Contttn KtTO rOL. IV. iiiLLsnoij()iTr,ii, sii:kua county, n. m., apiil .', isso. NO. (?. STOCK BRANDS. V "Lv I'inder tho stoop lu 7"Z?- -v - AS3'"!"t' IU s- WrM,' W. J. Worden. . , pyr.iJ Five-Inch on left ffjfowifc. . .... , S. S. Mail,,' Dr.nd. Q 0. VVV1 P-O-addr,..: lirnnda used by P. I J K notch in under a do v 9 Ay" S. and.l. lt.8ta lo.ia VI ,,.. ",r ',''K''l Y Us Palouiai. N. M. PJpf3 . i i in ii s, fur branding Choir t(l i he head. itVV f a a cattle; brands on JT i .) I: ii. address: , V.l Icit side: nnd for n : , Jfjf Lake Valley, N. M. ,, .1 IY -f horaca one I i-ning:le Jiiy ,-'-yM-'7.T XhkJtA . on left shoulder. J- "" C7W "xT'"' 8"""" nl""i . .rS2t4- h -O V V The brand lit. led P. (I. address, rhlorida, N. M. m C ,1 V "WCTfilP' V on the left lid In - . h j I K f I " a iho lollowlns; man- CritMin & Co. 1 1 j. y Stock brand used J. I, J hit: on houlder, t.r.ijson i. tlrfH F riKtit silt. ','" "d'd '" Cfgii-" iti a-ilL n-jnJ$L . i - ill l J Ni"' rumii mark ii if T -aia oM J ? ud In P11'8 "f 11,9 ,Jolcff0n,Cft0' I!RWn&BWe. ed i! l3 Jjf VQ" . Thenbove Is also one of our hnndi for "ffZrfi''KLjt tjLi i 1 . w Mock on 1 lie loft sid. """ " i R. H- Hooper, Ceneral Mmnrer. A tl J ? S. t. Jm knon, Knneh MniKKer. ISA tt BElCV f P. O. iddrtwa: Kiiiftatun, N. M. T j f"""'1 "w"" R-Zil Sttinut'l (irc(rp. fc 4USS. I'10'8"- m&rr-- , Itanrh on Indian tr ytAli awA-i-rv. T s v Tk'rcl-k, elifht inllea I w... lfl n5a "". rattle inld luva- CA o J.oulh of Lake Val- 'AiLiJmjLi t ' TJ. ' nahlv In-nr tlio jl;,.v. Hrand on left -w i. tt- J JouiMrrbriiiid,tlius ti -J1 ft'1'" H1 T "A Placed upon the jTv ' Jl1 , , UiLJL- v'l''5'. N. M. , -I.J J i,.ft aido of calves l'SuO "rand of Cont!- 2?'- U I Sml yearlinira and x 3f neniiil ( atllo ( o. lam... k'nlirlit V J-MX I in the left, ahouldor y- used us nbovu it- JUIIIIS 0IIII. jf)i"Uor",a' 44- rx 3v" C" G v r fljlf J i j Kanirn hend.iinr- CrPrKn ' aZ-iJTrff- lUiaV . . 'L J era of (lilaand tied , i ' .IK (ronnectod)on v r- ' I - ' ""J"11- C , eft thigh. -AC Brand on left aide j4SatV f I 8Cc lllack Itnimo. ,Av. P. O. addroas: 71 jW.-o.. VI ''nk0 v"",,y N-M- 'A apllt above tropin -.. . I itL0!SfiJ-- rf Tn. addreaa. I..a ... . VI I fillPuloiiiaa.Sierrat'o., iTtja- ... 11. r. I itrhs. - U " Ti II v kW jfl ealtle and on the V ' . 1 lloraea V.randed . ' " 1(VP Lake Valley, N. M. TA v Howell Ke.a. UllJ..f Anv branded T - aisr( wii. aaniu brand, I n II,,,, .,. ' Vy have aol.l. Sjgra ' v J. II. Ilonillllll. ' O iJI oSrt!jll - f'attle branded on ' . " t i ix J A i lie left aide: horaoa ' SfClintllllO DoiIllnRIICZ. fc I 1 Ct K M jurnnded on the left " - fT 3 Horae brand aame , IX J Ihip and a lewbrand- V ti'ift . B' lis flit, only amaller ll''d on the rijttil hip. ftBpyl a m left hip. Other tir"V f 1 I'O- addreaa: V' a T J """d -W r and l Vlfl Hainan, Sierra rl I ' n dewlap allt once. Q 'Ii w . J Jlf County , N. M. w U ?l Ilrind uaed . on r l ar mnrks.trop and 'iXiT!- ti 71 rattle and lioraea. V.?W ! ,. i,,,ti, iither X jOt-V f I "!ly ear murki ai above jakH Vulley LhiiiI ami Live Motk to. HAjJP VViL on rattle, horae. ' " T ; , C OQ V'iireB W on the ria-ht Jos. lilt Franklin. c: ! flit flU TT iLi h'P. On aheep and i"fi4l- IS 4 lioua an under half ' . - - - II y elipp In th loft ear. ygottp..! N Iloraes brande.1 Esperitlnn Tufoja. r A- V Ji,"i,e,iSe.c' . a- ' on left a du or left 7 BWl 1 : ,"'. .T F . mi.. Samo on cat- . Jf ! i v ,1 U I 4f Me, with the addi- S TTStJ I-ake llLy- N- M- X jpXEpt loft ear being split S. p T VJW KullPIl SIliuT. jS and under b.t, " jr Hrand for itnck Herman (jrulie & Fred Nbaw. JlXisP-.Lt ti,' M U i p. o. addresi: X fe ' 1 1 1 i KalrvlewHlerra ty? , ,. -t' v rattle branded Francisco Apodaca. (afV f l" i A ' 'wio.e, once on left v jf l WJ I A TT i iP and onceonl. lt ti J$ sJJl TV ' X .do: also one third m SX?ter Tfe?- L X.' VaX d each ear cut on. ( vi i V 9&tfF. ' Mrand on horaes fe r A v'iJa-' Tlrnnded on right J J.' (xrobe. John I?. A Hot. aSks?VfI -t 4. J Range at and ' , x x .91 around White Kock JL v Jose Tafoja 7 ;arcla. "ir'o'addresa: TV 7l Hrand for rattle; YI Till Lake Valley, N. M. second on side, T 1 f9 'f-frUSSrh.ii. Si JTG PSnjjEe, renins, Nltaroi, ft Co. -irfl . ""r V! J tXTTtt i W on left shoul- 1 " x . JHf VTa iler. l'tiehllla I'andolaTio Chaves. HattZ-4fTSrx7 C PI WSJ onhlleft " CatintirTatlilla. - fl 13 h'P' H J Stock on left hip 5S5a" "T?k , "nd ual on left. tL&JsFmA to., M. M. X Ml lland ear mark ou ' . - llllnof no"es nl1 i?- 2aW I both cars. t? ( . ( TC I0""18- - J SjTl ,''',"1ir0S,: Wmtlon. i Mnry Yllllle. ifaj;'T ffi C C racd on r'ght side. ... i II J Jr F.ar mark: Hound 'Vy Hafael Olqiilcn. I y Jf h''n e"j,n ,' H Ear marks cropped 5'a" 1 ''. jl aVJ4a? J(-li . m. t the right and t " 1 "rand uaed on 0fl.iil boll to tlie 7 ,lioract mules, cat- J. . Tale. K J e,t- "t ' ' fl le and burros. - iSfjttJL-. Jk llll eTkJP'ffrrk ei leftside. Horaeaon ' ii3jJl T' -' 'Aloft hip. Home cat- .Wcitj & Minox. -vrzwt Ui AUR J1"1 2n,,hV"n v J k rtlirx Jl marked and brand- f Aiilonlo Bpez. J VI II .ti Vy (MSw 1 1 'V "rnd used on irS y fill KaVU'l at . C 1 X J , , , fc - 'loraea, tnules, bur- mt M -'PIW Jl 1. na"! A ffl, Ea'-markln awal- tTA TT T" I J ,s and cattle MfTTW1 I Jl low fork right ear. - I Jl branded on the left aTvl4 j!34ttlBwV f I r'" "ldrc": P. O. addreaa: Grafton, N. M. fTfe vj J') LasTolomas. J. W. Hitter. . U&??&Ji The above Is uaed John Sullivan ft X for a ranch and John s,..IITan. Ohmen, HolfA OhUen. ,, ..d brand. C.,,t. .V-,, ,. , 7 D 1 aide. Home oattle. aW5 Tk V-v' J Jlnowon the ran;ei W" i'PI 1 Prand on stock: jS'Xt'T". "A I are l anded thui; Ti' f JlKar mark Is a hole C1" tKI ' x. . jf""f XV I T 5 T !lv luirnughlertearaud U VV f attle brand used 1 TJI ,-SstaaSV 1 I IcwUiionnghtear. v. 7 in left side. aii3j-W-f eaaj ,'7 UiT " r-O.lrea. Jame. Jl. trover. ,.,,, y ,,, ,-l'daDodf7on,hf; , rattle branded on fl S.Ttn TT H j .nd bck.ner thS W t de. Ear Bjirli: Ca; 4 LJ left thl.b .fl -houlder. F.ar mark H, . tor bit in lett and I a. Uwr.e braod. VJ 4 jfl'inder Hope in each 1 . J r 0"JP,- III t n jaswV l,.n. fTiaU a.ldreaa: f slf r. O-addresi: tkLy- -'kO 'i''k M JjjJ OoVNWjL'err Grafton. U.K. Felix linniales. 1. M. Monroe. S. II. Mima. My mark and I 0ipdS a. i . 3SaL m A 1 1 fSa ''rand uaed on eat- l jT X" fl ""d used for T fv ' , M on both lldel. IB 1a i7 'I' "n1 h""f: cat- ru j;!rteMl JvA- . -i-n. both ear l VV 'JHlXrA' V AiV P.O. addreaa: P.O. addreaa: J 0 shoulder, omeeat- Hl..sboronh,N.f. XCV .lrv.ew.Hh,rr. f Zla v ift f V T M.. .M. jljL . f 1'. O. addresa; R? iE2tat tirafton, I W. K. Ornbaui). H. A. ByPTa Hrand used ontno r It I niror. on either et both aide. ( iop off right and under xlope off left tmr. V. O. addreM: Fivrview, Hi err to., N. M. THE DISAPPOINTED. Tvrr Hni doriK tnoiiKh for tin lirin, W'Iki Owflinon !lt h('iliU of lann; I "mi: for the (1ihm utiil, Kor tlmst whu miMH(t( their aim. I aintr with a ttnr'ul cmlcnoo Knr 4 me wIki hi nmts in Hit (lurk. And know t lit t hi lat, ltit hi row llaa Irouii'lcU txu -k Inun tUv murk, I Pintf fnr thfi I rt'MthU' runnrr, Thi eiiyrr, nnxioii-v tuul, VS ho fHtls with h n "tn-iiKiti fxhnustiMl Alnmxt in fiitfUt of the kohI; For (hit hf.i'in ttmt Itt-.'nk In kIUmh'o With tuitrow nil unknown; For ttioNn w ho iw d eomptiniona, )t ivnik tluir wh) ( fttuno. Thf if nrc jmtjii enough for tho Invert Whu nhitrc in v v h'rulr pu n: I tmif. for ihf on whom pa.'p on U irivca ami lu mu. For thoe wlintu' f rlf comradct Mh c iiiiKccil Itinii on tti way, I w iih h bc-iirt o i rflowiiiif '1 Uii minor fttra n to day. And I know the aolnr srlfm Must son owlu re kt t p in ipnc A r . for that iwnt nintier tn l-iirt-ly iott (hi4 rftt'O. For tin- ritm would he hupotft'ct I'li'i-tn It hrld mohm' Hphoro 1 liai ph d for tho to t iin.l tnlont And lofthut ure WHMirdhere. l hrfin- Wilcox, indent chfvr. .JIM ClIUlUllILIi. The Lifo, Love nnd Death of a Bravo Man, It was tlustv, hot and liaillv venti liilcil iiiiliinrs, till lioiilt out if (lour a colli ram was Lcating cIhm'I'Ics.sIv BtraiuMt tlx: car wituluw.s, nml the damp, raw wind was as fresh as th brown hills and ice covered inarshes i blew ocr. It was an accommodation train on one of (he trunk lines in the central part of this State and therefore a belter condition of a flair could not have been expected. No matter how cold the weather or wet, it is always hot and ilustv on an accommodation ktrtiin. The colder and welter it is out hide, the hotter and dustier inside, and the more unpleasant It is the slower the train bumps over the rails, the more freipient Ihe slops it makes, the larger the crowd of on-comiiifr passen- cers. and the greater the tln'onir of sro- ers-out. At l'alatine Bridge the train came to another stop. On the iineov cred platform of the railway station there were gathered a few shivering wotilil-lie passengers, eager to barter one condition of discomfort for an oilier almost entially as disagreealih and impatient at the delay, for who ever knew an Hceoininodation train to be on tinier1 Among them were a man dressed like a fanner and two lilll girls the elder less than six years old and the younger her junior a year or an with fresh, smiling, dimpled faces and sweet, prattling voices, which even the rumble of the train, the sticky dust, the plashing rain, the smoke, the heat and the crowded load of ill-tempered passengers could not cloud or silence. They came into Ihe car when; 1 sat. The farmer and the younger child found a vacant seat in front of me. I moved nearer the aisle to let ttie oilier climb over the parcels bv my side next to the window, out of which she gazed into the rain and through the blinding clouds of smoke which covered the. soggy fields with an intensity of delight that was so unaf fected that the train ought to have felt flattered, hud it had sense enough to feel nnytbing. "I dess love to ride on the cars, don't you?" she asked after the train had resumed its tiresome journey. "Sometimes," I replied. "I do all the time. My pupa is an engineer." ''Then you ride a good deal?'' 1 ven tured. "Not very much," she answered with a little sigh of discontent; "not as much as I want to. Since mamma went away, pupa won't let me, ami grandma always cries when I go on the cars." "Ah!" "liidn't von know that? You know my papa?'' she remarked with such confidence: in mv knowledge that I was almost ashamed to say that I didn't. "Don't bother the gentleman," inter rupted the farmer as ho turned half around in his seat and faced me. "Shu is a big talker." "She doesn't bother me in the least," I made haste to say. So, reassured, the little maiden turned her face again to the window, and in a moment was too much absorbed in the fleeting pano rama to remember anything but the passing pleasure.. "Her father was an engineer on this road Jim Churchill. Kver heard of him?" continued the farmer after a short pause. "No. Well, I ain't sur prised. Yet he deserved to be known mnrc'n lots of men that gets their names, before tho public. Jim anil I was schoolboys together up the country near Palmyra. W was both raised in the same township, and wo nsed to think when we was men we'd be part ners, and so we was almost. Jim was bigger'n me, stronger and a year or so older. I was always a runt among the boys, and if it hadn't been for Jim I'd f'rribnWy born ieker every ibiv in my ife. But Jim wouldn't stand nothing of that sort. Ho was as bravo as a giant and he never allowed any one to be imposed upon while he could pre vent it, and when tho boy a learned that he meant what he said they let me alone. So we grew tip together like two brothers, lie loved me because I was weaker than he waa, just as a father lovea a baby, and I just wor shiped him. I'd a. died for him, stran ger, just a easy if he'd only said the word. You ought to have knowed Jim Churchill. One Jim Churchill would make up for a half a million such fel lows as mo and the, ordinary run of folks. "When we was alsmt sixteen years wc had our first trouble. She was the prettiest girl in the county, and she was just as sweet and good as she was pretty. She was the dominie's daugh ter, and when she came to school Jim and I both set our caps for her at the same time. Funny, stranger, how n pretty girl will come between old friends. Two men can live like twitu a whole lifetime, but just let a pretty woman come in and they will light like brothers-in-law over a w ill. When little I l'hillis came to school, and Jim and I 1 ran races to ask to see her home or to fetch lu r to singing school or Sunday night meeting, then: stranger, we : knowed the tiist trouble of our lives, j Somehow we grew cold like, and be fore that year was ended we did not j speak. One night Jim and 1 met at Iter , house. 1 was seventeen then, and Jini was over eighteen and as big as a man. ' He had a beard, almost, and he was as 1 handsome, as a picture. lie didn't know I was there, or I don't think he'd a called. I hail been there about at, hour, and just before the knocker . sounded l'hillis hail told mo the old ! story we all of us love to hear so well. and I fell as happy and light-hearted as a lark. When Jim came in and saw us sitting in the lilllcold parlor he seemed to know just what had happened like a flash. For a moment 1 thought he'd do something he'd regret some time. Ilia face got so black and sullen and his even got ugly, l'hillis saw it, too, soon s t did. " Jim.' said she. her voice trembling just a little, 'Jim, I want you ami Bob to shake hands and be friends.' "Then I got up and held out my hand; though, to tell the truth, I fell 'sort of nervous. " 'Jim,' she went on, her voice get ting stronger and her face getting sweeter and sweeter, 'I waul you to love Hob again just as you used to, be cause - because - I love him so much. Won't you, Jim, for -my sake?" "I wish you could have seen Jim just then, stranger. I never saw the good in a man light so hard with the bad and eoine out ahead in all my life before or since, and never expect to again. He stood there by the open window just as if he d been carved oul of stone. 1 didn't know whether he'd heard what she said or not, he was so still. Then, just as I was about to take back in hand. Jim took it in both of his so liaid 1 almost dropped. Then he threw his arms around my neck, kissed me on my lips, flopped down on a chair, stranger, and cried like a baby, l'hillis, the little woman, cried too, nnd there we all were with our arms around each other crying like women and not any of us knowing what we were crying about. 1 hat sett led things with us. Alter lliiil we was brothers just like we used to be. Well, it's a long story, and I guess you won't care to hear it nil. So 11 cut il short. When 1 was twcnly- one 1 was married. .Inn was our best, man, and mv oldest boy is named : James Churchill Brown. About a year or ao later Jim married. She was a cripple and supported her mother do ing sewing, lint if she had been a : royal princess Jim couldn't have treated her any belter. After he got on the roail he buill her a little bouse near us and there they lived and there these little tots came into the world. About a year ago a lillle boy came to Iheir collage, bill he only stayed a day or so, and w hen he went back to where came from he took the lillle mother back too, and these little ones were ft behind. Jim never lost . heart. though, but the blow nearly killed him. lie stood up under it as bravo as a lion, and you'd necr have known from his face, except that he didn't smile the w ay he used to, thai he knew what sorrow was. One evening last week it wasauoliduv with Jim lu: and l'hillis was out walking by the reek that ru.is through inv meadow iv the reil barn. It was just dusk and mv little boy was running on ahead Waving in the snow when they runiii to the railroad crossing. Just as they got there Jini heard a whistle. It w asn't time for the regular train, so he wasn't watching out for danger, It was a special and II w as coming round the curve like lightning. My little Jim was plat ing on the culvert, l'hil lis heard Ihe whistle, she saw the boy on tlie track, she heard the rattle of the engine just as if it was a dream. I'licn she gave a lillle scream and fell own on the road in a faint " "East Creek!'' called out the conduc tor, as the Irani stopped again in the storm. Oh, I'ncle Hob!" cried the littlo maiden by my side, "hook out the window. There's Aunt l'hillis and ousin Jim and there's grandpa and grandma and what a funny looking black wagon that is! Look! Look!" he continued, as the fanner gathered together his charges and started for tho door. " I hey are putting a black box in the wagon, and Aunt l'hillis is cry ing awful hard." ics, replied Ihe farmer as ho brushed away a tear from his eyes. Yes, that's Jim Churchill, at ranger. in that box." Jit njumiii Sorthrop, in The slag resulting from the smelt of copper, gold and silver ores at Argo, Col., is now being used for the manufacture of beautiful table ware. 'The colors are a kind of spray of onyx and opal Hushed in waves through tlie Marc. Tho slag is melted at an in tense heat, then poured into vats of agitated water, then rcmclted and poured into moulds either with or after an acid mixture which causes the metal to flux pretty generally with added materials. Tlie result is said tn be a metallic glass with tha strength of light east iron, which may be moulded into any form of table ware bowls, cups, tumbler, etc., with the most beautiful sprays of onyx stone colors upon a generaf back ground of opal. lhnvrr Trilmnr. Mrs. Dr. F. Cartwright, of C.arden City, Kan., received a telegram at !:H5 a. in., announcing the serious illness of her mother, and asking her to come immediately. She packed her trunk, lint up a lunch, appointed A. II. Ad kinson her attorney to dispone of ten thousand dollars worlh of property during her absence, and left on the train at 51:54 for her old home in Iowa, all in nineteen minutes. ChiiU'jn Miil. A man near Winnetnnceii, Nev., offers a reward of $l,Vl for the arrest of the person who slide his house from him. The building has mysteriously disappeared and there is no trace of itic wherealKwts. LEGAL NOISE. What the l aw Allow. "d What It Cnn- .liier. a Nulaitnce. F.vcrv good citizen is interested in know ing how much noise tho law will compel him to endure at the hands o his neighbors without redress, am nninv citizens who are not irnod will . JotiliUeasgliko to ascertain how much ' noise they can inflict upon their neigh bora without fear of punishment. SeT ; pral decisions bearing upon these 1 noinls have lately been made bv the courts. One broad principle well established ill the law of noise,, both in , I Ii in country and Knglaiul. curiously 1 il lust rates t he serious bent of our I Anglo-Saxon nature, and that is the i sharp distinction drawn between ! money-making noises and those which ! are made in the pursuit of pleasure The law is tender to a steam engine or I a boiler maker, and will allow them to I disturb a w hole neiglilirhood with im punity, but it is severe upon a brass band or a game of skittles. 1 lie poo citizens must be very wary about play- in" bowls or skittles in populous nlaces. The Italians order tins matter differently, and restrain blacksmiths, boiler makers, etc., within somewhat close limits us to time and place, whereas they allow musical merry makers to make night hideous or beau tiful, as Ihe case may be, without any restrain! whatever. 'The dog, in Knglisli and American jurisprudence, stands upon the border line, because he may be considered in either aspect -as kept for use, when watch dog, or for pleasure, when re garded merely as a companion or .an ornament. Ilere, however, we run airainst another principle of the com mon law, according to which dogs are privileged persons. For instance, it is unlawful for a fanner to shoot an other's dog who has eaten his sheep. provided il be the animal's lirst of fense of that kind; for the ilog who is young in the sin of sheep-killing may repent and lead u respectable life thereafter; but if he has already been convicted of the crime, then it is law fill to shoot bun. In other words, as Lord Manslield once said: "The law allows every dog in England one bite at a sheep,' It has, however, been held that "tho noise produced by a dog barking in Ihe uiglil is a nuisance, and thai a man may shoot (he dog nml abate the nui sance when on his own premises; that is, we presume, when on his own, the shooter's, premises, for it has never been lawful for it man to stand ou his own reniises Hud a dog in his neighbor's A great judge. Lord yon, held that a dog barking at shoot yard. ' Ken- night is not a nuisance, but it is doubtful if this would be considered a gooil law at the jircsent day. According to the dclinilion given W one writer, a noise is a nuisance when it is "unusual, ill timed or deafening." This is plainly incorrect, for the noise of a nightin gale in the streets of Boston would be '.'unusual," but hardly a nuisance. Some very "ill-timed" noises are also, in the eye of the law, not nuisances. Thus it lias been held in the case of Tool against lligginson and Daly that it is not a nuisance for the parent of an infant suffering from colic to trun dle a baby -carriage all night in a boarding-house over the head of a nervous hacUclor editor. This noise may not have been unusual and per haps was not deafening, hut it would Is' an abuse of language to say that it was not "ill-timed." Probably what saved the parent in this case was the fact thai the noise was useful, for the evidence tended to show that the baby was relieved by the trundling. On the other hand, useless noises, "such as a concert we quote from a decision of the Supreme Court of Massachusetts although they disturb but a single per son, may constitute a nuisance." It has very jiropcrly liecn held that a "show having brass bands, when con tinued two weeks," is a nuisance. It is not likely thai many people will quarrel with this decision. A kindred subject is that of nuisance by vibration. If a man attempts to operate a steam hammer next door to a dwelling-bouse the law will restrain him. One authority states the rule as follows: "The vibration must pro duct) such a condition of things as, in tlie judgment of reasonable men, is naturally productive of actual phys ical discomfort to persons of ordinary sensibilities and of ordinary itste and liitliits." 'The words in italics seem to imply that some persons like morn vibration than others, and are in the habit of "vibrating" themselves, Kesidents in the Buck Bay who are accustomed to pile-drivers in their close vicinilv mav he said to have ac quired the habit of vibrating, but we doubt if they have any "taste for it. However this may be, the sum of the mutter is that in the interest of trade or manufactures you may vibrato or deafen your neighbor with few restric tions, but that for purposes of pleasure your iaciiny oi noise-iiiniuiig must se verely bo repressed. Jjoston Adver tiser. STAGE MAKE-UPS. Neereta of tlie Ireaai.ir-ltootn aa Jtevealed bv a Theatrical .Man. "See here! 1 have a letter from an amateur asking me to give him direc tions how to make up for an old man, and I don't know any better way than telling you every thing about it and let ting you tell everybody." Thus spoke Jerry Taylor, stage manager of the Walnut Street Theater, to a reporter. "When a star enters his dressing room," said Mr. Taylor, "he finds the contents of his dressing-case or make up box spread out la-fore him on a table, in front of a glass that is hung between two lights. Ho has ready in his hand sticks of grease paints of all colors, and cosmetics, pencil brushes, spirit gum for sticking on noses or whiskers and a hare's foot. Now, sun pose he is going to make tin for an old man. Jle takes a stick of flesh-colored grease paint, warms it slightly and rubs it all over his face, just the same as a scene painter 'sizes' his canva before painting the picture on it. Then if he is going to make up for some his torical character he has a picture of the original before hint and ho must line his face according to it. Otherwise ho goes to work and makes tho face ho fancies. After tho lirst cottt of flesh colored paint he covers his cheeks and lips witti vcrmillion. He next draws two short lines wide apart at the ton and almost converging bet ween them, j'hcsu lines are put on with Indian ink applied with a pencil brush. Crows' feet with three little lines at the outer corner of the eves give them the old wrinkled expression. Two parallel lines on each side of the face, one beginning near the inner corner of the eye and the other beginning at the base of the nose, each about naif an inch long, with an ordinary face and slanling downward, give the lengthened expres sion to the face. A line across the chin, blended downward at the ends, completes the lining required with an ordinary old man's face. Different old man characters must, of course, be given different expressions about Ihe mouth, and these are made with lines to suit the expressions. To make himself look as if he was a couple of weeks without a shave, is the simplest thing imagin able. All he has to do is to burn a newspaper and rub the ashes vt hern the burlier puts the lather, nml be will have a strong, two weeks' old black beard. Ho can tone that down by rub bing In ground chalk. "To make the arms thin, a linn of brown or green grease paint run along the veins will make n fat, round arm look like that of a . shriveled old woman. For a young man or hero character the same ground work is laid ou; vcrmil lion or rouge is applied to the lips and checks with a hare's foot. The eje brows are blackened wilh India ink, and a thin line is drawn on the under eyelid, extending from the inner cor ner of Ihe eye to a little beyond the outer corner and right under the hail1 line of Ihe lush. In blacking the eye brows the ladies frequently use the soot of gas smoke, collected by holding a piece of glass over the burner. It is one of the best colors and the least harmful. For a snub nose a small line drawn over the nose and another drawn under Ihe point of the same organ will give it a beautiful snub, but if he is the unfor tunate possessor of a natural snub ho can't take it oil' with all Ihe lines ho can draw. He has to build it out wilh putty or dough. An actor can not en large his mouth nor diminish the size of his cars with paint. Jo take oil tlie grease paints cocoa butter is generally used. It is applied over the paints, and the whole mass rubbed oil' with a dry towel, after which the face is washed with water. False noses of paper nre seldom worn any more. Hough, putty anil col ton, shaped and made as the wearer wills, is tho rule nowadays, llollowuess of the face is made by rubbing paper iisbes on the cheeks, and llih eyes are sunken bv putting red paint on the upper eyelids. uurnl-curk artists nave tun easiest make-up used on the stage. All they have to do is to get a few corks, burii them completely, grind them line to re move the grit and apply damp. They aint their lips wilh rouge nml lliev en irgu their mouths by rubbing oil' the cork about a half inch on each side. Thev seldom moisten the cork with any thing except water, as grease and things like that would make the cork slick into the skin. Crease paints and cork never hurt the skin if properly tip- plied. I'liMiulili'luii Afir.i. PRINCE BISMARCK. A (.llnipae at tlie Trite Chiii-acter. of the "Man of III.hmI and Iron.' Since the accession of llismarck to the highest position in the nation, next to the monarch, he has greatly exalted the power and position of Prussia, but it has been at fearful cost. To carry his purposes lie has muzzled the press, tidied the representatives of the peo ple, and with an iron hand ruled like a despot. Fearless by nature, ho has confronted every kind of enmity and opposition at home and abroad. 'There is no need to follow el'wely csree? since he became the chief adviser and prime minister of William I. Bis marck's prominenco as a statesman bus somew hat obscured his merit as a soldier; but he himself always believed that the army was the place for which nature designed him. When the Km peror invested him with the highest military order in his gift, he addressed him in tho following terms: "Truly at many a grievous time you have shown the highest courage of the sol dier, and vou nave also thoroughly and conipletefy proved ut my side In two campaigns that, apart from every thing else, you have the fullest chum to conspicuous military distinction." It is astonishing that Bismarck has been able for so many years to sustain the burden which lias been laid on his shoulders. Nothing but an iron constitution could hate borne nil that has been thrown upon him. Six feet two in his boots, seventy years of age, but straight and unbent by weight of years, in weight from two hundred to "two hundred and fifty pounds, ho, ha uccu uud.sU'.l io a m,.di 1 of manly strength and vigor. Of late years there have been times when he lias been compelled to beat a retreat for a season from the cares and IHbors of oOice to recuperate and re-cstabli.-h his health, lie lias always liecn a great cater, ami deep iiruiKer, and a heavy smoker. Prince liistuf rck, in the course of such a distinguished and elevated career, has become one of thd richest men of (ierniany; but no one has ever accused him or availing him self of his position to acquire wealth In an improper manner. Most of his property has been the pift of the na tion. Prom Chan. Lowe s "J.ifc of h'iJ manic." m The invention of type-writing dates as far back as 1714, when one Henry Mill obtained in Kngland a patent fur a device that "writes in printed char acters, one at a time and one after an other," but it was not until lt!7 that it was improved so aa to work satisfacto rily. 2'roy Timet. 1 a s