Skip to main content
The largest online newspaper archive

The Sun from New York, New York • Page 5

Publication:
The Suni
Location:
New York, New York
Issue Date:
Page:
5
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

lit. THE SUN, SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 14, 1880. SARAN BERNHARDT. Treception at the Union L.engue Thentre Paintings and Sintuary-A Great Crush -Considerations of Stage Millinery. Tho interest that Mile.

Bernhardt possesses for the people who pay high prices to be admitted to her performances and for the far greater number who rend with avidity the things are written of her is of a very comcharacter. She has for several years been an interesting minor topic in the public prints, and has always contrived to entertain, some fashion or other, much larger audience outF Rite the theatro than in it. Such part of Mile. Bernhardt's art 0.8 1.28 been confined to the stage has done comparatively little to commend her the attention of a foreiun public. Divested of the superstructure of agreeable and fantastic eccentricity that she has founded upon it, her achievements do uot explain her notoriety.

we know far dramatic, less of the real triumphs that she has won in the than we do of her exploits with her ambulance of the her querre Villemessant, her balloonacy, her contumacy of the worthy director of the house of her paintings, her sculpture. her coffins, and hor skeletons. It is possible that on the uncertain ground that Mile. Bernhardt as yet occu pies in America she may abstain from any startling eccentricity, but she will not consent to present only one side of her artistic personality to this or any other community that she may enter. Besides, her paintings and her sculpture are expedients that agreeably and effectively bridge across the footlights and give world without which always, as it oughtto, sees only the best side of geniua.

Fifteen of her paintings and ball A dozen pieces of sculpture have been placed in the ante-chamber of the Union League Club Theatre, and Mile. Bernbardt held a reception last evening and exhibited them to a host of fashionable and distinguished people whom shot had honored with invitations. The door the theatre WAS cleared: various objects of art were tastefully disposed of: the stage was filled with plants. flowers. and tropical verdure, concealing a large orchestra, and at 7 o'clock peoplo began to arrive.

Nearly all were in full dress, and at half past 7 Mile. Bernbardt made her appearance all in white and diamond here and there, very brilliant, very tasteful, piquant and interesting to behold. The moet intense interest was manifested in her, and she was unmercifully stared at. A journalist introduced himself, and from the charming crimson of his ears it was properly inferred that he visiting his French upon the fair actreas. She is very amiable, Milo.

Bernhardt; she smiled with infnite good nature; she was even amused. At half past 8 o'clock the theatre and the ante-chamber were packed to their utmost capacity, and it was impossible any longer to move. At the door was a struggling mass of persons, vainly endeavoring to enter. and the narrow stairway was completely blocked up. Technically it was a complete social success.

Mille. Bernhardt looked very happy: she stood between the folding doors, and talked English great courage, but appeared to prefer French. All the artists in town were there. They crowded around her. and there was a great deal of conversation indeed.

It was very amusing and a very interesting occasion. Very little was consequently seen of Mile. Bernhardt's paintings and statuary. but. it must be confessed, that little was surprise.

Her paintings neither very serious nor very ambitious, but they are full of an agreeable fanes, a distinct and effective character of execution, and a fixed and unhesitating apprehensiou of subject and motive. They are much less the works of a clever and practical amateur than they are of a trained person with a certain eccoatricity or peculiar individuality in his work. They are intoresting, aud they resemble the style of Alfred Stevens more than that of any other artist that one can call to mind. Whatever may be thought of Mile. Bernhard's paintings, it will not be easy to differ greatly as to her skill in modelling.

There is a bead in bronze of M. de Girardin, which is in every respect an excellent piece work. bold and vigorous in its treatment, full of character and vitality, and in every way strong and effective. A high relief of Ophelia" in marble is a most tasteful and charming piece of work. The entire design of it is admirable, the face full of tenderness and sentiment, and the treatment of the hair, flowers, and background in the highest degree artistic.

An ink bottle in bronze, a little portrait head of herself. very fantastically modelled, is also full of cleverness, The dresses that Mile. Bernbardt has so far cavenled in her two characters of Adrienne and Frou-Frou have made a deep impression. No woman has seen her upon the stage of Booth's Theatre who has not arrived at a definite conviction of her intellectual and artistic superiorits. wholly apart from her excellence n8 actress.

There is an elevation of sentiment ber various draperies and adornments. a reA nement of personal decoration, the like of which woman never presented on our stage before. It is true that it is perilous in the extreme for any merely lay person venture upon this subject, and presumption self to suppose that the doing so will not scathingly resented; but even impressions of ignorance are sometimes interesting. good many years have passed since the drama of feminine upholsters came into fashion. During that time a large part of the public has learned to esteem a play more or less accordingly A8 the clothes displayed are rich and numerous, or plain and few.

The generous emulation in this regard of our managers has gradually exalted the work the milliner and afforded the public a liberal education, whereby to build in its mind an ideal of this fine form of modern art, which presently Sarah Bernhardt should come upon the scene and realize. She is a marvellously well attired woman. Her dresses are not merely fine and costly fabrics, and trimmed in conformity with the latest fashionable frenzy: they have a distinction, a ftnese, a propriety, and a taste that affect even men. As to the women who them, they even forget their proper sense envy, and they come away from the theatre with that happy restfulness and cheerful ease of mind that ensue when one's spiritual nature and higher inclinations have been powerfully wrought upon by agreeable and improving Quences. They feel that upon the horizon of their than ambition their there fancy are had possibilities ever painted; and whenever such 8 thing occurs to a buman being.

he, or she, feels much better for it. Frou-Frou's dress in the last brought tears to the eyes of every woman in audience. In the third act sho wore a dress such material and disposition that it could be contemplated without deep emotion, while any dress that she put on in Adrienne" equivalent to a powerful moral tonic. Within cortain limita the elaboration of accessories of dramatie representation grateful, and it cannot be truly said of Mile. Beratardt that her robes transcend her The tendency of tho modern stage is, however.

largely in the direction the spectacular. 89 it the gratification of the sense sight were the main thing to he effected. We have had many occasions to observe actresses that did not please in any other than by renson of what they wore, and others who aimed to please by reason of what they not wear: but the contemplation of a pretty personable young woman figuring as an Inated milliner's block is not profituble. Mile. Bernhardt is not of these, but her clothes ArG 8 powerful encouragement her fessional sisters to proceod to even wilder flights of extravagance than they have heretofore indulged in.

All that our managers seem to want is an excuse to hang a spectacle Even John McCullough, who is a noble enough Roman in a burn, is to be served us a pageant to-morrow night at the Fifth Avenue TheatreForrest, upholstered by Mr. Jack Haverly. Red merino undershirts, 51; white, 51 each. Fix dress shirts to measure for J. above W.

230 Johnston, Grand aL, also 079 MELA ad door at WHAT 18 GOING ON IN SOCIETY. The question of opening the doors of our best society to Miss Sarah Bernhardt just now agitates the breasts of some of the leaderg of fashion, and the conflict going on between the love of virtue on one hand, and the love of notoriety on the other, is worthy of 8 better cause. As yet no decided step has been taken either way, and tho disposition among sensible poople is to let the whole thing alone, and to make no effort either to receive or ex. clude. In polut of fact, Miss Bernhardt brought very few letters of introduction with her.

Notabilities on the other side of the ocean. who wore able and willing to give her letters to frienda over here, thought it advisable to ask permission before doing so, and in this way time was lost. and Amoricans abroad. and those at home who were written to. were able to evade or decline the honor.

M. Victor Cousin, however, did give Miss Bernhardt a letter of presentation to a lady of high social position in this city, who expressed herself much embarrassed receiving it. as she did not wish to slight M. Cousin, but wished still less to make Miss Bernhardt's acquaintance. How she decided the point we have not heard.

Probably it delegating to the men of knotty, family the honor of entertaining the ductive Sarah. and being out of town" in mourning" herself. There are others again who take what is called a broader view of the claims upon society of all artistic celebrities, and of the pleasure and profit to be derived from knowing them. One of these, a lady who has had intimate acquaintance with aristocratic circles in England. and who holds that the virtuous example of the Prince of Wales should be followed by all his faithful friends on both sides of the water, it is expected will entertain Miss Bernhardt at one of her Sunday evening receptions, In such a case as this, we suppose "noblesse oblige," but it is not likely that the precedent will be very extensively followed.

In the the great actress is so absorbed in rebearsals and stage business, and so well pleased with the nightly receipts accruing to her, that she probably cares very little whether sho is invited out or not. It is said, by the was, that she actually brought with her that exhilarating and useful companion, her coffin. in which she reposes whenever, to use her own words, she has an attaque de nerfs or tho maladie de "esprit, from which she so often suffers, and for which her grim resting place is found to be an unvarying cure. Invitations are issued for an entertainment to be given by Mr. W.

R. Travers, the popular President of the Raquette Club, on Thursday, Nov. 18, the invitations to be limited to the families and friends of the club members. An ontertainment of a similar kind was given last year by Mr. Travers, and was eminently suecessful, and as in these days manly sports are as familiar to the feminine as masculine part the community, the ladies will no doubt greatly enjoy the good play that they will have an opportunity of seeing.

The whole club house will be decorated and thrown open on this occasion. and there will be a collation and music after the games of raquette are over. It is reported that Mr. Leonard Jerome designs to convert the building owned by him on corner of Twenty-sixth street and Madison avenue, and now occupied Union League Club, into a restaurant on the plan of Delmonico's, but this is somewhat premature. Mr.

Jeromo has had more than one project in contemplation in rexard to the disposition of this buiiding when the time comes for the present occupants to remove to their now club house in Thirty street. At one time he thought seriously of making it the headquarters of a new organization to be called the Turf Club. which was combine and associate all the leading sporting clubs of the country. and afford railying point for members or representatives of distant clubs such as the Maryland Jockey Club, for instance, who might wish to come here for some particular meeting. This plan was favorably entertained a few months since.

but seems now to have given place in fertile brain which has conceived and carried out so many original schemes, to the idea of a restaurant, somewhat on the plan of Deimonico's, but of rather a higher grade, affording more facilities of accommodation for bachelors and more extensive reception and ball rooms. Perhaps in this way the glories of Delmonico's old "blue rooms" might be revived where small Germans were wont to be given in the olden times, and which since his removal to street have we at been greatly missed, as he has now only the one large ball room, which is not available for a small entertainment of any sort, and is apt to have a bleak and melancholy aspect when not filled to suffocation. The first afternoon teas of the winter will be given the 19th of this month by Mra. Clapp and Miss Wolfe, for which cards are already out. and on the 30th by Mrs.

Charles F. Blake, a daughter of the late Gan. John A. Dix, at her residence in street. Mrs.

Blake's reception is intended as an introduction into society for her two daughters, and it is said there will be several other present. Mra. W. B. Parsons has already sent out cards for Wednesdays throughout the season: and Mr.

and Mrs. Fernando Yznaga for Tuesdays in November. The engagement is announced of Mr. Oliver Adams, a young Englishman who has resided for some time in this city, to Miss Tardos of New Orleans. The engagement is also announced of Dr.

Hill. the young surgeon so favorably known to travellers by the Cunard steamship Gallin, to Miss Minna Schaus, the daughter of the wellknown art collector. Mr. William Sebaus. The marriage of Mr.

Pierre Lorillard. to Miss Hamilton is expected to take place early in February, at which time the youthful bridegroom will attain his majority. An engagement is talked of between Miss Bettina White of Second avenue and Mr. Ledyard Stevens, nephew of Mr. Byam Stevens; but this has not yet been officially announced.

The rumor of an engagement reaches us from the other side of Miss Rose, a daughter of Sir John Rose of the banking firm of Morton, Rose to Mr. Heine, a wealthy German gentleman residing in London. There is now on exhibition in Goupil'a Art Gallery a statuette of Sarah Bernhardt, modelled in plaster by Ar. James Gallatin, whose eccentric proclivities made him rather a conspicuous member of New York society last winter, and who is now a resident of Paris. We are told that Miss Bernhardt gave several sittings for the statue, but it does little justice to her grace and beauty, and no credit whatever to the artistic.

talents of Mr. Gallatin, or perhaps we should way de Gallatin, as we notice the act name is thus inscribed on the work. His grandthe father, Albert the etatesman and of diplomatist of Revolutionary times, would probnot ably be somewhat surprised nt the little prolix. Fifteen Years a Doorkeeper. PHILADELPHIA, Nov.

theatrical people who have over visited the Walnut Street Theatre will be sorry to hear of the death of Old Buck." for fillean years doorkeeper at the theatre. He was 80 years of age, and his life was an eventful one. But little is known of his history. He was an offleer in the army of Bucher Waterloo, and served three years during our own war in the Seventy-fifth Pennsylvania Volunteers. Nine Weeks, avo be quitted the theatre for the last thine.

I've waited long for the summons." he said to Harry dith, the actor, as he passed out. I'm going to rest The old doorkeeper came to this country in 1938 with Engle, the brewer. At one time he managed a German theatre in Callowhill street. Once he supported Janauschek. The netress.

when at the Walnut, sought him out, and left him a subatantial token of her esteem. WaS known to all the stars. He was well educated. and spoke haif a dozen languages. Booth's Theatre Mortgaged.

Oliver and Oakes A. Ames, said to be sons of Oliver and Oakes Ames of Credit Mobilier fame, and their on. wives, all of them residents of North Easton, Mass, have mortgaged the property on the southeast corner of Sixth avenue and Twenty -third street, known as Booth's Theatre, to the trustees under the will of Augustus way, for The torteage is to run three years (rain Aug. 21, 1880, with interest at the rate of five per cent per annum. The instrument was recorded in the Register's office of this county yesterday.

All your own fault if you remain sick or out of health, when you can gut Hop Bitters FRENCH CRITIO AT BOOTH'S. What Me Thinks of the American Reception to the Idol or Paris. bent upon pronouncing judgments about colors. I. A man judges well only that which he knows well.

Il. A man judges as he is. For a week now the great French actress has been under the ores of the New York public. Eight days and two important should be enough, I think, to enable even the most ordinary public to clear up its fret confused impressions, and make up its mind, reach a defnite opinion about the scenic value of a drainatic artist. It is also true that a period of eight days can furnish to incompetent judies repeated opportunities for committing gross blunders of judgment, for uttefing a fine lot of stupidities, in short, for betraying their inexperience; but in eight days the most incompotent of the improvised critics must be very unlucky it some good chance does not offer itself to him for rectifying, amending, qualifying.

or disavowing opinions that havo ceased to please the public. In fine, the obstinate, the unreasonable, the pig-beaded should be nble to And in eight days all the possible arguments in defence of thesis contrary to the evidence and to stood sense. It seems to me that these gros bonnets, these guardians of the public taste of New York, these dispensers of glory and reputation. have used this week to good purpose, and I should think the man very unjust who should accuse them of having let slip a single one of the opportunities aforesaid. In tho examination of any judgment pronounced on matters of art, it is well at the outstart to consider the moral weight of the man who pronounces it.

With $10 and a good lorgnette nearly 2,000 curious spectators have been able every evening to go to see and hear Sarah Bernhardt. But alas! no more in New York than in any other part of the world have the oculists yet succeeded in Anding the Edison able to invent the patent polyform that shall be infallible against the diverse affections of the eye, myopia, presbyopia, strabismus. Daltonism, and so on: tho list is a long one. And yet the great city holds a place by itself among civilized countries, thanks to its famous Eye and Ear Infirmary. This circumstance would soem to prove on the one hand that these diseases are an indigenous specialty, while at the same time it reveals the efforts made to disembarass the nation of them.

On the other hand thero are men who, endowed by Providence with an excellent oyesight and a full pocketbook, peraist in seeing a play through the little end of their lornettes, perhaps because, having suddenly become rich enough to buy a ticket and an opera glass, they have not had the time to learn how to use them. Thore is a second class of curious people. unhappily very numerous, who, although well able to buy their own glasses. find it more oconomical to always use those of their neighbors. Other original persons have the queer custom of always using muddied glasses or glasses tinted with gaudy colors, in the hope of making themselves singular.

or else for the purpose of advancing themselves in the good graces of those who profess a taste for this or the other mania. A last group of false crities is composed of those who pronounce an opinion upon the first glance, thus generalizing a fugitive impression. There was once an English tourist who. landing at Calais, put up at a little The solitary servant of the house had carrotty red hair. Our Englishman, a man of precautions, took out his note book and gravely entered this memorandum: 'In France the servant giris have red hair." The worst of it is that this worthy man is still persuaded of the truth of his observation.

an urgent despatch having called him back to London that verv dav. I say nothing about the blind, who, since the epoch of M. de Voltaire, have been obstinately These are the two fundamental articles of an unchangable law, whose operation no critic enn evade, and which. as it were, about him a circle from which it is impossible for him ever to escape. The man who maintained that it is necessary to be pont in order to comprehend the true beauty of Corneille or of Shakespeare rendered homage to this truth.

In reality that which we admire in others is always a little that portion of others which resembles what we are, or what we should like to ba. ourselves. To say to a man You are right." real means nothing except You agree with me." This is not alwass a compliment. Do not these considerations alone, without speaking of many other motives, among them self-interest, and thousand passions of the minor order, sufficiently explain the nearly unanimous judgment pronounced on the qualities of displayed in New York by Mile, Sarah Bernhardt as a dramatic artist It seoms to me they do. What do we demand of the theatre beyond the pleasure of nervous emotion in itself and the spectacles which it offers to our eyes Is it not.

above all. to represent to us the ideal, the poetry of the things which we love in real life: to aggrandize and elevate our loves, our hates, all our passions, so that they shall be such as we dream them That is why one has always the right to judge people by its stage, as one may also judize it by its religious manners, and. above all. by its women, who are its incarnate and living ideal: because the theatre of any De0ple. like its religion, betrays the ideal which that people pursues.

Very well. then: let us take the judgments actually pronounced by the directors of American opinion ou the great artiste of the Franchise. If we disentangie the verdict pronounced by them from the banalites, more or less clever and gallant, addressed to one of the idols of the entire theatre-going publie of Europe: if we go further than the phrase, itself. go behind the tinsel of style. strip off the glittering epithets with which the writers swaddle their naked thought.

we find that this opinion can be summed up in the following sentence: Mile. Bernbardt is a great actress: in Europe, perhaps, she is one of the first. but for us Americans there are several who surpass her." Wicked tongues. I know, have whispered. and a journal has printed it in black and white.

that this opinion was dietated to the critics of the New World by the desire of showing selves harder to please than their brothers of Europe. But I do not wish to pay any attention to these uncharitable speeches: I prefer. rather. to think that the opinion thus expressed is wholly sincere. It is the cry of the heart.

For my part it seems to me that it could not be otherwise. In order to clearly explain my thought it would, perhaps, be necessary to give here a complete picture of the fundamental differences which create an abyss between the social life of the Anglo-Saxon peoples and the life of French society. But I can at least aum up these differences in saying that this French society dates from thousand years, while one does not have to remount very high in the centuries to find the day when the ancestors of the Now Yorkers were still wearing feathers and carrying tomahawks. Hence points of view widely different. born of the two very dissimilar ideals which the necessity of the case engenders.

The man who possesses only a canvas tent thinks only of building a solid house wherein to shelter his family: the man who has a marble palace can dream at his ease of methods of ornamenting the interior. Art is the ripo fruit of societies. The reason given by many critics for their inability to conceal from themselves that Sarah Bernhardt is a long way from perfection is, they say, her luck of physical force. Nothing more natural. In a country where great part of the territory is not yet settled, only a half century at most after the emergence of the nation from its heroie period, the ideal is great strength.

capable of vanquishing the obstacles which still remain to be vanquished. All Yankee boys dream of going to hunt the buffalo and to scalp the Indians. What wonder these charitnile souls wish Sarah Bernhardt possessed a little more nvoirdupois, wherewith to cover the nerves of which she is made! In France, on the contrary, nil the children dream of becoming poets, orators, painters. Here we soo the whole difference, This is why the sensational drama, in which the heroes wear huge riding boots, rescue imperilled ladies, cut the villaina in pieces, weigh 300 pounds, and are as strong AN Hercules, cannot succeed louger on the French stage, All the lovers of this sort of play are rapidly disappearing, and the antiquated dramatic author who should be tempted in these days to write a piece a mousquetaires would not be able to get it represented, for the lack of artista capable of creating the roles. In Ainerien it is just the way.

What the people want are tuase very heroca, who, by all their actions, by the emphasis of their Iangunge, by the of their costumes, chant the poem of physical force, which is the virtue most in honor here because the most necessary. This is the reason why an American audience, as it goes away after hearing Sarah Bernhardt, whose art is wholly made up of infinite nuances, cannot refrain from recalling in memory the artistes who have appeared to it so strong. so energetic, so full of health. Hence these comparisons, which make one smile, between this actress and certain favorites of the American public. Seeing the delicate archnesses of this Ane nature, they are charmed because the art is DArfect, but there is in them something which protests and save, That is not With them, certainly not; but elsewhere that is absoIntely true.

In France, to which Sarah belongs, all these sentiments, this rhythm in spoech and action. this fine grace, this clue, as they say in Paris -these are, on the contrary, the qualities that artists dream of acquiring if they do not possess them by birth or education. Sarah Bernhardt is the ideal of all that, and why in Franco she is an artiste without a rival. My grandmother knew a story. One in the time of the fairies the most powerful of them met in order to assist at the birth of women for the purpose of distributing to them the particular gifts which it WAS in the power of each fairy to beetow upon one of the new born.

The Englishwoman received her brilliant color. the Spanish woman her fine figure, the Italian woman her eyes, the German woman her beautiful hair, the Frenchwoman her little foot and her chic. Christopher Columbus had not yet discovered the Amerienn woman. The distribution over. the fairies were going to leave when little thin voice was heard.

and they saw arrive a dainty little woman whom nobody had seen up to, that time, and who demanded her share. Who are you asked the Queen of the fairies, attracted by the graceful manuere of the little unknown. I am but shall not be said that the fairies have "There is nothing left for you. my dear child, been unjust to you. You will not have any barticular gift like your sisters, but one which shali partako of all the others and be worth them all- the charm which subjugates all around it." of And Sarah Bernhardt is the latest descendant that original Parisienne, and tion of that spirit of elegance, of independence.

of netivity, and of tact which Paris imprints upon all that is hers, and the fueffaceable mark of which is found upon everything which comes out from her walls. Sarah has the careless levity of the gamine of the streets, the grande air of the duchesses of the noble faubourg. the heart of all her people: as one saw when, as the she cared for the wounded of the Franco-German war. A reporter recently recounted a conversation with Sarah Bernhardt. in which she had used this phrase: Art is I wish to show to what point this formula is a truth for Sarah.

On Thursday I went to pay her a visit in her loge, She was on the stage for the end of the third act of Frou Frou," and I waited. All at once she came in like a gust of wind--animated, excited. Good evening." sho cried. "Oh! it horror! I am crazy. Were you hero? 'Did you see the last scene No." Ah.

well: so much the better! Oh! I am crazy with rage. Fancy that this stupid of an turned her back to me all the while. During all the time that I was reproaching her for taking from me my husband. my child, she turned her back to me. How natural, waen't it I could have killed her.

Finally I took her by the shoulder and forced her to turn toward me. But, you know. have stabbed -yes. I could hinve stabbed her. for turning her back to me like And Sarah, who had seized my arm.

shook it violently, repeating in her and vibrant voice: Turning her back on ine like that. How natural that is!" She was beaide herself and superb. I wanted to cry Natural-that is the great word with her. Everything must be natural, true. One sees in that the traditions of that that house of whose artista.

Coquelin. Got. Febre, are without equals in any country of the world. Why? Because they are natural; because when they have once put on the skin of a character they walk. talk, drink.

fly into a passion. or roar with laughter just as the personage himself would have done. Is it at all astonishing that to a people accustomed to 800 theatrical enterprises organized by grocers who have an understanding with an agent of sewing machines and a reporter. this style of thing should seem unsatisfactory Put upon the stage the life of that society: the audienco cannot honestiy be much interested. What is needed to interest it is a keg of powder and two Bengal lights, with nineteen actors speaking Sioux.

On the other side of the ocean. at Sarah's home, people drink Bordeaux, here whiskey: it is question of latitude. I know well that people drink champagne here: but. besides the fact that the greater part of it comes from California, this is nothing to the point. The American ladies great many dresses from Paris: arethey Parisiennes One of them was complaining to me of the criticisms of visitors from abroad on the extravagance of the feminine toilet in this country.

See the injustice." she said. triumphantly; Three out of four of our dresses come from Worth's. Politeness prevented me from saying to her. what I may say here, that nt Worth's. and in the principal magasms of thesame class.

an entire story is specially set apart the stuffs, patterns. and models destined for the American customers, who in Paris continue to pick out American colors and costumes. Do I mean tosay by this that no one in these American nudiences is qualified to appreciate all the fineness of Sarah's playing, to which the critics give the name of feebleness? To advance such a thesis would be to fall into the sAme error they have fallen into, and to become either unjust or blind. There are elegant American women, after all. There are also men of taste in New York.

During the voyage over. Sarah expressed a fear of being misunderstood. I am really nfraid that they will come to see me as they would to see a curious animal." Her fear has not been realized. The populace has not confirmed the judgment of the critics. That is because, in the midst of these scenes passing in a society of which they are ignorant, and in a language which is not theirs, they feel a breath of truth.

they yield to the charm of the natural. Moreover--it is necessary to say it--this people owes to its mixed blood, its intermingling of races, and its wealth an aptitude and an enormous good will for everything which touches art: a fact which seems to justify the remark of an American who said to me recently: I have always believed that for people not of the Latin stock the Americans are going to most resemble the Latins." I do not wish any other proof of the truth of this than the 15,000 Americans, men and women. who are studying music at Milan. at Florence, at Paris, and the 2.000 others who are copying the masters in the European museums. It is this powerful sentiment.

on the eve of becoming a national sentiment, which will one day bring Americans to the taste of the natural in art. When that day shail come an American drama will be born. and with it artists to interpret it. That day, if A Sarah Bernhardt comes across the ocean to visit America, the journals will not prefer to her some Fanny Davenport or even some Clara Morris of the epoch. Until then, the critics of the critics will not be able to refrain from repeating: Forgive them, they know not what they any." JEHAN SOUDAN.

THE SEARCH FOR JAMES DUNNE. How he Escaped from Brooklyn-Sympathy Expressed for Mr. Morris. The search for James Dunne, the deputy Coroner and ex- pugilist of Brooklyn who assaulted ex- District Attorney 8. D.

Morris on Inet Wednesday afternoon in a in Clinton street and broke bis cheek bone, is being continued in Brooklyn by the police and the detectives of the District Attorney's office. it is charged. without ANY system, and not with much zeal." Had a detective been sent to follow Alderman Kane. or any of the friends of Dunne who were waiting about the entrance to the District Attorney's office, on last Thursday to learn the secrets of all the proceedings taken, it is claimed Dunne might have been kept under surveillance from the time he was indicted, and arrested soon as the bench warrant was issued. Dunde went to McClennen's where the assault was made on Thursday.

and remained there expecting to be summoned to answer an indictment for assault and battery. But when he learned that he WAS indicted for assault with intent to kill, and that he ran the risk of being sent to the penitentiary for ten years, be determined to leave the citv. Alderman Kane went with him to South Ferry, and at 1:25 P. M. James Dunne entered the ferry house.

A policeman of the Washington street station stood at the entrance swinging his club. and saw Dunne go out of the citr. On Friday night James Glendenning, a young lawyer in Mr. S. D.

Morris's office, while passing up Myrtle avenue was bailed by a stranger. who said that he could not give his name, but he wished to say that he knew that Dunno was hiding in McClenden'e adding that exSurrogate Veeder, under whom Dunne held a sinecure position. was there with him. Mr. Thos.

E. Pearsall reported this to Police Captain Campbell, who caused the to be watched on Friday night and yesterday morning. The police were requested to make a raid upon the to see if Dunne was hiding there. The request was submitted to Police Superintendent Campbell yesterday. but there the matter ended.

The police have been informed that Dunne was seen at Rockaway on Thursday, but the information is discredited. Mr. Morris's friends yesterday said that they intended to demand the indictment of Alderman Kane for aiding and abetting a criminal to escape, Mr. Morris is confined in a darkened room in his residence at 55. South Oxford street.

Dr. Ayres insisted yesterday that no one should be admitted to his room except members of his family. Mr. Morris still unable to speak distinctly, aud his food is administered in a liquid form through a glass tube, He suffers great pain from the fractured cheek boue. The tracture, the physician anya, was doubtless caused by kick.

which. if it had been delivered an inch to the right or above, must have caused death. Many persons have called at Mr. Morris's house to express sympathy with him and others have written to him. Mr.

John D. Townsend wrote: I know you well enough to be sure that the villain's triumph will be shortlived. if you get well." Mr. Theodore Tilton. whoau counsel Mr.

Morris WAR during his litication with Henry Ward Beecher. wrote a note of sympathy. Gen. Catlin, the District Attorney, said yesterday thut if Dunno was not nrrested by tomorrow he (Gen. Catlin) would probably offer a reward for his capture.

In 1857 James Dunne was indicted for manslaughter for having on June 13 caused the death of Francis Dellamore by stabbing him with a pocket knife. The indictment was dismissed by the Court upon motion of Samuel D. Morris on Oct 26, 1870, when he was District Attorney, The indictment endorsed as dismissed was pigeonholed. It was fled Sept. 18.

1875. when Winchester Britton WAS District Attorney. Sealskin sacques relined, altered, trimmed: splendid work: prices low. Shayne, manufacturer, 103 Prince at Will retail elasant sociakia 684 furlined garmeats. VICTORY FOR THE PRINCETONS.

The Harvard Football Team Vanquished the Pole Grounds Yesterday. Football is football, and wrestling is wrostling, but the legislators of the Intercollegiate Association have contrived. with considerable ingenuity, to devise a game that is not only anything but sport to those who engage in it, but a game which is nominally football, and in reality a series of wrestling encounters for the possession of a large leather globe. The American Association game, under the new rules of 1880, was exemplified yesterday afternoon on the field of the Manhattan Polo Association, in the presence of welldressed students of several leading universities and schools, between 3,000 and 4,000. It was of the series for numbering, the championship of the College Football Association, in which the elevens of Yale, Harvard, and Princeton are the most prominent.

The day was cold and unpleasant. In the betting Harvard had the call. The Princeton boys were unable to beout in thoir full strength, two or three of their experienced players having been used up on their last feld encounter. The Harvards, too. were unable to place the strongest team in the fleld, but they managed to present a very good eleven.

nevertheless. Compared with the matches with which the season tor football playing has been opened, the contest of yesterday may ho said to have been a battle of the giants of the football arena. Certhinly tho heavy weights who wore the Princeton colors in yesterday's match were decidedly of the stalwart order, as were several of the Harvard representatives. Men who stand six feet in height and tip the scale at one hundred and eighty odd pounds are unpleasant individuals to have clutching one round the waist, collaring him, or sweeping the ground with his legs, as they go into a maul." tackle." or a This was the kind of sport that WAS enjoyed by the thousands who crowdod around the polo feld yesterday. In the fret half" Princeton led off with a brilliant dash on the Harvard camp, made by her forwards" or rushere." and by a coup de main obtained the point of vantage technically known AS 8 touch down." which.

by an additional achievement called a try at goal." resuited in the scoring of a goal" for the orangeattired youths from New Jersey, ten minutes only einpsing between the start and the culmination in question. By way of off-set the Harvard team, after tough struggle, managed to do likewise, and when time" wAs called by the referee the record of goals scored stood 1 to 1. Though not counting in the record, the Harvard tenm had 60 forced the fighting" in the first half as to oblige the Princetons to resort to defensive operations, one of which is known as a safely touch down: this, of course. giving the eastern toam a slight advantage. In the second baif of the match the contest was fruitful of the results almost inseparable from the method of football in vogue in America, and there were bruised faces from kicks, arms and legs from mauls" and "tackling." and a damaged physical condition of a majority of the contestants.

Substitutes on the Princeton side were in demand before the contest was half over. so severe were the Harvard charges, and 80 rough the mauls in Finally, whon darkuess threatened to put a stop to the field work, and the contest promised to end in a drawn game, the Princetons made a brilliant sortie from their outworks, sprang mine on the enemy, rallied in front of their camp, and by a closing dash won victory. and left the field in triumph, amid a burst of exulting cheers from the Princeton students. Yale and Princeton are to try conclusions on Thankagiving Day. The positions of the players in yesterday's game, and the score, are given below: PRINCETON.

-Forwards-T. G. Hunter, H. Drayton, 8. Jamieson.

J. G. Hunter. C. H.

Biddle. Perot. Half-backs-J. T. Bailey, G.

C. Thayer, J. B. Thaver. Remak.

T. Robinson. W. Dilworth, L. 8.

Coe, C. Dunlap. P. Butler. Quarter-back-T.

Praley, lialf-backs-J. Pracy, R. Merritt, M. McNaughton, F. Hyslop.

BacksE. E. McGovern. Lyal. Referee Watson of Yale.

Goals scored by Princeton, 2: Harvard, 1 Touch downs for safety by Princeton, 5: by Harvard, 3. THE STEVENS TEAM BEATEN AT FOOTBALL. The football plavers of the Pennsylvania University of Philadelphia visited Hoboken yesterday morning and played a lively match with the Stevens Institute team. After a contest of nearly two hours the Pennsylvania players were victorious by a score of two goals and four touch downs, to nothing. The Pennsylvanians went into the game with a rush, and by the fine play of the brothers Thayer, noted young cricketers of the Merion Club, they secured a touchdown in about two minutes from the start, and on the try-at-goal they scored a goal by George Thayer's kick.

Before the frat half of the game was finished they added three touch downs. They kept the Stevens team on the defensive throughout, the latter having to touch down for safety several times. In the second half the contest was more even, but near the end the Penneylvanians added a goal and a touch down to their score, and so ended the coutest. The contestants were: -G. Thayer, Captain; T.

Hunter, G. Hunter. Drayton. Jamieson, Biddle, rushers; Perat, quarterback: Bailey and J. Thayer, halt-backs, and Reinak and Robinson, backs.

STEVENS. Captain: Reisenbergen, Dilworth, Coe. Dunlap, and Butler. rushers: Pracy, quarterback: Merritt and Hiyslop, hall-backs; McGovern and Lyal, backs. PARTY REORGANIZATION.

The Plans of the Young Men's Democratic Club for Improved Methods. The Executive Committee of the Young Men's Democratic Club met yesterday afternoon at the office of Mr. Simon Sterne to arrange a plan for an enrollment of voters in Assembly districts. The committee divided itself into sub- committees for the purpose of consideration, and each of these will report its views at Mr. Sterne's office to-morrow afternoon.

In the evening the various suggestions will be reported to the club. Mr. Sterne etated that an impression existed that the club intended to attempt replacing Irving and Tammany Halls as a machine for making nominations. It simply desired to emancipate voters from all and give them an opportunity for the fullest expression of opinion. Also to give to Assembly district committees elected by voters freedom to nominate without outside dictation.

Likewise to call conventions. and keep the source of political power pure through the instrumentality of law, by securing to voters at primaries the same legal guarantees of an honest count now secured on election days at elections. the Fifth Avenue. A meeting of all Irishmen in Jersey City favorable to the extension of the Land League win be held at 158 vonia avenue this afternoon, at 3 o'clock. Mr.

Jackson Willets, an aged resident of Westhampton. L. L. has been missing since Friday of week before last, He started to go fishing, and took his lunch along. Mra.

Polly Westervelt of Williamsburgh is 84 years age, but she is as active as a young woman. Several of her relatives lived to see their one hundredth birthday. The Rev. William H. Miller, who supplied the pul.

pit of the Reformed Church at Peekskill for nearly Sear, has closed his labors and returned to his former home, at Hempstead, L. I. The scaffold on which John Weyman was working ves. terday, on the rear gable of, the building at 196 Hester street, broke, and he tell from the sixth story to a twostory extension. He was killed.

A portion of the wrecked bark Sainaranc, which was sunk off Sandy Hook on the 7th aust, has been washed ashore at North Station. The rest of the sunken hull lies on the bar in the path of vessels. The pavinent of a debt of $5,000 which has been rest. inz on the Presbyterian Church at Dobb's Ferry for a peried of twelve ydars has been provided for by the united effort of the congregation and a few friends. Mrs.

Ellen Barry has been missing from her home. 411 East Fifty street, for about six weeks. She is 45 years of age, 5 feet 4 inches high, and has dark hair and eyes. She was aflicted with a mild type of insanity ou religious subjects. For disobeying an order issued in supplementary proceedings in the suit of Robert A.

Robertson against Frederick and John Kiro fur materials furnished. Cooke yesterday convicted the detendants of contempt, and fined them $450. Gen. I. S.

Catlin having resigned his position as Park Commissioner in Brooklyn. the other Conmissioners, who have the power to select their associates, yesterday appointed Ruphael C. Stearns, an importor, who lives in Keap street, Brooklyn. George Van Camp, a private watchman in Myrtle avenue. Brooklyn.

while making his rounds early yesterday morning. tell down a cellarway at Myrtle avenue and Wallabout street, and was seriously injured. He was removed to the St. Catharine's Hospital. Mr.

Nicholas Van Buskirk, or better known as Uncle Nick." residing at Bayonne, celebrated his eighty eighth birthday A reception was riven by his many friends, Mr. Van Buskirk is as hale and hearty na man of halt his age. He is the oldest person in Bayonne. The Rev. Robert Fulton, formerly of Boston and more recently of Philadelphia, has been appointed pastor of St.

Lawrence's Church in Fast Eighty fourth street, near Madison avenue, in this city. to till the vacancy caused by the death of the Rev, Father Trainor in California a few weeks ago. The Aldermen continued yesterday the official canvass of the city's vote, and compared the returns from the Fifteenth, Sixteenth. Seventeenth. and Eighteenth As sembly Districts The returns from the remaining six districts be compared tomorrow and the canvass completed on Tuesday.

The ceremony of consecrating three marble altars and dedicating the chapel of the Holy Family at St. Eliza. beth's Academy. Convent Station, Morris County. N.

is to be performed by Archbishop Corrigan 01 Thanks giving Day. Bishop Lynch of Charleston, S. will preach the dedicating sermon. The Rev. Timothy Pacceti, one of the Passionist sonary tathers attached to St Michael's Monsters, in West Hoboken, and for some tune past rector of that stitution, left this city a few dayaago for South America.

whither he has been sent by his superiors, iu order to tound a branch of the order there. Einanuel Feisner and John Reilly of this, city, who Were arrested in Morrisania, ott charge breaking into the baggage room at New Rochelle Railroad station and stealing: property valued at 5000, were vesterday committed by Justice, Keene to the county jail at White Plains to await the action of the Grand Jury. George Hacket was before Justice Gertrum in East New York yesterday charged with stealing wood from Evergreens Cemetery. lie was found guilty and sentenced to the counts jail for fifteen days. Hacket 18 the man who some time ago WAS suspected of body ing, and was afterward found guilty of stealing fence posts from the cemetery.

BRIEF MENTION. Murat Halstea1 and Gen. Thomas Ewing of Ohio are at Mr. Joseph Jefferson appears in "Rip Van Winkle," at the Grand Opera House, this week. FOOTLIGHT FLASHES A Celebrated Case will be the attraction at Haver1y'a Brooklyn Theatre during the week.

A programme containing more than usual fun is promised at Tony Pastor's Theatre this week. Dr. James L. Farley recites selections from Hamlet" at Chickering Hall on Wednesday evening. The Guv'nor continnes to arouse the echoes of Wallack's Theatre with the laughter it creates.

Nat Goodwin will present his mirth-provoking Hob. bies" at the Brooklyn Park Theatre this week. Frank S. Chantrau appears in his peculiar character of Ku. the Traveller, at the Windsor Theatre.

"Revels" will continue to te held nightly during the present week at Haverly's Fourteenth Street Theatre. There is no abatement in the applause that nightly greets Daniel Rochat" at the Union Square Theatre. My P'artner will be produced by Messrs. Aldrich Parsloe at the Williamsburgh Novelty Theatre this week. Baron Seeman, the famous conjurer, is easily first Among the attractions at the Aquarium, numerous they are.

The "Legion of Honor" at the Park Theatre has met with great acceptance, and will be continued until further notice. At her at the Park Theatre on Tuesday and Thursday of this week, Miss Clara Morris will repeat is to be revived at Niblo's Garden tomorrow night with, to borrow an old-time joke, all its teminine charina re-nude. The last week of the "Mulligan Guard Picnic at the Theatre Comique is announced. On Nov. 22 the gun Guard's Nominee will be produced.

Needles and Pins. Needles and Pins, when man marries, his trouble begins." will doubtless be the motto of Daly's theatre for a long time in the future. Robson and Crane will continue to hold the mirror up speculative nature in Sharpe and Flats" at the Standard Theatre for an indedluite time to cone. Stile. Bernhardt will play in "Camille the first three evenings of the present week, and in "Hernani" on Thursday and Friday and on Saturday afternoon.

The Rev. Dr. Maynard begins his course of illustrated historical. will lectures lecture in each Chickering Monday Hall until to.morrow February. after.

When "Daniel Rochat" is withdrawn at the Union Square Theatre, it will be succeeded by D'Ennery's new drama, Diana," now playing with great success in Paris. Tit for Tat." a musical farce, will be played for the coming fortnight at the Masonic Temple by a company of musicians and actors, under the management of Mr. J. 8. Vale.

The burlesque of "Sarah Heartburn" will be the at traction at the San Francisco Minstrels this week. The very original French of the libretto is worth going further than Paris to hear. John McCullough appears in "Virginias" at the Fifth Avenue Theatre to-morrow night. His other characters. zations are to follow.

This is Mr. McCullough's farewell appearance in New York prior to his engagement at the Drurv Lane Thentre, London. The 288th performance of "Hazel Kirke" at the Madison Square Theatre takes place to-morrow evening. For the 300th performance, which occurs next week Friday, souvenir programme is in preparation. Hazel Kirke's" first anniversary, now distant but a few weeks.

will be appropriately celebrated when it arrives, and if the play continues as popular in the future as in the past, second anniversary is only a question of time. The present week ends the engagement of Miss Kate Claxton at the Bijou Opera House. On the drst four evenings of the week she will play in the Snow Flower." On Friday evening. when she has a benefit. and on Saturday afternoon and evening.

the Two Orphans will be produced. Lawn Tennis." including the Scandinavian Jack and GIll." which proved so popular at the Park Theatre in September, is to be brought out at the Bijou next week. MUSICAL NOTES. Mr. Gilmore advertises another concert at the Twenty.

second Regiment Armory on Saturday evening. The Donaldi-Rummel concert combination sing in Stein. way Hall on Friday evening. Levy, the cornet player, also appears. Arbuckle's Ninth Regiment Band will appear in concert at the Thalia Theatre, in the Bowery, this evening, in connection with a number of eminent singers.

Several famous singers will appear at the Metropolitan Concert Garden this evening, in addition to Thomas's orchestra. The customary elaborate Sunday evening programme will be presented. Tuesday night will be devoted by the orchestra at Kos ter Rial's music hall. in West Twenty-third street, to the rendering of Johann Strauss's compositions The usual Sunday concert takes place this evening. A concert will be given in Terrace Garden this evening, under the auspices of the Society for Art and Science, to further the erection of a monument to Ernst Plap.

mann. the creator of the statue of Franklin in Printing House square, and nther local works, who died in 1877. A programme of interest to lovers of music will be given. The eighth annual festival of the choirs of Trinity Parish is to be held in Trinity Chapel on Thursday evening. Among the novelties an eight part motet, by Sebastian Bach, is to be performed for the first time in this country.

The performers will number more than hundred picked singers. An address on Church Music" will be delivered by the Rev. Dr. Swope. Lucia di Lammermoor is the opera at the Academy to-morrow night.

"I Puritani will be sung on Wednes dav. La Traviata on Friday, and Carmen on Saturday afternoon. Madame Gerster will appear on the three evenings, and Campamni on Tuesday and Saturday. Boito's opera of Mefistofele is shortly to be produced for the first time in this country. Rossini's Stabat Mater will be given at the Academy of Music, this evening.

by the principal singers of Her Majesty's Opera company, aided and abetted by a full band and a large chorus, Campanini will sing the "Coius Animam:" Mile. Valleria and Miss Cary the Quis est Hano:" all three, with Galassi, will sing the quartette Sancta Mater." and. with Novara. the quartette Quando Corpus." After the Stabat Mater." a miscel. laneous programme, comprising selections from Rossini.

Verdi. Mendelssohn, and other composers, will be dered by Campauini, de Belocca, Mme. Swift, et al. NOTES OF ENTERTAINMENTS. Annual ball of Wad worth Post, G.

A. R. Wendel's As seinbly Rooms, Tuesday evening. Reception of the Brighton Association in the old Post Office building. Wednesday evening.

24th inst. Game between the University of Pennsylvania and Yale Football clubs on the Manhattan Polo Grounds, Wednesday. Performance and reception under the auspices of Amity Chapter, R. A. Lexington Avenue Opera House, Tuesday evening.

Lecture by Dr. John F. Boynton on Crystallization of Metals." before the Bullion Club, 19 West Twenty-fourth street, Tuesday evening. William Rothschild Association of the Eleventh Ward will hold ate annual reception and ball in Irving Hall on Sunday, Nov. 21.

Handicap games of the Scottish- American Athletic Club on the grounds at Eighth avenue and Fifty-fourth street. Thanksgiving Day. Performance for the benefit of the Hebrew Sheltering Guardian Societv. by the Germania Theatre company, Terrace Garden, Wednesday evening. The Eleventh Regiment fair opens at the armory, cor.

ner of Grand and Centre streets, on the 24th lust The fair is to be for the benefit of the relief fund. Sociable and ball of J. L. Riker Post, 4. A.

in Concordia Assembly Rooms to-morrow. for the relief of disabled soldiers and sailors, and widows and orphans. Gen. J. M.

Varian, commanding the Third Brigade, will review at their respective armories the Seventh on Tuesday evening, Eighth on Wednesday, and Sixty-niuth on Thursday. The Old Guard has engaged the Academy of Music for the 26th of January for its annual ball. Efforts will be made to make the affair superior to all its predecessors in point of brilliancy, The Obelisk and Its Watchman. The obelisk is yet in the Boulevard, near Eighty -sixth street. A turntable operated with channel iron and cannon balls is now in process of construction, and will be completed Monday afternoon, at which time the obelisk will be turned parallel with Eighty sixth street.

During the past week 3,000 feet have been trav. ersed. The stone has been moved altogether about 6,000 feet, or two- thirds of the distance from the Ninety sixth street pier to the place where the pedestal is, in the Park. Relic hunters are becoming more numerous and bolder as the monolith nears its destination, many having been caught in the act of approaching it with penknives. pieces of iron, and hammers.

Last week a man, after looking it over carefully trom all sides. calmly produced a hammer from his coat pocket, and announced that he had all the way from Pittsburgh to get a piece of that thing, and if he wasn't going to have It. He didn't get it, for the Austrian watchman fastened his tierce atticial eyes, gleaming through his shaxey brows like wrathful moons behind thunder clonds, upon the relic hunter, and he silently state away followed by Valley of broken English. Small scales from the obelisk, jarred off during its transportation to the Park. have been sold privately at big prices.

Night and day of workmen will be employed during the coming week. and Commander Gorrince says if he makes half the progress made last week he will he satisfied. The trestle work leading from Fifth avenue to the pedestal in the Park, over which the monolith will be moved and put in position. is about three-quarters completed. Interesting and Instructive Things.

In none of its previous exhibitions has the American Institute met with more success than that at tending the fair now in progress. The display, too, was never more interesting. In the centre of the ball is huge fountain set in the midst of a mountain of rock, and surrounded by marine plants and fungi. In the 111 chines departinent the huge ore crushers attract inuch attention. as does also the great engine that runs the shafting for all the departments At the northeast corner of the main toor Prot.

Mover shows some experiments with electricity. One of these is to charge a plaster DATES unave with the currents br means of a Leyden jar. This makes the hair which the image has on its head to stand on end. A Card from Wm. B.

Riker Sos. We are Constantly naked why and how" we sell dross, modemes, proprietary articles. in fact, every. thing we have, at such extremely low prices. We answer with the following First of people often are unable to obtain actually necessary medicines account of the enor.

mons, prices generally charged. We certainly beneft them! Second-We know that by selling at the lowest possible prices we increase our busine-s and make more pioner. For instance. it we sell one bottle of our Elixir of CaliSAVA' at 51.25 (the regular prices, we make a profit of 75 centa: whereas, by selling a dozen bottles at 75 cents each (our present price), thereby saving our customer 50 cents, we realize 83, thus increasing our gain tour told Third Selling largely, we buy larvely and fur cash. thus securing the test discount from manufacturers and importers.

In short. we believe in large sales and small pronts. In conclusion we would assure the public that every. thing we ofter is genuine, of the best, and exactly as represented. irrespective of price.

W. B. RICER SoN. Druggists, 353 6th between 21st and 224 sta. Ada.

Many Forms of Nervous Debility In men yield to Carter's Iron Pills Ado. Gold stemwinding watches, perfect timekeepers, war. ranted, 435; silver. $13, installment plan. J.

JOUNSTON, 150 Bowery. -Ada MARINE INTELLIGENCE. MINTATURE ALMANAC--THIS DAY. 7 4 4 38 San NIGH WATER--THIS DAY. Sandy 5 0 20 itell 8.

09 Arrived-SATURDAT. Nov. 13. Rs Etna. Seiders.

Ponce Oct. Grande, Pennington, Galveston. Ba Albemarie, Oilfoil, Mallett, Trinidad Lewes. Oct 31. 6a 5a Canton.

Jacques, Yokohama Ang. Orienas. 28. Be Gen. Whitney, Coleman, New 84 Richmond.

Stevens, West Point, Va. Franconia. Bragg. Portland. Nereus, Hallett, Boston.

Ship Columbia, Fernald. Taiwanfoo. Ship Liverpool, Lambert, London. Bark Jose Ferrero, Roig, Campeache. Brig Advance, Peterseil, Bahia.

ARRIVED OUT. 8s City of Montreal, from New York Nov. 4. was nalled off Crookhaven, on her way to Liverpool. 8s Suevia, from New York Oct.

30, at Hamburg. Business Flotices: Cuticura. WONDERFUL CURES SCALY OF SALT HUMORS, RHEUM, SCROFULA, PSORIASIS, ITCHING AND SCROFULOUS SORES, ULCERS. AND MER. CURIAL AFFECTIONS.

CUTICURA REMEDIES consist of CUTICURA RESOLV. ENT. for purifying the blood, through the bowels, liver, kilneys, and skin; CUTICURA. A Medicinal Jelly, which removes dead flesh and skin, renders healths ulcers and old sores, allays inflammation, itchinz. and irritation.

of the skin and scalp, and CUTICURA MEDICINAL TOL LET SOAP. which restores, whitens. and beautifles the skin. CUTICURA SITAVING SOAP 14 the only medic nal soap expressly prepared for shaving. PSORIASIS.

Thomas Delany, Memphis. with says: Psoriasis, have bees anticted for nineteen years and have spent hundreds of dollars for doctors, know and stuff they call call blood purifiers. Doctors did not what to my discase. I would seratch nights until I scratched myself raw: then it would dev and form Into seales, which would all be seratched off next night, and have been completely cured by the CUTICURA REMEDIES." LEPROSY. H.

E. Carpenter, BAg, Henderson. N. cured of Psoriasis or Leprosy. of twenty vears' standing, by the CUTICURA RESOLVENT internally.

and CUTICURA And CUTICURA SOAP externally. The most wonderful case on record. Cure certifled to betore a Justice of the Peace and prominent citizens. All afflicted with itching and scaly diseases should send to us for this testimonial in full. ECZEMA.

F. H. Drake, Detroit, suffered beyond all description from a skin disease which appenred on his hand, head, and face, and nearly destroyed his eyes. The most careful doctoring failed to help hun. and after all had failed he used the RESOLVENT internally, CUTICURA and CUTICURA SOAP externally, and was cured, and has remained perfectly well to this day.

CUTICURA REMEDIES are prepared by WEEKS POTTER. Chemists and Druggists, 360 Washinton Boston. and are for sale by all Price of CUTE CURA. A Medicinal Jelly, boxes, 50 cents: larve boxeR, $1. CUTICURA RESOLVENT.

new Blond TOILET Parifer. $1 per bottle. CUTICU MEDICINAL SOAP. 25 cents, CUTICURA MEDICINAL SHAVING SOAP. 15 cents; in bars tor barbers and large consumers, 50 cente.

All mailed free on receipt of price. The most pleasant and eftiencious remedy in the world is ANGOSTURA BITTERS. It imparts a de licions flavor to all drinks and cures dyspepsia, diarrhea, and fever and ague. Try it, but beware of counterteits. Ank your grocer or druggist for the genuine article, manufactured by Dr.

J. G. B. SIEGERT SONS. Rapture Kadically Cured.

Dr. Marsh' treatment the only safe. reliable cure: 40 years' experience. Only office, 2 Vesey at, opposite St Paul's Church. Blair's Pills -Great English Gout and Rheumatie Remedy.

Oval box, round, 50c. At all druggists'. Fine Silk Hats, $3.20: worth 95. Fall Der. $1.90: worth 15 New Church up stairs.

MARRIED. Brooklyn. on Tuesday. Nov. 9.

at of the bride's father, by the Rev. Henry Mottet, rector of the Church of the Holy Communion. New York city, Legrand S. Cholwell of New York to Emilie Fitzgerald, daughter of Charles Dennis Bergen Point, N. on Wednesday, Nov.

10, by the Rev. George Herbert Walsh, Emile Guillandeu to Mary Norvell, daughter of William F. Owens, Esq. Schneider, Charles B. -By Isaacson the of this city to Tillie E.

ISAACSON-MEYER. Rev. Dr. Francis Never of Jersey city Heights. -On Nov.

11. at St. Thomas's Church, this city. by the Rev. William F.

Morgan. D. Marr Eveline, daughter of Henry S. Leavitt, to James Bryant Lindley, all of this city. DIED.

BURBANK. -On Friday. Nov. 12, Ferdinand, son of John W. Burbank of Castleton Corners, Staten Island, in the 44th year of his age.

Relatives and friends of the family are invited to attend the funeral services from the Moravian Church, New Dorp, on Monday, Nov. 15, at 2 P. M. JACOBUS. -Suddenly, on Friday, Nov.

12, Thomas L. Jacobus, aged 56 years. Notice of funeral hereafter. MAHER. Thomas Maher, son of Cornellus Maher of 200 North 5th Brooklyn, E.

born in Bally arid, County Tipperary, Ireland, aged 6 years 3 months and 18 days. All his friends are respectfully invited to attend the fu. neral at 2 o'clock on Sunday, Nov. 14. Special Notices.

CATARRHAL POISON. WEI DE MEYER'S wonderful CATARRH CURE 10 now dispensed by all druggists, and is delivered (carriage paid) by D. B. DEWEY 46 Dey New Fork. The remarkable cures which have everywhere resulted from the use of this preparation developed the startling fact that no merely LOCAL treatment, like snuffs, douches, and inhalations, can possibly reach or destroy catarrhal virus.

The antidotal elements discovered by Dr. Wei De Meyer are ABSORBED throughout the mucous membraneous system in two minutes' time, thus forming an INOCULATIVE and CONSTITUTIONAL cure, the effects of which are similar to, and as unfailing as a vaccination. A TREATISE." with full statements by the cured, is mailed FREE. Wei De Meyer's Catarrh Cure is worth TEN TIMES its cost. Rev.

C. J. Jones, New Brighton, Staten Island." It cured a member of my family who had suffered from Catarrh over 3U YEARS. J. D.

McDonald, 710 Broadway, New York." It cured me of chrome Catarrh. Lewis F. Newman, 305 Fulton st. Brooklyn," A real cure of Catarrh for DON'T LET YOUR HORSES SUFFER. cular contains references.

Dr. HOYT. 41 West 21th 4t. ONLY GENUINE VICHY IN FROM Springs Hauterive, Celestins, Grande Grille, Hopital. Seligious Notices.

A MERICAN TEMPERANCE UNION, Theatre, P. M. Capt. 0 R. Van Etten will deliver an interesting lecture, entitled Marching ou to Excellent singing by large choir, conducted by Dr.

J. A. Kelley, JOSEPIE A. BOGARDUS, Prea E. H.

CARPENTER. Cor. Sec. AT NICKERING Services. 5th -The av.

Rev. corner Sundel 19th Colcord preaches at 3.15 Sunday afternoon. Subject The Door of the Heart Opened Miss Henrietta Bebe will sing: also large choir directed by Asa Hull All seats free. Everybody welcome. ERFUL SERVICE.

music and A preaching in SE George Church Sunday evenings, Stuyvesant square. The Rev. Arthur Brooks preaches. Seats all free Every one cordially invited, especiaily those who have no regular place of worship. ANTIS 6th MEMORIAL B.

Heber CHURCH, New 48th wit preach at 11 A M. to young met on An Ancient Motel for Modern and give a brief address at choral prayers at 4 P. M. for young men ani women on 110 A lira of to ate bs the Lev Russell N. Bellows, at Unity Chapel, East 129th st BUM corner STREET Downing 10 13 morning, and 7.30 the Rev.

tor. Evening lecture: Modern Tuesday evening lecture by the pastor, at CHURCH OF -Morning TIE at 11 the Rev. 1. D. of Brooklyn will preacher subject Evening.

7. 45, Moncure D. at on The Unity of the Sprit Pubhe But tially 0 Christian. a hid the Instructed Bishop Snow, the interpreter will ur thro Medical Colleze, corner And sunday. M.

Theme: The Good Time k. DEEMN preach to dev at the young Curatian at 7.30. Al seats always tree. Science near DEPENDENT. ISOLIC Bishop McNamara present: the will speak on the importance at French in this city.

Service in English Invitation to alL Scats free. A. pastor INDEPENDENT CATHOLIC Madisor st and night meeting at Father oil The Turone of- and the Two IN dinal Metlosker' Cathedral." 50,000 copies timidation Letter" ready 35th at. LEM between Park ant SWEDEN the Rev. 8.

5. Seward, pastor Services at 11 A Nov. Text, Gen 19, 20: Joseph and his brett Subject: How the Lord Overrules the Evil it teutons of Steu for Good." Sunday school at 9:30 A. New York. Oct.

23, 1872. Dr. L. R. Herrick: I am recommending the use of Har.

vell's Condition Powders in connection with Herrick'4 German Horse Liniment for the prevailing epidemic among horses. I advise double the usual dose of powder in a warin mash, or honey or molasses or water, two or three tines a day in severe cases, ant to bathe the throat and chest as frequently an possible; also saturating cloth and binding on the neck and throat. Yours, respecttully, PROF. A. LEE.

Mace's Stables, 47th st. and Broadway. Sold by wholesale and retail druggists. Wholesale depot, 69 Murray st. SHERRY WINEN, Twentr grades, $2 to $17 per gallon, including our 183 and 191 (specially fine, at low price), in wood or glass, in store or in bond.

Full discount to the trade, H. B. KIRK 69 Fulton and 709 Broadway, (Estabished 1853.) ALLEN'S BRAIN FOOD IN THEGREAT special tonic for weakness of brain and generative orKans. 81. $5.

All druggists. Send for circular to ALLEN'S PHARMACY, 315 lat New York. thirty years Dr. UPHAM'S VEGETABLE ELECTUARY has been an acknowledged specify for this distressing complaint. Sold by all druggists.

Omce, 39 East 4th st. Send for pamphlet. DR. UPHAM'N MEDICAL REMEDIES will cure the most obstinate cases of dy-pepsta, piles, rheumatism. Prepared and tor sale at 39 East al PILES permanently eradicated in one to three weeks, without knife, ligature, or Send for eir.

cular contains references. Dr. HOYT. 41 West 21th 4t. was the is art.

of wuy did and ani- pro-.

Get access to Newspapers.com

  • The largest online newspaper archive
  • 300+ newspapers from the 1700's - 2000's
  • Millions of additional pages added every month

About The Sun Archive

Pages Available:
204,420
Years Available:
1859-1920