^Â¥^ i WOMAN GOSSIP. Humors of Ooortiliip and Odd MatrtmoDial Oerenumies Among th* People of Onba. A thort Screed on Unantliorised Kin- inc, and the Unfortonate Scsnlte of Tellisc of it. Reaching the Shrine of Hymen Un- der Difllcultiesâ€" Derivation of Women's Namesâ€" A River Between Them. FaatitOD NoM» CuKLs are Tery (aahioiuble. New operm cloaks are of shaded plush. BcTTON gloves are no longer faahionable. It is not the correct thing to wear tignt gloves. Chiiia cnpe acaris as accessories for ball tiileta are in demand. Bmro-MX^s, loose- wristed gloves take the precedence of all others PurFH of crimped tarlatan are the proper trimmings for widow's caps. EA^rmx combinations of )rieDtal colors grow in faahionable favor. The hair, in Paris, is dressed less flat and higher thmo it was last year. With ball coiffarea are worn bandeaux of ribbons set with precious stones. Fa.srionabl yoaog ladies who used to call for A kids now ask for "siies. " tiOLU, sOver and jewelled bandeaux are worn around thp head for fa)l dress for balls. White musiia petticoats are the only underganneots that are made fuller than formerly. NcwLY imported French underwear of all kinds fit the form as close as possible to be c ^mfortablc. TuE favorite artificial Mowers of the sea- son are Parma violets, rotes, chrysanthe- 1. ams, and pinks, Ulove... to be fashionable must be loose in the hands and finders, but actnally wrinkled aronnd the wrists. Wum flowers have become things of the past oa winter bonnets, they are worn to efcis on evening toilets. V'oLiMi.Nof.-. jabots, mingled with flowers, are worn down the front of dresaes for cere- I monious occasiooa. Cloaks of satin de Lyon, with ahirred kes, are rapidly coming in vogue. Fnr bands and collars are the trimmings. Whitk Chudda shawls, enriched on the l edges with Oriental embroidery illuminated with gold threads, make the moat elegant ball and opera wrs{r. l.'.NtiiiK.^.^Eij Ilid glovee, without button?, I light colors, very loose io the hands, and wrinkled aronnd the wrists, take precedence of all others for evening wear. 'I'ny large straight cloaks, with shirred ' yokes, which are coming io, have elbow sleeves formed of the fulness of the garment and bordered with deep fur bauds. iM pft (w gnee) of B«L Arali AimntetU, or bantifal atter, bat apcsyM wtMiM. In its ' iathetki MMuieehaa aothtagto^ vitk or » Moor, bat eoMaa fit r w cfc tt okMrioaof hearâ€". Bla'iatte ianaiiM of Abia^AlaD, or AUMS,MdM m poo riW s eonneetioB with ffnlUa. vhMh cjinaa from a different hngnago uiM Mtt by •boat • thoaMad yeen •* least Amj m not from timet, hnt froM Mi«r 'Ai/it, or Avis, does not exactly aoan advice, apsoaa •ecm to think. It comas from .-Ed-wis, and moans hupy wisdooi. Elizi hasno nowiMW tion with '"?«»»»«*»' It u tb« sister of Looiaa, and both are the daoghters of He? loiae, whi^ is Helewis, hidden wisdom. There is, indeed, another form of L'MHas, or rather Looise, which ia the feminine of Loois, but was scarcely heard f before the sixteenth century. The older Uakisae form of the name Alotaa, Aloisia, or Ateysia, was adopted iato medixral English, as Alesia, â€"a name which onr old ^enisalogists always confuse with Alice. Emily and Amelia are different forma of one name. Emily is from /Emylia, the name of an Etrutcan gem. Amelia comes from the Gothic a»a!a â€" haev- enl V. Ilegioald is not dsriTed f r a Re|ni% and haa nothioK to do with • qneoo. It Is Keinalt â€" exalted Dur^. Adelaii' Adel- aide, Alisa, Aliz. AMine, are all forms of one name, the root of which is aJel â€" noble. Bat Anne was never used aa identical with Anoia, or Agnes (of which last the old Scotch Annas is a variety), nor, as I itordi- ly maiataia, was Elizibetb cvsr synony- mous with Isabel. Marriaace in Cuta. A correspondent at HsTana studs ths fol lowing to ao exchange Keaders who hayo or have not been W(M«d and woo, even At tks asestiagof tet weak,am«g the ,_. bv Fcof. Hozlsjr oa tke spplinHna g tte lArs of eroiatiaa to te inammmA of tiie Tertsbrata, aod aaarspaettsakiqr â- w' The illostratioos ad^eed were these of Oe history of the horse, priaeipally, sefar as ia koowa, fiaari the work of Ftof. i^ah oa the " Eofoaei of Njprth Africa. " "pe so- xoMAimc BnTOBT Of .tn msr swomBSMAK or iPl iwe bfthepfs^ an aaaaaally Ian{a ottaod^iee, as it Vas ex- EMfhot tiieMrshsliMof thobet^PMf. slay's haods weaU^m f^eat faterest in ptmotically sabstsntiatiag the theory of sTolntion, which, thoaah f o n s h s dn wed bf others, took praeliQaykaiM la Ifce vork Of Darwin twcnty-oae years ago. Frot Hosier said There ia evidoiee, the vslae of whioh has not bees dictated, and which is aiy judgment amooats to proof, that between the commenca«eat«C,the t M tjaiy epofh and the present tlow the giopef lie eqai4* x* been repreaenled by a series' of laoat, of which the oMcet is that vAMf departs feast, from the general type of stmotare of the hisher mammalia, while ths latest is tiiat which most widely differs from that type. In fact, the earliest known eqoiaa animal poesesses four ccmplste snb-eqoal di^ta on the fore foot, three oa the hiad foot the aloa is complete and distinct from the rsd- ins the fitwla is complete and distinct from the tibia; there are fort^-foor teeth, the full number of caaiaes being present, and the cheek-teeth luSTiog short crowM with simple patterns and earlv-formed roots. The Uteit, on the other band, has only on3 oom- spite of the difficulties that often attend that ,â- plete digit on each foot, the reat hiing reprc- aaint- exciting period of the lives of young men and women in this country, will thank for- tune that nothing more than an irate father or meddlesome mother or an empty pocket- book stood in the way of matrimonial bUsa. Darina dinner one dav 1 was observing, while talking, a scene tnat was taking place near the gatea of an oppoeite house, and I will describe it, as it illustrates well the habits of the people in love affairs. A well- dressed young man was apeaking from the outside with a pretty young Udy who was standing at one of the corners of the window, sented By rudiments the aloa is reduced and partially encylosed with the radios the fibula is still more reduced and partially en- cylosed with the tibia the canine teeth are partially- or amplately soppfsssed in the fe- nules the first cheek-teeth usually remain nadeveloped, and when they appear are very small the other cheek-teetn have long crownr, »ith highly complicated patterna and late-formed room. 7he equidx of inter- mediate ages exhibit intermediate charac- ters. yfi reapeet to the Mterprat^tioa of these faeti two hypetheee*. and oaly tiro, The lover waa in such a position that the appear to be Iraegiaabley The one aasiimes persons who were in the parlor of the yonng lady's house could not aee hioi. Sometimee it happened that one of them approached the window she then gave notice to the youo^ man, and he would immediately start and stop at the corner of the blo;k and stay there watehin^ As soon as the risk was over he would come slowly to his post, ia order to continue his interrupted eonvataa- tion. What a troublesome way of courting a lady ' The notice 1 gave to the othars of what was going on afforded me much infor- mation as to the method of ooortahip. SoQtetimea this sort of thing is going oa at each window of the one-story bouses, and not unfrequently two in each may be seen. This generally occurs when the suitor is not admitted to the hoase on account of not that these successive forms of equme ani- mals have come into existence independently ot one another. The other assumes that they are the result of the gradual modifica- tion undergone by the sucoessive members of a continuous line of ancestry. As I am pot aware that any zoologist maintains the first hypotheses, I do not feel called upon to dis- CBSs it. The adoption of the second, how- ever, is equivaleat tatlie^cceptaoce of the doetriae of evelotiqa so Jar as hocics are ctmcermai, tad m the algaoce of «ri4Moe to the contrary, I shall suppose that it is ac- cepted. Since the commencement of the eocene epoch, the animals which constitute the family of the eqaidie have undergone procssses of modification of three kinds 1. There has been an exceas of development of of e I bdi«f^ the tf nnllsgs ly loMpa'aa the â- aamiAmZ-Onl-'fiMltar stody aSdofthe rodeatia has only i my eoBviet^n^kat jHiy.eMJ*^ •if wjih tbrnoice of raMtioa of stmotare ia'tl^ gfMpt fOttitet IBe key to every pocnliarity whicb is mst with in the pri- aaatss, the oamivora, and the nagalata. Given the eoounon plan of the ioseetivora of the rWsatia,aadaraniiM that the \thitit^*tU^ airaeU Vttie Umbs, of tM iMi^ «i4 of the 4mi^ *»' ' prainsHea ^iseeMf^lJMi i M g iiong them may exist and aoeamalate etsswhere, and the deviation of all esthsria from anifluls whioh, szoept for their diffuse placsntatioa, would be iaseotiTotes, is a simpls dedoetion from the law of eroldtioB. I venture to fezpica a oooidsBtiexpootatioB that inves. tigation into the mammalia faana of the meaozoic epoch will, aoooer or latter, fill np these blsnk*. Prof. Huxley proceeded to givMi details ad whieh his^ eoochtsicms ve based, and dwett on the fact that much farther careful work is needed to clear np problema before us. Wecet and Oott of Uwing in China vary el«aa»igaML mefrkeii iffi^ htoeed I their daughter with the suitor. The method I however, is generally condemned and avoided even by the young men, who fear Bkbthas or rivieres of artilioial (lowers to depreciate the character of the the object are made to fit the necks of dresses, no mat- of their affections. If they cannot viait tor what the shaie may be, and are tiniahed them they take advantage of all opportum on the shouldrrs with bouifuete or epaulettes u: flowers. having aa introdnctioD or when the parents I one part of the oldest iornrever aoether; i. of the girl disapprove the acquaintance of Certain parte have aadeiyaiie complete or '"" "' partial supiwesston 3. Qprti orisUaUy dis tinct have coalesoed. Employing the term ' law " simply in the sense of a general statement of facte ajcertained by observation, I shall speak of these three proceases by which the eohippns form haa paased into ties of seeing them in public places, at a equus, as the expression of a three.fold law church or theatre or possibly at ttie house of ot evolution. It is of profeuod interest to Voi'M. wiiluwB wear Kancboo or lebe caps F tarlatan, with or without strings fastening under the chignon elderly widows wear large intb caps uf the same iiuiterial, with Mark net linings on the crowns. Waifs. TKNXV.SO.S To sun.. 'diue into the garden mud. My darliu;;, my lile, my own i'ome with a jump and a thud. Err the Uaik bat night is Huwii. For the mud of the garden is pure, liutthe mud of the street is vile, .\nl our footing will be more sure, .Su we'll wade in too former awhiU-. .liiH.M calls liis Wife's hair-iln-tser her itWitoh tender. "Thc.i'i.h he sleigh me yet will 1 trust lu him." sayH the pious maiden of her lov. SiinKr lOurUhip " lUchcl the 1. 3rd hath sent me to marry thee," said the suit- ur. "The Lord's will be done,".waii the lubmisaive reply. " Yov seem ti) enjoy telling lib:"" dryly I'liaarked an old lady to her little niece the other day. " Yes, auntie," replied the ;hild. " I thiak I do, but I enjoy having you swallow them more. " TuK fashionable sprin;; lonnet fur 1881 is til be profusedly ilci- irated with flowers, n-^d provided in the rear with a lira-escape, o that the wearer's friends ran climb to the top and sae the trimmings. " 1 swEAK," said a gentleman to hix lady love, "you are very handsome." " I'ooh, ' said the lady, "so you would say if you did not think so." " And so you would think," answeretl he, " thongh 1 should not say so. " A Tkoy girl who has been deaf since t'hildhood regained her hearing through the mediuiii^hip of n htndsome young doctor who tackled her case. He sat down beside bet and liegan telling her how good-looking she waa. A roHv is told uf a North Adams young man who called on a young lady for the first time .Sunday evening. After an hour or two of pleasant conversation on various subjects, the " man uf tho house " entered the room were the young people wore sitting. He was introduced to the young man, and, af- ter a few remarks upon the weather, ete., left the room and retired for the night. Nine o'clock came, and the caller, ssying " (tood Night," left for his home. The next mom* iog, on passing the honse, the yonng maa had ooeasion to speak with th^ young lady, and when about to resume bis down town journey, met "the man of the house" com- ing iu the gate. "Well, young man, you hold on pretty long," said the old gentle- man, and the poor young mam. without stopping to explain, went his way, puzzled whether to commit suicide or go a-Hsbiag. The old Uucbesa of Somerset, the sale of whost! effects took place the other day, had a passion for dress which lasted to the very end of her life, and aa she htld to the opin-. ion that nothing ia too good ta wear and no- thing is too bad to keep, cupboards and drawers were filled to overflowiug, and the whole attic story of her house in Park stree- completely stuffed with dresses. The corot nation rotea worn at the crowning of Queen Victoria were there, of crimson velvet, lined with miniver. Her Grace was wont to have this robe broughi to her once in three montha, when she would try it on and par- ade before the looking glass with aa much I delight at her appearance aa she must have j felt on the oecaaion on which it waa first doomed. The Duke's coronet was there of I silver, mounted in gold lace and trimmed with miniver, and his garter robes shoae forth in splendor, and then came the lelic of the sentioient whioh belongs to all alike â€" the Duke's wedding vest, of white satin, embroidered in silver, and kept by the wife with the same care and reverence as Marl- borough treasured the lock of Sarah's hair â€" after so many years aa bright and fresh as ever. The sale has made a great impression ia Lendoo and called up stories of the dead and gone. An Accommodatlnir Parson. Beeently ia Texas a coaple beat on mar- riage precnied a lioeose, sad set out with one or two frienda to look np a parson. They reached the river, but alas! th would be bride oonld not cross. The only parson for long. weoTT miles was just across the river, wbuie Tisioos of irate parente with doable- barreled shot guns formed a very long and troablseome procession through the minds of the two lovers. The weather was cold, the river was np, and what oould they do One of the eeoort soggested that he would swim the river and see, if possible, the parson, who, nndoabtedly, would fix up a plan to tie the nuptial knot. He did so, found the preacher, and aoon had him down on the river bank. The water waa oold and deep, aod he lefoasd point black to crom over, to the vary gnat distroes of the yooeg ooaple o« the other side. Neoessi^ is not only the r of iaveotiooe, bat the mother of ex- The panoa cooeladad to marry the eeaple across ths river, and they jesaed hasds aad took thsir stand aear the waters a4|S^ while the preaoher, on the opposite haak, ia stsntonan voice pronooooed the â- artiste esrvice, aad deekired awlw»k I a common friend. The chief resource used is j a correspondence, in which the servanU, I and sometimes the frienda of the young I lady, act as mediators. Kome of theae love, letters are very funny The love-stricken heroes put the powers of the pen to the ut- most they exhaust their erudition and in- dulge in hyperboles, metephors, and smiles to an alarming extent, in order to show the vehemence of their passion and make the I most impossible promises. The following is copy of one written, evidently by a student, I which strikes one as an amusing burlesque, but which undoubtedly was intended to ex- press a great deal I " MLSii Your beautiful image had aoarce- ly struck the retina of my eye, by means of I a convergent ray, when my cave vena was filled with hot blood, as if I had tasted the nectar cf the gods or the heavenly ambrosia," ete. Endearmcute of this kind are frci|uentand are often kept up for years, and even then do not end in marriage. It is not uncom- mon for the lover to diaappoint his eneiaorai/o under frivolous pretexte, on account of nat- tural inconstancy or for a more golden pros- pect, for the wealth) of the young lady is the leading requisite. It is sa-d, injustice to the fair sex, that they are very seldom inconstant, scarcely ever dismissing a lover except for very jowerfiil reasons. Cubans generally marry rather late in life â€" the men when about thirty and the women when about twenty-five. This is rather aingular, considering the influence of the climate. The reason for it is a hard one to find, and no satiafactary one has ever been given. It is rather singular that one of tho rules res- pecting marriage is the same in Cuba as in many parte of the United Stater, particul- arly io New Vork. The bridegroom and bride start from the church where the cere- mony is performed on a. trip into the coon-, try, where they stay for a week or two. Then they return to the city and give notice of tbe marriage to their friends, who immed- iately go to greet them. The greatest pos- sible secrecy, is, however, observed in the performance of the ceremony, whicb ta'-ea place at the time the churchea are empty or leave is obtained from tbe bishop to be married at the lady'a residence. The laws ot the churoh forbid marriages with persons of different religious beliefs or among near relatives. The latter prohibi- tion is, however, easily surmounted by pay- ing the bishop a sum, the amount of which increases in proportion to the intimacy of the kindred. For legitimate marriages the consent of the fathers is necessary if these be dead, that of the mothers must be seonr- ed. Lastly, that of the paternal or mater- nal grandfather, of the tutor, and in default of those persons, of ttie judge, provided the age of the individuala to be married be over a certain limit, will be sufficient. Clergy- men and nuns are not allowed to marry, but widowers, even with children, are allowed to become clergymen. Total. â-º e^ â- them ia not Anna-bella, or Fair â-²â€¢â€¢ aa, bat is the feaaloiae of Haoaibal, A Fans Elopement. There has just been an instance of French credulity and snobbishness in the Fanbonrgh St. Hooore, says a Paris letter, whioh shows that snobs and fools may be found even among the natives â€" the aatochtoaes^ aa X. Onstave Flaubert, would have termed -them. Prince X. â€" I call him X., for his real name is yet an unknown quantity, in apite of the efforts of M. Andreieux's agents to discover his identity â€" Prince X. came, faw, and was admitted to several circles in the vicinity of the Palace de l'Oper He played higii, lost, and paid without besitotion was never caught with, or even saapected of having, an extra pack of cards up his aleeve, and, finaBy, was invited to one of the most fashionable hoasea in the Roule quarter. Here he met Mile. Y. a beauty and an heiress, who waa charmed with the prince and his title, and, with the consent of her parents, engaged her- self to marry him. So far everything waa gay and festive the troossean was oraared, the date for the aignatnre of the contract waa fixed, when, just as the invitetions were about to be issued, the future fatber-in-Iaw received and eommunicated to his future son-in.law a number of letters, not anony- mous, whenoe it appears that X. is not a prince that he is a pennilees ciiash'sr tim- Autrie, and that he had been forced the leave the country of his birth for that eountrv'a good. Great was the indignation of the noble stranger, who only aaked for 'gbt and flirty houn' time, at the cad of wluch he wnold " confound 4iis calumniaton and unmask theik machinations." M. Y. was only too willing to be persoaded that the suitor of his child is the real Simon Pure. He granted the re- quest but instead of interdicting to kim all vigils until the mystery ahoold be cleared up, he authorized their continuance. Epilogue Last Tuesday the prince and his roung wo. man eloped, fleeing away by night to some other clime, aad i:iterfamiliar is left unooa- solable. He is a former finaaeial funetioaaiy, iaomensely rich, who ovas oaeoftheaMat Bumptnons chalMaas in Fmnoe, a lew mOm only distant from the capital, and he asks himself whether, as hia heiress is ss'f-wiUed and obstinate, he might not have beesi wissr in his gsBsisliuu ii he had held has toagae and paid the prince's debts, iostsod of oettm^ the poUce to dimorer the truth ef tlw oe- cnsation that the Wallaehian is ooly a dir- chatged servmit ot a Bayard wlw residas in one of the Dannbian priaeipalitiea. I deat dolls are very little giri to her aot. my child ' â- akaam kaasL I ahraya my doll deiva ea her slemac thiak the peeob who gasas poevia,^Bai4 a OBO day. "Why remark that this law, or generalized sUte ment of the nature of tbe ancestral evolution of the horse, is precisely the same ss that Por clothing which tormalatea the process of ladiridnal developmeat ia animals generally, frma the period at whioh the broad characters of the group to which an animal belongs are dis- cermble onward. After a mammalian em. bryo, for example, hta Uken on its general mammalian characters, ite further progren toward its special form is affected by the eX' ceasive growth of one part or relation to au' other, by the tfrrest or snpprssaion of parte already formed, aitd by tne ooalesoeaoe of parta primarily distinct. This coincidence of the laws of ancestral and individual de- velopment creates a strong confidence in the general validity of tbe former, and a belief that we may safely employ it in reaaoning deductively from the known to the unknoim. The aatronomar who haa determined three placea of a new planet calculates ite place at an epoch, however remote and, if the law of evolution is to be depended npon, the zoologist who knows a certain length of the course of that evolution in any given caae may with equal justice reason backward to the earlier but unknown stages. .Vpplying this method to the caae of the hone, I do not see that there is any reason to doobt that the eocene equdie were preoeded by meto- zoic forms, which differed from eohippns in the same way as eohippns differs from equus. And thus we are ultimately led cenceive of a first form of the eqnine series, whicb, if the law is of general validity, must need have been provided with fire sub-equal dig- ite on each plantigrade foot, with complete, sub-eqnal antebrachial and crural bones, with cUvicles, and with, as at present, four- ty-foor teeth, the check-teeth having short crowns and aimpIe.ridMdor tuboroulatad pat- terna. Moreover.since Manh's investigations have shown that the older forma of any gir- cn mammalian group have less developed cerebral hemispheres than the later, there IS a prima facie probability that thia prim- ordial hippold had a low form of brain. Farther, since the existing horse has a dif- fuse allantoic placentation, the primary form conld not have presented a higher, and may have possessed a lower, condition of, the various modes by whioh the fetna derives aonrishment from the parent. Such an animal as this, however, would find no place in any of our systems of clamifioation of the mammalia. It would come nearest to the lemnroidea and the inaectivora, thongh the non-prehensile pes would separata it from the former and the plaoentetion from the latter group. A natural classification is one which associates tosether all those forms which are c'.oeely aUied and separatee them from the reat. But, whether in the ordinary sense of the word " alliance " or in ite purely morphological sense, it is impossible to im- sgiue a group of aoiauls more cloaely allied than onr primordial hippoida are with their descendante. Yet, according to exiating arrangemente, the m/^ton wooU- hare M beplactdinoneol^ei'of tbk cUas 0f OtaS malia and their descendante in another. It may be suggested that it might bs as well to wait until the primordial hippoid ia discover- ed before discuasiqg the ufficalUaf whioh will be created b^ iU MffeMM** jMtl|» truth u that that problem u already prening in another shape. NaaMfOas " lemui^" wilh marked ungulate characters, are being discovered in the older territoriei of the United States and elsewhere and no one can study the more ancient m.^..^^ ], ^d, which we are atiiaa/ acbialnted in{hool being constantly strocdc with the inaeettekr- oos chaiacteis whioh'thsy prpaoqt. X^ fac|, there is nothing in tKe detention of either primatts, camivorea, or ungulates, which is any means of deciding whether a given fossil akeletoo, with sknll, teeth, and lioibs, almost complete, ought to be ranged with the Issoors, tia inseei^ree, the oaalHorea, or tho gngu l at s s. Ii^.wbatever eMr of m smile a saSoieollyeong series e^^nns hss come to light, they illostrate the thi«e- fold law of evolution as clearly, though, perhaps, not so strikingly, aa the equine series does. CamiTores, artiodaetyles, and poriosodactylea all tend, as we teaoe them back through the tertiary epoch, toward leas modified forms, which will fit into none of the recognized orders, but come olceer to the insectivora than to any other. It would, however, be moot inconvenient and mia- leadin^ to term these primordial loans insectivora, the mammals so called being themselves more or lem specialised modifica- tions of the same conunon type, and .only, ji^ a partial and limited sease, rsprsosatali see of that type. The root of the matter appears to me to be that the paleontegioal facte which have com* to light in the oosHee of the last ten or fifteen years have completely broken doisa ea i sti n g taxoaoauoal eeaos^ to'cas, aad that the attamots t« asMlnal freak plsssifiostinws, upoa ths oU oiedUt as* ncoeamrily futile. The ' Cbviecaa method, which all modsia ohHmiata haae fslkared. of immense value to Isodiagto the (Pros) tbd San Francisco Bulletin.] There have been many books written on Ckina, from the time of Abbe Hue to the present But most of them have beeS too general to present any precise idea of the s tTt ual ^^fT i*^ nnnditiftns w that vaat empire. Recent official observation has, however, done much to clear avay the jniite j(hich obscure real Xfe. i^est of Ihe tsidear ^ch we h»ve are carried on in the C«etral Flowery land. There are there (he tradi- tional " buteber, baker, and candle-stick maker." But there is a peculiarity which is not found in civilizition. The artist obtains no higher rewards than the ordinary crafU- man. There appears to be a dead level for all who Work witn hand or finder. A mas- ter workman in any of the tradca in Cliina gets 13 per week, or $136 per annum. Bat the worbsaeo ooly aet hali that VMBoeei* tion ll.SO per woek, or #70 per anohm,' (s the aTerageiat«^ and ft ia nst every woffcr^ man who caB obtain it. YoAglten Ir wo- men get SO cente per week, or 926 per annum, It will be observed that these are the wages paid in the higher walks of art and mechanics. 'Qiere is only one class of operatives who fe more handsomely re- warded. Gold and ailversmitha do a little better, The silk rosier orfkpinner sotaeT times gete from $1 to 92 par day, baoae^ the silk has to be reeled off tbe ooeoons in a eiven time, and, as a consequence, tbe work haa to be prosecuted day and night. Consul Denny, at Shanghai, thoa figures out the expenses, per annum, of living in connec- tion with the compensation specified For a Master. For food, *o For rent, Ac. ... rr2 3G 12 For a Workman. .1120 ...|4fi ...12 8 For food, c... For rent.." ... For clothing.. Total $66 The wme authority adds "The mister generally iivaa at tbe srotksimp, where her has, perbapa, two rooms, besides a place to cook in. The household furniture may be estimated at from $20 to $30. The ordinary workman, if married, will share a small honse with a friend, and occupy one room, and have access to the kitehen. He may live with his parente, in which case bis earnings go to the common fund. Under such circumstances, $10 te $15 will cover the valne of the hooaebold furniture." We have no form of Chinese life in California, except in very rare cases, which corres- ponds to that which is here portrayed. There are only a few Chineae familiee in this city. Nearly all the Chineee aie amiM adnlte without any family ties or ecaneo- iiofie, at least in this ooantry. Mat we get a glinpae of that peculiar state of things in China also. Consul Denny further says that if the Cbinamaman is " a bachelor, and away from hia family, h* will tither sleep at his employer's for a consideration, or stay with a friend in either caae hu whole iaveatory consiste of a box with his clothes, and hot bidding." This is a complete portrait of the Chinaman in California. He is got up in light marching order. But the common labonrer, wbetbet in field or kitehen, does not set anything like the wage* of the skilled artirao. The farm labourer, daring harveat time, geta, besides his meals â€" worth about 10 cente â€" fron. 10 cente to fifteen cente a day, or from 70 cente to $1.05 a week. He can be hired by the month for from $1.50 to $2. If he gets per- manent employment he is willing to accept $12 per annum, with board and lodging. If he works for ahoeter terms, 60 oente a month will suffice for house rent, and $2 per annum will keep bis wardrobe in repair. Bat there ia a gr^e belov these, free la- bourers known as oolies, who are often gktd to work for five oente a day. Kisaing aad TelUng It. \Vhen the wrong man kiases the right wo- man or the right man kiases the wrong wo- man â€" and boin sometimes happen â€" it does not olway a follow that there is a disturbance about it The world can never know, how much unauthorized kissing haa beeen done and f ormven and forgotten. In the naturally wild ana audacious career of the human kind Ihyre iaajgocddaakof that sort of business, .had itis^^(a«lll tlut.'it « natAieUy dragged before the public on every occasion. If that were always done it would be very discouraging to a reasonable deli^htfnl paa- time which more or less concerns everybody. Ittajr of ihe cssIb and trials of this world -fiWfelilfTt aldkr; it U a .uacoramonly sweet ' the few luxuries of a imnnistioa into shsrp porlaat uag. R i logiaal u a t e gnris a defined by sm ' '" â- " "' was sapped when Van Beer esrtmating the likaoees and i priaoipia. el ma h i j e l i i ^M ri eiili fl er j i M i I ImI very little thing, for its size, and one of this world which well- organized people neverget too much of. No- body who understand even the riidiments of kissing disdain ite practice, and those who havwbeea-se-4efeaaaee-aa-ee reach eesaethiag of the icieno^ of )h%thiqu|^«l, npt easily re- s^m i o ad toMeir^jtnit i Mpreme happi- BehfirKir dAaS eeafflayainr, and it's a pretty amall matter to make a disturbance about and mo«t people will endure a good deal of kiming without getting angry about it and regarding it as a misfortune to make â- iiit^'Emwdiimnfbofmm. u «t to If awW test hJtfui w0, an.Li#niil|iiitnif brn|fc|Jilot^|t|^ man may not be so particular about putting his kisses where they srill do the most good the chief aim ef man is to get tbe kiaa, and he is freqaenlly too has*y and too leeklees about it Bat a woman i» apt to be a Uttte more considerate in her praferaaeea. There was an niineis weamn, now, who had a prejudice against being kissed by a tailor (possibly because the othor eight parte of the man were not aronnd), although the tailor waa perfectly free to say that he had no prqndice aaaiaat ksmsag the lsdf.K^*lthe regarded her ^UkA JtU to lSsfil|the fiaaklytold her sa Thore are some cold, wS^'^ive Hfc» into- tBs â- suiMl, #heeiS3d Botbe jiffe^ed, by any such talk, bat the 'S^^buwoXff irS'oiKnUs Var?l^ ot aat it-still a iiULpmu4 dvnle^t ii also -m^aidea lfh#h^?S# ip^W^ilor he was a bsn^soaw nan shs usut* that, being a tratkf al weoMi, she eeold not have done so BOBaBOitieaplK. mhUj )m takm the op. pesito side of the question. There is, how- aocootwraiX •koftJ^JIpe.feVt ^at waa the lawl â- y .â- *• *• ""f^ ' H P«"ili«r aboat a tatfar s kma. Bat it n cartsia that ths lad v didn't kM vneh time ia tdliag her lia^H aJ piMSite af ths^Uie, mr the tsOer prtMieed. edaphmtthehasbaadforsmrndt. KSae HS^idTaW^ t^"^*^ C/fc!l!S?v^!? '^^ theaeistoatai. lors Uh which iadaem a womaa to toll w '-â- '--^ ahert itaad cieato a distwhialea il 8«dk aeowasja-MsfaaaM .. •*» rf sUawod toiAfi* rsbokad most laevitahly cut tsilonofffcmi many of the good things of this world. ^^ iMlki feaoiag maa»nvMi.«itk hie-dviM aa iia ti o ne J luce itT^T^hWKinitf kf dJii" r eae oaatdlmi^iaMMr. Itm^Jialata. At^UvaiaChaiief aasmaU italBrs. batlmsat^lyarohsdJaoCthe si#i of Ms riiiStatuSSSitj Itsliaa type. His toga ia fall a s a e rg y, with itostroagly cot fsatares? aad aeverthclass there is'iaadi:gMtteaass ia thatphjndar notny. HIT WmIs flgare compel i the idea of a man powntally maselad. Tan yearn ago no one aroald have believed that the Baron di San Malato wooU ever open a feoeiag soheeL A Biettiaa gsatle- man, he lived magaifioently in Sicily. He drew apoB his {ortnaa srith hath haala, fliMiag his gold out ei tha sdadovs with rcoklass genenosity, as one lovee to see greet gentlemen da His lasury had renaersd him famous hia prodigality mad« him po- palar. Tbsrs sra* no fsatasy worthy of a grea loixl by which he was not tempted and none which he did not obey. Sever was tbe man's caprioe better eervad than by this maa. He loved laxnry with a loxnriaas love. His stablse were kept like a palace hispslicc like a museum. People came to see hia ten qtlendii hemej pawing marble, eating out of silver, drinking out ofcrysUl joat as they would also viait his gallariss to admire hia works of art. "Li em, U jtu It* Jtmmet," ho seldom went beyond the range of that romance, and he sang it en- obantingly wri' He kept at onoe toe best toble, the greatest iuncos, and the fineet mistresses. He played "Mssjenas " after a fashion of his own ' delighting to protect musle in the persons of divas, and dancing in thoee of the greatest ohoregrapbic sters. Once his fancy had been taken by a rosZadf or itJtU-baUu, â€" a nightingale throat or the shapely limbs of a sylph, it was no use for the publio to re- fuse to adopt the favourite. This aultan hired the theatre for hiias^f, paid for atf the leate, ^flung open all the doors, and said, " Enter '" A magnificent method of assur- ing suoceaa, s«fely, pitiful little protectoia that We are, who vaunt of having distrifaated' five leais to tbe olaqne I Bat tbe feaat could not endure forever at this rate. One fine morning San Bljdato, having by chance looked into his atrong box, fooad it absolutely empty. Like all thoroogh- bred bona viveurs be did not long hesitate what to do, Nevertheleaa, fanoy that his eyes mutt have become dimmed for a mo- meat â€" that moment of brief farewell that we give to the irreparable paat, when we are men of nerve. He looked into the future ai one looks into a river npon a oold day before plunging in. He did not firat put in one foot and then then the other, crying " Ait! capintt "â€"he simply creas- ed himse.f and dived io bead foremost. This was how the Baron di San Malato became a fenoing-master. To Mgin with, he was already a aplendid fencer, one of the beat Fencing had always beea a favourite diversion with him, aa all manly sporte are to finely-tempered natures. Taaght by hia father, a consummate swords- man, whom our fathers in the ar*' of using the foils may remember to have seen at Paris, he devoted five years more to the severeet studj' tha moat carefully aupervis- ed courses of instruction. .\ud when lie opened his school at Florence, it waa not only tbe first swordsman in Italy whom tlie aristooraey came to salute :â€" it was perhaps still more the modest pride and giorioos oou'rage of their former comrade. You can well imagine that under such conditiors the fenciog-hall of Via Mezza became the ren- dezvous rf high Florentine society. For five months during his stoy there, the Prince Imperial waa one of the moat aaaiduoua pupils who bonourod the school, leather with members of the oldest nobility and the most brilliant men of elegant society. This fact speaks for itselfâ€" 160 franca ror a trial of akill with the master 50 francs for a lesson. They do things on a grand scale in Florence As to the romantic side of the man â€" or, rather tbe picturesque â€" jne could never do justice tj it In tbe first place, it should be stated that San Malato ia known through- out the peniniula, and is known in the pe- liar light of a legendary type. He baa of- ten been called the D'Arta^nan of lUly and certainly wilh good reason. Wherever there has been a noble cause to maintein, a threatening danger wherever there was a man unjustly suffering, a woman weeping, a child crying for aid above all, wherever and whenever the fatherland beckoned, he was there, San Malato Twenty-two wounds received upon the field of battle One of j tbe first among thoaa hundred and fifty aol- I diers of epic celebrity who, at Aspremont, held their own against seventeen thousand j men 1 Forty duels far matters of honour ' Mon Dien, yes Iâ€" but I am aure that ontgof them all he did not provoke three. Most of them occurred in Sicily. Here is one which seems to me worthy of atten- tion. It was upon the public cquare of Palermo. I forget what was the political aidor arbieli flr^ the fiery dispoMciaoa ^f the people at the time. I think it was about a candidacy. Under tbe blue sky they were chatting and arguing. The Chevalier de P â€" a cousin of Uie candidate in ques- tion, spoke of his relative in terma worse than disrespectful. "You are a ooward I" aaid San Malato. How comical the sequel was. " Will you dare to repeat that ia. five minutee " retorted the chevalier. " Moit anuredly," repUed Sin Malato. Thereupon the Chevrlier de P entered hia reaidencF, which faced the square. Five minutes afterward ha osme oat and entered the group, with a revolver in his hand. San Malato went to meet him. "Let me first Buke another remark a revolver dtes;iiot beceme your hands it i Dot a. weapon dt for tach as -you ' yoo do not know hov to a«e it" And be spat ill his face. Attoniakment on the part of the chevalier, who remained motionlesf, asri reetad to the groofid, his arms haa^^| by his sid« aa i^^aralyzod. San MiUto's^ti bis fs^S-a second time. Friends intervened aaA' separated them. Ttien, of o^arae, s;ie3ads were ohoaeo. Swords werf setectedT In tbe ev«iiog San Malato Waa visited by Mme. de Pâ€"- mo- ther of theaheval^. Saakaew hia terri- ble atrea|^ and skill she came to beg him not to kiO'her son. ' "It shall be aeyeu wish, raadame you may rely epon my word." Next momiag San Malato, at the momenT of Iciviog hU house, gave a letter to one of hiaaeconila, and requested him ti convey it at once to Mme. de P Then he went onith* gro«lid,-and both nsea took thitr po- sitiona ^he chevidier attacked him furiously Sifi Malaty barred arithoat binging. Three times the atUek was made without any dif ference in the character of the cintrast the oaeadveteary vigoroua and eager, the other snpremely indifferent A witness bent for- ward aad whispered something in tho esr of the chevalier. "Ye^it istme,"aaid Stn Malato, 'I dona* wilh. to teuah you. Let us eontin. ue I And thU time the diabolical man oontin- oed the combat with his faoe turned toward TT^ " 1»» « «d to fantastic snnnealei "Then San Malato a^ to deT "Go and see madama year mother. ' She will explain what yea do oot nnderatand I" Let us toll soother stew rf him J^L are at itâ€" the taaoafc of proeadiag like a ha aiiesaMly apea aad laatoa as tbi^ to eh aan a with tka ire el a ywrti e« M, Mia ta all the r sssf amof th»aMMk'«Md hnsaiaaHoa Ha has atadied the m sl hs is rf iH i rhBth. sa d s pp sa ts tn hart aii l-i' ^* ne H eetioa ia each. Ia fiae, we ohaU aooa see that far oamalvaa for we are Mt ell bkatha Sidliaa brigaads. Oandmr. whaa Sea Malata was ridiag la hisoamivs^abaadofbaaditoaapsarsdapaa tha road. They stappad the vahiela aad throttlod the eaoebmaa Thaa tbe ehiaf of thebiadpat hishaadaad Ui bla a di Hi ass ia at ths wiadow and cried ia biaeaearnoos vo ce "Oetottt,allof you!" ban Makto, al ways leaning apoahM«lbaw ia a laagoerous atood, exclatsMd io a voioe ef esquiaito hautuer "Spread yoor c'.»al(S upon the ground I aught soil my feet gettiag deem.' "Han Malato I San Mafakto " yelled fhe brigands aad they fied ia terror. I may ^pear to be relatiogaiictjioe bot thia ia historical truth all ths Italian papers mentioned it But I only wanted to twist oat a differeBoe. We orv, "Rsa MaUto Uaa Malato I" but Ur from lyiag, w ehall all rash to meet bim. Mugatrd m nn tUn m U I POPiniAS 80IEV0B. Ma. C. J. KiAxyaa, of the United StU patent-office, believes that, jadging frm what has already been done in various ap- plioationa of electricity, within tbe next deoule we shall find oar large telegraphic corporations operating their elevators, sup- plying motive power, heat, and light throughout their buildings, and electricity for their lines, from one oomrain source of power. A PHOToaaAPHic sunshine recorder has been invented by Capt Abney. It consiste of a semi-cylindrical box, with a fiat )id, io the centre of which is a small hole. Round tlie inside of the cylinder strips of sensitive paper are fixed, and the instrument is then so p'aced that the sun, the hole, and the oentre line of the paper are in tbe same plane. As the sun moves, therefore, ite track will be recorded on tho paper. Mb. a. H. Kkami says that the extremely tow estimato cf the Australian intellect formed by Mr. Wake and other ethnologists seems at least somewhat premature, and that no one cin turn over the pages of Brough Smith's great work on tbe aborigi- nea of Victoria without coming to the con- dnaion that the race baa been much vilitied and unduly depreciated by careless or super- ficial obecrvers. Many inatances a; e given of their skill ia drawing, a capacity for which waa wholly denied them. Their childrea ooostantly show themselve " quite as cspable of receiving and profiting by in- struction aa the children of untaught parente among the white race." It appears from one of the recently pub- lished memoirs of the science department of tbe University of Tokio that there is noth- ing to warrant the helief entert^ued some years ago regarding the enormous quantities of gold and copper to be found in Japan. WhatoYer rick and easily-worked depoaite of either metel may have existed there, they were long since exhausted. Any remunera- tive extraction of gold or copper must now be pursued according to scientific methods and by persons posseming capiul. Coal is just now the most profiteble mineral brought to the surface in Japan. There are annually exporte 1 160,000,000 catties (a catty ia about I^ pounda), but the ccal imported is yet about 47,39,000 catties. Copper ranka second, silver third, and gold fourth in the mineral wealth of Japan. A AlMPt.E magic lantern, from the con- atruction and uae of which a good deal of instruction and amusement may be derived during vrinter evenings, is described in Tki Scitutifit Amtriean. A small box, a kero- sene lamp with an argand burner, a little fisb-glote filled with pure water, and a com- mon double or piano cosvex lens are all the materia's neceaaary to make it. A hole is bored in the top of the box to permit the ehimney ot the lamp to pass tbroagh and allow the heat and the products of combus- tion to escape. In the side ef the box a round hole is cut large enough to admit a portion of the globe, which is suspended in- side the hex close to the lamp. A piece of common glaas is then moistened with a strong lolution of sulphate of aods, and placed on a stand or clip so that tbe light from tne lamp will ba focused on it by tbe globe. The image of the glass will thus Le thrown upon a screen when the lens is properly sdjusted Tbe formation of the crystals of the sulphate of soda will be seen clearly on the screso, and appear like tbe magical growth of a forMt. Any ingenious family can readily devise a great number of iaterestiag szpen- mente srith this inexpensive lantern. .1Sft/f.1^1© Ki^t^- ti « •J â- ik 'OOMdiflhsSLte^aiL) ' •'trs^sS.' onSht IBTMbUe _^ ha ar^rilfir all. Mtf'^Mrd fto ffciir i lilMi T iil eSiim a i ^SdKMnrO:: the eady maOa. diSmaat aMied. Il'fs tobadieMfat«dthaft at* edlf a( aad th« £K^tp Wdy's^'Ul^wtth BmSmSmMi made er mj hady (smf iar the UoVeraer'e "at home," or the P)m- nier** "private a^artmeat" The mighty aaoegrm-xis of the foarfh astato ars, Eow- aoar, gradaal^ eoaiiai to the front thsir aMMke aias beiag d r a pp sd their â- kias desoribed thaii weakoassas i their buniaaity laoogaifid aad perhaps the atrange woador, ifnot aw'e attaehod to their amia mUn it b*»ap niawilMehly ., ed, possibly avaa oatirehr das tf o y a d teo^e iW kat^.BoMON^gTlaA ' TBI AwypL •we" â- '• " " of tbe New York iV^oa* has diwyfiesred for ever. Whitdaw Jieid is bat a elever maa. Ifais ae teifarap i a iti t a ti ^a iar less aa epitama of ell irM«B« *oA as arbiter of ths worbl's dastfay. Tbe Ifefr Tork HtraH Is bat aabtfaar same fer yoang Oordaa Benaet, aad auay oeasfort thatr hearts with the thoaght, that like WiHio's wife, be " aever was over wise." Everybody now knows that Dslane walkod every or rode evening doiratothe naMtafllos,amete thing of fleeh aad bleed that he aomked cigars draakeiarat aad oaaamooally even daaced. All this and maafa else, brings with it a pro- oees of diailhiaioniBg which is atran je, and yet pleaaant to the average mortal who thought hia favourite Editor " abe\ e him, like a star aad apart from bim like a spirit." 0mm ifnatum r,i wtagnHUo used to be a nice piece of Lttin for ordinary quototioa. At far as Editors ars ooaoemad, it is atmoet out of date. The "great unknowns " ai^s becom- ing the " little well knowns," and cudgel- ling is too rosterial a pceee m to I'C applied to a shade. Even ia oar own oou:itry the anonymous has almost entirely li aopeared. Who doei not know the Editor uf the MaU as he plods his ireary way along King street! Who haa any doobt about who playa " we " for the Ttbgram' Or who has any difficulty about tfiitvheatfc' dis^B *•" in rfJ* ^1. iMtWIItllS W disai^* ere. ii. JV «i Vaye- aia ether, and ve stispsM « 4aj(^aad haaiiii.., !«!«Xeaport*i" it rsi _. daysof theOIoiK ' 'lM"'k'ei'y'" tfcit the Vrsaten trTu^ij n^^^alS " "^-J ae K•e7K^^^ (FronniH..T„„^ J Almost everybo I T Ur^ hashe^dofcurlinJ:^ mwiy^hava seen the IptJ" (PJ»e at the wort V' With the thermomew' gr^above, the i„cW^ the shiyenag onlooki^' wonder what can b» til of tbe wheb affcir. V.! the whole rather "rijL*^ aay enthusiasm either f" ' P»iy..nditistench,t'» ^If otrwitbc-oir,*:* anything but an MmiraT: fnUdetermin»ti„nth;.?'" carter's riuk, proteui^ notf^l. andadiS^ faOod to discover. S^tVti ot the uninitiated hay. " once, and laugh at the „ OLD A.VI.VOl:.v^, Whose talk i, of 'tee,' " " brooms." aad " soon, .., and much else which iVLtt^' merest gibberUhtuihjT' lana, ' there must aft^r ,» " tractive, even t.if^Ji^,';^ ' ' the .u.«^ ' "" li»!i e and sing, «n 1 eve ' "" though they never off.. J,*"' any other jea.o.o/.^/;'^^ 11 o sritliottt i srili be pabliahrd Ull for- 1 ly. All tranaitory i "oe of pi»b- I Thuralay their p^blieation. S, Proprietor. I a BUSINESS DIRECTORY. I, ii Pe^irxl. »»!â- the ice ' sensible sUid people'^l" SThatnotgom.ro v'ut i their one amu^.- 8pr*Bl« dk Carter, I Sa^ceoaiB. Acooticliea,re al 'Hall; reiiideoee at lie. Sept 17, 1880. 1-y l/IOiuBON. A£XXUCH- 'XcoaatA P. O. «-tf. T r at l»a*r,; Owea Sound â€"MiOers^iiuildlng. over Eobin. I, Ponlet Street. i.y Oerlyle â- Viaitor. One of tbe moat oonataat viutors at Car- lyle'e house in Cheyne Walk, is a lady, whoee friendahip with the philoeopber be- gan ia a curious manner. A^ny years ago, the Rev. Dr. Thomas, now of Chapham' road chapel, delivered a lecture in Stock- well on Cariyle'a works. Amoag hia audi- ence was a yonng girl in humble circum- stenoea, upon wboae'miod the glowiiW^u!o- giek ef tbegrnt master's writings made a vivid impreeaion. Betuming home she manazed to became the poaseasor of one of Carlyle's volumee, which she load with avidity and then, j ielding to an ancon- trolable impulse, she penned a letter to the author cxpreaaing her gratitude for the light which hia work had been tbe meana of throwing upon many subjeote that had hitherto perplexed her. Scarcely had she dropped the miesive into the poet than, half, frightened, half-aahamed at her own pre- kumption, aho would gladly have lecalled it. A day or two afterward a carriage alopaed at the door ol her father's little ah^in Cambrewell, and a Udy alighted and in- quired for the girl who opened the door for Jane Price. " 1 am Jane Price," sraa the timid reply. " And are yoa tha lassie chat has written to Tens •" said the Udyâ€" Mrs. Carlyle. It rt quired some little expUnatiao before the blusoiog girl dearly understood that her viaitor was tbe wife of "Tom." and that he had been ao favorobtv imniaes- ed by the letter that ha wiahcd to see the writer. She waa taken in the cirria«e to t/beisea, whore she remained oromirtt and from that day down to the pwamit time, al- though ahe la Jane Price no longer, ahe has been a weekly an i a weloome v.sitot there. THB globe's PntSONAUTV, as it tekes it's lunch at C Jemao'a, or drinks deep draoghte of claaaical lore frum a great eduoatioaal authority, io f r qneat and de- lightful peripatetic confab «? (By the way, isn't that figure rather mixed Such things will occaaionally take place in the beet reg- ulated families,) Ani yet perhaps no GIi- tor haa for a longer p3noJ managnd to be ao very little better than a " ahade," than haa Mr. Gordon Brown. Except tj a compara- tively limited circle hia psisonality has boea almoat entirely lost aighi of. He has beea tbe "we" whom very few people iiave known tie i leil editor scarcely nder. stood to be flesh and blood except by bis fa- miliars the great omniscient whom no m«re mortal could matoh j the iatermeddler with all knowledge, whoae word waa law, whose nod was fate tbe maker and unmake^ of carters and characters; the terror of hia foes the sure refuge ef kie friends the ar- biter of taste tbe veriUble wialder of the thunderbolt tbe great rigfatcr of srroogs the great patron of merit the great prick- er of wind bags tbe great discoverer of gen- ius the great Coryphaeus of progreta the champion of tbe weak the advcole of the oppressed the guardian of liberty in abort the friend of ths good of all placea and in a'l times. Very many who b ve read the Olobe for a quarter of a century, never, till ro- cently, heard his name, or knew wbj their daily instructor might be. Georgx Biown they knew, and George Browe aad the OUit were to them one, and iodivisib a. That the late Hnnorable Senator wrote every word ia their paper, at kwt every word of any importance, was a ptrt of what waa moat surely believed amonj them, and thataay other " Brosra " had abend in tbe work was not even sntpected, tar lesa open- ly av ' wed And yet all the while THB RKIL KDITOa was doing his work unseen, and to a great extent unmarked, and it is only now, when the ohler, larger, and more energetic brother has beea withdrawn. th«t the Globites feaer- all^ are finding out that there was aU tim while "aaother Browu at the work, and that he though smaller was by no mea-u in- sigoificant Nay, it is aow dawning npon laany that a large daily p»psr is tbe srork of no ain^ individual, and that the responaible editor finds his work not so much in writing for iU columns aa in giving uoitjr, ooaaisteaoy, aad vital force to all which it contains frwa tbe casaal notice to the pondcroas editorial. No aua hae led a onieter, more exciting aad yet lees avcatfal life than Mr. Gordon Brown. Oonneetad srith neirspapor work since tbe down of early manhood was on kis cheek, he has been A NBWBPAPUt XAK ALL THP.OUOIL He ha», day by day, as they oocnrred. gone through all the exciting evente of nearly the last forty yeara has looked at them koealy and carefully haa discussed their relative importance with a large amount of ability but act always with tbe unbiased caadour of a judge baa »e.oatiines foaad himself niistoken m his sstiawto of iniiridoals. and in his forecast ef evente has â- "imiittimas exalted pretentions mediocrity and failed to reoogniAe undoubted ability aad traasparoat worta has been a pitileas assailant nad a bitter partiaaa intoleesat see* in his advo- cacy of toleration illiberal in hia liberality, and inclined to pUy the tyrant, even when be stood np for freedom. But, on the other hand, there can be little doubt about the fact that the ooaclu.iioiu reached by the brothers,â€" and, aa far ai the OhU was oon- oeraed, they were a nnityâ€" in their esti- mato of matters, both at ho m and abroad, were generally correct, for eooung events and altimato public opioi.*a kave made this altogether ucqaestionable. Indeed, on any other snpposition tbe pio*pcrity aad tower of the Ohkt sroaM have bean aftogetlmr in- ezpUoaUe, and the ability of •• the Biwwna" woukl have baea somslking more thaa ho. man. They have ltd, not brcauae they could make their readers believe anything they chore, but because, in nine casts oaT^ '-- their ojur.e was tbe correet ItlKl (ANI) AlTOBHETS-AT W"ChaneerT, Coiivrv Owsn Sound, have resamad at Oiftee open rvery Tbiirsdav. a-^ J. W. FaosT, LL. B. 1 oinv_^t»aiPB4T ot-t i, I ATTORNEV-AT L.\\7. in Chancerj-, Owen Sound. 1-v "tef J 1880. -*r-LAW, SOLICITOR IN rv, Notary Public, ±c. med at lowest rates on peronal vr. lemds bought and oM. 0BUf»d_fTee of rommii DUWDALK. r »l»t IflgO. 1 BrowB, F MARRIAGE LICENSES, .t isioner in B. R. 4c. cing in all its branches prom|tly aad earefully executed, ney to Lend on R«r| Estate e. Sept. 17, 1880. 1-v among the fraUrniti i„A7 play U even talked .iZ^^'*? the stammerer b**« aA«^ "°'""' of daiS gone by art \«jj^,^ sli the incidents (.1 lut)^,. again detailed â€" » itti a b,^ might think needleii u' that leavea nothing td v, Originally a Scotch uai, more or lesa iato fasli:oii tbe two iodispansabli s of .v and sometimes, evm «ti.e not forth coming, men of oti^' catch the infection ami to the manner bom. know what "curi:i. » For the information °t ti«» we may aay that it u verv pUyed on the iee and witi which that fict reuden oourse bowls would moderately smooth Ke ta» fectly unmanageable uj play would acarcely I,* p,^. bowls each "curler' h^tvn stones, generally grisife ^, 30 to 45 lbs. each, iajrio, • strength of the pli)„. IO the upper part oi ibe enable the player to hurl v degree of fortse. Tne coatj»„ are v«ry much lik.. tboaii are ma le op. usually fon.' t, a director named tki., for ». leugthof ic*, usually (roal, and eight or nine leet j:roa, j Tnis is called a r/»;t. At a-: r*«i- certain marks arc mnie several ooocentric riii^j lai %tte. A certeiu number it each aide pUy* alteruslely, f oourse IS to lay the ktoaei by either skilfully minajnj â- toaee of tbe nvjl sid., or kj away aad leiviof tfieirplaca poeitioDS. (Jj doing c'im hi amount of dextctity and m neariy all the inVsrwit nf tb scarcely possible to exag^eri of exoitoment and eutbusiu; diaplayed in this work. Pertut pastime irhatover th»t affofi! •••'*• Corket, Jr., It It IS very likely the eatiiji^I LOAN AND GENERAL AGEN 1 sreateet in the origiml itD:~)waa loond. Monev to Loan at "lnw bat even in Kagfaul »od i^a"»«hrtf • Pnucipal pavable at tlir elaewhere, players ofiea lui, .•â- â- P ^f yeaw.and intaroKt half veai- specteble show, at least id .i.r. aj^, or prindipal and inter«:t r^uav- aad the Canadian lovers o: ti ijpwalmente, '^- â- aber of deairable Improved Farm i y )N AND PROVINCIAL LAND for. Draughtsman and Valuator Markdale. Having purchased nd Surveyor Charles Rankin's original Eield Notes, Plans •tractions, Jeofail bis Surveva .the last fifty. tive years. 1 am I make Survey., m strict.acoord- ith. Profiles and EstimateA Plairs and Specifications Bridges, furnished on applies- to Loan at S per cent interest iter, or left with G. J. BLVTH -ill be promptly attended to. 'I GUI The Best Ej 70. 000 A(J 9.00 It •ilmalniff wbirfc rvBTrrU foaW Isia |.|iicl nanm Wtod •iomarb. I r â- trir â- ffn- Jl ori, uf,od â- nrtii upoa I( Reaulau 1 1 Puria-i, I Qitiri. IiPraniaim I Ic Naaiiobr I It oarrlra o4 ' It spraa ik Beallhr Prr It 0»*ll'rtl.zm I I blu"J. Hill, I Banner of skia 1 TUerr an» no i ' ani It rac u. j t2r s:;..! ui,| fa, UnU^*i to litre. t\ raicEOF FSICSOF Read the Vl of Persons w| use of the BL Foi: \)\ J'eui " yowx valuitf ban Leuetiii-( aud Liver (," ciue 1 ever I85in, r. Ii. smltli, AGENX AND DEABER IN" Stock. William:ford Station. 1 ^exui'er Br*ira, of Marriage Licenses, Fire and Inaurauce Agent. Commiasionei ive^naer and I.doani«ed 1 ounVr of Orey. Farmers .t?t^r^ •y"*»V»Bd Land Sales, Punctually at v 1 to siS charges made very moderate. M.taao. I. jw » I J •*S1? °' »«ether duel, but a different kind. They weio fightinglrith sa- bres the adreaary was the Count De B â€" t^ mort remarkable sabrenr of that taae. San Blalato was much lees skOfnl hacktoth«rj«jtioo.. leBl_wJlu o ?rT *** eneeuatsr oom- kMt** h^ tIa contmaed the aUowed hia to do it, „_ -^ forioaa fU Um^ aimartf forwaid, araaodcd tha QiMt DaB-ZTdll! P«»J^wth tha stamp of his weapoB, aai ?* yâ€" i»^e a seaars slash toaU ttl KeeeithalM the ym bilk 'ftht,aad 'HiaaSaa odpa. i that bThSTpSiirid «^ Mg»'»iah he sdsrss G!S"i!l'!.Jfe!* How oompletoly the T..,Bd Leaane ^a overcome the ceasideratMBs iru2 tewe heretofore so largely iaflaeeced the minds ol Inahmen la Men in the tact of such a man aa Lord Oranard having been compelled to invoke thi aid of dragoons and conataku- laiy. Lord Oransrd u among the dosaa noblemen of const quence who always leside f^^^. Except to attoad the isrioTa ^?~*?V .â- • •»« 'w twenty rears rarelv quitted his eststoa His father's mothw, the Coonteesof Moira-t^ friend aad oaV Jk*"v^ *Jr^ Bdwimth-biaSl*^ though by buth aJiUk, mofTSftia. **• I^^the^ves. aad Moita Heasa. W «prfiosat home oa Udier-s QaarSAK WM amety »«« ago, not mi^aly ttj oitysmost brdluat «cial centre, bat the very fo:«s of the anti-Union which her husband, her son (thVf2io« Marquis cf Hastiags), aad bar aoa-^^ Lord Oranard. were most activs iemW The preaeat Lord Oraaard. laheritlagX triditions of his house, eznroseed. oiimon than on. eocasiea, oniaioaaBO Irish, from a laad to hu remgaiaa-tbe nstdmtiaa haiaa hialrstwife, a pe at fiT jil^'thTjSSfaSK^'*^ "^2^ Sliobtlt aaNMHs «m 'tki their argumeata had not oaly a certain roagh vigour about them, but were in the mnn eharacteriaei by aoourato thinking, UDdimbtod eanseetaess, and a large «oaa«^ of 0od commea aaass. And in tha midat of aU thU soaUnaed change of men and things amid the excito- S!!^'^^ bjrthe riae and niia of empires ^.of'M'^o^uir**' *^"*»' MR. OOEDO.N asOWa HAJ MOVKD OS ia the even tenor of his way, ptaismg this one- "pftching ih" to that. qiirUy wSkini h« hoosa u bis offiee. aadf from hS takia^JUbl* "triSi" "â- * *^ ""^^ gliaa apwanU ovmabldLw^ J*" " his brothel's one, from Md ais aoa. ^Aftaaa^t he la Ii halOTw of "^^omassi SI am spsasii hatiawaa laay. Motaovar, »; ahrars « tha«hSa Ist* fC ^^!5r*?^ oveuhaSiwsd, no d^ibTTy V^^i^^JPV"^* individuaUty, jet that hrather's uaUspansable eompie- â- Mot,- aoompacatava laalima. sritkaofaenl- ty of spoken speeek. the foiee ha had Zmi health, yet, with an abiding eoafidanoe iu his owa posrars swl a f aU ooavietioa that he waa M«»d to aaae ia the entire aehle mmy of editors, ha ataada aow aloM to show how were doe to Um Titaaio eaetay aad wide to the »^W •«*. the «aiet courage mmI SJ JSfr^' -«• editorial f^ty of •roai;ini cav- we can vou- ' .re not Ljbma i: in strength aw^ ami reli':9i.: and eff.rt. ..c is sa:.i thi-.:i one specially remirlii'u'e ;:iic. is, that it and perb^jM I: aW. the time beia^; a ' liijroii:' ranks. Peers and |i.i-iu.» tradaejiea, clergy ah urra.i, dakee are all on equ il u I ru This is thought a i^n ' wouucr. where no such caste J.t no.i.: stod to exist, auii .i i.-r,- 1;., IS ooocemtd, an vcn n, ui mi familiarity over the "ttxes •orprise and calls fjnii uu ^T»•l; Wa ehonid be sirry tu »y • aga in e t curling. It is kr^c a.-. paatiata. The oaly ittt i \h relaxationa, it '«il be niaVe i gambling, a busiuem oi snA " v. with all the abominaUoBi i srill discredit tbe gxne. au fewer of the playera. We haa been tbe caee \c'., it .i LH ^« genuine lovers o\ v.. their faaes a^ast tne tin: bids Uir to one oouM nieotidc what need haa a curliai; r.oU Aad why end a day of tbe ' the tarem aad wtn^key {a:- often done. »tr«. f^ron, Owen Sound. [*â- ? 7HEBE^BE Hot SF -J?" 'It? *^» Wodaeeday iil 1 ne win be prepared to per lions required upon the mouth stisfaetory manner, and upon 1 V I s.ul Iai .^u- diJCtors' liani eight years, that I have -\fter usuig for a brief su led to ,Io lieve it H.I dllH^ Ml j lJ.vk ll; ;l lwa afflj.-t.dl I wLuh yrow Uiy rn,,tu. anI mcurable by 1877, I comr Blood Syjiif meiiceil t' • f,'a a short uu.- fair J^iv^ v entinlv ;,'.,:,. Cl JJtl .Mt. t[ wi Dtan Sir;â€" I ErysipebtK U,r your Indian Bj tar. l.JVJ Mt. Fre-t. De4B Mn Bloi-d hyi ;ijr rece:vi.d i:r«;t i^ mend ii- .\~ liISEASI Mt. F..r.-i I'KtB SiH valuaHe Iiui,„: t'ra«ii|.« III Ii,.. Ttet.iajthfi ffi^iMoa he hor Oc- cupies be is eoaviaoad thU hecaaaotoBlv aiaintom, bat ' niraovB orox rna aLoaas rAar ascoao is, of oouise, aotorieoa. Maay are of ooui. 3ii2M? J^SLiTw!?^!?^ hls' aoffi^ aad aaisrsalam Us bialksa'a «-*- eaaaaadpnatiga. '-mrillMamiiljir~ U«, ««. it m hqpa^aU wSSsS2t k ia MaaUy hawaaiijaSiw ^**B tha Olaha, Md hte d4(U: fcvat ma with tha toatr iwPvwiir^M Wliy Bridal Jto»1 eminent pbysicx "• S«* I "oa of bis ibstH""' her from «..in^ "a it« He did this from oofc-. and delicicy which ts in mind. Tbe ti'»' 'V de are such that slit »" irt rstiremeot aud u-it ati^l "tatious publicity. -AyouDg." oars and at hotel Ub'H prejioua and liappv stcittilJ^ Their newly-forme.l relatwsj tbonsani ways. Of li' ' acious, and the onUal ti *^ woaoan ia most trym ohange in the life ui the « bring on physical dewui*"**! laat a lifetime, for the »!«' ""J tion ot her feelings rjact oa »f iojuriously. So the Ne* ^f have been apeaking ol ow" with her young liusbiud » T upon the duties of » ue' l'l pone tbe tour uutil «' "*^_ pssaed away. Of -oi«* " side to this qoektioo. ",* tbe foodeat affecti.m v" " two people were iorcftl i time together witiixt t^' sitated by travel auJ tfc"" to t« kept up in publx^ f interesting topic, and o" ' a pcofitoble subject .to " swnistiss. It is a •â- ^i'^V^ oreosen pbysieiaii!i •i^i^"' tags. HOIVHOl MARKDALE. KK I'ISK.Vbl. t I '•• ' I'Mil IB PaiUb 111 liiy Sli reliWc 111.. !ii,:.l Syrup-wl.uiiei).' siwHvs (,Mve y.iM| justly de^erve- '*alt, the tn^" Lv aaooaiQiodatiou. Careful bo^et.""""'" VAN HOn.V, IVopriotor. â€" i"-*' I Df.Aii .s„. -;, Ito- J#%^s^B i*dX Has uju.l.l "*^ â- BL. /*•»» to a docto) ' I which did no go, Si A I AMQito the stuthug c whidiT. .T. Marsh h«l iW' at Charlesttu, HL. •'^,, GovemmcDt l«' lii.ooa " Is your'^irife » "l*"" eaaraahedoneKo:kl»»^' ia a store this mniiS' was the prompt rpspoo* '• "TJ eaatieosfy around and *»"..l heaiae waisper. be expl^*" ' iBier." It has generally ««â- „ of a deer forest IB I; raekon that each stag aad a baase of gn^use » â- tat «fai^ aeeorduig to ia ' aa aiaggeratiou â- O h arlaaJdordanntdunal* OlMfiabie. which les IS ' «f lavemeasahirf, 4 game, iaclBdiar,. («Mat of them ve ^tK. As he rests* O. KTotaat. M. P.. »^, ayear, iH»«*rt- isiathisoase far too' LRKDALK. TLiE. Proprietor. Hotel has bad a Inr^f ad- ' to it, thoroughly refitted, to none lu the county, attontive ustler. First- Jtion for eommorcial travel. ' •*••• i^r da y. 17- ly "ORD, Out PROPRIKTORS. "lation f. the tiavelbng .. T* "^y^d with the ^y»d Liqo^rs and the bet â- fi^^^rjtaiiis. f^*^ Iv ,CIAL hTteIT BVHiLiE, Ont. Hou* Sample Rooms â- ' *s. The Bar and larder the best the market af- and attentive Hostler's. ATKINSON, Proprietor. 8 vour Itiuiau UU oaly a Bbon liL ed, and now uiv I can xafelv remedy. inSPEP.SIA A.M Dear Sir I years with l.v-|ej Kidney uini'iiiiija many rt•mudle^. came very laa auJ 1 seut lu viiur Ad bottle of yuur Injil not hesitate tu ^sy| am rompletelv cuf man. Last wrei with severe HeadJ yoiii valiishlr medl CCRES DVSIKI VVeHtf DtAB SlB -I Dyiipepi,!* for a Indian blood Ayr, ever helped me. from Ibis diiwasv trial. 'E WILSON, 'MS St door to Expositor ffltow*. " Sole General op and Lyman, NJ Toronto. Alto Agl Healing Syrup, an is well known as i Blood Punier throii WM.I nalilOrssi I Estimates for st I pHeation. Safe deaee â€" Qneea i I Markdale. Sept. 11