Chicago Daily Tribune Newspaper, November 13, 1880, Page 9

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THE CHICAGO TRIBUNE: SATURDAY. NOVEMBER 13 AT---SBIENGE, |! Ing about to.du tis duty, Te spoke well for 1880—SIXTEEN PAGES. 9 nt that whit him over the cher I. fo ils own goutat length stowed sytplous of bi ste In referer personality and work, He has been depend- upon the compilations and colfaborations lind t po TNA LITERATURE---A Sst « UIstorical, Des winined, A paelfie, Inborlous, practieal | the Mev, Joseph Heople, continually beaten down, to quote a | Houghton, MiMi é& Jermain poet, to prosaic realit hyt P OCCU eriptive, and Critical. By | carefully collected, and then pleasantly nare Edking, D. Ds Moston: | rated, aud the Iuatracions aro mbundaNes RW? Mr. Knox writes toa very large extent from (ieorge TiL’s cannon sense that he never personal observation, 80 that his work ts woul in the comeratulutions whlen his | OF others, without attempting origin re | pacans of a vulear, buriher-lites cultivating NOTES ON NEW B es Ty t Charles James Fox, the English windeln eagerly and untnhnously bes | searches or Investigations, The volumes i Teton at the expense of ity lmauiteation: “ytisaing 15 ee atnre Catton nama eaten oll ane goals We weary printed k stowed npou wy of thelr number who was | are too much condensed to render then vale | ving, eonsequently, more In elene ideas than tt nfanititar * ‘: * Hon to the not tou-numerous volumes of ap- 00 (S () Statesman—The Reign of condemned to gt allypers nnd a ball-ehatr. | atte for reference purposes, Daring the | i beautital faces taktne refiiee from ub ieee te reulers of ieee ae propriate and welcome gift-books for boys. | ( George the Third, int hoe Pee Sea ee ar mney car | period of thnie they cover many of the nest iat nntte with witht i In nernetin itn Half-llonr Sortes, and ‘toplels, in nuughter's ; MAGAZINES a og? ; ‘ST In the country. heyer belleve tte Tnportant constitutional questions, inatters | tle: seeing only that whieh 1s, enJoving only complete abnegatton and devotion to aralned | The Bankers’ Maymelne for Nov * Are among the BE Aud then, of the comparative importance | touching the very foundations of the Governe | thal whieli it can possess, making (ts happl- and dishonored fathor. It isn story of Ene he Bankers’ Magazine for November firs tease examine ut your Mookstore. Our Own Timos—Holland as Seen by | aid vague of officeholding, ‘The utmost that | ment, were disetssed and settled, ‘The value consist in the trandull ense-and honest ‘ Ore isn story of E- | discusses the reduction of the Natlonal debt, : Pleas Bt a moddrn statesnum ean do for fi xen or a itty ot atte without violent passtong | elsh life, eharnl inok erefore, y one and platntively told. | ane alyze: 4 —_ * an Italian—Roy and Viola— nephew ds acndate tnt a thes irlvilens Es Mie ete SAS Ea ate ae ride ar mnrnliniit dd pe 4 se a peapl fata, ahs e I exon deal that Is safc in this Httle Rey ante cne TUT RO 1 ett, with dozen of ants 3 ee vee trate yulgo in their a a try ory t . 3 : * PETS AT MARGY'S, Chiness Buddhism, Ue Ah Inneuiges, with the ‘one omuwhat hnerted, generaliden of the events | Jove an art Tht atases ‘withaut start ne thee Here neat etiecthiat sual thy Pelimelty ls Wwas reduced $10,000,000, uring the samo QUEER pect that, in ease of siecess, he willobtain | of the Vietorlan nue. Jn ree | intnd, which addresses the senses rather then oe adil Marae 8 Fogel and wholes | period of thine there was pald upon the pub- ve tuonss MILLA, oulhor of *fAttlo Folks | . an income which would not’ have pald the | spect it. ty graphite. © Interesting, It un art fill of repose, preeisionand | S2UG and dts error is on the” rikt rather} He debt Interest and principat the grent sum: ByOLANT i and Fup" ote. Quarty, 3% pnyes, @ | Notes on New Books—Magazines—Books | Wine-bil! of i blncemmn in the daystar Wey nnd undoubtedly aecumte as. to ul Hal Hike their Hvess { than on the wrong side. Overeonselentlous | of 87i5105,04, Uther articles an’ on the : Be etentiul iY Recelyed—Literary. Art, and month and Samdwiet, Butit wis worth a] trets and. results. Vietoria's reign hag word, st rendist tin whieh they can | ness tiny entail more saffering unin the lack “Aspeet of ‘Trade nt Home and Abroddy” - Le erpho autumn Es hot Ike to nudie 9 betters hpi man’s while to hold ole durtg the Genre ndy found many chroulelers, Macke i nite ag they are and as they are | of it, butor the two It Is the best to tench “The Public Finances, er Eh Mortynge The apres or nore protiiable Loo or Scfontifle Notes. era. pone hobleinan fat chit iiirusaniil « MSs Ineau, Molesworth, Walpo! ut By ae ‘asl tuston ty | M4 the most to be commenced, : diitedieed At te oars ae ania tie te covet rend oe tite Pewituent, Annther Sulltae of the riplie at neat patton ata int tnacemuunted fur yet rpneltie tii —" The Young Ladtes’ Friend” tsa new | Atfairs In Europe, 1% ternational Cultage,? . ary tts | ; E '- i If i v4 0 H g LKS IN FEATHERS AND FUR, AND LITERATURE. Exel eth fnstde whieh he nev Kk fers have weltten fully and comprehensively, | ie wesielon uf the peaple, 2 edition of an old work, It 1s. book treating | “British Indebtedness,” “Pho Precious ~ LITTLE Fo . . had elit Puts ivnttita Of 1 Mr MeCarthy’s survey fulfills its purpose: fy | a, Fie nein he savy, tan urnfouindly: sine Upon toptes that may be sald to belong to a | Metals” and kindred toples. OTHERS IN NEITHER, CITARLES JAMES FOX, and tiventy thonsaud fn years of war. eleariny away the ust with whieh uiany of | tonal tu wl other respects, lias. with tie ex. | daughter's education, such as preservation of fed, why nothing to recom ception of a few naval battles, completely The subject of Mr. Trevelyan's handsoma,| in MILLER. Newedltlon, Quarta, f Mr. yan's handsoma By LT TE rentlons. CHOtHescseres. #240 | Vole f4 the Enylisliman that Mackintash ‘Wa pages. "y ther and prot! nf fat ey end hhh eX | the movements deseribead were surrounded, and whis- | Mr, MeCarthy hig uw elipter of ‘Trades. plosn Unions tn whtels he tritees Gieir growth sad the revilston uf opinion iy connection with month Ito y them and itso shows the ged work done w An the | hy thi manizations evolved from them, AL ‘a places which a states held In | the start, say Lwenty-five years azo, he muta: Hime formed buba part and often | re was an aston tunune all the employhni st park of the advantages that He} and capitalist classes that -tradescurannl ete ' ved from his positions || AH the | ious were aa mitch te bis condemned In point 1, and dred in 1800, nt the age of 57, Mr. | elalins on lis. purse were settled, aid | of morality as they vtere abstrd bn the sige evelyan, in 10 pages, ling covered only | tl services re tlered to hin, eauitalile of political economy. Country saulres, who the first twenty-three years of his: Hfe—a | M4 Aishonorable allkey were recompense | had onty Just been converted from the publie veriod of th in th tiv fl t s by fresh, and pyer tresh, inroads pon the profession af protectionist prinety! y ne in the tives of imast nen | Exeheyuer. ‘The patron of ity borough if | wi stl In thelresecret Intelligences which tho blozrapher is able to pass over tn | le was at commoners his mouthplece In the | fated to Bue that they were THE FAVORITE PIGTURE-BOOK AND | very tewelupters, Nor was thera anythlug Haweer Hone, Af ena n Doce the Gente: | wraie, . nuelt anon” Weare. owt FON! . o exe | URHOF the Bade! bye Wilt Ef in wonder or consumed by auger at the work= URSERY COMPANION, tn Ror'senrly Alte alone to. call for sueh eX | at Courts the broker who, when the list loan inuamun’s Infai nated nobtns a the subject tended notice, Remarkable as it was i | Was brought out, had got to know wore tian | ap pallitend econoiny. ATL thy leading news: + With 450 tos- | inany respects, ILeoutd have been fully and | was pleasant about theallotment of theserip: papers were constantly writing suatnst the #200 ) fulrly treated In much Jess spice. Itis evi- | lls raciig-triend, who find: Wothhag left to | trigesenions at one thes not writhig mere: dent, therefdre, that Mr. ‘Trevelyan intended panel, cute te ca lieat # tutor, Wy asa Liberal paper writes puealust some ir re rrate the det ss dee * uty m * 1 Tory ineasure, but ag men condemn a inane 7 rored IUustrations something more than to narrate the details gpired pamphicteer, were al pak with noin- a With Col % of Fos’s personal history from lus birth to iliatianane ne pueltiod with, reversions.” Cow- strous ty LES, NO | the attainment of bs majority. And in the | per did tot exigerate when he wrot UPS AND DOWNS. Alte SMI - N vivid, reallstle pletures he has painted, The lovee neveritia, ue ff Ip Holdin sip with the skill of a master, of social and | ,! Tattered nds bunlcrupe fortunes. mented any. Overflowing with charming tns- . Kine i ; aay of ehlhtlife, orlntird An. cultere,"wiils ‘2p polftteut Ute in the Kimedom of Great Britam anes! Nrriaie rhymes and singlea—atter tho style ot | during the latter part of the elghteenth | In another place the author sny —Hentano's: Mayazine for November re- his outward grace: pered Himself Lite nor would gather the ehitdren y called “the most Demosthenean speaker | from whieh thirte wi ibo even pand rend tint a duzon pages silico Demosthunes.” He was the ebosen | British gutnens ilo aren mic, tall x tho auiesh avery ond WOH friend of Burke, a colaborer with Wither- (he in of his Var te penetited.’ Christian Union. force, and even Johnson was proud to have | {erat hin join his selveted: set of Intiuate come | UES OW SUNDAY FOR 1880, panlusia: Charles MG Pig wite teaee [see uminnted board covers. About £00 dames Fox was born in seats siiiing for old und young, and over 50 neglected 4 eyreat eve varof | health, improvement of time, domestic econ-.| gray " a Tne Se ue ere ara the the ue omy, dress, behavior to parents, relatives, une are staat ont eee . Leyden end Haarlem alone would bave be: keutlemen, teachers, fricnids, and to domes. ustial, a ver Site uleiaive eal . ta i ration, full of strange smd terrible’ vielaal- | CoMvanlonship, “dinner and evening par | canoeing, erloket. hase-ball, archery, “trot- tudes. hes not been teeurded tn ong single Hes, eerenonions and friendly’ vise | ting, racing, Inerosse, vte., etc tuemortble puliting, Art so varled aaudse | Its, conversations and mental eultn ‘the Princeton Review t conselentions in its records of the country | These aro all iinportant snbjuets, 'f —The trinecton Review for November and Its people, bas represented wo scene of | dinientty with books of this kind is eh das the folluwing table of contents: “Tho 4 : Ultimate Design of Man? by Prof. Fred- Minin the Silent # prophetleatly named It whlelieost the Duteh | hey attempt to regulate by rules that whieh | 2.0 tee er . people, for Hf Tone a thine, 40 TNDY Millerent must be left to common sense and cannot be orle oe PD. Siitverlanas #ltaw Cone tuitions of terror, of pain, of rage, of joy, | made to conform to any precise boundaries, Reveals Lahtia ee with a Great Rev- ant of bride, ial ; What is snid about “ hnpollteness* and want ae eclusliti Prohtemn,” by the Hon, found a Tittle natte nittiontio vrit- | much of truth in ft, but It fs wintsstatement | Sehbath Question,” by President Seelye, Am- tional gratiieation in write ly herst’ Colleges Agnostielsm In Kant.” b Ine: * wns aeensed of being ndrunk- | of fact to say that, as a Nation, we “dls ban uy ey’ Agnosticism In Kant,” by way a seat drinkers Von Goven ) thignish ourselves by aur impoliteness,” ate Hitveatta State University; uy live Crone ‘iid Wnunter of There Is a great deal of good, sensible ad- Snel a tate a ins " A nde Origin of taverns; Willlun Cornelia and Hondekoster, | Yice within the pages of this volume whieh | Sortie’ Os Priuelnal | Dawson Ls Ds both devoted to the botle, Of the minor | '8 far above the ordinary cheap books on | MoUlreal: “The Ustortea! Proofs of Chris Hachts some died of drink und fu thelr deaths | “Etiqaet,” “Pollteness,” “Complete Let- | Uanlty,” by George 1, Plsher. D.D., LI, Day the Duteh puditers saw stramze vielasitudes, | ter-Writer,” ete, It is written Ina plain, | V8 Colleges “Criteria of the Varlous The gre “nbr 7 mod |g 4 2 : | Kinds of ‘Truth? by President MeCosh He great Aembrandt died in strattened | straiehtforward, earnest way that makes it | soe BARE C Aa reumstinces, almost unknown to ul; Hobe Prince! Sollee." a dhe nh Airatordian bn tlie war pleasant and easy reading, Jn this edition a | {rluceton Coltege. quarter’: Steen died in misery; Brouwer in | ew enapter hus been substituted for Chap. Good Company, No. 14, has the second the hospital: And! Vere) 1V, dn the orlztinat edition,” Many ‘more | Wstaltnent of “Rose unl the Doctor,” a emendations inight have been profitably matte | serlal story by Ellen W. Olney, Organiza. Let nulstre: that great tracery, as W ited anaw by UNCTE CItAttt corations. Quarta, cloth. {yidh the illustralious colored, wasnt; | spon nitons, and all the ne'er ir side and in thel of the wntons \ rl us tere ng parasites, ving on thet aac Dy at “Tar | strength of the oreantzutlon, Ngaderthe Window.” Wich riahtcovera printed | century his real object Is apparent. | For this | Mament, chosen by corrupt constituencies, the tinions were set down th ine seluring were drowre was Killed inn dict ably y rt mnced hy corrupt Minls- 5 myitite ’ ° K 5 I : a7 ‘ly ‘| 4 ‘woth aides, task no one coutd have been better equipped | Wits corruptly Intitenced hy, corvup lish and andaelous demugogs, whe li a tluets uy to make the book more in aecord with the | tlotin Charly" 12a thoely article, by Mr. D Sian thin the biographer of Loru Macaulay. And | 78 of whotn Junius told the Iterat truth | cited thelr iznorant mg on te robe in | Dlown up in apowder-nlil: Jolin Seotel Mal netual condition. of ‘anelety ted ie see. 0, Kelloze, of Philadelphia, ‘There Isa read when he said that diwy addressed: themselves " in his work we lve one of the most fasel- | neither to the passions nor tothe under- ih 1 " 123 LITTLE BUTTERCUP'S VISIT TO LIT- nating and comprehensive biographies It hus | standing, Bin siinply to the touch, for meee eae, bara TLE STAY-AT-HOME. been our privilege to read, not for what he |... sit aii aitaimenia te cg MH: time been pretty generally reversed DyLCrausAON. A colored plcture un every page | says Of Charles Janes Fox,—nlthough in that | Granville and HMDS tor cea |THE the uniuus "themselves | hive irs Were for £4 rt y cf eettous pound in attractive bourd Cavern, dO... soseee he ls accurate, painstaking, and detatled,— TERT Pe aenietanate ideale sabaey bean ahaa inany of thelr most objection: but for his graphic accounts of the acttal | at oa Premiers fevee dint sometimes | ty, Carthy'’s estimate of the “ Litera- ‘ BELLE’S P NK BOOTS. condition of English eoclety, depleted with- | they were silpped into a hand that was | ture ‘of the Rohen ig interesting, but In hor of" The Hesse Books,” | out fear or attempted palliation, and for bis | wshamed to close’ upon thei, WIth | sume respects narrow. Mr, Spencer ix one 7 KWH Author of “The Hesale Books,’ ei epted p stall i eae hey s pspuel » Mr, Spet b eg Breese Tlostrated arith 1 fullepato cowed: | ‘truthful presentation of the facts In regard pversthing to kel. wat doting to egouele of the greatest, Shinkers of Anodtern time 3 pictures, Avery elegant book. si STE re es na olitielais abit ihe regirded office a8 a frome well Hi Ho aH eI eRe classed mula Als fis « | reign of George the Third, Amerieans, who | nun of sense would be so infatuated asto | Sethe says of lim a Tite further on that THE WONDERFUL ROCKING-HORSE} | ire wont to regard our political system as tle- hunteh phusglt on any Quixotic grounds of Mot nie he its eae to bu li a eertuln sense 2 GARET" DE. to, colored q Y ci e, Wi 3 ye b fashion Is country ninodn, Lople Well to carefully read Mr. ‘Trevelyan’s ine | pis tong relent was, passed in constant, wat: really one uf the greatust of. the world’s phi- a (phat-ariée biased account of ina state of things in Bk fare ace Hiboral ide : ul pstcatlons: losophers,—a polntit ts hardly worth wile to Bent by tunil, poat-pald, on receipt af price. gland less than haifa century ago. Immoral, | Mr. Trevelyan, while pe nthug his’ portral + 2 ve oe ITs Wi with no flattering hand, dovs full yusttee to EP, DUTTON & CO., Publishers, | corrupt venal place-hunters ware the Mints | Ah etl nalltes et the siverett ding Pin} Potter dive order that they themselves tight live i eon brush {ny hand, taunt aonsgumptions Luke of Leyden was ypol- About forty yeurs aig ‘There ts no need to multiply extracts. It tragedy of “ King Lear,” with notes, Holland ts not to-day the great Holland of | by Wo J. Rolfe, fs the latest edition to. the the seventuenth century, she Is still, after-| series of Engllsi classles edited. by that gen- England, the first colonizing state in the | Ueman. ‘This book Is uniform with. the world, tricts herself: te commerce ace | ot: volumes both in plan and general ape quired by agrieutture, and retains the sub- | pearance. The Introduetion gives a history stance of repuotican government although 4 of the play. sourees of the plot, and seme she thay have last the form, Shehas “wenlth | erltical comments. ‘The text fottows closely Without ostentation, freedom wtthout Inso- | the fallo af 1683. The ni covert 108 Jence, and taxes without poverty.” It fs a | pages, are drawn alist entirely from Pure than with that at the time of Its firetw e, | able nceount of the origin sud workings of i {ine of Its rst writing, | tre ierior Departinent. My Housecat My Mandmatden’ giv xperlenees In Germany. Peainyre: ahh and An "tre twoot the stories. , thi ineludes “An Epis! 7 Bourding Round,” oA irthage,? What th reine-Tellerts,” an gecouns ann School for the Dent in je deat nnd dumb are taught Wk: besides contributions from Mrs, re W. oy Miss va Res inntter of regret to notice two tyoographical | hess’ new “vartornin” edition, Tis a handy | Goodale, Ghampuey: andl Aliss Bory Tend. « errors on one page (14) in a work otherwise | [ttle valume gt a moderate priee, with clear, so neat tn Supearnes: and makeup, ‘The | legible type. volume is fairly HMustrated, and was to huve | Log Dp z —The Journal of Nervous and Mentat Disertxe 15 0 substantial quarterly whose ob- ie is suflciently well Indleated by Sts tide, Dr. Jewell, of this city. is its editor, and jnong his associates are Drs, Hammond and Clymer, of New York, and Dr. Mitehell, of 4 Hyg. tis | piiladelphta. ‘Tho onilsston of a table xin] who sieritices herselt by | contents is n drawback, ‘The {mpartanes of Wa man whom she does not) seh a periodleal is recognized, hy the medl- to relleve her father frow the | cal profession, to whom alone it appeals, necessity of 4 porting he dt ts tale In {ita October number of the Vielorlan, “RL pret , vite. ow vl iy freed herself from the unhealthy atmosphere | alae «foregone eonelistuie “te hee A ntost excellent and. substantlal in which her former works have been too | agreeable, average novel, as to the author or » wublished at Melbourne, Australia, inch enveloped, “Roy and. Viola. is not | authoress of which it falls to arouse any reeelvi ‘ , Ania is aytleles ire much of a novel, but itis better constricted | curlustty. seiltative: elereyiien Ot the cuneate and tess objectionable than some of its pre- | , —'* Dangers and Duties” fsa collection of | Enland, the Presbyterian « Chureli,. ts : a clan, yteriar 8 deeessors, ‘There Is no especial originality | fourteen plain talks upon the ordinary sing | Homan Catholic. Church, and a“ Chilsthan In the plot or remarkable skill In Its develop. | AML errars of ten curd women by the Rector | Jarinant” "The Dead Man’s Grip an Landy inohty nelther'le thers ‘nuy. G¥eritrained: ot: of the Church of Our Savior, Cheinnatl, the | «Lowes? History of Philosophy.’ No, HL er Is tev. Dudley Ward Rhodes, ‘These “The Tnflucnee of Climate and Soif an the femptat sensationuism, nor fs its reading ays are entitled: “ Unreasoulng Skep | py, lopment of the Anglo-Austrian Kace?’s likely to weary the reader, A sketeh of the See aan Gena : and aA arly Splritualisin? ft, ¥ ge aa ths story nmounts to this: Wola Sterling ts Mi kirarrs Contemporary Thgueht of Groat Britatn, y GS 8) Peet of Mirae Inusements’ Reads] Enrope, and the Tasted States" somes b The Ideal Manhood’; | what comprehensive title, by the way—1re ts Purpose and) Spirit’?s e remaluing articles Tbe! Wfehoud:* Matherkaud™s the rem yeurticles hi this number, a po? (s heen issued shaultancansly in London, Flor mousiy, i tinge published anony ence, Paris, and New York, was ns good as the binding is tasteful Published in New York by G. P. Putnam's | night take hich muk among work: Ons. tlon, As itis, it iy not unintere -ROY AND VIOLA. It Is pleasant to record the fact that in her Intest work of fiction Mrs, Forrester has WI hurdiy any of the talents by means of | MUL Mere Heurd betore.”” Here ts an evident then the larger part of intelligent itizen. Being what he is claimed Whose reign the Amerlean colonies became } to be, he shoul be not a." fashion.” but: p dlsculsed, peeulation ona magnificent seale, | complishmierits whieh are ree utred for dole | intinates, moreover, that this great phitoso- Three Great orks.: slnecures created at the expense of the over. | business ns business Is done by Kings. Me | pher has “tolled his way. over the raga isa ee . Trince of tha bluod, and he wrote like the M3 of thought” that he may please BRITISH THOUGHT AND THINKERS. ments of govefnment and the means em | master of every one with Whom. he corte: hoya and clris’! ‘Truely it that a prophet « | ployed to perpetuate and retaln power, sponded, BPunetual, pattent, “sete | mist a hs fame in other coun: ritical, Biographical, Fox was a brilliant and eloquent orator, Willey aa se fans reat aera tat aM ogee nad Patlmuphicnl ant in polities a Liberal, But his many gifts | every depat Hy Anaulring grecdily Y |) “story of *hilosophy is termed By PROF. GEORGE 8, MORRIS, were counterbalanced by great faults and | every detail, making everybody's duty | q+ genuine find: valuable study,” although 35, | Vlees, which seem to have found their origin | scfentiously, indefatigably, 1 badly Leburwoy's *H of Philosephy,” ete. trlea, 61.75. sclentiously, Indefatigahly, and as badly | arthur Pendennis, upsetting, on the fait Fee ea ihe Pulndeipble Rare American, | 20 bis early tratulug, tho influences of hls it. contd posstily wy lanes | Of ane hour's reading in an” eneyelopedla, peat Enclish thinkers during the past tive centuries, | In.¢ His father, Henry Fox, afterwards Lord | 818n to use or inisuse an exalted stadion, | pad nev a TT eet und tho pork one'ot | olfand, had amassed alarge fortune as Pay- | Wien such a stution, ean be reached from ‘i 3 eet of Pre-Raphuelitism which is severe, but ening: 4 tt | rr a apa con Saatiieaopaaeatler sother offices, He had, moreover, acquired | trinfer their fidelity as dightly as he lnself me sone grains, at least, af truth. ve ere Sai als rustle sth ae ten are ‘bind to the greatness of 713 Broadway, New Yorks _._ | affairs, and corruption, bribery onen and un- | fndependent.. “The possessed all the wee { (0,044, We Should be wet, clover monic, Ale tuxed .people, these were the accompant- | tked foreian languages like nv wodern nt Hying fos -“unpltying?) Alpine Intraductory Atudie sed, Intruding into | tries than his own’? “Again, Lewes! Of the Julius Hupkins University, Translator of | Ms own, and then dolng it comt- | he likens i to a “dashing crltielsm’ Hy f ns Aderies of Loxraphical ond critical shotches of tho | birth and surroundings, and the age he lived | he had almost all the qua hich enable | sone arent selentiic theary of which le dents of English Meraturo will Ynu.tho work one of | Doster of the forces, besides holding several | below,» . «He wished public jen io Mr. MeCarthy has a narneranh on the sub- ! poor young Indy of good family who, at the Theso exsaya ury notlccable for thelr rollany of | Considerable notoriety by a runaway tateh | transferred that wiileh the London Gagelte | “Lately,” he says, “it has beeome wimerc ., SLPS ~The Nov mber number ofthe Nite with Lady Caroline Lennox, a dnughter of | styled his 'contidence.? * afertatidn, an artistic. whhn. It hus got | Countess de Ferlas, a thorough woman of + Broad: Winner: & Fallen 30] ’ : ‘ ag Raina ankee han copay’ eater? tha faded Duke of Iticluostt Ae real Pre omer ane Ne ONE UB ROS 3 Me mixed my with iwathet olen, heaps the world, having manned to obtain a rieh ct fitted eth talks? Pree atic l Pa et tek ae Het “ae me sil randy, es IL. Henry Fos ! y x0 = OF Sule ies, The typle _ 5 vel, 4 CANACS iit, oe ba te AUnInR aD atlas HageTHCtI NG, | Ruther, Sir Steplien Fos, hind also been Pay. | rate it from the glow! turesof the nies | Hnphuciiteot te sehaels Inter developaqent | Mt Anduigent | bustand, ts auxtous to | + warhing against sin and pleading Sor vire | Manu” by the a or Sheraroaks. Oris Hy vsented by Are ‘Trevely Unauestlon- 4 # : ene Tarrange oa itn mateh for — her | tue.” veda] gy eve te by EG: prope master-General of the forces and had held | presented by Mr. ‘Tr yin. nattestlon- | ts x figure nat unworthy of deserlpuon, ‘The ance of Sabhath,”. The Rev. PRE-ADAMITES 5 other oftives, allenormously lucrative, sothat | ably, the later rather than the earlier part of typlenl pre-Ruphaciiie-velteved Mr. Dante | beautiful but penniless companton, Regl- | —«John Swinton’s Travels” i4 a. smalt i its of Com=" 1 ety AMMNAGAUSGIRS A ‘1 he rolled tn wealth, all, says Or, A DEMONSTRATION OF THE EXISTENCE OF ctiaun cnateiek wht ev. Sir Stephen's sve lyn, “hon- | -his career was the most important, and re- ossettl and Mr, Burne Jones to be tie great- ris nextton | flected the most eredit upon hha. He began | est artists of the ancient. or modern world, nald dArey, a wealthy young Englishinan, pen het containing a few “brief sketches,” antnations,” and We H. Watloek nd wife sur- | kis politcal course unprovided with any | df any spoke te him of cadtemporary Ene sveink to the Countussto be the proper person | In which the writer gives his views on on ‘he Philosophy of Conservatlsin? to cayry out “her matrimonial scheme, He] tent adairs in Frances and Enelond. Mr. | john Ruskin contri ten the fgurth of ss admires Vigia, and proposes to her, and slie, | SWinton issn elose observer and a pleasant essnys con: “Fiction: Fale and? Foul, and being talked into thinklug herself in Jove | writer. His {itte’ proc! Maj. Wallett_has something to say ‘about. * with bho, warries him. | ‘Their unfortunate | interesting In that It records the observations | Our New Wheat-Flelda at Huinee” whieh murried Hfe is the subject of the novel, | derived from (a first visit. He saw imany | is intended to combat the ides that English. D' Arey \s the pogsessorof apecullarly brutal | things In fore days whieh a less neute ob- | laud cannot stand farther cultivation, | We, temper,—copyrizht on the artlele having ex- | server would not have seen in as many { ML, ‘Torrens, M. P. has an article on. “Tho pired,—and Viole is proud and ll-spirited, | month 5 Government of London,” and Frederic Hure- As_8 not tunatural result, napleasant seenes —"' The Poems of Gearge Arnold” ts 2 re son contrimtes the second of his essays on and quarrels are of constant occurrence. | pubtication of a votuine issied some vents | The Creeda: Old and New.” Othor artl- Like the good fairy In the story buok, about | ago, ‘The prusent volume fs edited by Wille | eles are: © lhe Works of Sir Henry ‘Tay- this Unie Sir Dougtax Roy appears upon the | fant Winter,’ and contains a biegraphieat | lor by H. G. Mewlett; © Brlbery aid Cor-, MEN HEFOWH ADAM. By Frof, Ataxannet | of WINCHELL, LL, D. One vol, octuvo, of 814 pues, i : i$ \ -]} vived him three years, and just before | fixed set of politica! apinions, “Ohler than | sltsh poetry he asstmed that: there wad only pitstop aed entra Hien her death called her children together pnd {tis years in nothing but his ‘looks and his Fuest ion of Mr, Rossettt, Mrz Swinburne, im Froth tho Mothodiat Quartorly Review. gaye them this quaint but practien! advice: | opportunities, his outfit for thy career of 1 Morris, | In- modern: French _ Iter- Of De, Wincheil's successive eENealnarnane aps * Don't be a fop; don'the a rake.” She sald | statesman consisted Inn few snperfielal | ature he adintred —-Vietor Hugo, ephen Pox; that, 1 hoy veep’ you conviction 52 fe! tes, Wien | to sone, aud of whom the onter world had Sepebliemiad asthe prevont mngnideont volume. | Fo hotne wicked, You, Harry, haviig a | he hid formed for hiwnselts mut iota few yet heard Iittle, Aimong the writers of older : less fortime, won't bo subject to so many | personal dislikes, which he had for the most | Franee he was chiefly concerned about A HANUAL OF CLASSICAL LITERATURE. temptutionss but weithatatel the, vot bayy part Inherited frou hts fathers eo Aon the Frincats fiton. iis wad tn enthusinstie 7 when you grow up. ‘Chen yowll learn to | attentlon o} , however, by Yney admiter of the paintings of the Inte Henrh Saree ae ee en ath oraewith tue awear, to rake about, to game, and at lust be | re which promised better things. th pre] Regnault. Probably ho spoke of France 1s trallve Extracts from their Wore, Also, a itrlor | Tuiued by those you unhapplly, think your } vate life his extravaganes was almost tn= | tour France? Le was angry with the Ge Survey of tho Riso und Progress of the Various | fTiends. Love your brother, Stephen; 1 | peraltelud. For over three years he cost his inans for having vexed our Franee, He p forms of Literature, with Doseriptiuna of thy | charge you all, love one gnother, You have | father n thousand gulnens a week, and was | tessed faith fu the philosophy of Sehopen- Minor Authors, Hy CHARLES MOItuTs, Ino, ao | Cheiles enough; make not one another so. largely In debt besides; He was 10 Inveterate | hanes and the muste of Wagner, aud he was Paes, rico, $1.16. Henry Fox's marriage was one of perfect | gamester, nnd almost always a loser. Dur- | preatly touched by Chopin. - Le gave himself From tho Eptscopal Regiator, Phil <] bappfness, and on the birt of Charles | hus his-first Parilament hs highest ambition | out ns tanmliiar with the Greek poets, and was hitltuly designed nud achointip ork Accurate | MtHes, the old Duke forgave the disobedient | seenied to be to ascortaln how weh wns | witd tn hls admiration of lement and attractive in style Sis worthy of | vile. Fox senor must have transmitted | sound areument and pert dogmutisin would =o pattern man, almost without de- | sketch of the author, The poems in the lite ruption,” by Sidney C. Buxtony and “Roe fect. ‘Me Is tho o ppuslt of Viola's husband | tle yolume before us tre ween Ragreat varlety | cent Selance,® supervised, by Prot, tuxley. in everything, He and his. mother give | of sub ects, and were contributed during the | On the whole, ® readable number. of tle nt mH Piatunle rlenusiiiy the muller a ifethine to sltferaat periodicals, | “heavy” order, . € persecuted, 0g pP vite, ausband | Mr, Winter.and Mr. Arnold were indiimate =—The October number of. the Natlonat | dles off fi due course of tine, and Rey ana ons, that th “v's work has be i a Vinta can and do henceforth live tor one sts ove ram etendeniin he aca ‘ato Gharterly dientety bs dust its revi appho, Ile made for himself asort of religion out of wall- | another. of uneven merit, some of: them, however, | {i¢,essaye and Its ess le It is ably many of his characteristics to hilsson, Ite | be permitted and Istened to from an casy | paper, ald tea-pols, and fans, He thonghtto | ‘There ls one eculiarity about Mrs. For | foe oe ere (thy vor | cilited, and ns neat and clean typographlentl esHeeLasiestt ot educa: was “unatttnetive in person and with de- | and axrecable Speaker; haw often he cont ler an yetabove all things piqued hit: } pester's onininnane whieh tt inay. be’ worth Len and plea oF area pertodl aL the eomitey, Chaate , Excelient asntockor Risen aaa forthe gen. | {¢tlve elocution,” but “surpassed all tho | assume or Iny down tho cares of office with- | self on his orluinallty, He- became quite x | while tocall attention. She ts, comparing the cles th the eur humber are on: he’, orators of his time In the force, the nbun- | out any adequate reason for leaving or justl- | diatinet figure In the literary history of our ‘ New York Nt a C dance, and the justness of the proofs ind | fication«for resuming thom, Nor did he | tine, and he positively culled Into existence Deserves uplacoabove thocy lournal, iustrations with whieh he supported | change atall until he “had exhausted ils] q whole school of sutfrists in gietlon, verse, Manuals eMbovo theordinary range ot School | and explained his views.” Jt was well | sunciness and his sophistry in deetaining | and drawing to make fun of his’ follies — sald that Tox always spoke fo tho | against all the principles with which ts | witmslenlities, and affeetations,” Who cin To be had of all boaksullors, and sent, post-paid, on | question and Pitt “to the passion, | name wasthereafter to he identified.” Ofthe | ue author have had In mind as he penned ¢ t ‘Ife. S: "Japanese Falry Workt isa collection | Chinese and the Chinese Question,” by Janes. readers Joys Of punthur and thal of me we eee of thirty-four stories selected from dapanesu | A. Whitney, LL.D: Phitoanpy of tho woman who possesses equally the eapacity | Hterature by Willa Elliot Gritis, author | Civil War tu the United States,” by George for loving husband or’ luver and children: | Of “The Mikado's Empire, and Ulustrated | A, Potter: "The Poverty of the People?” b the won who has the strongest maternal | BY Ozawa, of ‘Tokio, Within this tte | Charles Frederic Adama; “The Franchise -, 1 y Si ” by Willan Baird (Virginia); inathict ty, ax arute, the que of lowest. In | Cuodeclno the author clolins that the | In the South,” by rans Tecolpt of price by the publishers, 5 Mr, ‘Trevelyan claractorizes Henry Fox as | Mnister under whom he took oftiee (Lord | these sentences? telleet, the neureat akin to the animate, | Tedder will find traustations, condensations | 1 resident, Vorter on Mil by Div 8. C. GRIGGS & CO fhe hance, Bt eee i Mbit int ae mt crenptlon in Ce cemeareed Published by Harper & Bros, New York, | (p.24).0 Is thata true of falr statement? thd W fowe sieteties b Sette ainbods tine niu Jealian ae by G. bogota tat 2 U a eg denea, eynicisin, misdirected courage, an | clo: ¥ Assuredly not; but rather in tho nature ofa Ne had , # , 3 by fs, and superstitions, | Coditientton of thee Conmen Law," 25 Washington-st., Chicago. unequaled aoe cui of all that was worst words of lls disastrous and inglorlous ious, rather than | Willan M. ving, Lh + ‘ W LLB. wal . in tunan nature and least -adinirable in hue | Administration,” TOLLAND. “Ils appearance is 2 notable ovent.? | man atfalrs, . Nobaty, thought well | Macaulay sald of Fox: ‘Ho was, indeed, The Duteh provinces are not in themselves of itn except his wife, his children, and his | a great orators but then ho was the great de- so wonderful but that description of thelr i eux. "Fhe! ¢ Japanese teas, bel Iibel on her own sex, qiare ts nating really ‘The book ty quutine and 1 In the character of the fond, old mother? the | attractive. Sul the storles rend very much | —penn Monthly for Nove best of the people whose aequaintance wo | ke our own fairy stories, and may amuse | dhenen ft had the Yaundier, be Ing printed on are compelled to make. those for whom they are desizned. Some of {+ yellow ereantedlared paper net We all to the woodcuts are cleverly deslgned. Kk Its co o*’Mimour the Published by J. 8. Lippincott & Co, Ur ich, | Utd contests aby plu. ay : aes Locher by Thains Have is the parte’ ‘ Decry ual Fuuateial Ast 1a Ee atest mumber of the © English Meu of Let- ublie Schools’: * Enilish Grammar and\ CHINESE -HUDDIIRM, tors.” At ds ditientt to sew the ground of Mr, | Composition ";) " Miss” Martineau s and 9, elevating lu the bouk, Lov pervaniar but not n few hada kindly feeling | bater.”? And be was declared b itt to pecullarities of costumes, location, and sur- re lm, and liked him the better for his | be the best speaker that he over fi . ‘ tigehuinn aay Prtensetoa virtuwof which, | variety of MMUIOT Wis “quite ag remirkablo | Toundings may become tedious, ‘The platns t after all, he wars not more deyold then some | as the rielmess of his matter.” ‘The Duchess | of Molland—that “sort of transition between of his seemiler competitors,” of Devonshire was a shrewd observer, and | Jand and seat—whieh produce unntierabla Passing now to the son, at 5 years of age | sha thoucht Fox’s great merit was his amar ‘2 By Mus, BwIRKUEIAL, Price, $1.00, ennul oven to the traveler, are equally | Tho history of Buddhism ts at the prosont | Fux Ronrne’s complaint that Prof, Fowler | revi yof Prof, Abbutt. on “Tha Fourth a his father spoke of him as “Very well, very | img quiekners in selzing any subject. Ho | yread | day attracting special attention, Among the | has drawn all hls materkils for bis biography | Gospel.!? , Pit eesaatie : MOH uri ae netinatieg | BeHL and very argumentative.” He was pecans tevtinve ie particular tent bis know. RAT aiealeanteae Mette ie jearned atlteces on this subject Prof. Mas | of Locke fromhia twevolume work vith se Staten! eyhaeene ene Und fs Uiiatrustiva Horn a disputant, a sophist bred; frag more about What she is saying, and with | W' TrAyoler w) set Miller, of Oxford, Eng., 1s prominent, Iris | QULas inuch as asking his leave.” ‘The very LITERARY NOTES, . : ferails of Nahi A06 teeter Jia nurse he altenced, and bis tutor led, less ahs, than pn toot yale +e rite rian, the blogrupher, anid tho art lover, the ann hae er eel tie fe eer ea t first thing we see on’ opentng the book Isa | Mr. B.D, Blackmore's new stary will be imluagnc ography, It tw a bao! Tis eclueation was peculiar and Irregular In | wore you know of Mr. Fox's character, thy | Netherlands overtlow with rich material, | evident, however, that there Is yet roam for | rink ne fn nowledement on the part of the nue cy stowell’ rate? further Investigation In relation to the vas] thor of his hidebtedness chy Mtr Toure, Faw | cutltled, “Chiristawell: « Dartmoor Tale, rlows develomnents of Buddhism, whichis | people would eare to read more about | —Mr. W. Me Rossettl will contribute o one thiig in India and Ceylon, another jn} debn Lo than fs contained In these | series of pavers to the stlantle on the Burimah and Thlbet, and a still diferent | 0 pages, and the volume really. con- | Wives of the Poets.” : thing.In Chinw nnd Japan, Iths, therefore, | Wns all there Is to Beets —Miss Blanehe Willis Howard, author of with peculiar interost that wo read tho're- | Jolin Locke was the most characteristic of | “One Summer,” has another novel nearly’ | sults of the inquirles made by conmetent | English, philosophers, although he would | ready for publication, A schalars who ave a personal acquaintance | Hirdly be culled the grentest. Me was | ane three eomlus nuipbers of Scrivner’s . With this religion as It 1s found in the ex- clears caliu thinersant) erat a0 aa ta her Monthiy wif contain soiio tine portraits of * treme East, where It has come in contact |. Fowler appears to have prepared i volume | famous aetora, lvlng and dead, + with other systems and has fopght | fully equal to Its predecessors, Jn polut of —Nenrly 77,000 octavo pages will be taken its way through nearly 1,800 years, receiving | literary merit, In a most excellent and popue up with the “ Records of the War,” about to material modifieations In the course of fts | lar series, : be published by the Gavernment, + long-continued conflicts. A vollime has —"Wo and the World Mg is a book that most —Tho vollection of ‘Mr, Rusitn’s scattered. heen lately published on Chinese uddhlsm, foys will thorouR uy ends Tt iy watt by Jotters will shortly appear under phe charac. written by Josoph Edkiny, D. D,, of Peking, | Juliana Horatin Ewing,—0 lady who appearg | teristle tle of * Arrows of the Chica,” ~ Ching, which constitutes an Important cons |.to understand the wants of her youthful | —vhe death is announced of Miss M, Ie a tribution to the Jiterature of this subject, | constituents and to ninister to those wants | Charlesworth, the author. of ** Ministering dou! und to blame samowhat, to laugh Arr i ", " more’ you will admire the great features of t . ‘| rena aver: on the wlo, tho nat fnusings | Sogn ton, aid 1g fiat tea as Myancoworth | iy mild, —tho vast compredtenaton thar lakes Fitna TU oe tainty fe A ae "tied, baving nea begun, you will fot lay dowa uae | only 1 his father tuok lim from his books | 1p any subject, united to a candor and beney- fe ‘ t I Uithe ‘last chap 2 | and conveyed him to. the Continent on a | olence that render hin as amiable ng he ty | Hberty-loving people possessed the strongest Betnlated i uu ae ue teeeg, Ane Wey | round of ldleness au cUsetpation, AY, Spa, Hehe aie alitiny neat einattice Ae ae trot: Cite ty Wis Nfe at Jub at f se Y 0 f Witt, and or of Barnoveld's life vocketful of gold, and the parent took not a | the slay fl eit Less rors Meh He writing, and the names of Dutch artists aro 1 " on Tespecinl ied, But “whenever, r ieee pila 10 contrive, Aa poy sheullt poor, blameless or erring, © womin was In | familiar to every reader of iu art catalog. uU ssa Ss xaned, studied, and spent profusely the lay. | trouble, she always ys sure of f'| Strangely enough, the best descriptions ish allowaneo given hin by his fathor, Ho | champlon” tn Fax: dotted” mingses | of the country anit its Inhabitants - "aS Vel “3 se fie was cordially In Vn " tien a - Dy Trot. Davin Bwina, rice, $1.4 Was very fond ge mathoniatles, Peet wns resarded ‘a8 a young Hannibal | Mave beon glyen by two Itallun travel la vist tho nuthur of this volunie Ia always, y y e101 “whour dis sire had pledged from the nurs- | ers writing at an interval of nearly ecp best. Hy thought tlows naturally ina phite they ure entertaining, wideh ay 16 coi ery to the destruction of freedom; with a | 200 years from each other, Guiccinrdint terary fu att draps without wppurentafturt into | ford without graduating, b went to | forehead of brass and a constitution of fron, ary yllosnyted a Jiatoriulawitiswhteh que the Continent In 1766, Mw r ccompilahes tile work aro the ve rds Kile y imganered bindos of wit, wisdom, eloquence, Had hin traveling tn, {aly Wl daniel self in amount of netive distike equal te that | Work, translated from the Htallan by Caroling bore; sind cloar, erystulline thoughts, Iie aplece, notleed by Queens, treated as equals | Which a fewws and only a few, great Ministers | ‘Titan, has just been published, Its author i) of observation [a slngul; rave 0 onlle ~ Horeaion equally facies Ia Toros, outs andere | Uy Aubassadors, loslig thelr hearts inony | have enrrled to, the grave or scaffold ag the | might alnost bo called a professional tray found strong characters for biographical rf "1 ig uy hy ¥ 8 HEIL nwent to} forehead within two years. of his agen writingin the Sixteenth Century, and Do Speech he had continied to, attract to him. | Alels In the Nineteenth,-a copy of whose 4 vel Bt 33 % om Oo uy " Y ant neeeptably, A litte larger type would | Ciildren," a {ii tho pasviunate furvur of a devotes, and he fede palace und their monoy fn another.” Tn 1768 nesumulation of a Heaths icavo this fascinate | {leh , ls. “Constantinople,” tudies of | ‘The work embraces upwards of 450 bayes, fet ie ate ne aeetn gi ral int pare ye and other popular religious - 2 Munato und absotute truth as tho mind of @ child eturned to England, where he had been tt Miriyle Das sie that Ort Paris,” and “Morocco” were the works of | It seems to ts that the author might have | iy Sent plonganter reading. Itisn walle phi Mroveliy," eted to Parliament, while yet under age, luline wind Cariyla ie rte sute observer and of n student of tha | Riven the valuable contents of this volume | 2 eat boyish, Mfe at home, ab | ¢72the next number of tho Lelsure Wour —— Ho tuok hs seat ag a supporter of the Duke | delineation of tho sinatlest man 18 capable of { an acute observer and of i stu bra Rt Wwellten story af bostal : Sorios will Introduces a new binding. An A galt by a bookrallore, oF sont vy matt, past | af Grufion's Ministey,. and made hls ret | litercating the greatestinga.” Tho eonvergy¥ countries and places which ho viskted, And | within narrower mits, it le had arcanged | school, on shipboard, aud In forelgh tands, | Series will tntrod tged, of a shade slightly MiG ontucelpt of priew Ly the pubilstiers spoech In tho Louse ‘April 05, 1769, 2 feb, oF te solbuyiont, polhy frevelyan he hip hutest work on © Holland and Its People # aN materials ut : ulate hepyaiietrae ee 71 Dies Eusblovied als Tatea comes te darker and more durable than the old one, d untor Lord al ee, Pa Hlaw" 1 Sesse: erary me gen- | atic manner, It. is not ensy to getacon- | usin two volumes, belng a tirs! roan a 1 PAN-EW, MeCLURG & CO. | Eh Rimi haar ee beats | SRL Won a Ai ur ATR | Sept‘ bke woen oy tour | Heigl eof ie antes ocr | Stu unt uk waht agent | cc" Dearanny Dl Sale” nn i ‘Prenstiry, - tly, E He nddhisi frown: th ule work; for the | editions with hands I" vat 4 & 119 State-at,, Chicago, pus pF the Hanis of the Tpenanry Uae com. Janes Fox" will take rank among the trat | Jodrneylng for thelr own pleasure. Booksof | rigan nut Mey are nowhera distinelly pre | covers. Falry tales wit always: fugniaiy | ABELL hext, ‘The tirst volume tx In type, bug HISTO Prenmer, on the Marriage act, was disuiissed | of blographten! works, and sa most Inter | travel nra tuo often mere enlarged guide | sented together, Stull the whole ground ts | amusement and entertainment to 0 large {ta publications Js delayed until the secon dina. ‘ esting and valuable contribution to current.| pooks padded with aneedates of adventures | covered ii lasts and Wd origivot Hutdhisa | tiimot readers, du these huoka they wilt | volume bs ready, y Attlls period In lis history Mr. ‘Trevet- | terature, and Gusteated by points pleked up from re) F iN DI A. yan's “blography ends,—possibly, however, | Published by Harper Bros., New York, dens and sundry maine artieles, tn Judia and its history In Ching are clearly | find all the storles theycan want with the —feresa Aloysla Thornet' is the slg oily temporarily., Ags we have sald betiires We ie is true that Ve Amicts’ work is a fly glven tu the patient reader, Wildest Hgts of lnmglnation possible. ‘The | uatureof a new authoress, who gives her Shakyamlny afterwards Buddha, was born | woodeuts are poor aud not commensurate | persunal observations of arniy lite fa book Dy PANNY ot " by far the greater part of the book fs devoted ORY Oo 'N TIMES, most ‘excellent landbook, cordially come | in India, divar the boundary of Nepaul, B..) with the binding. soon to be yublished bearuyg tho thle * Kate. * wane, Yast diane sade phate wa preseutation of the suctal and politheat preter Mey Tae pa tat Le ho | Wended to all who may desire to Wander’) C, 02. ‘The Chinese dute, However, 8 about —The “Iustrated Catalog of the Parig | Comerford; or, Sketches of Garrison Lite.” , leer hithl levonds connucead wii peke teenie | athies of the realm, And so ndintrablo Is thls hy reas through the qualnt aid towns of Leyden, | 400 years earilur, Buddtisin wits dntroduced | soto of isso? fy n gem fy ity way, It ae Lord Beaconstleld fs revising his former: wie won geie aa tie Gidesr taGnedwoun: | lewerivtlve part of the work that it iy ex | Underitok sae tine nga, and has brought | Delft” Dortreeht, ar Rotterdam, it 1s some: | hnto China in A.D, 64, just when Christianity beter look: thin ‘the ano of the preceding | productions, and writing a news novel, THe Wleneururits stots, Tee g(bulous wealth and | titled to some space and considuration, tis | down his“ Mistory of Our Own ‘Thnes” to | thing’ more, tor’ lt fy 0 earefully written, began to inake Ita was tite the countries of salon, containing many. more iiltstrations | title of tie lew hover be. Bheymlons cas eae a gawd strutce olin all care really a pleture of British elvilization during | tho general election of 1880, ‘The edition | Wthough somewhat rambling, history of the | the West. Primitive Bucdlixin was n se take und reproductions of the prineipal works In | “edition deluxe” of his formur works Is tobe heyh jwacriplions of the dee the latter half of the elehteenth century, published by Harpars. fs In two vol Fou ¢ =i Gambling was one of tha most connnon | y * iportant places In the Low Countries, Sloth Guppy, 109 full page itustrattons, | vera, Eeory one. gambled. Lords ane | “welt volume contalning twoof tho English | And to this is added, or Inlerpolnud, the Volume, the test ls thet tadies, commoners and peasunts Kought the | volumes, go that thiysecond volume contains | critielsinsat an educate. Intellcent, ‘and cous uf rroacrlen of hivtorios | vveitament of the quuiine-table, And drink: | volumes three and fourog the London edie | scholarly man on the art and fleratire of Si urepacution bs the publisninehouse NY ascinutiny chutnelor ot ease | He Georgian era was sailing gnu sea uf hhensl during | BYve read anuel better books—ni0 ie plensl rorgl ru Wi “ snsive Blt 1 be Del "1 " F riot of Hire when a polltlen a prepier rests. tnother at a perlos eno ve | dbluas giving the writer's own views of his | Ing disquisition on the Jufelt wy a natOn and athelstic philosophy, Unged with myatlel sculpture. It Js the most elaburate publica: | mibilshed next year, and will Include, forthe it Aah Prec en an aT thon, In the way ata mere catalog fsued, and ae tne, tha famous “Lotters of Runny~ erimiee frapt all evita tn vatata Wiel Bide | yaluMble ase kouveLtT. | A vullectian of | ined.” A i . ly form a pretty’ i ha ealted newana, witerstoed by sume to | hese cutalous will uithuatel i —eterson Brothers, of Phiiadelphia, nave aan pee ee pertect rest, aid by athe | Hood unlotature gallery of the works of) po ctod an entirely uew and complety edition 3 tists from yort to year, ‘The present oar ty ers to signify the utter extinction of con. | ‘ ‘ uf ull the Works written py the well-kuown | sclous personality, ‘The system, however, puinbar comtaltis ently 400 yeprodiuetions Atierican authoress Mrs. Emma D. EB. Ne Of witch ombraced u beliof tu tumorkatity, eapectulty, preuarcah tor ertslovers witht lane editlon comprises forty-two volumes, ss and ull of whieh tncluded the worship of ‘The private papers of Marshal Berthter, | ft dlvinity, ‘The morality | fer the entalog, —The private pape is a Buddha ns a sort of divinity, | “The mo R | eepare gecouul of “The Boy travelers Iu | te Great Napoleon's eecentrio Chlef-of-Stutt has been often compared wit! ve beet Y thar o¢ Chelsie its Ealiiu at the Far Eust” fx entitled “Adventires of | Have been found In Berlli in a chest th 3 va Ye e | had not been disturbed for seventy years. t ‘undamental tinctions between the ‘wo Youths in adourney to Shum aud Java.” + 4 i ‘ iwe rand shaws how wonk are the motives | Phe work of compilation, preparation, and Sapulcotcart’ the cimmnune tu Betone at . oh Buddhisin furnishes to reforgs the | editing hus been done by Col, ‘Thomas W. Gemrber, Yeo, ‘The more Itnportant of the vielous and keep the virtuous In the pith of 5 Knox, and well and carefully done. ‘The ipers WH shortly be published " pright living. ‘The volume before us will (nding ty very handsome and appropriate, | Pepe el e's, (ruweh und present condition of most of the wt ing was equally: universal, A statesman ol | yon, The final chapter is devoted to a fairly | the comity he happened to be visiting, Mterature of th say ae y 1 4 the Gaveriiane nad the gee | apprentice in the relxn of Vitoria Is not y ‘bat th < wtof his tndentures, No ona enn study ty outemporaries, ‘There ts also a full and | on thelr country, so peeuliar and Ko unique ed tie pagua Ut the wurtdoundasty | yblle OF personal Wstory of the elzbtecttt | oplete Indux. noha ths comtionwenlths uf tho Content, biksbers, D, LUTHROP & CO, ventury, Without belig Impressed by th ) yr, MeCarthy deserves unusal credit for is ene thy swlin . is r fmmenge space which —drinkl . how it tnpreased hin, and, what ty tore to as ry ted ii, the ihental hurlzon. of th | he flr and inpartiat spirit in which he hs | the point, has shown himself to be possessed Lies xi A dingutar Book, «| voung, and the consequences of drinking | nopared his litstory, Particularly is this | of the aulity todo that very thing nec fo gery tltwular book bus just boon, ublaked | het of thetold,” As we turn over volun: ruw of this second volume, which 1s, insome |. ably, ‘To te pr erman, be sure he wag oly a traveler, a lady to wth ye ft PUrporis ta be weltten bys | after voluine we tind the samme dismal sto: espects, un hnprovement on [ts predecessor, tourist, a temporary sojaurner in the land'of thy Leopold £ of Be . rst dreaded a8 an avenger, an aki a dykes, water und whid ills, But he ts not 0 were ealieg Haut Lexy on ‘nerenudtaho thu nee Fubar tt satler auger uetuatl «s author fs un aetlve politician, a member of r Mterary pretender, atu y professes to nar | upr * | cotvidered nae gtarene, the tarrlaye | ourted and welcomud ax n frend, 6 phi varlinment, and ® strong partisay, ‘The | rate wi Ae guy ait uly iota hare W Nigh value to every Investigator by | and the book 1s hitended for a hullday work, | —Durig vacation the English Spelling. adeuteds Lae mull aud void. ‘fo thie th’ nito witness the Jofiest minds) and tt «feets of the work are tainly of afyle and ("As a chizen of artloy Italy—where art | the department of comparative religions, ana | lhe success of thw first work was remarks | Reform association has been busy... The tran, br bur hives Pate Only ‘uhaclas rightest wits redueed: to the most barre husu consequent upon Re necessary super- | W848 cradled jond asguwed tts most magni: | will prove instructive to all eareta readers, | able, but there Js ho reason, why it showlt tase of collecting nad petting Specimens of pgHon and Thurried tito with Dace nd humubrions topless talking ot oltt age 4. jelallty, ‘There ore errors in tho Hsts of | CoNt proportlons—his comments on Duten | Mt fs voltme seventeen th the English | notte equated by that of thts book, Thucuun- | schemes of reforin has been successfully ac~ f ber ped Oe was elected iS > au e's fellow i art ary int ¢ q c S31," yoy lected King ut | even and forty; urzing a fellow-sutferer 1 : _ | ar iterestiing and sigularly free frou PESO nAe atler imareled a aaa os tur hhneelf with Morello cherries, In ord: ‘ubluet Suisters and some In the applien- prejudles. Of ithe says; F : bes Klay of the Freuct. so develop a erisis in the malady: or rele” uw of quotations, 80" als one ur two eve Wiait that art woik! necessarily bemigit foreign Philosophivat Library, and has | crles deserived are beconlag more ani ui complished, and all-those that scould be atm te ln LR Tee NT TOW, and what ts knuwh only increases | printed have been tssued to the niembers of, (Chinysy Buddaisua: A Voluiue of Sketeh- | we desire to kuow wore, ‘Thefucts are hers | the Assoclulios. ‘Lhere now Tenalus the

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