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- HISTORIC WASHINGTON, ‘MRS MA RT RATON—THE CIOSH OF HER EVENTFUL AND ROMANTIC C4%#RR—OFFICE SEEKERS IN TSR OLDEN TIM#—WaSHINGTON GOSSIP FIFTY YEARS AGO. CHAPTER VI. “ What a beautiful wo: These were the last words of Mra. Margaret. Eaton, uttered at the age of nearly ninety years, a3 she ap- Proached the {areshold that divides the things Of time from those of eternity. The world had been beautitulto her. It appeared peautiful to her stili, in her solitary chamber of death, at her boarding-honse, where nothing remained to ‘soothe her age or cheer her lonetines3 save the memory of the fragrance of that homage which once had been hers. Itis certain that no womanin the United States has ever exercised the same influence upon the leaders of great parties as she did. No woman ever bad more powertul or devoted friends or more relentless enemies, or ever Succeeded so long and weil In flguting’ a battle against society tn which her owa S*x were ar- Fayed agalust ber to aunit. In the courts of Europe women have often c Med the action Of the governing power for or for woe— notably tn France. But all tuesé women Sed some ciarm which Was the 3% ret of their power. The favorites of the “Merry Monareh’s” court owed all to thetr wit and personal beauty: the Pompadours and Maintenons were indebted for success malaly to thetr sisiil In Saton was remarkable nett! , Deauty or gence very high degree. Her’ perceptive e “keeh and lively, aad she was at repartee or for a mo: id a rox beauty, wh Models. hut which had an indesr ery about It; then there was a girishness and attlessness about her manner and a disposition 80 open, frank and confiding, aad Life was so exuberant in ‘her, that men were frresistivly attracted to her and became her friends. she Was of Irish descent, and possessed all tie at- tractive qualities Which are pecaliar to the Women of that race. She would not have made @ herotne for “the peet or vovelist.” | Her health was entirely too robust for that. There ‘Was no turning the mind inwardly upon Itself for reflection, but_a living and being In the World oniside, in the world of things—not of thoughts and of sentiments. Her massy biack hatr, the color and saucy expression of her eyes, and the clearness and f1 es3 Of her complexion, showing the delicate tracery of | the veins of blue, were all of tue Irish type; and so. too, was her whol-some 10 ment of life and pieasure. P ot different from thousands Sirls, She was more than anything Creature of elreutnstance; fora lag Ume tae idol ef toriune, & ii BER SaD &: The story has already besa told of her mir- riage v Timberlake, her husbind’s death. | her marriage with General Evton, aad her tn- called itself Wash- @ays: And the polttl- wed thls socha! storm ed upon. If remains to con- clude the history of Mrs, Eatoa—aud a s2d one t is. ‘The briiiant tfe tn Spain (wh ed States win T) Came aton and his wife revu ates, and In a few years the General died.” fils widew was lett with ap ani— ple support. She had three daughie whom were married; aud for hi Seemed the promise of a serene ola Would compensate in repose for the had tossed her youth and Womanhood. But tate w be Sad history of ber subsequent L fe ts W gion correspondent of O wrote the day afte Mrs. Eaton died at a bo . between E and F stre 2 The narrative referred 10 13 as 1o!- juced in the property left her by Eaton was a store with a hail tn the upp story, tsed generally 43 a daacing hall, @ay One ef ber grandchidren vrouzat with Pim an Italtan dan Bucignini, from whom they d sons. “Would sue rent him the tral burden of Lis errand, and “could she permit th Tent to te paid in tuition?” She could an would. So Meastro Buetgn tenant, and began to earn The 1 He 0 bli w 80 affable He had see ett . S a of a ora as ihe § count Count iinselt. He had a loog lias of an: Stretching back t the tea Dos mother, mother and chitdren ail be ested inbim. It was not tony Det & ember of the family, and din: le. Re was au italian gobieiman wao aul Ito teach dancins for au ‘Tt Was not loug Was & great ought to have bow itt { po=session GF “te treated her with te utinss Children, who were at first the 193 were, one by one, wou back to Line 4 @ppréviation of his character and gv0F 1-3. | Was 0! A shrewd. His Wife B ulsoa+ read cash— 6 she says ti was. It lay tn the Gramercy Park Bank cf New York. B Bini was tired of Washington tired of Curious point at him aud stare af, wanted to live in Ni! ness t Mrs, Eaton drew ont ner $26 ¢1t to him. He invested ti in a val Cigar store, and soon lost ft. The to work for her lots aud houses, far she had mabuged to OWN separate estafe. She refuse yive it_ up to bim and he deserted ber, ‘She wrote to to come back, she & not live without him. He replied that he would om not Come back and be distrusted. He did not want her property, but if he was not to de trusted WIth it Le Was not ft to hold the relations of a husband. The villain conquere to come back aad he cou Pars, after frst dis sappeared. N with him bis ad Ube mother mother and her granddauch- 'S were both Dereaved, wronged ned on the same day, and same villa. This was ‘th “tai For a year t oe" a she had been so dupe 3 aches and propert nearly all gous, her | family was doubly ¢ ed, and she had notL- ng it revenge te liv re Two years later Mr. Bucign United States from his B mistress, iO Were On t went to ork and nadh at in p He begved to be Baus tosee ner. There was onky On which she would consent. obtatn haa ose 1a divoree couid e married the girl to aud du atueda div greed ferted busband had ob | far between; they come “like shadows, so de- | Was beloved by a gentleman named Anthony, { lama and £6 above suspicion, Mrs. Eaton must be con- demned. but who would be willing to subm't hetr own cause to a decision unde- a principle 50 rigid and unju And who would be com- petent to act as judges? Let him that is with- out sin (fe sin ‘as some read) cast the frat stone. Mrs. Eaton was an Irish tavern keap- axom, cherry-lip eg O'N' who waited on her father’s customers and who had at times been, perhaps, a littie free with rat- ting tongue, ana, conscious of innocence, or | Tather unconscious of impurity had not been | over-cautious in ber conduct. Tals “creature” had become the wife of a United States Sena- tor, and Was entitled to be called ‘Mrs. Si retary of War Eatos.” The upstart piedtan! | What would those ladies do wno had given birth or expected to give birth to son3 who would belong to the order of Cinctnnati? And then to add insult to this injury, Mrs. Eaton committed the further indiscretion of being more attractive than these virtuous dames. | ‘The men would persist tn the vulgarity of pre- | ferripg Mrs. Eaion’s sparkliag wit and frresist- | ible prettiness to the ever 80 much to be com- mended soc ety of these very proper matrons. | it was the apple of Paris that created the dls- | cord among the godcesses of Olympus fraught | With “woes unnumbered” to the race of men. It was the women of Greece wo incited the | yy, ‘Trojak war to be reveuged on the superior | beauty of Helen. And it was the wife | ot the “king of men” who Illustrated | ‘heir Character by her conduct durin her | lord’s absence. Thus Mrs, Eatou, like Helen, iayed the mischiet in Waslingtoa, and like | ier ‘fred another Troy.” These actors have all passed away, and the passions watch then Taged are how quiet in the repose of death. The history of Mrs. Eaton affords a most ta- for the nioralisis. structive the eareer of bo Arm apuy ated tise from obscurity to bower and distinction, and the fall Irom these giddy heights fnto tie abyss of misery and sorrow, if she is auexa™ple of What may be accomplished Under ia\orlug elreamsiances, sheis t ne the less aa example of the vanity n aspirations and the uncertain future aul Hi A MISANTHICPICAL WANDERER, From the history of Mrs. Eaton, it may not be ab inappropriate transition to make some extracts from a somewhat rare and curious book entitled “The Wanderer m Washingtoa.” The writer was a gentleman of fine culture and—what fs not so common now—was well versed tn the Latin classics. He seems to have carried with him tn all hts wanderings over the Tace oF the earth, “the memory of a rooted gor- row.” His book 1s not pleasant reading to the gay and the happy. Hts melancholy degen- erates into bitteroess, and his pen dvops gall. During bis “wanderings” he visited Washing- tou regularly fron: the times of Presiaent Mad_ ison to the times of John Quincy Adams, His philosophy Was pessimism. He writes: “The Orst Uning that strikes a stranger, after residing In the Metropolls, Is the affecta- ton of siyle and fashion which seems to pervade almost every rank of society. ‘The President opens bis drawing room every fort- night, for the reception of such as may please to Visit him; and his Cabinet, the Secretaries, give dinner and evening parties during the ges- Sion, to members of Cougress and strangers of distinction, on a visit wo Washington. ‘This is all well enough, Dut 1b does not stop here. Subordinate ofilcers and clerks follow the ex- ample, and al:hough their salaries are generally small and their means limited, they fancy that it would be unpardonable not to ape those above them and be what is ealied fashionable. To me, it was not a little amusing, to witness the labored attempis at style of some and the ridiculous figure made by others in endeavoring to reach the pinnacie of thelr arabition. In one room you may see a few gray-headed mortals on the very verge of clernliy, exhausting their Mile remaining strength over a card table or chess board. and “grinulng horribly a ghastly smile” at every Ubsuecessiul move. In another a crowd of spirits, * Diack, white and gray,” jostling cach ouber, and elbowing thelr way through an al- Tost impenetrable and suffocating tmass, to show the beauty of tieir naked shoulders, or the exquisite manner tn which they have plas- tered their withered visages with rouge. And, in # third, or more frequently in the same room. aimay behold naif a dozen nymphs tripping away “on the Iicht fantastic tog,” wlia as many young Swatns, apparently as little con- Yersaut with the “poetry of motion” a3 the “nuusic of the spheres.” You can neither sit hor stand, and the alr you breatue 13 not “redo- Jent of sweets.” What motive could have drawn such a roass of perisaing mortality to- gether? Pieasnre, intelectual or puysical, tt cannot be; for the refreshments are * few and part,” and Li ape al beauty to be seen, or ihe intellectual feast to be enjoyed, is so iim- ited as searvely to mertt observation.” OFFICE SEEKZR3 FIFTY YEARS AGO. Our pessimist pictures the office hunters as they appeared in Washington more than fifty TS ago In these colors: The Harptes, they are always waiting and | in readiness io pounce upon whatever preseuts: i integrity and truth interpose no barrier to ibetr progress, and faisehoods are fabricated Without hesliation or reiuctanes to serve their purp One of them wil profess the Most perfect and lasting friendship to the man he ts laborlog to undermine. His sycophancy is unboucded, and he cringes to and Matters ali tom whota He expects to derive the least ad- Valtage. ‘There Js uo ilalt to his affrontery,no we coldness or reserve can affect him. He attends the tev , parites, drawing-rooms, &¢., Lato has sometimes beeh obiigéd ts forge He leaves nis card ata foreign mlais- waits upon a member's wife or daughter, forms Che Cates of a gallant, wheaever his services are required, and renders himself use- ful iu & thousand humbie ways, to those whe have the power to benefit him.” WASHINGTON GOSSIP PIPTY YEARS AGO, Our weep phtiosopher gives the the follow- ing hotes of scenes and snatches of coaversa- tons at a ball: Says oue: “As I live, the fat scribe ts dancin the idol waltz with a sour crout from Pennsyl- pee Did you ever see anything more ridici- A middle-aged female asks, “Who is that creature?” and on betng Informed that he 1s a clerk ejaculates “O, la! a clerk! How on earth do Ubose creatures get into fashtonable lite, 1 wonder?” Whereupoa her cavalier replies that he “ alesye treats them with sovereign con- tempt” Au ugly femsle remarks of another female, “She Js an absolute fright! She has been In market, to lay knowledge, for ten winters and Js moreover abominably spiteful and malignant. T dear ax brings her aad her five hoyden erg regularly every season to Washington; las yet taken a fancy to them.” from the same, would appear jon, Dut 16 1s corroborated by what Slr Augustus Poster says about the lack of in- formation miuopg the young ladies. The conversaiion ts about a masquerade ball. A bevy of young ladies are delighted atsucna possibility. O16 young lady expressed a profer- : for the C.eopatra. | re. You know she was a beautiful Fret lady who died in Rome, and who, pa Says, was a Turk. I would dress all in ; Dear me, how charming it | Wouldn't itr’? . ‘ould be bu! (For The Star. A New Year’s Card. ¢ summer's glow. of frost and snow; Of spring delight, and autumn rain, Went by, but brought him not again, fore. Soin foree him to & hat a3 Baw ake Fra‘ly, £0 did poor Mt home, ald crouche hearth. For m: since the last eve lived in the capital of tbe 4 known,wh she exerted power.” Even tn her scanty w Ways appeared as here © r F tides she | would relate Aud almost tin- | possible ev ue malt. tales | ments were Corroborative of kuown tacts, or ; easily supported by them. She was an omaty- | y of works © matter tired her or faillad to interest About the scandals w arose ani culmina- sckson's t was only toa ¥ at all. Oat with Candid and tru'htal. ne Deyer | = ew that sie sagre nd to be history of her Part connection with the Ad.uta!stration of 1 always Indiguantly Drandad ay ac slanders. Sc me she never his chivatry, hty 10D! were con: iy ¢ Bis friendsh'p or his ¢ Heved, ard knew bis beloved and stinde: most devoutly T have purposely 1 moneh whieh would maket) ing, which does not at a ‘There have been other troab of the order en. Dut for ti acooaat Sneny and burrtedly of the Jesterday—who was 8 brig irl when Napoleon was tirs: Wenster, Clay and Caton: public career, who bas witn: fall of thrones, | dynastis who piayed Ta the history of these United Staves, whose 20th and 10cd birthday she saw. QUE WOMEN WHO HAVE PLAYED THUS MISCHIBS IN TEE WORLD. Judged vy tbe law that Cwesar's Wife must pe » BeneTaily, and herseif in particular, that she | regard for her present ne Wad extremely | ved—remembered—cared to know How I had borne the anguished fear, ‘The tortures of suspense—and then; He briefly dipped his cautious pen, Aud wished for me “A happy yeart” N.M.E. ——— re ____ Advice to Mrs. Chris- tiancy. Eavor Star:—I wish Tas Star would suggest to Mia. Christiancy for the creait of womea Nor yet a single line to show ii make #o further statements to involve herseit deeper than she now ts ta contradiction, Stlence in ber case ts golden, and bad she not broken it by admission, her friends could stitl have given her the benefit of adoubt. Ifshe has no tion, she should not forget she has wora the senatorial mantle of Atuerica, and every social downfall of a repre- lady, whether based upon facts or ns, reflects upon the entire sex. The ition, the greater the tn- fiuenced,for harm. It is true she was not born in the purple whlch should have made her all the more anxious to matntalo credibly her newly won honors and on. It is simply uLperdonabie she so far forgot herself as an ex- Senator's acd tiatster’s wife as to allow a “traveling agent” to become her lover, the stn would have been far less fm the sight of man and woman, tf she had chosen a peer of her busvand, Unequal harm are always dangerous, and if one-half be true that ts ad- mitted by the lady in question, it forces her friends to believe that artfulness instead of wl sness, duplicity instead of simplicity has control of the heart and movement of “tne child wife” of the old man who seeks divorce, and as it proves with just cause. There is no golden guilt in Ubis chapter nor love’s sacrifice to make It interesting, and Mrs. Christlancy should close the act by retiring ays a Piutes and Porcupine. [Virmania City (Nevy.) Enterprise.) Some Ptates caught a porcupiae in Winne- muces mountain on Wednesday and wok it to Winnemucca. ‘They offered to bet that no dog intown could whip it, Dut found no takers. Finally, they let 11 loose on the street, when a inrge dog caught sight of tt and gave chase. He Dbed ‘Dut was glad to let go, after hav- in a dozen places. t, bg lis mouth punctured € LR | My own experience has RELIGIOUS NOTES. —The Bishop of Peterborough recently de- clared that Punishment Se depression was a divine nauonal unfaithfulness. —The youthful evangelist, Harrison, has been | eter @ harvest of about 165 con- vel sinners at Meriden, Conn. Great ex- citement attends his efforts. — Rev. B. F. Brown, rector of St, Andrew's P. E. Church, Baltimore, has accepted a call to the church in Mansfield, Tioga county, diocese of central Pennsylvania. — The religious necrology of the year includes the names of Bishop Gilbert Haven, George Ripley, Dr. Samuel O-good, Dr. Henry A. Board- man, Dr. William Adams, ‘Lucretia Mott, Dr. E. | H, Chapin. — One of the Methodist journals remarks that even if {t be true that General Schofield per- mitted priests and women to meddle with boy cadets, General Howard “ought to mind bis own buSiness churchwise.” — There are three clergymen in the Protes- tant Episcopal Church who have remained for half a century in the same parish: the Rev. Dr. — Rev. Robert Prout, the venerable rector of | Durham parish, Charles county, Md., died at | does not write his French letter from his desk his pastoral residence on Friday last at the ripe | @t home) cannot have goue beyoud the classes old age of native of Washington county about the year is. Church, Patladeiphia; the elton, of Buflalo; and tue | — The Rev. William Hill, at present pastor of the Church of the Transfiguration, 1a Hooper street, Brooklyn, has been chosen by the faculty of Mount St. Mary's College, Emmetsburg, M4.. to fill the office of president of that insti- tution, left vacant by the recent death of the y. Rey. Father McClos! — Rey. A, Webster, wh) has been pas‘or of St. John’s Independent Methodist Church, on Liberty street, Baltimore, for the past forty years, recently requested* the congregation to Telleve him from active relations, which request Was granted, and he was appointed pastor eme- Titus. Rev. T. H. Lewis, who has been assist— ant mous! astor for four years, has been unant- elected in place of Mr. Webster, —Thestir made by Dr. Tyng’s sermon on “So-Called Modern Miracles” has increased Tather than abated. The discourse has been published in pamphlet form and 1s widely cir- e Dr. Tyng says he has been m1: misunderstood and misrepresented. the religious papers have attacked him sharply. The Christian at Work bas asked the opin ulated. Several of Ofagreat many theologians as to the possi- bility of present miracles, and publishes about thirty replies, neariy all of which take the ground that miracies ceased with the days of the apostles, 5 years or upward. Mr. Prout wasa | y. Dut went to Charles | —Moody and Sankey want to go to New Or- | leans, but are so busy in San Francisco that | are “no'children” in French families. Poor Additions are reported to several of the San Franclseo churches. tuey Cannot get away. It is probable that the evangeilsis will continue their labors where they are for several weeks. New Orleans seems a hard place for such labors as they put forth, but cannot be harder than San Francisco was thought to be. After re. maininy awaits them from old friends, some weeks among the saints and ners of New Orleans, Moody and Sankey cross the ocean and labor for a whi land and Scotland. where a hea pty le in Eng rty welcom2 —Rey. B. A. Magutre, S. J., who closed a mission at St. Aloysius, in this clty, the middle Of last month, dia not, : was stated at the time of his leaving, open a mission Christmas day in Boston. On the coutrary, with the exception of a historical ser he delivered at one of the Catholic churches of that city, he has been taking & short respite from his misston labors On Sunday next, iowever, he, with his band of assistant fathers, opens’a mission at Jersey City, N. to Deny fornia, J., at the close of which they proceed ver, Colorado, and from thence to Call- — Spurgeon said, in a recent sermon which Was delivered while he wags suffering great bodily pain, ‘‘When a man gets to cuttingdown sin, paring down deprayity and making little of future punishment, let htm no longer preach to you. Some modern divines whittle away the gospel to the small end of nothing. They make our divine Lord to be a sort of blessed no- body; they bring down salvation to mere sal- vabi iity, make ceitaintles into probabilities,and treat verllles as mere opinions. When you see @ preacher making the gospel small_by degrees aud rnlserably less, till there ts not enough ot it left to make Soup for asick grasshop, you gone.” r, get “AS for me, I believe in the colossal; a need deep as hell and grace as high as Heaven, T believe in a pit that is bot- tomless and in a Heaven that 1s topless.” | — The Rey. Egbert F. Cleave, of Cleveland, Ohio, delivered a lecture Sunday evening In St. Peter's Academy, Brooklyn, upon “Chrisulanity and Infidelity.” ‘He satd, tuctdentally, that he Was formerly a Protestant minister, but had been Converted to Catholicism. He sald the Catholic chureh was the fougder of religious itberty and the stanch defender of human rights, Infidelity had its root in_ the fail ot | man. It was the same to-day as_ the idolutry of the past, but had for its tdols lust and pas- sion. Athetsin was a bypochondrlacal disorder, an aliliction of the bratn, a sort of madnes3, rhuaitsts; Ms god was as Talmage and Beecher. In; Lgersoll Was nearer the truth than contirs ood as the gods eTsoll’s case was hopeful, but Beecher’s hopeless. Beecher held lp a few latemperate Irish as typical of the ‘atholic churen, But Beecher lved tn a glas; | house, | | —Willtsg of religious revivais in the Zranyé- | ust, Theodore Cuyler says: seme discussions lately in these the question whether revivals or harm to the country? There has been columns upon have done more good or harm in the church of God. This ts something like Gebating the question whether thunder-siorms had accomplisaed more benefit ‘The negative side Might point to the trees blown down, the people who were struck by lightning, and milidamsswept away. and the bridges But the affirinative side might bring in an overwhelming argument of the thirsty earth and the purification of the suliry atmos- Phere, Unquestionably the most healthy state of a church 1s one of such even, normal, sys- tematic activity that It should not need an es- irom the abundant watering Pecial arousing. But if a church 1g coid or comatose, it on to be awakened and warmed into new life. there should be a resort to he danger {s that at such tlmes mere machinery, or to an importation of some human instrument instead of @ fervent calling upo in God, Penitentlal self-abasements and putting makes of sins. The church whic! trust 1s doomed to disap} h with away Mesh its intment and disaster. On that all the quick- €uipgs which have come to the churches under my care have been unpredicted, and in fact, unexpected. In no case has evangelist been sent for from abroad. — Mr. Sankey made some pertinent sugges- tions relating to church music at the recent convention of clergymen in San Francisco. | believes that the sin be led by a choir. any preacher or He ing in the churches should nat the choir should be at the same chd of the church where the minis- | ter{s, elther behind nim or bestde him. ‘The | choir and minister are not independent per- formers—the oue to preach and the other to sing. They unite tn leading the worship of the congregation ‘and ought to be in harmony with each other. And in order to have harmony, the singers ought to be Christians, How can a man is no fove for God raise God. pe weal Mien Moe fy eart? great deal of the proverbial troubles with church choirs grows out of the fact that the singers are not Christians, Mr, Sankey | does not object to quartet choirs, but he would Lave a large chorus choir around the quartet, | to join it in certain parts. He liked solos and special pieces by the trained singers, yet he would have only one or two such pieces during any one Service, and would have at least two bymns in which the whole congregation could join. He says that the minister should join in the singing, aud aot be fumbling over his notes as if he had Cale d The mintster shoul urge all to sing. to do with prai net only sing hii Choirs ought to behave like , but ladies and gentlemen. They have no business to be whispering, or flirting, or reading news- papers while the mtuister preaching. They cught to sing distinctly, so that the congrega- Uon Can understand the words. The church is on an opera, to gratify a taste for artistic music. — During the recent Christian conference at San Francisco, those present were invited to putin writing any question of religious bear- 1.g which might occur to them, and pass them up to Mr. Moody. he was constrained to tell the need sene up no more, as he al than he cou! them, and answ Before the hour had expired ple that had answer before midnight. Then he took the folded slips one after another ered thelr queries off they more r, read hang. Many of them were on questions of church dis cipline and management, and other things of interest enly to church people. The following of are samples: Q. Do you write your sermons? a. Iti did f couldn't read them. Q. Whatis the duty of @ minister who ts called upon to attend a ru- neral on the Sabbat’ when it could be held just as well some Other aay? 4. I would give them & good gospel iuneral. ‘There are some pie you can’t rea_D al any other-ime but a fune- ral There is DO use preaching a eul dead, but preach’ to the living. Q. you think of a Christian’s A. Go, If you can do It to of the it do forthe glory of God You can go to the theater, dance, or of God. anything elee that you can do to the glory of God. That isthe test. if you are sincerely converted and filled with the 1egenerating influence, you won't want togo, God things before you and he offers you somethiv n'C set of these you shall not go; but better, 50 that you don’t want them. I never desire these thiigs, ‘that makes because God gives me somet! me happier than they could, 18 child, | death. The idea of father, mothér and chil- | in for an actor two. Indeed going to the thea- ABOUT FRENCH HOMEs. The Facts by One Who Knows. ‘This letter ts already 90 long that I must stop w will certainly "e su Ment | Editor Star:—Wi0l you allow a Frenchwomas | that if the writer acquird nis knowl (wife of an American) to contradict a pasag? of the French letter in Bradstreet you pub- Ushed Saturday? So far as “French economy”» 4s concerned, the article is pretty correct wi'n minor reservations. So 1s also the passaze that declares the laboring class anxious 10 save. As soon as a couple are married, no sun is considered too trifling to be taken to tho Savings’ bank to be used later for tueir boy's ‘Start in life, thelr daughter's marriage portion and the comforts of theirold age. But when the writer asserts that “the freiess condition } (of the French) ts due in a great. measure to the fact that the French people have no homes, ta our sense of the ;ord, Coffee and rolls In bet {1m the morning, does away with a breaxtast: | atdejeuner or lunch, ihe heal of a family gos toa café down town, abd to dine oat [3 ru rule, After dinner Gomes the theater; quently the husband goiug to ofe aud tne wite io another, and thre are no cuildrea to! ‘damand &' family reunion” when, I say, the writer Stat S such things as existiag, be shows ere | family Ufe of the really respectable porttoa of (he community he profeases to speak ado: His experience (if he has ever had auy a | that live in the Quartier Latin ia third-rate | boarding houses for young bachet or something very bear like 1t; ce was never acquired by living among nw of the middleclass or “bourgeoise” ric poor; not one single word of the above quoted passege 13° Correct, and ail aesertions deserve an emphatic dental, the Jamily breakfast ls geteraily composed coffee, bread and butter, with bolied ery: boiled ham or such like; a8 a ruie. the Frenva Go not feel an appetite for a dish or two of meat on getting up, and therefore they prefer haviuig the solid meal for luuch rather Uan for break- fast. It 1s @ matter of taste, of lygiene, of constitution, etc., and suits them. Here, your two principal meals are breakfast and dinner; there, lunch and Ginner, Here any smali thin: Will do for a lunch; there plenty of coffe, brea fast. It cau be got ready tn a very short Ume without any shopping; after breakfast the cook can go to market and get fresh things for lunch and dinner. Here it you wa: an early breakfast you must very often con- sent to have its marketing done the day before to be kept on ice or in the open air; the idea of such marketing would make a French cook’s bair stand on end; 1t wouid ba impossible to peisuade her the food was not stale or tainted; however, all this Is a walter of taste, and as Such, Dot to be discussed. But when the writer comes to say the breakfast is ate in hed It is enough to makea French cat laugh itself to ren ail €ating in bed! and peraaps the cook toot Oh, I forgot; further on he sates there France! in another twenty-flve years it wiil be miz.us its Inhabitants and a thing of the past Those two words “in bed” give the key of standing-point of the writer. In cheap board. Ing and lodging houses, breakfast 1s olten sent up to the room on a tray tnstead of belng served in the dining-room for domestic considerations; the same servant having to Clean stairs, halls, efe., and walt at table, {0 1s found easier to dis- pepse with the presence of boarders in t morning; {t Saves a servant, At hotels and tore expensive boarding houses a tray seat 10 the room would, on the contrary be charged Let us proceed : ‘The head ofa family lunches down town,” certainly; so does the London of business luncn in the city; so doallof you nere, if far from home, drop into a restaurant or a salcon; “to dine out ts the rule;” excuse me, to dine out (for a genuine Frenca family) ts the exception. I suppose its the rule for foreign- ers, OF yGuby bacuelors, be they the hard-work- ing Students or the fast jeunesse dove Dining out is considered a grea! treat, ta family, es pec! to the children, (for there are sd, now and then, In France. Acctdenis will bap- pen, you know, in the best regulated families.) The second-rate respectable restaurants give dinners ai fifty cents, a shade better than you get here for twenty-tive, (claret, the national table wine, 1s always inciuded.) It you ad- mit two accidents in the family, the dinner would cost two dollars; the mother can provide as good a one, If not so varied, for half the i aud butter is consid: red suficient for a break. | not be taken as a fair aes any inore statemenis. venah habits de rsu. his point of view could S., Washington, B. C. Bismarck at Schoenhausen. {Le Messager Fravco-Americain } Bismarck’s biriubpiace. and ne fat at the Bott Schoenhaus«n, good Da. tured landlord Is speaking of the great man “Those are the Dullocks of His Uighn exclaimed afier a m ed that two passing s bullocks should give him an continuing the conversation. administrator of his esiate, was when he undertook to ment, thor Th oughiy d Venger carts aray Opportur je was Herr marek, | abdle th his ow a airs. | The whole time that he rematned at schoeniian- | pathways of bi he knows Lothing of Freuck homes,familles aud | | liave Lo face the enemy’s fire agatn | on the contrary, while passing tarough 8) oO sen prior to entering upoa bis diplomats he was seldem seen by even his own tevs farmers. le was always poring over his b or striding in dgep revery alou park, that siroggie ta whic Ube palm of victory. Aud yet at he filed the posi of a supe: d) kes—nOt a sinecure in tues e constenty thr: of the Bide. Bat Herr & managed to transfer his dut without at the same time neg: (ue very respectable salary cnice.” preparing hi he afterwards we the this very wo Dp attached to hy je carcer | a In oa toa question the landiord con- ued: i “War? A war with you French, do you Mean? I don’t belteve it. After the campaign of 1870-71 Bismarck came to pass a diy at Sehoephausen. To several young fellows of the village Who had returned wounded tr ‘My children, be il ever France he sald, cheerily: tain that in all our lives none hausen, Bismarck gave us ubors stand that the moment for laying d arms had not yet come, and that we ma: reat struggle with our gle which began exactiy | ‘are ourselves for bereditary foe—a str Ubree years later.” | Tbe mansion of the Bismarck family at | Tounding park 1s a price; that wili settle the question of its being * the rul tus go on: * After dinner comes the theater,” bot so very often, good sir; thea- ters cost a good deal more there than here, and therefore are not on an ordinary income, of such dally occurrence, to @ French family. ‘There ts DO such thirg as lounging into a thea- ter, Except perhaps for bachelors, who do not know what to do with their evenings and look ter 1s amatter of no sinall commotion in a French household. The hour of the per- formance varies trom 7 to 8 o'clock and ends Dearly always at midnight. Tae distance frora home ts such as to require a cb and an allowance of tine to go. Therefore tae | dinner hour must be made cariler and tne day is chosen to suit the father’s occupations. I! 13 4 thing discussed two or turee days abead ani looked up to by the junior members; (1 alway: forget there are none;) sometimes in a family t ‘eat of the play is combined with the treat dining out. so as to be ready earlier, espec‘ally if the father’s business is in the same a of tie city as the theater. It must be remem) 2rd that iu Paris, a city of more than two million inhabitants, distances are an item of g:rious consideration. The last (uot the feast) assertion 1g “that the husband govs to one theater and. the wife to another.” Oa reading this my breath was cut short and tho doubt came acroas my tind that there were two Frances; certain ivig the Paris I have known ali my life ig not the Pafls this writer has moved in. Certainly the husband does now and then go to a theater without his wife; indeed you gen- Uemen do this a good deal more than French husbands do; so also does the wife without her husband but not alone, 1 can safely assert, {t hardly ever happens, and never as & system. Generally, it 1s because some other fatuily of friends has got a box and offers one seat in it; sometimes, because the thing to be seen is ata place of amusement where ladies are not expected tobe met. In Such cases the husband goes there openly, and at breakfast Chats about it to his wife. Hedoes Bot go on the sly, and doesnot telt his wife he has passed the evening sitting up with asick friend. In Paris or France ladies do not go alone to theatera in the ere- ulng; two can go, if one is old enough to chaperone the other; there are no cheap matinée arrangements in the week for ladies and children, that allow gentlemen at the head of families to have such good excuses for goinz alone in the evening. The only matinees that exist (and they have only been introduced these last five years) are on Sunday afternoons for the very pi ‘that all the members of a fami- ly should be enabled to go together. It is about Ume that the superannuated notions of “no deme” and “no family” should be banished tn regard to the French fd How many tim-s have I been pe irely str dumb on hearing people not able to put two words of Frenca to- gether tell me to my face, with all the marks of honest conviction, that the French lived in cafés and had no homes, as there was not even a word in the language for such an article. What would a Washingtonian think tt T were to tell him all hts community lved in Abner’s garden? To such, let me say once for all, that their c/ez-sov, (the French word for home,) 18 a8 dear lo @ French family as to any other f on earth, perhaps a good deal mere 80, as they give it up witn more reluc- tance and emigrate less than other nations. There 1s no living in boarding houses or fur- Bished rooms for French peuple; such places are reserved specially for foreigners, travelers or provincial pational siudents, Poor or rick, the iirst thing to be thought of, betore a couple Inarry, is their chez-soi; that {s, tue furniture and apartment, the household goods that are to torm a home forthem. They will live in these all their life probatly; circumstances may make them change lodgings, but they will cling to their furniture, if they cavnot cling to the walls, There is, owing to a less turbulent and agitated life than in the United States, no re- peated breaking up of housekeeping; no sales of furniture, etc.; no scattering of the members ye tan fore sa ble to ‘settle somewhere, and try aud getahome. How many thousands of families here wander to the four winds of earth, live in all the cities of the Union and have a home nowhere? Such an existence, common as it 13 bere, would be horrible to French notions of home, Of chez-soi, aat ideal of coziness, q' and family grouping whose sanctity it isnot given mapy foreigners to enter, How would yeu enjoy hearing a Frenchman turaing the tables on you, aud declare “Mon Dieu, ces Awiéricains, ils sont toujours dans ies malles et jes chemins de fer; ce sont de vrais juifs er- rants! fls ne savent pas ce que c'est que le chez- sol!” The assertion of course would be false, but there would be a deal more truth to back 1t than there is in the p: raph I men- Uoned at the beginning of this As for the assertion pass thelr winters without any fire except in their kitchen,” it is of the same caliber as the ol There is no room unprovided with a fire-place or ‘with a hole for a stove in the houses of old Paris; in the new erected. during ie apie. even the halls and stair- ments two cellars are given. The fact that the Assistance Publique provides tlie poor with fuel ag well a8 with food during winter shows con- clusively that it ts considered matter of neces- sity. Ifthe writer has stumbled on some ple who like to he must not con ‘hat all France enjoys {t. In general, cast ly used for iron large offices or Balld- ‘not considered ion Hitie pleasing to te eye. of us aghly Ta 15: | Schoenhausen ts an arcbitectaral conglomera- | Nothing could | be more modest in construciton—one could al- most say, nothing more ungal was built in 1700 by August Dorothea Sophia Katten. L 13" wife great quadrilateral in sh a@ igh Wall Incioses it on the north aud Bi ‘The place | arck aud ‘The sur wWhiie a brook forms Its svuthern aud westerd border. In the park a brotber tender age and an uncle of the buried, the tombstoue of the fo carved butterti “He was tbe joy and whom he never afive The whole appr rulns, which the ote of the why the Prince preter ik Tul And stooi é (But the Never a fear nora pi 5) Wailed in her x d (but the chil Never a fear nor a d they amber ‘s form at 1 i the delicate Cold in the lone Lay the fathe (But the boys Nevera fear 10) ent hoe to th apang bad il Papa never con (But soon they lavigh and sine Never a fear wor a puny have So God in His infi Shuts the eyes « And they see not the fel ‘Though their eye And I said: Th With its terrible Aud for them no brooding F \icth its thre Aut € is the And ev they pangs and sti eutn esent— 10-1 laugh aud sing at thet he hope of bis p. "1 Dut by his deat. who ch. ommer de. park and ives digalty by tue ‘tle, is Sad indved, and one understands | ng his lelsre hous | cee wore sumptuous domaias at Fri ic mother y ‘ountry Hooks. nan there. hed and sang at thoir play; had they.) 2 boo ait ached aut eaug at thoie play: aie ty gf hoar-froat a ambers Journal. A fove of the counny 1s taken. T know not why, to Indicate ¢ presence of all the cardi | di nal virtues, Itisone o, uQse Outlying quall- | Wes Which gre not exactly erilortous, but which, vocati for that very reason, are the "208e pro- | e Of & pleasing self-complaceucy. ple pride themselves upon {t a3 upon hadits of | early rising, or of answering letters by return OF post. We recognize the virtuous hero of a novel as soon as we are told that the cat in- slinetively creeps to his knee, and that the little child clutches bis hand to stay its totter- ing steps. To say that we love the country is to make an indirect claim to a similar | excellence. We assert a taste for sweet | and innocent pleasures, and an tndtffer- | ence to the feverish excitements of artifictal society. I, too, love the country—if such a | Stat ment can be recelved after such an exor- | dium; but I confess—to be duly modest—that I | jove it best in books. In real Mfe I have re- marked that it is frequently damp and rheu- matic, and most hated by these who know it best. Not long oI heard a worthy orator at a country school-treat declare to his small audl- ence that honesty, sobri-ty and industry, in their station in life, ae Ppossioly enable them to become cab-drivers form of the reward was su; London. ‘The precise gzested, I fancy, by some edifying history of an ideal cabman; but Lhe speaker Clearly knew the road to his hear- crs’ hearts. Perhaps the realization of this high destiny might dispel thetr illusions. Like poor Susan, at the corner of Wood street, they would see “Bright, volumes of vapor throngh Lothbury And a Ber flow on through the vale of Gheap- ie.” ‘The Swiss, wbo at home regards a mountain as an unmitigated nuisance, is (or once was) capable of developing sentimental yearnings for the Alps at the Sound of a ranz des vaches, We all agree with Horace that Rome 1s most attractive at Tibur, and vice versa. It is the man who has been’ “ion; Pent” who, according to in papulous cities llton, enjoys “The emell of grain or tedded grass or kine, Or daisy, each rural sight, each rural sound,” and the phrase Is employed to illustrate the sentiments of a being whose aid dise was Certainly enhanced contrasted experience, yment of para- ya sufficiently I do not wish to pursue the good old moral saws expounded by s) many preachers and i possible groun: the ideal mode of rustication worthy Johnson's love of Charin; sympathize with his pathetic remar! joets, T am only suggesting a of apology for one who prefers who can share the Cross, and wheo en- Uced into the Highlands by bis bear leader,that is easy ‘to sit at hi ome and conceive roc! neaths, abd water falls.” Some siight basis of experience must doubiless be provided on which fo rear any imaginary fabric; and the mental opiate which silmulates the sweetest reverie is found in chewing past recollections. = But guide one requires small the external cud of with a good ald. Though a cockney in grain, I love to lean upon the farm-yard Peo, to hear Mrs. bit of her mine placid doze by the SO TERE to sit down in Dandie Din: bestow crumbs from his groauii Poyser givea to the squire; to be iulled Into a of Dorlecote Mill; mont’s parlor, and Table upon. ID three generations of Peppers and Srustarass or to drop inte the kitchen of a good old country inn and to smoke a pipe with ‘Tom Jones or Msten to the simple minded philosophy of Par- sen Adams. When I iift my eyes to realliies, I can dimly desery act the street a vision of FOSS, my neighbor behind his iooking-glass adjusting te parting. of his back hatr, and achieving ‘rlumphs with his white tle calculated to excite the envy of a Brummell. It 1s pleasant to take down oné of the magicians of the shelf, to an- nibilate my neighbor and his evening partics, and to wander off through quiet country lanes into some sleepy hollow of the past.—7h# Corn- Mall Magazine. ‘120 Miles a Second. {St. Louis Republican. ] When speaking of the — the other night, i many of them were res with great velocity, some at miles pet The tg On the sun, in his rotessor Rees stated to revolve Tate of 120 vol matter at an swift rate. It must be remembered that the ne of the spots would be covered only A Se ust Bot imagine that they solar cy we mi are ones we have here on earth. Should a solar cyclone strike the United: s a by | uliy of | THE BOMANCE OF A BOSE. Whispers Concerning the Object of : px Humberts Quret View to Parte {London Trath j The King of J ely ts coming on a visit to Paris. He will precerve here a strict Incognito. A wish to be agrevebie to France is 10 own in the selection of the title wita, wale ul hiask bis roysity, Ils Majesty ist Count of Pavia. What his politic in visiting Paris, Lam not able t0 course, for it} Dis father tea vtno Hiren a Ihan to obtain Utes ave plenty of mow: ad Or end 2 has us is not reg revised. a ava ied at Tils brows u ) Lhe Sun DOWN Lac y. ald set he coming Co. i | of pantomim:! ‘The sallent « Loldness, fe grace of an a iuore by intulijoa What Kilis Us, There were 3 in Ubis year Isso But the fact that tne ds jority of 4,330 need not Exel bat the city ts to be deo! people of lange citles are in in Ube rural aistriets or 1 ndeed, the extei } ound ‘in cles ty in the x rch, NS have tl by a ma upward, Not one of cliy and only country, Sev | one of” Gi | India and or of Wiom “ten hese was a native of oue born in of Irel ot in Support Of the o great age taat born so far the Gates of tie: cent narians al that-it 1s im po: other eviden a death record due to Uh janghter of the children in uaheatth, 2 wO-fitihs Of all Uhose who died tn the city Wer under hve year and more ian ov fourth were uncer One those less than five » io Jess than that oF the whose city ts pretty constant and has varied } put y slightly in the past four years. } Dipht , thetich more ts sald ab ti | in cecasional L other dis- | $ the rast } fatal i | deal less than that iy | tnpal derangen: ton is principal diars twice Une fatality of i Tedeed, y ¢ ¥ popu According to the repor produced by the action of tigut al in the cumera, and owe noting the artist's brush. In the prot ed, the coloring appeared to be qu 1 ture, and delicate’ tones and stades were to the view. The flesh-tint | and roli justice was done to gorge: tals, The protruded tougueot a db photographs possessed Ue exac! ©: Some of the guests, says the inspecting this collection, and not fatly qualnted with the ebaracter of the lat Venton, took it for granted Unt the work w litul, ar Qs on ivory au Tiat, and eyes whea informed f the form aud outlioe, 1 by tie ight ot day. Careful and minute inves't feu, LOWEver, Would then show that | panaicra‘t ©88 not tn it: for there we and effects whics: UAture’s pencil of 1 alone aecomplish. ~* contention tographs colored by ariit3, howe must be more or less “monoic™eas, bard, true to nature and to the origiaals. e process was discovered, it is 7ald, by a French selentist, but bas since undery ay proversent by the proprietor of tue p: England, Ifthe new system prove an tied sui the reward wiil not < reaped without muci labor tn the pa HUIBETOUS ATLEINpLs Lave Deen made vIn dacs the Bun-pencil to 11x Colors ib the plerures it draws in the camera; but chemical and mo chanical dificuitles have stood fa iue way. In colors a faltbtuily produced. but prowected fr uy action of ight by being passed through a 0 ing solution, of which geistine forms the pri cibal Ingredient, and that some of the photo- graphs 80 treated have been exposed for mouths to the sun without betog, in any wise, alfected by the ordeal. Unfortunately the process 1s as yel UDKNOWS, a It 1s likely UO be for some ime to come. Gey. Grimes and Twenty Cents. {Burlineton Hawkeye 1 The legislature had Jusi convened at the capt- taloflowa Gov. Grimes Lad srrived the atgnt before and taken rooms at a ceriain b A young espirant for o' of the state siso dro: carriage at the si up and allghte of the same h os el. T hostier threw off bis trank, and the landlord conducted bim to his room, leaving the tras in the barroom. Wishiog his trunk, the you man demanded to have it brought wy ing a man passing through the Io whom be took to be the porter, he ¢ commands in an imperious and lofty tone. T order wes cbeyed, the man Charzing a quarter of a dollar for his services, A marked quarter, that was good for only 2 cents, was slipp styly into his band, and was pnt into his pocket by the moan with a smile. “And now, sirrah!” erled the new arrival, “you know Gov. Grimes?” “0 yes, sit.” “Well, take my card to him, end tell him I Wish an interview with him at his earliest convenience.” eae A pecullar look fisshed from tho man’s biue eyes, and, with a smile, exteuding his hand, be sat am Gov. Grimes, at your service, sir.” ‘You--I—that 1s, my dear sir, 1 beg—a—a thousand pardons!” ‘None needed at all, sir,” replied Gov, “I was rather favorably impressed with your letter, and bad thought you well suited for the office specified. Bat. sir, any msb who would swindle a work! | the pubite Good ev: ing, sir.” A Romance: It wes Christmes Eve. Streets—brilliapuy Ut shop windows—toys— gay crowds—snow on the ground—everyDody out—Christimas turkey. Jane Allalone wandered alone—crowd—sweet, Sad face, wistful ey es. Five years before, James Goody goody —Christ- mes Eve—betrothed Ww Janc—satled away— India—ship lost—never heard of—foundered on Coast of Africa. Jane held on to hope—never would marry— Pined away, etc. ‘Wilitam Bacybady—rich, corrupt, dissipated — mortgage on Jaue’s motuer’s house—fore- closure, Away Villain! Rather poverty, crusts, &c, ‘Turned out of doors—homiless, Down by the dark river—Pier No. S. She was about to make the fatal pluoge. In fact, Jane Allalone did) Sut just then the sbip, wita Captain James Goodygoody, which tad not been lost at iz up to the dock, loaded to water’s edge with china, silk dresses aud tea. Captain Goody; ly saw Jane strug- eae water. He her out with a t-hook and hauled her on board. james! : ‘The cook dried her at the galley stove. They were married on Christmag.—alla Californian, | LOtor ern ft WANHIN: the new process colors are Siid nob only tobe | yy A SOCIAL EXPERNMENT. {San Francisco Post } Woman ts by nature so erratic and tnoonsts- Tent a creation that it doesn’t do to bat on even her most marked characteristics. For thus | tration, the other day old Mr. Pangleup, of Nob il, Was commenting on the railroad Veloci'y which young ladies jabber to each 0% wheneverthey moet, wi! hout ether in the least understanding or replytog to what Ube oth ; says, * Its Just. a clean falsehood gotten up by you cod-for-nothtng men,” said the youn: Lop girl, mndignantiy, j Au *sakd her father, bentgnant *roast Uarkey @ <ponse to wares without » lovely for a hyo a hess 5 th ur usu a ‘ That pecultar pre orgie with wht Treason. tt when des: clean « out? Yours 1a met Charlie Boggs th if Skippen sald Vand be said ma dos ento a word! say. TF was asking av Charley, nol roast turkey! George ‘Shetloy (hinks You re awful ni Now, tel me, wh dia he sa; pod «gracious! What are you hugging me fe And, ‘Tida,” thoughtfully remarked Misa Pungieup, aiter the matcer had been explained and ber father agmitted that he had lost_b) seraieb, “I believe inmy heart tut it y hadn't thought about Charley Just then shouldn't have any new sutt thts winter.” BROKE Jat.—Daring the nicht of Wed @ay of last week Augustus Brown, white Joh: red. confined ta the conn y of larceny, escaped Unerefr>. by fling two of the tron bars in the rear wia- dow of ‘the large cell. Watts as sluce 1 captured. Unabie to stand tue intense o. sought refuge at the farm of Wiiilan ingly, near the town, who tuformed , uty sherlif, A. J. Scott, who at Once went out aud brought him The prisoner's fect were found badly frost-bitten, and fears are enter. will be necessary brown bas not been heard of, and it ts taoug! king his way to Harford couaty, us Mary's (Mi) Beacon. tin California to oramanding the made Secrolary vision of the jor Garfield, z AS KEMAINL eee ‘DON CITY POST OFFICE, Saturday, January 8, 355%. £7 To obtain any of these Letters the ust call for “ADVEBTIsgy LeTTEns,” Gate of Qus list. 8271 pot called for within one month they will Le cut to the Dead Letter Ofties. LADIES’ LIST Kate M Mrw, Brow! 2M M Boouks Moiie’ i Mies; 5 ira; © EK Mrs “Ce td Katie M + Crawford Kittie Miss; Oar Tase Mie, D-iavis Abtne W Mra; Doagises Ela M Myra Bose. Don. | Or og pad Fan Mra: for Fis M « "eetax Marvie Miss; Felton of re. Misk: Gittipgs Beth Mis ise; Grant tia Miss; sosbel 2; Ty Addie re Bins; 9 Louisa Mis .: 6 rs; Garyey Mollie Miss; Gomer Pil, «Mre Anne Delle Lee: Holly Mins A 2ate ; Humpheey Miss C Lizzie; No oy; Heydura Mra Neird Mrs Mery: dicduan Mies Matilde sbarshF; Hawkins Mies Sarah, ia: a Jacobs Miss Alice; Johnson | Mise Marv: Johnson Mise MH; Jom dures Mies Mary; doves Mrs Mai Mise 5D. K—herr Mrs L W; Kutt Mrs; Kearse Miss Mary | 4.—Lewis Mies B: Lewis Mins J M; Launan Mre M: Lewis Mies Mode, ie brow Miss Mary, Lewis » he Marrsy Mre Ads M rs Es ore > 6 Mie swilie. O'Connor Miss Magwie. > Quine Migs Sas riew H. Passuers Deboral G Prince & Miss Laura; Price f A; Resel Mrs Jan x, Euowell wins Mary #; 16> fon Dire Mary Ey Aiea Mire Mary; Ki bingo ‘S—sweatinser Mre F J. Showen Miss K Suvth Miss M4 SE Ss Plizs, Thomas Mre MA: Ta Tacker Mive Mary R; Tuiier 8 Parsie Wood Mra Aun; Wa D: _Waebiogton vollie; Waters Mor #1 Elgab-th; Wilsoa Ms y auwie, Wisin Mex Mary A: Wister = Macy A; Wililstue Mise Marin; Wilsoa Miss M Ts Pitlua; Weils Mise Balle, Woot ee la. GENILEMEN'S LIST. Andrews 4D, Awhrose Gloud; Alexaud Ackersan GH; Arnold JK, Asheru J Oot AB; Burks Qos WT, del! William —Colman William ; buoan Charhe C sidy Hon @ W yUhriety 3k rts NW; Co i ers WU; Campbed P a, Oem, E-Piliott Beevelly ; Esings Joseph; E Sihert WG; Bite Welter H. Tracie © 3; Forster 3; Fowler Jory> Mr. Fowier WM. Fraile Wat. Lis EW, 3. Gorden James; Green LL. Mr Grant Wm L. coward Hyuen Charles M; Ileb OW, Hobbera C KeBindrsy Daun; 1 erEdwo MB; Hadfield Dr Geo, Hutekunsos f+ ard B; Hencersoa HG; Mawarter ZoM. dar: 60 James; Howard JC; SB, Beiskeu J E. Marris Stephen ; Hale Wu J. DEM; Jasper dames; Jolinston 5 W :gchiston William " M—Fanpiey AF; Kindell Mason :Koiht W0., —Lewis George T; Layman George; Laue 3 nt Wi Jewis John HH: \Lietou Patrick; Lowey W* * reuce poh Mannie 37; Mille 3.0; Mitford 3.0.8; Mis Rie huar <rits Db. yorew ; McFuen Gen! Chas; Mo- cBride Win ¥- = ; Phillips Charien: Payne Gio E: Poiros dA blunt, Pumice Bauituel Parks Seuaao Jamon. vane bd AB: Rathi SG; Rescuthsl Ferd: Rollins M Fes Rudaph, Bocsou Samuel Hy Bs Frazer a son Richard; Span'4 Thomas R ‘same ae: Spal S Syiet Gnarly; Taylor Puomaa; Tacker Wat 2: ter G. a ’ oeby ©, 4; Winterford On; Wa! Gintnas Oo. '3s Whittieesey D W_ Whitman