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wy 4 We are tes < We are ha | Bas onr when our feet were y OF sorrow, ot fret, ula pe er by ik y its Tsun yet q Gt [Domestic Monthiy —__+++e-____ THE 8UCJESSOR OF SIDDON | UFrom Miss Stetbins’ Blography of Chriotte | Cushman. | She wrote to Manager Simpson, asking fo~ | any position that might be vacant at the P. Theater, and accepted the offer of utility” at #2) week. For three y September, 1837, to June, 1si0—she 1 | at the Park, playing all sorts of parts, support: | ing all sorts of ‘stars, and starring herseif in | the summer at provincial cities. Her perform | auces with Macready are best remembered : She made Emilia the leading part in “Othell: by her powerful denunciation of the Moor she shared the honors with himin “Macbeth she was called out, hats and handkerchiets waved at her: she had made herself a favor- ite. Afterwaid, when she became the mana geress of the Walnut-Street Theater, in 1512, she acted with Macready every other ‘night in New York. undergoing the fatigue of the daity f maintaining her post at ress of America, p general utility” att 40, her Meg Merrilies © hight ent Ma on the staze eis m r ne to thank you for the most ion TL periene-d for a i, when Iturned ne T felt a cold have you learned i Tt will be remer Cushman made her seeond ¢ oh the stage at Boston as Ly HER FIkS z. business faculty which Miss Cushman ina very high degree led her t he manazemen Philadel et Th ri tays her to start port her stars, She made mou heater an i There is a it pbins). that, while p! own theater, sh ster taugh’ her the value of a foreign indorse- pent, and she went to work to secure one for lierseif wich a systematic calcul that would have done eredit toa Rothsehid. Her money Was so invested as to maintain her family during her absence abroad, and a sult cient sum left intact to secure her return to home in ease of failure. Then, on Octover 25, IM4, she sailed for England in the packet ship Garrick—apopriately named—accompanie. enly by Sallie, her faithful maid and dresser, Ai Liverpool a letier from Macready awaited | Pr, proposing that she should act with himselt nd the great Miss Heien Faucit at but Miss Cushman had not crossed the Atlantic to pity second to Miss Faucit or Macready. Sae rejecied the proposition then, and after ward refused to fill Miss : : when eady had quarre favor gish actr A tei r en days in Pais, udied the French sehool of acting; and the daunted American setiied d wn tothe sel Sallie, her We li n chop a diy, a ys bou: ers dozeu of muffins for the sake of ~ Miss Cushman dee! ht the made h Prinerss’ a ad T first apy Fa i e folowing February. card the tradition which attridutes her en. agement to a good round oath. like Washing ten’ iy at the battle of Monmouth, le o the pluck that enrbied het to | refuse to support Edwin Forrest in his London | debut until she had first playelasa dox engaged her at £7 a night, and he w staneous and overwhelming. ‘Ail | my Successes put together since I upon the stage would not e hear my cess in London, ye writ “invita ions in for every night that I do not act, aud day I havea steady stream of calle our il the Ser- ant Talfourd promised to write 4 new play fer her, and referred to heria op-n court as | “the seconc Siddons.” Her pr rvincial engage ments, hastily made, ha! to be c.n-eled. The Times and other leading journals awarded her | the highes: place upon the coniemporaneous | Stage. Her Bianca, her Eniit, her Lady | hy he. Mrs. Hdler, and her Rosalind were equally praise. The most distinguished personages of the day crowded about her. The | poet Red. ers gave b:e..kfasts to her for which Ske Was permitted to n ume for the other guests ail the © lebrities she vst Wished to meet. then, lanky gil’ of Maeder’s opera troupe hid now become a splendid woman with me ry, clear, blue eves, afresh, frank fae, and a regaltread. The worid was at her | ect. The mement Miss Cushman felt that her Meee SS Was ussured She sent to America for ly, and Legan to study “ Komeo and with her si: 3 Whether sh> | leit tat the only requisite for sustained pe Hiary success whieh she lacked was beaut whir usan Sunp'ied—or whether she deter- | m hee to play Roi order to | si ter to the best possible advantay | ortant. ASwe have said, nstinets were strong: Second genius. 1 a fortune by her | first provincial tour in ud; she created another furo:s and another fortune by open- Ing at the London Haymarket wi.t her siste: in “Romeo When her first pr ingia: tour Ww ym wket Cua ny, alway a h e introducti & corpora | “the American Indians,” | as th led the Cushman sisters, iuto their | le; bus izhts of * Roineo | Toe 485 Cushman is e have ever had.” snous and Lond on eighty 1 tliet” conquered all mes said: “The Rom> r superior to any 20v1 i beridan Knowes said: “Uni ish 2s were the encomiums of ess, | was not prepares pure genius.” At Dubii rethe: in “Ton” and in * Meith Isis (July 10) Miss Cush een Katharine for Macr ady wet, at Druy La ing ‘present. She ee, and among hei cronies was st ion. the Sheri pratt, of Liverpool, and left the staxe. ag August Miss Cushman sailed £ a golden harves: here i ay n ceiebri The a nightly Feeeipts was gre dy's. In Bay, 1852 she took her frst for farewell here at the old Broadway Thea and in October ske paid her first Visit to ie iv company with Ha:ri-t Hosmer and © Gecenwood. Tae season of 184 again -raeting in Londow, and iu iss) sie ied charming home at Boltoa-row fur where she dispensed the most gra o ptaty. Her dinner to Ristori in 18% Ss. WaiteTs, dishes, ail Itulian—is memor and led ‘to a warm fri-ndstp between two trazedicnnes, Miss Cusiman pr at Kistori tof as being more t wuie ke very wud each ober. : Miss Cusaman re in de bing one of thelr iuterviews, 4t)rewall the I alian Dhada wer pel and she understood me, as she always LOW What 1 sat theatre-gvers of the present generation wher Chaciet e Cushman ony ax Quee rere and Mee rrilves. “Ehey Ww +b able t. believe -he miracles wal ses of her # z f. aid Julia; sich Miss S.ebbins gives are exce - 8, Which point out the detai.s of | usbman 3 artistte work and the reason suceess. Tn ii inca, the London Tunes | €: passion, “her rea’, impernous, irre. In Rosasind another ef a it cS Wh bie | the false sentiment of the play, and to eli com ein Meg tistic: the battered head ‘dress vaguely Din ; the robe a mass of taliers, | full of ar.istie method and meaning, ~ Mach | for the isformashun ov those who havn't had | give him credit for on mi books—he al n | lawye: having failed to dffeontinue it, so that describes. “her graceful for her arched brows, her ehan’ Blane said of her Mrs. Haller; “Miss Cush- | man, I assure you, I never have er-ied so much in all my life,” and Miss Jewsbury added, “She seemed to absorb and consume ail only thereal suffering of the character.” Julia another friend writes: “Tne mann which her face was made up in this pt its wonderful freshness ard com lin perfectly wonderful to those who ‘harlotte in private life, and to whom, de. | lightful as the woman and the artist were, her plainness and the almost strange leatures were familiar. But just as genteel and six te Cushman was lovely, é' i It is no more str: ho coul! so transform ysique, stiou'd be equally great in fies, than that she should relieve the | Sof her profession by singing telling dftiect stories, and recit Ti up to put e sh lines which so ace 7 *T don't , “1 only feel where Her costu i nn the wonder of those wiio dress off her person.” says Miss Steb- hy w she ever contrived to get into it aithy creature but herself and Sa ie w the mysterious exits and entrances 0 x'raordinary garment.” Waen the ins would wear out, Miss Cushman new pair with ner own hi ays particular and_ perfect in her make-up.” Tt is impossible for those who have not seen Miss Cushman to understand the J Merriti Metomori and great has b sa birs ne although the greatest of American ac- have left no school, no imi’ators, 0 succes-ors. The record of Miss Cushma s | triumphs reads, iu the present condition ot dramatic art, like a romance that could not ibly have'been true. AS she her: said: * What is or can be the record tor or actress, however famous? nothing behind them but the memories. Ask any number of pers real picture or positive image of y great actor produced in his ney ean tell you nothing more than that it was fine, it was grand, it was ov wheiming; but ask them how did he do s and such ‘a thing, how nder s passage, dese hi , his gesture even his pe! al appearance, that we may ve a living picture of him—and they are at ce at a lass. all gone, passed > strutand fre’ our hour upon t curtain falls, and ail is If of! The Micro; The only obst: in th c hit repr ocuced sounds. | 's mouth within ha a vel ival y USE Some means must be nd. Ei heran iusirue dering the ear capi is imyuiible to th that the mi ye to distinguish withe ble to the niked eye, or aninstrument which multiplies the sou id as it comes from the phonugraph. This is what Prof. DE. Hughes has suc ceeded in accomplish rding to tae atest reports of the scien 4 nals. Tue bare account which we have received of the experiments giv xplanation of tie ph homeuon. The multipiying apparatus m, described as follows: Pwo pieces of ch heated toa white heat, are plunged into m= cury pressed end toend, making a part of an elee. | tie cuit; if a te'ephoue is introduced in | the circuit, and a sound oft cireuit sensibdl; Heat. light, sound an ctrici by on Physicists to be i The probabilities are that we hi versie n of electricity in'o sound. creased in volum. « telephone pre h the intensity w: The foo nograph will in There seems to | phonograph should not | apersand our books to prea In ab-urdiy amazing ink out for himself urprisiy wh will do before use for this new il be the absolute distil © physician ean hear the another si phon on; vention, the ini- ands: rt and tie rush of blood in the arte- sa mesical discovery alone, ‘he mi bee may prove of the very highest value.— | he Honey Bee. The honey bee iz an inflamible critter, sud- | den iv his impreshuns and hasty in his conel a- sions, or end. His natra! disvosishun iz a warm cross be tween red pep u the pod and fusil vil, aad his m 1 bia 1z, “git out ov mi way.” y have a long boddy, divided in the mi '- a waist spot, but their eka impor:- ance lays at the terminus of their subberb. 10 the shape of a javelin. ‘The pe n 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 fuiloph melankoily az ihe tooth- ake. 5 Bees never argy a case: they settle awl ov their differences ov opinyan by letting their javelin fly, aud are az certain to hit az a mule Wz. Bees are not long lived—I kant state ji: how kengz their lives are, but I kno, from in- stinkt and obse!vashun, that enny critter, be he bug. or be he devil, who iz mad ail the and sings every good chance he kan git, gen erally dies early. The only way tew git theexact fiteing weight oy a bee iz tew tutch him, lei him hit you onee with his javelin, and you will be willing tew fy in court that sumboddyrun a one fined ehfork inter yer:and az for grit I will siate a chance to lay in their vermin wisdum az frecly az I hav, that one single bee who feels well will brake up a large camp meeting! There iz one one thing that a bee does I will as ate allow y boddy else to attend tew it, and what he he duz well. you never see him a altering ything, if they make eany mistakes It iz fter dark and ain't seen. U bees made ha"t 47 inany blunders az the men do, éven wiih their javelins, every boidy would Jaff at them. In ending oph this essa, I will come to a stop by concluding that if bees waz a little more pensive, and not so darned peremtory with their javelins, they might be guilty of less wisdum but more charity. But you kant alter tends tew his own bizziness, and won't bug nature without spileing it for eany thing an an elephant's else, enny more than you egg.—[Josh Billing: NDI remarked .Eneas one da) E hy is President Hayes like 4 man who was at St Paul when the Minneapolis flour mills exploded?” “Is it a conundrum?” asked Queen Dido, who was putting the finishing touches ty her coillure before the glass, pre- paratory ty xotuy Lo the theater to see Aunee in = Cent Vi-rges.” “Yes, t. Was -Eneas’ fond reply.“ Well, ’said Dido, quick- ly, “then it must be because he's being ground by the Potter's wheel—thougii 1 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 was al*ays a dreadful poor hand at conund Achate: ius."? piesatime, had os Ly an Johuny Morgan,” an y thinking deeply. “At last he re- markea I dou't see any likeu ss, waless it is because he has no floury experience.” * Ah. ha, ha,” chuckled neas, “{ a'd | never guess it. Come, Dido, if you're . We shail be late. Achates, see that the kitshen door is locked and the yas out and the cat shut up in the cellar and the furnace drafts right before you go to bed. Good night.” And just as he and Dido siid out of the fro it e turned and sais Bee vase he’sm‘] s | ght of danger.” and justin time to dodge Post. knew y #2-W ater is again causing trouble in Texas, Two wen quarrelled over a bucket of it aud one of them was Killed. 4#e-¥r. and Mrs. MeCollester quarrelled in Story, Iowa, and he sued fora divorce; b t after the case had nM @ While ia the court they settlea their difficulty, and lived cogether again. He died recentiy, and the widow a | He certainly is excusable, i | whieh the ancieut Attic poet sings. j i and their fine and vigorous | rambles they are then placed ina glass tuve and | | ndissent through the | | two plvecs Of charcoal, JU comes out at the end | | imbued with bs spirit. nd useful thing which the | ¢! | riences, learns that the suit re: in divoree, the she bas :o wai clsim on the esiate. 4## Tie Episcopal conveation of Northern Texas strongly condemus bull fighting as a relic of barbarism, demora'izing and dero,a- tory to the character of the state, and asks for a repeal of the law recognizing bull fights eanibit ons Which may be iicensed. Tucy aso request “the good people of other denom na- tions and creeds to assist in securing the ie peal of the obnoxious law.” WALKT. The Folly of Shunniag Pedestrian Exercise. Going a-foot is not popular with us. Weare o much in a hurry to be willing t» walk even nee. AS aconsegaence, the am ons for the relief of the human t from the drudgery of locomotion y ‘e tide is cheaper re expeditious than to walk. Tim> and and shoe-leather are both economized, and the na- tural desire for ease is gratified. What wou- der, then, that walking has fallen into almost complete’ desuetude “amongst us? that is, amongst civilians and peopie engaged in the | ordinary bi ness of life. Even the common | laborer Proceeds to his tol by hor : 3 the very nature of his employm coitinu ti and strenuous expenditure of vital furce, ue i ingit in eundoet redoundo, ne of his labors. He docs | e of walking, as he gets of that in‘earaing his ad. Horse-cars are in his case a most ad irable and justifiable device for locom: Sanerus betw remote suburb ia vver, broker, banker and clerk, to immerse himself at the close of each day in the quietude lutary environment of the ¢ adinirable and promo tive offiealth. Bat when business, istance, and health wiil permit, When there is sanum corpus aud inent in whieh the brain is priaci- pally active, and where the distance is not ver five miles, for example, walking is to be preierred to riding. For be it remembered that we are not yet spiritual creatures purely | existence. Weare spirits served ns require constant y evelope them properly and keep then ina fitting condition. Soul and body are | nately interconnected | passu, the man deteriora‘es. material condition of mentai } 1, with Its delicate, involved and jabyrinthiné structure, wants’ beiow it a full eLest, buoyed lungs, ana hi . 4y columnar legs, thewy and sinewy. To vastantly sitting irs, stools and ¢ seais—in other words, to relieve the jegs constantly from duty, is to finally wa fit them entirely for the performance of their natural functions; and as each member of the body acts upon every ofier and is reacted uy- on in turn, te. dis nd inertia of one im- pairs all the re 8 said that our atmos. phere is unfavorable to walking, that whereas in the moist air of the. British islands a ten or twelve miles his followed by little or no lassi and exhaustion, here itis otherwise. Ttmay be so, bui non conte. it is not probable. Sherman’s army, ¢ long circuit through the south, an roug, With their muscles wonderfully developed and strengthened. — The talk the exhausiive f the Am phere is a weal piition of th 5 , enemy. O¥ re is the finest in the world, equal to Our nd bril f Athens, i or hospitable.” o! It is just the thing wherewith to inilate the lungs and feed the brain with sparkling and exhi ing blood. Indeed, dusing the greater part of the year we may be said, ‘ike the old Athenians.to e always “Walking (in our ease, howeyer, it should t ) through a most luninow - mos, he ie experience of our sold itysicat conditi deled length, 1s vid after n Sof almost wip Sulliciently dispose of the slander nerican air as unfavorable to walking. Phis & So, exeuse is there for so much riding, woud be every Way more conducive to our health aud general well bei The r r of Rousseau rwith what gus'o dwells upou his many Pri you hamoogst the inspiring tnd Switzerland. To read his glow- his youthful and) wayward is enotigh to miki a similar e himself durin: 1 as glowing with ph ment ul shis mind inspired by the eharm es through w he was pas. ull of reveries or actively engaged easile inthe air. In faet, on his works isenti‘led Tue Rereries of a Wa king is indeed most exciting exervi kKindies a glow in the b'ood, which iv rs a delightful exhilaration to the mind tn fact, the practised wa: feels no sense of weariness when his blood is fairly warmed up, but a pleasant exei pervading miad tnd bouy both. We believe that our scholars, artists and writers are geting to be grea Wa kers, ful aware of the pleasure and represents healihfulvess of the natural metiod of locom > tion. Thoreau set a good example in this respect, He was awa! an aecon plished’ pedestrian, otherwise “he ~ oul: never have become so familiarly ae quainted wiih our natural scenery nd hi wri ’ 28 Would never have been so th If we are not itis getting to be of our academies, ries of learning, during sui travel long distances to th , mountaia nigh th pi unt of the long ramble of the Professor and his fair you. vife through the Highlands of Seo land, au their varied and sumetimes ludicrous expe- Vordsworth, the high priest c ture, was a great walker, so was v, despite his puny and insi cant frane. In George Sand's Consuelo there isa most eh rm- ing account of a Journey on foot of the he roine in company with Haydn, then a poor and unknown youth, from Castle Rudolstadt to Vir » There is a deserip‘ion of a simiiar journey in Rousseau’s Confessions, made by him in company with Merceret, a maid ser- vant of Madame de Waren’s, from Ciamberi to Fryburg in Switzerland. From June to Indian Summer New England a fairy land to ramble over on foot. In the height of summer there is a portion of the diy when the wayfarer will find it convenieat to sliun 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 ersed to answer every purpose of the pe les ian. Herodotus callsan accomplished walker well-zoned man,” and expresses distance by the length of time it would oceupy such a one to traveise them. Among the other inei cents of foot-travel is a most vuracious appe- tite, Which is of ivself a blessing in our own well-peopled and well-provisioned New Eng. land. Thirstcan be quenced at short intervals from old oaken buckets hanging in the shadow of mighty elm_ tre A’ draught of Cognac is not interdicted to the pedes trian, when he has drawn somewhat ex- tensively upon his legs in climbing m 2 tains and performing other arduous exploits. Professor Wilson, who was a giant in body a ng, after a most exhaustive four- relates how he drank, to quench ed by heat and travel, a waole pan of milk, dashed with a bottle of Mountain Jew. ‘This’ was a Cyclopean feat, indica ing the vigorous nature of the man. To put your self properly in communiyvu wih natural scenery you must traverse it on foot. Seen from the window of a railcar, mountains, rivers, Jakes, meadows and valleys form a sort of intiistinguishable and flying panorama. Unsatisfactory, momentary glimpses are onl: afforded. such as Faust caught iu his wild zal- lop with Mephistopheles to the wich festival in the Harz: ‘The limits of the sphere of dream, Tue bounds of wue a d false arr past; Jtad us on, thou wandering glea u, Tiead us Guward fat and fast. To the wide, the desert waste: Bu. see how swift alvauce and shift, ‘Tice: behind tree-, row by row, And cliff by c'ift; rocks bend and litt Theil: frewning foreheads as we go: Pre glans suouted crags ho! b How they snort and how they blow! [Boston Courier. INGERSOLL OBSERVES: “To-day the news- papers are engaged in finding out all the mean things that are done. Unless a thing is bad thing 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 wile and children, find some man who had piven up all the property he had to pay his honest debts; who had gone out of his house, given up his pictures and all there was of lux: ury, and taken his wife by the hand and gone down to poverty and penury ina hut; if they would tell 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.” Wrisky Dringing In New York.—The prop: jetor of the Metropolitan Hotel to! e ht that his bar receipts were $175 a day. Ppose the average ceceipts at the ba 8 to be $2) a day, about $220.00) would have ban spent every dav for liquor in Ni f, lers alone. This is equal to #7»). tis computed that 1,26 taken in New York yearly, and « tarid of two cents on spirits and’ a half a cent on ale w Il aggregate ren city revenue. We spend for] quors in the United States $735,000.00 4 ear, or nearly four times the cost of runai g ine general government, and vet the Eagii n exceeu usin guzzling by $59,000,000.—[ Cincin. nati Enquire. 4#&a-“ames Freeman Clarke says that Mor. rissey “ may rise up in th: day of judgment, with the peopl« of Sodcm and Gomo r. to condemt the professors uf religion wh >, while teaching Bibl classes on Sunday, are robbing the cor poratins of which they are treasurers duiing all the rest of the week ” 4% San Francisco clergyman advertis: d &@ sermon entitled “Tue Boss Devil of America,” meaning intemperance. A WASHINGTON HEBO. Pr. Porter's Part in Reno’s Route. The subject of the following sketeh from the Utiea (N. Y.) Herald was a graduate of the Medical Department of Georgetown Univer sity. and subsequently was resident physician at the Washington Hospital Our readers are, at least partial: with the brave part taken by Dr. H. (son of Dr. Porter, of New York M expedition under Major Reno against the La- dians in 1876, and how narrowly he escaped from the disasters of the day on the Little Bz Horn. But there is much in the thrilling rem iniscences of the events in which he too part furnished by a Bismarck correspondent of the Minueapolts Proncer- Press of a recent date, which will be read with interest friends of Dr. Porver i : Tt spea"sof h. , familiar Porter, dy N mn th Nicknames and Other Names. It is sometimes in a man’s favor to be knowe. by a nickname, though of course a good dea! depends on the nickname. Some are the re- verse of eomplanentary.: There is, for in- | stance, a gentleman who bears a somewhat | common name, which we shall for the occa. sion call Brown, who has gone through life as “Dirty Brown.” It cannot pleasant to the said Brown's feelings to know that when any of the clan Brown has done anything conspic- yous, and he happens to. be the particular Brown who has friends announce the fact by saying, “Oh, | that's Dirty Brown who done sueh and | such a thing”—or as the case may be. We believe the sobriquet arose from an aversion te cold water which Brown shared with a good many other little boys while at Hirrow—prob- | abiy now he is the cleauliest of men. { Only @ man’s very intimate friends ought to | ter speaking of the eageruess of . 9 accompany the command, ant cribing the scattering of Reuo's forces, Porter was by the side of a dying soldie: His orderly and’ supplies were gone. and command off several huadrel yards. was alone is were pruning the trees, a terrific yell was sounding the alarm of uni- versal death. rter left his last patient and horse to the embankment that protected woods. He was stariled by [udians dash- ing by him within ten feet. They were rush long the foot of the little bluff. Their aim was so direct in the line of the flying battalion that Porter’s presence was unno iced. He was unarmed, and his powerful black horse reared and plunged as if he was mad. Porter saw the fate that was in the immediate future if tha’ horse escaped before he was on his back. He held on with superb human strength. He could hold him, but that was all. To gain the addle seemed a forlorn hope. Leap after leap 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 full seat, and ying close upon his his savior’s neck was run- eauntiet where the chanzes of death Was a thousand to one. The Indi ins were quik to see the lone rider, and a storm of leadened hail fell around him. He had no control of nis hors It was only a half miie dash, but it was a wild one. The horse was frenzied. He» reached the river in a minute and rushed up the bluff, where Reno had gone and was then recovering himself. The horse and rider were safe. Itw lestiny, Porte first remark the officers: ‘Pretty badly demoralized.’ ‘No, answered Reno. ‘It was a charge. Pocter took the hint, but it was a charge diferent he | He and from any he had ever seen of read of. Porte yelate was killed amt he wasaione. | The afterno om of the 25th, all night, throuch: out the 26th, the nigit of that date’ until the forenoon of the 27h, Porter worked as few men are ever called tipon to work. He had ao idea that he would get out alive and believed Haround him wasdoom-d. § ilihe me coo: and SKEW surgeon tua! he isteday. He hada duty to perform that sal- dom fabs to a man of twenty-six, aad yt ” performed it nobiy. He was su unded by the eead, dying and wounded, — Men were erying r water, for help, for r-lief, for life. The sun | was zing hot, the dead horses were sick ing, the air heavy with a hindved sms bullets thick, the me for mites black with the jut work of the others was no Ae must ko no fear, no tremblins, and ny rest He had every agonizing sight re hisey , When the Indians 5 began to move off, ere were around P on the ground fifty dead and fifty wounded. Ove it eve as einer kuled or maimed, hospital his ory, but_L doubt if there is mci, tliat overshadows: Porter's experience upyit | Dlufl overkoking the Lite Biz Horn If | d the genius of Buchanan Reid, 1 ald ve itinto a song more hervie thin Saeri dans Rid Of the doctor's service during the of the steamer Far West down the ri wounded, the writer says: wounds a thay fterneon of the 2 do their firing and the 1 ssaze ver witu “There were and men more Was not termi- the field to the Wand ended in death Fort Lincoln was rate, Was tested. on tity four hours. Ht sount, we serm 1 purposes to me enircly This is red, this is green, This is C, this is D, thisis E. What car pharently be more finite.tno i But fet us look more cl. y. Le the seven colors of the rainbow: and | where is the edze of an eye sh nagh t ‘x itself on the poiat where blue eads and ‘veen besins, or where green ends and yeio ¢ i We might as well attempt ta pus ow the point where oie wild metre ends and anotier be We di olor by seven rough degrees, seven deg. eesare of iaie date in tie evolution ys kine » Tneomnga Aca jgrave tells us, the names f+ J brown are consiant,y eon 16a the rainbow Is ¢ Nenuphanes says that wirat a, pur pe, red, a peaks of the and green. Bue, which cems to's so defi ite a color, was worked out f he infinity of colors at a comparatively Lie i There is hardly a book now in «hich we t read of the blue skv. Bul in the aac s of the Vede, su full of the daw in, and the sky, the biue sky is never men ioned ; in the Zendarest« the blue sky is never mentioned; in Homer the blue sky is never mentioned ; in the Old, and even inthe New estament, the blue sky is never mentioned. ‘n the Teutonic language blue comes [rom a oot which originaily meant bleak and black. The Romance languages found no use- ful werds for bie in Latin, and _bor- rowed their word from German. Tk has been asked whether we shonld recognize in tiis ‘i physiclogical development of our seuses, 0 only a gradual increase of words capable of expressing finer distineti of light. No oue is likely to contend that the irritations of our organs of sense, which produce sensation, as distinguished fiom peiception, were different thousands of. years ago from what they are ow. They are the same for all men, the Same rn for certain animals. for we Know that le are insects which react very strongly inst differences of color. No, we on!y learn here again, ina very clear manner, that con- cious perception is impossibie without lan- guage. Who would contend that savages who, as We are told, cannot count beyond three— hat is to say, Who have no numerals beyond thice—do not recetve the sensuous impression of four whecls ina cart? Now, in this evolu. ion of consciousness of co'or we see most jeaily how perception, as different from sen. | -aticn, gees hand in hand with the evoln joa of language, and how slowly every definite oncept is gaited out of an infini ude of indis- inet perceptions. Demokritos kuew of four ‘olors, Viz., black and white, (which he re- garded as colors), red and Fellow. Are we to | ay that he did no: see the blue of the sky be- | cause he never called it blue, but only dirk or bright? In China the number of colors was tinally five. That number was increased h the increase of their power of distin suishing and of eapressing their distinctions in words ; but thouzh we distinguish more and more, the variety of colors always stands be. fore Us @ real infinite, to be measured, it may ve, by millions of ethereal vibrations in one second, but immeasurable and indivisible even to the keenest eye.—[ Maz Miler, in Contem- porary keview. within the fin this 1s vio us those nd tri wil THE MARRIAGE OF A WOMAN TO A WOMAN. Marancy Hughes was married in Sep ember iast 10a person who Was Known as Samuel M Pollaid. Her rela‘ives opposed the match,and she eloped and was marr without their knowledge, and a short time after their mar- riage Pollard confessed to her that she wa: woman ; that she bad trouble with her re tives iv the East; had lost her property, and assumed the disguise of a man for the reason that avenues for making money would be open 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 ated by a foolish pride in appearing in the character 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, and so she kept silence until a fortnight ago,when her aunt got an intimation of the fact, and questioned her ciosely, and she related to her the whole story. The victim says that the woman's real name iy Sarah M. Po'lard, and that her trunk is filled with feminine appared. A complaint was filed yesterday by J. C. Howerton, accus. ing Pollard of perjury in swearing when he took ou! the marriage license that he wasa man.—[ Tuscarora (Nevada) Tim s-Review. A HUMAN SKELETON IXSIDE OF A HORSE. A miner in the Black Hills, pide i) a friend in this city, tells of a horrible reinluder of the fearful snow storms of last winter, and of the perils of those who were caught out and lost their way on the plains. Hesays that recenily, while he and two others were crossing the country, they came upon the skeleton of a horse, within which was the skeleton of a man, With the grinning skull looking at them | frem between the ribs of the animal, like a prisoner peering through the bars of his cell. | he two skeletons told the whole story. The man had killed his horse, cut_him open, and crawled iuside of him, thiaking to thus eseape perishing of cold, bu: the flesh of the animal froze solid. and the man was as much of a risone: as if he had been shut in by walls of cen. The wolves and carrion birds had stripped the et eater partof the flesh from both skeieious. The miner concludes his descrip- tion by saying: “It was a sight I shali never forget. I can see it now whenever I c.ose my eyes." —[ Viroir ia Cit prise, _—————— ae Mi of a western of female minsirelst Grin and pare” ey | duces the call him by his Christian name. There has been a great deal too much lately of talking of certain personages in terms of undue famili arity. We doubt, for instance, if Lord Ch s Beresford a [Gurnais, of society to inv: mention himh as “Charie: t practice is immensely popular with that, foo numerous class who form the public these prints, aud who are the effeet—pe ha) ly Ot course this | | we should say the cause—of their existence. Indeed, there is no surer sign of the thoroug! going, back-stairs hanger-on of fashionable society than the ease with which he or she talks of noblemen by their Christian na or their nicknames which have been given them by their in ate friends, and whic have, somehow or other, generally through the journals aforesaid, filtered down to the para- it nd are urged on by it with avidity as its lawful prey. We do no* mean tu say that we can see any harm in public men, in the true sense of the term, being kuown b: Mr. Lowe is kno ealling him though. by the w: this name will probably be superseded by ihe new one, “The Whiehead Torpedo,” which, having in view his appearance and his peculiar style of oratory, is about as good as it could be. Turning from nicknames to other names, may We be permitted to make a suggestion that some mode should be found by which the name given at baptism should only be a sort of provisional designation, to be changed at, Say. Seven, fourteen, or twenty-one years of | ze, on due notice being given the person P parties interested? What ean b* ‘ash, for example, that at the baptismal | stow the name of Blanche on an i fant with a bald head and a red face, who eighteen years afterward bursts upon society wi 1 locks aud plexion, o1 later 8 ther’s substance in riotous liv- | es a Cook or Worse, attempts suici: ly ends his days in a work shoud also venture to impress u the advisability of exercising. s Spection in besiewing pet hames on their off- | yout; t of sticking tothe their relstious do nm used to it, there i went of the ri in Ti as" Tiny At the present time Scripture nimes grat vyosue in many of the cout o and, and very odd one sometimes chosen. We never a-tuilly hea d ofa child calied Judas Iseariot or Jezebs but we have heard of gue of whoin it was p po ed at the font that it should go through life as Pontius Pilate; and we think if did the ating CiergymMan great credit thit ou the + being propounded to him, he went on ula stupor a *Eulip Peter, 1 are hilip Peter the ¢ nes. No doubt origiualiy, double were only taken under tne provisions w ol ming inte a property, or on irying a landed proprietress in her own he I; that were the case now, there would (many young gentlemen able to pay ors’ bibs whe are in temporary diffi- pite of their hizh-sounding appelia- uions. Of course, itis a privation, If, in grat tude for favors received. y the vift of a liv- ing—one's parents have bestowed on one the suniiy name of the nobie patron, not to wake one's entre into society as Howard- Brown, Powys-Joves, or Manners-Rubinson, inste Mf plain Browa, Jones or Robinson. It Vetter name to give the announcing me- euities it land it gives the impression that one is .bected with the noble families, afores tid. Which is again in one’s faver.—[ Lodon Wek: Usefal Fai FLDER FLOWEX WINE.—Oue quart of e'der towers (oot berries) oue gation of water, | hiee pounds of wiie loaf sugar; boil water nd stizar together and pour oa the flowers white hot; when cso: add the juice of one | ehen to each gation and one tablespoonful of seast stirred wel in; let it ferment three days na tub covered With flannel; then siraia shrough a sieve, and to every six gallous o Wine add one ounce of isinglass and six pound of stoned raisin «six months bottle. To KENOVATE BLACK SILK.—Kip your dres Mand dust well; then h the silk in to psuds by dipping up and dow use in sWo Warn Witers, then dip in water prepared follows: Boil two ounces of lozwoud chips five quarts of water; add quarter of an uace ol copperas in through an old bi of ealieo: dip your silk in this dye: hang on the line by the corners until it is nearly dry; icon between old . WashinG FLuip.—Halfa pound of sal soda, quai ter of a pound borax, dissvive in one gal lon of hot soft water; let it seitle; pour off in bottles; one gill of this mixture with a plat of ly Hints, soft soap, or half a bar of soap dissolved in hot water, isenouh for a washing. To RgenovaTE BLack MERINO.—Rip the dress apart ; theu soak the goods in warm Soap suds two hour: sulve one ounce ot extract of logwood in a bow] of warm water, and suf- ficient waim water to cover 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 without wringing in the last water; add one vint of sweet milk; iron while damp; it will ook like new.—[N. ¥. Times. CONCERNING | ILL-FITTING CLOTHES.—The Christian Intelagencer thus discourses: “*Many a boy, we believe. gets blamed and puniaied at home and at school, who woutd bear a good reputation if his flannels were properly washe looked after. What can youexpect of a boy—and boys are so often lamed for Being petuient and peppery—ia these first warm days of ihe season, whose sys. tem, sapped by the spring fever: which, in spite of the endeavor of w lland hearty peo. ple to ignore its existence, is a very real and le ailment, is tortured by flaauels wu thick and tight with the winter's wash- ‘ho has outgrown his winter cles et must wear them till others are provided for him ; whose sleeves are too short, and his pan- taloous of that most uncomfortable length, above the tops of his shoes! Do not think ii $ range, if, thus harrassed, he should fall into the snare of the evil one, who is always ready vith his masked _ batteries when poor hua ure is most tried and worried. Before you blame him or punish him, see that his hes re made comfortable and easy. We believe Wat tight and ill-fittiug garmentsure the cause of many of our shorteomiugs. How can we continue in a tranquil state of mind, ready to perform the duties which are required 0! With faithfulness and fidelity, while we are agonized, perhaps, wih the pain gf a collar tuo small for us, Which binds so tightly over our jugular vein that the blood rushes into our and roars in our ears when we stoop over; or with arm-holes so tight as to p: event a free cir. culation of the blood? People of sensitive or- vanizations often feel the influence of such discomforts without Knowing what is the trouble, and they aly mourn over and repent of their fits of impatience and temper, which wou'd have been avoided if their clothing were made comfortable.” A Curious LzGAl-TENDER CasE recently occurred at Dartinouth College. One of the sophomores, the son of a miikman, received a number of five cent pieces from his father last autumn with which to pay his tuition, but the college treasurer refused them. Since the pass- age of the silver bill the student has been co!- lecting all the silver three cents pieces he could find, and at the beginning of the present term he tendered them for his tuition. They were refused; but the young man keeps his of money, and the treasurer is given to und-r- stand that he will be paid as soon as he is ready to accept the specie. To VENTILATE A Room.—To ventilate a reom without draft, make a hole through the wall to the outer air, in a corner of the room just abuve the skirting Through the hole put obearm of a tube three inches in diameter, and bent at right angles. The arm of the tube reaching to the outer air should be in length equal to the thickness of the wall, and the other arm should be two feet long, standing yertically in the corner of the room ; if desired, it ean be covered with paper, of the same pat- | tern as that on the wall. A tube of the diam- eter given above is sufficient to ventilat: a room of moderate size. In Fis SERMON last Sunday, Mr. Beecher Suid there is a chang. 10 the air that men can notundersiand: In the oil regions they their pumps and th- ofl flows, and by and by it flows less freely, and then it stops. Tuen they put a torpedo’ down at the bottom of the pump and explode it, and it bursts all ‘he ob. Structions, and a renewed fiow isthe result. Tis a good Shing to pub a mh nee under aa crthodox doctiine and explode it, and you Re a better spiritual flow. One thing is seriain, tere is no folly equal to hat of cowadie-; and tosay tomen, “Don’t thiuk, don't read. don’t listen; shut your eyes to every hi thi al Suicide. glose your ears,/—shis Js spiritual suicide, pha od 4#@-The manager of the bull fight at San An- tonio has been indicted by the grand Seas onthe chargect celts eae ¥ istinguished himself, his | \ } But in civilized commu: The Human Foot. ITS BEAUTY, AND ITS ABUSE BY SILLY PASH- TONS. An exchange says:—No part of the human body contributes So liberally to its locomotive powers as the feet. How rarely we see the feet of our fair sisters in the beautiful and useful form the Creator made them. has twenty six bones, most wisely and admir. ably fitted toeach other! They form a strong and elasti y Support the body, how. y d bear it easily on its wonted way. These many bones vary in size in diflerent persons, but always, if treated fairly, retain their natural form and relations to each other, Wonderful to say, they are more beautiful and delicate in the femates of our race, as if they were i i to be ob- heat of admiration. We rarely them, un- ess it be in the mazes of the da and then they are covered. So we must say, that the normal female human foot makes aright anzie with the body, flat and curved upon Its upper surface, concave and wisely arched below. and narrowest behind. The number and beauty of its curves are wonderful. It has uo straight line-, unles: made by art. The instep has an arch of seven bones, the number of perf . These sup cent parts from ¢ and displacement. Attached by li the larger bones of the leg, or tibia, lower limb is the astralagus, So this tibia and astralagus form the ankle joint, se useful in “shaking the light fantastic toe.” Below this heel bone, that not only supports the b dy but aids in'raising it_as ihe cultivated foot moves quie'ly along. Too many ladies do No move these lower limbs with grace. They imitate the Indians of our plains aud forests, throw th feet straight for expected to meet obsta Projecting the feet slightly out nds grace and beauty to the lower limbs. Some of the lower races, if not all, are marked by a longer heel, a flatter calf and straightforward move- ment of the feet. Grace of motion charms the eye hardiy less than the grace of character a‘ tracts the soul. In front of the astragalus are a sec of fine bones. They form the areh to side, and from front to rear. Thi ho low of the foot, has been long ad: all men of thought and science. “Its icity gives ease and comfort to the spinal column and all its dependeat parts. In the normal state of woman, the se tee of each foot is the lon ard, as if in their walks. nd row om side md st of the total row he length, di leading membh ton, and cor rt of th the hum:n form divin \L-fitting shoes ch Tuey dis. t ir | place the bones and compel the several toes to | rde upon ach other. Qo part of the human body, unless tt be the ch st, isso much abused as those on whieh it 1 sts. Acompressed and contr ve’ chest in vit Ss disease and death. A compressed and contracted foot invites corns aad bunons, S flevings and pains. Let the toes be free to move easily among themselves, and let the! common covering be so lar: { t may | r-tein the form, direction, and beau!y Nature gave them. High Leels should be as indicative 0° low life as long ones ave. Sonail feet even ate th Mness of the mind. Let the arch so wisely its benetic and contri Howed to re The bea i leandy equalitic T've the Wi support. action of the { body is chang: feet are distor supported, the t mal position, th The whole proc is thrown pine is very of walking is un laborions. ‘The results are fati« and spinal ion. Some na an arehe mark of beauty vence consider that female come degenera’e races the mental powers keep pace with the arehing of the foot. A flat foo'ed race is always an inferior one. Preserve the feet in a'l their curves and beauty. The Women of Cincinnati. THEY REFRAIN FROM GOSSIP AND DKINK CHEAP BEEK AND WINE. esident Hayes is hardly an Specimen of the ladies o" middie belongs to another type, the steady lization of Connecticut and Ver tis fascina‘ing wife isa reminder 0) The wife of a fed as They are co fideat and ou spoken, yet with a tru ydesty that ne simper The gossip vile the nerve out ef you And in i reimnati to h fe he best ladies go to the rardens on the high hevfold Cincinnati and sip i wine, both so cheap here as to be alinust fre aud listen to fine music. ‘These gardens are reached by steam ineliued planes or lifts which, in a ininute, hoist a muliitude out ot the depths of the city to plateaus 690 to 700 feet in the air. By night and on Suadays these gardens are in full blast ; the eler; the bridal couple are found there, and they have become the lyceums of musical taste. Notwiths:anding this freedom of public iuter- course, Cincinnati is one of the mos! virtuous cities on our continent, family loyalty being based on kindness, good sense, and example. Cheapness is the law of things here. Stre car fare is only four cents. thirty cents the bottle. The brewers are am the richest people, and their best beer will not export successfully. As you sit in the ed beer halls traders come threugh with tot Vienna sausage, served on a cushion of horse radish and brown bread. Tiaat is half a dime, and is the frugal supper of many a ci zen. Beef and white fish are cheap and abun- dant. The Ohio Valley is one long Rhine, of double Rhinvland ferulity.—(“Gath” in the Phi adviplua Ltmes. —— Beauties of Brazil. Those who sigh for a lodge in Brazil shou'd read what Mr. Bigg-Withe: ites of the beauties of that country ‘he mosquito makes his home in these wilds. A tiny fly, called po vora, from being as small and multi. tudinous as atoms of dust, passes through the meshes of the finest ne‘, then penetra‘es the hair and beard and sticks its Venomous pro. boscis into the skin. The loathsome tick named carapetta, when disturbed on the cones and twigs by the foot of the passer-by, swarmed up the trouser legs and fastens upon the flesh. It has so firma bite that if it is piccked off, its head is left buried deep in the le -h, diffusing a virulent poison of its own. The hairy caterpillar, by day or night + qually beautiful, luminously phosphorescent in the dark, and with a covering of bridian’ hues like delicately formed moss, the ends of which ‘braneh off into. pointed antlers, inflicts with every point of these a very painful sting. There isa lively red ant, whose tormenting powers are not to be de spised. But one of the worst en Kind, as well as of cattle and spotted fly which comes along s pricks the body of its victim. It su lood and instills no venom; its miaute weapon, instantly withdrawn, leaves no sore. ness or irri-ation at the time.” The man thus slightly punctured does not rub or serateh himself. He litt.e kuows that he has received the deposit of an egg whicti will soon become awrigelicg maggot, half an inch long after one week's grow-h, but capable of growing to an ineh and a quarier in length and an inch in thickness. With fine rings of black spikes or bristles around its body, it has a horrid trick of revolving on its owu axis, tearing the flesh anew by each of its hourly revolutions. Mules, oxen and wild deer suTer likewise from the hideous visitation. Wasps and hor- nets there are, of course. There is a small, stingless bee, which crowds so thick upon ex: parts of the body as to leave no room for @ mosquito to alight. “As the bee only tickles, instead of biting, ‘stinging or laying an egg, it is welcome ; but it is impossible to eat without devouring half a dozen or more. THERE I8 A SOCIALIST SOcIETY in Syracuse which is composed almost entirely of members of tades unions. It was formed a year ago by an agent who acted under instructions “from the hea iquarters of the national order.” The members are m inly Germans and French- men. The p:e>iding officer is Anton Amon, a carpenter. He states that the organization is opposed to monopoles and capitalists, and its fundamen‘a’ principle is this: Tne laboring man is ju-tified in reserting to any lawful ex. t:emity to obtain his mghts from corporations, monopolies and employers generally, When asked if there is any prospect of a general railload s'rike this summer, he admits that he has received advices which lead him to expect such a d« monstration late in June. Ifa strike © ours, the members of this society will be in duty bound, he Says; to extend to the insur gents against capital all the aid in their power ENGLISH VIEWS OF AMERICAN CoMMUN- 1sm.—The London journals are not disp sed to exaggerate t 1e evils of communistic and socia!- istic agi ation in the United States. The Times taaces the o.icin of the movement to the strin- ency of the times, remarking that when trade ehahe ne pemeitp amc phe quent es “hoare of n ling to acknow- dg the justice or to acquiesce pylon geet i Gauette is convinoed that the is overra ed, am jority will r sily to the whenever bey are threatened, tat it is cer iy the duty of the tion te take steps for contends Each trotter {ID Buta’ - | Ninth ai istotally disregarded. | yand | Good wine is | ‘LADIES’ GOODS. UMMER IMPORTATION Ss Representing the largest and most diversified stook of CADIES BUITHis Lines Poraie White, Colored and Figured Percale and Lawn Wrapper Robes de Voyage. | | y Also. several vers beautiful and new designs in Muslin and Valenciennes SUITS for he Ments.ali at lower prices than any previous sease. M. WILLIAN, 907 Pennsylvania avenue. _1 Cite Trevise, Paris. my2?-tr N ME. L. P. JEANNERET has AVE ceived two cases of imported HATS: i | re- and BONNETS. which she will open TUESDAY, WEDNESDAY, and THURSDAY: ink 8 ue, Washin A perfect fi LAS: a ¥ sts., St. Cloud Building. ues, and the ne- The steady increase of dur | cessity for more space to | ciaities, has Induced us te | nk) formerly occupied Miss MoCorn faciiities augmented, and new depart ated, we shall be able to display all he special lines, as soon as they appear, au the Special son consist of HOSIERY, GLOVES, HANUKERCHIEPS, PAR ABOLS! KIBBONS, FANS. RUFFLINGS.TIES, BOWS. 8ULTO! ELRY,0O TON AND | MERINO ERWEAR, &c. ipicie a sortment of EXTRACTS and ‘TOILET ARTI CLES. Our Gentiemen’s Ament (entirely | distinet) is rote with pewest designs in COL} | LARS. CUFFS, HOSIERY, NECK WAR, &c, Each artic e is marked at the lowest New York "with acon orice. We invite inspection from all. )UGLASS?, ma2S-tr Ninth 8t., Bt. Cloud Building. Ms: ™. 3. HUNT a Would invite the attention to her, of the I to her-handsome assortment or '* ™ales PATTERN HATS and BONNETS, A full assortment of CRAPE BONNETS alwa: on hana. CRAVE VEILS RENEWED equal to new. SPECIAL ATTENTION GIVEN TO ORDERS, Mrs. M. J. HUNT, _ my 23-tr G21 and 623 D Street. SUMIER OPENING MRS. J.P. P- Respectfu'ly announces her opening of | PATTERN BONNETS AND wove HATS ON THURSDAY AND FRIDAY, The 23) and 24 lof M. attention of Washing » towhich she invites the and vicinity. SPrcia, NOTICE. my20 tr LADIES FINE BOOTS for Spring wear of my wn make for sale at very reasonable prices, JAS. H. VERMILY’ 610 Oth site Patent Offes, made to omier at short mar30-tr Ladies Boots and Shoes vottce, NEW stock or PARASBOLS, With Fancy Handics, $1 00, $1 25, $1.50, $1.75, $2.00. $2.50, $3.00, vie. IVORY HANDLES 8: BO ete. PEARL INLAID HANDLES FRENCH HOKN AA ip Piatn and Twilled Silk, 18 inches, 22 inches, 24 inches, at DL 20 inches: myé-tr MS. SELMA KUPPENT, 614 91H STREET, INFANTS’ AND CHILDREN’S LACE aud BONNETS, BUBES, — ~LONG AND SHORT DRESSES, And all Kinds of CHILDREN'S FURNISHING GOODB. Novelties in Lisle Thread GLOVES, Black Silk MINTS. LACES. LACK GODS and EMBROID- E sizles, C ‘ ade order. a D)StQE31 PATTERNS, (aii the just received by W. P. sellers and Stationers, 1149 7th and Blank Books specialties, [EW YoRh SNUE STOR!) . Penns; oy) PANIC PRICES EB LTPSED, LOOK AT THE FIGURE Ladies” Newport Ties. | Ladies Newyort Button. 1 to 1 75 L-d'es Fine Kid Sandai Slippers 1 to 1 75 Ladies’ Parlor Slippers o$L | Cadies’ Kid and Foxed 3 03 Undies* French K‘d Button Boots 1 Ladies: Rest French Kid, ABC 350 + Lasting (0 and Lace . 169 | 1 | 1% E ges above are | city for the price, | “One’Price Only. No Branch Btore | _my 99-40 GEORGE McCARTHY, | J: 2, Gnonee ENS. ILITARY AND NAVAL BOOT, SHOE AND GaITER MANUPACTU, #118 atenue. A fect fit, combining at once ease and! comfort in all cases guaranteed. Will call at houses and take measures, if Pequested by postal cardor letter, A fine selection of ladlesand -ntlemen's Gouds of my own manufac- shia eat?’and Si rckoctote ence ee Sehurtas dt Madre gerne short notioe. myli-ly M42 VELLous BARGAINS! TWENTY DIFFERENT STYLES or TIES, LOW-BUTTON, SLIPPERS, with Box and Opera Toe, UJ French and Low Heel, for Ladies, Misses and Children, from 25 cts. to $2.56, LADIES’ GAITERS, 65 cts. to $5. CHILDS’ SHOES, WO cts, toga, WHITE KID SLIPPERS, ALL SIZES. GENTS’ TIES, GAITERS AND SLIPPERS, trim 60 cts, to $6, BUCKSKIN AND KID GAITERS, To Order, LASTING AND BASE BALL SHOES, LOUIS HBILBRUN, 002 SEVENTH STREET. Mon of “That Old Woman of Mine.” myl3 tr neoprene Bore" SHOE AUCTION HOUSE. SIGN OF THE RED FLAG, 491 Pennsylvania Avenue, BETWEEN 4% AND 6TH STREETS. CHEAPEST HOUSE THIS SIDE OF GREAT REDUCTION IN XEWQOODB. AT THe F. Genuine Gots, Lasting and Foxed Button Boots from $1 60 toss. EVERY ARTICLE 8O0LD AS ADVERTISED. Strape—trom Bre fs Co (Baltime > | Fe Crk & Ue, Gialtimgto, Ma,) ad e THE BOSTON SHOE AUCTION HOUSE, my7-tr 491 Penn’a avenue.