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10 THE CHICAGO DAILY TRIBUNE: SUNDAY, JUNE 15, 1873. gotherwith private ones, givo French artisin what | litted bim up s foot.or so. -Gregg attempted to in | through. It rarely happens that ther is xeso- | improssion of ber. Tho ‘writer wns He BT, i . ; :, | Bing would find his way fo his room i Sin in 162, SR : maybo termed s good airing. ~In Englandagood | callin the police, but the fanny man seized HUMBOLDT. | e et 0 e ok bl | Lution smoagh for this. restity i the | O e e L e e atamastion | & | Hiow x¢ | Hodem picture may be exhibited onca; It in | him by the throdt and mearly chokod hien sa B AT 4 Leare, ould Bl e andto tho foot | b e o rouce, but ampecally’ that of | bearing on the. candition of Germany. st tnat | & FRiadelphizs elates ¥iow Xt | bronghtand N s 1 (g |/ CoAth. ¥ Wby don't yun laagh?' suia ‘tha of his o taircase, whithér Humboldt sccom- ooy i i = g 5 ! - publio eye forever, an of e use tranger, saying whi e to twi A Memoir of the Author o | pmisinm, In mfiibfimz’-”{w:&wdifimlfifl women, may bo atirbuted to 8 sort of policy | Hmo: o peut a5 esrsot | Aloph B.-Giromel" relatasin the lastissuo | ariots as an advertisoment, 8s comparod With | bis e, A - stairzod ~then came. inig W@ 5 lp was slwaya near; and when he was confinod T L oLy s o bo thonght. wisg. £0 | 160, s siihough not distioguished for hor besuty, | of th Philadelphia Sunday Dispaich bis marvel- | French pictures, which chiange hands apidly, roquisiion, Grog being copstantly roquested to JKosmos.' to his bed by illness the Eing would go and read :::nn; ho;aeihinga F;Pfi ch women do not learn, in haa'a befter face than most of her gex. She ia ;m ous experierice with s district telegraph bF" ;i °xo;'ux which' the big drum is furfonsly | laugh. Beeing that his life was in danger he did i i indeed spoke m being elated 2 5 %0 lim ab i bedside. Hum ol e SBfort | order to- give woment & dogroe of respect for | EFTer7 medent knd i ar trorh e® S0CCL Wt | hat his wife hud coaxed -him into purchasing. taaly Iha stcaogor bogan Biting st bis fosr with = 2a a slave. ‘7 is most sng and oppres- | men's attainments, which they would not be 80 | 4, thy wife of a Eing of twelye millions of subjects. | He says 1 £ B S iuichet. A paie of shears way then B i Tty LA s i | iy o Sy woro o 1 st | T A b | Moot conmatene came o hant. 1 AMERICA AT VIENNA, b, DA o il T e werd an intolerable burden. He was, in fact, | them critieally ; while girls B2 WAOBRECOC Toy | Gtk Coutd boast of Louise for-his wife, has lessenod | was put up in my. absence ; Mrs. Gimmel had |- : Victim was loft bald. o then cut off tho man's obliged to do Lis literary work by tsking tims | lunguages, which, until seceelly, wOrD O | S ICiGby his Jtt handed. marsiags with & mere | it oo its rayaterion to the lowest depths, uad | XRe Wigwame-Nondescript F1ags. | whiskers sod tickled his feot with an old curry- from sleop. In this period of bis e * Koemo f frormtios. Mon aud women | Countaes.’ T havo seen hex ot several bally whoroshe | o e e o ta aihalittle | Fimna Correspondeniceof the New York Tribune, | comb, threatening to stab Grogg if ho made say was published; and bo could. saysot the work | po rank at our universiior. KoR Mo BTG ook tho-unted o fourth, place, {fhen tag | she oxplaited, them bo me—how io puch 1 finally fall 1o with & frend who knew the | alarml. Growing tired t last, the stranger said & Tn collecting material I have taken down notes | had consequently scarcely any Duke of Wellington was here, a few Y8 | white handle to the left and pull s ring, when s way to the American wlg"fi s feature of | he gneased he wounld go. He was not in need of from the lips of Laplace, Arago, Davy, snd Wol- | to moet upon, and__tho sbeence of scrious moR- | ago, sfter ho had golonaised with | the | GToWn | b\oypenser wold pop up out of the floor; thrust | which Ihad slready hesrd tho' Austrians spesk | any money, he said, but Lo liked to meet s man 8 C o et upon, o s madi 1 Mecklenburg, he L d ' i et e e L i oo | Hdisposed e g O moneds | Lasict s hand ip the Brucess of Licgnits At the | it to the loft, give tho ring tug, and & police- | With groat interost.” The way led throngh 8 bit | who conld appreciate fun, and he went ont. Tha i i time of her marriage in November, 1824, nobody knew i i 5 of the old Prater forest, which has been left | carpenter was alive at last accounts, but the my love 'of knowledge, fow mon have | of that esrnost fntoleoton Iabor which TEhY | oFihecront beforeband. - The, Crown-Eriace was re- 1m0 S R d::;"‘ “B‘; ‘h"“b‘“’" 3";“;‘ standing on tho eastern side of the Sonth Portal. | fanny man is stil ot large. Itis thought that resped | mo - largely Cfrom - intercourso | hebe oo Mot mental hubits was then, | foested by the Eing o come fo the ot Char- | the ring as if you wanted » shower-bath, and the | ¥e pustied on, under the tall trees, until a veri- | the caso is one of emotional insanity. wit] their illustrious cptemporaries in { of accurscy in their men s | foMenburg, snd was there introduced to her s bie | firg department would come locomotive speed | table Wi A1 euongh. ot Pl Iaugh, but it was not a heacty laugh, and accord- —_— Incidents in the Life of the Great Savant, . From the London News, Nearly four years have passed since the cen- tenary of the birth of the author of * Koemos ™ was kapt, yot it is only now, and in commemora- tion of that contenary, that s complets memoir of him has been published.* A life of Humboldt i ific hi 5 is stil i e majority of women, in-law, The unication fell like s 5 < t Tuvolves the survey of tho scloatfic bistory of & | the space of 63, yewrs; for eo | andisstll for ho mvmenee BMET ol "Rs | S RS, 0ol ot et | for our domicil, supposad to b in famen. for “Blsfer-Feet or Holo-mihe-Day, - Joomad POETRY AND PROPER NAMES. whole contry. Bom in the same yoarwith |lomg it is since, throngh Georgo | tho losst gl ST 0y marriages which | The Riage dasghters, who were ol hers, neatly cried | - On tho second day of the domestiostion of the | UPon _our . Vislon. {t stan s hol- i , Naupoleon and Wellington, with Cuvier, Chatosubriand, and Canning, he lived to be & <contemporary of Napoleon the Third and Prince Biemarck, to welcome the Princess Royal of England to Berlin, and, in his own words, to i i i ize i ion- | their eyes out, Tho Berliners eay that Chariotte, now i low, with the roi neglected grove s the giants of » former age, Bir Joseph Banks, n&m{med lpegfil-il;zz .’:,ff.u;f:":lmi%mgflu- o e € Nicholas, wept for sorrows that Leuise, | Latost Modern Convenence in our sbode my | ot ; i on flgfihvfim.l A hubdred | [T forma assiting you to pronounce the late.] Cavendish, and_Vjilliam' HerscheL.” Yot this | ship is comprized In 8 seplence, WUCL Do | wifeof prince Wiliseh of Holland, wept for pridey snd | irst-born summoned four messenger. ‘That | foot in cifoumference by sbout 35 fec in beight, great worl! is now valusblo Galy in an historical y tuelly RSN G1° 3 ow mothing whon I mar- | fhat Alecandring, Grand Dachess. of ‘Mocklenburg: | nquisitive boy went supperloss to bed on the | corered with ceavas painted to imitato tho or- E:m'fl::fl;:'ic:fi osts mnl:\r:e of Lhz m”f:fi of risd{ler- T tried to tesch her somothing; it it evening of the eventful day. His mother paid | Damented buffalo hides of the tribes beyond the < " - i i Missouri, i sque object. soience our scientific progress has made it obso- | made her an, , and I gave it up."—" The In- A COCKNEY WAIL. the messengors, and economized by saving the o a-r:( ti:l :: really s very pictures objec! torment himself with the nmew mechanical A s ife,” by Philip Gilbert Hamerlon. s S in exoellent, and there are mo 5 lete. Humboldt died in 1859 ; within _our own | tellectual Life, itip child's evening meal. S hiation s, Sxoellont, nd Sere AT N0 |\ & ssiall esbet shaved for s peii Sheary ot | Best. 22 r““m‘fid by Joule, | ummedate times, yot ho told Bsyard Teslof, in . From the London Figaro. But the crowning trinmph of the Convenisnce | iy with the smomentary flusion. Bat_ for, the | Eis shopwas he pride of il Grove, and Rankine. He was © | 1856, that he belonged to the age Of Joktor- MORGANATIC MARRIAGES. Tho grat Paciio ourney ¥ have done, s yet to come ; and: it came on a dark, rainy | numbers of chairs and tables scattered_ in front i o younger son of Maj.von Humboldt, and was | son, and heard of the death of ¢ 1In many & town and tent I've found s lodgment, ight. 5 of the entrance, and the wondering and excited | <tyhereon was inscribed Abergsverny. &wo years the junior of his almost equally illus- | inglon when traveling in America. ¢ You Love-Stories. 1 think I've traveled to tho setting sun, nig Viennege, who for the firat time drew the sherry- o o i baye tiaveled . much and_ soen many Some Hoyal Love, b 'And vory nearly reached the Day of Judgment. I waa sleeping the sleop of innocence, when | Vieonese, who for the frst i i rious brother, Willism, ¥ho was born at Pots- | bave traveled | much anl soed T From the Cincinnali Gazette. | Tike Launcelot, {a quest of Holy Grafl. Hre. G. nronsed me with the old news that thers | Soobs” i e Trelons T o | A e B i3 s ka5 dam in 1767. Alexander was born st Berlin in | 1P broad face he gave his hand to the trav- | Morganatic marrisges are a peculiar institu- | From Western Beershoba to Yankeo Dan e Bt bt thatomin, Fan. | ught, bave expectad to fud redebim Il B eme g e ol trase , 2769. In April, 1789, bo entered the University | lor;, “now you have seen ongmore.” *'Net 4 | tion in Germany, When & royal permonsge falls | PYpbaes siescen yt Lo S Tog recoivod.this information 50 often in the | our mild colored brother, *howaver, who ox pedsgogus caed bimselt Besuebamp. “of Gottingen, then at the height of its glory as a | ruin,” answered Mr. T,g]"" 11;“;;; mfia in love with s lady of lower rank, he marries i “5 deiniagerrt b T disrogarded if, and | 8ued _from the chief's - lodge,” and, | Thispoor ogus chool of seence, Hers o ived in o ssme | T ta0yes vh 28, 5 £ LR | s mgaoaticaly_tha i, wih the skl | TRts e e ot mg st st Sl otche o o mghy I St s | (i S o heod (5 oot o0 | s ofme et man e e thoueo as tho young Count, afterwards Prince | Lot Ge BT M {24 5P 0o "o thia great, | tion that the bride and hor children shall not | Who opened evory sentance with By thunder, who was wrought p to a high dsgreoof excite- | drcssed us in the sccents of Now York: “Cock- | - ¥or thosg Wi thels HaRor ¥ s Zetternich ; and had ss fellow-students Earnest | mamoir of him, that were its plan less large and | gnjoy the rank nor inherit the poasessions of ThAnd wu&led fl';y!!u& a gltohundk.ma v ment. She insisted on my harkening. I hark- Bete, !k?"x I‘ril S omugn, the mmm um- s With the whola of my dust,” \Augustus, Duke of Cumberland, afterwards King | its historic continuity greaterit would be more | yy4 husband, The name is ssid to have hradedingal b Mm‘“’““umwb‘. i3 ened. I did hoar a noise of.some kind, and pro- | .at% Shit oY SR B B0 T rican Bar® | Need Xsay, it is yours, Mesars, Marjoribanki, tive than it Tikie Joas 1y ch J ed to investigato. g * ot Baover; and Adolphus Froderick, Duko of | plesssnt and instruckive than it nov . originated in tho fact that the morgen gitt, or | Wiy did he frely ahow himael to Dickens, posed tonventigate. @ youT be | Outeidethe grounds ; anotherand more gorgeous | A solator may geatus or dunce bos Bussex, 83 well as De Broglio and Baint Simon. inggi dowry iven in lien ofall | ToDixon, Ssls, Trollope, not to me? -+ Oh, don't 1 ™ scream - Davilion lks affals 14 golngap 1osids ; but DT, | Bat elther cen slatn only 0ace béy 3 morning gift, or dowry, was given in lieu o killed!” Think of Foster—Probat! I'll save you, | P2 3 L Wis hose riama His brother William was already on terms of WOMEN AND MARRIAGE. - ofhor dowry and inberitance. The Princess | Noonesecosts mo with the wordsy Wa'slsrarger! | Gimmol! I'lsave us both from the blood: Xx:g!;n l;agl};;_ngfi o Cemman fi?fi:’ n:f ol hrb ey i ol B Gemmicman of Xntel. | Augusts, of Lisguitz, who has fust died, in bor | o't 0 ShociCe et e wit cagor, thirsty wrolohas | » Sho rushod fo hor telograbh, | (ivo mind imparta a weird, aboriginal flavor fo | _Thst hero of Waterloo Fobsonty. guished men in the University; and Alexander | Letter to a Young Gon ihont 734 year, was the morganatic wife of Frederick | -If I don't quickly pass the butter, boss. box, snd pushed sng cullod. ket and ‘mhg | the strange compounds. While X was examining b recolved cordial welcomo'to their saciety. The | Jectual Tastes, Who, out Mav- | Sillism ITL. of Prusais, whom she married in | Bound frendiy boards no cocktallover peases, . | shey died homa sore, the pictures of scalps, serponts, snd buffaloes | 4 s}, Women—Their Picturesque Cose 5 i ing as yet any Particular Lady in No brandy smath my morning hour besets, pushed and pulled some more. t ¢ th al Archdukes French Bevolution was then attracting thoeyes | A& A8 Yol SRF IR0 AT R N | 1624, Bho was, therefore, the stepmother of | Aad petticosts are worn by al Lho lasses, VO, deat! ” aho cried pettishly, “T wasright | WEich cover it, ono of the Imperial Archukes | sy mes—arab Usages—a Tough Story of the wholo world, and Willism von Humboldt | 52,20 0 inalion to Get Mars | the Emporor William, and of his brother, tho |~ And the pianos don't wear pantalaies. st first | Then thero was a noise in the back | (005 C "0y rican wine. - T did not aacestain | t Telle f 3 setoff to Paris, * to assist at the obsequies of | 4] Iate King, Frederick William IV., though sey- | The ladies, when you offer chicken salad, yard again. Then my wife tugged with might | EOTTRL G STERE0 B S oo o lied it I have only yet alladed elightly to tkat which ism,” while Alexander alresdy : i e S8 5 Don't say, I'm pretty crowded now, 1 giicss and main, screaming hysterically the while. ot Aacl o of (o Exnibiiion | makes one of the great charms of Algiers. 1 B o, e A ao hir, | The subject of marriags is one, concerning | eral years younger then both. . They doutd sing M. Harney Wiliama' balisds " Now, you see, Alephi—mhat & jewel of & wife | , Oter the American pavilion of the Exhibi Tean the picturesqueness and varity of the exhitifed & devolion ta scleace whish made which neitber X nor anybody else can hsve more | -~ mho offgpring of morganatio marrisges are | Of “ Bobbing Round,” nor sdd Sir-cs to yes. sonhave got! Gur LatestModern Convenience | Duilding thoro is & Singplar, nondesoript fag | oty g capocially in the old tomn. At first Sqmpsrirly e s o ol el | o s afpesimalyamall st of vl | e e to ol ok T vas e | 510 e RSB ATL T| Pl o e dof o oot | Wt oF 1o U St i ke 07 | e Lipeuile o dripEe s Bnd @ T0eE VAldALle TeAUE o N Eachof us knows how his or her own marriage ith the Prince of Teck, who married into il T & 4 rella oyildl » i waa never before seen by any American. It has | Dationalities of the wear i tingen was the friendship formed vflf-‘!; Ge;rl%: has turned out; but that, in comparison witha | tne };:s m;myfl e N%nggl.l.zln;' wfi?}fin‘ui’«“@"fi?’fim - there was a terrific ringing st our door- T siaipes, but the I;Lnifle, o ""gfé‘”fl’ ,h‘: :;fi;gc?n:::lq :‘?fi :‘3:“1,‘:1,?";” mg‘hii m?l: Forster, Han}fgwn—flg—hvi. ;tl:émm dl;n} h knowledge .of marrisge generally, is like | father, the Duke Alexander, of Wurtemberg, | Gone are the Ymhda!m.vufl!r»dlnf! “ Run down, Gimmel! I¢'s the needed succor " ::tr\}l: fl: s;iag,l h.:gmlm‘ it:ex::r: ‘gfir l?lu e‘xfiold ith their tall, sroct Agures, straight features, speaknashis " distinguished teacherand friend.” | , “pingle plant in comparison .with the i0d morganatically the Countess of Hohen- | Faded the Yankes land of esger guests said my wife. g R N 4 | magnificent carraige, and dark eyes. There is Forster was ffteen years older than Humbolds, | gory of tho globe. The utmost ex- | stoin, I 1658 tho Princa and an oldar sistar wers X maest with gulture cdurtesy, good Leoding Tobeyed. No sooner had Iopened tho door :’é‘,&f‘..;.f&%{: &?fl'ufimwon o s rrheads Which | one peculiarity abous them, and itila that e be hind boen round the world with Oapt. Cook | porignse on this subject to be found in this | raiged to royal rank, whilé a sounger sister, who | okl eliow Bcitons, o sy hopes aro uadone! than a policeman grasped mo.. New | encloses the grounds, there sre_thres or four | always have thelr l:hnél w“;fi'“ s in his second vo; e was & man of almost trials ic ¥ i 7 ¢ inted man 1 Ah? You are the burglar, are you? New ieces of bunting of a different descrip- | dress or capote of their burn bound universal gm.iu.n,m:;d, abalit, skye, dntios,| LT 0y sxténds o shoot: tran O donay | Lad Just betore martied a simple Baron, was loft Do Sope ok piay 8t home dn Landon, dodge, oh ! Riggod up In & Dightabirt with u | Smaller ploces of bunting of a different deserip: | -0l % SRond with s thick cord of camels hair ts. A man may become twice s widowsr, | inher old social position. InGermany, and espe- ! ta , daced the modern book of travels snd the new | @2 An * 2 S 2 B ot ry i d seek in books tha true American; candle in your hand |’ Cunning lady: butIam lors. They have about fifty stripes | wound round six or seven times. 8 v and then marry ‘“?”'d tinms, but it may be easily | cially in Austria, ’;: noble dasunttn 8 p:upa:: ;3 toa old a bird to b canght with such chaff ! ) g;n uf: ??dm . h{u T gfl_ iy lém o shronded m&, head mfifimtf‘;n yvh:t:n 'l::ufi shown that the variety of his experience is more | Brivieses to whioh no SHOUNE 37 FATDY OF Monkey Sagacity. Ho_ehook my night garment a5 though it oon- | {7 %t ung qomers square of plain blue, | and burnouses, th only sign of 4if ing ti admission. f : d - ; In the exceeding finencss of than counterbalanced by ita incomplotences in | d522lnE title then sccufs, aEARon oVBSR | 11y ranin . wild and dreacy part of tho coun- | cealsd burglars in every stitch, sad was aboutto | J0TC N8 g than this sivesked fhing could | Fank being shown [n the excacding Snences of - : ) b il conn- | Grag mo out of my own house—out into the r fag than this awesked thing could | SRR DEPE L rC o Tdice, w each instance. For tho experiment to becon- | tinad for, it is sometimes mentioned that | try.” 8ays a writerin a Iate London magazine, | drag ) oA PR atardy boys camo | "eareely o Siotely, only ans eye being allowed to be ator : ) ¢ b t India, while journeying, that, | rain—when thres dripping, s sible for theso burlosques of our beautiful | completaly, only it must extend over half a lifetime. Atruo | ings on tholr coatof arms. Ohe 56 e Bet | JElioTt an umbragoous banyan freo: and wo | bummingmen, o, | bition officials have been so long sway from | These door moner MRS IEG fHl Tover ‘marrisge is not & mers temporary arrangemont, | hazy Pringos margioc s Sangier ot (0 TR DR | vere enjoying a meal of various edibles, tobe | ¢ Wo be the messengers, Tome that they have forgotten what their coun- arden, In, the lents 800 A0 e simply era of scientific journeying. _ Humboldt'a first journey was with Forster, andit included France fnd England. Boon sfter his return he was ap- pointed Assessor of Mines and afterwards Coun- Eellor of Mines under the Prussian Government gadin the ardor of his lovo of eclence riske s lifo in_stodying an yzing the gasea hich are found Henath tho’ suiface of the <arth. Writing to Blumenbach in 1795, he de- | and, althongh a young couple are said tobe | the | washed down with a glass of Bass' best, when chorus. " mai «He is | ty'8 fiag is like, or perhaps some of the new- ks hose one ides in life is to geribes some galwanio m&fl;:l;c!h L. m:"riedn,agnon sa the Iady has. changed her B e e onssaamatly the. arin o were disiurbod by ko arrial 30 ;;:; Sgsa | 1) t;r:\éf;&t:! doctor 1" said tho sk, Ko in s Mt i B 10 o pimpeed v g}e:'“$° s s ibeon made on his own ere ! aged. | ; gt : eps.” i g Vienna turned up their moses at her, | Of 8 troop of a'gs - : 41 fotched a midwifo!" scresmed the second. the ttempts have been made by the.French &made by blisters and then galvanized to | 28mo, the truth is, that the real marriage is a | tocrats of ke branches overhed literally swarmed with them, | ' cond. | 1o much about ou flag, have put them up. pi A bt o e the effors—with resulte ‘.‘hichfi!msmx:ig long. slow intergrowth, liko tliat of two trees | aud disputed over hor caims to procelonca, | yilor ockod on us as intorlopers, no doubt ; and {3 want to neir i Wiers Tam 1) 804" bel* | 7, "gither case thero is no excuse For the Come emanipate the Lo e e eP Y. Ohatbont pninh;}l‘,‘hnqd ont:r“u uqmm;tdi:rmng- With | planted quite closs together in the forest. oraryflnn 8 fairly well-off American merchant | for some time their gestures were so menacing °:_n Y ";fl‘h”h ld;z in speechless wonder, & misgioners, who have allowed them to remain D o e boad of the Arabie French schodl and 2his enthusisem ; hardl ared h alearned archmologist, with whose labors we The subject of marriage generally is one of that we were spprehensive they would dispute o 2 $th for a fortmight. which s o Toes toars they Bmow of any | CoE T B O ek wad sharp.iongaad | Lho ground with ua. Dat stter tme things | Aih Minatic oma texclog 1p, b dops TiL 8 2losraed archaniogleh, with whoge ibom o other subject of universal interest. People are | enough to make one sigh over the shortcomings | seemed ::; i;stflu down‘%:n&d'f;“;a%'? ;‘o;‘: e i g . THE WHALE’S REVENGE. Hve) tella the b‘”&“’}““ “gc[do,e,' whia]‘_:z o i f his pedigree. Prince Christian, of Schleswig | OUr rep: i kg 1—where's the fire ?” said he. Then —_— related to him by the famous Mussu!man lawyer, almost always wrong in their estimates of the | of bis pedigree. Bruce SEEIRS O FENOSE | our ‘moal, and wore strolling from. under e finé':l; T R e tioar® | i dienihal b e Hce s ke Bea bt | e o T e fihg.of Haria, marriages of others, sad tho best proot how Li- | Folsteln, miom Qnech etofs BaCr iR | chage, ™ yhen, "o our ewrprise, ono of | enufling the din bomontel o | o e k. Gas i kuroecas | botwen Ala-Beida sad Tebensa, ment o eoma tle we know the real tastes and needs of those | mmora of having a wite or mistress and | the monkeys—a _young .one—fo 1 wl: D Peoia-witer on the piano from his knap- | have made the whaloof R0 sccount in commerce— | buainess to Constsntine. A few days later he ly sur~ ?n'sing to find Goethe writing in 1794 that ‘‘the ong expected arrival of Alexander von Hum- boldt from Bayreuth was the signal for turning our thoughts exclusively to science.” Loder ,was then lecturing to empty benches on the con~ neetion beiween the bones and the muscles, and Gosthe, spesking of the brothers Humboldt, t intimate, is our'| half a dozen children, supported his high rank | from a high branch at our feet X Morning paper.) i D b0 min fyibe. and, calliog his wife, do- Sve ‘!‘,W,de"' io company with Sur tiiend ‘flml(wl.{hnmmwmma B e aes they mave, | On about~ 81300 . por - anoum, and- thers | uite dosd. “Thoclamor that arose sbovens on | S50 o\ bocan o regard cie withspesch- | Yo whales that fn the Arcti seas Eired hor o fetch four posts and some cord. Meger, to wade of = morning through | unfailing af g ¥ thors of hia class as poor, or even worss off. | the occurrence of this calamity Wwas g | der, and would have demanded an ex- Have long by cruel man been worried, she obayed, when, to her horror, the chisf threw tho deopest smow o hear Bt an . sl | Very old and experienced pooplefancy theyknow | 8o othors of hls clase 8a oo, of oven S0 ST | mhe"Wiole. assembly of monkoys clustered to- | less wonder, and would havo demandel A% S% | yayy the shore, and take your ase, s cbogod, when, to hes horr, the il theer most empty lecture-room this portion of | s grest deal abom younger couples, but their | 1o 190 B19TETO A0 S TG FPrinco Fredomc: | gother for aconfab; Long and loud were the |-planal ation of an spolog, had not moro policomen | XoTonger need sour hoaris be BurHed. ordowa o the g”mk‘mmmmed o ks physical structure lucidly explained.” Goothe's thers is good reason to believe, nover | Hrecy Lo o protty and wenlthy young lady from | chtterings and varied the grimances of thotribe, | arrived FUth BRCCRp RN IOTIYOR B Soed | oy o o e of Nantuckat's ale her with all his might. ome&!:zy yis ths mmél otg\;mbomfifl:neo fiffi;’iflg :;: mfrk. * Now: Frsld H4 Jowld mot consont to & mor- | each ‘“?fig“ii, :;ni:g"i% B;_h.;;tg:rfl::] té.’g, IJ"I‘;S; bors M_;q:g?m I her of alatin, veenoid No more your *1ls ™ will seck o try out, Htor cries brought sl m% mm“ffi Mhu?. ‘on mind. One da: erman on p . LOTE; | Lino ness of his % i o o s 1 Jnml o e Goetho, and ks ho sdvanced £ weloome. him | Ever since thia ides, that marrisge is o sub- gensilo marriago, and Jhe hiend of tho house | madeit apparent thnb thoy suspectod us as being | Of: Four mor who dell scross the sirot cams Gaaykerowene ventions e, wuz:fig Tode,tad o , though i Goothe' exclaimed, ** Alexander yon Humbokds | ject we are all very ignorant abont, had taken | WOWC 0ot RUOW BUR B0 L G Prince laid | the csuse of the death of their juvenile comrade ; with b gaid, Tas o hotshtan. the di. & Tasano donn 77 the, excll'med.n_ «ghe is the s been with me for some hours this morning— | Tooy in my-own mind, many little incidents | SlebeinR, bride, Coneedrent Y en the non.roal | and, had we had guns in our hands, or suy other | &nd & feather-bnsh j B8 (OB EIE, 0 R | wiail not for Xam, 7o Hghtsome whales, peat] of the tribe, tho best of mothers, the mod- what- an extraordinary man he is! Though I tuall; ‘ing to confirm it ; they | title. of Prinoo of Noer, under whichhs was | murderous weapons, we would nodoubt have | o c_hinsl Hks a lzomotive With & Bad | o e e e . 1™ BT of wives ! '# What has she done " retorted ‘have known him 80 long I am always atruck with | Were perpetually occnrring to co ; they | title of 5 P been set mpon and maltreated. But we wers | door, screeching lite e en alsp your tails, " L e oty sy fresh 2 t in his s proved to me, on the one hand, how often I espoused to Miss Leo 5 few weoks latar, The 4" the good pense of the monkeys | cold ; and close behind clattered the insurance ‘And blithely dance a joyful measure. the monster. ‘“Nothing. o his oot st 0 prston Toe ondactus rares | had been mistaken about othec poople, sud, | Union was not of long continusnce. The happy | oaTneth, AE S BP0 JOVE e omorge | patrol wagon, which selicle hsd no sooner come Imindw At Inst, being exhsusted by his own. “in the same strain to praiso his wonderful versa- wr trayelod in Syria, and, while at Boyrou Fary, e condescended to stop, and explain that, i ; i B A ~ : i b than two men leaped from it withn | Bevengeisyoura: for man, the lubber, tlity, conclnding, * Ho will remain here a fow band, how mistaken other peo- ; i other culprit. Haring come tothis conclusion, one | t0 & hall men i eringalé youse; s s Uie labber, X stap, snd explain dab, ffif‘?', s T alresdy fesl ibatT shall nate lied oo enes cansoraing thy oaly marstgs 1 pro- Efi’gg‘:&fi“:fii oy ,"z‘z‘u‘"&.“;,fnf.“éii mflhéawm““{g“ “‘;",;'I;;‘g'&'f;:;",‘:‘; e allot oo s cntas oL 3 contho D T magn L suiorties, dag ot ears in the time.” this 8 the, o o %5 st tmas. | whole tribe, separated hims ; 2 ot to complai o . i time - the quarrel ot the Neptunists aud | 064 to know suyihing sboit, namely, my own. | Ho left no issue, but had » son By 1o fral o the spot on the branch whoncothe youngmon- | table. Loy dered | ag ol AT R haaband BT e setustly given judgment; Feloasd A Ahep e ed, was | Ourignoranc s all the darker that fow men | iog) O, ;30 “Carisigt Froderick tho Great | key had fallen, examinedit carefully, smelled the o O aoht wnt the sergeant of the L e Ean. v be forced to tomple 18, 8 favor! So monstrous an infraction ‘of' i@ ol 'forcs, Humboldt Lstemed to | tellus tho litle that they know, that itle being | ' riomber Princs Leopold, of Anbalt Dos- | branch, and then glided aimby down ene | & bedley [ PO, 230kt 1ol mesat, The victim of bsd inpe that flout ‘Arab usages had infuriated the chief to such - Vulcatiam, capecially atter his Amerioan fout. | oo closaly bound up with that innormost privacy | pil Zomember Prince Leopold, ol bxelt Doe- | oF the pilar or pendont roots with which tho | police, and humbly asked what it all menaty | Thprieim ot e iapeint i rsb uanges had induriatd the el Lo, such, i ney, when he had seen the effects of volcanio | of Jite which every man'of right fecling respects | was one of Srederick's ablest Generals, a brave | banyan trea is 80 richly farnished, and came to |, Wby, vou soo, Pl SRSl | SR 0O | —New York Graphie. gouros thatle nxh’dy o e o etask is ection; Gootho was gtrongly Neptunist, sod |, . in the of another. The | soldier, and Little more, one of whose chiof | the corpse of the monkey, took it np, examined | /your airet Aty m"‘h“d‘“ 'a duty bound, - - e, e tha it offered to themale sex, Py Ll L nstances which are Iaid bare o the public | claims on the public recoflection waa the foven- | it miautely, partenlariy’ tho ehoulder, whors lico, messongars, A0d fre, Hael i ecdone 1a thy | * Cording™ Your Tother-in-Lawrs | YePEeRncs, (o BT L orsie S rody For 3 s G e i . o i i ion of i mrods for muskete. _Yet this pu ere was —not s gunshot, e Bedstead. Qi ey Jeal, Gosthe gave in. e wrole T Tid | Ylow aro the unhappy macriages, which are senly | Hon o . who mab happy only in camp | somewhat smaller. Instinct immodiately turned | Promises’ . g musias, | zu ioe s stuge smy sous wies momer | MOHALTIET system would have fo.be reorganized | B0L BT ML eiution toa Y Mariage that | or on the battleflld, made & most romantio mar- | suspicion into certainty. Hoplaced tho corpeo | oMy wifs 203 i "AotRe fofroB to seal | will persist in sleoping on a cord bedstesd. But | qope profitablencss of Bird-Nesting in e 0 Toet s sl it . | Gisoase doos to.bealth, sad - tha quarrols and | riage. When quite young ho fell desperately in | on the ground sgain, and, tumming his gazsin | B io [0 %Chor T found Josning out of our | she does. You don't think so much of this st ; e @exibly toward Heaven 88 though nothing had happened; to him such s thought lay in the misty regions of transubstantiation ; yet ha i Crisis i i - evory direction, endeavored to plerce the folisge o a ot L oon ke so.much of this 2 s iy S b, 17, T paan |l i e e, ot O, SO M | et of s o Adr s il il | ek Chanber, wow, L ROE 07 | S Yol B vty | Tho, s f St i fomihing i ion, his family sent him away, and tried something e i armed with bats, and cues. | bedate; n cleaned in the afternoon, and 3 7 o T B:&?fi," the endurable peace of a settled sep- I l:!:&l:.ol?;m mZx :°“bn¢ in vaii Hé remained | but for a moment. The next instant he had m!x‘}",,fih;:; fedied with -sHM," e T | e e abos (oot mith Lok wator, oo, TThe prices of some varisties aro thus e P ey 3 . 6,25 each; merlin, S o o Stto "waa. Togaeally op. i i i mago: h. | mounted the troe, sprung to the epot, and with | ., 2, +at least I did not intend to.” ady for putting up. Your wife holds 'the | quoted: Golden esglo exge, & ; . A S o nok S s Togically spr | , Althst wo sealy ko bout marriage st | (uthtullobslovo,and wesmagnactmonagnonel | SRk by R s fong v shake, ity | Qi riog for o tlest L0k nok mpend (0, | mor vy, o6 PALOE W o8 TS, B e | Fomg-earodowland tamayovlyoggs ddcantacach i prebendod by Hamboldt, and would ov'e ite prea- | 4. and thet it showa ts own justidoation in able, o orginal moriago being morganatl, | which be hastened to the ground. Newoocurred | o Licr in ' voico ot be coniradieted, | rops has Besn wader atar soven times i o | 5! and goldtnch oggs, 1 e enem, 85,00 4 D m. 3 1, : > w2 is bride waa worthy of him. 6 BCCOMPANif ‘s e s i i i “ there are no robbers here! ™ COUrES O; leaning, and, having swi .'SRd'- on anipe’s oggs, 13 conts e 3 the antique_spirit; Humboldt with the modern | it8 £ruits, especially in the prolonged and watch- | His bri ; a1 2 bote following - their leadér in his rapid 1 “ ad, having swolle e ) ; g £ - | him on all his marches_ond sharod all his hard » 3 e D T s mith my own ears,” per- | Slsmeter groater then the B Shi.ralls | each; 3,12 conta’ coch. i temper. Behillor wroto of Humboldt that ke was | f 4% iff?gfifinan&:flx:fie’f;flnfia D o e aamy Tevva. " Whon b, Biod tho oid | movemont, wers on the ground slmost a | tBut 1 hesct e A B 08 it BT | SUEST, SIS, 0 r cofling up inéo myster | Thoso pricee baing, so remuseratize Is ey the *mpersonation of keen, cold reason, which would have. all nature shamelessly exposed to scrutiny; with no power of imagination, no ten- der sympathy, no sentimental interest.” Those * . tvo great men were both among Humboldt's nearest friends; but their dislike of the scien- tific method only shows how late tho triumph of that mothod is, snd how hard it Is for postic and scientific genius to understand each other. ‘Humboldt's privilege was to bridge over the historic interval batween thess sciontific meth- ods. ‘Ho belonged to two centuries ; he studied : ; b jof than 7oon s ho'; and then a8 many as could ranged ; d i < s 0t of coiling up Into mymter | places, and espe 5 Zemiting from it fo which zomakably it st | man shoved more griel chan could be prodused | 200% 38,00 510 UGR S10AC) " smake, soch | iog foclimbupthe in waterapont | | riows wnd very, intricate fomma. ot ot T | Eo Hie'north, people fud it worth ther wile to. footapon. the Iadlioctmal ifs, Surely they de- | cynservatism has rarely been broken as com- | monkey putting bis hand on the reptile, dlatel | . TRy TR (e T At e e yn "seald, | oocupy thomseives ll the brocding sessas Totve tonsidecation by all who valas cultaze, | pletely or s ploraantly aain the case of this ing hold g:fut?;ulg:gfizg:mgggg‘& beay | Z s, juat P Gterminedly snspped out Tho {hread which, s boen Found avound B e for e L ey sapa that wile. ' Tbelieve that, for an_intelleotual man, only | zough warrior. . g Mo ™| o end of the rope ; JBrosidon of a naturalist sociey eas that wile o coureos are gpen : ither he ought fo mamy | - the Soringeld Républican, of the writhing snako backwasd and forward, 0% | ™5, ung tong and hearty Isnghed that palico- | i the Eoles has come off,sud som bave o ol | 1 S5 EAT) Sl maater” there, who shoved. some simpl, dutitl woman, who wil bose it |y o T SRS gy 1 | 128 e Buckbone, Thomods of xocution waa | mas and botweon his resonint gufwa ke | itup sptn, Thos, ser 3ot e, BR°G,." | b lo of oggs collcted by islf on eom fove him in » trastful spiri, without jeslousy of | interesting ss removing another of the Princes | at once summary xnd effectual ; snd in the vay | BRFESSC™, 1 1yt hat—a—he! he! hel—s | covery.thst yon have started wrong. The way | mission forh Honcen sEona & Roet ol mont. G i bot ich i carried out_was manifested the i -a— 3 4 Bal Pl ! his ocoupatfons; or else, on the other | contemporary with the Emperor. He was born | in which it was c s cat—ho! ho! ho!—a-playing with—ha! ha! ha! | that rope ¢omes out of those holes again, oo Torsthe purposa.—and in ey H oxnzm =l some | in 1801, and was the Emperor’s cousin. He was duuunmtmmn%:x:x:hotfh:h:wfil;g l::;z:ug: O emply tin" tomatoeag—ba.! ha! ha!—which ?gu Wife get closer to o’ door. -m: m«;k:lx; ’::u‘:'g.“sw ot p:'n?!nmsfis, sl at 13 ‘who E T ailor by education, of rather more character | conveys. It remin t g i i d this here blessed yard for en you try it sgain, and- getit tangled in is fortunate tho sclenco of the eighteenth century, and in | highlpintelligent * lady, able %o earry | b LI Y C et o ollern, and enjoyed no | of tho Pabaroe tribes of Himalayss, which con- | it are ralling around this bere Joutry i agaim, A o G tu the | cents each to 836. is fortun * Kosmos” ho triod to draw a complste picture | BT ‘d,m“?‘“mZ‘,‘b’,"‘cm},’:’h",-“,de;f:;’.",,',-,,':";",f,“:::: end of affection from the peoplo, aathe *Prince | sists of a string or uccession of sounds like | yonall tosee! Halbalbe! your legs. time 5 that ssess o golden eaglo hen {bat ia & of its condition in the middle of the ninateenth century. It was at the end of the lsst century 1hat he resolved on setting ont on that cele- brated transstlantic journey which has been called the ro-discovery of America. The . A ough o enf 0 g or, f Somnd i the neighbors to | smallest bed-room in the house, and youcall the | eROTER 70 POTT OBt ke, A 5> trik- hahoo-hoo-Nin-hin—equally unintelligible to [ - My" wife began to weep, A ~ i t by obs : | Tegular datly layer, might eas! " i st piiad oo | gy e oAbl FUPhgute H0opaced | T e (hoclaiageof (b onkey, ot Yary | sy g, paolnes £ SERSOh,, e | MR e on o T oo T B | 12l pnm e, S s B ronie o s td 1] 2 - -jig i v ool peasant's cottage in Westmoreland. The tourist | published seversl works, including a diary of | one another.” Did T somtort my solitary wite? No; 1left | lamp. First eho puts it on the wrongside of the | A New Krick of the Heathe Spanish “calonies_then melnded all _Gentral 7 the T i loand o thesis formation of » Ger- . i i s th From the San Francisco AlLz. Bpacs B Tould apod the little romantio pot it he bought | iravels snd a on {he formation of a Sor paercies of the Police-Borgeant, | ail, thon she moves it so the heat comea up the o America, with the termitory which " now | HoUC AR N bty dependsnt upon jue | man navy. Dut tho oddest sizesk in i lfe was | prompe Dealing with a Savage, | 120 1o o laiernorion) e FOnto PRI | Chisiney and scorches your nose. _ Just as you | It s & singular fact that only two or thice ida, Tiouisisne, end California; ‘resching, | POty of simple ‘lifo, and would bo brushed | Lis mariisge with, Theress Ellsclor, sster of | 14 4 Orogon Indian war of 1655 and 1856, | contents of a decanter. i Coua"St the ‘worst you lose sight of it en- | cases of small-pox ar ) 3 : ] : 6 ; ) been from i oy ¢ Fanoy Ellsslor, both ballet girls, who had grown iof of the Yaki. o T eound, fiod her exam- | mving from China, though there have :wtyo‘;:apls“i;m&:‘ggdgg ...'.’“x::‘.’n‘zfi woalthy by their trade and retired from it. 3‘?.2”,“‘,:,@““’::{3;‘%‘3&‘31‘1"3& ainDWu;inglmn Prices Pald for Pictures. %fi.‘;‘;'m:“"?mm o5 Bow that man has put om | 600 £0 1,000 passengers, sad '-hm&: fi bor dining in » comnkry inn with an Eng- | Prince ACtlert bevieg sgnoneed e foier | Territory, was ono of the principal leaders, At~ iy correspondent of the Sootsman | the whitewash. Thia excies ou, sad briogs proad attortho arrival of o vessel. | Elther f2 i 1 : ] [ v L g i ) i iration in_greater 3 2 hont's dsughter, beautiful girl, whose manners | Von Barnim. This was in 1850, when the bride- | yio "Crn 7y ey offcer to whom he sirrendered | forpictures in Paris: {1y for | doors if she doesn't comearound with that light. | pertect eimulation of the horrible diseasa wors remarksblo for their natural ologanco and | Eroom had resched the age of '49 aud the bride | ¢ Z*G0P" Dot of tho Ninth Infantry, the | Thefsbulous prices given here'sacontly, 08 | iy sho comes around. Finally the cord is laid | carry ous some smuggling cpemtiohl vossel distinction. Tt seemed tous both that no Hdy | 44. Theonly issue of this marriago lost hia life | Ty P21 00 b resident Grant. Gen. Wright, | pictures have nol _onliv‘ astonished the rest of | Then sho COmer ST execute the very | is quarantinad for fow days (in wh ne it of rank could be more distingnished than she | in Keyph afow yenrs ago, by fover. | who commandsd the troops then in the field, 3 | Europe, but Farls tacll, hck b givey 10 d0 | Gelicate job of tightening it. e lower ropes | hua boe, sey o gt T o e e i i t g = i} : .. is done st eid :e.:fiafl bt do worss. Hhan asi Chak_ oo to | eallor boy, s appoars by the following dispaich e i the capturs of Oubil was a0 | wero dus, in & great moasure, to kiicks of tho | ore frst walked ovar. s 7 stepping a2, cany matter, by the use of in = fact, from ~ 38. - degrees morth latitude to 42 degrees south latitude. It is im- ypossible to follow him in his years of travel in this then almost unknown region. Five years were opcupied in the journey, and the splendid Tegions of equatorial America were literally 2dded to onr knowledge. SBomewhat later in life, Humboldt made a similar journey into Asiatic Russia, with results which, if m.fi-r, were still of considerable value and importance. Mean- 5 | Theso prices, however, This | Fis i i vi in wi ! ; imat ome and sinking it, down, Benging to | are released. I sy maiter, by the usa af Fhile, wo find him visiting Parls with Eing { B0 i, a jetly in that - | published'in_the recent memoir of Baron Rtock- ; S frade, andin no way repressnted the real and | on the fir ot Aanth. e | Birtar-emetio, o produce vy pustules, Frodeiok Willlen TIT, 10 1014, uc aRervands | tavs villy e e cres 2ad Fauitienof | mar, log. Private Sscretary to Princess and | Prorght beforo him, Hethen selds ime. 1 | quiet Taluo of the aintings od ot Tho | tho hend boned w e et b, tha next. line, | how o counterfelt the fever sccompaoying the apanying that monarch o was JOUTOY | tho world. ~That is & sort of a droam which has | Queen Victoris, of England. 1t is dotodabout | or, gotng to hang you. Nt that you have fought | roomwhers tho Wilson, Papin, Laurentciiears, Pust Hows, joseyour. balance, grsb for | small-pox, aud the peculisr odor, i s to i The Revolution of July found him at Berlin, where ho had been giving the lectures which formed the basis of “Ecemos.” At this time Arago wrote from Motz that if the lectures were ot to be translated into French he- mnst learn German to resd them. . Between the-July revo- Iution and the death of the King, Humboldt so- coptod several tomporary diplomatic missions to Paris, and Earl Vogt describes his life in the French capital: . The early morning hours, from 8 till 11, are his gar- ret bours, spent in pol sbout thanw% and wrg:r" ‘of Paris, climbing into the sttics of the Quartier , searchin, students of sclence. ied with sqme special invastiga~ i e breek occurr man; man, | si i io i rin| diseass, is far_ beyond anything ubt, to h bl . | six weeks before the accession of that lady to the i - the and other collactions were knocked down in quiok it i and come down in o | the ‘genuine ) i t Borne o wavo gotio o5 far ua o £y 4o make,fh6 | theone, sud wae addrossed by the then Minister | BEnyost 8 10 DACUE, Rl Periae DO Mo B | enconasion, was crowded tosuffocation by excited gfi;fngfl};:",.} Tmeated “more. ot loes timen | kmown in our materia medics Tho Chiness S e ionsty - hoct e Toea et | S Sk, e Duchoss of Kent | g g your friond ; but-yon followed him from | bidders, aad each time that s woml 87 10 70 | wcross th length of tho bed, the anly variey | Waeh 0o WO, Lo’ out smugglng s i , 1837, R i8 j 0 m, _ s s 3 il vl s S e T | s v o S R B | ) L e ol | B e s Ty | S SRl S 0 | e R Bt et of e-balieve Iady, and then her igno: ), oo William, should place himself on tho list of | Other Indians killed him, and yet the mm’il_;lll: 3¥Pg.3'£.°—me Pl:gin collection i3 mmedmb: ::;'; '1& [ v?hictll:’ i dgr; ¥ wg} o Oand as | to the balief that they are at their old tricks. which, in her_ 'natural condition, . wes F 'hsd boen smoking with him. ; E ; T ehavining nafveteT booomes n ietating lateck, | Lot mbo protend 1o theland of B R B e Pt | DO o it waa tho. act f & dog, and you | have fotched enormous prices thro o P80 it the frightfal thonght strikes you that, i ’ f whom hLad i othing on A Geyser Wash-Tub. It, however, it were possible for an intellectual ¢ satisfaction to the Court of Berlin, I havethe og’a death, Capt. Dent, as Officer | jealousy of two stockbrokers, ono of 1t one of those feet should slip over, nothing i ‘man to marry some simple-hearted peasant-girl, Boncr to beyour Royal Highness cbedient, umble :’;"%fiap'; §m e ot s Boraoint and a | run swsy with the mistress of 3a ;:b i | e el provent: gos Toom ”""5; alit | Ong evening Messrs. Spencer and Hamp, do- and keep her carefully in her ariginal condition, | servant, WinL1aM RUSSELL, roper number of men, and hang r&i, man aa | the fortunate lover desired some ¢ | through to the chin. en you pull up the first | girong of testing the cleansing qualities of the 1 seriously believe that the venture wouldbs | _The Duchess of Kent roplied to this, that Miss | Boon as the preparations can be made.” - pictures, which the betrayed one, in & spirit of | BECRELPCoy Goos saem fo be on the point of | hot springs, e th waah'a flannel over- lens porilous to his culture than an alliance with | Victoria waa still somewhat too young, only 18, | = Tt took very few minutes to carry these orders | Fevenge, ran up for him. et gave Tofiug 0w of their sockets, and the blood in | ghirt belapging to the former in their boilin some woman of our Philistine classes, equally | to think of marrisge—especially, we may 8up- | ont. Youog Oubi was stretched up as a warn- | - By the way, not many years sgo ul: MB:" your veins {url{flglrpm. snd,on being convinced | waters. After carefully uo;}:ms the §"m€“ in::t:ble of comprehending his pursuits, but 88 her to add mentally, to a man of 86. 'I'E; ing-to other Indisn Ohiefs that murderers would | 10,000.francs, or £400, for :yfi:"dm s price that you can’t pull it any further without cip- | the the lesst active m - tion, . . . AtIl asta iu the Cafe Proco] more likely to interfare with them. I.[.business-like note of Lord Russcll fiashes vivid~ i sral Wright, then i - | considered 8o ineane for P! o ling yourself for life, you catch hold of the | canldrons in the basin; when, to their astonish-_ Bear s Oddon, at the left-band coruer, by thowin' | onoe had & conversation on thia subject with a | 1y npon us the cold heattlessmess of royal match | Losch ot fhs Depesinent Frighty thon in O | STt s rlativen wero oo the point of domand- | P28 yonrsell (07 ot N0 b¥ent ot mhan | S30t"0h ter 1n the ppatog suddenly zeced distingnished artist, who is now a widower, and | making, and the existence of & time when th i war t] ing & *{amily council” to_deprive him ‘move along to the next, and pull that up,| carrring the shirt out of sight. Curicaity I who is certainly hot likely to be prejudliced cromned, hudsval:;{: :nsmfw : l-.ndma:c‘;a;iut. wers fltmg:‘fb\%" g!:? 2ot meh'gs fth Ingl:tr.yn management of his Pl"'P“'Yi\i “:‘1 "";,‘Ih‘ °}§:§ i grunt again. Just a8 you have got to the | Gho the naxt moming to Tevisit the Epring, against marriage by his own experionce, which | boys and girls togother. It also opens a wonder- | who waa killed by the Modocs at the same time | dsy this saime work was sol 8t %?“ y faps | middle, and commence to think that you are | which proved to be er of coniderabl had been an unusually happy one. His view | ful abyss of ““might have beens.” Had Adal- | wi s 80D of ol times the figure ¥ about even if your join TOVer | force; and as they atood in_mute_astol His yss g! with Capt. Thomas, was this old Indian the figure given by Papin 5 it jointa s 5, stood te astonishment crowd. The afterncon he spends in Mignel’s study at the Bibliotheque Richellen; As Mignet never works atsil, and Humboldt works a great deal, the former yacaten his study during Humboldt's visit, Both the brary snd the aitendsnts tirely at his dis- man i marry i i owing to the bitter feud stirred i did before, you some Way or corrugated T A e oo aites “ng | oot & foan devoled o act might macey e e e Py oo the muccosstul | fghter. ™~ . ¥ tho moderm Helon batween tho t90 sbov men- | SEUI 0L the’ conmevtion.” and find that you | LECD the sdge, snd gred B0 I Fovatteris o O e s o aiwass | cupy Bemelf exclusivly with' household mat- | of Wales, and the Baroness von Barnim? A Ioll-Vender. tioned agents de chango. M. Lsurent-Ricard, | JieF J0™4o o back and do it 8ll over. | of ths water, nad the ominous intonations from lf exc I . arted with i rioulke : ters and ahield his pesce by taking these cares | ~ The cablo also announces the desth of the | Newt¥ork Correspondenceaf the Cincinnati Commercial | tho tailor, sold the works he roslly parted Here you pause for & few minutes of ol ‘Dbeneath, an eruption suddenly took place, which upon herself, or else & woman quito capablo ofen. | widow of Froderick William TIX., Brincess of | * Tasgne s bandeome young follow, an Alsstian | a¢ extravagaut prices, but 8 good many, plotures | 1 otresbment, snd then slowly and carefally work | profacted tho missing shirt, mid column of tering into his artistic life; but he was convinced mem This recalls s raost painful epoch in | Frenchman, with & pair of purple-velvat knee- | appear to have boen brought 1n 80 88 £0 XUh B0, | vour way back. You don't jump down and walk | Tnier and vapor, to the hight of twenty feet intd that amarrisge which exposed him to unintelli- | the history of a man otherwise much revered, | breeches, a psir of snow-white stockings cnmin% others up, on the good 9lum ot wis Jack, becanse yon_sre sfraid o Epresd out in | tno air, and in its descent it was caught upon oné gent criticiam and interference would be danger- | This is the King who well-nigh lost his life and | to his knees, at which they are trimmed with | books. Many of the P;(‘;! “:u are still living, u 4 ousin the highest degreo. And, of tho two | kingdom by Napoleon, but who had for his first | Iace; & pair of low shoes with silver buckles, & osed of for suchgoodly prices sxe ¥ALIE AR | ing the way inch by inch, and with consummate | rounded the edge of the crater, and recovered.— kinds of marriage which he considered possible, | wife as good & Queen as often falls to the lot of | white linen jacket, & four-cornered hat of white | and were probably D 96 or six times what | Patienco. A man thus stretched across & bed- | iThe Ascent of Mount Hayden,” in Scribner’s for e preferred the former—that with the entirely | unhappy Kingship. Queen Louise (who was the | linen, and carrying a large light basket filled | their works were nadformve o esentatives of | Btead never becomes 80 excited 8s to lose his | ryn. ; ignorant and simple person from whom 10 in- mother of the present Emperor) was s rare | with those dolicious rolls which are made for the | they reccived. Among other sREECERETE O | presence of mind. . It would be instant desth if terference was to be apprehended. He consider- | woman, 8a the meanest pessant woman in Prus- | Sunday breakfast-table in some of the towns of | French art may be mention: ol el high Boaia. Then he goes over it again, waddling - Siberian Non! &d the first Madsme Ingres the true model of an ['sis will to this day doclare, The Napoleonio | France. I am not describing a circus per- microacaplo performances leayS e always | snd pulliog, groaning and ting, while his | A peculisrly Siberian story is reported £rom artista-mife, becuse sho did all in her power to | misfortunes best the lifa out of her, andher hus- | former, or s grotesque humbug perambulat- | prices; Fromentin, whososnimale ™6 So¥T | wife moves around with the ap, aad tells bim | the southern shores of Lake Bsikal In oot guard her husband's peace -Enmut the daily | band was left a widower af the age’ of 40. One | ing the street for boys to laugh st. I saw. | drawn with dssh an T Sther weary oo with | to take it easy, and not saratch the bedstead any | pleasing neighborhood, & spacious Russisn mon- cares of lifo, and never herself disturbed it, act- | of the finest works of modern sculptire is that | him, and more than one of his kind, in the | works, admirable SR8 Yarot it 18 mways the | more than he can belp, and she can't tell which | astery was erected not long ago, the monks being ing the part of a_broskwater which protects a | tomb at Potsdam, where tho hand of Rauch-hss | bright early hours of last Bunday morning, | their sameness. hadd e ad arimA ook, | croaks the most, he or tho bedstead. And after | doatined to devote their leisure hours fothecon” space of calm, and never destroys the peacs that | wrought in Pmn marble the counterfeit pre- | going round from house to house in the upper | same cold early morning ’Z ek a Tittle, thu_a ia | he gets through she has the audacity to ask him | vergion of the Mongols thereabouts. This beirg it has made. “Thia may bg true {dF artists whoeo | sentments of the revered monarch and his queen, | part of the town, supplying his customers with | ing tress ; but, if you step back a little, ? | to bring in the feather beds. In tho desd of | noionnted s comparatively essy task by the con® scoupation jaather astheto than totalocoal | Jying ide by oo n ine avast Tapose of 2;.3;. the bread-rolls in quosilon. This siyle of thing | ng denying U ST 15 gulos which T have maght that man will stoal up to thaéroom and 100k | viots and exiles in the proviace, & good m07 much benefit from talk; aro the and Queen, husband and wi is comparatively new hero, an en intro- pedal —Danbury News. on. o m;f but the ideal marrisge of 3 man of great litorary | whom Prussia TameriDere ith the greatest | duced xl’:y A!adh{n exiles. ' The young man's cos- | meationed, and st several other ones, are for the at that ‘m‘“____ offered to take tha yow, on condi! with friends, and never at an hotel or restau. rant, Between ourselves, he is a great talker, He tells a story well, discourses with much wit and Antelligen: so that it is a pleagure to listen to him, Nobgmmnun has more esprit, He never sita long after dinner—balf an hour at the most—and then he takes his leave., Ea -goea st least l::hfig Teceptions every evening, and on each occasion the same incidents with variations, After he has talk- «d for about half an hour, he rises, makes a bow, and then retiring with some one into-'a recess for a few minutes’ whispered conversation, he slips sway quietly tothe door, His carrisge waits below, At ht he drives home. - # When Frederick William tbe Fourth eame to the throne, Humboldt became his almost con- £tant companion. The King wes » man of sus- ceptible temperament, & mester of words, With & living interest in all thet went on around him, but without the art of® a ruler. He was un- that way again. You sort of vaddle back, work- | of the umerous siliious projoctions hich - stable as water—a rn dilettants, full of schemes ' and imp:}e., but_vacillating itti : X . 8 you X i i i f punishment remitted. In consit cultars would be one permitting soms equality | pleasure. She would fain f if sh tirel, t it ‘most, part French (with s fair sprinkling of the their term of puni it. and weak. Humboldt, who waa & born courtier, | of companionship; or, if not- equality, at least g:dned forgotten, that :g‘e Kum!g;t'ln l.;i: old :;: mm?u.:nd gzy?t;m l:‘s:mm “k-Bp.un“t_y‘: Dutch school), and were disposed of, a8 far as s A Fonny Maa. eration of the raligious ob"i%\:&:‘: g;’;" and who once said of himselt, ** Iseek to plessé | interest. That this ideal i not' n mers | took another woman to wife, ennobling her and | ionand reminisoense of the far-gono times. His | Iconld learn, to Frenchmen. -More suctions | Detroit has whatit calls a funny man. An Sppearsy were granted. o = :;emy{:‘ :;;:dmom m‘!“mn dfl]; kept | dresm, but may consolidste into @ happy | putting her at the head of his table. For sixteen | fleecy rolla brought back to one’s imagination | are coming on, and st one of theso several | old man named Gregg, who mends furniture for | short, the new monks were mflmmm anor- 3 tific terary reality, several examples prove; yet these ex- | years the court and kingdom emiffed at n:as yet Biddy was not, and when | Englih works will be put up, and we shall have | a living, was sitting in bis shop recently, when & than ihey began forging paper m: to have lmplebyl' are not 8o nulinnepnu 24 to relieve me | man's graceless in!ntnlfi‘on. ‘When he d.i:g: 33: 2: :gi:xaa:f :ncm’imn w—god ongh:fir Isbors as .u-g op] ity of eecing how Reynolds' | stranger entered 2nd ssked the loan oty a dollar. { mous quantity of d::nn!: E’z’m‘:‘c::lf ‘At last from anxiety about your chances of finding such | Princess of Liegnitz dissppeared from Berlin | tliough they meant o please and delight those | Gsinesborough and Lawrence are appreciatefl. | Gregg bounded at the impudance of the request, mutmms?un £ coter of the Co eing ate- ‘compani ip- The different education of the { life. Now, after the lapse of a thizdof & cen- | whom it was their privil to sarve. The | The English school is almost unknown here, | and the stran; began g ;E:Mmly, the matter oozed out i men men S¥o sexed sspiaitan’ hisal Widalyat the begtnc | tury, Bhe resppears, o cls. T vre tho cnly chvilized people. the only | exoept to afew amatenrs, Every time French | snd shut and bolted tha door. The stranger | essary, snd the venarable inmal e b tho o ning, and 0 meet on any common ground of éro is = contemporary picture of this fine 1ady | people who can gite color and charm to the arts | collector dies, the-works he has carefully amassed | then took off his cost, rolled up his aleeves, and | of tried nerve, they immedaitely burn culture & second educafion has to be gone | in her exaltation which leaves a not unpleasant | of daily life, S oA ST are brought to the haummer, and thees sales, to- | stepped up sod seized Gregg by the hair and | vent sad took to their beals. subjects. After a day spent with Humboldt the of Alexander von Humboldt: compiled in com-