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THE CHICAGO DAILY TRIBUNE: SUNDAY, JUNE 1, 1873, 10 - -_— e leys of Bwitzerland ; for hardly any valley is | forth to the light of 1873. It will bo observed GROTE, THE HISTORIAN. | tories of th;chn-G Z e ot of soms of i X - i aco-German o " | our courts, i were | is moro and more moving onward in this | le; . 3 [ CHRISTIAN PATRIOTISM. Our conrte, Mhal thoas vidlatlans ol Ly e | i rtesion o without one or more’ transverso- barriors of re | this version bears some_fesemblance to tho ono tories of fh hour of midnight ; and therefore it was thatonr PRESERVING AND PURIFYING THE NATION sisting material, over which the river flowing | that hasso long occupied & prominent. place in. —~M:FJ0 "G Sh FEoo city authoritios put info execution the law al- | by bringing individusl man info the love and | through the valley once fell as a cataract. Near | spelling-books, but it is more beautiful and pa- sy ek oot i g fut York, one of tha eervice of God in Christ. That this is true, is | Pontresins in the Engadin, there is such & case, | thetio in ita tone, If it does not exhibita A Memoir of Him by His w:’ o pwwm‘:; 0,41 ;muflwu; ¥ < rammar DALY of P % . i i) saloons on. The Evils Threatening Socie {roady on the statute-book closing ted | manifest from the violence and bittorness of | the hard gneiss being mow worn awsy to form a | Galahad purity, it shows a childish ingennons- d the R i by e g, o bt o o e 3 clowe.of | Rostlity to hor progzesss for, when tho Chturch | gorgo thiongh whick tho rivor from tho Horter. | noss that will 4l forth the warmest admiration Widow o T 100 seerenres of, tno Mis- an e Remedies Sn'encly o o o ight. Toda not domand | sieops, Batan nover troubles it Ttis aieo mani- | atoch glaclr ruahes. Tho barrer of o Kirohot, | of tho devoted couniry. Hero i 1s in all s * thia ho wil follow with. s Borsioreriond for for Them. of religious fanaticism ; it is not, in any secuse, | fest from the growing union between Christians | above Mesringen is also & case in point. Bohind | besuty: - e Tank Vonbilir o B P ish-French-Mo- i ‘52 offort of those who belloyo In the sellglons | of difereet e e e st | aoaorer Th e o 1 s | fntuoe Tebont op e e, FFpodfather to the 7 —Bishiop Caldnec's mow bk Wil ontin s % cra to | incronsing spirit of e o or red ita 5 {athar of his country, * Ben; s | T3 : SV o & % an observance of the ol balD, b ot ot labor T pat " forh” for he | of water, Here the rock” bewg Mmestons | father s o soapboter, nhe is soiag s grow | I8 Intimacy with Young John Stu- Chromn nd legmed dissertation on “ThoPre- confarm fo thels {dast not one sing ol G R M T agencies of the | was in grest part dissolved, but added to [upand call down fire from hesven. Yours i or by thio en. Yours is Been pilerel of fhis ¢ 4 ’ the | thia we had the action of the solid partic | not, yob you are not wholly nninsiructed, my art Mill, fiéfi:i’:;f&'&%,‘%fl“g}‘::gp,‘:flgf, geady for ; - s A Discourse Delivered by the Rev. i idi i i + | Bivocated thoso monsures, and the chargois | Church, the tidings of rovivals all uver t > F infiamo, by falsehood, thepassions | world, and the great numbers who aro being | clos carried along by tho water, each of which, | som, in the science of chemistry. Tell me, then, B 4 I oy e g T Abbott E. Kittredge, e A s ibeset 1o | aiied pubiicly to he Lot Never, T bolieve, | 88 it sirok th Sock, ohipped.{t smay 1ike the | sinco T Lava now lsached: toate. chersi-nen orgtection Against Fire,” upon which the sa- obeervo the law. It ia & question kolely of sinco onr Lord ascendod to glory, and the | particles of tho sand-blast. Thus, by solution | ashes for more than o weok, Is he liquid resdy | The Romance of His Lo e o oo engaged many years. His doo. PUBLIC BAFETY AND OBDES, showers of grace usheredin tho Pentecostal dsy, | sud mechanical erosion, the great, chasm of the | for tho addition of soap-grease?” The hero of 3 Ve ‘and | ke, ho cantends, If pitt in practice, jrould pro &% the Third Preshyterian Church, Chis | ang of the right and duty of the law’ to protect | never was the Church of Christ, notwithstanding | Fensteraarschlucht was formed. It is demon- | Monmouth, Trenton, and such, let up foraspace Marriage. e |y Greg in ciriga. . The publiowill of 0, on Sanday Eveniog, {isctins 11 o salo” of boor Gocs Dot an- | defecions boxe and thero, o izong, o asivo, | trabl i e waier which fows at the,bol- | upon e sfck o wis whiting, to'zeply, with : fohis contlastong, - 2roow Befora they ruth ! €350, y » aanger the proparty and lives of the community, | 8o warm with love to Christ, and fired with the | toms of such'deep fissures once flowed at the [ all the ingenuousness of childish ignorance, T . Hay 25, 1873. {hos this biverage should be exclndad from pro. | paseion for souls aad, by those checring tokions, | 1ovel of what is How their edges, sud tumblod |+ Father, I cannot tell Iye." After tha b5 | Mrs. Groto has published the first volaito of | dnnTGTE400% 8 meinber of Congress who Tibition under our prosent laws, which do ‘ot | And, above all, by the promiso of our Great | down the lower facca of tne barriers. Almost | passed into history, o sl oF e volame of | distinguished himself byalways writing the namg forbid the sale of papers, cigars, swoetmeats, | Captain, we know that the hour is hastening on, | every valley in Switzerland furnishes exsmples N e | & memoir of her distinguished husband. Itssp- | of tho Bupreme Being with a littleg. But thg ' TvatTT, Chounicles, Tat chapler, 1ith and 120 | icu on the Babbatheday. And imowing aa Lo, | and that its duwn has already come, whon ths. | of this kind; the untensbla hypothesis of oarth- : pearance at this moment is singularly well-timed, | SPectalor; in an article on *'The Literary Sin of werses. froth ixavols in Germany, {bo-habits f s poo: | kingdoma of this world shall bo Glrif's, whon - | quakies, ance 5o ropdily resorted o In accounting RUSSIA'S CAVALRY. —for, among the grotip of young Utilitarian | pioguiaricly, Poiats ot the foct that Mr. Morley, A true Christian patriotism will bo alive tothe | ple, and the innocency to them of this liquor, I ALL GHALL ENOW THE LOKD, or thodo gorges, boiog now for the most part philosophers that it describes, is throughout the two volumer of his “ Rouseesn, ol mhion fhreaten socioty, and lio to the | have slways felt that some oxception should bo | when righteousnoss shall run down cur streots | abundoned. o 'produce the Canons of Westerm | The Horsemen of the Czar--Marvelous 2 ginien tha canital latter 40 noarly. all words fn i O hace oamnzes which will | made by which our German eitizons could meet, | like s river, and whon violence shall no more be | America, no other cause i neoded than tho in- Eidin S s e o | phich Englishmen_ are sccustomed to find it {fearlons advocacy of tho 3 it thoy desire, and enjoy their mationsl beveraga | hoard within our borders, for equity, truth, and | togration of offects individually infinitesimal. Tiling asder date o€ Mo A Mo was thagyoungest in yesrs, but junior in | Not onlydoes he writo «christians ™ and *trin. iremove the causes of alarm, and will tend to { 3, o eI T SO piP ST "Hie leadors | love shall roign in every ‘soul, aod #ballbe the | And now Wo come to Nisgara. Boon after | . ot of May % of areview held | woight and forco of mind to none. An instance | 7y’ Pa¢ hhas “belief in £0," tho “idea of- e strength and purity of the nation. And I | of this nationality clasp batds with the rum- | priosts of the soul beforo the inuer shrino of | Europesns had takon possegsion of the country, | in 1t. Petersburg inhonor of the visit of the Em- | of this was his correspondence, when only 12 | B°%p&S% i has il youe atantion to somo of thoto evls, s2d | aler, Gad sond op s vid ry of porsonalvighis, | Chistian ™ ©C TR tho conviction aposars to have risen hat 45 | poror of Germesy to the Gaar, thecorrespondnt | searsof g, with Grors, on ssbjots of the st Pfi;fl. i 02 e forimer, e e “that a man can sell what Lo ploases, and whed o, then, 3 chang o river Niagars below the | of the London Daily News sdys : abetruso kind. Mill, Grote, and thelr zadical | © Has Ghristianity Beea Favorablo to Treoliecis. 20 their remedy, that our patriotism msy be g e ploases,—every true Jover of his country must flowers, sweet and fragrant, on the | F: had been excavated by tho cataract. In The great attraction of the day was the cav- companions, formed what they called the | Al Progress?” t answers the question in the &ctive and earnest in deed a8 well 88 in word. ; 3 f poad 5T A Bociety eatablished on suchideas | graves of those who ~died to eave | Mr. Bakewell's # Introduction to Geology,” tho ; z y And T remark, firet, we must guard more | YNSYNGL 4207 T bacomo a sob of sival | & nation's life,—scatter them tendorly. lovingly | prevalonco of thia botief hoa been refercol to Sy ond that (af surpmséod anyil A8 mich T | ¢ Dtilitarian Boclety,” snd msed to meet | DOBBHYE . oo e ~igilsatly #ndl antagonisiio desires. I have » personalright | Yecalling tho’ great debt of gratitude which, | it ia exprossed thus by Prof. Joseph Honry in | wore, of contee, the Loraes Trmesarercolch®® | at the banking-ofice of Mr. Grote, Sr, in | noyes Bmpiiustrsted edition of tho Bronid 3 THE PURITY OF THE HOME. s 8 citizen to do what I please, and to | under God, We owe fo their valor and heroism | the Transactions of the Mb‘ni‘ Institate : “In | horgemanal ip of the riders. Can anybody exs Threadneedle street. They did not, as ,wu :(?Dn lm(cm;l 1"&31 by flgn pnbl?;fi‘mnp b The mation is an sssemblage of hamen; the | sccumulate property in the way 1 ploste ~ | even untq nesth, Vlob fs nof oper up sgiin tho | viewing the position of the Falls and the fes- plain tho peculiar charm sbout Russian horaos ? | popularly suppotod, spend heir time ih'tho pe- | Geskella ifo of Ghariotto. o - “ Commonwexlth grows ot of the femily; the | P7OVAR.L o 2on WECE TN BRI FHele: | encos of the past, but, In the sweot charity and | to b improssed with the i e.éfi;@?}:’fiwfi B 1 hont prosuning to snswor my own question, | rusal of Adum Smith's “ Wealth of Nations," | ,_~—Japanoso Lieraturo is not sbindsat. Twen- nxdional strasture rests upon the hearthatone 85 | byt aring siones through my neighbor's window | love of the Gospel, clasping hands with thoo of | nral raceway has been formed by tho_contimied | with fratnara phre orang e be s o0, S2%%0% | reading 1t backwards a8 well ua forwards ; but | 5 Ouk books were published in Japxn last year, = foundation ; sad, when you stuly tho istory | i vrong, and tho o zastrang mo. 1t sy bo | overy soction n ouk browd land, ot s emomber tion of the iroesfiblo Nisgars, snd that tho | Rorse: b maks nin bestiories (ol s, | UieY dobated froely and thotonglly every topio | occumtoms S oty Loy aione- Withond ‘of the growth of nations, yon will find thatthe | & pocuniary advantago fo mo to leavo s opeaing | fi greater conflcts wlich ard sl boforo us; | Fall, bepinning at Lewiston, Lavb, i tho conrsa | Litoed =" amg o Byersa Oy TUBIUL, wm | e sonil scomomy Sshvas hre, | Sacoption they relate o what wero, (i Isely amcleus was the family; then the clan compris- | in é’:; ';kul:; frgfi: Ly amlie bk D ] e o ;-:;? e fo b wan “;:g:«; o; e ,gwr;hbwk the rocky strats to thoir pres- | trivances which, in more civilized countries, | up by the discussions of that timo. In o few foreign e!efnonim works on chemiatry"n:a 5 ing the family and its dependents; then the | SRTRERR N0 BILOEMOR, LD O (U Co0R0Y | {ove of cpuntry. and bring it into an ontiré aile: | Obarles Lyell by M Tt oy S Cunvod bY 8ir | orush the spirit Gut of tho poor beasts. In what | yeurs, young Mill was the seknomledged centes | PISics four on geography, £wo on Ameritan 5 tzibo; and lasfly the nation. In the early his- | Tifrc’glvoerine would Do great pecuniary sd- | gituco to the Ring of Kinga; that Ho will not | Prof. Ramsey, iadeod by almogt al of ihoss why | C4ick country can ong seb horscs like those | or' ¢y Thrssdneedle-street philosopners, who Eforsaad thres ot dvillaw, . Sory of Nomo, tho fireside was the most sacrod | vantage to many, and 1 have & personal Tight to | only blend all our differont nationalities tnto one | have inspocted the placs. hich dash slong the Nvoskn 8o {reo, and fresh, | U340 wugat with bim evory ocsing. from | of oy SiCr Hockefort is said to be the attno Epot on esrih, There were two guardian deities | manufscture, eofl, or uso it ; but, as & member | a8 American, but blend all hearts into ome | A connected image of the origin and proy o smos Woasoter counfry do they | ot it 8 from | of the snonymous novel now running in Rappel, - a | of society, the interests of the community | as Christian; and thus msy we go forth CRrr gy B¢ it i QV “fi:}eu ave such a glossy skin, such swan like necks, past 8 till business hours, to dis- | entitled ¢’ Les Dopraves.' hares and Punates) who watched over it, sud | Of sociely, tho interests ot the community 8 e ey X 0 ol o cataract is ceaily obtained. ng | such delicate limbs? And in what other country | cuss the topics which were o 'be trested of | —Leconte s Lisle, author of *[Poemes Bar- radition informs us that, for 170 years, there | ;) ipite this article, because it is dangerous to | fearless of the face of man, loyal to the Divine fi‘,’“’*g‘"‘“’ £rom the Vmfllfi“ Niagara Fellsby | do they offer such materisl for cavalry? Ono | in tho Westminster Review, then th bares,” is called by the London Spectalor the was no sepsration by lsw between hus- | Dronorty and life. The ery, thorofore, of per- | will, pure in love to our neighbor, that this, onr | oo o of the river, wo have to onr loft the | mustreflect, too, that Russians of a certain class th s 2 then the organ of | gooong living French post, Victor Hugo being 4 ¥ dear Ylang, may not only light the fires of orell. | 9P, 22d comparatively natrow gorge through | are born, like Arabs, in the sddia, The horse ( the Utilitarisn sect. Those were the days in | firt, ¥ which the Nisgara flows. The bounding cliffs | ia & momber of the flmflyfibmther, 5 compan- | Which Mill wrote for the Morning Chromicle | —The British Quarterly puts George Eliot, as band and. wife; and, so long 8s the | sonal liberty, is the cry of dear lang 2ot ooty light home was inviolats, the Baman * TREASON TO THE PUBLIC GOOD, orty all over tho warld, but may carry the | of this gorge re from 800 to 350 foet high. We | jon in overy adventure. °The Russian Govern. | with that i i i i G i In the charc ite citizens wero Eirone reasan, and All our streats with madmen, | into overy soul. " ¢ o e ; 2| Do weeit: and tho proof is tho superb | sy the Utilitarians thonght that to bo philo- | Lo, 80d with Sir Walter's masculine breadth. virtue, coursge, mavhood. * Femalo chastity was | jhen"Jot theso opponents of the Sunday law e T Yew S irgeboine S T Bk 0\:‘: tm’agdmfl:? {rg: ‘horsemen who to-day galloped_along {a% Eaiger 0 paLlo- | Where are there in George Eliot’s stories euch " # . - 2 36 presant Palls, Wilhelm and his German officors. The Rus- | S0phical they must be dry, and that they forgot ic and i “ the honor. of woman, &ad we flod among e | provo this—prove it salooms are » leesing to THE FALLS OF NIAGARA. clivity which infrma us that wo havo boon hith. | sisa covalry has tho ordimary duvisions fonnd i | that » sophistry could lntk in a syllogiam as well ififi?fi&ufi%fifi?flmfl 'E:‘;Bigné‘:y owt rites of the nation what ";ufl‘"“ b v:;f‘-’ ths’ ecmment sy aslond Of 8 dameand i erto walliag on {able-land. Somo hundreds of il Continantal araigs,—nainoly, hussaro, are- | as in o motapkor nering?” . re, ternal const replenished,— ) e £ cet low us is s comparatively level plai 001 i i i % . " g " 3 an of fire, ly zep their liberty to Sell If it makes s | Prof. Tyndall on Their Genesis and | which stroiches to Lake Obtario. . The doslivity | Socies marmic s Lz, 'fs;gg“f,é‘.,".“&':‘}:‘: When M. Grote found His wife, on morning, | ooty "pa “ag s a.‘:."."u?;‘:iin“%'f‘l"c‘afiiflai;“! 3 Smy call attention to the horaos. These | TRIMgIng in his papers, and was told by her | pat it seems we are to have during the coming g ithe belief being, that, so long 88 the purity of | Ly iorg of ' 8 man, more sober, more lovin Proximate Destiny. o Ber matrons and virgins remained unsullied, | yud careful for tho dtar ones st Bome, then 16¢ | Fvom a Recent Lecture by Prof, Tumde in England. | Monaaro. Hioms ton S Fiopions orpo of the | mos, sod only cull « e i ) Rome would last, and no longer. And history us kmow u,nxar the question is ono of the public __We Lavo now to consider the genesia and prox- | mural boundaries, and in & widencd bed pursues | loctod as carofally s the men themsolyen, For proved the trath of this maxim, for it was when ::nm m::n“??fl%%m:;d %““‘m‘f:‘éfi%,fi imate destiny of the Falls of Niagars. We may | it8 Yoy to the lake which finallyreceives its | each battalion they were all of ono color, Dow & | lutely nothing to tell!” Bat, uneventful | STOE, its mham: and its Literary ability. Maj.- Rome learnied from Greeco the morals of the [ TEngues amonnt tonothing, Al this wild t8Tk | opon our way to this subject by s fow prelimi- | Watere. 5 3z glossy biack, now a rich brown, nowa light [ us tho lifo of the banker and scholar | GO0 LW e has viyitten & romance found- latter, when the sanctity of its domestic tica was flmmg%l: £ Tnado, ©1Ve will do what | BATy remarks npon erosion. Time and intonsity | ,, e fact that in historio times, even within | 78y, and the uniformity secmed to_extond even 5 BCHO) od on the conquest of Mexico by Cortez, and wo ‘tarnichoed, that the death-lell of the nation was i i0n, 80! mady e wiltdo D b o D oane 218 7. | the memory of man, the Fall hs sensibly reced- | t0 their sizo, shape, aud motion. 'The elfectwas | 8 ususlly thought to have beon, it turns out | have seen the written opinion of a competent atrack’ T wan ot policieAl corruption Whith | T benaith Ta0oey Wit frais e baisy aod : ctors of geologio change, and-| ¢4, prompts the question, How far has this ro- | singulsrly striking. The Tcheck and Cossack | that, with all the wealth, leisure, social, and ed- | critio to whom the manuscript was submitted by L ‘was not pol ip : P 3 g ) they are in a certain sense convertible. A foeble | cossion gone? At what point did the ledge | cavalry hiave been 80 ofton described that there | neational opportunities that wera his, Mr. Grote thepl;‘:‘l\ifl;eg- fif:tminé’ A o an}hniimfin approval of the venture of & tyro in litera~ tainted the home, but firat domestio impurity, ( 80bs, and lives of the community,” wo Gimply | forco ncting through long periods, and an in- | Which thus _continually creeps backwards begin | is nothing new to bo said about their sppear- | had i i and then, a6 & consequent, corripion in tho | SRMer, ealmly, Mot in this 10Ad of equl | yunyy force eting through short ones, may pro- | 18 Zotrograda conrao? To munda dinplined 1 | anco. ‘Tho Gsiachment. which took part T3 tho | Beermante wrt hae acmsoy nd grest discour- | iFe dlevor emanated. from the reader of grest Tho strength of England in tho past | TELS FHCe R 5 e mplactio b8 hon £ s | duco approximately the ssme results, To Dr, | Sch researches tho suawor hus been and will bo, | ceremonios of to-day word ‘bright red jackels | cous, was achisved in spite of thess. . Tho story | PUblishing house, I donot hesitato to com: ®is betn the English home,—a sacred, pure by 4 : At the precipitous deolivity which crossed the | and a sort of fur hats of the eame_color, and | of his mend it,"gsys thin suthority, *‘as hardly sur: en ennglmh 0,8 stered, Pure | your dofiition of fherty, you cannot find ithoro. | Hooker I havo beon indobied for somo swnples | Niagaza from Lewiaton on fho Americsa. to | Zodo chostunt ponics, On fheir backs carbines Yo AN TR, mssed in historical fiction, 50d 2 a book that 8;. THe wesknes of Fretice, Ihe law has a right to clode every liquor-aaloon | of stones, tho first examples of which wore | Queensiown on he Csnadian side. Over this | ¥oro strappod, and.in their hands they carrid | and the trisls Ta VAL Ic LS through which he Blere will bo hogor s wail a5 proft in pobls wrot of Ler g0 essy disintogration, has heen, | &1, the weck, for tho emple ranson, that they S50 | picked up by Mr. Hackworth on the shores of | transverse barrier tho. united. afluents of all the | loug red Jancos. They led the cavalry division. | won the dovoted wifo who was the. mmoving in. | g Ibis 50 utterly unliko ordinary navels, so that France, ss & nation, has no homes; that | 520 e onten; vegansing | Lyell's Bay, near Wellington, in New Zealand. | UPDer lakes onco ponred their wators, and here (Tho frst circuit of cavalry was | epiration of s bost hiorary and politieal work, | réah and fascinating, that thers can bo hardly a the naticnal 1ifo id an ont-door life of amuse- | e m‘i‘“‘“‘d‘y o ASmol Bk e T8 formc | They have boen described by Mr. Travers in the | 120 %OCk of erosion began. The dam, moroover, | Worely for _inspootion the second | and who survives to erect this. mopament o pig | 40ubE Of ite popularity.”—New York Tritune. Sinie ok ety Mo sléngtt 68 Aba oy, e ey Bl e Ssorl - Tra was demonstrably of sufficient height to caus | Was ~ for evolations. How impatiently |*memory, s fall of the torturing vicissitudes, and | . —Gustave Dore, the author of mors book 3 and - excitem opon na; Iat ua meet i s cuz fathers sl kot snctions of tho New Zealand Institute. Un-§ the river abovo if to submerge Goat lsland; and | the Cossacks went through the firat, and how | long-snduring constancy, and Rappy consumma- | ilustrations than any man living, except Georga (German_Empire, sterdily snd firmly con- | ors havemet tho issos of the past; and tho | acquainted with their origin, yon would certainly miswonldg_mecny sccount for the finding by | esgerly they entored on tho second ! The ponies, | tion, that-make romance. When yyoung Grote | Cruikshank, wants to take a voyage round i solidating in the conturies past, hss gflfl i d ascribe their forms to humsn workmanship. ‘They . Hall, Sir Charles Lyell, and others, in tho | even, tremblod with enthusiasm. As tho caval- | was’ giving himself np to all the fascination of | WOTld in a seiling vessel, aketching as he goes. ben the - German home—ss s rule, | B%S% b s iy qucetion, and now, as to the | Tesemble flint knives and sposc-hoads, being | 5320 and gravel of tho siand, the gamo Suvitilo | cade spproached the Emperors, the riders sel- | Jovo,"ho as warned by a young elongy. | Dat he s 60 horribly the victim of sex-sickues e e i Yoo for S, | ol e spony e o i sl | BSlSSSon S0 W S et | oS ol et | B e e, A | bl m il sl 04 eaneis of Eantans mattons hes in the fact that | ygop 20T, CA IF 58 maploaLuy souven? | aktention to symmetry as i tool guided by hu- | posits along. e sides of the river, tho discovery | Lghthing, and simultancously, thie Lorses shoot | Fement, Cas ghooTy "y B8, Sections, and | G e ok for the hovears of - the per Zhoy axo s collection of units, like particles of | o jor &3 (BB aKon, for tho law shoyld go only | man intelligonco had passed over them.. But no | Of which eiabled Lyoll, Hall, aid Rameny to | off, and beforo the epoctators havo caught their | hand, as ehie was angaged 0 anothor. S dsonty.| S3g6: Ho hss grown old in tho past three sears ‘and, coesivo oaly by the pover. of the whirl- | §0:14545 19 Protest proRorty and Wles borond | human instrument has boon brought to bear np- | 1educe fo domonsiratioh the popalar beliof | bréath urobalf vay aronnd tho squata, What | wan Grote aifocted by this. rovalation, that hiy | 80 5uflers from dopression of spirite, which his Vind, aod falling 3part whon the power in ro. | Liie there i ua individual right to ariak tea or | (I K8 R O s wrought fnko that tho Nisgara once Sowed thraugh o shailow | &n estounding pace! I a horseshould stumblo, | ealth bogan to fal ag noticenbly that his father, | income of 100,000 france a year {rom bla skeichea #oved which called them together. ~ And, when | fiviin' luw can bo logally sustainod. To sure | their present shape by tho wind-blown gand of | "oy s Vo cronth low n tho. Sedthe, Sod. shont lics | FLioge0ms to have boon of a harsh, exacting | does not subdue. ; 3 ‘we open the Bible, God's text-book ‘of morals, | fLTOTY 1 015 B° PERY Grin. o 70 FRTG | Tholt prosent shapo by tho wind. ! | _Tho physics of the progress of excavation, | 8icks crouch low in tho saddlo, nd shout Lo | nature, soon discovored the_ passion, which | —Tho supplement of the Allsemeine Zeilung we find religious and national 1ife represented | np o 8 00 voro Y s o hnatite, and abolish | ot oey. Two win are dominant here, and | which I'made clear to my mind before quitting | fien LY fi'“ oir long glittering lances, stretch- | hitherto had been hidden from him. He stonce | Of the 16th of April has an article upon Swin~ s the home-life, and domestic _xmpun%;lwlys Saloons by robbing them of theje cuatomers ; | 0V in succession urged tho ‘sand against oppo- | Niagara, are rovealed by s close inspection of | 0§ out borizontally far boyond the horsos, aro | exactod from his son a pledge that he | bur's #Byron” and detailed quotations from Jollowed by calamity. Our Savior, by, s obe- | and then the doors will swing to, bocauso tho | Site ides of the stone ; every lttlo particle of 35":;’&2’1‘::5"3"?&& Eall. Hers wo soo evi- | (008 S do'r;:or;daap:‘:;l ';ggi;ean;};:;ndg:: vonld nover offer himslf to ony woman | the prefacs of thenew edifor, in which the hope lent childhood in the homein Naz: i . i its infinitesi i 0 el ‘weight of water ben - | without his consent. Barely had s expressed *! gomething at once new an ! business has ceasod. To a cortain dogreo, edu- | aud chippod away its infinitosimal bit of stone, | or Fo'Cors'an s of the Hosaoshoo. In s pas. | They lovo tho ubluus who frampled | promias boen extracten, gl ang | trac” may ono day be. brought to fight concern- ‘lessing -upon the marrisge-feast at Cana of | Juit 2 0 €0, ¢ : l s flfi?fl?b‘?fliflhvg pamias cation and the inculeation of moral principles | andin the end seulptured these eingular {orms. | gago in his excellont chapter on Nisgara Falls, | dovn tho Turcos, end the BDismarck | Grote learned that the clorgythsn who had var: | ing Byro's Lifo.. * However, thise like much Cuirassiors who rodo 1nto the juwa of death st | unteored the information which had destroyed | else bosides, lies in the lap of the gods, and es- leasant Hiousehold | &3 ; : , i Betbiny, recognized and © - - fil accomplish results looking to this end; but | Tho Sphinx of Egypt isneasly coveredup by | M. Hall alludos to thia fact, Horo we havo th ito the CONSECRATED THE HEAETHSTONE proves tha alarming fact that there ia mo great. | be sand of the dosort. The neck of tho Sphinx | most copious and tho most violent whirling | Aars le Tour, but nothing Jike those unesrthly | his happiness was o villain, snd had deceived pecially in tholap of ono goddess, who sull e oo e P e | B e e ot et Bt |y G o, e sy . | 5 el ot g | St Lo i of s, | i T S S | Bt o8 S Bl . @ nation an 4 s - s s & i 3 P 0 I . - of op nation and o ! "Ihg | Ress; ox pobility of hexrl, which are beyond tho | Fuxles, by ordinary weathering, butby the erod- | porfion of the Fall indeed, the Sprsy somatize | O tho cavalry. ~ Afior tho' second. turm_ around | 1o faihar wes eroreiie to bl eefhnel o - | Shraso tho oditor adds: -+ Gonntess Guiceiolibas that she was gathering tho materials for his life, | antnmn a book from the press of J. R. Osgood be exclaimed: “My life! Why, there is abso- | & Co., which will be equally remarkable for ita it o in his refusal to al-| phrase the editor ad been i the history of our own land. The % Boin deprading. Tosnt i et 4 Zyes Msyfiower brought to Plymouth Rock a collec~ | 22300 0! log 8, boastly appetite. Thare | ing action of the fine sand blown ngainst it. In | rises without solution of continuity to the region | the field the Whole body formed at the rear, op- | low him to soek AMiss Tewin's hand. ied meanwhile without dival, ything.” : tjnflx Homea t6 Torm tha muclens of American | 13 DOt 000 hopo for the uplifting of our fallov- | {1,cgq casos nature furnishes us with hinta which | of clonda, becoming graduslly meye attonueiod, posite the Emporors aud the smpkitheatrs. ‘Tho compotied 5o sbandon il intésenrse with | NG (saye Mlr. Karl Fileimuns, Sritng fram ront strotchad tho whole length of the fold; | hor and bher femily. Ho gavo up all | Florence], I have hud the privilege of looking 3 and that i s d , life and strength ; and, so long ns the marrisge- | %% may bo taken advantage of in art; and this | and passing finally throngh the condition of true Yow was sacred, and the honor of womsn kept - B own g 000w 1, | Betion of sand has beon recently turhed to ox- cloud fnto inviaible wpgr, which is somotimes | S0mewhat longer—to use a comparison whick | Lope of ever winning her, and betook him- | through the whole of the extremely valusble snviolate, 50 lodg there wae purity in nstional | Forking by His Holy Bpirit in the soul. | traordinary account in the United States. When'| re-p ted highor up. Al tho phenomena | 280y Englich readers will sppreciate—than | gelt, with sn industry little short of pro- | manuscript collection left by the Countess, which councile, and - perfect safety of pmw,i cl ateing_sppetites =ud passions to His will, | in Boston I was talen by Mr. Josiah Quincy to | point distinotly to tho centre of the river as the | {rom tho Seino to the barracks at the foot of tho | dizious, fo his studies, It was all in vain that | is still in the possession of her family. Tt cone sod _lfe. Bat, in the rapid grosth | 2nd implaniing o Divine ‘motive of mha, _6co tho action of the sand-blast. A kind of | place of greatest mechanical enorgy, snd from | Champs de Mars, and soveral regimonts dep. | ho ought to forgot the fair girl who had * mag- | tains, besides the MS. of a work on ‘Byron's . ‘of our nation, in its intensity of mercantilo life, | Which will use all earth 7, ealris, ya:hnbt t B | bopper containing fine silicious sand was con- | tho centre the vigor of the Fall gradually dics | Thero wero probably 15,000 in all—the cniras- | netized him,” as ho expressed it. Ho conld not | Stay in Italy,’ by the Conntess, which is full of - fin the aggragation o our cifizenship of other ( FRG HIRG, omincipating the sout from el bond- | nected with a resorvoir of compressed ir, the | away towards tho eides. The hiorseshoe form, | 8iors With iheir white coats and henyy black | banish her from his affections, They meb again | nopublished lotters and contemporary notices, a - ‘mationsfities, and, fo. grest extent, of living | 3800 ey that new o which breals d9wn | pressurs being variablo st pleasuro. The hop- [ with tho concavity facing: downwards, is an | horses, tho hussars with their pikes, tho | by accident, and all their former fondnoss was | quantity of Lord Byron's sutograph manuscripts aloms, instedd .of households, tho home-lifo has | fio. partitionwall of eath, soveals a sublime | por ended in o long slit, from which the sund | obvions and nocessary - consequence of this | mounted grenadiers and the dragoons, ‘and st | rekindled. 'Pero Grote was compelled to give ‘(1‘" instance, of ¢ Barino Falieri, seyeral cantos felt the influence of this peculiar growth, enter- mtmmmol G‘;d,sfl%sfl 8 plert e Ula'l}:! was blown. A plate of glass was placed beneath | action. ~Right along the middlo of the river the | the wings the rockless Cossacks again. The | consent to the determined lovers, but, ugly to.| of ‘Don Juan,! ‘Dantc's Prophecy,’ &c.), and, priso, and immigrstion, and the Vestal firo burns e oot o & guiding, inclwelling | this slit, and caused to pass slowly under it; it | apex of tho curve pushes ita way backwards, | Grand Duke Nicholss waved his sword, and the | tho last, forbade them to what is a good deal more important, an extenaivs . ok 2a clear and full as' it once did. Tho fre- | Christy o pincen in ho band, na o chart of tho | came out perfectly depolished, with a_bright | cutting along the centre deep and compary. | entire force moved toward tho Emperors and | vears. Mrs. Grote, writing now correspondenco, dating from 1820 to 1823, which, quency of divorces; the accommodation of civil ‘mypgt;a dmktxy“, e Bil nL n\u;::I dtu 38 & | opalescent glimner, such 85 conld only be pro- | tively narrow groove, and draining the sides as it the spoctators. At first it was a light trot, then {u,, calls this “ a cruel compact,” aa it certainly | however, is hardly adapted for publication.” . . s Zaw to thia Tooseness of morals touching tho | foxb-bo t’;egx_s :ionngghgl:t! 0 30ind A Leart. | duced by the most careful zri'ndinf; vory Tiv- | passas thom. Hence the rmarkaslo discrepancy | 81 easy lsv-flom then faster and faster, till ono | was. The Lewins hold a better social position | _—Adams, Victor & Co. write to the New Tork Earrizge-vow ; thio inoonstancs of hnsbands and | This {3 th mission of the Christisn Cliurcl— | tlo particle of sand urged against the glass, hav- | becwoen the widtha of the Niagara above and | could only see” thousands of glittering uniforms | fhan tho Grotes; Miss Lowin, if the girl hold | Tribune, in_Toply to s communication in that - ‘wives; “the increasing number of unmarried Toving Fm:; e u!.mmfiukysec a sp:xE. ut | ing all its ene: concentrated on the pointof | below the Horseshoe. All along its course, and superb horses dashing madly toward the | any of the promigo of the woman, must gnpcr,u!aflowa: *Tho last Isbor which Misg : men, many of whom, in the free indulgence of | YUREN Ane Ase oty 0 The Do bxom. | impact, formed there s littlo pit, the de~ | from Lewiston Hoights to its present position, | €rowd. Nearer and nearer thoy come, snd ever | have possessed fine moral snd | intol-| EmilyFaithfall performed, prior fo her return to i gnmn,m.mnq.o Testraints and e: es of | plar, to g A6 Goin cailien fis Bhvine powor | polished surface consisling of innumersblo | the form of the :mw-apmh.bfymn of 5 horse- | 8t the same terrific pace. It will bo death for | Jectual qualities; the two wero devoted | England, was upon her novel, ‘A Reod Shaken ome and family; the large number of unsexed | f0 emrucipato Cods childton from th powor of | hollows of = this description. ~ But this | shoo; for this is merely the expression of tho | the Imperial party who are on the ground be- | lovers, and there was no lack of with tho Wind. which wo. Lave in press. Your ‘omen who boldly and shamelessly sdvocata the | &, 21d to mako thom kings and priests unto | was not . By protociiug corain portions | Eroater depth, spd, conaoiuently, graster ex- low! Buddenly the Grand Duke's sword flies up | monoy to forbid their union. They were afil- | correspondont’s assumption that the povel is abolishmant of all walls of purity, exalting p.-.| God by faith in TTis Son. ' Aud eo, whan wo Opfk | of the surface, and exposing others, figres and | cavating power, of the centre of the river. The | 358in In tho air; the officers puss the word | anced, and George Groto began at once to keep | ‘but & republication,’ and ‘is not the work of ion ea tho ruling covereign of .the .aoul,—theso | Ouf upon tho multitndes who are sensnal, who | tracory of any m}mxed form could be etched | gorge, moreover, varies in width aa the depth of | 210ng; still the 15,000 horsemenshake the earth. | » diary, in_which he minutely recorded each | her maturer and wiser years,’is the basty con- are signa of the times, which are alkrming; thoy | &8 ebger for we f{h o ato careless 86 £0 | upon the glass. The figures of open iron-work | the contre of the ancient river varied, being | Tho Grand Duke'a sword falis, and the mighty | day’s work for the inspection of his botrothed. | clusion of soms over-ofiicious frind. - The book ere ..o - | Henven? hoough 1t 20 wistogrity, honor, | could bo thus copied ; while wire gauze placed | narrowest whore that depth was greatest. mass comos to a stop as if transfixed by an elec- | It affords a marvelous instanco of is quite worthy of its eminent author. The far- FODENING BEAMS IN TR WALLS OF T KATION,— | e e o s " tho " Tomo " ang- pons | over the glass produced retioulsted pattern. | The vast comparative erosive enrgy of the | fric shock. Perfect silenca reigns. The long HOW MUCH CAX B2 ACCOMPLISHED, thor sassumption of your correspondent thad for tho ssaredness of the h:oma end tho purity of | Fouth, in whom is the lope e vgxfla But it required no such resisting - substance as | Horseshoe Fall comes strikingly into view when | }ine of cavalry is s calm and steady as the mar- | uner the inapiration of love and ambition, by | Miss Faithfull ‘yielded to the desire oman are the sssentials to our very existence | OF, ORF, FONOR Praoging: fay after do | iron to shelter the glass. The patterns of the | it and the American Fall are compared together, | DIS pelace itsalf, and far back through the cen- | an industrious young man. "Tha quotations which | of her publishers in ok mentioning the work 28 o oy, ich few | finest Iace conld be ‘thus reproduced ; the deli- | The American branch of the upper .river ia caf | ircs all is tranquil. That was s glorious eight, | Mrs. Grote gives show that young. Grote, al- | & ropublication’ is not complimentary to the and worth a journey to St. Peteraburg fo see. | though engaged in business of an exacting | sturdy independence which characterizea the g5 vpoople; anditis from thess disorganized | nto this seothing cauldran, from wh - homes, from - thess broken hearthatones, them naked and poor up- | cate filaments of the lace itsalf off suffi- | at s i i ingara. o thu: i}t‘!n&plln of free love, that :%:aw ::g;a &fthfiwm;@ast to evn;!l;.-l 88y | clent protection. SHPEY Hato. %zi b L:l;eh o? ’Ffifi's:m‘f ,‘,‘:: fl'.“l ‘ex- | I 8hill nover look on such s spectacle again. nature, found time to cultivate litarature, pnmfi suthor ; but, as Miss F. had her own way entiro- ITap! go ica ;-;?h aour dishonest' trado et Ay S then o nfifi o bhgos | Allthese effoctshave been obtsined with a | cavator. It cut the rock and formed cal economy, German metaphysics, poetrv, his--| 1y in the matter, and is decidedly prond of her come forth to curss the nation. g Iations whoso | simple model of the sand-blast devised for me | tho precipice over which the American A PRAIRIE-SONG. tory, philosophy,—n dozen different subjects. | book, wo see no reason why, as_her publishers, is dovotion to his betrothed and his studies, | 'We should deny to H. K. the little satisfaction are borm, an et th ivorcodavyer be donpised and scomed | O2masd splandor oxly roveslod more loasy the | Ly o sasiatans. s feo o, dovised for mo | tho ‘prociice cver which | the American In o Grote managed to spend the two years of their | Which ho (or &he) takes in prejudging the forth- by all decent people; drive him out of society; | COrTaption and wreck of the moral and_spiritusl | 43 eteh apon ¥ 4 ! e ¥ “ 65 driy oty | 5 b % A h glass & boautiful lace pattern. | erosive action of the American Fall has been al- N i an Tshinselito, Befuss borecopnize, | [0 T, e may ol take paming, and, | Any yielding subatance mey be om 1576d 10 | most i, wiila tho Horseshos has ont fta way B ey augogemont in. happimots, “derpite. e | coming caretally rotouched sition of the mo- | you know £obe oo n?fln = se;_mem;:l A b Pafure the i hty torrant, which, if not &t protect the glass. By immediately diftusing the | for 500 yards acroes the end of Goat Island, and And clouds, on golden se3s asleep, despicable conduct. of his father. This | cessful English novel. We may add, asan item { Loverimain thy It Amomle. Defuseto | ceet ,,mm,,pglw, the foundations of our | “hockof the patticle, such substances practi- | is now donbling back to excavate a channel par- Drift down the purple splendor, smisble parent would have no communi- | Of literary news, that Miss Faithfull ex, to- } Ldveriise in the paper which in staoped in sen- | 1 o0, ill sweep away tie foundations Of our | cally destroy the local erosive power. Tho hand'| allal to the length of theisland. Thispoint, cotion of any sort with the yopng lady | place tho MS. of her ‘Impressions of America | on 1 s o ovie Ohursly of God; T8 | omeie th oruss of tm.“vyn' Shioh 12 thet oy | €88 boar withont inconvenience eand-shower | I bave just learned, has not escapod the scute The ioging prainie bofkago pings orher family, and would not even pay them a | and Americans’ in onr hands ready for early fall i 080 fir onr Boteen: Dt s g,';;,:, et | has » thatman | which wonld pulverize glass. Etchings executed | observation of Prof. Ramsay. The river bends; White brasated plovers Aadh their wingy chance visit. . Ho gave his gon, after his mar- | issuo.” 5 Dosa of She v tam, Serit paaner st S ety oa glass with suitable kinds of ink are acourately | the Horseshoe immediately secommodates itaelf Across the duaky distance. risge, & mere pitfance fo live on. Butsuch | —Tha Rev. Mr. Murray, of Adirondsckand |: demolish, the walls of our homes. o down | and has forgotten tix \GE IN GOD, worked out by the sand-blast. In fact, within | to the bending, and will foliow implicitly the trials were easy to bear with Park Strest Church celebrity, will shortly give i A58 Tule’ whith has uo bxocpiics. flutithemm A {5& mr:m;‘hm, ortality, and go | certain limits, the harder the surface the greater | direction of the deepest water in the upper ‘Brown-feathered quail now pipe their calt 80 NOBLE A WOMAN new proof of his versatile tastes and genius, by o ot 1o, acoption, Hiat the ma. | the oure ls i this return of the individual man fo | is the concentration of the ‘shock, and the mor | atream. . Tho flezibility of tho. gorgo, i To bring thelr mates—a-rouming— by hisside. During their engogement, sho had | publishing, through Mesars. J. B. Osgood & Co., i S0 gou cannab ddmls dnto your faeally cannch | s sasdiorage. - ot ut what thero aro Chris- | ellectual is the erosion. It is not necossary that | nse the term, is detormined by the flexibility e degly stmospliarsd, WhEkOl aasiduonsly cultivated those studies which wonld | a work entitled “ The Perfect Horse ; How to i aoy oheg. Vieman, and xofase to elecbhim fo | Hans (rofessedly o) who yield to sin (Domas | tho sand should bo tho harder substance of the | tho river chaanel above it. . Wero tho Niagsra e delQ s glomtis, | qualify her to assist her busband, After their | Bread, Train, Shoa, and Drive Him.” Weun- o med womeD, Ygur, chlldren untl they are | Jorerook Paul, having loved thia prosont world); | fwo; corundum, ' for cxamplo, i much hardsr | abovetho Fallsinons, the gorge would obeds And bigh on spire snd minaret union, sho gave up all her noble friends and con- | derstand that Mr. Murray bas been stworkon ¢ Bweet, fragrant fowers of 00 | hons pomer ta opyene fact of Gods omnip- | than quartz ; still, quariz sand can not only | ently follow its sinuosities. - Once sugsosted, no 0f overy cloud-bullt castle,— nectiona of rank in deference to her husband's | ‘this book for many years, and his zeal for good [} g LG prech i Towar, to hoa the - soul; depolish, but actually blow & hole through a | donbt geographers will be sbla to point out Low on tho lush, green meadows wet, rooted aversion to everything aristocratio,—an | horses has led him fo study carefally all accessi- . go out and these flowers into other homes,. | fect 1ife of Jesus cox: Sl the per- [ plate of corundum. Nay, glass may be depol- | many examples of this action. The Zambesi ‘Where tiny birdiings nestlc,— g aversion which had been implanted by the teach- | blo literaturo upon them. In addition to his B i Tow gloomy and discordant; and bo assured thal | tempted in &l pemnts e g who was | ished by the impact of fine 6hot ; tho grainsin | is thought to present a great difficnlty to the e T by ings of James Mill, who may be eaid to have bent | 'own work, the book will contain a preface by a8 You will thas bo. working st the very Texeda: | sudthe gront comd ap s Like 'da wo aro; | this ciso bruising tho glass beforo they hava | erosion thoory, bacause of tho sinuosityof the b o ke A R g his mind to the shape in which it reproduced.| Honry Ward Beecher; an article by Dr. G.B. & 1 Tions of . tha mationaoa” g Ty founda- | snd the great crowd of witnases to tho oficacy | time to flatten and turn their energy into heat. | chasm below the Victoria Falls, - But assuming And every dusty 30 seoetvea |+ itself in the History of Greece. Mra. Grote was | Loring, on the Northeastern Agricultural Socie- B though silent, will be mighty in iheir restite’ | the temparal and lovs & e spiritual above ( And here, in passing, we" may tic togother one | the basalt to beof tolerably nniform texturs, Btar-jewsls without number, & woman of singularly generous impulses, noble | ty, with special reference to the horse ; and & i@ TR o are 13, Tomman Gt in hele vémnlés, | the toiponl, dlave o d sbove the love of | or two spparently unrelated fscts. Bupposing | had the river been examined before the forma: ambitions, quick snd certain sympathy. z:ilpurlmm Mr. Budd Doble, the well-known g ! etk ¥ams wad s fiak dampler | oz ly things, 1 are aro ua;"renc multitudo in | you turn on, at ths lower part of & Louse, & cock | tion of this sinuous channel, the present zigzag Now despening shadows, prostrate all, All these charming traits sho brought to [ trainer aod driver of Goldsmith Afaid, directing ‘. with & the avil of the world. 50 woume e | Gk, sud tens of thonsands who live to-day, | which ia fed by a pipe from a cistern at tho top | course of the gorge below tho Fall could, ¥ am Aroon the meadows Iying: his aid, and eho guyo him, beside, the keenest | ‘¢ how the trotting horse should be driven.” It Bokam o e good I the worid“wom i | of ths Bl S above Lo Gresof ‘bson, | Gltn dommmns, i D oF ulr from the | purszadod, ave béompraditd, il the founa- | ARl So S o I L T s L Do o oly 8 h on; uward, is sot in motion. i t rive: - 3 —uttor, unquestio; fond faith in him snd | horses, and—by speci sion—will be ;."‘,’;’fiu,','fix‘,‘}fy‘;g 9::6’1‘:;‘5 a8 ‘flfl;fl- and ‘}’m fh:b!mv though seemingly silken, chuins | off tho cock, this ' motion is stoppod; 30d whes Egcfi?gfif?nge ;&'.Z:L% 3‘;‘3: :fo:?oixfu +Esgrzwoan, Il B30 | o Tt bt iuticastion that Tod him | icured to an:’r.’d:gt Grant: It will probablybe e dar st o mtJi.n jhoipeds :ex:;;rs nmwv’v‘:{: : :ietx;zfu bty; above the frenzy of thelove of | the turning off is ver sudden, the pipe, if not | the future. o write his great work, and herunseen, faithfal, | published early next fall. R Torm or the balot can ever pive Ber. - L B | R s Ve elf, into tho will, and love, and | strong, may bo burst by tho internal impact of |' Bat mot only has the Nisgars River cut the Snalces Exorcised by Bagpipes and affectionate influence was with him throagh | - —A Boston letter in the Springfield Republican © phasbalil S Tonset i here is the only and thesure | the water. "By distributing the turning of.the | go o o ety Sog aliios of st o | , 1t appears, remarks the Brishane Courer, the | life to the end, nrginf and keeping him onin | says: * Miss Alcott’s novel * Work,’ which 8 o~ i8 anothr evil which tmpenla the future of our | this Dirias seyars " 9647 1aud. - Opposed to | cock ovor half a socond of timo, the shock and | yorkehop. The shale being. prabably eramblod | frigbL{ul offect of tho sound of bagpipes is'nok | his carcer 5a & groat scholar, an eamest and | nounced for publication on.the 15th of June, bis nad v S o Bl prereti o | T i, - fanger ot ruphus oy b iy veoed e | 1oy e sy B £ o as o L | oo o B belage b s Cos, i, the | Bonable poicin, and's st man of | o lataions, aed o o tham e ook eideration of & true patriotism. 1t is not neces- | never perhaps stronger than 3t is to-da; 70 dero &n oxample of the concentration of | Fall we find thohuge boulders already described, | 5Poreog, 7| business. tal. It takes its motto from e, and is ded- A neces . ¥, —not n | energy in time. The sand-blast illustra 3 “Here's the latest snake story. We do not icated to Mrs. Alcotts runs to 475 and ] g7 for 8 o spend o moment tiis evaning B | manly dosirs to kmow {ho truth, but 1 skepticism Concentration of enerrydn swmcs, | Taairates the | nd by somo. mosna or other these ar® | vouch for its authenticity. Mrs. P. wes thrown LITERARY NOTES. . Tair 10 have a argo asla. In Enghath 0 F evil; of the heavy burden of tasation whick 1t | mora :hmt:fwmp;msg Sorraption of tho | flict aud steel is an illustration of the sumo prin-.| fills tho gorge In winter, and which | into state closoly bordering on bysteria by hor | There is no truth in the report that Henri | editions of it will bo issued by Sampson Low— 1 Jaye apon ous comimaniicn; o the crime nd I | £ fadocon, wiich ' firo 1o 1ho eass | Sbsusa. son o SLred oponotate the warkis | prapples with:tho boulders, "Tas been | H{NS EIf YO8, G G 5 bu, Shake, 0 | Taino has accepled a Brofessorahip in an Ameri- | ong i b0 selumes for u guey ad (o 00 | centionsness which it breeds i idat s i 5 e * i - 3 ¢ meckanical pation boing moder- ing & uss. can university. *| & cheaper, one-volume edition from the Ameri-; 4 S el povr o i o | et "o A 2 S | ol LS loprieotic b oLt o | IR 1o mring e, Pt | St o sffor it | 2 il v g o oo pory | e VA B hermons Mo of sin and debasement the strongest intellect | & superficial ‘liberalism; & skepticism which | the collision of hard substancen” Gareoured by | without ceasing on the abutting points of the | i Hets R i, | ioto 8 volume wader the litle of ' Hap-Hazard." ') Aloat's Boston publisher, 3 5 i 4 ; L e wrd substances. Cal i 5 i i visitor. They were unsuccesaful, and in despair. | —_The wife of Arthur Amnold, the editor of the | about the same time = volume of the ‘Wit and Remo i pians of miicly. Tao oo 0 | 55 B0t ndepepdonce, bt rceumption, 0t evbply Cho plaeo of ik nor load 156 plce | wosing fham gradualy” Aowa the vy oo | HAPEY, thought!, Sumo ong rémembered that | rondon o ;_.fimfi,g" Sanor Casiaars'| Wiadom of Georgo Elr, saited 1y » Boson Feady familiar, by reading, by observation,—per- | and meekness, is_but anotber namo f With e mecion of fire. by collision. | tion also does_ its portion of the work, That'| 1 ot tho “scene. and. atand | ¥Orks.on Rome into English. . 5, and including the good sayings.in Mid- baps sams of 5uu by experionce,—with thégo un- | athoism, France has not yot Tecovored fom | dused mey b pras sy th0 lolal oot pro- | golid matter fa-cprvied down is proved by tha | FALET, DRSS, 10, TR KO p0000y, G0, Bnd | | —Richardson's movels, © Pamela,t i Clariasa | dlemiarch, with” an index io tho whos donbted facts. It is no fanaticist which declares, | the terible blow to hier natioiallife and nierors. | LLcod 127 be grestor than with tho hard ones ;.| differenco of dopth between tho Nisgara . Hiver | bebind with his bagpives. Boforo a dozen bara | Harlowe,” and ¥ Sir Charles Grandison,” ato to | both of ' which the English volumo but fanaticism of unsccountablo, determined | which was, inflicted in. 1705 by ths cerchoiy | b to produce the spars, tho heat must be in- | sod Lake Ontario, where the riveronters it. The | 12d beon played, his enakeship made his appear- Mre!BerLedinLnndnn in cheap editions. This will be a tressure in & small space—~ blindness which. deni a -} wwhi . on £l 5 tho samo biand | tousely localized. eventy- | ance, to the delight of the charmer and tho ter- | ~__MAT. Erckman and Chatrisn have published | about the bigness of Ars. Thaxter's book. Mr. this and every eity- whete txli'q;ugeu!eflmg L’é‘?"n}‘;‘ o d"fff;d"?g"’fi hereanctua- | Bt can go fur beyond tho more depolish- ?l:”é&i:flifié‘l?;fffié"é’ 1o foot o twonty feshy | ror of tho lsdies and childrom. Mr. H. ro- |'sugther of thoss stories of real 1ife Jor which Hamerton's yolume, 8o long ised, is still and daak " e pominel wo Vie Ot | soptim, S70vsouna o ‘sipersiion, v | s ot e i, oy el thad | chotd By aminhed motn ooty | el DRI B ol ol | o famous, cader o o of *Lis Deuz | emeptatdlaed o s il bt desth; firing their burning shot at all that i ve gained i Jhod il vear a holo through " corundum. % i LA ores.” 2 3 ‘memoir of Thorean be. The latter is ble, ‘:’mgfiimfing S i bateno, v guied Tdle, . i leads me to oxpress my ackaovledgmonts mi“pigi‘f,l,“f.i;";:,t‘;;’:;';’}«i;’“:}”“fl EBio o | houso, the musician struck up “Love Among |~ _Tho revision of the New Testament, how in | and, with the preface, contains 365 poges—tbs especially attacking. the fortress of civil Iaw, | jeslons et humile bond ot b fo Gau. 'Tilghmon, who is tho inventor of the' | exonvation aesignodto it bySit Oharles Lyell, | the Boses.” Tho enake reared himself on high, | progress in Englaud, will occupy seven years, | Iast 30 being phivey with ¢ memorial versce, ifus- wWhich licenses these saloons to fill its prisony | manly, only stron one o erpor iy —{be oply | sand-blast. "o his spontancous kindness I am.| pamely a foot & year, five thonsand years of so | darted out his tonguo savagely, fell over with 4 | ang that of the 61a Testament i vo years. trating chiefly scenes in Thoreau's life.’ The ith crizainals, and to A our stsoets Wik mars | Bowl oL iroug an |grereoming power 4o {59 | indebled for some beantital iltstrations of his | wa the Horseshoe Fall far higher than EPGEIB, and expired lying 28 he bad emiled. | * _The French historian, Thierry, who died last | 'first of these poems, which are eight in number, Torors, T roimeth ta shib oul Bus our Guby 22 | Eoatted tn ph Lo, Younded oit & rock, en- Process. . In one (hiok plato of glass o figare | ‘Goat Isiand. As the gorge receden it will | 'his was something like & snako. month, published his first work fifty years ago, | Was resd by Mr. Emerson at Thorean's faneral; ‘oatriofs touching it, there are ©~ Enbject not 50 much fo the Disis power sr s | oo "orked otk to u Joptly of - three- | drain, as it has hitherto d558, tho Dunks Hght 3 Vetoranos Noho anq She Feocts, of hisluit weze Lreught to him | the othera iave Beea yeintad i e ivil i is sus; b inch. econ 6 seven- i rrace e on ath-bed. It wasan o in the Revue | Commmontwealih, and Independent. w TW0 ArBTHODS OF the Divine character in Christ Josas » abore Ly sadlofbof I iR leying W ricetly oxel 1o The mamage of tho Archduchess Gisela with | des Dewz Afonde as Thoreaa. oncs, said, * i a sublime lig-atod i WG JETIL e his Div te st Jouns 0 tha | <zl a3 of an inch thick is entirely porforated.. i 3 3 des S, i predshan b Bt i e T oF e Tty YoE o ohild in SHrongh o cirealar pleio of murblc, dearly hatf | Pamer vb . il torally Gesin e Auscieun | Prineo Leopold of Bavaris hes produced & show. | A vuiume of lestures, biographical, histori- | stvle, 80d tha wholo book may romin uaof. of duty looking to the fmmediale presarvation of | this i tho powor which overcomon tho ToVI— | and €izbotats Seseription s Lo ook, nixicate | branch of the siver; the channel - of which in ¥ ‘human life and the public peace ; the other hav- | this the only oficient and porfest romedr for (5o | memid oorey ing reforonco to tls permanent oradication of | evile i ‘sodity.—thia (bt Hops of our nason, i this ovil frbm our midst, Tho first question ha | Duild its walls, howevor becueiful. on oy Deen forced upon us by the increasing preva- | foundstion, and the storms vill Sree lence of arimo having it originin intemperanco; | that is -precions and sacred in those pemds. By er of Orders at Vienns. The following story is | cal, etc., cn “Ireland and tho Irish,” by the Very | Thorean's remark concerning ono i r ecription has been execated. It | due time_will bocomo cultivable land, The | now circulsting in that capital apropos of ilua | Rev. Thomaa N. Burko, O. P., is prosented as | friends, ‘As naturally whimsical 838 cow 18 bably foko many days to perform this | American Fall will then be transformed into s | plethora of honors: An Austrian veteran whose | the second book in the -American Libra-.| brindled, both in his tenderness and in his rouga- any crdinaty process ; with the sand- | dry ‘procipice, forming s simple continuation of | military prowess had raised him to & high pin- | ry" of Lynch, Cole & Meeban. uess he belies ‘himself.’ There is more le=rmicg th cliffy boundary of the Nisgara. At tho | nacle of glory in his own profession, was unfor- | "—T¢ is rumored that the work upon the life:| and literaturo in it than in most books eince place occapiod by tho Fall ut this moment wo | tunste in this, that ho waa deeply in debf. One | and tumes of the late Chief Justice Ohase, which | Burton's ‘Anstomy of Melancholy,’ which e th a.| was in progress with a view to speedy publica- | Sterne up in business as s humorist. The secon i i day, 28 ho was conversing in his tent wii 8 sl i) Lot e b oaei s “P ‘:l;i; forye‘ign General, a messenger came in | tion by Jugge Robert B. Warden, of Ohio, will | ‘volume of Lamon's life of Abraham LA_:'::’:‘ End it wnqfiflz.mt ntrgadfl:gop g\u- attention by a “filltlha;- Jand,"—for, afi it is no: tho clothey 4 d whirlposl th erman citizen of we: and position in our | which he wears ich makes the map, bui 2 eyt ey G . second whirlpool being the consequence of A, 2 3¢ b city, by whose direction P Sy organ- | the . sharactor within, so it is Dot tho i l{;‘;* Vawer of erozion, go strikingly displayod | To those ‘who viait Nfigm o i tonnims | and brought a dispatch. He had barely read it, | not sppear, In consoquence of serlous disagree- | which ought to have nEpeued this yoar, is B0y ized to securo from the hands of the civil law | or trade, or ammies, which sro . 2 i8 urged by air, rendersus better. ‘hence, I leave the verification of this prediction. | When Le joyfully shook " the stran ser by _the | ment between the bl?‘gnyhenndthu surviving-| yet in the publisher’s hands, and it is do e AT araaty. Eshonti: of mnrdirats. bl hu| st bat i Ehacter ot 1) civo it cetion when urged by water. | All that can beeaid is, that if the causcs now in | band, crying, “ Congratulate me!” & Upon | rolatives of the Chief Justice. N zg00d ever printa more of ity —the frst volumo Pmest .of .all criminale, Bat thare | a4 in the individusl, s with tho nads er ia vastly angmented | sction continue to act, it will prove itself literal- | what?” inguired tho Genoral. ‘I have received | ~—The second volume of M. Guizot's ** Popu- | having failed to gell. Mr. Felts ¢ Kaballah® als} Trero those who, while spproving of thia stop, | ner stano of all-enduring growth sad p ong with it. Band'|lytme. . ° . an Order,” replied tho Ausiriay votoran, rub- Iar History of Franco” has sppeared simul- | drage, aud may not be publishied tll 2utuzm, U eaw at ance that the mers act of imging would | Iove to God by foith in Giriets and Jove. {0 man’ tiver vortox can weor. ——— bing his hands. “ How is it,” inquired the | taneoualyin French and Engl.ug. \'ano?flly 80 8oon. No American Jublmher has 16" e randloveta LK potholes™ “and The Truth at Last, nstonished visitor, * that you, who posseas | the work wiil end, ke all o really good his- | found for Joaquin 3iller's now volume, whic s~ Deing thus pro- [ Ono of the oditorsof the Boston Transcript | almost every Order, can show 80 tories of that conntry, with the outbreak of the | the Afheneum praises. Possibly Rol ke i S reprint it by and by. It is successfal in England, not alons secure prevention of arime, since. the | tho frst bloszoms of thet uni L crimes were committed by those who had bean | Wwith'God. -And, the mero frea ihe pation from made erazy by drink; and it were surcly far ( all outward restraint, greave: h better to strike at the root of the evil, and. thus | sits that this human Jibor! “bo- s save tho necessity of the scaffold being frequent- | infloxible grooves of the Iy erected. It was found, by actual statistics of | by the grasp of love. And iks leasure slroniiaory instanco - of | has Long beon convinoed that tlio currontversion | ou the receipt of arother 2" 'Ob, it 18 the only | rovolation in 1789. ssf i iz to Do econia tho Val | of the cherry-tree story was insccurato. So he'| Order I hove not got.” “But even then?” | —Frenchmen are still busy with war litera- | but probably would not be strikingly so hetey ‘t’ng villago of this name. | went in to find the truo facts of the case. Into | ‘‘Now,” replied lhoim&rfic\m General, chuck- | ture. Ont of twenty-five 'books in history and | Miller's autobiography, on which he 18 ssid cle kas” boon thne cut ‘ont.’| ‘the dusty records of the past he dived, found | ling, ** they have nothing left to give me but | geograpby, published in Paris in April of the | 8t work, with somo accouat in it of the +o 0sce froguent in the val- | whathe was after, grappled with it, and drew it | Money!™ present year, no less than twelve are now bis- | Indians, would sell well in America. above