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MY LITTLE WIFE AND T. rT many a read most dreary, Pi at never teazes ut Biography of Charlotte | She wrote to Mana er Simpson, asking fo amt at the Park |<; Theater, and accepted the offer of utility” at #2)a week. For three years—from | to June, 1840—she ying all sorts of parts, ing all sorts of ‘stars, and starrin; the summer at provincial cities. T ; anees with Macready are best remembered; | 4 she made £miléa the leading part in “Othe! powerful denunciation of the Mo she shared the honors with him in “Macbe p T, at the Fark, pl Theater, in 1 ly every other ‘nig! the fatigue of the daity of maintaining her man Was or i:—that is to sa have experiene my word, when [tu have you learn that Miss Cushman made her se: ze at Boston as L Guy Mannerin: and by gatherit about her, working rd. and being aiways ready either to start she made money mmense pres igs, herself or suppe and gave the theater an has not yet entirely lost. traditfon (not mentioned by Miss a gevius, and forced the public toac tthe Park Thea ‘alue of a foreign indorse- work to secure one for h a systematic eale ne Credit toa Roths Was so invested as to m family during her absene cient sum left intact ugh" her the ment, and she went t abroad, and a sult » seeure her retur: | two piece ithful maid and dresser. from Macready awaited that she should act with himselt and the great Miss Heien Faucit at Paris; but d not crossed the Atlantic to ucit or Macready. At Liverpool a Miss Cushman hi ed the propos’ when Macieady favorite Eng is’ A trip to seutland Sallie, her maid, rest in his London til she had first playelasasiar. M xengaged hier at £7 a ni; instantaneous and overwhelming. successes put to it, and her triumph | ie ho “Al | den iv his itpreshuns and hasty in his conel i- ether since I have been d not come near my suc- ess in Londo: 3 for every night that I do not act, an ay havea steady stream of ¢. . | ant Talfourd promi-ed to write a new play referred to herin op-n court as | si y made, ha! to be mes and other leadinz journals awarded her e highes: place upon the coniemporaneous Her Bianca, her Evndia, her Lady th, he: Mrs. Hdler, and her Rosalind | ake. : - The most distinguished rsohagrs of the day crowded about her. The | th ers gave bie..Kfasts to her for which | * Was permitted to name for the other guests | iz. the ¢ lebrivies she most wished to meet. e “tabi, then, lanky gil” f upe hed new become a splendid woman | stinkt and obse!vashun, that enny critter, be h me ry, clear, blue eves, af ‘ rv, and aregaltread. The worid was at her | and sings every good chance he Kan gil, i. | “Te equally prai: seder’s opera Miss Cushman felt ured she sent to began to study Whether ‘sh + only requisite f nshe lacked was beau p'ied—or whether she deter- Roieo in order to present hee | ivantage, is unim | wel | tends tew his own bizziness, and won't ailow reated | aby bo rovineial tour in Eng’and pec furo:s and ai duzw ' " it the Londyn Haymarket wi-t her sister, | elny thing, if they make eany mistakes it Iz i, When her first pro- Romeo and Ju sé corporation, reset | wouid Jaf at them. ed the Cushman sisters, bu: eizhts nights of “ Roineo | more pensive, and ‘jor to an, Rvimeo we hav Jan Knowes said: jas were the encomiums |T was not prepared for “Unanimous and f the Lond on * Pweilth Nis! ry Katharine for Macr ady’s tarewe.l She made friends every mong he: cronie: ie, Whom she wa: {tly sketches usintiing, wa- ied, a manner nd left the stage. t Miss Cushman sailed old Broadway y in Oetober she paid her first visit to ‘company with Hacriet Hosmer and reenwood. Tae season of 184 again dow, and in 1855 she ag heme at peused the most grace to Ristori in} raeting in L a as being more true > Cusaman spoke very ll - ured to compe weowhat Ls Iesevibing on of thelr iuterview: the Talian Thad a she understusd mi generation tt gas ison | lawye: having failed to dfeontinue it, so that eee) | she bas nv sexi claim on the estate. 3, Which poiut artistte work and the r . the London s impertous, | In Rosaiiad another efx Blane said of her Mrs. Haller; “Miss Cush- man, I assure you, I never haye c-r-i e-d so much in all my life,” and Miss Jewsbu added, “She seemed to absorb and consume all | the false sentiment of the play, and to elicit | | Only thereal suffering of the character.” Of | The mannerin | | Julia another friend writes: | which her face was made up in this play, with its wonderful freshness a | lightful as the woman and the artist were,ber plainness and the almost strange ent of her Teatures were familiar. But just as “Pritchard | was genteel and Garrick six feet high,” so | Chariotte Cushman was loveiy, elegant, youth. | It is no more strange that | ful, and espirgel.” this versati'e actress, who | even her ph Meriliés, than that she should felieve stress of her profession by singing Irish songs. telling dialect stories, and recit. sie poetry at her private seance: nd once asked her, while watching her sup” for Meg, “How do you know those shadows and make curately give the age!’ “Idon't know,” replied Miss ny, “I only feel where the: h Her costume in Meg was the battered head dress vaguely r biing a crown; the robe a mass of tat | full of ar.istie method and meaning. and great has been the wonder sav the dress off her person.” says Miss Sieb- ald so transform ‘s, “ho wshe ever contrived to get int» it ho carth'y creature but herself and Sa ie | knew the mysterious exits and en‘rances 0 | that ex'raordinary garment.” Waen the tockin:$ would wear out, Miss Cushman | weuld dye a new pair with ber own hands, beivg ‘4 Ways pafticular and. perfect in her | make-up.” Tt is impossible for those who have not seen Miss Cushman to understand he power she infused into the rubmish of Meg | Merriies—a part tha* is now as dead Forrest's Mrtemora. Iudeed, one of the chie“est e- semblances between Cushman and Forrest is that, although the greatest of American ac- | tors, they have left no school, no imi‘ators, o S| succes-ors. The record of Miss Cushma | ~ | triumphs reads, in the present condition ot | dramatic art, like a romance that could not possibly have been true. As she herself often said What is or can be the reeord of an ac- tor or actress, however famous? They leave nothing behind them but the vaguest of memories. Ask any number of persons to five youa real picture or positive image of the e time, and they ean tell you nothing more than that it was fine, it was grand, it was oyer- wheiming; but ask them how did he do such and such athing, how did he render sucha describe his manner, his gesture personal appearance, that we ma living picture of him—and they ar nce at a loss. It is all gone, passed av tand fre’ our hour upen the a the curtain falls, and ail is darkness and silence. describes. “her graceful form, her merry eye, | WALKING. her arched brows, her changing looks.” Louis | The Folly of Si Ex A WASHINGTON HERO. Dr. Porter's Nicknames and Other The Human Foot. LADIES’ GOO It is Sometimes in a man’s favor to be known | ITS BEAUTY, —_ DU S’_ GX DS. _ by a nickname, though of course a good deal | depends on the nickname. Some are the re- | verse of complimentary. stance, a gentleman who bears a somewhat common name, which we shall for the occa- who has gone through life as | It cannot be pleasant to the said Brown's feelings to know that when an of the clan Brown has done anything cons: uous, and he happens to be the particular istinguished himsel ming Pedestrian Part in Reno’s Route. The subject of the following sketch from the Y.) Herald was a graduate of the Medical Department of Georgetown Univer- sity, and subsequently was resideut physician tihe Washington Hospital: Our readers are, at least partially, familiar taken by Dr. H. RB. f New York Milis,) in the Major Reno against the In- wiy he escaped on the Little Bg Going a-foot is not popular with us. Weare too much in a hurry to a short distance. “Asa consequence, the am- plest provisions for the relie! iegs and feet from the drudgery of locomotion are everywhere at hand. ¢ and more expeditious thanto walk. Tim> and shoe-leather are both economized, and the na- tural desire for ease _is der, then, that walking An exchange says:—> | body contributes So liberal y to its locomotive Reprerenting the i powers as the feet. How rarely we see the feet | White: Grioret : 3 ~ of our fair sisters in the beautiful and useful | Percale and’ Tages Meee ane: and wun There is, for in- Willing ty walk even of the human ion call Brown, | form the Creator made them. Each trotter | Robes de Voy: “Dirty Brown. | has twenty six bones, most wisely and admir. | reed ‘e ride is cheaper ably fitted to each other! They form a strong |. Also, several very with the brave part (son of Dr. Porter, o! dition under ™ in I : shu a com tines, was | ae et We perfectly wonderful to those who had seen t when our feet were | Poarote in private ile sad ty Chom ae | 2 }, and how nari m the disasters of the d I But there is much in the thrillin iniscences of the events in which he too! furnished by a Bismarek correspondent o! Minneapolts Pioneer: Pres eratified. What wou- ever heavy it may be, as fallen into almost Brown who has wonted way. Thes sonia friends announce the fact that’s Dirty Brown who has done sue such a thin Delieve the sobri te cold water wh! complete desuetude amongst mot fe engaged in the Pi amongst civilians and ordinary business of li laborer proceeds to bis daily He certainly is excusable, bee nature of his employment involv and strenuous expenditure of vi is right in husbandingit in eundo to and from tie scene of his labors. not need the exercise of walking, as he gets ugh of that in earain, -cars are in his case a most ad mirtable and justifiable device for locomotion | sanerus between business centres and very remote suburbs. enabling the jaded m lawyer, broker, banker and clerk, to immerse | himself at the close of each day in the quietude lutary environment of the ars are admirable and prom: retain their natural form and relatiot to each other. Wonderful to sa: y | more beautiful and delicate in the f Tace, as if they were int sof admiration. We rare! ‘—or as the case may be. | uet arose from an aversion Brown shared with a good | many other little boys while at Harrow—prob- | | i auliest of men. y intimate Sriends suet to f a reeent date. fiends of Dr. Por The writer spca':s Wy Now he is the el Only @ Wan’s ver call him by his Christian name. been a great deal too much lately of talking o certain personages in terms of undue famili . We doubt, for instance, if Lord Charles ford appreciates the affection whieh in- journals of society to invariably ‘Ol course this que, Suou'd be equally great io ial force, we iiue, Sto yu ally | ren PM lesa it be in the mares of the BONNETS. wh ne will OF they are covered. So we must that the ESD AY. , normal female human foot makesatight angie THURSDAY: also wistes to inform he Rinse of the eager Porter to aceompany the. comman: | describing the scattering of Reuo's for with the body, surface, cones narrowesi behind. The number a its curves are wonderfu line-, unless made by ‘The instep has number of perfee A | more than en “Porter was by the side of a dying soldier. and_ supplies were gene, and the mention hii as * t practice is immensely popular with that, alas, | foo numerous class who form the public of these prints, and who are the effeet—pe chaps we should say the cause—of their existen Indeed, there is no surer sign of the thorow going, ‘back-stairs hanger-on of fashiona society than the ease with which h talks of noblemen b; or their nicknames w them by their in have, somehow or ell versal death. Po: his horse to the embankment that protected ds. He was stariled him within ten feet. and every W: the larger bones of the leg, or tibia. of this lower limb is the astralagus. So this tibia and astralagus form the ankle joint, ts “shaking the light fantastic toe” Below this special lines, a8 soon as they appear, aud-at prices is the heel bone, that not only supports the | © b dy but aids in raising it_as ihe cultivated tive of health, But when business, distance, and health is sanum corpus and ent in which the brain fs prici- pally active, and where the distance is not over five miles, for example, walking is to be For be it remembered et Spiritual creatures purely in this state of existence. Weare s; by organs, and those organs requ exercise to develope them properly and keep then ina fitting condition. so mysteriously and intimately interconnected | in tuis life that if they are not exercised and | developed pari passu, the man deteriora‘es, i al condition of mental , With Its delicate, involved and byrinthine structure, wa! i chest, buoyed and distended by well-inflaied lungs, anda highly assimilative stomaea and sturdy columnar legs, thewy and sinewy. Indians dash- wid permit, when thei siian names, ich have been mate friends, an ther, generally through the journals aforesaid, filtered down’ to the para- ged on by it with avidity as its ful prey. We do no’ mean tu say that we @ any harm in public men, in the true sense of the term, being Known by nicknames. Mr, Lowe is known to the present generation, be known to future generations, as “Bob” Lowe ; and there is no calling him so, though, bj it Porter’s presence was unno ic: owerful black horse reared le was mad. Porter saw the fate that was in the immediate future if that horse escaped before he was on his back. He held on with superb human strength. could hold him, but that was all. saddle seemed a forlorn hope. Leap after Ivap with the horse quicker than he. It was a brief ordeal, but in the face of death it wasa terri- bie one. One supreme effort, and half in the saddle the dusky charger bore away his mas- ter like the wind. He gained the fuli seat, and on his his savior’s neck was run- let where the chances of death was a thousand to one. The Indi ins were quitk to see the lone rider, and a storm of leadenod He had no contro! of nis horse. It was only a half miie dash, but it was horse was frenzied. reached the river in a minute and rushed up ff, where Reno had gone and was then The horse and unarmed, and his and plunged as if preierred to riding. that we are not no move these Site, and are ur and throw their feet straight forward, they expected fo meet obstacles tn their walks. | CLES. Our Gentlemen's Department (entirely Projecting the feet slight’ and beauty to the lower lim lower races, if not all, are marl heel, a flatter catf and straightfor ment of the feet. Grace of motion cha less than the grace of character at- oul. M RS. M. J. HUNT In front of the a of fine bones. Th side, and om front to rear, ho low of the foot, vip ; . all men of thought and science. Itseias icy | 7 477ERN HATS and BONNETS. gives ease and comfort to the spinal column | A full assortment of CRAPE BONNETS always | and all its dependeat parts. on hand. In the normal state of woman, the second toe of each foot is the longest of the total row. But in civilized communities, the lenzt! { on, and comfort of this leading meaibe the humsn form divine” istotatiy disre, | Iit-fitting shoes cha place the bones and compel the several toes to Tr de upon each other. St MMER OPENING, No part of the human body, unless tt be the | 3 St, isso much abused as those A compressed and contr vit sdisease and death. A comp: contracted foot invites corns aud bumons, Soul and body are | nobbishness in n, the mate "which, havin; view his appearance and his peculiar sty! ood as it could be. Turning from uicknames to other names, may we be permitted to make a suggestion that some mode should be found by whieh the bame given at baptism should only be a sort of provisional designation, to be changed at, say. seven, fourteen, or twenty-one years of ave, on due notice being given ‘to the person and the partie: more rash, for example, that at the bapt font to bestow the name of Blanche on an in- fant with a bald head and a red face, who eighteen years afterward bursts upon society wih raven locks and a dark complexion, or to Felix the babe who in later Yyea's i is father’s substance in riotous liv- ing, mariies a cook or wot and fina‘ly ends his da should also venture to. im es of exer below ita full | lying close u oratory, is al hail fell around him. cushioned car s s—in other words, to relieve tie iegs cons tly is to finally wa- y for the performance of their natural funetions: and as each member of the | body acts upon every other and on in turn, the disuse and inertia pairs all the rest. a wild one. recovering himself. safe. It wasdestiny, Porter's fi the officers: ‘Pretty bad. answered Reno. e. fe took the hint, but it was a charge ditfer e had ever seen or read of. * What can b> feet_ any great actor produced in_ his | ly demoralized.” ‘Tt was a cha ‘5 Tt is said that our atm e moist air of the ve miles stretch is followed and exhaustion, he islands a ten or tw by little or no la illed ant he was a‘on rhoon of the 25th, all night, thro out the 26th, ht of that date until the 27h, Porter worked as few | Med upon to work. He had no ra uit through the south, came in fresh troug, with their muscles wonderfu'ly developed and strengthened. the exinaus'ive q attempts suicide, a Workiouse? W ress upon pa sing some ¢ iowing pet names on their The talk about ulity of the American atino~ weak invention of the enem Ww surgeon taat he common covering be so large that they 1 The Micropho:e. The only obstzele in the way of the phono: graph’s perfeetion was the indistine!n n Which it reproduced sounds. By talking with one’s mouth hin half anineh of t a very loud voice, the rep. o- duction could be heard from all’ parts of a large room if perfeet silence was observ: d nd to those persons very ven the diflerence between iwo mile vo ye distinguished, whie the difference man’s and a womar's voice w s very marked. From the first it was evi that to make the phonograph of praciival ie for everyday use some means must be found of magnifying sound. Ei her an iastru- ment must be devised rendering the ear capt ble of distinguishing sounds inaydible to the naked ear in the same way that the micro secpe enables the eye to distinguish wirhe ear ness objects invi-ible to the niked eye, or else an instrument which multiplies the souad as it comes from the phonugrapi. This is whai Prof. E. Hughes has sue ceeded in aceomplishing, according to tie @ reports of the scienifie j The account which we have rece experiments gives nomenon. The rd to a white he hey are then pl i l, making a tof an elec. | te’ephone is introduced in iit, and a sound is sent through the of char it comes out at the end of the circuit sensibly i sed in volum>. Hea. light, sound and electricity are su z by many physicists to be interconvertibie. The y lilies are that we have here a con: ie the ttrivity into sound. I events the resulis obtained by Pro’. ider the future of the phonograpa simply marvelous. The lightest touches of a feather's edge or of a eamel’s hair brush on the sounding board of the telephone produce scrackling noise of which the intensity was al he ear.” The footsteps of a house tly watking aeross the sounding board become distinctly audible. The wildest dreains of the inventor of the phonograph will in all | probability now be realized. There seems to be ho reason Why the graph should not be Teacy to read Gur newspapers and our books i gs tous: to preaeh to us. In the prospect seems -urdiy amazing that € man ean think out for himself | by and useful thing Which the the ini- absvitte distinetness ysician ean hear the sounds tie rush of blood in the arte- Asa mesical discovery aloue, ‘he m prove of the very hi E with whic of the The Honey Bee. | The honey bee iz an inflamible critter, sud. | sions, or end. His natral disvosishun iz a warm cross be tween red pepper in the pod and fusil vil, aad his moral bia~ iz, “git out ov mi way.” | They have a long boddy, divided in the mi dle by a waist spot, but their physikl impo: ance lays at the terminus of their subberb, 10 the shape of a javelin. ‘The javelin iz alwas loaded, and stands reddy t unload at a minni's warning, and en- ters a man as still as thought, as spry as li e- ning, and as fulloph melankolly az the tooth- Brees never argy a case: they settle awl ov differences ov opinyun by letting their jn fly, aud are az certain to hit az a mule vi | Bees are not long lived—I kant state jist | how leng their lives are, but IKno, from in he ng or be he devil, who iz mad ail the time etally dies ealy. he only way tew theexact fiteing weight ov a bee iz iew tutch him, lei him hit ys with his javelin, testify in court tha pitehfork inter yei ill siate forthe informashun ov those Who havn't had a chance to lay in their vermin wisdum az freciy az I hav, that one single bee wh> feels ji brake up a large camp meeting! There iz one one thing that a bee does I will give him credit for on mi books—he alwas at- else to attend tew it, and whit he uz he duz well, you never see him a altering after dark and ain't seen. es made b: many blunders az the | men do, éven with their javelins, every boddy In ending oph this essa, I will come to a | stop by coneluding that if bees waz a little i not so darned peremtory with their javelins, they might be guilty of less wisdum but move charity. But you kant alter bug nature without spileing it for eany thing else, enny more than you kan an elephant’s (Josh Billings, NDRUM.—* Say, Acha- es,” remarked ‘Eneas one day, at Carthag: Why is President Hayes like a man who wa . Paul when the Minneapolis flour mills xpioded?” “Is it a conundrum?” asked Qi Dido, who was putting the finishing sto her coitture before the glass, pre- ry ty wow the theater to see Aunee ges.” "Yes, pet.” was Eneas’ fond reply.“ Well,’ said’ Dido, quick- jy, “then it must be because he’s being ground by the Potter's wheel—though | don’t see, after all, What that has to do with the man at St. Paul,” she added, dreamily, after a moment's pause. “I wasalays a dreadful poor hand at conundiums.” Achates, meantime, had been diummingon the window pane, waistin| “Whoa, Enma™ and “Johuny Morgan,” an hioking deeply. “At last he re- I don’t see any liken ss, w i se he has no flaury experieuce.” “ Ah, chuckied Eneas, “{ knew you'd never guess tt. Cor Dido, if you're ready. We shall be late. Acha'‘es, see that the kitchen door is locked and the yas out and the cat shut up in the cellar and the furnace drafts Fight defore you go to bed. Good. night." And just as he and Dido siid out of the fro it door, be turned and said Beeause he’sm'] s. away, with never a thought of danger.” And he sf med the door to, just in time to dodge the cuspie Boston Pos 22> Water is again causing trouble in Texas. Two wen quarrelied over a bucket of it aud one of them was killed. #e-Nr. and Mrs. McCollester quarrelled in Story, lowa, and he sued for a divorce; bt after the case had been a while in the cout they settlea their difficulty, and lived « again. He died recenfiy, and the widow learns thar the suit resyted in divoree, tne for pet names have a on’s, aud although pecause they ae atmosphere is the finest in the world, equal vst pure and brilliaat air o! ive to famous wits, or hospitabl which the ancient Attic poet sings, wherewith to feed the brain with sparkiit Indeed, du:ing the du'y to perform that sel- | Es to a man of tweuty-six, aad retin the form, direet i i “ie ; gave them. High Leels should be as indicative ON THURSDAY AND FRIDAY, low life as long on: n windicate the smallness of the m the arch so wisely made be allow performed it nobiy. He wasst-round cead, dying and wow ment of the ridiculous when one tears. png young wor shi, and five fe J late the lungs and and exhilarating ater part of the y be said, like the old Athenians.to aiking (in our riding) through a most iuminous at. The experience of our sold ir fine and vigorous physical cond ches of almost wpa ly dispose of the sk ai favorable to. excuse is there for alking woud be every 5 o our health and general hot, the dead h rheavy with a haindred sm 1. + men faling, and th | for miles Dlack with the juli work of the others was 1 must krow no fear, n He had every agoniz ufternoon of the 26th, when the Indians their firing and re were around Pores d and fifty wounded. einer baited ov anaiined. Were sicken- i ten in height, ad dresse of human folly. he present time Scripture nimes are zine beautiful arch of the haman foot is flex — ie. eratly in yosue in many of the couatey di | diets of Engiand, sometimes chosen, ofa ehild caled Judas Isea but we have he ase, however, y odil ones are and ny rest. fore hiseyes, ileled length, rd of one of whoin it Was prot nt that it should go theough lite as Pontius Pilate; and we think it did the ergyman great credit that ou the me being propounded to him, he went on Witheut a sty Philip Ps ze these,” &e., avd Philip Peter the child ned, regardl 1 was made to be the chief basis of ate disto: supported, the tr mal position, the Th proces of walking is unnecessarily | With Fancy Bandics, $1 00, $1 25, $1.50, §1.75, Ph ws Porter's experienc hoking the Little Bi: he genius of Buehanan Reid, 1 nl0 & Song more hervie than W What gusco and ii he dwells upoo his many pe mongst the inspiring do Switzerland. ing account of his youthful and ings on foot is enough to mak similar exeurs: last ten years is that of double doubt originaliy, dou eu under th ofa will on coming inte a property, or on marrying a landed proprietress in her own i hat were the case now, there would any young gentlemen able to pay bils wh are in tem) euities in spite i Rid Of the doctor’ service during the passage of the steamer ar West down the river wounds of eve: dead than alive, suffering was not termi nated with the removat from the field to the It continued and ended in death Fort Lincoln was Here again the son of N.Y. Mills, of ate, Was tested. or filty four h race is alwa: a as glowing with physical and mental the feet in a!l their curves and beauty. excitement, his mind inspired by the eharin cenes through witch uli of reveri: easile inthe ai isentiled Tie Re ig is indeed most e soon kindles a glow in the ightful exhilal than’ onee_ before ine Supclia- i or actively eng: tude for favors received—say the gift of a liv- phe’s parents have bestowed on one the { their noble patron, not to isto society as How. , Or Manners-Roinson, ced ina glass tude and | | Porter watened He stood th: test.” eries ofa Wa ing exercise, an: b'ood, which im tion to the mind r feels no sense of 1 his blood is fairly warmed up, pervading miad that our scholars, ing to be grea make one’s entre Brown, Powys-Ju instead of plain Brow a Letter name to give the announe nial, and it gives connected With t The wife of President Hayes is hardly an exceptional of covors or soun 1, we ser purposes to move en‘ircly is red, this is gre. This is C, this i8 D, thisi tea apparently be more finite,mors within ihe fine, this ts viove. Wh yn that one is © noble families, 4 sfavor—[Lmdon Wek he Virginia and writers are , fully aware of al arkly fin ced often hazel e the brown. pi aiing. Th» bonde the seven colors of where is the ed method of locom > Xampie in this a. FLDER FLOWER WINE.—Oue guact of e’der sh ends and yelo ¥ f spoken, yet with a tr The gossip fingers on the point wher quainted. wii our natural seeuery, and hi ¥ have been so the his spirit. If we are not m! it is getting to b of our academ ries of learning, during sumimer vac: avel long distances to the seashore on foot, camping ow This mode of travel close communion with nature, and is most The readers of the ife ighter, wil re- add the jutce of ot roush degrees, of laie dite in the evoluiion Ti com nua Aca f | whieh bell Ne eastera the nerve out of young peo; innati no healt yd tirred Well even deg. ces ment three days IS Kuowiedze. 1s Palgrave telis us, the names for 1d brown are constan woaihe rainbow nophanes says that wiret ud, pup e, red, and yellow, and to every six gallons 0 isinylass and six pound hs; ia six months bottle il wine, both so a then wash the siik in ho suds by dipping up and down; rinse in ers, then dip in water prepared Boil two ounces of lozwood chips in five quarts of water; add quarter of an unee of Coppera: Ne eal Lis is ph Aristove stil listen to fine salutary in its eflect. . sor Wi'son, by his d: ea color, Was Worl Lfinity of colors at a comparatively Lee hardly a book nuw ia» » Balin the aaeien so full of the dawn, the ue sky is never me Zs “the blue sky is never ioned; in Homer the blue nentioned ; in the Old, and even inthe N nt, the blue sky is never ment eutonic language b!ue comes {ro oot Which ovizinaily meant bleak and black. The Romance steain through dip your silk in this dye; han: the line by the corners until it is nearly ven between old s < ramble of ine wife through the Highlands: of Sco land, and their varied and sometimes ludicrous expe- riences. Wordsworth, the high priest of na- | ture, was a great walke Professor and aynins of the 1 fa pound of sal soda. dissvive in one seitle ; pour of ture wiih a piat of 1 Q lon of hot soft water let one gill of this mix ), oF half a bar of soap dissolved in hot ater, is enough, for a washing. To Renovate George Sand’s Consuelo t amo3t ch rin- ing account of a journey on foot of the he roine in company with Haydn, then a poor and upknown youth, from Castle Rudolstadt to Vienna, There is a deserip‘ion of a simi.ar journey in Rousseau’s Confessions, made by thirty cents the bottle. The brewers are ie above LACK MERINO.—Rip, the | among the richest peo} le, and their best beer | city for the price. Mag] dress apart; then soak the goods in warm soap 3 dissolve one ounce ot extract bowl of warm water, and suf- ficient wa:m water to coyer the goods, which is to be taken from the suds without wringing ; jet the dress stand in the logwood water ali nicht; inthe morning rinse in several waters in the last water; addone iron while damp; it will ¥. Time: will not export successful reat beer halls traders come through with | ot Vienna sausage, served on a cushion of | horse radish and brown bread. Taat is half a dime, and is the frugal supper of many a citi- SHOE AND GAITEKR MANUFACTURER, Beef and white fish are cheap and abun- #2118 yloania avenue. dant, The Ohio Valley is one long Rhine, of a fect fit, combining st once ease: double Rhineland ferility.—[“Gatn” in the | Com irony Phiad:lphia ites. a rowed their word from Geran. asked whether we shonld recognize fj ical development of our ual increase of words capa’ ug finer distinctions of light. No oue hat the irritations of our organs of sense, Which produce sensation, as distinguished fiom peiception, were different thousands of. years ago from what they are They are the same for all men, the Same even for certain animals. for we know that ‘herve are insects which react very strongly against differences of color. No, we on'y learn here again, ina very clear manner, that con- reeption is impossible without lan- Who would contend that savages who, as we are told, cannot count beyon hat is to say, who have no numerals beyond thice—do not receive the sensuous impres of four whecls ina cart? Now, in this evolu. ion of consciousness of co'or we see most ly how perception, as different from sen. es hand in hand with the evoln iow lage, and how slowly every definite is ed out of an infini ude of indis- Demokritos Knew of four black and white, (which he re- red and yellow. him in company with M vant of Madame de Waren’s, from Cuamberi to Fryburg in Switzerland. . From June to Indian Summer New England isa fairy land to ramble over on foot, ner there Is a pret, a maid ser- of logwood it is likely to conte ortion of the diy it conyenieat to shun the fervid heat, either under the shelter of a roadside roof or some wide-spreading tree ; but even in mid-summer there are many cool, dewy hours, both at morning and at evening. when a Suflicient length of way may be tra. versed to answer every purpose of the pe les tri Herodotus callsan accomplished walker “a well-zoned mar without wringin; tof sweet milk lock like new. LOTHES.—The thus discourses: lieve, gets blamed and unished at home and at school, who woutd ear a good reputation if his flanuels were and looked after, | yewexpect of a boy—and boys are so often being petuient and t wari days of ihe sea sys pped by the spring fever, whieh, spite of the endeavor of w Iland hi Xistence, is a very real and sagieeable ailment, is erown thick and light with the win! ing—who has outgrown his winter clothes, yet must wear them till others are provided for him ; whose sleeves are too short, and his pan- taloons of that most uncomfortable length, above the tops of h s_range, if, thus ha Beauties of Brazil. ture, aud of superior “Many a boy, we read what Mr. Bige-Withers writes of the | machine: also all beauties of that country makes his home in these wilds. A tiny fly, called po oe from being a8 sm: og ane mullti- (udinous as atoms o! just, passes through the meshes of the finest net then penettaces the arenes, hair and beard and sticks its‘venom boscis into the skin. The loathsome tick named carapetta, when disturbed on the oF cones and twigs by the foot of the passer-by, ri and expresses distance by the length of time it would oceupy such a Among the other inci st voracious appe- pioperly washe one to traveise them. cents of foot-travel is a mos! tite, Which is of self a blessing in. our own well-peopled and well-prov land. Thirstean be quenced oned New Eng- short intervals buckets hanging in the ¢ cA < of Cognac is not’ interdicted to the pedes has drawn somewhat tensively upon his legs in tains and performing other arduous exp r Wilson, who was a giant in body i ver a most exh varded as colors), ay that he did no: see the cause he never called it blue, t China the nuinbe -qually beautiful, luminously phospho: in the dark, and with a coverlug of | Do not think ii sed, he should fall into the snare of the evil one, who is always ready wiih his masked batteries when poor hua tried and worried. ‘h him, see that able and easy lue of the sky be- but only dirk or tof colors was ve. That number was increased | rease of their power of distin- suishing and of expressing their distinctions in words; but though we distinguish more and mote, the variety of colors alway fore us @ real infinite, to be measured, it may ve, by millions of ethereal vibrations in one uble and inlivisible even (Mar Miler, in Contem- ustive Jour- nk, to queneh hirst caused by heat and travel, a waole f milk, dashed with a bottle of Mountain ‘This'was a Cyclopean feat, indica ing the vigerous nature of the man, self properly in communion scenery you must traverse it on foot. from the window of a railcar, mountains, i lakes, meadows and vaileys form a inguishable and flying panorama. limpses are only ht in his wild gal. e wiich festival ends of which 1 antlers, inflicts with every point of these a si painful sti whose tormenting powers SENTS: TLE LIP spised. But one of the worst enemies of man- | CENTS’ TIES. @AITERS AND SLIPPERS, kind, as well i pt cattle and hogs, is a bi fr.m 60 cts, to 98, spotted fly which comes along sientiy ani y AN ricks the body of its victim. It sucks no BUCKSKIN AND KID GAITERS, lood and instills no venom: its minute instantly withdrawn, leaves no sore- irri ation at the time. The man thus LASTING AND BASE BALL SHOES, slightly punctured does not rub or serateh He litte knows that he has received € made comfortal : that tight and ill-fittiug garmenisare the cause comings. How can we continue in a tranquil state of mind, ready to perform the duties which are required of us with faithfulness and fidelity, while we are agonized, perhaps, with the pain gf a collar tuo binds so tightly over our jugular vein that the blood rushes into our and roars in our ears when we stoop ove with arm-holes so tight as to culation of the blood? People of sensitive or- val ions often feel the influence of such discomforts without knowing what is the trouble, and they daily mourn over and re} of their fits of impatience and temper, which woud have been avoid were made comfortable. A Curious LEGAI-TeNDER Case recently occurred at Dartinouth College. One of the -ophomores, the son of a miikman, received a ve cent pieces from his father last sutumn with which to pay his tuition, but the lege treasurer refused them. Since the pass- er bill the student has been col- leeting all the silver three cents pieces he could vinning of the present term for his tuition. They were oung man keeps his reasurer is given to und-r- id as soon as he is wih natural of many of our shor second, but immeasu to the keenest eye. porary £eview. Unsa » momentary afforded. sueh as Faust caug) lop with Mephistopheles. to th in the Harz: ‘The Mmits of the sphere of dream, Tue bounds of wue a d false are past; J ead us on, thou wandering glea n, Lead us Onward far and fast. To the wide, the desert waste: Bu, sce how swift alvance ai And cliff bye" Thel: frowning forcheads as_we go: lan’ snouted crags ho! hy ey suort and how they blow! [Boston Courier. smali for us, which THE MARRIAGE OF 4 Wo T Matancy Hughes was married in Sep ember ast 10 a person Who Was known as Samuel M Pollard. Her rela'ives opposed the matchand ske eloped and was mai knowledge, and a short time after their mar- riage Pollard confessed to her that she wasa woman ; that she had trouble with her reia- tives iv the East assumed the di: TO A WOMAN. d without their or bristles around its body, it has a horrid trick of revolving on its owa axis, tearing the ion of “That Old Woman of Mine.” flesh anew by each of its hourly revo! oxen and wild deer suTer likewise | _™13 tr the hideous visitation. Wasps and hor- OSTO! UCT! USE. nets there are, of course. There, is small, B memen A gala led if their clothing ise of a man for the reason that avenues for making money would be op2n to her in that character which Would be closed to her asa woman. Pollard has never given her any particular reason for doing her this great wrong, but is believed to have been actu a foolish pride in appearing in the er of a married man. The victim was ashamed to acknowledge that she had been imposed upon, and shrunk from admitting the truth. Pollard, without actually threatening her life, repeatedly intimated that it would be bad for her if she exposed her, silence until a fortnight ago, w! an intimation of the fact, and questioned her closely, and she related to her the whoie story. The vicliin says that the woman's real name Jard, and that her trunk is red. A complaint C. Howerton, accus- INGERSOLL OBSERVES: “*To-day the news- papers are engaged in finding out all the mean things that are done. Unless a thing is it ignot known. If all the report- ers of all the newspapers would look through all the streets and through all the houses of the country, and find the name of some man who had practiced self-denial for the sake of his wite and children, find some man who had roperty he had to pry his onest debts: who had gone out of his house, given up his pictures and ali there was of lux- ury, and taken his wife by the hand and gone vd penury ina hut; if they would tel! the names of all the men who had done generous deeds, I tell you every news. paper in the United States would be erowded With the names of the men and women.” age of the sil devouring half a dozen or more. find, and at the be; he tendered them refused ; but the money, and the stand that he will be ready to accept the specie. THERE Is 4 SoctaLisT Society in Syracuse | GREAT REDUCTION IN Ni which is coniposed almost entirely of members of trades unions. It was formed a year ago by an agent who acted under instructions “from the hea quarters of the national order.” The members are minty Germans and French. men. The presiding officer is Anton Amon, a carpenter. He states that the organization is | Opposed to monopo'tes and capitalists, and its | fandarren‘a’ prineiple is this: Tne laboring | man is ju-tified in resorting to any lawful ex. t:emity to obtain his mghts from ae, y. and soshe kept ‘iven up all the en her aunt got To VENTILATE A Room.—To ventilate a reom without draft, make a hole through the in a corner of the room ¢ Through the hole put onearm of a tube three inches in diameter, and bent at right angles. reaching to the outer air should be in length equal to the thickness of the wall, and the other arm should be two feet lon; yertically in the corner of the room it can be covered with | tern as that on the wall eter given above is sufficient to ventilat: a room of moderate size. In Fis SERMON last Sunday, Mr. Beecher suid there is a change 10 the air that men c1n not understand: In the oil regions they sink their pumps and th- oil flows, and by anid by il flows less freely, and then it stops. they put a torpedo down at the bottom of the pump and explode it, and it bursts all :he ob. structions, and a renewed filled with feminine was filed yesterday by ing Pollard of perjury in swearing when he license that he was a da) Tim-s-Review. wall to the outer air, just abuve the skirt took ou! the marriaj The arm of the tube man.—[ Tuscarora ( tek and cuployers pee ere is any prospect of a general rajiioad s'rike this summer, he admits $f Bratton Boots trom $1.80 to88, has received advices which Wend Hint fo cence | _ Easting and Woxed Bu 51 50 such a d¢ monsiration late in June. Ifa strixe Wnrisky Drinking Ix New_York. roprietor of the Metropulitan Hotel told mi st night that his bar receipts were $175 a day If we Suppose the average day, about $220.00) woul hi AN SKELETON INSIDE OF A HORSE. A miner in the Black Hills, writin; in this city, tells of a horrible rein fearful snow storms of last winter, and of the peri's of those who were caught out and lost their way on the plains. He says that recently, while he and two others were crossing the country, they came upon the skeleton of a horse, within which was the skeleton of a 1inning skull looking at them he ribs of the animal, li isoner peering through the bars of his cell. the whole story. The man had killed his horse, cut him open, and crawled inside of him, thiakin: per of the same pat- receip's at the ba s A tube of the diam- , 1.000.000 a year. is computed that 1,260,000,000 drinks 4 é taken in New York yearly, aud « tariif of two cents on spirits and a half a cent on ale w Il gate $9,000,000 city revenue. for] quor; in the United States $735,000.10) a | year, or nearly four times the co he general government, and_ vet guzzling by $59,000,000.—[ Cincin. man, with the exaggerate t :e evils of com istic and social- istic agi ation in the United States, The Times tof ranal g traces the o.igin of the he two skeletons, tole w re exceeu us in hen Wages are to thus escape try is cons: quent’y de] of the animal flow is the result. 4#% Tie Episcopal convention of Texas strovgly condemus bull fighting as a | relic of barbarism, demora'izing and dero,a- to the character of the state, and asks fur eal of the law recognizing bull fights s ions Which may be licensed. Tucy a'so t “the good people of other denom na- s and creeds to assist in securing the ic- peal of the obnoxious law.” is a good thing to crthodox docti ine ane a better spiritual flow. and to say to men, it your eyes to ev. ur ears, There is no fear of the resu! *@-The manager tonio has been Bexar on the charge of cru froze soiid. and the man was as much of a risone: as if he had been shut in by The wolves and carrion eater partof the flesh from both he miner concludes his deserip- tion by saying: “It was a sight I shali never forget. I can see it eyes.”—[ Vireivia Citu Enterpri: ———_— 4¥Z-Motto of a western com; of female minstrels: “ Grin and bare,” aes men who are poor struggling, to acknow- ‘dge the justice or to acquiesce in the neces- sity uf the economical laws which permit some of iheir neighbors to be rich. The Pail Mall Gazette is convinced that the present danger is overra'ed, and that the overwhelming ma- jerity willr sly to the side of stability and order #&# ames Freeman Clarke says that Mor. yy “may ree upin th: d with the peopl: of Sodcm an condemp the professors vf rel teaching Bibl- classes on Sun the ee) porati-ns of which they dui ing all the rest of the week 42-A San Francisco clergyman advertis: d @ sermon entitled Boss D America,” meaning intemperance. vt judgment, Gomo Fah, to ion Wh, while 1 are robbing ,are treasurers irttual os 7" now _whenevel ual Suicide. tion te take steps for in fore? available for the ‘ession of ri either in San Francisco or elssehore, of the bull fight at San An- by the grand of animals AND ITS ABUSE BY SILLY PASH- ——— = IONS. SU™MER IMPORTATIONS, ‘0 part of the human DL sur ase. They support the body, how. | Muslin and Valenciennes SUITS for Comme und bear it easilyon its | Ments.all at lower prices than aay previous senso... many bones vary in size | Persons, but always, if treated | M. WILLIAN, 907 Pennsyleania avenue. 7 Cite Trevise, Paris. ME. L. P. JEANNE! 2T-r re. ane\ ers a oral that all orders UPPCT for elegaut Par sent to 83 North nd Charles st... Baltiwore. and 989 Peausyivauia ave- nd beauty of aue, Washington, will be promptly attended 1. It has uo straight Perfect fit guaranteed. mayS7-tr flat and curved upon ve and wisely arched bei anarch of seven bones, the jon. These support and pro- Ajacent parts from ment. Attached by li ss f sts., St. Cloud Building. be steady tne dur bustuess, wud the me cessity for more space to properly disp ay our § ciaities, has Induced us tononnect thes ing, formerly occupied b cilities ented, and useful in | ated, we shall be able to disp tes inour he lowest. Specialties this season consist of HOSIERY, PAR MI falas h GLOVES, HANURERCHIEFS, — P loves quie'ly along. Too many KIBBONS, FANS. RUFFLINGS, Ties hows! i ower limbs with gi SJEWKLM,CO TON AND imitate the Indians of our plains and forests, | MERINO U WEAR, &c., "with a complete a sortinent of ‘RACES and ‘TOILET ARTI- vardlendsgrace | distivet) is replete with newest designs in COL« (nba soem etace | CARS. CUFFS HOSIERY, NECK Wace we aby 4 longer | . Pact artice is marked at the lowest New York “di move. | Tee, We invite inspection trom all. | ms the | magh-tr Ninth 8t,, 8t.Cloud Building. ‘tragalus are a form the ar. as been long a . | “Would invite the attention of the ladies | to her handsonse assortment of * CRAVE VEILS RENEWED equal to new. SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO ORDERS, r Mrs, M.J. HUNT, irse. Tuey dis my 23-tr _ G21 and 623 D Street. their MRS. J. P. PALMER ssed and mong themselves, and let their | CATTERN BONNER AND ROUND ) by Res] tfu'ly anneunces he ny s fletings and pains. Let the toes be free to cities imental see! bo ay ulv Nature and are. Sail t yf | The 23d and 24 bi of May, to which she invites the in | attention of Washing dwais ee lusiration | QPECIAL NOTICE. om and vicinity. my0-tr ticity. A ed feet forma pitiab: was to adap: its form to ia. | LADIES FINE BOOTS for Spring wear of my e, and so elastic astore- | own make for sale at very reasonable mm shoeks in the ordinary | ortees, JAS. H. VERMILYA, 610 9th street. The toes were made to steady the Parca Fatens OMes. of the foot. If the balancing of the | ,cigect Bool and Shoes made to order at short ole Dody suffers. The — limbs are ‘wisteadily | {EW STOCK OF into anabnor- | 2 4 often harmed. PARASOLS, result tion. Some na rk of beau re fativ arve .00. $2.50, $3.00, ete, re, fatigue, nerveus | rvoRY HANDLES and inelli- PEARL INLAID HANDLES, They consider that female a slave FRENCH HOKN HANDLES, im Plain and Twilled sil under whose foot the water cannot flow. In | 2 inches Bl inches atk 28 ‘aches, 20 inches, ¢ races the mental powers h the arehing of the foot aninferior one. I C. M. TUWSON & CO", A flat. 636 Pennsyleania avenue, eserve | _™myétr - South Side, BS. SELMA KUPPENRT, M 614 9TH STREET, The Women of Cincinnati. OrposiTé PATENT OFFICER, THEY REFRAIN FROM GOSSIP AND DRINK CHEAP | 45 Just opened a large and select assortment of BEEK AND WINE. (NFANTS’ AND CHILDREN’S LACE ee and BONNETS, BobES. | CAPS cimen of the lad ~ LONG AND SHORT DRESSES, ion of Connecti oa Pie fuaiing wife 1a remlader CHILDREN'S FURNISHING @OODS8. The women of this Novelties in | isle Thread GLOV) Biack Sik i rune tes, ark gray | “I7TS. LACES. LACE GOODs and EME: herally brune:tes, with d rk Bray | CRIES’ BILE and WORSTED FRING Bee od ‘are | che newest siy ies. CHILDREN'S LACK CAPS 1 | tade to order. maras-tr ana and Blank Books spectaities, BOOTS AND SHOES. JEW YURK SHOE STORE, or se, lesive is fett law. The best ladies go to the fens on the high mountainous ane mia enfold Cincinnati an bee PANIC PRICES E Tiesto. ‘ap here as to be almost LOOK AT THE FIGURBS. m These gardeus are | Ladies’ Newport Tics iL reached by steam inclined planes or lifts, | Ladies Newyort_B. which, in a minute, hoist a muliitude out of ‘i a 35 the depths of the ‘city to plateaus 69) to 700 1 33 feet in the air. By hight and on Sundays | 4-4 these gardens are in full blast; the elergy and h 3 50 the bridal couple are found there, and they * Lasting Congress and Lace wl have become the lyceums of musical taste. | Misses Foaed Button si toi 33 No'withsianding this freedom of public iuter. | M sees P-Dbie Busto. $lt01 7 course, Cincinnati is one of the mos? virtuous | Misses Shoes and Blippers,all kinds. very cheap. cities on our continent, family loyalty being a ye tee pare! at low pri 50 n kindness, good sense, and example. | Gent's Fine Gat Loweseaten Cheapness is the law of things here. Street | Gent's Gaiters. % fare is only four cents. Good wine is | Buys’ Shoes and Gaiters, are the best goods ever offered in this 5 { Price Only. No Branch Store ly. As you sit in the ‘20-40 sata @ EORGE McCARTHY. J GEORG CITIZENS. MILITARY AND NAVAL BOOT, and fort in all cases g: teed. Will call t houses and take measures, if requested by postal cardor letter, A fine selection of ladlesand gentlemen ‘s Goods of my own manufac- juality, on and suitable for Q summer wear, at Those who sigh for a lodge in Brazil shou'd | gores ieeried’ tn old galore ty pet atiten 1 finds of hus ree es The mosquito | short notice, myli-ly N ABRVELLOUs a us pro. TWENTY DIFFERENT STYLES swarmed up the 'rouser legs and fastens upon | THES: LOW-BUTTON, t has so firma bite that if ii MT, its head is left buried de fusing a tit it ts SLIPPERS, with Box and Opera Toe, ep in the rulent poison of its own. | French and Low Heel, for Ladies, Misses and caterpillar, by day or night Children, from 26 ets, to $2.58. scent jan’ | LADIFS’ GAITERS, 65 cts, to $5. icately formed moss, the a ‘ ‘i branch off into pointed CHILDS" SHOES, 10 cts. to $3, g. There isa lively red ant, WHITE KID SLIPPERS, ALL SIZES. are not to be de’ To Order, the deposit of an egy which will soon become a iguli.g maxgot, half an inch long after one Week's grow h, Dut eapable of growing to LOUIS HBILBRUN, ap ineh and = quarter in length and an inch iu thickness. With fine rings of black spikes 402 SEVENTH BrazeT. uations. stingless bee, which crowds so thick upon ex: SIGN OF THE RED FLAG, posed parts of the body as to leave no room for @ mosquito to alight. As the fee only tickles, 491 Pennsylvania Avenue, nstead of biting, stinging or laying an egg, it BETwserx D TH STREETS. pt 2 but it is impossible io eat without “= : CHEAPEST HOUSE THIS SIDE OF a THE When © ours, the members of this society will bes Ses eee sear duty bound, he says, to extend to th> insur found best home- against capital all the aid in their power Gases ‘Ties and —“™- Baltimore, ENGLISH VIEWS OF AMERICAN COMMUN- Ma.,) and otter 1sM.—The London journals are not disp »sed to | well-I man vement to the strin- ug that when trade w, and when indus- it is difficult for mes, remai are threatened, but contends ly the duty of the administra- for stren| some