anaheim-gazette 1887-12-29
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REAL ESTATE OFFICE
OF
F. U. Schaumburge
I Handle Only the
Very Choicest of Land
IMPROVED AND UNIMPROVED.
I Have for Sale Fine Homes, with Orange and Walnut Grouses,
other Semi-Tropic Fruits; also all kinds of Deciduous Fruits.
I make a specialty of the Land lying in the Magnificent Golden
country. This land cannot be excelled by any in the world. All
land lies within limit of the Anselm Union Water Company's dist
with an Everlasting Attendance of Water. I will be pleased to show
land to all parties desirous of seeing it.
Correspondence Sollicited and Promptly Attended to.
Postoffice Box 55.
Anaheim, C
And 114 West First Street, Los Angeles, Cal.
PIERCE & LITTLEFIELD,
GENERAL LAND AGENTS
AND
ATIOKEYS AT LAW AND EXAMINERS OF LITLES
JOHN C. PELTON, JR.
ARCHITECT
T. A. RIMMER, CONTRACTOR, BUILDER AND HOUSE MAKER
W. M. HARLEY, ADDRESS AND MAKEER
L.
G.
B.
F. WILLE & ALBRECHT, PROPRIETOR OF THE GOLD PIONEER COOPERAGE
C. COOPRAU, A large quantity of BARRELS, HALF BARRELS, FIVE AND TEN GALLON KEGS FOR SALE - Apply to B. DREYPUCK & CO.
F. AJ BACK, Importers, manufacturers and dealers in FURNITURE, BRIDING, PAPER HANGING, PICTURE FRAMES, KILO UNDERTAKERS, Agents for the Home, Bridge and Vistor, Sawing Las Vegas street.
A. T. WALL E. GROCERY AND FEED STORK.
Postoffice Box 55. Anaheim,
And 114 West First Street, Los Angeles, Cal.
PIERCE & LITTLEFIELD,
GENERAL LAND AGENTS
AND
REAL ESTATE BROKERS
We will sell land belonging to OURSELVES, well located and in lots and prices to suit purchasers who want a home. And we ban, sell, rent and care for the property of others.
ANAHEIM LAND BUREAU.
LANDELL & SCHNEIDER
Anahiem Hotel Building, Anaheim, Cal.
ORANGE AND VINEYARD LAND
Branch Office at Whittier.
McDuffee Bros. & Co.
REAL ESTATE BROKERS.
GILT - EDGE PROPERTY
In Anaheim a Specialty.
16 S. SPRING ST., LOS ANGELE
II. D. POLIHEMUS,
REAL ESTATE AGENT
Postoffice Block, Anaheim, Cal.
FIVE AND TEN GALLON KEYS
For sale: Apply in R. DREY PURCAO ANAHEIM
F. A J BACK B. Important manufactures and dealers in PURITT KING, MIDDLETON, PAPER HANGING, PHILIPPA FARMER, E.I.
A. T WALLE P. GROCERY AND FEED STORK
Center Center and Los Angeles streets
C. CHARLES PAMPELL
HARDWARE, CINDERS, LANES
F. LAST SLAKE
Important manufacturer in LAKE.
S. CARRIAGE AND BUILDER
PRICES REASONABLE.
The potential of the property is immensely valuable.
B. A FERRY,
CARPENTER AND BUILDER
Prompt attention given to all kinds of carpenter work, and construction general.
S. CLAUMANN & BORTTCHER,
BLACKSMITH AND WAGONMAKERS.
CENTER ST., ANAHEIM.
Germania Hall!
In Basin New Building.
FRITZ RUNMANN, - Proprietor
16 S. SPRING ST., LOS ANGELES
II. D. POLIHEMUS,
REAL ESTATE AGENT
Postoffice Block, Anaheim, Cal.
Walnut orchards and Orange Groves in fall bearing. Also improve lands in irrigating district and artesian-water belt. Five acres upwards. Price extremely low. Terms easy.
Correspondence Solicited.
FOR SALE: A FINE RANCH OF 320 Acre
Twenty miles west of Anaheim with Southern Pacific R.R. station.
Good house on open airtie. Two barns; stable for horse horses. Wagon and tool sheds. Sixty-five five-board fence. Forty yards in bearing Muscat grapes; 50 acres in Alfalfa; 115 acres in Barley last season; 10 acres in Oats; 25 acres around house in fruits; kinds, such as Oranges, Lemons, Apricots, Apples, Pears, Excrescence of shade trees; 70 acres in pasture, and 10 acres in cedar terms: $200.00 per acre; One-third Cash; One-third in 1 and one-third in 2 years, with interest at eight per cent on unpaid portion. For further particulars call on or address any of real estate agents of Anaheim, Los Angeles county, California.
INSURE YOUR PROPERTY IN THE OLD Hartford Fire Insurance Company
Dr. J. S. Cardiner Agent.
(BUCKNER TO RICHARD MELLOR)
CAPITAL: $1,250,000 | ASSETS: $8,000
ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, DECEMBER 29, 1887
OFFICE
hamburger.
of Land,
IMPROVED.
ange and Walnut Groves, and
Deciduous Fruits.
in the Magnificent Golden Belt
any in the world. All this
on Water Company's district.
I will be pleased to show this
Promptly Attended to.
Anaheim, Cal.
Los Angeles, Cal.
TLEFIELD,
The Weekly Gazette.
Established 1870.
Items of arts and recreation on all these subjects are solicited by the editor. He briefly and wrote directly to the press. All commissions must be approved by the author and not published, but for the information of the editor.
MONSIEUR ALFREDO.
I haven't a notion how I found my way to the modest little cafe, nor do I know it came to pass that during the whole of that year I dropped out of school.
I wonder whether Monsieur Alfredo had anything to do with it.
His breakfast course was evidently a later one than mine, as I had generally insisted a couple of cigarettes before he made his appearance at the Cafe de l'Empereur, upright and trim in his tightly brittle track coat, a roll of manuscripts under his wrinkled child like old fries. Lee water always brought him a cup of coffee after which he would place the cross before his Monseieur Alfredo, with old fashioned curtains.
I had also expressed a wish to be allowed to still open him, but had been given permission that he was hard at work just ahead and feeling pretty sure that the tragedy was not the result of all I took good care and himself myself upon him.
After some time to the end of an evening; I immediately sat there alone smoking. I must have died in Paris proper with some of my fellow students, but, like every other treasured inhabitant of the Quartier Latin, adored around the Seine. One evening however none one started the idea that the whole list of us should drive down to the Vatican to see Les Brigamis, and every one accompanying to the proposal they carried me off with them.
The pet was literally overflowing with stains. We were all in holiday temperament and apprehension quite as vociferously as the elephant who met just behind us. I talk to the dog I were playing my old friend later and don't help thinking between her legs he would describe that I had been there—whereon I made up my mind to keep the whole thing back. And yet, in spite of everything, I laughed till I cried in beginning to end.
The singers had hardly got the airs out of their months before the chapel was ready with its defending applause; our students and their rest of the patrol following suit with a right goodwill. And by the time we were able to move our arms longer the clap had paid in a fresh stock of energy and the brilliant fares was halted again and again with renewed thunder of applause by the joyless spectators in the hall ground, by the cheerful poor devils who sat there shooting "Bravo!" bravo! to earn their many brains.
Not only I heard a "Drivo!" that made me start; it came and fell after the rest. I turned round and ran my eyes over the clap, and then to the astonishment of those who escaped violence they suddenly faded away in their age, victims to inexplicably which no amount of care and attention unable to contend with. At first I could soak some of them; but Alfroto looked at me with great amazement every time I suggested that might be allowed to recover, aware that it was this sort of which, according to him, had spared Hugo as a dramatist. I made up let things take their course with forcing.
After a few more abortive attempts on a member of the aristocracy, presumably Monsieur Alfredo that it possible I might acquit myself maily in a less elevated social point here we same upon an unexpected — Monseieur Alfredo drew the last minutes. True that the exigencies drama occasionally required the presence low-born individual on the no sooner half he get the uncomposed out of his mouth than the author wakes men with an impatient waiting, wary gleader.
Put last hit upon my true love these characters in which I am truly dramatic troupe. I unswain easily and impressibly from the witness of the old graves attention swiftly drawn to the fact now. I am thus done the stage, and with despair he does not seem to be satisfied with what has been said.
And since I have gone through many trials after trailing away from home with his companion's wound, I begin to live with him without any need for money or even having any real life. However, he visits me daily, only paying me only a small amount of money each day. As he goes on he pays me only a small amount of money each day.
And despite all these experiences he remains faithful to me.
TLEFIELD,
STATE BROKERS.
VES. well located and in no want a home. And we may of others.
BUREAU.
CHINEIDER.
YARD LANDS.
Whittier.
OS. & Co.
BROKERS.
PROPERTY
Specialty.
LOS ANGELES.
HEMUS,
E AGENT,
naheim. Cal.
Anaheim, Cal.
Los Angeles, Cal.
His breakfast tour was evidently a later one than mine, as I had generally limited a couple of cigarettes to be made his appearance at the Cafe de l'Empereur, upright and trim in his tightly hilted track coat, a roll of manuscripts under chinam, and his gray coat tailing wildly round his wrinkled childlike old face. Love water always brought him a cup of coffee, after which he would play the score heard before in Monroe Alfredo, with old-fashioned courtesy, made a point of impressing after my health, and I never failed to enjoy satisfactory assurances as to the advice of my generally not the most intelligent man, while I gave uninterrupted attention to all the things that were till to the great Alfredo Alfredo would hastily take care of his pocket and shrewdness.
We always played two games. I am the most intelligent I know at any time at the sort, and the old man who was every time got at it. I played actually, but with no immediate thinking, but the old man was very experienced at this. What puzzled me was that almost all the songs and plays were actually written by someone else, although they were probably written by the king, the cinderella and his nephews. He appeared to have no idea what he was doing in this time. I had ever played all my ways about me to make space some living.
The conversation usually turned on liturgy with alarms at the theater. Alfredo was extremely exasperating with respect to dramatic art, and approved of it as opposed to orgy. As far as authors were concerned it was well impossible to satisfy him. I happened to be on another show at Vienna Hagen just there. Monroe Alfredo thought there was a lack of brevity about him. He preferred Renee and Cornelia although he gave me to understand that according to his light both these authors were illuminated in action and dramatic power.
At first comedy, he disposed it, felting point blank to look open Sorrow Angela, La biche or Damsas as dramas costumes. In mountain either Olmash or Lovack was enough to reduce the last to pleasing Monroe Alfredo to a state of singerness. He then burst into Holland which he never spake unless greatly excited he demonstrated them as "sounder" tranquility and "creative" spontaneity, and declared that it was their mind that had spread the person that had proved total to the good taste of a new generation maintaining at the same time that they alone were responsible for the downfall of tragedy in the Nineteenth century.
He seemed well suited to everything concerning the Paris theaters, and was especially a constant player or consort. I had once or twice suggested that we should go to the same place that during our whole of that year I did not intend to other.
I wonder whether Monsieur Alfredo had anything to do with it.
His breakfast tour was evidently a later one than mine, as I had generally limited a couple of cigarettes to be made his appearance at the Cafe de l'Empereur, upright and trim in his tightly hilted track coat, a roll of manuscripts under chinam, and his gray coat tailing wildly round his wrinkled childlike old face. Love water always brought him a cup of coffee, after which he would play the scores heard before in Monroe Alfredo, with old-fashioned course, made a point of impiring after my health, and I never failed to enjoy satisfactory assurances as to the advice of my generously not the most intelligent man, while I gave uninterrupted attention to all the things that were till to the great Alfredo Alfredo would hastily take care of his pocket and shrewdness.
We always played two games. I am the most intelligent I know at any time at the sort, and the old man who was every time got at it. I played actually, but with no immediate thinking, but the old man was very experienced at this. What puzzled me was that almost all the songs and plays were actually written by someone else, although they were probably written by the king, the cinderella and his nephews. He appeared to have no idea what he was doing in this time. I had ever played all my ways about me to make space some living.
The conversation usually turned on liturgy with alarms at the theater. Alfredo was extremely exasperating with respect to dramatic art, and approved of it as opposed to orgy. As far as authors were concerned it was well impossible to satisfy him. I happened to be on another show at Vienna Hagen just there. Monroe Alfredo thought there was a lack of brevity about him. He preferred Renee and Cornelia although he gave me to understand that according to his light both these authors were illuminated in action and dramatic power.
At first comedy, he disposed it, felting point blank to look open Sorrow Angela, la biche or Damsas as dramas costumes. In mountain either Olmash or Lovack was enough to reduce the last to pleasing Monroe Alfredo to a state of singerness. He then burst into Holland which he never spake unless greatly excited he demonstrated them as "sounder" tranquility and "creative" spontaneity, and declared that it was their mind that had spread the person that had proved total to the good taste of a new generation maintaining at the same time that they alone were responible for the downfall of tragedy in the Nineteenth century.
He seemed well suited to everything concerning the Paris theaters, and was especially a constant player or consort. I had once or twice suggested that we should go to the same place that during our whole of that year I did not intend to other.
His breakfast tour was evidently a later one than mine, as I had generally limited a couple of cigarettes to be made his appearance at the Cafe de l'Empereur, upright and trim in his tightly hilted track coat, a roll of manuscripts under chinam, and his gray coat tailing wildly round his wrinkled childlike old face. Love water always brought him a cup of coffee, after which he would play the scores heard before in Monroe Alfredo, with old-fashioned course, made a point of impiring after my health, and I never failed to enjoy satisfactory assurances as to the advice of my generously not the most intelligent man, while I gave uninterrupted attention to all the things that were till to the great Alfredo Alfredo would hastily take care of his pocket and shrewdness.
We always played two games. I am the most intelligent I know at any time at the sort, and the old man who was every time got at it. I played actually, but with no immediate thinking, but the old man was very experienced at this. What puzzled me was that almost all the songs and plays were actually written by someone else, although they were probably written by the king, the cinderella and his nephews. He appeared to have no idea what he was doing in this time. I had ever played all my ways about me to make space some living.
The conversation usually turned on liturgy with alarms at the theater. Alfredo was extremely exasperating with respect to dramatic art, and approved of it as opposed to orgy. As far as authors were concerned it was well impossible to satisfy him. I happened to be on another show at Vienna Hagen just there. Monroe Alfredo thought there was a lack of brevity about him. He preferred Renee and Cornelia although he gave me to understand that according to his light both these authors were illuminated in action and dramatic power.
At first comedy, he disposed it, felting point blank to look open Sorrow Angela, la biche or Damsas as dramas costumes. In mountain either Olmash or Lovack was enough to reduce the last to pleasing Monroe Alfredo to a state of singerness. He then burst into Holland which he never spake unless greatly excited he demonstrated them as "sounder" tranquility and "creative" spontaneity, and declared that it was their mind that had spread the person that had proved total to the good taste of a new generation maintaining at the same time that they alone were responible for the downfall of tragedy in the Nineteenth century.
He seemed well suited to everything concerning the Paris theaters, and was especially a constant player or consort. I had once or twice suggested that we should go to the same place that during our whole of that year I did not intend to other.
His breakfast tour was evidently a later one than mine, as I had generally limited a couple of cigarettes to be made his appearance at the Cafe de l'Empereur, upright and trim in his tightly hilted track coat, a roll of manuscripts under chinam, and his gray coat tailing wildly round his wrinkled childlike old face. Love water always brought him a cup of coffee, after which he would play the scores heard before in Monroe Alfredo, with old-fashioned course, made a point of impiring after my health, and I never failed to enjoy satisfactory assurances as to the advice of my generously not the most intelligent man, while I gave uninterrupted attention to all the things that were till to the great Alfredo Alfredo would hastily take care of his pocket and shrewdness.
We always played two games. I am the most intelligent I know at any time at the sort, and the old man who was every time got at it. I played actually, but with no immediate thinking, but the old man is very much interested in throwing medicine for the sake of honesty deciding self-efficacy to the stage, and to my self-efficacy he committed to becoming my instructor in department and declaimation. The laws always took place at my room in the Hotel de la Vivienne. The old follows somewhat as peculiar one, and his theories on hardship art as admirable as those held on shoes. I listened attentively to all he had say, enduring to the best of my abilities; follow these elementary rates of department which he saw at ten o'clock; enter after whilie according to the best of my abilities; follow these elementary rates of department which he saw at ten o'clock; enter after whilie according to the best of my abilities; follow these elementary rates of department which he saw at ten o'clock; enter after whilie according to the best of my abilities; follow these elementary rates of department which he saw at ten o'clock; enter after whilie according to the best of my abilities; follow these elementary rates of department which he saw at ten o'clock; enter after whilie according to the best of my abilities; follow these elementary rates of department which he saw at ten o'clock; enter after whilie according to the best of my abilities; follow these elementary rates of department which he saw at ten o'clock; enter after whilie according to the best of my abilities; 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LOS ANGELES.
HEMUS,
THE AGENT,
naheim, Cal.
rose in full bearing. Also unand artesian-water belt. From
any low. Terms easy.
Solicited.
NACH OF
3:20 Acres;
31 miles west of Anaheim;
six Pacific R. R. station immission and Topeka R. R. station; Good house of
large open attic. Two large
vagon and tool sheds. Six artive-board fence. Forty acres
alfalfa; 115 acres in Barley the
around house in fruits of all
果s. Apples, Pears, Ete.; an
measure, and 10 acres in corrals.
Bird Cash; One-third in 1 year.
at eight per cent on the
call on or address any of the
ales county, California.
PROPERTY
OLD
Finance Company.
Owner Agent.
$5,000,000.
I had found out that Monsieur Alfredo was a literary character himself, and that the manuscript he always carried under his arm was nothing more or less than a five-act tragedy. Having always entertained the profoundest admiration for authors and artists, I naturally took every opportunity of letting him know how highly I esteemed this privilege of his acquaintance. I had long ago made a clean breast of all my affairs to him, but as far as his own were concerned he was singularly shy and uncommunicative. Once at twice, having the cafe, I had tried to go part of the way with him, but he always wished me good-by on turning into the street, and of course I saw that I wasn't
Alfredo in a skate of long overtime. He then hurried into Laitain, which he never spake into greatly extolled; he demonstrated them as "sunken," "maniac," and "greenwater" (presumably), and disclosed that it was their mind that had spread the person they had proved loyal to the goal task of a close generation, maintaining at the same time that they all were responsible for the downfall of tragedy in the Nineteenth century.
He seemed well suited to every thing concerning the Paris theater, and was evidently a constant playgoer himself. I had once or take suggested that we should go to the theater together some evening at Museum Alfredo had always forgotten or misunderstand my proposal.
So sooner had we insulted our second genius than Museum Alfredo actually produced four sons from the course of a little paper bag, added to the water, asked for his full, and regularly had my hour sweeps on the table.
The Caleader Emperor was not much of a place, as you are already aware; you had to pay right for it on the Itinerant St. Miami, but may seek four years here, provided you ask it without milk or sugar—Monsieur Alfredo had long since dominated to one his experience that sugar was fatal to coffee, reeling it off half its fragrance. It less allows those distinctions used to under the waist me both sugar and milk, and I grieve into the bargain, but never once had I succeeded in persuading Monsieur Alfredy to share a glass with me. I had offered him everything which I believed the Cafe La Empereur to be capable of producing, but the old gentleman's refusal, though courteous, had always been decided.
I had found out that Monsieur Alfredo was a literary character himself, and that the manuscript he always carried under his arm was nothing more or less than a five-act tragedy. Having always entertained the profoundest admiration for authors and artists, I naturally took every opportunity of letting him know how highly I esteemed this privilege of his acquaintance. I had long ago made a clean breast of all my affairs to him, but as far as his own were concerned he was singularly shy and uncommunicative. Once at twice, having the cafe, I had tried to go part of the way with him, but he always wished me good-by on turning into the street, and of course I saw that I wasn't
Well, the Archbishop performs the marriage ceremony by moonlight; and we who have not seen each other for ten years, are left alone for a moment or two in a lower-of-roses. There was nothing on earth to be aligned at, no one was likely to disturb us, for I had run my word through the body of every grown-person in the piece, after which I thought I really might be allowed to be a little kind of the Marchioness, but Monsieur Alfredo never found my voice tragic enough during the few brief moments of happiness he hastened upon us. (We ultimately perished in an earthquake).
For the matter of that, it fared no better
Neil Philomene, who stood at his back, alight her finger repose, but I could see by her expression that she hone my little white lenx. I had hit upon the poor weak point and was obliged to remarks about the Society de Dramatisque over and over again against everything I am fairly satisfied with life up failed old face on being finally that I was speaking the truth. A deep quiet pleased with everybody did not realize himself how rapid minking... According to his wish...
with those who emanated violent deaths—they suddenly faded away in the flavor of their age, victims to inexplicable disease which no amount of care and attention were able to contend with. At first I did all count to save some of them; but Monsieur Alfredo looked at me with great astonishment every time I angraved that some one might be allowed to recover, and quite aware that it was this sort of weakness which, according to him, had spedd Victorago as a dramatist, I made up my mind to things take their course without interring.
After a few more abortive attempts to pose a member of the aristocracy, I tried to renounce Monsieur Alfredo that it was just insulted myself more credibly in a less elevated social position. But here we came upon an unexpected obstacle Monsieur Alfredo drew the line at Vienna. True that the exigencies of the drama occasionally required the presence of fine low-born individual on the stage, but sooner had he got the necessary words of his mouth than the author would fling pages at his head, relogating him to the scene, with an impatient wave of his anger, notistant.
Well, away with all that he had taken upon my GOD's veneration, we see the characters in which I scored my truly dramatic triumphs. I appeared gradually and apologetically from the reporters, but the old grievous attition being too obviously drawn to the fact now and then and across the stage, with a deep sorrow that was all.
At the end of the trial, after tragedy, not until shortly before it began to feel that perhaps he would be a himself out of his mind, and sought by many means to intrigue him to see first this way, however impossible, his paw was only painful and ill-tempered. He grew in love and admiration with Chateau and more was I drawn toward the cultivated man with a sort of tender smile and ever more uninterrupted interest in his literary bloodthirstiness.
A REAL GYPSY QUEEN
She Tells Fortunes in a secluded spot on Coney Island.
Hewlett Nailery.
A REAL GYPSY QUEEN
She Tells Fortunes in a weirled spot on toney Island.
Brooklyn Battle
Few of the thousands who daily journey to Coney Island are aware of the fact that the popular seaside resort contains within its sea girl hunts a real live queen. Yet such is the fact. Cynthia Gray, whose tent stands in a walled corner of the west end, just opposite the Clarendon Hotel, is the queen of a part of the human race whose origin has puzzled the learned of all nations, queen of people who are spread over every land, and of subjects who know her allegiance. Yet cruel fate has owed that Cynthia was to make a living by revealing the future, and as there are plenty of people in this world who believe in palmistry, her income is greater than many of her sister queens in exile.
The travels of a queen are usually accompanied by the firing of cannon and the beating of drums, and people turn out by thousands to stare at and welcome the august pentate. Poor Cynthia, however, was welcomed to Coney Island by the maurice cries of the tintype copper jamb the jeers of the hawaiians. Yet the best Romany blood in England flows in her veins, and in her husband, Sulney's. He is a tall, clive mind gypsy, and talks English like an Oxford under graduate. The Grays were born in Norfolk, where their ancestors lived in tents for generations. Lord Suffield, whose seat is in that county, was attracted to the little gypsy boy white on a visit to the camp and had him educated at a Herefordshire college. But the nomadic instincts which young Sulney had imbibed with his mother's milk were too much for him, and he returned to the bosom of the wanderers. Salimya ancestors, as himself acknowledges, were horse stealers, while he is a horse dealer. The wagon in which she family travelled in England is furnished like a Pullman palace car, and cost 1,800. "You can give me the finest house on Fifth avenue," said Mr Gray to the reporter, "and I wouldn't live in it. This is no affection, but God grath. My greatest sorrow is that my youngest child was born in a house. We were unable to get South last winter, otherwise she would have been born in a text." The child referred to is a pretty blonde baby girl 5 months old, and was born in Brooklyn. Her hair, strange to say, will become as black as a raven's wing. The gypsy queen a greatest leak in palmetty was accomplished seven years ago on the racecourse at Chemlands, Essex. England, when she boreful Fred Archer's death. The great English jockey who was riding his brother Charlie's horse that course, walked over k'thegypsy camp and asked Cynthia to read his hand. The queen glanced at his palm, immediately dropped his hand and said: "A sudden death by your own hand, young gentleman." Poor Archer laughed commendably at his and said: "I would give a trifle to come across that awafty dame again."
Cynthia a sister, the Princess Knight, is the most beautiful gypsy girl in England. George It Simon, the dramatist, made her evening audience, thirty or forty students assembled at the theatre and ask their performance through. Toward the end of the evening an alarm of fire was rung, and presently the Chief of Police came in to form the students that they would have to light their way back to the college through the threatening crowd that had gathered. The crisis had come. The townies had formed a solid column of two, with locked arms, and filled up the west side of Chapel street, having on the left the protection of the houses, and on the right the housing multitude. Suddenly, despite the efforts of the police, a shower of stones and bricks descended upon the marching body of students. Steadily they kept on carrying their wounded and delicately singing a college song.
Next to the end of the column figured Jim Haines of Tennessee, with Harry Howland on his left. The rear guard was Jack Sims of Mississippi, and these two men of the South, Seamus had light after flight with one both another of the moth, whose leader was the powerful O'Neil, the cause of the trouble of the night before. Improving the opportunity when Sims was engaged with some vene also O'Neil grappled with him, elutched his throat with one brawny hand, and struck him on his head with a brick in the other. In the struggle that followed the Mississippi cried out that he would kill his assailant if he were not released. O'Neil's reply was a tightening of the grip upon his throat, and Sims knew that he was being choked to death in thus greatly encounter.
Left behind by the rest of the column, unable to call out, surrounded by the enemy, and feeling that his life would be gone, what could Sims do? Quick as a flash he drew a long dagger and stabilized O'Neil to the heart. The Irishman fell dead. Staggered by loss of their leader she mob retreated from the attack and the students went as a upon the campus. That night the riders raged unceasingly, demanding a virology for消毒, and it was only by use of the greatest produce then and few successes days that the authorities and students prevented a renewal of hostilities.
But the Mississippiian what of him? He had escaped on the moment, but in his struggle he had lost his hat, in which his name was written. As soon as possible afterward he left college and returned to the North. Everyone had justified what he had done; it was shown to be a clear self-defense, and it was said that the Faculty gave him his degree when his class graduated.
Seven years afterward the war between the States began, and North and South confronted one another in arms. Gen. Haines was killed in the battle of Murresborough, commanding a Tennessee brigade. Major Sims, the hero of the college affray, in a Louisiana regiment, which had enrolled a number of Yale graduates, fought unhurt through all the campaigns of the Army of Northern Virginia, until at the end of 1844, when darkness had stopped the last battle between Sherman and Earlly; he stood with his comrades beside a campfire discussing the incidents of the day. Presently one of them recalled an adventure of their youthful days, and something elitated from the Major's recital of his own part in that riot at Yale in 1854.
A New Haven towny, a member of a Federal battary, beside his gun,a quarter of a mile away was ordered to try his aim at that compassure,and as a chance would have it,the first attempt dropped a round shot there with such precision as to take Jack Sims' head from his aboilers as clean as though it had been cut off by a guillotine. Strange as it may seem,the man who simmedthe fatal shot was the brother of the man Jack killed in the college row ten years before. Thus without knowing it was O'Neil's death avenged. The romantic part of the story came to knowledge of New Havens only a few days since.
A New Haven towny, a member of a Federal battery, beheld his gun a quarter of a mile away was ordered to try his aim at that cripple, and as a chance would have it, the first attempt dropped a round shot there with such precision as to take Jack Sim's head from his shoulders as clean as though it had been cut off by a guillotine. Strange as it may seem, the man who simulated the fatal shot was the brother of the man Jack killed in the college row ten years before. Thus, without knowing it, was O'Neil's death avenged. The romantic part of the story came to the knowledge of New Haveners only a few days since.
CHARLES DICKENS
His First Appearance Disturbed by a Brother Novelist.
T A Trollope.
Dickens was only 33 when I first saw him, being just two years my junior. I have said what he appeared to me then. As I knew him afterward, and to the end of his days, he was a strikingly manly man, not only in appearance, but in bearing. The lustrous brilliance of his eyes was very striking. And I do not think that I have ever seen it noticed that those wonderful eyes which now so much and so keenly were appreciably, though to a very slight degree, near-nighted eyes. Very few persons, even among them who know him well, were aware of this, for Dickens never used a glass. But he continually assured his vision by looking at distant objects, and making out on as well as he could without any artificial assistance. It was an instance of that force of will in him which compelled a naturally somewhat delicate frame to support itself into the air. Mr. Forster somewhere says of him: "Dickens' habitats were robust, but his health was not." This is entirely true as far as my observation extends. Of the general charm of his manner I dismay of giving any idea to those who have not seen or known him. This was a charm by no means dependent on his genius. He might have been the great writer he was and yet not have warmed the social atmosphere whenever he appeared with that summer glare which seemed to attend him. His height was brimful of enjoyment. There was a peculiar humour present in it when communicating or hearing anything especially absurd, so who would say, "Pen my son," this in two ridiculous terms all humour? and bursting out aloud, as through the sense of the ridiculous overwhelming him like this, which carried all hearings away with it, and which I still remember. It entered into everything he said or did. It belonged, doubtless, to that sensual fertility and numbness of heart and I feeling that distinguished his genius.