Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, December 26, 1877, Page 6

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ment tho moment sho heard that fiet be- gage Vassar! [ have never been there, but have a8 racelved from thom assurances of co-opera- 1iving structures, far from being tha products Vho Attempled o Show that the Ameriean Ine | trothed had been bitten by & niad dog, o the Ezyptian. kmown quitea nuinber of its pupfls, and havé | tion. A 8t Gaudens has gono to Paris to of one such homorencona power, are rather the busiresn comnity, Tho Toard o Trade, wole. verngo of Intelligent | Took after things abroad. [n Patis a committeo | resultants of the dction ot a multitude of mate- #ale and atreot-commieslon houses wero closed, ;\ [} : THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: WEDNESDAY., DECEMBER 26, 1877, i s = e ST R -— |4 ; . wmas have fons of thousands of | back from summer rambles on the const and in | foot ta fixed to a stake fn the ground, andds | introdnction nto th bods, erow sagrain grows | PINANCE AND TRA 1 SAMANUSCRIPT FOUND,? | sty and lovemaking aro gone, and that thts b | (0 1o eretaned. mamun=of waraen who | {10 Inierior, ot to organize a now Acsemy just | hekd by n assisiant, while the smith halia on | st I o Lostil Tis caalos o | 10 ' DE. i . | Why, the exclange table showa: () that | can waikl dnst think of e wnknom plemsure | get " but "to, have a0 pGxhibitton, " and | the aloe. e gpor of Cgna ,,h‘;:‘ ,;,I,m“,;). i . r : : f sccing & woman walk!l " I{ there wero 100 fn { fest botl halr own ability and the s S = al onents o s g ory. i " oy .flulfi?'::c'c"{”&ng'rn'nfix? A OF 18 | Ehfenso ooy capable” of that exercise, i cer- | aympathy of The publle. Thiey vranized HOW PLANTS GROW. The roed Chastg been planted, ©ns m’l"nernfl\:crfr:fl]n‘ar;:‘ln|'rnrn'ucg;nlrl;fl-rfl»ym i “Now It Came to Pass" that Jo | 575 ) that it gats on fast: for 8 dnsh- | taioly wonld not b fon years uniil acrowd of | & working Committes, thesefore, — for SOV LhL it oweres dn tho form “of ' wrtkia nf | the clvlliei world to report, Tho niretaaloh. & ’. inz naval officer propo:ed ta & Washington | bovawould colicct on ecelng a4 woman wrig- | the purpose, composed of tho followiog men: | proauetion and Disteibutton of Organla | (OMMAZIUM from without, 1t mu tipliea Ly | acrvance of Christmas Dny produced & perfect 2l Smith Didn't Write the B o eor aesopted on Wedntedary | eNog, twisting, Jerking, biiching, _piunzing, | Walter Shiraw, Prosident: Mr. St. Gaudens, L3l growih within the 'ayefom, and thus Decasions | vacuam fo the lonn market fa. Wall atreot In the A and married on Satandny: () that it {s numer- | jumplog, running, skinping, ducking after her Vice-Presltent; Wyatt Eaton, Secrctary; Louts The aclentlfic editor of Harper's Monihly gises the phenoment Dhelong g (o that putieular diss | movements of currency and the dealings in ex. H Book of Mormon. T oo I Covethr.Cony aweats | iy ot Hingin (nto poation. &1 tne pre- | Tifang Tronmgrer! and Mosste. Detiman, Cole- | o 08 en 0o L ECICCN s Trotic the | (s ntacais i the e, T wmily of | St slvor it b, this morming. whers 5 Lr;: |:::‘:u'vneun Tx:});:&:l:n((ilfl:::b{lll‘:\vw:;eelee- en{.};:.ly::: mfa;xm: |qv:ml’|‘lln‘l‘§n¢ 1t would take | Bwain wiftora, nn:; ‘Thomns Moran, ll;l’;] Mra. | Organization of Plants.”” He combats tha doc- | Thomns Wateom, In the May numbior of Lhe :,: y;!‘-:gn:?fl ‘lfllt}:l“:n't‘::n;'}n‘?;h:r“c‘;n‘:‘l‘l‘v;?“ i It Wasa Historical IRomance Writw | b8 I seren busbands, ant [t S1of 2 A | po Tong o tme fo undo our. evil-dotng. Naturs | lider, mombore, ail peopie nf excellent talent, | trine .of the existenco of o vital foreo of tho | AbwierntA Century. mentlons the envo of saveral | L0 ECIL e UL aw 5 ten by Solomon Spalding, Tinil overy reason to suppose that \Key had been § stands ready, strugeling to le dh?;,""'c am& !l!r. Shlgllaz, who l:lflr;u fellow, and f"\ -:rtlll-': ohivslologlsts &s a homogeneous and distinct .'i!‘,,““l'.i'fi'.‘: ;el;\g h\‘%\'fi? ‘lm:l;l(;l‘ ‘l:l“m;l“nrl’l'r‘n‘v' u‘m':- ork e ge st par, s coj o - y of Connonut, 0. mmfmm"eff.‘.‘i“fi:' q‘:'.itmi.g‘l’i' ‘l:’r'.c:r'n"-{?‘" E"n‘.‘é’iéfldfi"n‘z":‘-’x“'filfifl&’:'(’,‘.“«‘1‘:‘: :r‘ur:.e-:"r?lr:st ;mm;cn'\:n .»!’;‘.’..‘fi,’.’.'..: Wit artiets In Bhiladcl. | Power. Tte anya: ward of a malanant fever, which was aseribed COMMERCIAY. i . anr".‘ ara,” of Westheld, Mass., broko theen- | of them [none. But, nins for your dream about rhln.‘llosmu. and other citics, sinca then, and ‘The progress of eclence shows J:Ilhfly that | to infection- from the body of the ancicat Christmas Day waa generally ohesrced by the g ) i ground that it wonld be unsale ta marrs & man | found them ail hotow ¢ AR Gty ahcaton oinattiity, th SOME SILVER QUESTIONS ANSWERED, [ and thio bnstnons dona was small and chiefly at the \ 118 tn tho follics of dress, Thby have svemed | of four lias been formed to select pletures for | ¥l forces. Uratity, colicslon, clmaticlty, the AL S DR, e i s “e?fl::r‘.:hl:::,;f eilegs who might have thie bylroptiobia; (@) thet, 18 | £orme teMling cxamples of the mistake of tho | the cxhibition, composcd of Atr. Tirldgman, ono | agency of the Jinpunderables, and all other rgouirian Gt o A T eivineror. | oL Ssablisbmania, “Hosos 345810 52, prlos chauges to report. LIVE 8TOCK. e Atncarato | STl tiree ér, four Americwns who has re; | BEer® MHICh, CRETRLS ton. hnd hemce It I ome years ago there was a e dlscursion | celved a medal from tho French salon, and chiom, o T e ot Wamear contames. o Now | Messrs. Sarzent, Volk, and &t Gaudeos, aud | that tho very evolution of & living form depends scparnte system. Tur Trisuxe I8 generally e clontly stated Mat, whether we agrea with it'or not, wo are not ofton fett in daubt s to what ita doctrine fs, Dut [ bo- i Massachusctts, who confesscd his 78d Jur, hired his neighbor's son to find o Spectal Qorrespondence of Tha Tribune, wife for him, inslsting _thal she i ' il Iross- | thirt c £ are alrcady prom- | On the condition that all these various agents | gin todoabt whethor Iunderatand its positionupon CRICARD, . ! Curvaanp, O Doc. BTho roceut’ death | must ba goune and pretty, and, the neent | Lo, ol ol fn® e | Y e em e r e st " the _ Aead: | conspire. Orunizel beings and organized hod- | ono phase of tha silvee aneation, * "0 | GATILE-Receired ymterder, ot tace Sniurdy i of the head of the Mormon Church, snd tha | brovht 10 the vancrabld, Fomee S0 SUTEINE | (i ulicity and healthfulncss scemed to be put | emy 18 o the “whole, & " vory | iessbring forth in thoso positions anty L0 whiehh | 4uq dcrrinos that real manor, Tt ita mera rop. et o e pmrat 10 GRhey Sur st AN wees i ‘prophecios indulged 1n in Tegard to the probable [ {52° torcherd her willingnoss to marry him,and | down. From the descriptions given, then and | intorosting one, and on tha lat of March, wiien the rays of the sun lavo access. ‘Thoy are | ICAGHCISS Lot 1ol amo bets HRELLRL T AT, | Tanotiea e 000318 0n ieroe Lo astoa kTRlee, e £ Tuture of that great dcluafon, invest all the ‘DK{RE‘““ T money in tho swect by-and-bys | since, of tho gruduacing-dresses of m? Iadiea, )I the exhibi xlo{r‘n avcn-' II:[II.\M ;:rur. lllrere( wlllll be. :I;;‘r:‘l&r:ml_lx{:cl;e& ll‘(‘we :ng‘ ;mephem. tho aca, mnu% ",w nosrens Thtrinale valne, whieh Tainn Pl i e et g a1 Tho. general public, of course, understand | beakics the commistions ciarged by the nelah | ETAUARO, M) WERC MG PR ror aate: | drom 1 dow't kot whera- wlae, fuun fn . It | shine, though 1 may have been cleac and trav- | flon, and the emand for 1 aftae it s priduced, | gortho monca fsrni 1ha markes was wronetr, ol that the whole system 18 a gross and palpable | 2OT8 0 R0 B0 s By sight years, 810.000 | and the dress of that day gives the oyote of | will ba a very brilllant aftalr. ‘Theacademiclans | PATERL AL first, it prescntly bezing Lo ansumo s | awdnot atall on the name the iaw giiesto mny | v BENA or to 64, 10@,50 for common 1o catra | b that the orlgin of the Hook of Mormon | H8 S Ha e e auld consent. 10 feave Lis | the nstitution on this lnbinct- ’ Wil mko n Inces spront, bit not & better ane. | Grecnlah Lintyand after wwhilo locks of green | efnito nuantity of It a0 thats wheieru coln of | Louty ko nicifun welght. paceing hom, 3d to $4.19 ! 13 deeply onshrouded in fraud and deceit; but | roof and allow him to enjoy his honoymaon, Al Twos once in_ the room of an expen- | Tuo younz men wil hayoS00 plettires at Tematy | T e, 08 o gides of thovesscl In which | §2lug Is not a whit aitored. i @A4.20for light, We note the following { only the antlauarian, or ong whohas pald special e I cauIng e, henty prckntes and panting | bt onelia the ot~ The atair Wil loat four | ‘Aun fn ebining, inbbica of gaa'may Do been; | cyeqics cont-srorin of ilve Sotnedinis frpciions | Ao A% Bice hor*an, “Bree y, { attentlan to the subect, ls awara of the facts in CO-EDUCATION. wnier s welght. Tt proved (o be tuontyfour | weoks. \ which, £ collccted, provo to bo 8 mixturo of | 4itaiy of"a’ doliar pamen coreent ' of eqimi {0 10 e i . regard to the authorship and first introdaction Yards, double width, of very heavy woolen | = The regnlarexhibition at tho Acadomy will | Oxy&en and nitropen, thelr proportion Lein® | yaiue with & greenback dolinr, or 07 cents In gald 3 ' 3 Gray Swinshelm Returns to the | K008, whichawith an_ cqual surface uf muslin | open the drst week of April, and last a montt | vafinble, Meantimo the green matler rnrmly that, therefore, 01 conta' worth In colns stamped H 5 * a4 ate have learncid #0 much | BTOWS, its new parts, aro developed, be- | 81, and mndo legai-tender for any sum, woull e e T R T i, Vining and soviral ynrds of heavy wiguing, waa | of two. Aunorican artiate it | rows, fis new parts, aa they aro develoned, ba- | 81, and mado ‘legai-tendrr 1 ] all o be put {nlo one dress far u feactice in Vas~ | in thu last year and o half, and aro fnepired | 12 nll day long covered with sirbolle which Jr, who was a arnduate of tho institutlon, ‘This | now witl ‘ush coiirage, that his Wil probably | dlsapoenr as soon ns th san laset. 1 theso dress she woro witbout support from the | be an excellent show, . obscrvations be medc on e stream o water the Sloulders, with French corscts four inch- | Unoof the pleces at tho latter éxhibition wiit | current of which ruus slowly, [t will bo found o smalier around the walsk than Nn- | be status of ©Whirltind" it completed fn | that the greon matter servcs as food for thon- turo required, In that dress thers wns | time, ns it probably will Do, by IHartley, tho | sands of nquatle insccts which mako thelr hab- aullctent of tie outsldu matcrial to iave mado | young seulptor. Tho clny modol for this work | ltatlons In it. ‘Theas fnsccts are tndued, with cight dresses. Tha father of the young lnly f; now nearly done. Litile remalus except to | powers of rapid locomotion, and possess n high, who worg it was a poor Western ‘clergyman, | complete the drapery, That la the last diflicult | 1y m’“‘““l'l?'] steucture, In their turn thoy fall often dependent on triends for weslstance, sud | partof the work, and thera In overy reason to | 8Drey to the fishics which frequent stich strenma- Fhio whs always in fnancial difficuttics. Sinee | betieve that this original and striking pleco witl | Thuis by the influence of the sunlight orgnnic that timo 1 have thought of Vassarns Carlyle npvear L tho Avademy in April. Jt ropresonts | matter is added L vegetablo systems, the action does of the British nation. It {s & collegs ontin | the incarnation of a whirlwind, a woman rlsing | being accompanlod by o variety of chemical de- Pouglkeeaio with 500 young lady students, | wildly from the sea, with tha arins tirows aloft, | Compositions nnd inicrstitial - diffusions. Tho “prineipally foole It'is vuc of the places | thu head bent forward and wearing n thireaten: | Bubstances arfsing arc such aa nru necessars for tewhich T would o more sond & girl than 10 a | ing look, aud tho drapery twisted nround tho | tho uses of the plant, mid fu order to distribute convent. The wholo atmosphere of thoss great | form and in o nass below i, giving tho outline | them mechanical mnthns liave to take place, caravansaries or bins of assorted bumanity is | and spirit of the natural ?ucnmnunon it repre- | This M tho mors highly ormanized plants gocs unliealthy, enervatiug, unnatural. Let thohoys | sents vividly, It is an ideal composition, con- | uniler tho acsiguation fl tho flow of tho sap. and girls fo to uchiool together, reclta together, | celvod In tho pirer nkt apirit, aud exdtes no | ‘The flow of hln sap in plants and the circala- compete for the smne prizes, but {ive I funlles [ Tittlo intercst among the art acquaintances of | ton of thia blood '1" animnls nre probably duc to whera there uzo old aud young of buth scxcs. tlis young sculptor. the same physical cause, And bringing into JAxE GRAT BWisstELM, 1t may not prove untnteresting to relate ont | View the experinents already related rospecting e \of what the idea for this statne grew, Hartley | caplilary ‘“'"‘";“”:!' 1 f"“’l"“";l‘ “‘“l %""“'”""fl N s » memba ¢ necessary for producing s contival flow, auc ART IN NEW YORK. s b o romon] fexabar | as evapotation, decomposition, eniution, : contly, and meets overy Naturdsy wight for | 0pIng the general Inw of thote movements, and Aclivity Among tho Artists—Threo Comlug |, entortalument and proft, Itis caflod the Sal- {Uuatrabing the et Tama nilh Shith shevire - 3 Hartioy’ e ub, after Washingtos f ¥ eyl e ey :;fl:‘llx‘mc. {n Its ranks many c-vfial“ olloms, | depend on this physfeal principle: “That it thereby be mnade worth one hundred centa In gold, 1 thin in true, what has inirinelo valus 1o dn with 1t} If it ean be done with N1 cents, why not with 50 centa? Whore shall we stop? (The truth in disputed cases is gencrally found in neither oxtreme, but somewhereealong about the middle. Tho Latin maxim rocounizes this in snying, * I medio futlesimua fbla.” The in- trinsfe or commereinl valuc of o metal can be increased by confering upon it new oradditional uses, which fincreszes demsnd for t. The comimnercint yolue of n thing is fn proportion to the demand g8 compared Wwith tho supply. ‘To demouctize aflver in a great natlon lke ours {s to cut down demand for it grestly, as Mr, Fiuk knows, and tho inevitabte tendenoy of that Is necessarily to cheapen it, s he cannot hetp pereotving, Making 'sfiver Jegal-tehder money In an-active cominercial natlon of 45,000,000 of people nffords an immense now demand for the metal, and, as long as it 'Is rel- atively chenper than gold, everybody will neglect gold and use the sliver. Tho necessary cffect of this actlon 8 to reduce the purchesiog power of gold by loas of demand, and to en- fect. It had scemed sach a wonder that right To the Kdifor of The Tribune. 1n the middle of the enlightened nineteenth cen- SWIssvALE, P&, Dec. 20.—Your comments on tury, and in the enlightened United Btates, an | my Co-cducation, Wisconxin-University Icn:r ' filiterate aud superstitious man could nssume | appeared in your 1ssue of the Bth Inst., the 621 d 1he disine affatus, write 8 book and deceive the | anniversary of my birth} solam *old enouch," ' soultitude. But tho facts were undisputed, and | It not **big enough, and might hiavo known bet~ the ouly thing to do was to nceept them and ac- ter! than write In #o0 careless a manner that count for them on reasonable grounds, you, or any one, could have supoosed mo favor- ’ Bome twenty miles enst of this elty, on the | able to love-making In school, or coquetry any- Iake shore, I the Town of Kirtland. This was where. If yousre right fn thinking that co- the first stake of the Church, Hero tho Prophet | education puts love-making into tha heads of and Lis aposties bullt o temple, which Is stand- [ the young folks, the question Is setticd, and we p fog fn good repalr to-day, and established o should have separate schools; but this Is cxact- hank for the issue of irredecmable paper moncy. | 1y tho proposition I deny, 1 claim that the Herc affalrs moved on In fino stylo untfl the | rivalrics of study, competition, and the occupn- Lank became bankrupt and tho people of Tho | tion of their minds by other subjects;lcad them surrounding country, who had been robbed and | them away from love-making, and that the com- defrauded, beeame enraged, ond, nsiug cu | panjonship of boya gives to girls, 8 mental ro- 1mansse, the Prophiet decmed J& politic to sca a . wislon which told him that he hal mude s mis- bustness and vigor obbated ta sentimentallty, i is Church, snd that T mointain that In no other place are the minds fake n locating bls Church, and that Missourl |/ S0 orcupod with boaux and billt-doux This whole section ot Lake Colm!f 1s, there- | as jo & fermaale seminary. 1&:0‘ rlch In memorles of the enrly daga of tho | 7 gm sustaincd in this view by my own expert- iiion Trowm "The” senseicrs. pages of b | evce,both a8 pupllmad teacher,and by that of firm at $2.7304.25 1 et h— 0~ CUBRENT OPINION, Whnt President Grant doosn't know ahont obstinacy Presidont Hayea can teach him.—Paila. aelphia Times (Ind. ) "I'he President s enjoying himself hngely In Now York, Tho sharks are feodiug him «on guid-dollar sermons with remumption sance, Moanwbile tho cracking and snupping go on.— Cincinnati Enquirer (Dem. ). Tho Albang Evening Journalsaya: ** A Ro- publican Administration ought to ba in accord with tho Repulican party, " Tho lapublican patty onght to bo 1z nccond with the Auministration when the Inttor ta simply fulnlling ‘the vledgos of tha party by which it was clected, —New York Evening L'ost (Rep.). 3 + We, for our lives, can't toll which are most opponed to the Intereatn of thaSouth and West—t| Lemodtatio Now York papers, or the Radical York pnpers, —Vickeburg Herald (Dem,),~No dife —Tottery Decoratlon = American hance sllver by the converse force of increased e ® | pupils and teachors, of both sexes, with whom] | Btatae L x s 1o liquids commuanicate with ono another in & 3 fetonce betweoen them. Thoey are two souls with H:fll;lt t]ggmn:;'n P:.:{,;m :; li: ‘32'%'«’5'.\?‘5‘.:’. I:ln {:-:o Mo oo 8 Y s“m;:l: ;:?.:l; :r::’,',m ’;::::’:;n. ¥ mmn'lsiv“?‘%hfi;!fl: .c:v"al;k?'ctl.blu"n ‘tll‘.‘:h 't‘!ll'f:u? b npuh;‘ry tube, or in o porous or paren- | demand, thereby brineing tho valte of thetwo | butasingle thonght: twa Tearta that bost the . Tridune, {lrlgm‘!l"io lho:méul hrh-ml -fl;‘lmol d.&wl? d?.v 1quote, as examples of monastic education, 0, They reject poligamy, und the dwellers In | yhq French, who certatnly do not atand ligh in i y i f:.i,‘ulfé‘ )1(: f&&:&fi"um' _,'{Efi,.“, n;‘;nfi:elg thelr reputation for. moral purity; and yet the Told several shades of belief, thus showing tha | glrls are kept within convent-walls until ready for marrfage. s . pecultar disposition of the human mind to form Bocts. . T should bo glad tobo done with all thls talk Allthisly “'“’,“‘ preface, Inthe year1810 | yuouy ducating girls for wives and mothers, Mr. E. D. Ilowe, then lvipg in Lake “County, Tabor for th 1 time a-corafng when the, and having had the best of opportunitics forob- | aod labor for the good timea-co y gorving the workings of the Church of Latter. | will bo brought up to bogood and noblewomen, Day Saints, wrote a book called ' Hlstory of | and when marriago will bo regarded as a proba- Murmoulsin,” which only recelved very small | 1o (neidont In thelr lives, not_na the lifo itself; dreulation, and coples Of which sro’ now ex. | pyt your Wisconsin lloard of Fducation laid the ceedingly scarce. — This writer propounded | ey gfe stress of thelr casa on this point, Tho the theory that Bolomen Bpalding was mrls must not go to the University because the suior “of tho - bisturical | por- | oy wero to bo eiucated for wives and mothers, tion of ino Mormon Bible, that Sid-| [4iienpetomeet them ontheirown grouud, and malntain that even this’ narrow. object can bo Bouth as vtio, —dlemphis Avalanche (Ind. ). Neijher Mr. Hill nor any other sana Damo- crat, North or Bonth, wishés to Insagnrute clvil war'by o coup d'elat in_favor of Mr. Tilden or any one elre. Jiatnow, wo are tolerably content with ibe work of the itepublicnn Prosidont, and quite willing to bide our timo for another hedring at. the Vatlot-box.—Mucon (6. ) Telegraph (Dem. ). There I8 no lonficr any exouso for mimn. derstanding, The Republican sentiment Is clear. 'Tho ponition of the Resablican Nopreeentatives 1 unmistakable, 'Tho l'rosidont canmot conat on Deinocratio -uiwuu. and ought not to want it fle cannoy succoed withuut any party, 'Tho only hopa of hin Adwministration les ju Itepublican suppor :‘ (h)u path Is plain.—~Aldany Ecening Journgl wep.). In his offorisfto roform tho civil-servico tho Prosidont needs the sappurtof sll honest man, - | chymatous structure, and have for that tibo or Nas Yons, Dec. 82— When any ono disputes | ioJ0urnsis of proveetings and the sommon; Mractare aifterent *afinitics movoment. wilt the valuo of oxpositions in the presence of Mr. | rofreshments and mugs of boer. As tlio tnuga | ¢nsues that Ttquid which has the nost energetic Abram 8, Howlit, of this clly, that gentlemanls | and pipes €0 around, s topic for filustration at | afllnity will moge ":"' the [renies velocity, very fond of telling tho consequences to thls | the next mecting o discusicd, and declded Jo ey Sron e |h°(°,1h“ fuidenticuly bes conmry of tlia Psria Worlds Fatf of 1907, Mr, | Upom." At tho noxt meettng évery member | foro iy et s fs fus 1o sommen Cooll lary attraction, ,which, in its turn, Is due to Tewlti savs the valuo of that cxhibition to the | bfpss ‘08 ouaty, skeich lllastratiie the toplc | eleetri excitement, * 4 United States Is incalculable, It 1sthe knowl- | clags of subjects given out, n few of ‘Arplylnx this principle ta the casc of plants, ¥ by B the liquid of which the ascending sap {a consti- oilgs gilind thste :'ifl:’,‘ffifi. il i o lato onen, my , b nentioned:, TREY | tuted' s derived from tio around by the actiun h " % | Frosty Morning,” “Harmony,” ¥ Wind, | of the spongloles, and consiats of water holding Uled them to reduce tho Importation of tron | Kruty, MO, (HARRRrY Wb in solution tho dilferentsaliuo bodies ncceasary and steel manufactures to tho United States | (he only sculptor in the Club., The restare | fo the plant, nlong with carbonle acid, ote. from 813,000,000 8 Fear to loss thau $10,000,000, | crason aud color paiutera, The sketches arg | This Jgsce upward by thn' woody fibre and totho great lucrease of our natlonal wealth, | pined wp around. the room, on the ine, when | ducts of tho alburnain, making ita way to tha The Informatlon gatued nt. Paris in 1807 and ro- | brought fu, this being an instltutton whero ev- :wv o _L4¢ - UDPSE alitiacn o ch, B erybolly reccives a place ou tho line, Itwaan | I0 - common = cases, —a clange i A - | 1, etelies of * Wind "' were thy ported so minutely by the Ameriean Commts. ntt, when tho sketclies of * Wind 7 wers thma | It8 chemical conatitutfon occurs through wmetals to an approximata level. The lutrinsie valuo of a thing Is an abstract dea. To find out how mucli a thing fs worth it must be aubjected to the market test of price, and the prico is de- termined by the Jaw of supply and demand. All this I8 too plaln and setf-cvident for contro- versy or multiplication of words.~En.} Yor say such » dollnt has tho same valne In pay- Ing debts as a gold dollar of 100 conts, Undoubit- cdly: ond #0 has & greenback dollar. with no ln- triusle value; and if two-thirds of both Hounes of Congreen agreo and chact—perbaps & supposiblo caso—that a dime whall be leusl-tendor for & dollar, :]h\i)l‘l' lh? 'l'lmu:. "nr the ’nnrglxb‘ln of charging bty — not say paylng them, — 00d a8 1he gold volinr of lllg B 2 [Thia bypereritictam ardly up to the in- ey Rigdon interlaraed the religious portions, tellectual standard which Mr. Fisk professes lnat the politiclans of e wy mo. Dut and proveeded with undisputable docamentary | F80 ottaincd by educating them together than | slonora bas proved of sluillar valuo to manufac- | pinted up, that in the twenty-seven or eight | tho influeace of tho: sunlight, 14 ol to occupy, and stnacks a lttl of pottifonging. | fE5AL S, BN pport his pollcy w o 8 polle, evidenco to substantiate bis- position. Ilearing 1 ther branches of {ndustry and to the | pictures of wavlug trees, overturned apple- | tains a quantity of carbon. This claborated | Jo well knows that o grecnback, in addition to 1 ¥ Thiat n distant relative of the suthior of the book | APArh becayss co-cducation gives them an op- u;f;;ar :n other Slands, wrecks on the const, overpuwered tim. | 3P, OF luteX, now roturus to the bark, and do- . o nderiand petEibls of geter pligtion, portunity of knowlog each other's mental and moral qualitics,—not veeanse it alds them to become lovers, If luva follows tius letter knowledge, it rests on amueh firmer founda. tion than {f bullt on a ball-room ot slelgh-ride acqualntance, and is moro 1ikely, if it result tn marriage, to bring happiness. ~ Icurtainly should not favor the herding of Targe numbers of young ten and younz women in one boarding-house, 1 have alwsys opposed the sorting of humaa belngs Itke coal or pota- toes,—putting those of one nge or description {n one Lin,m those of anotherfnanotherbin, An 01d Man's Home,an Otd Woman’s Home, 8 News- boys’ Home, & tlome for (iirls, and one for Dix- bies, are all abominations,—vivlations of the Creator's plan, Ile mada folks to Mve in faml- Hen,—old and youug, men and woineu, boys and girls, bables nnd grandparents, maosters and servants. A community of young folks, elther of ona scx or of both, {aull a mistake, ‘The pupils of every school should board in familics. As a rule, parcnts should live near enough sny school In which their children are to ho vducated, to have them board at home, ‘They never can have any utlier businesa of more importance, and, when sons and daughters zo to one schiool, thia ia casiers” but, when this cnnnot be dotie, pupils should bo placed under thecaro of some one who will represcnt tho pareats. s In most cascs, there arc young folks of both scxes In o famlly, and ‘a girl ought to be protty sure of protoction who has a brotherin the same school. A younz man would surcly Tead o better 1ifo who spent his evoninzs with his sister, or the sister of & friend, fn study, than if left to the companiunship of his own sex. 1f the Wisconsin University bas a lot of young men aud women it s great caravanéary of a comwoun boardinj-house, eating at thu same table, walking in the same ayeuues, and left to thelr own devicos, the Suard had better close the catablishment as soun as ‘possible, or burn It down It they canuot shut It up in a week, 1f such fs thelr plan of co-cducation, tio won- der thoy pronuunce it o failure; for thelr [nstfe tution inust be nore onu ol ce-sbominution than anything else, Fducatiog the scxes in the samo schoul docs not mean herding them together Jiko Indiona on a resorvationd You nssume that a 8chool Bonrd has no power to dictate what dress a pupll shall wear; but rou certalnly huve not considercd the question. Tt of hap-hnratd dovices which, follow noiat of political wmorulity, and areenbject to the suspicton of personal bias in tho Interest of local sliques,— (St Paut Ploneer-Lress (Ind. Rep, ). ? . Whon asked If thorc could bo a compromiso effectod between hhinsolf and the Proslifat, Jif. Conkling, with an exaltodnir, repilod, ** Yes, it Unm altowed ta dlctats tne teeme.'l 1t ho fv ot mistakes, Mr, Conkling is decidedly a ** biger man than old Hayes." "liut 1f Mr. Hayes aliows Mr. Conkling (o dictato torma of comprotnise, or If ho propores sny himsult, ha will pravo bimclf o lgger donkey than he haw yet given the eountry n(;?:::; t0 supposo he Quincy (1) Whig It is not worth while for tho frionds of silvor in tha Sonate to permit the Biand bIll to be comprowired away by untendaionts, , Tho blll as changed in (ho Benate Commitloo wauld not bo success In tag honds of an unfeiendiy Treamnry Depantment, Frov colnage wust bo had to owko money instead of merchandiso of milver, tu avold tho Increnso uf the publtc dovt, and to provido as Iy ns povelblo the motallio basls necdud for quate’ carrency, ~Uldcanatl Comenercial (Ind. kep.). “Broddrin,” eald, so elderly colored preacher, 1 the coursc of n funcral sernion over the remains of onc of Lis fock whose head had beon cavod fn by the hind fect of a mule,—~ **Bruddrin, It am vow'tul strunge dat, arter mo'n. nundred yars of 'saatrus ‘sporiment, a cnllud pussan shud pueelst in ‘proachin’ & mule fum do rar." We wonder It layen and Kvarts will, after tho late disastrons experiment, persovere in tholr attempt 40 approach Bonator Cunkling from that ;&)nmu)- directiont—Waskingtpn (0. C.) Post i) Undor {ho circumstances, ho [President Hayes] cannot do better than to make a Aght for his constitutional prorogative, Possibly (he Sen- nie is too strong for him; thst, howaver, rewalns tobo proved. Meanwhile, he mue perssvore in the llue of actlon bo has marked out, or give up altogether; for tacre s no mlddie course. ‘The Sonate counts upon tho kupport of the country, 1t {8 mot sare of that. If thu ‘cafe can be praperly reuented (0 the peapte, thcy Wil seo {unt the Prosident 19 moking u conteat ngainet an ontragcons usuroation of authority on the part of tho Senate, whicl: the Constitution alinost uxpressly forbide. ~—ifoston Adieriseer (Rep.), ¥ ‘I'he Ropublican party docs not require of President llayes that ho ‘ahall make a sacrifice of tho lenst lmportant of all the principles ho has cnunclated tn ils letter of ncoeplance or in his fn- augural address, to socuro Ite favor ond hearty ap- Lelng a lezal-tender for dobts, Is A promiso of tho Qovorument to pay a coln dollar, It is n duo-bill for a coin dollar to be pald the holder, it demanded, on the 1st of January, 1870, 1tn sllver dlino was lssucd as a legal-tender dollar, with the nccompauying promise that a year hience tho Oovernment would redeem It with o full coln dollar, there I8 no question as to what its prescnt purchastng power would be, ,viz.: tho same o legal-tender notes.—ED.) In the matter of small chango, legal tonder for small sums only, nobody cares for invir valae, so that thoy ate ycnuine and current;and yotls thero nolnunrn of lonlnlhlnfi hardly roputable, somes tufng a little ko a lio, In debarring the valuo of theao subsidiary colns below the. patut necessary tukeop thom In circulation, —sometning 8 litsla Tike *eilpping?” [Yes, peoplo do cars for thelr value, If they wwero not legal-tenders, tha present mass of over forty millions of them could not be kept at six or.geven conts above thelr comimorcial value ns bullion, If they wero.redecmable In gold cotn they wuuld have that value, [f thoy ware not legal-tenders they would necessarily have the purchasing power of thelr {utrinsle or market valtie as metal; but, belng made legal-tenders, they arc cxhalted o fewr cents to thio level of tho comimon legal-tonder note, which s rodeemable incolna year bience, aud,; asithere {s no silyer dollar, the coln 1a, perforee, gold.—En.] Except for the Inconvenlence of It on account of its wel fh" and bulk,—xot & vory sorlous objec t1on,—1 concelve uo falr-minded mau can object to anitinited stlver, Drovided only that not less than n dollar's worth ehall o cnlled a dullar, nor can 1 seo how such a man can ggk that Jess tnas that shall ba called ona, It 13 casy lo vec whe ane man wants 00 cents ta go for a dollar, aud nother woald Jiko ‘1o sev 110 conta called one. Eolflahinens explaina all thoee difToronces of apinion, The thing to Andaut aud do i t0 do right, togardess of elther of thewo wen; and purely 17 anunjust wolitht 18 an abom)na- ton 'St cannot'bo hard for & sincera_man to find whst the r It ls snid tiat use e in vaine, to bo d. W Withi & ahort {1136 colnod and bt fato clrealation a lurga amount of aliver, and the operation fs still Roini 00, #0 that Tor ail the A0 about dewoneal- zation wo hiavo it about as plenty ae over, and yot tha prico bas not advanced, but Tallen. atlll resided In Lake Cunmk er Jmfinzn re- cent vislt to the templo In Kirtland, I repaired to this gestlumew's houee, and proceaded to wake fuquiries o regard to Mr. Howe and his wind was fonud to b sconas thirough Its ecliular tissuo and Intercel- The uscfulnoss of an cxhibition 18 to be look- fi:glll’;l.lh‘l;‘\c;l'l;‘z: every skotch exucp: q‘;’:‘x:‘."% lular spaces, findlug {18*way by the route of the ed fora few years after the event takes place, | jooked like the panornmu of o gale, It was on | medullary rays to o l&mm of 'tho plant, Dur- and tho falr ftsclt 18 almost forgotten. For this | this night that Hartley'd Iittls clay”sketeh of | Ing its descont tho different vegetable principles reason thu benoiits of Iast year's show at Phila. | * Whirlwind,” a roughly formed aifalr, notover | hccessaty for the cconouy of tho plant ara ro- a Lhotbe fully undlerstood by Amert. | & 00t highy was brouzht fn, It was tho beat | ioved fram it,and a cortaln quantity goes elolua will not be fully uwilerat y Amert- | 3 0200 NED it and ‘atiracied a0 much atc | 40w to tli roots, purtly to ald in thelr growth, cans until somewhero in tho elghteen-oightics | yygion thnt Harthey resolved to bring it out in | 8nd partly to throw new quantities of ascending ot least. That thoro will then bo some causc for | o serjous statue. flo bogan the work Immo- | 5ap {uto thotrec, In this deacent the clsborat- national congratulation over the matter {s, how- dl()nwly. and has gono a8 far with St as stated '.’:’, :;:g l;n&?l\:flm'r‘t:l :n;w:l{v‘\:{ ‘r:::cnllun ‘:xlu':fuh aboyve. a grer, aircady apparent, and I 5o feencet more | “Tiiz Sketeh Club s one of tho most, Intorest. | nor a8 tho caplliary vesstla of aimals, Sstonishing what & change has alreasdy coma | 10is itio out rotories i town. It 18 very useful There are, therefore, two polnts In this clrcu- e eehluitlom, Which w0 overwhcimod | toits members, all of whom find that the | lation which requite atientive conulderation— our peoplo and artiits with [ta kivrics of for- | stiwulus it glves to orlginal composition is very tho spongiolo and tha leaf, Tlio apougloles arg ‘elgm art as to leave the former bewildered for a L:cnl« Bc\ifral ,&Z? already mml& mun‘uy l&m‘n {lg;b n&g‘u.l th; flclaul Ifl:geumcn‘f:gtrm:nglm:fi thno ond tho latter in duspalr has already ln | 1o suggestions thelr own pioperatious for Sat- footh " o5 ontly. urday night bave given them. It would not bo | formed from _vportlons of tha descond- saoatie v soonfd s sl e yoor | AR AEEMAICKIDE LI, L RAULESNNS | e oy ana Tt iy e D itaeh that tho. futuro of Atnerican At 1s | bresd and butter farzely by masblo-cuttiog for | specles of mucilagiious solution. Drecscls, ettt " A Sl AL A2 | e iz, shotd owe o U il i | hersur et vl pss throuh ths Mo s, e own first declded suceess In oririnal work, ruled the market. Amerlean pletures acarcely his dellriitful pastime has taken a firm hold of g i capece v the feminino and the masculino miud alike. The | colty in thus sccouuting for the riso of the as- o Tt v principat par of tho decoration 1w done by thy | sendiai top an tis ertclple of, canlary attene Jaln, and furniture onmly Rot their’ best | ladies. Tho atrongest admirers of the com- tion, and Indeed this is the lexolanation zencr- Tices when - they wero abio to paes off | lated plocs aco, howover, among the men. I | ally Tacelvod by vegetablo physlolugista, P e e 1t e o | Tenr tht tin- day Of wurstod work for holidsy | . Gulded r the princibio sbova laid down, I of- to a lurger oxtent than la -’unmsm- In the },ur,,u..,., at least for presentation togentloman | fered the following a8 an cxplauation of tho beautifying of luxurious honmes everything was "“’m‘" is p“)“"‘ Y 1:1!”[.4"!}:“'“““ l")u“". “"c':l";";lo‘r“:::g‘l”clt’.bu’r:u"n:“c"‘”‘;"'fl"&r;fl?, Ty forclgn as fat ns possible, or was supposcd to | social atinosnhere caused by the approsching | We SIRY SEEIERR O R 8 GO WREE Do hte winter Amorlcaton uro beglnning Lo nd- | Seativities has caused o rush to tho Eot\ery o Srd e v g sliops and kilus such as was nover botare know. | obtains carbonic acld from the ale; of this the vance national ast, 'Thoy have wot slowy ss far | Nearly everybody decorates now, thanks to tho | sunllizht effects the decomposition, with the English fu the last contury, Purchusers appear | clissusand privato Instruction of the past fow production of gum, tho result being a chango 10 avo growo discriminatiug. They tako a winters, and_ Christmas-trecs this year will be from waler to a mucilaginous solatlon. In tho Tctiiro or worlp oL art now upoh something ko | freluhied with no astoulsbing smount of tho | tlasuce of tho leal wo have, therefore, two ts ncrits, no mattor undor what sky 16 waa | MoWw closs of prescutation ploces, Thu miakers Hquids engaged, water and a mucllaginous so- palnited, Tl result s scen in the sals of the | ol the unglazed puttesy lave borraiwed irem Jatign,. Ot e peiuctple shove, Indleated, tho Olyyant collection o pictures ot a fashianabla | the formw ku the Cesnolawd other colloctions tn | Wuter will drive the musllaginous solution be- atvslon-roon thiswoek. Onoof theeriticaintown | the Metropolitan Museum —(aithough it [s | fora it, and forco it back aloug its proper ves- 2563 of "thia collsction, that ho dldn't exactly | buaiost tho rules), und from Schllemann's ( sels ntothe stom. Want to call tho nlctures bad, bug that it wae | ‘Troy and ita Rematns " and othor works, aud What, umn!h tho reason that tho light of wubiclent t0 ey thoy wore Amerlean pletures, | thostores ars full of w multitude of plecss of | the sun con) rols the Fapldity with which tho The colfection, however, has brought prices | 81l slzes and models, In the purcst types: aud ascending current comes! Hecauso it controls which lave op'mnu evervbody's cycs, ik these have becn golng off for the past monthby | the smount of carbonie acld reduced, andatiore- artists are happy. They say )t 1s the beat thing thousands, The lady artlsts bave boen ex- | foro the minount of elaborated nr formed, Why which has bnml{un thein au & class for sovery) | tremcly busy, tos, for s month, with orders for Is 1t thut the upward flow alminishes whei years. ‘Tha mpoil whicl Las been upon pur. | plasquer fl":ll plccad ol all ind from thoso f{':;g‘;:"“{g;’*:}}“:gr e L iaes ol 0 ! who do not decorate thomselves, tho plocos to c! T decoratiun is abroad, and every clasa appears to 3 P » n.,‘."f,'{::Q,f“&’flfi’fi',::fifi.fifl'%\ 58 e studion | Sost ths divino siiatus, Ytiero are, therofore, two sonrces of fores fn Can yon tell me,” sald I, * whether tho latg 1. 1, Howelelt any papers bohind bim; and 1t 80 where they moy be foundi®” 1 wife diduot vave many,’ sald the relative, “and sowme of thoso be did leave have been do- Etroyed,” *Wilcre cun thosa left be foundi “They ure lu my possession.” b \\"u'uhl yuu huve any objection to showing Wi th e, A tn box containing o conslderable number of old private loiters, o few old deeds, mud rome scraps of mauuseript was brought out, and bwas given permlasion to €o through it I spent 8 loug tine thos looking over these old documents, und uithough severn! of the let- ters referred In one way or another to the ** Hlstory of Mormonism,' still there was noth- e of espetial consequenca discovered untll the Lottom of the box was nearly reached, when two letbers carefully tled together, written in the old-fashioned way, upon larwe sheets, snd doubled with the writlug upon the inside, so that the sheet served buth aa letter aud envel- ope, aml held together by wofers, were founu, Upou reading tieso through I found them to bo the origlnal covies of twoof the lciters cou- talned In the * smr{ of Mormoulsm, Thg firat ouo bore nodate. 1t was trum a brother ol Bolomon Spulding, sud read as follows: i Dransin: You usk for some fucts in rognrd to iy brother, ond 1 lake the At opportauity to comply with your request. Solomon ‘was born fu Conneeticut In 1761 ~ Tic graduated at Dartmouth, arl, after trylng ono or two of the professiona, went intu mercantile pursaits, sni, fafling in th removed to Conneaut, Ashtabula 'County, O., In 1n08, At this placa 1 Visited him In 1812, ' Mo then told mo that bo had bean wriling 8 hook, wiieh Lo intended to Lave printed, the avalle af which he thought woald enable him'to pay all his dubte. ‘Tha bovk wae entitled tha **Manascript Yound,* of which he resd 10 Do many pasasges, It was ‘an histurical romance of tho frst settlers of ‘America, endesvorlng to ehow that the Amerlcan Indlans ‘aro the descendanta of the Jewy, of lost trites. It gava & detailed account of tnele Joue- and Leh contentions, and eoparated fnto o aistinct i e i i s '] Yaubaldlury ™ colned fn tho | prubatl It lanat o d ; 4 “Tho Academy of Design has beon apon for | & fowering plant—the spongiolo and tho leaf- {Ths amount ot “au ho | probativn, noto taskmastor. i, Mhe opRieied o o, dttact | Waah Polut o the Naval Sclhoul ot Auaapalls | exlivitions O fhan thore s in lubroken |'a s cuonthTora Tonscxibition of doco: | and thov Jerio thele power fsom ardigary phya- | ast sear nud threo-quartars Liss beon about | [Lisskes 5 ney s were erus wih i e Yhiten and ihe other Luinanites. Gruo) und bloody | tyue o very pupil; 60 do other successtul | ter aud pact af tha sotlug, rutive art fu all ta branches, Thoughnmodest | lcal priuciples. ovor has beon suld re8pect- | chirty-seven willlons of dollars, which wo sub- | gt sown, uF to gather where it b schiools fdr boys; and L inalst that glrls nave os much right to” be governed as boys, aud that they stand fn quits a3 much need of govern- meit. ‘Thero was & {lme, In the history of Weat Folut, when the puplls, fn ohedicned to fashion, took to weariug their pantuloons without sus- Eemlvn aud strapped ‘under thefr boots, This ud slmost the samo effect on thelr digestive . ata! | exporiment n the begluning, |t has proved to be | i tho movoments of 3ap in exogenous piants Fono At fe for the bencht of b Artite: | wkreas sitraction to tho Dublle. The visitora | applics also to the cuss of endoguuous, uud fa- 5 which this tfaie Is orsanizen ls that thoss | MumLLr 1,600 u day when the weather s pless- | deed to flowerless plants too, Wh sond pictires ang woris of ozt to ft abuil | 8ht, The suclety of lady artists, for whomft | Ithasbeon clearly catablisliod by the re- Yot contribte snferior works, but that the | wasoraunized, will fud ihemsclves at it closg | searchios of comparative unstomiste” that tho | blccos must ba certuin to soll foF & feapectable | With st leust 810,000 In thels treasury presonce ot culatory mechunlain 8 detees brice. Dlctures must Lo sure to bring B100. Ab intercativg fact in regard 10 the new | Wined by thecoutralizatiou of the vulrltiva uud A broportion of the recolpta from the sale wocs | Dicturcs which wre erowing into belug this | Fespiratury soparatus. o exogenous sud co- o tho ariiat{ tho rest to tho ud, Tl diblay whater out of the sketclios inade by the artista | dogenous plants, from the clreuinatances that not strown3 but §t doca claim thnt, having been elucted by the Republican party *'througn much mbulnl’un." upon the platfurm of principles which it hnd adopted as {hu guide of Itu counsel, and {n aceord- with the truditions and usages tbat have beun ted by each Hupublican Prosldent who has o tim, Prosidnt layee 1a in boor bound dhery to thuse principles, traditions, amd usages 8o loni ne bo bolds o posltion through the They burled thelr dosd in large Lieaps, which d the mounds so common fu this country. (1t Brts, sclet d clvilfxation wers brought into view In order 10'acconnt forall the curious an- tiquitica found m vurivus parts of North apd South Auierlea. 1 liava recently read the Look of Mor. won, and was f!uu"y surprised to find mearly the #ame historlenl 1outter, udtucs, otc., a8 thoy were {11 my brother's writings, 1 woll remember that e wrots In the old siyle, and commenced about every mitis hardly suficlent under the law of de- mand to enhaoce the ailver bulilou market of Loudon tothe level of legal-tender gold, for which there has beon an oxcesslva demand sinco Qermany and the Unlted Btates demonstized sliver. Bt 1t 1a belleved that thlg small Amer- fean colnage of *‘subsiliary chango has tended ure aguncy of lepublican suilrage. ‘The Iepob- rote : d abo i Whith heavy skirts Lung by the watst | this year composed of % laree., (¥ during thelr sumiser ruwbles, is the promivenca | Hquid lndlul{nl mn.u:rm aro Introduced at dis- | conslderably to arrvst tho fall o the market fic D party Avka this moch and nothing more, and Reitincy with, " Tabd 1 Caulo pune or a1 | oreans which beavyskirie luing Ly the Walst | tide year wil be comuoscd, of 8 larss mutaber | i3 bolui ivan 10 0id Bousow, {bo old | 1aus, balute, chanucls of communlaiion frou | valus of ailver bullon. Nobody belleves that | 1t wiil ol b contont wih anyihiag Ine - 1€ by o, sud, accordiaglo Lo boat of my recoflec: probibited by authority. Now, why stiould uot | noous art works, The ladics will appear in the | country strects of New England, the ruins fo | 000 to tho obkr, au o very barty @50 { yhg amount of stiver fh the dollar should be leas | Ident Hayes (s not willing fo snuarc tha measut d bellef, 1t is the satne ne my brother Solo- tiou ai 1nun wrote, with tha oxception of the roliglous matter. Iy what monue it bas fallen fato the hands of Joseph Braith, Jr., 1 am unable 10 de- termine, - Juint Bratwina, ‘The second letter waa dated at Conueaut, and reads s fullows, Ilcfithe tata of New York late In the year 1810, and atrived st this place the 1st of Jauuary fuliowiog. Soonalter my arrival | furmed & co- purterkhip with Solomen Bpsiding, for the pur. posa ot rebuflding & forge which behad commenced & yeur or two_Lefore, 1o very froquently read to 1ut trom a wanuscript which ho was writiug which 1 eutitled the **Manucript Found," and which Le repreacated ae belog found 15 this town. 1 spent ahsny bours tu hearing bim read said writl: Leruiow well acquuinted with dte contonts,’ He wished 16 10 atalat, hiia in dottluk bis production pututed, ailegiug tht & ook of that kud woald auvet with & rapid eale, § deslgnod duing so, but, the farge wub wewtiug our antidiostivns, we failed §. bukigess, and L declined having ~any- thiow to do with the publicution of ihe buuk. This book represented the Amerlcan Inlians us descendauts of ue lost Uirbes, K4v0 a1 accouut of their leaving Jerusalom, helr contentions and wars, which wery many and grest. Uue tme, when he was reading tu me the Gagic sccount of Labaa, I poiated out to blns what 1 cousliered an tuconsltency, which be promised Lo zorsuct, but, by relerrini Lo the Hook of Mormon, J bud 1o my surprige that 1t etauds there Just as be yead I\ to e then, Some months ayo L borrowed ths Guldea Bible, {ml 1t 1uto my pocket, carried it hioine, sud thought uo more of it.” Alaul 8 weck fuy wifo fuund the book 1o my coat-pocket, hung up, and commenced reading it sluud ay oy upun the bud, “bhe bad uot read twenty min- wtea till 1 was astonlihed 1o And tho eaine pussages 4 1= ¢hat Spalding bag read to me more tha tweuly vers before from his ** Masuscript Found.* 1w tlat | have more fully” exsuwfuvd the Golden B.tle, snd aitation {n 1ng that ton Chidtaclcal part TAa | priocipally if ot wlally ken frow the **Munuacsipt Pound." I wull recollect tolliug Mr. Spaldiog that tue xo fre- quost use uf the wurds **and it came to pass.” * - yuw It came Lo pass, “elc., readered 1t ridiculous, palising left here tn 1512, 'and 1 farisied bl b8 L0 carry bim to Pittabury, whess bo aald he 14 get the book printed wad poy me. But [ Fver leatd saviliogmore of bl o bl writiuge uutih 1 saw thew io the Book of Mormon. Hzusy Lase. After taking u cony of these letters, aud bav- in:z & luag couversatiou with the E:nueman. 1 left much strovger {u the velief that Spalding was ¢hie suthor of the bulk of this curlous buok then 1 bad cyer been before. Bluce that time L hisve made s careful study of the way in which female pupils, as well as males, bo forbidden to comit sufcide by drevs! What is to biuder auy Board of Education adoptior yules ou dress snd diet, or any otlicr sanftary subject? You think tho dress of girls too delleate i question for the iaterference of Belioul Boards, e 1t any more delicato thau the physiologlenl questions baraded before the pubs loon this questiont [ thiuk alwost avy girl would preter foterferonce with ler dress to q?l‘l: so much discussion about what ta lnside i Again: you are equally milstaken (f you thiok tumdwn- the ulthmatum ol dress-reform, Wumen would not be és bhealthy fu them as In slort, loose skirts; aml I dotbt if meu are. 1ws could havea perfect dress, both sexes would wear drapery more or less flowlng, and uo uue would ba stiiled futo his clutbes llke a afrogor ncrab, “I'he body wants mure Hizbt and slr than {t gets In the bresent costume of cither nigu or women, sud the one Is litle, I Anfi. better than the other, 1 suggust fur school -girls the (lerman peasant dress, in which thero 18 no bifurcated garmient; and, If one be added, it shiould be of very light materlul. HBut my idea of authority on tho subject of a school-dress and physival developent Is not new, ‘Tho Boston Behool of Oratury is one of co-education, and whew & woman presents bes- self 38 8 pupll, the Principal stauds before ber, laces his hauds ou ber lv«.'n, and tells her to »Breatho 17 It b inds that her dress interferes with that opcration, his verdict ls: 4 W can do nothing for you until you are prgrnly dressed!”—or wordsto this effect, is may come sgaln aud wgaln, but cannot begin bier stadies untd bo s satisfled that o outelde pressury prevents the full cxpansion of the dlaphragm, Whea she has rovm to brecthe, the next thinz is to perform that operationy to spend fiftecn minutes every morning breath- inie; then as many wore developiug muscle by slow, pativnt, scicotific motions, which produce uo strain, but bring the long-unused walls of the clest into fhele grn r, putural functions. Meo and wowmen, tu the luve-makiug perlod of 1ife, study in tho sawe clssses thery, and there lias becn 0o trouble with diriatlous. 1 have but rocently et ao Hlluols graduate of thut scliool, and have never eccn a mors Efllefl spechinen of pbysical culture. Her forin l‘lfll),g waguiticeut, her waist os large us & mwun of her beigut should have, and her mutivus a9 casy and graceul us those of 80 uutelope. No o o N California, and in geucral to what muy be | Fequired, and hience the introductlos of a tlre Butr it ::‘u; “fn‘.‘?,’é”m}fi.&‘.‘,'g o fi‘;.’,d eabs | termod American anthjuities, . A dilapidated | latory apparatus. In tho lower trioes of vet pla} of origlual works of the seoson. woysovered mill, or barn, or {arm house, | table llre‘ where the separation of fenction does T tho Bist week of February will begiu the | has been iu tho' pust a 'great stiraction | Bov exist, the clreulatory nccluclem fs core anntial oxhibition of the Water-Color Socletr, | tuariista, ‘Thls has been simply bocauss the | respondingly susont, = Hea-weeds absorb on How B prosperous and strong nssociation. Many | bullding wasa picturcsquo subjoct. Auothr | thelr whole surface, and nutrition s diract- OF tho pictires for this aro alrendy nishod, an | ldes seems Lo bo meorporated Into thisclase of [ ly carrlod forward at tho poluts ut recep, ureto boseen in 6 quist way ot the atudjos at | Work now, ‘The ariiats bavo been on the look- tlon, I lehens therc (s tho firet apnearance of th numerous art eolonics round town, Scurcs | Out this past summer, ot ouly for quaint old | 8 trantusory mechubismn, arisiug, from tho cire of others have siready been rubbed in. ‘Fho | bulldings, but for thoso earound which ancleat cumstance that oy those parts which are shadud Tasto for wator colors s made progress within | ssociations guther, and soveral -~ landscape | Srom the lhit, sbevrptlon tnost roplidly takes & fow years, it liaviog buen sceu wirat heautiful | painters have found that, additional soutiment | blace: hete probably, however, the chanucls of Silevts eat bo produced in this oo of work, and | could bo brought out in thelr works by stuwiug | inovement are thy luwrapaces bobwees tho wnumber of ol puluters havs shiftod to thiy | vencsof an bustorle charmcter, ‘The sling of cctls, und the causy stuiplo captilary attraction. Uiass of painting this winter. Somo of themury | Now England hava long been favorite thomos, | In mushrooma there i a closer, approxtination accused of DFinlug out Water colora which look | but this ls probably tha irst year, thiat speclal | 1o the Mechawii AT Ially doveloped 1 the Hica olt pantioge. i revrs, they catm that | sttention liss been glven to thoso anclont, | bizber plants, for i thom tho roatluts ahaorh they can sceuro the delfcacy of water colors at | broud, eho-shaded strieta in impossibie out of | vutrient wnatter from the yoll, (rom which 1t the same time that they put tho rich body of ofl | the way pisces in the country towns In that re- | passca by caplilary sction to every past of the paintings (nto thelr plotures, und they propose | Kion Whers the Hovolulionury arinics camped, | syatem. ¢ th to Tet tholr work speak for tsoll {n February, un:ll lllnlmh-‘: ;{hmwr‘- L guarded, n&%fi(fifllfi J{"fi"fi’g{'&g"‘r& o: &_';'ué'; Tl c a anllics whoss npames are 4 h The ouly drawback to tho eutlrs success of this ]!:Dmhw:l‘c T Gie aurals Mol mnm.'i flnp :nd‘lh‘shdcmn:g{ 'fihl %""&Tfic"‘f""fi" "hf el c el duwn houscs bave Leen palnted | liznt o 0 sun, Which cffocts the decomposl- V\uurm are stspped up the woment th Iil;(ufo. ‘{:“ ‘fi‘ '{;“&":"" ‘?fl{ aen ki ,&m.' tion of carbonts aitd. N ure mada {n tna wintor theold Dutch ruofed country seals of 3= D itiun of the pletures | ol fumnilics buva been painted, bocauso of to ‘Costly Churoh.Golng. tuus disposod of. ‘Tho show will last awonth, | ssutioent which histcry would add to the pict- Now York m:fum It will be followed by sn exhlbition concern- | ures. There {8 sometling fn this teudency of A prominent tnember o Flfth avenuo {0 which thers {s 8 gl deal of agitation fu | taste worths uudfiluw. taken by itself. 1t o ot | fashfopable church way have the followiug art circlce, It way possibly be remembered fn | 8 diswounsciod phienouena, Jt need only be al- | dinlogue this evonlag: Chlcago that last wister the supcruaturally lu.llu-l Lo Licre, howuver, ou account of its art re- w'l'. Oum;»‘tlw‘l‘txu.v—uolnflonhmh to-moarrow 14 academiclans hero r orribly | sults. mgrulug, wy de :fi'.lffl"b‘n'.m tho T":w or more plc:u‘xtg ?v:r: sent | * ‘Lo spirit of the new pictures f» American. gn Uutolpocket (emphatically)—Nol It cost Tu for their grand aunusl lapluy, fu the tlrag | Tho eye detects tho fuducocs of forelgn train- | e $5,000 last Bunduy moruing. I dunit feel fu lace, thers was only room (o tivs Acudemy of | Juig in thy method of treatment often, but our & devotlvnal frame of miud, und I don's Iike to ?mn:n for 500 palntiugs, Four bundred of | urtlsts are vot yickllug otherwise to forelga | it auy more under Brother KlnbalPe preacblog. those sent in wera destited tu be crowded out | Ideas snd nnrlmiuu exeept lu rarc cases, Thoy | He talks well. uug b talks too much ouey vut fur lack of wall room, rexardless of mcrls and | are paluting houcstly wud carucstly tuls winbt | of my pocket. He's tou strong a proacher los wlt other considerations whiatever. In the next lAmurlun:nmbljwlAdu nuwAmcern ‘l'tvll“:l flr.r‘lhl‘:.uko weakor aud leas coatly syrmons unlng the works e teed hey say thoy futend yet to couguer wi ft 01 P aa s thaat el 0 S0 favormal lhc:pucl:u b Aericar ol thepapin | Ml Gutatposkat. (outerlog)—Fatho, wou't lctures woro to bo eloct hu walls accard- | 50 Lard toplease. Tuere 18 sowe reason to Le- | yo e u.mf:'m:m,‘mo umfld’fn‘. w.mm fare su | luye they sy succeed, Musavs, Mr, O.—Buyl 1 bar nothlag for the noxt six Ladly that soime of them would pot have & et e mouths. Yol must give up that teip to Parly, paluting In the exbibition at all. A large suin- Horse-Shoclug lu Varlous Countrics. too. W : berof thy best pletuscs were paluted by men | Intbe Unltod States, Eugland, sud Fraoce | - Miss O.—Why, pa, what's the matter] | whow the Acadensy bad keps fo the cold outer | theburso-shoer simply” takes tbo Dorsc’s font | My O.—Kinball, w{ dur.nmmlml! s tho ir of uop-membershlp for years. There was | un his kueo b sboeit, This depsnds tu some | Waster. Klmball did (& all. Dow's blame me, dnuger (bat tbe «ocademicluns would bo | extent ok the nalure of \bé brewl of borses, | Go to Kimball bung up ber the skylizhts, wnd the | which ln sowme countries are, on the wveruge, | Alrs. O, (retlring)~I wish that Kimball would new 1men be acordud places on the line, An | wore shy, and most of thow'would not weil be | mind his own bustuess, absurd regulation was therefore made Iy regard | teated fu this way, Thus, I the Netuorlauds, | Toe Ruv. Mr. Fulug (cutering)—flo is, Miss :u m:lumwhun 'tw‘l"pg |]_cmnln uulubfl; of | sod iu nufli-‘lz( lfl:mm{&ludfi:\uu [ plfi ‘ls 3!:2{1;0:}';:: Bu‘;- Ll'uon ;fl?&l&pfifilflhm ‘l:’l: ect Of wpace un tbe hue, ‘This was suon aiter | & varrow af whiera chaius oro attaci . rupm!ud?‘:nd & scuaivlo Hunging Commfttes | to the upriguts; thon o0e of thcss chalus by | Jast Sunday. (\'unmnw only $76,000 to 14 and palicics of .lus Admiulstration by the prioclyles sl tiszes o Abo porty which cloctod Bim, ~the "least that he csn do fu honor ts to frankly make thal declaration 1 tho world, su that Hepublicans msy not lahor under the delusion that they have s lepublican Presldent, while history ia rapldly unveiling the fact that they have sogietbiag elso.~ Wudhington Republican (Rep.). ‘There aro two roasons for thls course on the part of the Ilepublicaus, In one view, it Is wimply the exerclue of & dlucrollon roposed in'thom by thu Conultution, 1f thoy prefee tho previuns incumbents and ihink the nominations {proper or fnjudicious, they bave o right to sy 80 withqut tncurring censuro. ‘The tenure-uf-ofiice act pro- Yidea that an onicer appolntud for four years shall o hiw full ler uulews ramoved, o4 well e ap- paluwd ¢+ by aud with the adsice wud consent of the Bemate.™ 1t was allcgod that no reasuns wers given by “fl Premdeut or Nr. Bhorman for the ro- moval of Muasrs, Arthurand Cornoll, But there 810 0Lher catises for thceo refections that woll sivided agejust criticiam. Slightl it ia tha old clalm that s Seuator 1a the w: pateunage In bia Biaty, aad that, 1€ a 1\ piade agalnst biswill, be hae 8 right 10 psk bis Lrother BenAtors, B8 g wyatter uf **senstocial comity," to Juin blm In sefusiug to condrm, Vile claiu 16 st war with the Cigutitation. It ie'an une wise, radical, ond rovolatiunary aiteration of the Constlintion,’ it is a usrpsion of Executive functions by (be legislative Lrateh, 1t {s cone dombed by tho Cinciunali platfortd upon which Mr, lHayos was vlected. The issu¢ lary bo dise Uiscd 1 Vhla case, but when 16t Cleaky mad he 400d will of every constituilonal lawyer an uyory patrlot wilh by with the Prvsldent. —Har¢ford Courant (Lep.). In regard to the Bouthem question, if there ia any Southern quecstion jow, we thiak it Gesdrablo f0r ALose exireiue Raulals to nnaeretand wuak southeru %couln think of &, aud for them to hnow what tho Buuthern white pecple will do be- fore thoy will aealn submit & negro rale, The Couklings aud Bluines bavo newr ceased (o whing becauso President Hayes refused to slteumpt to furce the Southern people 10 subglt to regro rule, &nd oven now clatn that tho Hejublican pasty ta clargod with the miseion of restoing to power the Amascs, the Spencers, the Pattenons ke Smal) the Cardozos, and_their follower{ Il seoms i to thelr minds thet this s ppcticatle, [i e tflu hure that we think thes| wen ueed ens ghtenmicnt. o Southeen Governurs wilf Maver call fut tho ald of the Natihial troope, and i not easy to understand how Mt Hayes could fn- terferu 1o tho local slfales of (biSoutbern Mate But if any contlugeacy shoald irlés that sloy) causo bini 10 8180tnpt L0 furee thi people axsin ane than tho old standard, viz.: 871) gralue. That amount makes an Americansllver dollar, Whon silver {s romonetized that welghit of metal wiil bo a dollar—legal-tender homest dollar, There will be no 01 conts about ft. It will b precisely 100 ceuts—ncither moro mor less, If tho in- triuslc or bullion value of the gold dol- lar shuil cxcced the purchasiog power ot ths logaltender, full-wolght asliver dollar, the former will bo employed in oz for- elgn exchanges os Is the case now, sod thelat. ter in debt-paylng and fo all domestle affulrs un- til the two come to an equilibriuw of commer- clal valug or purchasing powor. The gold dollar has not been {n domestio clrculatiou for vearly soventecy years.—Ep. ] One point further, [ think Tu Teiavxs would Taatotau 1hat ¢ would bo impossible to keep gold and silver in joint clrculation together, while elther metal was undervalued to say istcrisl swount; that s silver Jdoliar worth, say, nu wure thap U7 conta would be sure to drive out of eircala- tion & gold dollar worth 10U cunts, as n our own tie and countey the, gold dolia of 100 ‘centa dil arive out fhe silver dollar of 104 cents, 0 that il we adopt the silver dollar of 4125 yralng, maklvg it 1a the language of thie Gresubaciern, +fall * logal: tvndur, wa should havosud conld have vo guld coin iu ¢clrculation in the country; and It wo have but une otal all wust aliow gold to Deat, Respectiully, 8. Fiak. [They have no trouble in keeplug silyer and gold fo jolot circulation fo Fraace, Belgium, Bwitzerland, and Germany. There are still be- tween 200 snd 800 millions thbalers (73-cent silver plcces) Lo clreulation in Gerwany on a pas with gold, becauss it continucs to bo legl- tendor the saime as gold. The German Gov- crnment has pot dcmonetized siiver s was done {n this counsry—destroylug its lognl-teader power, What thas Guverumunt is dofug Is re- ducing the quantity of silver fo circalation in the Einpire. It s takivg the silver rccelved: for tages,. or & part of i, sending it over to Londoa, snd selling it ss bulllon for English gold, sud femiutiog this gold juto German marks and paylng them out. About balf the volume of sitver has fo this way been sent to Englaud and gold substituted; but the bate 0O 5 1d el "f Bouthorn whig J semalnder of the siver thalers coutinuo to bo | Ser Begru sule, bo would fail. sy B et e the presuscript fo all probability vassed from | wrigelo like that which distinguistics Lho becors | weut aliead and guya tho new wen the phices | plsced arvuud tho hoise's suklo sud the foot obt. % : peoplo witl narer again stiempl-o live undar nmnjw’: n;‘iu‘.":uw Yhoss of lhguvlun and Jo Sertd feuale tigure, no idgets,00 bullow cyes,und | thelr ment deseryed. ted sud ted up to aeouvenfvnt beighbt fur thy | - Mg Q.—Humpht legal-tenders as before, llml ;) circulate 'trw'lym g.:\:n.‘\;\g:nu:rn:-: L‘nm:a{ N '1 Tiey -.'51“1I :fl} Bralth, 0 1o auother letter will Iny the resalt | sbarp outliuvs about the fuce,~tuoss outward | 'The actiou of the academiclans was noby bow- | swith to do hbs works Tu Turkey snd Bervia e par yaluy with gold. lu France sot far from | drsi. \Wo U0 Bt e e gttt of 1y researvhes before the readers- of Tuw | aigos of intoroal displacementes Amovgoraluary | ever, forgutten. The uew wen resolved that | the bors's head 1 Beld h{ ong man, spother The Oerm Thyory, balf the metallic currency of tho mation i | Bty wuil Bzbe. Jast & the Nort Taipsvag. Gare, wonien slie woves Jiku Juuo awoug bur attend- | they would start 8 ucw Acudemy, or ut avy rate | boltls tho lex vu s aru, while the third oper- New York Sva, iit, be silver, aud it circulates on an oquality with guld, becausa It s an unlimited legul-tonder. 8o it wauld be {o this country If {8 were frecly colned xnd the greenbocks were Tedeemable ta oula oo demsund.—Kn. ¥ ra peos {ory they wil sulcr aguln what oy have 8 red. 1f the shlwart Reoublicans will kvep tbis fuct lu their suds, it will porkape sucourage thvn b endure lu puticace the Presi. ?:‘n’t;-?ouhunwuu.— Vickourg (Mls.) Daulg / o would By ante; aod the fuct that our climaty permits tho existence of vue yuch woman, and thut wo bave wue sehoot which calurces the teshue veces- sury Lo produce auch, proves that all vur sclools could do likewide U 3uey would, aud that i orzanize thelr owu exbibitwn suotler year, s | stes ou the foot, 1o Kussis the horse ls plaed According to the germ thoory, the commmunl- determination o which they wero strevgitienod | in a square cage wadu of roug wouden planks, | cable discases, Such 4 swall-pox, cholera, yel- by the powerful wld of the ves of Clsrence Coui, | sl lé strupped around the belly with wide | low fever, measled, scarlet fever, typhus aud tho well-kpo¥a art critic. . Not 10 gu tou Last, | lcather straps sttached 10 the cross-burs of the | typhold feverw sud diphtuens, are developed Bowever, they resolved this full, alter gottlug | frawe-workt bis bvad i slso safely Hud, tho | from pasticles of orguilc wotter. which, uon o ——— Humsoce 1u Awmeriva, M York Ivtbune. . Who ays that there bn ou somance in prac- $oad Awcricat WL aiye toab Lhe ds)e uf wlaye ~

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