Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, September 7, 1878, Page 9

Page views left: 0

You have reached the hourly page view limit. Unlock higher limit to our entire archive!

Subscribers enjoy higher page view limit, downloads, and exclusive features.

Text content (automatically generated)

SBATURDAY SEPTEMBER 7, 1875— had acenmulated during the last twenty vear and 1t was now besond doubt that man—intel eent man—bad existed on the ear(h ut n tine when its physleal conformation was very differ- ent from what It ls now, §le admitted that tho evidence of the exlstence of man eartler tuan the perfod of the drift was very dublous. As to the Interesting question whether, with the evidenres af the exiatonce of man at that period, they had the powibility of tracing his. deveiop- ment from a tyoe diffcrent to that which now 1li CILICAGO 'TRIBU me better aptad for the purposn than the French ones, Inasinuch za they contain more Iabials, and & i3 throngh the influence of tho lshials that fhe Itpy are contracted intn the pronunciation of tha wonls which I havo given. ‘Thia boing so, it Is evident that Peter Pipor picked a peck of pickles," ete., would also be found very useful, only tha repetition. of this well-known " alterna. tive catch for an_hour a day would, I should think, be unendurable, Perhiaps xome of the PAG ncatus alone mav reanlt; or, 1 violonthe fn- Jected, s [n surf-bathing. or long retalied In tha canul froin diviog, the disease may nffect the drumn-head and middle esr. When ver water s forved from the mouth and nostrily Into the middlo car through the Enstachian tithe, inflammation of the middle ear ja almost aure to ocenr, even though the water be warm. Aceonling to the author, several thousand ro- yere cases of ural disease result annually from bathing In New York City nlone. The hather, inly shonld, between the orlgln of fd individ 1 thelr arigin in a natlon or we should atll come to the mane con: closion, If e take. the cass of the individunl, ol “we can. do In to eive an sccount ot oar own exphrience: how wo played with marbles and ap how e learnt the multipiication table, fractlons, and propartion; how we wore afterwarda amased to fina that gnm'i mon things conformed 10 the rales of number; an Iater atill how we came to aee that the mame'laws applied ta muslc and 1o mochanisms tu Artronamy, LONDON. t‘z(:anrr soon doubles the powers of obserya- on." * Where shall you spend yonur tima in Bent. lanad i “Oht around Dinmfrics almost altogether. I'm going 1o investinate two thihgs on their own #olt,—Robert Burna and Scotch Preshy- terianlem’: and here hiscyes twinkled with fuick hamor, O courss I've read all that has been printed ahout Burnss tn fact, {f all the " LITERATURE Biography of Bir Walter Scott «-Books and Periodi- cals Received, The Marriage of Albani, the Sing- er, to Gye the Younger. \ Another American Wedding in the En- 3 y - f . : hooks were destroyed, 1 thinkc [ could reprodus {o chemistey, and to many ofher subjectd. AN, | readors of « N, & Q. may be able to communi- | cxista, he i not think that In all the traces when fn the surf. should take the water on his lis apital--.. - Yk o) e L e shieal sens have loven | Cate similar recelots In other ianguagrs, Hitherto discovered there was more roason for | chest or back, wilh et sl a8 L pital—Bishop Little. Sk Snethinl myicit froin memors lflug gettes. wa tad fhat mathomatical ideas have been | %05, BENIIED e Nire "Gk, | { thinking tho man uf that day essantiaily dillr. | and mever brésenting. oo e fir i Csel folin's Daughter. worked, and geb the haven oo ived and The Origin of Ideas-Desolation of Attica | Imhived in pr [In Dickens® “Littla Dorrit,” Mrs, General { ent from the man of thy Prosent day, or for | wave. A firm pledget of cotton-wool in the ears v AN get the flavor of the surround- 23 learning, by exverlence, and by Teexiion: ' Tha shparest alMerenc nthe miogs of first apprehending them and 1n thoir nltimate cogency arises from the differcnce of the kdeas themscives, from the preponderanco of quantita. tive over qualitative comsiderailons in mathe- matlea, from the notlons of absolute quallty and Identity which they imply, If we turn to the other question, —how did the world at large acquire and improve Its ideaof number and of ficurest addresees to Amy Dorrit the following remarks: +, Father Is rather vulgar, my dear. The word Papa, besides, glves a pretty form to the lips. Papa, potatocs, poultry, pruncs, and priam, are all” very good words 'for the i § vspecially prunce and prism. You will tind 1t servicenbla in the formation of a demeanor, if you fome- times say to yoursoll In COMmpany,~—on entering nes, INGERYOLL'S YIEWS OP AMRRICAN FOLITICS. <Just then Gen. G. M, Dodge, of lowa, came up and shook hands with vs, quite surprised at meeting [ngersoll. . *“Why, when did vou arrive, and Ly what ateamer, Engersoll 1" he asked, “Ob! I'm just ant in the North German thinking that the horse of that time was differ- ent {rom the horse we hisd now; but, a5 we hap- pened to have proof that tne hiorse in hia per- fect form was 8 modification of n_atiil earlier type, there was no.reason why simllar evidences should not ultimately be discovered of the proc- 88 0f evolution in the case of man.' is some vrotection. The Rev. (. C. M'Cook, of Philadeiphia, euiogires the neatness of the_agricaltnral ant, as obseryed (n confinement, The most minate particles of airt are carefully removed, and the whole body s mrluenuv and thoroughly gcleansed, eapeclally afier eating ana Heeping. ~kiecping the Mouth Small~glad- Arvival of Rob fngersoll~tWhat Me fntends Deing, atons on Art-Labor, and Some Remarks About Presi. denl Mages, Huxley on the Study of Man--The Thoy aasist eich ather in the seneral cleansing, | The Bow on the Ritualistio Question—How | Llovd line. "Tt's 'n good fine. I like it beernen . . How can we apan the interval between the aavage | & room, for {nstance,—Paps, potatocs, onltry, THE ELECTRIC LIGHT, and the attitude of the ant und 3 5 the living is good, plont i the Eleotrio Light---Vulcan--- pasompichonls B NPT raentel g | runes:and rim, ornesaod Dran |t | gy yIALE FLECTRIC LIONT, anr | She ‘o ‘s ok tho 2t under cpemon i 14, G 8 U Piddington Tried to Put nt e Tor_oicers, s e ine 4= Englishmen tor_ofcers, | went into the o o lace?—tho nnswer ia the hlstory of vesor (Mr. t, il 8tayton) to Paris to Inspect the | 8een an ant kneel down before another and Cunard oflice in New York to ace about. taking Soientific Notes, e aice ad Tta whetaraleet e Koty of MR, GLADSTONE ON ART-LAROR. | s i e ol for employlng the | tHPUst forward the heal uner the facent S Down the Lay Reotor: pansage, and ey were so high-and-mighty thay R Sanohte, Siecothe st and | 0 1o Tawaracn: Blors o ot month, | electrle light in lau of gas fot atreet-lighting, [ e and llo otionless, Sxpreasing quita ; iy bt i disgst. Ther svem o think ey du n wae the tran com g - ic deaire to be cleatied; the Correspondence 3 e LITERATURE. B ot In the concrete 1o namhes o o an feom | o o Gladatone, belng calied on for & specch, re- | He reporta that the distance between the lamps ot ather wit Spretal Comsipmilencr of The Tribun: it *LonerasyOr by sllowing us to travel in underssood this and went to work. Sometimen this Is combined with acrobatic feats, In which the ants excel, Jumping about and clinging to blades of grass o a srkable fashion, Kome. Uimes the cleaning ant hangs downward from the zrass, and to her the ant operated unon clings, reaching over and up with great agility to sabmit to her friend's ufflces, Evidently tnolsture from the mouth Is used for washing. ——— . CURRENT OPINION. Benator Thurman ought to be ablo to dis- cover by this time that ho 1a the only one among 40,000,000 of fraeincn who srce no inconalstenc; Inhis record on financial quentions.—Cencinnals Commercial (Ind. ), Ghil Hamilton is nominated for President of Vassar College. Thia nomination s intended 10 harmonlze the two partles which aro resnectiy Iy farintiug that nobody but @ man and nobody but 4 woman ehould be the head of that iuetitation. — Albany Argus (Dem. ), Tie Cricaco ‘Trisuxe is at the trouble to presc that ex-Gov. Hendricks §s committed to re- ll-lmrllon Ly rometbing he maid years azo, It would be more edifying to undertake to siiaw what he has not been committed to fluanclally within ten yeare.—Clncinnati Commerctal (Ind, ) Iama hard-money man, and have been thelr steamers.” ** How's politics at home?" s Politicat—volitical There fen't any such sclenve extant in tue United Btates, Pretty muss Ilaves has madeof it 1 don't want Ly say, ‘Didn't [ told i s0's bui 111 tell a story of the man who hitched his horse to a trea which fume bova were cutling down. ¢ Boys,” sakt he, ‘“that tree's going to fall on my horae.’ *No, [t won't,’ they replid, ‘Well, I, know it will. Now, mind what 1 te you: that trea will fall on my horae.' Sure enourh it dd full on his Bors and Killenl hi “There, what did I say i’ cxclulined the horse's owner, I wouldn’t take a thouzand doiiurs for my julgment of the wa atree will il That's Just the way L feo ahouk the Presidential tnber we hitched our borses Lo it clection," ** Well, Me. Inzersoll, I shall have 8 Inter- vlew vou, T think."" “Hold on, Neville,~Hold on, Whait i [ cotie back from Seotlind, We'll zo around to- sether for 0 whole day, and 11 stufl vau as full of paetry, nolities, aml Presbyterianism an Fou ean okl Now Imust be off, Shall leave for Scottaud In the mornin And away hie went to skim the cream of out- door London 1o n day, le vlnxiyuur correspand- eut to wonder whether the Loudoners would feel comfortable ft they knew that they were cotertaininge within thelr gates the man who alolishied. Hell and . wpoke *doubtingly of the Devil. Eeb! but wha! wilt the canny Scots 1.0¥00, Aug. 14.—Returning from a trip to Paris, | hieard of Albani's wedding. ft had been 80 very quietly arranced that uo onc outaldethe famflics of the brids and bridegroom had anv previous warning. ‘There had been all kinds of reportsthat Mile. Albanl was about to commit matrimuny, but there was little attention paid toany of them, for the reason that such atories are alwaya swurming about every young. talent- ed, and beautiful artiste on either the dramatic ur the Ivric stage. Tt was rather odd that ull the quiduuncs should have been resolved upon her marrlage to \r, Uye, Sen., when, n pofnt of fact, she hatl heen for some thno cugaged to Mr. Ernest Gye, his non, However, the knaw- fng retallers of ceeenronm and club-room gossip console themseives with the re flec- tion hat “It was wll fn fie family,” 0 that they were moL so far wut of the way as usual. It Is woticeable, too, that an Intended wedding bere fn Englaml ean be kept absolutelysecret from the world far more effect- ually than in Chlcago. A speclal leense liero costs aboul £30 sterling, ami thers are, conse- yuently, few who resort toft. Tho publication of the banus was, of course, origtnaily estab- Hishied to give publicity to inarriage-ceremonies was tho beginning not enly of mathematics Batof M AbAEACE ERORRIL: - e seapinang mode of it he sanie ad in tho individual. Thero was the same general influx of evidence, the same un- sooght fof experiments] proof, the' sama racogni. tion of general lawa running through all mannee of purposes and relations of life. No wonder, then, if, under such clecumsiances, mathematics, like some other subjects, and perhaps with petter ex- clide, camo alter a iime 1o bo ciothed with mystf. clom’; nor that, even In modernttmes, thoy anould have Deen Pllted upsn an a prior: bosis, &a In the pollosophy of Kant, = Number was #0 soon found to be o principal common to many branches of knowledgo that it was readily asenmed to ba the kev toail. I¢ gave dis- linctness of cxpression, If not clearnces of lnon‘rnl,,“: Ideas whicn were floating in the unta. tored mirkt, and even sug, tions, Tu *‘the one, " )," **the many in one, " terms of paraly arfthmetic orlgin, It gave the carliest utteranco to men's first crude about God and the world. In **the cqual, solld, " o stroigatl,” mnd ‘*the crooked, rvive as fgores of specch among wurselves, 1t rupplied a vocabulary for the moral notions of mankind, and quickened thew by giy- Ing them the power of expre<sion. In this llas the great endaring interest In the fragments which remain 1o ue of tho Pythagorean pniloso- hy. Thbe consecutive processes of mathemntics led to the consecutive processes of Jogic: but it wag not unhl long after mankind had attained to mbstraci ideas that thoy attained ‘to any clear notion of taelr connexion with one another, 1In proces: nl'. tie thae leading Ideas of innthemuate o sponded at some length: In the coursoof his remarks bo sald: I would advise that the people of thls coun try should give more attention than they do to ralslng hand labor of all kinds to the excellence of which it is susceptible, ‘They aro too fond oF getting out ol hand-labor aud getting into what they call head-labor,~that fs to ray, gets fog sufllciently scquafnted with reading and writing, and casting up accounts, perhaps to et Into the lower elasa of clerka. ' I do bellevo there fs & mora distressed cluss in the country than that ciass, and I believe that n great bumber of young people would do Infinftely bet- ter for themselves and for soclety if they were content to keep much more than they do to the use of thefr honds, and would try to ralse the character of the inbor whith they perform with thele hands, because, pray remember this, that a great deal of the very bighest lubor 1s labur performed with the bands. Look at the Iabor of the painter, uf the aculp- tor, and, not ouly so, but look at'a great man: Intermediate kinds of Tabor,~hard fabor whicit is atrictly afl devendent on an excellent hand. Now, there {s » ereat deflciency of that kind of 1abor In this country. Go fnto tha study of a sculptor fo London and you will find that the sculptor, probably an Engilsnman, Is obliged to bave a great many assistants, bécause working &L the marble requires very much to be done before tha stage of finlshing comes, and these In Cheleea belng much greator than in Parls, and thero being ouly ono Iamp upon each column, greatly Increases the comparative cost of the syatems. ‘The present cost of a gas-lamp In Chelsca, burning 3.850 hours per annu, (s £3 8s T, therefore the expense of the forty in Sloane strect s 84d per hour. To light the Chelsea embankment, which Is about 1,830 vards loug, and liag 109 gastamps (inciuding those on the river wa'l belonging to the Metropolitan Board of Works), would requirc s first outiay of £4,800 for forty-elgit hights of 8,250 hours ber mnnum, with’ an hourly cost of £ {s, The present cost of the gas-lamps s 28 1¢d per hour for .85 hours per annum, Ar. Stayton has arrived at tha follow- Ing conclusio “ That the presenf arrange. meonte for electrie lighting are unsuitable for long distances (In this I s supported by the City Engincer of Paris), espectally m London, Where the lamps are so much further apart than in Paris. The close proximity of the electrie station i'n great drawback to’ the sy, thelr eatablishment in business stre a matter of consldefable difficulty.” These arc the disadvautages of the system. The follow- Ing are the advantages: “ About one and on half hours' dally consumptlon Is saved in cons ouence of {nstantaneous lghting and extin- guishing, the light 1s vastly superlor to gas and I8 not fnjurious, there is an absence of noxious BIR WALTER SCOTT. The series of blograpbles of Enghsa Men of Letters now publishing In England under the editorial supervision of Mr, John Morley, and reprinted In this country by the Harpers, has reached the third volume. This is devoted to 8 blography of Bir Walter Scott, by Richard H. Holton. Tt is, ns the cditor Informs us, for the most part an abridgmont of the ten volumes of Lockhart's Life, It is generally agreed by lit- crary men that Lockhart's Life isoncol the few books all cultivated persons ought to be ex- pected o read; but cuitivated persons, we have too much reason to know, do not always do as they ought to do. For the benefit, therefore, of those who neglect their daty this little vol- ume hus been prepared. Mr. Holton has mado one exception to hls wholesale appropriation from Lockbart, and that ia In the matter of Sir Walter's relations with the Ballantyne brothers, In writing of these, he has taken care to check Mr. Lockhart's state- menta by reading those of the represontatives of tha Ballantyho brothers. It becomes im- ortant, therefore, to krow what Is the sum of Rfr. Holton’s Investigations st this -point. 8 Ecott’s motlve fn engazinz lo the publishing 3 o gain o | fos beeame t ing ideas of | Thie vsonest A siells both [n the production and combustion, | since I was old cnough fo knaw anythinz. ‘There | soveral weeus In advance of the event bus nows | think of it Probably they will gatner in ’:X:i?&::.‘&‘:' ;t‘::u:r‘:’l’:?e" .‘;':"m"mu: sao‘;l-nl and th :y“nlvfed ':mr',“ oo and i asslatants aro well paid; but It you come to talk | the heat In u room-oas often Hphearrie nthe [ 1450 other kind of money. A prosis to say : thewr kirks and cliavels oit his arrival, and never an ence nto the universal ™ to them you will find that la the Jarge ma) ority of cascs they are nut Englishmen at all, but Italians and __Frenchinen,~very common- I{ Ataltans, What [ want you to do is this,~not to be in such a hnrr{ to get Into so low a ¢lass of head labor as copying clerks or something or that kind. People should recollect that handlcraft itself Is capable of befog ralsed to a very high descrip- tion of art and of ylelding a very bigh standard ot remuneration. 1 cannot teti you bow anx- fous I am to impreas that upon “the mind of Young neople, and how certain I feel that the leason s one of great {mportance to the people of this country. " Let them perforu tholr work In the spirlt of an artist; let them try to give 1t excellence and make It a thing that not only wiil sell, but as good as they can make 1t, as uscful, as well pul togetber, e well propor- tloned, as pleaslug Lo the cye, as full of beauty as they can make it, and thie more they try to do it thio better they will be able to do t." adays no one ever heurs of a coming wedding throuch the banns. no matter how rigldly their vublication Is enforced. Consequently, ule though Ernest Gye, bachelor, amt Marie Loulso Emma Cecilla Lajeuncsse, spinster, were duly cried three times tn the Bavarlan Chawel, War- wick street, the world was none the wiser. In fact, no one seemed to know anything sbout t for several days ofterward, aud, but for a re- merk let drop by o lady who was present, which was overheard by a reporter for o weekly jour- nal, 1t is possiblc that the news would not lave Ueen made public until yeeterday, when the official udvertisement appeared i the Teleyraph. The lady was one of the very few, outside of the interested familfes, present, nnd she Kiodly guve me some particulars as to the LRIDE'S WEDDING-GARNENTS, The dress was made of rich white satin, cut fn blgh Princess style, with long tralo tnmmed with Brussels luce, orange-blossoms and Jeasa- minc-blossoms. Over the satin wasa Princess dress of Brussels lace of the fluest quality, Mlle. Alban! wore mo jewelry whatever, her only ormaments being natural flowers. A full flowiug Brusscls lace vell floated from o coronet of ordnge-blossoms and those who saw lier sy that s never looked more lovely. The com- bluatton of a Princess rove of while satin, covercd with u Princess robs of Brussols lace, 1 the dealgn of one of the leading modistes of Loudou, Mrs. Hewitt, in Lower Beymonr strect, und its effect Is very rich wid beautiful. The objeetion to white satin on account of #ts war- isluces is wholly removed by the - covering of lace, Aithough” Mile. Albanl did not set the fushion in this respect, sho wus one of the first to adopt ft, vud ft {8 to be the chic style of wed-, ding-dress for tne coming year, ‘The bridesmalds were two in number,~Miss Lajeunesse, slster of the bride, und Mtsa Gye, sister of the bridegroom. Tho latter's * bust wan ™ was his brother; wo that there was no Noed to call n atrungera Lo il any of the lead- fug purts, If the bride be regurded as slniply dressed, the bridesmnids were still more so, Whether simolicity und_ oideration fn cxpense are to becume fashlonable is diliculs ut this, the dullest part of the year, 10say; but certainly this wedding' ht well serve as a model in this respect, * Tue bridesmahls wore white ba- rego Princess robcs, over white silk, teimmed with plisses of stk aud bows of maroon-volured velvet, with hats to nateh. Like tho bride, lney wore no jewelry. Mile, Albani befng u Hbinan Catholic, the ceremony was performed case of gas—{s _scarcely fclt, the most dellcato colors are preserved, air is not con- sumed as in the case of gas, there is no chance Whatever of an cxplosion, ‘and, althongh the light 14 o powerful in the streets, no accidents to borses liave occurred. After a careful con- slderation of the whole question, 1 am of opin- lou that at present the eiectric lght is not sult. able for strect-lightlog fn the metropolis; that 1t 1s uitabic and can be ulilized with splendia effect in large squares and places, such as Tra- falgar Square and Parllament 8quare: but, al- thouuh In cach of these places at the present time the lamps are 80 numerous, the cost would be greater than zus. I am also of opinion that, 80 500n 18 the modificatious alluded to can ba effected (particularly as to the electric carrent belog carried to a mucli greater distance, there- by reducing the cost), the electric light wil very soon suersedo gas to a considerable extent, the attendant advantagesbelngso great.""—ZLon- don Olaerver, ‘epartas and . the ‘‘particalar,” The fatlscies of logic, such as the well-known puzzte of Achilics and tho tor- tolse, partake of the nature of butl sclencos. And perhaps the conception of the indnlte and infini- tesimal, aa well as of negation, may bave been In early times traneferred from logic to mathematica, But'the connexlon of our deas of number fs probe ably anterior to the connexion of any of vur other Ideas. And, matier of fact. yeometry and arithmetic had already made considerable progress when Aristotie fnvenied the ayllogiem. General Ideas tuere were, besiden those of mathematics, — true fasnes of genins wiich maw that thers muws ba general laws (o wnich the universe confurma, Lut which raw them only by occasional glimpses, and through the disturtion of imperfect knowledge; and al- thuagh the only recurts of thew now remaining aro the adequate representations of later writers, yet wo must still remember that to the exislenca of suct jdead is duo not only the conceptlon, but even the vossibility of physical sclenco, liut these gencral {deas were tuo Wide in toelr grawp, and In carly aayd at least svore connected to their subject 0 li%d0Wy ta be thorough- minds; und 80 it camo to ch an idea was taken as plication of it as the iden ftself; and philos y unable to maintaln Itself at the level of {dess, fell back upon the sbetrac. tlone of senee, mud, by preference, npon thoss which were most ready to hand—nanely, those of matbematics, Idens relapsed into s doe- trine of numbers; mathematics into mystictem, {nto neo-Pla and the l1ke. And wo, through many lung agee, through goud repors and evil report, matbumatice have always held an un- sought-for way, It has happensd to this aclenc, as 10 many other subjects, that its warmest adherents havo not ulwaya boen itx best friond Mathematics have uften Deen brought into matters’ whera their presence hins beon of doubiful utlliry, If they have given precision to literary atyle, thut recivion has sometimes oecn carried 1o oxcesn ag Fithout so embarking In commerce as to obilge bim cither to pive up his status as & sheri(, or his official dutics as a clerk of seasfon, or bis literacy undertaking, “It [ have a vory srong pession in the world,” ‘he once 1ald,—and the whole llm"y of his life teems to confirm {t,—%jt s pride, *And It is quite possible that Beott might have succeeded,'” Mr. Holton goes on to say, *or at least not scriously fatled, it he had been content to stick totha printing-firm of James Ballantyne & Co,, and had not launched alsolnto the book- scitiug and publishing firns of John Baliantyns Co, or had never Legan the wild and dan- grrous practice of forestalling his gaina and soending wealth swhich ho had not carned, . The trutt was cvidently that James Ballantyne's respectlul homagre and John's humorous appre. giatfon all but blinded Buott's eyes to the utter Inadequacy of cither of these men, espectally the Jatter, to supply the deficlencics of his own character for conducting business of this kind with proper discretion, James Bal~ lantyue was pompous and indolent. . . John was clever, but Irivolous, dtssipated, and trick- li." Mr. Holton goes on with a good deal of akill and accuracy no doubt to show how the publishing house was longed down with manu- scripta tu which Scott was interested, but which the public did not give a iz for, The best part of the book Is thie pussage In wiilch Mr. Holfton undertakes to show, eud does Ahow, that an au- thor ia, from the nature of the case, disqualified to act aa publisher; and that for success In the atter calling, traluing, good habits, quick ap- relicusion of popular needs, anddndustry are teanired more perbaps than in the former, Mr. Holton daes not do justice to tha fn- Guence al Bir Walter Scatton English lterature, which should have been one of the most im. portant of hia topics. There ara other evidence 8150 that this book has been hastlly shrowa to- rulmr;nm.l it is on this account not cqual to he Lives of Jolmson, snd Gibbon, ulrendy Roticed tn thesa columns, On tho other hand, It gives full atory of Bir Walter's privata Ule, and some cxcelient criticlsms uf his writings, aud all tu o graceful, fluont atyle, The book is bandsomely bound, apd sold for only 75 cents. (New York: Harper & Iiros.) = — BOOKS RECEIVED. FOANRLIN-SQuARE LinmART: **Twenty Yesrs' Hesidenca Among tho People of ‘Furkey, —nl- karians, Greels, Albanlans, Turks, and ' Anne. By a Consul'a Daoghter nud Wife, Ed- Stunley Lane Poulo,. Prico 15 cents, laverholme:” or, 'the;Apotheosts of Jingo, Ire. By Edward Jeukius, Vrice 10 cen £ Young Duke.” A Moraj 1y fieojamin Dinzell, Cleveaen.™ A Novel. Uy’ Stophen Yorke, Price 10 cents. New York: farper & Hros, money In not money. To maka grecnbacka & aub- stitate for money wonld be like returning wheat chall for borrowed pine boards. It would be Ri¥ing 8 a stono 1o the man who asks for bread.— Judge Jere Black (Uem. ), Ben Butler's charges against the party he has been acting with remindn us of the Iriah woman who sought a disarce from her husband on tbe ground that he had been unfalthful to her. ‘‘And what makes you think be has Leen un- faithfol to yous" asked the lawyer. -+ have ralson fo beiave that he was not the father of tiy last child!™ whe replied, The ** widaw " hay evi- dently got some offepring which the Nepublican rll;l )wu not the father of,—Zorion Herald - Tho Lowell District is the only one in which Butler hns gafned any prominent Republic- an following, and that s duo to the fact that L 18 a heavy stockholder in reveral Lowell corporn- tons. The Middlesex Manufscturing Company, d, pays s stock- ral. of ita men #0 yenzire out unhil hie departs: from thelr consts; and then they'll nstat lic left the amell of aul. l"[hur and thu mark of his tafl and hoofs behtnd him. SONE 1aTTLE HuRCH-QUARNELS. Aud speaking of churches leads me to men ton the lutest reault of the anti-Ritual Htig; tlon in English courts. The Rev. Mr. Machono- chie's rentenco having been set aside oy appieal, the whote Ritualistic fraternity are fu ‘nig feuther, "Thers (s nothlug now (o prevent L from swinging thelr consers in the face of thelr Bishops, or setting up cruclixes under the noses of the loity, For the pubiie sentiment ia oneaf disgust at the whole performanee, an 1t walt e long cre anosher attempt s mado to enforce ceclestustical iiscipline by decrecs of elvll courts. The Kev. Malcolm MeColl, Of Bt. James’, flatcliam, 18 one of the Jeagine would-be martyes of the Jiigh-Cliurch party, and ho has cstublished everything s 1t uxed to was " before the Court of Arclies descended wpon his brother-pricst. Lust Sumlay the congregation found & line smel) of {uovnse per. vading the church at mornlog-service, and it was t0o ridiculous to see how the f.ow-Church nose turned up In dsdainful and indignant dis- teust, wiills peace, love, and charity played around the nostrils of its Ritualistic nelehbor, ¢ of Lhe servico_thera was a wrathe v of tho Vestry and laity o Ritualistic practices, and thero was blain langnage used on both sides. But the row was influltely less than [ had been led to expect, for church-quarrcls ara generally the scencs of abaut the meanest displaysof teig. per known to human expericnce. The Iigh- Chureh party wers evidently ncting nnder lezal ndvice, aud th pponients had not sufliciently ed thy ves us to what was the best to pursuc. 8o the affale louwn there wers threats ¢ et Sun. day, If the Hector continues his alleged (llegal practices, there would be an- encrretic attempt Lo udnulster whut Jlardiel Slote would call the U. B fn 8 M. that is, tho grand bounce lu short mutre,—tho latter sot taken from the Prayer-Book. Up at a Intlo church in TiddIngton, near Northamnton, there was u very active little shirmish durlig scrvice s short time nago. Sir Tteury Gunuiug, being lny Rector of Plddington, 15 cutitled to u seat o tho chancel. Indeed, he Is not only entitled to o seat, but he cau occuny the whale chuncel If b so will. ‘Thereare plenty of cases where, tho gife of a lviog belng in Ro- inan-Cathollc hands, the chancel has been board- e up, and services therefore rendered {mipossi- bls. Well, the churcis was unaergoing ropairs, and, a3 the scats uaually occupled by 8ir Heury's Aervanta were torn up, he instructed them to oeeupy lis seat in tho chaucel. The Viear VULCAN. The Chicsgo Astronomical Soclety b ed 8 pamplilet-report of the ohservations made at Denver by Messts. Coltert, Hongh, Bwitt, and Thomas, and of the work of a class orgaulzed in Denver to make drawings of the corona, Probably the most {nteresting part of tho report 13 that in whica Swift describes bis discovery of Vulcan, as followa: | A strong breezo wis blowlog from the south- cast, and, to prevent the stiaking of tho tele~ scope, which was not very substantially mountea {part of It having been vonstructed aftes reach- ing Denver), 1 placed a polo some ten feet ly length with tho east end resting on the cye end of the tclekcopa and- the west end upon the ground. ‘tnen, to grovent it from: aliding down and striking my face, Itied it withn string to the telescone, Mg Vprelimiuary Obscrvations belng completed, I assayed the projected sweeps for the finding of Vulean, when, to my extrenu dismay, 1 found that I hnd forgotten to untie the string that heldtho pole to the fostrument. ‘The pole would drag - easily enough to the cyat- lowing lhnm&t end of the teluscope to be moved westw: but if 1 attempted to sweep to tho castithe end of the pole would plunga Into the ground, and 1 was, there- fure, restricted, in nllinv sweeps, to the west of thesun, It 8 to thid.circumatance alone, th andeull with which, for no crime, I bad man- acled my tetescope,that 1 owe the discovery of Vulean some two miutes after Its dis very by Prof. Watson at. Rawllus, Wyo., totality there E'L‘Ilrrlm: soule two minutes earlier than at enver, Immedlately after. totality [ rocorded fa my / EDUCATED ‘TASTE, 7 It fe & curlous fact that miany, it not most, people, when suddenly interrogated, are not able o tell the exact colors or patterns of the carpet and wall-paper, or the atyle of furniture, In & room fn which they Lave lived for years. ‘I'hils may be remotely connected with the old metaphysical doctring that always to have the sume sensalion amounts to bavinw no sonsation atall, But In whatever way we acconnt for the fact, it ought not to be so, Our cyes should ba oducated to enjoy whatever 18 beautiful In our.| surroundings, and to demand the removal of what Is offcnslve to o _correct taste. The per- fection of Ureek workrof art 1s ofton account- ed for by tho fact that Greek artists coustsutly had such beautiful models be- fore thelr oyes, Weo ought to take a lesson from this, and cudeavar to educate the esthetlc tasta of the coming eneration by pay- ing more attention to artistic merlt and_purii of stylo [n the-furniture of our rooms, Thero fs perhaps more luxury and comfart to be found in Awerican homes than anywhere 1o Europe. Tou Irequently, lowever, display and costlincss alouoary considored In the pariors of thoe rich, whilo the furniture of more humble houscholds shows that absenco of *the power of living thought anlmatiog the workman's sensitive fingers," which M. Ruskin so laments {n lour nfi-_adebu'-n machine-made furniture.~Lierary orid, SPARKS OF SCIENCE, THE STUDY\OF MAN. Prof. fluxicy, as the Prestdent of the Anthro- r centa s day. o Glited. as Dennle would ray. men raily to Union (itep. ). Ltesumnption ia mure to be sccomplished. 1t will come about withont the slightest jar 1o the business of the conntry, and when It comes the re- ilof from tho suspenso will be n grateful stimulus 1o business. Then nearly - $200,000,000 of eoln will bo released for cirenlation, the reviving com- merclal and Industrial activity wiil he accelerated; Lusinesr, selleved from (he apprehension of the ¢#flects of resumntlon, will take new Iife, and tho yoar 1870 will be the most proancroua ano that tlie country has ever scem.—Zoledo Conmcreial (Rep. ) 34 No doubt some of his charges oro true,— wa liavo mada them sgain and again, and urged Attentlon to them, —but tho tdoa of electing Ben Batler to reform abaacs is too absurd to be con- siderod by men of scnse, Hen Butler, the salary- rabbor, the sdvocato of the Force bill, the sup- porter of thicyes and scalawags, tho man wliose fuce in the Farragus priseundney execedod tie a dozen of the Hiate, Commivriops ho the oftice-broker, * the prenche of re- i3 not the sort of man for a reform iovernor. To clect him as reform Guvernor would ho itke setting u wolf to guard the sheey. —Boston Iterald (Ind.). A fow years ago wo were rapidly getting In debit to the rest of the world while we thought oursaclves very prosperoas. For (he last four- yoars we have been rapldly setting out of dlebt to the rest of the world, and havo consldered 0 8pinoas and_perh tended 10 tlenrnues s Descartos: If they bave expression in philusophy, s sometimes given un upe not always true; if they nave contributod to definttion In theology, that definitas nioss has ofton ben dctitious, and haa been ate tained at the cost of spieitusl mouning. And, {oming lo recont thnos, uithough we ‘way admir ed tn_tae Jogleal machines of indof Stanley"Jovons, n the oglc' ‘of De Morgun, and In the ole; slthough as mathematiclung we may feel saf ction that these fea possluliity of which wus clear @ priori) have been aciually accoinpliskied, yet wa must bear in pind that tholr kpplication is” really confived to cisen whero the subject-watter fs porfectly nniform i character, and that boyond thia ra liable to encumber rathicr than to ssy DREIOLATYE ATTICA, A correspondent of tho Londoa-Times, writ- ing from Atheus, speaks of the desolation of conta, 3 polugical Sectiun, nt the meeting of the Hrifish | note-vook the following: *Baw two stars about | oursclves in a very bad way fudced. 1t often according to the ritusl of the Roman Church; rdered ~ ther t. ‘Ihe naxt Sunday, Sie . b the country, coused by tho destruction of the bt = 5 > o orderee hem oul e N a anren's MaLr-Tovn Seairs, ¢4 A Handbook to 4$degrees southwest' of the sun apparently of | hapoens In the history of natlond, as in the history | and fm; edintely afterward the twu familles " " el 5 3 b rv- 0 Fractico of Fastery B fainting, o pysotts | forcata and the practice of permitting goats to | Assoctatlon fn Dubi, delivered an address at | i dogrecs magnitude, soue 13 minates apars drovo Henry atteiulod tn, persou, and ordcred his'se of individusls, that they do not+ know when they arc well ofl. When we wera spendivg monuy faster than we earned it wo stich featlers in our lista and atrutted, tled with windy notions of vur wealth and importanice, Now Lhat we nre earning whoney favter than we spend It we are aillicted with tho dumps and walk aronnd with our licads down. As there was Do sense 1 our exaltation, so there jn 10 vensc in aur despondency. Now, o the ove of apecie resumption, 14 o grod time 10 resume our sight winds,—Phladetpaia Record (Ind, ). Mr. Gye’s residence, In Great Jauies street, for the weddlug-breakfast. The newly- married couple lelt town that evenlng, but where they went nobody knows. Even Mr. Gye, Sen., protests that he canuot eay whethor they went to Larls or to Neotland; and the robubilitics are, that they propose to pass thu loneymoun us quietly as pussible, quita indif- ngnj‘ to the anxiuus inquirdes of curous ouds, Its opeviug, the chiel vart of which Is thus re- vurted by the correspondent of the Edinburg Scotaman: *Thu Professor procceded to contena that there wus nu evading whutever resulta mignt bo reached by physieal scionce. With regnrd to Iy, thoy had but the outcome of the fuevita. ble progress of scicutitle thourht, whose legltis tuate domain of Inquiry wus just us wide in' re. gurd to man as In regard to the Jower animals, auts to remaln. The Viear refused to vo on Wwith the services until these low-bora churls yuitted the chuncer; and so Sir n:nr,v aod his ‘whole family departed dn peace, The third Sun. duy, as two scrvanta arrived latcand endeavored toeuter the chaveel alter services had beguu, accompauted by Str Heory's nephew, the Viear threw bimsclt fu thor way, aud, ke o second Horatius ut the bridge, he beld the gate seainst the futruders. llence, summonses for assault, and counter-summonses, aud cross-charges, oid C. L. Hporkes, Price 20 cents, **Olver Gald. sinlth—Johu Bunyan — Nadania D'Arolay. By Lord Macanlay. Price 25 conta, Fruva or KeNTiekY. With Bixty Fall-Page Eichings and 8ix Woodcuts, Illustrating Struc- tuee, Fertilization, Clnssification. Geners, and bpccles, Dy John W illamao; Loutaville, Ky. : Friutea by dolu ¥, Morion & Co. StupENT's Eccristasticat Hisvonr. The Stu- dent's kerles. ‘tho llistory of tho Christlan “eutaricn Ly Puile run wild, and adds: 1t 18 not God's providence, but man’s im- ruvldence, that ono haa to thank for this evil, t s conturles of humau unthrift and stolidity which es mado of Attica a torrid desert tor six orscvon months o the vear, Thero was n thme, ns Boptiocies tells us, and us the cuide- books translate, when ‘beautiful Holds bloomed, whoen uightingales sighed ond ls- mented among the groves of Colotus, along its polating to the sun. Red.” On my homewnr way the thought occurred 1o me that their dis- tance apart was, according tomemory, a Nitle more than ball tha distance between Mizar und Aleor. I flud their distance to bo 1134 minutes, which would make the distauce between the twa objects scen by me some 7 ininutes Instead Ol 12, as recorded st thy time, Tnoy were of th me maguitude ond color, and wero free from twinkling. ALDANI A8 A BINGER. Church during the Firet 1 ] he long- ht pli Idonot Mr. W, F. Btorey, by himself or deputy, Te ho heart R et 3 ¥ . My reen hed nd walls wantled with dark ivy,’ |'Sfan bad a frameswork comparabla bune for hone That oue was the lang-soug| it planct, I do nof 'y It I8 plessing to note the hiearty Rood-will | the devil to pay genersi! 1t was a very pretty 1 s iop A Price 8LAZ "N ow York: Jar. | kreen i incutloned when the' Cophisua and | with that of the animsi hur physical develop. | doubt. Tho other was, probably, Thota Caneri. | causea to b printed 1n Chicago & paper which 1 | wii! oxery ouo shows toward Albaui, 1t 15 | quacrel as 1t sthod. bt befors ths peerarE ooty Dilssus were streams of water nud not beds of e—— ed stey 11 er il horoughly well understood that she Is n ot thel el v ¢ ToricaL Covnse ar Sruny ron T Coumax ment procecded step by step in tho same way as the most complets apeelmen of matter without | thoroughly we e 1oL | uhle to get their clicnts sutliciently exasperated BeNoots or THE UNiren & %, I, ¢ | ord stones us thoy sre now; when people theirs; nlsbodlly activities,and others which wera SCIENCE NOTES, mnd which oxlsts in thls or any other country. As | only 1he poer as an artiste of any Hviog singer, | tho Viear and the Rector becawe reconeilo Blono, Trico 60 cente A hernos & i | could talk of *sacrad foMo teemlng with | not ordinarily so classed, were just as much tha According to the Revue des Deuz Mondes, the | 3 bulletin bord, Mr. Storey's paver 1a & sacems (g | bt that she s ais o lady In - ber ownh rlents | and all fs now quict at Plddiugson. New York, Chicago, and New (irlcans, * | truits Inahady coolness, nourah subjeet of scleutltic inquiry as those of ants and she necds no A d nlv Reutle breezes, untouched by storms. The ray- ages of man have done wway with all taat. Men still living hers remember tho fires with whica the last strips of forest in the alens of Ilymctius snd Pentellcus gleamed round Athens night after nleit as they do now incess nl|fi n tie gui of the mountatus of Albanis vlsible from fu, The savage culti- vators of the soll in theae regions burn thelr woods to fertllize the (ulds with their oshes, archiones' coronet to staup lier as noble and * to the manner born.” Shets intellectunlly far beyoud any other prima tonna of to-day, excepl, perhaps, Nilsson, P'attiand Lucca are wimgeers by birchrighr, It s no strugale for thew 10 attain perfection in vocal art, for the cift of Nuture saved them the greator part of the ditficulties which Albani was oblized to surmount. Nut that Albani (s Hot naturally u siuger; no one can compare her alnging to the mere mechanisin of which Clara a conslderable degree; it Lo never reliable, often Mouaan Nevirre, untrathful, aud setdom decent; but (L presents greut quantitice of what ita owner calls news, snd this being ita owner's nurpose {4 may properly bo declared wuccossful, Lut wien Mr, Siorey or lis deputies undeitake to dlscuss any question of in- terest Lo the people, it so blunders, su confounds opluton and fact, as to upooar most absun. Asa specimen of this quahly of Mr. torev's paper, 1L may be noted that, th a lato fesue, it declarss that ” *tihe Nation rly stronger and botter organized thar any oiher third ostrich-lunters of Bouth Ameriea, bearing In mind the almost Incredible digestive powers of that bird, extract the pepsine from its stomach, and sell it for its welght 10 gold to ayspeptics. Nature reports a proposed denlal of fustico to Mr. Edison, which, lv will be remembered, has sinco been rectitied: It fs stated fn the French papers that Mr. Edlson Isto have no reward whatever at the Paris Exhibition for his bees, ‘The pheuomiena of futelligence were phicnomena followiug a definite cauasl order, and were as much susceotible of scientitle examina- vion as were phvsical phenomena, Authropolo- &y excluded theology from the sphere of ita fn- vestigatious; it was not coucerned with the Question,of truth or folsehood of religlons, bt tho natural bistory of nll‘flan; the manver in which it bud developud and the extent to which it affected tho raco was eutirsly within the THE PABALLEL AXD MERIDIAN StsTEM OF Dmaw. Yo, Can o Used with Any Gleography, Ly W, hall, A 8. Darnes & Co., New York, and New Orleuns, P Levreiy, Edited by John Mor. alter ficott,” My lichard I, Iol. fon. Price 9 cents.” Now York: llerpor & ECHOES. * * Wil my lfe be light and cheery? No sad momenta—ncvor dreary? Uraw In streoxth whilo others weary Evermora?" o List! the echoes ara revealing, Futuro myutorics unsealiug, From the silence o'er my atonling, Linnany o Awenicaw Ficriow, Rosos.” A Novi Ly Clers Francls in Illinots 1v b # S, By tho dostruction of trees uf many ages’ growth | legitimates scupe of anthrovologisal fnveatigs- : ) 5 Loulss Kellogg B4 tho wost perfect repro- **Nevermoro " Frics 80 couta. " New York? Harper & | 1y bho dontr palley crop for onc soassie Hut | tion W hen sy orLroDG quastion of tho | Phouograph, Tho reusons allcged for this B R e, wpebaritrd of [ weotativu but shio bad eithor s physigse 1 echoes, in doriel the experiment caunot betwice made; the havoe | cause of all the Dhonomena, If 1t was permiast- | soparent denlal of justice are somewhat amus- Ry nor the opportunitics in carly lifo to encouraze Cruol echoes, in dorision PiLtoxe, From the Dantsh of Wilhelm Borguoe, By D. G, Nubard,~ Boston; Lockwood, Urooks &'Co. Frice §1. PERIODIOATLS RECEIVED, l‘nmn'mn REvicw—Buptember. Contents: Frobiew of the Numan WilL " by Henry C wood, LL, D, University of Kdinbarg; M54 and 1830, fa_completely forgotten by Mr, Storay, and the banafalof Natlounte i Hiludta 15 exupgerated Iutos puwertar pollties) party. The Na will ot eloct a member of Congeens o the Siate, thoy ure unublo ta kevp thulr caudivatos for Judiclal Cleckatiips 1 the feld, and will not elecs s member of the Lezlslature, cxcopt, § uly, 4n Cook Connty, ather th with oo of the ald uoiitical et T dispel air 8 vislon, \Vnumm;illm with deep Inclalon n vermor T4 thers not, s time llemn& Suime true heart for ine that's beatiogt Sull the ecluce keop ropeating, Nevenuoru!™ is now complete; the mischlef csn no further go, With every trace of vouetation, cvery vestigs of tolsture vanishes early In- the spring from the Attic land, Berore the und of May all parched, burat, pulverized, Nothiog cun ‘be more aston. Isning than the tantalizing barreuness of the clouds which at that tuneof the yoar Liang heavily on the horlzun—phantom clouds, preg- ble to approuch that problem In reference to the fower aufmals, it was eaually permisaible with regard to man, To the svientlde miud theros Was o reason for dealiug wore critically with the oue vusc thun with the othier. The Assocla- tlon met Dubli twenty-one years ago, and hie had been at the patus to look up what had bevu douo at that @uceting in revand to this fog. The Jury of - tho class of lustruments of precision declared that the phonograph could niot be consldercd as at all ‘an instrument of preciston, but merely atoy: consequently they sent it to the cluss of telecraphy to be re. warded. But the telegraphists replicd that it Was of 1o uso whatever iu telegraphy, and ro- her, And it was only va really berol strug- gles, and a disoluy ot will end determination of the highest kind, that she achloved her bregent well-deserved stccess. Coruvared with 's wlngin the seusuality of Patti's art, Albanl I aud ucting are like frosh nountalu-breezes 1o the perfumed but, suervatiug zepliyrs from E Thewo facte® **But 1 know 3 troe heart waitine, Aruby the Blest, a0 lnterpreter of Mistory," by Prof, Henty tused to examine it.” aro quite apparent Lo evory ntelliyont man in the % ; : 'That m# coming is elatiuy, Copuee, Leh Cntversi; 'axat piant 1t spuearance with a vory deluge, yot hurd- [ subject. At that timo thero was no anthropo- Stato, . Btorey olther 18 st nformed of [ SNOTUEL AMEKICAN WEDDING IN LONDON, Allm, fm with Juve Indugog Ligior “Tragie, ! by dudee Roberp G pien e | A ‘aqueceziug out & drop oF Lo fusttosprinklo ( logical departuneiit, Tha sclenco had not sufi. | _Tbe Internatlonal Congress of Meteorology, ey in Hutey dlthos pirbose of b uws, | Yesterduy at 11 o'clock the siall inonche 71 selulslave sarng Mussachusctivi **Belonce and & Futare Sets 37, Bultour Siewvart, I 1t. 8., the Owens Colloge, anchesters V. B, Miil ‘and the' Destruction tobe held fo Parls from Aug. 26to 93 next, ut the Trocadero, will dlscuss o tong series of U tlons buving an iwportant bearfug on the prog- ress of meleorology and capeclally oo combined uction on the part of the meteorolozists of yari- utries. Bixteen subjects are down lor lou relating to tho study of storms in KEurope and Anicries, the means of carrylug on and recordlug meteorologieul fnvestigaiions on o unifurw plan, the origin und propagation of tyclones, muteorolozy and soronauties, . terrose rial wognotism, sun-spots and meu:uraiogy, n- flucnce of the configuration sud nuture of sofi, aud other phiysical conditions on climate, earths without ever Isylag the dust. The horrors of nuc.i:x ? ngu:fiu nnlnl Icommufl -gunluh ) P, throughou! uthern aly an pain, ae ool by, Eresldont anlel' 8, *trcgory, | Lrougl population of Madrid, for nstance, by, Principal Bharp, D‘I‘mhtqln nm-[urvbmlhflyrc;:tn‘leultlhinor I(;. Hut WThe Fuundations o there Queen Isabella brought ju living streamns ¥ . o b srom tne Blerra do Gusdarama, ana now the Spanish capltal, with o zono ut about two miles around ft, It belng turncd from u desers into & anden. Wo aro told that wator will likewise brought, or even fa actually beng brough Into Athens, e also luto Florcuce and Naples. But for what concerns the tircek ity it must be borue In smind that it bas, unfortunagely, no clently differentisted {tsclf from anatomy aud physiology on tho e hand and zoulogy on the other, Moroover, it was eveu then regardod as & very volealu subject, to which people would rathier not accord a formal recognition. It was 4 curloud fact, bowever, that, though anthropo- logical matters wore brought before the geo-' Lraphical section,—with which, by thewny, they liad nothing whateyerto do,—more than balf the rlp:n {o that section wers' distiuctly anthropo- agleal In charscter, Thero wero studies of fau. vuure, descriptions of savageraces, the question ! the unity or multiplcity of the human racy Father touched upon thaw discussed, but there faro leadliz out of the Btrand to the qualng hittle Royul Chapel, Buvoy, was througed with Americans on their wiy to attend the marriaze- serylees of Mr, Frederick Wessou, ol Broox y and Mra. Lilius Jeunio Mills, daughiter ot Bishop Littlejulin of Long Istaud. The CUIemOny wiss rlormed by tho Ri.-Rev, Dr. Clarksou, now it:hop of Ncbrasks, but Toraserly, for many years, the Rector of* Bt. James® Church, Chica- #0. Ho was assboted by the Rev, fl. White, Chaplain tu her Majesty the Queen, and by the Rev, E. 1, Tuttle, Chaplain United Hiates Ay, also formerly a Clicago clergyting, choodes {0 Ignore them,—A%-Gor. Palmer's Springfelid Regiater. WHAT DENOCRACY HAS DONE ¥OU TNE LABON- NG MAN, First—Befora the Rebellion thev hold 4,000,000 of laborers tn sl v thus degrading tho whole he country. ey rofusod (o pass the llomestead 18 413 1ove you 'ro stil] denylog, * Echovs, yo urs foully lying Tiva whisper stitl thov'so slghing, **Novermaro " ‘hen, 1 Tovy ls thas dented me, Cunid'a itart haw thus dulled mo, ' 1will phuck the tlowurs beado e Evernioro: Burating every boad ssunder. T will rlec whilo nutions wender, ** tollod tho cciwus then, fu thuader, ** Nuveruore " **Thou, If all my jove by Arthur Aj olic Moveme, up of (lauces Third—~Thoy went to war to perpetuato slavery. "KourfA—They held that atavery was the normal condition of the laborer. X X T ho @ . [ Rector of St Mark’s.” Tho bride wora u busque Al my Nte {n sadua: Forucan screxex Mowrury—sop snow mouutains withta reach, uo sacred grove | was not oue allusion to what are now the busn. | quakes, the \ncasures to bo adopted lu obsorva- m.';;' ./Ln..lll.;'&';'.'nfx(ffi ;.m,' '.“;nf;a'fi.lmm:::'.'.'.f. and polonaise of bronze<olored silk, trinmied “Through a oo of loton & Co., New York). ‘(g whero sprlugs may bs coaxed up and nursed | fug questlons of authropological research, Novw, | tories to Lasten the prouress of metevralozy, luyes mitght b paid 1u w euperior currency, leave | With the nfimm blue, the basque taced with c Evermo a wul[‘n(“:s -m..ffl.fi!.\’.":t,'fl'h A and u.,““,fi rom the heat of tho'sun's furnace. | on the other baod, thers was o sclence whien | ¢1¢ : flu uly -Hemclmd State currency for tho ls- [ luce, and the tablier of the skirt mado of Shall I know & brighter martow, Free from all this pain snd sorrowr And the cchoes music borrow— Whisper, **On the (Golden Shore " J. Rosszel Yuuzn, MiLwavsey, Aug. 23, 1878, " SUMMER-DAYS, O daye brim-fall of sunshino and of wer sloug the bighwaye of the t Linger—nur whlsper *treason® by your Seel borer, Si2tA—They oppoded the creation of a Govern- ment currency for all Lhe povple, SerqntA—bincy their ccession’ 1o power, under thy falae plea of ceunomy, they have refused ape progrL of the peoy oucy fur nceded L. prove thuy dupr abor in @ time of reneral reaw, while ] squavdered milllons n {roftlue investicution and payment of Rebel clalms. EYghtA—They bave atteinpted the reduction of the tarift, that American Jabor uight be reduecd ‘o competition wiil tho balf-pald lsbor of forcign countrive, NinlA—They bave retused eucoursgemens to coummerce; inrogh which our vurpluy productions ugit fud & vroiftable foreigu warket, Jeath—They huve cwbarrsssed and retarded tho Public basines oy unwhse reductiosa of the cigri- Al around is bare and scorcbed und desolate, Nu one plauts trees hures no trees planted would have -ur chancs of liviug: andwhery uature, by the Inexbaustible strenih of her ro- atin cnpalr;uvu anmdel:. nuulur:lh l:]rm 4 r:,ud'. there St here m chance sees rupped from & 1. *vine' Physicsl Phass Fro b, ‘ 247 wafted by the wind mignt Lo the means The Astronumical il ¥ of agaln mverlng the land with trecs and bless- Ing 1t with new verdure and mowture, the mur. derous goat comes browsing, crops up, tears up, the very rock to which theroots cilug with un- availing vital lustfnet. KEEPING THE MOUTH 8MALL, ‘The proverts, * Live and learn,” received an smusing exewplification fn sy dbwn case yesters day. ‘Iwasresdinga feuilleton in the French Was represcoted by s larger or more active body of workers than was anthroj . ‘I'io whola conditions aud prospucts of the scfunce had been Toversea by thu publication of nnhlglu book of bu great Quik,—the “Origln of Bpecies,"'— aud all tho eucrities of those devuted Lo antiiro- Fulogy were eugaved (o working out the prob- em, whether tho doctriucs ovolved by Mr, Dur. Win o that book with roferance to anlwals could be spplicd Iu the wmau. "Tho question has not yet been a 1 was an enorimous question, and for a definite answer 1o it people would probably tave to look tusumo perled 1o the wvexs century, e be- lleved that it would st some time bo solved,— how, he could ot say, though he migut bave dleas of Lis own on the subject. It he wers asked what lad been doue during the canary-colored brocade. Bto wore a canary- valored laty trimmed with bronze silk aud’s light bluv feather. Shu was attended by ber w0 slsters,—oue dressed {u Liack velvet, sud tho otber fu crestn-colored watered wilk. [t was pleasant to listen to Dr. Clarkson's clear coun- clation and hearty sveech, after the slivshod muouthingz so conitnon smotgthe English clergy ) und the spectators, who erowded thu little chap® ¢l to its utmost Hmit, made many comments on tho agreeabls maouner i which Dr. Clarkson spoke, His few words to the murried couple at the clesc were 80 genuive aud charucteristic that 1 veuturo to «’uuu the scuteove which struck we most foreiuly, After wishing thew o wedded Bife of happiuess, by sald that it would depend upon (hely * mutual atfeculon, forbegr- The cliegical lecturer of the next centary will tehh bifaudience how long it was befors thy world learned to bura fucl without blowing a kood pare of i foco tho alr, He will grow fate- tious us bo describes the Sppearics of great cities perpetually covered with a pall of vapor- ous bluckaess, “Why, fn that dark age, he Will add, “thelr rallway engines used (o drag luug streamers of dirty smoke bebind them, und one could not ride fn the cars without hay- iz bls eycs sud nostrils and throat lled with clnders and dust: sud, tucredible we It iy secin, this was tolerated for muny vuuL the futroduction of smokeless locomotives belug oue of the lust Improveuents lutroduced {uto our rallruad systee And bis bearers will say to thewmselves, Wit a terrible ordeal & lontr rafiway ride ust havo beeu fn thoss bad old 11l by Prof. Ll Du ols-Reymond; e gt Frecious Stunes, " by Carus dlll’nl “TAB:”KIE:II:! do and Its Dopradations, " 11., by Haumbauex (with 11 r. K.l vou i) *‘Sclence In uers, and the Prob. Amunletts v An I by Prederlek Pollock Ly ¥rof. Grant Alied b by 4. I, uows— O doya o full of aunstilne and of mirth, Btew woltly ou Lo Ulossuuss that are smiliug— ‘Tread hiztly ou the heacte that welcumo yo our winds to do their sweet bezulling— Let Heavon (taslf bo Shrobbiug with fts biua. Mepioat, Jountat awp Bxaxixam— ber (Chicayo Medical P Assoclation), HaX-—Beptember (A. N, lioll, New York). GhLts Livise Auk~Current numbers (Littell & cal forea ju the Depaitments. suce, contideuce, and good dense. 1 eouid ot | 8 A . 1y, Dosioa), {igar of July bl, whon I caiue across tha fol- | 1ant UWCOL-0Ue yoars i the diructioni—he | Lo i . s st bavo & of Chemistey, . ‘hff":;;;’{;l,f";"'hfi:‘}m“"';‘?::‘“;":,'.“;‘,“5“,';,"‘,f' Belp tlusiog that uny eouple who wauld it out “«%.Lu".“:u‘:'&",:.‘;,'zt.".:"f..:";-;:“:" fih Ttia Kiomat Oooe—Autuma, 3678 (ames | lowing sentauca tn the deseriomion ron beautiful | WOWE Tk 4aY of solrlng thu queation, but of [ ©ll to TR e oF U uppesr to liave ol heante for Lae protection of the fronticr sattloaints, Wiib the view of tbeawlng yponan overvurdencd suarket wu sdditloual supply of Buemployed tbore erv.-~Gen, Grostenor iech ut Lhilabure, O, il latealy BONNY RED LIPs. | ’ Honny Hed Lips, why do you poat? \r\'u{thmnmlwr.l l’-nw . Al’imyun traubles prylog abousr 11 s, 1 wi with u luting supply of those four qualities could uot fait to be prasverous und bay “This weddiug-party bustened off 1o Paris hnmedisto. 1y, —Bistop Littlejobn und Bishou Clarkson se- mmyan)ln{ Hiew. They will roturn ta. Brook- Iyu toive in the fall. - e * BOU INUEHSOLL IN LONDON. This wiorniug, ux [ dropped ioto Glllig's Auwcrivan Eachange,~the great Loudon head- quarters for }m::flmns.—nw List person | lald eyes vl was jovisl Bob lugersoll, He arrived Vick, Rochoster, N, FAMILIAR TALK. DRIGIN OF MATIIEMATICAL IDEAS. Mr. Bpottlswoode, Prestdent of the Britlsh Assoctatlon, i1 his annual address, treated of the Srgin of mathewnatical {deas i & most sugges- Live wauner, and, as hls reuarks on thissubject <t all your Joypiico nging— T bavu your tegre, ¥y fioal, your e, - " Bas Low: buciffaleo? Bah! et snvther lover— Love Is a lagyard at tho , forsvoth What tine 1o buds ure out, and brown bees hover, Al thivgs are possible with glorfoas yoath. And why would surrow o'vr 8 moment'y drvaming) Dresus gre $ho Loow of rods, aud nub of sy, Alluyen aro bright whew Sumiiicr-aturs a1y seiu- ¢leatlug the ground for its solytion,—ho ald oot kuow that he could potut to un?‘unnz very detimte except on one polnt. THl about 1560 nothing could bo inore yolcanle or more shock- Iy than for any wan to say thera was auatom- dcally lesy dillercuce between wan sud the blgh- crapes tusu betweenu the bighor and the lower apes, Yet ho bud lately been readiuge o book by a very learned uud emineutsciontist, M. Quatre. tuees, who Lad always been an opponcat of evolutionary 1deas, In which this proposition Joung girlt * Kile u'a polut une de ces bouches betement etroltes, reve des aemglsellos do la rue du Bentler® qui passcot uno feurs chaque Jour & Yepoter pilte pumme." Untll yesterday | had beon tataliy unaware of the exlateuco olany artfclal melhod for- the production of thap coveted atiraction, o smull moutlh; oud thew, ull at oncg, withous the least effort ur rescarcty up- on my own part. I was not only made uware ot a attracted & uuwruuull' of women, to judge by ths uumbers of cudidutes at the Cambridge highce local exuminativus recently el B07vut of O took thy sclence: sub) took botauy, 1 failed, aud 8 vbtalued distin ou § 20 geology uud physical "D‘i“fn v of whow 2 failed, sud 7 wero distiogulshed; ;uwlufl)’. 1 faled, 8 distluguished; O chelstry, 8 fulled, nouc distivpubsbed. Leu of the sclence cauds- dates sut ul Cabridge, sud wmouy them they Unly a1 the existeuco of such u wathiod, but wus put fn o i drive thei yuay, out i) the Nort Germau Lloyd stesmer Rbing ne: ey o counected from the maln argument, | possesslon af e aetuul receu. Whh T8 pe | Wht FCLUITEA 10 a0 00 00 Wall o rupoual per. | KOG BN p1 the) dlstlictions giveu. T T dra oyt te ks~ | S0 b Wb iog by tho saav, Bopt, 10, | Bcoru ofiea cnds the tals that Love boyan they way. by uppropriately printed separately: | Leard, consiats in the ropetition’ of thy words | sou would venturs to dispute the truth. 1t was S Al Mry. Iugersoll, sud bis” two dauzhters sceom- Ot xl(lll Jluur thoughts to usught bub thius sweet Viug— Th verfeet joy of sach brlef suzvy & Let carv and grict o by yuar unlorivi Lt wo and S0rrow g6 taelr bwE dars Drink in the balmy wino of sunshine gulden; Uutber the rowos, sed, aud wild, und swoct; Dweil for awbilu i rapluro vew and oldeu, Here, with tho Sgumaer Jylug st your feei. 1o au cxhaustiva treatmont of m Youtd athll svimatu & question which I o6 1\ Uie bottom of all uthers, oud which throngh Yiitae bay hiad an atiraction for renectivo miniy. Aryivuat was the urlgin of wathewmatical jacast ru they 10 be regarded aa dndeper bendent upon, eIpericnce? The qud ulwwercd wosetinies bu ouo way s Hiader. But tho ataciica of auy sabisfactory cou Vnon way atter wll be un.eretoud 2s bablylog coulfort 1o have got 80 tur, A secoud direction {u which progress had been made was i thy pro- clalon sud exactucss vimployed tn obtalulnz the duta which wers uccessary Jor antaropolugists to work upou. After {ilustrating tnis at some Icouth, the Professor commented ou thy ex- traordinary dlscoverics which bad been wade of lae years of truces of man Io Abe fossil state. flo remembered whea 1t was regarded—thougt he did Dot kuow r«.uwuumlur a0 hour & day. ‘Thers werg udies fn tho room, aud 1 immediately come uunlcated the recelnt 1o 1nem, thinklng that it would be much more' valuably - to them thau to e, especially us ] wOro m woustache. But ljud ko ol mv horror when I red that had - ouly wado au exhivition of wy own lguursuce. One of the ladies de. - clured at once Lhat [t Was 6 new (g 1o by, tuat Ler graudumothcr hud very early put her ty guishied in geoloqy, xuology, und botany, asd passed (u chemlstry, Mathewatics gut only 23 caudidates, of whou 4 fullea; ouly 3, however, were placed 1 tbe tiret class (beln Cambridge students), and 3 {u the second,~Nature. oA Iotawmation of the widdle ear, oftey result- gz f clronic deafucss, is w uot iufrequent cou- sequenco of bathlug. ‘The damae, sccording 1o Dr. Sexton, lu the” Vedical Jiccord, couslsts in thy sduwilision of water to Lbe ear, cither through pany b, and Be futends Lo devots a weok to dcotlaud, 8 week o Purls, aud thu seat of his tiwe to Londou und Berlin. . *1can sev il I want Ly bere fu shroo or four days,"? e egid, Iu bis off-hand, downright Way. * Labiadl walk through the wulleries ab aboat two wlles an hour, sw L abull ses overy plcture, ad reweinber it too," “You Lsve tratued yuil.mcll to obEcrve guick- 4. I.Ionn{ Red Livs, O sweet Red Lips, Wiil you not glve e bt une? The wew Loney-bee, It sipe and sigs, Aund uevor Hkes to yot doue.. 'Tls so witn me, ooauy Led Lips: 80 give mo 8 bundrd—or wore, Bonoy Bed Lips, O sweet Red Lips, Way du you sulle suygay: ‘Thu wee bouey-boe i Lay white rose wipa, b0t 00 wnewer In poasibie Lu s sensu Iu whict the O dayw -omlufunlnfiln‘«g r:::h‘ " B nl, lowsow, long; Aud the while ruse ever says Nay. Iy aud aceurutcly, the Liuscr, with way ul, OF ratkier et thers 16 no queation | pussession of & slmitar fecelbb, from which she | wliv—as & aacred canon by the palwontolo. | tho exterual auditory conul or the Eustachisn And pelt ¢r do y':x: :.'y‘t::fl;‘llu?u»:. **Yes, abacrvation da like wewmory, capable of | qeil ou your beads cach Koor your deathiess story s Stun) juis w‘{\yx-r. :xcq‘n L8 Lo ‘nln- ll:hlury of | bad derived wreat beuclt, and that the words #ists that man did not exist in the fosxil state, | tube. When water® fiuds aduilttance t the A Ikiza el your troubles swoy, great caltivation, Of course, part is & natural O daye »0 full uf sunshive and of suug! U, Y01 we aistivgulso, as we Ry .sbe bad fouud €9 uactul Were iy, pimine, | Av sataataidug welzhe of evidence on thut polut former, Al cold ur salt. fullammation of tus Bioex'" Duvsaken, &L but tratuig the ese und wind 10 work to- Faxsx f)nucvu.

Other pages from this issue: