Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, August 17, 1878, Page 9

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1HE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: SATURDAY- AUGUST 17; 185B—TWELVE PAGES. ) e — o — 2 LITERATURE Tested by Languare.” London: Rivinatons. | thence and good humar, D oick up from the | Tuccany,” hy dames Montzomery Henre I Goddard: ** Judith and Indah.” I, by | & dream in which God. speaking * with & sound. 4 > New York: Scribners. Chlcago: Jausen, Me- | simple peasant-folk foru tnera song. Very in- | French eraristation, B Jusnphine it Baker: ‘A Water-Lily." hy 8.7, | Jeas word." m,rwmhm‘"m. -hunm.mr:{fl,‘:?.:‘z Dowrewion. '."#“22‘.’;&%-’&‘2’.:“.&.‘}2:;5"‘;‘1‘,‘,:;: > Clurz & Co. Price, $3) iLg chanters lao are devotced to the Para- | hees of the Cobden Bura: 2 Aftera Palk. " by Maria Louie, el | peficlon fn the outward sizn. It ia thus that | of 18500 ko e = '|'r not the grent Oberammegan Passion | avnual report tor 18 150 eoples O O e Walker: | the Delty speaks to the race: . Lty .. . i lav, Lt 1 far sinpler and ruder performance, | Creed of Free Traded" by the Hom, Dacid Ao zditor's Tanle; AMERICAN CURRENCY, C, i, Evans & Co., of 411 North Thiell street, | tainment.” 1. by llorace Scudder Or eat your holy bresd? ! ¥ hatTack I, O my children? ONEIDA COMMUNITY CHILDREX. . i : —tho Village Schoolmnater, Prieathood and kn- | W 5 s of Cobden,s Attaxtie Moxrhry—September (Houghton, Os- \ #Darwinism Tested by Lan-| Thetitlcof Mr.it, V. Poor's new work ta a | Teig\ieee fehohinnater, Prieathog) and bu- l,.:fi‘l’::."&"li-‘..."’.'fi:;.?.";‘.’?u‘i»"“&%{u e | AT & Cor Tovisnt. Teamtontac 5he Vintan TS YA o o) ok Tl staee T. R. Noves, the physieian o the Onelda Com- 7 misnomer. It ttocs not treat chiefly of K Pensant Wedding, @ Poasant Wate Potltivnl Writings,” with an_intrody of Echard, " by John Greenieaf Whiltier: ** The 1h0ld a8 krains of sand. * munity, has prepared a report on the health of guage "---An Orthodox sumbtlon and the Siiver Queation” 1. fa not, | Place, Atpine’ Walks, ote: "The Colten'r Lile ami Wrisings, be &ir Lo e iy aaky dames drit R the ctldven uudss ble charis. . Ha bies tantaed . in any proper sense, *'a hand-book.' 1t con- ! custou ho peanle are inclde et (Ridzwar), 1.000 cnoles. Profesanr Fa ena Finauces ftom 1780 o 1835, I., hy John o _ s mitentton to the children borm since 1889, View of Evolu- taine ix easays upon dilferent questions of | 4TI Ueso chapters in an wdmisabla wayund | - Trade and Prosection,” (Macmi (¥attn Kewrmes s - Some. French Noveln by D ea e e et st which date the Community, findiog tion, present financal Interest. These are headed | pucity, couraze, ,;Mm)} P i eaples. "Thoma= Sargeant Perry: **A Tonse of Fnter. Taste | your wine of worship, fteett Onanciaily prosperous, determined Part L. Part JI, efc.; Hut there Ia no logical | Lrue, they must ho one of the must mtereating *%Joan Nelllah, " by Darton Grey: to suooly the deflciency cansed. by nations in Europe to visit. 3. Louls, have Isriied the secoud sonual volume | o iments ta llach's and Iiandel’s Kcores. S TS SO the normal death alsin connection hetieen them, and they do not form L of thelr college_direetory and universal cata. [ £°CRineRInEntaio fachornd PaRdcE dtcares. *4For yon I gavethe Prophets e e s 1 STt da 1L V. Poor’s New Treatise, * Ree [ *[ANann t 00 inor, 1 s rentenca it THE ENGLISH STAGYE, B e o acas| Ehihze Guniateans e filert Melody, e For you the Pt iy accordance with the princloies of adantife stirp: o the prefsio, ! Under tho title of *' Lights of the Old English | the name; Jocation, size of facuity, iength of | manism: " by Arthnr O. Sedgwicks - American- For pon the tw's stons ta foultuge. It attempted, however, Httle fur: sumption and the Sil- ver Question.” Ing & half-page, announces that the object of his book (s to show how hank currency differs from Uovernmenl currency, and £ ther than laving s veto unan combinations for rlnnuwu which wera obviously unfit, and even here 1t did not always succeed.” So much & . And boo 2 Staze,” Mesars. D. Appleton & Co. have col- mrl'u!. mlnue{m&:fl;fl size '\}'f mfl";l‘!‘ “"“““" "',:"‘;;;".’"-' “,.’,.’,f.lf".‘.'.fi flfi?!--“y.l‘.“{;. .l.t',:"wh; "y flhhfllf s Jeted & & uition, price of board, humber and classifica- A 3 Ye ehange tn wenry burdena’ ! 1y one of thelr admirable handy volumes ton ovnmmenu, 'age, Tlue of apparatus, Francis itt; *Anguat Saling," by H. d r Th lelpe that shonid apitfe fnder of the preface fa occu- | ® ferles of papers originally vublished o t, a Everezt. ‘e Contribulors' Clud s *! Hecent Ye luye in sien the ranstance, for the method : “now for the re- e e encontagtog. us o betieva | 1 Temple Mar, Tho titles of thess | Ko e O o alT st | Lilcratnre Theiverin thogifl, tulte. There havo been born n the #Gaddings with & Primitive Peo | that this bonk will 0 arouse tho peaplo tothis | PApers asb: “Richard Burbace and Other [ cational fnstivutions of ali Kinda n tho nited | YIRS Law-Rurp pugut-September (0. T S, 3 TR M e i e amac 1%y Oiuydes lo"ee® Lights of quastion that they will demand tho fmmediate | Orleinals of Slakespesre's Characters,® t*Tho | Btate 7 AuBRican Law Trowerpn—August (D, B. Can- | **Yghowtoghsstyarmvoie, barn have been nat onis viable (that Is, capaie ple'= ghts of the retlrement of all the outstanding legal-tender Cibbers, ‘The Modern Rosclus' (Garrick), Henry Holt & Co. have fsaued a new editicn of field & Co.v Philadeinbin). Tu crose, and econree, and thomn; of living), but fres from conatitutional de- English Stage.” releus “Charles Macklin *Peg Woflington and | Mrs. Brasser's * Voyage Around the Worldin | 10pyysy 1ivia Aag—Corrent numbers (Littell e ina hemm mneet Lol Lty viabls, notwithatanding live caso 3 Tins Is & most Important subject, and one | G¢0r@e_Ann Bellamy,” “John Kemblo and the Yacht Sunbeam.” Finding that the En- | “ETECE A 0inn 5 of death or near birth, hecanse every ong of. Surah Siddons,” Georgs Frederick Cooke, | Sof cdition was withaut smnders thop have +4For the dead Christ, not the living, =y “Edmund Kean,” “Charles Younz,” *“Mra. | and will furnish it separately without charze to FAMILIAR TALK. w}.:.:i‘.'f." -’l'::;: A oy Dora Jordan,” snd *The Story of Perdits.’” me"?x""h‘" thefr mt :ufl.lun.' fl'\ful":’:r AN HISTOTIOAL. PRAUE Han power to bless and save, The serles 18 by no means complete. It con- shers have now rt arrecto o X L, FRATUD, e o bt e eh-and Aten, | Theo-Gift’s novel, Maid_ Ellice. In thelr Letsure- Foths Edlior e e Dibwaes Thists buta (raxmant of the utterance of the 7 S Divine voice which Echard hears, It warns him Pritcbard, a8 remarkable s pair {n their way as }L‘Z'fl.fim"flffi'é&'?hfi.’ffi"':‘ffl'lr'»’e“’f—i'r';é'.fi“ CnicAco, Aue. 15.—~The articie which ap- | that self-turment and penauce and the “desth any of the others; nor about Barry and | bered, was peopered with' italics through the | peared In Tne TRiRUNE of Saturday last, with | tn life!” of Nitria and Chartreuse are vain; tbat be alone who couuts his brother's welfare as hin Quin, or the clarming Mrs. Bracegirdle, | biunder of a proof-reader. the beading, © Rutnme sua Sugar,'’ 18 u curtous | o080yl e i0 1" inGrard voleer shial or Nellle Gwynn, whose acting was The American public Is requested to take | 1llustration of the vitality of s fraud which, | Rnow Chrlst, - The dreaming tmonk is reminded goot and history a« romantlc | Dotice that the Rev. Arthur Murscll, an English | though often expuscd, is still passtug round In | of the transitoriness of all mere forms of re- erdita’s; nor about manv other lghts of | J\on:Conformist pastor who in announced | the columns of newsponers as histotical verity, | ligton: these deaths depenited directly upon causesdua tothe mother,” Of the fifty who survived the g:nll of birth, all are now livmg. There has cn no death in the children's department for eight vears. ‘The department includes seven children brought in by their parents in addition totne ity born bhere. The Community num- bers in alt"about 300 persons. According to the ¥ best tables of mortallty, under the most favor- able circuinstances the deaths among an equal number of chiidren In the same period of timo shouid have been sixtcen instead of fdve, ¢ Allowing threo deaths as likely to have taken which has never been properly presented to the American people. Mr. Pour can do a great eerv- feo it he ean show ue clearly and conelzoly why bank-notes are the only admissible form of pa- per monev. Wa enter upon his first essay with high hooes; but, after following nim through fifteen pages of rambling, inconclusive state- ments, we come to the end of his discussion of this tople, and to the cheering Information that he differs from all other writers on this uuhgecl. whoso conclusions, lie tells us, are withou “The Model History of the United, Btates "'---Literary News, Qossip, and Notes. An Historical Honx—The Inventor of Photography—The Nebular g IR SOy W the | a8 3 shortly to deliver s course of lectures in the : po place If messles, hooping-congh, and scarlet- by Hypothesis, 1,.-..,;'..},“,0% ;,1. reaton of experience. :.;m‘ul‘nllnl:.ng‘l\!:)l: ::-':‘wial wmh nit’nla:lllg"!;fl‘tg:: :: United Rtaton was during the War an ancom: It umul‘nll ';.hnf. :n:z:ng! to !n. a letter from '“l'x':r' ;5 dn’-:"e;;fl; ;;;-Qfi::\gm. fever had invaded the children's departmept, Tactorr.” Tho obvlsus restmmr g n Ut | atiyes furnish much orfginal matter, or | DTumistog_enemy of the Unlon cuuse. In s | Cotton Mather, du bt 15, 053 atating hat [a 1t to (he changeless trrth £he deathis Under [0 gears ol age wauld anaunt LITERATURE,. r:'fi‘cavrh nrdg:lh;l”ugl ?fiz::;givcn‘ 2:2:25:; "l:;%m thatice. an otiginal Env'. Dr. Doran | Bermon on **The Grievousness of War.” delly- | that secret orders had heen given by the Gen- That yours shall fall in torn ? to eight, the United States average being nearly 3 3 sixteen, M- Poor docs not even mentlon. - o vonmely | has evidently helped much In ‘some of the ered in 1863, he sald, reterring to the Trent af- | cral Court of Massachuscits to Master Malachi s Sy 3 **Ha t atfl] ts 8o inuch for atatistics of mortality. Now DARWINISM AND LANGUAGE. | bimaull o endeavoring Lo ostublish somo sliads | Dabers; those an Giarrick, 8lddons and Kemblo [ fa/7:, “Audacious pitates, ot content with | fluxett, of the brig Poroolse, to waslay a ship T s as to sickiess not terminatiog fatally. Of Au cxamination of Darwinism, from an | owy distinctions, arising from different methods | arc lsrmely drawn from Fitzzerald's Lives, snd | Joorcs e portin oy Co o (Feutin fofS OO0 | which had ssiled from London with a hundred My hand that un the key ot lite course it s not bossible to nso statistios orthodox point of view, fs undertaken by | ID Which the two forms of Jahor mogey Bew put tho later ones aro taken frum sources as easily | ¢ ot protection.”” The whole tenor of the | of more herctics called Quakers on hosed, one of bliss or bale I lay 2" - for comvnrison bere. Al that s in circulation. e clsims that bank- rreney to he sald s that serlous sickness among the children born since 1867 has been uvknown. One or two children were delicate and had convulsions while teething, and several were affected with diarrhea fn summer. Tha only exception to gencral heaith among them accessible, discourse was In keeping with this aentence. | of whom was Willlam Penn, and to take thiem | The drcamer awakes at sunset, and, going back ¢ s Ho called the tlnited States & sirt Repubile, | 1o Backilocs. aell them. for slaves, st fi 1o ““his order's Kloates," sits innight-long parie TAYLOR'S 5CIIOOL HISTORY. 0 Barbadacs, & And from | ieh two brethren,who tell him that “the Vo “ A Brlef Account of the American People, for | (fnted thom with thelr voar display 8t the | g proceeds bring home s carco of *rumme | above all voices has also spoken £o them and o Behools " fs the sufliclent title of a school- [ *vilewarfare® * nothing but dead~Irunk passion | 20 SuKer. they conclude thuss history by Edward Taylor, A. M. The publish- | —hothing but one crimaon orgio of bitchery | 4 This letter first anpearcd fn the Easton (Pa.) “\What If the viion tarry? Frederle Batoman, M. D, F. R C. P,ina treatlse entitled “Darwinism Tested by Lan- guage,’ recently published by the Rivingtons. Dr. Goulbury, Dean of Norwich, has furnfshed the preface, or Introductlon, which s longer represeints the transactions of comme , while Government currency represents * waste,” Il does not tell us why Government notes, it redecmoble In coln on demand, may “not represent coln actually in tho Treasury, aud thercfore o proper substitute and blood” w becauss' I sed altke 1n | Ar7us Aprii 24, 1870, and was copted into nearly (Soa's time (s alwaya hest; hae heenono boy who was oncof the cases '.: dmore pedantic than thero was any need of . He a ershave prefixed thu titic, * The Model His. } 4d blovd." It 18 uss [ sec slike In | Geory newapaper fn the United States. S i v ¢ b i B I g tcs L entirely O | o which Is superilous and untrue, It fs | Federal and Coufederate” e contivued, *the | SUCEL TCRRINSL "5 i e followlng trodue. e Chtiat witnin confemend>" ot wer e o ehind ls sk : ftsbemer, Both Doctors show much scrimony | the fundamental {len. that confidence fu the re- hater of the slave, the champion of chalns, that ception were disregarded. This ehild 18 affect- ‘ q —f ¢ s fon: *“Mr. Judkins, the Librarfan of the 1 with lack of co-ordinati: his in discussing the subject. Their thrusts at | deemability of paer money—in otner words, its | difticult to excuse the had tasto which can 80 | {caq find no sotace In the dreary spectacle, no 4 k . A **In mercy and 1n Judgment ed with lack of co-ordinating power over what they are pleased to conslder the humorous | tTedit—conatitutes dis valio asacleeulatiug mo- | describa auy school-book, or serfes of books, | hupe for humanity In the frsues of this uniioly ,‘_{:‘:“’-c‘,‘l‘;:f“;, Histpleal Hoclely. 10 pvertunls Heutalh sarn and frastirt: musclex | Ho fmproves yesr by vear, bt wil sspects of Durwinlem aro savago and fll-totn- | ot Bncysscd by Govermment iotac it MAY | and particularly thls book, which is in eyery strife? 1t is not prohable that a man who In | grijiivesal that bods Ly the late Robert Green. Tl the heart aball ne Hin teimple, Aliage b uder sive 1o welzbt il Dehts and percd, Instead of being, as we had almost the other respect modest and excellent. ghowed & judizment 80 rancorouscanin | jear, of Malden, has recently made s curious : taic 28 by notes fssucd by banks. ‘The stroug argument nagainst tho use by s uvation of ita promises fo pay as money,—that the constant temptationa to overlasue ars almost irresistible,~he neglects to meution. Thls arguinent, can be urged with especial foree upon the Amerfean people, for it prevelled with almost unanimous force on the Convention which framed the Constitution; and that Instrument, by neglecting to conter such power upon the Government, stands us a con- stant aud solemn protest agalnst such {ssues of baper money. ther cogent reasuns acainst Government per carreucy are, that, it volume heing stable, t does not well adapt itself to the fluctusting wants of trade} that it ncts as an artificiai stimulus or restraint of prices; that {ta legal-tender quality forces it 1nto transactions have anything of value to say to the peo- tion. His mind is sound.” I Mr. Taylor has a clear (dea of what a s 1- discovery which b hln:;r;r .-‘h:y‘:l:l be. Ho says in the br:'rl:c:' l'l;:l :h:’l u':“m ates; tng th b people "'l"“““'v“: “’,"" A"H“," t';s“fl i e @ following note respectiug the new cheap | was oue of auctent date, which bore n- L, e * The valunblo Iessons of Anicrican history aro [ yyrarics of tiction is made In the Contributor | dorsoment: » Ye Schienic (o Bugge Penne! This LUCKY NUMBERS. mostly to be found {n our natlonal rather than | Club of the Atlantic, *The most notable aml | curluus title attracted the attention of Mr. | = Superstition dies*hard; and of all mupersti- provineial life,"—an opinlon which we had ac- p.lleuinz llcll in L;nnll’!:fllla;nbwl;h th:mhh;, lu,.: Jludklnn. nm{”lm enrflnod the eon:c‘nu o{ uizé tons a belief in lucky numbers is by no incans cuslon to express nearly In this precise lan- | theyarcso largely bought by former habitual | duciment with more than commou Intereat, the lcast remarkable for vitallty. From alet- o o . readers of the *Texas Jack® mtrlpe of dime. | is in the familiar and quaint hundwriting of the - : Ruage, & few weeks “:"'l‘“ 'ddm"‘"'i connee- | oo™ The newsdealer who sold me tho * His. © Kev, Cotton Mather, aud Is addressed to ¢Ye | tér written to one of our nowspapers a few days ton. Another merit clalmed for Me. Tay- | tory'of a Crime’ made ano very suguestive re- | azed and beloyed Mr. John Hicginspn. It [ 820, & belief appears to' prevall In Venice lor’s bouk is, that **it does not make a specialty | mark. *Tho oddest thiug ubout the whole | bears date *September yo 15, 16521 thut “in the eventof a stranger dying in one of wilitary detafls.” * Mors than usual space ;Nllll\'!ll!.; nnhh! he, " is tl.hu ‘x;;:mbi:rol clnlln] have T b‘(ln;r.? ::;l; liln% l.l"! lzt::ltg: .'J-r‘.i‘."ni'?:' ¥ ;T‘r:: of the hotels there, the numbers of his rooms . | for the best novels, in this shape, from men | raw this le ) « iN2 of May oo e e ite aom Prest: | whom 1 used to think of as wanting only the | 4 15, und, Imediatcly detectiug It to bo a | Il b lueks oumbers in the noxk ottery. and kbl TRAUCH, Calle b o PFOEress of | worgt cloes of publications 1 lad ou mycoun. | forzery, wrote to the Bosion Trumseripd of June e i S L Ll opiniun, poctal, ofliclal, and domestic mavners; | ters,” Such men—women and children, too— | 1, us follows ¢ Western teaders can bardly | {llustration,” not only of the belfef, but, unfor- fn a word, the development of our pationsl | cunhe wou from the degrading reading to | be expected toknow that Mr. Judkine and the | tunately, of its confirmation alsv. It Is stated iife” This statement we have found, | Which they are accustomed only by the substi- | late Mr. Greenleal are persons who have uever | by the writer that “on the death of the late capecial interest for the | Wil this prophecy the poem, which contains 1ight to expectin such n connection, playful about 20 lines, concludes, and amusing. This Is the more to be deplored from the fact that they are coustantly pretending to be in n zale of langh- fer whenever thoy mention the absurdities of Darwintsm they both scem to be in sympathy with Dr. Moffatt, the Afrlean traveler, who sags in a letter published in this volume: *The Darwinfun theory is altogether so ludlcrous that I never rofer to it from the platforn, which 1 sumetimes do, without taxing the risible pow- ers of my audlence.” If Durwinism is serlous and important enough to deserve that such prest men 8s Dr. Batoman and Dean Guulburn shonld write about it, we believe it s not, as THE NEBULAR HYPOTHESIS. : On Lis return to Washington from his expedi- tion to Colorado to observe the cclipee, Prof. Lockyer was {uterviewed by a reporter of the Post of that citv, and, In speaking of the bear- ingof the result of his observations upon the nebular theory, said: L believe that evolation will aecount for ail the plancts that may be dis- covered ot nny time in the future. ‘The theory 2 of the oebular hypothesis is to-day the only theory that can account for the origin of worda. Tho idca that the discovery of the 3 moons of Marscave a fatal blow to the evolu- . tion theory is all stupld nonsense. Iam afrald, A lowever, that I am not a fair exponeut of the . wiiera othicr forms of vaper money would not | on examination, strictly true. Such great | tution for'icof good literature, cqually attract. | Leew heard af in these parte s that no such in- | gir vy, 8t1rling-Mazwell ot Danteli’s well-known | nebular hypotliesis, Lecause I am rather come F "'f,’.;” ‘::’;" ?:’,Z!nlfi::“:;kfltmn off from tho | Baturally euter:and thab 1t pinces) tha tadle of | facts i our History s the Iutroduetion | Ivo and cqually cheap. Pul c and nflcul-llnu ddent apdmain Le 5‘}‘-““""9‘9!3‘“ Historical } ) 00 e :mnlnyu of the hnl:l m:::: Titted o It The sbecirascopo has. consoll- ho difforen o the country upou a basts 1ot recognized by th | of tho eultura of rico and tobaceo; the foven- [ librarics accomplien ' little: only u lttle. | Roclety s that the Massachuscits Lolouy didnot | B8 50 CRRAYEE € E L TRET HIREE | dated the hypothiests 1o an_enurmous degree, i lower animals.” Dean Goulburn remarks in the | world. These micht all beurged with Torce, and | tion of the cotton-uin, the steamboat, the mag- | Bound books, or cven the ordinary paper nov- | maintain a navy ; that Cottou Mather was only ately subscr 0 c shares in the t and the mors the spectroscopic results are pgarnercd In, the more romarkable ¢ does the theory become. If you take : the observations “of Sir Willlam Thompson and of ProL. Tate, dcaling with the origin of the spectra of the nebule aud comets, or the known obscrvations on stars with bright lioes, and “ stara with dark ones: the varfons appearanés of nebule fo Saturniue forms; the existeace of the rings of Baturn; thc density of the Interior plancts; the density of = the exteriur plancts: the deosity of the satellites ju relation to thelr primaries; 3 resent condition of the sun; the former condition of the earth; the present com- posttion of the sun’s atmospbere; and the pres- sent composition of the crust around thy earth, oue-half of which consists of oxyzen—if we look atall this, I rently do not sce what doubt can remain In repard to the correctuess of the theory, Itis oneof thuse things requiring to be treatea with scientific cautfon, but Ise: no error in . But thers may have been other causes going on of which we at present are perfectly ignorant, so that the nebu- lar liypothesis may be only upplicable to one of the nany cuuses at work. The observations of the uewstars wero aupposcd st one tino to by fatal to the hypotnesis, but that waa beeause peuple wers carried cway by the meaning of word, ‘The star m us could not bave been u star at all when [t burst out ip the sky, for If it hoa been, It would have taken miilions of years 1o cool down Instead of » few days." VENTILATING THE SEWERS, Mr. Heory E. Knapp, civil eurineer, of this city, has recently ottacked the theory of ven- tilating eewers sud drains. He wsserts that sewer-mases are heavicr thau air snd would remain near the surface of the ground if set {free, and therufore it would be just as secaible to ventilate graves. o contends that the only safe way to deal with the scwors s to grivo them plecty of vater und scu that proper valves are used. fn commenting upon Mr. Knapo's views, the Manufacturer und Builder savs: ** Wehave always been tn favor of Keepine tho scwer-rases where they belong—in the sewers. Experienco hius taught us that ventilating onenlngs, even when led up to tha roof, often spread disgust. fug and pernicious odors around the place of thelr exit. To ventilatc them in the street or v sidewalks in front of resldences, 8a reccommend- od by sume, who even have patented contriv- -~ ances for this purpose, we most emphaticully condemnp, especiully when the watersupply 1s ticlent to dilute and wash the coutenta to the urely lu that case thero is not the least Ity forat," AT THE MIRROR. preface, **may bo briefly stated ns three: Man can speak; he can make improvements iu his condition; and be can worship,' ‘The firat (and pernaps the most fundamental) of theso differ ences, Dr. Bateman hasexbibited in tho present work. Tho sccond difference he has passed over, and the third he has only briefly alludod to. The main object of the treatise, as stated hy the anthor himself, {8 tu test Darwinism by language,—**to examine tbe Evolution the- ory from a linguistle polnt of view, and to sce whether the attribute of articulato specch catablishes a difference of kind between unimals.” The orgument is con- ducted In theso threo propositions: (1) That speech 18 a distigctivoattribute of man; (2) that erticulate socech is an unlversal attribute of man; and (3) thot the facuity of speech Is not naterial. in support of the first proposition, the author quotes L'rof, Max Muller to tne ef- Jfect that there ts one barrier between men and animals which no one has yet venturod to touch, namelv: the barrier of language. If this is true, Dr. Bateman has been at iuneces- sary pains. Il nobody has ventured to touch the barrier in question, there I8 no reason why he should defend ft; and hia laborfous argu- ment wnd cltatlons are frulticss, ‘The argument on the second polnt i more substontial. The wrlter's opponents Lero are not meru men of atraw, though somo of them, perhaps, are not posscesed of authorlty or digs nity cnough to muke the rout of them a slenal triumph. One of them enters tho Jlst with the assertlon that lnuguage is not un attributo uni- versally belonging to the humau ruce, and that there are savages who have nothing of the kind. The authority for this is a well-known book of travel, the * Voyage of the Beacle,” whero 1t 1s slated thut the Fuegian savages can only cluck llke a ien. Dr. Batetun shows that this is an fneorreet statement ol the fuct. Mr. Darwin himsclf wus the naturalist to the expedition fu which the Beagle was engaged. From Mr, Darwin's _full account it is evident that the Fuegions did posscss articulate rpcech. Mr. Darwin says: ** They could repeat with perfect correctuesa cach word in the sen- tence addressed to them, und they remembered euch words for some time, Henve it is evident that they possessed the facully of lauruage, ul- thouch In un Imperfectly developed form.” Stil better proof of tho falsity of the cvinence attempted to be drawn from this source is the tuct that a nunber of Fueglans broughit over to Englaud it the Beazle Jearned enongh of our language to bo able tu talk about com- won things, ‘They acquired powers of ar- tlculation, it is true, through linitatin sud teaching; but they slso Yiad the healthy germs of speech, without which imitation and perhops conclusive effect. Mr. Poor, by ‘neg- leetiug themn and treatiug his subject fn'n mys- tifylng and faselful mothod, hus shown that he {8 not master of the question which ho bas un- dertaken to discuss. Mr. Poor’s sccond cssay i on the resumption of specle-payments, It “Alla ninety-five pages, and s mainly taken up with criticisms of Scc- retary Sherman’s vicws as expresacd in his con- ferctice with the Committees of Congress lost March, Mr, SBhermau hns not adooted Mr, Pour's new system of finauce, and conse- quently the most dreadlul consequences are Nere predicted for his management of the Treasurv. ‘The third essay, occupying twenty-six pages, is on tho eflver question, and 18 a short nccount of_the varlous coinage acts of this Government. The fourth easay {8 on Jegal-tonder currencles, Tt oceuples twenty-seven puges, and treats of tho currencles of the Mongols, of the American and of the French Revolutious, aad of the United States. It is principally in nurrative forin, and is for the most part well told. That part of it vspecfully which treats of tho lewal-tender money of the Mougols, and which Is Iargely composed of quotatious from Col. Yule, the translator of Marco Polo, is the most entortain- {ng part of the book. It s nsintercstingasa bit of -medimval bric-a-brac, and lsabort as much practical value. ‘The fifth essay, on the Greenback party, isa sovere aitack upou that very vulnerablo organi- zation; and in the sixth cssay, on the method of resumption, the author gives some fndica- tion ot the lmpracticablo manner in which he would have resuinption effected, if be could B omcrcs this ook § disappointt oguther ook s vers 80 nting. ‘Theru ia great need of good l';oolu J:lp(:.hu m‘fn tinanclal 1seues, But llavcr{ man who unders takes to treat them thinks himself obhiged to lovent a new monctary n,‘;atcm. and to consider all questions from the aovel point of view of his pet theory, the natlon will gain little substuntfal advantage, Burely, thera are enough well-settled points upon which well read men can agree to stamd aud oppose the dangerous absuruities which are flooding the country and deluding the people. It Mr. Poor bad contented himsclf with discussing those subjects from these strong and well-cstablished positions, he might have madg a valuable book. Ho scems to have read widely, but to have thoucht superncially, His andor 1 greater than his logle, [lis arronge- ments ara defective, and, while he presents many Important facts, one is obliged to be constantly ou Eulrd siainst s hosty conclusions, ilis work, wo fear, will convince noue of the {nfla- tionlsts of the error of his wava; we sinceroly trust thut 1t will not have the etfect of dividing thos who adyocate speedy resumption and the mulntensico of a reifcomuble curroncy, (¢ Re- sumption and the Bilver Question.” By i1, V. netle telegraph, aud the rewinz-achine; the | ¢18 at fiftv cents or seventy-five cunts a copy. construction of the Pacifle Railrvad and the | are absolutely beyond tho mcans of these reail- Atlantic cable; and the orzanization of the | ers. \Whatever I8 doue at preaent must be done Awmetican Misslonary, Bible and Peaco Socicties, | by such clicap agencles as the Franklln Square —are miven the atteatlon they require, ‘The | Library. 7The wide extent of their fofluence It warsora well treated, the urincipal campslgns | 18 ensy to see. Bearcely s news-tand or of vach year being meutioned, and the gencral | neriodical store can be found which does not results of each brietly told, The writer is ain- tur‘l;] a large stock of them, and the numbers rularly Impartial. It's no easy thing to write | sold” are enormous. Ou the other hand, the 1 perfoetly colorless account of our 2T lerls. | dine nuvels of & dozen yeurs ago, and alf the Iatlou, or the latg electoral nquiry, but Mr, | kindred npovelettes, are’ now compuratively Taylor has atice ficd iu doing so. e s even | rare; the circulation of the weekly story pa- wrltten of the slavery acitation and the War-of | pers, like the New York Wekiy, too, Is “sald thie Rebellion in o way thut sliould ive offense | to be muchemaller.” to no fair Southeru man. e is refroshingly lrn{m. sujeukll:'uiu of 't'lw )chluu} w:lr u‘;v‘lmeh; ART NOTES. and un, able,’ nn 2 ho ar ol 1813 as **a strugile without results.” Theso | 1418 to be ioped that the British occuvation aro wholesomo fucts fur young Americans to | Of the lsland of Cyprus may at least resultin knows and it s much better that they should | the Intelllgent and systumatic investigation of Hiatory tim ?'t"llmll;"g “"l“";“‘d;.'“"}"i‘ facts in our | Cyorioto Inscriptions, culbturcs, and Methia, hlstory than It fa that thoy should have false | -y . 4 « notloris of nutiowal Justica. and {nvincibicucss, | Vs Wil i some dezres compensato the The history coutaius some errors. On page b3 | Arebvololeal world for tho Joss it has ex- it is enfd that John Locke's **tirand Model?* | perienced by the deportation to America of the s lr{cd ln‘ctxlul{nn"fm'“twarplt.v Joarat It yas, collections made In that fsland by Gien. di n fact, not tried at all. o undamenta| e o o o Constitutions™ were @ dead. Jotter from thy | Ceinola-—dradeny. time they wero spproved by the Propriotors till | There bas just closcd in Berlin an exhibltion -they were flually rojected by the Assembly of | of models for tlie Lisbic mouumer? -Twubtys South Carollna in 1608, while the Albemarle | one sculptors had competed, five of whom, laws governed North Corollue. On page 10 | oygn, Plubl, and Sussmann-Heliboru of Her- T e atlod, | A rasche < | 1in, Gedon and Wagmullerof Muulch, had been this lemslation, the Y‘n" money speedily | invited todo so. The models will now be ex- roso to its par volue, and the entire debt of the | hiblted in Munlch, where afterwards a come naton was dinally pald.” This s not true. | mittee alrendy appoinied will decide which T;I?"Cunlllllfl:xm.ll sarey ‘{“f,}‘%‘l"{ flld-A l‘nr; model 15 to be oceepted for execution, ul was funded ul e rate 4 1) currenc] for $1 of sncvie, but the greater part of it was RA Ixrunq: l(luufc to the me.mor)' of the late never presented for redemption or heurd of ev. Dr. Chulmers, the eminent jeader of the agatn, ‘This naturally followed trom the uses | ¥ree Church of Scotland, was unvelled m Edin- wde'of it, A barver's shop in Piladetphin | burg fn the vresonce of & larco nexemblage. was papercd with {t, and & dog, coated with tar, | The execution of thu statue was Intrusted to Bir and tho billa stuck all over him, was paraded fn | John Steel, R. 8. A, who bas produeed an ex- tho steceta.” On page 142, the writer ttributes | tellont work of art and an admlrable likeness, to_ Wurhiogton and bis Cabluct the muxim, | The statue, which is twelve fet fo Lelght, #Fricndulip with all tativus, entangling alil- | fepresents the reverend doctor fu the dress of n ances with none''; this wus the maxhm of | Moderator of the General Assembly, with au ‘Thomas Jefferson, und used by hin for the firsy | oben Bible fn bis haud as If giving u exposition. timo publicly fn Lisinuugurul nddress. Ob page | 1he pedestal s of Peterhicad grasite and sbout 935, 1t is eal “8cott then entered the | fifteen feet high. Tae eite 1s at the fntersection m):, contatutng n population of 140,000, Noth. | Of Caatlo and George streets, ing in the context sliows that the city referred A memorinl sigocd by Lord Rosebery has to'ls the City of Mexico. On pags 801, in | been presented to tho Councl) of the Roval he Iistorical Recrentlons, this auestion is put: | Academy of Arts by the Sunday Bocloty, asking #\What six Vice-Presidents were afterwurds | thut the exhibition of the Academs” mav. be elected l‘u-mgu;:ju -'l ~10'=lyl’"‘-rtl:l]" :mldevm opened on oue or two Bunday afternoons dur- vutbed "Ly S Retha or Treskdents. T v oy e Ao Eaoriot tory has & useful colored chart, and good sum- ( to relievs the regular attendants. To this marics of conteits, and {a well printed. With | memurial the Council of the Royal Avadeniy lias the correction of the errurs pointed out, it will | adidressed the followlng reply to Mr. Mark 1. D udmirably adapted for the purposs for whick | Judge, Honoravles Becretary ol the Sunday So- 1t was intended. cletys” **8ir, 1 um directed by the Presldent 10 years old in September, 1032, vever perse- | numbers of the next lottery corresponding cuted the Quakers, and uever wrote and spelt | with the number of the two rooms oceupled by like o blockhead. Its author is more hikely to | the late member for Uerthshire, hoth of which attain the Lonors of a Penusylvania or Dela- | numbers. strangely onough, were altcrwa ware whipping-post than the questiouable noto- | drawn vrizes,” Lo the unspeakable grief of riety of a Chatterton or an Ircland. erson connected with the hotel,' who * bitte 4 Cotron Matlier was aman of marked peculiar- i" amented that he had been prevented by sud- itles, and his hatred of relizious intulerance and | Jen iflness from taking the whole of the lucky [semccutlun was one of them, He used to say | nuimnbers, and thus realizin s havdsome fortune hat be kept himself 50 busy with bis own du- | at one stroke.” Somo curious fustauces of the ties that hie had no time o interfere with other | #devilry ”? connected with certaln numbers have peupld fn the performance of thelrs. lio saw, | been éelected by a French journalist e sald. so tlttle of Christianity of auy sortin | from the “ilistolre de la Loterie™ in the world that he had no beart to J:crm-me the “Entr'actes” of the younwer Du- the poor and feeble Hiustrations of it that came | mas. Here fs one: A poor working- in hls wav. *A good wulrhbor and good sub- | man, farrier to a regiment of culrassiers, took it fect,” he wrute, “has a claim to ali his temporal | futo his head to make a note of four regulation enjoyments before he ts & Christian. 1t is very | numbers branded, according to custom, on the odd “thut 8 man should luse bis claim from his | quarters of the remonnts; lie chose a number, cubracing Chrlsflnuu?'. and because be does not | accordingly, in toe Frankfort lottery, sud neurly lappen to be a Curistian of the uppermost par- | went mad with joy on winning 130,000 florina. tv. To pumsh wen in thelr temporal enjo The tirst thiog he dld was te buy as many pairs ments, or with an excluston fron theirtemnporal | of trousers ns there are uays In the year, so that enjoyvients, beeausc of some religlous opinjous, | he was known all through the cuvairy as *the 1s mblx‘rz)' N man with the 805 pairs of breeches,'" Here 1s My artivle in the Boston Tranecript was re- | anothier: **A womun dreamed of ten numbers, printed fu Tie Ciicaco TRIBUNE of Juso 11, | wrote them down on some liitle biti 1870, and In many otlicr papers of that period. | of paper, stuck these tickets on sticks, About four yearsago the origival story, with | and placed them atop some beans _its- authenticity unchallenged, took its ascond | plan‘ed st egaai intervals in w atrin of hor ilttic turn through the Western and Bouthern news- | garden. *I'll take,” said she, ‘the nuwbers of pupers. It is now starting out on its third cir- | the irst five that sprout and put them in the cult, It will not surprise nie to see it in the so- | Jottery.’ In dug time tive came out. She catled ** Bryant's Histors of the United States,”” | copled the numbers, and guve her son ten which hoa statenicnta, as | infer from a review | trancs, all the mouey she had in the world, suy- in Tue TiisrxE concerntoe Mr. Mather's con- | ing, *Ruon and take'nic this scquence of Ave at uection with Ealem witcheraft, which are quite | the office round the worner.’ ¢ All rizht, moth- us truthful, er.! ‘The sou rpent the mones, came back, and Some ycars ago I bind curiosity to look up the | assured her that he_had done as he was told. name of ‘the writer of this noax, and to eccure | The numbers won. 1t is Impossibie to describe & vopy of the paper {n whi t_originally ap- | the gricf which overwhelmed the poor woman peared. The writer wus James F. 8nuunk (vot | when ehe learned the truth. Bhe went muad, BEunk), the editor of the . Democratic | amla few years afterwanls ner son blew out his newspaper in Easton, Pa. 1 lad some corre- | brains."'—2ali Mall Gazelte. uw;:dun}fu wl!&l lllm.‘x lll:hn('knu\\iletggild the - authorehip, and scemed rather tond of the suc- Y 5! N | cens of hts feu ' eaprit. 'rnultummm; {s u por- SPARKS OF SCIENCE. mm(“lllr»'enxfl.u-l article which bas not before THE INVENTOR OF PHOTOGRAPITY “But it §s curlous to reflect on the narrow A committeo of eminent mon in France has chauce by which the founderof this &l’mmylrl- undertaken the project of crecting a monmment n:- Fou“mlruwmll'th&mlml, the fate °:' 19nY | to the memory of Nicephore Nicpee, the jnveut- of his religlous brethren who were vast ashore ol '« i thie relohtless coast of Narragansctt. 1t fs | OF Of photography. Iu thelr circulur it fs sald: strange to faucy the wise Jawgiver, endeared to | * Niceohore Niepeo underwent fully the ill-luck the licarts of a great peoplo and thelr posterity | which modesty and disinterestedness make the by his m';h}lx" nbnl-"]u'" 1 ".'1“‘ 't;eml:vorllcurw. \I,um- man of genlus table to: he never ceased belng Inge stuear in Barbadoes under the lash of a Yan- Kce overseer, or erushing cane futo rum to thaw :;kn:rm ?‘“:h‘:‘:fiwfld :r:llnler :I:I”:d f' the granito glzzards which Mather und his theo- abarion ‘ gain, g to logical brethron carried about [nstead of hearts, | 8 public wistake, hls work at firet Al how the ancient Mather [19ycarsold] must | procured to lis memory nothing more thin :"'"fl "['0“;!‘"“! _“"’ the n "lk'"l;‘m“ Q“k".l "l‘| an honorable mentlon. ‘Fhere still re- he relreuhiing ‘rumme’ which came not. It fs 2 dollzherul 1o think how hu never wut o bit of [ Was 8 way to make Lalf smends for the A . n o el ¢ . tht f the *spovle’ which his devilish old soul held | detriment that such an excesslye self- Standing bafors the mieror, teaching would ve ftuposaible. No animal has | Poor. New York: H. V. & 1L W, roor,) 3 = and Council of the Royal Academy of Artato | Pt L p s to the fnventor of photog- Coinbing her wealth of hair, ever evinced the silebtest capwcity for the LITERARY NOTES, acknowldge the recelpt of a tmemofial fruns the [ 10 delictous anticpation =how Brother Hiegl, denlel, ralsell b, the lavselor. of pintog B e browa brightness and | ‘raphy, viz.: procuring to his nams the dreamed of swallowing his lalf-score of hereties | universal celebrity which, na we said, it bas not In plous punches, ‘They would have made a | yet : and, to this ¢nd, proclaiming solemuly his ‘rum cretur ' of the great founder {f they had | riehts to the grateful of maukiud, and giv- {:ul. him{ but, thauks to the roud steeriug of | fng bim a durablo token of it. Nlepeo’s com- R, Greeuway, master,’ they didu't get bl patriols are determincd upon ercctinit to him 4 W F. I, statue in his native city, Chalon-sur-Saone. and, that they may defray tho exvenses of this moou- TYROLESE MARRIAQFR-CUSTOMS. | ment, asking for the munitizent nee of In fts roview of *Gaddings with s Primitive | every civilized nation. As the wi rh) s ; P abilged to Nicephore Nispev, no one ussurcdly TPeople,” tho Lundon Spetafor says: “Tho | Liny%heine tho hunor of purticipating in the marriage-customs of the different villages of | enterprise.” acquisition of lunguage., I[n the sume connee- tivn, Dr, Bateman yuotes tho uplnions ol vari- ots Jugh suthoritics. 8ir Jubu Lubbuck writes: * Althouth 1t has been at varfous times stated that certalu savage tripes are cutirely without lsuzuaire, noue of these accounts appear Lo be well authenticated, aud _they arv ¢ priori ex. tremely fmprobuble. Prof. Whitney say *Laucunge, articulate spcech, is n unlyersal snd exclusive churacteristic of mani no tribs of human kind, however low, fgnorunt, and brut- Ish, fatls to sprak ; norace of the lower ant- mals, however highly endowed, s able to A PRIMITIVE PEOPLIE. Messrs. Ilenry Hall & Co. have lucorporated In Nu. 08 of thelr * Lelsure-Hour Serles,” under the title of **Gaddlogs with & Primitive People,” two distinct works by Mr. A. Baillle Grohmau, The first of thuso wus published in England some years ago under the title ot # Tyrol and tho Tyrulese,” and has siuce passed tous second cditlion, the seeond has just been published tn Eogland, with tho titlo that the American publishers have chosen to retain for It Is rumored that a new volume of lyrical uu;-;‘l]fi &wltl; rel;llm lu|tlhc owm‘:‘:l n{ the poems by My, Tenayson may be expected short- | LXhibition on Bundiys, and to requeat that vou g will have the kindnesa (0 inform the mentorial- Iy to saske (e appontance; Iats that the coustitution and laws of the ltoval Helen Hunt (Mrs, Jackson) {s engagea upon a | Academy do not allow of the exhibition being story of Culorade life, for young people, to be | opened ‘on Bundays. N am, llr"vuur abealent entitled ** Nelly's Silver-Mine. strvant, ¥, A, Eaton, Sccretary, Juuu’uldlldtmewu bas written for the Spirit BOOKS RECEKIVED, of the Times ascrics of papcra on Rifle-8hoot- | Joxxs' Jounser vo Pamia. New York: Scribner ing, which bave wow been repriuted fu book- Wilford. Clicago: Jansen, McClurg & Co. form. Prico bU cents. Tug Secner or Tunke GrNenations. From the Out info papples rare, Thinks shu there 'l com When, over thos Bratding {is burnished beauty Back frons her furebesd farz, Thinkw she thst pallid smoothness Soon shall be seamed by care? “The finvers »0 solt and shapuly shall shrivel ‘neath storms of yosra? The clear, beaming eyo grow sunken And dim with ita tide of tears? . Y ‘Tyrol afford to Mr. Grohmann sume of his beat 1n u pamphiet summarizine *His Richtatos speuk ; clesrly ft was fust as intch s part of i duted volume. ‘This Beriiner, Welford & Arm strong desire notice | “'¥rouch of Alexanderde Fonimartin, Philadel- i ® o the Tottow es—the English Untess, through lis boundless mescy, i\'if.?.f,"..'fii’{,';’g‘;:?,'é that wo huuld talk ns that fl':ml‘:,';"“,’:tl:":,, Tt P 28] 4o begiven tha thaveice of * Darwintein Tested | phia: 4, . Sioddars & o, Cuicago: Jaused, ;‘::"J‘m;“ ',‘:"’“fi.’::,‘:’.;‘“‘:z s H‘,{:’:‘,‘w’v‘z‘;‘“ ity Tlomls e 8! Uemenbering ber fiaglleness, ‘The Father shall early call her Away from this world's distre Tho luvely snd long brown © Just tuged with the sunsel Ba shultered vecure fornver ‘Away from the storm and cold. And yet, 1'd not ask that she miss them, ‘Phicae triale and cares of earth; 1 nuver w lested onr jawais Wo uever should know thelr worth, “Tis not by uwnnxlduun \We find otis :nmr eteat bl The beautiful world beyond us by Lunguuge.”! elsuwhera noticed, s 83, Toey cClurg &I 'Cn- l‘nln-i‘?un:. 382 have tmport{d 4 spectal edition for use fn this | THE Otuen Hovew, Iy Mary I, Ifigham. New York: A. D. F. Handolph, Chicaga: & conatey. g MeCTarg & Cu. Prics 81 Lk LI The Rev, Edward Everett Halu's skctehes of | Eeuoxs or Sowu, tho tlves of thebrothers Everett, prepared tor the Soringteld, 1L : Eueyelopedla Sritannica, have been republished | Janseu, ScClurg & e ¢l 5 e BAINTS AND BIXAKKA, \ e ott. New {uu steuder pawphlet by Little, lrown & Co, | BASE A0, S0 News Conpang? © Chicagor A correspoudent of the ludiananalis Jourua!, Thecp st N vLinie S0 1 8 Journa’s | e Dean Litres Wir. Philadoiphia: J. A, who tately visited Concord, suys that Mr, Emer- Stod . Ll 3 " MeClure sun has falled greatly of Hte. Waen asked to z‘c:."‘ A (ol nCIACRUT: (Jiigm, MelTary farltles wtfending such cvents fu cach sevarate | o Nlevce, stter he bad ncquived the locallty, The ctiquette In such mutters is not .u:m for its -ln?] 1;\- fi»w‘n luumll:vlu-nc . b ::Illll\( alittle droll, For instance, whila ft fs by no | tobring it o full gt by fts mative Imperfection; he nad At lheart not to divulyo it before Is means periafited to an Huvite? 1o wive u e | o Gioh compistlon. and this he was toifing for. fusal, It by no mesns follows that the person | with bis ususl_patience, when death suddenty who kas spparently sceepted with effuslon at fi:?fi:}_fi};wflmw ;-'Il"ll;g:‘;g.;_ Tommer of ail Intends to preseut bimacll on the oceaslon, | pe had got s hint of Mlepeo's punuiu,—had cume and it ¥ the duty of the Hochzeitlader 1o dis- | and drswn out of his candour the sccrct e b < broo | OF biw proccedige, and from that tme, by tugutah between the genume and the pro- | oL, B WEEEEL, ) x'm-,mr uimsell with the o temtea acceptutice, snd woe by to bim §f e | rigaemens of fts detaile, bad lent cunningly o dangerous und dublous one. It §s certuinty treating an suthor with 1ittle respect, and por- haps with less courteay than ho has the right to look for, to put inone volume without mark of scparation what he was chosen to write and publh n two. The consue quences lway pot have been unfortunate fn tuls fustance,—we buvano meaus of judgiug whether they have been or not; but it 1s easy to imagive that the literary form at least of anybody's drink, The only question ls, whether we be- fiun to talk in the aowe inunner os we bestun to teathe, us our blood began to circulute, by o brocess fu which our own will hud no part 3" or s Wo Inave, eat, cloth, uad shlier ourselves by the cousclous exertivn of our naturs! puwers, by usiug our I.“\"DI!I‘V-L'IVOH fuculties for thy eatistaction of our diyluelydmplanted nevessi- tiea” Archblshop Treneh writes; “Thero hava never yet been found human belogs, ot the most dezeuded hordu of South African bush- wen, or Papusn canntbals, who did ot employ ‘Washington, Chlcago?: ; Cau unly be won in thia! this meuns of lutercourse with one unotbier.” | work might be acstroyed by such a proveas, tuko part in o conversution, he pleaded failing canses the unlucky briaegroom to have to puy | thissecund-rats tiak the secwinguces of 8 myate- | 000 AT M. E. Hamxo: o " h ‘i o g & . ", RIE ,.';.'.'.;‘:‘°""’I.J.’.';,‘,’m‘t.’.‘:.“..:“‘?" pthat the | My, Girohiman [s in all respects competent to | meniory as su excuse. T CREED oF O NDOt 7 Wit oGP, | for the cover lald for a detaulter, For tha cost | Hueiudsgation, tending o u porsonal discororr. Wt wera s roality ancs of wonte. jense LAUthors | yerite fu an entertaining and sccurato wanner | - Str. Jotw Brougham, the popular comedian Bhlle strvel): Tho Rose-Helford Fublishing | of this, soue five oF six Horine snould bs - | for mpravements, but keot meanwhils AR abeor Forty In of the Tyrol and {ty inhubitants, * Ho has iived there for inany Vears, speaks the lauguege pere foctly, and has assimllated Bimsell Lo thy dress, customs, and prejudices of the people. Hu 13 sud yemal gentleinun, will soun begin writing Company. Ty theatrical recollectious, which extend over & | Tus Etnics or 8rinstratisy. Uy Hudeon Tutils. perlod of Bty years, The bouk will bu pubhish- Chicage; ‘The Kelygio-Philosuphbical Publishing wd {u the full of 1370 by D. Appleton & Co, Nouse, From Liviogsions’s description it {s clear that {3 the Soko {3 increly u new specica of authro- poid ape. Lord ouboddo slso bas to admit tuat thie orang-outauk, between whon and gan frayed by the wedding present of the invited | lute ailencs avout l:uhhévlemlllnn.“ ix Yoo gueat, aud the meu who iy unwilliug to carouse | Clabsed, u“fi.',:‘j;h,:'m‘l’“fi,m‘l:m{ My aL 80 great an expenso witl, of couree, endeayor | goliation scensed to bim rive: §t was known that Morristown (Tenn.) Gusetta, 'l‘rlo famous duel in \:,ht'cn llgg'yl m-!:nou gentlemen were enygaged, in s stiil re- mumbered ta Nutehez, Col. James' Bowle, the 0 get out of it as well &s he can. b had for s vory grest while lingered over treatises | o fight: d invant T Py it he babors bund tuestublish u velutionsliip, ars **u | the betier able to do this {rom Ui fact that e | The death Is announced of Evert Augu A hero ts w curious viatoms i Unter Tonthat at | of chemfstry, b order to invent something, s | Jumuus tighter and lnysutor of the kulfo which barbarous pation which bas not yet I:npmcd the | 1s holf un Austrian by virth. His wdentity bas | Duyekek, compiler of * The c’.fl“ml“dl:l%’ PERIODICALS RECEIVED, the commenceinent of cotrtship, whieh b styled ".“"_“m,,{“ was hikely to aceredit tho opinton of | bears his uame, used tospend agreat deal of his thine In that city. 1lo was cballeuged bya geutleman from Alexandria, La., whoso trienas to the number of forty or mure, acvompanici hit 1o Natchez to see fair play, Kuowing that use of specel.™ ‘I'his 8 bezing thy question, vr {nvalidating it in o vital part. Several dis- tingulabed African travelers—Dr, Moftatt, Bie Burtle Frere, sud 8ir Samuel Baker—agres to on several occustons beea so completely lust that hie has been mlstuken tor o pative, und oues had the bovor of belug ruessedd futo service us gelde by u company of Auierican Literuture," apd sutbor of nany othe | Barrew's Mauszixk—-Septembet (Harper & Dros., er works; aléo that Of the Rev. George Gilil- | - haw, Jork). gontents: Soheen, the Beautl: 1an, the Seoteh entic, poet, and comuicutator. T e ar Masterm e S bringing the wioe A youth, haviug wade | his belag able to do 4, the prestige of - his chulw‘\‘u( ‘his maidcti, and been allowcd perufs. | consequence and mllll tnnumlmis mml'nn."- s1on tu visil ner, uresents Llmself with s bottle uaplc! ‘1“ “’; his "‘\:;' ‘:.’I:;n::n .":l‘.‘::;u“ lilyl; of wine, » glaas of which hie presents to bis (aie ey Ay, ¢ o 20 e i, e X i 4 Mrs. Huroett's uew novel, * Haworth's," by Charles ). Deshler (with ¢ e P o th, or haviug le(t but scarce aud vauue recollee- | Bowle was u desperate tug aud bad biy own peechlves tribe, ko ex- | sketch hiu ws @ sbu tierwards | Seriviuer, §s W be more fully fllustrated than (s | 1oth Daus. Hcfomed W L O e v sug, tho olhur his ex: partuor, were notlenorant of | yuiy, “The combatauts touk thelr places fu the tends, The weyuatutunee thus formel was utterwards | BI00 8 U e i L s to b Dub. | Hovert Tomes (witu tucaty-vuo 1t ind, she will nake every bowible excuse to ution; but (he sou, by a decd wrested from centre, separated from tuelr fsiends fu tue rear, or enouxh nut Lo endubger tuem with thele alls. Behold the buttle array thus: Twent armed Loufsiantans dfty ysids bebind thelr chawpion sad bis secunds “aud surgevs, and opposlto thewn, ad fur beblud Bowic and bis secotds and surgeon, tweoty armed Missisalppi- ans. Bebold the higbis of Natcbez througed with spcctators, snd asteamer o the river rounded to, sta deck black with passengers wutehinig with deep futerest the scene, Tue plan of tizht was 1o ex:binge shots twice with pistols. und Lo closo with Kulyes, Bowle being armed with his own terrible weapou. At tue lirat ire both parties escaped. At thy sec- oud the Louisianlun was too yulck, sud took sdvautage ol Bowie, whu waited the word. At tnis Bowie’s second eded “Foul play,” sud shot the Loulstanian dead. The secoud” of the Jutter m-uml{ ktiled the slayerol his principul. Bowle druve bis kuife futy thls wan, 'Tho sus- geous now crossed blades, while, with loud crics, came on the two purtics of fricuds, the Mgt of battle in their eyes. Iu & woincut the whole number was enguged fu o feurless counfiict. Dirky, pistols, and Snives were used with fatal elfect, untit vbe party drove the vtber frum tho ticld. 1 gu not know how msuy were kilied and wounded fu alt, but {t wss a dreadful slaughter. Howly fouzbt 11ke a tloy, but fell covered with - wounds. For wontla be lingered ak tue Mason Huousa bafurs he fally recavarned. ‘fhe argument o regurd to the e waterlallty ot speech s Inconclusive, Its pavslological busis wo do not pretend to yuestidu, but, admitting ji to be true, it docs Mol contrudict the fundamental facts of Dar- winlam, 1t {8 oppuecd to thy arzument drawn frum the unslvgles between the brain of wan sud ot the upes but this hus been ut tho best su Ludiy supported and so lttlo depended on that the refucation of it, it It were accomuhitied, would bot Lo a avrious blow to the Durwiniun tueory, Dr, Bateman cntevs upon u long argu- teot to shuw thut the lovalization of speech in e third froutul convolutivn or the orbital con- volutlons, 1a erroneous, e wentlons several busts Iy which thess couvolutlons wer deatroyed vy discase, aud th apeech vl Lue sub- Ject autlered no lupwrnent, But he does vot VIGVCIL proving this,that thero ts no localorcun Cleocech. It s rather superfiuous for bim to suow that there fs a ditfercuce between the Urgau and the thing orgenlzed, ws uobody, so fag us we buve Leard, Lus wdserted the contrury, The treatiae, where It touchies on languuge, s execedingly luteresting aud able; wud we regret uh tbis gevount that the autbor Lus added su llmx:u Bot relovant 10 the arguwment to hisbook, lh- statewent, or rather miststement, of tho Darwiutan theory, his occusional use of vitu- }erative lauguage, sud his discurmve wetbod de- iract (rom w work that inlzht otaerwise befu Feapects pleasant svading. (“YDarwlilbm contiuged uader more favoruble clrcunstances ju Englsnd, to which couutry Mr. Grobwaun Imlm?u, velng halt Encitah by birth, and conl- nietely o by cducation, ssswciation, aud fecl- nig. Ha ls muster, morcuver, of 8 pure und te- tvitous Euglish style. We shoaid lnmlf‘y kuow where to begiu € e Were 10 try tu recapltulate the conteuts of this k. 1Uis o series of sketches jolued tosether by uo particular narrative or relevsney of eub- fcm: wadd perhupa the daconnecteducssof it ius been fucresavd by the lberties of - the pub- Msher, Ouu thing, howover, fs cvident, namely, that the author 1s & keen sportaman. He wiites with cenufae zeal of bls excursiousufter <hunols s blackvok, glorying in his scif-denial and sulleriugs. und s oceastonsl luck as vuly o true sportsman cuuld. Thu book, indecd, s dedicat- ed W The Keensst ol Roys! spurtaes, his Royal Hichuess Bruest 1L, Reigning Duke ol Baxe-Coburg-tiotha, K. G, ete, ete; and uuthing else, purely, can be necded 1o catablish the charucter of {ts unutbor as a wporismay, But Lo Is sutuething more thiau w sportstuay. 1o 1s miglity buuter, 100, tua wore locens deld, Oou of the most eutertaming cuapters lu this bouk I3 that whicl describes the udveotures of cusl- osity-hunters du the Tyrol. The traveled routes have of late beeu swept vlcar by agents of great houses and wuseuws, but the unfrequented il stll] contath slwost priceless tressutes, which the wntiyusrlan, 1 be bo wrmed with pa- 0 Vel ewick, ™ W, PG lae lhed i Euglaud contewporuncously, as tho | popoiey Bewich, & b8 N ercedon ™ Dramar. b, leading senal of Maemilian's. . Aldrien (with three 1 Dr, Hulmes contributes to the September **Uhu Forecluaure of the Murteage Atiant:c the poem eotitled *‘Fhe Sllent Hasper," Hre, ‘;- ,lf". ‘l‘;"bulnl “l‘{l‘:fim‘;:f\ which bo lately read ut tho dinuer of the Poi | (AR, nsiien Bride 15, Henaeni, Bata Kappa Bocluty of Hurvard University. In | Juuar in Staten laiaud, " by Wo 11 the suwie ouber Jow Watts Kearney wilt | fwith soventecn slaviratioust, huve w review of thy Husnctal nistory of the are,” by Wilhat: Black, *'Paror Mazic™ rountry !runu;lb‘.l.lu;&ll\'il. :ml Ah):.xundwr 18y Il’l‘hflul, Illxl“;;“ vr';cultbl“w'l&'u’!‘”\‘;pfi.l ol Wi Ve riel biogr: ¥ ulver MD e Doy ¥ ¢ Terey 2 mfuulvnluu. PRERAY 08 | Colins tve. ' Ly Thomss Hid, *Plsiy Lectures on the Pilgrim's Progress™ Buolmistress, ” by Mary P Thacher, ** A D ractive titlo of & bouk publlahied by H. | Witk Doctor Sarah Uy lisbecca. 1iaratag v . Rokker, of 8prinetield, LiL, and well spoken | !'Catanaa by Cu best Nourst or @ Cougregs i 3 b Y Drawer. b N R oleld, aud the Jonrehationtl | - fior'd iistorical Heeord:" ** Editor's Drawer. delivercd by him from Lia pulpit. Owlugto the | 5usDAY Arrzusvos—Scptember (Springduld, Tate bour at whlch tho Copy it to this offica | e ey T Touttpouy of the it wu-.ya;alvcd. turther otice of 1t Ls uey uy | oy Uluuupl’.'b’nner, s Mihore Moot inig Lhe year £l Iz 6 late sa- 24| o) ey Inliers ol e, " . uul:;lxlemug) of the Cobden Club, the Com- by 3. T. J *¢ Rehzion o Collexe. ™ by €, witice published or purchased t! bilsuibropty ggbrnicn Puipt, works for distribution: ir. Hear! VLK Slacks k.m'nnllunml.l ry.l:unnh{,fi . the Duke of Areyll's Essay on idgo: ~+Cbloa ffom & Nurthweaters Lug, uou"mmnuw-f 500 copies: T Camp! ¢! Re g Times of Jobu Brignt,"” ':{ William Robertson, 113 covles, *Tue Fioancial Reform Alwagac, P s 3 - IATAY 4000 copies; “ Hiatory of Fres Trads fn | Dusr, * Marcua Pkt wnd Usauia Wolcutt, ¥ by I avuld tastiug it for the present, withuut, huw- | bis both material sud intellectual penury, smupow- ever, ou llu)’dlu\‘lmlil nfirlug“- Doiu!»:llhnk cred the ex-pariner tu :l'n: r:lvnl &::lh-lx '-l Fr:'tmivli refusel. Should the wing be apilt, ur bottle or 8 ! Klass Ly broken, 1t 13 looked uvou 2% & woat in- v‘nun-‘r'ln Nie ':N"ES bellluu. the p-I«- turtuuato oulen; and the peasans, wben he with the I‘le?n';:::ulny “‘l“::r“’.}f“ ':: ll‘l‘l‘ . 'lll:hlc wishics to descrive an unhappy marriage, merely glory of belug tho ¢ Sat invenioe of it 804 ml‘.’ iu- *they have n{lu the wuvul:aej.\u‘u‘:hullll ; $ioey, Ja facts no engrowsed eavirely. i ma Iy ahtit ader ho churgy uf an | Dugueree, (& i furher aaid, was really on: cldenty Tomates o foce by the uanis of - brous | Htled to prutend, in point of’ beliograpliy, oo Tolat® wihe growling Lear, und froum whose | WOre mportant a share 1u tbe luvention thau o L3 . Lo would bave done {u polnt of steam-enginery, sidv sbo wsy uot sti=until the knot bas beeu 5 Lappily tled, the poorbridecroous belug oblized, lbqu i :A:ou or less {udifferent modlticatlon of the Hiugly, h acl! unrepluing- e g L B e Fesceis. | Provious to thetr contract, Niopco had ovtained fug tho weddiug customs_of Tyrol, whirti ho | BAby fesglt uf ua proccediog: lo 1637, bo ex. Eives ut great Jeugth, Mr. Grobuiunn wao takes | Bt ied W Eouiand woveral hetluxraphic drawlugs oI lhlu Bu'u‘m:” Highlands, “."","'?-":,‘Efc'fi’.'}: now preserved fu the Muscum of Chalon; contra- ssalat at vue of L bowe-cuniluge,’ 1ily to which, for the wbule lapse of rine years truly origiual. exicndiog from the date of the coutract to the di- valgece of ho proceudipg, bis vartuer nuver did ST Sarost rrieie, AL To e revatte e Tutoited Tho Bostou currespundent of the New York at frieuds. And, sstutue results ho cxbibit et 10 late, hels oxcellence 1u cowparison wit Hioss Post wiltos? Toe Atautic Month'y for 8ed- | 50 early wude public by Nicephore Nicpce, wuse it tember coutalns v puem by Whittier, which Is | not imaginary, st lcast overrated (o an cxceos: lu i 1840, Mr. Baer, 8 mewber of the loyal Loodon toivethy this to s Surthcowmiog volume, *Tho Boclély, “quite Waintorcated 1 tho adalr, Dut fu- Vistou of Echard.” It relates, o vot very ani- | ciied by bl conecicnce to a urotestution mated verse, bow the Benedictine Echard fell :l::;:-:lr‘:;:: :‘nul:::‘m":l A"rn‘xt}u-”r;m ssicep ous day at Marebery, overlooklng the | SLl0 oV iought to London byt Nieyeo sad Juuction of tho doscliv aud the Sarre, aud bad | exlitited lu 1537, soue of which are 88 yei lo wy asre,” by Charlotte Adams} Chnetisn ~ State," by Chsilos H. {(I'chlull: s T z 5 15 g 2 3 ¥ » £ = & 5 g 2 =5T 2 1S ) b 25 o < £33 P-4 314 e ey e S o i

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