Evening Star Newspaper, June 16, 1883, Page 2

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2 - THE EVENING STAR: WASHINGTON. ‘SAPURDAY. ; i - NEW ¥ hen Vignanx °made! his of NEW HOUSES. CITY AND DISTRICT. ae ae eee a eee oe LETTER FROM ORK. 7 ao % = ae De rans —— = = *. from the gov af 80 mush = ipped to’ all the 3 Handcome Residences im Course of nk 4 y. is too “tl iil be peg plunder. SHE FISHING SQUABBLE AGAIN. Sins ate ee ; "sth way of Mr. McGlory’s Glory—Mrw. Vanderbilvs z get up a os ee vag Construction—The Columbia Meights and ret Veraic Says Gunty. Nets, load of small fish are destroyed at every hauling. | Carricle— The Clab Tro for; he billlard ‘men, Itke Property and People whe Intend to departi The Popul ‘oraict ney. Se Judge, unanimously brought in a verdict | army and consider ing that can be stoles Z z Seines, Trap Nets and G is ‘at turnof the} Captain Padger d the ed the services of ‘all the e: Build There, &c. ago by acommittee of the | From the Chicago Tribune. fide by ali the canoe in ane neste in and day,| bert bers Failure—A Swell Kilep- | contests can only be hadi when they will result Ev. x adds to the list of Reese Representatives, composed of mem-| qe verdict which has been found will satinty Meeting an old seine-hauler a few day since, | during the season of shad running. The sein¢| tomanine—The Billiard Champion- | to the profit of tle bigmhanufacturers. This has ery weel of elegant the star route gang, but {tt will satisfyno one who had about two weeks ago “‘cut-out” from | men try and make the pubhiethink that trap and| ship, Etc. got to be so bad with planos that It has lost its | which have been put under contract, This else. There is not a person of intelligence im his lower river shore, dismantled his cabins, | gill fishing is the most destructive to the fish. - oa force. We are so used to seeing every — year will contributé greatly to the beauty of the ae the country who has not believed them to be Glsmissed his mea and returned home ‘‘with- | Gill nets are not 60 much used on the Potomac | «1.1 comespondence of Tux kvaxtwe Brix. advertised as the best fi the universe, ani {ne | northwestern part of ‘the city, where most of guilty from the beginning, and there is not ® - z as they were before trap nets came into gen- pon PeCasrene OL ene aniiale anid CIPIOINAS WORE | ae ofatly Mouses ure belng erected. 4 _ Out means,” as he stated, “of quaring his so-| C1 usy ‘but all of the gill and trap nets pur to. New Youx, June 15, 1888 | haye ever been lagued that we no longer belleve ing But the verdict of intelligence who doea not believe = counts,” he remarked, “ply to the question | gether are not so destructive to fish as one| I went down to Billy McGlory’s celebrated | the advertisements. po, too, when we see all MR. PAGE'S NEW HOUSE. must be held to’show conclusively that the ah ——, alt rata e J a . of “what luck?” “it's no use. I've been in the | large seine. ee as now made and used | dance house a few nights ago, and was treated | the prominent Gperati¢ people's names affixed | fr, Harvey L. Page, of the firm of Gray & ieee “fp = — . 4 =< conspiracy to bres bar mar euity > —— hy fishing business forty years, and It's played out. | Is of recent origin. It is made of the eame kind | 5, that gentieman with courtesy and hospital- ae a cette ae aed coal oe Page, who recently sold his residence on Dupont ud it between the defendant oe gecchiy atcomtea tt Se hensd, tak a The way I feel now is that its the last trip T | Ther of ning fe and is oni isle nies | ity. His placo is in Hosterstreot, just off the | Piano n question, no matier what make, e the | s:')"p Oeuatse gs Gow to abou te harangues of canting counsel, but upon the ’ shall make. I think serioasly of turning my at- | Complicated. If ts’ usually flaed once’ a day | Bowery. ‘The locality Is not aristocratio nor ex- | to any other plano, we smile incredulously, and | begin the fefeeee teat aoe hein re testimony that bears upon the plain charge. It tention to somethin, else,and if I could get any- | with a dip net from a boat, and the fish taken | clasive—in fact it Is pretty tough. The reason | examine the piano for oureclves. But though | Use on , near Connecticut aven! will h front f 89 feet, and will be tw: has not been affected by the quibbles, pretenses: 0 thing near what my ‘lay-out’ cost me I'd be a | out without any damage, and nothing but shad | 1 went to Billy McGlory’s was not because he | the plano has monopolized a fair part a the pole mite] pero g tee ont will ‘be laid | Both the ion and ti court are open and delays of the law. happy man. As it is now, there’s thousands of | and herring removed, all the small ae being kept @ dance house, but because I wanted to sneer 6 Ge peor ee base Aouad vrai ineel red brick with coteo enta- | to crit ral pets itting the trial to a euianans Chauhan mena fen errpee npg beset epee 4 oboe FT traps “should bo | #22 the man, who, despite his reputation for | iard-tabie manutoterers tara: eterna ee tion, and will present @ handsome appearance. |to point where probably it would have Deen | ernment Never Oomvicts ite Great ‘agninst me for this year’s fruitless efforts, and | the only methods allowed for fishing on | wickedness and immorality, had proved himself | makers one better. The billiard table men have | The interior will have a cen’ dificult for some of the jurymen to render an| Regues. e ; Bo encouragement ahead. Their doesn’t appear | the Potomac, especially on the upper shores. |to be manly, self-sacrificing and heroic. He | now secured all of the prominent billlardists. 4 impartial and intel! verdict, It they had] The Chicago Times says, In regard to the vere i 1 4 Siosson by | €fn style. The cost of the house will be €9.000. | been so disposed. very character of the ‘that it takes to be any more fish in the river. With oue or two | The size of meshes to gill nets tor herring 18 2% | saved the life of a girl who was the victim of a | Vignaux Is owned by one firm and y dict in the star route trial, nobody weptions among the thousands of fishermen | inches, and 90 meshes ona line from the corks fanawiy horse on the road, and he did it at the | othe». Slosson will not play Vignaux unless | THE NEW FLATS AND THE NEW CLUB HOUSE, the case, while made in the business, all have sunk thelr means—| to the leads or from top to the bottom: the i : ise. There is probably not one intelli- he plays on the table in whose Interest he (Slos-| The new flats house at the corner of 17th | Clear, should be presented in as compact a shape | Dy Surpri thrown it overboard—and are by far worse off | same for the catch of shad, 53 inch meshes and | direct risk of his own life. In fat, it wasa risk | son) is hired; and Vignaux's owners make the | ang streets is completed as far as the second | 8% Possible. It may be that the defendants owe, | gent American citizen who has given any atten- than when they cast their first net in the| from 60 to 100 meshes from corks to leads. | that few men among the million or more in New | same restriction in favor of their own tables. in part, to this ce & verdict which | tion to the proofs in the case who has an: bt - story, and the building is being put up In ® | witt not affect the Judgment of the public. ‘They dof “geil ring. There is also a seine for the catch of sturgeon, | York would care te take. When I spoke to| The result is that the two men will not be very solid and substantial manner. The work that the fendante are “guilty as i tints thes season any worse than that of last the meshes Gee are 8 font Care MeGlory about it he sald: allowed to cross cues. te being. pushed forward rapidly and the build- | C&P the penalties of the law, but they cannot | +1. inaictment. Rat, between a universal con- yeer?” as ‘HE =TAR reporter. ese are fis! from ottor escape general condemnation. viction of their guilt’ and even a very limited “I would rather not speak about that. The A SWELL KLEPTOMANIAC. ing will probably be in readiness early in the gu “Yes, far worse, especiaily for the seine-haul- | river, where they are sunk with floats at trath about-young | fall. On’ the corner, diagonally opposite, the aaa ; expectation that their guilt would be formally ems, who have so much invested In their ‘lay- | top, to indicate when a sturgeon is in| whole thing {s over estimated. If that is wat renee - ans ot aete sae cb aa new house of the Metropolitas. club is nearly i mirake'a! @ Long Trial. Geclared by the verdict of a jury under the forme ut;” then their running expenses are so much | the trap. These are the feo devices for | is called bravery, I wish I had a ehance to do . ae that completed and the work on the interior is now | From vening Post. of law there is the widest imaginable margin. wevier than these gill and trap men.” fishing In the Potomac. There are others used every day in the year. I like the exercise, As} Man and talked with him will admit at once thai in ress, The escape of Brady and Dorsey is most un- | Though Carlyle held that the chief end of gov- “Bat you seine men aroawsy down below the in ce Cieeaveaks bay; ee Seley vaen once tor it being heroic, it is all infernal nonsense. | he 1s not quite reliable. papoose ae park . itis s expected Ad begin the erection of ae fortunate; but what is more unfortunate still is | ernment is to expedigiously exterminate the lers and trappers. and you ought to get. the | net,” or seine, to ranaround a school o ly idiotic, he is certainly frivolous and fool- | flats Ing at tne corner oi ani Se giakilte shad aod aerriag oken they | seen on the surface, and which usually scoops | Any man in my place would have done the same | lutely idio! a cone ig that the effect ot the two star route trials has | Seat rogues, it is not for such an end that gov- come up from the bay and ocean,” put in Tus | them all in. Yom ean depend upon it that the | thing.” tah, and It Is well known he hias been & victim of | ete ane te a iate Tenet and It will Te | been, not to make an example of anybody, ut | Fament in this country is admin fa a2 seine haulers are doing all the mischlef to the} He refused to talk about the miatter further | kleptomanta for years, He isa quiet, modest- | Tulre year P) rather to draw people to the conclusion that the A Farce and = Burlesque. “There's where you're mistaken. It used to | fishing interests.” than to disclaim all credit for any heroic action, | looking young man, with clear brown eyes and SEB et erlang dry crnclgere cecing grid [Sy ey EE be so once, but isno longer that way. We don’t SS whenever the subject was brought up. He did | gentle manners. He takes the disgrace of being | The improvements on Columbian Heights are i ad that By De Dir braec | She werliich weak be: excepted an ene ot the toe get the first dip at the fish at all; the gill nets J cnelingly Latent hag entertain snt was | tls sincerely and honestly, and evidently thinks | expelled Hear ee, and’ Groket club | belng.pushed forward rapidly, and mew houses | less. and that F ploen lament Satin taer pea expliaas Hamer cos ey anon eee are spread out miles and miles way below the | An exceedingly interesting entertainment was | that his deed is overpralaed. It is curious that | very much to he: ut can ofies are going up on all sides. A large force 0: men. a pe pots otra te tae ¥mouth of the river, | given at Mrs. J. L. MoGee'sachool for girls, 1110 | a man of McGlory’s fame should be at heart so Tor his various the! s. The tact ae 4 Bo oh ate at ook grading Roanoke street, and as ae hee ome i bilo ever con- | Guently produces, and which are doing #0 much and even into the Chesapedke bay—there’s not | 1, street, last Wednesday evening. Asstated by | courageous and modest, for he is certainly, de- | sonable to suppose that a man o! ue hi . ipretp oon as this is completed John Sherman and his | * 7,4 conclusion, too, has mally fore- | bring that venerable “palladium of civil & yard of space not covered; and about the | the principal. it was not a commencement. More | SPite his position and surroundings, one of the | position and connections would steal little ‘ shoals and bars in the bay, anywhere near the P : the erection of four villa rights” into cont the actual m rly. it was the last of Mrs, MeGee's even. | ost retiring men I ever mot. His place 1s a| things like silver watches and small sums ol Taldeate Te herein That connection ‘eitt | {28 itself upon the public mind that, although | rihts’ contempt. Of ual moral fiver approaches, every yard is curtained off | Properly. vi = = with will nets, and the fish, if there are any, are | the administration was honest in its determina- | guilt of the accused there can be and ts no : for dancing. “Xaallery guns acted the onion | chances of detection’ were ten toon” Ducts | be made with the stand-pipe at the head of 16ch | qtmcquytuaeresion vas honest in ts determina. | gullt But, clear as the moral guilt may ings with her girls, for the present, an evening | for dancing. A gallery runs around the hall at | chances of detection were ten street, and water brought over in pipes, Mr. ©. | Hon to punish the r oa ae ee oral gultt may headed off from an entrance to the river, | that was graced with flowers, that sparkled with | a height of about 12 feet from the floor. It is a | thefts have covered a period of four years, and W. Hill, the owner of the Columbian college ern Ls 3 apr mre ae ble oe wes hes fest wy! — = ho | ecgd joul and do not enter it in numbers, as be- | pright thoughts, and showed most gratifying ad- | typical New York dance-house. All sorts ofmen | yet the amount of money taken 1s very small, property, having consented to. allow the pipes | ° aap chias inated Over eis montig | rom,the first whether the fuct of a conspiracy fore these obstructions were pat there. | wiht thoughts, and showed most gratifying ao | oe ee ere ance house. All sorts every | when compared with what, he might have done. | Foye iald through his omg erte. concern. case has lasted over six could be legally established. “Enough consiger- fore ese obstrac’ x nes matter | Yaucement in the work of the year. The instru- night and while away the hours until 6 or 7 | He has been disgraced. The chances are that he | “py, @ p J. Colburn has soid his residence on and ts one of the longest Jury trials on agete ation has not been given to the point, to which of tishin, iy think there's lots of money in it, | mental music by Misses Katie Gilman, Mary De- | ¢ clock in the morning. Politicians, ngpvspaper | will never get over it; but the fact Is, as I have Corcoran street, and will beain. soon the erec- | Yet eversbody soe eed Dees flap We have often called sttention, that Congress and, as gill nets are inexpensive, paratively, | pew and Lola Goodall was excellent, the young | men, rounders of all sorts, and many swellsfrom | stated, that he is not responsible for his actions. | tion of a beautiful residence on Clifton street. pectin A fi af making ft oe ae cope ip beh dl al o> loos and placed. to seines, they I manage to get a web or | ladies showing great skill and confidence. The | the upper part of the city, visit McGlory’s just to Se, eee oe Tnero will be 8 or 10 rooms in the house, | By extending the time of trial, by occupying, | tack “ateen sretion department, that there two of gill nettin d_a boat or two to trall | essays, the short articles in the ‘Weekly Re- | see the man and his famous dance-house.. The LITERARY NOTES. which will cost $6,000. The grounds are to be | ®3, apa, Dok wenks, with adinnsens to thejury, Tiight be robbery which wes ot abeing them. This isthe reason so many go nto the | corder” and the recitations were crisp and | women dance with absolute abandon, and there laid out tastefully, and thisresidence will be one | ana arrumentedeed ertterce and weet Seiad In ooeeee Cee ee business. Thousands of Idle men, who never | bright. The Misses Mary King, Mattie Barron, {1s no attempt at propriety or’ decorum, sees . acco caught a fish, go inevery year, but the most of | Mazgie Lammond. Edith Bai ASSAGES' FROM THE AM"RICAN NOTE-BOOK | of the notable improvements of the heights. e = Ninnle Crow- | Ail of the waiters in the place ara fighters of | ” “OF NATHARInL HAWAHORNE, Bonn! foun | Mrs, Sounders, a daughter of Col. Whiting, | GIrerabted trom the'men wate at rey are | disagree Eilers Gresmelbaclanges Oaee them are yiad to vet their money back, this year | ell and Meta Newbold deserved the sincere ap- | pronounced ability, but they all fear McGlory. ton, Miftin® Co. Washington: Robert Be: U.S. A., has bouzht a large double lot on 14th, | Gisttacted from ale Dain of igene, and Le | Galley. Att ra farce and a especially.” : plause they received. One essay, entitled “The | Hecan knock out any of his men, and hence PASSAGES FROM THE FRENCH ANDITALTAN | near Clifton street, and will shortly begin the Aopeliens LV erers we saooclialla, ri rites agan: eee ee Che eget’ Gerling In numbers of | Golded Age; or, When I Was a Girl,” was a gem | they respect him. When he and his employes | NOTE: PONE otha ENE. | erection of a handsome house. Nard prcedes er nt alg) identi z fish caught this year has been the Increased | in its way, and well read; also a short and sharp | get together they can knock out any gang that ert Bosll. : strug- aber of giller and trapp : : i MR. DAVID KING'S NEW RESIDENCE. gle of wits between a lot of sharp ‘counsel”—a mong the specially fine ances v 5 on e re. It ain't nothing else; the | recitations, In German ar French, by the puplis | gangs to create a disturbance, and they | Hawthorne’s complete works will not have the | King, of New York, on Connecticut avenue, | and decide which si garoiasg! = with them; you see how it is !n | who have been under Prof. Arthur Grabowsku’s | are generally accommodated with a fight | interest for the general reader possessed by | near N street. The building will be three sto- ‘the Jury System in Danger. it's the further you | tuition the past five months. These were ‘*Hek- | if they desire one. It is somewhat significant | those which have preceded them, but they have | ries and a basement high, with French roof and : S fog over the meaning of words. The term go down: and t itself is xetting to be cov- | tor's Abschied,” Schiller, by Misses L. Patterson | that the gentle William always comes out ahead | 9 value in being, as the editor expresses it, “re- | dormer windows, a two-story bay window sur- | From the New York Mail and Express. z ad red with then ® fish are not permitted to | and Jessie McDonald; “Der Erlkonig,” Goethe, | in the fistic encounters. He does not look like positorles of the most informal kind, forsuch |™ounted by an’ ornamental wrought-iron bal- | _ Whether or not the failare ot Justice in these Beep ied a to or ohiere — pass into the river, and are driven away from | by Misses Bailey, Jeffrys.Crowell, Patterson and | a fighting man, but he has terrific hitting power, - te ads cony, and a projecting entrance ornaments the | star route trials has been due to the ignorance, | 8d Spanish sombreros on the theater stage, the spawning ground, to flad other places. It's | MeDonald; “L¢Hirondelle”” Lamartine, Miss | and his reputation 1s greet among the toughs. | fragments of observation and reflection as the | front, which s of pressed brick, with Hummels- | ontat Imbeellity or rum soaked condition of | Cut-throats or dynamiters, has clearness; but the infernal gili nets and trap nets; nething else. | MeCo'lum: “La Corbeau et le Renard,” La Fon- | Every Sunday night he gives over his place to a | writer chose to commit to them for hisown pur- | town’ brownstone trimmings. The frontage is Jurymen, or to bribery, or to what not, the ver- | when the Judge instructs that “overacts” must Some of these fellows would try to make it ap- | taine, by Miss Williams; “La Tombe et la Rose,” | missionary named Jerry McCauley, who has es- pose: as the results, too, of an early-formed | 25 feet. The interior will be handsomely fitted | Gict will be received by the American people | be proved upon well-to-do-citizens in plain ear that the s he cause of Keeping the | Victor Hugo. by Miss Jordan; Oiscanx.2 | pecially devoted himseif to the work of saving | taste for exercising his pen upon the simplest | Up- The cost of the house is $80,000. Mr. R. 1. ish down; this with indignation, disappointment and disgust. ‘ a It didn't use to | Beranger, Miss Kent; “Une toile,” Alfred de | falling women. Billy gives him the whole place objects of notice that entrounded him.” ‘Doubt. | Fleming is the architect. Tt would not take meny such costly and dis. | Clothes and apparently on good terms with #o- be so twenty or th en | Musset, Miss Patterson. In the delivery ot | free of charge, turns on the electric lights, fur- , searcely any device y certainly it Is Fiver is cover front ot this ¢ It was evident in the question asked by that Washington jury of the court, pending their deliberations, that they had got into a hopeless clety, no doubt-the instructions carried chaos : ; y shoul TWO HANDSOME STORES. failures to put the ancient system of — . : e seines for | these, in expression and earnestness, there was | nishes the music and assists himself at the oere- ances ats cE Ta Rn een tena | Mri RUL Floming is, ahout 40 oomaense thei] Ean (by Jury, as it now stands, iu Eates | one atone pellets wee igerarneh ind fishing, and the river was alive | evinced thorough knowledge of the subjects | monies. He says if any of the «irls want to to- probably al the more to-be desired by the pab- | erection, for Dr. Charles Lieberman, of two | Bighes! end of government 1s Justice. When | "duale, Putin cars English the inquiry, “Do with fish every yea feo), know, | Gniued through the Jadgange in which they | form he Is the last man ta the world to Keep | Probably all the more to,be desited by the pub- | erection, for Dr. Charies! Tseherman, of two | highest ead of gor by corruption, by diaboll | Them ewindled the, mevermment, thrcagt tee —_,- aavices: Haawns | spoke: Aree HOR ake af any. of them takes a step | Grawings by Ross Turner, formerly of this city. | lows" hall, Nos, 409. and 11, They will bs two | cal Tesources of defense or "by the Veron star route contracts, and how, and who helped Tadmit that so long then as +9» _____ in the right direction the first one to offer them * stories high, or uniitness of jurors, the very foundations of | them?"the way would not have een bed Row, for the reason that it was not necessary. | LEETER FROM SAN FRANCISCO. | pecontary aid is McGlory himself. He seems ‘TIME, By the author of ‘*Noblesns Br Sg government and society feel the shock. Gagne Orbis ahey. Sus aetrooraeiok Between the time of the haulings, many hours made up of contradictions. There is one thing | Oblige,”) "On, te Edge ot the Storm, Hetc. Ler | A Faithful Teacher and Noble Woman. : through a blind alley is to beck out ane thet $2ihFe Sometimes, off-riny no cbstruction to the | Preparations for the Great Masonic | certain—in a city like New York he cannot re-| puretfour Se-iee—No, Toi. Now York: To the Editor of ‘Tam Eveunte' Bran: Net Preven. fish to run at will’ aout th and, as for} Demonstration—Fifty ‘Thousand Vis-| main in obscurity, and his future is brilliant. f t d death of Mi the N ~ is precisely what this jury did. Finding the the damages the ropes do, it's all foolish- | ftors Expected—Crop Prospects in Cal | Didn't John Morrissey rise from the same leyel? This is a cleverly written story of the times| Apropo of the recent illness and death of Miss | From the New York Sun. whole phraseology beyond them. and fearing to hess. I never saw any fish spawn drawn up| jfernia—Better Show for Wheat— | No mancan foretell the future of the proprietor | long past, when Barons bold lived in their | Symphronia M. Lusby, whose death was chroni-| It is a mistake to suppose that either in Eng- entangle themselves, they retreated under cover With river debris in my life, except sometimes | About Southern California. ot the Hester street dance house. * strongholds, from which they sallied forth from | cledin your columns of Saturday last, permit | land or America the people undertake to punish | of “not guilty. when an old shoe or tin cup or kettle is drawn THE OURRICLE. time to time to pillage and burn, when peasants | me a small space to mention a few of what | by legal process every man who may have com- Justice Defentea. a 1 HEM. rbed | CesPondence of Tae Evesrsa Sra. Mrs. William K.Vanderbilt will drive a curricle | were held as serfs, and condemned on trivial | might be termed her distinctive characteristics, mitted @ Srime. | Only Those ane £0 eallee SOI a stow Sack Nee Mey tlie eliieks then coe TRG ete tee Saw Francisco, Cat., June 6th, 1883. | at Newport this year. It is asort of a two- | grounds to lose an eye ar a hand. The author | and also to note in connection with her illness TIRE MSS on AE OT PRE en | his warteck ot ts eae souks Seip hs ene tab Bottoms of streams,rourh and une 1, where the Your correspondent came to this great inter- | wheel chaise, with a pole and a bar across the | shows great familiarity with the personages and | an act of generosity which I think is deserving seine ropes do not’ te nets are set all the time. them. Shad and tions; they go w gentle motion, an structions, like ne they turn about Clear: that there ants in the star route case could not be brought | will give comfort and encouragement to all who The traps national city on Saturday from Benicia, and | horse. It is to be bullt by an American | events of the period embraced within the story; | of mention. For eighteen years Miss Lusby within this category, they were entitled to io | think it 1s no sin to steal from the Treasury of and no fisit can e found the hotels crowded with visitors and the | firm, put will be closely modeled after the old | 224, in spite of its many‘dark phases, a Pleasant | was a prominent teacher In our public schools, | free; and we can only regret that the proof falled the United States. To the honest people of the ing do not like obsti streets ablaze with beauty and splendor. Some | English style, with two wheels and a seat for | Hit lé thrown over it by the devoted love of | 354 in ali those years her record discloses but | to establish thelr responsibility fora crime. of : i » there is clear water of | Te I y . glish style, Hildemund and Rosilde. Duke Ulrich of Wur- = Cocca 4. that oceastoned | Which we believed them to be gullty. nation it 1s a result unexpected and undesired, nen they meet with ob- | Of the most distinguished men of the east are | the groom behind. It js as dangerous a vehicle | temburg figures prominently in the story, and | 80 absence of three days, ani hat occasion ee a grievous disappointment, and a fresh revela- rung out in vast curtains, | here for purposes of health and Pleasure. Sen- | to drive asa dog-cart or a Stanhope-gig. Mrs. | as portrayed by the author he is a far less repul-| by the death of her mother, eleven years ago. | The Whole ‘Thing a National Humilia- | ton of the power of wealthy and unscraputons xo back. One thing is | ator Edmunds is still at the Palace hotel, and | Vanderbiltis acapital whip. In fact, there are, sive character than as usually painted by histo-| Asa teacher she was very successful, owing to tion. graduates of the school of “practical politics,” r was known any scarcity | Gen. Albert Pike, of your own beautiful efty, is | few better horsewomen than she in New York. | Tans. her indomnitable will and courage in the per- | From the Baltimore American, when confronted in the courts of Wi bo fish during ee times, ray : pene bey registered at the Occidental. Elaborate prepara- | She will probably be the first of her sex to drive | TIGER LILY AND ER STORIES. By Joxza | formance of what she conceived to be her duty. selnes were used. There are but three well de- 2 AND B The trial which has just concluded began, one | by the proofs of their villainy. ‘i acurricle in America, It is sald the last man SomArER. New York: Charles Scribner's S088. | Sie knew no such thing as fall, and was pos- e: Now that the detendants in what has been re- fined methods of catching fish: by seines, gill | tlons are In progress for the triennial conclave | Wiig drove one of these vehicles la London was | Washington: Wm. Haiiantyno & Son. » | sessed with an energy and ability to accomplish | MAY Say, with two defendants already convicted | carded as the first Of a series ot prosecutions nets, and stationary traps, = be coat pos- re et i a baleen ae to be Heathens bn theold Marquis ofAnglesey,of Waterloo fame. He | Those who remomber “My Friend Mrs.Angel,” | what another and less peculiarly gifted person | and one who pleaded guilty. The evidence was 1 knowledze of fishing | August—and which, it Is supposed, will bring al against the members of a great ring have been did not allow his grooms to sit beside him, but | a Washington sketch, reprinted in Tux Star | would fearto undertake. Asa fact,tllustrative of | fuller, the charge of the Judge more severe_-and acquitted, although the strength of the govern- will that seines do the most dam- | least fifty thousand people to the city. The fare | haa two of them following on horseback. | some time ago, will be glad to get this little | this, I need only mention that when the school | yet the jury finds them all not guilty. ace. Gill ne has been at one | from New York, Boston, Washington, Chicago, Though Mrs. Vanderbilt’s vehicle is to be made id ment’s evidence was generally admitted from lume, of which it forms the concluding paper. | 400TS closed upon her each evening her task | Still, there will be a feeling of relief that it 1s | one end of the country to the other, the people time a popular hod of fishing, but it is no | &c., will not exceed $100 for the round trip, | jn America, she imports all of her harness from | V°! Pee g Paper. | for the day was well and thoroughly completed; | all over. For more than a year these exposures | wi] very naturally recall the history of the ex- Jonger, ou account of its damave to the fish. | and these special rates will be extended to the | England. She has'a great lking for showy | All Mrs. Schayer’s writings have a marked and no matter how trying and exhaustive had been | have been kept under the nostrils of the public. | Dosure and prosecution of these man with: tos The destruction to the female shad loaded with | families of the Sir Knights also. Multitudes | equipages, by the way. Last year she drove to | pleasant flavor of thelr own, and are full of sen- | the labors of the day, every roll was made out, | The whole thing has been a national humilia~ urpose of Anding some causes which may serve spawn, while hanzing in the nets, by the vora- | will seize this opportunity to cross the continent | the races’ in a Victoria, with four horses and | timent and color, and her stories and sketches | every particle of the numerous duties ee tion. Ep cescaak ter tet aomaee at ‘Justice. ous catfish and eels is enough to condemn | and to behold the Pacific world with its thousand postillions. It was the first time that sucha | are particularly clever and clear cut, and never formed, and she went home determined, willing They will recall the almost inexplicable delays ey gm ites do gillers find these shad | wonders and attractions. The day when the | turnout lind been seen In New York, though it'| flagin interest It is Pleasant but not surpris- | and ready to give her attention totally and com- A Proper Object for Plunder. which caused the postponement of proceedings killed, and nearly devoured, by tiese game fish, | knightly procession moves through the streets | is common enough iv England. Postiilions | ing news to her many Washington friends and | pletely to her afflicted father, as, indeed, to an; From the Chicago Inter. in court, after the evidence had been when they are lifted out of water. These mur- | will be the grandest day in the history of thls | haye since been employed oy Mrs. Augustus | admirers that there is a large and increasing de- | that needed her ministration. All school wor sags Ocean. by Postmaster General James and his subordl- derous fish follow and lay around gill nets for | city. Twenty thousand men In line, arrayed in | Belmont and Mr. J.L. Antivny, The carriages | mand for her first venture in book form—than | was accomplished in the school-room, and it is | There has long been an apprehension that the | nates, the mysterious ‘adjournments of resin the purpose of preying upon these roe fish. Of | brilliant costume, led by bands of music from | attract great attention here. They are certainly | which there can hardly be anything better sulted | worthy of remark that she was never known to | star route prosecutions, which were begun with Juries, and the retenti the zill net and trap net, the latter 1s much the | the cities of the east and west, and with magnifl- jon in office of men who baa floating in the be the foreign to the spirit of a republican country. for light summer reading. be tardy therein. Asa friend she was ever true | such a flourish of trumpets would end in a| were leved to be the allies of the ring. These tence iy pe fase the =i Then ep to | Golden Gate, “willl ‘certainly constitute ® most THE CLUB TROUBLES. BUT YET A WOMAN. ANovel. By Anraun Srer- = on fang ey. = ct SEarere Fe cate ery eran coe expected an sogulttal: pry or the eng of ihm foluenb uaa eo Axed that the ‘sh aresied into the trap before | Imposing spectacle to the people of this coast. | There has been another row in the athletic | guRXE Hanpx. Boston: Houghton, Miflin & Co. ful, “kind and. sympatetio, it is’ note Wolinghn Ceca that aity a paealy itr wonsening ear by any, epee man they know it, and while in they have thelr free- @ are now inthe midst of the hay harvest | clubs. This time it is the Land and Water club, 1 matter of wonder to those who knew her best | havi shane victi thal the ad which the werinent mast work if it intended. doi to play about until they ste gently di season. of California. ‘The wheat crop ls later | which was formally opened on Friday last at | ,, PY Common consent this novel, by a new au-| matterof wonder to those who knew her best ent Is a proper object of plunder, nev | to work cee hee ork If it intended Gut with hand nets, and can be keot alive; if oo [and promises to Uh ektndene Io te carly | Whitestone, Long Island. I met a young soci- | BO" 18 pronounced one of the marked ilterary | sora tributes, ‘The beautiful. tribute pald her | cSt #8 Proper object of plunder. thse Acbajabenaean ofan upoenil proceed desired. Both kinds, however, should be ex- | spring the prospect for the cereals was gloomy. ety man, named Minton, a day or two ago and | Cvents, if not the success, of the year. The by Rey. Mr. Andrews was well and richly de- ‘What the Jury Have Done. ing by information, and because of blunders — d from the Potomac river. z be es fine pores Taare faen aac he was very bitter about the way the Land and plot is original and interesting; the conversa-| served. “She needs no eulogy from me; you ess ecaiel which vitiated the first indictment, that the gov- When were gill nets first used iver?” | have insured a golden yield of grain. This state ; = "Whi wing | From the Baltimore Day. SikedTac Sree | enaid furan bined factiall thetic ie nee | Wale Gab Aad bce EE Com ee Ba | eee earn eae cio ana mantel Fhe Char | Whe Know Dar oony ler aphid “Ever since I h: ernment was at last forced to rely for conviction acters are graphically pla the cannon and Seanene ae ae be even - fad en They have established the fact that no man of or ekegenrcad eres to acts done after . food, and the tone wholesome. iat_ more | 80 noble, 80 every trust, ly wi , ouch the contract term in whi ne they were generally | eign ports are simply immense, of which I have | till it was a successful thing last winter,and just | Z0Od and. the ton there are two Bancrofta be- | every emergency. Of the teachers’and officials pen Leacia Hates Solberg ote! the frauds had been committed began om July‘1, ‘s und dwellers near the river,and | written in former letters to THE Star. as It had reached the point where it could stand fore the world as historians, so we now have | of East Washington, and particularly the Wal- 1878. The evidence not affected by the statute then only to serve their own uses; for instance, SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA on its own lexs it was calmly taken from him, | two Hardys In the fleld of fiction, and it is by no | lach building, too much catnot, be exid ie teers | It the thieves have money and position they are | of limitations was sufficient, but these delays. 80 persons living | Ustances from fishing shores | has become the center of attraction for tourists | #24he was ousted from the management and means certain that the later comer is not the | praise, In thelr noble effort to alleviate the wants | free from punishment 60 long as the venue of | Siviged the whole body of proof that some ofthe w d “out_a floating ret, made with i all connection with it, He ts inclined to feel | Putter novelist of the iyo. of one of their number in time of distress. By | the offense must be lald in the federal capital. | yirived the whole body of proof that son rulings of tne thread, to catch shad | the world over. In respect to salubrity of cli- | stubborn about it and saya he will bring a law the construction of thelaw governing the subject | It 1s trde rings formed for thievery, and which | {f'the court upon this polat, : it. to keep for use | Mate, magnificence of scenery, and in abun- | sult for $1,000 damages. I do not know who | LEAVES OF SPRING GATHERED IN AUTUMN. @ teacher absent from school is not en-| did steal millions trom the hhigrrcies nei. 6 « If the pennaane ied Geman ber etimes supply | dance of semi-tropical fruits it is justly styled | he is going to sue or how he has been damaged, RR ese aap che tr estou tae ie fl PHYSIC coe pay. no matter what the | been broken up and the members thereof sent ge pe carried on to | 8 garden spot of the state. This section is|but his action goes to show how ve known an ing about | sary. Her annual shipments of wheat to for- | started the club, organized it and pushed it and herring for px throughout the their neighbors, bat _ 5 ding his own interests, the prosecution to. Pi if J.B. Lip- | necess if 1 ‘hat absence, | to the penitentiary; butthe convictions occurred | 00, gua! . a years. 3 - gan | trouble always follows club life in pincott & Co. peer tra ip- | nec sity pion apes ae ‘der this rula | elsewhere; the government was not compelled | of the ring would probably have been conducted 3 chiefly confined to two counties, namely, San 1 but must furnish a substit bmit I Washi 7,and the | More effectively. Itwas unwise to select as the his river fifty | Povaerdino and Los ‘Angeles. The first ig an | NO™, YOTK. Despite ree Minton’s grievances, | Such ts the title paze of a dainty little volume | Miss Lusby would have lost almost a month's ees preci pig SE ee “sg first in a series of cases one that required so Faoprecet | liland| county, extadtie on (ty /encao Rises aicoeaase The Gate eae of verse and afew brief prose selections, writ-| pay, which she could illy afford to do. Not, so, | Post Office department 01 ‘0 busi- case req’ ng the bust- tate Loundary on the east, tomwithin ten, as we understand, hy a gentleman who was | however, for the teachers of the bullding fam: | ness relations with the defendants a week be- | ong. trial. The case acainst, Brady and Price oi the sea, from which it is cut off by fully as strong, and it could have been tried ; pas | fore the close of the trial. was . i at one time an editor in Washington, and pub- the eee ae pemte ene ae in toes thane sooain.) _if, tome respects tt ras lished by'a friend of the dead author asa token | substitute, and within but afew days of her The Remarkable Verdict. ee = are charmingly situated on the Sound, and on the premisesare brilliant rooms, tennis grounds, mile the last-named county. It is by far the largest | quolt grounds and all facilities for athletic 472 square county in California, embracing 23 games. A steam launch runs from New York : case, in the prosecution of which the govern- 1 territory equal in extent to o if the the ela groan: of esteem and affection, It cannot be revarded | death Miss L. was permitted to draw her full | rom the Baltimore Sun. ment took one step, was more compact. The | entirestate of New Yorks Iewouldswatiowaps | ° ne Sa REE rt eee ate i cane | cueee: We eed. only add hat the) patrons Of |/- 5. ita or ‘hs complaxttion oF the case pabs| eatatomes tee erie te met eect is h cueresise of é : : S < ions, MES. CAPTAIN PADGET AND THE PRINCE. period, but in many eyes it will doubtless have | our public schools need have no fear of their lic opinion has settled down very generally, on | The case against the Dorsey group, having been at seine-hanling and | dozen of Rhode Islatds, with New >, ed with gratifica- | # Value not possessed by even more pretentious | children whilst entrusted to the guidance and P p OO | Sante, saigtit Bawa been SimioenOA as te ing. He sald the gil-| im. This wide area tsa barren mount«: Mie. Paran Stevens is covered with gratifoa- | $ V8 perfect flights into the realms of poesy. care of such teachers. Farexp. | the strength of the testimony for the govern- k, by using only five, or only three, of the ly this year, and perhaps |e"; poorly adapted to agricultural p.rposes, | tlon and delight because her daugnter rodenext | Si perfect tl Lib Rete eae ment, to the belief that the charges aguinst the | Speak. by using only five, or only three, 0 ay of them in the business, | tng. is unsurpaseed: be cae tee settle Fals- | to the Prince of Wales on Lord Castlereagh's | "GUND, THE Ji‘NCHE., By Bante Kentoae DICT UPON THE VERDICT. | sccused were proved by the testimony adduced, | sued the trial would have been short, and” 3 *, | Ing, is unsurpassed by any other section of the coach at the recent coaching parade in London. C. GC, Pursell. THE VE) UPON 5 Sth ict of thy © th 1a re a “] You know there are many poor | state. As the tourist enters the state by the is P 2 : in spite verdict e jury e con- | rors would not have become weary’ ani People out of mones, provisions. and with no | southern route, traverses the broad Colorado | /¢ Wasa very brilliant scene, and all London| Boys and girls will find thisa pleasant story trary. That verdict was the more remarkable | fc ove The . |. Acase of conspiracy is a difficult one nets don't cost much—many | desert, with its alkall piains and dreary wastes, | turned ont to see the pageant. A great many | of scenery, life and adventures in the mountain WHAT THE PRESS SAY. grom he a that sl gpeerreig Pref ton Aloo tot, and it should be made as simple as pos- 0 een uz them for their own use. | and comes up through the mountain pass, one | coaches were in line, and, of course, the princl- country of Colorado, while the trials and tribu- i ae pater eee ethan thar or tas commend ot ~) ss (lever fish for beer and others toe oe oe the finest pas Kod the shea nt beauti- re object oe Gateten was ne, since frre lations of the western Latie) in the east, where the frst trial, on which the charge of conspiracy “A Disgracefal Verdict.” ing: the latter predominate as to numbers, ‘ul opens on his admiring view. If he comes in | It 1s a great thing for Mrs. Stevens’ daughter to | she is sent to be polished, will prove quite as | Comdemmed at the Bar of Pablic Opine % ceo of fhe tka ty get herring.” | the winter season from the eoid climate of the | be seated next the future king of Hogiand | reagent %9,be Polished, will prove quite as < ion, find frond was, declared by the verdict of the | rom the New York World. “Some of the ilsiermenare opposed to the gill | east, where the land les locked in {cy fetters, | that ls, {t 18a great thing inasoclal point of to have been made ont against two of the effort of the author, who may well be proud of | From the Philadelphia Preas. Jary The false verdict rendered by the Jury f Fane And say they oucht to be excluded by law | with the thermometer tar below. zero, he finds | view. "It does “not influence the condition of her success. ; y “i ‘Acquitted though they be by the Jury, the eerste so by Jonge Wri and Bae star route prosecution ts more than a failure of from the river, as they are daimaxiny the fishing, | himself here in the midst of the brightness and | political affairs in America to any alarming ex- The July number of The ss ill haye | fendants were long ago condemned at the bar of ow reed "od L3 be tise justice. It is a public calamity. The and are murderous on the fish in many ways,” | bloom of spring. Frequently he discovers win- | tent—at least, it has not yet. Miss Stevens le July num Century wi aS | cats ontea Whether the perry te 7s OES, wee rable | the government has been robbed Cpr he gobi Me tally the | 720d summer combined in one charming pic- | married Captain Paget, who, I belleve, is now a | two articles of special interest in Washington. | public opinion. technical offense “1 know they taik about us, especially the he ture—the mountains covered with snow half | colonel, and will eventually be a duke or some- | The first is a paper by Gen. Chas. P. Stone, (late | of conspiracy was fully made out or not, the weave todd the bear cig Ziller, “OF course, | way to their base and fringed with evercreon | thing of that sort. She was one of ‘the most | ot tie Egyptian army,) describing the events | evidence established early in the trial ‘that We have tu do the best we can, and there is not pine, while Inthe valley the flowers are in full | ad ent girls in New York society, and her loss is - | Brady, Dorsey and company were for Taueh charity between the different classes of | bloom and the fields covered with the splendor | fs ‘keenly. felt. But ene le cacien by every Tpacti Ceneral OC thOMNeNIee Osea severtl years in the business of making, and Astermen. | Fach will talk for hisown interests, | ofa midsummer sun. The ordinary winter tem- | woman of her set. Happy Mrs Coleone, Paget. | the eve of the late civil ‘war. The other Is an | *fterward manipulating, star route contracts Same as all the world does, believing his own | perature ranges from 36 to 80. , illustrated paper on Black Bass Fishing, by Dr. | With tntent to defraud the government and line may the best Everybody Knows. though, that ‘THE “ NORTHERS” Ning oe Wabes bas Oscared Wine he ivent, | James. A eoshalL the acknowledged author thelr own pa oes Shee Sanne a » big seines do niore damaze to fishin = fared jolyent, : ‘ |. | confessed 5 attitude ol y other way used to catch flxh. Why are the most unpleasant feature of this climate. | ang thie Magnificent Weber ware-rooms are in Ped or roy eelcur etry prope defendants throughout has been one of con- | that circumstance might legitimately ‘The popular verdict says guilty. It is un- Kat the meshes of the seines; they are | These strong winds, which sweep down the | the hands of th sheriff. This scious guilt, anxious to suppress the trath. A was written in the records of courts. It is based - ’ the 18 Was a result long | rod and line now resident at the national cap- So eniall—about 24 inches—and they gobble | coast, blast the vegetation of the desert, and foreseen. When the elder Weber died his son | i week’ with the evidence and argument up eversthing, even little perch, eels, cat fish, | seem to absorb the vitality of man and beast. ss t - _._{ limited to those dealing with the government @t—nothing can escape, and they are all killed; a ‘3 = al in the ry: old man inten views of Dr. Dix’: nt lectures, which made | sec @ conviction from an Yery few. at least, make thelr escape: and for | 8%@ Never last more than two or three days in : ‘ive the boy a thorough grounding in eve ‘ion when delivered ri honest jury. 5 the crnelties of the seinesas compared with the | Succession. Branch of the bus.ness, Just as the Harpers nave Gaertner in Latte ereux alikee ee gill nets, I know all about them; they are miles| The rainy season usually begins about the | always educated the your members of their “Not Guilty,” * r, thereto, published by thé John W. Lovell Com- ; in lensth and take in all things movable; and | close of November, and rain continues to tall at | firm. So he put Albert into the machine sho; J re ‘From the ‘New York Herald, Jem puhe tbe present at these big hauls | Intervals through the months of January and | so that he could learn to. makes plane Vet Se ee ee sepia eee ee sil al a t 2 ; though somewhat extreme in many of} This result of so important and extremely Ren bait a dozen sturgeon and perhaps as | February, with occasional showers through | Albert had not fairly started when. tho ola'tecr a trial will vivious bisnmeae: mans iarze roek fish are brought ashore. “Their | March and April. ‘During the remalderok vee | Ave yee bot boy came into’ possession of ins Cee ae ee aeeet ag pminon. that she | protracted a Dare, varioas 00 les for liberty sometimes endanger the | year rain 13a rarity. The following variety of ye y of | vast business. In two or three years he has | Srey sos, “ty response the bosom | throughout the country. ‘The Herald was brie when the older men wilt wade out with | fruits abound in this region:—The apple, apri- | managed to run ft all into the and. Yor pene and Knock them on the head, | cot, banana, cherry, currant, fiz, crapo, lomon, | Weber was foolish. He plunged into’ coved | Mr. R. Worthiagton will tesne next week, aieting them until they can be caught and lime, nectarine, olive or anze, peach, pear, | of dissipation as goon as he could lay his hands simultaneously with {ts publication in England, ~ bees Ue een tare fieh ne = Tomcaremte, | prose bare ant ceed money that his father so patiently accu- Swinburne’s new volume, entitled “A Century ragxed by the net in wil he large ones, ans '. raspherry, raw berry, mon mulated. young man’s was ” Mest of them perish by belnse smothered, and | English walunt, ate. The coancy of Low na. | muted. |The town. He would give away | 0f Roundels,” comprising one hundred are thrown overboard with other debris,and are | geles has a fro! on the Pacific ocean of | pianos as though they were bricks, and — offand thrown on the poor lands by the | about 100 miles. The water is deep near the | money as thor ‘mers. Some of these seines are seven to | shore most of the distance, and the locality is so | course in the he got samp. ‘ with si Fils Geet ete ee. se cizht miles tong, and will stretch across the wid- | free from storms that vessels may load and un- | of medium height, whiskers and =~ wapcinea propped weeded pecbody of trial by Jury. EiiParts of the river. All are not of this length; | load, by means of lighters, at any point, The | moustache, and is bright and talkative’ “i, | of the poetio art. oe they are made to fit the shore. Some fishermen | town of Los Angeles is the present southern | makes pretensions to swelldom, but somehow he fer short seines, others cannot afford to have | terminus on the Pacific coast of all trans-conti- never looks like s swell and never will. There | etn,a8 the cost of working them is correspond- | nental travel. The Union Pacific and Central | is an intangible something about the man that j ingly great, and they say it don’t pay. Pacide railroads are connected from San Fran- | proveate it with Angeles THE HEAVY PRESETS while this latter extends east from the tema eo THE BILLIARD CHAMPIONSHIP. in the river annually make changes in the river the new belt and connects with the railroad | A 00d deal of money was lost when Shaffer bottoms and on the shores by the deposit of of the southern states. Thusit is plain | suffered his defeat inthe match for the cham- rift wood, sinking of old logs and stumps, and Southern California by reason of the cen- So obstruct the trailing of all kinds of nets that vantages the. gan teed ea — = Portions of the shores have to be dragged with gmppling 1 ‘until 4 of Nepore beteenty-bresegeor yaa Keppaciers tions. A large seine requires fifty and some- aig Chet deaRe times near a hundred men to work it. The Judge Foraker, the republican ca: efor e ndidat: Utilization of steam power Is of recent date in governor of Ohio, says his youth has always selne-hauling, but Is of great use where long been urged against him. “My father I Rets are used. Boats, ktown as lighters, are | was ‘too young," when, at thirteen, I fell in love bronght bebasge the seine arrives at the shore. | with a red-haired and he my court- sud the fish are all separated and put on these jingher. He when I and now _Sigaters and towed up to market tet 2 's. | other people say Iam too young for governor.”

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