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THE CHICAGO DAILY TRIBUNE: SUNDAY, NOVEMBER 17, 1 7 s the er, | tions of “Dr. Livingstone.” W. R. 8, Ralston | Mjll on Auguste Comte, the Contemporary Re- ; Al spiitual life, could never have denomnced the, T s T4 3 then manking bopen to zecorer, | tons of D, Lisingetons.” 3 Norso,” **Mis. | vitw, Olives Wendell Holmeer ¢ Moo 11 THE HORSE me'e sign of itas asin. - Tdare mop vet be cook & dinng’r for anybody that don'’t raspech dition. Tho gradual fmprovempent in the position. of | Education,” by Thomas Wright (the “Journey- | Thought and Morals,” Patent Office publica- strict communionist. Yel, mark you, the Lord Byron.” —2Misg Fannie Caron, of Yows, is Lolstered! Jomen 13 the determining cause of esch upward Engigeor™), is an cttack upon the present | tions, and some of Tmerson's poems, —all which - e . lnxity of my brethren here’ influences me “in [ up ag shining example'of her sex, because skei movement, Ravagr was sucoseded by patrarcal | ey §§a:)é::f of ‘Gyeat Britatn: st ;emf A o ten mintes; which is tully ssmuch | His Origin, History, Use:s,"&c. the direction of sirict communion; and ordy | weat iato her fahery) bay fields I ths sapecii: 'he British Magazines fop | Ee2ment; but thiswould, in ia “bechimo & tyront | Sents & achema of what education Z0r the i | Lons o the o, T can profitably epend on : of 1% Spirit Reeps mo moplccrding to the mind | of Maud Muller ; but, whlik thar rome quoteds 4 fgazraey 1or. oy n.mhb"hmm' e e hen.sovoral fres | in -people ought to be. them. [ HAvANA, 1L, Nov,. 10,1872 | of't) FSP‘;‘ °oPs Mo Irom it. Mony of the maiden, she ‘“‘raked the megdow sweet withy November. - e e o Ababam, But, when, e ong the Tlow of the possible Prosidential fature of | f I Was Dictator” is a brilliant fancy sketch | 7o ehe Eaitor o The Chicey rmis i o baptiom, optios tized memberstip, and | Ly hafl-sho" had gathors fory " ois A1 | Tartars, the women obtained more privileges and civil | 8y Gambetta the recital by an ex-Secrdtary, un- | of the experiences of honest- Captain. Strong- “Sm: The equine species furnishes {1 % only | leav o baptism. op 1o mich I 8m sure ihe | Memphis paper says tha was moch ettor thant ;¥ foolin’ round with & rhenmatio old udge,” —In one of Mr. John Fiske's articles in the: Atlantic Monthly an Indian superstition is 00— ticed, according to which s man becams blind. because & demon had eaten the soul of his eye.; Probably had the demonpreferred to make & meslt 0 b 1€ - e Lor1does .not. Deacons are chosen who are Tights, and civilization resulted. But tho present | oy oo " gie Monthapf Profecture Under | ways, who was waited upon b; Gladstons 5 1 e i ts of and of } om 8 St oo ecnl et mal R | Gumbtin o Gambeiss sondie In S s sod o Doty and s e Seegaton o ths | S et e arte s e pes N |iped et o i romget o resorved ; * 2 2 gl M fence of France, wil of interest as showin; chief men of ritain, and by s 2 s s 5 : 3 i i v Bortuighly, Fraser's Tinsleys, Tomplo | St fod i B o' 32 Gound s sirposs | once ot Fance wilboct sy a puots | siolets Ditier ver”Crent Bt for e it T reses o sieo o pman Ve | ol I e s ovapied by & Pedobuniics pu @ o . = : ht that it was to- | singleness of purpose. months. 0 | o i of wit an 0T; | guits. peace, he ai e 8 of a, STi- o % : A : t 3 inti d iclo is so long, that it i Stk g | @ x L i~ | of th i D London Socicty. our pessions, and is the cause of many peculiar 3 _TINSLEYS", 3 . bt ?ggfie:n?glfhits‘}mfi§ el aitachments and pleasures; while in war, ho .8 | Tirlo ‘mon and baptize them; and, if they wi | of,$he Sole of his foof ho would bave becora. Syala; Tinsleys’ Magazine is mainly filled with fiction, sbeolutely indispensable. None of the trinaphs! | not bi) baptized, they fail in’ diecipleship, and 3 ¥7hen an animal is killed or burt by o cars cresse your families and, fo this end, enconvago | and that of a very poor guality. | Anyihing m aciense can supersede, offset, or neu- | canno. receivo them into tho church over which wamartied Fomin o, b chidzen. Fof yoursavet, | 80 et of & v T 4 i ot Bhie Eren” 1 e B it | Dotern srletios can Buperaide) oilsety g have | God hias Placed mo. I do mot judgs other ri o i B e, b hiow spssbi fha iy | would be diffioult to fud. —* Disas Tersplo” s | The question of flogging criminals is exciting | tralize the advantag B churche:s who stand or fall to their own Master. arical Partyism in Belgium---Meta- | 22 passions, | Remember bow speedily tho est- | ould bo diffeuly Farjeon continues “London's | considerable stir in England, and Dark Blue for | over snother, if the latter were dispossessd of With th em I conmuno, becatso thoy aro hying physical Problems---Fourier--- o o ey, BT 88 egulate | B I aeon contines " Londons Rovember opens with an articls o “The Just | this importast anxilisry. Conflicts on which { members of the body ; though, as I Judge, disce i 7 Marriago, b, clsimed, gives rioe fo interests | VIIton ot tho who. aed yong. s ouciuats | Brincintos of o pmens’ in orhich ia 2dv0- | thg fato of nations deponded have boon Tostor || Beter st ooleo s, tongh Prices in Germany. posed i that of tho Btela: with these remarkabla worda: cated the use of the cat in cortain cases: on the Kansas-Pacific Railroad, the section boss fills outa blenk form describing the_locziity of the accident, ete. One of the queations in’ the' form is, “ What disposition was made of the an- Imal?” The answer returned to this query in the case of & Texas steer run over the othar day ; epends 7rilg i *Disposition mild and gentle.” oppose St . q P won by this efficient instrumentality. To | = was, mild and gentle. He . B. Glitto Leslioinvostigatos * ThoGold | Somo timo s sill beforo us that womay Dy ii?o'ihefirfigg’.m“%vfi"s'?gfigffiéfifififim‘a this tho conquest of Mexico is duo, for |’ SELECTIONS. —TUnclo L.— Now, Samumy, tell me, have you Question and the Mave‘tlnf):lt of tEnflceaf In Gf" §:£§g:&§“§‘,§;}f’g§; Pt which ahall nok be taken | s ha Zecelved forty stripes save ome? ‘Wero the | the . Inck of this was the Rovolutionary g ffia%fl;:s‘hmlxh‘l} aé«;ryhoz_‘fr‘o‘?el{h t; s;ui‘_" P o "5 rdance with the method of Tooke, bl rtyra e l t worthy degraded idan’s Ride” {8 im- RS . cle—i e er, whal > British Army---An Alpine In- 22 Newmarck, avd Thovald Togors. . Statiatio L o Lot whethar s go dowaifo an, Danopatls. | msiyrs g;;g;ge:gg;:;;;*’ T, they coned | strugglo prolonged. ““Sheridan's Ride” la im nzlgmhi PORTEE. o wrong did they do when they sold thote “broth. cident~--D 1 Th +» | are given very fully, from the publications of Ef.y reccive the glad word, “Well done, good and | ed their scarsmarks of Lonor; you cannot degrade s | mortalized, Grierson in Mississippi, Stuart on God never woul ¥e required the szcrifice | grz Sam—“ They gold him too cheap, uncle, peeny —-Demonologys-Tiies 7 are Royal Prussian Statistical Office, of the va- | faithtes moreer® g 1§ aehi bl body: degradstion s of the aoul; |y, Tpoyn Horgan in Ohio, are among tho | of ssao from mothor. Tthir X atrical “Gagging.” ristions in prices throughont Germany of the | Charles Mathews® article on “ Sheridan's o L T L T T ot el sficiency of this amof | , —Nothing is lovelier or more holy than a [ —A lady haviog herdress trimmedwith bagles before going to a ball, her littls daughter waq! - edto know if the bugles would blow when ahe danced. 0, no,” replied the mother, “br: Dpapa will, when he sees tho bill! " _ articles that go to makeup the cost of living, | ¢ Critie; » in whioh he dofends the practica on | HIECE t elty Delpless fellow= i i lost by Na- | “thoroughly wifely woman. Statistics are cited from other authoritis, mei the par of actors of infroducing gags,” OF re- Cresture, we taier Seck Boepik or- Ihe moabe edo¥- | thio military service. W‘:“;‘“&: et el B ity chivalry are not over; they live e . - | the subject is very fully elucidated ; for, as is marks of their own, in their {mtsk has already | mero fact that the punishment he _receives | Poleon meinly on account o. > 5 s e H - Der as a Satirist---Postal Universis | wen known, German statistics aford fuller in- | begn noticed in our columns. Wo give an inter. | s Dodily,—pamely: in the feeling that the | cavalry. Frederick tho Great of Prussia owed | ‘yeb in that far-off s ip paid by many a youl +esenPrinci i 5 formation respecting local prices than are ob- | esting wetract s S L% Thich euch punishment 1a fflited 18 8o | 1o e Kot o dogreo to this instra- | .and man fo the woman whom he nover dreams | | —A lady asked o entleman who was guffering es---Principles of Punishment- taiuablo with Tespect to Entlend cr sny otber Tt b possiplefor 3 man {0 obtaln favor with tho pub Tt oy csiabim out_barey sotizg san by | Mo o ity 55 @ ATk Gt AdSiphay of .o shall fouch 60 much a her itlo Safar o the | fr0m indonen, s fou S what do you ass Schon Rohtraut---Women as. great conntry. Theso statistics ehow thatprices | 1io by merely attending to the mechanical portion of T s cngly Suet than o by Soteting i Sweden, Oliver Cromwell, Alexander, sud va- | ‘hem of her robe, for your cold Five handkerchiefs & dsy, everywhere In Germany are higher than bofore, | the profession, withoat any exertion of P naraslect | on a weaker fellow crepture s fod, then. abar 1t is to | = e of antiquity. —Who shell be gled any more that has seen They Were, Etc., Etc. and that there is an extraordinary inequality of | beyond committing his words to memory, and speak- SufTor pain in your som botne aid i oo by | Tious other wartiors of an tguity. il e qu npoi Thieh Tt At 3 ; 0. “cues ™ ot the right moment and with the s % z local prices. This is caused by the war in fi%;:rh;phfi:- Fwill give ono remarkablo Mipsrey, | Tnder its smct, 1 that an’ offending fellow- When' asked for the origin of bis noble_steed, - WEARY! France, which disturbed marketsin the towns ‘stran] sibility = creature is suffering similar pain through yonr a0 skt wished to | -2Te built? 3 : THE FORTNIGHTLY. nearest tho military operations; by differences | UoL0f bisstmmgeposeblity: Eaced ot o oo There woud bo | Abd-ol.Rader roplied: s eocoiod 5 | —The most beankiral of stass i ihe soalop Weary ! weary! O, bow weary § o Fortrighlly Review for November opens | in the feriiy t;)(“iigerent T Bhd Lo | To7 Tpepietusan: goveat S, Toeaioe, Lo | (459020t reisloulon i corpen] pugatgnt o ek to foEmn Greatass o bo thon | :an unhappy man who is comforted and thanks szl bl v - . : or-combinations; by the increase | was s long-cxperi ) however, lay down 88 & maxim, that punise & Angel Gabriel, | | g 1 Ob, how weary, e o i Cierical Packyin Balgh | o trausportution, - whish fonds Do he | T e R L e R A R b iy e enne . Cotier cend g 00 Aching heatt and limb prociaim, "in which Emile de Laveleye discusses the equalize and to amass prices; by the | notmention his name, though, as he has long mu)fl ‘most distastefal to the culprits, snd that, to & grest H A g & T —To the contemplative soul thers is no little- BEAy, oL Djat peshaps do 2o without unkindness), | Tl SUptastetnl to the culprits, the nature of the pun- | Presented it to God, who formed il ittty Weary : ness; the least of things Is infinite. earry of the faint endeavor; ‘essive attitude of its religions corporations, quickening influence of education ; by, in West~ Do ‘played one of the parts o admirably that 1y se 3 tos light brown or sorrel horge, snying, ‘I 8 =z e Weary of the faltering will ; 2, although the union of Church and State | & Germany, the greater sbundanco of moncy; | Fb Fiajel one of tho paris eo admiran] 0 | g S e o s b inles ad the | into a Light brown or sorrl. mor croated thee. | —Man respires, aspires, and expires. Peging forthasirengi {o canguer »een severed, aro bent upon geining sbeo- | 1%, in Derlin, the grest influx of peopls, monsy, | sudience, was 8. prominent festurs dn the b oot epeied, o, bacd and sieady lavor, o | T'havo bound fortune upon thy momo which fals | —On tho carpob of verdure snd dowers, in the ery coming daily Theary of the wayward footsteps, Straging from the path of right; ‘eary of the blinded eyesight, Beaching not the Throne of Light. % - and capital ; and by great legal and a- | piece, ~highly praised by the press, and B drel guilty of cruelty. 5o prnise b A ovenall 3 o n o Ringdom. The mumerous | 5y Clformds, whish havo rembved. chataries o | Bt oy (hTaes,, 27, 08 prew. sad e shndel Gl of ey, pe B | ovr hine 0765, Thou shell be tho lord over all | midst of bundance, would God have sast & 1landed proprictors sre entirely under tho | trade aud production. . What pactin the B | e mos i oo arooniion, Afler the play hat | S0 B8 i poimieltl a2 the Juiniul, fog o r:flz“_;’tgfi‘?;w-s Jien shall Tollow th good for | iving beigg emitten with a carso? - ation of the clerleal party, which, by this | changs in the valuo 6f moncy which hus takion | Tun for some e o s gt T weald ot him ave thg | _Evalyn Jerrold gives apaper. on * Theophilo pursuit ss for flight. Thou shall fly withont | —Every man is not so/much & workman in the ace of the' peaseniry, has, in the lats eleo- g};cein Germany in the last twenty years, has | 10208 feked hn s favor that L won Sertainly,” eald | Gantier ;" and. J, W. Tipton writes of Russia | B0 s. Richesshall reposein thyloins, Wealth | w.0tld as a suggestion of what is to be. Mon i s Weary of the toil and hardshij : 3 3 A due to the production of gold, cannot be L {but what do you wantit for?” ¢Why,"” sad be, | and Pantclavism.” i ion. dk ies of the Forti & increased its mejority in the Chamber. or et 5 B Tar | - ) 29 ing | @bl be made by thy interceasion.’ ” wailk a8 prophecies of the next age. ortion of our Guly Life; . R e s B e e il e —— e dedstoms ot to vl | " ril's oot s, i cois | T e g g n to Anglican politics are assured to Belgi- | payment of the French indemnity. The chief | whatXaminit.” make athletic sports s matter of dissipation. and EClWEC:‘“h 0 1§ origin. inhabitant of this New | canttol interrupt any more than the night can % b chand State than that, singularly enough, | from circulation by the Government, O EOshane® | and the suthor, and b had. nevor svin noi tpe Poest handicapping propensities : with the Mastodon; but bis race Lere becswm | —3Vemay oo drwedo bat Loy o Sitls Oh 1 for hope, and atrength, end conzige, . »ut auy participation in their appointment, | 026D expended wost of the Rhine ; Batoee in wgy | oSty to" tnduiro in whst ey he was miied | - yve Jught In reason fo bave ome of two things. | extinct, and ho was unrepresented at the timo of o e i toand froin the tiniest marsel of Mortal il to rise abovel > | “eis burdened with the support of the | myearae: D4veiniuenced prices be [ ek Tei1o1a g ih sebameny | Either et an Frpons . winniog o wisatuge e | the discovery of this continent by Columbue. e+ lovo and to Isbor s the sum of living, Pertect trust and perfect lovs come ‘8. For centuries, the Catholic party has | = John Morley, who is_editor of an«zfrlm‘{fl\!ly‘i and adopted his suggestions 60 correctly that 1o Wad | o7 elgg ot it be mndersiood thor Sor gentlemen directly | 12 the Old World, he was fortunately pre: and yer how many think they live Who meither Only to the meek of heart ; labor nor love. —All things are bat altered, nothing dfes. —There i8 no death ; what *8eems g0 is transi- tion, 3 —Teith is to walk through the darkes’ clouds, though there be no silver lining to eow that S ek party | ! i Paris (1TA4-1756) 1+ bls to fulfl all the Tequirements of the charscter sa- i ; : rpte: sorved. As he was designed by the Creator for e e oo, Which i mainiatned | yrifes of Rotssenu fn Paria (174L-1750):" and | abletofuifl e Squiremante"of s chas wasdo | Sisce Taxe Nonorai oade 3 svppiniog Bt | fho e of e, L s a0 ‘under bis fostor during tho uphesvels of the Reformation, | Aathony Tr e ing, or of the person whom he represented. leneles of el ncomea; and, i tis be 0, I us cat | ing care. Barbarous tribos recogaize his uriliy, its neighbora awoke to the new light. And | 8¢°P—* The Eustace Diamonds. ovis Zomb by tho Sen ” is the stoty of Sir John | asids all gubtertuge, and'frankly and honestly SAmit | ascimell o5 Cotliag mag L oETize bis v Ty " o Ultramontane party frankly avows its 5 More's death. A racy sketch of Sicilian Life is the fact; Jot the narrow line which now separates a | Tndian, while he Tepulses our advances to give 380 to be 2 continuation of the Papal policy g Belf-forgetting, hopefal, trudting, Ho can heal S0tk tnvwkod mock Then, ob, weary not in striving, Xatat of heart and wesk of limb, For Hislove-light is around us, d our eyesight only dim, £ i in ¢ imli Il of “gentlemen amateurs” from those who i ivilizati hristiani SER'S. o o oo Etmlico to Palarmg * and the | Ceriain oliss of Jucntlemen simajouss® freen those wio | hiny civilization nay Ubesetianits, Lag oseath 1o . In Fraser’s Mw-;'é:" ng, we have s belligerent | number closes with “ Sybil Ashton,” s long sto- their strength of limb be removed; and then, by all | Subdue and utilizo the descendants of the stock ET. in coln, 8 i i : K 3 . . itk | sy i8 dawning. — gt the Middle Ages: universal sovereignty, | oo the Ro< G. . Gleig, telling how the “Modern V¢ t the taken to Mexico by the Spaniards. Henco, with | <87 18 ! 3 Bee ; 2 rgyman, the Bo=, G, . Gleig, telling how the | rv, and a short poem, ¢ Modern Versions of means, let us hava the prizes.bestowed aker S I ) Nith Heo who cheerfally commits the universa to dominstion, even in the fres State of | & Attumn Manwnvres,” in whichall the regulars | Harroes: ! “In Purauit of Slavers™ i3 o short story, and, | Civilized and savago, this JDoble simalhashe: | o e Otig o Tl e e Y T REm(:IOUz; — AL de Laveleye thinks they may suc- | and voluntoeers play soldier for a fow days eve - in ““ATadys Visit fo the South Africad Diu. | COmo man's companion in every part Do not hopeloss for the Liy boeaces it starts . Dr. Vincent writ 1 Engls: Al an TEMPLE BAR. y habitabloglobe. Ho is foundin the wild state that he hud an interview with Mr. Spurs Amply by taking advantage of present in- | year, onght to be conducted. Althongh Engl BAR. “ ‘mond Feld," s good deal of information is gives | habitabloglobe. Ho is found in ld e Tt i - Bourge + ARy by, 3 ge of p as long since abandoned her Colonial system, Temple Bar hus a caustic article on_“ Cowper in 2 pleasant way. in the unpeopled wastes of Central Asia; bub -Animals are truly neither fathernor mother; | 72O declared that he would mot como t i ions: founded ona belligerent commerce, which con- | 85 s Satirist,” in which that gifted hypochon- Othor attictes aro: ummmm{ Sehogls » | Dataralists ero not agreod on tho quostion | .= Animals aro traly noithey Naturo. " 093 | conatry until after the Day of Judgeent, —The European Governmenta appear to Lo acting in_concert for the expulsion of ths Jesuits, Pruseis is enforcing their removal. Yictor Emmanuel has determined to supprecs the Order in Italy; and they have been notified” that their immigration to France will not be toi~ erated. . —At the late Congregational Association, hel 1 in the city of Rochester, notice was given’ tha: 8% the next meeting of the Associntion & motion Tould be made to change the consiitution, eo that in future each church will be rprescated by & Woman and man. The idea seemed to. meet with decided favor. —1In Philadelphia, the Catholic Bishop Wood has prascribed the recitation of the praver from the Missal, Pro Peste Animalium, for thirty days, for the abatement of tho hores disease: . —Ufr. Beechor’s Church proposes ‘o raise & fuvd of £50,000, to be called the Plrmont: {2 n “Unis_and Necklace:” a Prose Idyll; ¢ She | Whether, as thers found, ho is tho tyo of & race ; ity tothe Chambers, makes itse:f master of all from the impertinent interference in | aunts read poetry, isseverely handled and highly | £Unis_an - ool J AoV originally wild, or is descended from the tame ot ot L PEA e | B it ai o Tadalged i o one? i | Bunts read pootry, is sovercly ) brought English | Being Doad:) and 1 Arabe and Training. wnie | Stock o ‘somo anciont pevere. | TSGR Biope Shes ke Pobe: beses Tha Pty | BUIL. amiatains s snomoas oty Long, she poetry back to truth and nature is pronounced cling, empty-mindsd, akeleton oy i | . Cortain it was that o was the companion of Tmors of o Ring a0 Lecoeld. T1. for Bersiy | eoteblohmaiss &1 enormon pectly to tho natural | ignorant and shallow rabbich, Ttwas the time- f;}g oA v T U POty i U LR antiquiy. - Thers 1a 9f, B¢ Paslisment which ensets the Iaws and | desire of the aristocracy to refain the pomp and | 1 production of that lsughsblo poam, “Jobn | 10, irick-perpotrating, Bobby.slipping, smes. | ovidenco that horscs hava beon beed on. the ~ hetozes, rofit they gain from the army, which Mr. Bright | Gilpin,” that revived public interest. hunting, police-news-devouring, bloodskat-eyed, | PIAIns of Assyria for moro thun a thonsand ivents are multiplying ; parish schools are Eu deacribed 28 a vast system of outdoor relief “ The Progress of Exror,” « Truth,” Table-Talk,” 0 n'g ged, stunted, starv e Tondon | years. Late researches smong -the ruins of Iy in the priestly hand. When they have | for the nobility ; and partly to_the ineradicable ana"* Exoostulation,” 1id siready’ e e, | aba soa s Giscnepa ol e o fooadon. [ Bt ey cllgxenguxxlne:ahdqnd “Bubylon Fata ed the teachicg staff of the' schools and Sfprfl?e";“;n °{I ?;f b e B{;“’,‘,‘;“fivfigfi" Thelt opinion, oF ot Jesst. ihoie verdict, being, tuat all | demption. Schools will ot da, :’l:’i“ m‘fi o e eanl & tho. Atae cxities, they will be masters of the ednca~ | 02F IS beloved isle is ?m{ 3 - 3 | four were no better than a dull sermon, and displased | The Arab wants tobo in the open sir and use his | F1 although th i have 2 5 bhey altiough no hostile foot has reached its shores h ich neither men nor gods can tolerate, ent it, he'll get locked up for | Pisn horse of to-day, ough they may [ 2 ” gl & mediocrity which neither me 8 limbs, If you don’t prevent it, he ip b f Belgium, and “he who has the education | for nearly a thousand years, e oroun Gilpin | appested in the Public Adver- | womebody clse's crime come out b Qesperade, taught | Teprésented the famidy steeds of Sennacherit o & conntry. Bub let the invader come when or wheto he | iser, they took 1o Rotich of 3t Whatever 5 but when an by an sbandoned fellow-prisouer; or he'll be t0ld, ia a | Nebuchadnezzar. _ Descriptions given by Catholic party has everywhers Electoral Jrill, bo will find the Rov. G- B. Gleig resdy for | actor had made it the talk of the {own, they behaved casual ward, that thieving is better than the hospitality | the Sacred Writers enable us still —political associations, which hold meet- him’s SR in the usual dfishéon, wdrac:nl:led u"’i!“!;lsu Tfo'i:dm:-xh e exte?iflvearllh'-;n‘ pxgla,pqmmmf, mdmg:cq;— further to trace the affinity an b,thn G , an ey . para o solaces the pick- : : B0 cosses, preparofor tho elections. o have magneto telgrapha everyuhere, Ourlines | Sorvle uditon herote m&vgr?mt}m&bm:e Bocket’s isfortunce, Sisty.towr thossac avehun- | Soclont trpe G i Jmndarn Arabiin: F oot au ST 52,08 | S T by bttt TS | B g, S LTS i | Beed st DRI LT | S0 TS oo o e wactn: 3f German science, qwil;:the Catholic | invader; coming in anyforce, would be obliged tomake Another cause of his success was the marked Training-ships, the writer thinks, will be | AT of the desert. The prophet Habakkuk, in —A child should never be made to wuffer the "2gony of & parent’s final condemnation. —To understand truth, one must live it. —Truth is richer than gination ; she over- steps it on all sides. . —God values men adcording to what they have had to walk throngh. 3 —The earth does not bring forth but under the plow which rends it. —Infancy is a perpetual Meesizh, svhich comea into the arme of fallen men, and pleeds with them to return to Paradisc. —Youth is the emile of the future before an unknown being, which is itself, —The general sentiment of fnthars is, that children owe a debt to them for existence; but there is a fallacy in this. —Our homes should be as holyas our. churches, to say the least. » Succeeding in eending a genuine clerical leered and held markets by force, and hes with- | drisc, who was so popular when our maiden . ¥ o arke o -—To love is the only thing that can fill up Missi " NG v " Dol Deigien E0 Gne OF | S8 peilo s sipt 12 buirying tomerd 1ho seens Jollgious cast of bis vritings ; and » third it | fonnd tho best jmstitution. el Y5 e Yeme of tho dangers frout the pow- O this BEStt 16 olefh 0 60 sore thens g | ESaslont tmme o5 o endowannat of ih iy = Lavolsve proposesno plan for he defeat ( by the enemy mpossible, our troops must be Lrought | his persistent cultivation of commonplace, a about to assail them, says: * Their horses aro | _—-'vhen the heart is 0t core, there 18 | fand will serve as the memoril of iha” S 5 % 7 i nient | consequont fitness to be everybody's companion. 0 3 B Catholic aggression. His only consola- | 0%, with all the speed of steam, to a conve he LONDON SOCIETY. swifter than the leopards, and more fierce than tha o 5 ot of isoncentzation. Mot 4 moment should | ” But, as a satirist, he has boen approached by |. | : 2B S b ; that “Her foundering may serve 10T | b lost in attacking the invader. If you oan cateh hira 00 other English writer in the excallence of iy |, London S;:mlg, 8a its mz; x:.d:fi:te:é n:g wglt- aveiau.;g v:gl\jeu. N Thsg’ horeemen shall fly a3 an § to other nations, as the wrecked fr;g- in the act of Landing, g0 8t bizm w}_&hnolr'xo sad Mr:;e; otk En g:mnly oz 'ne'glyx g::flr em v D render th : eagle hastening ;’:uum e grg:tsa?l&?;:r?fi: hult{o‘s?:i%.’l‘n‘-r o poghiy s this, and _ho bs in Position, ot the less 5 e only Tack ar g{tfi-:bjefcgflami&nt;;?egz gac:;é’ ?file’w{m the thoughtful themea | In point of usefulness, the horso can claim su- eric Hurison discusses *The Supposed | fercely and apidly fl;@rog"“iu;‘fi'g}mfig et | Bn or e oun puing fovl its 9y only inbooks | into whi . Froude enticea the readers of pericrity over any other domestic animal. Ho Iy of Certain Metaphysicel Problems;” | fave been very negligeat; of sour Dresenca beforo | and by imagination, and the consequenca is, that his | Fraser's Magazine, or John Morley those of the been prized for various propertis. The nnence the origin of things? of what | iy, 200 10 o0, A7 tGieomo fnto presance before | and by & a5 rule, oo general and swecping. Yetitis | Fortnighily Review. Even in'its own field, it | boauty.and graefeimoss or pis form, the noble- no speech or language. “Weddin, Trorne mncoEnng on the throneof the | WoRuE o L Evangelical Protestant ;l:;vs;‘fi;-rgg the crown of all crowns has been Epis_copn} Ctmxc hSm:iekties Was hc}dA on Sunday el 3 evening last atthe Church of the tonemant, ool image slumbors in (0r Souls HIL | Now York. The muoney ot coatribations re- !h"vedir'a et thue hereand thers, when, 1o | | poreq For iha year was $132,000, which, added the semblance of His form appeats sculptured | Py tea $218,000 %r:viouzly Teported from the 2 by the woes of Timo. 2 o " Whols thero thit is not chaioed to some | 15T, Episcopal Bonsd mikse! 210,000 58 o 'the personsl government of the Unir if 1) beso, Your artillery alone will over- | full of powers doea not, to the aritical eye of an American Re- | ness of his lemeanor, his strength and his swift- : sum total of missionary offerings in the Ero- the Eccrporeal parsonaiity of tho human e o e 5 esee, there T very Uit Seed | ¢ s e countrs—one that I conld namo— Fiewer, afford much to enterigin; but the class | nass, bave furniebes's Lo Bo b historian {ggfi,?é ;’g‘}fig“;fiz.‘l‘:":;é‘fmf.?‘é“}:"r;’é.“‘;mgg tostant Episcopal - Church, mzfimg including §,its prolongation afte death;—in other | or scope for manwuvering. * Howerer commanding In prostitution sinks the sense of shame; to which it goes are proverbially of those who | and poot fromy the days of Job to the present. e bR e Diocesan Missions or Parith Hone Missionary - the creation, God, the eoul, and a fature | his_position may be, he will find himself unable to When infamous venality, grown bold, Like to be tickled with a feather, and will laugh | The varieties of the Loree, though presenting “Thero ia, back of all this aliaris ek work, which must amount to & sudch greater 2 o bhm v e et e ybouading a8 youwill | Writes on hia bosom, <76 be lt or ol to distraction. Charles Beads, in thopresent | striking external diferences, ate. o1l iociuded 15 S Al o el the o porEoithing | agm,’ " aave been discussed, 1t {5 true, by varions pore | &7e.l Yo arely wil, even f, in point of numbers, b6 g:lhle.n mt’,’m"’:‘mfi?& :#:‘,%g‘;;?;, number, ‘continues the story ot! A tBihmpletm:, one zoological classification, their diversity of £inite and etercal, in which our invisible oo InTshg'Hmfld of Life (@dvegm‘t‘).ucl?h s the humaa race during long epochs of history, | be equay, or ‘perliaps superior, to you. Stamps God's ownl name upon o lie jast made, ¥hich, at his particular request, is not illustrated. | form &nd size being attributed to his various o love and thought, of memory and faith, ate tg cripture thak the epizootic “is but anothes eting Serd® Amorfment but will | A Bad Fivo Minutes 1n the Alpe” was the | EEEEC ‘penny in the way of trade.s Lo ddlogunas ol ia tfmm:x kind: o Jaes, cimate, and bresding. The English sad | L lore sed 2 Omen of tho coming day, aad bt coother effoft ; amezing discor on of the s i AN Rosa read, and crushed the nof lomi aft differ a ton in weight, e Shet- = o call attention to it.” Ipmaning e them 1o thia year | time epent by an_adventurous climber, whoso | « T fach parson or extirist behold thealter- | 31383 TR0 mad, crnahe Iand pony of 200 pounds excites our astonish- == They are trying to organize & Mothadist Epis-’ i e e h"ufx;':;wm g lfifium !'heggg% of E :figsg%?eycigze h:?getgo: fiifimfi’fmfii’.i'?mt‘;‘ul’ Sl a o formntons | USiziens ment that all are identical in origin. REGRET. copal Church in’ Philadelphia, in whih more ught on 8 i L D a S . hilad Sfond. o those who-apoly tho testa whih | fom oF maset oo ot or Brecipice, st tho bot- 3 post of consoquencs, artiouarly s poet ohe wons | Seven e horme 0. gur modera civilization, and ; sesongaat P will b placed npon the ir dails life, there is not one fixed point, not a picts the shock ; the surging emotions ; bitter | sing of Nature! But he had quito enough for a satir- | o Eight.? more g0 in cities than in the country and smaller | e aid hin feot were Gore, - oo of the denominational razme. Mr. common ground, amongst the disputants, outbreaks of “‘“mj,,g fury ; glimpses of the | st. Not that a great satirist need be without fancy,— 4 Efght ten.” d towns, has become the victim of numerous As ha stond outside the door, esley prepared an abridgment of the English Laves these inquiries to be & Tartarean | higden mysteries of the universes desperato Trons Tombire e out, Amagloation, —mitneas | LB, » s Ross, and. then, with feminine | and virulent~ disesses. _Our object is to Sore with walking in the long ind dusty street; Prager-book, and the use of this is conteaplate - - aifle of Tt snd eze: B Yo oo o oo e | S 0 o L Sty o o P | o S el SRR | BT i Ul | ST i el o e, Archer M. S, 5. Bomsn_Cuti e tons, o Bnhine T ya2d ome | twenty-five years se0 3 recolloctions ‘of ol the Dot cismn b o ammgeree,” v perbane Compery | ISHERE ARG Sray Tor the ammliomare! opi, condition of | Beiel oot manderingly, the offered alms tomeet, [ ie Fy frCher M. Shee, deolaring his “‘atter . % to 6 what ing of i 7 “ v # 3 ), 0 1 i 1 hi form. & .10 4 Lo sl goovhds andmay Tead o Tomite Posnbiitics of tht Fature; Ihovenia, of T | Bost s fo be eguried a6 5 poet; b his ove UTwelee ; this noblo snimal. Aswith the human nniral, | cdclmentbesgsifoom disbelief” of tho alloged- appearance of the V. e L e e o ho"Geacee 188 | Lality, religion, metephysics, thy Ballot bill, a | marry, lead us almost conclusively to think that for | |, Fhortecn.”) Bowith the oquine; his food, drink, and mannes | Would ther s arees cheeriag word to him had spoken; | £n at Lourdes. Ho has read the accounts of e L R R R e e ek e i e A in- | Poctry—pootic postry—he bad Iitlo inclimation or | [ Eoarteen z of Jiving, his_constutution, tempérament and | ' For upon his farrcn 1o -” |-he “pilgrimages,” he seys, with “mevrnfal dis . problems zs insoluble, and tostamp inquiries | Pope who s o Paria: fnall gme ‘obbing | 8euiua. Could he have but lived ok Bd'ox:h 204 re- « Eighteen.” ¥ labors, make his average health and usefuiness.. Was imprinted there a trace . gust.” s i " s, Each branch of Sclence, from within it | stead of theology, In Pavia; fi o heno Sbbing | tained his morst Syaestneas, bowould doubtless have | |, FEisen; Diagases among horses in new countries have | Of@sorrow that revealod & heart quite broken, —A new society, entitled the “Catholic Unlon . bas eliminated a encoession of idls | of the sirength, the relaxa g Beon our Eaglish Juvensl “Tsenty guiness.” never been 50 numerous or virlent s in oldes { of Treland,” has been formed in that country o ‘Wearled at its quiet play, Came a little child one da, Teasing, teasing for a story oft repeated ; 1, in on impatient mood, To the pretty lips that sued, £hid me nay; Wwas dumb to voice thst soft entrested, Ab, me! that night I heard, sere, has elim . i Tt b e e ettt 52 | 2 ras fulling theomgh the atr, Theold fashof mur- | . Edwin James gives. the first part of “A | wgohon Bontraut” s the-logend of & King! o ; l 8 its 3 : i b p gend of & King's | Jocalities. S0 with the hardy pionears and. i e Bt sl ‘prohieged of | prise crossed my maind, tempered Sjitb, something ike | Reminiscence of the American Bar,"—a defonce daughter of that name, who used to rosm in the | robust health of each can by wricralg L10 {5, 36d, in turm, have passed o a Jestof | 3 sensoe of rellet All vas Bt befors (o el ad | TORRIEL. o loiss eto of amur. | Jild woods, hunting and fishing, atéended only | coarse dish, reo. exerciss In tho. apen. < o 1. hen'science definitely pronounced that el begin, beforo the air hadl begin. 1o whistle. pust Berbretold b 24 Dy her page: well-ventilated spartments. The ~Indian’ and L 18dgo were ideas : z ¥ ; e ; T o ot of 1y, thay 2 Mhock bt supriss, T found muself ipiog oas | Postal Universities” unfolds a movel and | Theold, old sory; shewas so very besutiful,—ao | Mosheniiaed, sparimen sick, and feed almost toys T defend the Pontiff and Roman Catholio inters ests, the libertv of the clergy, and religions or- ders.” Ita members are of both sexes and of every profession and rank. The council is to be formed of thirty elected members, o - o o N near " him, and yet so far. Can one wonder that the | exclusively on the wild 8es, green or dried, > who are “to wafch all legislation o hees "o {hb tranacendent valio of | Drosd bed of deep moss, as comforianty as fomy bed ndmmbl_t:, Ph“hi for fiugsttehm;:wo FEttiton in | youth grew sad, and communcd with himself: of their native plains and prairie A ::u‘éafigffiflflge;{awm in the air; affecting Catholic interesty” Tt1s rancoiiion A e avo, was moatoity Beivcy, Tundersisod sl The T werk sonple any | Gommunitics whick, like thoss of Sy, o Foimtimrs Rngruml Lot us look & moment at the hey-crop of the | 4 220PF oot fanter growing in - on the raturu of Cardinal Cullen from Rome the le., Lnise ey fflgfig’gfl that It | ther provoking.. Defose atiampiing. the by any central point, or for any cortain time, for s United States, tho varieties grown in the differ- | it the whito and brcathjesy sloep, Bishops will meet and issue very positive pro- 80 Lie atill, my heart. e x 5 sicep : across tho rockace, Thad fust noticod-—though, in my | £17 SORHE Dol or X training, is imponaitle . | Buttos peii Dy beart? - stll, anditfell ona day, | ont Btates, and tho condition of the horses in | For tho ewest young pieader's spigt was ot fhota, & 5 the h — i d ill at once discover t might ; but, as far 83 sclence yet. & hurry, I had not imprinted the fact on my mind—that 20 they xested under a large oik tree, that fair Boh | Tegard o health, and we wil i 3t T xeceeionp {820t or s Gstingtly Tu. | bencath my asrrow iedge, therawes a broader omo, thars pait Sy S L Poplated countey, (/2o et Sentel M 3 ari L s, e Tooks, and | that no horse diseases exist where the wild nac T e D D st “pislors. | Somoten faet lower down. Tho sudden siacem pro. | thero 3 of valuo s this o meanifest i the puesmse rFiuy. | Laughod o merry lugh, and saras: T Why o oL 2 tive grasses are the principal articles of food. Tpe plea js 80N b S estions of | duced by tho slip, whilst reviving so much elac, had | Proved of Instruction by Correspondence,” alresdy | 3t e 80 longingly? Riss me, if you dare!” "And hia The fat-producing clement that has enlarged ot peraomsl will in physical law, of | €xpunged this ono practically-useful memory come 12 work 3t Cambridss sud oes sibee ity ety | Tinees Fnooked hogether has ealon paans allhisheart | tho carcass of the Conestoga horse hos oot T K uantivas whliy alie 1o i | pleey 5na instantascomai, Taysel Dot gaty iak'T | Dene of N Lt iy Eesty Chiey for the faeat outof b, sad selied 12 one Tong'kieson thore | £10 carctss of tho Cone Tongovity. The Cali- , areg £o.me, T easily c: ; e u g, 2nd then, 3 o ad to x ongevity. y, 80 ax 88 U8 Testurces g0, wholly M. | o ever Dees n dauger and his - ies geare published undor th Eon o the Natlonal | o0 g e: ot tho pape Iamehan oy 1o doms | 22T equine, that makes his 125 miles por day, 71t and indeed uninteligblotott, Andthe | 4% CoV e o7 had been— throws Yy, Dok | nion for Tinproving cribes the benefits of thiy | 0T Besald : “ Wert thou msde Empross fo-morrow, it | oxcels his famed Arabiau brother in speed an e e ot o ot aside,Ja g | that T had maver oven done smthing | mash. It el el desl longing che period of educa: | Fstters not, for tho thousand leaves of the forest kubw | endurance, on & regime of wild hor, producing ey (on of 1% i the Jaidst | a8 rather humliatig, but. decidodly consoling, mnd En Trom childhoss oF sen st ol O e | B iaocd Sebon Bobtoaut's st o ood wind and great physical o the plea for a3 elixir of life, oty BIchon oBRt Wb T IoOkeR S5 et T | o Ehen meopes i arenat, Jouth to womsuhood: | Tiste Ksed Sehon Bolltant s mantt ) e moutn? nrance, but loss of fhe carbonaceous 1 pbysiologs. slowly picked myself up, I looked at my watch. It | *They propose 0 frcyent; on e t‘};m o pat | Unbappy he orrhe who has 1o tender gmemories, 10 | gonoeit than his rhinocenan. rtioned Cones- ier” is a rapid sketch, by Arthar J. | fonowed, from a comparison of times, thist I had not | have joarnt but littlo tfom losing tha o fohat | pleasant nssociations, of which none but the jeats g | deposit than his rhinoces & proporti 2y h history and the philoso- | been strétched upon the rack for mor thas fivemin. | them in the way of emplosments then wams w08 | the forest wof, Burely they aro better thingato people ( t0ga contemporary. Botanists give us 3, L D il Lan ws theitens | Cie o opon the sack Lor oe that, in guch | themselves for better B Sl i Sl i Bl L T troubles | varieties of grassed now known, and new ones ourier. His cen O Shn e el oo followed thit Laudght | bées sble to suderials Sitnertor and, on the other, o, | fHeind with & goough and uninvited; shadows s | are continually discovered in ‘the umerplored laws that govern the four great | mc fordinner. I got on my legs, tremb- | Secure to tho large class of girls, whom no necessary . 800, thes6. reminiatancas. "4 o % 1aia o7 “tho Universo: sosicty, smimal TG e bt v Eomad oot ey i Tolil | Secre o e e clast of gl v over, from vastiag | 820sa thay are Loo, hes pressuro | regions of the West. Only sbout 90 of theso nunciaments with regard to education. —Right Rev. A. C. Coxe, Bishop of the Prot- estant Epiecopal Diocese of Central New York, sailed on Saturday last, by appointment of tha ‘| House of Bishops, st its- late meeting in Ne York, for Hayti. 'In 1862, & colored proache:, Rev. J.T. Holly, of Buffalo, went to Hayti o priest’s orders, and has beon a very successfcl missipnary among the peopla of his color. Bishop Coxe's visit to the island is for the par- Pose of admitting clergymen to the ministry and organizing congregations in something sim. ilar to the dioceses of this country, —The Pall Mall Gazette calls the attention of clergymen who disliks the Anthanasian Crsed to the method employed some years ago by the Rev. Mr. Wright, & clergyman of the West of Omceintomy car thero came A-low breath against the name Of ome powerless to avoid the whisperaly; ° Ard a rush of scarlet flame Burges o%er my face for shame That 1, eilently, listened to the huztful lie; For the wicked shaft prevailed, *Gainst the one by it essailed, With its velvet-pointed malice and deep hata, Yet in heart, and life, and soul, He was pure as pureét gold, But the kndwledgs came, alas? alas? too late, A pity *tis our scts ‘Are 60 sobered by regrets, From Alpba to Omega of the strifo; That words are left unsaid; That deeds oft diza-the thread e lab perin 7 vt tro’ woven texturs of our Iife, ol o fained 0. his 8.0 terial d frivolit f the besf. of their | o ;> Yhispering by moonlight, | have been brought under” cultivation, selected | Bunning this t! ngland, whose parishioners complaiued fo his e e ormod the iden that the | fiostas wbual down the wellmovs puth. soinga 1 | dtedpea°e2 9% f0L, Come of the besl years of hole ot Sommemns ant ok hog doney ok o7 amount | 76 lurco vield aud ror toair mabr e | e v et 8001 S0Tr. | Bishiop bavuues B woul pot eomrhn the Creed + 3g thess, ha formed A regmlato theso | {ia paus faceonsmens sovat the o oo somned 1 IefPondence,”us carrled on at Combridge, renoives - | Of Ronsense, audyet how desr! i hafimeliag. acd | producing, properties. The aunual hay crop of et In his service. The Bishop admonisked tha the lafs of Jaipry ism of | evening—tor the clouda were now rolling away—in | self into thréa main heads: Advics and difection us to isyto tho world's' judgment, & greedy old skinfint, | the United States is about 25,000,000 tons, most- HUMOR. clergyman to heed the request of hisflosk, The "”f‘ffi?fi?fi'fihfi%fi%fly bodies, | discussing the best mode of assaulting our old friend, | what books to read, what sudles to Pime &5 Hone. ana | With no idens beyond his money ;- and yot hehes s ng Ly clover and timothy, and is worth about $250,~ 20 less & ey heavenlyb questions set in such subjects from time to Hmao, and Sl b aney ; snd st L I time 2 3 s gravitation; . e., a8 | the Teusels y Iooked gver, und returned to their suthors | COrRSE {n bis hedrh and wmany a Ume, when you fancy | 000,000. Clover is tho greatost ‘meat-producing e Ho e e o 13 1 pospetual har. | | “Tho Panthaya of Tunmen” sre Mahom- e oot sy g sensned to Liste auinors e tong ssesmmens he vibas Gepamiog bappily of | foad, it only requiting 13 pounds of Ly s saks “ihe action of fhe laws of atirection and | medan Chingso of tho Province of Yun-nan, who | Y, S0 say diffoulties’ “mét “witn | by | tholoug og B rait > | 5 pound of meat; hence tho mass of flcsh on tha e “ill sostety be restored to its nor- | have Tevoltod successfally against th yoke thoy | Lo y,oL, 437 T | oo omon s They Woro! i doscripion.of h | BEowaaof mobss Deno the mass of desh on the 1, 80 will E°§l ty the lawa of at- [ have borne for fiye or six centuries. An in- | The centreof ‘the system would be o board of advis-| costumes, the habits, and the morals of the yanng 7 of barley, 7.0f oats, 8 of beans or peas, 150 of 4 repulsion of the passions of | structive account is given of their origin snd o teachers o tried fams I thelz opecal fines? fomen,of Old England he wera axposied | iurnps, saarigolds, o cassote 1o abhom i s o coul o purmlid o sei yits | Women peimlny Ol NN, e acha o o tascalics of o bogse o | el "or detl oo mouch mhos ok ek | ed. snslysia of. éhe ¥ild grasssn ot bic e e this theory, that he diacov. | ments in tho StaxDepths” In startllng contrast | ufugiends o for thesm, am b mes 1y coeieontn a0 | table. Thay were anjoined to practico habits of | prairios, as well as experiments in eeding thets, B, the ability o prodict with un. | to the apparent motionlesenoss prevailiog thore, fox tie Uity of elaenda Stadents, by aatlag | indushe, to_rospoct tho agod to zalrain Trom. | Drawas fhety chvamealel g, feodiog them, B A S miico fhiture destiny of | present. an almost inconcaivabla. activity, ohs | 125 gpecil technic qublectin whieh they'might wieh | quarrels, and) aboyo all, neverto allow gentlor | Lo Tas, uer t0 contan logs of tho me! tandons ooTTaOy A O i unriemert s | Clats whith, Tooms the immemorial, have been | for natruction, and tho smount of time thoy Could de: | en o Liss ¢ tem in secret!” Even yet it 16 nac- | or- in other words, thoy possetn les o ot ‘He was even al the past. Forin- | set in poetry2s emblems of reet and eternal | Vote to the purpose. It would be well, tao, for them essary to continue exhorting the young women bonaceous elements, ang qiva more power to the. N history concerning fixity, ate speeding through space with a velocity :;’;,’;ffig;,;‘:;*;,:‘:j;fl;’;“ggyflfigwg‘f;mfig of the period after much the same fashion, framework of the animal, Tho writer well ro -|oysBooth: i is | compared with which every form of motion 3 £y - | groung Indies of that day (about 1650), when conceal- | members the ante-railroad period in Ohio, when. " plaiped that man s destingd, to tobabit this | C0 D o eaeth o baregarded as almost | {157 8re advieed of by paicarat, amd petiod- | Young afles of that duy (bout 1650, whe converss | tho Ohio Stage Company traversed the State, i | glebis thonsand S Sho-begianing, six- | absoluta rest, An explanetion i given of the | tions, * By their thinking brer. snewenng. and ey | with: sty stesnger vhose maunre or sposuranca | 110y and Bresat, miik i pai i B e cated—ine in the Ol World and. | fnferesting exporiments by vibich. wlh the oot | Saaniag the comments on thets answers, the students | plensed them, ' In tho comedsy of % 3t tho satste ¢ | Coaches and'thousands of horaes, requiring of o8 T ey appeared between fho S0th troscope, %r.xfiuggixm has caleulated the rate of | would undoubtedly take in and retain the knowledga e fo";’;'nfix’f and the ‘following sonvermtincZ, Sl | e the grestent ‘physical endurance. . The feed “|ferecs o iatitude, and enjoyed perfect ap- | 47 03 R0 T sought for, < xdjudged%:n by their most experienced men s epace of three Bundrel oo, et 'ose | Tn ““Demonology,” M. D, Conway discusses | Thoe defails of the scheme sro. 80 thoronghly | DA% 5y sy eo2 Whereste you going thea s a8 coaree straw,—the coarser tho better,—and -ous then i A legal conveyance—RBlack Maris. —Bored of health—The suicides. —A water-pitcher—A fire-engine, —An exchange is talking sbout * tho next World's Fair,” just s it we '5 have troubls enough with this world's ‘¢ Fair.” 1 —If a Bedouin should lose his teeth, would he talk gum Arabic? —If seven days make one week, how many will make ono strong ? m—fCarpals are bought by the yard and wora by 0 foot. —A woman who tells fortunes from a tea cup neeaed to be o sauceress. = & —Brown says the mountain airis 8o thinin New Hampshire that you can ses the mountain’s peak and the wood pine. v —Gravity is no more evidence of wisdom than apaper collar is of a shirt. 5 D ares which every wifeis willing that the husband shall sow—Solitaires, in her ears. —Fashionable authority decides that a stove- Teverend gentleman, accordingly, on the foliov- ing Sunday, made the following little spesch i1 his congregation: *Next follows St. Anth, nasing’ creefll cither to bo_said or sung; 1 with God’s leave, I'll singt.it. Now, cl < mind what you are sbout.”” Wherenpon both clark and curate commenced singing it to a {fox-hunting tune, which, having previotsis practiced, they Performed not only correctly Lut With considerable spirit and effect. Tha parish- ioners held another meeting, and inforrmed ti. curate that they would dispense with the Atha- asian Creed in future. i —The Christian Leader i3 glad io hear that +the horrible old Augustinian 0gINas are some- times repudiated by **members of councils,” and hopes that “ the next stzgrwill be councils to repudiate them.” The Leader onght to kno~ that the dogmas to which wa referred arenc; ¥ faught now in the theological seminaries of the Congregationalists with perhaps one exception. Andover, and New Haven, and Chicago ro- e i 4 term 3¢ i ich divided the vis- | elaborate. that the difficulties which at firs view | g hae: Moy you be trusted, sir 7 s mixture of oats and corn. The most_éxperi- | pipe hat is always becoming, unless it is top ject such monstrous motions as that men shars B tveziaigh "‘;u?}fi e the ?fi%’:fi?fl:&’ °§.‘$“3fl5‘é‘;“l‘fii" g’;‘mfdu;i‘;::a would embarrass the granting of cortificates for | gy Dell. Indeed, I may, madam, e g practically best informed of ‘Wostern | much stove. G the guilt of their first progenitor juat ca Aol o Thir stionger than st pres | 10§ TR A camps, and gives the popalace | Proficiency, are to bo obviated by niva woce ex- | _“ Oplielia, Thea know, 1 abepetomy chambonto | oy ien have for years Tor aagac) £0-d87 | Jant ot ancient instrument of wardoes s potu- | heartily as tho Zeader doos - Jadpoacters. which were e overty hed Do existence, their Devil, who was once a, deity, but. has, some- | Bminations, conducted throngh the telegraph. | fotch my mazk, hood, and gcarf, sud 50 jaunt it lant Jover most resemble ?—A cross-bow. feeding, the wild native hay of the prairies Witk where and somehow, been degraded. Most peo- i The editor tells us * How the World g8, | NS Bett, Jountit! Whave the mesningof that? | the L object and res_nlylu, with the greatest e of south. B b «philosoplical chi- | ple will be surprised to hear that Devil and God ina few pages of pleasant gga_msi‘:’:r'gfh“ dis~ | W Qrelia, Why thatls. to take a Dackney-coach, | samitary benefit to their stock. -While tho unknown, for tible with happiness. | are etymologically one. tressing rise in prices, whichis dis ing 6ven | geonr from Plillyh“u to playhouse, till Imeet with | cloge siabl s, pampered feeding and vitiatod air e qulte I or strpngth and bean- b Hiaie ok the beantifal valleys of Wales; the ingidious | gome young foliow tht his BOWEr enoughieatiiis of the crowded stahles of Tivery mud chr worar fman was remarkible for etrgn Jbeard lately of & lndy ko your ehsldren | SPreadof sacordotalism, or ritualism, In fho | s aeLiE felow, that ae A Dicsest mie, 0 foly | Sanion frove snduced 1o forimny b oy —A maetinE in the interest of the Evangelical ° Alliance was held, & few days #g0, in the Char:iy of the Pilgrims, Brooklyn, to -hear the report nf the Rev. Dr. Schaff, Secretary of ‘Lo on its operations in Europe, and on the subject of the General Conference Which it is propos, to hold in New York City in 1878. In his reporr, Dr. Schaft said that between forty and fifty dise tingnished men from almost every countryin Europe would attend next year's Conferencs, and take part in ‘ita_deliberations. Altogether, & + | freely indulged. Niture was in all the stion s fhig, A0 ST T e and - —A physician, on pxeaentins his bill to the executor of the estate of & deceased patient, asked, “Do you wish to have my bill sworn to 2 “No,” replied the executor; ‘“the death of the decedent is sufficient evidence that you attended hum professionally.” —2Mrs, Partingtonhas been reading the Health Officer's weekly reports, and_thi “ total must be sn_awful malignant disease, since as many die of it a8 of all the rest put togother. ola, or silver, or precious " T £l ! b -0 ommments of 010, O Cnal eharm to. the O rersuother iy, * o Jou miks soue chiliten tho Church of England ; tho promises of the now | eagugh to be Kanghed ot for bir iz i | o e o e semibishome chidanu> S ruth, men were led, for s briel Reriod, bY | e do; T think it safers Tt droll enough tofind | literary season, which are: not many; and the Frederick Amold, in gearch of f’w Xperi- | rongh conrse, and Sometimes scant food of the * Fuses, to adopt the institations 1o whi Fevert, | this bit of ceremons toward tho Devil survivingin sn | unpunctuality of English railways. . ences,” finds them i yery conventional and | o By COTES 07 Sometitnes soa Villages, have sidance of Fourier, e 00 o o passions | English county; but it lends some plausibility totho | & Roots,” 15 an exposition, in the form of stereotyped events. He joing in & political can- proved a preventive, and secured an bnmunity phers had 5 g&mswwmunlm main. { theory of Mr.Cox and other mfihfllfléfl"& fhat the | 5 convorsation, of the religious_ scepticism of | vass in ngland, undertakes the position of ex- Bgainst its ravages. ' Prevention is better than thecq A ed by external | Zame which the lady taught her children to | §P0%Y and i as satisfactory and conclusive as | aminer of & large school, writes leading article en interested in tho [ —A soldier, talling his mother of the terriblo | from 300 fo. 500, vicites might be expected cn S e 5 PR O Tappnc oo | Bromooncs oay el Tawe M snbuiy i | tho day and o sysare. for » daily Rewepsper; and goa o aball in 8 | welletig Dt oo et ey ooy e | oot Chickemange, was asied by har 'why o | ihat ocossion Thess porbt va Loohtol el . P ehsss T 453 Banakeit Dyu, Zend deo, thrts oo Shioihi Qo e . Iupatic asylum. i = fom of regime moro in consonanco with tho nat- | did not gt behind o tree. #1x201" said ha | of subjeess e be poremeria, L0 ETERE | pres. e In Greece it became Zeus: in Latin it became Ding. SAINT PAUL'S. Sketches from _Paris; ““Caught,” & poem; “There wasn't enough for the officers.” ent state of Christendom,” * Christian uaion,” ural and phyaiologicnlxe&niumenla of the horse, B e onth of ‘siacts. Sacit | paler, COrTuBied. nto. Supiter, Eathes of Eieht ¥ a The Saint Pauls Magarine begins with 6ty | b KooE Lot ok $he Rusalan Blopnes = | B T beion, e o onts of thehorsey | Tipre waswlt onoug chatting gaily, when the | i Foreign and domestic missions,” ¢ Chriatian ’a"lm north ard south of man’s dwell- Apglo-8szon it became Tiw, the God of War, from ing Christian at Work in mine!” —Bridget made & good point on Mrs, H, B, Stowe. The latter was invited to ding. In the midst of tho dsy and the dinner-gatting, Bridget sent up word that she was. going to leave, Mad- ame (hair in gnpers) burried down. “ Leave, Bridget!” ‘Yes 'm.” “Butyon can’t mean it, Bridget.” ‘Yes 'm.” “But you know I can't let you leave me thus, in the ‘middle of the fore- noon, when you know I have special company invited. fo dinner.” “Yes 'm, that's it, 'm; ‘taint’t you, 'm, &t all, but I dow't think I can " 4 £ Cardington and Conking;" “The talk of the i B ed, and .the | conversation turned upon the subject of dress, | ity and ove t,” ¢ Christigniiy and philan- ripn ts IR | e e Rl AR | mam oo ibtor sl o 2 | N e AR | RS BN B | ot S e % | i 00 forrmne ' o GofeRive, wespons, Simincousty with | it also the GermunTensey, Devil, Tn Graste sop, | Skellige.” ion, “Will November | Luces,” tho warlike adventares of a poaceablo | PAFical condit ¢ ot all the domestio ani- | No.3,8aid: +I'm in 00 mood for trifling to- |- s Sminence Lutgi Amat, Ca:dinal and Vico e oF hesg Tormidable cnemics, smotier | RAilo o Srom it sl iaveson hey Gom Dy, | I T e | s otnr cimatets B aencl St ndand gerveltof 3.C." | day.40d I'm backed up in my good intentions | Chasaranenco L y Romin_Church, died in - iuin, The popuiation had lncressed | hero, came froz caled atention fo the fact that the | folls al sbous the metéoris. pheoimens R e N o Crrerommanion, | DL prestocs ol Ste ferali e ponaler.” | tho Gty of Nics, on T dns. Lnle e i pl God amon; sies ig, s day, 1, i til of —A little Danl 0y Tan away from, school -Communion, . I : 01 eel- | was born i e City of Cag L, o the v 25 e divbot cadss of Family lfe and mono- Bk el e deimes fo o Just quloted b | 128t few vears, and says that, if practise: e i e Sputgeon ow Clase ing 8o particularly good about that; Ihave tho | 21st of June, 1796: Ho entered the. Chiisehos. [} 4 ; the 18th of | Monday, to go chestnutting. During the expe- | g ihution to the discassion of the iages, whereby, instead of one harmoni- to believe that the. servers will watch from the 10th to Tonday, ] expe & contribution to the | e Separate and eclfish tribes came fato | true o not thers fs resson fo beliere thit 1 %d Dyu. | November, in the early morning hours of each | dition he fell tice ont of oo tree to the immi- | communion question, the Rev. J. Hratt i i an early moment of his life, and wa3 soon Tiatin- ‘ e e omapens inooniey | Consider now the Eindred. word Demon. Fota vornt: dag, they iill probably sep some. nent danger of bresking his neck, was lickod by guished for his zeal and piety. Bince the 13t of March, 1852, he has been consecraied Bishop. created Vice Chancellor of the Church, s Archpriest of the Basilica of St. Mary the Great. He was nominated Cardinal on the 13th of May, 1857, and his name stands enrotled second on ths lisbof Cardinal Bishops, the wholo number of that order of the Boman Epiacopacy being sis. Cardinal Amat's death leaves twenty-eight hats vacant in the Vatican and in the 33Ut of Popa Pius the Ninth, J i i i i tter received foll aod, the weapons iavented | SOB2 irit, ori £ th Notioas of Itight snd Wrong,” 8 | one of ths other boys whose breath he materially | Swith publishes in the Observer als e saimals werenow arpiiad | S slow means an evilispitit, orighaly et 0ig e pacroas of Figh ‘Holbach,” gnd | lossonsd by shemaslis sheaes bis stomach, rana | by him from Mr. Spurgeon o year ago. Mr. struction onl:uflm& g qE:s- times when there In short, our Demons and Devils are Deities | “ A 'I:mmp in the Bush,” an Australian adven- | sliver into his knee, and was bitten violently on Bpurgeon says: ‘¢ If this communion question B lond plenty, 4ad unrestrained love, | whe hoen b degraded. The Gods of old re- | ture. . J fhoneck besnaw kind of bug. When ho 8ot | suues ho discassed, T aidh every success to the e B buterate all memory of them ligions becawe Devils when new creeds aroso; | Matthew Browne, incited thereto by the boast | home his father anointed him wuh.thicgoss end Chalstinn véres e Baptist sido of it. I be. dure EEREROnS PPt "hot s | thio Goda of hostile races hecemo Dexils o each | of s colbrated irino that o lad priton s con | of s billncd cue and. the noxt day ot s ol e g s e B F o lita thace' st by A 3 er is about | mentary in i e snatched frol e % ! ke i recerd of tho bappineas they Siher, ,,,fl’;:;j"‘{g‘;fic‘fpia; By “the Dragor hilo whiting e Be sns dress, gives soven | his pooret ear. Ho saya that chestnutearo so | and, s a matter of faot o commualon. - Tho e e aith, which our chldren are it | and Berpant a s 0Ccupie Dages of misceliancous newspaper extracts,— | wormy this year that it don't Pay 0 g0 nfter | outyed sign is secondary, but the Holy ] ord, "(BW ‘peimoval Bappiness to cavagery, e | L. J. Procter eketches the life and explora- poftenng among histories, George Sands’ novels, em. Who makes the thing anz@fl_ & necessity of = 2 ! ]