^ ' tl - F ----- - ~ %/ 7 — - —A small but highly cultured audience greeted Miss Susan K. Anthony, .the famous advocator of female suffrage, at Odd Fellow s’ Hall last evening. In billing Miss Anthony there had evidently been a mistake, as her lecture was a reply to, and not a discourse on “Woman Wants Bread. Not the Ballot.” She was introduced by Senator A. S. Berry, ami for an hour and a half spoke in an easy conversational style concerning the failac3r of the title of tier lecture, and advancing the views and arguments of the cause of which sfie is an able champion. A portion of the audience, as plainly manifested, had gone expecting to see a woman who in aspect and manner could terrify man. and | w^ere surprised to find the speaker a gon tie-bearing elderly lady, in a modest black dress and gold spectacles. The audience was made up mainly of ladies.