Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, April 3, 1880, Page 9

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1880—TWuLVE PAGES. unduo re- | are you aro! nan, * Dam very suro it 18 the ame.” TILE CHICAGO ‘TRIBUNE: SATURDAY, APRIL 3 sag SE PUmacarion, LITERATURE AND SCIENCE, |i aatd my Lard." Yes, iy Tard,"antd of forbidden frult. Tt is fonged for in | of facts inthoir rejations, withont n Davenport Adams, called “ Woman's Work and | is trom tho sun. ‘The earth's extraordiuay nd Eynerance of ita real character, but | gourd to his own theological positlan, Occasions | tho: han xtenordiiary Worth in Girthood, Maidenhood, and Wifchoud.” | aphelion, added to atch Alterntions nanaront- inerenses tho t ‘or knowledge. Tet eald | ally, though peldoi, we find" troves of Capell took the ax and kissed it, and | with hints on gcif-culture, aud chapters on the | trimtatio tovke prec eeees , BG that the Tee fata gine Parlelie frida uaks | the’ thoalngieal bine. Tho atyte ts pleas | gi 1 five pleces of wold, J heard him ey, | Mlher education and employment of women. + | thought to have’ produced fae algae wat "an from her tuatand ini tat ter to ine Calne | une and ia suatomontn, are etnnly inate, | Chieryna wert thot afar Sah Sen | | Tho linen: gh the. paste From auch poniiuen i . * Oy caine. For ndirly thirty years it was | Beginntig wi m1 cl jc § “EK een held ve 7 * pence. The Theatres of Paris—King | oneurtie most succcsstulthontresla. Paris, Hut | tha authne proceeds to tho introduction of | my Daina’ One Walker, who dled an into an | ofOrst feel feelings ne with water, |, | baer held Oy divers, snvanla that mit has 1 of Jitte tts nck tine turned.” Chtistianity among. tho: native Britons, and re | 1700, also ‘tabored under nof having | Arwanid to have uoun writter hy Geathe "| opinion from sehich Palize disactite as not ie hace l} STORY Ol REL GION Lear—The Learned ©The tast eapter in tho book trentaof the erit- | fera very hrlelly to some of their most distin | done the deed, and also one fh é i mony with thd “drift. of contemporancoia ul Ny. - jeeunt tho dramatts, Its well weltton, and | guished * Saints.” Thence bo follows the his- | tho reat Identity seems Wkely to remain forover | | Mr. WC, Hnalltt has written a lite of tho | thought. Durlog winter, in tho nee et Blacksmith. might profitably haye been extended. Lord | tory down slop by step through tho Invasions by | a mystery.” notorious Wainwright, who to tho practice of a | faphere, we are $5,000,900 mites nenter the sun ENGI AND Lytton sald in the "Parisians": There ia ne | tho Saxons and Aingles, tho Danes, the Nor- skilled polsoner added tho knowledge of an art | than during aummor, which tenda te equalize JNA, camntry in which the thentro hia no great ahold | mans, the conilleta hetween the Itoinin Catholle MINOR NOTICES. eritig nnd an oxeeptional power of expression: | wir climates rendering winter mitch, tilde nad onthe publions in Franco: no country in which | Churret and tho rising sptrit of religious tiberty | a . Ty Rev. Brooke Merford. Vrice 81.7% | The New Hildreth—Religion in Ene | iemmecessful drunuilet hanno hike tame un | tothe Afteonth and slateenth centusies, tho | j¢,ftodman the Kooper,” is tha fret of a action Avory charmingly written hook, dotaiting withaut Religion In Ene | wiuntry, perlaps, In which tho state of the stao | atruggtes botween Kpiscomacy, Preabyterianiam, | of Southern skutche: yy Ci 3 controvoray and without Uieolocod merimusy the tee tand—Geological S Th fo fnthtutly represents tie moral and, intetteet: | and Curitantan, tor tho present century. This | more Woolson, and now published In book form, ferentnn pory of Heal fy eaatnnd fm tho ei glan¢—Geological Survey—The hnlatate of the propio.” | We should hnnily | Historieal outline presents ong xrvat f4eh with | They are mainly, if not wholly magazine stories, ‘ ons ve with the author In considering this aa | distinetness, whict nt on much Ov 1, as auch, are cloverly written, dealing with Silariatnaliy for youn pouple, If tian grown into Sacraments. camplimnent Wrather nde | looked, that thesolemn” League andcavenant™ | at . y d et gid raeseeas a ald Wecdued arord entity hath waste Me. Mat | was originally ns intolerant us tha first act of | Southern scones and Bouthorn people, for whom thews’ book Is a good gulte to the diferent | uniformity, although the Scotch Covenanters | tho writer acknowledges her great affection, “THE FOUNDATIONS —- ; PHASE PET 3, urandor sate | ME alii sont Ree | mem mata tenet I to, plta over, iees— red — 7 Paris. Iiy J. Brander Mate | nyu el 5 eA = Ree : Minor Noticrs—Books Reeeived—Maga- | «(tho Tusotres of tar “Now York: Charles | for theft opinions and prinelpies, ‘The Weat. | thine rouds unturally.—the style le graceful and ; Ks ui my aon 7 J " y i " y, ke all rel attractive, and, asa volume of short storics of ae OF CHRISTIANITY, | ziues—IWho Executed tharlesy— ~~ | Seibert e raster, aswel ko, al relivican Wl ot | et orunt i posteneesrceie and splagn led hin “kind, Ight-hearted } xummer tess; intense than they would be were Walnwrtaht,’ . the conditions reversed. In the Southern fem Turgenief? Invented tho namo “Nihilist” for | Isphere tho opporit is true. Thore people, being the, revolutionists of ‘Iussin, by saying, some | heurer the sun in summer and further olf in yous since, * Even as the sinell of musk cannot | winter, have cold wintersand hot suminers, At he gat out’ of a room, ao I feel surrounded in | tho Sauth Pole tho fen Is vastly In execss Of the Itussin by a atoll of putrefaction,—by the tend- | Ico rt the North Polc, and attracts, therefore, ency towards the Nothing. the waters of the ocean, changing the equilibels um of the earth's a a 1 The Library Commitieo nt Washington bas | aauthwanh and drawing ieee ce ea te purchased of tho helra of Daniel Webster por- | pole Y 7 - triltaof the orttor and of Lord Ashburn. | thoevitentauimidence nt watera/ht he Wehs Palnted by Henloy In 15, They cost $106) | ven, and tho compurnitve absence nt dey iheck ta uplece nt the time, and the two have been | the’ Kmithern, Hemisphere, If the tee ages can ¥ vil Governe * - | bought by Congress for 6,00. m tmiet . nm viction that it was the duty of the Civil Goyern= | ability and skill. both in development and treat: nt be triced to such enuses, a glacial period Is np- By Mov. Dr. J. Monro Gibson. Price Bt. Literary Notes, ‘This handsome vontme ts number five in the | ment taanfurca wine it teemed the tro faith. | mont, A new "No Namo” Is in progress of publien« | pronching the suuthorn Hemisphere, and willie «gilt, ig 80 eloquent pon for Christtantty."—The Vuriorum Edition of Suakapenre edited by Dr. | nhsolite anthority. Further on, the'weiter | ‘Tho original title of "A Stroke of Diplomney” | {" Fn Taek eae arr re ee [bare eign Se nae toca unm abut: Bae “The stylo ts clear, almpto, vigorous, earnest, and Expl i in Asi Origi f Furness, Itts not bestowing unmerited praise | shows how tho, Indepondants a Hula wre is “Le Rol Apépl,"" and cuphony was probably | soclety life, and Is eald to be go bright and clev- Hemtsphere was probably not far from 150 cent- + snteros! <The work $4 evangelical and truatwor- xplorations in S1a—Origin OF | when we say that this is tho most scholarly and | More carnest in iw to tho Westminster | the main reason for making a change in tho | erly done that many of its leading characters | Urfes ugo. Paige inaintilns that, if these views tiy.Chnlatlun Instructor. Confession and. maintained 1 deeper-toned : ; i 4 localities will be readily recognized. be correct, the Ice period will rocur in about , the Plow—Scientific Mat- most elaborate commentary on tho works of the | Hoty than the English Presbyterians, although | title when the Ianguaye was changed. Victor | 29 4 Y ; aront English dramatist that haa yt nypeared. | fer goes nor recogutye tho Tact that, hefore two. | Cherbiulleg fs aiwayn citteriaining,uliaye amas: | _ Messrs, tineiohs, of Lelpzig, hava issued thir | {Ota sears in the Northorn Hemisphere. Geant= ; Recently Published: ters—Etc., Etc, Itumbodies tho rensearches, investigations, and | latter heeama lax fy paint of doctrine, they | tnx, almost always well worthy tho attention of | annual systematic survey of tho Uermun book | tnethe globe taute be cored tees Geeatenice Cortes’ “Ingersoll and Moses eriticfems of nll the feuding writers on tho sub- | partly abandoned the Presbyterian polity. The | the | novel-reader. And his Inet nove inarket. The yrentest crease Ie shown tu the | shorter than hus been. suppused,—net more, in “Lite of Menedtet Arno’ a tae Ject.andis repleta moreover with tho anniyses | Httter partof tha voluma containa a aketeh of | which the Nation descrihos ns % tho Fotbor|n- Mie nd reais tee mmudonee. Pedurorles, Pole | nil Ueeltiood, than Crom AO) to TOK ye ‘. re id rowth of and Quakers, ar u Bh Tae a ly the deciine is m VI “a nee Corbin'’a “Iello andthe Hoya" LITERATURE, and comments of ono who stands probably at | Vrichds, and n very tairncconit of tho rise and | is bright, compact, and. harncteristio of te | visible My all departments of bollos-lotters. finalise tNe anne Gacatis ocean acto, IN PRESS Seeetan Soak camrrarintiy eo TSE ee Cae ee eee eae tore ie ee earitines tharos nonitenmt atsomnc i ohae. | ‘THe Atheneum states, xpropns of the recenthy | In knowing how long It fn to remain on tia Fate of Moznrt. From the German, THE TIEATRES OF PATIS. page with i ext Dae eT atees eo tie] mee wealoy, catbagr with Brie o Wintield, | ucter sketching, ho pretonstons to anything sens | MHowced appolntment of Mr, James Russell | planets but oven this is of small eoncorn tu fue ne ‘This hook ts dleappointing. Not thavit is not | Fewlings of the iitcrent, & : Ho’ pr Le ee Bldleldd i milan 1 Lowell to the post of Ameriean Minister in Lon | dividuals, \ ‘The Story of Aunt Lizzie Athen. “Ly Mrs. Gn- earilest quarto to tho tatest eritteal odition. | The spice ussigned to Unitarinnism taquite | sationl, brilliunt, or wise. It isa pleasant story | don, that Ib ts huteanded to bring out in Englind tusha Anderson, interesting; not that It dues not convey n good | Thy appendix ts In 1 nited, and {8 occupied malnly with the {ntlu- | Written In Cherbuliez's vest style. The «tétu- 8 Nating, for ft cone before tong a collected edition of tis pocticul THE ORIGIN OF TIE PLOW. tden of the subject of which tt trents: but be- | tats elaborate ossiya, on “Tho neo and work of Theophilus Lindsey and Dr, | tantes ure Imited. We havo thoold diplomatist : $2 fald by all Hookscllers, or mailed on receipt of | cause tt shows so clearly what It might bave | Duto of Composition,’ “Tho Syurco of tho | Priestly, ‘Tho lust five chapters fire devoted | and the adventuross whont ho attacks, the luver ory Suni otacty printed, in three crown oc- | The orlgin of the plow nnd tho wheclel car * price by the Publishors, Deuns becatise {t ylves just enough of Ineltent Plot,” * Duration of tho Action.” “lisanity,” | to ign Missions: Edwant Irv with a taste for Egyptology, and the mothor of * tinge was the subject of a paper Intely read by | ¥ ‘7 Hs seh “ Actors," “Costume,” "Late's Autlng Vorsion,' Chureh of Scotland, Including a special nottee 0 the adventuress, and that ts all. The work {s The first two parts into which the Brinley | pr, Tylor before the London Anthropologicat JANSEN, McCLURG & CO,, and aheadate to prove how valuable and enters | gfe, Hr, Chutimors:, ‘Folerution, “Liburty, Eyuulitys | tasued fn tho itandy-Volume Series, Mbrury was divided were sot for ¢9146H.02, und | institute, He bollonal th ete g 117 and 110 sinterat., € taining # volume might have been written. Two | With many" King Lear ranks as one of the | and Tho Churehes of ‘To-Diy, In the lust chup- | tn “Our Homes" Dr. Hartshorno convoys | there nro two more parts of tnix extraordinary | lastitute, Ho belioved that tho first ngricuttural branches of tho general subject occupy one-half | best of 14 author's works. “Of all Shakspenre’s | ter the lending frets are given in relation to tho ty dv f - | collection to.e sold. What these parts contain | Implement was a pointed atick, which at a Inter x je Py i somne excocdingly good advice fn a pleasant, wn- ‘TRIOSE WHO ATTENDED THR | Seatarnes.tte ener evtet occurs on-halt | ieee Coleridge, ** Macbeth’ is tho most | ‘Practarinn movement at Oxtord, tho subsequent ehnles : - | HOone can say. It is rumored. however, that | stagé of development was bent at th hs. sitter OF Fupld, *Mamtet tha ‘slowest in moventent, | defections to lomantam, and the oppose devel- | uratad in there ficaith Primogs eannut levteo | Werelsicopy of tho Sazzurino lilble, fur whled | the form af ahoe and had the, welne heclona APOLLO CLUB CONCERT Able fs a ane ation or repecRlUGtIOlp {rnin other ‘Leur* comblies length with rapldity.—Ilke the | opment of Brond Churehisin and Skeptieisin.and | highly commended, It is ignorance or diso- | $12,000 was puld. inn, he ray. cAfien thalapsoct neeseienretie: sources, The portion (about 100 puxes) devoted | hurricane und the whirlpool, absorbling while tt} tho Evangelical party in, the Enylish Church. | heaience of. the simplest hygienic principles | Prof. Smith, whose Miblleal articto in tho “Bn- plement of the sate shape camo into use. It to the Théntre Frinyais is taken from ut wor's by | udvanees, It begins Inn stormy duy in euin- | tho offorts to effect tha disestablishment of the | thuten t tol y ¥ Ci i c] le ran Last Night should read M, Sarcey, and the description of the now Opern- Tue ae Geshe ta a eee Feree iat thee Sueedentaeatans theaters 4 our eltte ect th ell ‘ bor guneaed fy inecresin Thontusteal carelos in geatiane ail ied Aol ornare Uke he hee, or “hack,” but i i ‘ md sug.) aeons. aha , ‘ aguinat belong to tho deterioration of tho nt- | have three lengthy articles in the eleventh yol- | drawn by menor oxen, Among our own Ine Pi lcom bs Tea elatan ey House ia common to ail tho muite-books of | play wis weltten® between tho end ‘of 1645 | Plymouth Brethren, tho Maptints, tho Methute | Aeulust Delon to the daterlaration of tho at- Of tho “Enoyclopadiny’ on tho Prophet | dans, in tho traditional lore of Sweden, ta 5 Paris, Having tndertaken to tell of the lives | ni tho Christning of 1800, and wns | ists, the Independents, Wedo not find In this my or,” FRIDTHJOE’S SAGA. of tho famous. French setors ami netresses, a | first published in 1008. There Je some | conection rite distinct reference to the arti | ai TT ra ge Reet eee 4 , - mH 7 dou! tJ at 4. dox Presby' of ch o! ieland, which ts "Oy =| tT vs A Norse Momanco by Esains Tegner. | purpose not indicated Bs the ttle of tho work, | hotat = Lear” fs dirotly derived, although the fiw webruvue and srrowing body: ‘Thin work ene | vee. Gp aa areca eTLY leone, and Wmo. Price, $1.50. un opportunity to contribute entertalutug mat> | tragic atory ot Glotecst undoubtedly from | brives about 400 pages duadccimo, It is cape | Expecially to contagious aud. epidemic disensen, 4 : ter bas not been Improved, and what ts | Sidney's Arendin.” Dr. Furneas inclines tothe | elully designed for ** Young. kK." but is well | Wo can cordially recommend this Ilttle wor! sane nereverane opene the pocimhetesure te | given docs not scom cepecitlly novel or | oplilon that the direct sourve of tho play will be | avorthy of n careful rewling by older "folk." for it appears to have been complied with. eare, Iaht upon parsnuos of exquisite beauty. laonutallow 7 rel found to have been inthe druma of the *Chron- |" ¢rhe Story of Religion ti Kayland, A Book for uetid H : iglos it the nobleRt pootle contribution witch Sweden | Interesting. The mutter relating to Sarah i 45 tobe cusily understood, and intelligently writ- | bite yot made to the Htorary histury of the world."— telo History of King Lear,” dramatized as curly | young Folk, By Brooke Horford. Second Edl- | te; ito trent ofn tople of vital f + Tho Church Journ Now York “~ | Reruhardt,- particularly = tho anecdotes 8 | ng yc, ‘Phils, possibly, was iu turn drawn from | tion. Culcago: Jansen, McClurg & Co, Price | (eh. Gnd to trent of n topla of vital interest ty les benutlonae innuecrnbie. ‘Theentnn. | tO HCE angulnrity, ote, 1s not fresh, Whether. | Hunshed: Tunerticlnt of thle play written | greg) CLs M Be ees Tee | Overy one who desires to enjoy quod health. e ee emthe. Geoffrey Conic malted eau Ronlatye: ae TILE on was inventive, though. disviples original, TIE LOOTIT | trough a transintory Aman of geniuRand ¢ mith is KOWNdS very ume Haxyal, the Hebrew Langunge and Literature, | Egypt's pletured pages of n remote pust, there and the Epistle to the Hubrews respectively, fre more or less distinct traces of the above trausition, Greck, Exyptian, Cbinese severally rt . Possess the gerin, 80 to speak, of the modes of 78, Sho wus the second daughter of Edward | flow. ‘The spur wae next shod’ wile ecate« Horley, fifth Earl of Oxford, and wus one of tho | Ihor Ny to ft well-aiown beauties of ths early part of, tho Oe ee etal tho putt eter Fretent century. | Sho was the Lady Charlotte | pad reached a very high stage ot perfection. It Harley towhom Byron refers in his porm to | was then constricted. with wheal and. an lathe,” which forms the prologue to “Childe | ipward projecting handle, llka tho beat urold.' form of plow In use in Europe fn the elghtcenth The Hoy, Anson Titus, Jr.. Corresponding Sec- | century. and, it might well be added, like the retary Weymouth eal Boclety, “Woy | plows stil employed near Muntitn and Venico at mouth, Mass, (xcttled 1021), hax been for sonte | the presentday. Dr. Tylor fs unwilling to con+ time gathering the genenlogy of tho Titus fam- | cede that the plow was the progenitor of tho ily of Ainorica, with a view to publication, To | vehicle of to-day; he uxsigns that honor to the guin correctness nd coinpleteness It behuoves | sled, a8 1s nore probubly just. It would soon be all members of tho Titus family to enter atonce | found that the introduction of rollera boneath Into correspondence with the compiler. thesled would facilitate Nts traction. But as it Lady Charlotte Bacon dled Inat week atthe nage iastia love uiture which ts ev h irost | Mr. Matthowa originated the nuecdotes tn some | by Victor Hugo in 1804, bo calls attention to 1p, ity the prepa a Vining spirit witch ulonnin avery magazine article or correspondence or not, we | sume colncldences worth transtutluz, us they | GEOLOGY W: ine. and fis keen, inalght into some of tho subtlor are seldom remeinbered,, Hosnys: * Attho time TERIDIA: Tienuings of the Northern myths investitwittalnat | donot kuow, but thoy sound very famillar on | Oe this pinay doas was King oF sna, Agarippus ™ a of mirk: a seholar, yet always o man of the Ing charm for every lover of trua yootry."—Christian | reading, Assuming that thoro tsa fascination | King of Feance, aud Lou Ring ot Engiiid. ail | Volume third of the quarto works of tho | world, Wend mia alternately inate ieliges is Ls about the Ife of a great actor or actress, and, | the varth was mysterious. Tho Pemplo of Jeru- | Wheeler Survey of the Territories ta unusually riny, inthe King's Court, husband of a mnlide assuming furthor that tho members of tho | fitlem wus still now, the gardens of Scmiriumis— | complete and Intercating. It pertains to tho honor, it bali, ath oltecholder, a Deputy Other Choice and Standard Works | Cowédie Frangatse company are entitled to tho | M2 Years oldhad just bexun to crumble, tho | Grotogy, the vulloys, caflons, crosions, thogineinl Heart ernedlcy Hees Re te others bi first gald ns money hud uppenred at Eginus, tho ; ald Facil us true ‘on’ Norse Literature are: dist{nction of Lelng consitered grout," t-acems | frat genie was mide by Phedon, the (meat the | epochs, tho water aupplles, the voleunte rocks, | TM Inwat the Gale ot Lane oe ©] Reminiscences of an Idler by-the Chevatior | 3M not weccasity, that every part of the: Fatiee Anderson's. America Not Discovered b ay though tho Intercating side of the subject hud } first eclipse of tho sin bid been ealeulated by | mountains, and tho stratitied rocks, ete, ete., of | that be could depict the character of the nobles, | Henry Wikoff, will Include 800 pages devoted tu midule wns reduced with, pre hded s of 18 *" Columbus", ¥ g:.00 | not been fully improved, * | the Chinese. Homer, if ulive, wus Jul yeurs oll, | the vast region under survey west of the 100th | thelr mode of life, their nmours, and pleako | perscnaluncedotes and curious jcosalp whout | Siwy ia this way tho wheel cont fe ee ‘8 “Norse My ary vory tri ’ and Lycurguahad Just returned to Sparta, Lear | ing 1 1 Ls . ig | them by his portratture. Ie was no wonderful | many notable peopte.—in America, Auron Burr, MD ricltliye nttactiet epi chrvaneus. ‘Anderson's Norse Mythology "......0.s006 2650 Tt is vory trio ‘that “the Parisians nre essen | ruined #85 years before Virgll, and 950 before meridian, In such 9 region as tho geologisis | iinn- and Me Ward hia’ acted wisely in again | Jackson, Clay, Calhoun, Webster, Van. Bur pul rigidly attached to the uxle, came inte ox- “Viking Tales of the North",.., 2.00 | tlally a thoatrieal peoplo; thelr talic and thelr | Beneen.” found thomselves, It Is 8 matter of little wonder | holding him up for the world to recall of chat | the Liviuetonse ate istence. ‘The wheel nid axle of the Scythlans 3 in Europe, Talleyran Louls Puilippy, Thiers, Gulzar, “Napoleon rH revolved together. Even tow some of the piet- the Count d'Orsay, Countess of Biessingtor uresque carts of Italy and Portugal have drum. ton, ung Por ie Countess Guiecioul, Lady Bulwer, Joseph Honus | fee arsed an nares wiich revolve tn beurings parte, Rothsculld, Wellington, and muny others. | jig of the yoke attichied to the horns or wethers Messrs. Firiatn-Didot ct Cle, Paris, unnounco | of oxen xt first, the advance to the present an edition of Sir Walter Scott's worksthat prom- | method waa nlso gradual. Mut tt fs ensy to fole isesto be tho most sumptuous ever tnates are theatrical, and at times even thelr Tho work {s supplemented by a bibliography of | that tholrreports read more Hke rownnees than | stunt pocts were made, and what thelr themce Forestier's “Echoen from Mist-Land; or, The notions are theatrical,’ Possibly this othor | King Lear, and an index to some of the niore | |tke solid scientific matter. The orotugy of this | and surroundings, in tho foudal courts of the Nibelungen Lay Revealed to Lovers of Ro- atutement, that, “In thomumber of tts thoatres, | Important hotes and ta tho appendix, | 4 | soction ts Wlscussed iinder-fourheads: “Tho | fourtoenth contury. Afr. Ward appenta tothor- mane: ang Gaivalry in the excellenco of its notors, and in the caro | ted py Horace Howard Furness, PHD. LL.D, | Basin Range Syatom, Tho Colorado Plateau Sys- | fully rend. all. thut as bithorto, been written Aanson's 2 6pail-Bound Fi 4 forse ful splendor of its thentrical performance Volunie V. King Lear. Philadolphia:’ J. 3. | tem, Tho Bordor Land Between tho Basin itanes | about him. For that reason bis proliminars Romance. Translated by Auber Forentler. Paris fs firat among tho cltica uf the world," | Lipplucott&Co. Price $1) * and tho Pluteaus, and General Considerations.” | ehapter asa sumiagry af YChaucera Time” fs may pass unchallenged, Nevertheless, many of eee ‘Tho Lusin tango system fs somowhnt graphically canegany. palirenle LC ae, captors ‘The translation into Fronch will beemire iy pid knit ‘Nheeled tel Nels Tarpeinc isting edndie the representations given, not only fn Vienna, ELMIU BURIUITT. depicted by Mr.G. K.Gilbert, the geologist. “The | that plays only a subordinate part. The book Is | Efct volume will be Mlustrated with 100 engrav- | tlon through the alibof recorded history, 5 but also in the Italinn opern-houses, have never | | The subject of the preseut-memorial volume | traveler who passes westward over tho Paciile | very readable, and fs. 1 commendable udultion to | WHE, The Most scrupulous caro will be exer- Freer cee been oxeelled for splonitor evan in Paris. For | Was better known during his lifetime perhaps | rullway, descendiug froin the lofty’ pluteaus | the English Men-uf-Letters Series. clean thit, the custiiines, architecture, apd alt TIE ORIGINAL INDIANS. thut attaches to the archivology of tho storics, Forsala by all booksellers, or any of the books sont ns tho “Iearned blucksinith." Hig greed for Revered that Hine, occupy tho trutitional posl- a tof price by f eallatie ctfects tho perforinances at Bayreuth tho Rocky Mauntuln, passes, by is- |‘ Mr. Froude hna written the companion yol- | shall be falthrully followed, Neither trouble Tn att article in the current number of Polter'a postpald, on recolpt of prico by tho publishers, Patan aae Mayle oyer+ Wel a the | Knowledgo was insatiable, und the rendincas | #o8e callous AHeOUgH. the Atunaitch Penge aed | umetothe «Chaucer af the fugieh senor: hor cxpenso isto be spured in tho production of | American Monthly Gon. Uelabin attempts to : §, &, GRIGGS & CO, Chicago, Porte St. Martin, But’ tho” great charm | With which he acquired Innguages somethingre- | cntore a region that for a cunsidcenble tren hus | Letters Serier, and its subject is that sturdy old | thovdidon, ‘Tho edition 1st commency with | prove that the Indlin i of Asiatie orn. In 4 , zs * murkable, Mo etudled beeauss ho loved tu | peculiar characteristic. Across the remaining | enthustust_ and philosophical thinker, Jolin Ivanboe,' summiig up his facts he says: “Perhaps the of French porformancos {6 in tho ron- ‘ portion of Utab, the entire State of Nevadu, and | Bunyan. Englishmen wl) know that Bunyan GF NOW READ Y-€e | dition of cach part by a competent perform | Stdy, and In studying found that relaxation and | harry strip of Californin, the train winds in | weate"* Pigriin's Progress,” hut thoy know vary ———ee er .and the pralscwortby attention to details, | Change ho needed. Ho was pretminently a self- | and out ainong a system of abort, nurrow ranges, | Ittlo about his other works. Yet Macaulay eee au le ul ag spiletalizabtowaricer, strongest proof that oug Indinns are from Asin Tee LOO) eo onth he | fain the fact tnt tho nomndic tribes of Alaskn will publish co .000 vernes 3 hat te, tled mu Relheion or tevin i; then with a fre relited to the Kumtehatkans, and oven now “Toute In Lyre," twa volumes of ve the | pass and repass Behring Straits. A tribe has “pegaton, de Murito” fie, wants ent aly lately been found in Aluska speaking the same of tho *Légende des Slécles.”. Nesiles thea | guage that ts spoken In Kuintchatka; and Frene! 01 made man, Necessity compelled him to earn | inferlor in altitude to the Slerra Nevacu and | says that if tho Pilgrin’s Progress had not been 2 A NOVEL, we note rete Desulta le shorteorntiiee there | Wis) bread by" hard nnd -htunblo labor, but bis Wonsateh ‘sfountains, whicls Unit the series we | written his "itoly, War” would ave been the ‘i . cl vs 1 1G West und Cust. ges ore distrib Se . e hins, Re: aH FROM THE FRENCH oF | /#much in Mr. Matthows' boot that is notonty | exer desire fora wider fluld uf usefulness, his | ity “tolerable regularity “aud parullelism | fore very wieely devoted much more apace to E “ (nteresting reading, but valuable us tnformu- | ferred by eduction, made him all his | Hiroughout an extended urea of which tho | the callected facts us to his least-known works, < . used commondable dill- " bh i " worthern ang southorn Hinits have not yet been | than to the famous ane by which ho won bly | works there. a dy for pubtlen still further, us if to remove alt obstacles to thy most Fa ALGERT:DECTATe Beene eetccting the facts he hus publiehod. | Aadondty te kersenemiss, Coated taney | determined, fetweon them ire rules’ Hoored | fume, Lis reputution wus for neurly a contury | Ntheug madasn deumnn in divenets iy vere | uellet that the North Aimerioat Indinn fs fron wel which bo wis unedual, but hia tuluonoescee al- | by thodébris fromthe mountulns which conceals | confined to religious families of the middle | « pEpée,” eee: . and two comedies | Asi, Pain assured many tribes on: both sidet inten TRANSLATED FROM THR | ‘Cho quotation of some of those will well {ltus- | Viv octad in behalf of that which was honore-| telr depth ond leaves to the imugina- | and lower classes. He was seldom mene | in’ veme, “La Grandes and "La Ford, | of the Straits are fdentleal in manne FAINING'S “Kevur Des Deux | trate tho character and style of tho work. Thus, | apie, honest, and true. Perhaps hia moatambl- | tion to pleturo tho full proportions of ranges | tloncd with” respect by any writer of | srouilice." Ui habits, and customs, Wille tho: geography} Novai,aa \g, -Monpua," ny speakingof that recognized Institution in French | tious labors were In conncetion with the tstab- | Of which tho crests alone nro visible. | erent Mterary eminence, although Cow- 2 of the Western Homisphery was unknowly well as tho pee Ne ho roproducvs aletter | lisbmentof a species of universal peace brothor- | Le such portions of this inland region asdo not | Per praised tho xreat allegorist, but did |. ‘The Chicago Fidd Ia publishing n series of pa- | the origin of our Indiana could not be fers under tho heading of ‘a “iibllogruphicnt | otherwise thin anutter of» eonjeoturo Manual of American Naturalists,” by Willian | but now that the locality of tribes an Hora Mah of Ean wrulch willbe walnn. the eharucteristles of our country nro known, every Working belentist 4 a work of | we enn with almoxt curtalnty estublis reference, Papers Ott Di S.Packard, dr, iy ni state de ienoesitiin the sen thoatres,—tho ‘elaque, to tho ocenn, the namo of tha | not dure to mention his name, Bunyan was a most eagerly: & A Emily Prescott. | sveitten by ono of its uifof to Mlle. Iuchol, ‘Tho Boni fie frie a) BAU Arona aa wait ea “Great Hinatn® wus gived by Fremont wad It uae | beltover in aupernatarnt: Impresstotia: and ho F Sea at a — _ «- » | actress hud expressed herself ns disautisted with | creat anda good ‘inun in the lttle Connecticut | passed Into general use, Wishing to trcat of an | Wrote of Anon pecaures they were within thorunge t - rivnce, His imagination pro I-A handsome | tho upplause she wad received at Like Bt. ‘Thoresn; be wie front cach orthographic province which hus tts typo in the | of hia dail: he eecoud | town where he was born and dod. hot coincident with {t, an } duced then Uterary and cuttt- " evessful pleco: * Maud Yor, Great Basin, but oe, tivity of the Hed Mun, It isnotiithin the seope Heel jennie 12m, se eee etal eT enunor Ramat Mer | gee ee NS, JURE, Published by dr, Northond | iter pur woe tdentienl tite, wus selected, ‘The | Infuney = ently troubled with thoughts of sculor editor, of the American Naturuit, and | of this article to enter inte further particule +o as on Bisek & Gold } tho obtoyuy of © reproach trom lips such as | Jections from his writings aud lectures, and ox. | Hasty Range systen and Huain Ranges aro ap. | tire.” Not u cheerful subject, and one which | Dr. Elliott Coucs, U.8.A.. tho eminent ‘ornl- | concerning this intoreating subject, but 1 wip, Stamp. + | yours, “Tho following 18. un authontic state: | tracts from bis private Journals in Europe and piisd to nll that system of short ridges,separated | nuturally made of bin ape viesof monomnniac, | tholog! pave alroay: appeared. No scientitio | remark thatsixty-nine authorities examined alt Advance Orders —: inent of what really wok placo at tho first rep- | America. ‘The part contributed by tho editor {a | by trough-llke valleys, which lloa west of the | Taine siya: ‘In the red furnace where tha fron phicnl work by uuthors hus horetofore | polut ta the eamd conchuston,and If can bo Aut - Pte. we resentation: I led the uttuek fn pervon no Jess -| very small compared with that, furnished by Mr, | platenu system, without reference to its drain- | {s bubbling. io tho slang of the hammered brues, | bad a place in the current iierature of Amer- | Isfactorily provid our Indians are Asinticas AD * PRICE, | than at times, We had Jucelamusions, 4 hilar | Hureittshimeolt, ands usu tantior of-faceetie«|-uRe conditions. ‘In Utabiftiy basin of the Sevier | Inthe back cornera where tha damp shadow Jeu, though not an uncommon wiulr In-parts of | First, by thelr similarity of features and com. VERY LARGE, tles,2 thrillig movements, 4 ren of ‘ap- | rormer bas mainly contributed conuocting pi it 7 creeps, bo sees the flame and darkness of hell, | the Old World, J texions, Second, by slrailarity of tnngnages, An immodiate order will be St. plivse, and 2 indelinit-explosions. In fuet. to | graphs, He enubles us, however, to sce tho ttt share of it fulls inthe province of the | and the rutting of cternal chains.” He writes Tho firat book printed in New York was en- hird, by similarity of religion. Bagi Mf 2 Ahuttdrity of dress and orname he LAWS & ACTS of the General Assembly | Simllurity of murringes. Bix for Their Mijestics Province of New-Yorr, an mothods of making war, Seventh they were Enacted in divers Sesstons, thu first of | OC dances, Elihth, by almitarity le ue i almilnrity a, h bby aliinrity sucritlees, A, Bu s stich fn oxtont did wo cnery our applause that pitshed nguist. in’ hiv daily’ life, and to ap- | Huatn Ranges, and tho remainder ts included tn | out bis mode of escape, but his style te awkward TDS BRE wltiGa, sation ports S, Tha cements, of tho Hallewerg Jeane vines Bud Pet ais his trewtis for cutee the province of tho Plateaus. On tho othor | andecrude. Mis simplicity vells power, He was . ¢ aor! out, ‘Turn thom out! My men | he 477 ‘Of which the b com- | band the Basin Range system extends south. | nota “man of letters,” but bis words burn, his ret, OH secelbt oF pelos; 81:00» En were positively overcome with fatigue, und bo ar aA epee rh re pee tote eg ce all but (rare taken upwithexteacts | Ward in Arizona fur beyond the limit of the | writings sway men's hearta, bis ‘field by the publishers, & timated ‘to me that thoy cold not ‘again |}; nd : i ie, 3) Great Mnsin. Ueeame | the = world. = Lord = Macaulay | whieh begun April. the ith, Annog: Domini, ton | Niuth, by similarity of funeral rites, ‘tenth, by : ian through auch na evening. Seeing auch t bu | tfuet tram his journgletwill steve Now mid- nine | in to Ogiirrh tango, 2000 fect of quartzite | sign in hls) “essiy. that Hunsane | Sug bern April tho ttn, Annogs Homing on | Ate Ae testis aid Halfele ‘coneerleg HENRY A. SUMNER & CO., the case Lupplied for tho mitnuscript, and, after | what elrcumatances he pursued his studies when | frocks wore found overlying 4,000 fect of lime- | pecullar glory la that those who most hated bls | ford, Printers ‘to their Majeatica, King Willian | dreams. Eleventh, by simiineity of games. LAKUSIDE BUILDING, O1I0AGO, having protoundly apie ae ete rt 27 yours ol slong. RAT Taba roninted ease pouaed ithe a ee Te ea le Dares ee ees snd Queen Mary, 1091." Preis ya simtinelsy, of preteen enol ny tip my mitid for the second rep- ay y, : op. In thia range the fossiilferous horizon was a ¥ y A copy wns rec the Brinley: children. » by Kitnilarity of olte For ante uy ail booksonore, __ | vdttidontaccrtu enrtutimonts inthe sere: | onviate Siyyure enduches , forty, pees] foundat tho bise of uo quneiiter tho lowest | bo xeon Wie whoad of tho Virgin on tho titio | gifeeh) gtayregeut soldat We Brinley Look | EUAUG creer Use ‘similarity: Wa dorsns oe JUST ISSUED: feo of my men, In euch a aituntion as that which | pages French; eleven hours’ forging. horizon, at Ophir City. contained Primordal | pages, and In 1853 an nttempt wastmade to trans | its owh library. . government’? ig Chave Hust depleted I have only to request you “June W—Hixty lines Hobrow; thirty pages | triloultes. Numorous fossils, referrabte to the | fer Pilgrim's Progress Into a tractarian book, — * —_—— i} to tirmly bellove in profound adinirition | Froneh; ten pages Cuyier's ‘Theory’; efght | curboniferous, wore found Inthe interval. in | Mr. Froude has prepured un interesting volume, BOOKS RECEIVED, SCIENTIFIC NOTES. OUTLINES OF DETERMINATIVE und respeettul zend. and f venture ty ontreat you | fines Syting: ton lines Danish: ten lines Hohe. | White's Penk OF Kern Sfountuine tho, qunrizites Meee ee er eed Hee | Cantorra. A Tragedy In Five Acts, Ly Rov. |. Keely'e motor Is ngatn elalined us n success Sa eras weed mnrmmndomaetiors ote. | mua; ino lines Voltehy Hfteed names of stars; ) Uaphs ‘ovur fect, Turnished us with moro than i essay without | ert Rooksten, M.D, Poorin, fl. by tho inventor, RobMan tHE Reerei. Southern Sketches, { The average annual loss from tho cottom Thy Constance Fenimore Woolson. New York: | Wort fs estimated at over $12,000,000, D, Apnieton & Co, Tho Academy of Selenco at Turin hus awarded Carr. Fuacasse. By Theophilo Gautier, | & prize, amounting in value to about £180, to Ma Translated by Helen Murray Beam. Now York: Charles Durwin for bls discoveries In tho phys GP, Putnnin's Sons. Price 81.35, LOK aE iplunes. a 4 Ostrich fenthors may be bleached by expos! GuNwan: A Talo of Norso Life, By Hinlmar | gromto te liehe oF tho Aun, In ait einaDpne whieh environ me. 1 ain, muidenvoiseilo,” cto, | ten hours forgli. ciated schixtg, of ‘over 11,000 fect. In some ‘Operwand some of thotheutres ure largel juno fly i cufions, notubly Salt Creek, tho rain scutpture | belng diffuse. lia comments aro pructical and a MINERALOGY, nou Dy hs Governments ne BUR Ge | sere Tent Ava lines Hebrow; elghtof | te romarkuble, fina photographs of which wore | forcible, and. the Dok isoue that’ inay be roud tig. sot Opera costa the people of France nearly + Se M1—Fifty-t : d by tho suryoying purty, with profit and with pleasure, . For.the Practical Miner and Prospector, | e2bucob vane, aha phrtion of thd work Which | Byrn cen ieee eves Hebrews elght of Colareuta lated system. Ty reforred to ns n r ‘ AND FOR USE IN fadevoted to tho Comédie Frangalso ts tikely to | “+ Jame 2!—Unwell: ticelve hours’ forging." oyist's paradise.” "There ho can trace the MAGAZINES. ie prove the most ontortalning, oven though it ts Tn addition to those Junguuges, he rend Ital- | slow Uthotogical mutations of strate continu- Wohi ved the first t " Cth HIGH SCHOOLS, ACADEMIES, ETC. | the least original, ‘The three greutost netressea | fan, Spanish, German, Latin, mid Greek, Are- | ously visible for hundreds of miles; can ex- | We havo recelved tho wo numbers of tho BY atthis\the thoatre founded by SMollére, have | mark ho mukes about himself is worthy of ro- | Wwilhe, in vislblo contact, the atrata of nour> | National Zdlerary Monthly, a now magazine, pub- ©. GILBERT WMEELER, been ‘Mile, Mars, Mile, Rachel, and Mine. | production; "All that I hays accomplished, or | ly tho entire geological series, and de- | jished at Toledo, It is notaremurkable publll- of Chien Arnould-Flesay, Of tho actresses with whom ‘expect, or hops to avcomplish, hus becn and will | tect every’ nonconformity, howover slizht, and | oution, But tho object for which {t bas been unt- Profossor In tho University of Chicago, ve become somewhint fuunillar, Milo. Sarah | bo vy that plodal: tient, persevert rocesy | cin study tho simpler initiatory phuges of an Hjorth Boyesen. Fourth Editlon. Now York: { ayturated with tho vapors of beuzine, turpens 1 Botng a Pructical Handbuok to ald in the reougnition | We bave bec Jowess, Bhe was educated fin eon ly bint plodding, patient, persoveriny proces embryo mountain system.” Tn contradistine- | dortaken is a prifscworthy one. Miss Hurt- | Charles Scribner's Sons. Price $1.25. tne, or petroloum, Bornhardtian Je of accrotion which builds the ant-heup, particle tion to this place ia Hare Mountain, east of | Wieke, the writer of * Curfew Bhull Not lng To- Socranism AND Utinirantaniss. By John Etna Js nguin tranquil, its summit is once more Sipe tang POrant minorals and ofos Uy muanser | One ‘trom whiuh she was four times expolled for by purtlelo, thought by thought. Tact ‘by fuer tt ‘StiGd fa gapecially adapted to the Prospector, | faults thore regunded as mortal ali, When was ovor notated by uinbitton, {ts highest | Auiorgosa Desert, whileh Drosonts n bold escurp- | Mbt,” begins 8 serial story tn the sooong unt | Aer sty Cy rort - | covered with snow, und an aseent fs contents and also inoxamnining Mining Property. abe left funlly she declared hor” inton- | ana warmest aspiration reached no further than, | Ment tor neurly its whole oxtent of ten miles, ; «| Se alae aaron Cheeks a any Hes | ciated, with vow to examine tho. alterutio Bont by mall, pustpatd, on reculpt of price (#1), by tlon of boing a aun hnleare pe ae ni tho hope to’ aut pole tho young men of my met is Sestinte oF yewutation, but Pols ay Paller’s Ainertean Monthly tor Apel contains 21.5. ‘ * caused In the crater by recent eruptions, 5 7 ret been Bi T employ’ = Lt approach, 4 y rel PI trated urticlo on 7 , T o JANSEN. MeCLURG &. £ On Poa tae Toe the two protessions best sulted ie foaenenee neta Satta ota moment Unt “i wis extremely tuitullzing to. sea there | Sf HV pert treet d Ld eh otntone Git | Seance FoR Wiret Suxvraua i me | Over BA forged Babytonian. terrascaltis dias : z aie oO | her, Having enterod tho Théatro Frangily sho |" ‘Tho lite of Elihu Hurrite Is thut of a. good | Hotlexs than 400 fect of bodded rocks 80 beau- | articles aros’ "Tho Hithpinco aud Home of | RIVIERA, CONSICA, ALE. AND Sain, Hy | scribed tubilots muda at Bagduc [. bearing duteg 7 | slapped tho racopft an agsoclute, and left, Bho | mun, struggling successfully ayiinet udvorse | tifully displayed and yet be unnblo to examine « | Whittier"; American Art"; "America's Song- | the Hon. 8, 8. Cox. Now Edltion,. New Yorks | from Nebuchaonezzar to Darius, hive bee THE CIRCUS? * | played nt tho Pdeto St. Murtin and the Odéon | ctreumstances, nequiring famo and reputation | siglo stratuin.” Tho study of tho giuclal, vols | Composers"; "Traci the Red Sen"; "The | D. Appleton & Co, Price 81.75, Shrown on tho Loniton antiquarian inurkot. until 1872, whon sho again became t membor of | aa an onrnest although necessarily sumowhut | atic, and otber epochs, Of the phenomonn of | Woos of tho Inartistle"; “Mrs, Jameson": and | A Srtoxe ov Dirnoacy, Ny Victor Cher- | Tho Pars Academy of Sclonces has recelyox New York tho Phéntro Frangala, itis in tragedy that she | supertielal Pholar, ‘and, using all ble talents to | Water supplics, the diferent geologieat ages, | others. ‘This beriodlen! 18 carefutly edited, and | puliez, "Tandy Volutne ‘Sorles.” Price 20 | information of tho Heath of M. Zinin, the ems Oth re von a folly thin, ig at hor best, and ber volco is aid tobe of | aid the great eausd of humun rights, Intiforhe | aud tho resources of the reglons explored 18 Ine | tho illustrations generally well executed, cents, Tae HerunN Oy THR Pitxcess, [ly | neutchemist, of St. Poteriburg, He wir ths eee bioasone with tho sprite, most “marvelous and christine purity.” Hut | jas pure and blameless, and his blogvapher bus | teresting and ieeuptileully deacribed In this work, ti 1 duoqies Vinevrt, Prico'23 centa, New York: | discoverer of tho production of aniline colors by For hon i edad Nato hor itn dota | Her afGhes aya wlth mg vert: | CUA ee SE vata, vation | bly Merair an Coa Hy Wate Coa | cla uraatah as sso To te digay at | D.Aleton Co, bydrorburets work ua} tained fatrio 08 at tatased her culling’ and thie Yhu Beeeritt, A Memorial Volume. Edited | ee agmeers, Dek, eine ob VoLcTL | publleation of real'yatue und solid interest toatl : ——— Dr. Phipson, by Inclosing a phosphorescont Tint, of all tho things that sprout, Hevo that she bad missed her culling and that | py Charles Northoud, A, M, New York: D, | of Engincers, U. 8. A. in churge. Vol. U1. xruduutes af the Univorulty. 11 devotes ttself s substance, wtteh us tho sulpikte of bariuin, it ve ome (rho beat boyond a doubt, BO aR oedema | APpluton é& Co, Fried #17), : QHurte Heports, Washington: Department uf | tthe news tud inforuatiod connected with tho SCIENCE. Gofsslor tube traversed by & eonstant bat weak és the canvas-tentod, sawiuat-sconted, always | if ‘Mr. Matthows: In all ¢his thore {6.0, Univeralty, Tho deyider only beqan with the | is5pLORATION IN CENTRAL ASIA, | *iettic current, so Inerenses the phosphores Jolly prcuss} 2O8. dngavor of mervly meretricious sensation- THE NEW WLDRETH. mide: SACTEX. SOF scrim NEW | preseul yeur, and is publiied monty i taster | 73 NAN CUNTRAT, ASIA. | coien-thirn preity uniturm ubd igreealte light e : ‘5 droth's © e " . a : ‘ul and” conventent shape, ug tho countes ‘ a jg Bald to bo obtained. ‘With a thrill of glad surprise uNsin. Tho very thinhess of which Mo, Born: Hlldreth’s “ History of the United States" fs oY AMEN'L. ‘nud aupport. of te Faculty, as well us of Exploration haa probably never beon x0 fentt= ‘The youngster stands and vyea burdt compluing is sometimes exiggeratod will- | one of tho two ur three standard treatises upon min By enta’* . Each gorgeoiseculcrod poster that decorates tho | fully by tha costume why chooses, nud wloves too | this subject. In some respects ft Id tho best, | _ THO dsousston of tho “Sneramenta” scems | the students, ‘A deplorable nveldont has taken placo at the fullare doliberately wrinklod along the uring to, covering not only tho yround of Hnncroft's ondicss, but it is neecasary, We have before us | pag Dystatuter ta a monthly reviow of current Cul in Contral Aula ug lt hus during the Inst three | Gronoitie bycte. “The. Profesor, oF Chemistry. bare b, in glowing t {ncreuso the attonuited Improssion, In wil tho anothor volume on this subject by G. D, Arn | ovents, Canadian and general, aud published at ES eterno aioe OEE eta aioe Be Mie alotlias full of inencueia? on pa 4 ee loccontens feokiosmoss pF ehutructor, in tho | sudden | work, but reaching through the early part ot | strong, Dy Da. of Norfolk, Vin. Iels an couvo | Turnito, ‘The Apel Aumbor Sumtaitenrticicaan | Curr Satara suger Choe nese | a nomen tor distruction no emptied Itybelleving ‘Tunt the coming slow toatl who go Will dazzle tor ee Te eeerael Eat | UE IR Neate ak es ath tug vents | o¢ moro thun 900 piges. ‘Tho author considers | Fhe Dominion, Varlianye ‘tho Ontario Lame: | the year 78 In tho region botweon ‘Turkestan | fYrtusate lecturer dled Ainest lramealitelys quite thelr scnece. length, in tho hastiis-dictated urticles contrib- | yeopt mere compends and abrldgomenta, on: | #2 Whole subject of tho modo and aubjects of | jutro"; Tho Parliament Duildings": “Abo | and British Indla will be dorived from a pretty Trucrodes ine’ ua weil crac nlelnat Garey And when the day arrives, led. to, howananera in the eccentric capriccs | yeaces thoanme extent of tmos none. compris We from 4 Presbyterian standpolnts also | Art Hxpibition at Ottuwa""s thy Hullding So. | full summary fn tho Inst Bulletin of the Paris HON Hee eaten Ge De W. Roinena tie anteres . Aud tho gilded chariot drives which giv ae + Md -_ | tho doctrine of the Lord’s Supper, its nature | cietles”s » sate tiles tuples | Geographical Society. Severnl of the Journeys | sion of ane atectrleal rallway which will connect Respleridont through tho town with niusto play- | her studlo, and of a cow Ninich sho ticetw, in HIPS Uke Me Peo eee hus any. | and imports tho Mass, and the fvo additonal PSRs thay As PA Sunith ts thore!n deseribed wore noticed by usut the une, | Wedding-Platz with Mello Allianee-Platz, ‘Pho, q hore’s the b ; ho'd not moment the demands of art, which must be | otve vin be found In the sumo dixtinet completes Sucramonts of tho Church of Rome, The yol- but some aru comparatively new. Komunofsky, nila ae ho Pat paket by fru ue ence To bo tho clown who wins ronown by funny | {mull this there. is uy gulf, | England theocracy, tho Hnuneial. economical, | volumes formerly published. 4 et j h a geologist, devoted part ut 1877 and 1878 to a | will he uo intermodiate station between the two spasehes saying? auvortiacinent, BOF to say a distinct truvo OF | wud pulitieul bistory of the Culouioy to thuitevo™ | | Sowe of tho uithorswrguments ary strongly | Wes predécesaurs, ‘Tho sow vunture nromniaes to | % KoUlOK st dovitod pant ob ITT all! IETS fo a | will be wo inter Hornhandt’s great rival fa Mtle, Crotzetto, | the work Juinally ‘publlahed in. 1810, | Reese dah Whale, the work exMMbite Lourie | read Mtantlige ainobge tho contents oF the ‘Mite. Hornhardt’s great rival . Crol ' ‘fhe work was original udlished In , | lug and thought. On some polnt jowever, WO " le COMLE Aegis e takes it vers? cont, susie whild a the aagor bere imenrat A wits | thon revised and ropibtiqned Ii 1855, And now | cannot my that his positiond aro very pntien earenk umber Ae, epee aruion eneates ff dramatic wuthor, or, an vl ne a oy + bad lk ‘Your ten-year-old js huppler than any monarelt | (to yas a dancer; her futhor wis a itusala, | & Hruthors in-¥lx volumes Ih the Bue ford as | OF fURL chureh wcmbertipe whlens true oe | “iho Hornit of Troasuro Poaks”; “Hhephoris me Wille be Inughs with koenost seat, Sho was born at St. Petersburg wbout thirty | tholr Macaulay, Hume, and Motiey,—ciitions | filsy, we do not think ‘can be estah- | and Sheep Herding: * Americanism | And deel: res each fet the best, yours io. Bhe wae cducited ax a governess, | which huve been aptly termed “tho perfection | Uehod by apponling to ‘addresses to “chile | ture"; “Tho Ethlea of siclde From the entre guy with reh array’ to final | butcould find notulng to do, she was admitted | of booking of thole kind, und thuchoupest | dren” "tne tha -Apoatolia eplatios, din Ophidian Friends a} fe is 10" taf} = to thy Conservatoiry, und after bolng there two | png editions inthe jarket.” ‘Tho coverdure of | Ike manner we think his replies to the usual | * Arizonw and a Glin I" CETUS PON cars eraduntod with tho tit prize, whieh ud- durk-purple cloth, with a pila label in red and | arguments for baptismal reqoucration are nop | muguzlne ts published In San Francisco. ‘Tho {ntropld bareback rider, imitted hee to the Conédie Frungaise. Her thrat | pluck tette and | fully suiticiont or always the beat thut could be | Tho American Journal of the Medidal_ Sclencea, ‘With thogirlwhoseskirtadon'thideher, | “hit” was mude ina little ono-nct comedy, but | tho leaves aro gilded on tho top, We hive no | made, Btill tho book fs valuable, und deserves | edited by Dr. 1. Sl, Huy, fa recountzod us ond Tho | . ithe tumblers, and tho horse to | hor famo reste mainly on tho lending part she | words except of praise for this adinfratle and | t be not only read but studied with thoughtful | of ine most valunblu publications porta to miusio pranclig, ee 4p played.in “The Sphinx," and us the Duchess tn | sutisfuctory edition of a standard work. It isi | attentian, thu medical profession, 1¢ preaunta an mitAnd tho brsthGra who with ense + L'Etrangoro.” credit to its publishors, and sets an oxumple . Nount tho trenchoratis trapeze, itis efuealy wae ee fallow ate, Stats worthy of frattatton Wha tin bistory Lins its t fhewe furthor In his biog a horwoinlngs, 8, Nevertholess, i necessin _ And the nimblo-footed gent who Keups tho bar | Titty Sito. Joungsin, and Sue. Lsobun and | hook in overy Ubrury, and. in fea present furit ' M ebingk Provines, Col, Mutvuyol? was sont According to the Verhundlungen, the organ of ' from Kuldja during the latter “your” to | tho Herr duogruphieal Society, Capt, Merkin shiko, on a inlaslon ta a Chinese digni- | of tho United States ship ‘Tuscurorm, has made tary, and has contributed a yood deal to the | the decpest xen mensurement on record, Lit tho previous topographical knowledge of the Valloy | North Bioitie Oeenn, at latitude 4b degrnos: of tho Ti, the western pact of Chinese Daun | intiutes north and longitude ig deurees 26 lis. karly, and the mouituin passes dividing the | utes east, Greenwich, be reached the amazing two, Twenty-six barvmetrlo tights wore dete depth of 8,513 metros, or nearly tive wud a quire - tino uring, thls Journuy, ho botwny of | gor miles, trict und a jee ets bo 5, the Muted avast studied Uy Se Novo rect rise |. Anow millltary projectiio has eon inventod collections of plauta made, while tho ‘southern | by Mt. Lamurre, of Paris, and oxperinents aro part Of tho same district and the contues of | BOW belng mudy with kat Grenoble. | Tho tne ‘nines. urkestan were traversed by M. | Vertion conalsts of Hro-bulls to be projected by Fousselt, the Director of the Hotanical Garden | {ho gans of a fart, which while exploding would, ut Vernov. ‘Chik gentloman demonstrated that | Urow a Ughtupon the enemy's position acnight, the supposed Voleanoos in the Kuldja Dlatrice | ‘The object is to provent Intrenching or the role. were tally coul-beds in astute of combustion, | lug of earthworks. and the projectile ty provided q her | thix lust edition has teen republished by Harper | factorlly dustained,—for exinple, hts dow on the buck of euch volun i 1 nts un IMMENSE ‘ho Sucramonts of tho New Tostamont as Iu- | amount of iyformation gutherod by men who uted by Christ. Hy George D, Armatrong, D, | may D., Fuston of the Fibut Prosbytorian Churen of | Uti Norfolk, Va. New York; A.C, Armetrony & ternfod experts, Among the communte ns in the April number we fhid articios on ough Drulnage in the ‘Proutment of O} off. Coquelin, ‘Sf. Delaunay, Mt. Febyre, | dusorvusu place us inudh for stewubstantial, | San. Pelcu €3.00,) Wounse by tes urkour "Tha Party Medltleas 0 Fao eee eater arian oaplios within 4 cortutty : om that falter, SWorns, ura among tho charactors sketched | gervicouble, and bandsome external appuuraued —— tion of tho Ciwsuroan Operation In Continental | His reseurches to tho south, in the Vicinity OF | Tine, avas to keep the enemy. olf and hinder i ’ Gc nerves that never falters In Paris to-day thero ure fifty places of auvuso- | ua for {ts Intringle merit, Hildveth’s dostre und | WITO WAS’ ‘LIE EXECUTIONER O¥ | turope,” by De, Harris; “Notes of ‘Three Cases | Chicas wreitory, wore checked by tho hostility | fine ao co teen tie chant b Fhe double somcresultu: ent which may bo culled thoatres, ‘Tho re- | intuntion Is thus ect forth in the preface written 3 ‘ of InJuty to the Eyo Treated Almost Bxulnsively | of tribe culled Chumpang, who, ilked un tie ’ ‘Who clears @ stud of hurwes with sufoty and pro- |! : q . B CHARLES t Ma 4 ¥ | party, Sosera, Middendorf and Smirnoff mude | — You Friodrich MAler, In hf treatise on" Unite on— A . pois ain 1st poara very lap ie #4 the Tncatro Ho Tea ate aay as a tetue, Ae UE (ators aud Answoring 8 correspondent, who {inquires Pe eatin pier eterna ana TP EUFCDy UE suo Camibilerenncoes OF tae Kore vorenl Hihnography,” wtrongly tualntaius that , All those thelr glory ting and ii 1877 ta 1,880,000 frunes, ‘Tho wctorsand | present for onea on the Ulstoric stays tho | Whether it hus ever boon delinitly establiebed | srhomus; * Siclumtatio ‘rononitis in Diphtheria,” | gunnh Province; while Messrs. Mushketol® and | the distinctions of the various hutman races are Drrtereg Wea ttn ere notressos, boing “navoclutos,* huve w shure of | faundurs of our American Nutlon. unbedsubed | who {t was hat anted the part of excoutioner of | by Dr. Hoyl; and inuny othors quully’ (ntorest- | Severtaoll conducted two separate explorations | pormunent, olting insupport of his opinion the Ando onunor by thelr glamour every boyish | Tey tronita, thus in 187d M. Got received 7,00 | with putriotlo rouxe, wrupped up dn nu finu- | Charles 14 Notes and Querice saya “Hila tdentt | ing add haporiant, ‘Tho magnaige i publishod | Of Me Pamtr, which huye (eft but litte of these | Evidence utforded by tuo most anelone of the vislon, foes (besides aalury), M. Coquelin gu.08) Ml | apun cloaks of oxcubes und upolouy, without | ty nus wo bellove, ecketath thoroughly vs- | by Houry G, Sua's Hon & Co. didicnit highfands wumupped. Zoology hus boon | Hyyptian monuments whore the negro {4 rep. 5 . ° : » Bel 2,000, BI, : 1 aes provided tor in the tours of M1 Mtoussott, who | resonted with allot those churauteristic phys ‘To you and mo, Delaunay 83,000, Mifu. Bernhardt 82, allits, buskins, tinsel, or bedizonment, in their b anarabiun Valle » tablished. In hie * History of Hia Life and studied the Fauna of the 7 later on, Jomned Col, Mutveyolt's expedition to | from. 4000 to, 600) yours. All research, his Febvre, Worms, ‘Thiron, and Muubrant each | own proper persons: often rude, hurd, nirray, leul tralts bu possesses to-day, after the lupse of a baal chaps} Aan go1ne o Has Tonys | Saud wile site, Crolzett hid chlo and Sines. | gupurwitioua, aiid talstaken= Journoys from the Uxus to Cubul and Herat sue | possibility of red : always | ‘Thnes,' Lilly, tho fumous English astrotogor of LITERARY NOTES. ‘This glaraou some other things, dt Fuvurt 60,00. A Marshal of France { ournest, downright, manly, aud sincere, ‘TI syontee y y, whi ned bi G.W. Cable, tho uuthorofTho Grundissimes,”” | Budukshun, Pussy by MM. Bykort's asvent of | gttorded no countenanes winitever to the hy- ted: Broban an uw a gh ‘s a io | the Suyenteenth Century, wl oN exami 10- . W. y Sid Be rear rriear De creer ery Perea A RTT Tele. La ecuntenunos, whatever £0 the hye ‘ ae roe your trustful ten-year-old rocelves iN,0W fruncs a yeur, and an Archbishop ore of fooler fe eu rere rere fore tho fret Parllumunt of Charles IL, a4 ta tho | {8.4 cotton-Lroker at Now Orloana, Ba any ols May OT thee aid: mo Nartugen | mutdiga {tut tho nero und the Burop Finds all the glitter gald— 1. government of the Théatro Francais is Wo have uccordingly in this bools an ‘attempt wo | ¥isored oxccutioner of Churles 4, said that the | Tho next yolume in the Lolwure-HourBerica will | Pumuir, fully noticed by us at the thne, Col, Dr. Ana Gray, Mr, Aloxunder Aj i, and Prof, And so did you, before you grew too wise to be cullur, and is fn @ mousure conducted on the | get forth tho perdonages of our colunlal and | next Sunduy but one uftor Charles I. was be- | be un American novel entitled “Diplomacy.” © | Matyoyelt'w oxpedition to Fyzibad, the capital argo te dota have lesued masala aries peas panera pn aided oy wvabendcn trom tno | Fovoluionary tiaory auch aa thoy realy worg | beuded,_touert Bustin, Cranwell Suery: | A uook of Calnoso storie, by Dru" Sungeiing, |, despeaia tas not gs rey | diy i tnsitenay of the invent Cds Bo the-pratsoa still T sing overnmies ruduntes frou tho Conservatory | Uroataing mons cooler fuults. us Woll asters | tue? chet subject of convuraution “wus | bas been trunstated into Engiluh. It ia auld to | Wood, walle the watioe tauy” bo eonelidud wilt f the Hotunlg Gardonet Harvie University to Of tho Jolly sawdust ring, elas i at oney engaged by thle tho” | viriuos hele "weukuosics as well as thule | WHO | hud euuuied | tho King. “Guo | bo moro remarkublo for abundunies of tneldent | 8 rufcreco’ ta Cola. Siolotolt aud Gredokolt a 7 Prosout busta, arid tho inne | ‘Which cumesto ud when Naturv hoy miracles | With # frat prt 1 ee inarkod ability he | Keren sald It was the coutnon hangman, others | than fellvity of plot. ! % z 1 ring the eficioncy of tho establishment as doth work us ature OF ected an uasuciulo,"—or sburvr Ini the 'a History 0 to -Hugh Poters, but no one spoke with certainty. ‘ spectively, whieh huye made sume unefulnddl- | Ye t felons For tho happiest of things My ee pruttay and responaiblutics of tho | wAlltons: Hix veluiai, Intu cise. Now Yon! | After dinner, howevery Spuvin ‘privately eer |, Abwkwor bas discogered that Tord eas. | tine uate wpogriiienl kuowiedgoor Noribe | selentiia contraand at x ineans of {uatructlot* Which tho gontlo Springime brings INANE. The ussouiutes nuinber twenty-four, | Hurpor & Bros, Prico $12) Tossed to Lilly that thé executtoner waa Col, | ousiield's alliturative phrase, “nen of Hebe | ora und Wostern Afghantitun. ; un intependont. foundation, aad S2t0ud Bae Is the canvua-tented, suwdust-xcuntod, much+ | Chi The tir yucuneles in tholr ranks. As thers Joyvo, +1 was iu tho room, he std, +whon ho | gud leuding,” In big letter to the Duke o Y according. to the clreulur, buon already: wube ‘frequented circus, « wad ways nore shurers than thore Wro shares, RELIGION IN ENGLAND, Atted himaclf for the work; stoud Behind hia | Marlborough, oceuns in ono of Bnrko’s orations, ‘TIE ICE PERIOD, seribud, ott A gasals bimngelfeas is" his austen . . Vaxpyks Brown, vie ructreas begins with un olghth ara =) A jab ek? when po did it; who done went in with bin Tho Kings of Vortugul and Sweden are tho "Tho Now York Tica suys that Prof. Paigo, of | beluy uno of tho foremost givers _ : ant autor Tvanuro. In 1878 each full aharo patd | ‘This ty a subjoct with which readers of ocolo- | ayuiu; Chure is ho Mau knows this but uy was- | Iloyal pods of the poriod, “The Inttce’s pootie iu Ney cclared that tho belief 1A ceca bat ‘ . Revenge. quarter oF (wow francs, Euch ussoclite also ro- | slastical history aro already faulliut, But a | ter (Gromwel, On thevttorband, Wiliiuu tue | purdent Tilinols, In w lecture, declare Late is the ‘Stil ’ ne Ha ovo alt rapidly growing thut tho great ice period which | One doltar expended vow In purchasing a bot- * had ground tho rucks Into soil hus been useribed He ae fhe Broustonine. ey tied seoubled toa the too remote In the planet's history, Tho inuy uve the expense of u doctor'a DIL, LA ne; almost uulversully-accepted opinion had been { levied cough orten ens in eansumptton a thut tho groaticu caps had been formed bya rn] ht Invaranaation Of the Ce aus Oo winds. | clinate -rendered extremely cold through | Whew, the usual symptons of which ire sure * throat and 4 palo in the breast, frequently touds chunwed comme relutions, It wag known that | tobronchitla A duy's uetny mupoutell toonths fter wu cortain number of - | lott, ullng Howlott, was tried and convicted of | appeai Sway atatere oY at 84 wat a plumnbor | Solves see ean a pensfon, cortaly of uno | Work presenting (ho leading facts tu tho prog: | Rov ayaeeucie tke fatal alow: Hut oor was | pbb watt bi out of #ACbenony windoeedt | ratte bung ver ca, Fem, MeSUMNS | Te Fy OF Coeatantyy witin naraw laa, | SerPncong evi (at ho was not the mi | score Barpaon, Low & Cin of London, ao fe Fai frova tho eninuto ho loft tao window Fa Aan withdrow he received 68,000 | brings un oullino of this bistury within tho cusy | arose out of u determfuation to fasten tho | Spout to publish Tho National Muslo of tho mite oalsuoks the adowalige 1 (oft tHe Window | When M,N aig uanaul pension of 10,00) more, | roach of all readers, Such {a tho volume by the | #ullé, gomowhere, “Que of the witnesses tor | World, A posthumous work of tho Into Hon 7 Tho duties - o! th * -iBekns Mage mmannyer aro dividod Rov. Brooke Herford, now of this ity, which hus | HIS defenwo auld: * When a Lond Capolt Ifewte! whose hod. suffering from impure blood, or | among, arte ein futurn for a week ata | Just boon ropublished by Jansen, MeClury & | wore beheaded in the puluce yard, Weatwinster, |. Messrs, Cassell, Potter, Galpin’ & Co. will have f the vlder malo uasocl- the Duke of Huinllton, and the ‘Earl of Holian ds giving way, elthoras mlulsters or | utes, who assuun anal com- | Ca, of Chicago, from tho ‘Lord C1 ked t r vdition | the cccontrighty of the curth’s path around tho | of wutfering. otter try at Ouco Jhyns's Expe ss Fistopbospitity ‘oloooly, will tind in Bellows’ | tino, ‘and for a tonal prereset eters [Rrra saan abe Bid you abe od nny tmeater seca eezaads | Heady tn, a few duya a new wad chuaver edition | un wus subjoce at long periods to conuideratie | torunt, a seindard remedy, whose cunulive woe up and ikyrup the material to build Heneation to say “risky,” playa, 10 Paci: Of | The author seoms fn th salth be, “ Whero {6 tho Inetrument that did it?” | from Churies Dickebs,” fu a bandsotue portfollo, | chunge, resulting In romayval, at tines, of tho | erties hyye beew tested ald wpproved by they~ slg to keep them a there. a Fogklons. ows §y8, thls fiodte bas all tha | a Voltarign, but capable of taking « broad view { Ho thon brought thoux, “Is this the sau ax, large quarto size, & new book by W, Hf planct soma 25,000,000 wgulea further than it.now | suuds, . : ” ks lg Ace

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