Evening Star Newspaper, March 5, 1892, Page 11

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a Ld THE EVENING STAR: WASHINGTON, D.C. SATURDAY, MARGH®= 5, 1892-SIXTEEN PAGES ‘ ll SSE SE Se rd Nate) NEW YORK LAWYERS. fey ators Sal en a's oa ek ere deel of secant : WAY THEY ARE cRUEL. hundreds of miles in every direction on fre, and all the settlers that were not killed fleeing. a Only Followed the Example Set | {0T their lives to the towns on the Rio Grama The aes : “bani ‘ A better understanding was reached «few Fears after, throngh the exertions of officers of day. Among vi are so genial and refined, is Jobn the stamp of Ewell, who A Notable Bar of About Forty Years Van the “prince” of White House f ROW MONORS ARE FASY—A RECORD oF cuvELTY, | tend A ee erie ie wae bet aie saved hee ote ne oe nder in peace, and who obtained great infil: Ago. stabbed her betrayor on the steps of the Astor | mien, nd Spenser, the New Jersey homicide. fashion and the world, is a command- BLOODSHED AND BROKEN FAITH--WuY THE ONLY | ence over a a w House, Of Mr. Graham saysa writer in the New York ing lawyer, whose words are ever classically one! GOOD INDIAN IS A DEAD INDTAX—casTrtaN | MOR Whose w FEROCITY—THE ONLY DIFFERENCE BETWEEN ~ son t : SOCIAL LIES NOT WICKED, >) World, May 8, 187: “He was kind, courteous, on David Dudiey Field, still at the WHITE AND RED. pe BRILLIANT CHAS. O'CONOR. | chivairicand fominine in his feelings, yet he | acme of his rensens Dewey, Field, still st the a MaMDations of the Necessity Which W ed knew how to fight al’ outrance for his self-re- | seen a small, , elderly person with thick Capt John @. Bourl ‘On the Border With Crook.” _ spect and self-convictions, aswell as for the | grayish hair, a flue strong face and « perfectly For years I have collected the data and have Be | Te ote Emmets, Bradys, Mexeon,| rights of his clienia. "He Bad n'tweeh Jusical )compored manner, shongh a times imperative A LENTEN SOCIABLE. conteerplalall She geajoen Of satting tae Sav. = and wasa consummate orator.” For | He ¢ lawyer who drew the testament in 3 ee eee eee hebapinies some years he was corporation counsel; he was | contest and is succinctly telling the story of its tory of the Apaches, based not only upon the Their Employment. “People talk about the wickedness of lies, bub Twould like to kuow how they could be got - < Written for The Evenine Star. accounts itted to us from the Spaniards | ®0ng without in polite soniety,” said a woman iated with David Dudiey Field in the prep- | execution in his prosence. It is the chief com-| _,, 5 rere ante tranewnli = 4 dents Bringing Out the Peculiarities of | sration of the New York code of precedure, mercial lawyer of wee aniel Lord, jr. | “Tam certainly relieved to think Lent is here | and their de endants, the Mexicans, but upon | fashion toawriter for Tne Stan. “Imagine "These Great Advocates. and he wrote “Graham's Practice,” still the | Perhaps no judicial inqni -y ever held in New | 8nd wo will not have to flourish at those everlast- | the Apache's own story as conserved in his | fF ® moment an afternoon call, for example, andard work on Koa subject in his state, | York city was more conscientiously and ably | ing tens,” saida sweet little lump of sugar. | myths and traditions; but I have lacked both ere both hostess and visitor had conscien- —— ay pod 3 of when he was but in his twenty-fifth year. Dur- | conducted to its final determination than that | “Well. fam not poke ap a napkin fla the leisure and the inclination to put the pro- | HoUsly made up their minds to spoak with en- : USS ing the tri of White _the | of the well and widely known Parish will case. — tire frankness and truthfulness. Written tor s Rrenine Star p|ettorney general,” Willis Hall “who. pros: " Davip Gragas Aprg. | !*8 white dross over the table edge. Ject into execution. It would require # man | "Spire ts yours! the mistene of the b i YEAR OF | ccuted, said of Mr. Graham, that’ “he = ‘Though I must say it's boon rather hard on | with the even-handed senso of justice possessed | in the act ot ‘entering the drawing room. Im Jour nineteenth century bad paret Metis ——_ aan aa MONEY SAVED IN BANK. me, I have ‘assisted’ at afternoon | by Guizot and the keen, critical, analytical | stead of rasbing impulsively for: od grasp- saw an especially brill- | eloquence, and being himself but a man, he —— thie yes i 8 a - | ing the visitor's hand wi 0 itrelinasenad te Seale erestite Cheetatn a otate ee onl meme el pas eee ‘Away Against the | (is Year. And it docs wear out one's clothes so, | powers of «Gibbon to deal fairly with a ques nd wath « p tie and ! but it’s such fun to seo the pretty girls: one i Sords expressive of pleasure at seeing hor, she the Leader: ere was one peculinrity of Mr. Rainy Day That M: = 2 ee a ee simply anys: the goodly city of Goth-| Graham with rogard to the conduct of the dec hapACn eethreh Wika ae Tuiing to put up with some abuse—why, only | man has been more than equaled by the feroc- | EY'.A lee ota thing. why om earth bere you am. Many, then, were | fense in important criminal triale fle cos eaed OTe etd the eosave money bY TeS-| Inst wook I was squeezed most unmorcifully | ity of the Christian Caucesian; in which the o bother me with « call this afvernoont” the lawyers of note | the opening, especially in times of greatexcite- | War system,” said the president of @ saving®| and then thrust behind » divan, but even in / occasional treachery of theaborigines hasfound | “‘‘Simply for the sake of getting through there and many are the — So — f@ address for the ac- bank toa Sram writer. “One of our deposit- my rumpled state I managod to hear some | its best excuse in te cman punic faith of | With an unpleasant duty, fan oye accounts still extant of | oe iteg Jounny Aten cha oe fon ae is aes Of thie institution | gwoet things said to the younglady who tucked | the Caucasian invader; in which’ promises on shore ery earnestly that 1 should not find their professional pro- | in the face of the most able and earnest efforts | "*" Rewsboy. He sold papers on Pennsyl-| me away in the dark, and she appeared to be side have beon made only to deceive and |” if T had had any notion that you were com- ing Isbould have told the maid to say that I bat tion in which the ferocity of the savage red é - | of the talented Jolin MeKeon. then district at- | Yanis avenue. Every day he came in and de-| nizhiy pleased with the young mun who sat be-| to be broken: in which the col hand of war Rar eer torney for the city and county of New York. | Posited 25 cents, He never missed a day | side her.”” Z ‘Seer is : J has rested most heavily upon shrieking mother | Was not receiving, returns the hostess” "Wi Graham was the son of that el when the bank was open, and afte: hile 1, o ” becemin 3 ¥ r ” 5 eee marked membersof the | Aisbol and "schoheely’ wo crek tena iareree’ (uae cbsuscaiated crac @10b. ate drew outthe | 77, Ni Fou, lve some one else a chance?” | aud wailing babe. ie oy eas MR. BLAINE’S WASHINGTON DINING ROOM. eminent bar of that day | eminent in the ministry, 1n literatureand juris- a This was rattled out in a saucy manner by the HONORS ARE RAS notorio was Charles O-Gonor. “Ste. O'Conor studied | Prudence, of the, saito ‘ame, tbe aatior of Eto ee spoont. “Our duty is higher than yours, we Jraham on New Trials," and the brother of ey wé have carried sweets mauy ad ty mouth, " Y ay | cece lore ee, corms seem Lien Dab) ew Wite (se oot txnsdltionae by tie warns of | (5 caeat gifted Jche Graham, yin te wean | /*The alMioull tnlag with rooet people ts to| uterine only been used to brash them | act eny couse of eclfaudation I am gled | ,_CAt spout thet point in the conversation the MRS. J (WES ¢ BL AINE there is any delicacy in my house or anything Fay, laboriously fought the battle of legal sue-| known in Washington circles as the counsel make the first start in saving. After one has | off. of it Speaking asa censor, who has read the | Trp *iets of politeness are altogether dig ed wn sea o same Pea A ea Sisaltg, Frente Maeeraity of circumstances | who opened the cuse of Gen. Sickles on bebalt | got togethe “As far as that goes,” rang out a glass, “‘our | evidence with us much impartiality as could be | Jyw.” - _ atta badly dressed yourself seems rather ‘ejoins the visitor. Iffrom this history the Caucasian can ex- | absurd, 3 few dollars in a reserve fund an low . Of the defeuso, and asthe lawyer who ia’ late : : pleasur, the same: sucha dear litte miss | expected from one who started in with the | "opie. = Rig antellect and the breadth and depth of lis | years cleared Mucfarland, tried for the shooting | *PPetite for accumulation is acquired. It be-| Epped me up to bes roobed of @ months | sere cere ene the only good Indian | aucy ada on moe poe syn 4 ; f the Most F. learning in law and letters firiumphed | of que Richardson in the Tribune office. comes an object in life to put something aside, | otter day and her lips caressed mo ia a inost | was adend Indian, and that. the only use to civilized life are in a hugh degres ortifietal naa Gossip About One of the Most Fa- : se hee obstacle, wom ies ae a easy which represents an insurance against misfor- tbriing m aner; indeed I think my position | inake of him that of a fertilizer, and whe, | we are ail of us compelled anaeanaioees — . P ‘ odes an enviable one.” ng the documents in the case an: ink Giada aro lngine too eamnadl mous Ladies in Social Life. y he conscious of its right, took his acknowledged nt hee Tae Oe mney sro not eet |For ahaiseT? eichsianed the eajac. Sow ittio by little to the savage’s own | much anit wo were ne she cee ee eer osition at the head of the bar of his state, the | Brady should appear beside that of his life-long | Siven to saving compared with Europeans. | many iver vio you think you have embittered | story, las arrived at the conclusion that pet-| ing our real sel = the stage teatend _—__ zitimate successor in legal attainments of the | friend and associate, David Graham, jr. Of | They usually live up to the last ponny of their | by your we". > ‘ ps Pope Paul LIL was right when he solemnly | T think, but ences pecen wy mefoeewe tpl THE HOMES OF THE B: NES. — Seas ee te the Irish-American bar already alluded to both | incomes, or just a little beyond. This is cer-| “‘"Well,” tho injured one responded, “you {declared that the — natives of the “4 » = 7 s ‘LAINES. . O'Conor aides, onore @ certain role orld. ind aud must “be he world. The only people 5 i. | tainly very unfortunate. In caso of loss of ent- | consider yourself 0 tet ‘of that talented branch of ‘the New York | Of these gentlemen, although native-born citi- | *imly very unfor ra peeiveatey os buman beluga and oouiod on ther their natural selves are sav- : vom that slander in your bar known at Irish-American aad of which the | ens of our republic, were conspicuous mom. | Plo¥ment suffering for the wage earner and his | swectened state; but teli you you are indeed i k is Ww. a ‘bitter sweet.’ otics vi i ce | to the sac: when found lo receive | Mrs. Blaine’s Witty Remarks and How She Emmets, the Grahams, the Bradys, McKeon, | bers peter oe eaten, At one period no ig Are tee ate ia to make it an in-| many times in oe Meee euanion? them, I feel it to be my duty to eay that DB hp eedlerer yd yee Sear Mistes Themn—Met Career an © Schecl Daly, O'Gorman, together with a group of | public meoting and thOnt & Brady oat eral | varinble rule to deposit something each week | “Oh, dear! I'am ao glad ani too stupid to| the Apache has found himecif in the very | ing ita vitees eas ee a p 3 \ other notable legal lights, haye been such dis- | ' Court t0%, lace wi hou Dede ate | or exch month. Having thus put the money | be responsible for anybedy's wrongs.” The | best of company when ho committed any | it” ‘They would sor tuk, ae ae aoe Rene a eae x tinguished ornaments, Mr. O'Conor first camo | bam init. ‘There were brothe aside, 1t should be considered out of rench and | old eat yawned it out ax it aie enjoyed the dis-| atrocity, it matters not how vile, aud. that hie | Sbig {has eit Ot ewitate to say dinaierwe- Something About Her Life in Augusta. : into prominence before the community as| were brothers ie on no account to be drawn upon exceptin case of | tinction. and lazily curled up again on the rug | complete histors, if it could be written by him- | true theme conte yee ne, Lone a8 they were = the counsel of Mrs. Forrest in th S Draay wen fone car; a2 Chisl Juetice | Sickness, loss of employment or desth. It is | for asthor ney. self, would not ‘be any special cause of seif-| Such people de not eats in uttering them. = suit, John Van Buren ee ihe ornament of the | surprising how money will pile up when such a| ‘Tho spoons. tittored audibly, at which «| complacency to such white men as believe m | fy imitation of seeaneh eaten Sry weaning Written for The Evening Star. ¢ win Forrest. It = bust of Mr. ‘br. 8 aba notice rk gears aa system as this is followed. If every one who | mouse who was stealing along toward the sugar | just God, who will visit the sins of parents upon portant ditarenne tones paren yt F ALL THE FAMOUS . isan caencee teen Be cee | enad ihc. Geaheae wean gnosis ae qupteme | Pomenses any income at all would adopt the | scampered back to its retreat behind the coffee | their children even to the third and fourth | Mviused inuivnical lee tee nee the = . < 5 0 ow ami n, but on le pit se generatior i women at Washington y : ww counsel was fomented tb fever heat, an enmity a oe Teatenne ee (Reap rary mig be poverty vould ve wall] Ghetion anita: © rena rdw er 4 ars cavcastas oRvEttr. paseo ges shang tbe Wek Go ‘ c which cost actor a very large part of : rad eT . tiny sae 2 Risberg : : x on ; . is always rng a eae . his fortane in'alimony, Mr. O'Conor’ atter-| the lawyer's library which also ought to. be wen ot pompegtnpeciptet (peapeeeten Sapo eek ircewtieg Ie eae eiation eet tmp, | We have become #0 thoroughiy Pecksniffian | pulse to tell the truth. A falschood signifies ced beside G; "sii A pacha: ge rma : ward acquired world-wide {ame as the counsel | Placed be 7 eae fer but ‘often | ‘Be thrifty people of New England, who put | and called vigorously to the their money ito the bank and let it remain, | Pussy opencd one sleepy © wife of the Secretary tanning through many years of demurrer and | Crossed legal swords. In death they should be | xading to i: ateudily pone alter yer “ y : 3188 HATTIE BLAINE. eral relati near toget! ‘Mr. Brady was » graceful | *4ding to i wed *: 2 . is. Accordingly, there can be no good objeo- ve years her husband raps ; forgery case, in which he introduced the rier ns : - oF gee aed am arg Aaptarticenact herss-hged roel ferenge ged ep has beenjthe most noted bey isa bh Lgapatdrkers ger pegs Bhs ain attempt to-apest her lage will mae Iz" | then novel plea of moral insanity in defense for | Ye 10F taxes or vacations; in the autumn they | hook Soin merriment. that over it topple already intimate: ordinarily a . : republican in the 3 # a misconception, and sta | Hence, in polite society pecple ere conkle ject to frequont attaexs of dyspepsia and other | 804 Mts. Nelton and likewise by his cou- | felony, he spent some nine hours in summing | foye,cor winver clothes and fuel, and Inter on | the loor, to spread itself into s thousand glit- | tistics, for such as care to sig chem oUt. will | saying’ things wan —_ assistance, | it our self-laudation, in our exaltation of out ype thee @ ~ other r motives. e : ? i siliaeiial othing can be more erpel and own virtues, that we have become grounded in | og ieciated to injure sheen eee the error of imagining that the American say- aa on t fo and languidly Here the | surveyed the scene, whereupon she was all ey of the Jumel heirs in the well-known action, | hey w 4 ’ sre untroe. If it were ¢ for celebrating Thanksgiving and Christmas. | tering pieces. ove that Tai right. The Assyrians cut their snreps - . and nothing coul lor g giving : prove that I am rig 3 one's feliow-beings. ‘A very am nile Sesto. “Hees | oaiiaat he family Revo. wot doma's qrevt | ocean Witices a a he | Sa ca eae eae ners WADE | YON orn eee eh dna cate by our deposits, | | This commotion roused the pug dog, who | conquered foes limb from limb; the Israelites ne ery au been worshiped almost * amount of entertaining, largely on account of | prime, was @ tall, slim, graéeful, dark-haired | little Alpine flower which he had found spring. | WMieH at this time of year run high, while in| came trotting in from t spared uecither parent nor cluld; the Romans crucified head downward the gladiators who Uissolving tone, | revolted under Spartacus; even in the civi- ed from one enemy | ized England of the past century the edupbyanotherand | wretch convicted of treason was exe- ed pug.” “Well, | cuted under circumstances of crucity thing oo- otherwise there could be no pleasure in meeting curred to @ lady of my acquaintance the other day which will serve to illustrate the point, © went to call at the house of some people whom she knew but slightly. The maid, com- ing to the door, informed ber that the mistress ; i i July they run low. nosing around, spied the fr asan idol by bis party ir recent bereavements, and trouble has | man, whone cold, deep. ‘sicely, imperious eves, | ig joyously from the sunny sido of a. snow “Alas,” ft ort and there is no one who | come 20 tick and fast upon’ them during theif ret'of the parece Bide, shaven Lips and fore | bank near the frosty summit of Mount Blanc, Frppeay accent aera aoe ‘Mo atak Tatouta be lh cad cee cites tes than | J@st stay here that sainoas lingers around the | face and noble brow could never be forgotten | The present writer, when a young lawyer, had| ‘Conditions favorable for the business of " only to be deliberately brightest spots of their lives. Miss Hattie | by an. itor who bad ever been privileged | the pleasure of several conversations with Mr. savin; banks do not exist in Washington. t n' J.G. Blaine. Mrs. Blaine bas always been | Biaine has for a good part of the time been the | with the opportunity of listening tohnis calm, | Brady, the tenor of which he well recall, At oa that one a mere smnt V “ i the mansion and her daughter were not at v8 be There are not great manufactorios here em- | weil, nodded to the napkin, as the | which would have been too much for the |} ~4 rather reserved in her ways. She is retiring | only one of the family of children here. She hed di the latter's office one stormy midwinter after- ; er ee eee eee home. sh’ left her cards and was starting ialigd teaai Sorwacd ta” ec’ Glagactiaam, aan (ia Gea yormguss and Goer Salcers ot Gee Genii’ (eee, Sn ee pee noon Mr. Brady said, reflecti Ploving stendy-going wage-enrners who, put her chops iu a icisurely | nerves of the fiercest of the Apaches or Sioux. | 49 dewend the front store whe Cease eee Mahed tet Ge prseel maguiien ea | agood figure and an attractive face. | Col. Burr in the separation proceedings of his ever aifect your spirits?” “No, not at | Something away against the rainy day. A large Of the world. “hose | Instances in support of what | here assert crop | was turust out from the parlor window and the f : os " y the least in praise of themselves gen- m1 the page of history; the trouble as | jy ac ~ p = taral and unaffected in her ‘ou are too you! et. When the clouds | Proportion of our depositors draw out their ty a Pi rs up all over the page a aud attached to the armdetained her. atthe is so prominent a traitof her husband's ebar- | Suooue '* cory, Matra ere he ‘personal mag- pee igh nen ere Ste Pecene, are gray and the streets sre bleak and dark 1 | MOUey aboutas fast us they put it in, never | erally get the most. not to discover them, but to keep them from leaving much balance fc y length of tin ———— blinding th to mates fo pleasant | woman we Srumt voice said, “My pretty young eter. The wonderful good fellowship and | netism in her for which her father is so widely | ged man of seventy or so, but very sharp.” | feel a weight upon me, a sadness, a depression, | !¢ 2 ody 2 = inding the memory to matters more woman, who are you?" Personal attraction of Mr. Blaine hare made | noted, and old and young par homage to her | Charles O'Conor bas « name in the state of | &dexpoudency which f cannotexpress it haants | Cousider.ng them as individuals, it hardly pays | Written for The Evening Star. to remember. Certainly the American Abori-| "My friend once comprehended that i jes the moro apparent | beauty. cleverness and amiability. She hus | New York and throughout the United States, ae | Me most unpicasantiy.” When the remains of | © Keep their accounts; but the agyregute bal- Hope's Deception, Sine is not indebted to ‘his pal ; aced beother, | was the old general, the father of the re the | been given @ thorough education and is fond | weil as in England, which it has been vouch. | Archbishop Hughes were borne to their tems | ®2Ce oD ee res How often hope’sillusive art aS ree thon made ber pause. ‘She knew Bb people have got the | of reading. She has traveled quite extensively | gated te very few jurists of our century or | porary resting placo. in the crypt of Bt | #2 that it makes no difference, z In bright, alluring strain for jessons in tenderness and humanity. reputation for gruff and weoll-meant haughty, when she} and she has been associated all her life wit Patrick's Cathodral, a while ago, betwoen a| _ “We bave one very curious depositor whom Attempis to soothe th sd heart From the moment the Castihan landed on | but replied, mentioning her mame, and di = we shall have to turn down, I expect. He is a spite weenie emitauataes the coast of the present Mexican republic there | that she aa ke fs nothing of and is simply | the brightest minds of the day. Given even “axonax wooo.” Sees oan At mitvok posininn, Mc. Bande, Whe | AE sauder by trade ond bas te ae And ease its mortal pai was no such thiug thought of as justice for the | Gaucher meer Boomer _ ‘ ; y Ean . : . 20 Bi g tho y * Se pe Sete Comeninrsene 1 Dest S | Sains, wate asapecior gid? Aud dakee mntil- lasses tha’ profound cal) eminaabs lavvervet | one ens His church had his affec- | COUt He asked what was the smallest sum ‘That follows mournful night, church took the matter in band and compelled | the general, poking his grizzled head out of the Senator's wife say the other day that she bad | j;,ence is above the ordinary ahe is very clever New York, » hale, hearty, white-haired, florid, | tion firet and last. He was a literary lawyer, | *BAt We would receive for that purpose, and he asc en une an outward regard for the rights which even dow. more of the right kind of character than James | indeed. smoothly shorn “old gentleman, slow and | Contributing often and copiously to the press | {yw fold 10 cents, Accordingly he deposited ‘That follows sorrow's blight, Goer elgg ll very | my {nt maid so informed meat the door,” sald G. Blaine himself, Her family is noted for its ans. DAMROSCH jonderons of manuer but easy enough of | 40d publishing a Christmas carol of his own-— tee al Lristopher Columbus, whom some y, frien {intellectual attainments and all of its members | has been here several times this winter. She | speech and as sot of ideas as over exact ‘of ox: | #littic book of very Kindly sentiments to. ail — Halabi petri epeerersirs — Or singing of the summer's glow pepe sec cage feign drape gr emeny cru’ t,® acd let, excinimed the Tra hire binkse boreal spanned nar P.it thelr | was Margaret Blaine, and she is now the wife of | pression. It was of him that the story was | 4.8 gift and token of the cheery seayon for bie | {eq,cebquved 22 cents, Ihe neat day he cane Despite the winter's vast, Mounds for ruuniug down the inhabitants of | mene. “Coeett, Of them upstairs at thie sae wit. Mrs. Blaine herself is noted for her witty . told in those days that Daniel Webster seeing | inde and family. | The wchool of oratory to | Sadun” On the doe fies Ghar he. ame To prove that sorrows, like the snow, Migentrla. mt Come into the house and I will have Yemarks. She likes to say bright things, and | Walter Damrosch, who is so famous in musical | bi-1 10, the firai time, hie adversary 1a an ime | Which Mr. Brady belonged was, for it has now Siials Sajoual earvendetingyhis) boos. <a ‘Do not forever last. ‘The expedition of D'Ayllon to the coast of | ace in oNt, Stairs ine jiffy. “The lay women like many other people, she sometimes says | Circles. She is not so pretty fer younger | portant caso, as Mr. "Wood compocedly eat in | Slmost passed away, florid, classical, orante Frock peor pepe pectoral ine cana espedition of Draston to the « eer} sre lounging on the bed-and reading novela: these with the best intentions, not realizing | sister, but her face is a distinguished one and | court with his eyes shut, asked of his Junior | ®nd wonderfully eloquent, with no loss in its conte, depositing a few pennies on each of six Ah, would that hope did not deceive Ens hind cacasiion aeecaed Sey the poten Ey, Wend $ ey Aer] do nothing of the kina!” bow they will affect the people to whom they | one that would attract attention in any orowd. | associate, “Who is that sleepy-looki Misi Se Sonic; sither, Erom| ie sowewhas | Sigsrent coostions during the following tects With promi fair! the basest treachery; two shiploads of the an- | Praia nome steee Tte eehaet. “T willeome are uttered. People who know her well appre- | She has beautiful dark hair, which she carries | yonder?” and that the answet was, ““Ibat, Mr, | similar style of Meagher, Mitchell ‘and. others eigut hours, ‘hen he drew it all out again, For then would human hearts believe fortunates enticed on board were carried off to | “®= "Ker T pene gee far to nceouat Tor Bee ae rand do not nold | back loosely from ier forehead and confines in | Webster, is George Wood of New York, and i | ti# probably inberent in the cuitured nish | Sut ours Lhen he drew it all out, aguin, ‘Where now they but despair, ackcin Gas baiaset hs even clared the geusral anh, au feet Ke cbaeeh oe ber torccount for her witts ton mots. They Freee ee eee or ae crerahared heed. | will be best for us, perhaps, if you don't wake | cberscter and perhaps traditional of Curran, | if ueamckly ar before. ‘This makes business Girolamo Lenzoni, oue of the earliest authors, | to come inte the Bouse, incteetingg ne one now that at soul she is jer eyes are dark, liquid and full of expression. | him up.’ 5 : How oft a heart has sought relict te “3 apo , po J she would not harm a fly with malice afore- | She is noted for her conversational powers and |" When the present writer was a law student Pure than theirs, more modern, ‘graceful aud —.e sermeunc sears Within the grave's repose, peepee pe thig Bammer prey on total hone ladice to come straight down to thought. she bas her mother's power of bright repartee. in i Lord's ofice in the s Merchants! Ex: ihesticn. Beta eae fig tan? ee ee | Kaa bis cash for him. it i ‘Upon whose night of bitter griet could capture and branding them witha red-} “So, after about twenty minutes, the wife MRS. BLAINE’S TOUTE. | change urder rr. r - “There was another thing rather amusing No morning ever rose, hot iron on the hip or cheek, so that their new | and daughter i Mrs. Blane's maiden name was Harriet Stan- ; street dentist, took place, Mre. Cunningham DANIEL Lon. about that depositor. He could not either : owners could recognize them the more | sraceugnter made their unwilling eppesrance, and her daughters being charged with com- i hi Gat Ba And that t a x 'y imagine, to the extreme embarrass Wood. She was born at Augusta, Me., and her Lt \ icity in the erime, together with John J,|, Daniel Lord was, atthe time of which we ieee ded spell his own Santen had got id many that to anguish yiel: readily. é = ment of all Rartics concerned, with the exosp- family was one of many connections. The . m ‘kel (whose counsel was John Graham) and | ‘eat, the leading commercial lawyer of the | *°mebody to write it for him in plain letters on No summer ever know Cabeza de Vaca and his wretched companions | tion of the old general, who referred with glee ; G : * acard. With this asa copy, holding it in ore And buruing tears are but congealed carried no arms, but mat with nothing | to the success he had bad in this particulas ie Stanwoods were not wealthy when Mrs. Blaire " " young igrese (for whom Daniel Lord had | city. Wall street was his essential element, for | hand, be signed the book in surprisingly good In grief’s perpetual snow. butan ovation trom the simple-minded and | stance in correcting what he called a Yeminine was a girl, and after she had got her schooling ‘ been retained). Mr. Wood was an oid friend | he was there always near his-elients, financial | script, simply imitating thecharacters torming —CLIFFORD Howanp, | gtatetul natives, whose ailmeuts they endeay- | tendency to falsehood’ in the ladies of his fam she went to Kentucky to tench, and hereshe met £ ; . Seotging te 33.5 Sara lane rare ears yal [epee thie bank during} Washington, x ored to cure by prayer ‘and, the sign of the | ly." ir. Blaine, who was acting as a pedagogue in a » < of delicate features, with bushy light gray hair ere Wasa bigrun on this bank durin, = = cross. Yet Vaca teils us as they drew near the neighboring academy. The two fell in love : : fare Brocial chat’ On one occasion the sub- | brushed up from hisemooth brow andamoother | the panic of 1885 which followed the Grant uti Bare Tapetsies ta Waahbayion. settiements of their own countrymen they aad were married. Neither of them had any- 3 Q Feeete esckata tue implication of the | face; clad in dress coatzand dainty, well-blacked | Ward failure in New York. On that oceasion SN rere toes y found the whole country ine tumult, due to thing to speak of, and they know by bitter ex- 7 [mor eer] a in = ~ boots, he looked to be the city counsellor that | » colored man drew out about $1,000) which he Possibly the largest and most valuable collec. | te efforts the Castiltans were making to en- perience how it feels to look at a €5 bill J 3 jardell, and Mr. apie ‘ole an . hile | Be%a®_ Crisp, shrewd, ready, always alert, his | bad saved, being fearful of losing it. Three | y sim , ve the populace and drive them by fire and oa both sidesand to put it back witha sigh. ‘ on aepare yes tly opposite ries'of the | forces ever mustered in order for action, he | years later he brought the money back—the | tion of tapestry in this country is that of Mr. | gword to the plantations newly established. ‘They settled in Maine and worked along to- ® ir. Wood held a directly Panag Meas impressed one with a sense of massed Fosources | Very same bank notes which be had drawn | Charles M. Ffoulke of Pennsylvania, who | Humboldt is authority ior the statement that gether, and in the fight for fame and fortune matter. The argument grew hot and lively | both of power and self-importance. He wore | out-and deposited it again. He reproached | gpends his winters in Washington with his | the Apaches resolved upon a war of extermina- they have been helpmeets in every sense of the — — the — ro weighs pry by rod = air of authority, always. — young lawyer noes = ~~ oy ai ~ —, He has lately added a lerge gallery to | tion upon the Spaniards when they learned word. Their days of want soon passed away. THE BAR HARBOR COTTAGE. igus which Mr. @ met a brother practitioner also of low size, | ‘What ajackassIam. I've kept this boodle in Senator Elaine bas always been ® money-maker | Within @ month or so from now Mrs. Blaine is - n@| said to them: “Young gentlemen, there is a| "We musi prvi eo i 73 there oc- | to necommodate his treasures. The house ane done well ‘before he Set 10 Com and her family will go to Bar Harbor and will | saying of Curren's which I ain going to give | ,V¢must grow!” And he grew, accordingly. | on it.’ After the big panic of 1878 there oc- | to neco a asures. w 4 He hada great many rich clients, and wealth | curred about fifty minor scares, in each case fairly lined with them before he secured the and bis big house on Dupont circie rents for | take up their home in the Blaine cottage there. | you and which I want you to write down and | and prosperity closely followed them into bis causingarun on the bank. But during all | famous Barberini collection some two years $10,000 a year and the house be lives in here ig | This cottage is more likea big home thana}Temember: ‘There is in man a bold and ad- ward the two eagerly Lstening students and | sohe gid to hi that all their people taken captive by the ki ith a slap on the shoulder, | a trurk allthis time and have lost the interest | Bis handsome house on Massachusetts avenue =e 4 forces had been driven off, to die = lingering death upon the sugar plantations of Cubs or in the mines of Guanaxuato. re nae comfortable offices, Said Mr. Lord to Mr. Em- | those years there was one depositor, a colored | ago. Among several Flemish tapestries of the 2 sa ee Worth at least $100,000. seaside cottage. It is beautifully located. | ventarous credulity which disdains assenting | met, jr., once, “Why is it that the younger | man, who steadily kept adding to ‘his savings, sixteenth century is one from the Buonsignori| Drawing near toour own days we read the fact ‘ome wemmedares wou. and forest scenery meet the | t0 Common truths, but delights in catching at) members of the bar wear whiskers and the hi , a fh beautiful | the improbal of circumstances as its best | Sigur in weer suave Fi never — a Rirsy a ee although his | Paice, Sienna. "It is about twelve feet square, } set down in the clearest and coldest black and Mire. Secretary Biaine's Washington home | and-locked bay siretches away in the distance | ground of faith." “The citation wan most opt. | wiin native dency, Drain wad Lecce ee | Meee esone made in small deiby, were ap in| and represents, aay "His Foulaioce’ Cear| Teint teesienorecamestioctieersat| oo and fmmediately hhas often been described. It is the old Seward | and loses itself in many little coves and inlete | and by one at least of those embryo limbé of | Irish-American growth instanos of steady confidence. Usually people | panion pieces represent Dang in the brazen | ¢tbuahus had offeredand paid rewards of €900 | , Stearcruats manaion and it is valuable rather from the | *™id purple hills and green wooded shores, ite | the law has never been forgotten. Gaceueae who have money saved in a bank are as readily | tower. “In one Jupiter visits her as a shower of | £0F each scalp eee) 0 4 ! ground about it than from the house itself. It washing the feet of well-worn cliffs JAMES W. GERARD. aegrrsrrccataag stampeded as a flock of sheep, and atthe slight | gold; in the other she is seen caressing her | sotted st certain designated head eg is built on Henry Clay's old lot and it has been | or yan n, Sottly om the shining sands and) James W. Gerard was a very noteworthy per-| Recorder John B. Scott was a notable person | ost rumor run to make sure of the safety of | fatant son, Perseus, held in the armaeof a | We read rom: ori in- ebbles. The cottage is known as Stanwood. ofthat period. An upright judge, a genial | their cash. It is not surprising, either, con-| female attendant. These tapestries are of silk | 2¥iduals clad im human form—men like the @ fashionable home for many years. It was in | ]t is several hundred feet above sea le Teenie Meaeete: Seed pers te pabresilang painstaking to a degree, an he | sidering what such ‘cavings usally signify to | and wool ina fine state ot’ preservation and ayn Soeniee ae front of it that Gen. Dan Sickles shot Barton | the house faces the sea, so that from logic: [70 a pile eh ft sti would grow absent-minded during the trial of | them 1m the way of little self-denials. fine colors. Another large piece of the same | Cr cuihuahua to do such bi cody werk: Key for flirting with his pretty wife on the | sid ‘i pel brag Lexy bs ong bof im ie Aeros fore him and consequently sometimes ‘The most remarkable pao we have | period represents Cleopatra, gorgeously at- preamp ag ‘of honor.” his Sider side of ‘the square, and it was in this Spam weeds, seee: sud abens is | Libs Careem, bewes cannes Lane ical ly the ake mauy a fanny maake ustoneneniae STG received was s boxful of gold coing which | tired and suended by her tails, appearing | word faithfully pom iesned whanas oon a eh) Tacherce ie a kenge, con, eapromenes |areenda’ ‘The Pisios Sante coats oc ee Late cok ecco bewigged, black broad. | Bame of Cockroft he addressed continually as | Bee ouiieney beck buried for years in, the | before the Emperor Augustus. Another shows | £Oochesin to see him and heve we feo co te ool, = ‘9 ground. Presumably they were thus hidden | the rescue of Andromeda by Perseus. In len ae - Mr. Cockloft!” A prisoner was tried in court, : brick of three stories, a old-fashioned and when they go 9 ay thes clothed, of infinite wit, e punster, yet withal | «26 Poepaci plat rey peapritteyenrest oye Hog | Juriug the Into war. Some of thom were | Italian renaissance tapestry are three expecially eee per any popes sca Fides root aad with, many windows. “It is | plants are generally confscaied by vistors | with « mama pag Mamas anal sever ant) froot the door of a grocery. After the testtmong | WPADP® in paper and all were much corroded, | fing pieces. One representa the king and queen | PeGh On the spot and have seen the exact ene OF Gee ie te cee ee [ieaek oe Secrotary Diaine is very | rard had ever boslsand hoste st friends, And he | bad all been taken and the sumuing-up was ae es oe | ie opens ain, waited pon by eetatd table 2m | suddenly opened upon them with » light Held Bisine’s study. where he receives his | fond of Bar Harbor, and when he bought the | hudenemies, too, created by hisscathing, relent- | cnded the old judge began his charge to the Dusiness - piece loaded to the muzzle with nails, bullets ; f hen a sudden doubt seemed to cross his Son ees F i d filled the cours ah alle’ The tamil; ¢ Mra. Blaine was lad to know that | less sarcasm and withering invective during de- | Jury, whe! t aud scrap iron anc yard wi fev on the second" floor ‘and. the e-| the land upon which the Hlatue cottage ieuow | bates aud argumonta im esurt Ia bis omming oe oe ee ee eS third, quite large, depicts the reconciliation of | deed. ception rooms, both below snd above, are | built belonged long azoto one of ber ancestors. | up he usually made himself most effective and | be seriously inquired, | "Wag ot | Some Are Very Wicked Ones, While Other | the Emperor Constantine with Ine smmice | Johnson, I say, was e “gentleman, elegantly fitted up. The d hung | This fact, however, was not discovered until | attractive with a jary. A very fanny incident | 94 the ludicrousness of the imaze called up of oe eo meee °F | A piece of French tapestry mad sbided by the terms of his contract; bat Glan- Web ins plstares und ies aniline, te Decutifaile | after iho ‘property wes purcbened: tea it ac, | silos pedometers i coarse inex. | half s hoy being alive and kicking brought agar senna inthe intier half of the ciateenth, cestasy'iy | ton was a blackguard, and ‘at out to kill any- "in costae old mahegeny ob d | to light when the old deeds were hunted up to| pression. Mr. Gerard was employed by a poor | 4own the house in » burst of mirth instanter. Enthusiastic scientists have been recently | of silk, about thirteon fect wide 'b Seat | thing and everything in human form, whether erable is of generous dimensions. When | make the Blaine title secure, ‘The interiot are | widow to prosecute the Sun hewepaper fore cone Fa tne pera dee atte old surrogate's| experimenting with Alsease-producing bac-| fighiand shows ae accrues soy 1 feet Indinn ‘or Aesicun’ Hs det “victory” was ee Se heme coven youn see eee ee a com- tp dike eg tethered tee fhinees Dich oil wili never be| teria in butter. It is worth while, eoforing. Ceres, the principal figure, bears | Cy atone “arranging @ ae aoe new vahh tale mabey oa ‘daring the putennes on, the eastern sldin, aed fi patil | only chance of success lay in the direction of | blotted from the tablets of the writer's recollec-] one of them sid to a Srag writer, | Wheat and flowers and is accompanied by other mgr thera, & lad i huabua, not far from El Paso. ‘The bl TEE! Sve sears for $10 per square foot Since | large old plate-glass window which gives light | an appeal to the jurors’ wholesome senso of | t100;_ There is no good reason for hore enter. |to find out how these microscopic veg- Senrpeey a Sel ees of nik | Seulps, "were torn from the heads o that ue the property bas decidedly increased | and sunshine and amagnficent view. “On the | humor. |The newspaper in question had re-| 126 pipe eae Sarg peels fice | ctable organisms live in various foods in order | threuds, are nearly ten feet high by cighe, fon = os a ee am value and he made the purchase some time ether cite oo Foor, sare ne great ston ne Se eo rd — < = = oe it to say that the services of some of the fore- | that it may be ascertained how likely different | wide. ‘They were Prevented to the reigning | jimnits Ans “ _ Fic rage Odd’ chairs are scattered about it | of bls winding up’ to the Jury Mr. Gerard al, | Most lawyers of the clty wore articles of human diet are to convey morbid | eee oot tho Leake ann, ttutes and | procession of the governor, all the leading “anda empire naa and a soft inviting couch stands near the win- | luded somewhat after the following fashion | Y4rious parties, | pr: Prop:|complaints into the aystem. Accordingly, | esch ‘has fificent medallion of dvver | state dignitaries and the clergy, and escorted Secretary Blaine has another home at Au-| Gow. In the center of the room isan antique | to the derelict defendants: “And wio, goutle- | °rty St chamber for monthe the comckcerrent | trials have been made with the germs of con-| {none s Cupid vides the oe meen oF Homers. | hack to the city limits, where, as we ave told esta, and he has still another beantiful resi- | tabie and oa thie you find the magazines and | men, are the unprincipled parties, the ungal- | 1 that chamber for month: sumption, typhoid fever and cholera by plant- | and in the other the god of love sails in's tiny | PY Ruxton, the English officer who traveled gence at Bar Harbor by the sea. The Blaine | current literature of the day, together with s |lant, Guchivalrous, unscrupulous, ‘andesirable | ‘0 settle. an angry controversy about the final agate a cock aeels ar Uasier Seek tae (ee aie ing branches | #¢f08s the Chibuabua on horseback in 1885 and house at Augusta is situated next to the capi- | &Fest number of newspspers, for the Bisines | members of alee ~~ = grossly eet craton < Ae niinod oma te the beeen the dairy and waiting amateesera of oak, with wreaths of ivy tied with cibhee. aad a as — with — joy to tol Itis a large, old-fashioned hospitable- | *T® eat newspaper readers. fers avelengy ot! serge ‘poor client, « thor. | the north end and a long table running down | Ong curious result obtained was the discovery | 12 the saces everywhere appear the emblem | erection the silver mines had beem taxed looking mansion, surrounded by extensive and | MR. EMMONS BLAINE'S COTTAGE. hly honest and worthy woman, gentlemen, | the middle for the accommodation of counsel, | that guch disease-making Dacteria lived much | °f, the Princely family for whom they were | Srvcuon wy, A atone’s throw from Stanwood is the cottage | anu Feal indy by rights who. but these in: | Let us glance at the scenic stage before us and longer in butter of the best quality than in poor | 47°. Goocee Hearst has a Seeker ae many notable entertainments in the past. The | of Mr. Emmous Blaine, where, with his eharm- | sufferable sons of Beach's, gentlemen?” He | {t# distinguished dramatis persons. butter. Virulent bacilli of tuberculosis were | hangings and valuable old prayersece aed ane Blaines are very popular in Augusta and Mrs. | ing wife and year-old baby, he spent last sum- bis cause, mulcting defendants in 4 NOTABLE GROUP. found among germs which had been in first- | or + i cae heneieiad sais ey, “@p- | he ne feels herself at home there. She has i js damages, amid the irrepressible laughter i i: rate butter for 120 days, The vitality poasessed | ¢S'¥#05 12 Ler beautiful new house in Washing- Marr personal friends, who are very foud of Met: » All the members of tho Blaine family are jury and spectators. Joba MeKoon | 0” the bench sits » medium-sized, painfully | Fy'tnom was proved by inoculating guines pies | (2 qhich wee 20 sadly closed almost before it | 50'the Cal her, and who never tire of dwelling on her wit, | be Sue of the most popuiee nase tac nene to laughable story of Mr. Gerard to | houghtfulooking man of middle life, with | with them. | Evidently, therefore, it ls possible | N™4, Hnished by the lon Sha incoeet calonses | ana ba eccen- her cleverness and her brilliaucy in conversa: | Bar Harbor, She tetemocrstie te her cenit latter was retained b; fine forehead Coe pape and an Foban os for butter to communicate ne koma beings a superb battle pooky Of rich apy fa — pda) — distine- favit, if she bas any, is ber | of eager attention e proceedings. it is | any diseases mentioned, as asol ‘i a to lack of diplomacy. She has never learned to | ened rank and pleasant in her manner the surrogate, Alexander W. Bradford, gen- | doubtless. F% | coloring and fine work. The border is com we? penne. w out on the trail alone, let Gianton and bis com- agar-coat Ler words, and her bright repartees Hleman of the highest respectability and judi-| | Much sindy has recently. been given to the | Pots of implements of war, drums, de. A | ce got ef. into the river and then as those whica dro; ‘MRS. BLAINE AND CHILDRER. a afew yards cial endowments De sure nothing will escape | bacteria which breed in milk, of which there | Sunita ui play: ove? Piece shows & group Of | Opened on them from an ambush in the reeds jouth of Senator Ingulla, Ichatted | Love of children is one of the strongest qual- hie inquiring notion! As the he are not less than forty species. How numerous | “"Ei“tno ew winter residence of Mr. Albert | ®24 killed the last *\i7 England woman about Mra.’ ities of Mra. Blaine’s make-up and children are table, hedged in with boo! they sre may be faintly conceived when i$ is | cutford Barney, in the same city, fs «large Said she: pec proline “ fully writing down, word for ‘Stated that 2,000,000 may be found in a single | CH “4 Mipesteh to eae see how Mrs. Blaine often makes | 8*Herally very fond of her. mony of the witnesses under examination, is ¢ | drop of cream, Some of them give to the but- het cage oP enemies. Her freedom of epeech is » Stanwood a's | slim, straight figure, with iron-gray hair and | ter its characteristic odor * i trait and it was encouraged by her home train- trim, short beard, regular features, s mobile | bacteria are growing and feeding the: down and eat repasts seasoned with the exhil- ing. About the Stanwood table bright answers, the most of her time to her McCor- mouth and large, deep eyes of the clearest | volatile substances, the presence of ns things arating strychnine. So that, teke it for all in tting, were expected. It mick Biaine and the Coppinger boys. Inher inti- azure, whose glance is aselectricas the lightning | distinguishable by the sense of smell. Other xico. Spain | ll the honors have been easy so far as treach- nd no one cared about the | mate friendships she more often chooses of the clouds, and whose sentences from | kinds of bacteria cause the milk to curdle, | e% b saan bon i ery, brutality, cruelty and lust have Femarks after they were made. Mrs. Blaine is | people than those of her own as ia shows him with trained distinctness of while others yet make an acid which turns it if ft cerned. Theone great difference has much like her cousin, Gail Hamilton. You in her friendship with Mrs. Don Cameron and each word a telling one and true to sour, ald know bow bright and p: tsbe is; butIcan| Mra, Hill. Mrs. Senator Frye is one of bet for it emanates from a brain as It is Japed. that the time may yet arrive tell you that if Mrs. Blaine had turned her at-| older friends, having known’ her all her when it will be possible for the farmer to inoc- r@ she would have far out- | and she is one of her warmest and most ehown her brilliant kinswoman. There is one | Sdmirers. ‘ing. She does not! I passed the Blaine mansion this afternoon 4 just as leave say & | and as I did so [took a glance at the big St ‘ogntory of herself as of any one | Bernard dog which lies on the front door ‘step think she is unkind in it, nor has | and which is quite a member of the Blaine fam }: of From Life, she any intention of offending, but there are in| ily. He is one of the finest dogs bis world @ class of dull people, devoid of | ton, and he looks like ything au serieux, and | independent and powerful. remark bas some ma- | walkin, i Such people Mra. Bain bo i baee hae nod pone i treaties, in which the Apaches bave been invited to sit Bs aa*t § i i ulate his cream with certain kinds of bacteria, whigh may have been ascertained to give the flavor to the butter. F EEe i Hi F. if i ii i ie £ i rH ij fis E nda. ‘I do not think the world understands Mra. ae San eemnn week on. “She is full of | sterling good qualities. No one ever speaks of Ber ass Sister of Mercy, bus no meedy’ease os ever brought to her notice but that she d mot make every effortin her ie She prefers todo her ¢ rough others, an Firing, not to let what | Ht i Epsk. BE Hi if [ Hi i BH Bote uf Ere i wk ney ii tH j : | i | i r Lf H F itt F HE By | ty i a 3 q t fhe | aise * : a »

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