Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, March 2, 1878, Page 9

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1 THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: SATURDAY. MARCIT 2, 1878—-TWELVF PAGES. 9 = ————_ i ————————— — - LITERAI‘URE. do whn:. pcnp'!u l"]llfi uule—'tlum nto n"poml, l\lnny{ lfilflnmrurl g{;-pmn‘wrmn .whlen'. ns n-nk- "';:nlrnllcrwnrdl, to muster """fiwl'r}'rh mld):;r;. Mnhlumz,; ‘;l-rrl..- ”"E“‘.’l’r “r{ F.l'(-)m‘fl)l }‘?nl-n' or @ stagnant Lethe—a silo crescent, row | rescntative of the New York flerald, hn too ut fearing that the nolae of 600, pound Js mant,"" by the Itev, Noah Porter, ). D)., L Ly Lo o butldingn. Detter be fnpradent moveabice | part fn-tho Kossian eampalgu beforo Kiivs, | something too loud, 1 wil not. enforce nuy man | Lreebient of Yale Cniiege. tho Rev: 0: 1il | [lerett e Y Nyecyur in iy by Banafand | fo be nursuing the very aame taturs In the same than pradent fixtures. Open my mouth at the | carned him the admiration of Europs and | to beleeve more than his ahare of it, tillhe | Frothinzham, the Very Rev. T?flm" S, Pres. %, Y D! y and In the same flelds as auring the day, " p the " 2 2 Letters of John Keats to His | Street door like tiia Lion's hiewd at Venlco to | Amarica. Other oniy less rendy and nntorpris- | henros it confirmed onee azaine. o b g thin Rex, Hemy S0 olonrn D D | e v e €0 W ey of v acre | Mg ey, Syt folinxstalions which atood near the tomb ol her huaband, | night, from sunsct to- sunrise, they were found ut to kiss the lips of the fnanimate | feeding-grounds, ana hills wera always thronged recelve hateful cards, letters, mesnages. (io | ing journalists nssist in describing the events Perhaps other more Intereating points might [ ”" Sweetheart, Fanny ut and wilerstiea trton;ffeczo ot dianere; | wich nvo marked the beogressof tho prescnt | he relectot” from” Ui e oid Lumon nee Thant iy Snpet Tl i S Cantamnaraty. Gen, SARY pesrs e S promunot Catty | darand migiet Theywert aleo fauniby b nces ; simmer at routs, No oye, | contest in both Europo and Asia, ournal, but we nave already devoted suflicient NATURALIST for March (McCalla I Brawne. trust yourself to me and 1 will find you nobler | *The letters, heainning early in April and con- | &pace, nnd. after all. the engtente Are nnt a0 re- ATERATIAL ot March ¢ Vilihin reach, although udor lock and keg a8 | nesta, in Fennaylvanis, even fn winter. “Al- amugscments, fortune favoring.' tinuing untii the 20tk of November, arc so skill* | markable as the existence of the paper itseif In At the time of this writine, and of the letter fully connected by explanatory lines as to | this metropolls of & region feom which, at the hia). of tne Westminster achofars | though difficuit to exami f IS For February (Yew Yoro, | okt feted O 0 Re R Sl of Saine it cerialuty, ghe v p J g them | proccedings of the ants in th nderground BANITARIAN for March (A. N- hell, New Yori, | BeklMe e vl way then awalting tie open- | EuTicrics, 1 has been, detérmines with sore. ot omy of Invertebrated following, Keats was absorbed In the ecatalic | form a coherent account. They arc minute aml | (Ime the paner apneared, a newa correspondenc X Anat A" t Tife.Eist A';:m“"" dreams of & poct, and confesses tols lads-love, | comprehensva in Aetall, norvous and erapbicin | would have ‘seemed sirangor than one FAMILIAR TALK. Ing of 8 Jors) yault to widch It might ‘be con- | lean conclusivenaes by thls ohmerver that they neient EE- story of the ;"lrnan:'. Tcmain wmndny;'ln . ."‘lll:b—hlm ou | style, and Animated with meiote umltc’:!unm- tolegraplied_ directly {r;nm Ithe man - o Tn 1770, the yoar In which the first Duchass of | do not. :‘nlx:l‘r;‘t;fnrau;’!’:—u‘:::‘:r’cm‘:dfl::? R hrough a Mist. . . o mind {» heap'd to n of exciting Interest. [n aliort, thay are | the “mumin—s er which, it woul em. . Ne g - arth, the Tull; stuffed ifke & ericket. bali~f I strive | stich secitals an aro prodnced oniy by actnal obe | dues nog ‘asitr i a0 earir a copys even. in STRENGTIT OF WOMEN, Northumberland was Inid in the tomb, when | great majority of tha commanity oecupy tho The universat beliel that woma: pature | the Peres vault was bufit In the Bt. Nicholas | underaround gslleries In winter, although the s uaiscrmt et “mn “l:llln:“ o, | Chapel, ihe apportunits was weed e [;llflnz structure of themounds fs auch as to Insura . I4 " | tho cofftu of Queen Catherlne outof sight. In the | protection fn the central parts above ground fs founded upon the abscrvation of civillzed | adjacent vault of Sir Georgs Villiers, Ou the | auninst ordinarily severe weather.. The ants peoples from time immemorial. And yet there | tdeath of Lurd Henry Percy, in December, 1877, | appear to be nhlo{o proserve their activity in all is an abundance of persuasive evidence that it fs | 1he wall which separates the vault of the Percys | ordinary scasons,.cspeclally when dwelling fn not nature, but habit, that bas rendered woman trom that of the Villfers was perforated, and | the underground gallerles, and aleo to do with- to fill It more I'b. udll h‘l’;“’u“l Fn;l.hcl;lnnuln the same commitnication, be atates, in alluding to TRusso-Turkish War Correspondence of | his aependenco upon friends for pecuniary the ** London Dally News **—.Ser= means: ‘*I haye all my life thought very little of these mattcrs—tlioy scem not to betong to mons by Canon Kingsley. me. It mny be s proud sentence; but by Heaven Ian asoutirelyaliove atl mattera of in« servers who have the faculty and the training to | the great world'metropolis where It was orlgi- note down with Tightnlng pen that which they | nally fssued. Me, Clarke acquired [t some sears hiave seen and heard, while the pulsos are #till | ago, amone a collection of ‘.Th books purchased uivering from the straln upon hudy and inind. | at a sccond-hand buokstore in London, hey have tho advantage over Iater and cooler [ Nathame) Bitter's Werkly Newes Is not the liatorlen In that thoy aro frcer, more familiar, | ouly carly English nowspaper Mr. Clarko pos- and more aglow with the thrilling experlence of | resice, (houghy Lecanss of fta distiiction as the tercat an tho Sun is above the Barthnnd thongh | the hour and the ircamatance, fieat Englial néwspaper, 1t 1 far the most natice. | the Inferiof of man 1n_ muscular force and en- | 10 enioq. with & 1aden i Tororiing con T, | i fheceimar, sl customary. supplles of fqpd ftrength of Women—Maissonier, the French ;;l';'n{,‘::'l"rg:l“"{”gu‘.;’;gx',',‘ bo careless; of my SR TONE T R TRERE g, Houndin 3 neat lit{le valume efore us | durance. We pass by the textimony bearing | of thelr deposition. At this Jast data the box Ao 3 LM ONS NGSLEY. ¢ Moderate yencer: . i % Painter—Royal Remains-—Art- Altee s rupiore of a_blood-vessel In tho | ALL AATSTS! DAL avp (e Senasns, Ty | Ualy Communtcating: Marual AMairea to tho | 4POn the arqument that mizht be adduced from | mas removel, frotr tho Villers vait anl de- JADANBAE FENSINMONS, Gossip—Indian Bosaries, lungsin February, 13%, Kents remaincd for | “the ftey. Citant.en Kivastey, S Av Late ltectop | Anedom of Eneland: from 7 harsday. August | the histary of savage races, and cite merelv that | FOS J | _ At a mecting of the California Academy ot some weeks at_the house of his friend Brown, Itn }xegn:rr&l]n T":El'llm-l nouiad werg. dln{\y ur‘L " 0 his be! hed at the * next door.! e real- Artificial Voice~WWood-Ants~.-Japanese Persim- | ized from the firat all that, thia fliness portend- {| fth. The b were sul ‘- which fs offered In the feats of male and female | fi¢ FIfth The l;',:’n:h“"",fc:,'l"fl,e,,“n‘}"l:‘:‘: fast, | Bclences, a specimen of the Japanese persim- gymonsts, Mr. Charles Reade Inadentally | and it may be supposed final, disturbance, and | mon was presented by Mr. Hoilister, In whose furnishes some important facts relating to this | & suitable fn<cription was placed on the marble | orchard near Santa Barbara it had been grown. of Eversioy and Canon of Westminster, Edited | f to Thursday, August 13, 1646," which presents Dby the Rev, W. Hannirox, M. A., Rector of | the newa for each day of the week at home and Biringlon. Now York: Scribner, Armsirong & | from il parts of the continent; Jie home news ‘4‘{'(‘, Chicago: Hadley Brov. & Co. 12mo.. pp. | referting chiefly to negotiatfons hetween the h ¢ R ' rlah at the sltar of the Annunclation, which les 5 i Va | o ed, and his notes reflect the melancholy of his Frice, $1.50. King, Cliarien T and tho Partlament, A copyof | POlubs In s letter cntitled SThe Coming Man." " The Ameriean Naturalist reporta the, following : mons-Juseels of 1llinols.~Brief splrits. *You know our situation,” (s anid fu | These sermons are, Wko all the writings of [ this e ot 180 T e htet form) dared | and publisted in farper's Weekly. He is aiming | OVer them. remarks upon the fruft made by Mr. Holllster, 1 Sclentific Notes, one of these; **what hope Is there If I should | Charles Kingsley, the outponring of an fntense- | Feb. 1, 1619, wasshown at the Caxton Exhibitfon. | to prove that the left handand feg are naturally ART-GOSSIP, who n.-{nn!» it a8 the mnost beautiful to the eye Al Do Feciprered over g0, Soon—my very bentr} | Iv camest, devout, aud forvent nind. The | ieClarkets cops of the Afueralt Tuftijencer I | us capable of skilied and sustained effort as the | A eomplete catalogue of enravings and etch | 14 eliclous to tii tasto of any b has acen. ) e of v 74 'eLL v L0] hats n rich yellow color, an ol LITERATURE. am recommended not even to read paetry, mueh ;“‘;"_‘I':"::" ':;‘:l'::"ze:’( “’,'1’: :"‘I‘:" :."I"n:l‘"l"l‘:' Merenrius Klentieus, filling up most of the time ;‘fi:‘ “e':_':‘::i::t ;:’m:é“";]:”":"l"":’;“:::h‘;';“r;’:. inga by and after Van Dyck bis been recently | ahailof wax than froit’ ..‘T;‘(f."""f::,m'?;: t :‘m o Teas writo 1t Twish T nad aven attetio’ hope, | #p y line, communieating its | between duly 11, 1618, and. Jan. 9, 1032, in. | from p . He quotes, publiskied, and s pronounced & model of its | Mr. Hollister, *known na the Diospyros kaki, § KEATS* LOVE-LETTERS, Lcannot say forget me—but I would mention LETTERS OF JOIUN KEATS TO FANNY | that there e impossibllitica {n the world. No TBRAWNE: WhITTEN 1N THE YEAns 1810 axp | morcof this, I am uot strong coough tobe 1820, axp_ Now OiveN yitox Tue Ontarxar | Weaned.! Maxuscnirrs. With lutrodaction and Notos by The cruelty of tho blow which crushed his Jianny BuxTon Formax. New York: Scribner, | hopes of fanie, as well ns of love, is plainly secn Armetrong & Co, Chicago: Hadloy Bros. & [ fna note, briming with sadness, in whichi thes Coi 13m0, Pyl 138 Hines occur: * How flluess stania asa barrier vitalizing power with very sonsibie and vrateful | clusive, This Mercurius FElenticus advertiscs effect, 'Tho discourses are short, but conclusivo | ftacif ut the head of each number as * Com- and Allrcul’-]lruununu In vigorous and pithy | municating the unparmleli’d Proceedings at words tho leading lesson to bedrawn from thele | Westminater, the Headquarters aml other text. Thercis ono entitled * The Distracted | places, discovering thelr Deefpnes, reproving Mind,” among thosc_treating of practical sub- | thelr Crimes, and advistug the Kingdome.” It Jects, whose condensod wisdom, taken Lo heaet, | {s devoted to the royul cause, and 18 contempt. would make ft alone worth to any reader the | uous In fta nllusfons to the *“Rebels” and est European authority on the subject, tne onin- | kind, dilfers materially from the wild perslimmon ot fons of Farinl, a tesclicr of acientitic pymnasties, [ © (" o i h the Sodtiicrn S1atc. s 1 Fipens without {Hst Farin{ began hia carecr with & thorough study ears. Jansen, McClurg & Co. have In press | ang'iy equaily palatable whether freah of dried. .t of anatomy’and medicine, but, atter recelving | 8 novel with the attractive title, “Tlow She | The trec fa highly ornamental, s prolific hearer, L3 ?llu’x ’d;p.l!l:lnl?.e fifi:d::fd- "l(llnudgrigfllugl ,::c?ncg Came {nto Her Kingdom,” The book will be | sndas hardy us the pear. Itsscason fs front : cing e f o ¢! T e work of tralntng krvmpasts. e Is himsetf | PUblishied anonymously. e Aty bl by bl o Tk a splendid athlete, and s practical as well as | _ The sptre of 8t. Bernant's Church, at Cohoes, Cifinfi?:fi‘" re'flfiflh"r:-'im!.’ :n‘d‘ J.’".’i?&s?dl,’l-:’& 1t Is fifty-scven years sinco the suffering frame; | betwixt me sud youl Even if [ was well—I | cost of the volume,—~aye, of a wholo library, “8alnts * in Parliament nnd eclsewhere. Each | theorctical cxponent of the sclence of gym- | N, Y., Is to be surmounted by a cross nine feet | equal to th ch, It i and the eager, passionate, agonized heart, of th; must mako mysclf 88 good o Philus — number opens with several baollad stanzas, | bostics. In the bezinning he cntertaiped the | {n lcn‘ukh and five feet fn width, It will be xquolldum':ew;:r;:::fi:;:l shly-':::lfl:":t::“:‘:rl:r: ! poet Keata, found a lasting rest in tho stiilnens | ODct 0s possiblc. Now I have hd opportun- HEREDITY, wiving, 0s i worc, the “argument™ of tho | Common opinion that the phyaical weakness of | composed of 1,500 clnss peiston, and in its I | 10 trows 1o & large. slze. atiain ug I samne cases Lics of passing nights anxious and awaxe I have wouen 13 due to nature, but he informs Mr. and soljtudo of tho cemotery of the Protestants, 'n,}_ANs.\nssxux; on, VARIATION o Cuanacren | Week, one fnstalimeut of which ¢nds withthese terforare to be numcrous gas-jets, whicl will | 8 pound each in welght,” found other thouithts Intrude upon me. ‘If [ ovun_Tie Motnzn By Geonaiaxa B, | lncs: Rende that e has **been driven—In spite of o | be lighted by the agency of an cicetric buttery. Mr. Holllster furthermore states that tho smong the rulns of anclent Rome. Tho woman | should dfe, I safd to myself, *1 have left no Kinny, New York: 8. It. Wella & C 2no. prejudice he ehared with every man'—to con- B, = towhom ho had given the love of an ardent, | immortal work behind Tnc—nothiag to make | by, b, L A’?X’&flr,‘r&“fl‘:fil‘: (i (‘=“‘ °fl"‘“5“ s s ""’i‘ to 0 “'!m’ the Jnatiee w:‘:‘ufv:mm(%’cll:l'lyr '?:“Arg :."y'“fi:.l,mkm:‘d} 'r'::'n’i'rfifi.",‘.’.'.fi'";'éfi.'}iru': .T.‘.'.'J;‘,%.J"-E.':;?“;‘m’ L iy ¢ " . ‘ , Jan. 97, o 3 - constant nature, and from whoin the sad ncces- | Y friends proud of my momory—but I liave | This Is & thin slip of o book, written by a Bt It oo fell you, Tia not suase, B e e o tranie 1o | Spain, cuntains, in® the scctions of patuting, | Yatiou ns e apple. The graited trees bearin o sittes of the case hadscparated hlin somo five | 1077 theprinciple of hauty fn alt thinas, and It months before ho was lafd in the grave, sur- membered., Thoughts like these camavery feeb- tived him nearly half acentury, Shedied In | Iv whilst 1 was in licalthandovery putae beat for woman for women, upon a tople which con- cerns them vitally, 1L is characterized in s re- o ball- o sculpture, and architecture, 511 works, The | 8bout four vears, and the seedlings in double tho bell-tooi, aml thelr powets amd acllity in | Dalutings’ nutober 30h—thé collection belng | thot tinie, althoth theso last aca ot reilablc. practice dancng will contlune the exercse for | fotable for un almost total absence of portraits. z Auother opens with these: markable degree by clevated entiment, purity e rscs Al oar 1805, ab th 2 e o ivide with thia oy Taayith) | of 65 and - : et fouirs togothier without exbaustions aud i tho | A few examples in cach departiment are sald to BRIEF NOTES. e o A et | N aTnity ot (ool i el sy e | S oxbeAskm, ani “,‘:{,’.‘.’:”,‘,’,",":.’J‘;:‘;fi,‘:’u, Jo A e e s et el nzilo and. gracctul business of the gyimhast, it | 40 eredit to the modern Soantal sctiool. Several (st aces aro on recond of tho graine tlon," viousty; but ull tend stralght to the mark, and | And closes with these: 15 stated by Farlnd that they cany as a rule, sur- | The Castellant Colicetion s probably lost to | dust in fure fug-milla igniting by o svark her poet-lover then came nto the posscssion of < i Ived A1 ) ass the men, In those cascs where they tral h M R That Keats was ab this period involved in re- | carry welght with them. 'They bear upon the Let snch as took thee for 8 Foole . e they train | this country, as the Metropolitan Muscum of | struck f1om the mochinery, or from excessive her family. Shohad sometimes been heard to | 1y, {dent fi - ur feats of strength, they also develop remark- | Art bas been bie t ¢ the zious doubtr, {8 ovident frum on ur two pas- | question of heredity, partleularly upon tht side Jiesnoane \hele Mimick Treason ¢ d P Art Lias been inubic to ratse the sum demanded | friction, ard producing a dangerous explosl . eay, when a matron with grown-up children | snges in the last of the letters. Inonehe sava: | of 1t which npplles to the transmission of And (with the Yembers) go ta schoole, able pawers. S 7 for it,—8170,000. 1%was hoped that the pottery $ P ol A sbout her, though otherwiso most reticont with | * appeal to you by the biood of that Christ | physical and .pm'zuul traits during the months To thea the Aing of Jteaton. The French gymnast named Nathalie, s waman | fucduded with it mlcnt besecured: but the | The Boclety of Telegrapli-Engincers at Lon- regard Lo thom, that theso lcticrs should bo n}: bcllluv;: in? ;lnr‘sfi. in ln.nlmllxlur: "{, l“fi :o of ante-natal cxistence, ‘There is no question l-‘g;h .ll.l:hl'll “II' 1{4:’0::';,‘1:1., 0.;.,1 ;v!:re one nl“rr\l?lt :S!r;&n:m: ‘li‘uem‘l!,mt:la’r’!d tn:l«‘:u :::ui: Pme {:;;'t:xll-, m:ml" Wn.lll (uuml“lou‘ lm;u (l? don was organized stx vears ago, and has now K Vi 4| o rer Lo ol 9 AN Y i “ o ! e mel hose hayl ic matter n ¢! i . carcfully guurded, *us they would somo day be | poyeo in immortalicy. 1 sball novor bo ableto | of greater lmportauco o thio welfaro uf the b Sty o would sy, Aind Solomon, [and, and put thein slowly sbove hor head. | Tt collcetion s Dacko to o 1o, arts, bt ita | Ly membere, It bas publialiel iz volumea ; man raca: and it may b added that the ques- (None elso) Levin'd in thee, tion could not be cunsidered with more dolleacy 2 5 and snfnc\!.' than {v hes been lu the space of Eé:l:;““'fi{l":g? 1';:,1};',‘:,,:5:"?,“ §;’,’,‘{'.,‘,‘,§,‘,,',“ thia Jittle volume. 1613, A later number opens with the follow- Ing stanza: considered of valuc.” be hoppy with you here—how short s During ber Nlo-time they were held as too | the longest Life, I = wish to be- eacred to bo more than distantly alluded to; | Meve In immortnitty—Iwish to live with you for i . but thore was a taclt acknowledgmont that, fe'f';r“""““,;’:""ml";:hfnlnfim:,d5:’:#"::““.'.'1‘.}:: Farinl says that the putting up of an agile gvm- | ultimate destinatiou js undetermived. of T ransactions, aniong which are many, papers B st T8 DAL eliiave pfay compared with (s put- G of high eclontific valuc. :\;5 ,:xlzl?lth;ddcl’;l-mflll:-m ::mx:: :{u}lfim{) iCuce INDIAN ROSARIES, ‘Ihe Central Pacilic Raftrond Company set out. Wihe crass,” which consistsin putting the hands | Rosarles are in common nse among the three | 300,000 Eucalyptus trees along the ifue of their after her death, thero might be o propricty in | world fs too brutal for mo—I am glad thera fs OLD ENGLISII NFWSPAPERS, Now docs the 1Work begin (I trow] Into two ringa lowered by ropes, and then rals- | great religious sects of [ndid—the Brabmins, | road last yinter. The trees made a healthy . giving them to the world, for the sake of the | auch n thing as the grave—I am firo T shall Clicianals Cavimersial, Now, now or nover i Ing the body, then extending both arms, and 80 | Budhists, and Mohamiedans. They are cailed | and mnl%finwlh durlng the summer, and this Nzht they would throw on the charncter of ono | nover have any rest till Twet there. . . . It In the recently published catalogue of the Whenas King Cromiceii holds the Plough, sustaining the body by the horizontal arms. A yn ganskrit *mutteriug-chaplets,” or “remem. | ¥inter 100,000 more are to be planted along tho Caxton Exhibition, under the head of ** News- _— Amlll l'rlrn‘a(lly) lm:;:' 12:;;_ i " y > Newge | - In Noumber B (Dec. . we read that: papers, ductory 10 | oy iypder Lthe present King, and to dlsinkerit the lst of carly ncwapapera cxhibited are made: | 1fis Posterity, thelr next work 1s toperswade the *¢ Thio origin of newspancers 18 a subject on which | Jzople That it is destructive to thelr Liberties, there hos been o large amount of controversy. | &c., to haye their Kings suy longer by succasalon, All writors who have given attention to tho | 41 tapreach Up and prejer'tho way of Election: matter are agreed that Nathaolel Butter's E:; vm{,y,g:;ho uim.n:}rum(s‘ ?ueny"“mul?: Weekly Newes, which first appeared in | chofce of @ good ‘and upright man to be 1622, fulfltls all the coudlitions of a newspaper, | King, orer us, itho above all things feareth God, and that publication has gonerally Leen ac- cfilg'&::lgfifilmm;;.&jffi .i‘,‘{fgé"fi; Jfl?EMS e : s h cepted as tho first English newspaper. There | o0 B0 of distigion and Verturs than of all were, however, numerous printed news-sheets | yolaiy things: Or (in plain termes) Aad ire not fssucd frum tho press prior to the alove date, Mtér ave 11”0"""{"""«"'712 ;l’lfzm:‘u:‘ Faircfax, which somo writers have regarded as newspa- | or Cromwell, in whom ducel it of Meeke pers, During tbo relgns of Elizaboth u'::d neass, Truth alml llal:nml;.i and In l:;lvm l{odham James I, o class of men camo fnto existence ;",,:';‘;",;‘;',';:,‘;’.,’{,5’!‘3!“’ 3 presence 1o INicom: whio wers known as news-letter writers, Writ- | No, 85(Dec. 12, 1048,) after its vootle nrga- ten sheets of news wera scnt to any persons | ment, begins flows: *Uentlemon—I nad willlni to pay for them. As the demsand fn- | much adoe to ecreepout the last Weoke so op- creased, the nows-letter writers were compelled | portunely as usuall, for the Lloodhounds were to call in the ald of the printlnzg press, and | #o bot in the Chase that I had scarce Lelsure to printed_news-letters nlrfcnml from tlme to | print my Intelligence: and avold thoir pursuite; tme, Fivally, Nathauis! Butter, taking advan- | o that 1 erave your pardou, if you found me tage of the excitement in the country occasfon- | missing at my wonted Hoare: But now I pre. ed’by the Thirty Years' War, conceived the idea | sume I am ‘so provided for them that I'le of bringing ott a printed ncws-sheet aystemat- | escape them a Twelyemonth longer, though feally. It was for a toug timo belleved that there | they range mnceasautly. Thus you sce Truth wasan English Mercurle publishicd in 1589, aml | sometimes must Lurke in = Angulis, and that this was the first Euglish nowspaper; but | watch opportunities: zal magna est et prevaledit: in o pamphlet by Mr. Thumas Watts, of the | Thoughthe Denil and tho drmy and all the British Musoum, published 1n 1830, this wns | degenerate Cast-away’s of both louses and clearly proved to be o forgerv.” Our purposo | their Justruments, Rage and Tyrannize never so In quoting tho above passage is not to discuss | much, she will staud a-tiptoes, whilst thctr un- or sugwest discusslon of tho subloct touched | godly forgeriesand Lies shnll (like tho Serp xl‘ upon, but to call attention to the somewhat | the Father of them) craw's upon tho " remarkablo fact that, whila the earlieat copy of | Atter this cxordium, *strange, and high, and an English newapaper on file at the Caxton Ex- | much? news fs_nnnounced—that, as a result of hibitlon was The Continuation of Our Ieeke- | **the long aud high debates of the Commons,” ley Avisoes, helng No. 32 of that”paper, which | **the Kiog's answersani concesslons tathe Prop- was also lssued by Nathanlel Dutter, dated | ositions of both Houses ara a ground for the July U, 1083, yet In the valuable private | Houeo to proceed ufiuu, for tho scttlement of coliection of Robert Clarke, Eaq, of Cin- | the peaco of the Kingdome” to which tho cionath, 18 to be found o copy of the first | Jouse of Lords had nssonted. Toward tho ew gymnnasts vando ‘‘the onc-arm horizon- . T e ST clterte iy extending 1hm | brances,” from their being employed tn count | *HE Foak : body from the bar, supported oniy by upe hand | it a definite wumber of pravers. Wo leara | 1B means of a hew teloxraph-apnaratup tested 1 graspinie. th bar with the knncklos downward, | from the Atuameum that the rosary of the | Seorersiagie anre in the apave ey e fontr. S b gfi:’ifi'«hufi'; do thip with cither haiid, and | Valstinavas is made of the wood of thqTolusl, | number may, under cortalis conlitions, te raiscd tho bar with it, und hold the body horizontal by | OF Toly basil,—n shirub sarred to Visnu,—nnd | to 200 or even The fuventor is Herr Au- B R L roms hot Ragorizontal BY | that It consists of 103 smooth beads, Thutosary | guat Eduard Granfeld, su Austrian telegranhe Tote that can uo this; yet it is not knacks {t js | Of the airas comurises thirty-two, or sume- | olliclal. . complete either-handncss coupled with wigantlc | Hines sisty-four, berrdes of the Elvocarpus, | It has been sald that Prof. Asa Gray fs tho strength.! Theo sceds are rough, and arogetierally marked | only living American who, previous to the latu 5 A sister of Nathallo has lkewlse acquircd | *ith ive linca. The rosary of the Mubamine- | clection of Prof, Simon Newcomb, has been . amazing strength. Bite onve made & test of her | UADS containg 100 beads, gencrally made of date- Forcign Member of the London Royal . powers o competition with tweniy satlors, | 8t0NCS, of of the sacred varth ot ‘Kariiala. The It {s an error, as the nams of Prof. % Tiic sailors hud a slack ropo; she had another, | 312¢ of the beads composiug an Indian_ rosary | Beys, . Pierce, of Cambridze, Muse., stands in E Tha sallors iad. their cholce of the ropes. A | Fory from emall seeds to valls s lurce s o bu- | he Tt of Foreic Siombers of e soctets saflor went up as far ns he could; the c}'m‘nm. maii akull, and it is used {n repeating the names 2 wont os high in her rope at the eam¢ time, | Pplied to Deity, as well asin repeative prayere. It has been noged thot, fu_the collection of Y Saflor camo down tired, the lady fresh. ‘An. | It has been estiinated that nbout nincty names objects recovered! Dr. Schliemaon and now N ey pattor et up, tho! jady Gitio, and s0-ow. | Ar¢ avplied to Curist fu the Bible. ‘The Motaw | ot exhibltion ut Lho South Keustuwion Museum, Blie wore out the wholo Iwenty, haviug gone up | Medans spoly ntnety-nine names to Deity: but therc are several classes of relies closely reseni- an appresate of feet bigher 'than St. Deter's | the worshibers of Vishou recognize their Gud | bIng artleles extumed from the works of tio T eRal e CThia Teat fs due to grcay | under 1,030 dilferent namce, and the ‘worshtp. | Mound-ullly, Among these nre hand- sironath, complots cither-handednoss, and. the | 78 of Biva adore it by 1,008 distluct appella- | pounders of u trumpet, shape, skin-dressers, ! athlete's power of pinching a rope with the sin- | Hons: aninerd, aid funtiols, ofbakelclag, v * new specles of s been disco q“fi:n{nltrlx.xesl:r:‘;‘?hl;hw"g:wcmhs about 180pounds, THE “PORTFOLIO.” flofilll\\'u!l‘(‘:‘:‘u‘ T\:xnsl:mlitmllw:"ln ‘um‘fir:.'.‘xri'l will do the ordinary Luslncas of the trapeze, The artistic valuo of the Jast number of the | and crevices of the Mmestone rocks of thag i and then como down the rope head-foremost, | Lor{fvio Is unusualiy great, This will be clear- | regton, The eges arehatchied In the winter, and twiat one leg round Jt, hang down by that lez; | Iy apparent when it is inentoned that the threa Hwtalnotes Tive i the slalinw. pualsoCratis i downward, and hanelog By one loe, liold threo | Melssunicr's portralt of A Warrior™; acopy { to ring withi thoke croaking. The Trog is re- cat hulking fellows danging in the airfor | by Drunett-Debaines of Turner's **Bay of | ferred tothe genus Lithwdytes, and named by R L4 cver 40 Jong, by her teeth. Mr, Reade remarks | alac™'; aud a holfogravure by Durand of Paul [ Frof. Cove L. lataus. that, Oflh:"“m;n&nu (lfl: v.flrh}rnmncc. Ilhcm Potter's famous ctching of “ The' Nelehing A flock of hawks, numbering thousands, was g‘;’:}‘;u""bu;hml:g "}l;f"‘."";s"jmvz :hll:o lester | Torse. ‘The Mterary contents of the number | Scen by scverul credible witnesscs, near Ful- Teblo e 549 | arg alaa of a superlor character. Thay einbiracy | S0l Gl I the st wek of Scptetmber. Larc : 1€ Wanien who hava not an exceptional framo | & belel eritical motlco of the work of Melasonler, | TR MLV Se HEs R B ean by LraInIng qUAL OF stirpass men fn tho oxe | bY Hemerton: o cliuter frun th sniue writer's | YCE o, refusing to iy, thowsh feed unos Ly Choite of the pymndate why annas the. oneire | biozraphy of Turuer: a fresh and Interesting | Kuiners. After restinic about, thico hotrs, Bt be Hifeed, by somo system of Judiclous edu. | Bistory uf tho lavist and custly art-docorntions | they sbed ou thelt By sbutiward. I 36 thotht eation, combining excrelso and hygicne, out of | Of " Florentine Bridal Chimber # in the Six- | Lot i, b PR O T gy L8 RIS Hioir oroscnt, pitiful. condition of fcebleneasi | teenth Contury: a review of Hare's “ Walks fu [ W ElebRSec Wt (R Joile, HEE MHehY Tuisnot desirable that they should develop | London®s and onc or tiro minor artictes, Take | REREIS S L0 SIS THES S0 A by Do i thele powors wholly In the diroction of | 16 all iu ally the Portyotio lims this month really | peré &2 1 bie VISR B4 170 ame hours by per- ] touscle, s the oxpert Rymmnst . musts | €oue boyond its awi high staudard of lierarg | S0US cIEht or teu infles upurt, whoso sorrowful lot and whose untimely death | ¥ hiealth would vear it I could write a Poem witich I havo in my tead, which would be a con- have buon stucercly mourncd by tho lovers of | wojgtjon for people In such o situstion as mine. Hlumanity sud of Literature. In accordance | 1 would shiow somo onc In Love as 1 am, with a with tnis definitely-understood feeling of the | person llving in such Liberty as you do. Shake- lady to whom they wero addressed, the love- | spearc always sums un matters (u the-most sov- Jetiers of Keats have now been publl.thd. with | erelgn manner. lamiet’s heart waa full of an intraduction and notes by Mr. IL B. Forman, | such Mlsery as minc is when he safd to Ophelia, There nra thirty-soven in all,—the first having | *Go to & nunnery, go, o’ Indecd I should been writteu In the summer of 1819, and the | like to give up the matter at onco—I should like Jast in Juno or July of 1820, Nona of them bear | to die.! After this passionate outburst of sor- any date, save the two or three which name tho | row, Keats was taken back to Wenworth I'lace, month only in which thoy were written; but, | Where he enjoyed the tender ministrits of Miss by a critical study of circumstautial ovidence, | Brawne and her mother. the cditor has detérmined with satistactory pre- Accompanying thia collection of the poat’s tislon the order and time of thelr production. letters Is a gunrult of Keats as e Iay dying, It 1t was o the latter part of the year 1818 that | was drawn by Mr. 8evern, and Las those words Keats first met Miss Fanny Brawne. He was | attached: “28th Jan. 8 o'clock mg. Drawn then living with his friend, Charles Armitage | to keep me awake—a deadly sweut was on Brown, in Wentworth Place, Hampstead; aud fn | bim ail night.”” The drawing was pronouuced the cottage next bim resded the widow of Mr. | by Cbarles Cowden Clarke, who waa o school- bamtel Brawne, o gontleman of independent | mate of Keats, #a_marvalously correct Hke- means, who had diedwhen bis children—Fanny, | ness.”” No good portrait of Miss Brawnc exists, Samucl, and Margaret—were still in thelr fn- | but a full-length stlhouette is shown the reader. fancy. Fanny, tho eldest of the three, was | It fs sald that the draped figure in Titlan's born {n 1800, * Keats scems to have concetvea a | plctura of Smered and T'rofane Love, in the profound pnssion for tho young girl dircctly lorghesa Palace at Rome, rescinbles ber groat- upon their tirat meeting, and their mutual love | 1y. soon led to an engagement, Tho relation was Mr, Forman makes two important correctionsy recarded with torebioding by tho fricnds of | in his Introductlon, of statumonts that have loog bath, on account of the maferlal obstacles tn | been popularly current with regard to Kats, the way of their union, and of the Inevitable ro- | Tho flrat refers to the bellet, sanctioned by Lord sult of an Increase of sorrow to the sensitive, | HHoughton in his blography of the bocet, that the troubled, and finully stricken life of the poet. latter druw the portrait of Miss Brawne in his A slznificant expression of the fecling of | well-known description of Channian, — Mr. those nearcst the unfortunate lovers is found [u | Forman shows conclusively that Keats had I‘Pulanzc token from the memolr of Charles | quite another person in his mind than the one Weniworth Dilke, which runs as_foltows: * {t | who Inspired him with o touching snd tenaclous 1s quito a scttled thing between Keats and Miss | adoration. In the socond Instance, Mr. Forman ——. God help them. It's o bad thing for | doesaway:with the fmnprossion that Keats? life thew, Tho mother says she cannot prevent it, | was sbortoncd by tho inalevolenco of his and that her only hope is, that it will zo ofl. | critics, or that Le died, in the words of Sir He don't like any one to look st hier or tospcak | Charlea Dilke, of **a passion which killed “to her," Aud( fn the same conncction, Mrs. | him as surely ns ever any man was killed by Dilke writes: **Thear that Keats is going to } love.”” Keats fuherited consumption, and thosa Rome; which must please all his fricnds on | who knew him best feel sura that neither tho: cyLry aeeount, hlm:crclf' hope it will beneflt | adverso criticlsin nor the frenzy of love bad his Liealth, poor fcllow! [l do with his unti 3 i % must b bettered by it; -nu"a""«"x:‘uu::;gy alr’t‘)r&: fl-'n'.’u".':‘:g:n%;||ty° ot bis :'o‘x‘r?pe"r:::fm:“;'-? *:.ff. weakly Journal, bolng the twentyninth number | close of the samo number, however, wa read: | but 1t would put s more hopefui | 804 plctorial exeellence. m'“{i. Jllcu:'fl.‘n.lffnS"«':Ixu'h,':h?mllf 'f-";'.’u"“';ll’ £ bly weaken, If not bresk off. 8 connection that | cxtreme nervousness attor diseasenttacked him, | of The Coutinuation of Onur Weekly dewes, | “'That scred Tomple dedicated to St. Paul, and | look on the presont statc and the future S S fuz the lasectfaing of {he Amazuns slice tiia 188 been 8 Mmost unhappy oiie to im." rendered him llablo to paroxysms of acuto | dated May 2 10Xi—or niug yoars carller— | hencefurtl sct apurt and kept i all possibio de- ( prospects of the human race i wuraen were to SPARKS OF SCIENCE. Uhtitont Btates with u collection of Misect ne ¥ clret o ¥ or Nuf | ic! l, o have erto i~ T p "OICE, s ¢ varly fi 7, Mr. f::bl:fl:‘;llz’c ‘:‘:lnl&lllrlé:r.n&"ll’lr\::::fi?lx:z‘vfiu;‘r:‘& ff.'u'xi'?ivf’"““' Astian ahiall Jisisablnibalal 16237 Thie number of the HWeekly Newea is n }monmon Ithy Stabde, and filled it with Hay | comolish the rougher und tnore tasking part, FIOLAL 1GE During 1576 and the early pure of 1857, Mr, m b : 't | A wonderfal case s reported fu the Pall-Mall | Smith was copnected with the Druziiian e o i ot eocnmtial svosotuner, | Gazele, f the eutirc romuval af tho largox, o | Gcolagival Survey: 1t 18 bispurposc toreturi to | modesty, and delicacy of womauhood; and how | Orwa of voice, from the huwman throut, and the | Brazil and contliue ‘~ls"~'xul"ru"flm x'."'!u ho important thoy are as factors {n the happiness | substitution of ‘an artilelal Instrument wieh | 138 ““"“"l","‘I‘fn;':,‘i":;;},"uf,':,‘n U the ‘h‘:““f’:;“z‘,‘ : %2‘:\‘:&:3{-“[“‘ of tho female, as well s of the | waich spocch can bo perfeetly effected. The Ll utel 5 "Among the lower snimalstherels no such dif. | operation was performed In Glasgow, by DE | 1y g been found that seeds of most plants ; ference in bolut of strengh and agllity as bas | Foulis, in Scotember, 1877, Tho putient was | wiil endure very low temberatures, but Iate e yellow paphlet of twenty-two clearly printed | and Horses, &c.3 ? while on the last page of srall outavo pages, and 8 entlrely davoted to | No. 59 (Jan, 0 IMQ;‘ wo find this: *“The Saints foreign or continental news,—belng like our | in Paul's were tho Iast week teaching thelr contemporary nowspapers in the ltem of head- | horses to ride up the great Si that Jead fnto lines, which appenr in scpurate paragraphs upon | the QYuire, where (s thoy derided) they might tho thtle-page, nud read a8 follows: perhaps learn to Uhaunt an Anthems; but one ¢ The Arsicles of the League botween France, | of them fell, and broke both hls Leg and Venice and ‘Savoy tor the recoverio of the Valto- | theNeck of iis Rider, whicn hath spoilded his oceasfoned him tho gnawing angulsh of delay In tho last threo years of his life were com- sud ultimate disappolutment, The 34 of ressed the memorable events of his hlnnrr. Februery, ) Keats recelved a sovere o had publishied In 1817 & voluma of juvenile chill whilo riding outaldo n staye-conch, and, | poems; und this was followed In 1818 by * En- relurning lato ot night, sppearcd hefore his | dymion,” and in 1820 by *Lamia,” *The Eve Iriend Brown “tn nstato of strunge physicol | of 8t. Agacs, cte.”” In these years 200, had excltement.” 1l coughed up soms blood on | sprung up ¢ ha one passiun of uis h(e, sweet egetting foto bed, and read in its color his death- | to him as honey In the interyals of brightness w . 1) " o which b oyed, b ine, Chatinting, for ho was buried on Saturday night | unlortunately been brought about in tho supe- threatened with o lugering death from sume [ periments show that they resist a high degre 'Jx:fllrllllurcl:g:rnl:ll.m.hlrlz??llel:":lu‘l‘o:llrlc m«:’l :'.“i::fifi'&”&'fi‘ ln' ui‘l?;m l(;u.leuoo:‘:{cfi(c'u “n’;lx?(i w7The End of the Dict of REGENsuuRan, lost. A )yunjwlanuul of God on sucha x‘a’ru(finu rior race. ‘The mother bird, for oxample, more | disease—presumanly cancer—affectiug the | Of hieat with much less su Just. of Curls- . blood-apltsing, oceurring in tho summer follow- | poverty, and the deeponing shadow of death, #'ho Preparatiun of the Eurenor and Beru- | and Sacrllegioua wreteh.,” The same paragraph | often thau not performs the wreater shura of | jareny: and, to remove the malady, It wus nee- ruhic, haa proved that bar] 1l uot germinato ' the tabor of bullding her nest and rearing her . 1n a temperaturs of 100 degrees, and svoner or voung, white, in addition, she fultllls her pecul- | €883FY to extirpate the organ lmvlicated. Tho ( jgior Toses it vital power wnder thin boats After {ar matcrnal functions, Her mate wears the | possibility of successfully accomolishing this { anc duy’s exposurotoIZ3degrees, bulf the barley - ing, Keats retuencd from Kentlsh Town, where | which we have learned to assoclato almost con- he had yisited Lefrh Lunt, to Wentworth Ilace, | stantly with our thoughta of him.” to be nurscd by Mrs, Hrawno and her daughter The teatimony of Leigh Lunt to the sweet LEM (fAUON. contuins the following sentenco: This day (Jan, “The reason of Monsieur Tillyes stay nbove. 8) the /lvwdy Tyaytors (who sre sppointed for “The beginnlog of the Duke of Sarouie to | Commissioners to Zry the King) et in the Fanny. The trip to Jaly, in the hoy 1 per with which Keats endured the tinal edrre, Talnted Chambor at’ Westmbuater ; to whom all | gayer dressand has the moro tunctul voice. [ operation was flrst suggested by a French sure | seeds were dead. Just also found out that tho {ne ifs henlth, v?u uml{:’:;‘keu lnp&%‘let;é::: :?\';:mln:zlmncn‘ though kn“:w‘}n‘{‘o ovcr‘v‘:;‘:}: “Tho several Btrangths, Biates, and laat | thinga that concern the Placo and Manuer of | li¢ makes mora ehow ard blusters but the wear | gegn about twenty years aro. Suina years later | destruction of the seetl wus inore rapld when i but ho waa too il on thu voyage, and after his may bo oppropristely repeated herot Il suft | Achievements of the Armies of the Dakes of his tryall aro reterred; but I can not give you | and tear of lifo fall heavier ou her, and sho 18 | \“Gornan sclontist proved its feasibility by ex- this hleh tempersture was accompanied with a ’ arrival In Kome, o cudura the oxcltoment and | forid so tmaicl in his Mngering that he used to | Nuzon, Weimar, Lirunawick, Cordora, dwhoit, | tio résult of the businicuse, becauso thio Lesw | cqual to tho exaction throuah suporlor sttuneth | o finons upon dors; aud In 1973 1L was pep- | 200 tmosplicre. it excrtion of writing to his botrothed. He died | watch the countenance of his physiciau for tho | Manafleld, Spinola, and the Prince of l}mngo. cannot walt thelr lmdlurr." The. Mercurius nervo and sinew, x}dunwulnnwhm that 1f, Sorwed by Billroth . Tering | A writer in Forest and Stream records tho in February, 1831, aged o littlo moro tuan 25, | favorable and futal sentence, and express lis w7 Kingof BENMAUK stirring. lenticua in tho coples befor us, has vo {udica. | fo the lower grades of lorgnnlzml‘ beings, thera | formed by Blllruth upon a man sullerlug from | ¢ o0 BIG SR crutaing In brig off the coase v Alr, Bevern, the taithlul friend whoaccompanied | reiret when he found 1t delayed. Yct no Im- “Tha givime up of Frankendale. tion of its publisher's name, or tho place or | {8 adifferonce {u the relative plysical capacities | caucer. The aperation has since been reveated | or Atrlen, fn March, 1837, o quatl atighted on ¢ Pugether with ather occurrences fn several parts | places of publication, of 1he orld. parte | o Mercurius Publieus ta stlll snother of At the top of tho page succeeding tha title | thesc carly English newspapers a copy of which page—ono slde of which only Is printed on—is | 18 In Mr, Clurke’s possession, It profcsses to a turther bead-line, *The Coutiuuation of the | compriso the **sum of foreign inteliizence; with former Newes out of Turkle, ilungarie, Wala- | $he affales now In agitatton In Englaug, Beot~ him on this fruiticss journoy after health, and | patience escaped Il he was manly and gentlo nursed him throuxh the closing months of his | to tho last, and urateiul for all services, A iife, states that Mrs, and Miss Brawue feit tho | little before ho died, ho sald ho flt tho dalsics keenest reret that thoy liad not followed Keats | growlog over him." ta Italy; and, Indeed, that thero had been some e talk of hila wurclage wlm'Funuy bafare his de- ACIENTIFIC, of the sexcs, tho advantage Is uot on the sids | cleven different thnes e Europe, with varymg | ina deck of the vessel In un cxhausted cous o!,rlhc tnale, ¢’ results. tlow, The brix was at the time 11 d e artiticial hobits of cfvilization havo cffect- The mau who endured the operatlon In Glas- | yortly of the Equator, aud between 8 decrecs o tho wido distinction which now exista be- | gow has beun lately exhibited at the Universlty | yud D degzrees trom the coant. 'The writer stood tween the energy and endurance of mcn oud | aud ut sume of the scientitic Bocleties in the | gy 1he wheet en the bird appeared in view, 3 el by the Cu‘llulll, vlcked up o women, and thero is little doubt that equality | city, where his ability to spesk through artiicial parture, . | cbin, Poland, Silesta, Bohomia, the Falatinute, | Jund, and Ircland, for intormativn of the peo- in this respect might Bialn be recovered were | yolee-tubes was thoroughly Lested, The appa- ereature o 1t loy helpless and Wheu Mr. Sovernreturned to England, twenty | 2 DR Er O o s AN oary OF INVERTE- | Saxonio, the 'Low Countrles, aud dlvers othot | plett The uumber bofore us (No. 37, for the | the '"“""‘"d""‘l.f"‘.'&‘“‘g‘ of “’l‘: rsing goucr. | ratus used was miado n¢ luwzow, and 18 de- | punting ou Vo deck. 1t was recoanized by il i years after tho burial of Keats, tho woman be- | LL.D., ¥. . 8. New York: D, Appleton & g.lmx- of the Uppor and Lower Germanie. | week ending Thursday, Sept. 13, 1660,) hostdes | ation l‘;flfl" thelr cfforts to tho accomplish- | ecribed as follows: “ For the suke of easy nd- | forsuns on board us & verituble quall, amd” was 3 Teaved by that carly death wus unablato recelve | Co, Chlcago: Uadloy Bros, & Co. l‘slmm. oo, | Then follows (he latest Europenu nows, bewin. | wlving lutest advices concorning tho war Turkey | ment of tho purposc. Justment, it consists of two tubes, whicti are | yiiced fn w eage for safe keeping, - 11 was found ) tio frienid who had walted upon the dying poet, | 5oy, ning with an account of tho clrcutistances at. | Wis tien waging agalust the Emperor of Aus- placed fu the wound scparately, uud fitted 10 | yeaq, howevor, u MorBing or two after fta cap- g o aceunt of tha ouin stll tonuceted Wieh thg | THE . ANCIENT _LIPE-HISTORY OF THE | tending tho closo of the Diot of legeusburah, | tris, with other forelzn aud huins tiows, cun- MEISSONTER, cach otbier wflluvhl‘u the lower w littls wayinto | pype! memory of the loved and lost. *8ha could not EARTH: A CoMPRENENSIVE OUTLINE OF Tus | é whichi hatt heldn full quarter of & yeere,” | tains several advertisements,—two ol these The plcture cntitled * A Warrlor,® by Mels. | the upper oue. A fnuuework holding n vivru- ' e l A Boclety has been recently orzanized fu Uaria sanler, of which an. ctchlugz fs given fn the | Wz red o passod futo,w oo Ju the front of | (b0 Sl SO ol iutto metbod of : curreat Portfuito, was sold at auction, In the. | pyshed nowe, the reed-plate siopes downward, | xploration aud culonizatiun In dilfercut varta spring of 1577, for $8,000. It represcnts the | aud the current of air from the lunzs, implnglg | of the workl, Twu Councils direct iLs opera- son of the palnter lu the character of a stand- | upon ita free end, throws it (bto vibration, A tons,—tho test having chargo of the 3dnmuh-. ard-bearer. Five other pletures by Melisonler | continuous inusical notu Is thus produced, which Eeogranhicl, and exploratory seetions; and the WoAOB O | becomes todulated fnto vowels, consonunts, | secutid, of affairs relative o gricultpre, o wore sold at tho ssma suction, vis.: “Le Por- | 3\ 0n by the uetlon of the moutk, Al tho | meree, and industry, Thio plan of (66 Soclety ; traft du Borgent,” which brought $30.000; | reeds remiam silcnt fn ordivary breathing, | 18t send toa promising loculity s party cous ; +Innocents at Malins,” $18,000; “Une Chan- | Hut the voluntary urtm‘\xi:llnxn“o with luln{{ug‘k{‘cpn;-aul::l -“‘n‘x‘fin&u?fi:lnvz‘-m ' = 1\ epoOTiL weeunations, 14 Ure e . son? $U000; wTorte. Drapeus do la Uardo | Wa, SHATNS, ¥ 1 PO uputony, | Hion aud dovelopinct of wnew somstey. *They Civique Flamande, $5,000; 1Un Arquebusten, | BULIO L, Jiailigutshed from tho fatural’ | ure brovided with a_complete equipment, aud £3,i00;~makiug a fotal of nearly $63,000 re- | v “Tho vowcls aro erfectly clear und diz. | Bre expected ua woon ad possible £6 beconio seif- bear any discussion of hlmh" says_Mr. Forman, | PuiscirLes ano Leaoi Na ootk ox ,§' ALKOKTD “and wok, Uil ber doath u 1805, peculiarly | Jpoia Boiencs Byl Aviarss Nicouiaoy, seticent nbout him.” v But little Is rocorded by Mr. Forman of the | York: D. A v‘l:flr;lli nén.s Lc‘r}lnrg;?n?"lhdlu‘; personal traits of **this honored Jady," yot fn Dros, & Co, 12mo., pp. 407, that littlo we read that “Sho had the @ift of In- | Tho volume dealing with the * Anat t devendence, or sclt-suficingness, in & high de- o e e gl i gree; and It was not easy to turn her trom o ’“""é"bfllmhAnlxnll completes o treatiso scitled purpose, Withuut belug In general o | on Comparative Anatomy, for the use of systematic student, she was a volumiious reader | studeats, which was undertaken by Prof. Hux- fu widuly-varying brauches of Litersturo; and | ley over twonty years ago- A considerablg pore some out-of-thu-way subjects sho followed up | tion of tho work was published fu 8 scle ¥ith great perscverance. Ono of bor strony lepilas ntoar learning was the history of cnumnc‘.‘ periodical during 1836-'57, In the form of Ject- after which tho cditor somewhat jocundly re- | belng book advertisements, while another marks: * Aud now have wo nothmg ta suy | odvertises 8 rtunuway mau, John Bmith, more of the Diet but to ship away the Eme | who tot unly carried himself off, butaconsid- presse [of Austrin] 3 who {4 sald to_have taken | erable suin of money helonging to his master, water to goe for Vieunu st 9 a clocke fn tho | 8ir Richord Berney, A finul news paragravh in uworning, April 5, so that it scems she statd ten | this numbor shows the political animus of the duyes Jonger than jt was thought shu should | Mercuriva Fublicus, reading thus: *And (sinco buve done, haviuy befors uppoluted to koo the | we mention Ambassadours) we can ussurg you, 8. of Apr. The sama day, about an bour after, | that Monslour de Bourdeaux, tho late Frenel went the Emperor onwards towards Prague.’! | Ambassadour fn England, who made those fa- Here 18 o passaxo which may bo iuteresting us | mous Articies whth Oliver Cromuell, and went baying & tnanciat and nunl—mmm{ allusion: | out of Eugluud scon after his Majestiec's You heard in the last, printod April 84, of the | buppy Returs, 1s sluce gone out of the Emperor’s taking order for the coines of Sllesta, | World,” But the uiost remarkshlo passage o % 7, vet clentitia \ b which sk 10 be abl * | ureson tho Invertebrata; whilo tho part relat- | thut the bas money bolng catled fny [ 4 thls ‘old uawspspcr—oue, too, which | celved for alx pletur tinct, buth s whispering with tho reed out, uud | supporting, and to forai & centrs for scleutl e e B e L0 M | L to tho hizlier ordors sapeared 1 1571, a4 a | (e MIME Iight bo roined propurtionanie totht | cvou moro distinctly gives fta bolitical bias—ia | ~Mr. [lamerton says of this artist, that bds | fa infoniug with tha vecd fu tho tube,—priving | fvesizution, Tho trat colony lias beeh wstal Sho wns aih cager politiefam, Wit very stroog | Manuul of the Anatomyor Vertcbrated Aul- | Valus of tho Austrian colniee: thut so tho lin- | the followlug, with which wo shatl coucludo our | #fame has already pussca oyond discussion | that thu Youcls uro the product of changes s | JEEEC S MR CORSE SE SRAYES B 4" 0r (G -::lnlvlamu-{J flery and anbmoted in discusslun | nals? The work will be rucelved by the | Perialsc) m”rf' {alelug pald w“x'll «{;fll mlld current m_l‘l;llll:n'nu trum mm:;.:l lm.crc;u:fi :fi""."l ;nuc loto the region of the lmmortals.” Mr, Stil- ;)l, .xln:."r%:fz u'fff;'\fi."fif.‘.'{ffi?r'-'y‘ aud ot furined ;‘;’;fi:}u’l'm";‘r:“flum‘;' Dby of Parla, “ ‘ 2 { 3 o8 Merd ¢ ) r tho * ressur - 2 y s t5q hie characteristle she proscrved til 1h | 4y, gente of Natural Scicnco as a production of | HOmies, JOUh Meechitts sl Yctulers skt | UEhed azo and history moving aud breathing | 1918 Los rocously sald: “Meissouler §8 mose | “foy tirsl apparatus uscd by the pationt was T ch K tbe greatest of liviug anatomists, In the pro- o rore et Keats, addvossed to Miss | fuce, tho suthior emphtically saye: “** Tho is- of s Teeling, showlng nowhors an eifart at sla. | stctlon of a single represcntative of each of the fant or tical writlng, Nevertheless, they principal divislous of the Tuvertebrata will glve breathie the cluquence of passion, of longlige, of | the student s more real acqualntance with their fading Nope, of polgaant sorrow, aud, Bunlly, | {omparative nnnmnfi;lhnn any amount of read. risuns with hocessarles, a8 trustiug to recetve | before us, Under dato'of Aug. 21, 140, Lon- their prices fu current and payablo monles. So | dun, we resd: *This week (sceondiug to s that this befug first taken onder for, the sol- | former proclamation) several Coples of those dlera ulso were the willinger to dos the Eme | fufumous Books made vy Juhn Geodiols and pesor's service, Lo which they wers now called | John Miltow, in Justieation of the horrid on all hauds," wurther of our late glorlous savm\lfin. King e complete than any old master ever was.” Rus- | wado of brass; but it was found by experiiment ADVERSITY. B Kin, on the other haud) regards bils work “with | that one of ivory, horn, cane, siiver, or stel, v——— exceeding sorrow,” declarine that it Is **all | will auswer. ‘lle patignt, belng o good e Flanders and Holland over sgain,” aod vet | chauic, muses himsell i mauuficturiog voles. allowiug that it Is “quite as good as cver Hol | reeds trom different materials, The soltest fond did; uay, it scems to me, fn some ree | and most naturul tones are produced by the Have nat pee of epa fniz of this or noy other bouk.? Notwithstand Vo e ¢ CHARLES tho First, wers solemuly burn*d at | spects, better.’ Thesy uplnlous are taken from | uon-metstile reeds, whilo the richest of all There, in the silent, Moy keep, erie, astmasd uly D T o vriten Toass | 0 thts dechuraclon of tha superlariy of sel. ot oot attempt liero to fullow o thiculs | K Neasionhouse, in s Gt Shayiess by tho hand | & cetical notlco of the wreat. Fronch artist and from one made of an ulloy of sliver and 1u'tho'sorky €any o, 1ous b dciv, . Newport, on tho lsle of Wight: 1 do not | £uined kuowiedye to that which is borrowed | thug remporarily In the: Heekly Newes,—li atl of | of the Common Taugman.” his work, which Mr. tlamerton coutributes to Wwithareed of vulcunite, the tone can Are woven the Ihlfl.a‘fll [ u}u: yleam . kuow how elastic my spurit uizht bo, what Iruun Sekers lu»rkldli(e;hhbfilfilw‘u‘:"“{‘l’““‘i‘""‘ whichs the editor doca not place thy most fm- o Furtrats, i 1o 1610, and | DLl tove mar At the eiid of four That form tus wighty river's atreai. > Vleasure { i} h breath. | 40 the bovico fn Selence, without which thera | pyiciy coutldence, for, in oue blace, after detall- NOOKS RECEIVED, HeUDICE N ) months tho vatient hadyucovered o faie stiure N t: I Wy e e oicath: | wust be much needessly stow and paintul | fur'\arious war movewents, and ailading. to SRpDKS HiorLy E?uzu;s'rnv ts, thercfore, 63 years old_at tho prosent date. | of healih, and thers was 1o Feburu of tho dise ”_‘\“-‘,‘,',,',',";,,,‘,‘bfi.‘:’,fi‘.",f:‘,‘,,"m“'“‘“' Al tho age of 23 ho established o reputation by | case, ci ¢l roping in tho darl Autitul coast, (1 the romewbrancy of you aid | KT2R uis pleture of tho “Litls Messeuger,” * lio k. uol welgh so upon me. I bave never known *The Anclong Life-Iistory of the Earth," by I NEW E l“‘nuuuwfl meeting of the Duke of Saxony 'lr&:{?nu'ncu.. PRACTIOAL, AND ANALYT- 4 AL M Lo suinbre pall of darkucss h the Emperor of Austria at Egra, in Bo- ArrLisn o Tue Anrs axp Manu. | rlection nover stalos— : any unaifoy'd § for muny duys togeth | Frof. Nicholson, is u work careylog in the nume | yemnig, e says: ud thus have we thought 15y Writers of Eminence. Numer. | was created a Kulzht of the Legloy of Honor INSECTS OF ILLINOIS, Thers couse, fough peasly gates of dew, o the u’en\n l::‘;mn:;:knu‘:x of lymufi' n&fu"unl. of ity nulhm’lgunr‘lul% ol it vmuulllflt; value. | jcyouestest ’w present you with tbe varictles Mon_h' ‘L'x;nuiluu: Jlu l;urlzj' l;-rnl. at :hul-&:’e u! l.u.‘fih”lrlr'n]lmrc ‘;{: the ll.l;“l{' Tho 8xth Roport of the State Eutomologlst, g::‘wt‘:t;‘: .'y":.':;'.‘;mfi ::;7_"'. dways” apalle ‘ny' hours—and now. when [ 1618 8 outling of Hiatoriou Fatwoutolugy, pru. | of reports, aud ta leave tho succss to tmo; Vrics, 0 centyper pare. - PPt | 10Ot OF ‘M Dotiad, Slolssonier has jutroy | 00 the Nuswus wud Beneticlal [sects of Lili- Thesuvnmsolesiibiebaant duced no femule igure o auy of bis extibited | bols, fs published by Cyrus Thowas, Pb. D., noue such troublos oppruss ine, it fs you | pared with refercnco to the wants of geuloglcal | gyly wdding :gu, that W caunot see now | &G0, Lrico, B contaper bat. o IENCED HOUSEKEEFERS, must coufess yery hard that another sort | 8ud zoologicul studente. Tho subject 18 oueto | the' Duke ul Saxonie's meetiug of the Lm- e by the i | duced no e ¢ be s the soilé of men aud natioos, 4t pan shoula ot ‘me. At ‘yoursit my | hleh Prok Nicholon bas dewted, the Isbo | poror ai Bgrs can st wth e prepars; | e bovent Fibytenla-tiarel of cinciunst | PILOTeRs, DS e S0 A4 Bt o pelat 8 | Sk Entamaiorbl T, sebries L L O Veoua 1ho undee sourcee or, ve whether you are not very cruel to have so "_I;“fl! vflm and which his_has shown Y tlous for the nrmIl or how that report of Becona and Rovised Edition. Ciucinustl} | ™ 1id Hi St pecfoctly” onn - staall seadts Purt, notes relativg particularly i Presslug onward, over onward, P "::‘N}unrwlludm&wdfllmv«lmvlle«lflm- Wil Bl n peeviain books, bighly cowpetent to ll!m pulrm:mfi?z o tw%w{lru:u:xlfiw{f: of :h:l. Yobert Clarke & Co. 32mo., T, #10. Frice, Yo o hls, Y o o i) s sutoology nd,uhlx’ mww::x E;:‘;::n:x‘l’: gpen- i Glowing Erecdonye gutdlng atar: A tadbuisty g domly geh ca o5 Sonaole mg B e i e “hrell” sadr™ate | EMNEYD INEST: ou, Tus Sranc rou Toveu, | of & siugularly paticut and studious mind.” [ | e O B CAMRS, B TULGOS wiew. A U e L o , In [t —ma ‘ ') THE RUSSO-TURKISH WAR. hat foll for tis written 1y SaLciu Kocuxsten Foun, Authorof **Grace | order to secuse perfect trutli in his sopresenta compl Lls Jatter work at the curlicst Drawn to the lope of being freo i torko 1t ricl aa o dreugh of vopbies (o | Tig SPONDENCE | OF tiis thet folial oty oy TG (1O |l am. eto. . Now York: ‘Sheldon & Co. Chie | ion of borses, Meissonicr hus made models of | +on 10 cotbies this latter b e By that uubitle cord, Adveraity. i thoskate we—writs tho goltest words aud kiss _.Dmfi,“fig\ggls}igbl’g_i\:ng‘;tl OF xTHE | Brestaw n -8licsly, March 25, low that | LEEaL S, faw Yaree Sheica & 0. & o To wax, wllcn Bo bas comblotely baraceey | fuoment, thiat tho farmcrs of ol ey havs, U SEANANDS. i TOU o WY B Itast bouch uy Lt whte | - xyibeiix Bonuita o Coveiacute HToh oF | Keiiewns behoutod, oo Dtk i Sub: | sihas WS o £0:" I Oniér to study the snituals ot the wal- | L counact b wecceslile foct o Which | Davawrour, la., Jun. 22, 1878, it cu, * For myse 1 - | MABEL VA N, ho Author of 5 cts | aul ————— waress my ‘devation to sofalra form: 1| TUE Man S Tttt Crutn ‘tegens | Aerchew by nate, who ‘Was ouo of the tWo | “Lampligiter, Tivcnty usond Taidasad. Now Aoml 55 hi b Tiiva at YAk Csame vate oo s | inhabit the State. "Tho achein feyinilar 1o that Shooting a Lynx by Its Flery Eves. mul 'lPr!,ghlcr word than bright, u fulrer word | or Mu. Ascuixaln’ Fousss, Mu. J. A, M. whick were tuken for l;‘fl:h.'l’ n(h &zuldhflv York: Alvest Comwell. ~ Clucsgo: Uadiey Bros, | JUCED L0 S8 HONS h ot n willo keeplug | %, ably carried out [u the .'fi'“:"a‘: aitle, peue R e it A fon Gaua¥, A% AUANY OTUER SyEciaL Coudisroy privately, fur Couut 'Jlt‘ln di whereas the | & Co. 1o, pp. 503, Slongeids of thew, actlol pured for the Comuouwealth of Massaubusutta, | 5, yogier st Joe eIt & Iynx_near iy ew days later he writes, in letter No. 8: EXTH N Euuors a¥u Asia. Loudon: Ma other ot lis pandon, Jor that bu turued Catho- oud, when perleciod, '"uul prot u‘ o \.h 128 socky luir du the movutains, vear Wurihe : . dear love, I canuot bellovo tbers ever was | millan & Co. th? o: Jausen, McClarg & Co. | lique” Aud, furthier on, lmnng mvunpun e VPERIODICALS RECEIVED, lm\’AT “EM‘ AINS, value to :hu;:lrlvunu):hn o ::l-:r::lny‘ bll‘a‘:cul bw“*ku Sulliyan County, No Y., receutly, The 4 "n;;:lr) could b anythivg to adwire fn me 12wo., po. un: . lhw- $3.50. count of tuy ygic{c-flxl hl:.ux'u:gs.::eu_u“ run;:, NORTH AMERICAN REVIEW for March—April DBt bt m;"‘- wisiogat bu; u(. tuc‘\\;;t.c ll‘n tle’:"m ‘Mm'n Bottds had run fato the rocks and tricd o dis~ ooy rvu 1ar aa sight goes—1 cannot be sd- We shiall scarcely Lave a more vivid snd fas- | Venice, sud Savoy, the _x:,u ; writer goes | (New York). | Contontss **Tha Arwy of the y e d lucludes ouly the Colcoptera, i lodige it, but werv badly beateu. ‘The hunters 4 wred, Law nota thig to be aduiired. You | einating bistory of the Russlan war with Tur- | on to say, closiig @ wild, burd-nioney rumor | United States.” by en. James A, Garteld, | tho Loudon Boclety of Antlquaries s bistury of —y—— e detided that ono of thew should unter und P b % Llove you; ull Tean brine you is & awoon- ey, down to tho fall ot Kure, tu November, than | YUFY m;lwliA * And these ure the Articles: 1o | wmcuwoer of Congrss from Oblo, Wwith letters of | \ho straugo vicissitudes which bave befsilen WOOD=ANTS. oot the beast. Takiug uu arwy revolver in B o e, e | B et e s | Wi yoa aro ' dey e wieceb o pe | e, Shorn it Bhserccd ¥l 303 | L0 iy o Catberino do Vol Queen of | Tho e-itoryof the wood or fulow ant | HoSHALS Utk s ot Tt R ok ot : ¢ Lo bri ‘1 my w y % ¢ b v Col ngfieidd,wbic! bnier it pare: e i - Pty . 5 el o velng g velucgs ud i hote o 0 7 u:h.“o‘:‘l‘;‘:{ st tho brilliaut speclad cosrespundents who ‘lzu huve buard before, thut they bave now “S ‘Ll‘ll:&‘lflls‘lz.. ‘1’ ':a:ll:;llt‘::hx.u n'e';?fmcp'fll:{“ Heary tho Fifth. Tho Royal lady was origlually | (Porwiics rufa) was carcfully studied by Huber, | ibew eutered the rod "nflt‘i’ :fi:fi:fi rxl::I tl;’,‘fix s | buried in the Lady Chapel st Westminster. | who records that it does. ne work io the uigbt. hmcm;urn,‘uz"{:fi brain und Kiilis it fostatly. us largy s an ordivary boutd. The 1 could have posscasion of them both {n the | have carned & world-wide reputation by thelr fa006 A ately done by the suveral Auibassadors which :{gn“" Hichard "{avior; * Tho D’“"'M'"fflf walt for thetr auswers Iu bls Cawp. — Aud there bilean 3 = g 14 sald to bee tuuch monky alresuy made over of lfl‘x’s'fé’." u-r:'f.?'if‘;.u'il..“f.:"&:“;‘:fl'. in unty him, and some letters mnention 00 tusne America, " by Rabbl Gustav Gottbeil; **Tho of gold, which amuunts unto 600,000 | Politlcal' Aiauco of tho South with the West, " pound sterdur, sud O tumnc should be | Ly Jobu K. Morgan, Uulted States Beuator from When her grandson, Henry the Seventh, built | The Rev. Heury C. MceCook, who bas closcly lu- tho chapel which boars his uaime, ber body waa | vestigutud tho babits of the suume specles fu the iz s lurgter than & wild-cat, and ite : exbumed, and, the cotlin coutaining it belngla a | Unitod Statcs, saya: * When observed (a8 they | g) shorter tban 0 colamouut’s. Beverwl 3 decayed state, it was placed in a woodeu chest, | were by we) during nearly every hour of tho | Luve been killed fu the valloy. In the letter of Aug. 9 bo | Letters from the sceno of action. First smoug puightanend 8 ploisant scar 8¢ |y fs Mr. Arbibald Fortys, of whom it ks (4 iy ¢ Buacech theo to bear us O Uoddeest | Becessary morcly to moution bis pame: and Lo should bear, God forbid we should | sccond is Mr. J. A, MacGabau, whose extruor-

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