Evening Star Newspaper, November 26, 1872, Page 4

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5 5. GION LEBEL for It: came tote ging | whatever it was; and Mr. Bennett went out petit larcemy; the Acttal transéé@ibn wasafel- ant Mr. Nores inthe mening, at the Star of” SEORGETOWN., Stik AGAINST 1HE STAR He ghoul until it Wand ace inthe Star. | with bim, and’ Prince told bim thet he | ony. So that if we feti iuto the your fice Pe —- i | onmeoenes Denwere g PS ?. nt or nat Su caste tar er ETS ge pate * Pc a To the testimony of the broker What is to be = 4 ween f cy 7 vr to repay that and ifs id notte say | not im. ye iv rince ‘ t m 24 a for Bpecatnstee rer and |Matostory toriate pavdhine tnd Mahe ey meen to her that she ahould be arrested for pascing it. | trae. eThe orig mares wherein te correspou!- | Mr. Kiddle.—} am referring to the testim Las gt aol ga asd ent r the AT Gt Went for Wool aud came | cating on iniamous story reflecting directly apon | 7b t is the language, 9nd he says that Prince | ence is not quite perfeet is this, that of the broker ¥ Prince, y “eS NEWS. Back Sherm |g person charging imbsrality or evil practices, | was drunk; half or two-thirds dronk. Priyce | stated that Mr. Prince followed the ja. me yin but hae -f pope emerge 2 te ab ote oe Gag lng art ge tee Boge Mage its Plant. | ci rete hy yw] to ig in the stri YS ! ne 2 ° a rate, ® purpose fabrication of a false- | Prince cor cts the other Prince, and, of | rendering erept into it tn its popular rt. aterit * " * were ina Shey Birthe for $20,006 aad Get Bix. fcoa, and publication given, to the detriment | course, he contradicts Noyes. What a terrible | circulatkenon the streets tor TEA NO Preteuse newer a ihe Speculative Partnership Gaited Of Seether, Lam not at alt perticular about the | stock in trade there must be of testimany, your | that we fabricated that. None at 2 story —I wa * a . as = . epem to ee B amount of damages that suall ba visited apon is one inevitable Prince, the | substantially aP printed was the stare m cir - xe ft was t piv the - ama, eo Proclip-oy > aaa the maker of such a lie. And, gentlemen, there ‘There.source of all the evidense, | lation. and the story in circulation aabstan‘ial- other Prince. : ® i ae will be no sncers on our part,no levity or jaugh. argon the vulgarity of the, refer. | ly ad foundation in the conyet of Prince; pas Biddic—1 hava ony tw say tha og 7 anctiioae m iia ‘ dia . | ter al e sanctity of reputation, as my frien: little signiticant—is introduced as the | and if all have $20,000, or I) cents out of us Tivce, the broker, and Mr Noor 2 gece Pe . - weee eee ¢ Ham Prince agwinet the Even- | told you there would be. Reputation ia all the | one bail with cbs they are going to bowl down | for that, it shail be becaase be conducted him- taikit.gthe matter ores th ? : the same wey. “ oh = Tr Newspaper Company for libel, (new | possession some of us have, and if ely] sll our witnesses one after the other—under- | self in such ® manner that the story gotacireu- wit, 1! Go a ad cecieae oie o ae oat s decneas ; mages $20,000, was cu‘ered wpou Taes- | scanned, some men mignt be startied at the | takes toxwear them all outof coutrt. He swears | lation; and the san Mid him no injastice, for it trait : n bere ct as a pen me on ~ 4 ds vember 19, in the Circuit Court of this | smal! size of their possessions. A . gre pata | Bennett out of existence; he contradicts Plant | was substantially true. He did pursue Mrs. was c ‘i CAUSE 4 Justice Cartter presiding. Mesers E.¢ | ton is not a matter of accident. Ido not quite | flat-footed; and Sisagrees—to say the least of it— | Hume by his officers. He did threaten to arrest Well, gentiomen, re te aaa 5 tig, | S8tee with that chivalrous Virginian cited by | with Noyes. What can be said about the weight her; her husband did understand that there was she re ep Lutheran | nd J. ©. Carrington appeared for te plaintiff; | {he gentleman, who said that “God had given | of evidence, your Honor, when the man that the | a warrant for ler asrect Hawe didcailinthe | made, and Mr. tenon the | Mrar tate, Mt EL. Stanton forthe | him a repztation.” God does not general'y | special act of the m paved with wood e, the 1 + ates Bow ecoupiod by buildings Ww Waabing- : } Congress was necessary to'make a | other Mr. Prince for the purpose of dealin: a ‘ - a ea am streets, to be used | aerence. confer reputations, good or bad. He creates a | witness at all, is to be used to annihil ite at least | with bim after the mannerof men, and that content with i 1! was % arma 2 aus is ar . | ARGUMENT OF HON. A. G. RIDDLE man, and places him, surrounded y associates, | four disinterested witnesses, for Plant, Bennett, | matter between these parties was ended with a twndersteoi was to be ' 1 He ma serge he Car > Cohan company lewon of be jury: I always listen to my | #04 his reputation is the product of his good or | Hume and our Prince have no possible interest | drink. The story was substantial ly tewe. It adbered to lis part - egw rec meeting. resolved that half 7 4 Carringion with ent, evil conduct amid his associates and fel- | in this case—none at all; and here appears the w out of the conduct, or miscondact of he bes i bing te “avienine aoe on thats drivers and | withadmirstion But iowe. A man comes to be known. He | original strength, force, and geniusof my friend | Prince. gatios . oy rene | men, this tht daily associates with friends and neighbors, | on the other side that I cannot pass without | |Your Honor, it has been argued to this jary, ays that the fing: | SCCount ¢ a upper air. and that which is essentially a partof himra- | commendation. He says that we are a-sailing | that this paper was libellous. This ern k bs distes trom him; makes an atmosphere around AT Soom TODAY the rear baliding erdove 7 coast +) Morket-bonse had b A ua “ ar- | to this is reputation of this Prince of his, fur | which your Honor has given to this Jury in th ' though sovereigns, are sometimes | charge which you have already given, is libel: ; nnfortunate. Royalty doesn’t, it seems, escape | lous mainly, aa it is urged, because jt prompted any more than the more valgar of us. Because | this Prince himself to seek some sort or redeoos lim, and he becomes attractive ‘ax ho it good ot | or repulrive ag be ie bad. And what he appear rover guid never | to Leto his neighbors comes to be his repu tng with; that | {0n. A man does not acquire one in a day. Lrak tN bg whal ibe evi . learned in the work * what aes tan 0 Prince happened to be drunk—I do not charge | Nay, it set theee two Prince's in pursuit of ur pret | plasful article in the Star | ct the growth of a month; it is not the pro- | it upon bum at all—he says that we think that | S' It agitated them; it produced excitement * P “ “ T hat tebody was affected but a | (uctor a r; but it is the beautiful te We are entitled to libel him. We didn’t saya | and under the inspiration of that excite jt * t i . Diuan. Ue would have supposed | HOWering and fruitage of long years of uprig 0 Word about it; didn't know anything about it; | they went in pursuit of the Star. ness and virtue, and pure liv g- Aud it comes | didn’t care anything about it; didn’t go around What shail be said then, gent igh-born virgins, or angels, or men ot "5 bs Span to be a part and parcel of the man. a part and | jooking for witnesess to’ prove it; did } jury, of the condact of this plainri® Prix a 7 . Sioetical ‘conceptions qrvody | the | parcel of his possessions. It thing that a| not Gk thie witness ‘whedher pe oe er ee oe thenof the conduc x York, with ro Wats ttender, Weeahee aaa: Coen ‘al, | "ingie article in a newspaper, Uule paff of | drunk but the ‘witness stuted It himself, | conduct of this man himself, wh : = - “ fui severally undergone the moat | P¢F'flage, cannot strike down. The pretence, | and Prince contradicts it. It is not of any con. outrage in the opinion, or esti Lines en artiey & 2 aud horrine tortures of | kemtlemen, that here has been @ high-minded | sequence, gentlemen of the jury, whether he | Hum. that he proposed tm tage t : “ 4 ‘era, that evuld have been | 4M Virtuous man of twenty-five years living | was drunk or sober, ‘hat I know of, except thar | posing he bad tet te warner aan I oeue er . : ved of, or sketched. Why, be hes laid | 884 growth in the city of Washington, who has |’ my friend here is going to have it enhance the | have been no explenatin 7 ’ © ¢r tour Tir regions all waste bere. There | 8C°Wmulated fo himself the inestimable treasure | dividends; and I don't like that. I don't maan | flegsed him, woud the Seas ‘ = = been # score of honsehols desoiated. We | Of & 00d reputation, and that one little whit | that his fees shall be largely increased becuase | ¢2¢un then? wit 7 r 4 ‘agp . nebele the weeping dexth- bed side of halt | Of Dedinage, one ‘ttle whistle of humor |; his client was drunk. Bat, to take up Bennett. Why, gentlemen, it was the bi I t Ce aaeemen # doa n beart-broken women; several venerable | tPTouch ap evening paper is to dissipate it, ix | Bennett says that he went over to Georgetown, | which Hume made in ihe pores | Byte lemen have been taken up bodily inte y 0 say that a good reputation is of no Sgr be souls, when he came to inquire | parties. If he had met Prince ther ‘ to the ven, which igus wary glad tb heeron’ under the heavens. We do not hold our | after the lady why he would as soon put his | here, he wi ry. he clock on ft r ¥ a gana ue dveneteae geod thing to do every- | Tenutations by any such slight or frail tenure | finger on live lightning as to approach Mra. | gernce aye slay equ Sarrersctrow entertainmer » addresses, and stereop- | where execpt in this court. 1 don’t Seals tebe as that. It is not a mere color and tint in the | Hume and saya word to her about her having | Cerr'ngton, would prove gross mix -onduc tact wiotg Hemp ¢. Bneb tieon views * ren, Articles of food and | where execpt in this cou pnt to death. Indeed. | *K’s that a simple intervening cloud or shadow | passed a counterfeit #10 bill. And with the best | the part of Prince, Yor it agitated andl we i sufler for sale by all apet? dow ations c tothe recens before mom | fhe TeAniity of children pat courts, counsels, | °3! dash forever off, but it ism part and parcel | grace that he could he said, “Really, f mates | He I am onty offsetting the argument of | Ore other point! d of ibure juries, pean ‘and all, ahalf scoreot times to the | Of the man, having its root in an up-| mistake. bout the Mrs. Hume, and now, madam, | the plaintiff, and [ am ng that if there Las | says that he 2 bave an in ¥ Hosrmny arp ¢ 2 mn : Fealm of rest. Angels have been invoked and | TS8Ut heart. ‘and it is the ontgrowth of | if you will excuse mel will make my bow and | been wrong dene to aie man; if he bas suffered | Prince, the piaintiil, ! ter "he paliioath an & St Bics for Materiai for the New Jail sa ated the ound, sek the ‘awfal Prose . that | Yes?s of virtuous and pure life. It may be de- | retire,” which he did, and he went down to Mr. | tn consequence of this story, he has suffered be- | “P.P.'P.’ article. He ease t ew “ Mr, Chandier, the acting supervising archi- = ‘ao wet ihe eG name has been arecesl hae molished, but it ie only through a persistent ||Hums-and he told him that Prince said that | cause it was the natural asa necessary fruit of | interview between thei a ationof | yor caw Subs Ghthelinae wen teet of the Treasury department, and Mr. Cluss, | Dereonally appealed to; and the etieg of it, | CoUrse of misrepregentation; @largeand general |' Mrs. Hume had passed to him a$i0 counterfeit | his own act, avd it was all his act before it | that article. The plaints e wae ! ugh momay to buy a goose | Bh Beemiy cad superintendent of the uew jail for the District | bree un: ie this little playful artiele in the | Posoming of all the sources and of all the ave- | Dill, and he bad threatened if it was not | reached The Star at all. It reuchel The Piat | Well, now, xentiemen, wien chis piaintif bas | Dor ty sing, pour cotaing eater Mics Cot —— Star newspaper, recounting this little eomed: nurs of public and ‘ivate Information. replaced she shonid be arrested. Hume under- | innocently. Why taik about malice? What | been conired cted by Hume; whew he has b & Cons h strect man of - — bday omen bids for ey lloresesued aces antics ‘Abything | ,Preathe on it and it dies,” may bea poetic | stood him to say that he hada warrant’ OF earcbly malice had Mr. Young? None at all. | contradicted by Piant; wien he has b and del ng on the oon struc- ros 3 like it? figure, but it is not true in fact. A thing so help- | course, ‘ntlemen, you see that would bea very | What conceivable malice could Mr. Collins ture, near th » 3 le yards of | AE a ca te that tn Jes: and intangible as that can have no existence | natural inference on the part of Mr. Hume, for | have had? orany of these three proprietors of clean, sharp river sand; 4,500 cubic yards of | 3 nap wore gen! id in at ‘ieelo in contemplation of law. It only occupies the | when a person known to be an officer talks of | that Star ng oo Kauffmann, Mr. | himself once or twice, it secm= to me thet there KraeaahasTanite, ot Seneca stone; 13,000 barrels | Somsmae: Toons Uke Chis con eha nite Boner empyrean, which was solargely proved | making an arrest. of couree.whoovereard that, | Noses, and Mr. Shepberd—have bady (Why, | ie not ans more left o; bisa than fan be sucess ry cement, equal in ity te the | 16 gen’ ; ise wi cannot ‘would suppose that he had a warrantfor her ntlemen, not know even @ | fully co retes rt. Noyes. It ts p Wale or Round top cement, ant sd eavic | Of & good deal of wind blow it'up to such large | PY a by vulgar mortals is net compre: | ic; Sie ot ie paei se td as rem arrest. article was ished. I know, and it is sound | Mr. Noyes @ very poor coms Earsor granite, limestonoer other hard dur. | fi pensione, fon there ls noting else. It used | ended; has no existence, save in the imagina. Well, Hume did not like it. Brother Carring- | law, and it has the best foundsti i tradicted by Bennett; when be has been o tradicted by the other r’rince; and eontrad ° DORKS Lay Nai 1th | to be said that the ‘contined the winds i m in reason, | say that it would be cren necessary to have bin sie stone broken to the size of hen's eggs, euit- —"% gods it tit tion of @ poet in his upper filght. It is not | toneays tbat he has profaned the great God | also, that where a man leaves his businessiuthe | contradict Prince in the m.tte: Mr. able for concrete. The bids were as follows: fogs meet a acne a that with which we are dealing; but it is \d this holy court by saying ** Damu it” here— | hands ya emerged joyes,—these parties to | Noyes tells you pe pens, Ren this 7 a rot T.T. Fowlers: oy yards JM. Hall, 92:20. Goteue tenn eae thing hece | {@ solid and substantia! part of a man, Damn it!” Gentlemen, @ collect information and to give it the shape of | lication was ta ked over between nd the ‘ds is there and inevery manner the and he would not recover so much for ‘eal reputation Ishardly | might not indulge in it, in the presence of the | =ponsible; but Charice G. Vanderwerken, $60: James A. | *mewhere on this earth, and as we with good many men might have occasion to say that, although they ar it,—{ know that they are re- | pisintif?, whic no" : : " ’ a ise is conducted on « fair and honorable } an actual injary—for a ww, as you know, gentlemen, } basi Hoc g2 4. Zng & Co., D. M. Davis, | Sher bape papper Fog Coenen merci susceptible of injury by ordinary slander—bat | court. Well, your Honor saw fitto overlook it, | that to urge, to argue that they should pay as if even are a $2.85; Austin P. Brown, #5.2). fig eae. Bice meee ic Ese with mane | fF an attempt to injure it. Nor do L compiai and I submit, your Honor, that really he had as | they themselves had written it, and knew that t H an ae RUBELR STONR. | ‘S Begs, bleed yesm Gnd aay feaew ‘I would | Keptlemen, that the law has fixed. money val inuch reason to complain as my Brother Uar- | was fulse; as if they bad fabricated it, is an oat- ke'sin the s cAtstiz P: Brown, $7.40 per yard. J. Zng & | Strous corporate a i Grand 2 ¢ UES | have sou believe that there was © special act of | O8ePUtation, and esteems itamong the vulgar | rington, and I'do notlike to have that go tosda Fage uponevery man's conceivable sense of right ft Concert in aid of the Public ¢.. $3.25: H. 1. Atchinson & Co. “3 ky, wore r red to settle w iu gocds and chattels of,a man that he cannot ex- | ¢1:0 or $200 to their verdict. But | confess it we have no more different ideas of rigut | from that i oath f " Siduay Richmond. Va. $40; Marviand Free | corporation, and. ea he says, for the pablic | Ergy Duy and rell, though he may takea partner | appesrs to be about the best ground my friend | here “in court than yo have. outsie | tpmne, Ssy, 2b Hos bet tir the © Stone my, €425; Charles G- Vanderwer- | S000; mainly, which have be Tae alate | in when he seeks to tinker up a bruise or batter | hos It leoke te me ms it thie © damn it” was | That which is fair and inanly amongst mon, then, 1 om came en ee ken, 82.50; T. T. Fuwier, $2.05; M. Clenahan & | ™i#chiet. Why, your honor, here were these | Mit And Ido not object if a man seeks to | rather actionable, and if ie doceee make aay | is fair and maniy, and is law in court. it. Iwan | eo perecciond fen Bro., getting! Pi yout BOnCe, tote bie Loe! goin itinto gold, and takes money for blows. | difference who is the plaintiff, considering the | You ate jurors because you are citizen you ral circulatiun; and it could uo! | Of December | Taos. F cEwENT. entiemen ae Lf Gee =e pecpetipes If & man is mercenary enough for that, the | number going to have ‘anacka” in it, as the | come here with your citiz: — wi lay cement company, $198 per barrel; | in Private. each woe eer ae, oy | courts and the law permit him to. But slander | Yankees seit» eay, itought not make emack thoughts aud feelingeattct m the jury, the onty resp. Louisville, Ky., No: u F Brown, 91.88; Francis H.Smith, ¢244 | ineorporation, which was apa pleco its would thrive, aud so might the bar. I | diftereuce who ls drtendant whatever they are they go to make th aly publishe? was x saacpind steno ndule cement. or $4 ——_ inal Am P general act, so that uvess that all that part of it—this going Well, everybody seemed to sympathize with | total of the citizen; and you deal with the tau Geewaw Awenican Sa pee cement; H. W. Blunt, any three ge ok seine me’ ay L tyal onl 7 | Sacks ina slander snit—ts new tome. We did | Hume when that little “damn it” escaped him. | her » a8 youdeal with them everywhere eise. b. tor street, pays 6 per cow asters, $1 Nicotat & Co., ever, cam asad ate t! ee piwed bok Tivate cor- | not get such lessons in the west, your | I confess | felt myself—pardon me—I felt myself | The thing that is rightis right. That which ix | thing was 3 aid ce oner before De F Eckloft. re a; J. Di Piteh the public has no interest, Bat ort Eovor, where we were educated tor | alittle like a lady on a certain occasion, when a | right here must be right everywhere, and to s) Plain, Twili pubitsa ® card fa: vntil Januery 1 4 Bhi cklof, «1. Ueto ‘3 Daren | Cetendant fe one of these awful, thirsty, the bar. I finding no fault with | gentlemanrushed up to the platform, with his | hers that these pertics defendant, who had no 5; A.M. Maynard A i average daily balances of b | hideous, bloody, overgrown, nce of this tement that you anybody. I do not set myself up as a standard. | carpet bagin hand, just in time to see th» train | ihs slightest knowledge of the ext ag nnnery. I do not make that an item of the case, put the | Irofe of! The iad reached the 7 . ‘ ar} - point at | erticle at all, until it was complained of, could 5 but after gotng again over the mattar | Thanksgiving! : * | eating, devouring corporations that takes down 4 mee pone ; : . . He ol aoeaceme beens | # men like Prince, takes his wife and innumer- | ¢Y:Cenee on this point was not contradicted by | the same instant. Now, the man under the | be guilty of deliberate and wilfal malice is | it was final y concluded th : as i the plaintiff; and when you hear a sonorous | ur, sency and stress of that departing train, said, | absurd. Gentleman, | will not para bef allet able children, takes all bis fature prospects in i 7 ” ay saak “Re Goae Z 4 before the retorn of Mr. Mul ett next week. | this and the xt world—no; I'm giud to re. clamor here for outrageous damages, I only ask | Damn the train,” and the la gr My big farther, and yet it was gravely ar, @thatany | thatcould bessid. The thing was TO THs GawaT Toker Ravecett ed to you | helpless. ‘There co 3 “t corner ith e {hat you shall remember to whom they are going; | sir, permit me to thank yon for that remark.” | that the proprietors of ‘the Star newspanes | Likes: ga pere £9 Senwiw: ELgction oF A TREASURER BY THR | member that era Seem tas taken | that Prince and his reputation are of the least | Now! I confers I felt a good deal like thanking | acted solel? and exciniively through malice. conduct in the prem Feke iaijourned session of | Sottn. without a chadoy OF see an eer | contequence in the world here, only as mor- | Br" Huse ter thar He ond en ry eee ees | Seted solely and Purpose, which the Lord, or | The neat wo heat suit Jd mg: f the Unitarian Association | 0¥M, withont a shadow of compunction. And | chandise for trade in the law. What doce sour mark, especially when you remember to whom | which snother party, notto be named, vnly Gen! cin ae - = . as held last evening at the | the only thing that reconciles him to the awful | Honor suppore old Judge Callett would have | atts applied, sto - ee ae ,_ corner of 6th and D streets, | ¢atastrophe at all is that he is going to share in Af 4 Well, what did Hume do? | knows, they singled out this Prince, who was a | facts in this care. said, or Chief Justice Hitchcock to su x : Pp to Prince's. He did not see | customer of theirs, against whom they coull To partals ee Thai - ; a} He wert ba been made clearly to appear 32 rpose or electing a treasnrer and fixing | te grobovenco nm f the corporation! Bi alone | transaction? But what is there of thisever- | Prince, but he saw Mise Prince, and here | have no feeling of any kind, and with whom | plaintiff, Prines, had an nator . That disappointment may not coz of the pastor, Rev. F. W. Hinckley. | €4m reconcile him to the contemplation of it | lasting great caso? for I am obliged todeal with | we are again brought up by the geniusot the | their interests were one, for as bis business | fone with Mrs. Hume. Ido not say that it wa: To mar the pleasures of our home, esidedoyer by Dr. B. Lip- | O2, bow unhappy he will be when this verdict | it asa matter of some importance and some | plaintiffs leading counsel, your honor. We can- | progrested he could advertise and pay—they | discreditable to him. 1 For turkies fat, ail should ¢ Pincott, with Mr. G. Duolittle secretary. “after | Comes in! é debate as tothe 2 significance. IT have no canting way of talking | not do anythin, this case without aj vatin, would have you believe that these parties, pro- | part of Plan sri = Se conan about duty. Men may say that I do ordo not damages. it eine wast scgravating aes that foundly ignorant that this article was inserted, | he believed—was very «l : He rays the ship 2. | Paper. “Has it’ . Danwat 2” | Exclaims! I should like to inquire how all that | d222Y duty. I do not care what they A chance with Messrs. 5 CragKe. - allot was tak on the treasn about | a man wis ever in; and these are the most ag- | were guilty of express malice agalust this | notin our arch oftier be gut ® | ing sete the eres ant effectual = uted in the election of Mr. W. P. Dunwoody, 2 TT tt te havea that. If I think 1 do it, lam pot pete te brag | gravating gentlemen, that ever hunted down | plaintiff. Their agents fuund the story upon bill way along abo mas, and sume | ton © Pearson's. YM. CA. Bs itd = Phe received 13 votes so De. W F, Wraliace’s 12. | culation? Whe do mee ad te es about it So the enke < ageray ng ¢ mages, | & great, bloated, overgrown, swollen ‘corpora- the street circulating. Nobody contradicted it. | time in March fol bg he was hunting oat |“! S ee | Ss r. Wallace, the defeated candidate, thanked | on? a nor reducing them. I am goin, jeal wit! . Why, we did not ask what Mrs. these who bad voted for him: bat he would say | Patfonize it? Why, by industry and intelli. this ease, it 1 ermes aid dine, oo it aad t tot fash i i ‘rince had not morse = 4 any utterer of — somebody upon whe ever get it, man ion, and | said to Hume, we were not entitled to it, and | story, and prosecute: im with @ sult forslan- | and be selected Mrs that the feason or bis defeat was not any dif. | Bence, 7 eco: 4 care and — and | it shall not be my fault it it is misapprenended | we stopped the witness; but the gentlemen con- | der. Not atall. It was reduced to writing, in | to Mr. Plant. and he toll b ference between him and the members, buta | ® careful regard for the feelings and the ghs again; for I know I at least h. i Guaczence between him and the minister. He | Of everybody. it is by this course that these to make myself understood, and Ihave capacity | the junior end all aud thon tk GoiTingtons, | terms the least offensive to Prince, and was | lected, and instructed the ., ie |, arn it the junior, a1 1, an en ey * Let it yu} 5 ntlemen, e court says | was Lot paid other steps charged that the minister had electioneered | @eBtlemen have succeeded in presenting us ~ ron ae kong = b gentlemen, th rt says I : r at Dill, | CORKS REMOVED WITHOUT ParN, Bunions | Chilblains, Bad Nails, &e , successfully treated j by Dr. White, Chiropodist, No. 535 sth street, | Crporite U.S. Treasury. Lstablisued in Wash- | ington 161. enough to understand a ease as difficult even as | all come out, anddon’ttry to supprees anything,” | that it will I it for you to determine | He says that he introdvec! h — Sgainst him. On motion of Mr. G. E. Baker, a | With a newspaper that for ite many eto this, swollen and magnified as it is. I confess 1 | andit did. itcame out from Mrs. Princethat the Whether that article is libellous or not. | Mr. Bennett saye that be took him out and had | | Wittoox & Ginw's Newrna Mactiwe. The vote of thanks to Dr. William F. Wallace, the | Co™mmends iteelf [ol ana ag ibeliers. | have to strain my imagination a good deal to plamntitt was drunk, and now they say that we | Well, I fully discussed this on my motion to the | a conversation with him, and that he told hom | Celebrated Ba Patterns. Agency at Chas, retiring treasurer, was unanimously adopted. perme rors Recon Doone oo Bf sned encompass and com rehend itin the way it has | have made Mrs. Prinee slander poor Prinee;and | court, and ray briefly that au article, to be | to present itto Mrs. Hume, and to say to hr | Baum'shoopskirt and corset factory, 2th street, nnwoods d pant oes ben sino a —— mischiet, c not grow into the significance, | been presented, an: doubt whether I'do. Ir | they have got this action for libel now against | libellous, must charge @ man with having done that itshe did not pay it *be should be arrest -d, | Intelligencer Butiding. 10,28 that goes in aggravation of —— let it goto | The Star, 1or slanderous words that Mrs. Prince in violation of his duty as a citizen, | and he excuses himselt for not doing that errand moreno. ‘$20, 5 ——_ 801 ing Weatser Stairs for doors and windows, at The salary | Portance and consequence of the Star Compa- | sweilthe —it will be need uttered against Mr. Prinee! Was there ever | in violation of good morals as a man, or good | to Mrx Hume because of the bigh prmition or tee th YT . Bade against itbrought salmet tease oe | Well, now, about this case. I confess when I | such a, case? Did. angtony Ove nen re over | in violation ntleman, or in violation of some | lady's own family, and the High position in Hamilton & Pearson's, ¥.M.C.a. Butid’'g. 005 3 ——e— oom ceneia vail a ae nit i agaTeason why | come to turn from the huge Agure that was ex: | an one? And yet, gentlemen of the Jury, it was | \awas a subject. It accuses and charges him | social, as well as in business viretes, be her wun Lavrgs awp Gawriemen: if wish your )RNAMENTAL GATE aT THE WASHINGTON Dassen ott Bed me Dat i oe. it | hibited before you to look ‘is case, L cannot | and ie positive made a point to you against us | with neither, but it simply recites @ story, the | bard;'and that he went to her husband and ro. wearing apparel cleaned in a Sret-clase manner, AbSEN«1.—Sergeant Sas has just completed at “tr; ig t ben ae ct it ae sean) find it. But we will sround util oureyes | in this case; and there is not any other in the populsr version of which varied butelightly {rom | peated itto him. And it produced the sggra- | sent themtn A. Fisher, No. 615 9th street, eppo- the main entrance to the arsenal a gateway | UPON oie We pa iy help it in an hour of | recover from the dazz they have suilered | case, or but one other—that little “ damn it” of | the actual tr mn. It calls him no name. it | vation of which Mr. Hume complains, and | site Patent Office. The Professor will give you which is an ornament to the place and a credit | Teal Ree . e do not = a. nor im- | from, and this atom floate within our asp,and | my friend Hume. That and this Kittle ««damn | does not intimate that he was entitied to any | from which he has not quite recovered. yet, for | satisfaction without fail. Kid Gloves cleaned to himself as the designer. The central or main i for a = . ‘e only ask that | when it dqes we will seize and look at it. it, general,” together, are good for a thousand | punishment. It does not complain that he was you see, gentlemen, that bis face is inciined vo | nicely and cheap. 9,21 entrance isa double gate, fourteen feet in width, | Precisely ppp ni ge same rules and | Here wes @ very decent sort of a man, bythe | each, I de not’knew’ where this whole sum ot | not punished. It applies to bim no epithet. it | flush even now a little the moment his mit — with fine granite abutments, in which are set sen shal extended to . press now a8 has | name of Prince. Tha untuckiest thing that | $20,000 is to come from, unless you make it up | uses no ex: ‘on Oo! tion against him ia | drawntothisoidsore. The chords that it pu TERxwomrrnns and are repaired {rQibity-two yound guns, the breeches Sittin, eee ee eauented te St, and ander the fo bim was to bring this suit. He | ont of eloquence. [Laughter.) Thereisat least | any form, but is simply a dry, condensed, cold, | motion, yiorate sometitnes through a lifetime, | and tusde to order by Hompler. near 4 street che \slone. These are ornamented with beau- | fostering care, or rather # just toleration of ty | bad © pertect right to go to court, and bring a | $20,(00 worth of that {Renewed laughter.) | colorless etatemet of the facts most favorable | and be cannot quite help it. ido not top 0 |) —————$—$—$—$_$$—$—$—=— — ral bronze eagles, and surmounted by hand | the pres= has grown to ite vast proportions cf uit erith him into it. fam not complaining of | ‘Throwing the Angels in. (Groat laughter.] | to him,and more favorable than the actual fact: | expatiate upon these emotions, vor Like ny ure | Georgetown Advertisements he lower hinge is se in the tretulnese, strength Lor! pore ee boon that. ‘The course of the law is open to him. He | And the death-bed scenes, they are worth a lit warranted, | Because, gentlemen, if th: article | cmot al friend to gather wind and wings and getor 1 u e . a © one 1c ' 2 " s man & coun! it bili, it bg into por glory to talk of them to Bee he eae en rene | Collignace, baalac the omen ees a didn’t seem to have any difficulty in securing fp something, nd a good many of them. | had eald that tb teri 1, | go plunging into upper glory ard was elected to fill the vaeanc; of the minister was fixed at a DATBAOKDINARY BARGAINS Iw able counsel—none at ali. He has his case here. ndertaking cests something now- | passed to him innocently, as it is admitted this | the angels. Home sought his redress, and & E VOUL on, Saccens, E: . " any, Sreei@ht inch rails, and | [Ul, enlarging and ennobling ideas, when juries | Now, how came It bere? Why was its Tite Aadaye, eopecially where the man furnishes | was; and that, for the purpose of eecuring ite re, | iacuade Wrong man, and, then, occurred what | Merince ie Ae ne two sre ea arith bronze spear | under rreju apenas erase thy for fancied | begitping was not with us. Mr. Prince was | the mourning coach, and ail the weeping | payment, he went toe lady and told her if she | did. And it transpired to the public, and we eee Eaten, fi s reed f would arrest for th tory miked about. It wae suntion: eeeneee eens Gaerne BO's casasied, tend Maphiiyupes <4 i on b's place up there—which was | himself. fanghter This boring for water in pot pay it Passi e Story = Was co ow be morey, or had gone to ber husband told as @ good joke upon Hume. It finaly i 40 the wall, on cither side. | ai 4 J 1eF | spoken of by The Star as a very respectable | dry places ls not always very pleasant, Derit | counter }(welwe-pounders, From {hegaten,g | UCR iniquitous visitation the press would lan- Wheeand ia some way there cams to beastory | man'does et any molstare if ought t er bi h, | and related the same. I ave no doubt, your | found its way into We Star. Now. it may bo | Sv! pantech ws heat iron fence, | guish While the public would suffers blight, un- | agoat about him and his place. ‘Now, if The | lan ttc nly ‘went hard. (Laughter) fut | Honor, but that that statement would belive. | sed theta hewspaper should not tell such stories. | Flaunel. Volweterns + which its interests would wither perish. | Star manufactured it, and it is libelious, hold | it was made @ point to you. It was gravely | ous, and if we on the trial should fail to proveit | We ‘THE FSSAy GOLD MedALs—170 Compositions | This the learned gentleman could be reconciled | The Star ble; v id titled ‘di . then, =e, should teil oak _ “5 bought before the atvenc: 7 ible; but if The Star didn’t | argued. The gentleman in his flights almost | true, they would be entitled to @ verdict against | it is no woree for a newspaper to tell itthen w Kine W aterere ete Fe Ee eommittee of the essay com. | £0. for do not the wages awarded by juries flow | manufacture it, end has not given it cirealation | left the earthe Lad nce know whether he | us. If we had ttated in that article that bu had | citizen. Ne worse toreduce it to writing thas BEN TAM te Man kociety for the Prevention of Geu- | Vittuously to him. Why, gentlemen, the press | for the purpose of injuring Primos, it eor- | would come down agai or not te sent oe innocently received a bank bill, and for the pur- | to publish it orally; pot a whit. Iain not guing FIRST CLAS: Elty to Avimais, consisting of Rev. Dr. Atkims, | Shares the infirmities that are incident | tainly ia not fit te he'd The S A responsible. ou asan evidence of our express malice. Hi pose of recovering it from some one sought to | to sa: prgetown. Hon. ©. C.Cox, Major Bell,and | t0 all the works aud acts of men. It is s ~ : a $ stock of Cottons Water proof from isc. & your Honor, but that a thing redoced to —— ". i yn the Je is st int in ot of express | coerce the repayment with threats of a prosecu- | writing, may undercertain rulce of aw take a J. 0. NICHOLS, che! and Prof. Thomas | Wned and conducted dy men, and we | soy eopiaaion, Mat oxecees & pidnanat mhllve’” we twa had got good, sweet, | tion, or gasex, tor-& felony, east wood tea en fon at an cariter stage than oral stander, | anufactorer and @aler te Tarler, are now engaged in examining thees- | Obly ask for it exactly the same rights laugh—and you tell it toa neighbor. That is a Pe innocent Mrs. Prince to say that | grave ea against any man; but if | but 1 am now dealing with this thing as a story the ekiee prom (ls youth of the Distrieton | that the law and fair dealing scoerd to | republication of it. You tellit etmply because | har’ ’hinbosd: wee derek ay eazy (ha! | Suave charge (0 m é subject of y © % im that —— bot he aims true ip ye tye! and een, lew por, may T opulieaier ence, | itisa good story. Or the honest and eetimavle | had publlsted it~ here through the mouts | have told God's truth, an. We could have | tell that which is bo scandal and whic ar ‘hundred and seventy essays in al! were re_ € same construction and spplication of law | wite of some one of you hears a Tittle store of Mr’ Hume, who had already said‘‘damn It, | Proved it, aa wo havo on this stand. So 1 | tency and foundation mainly in truth, and it d. Of these on} were from the public | 8@d fact to our case, and no more. A news- among ber lady frien doy there nothing in | General,” and therefore it was proof that the | say, gentlemen, that this story that has been | may just as well be printed as uttered orally. ceeee ea esem Bom Attendants of public | paver, to be sure must be permitted to speak | the story that is particularly hurtful to anybedy, | Star hewepaper—-tbe corporation, had express | printed in the Btar contains lees reflection—in | As to the propriety ot enlightening Css $7 ickinn he Mesilk bane, toma bs schools. Lo S25 apd two $15 medals will be | fF itself, a8 an individual speaks. A man is | only @ little Pleasantry. Bne relates it to-a | malice towards Prince. Lam not going to ask | fact itcontains none, when it might have con- | public with stories of this kind; that is not a . rte gn fis tet eee eh ce Fiven to the public schools, and one of $25 to | beaten ins case and as he thinks, unfairly, and neighbor; you did not know anything about it | your honor to charge upon that penta all. 1 | tained. gross charge agalust this Prince, and | question for the jury. That is a question the | Prypere’, wit mont the non-attendants of pablic schools. ‘The pro- | he says so. and » newspaper does the sam». | at the time, and yet you sre responsible for | think that with the aid of my ingenious friend | which would have gramme of exercises at Lincoln Hal! on Satar- | This Star did that, ing more. A former We ati true. And yet I am to | defendants mast answer to the, public, these 55 HIGH STREET, _ ‘bat wife says. Would not you think it ® | who will follow me, we shall be able to take here, am I, all this iong afternuon, to con- | customers. position e Star in this Seurgetows, D.C. Gay evening will be announced to-morrow. The | J8ty gave $3,000 damages against it, as the vay ard case that you should’ be sued and | care of that part of the case. Well, gentlemen | tend that the verdict shall net go ‘against these | community, as vouched for by the learned and Presitient is expected to be present, and Gover- | S€0t. $0 carefully reiterates, and the Star did | hrought into court, and have two distinguished | ofthe jury, all this happened here in the fall | defendants, for publishing this tame, colorless, | eloquent tlemanon the other side, is such nor Cooke will preside, if his health’ permits, dot like it. Doyou? The jury who gave tha: pete nec Sec verdict werestupid, and so the Star said from two of the commonwealths of | end winter of 1869, te ha in the spring of 1870. | aud truthfa! statement; when it might have | that their editing and mre age received the | PERPMPTORY SALE OF STOC! ni 30 you will say, | fendai welty to Animals.” About o TOCK OF HARD- is gres ible, Occupy @ day or two in | The bill was passed the fall, or ards | been made stinging and pungent, and that with | just commendation of the public, the best indi- WARE AND ae BH Bo 138 yet for saying that, the de- | biowing up such & case as that, and Ting- | Christm ing thi nt «8 charged with express malice rg ing the Than ie Tar Fottowers or § \ c as, and in the f the polders of th the mondacity and | Hume aido’t like it at all. hi annual mert is occurred, ; truth, too? cation of which is that the paper, as the gentle BRIDGE =TREET. Let 1 wil! rel! at public auction, on the prem f - es upon more be thought me pass along. Timeisgoing, anda little | man says, has 150,00 circulation. ; ieee, No. L™ Bridge treet, Geurestown, on rooms of the | ‘he piaiptift, and this dogs scem to be malice of your innocent wife. who hap- | about it the less he liked it. Seeing a faster than I am. Mr. Carrington.—Of course that was an ex MONDAY, Decewter 91h, lz ag 10 o'clook Ghicm, lasteweninc, Ri pamo'ciocks Brey. W | stongest evidence of its Ill will given on this to. pity and carelessly’ teil tho | man that some other, gentleman’ sath wes < ‘Well, the article was published. Allthe restof | travagant figure; but we admit it has a very 8 m . and 2aily thereafter .ill the sale ix com ; se - leted, all th ‘K of Hardware and Mer- Hont in the chair, and ©. E. Prentis sacr, trial, apd about the only evidence that it has your Honor, that is all thereis of lies in 8 comparatively email compass. | large cirenluiion. PI the s"o es ‘he t —¥ tleman is a | chancise contained ip said premises : “ libelled anybody. If this is snother libel the | this’ But how came the story itself to get |] day and su: ing he wasGen. Carrington’s 10 | ‘he two Prinees are havi le canse ir. Riddle —Yes, I know the gen’ ~ gn ee | fF on er ante, quostirhs Pt hperogamicn “gy | est at hehe sew pe achat | aig seren, ectette bas Cue | Gln Bret be ngs coment, rtd | simmeenee merertnn Teertetong: | MuseuaTARt swe wer meemee 4 |e wiser Garett Se bi 0 N ness to evade & mas, 1569, rome! —DO! nows who—nor into sl and from re id mi + Eotig te fabian cela | Sagtge eet wenoe erin | Rott eg Aan eae | Renae aaa enseeigea | Cat Peat eee eo | ie a pga ta ertings elk ” anew one. upen im @ ten 8. , Mr. Hume me seihal 1 cuintio the report the following named gerne eo! | of damages teatded, han been reiterated to yen, | Rotappeat» far nobod p tsmtmony front Eioce | Sasigoc Yun uct guint te teres ester fises.| Lene ant tay somecemee el mervone | uetee went on (9 tay that he prosumond they B ADLOTS Fok Sate 1a 400" FEET O8 Pasmene Oe ee Although bis Honor has already told you that | thathe put marks upon the note which very | that. I am willing we should pay for all we | don and forgiveness by alibation, not tothe fold 150.0/0 extra covies becanre it contain’ | GRC UND« So eset. soposite Cutow Hotel, Ech teat you bad nothing to do. and although | much defaced it, or rather “‘bebacked” it, for | have bad; and if ‘The Star must pay for Hume, | gods, exactly, as the ancient custom was, but a I aoe cau Wank: at ope BM the answer to this is on the record, that tae | } believe he placed something on the back of y for the other Prince, pay for Bennett, pay | in drinks by mortals, as 1 believe the modern x = oie my — sone . 146 Bridge et Girgetowrn | court who tried the case promptly set that ver- it, and then put it under @ goose, hot or cold, tor Plant, and pay for Mrs. Prince, too, they will | customis. souw eink. ehew tu Mc. Biddle. be iomew that tuck, andl ace nus -eott face of this record the counsel ‘amen eir . Well, cometime in March, 1870, we | fired mess.” Well, dow! a : 25 ng totarn | declaration, and. now claim $20,000, and insist | {ia Gaee-, Well, somet somebody to take ‘that | (not very pleasant) interview between these | morning. Now, there are three witnesses as to | would take it nll back, when he realizes how iefactory » curity. bev ld cote ais M. Ht. WHEATLEYS Steam Dyeing and Scouring Star | abrurd it was. inte the alley opening on the north «de of © | that they ought te have it. because before. on iback. He himeelf that it had been »arties— Hume and our Prince. It might have | what occurred that next morning at the sma = street, between, Sth sud Sth sitects nprth ms, | Gifteent erases san Giieest rehtee akan in thobhats ota men by choname ci-tb> >|, bean sacpiemented Wik Det Ge Seer Otek Sin’ Hades aad Wit Eieae tae | RAL oay then, wes tharplabedinp and pub Ratabiichmen: too short a turn, th eon- | lished, and when these defendants’ at recovered the amount named, and dealt with teh seems probable when we rememb.. i.e | view that occurred a day or two after that, up | broker, a; ing with each other, and bo’ aeetuee tk | as that was by the court, one feela called upon pl eee case. For some reason, when you take | at the broker establishment of the other Mr. | tradict Mr. Prince, the plaintif. But your | was called to it the nition ever the area railing at just whet t rt warded 1°57; and te row fashion to contradict | required. He could uot deny it, fr it was tree ot. Wied Mosk COM " ving t ailing to admire the law logic and fairness of this ar- | the other testimony in connection with the | Prince—and I have something else todo than | Honor, it has become the | “ <o Behe a nd oo ~ pet place tn ising the family. who were | thought we were not entitl @ testimony | out « Mrs. Thomas L. Hume. aggravation of + sata: Pinat onkienaute|l any abtacomerinta aed sake motions CF a Tytbine appertaining te the b * Singularly h, the | Of Mr. Hume and of Mr. Justice Plant, and Now, whatever may be said about Mr. Hume, | have to pay a thousand dollars fer it. I 4 | Our Prince contradicts him. nt contradic! 7 f ane ply exvcuted. Office clesed daily et animal, «i to be turned in the room't be | Mr. Bennett, and the other Mr. Prince. The Pi pat gentleman wilo uniformly respects the | the case nas gotten up now, to about as much as | him, and Bennett contradicts him, and the | mest qeeagementoclawbere, a csard ive apes anal led out, was rently uninjured. chief justice who presides at this trial took rights of others, and is ome of those who isa | we can well pay; and a8 my friend saysthat | General says his wife — hi be and Lenin eee aenn & Som roms regis. 6 c con, ie D fication Wo sas to the gentlemen on yeaterday | jittic sensitive where anything affects his honor, | judgment for damages operates in Fie er will contend, most feriously, that it sha: g the ques er, y- SF RORGETE ToLtees, MepicaL BPART- t go permitting part . Noyes the plaintiff, observing ‘that wheu he m: that he was in the habit of it tes to ches Mrs. Hume comes | there is no knowing what I may say het rto | im aggravation of this case, because Mr. Noyes | for % MEnT — On Saturday evening last, an election | show something about their cases, as we hace Seockpareetoteas do not stop to descant wate nim. I ust leave a margin for that | contradicts bim. When a man has been con- | tioned the word damages, the Court could ¢! officers for the clase of 73 was held at the col- | been permitted todehere. But you do not care TRY €4.50 :TITCHED BOOTS, le at the absurdity of damages : ts inflame it at all. ‘ow this thing between Prince and Hame | tradicted eo much and eo often as that, it comes | repress a mui 520 coven mane eore. Ceesce ne, Lesalting, me. Soliome:—Onartes | haw this cose was’ tied Detacs.. I omly any os | Ther are things tet teed only te besestee tty | AG0 IE crn ea eee Ee | eee eC ee een ee en | Eee i. H. Marpby, vice presi- | much ef it because of what has been repeated det E e oad the . 8 voce) denied that the : is > Tetood. flights fh not make up the . Wedid not start it. We | almost be plead, and courts will take notice of Mr. Orrin, (setto 2) $3 00 STOUT WATER PROOF. Ee cr secretary. “he (lag were | and reiterated to you, and only to correct any Sete wake Sie Me bee bad no han init, | We did not pase the money. | it. A man cantiot complain he may complain | eourt did smile. e Aiylss isa invited by t president to partake o! cit © | wrong impression about tise ter for fe usti ‘lant. ere not Justice Plant. fe were not Mr. a TL . — Vester fer- at Harvey's, which was ‘well attended ad | you te treat now and here AS ANOrieinat ante, | PHBe® went to Mr. Justice Plan nb plain that he 1s contradicted by an A Mimacctove Escare. aay a 1am not now dealing with the varying instruc- | Bennett. We were notMr. Hume; nor ‘were wi abundantly enjoyed. action between these taki our im- x be: have | theother Mr. Prince. We bad no! in the | one, when everybody does it that 7 — pee pe gonebenngdh apt wey Bear | tions which Mr. Plant and Mr. Prince may he ot r. pe noe ts Esoa Pi Ys noon @ little school gtrl in attempting to cross 2 50 LADIES’ BUTTON BOOTS, railroad in M. st avenue, near L trustin, . Ben: I just id to do with them or it. The Star was | thing . 3 eth > ie ee 94.00 LADIES’ FRENCH BUTTON mart Sain SCs LARGE ScAtm—Moews. | to your own recollection of the evidence as ts | {ie accounts betwecn them witecaee’ Eaters | een ow hem oF, ie. the Star was ne ee eee cus anaeeanih Fmmart, Smith & Co., contractors, will com- | your impressions of the facts. And it will not | mes ucor he said, that he hada lady to deal a pearing the next evening: along immediately after, and the not | WHITE Gar ® ence, as son as the weather clears, to lay the | Go at all to this matter by the respective | with, and he wantedsome man to body drea: that my friend No and Knowing that the child was fast, failed to stop RUBBER BOUTr, SHOES, AROTIOS, new iron condait, fifty inches in diameter, from | meritsof counsel and because our friends on the the case. Of course nota man quite equal to nd over there, Mr. Kauft- the train, but finding that something was ths the ga Upper reservoir of the Sublimated accumalating matter with her so that she could net move, be at MEILBRUN'S, Washington aqueduct to the lower reservoir, Proper time to slowed up the train, and out on the cow 408 SEVENTH ET. and ex Sta me crabiste the Job in a very short | head of this de- catcher seized her, and smart pull | net __403 SEVENTH STREET. time. his is the largest pipe ever laidin the got itself gine, extricated her from her perilous position. ;cELROY, BAIRD District. Rete & certain form, Quick Woux—LasiSaturday the vice pree | Mi ci pans aNd CrizoLsrerens, Savaersty Buswep sy « Coat-Orn Exrro- ® friend saGnc ot eho baad of publi warty mae 0 wr Or, wd 810,000 if PI pay ve or six gen- whole | tracts for the lease and purchase of the east Baif 5 streets, sout Ito ° Che. oe ret of the ‘to make his flowd Hae orden, comet 500 ‘sgunre fore of At cat on ‘ ‘ae of comlollyesterday afterudos, wie | cate, pani cline cag’ eri either of the ground. Eaily morning the removal the oi! took fire and Cee’ a ae Mr. Riddie—I do vot know that it Is, bat ‘back a bas eneatning and ofautand i sects: to the new Sie wascom- Particular stove into atoms and severe! rned eo tb y girl. Officer O'Hare put out the fire and ron- | neerit, Premem ‘here that sounds mighty tention of Mr. Collins, ope of ‘the jared | menced, under the direction of Thomas M. dered assistance. ‘The Court —* Reasonable expenses” is the ex- oe a — Piowman, architect. J —— —e—_ sion used, “* about prosecuting pelled Prorssson Wairssy, who art co trial tm the gure of Ohariee Th OrBrecs aera fees blsstate, tar | reading at the © Jiouat ureh to-mor= new cate aries H. O'Brien, | “Mr. Riddie.—Does that cover lawyers’ fees? ‘care in his state- Cnet ‘press convicted of murder, will be argued to-morrw, | 7\ra Riddie-—Doee that cover lawyers’ foes to make them not could ave | Buglend sad ancricn ns oncof the fisext glock 7 and of overruled it is probable that the coart Mr. Riddie—That is a provided for. the purpose, so far as mond of the age. His selections are from the BUY a. ee nes covts, athe proce i. ne Veretct and pay the tion for the mistake whick Hust wt O | eat neiors and spoaxers, and e.rare literary | Cor. dihand Mas. Wesbincton. DO wort sols” be pee ee reed Corts, as be for mi ie ume = = Cun prominent yuicians recognize the ac- | ‘Tho Court—It doesn't cover extravagunt al- mado with the other Prince. The story was asked | treat may be expected by ee ce Baroy me phar: lowances of any kind. | published, as it was talked about on the That | him. PH if ils i ) 5s i all Boars, Day and Night g: ne 3 tee A ane A Hi i H 5 | 5 : ; i H elegant property on corner of 13th ‘Massachusetts avenue, for $14,025. J terfert dill. Well, if it was 2 a que tLe «nermity, the larceny was i

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