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THE CHICAGO DAILY TRIBUNE: SUND ‘APRIL 6, 1873. - ; y wero got by thelr rorkfog. harder snd moro | havo bewn out of the. quostion, and bence mis- | POPULAR SCIENCE MONTHLY, | inseribod o tho sfing conrserasning opnd tho grince prograts bocenss i he e sinit N harie ; 3 1 v despised 88, in which, in theso dsya, the maid will probably T} . 1 & get the’{v"a's‘-'of ity B 'say nothing of the un- | honestly than other podple. ; With all their. understandings wonld have been l:_fiosa“elfl;a 3 Froneh names, wiild. (atrango ovoreight; as we e a a otess, * | pleasantnoss of struggles in. general. ‘15 sular advantiges, snd, thelr mineral daposits, |~ He comes to tho conclusion that the causes of. e ‘must suppose) the name of q% is CU-. | acheme was regardedas_under a divine_curse, s . % * | madsme, & word 'in “your ear. You do HOf | oy would'mok have succesded as_they have,| Our sutipathies aro ag deop aaourresemblances; | % P ous by its absonce ; we see exemplified & nation- | and its stndents were put into prison and_pun- g s G . |dike & lsdy to have ~comse, re 12 not iad bard work nd fpright | that the points where we meet are:the” points'| English- and American — Science=-= | ai sentiment which, genorating - tho -beliof that | jshed . in various -ways..; We ere past all:that Hodern Artistio and Tntéllectiial Grer- | tsuda!" Nor do I'So be auro 't war | dono, if they had ot tind hafd workdnd upright | BROEORER Y R TS By tnton and | © ¢ o pa - | thitgs not French "dusorvo Iitle attention; scts”| now and Natrs is cossidéred as of bome-ihter: A Word to Tadi gloves. But the sbape and fullnoss of the arm g—harder work and more up) ight g bt iedy ums,-t svéry ol L adeakry, i Science - and - 0ar. Ednca- - | injuriously on French thought and French prog- | eat and fit enongh to be studied by - those who 2 many—A Word to s, &nd shoulder, and cven of the bust, ire, a8 o | than could bo found elsewhsre—bebind them. | Englondtouch st almast esery pdiat, ancestry, i 4 % o Fictors Hugo mayalloquent Qoserife | Tttt thor Sall ooosant to bavy bith tn thes 7, ] rale, improved by much moro active use of tho | miyay wils dissppear, slowly perhaps, but surcly, | government, ” langusge, literaturo, law, eoci lionai Systems -~ | Hon'of France ss the savior of nations; down 0’| mouths and bs kept within suitabla bounds. ' : = ppes Limbs Hh ot oo eaking well. | when they havo thom nolonger. , - - ;. - | lifeyand relizion. In'this wo ara aliko, and yot . tho declamations of those who urged that wero| ) /iy { South Sea Slavery--<The: Chaucer Socie- | Emovn fuat . a3d, matks, i yout hund shouldy| _ To thoe oy sign, thon (ho k), thatthey o | uaike, e kanoss aretes oopladh, Mo e e i i | o S lghtof ilzalon noUA b2 | b oo M, Goati s of it i : . . little increase in size, 88 in the course of years failing us ?- “Iwish I could answer ‘No’ un- 8 ivaley ;. S s Ao -Herber pencer on the ia,s ] Sramibic objurgation, as follows: *Greak- s ty---The Problems of Civ- - H bt would, yot if yon ask artists and | hogitatingly.” ahell pover fight, but we -shall always scratch. |, L that France is the great teacher, and by implica- % i ] 5 | ¥ e B ounvan i gommeal what thoy havo'to say | Loaltatingly.” ] . B tioion way bt s pasamon mie- of Patriotism. tiom neads not to bo a learner. A e i ilization. e O O i B o ot fho iy |, Our cotton trado is tho greatest of our indus- | H0% 620 6 SUnairee, Ty e O : : I ism The samo corroding self-estoem that brought:|- ¢ «+ Great God!_ Td rather bo H = . B e hflatr 5 £ | tries; wo still woave and distribute over the world T s s : . . defeat upon the French, has been brought upon A pagun snokiad dn § cread Gtwor ; | is nothing to regret ; while if it woro you would | ot £ S0 RO SIS other nations put | o Smm;fi: do Cubs an American seamen, the | @ _ .. ot ey I, £ . 8o might I, standing on this pleasant les, . . i 5 bave much to eet off against it,—s firn-fleshed, togother: The material -woll-being of England son of English parents, is -about to be ehot for Kpyiied: 2 - the Germaus by their victorie Sl 3 g\m ¢liv;1pi- Ps:;zwauu oo a‘flm forlorn, ! ohe Triction Betwoen the United States | well-xounded shoulder, and nwell—opex’md bust-" | depends perbaps more, upon the taztyre sl ;l;%:& complictiy i, fil‘m‘;‘li”""‘azf.‘.?fi,";f‘ff; - Applie Sammry Science—~The 5 “,fi‘; ?m pgfmmm to:;;:,“hcs:;; Riiva Mgk of Beolave vty vg!:mo;?z?'rn.’" <~ 3 and England---The Peking HACMILLAN'S, O O e o Lhis taig English 's0d Kmerican Vico-Cousuls who o |« ¢ Limitations ‘of Science. contrastfo Fronch sel iy " wbich Gor- o, S may bo all very well fo callow P <, T 5 ly satisfied of the man's innocance, 8 —— 3 ‘oA éretofore displa; ppaaring,: ' ; e [ Gantter In Muckillans, theslave frado fn the Fijisis | so, wobavo allomed s Iarme Hra ot e ol | to Consuls follow. the. fiing-party and thoir |+ TR D o ire wary of e Jote victomuarr M | t0 bavo beon wesned from this s pagan nonseuse . # & 3 L 2 i i i 5 of Germanis -ma- % i G - Hl ST.PAULS. . DERY o -‘:i’;’ ar !go‘:uh wfllfi"figyfi:f’:‘fi {hote tox- | reada a protest, demands’ the -release of tho 1c- | the speeches delivered at the-farewell banquet | tion, the ‘Gorman ‘Empiro, the German army, and' | verse, the case ‘becmes pitisble. ‘This ia the i Eabrle-Evans dossnot agree With Held, an | As far back as 1868 the deportation of the | 18 & injare their durability. Iwonld gladly | cusod, and declares that the . authorities will be | 4o Prof, Tyndall, st Delmonico’s. In ong of | tho German navy, the German Church, and Gor- | second time that Prof. Tyndall hes been gravely ; ! wathority of no mesn Tank, ia tho picturo ho | Bonth Soa Telandors had challanged the sttention | L% ey 03" of my mistako i 1 am in error called to sosount for s doath, by the Govera- | o p. 050"y Draper the bl ¢ iy | man cience. .~ . Thay Aislouia Renctmes, Lol aerom the table I hew York by aftocdinnes H . y= » of the British Government. was known e -BDi! ‘both | ments of Eng] ¥ e Unif tates.. The Ao 2 " and ‘what animates them is, er e e HehAigm. i dmwsof < : ono of our Australian colonies, Queonsland, was | but I have asked many cotton-spinners, i » > : b6 Tntellectual Devel ¢ Europe,” | : ita- # | rather than sccept tho scienco that his H : Austra 3 , W STain to.mo tho | excitement is intense. The prisoner rocia with | of the Intellectual Development o pe,"'| Fronch _spirit. translated into -German. Dt | his presenco HODFRY ABTISTI AXD INTELIZOTUAL GEBMANY, | rozulurly importing labor from the Paeifc | masters and momkpecpl, o 0spn (0,00 48 | £ o’ o Bpaniah soldters show impationce | answering to the fosat, - - i " | Ana” thiom, " to: illnstrate . the', injurious | suggested—a striking comment oh the Value o theso words: ““Tho pressandrottrom in Ger- | for ~plantation work; and though there | FoR B8, ORI ooae thiop ' produce o | towards fhe meddling foreigners; there is & . RNGLISIL AND AMERICAN SCIENCE," reaction on Germsn thought, and, on he esti- | which flwflg d;g,-;.gm HEthe fud ssen o g many are slike degraded; the stage kept alive | wore few instances—we believo only diligently; bow it dds, mot to their | pause and a consultation ; the Consuls are. in-.| oo coq 410t 4hoir growth was much more clogely | Imates of foreign nations and their doings, he | rel e‘il :h mmum[ ui” let people bo by soraps from foreign sources; poetry and art | ono well authentionted—of thoso natives boing | SNEPPETE (A gl P Calle *and | formed that the sentence must be carried into 8 Qeneribes his discnasion with an esteemed Gor- | Buckled. where they “plesse ; * as for our ovm S eers Bustitato of sigor; musio grown degon | treated with neglect on & Quocnsland station, if [ BRNOEL T 9, 60T o Gorrowtally atioug, | effect ; the order “ Present” ig given associated than most people supposed. He |-mgn professor of philosophy, againat whom ho | spiritusl lactation we prefer to get it from the - ntterly des gor ; waa notorious that they were not all there yolua- fu thio aboye conclusion. Thoy have shown rs | ; At.this moment the two Consuls, carrying | eaid: Fes contending that, the peychical and ethical | revelations of modern science rather than from sciences wonld gainin progress and influence by international commanion, like that among the bysico-mathematical scionces. He, * to my as- Foninhment, declared that, even if suoki's union wero possibld, he did not think it desirable, as it would interfers too much with the iarity of German thought. . -. . Bacond to Ger- many,” be ssid, ‘it was Ttaly, which, in the immediate fuburs, waa most likely to promotc hilosopby. - . - It appesred that what made im profer the Italisos . . . . wasnothing glso “than bis having' obieriod_ that n 1t they were acquain with every philbeipbical trostiso - published in - Gor many, Bcever Soimportent,” -Aud thus, sdds my odrrespondent, * 3t fnéat German cbar taristica are disappossing in sn exaggerated Ten- ot OTEy ot ot hap emmamonts o German fesling make manifest. There s in- diractly an antagonism between tho sentiment of nationality and the sentiment of -individuality; the resuit of which i8 that exaltation of the one. involves dopression of the other, and s decress- ed regard fortheinstitutions it originates, Speak- ing of the * so-called National Liberals,” he says : 2 friend of mine was lately present st s dis- cussion, 1n the course of which & profesaor of philosophy, 6f the Univority of —, was very Gloquently, and with perfect seriousness, con- tn%mg ihat only one thing was now wanting to complete our German institutions—s . national costume. Other people, who, no doubt, are fally aware of the ridiculousness of such things, axs, novertheless, guilty of an equally -absurd, sod even more intolerablo_encroachment on indi- vidual liberty ; since, by. proposing to_establish a national cliurch, they sim a6 constraining the adherents of the various Teligious bodies into & spintoat uniform. - Indesd, 1 hould hiscdly hitve thought it possibie that-a German Government could encourage such monstrons propositions, it they had not boen expounded to me &t tho Min- erate; literature & sickly romanticiam devoid of | 4, ri1g bot:that many of tlem had been onticed nclusior me | e . . $0 Tusk-and-s-Reanstalk tomfacleienof pages Alboral y 3 3 3 that the sizor'a ” trade lins boon growing | their respective fiags, bound out betwoen the | - When T was in London a year or twoago, I . v any originality; ho matiotal lsngusge culpebly | on Laaed the vosselnand forcitly deportod. fo ity than Javor ot Tata vents, Thg | lovelled musketa. aad ‘the doomed man, who i | paasod omo plessant hours wilkmy friead Brof. mythelogy. o VS moglected, disfigured by “the introdue- | fact, go far as the elG procupie of FONG P9 | wealth which comes out of “sized” cottén, or | sn Instant is covered with tho English colors. | Tyndall, Among these, I think that, perhaps, = tion of forcign words, and in its | tdo was SPRDE: %it, " atoppod | Ay such product, cannot bo said, I think, to bo | The Amorican Consul wraps himsolf in his flag, | thomost pleasant wore thoso of one afternoon turn_disfigaring German-‘modos of thonght | Legislature, to Aher Sre e Poly- | in any sense “well potten.” and stands by the ido of his fellow hero, who | thmt we spent together in the Iaboratory of the s n patiie.” a in sod passed an 80 oga Y- | 1 will tako one otlicr instance from the other | exclaime—¢“Hold! hold! As the represenistive { Royal Institution, whers Davy discovered potas- and the Gorman matiire Modern | negian Isbor. Sinco ihenb!he trafic hbs; bxi‘a,n oud of our empire. Tho great mainatsy of our | Of her Britannio Majosty, T protest sgainst tho | sinm sudsodinm, and docomposed the eatha ; German Literaturohe thinks to bo the finest in | carried on a8 freo from sbuses as may be. We | 7y, oconug ig the Government monopoly of | murder. -1t is yonr dutyto proteckthis man's | where Young irst announced the grand and fer- sorld. It hes & iiberty,of thought and fresh- | use the qualification advisedly ; for though we | 0™ FOTr ! s and | lifo. If you take it, you tako ours, and that at | til ciplo of interference, and placed on firm tho worl a8 & liberty. ght and Sregh- | b8 B erasal of tho voluininonsbine pooks | opinm. This drug England” manufactures Jou 5 ¢ ) o principle 2 ot intartorence, i ko on Bios 5 i English reader is ot iy s £0 tho Chi lo cliiefly, with the fall | your peri it oo ; Dess of scatimont o which the Eng on tho eubject with a conviotion that Quoonsiand | 281 to tho Chiness pooblo clisl, vith the ful | YD focq toin toase Belplaslysoat b | Fieaday mado i goss Oscorerin s oot » strangor. Tho Germen does ok, like the | Bo e Sub)ect E & o oF asiavabtata op wrstehol a i is 4 i o 7 3 | to the purchascrs, and against the strenmous | defendors.-The muskets ars lowered. Another | aud magnetism. On that occasion,Dr. Tyn Fronchman, se¢ Lis invention on tho mick o | vo maintaln that no regulstions can controlthe | .0 Jof Yapeated protests of tho Government: of | awful pause, auother conenltation, and tho pris- | wa showing mo some of 1is own splendid dis- O k. ko ihe.evor-opactioal Eng: | (1o hualzods of llands seatiered abont tho Pa--| that sounley. Docs i siriko you thas theweslth | SRk P SS0LIARG prok g el FPRPGIES, 07 | exserios it aelln o elbor maves of siors be- . d , like the ever-pract ing- | "0 N 2 i jc] i 0 well- n ) b . d the chee od upon gaseous matter, clouds formed by ac- vico. He does nof 3 cific, tho various dislects and langusges, the | Which comes ftom opium cn ) of thewsoldisrs, who, forgatting their animosity;- | tinic decomponition, T ssw tho saporb, sky-plae ishman, truct novel 288 Chinaman fabri i 3 | wealth, or that this is tho kind of example which ; 0 ¢ i tion. X ol :::;“1’::;:’: 254 sacciSo all eleo bo tho woari- | Domors of Hhe CLlels oL e e N iots, | tbe richest nation in tbo 1rorld dhonla bo satting | uro eloctrified by this splondid, spoctaalo of | Jight, mnd verifod its polarised condition. 1t s : oL i to her sistor nations, who are, toiling after her | boroic sudacity.” Tn s fow honrs tho scamsn is | ‘was fike tho light of hesven. somo ingennity of o perfect plot. Abovell, ho | will imagine that-the Kanaks ~always comes o s " tolling after Ber | Felensod, and ta & fow more has embarked. in | © Woll, ue 1aid down the Nicol i sl docs not-matilato-eternsl emotions o the Pro- | board sua sponle, or undorstands the naturs of up ng?lxrebm ; ;?&l:e l:gc :li‘:davoted 1o the zome. | Safety, inder the two flags of the two countriss. | boon uking, T oald not holp R0y thete crustean couch of modern conventionality. Ho | the agreement he signs. : o P I believe this incidont fairly . illustrates the |'wasan unssen ¢ prosence " in the place—a ge- G008 mot wwrite with the foar of moral censor- | If Eoklend would boldly assumo the sover- | dies whith ho eeoks, less by legislation than by | deopest fesling hat the two nations have one “mius loci—that inspired men to make such dis- !_:iep e e et sigaty of the Fije, we should very shortly wit- | aa activ, individul, :;.aespma philantrophy | fowarda tho othor, aud the h;g'ljnt‘ mission thoy | coveriga. Who was it that brought that gonjus o ;) ¢ Bx b t hoand L And in this'way, and by this means, can al- | share—the .championship of justice, and tho, | there? Grondy. Ho dates, without malics on tho one | cessation of the native fouds, the clvllization | zog; all those social tangios which we have boon | reacuo of the opprussedthrogliout the world. | 4§ tho timo of tho Amoriean Rovolution, there band or estonastion on'tho other, to reflect Na~ | 07e000m eht oL She, ANTH, TG RReR O (30 | glancing af cagually tus ovening bo gt xight, | . Bir Rulberford Aloock, K. C. T, givestho soo- | xoaidad in tho town of Bumford, N. H, orle Ben- turo as mooifested either in virtue: or in | PUASUSE TEEIOR S L P e oho aecentod | Simple living I To it oven the grost household | ond part of bis article on R jamin Thompson, who occupied bimself in teach- Gice. Parenthotically, the writer gives his defi- | fheoottemads her pa. 1669, the South Hons | Question, stonce tho most ridicnlous.and the Yz PREING GAZEITY, ing o school. Ho embraced, a8 we Americana b ] ) ke i offar d most barrassing of social tronbles; will in the i 7 y would eay, the wrong side_of the question on niton of Art,—a phaso of human sctivity which | might Lave boen epared the hor- | SN AREIRPE B S RN T Top gjyy | in which ho prosonts somo -general ide of | BIRCnen” TR G itk the King's Governs Teino and Raskin ave trying veryhard todofine. | rors = snd atrocitios . perpetrated by fnsoluble and Lopeless. - Spoaking of thia-sors | s contents, s well sa the conditions under | mopt. Ho weat to England, becavio s man of #*Forwast i Art? Isitnot tho simple, loyal, | British man stoalors, ~he 1035 180 | qucstion.in the Nation the othor day, one.of -tho | which it appoars from day.to day. I the Pek- | mack, and was knighted., Thon Lo vent on the loving reprodtiction of Nature? Not necessarily farflm?:fmfifim;gmzy‘ e G oha |- wittiest of ‘American essayists tcok up tho | ing Gazetle, ho says, aro o be found illustra- | Continent, agnin distinguisiing himaelt by bis tho reproduction of every potty dstatl, bub.af | nor fhis nstives can fecl very strongly sbont, thoir | pudgels for Bridze: (tho, Irlsh. servant girl OF | tions of Chinesa politicsl and sociallifo of tho | Scicntifo attainments, again was Htied, snc! (8 tho brond, generel features, And, if this be 50, | Constitntion or the Minisiry of the day; and tho | oo B) pEC G W LAt SIEPCl, yavs | Brontest value,—solo representative as itis, in | cylicd Gount Rumtord. * tho first im of ‘the artist, whetber with pecil | Pacific Islanders would m;“'bmg" in®heic | You eny right to look for? The things | China, of the newspaper press of othercifies. | ~On his return to London, Count Rumford o with pen, =ust bo to b natural” - There. ia | Midst a power . which would protect right b7 | Fjoh American lifo and mnnners proech | Perhaps noue of tho extracts whioh ho makes | founded tho Royal Institution, sad thus to s no art in England, whera everything is conven- | & L —— t0 her are not patience, sober-mindedness, faith- | from its pages will be more interesting to the | Bative American the world owes that establish- . 3 R falness, diligence, and honosty ; but self-assor- Tz s b0 Whe | ent which hns been glorified by Davy, sud tional. & The artistic novel atfaing its WighoSty. b 7 ruriia pives, amid amassof encyclopodic | tioh, discontent, hatrod of supotiority of ail | Occidental seader than ita isclosures with're- | 3007 M0l s i0any ‘wnd the lostro of which is kinds, and eageress for physical enjoyment ;" | §ard to Chinese competitive.examinations. He | now 50 conspicuously maintained by Tyndall. " THE “LAKESIDE." - ' Its Issue for April. " Love-Stories-and Wax‘-i’na_try.' i Postry and loye stories make the pagos of the ZLakeside very sessonable reading for'the young ‘men and women who lightly turn to thoughts of 16vo in"the spring. Alfred de Musset says, in his airy way, L'hiver c'est une maladig; and this .pedtilential character of winter is a8 noticeable in Chicago a in Paris.” The same writer says, or might havo, said if he had thought of it, Ze ‘printemps c'est une sentiment. . Whether. he ‘said it or not, the editors of the Lakeside havé caught ‘the ides, and givenus a very sentimental spring number. 3 B S : " THERE AR EEVERAL LOVE BTORIES,, ‘which ‘are all very good, and altogothet fo-’ describable. It is'a peculiarity of such literature, a8 of the, thirig itselt, that, the batter ft i, it is the more inexpressible. A good inataics of this, was given in the reply 6f a witnéss_in dn East ern court, who waa sskod what ahs"mesnt by “courting?” * She replied, ii & synthetic and helpless kind of way, Oh! taking hold of bands, and all that sort of thing.”" * Carlotts Perry tells - one of these stories of the vicissitudes ‘of i formin German belletristic literature. ritelers ‘about Chaucor and tha dates of abli “Adterthese Iotty infoductory remarks, Egliule- | 326120erlan faci ings‘“éu-m o totmation abont | 20d the words come hiomo, I fear, with singulsr | saya: : Had it not been for Rumford, Davy might have | istry of Pablio Worship.” _[1ove _culminating In triumphant matrimiony, Evans analyzes the literary character - of ‘Spiel- | ¢ sslyrons oETn force to us also islanders in-these days. Lot | Much has been thought and'said of Iate years | spent his lifo in filling gas-bags for Dr. Bed- | Dr.J. R. Black, in "w ° "|under the heading, “How . It Happened” the condition of tho Chaucar Sqcioty : us hopo that flis picture of tho good. coming | as to the merits of compotitive examination for | does' pationts; Faraday might have been a { ““APPLIED BANITARY BCIEXNCE,” « Flirtin, "Even Game,” by Anna 2 Delioves that it-is within human ability to s7oid BEeD TR, Sonldy 2 bagets; Averbach, Hucklauder, Gutzkow, BMubl | ryq Ghsucar Sosioty” hos, ont of tho milllons | fime which ho goos on -to draw. may. provo iras | il tho ofices I tho public service. . Add grost | book-biader ; aad cortaialy Tyndall Wwonld ot bach, Heyse, and Joan Paul. He sdys: - .. |.of Grest Britain, found just eixty men in Evg- | for us also. ** Whenover the sound of the new | deal of "clip-trap argument in favor of this | have beon honoring us with his presonce here 1 know mno modern suthor who Las Iaid | gnd and Wales, five; in” Scotland, and one i | Gospel whichis to win tho nations back to the | syatem has beon advanced, on no batter founda- | to-night. = . human natureso universally uader contribution | Ircland, wmy rt i€; and, -but-for the help of | ancient and noblo ways is heard in the laud, it on-than its alleged sncooss in Chins. Asitis | Butif Benjamin. Thompson, an American, nnd with sucli uniform success- as Spiclhagen. | Profassor Child and his friends in the United | i fair to expect that it will not find her ears | only at its commencement with us, and hag been | foundod the Royal Institution, Fames Sxmfihwn‘ Hiscsuvas iscrowded with figures all true to. | States, conld never have crept into being. - Still, | wholly closed ; and that when the altar of duty | in full ‘activity in China for many centuries, it | an Englishman, shortly afterward founded thal oatare, but all moro or less typical, Tho it'is something" to~ have - a - Chauncer ~Socicty | is again set up by her cmployers she will lay on | is worth whilo to inguire’,what have been' the | noblo institution in Washington which bears his Deritor.of ancestral imbecility, whose talkc.is-of | alive; and it is more to have grounds | it attractive boofstesks, potatoes done to a turn, | practicel results. R S pame, and which, under the enlightened care of dogs and borses, and whoge virtue consists in 8 | for-: hope: :that . tke pitiable - indifference | make libations of dolicious soup, display re- | - As s matter of fact, vast numbers of the con- | Prof. Henry, bos so grestly ministered to the contfaht readiness to stake - his own | (dua to pure ignorance) shown by the classically- | markablo fortility. in .sweots, an. extzeme fond- | didatés never get office or take. any.higher:de- | advancement and diffusion of science. You, sir, valueleas, - some_* fellow-creature’s | rained men of Lha“sf‘:asent goneration to the | ness for washing, and learn to grow old in one [ gree. Dut tho Gazetles give curious instarces of | have called on ma to respond to your m:t, reaches ' the ' ssme ' chtastrophe by B _another rosd. “ThoMillionin the Garzett,” a stoiy of Wariaw wnd Polizh passion, s con- i nearly all the ills i which tho flesh i now subs ject. Givan agood constitution, and the con- ditions of health or eickness ero almost wholly in cur power. The only truly natural mode of dying-is by old age. -How is it, he asks, that, although many of. the leading rules of sanitary science are g old that they were taught by Egyp- tian priests, and. that, of late, its area bas been It is interesting fo observe the growing ted dency of magazina writers to delve Into the. ADVENTURES AND BECORDS OF THE .WAR in thelr themes. There was nover- a widor feld offered the historian, the novelist, and the pos! but it i8 in sccordance” with humax natute that valuablo : * Profossor whose " 6eeth- | gecond great English poot-—which Chautor in- | fumil tho_tenacity- and persoverance - with, which the_ | English and American Beience,”. and I think tly enlarged, that disesse, deformity, dea! ] : Iog brain bolls orer gt last in_s medncss | contestbly is—will not be sharad by their se: | T e kR hopo is Harared srom o the most advanced age. | these facts show you how clogely they havo E:‘;d:u:epitude’prerfi! u::-fmmc;i's ev:rhi Bload yas. sty woky i s roplete with strange and- 'mfll"§ wisdom=tho | cessors, the youths and boys now training at FRAZER'S. One of tho later returns gave the following re- | been associated. XN inab the di the | ed" with cries ' of ® anguish. " Whils .the i young girl who, possessed of physical desire, | collge and —school. Tho 0 alo | The anthor of Premier and President " takes | gulta: . - S 7"} “Prosident . A. P. Parmard, in hia remarks on | Wo havo had in sbundanco the discoverars of the | 7 It SR O Rl YRe. e s i tompts o 8 lovs whose fruit is bittorness of sor--) and “use of the - excellent Clarendon | yp in Frazer's, the canses of the Knangst heads tho st with & Sew-tiai of 103, who HSCTENCE AND OUR EDUCATIONAL SYSTEN,” g&gf:fiz‘fl ‘-‘!:“‘;"”‘;’;. hiave 8ot, ROt Ca | senses, thero in no heed of tho fniginstive art © i of the novelist or the poot to make it more ap. arent, and thera is Do plessure in the fepro- -duction. - The wars of the Roses, the Bound-- ‘hesds, and Cavaliers, &id" not become the stapls of Eoglsh song aud'story uatil wheat sod fow- ers grown for many years over the scenes of their alaughter. In the same way, We may ex- pect that, a3 the pain of the suffering of onr War grows dimmer, the ‘pleasure’ of hearing'its,’, increas % earry out for the advantage of all, the- benofits which hygienio law is capablo of conferring. - Theso cannot be, in sanitary matters, ingenions con- trivances, by which a certain 8 of men can ‘manipulate health and Jong life into their fel- low-beings. Its truths, if applied at all, must Do mainly applied by those wio desire tts’ bene- fits ; or every one must -apply the science for himéelf or horself, else nearly all the knowledge there may be on the subject will-be as if it were, row—tho beguteons metron who, also loving, | Progs _editions _of ~ Chaucer ~Selections, - 2 . showed his vigor not anly by succossfully braving tho % iblis N i heds the calm of holy self-donial 'over an inter~ | Eardy English Specimens, Piers Plowman's | FRICTION BETWEEX THE UNITED SIATES AND vigor ot ouly by, ccoss{ully braving the | anid that onx ]::}g—csln‘b_lmhod l:d g.xmw;qnore‘fl course that elge had passed the bounds of friend- | Vision, etc., by Dr. Richard Morris and M. | ENGLAND. riage and muscular frame. A special memorial was | System of liberal education, embracing not only ship—gbove all, the poor, perplexed nature, | Skeat, prove this; and we may be sure - that.in He gays : devoted to his and he will no doubt receive soma |.the colleges, but the tributary schools of tho Shdeh, £all of noble pulscs and, lofty sepira” | tho noxt goneraticn, we ehall not heve ono of tho | - No other two nations pend so much time In ot ot 8 e iiate ot 91 ond of san | Jower grade as well, does not tend to form origi- H gations, Ia yot the of self and indecision— } ablest Professors of History in- England asking | asirming their friendship, and no other two na- | others ranging between 80 and 86, Shanting had 1o | nal investigators of Nature's truths; and the : thes are bt fes of the characters which, drawn') What -is Lesyamon?” ' evidently uncertain | tions find it 80 dificult £0 live on friondly terms. | less than soventeen sbove 90, and Afty-thres o that {t does not is, that it fnverta the nat- 4 with realistichand, yet Tovesl to us snidealist | whether that most sglm“fl old_English chroni-'| In fact we are the only two nations that over say | between 60 and 90, In Chekiang tharo wero four over | Xo%5 . 4 3 who aims at somothing higher than the repro- | clor, end priest of loy Rogis, was & atuffed | anything about their friendsliip, and the only | 90, and ffteen between 80 and 90. Bacchuen sent | ural ‘order of proceeding in the business of men- H on of mere externalism, who. is-.ever con- | bird, a fossil, or a new candle iike the Ozokerit. | 4o that have any difficulty in majutaining amic- | UP 0ne Sew-taai by purchsseaged 91, and ninety others | ta] culture, and fails to stimulate in season the hardships and heroisma’ reconnted will i s of the mystery of Iife znd the surpessing | . gi\omas Hughes, M. P. (*+ Tom Brown "), fur- | able intercouse,.. True, other nations fight, but | B0 agea ranged batweon 70 and 90, And lastly, 3 2" observati Th tem - that = . ot Dre : ) : x e Funan had the tablo number of sistoon | POWers ,of observation. Tho system 0 3 8.8 00d tells of : i eresy of payclolorica] devalopmonl | . | Disbes an sbridgement of ulecture delivered by | they Gonot,shonically penking quarrel, Thyare | Sahdiduiesshovas; botHor eschiog 9. Tt xather | bids tho aente, inquisitive mind of yauth | 20k, Here wo havo plaily beforo the mind tho THE “RETRIBUTION” oF THE WAR. 3§ But even & German Artist, IS, AT him to thé' Philosopliical Tnstitution ‘of' Edin- | Sometimes technically Yenomios,” but they would | ssd to consider ahat not omeof these 230 geotlemen, | 1 kogp ita eye on its book, and (it o, which. this scl. |. +A woman in tears, in s widowed hiomo, . 3 | &scend from his impartial beights to level his pen resent the imputation 'of being bmbitually any- | the most boyish of whom was 70 af least, succeeded on . e practical benefits are concerned, wi acl Bits down by & vacant hearth and board; < ] i eouinet sbases. Tor Spieliagen has s0' far burgbon . oo 5 - w+==- | thing buk -friends.- They are occasionally at Elu ‘merits. m:y 1vere x:" ph«;z:d‘l‘ Buf lmperla: not look out of the window, is not going ;ncu ‘ma) bac;pnble r;!l'wnlianmntgl; TcEka it | Ponders the puzzle that poverty bringe— ~ - * . i i 3 TIE PROBLEMS OF CIVILIZATIOS. wer, but it is never a war of words, ‘Thoy | clemency, more far-rexching than Royal prerogativedn | to §t tho eucceoding manhood—to * use | ‘profitable and useful, or, in_other Words, to | The problem of eking b oard: - ! 5 less learniod conutsics, sieps fn and justifies tho good | L0 4 Tiake it an appliod science i & community, ihat | «Tniwia b6 price AL ray s sorh mpes * forgotten Limself. asto be bitter.against ono | g qonyigerg tho-effectn which civilization has | sheatho their swords and shako hands, smooth | 1s8v1esned connteies steps fn and Justifes tho @o0d |'p7. 1o poantiful similo—to copa with the in- zlass alone—the wreiched Juukers, who, in % i their wrinkled fronts, and smile cacl upon tho | S Dt P 2 ¢ e . wronght upon England:. Most of his remarks, | Tat ¥ Patriotism and . prowess. Ony w0 | Sy ponsece 'fifisfl»fi“&fi!"’flfifi?fi&fli visible antagonist who enforces against us’ the “of o stail-fed courage, Lave arrogated: fo |00 ; . s S saclves from timo. fmmemorial . position | Particularly bis exhortatiors to tho young blooda | 7 {f5\ J7g nover so much At daggors’ pOTnta a8 | peasation i thaso foF 5o Tuny tHienaial fallarea ] . | mioutest rulos of tho gime, whother we know 1t monld b ludicrous if it wero not, so par- | Of . England. o . tum fthelr enérgies from | whep thoy sro siring and repairing thoir pacific | ~ Ting-jili-chang, who, as Goveror-General of | them or mot. Wo neod now more than ever O ot Geonin “Sjar | thelr dissipations to works of roforma; and | relations. We aro-slternately gushing and | m proviaco, has Zoached tho bighest rank, ks | minds active, belligerently ingulsitive, for Sei: 5 60 P10 bETk Y. Spiel | piy appeals to the' amassers of mighty fortunes | naggling, nay, wo gush and na simultancously. | naver taken the second degree. - He womld prob | ence ia but the break of day : bigon doseribes il othor elasses with & gtand |'y " pice” vy thiir silly. passion for, founding ‘| Our frioudliness for other countries, liko civility | ably insist npon the superior usefulness of prac- | * 1 somember a timo-it ia- ow loog gorte by— and st impatiility, . " |estates, and found instesd Cooper Inatitutes | 0 Privatelife, is taken quite ss & matter of | tical sagacity to oy amount of book-learning. | whon thls akeptical feling sa to tho poesibilifies A5 wo contingc, we_sre pained to find that 5 o 1oaall Teetd Opops ates | courao, and nothiog, theroforo, is said about it | - In Obina, theroforo, it 5 sppatent hat.-their | o2 thia skeplical focling aa fo tho posaibiities s ) ) . e a0 nat. | and Gomell -Universitios, liko their A merican | fho friendabip of ‘our (o conntries for ons | theary of selsction Tof Posts of- sathenity g | OfJarge sclentifi progre otlier Gorman Artist Bas fallen into tho sin of | feiiows, —are of no epecial interest to us. . But |- another i the victim of incesssnt protestation:” | off cg”g“ otally thros hl;mo»n 2 o .E‘::{i;g’ o axé.remug!g;: oten:,—::j fivpm ;h;: : H D O n called, mot withont | m e e e e e oty | _Onofruitfal causo of tho friction botween our | aloné, 1o bs Getarmiaed by compotitivo or soarch a1 worth his £me,to combat, T an onak: I D e o2 Garmany. T has the | and the acrus! state ot Britiuh induairy and so. | two countries is the"ignoraice’of tho English | ing. examination, tends -to stimulato the antiro | goticpublic_addross, the'discouraging notion i Saimo Jove for tho loss known. pleces of human | clety : o " |-t rogesd to what, was once ouz colony, bt | BAUER 12 thin alfction. The pootest cattr o | £ iturs has no onger- eny imporiant secrots , the samo power of microscopic description, | The “lasps and bounda" of our materialprog- is now the United Scates.” 8¢ least-0ne of his sons ks aducation which sy e e’lnfxl;l- Bcgrh::qflm::d h”f,'},," e mas “Thia s the Gout of the War o me.? ol A planter Jesns over's ruined gat Tk looka ot & descints st of ghtet— ¢ 3 fourns for the loss of power ad placa, - Thin is 1o eicn i ¥ pags oronns o : « o price that I pay,” : 1 Ths 12 tha Sost of the vk fo e i L - - - A Degro stands calm at the polis, and youhear ' A novel name read by the Judge from the list: #/The mills of the gods grind slow 2" No doubt; ‘But sooner or Iater they g1.nd us the grist,’ “This is the prize I hl?!'_fln,"hfl,ph-lbl % “Thia in the gift of the war to me.” ; 1 Josephing Clifford also finds s war subject for her story, * Marching with a Command,” which tells of the sad experiences of » march 'with un= ruly horses through the sun-heated Red River commanity wmust be mado, one. and_all, esparts in ita knowledge and in its applications. : This fast considerstion should lead educators fo bestow a pre-eminent importance o a thor- ough conrs of instruction in hygiene. It is all il enough for the youog to learn more, o less ‘about the philosophy of alectricity and magnet- ism, but, as the great majority of them in after- 1ife’ will, make very littlo, Lf any, usoof this knowledge, its importance practically. dwindles to véry umall proportions. - Wholly different is itinthe caseof sanitary Science. Every one can make of it in after-life_most important, and ‘ultimately momentous uges, nop_oceasionally; but during every day and_hour of Iife.. And, it thus applied, ita benefits wonld- transcend those of any otber -branch of knowledges it would the Union forcos for more than two years, where over 100,000 unacclimated soldiers wero sta- tioned, or passed - through the city, without & singlo'caso of tho disease originating there ; -that it is possible_ to stamp out the germs of Asiatic choler and_small-pox, and-say, ** Thus far shalt thou go, snd no_ferther ;" and taking, into consideration that tha average. duration of lifo has been extended during the pust two_cen- Fou thought that T hated it, hey 7 erhsps, then, 1 do, if that's what you'rs at— v But why are you ’ that way 7 ' , 'd o0k at Ben Butler if he came in my view— - T'va & hankerin' for seein’~bain’t you 2 Ob1 Xlooked rather curicus 7 Howso?- Eind o' white round tho gills ’d you say 7 But that, in our fam'ly—you cert’nly know-—. E That mekns that the devil's to pay | . ot most popular 1omance, ‘‘Das Europeische | for their consumption between the 1stof Janu- | that *“the Americans are so like onrselyes,” or & | how widely and profoundly this sentimen| arall: Silcvealeben, {ho moral drift of -which i8 | ary and tha S1st of Decomber, 1672, £359,575,730 | series of crackling opigrame over the ahatnco in | equeliy, . tho best sudlargost sonss of the | 20 Dessel had dotoctod tho pazallaxes of tho i cb¥ious, from its very title, and in which, truo | worthof foreign and colonial merchandiso, being | Amorics of everything “ English,” and the pres- | term, influences the whole nation, and: gives to | pig L le into space, and folt the influenco of 1o his purpose, but renegnds to Art, hb distorts, | an advauce of nearly £23,000,000 on the previons | ence therefors of everything ominous, every subjoct of the Empiro an interest in main- | be iasiis planet irembling, to use the bostital oxeggeratcs, and sctuslly weakens & causo in | year(£830,754,359), and of moro than £60,000,000 | We Amoricans aro,as s nation, the victim of | taining the existing institutions. Every family | fianocoo Peret Mol bt 4, 05 i Frice il nobie'and desexving, by committing him- | on tho yoar.18i0. During the samo twolvs | ono of our own habils of mind—goneralization. | certainly feols this interest, for thord are fow in- | Jasomeisess ; 16 Drapes, or Dagaerro, or Talbot, 7 1-um the outset to its {00 partial advocscy. | months onr exports of British and Irish prodncd | As.no country in tho world presents 50 inviting | deed which cannot point to an ancostor who ling | oy esied tha wonders of of actinism ; 1o ‘50 16" degencrates into tho special | gmounted to £255,961,000, showing an iucreasoof | o field for thé exercise of this thorougbly, Eng- | held offico or achieved distinction; o, if there | afaver or Joulo had laid & sura foundation' for i the artist inito the ono-iden-ed | £33,000,000 over thosoof 1871, and of £55,000,000 | lish-spesking propensity as ** Now ‘Amorica," 86 | be no such descondod honor, which has'not,80mo- |-Sis crand dactring of thie consorvation. of foreas : samd warm philanthropic heart ; but, like |“regs, to “which Mr. Gladatono roférs, aro, well The confusion that prevailsin England on this | enable him to compate f Lonors. -And |- I { Ditkens, ho 18 essontially ono-sidod. And—as | Tustrated by tho'oports of the Boatd of Trads | sabjoct of tho Euglian ia Amorics, is nowhore | e remtains contented 11 nis mrm Bt soiam: | For L L LS e frony | tend fomako.a man master of himself, of his | country. - - i is often the caso with Dickens—he wiites withi 8| for'1872. The poople of these - islands, accord- | worse confounded than in English books on this | kmowing that the path of advancement and bon- {;‘:E‘:&; e e P aniell o Birovo, o | Paine, deforniities, snd mostel afflictiona. . - Edward Porter Thompson sdopts the m&-u-n i purpose, aud folls short, therofore, of no-f ingjo Chichester; Fortoscue and Lis' ‘! Rogis- | subject. Opon almost nny book on the United | or-is open to bis progony~asopen tothom 86 | Hiean, had. given s an enduring a0urcs, of | wittiobs raecopidoration the fact that it Is |-style of postry, and sings ‘some ncouth bud |, wighest art pud tho bighest influonco. This i8 | trar-General,” < Accountant .snd Coptroller: | States writtan by sn Englishman and you ehall | to tho eldost son of the Sirst Minister of Stato. | glsetro-dynamis powor; no Ohm had taught us | Yoo tho power of ssutaty rogulations fo pro- | fecling versos about . - {4 sbandantly ‘ovident in his grostest sad | General.” sud other roturuing officers, importod | goo oithor & Pickwickian “surpriso over tho fact | It is difficult, perhaps, adequately to mosuro | i bo moessare wich & power when obtiined ; | Loi oagn. taiuanos Antiag the iats ,f“‘”’l‘;; TheTug? Tt S Rt ¥ i % i " NOW, W ! B i £ - 5 .- | over thoso of 1670. This'ia of courdo only | no other is Bo remorsclosely subjected to it. As | 'son, brother, or connection sbont to try tholr fuds sutkiond 2 0 7 i 25 1a givon only & eubordinete position. | ono item, though tho -lasgest, in ths | we aro fhblast peopIS in tho. WeLL b0 ba fken | B e e e ['no upenter ud unravalled. the intricacies of | turies from nineteen fo thirty-ono years, by 8 | Tl s semeben s raon - i Yio “ hae perception, but noinstinct. Hepsints | Wealth producing ~ and - accumulating | ‘at ono sitting, so-*wo aro - the most diatorted- | sanguine hope of success. s o kel e el had ridden dona | BlOW sppreciation and imperfeot application”of : : : 4 3 powers of tho country. - So far from | Jooking-nstioh in Hie woild when ‘sirnck from iharor = e ol i sanitary lIaw alone; taking these, and many | No? Didutlook viclous, you think? Whatthent warvelouely well what ho soes, but bo hes no | BIGCR 0y yikely to decroase, it would scem to | ‘the negative of an itimerant and - astantan: XROSK FKLXTLERERAIRS the Alps on tho backs of the glaclers sad proved | other facta of o liko’ character, into considera~ |“Kind o' sorrowfal, hey 7 Titeago, . P power to foel towdrd the invieible.” be much more probable that the rato will in- | eons” photogrephor.” - Ho turns his camora | Wo make theso two seloctions : e B arcon ™ of . oegens. donalon | tiom, it Goes mob seom too much to_say | EorA(ouryeury Cunpsigner with mim - Heyse is one .of Eubulo-Evans' favorites. | crease st least as rapidly as heretofore, in spite | upon us, pulls out his watch, uncovers - T D o JMOONTENT, 5. ) ants - 6. Bebiaparelli orS Newton, haq | that it is within the power of ‘any one with & | Tnaves story to tell on e man 7 Heyas i tho vriter who was the eubjoct of a | of tho lsbor war which is ragiog a0 Ditterly |tho lense, clasps on the cover sgain, and AL basaand aclfah Susontent’, i | Dut thia harness of gravitation upon the way- m&de?tely fwaf?"zt“h?:an-m €3 ;vjhi;herps Who can stiow's manyscarsas Teanl - y the adoption | there wo are—tho ontire 89,000,000 of ns ward movements of the shooting-stars; no Mal- | o} Gio0%e fo cut shor! ot hio will ogtand | Well, there's no nse o dodgia’ &, Tom, It e 0l ok oodla. | Amongst us. Tn-the past year, q : - GSign a5, who comperod L i | o ot avenion, i oue fon-vering dnrey |undor o magnotly atuics” ot” 600 | Iok bad prosentod s aieligible heory’ of vol > 21 35 of 2.0 : i Tont death of disease, or whathor ke will extand ted Gierman eritic, who comparod Lim with | B0 05 3500 g Likely o bo superseded, | Shakers; and under the control of tho Irish, Dht, cowirdice snd Tow destra fakEsdprefini o sn 1iielilsihle Hoory, ot Xl i tho powers of his body o’ their normal limits, ‘and so die from tho affects of old age, or from I sometimes do feel awful queer 1 don't talk of i¢ much, ev'n at home, * i gei, Klng ¢ and_the producing powér of the country | whohave abandoned political affeirs boceuss il with wnrest; : i ; Bat gt Sidys 3 38 S B - b i 5 P 2, 3 Ytwixt d Idont ¥ agen: ia like a grand antiquo statue, | 110G B Goifoa Wil thousands - of. | (hey eanmotcontral hem absorbing and. gels " i, the gouls longings that gipire torrors; no Jirohhof had furuishod . key 10 | the gradual weating out of the most iiparfoct | T aid ook f the feg o By : I ¢ Lops, this or that inforior momber | worimen will be loft fres for ofhor oc- |'ting absorbed bytho Colts; carrying aloft the ForTa SR B . g0 of stellar drift; no Hoggias, or Secehi, of | O7gaD of his body. -~ p With a kind of & mist in my e7e. 1+ o Lole—t . Heyse, on | Gobo'orthe iron-master, other inventors ara | whils nothing but the fossiliferous remaing of e on, da, - ¢ p ea.supports in comparative aflucnce T : conirars, fa 3 modern siatiatte exquisitely | GGing for ofber ndustries, If tho past twenty | that extinct specica. Or, if I may b indulged B e Bot sontad to outer tho sccrot chambrs of tho sun, | af Toast, 75,000 persons with thelr families. Tho | No-met meehvassmtrsie oot aoet Y00 401 Gushed in otler respects, but whfortunately | vourd havo been ogusl to the previous ffty, sud | in & change of metaphors, the popular Engheh Tul thio Universe thou hust thy share, - -, | (10 Comets, tue fxod stars, and, te nobuleo; 10 | physiciana and dentists amount in round nam- | There aro thousands who ses i that way, : without the hoad < Tho two -together (as Mr. Gladstono calaalates) | books on tho United States aro kaleidoscopes, in Be not afreid, but trust ; B theo wolot - o T hod dome the | CoL®; sccording to the Inst census, to 55,000, and | ‘Thongh, like me, they have littla ta axy. . Eis owy juigment of Heyas famore roseate | equal to ths 180 years sinco Julius Comear,t o | whiel, a8 woturn ovor tholouvos, wa seo Shafors | ;. Thou vl sufer nothing unjust. e e oo boranll ad slouo fhe | the druggists, pharmaceutiste, and patent-medi- | xor, 1 eaume of a patrtat - : i 4 E v Lies Toyse's style a peculiar and deli- | alinost.cortain thal the noxt ten years will in | tumbling into the arms of Free-Lovers, Mor- | * L e tho heat abeotbiag powers of saritarm | CiuS yendors, o sbout 20,000 more. Add to all | S Lo e e 00 Fiag ! @ which absolutely defies translation,’ thoir turn equal the past twenty. mons cracking heads with * Second-Coming- How the madxia Ladics Snubbed Mru. | bojies, or shomn Low the tremors of the other | (oo fln:nmm:e° ooy “’chmm i:ufim mm:: %.h.;lx‘;g:::h\a:gm; ;mné__ St * But this enormous prosperity Las not bronght | ites,” end Comanches grabbing. at the pig-tai . Amndens,. ' 5 shake asunder the clementsof yapors, In short, of the Chinego, the London News. that period of presumed gcientitic “omniscience [ Ho thinks it isextremely doubtful whether see- From the firat, the hoatility of tho grandees of | gooms now, as we look back to it, but the faint from the effocts of preventable diseases, such as TlE T felt that it emblem'd a power - © .. -. 1 the dea, the blind, the insane, and the imbecile | That Tespected 3fadrid Correspondence of ‘my peaple no more, 1o natbor with who hocould be com- { y o inace: pared in such © :uanner as to oneblo the English PR . : b “foim oo intallizy i i Take the first test, the relations botween om- | it d hother see- T B ? o t Mot | agviums, and the aggregata outlay far avoidable : s g L e o dos noy ol imaet. fm b | plogers and amplose, ias dhe tmmengolyL | ing counsleay adventago o theperson who | BEAD, S 09 0Nl oo | dThing of o of gloions Whorem, ol | ol vshinesanorsons proporins. © ¢ | Bt S e, Uk E-i! 3 cronsod production,. the rosult of. thelr joint | wishesto writo abont it. If it is true that his- | F5%, 15 offor to mitigate it was specdily rpcog- pl% ohing its mer e P -P® 8P~ " Mr. Parke Godwin, of the New York Et m‘nz:b'#:fi ;&;a.:.‘ '.Er:“g::‘l'“ cx T over standing in tho 4 i ns, - with the ~Eemo | Work, jmproved thiesa? Tho industrial war | torjuns in orderfo bo trustworthy must havo | toea To T hopelors,. Tha® court. cynsisted THE D1AS OF PATHIOTIEN sod calm _desp-watching | hioh bas broken oat atcesl and widh increaiod | g pact orlot in tho events which thoy marrato, | wholly of now pooplo—Liborals eunobled by the | 1\ o vcpt i ® T IITRR e eves, and, for tho most pari (for he is | bittorness, in England, is the answer. Thirly | Flepiae : 2 ooplo. A strange device of B a iopeful bod Joyans)y i tae piacid | Tears ago tho old spmall-mstor eystom. wea sl | it may bo maintained with no loss plausibility B D vata v sdoptan to judicate 3o | dealing with social phenomens, ssys Herbert Post, was to have spoken st the Tyndall ban- quot on “The Press.” He chose, fays the edi- tor, to throw his toast behind him, snd under- To go fghtin’ each other like heat - 2 ‘Cause we couldn't through the sams glasses ses then, BoT ook to the “So-called” at first; . svile zpon the lips. S0 ke stands, tho vory | S1oug in many trades; thers was not s einglo | that thereis ouly one porson worso qualified | b2 icer' it theyconsidered bor an interloper, | Bpencar in the ninth chapter of * The Stady of | took to tesch the scientific gentlemen who were. | ‘And * I had suy vigor and pluck, : enbodimeat of humsn gymapathy, novor rising | amalgamated " trades socioly 1n - exisfonco; | for writing about o country then the porson e e mantills fastencd to high foriores, sficmog,._.. ‘Whoavar atariaing each & soutl. | prescnt how far they ought t0 go fn theiriny Det at her best and her worst— = Lo (bo sogels oz sinking o the doriley bt Al | e O e acrwomat knowledgs of thara, | "1 knows Dotling sbout it s0d that is tho | sholl comb was, in tho old. days, the. wnivemal | pice % 6 or countey, righ o wrong,” ia Ges. | quiries, and fo atake ont the ground within | S Reieer S b SnCE LS S O e od. A i e person who knowa a little sbout it. boad-gear of Sponigh Iadies. Tho grand ladios- | Yitato of “ that equilibrium of feeling™ fndis- | which al is legitimate, aud beyond which all is | il £ cams tad saw your bissted grin.] ‘Bat the struggle's long over, Tom, now; E E And we've all the same Government still 3 = | ‘We've no thought of :nu!-hnl:tnnen how 7 s ’ | | | i i &:aved to o6 and welcome all’ thet there is | NOv; in almost overy trade the large shops have t tho tion, it is 5aid, of. the Marchionoess R iz of good and Robla ; preparcd topity, s, | Svollowod tho small: the big maofasturars | Lyssstruck with the angwer of thelate Dr. | 85 410 oo™ saflor knows as Duchess of Morny | pensablo for socioloical success. Beforo ons I : ‘;‘c.:; g;neyq:c::: o?‘n i\: sometimen to | re A an e organized I groat in- | I ssked him Why he who had made o many | —detorminod to ,:evxva ln.us cgntmm;, and to ap- | can take achromatic observations of social move- i Barion, TOr | e dustiial ermies, whilo tho individual pcarcely | maps of America bad not visitod it. Hogaid | poarin I A . "R,‘h; aftor- | ments, he must strip himself of “all personal i idatthew Drowne had 3 word to ladies, knows hig emplogor by sight acknowladges no | ho ' never isd any difficalty in making mapa of | oo drivo in the Prado. Tbeday arrived. Tar-| 4" fational - prejudices and prepossessions. 13 THESE HARD TIMES," xelationsbip babween them, excapt that which is | & country uotil ho travaled in 1t. Defore ho | fsian bonoels gsvo Biach o, tha iite mantills | o0 5 o P B e T R o0 busbzads liavo been bosten in the rsce | discharged woskly st tho liolo jn the pay-ofice, | vent Bast bo made maps of it with easo; sinca | SCherOletiE, B0 L i0 D8, PO oreipec | o PR B BT L ORe SO ility s . through whieh the are thrasl alerk, { hisreturn ke had not made ono to suit him. It & e ditelybesoms sordidbe- | ASRRBoEazms o EBY 8 lerk | e a0 it Amerions if B should soo tho cone Qugan, s sho droso, notcod the strange clisugo | ed that tho. red men of America should give e B e aueh ovnament aa | _ Domostic service, which aliould b, ind ua- | $57 e Would never 'be satiatied with Lia maps | Of fashion, 4nd rusentls polgied 16 ont to Ler | sruy 4o the Caucasian; o the ancient Britons ths mpholsterer aud drossmaker cxn provide for | doubtedly at one’ time was, so iwheritamce, 8 | OFdbl L Shat g6 ‘meant. Had the mattor ended thers, 1 | Were secrificed to the Romans. To the sociolog- : it.. A person of an elegant mind_c:n pmng- m;:g '@,‘1‘;”,”:.:’,3".13‘}’.3‘;‘, rggn ;hnr;':f;e;:?; seo of the country the more intalligenily they | would have been Well. Tho paltriness of fho | ical mind those wero cloarly steps toward a highér * gestions of culture and refinement into what ace | B 8 St o Manter and " | can epeak of it, The most accurate Book aboyt | motive took away tho ating of the slight. ' When | life; but isit to bo supposed that the patriotic i i i i 1 tied ings.” +who has 1 e T ~ i indi- it § i ed < poor surroundings.” A woman maid snd mistress, liv jndoad fofother, bub | tho United Siétes I ever resd was ~written by a | tho ldics of the Spanish noblosas chodo to indt | wecumaoh or the early British chiefa took any i I I FANTASTIO PSEUDO-SOIENCE, Some of Mr. Godwin's sentences were choice specimens of the picturesque English of which Ke is 8o fine a master; as, for instance, this: .Thero_is auother of these outside teachers of science, but this one is entitled to the highest réspect~though I think he rides a hobby beyond the capacity of the creature to carry—who con- trives a vast process of cosmio evolutions, who tells na that s grest while sgo—10,000 years—no, ahundred million of millions of millions :;ggeu‘s Shall we go on in bitterness, 5 Qu children {mbibe the asma feeling, -And keep widening the breach, ’stead of healing? * | Now, in truth, T don’t ke it, to feel e Tee o Country, or, what is the same, Can't love, and rejoice in ita weal— ° - Can't take pride, as I did, in its name— That my children—it hurts me, X b May iwrays look coldly apon it ‘What ? A family quarrel, ’d say 2 L) lex "0l ut ma] Bo right about that, o T sgo—a nebulous gas was diffused through the loamt—as every woman sould learu—to maks | J 00" ommon life, 50d would- seomto bo | Eentleman who never eaw our ehiores, ud ho was aviacds of the blaeet blooar ook 8¢ | cuch view of it? Mr. Spencer backs up his as. | Lymennity of spice, which frst twisted fizelf T own dresses, can get’ on wonderfally Yol e K Fy they were S| X ” g Hrre into a solar system, then into l i pus up wall-puper, make picture-frames, and do | Rew SrEADEAT S Bides fr 1oad and crack away if ho would contribute to | & Spsniard, they only told the royal conple and | 0u8. mghfl gwe ack upon tho French from | spirales, into animal motions, into human | ° o ol S, other things that belong to the ornamenting the blinding masy of pyrotechnical gomeraliz- | the Spanish people what both kmew well already. | their undue self-canceit: vortices called societies, into iliads, parthenons, | .00 T';‘oe‘;-‘-‘”"{‘;':?g: P, T thh and Shakspeares, and at last into' s grand phil- life, cen do_ withont much help from the | - Another evil tendency s the gathering of pop | 4figng which make up. oar knowlodge of tho hu | But Sagasts, who was Prima Minigtr at thetimo, | _Observe what has resulted from that exaltod ons wh o8ophy of Evolution—the crown and consumma- conld not seo tha t dignified indifferenca waa the | ides of French power which the writings of AL magazines s loast, reappears with the. usal. holsferer and bhis myrmidons. And both the | glation about city centres, which, while bringing | map family, - And thy Ay d i : ; sy npdghh;rg;;m‘lg:;nwmflndn koon plessuro | yho gifferont clssses of the commuaity nearor | susp fhors .&pciflmfirfiim&&pfih&flu bost fetort. Ho_sought out » number of o | Thiers &d 5o much to mainiain wad iacrosso. | slouof ths whale; which il be true, thaugh v};‘:gg;‘;‘:{;“;; N M;’;gafflm Spparty beinf trade tyranny. = 9 i readers he wi o and i est-kns ome! disteputable character, en we remember hor causing undervalua- @ birth strikes me t e Ldoacg onoh other physically, drives tham further spact | Tetdore o will kuvo. gnd the moro contusion e | PSUEROTE WM o mabtlinaend tovpeier? | tion of othes pations. it Tod o Slarogard of | nA 50 tretnandons s peanian Y of 0 lug D O N L i mkens teilors; fartturo-foll, paper-bangers, | 207 P Jed I whitamacts S Bl 0 workingman in general, are as tyran- | 8¢ = St Our common lan i shell combs, found for them handsome private | theiridess and an ignorance of their doings— B oy aiman I, conal, o s s | S0y ooty of civlition™ dravs e o o g oo | carrisges, shd suddenly turnad tho. good-for- | whon wo remember Bow, in. tho lsto war. ha 211 think it scorn to make the best 3f small and | more and mors people to the great - contres of T shavieen. nothing cortege on to the Prado to mingle with | French, confident 6f victory, had maps of Ger- goor matecials. Infact, they deliberately and | population, o when it hes gou them there it | countries, scts aa both a cause and an effeot of | the demes of sncient lineage and reputstions | man tarritory but not of their own, and suffered contemptuously ““scamp” the workmanship, if | seems inevitably to divide them more and mors | their friction : untarnished. It was sauve qui.peut with the | catastrophes from this and other kinds of unpre- ¢he material and the occasion altogether are not | into separate communities. The rich and poor | If “blood and iron” cemented the German- | noble Iadies. Madrid took np the coarse and |.paredness; we Bee what fatal evils this reflex tip $o thoir notions of the dignity of their eraft. | are further apart than ever. The arger & City | spasking States, the English-speaking nations | undignified joke. Some of the women were | Belf-esteom may produce when in excess. Bo, Tn theso daye of servant-girls’ trades-unious, | grows tho more sharply the iine in drawn. Tho | are estianged by bile aud ink. Ths common | mobbed as they drove home in s splendor to | o0, on stadying thoy Wy in Which it as innc. sud exiravagant and shiftless domestics, he | BeW le‘u!en are occupied exclusively by the | Janguage not only concoals thought, but reveals | them so unwonted, their mantillas wero torn | enced Frenchthonght in other directions. Look- hinks tresses would find it conduce 0 ground being too valusble to waste on | choler.” The San Juan boundary difficulty could | off and the tortoise-shell combs serionsly mal- | ingat -Crimean battle-pieces, in which French sol- fhsinks thet mis oo to d-rent rtain gl e el i sl a ine respectability if they w it those who can pay besvy ground-rents. | not have survived all but two or three of the | trested. It is not ce: but that some of the | diersareshown to haveachieved eversthing~look- sconomy and genuin Pt 'Y Were | To these quartars migrate, gradually but uu,rel{‘ +statesmen of both countries, who first under- | Iadies were bandled after the same fashion; any- | ing at a pieturelike Ingres’‘Crowning of Homer,” to do more of the household work themsclves the ‘m";hfl“ of labor, merchants, professionsl | took to settls it, if they had not been compelled | how, Bagasta’s coupe abolished white 'man- | and noting Franch PoEts conspicuous in the fore- Oxly it muat be bogun, in good time , that Is, | men, who used Lo live fn the old quariers side by | to use tneir common langunge in sottling it. If | tillas on the Prado. No one' insinustos that | ground, while the fignre of are in one Lo migtress must be distinctly before-hand witt? | &ide with the pooror classes. s the Wachington Treaty had been composed in | eithier the King or Queen Was privy to a piece | cornar is balf in and half ont of the pictarens $l maid. or there will be a sfruzzle for empire, | Enclish®wealth and industrisl pre-cminence | sboriginal American, ** ynderstanding”. would | of retalistion of a character 8o duestiongbls. - | resding the names of great men of all nations Mr, Youmans, who has a talent for controversy, .28 Dr. Holland Iately learned to his cost, does not stop {0 bo charmed by this tortuous elo- quence. He retorts: ‘The foregoing passage gives an interssiin clue to Mr. godfin'a Olfi‘;lta of the valae of thg universe. Itisnot worth production by so tedi- ous a process as that of Evolution ; bat, if got up in six dsys—indefinite periods being excinded —3r. Godwin would probably allow ih&t it is worth cost. Estimates of the natural world will of course vary with the knowledge of it. The first valuation was mede in times of blank ignorance of Nature, and still harmonizes with 4 state of mind. ~ Yet Mr. Godwin's position Home,” Bernard; * Thi ‘%( Dt 'g s 3 The Ne Amertsa,” by W. P, Morkas Spriog %;-." by B. Hathaway; ! The Railroad Qusstion.” 1Y . . Bonney; “Edinburgh and Its Assouis tions,” by D. . Btephens; * Art and Love,” Y Thomss B. Chard; ¢ The Death Penalty,” bY: John 3. Binckley’; ‘“After the Piouearsy ':; : i “Books and’ Literature aoZonr childrenmay nevr have '{3‘3’: ;‘; s served a neighboring clergyman fo Ation, ¢ but wheg oy graw-ap it vill besoms= Ehmg for them to boast that their fathers were Rot membars of the Forty-second Gongress.”