 to me in your letter Sint Jan- | ard - variety. The scarf comes narrow in the por- at Win. W. Soguin, Zelda (Harrison) you remember that day about a week before | aversion, but she did shape it. “But I don't! | king this mark of confidence. I can't en- | filled with the loveliest and rarest specimens of | {ion which is hidden in the back of the ener wary The first he reterred to the Attoi Seguin, 8. C. Campbell and . Castle—and ie died, when he sent for me—well, he lay | [ don't”’ she protested, “when I thought about | dure to have my enemies jecring at me and say- | ferns, the spreading, feathery fronds reach- | and swelle out toward both ends. It should General and he approved an next comes Carlotta Patti, November, 1869, and t ; there in that bed sat in the chair | itso long, aud he is just like what 1 thought | ig You bargained with me. After we are mar- | ing far over the heads of the assembled com- | be crossed X shape as the initial move, as seem thurd, « bill 4 ng the commissioners, | “Remember, Yours Truly, Theodor Wachtel, r, you re in now” (there w very slight move- | every way!” ried then you shall see it I will be stingy with | pany, and forming, as it — ete = in : Was pot acted gress. 1872." Who could forget him and his charm- iment on Mrs. Agee's part) “and he wanted me! Realty the colonel might have spared himself | “°*" little Gather! But you know the puet’s | through whoso interstices shone the electric |" ‘The second move is to push tho outside lap g for a Sunday jour- wonderful voice? Christine Nilsson, March ~- to draw up his will for him. Now—I'm going | te cudgeling that he wes giving his witsall tho | Y°F28. honey: lights of the chandelier. No candles, no flow-| up inside, showing the lining, then cross the Bal some mo here was no society in | 38.1872. Tn the same year we have Janauachek, 2 to be frank with you—I thought it would be ned ae we : ere were used, but cach silver dish was sur- ws no society in 3 . Ss x ; way home, for Mrs. Agee was affected as power: ‘Trust meal} in al’, Souahel Or a Sraath oF Bran chem hoes ee Wares ant bere is what Mr. | am admirable actress." Poor John I. Raymond, A, better to provide for Gather wish a guardian | Pi, Qg he ‘could. have. wished, aithout ao Or annette rounded by a wreath of ferns. which kept per Lib = “the socte - | “Col. Sellers,” Tean see him and hear him in ad iF and trust funds, and to have some provision in | erratic conscience of a woman would brace her | “Yes,” ald Mildred. And she wondered pop eel preemie thn ~~ fugton partes of all the h . my memory. He made his first success here. VF &) ard to your marrying again —the miserable | peart to resist him and to cling to Kime, be-| Why she did not feel more impressed. and ‘sth imoces, whi Gus Wicehen cba eres cred life, from the highest “Gabriel Kavel,” that name takes me back i mi XN . | uspicion of us men, Milly. nothing else; we | canse—well, in truth, because she was not in | she wished Elmer would not hold er so tight. ee bins Souik Ot seaeaek with, France tu the rive tinny of ustaturet know not how many years. “Ihe Ravels,” un- XI easgnming every pretty woman will | (Ove with Kime at ail. Nobody suspected it; _ “Well, Wt old Allerton nor Was vont gave the one touch of warmth and color wit Parties daring the wrt 3 ara numer-|*pproachable in their line, were household TN ; gain. 3 her friends did not"suspect it; Kime did not | ‘he can’ r'arand charges muchas he Likes, ie bate aoa eee, ous and weil attende The amuse-| Yords throughout this country and Europe. iy ‘The compliment miscarried, apparently, for | suspect it; she, least of all, euspected it. Just | he shan't bother us. But I've come to soe non inal Sux sabe etetdive Wass Oho ehabieane We anes a Gia athe hed ex tie He was bere, quite an old man, in 1874 had Te- fy Mrs, Agee only looked more bewildered’ and | tic? Same, like’ other grit facto it remained | about something What do you reckon, Milly? Senaants wien hinve peovaied Mera ie pos the society ev gvod that none can fee ured from the stage som betore. Rossi. Mm. Ft cat Fou, 4° that | And this that sho had longed to tell Col. Allerton | I've found out how to make some money’ for | D&D a for the one or be ied with the other. the arest, Halian actor. h, 1873, Char-| yfr, Podby (suddenly awaking from hia | ¥#¥¢ Iwish you had,” she stammere was the expianation how she could thus deceive eenecoes A CITY DIRECTORY 18 1522. mole meng open deal- | siesta) —““Hi there! Stop thief! Hold him till| “Why?” the colonel repeated—“why? Because | jrerselt, “All my money is in Col. Allerton’s hands.” STEN SPIE Ty Tay down Mr. Glover'sbook with retuctance, | “ritz,” who diel ney cea, oe Emmet, | T get after him!” your husband would not have it. He said to| Mildred was the only child of ruined and| ‘This is some money that you will get; I aorta for thore is so much of interest in it of the | the great clown: Lydia Thompton signe'he sot te eo te tt ee reckless gentleman, who had covered a multi- | can get you 10 per cent for it, sure, and maybe | Taterview with a Bartender. jigns herself feel for a woman since he had married you. | tude of errors by a heroic death. His exteara, | more, if” sini ing—"you ain't afraid to let'me | Saloons are getting to be very good custom- ‘I can’t talk, says he; ‘I'ma rough fellow, not | gance left Mildred penniless, but she always | have it.” ers of the dairies owing to the steady growth fit to live with a lady like her, but by ——’ — | Siored his memory. you know Mike would swear—'a king couldn't | Being without kindred, for Capt. Broyles’ ‘ould you say to getting a hun- love her better,’ says he; ‘and I'm going to | past history waa a blank, the little girl was ap- | dred and twenty for old Spike? “Woullure you show her how 1 trust her. ios trast Gather | prenticed toan Ohiv férmer with an ailing | call that a pretty sharp job of financiering?’ 7 i, will er. y money aint nothing com- | wife, who wanted “some help that couldn't run be. o? doesn’ tshed by Wm. Duncan and compiled by Judah | My 10, 1867, has left no successor in the char- ared to my boy. T Teave “kim "to ‘her Off,” and in his family sho oan atl oho for; teeletent hha pee i Delano. Mr. Delano was in after y acters he assumed—Major De Boots, Bob Tyke, 00; for there's nobody in the world will | jy, ighteen; then she wn to support her-| “Si Hurd.” ployed im the oltice of the Vationai Intelii- | #¢., and almost the last name I find is “Signor do for him like her. You put it strong as you | self. She cpanel ‘emes, she | _ “Sell Spike toa livery stable, and that cruel occ. Heoutainsabout 1.700 names, including | Bitz. bis BO, “members Richard R. Risley | Iv. gan, colonel,’ he said— ‘everything to my be-| “helped” in families, and all the while she | Si Hurd! Oh, Elmer? But you don't know how Leamtere and members of Congress, the popu-| Fite hie two sons’ He traveled through | (as he sets his foot onthe plank and sends In- | loved wife, she to be guardian. executrix and | never forgot that she was a gentleman's daugh- I was lost once and Spike brought me home and lation beings little over 13.000: nearly 4,000 of it | Europe, appearing at almost every court, win- | ge Houlihan spinning into the sir)—‘"Ha! | everything else the law allows, to have and to | ter. saved my life.” Were colored. Capt. Thomas Carbery was | ®ing wealth and fame. His autograph is dated | Now I've got him P spend and to marry if she wants to—God bless | When she was twenty she met the Allertons. “Oh, yee, I do,darling; but any horse will do mayor. ‘The boards of akiermen aad common | APtil, 1869. About that time he rented “Iron her and d— him! cries poor Mike. Ob, he | she was thirty now, and she knew that she| that. ‘Spike wasn't aiming to save your life; he counetl coutain ta:mibar ames, aud theit de- pm Mag rr —_ ‘acct thought the world and all of you, Milly!” owed to them the glimpso of a new world. On | was after his own corn and cotton seed. And ecend are among o g dent Pi es i id i it i Y po ember —— — — modeler an admirable company. 1 met hie eo pote The woman sat ® stone, her two hands | their part they grew attached to her, and | we got to consider that the horse ain't going to. chief clerk for sears cf the naval commisuon- | the Landsome and graceful boys whose per- locked. She was not trembling, but she cer- | Hortense Allerton often wondered “why some | get any younger. We better voll ins fi disco * tainly had grown very pale. Did the trust of | nice man did not marry Mildred.” = a ‘a ets, who were then Commodores Rodgers, | formance as acrobats gave such pieasure years ‘4 cey and Porter; James A. Paulding the | “8% He was then the proprictor of the news- get a good chan He hasn't more than thi the poor fellow who bad loved her affect her so | The few suitors that ‘a peared Mildred dis-| or ‘tour years’ ak in poly "What are you Author, wus secretary of the board and subse- | *taud in the Continental Hotel, Philadelphia. ee couraged so summarily that they retired dis- | lookin, ° early days of the city. and take up two small | “Yours truly,”’and Reta Sangallt, Josephene books, for which I aim indebted to Mr. Joseph | 44 Adele Zanfretta, the danseuse. Wm. F. S Sessford of the Smithsonian Institution, one | Cedy, “Buffato Bill,” “oncea scout of the plains, being the “National Calendar” of 1821, pub- | but now a thin star, Washington, May 10, 1873, ished by Peter Force, and the other the “City | “Remember the world is a stage,” writes Directory” of 1822 The directory was pub- | Strakosch. March 29, 1872. John Sleeper Clark, but where's the money?” at me in that for, Mildred?" ; Iwish I had fetched Hortense!” was the | comfited in the earliest stages of courtship. “Oh, nothing.” said Mildred faa” very low quently wasSe-re { the Navy, and Heury M. ARTEMUS WARD'S FAREWELL. only thing clear in the colonel’s perturbed |" “Fact is,” explained Col. Allerton, “Milly | voice.’ “Idon't Just like to—to hear you talk Sisinet; council. Alexander Mcintyre, Wai. P.| I find a reminder of “Arterus Ward,” « pro- mind; but he tramped on doggedly through hie | ain't sentimental. If she doesmarry 1 will be | that way, Elmer; like all you thought of besste Gardnet and James iatther Secoud ward, | gram of his lecture, “Farewell Nights in Ainer- mental brief of the case. “Slike was proud of | for » home.” was what james Hol ad Jolin ison, aldermen, | ica, Adoo! i !"" His lecture was a “Mormon ttainment.” He had just returned from ‘ornin “over the plains.” Telegraphing from Californin in 1864 was rather expensive, snd Henry Ashton, subsequently marshal: Menry Smith and Francis Coyle (my father), | C ‘canetimes. Third ward, Wm. W. Seatou rou could get it You, Milly; he thought everything of your bet-| _ Little did the good man suspect that Mi Bpike now, he he BCE ow; he has just window, ter education and accomplishments. “He c she was learning to eat with her furk an: eanee tellin re x Whe te on. | wi ‘When ‘he’ other day, Sidered you the finest lady in the world; but | to distinguish an etching from m chromo, and | fond of mo, meteor ng en till eee ane 288, | Fulton street, the noes seized « young man by the arm and said: what touched him most was the way you hed | to play Mendelssohn's Songe without Words in- | for mo, it seams wicked vo talk of welling Bien = a wd = rare councilmen, “Peter Force, | and one of the managers ia’ San Frosting i with Gather, | “Tdon’t believe’ says he, ‘she'll | stend of tho Gospel Hymna, waa keenly watch: | “Kimplocken poetics, oly Litsant My Shancest? "cated alter Clarke and Nathan ‘Smith. Fourth | his frugality telegraphed Ward, “What will pou ever leave the boy to marry again; but if she | ing hes friend's married hfe. “But that's what horses "| ‘My 1 My a baad Gard, Bech, Burch, Wm. &- Bradley. aldermen; | take for thirty nights?” Artemus replied at jcorge Watier for—to work, does, 11 engngo she'll take up with a decent | “When Iam married,” Mildred would’aream, | snid he. “Whatare ros gone te no cit tie Saas Crem cyeted | casa Theva axl tre hoes! ciatben, “Lwilbovenbemeel diet centre | near piace wee as pleas, ve,” sai irs. lot “5. ve a ve ae wien Ewen yee | geal Sits Glee? soulfal dark eyes and curly hair, and shall treat | Elancrnt 7% PUt BY She looked at him as if ho bad struck her. | me like,Col. Allerton does Mra’ Allerton! He | oie if “Why—why didn't you stop Mike trusting in | shall look " me #0, it that's how you think about me?" abo |" Now me fed wildly, an ‘sob. man, y sia dd fey ta beat But it only made fet on her single’ railway Jpsrmey to, Lite | ara laat ationce: him mad,” said the colonel.’ “‘Don’tery, Milly; | Kook. There n'a collision, nothing of Were nearet a quarrel than they had ever crying won't help. Ifelt £ ought to tell you | moment or danger, although it seemed fright. | need en be rode aa. wt Elias Ke Cald= Seuntey and in The = well, clerk of the Supreme Court. councilmen. ome ‘This lecture waa bio dames’ Fimo he comes! 1 we Filth ward, James Middleton, George Blagden, | tion of his tr aldermen; Gruftith Coombs, Edward =e is | was the greatect of all the humorists this ¢ and Clement boswell, mer. Sixth ward, | try has produced. His solemn appearance larael Little, Edw ard W. Clarke, M. D., alder- | the unexpected flashes of wit thet came sp men; Adam Lindsey, Philoman Moss, John | taneously kept the audience ina roar of laughter Nowland, councilmen; E. J. Middleton and | ducing th Thomas L. Noyes, secretaries; Dr. Alexander | wit. “The few hiss cat ba ccneamea ee MeWilhams was “physician to the guardians of | the pianist lema: boarded i the poor.” Managers of the city lovteries were | sams street Site Me Gotten. The wean wee Thomas H. Gillis, Andrew Ww dis- nd 1 shall never forget it. “ : how Mike trusted you. Milly, any woman on | fal to Milly's inexperienced eyes, and the man| Mildred remembered. had refused ‘m. Brent, | kept the boarding house remembers this earth might be proud to have won such a love | had her away from the window in time «larger gum for the horse, saying that be never Danie! Rapine and John Davidson. — Trustees | tinctly). The overture will consist of a medley from as honest, noble-hearteds man as Michael | to save her arm a wrench. He had been sell the horse that saved her life. Mike gf the public schools, ev. Father Matthews, | of airs, including ‘Mother. is the Battle O'er? Agee.” courteous and friendly for the few minutes | had understood; Mike always did understand. Hev. Andrew McCormick, Thomas Monroe, | and ‘Is It Safe for Me to Come Home From Can, she sobbed. that they wore together before his friends | Again eame that useless longing for her dead James Hoban, " Watterson and others | ada? and atthe request of many who have'nt ‘Well, ‘the colonel’s elastic spirits|came to take him away. He had a» dark|nusband. But now she sarnel pa sternly away and Henry and subsequently | heard it, “Tramp, Tramp, Tramp. the Boys jumped at a new hope—‘‘just contrast the two. | handsome face and beaitiful voice. | from the memories of Mike as di Gea. Robert taught in one of the public | Are Marching.” Secon: n't you owe something to Mike? He didn't | She fancied that he seemed annoyed when | she had turned away from her rever- pools Artemus Ward, who will VI. ‘ask you not to marry; but to marry the man he | hiefriends took him — “We will meet | ies about her unknown hero. Elmer was the SOME OF THE BAYES THEY. plause—the ushers are pai “Now, just you come with ber 4 most despised on earth—” seein, Don't forget me!” he had hero and to think of Mike so regretfully was to George Graham was president and Richard | ' sttend to this. very | Fuffian, to be handed over to the police! 't| “Mike didn’t know him.” was as the be tohim. What, when he had been of the Branch Bank of the | iiefesting one, as we rere rather farther | You ashamed to attack an old man like me?” Pe so deceived, eo deserted, when be clung to her hearsay om those days. His lecture was ———<eo_—____ t if there wasn’ as happiness United States, which was then corner of F | interspersed wit “You'll drive me into my grave with the fact that Kime is (so be hed bee many tne) sod 13h streets, and enbseqnentiy, built and | the séenes are brought into view, his descrip- | demands for,'thorey, eid Sid aheek one bildren—" bg if ae Tee pay cceupied what is pow . "have to give ‘me $150 more,” said Mrs. | ‘They are all away from home.” a, ae el ae Mr. Thomas Monroe, Gen. Weightman. Will- tae “Of course they are. was riding now, bad as bad. Her iam Wirt, Mr. Seaton, Anthony Cazanove of ba | pensive.” —Harper’s Basar. “i “It was their mother’s conscience smote her and she donned | up.”—Life.

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