Evening Star Newspaper, March 24, 1883, Page 2

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Re has 7 2 THE EVENING STAR: .WASHINGTON,-SATURDAY. MARCH 24, 1888—DOUBLE SHEET. {For Tae Wasuixerow Stam. | miration and commiseration, yet we cannot,| THE HOUSE OF THE TEMPLE. ROBERT BURNS. from our mount of investigation, chill his mem- % ory with the cold wave of criticism, for criticism | The Supreme Cou: cll, Scottish Rite DOUGLAS. is soulless and captious, and has its source near Masons, and the New Home in This — the north pole of pabilé opinion. This much is : Mar, are inclin josy' @ €X- | ous, earnest in thor ant sion, thot in~ Istence of amore exalted appreciation of the decisive, lacking patty in his aims and ‘osclllat- oe oo = clini! abe i than | ing n purpose. His private life, at times, was Ireland, respectively, gran chahs live cr Friar ere ‘of | TePrehensible and vicious, his habits variable | commander, and secretary general of the and Irregular, and, as a result, he was ostra- | supreme council of the 88d degree of the An- human nature. It is too often the usage to en- | cised by his patrons and distinguished admirers, | ove pted Scottish Rite ot Free Ma- tertain coldly or depreciate him in his sphere of | and those tn high stations, who delighted to | cu vos ohe ereehars jaciedletion of the ited thought and activity on earth, and then to plant | honor him, dismissed, spurned and despised | °0'Y chased from Mr. Samuel E. Mid- laurel. weave cypress, and build above him | lim. oe tt alae, fr we Supreme Connell the building granite shafts whendead. Great deeds may, Wo Wises aiteaee erected some twelve years ago ‘by Col. Wright and do, make heroes, but too frequently the} « Rives, at the corner of 8d and E streets north- “His sun shone as thro a tropical tornado, eo hero must die and be transplanted in another | and the pale Shadow of Death eclipsed it at | west, for $17,000; and it will hereafter be ibe) Soil unconscious of his fame, before the slow-| noon.” * * * Yet, from that cottaze of pov- | House of Layee ie tes the SaEceree Sounell. recognizing world concedes it. or applauds. | erty, the rusticity of country life,-the plough- | This posta ecines ce oe Hence, faithfally portrayed obituaries are, in} man’s furrow, the flax dresser’s shop, his ge-|the rite Gh pe Seiten eee many instances, the keynotes to Worldly appre-| nius darts across the heavens and illuminates| known as a = Fi aie an Mae a Glation ; ence; the ministerial echo, “dust to | the world. He walks now, not with peasants | Delaware, | and in alll the states a dust,” may be the soundings of the first note in | alone, but with kings and lords; he is invited to nice west o' - pee ississippi. dia the gamut of a great renown. Why | Edinburgh, and is welcomed with demonstra- | full i LJ coolpare a : foal rato ot fae this propensity to postpone respect, to procras-| tions of honor and the most affectionate accla- bein ere A nes an anges fonda hse tinate honor, to economize affection for the| mation. He ts hailed as a dlgy. and tie Pe ete a stot stars and corerke c Sr te tele several salpecte bat the < — Fron le sare i | — The supreme court of Connecheut has just Eni peopien ao heartdew that they must make | the Scoteh metroreils vie with eash ‘other, a | Seuroen from the 4th to tho 54, having to cou | ll Nas largo fam of eight Orson poraers ings given In the attici referred ta. "| attention. ‘The ectareosa Diveon foment | Accldcd that. Carrie Swain, whe has boon ve trace eis oosmence by’ besteviog: maa the | osoring: kite vie Ace cin Cat dice: tin | Krol over iiue Gr Eynbolio Maarinr and ee soe: | Will rales enter oioae cede eee cannot be circulated too widely nor read too | week at Ford's, can play Cad the Tomboy tm — : Vee — ae f 2 aris ne oper em chalice of fame; mankind weep over the ex. | Nection with Royal Arch or Templar Masonry. | acre of ground to supply them, in their way, for| — Mr. Ulke shows at Barlow's the beautiful frequently. Grover’s comedy. 5 Stood erect with men? Ts it tot by some ‘me, | tinction of thls, Prometieats free but aa ap- | It was established at Charleston, 8. C., as the | ® year. One Indian's labor does not amount to | full-length portrait of his little girl, which at- Pict era cs saci ghriomse di saul Saeed tempeychoals of rational casuistry tir we scek | preciating: world has mae ample ‘room for his | Supreme Council of the United ‘States, on the | more than two whole weeks in a year; 80 you | tracted ao much attention at the meeting of the Te ee aR ee REET. | — Blanche Chapman seve a tovcoutpensate Our feelings for Gar uenlece ty | Wenlory, wal there will saroe maaremont coo | BIE Or Pears aagty sad tn 381A crsatad the Bu. | one Ht there sre any people in this greet country | Titscary soolety af Juation Matthews law Gal- SEB Aa eek, Pavniten a Go, Washington: | With, the ducton fused see one + r . t il for the northern ju ion at 10 ‘arch 17. e it ¢ Hess Opera Com- Seer eras rar ee cil eT ea cee Fee ee eee eee anne ee re ae eT rater cute I anate urday evening. Mr. Ulke has, by the way, re-| othe beautiful “Parchment Li series | pany, and is playing Phyllis in“ > eae nes ar oeeed © | tne ue rene test Tau ask inva Dreent “orand Commander | "Tete e stunted on the Salt rver, andi erally in ouatetion Wit Maplossans reeckeres | SOW ded the volume sumed shore, As|"' Tine pret toatl ey the bare Gem at ‘ od J i lected Grand us supp! w! e finest water-power in a . Will it be refuted that this failure to recog- oo ee eneral Albert Pike was el " (eee 411 Fifteenth street, where he will be pleased to | those familiar with Shelley's writings know, his | House has been the most prosperous for sixtcem. nize sterling merit and Heaven-descended gitts THE NEW TARIFF BILL. Commander for life in January, 1859, and is | the terri eae has already one of the largest LETTER FROM ARIZONA. LITERARY NOTES. The Washington Art Club, at its meeting | LECTURES on c. rr held last Monday evening, adopted a new con- ae eae stitution, and oth Ing indications loRGam “.D.. Rector: of taking aan es cae ener Bae Yorks B. Appintoa ‘& Co, Washington: — Among the American artists abroad who| Inthe title aboye will be recognized the series — are getting pictures ready for the Paris Salon | of discourses lately deltvered by Dr. Dix which | _— John MeCullough will openthe week at the this year, and whose work will probably attract | have provoked so much critical discussion, not aes : 4 attention there, are Baga. Bridgman, Doneho, alone in the city where they were delivered, but | — lolanthe troup begin Monday. Heaton, Knight, May, and Sargent. in other parts of the country. In making them | night at Ford's. — At a picture sale In Philadelphia the other | Public at this time and in this form the author; — Langtry will play a week at Ford's, com- evening Gustave Doré’s original drawingsof the famous and popular engravings, “Peace” and asks his readers to bear in mind that they were | mencing April 16th. tehgatenk peers fol eng Tops inthe Tne of — The proposed new theater on Connections usual ral work; were n= called the “War,” were withdrawn for want of @ bid. | tenderer eager ‘chat’ they Fagen scares wd ed peggy Bo hed though it was understood that an offer of €9,000 | nubtished In his own detense. bececes of the vee aly Srp Led would have secared the pair. - misrepresentation of his views by critics who 7 eee ‘ot tniaetathen i — The illustrations of Major Poore’s article | had not the means of knowing exactly what he|_— isson concert ncola for said or all that he said. With this explanation | Thuraday evening next promises to be largely on the National Capitol in The Century for April “7 dis inti 1s this true of the | b¢ !8 quite content to let his talks serve. it they | atten: are disappointing. Especially will, asa brake on some wheels which ap) — The spring season of Italian operain New = _ drawings illustrating some of the beautiful | to him to be Tevolving too fast for safety, Few | york has been a 4 — minor details and interior views of the building, | persons or none perhaps will agree in all the | pots, sung Lucia the other night the entire which are too ragged and sketchy to do full Jus- | views expressed Dr. Dix; but, on the other house to its feet and tice to thelr several subjects; but the remark | hand, few will deny that much that he says is eg con. MUSICAL AND DRAMATIC. THE GPRIXG GEASON—NEW OPERAS ABROAD—THB CINCINNATI DRAMATIC FRSTIVAL—REW OPERA HOUSES—TEE La SCALA ORCHESTRA COMING, ETO. The Salt River Valley—Agricultural Hesources — irrigation — Rallroads, Ete. BY BI — iow Correspon dence of Tar Evexmxe Stan. Tempe, March 18. I live in the Salt river valley, the great agri- cultural part of Arizona. Immense crops of grain are produced here annually—wheat, bar- ley and corn—and all by irrigation. The Salt river furnishes thie water. The country already has many: irrigating canals running in every direction througn this valley, and settlers are coming in by the hundred, and rapidly taking up the desirable lands. We have people of-all nations and religions—Americans, Mormons, In- dians, Mexicans,Chinese, and colored people—all striving. and jostling each other in pursuit of the “mighty dollar,” except the native owner of the soil, who wraps his blanket around him and views the struggle with stolid indifference. We have two tribes of Indians in our immediate vicin- ity—the Pimos, numbering some 5,000, and the Maricopos, 500. They are cultivators of the fi i t iMustri ‘har. now over 73 years of age. Among the present | flouring mi m the Pacific coast, owned by the | Sce all who are interested in his work. letters are scarcely less poetical than his verses, years. The weekly average has been $4,000. has been rei — ee Of Kamae tacnanes| = aes members are Hon. Henry M. Teller, of Culorado, | Hon. Charles. Hayden, andanother smaller one] — Mr. William Garl Browne has now upon his | and have besides an excellence Pecullarly their | __ John McCullough several years ago played Ten tt given to Shakespeare to know of his | Tee Tate Of Contesting ite Constitution: |S cretary of the interior, and. tion, Daren | bealdon, Anis pines ofan thewaie nee easel and well forward toward completion a por- | own, in belng full of fine descriptive passages, | to a twenty-six dollar house In Rochester Hila the preat Shakeapearesout- ality. last, "HOR W. W, Upton, Becond Concerta | fiom of Balt vee eatiey ead ae cuutivated Dor-| trait of Henry Clay, which he ia panting from a | chartalag bits of criticism, and. Interesting Sere support was Frank Mordaunt, Henrietta Chan the cloaquenes ofthe tach Con bite ncn:| The talk of testing the constitutionality. of |of the ‘treasury, Leet? OR ee ment Is destined to be one of the larzedt towns | daguerreotype taken in 1844 and his own recol- Sonn Tete ae te pa atording furthermore 80 | tray and Evelyn Evans. ; cee eee cs seebemed tates eel ber the new tariff law before the United States | John C. Breckenridge and Robert Toombs were | in the territory. We have many enterprising citi- | lection of the distinguished statesman. Those selection here given, which Includes something | — ‘ Little Red Riding Hood” and “ The Sleep» hs Lemgnabel Sobidd 2 ‘th a Eraiieatane tadi: | Supeete Catt wes ba in thiacity on the | 8tive members—the former until his death, the | zens, prominent among whom I will mention | who have seen Mr. Browne's portrait and knew | over fifty letters, and covers a period of eleven | ing Beauty” will be produced at the Academy Maus of te te Ee eh ae onus y latter havingresigned. The Supreme Council pos- | Judge Hayden, one of the ploneers of Arizona, | as {ilustrions subject regard this effort as pecu- years, comprises his best epistolary efforts, and | of Music, Philadelphi 17. Trait siten to ea ugantic ‘mind. | very day the bill passed, and by some of the | ferent aizary of someseven thousand volumes, | Who has worked long and faithfully for its in- | arly successful In giving the remarkable ex- | Subracce tne on trooe wee never before pub- | f Music, Philadelphia, April 7. bard of immortal subjects"—to know of his | S™¢ parties who are again agitating the ques- | composed in largest measure of books of value, | terests, and who, I am happy to say, is meeting | pression of Mr. Clay's face and features,—a point ; it ie ei aed ei ne 4 lished. —The new Academy of Music, Denver, Col., - fadicnl anid Uintioe tabty tion at Pittsburg. Thelr theory 1s that the | of the most costly editions and costly binding— | with his deserved reward in theaccumulation of | tpon which most of his likenesses are latreat, ANIMAL INTELLIGEN: os Will be opened April 14, ‘The seating capacity Pantas tone corns no startling effets, | United States Supreme Court, in its construc. Hiptorieal, cclentifis, religions, phtlosoplical sof one nea one of tho prettiest | ably deficlent. MA LED. BRS Ney Gores D. Appeen'e | will be 1,000, ‘The population of Denver af Won no admiring imitators, eausing no material | tion of the Constitution, would hold that the Teeiich eeonmastiginir inten ee railroad runs through the great Arizona desert, | |—A Correspondent using the signature of | °° Meare berries of which | Present is 78,000. eanece mie Ja “A neni for war ngh Senate. having originated the bill,it is in contra- The Supreme Council has printed and pub- | about thirty miles south of this place, and the | ‘‘ Doubting Thomas,” and referring to some- this work constitutes volume XLIV. while com-| — Joseph Jefferson will dedicate the new oe. wenetations remained anresceed trout an | ¥ention of section 7 of article I of the Constitu- | tished for the use of the Pontos) and brethren of Avlentic fad eects ppoue ene pandred aa fsa thing said on the subject in this column last prising much that s to aclentiste only, | Pera house at Uniontown, Pa., April 80. tentons oblivion? tion, which reads: ‘Ail bilis for raising revenue | the Rite, since 1865, twenty-five volumes of} ™ rth, over ano' - Bothot ° | Saturday, asks Taz Star to name a single pic- ——- 4 Wiese " Happily for our bard, old. Scotia's sweetest | shall orizinate In the House of Representatives; | Htuals, Geremontes and other works, most of faral and mining sections ofthis costae co | ture palnted by the lato Sanford R. Ciford | folshes also a great deal that is both useful | | —Slenor Salrinl, eapported by Clara Moria ation of his genius was inter-| but the Senate may propose or concur with | them stereotyped, and many of them costly and | tural and mining sections of this country. ar . vill be at the Boston Museum, April 8. late J. | #24 entertaining to the general reader. This is | w " Se 2 ‘ ” beautiful, and that the printing of its books of | An immense fortune is sure to accrue to some | Which is equal to any one painted by the leninenti oof the at wolnien, which < san int ‘emis te tl charlie pent tftp | Za a aot se compe cont oa | erin eae ow ons |W, Rn, Mada ow adage tn apm een tae of te pent vlan, whch | "The a ulin an ron theater von nage of his years. ‘The poet of nature, he | a law have its origi in the Senates"" The. best | £3,500. Of some costly worke not more than 100 | matter and will start a road from Lasso, ARE | Perms ate (Otirons “And Suse as alee {het | world, from the lowest to the highest In the J = ives not in the davzling rays of herole oF tragic | of parliamentarians think not. ‘The Senare did | Cobles were printed, and these are now worth | zone, connecting there ‘with ‘the raliroad to | may Us rezerded Ss miphtoraiges utenti od Posty petals intelligence, presented with | =® ie i like H ier and kespeare, yet. as} pass a bill which the House refused to pass. | {rom €25 to €50a volume. Several copies of | Guaymas, on the Pacific ocean, running from | the paragraph in question yet does not hesit due regard to the demande of scientific Inquiry, —The subject of “Bluebeard,” which has Thuch as they, ing he communicated to the tan: | the outcome wea a conference coameittoe nn | op ese wees toe te Me cette | scant” Cae Sate Siar a nice or aca: | nein che, opinion nt as/a gennine an | Aue roves ta Che Semesals of etlentioo tna, been upon the English stage for certainly wall “ "9 be ol ie m ple” w! +, is oy ” 4 z = Boru in wldwinter, lua lowly cot: | Senete tlliaeals bats tht oeeoneo te a ox: | cupled iby the Rupreme Colvel, aad te tute | Worth to tie Gaye Greak matin wee one | ciseere ‘Earthenon,” “twitlgnt’ on Hunter | 51 a8 well asto ody all clasees in whose hands | mgh a hundred years, has again been treated meant from the = banks ‘of Doou® | ference committe, In whick: the House. son | seaslons (biennial) will bo hereafter held tere, | 1s destined to be one of the. Anset ta the’ terst, | Mountain,” «Tivsli ‘or one ot hr henge this time by Mr. F. C. Burnand—in a three-eet ee ich he | ferees participated by cousent of the House. | the next in October, 1884, and t will at once | tory; thence into the coal mines in the same dis-| In the vicinity of Venice, on Lake Como or on | MRS. LORIMER: A Sketsh in Bisck.and White. By | burlesque drama, produced at the Gaiety thet tne The fact that the House gave its consent to thé | erect s library building on the portion of the | trict; thence into the great pine forest of Ari- | the Nile, ts worth as many of Turner's “Slave Washinton: A: Brentano & Go.” “Peon ter, London, on March 12. ‘thus grotesquely mentions: appointment of conference managers on its be- | Premises not covered by the main building. zon, Wich te conceded as being the finest body | Ship,” for example, as could be set up edgewise | yrrenyiarion: B lovely young widow—scarce | _— A Shakespeare festival is to occur this year hale plainly indicated that the majority who so | - SutJoined is aroll of ts oficers and members: | of timber on the Pacific coast outside of Oregon | this ‘outacre lot 1¢ ts not) pretended that Mr: | a. at Stratford-on-A\ i April 16 and voted did’ not sietlnye: that ie nstitutional | Grand Commander, Albert Pike, Washinton, | and the extreme northwest; thence tothe Atlan- | Gifford ever deserved the same measure of fame | two years married—who, tired of vegetating in | at Stratford-on-Avon, beginning on Ap “plow hansel In on Robin.” prerogative had been invaded. ‘The bill which | P-C.; Lieutenant Grand Commander, James | tic and Pacificraliroad, connecting with the Utah | 80 Justly earned by Turner, or that he could | a dull country Parish, under the tutelage of her | lasting two weeks. William Creswick will mI v a Cunningham Batchelor, New Orleans, La,; | Central, thereby making a competing short line | have matched some of that artist's best efforts; | uncle and guarcian, an old fashioned English | ¢icht times. and will impersonate Faistaf for Peer thecins Saree te nt ee ee el occ Aopen ting | Grand Prior ad interim, Philip Crosby ‘Tucker! aswell asa cross line to the Facifc const, An | but atthe same timo Mr. Giford’s fine love of | fox nanting hero rors to London, Tres | the frst time in England. r om Mugen commen tr , es. It | Galveston, Texas; Grand Chancellor, Henry | immense future will be certain to reward those | nature and his highly sensitive artistic organ- — Ab Toreabe Bien. wan ae 2 Sicce cotts Scan te poise ne une Leelee Hees a Gane ce Buist, Charleston, 8. O.; Grand Mintster of | who will build such a line. Now nearly all the | ization would have eaved him from perpe- | She meets her fate in Fred Wharton, a careless Langtry nan- cial success—artistically a failure. She wag “f mesa e: i 0 al State ad interim, Thomas Hubbard Caswell, San | coal and timber used in Arizona are brought | trating such a preposterous production as the | sort of dilletanti artist, who, in undertaking to tha hannts ot vice the caniy ionehip of lords mer ieee fesse eer “ran wire. | Francisco, Cal; Secretary-General,, William | trom California, and the iatter sells for so0 to | «Slave tip.) OF this painting: tts selabed|stty ber eri gries es, ord bony per eg cay een. . in the compunctions of remorse and | which would be much better off If it were set Coe eanunRto ns D7 Os Treasurers | Wi0iper WU Gilars RECAREEN Rddooments ems Rober R500 ie nd otaea toes | bette mony or ae toe eee | eee advance sale tor the Emma Abbott ceppreros his nal Mle re yer Ieccs Grand Alnoner, Luke Edgar Barber, ‘Little |to the sturdy immigrate, as land sendy pro- | having eeenit himself and solely on the strength | done, and the tory throurhout Hinitteresting | Opera Company this week at Kansas City, was ws of winter. In thehietus spaaned by these | SENATOR MORGAN THINKS THERE 18 NO QUES- Rock, Ark.; | Grand Auditor, | Sam- | duces from 1,500 to 2,000 Ibs. of grain to the | of that gentleman’s high praise, had it upside a armingly told, albelt the ending 1s rather yery large. They appeared in * Tolanthe,” “It pond Jared of BAH. ail’ Death, tere case and | TION OF THE CONSTITUTIONALITY OF THE LAW. | nel ’Manning Todd, New Orleans, La,; | acre, which sells from £3 to $2.25 per 100 Ibs. down on its easel in his gallery for some time Trovatore” and “ Paul and Virginia. burst. un flashed, and corruseated, and expired | _ Senator Morgan, of Alabama, was asked by a | Grand Constable,Erasmus Theodore Carr, Leavy: | ‘There are many flelds open here for men with Betors | its true Position A seers and THE GR ap SETTER, axp THE BIITHEDALE | — At Richmond the advance sale of seats tor a most weird and wonderful life. From the | STaR reporter what he thought of the agitation ees haat Grand ne ee Sey bah peas can be pe ae _ adel bet oes ae coum Ales = Bong toe wane ringd Meth ae pend the Hess Acme Opera Company this week was atialios ' ins, St. Louls, Mo.; Firs! querry, . “ ene ei Beall. ie largest of the season. mit of a proud, though unsymmetrical fame. S x Grand Equerry, Robert Carrel Jordan,’ Omaha, , Wishing to leara anything specially concerning | picture might suppose. THT ONTO BENT ON: Sh yzHE ROMANCE OF First eulogized, then lionized, and, 0, the pity! pease ee een ite danteareas Neb Grand andard Bearer, Wilmot Gibves | this county, J. 8. ARMSTRONG. — Just what is the highest sum ever pald for} Boston: Honguton, Mifllin & Co, Washington: me aoe as Ey Duntroary, and on ne then despised! When but boy he was not joes not presc! the manner in which is e Saussure, arleston, 8.C.; Tan OE! r. asingle inting by an American artist is a lit- & acted Davi jarrick. e parte Gesinell bey his teacher er" ‘Murdock, as bright shall pass Congress. Therein it differs from | Bearer, John Lonsdale Roper, Norfolk, Va.; National Rifles Music Mall. se perme. by These two handsome volumes constitute the had never before acted in England. though up and receptive as his older brcther, Gilbert; yet | state constitutions. Now, it is said this law is | Grand Herald, Gilmor Meredith’ Baltimore, Md.; | To the Editor of Tue Evextxe Stan: He dificult to tell. “It issaid that A. T. Stewart | arth and sixth of thenew “Riverside Edition” of wards of 1,000 times in Australia and elsewhere, he evinced capacity of quick acquisition, and | unconstitutional because it originated in the | Theodore Sutton Parvin, Iowa City, Iowa; Jas. | Your correspondent “E.J.B.,” in his article on | Pald $25,000 for the ‘Republican Court,” repre- Hawthorne's Complete Work, of whichextended | He is said to be very like his father as am was withal a most promising youth. His edu- | Senate, but who is to decide that?” Smyth Lawson, San Francisco, Cal.; Achille Vs actor. the “Proposed Opera House,” published in your |-Senting @ reception by President Washington, | notice has already appeared In these columns. ot cation commenced at a very early period, and} Star.—“Can the question be brought before | Regulus Morel, Galveston, Tex.; DeWitt Clinton paper of Saturday last, says, ie che sear h | by Huntington, and a like sum is said to be the | It only needs to geri now that in every re- | _—Gounod’s “Redemption” has been purchased with astonishing celerity he acquired profi- | the Supreme Court?” Dawns Jacksonville, Lee Mines of his letter relative to ake pabhe hall for amount he paid for “After the Bath,” by.M. K. | spect the caskets are worthy the gems they en- | for Italy by Ricordi, of Milan, who will shortly sited a tumilariey with tho Fveteh aaa Latin | tatlonalty of the tari ne ment be tate to | Nees. WAMAGCa Dee ee eeaeiee | tunnguratton, ball” ootreetoe ee aneey Kellogg, but the statement has never been well | firine, and will make a valuable addition to any | publish an edition with Itallan text, 7 i library. —Mr. Charles Reade was to write for Miss . vil 3 vay: Pi Brown, San Francisco, Cal.; Hon. Henry Moore | Perhaps it is too late for the National Rifles to | authenticated as to either picture. There haye . = five ene ba Brometey — saver - pe Eaitens coor the rey a pete Teller, Central City, Col; Robert Strachan | 8dapt thelr projected armory partially to such also been many mks told of the fabulons THE PROBLEM. OF THE Poor. = of Quiet Genevieve Ward a version of his old piece en- books, the biographies of Hannibal and Sir Woe, | pay the import duties on the ground of the un- | Innes’ Minneapolls, Minn; Hon. Buren Robin. | af object. prices realized by Mr. Bierstadt for some of his Sew York: orcs, Howard & Hubert. Washing- | tiled “‘Art” (1855), with Anne Oldfield for hero- t = b, . iy . Will you allow me to correct that portion of | immense canvases, but these stories also lack ton: A. Bi & ine. This subject is well ki t Beluse cantante: can tae eet ae | ome one cE 0 the «Tae the (gay. | som bberman, Vinton Towa oo .4.Bvs" article by informing the many read: | confirmation “Mane at thie ators woe ace As may be inferred from the title, the sketches | under the nace of san wohnee Cy Dapligit i eo ee Co aot ae Teele ae Ga ates aaa Lane impo tere ad POLITICS IN THE SOUTH. ers of your valuable paper that the National | made under ee circumstances, and not al-| which make up this volume are not pleasant | Which Bracegirdie is the female saint. with the seclusion of his rustic fife, were all- | bring suit in the Circuit Court, and thus finally — ane Feat pies ones th eee oe ee ese ‘ota, | Teading, but none the less ought they to be read. | —At the May dramatic festival tn Cincinnati nature to the intensity of song, and the si i icket Named—The Colo ‘1 i fi t ® reserved seat for each lation of his fancy to flights of poetic sublimity. | question can be brought directly before the| Ete, Fee musio hall will measure 58 by 08 feet in the | ia believed that the highest price ever pald for | Important problem, and anything which alas in the y i a. i C Ce clear, and will have adjoining it all the neces- | the work of an American artist in open market, | Solving it, as the author aims to do, deserves it performances. At the auction sale, the Cire = baer pret aeweris scares bik for raising ee mall rouguate te as Correspondence of THe EVENING STAR. sary dressing and retiring rooms, fitted up with | or, more strictly cpeaking, at auction, wasgiven | attention. : bids will be for a premium above the price of > o ie te ering, i pon od be co} ef ry i: sive, and if he was not the champion of English | House, but they can be altered or amended in the allthe modern improvements. It will be the | by the Corcoran Gallery for the justly celebrated | orp ocEAN. By Fawesr Ixaxnsoxt. Boston: D | the ticket, purchasers being limited to @10. Mempuis, TESN,, March 20. rose, he was most emphatically the master of | Senate, The new tariff law did in fact originate a ish vere. "“Andalthoush Lord Jefe de-| in the House as"a bite reduce tateralreve- | Maving been for nearly thre yearn the Mie By the time of the next presidential inau, cost €12,500, and that sum is likely as large a| Quite an amount of useful and entertaining | °f °°aon {ickets without stent of the, Eooden Rounces the undisciplined severity of his inveo- | nue. In the Senate it was amended so asto | sissipp! valley, from Memphis south, I have tion “Carroll Halt” ‘adjoining that of the Ne. fAgure a8 any painting by an American artist has | information relating to tides, currents va eae lan correspon’ dom : See ameteered eg an, Geslanates him | revise the tarlf. Now when the bill was re-| sounded numbers of the democratic host on the | HO" Gavel Hall” adjoining that of the Na-| fgure as any paintin Iiciicy actuaiy pall Gren. | Gama Giwiecat oe 5 Tached’ bee cat | Afusioal Review reports that Verdi still has the Sees Wie ae en nes | Coens to tee icuse = ‘a2 {0 al invasion of the | b}ect of the republican presidential ticket for | and by bullding a passageway tetween the wine | Cortate itis. that Ie wocla: bees ingly dil- | water’ will be foond tn cus tectcomety poate intention of enriching the stage with an opera Se Vor sae ee ee ee five of tint Taney oy | 1884, and considering the aubject from a repub- | dows of eadh ‘onilding” (ooth, being one Neca] | Galt bo ae ee oxcoedl bring ‘as | ond attractively illustrated volume made cy | Which will certainly be the finest and Postions greet force, mal. creat Gprit sad ones| GROPIad MEE Cee eee oe es not | lican standpoint, Ihave reached the conclusion | And only ten feet distan:) the twohalls wil fur- ever, EAL TC Real Sea, Skee Lene on | largely 1 not wholly from the authors meur, pombe tng pe pe oy wpenieon Faugs through (ac repiea Wr tart end cari | Hoceecoma mare Cane eet qu’ | thet the republican banner in 1864 should have | balls or any other large entertainmente,- Yoee | to ceupe tho prevent possessorof the “Niagara” | Dutions to that clever monthly Wide Awake. | confusion with the “Othello” of Hosalal. largest hall in the clty. Special attention has | painting of “Niagara,” by Church, which now Lothrop & Co. Washington: Wm. Ballantyne & | The auction sale begins on April 4, and the sale also been given to its heating and ventilation. | hangs in the main hall of that institution. This Son. * y the names of George F. Edmunds, of Vermont, | correspondent is also in error about the armory. | to part with AN HONORABLE SURRENDER. By Many Apaus.| — Henry E. Abbey has contracted with the hime! h 3. has | tion had It been honest and sincere; but havii i % (i a New York: Charles Scribner's Sous. Washinton hogs s peat ee SOWaE tf tema accomplished the object for which the resale | #oF President, and Rob’... Lincoln, of Iiliaol, | fe will be on the first oor, and wil beindepend | _ Beyond question the costliest painting in] Win Ballastyns @ Sono SOE *|“La Scala,” Milan, orchestra, consisting of great pathos, and great discrimination of char-| tions were devised, viz—to get the bill| for Vice President. Those two names would | ent of the music hall. The armory proper will the United States isthe Meissonier, entitled | The expectations formed in reading the be- seventy-six members, to bring them to this - acter.” in the hands ot a conference committee, the | bring out a vote that comprises a majority in Prot Please pubis tatiana ae 1807,” belonging to Mrs. A. T. Stewart. The | ginning of this story are not realized. Its fairly | country next season for the Metropolitan 0; Prof. Wilson, his chief biozrapher, pronounces | House receded and adopted the report of the the south when cast, and which has been almost National Rifles enterprise. price paid for it was $60,000, which is, in turn, | written, and the tone is unobjectionable, but | House. Signor Campanini (not the tenor) him “by far the greatest poet that ‘ever sprung | conference committee, thus passing the bill and | dormant for years, viz: the wing ana itore eet March 23. G.W.E. derstood to be the largest sum ever received | the plot is slight, the characters nut very clearly | be the musical director. re cee on uatet geen ora a parsea papitcan saat Mole ne Eamunds is Mmimricwiian | iy ita dlstingutshed “paletor te a fawie wore defined, the purpose a little misty, and there is | _—There will be a June musical festival in San i e , “a man in whose | is o a 5 y 0-day regarde he south as the purest an 5 . . 4 heart resides some effluence of wisdom, some | upon by the judiciary. It tsa question for the | ablest man in the ‘republieanranke | Wie caoe ‘he plotuire ts Ukerise minch the langest ML Mets | to0 ment diving after: Cie cenreeegsan yy — eg tat hail ern arareeentc utr tone of the “Eternal Melodies.’ politica’ power of the country to determine. It | cacy ot obedience to the law, irrespective of the | Silly Women Eating Arsenicfor Weeks | ®nler has painted, although it by no means tant wort of thing’ ofthe benioe re ae Ren ancre will be Wagner, Beethovenang He flourished and wrote in an age the most | is one purely of political discretion. When the wishes of party consistently pursued by him to Attain it. ranks among large or even ordinary canvases as rage i of ng. ot e — ie, who, L. nod nights. a sic in British bistory. A composer of verses | framers of the Constitution adopted that clause | throughout, and more especially in the contest covered by most other artists. Nor does it show ore ly worth the trouble she gives the author | —Thursday night ‘£50,000, a Story of Pluck,’ n childhood, to what dizzier altitudes of emi-| in relation to bills raising revenue originating | made by Mr. Pinchback, of Louisiana, for a scet Speaking of weakposs of the gentler sex, | 1% Painter at his best. It seems, in fact, to illus- | and her readers. ce might he not have attained had he been | in the House it was Just after the controversy in| in the Senate, at atime when the vote of Mr. peaking Df g | trate the limitation of his powers, rather than to MARY BURTON ABROAD. By Pawer. Boston. D. es 3 x . 3 . D. dienee. ‘Th entirely depends to maturer years! Literally, his life was | England as to the rizht of the lords and the| Edmunds, cast in favor of Pinchback, would | 5855 _® Cleveland correspondent, I met my | display them. It contains a great number of| Lothrop & Co Weehingose We Ballantyne & pepo _—— be whe o it manhood or old age. and his writings | crown to levy taxes. With the erroneous idea | have given him the seat and have given the re- | friend, the doctor, yesterday, and as he and I | figures, and portrays intense action, whereas pera ‘1 t of f “ thin psc “qed ors 4 rere) reer 4 Rea iilttle else than “a poor wutilated fraction | that the Senate would bea sort of house of | publican party a longer lease of power in the | stood and surveyed the passing show, a plump, | Meissonler’s strength lies In single figures, or | Animaginary account of foreign’travel, based natisinttion Of thee seoneu rage coe, of what-was in him While his prose produc- | lords that provision was inserted. The Senate | Senate. But with courage and regardless of | fair woman passed by, and I said to him: “What | Small groups, in repose, and in careful manipu- | on the reading of descriptive books, written at | and sal ose present & sense tions abomnd In namerous scintillations of | 1s purely @ democratic body and nothing like | the prayers and commands of hie party asso | unromae Be plexion!” “short-lived,though, | lation and brilliant colors. Atter this expensive | home, by one little girl, for the benefit of an- | tional drama, and attaiued considerable success Piquant humor. zraceful imazery and native | the house of lords. The constitutionality ot the | clates, he rose far above partizanship: and voted in London. my dear boy,” quoth he. I expressed surprise, | ¢™ample, oll paintings by foreign artists which | other. As such it may have served its yurpose eloquence, his title to fame will rest exclusively | law cannot be questioned.” against the admittance of Mr. Pinchback. His | for my Since wes young. eraenie! Talbot! vost from papa down to $10,000 are by no | fairly well, but there hardly seems to be ment cf, —————————————— Upon his songs. And it cannot be denied that saPanseiceuliva news OF ataance course brought upon his head the vials of party | arsenic,” said he, calmly. “Then it dawned upon | means unusual In private collections in tha | preserving it in th he was the most «raphic of all our poets andthe a # i! is anent form, when re-| HOW TOM BOWEN WAS OUTWIT: " wrath towhich he paid not theslightest regard, | me what he meant. Resuming, he said: “Its | larger cities, although of course they are not cords of actual Gapeceaes and observation are "TED. most intensely natural and poetic. It recked him | Says: “The Idea of the law being treated as un-| continuing to act as his conscience directed. use Is increasing. Women eat it in two plenty. WY ate Ble pened 80 plenty. : pat ttle what his subject . whether ‘Lines | constitutional Is absurd. If the House of Rep-| That one act has never been forgotten by the | forms; the white powder, that caused poor | Mr. W. H. fel a tact Who Took to Poor Mailie,” “The Mountain Daisy,” or | resentatives passed any revenue bill at all, | people of Loutsiana and the south gencrally. | Jers Geena death, or arsenious acid, af the | Of its clasa in this country. Fora water colorit | Readers of the brilliant and scholarly re- eatin sfdascg samy yg tee his | eer ara ayia apr on the destruction | \hether of customs or revenue, the Senate has, | The news of the elevation of Senator Edmunds | drug dealers have it, and Fowler's solution, Ronee neice wk Centtenee te _ of books printed in the heron, be issues of ”" ee: - ace ee bitation o! ne 5 i - ig " e ches. v's 5 ot , hat itation of the field ee, oe bee Dee under its constitutional power of amendment, | ‘® the Presidency ofthe Senate was received | which the pharmacoposla says is a mixture of the New York Sup will be glad to know that here with satisfaction as a just recognition. The | arsenic with potash ina fluld form. Either way | Spanish cathedral. It includes numerous fg-| their author, Mr. Mayo W. Hazeltine, is to pub- | #*0™ the Kansas City Times. des and perme-| the right to include any article of revenue; to | nomination of Mr. Lincoln in conjunction with | of taking areeala produces the plumpness of face ures, and is characterised throughout by the | jish shortly, through Menics. Scribner, acollec- | Whilst the papers are recounting reminis- wered him with | include articles not now dutiable, and make| Senator Edmunds would have a two-fold | snd bornty of complexion that you noticed in | brilliant coloring and striking effects for which | tion of his critioal essays in @ volume entitled | cences of Tom Bowen, the Senator-elect trom ie compensation, | them so, and to take articles from the free list | effect; first, 1t will secure to the re- yon fair lady. Its influence Is princtpally on the | Villegas is justly noted. This was bought from | “Chats About Books.” Colorado, some of the pioneers of Corydon, this erach waste of an uncompleted | and make them dutiable. The power of the | publican Party tho colored vote, | capillary surface of the skin, which pro- | the Sy anor i) otetsarn ddemee | AOR Say pepe 15th street,we have the | state, remember him as having practiced law nd epistie to Lapraik he said: Senate to amend a revenue Dill is absolite,'and| 1 believé solldly. The part will not | duces the plumpness. In plain English, | between $80,000 and $40,000, thongh the first it car * ated tat rr ‘atnre’s fire, to deal with the entire subject after it otice gets | have this under other leaders, for I can assure | water {8 the influence at work, and in the | Hamed sum is probably nearest the traeamount. handsomely illustrated catalogue of the notable | here when the town was yet in its intancy. hat’s a’ the learning I desire,” a revenue bill from the House, even though the You that the-colored vote in the future must be | end it shows itself. The skin assumes a — Although a picture by Millet brought the | exhibition of the Philadelphia Society of Etchers, | amusing anecdote, which is well vouched for, is sh and bountiful | House bill should affect only one or two atti’ éd'as'an independent factor in politics. watery transparency, which in its turn gives D lately held in that city related of the future Senator, who was then a Ing, luminous interest: Hedepueivce with a glow-| cles.” Mr. Dunn farther thinks the new tarift| Tis ‘has béen cleatly demonstrated by their | way fo ghastiiness dad whitening of theiine Pane Badr a ahd Te ie SS lawyer in embryo—a ort of legal fledgling. One Ing, luminous interest irrespective ot its hum- | law will not reduce very materially the réyénues | vote In the last state elections In the south, | That is the awakening from the blissful dream. | tte Runkle collection, in New York, yi LAWRENCE BARRETT IN WasHe|of the wealthy and nent citizens of Dievess, insignifiance and simplicity. Of the government. because of Increased Iinpor-| where they voted Iatgely for democrats and re- | Beauty vanishes and the end comes. Horrible? | price it sold for,—€8,850,—is comparatively low, : pane tah nc nhenbeentier aa Deo, ‘0 soul could sink beneath his love,— tations, which may be anticipated. | publicans under the guise of “People’s Tickets,” | Oh, no! I call it retribution. Cynical? Perhaps! | as Millet’s go now adays., A singular craze for P: — finally resulted in @ divorce jot even angel blasted; ————————-e-—_____ thus ignoring'the straight ticket, and carrying | but plain truth generally is, my dear boy, in | nis works has existed for some time past in this ‘When Hf mortal power could scar above country and in Framce, and It ishardiy safe to ‘whe sce 0 x bo AGALEN GAMING. the “People’s” banner to victory. But should| these days of ours. Arsenic eating can be The pride that ail outlasted. WHE LAW AGAINST GAMEN the son of “Abe” Lincoln be @ candidate, they | stopped at any without an effort, except Marathon, Blenheim, Pultowa, Valmy. All would give him a strong and wil:ing support. | that which ity dreads. It hi of th mee poet od — w= cage mt nd From the Philadelphia Press. " ial i= hat which vani as NONE ie 80) al ion un well man- might remain forever bnersstalized, but “The Stringent and Comprehensive. Secondly. The people of this Valley, Irrespective | soporific effect olopiam or morphine. Used! as Heel conditions. It is safe to Predict, however, | washington,” sald Lawrence Barrett ‘ ounde e” and “His Mare Mag- teraz of color or party, can never forget the service edicine it is an excellent tonic, one of the A its in- é gle” The following ts the full and correct text of | rendered thei by Secretary Lincoln in the howe | peut een : tritale More om one rcportion £2 its in| yecome a delightful elty. and some day will be | out his knowledge, and “Who prance that dar wr muckle pfide as she| the law to suppress gaming, ete..in the Dis-| of their distress, when the dark waters of the pure hame bis bride,” debts which he was compeiled to pay, ‘* How long can arsento be used before it pro- | of pleasure it will actually yleid to ite possessor | the social metropolis of this country. It is ad- Gamoomtuity eonekea be trict, passed at the late session of Congresg, It | flood roiled at their doorsteps, threatening life | duces the ighastliness you speak of?” I asked as coapatel with that forded b ‘many other | mirably adapted for the homes of people of re- a 4 Ny — must be enthroned in pathetic song. His poetry has been published once in Taz Star, but we | #24 limband destroying their homes and chattele, my mentor. works costing farless money. But a certain set | snement, culture and leisure, ‘and society there | was dignified the peasant’s home and its lowly int it to meet a general demand to learn ite | €V¢" the child in its imocher serms pesiahing. for| “Six weeks’ unbroken dosing will do the must have a Millet, orseveral of them, no mat- ‘ In their ranks he grew, In their soil | Feprint it to cs C 0 le SoH: guith none to help, because all were strick- | work well and effectually,” answered he; “but | ter how high they come, and. it ie by'no meena | ASCosmopolitan characteristics already. I have of tan teeen ‘ated.and his loving sympathies strength- en. Secretary Lincoln, by his prompt action in| woman Is skillful, and, using it a week, she unlikely that the they come the more | bought property there, and expect it to as 2 nid clevated them in their hours of penu-| | Be t enacted, ete, That every person who shall, | using the government vessels at his command te pauses, and before the effect of the cessation | they will be want Tt is the thing to have man : il. in ie ee (reins we ap or kere any | convey food and clothing to the destitute peo- | comes she-takes anothef interval of arsenic | them, and the fewer the who are able to w S that, the peasantry exult to | FING of water’ for the peered oe ene ghiace, O8 | ple, regardless of the fact that he waa acting | dosing. hus fate is held off. The end must | get them the more waesble they appear in me Know and feel th they have had such treasures | piime-qevies commonly calied &, 6G. fare Mane, | Without authority of law, and showed that if come, however, and it comes ‘all too soon for | some eyes. Millet’s pictures are generally the choice. My sojourn there in er o them by es, an i bs si itwitted both her husband and the lawyer. E. O., roulette, equality, keno, thimbles cr “ittlé | Was the man and not the ‘official that spoke in | tt ic eaters, Some eyster ith and there 1s a senti- | the last days ot the congressional session was | OU! {hat the poor man, as he breathes id name of | joxer," or any kind of gambling table or gambling | considering that one sufferer ‘released one 1 | tue arsenic eat Seine toate dali) [ATV VE ar the dr n others, bi Ww admii calculated to | marked by the pleaggntest Burns, holds up his head with an honest, manly | device, adapted, devised, and desizned or the pure | ward ample enous for the fake tee aes ihe ane eee Verily) wae a ene ee and eating eet epecially of | particular enjoyed the receptions at the White ‘ ae Dut In Gettyhag | BrOperey OF ho aed Sada eae momeY oe PE et eit ere ae oppertu- | sald, “Vanity, thy name is woman.’ ” the umbler sorts, together, with a wonderfully ee cent Ss IRR good Show gohan = ors ot Or y “4 nity offer em, 80 Tew: im that he an astonishing thing,” of nature in her quiet moods. | 80 tleman to-the core. called Tae te fantinad Datriot was he, not- | Soushe table or gampling Goes: Coe eee | wlll feel that the “oread, cast upon the yore ovat “tnt aaeL weg Wit uae | tee Thodeling ‘wan good. and ‘iis drawing | Mrz. ‘McElroy, © woman of ‘excellent ‘poles a barber-shop in a certain town in this county ing the fact that when an exciseman the keeper thertot, shail, on conviction, | has, indeed, returned multiplied an hundred | I'had'a trend who was an enthetarthe ceene, strong, though not always well: defined, but | 8d social tact, received with the as- on the occasion of a too-too wedding. * - aged guilty of a misdemeanor. and shall bé | fold. My view on this subject may seem vision- | He had preseryed.e lot of che - ures We n while his 'sub-| sistance of twenty-eight aon preserved ¢ of Tries in an arsen- | his figures were usually coarse, and ft teresti Well,” said the barber to the usual crowd.ef Chie | Erawned by Imprisonment for a teri not more | ary, but I fully and earnestly believe {t will, upon | ical solution, and having no further use tor | jects, if not actually repulsive, were not in — Rhend pyre ED eaigan “i geom th aie peices of bie | eee mat e rson who shall, in the Dis- | 2Véstigation, be found a truthful statement ot | them threw them, one morning, from his labor- | themselves pleasing or elevating. To the latter | that I could ay to every one of them: ‘I know | loungers 8 place, “ uty: HMWAE | cic or Goldman been it any gating | tHe situation and condition of affairs. atory window. A*rambling porker, on the look- | obgervation there are however some marked | your father, your your grandfather— off thisevening.” —~ «Of Bannockburn, ‘where the | (ticho Columbia, Knowingly permit any gaming * | out “for edible trifies, saw them drop, and look- | exceptions. Still, the general sentiment herein mee nar 11. fell before the columns of | Purpose of gaming in any house, butlding coe ey-Making Devices. ing them over, Contrasting them with the | expressed holds ¢rue, © There. are perhaps. is im Wins ee shed, booth, shelter, lot or other premises to him | To the Editor of Tax Evexmne Sram. usual expangé of tile, brickbat and old tin | handred examples of Millet In this country. pe pirting — ail sche posseannatn Chant aan ee hath} Please let me know through your columns | cans on which it had been his daily wont to'| and yet is safe to say that a gone ok & A good thing is related as having occurred ia ~ oe “ay tho hether the recent browse, eagerly swallowed them. My friend n that could be named ayuas Rhine ae ; uw was alarmed, and visions of bill for the value tee ‘was realized by the artist for the whole | sent daughter. Locteye tress leet rer 7 | of. dead and unestable Dlg Tose like @ specter | number now on thieside of tte Atlantic. reap gor - ‘it Let us do, or die, Sec. & That every person who shall, in the Dis-| 80ld as prize season tickets at tairs for charit- showghe toate Bee its dost iene aoe be it rg Take ‘Millet’s ponte paella Bienen dlp frlct of Ccpumbia, deal, play or oF be in able ae erp Once. oy, 9, dolug you will Haid at his door if the pig was not there when tt | Lie paintings, and let them cesses ol 8 ‘ anger , Or | greatly ol mi jour cons! fe Sa pecan b pereaed” wae as Fee ut 2a | tT Smet an | re” Sil ted an are pli ade waa Ge exvengy ana : 3 he act referred to 1s reprinted in anothi E for Drink” and “The Aly Fue wen deo gino practise aha conviction terec?, Snait’is | mation. Of ite eederae fore general Infor Sono ere pr sre: my te and the esteem riage is to take ~ w editor oa - by repay gayet ene es fine not exceeding yee faa an soreen dewat devieren Choa. and Peniboy Seger ae meant bares alpen . Bec, 4 Thi devic pouty ent can, however, read the isw for himself, and sateen wie iiottaset, a ade tdigery phd Ae held cr the presvure of @ Dine Hank ‘bail ithe is not satistied with his own interpretation pig's con" 2cicein Re ee nee cneainen nanan of “it was God-thrilied and God-an- table wasnin | Of tt he can employ s lawyer to on Ineo it; or | arsenical cherries stron<or inah ever.” z Es P he may experimental know! — iar of ait his ballader cade Patho sort it | vent the the devigerhe Ler and seuting eae hens ‘Seared to Death by the False ‘Prophet. as his sweetest and tenderest lyric. “Holy geen From the Clovelind Leader. Willie's Prayer” is the most terrible of / “No, the “Tm f st ‘A bright ttle twelve-year-old girl has dled west,’ Pm the fellow that ls to be satires. and the “Jolly Beze-xs* the most wife. ey Fee a a ee ee thea rah sso ie dramatic. At times he 's ‘wild and stormy, as | Scexm ynow A VAUDEVILLE which caste much | Wrenn the he hd pnd Nets Swe great reader | in “Mecxpherson’s Farewell;” a:-ain ral | light on the situation in France: storms and became intensely cxeited as the time and plaintive, as in his lines’ to the Warbling | "stot us be 0 ig prspeey a px wae hr th DS Sank eg P Se canes nee nn Dare seareaiee not bate nspe dpc os ia oe ae cpt command censire as as ‘or aid

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