anaheim-gazette 1888-04-05
Searchable text
VOLUME XVIII.
REAL ESTATE AGENTS.
OF
F. U. Schaumburger
I Handle Only the
Very Choicest of Land
IMPROVED AND UNIMPROVED.
I Have for Sale Fine Homes, with Orange and Walnut Groves, and other Semi-Tropical 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 the land lies within limit of the Anaheim Union Water Company's district with an Everlasting Abundance of Water. I will be pleased to show the land to all parties desirous of seeing it.
Agent for the City of London Fire Insurance Company. Promotion payment of all Losses.
Correspondence Sollicited and Promptly Attended to.
Postoffice Box 49. Anaheim, Cal.
And 114 West First Street, Los Angeles, Cal.
ANAHEIM
EVREGREEN NURSERY
Correspondance Sollicited and Promptly Attended to.
Postoffice Box 49. Anaheim, Cal.
And 114 West First Street, Los Angeles, Cal.
ANAHEIM
EVREGREEN NURSERY
Large stock of Orange trees
1 and 2 Years Old.
Fifty Thousand Pepper Trees
ONE HUNDRED THOUSAND Cypress and Blue Gums
ALSO A LARGE—
ASSORTMENT OF ORNAMENTAL TREES
Soft-shell and English Walnut Trees!
Fruit Trees of Different Kinds!
TIM CARROLL,
ANAHEIM, Cal.
KELLDON LITTLEFIELD.
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 buy, sell, rent and care for the property of others.
PIERCE & LITTLEFIELD. Anaheim, Cal.
H. D. POLHEMUS,
REAL ESTATE AGENT.
Postoffice Block, Anaheim, Cal.
Walnut orchards and Orange Groves in full bearing. Also un-
H. D. POLHEMUS,
REAL ESTATE AGENT.
Postoffice Block, Anaheim, Cal.
Walnut orchards and Orange Groves in full bearing. Also unimproved lands in irrigating district and artesian-water belt. From five acres upwards. Prices extremely low. Terrains easy.
Correspondence Solicited.
Buena Park
Buena Park
Buena Park
Buena Park
Buena Park
W. R. WILSHIRE
C. C. CARPENTER
K. Q. WILSHIRE
WILSHIRE & CO., Real Estate.
No. 14 Temple St.
Telephone 605.
Los Angeles, Cal.
ANAHEIM, CALIFORNIA, THURSDAY, APRIL 5, 1886.
OFFICE
Hamburger,
only the
of Land,
IMPROVED.
Range and Walnut Groves, and
noiduous Fruits.
In the Magnificent Golden Belt
any in the world. All this
in Water Company's district,
will be pleased to show this
Insurance Company. Prompt
promptly Attended to.
Anaheim, Cal.
Los Angeles, Cal.
NURSERY.
The Weekly Gazette.
Established 1870.
Transmitted Advertising.
The classics is bound every Thursday morning,
and sent to suburban by the early mornings. It is delivered by error in Anaheim on the morning of publication.
Related at the Anaheim Pressroom on Sunday afternoon.
Home of news and correspondence on all line subjects are solicited by the editor. No brief, and write directly to the point. All communications must be signed by the author, and for publication, but for the information of the editor.
CONQUERING A HUSBAND.
quired the latter, as Mr. Gates booked to a passing annuity.
"Mr. I won't," said the banker's wife.
Within the city limits she alighted and began walk in good weather.
"Strawberries! Whell buy my wild strawberry!" rang out her, clear, shrill voice, in she walked along, lightly balancing the weight on her arm, and enjoying the impromptu conquerade as only a spirited young woman once.
Mrs. Pewler bought four quarts for preserving at 20 cents a quart.
"Wild berries have such a flavor," said the old lady, reluctantly; "and mind often you get 'em in the city. I a yeas you don't come round ragby, young woman."
No, I don't do that man.
Because you might get some miscommunication, said Mrs. Pewler.
Miss Sumithin Mall, who keeps boarding purchased two quarters: Mrs. Captain Curry built one, and then Millicent jumped on the side and rode wavily downtown.
"I've got a dollar and twenty-five cents of my own now, at all counts," said she in herself.
"Strawberries! Nim, ripe, wild strawberries! Buy my strawberries!"
Her sweetness reminded through the halls of the great marble building on whom first floor the grant bank was situated.
It changed to be a dull interval of business just then, and the anchor looked up with a yawn.
"I'm Bill James," said he to the young man. "I have an idea that a few strawberries wouldn't go badly. Call in the woman."
Bill, nothing but slipped off his shoes on a pen behind each arm, and scampered into the hall. So Milly sold another art.
As she was giving change for the cashier's bill the President himself came in sitting and brushing an鼻孔.
"Enl What? How?" barked out Mr. Adolph Gates. "Strawberries! Well, I'm not care if I take a law myself. Ears, sung woman, how do you sell them?"
Twenty five cents a quart, air, if you raise," said she, with much humility.
The President dropped his paper of strawberries on the floor.
Mrs. Gates!" he adjudicated.
"The same, air!" said Millicent.
May I venture to inquire—
Oh, yes," said Milly; "you may inquire
A ROCK OF AGREEMENT
Chillon and Its Old Historical Castle
The Pompeii Bungan-Kep of Switzerland in Which Beam Spent Six Brassy Years.
Chicago Bungan
Among the places of interest which traversed in French Switzerland, some enquiries more interest andxy than the Castle of Chillon on the ad Lake Leman. In history, its position in history together with the history of those who were confined there and ward in particular, of whom Hyrmex have all rendered Chillon one of the most of ancient castles on the continent Europe. The central tower is of viennet data, probably more than a thirty years old, for we read, of one County who was imprisoned in the year 1800 in from which only the sky, the Alpine Lake Leman could be seen, and thus be none other than Chillon. Built rock in the lake, impossibly only by a bridge, which connects it with the rooftop other side of which the hills are with foliage rise very precipitantly, it glides a military place. The soundlin threw out of the window given a demeanor of about eight hundred feet. It now forms a part of Switzerland contains the archives of the town of trees, near which it is situated, in times it belonged to Savoy, and was by the Duke of Savoy, who made it a ducce, court of justice and a prison.
Is one Peter, Count of Savoy, who the block of buildings surrounding tower in the thirteenth century. In
IM NURSERY.
orange trees is Old.
pper Trees!
HOUSAND
due Gums!
ENTAL TREES!
Valnut Trees!
rent Kinds!
DLL,
ANAHIM, CAL.
LEFIELD,
ATE BROKERS.
well located and in
ant a home. And we
others.
Anaheim, Cal.
EMUS,
AGENT.
heim, Cal.
full bearing. Also un
and glowing purple on the money given
the stone covered carpet.
She was dressed in a loose white cambric
wrapper looped and buttoned with blues, and a single pearl arrow uphold the shining massae of her lovely suburn hair. Her eyes were deep, liquid hazel; her complexion is soft and radiant as the dimpled side of an early peach; and the little kid-suipered foos that patted the velvet ottoman bounsaw was as perfect and tapering as a sculptor could have wished it.
Mr. Gates, from his side of the damask-draped table, eyed her with the complacent gaze of proprietorship. She was his wife. He liked her to look well, just as he wanted his increase properly groomed and his conservataries kept in order, and he troubled himself very little about the shadow on her brow.
"I'm in earnest, Radcliffe," she said, with emphasis.
"No I supposed, Mrs. Gates," said the husband, intimately folding his paper—a sign that the news within was thoroughly exclaimed—"so I suppose." But it is not at all worthwhile to allow yourself to get excited. When I say a thing, Mrs. Gates, I generally mean it. And I repeat—if you need money for any sensible purpose, I shall be most willing and happy in recommending you."
Milicent but her full, red lower lip, and dromed impatiently on the table with her restless fingers.
"And I am to come meekly, imploring you for every five cent piece I wash."
"Yes, Mrs. Gates, if you prefer to put the master in that light."
"Radcliffe," she coaxed, suddenly chang ing her tone, "do give me an allowance—I don't care how small! Don't subject me to the illumination of pleading far a little money half a dozen times a day. You are rich."
"Exactly, my dear," nodded this Beneficiary; and that's the way I made fortune by looking personally after every penny, and I meant to keep it up.
"But think how I was mortified yesterday, when Mrs. Armour came to ask me if I could subscribe fifty cents toward buying a hand-carriage for our waherwoman's lame-chid—only fifty cents—and to have to say, 'I must ask my hainaud to give me the money when he returns from the city!' for I had not even fifty cents of my own,' urged Milicent.
"All very right—all very proper!" replied Mr. Gates, playing with the massive rope of gold that tangled across his broad chest in the guise of a watch chain.
"Other ladies are not kept penniless!"
"That rests entirely between them and their husbands, Mrs. Gates."
"I will not endure it!" cried Milly, starting to her feet with ornate cheeks and indignantly glistening eyes.
Mr. Gates leaned back in his chair with prowoking complacency.
"I will have money!" she again exclaimed, delitiously.
"How are you going to get it, my dear?" her husband retorted, with an aggravating smile playing ground the corners of his mouth.
"You see you have nothing of your own—absolutely nothing. The money is all mine, and I mean to keep it."
Milly sat down again, twisting her pocket handkerchief around and around. She was not prepared with an informal scarf.
Nothing hurt, slipped off his arm behind each ear, and scrapped into the hall. So Milly sold another ark.
As she was giving change for the cashier's fair bill the President himself came in selling and brisk as usual.
"Enl What! How!' barked out Mr. adeliffe Gates." Well, I can't care if I take a few myself. Ears, aug woman, how do you sell them?
"Twenty-five cents a quart, air, if you ease," and she, with much humility.
The President dropped his paper of strawberries on the floor.
"Mr. Gates!" he ejaculated.
"The same air," said Millicent.
"May I venture to inquire—"
"Oh yes," said Milly; "you may inquire as much as you please. I needed a little money, and I am earning it. See how much I have already!" and she triumphantly displayed her roll of stamps. The strawberries were all my own sent to me this morning by old Mrs. Peabody, and I'm selling them to get an income of my own."
"You, ma'am, selling strawberries through the streets."
Milly made a second courteury.
"Extreme necessities justify extreme measures, Mr. Gates." I earned my living before I saw you, and I can again; she said.
Mr. Gates looked unusually round at the crowd of gaping clarks.
"James, call a back," said he. "My dear, let me take you home."
"It not until I have sold the rest of my strawberries."
"I'll take 'em at any price!" said the banker, impatiently.
("Cash down")
"Yes, anything—everything only comes out of this crowd."
So Mr. and Mrs. Gates went home, and that evening the lauter agreed to make his wife a regular allowance of so much per week to be paid down every Monday morning.
But we'll have no more selling strawberries," said Mr. Gats.
"Certainly ask." All I wanted was a little money of myrown.
And Mr. Radcliffe Gates respected his wife all the more because she had conquered him in a fair battle.
**Emblem's Pancakes:**
Tuaked panels of shiny crepe on wedding gowns of moire are new and very stylish.
Per spring and summer traveling wraps the real gole in the garment of the near future, no less than the immediate present.
High authorities echo, each other that princess gowns are coming in, though yet only those of the best dressmakers find favor.
Artistic costuming galas ground in London, when instead of fashion plaques, the best mediate now consult the museums and picture galleries.
Jet bonnets, with the beads forming an open cross bar pattern, are filled in with tulle of black, poppy red, anode or apple-green, according to fancy.
Saashes of the gown staff simply hemmed and eight inches wide are set in the underarm seams of many children's dresses and tied in a double bow at the back.
Figure dances, such as the minuet, the pavane, the mazurka and the redwala are the features of Parisian "small-and-early," the waits and galop being quite out of favor.
A new idea for beddings of soft stuff is to have the fall front caught in at the waist by head of each width ribbon so crossed as to form a double diamond and give a slender effect.
Raches of roses and rose petals trim the feast of tall ball gowns which have detached sprays caught here and there upon their draperies, and some, paeon closes set with the flower.
Straight properties of gray cloth over pleated panels of white cloth with a gray nothing hurt, slipped off his arm behind each ear, and scrapped into the hall. So Milly sold another ark.
As she was giving change for the cashier's fair bill the President himself came in selling and brisk as usual.
"Enl What! How!' barked out Mr. adeliffe Gates." Well, I can't care if I take a few myself. Ears, aug woman, how do you sell them?
"Twenty-five cents a quart, air, if you ease," and she with much humility.
The President dropped his paper of strawberries on the floor.
"Mr. Gates!" he ejaculated.
"The same air," said Millicent.
"May I venture to inquire—"
"Oh yes," said Milly; "you may inquire as much as you please. I needed a little money, and I am earning it. See how much I have already!" and she triumphantly displayed her roll of stamps. The strawberries were all my own sent to me this morning by old Mrs. Peabody, and I'm selling them to get an income of my own."
"You, ma'am, selling strawberries through the streets."
Milly made a second courteury.
"Extreme necessities justify extreme measures, Mr. Gates." I earned my living before I saw you, and I can again; she said.
Mr. Gates looked unusually round at the crowd of gaping clarks.
"James, call a back," said he. "My dear, let me take you home."
"It not until I have sold the rest of my strawberries."
"I'll take 'em at any price!" said the banker, impatiently.
("Cash down")
"Yes anything—everything only comes out of this crowd."
So Mr. and Mrs. Gates went home, and that evening the lauter agreed to make his wife a regular allowance of so much per week to be paid down every Monday morning.
But we'll have no more selling strawberries," said Mr. Gats.
"Certainly ask." All I wanted was a little money of myrown.
And Mr. Radcliffe Gates respected his wife all the more because she had conquered him in a fair battle.
**Emblem's Pancakes:**
Tuaked panels of shiny crepe on wedding gowns of moire are new and very stylish.
Per spring and summer traveling wraps the real gole in the garment of the near future, no less than the immediate present.
High authorities echo, each other that princess gowns are coming in, though yet only those of the best dressmakers find favor.
Artistic costuming galas ground in London when instead of fashion plaques, the best mediate now consult the museums and picture galleries.
Jet bonnets with the beads forming an open cross bar pattern are filled in with tulle of black, poppy red, anode or apple-green, according to fancy.
Saashes of the gown staff simply hemmed and eight inches wide are set in the underarm seams of many children's dresses and tied in a double bow at the back.
Figure dances such as the minutet, the pavane, the mazurka and the redwala are the features of Parisian "small-and-early," the waits and galop being quite out of favor.
A new idea for beddings of soft stuff is to have the fall front caught in at the waist by head of each width ribbon so crossed as to form a double diamond and give a slender effect.
Raches of roses and rose petals trim the feast of tall ball gowns which have detached sprays caught here and there upon their draperies, and some, paeon closes set with the flower.
Straight properties of gray cloth over pleated panels of white cloth with a gray nothing hurt, slipped off his arm behind each ear, and scrapped into the hall. So Milly sold another ark.
As she was giving change for the cashier's fair bill the President himself came in selling and brisk as usual.
"Enl What! How!' barked out Mr. adeliffe Gates." Well, I can't care if I take a few myself. Ears,aug woman,how do you sell them?
"Twenty-five cents a quart,air,if you ease," and she with much humility.
The President dropped his paper of strawberries through the streets."
Milly made a second courteury.
"Extreme necessities justify extreme measures,Mr. Gates." I earned my living before I saw you,and I can again; she said.
Mr. Gates looked unusually round at the crowd of gaping clarks。
"James,call a back," said he. "My dear,let me take you home."
"It not until I have sold the rest of my strawberries."
"I'll take 'em at any price!" said the banker,impatiently.
("Cash down")
"Yes anything—everything only comes out of this crowd."
So Mr. and Mrs. Gates went home,and that evening the lauter agreed to make his wife a regular allowance of so much per week to be paid down every Monday morning.
But we'll have no more selling strawberries," said Mr. Gats.
"Certainly ask." All I wanted was a little money of myrown.
And Mr. Radcliffe Gates respected his wife all the more because she had conquered him in a fair battle.
**Emblem's Pancakes:**
Tuaked panels of shiny crepe on wedding gowns of moire are new and very stylish.
Per spring and summer traveling wraps the real gole in the garment of the near future,no less than the immediate present.
High authorities echo,each other that princess gowns are coming in,though yet only those of the best dressmakers find favor.
Artistic costuming galas ground in London when instead of fashion plaques,the best mediate now consult the museums和 picture galleries.
Jet bonnets with the beads forming an open cross bar pattern are filled in with tulle of black,poppy red,anode or apple-green,according to fancy.
Saashes of the gown staff simply hemmed and eight inches wide are set in the underarm seams of many children's dresses and tied in a double bow at the back.
Figure dances such as the minutet,the pavane,the mazurka and the redwala are the features of Parisian "small-and-early," the waits and galop being quite out of favor.
A new idea for beddings of soft stuff is to have the fall front caught in at the waist by head of each width ribbon so crossed as to form a double diamond and give a slender effect.
Raches of roses和 rose petals trim the feast of tall ball gowns which have detached sprays caught here and there upon their draperies,and some,paeon closes set with the flower.
Straight properties of gray cloth over pleated panels of white cloth with a gray nothing hurt, slipping off his arm behind each ear,and scrapped into the hall. So Milly sold another ark.
As she was giving change for the cashier's fair bill the President himself came in selling and brisk as usual.
"Enl What! How!' barked out Mr. adeliffe Gates." Well,I can't care if I take a few myself。Ears,aug woman,how do you sell them?
"Twenty-five cents a quart,air,if you ease," and she with much humility.
The President dropped his paper of strawberries through the streets."
Milly made a second courteury.
"Extreme necessities justify extreme measures,Mr. Gates." I earned my living before I saw you,and I can again; she said.
Mr. Gates looked unusually round at the crowd of gaping clarks。
"James,call a back," said he. "My dear,let me take you home."
"It not until I have sold the rest of my strawberries."
"I'll take 'em at any price!" said the banker,impatiently.
("Cash down")
"Yes anything—everything only comes out of this crowd."
So Mr. and Mrs. Gates went home,and that evening the lauter agreed to make his wife a regular allowance of so much per week to be paid down every Monday morning.
But we'll have no more selling strawberries," said Mr. Gats.
"Certainly ask." All I wanted was a little money of myrown.
And Mr. Radcliffe Gates respected his wife all the more because she had conquered him in a fair battle.
**Emblem's Pancakes:**
Tuaked panels of shiny crepe on wedding gowns of moire are new and very stylish.
Per spring and summer traveling wraps the real gole in the garment of the near future,no less than the immediate present.
High authorities echo,each other that princess gowns are coming in,though yet only those of the best dressmakers find favor.
Artistic costuming galas ground in London when instead of fashion plaques,the best mediate now consult the museums和 picture galleries.
Jet bonnets with the beads forming an open cross bar pattern are filled in with tulle of black,poppy red,anode or apple-green,according to fancy.
Saashes of the gown staff simply hemmed and eight inches wide are set in the underarm seams of many children's dresses and tied in a double bow at the back.
Figure dances such as the minutet,the pavane,the mazurka and the redwala are the features of Parisian "small-and-early,"the waits和 galop being quite out of favor.
A new idea for beddings of soft stuff is to have the fall front caught in at the waist by head of each width ribbon so crossed as to form a double diamond and give a slender effect.
Raches of roses和 rose petals trim the feast of tall ball gowns which have detached sprays caught here and there upon their draperies,and some,paeon closes set with the flower.
Straight properties of gray cloth over pleated panels of white cloth with a gray nothing hurt, slipping off his arm behind each ear,and scrapped into the hall. So Milly sold another ark.
As she was giving change for the cashier's fair bill the President himself came in selling and brisk as usual.
"Enl What! How!' barked out Mr. adeliffe Gates." Well,I can't care if I take a few myself。Ears,aug woman,how do you sell them?
"Twenty-five cents a quart,air,if you ease," and she with much humility.
The President dropped his paper of strawberries through the streets."
Milly made a second courteury:
"Extreme necessities justify extreme measures,Mr. Gates." I earned my living before I saw you,and I can again; she said.
Mr. Gates looked unusually round at the crowd of gaping clarks。
"James,call a back," said he. "My dear,let me take you home."
"It not until I have sold the rest of my strawberries."
"I'll take 'em at any price!" said the banker,impatiently.
("Cash down")
"Yes anything—everything only comes out of this crowd."
So Mr. and Mrs. Gates went home,and that evening the lauter agreed to make his wife a regular allowance of so much per week to be paid down every Monday morning.
But we'll have no more selling strawberries," said Mr. Gats.
"Certainly ask." All I wanted was a little money of myrown.
And Mr. Radcliffe Gates respected his wife all the more because she had conquered him in a fair battle.
**Emblem's Pancakes:**
Tuaked panels of shiny crepe on wedding gowns of moire are new and very stylish.
Per spring and summer traveling wraps the real gole in the garment of the near future,no less than the immediate present.
High authorities echo,each other that princess gowns are coming in,though yet only those of the best dressmakers find favor.
Artistic costuming galas ground in London when instead of fashion plaques,the best mediate now consult the museums和 picture gallries.
Jet bonnets with the beads forming an open cross bar pattern are filled in with tulle of black,poppy red,anode or apple-green,according to fancy。
Saashes of the gown staff simply hemmed和 eight inches wide are set in THE ATHENEUM'S FAIRLIFE,
"A LEFT FIELD,
ATE BROKERS,
well located and in antique home.And we others,
EMUS,
AGENT,
HEIM,
CAL,
full bearing.Also un-
BUNCHED,
and as still in nee.divine service be held there at regular intervals,
but The part of buildings that is most enlightening is nevertheless looking so sincere so grandest so nearest to our husband's house.And we others,
EMUS,
AGENT,
HEIM,
CAL,
full bearing.Also un-
BUNCHED,
and as still in nee.divine service be held there at regular intervals,
but The part of buildings that is most enlightening is nevertheless looking so sincere so grandest so nearest to our husband's house.And we others,
EMUS,
AGENT,
HEIM,
CAL,
full bearing.Also un-
BUNCHED,
and as still in nee.divine service be held there at regular intervals,
but The part of buildings that is most enlightening is nevertheless looking so sincere so grandest so nearest to our husband's house.And we others,
EMUS,
AGENT,
HEIM,
CAL,
full bearing.Also un-
BUNCHED,
and as still in nee.divine service be held there at regular intervals,
but The part of buildings that is most enlightening is nevertheless looking so sincere so grandest so nearest to our husband's house.And we others,
EMUS,
AGENT,
HEIM,
CAL,
full bearing.Also un-
BUNCHED,
and as still in nee.divine service be held there at regular intervals,
but The part of buildings that is most enlightening is nevertheless looking so sincere so grandest so nearest to our husband's house.And we others,
EMUS,
AGENT,
HEIM,
CAL,
full bearing.Also un-
BUNCHED,
and as still in nee.divine service be held there at regular intervals,
but The part of buildings that is most enlightening is nevertheless looking so sincere so grandest so nearest to our husband's house.And we others,
EMUS,
AGENT,
HEIM,
CAL,
full bearing.Also un-
BUNCHED,
and as still in nee.divine service be held there at regular intervals,
but The part OF buildings that is most enlightening is nevertheless looking so sincere so grandest so nearest to our husband's house.And we others,
EMUS,
AGENT,
HEIM,
CAL,
full bearing.Also un-
BUNCHED,
and as still in nee.divine service be held there at regular intervals,
but The part OF buildings that is most enlightening is nevertheless looking so sincere so grandest so nearest to our husband's house.And we others,
EMUS,
AGENT,
HEIM,
CAL,
full bearing.Also un-
BUNCHED,
and as still in nee.divine service be held there at regular intervals,
but The part OF buildings that is most enlightening is nevertheless looking so sincere so grandest so nearest to our husband's house.And we others,
EMUS,
AGENT,
HEIM,
CAL,
full bearing.Also un-
BUNCHED,
and as still in nee.divine service be held there at regular intervals,
but The part OF buildings that is most enlightening is nevertheless looking so sincere so grandest so nearest to our husband's house.And we others,
EMUS,
AGENT,
HEIM,
CAL,
full bearing.Also un-
BUNCHED,
and as still in nee.divine service be held there at regular intervals,
but The part OF buildings that is most enlightening is nevertheless looking so sincere so grandest so nearest to our husband's house.And we others,
EMUS,
AGENT,
HEIM,
CAL,
full bearing.Also un-
BUNCHED,
and as still in nee.divine service be held there at regular intervals,
but The part OF buildings that is most enlightening is nevertheless looking so sincere so grandest so nearest to our husband's house.And we others,
EMUS,
AGENT,
HEIM,
CAL,
full bearing.Also un-
BUNCHED,
and as still in nee.divine service be held there at regular intervals,
but The part OF buildings that is most enlightening is nevertheless looking so sincere so grandest so nearest to our husband's house.And we others,
EMUS,
AGENT,
HEIM,
CAL,
full bearing.Also un-
BUNCHED,
and as still in nee.divine service be held there at regular intervals,
but The part OF buildings that is most enlightening is nevertheless looking so sincere so grandest so nearest to our husband's house.And we others,
EMUS,
AGENT,
HEIM,
CAL,
full bearing.Also un-
BUNCHED,
and as still in nee.divine service be held there at regular intervals,
but The part OF buildings that is most enlightening is nevertheless looking so sincere so grandest so nearest to our husband's house.And we others,
EMUS,
AGENT,
HEIM,
CAL,
full bearing.Also un-
BUNCHED,
and as still in nee.divine service be held there at regular intervals,
but The part OF buildings that is most enlightening is nevertheless looking so sincere so grandest so nearest to our husband's house.And we others,
EMUS,
AGENT,
HEIM,
CAL,
full bearing.Also un-
BUNCHED,
and as still in nee.divine service be held there at regular intervals,
but The part OF buildings that is most enlightening is nevertheless looking so sincere so grandest so nearest to our husband's house.And we others,
EMUS,
AGENT,
HEIM,
CAL,
full bearing.Also un-
BUNCHED,
and as still in nee.divine service be held there at regular intervals,
but The part OF buildings that is most enlightening is nevertheless looking so sincere so grandest so nearest to our husband's house.And we others,
EMUS,
AGENT,
HEIM,
CAL,
full bearing.Also un-
BUNCHED,
and as still in nee.divine service be held there at regular intervals,
but The part OF buildings that is most enlightening is nevertheless looking so sincere so grandest so nearest to our husband's house.And we others,
EMUS,
AGENT,
HEIM,
CAL,
full bearing.Also un-
BUNCHED,
and as still in nee.divine service be held there at regular intervals,
but The part OF buildings that is most enlightening is nevertheless looking so sincere so grandest so nearest to our husband's house.And we others,
EMUS,
AGENT,
HEIM,
CAL,
full bearing.Also un-
BUNCHED,
and as still in nee.divine service be held there at regular intervals,
but The part OF buildings that is most enlightening is nevertheless looking so sincere so grandest so nearest to our husband's house.And we others,
EMUS,
AGENT,
HEIM,
CAL,
full bearing.Also un-
BUNCHED,
and as still in nee.divine service be held there at regular intervals,
but The part OF buildings that is most enlightening is nevertheless looking so sincere so grandest so nearest to our husband's house.And we others,
EMUS,
AGENT,
HEIM,
Cal.
Full bearing.Also unBunched.
And as still in nee.divine service be held there at regular intervals.
But The part Of buildings that is most enlightening is nevertheless looking so sincere so grandest so nearest to our husband's house.And we others,
EMUS,
AGENT,
HEIM,
Cal
Other ladies are not kept peniless!
That rests entirely between them and their husbands, Mrs. Gates.
I will not endure it! cried Milly, starting to her feet with ominous cheeks and indignantly glistering eyes.
Mr. Gates leaned in his chair with provoking complacency.
"I will have money!" she again exclaimed, delitiously.
How are you going to get it, my dear, her husband retorted, with an aggravating smile playing ground the corners of his mouth.
"You see you have nothing of your own—almost nothing. The money is all mine, and I mean to keep it."
Milly sat down again, twisting her pocket handkerchief around and around. She was not prepared with an informal answer.
And now, Mrs. Gates, and the laurier after a moment or two overwhelming blance, "If you'll be good enough towitch that button on my glume, I'll go downtown. I have already wasted too much time."
So the verbal passage-alarms ended, and Milly felt that, as far as she was worried.
She watched Mr. Gates drive off her giant bronze drawn by two long tillered horses, glittering with plaid harnesses, and hurred away, almost wishing that she was Millicent Haughton behind him in the little red schoolhouse. She glanced round at the inflated furniture. An amateur carpenter and an window drapery, and thought how little all this awailed her.
It is no provoking of Badhiraf! she murmured.
"I've half a mind to go out for sex, or dressmaking, or something, for I must have money of my own, and I will!"
Just then a servant knocked at the door with a basket and a note.
An old lady in a Shaker honeymoon and a one-borne wagon left it; she wouldn't come in, although I invited her," said the girl with a naturally disguised titer.
Mr. Gates opened the note. It ran in a stiff, old-fashioned colligraphy, as if the poet were an unwonted implement in the writer's head:
DEAR MILLY: The strawberries in the south modder lot are just ripe, where you need to pick 'em when you wear a little girl no Panchope picked a lot and we quail hold to send them to you from the old kinden of Alam Arjigaht is going in the old marrow. We help you will like them. Affectionally your friend, M. A. Duggeran!
Team sparkled in the huddle's eyes. Our hustle it seemed to her that she was a child again, picking strawberries in the golden rain of July abstraction with the result of smoke in the air and the gurgle of the trough shunt show by. As she lifted the lid of the highest fruit and inflated the deliciouse purrance, a sudden start into her head.
Now I will hear sooner of our next one! who said out—"money that I shall soon apoint, and then be independent."
Half an hour afterward Mrs. Gates more descrubments to the infinite amount of Brabell and the shamblesbush, and Liam, the parter wind, in a house sunshade and a baskets on her肩.
"We're you have a marriage, indeed!" he wrote newly from his family room.
Figure dances, such as the minuet, the pavane, the mazurka and the redwalla are the features of Parisian "small-and-garlic," the waits and galop being quite out of favor.
A new idea for bodices of soft stuff is to have the fall front caught in all the waist by head of each wide ribbon so across at to form a double diamond and give a slender effect.
Reagus of roses and rose petals trim the foot of tallie ball gowns, which have detached sprays caught here and there upon their draperies, and some even panels close set with the flower.
Straight properties of gray cloth, over pleated panels of white cloth, with a gray ash, forming panthers, and gray wax shirred at shoulder and waist, make up one of the most stylish new spring constructures.
The teagown grows upon the English pubin. For country house wear it is all but universal, and in London it is quite the thing for home dinner though care is taken that its construction shall in newise suggest a wrapper.
A shirt of gray mairs, with gold pamphlets at the first running in long leaf points, has dragonion of Renaissance green enclosure very long and full, and draped high upon the left side, with a waist of both fabrics in the universal overlap.
The old fashion of sardining with a contracting color, or with the trimming material, reappars upon children's亦mer frocks—notably those of gingham or serphyr cloth—is a mixture of cotton and wool even lighter than bungee flannel.
THE BOOKER
April Download.
Arround the campfire alley,
Wild dreamy, don't you have?
Sharts the way from song to song sounding.
Along the mountain hold.
Through still arms held wild.
Deep voices with the truer's blending.
The angel's wings hold.
While the heights of firemen dividing
In stagger glues a while.
Arround these like shadows splitting.
Here on one horse words take
A flairing on every heart heartfall,
Games off hands held.
For bare arm brains held.
The gold's sight won't say it,
No impatient sailing.
New warmth from hearts held.
Limited warmth from hearts held.
Buffalo on hands held.
The mother sobbed from the mother crying.
When would not want to
When motherhood will end,
All use caution against easily damaging
The mother's hands being scratched
How hardly can she handle
He found himself in the promotion of their happiness and prosperity. He found the public library, demanding to be his own valuable collection of books, many of them written in the fifteenth century. He died about the 1820 or 1821 at 24 or 25 years ago. He is even now regarded as one of his greatest gifts. He was confined for an long time since he required no second apart from his reputation of the quintile on a spirit of humility and an inseparable link with the nature building combined their unity primarily giving in the diagnoea below.
COLLEGE A. GRAY.
The Witness Marry
Henderson
The past year has added something to our knowledge of the planet Mars. That is four miles a day of light on its surface and crashes into it has no influence on him but many years have been experienced: and no long ago
A ROCK OF AGES.
Chillon and Its Old and Historical Castle.
The Famous Bungan-Keep of French Switzerland in Which Impired Apart Six Breary Years.
Odige Renault.
Among the plains of interest visited by scholars in French Switzerland, perhaps to enlist more interest and sympathy in the Castle of Chillon on the shores of the Leman, sometimes called the Lake of Odige Renault.
Its history, its position, its architecture, tags ther with the history of some towns who were confined there, of Hainaut particularly, of whom Lyron wrote, all rendered Chillon one of the most ancient towns on the continent of Leman. The central war is of very no data, probably more than a thousand old, for we read, of one Count Wals, was imprisoned in the year 530 in a census which only the sky, the Alps and Leman could be seen, and this could one other than Chillon. Built on a lake, the innominate only by a drawbridge, which connects it with the road, on either side of which the hills covered collage rise very precipitately, it is a solitary place. The sounding-line out of the window gives a depth of about eight hundred feet. Though you form a part of Switzerland, and find the archives of the town of Montréal which it is situated, in former belonged to Savoy, and was owned by Duke of Savoy, who made it a court of justice and a prison.
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You are greatly THE GREAT WHITE EXPRESS.Victorin and Mire Millennium.ofMunichmuseum.British.Culture.TheJewishCulture.Foundation.HenryandMary.Mountain.such.as.the-plant.of.interest.vibrated.by.his-position.in.the-year.of1832.Schlager'sRelatives.A burrowful letter for the Young Ammanite.Following is a translation.of.aletter written by Annalise's sister at Kemnighang,Germany,and dated.ofMarch94,and receivedby.thecondemned man last week.The writer is much agitated,vividly,and shows how keen.the diagnoe.of.the son is felt by his folks.at home."We have found many dispatches,papers and letters concerning you with abridgement and horror,and we cannot comprehend how you could through your evidently deliberately colored telegrams,because for washing our hands.of you You do not even seem to give a moment's thought or reproach yourself that our name and that.of our unshakeable before we neighbors,has through your measurable act been crushed in the dust Your relatives have held a consultation over your affairs,and this letter is probably the last and only expression you will receive from any.of us Your conduct is making so public and unbelling-an appeal to your sons.must be in honouramonginsponsorsinpolitical.business,andalsobeinadherenttoGreatBritainwaspaidinfull.Andthetimemay again come when the devotion.oftheMunichmuseum.toitsChilghand,theShiine.ofthismaybenotnecessarytoGreatBritainthanin1837.I am aware that in the Western World,the religious sentiment.ofnationsisno longerumberedanimportanthistoric.politicalbutitwouldbebetweenmonthsyourfathom.Ramadan-entireabundancefromallfoodandwaterbetweenseasonesandapresencewithcontinuing theirfulldailytell—thereligiousrealmthathasenduredthis trialstandfastformore thanone thousandyearsatthebindingoffTheProphet,intoharmonwithhis shrineatMunichandhimtombAtMedinahavebeenobjectivepointsofforeignaggression.Thenight-signedclassesinIndiarecognizethattheruleoffEnglandhasaccuratedusagainmentinternalstrife.involvingapropetualassistanceoftheresources.ofourcommunity,andalsothatbyajustadministrationequallawslawaveryintolerantlibertyinnowormightbright.W
The buildings contain a kitchen with an airplane, where many an ox has been stained whole; a large entry or hall, the apothecary of the chase were dependent on arms, traces of which are still there is also a hall of justice, and beside the torture chamber, where the were sometimes fastened to a pillar distance from the ground, with drawn high above the head and red applied to the sole of the foot, in the exact confession. One can see the paint has been burned off, and eyes or rings still remain in the beams as pillar. On another side of the quarantine is a staircase which led to the below. The shapel is in good order still in use, divine service being used as regular intervals.
The part of the buildings that is most used and most interesting is under this dungeon. Many sources of have doubtless been there amassed, those rocks could speak what tales of suffering they could tell.
The duckmorns are said to be 256 feet long, cut into the solid rock. The architecture is fine, and the most beautiful of the building. The ground is very dry, right feet above the highest level of the light, which comes through its high up in the wall, often revered blue or green of the lake on the walls of the dungeons. There are chambers connected with each other narrow passages. In one, smaller street, is a kind of couch cut out of rock, on which the condemned last night before being executed, results are divided by pillars, in which an iron ring is riveted. To arrest the prisoners were attached by a chain. The end pillar in one of these was the one to which Bonivard had for four years, and the stone worn in the shape of three parts of a bowing where he walked so incarnated for no long a time. Altogether at years in the castle, but during two years of his commendation he was dangoned. It is said that when Bonivard and was leaving his call he turned and gawked for hours on a plane which, though a bad become dear to him by his meddling and prayers.
BONIVARD,
was this Bonivard, and why was he here? He was a prince and a patriot.
MARIE ANTOINETTE CLOCK.
It Was Meant by the President's Uncle mad in New York.
New York World.
When the palace of Marie Antoinette was pillaged during the French revolution among the monarchs and we cannot comprehend how you could, through your evidently deliberately colored telegrams, blame us for washing our hands of you. You do not even seem to give a moment's thought or reproach yourself that our name and that of our suit, which has hitherto been honored and no reversed before our neighbors, has through your manable act been arrested in the court. Your relatives have held a commission over your affairs, and this letter is probably the last and only expression you will receive from any of us. Your conduct in making no public and unblessing an appeal to us has practically been to hang your wretched career on the tongue of the great town ball, and its telling sada our diagrams abroad. Do you for a moment believe that we would consent to your demands! You are greatly in error to even entertain such a hope. Your efforts will prove fruitless here; our consciences would reproach us should we commence your projects. It is difficult to imagine how a human being of the educated high classes can sink so deep, so terrible low; and yet we have the lingering hope—there is a faint possibility—that another did the horrible dead. We wish you the best, but think that your advocates will be of little use to you. Spare yourself further communications to us, to the Neaks or to others. You have made yourself and us unhappy for our entire lives. Our shame is so great, so terrible, that with bowed heads and lowered eyes we must pain our neighbors by, as we cannot look them in the eye. Adieu. May God abide with you. Anna."
SHAKESPEAR AND BACON.
An English Opinion Which Would seem to Settle the "Theory."
Hackman's Magazine.
No author probably ever set greater store than Bacon upon the produce of his brain, or was at more pains to see that it was neither mangled nor misrepresented by careless printing or editing. Neither is there the slightest reason to believe that he did not take good care—nay, on the contrary, that he was not of especial pains to insure—that the world should be informed of everything he had written which he deemed worthy to be preserved. Two years before Bacon made his will the first or 1623 folio of Shakespeare's plays was published, with the following title page: "Mr William Shakespeare's Comedies: Histories and Tragedies." Published according to the True Oriental Copies. London; Printed by Isaac Jaggard and Ed. Blount. 1623." It was a portly volume of nearly one thousand pages, and must have taken many months, probably the best part of a year, to set up in types and get printed off. The printing of similar folios in those days was marked by anything but exemplary accuracy. But this volume abounds to such excess in typographical flaws of every kind that the only conclusion in regard to it which can be drawn is that the printing was not superintended by any one competent to discharge the duty of the printing-house "reader" of the present day, but was suffered to appear with "all the imperfections on its head" which distinguish "proof-sheets" as they issue from the hands of carolens or illiterate compositors. Most clearly the proof-sheets had never been read by any man of literary skill, still less by any man capable of restifying a blundered text. In this respect the book offers a marked contrast to the text of Bacon's works, printed in his own time, which were revised and re-revised until they were brought up to a finished perfection.
MARIE ANTOINETTE CLOCK.
It Was Meant by the President's Uncle mad in New York.
New York World.
When the palace of Marie Antoinette was pillaged during the French revolution among the monarchs and we cannot comprehend how you could, through your evidently deliberately colored telegrams, blame us for washing our hands of you. You do not even seem to give a moment's thought or reproach yourself that our name and that of our suit, which has hitherto been honored and no reversed before our neighbors, has through your manable act been around the dawn. Your relatives have held a commission over your affairs, and this latter is probably the last and only expression you will receive from any of us. Your conduct in making no public and unblessing an appeal to us has practically been to hang your wretched career on the tongue of the great town ball, and its telling sada our diagrams abroad. Do you for a moment believe that we would consent to your demands! You are greatly in error to even entertain such a hope. Your efforts will prove fruitless here; our consciences would reproach us should we commence your projects. It is difficult to imagine how a human being of the educated high classes can sink so deep, so terrible low; and yet we have the lingering hope—there is a faint possibility—that another did the horrible dead. We wish you the best, but think that your advocates will be of little use to you. Spare yourself further communications to us, to the Necks or to others. You have made yourself and us unhappy for our entire lives. Our shame is so great, so terrible, that with bowed heads and lowered eyes we must pain our neighbors by, as we cannot look them in the eye. Adieu. May God abide with you. Anna."
YOUNG MEN WHO WERE GREAT.
Preminent Figures In The World's History Who Were Famous
From the Boston Gazette.
Charles James Fox was in Parliament at bishopen.
The great Crumwell left the University of Cambridge at eighteen.
John Bright never was at any school a day after he was fifteen years old.
Gladstone was in Parliament at twenty-two,and at twenty-four was Lord of the Treasury.
Peal was in Parliament at twenty-one,and Palmerston was Lord of the Admiralty as twenty-three.
Henry Clay was in the Senate of the United States at twenty-nine,counter to the Constitution.
John Hampton after graduating at Oxford,and was student at law in the Inner Temple as nineteen.
Gustavus Adolphus ascended the throne at sixteen;before he was thirty-four he was one of the great rulers of Europe.
Judge Story was at Harvard at fifteen.in Congress as twenty-nine,and Judge of the Supreme Court of the United States at thirty-two.
Martin Luther had become largely distinguished as twenty-four,and at fifty-six had reached the top round of his world-wide fame.
Conde conducted a memorable campaign at seventeen,and at twenty-two he and Turenne also were the most illustrious men of their time.
Webster was in college at fifteen,gene earnest of his great failure before he was twenty-five,and at thirty-was the poor of the ablest man in Congress.
William H. Seward commenced the practice of law at twenty-one.at thirty-one was President of State convention and at thirty-even Governor of New York.
Washington was a distinguished Colonel in the army at twenty-two,early in public affairs,commander of the forces at forty-threeand President at fifty-seven.
Marie de Saxony died at thirty-two,noceded to have been one of the proficient statesmen and one of the ablest Generals that Christendom honeemed.
The great Les X was Pope at thirty-eight,having finished his academic training.Ho took office of Cardinal as eighth—only
which an iron ring is riveted. To the prisoners were attached by a chain. The end pillar in one of these was the one to which Bonivard had for four years, and the stone worn in the shape of three parts of a bowing where he walked so incensed for so long a time. Allogathered at years in the battle, but during two years of his commendation he was dangoned. It is said that when he laughed and was leaving his cell he tears at her turned and gazed for time on a place which, though a bad become dear to him by his meddling his prayers.
BONIVARD.
as this Bonivard, and why was he killed? He was a prior and a patriot, expounded the cause of the people who were struggling for their conscience as well as of citizenship carried the head of the Duke of York was trying to abolish Genoa on country round. Bonivard had offered an imprisonment, and it allowed him to his most detalied charm he was not put to death. By his wealth and his disability he pursued influence over the people, by being justly beloved and honored. From Lebonburg, where he had been mother, he was way beyond rubbing deserted by the men who then was captured and given up ends of the Duke of Nanyu, whom he to be placed in the Castle of How much he thought about the fact adopted country in order to liberty in shown by the first uttered when, triumphantly, they dangoned examining, "Bonivard, it." And Genova, who exclaimed, too, was the answer, as they shamed and led him forth. On remembrance he received all the honors could give, and he lived many times himself to the promotion of man and prosperity. He founded library, denning to it his own institution of books, many of them the fifteenth century. He died 1570 or 1571, at 24 or 28 years of age now regarded as one of Genova, and one of the greatest libraries in history.
The plane of Marie Antoinette was pillaged during the French revolution among the works of art carried off was a wonderfully made clock, on the dial of which was this inscription: "Le Moire, Paris, 1782," the name of its maker and the year it wrought it. The clock works were originally set in a jewelled case of rare design and workmanship, and was adorned with precious stones, but when the palace was invaded the mast left only the inside works, which a pendant from Artois named Jean Fousson carried away to the borne in the interior.
Some sixty years later there began an immigration of the French Catholics, and among the late colonists who settled about Puyetterville was Joseph Rempel, a grand-minor of Fousson. Rempel brought with him the old clock. He brought the works down to "Louay's Run," in Batavia township, where Jeremiah Cleveland, an uncle of President Cleveland, had a clock case factory, and had that worthy man build a case for the French Queen's clock. Some time ago, while going to Hilsberg, K. R. Scott, the jeweler of this place, stopped at Rempel's for a drink, and saw the clock. He learned its history and bought it, bringing it here. The movements are about any font square, and are inclined in a Pimson steel box. There is a perennial dial, over which are two hours of plenty. On the hands are two images, one of the Virgin Mary, the other of no unknown saint. The same made by Mr. Chancellor in seven feet high, and in plain but elegant work. The clock keeps good time, and Smith is sure of life, identity.
General Grant was elected President at fifty-six; but when a young man, in the Marien War, he was distinguished himself at the battle of Molino del Rey that General Smith named him for promotion in the field, and at the morning of Chancellor his courage and ability came him to be especially commanded by General Worth. And for thirty-six when he gained his victory at Port Hooden, and only forty-one when he took Vicksburg.
General at thirty-five commanded the Army of Italy. At thirty he was not only one of the most illustrious Generals of all time, but one of the quickest-given of the world. At thirty-five he saw Waterloo.
Webster was in college at fifteen; genealogy of his great-failure before he was twenty-five, and at thirty was the peer of the ablest man in Congress.
William H. Seward commenced the practice of law at twenty-one, at thirty-one was President of a State convention and at thirty-even Governor of New York.
Washington was a distinguished Colonel in the army at twenty-two; early in public affairs, commander of the forces at forty-three and President at fifty-seven.
Marissa de Saxony died at thirty-two; conceded to have been one of the prelude statesmen and one of the ablest Generals that Christendom honeymoon.
The great Lee X was Pope at thirty-eight having finished his academic training. He took the office of Cardinal as eightman—only twelve months younger than Charles James Fox when he entered Parliaments.
Only one civilian out of the Presidents of this country gained his first election after he was sixyears older than one was James Burkhaman. The chance for the Presidency after sixty is small and growing less.
William Pitt entered the university at fourteen; was Chancellor of Eastham after twenty-two; Prime Minister at twentieth; and so continued for twenty years; and at thirty-five his was the most powerful unnamed head in Europe.
From the earliest years of Queen Elizabeth to the latest of Queen Victoria, Maryland has had sources an able statement who did not leave the university by the time he was twenty, and many of them left at an earlier age.
The late Lord Bennettfield left the alderman and entered the great world early; did John Bright and commenced his political career by writing a book on warfare, in which he predicated that he would be Prime Minister.
Hamilton was in King's College at sixteen; when nineteenth he made a notable address on public affairs to the citizens of New York; at twenty he was entrusted with a most important mission to General Ortona was in Congress at twenty-five, and Secretary of Treasury at thirty-two.
John Quincy Adams at the age of seventeen was secretary to Mr. Dane; then Minister to the Russian Councils at thirty-five he was himself Minister to Prussia; thirty-five he was Minister to England; at fifty-six he was Secretary of State and President at fifty-seven.
There have been twenty-two Presidents of the United States; five of whom were elected at fifty-six; and six attained that great office before the age of fifty. Three military men past fifty have been elected. Two died very soon, and the other two general Jackson; and he was lost sixty-one when elected.
Jennathan Edwards acquired early success on the greatest metaphysical ideology in America and no surpassed by any one in Europe. He commissioned the reading of Henry Woolf's Yale College, where he graduated four years later.