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Frederick Weekly News Thursday, December 13, 1883,
Maryland

Frederick Weekly News Thursday, December 20, 1883,
Maryland

Frederick Weekly News Thursday, December 27, 1883,
Maryland

Frederick Weekly News Thursday, January 03, 1884,
Maryland

Frederick Weekly News Thursday, January 10, 1884,
Maryland

Frederick Weekly News Thursday, January 17, 1884,
Maryland

Frederick Weekly News Thursday, January 17, 1884,
Maryland

Frederick Weekly News Thursday, January 24, 1884,
Maryland

Frederick Weekly News Thursday, January 31, 1884,
Maryland

Other Editions from Thursday, July 03, 1884

Alton Daily Telegraph Thursday, July 03, 1884 ,
Illinois

Bangor Daily Whig And Courier Thursday, July 03, 1884 ,
Maine

Cambridge Jeffersonian Thursday, July 03, 1884 ,
Ohio

Colorado Springs Gazette Thursday, July 03, 1884 ,
Colorado

Daily Nevada State Journal Thursday, July 03, 1884 ,
Nevada

Decatur Daily Republican Thursday, July 03, 1884 ,
Illinois

Decatur Morning Review Thursday, July 03, 1884 ,
Illinois

Defiance Democrat Thursday, July 03, 1884 ,
Ohio

Edinburgh Courant Thursday, July 03, 1884 ,
Midlothian

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Frederick Weekly News
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Frederick Weekly News

   Weekly News, The (Newspaper) - July 3, 1884, Frederick, Maryland                               THE WEEKLY 30. JULY 3, 1884. PER YEAR I Glorious BY WALTER Commenced in vol. 1, there came no more answers to his I Therefore he resolved calling old though with some same What did the impudent beggar and pauper of the old set was a partner in a city another was a a a and a had once officers in tie and so He would Hu TouM intended to be nasty about a thing now years in- they knew of it. Tbe results of his visits illustrated in a manner the tendency which I lave ly is to uas in the least disposed to forget they knew perfectly till his memory as m ihe sailor ass an anchor witu tbu of And yet remark that 1Kb mtn chicly 1, was to bury and hive done with as the in time of to bury a if that tomahawk expended in the funeral -er- or it was dug up brave and traded away fyr what it would fetch in It L- r. dreadful story of outrage and Mr. Brooke West went call upon friead the partner in the city one in his younger days had carried on with greater than the s me this at woul 1 be to his Was he Not at On i; tared he was very H hi rvt Mr. West's i w hi h t in to no longer n r very in the che as rea ly to at u its the cheek of tho j and regularly seen tMn about 1 impudence of und sent out word that if the and owner of the did not leave that oili and the stairs the efforts of the Mr. Brooke West re this in its without making or attempt at For his Slashed and he that the glibly de- i the quailed and pal 5Vn a lie walked It worst of such a situation a man the luxury of a else he for that liable ho but with much loss to call another old a r in thu He w as a man w ho Kl got on in his thought of taking gambled ha t-n the ways of iniquity and iu married ami lived on Camp len the memory of his young w hen it back to was no fonder a thing k loved to dwell He on receiving the jumped ia his used strong tore up tho and sent an message that ho nothing whatever to say to Mr. Brooke ami refused to see Again the Colonel walked away without I think had ho got that merchant and that ou Embankment in the flops or splashes would have presently heard in the or had ho wet either of them on a heath after there would have been a lively steps not described in the he went to his old where ho found a new who did not know he asked for his old the gallant captain w thls a Then for another of the band of the Major left the club a long in expelled from he asked for Colonel This now j. in the club at that West sent up his and a T lips that n the General himself the leaning heavily on n a friendly ti cordial welcome hand returned prodigal held out his a genial Cv and said with n standing in the middle his stick on the ss Tn in the windows shook for Ty Ot tongs and in tho houso with and a tho of al banks of the aud especially at or beside tho stalls at he by his confounded A fellow who actually expelled from that verj same daring to send up his impudent to call upon the him do you lie him out into the Knock him down if he ventures to call Turn him I This last blow left no room for That part of the all a very small As a matter of Mr. Brooke West did not know until then that he had been expelled from the He thought that perhaps a kindly of certain fishy which had led to his might not have been laid before that j was he must try something As for making a or a that was out of the He changed his he went to the there i are generally more than There was fear that anybody tl ere would him for what lie had been iu the Southern and He was now the English who had traveled and lost some of national and And here he stayed for six months and He to make and presently forced his way to certain places where i high to be I whether or the simple He found there were plenty of hawks and pige harder than ever to and But he did pretty I do not know how or it was that he first thought of By accident ho carried off her letters with Now and them in his dearest they aud eight at of they end 1. m and loving Milly There was sp ike the her had sjoken of certain Gradually he came to think sub- ject more and It was tainly her it was not likely it was upon tile girl Could not he get It w a little but it be of to the came to till the thought ot vineyard the brain of But i re was i nh one to get only i to gtt to the mm man he see ivs as of girl i and her and to thy for it would felt h. put tilt in 1 away with it. f tho uld tind something loung cioi always And worth and fifty a year can be sold for thousand or pe. m tho ivaid a sume man s The longer he over this the it As for Ins. re so far as he could -o as he kupt out of the way of cousins and he could an exact knowledge of the life led by the girl who had told her father he had 1. he knew the scrambling the and i lhe sons who had chance nt home and i for one He I 01-guessecl, what letters the man who nad m so a fortune sent to his were full of and about he build any he was to his provided only there was no one to swear that he could not be the lost Here he was though he ad- mitted to himself that it was tho one ous The girl's relations neglected her They made any about her father's who be- longed to quite tho lower class of were scattered and and too much occupied with their own troubles to ask what had become of Charles's her mother's she who had married into had gone on xip the hill of and was with her so rich that she had a great house at with more than one and contented self with writing to her niece once a year or so. Tho very people in whose she lived knew nothing of her nothing was wanted to carry through the business but swiftness rush and a bold in tho which must be between the first appearance and the cousins should offer to renew inly cousins must be insulted and Tbe thing could be done safely if it were done And though it were impossible to foresee all the difficulties which might he could vide against Freedom and skill In it seemed to wero tho first And so far ho was tho equal of any living You have seen how ho made his It was after there was any one who might have known Montoro in the old then was there timo to prepare that person for a in and rl and tender he could iu the first and in the it was ter for his purposes to be the hard and stern He was at his daughter's having forgotten that girls do kiss but on the whole he was So far he had been accepted without the slightest The next day he drove to Villa in the His daughter carne to but on this she did not offer to throw herself into his ho out his hands and she took it as though she had been crying all the j night over this disappointment of a Many a woman cries over a but few have to lament that a father does not turn out as he had been Perhaps she had allowed her imagination too much All she had to go upon were his aud these spoke to her of a writer very different from this cold man with the hard us he is a. good to Let me Milly is your is it not? to be He if it was or something is at talking to my own did not find it strange writing to that was Did you ex- to find your father what he did said Milly took me at your mother's I believe she told you I was of a meuk and gentle in I If a man wants to get over mind he mast get rid of his So. that is the first thing I have to I am accustomed to have 1 my own Please remember i Perhaps you when I camo home you would have it all your Not so young Milly said but a red flush on either cheek might have told had he remembered that she her mother's your you left ney what a place to live Where it thai you lived in said the the old of where you lived until you went I.e. old the old house in Aud than you came Pa who managed the suggested his to my when they wanted some one to take care or he stroked his chin. I I should think He told me once he never seen I will go to him Write He manages the d. es We will walk round and sie the old Are there of my old friends left to see you shook think I have never seen any of your old friends or relations at I do not know where they do he with perfect shall not trouble ourselves much to find that is lery And your now live at a long way and I seldom see my aunt ina or my I do not think body cai much about except the blers goo 1." her father keep away from you as long as vou are do Then we will keep away from them now that we are As for for remember that I refuse to see sins of this Absolutely He looked so needlessly that Milly was Certainly this new father of hers was not one to be I went he said I gave up the post I held in the firm What the devil now was the name of the people Milly shook her She did not think the least you could have he replied to make yourself acquainted with the history of your own Never What did you cara about your When I went away your mother had about a hundred and fifty pounds a lived upon trifle though you call until she since you sent her and I have lived it said Milly What is it worth houses are all and they I after allowing for about one hundred and eighty pounds a This is all paid to Mr. Ambler for my and very handsome upon my A hundred and eighty pounds a It should have been that have been quite and the rest for you? But the property was my who to she make any there was no Nobody else could take her were Q Uo did not assume tho manner of tho uo Jie there were any or he that there were your mother's effects wera and are Milly she to lose her little property which was do so much for the home when she married she said are so rich that you do not want but no man refuses or can afford to throw it As for those houses he rose and walked to the is as well to un- at have come over here at great loss of time and having mous of the very greatest in the hands of people I only hulf for I cannot stay there is nothing for me to do I have got no friends in I am out of tbe and there is no getting back to the old back to the old Milly stared and She pretty well knew what the old life with penniless for and the parlor for old when I said the old I mean the old you care to meet them those old friends of yours f remembered her mother's tions over the memory of those old friends who took her husband from his led him into drank with and made him smoke too much tiated him into the Orders and hoods of Ancient Druids and Her husband's love of low she coupled with his lack of was the bane of her married Perhaps she for the her father they have gone on in the old I don't want to meet When a man gets up in the the first thing he should do is to kick away the and not one of As for the old I don't suppose I ever want to hear about it Why I was a clerk in the I had to go and write all A pretty kind of life mine at a desk all and your mother's tongue in the Very Don't There is nothing to keep me I shall sell the and we will go back father and daughter ought not to be I there is no particular reason why you should stay is is she j The lawyer's i You may leave me to settle with I About this Ambler this jackass with the has he got any or do you keep him and all his has a small I know what it I is because I have heard over and over He has five thousand in the Three per 1 he is mighty fond of you with your hundred and j it is as good as doubling his Go tell he is iu the that I want I to s I said standing before I and looking him straight iu the I is one thing iu which you understand me at I can never I give up even to go back with own even I do not think in any even without I could go back she was a perfectly truthful and she therefore spoke exactly what was in her I am afraid of Your letters prepared me for thing very You are cold and you begin with taking away my although you are so rich that you despise it for being such a very little I can not prevent I But I will not go back to with and I will not give up She broke her voice she fled because she would not let this hard father of hers see that he had made her is rather more serious work than I said the makes a man respect the I suppose she expected to be kissed and cuddled and made much of. can't do it As for I think it is a deuced lucky thing there is a because she's a creature with a will of her not like her fool of a and she certainly will not give up her lover for a dozen So much the better for me. Be- cause now I can sell up the and go away openly without concerning self about an undutiful child who prefers to remain with her It is better than running I am really very pleased there is a Bless them Suppose she had thrown herself upon my bosom and swore never to leave her fond and faithful At supper that Mr. Ambler could talk of nothing but Mr. who had spent two hours with him in the had been most affable and speaking of the business in which of my he engaged in conversation concerning the Great I found in him one of those candid and open to Nothing of Mr. Ho brought he in the ed and has always been taught that the earth was he ly surprised to leam that it on the other without a surrounding Rim of ice. I begged him not to take my simple word for it. but to to the he sat I gave him my Plain shook Then he one after my Simple and I flatter myself con- viction was growing in. Then I read him the which he put in his and promised to see me again upon the he began to talk about his own he is immensely he is a millionaire over and over I can hardly tell you what he there are house one whole town belongs to he Think of it. What a glorious country it must be for a man in less than twenty years to cumulate such I think I have made a Recruit of the very first Croesus among what we lacked in money we made up in Perhaps now we shall get both money and among other of a col- lege or 1 forget in this city of It was built and is owned en- tirely by He said that among other professional chairs there is a chair of astronomy worth a thousand a year or so. and that it by great good at ent He has this appointment in his own he he is quite satisfied with the new Discovery as to which he was already favorably prepared by his daughter's my you are always our guardian looked horribly sees no reason why I should not fill that cried my did he say it asked thousand a In his own And in did not say We were only discussing and I do thai the namo of Professor longer plain Reginald a will carry whether it the of the Reasons or the Simple But Milly's cheeks were because she had never spoken of her guardian's Dis- covery with respect in any letter to her What did ho want to deceive Mr. Ambler for in so trifling a matter? And with all this should he desire to take from her the little property which would be so useful to George and Was it to make her an she said that night when she dismissed him at the garden do not want his I wish he would go away and leave me. I do not feel the least speck of love for CHAPTER Y. A So things had gone so easily with this that he began seriously to wonder the vast number of lost missing strayed wandering claimants like himsels for the family and friends do not con- turn Perhaps they haps there are hundreds among names to which they are not and enjoying for- tunes to which they have uo What is to prevent a man who knows the to march into the club of a dead for supposing he alone knows that the man is and taking up his Our Claimant went to the villa again the next and the day The who thought she was his ed She looked so pretty that he could not choose but And after fifteen the sight of a young aud beautiful English girl is to a selfish old She behaved nicely to was respectful in her guage and save in the matter of that young he said at the fourth was already so far advanced that he called tho girl by her Christian aud even addressed her as and without stammering or we are getting on Are you still afraid of cau I help being afraid she replied want to take me away from my and from my and you are going to take away what I thought was my your Silly across the for every pound you have you shall get a Your it Is because I want to have done with the place altogether that I wish to sell it. Never heed such a Now tell do you like do not we have no I believe there is very good society at ford but wo never go any you like do not we never go to you liko I have been to a good many and there are lectures and ing you liko the West be  

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