It is a generally accepted fact that the man _ who uses his head to save his feet is wise in his day, and will live to a long and honoured old age. Upside-down Wright, at the BijouTheatre, will seem to many to be the exception to the rule, for. although he does on hishead much that is usually accomplished or. the feet, his hazardous undertakings lead the spec* tator to the opinion that Upside-down Wright’s means of earning a living may develop into a means of earning a burial. Bumping downstair on one’s cranium is, may be, not conducive to health ; but, apparently, it is conducive to the happiness of audiences, for the Fuller artist's act wins plenty of applause, and his extraordinary treatment, of a head that was made to grow hair and wear a hat meets with raptattention.* • « *