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V w BERNHARDTS TRIUMPH.' ^doa t» Play a m v a PiayedLin 3?jais mA ’Cna;^ Follow H ot ThitfeOT—Her jWnru^ftrfVii jEtejaderiDg ^.Acioeiuie, <Be«alar cotre^p<mdeice of theBreaiBjt Port.1 £, q 5 dok ^ Hay 30f, 1580, lier exasperaliagior M. 8? sways, droops, &Us; Trat ahereodtere anft 31BWS with, tendenieaa-and with,*lmo8t giiiisk joyhef-ernltadonaf ateretnltt ofBef foter. AloaiHCT 8 A i m mat «. H. j& CO., AvasQssssa jlsd BKUi^ssxan bbox Offlosi, go, a Pine iad Hix USO Bro «fBHITDB«aJX*i \ ■■- 1 ^ d actress^ M. Sarcey seemed to consider his la^ year’s excursion altogether phenomenal, and quite unlikdy to repetition. He wrote, “I have _____ from England” as one might say, “I lias just arrived &om Z^nibar,” and he de scribed the manners mid customs “ if he were the first civilized pers< •dared to penetrate the wilds of islands. But a year has rolled around, and with it M. Sarceys exaggerated ideas of dis tance have received essential modification. You' may see him any evenii^ now, tafemg his airing between the acta in front of the Ckiiety Theatre, where Sarah Bernhardt nightly gives fresh evidence of her genius. The wayward Sarah, in the exuberance of 1 •her disdain for the manager of the Comedie Fran^aise, determined to veX him more than she had already done by leaving his fostering •care, and so announced that she would give in London her rendering of Adrienne Leeo vrev/r, in which she was to have appeared I the first time in Paris ' ' ’ - - • ne<*; she lays her d upohlUBhreast^. she ppnrs forth from ? lips wlJi<% ate drea^ {remh^ng ;irith pis of disBohrtidn ajl the adorable^ words' biieh a loving wpmaff can bestow npou the an she loves. Butshs never snow's herself She shows ns Adrknne , mystery—whidi she tries vJDMMXBam j»JkJMiTB: n v wiLi/iAia: c. bryaht se co.; 2og bhoajw a y , conmsd of WDueon s * bbbt * P K IO E T H E E E CBOTS. NE'W T O E K , TDESDAX j JU N E 15 , 1880 . r a S E DO L L A R S A TEA R . to become violent She shows ns Adrienne in the presence of a mystery—whidi she tries to fethom—in the embrace of death, against which ^ revolts with the pa^onate f a young life rendered doubly dear by chantment of love. ‘ Finally, when she can and no longer, and reclining in an arm- lair, she utters the poignant cry, JeTiezetexpaamourirf Jeneteuzge^mou- r!” The emotion of the audience cannot 5 containfed: it is manifested in a tempe applause, sobs and shouts. But this i tribute instantly dies away, for the actress, with supreme art, makra the closing moments of Adriennds life so quiet, so imposingly full of pathos, that the spectators are as hashed as th^ would be in the presence of veritable death, and they leave the theatre saddened and touched to the very botto . So M. Sarcey an a voyage across the Channel necessary, should the Bernhardt be al- 3 attempt a personation of the , . _ ions, loving and exquisite Adrienne ■wMch the great Rachel had rendered so real and so inexpressibly tonching to theatre-goers of the last generation, without feeling herself in the presence of Sarcey and his fellows ? Never! Perish the thought. The daily ] of Pans may consent now and then to ge without the first news of a diplomatic intrigue or a political combmation, but it cannot be deprived of its theatrical criticism. Art before all things Sarah Bernhardt does not win the unquali fied approval of the English press in her per sonification of Adrienne. The memory of RacheT lingers here, as doubtless it does America, and critics are ever fond of belie ing that nothing in the present is so good many things in the past. Of course tl brateil drama has been maintained by most of the actors and actresses of the company which Mademoiselle Bernhardt has brought to’Lon don; the character of the Abbe is even taken by M. Dieudonne, who played it with Rachel in America. Should Made moiselle Bernhardt take it into her wQfulhead to visit the United States, it is to be hoped, for the sake of her artistic reputation, that she would choose first to present herself to an American audience as Adrienne. She could not fail to win both favor and high praise for the delicious and delicate manner in which she depicts the growth of Adrienne's love and jealousy, the fineness of the girl-actress’s nature, hemmed m as it is on every side by the coarseness and corruption of one of the most dissolute of epochs. The man or woman who should see Sarah Bernhardt first as Phedre, and then, soon afterward, as Adrienne, could scarcely believe that the two tjrpes were in terpreted by the AS EARLY VAOATIOir. .TTX^A^^, B^, N.T., it we left New YoA on ed the July heats of Mt THE MOSBllga IGBW& The Wreck of the Nuruusett. rrs BAPiD DEsraucrnoij—THK iobs , of ufe . The water was rougher In tbaSoond yeste^y, nd in Che monung tlmjoiiier-worltaf the upper eck of the Narragansett, or so much of it as ad not been burned, began to break up t oat away. Then a p ^of the deck floated i nd-a large quantity of baggage came to the a_ ice and was seenred by the wreckihg steamer. A son of Captain Scott, the diver, ac cording to a report, fell overboard from the schooner Report and was drowned. The wind- carried bits the wreck and otiier floating staff toward the Long Island shore, and boats iff in that direction to pick np anything that It float into their bands. Should the wind inne to blow as it did yesterday, It will send floating bodies as well as freight to the Long Island shore instead of out to sea. It is annonneed ttat the examination of the ladies’ lower cabin and the berths has been com- : without thediecovery of any bodies, crews of two fl.shing boats recovered six ___ 1 and took them to the factory of their em ployers, the Lucy Brothers, on Lyme Point. The children. The bodies removed were J. Horton, of Attleboro, Mass.; of Mrs. Je, of New York; of Mrs. WiUiam Boston, and of a daughter of A- P. Brooklyn. Mr. Dix, who lost three chfi- identifled this child yesterday. Two bodies >main tmidentified in the possession of the . brothers. One is that of a man about fortT'five years of age, dressed in a block cassf- 't, wearing a plain gold ring on the little Bd having cuff buttons withal RrofeaaorComstocfcsaysof the romedfes to be toed to kill the worm: . “The best means of pre of this pest in cnltlvatei ■ • FAMILY SBPPLTWa. © a w a i t - and oOur ^rst-claw orocari, BAXXKe POWDJSB8. ' -Cook’s Imperial and Extra'crr. r» au> i ■“ 1 = 1 1 ^ A Lively Scene In the Bense of Comn In the House of Commons last night Mr. O’DonneH (home ruler), member for Dungar- van, aslmd Sir Charles Dilke, Under Foreign Sec retary, a question relative to the antecedents of M, Chanemel-Lacour, recently appointed French Ambassador to London, and whether his i nation as Ambassador to Germany was not drawn in deference to the wish of the Ge: -Br«ids,Cnwkers.Cei tOD/Jo.’B AMriaziBa. User purse containing a few pennies, iring at the heck a broad, flat pin of g J body of a boy about two years of age was vn to East Lyme, Conn., yesterday. This Id was partly burned on the limba It has iwn hair and wore a brown linen dress, with old necklace clasped about its neck. All of se bodies but one wore life-preservers. Mr. ----------------------- --- — Dominion, fifaging with gold the ridges of a cloud moi lose against the horizon. An hour la comes the brilliant flushes of the northc , which we triedko persuade ourselves wi sralds of cooler weather to the sweltering wonder that these points and islands dotted with villas and cottages, i this is becoming more and m ace of resort. With a mainli Jtible of cultivation, abundant fish _ •aters, beautiful drives, safe boating, and season small steam yachts to be had at rea le prices, every year brings an increasing sr of people. We look out of pur window me cmia should not bo heard. Messrs, ParneU and A. M. \ Sullivan (home rulers) protested against the < attempt to silence a member. Sir Charles Dilke j denied the aUegations contained in Mr. O’Don- j nefl’s question. Mr. O’Donnell was not satisfied wi swer, and moved the adjournment of and, on the pretext of speaking on th persisted, amid an uproar. The Sp O’Donnell’s condact was a grave abnsi a similar motion had not been made fc dred years. I Sir William Harconrt said Mr. O’Donnell had i received influeatial support from Sir Stafford , Nerthcote in his opposition to Mr. Gladstone’s , Poor, hearing with her excellent testimonials of ' her worth. The objectof her visit here had been ■ possession of her only child, a eresting girl of about three years, her by her.,husband. CnABlI UHE. R O I j T E , From New York for Liyerpool and Queenstown. FROM PIEB 40 NORTH RIVER. CHAS. C. FBAMCKLYM, Agent. blight and in I’s attack on M.ChaUemel-Lacour ought not to j elve the countenance of any port of the ae exceptionally exceUent, e _ the mother ai terpreted by the same actress. In PM^e we pt glimpses of a nature which horrifies while it fascinates us, which is full of passion, but destitute of love or simple aflectiorf. All the splendid force of Continental realism in acting with its utter indifference to the moral side of things, its brutal frankness, its abnormal fond ness for expressing matters which ought to be nacredly inexpressible, is to be foi dre as ^ ah mterprets it. But Ad lovable, the per her virginal horn that one goes away from Sr ____________ hardt’s interpretation of the character saying ^ that a woman who can create such a person- , age and make it live for three hours before one’s admirmg eyes must herself be entirely good and sweet The actress has positive genius, or sh in 1846 with a capacity for ten guests. Each , year since has wltnesse<h changes and improve- , ments. In 1872 the present structure, with ao- \ nodations for three hundred guest The bouse, which is kept open t , is in every sense a traveller’s home, is left to do as he pleases, while at th he is perfectly well taken care -of I nal and only proprietor the faotu TALEHTIIIE ’8 TARMSHES. MAIN OFFICES : rAlENmrai & COMPANY, 323 Pearl st, N. T VALENTINE & COMPANY, 66 Lake st, Chicago, GENEEAL EUEOPEAN AGENCV: ' VALENTINE & CO., 103 Boul. Haussmann, Paris. , ^^ANCH O he autumn elections. could not Her soul s( the radiance of dawning love in that wonder ful second act, the scene of which is laid the greenroom of the Comedie Prangiise. fancy that most cultivated persons, and. i.^- deed, the mass of theatre-goers, are so fa- mOiar with the story of the play rienne Lecouvrier” that I need ee it here. It is the love and so us cottage still standing w _____ angle the. interests of his large diocese. Great changes have come over the region since those primitive times. The denominational land improvement association spirit has come up hither. Oppdsite our hotel, on Wells Island, is Westminster Park, the Presbyterian summer re- <.nd tragical die Fran9aise—a ---- - , -------- --- -------- - ( actress like Sarah herself—which Mademoiselle , Bernhardt places before usr, and the work is ] done so that one can never forget it. The ( French critics are not willing to admit that it is so remarkable as Rachel made it, but they are amazed and startled by it. The “great scenes,” as the English call ^ them, are unquestionably those of the fourth ^ and fifth acts, Modjeska is very impressive in them, but she lacks just the fine grain of genius which in these important parts i drama carries Mademoiselle Bernh personation beyond hers in excellence the fourth act, it will be rememberea, — actress comes to the parlor pf the Princess, ; whom she discovers to he her rival in the affections of Maurice, Count de Sa.ee a tragedy as a paid attraction — the Priuas^s magnificent entertainment. In her indignation at the conduct of the Princess she pours forth the ter rible denunciation contained in certain lines ' of “PMdre” directly upon the head of hei rival, and then leaves the company to break uj 'The English critics think that Mademoiselle | Bernhardt’s rendering of this scene touches' j on the limits of improbability, but they mis take. Adrimne, had she been an English woman, would have made a desperate effort to conceal her anger from all except the person upon whom it was to be expended ; but the Latin woman, carried away by the tumultuous torrent of her pas sions, would have done exactly as Mademoi selle Bernhardt does. The English audiences sh spell-bound before this superb exhibition. Blit they are inclined to say that they expect- tinuous energy. Sarah Bernhardt never rants, and this the London audiences, which at this season of the year are largely made up of wealthy country folks, feel to be an error. The spectacle of the long rows of bucolic squires, with their red-faced wives in white caps and scarlet cloaks, and their angular -daughters encased in dresses so tight that they .seem to have been melted and then poured upon them—the spectacle of these worthy peo ple during the intervals when MademoiseUe Bernhardt is not bn the stage, is highly amus ing. They sit wearily, with an expression of intense gloom upon their features, but brighten up as soon as the goddess returns. Rachel, Ristori and Favart have all given the best efforts of their genius to the fifth act of ••Adrienne Lecouvreur,” and Modjeska has latterly revived before American audi ences the sensation which it is always sure to cause. I am bound to admit that I considered Modjeska without a rival in this act until I had seen the Bernhardt. The kaleidoscopic Sarah is fairly entitled to the honors of a rs, to have deserted toe Protestant Episcopal calendar. •ge audience a^embled in the Brook Academy of Music last evening, when the : publican campaign was opened in that ci ■ ong the prominent persons in the house e the stage, beside the speakers, were John islow, W. W. Goodrich, Stephen M. Gris- d, Charles Storrs, A ’W. Tenney, John Oakey, in Palmer, Colonel David E. Austen, Mem- I of Assembly Tallmadge and Russell, the Drs. A. P. Putnam and Reuben Jeffreys, and the Rev. S. B. HalUday. Mrs. Beecher occupied a seat near the speaker’s ' desk. In a stage box were Henry Sanger, Wil im Richardson e r. S, L. Woodfo Letters expressing regret for inability to attend are read from Secretary Evarts, Secretary iburz, John Jay, George 'W^illiam Curtis, Ham- on Fish and E. D. Morgan. Edwin A. BtudweU called the meeting to Order and nominated General Stewart L. Woodford as chairman. This was earned by acclamation. General Woodford was received with cheers as he came forward to inWoduce Mr. Beecher in a Mr. Beecher spoke substantially t “ I look upon the defeat of t ____ ___ _ a tear. I believe in the repre- people. It will do no harm to n the engine and watch the en- 1 govern them. I am ------- rget the dark days of ,nnoC forget the man who dges He only had the strength to l, and bear it on to victory. )dest, true, loyal, just and ---------- ----- Jorgave his enemies and never forgot his friends. In character he is Uke a child. I, first, second, last and all the time, was for General Grant; but, as I can’t have my way ’-3 glad to take Gen^l G^fldd. ^ Since i The -West Point Academic BoardhasfoundCadet 1 Whittaker deficient in phiiosophj A jury has been empaneUed in the Cu-rie in Texas, and testimony has begun. Everything was quiet at LeadviUe, Col. terday, and the miners went to work. WOOD FLOORS. Wti.od Carpeting. I K INMmWoodBordersforBngi. National Wood M’fg Co- No. 950 Broadwar. Near 33d 8U, NEW YOB ■i M. X,« and K Inchijg Tmca WATCHES, T . B . B Y N N E S , DIAMONDS, BROADWAY JEWELRY, (8T. NICHOLAS HOm.1. IMPERIAL C ^ M A N MAIL. NORTH GERMAIf LLOYJ) h special capabiliti irgencies of our d SUMMER RESORT NOTES. The Neptune SoUaS at New BocheUe, on ti >und, was opened for the season on last Prida_ le house is within a stone’s-throw of the. water, id has recently been put in complete order and furnished. There are aceommodations for ree hundred guests, and the facilities for ing, fishing and boating are unsurpassed. Rochelle is thirty seven minutes’ride fro The nomination of General Longstreet to be Minister to Turkey was confirmed yesterday by a vote of 39 yeas to 3 nays. The accounts of Town Treasurer Lafayette Clapp, of East Hampton, Mass., have been found short about J2.000, and he has disappeared. The London “ Mark lane Express ” in its weekly review of the British grain trade says: “ Both wheat and barley, especially the latter, have im proved greatly during the last fortnight.\ In the House of Representatives yesterday, on of Mr. Wright (Dem., Pa.) the lules were _ Jed and the joint resolution to enforce the eight hour law was passed, after a half hour’s debate—yeas 130, nays, 51. The will of the late John Alfred Hazard of Newport, R. I., excludes his wife from all except dower in real estate, gives n servant, Margaret Sullivan, $5,000, and Island Cemetery at New port 1500. All the rest of his property of every kind he leaves Newport Hospital, subject One of the corporations involved by the rascal ities of Representative C. H. Voorhiaof Hacken sack, N. J., was the Hackensack Water Com pany. Mr. Hardenbergh, the receiver, found that there bad been about $65,000 of water bonds issued, which Voorhls had placed as he chose, and that there was about $50,000 due to tue water company on that and other accounts. The law limited the issue of bonds to an rds of the paid up . stock amounted to lying a dollar, had run the ’ard to law, giving water iment when necessary for the com- 30, but applying a large amount of _______An use. Among the chief creditors of ^ he Hackensack Water Company were the civil “engineers, Messrs. Robert Bacot and John F. Ward, who built the works at a cost of about 875,000, and to whom there was between $27,000 . and $28,000 still due. They offered to settle with ‘ the other creditors by paying them SO per oen- I centum of then- claims, which the creditors :d to, and a sale has been authorized by the Chancellor, by which the water works are to pass cheaply i ; and Ward with a F R A N C I S & L O U T R ^ L , • No. 45AIBEN n LANE. ■ atloners. Printer^ and OlanataetDran at Patent Sprlna-bnck Aeoennt Book*. l i a w P r i n t i n g BV Z S X Y X N 'G P O S T , Broadway and Fulton Street. N. Y. IMPERIAL GERMAN MAIL. unountt t o ^ be BIAN. Agent. 6 BowUng Green. C^Co. B A N K E R S , 18 WALL STREET, IBANBAOT A OE3SERAL BANKING BU8INB». IN P . W : C A L L A U D E T , Banker aii! Dealer ii Demmerdal Paper, IKSND A BONDS WUGHT AND BOLD OB OON. \^P.O.BoxNa“^T- . P A C I F I C W lAIL SteAnx»jbLljE3 Ooxxi.i3a.xxy. h’s r - BEOWN BROTHERS & CO., i 59 WALL 8TBEET, parts of the wodd. ______ D E ft Y W A L L E R & C O . , WALU STBMET, N. Y. Edwards Pierrepont made an address in which “ Let me say here for the 306 that stood so ly, and who were so determined to have Gei Grant nominated if we could bring it about Addresses were al ; Rev. Robert Jeffrey was opened on the Is 3 bndt in 1873 and co iveniences. There ar rounded by beautifnl scenery, and is easily ac- Ratification m cessible from the city by several railroads and last evening by three steamboats. paign31ub f at Cis Springs, wfll stead of the European plan, Shelley, of the Park Avenm hasbeen been reappointed mansger. Meventh’lind Thlrteentt^issembly “ UNITED STATES TRUST CO. OF NEW YORK, JO. 49 WALL STREE’ Capital aad Surplus, Four Million DoUais. Thla CompMT U mesAI l depoaltory for money, paid tato Court, Bud IB .ntborlKd W »ot m guardlmi or re- interest Allowed on Deposits, S I M O N S O N & H O W S S ’ BEGDLAB UNE OF CLIFPEB SHIPS FOR SAM FRAMCISCO. me magnlfloent new extreme dipper skip Is completing her loading at PIEB U EAST BIVEB. XhoGlendonls rao of the sharpoBt and best moddi ever built, and ?riU have nnusnal prompt dispatch. - g freight at emrent rates apply to smONSOM * aoWES, ua wan street. Oont]gnMat«anm&eIsoo. J. N. KNO’WLES. ___IT Campaign Club at Si^-seventh st I and the Boulevard, bv the Republicans of the ------- h A districts, ____ me Hotel in this cil reappointed manag Since last yc o^ o r of the hotel has been entin rooms have been at---------- larged. M. Delee, formerly 1 Union Clnbe, has been engagi Jrench and German servants ed, and the bouse conducted in < It has an of the advantages the principal springs and yet . dining-ro ‘ Chicap candixiates, pi dissent from the uorepubllcan doctrine that thi I W c WIMdlAfil OA&ROWt SeeretaxT* f AgtES St CIARK* j A mu Bearetmxr^ STEAMBOATS. le United States - ----------- 3 to die, is ---- ----- — IB the bouquet which she gave to Maurice but a short time before, and which the wicked Princes has managed to get into her posses sion. Naturally she fa ' sbiMding him from the o-wn folly and to paying his debts, has added a final insult by returning her flowers, ,83 an indication that cdl is over bet ween them- Bul he comes to throw himself at her feet; he has learned of her heroic self-devotion to his -cause, and he hastens to bow before her.- It is at this episode in the drama that Mademoi- .Aelle Bernhardt^s genius is. shown most clear ly. With a cry of joy she spring into his arms, but instantly withdraws^ pushing him violent^' from her, covering her face with her tandsi and shuddering, AS if Ihoc^’”’ -Uvrn we^®8, And when he ■■finced her th*k- Jns. love The Urgeit and raoBS fashionable _ Greenwich, Corm., the most rapidly growing isort on the Sound, is the Morton House, _____ buildmg of which is the <mc8 famous Americus Club House, bmlt by ttie Tweed Rtog without regM^i to expense In the days when the ring was at the heightof ite powe^Theato^m adapted for rowing, dg amoas the piazzas at comfort aniprbere. The dni manma Is adiairabte,*S sailing «dkost x up to the i^azsaa of the howoaad ffnding^saf aheboCT^ inindian will b jhEo^red and fifiTgtieats. Tbs time by rail firoi .NewY«hto43reeawh;hlefiftymiautei^expc^ * . traiM itopptogttiera mornifif Jtafl eTenlai;. tm \ artotenlxirtruimtoe^^^ 4 Agricultural Department, has made a report to the- Commlationer at Ag^oultura on the army worm. Of its origin he “The adult insect is a ^i^tf-v^'-aTtaTov quarters. The moth dopi tows of leaves of SECURITY BONDS ; FDEIITY° 1 & MSHIH COMPM, DTo. x sy asroadw ay, IN. Y. SHTBPING, SAVAIiNAH m i FLOBIDA ] KW71SB4S XOBIH SITXB FIXir BO. S6 FOOT aFBmasc.).ATSP.x: Wednesday and Saturday. ------ - ------------ ------------------------ ss.'SfflSr*’* ■ STEAMBOATS. F A L L BXVER U 2 T O BOSTOX aSB the EiSI. NEWPORT LINE o s o s T o i x r . O n e DoHar. “ s u a ' S J B . IHTEEHifiraAl^BOAT EACE, Providence, June 17 . MOM W ICH L IN H * 1 ® BAILKOADS. i i l p s e = s 5 BS OF HiWHY UAT-r. rV per obit. AocumbSked>eas i aly? per oent-AocnmuiBtecI Deb* ^‘•i per cent BouleraKS topt « ........... «EW YORK AND LONG BBANCH THE ERD^BAILWAY, [E NEW YORK. LAKE^^E WESTERN SbHAIHSauUBRIL- w m i 20 eases cotton DRESS ousexeepin X ^ i . . x goods . ND CURTAIN NETS. iS, UNDERWEAR. &C-, &0. DAVID CLARKSON. Aucttoueea, BYELLS P & OO m Stoi%09 1 Pearl street (Hanover Square). tlNA. GLASSWARE, CUTLEST, TOTS, FANOT GOODS, Oc., In Packaeea and Open Lot.. ESDAY. June 18, & “-3 r S : H.L85p.il..Tuesdays, Wed- S S S JOHN H. DHAPEB, AucUOlWer. BY SUBINEB P, VICKERS * CO., 1 THE ETErae POST. XEB3£3 TO MAIL SUBSOBIBSaf. For^rtCTP^odBV.V.V.V.\\\reo^ . SPECIMEM NU M B m SEK7 FRKK AUCTION SAUBS. K S W YORK Am > MAYAMA, RicHAxn T. namnnm, AuctioBCME. BY BIOBEABB Tv SCABNBXT, REAL axD E&re-Aaas BAE_ jciKw FCBsmaa, tiler tennsbjapp&bHrtoni. Eir AdiKiohs may ha mate; ’^ T e x BRYANT Ib OOW J