THE SCR ANTON" TRIBUNE "MONDAY MORNING, JANUARY 1. "5, 1894. 7 GRENADIER - MARSCH. V- - - --v vw y m JOSEF WIEEEMAN. Op. 80. m rfrr a t7"" AM ' ff :3 S .1. WiLii ffaafffi r r r i V ir ' r i -1" r JLJtJt.0-.lt ML k Y. b " w rf Pi T ! t . v 3 Irfr-i 1 f i c si L t At rl HEEE gal ' ): ' - si I - j -z 35 5 r: .-.. . !t . ; J .-L.. I L ! 5B L r jc j ii e 9 t 9 -f 3 : Jt.a.jt. jl &--0--V- -frit o m 0.. JLJLS. JL iff t ft .c. H 1 zrirzizzTst ' S3 i. 1 i iff - 1 J2. ..i. U-4 --t. ' p . p p taT i a i . A 0 -H.---I tfl tfC I I cgrL3ziu i. q , jj r- 1 - i --i 1 j i 2 F 1 F m i. 4 4 ( 2 fip)-4 ! s BE I u i ( rr, i ft i Trio. f j Troimnel. Ff m i-ifiJZ m-x k , E H- -ir 7, Arhf ' r A. iR I TT1 i- , -r-r-1 T J -?r --rl" I- W. ' W I . V , L V 1 V . r j , 1 f 1 1 j ! 1 J f ; '' I Z " 1 h - r jl -j i i H SIT- ! f 4 - 21 tK tzszt Hb-T H i h H h f m. t I (-4- 1 m v -as- T 7 T I i ' h I 4 1 --J h ! i -4t- i " H-tM 1 r -( D.C.alFinc Grenadier-Marscb 3. 35c. 35c FOR LADIES' MUFF. How can we sell Muffs at this price? 1 We must have the room and all i urs must go regardles; of what they cost. We stiil have a good assortment of Fine Furs. 41 AO F0R LADIES' W HK JACKET. Vl-VU Black Cheviot m 4 AA Umbrella back, I Tl,ment and well worth double the money. We 1 have some very good styles left in Fine Garments, A CHILDREN'S UN 4n DERWEAR. Our stock of Chil li dren's Fnderwear is IP much larger than we want to carry, so have cut the pricn deep to close. White, ()C. upward. Scarlet and Gray at cost. rM LADIES' AND fin MEN'3 UNDER bVU. WEAR. Greatest Bargain nP in this department VUi f;ver offered. Ml grades of White, Gray and Scarlet; price astonishes. $16.75 no 3 $16.75 Demorest Sewing Machine AT WALTER'S, 128 Wyoming Ava. AMERICAN POSTERS. AHTOHEHARTHAH 906 South Wtahinoton Avenue, Conttifftor nud Viullclnror Tonorets FliigKi ne, Concrete Block, Potato. Butter nni) ('on! Him, Wet Cetluri UrM up. OnUtN majr b left ui Ttiompxon Pratt, Will ainx b 'o, Mnin mill Eyooii titrwte. or ab Hoaiiton Move Wurlf. Alio Piiuuilatiuiii, t'ltturun. Fik Wire Tuuucla and Cu Jln. r'luggiuu tor ttaidau WaUd PICTURES IN WHICH THIS COUNTRY LEADS THE WORLD. The Growth of Lithography untl Ita It- !.. tloa to the Art of .AdvvrtUliiK Theatrlcul Attrartluua lion tha llutinum, Una lleco Built t'p. The American poster has utterly changed ks standing biiu;e the printers have been producing their work by Uthographr, It Lai become an urtlstio creation. Wood cuts may b a-i fine and delicate as etch ings, but in potter Work they depended on their COareen ett, They needed to be bold and conspicuous, anil the printing of them required nich A greftt uruount ot ink that any line work that might have been done upon them would have Clogged up and be come a great blot. The old fashioned poster picture was always a wood cut and was always coarse Hnd rud: With the advent of lithography into t.e bttaiscsi not only artistic drawing but bt liant color effects became jiossible. The Americans found few artists hen- w ho were accustomed to the work. There fart fa mous painters who were masterly In their use of colors, but it was not po"lble to em ploy them in a calling that had not then attracted wido attention and that in all probability uerer will rank nearer than cousinship to high art. Moreover, lithog raphy il a science by itself, it does nut permit tha execution of the design that is aimed at. It requires the artlt to reach an efi'ett indirectly by drawing a picture as a looking glass reflects a figure, with the l ight side of thevtone making the left side of tho finished work. The best artists who have mastered this t rich are the cartoon i ts upon the leading weekly pa pen that pro duce picture:, in colors. The number of men who ff re colupetant to produce the American poster of today eras Very small When the printers took up lithography. Kurupe, however, was a rich treasury of clever aNftHnen and iplor ists, who were trained to lithographic work. To Europe the American poster printers went tor their talent, and the cousetj ux-nee has been that today the leading poster art ists iu this country are nearly all Euro peans. They arc Frenchmen, Germans and Kussians. They have been imported in this country as bial us they have attracted attention in their own capitals, and the custom of recruiting their ranks with men of their own nationalities still goes on. The American poster is, therefore, In one sense a foreign prud.ict. The artlst9, the process, the lithographic stones all lire brought from abroad. Even some of the paper in use on the dead walls of the coun tr, .though made hero, is manufactured of liber I hat is imported. Hut the finished product of this foreign combination is as truly American as the enterprise and judgment that led up to it. So American Is our po.'.ter, in fact, that to day the most at tractive fence and wall ad vertising done in Loudon, I'arlt, Madrid and Berlin is printed in Cincinnati and New York. It is not merely the ilaruum circus, the Kiralfy spei tacle or the series of Yan kee patent medicines that are thus exploit-. 1 l.o.i' m I The Europeans themselves sriul hen: to get their posters. It is a curious circumstance that the same artist who iu Pit! I tinned out an artistic but old fash iuued, unattractive little placard now scuds from America to the same Paris tirm the stunning, showy, beautiful designs that are everywhere classified as American. There are no secrets in the making of tho new style poster except that the biggest, most successful pnuters are those that em ploy the b'jst talent, show the most enter prise and spend the most money for the best matetii'.ls and machinery. They give out the figure work to the figure men, the lettering to the best designers, the color work to the men whose xklll as colorist has attracted wide attention. Tbey pay good wages. There are poster artists who in '- getting $15,000 a year, or perhaps more than any painter or Illustrator ou any mag azine or iu aur studio in Uil cill- The fidelity of the likenesses to the originals iu the theatrical bills is due to photography. There are no portrait paint ers in the new poster shops. The actor or actress who is to be portrayed us in the lusu of the famous portraits of Mr. Crane as the Senator and Johnstone liennett as Jane were, if they are like the rest of their kind, photographed up to the required size. and then the photograph w'us used as the IDAL LIFE IN A CLUB. What Membership la a Metropolitan So cial ii sanitation Mean. I By union of financial and social forces, I club conditions hare been created that to Individuals would bo absolutely impossi ble. 'All one has to do to secure their per-. feet fulfillment in his particular case is to basisofthcilrawingorpaintiug. Kfl'ectlve i pay his dues and observe the few simple scenes and situations are seen by the artist in tho same way that any spectator in an orchestra chair sees theiu, except that the actors and actresses often pose for him alone, and their photographs are carried away by him iu his notebook. ' It has bcensniil that nearly all the lead ing poster artists are foreigners. It is true therefore that a few ary Americans. One of the very best of them, whose figure work attracted (ride attention, wns a .Mr. ("raue, who until lately lived and worked In this city, and there are now in town at least two other first class figure men, who, like half a dozen famous painters and illus trators, graduated from the art depart ment of the now defuuet Daily Graphic. To step aside from I he actual poster, there are found iu the workshops of the great bank Hole companies other Americans, em ployed as designer In the main. The good work done on our deed Weill has wrested praise from tho men who ure engaged In the higher lines of ertilt industry. It was at a dinner to Henry X, Abbey, when the best artists In the country were present, n couple of years aioi, that a toast, was drunk to the American sister. With no un healthy prejudice to break down, and in view of the money that tho printers are (pending, it is safe to predict that Amer icans will eonl ribute more and more to the glory and mccess of our poster uulil ut last it will be Americas in fact, from its ink .surface to tin- paste on its hftck, with ull which that implies. -New York Sun. Small, bill Terfe t. In sour paste, vinegar, the melt of a cod fish, or even in water iu which decayed veg etables have been infused, the microscope reveals aniinalculi Mliitleuniiiials)so small that milliontof them Mould not equal a common grain of wheat iu bulk. And yet nalurcwith singular prodigality has sup plied insiiy of these minute creatures with organs ns complete and perfect, as those oT ft whale or Ml elephant. Iu a single ounce Of such matter tin' are more living crea tures Hum there ure human beings on the latoof the globe! -St. Louis Republic. Kept Mini Busy. Mrs. Pennyroyal Your mother tells me rules that underlie his peace. Bv bis choice uf u club It is assumed that the conditions there arc those he most desires. If ho finds himself mistaken, he is at liberty to shake ull the shackles ut u small cost and try over again elsewhere. After admission, whicfti secures to 1dm MOgtnlftl environment, he takes his own I pace and forms his own associations. Aft er that his life is as near happiness ns it is I possible (or material influence to bring a j mortal. One iu possession of ft perfect I home may still make sensible and proper ; use of the club, while fur the one huviug no home It is u pi hoc of refuge and u palace of I peace. By uu entrance feu of a few dollars I and n trifiitiK annual payment a man may , enjoy the privilege! of an institution whose I income and expenditures are enormous. ! Keen under a wasteful management, one bus t he privilege of living iu a house worth many thousands of dollars iu ft way that seems impossible in a private house. ; Each one has the same right ns the other. The house practically belongs to the lnetn I ber. Hundreds of perfectly trained serv i ants of various grades are employed with out thought on the part of a member. I These, prohibited from accepting fees, serve ' all alike iu view of the generous wages paid laud the voluntary subscription which nt holiday limes is distributed among them. Tho whole management is so arranged that all runs us if bv clockwork, t'l' iming, sweeping, etc. , are done out of sight of mem bers. All iipplinncea are first class and of the beet description, Nothing is ever out, of repair, there is no dust or dirt anyw here, aud some one is always within call. Letters are stamped as received to the ex- act minute by an automatic clock, while lite strife is rigorously excluded, it invisi bly pulsatrs In the very heart of the club. There are telephone connections, telegraph reporters fur stocks, carriages within call furnished nt moderate charges uud free from suspicion of extortion, uud burner at tentions w hich are confined to members of the "household." There arc dining rooms where the most perfect service is furnished at moderate rates, and private rooms where one may give entertainments of such char acter us he may choose to pay for. There is u library with hunuredsuf volumes, such you went to church for the first time last us one might select lor private use, uud a Sundav, Bobble. How did you like Itr reading room where all papers- dailv, Bobble Oh, it wus nice enough, but I weekly, monthly, quarterly -and In all lan mwsha 0,1,1 ma 10 hnioiri.,m.l do inst what guagi-s may he found, an well as an almn- he did. Mrs. Pennyroyal Well, that wasn't so very difficult, was it Bobbin-Yes'm; 1 had to crane my neck around all the time to see what every other woman iu the congregation had ou. --Detroit Free Press. The Muttiirhe. According lo an authority on the subject, there is a great deal of character Iu a man's mustache. When tiie mustache is ragged mid, as it were, (lying hither and thither, there is a lack of proper self control on tho port of the owner. If then- Is a tendency to curl at the outer ends of the mustache, there Is a tendency to ambition, vanity and display. When the curl turns upwind, there Is a geniality combined with a love of approbation. When the Inclination la down ward, there is a more sedate, turn of mind, not accompanied with gloom. Exchange. Tt" esrller symptoms of dyspepsia, such as distress after oatiog, beartbum, and occasional headaches, should not be ne glected. Take Hood's Harsaparilla and be cured. HooPt Pills are tha best family cathartic and liver medicine. Harmless, reliable, tuts. dance of stationery. In payment, of any ex tra debts incurred one simply -ions a cheek when he Is furnished with vouchers for ull he has ordered. Everything is looked after. Then there is special entertainment from time to time. Good breeding, correct liehnvior and strict, courtesy uro the club atmosphere. No mutter how extended the membership limit muy be, there Is no Interference, us each uses the privilege only occasionally, fcbjmo use It only during the summer mouths, when their families are out of town; some drop In but to get n glance at the papers soma visit hut seldom, while others make the house their regular head quarters. There Is always a view from the windows and some olio iutcrrstiug with whom to converse. The club furnishes a good place lo make business or social ap pointments. While all messages are prompt ly and safely cared for, addresses ure guarded from intruders, and once one passes through the doors he Is absolutely safe from interruptions. In most clubs the billiard table, card tabic bowling alley, pool and chessromns add to without tak ing anything from the desirability of tho place. New York Club. driving, hue one dark night, over a strange road. A violent rain hud been falling, and the highway was badly washed. Presently his horse, u Vermont Morgan, made a leup and crushed through what seemed to be the upper branches of a tree, taking the gig with him. Half a mile farther on he made another jump, there came a crash and shiv er, the gig reeled oveT another tree, poised for a moment ou one wheel and righted itself as the horse resumed his trot. by this time the doctor knew he must be near a river w ith high banks, for he could hear the water roaring on the rocks below. Now the horse came to a dead stop and re lused to cross the bridge. The doctor urged him forward, and he took a few steps, only to move hack In his tracks. This was twice repeated. Finally, vexed at such uuusuul obstiuncy, the doctor struck him with the whip. The horse squealed w it h disgust, shook his head, ad vanced as before and backed again. Now, at last thedoctor alighted and went forwanl to rt connoiter. This was what he saw: The flooring of the bridge had been completely swept away by the florid. Noth ing was left but the sleepers running from bank tO hank, and It was on one of these that the horse had walked out as far as he could w ith safety to the gig aud its occu pant. The obstruct ions which the roadster had jumped Were brush lelices put Up to stop travel ou the highwuy until the bridge could be repaired "Koad, Track uud ble." TroUSseau'S Heroic t o.t. Trousseau became aware that he wo- the victim of ft cancer, uu "nutodlugnosis," which Dieulafoy was sorrowfully compelled to afilrm. He went on, however, though eaten up by cares of many kinds, with unabated tearfulness, seeing his patients in the mottling und receiving his guests In the evening and saying nothingofhisdlseu.se. When forced to lake to his bed, he contin ued to receive visitors, to whom haapoka in t lie tone ot one suffering from slight in disposition. When racked with pain, he would say to the professional brethren urliu attended hint, "Let US hve a little intel lectual gymnastics." and would straight way start a discussion mi some medical subject. One of the very Inst ai ls of his life was to get Neliilou to obtain a distinct ion for a provincial confrere fur whom he had a re gard. A truly heroic death, made bcauli fill by a self sHcrilicing and euduring cour age under prolonged mental and bodily an guish, beside which the mere pluckxufthe "combatant" shows poor ludeed British Medical Journal. What is Castoria is Dr. Samuel Pitcher's prescription for Infants and Children. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic suhstance. It is a harmless substitute for Pnregoric, DropsSoothine Syrups and Castor Oil. It is Pleasant. Its guarantco is thirty years' use by Millions of Mothers. Castoria destroys Worms aud allays feverishucss. Castoria prevents vomiting Sour Curd, cures Diarrhoea and W ind Colic. Castoria relieves teething; troubles cures constipation aud flatulency. Castoria assimilates tho food, regulates the stomach aud bowels, giving healthy and natural sleep. Cas toria is tho Children's Pauacea-the Mother's Friend. Castoria. "Castoria is an IXOSUsUt medicine for chil dren. Mothers have repeatedly told me of its good effect upon their chiKlren." Da. G. C. Osaoon, l.ottvll, Mass. " Castoria is the best remedy for children of which 1 am acquainted. 1 hope the day is not far distant when mothers wil Iconslder the real Interest of their children, and use Castoria In stead of the vnrlousqunek nostrums which are destroying their loved ones, by forcing opium, morphine, soothing syrup and other hurtful agents down t"ielr throats-,, thereby sending tin-in to preinauire grsres." Dr.. J. F. KisrHttot, Oonvray, Ark. Castoria. " Castoria Is so well adapted to children thai I recommend it ussuperiortoany prescription know n to me." n. A. Archir, M. D., Ill Fo. Oxford St., Brooklyn, N. Y. " Our physicians in tho children's depart nient have spoken highly of their expori cuce In their outside practice with ("astorut. and although we only hare aioouB ou: medical supplies what is known as reftulat products, yet we are free to confess that th merits of Castoria has woa us to look wlUi favor upon it." Unitko Hospital no Pispsssarv, Boston, Mass Au ks C. Saita. Pres., An Intelligent Animal, country physician says that he was Agonies or Street Car Riding. Did you ever stand 10, 15, "" minutes ou the turbstone waiting for "your car," only to learn when you Inquired of the right one that that line of ears now runs on an other route? Hid you ever hnse a fleeting car, nud w hen you were firmly packed in, hanging to a strap, with your fare paid, see another of that same liue just btiduil with vacant seats gilloref Ucccham's pills arc f liliousncss, bilious headache lyspepsia, heartburn, lorpi iYcr, dizziness, sick he.u iche, bad lastc in the moutl oated tongue, loss of appt ile, sallow skin, w hen canst y constipation; and consti patios is the most frtqueni cause of all of them. Hook free; pills 25c. At drugstores, or write 13. F.Allen Co.,365 Canal St., New York. The Centanr Company, Tl Murray Straet, Now York City. AUCTION. AUCTION 'Bargain Stores 133 Penn Avenue, COMMENCING MONDAY EVENING, JAN, 15. AT SURDAMS A CHANCE to buy at your own price 1 Y Hardware, Saws, Hammers, Tinware, Lamps, Hosiery, Gloves, Notions, Fancy a nd Other Goods. Sign Reel Flag.