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N — COTHAN'S UPPER ST TUN et s o4, v v sovia ¥ THE MAY THE C00N CAME 10 ot for N0 Ky AT 8 pasean B 'WINTER SCENES AT ‘P‘\‘l‘.l ks without them Knowing it, you hearing any one cali aline of g — | 8 \ don’t make them feel like prize fools set flock “of geese, or & covey of quails s [ Y The Patriarch's Ball and the Money There | up for exhibition. 1 am_ confident that | Osptain Martin Soott, of Vermont, the | brood of quals On one grension Olimate, Scenery, Society aud Healthy CH[APEST. 1887 B[STI - ynekist a the coming fashionable | T ranizet grand hu Fa Mo WAS | Represented, pickinitt bl Noted Rifle Shot. Jack rabbits A greai many vising Outdoor Life. A BALL ON THE AVENUF e — offleers with number of ladics were —_— . - . [ sl of the nicest of sweil parties ‘ello Y s Cured of Consumps | present, and Captain Scott had taken | NI ‘ b ELIGIBLE BELLES AND BEAUX, ohpctstfofilu g 4% T e | E ".“v ”flu mr. ':Iu]:‘ll ul nlx‘nllll ! i3 e tn Tyin Qe conM aotad: | SOUVENIRS OF ANTIQUITY | ploit. They bought private boxes for the | 10" by Omne of R on the strictest prineples. He had re ns ' A Swell Dance on the Avenne—The 11l st Roster & Bial's notorions garden, lets—The Captain’s Clever Dog | hearsed the home officers, and had in- | A Lazy and Comfortable Life, Wh | W Woianivn of Backistryatntels and looked on the dongs safely from be His Visit Hon structed them that when' a rabbit ran Days ¢ t A tew stood from cover they sl Il give th B Y hind screening curtains ew stood - om cover they should all give the ; lectual s and Angles of concealed by ipart of potted trees “View-halloo, talty-ho!” Among the Months if the Purs Shoulder Blades, i vine me of them in full bloom Atlanta Uonstitution Almost every officers was a Captain B, who was an in- Holds Out, r | coon has become famouns, while the man . ik ' 3 I'here ¢ fonr hundred | h life befor o'elc he drosses Every man was at s postin tip toe | Bee.]-Of the many attractive winter re- of 1l bEE There are four hund I life bef 1 Th Ir who made the coon come down—Captain ! I ' 1 anxiety to eateh the rlim of the | sorts in Southern France, few have for DD N " DIUN ‘u V1) h \ nd o few were in excellent t He was reaily one of the most interest | hounds grew sharper and sharper, and | 30008 88 TEre €80 A . neredulous? Well, et s Haure Ub. | qnd beautiful tolook upon. At least half | ing of men, with a cutious and adventur- | deared Captain B.. who had @ conspicu. | * sl Wbt ."" o s v T n with, we must admit for argu- | the men were in full dress. The venture- | guepec It is strange that so capa. | 008 stand. Suddenly, just in front of | bines many attractions, climate, seenery, (Hm l‘]\l‘ \Um) )“» Mont's sake, If not fora fact, that the | some belles conld not see tiie wite bottles el Loy AP i, out bounded an’ enormous camp | society and healthy ontdoor life. The ( ( i Astor stratum is top in the soecial | in the other boxes, or the beaded glasses | ble a man Shau 1 have gone down to i [ mice, with twenty dogs in full ery air certainly is delightful, of a perfect v reology. Now. then, the patriarch's ball | At the tables in the further end of the hall, JoTn 1188 Tho e Aoy c00m: 10 | hecls. At this eritical moment Taptain | qomporature at this season of the year, T“E QLESQN JAHES WH'E BAS dliimoail thls ook utmost pre. | OF the bie smoke from cigors and cigar: | "y Story was first printed 1 a_coun- | by fotfed ol the top of his veiee, WLy ) capecially when mellowed by the rays of . or iRy v ! Uirection. | A noticoable poreentage of | (Y paperin New York siate about 1810 | Fiia tdienlons. ey ) | the sun, of which there is generally 3 J= enution has boen taken to keep it ex irection, A noticeable percentage of | {FY paperin The ridienlons ery wias taken up by the ' W ) g ) ! A clusive, Criticism was made lnst season | the men vresent had come to see the | Atthat tine the coon had considerable | ghers, and the whole ficld burst into un- | good deal, with an oceasional . 218 South 15th Street. 3 cloudy or thint sevoral of these extra-sensitive voen hts and were in a state of profound dis- | Political significance, and_ the story may | gontrollable fanghter. Captain Scott | 1 1y day interspersed, just to make you Ty = RIeA wors demornlizod by Uho hresonce | ZUst ‘:u" y m‘,‘ "Il~l~‘:t::v“z\“¥1i|HU‘I||“|H :‘ A NI TS FATTONR: ) T .‘..'(‘;\no".[fi[-fi..f;{f»!:‘.(-.IM:y.,l“.;,'.r;]” el that perfection is not quit attain: NEAHEST HNEST of a fow unaceustomed and unqualified | LEEEEAE T O et thoy | . Captain Martin Scott, who was a noted | i his calling the raetionl joker o e, An Eaglich lndy who has wirtered ! . guests, This time the lines were drawn | ot their I hecked, for which they | Tifle shot, was out in the woods one day Mr. Scott had a dog named Hark, o | here many years, having first come for wi y. The ball was given by [ fiad to yield up fifty conts additional, and | With & party of friends hunting. —'They [ aros< hatween setter and pointer, that | her health, which she soon entirc ly re fifty patriarchs, all within the vail be- | flen to find wine the only drinkable | Were scattered through the woods. cach | wag famons thronghout the army. For | covered, deseribed to me the elimate yond peradventure, Eyen so firmly o8- | o be obtained and that ata mountamons | Mnting separately, One of the party at unple, while sitting in his tent at the | hy (he one “soothing,” and tablished a swell as Cornelius Vanderbilt | price, admission to the gallery and [ oDt camie upon a racoon that was sit t, he would suy to the dog. “Hark, I | v t A was new to this saered half-hundred. he | giher places wher view of the floor | 1&g in oneof the highest 1 1ches of nt you to goover to the island, ns i i even in the damp having been clected this year. Eae I [ conld be had, refused without a sull | Yery tall tree. He fiveat him and missed. | uin if there are any woodeock there, « 1y days. Nice and the other r paid 150 to cover the expenses, and r further surrender of <hekels,and nothing One by one the rest of the party came up | come back and teli me." sorts of the Mediterranean, though fa ceived an invitation for his immediate | put church fair sobri at | and tried their hand, each missing the I'he dog would instantly o to the | vored perhaps with more blue skics, are mily, besides others for five persons | the best. It w qut [ distant coon, who grew saucier as river, swim to the island, and after hav | o the other hand subjeet to the harsh whom e might ehoose as suitable. This | fhere was one person, LRI it AL A EGHE ot ar | in innted it over return, and it he had | wind of the mountains behind, a8 well as ' " method was calenlated to seeure N - even this stage of the pel nance was | Tved, and was in the uet of pulling trig found birds would run wp to his_master, the tempestuous storms ot the sea. Here tor the most of the year, the Pyrences © snow-capped, but seldom does « 12 THE OMAHA DAILY BEE: SUNDAY DECEMBER 26, 1886,~~TWELVE PAGES. tude in admitting only individuals i | jnteresting. Stie was dressed in_white, | #00 whon the coon looked - slyly around | then to the gun, wag his tul, and _make U The number was 467, by e | wore a fong train, had bave arms and "1'\1\“[:‘""I""\“'l‘f'.. it perfectly” apparent that he had been ful accounting, and of them all” except | peck, and watched the aftair with the AT G s, suecessful. - Captain Scott would then | wafiof the icy air sweep down the forty two were there, keen attention of & novice The men _‘{\"I”‘\\"":l s tell the dog to get the canoe ready. Havk | i view feom the w!mn-vml.- looking Makes and Se“s JAMES GORDON BENNETT were polite to her und everybody clse,her [ VR Bcottes woulil thereupon take the cushion in Ws | conphward over the rver s (i L TiFe. is an ehgible bachelor who has Iately re | eseort was gallant d introduced m Captain Seott i W t \ mouth, take it to the canoe, place it upon | jine of hills, : mountains vived New York interestan himself by | ig friends by what seemed at least to be Are you ain Martin Scott » seat, return for the paddles, take B WP beyond, sometimes half obscured by the briet visit to town; and while here he [ heir real names. After such an intro AL : ; om (o tho canoe, and then come back | clomls, hnd the Morning or cvening s ese (aooas. prosed, by overhaning and improving | dietion, whon the gentiomaniy dude i | | Well? sl the coon, wnlimboring | i Sy (o Mr. Seott that sverything | omaiari e MOTing or cvoning sin the Herald, that he can do something else | withdrawn, she cast a sweeping glanee | Mmself, you need not shoot; I will come | e ready enchanting. Tho « lover of natur than luxuriovsly enjoy himself if e trics, | qhont the room, saw the waltzers pro- [ down”" \ Another dow Tark, whipped Hark sev- [ o 5 plenty of eisy exeursions t His presence led Tarey Nolen, 0 boat: | Gending to the waxed floor, the old men | . When 12 years old Martin: Seott was | oral fnos, and had him acked. One | G308 fnd] WAL i ing v , AL .oux-Bonnes, Luchon, Cauterets manwellknown in yatehing cireles, to | Lowing geaciously over their fair com- | HVin mington, Vi, A bear made | aay Hurk saw Turk eating o very tombt- | o the thyaiorions. shting. of Lotele I'I'll ,d t 1 o e i S At | B ol Ml o | WS i b e | g e e it wineniesatie'ts S | Millard Hotel Block, Omaha, t's diversions, Harry said the proceedin nd turning to her | d4oin oc among the flocks. The | con by assault, and going outside of the ) 'l o sople ol od in s ds H - OF THE SIGHTS IN THE TOWN was discovered one morning | & aid half earnestly, haif jocosely, | Reoblo oganized in squids to hunt it | fort, setupa fvious barking. Al the 1f the most interesting is the Chatean out - n crazy way th to guard against a ridiculous slip: | Young Scott, knowing that his father | dogtin the fort ran out, Turk included, & verybody that' saw her. | Sand is this the way they do in society | Would not fet him take part in the ‘hunt, | when Hark Sipped back quictly, seized | & ,,,,':",,.‘{::l R ,},-’{-'h,'l’,‘[l,', ) ANT T I N “ T “ ) ) Q Sometimos “she Cwould | dart ahead AS TITE SUIRLT OF WINE loaded wn - old smooth e \ | the prize and ok itto his hiding place. | comb from before the time of Charle l [ l { \ { n like a fish; she would come up | o ot the IEDOE hants/ot o tev. | Crawladiontiof tht » daylfght, | s ! et B e UL na | t MANS cn AR R i i oot of th heeond, | besan to get tho uppor hands of the rev. | EENENELDE TAEIOURS BEIORS dAVHEN, | ITe w g el LG be traced, with the stone piers of the olil 4 iAWV V) VAN 2 | eilers the scenes inthe boxes ranged | night, ¢ s spent i night aws 7 O TN S UL IS ST battina buck up, spar for wind and then make | around the gallery beeame more and | the bear. It was nearly night when he | from home was compelled by his mastor ::A‘.'\f:‘.d G R e anoth sh. In fact she manauvred | yore hilarions. The first intimation that | Ctme upon the bewr, b,wwl,: apparently | o stand on his aind feet with his fore | s fipsg p A rogular olintent by P '-\l"“l""'ll)”"' N ":}l-hl-rm, the ring. | tlie bounds of decorum were passed was L bufore g “'n-.nln\;"l..:,’,"" PUwS resting g inst ml.- wall, and' tako [ {on 111, deiFoix, who ‘was cillod Phobus AT COST, fora few days only, Base Heaters, Square and Round Stoves—for Bverybody thought 't whoever was series of falsetto and soprano yells that | &' 0 his or, fire ortun- und whipping. In one instance, e B remarkible. bai AT ¢ 5 i y X s suiling it bont was crazy sure. But | Sounded ko the emotional eries of the | 8Lely reached the vitls of the beast and iz heen ont ali wizht on wiiat st .E:u'(’::uhi'ef'"“l' ;Ix}..-::’:-.':\l:u‘{)lfiu‘l.l3}“'\':..1 e Lo ot D LA BeE M ICEOR S Loveh ses soon showed that there was | untutored redman when he is either in | Killed himinstantly, When he reached been an unus; debaueh, he re- | yound it This transformation oeeurret assortment of the New Agate Coffee and Tea Pots nobody on board, She was out on aspree | unger or rejoicing. The sounds came | thetavorn the hunters wero all reluting | tened the next morning with the most | fownrds the end of the foyctecsur bt of her'own, and, as she was disorderly, | fyoma box at the further end of the val- | theivexperience, He announced that e | gejec nd penitent air. is master ey From that time down the ehateau ANl she was taken in. It was believed that ) cony, were canghtup by the occupants of | B Killed the be: nd agreed to show | jyaked af him, but did not say . word. hises e 8 3 R has been inbabited by many distingwished Blio had tossed somo fellows ovorboard, | tho next one, and “rapidly cartied | them whete it was. Wiien tiey found | Tark nemtentlys > wal ot into | yersone, the. varions kings of Navarre. | Mle be WAN scaTEN '5'6 BDodee streel but she hadu't. | know what happened | yound ™ the cireuit until the whole | the bear they constructed a litter on | hosition for lickin ning round | Mapgucrite de Valois, who made its 1 to her, he Dauntless was in the harbor | o of boxos WHE . | which to carry him totown, and mounted | vful eyes fooked at Captain Scott smost beautiful,and has for its erent the night before, and Bennett went | with shricks, curions speetators | Martin ontop of the bear. As they | to sy, T am ready.” R f i . il e i i i Hut Henri 1V, the son - v N o | ; ashore. He wasn’t long there until he | odwo 5 ¢ ok, | passed his futher's house the old man | BEhRUE el st for ety el L LV, el ITER | Kept right on cailing hor Pete's wife. ran fonl of Night in 4 hotel. T don’t | Saged out tuo sce what it meant Look: | Lifod him: down, but, unliko the coon, B e et IO o of Junnno Albretand imsbana, | [IANK'S CHOICE OF A WIFE. iy i and a beantiful nware and House Furnishing Goods, offered at specially low figires box near the end of th number of years and lmd aecumnlate d SIRCE0 o UG VBB iE | About wmonth after this my triend ank know anything about the details of the | Liticony onnosite where the souns first | the voungster would notcome, and the | toneiderab moncy, Captain Seott went | whs born '\'m1”:;'“1'*}1”" “|‘|;l'|",':-l‘('.','." told me that he had been “making up to battle, but I believe he had quite a | wers heard they saw the triumpliant erowd told his father that he | Baek to viit his pesple at Boaninaton, | S bors within it walls, 1is tortoise. ) Pete’s wife, and that she had promised to breczy ume. Champagne bottles were | hofeathered heads of two stalwart braves | had Killed the hear, ! He left there @ poor bov, and 1 Aboye, and higher yet his holmet with | A Weman to Fit the Dresses He Had | marry him thirty days later. Tlns met dumaged, mirrors - were - bombarded, | ecring over the rail. and back of them | From his carliestdays Ot Witk [ yich and famous. He had two - | the white piumes shining as in the poein Bonght for Another. my approval and nobody olse objected, waiters were seattered, — bouncers | {niling in vist amusement Mr, Wil o remarkable fiue shot. awme | gply fine horses, wnd a negro boy named | oy o said 2! ) er. so that Hank made his preparations ae- pounced and the police called. “Ihe posi- | ¥ Cody, (“‘Buftalo Bill"") his long black ‘ il counties. — One — day | Juck, for whom he aid $5 2 pound, 8 - cordingly. At first he sent over to Sk tion became “a - little ' disagreo- | har in elogant order and his wild *he was plowing in the ficld & ) und whom he afterward freed. The cap’ | |Tess whenyou seo my white plumes shine | A ROMANCE OF DEADWOOD. | ney for “a couple of new dresses, and able, and Bennett, who, whether he'de- | wostern form clad in {1 jon full | letter was handed to him. He stopped s | tain on his return home sertatiinyay| Eaniilativan Kelobwary . " h ; fell you that they served it or not, was sure to get the credit | ecs of ofailizmiion. on 1+ horse, opened the letter, and found that | beautiful gig, drawn by his superb white | /i ke your oriflamme today, = of having painted the town ted, found ASEIG I ITOREE pREk] A it enclosed him a commission as ensign | Jorse, foliowed by Jack in liver o ! 3 ! l""ll-*lf”l""“u“l to retreat. He B ehain | B \I\I:r)- 1:1";«'nl|l:l|\::nl ise; the ";!'."'} ‘:‘l"‘l‘ States Ty To I”_"' day | outrider, and his thorougnbred ** it | Inour time the (“h.lllll'll("’ e s iy to the dock, jumped on board the first | e, al i o ni ter [ OF.0is death he never knew how this com- [ ith twenty or thirty fuil-blooded dogs | foF lo_ rotreat of Abd-el-K A e tric ooked mighty catbont ho coulll ronch, out hor loso, e “l'l,'(! "‘d;l,']“.'i',,g by, bub later | sesion came to be tondered him. Ho | of various broeds. binsing np the ro. i ] rite abode of the grace Lear i CHthojIg i esace fine. Now I wantto tell you sonetiiing made suil, and put out for the Diuntles: could not repress never applicd for it and never thousht of | T, created considerable excitement. He | F2mpr on the oceasion of the IR HISHanas; duy set for the” marrymz -we Oh, he could handle anything with ca ted smiles. The war-whoops were e aceepted it, however, and soon | houeht a farm for s brother: rekod wix-Bonnes or M!:nl'n_y 12 to conduct the ceremony onr yass, When he got on board the Daunt- | furnished solely by the dudes, famous throughout * the whole | jt finely, and made them deeds 1o it all. | ! X nd renovated by Louis-Phil- | Ho e i —Péte’s wite vanished. Hank was less he left the boat go adrift and | Presently a swallow-tailed represen as the best shot of his day. Here | Shortly afterward ho was ealled to the | ivpe, it h ven in the cpoch of the Re HOREORTNOO! about erazy, for he hadn't counted on gave orders to leave i inte. We left, | t1ve of one of the boxes cnme over are some stories avout his shooting told | cerviee in the Mexican s, and was | Public been tarned into @ national mus- | mane old John Bittle the other | anything of this Kind, and | was atraid and that explains the ~ | Cody und invited him and the Indians to | Upon the authority of Colonel R. B. | Killed while leading his command at the | €um tor the south of France, and will | night Iwood, “the only real Dead- | that he would go out and shoot his head If the boat hud been lost or aged, | join” his party in a bottle. The invita- | Marey, of the United States army. battle of Molino del Rey. s0on hive many treasures added to the | wood ance that Lever heard - of has [ off, too. But he: didu't. We looked all Bennett would undoubtedly gave given | fion was accepted and the savages were | A the presence of his com - collection it already contains. Many a 3 n - printed by any of these | over without finding i ( of hor. At the owner of her the price of a” new one; | gscorted to the box. They did not fit | Of €lubs was tacked upon a try KILLED BY HIS FATHER. the attractive drives and rides to be en- »tz: h'llu)\ B i ; first we thought thut the Injuns might no damuge wis done, 10 money | woll into the surroundings; their digmty ‘l‘;'"“ DY "l"‘l"‘ HCTOLyedve yad Ll A e iy antanist doyediin THE ENVIRONS OF PAU e ;(,xI;};.- ’1"(“h l‘x.::‘ltltli‘;x‘mlllr( ;Kr";:l)!xh“ 3 | Ea her, 'I"!: g theory wis r']";l'“' paid, at le as far as 1 know sive 5 P he tree and took his position An Enr Pennsylvanian Shoots ) e NS OF PAU. speakes o i o o ses, | oned after n while, because we conld not Wi Nl masesli S e oL oo £00 | muzzie-loading squirrel Tifle he prone ; For n moming strofl. you inave the | evpressid a willingiess 1o histen. Ol | find anywiero within twenty s of the close of any boyish frolic; fo zh | them to the floor and have them join the | {0 Sce how quickly he could load and fire | A horrible tragedy was enacted at Port | park of the chateau, in one direction, ~“|“““"'f"1“"1 and hawed alittle, and | camp o' fresh trail. - Then we eame to the Bennet was a wild fellow, he was also a | qaneing, but it failed, and soon nothing | three times. Hebegan, and in one min- | Bowkley, Pa., of the cvening of Decem- | with it Itered trees and glimpses over | then began 3 conclusion thot she had just s . To gentleman but the whoops of the eivilized remained | Ute and twenty seconds had loaded and | ber 13, For niany years past John Crouse wl mountainsiand inanother, u see, what I'mgoing to tell you | save Hank's feeling n little we him = ' packisTRY s L 2 L fired three shots at_the car (| has been looked upon as the feading man | the quaint streets of the town itsclf, by | oceurred here when the hills were: com- | that she probably had fotnd ot (i the is a suddenly new science of my own. It | ' "rul‘ RED MEN 1HAD BE ER| very quick work, forcing him to take of the little tow In all enterprises | the old mar I ni m\'vl new. lew romances in those | il thought too much of Pete Marry is no great thing to read the lines in the | A Jigt of the swell matrons and maidens | 4rop sight and’ five ‘instantancously. | which had for their objcet the advance- [ park, where ] rd. days were not gob vllwl'uv}v) ihe BOWE | again right awny, and so went on_tryiniz hand. Why, one's character sticks out all | who went to this ball for a lark and re- | Colonel Marcy went to examine the tar- | ment of the v y of the town he | see the ¢ 1 v 0 [ pances as 001 a they are now 1en | to forget all nbout her. “That wus in 1876, over, and it is particularly bristling and | yained caretully undisclosed to the . | get and found one hole cexactly in the | took a foremost r nd in charitable R )" i | Teamein here w lite men were § P Five years later [ heard of Pete i obtrusive across the back of the neck and 1 assemblage, would read astonish. | center. He remarked, however) that the | work he alw the list. By 'n by man with his beret cap of | than they now in Alaska, and, as far | in Montanar fler that 1 saw shoulder blades. 1 took a lesson inan | jnoly to those who 4o not know the dar- | 2ther two shots had missed the tree en- | theift and striet attention to business, he | dark blue, tlat and large not unlike « | ns women ‘lx-y(‘mu‘wrxu‘u(\_ you'd .~4i(" one 5 then well marvied, opera box in company with tour illus: | inz “{hat society sometimes indulges in: | Urely. Captam Scott smil called for | n red to comulate o s com- | Scoteh Gle, perhups a onee II“‘ \'v‘n_h.nwlp. and maybe you told me t s had skipped out trative examples. [n'front of me loomed | By even these ventn eIt called upon | A0 axe, dug into the t und found the | petence. He had an only son, John, the ant hom his place, The ani- | wouldn’t. We hadn’t any of us iy seanse she had concluded that she could the stately shoulders and aggressive b ther early in the funOne | three bills embedded m’a single hole. | pride of his heart and theé petof the | mals are Iy covered with shoets | basiness here then, because the 1o s She found her way to the of a damé, who was suryeying the : misements of the Tutier end | Colonel Marey says he has seen” oflicers | howe, - Nothing was too good for the | to protcet them from the eold of winter | v ton hndnlt) ‘beon Copencd up. ins || ¢l 1 owgh she v boxes, happily unconscious of the was the demolition of tall | Who vouch for “having scen Captun | lad. At an early * he was sent to a the heat and flies of S Pau is »-;ii but x.xl.-‘ ‘\\. I'||I us W 19 i) ppoint anyhody, she had uever 1 that her fashionable low corsag 'he youne ludies led in this | Seott do this: He would take two po ew England © school and after- great place for animals and are | willing to take the chances of getting | wrotted her decision offerin L w index to her el sting. et, their part of the g o | tatoes, throw them into the air sue- [ ward 10 college. Last June | held where there is much traflicking in | ourselves Iped and hamstrung by the Well, Hank kept the two dresses for asadiamond circlet around her neck did o | § “L“‘nl”‘”‘ S Lo LR cessively, and_put & pistol bail through | he — returned 15 the paternal | them. Mulos are bred, and the Spaniards, | Injuns were not disturbed very” mueh. | sonie time: and stid nwothing ALy her wealth. [ saw that the outline of | b 28n Cnd Bive MhEY ap Pebind 1ot of them as they crossed in the wir, | roof, a fulj-fledged collego-bred man, | in their picturesque’ dress, come from | I'm speaking now of the time that Crook | when the crowd bosan to e her shoulder-blades came down parallel | & e AN EVE NS, LOPROS ) SUCH ] one going up and one coming down and ready to enter the world to battlé | over the ‘border 1o buy them and take | was after the Sioux. He had been up in | yoticod that he would take a great seal with her spinal column, and nid to! |\ rolling ovortho. floor under. tho fect of urally this was the sort of man | for alivelihood, In accordance with the | them to their ive land. The market [ ) ’n :uul'lu .lmlluu_-_' the savizes | of interest in every woman that arrived mysclf, that ime is us stil and unbend- | §il” qanecrs, there to bo icked and | that @ fellow would not like to fight a | wishes of his father, he chose mereantile | is ab large open bit of Tand, and thou- thore o hnd cireled around r|(l|1\.| Icamn: Two ot threo: Gmos he got the ingas the old Jady hersell. See how | fogsed about jovously untii owner | el with, and yet iie had a great miny. | pursuits as his ayocation, wnd was admit- | sands of horses, mules and cattle are | Jowed the trail of varioys parties whicit | dresses out and earried them dow o, sharp it turns that' corner making the | eould rescue it. In some e N owna [ LS fiveb All[\[«'l wus under p -[ul\.n';wn{lnl! ||4-«l to |r:l|'ljm-'~l- ) \‘h fath; ; nll vlunl i|;:u\|(‘_'|lv|“!I\i1‘| ”l'h I_l‘.- 1]....;. n]x: lum;:‘n m|‘[ i ‘!:n“:nh”xl I:\((!vlu :\“\uIT ‘t\[‘n‘d hut hl.]‘ alwe ~'Im wym (h‘. vlu back v‘u.‘m zle of obsting i coul e | e SAALAR Coithatimat it stances, ¢ was stationed on the fron- | ducting u al store, whieh hac Iy t ere is also here one o thor ciame o s the col s mally we got word that he was to he B Prtkor thion i St tver g | O3 blected to'the’ ruin of their hats, but the wilitary vost of Couneil | for its customiers eigit hundred or more | the Zovernient haras, or establishments | terribly rougl i ] o Tl general outline indicates uggressiveness | oyorynody saw . that. any Feeentment The army oflices, were then miners. In the same neighborhood and | for Dreedmg horses, which are so cure. | comm 0 1. “They | Jere then, we went to the parson’s houe i SryROdyEBAWASL ANYAFORehUnent are not nowr, foud of a social g opposite the Crouse mansion, resided w | fully Jooked after in' France, -ame into this e 1 zged and | (o spe the ceremony performed, W in w high degree, but, 1 suppose, if 1| \would surely finvolve one or more \ | ; 5 P T ; wero oxplaining hor bick before an au- | won §8 i Minvolve one or more, wor | and addicted o card plaving, They | family named Buek for woalth | Fom ouTpoOk EXERCSE, | hangry, having on hwle meat for | didn ' know the i, but whon she e dience of her” dearest five hundred, T| gclock every dimee desenerated into the | considered a° man who fned en- [ and Village aristoc nngswergilithose hetsons wholllkvitosynsoyorshillll abounirereaks s here Ly in with Hank what do you think sie ) would simply suy that she had a vivid q 3 irely from the like indulg . k- | fully equal to the Crouses. In the Buek- | and dale in_the pursuit of a poor iittle | for a long time ir 3 on? Pete's wife's aress, by cracky underst mlln};‘_: of her own rights and :',““ can. \‘MI‘:HU{I‘ y .m.h(-u llu"'" ”“l' in the proper spirit. ley fumily two daughters, | fox until he is driven to despe it wer You can bet that they didn't | bie as hfe, She was a tough little en And i ANG 1, surrounding th most extravagan ¢ : . » " - § 2 o N » is taste il fl i & v I or {1 4 » Jo Ay rae neyer allows Kerself o be imposcd upon. | Ktk s, and complete b i ank i glass of Jiquor in hisiio, | May and Lewa. The Jatter whs the | death, can ave this taste g fiad any fauly with us white mon (07 | tamor, il sho led ik a iively race for Just as [ was getting deeply interested attempts to waltz or £o thr fix og | and never pla ame of cards, und | youngest, and looked npon as the wife f please ut there eing fin an Inj ll.h reserviti Y 1CY L ayear or two, but you can't wonder in the old Indy, she moved to the other | of ! 3 ? .,‘;“W tinuous | While e was libe i his antercourse | prospective of young Crouse, Lena was which hurt no one, as for [ took all that we had to ofter, and we | {150 when you hear how she came to side of the ho, and L transferred my | Paueitor and howlma filod the e PURE 1 with bis brother offlcers, was exceedingly | not the pretiiest givl in the neighborhood ‘ wir tennis, for wh offered the Luds ubout everything that | Luny or how he eame (o gt her, tudy to the shoulders of the girl who | +eugetor and hawhing lillod the air simonious in his own personal ox- | by any means, but compensated in other | admirable grounds have been arranged, | the country ufforded, S e study to the shoulders of the girl who | seone was sufliciently shocking. s ) { ! J D5 L “There is a very neat little the Several of Crook's men had alrend S ' ? s D) 48 your ow : ol oflicers of the post took um- | charming attractions. ¢ is a very neat Jittle theat v ri bok's men had al Y | more economically than me fook the seat. Phant as your own Wil- | eyidenced by the action of a woman past A A e She wis coguettish in the ext rformances three times a we The | served bevond their time, and when the | o lud tried for nearly 8 year (o ey douny L suid to myseld: | middlo lifo, who had sat ut n tablo for a | prao of this, and graduslly witharew | Sh A& EAV6 iGF greator delight than o cledo ]’ Union 1sespacially for French- | command reached Dendwood it was de. | Lo o Tor o e s Gap moan nothing in tho world but | Louror moro, & closo spootator was put_in coventry by all stive two or | have a bt dozen youngmen of the neigh. | men, while the English elub” is the ven- | cided to let sucih of theurus had served | Mg bt Gt DY Bl et gentlessness and meekness. That line three of s most intimate wssociates, | borhood “on the siving.” On the other | dezyous of the sons of Albion und_ the | the fuil term of their enlistment 20 about | Whon the dresses wonkd fit, the somin down the middle in what vulgar and | (Farowd. seized 5 sl 1 for a long time to the in i, ner alleged lover, Crouse, was of a | United States, —The holels are excelient | their business: Several of the ‘troopers | wauldn't,and when the woman would fit, pructicul physiologists would call spimal | b omih Seized o young woman by the | 15 and small slights, and then held Sullen and jealous disposition. The | and many in number,and the visitor who | skipped out ns soon as_ they could, bt u | {he (ressas wonldn't, amd o 1t swont. Al column, | but i is. your . life | Mo vielghtly wnd dragged herawas | CUG of war with bis threo friends o | acquaintancesbip between Mr. Crouso | intends to remuin some time can find u | fow remuined horo, thinking that thero | Jira e fownd a i who wis it 1 line, And the way in whieh it | siying: Al dowt allow wo givl that Ty | Q0 e upon what had best b done, | and Miss Lena existed for years, and, | good villa, or, if ho prefers,tuke an apart- | was more money in mining thau there | g e SR EU WO WS T @akes itsclf apparont ndicatos great | Shaporoning to act ke that,® Tho men | 4 ot ™ it onty two. alter: | althongh thero had been frequoent ‘spits, | ment, or settls down in a on. hera | was in anything else nt that momont. In | frreon e e o nrocd 1o marry vitality, and_assures me that you ean | Lought it eruel to duaw the line so 1 15 Were Joft him, One was 10 throw Sips of the towin o it that now | e plonty of churchos, sgoo crculating | this way wo bid auite an adition to-our | 5" Now. T e seon plonty of e at 3 1 sharply, b vhat is a chaperone for, | D#eS! 4oy i M0 1} 0 K | tad o {hndow. oo manw.g hy king | enmp. Ty i ce of the ari ood 1'c cos, b ( . nerally confidently expect a long lease” ot life, mm::w“ o e L u. his commission.” The other was to | th on had been admitted to part [l'r»xlny ind S for making | oamp, nd, us the prosonce uf the army | wood romanicos, but bh Y, are gouurally hose outline humps are not vertebrae, yWa = g chatlenge the fivst man_who insulted | nership with his father the wedding would | the diys pass easi v, § 2 BB NOILY C08 JILO A0 H0LOVR R0 | 100 high “ta -bo. Loug ‘; aevar 40 they arc love knobs, and the number of | Judge Gresham as a Conscientious | him. e promptly announced tiat he | soon take place. But thoso who claimed | Fow” towns of the size of Puu have so | fears o ho averige r, ar [ nueh ground. Phey involve (oo niny them that can be counted above the eor- M chose the latter course, and his determin- | to know theinside facts of the relation- [ much of what is known as u regulir good Is became more numerous as time | e people hig is 1 troe story, and it sage show how wmany more years she AR ation became known ' throughout the | ship existing between the lovers said | society. This avises from the” tact that | wenthby. Well, what I want to tell you | j&none ton vich for the blood of sy ol ll'lfy expect to continue writing 550 [ Chicago Herald: “Judge Gresham was | o, His skillas a marksman and bis | there would be no marriuge, at least not [ many fannnes of diflerent nationalities | is that one of the men from Crrok's eom- | Dandwooder who wis here when it before her name., [ see the upper inside | & near neighbor of mine fory 3 3 undoubted nerve protected him for a | for the present. Lena had uru\\nvu]tl!u. |“\'HL] e m.:IA Inn;_:m‘ I“‘-"I‘;““Mf‘u“)‘- ;:::\‘!nfl wis I |I|Ar“\l\“;|l\xl.uus‘.“u~ |1:m :”Ih“!( such things werd £oing on of your shoulder blade rises into a little 1 a former citizen of In [ good while, no one caring to provoke un | ward Crouse, and found a new admirer | dence here, and so casily full in with the s ) RSO i L AT TRAC R ) headland, and I'suspect that it means a | can say that a_more conscientions encounter with him. At “Jast, however, | inthe person of John Clark, who was | natives of he 1-nun]|c| ho give th l: o L] :“:‘ hl\m\‘l‘.j:‘ o III::.‘. “::l Ty :I:m” A M (s 00d deat of thr £t and the intention of | than o never lived. 1 beliove s con- | an oflicor trom & neighboring post, who | much handsomer than Croutc. but not | warm welcome, Roceptions, teas, din- | yeurs, aud, of course has scona heap of | & contribitor to the Pall 5 G fBealiii ko ttorosts of nmbor one. Just | sclontionhos in & orything he does to be v oclobrated shot, and had brouglt | near o wealthy, Tho appuarance of a | ners, pienies and ovening partios are vou- | service.” Soldioring in thoso duys didi't | takes oveasion to evplait bo bis a little ahead of the rest of the world, his most predominating trait. One story [ down lus man in some several ducis, | vival in the ficld nettled Crous stanily taking place, and thory is ail the | give u man much of v en lie | country rof thiotorny When | turned my attention to vhout the judge’s severity in this direei- | came to the post. quick, und he hecame more j gossipand rivaley for sovial distnction | around andlook pretty. When a band | they call lsius At no THE BELLE OF THE BOX, ion, told me by Mrs, Gresham, runs ik aptmin Scott’s singdlar habits soon | ever. Last night he called at the home \\!m‘hu!mn,x;l in lurgor oitins I\.m mect ‘{{L‘ |!.\:‘~' oums’lo lowl oy 1‘“:::mll Jlian gaod-ati WAL WO & k 3 B y ! ™ 8 4 SHFS : ety . ol ' of we e 00ple ¢ 7 BUN- ates, anc haf ay, t0o, ceome obsolete, or nearly 80, with he flat, smooth back, as soft, smooth | this: In the Iy part of the war the | gave him provocation, and he put a de- u]l .||_.: I"nilrvkvhji, ..‘n.l.' nmulu |‘x‘|~ f‘l\;ll :.;x.“r“|l:nl-x::,»h‘m ':“n lll:v-”.lfilm|iul\‘:x|nly:il'x |"N L“{:lrn“.mle 1““““ ey ‘\ 00, | panauis UNGMO.OE OIS M and white as velvet, I rémarked to my- | general was a provost marshal some [ liberate insult on him. ‘The “affair oc- | there, flew into ' passion. used to 2 the wievird 1 ndo binlf f Jus komo caen ira liave.nok anly p self thut if there was ever a self-possessed | place down in Tennesse, or perhaps it | eurved at the mess table. Captain Seott | be seated, but, taking his il cane, | Midi or listening to the music in the Pu to my party, and, as he wi i chap, KGR Trom Qliaration SULACis back there it sat right beforo me, That | was Mississippi, Mrs. Gresham, agong | left the room, and immediately sont s | started for the door, - Miss Lana accom: | Beaumonts you find yoursclf by them at N toois . -k souldaticns wollaa | 1a1ing Gxalusiva ke 4f kIEo L0 A peeuliar curve of the neck wher with some ul‘h‘rulliw'r\' wives from In- | ehallenge. In telhing about the duel af- | panied him to the door, where an angry »I'M:. or 18 the n] l‘;‘uu.n‘fxlr;x‘n: ‘I’A“t:n:“«l ’Im Al ARG AR EARARIGY AEQUDI | TASOERE LGH 20 o e S merges nto the should, plainly means | diana, took a run down there. Among rwird ( :||:|I:u|| m»_n‘u iwlun. ||nl ’“.».i: '“I 1ssion u,‘\,l»\ p“ s i e e n:(ln: ";;[1‘ rll":hi‘m-lxzm :': 1;y|;'.”;“‘ “ |.“|n-1.» SasupnlinauaEme,cthire)| smeriaitisanu af KRN CCi G orry disposition. Tha > hollow | the curiositics in which they wen ound considerably agitated, It rouse aceused bis lady love of treat- | lazy and comfortable, and s y come | we s . anothel iloa, ™ chy uep af whicl) b iiny diaconition, Thiak LUio hollow | the ourloaitios In which they pilo of con. | wa St duch, and - boing uttorly op: | ing bim shamefully, in invitng bi s rival | to the’ conclusion 'that” there’ ara wany | others still’ camb in. Wit one party | trays an Amcriedn at onge i Enzlavd her hend back and straightens hers traband cotton. Each of the s posed to the practice, he bad detormined | to'the house when e had sent ier word | worse places for passing the winter s camo & woman, the Wifo of ove of tio | was i vouue when fho Burins that is the eup of happiness, and s | wanted to make up a small parcel to throw away his fire. - While' the | thatlio was going to cull, Tho, young | son thn Pan, that they can go farther | men, who called = himself Pote. = We | over, W fallen into that she will have a v fortunate, | raw material to send home as a cuviosit seconds were measuring the und, and | lady said she had not invited Clark to | and worse; 50 the wain as the | always k:j")\\'/ ko ;"I‘Iv;llln 1\‘3\“\'-‘” ‘.”‘4I Pk L e LB s happy, contonted life. Thero jsn't mich | andalso for housohold “use, and they | the principals with (heir friends wer, | hor house, Crounse would not be satis: | days glide into weeks and months, - and, | was “ mighty swart httle wougn, to. | there SHall of & dopression between her shoulder | were greatly surprised when Marshal | group v he aceidentally | fied with tho- explanation, however, and [ whon at length they leave, it is gfton | Sho didu U tiwndsomo mncly, but' ho | gt for, R blades, and that, I take it, cloarly proves | Gresham forbad them domg any snch | overheard his antomonist say that he had | left, as mad as a hornet.” He at once | with the intention of returning another | didn't have loI|‘|\ t \}u.j\ ke ARLGFARIR [ AGERA I i g that she is to have muny friends, that | thing. He said that cotton was govern- | a ve disagreeable job on hand that | Droo led to his home where he told | year. NATIIAN APPLETON 8ho got juto the lf‘n T o of bor, | a0 it Wi i common thure she will prove faithful and that she will | ment property, and not a_pound of it, not | moruing, viz., the shooting o lamned | his father what had taken Ihe - 45 « ..\\A‘. and \‘\-1 all II:‘“lh Ia Leap ol bar. | ARG 1L WKS g ndo ss of take great pleasure m their society, even an ounc onid be taken away [ Yankec This raised Captain Scott’s | parent got very angry and sa s ought Mrs. Druse, the Herkimer, N Y., mur- R ke, whon whit should | whioh we eling to, while The close of the opers broke up my | without due process of law. § indignation, and he_determined that in- [ 1o be ashamed of him'self to allow a poor | deress, is to bo &0 confidont that | camp about ex wooks, when what shoid | which wo elne 10, WL K inyestigations that evening, but I have ““Another thing which I "have heard | stead of throwing his fire away, he would | clerk to cheat him out of a wealthy girl; | Governor Hill will commute her sen- | Pet .!4. but M',”‘v In;ln] lu:’\\\\'\h‘ a8 ! g g B arhiittl mrsued them on a number of occasions | about Judge Gresham, and which 1 be- | put his ball where it would do some | tl at if Le had any spunk in him he | tence that she gives no thought to | |']|' ster t 1-!{!;4 W s u;r‘: A Bl A G S 1) avond s agurainly jee at the opera, at balls and at dinner { lieve to be a is that in ail of his ex- | good. When the word was given the | would have remaived at the ckley | spiritual condition he Citizen repor saw im do the job, and w sound | by Ralih Wat L [ i i r <h e | the body we thought at first that e had | fined 1o tl artios, and 1 find that the results fully | perience on the heneh—wmore than thiv- | men fired together. Captain Scott re- | mansion and sat his rival out, i lier as saying the other night to her tue | “‘»”“ R A oy ana 6x: | 1a v in (ho ARDIG K of ¥ ustify the enthusiasm I felt when 1 made | teen years i all—he neyer had a ceived a slight lesh wound, and sent a T'his twitting on the father's part made ard By ——, if I'm hung U'll haunt beui) vrI‘ | )y guns. LHox ¥ o e aadonte hut he discovery. At the opera, as an intel- | reversed by the supreme e s | ball whizzing ‘muu-;'h his opponent's \.r,l .14 stle ;nu: ne xlxlmh ,:w‘nl you all in my night clothes B r\‘ i a ': e ey e G st 0 T pal entertainment it fully equals | judge’s friends in Chic nd Indiana | lungs. 1t is mentioned as a curions fact : retaliatéd by calling the old gen - daye. Bt an oxaminiug the luy o ont Ly et "’m-rn Wusio. At balls 8ud dibuer | Whdorstand ve ry well that he desires no | that'this shot saved the man’s life. He | man some hard names. Mr. Croanse, | A young man, one of a party of hunt ound we luwlhl ;lw “‘iy ARG muds § f"l‘.“"”h et Y liee, there 18 nothing like it when | political oflice, “and thut he has abjured | had consumption before the ducl aud. re- | himself a very impetuous man, grabbed | ers in Color 31‘1- l'lfll camp to go out and IW']'” R 80 acBent, MY B8 S | Seutially ap Auler r partaer bores you awfully. The | polities forever and dedicated himsolf, | covercd afterward—it being said that the | up a revolver which lay on a shelf near | set a trap ¢ did not return in due | ridge had b ! | anhaind 1 Dane, who wWas put aulyantage of it s you tuke people | body and mind, to the ifs poguion ho [ wound he received stopped” the course o | by and shot the son thiough the breast, | time, and’ scareh was made for him, 1t | no Teason (o supposo that Pots wa tived | appears i Pope Rearos, g they can't decelvo you by | now hoida. Ho. 18 tao conscitniious & | the discuso . 18 ia. net stated. hawever | infie a fatal wound from which he | wi ays bofare ho wasfound, and | oflife we rowirhed & verdict tuat i partiouar 16 BEH isting their shoulder-blades or letting | man o have any liking for politics or | that this remedy has hecome popular, died this morni Thereis great excite 3 that in setting the trap | death'w s ulw ide “\[“‘."'\“,'l‘ hase wye prosow Sty down their shoulders, and so disarrax woliticians, and” actually “despises both. | Captain Seott came very near having | went in the town, sud Ivich Jaw is | both hands bad been caught T it, and | riosdispensations Uiat yoi vt about. | ks An boa'" Jav. Lo GoRAIsL Lso their lives and angles. And ther {e-has no more political ambition than | another duel on. the most ridieulous | threatened The mi rer bas been | thus he had been held until he was frozen | We buried him in goo shy LB | gl AR eanarad Mtk 4 ® wueh more considerate way of get- | Rutherford B. Hoyes has, grounds. He was o great sportsman and | arrested, 10 death, woman suid thut she would sty with us we | find collog ¥ ces and i RRTTS ) ¢ pretty. They fitted Pote’s linct of Navarre, Ihe Other Ran Awuy from Hank Just | wife live w glove, becnuse they had been on the Eve of the Wedding, made afte, und when she sorry rose when the exc ant was at neight, and, pusbin o 1y through ek fun ¢