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THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: SATURDAY, MAY 27 welcome from the publle, of which they. A fow nights shice, W ner's % Tannhanser ® was performed for the first time jn London, nnd_produced a great sen- sation, | One novelty of fhe season has been the spraranecs, aunowiieed or sccomplished, of a ehister of youmz Americin debutantes pressinge forward to assume thelr plice i (e bright galuxy of the world's primndonias. LONDON GOSSIP. long been favorites, Flora Round About Chicago-=The Cashew Family. fhe Return Home of the Prince of Wales. The Coffee-Plant---New Guinea---North- Unjust Assaults of English Critics Atlantio Exploration, the procession na [ loldta in “ Lo upon Signor Rossi. every one with her heauty and groce, 3Miss Abbott, also from Chicaio, atud well known us & ainger in Dr. Chinpin's Church, pearnnce in Lo Fiile ved an_unguestionahle success, Critlea complain that the three regls- ters in Miss Abhott’s volee arg not of the same quality, and that the charm of hor pure notes is sometimes marred by n distinguistable Yankee twang ; but ahe tingstrue, exocutes with remark- v, nid evinees force and dramatic firo, ' (Mrs, Knox), of Now York, and and, will_appear in Mre. Knox Is remark- New York, made her a) ) Fithout du Regiment,” and ach Telegraph Withou! Oceanle Circulation Wircss-Camneron to Make An« other Alrican Journeye Tho Appearance of American Debutane {cs upon tho Operatic Stage. Bome Pictures in the Eshibition at the Acadomy—A New Hotel, Speciat Correspndenre of The Tribune. Loxnox, Eng., May 12.—The great day of England for 1870 has come and gone; THE PRINCE NIAS BESN WELCOMED TO IS HOME by his devotod and loyal subjects, It was well worth a visit to Portsmouth to witness the splendid pageant of his arrival; to mark that vast assembled multitude with thelr eager faces and voclferous throats; the gay Dags glittering i the breeze; the splendor of the tranquil ses, clothed with pleasure-boats, teavily laden with their human freight] the fark {ron-clads waiting to pour forth the terrifle foive of England’s first sulute to the Hetr-Ap- sarent of the ‘Throne; to mark, above all, the bappy faces of the reunited family when they wppeared at last {n presenco of the multitude, Ihe Prince and Princess none tho less man and - woman hope of a nntlon centres. Covent Garden also, In the evening, was most wpressive,—that glittering array of beautifu_, vomen, blazing with dlsmonds, sweeping down rum topmost gallery to parterre; tho cager ixpectation, and tho spontancous outburst of snthustasm when the Royal. family appeared; FLORA ROUND ABOUT CHICAGO. iz CABBEW FAMILY. April or the first of May, the low, straggling bushes of the Fragrant Sumach (Xhua aromati- ca), which occur on the Inke-shore north and gouth of the city, ciothe thelr yeb leaflcen branches with clustera of small, pale-yellow flowers. Latér, the leaves unfold their three divistons, anid these, when crushed, exhale a Along In the lnst of Miss Van Llsnery of Cleyel the couse of the Feason, ably beautiful, hns u superb contralto volce, and 1s said to be an admirable musiclan; and this ls true nlso of Miss Vun Elsucr, whose volcels a pure Madame Viardot, so aparing in s aald to ulm-r; s young aspimni “Volla une _petite marchera bien,” she sald on first hearing her; and shie has predicted that Van Elsuer will have a great earcer. TIHE EXTNITION AT TIE ACADEMY and s daily popular and speeific June, the Poison-Ivy (I iecodendron), which must be guarded ngainet in alinost every wiid place, shakes out its lonse panicles of greentsh-white bloasoms. The plant Is o ellmber, with leaves divided into three notched or lobed Jeallets. To most perrons 1t proves a violent poison,—even the exhalations causing very serlous effeets, Almost every hoy has goue through the experience of inflamed liands with accompanying pain and Irritation, in consequence of inadvertently touching the iiant while mnging by-plnces. A variety of the Polsun: Lvy (K. radicins) 1s noted by Prof. Babw cock as occurtdng newr Riverside, somo sped- cins 2 fnclies In diameter, ‘The Poteon-Bumnch (2 Venenata) mwnmups near Graceland and routf Thiia is a shrub reaching o height of from 6 to 18 feet, and beard with from scyen to thirteen leatlets, most polronous of all the species of Rhos, Dlossoms fn June. In duly, the flowera of the Dwarf Sumuach (2. copallina) may be at Miller's anid Gibsow’s Stations. sbrub I8 very ornumental fn August Scptember, {ts pinnate leaves assuming the most brilliant autamual colora. S Sumnch (12, glabra) s common fn our vicinity. 1t i taller than the precoding specles, and fis Jeaves uve o greater number of lealets, Deur deuse paufcles of flowers, succeeded by very handsome fruits covered with seld erlinson The Rhus Iz the is now the great scnsatfon, througed. Tho paintings are p c best art of the day, hese is the “ Daphnephorin,” by~ Frede Leighton. The sublect §s clussfeal,—a proces- Apollo, - the representation pollo, ! anclent Thcbes, still the inspira: Fhe youngs priest who procession s o nolile fhzure, trly holsed asa statue, and superbly puinted; boys earing trophics, children finely grouped, and heaut!ful women crowned with luurel-wreaths nnd chantin '"l(n ];l.l'fiu;)[lllm'llr" follow: Ty cene f3 brillfant nnd agniticen i 3 2 The © Duphucphiorin’ will be Taghton's masterpicce. ace,” by Mr. Poynter, has also created ‘The urtist has relzed tha critical moment of the raco ns deseribed by Mr, Morris, Atalantn, a charming figure swithed In floating drapery, pauses {in lier wind-swift speed, and swopato pick from the ground the second golden apple which Milanion has just oliden prize she lolds p o Mlanfon Is finally polsed wih to cast {t at the oth of these figures The scene At ta and artlsts. mens having st 4, follow. The g pinnata leaves grandly treated, greet them; the song of welcome poured of Albani, sustained Bradlaugh himsclf, hiad he heen there, would have found hls pulges throb- Mng and his blood tingling with sympath, vhntever may bo the oceaslon, it is always fine o catch the aural breath of popular enthusl- wms. These congregated individuals, in them- selves 8o dull, and commonplace, and obtuse, let them be united by n sufliclently po- “ Over-Soul " beeo mes evident s the God moves fmninent in Prince of Whales 18 not by nny meaus a hero, nor has he accompliehed any reat marvels during his Eastern tour; he has one 1ljtle more, indocd, than take advantageof elreumstances, and consent to have & glorlons tne; yet it {s certainly true_that Iis popularity has been vastly augmented. He has been tho heroof sdventuroustigir-hunts; and festivitics, and fandango all, of the illfiatrated newspapers. The whole people of England haye gone with him on his travels; they have had before them pletures of cyery scene that he has visited hMm in thelr thoughts, trem! might befall lhrcuwncdt—-rujo lorth by the volee a great gensation, by o full chorus. the third ‘in lils hand, read; most propitious moment. of merriment aud American artists, Miss Lea, of Phitlndelphiu, has nchioved distinction. which she cxbiblta this year, “Ferdinand mid Miranda,” “The Hlding-Place,” and “A Girl with Doves," are all of great merit,—the two former showing very unusual qualities. Miss Lea has been fn” London for several years, and from the first has been suceessful. ines that she has discovered scerets in regard to the use of pigments known to the old masters and lost by modern artists. Whother this s truc or not, it {s certaln that her culoring 13 un- usually rich and effective. only genus of the Cnghew famlly (Anacardiacee) represented in the United States cast of the Misslsippl, aud the Gora round about Chicago Includes five out of the The order fs not large, number- {ng tn all about 100 species. Most of nuttves of “Tropieal America, Afric, and Indfs, and aro trees of lango slze. They ordinurily abound In u resinous, or ucrld, and highly polsonous fuice. The most fmportant member of the fawlily 18 the Mango-treo (Mangifera Jn- which™{s an inhabltant of Indis rower, and attalns a belght of 30 to 40 feet, the lower branehes starting from the stem Bor 10 feet above the ground, lanceolate, leathury leaves, length, form an fiipenctrablo shade, and give out a sweet, resinous smell, The kidney-shaped frult §s the size of o largo pear, und of a dell- clous quality. Itis greatly csteemed In India, and in all tropleal lauds, where it has been erally introduced nud universally cultivated The Pistachio-nut, s0 mnucli prized in Europe and in Eastern countries, whe saine, b3 the produce of a pecies of this order. I Dears o frult about the rucl of whichi I3 oily and theheroof bnlla, the hicro, above they have held ings lest, some At one time it was the privilege of all travel- cera, and especinlly of Amerfeans accustomed to the hotel-palaces of our Western Continent, to abuse English hotels, And, sceording to sl ac- counta, with very good reason. They tuust haye pensive and cheerless. on has_begun to vie with plendor of its Botels, ly sltiated, fronting Portland Place and the Crercent of Regent’s Park; Buckingham Paluce, the Westminstir, and. many niore, even n, — thinking been equally ¢ York fu the & peated to cuch other that he s o’ thorough En- roudest bonst; that he bad worn out his eutire suite fu his venturesome has alwuys the right word ot y otie;_that ho Is kindly, and genfal, and generons, and suave; they have talked about him glistman,—thelf exploits; that ] ce it originully the Hzht tine for o ginully The tree (Pintacia vera) Kize of an olive, the feate-flavored, like ‘enus (I tercinthus) yivldsihe Wit Iy commeree a8 (h r Ciuan, or Belo turpentine. wacardium Occidentele) repented | these aud thought homellke, family hotels which are o be found n &l of our principal citfes. But at Inst ju t such an estabdishment has been opened, rival- fng our own. Delightfully situated In an nrls- he town, close to Kensington e furnlshed with consummate toste, with un umiable, energetie propricto it corpg of servants, und an excel rdor of enthnsinsm. And they greeted him yesterday with an enthusfastic, spontuncons, and afféctionate welcome, such as few Mon- srehs have recelved, Searted, lundering, overgrown children ol Augglo-daxon race, with their lmpressible loy- tgerutlc part of L Kidney-shaped borne at the extremity of a fleahy stulk, varying Sea s far a8 Jan Meya TIHT OCEANIC CIRCULATION. ‘The Challenger Is expeeted to arrive In Ports- month, at tho concluston of her three years’ cruise, by the last of this month or the fmt of June, Trof, Wyville Thotnpson, in discussing the question of veeanie dreulation, in his lost report to the Hydrographer of the Admiralty, geta forth the opinton that * The botton water of the two great ocenns s nn extremely slow inlraught from the Bouthern Sca; nud thia o refers 1o the simplest aud most obvious'of all causes,—the excess of evap- oratlon over precipitation fn the middle and sothern part of the water hemisphere.” In W8 report, Prof. Thompson re- ndd, that 1 have never ntie, the Southern 8ca, hitest pround for supposing sts 0a n general vertieal clr- culation of the water of the ocean, depending upon differences of s ced searcel seeny whether In the At or thu Pacific, the 8l that such o thing ex 1876—TWELVE PAGES. R TWO LOVERS. Harper's Dazar, “In tho spring n young wan'a fancy lghtly turna to thoughts of love,” sung the poet, and it was In the spring that Phil Faruday's fancy took that turn, when he lirst sct eyes on Protty Dolly Ollver, all ditaples and dancing eyoa and ringlets, wnm tints aud generous outlines. While ha palnted he could not forbear to mako love. He had come fresh from a great clty, where Indies fn velvets and jewels, with fine manuers and eegant surroundiugs, stood erowded hia notes, besleged Invitations, cheapened favor for him, flat- tered and fawned abont him, and perhaps turned his head {f they dfd not touch hls Lieart; was he to bo won by the polsc of n pretty head, by the pensivo trick of tiwo brown cyes, by the tremor of n dlmiple, or the touch aud go ofa blushit Could he afford such an fndulgence? He recalled the handsome and Rev, Mr, Smithors, DOLLY AND I e b it, T heliove my Muao pouserd hier eause; I'm not able Lo paint for thinking of her.* ‘AW sita tho wind fn that cornor? It you love her, why fn the name of common scnse t you think of her " given her up?? trn. 1 dars gay y 0 ur life without regretting it.)? 3 lr:evlcrl, Hll to-day.” - nd, to-morrow, yot wi rot » 136 yon think me o fek T cery “Don’t Jot ua b parsonal, “\Well, I’ & oo falry, grant. me threo wishes,” * Certanly, i you dmcmé them, ross ni 0] 1 winh that iy wifo shonld bo wallss * How so? That ahe ahould not by ¢d, nor cross-cyed, nor hunchback ¥ *That she aliall be of ** Not a mllkmalid or ls *“ Beenuso I I H Glven her upt or falr witch, anq ou never hear of such n a8 aelf-deninl " S Dve heant of it, ut havo never reen mich; rreat deal of the counterfeit about,* hava just denfed mysetf the greateat n life, because ahe wouldw't bear trans- Iant{ng from the rural districts to this hot- ottre existenvo of ours,” “Bother! Drop hifalutin, and tell us the *Tu plaln words, then, my friend, sho had never rend o lne of Bhakapeare in Ler life, ahe dldn't even know the namea of the popular writers of her own age, and ghe was the grand- doughter of u flsherman{® “1 lave heard of Ons who was tho bosom- friend of fislicrmen,” rald Ilardy, gravely. “Dyg ncurlosity to see this flaleran's grani- child, who haé aceomplished what our fino dnmes have falled to do, icrinan's granddaugh. with a diraple in aro plonty mich,” wayin, i e e Bhe shull be of your color, *'8ho shall; thera Tier wand towand the 4 And her name sha “Doloresl That's but a d used to eall me Dolly when I npine shall bu Dolores, an’ it * Her namo alull bo Dolores Def “ Al promised to graut onl olorous nam 05 the pectile gravity,'” y threo wishesn BRIEE NO’ The French Geographical Soclety purpogo in- viting Licut. Camcron to Parls, to o speclal meeting, in order {o bestow npon hiin testimo- nials of the appreefation in which s services to Belonce are lield in France, Mr, . C. Sorby, Presilent of the Royal Microscopical Soclety, London, gave a rofree on the 21st of April, in the apartments of Klug's College. Two hundred and fifty fnstrumenta and objects wero on axhibitlon; and the display of speclinens was, in somo reepeets, the fincst ever publicly wade. About 800 guests wero The Annals nf Natural Ilistory contains n traustation of an article by IHerr Otto Iahn on the structure of the Eozoon. nation of o number of sectlons of serpentinous limestone, including genuine cozoonal specimens from Canadu, the nuthor concludes that the structure of this so-called fossl is not orgnnle, —tho reprianl of your miade up his mind 1" Indulge himeelf you will proniise this, you will be my wife?"” he “‘Don't ask me, Mr, sible, I don't fulill your requir who built up a church in his bachelor days and converted sluners, but who found tho first crumbling abont his ears when he became a Ben- edick, aud the Inst bucksliding, not to say back- biting 3 und Mr, Faraday trembled. Old Mrs. Ol- iver, Dolly's grandmother, waa only the widow of a fisherman; Phil Faraday should never have thought of Tooking for a wife among such peo- ple. Would Dolly know how to hold licr ownin the salons of Iis world? Would she, who seemed to belong to this Innocent rural life as much ns the dalsles helonged to the flelds or the water- Hly to the ponds—would she not heill at cose und misplaced in a foshlonable drawiog-roomi Should ho never be ashanied of her s his wife? Could he be certain that ehe would never offend in gpeeeh or deed? Could he bear to sec the fine lndies who called themselves hils friends condeseend to her? could ho bear to liuve them criticise her * untutored mind,” as he knew they Poor Dolly knew little or nothing heart, Faraday.” And that, rooner or later, ho woul in that pleasure, encd that it was Marfus Tardy to fill Furnday's place, next and forgot stocks nnd exchanges, and developed o Tatent talont for sentiment for which Faraday luul never Ifardy went to Hedgevillo for curloslty, he stayed for Jove; but he never made known bls acqualntance with Faraday, Ono day Dolly nsked bim, shyly, and blugiing finely, “1lave Faraday—u celebrated who made bol “Youl You arc ‘atl m; are the day-dream of iny | ful, accomplished, high<born." erman's granddaughter, e, ou are heautl ven lifm credit, “My mother married a 8§ gardo, and died car) 8on; ho waa the wild descended house, to bo sure, took e, a baby, panish snllor, My, futher was Tose o n of nwenlthy and My grandmothep and cared for me mended the nets, They ealled me Dol always called Dolly Ollyer, beeause I seemed her chf ple fornd Delgardo o stum! offense. When Grandina Olly my father’s sister Agnes found my me away from the fiafing to conventa and what not, t! nps decelvo tho ver; you over scen painter, I hellevel™ Often,” anawered Tlardy, shrinking o little, “Then you know himi " ¢ Yes—a littlo.” “Yes, Imlght have known it,"—wincln view of the blow he waa about to inflict. ouinted your portealt, 8 thnt miade such a talk lust winter. Now I think of it, it was your very wralth. Ho was offered no end of money for it, and no won- And—and "—Dreathlessly—**did he sell {1 while grandma ig-block and gy From an exami- o hal to leavg liver in tho ‘uaccampy Lo nlso asserts thut what fs named the * canal-system® can be paralleled in tha tmeissose rocks of Mont Blane and the Black Forest. M. Bourbonge, a preparateur of the Sorbonne, {s continuing the experiments begun in Parls Auring the slege, for tho establishment of the telegruph without the use of wire. 1t s stated that he as already suceeeded In transmitting communicntions a'short distance by the expendi- turcof A lorge amount of clectrcit; 1ess than forty clements being require a magnetfe needlo ot o distancy of n quarter of 1t 3s aleo anid that he collects spon- tancous currents from the carth with large Mr. Piazzi 8nyth, the Astronomer-Royal for bas conununleated to Naturean nc- o rulu-hand which spectrun as bo was recently t: seople peep at the sky.” Although there were at the time no _especial Indieations of rain, it began to fall within an hour, und o continued Mr. Smyth hasdetected nd in the speetrum on several provious oeasions, but he does not yet feel able to explaln the phenomenon, and asks other observers to assist In throwing the subjeet through definite rescarches. It fs sald that Licut. Cameron contem- plates a wecond journey into Equatorinl Africa, 1is route will lend from the West Const of the Congo River; and he will take with him natlves of Zanzibar, who will be stimulated to persistent cfforts by the fact of ourney's conducting them homewards. Tl orer hopes, in s sceond expedition, to pass ound hitherto unknown,and to clearu, the doubtful points in Afrlean geography wi compelled 1o leave unsettied fu bis late Jouruey across the Continent. An account of the explorations of Col, Preje- vuleky In Eustern 1ligh Asta hns just appeared {n an ' English translution. ‘The objective point of the expedition was Kiakhta, on the borders of Slberia and Northern Mongzolln, The purty wus small, conslsting of the Colonel, ant, and two Cossacks; but the resull for a conslderable thue the presence of a rudu ut no_distant perlod. k, three years' worl alty, mot to principles, but in size from a cherry To an orunge, and from white to n yeitow or and pulpy stalk, with Its pleasnat acid tuste, Is calfed the apple, and s used a8 such; while the mukes u palatuble vinous ation, o hlghly rpirituvus The kernel of the red.” Fhis cnlargal to command. Mr. Bafley hus been Koeping a bonrding-house for several years with great Buceess, and has always Leen very popular with Mr. McCulloch, our” foriner Seere- tary of the Treasury, hus been dving with him, and wus the fint resldent of the new hotel, has all the elegance of the splendid establish- have referred, with o homne- llke comfort which they canuot prclvnlv old-fashloned, manly nation of nobs, a great # over thewn slnce the rupre- rown I8 once more treading on Luglish soll. And T wish them juy of his return. SIGNOR ROSST 12 at war with his critics, and not without cause. This great actor has been received by the En- Rlish press with an tsulting coldnees” nnd hos- Incomprehensible. dliquea for Ir- predetormined that Rose's engugement should be u fullure. If this s0, it_merely shows how without vulue, and venal, English dematie eriticlsm hns become, Kignor Rosxl wus vlolontly nesaulted for his in- and for the resson that 1t wus not the Hamiet of Shakspeare. But what sturdy, rtolid, uice, when expressed, everage, ory by distill Hquor of ugrecuble flavor. nut is oleaginous aud wholesome, und much val- ued o5 anurtiele of food. sields a milky juice, turning black ou exposure, which forms un excetlent vurnish, hut is o acrid 08 to produce inflummation of the skin by con- tuct, or even Ly its fumes alone. kentative of the The Cashew-tree menta to which [ ————— CORSBICANS. What They Eat, and tho Kind of Feoplo ving and Sulvini At o late meeting of the London Linnran Society, Mr, W, P. Uiern read a paper “On tho African Species of the Genns Coffes, Linn,” from which we glean some Interesting particu- lars. The genus is restricted exclusively to the Thirteen spocies are fudigenous Lo the African Continent, and two to the Istunds of Mauritius nud Bourbon. thirteen African specles are found western portion, and the other two {n the eentral uud castern reglons of the Contl- Of the seven Indian specles, one wus formerly cultivated, but this has b seded by the Afriean plants. The C. Arabicu, which uffords the coffee in ordinary use, grows wild fu Arabln, Abyssinia, near the Victoria Ny- In the Jutter country it s u sl tree, 10 to 15 foct high, und with a trunk ‘The celebrated Mocha cof- Hiven regards ’ Avablea, crented Har treatment and eultivation. But a fow spe- :8 s come to notlee, which posscases qual- ftles which are destined toinake it nore val- uable than even the Mocha. rian coffee (€, Liberica), which was introduced Into England in 1874 by Mr. W. Bull, the horti- By hnit wus sont to the coflee- Ceylow, who, having tested it by cultivation, declare that it surpasses in_somo fnportant respects the best varleties of the C. Arabica. It hoa Jarge leaves amd lurgo berries, which ure pruvounced far superior in flavor an aroma to any heretofors known, ‘80 hardy us to thy fungus thut §s working such damugs to the older species. thrives at lower ultitudes und in districts uncon- enfa) to the ather, and thercfore s likely to ave a greater cominereind value. The following skotch of Corslcan lite Is from a letter to the Cincinnatl Enquirer: nats, much latger than uny known In Amerles, bursting from their prickly sheath as they full to the ground, are gathered and gleancd to the last one; mcn, womnen, and chiliren making it their solo occupation until all wre housed, carry them on their heads In baskets, from thu ging to cach famdly, to the Joft Bubitation, where, potred Inu ugion a floor of polis, Iufd Jooucly, they gradually by the rmoke of the wintér's fira It on n platform of f the roam Ueneath), creeplug botweeh = the om the ¥ chestnity form no little part of “the prop] s gathered about tho wood-is ovening, the peasant's family es rout {n un carthen pot, each person putting his hand Into tho veesel and taking them one by ona upon his knee, burating the shell with s blow of When, iu the montha of January and Febraary, they are dricd lnrd und brittle, & part of the upper fioor {a 1itted up, and they coma rat- tling down upan the pavement benenth, man croshen the hull by pounding them In o bay tly dfled with nute, repeatedly upon a terpretation of Hamiel, ncter, ereated and fmpressed upon tho public mind by a serles of actors. 1t oueht tooceur to bim_ that an artlst of extraordinary genlus imisht perhaps Lave s deeper sympathy thun Nhmaclf with the pocet, and a truer {usight futo lous creations; at all events, that his fnterpretation, I u new one, should bo desery- ng of respectful conslderation. part, L udinire Rossl's Hamlel beyoud méusure, and for the speclal reason that it (I my opi famlet of Shakspeare; aun inter- pretation more trie to Nuture ond the poet, nore daring and complet: ecen upon the English stage Prince, nivland mental, he shuns remorselessly, and shows in- hee Living man created by the poet; Ji let, rendered Irresolute, not by dreamy reflect- Iveness, but by the conftlet of opposing pussions ; ndercurrent of fleveencss and frony, indicated by the insuch’ o nuture, tortured cireumstances und confliet, would have been fuevitable; Zamlet, sune from flrst to lust,aiever, in the true kense of the word, Insune, but, from first to lust, fren- eled with doubts anud frresolutiung fessness to cope with the eurrent bt swept to destructions Hamldl, In his out- bursts of rage verging over Into extravagunce, a8 o nature in which pussion 18 repressed” i al- ways extravagant o un occaslound unnilfesty- tion of pusslon; Jlamlet, lofty in thought, princely bearing not inconsistent with the grace of mi affuble” courtesy. This Is Shakspcare's Hamlet, pud it* i Rossl's, After nessing this uatonishing unazed ut the cothments “of clally ut certaln stotements ropeated by the 5 ulpiost, ununlinousty,—to tha effect, for ustanee, that the actor represented Hamlet s o nadman, and that his perfonnance lucked I began to doubt my own Eleven of the grop of Lrecs bolon in the middlo For my own them o4 they | anza, and in Angola, Lisn has before ‘The conventlonal 1 foot {n diameter Zlamlct, with W This is the Libe- tragedy, aud whi them fn o swooden n where tho wine and eful fingers will clean wway the aliells and At Iavt curried on un use's baek, and grouml in aio of the many Httle mills turned by the mountain brooks, the chentnuts are tranaformed into & meul worth always abont half the price of wheaten flours hence, tho contented Corfcan ex- hen wo huve not breud we sat And many thousand people eat nothing all enr save chestnat meal and o || rood spring water; even the oil is often lacking. 1e 49 called rich by his noluhbors who hna every duy & white loaf, abit of cheuso or g anil bottle of wine, nithough the latter, of mont excellent quality, 18 bought throughout afl Coralen Bt ive ceuts u quart, ** Unwashod, sud covered with flthy ragy, hulf- fedon the cheapent food, sleeplnzlike their own vilo unbmals, men, women, ' unid chifdren packed miscuously together, in oncbed chamber, thels stark-naked bodies {for so they lio dow A‘prey for fat ve drunken, the woi hold their heads b chivalry, wesr with excensivo military merlt recelved from Il have been soldic satusfuction the rank and ? courins huve riven t in the army, and are ready at all thnes to shoot and curve cach other In a quareel over a monsuro of ollves, and strictly observant of the forms of the Chureh, their conversation filled with invoeations to thy saluts, thiey blush notnt the wont vilo s obacena forws of epucch, uttered in Jeet, howaver hune, ni erformunce, 1 was the press, and es- NEW GUINEA. The story of the gigantic bird of New Guinen, witha spread of wings of 16 feet, and of tho spoor and tracks of suwe colossal quadruped, that were found on the banks of the Fly River, by the ofllvers of an Engllsh vessel, proves to bo fabulous. Bignor d'Albertl, the Itallan satural- ist, wha lately ascended the Fly River, hoa pub- sbed a portion of his notes made during the voyage; und these dlasipate completely the mar- velous atmosphere that invested the sceounts of the trayelers preceding hbu, Tho bgblrd turns out to be the red-nocked horn-bill, u bird of no extroordinary dhinenglons, but eulling slowly und stesdily, with the nolse of u locomotive- engine, The tracea of the supposed big quad- suped were left by the, cossowary. Sfgnor WAlhert! found the faund atong tho shores of the river surprising) character of the country und Of The sumu nuturallst, who has been for some thne studylng the native production of Yule Istond, on the southenst const of New Guinen, wacended amountaln 1,200 feet high, h lie obtained a viow of the plains o 'his atream truverses an in, the “mon di nev , Lonst of thair freedom and ride the budges of hat the actor did not intend torepresent HHamlet ¢; and ready to atltrm that so hud not seen beforo upon 4 Rossi in Hamlet 13 fumillar with eourtiers; but this familarity is the gramd, freo condescensfon of u Prinee_royal in birth and na- e thoves ensphiered with the majesty. The questlon us to the artist’s settled + by o letter hus just” published stating his opinton of Hamlet's churscter, and Lis nhint in his own Interpretation. ure preclscly i usecordance with my own (tho views expressed in this letter), I am content to abide hy my admiration, despite the alurs and assnults of ‘the Engtish press. AN that 1 have be applied with but lttle s conception s rofound study nud true drumatic fusight. In his interpretation of Bhukspeare's creatione, he shows s imaginutive power which few nctors have poesessed. is friends and crfeel goud Itoor; nu III:llllll;'l'dU' Lres it exeluded by deli- el soctalclicl o o o iy, when the suund of and nlight, they hurry tirough the an to coutinia whero the the bitter dispute In which thuy may Nave bvi en- gengad, and 0 hurl ¢ each others hesds the mor d hoeriblu curscs, o clawlngt cach other's Luir us thy vews ud rapidly ending the pruyer begln ugalu the battl scanty, considerin Lutray bls count sald of Jaynlet uns cliango to Rosel’s K1 the Amama Rlver, [Copy. Graxp Hotrs, Buientoy, England, May 11, 18 10 the Governor of Massuchuselts, U.'S. A. When on boord ote of vui somo Mttle thne spo 1 was looklng over nome old newspapers, and saw u Jetter (rom . ox-Confederaty Toy to you, returning the colors of o Mas- suchuretts reginient taken hy the troups under bis comwnand during your Clyil War. Now, hnd hu written und returnedd the fing 10 Lis awn foclings, nawcly, hius been his wish alnce tho War for o kindly feel- Ing tu exist butween the North and Bouth, ete., ete., 1t would have bean all right, and Ishoald not hsve troubled you with this Jetter; bat 1 think it my duty to Inform you thut o more hypocritical, 1ylng letter was never written, W, hnd a difcul 44Ol thiero was no dearth of purchasers, he- lleye me. Faraday's pletures don't go bugging, e eold it for n round sum. I forget the cxact about the things with which this tyorld was familiar, which the women with whom he min- led discussed as fluently as a salesman about I8 eunples; she lind never secen aplay in her 1ife, nor listened to a straln of music con- muster-mind and exceuted by she lind read such naovels as had come within her reach, but she learned to talk nrgon, of the day and tho o wathetic coteries to which I'arnday be- neither had sho learned to dissect her emotlons and motives, nor to distrust the hoj or the story of the sho had never heard of Darwin and What sort of figure would such a woman make In soclety? Faradny nsked himeclf as he sat be- r, day nfter day, watched her about her sk, taught licr to handle a penefl, san to her thoso sweet German afrs, full of love ang melodious regret, developed her powers of thought and expresslon, set her heart beating In deepened the wistful gleam of t the riddlo unsolyed, i the su- premt happiness of the moment, and forgot the uture and prudence. Ilo began to wish that he Jad been born w vustle, If this was not love, perhaps it was ns mnuch like the tender passlon s Faraday deserved to ¢ But theallair progreesed in spito of his seru- ples; if he did riot et her In the afternoon woods, he spent the evening mother’s poreh, with the old lady nodding in the background behind her speetacles, dreaming of the days when ber husband came rowin, at sunset, with the “ caller herrin’,” and cd thelr hands aud threw kisses ed reach of sea. hiw all the falr, sequestered spots where Nature was at lier best, all the solitudes the nelghbor- huod afforded; she showed him where the tan- ger built, where the maiden-air ferns and the Fosy Mnner were at home. They borrowed o wherry and went shootiug along thie still ponds, wmonit the Iragrant water-lics and the spley wikl azalene, and fullowed the windings of “the {uland river, shut in In sweet secluslon by its cmbowered banks and overarching trees. What brief evenings were those, when the still stremn was only broken by the béat of thelr ours or th plunge of sume magnificent plekerel the consiellations deptly and they see olores Delgardo. N, araday, I cannot b I promised, last evening, to marry and here he cames now with my wraj {s tiftro not? It really you have finished the gans, Tshould llKe to go In.” —— DEN HOLLADAY'S BIG FARM, Tho Ttegal Style that an Amerlean Craang Yanayed—Tho Unfinlshod Btono Castle In f,—A Domaln of & Thousang Acren thnt Was Stocked as o Luntinge Ground—A Mitllonalre Cripplod. New York Sun. The rich mendow lands of the town of Harelson, In Wenchester County, wero brimming with the sunahing and dew of a bright May morning, asg multitudo gathered around tho farm-houscs and rent cstate of len Tolladay ot a the farming property. tho Intereat of tho y the announcomen Tho executions that wero In hin hang , and wero on acconnt o {n the construction of the furm bulldings. aud in the arrangoment and laylng out of the farm. af buslncas roverees, was unablo to finfsh his won- home, and §t standa o while cle. phant, unavallable and without value, on the Lills luriua had been the It made no odds to Hardy thut Dolly had no taste for the drama, and lake poets; had not dreamed of Ierbert Spen- cer, tior Inughed over the Pickwlck Papers; ho fell a8 deliberately in love with her as i she hud been another Ielen, as learncd as an Oxford Professor, with o genenlogieal tree ns iz os o But Doliy's heart was not the unpro- tected fortress Farnday had found i, wha had walked boldly futo possession, while Iland, must st down, with all bis armaments andl equipments, and walt untfl it was starved into TFaraday hud taught Dolly suspicion of s sux, and u spice of cojuetry withul, and Ilardy was new to love-muking, " One day put on end to his suspense, and asked her” out~ it to marry him, T don't love you, Mr, Iardy,” she sald. * No, L suppose not; but, if you were my wife, I might help you to do so," * But what'If you found me no apt scholar In loyet No, I'm not in humor to Jove anybud, Ifeclliken clod; nsif I had no sensatlon. wonldn’t be falr; and then I'm not lit for your I used to think once that love made all thines equal, but it Isn’t so. bluslt for me, I'm so jgnorant.” ‘*Blush for you! you suspreet me of such a thingl our mind, Miss’ Dolly, if éver you should think more kindly of mu, If cver me, you will make me happy And then he kissed the tips of her fingera reverently, and went his way. urchaser himself. new nothing of the about ‘them in of fmmortallt Ilarrison, N, double measure, d dnys previoue to tho sale lier eyes, and lef plo had been sttmulated amounted to abont $22, of unpaid bill for worl Holladay, on accour 1 should make you i fn her grand- ‘ou make me blush when The Bherl walked under the hlossoming baughs of the npple orchard at the north of the sale of a valuable lot of lLoraes, and Mr, Ol 'n agent, described tho_flowery mend, ep in clover, sloplng from all direct! 13 of the stone manslon, M Ialladay bought this estate lu 1808, und at onca begnn the arrangement of & coantry houso thal should bo similar In plan and adornment to the of Enclieh noblemen, w hundred acres, but gradually cx- tending his domain from time o thne, he at lengh brought into hia posscasion nearl; the beet furming lands nunde over the whole territory to his wife, took cntire charge of tho Iaying ont and ac Tho constructlon of a auitablo dwelling house was at onco commenced, a_wwelllng knoll _abont Villago of White Ilaina tho foundations of the houss were laid, the aite being about a quarter of awile from the turnpike that winds from White he rock of which the Louscis conetructed 8 a bite granlte, and it was quarried Tho building s construcied ina should change =& o slieuld need tle children cln) neross the wrin! Dolly showed ANl that had happened five years ngo, when Delgardo ot Old “Orehard heaeh, und that voleano, hls heart, which ho he- 0 burned out, in the his renunciation of love und Dolly Oliver, began to give indications of beeoming aetive again. ST don’t know liow it 1s," he sald to her, one cvening, as they loitered on the sand, “but I feel s if I had known yon hefore. It must have been in some previous state of existence, when 1was o poet, perhaps. “Aud I a Pring Faraduy met Mlss Tieved extinet, of the grounds, beginning fn November, 1870, ctober, 1873, werc many nn he plants collected amonnted to 5,000 speclnens, representing 500 gpecies, otes flfth of which are new. In zoology, tiony Included 1,600 specimens o bracing 300 specics, 80 specimens of reptiles and fish, and 8,500 Insccts. An experiment is being tricd in New Zealand, to deterinlve how long un cel will llve catlug, An Injured spechnen was pl Lank nlong with others, for the convenlence of The tank was perfectly tight, with ption of the fincly-perforuted” bottom. red ecl, from ita unsound condition, 8 nhways left when u draft was made upon the contents of tho tank. The supply of cols kept up by continual udditivus, went on, the Individual exception: thinner and thinuer, wus stifl n uncaught, It [s uow reven years sines the cel has heen fed, and, though ** trunapurent sud quito white, it is, to al auces, bealthy and Ilvely enough.™ . e EX-CONFED. GEN. RIPLEY, To the Editor of The Tridune. BrianToy, Eng, May 11, 1876.—I Incloso a copy of o letter which T lave written to the Governor of Massachusetts respecting ex-Con- federate Gen, R. 8. Ripley and his letter when he returned the colors of a Mussachusetts regi- ment taken during the Ameriean War, Very J. R, Lee-BeLLASZSE. vere reflected fn 84 ed to eut ticlr way through e’ of stars, and found strange, deliclons cehoes in ambush on the shore, jealuus of thelr songs and catehes! “Dolly, who loves you?” ho called; and a u ulry volees fromn distunce beyoud distunce cesg, perhnps,” lnnghed Miss Delgardo, all the ricl colorkhiftihe on Lier check, ber velvet ey shinfng out softly as twin pans sles through the star-brin Plains to Harrison, from tho farm, peculiar style, beln; tman architectiro, a unlon of English and Gere hio_walle aro throo stories In helght, and ou the wostern sldo is a tall stona tawer, capped by u béautiful slate roof. Inside the building overything has a drear and desolato look, In tho baseiient, which Is woldy and drear, ury laundries, wine-roouws, fur- g, aud Gthor aprtinenta; il the second atory unfinished dining-room that wonld scat ob and in addition thoro are suiles “There, just now you remind moe of o dear MNttle girl once know out In the hackwoods, in the outskirts of uvilization, where 1 summer recruiting and sketehing,” “You! you! yout” Mg “Ilow you flatter mel One of your extinet fuu thivk tho cchio Is right, Dorotheal” “Tlow do Tknow?" she laughed. *I'm willing to take the echo’s ward for It, iy nune’s not Dorotbea, sir; many room, collars, Well, yes, perhaps 603 one has o o sl Moyt many u flame in o 8he was very sweet, do one no great cred though, or —" ¢ She would not haye kindled Tell me about her, however,—unly "m called Dolly, 1t doesn't do- of rooma whoee ol cct may only be guessed. From tho fient Atory & Tht.of vine. aro flight of pine stalrs, broad cnough for tho ascent of a columnn of soldlors, Jesds up to the sccond atory. numberless rooms that may b uscd for alumost ou Sowo rc square, soma clrcular, sud all ure provided with every modern appllance. The rooms are finfkhed withi dlilerent kinds of wood and while ln ono apartment thero may bo a contras of oalc and American walnut, in another {s & cheste nut and trople-wooded embeflishment. *+ IFrom thie higheat window of the granito towen ¥or miles and miles in ‘Dolly’s o milkmaid’s nam seribie you, my rose in bloowm, “I'mt sorry you don't llke it; but you needn’t use It s0 often,” sho laughed; an caught the bubble, and all the hill-side resound- cd with the attempted strain, 18 laughligs at you.» # Lot those Inugh who win,™ sald hi on his oars. ¢t 1 suppose this river finds the sca wo should follow it, hail some forefrnebound ship, aud count this sido of the world well lost for cach other his mind that {t ' would go easler with hin to re- nounce his hurdly-enrncd namo and live_an oh- scure [ife nbrond’than either to lose Dolly or h the ordeal of a mesallinnee, of fo- er to thosa who couldn't sca lier with his cyes, and yet whoso good opinfon of hils cholee was neeessury to his completo huppluess, if he would live unong them, “IWhat nced of thati” she answered him, 1y. ?\Hmhl you like to 41 don't know. What were her In_ thls story are almosk “What spells would ou expect of a flsher- man's grandduughter, ough sho were pretty You shall sce her pleture, some day, and judge for yourself.”” ou keep it yet? At I fear the orig- cr than you caro to own.” 4T keep the first rough sketeh only,™ “l;:'nuugh for memory und fmpgination to il 4 Hark] the echo there fna glorioas viow. overy direction roll the green, glossy knolls and valleys of a land thot 1s puefect In symmet. To the north an west n_ tho misty horls zon aro tho Vullsudes and sicopy villuges of tho Tiudson, to the south 1a o velvot spread of hillk and dales, ond on tho Acutheast ia the blue watcr of tha the picturo are broaks ecn menduws, and the tal -walled houses of country vile 17 %+ Around the fertilo ncres of tho Ophlr Farm, g tho estato of Mr. Holladny 18 called, und is unined ou the bars of tho great iron entrance gate, runy 1all grenite wall, capped with smooth-cut. ston Il wall woa bullt ““The finished portrait made such n hue-and- myselt famous for the ' Beeauso it was patuted by Insplration.” “You may call it thut. 1t added a fine figuro to my bank” account, Inspiratlon reducible to dollurs and canta, “*Oh! You bartered sentiment then!" oncall a passing fancy sacred senti- su Delgnrdo “Oh! then you didn't make real serfous love to Mirs Milkmuld{" “Well, like all very young it was serious enough at the time. should never recover, you know, and all ‘thut 1ands, hitlocks, spires and whi peclal contract, and it co 1t inclones the entire farm, and within ts circult are a multitude of farmhouscs and rural dwell many tonsnte of Just east of the “stonu dwells sy _valloy near thy small ° GQothic” edifice of granite, Holluday, who waa a devout Catholl erformed thu dutles of her fulth, long, winding, white-graveled lunc leads from tha chateau down'n_sloplug hill fo tho entranco of tha A few granito steps lead up to a landio; under a heavy stoned porch, on the sido of whic aro liiblical statues in- Parian marblo, chapol arc dozen or mors velvet-clad scats thing wtand beforo o littlo ultar, on which are golden candlosticks, Ogutes of the crucitixion, and waxen ou. ‘Many bronzo stutues of waints lin tha d 0 benutiful patating of the Immaculate on 18 hung at the rear of the altar, north and outaldo"of_tho chapel fs tho tomb of the famlly, §n which are buried childron. O one sido of tha church §u the room, scparateil by many hard-wood bilnds, in which the cholr sang thelr Catholic songs, stona mwansion, in 8 smooth, curying valle, farin-housve, tho cattle-yards, the bre bles, and wuny oflicea thut sre'nacd for the nens of the farin, ) Mr. Otin gave this occount of Mr. Holladay's cae reer: **When Mr. lolladay bought the Ophit Yarm Lo was in the fall dood of hls o wus the owner of the Overland nd waa speculating in boef on the plaing that brought bl thousunds upon thoussnds of dol« 1w all pay from the Goevernuent on the overland route umounted to sbout year, and from i s What 48 it 1fko *It would be like heaven there—with hut we won't o to-nlgl “What s it like? under his breath; turning the boat's head. 18 a ity of rulned paluces and pletures; the llon of Bt. Murk watchies over it; it canals throng with dugky gondulus live out the poem of for the world beyond the Adriatie. Would you like to o there with me, Dully! Wil you think about {t1"” And Dolly did think about it. used to dream of windiny streams to the murmnur of shudow of marble rulns; but she aid not go to Venlee. Ho brought her pictures of 1t, ho read oemp about it, he fired her {m- agination with his word-painting, aud then he, put the questlon by,"” and flonted 3 upon thalittle streaw ubout Tedge- ols, und sketched 1 wonder she didn’t like e Wi you, Indeed! Now It Is your turn to Vo W o atle, Would son “ Belng from the rural districts, I mean, 8ho must have thought she hud a dolphin In her “Perhaps sho dId, and dldn’t care to lund it, Iphins belng unmnrketablo.” * Was slie o mercenary ttle wreteh?” #Not fn the lenst. I went down to her place, to tetl you the truth, a few years after, just to own wiser; but the bird hed flown. The old grandinother, who used to nod over the mending of the nets, fu the rustic ehurch-yard, wit! her liead. But nobody could tell me anything of Dolly. The old folks were dead, and the younyz ones hud forgotten if they ever knew.” 1 should Jike to asl why you left her in tho place ' sadd Miss Delgzardo. \e wue a flsherman’s granddaughter.” *0ly, sure cnough! And soignorun! pose; no mateh for n great and rising ar quite out of her element hie March, 1872, when En- ity with America about tho Ala- hama clabms, Gen, Rivley wrote s very long letter to our War Uflice, giving them all tho Informatlon ho posscasd 08 fegurds the defonses of Amerlcs, polnting out the best places to land trooj support might be expected from the Houth, and skeiching out a plan vf onr eutire campnlgn! production of his waa afterwards printed in without hla name (o It, ‘Tor circne # friends: ho favored sne with one, also o letter cautloning me not to let **any Yanks getholdof it " 1 know the War Oflice acknow] of his cotmwunication, and thanked the Generasl for it ut tho sawe tme I hink iLin very probable they despleed Wlm 08 o traitor, the” oelginal letter In ties, 1f usked, wonld acl Tscnd & copy of this lotter toCol. Chicessbarough, Charge d'Alfafres, American Leiation, London, wi tho wiatter was bronght 1o the nolico of the Logu- ton womo the u her books and had gone to sleep villo, und’ fished in the white stons at slimpsen.of Arcadia, us i€ there were no Venlo and no to-morrow, and no reckoning day. A Ly and by, when the leaves began to drop relue- tuntly, atid the blackberry viues dressed up the stubhle with knots ond fringes of searlet, he be- thought himself that the summer wus over and done, and a erisls wos at hand. No doubt there was o grreat strugglo botween the Inclinations of s heart wod hle over-regard for Mre. Grundy and her fumnily before ho took lust row with Dol); u tdozen obseure apol which Dolly on vould not cven den; reasure of tho little Weat from th cdged the recelpt 1 have no douht m-lrv‘;u, l.l“dv.“xlt”“mx"l‘- re at n fashionable owledgo that it was du i % WIf T wern't Tooking Into your eyes, T shoutd think you were laughing at me.” It's an odd subjoct for us to talk about; let us chango it.” 'But first tell mo have you ever hud regrets” “ Not since I met Miss Delgardo, lark! the upon the river, nself that Inst tender hand, nor tho lust Ungering stoamahip lino from 'San 1 t liberty to usc this letter in any iink 0t, and iewapaper Ilia King Lear, e ———— cquully remurkable for Its majesty, and pathos, CELESTIAL LOVE. wiid subliinity, i o transcendent performance, sustafned throughout in the hghest key of tragic passlon, Thu reputation of Signor Rossb on the Continent bas dlunned cven Salvint's renown, und justly 505 with noe less foree of passion'thau Wis fiery compatriot, and consclentious un artfst, ho s far mnore sulitle, tn- telleetund, und imaginative. after being crowned with splend most fastidious of publics,—th forthe Urst Ui, Lus mo which should be awarde but with covert reproach or open ussaults, Rossi should visit Awerica, I trust thut our pul- Tle will not be futiuenced by the injustice of his English eritics, but will judge him on his und with unbiased mlnds. ~An Englishmal nature, hubit, cultare, truiniu until compelled o 1o so, extensive ond fertile district suited to grazing. iy recs nthe opinfon ot Wal- it there are two distinet hor A'Albert ng lace and others, races lubabiting N oF Pagusus, be' belleves ta be confined western and Interfor while n lghiter-colored, geut ruce oceupy th whieh they have drives At Antipodes my utory s, y eathion rogucs frum **Fanqul® eyes Strange mysterles couceal, I vontury, with but shinpl o palnt the ways of Heat! Celeatlal Juve reveal, portion of the [slund; urizer, sod more futelli- He came 1o Londun 1 tha original owners. NORTH-ATLANTIO EXPLORATION, An expedition will soou sturt from Bogue Flord, Norwuy, for the purpuso of surveylng the best navigable routes of the North Atlun- tie. Its apeclal objects oro suld to bo ¥ the de. termination by soundings of the sea's bottom; the obscrvation of the direction and rapldity of oceunie currents, and of the temperss the Investigution of the Purls; ATROPI Sl purtat S} teart.achen of *livatnens tricks that arc vai; ‘e World's old wtory o'cr *hinea ™ twaln, vk, 'l{u-lnn falr was Lu Aaln, ‘The daughter of u Mandarin, Who loy Ith thu Jove of womanking 1 slaply ** went It blin scaup napied Wiig, — amp, Lot worth a rap Lstes orfghiafe e hins always, in turs of the scaj causes bpd been at work, Roesi's originality would hlve been sufficlent to render popular Iy Buglund, In our electrical atmos- phitre, wo are wore prompt to recoguize the presclic of the trus Promethean fire, and to respond o the vibratfons of luspiration, have Wo loug, fnurt and literature, been con- nglish opinfons, of the great Centennful Celebration benceforth, we should be suftiviently muture to judge for the exwubition of the fausw wsud flors of lttoral snd submuorine regions; nwd the obaervution of metcorologieal “and g netle conditions generally,” commence with o survey of the cutrunce of Bogne Fjord itaclt, where the water {8 excop- tlonally deep and “the fauus sltnost unknowi, After the soundings alone the Norweglun coust ure completed, the expedition will depart from Christfansund for u survey of tho northeurt purts of the track between the Furoe Isles upd Scotland, and between those {slunds and Tee. 1t will also examine tho passago betweey leclund und Greentand, wnd, I8 the scuson prove Iu yulu old Asla stuenied an t Joyed o tore, v Wing st B round €0 Wit e e ™ Froin shis titue 1 Tulck and high 18 the ¢ Hroud and deep their e: We o no can sabo ™ them ut all, Ilence vur eathon lbunlvn:llull" thu zuuic the wids Warld over, Gxo, AL Rovesns, TUB OFBUA of activity. Nieson, Thal- Land, bave reccived” thelr accustomed Ex-Confederato Gun. R, § Riploy waa not so fortunaty us toget such an appointment, ond on tho£1st of January laet he Dehits, £9,050 0s 0d acnd you tha fnclosed (Which pledss conslde an private) ua the letter to the War You will also seo what my connection with Uen, Ripley haa beon. Tt chanced, upon nauminer's day, When all was calin within the bu; en lfghtest eophyr hid sway, fting tha wuninions, olus, moved, the sallors perhnpw, ho vesa Francleco to Portland, Ore. ; line from Callfornia 10 the Sumdwich Ieland; and a lino to Australia. At this tluo [t waa eatimated that ha was worlll about $10, 000,000, Soon ho rold out all h!l steams and Investod bs monoy In the San Frive on Hallrond. This investment fatlid, steadily lost mione: it value, and Ll il 1y as they had beed iss that sealed his resolve. Next morning he was up betimen, und away to his studio and sisters, and Dolly was waiting hind her casement, 1tke poor as day after day mel 3 1 do not belleva | doing wrong in molllng coples of 1t to koo of your lesding journals, for with me that Americuns ought to know what a Riploy has proved coursa hia may have had property at etake, vr other oluing the South’ duriy thera cducated at West Lo u forcim power, and at the sawe thine bo auxlous himself 1o juin in the fray, ls quite a different matter, Apologlzing for tronbiing you with thils letter, 1 am, very respectfully yours, Dlaying Von Weber, Shall we Jolu the think you will oy As they pussed into the danetng-hall, & couple brushed them by in the clrele of the wallz, and Faraduy suw Mizs Delgardo flush with a sudden e Marius Hardy, upon my word1” gald Fara- *Yes," sald Mlss Delgrardo, after tea, while you were at b Do you know him " # L gliould thiuk so! DIdn't we mect at Cha- mouni {—ol, the vatoof Chutmounl l—and didu't fer do Glace and the Flegers to- gether? Didn’t we take a diligence to and didn’t our diligence break down oud oblige to walk 3miles to the ncarest funi couldn’t have got nlong at all without Mr. Hae- dy—Auut Agnes and I3 be was invaluable.” speak with unction. I wish to heaven heen in his shoes, to d turn and carn such gratitude, Hi d watehing he- to his country. into the vast twilight shyss of_the pust did shie come to comprehend that he hud heen free to live his lfe with or without her, and that he had chosen us worldly prudence dictuted, ‘4 Dolly," he had once suld, not so, very long * jt'would be too seltlsh for me to téll you thut 1s in iy heart, This pleasant valley {s your sphere; you would pinein the artiticlal” nt- tnospliero ontsldo it. 1 should mysclt for brin, snd thereafter Mr., Ilollada iis immenso real estato el lons weru lost almost as quick] acquircd, Ho sold hinoverland mail rou Fargo & Co, in 1804 for 81, @ cash check fur the property. **For thy estate in Westchester County, with the penacs of tho bulldiy, d about $850, 000 r, Holladsy now lives In Portlan 1s tirst wifo s burled, cral sons uud a daughtor, under {he maz| tho tomb in the chapel in Harrison. day, the first wife, with Cathollc rites. her to the grave, and tho unusual magnlticence, was orlgiuaily bought and need for but it nevor pald, and the owner hus steadily los! money sinco ita purchane, over 160 Lorees—mustly brocding pluce, but for tho last fow scazons nof nlneteen of twenty horses have been on the farm. Mr. Chsrles Ohls leasod $he 950 acrea last ycar, and 14 teylng to work up the place, crn villa, {8 still kept up." “ho arrived juet SR, Lee-Beniazyee, P, 8. —About tha time Gen. tho following parogeaph appcare published in London: who sa skilMully defended Charlenton d Img the American War, lias been appointed to & command fn the Chinése nrmy with a salury of "l chatean cost §174, never forgive ng such trouble upon you for how could Dolly telt Dim she that wheroJic wis witling to risk trans And yot whén waa all would be well wi all wos plain to her, and she no longer hoped for not divest herself all at habit of caring icd in 1875, and wan burled Alurge conconrso followed uncrnl was an event of L8 return, she could gured In onr Bank. At one tlmo thera wors dog.” marce—on tha Is hel Every dog has his day, you know."” Faraday made the st of those fon days, elther among the spra puem, sitting at the feet of Miss Delgardo fn the dim reeesses’of the pine-groves, llstening to the singing sca, and the win among the spicy boughs, t) thie ulmost fuvarisble preseucs of Mr. 1i; * Can't L soe thut he {s do trop siday, on ono occasion, when he b Delggardo's nndivided attontion for half au hour, Hardy having been ealled aws 7ame ut croguet. and lils place was filled by a different over, who walted upon her with gen- tle ohservances, and made love inn very differ- ico ls alluded to B usly furniahiod se 8 mos “What Las come over the splrit of your dream, Faraday 1" asked Hardy, one Hardy, who adured genfus, and beaaty, and irt, but who could neither wield a penctl nor sing a astave, who lacked the expressive eyes of Furs- y, #nd his volubly tongue. oluying delicous orins ho “only drawback Le- Az Sung by the Imumrg:o‘t, Quarteste=Cy Py Z4 and ¥, ‘The blackbirds are wooing, Reed-warbloraare cooln; The niarshi-hens are chatt'ring luaves are gleaming sunabluw atreaming From tho bluy, tondor heaven of DI Puwaukeel Pewaukeul 0 lovoly Puwaukeet ‘We hasten to greet thee, this Tho black-bass are Jeapt Whioe thio still pools are ) o way, by apite, to lend hiw hand 1n off the steand, Now with hlseceptro emote the rock; Woke droway bay Sent vesucls iying Which o bl « Now dashed the wave Not one poor craft might ride at ¢ Ouic sbip wus torn, while tompest Another swallowed up und lost; Here, 8 poor brig parted with salle; Where, une had stroggied with cross galea lli, wweary grown of war and atrify, cured [t tarned (o ldlo ife. One rafely reached tho distant port, Aldud by atorus, 1ts voyago short; "l'was buill by workioy true 4 st Flaw was nol foun Cuncano, May 15, to mske up a e thu man who uct,” sighed Mr, Faradoy, lscarded wnong peodles; for how can uman reul 1o his swoetheart in the presence of & rival opencd ut random and read: ofn not madnees to mistakoy nowest sho loved thee, not a whit} hy heart might break , Misa Dolores" orithee, Mr. Faraday1” kind of sortilege, or divina- you waunt my heart ouly to 1don’t want it at all. Don't bo sentlmental, or l shall toalst on.w' flws;'t #ald, 4 without enough seatiment Faraday haa been complatuing that his Muse had deserted him, ** Change enoug| 80 harasscil in my “Debts 17 sugpested Hurdy, “There's my bank-bouk at your service." The fact, s, 11 Al 1 always thou, asbestos,—utterly fire-proo “Yes, {left nllitlo girl down in Hedgeville, last year, who loved me." “'There are plenty of girls he who doto on you. 00, t; but I loved herfwihat i5, I ‘snd scolding awsyy th livavy ahock; “T was never ossoming Mag that your check could pay. own g’ divided heart. 3 t you were wado of tholr operas o'ery . Like the breath of a lover, Tha odars of appla-bou, Powsukuy, Pewaukesl 0 lovely Pawaukus! We ball thee, aud love thes, Worp. s whits 0 tho shore. Rt A