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e . 4M UmiCAGO TRIBUNE:.. SATURDAY. JULY 16, ts1—SIX'THEN PAGS adapted for shortstey of the ten Jove stor time ares Dolly rs; An Heiress: Lanne and Ifer lero; Dick Halliday's Wiles 3} Meyer; The Charmer Keeleston’s Thanks;lying ; Heart. Seg} ‘—""Madame Delphine” has been issned in hook form ‘ane SHAG 2 NETS, sinall voluine, Jt is a story of “Old Creole Days” and takes us gain Into tha inexplored country to whlelt Sir. Cable Introduced fis rendurs in inently suggestive, whether or not th ler assenis to all the views propouniled In them. As we have before tntlinated, our country has seldom produce a fresher or more original writer than Dr, Bushnell, —"'The Bible Defended and Atheism Re- buked,’* fs.1 reply, In paper cover, to Robert G, Ingersoll’s lectures, “ Mistakes of Me nd “Skulls? * Whit Afist We De to Be Saved? ‘Sha writers Allan 3, Magruder, a lawyer of Stephens Clty, Vay 1. J. Hale & Son, of New York, are the publishers. Mr. Magru- der devotes fourteen chapters tolls reply and. NEW PUBLICA ~~" TARPER’S HONTHLY MAGAZINE FOR AUGUST, ere is not a toueh of paint on her, ant her dress, which tits her perfectly, I4 strangely ‘siiuple. If Lo have any skit in reading the Jooks of women, there — Is sonething of a higher Ie yet Mugering In that soft, pleading fice, that sie half hides from me by her large crimson fan. Some women have a ginnce that makes ine long to talk to thom, Just os clear ren-waler makes mo Jong to pluie fn it. ‘Phat is 2 pretell culored picture of a member of Mr. Saun- ders’ “benpficent profession”! Mr. Vernon’ dined with the Ducligss, Lord Surbiton, and A Romance of tho Nincteonth Contury—A Curious Book hy Matlock. Chari t) Jobin Margaret Freyer'’s Handicapped—Baby Rue—Lovo-Sto- Alr, and Mrs Grantly, the tater nn Ameren Othe Grandissines” vang "Old. Creolu | argument. Ln wany , Be ? 1 ‘ s ‘ Pe parts the answer to Mr, CONTAINS: ries—Among the Hille—The Pucliges dette gta vworluty wae | Davies cay stary is malfite one, yet, ex. | Ankers is direst sant convincing. ¢ AVG om i t 2 Sik . ‘| dom-to Mrs, Grantly, Inquiring es te. My, | milsltly told. A Creole. mother, Delphine | would not, however, iudorso some positions anette Bliss Family. Voron'’s history: Never We tea vcicey | Garraze,ling adauhter Olive, Tho latter loves | of the writer, Iv exposes many of Mr. In- : t i. £B. ALDIICL'S paper . Entitled “A DAY IN APIRIOA, Boautifully Mustrateds Capt. Lemaitre Vignoville, 2 white. man who would marry the quadroon’s daughter but for a Loulsinna law preventing such iuptlals. ‘The mother; so that Gllvoway inarry the ninth slic lovers denjes that the glrl-is her daugh- gersoil's assumptions: and the fallacy of ils Argtments He clearly shows ine multitude of casus by reason and facts, Dutoccasionally he assumes untenable positions, as when he maintains that sheol and: hades mean the my dear, ‘about a frlend’s history, and ther yout can niwass stick up for blin wlth a clear conselence.’s Col. Stnvleton oeepies atuble nent by. He plays the part of vilinin in the Unbolief Inthe : Eighteenth Century— . : ¥ 1° —The and eos, “Lalk nt her Grace's table fs somewhat | tar, antl dies-from grief at her own tumother- | gruve, ‘hore is hardly wn fistance of auch & {HE AURRENDEL OF CORNWALLIS, Building ‘Eras—The Bible lively. “Lord Surbiton! wail Mrs. Grant | ty get, She goes to the confessional: fieaning in the ‘whole fuible. Hindes and ahieot Anoxcoodingly Intoresting payor by . ys ness J eat show you one virtuous “Sess ma, fathor, lor I baye simed.” Bho | are used either to denote the wortd of de- : Atheism. IL 1%, JOMUNUTON, : parted apirits or the place of future punish. pustratedt from paintings by Reynolds, Stuart,Troms woman here. Her morals 1 nin sure,: are tha iments more frequently. the former than the “ strictly uninperchable, y you Oto 1 unt reoltes ber Ave, ‘Chon sho tiesitates, ».#Q Olive, my own daughter! them In black-silk stockings vonged, and was still, Pére Joromo ay 4 . Bath and Coploy, and. drawingd by Wy Ls Ubeppards ‘ — Magazines—Book: Lord. Surblion eyed. Mrs. Grantly with n | wate bueno sound onto. ite looked reeoune Mec Sdagruder lind signified ils reatiuces sy : Bible Handbook ‘agazines—Books Mr. Magruder had signified ils reattiness to Jouk of. suinawlint siulster gallantry. “If | the window. . She was knoeliug, with her force | trent Mr. Ingersoll in pubile debate, and hn ‘Ate poor, Received—Literary and Soicn- your feet and ankles,” hy said, "are ns lovely | bead resting on her arina, motionless, Tuccived no fepiy throws mauy hicathe, te “ALMOND IBLOSAORI,* ; tifle Notes; - : ‘1 as your hands and wrists, J slifl proudly pay Ha repeated words of absolution. still sho blait to. bo read by those who have read Mr. . ¥f, the ti ti io Notes, the bol, even if L hinve the sad fortune ta wit | dig notstic’ ra Ingersoll’s lect b ¢ MARGARET VELEY, tho tilusteatton for which, ‘ a it’: And ent “dy daughtor,”"ho sald,“ go to thy home in | lngersoll’s lectures. . : Meee tpy ABUWY. and ongraved by COLE, is made tr And now enters ou the seona the ero: | noaeg.s Hut aus did nut move, Io rose hastily, TE _ araiuispieeo to tho Number; * bas Ino, member wimber two of the “beneficent | Popped trom the box, ralsed Horio biserine, | j7 Lie L- Clark, of Edinburg, in publish trot LITERATURE, profeasion,” -’Stunding vloso tojthy door was | and calied hor by naine, : iny their series pf Pa reesei for Bible. . r ———e na tall English Bir In compniy of an elder “Mudame Delpbing)" ' Classes, Anan whi an i a commentary ou ge concluslonyof SAMUEL ADAMS, DRAKE'S | , ROMANCE OF TI! NINETHENTIL | Indy.:. . . There wasa proud reserve In| terhead fell back on his elbow: foran ine | the Westminster Confession of Faith, by tha Rev. Jolin MePhersen, ly doing a guod serv. ice to the Christian publie, A question inight be ralsed in regard to the proprigty of calling such a volumes Handbook for Bible-Classes, But passing this, we venture to say that the exposition of the Confession before us, thouglf very brief, is among the most satis- factory we have met with, ‘The dilticultles are in the subjects mther than tn the author's { earles of papors on the ‘WHITE MOUNTAINS, IMustroted by W. 11. GIBSON; stant thoro was life iu the eyes, —it gilminercd,— it vanished, and tears gushed from bis own and fell upon’ the fkentlo faco of the dead, as be looked up to Heaven and cricd: “Tord, iay not this sin to hor chargal” —" Ajnong the’ IN!Is §h a very ordinary work, negatively poets @. goud, because it fs not positively bud. ‘Therois nothing In {t to attract especial attention. and there are her xraceful movements ant attitude which, inascene Hke that, seomed-at once to dls tinguish her. She was vary Spal with a brow aud throat like o maging ia blossom $ whilst her lips, in the words of Sulomon, seamed by contrast “a thread of. scarlet; nid her large, clear eyes were dark us the darkest violet. She stood therein the glare and pilttor liken Yreahiirs from another world,” 1 aa CENTURY. ‘ This.is@ curlous.book,—curious: because written by.an English writer 13-0 story of to-day, nud beeause of ‘the plainness with which {¢ deais with forbidden subjects. Mr. Matlock is not.an unknown author. It ts buta few years since Lis “New Republic” A follpaca Uilustration of Ienitice’s poony “Tho ‘Parca, DY B.A, ABBEY; startled the Iiterary world ns. revelation of | This is Cynthia Walters (daughter of Slr Ki thonannds who suffer ny -tmuel If nut more | methods of treating them. It is not to be he third and Jast part of Dra. L. W.UITAMPNEY'S | the existences of a new xenius who would { ward Walters) Introduction to the characters | than Hétty Adains without asking the world ston of Faith, «| giv e — | ofthe story, Later the twolndlesare brought | to read of their tribulations. ‘The moral ts 0 yeurs azo, Been Peres ae sive to yovalwslbitg ‘link He inact neoiled Into the Diichess! party. Miss Wallers sks good one, und the story at least pleasantly | when Biblical exegesis was far less advanced PORTUGAL, a new casbond anew direction, His satire | ora Surbiton if vy the objects of nmbition | and carefully written. >| thatent present, would precisely express at + 1 Finety ttuaratea; | a8 of tho Keeriest, his argumentation closo, | ry the clilef ubjects uf life," aud reeelves thls | wo are Inlebted to the publishers of the | Sl poluts the views even of all Calvinistic is Mlustrations apt, and his styls earnest, | epigrammutic answer: “Sen in general are ‘Serles”. for advaies sheets of Presbyterlans at this day, One author seems * No-Name L the -Intest addition to the-series, entitled + Baby Rue.” ; This has been called an In- dian?! story, which 1s a misnomer so far ng it linplics' a. classiffention ofthis volume with such works as * Ploughed Under” or *Eild- den Power,” whose ‘sole - purpose Is to tell how terribly abused the Indians have been by the agdnts of the United States Government, Toa certain extent the Government is ar- raigned even in * Habs Tue! for- its Indian foley, but this is not the main purpose of he -novel. Jt i9 a romance in which the fortunes and misfortunes of the Lecszinksk: family are mixed up with! Pawnees, Senf- noles, and Comanches, the regular army, Phil Kearney, slaves, chiefs, and svouts, It ig as much a story of army life ag "an In dian story’ ‘The'little herolne—the infant datighter of Licut. Leeszinsky and Mar- garet Cartaret—is cuptured by the Indians, and the stories of her sojourit among then and of ber ultimate rescue, furnish the ex- euse for tho scenes of Liudinan fighting and of eamp Hfe written by one who is ovidently famiffiar with these subjects, A brothor to necept without seruple the entire Confes- alun as he understands it. This, however, is far front being true of all ministers in the Free Church of Scotland or in the Presbyty- rian Churches of the United. States, We commend the volume by Mr. McPherson to all thoughtful and candid Tenders, LWP, the puppets-of three forces—mmbition, love, and hunger; butdove destroys tho appetite; ambition destroys love, and fashion absorbs, or at any rate sways, ambition.” Vernon, who has-begun by admiring Miss Walters, and who desires to nnke nmendstor a tender paasiice with the “lady with the red fan,’? witnessed by the-tall, Engllstt girl, drives them home In lls carriage, as they prove to ¢ neighbors who have recently tnken the villa next to his awn. ‘The way isthus paved for, an. intimate acquatutince, — Menn- while Campbell arrives. to spend a night with iis friend. He Is traveling to meet the object of jis adoration and obtain a final an- swer, and proinises to tell italph her name when liv returns, The Jatter visits the Wall- erses at thelr hume, having known them two days. iv vomes pon Cynthia unawares, In the garion, and proceeds to make Jove ina most rapturous manner. He-begs leave to call her, “My sister, my, love, my dove, my undefiled,” and adds, “If T knew. that you would never know it, or that, knowing you would forgive or forget It, 1 feel guite sure Moreover, he took his characters from lite, borrowed from -“ Vivian . Grey” and “Lothair® the <form of his titerary bul musque, and thon’ preached pointed lessons with all the vigor of strong, earnest convic- tions, - Otho ‘Laurence, Dr, Jenkinson, Mr. Cope, Mr. * Herbert, Mr.* Leslie, “and Lady Ambrose were speedily recog- nized, but- none’ tho- less wero thelr eplgrama’ ‘rend and tho fidelity - of the portraits enjoyed, The “ New Republic” was a inarkéd success, In fnet, it was the Hterary success of 1878, and was universally read éyen by those who failed to appreciate the full meaning of tho subtitle, * Culture,” Faith, and Philosophy in a Country House,” ‘Then Mr, Mattock branched off In another (rection,—still, . however, maintaintug. the harmonles,—and In a general way continuing tho philosophic: dissertations of hig earller work, ‘IIe bolleved and still. believes, -prob- ' antmportant and timuly panor, antitted »WATEIt ROUTES YROM THE GREAT US “NOUR WENT,'* : By FREDENIO G. MATTER, = Alustroted by maps and plans; badlight{o} paper, of a ratrospectivo character, writ- aby JAMES T,. FIKLDS during hia Jost illness, Entitled THEN 3% 8 MAGAZINES, . The numbers of the Living Age dated July 2 and July 8 contain articles on “Sone National Characteristics of European Socle- ty; “A Last Word on’ Disraeli”; “Doy- cotted’”; “Sir Henry Taylor on Carlyle's ‘Heminiscences?”; "The Visions of Sane Persons”; “ Mattie, the History of an Even- ing’; "Tho Wit and Wumor of Lord Benc- onsfeld”; “The Reviston of the New Testa- ment”; “A Japanese Bride; “A Pilerim: age to Cyprus in 1305-06"; “The Shut-Up Houses"; with an installment of “The Frere's,” by Mrs, Alexander, and the usual Abumorous Georin Sketett, ontitted THE VARIOUS LANGUAGES OF BILLY MOON, By It. M. JOHNSTONS : MISS PICKETT, ABhort Btorys : Bee S: i ASSASSINS AND NIWILIOTS ' i foe TWO BERIAL NOVELS—"A Laodicean,” by 5 a ¢ THOMAS HAUDY and “Anne,” by alsa COMAZANCE | ably, that “lita ts worth living,” and forelbly | its aneden seaneandesomee hat like gaat in Sener ei Jove with Biargnrct, imeies | SMCUNEo£ poetry, TOMER WOOUSONE WE, “Fa yet clearly gave the reasons for his | * Faust” “Nearer nnd nearer. to himself | Ainhachayna, the daughter of an Indian |, Mucmitlans Magazine for July if od a - falth, ‘The spirit of lls. work: was deep- is reve his ante sompanton: She, ns {spells Chior, I is’ a rather complicated story of foltowting tabla (of content a se am, Yooma by : ly religious, “and: his ‘firm bellef was in | boum wibieo tii ed wien i re %, He | uneven texture, but on the whole well spin Gasnlrie ee. ug ure} ont onpa Mey Ae 4, BABAR ©, JEWETT tho ulthinate triumph of the rellgions priuele | Was sensible of the warmth of her face cloye | our and with carefully. selected threads, At | Profi J. Re Seeley; je Portrait of a é and : 6 ulllinate tritmph of tho religions privel: | ty iin: wmoment- more and he tid dong | tines it is thrilling and fascinating, audison | Lady,” by Henry ‘James, dr. Chapters pies LOUISH CLLANDLER MOULTON; ple. Life was something noble and solemn, | what he said he lov to do,—heliad kissed ‘work of Neti AXXINKAXLILS A Pe nt” French the whole a pleasin », dealing P ep need her on her proftered lips. * ont Me spars nantly Tae ip patblet gaits “The touch reeatled her to herself. ‘Go,’ with barier an h to many, ae iste ‘tie eOuatio ere neat HA Worelicuse And other interesting matter. Ce eee et hotes ot the ee ANE ie | shasald, ‘go. You dont know what it fs | §bpendlx. eontalnine io sucelist, lista Intirmaries,” by Stanley Lane-Poole; “Tha - torlalistle tendencies of the age, And now | you gro, tioline tome?” the ainsky family: trough the Aah ale | virst Enudigh Poet," by. William Allingham; this earnest champion, entering the Ilsts 7 ages, appears to be out of place, and to add a A i So the story runs along. Col, Stapleton shows Vernon a morecco book of plato- graphs, “Such as in England the police would selze upon.’ which is the inenns of reveniing to bin’ Cynthin Wolters’ true cliar- Reter when he ‘finds it in her possession. Meanwhile he goes on falling in love, and in nifit of jenlousy flirts with Mrs, Crane, “a woman who could kiss with her eyes almost ng tnequivocally as. with -her Itps. Several times during the afternoon she had already done this with the former; and they had not many ninutes been left alone with the ten- Mae before shu repeated the operation with the Intter.”” ‘Vernon aguin visits Cynthia, and in a* téte-a-této in the garden. tults eikle, f “Tn Wyoming,” by Prof, Archibald BRS. LL.D. ete. ’ The Fortnightly Review for July has the following contributed articles: “ Conelliation with Ireland,” by the Edita: rederick Pollock; “Italy: Hor He Foreign Polley,” by A. Gallenga; “ Victor wo’s New Volumes,” by George, Saints- “Compound Patktieal Hentls,” by Her- bert Spencer; ky” by Sir David Wedderburn, Technical Eduentt in Saxony,” by B, Samuelson, M. P.; 4 nothing to the merits of the novel itself. BLISS-FAMILY GENEALOGY. Mr. J, Womer ‘Biss, of ‘Norwich, Conn. hos just published a iiited edition of the family record of the Bilss emigrauts who -eane to this country In 1635. The result of Iis labors 1s before us in the shape of a large and handsome volume comprising over 800 pages In fino type, and giving 1 comprehen- slve genealogical record of the family for over 85 years, The records given in this work’ are connected and: continuots, and aguin'to battle for hls queen of love and beauty, uses a weapon to which we are wn- accustomed, and fills arOle the menning of which, frankly, we donot more than half comprehend, Ilis’ “ Romance of the: Ninc- teenth Couttry” in treatmicntand characters is. more In the style of a work by Feuillet, is more after tho method of a caterer of public favor through.:au appeal to Its: lower tastes than sucha bookas would havo .been ex- pected from so eartiest a writer os Mr.* Mal- lock, .: We have sult the snine clean-cut sen- "4, ae ‘ Harner’s Periodica HARPER'S 'MAGAZINE, Ono Year, HARPER'S.WEEKLY, Ono Year. 4.00 HARPER'S BAZAR, Ono Yenr. 4,00 HARPER'S YOUNG PEOPLE, Ono Yoar.., 1.50 Is, on 3 ‘The Land Laws,” by Sir Robert. ‘Torrens; * Bl- actnlltei and reo Trade,’? by Emile de La- yeluye. . . HBARPRV’S FRANKLIN’ SQUARE LIBRARY: & ‘weekly pubjication, contulning works of 'I'ravel, Blography, History, ‘¥iction, and Pootry, at prices sanglog from 10 10.25 conts por numbor. | Full list of :Marpor's Franklin Square Jdbrury will be fuentahed | tuiices,~ tho vsnme lengthy - metaphoric: | of iis feelings for, her. Her better | cover thirteen generations bearing the faniily | ‘The opening article In theNietcenth Cent- gratultously on application to LARPER & buoTH- | al analyses, the ‘same abnornially sharp | nature strives for the mastery, and she | name, commencing at/about 1550, and have | Ury for July is by James Anthony Froude, BHB, +, ee bits of: repartee, the same philosophic views | trics to show him.what she really J& She | occupied over twenty years in compilation. |. 20d Isentitled “Che Early Life of Thomas tells him to“ boware of her,” but he will not listen: Once.again shu yields to lily embrace, “He felt her yield onee more like a branch that) breaks‘ slowly. ; [er hand was on lil: of life and “praiso ,of ‘religion and religions failucnces It is‘ auch ey boule as Bo.guy cn Li at lock: could: have-written, vand-y v1 f tlint “Ate. AMallogk shoitld Carel ‘The paper iy an Huteresting, one, and Js mainly composed of letters to Carlyle from, his mother, his father, Irving, and others, When hesitating as to what career “PeHANPER's CATALOGUE, comprising the tes of between throa and four thousund volumes, ‘will be sent by wail on recoipt of Nino Cents, ‘They are ng nearly complete’ and perfect as practleable;. treating ns they do of 2225 Bliss families resident In Amerien, coluprising fe? st smany will that ¢ 1 i 5 eel about 9,600 descendants bearing: the name of | he should eb irvin tes Adarens tek iw ie | have swritten | ibis too inuoly tn. the sama Rye eps rine 1a Neal ait vats can*| Biss and. about. the aume,iuinuer In other eal ieay:that yon inays reaper. 1b your logal YRPER BROTHERS, Franklin Squire, WY, jin opinions ot CRS Hore Renn TS | oe a soe oth: | Bae pean ea Bee aaeemsuameny about | acai, provided oy yo wil ee Zour ipa . 7 pats = “by” ty Jo w iH et vast? | and there Is too open :au -unvelling of social ing Ale ehe eae youruae ask for noth: Sprhigield, Ainss,. and continued by’ My, Syl- question of tno obstactes. ue remaimbor, itis inunorality,. too. free” anwumasking of sins which. are wisely kept ‘concealed—however eloquent- the ‘Inuguaye used—to comniend the book for general rending, In the "New Republic,” its ‘readers “will: reendl some re- unurks made by Mr, Sturks and Mr, Saunders: “Sin, Lord “Allen,” sald Mr. Storks, "1s 0. word that. tins helped to retard moral and Bocll progress wore than anything. Poti not want of knowiedge alone that impedos, but want of instruments for muking that kKnowledgo available, This you know better than L. Now, my view of the matter is, that your knowledge, likely very soon to surpass in extent and accu- racy that of most of your coimpeors,”is to be made salable, not by the usual way of adding friend to fricnd, which neither you nor I are enough patient of, but bya way of ‘your own. Known you must be before you can be cin- goog woinan. Well, “shail f tell you the truth ?- ‘Lo make me fit to give what you are asking for, you would have first to cast seven dovils out of mufrs '. Lam worse,’ she ox- elatmed Ins whisper choked with ‘sobs, * am Wares for worse, than any Mary Aag- ene * an : This was plain talk, yet Ralph ‘still failed to understand, and’ (ually she admits: “1 Vester Bilss from 1848 to 1863, and undertaken by tha’ present compiler in, 18%... The family has been traced te one ‘Thomas Bliss, "who was: born in England about 1550, 'Tho nane tins been’ traced from the Norman French Biols, The lnistory of the American family begins with the Burl- tau brothers, George Bliss and ‘lhomns Blizs, Jr, who came to America to escape religious: A; VALUABLE AND : INTERTAINING WORK. * | fs wood or bud, but thinking makes It so; an 0 Nt iy : vee ployed.” Known you will not be fora winning, A s £ an- tho property,. leart: and soul, of | persecution, landing {n- Boston in 1005, ‘Cha \ PRIMITIVE SUP ERSTITIONS, tho Srrporelt tions apd smnrildl ven i vwhlel eet sro ak rt by on ie unnntural | arrangement of the matter In the book 19 ad- Autsnoting, ascoimiudatiog inane bub for ae : 2 See Recor oer y id Tee ait he | ifatuntion his. love | ‘conquers, and }-mirable, and a prominent and pecullar fent- | tan, Now, tostabliate this Inst. charactor, aud ‘TheOrigin of Primitive Superstitions; and thelr De- | banned as sin hus caused more than half the ure ig the voluminous index wherein the lis: still Is her. anxious lover. ‘You are acomplete mystory to nie,” he says, and she plainly answors: ““ You inust be, I think, o very Innocent-minded person, or you would have understood St by this time... . If I wore not a® tnd. Leould deseribo my own character far better and more tersely than you have done, only, unfortunately, the only yeu takonfar higher grady thao ‘auy other, How ure you to establish -it? Just by ourself betore the public ae frat ‘Mnd vent for your no- Uons. Get. them tonguo; upon every sub- ject got thom tongue, not upon law alone. You cuntot at present get thom olther utterance or audlence by ordinary couverse. , Your utterance ia not the most favorable, It convinces, but tragedies of the world.” . . . . “We think “It, for instance,’ said Mr. Saunders, ‘a ver sid thing when a girl is, us we call lt, rulned, But it is wo really that make all the sadness. Shots rulned only because we thinak she ta 80. ‘And: I have little doubt that that higher philosophy.of. tha: future that Mr. Storke namo of any person mentioned jn the book may readlly be found.’ Not only is the name of every Bliss given, but tse ever person intermarrying and. every person al- Iuded to Jucidentally, and every town re- ferret to throughout the volume, so thnt, If a porson’s residence is known and fils given ‘Yopwent into the Worviip of Spirita, sna the Doc- tine of Spiritual Agoncy Among the Aborigings ‘of erlea, ; BY RUSHTON M, DORMAN, ‘aya With tMuatrations. - Largesvo, Extra cloth, $3, “A yuluable trestisa on tho buried fatthe which. In the diferent intellectual atrata of tho spiritual world, are all ’} spenks of will go far, some day, towards * . ore ‘| Hic Madina as be funni cuubra®= | solving tie grent question af women's sphere | Wort Leould uso ld hot ganerally found tn w | Wane Comer ea oe ty Tenere Oty gap | does uot porauade, and fa only a ery fow iL This towarsuble Yook comes happily at atime | OE AetON by Its Fecogmition of prostitution 28 | am T ooking well tomght?: Why dowtyon | coules have been printed of this valuable | Your audieuco ta hoy. are genorally (£ then the atudy of archwolouical und othnologieat | Alt honorable sand: beneficent profession "— | vise ing, and tell me how soft and pretty 1.| werk, which should be In the hands of overy | excludy inyself) unpillosopbical, unthinking averiva. a fi meee ‘as ay Orie i . | words and who give you Ilttle Justiou In tha .re- putts conttibutton to archwolvgy In ite socond or | their’ coffee and clyats tnt Mr. Mallock In- | Yo tale to cmlels Hike mo? It is-not now | Work of reference. i Gialy Decadge ou mika. thelr VANE OF Rolfe We...» Kvun for roaders who ara obwadents in thie Hold ¢ hes tore, latorust!—Now ‘ork Event Pe 5 author hos made an entertaining and vatn- tudy.nnd tho tuxchor und thy scholar in this mut of anthropological sclanco will ucouw- Paty bin with unabated Interest und clove attention {hroyzhout tise wide Held of his Invostimution."—Chi- qo Evening Journal, ‘For ante by all Hooksollors, or will be sent b; Ral, puataga propald, ou recalpeotthe preeby 4B, LIPPINCOTT & GO., Publishers,: estou fittle justice, or even mercy, in the ren- contre. ‘Therefore, my denr friend, some other way ja tobe suught for. Now pauso, if you be not convinced of this conclusion. If you be, wa +) anull proceed. 1f you bu tot, read again, and you will aoe it just, and as such admitit. Now, what way {sto bosought for? 1 know no other thun tho press. Yuu buve not the pulpit as I have, aud where, perhaps, I have thoadvantage. You uve notgood and: Intluential society, — £ koow nothing but the pross for your purpose. possible sunderstand her. She reveals: to nim her life—and Col, Stapleton’s share in it. After the shock ho resolves to help herre- deen her Ife, And herecomesin the moral, Ralph isan: unbullever in tlie Geginning, “My unhappiness,” he hns sald, * arises not from having no womin to: love, but -from having no God to believe In? But now hg ,exclaimss, “All my lite is turned into ‘oni long muto* prayer for you. Scales have fallen fram my eyes; I see now what troduces us In his: last literary venture,—a novel of English soctety to-day. Is the author a believer in what these two worthles prenched’ 80 lustily? “Ralph: Vernon is &.contiiunstion of Otho Laurence, m- though Miss Walters has no‘followship with ‘Miss Morton, . We meet. constantly with membors* of Mr, Saunders’ “honorable and boneficent. profession,” and our philosopliia hero enjoys thelr company more than we do, * THEOLOGICAL WORKS. It reflects credit on the liberal spirit of the Trustees of the Cunningham Lectures, who are members of the Free Church of Scotland, that the lecturer chosen by.them for the year 1880 was tho Rey, Joln Cairns, D, D., Princi- paland Professor: of Systumatic ‘Theology and Apologetics in’ the United Presbyterian - Ve have “yprofessional beauties”. and mar. Colle; Dr, ; Cair ofall: knowl. | None ure $0 good as thor, two. the dine | ry vho' never saw before, and that fs the meaning of Lsed Bo na gracefully acknow Dury Review and Blacktwood's Magizine, Do nat goa. EUR Anbar Mater the nae fied woe Munna eon venanthy bibntoete Christ's loye for iien,—his Jonging for their | edges the honor.thus done him by represent- ature away and ae The ono aur not it for, the I 7 | Intrigue, | Huabatils conventently binder | snivation, » My sight {a very feebla; I am but | atives of a brancli of the Church of Scotland rhe bain nut el lou ies: Mote oes Trea : A NUMILEST PRINCESS bauche. A’ disreputable Duchess md gave | 8,BOor polite: to. God. Rove tara fale to which he does not belong,—nn honor the | pee ee eee en ae conic od muthes ¢ | eral disreputable Lords are Included in:the.) Omen tins made a be! 4 | lke .of which Is common In the free deiom- Tontles, Bl ales, Rencral Htorature, history, and Ralph discovers that Campbell's loved one is no other than Miss Walters herself. Tho two meet ata masked bail, During a walk In the garden Cynthia falnts, and ltalph goes enst of this “Romance of the Ninotuenth Century.” And the herolne—well, to speak, mildly; woman of the world; to say of the town”. sounds coarse, ond that is ono politics, you are as ripo ns the average of thelr writers, Mackwoud's Magazine presouta bud company, L confess; but it nia furnishes'a good fleld for fugitive writing and good Introduvtions Inatlonal Interchange of this country, but somewhat raro {n Great Dritain, -Dr. Cairns? six lectures, now published by Harper & ue ee Gov: leurely deetttn The Basten suturdas: 3 Itiscertainiyan . woning Guzettesnyas “A Nthi a as? \< 4 . vot | t0. gat Some water, Ie iy dressed as n Span- to ancloty on one aldy of the question, "This list sing praetor eee tarrp mee Me guality, Aes Bfalinale knows how toby old ignpeddier, Col. Stapleton passes, and Ralphs Hroks of New York, onetiigs With vt an advice, | ounfosa, fg uywinat iy cousclenee, au the rovolutionary arpect that at present | {lis Walters js n lovely, tasoliiatiig Engen | hatred masters Min. He springd for Is | Pendix, forma neat little volume of 210 | Lam tnelined to blot tf out, for dd 1 nut rose Mlorsit,!* : bribe peat ert aerate aid throat, and the Colonel draws a revolver and | paxoa.. It 1s. tho author's abject tu consiter | salietiod tint you were to use your por for your. The Literary World says: “'Canuot somes nate ‘tho mask of: &- decont, - honest | $0018 hin dead, et {3 found where | unbelief <in. the eighteenth century ag con- | Yourliving. Welters iu the encyclopedias, ex- iF get w copy of this hook tothonew Cars | Wepts bie) minds Ot! O. Cecont | fact, | Vernon left her, dond of tart disease.” trasted with earlier and Inter history. ‘Tho | cept of leading articles, do not xet out from tho ty ony bla wife never sullen as It le, °A i ev ha Meek a ears”. the mist puch feasunimary of this book, Itmay first leoture..fs.on"unbellef In the first four | crowd; but writers in the Mevtew come out at thet Princess’ would make her ¢rambl t Ne Cate cldert: Bot ver, contesacs to | be apleturaot Knglish society life, It may inlewaa-contre once aud obtain the very opinion you wunt,— The New York Tribune suyar eae tthe RO mot hid canmeaiont tie | 88 tint: tess English drawing-rooms ure centuries ag contrasted with unbelief in the | opinion ainony the intolligont and ‘netive men yor, with’ o oF uien, an aH a th H° | filled with Cynthia Walters, Mrs, Cranes,and | elghtconth century. ‘Ihe -contrasts noticed | in avery rank, not among tho sluggish savaus fidelity, even in live Immorality, and then | 4, Whit xood Is accomplished by tell- | aro, that” Christianity, ‘then .clalmat the | alone. : j turns Up her eyes, folds her hands, and utters pie itudes “about Joye, and sympathy, aud igher emotions, Such » churacter would be repulsive tnless skillful hands. The ob- jection Here te°that it 4s made the reverse, ing of It is Mr, Mutloc! cynic? Slr, Leslle told us that a cynte was ‘an Inverted confessor. perpetually inaking eneimles for the sake of what he knows to be false.” Ant Vernon himself gays that a cynic la a fool- June, 1817, he wrote to hia mother: It ylves.mo ploagure to hear that the bairos aro ut school, ‘Thore are fow things in this world more yuluuble than knowledge, and youth ts the portod for acquiring it. With the exception of tho rollgious and moral Instruction which I bad nome of rellglous -Nberty;.now unbellef; that unbollef was thon: allied to Poly- theism; -now ~-separated from all posl- tlve religions; and: that wnbellet then, ne K throws fresh Hick upon one of the mi band buroing questions of the day, Hold uy all Booksellers, or malied postpaid, Wp of prico (41.25) by the publishers, "She is rulned only becanso we tlrink she is low who either {3° Ignorant, or pre- a s ral TANSEN, MeCLURG & CO.<: | Soriugete supertription over Alas Walter's | tony to bey ot wood thied of am MyemAeD | thon “io geaana leckuve wel anime | Saati Butt eee nl ae Bae "any & 219 Statesi Chicago -As a story, thera {s-nothing remarkable ean ote Hee cae HS cous | bollef in the’ seventeenth .century, exrnines |. 10st Shan iio, Chere fe. aoIBing ror. wblent teat - : about thle ya ronatee anion ia H JOUnE Catholle, ‘Vand eh i has eee the causes. of post-reforimation ‘unbelief, and- tave |! atowad upon me ‘Sandy wag waxing . THE WAYSIDE FLOWER, | = ::. | thore was many a mothor in London of the a Catholis pelast te to file story thet We winy | charceterizes the ditforant forms of ith Do. | fond of roa wilt vontiuue thetr operations now, ism, Panthelsu, Skepticism, ‘Tho third lecture pees bestand purest type who thought his char- amt steont that ho {sat home, There cannot bo imagined * For The Chicago Tribune, * aoter ao cold,-so \nprincipled,-and #0: re- oid A Itomnnce Dae Pee ee enaricad view of Delsmi in Hogian Amore honest way of employing spare bourse, | @gardon entered I) whore grows _| pulllve that lie could utong for ff only belong prominently from among ' the ina . of exponents as. Bloune Lolan + Calling OO eee ee ee soiag anit and + MHRA wait Of Sliced towers | cond anaagedy Tun for Paviantonh at | i Pe taeS Gee ie fudge | Citbun did diated esac ee SE | Beane Hat St tet il i Ali inconseewelubied tare pertudio. is beaton by ale yur Shem causes wrap: ‘true.- Nelthor ls ita reat ona and tor man ’ uy of Dela, pen) ie, fourth lecture Dr. fui fete, put there isto rgiead wolirecn ts 2 deraesdy einen the rabboned win Iw one conditionof his marriage “that aig, | remsons Ie -fitertod from. ths’ synopals of | Frunca: its causes’ ite pouges its conecusions | but whole aoclety faitot very vuluubia to mes an ored pathways hard to finds Latte . he Itt ‘It should b Why, inay be ‘hi jynopsl 5 ses, its phases, its concession: te + The moss-roso tried {n vain to holut: children that wight. result from It should bo |i, contents.we have given. ~ to Christianity. In lecture fifth we have an | My. books sro. frleuda that nover fall’ me. For breath above the garden-tolst, , | brought up Catholics! . His tlaned's family |: 5 te count of-unbellef: in Ge “eupectally | Sometimes I sco the minister and somo others of * And all around way choked with Bloom. .”, belng pil Horeal Protestant is rupture was |, 5 Fublishedls New York by G, P, Putnam's inthe format ation aileiae the atk tinoetu! ti whom, witht srhom i aun very, voll aatladod, and ; Barge Pe, | RUPE ARE Ueolet vor ooltntion he: focenta |: ce Ras rs cae evoted to unbellef in. the ninotecnth att "dae: Behuld tho cutturo and the pride + engaged again, and’ “gave another: lady-a £.¥ wae i contur Hg wearlod or at # logs fo pass the tino, 2 had ‘das On 3 ‘ az 7 YY, and vita.expositions: by: Strauss, ity to Altki out bi Fresarrpgen etontay ie if aire eennimente, a on Min thot |, TERORNE WIOTION., | Homa, ath and cuentas aunes ur | MENGian Et ut iar sme ¥ Ota Tees toe ny: tiie ended thag matter by urying Ifmsolf ing | |.4* Handleapped" 8 title af acollection | jouried an instructive, aud will commend | to say avythiug. iad ia uoake for bins in tho Wut I'm confused, they'ra all ao sweets delle httul chateau a Cop de Juin, on the | of aix tales’ by Marion ilarlaud, all of which | thomselves to every thoughtful reader, . Tho | box, and 1 would hove sent bim tho geometry, "-Andiso wander beta aud ther, Heltorranean, devin ters he writes to 1s | aye boen ‘publisiad before separately, OF | aupandix contalis wxpiauutory notes ot vory | BULL waa hoy cue bad’ ia the, tov Rave Aud aay, “They are ao vory fair] *: jnumate friend, Aleck Campbell, to Jot iii! tees stories the author says: Lelulm for | high, valuy., ‘he-voluue, is a whole, is | sont you gucartus noar tho kind us Altken's * Amony thom all Foaunoe cbouse ‘The latter is In love with a young girl who'| these stories the author says; |’? worth much morg than ita price, which 1a 60 very soanty desoription would allow meto come. , ur ena tind whieh to refuav, ' ‘s facies to return his aitustlony bu, wiow them little beyond fidelity ta. Nabute, at tonts. sod 8, Tipe i lt House YOU, Fa Good wa any : ni and a . J ich are thoy, 80 complote,’ es ho galt ul 1y. puraten Gael tn to erate that they, were penned In deep sympathy with =" Buildin cai [gi the third volume of |-matorials would bays buch warmer, but | had uo the unconsclous, and tooaften (by mankind) uncansifepod togutit. Perhaps you would like to Lg De Hariee Hushnell’s ‘Literary Varluties.” Dave a ehawlulso. If you wil tell i what SE a eee ey atiealiy Erion Volume 1s namedsfrom thy tite of the {ndso I wander on, at last, writes to him very philosophically," Friend-” herolan that innkes-towly lives eolor Education.” And the following ure the titles | minute fo your acoount of your domeustioatalrs.: Prutsy 1 the cultured garden-blooms, “ record the storjes of yes .strugeting tinder And sit own by a brook to think, ship." he tells him, tia always e free witt; | sublime inthe slght of Godund fis angels.” | jirat article, Building Eras in Religion, ‘The | You prefer, 1 will eand it you with ail the plows. 7 MAL babel upon tae bein and itt alwuys wiven readlty, because itis hes ales re ‘A caniinon' object, ‘They | socond article lax duu hoadlng, “the Now | sto ln the wort l expect to bear from yn a pever awed, Love, too, begins 28 wni(ts bute 1 ot “remaining tencarticles; Couimor | Sty futher otiee spoko of a thrashing-rmachine. Ty Tone Dod wane fungal: oving woman wi nay eae a it tae: the welght of purdens too heavy to be borne, | Sonools; ‘The Ce ation ‘Petuity, 8 practient | 1f20 or so will belp bit, thoy aro quite ready ‘Yo thia they ary no parallel : doht; and the more she loves the debtor the | ¥et.patlyatly, endured, and of character per- | truth; Spiritual Keonowy of Ituvivals of Ite | at bis service, oo : rato! ‘a Lavo I thu little wayside flower! more. opproasively willatic extort’ tha utmost | fected by syerme, Tho’ storey ‘aro‘neces- | ligion; Pulpit. Talents: "Lratuine for tho | In 180, when in Edinburg, at work on the , SHus10, I, Henny Lonove.Low. farthing recow hi een ia near Monaco, sarlly of the kind known as pathetic, and ap- ue Hanwaed ti ar: Gospel 4 ue {9 thy “Eneycloped in, vorhins the sarkest perlog in —_————— au it to hi lend froui the roading: 3 : ny 8 luad; f fares eras ” TA Ing Haters" foam nt “Monte Carlot, “Apropos pect pases baer rmntie mtr ‘| Letter to his: Holinoss Pope Gregery XVi.j | You wlroady. know that J ain'protty well as Tho “boss” ratticnake wus killed a few-days | Wonton hery,”. lo says, * there 14 one on the Squtribution® of : Mlas- No: Christlan Comprehonsiveness. Sime of | to pealth, and also that dealin to Vialt you freon Bugar Crock, Harrison Ce Hissogth. | sofa opposlt'ine who ig really divinely lovely, |, Perry to Awerjoan literature Includes tan of | these essays were contributed by the gifted | axaln befure many months buve elapsed. “I cune I measured nine feet two loobes ilu Wh Tlook up fi writing Lait | her ohol In which. the loves and | author. td leading. purtodieais;-and uthors | Hot way “that my provpects: have got much Bleeteon inches sored the gins. bosties : mat by her ‘soft, farne oye, halt wad rari halt ner Chal c oe etptlon, mele. the 2 Ae vi | were dellveted before associations ar opus | Lribter stiec left yout: tho aspyct of tho wero counted, aan Voluptuous in'thely tondurness, “She js-aa | (eveys oe New England are portrayed with’) Tv Cudiences, ‘Phe admirers of Dr, Dughuell | future ts still as unsoitlod as it over wasy but e sume doyrey uf patience is behind, and hupo, the charinor, thet te tt ‘eternal inthe humap Risaoe toeabe wry muck for food Ur en farts uinor to care ol je. une, so far as onoerns inysolf, Tho thouxbt that my quimuwpat undertuly condition glyesyou and insight, + These stpri¢s are written’ and all thoughtful readers will tind the pres- 1 ty g/ght and animated manner, with clever} ent volume, the .most fuportant contents of light. She is one of the fallen; 1 re |" bits of description, and. natural and pleasing: which have not before appeared in prlut, not can be no doubt about that; but refiuement'| terminations... Miss. Perry Is a charming’) the least Interest! and vatunble of his even sort of nobleness—can outlive vir | writes, with a graceful all easy style’ well | Mt ——— “at--$ | ditferent from tho. wowen near ber ag day, ark Twain says he {s pleased to hayes | from night, ortather as the stars fror rood. sipar nawed after him, .Iudolt ath 183 Clark, ls agent for the wow al- malbenowe © Aire Pwain” : yarke Jiko gl of bls writings, Giese essavn a leves tno. Yet I would not have you Hae oty weribeofn boy. Ho tetll du something yet. Ho lsaahy, stingy soul, and very likely hn n bigher notion of his parts ‘than otbors have, Hut, on the other hand, ho is not incapable of diligence, IHelsbarmiess, and pose sesses tho virtue of his country.-thrift; so that, aftor all, things will yet bo right in tho ond. My Jove to all tha littic ones, Other minor artleles in this number are: “New Murkets for Iritish 2 unensiness chictly ft mrtofagoneral scheme, which is not yet Lo cecrra aah) planes te y ive park, and poss the establishment of a hoot o! forestry. ' I’ Electrictte states that M. Dohrn has ins troduced tha telephone In connection with his _sclentific explorations of the bad of the Bay of Naples. “By ite use the diver and the bontinan overhead: are able to comintinicata Georgo Haden-Powell; iuscond Charabers,” | With cach other quickly ani intallizibly, by Sir David Wedderburn, Bart, AG Ps A French sefentist claims that. he ling sua, “Gossip of an Old Bookworm,” by: Wiltiam | ceeded in roveraing the resuit obtained by J. Thoms; “Health aut Physiqte of Our | Prof.Bell in producing Mgt from sound Ilo has deserlberl an experiment to the Frenci Academy, by which he contends trans formation of sound Into light Is produced, The works of Borstg, of Berlin, for con struction of locomotives, employ at presen; 8,000 Wworkinen and turn’ out 200 to, 250 en gines annually. Tho first locomotive wi Ha? Uemgue h a a a motive, In 1858 huis 1,o00th. pep eats Aninyentor in Tiartford, Conn., has pat: ented’a belt whieh fs mace of tron "wire, the selvages being brass andl copper, ‘The well is of cotton, several threads being woven ft without belng twisted tuzether. A double Fatale Hs made, between swhtch, or frie of 3 nber of single heavier wires inclosed to take the tensile strain of the belt. According to M. Trove, the flame of a Ininp appears brighter, and a vortical sliaft, 0 post, or snast is seen moro distinctly through a City Populations,” by Lord’ Brabazons 3 Renan ant ‘DMiracles, by, Frederic ‘W. 11 Myers: “ Contiseation and Compensation,” by B.D. J. Wilson; Unity in the Church of Christ,” by the Rt-Iton, Earl Nelsons A. Dredging Ground,” by the Hon, Emily Law- less; “Man's. Pince In Nature,” by the Rt- Rey, the Lord Bishop of Carliste, : The Auantic Monthly for August opens with: three chanters of W. D. Howell's” new atory entitled " Dr, Breeh’s Practice.’ Jolt Durand has an article on “ French Domestle Life and Its Lessons.” Edinund C. Sted- nian’s poem entitled “Corda Concordia,” read at tho vpening session of the Concord School of Phitosophy, comes next, followed 4 Mary Hallock -F * in este? iy “ “note’s stury ‘ MM. G. Van Rensselacr. writes on! The New York Art Season; chard Grant White on "The Acting of tages Henry Janes, Jt, continues his Portrait of 2 Lady’; Octave hanet has a recond article on “The In- door Pauper? + Edwin 7, Whipple concrib- | Yertleal than through 9 horizontal slit, while Tee per dai “a ep Fields’; | 8 house, a landscape, or the disc of the sun or moon fs perceived more clearly: throuh & horizontal sit. Ie finds siinilar differ- ences In photugriphs, according as the Ihzht busses from the object to the plate through a, vertical or a horizontal stir, and aseribes the results to the actlon of diffused light. A new celluloid is sald to be obtained from well-pected potatoes, which ara treated for Uairty-alx hours with a solution of eleht parts of sulphuric acid 111 100 parts of water, ‘The tnss_ Js. dried between blotting-paper, and then pressed, -It {3 further stated that In France smoking-ptpes are inanufacturedt out of this new material which sre quite equal in Appenrance to the meerschaum, By neavi pressure the inaterial: acquires such a hard. pede Hat billlard-balis can be manufactured Mr. C.S. Wake, in the Revue d’Anthro pologie, remarks that but few writers on ethnology have recognized the beard ns an Important race character, and many travek ers have been so cureless ay to make nu ob- servations as to tho presence or absenee of the beard among the peoples whom thay have visited. Mr. Wake, dfter an elaborate ethnological survey, concludes that the hair on the face fs a character of much value to the anthropologist. It is curious that tha niost highly cultivated races nrg those most plentifully supplied with beard; and, in fact, ‘the beardless people may be compured to the children, and the bearded to the adults, of the human race, As the result of observation, and from tha testimony of rellable men, the following is about the average growth In twelve years of the lending desirable varieties of timber when Planted In belts. or groves and cultivated: White maple, one foot ijn diameter and thirty feet high; ash, leaf-maplie, or box-elder, one foot in diameter and twenty feet highs white willow, one and onc-hole feet in diameter and fitty feet high; yellow willow, one and one half feet In dinmeterand thirty-tive feet highs Lombardy poplar, ten Inches in diameter and forty feet high; blue and white ash, ten Inclies In dininetarand twenty-five fect, high; binck watnut and butternut, ten inches In dlnimeter and twenty fcet high. ~ AncEnglish writer says: “We may form some cancention of the enormous energy of the human heart when we retlect that a good climber can ascend only 9,000 feet in nina hours, that is, can raise his own weight only 1,000 feet In an hour, thatis, of course, contin- uously for any length of time, while the work done by the heart is equivalent to raising its own welghit (ten ' ounces) 13,860 feet high. Aud we may put this even more strikingly by poluting out thatthe most powerful en- gine ever made by inan, the ° Bavarin’ loco- motive of the Vienna & Trieste Rallway, can only ralse itself through 2,700 feet in an hours that fs, its energy’ Is fess than one-tifth of thatof the huinan heart. Of cotirse, tho actunl amuunt of work dong, both by-enzino and climber, is much greater.than, that dono by the heart; but, relative to. Welzhie the on- grey pe the heart far exceeds that of the other WO. s ——————==_>__— OLD CITIZENS AND INSURANCE. ° In looking over the list of prominent old citizens who have died within the past few months, wa don’t’ know that we wera moro struck with the value of a life-Insurance pol- ley hold by any of thent than “wo were in the case of tho late Mr. dames Ward, the pur- chasing and supply agent of the Board of Education... - man of sound judgment Jaies Freeman Clarke reviews Parton’s “ Life of Vortaire’; and F, HL. Underwood. performs the sane service for * Ward’s En- alish Poots.” On.the whole, an unusually envortalning, collection of urticles py strong titers, g LITERARY NOTES. Catulle Mendes has finished a novel entl- tled © The Virgin King.” M..Flammarion has published on account of lis many balloon voynues. ~ A portrait of the Rev, Robert Collyer, anda “eritical and biographical notico” of him will appear in Potler’s merican Monthly for Auzust. The excellent poem on President Garfield, “Shot at his Post,” ete., which appeared in the supplement to Iast week’s Puck, was written by Mr. I. C, Bunner, “The New ‘Testament, for a penny, is sald to have found already 250,000 purchasers in England. ‘The publisher intends to fssite a French edition fora sou, for circulation in France, Clark & Meynard publish in small pamph- lets a schoo! edition of English classics with explanatory notes. Scott, Byron, Burns Crabbe, Mliton, Hoge, Moore, Coleridge, and Milton furnish poems, of greater or tess length for use as text-books, ‘The notes go entensively into the derivations of words. Tam Cutcago, Trinune of the Tth Inst. contained a poem entitled “The. Stork’s deremind,” which was credited os * From an unknown source.” It ling since been ns- certained that the poem—quite a clever one, by the. way—was written by Miss Bessie Chandler for Harper's Bazar, appearing in No, 15 of Vol, 14 of that periodical. A rare Ainerican book was found Ina col- lection recently sold in London. It was a copy of the Common Prayer translated Jnto the Mohawk Jangunze for the use of the Indians and publshitt at New York fn 1715, Few copies of this edition survived the ax- patttotion of the Mohawk triles to Canada for aiding the British in the War of Inde pendence, ‘i Mr, George Houghton, author of * The Legend of St. Oluf's’Kirk,"Us writing an- other narrative poem founded upon this studies tn Icelandic literature. ‘Six Filghts of tho Dragons” will be the title, and the story will embrace the legends which de- seril the discovery and gecupancy of the Now England const by the Northen several centuries before the voyage of Columbus, It 1s probable that two new volumes of Mr, George Bancroft’s “Ilistory of the United States" will appear before the end of the coming. pttblication scason, Both volumes have been written, and half of one of them is already, In type at.D, Appleton & Co.'s, ‘These additional valumes are of specin in- terest, sinca they contain the history of the Federnl Constitition, of which Mr, Bancroft has made an exhaustive study, They will bring his work down to the close of Wash ington’s Administration. We have recelved from the publishers the “Vistory of the Attempted Assusination of President Gariivld,”, together with 1 cami- plete history of Charles J. Guiltontl; the ‘ns- sasin, giving the comments of the press on the tragedy, the feeling \throughout . the country, words of sympathy from all parts of the world, voices from the bulplt, Snelind- ing sermons by the Rev, Henry Ward Beech- er, the Rey. Dr. Storrs, the Roy, Robert 5, MeArthur, the Rey. Dr. J. P, Newman, an other prominent clorgymen, Also contati ing the life of Garfielil and Arthur, The authors of the No-Namo novels, as far as they are known, are, according to the Bos. ton Courier: |“ Mercy Philbrick's Uholce,” Mrs, Helen Jackson; “Deirdre,” Dr. Joy “Is That AlL?? Miss 1, W. Preston: ' Kis- met,” Miss Fletcher; “The Great ‘Mateh,” Prof. Jolin prow brlatga “A Modern Mephistopheles,” Miss Alcott; “ Afterglow,” Mr, G. P. Lathrop; cats Strange Hise tory,” Mrs, Jackson; Will Denbigh, Noble- inan,” Mrs, Dinah Muloch Ci 2 tMar- morue.” Philip Gilbort amerton ; Mirage,” Miss Fletchor; “A Masque of Poets,” edited by ir. G. P. Lathrop: “Signor Monaldini’s iece,” Miss 'Tinker; “The Colonel's Opera Cloak,” Mrs, Chaplain — Brush; rs, Beauchamp Brown,” Mrs. Jane G. Austin; “His Majesty Myself the Kev. 6 Baker; “Don Jolin,” Jean Ingelow; “The ‘Tsar's Window,” Mrs, Hooper. When martial Inw, was proclaimed In Pro- toria during the recent slege of 100 days, and all civillans were ordered to remove to tho military camp, tho London Times says that Mr. Decker, the wall-known editor of the Transvaal Argus, took 2 hand-press with him {ato camp and with the assistance of a Mr. Duval nttlated an almost unlaue experl- mentin the history of journallain by the is- sue of w newspaper on Cliristmis Day,’ m- der the title of © The News of the Grainy, t Journal of fancies, notiications, ess i» and general chit-chat Published in the military camp of her Majesty's forces defending tho beleaguered Inhabitants of Protoria.” Ina preface to the now-completed file of forty numbers the editors remark upon the ditt culties of their novel undertaking, '* Sure- Mer fey: Bay, “never was paper printed un- der such singular auspices—a bungalow for 8 printing-oflice, with canvas thrown over Its unfinished roof, through which the: rain freely penetrated, 0: gentle waterspout rune ning down the compositor’s back as hustout with 9 bandoller of Marthul-llenry cartridges over his shoulder, his white apron for n uniform, composing-stiek tn hand, and hig rile lylog suggestlvely near his printing- frame; the editors’ quarters, an army beil tent and a transport waxon, the space be- tween Ingenfonsly roofed In with n tuttered sill stretched on telegraph-polea; thelr work, | editing a paper by day and .on guard up to the knees m mud at night, or sleeping non pair of leather breeches, long boots, und jack spurs,’ es Air. Ward was 1. and deliberation, the possessor of ‘ui estnta valued after his. death at over $272,000, all equired = oby.. his. own fudustry and rigid economy, and: ‘to the. casual’ observer one who dit not require. Ife ‘ine surance, Yet withthe prudence and fore- thought so thoroughly characteristic of him, he had for many. yenrs ‘carried endowment insurance in’ the Mutual Life Instiranes Compduy’ot Now York, taking a second pol- icy after the payment. of the first one, only in tio month of Merch last, when he had at- talned the advanced of 07 years, ils ob- ject betng that should he survive to the end of the ten years for which It was taken, ho would, judging.frow iis experience of tno firstone, have mule a good Investment of his money, and should he not survive, that ho would have «provided an immediate fund promptly, avaliable to the administrator of iis estate, to afd lum In the legal settlement of it. > ape In this way tife-Insurance plays amost iin- portant part, and saves many an estate from serlous loss, which might rosult from the want of Itand, while we Know that life-policies are larguly obtained for this particular pur- ‘pose, we beltove that every ownor.of proper- ty should, as a mensure.of prudence, take caro that there should be no wasts of It after his decease owing to the want of rendy cash, which can be obtalned: in, n short tints after death by. the nld‘of n life-polley, and if 1¢ should be in such a company as the Mutual Life Insurauce Company of New York, witht Its ninety-five’ millions of dollars of assets, no better security enn possibly be had. —<$— $$ ~~ HIS. PICTURE, For The Chiciga Priming, Tf ahndows could broathe, if shadows could spouk, How fippy I'd bo this May afternoon, Look in wy eyes, Harry, sot Thus Lauck ‘Vo know of your comjug—bow long or how soon, Tho forest fu hoavy with leaty pulse, Tho Prairies haga loomed, and tha blossoms ara hos ‘ And Nntute bas grown Uke a face that tries ‘To guile on tho world ere hope be dead, ‘The meadows are brown, and the harvest is lato, And ineo and maldona a-yathering go} Hut L, dear Marry, can ouly wult Aud 100k on your pluturo, and kisa youmao} ‘As Tho Whoat Crop fn California. San Francisco Chruntels, Juiya, | @ ‘Tho ropurts of our currespondente from the ageicultural seotions of tho State are of amore fuyorablo character thau the antloipations of a fow wocks ngo, although bad enough in comm- pariaon with those of lust year, ‘The favoraulo i . - BOOKS RECEIVED. - 4 GENEALOGY OF THY ULtsh FaMiny IN Asin: Ica. Compiled by John Homer Uliss, Boston; Printed by the Author, A Book or Lovy-Stonina. By Norah Perry, Boatour J. HR, Osgood & Co.~ Trica $1. two or thro wooks preceding tho hur- yest time put a much Haprovod, facq. on atfairs, ‘Tho greatest abelnkego is in tho great Sau Josquin. Valley, where, turn. int conditions ayrioujtural during the, ~ E; . 5 ‘the yust wheat truct known as the West Side, ~ Yorks UserierBoribuere Guns, Vena 850..." | elour from the Upper AEE Of Alamnuda County, - Letsuue-Houn Bxiiest AMONG THE Hints. | tothe Mussel Slouwh country in Tularo, the By E, Frances Poynter, . Now York: Honry Holt © Rugtabina. ei i Hioraco | pesuliy fv the. great wuoyt countios’ of Iiitta ~ BUILDING -Exas IN ReLiaion. Dy. Worace | pec! e Hnushioil, “Literary Varigtiog Iti, Wy dtgmmes | kind Goliea, the crop. te only “ubout ult Lharics Scribucr's Bons. Prico $1.50. that." of Inet. yeur, Further north tue Tue NeW TeSTAMENT. Bouton; Loo & Shep- | reports ‘aro. botier, somo of the .countica NuwVorki: Ghanlee Heribuers dons,” Pvfeu 1 | Wulc aro avery voar Uuovinluy tory and murd orobard and vineyard sections and lesa devoted to coreals, make a very light showing in grain, but wore than compensate for it iu other prod+ ucts, Tho. roports frum the oxtremo sau (bar ‘counties are of u wore cncouraylog conip! ° Ste ic from, . jes Bar Tpit ecsamn tiptoe; ner Omionch teem, detente, Reece's RANKLIN BQUANM Lintany; Tus DeautivuT | hoc g 4 ‘ “wheat, Contra Costa, Solano, and Btuntaluug PEEL ie, CHALE avy uananin or | URES uae gel ana ed eae 4 rh : a Tee Bhat Pres Mi oorist ee oe, Vorthy ‘of remark thet: the roports from all Tus Provex'a Lisnany: WisTory oy Tum wectioby agroe % the -wheat produvod tule ASYAMINATION OF JAuyS A, GAuKIKLD,: Dy Jy your ia miatked linproy einee In quality ovet 8, Ogilvie, Vice Doone...) ‘ Eine outs, Can wets THE AMRRIOAN CATALOGUE, DXDERTHE DIREC: ‘TION or F, Luvponyr. Compited by Lynds B. sones, Now Yurk: A.C, Armatroug & Son, No-NAus Sxnives BAnv Rue, Boston: Hab- ors nae. Advunce ahvats. * yi agi of preceding years, the fullnoss and pluuip ness uf fie Dorey larwely offvetting the chinpaee ative falling cif” in quantity of tue yluld. On- the,whule the reports are eticnuraglug, showlug (has the harvest will cousiderably exceud the jtvipations of a few weeks axo. SO —— Tat aul : Ag i “Mr, ¥ Nodeburg, of Grand View, Ind., re- begun ‘by the ‘Romong! under the Emperor “tho fe ith’ rheuniue Netor but novor fhahed: le Uikuly tobe cut.| Une ur ‘over atx yeurssceonsuited: ny phyatclang, ond tried hundreds of remedles avithous avall, Having sean St Jucobs Vi ‘advertised, L gent for a bottle aud used 1¢ ac- cording to directions, ‘The-relief J tele wis i almost “esectrio”; 1 got better at ouce, and ‘Qurebased as a } How phere depots trae pt Foqusagllgup dese by the French, Gent, POrr having lately re- celvyot 4 concession from the Greek Goyeruy qudnt to carry out tha projeot:. ee + It ts'reported that the Natural Bridge tract in Virgiulg hos recently bey ae ay loxion, . crop falls off fromy:4U ta 60 per cout from that of, .