1
KNITTING AND CROCHET. A CHILD'S PETTICOAT. JVC*-* The Weekly Tribunt. i Children's undergarments, liotli ltnitteel and cro- cbeteel, are veiy popular now. Tba above repre¬ sents u pretty little petticoat, in ribbed crochet, wlikl! is easily unel quickly linnie. It is worked in pink and wbite Saxony wool with a bouo crochet book. Begin at tbe lower edge with a chain a yard arida .quarter in length, and divisible by 12, tbe number for each scallop, which is dented thus: Work from right to left. . 1 DC on each of th© first 5 ch., 3 DC into the sixth, for tbo centre and ontwaid peak; 5 DC on tbe next 5 ch., miss 2 to 6hnpe the hollow or inner peal.; this at the same time makes an open seam, which divides the scallops. Repeat from \ and, at tho end of tbe mw, to rib tbe crochet, turn tbe work, and pierce tho needle at the back of the stitch in the preceding line. At the 20lh row derreuse by missing 1 stitch on either side of the festoon. Fasten off at tho 32.1 row. anil join at eVbe back, leaving a placket hole or not as preferred. Prepare a band e.f doeililo crochet, on which we.rk any simple crochet editing. A draw- lug string may bo iusertcel through Ibis. EMITED LACE. "Adelaide "furnishes a pretty pattern of lace and tbo following direction-! for knitting it. Cast on 10 stitches. 1st row: Knit 2, over twice, purl 2 together, knit 2, over twice, narrow, knit 8. 2d row: Over, narrow, over, narrow, knit G, purl 1, knit 2, over twice, purl 2 together, km! 2. 3d row: Slip 1, knit 1, over twice, purl 2 to¬ gether, kuit 13. 4th row: Over, narrow, over, narrow, knit 9, over twice, purl 2 together, 2 plain. 8th low: Slip 1, knit 1, over twice, purl 2 to¬ gether, knit 2, over twice, narrow, over twice, nar¬ row, knit 7. Otb row: Over, narrow, over, narrow, Ts plain, purl 1, knit 2, purl 1, knit 2, over twice, purl 2 to¬ gether, knit 2. 7th row: Slip 1, knit 1, over twice, purl 2 to¬ gether, knit the rest plain. 8th row: Over, narrow, over, narrow, ll plain, over twice, purl 2 together, knit 2. Oth row: Slip 1, knit 1, over twice, purl 2 to¬ gether, kuit 2, over twice, narrow threo times, rest plain. lOtbrow: Over, narrow twice, 5 plain, purl 1, 2 plain, purl 1, 2 plain, purl 1, 2 plain, over twice, purl 2 together, 2 plain. 11th row: Slip 1. kuit 1, over twice, purl 2 to¬ gether, rest plain. 12ili ron : Over, narrow, over, narrow, G plain, bind ott G, 8 plain, over twice, purl 2 toijcthe.-, knit 2. Repeat from 1st row. "Adelaide" nays thia lace is very pretty knitted with linen thread instead of wool. :i9 the loops on the edge stand out better and make the pattern moro showy. ' INFANT'S CROCHETED SOCKS. Socks for the lit tlo ones are tu such constant do¬ main! Hint plain directions for crocheting n simple. useful pattern will bc acceptablo to beginners. With single zephyr of tin. desired colorant! a rather Bunill hook make a chain lung euough tog) arouud baby's leg.probably thiriy-tivo stitches, more or less. Join lliem together to form a round, .ntl work in DC, putting the hook through tho underhalf of each stitch for about 15 rounds. This forms tho leg. Now, for ibo top part of the foot, rai_e 13 stitches. crochet tricot.e.that is. put lu the hook as before, pull the wool through and leave the loop on thc book. Work these 13 (ditches forward and back¬ ward iu crochet tricot du for IO rows.remember- ing that forward and backward make 1 row. On the next row narrow by drawing tho weul through the lirst 3 vertical stitches on the right hand side of tbe piece, and again through the 3 stitches imme¬ diately belorc tbe last loop. Kepeat these narrowings on the next row. There aie now 5 stiches. Make a DC. lu each. The top part of tho foot le finished. Next, work down thc left Bide of this pice** in DC, then aiouud the i-.titche. ut tho bottom of tbo leg, and afterward along the right of the loot and around the toe. In doing this tho only part to be careful nhont is tho left side of the foot. The hook here should bo put uniter tbo last of tbe afghan stitches doini tbe side and through tho stitch be¬ low. Work ronnel and round tho bottom of foot aud leg in DC. for G or 7 louuds. Then tum tho Work inside out, place tho two sides carefully to¬ gether, put the hook through 7 stitches at tho toe end and draw thc wool through the whole. Crochet in DC. the bottom edges of the foot together till only 7 sti'.ehes are left, put the book through all of thecve, draw thom together to match tho too end, fttsteu ott', turu it insido out agaiu, and tho foot is finished. Next fnsten the wool on the top of the leg; make three chains, work two treblo Into thc same l.olo. miss two stitches, aud fasten with a DC. hilo tbe third stitch. Moke two chalti, work two trebles Into ibe same bole as tho DC. i miss two stitches and work a DC. eu the thirel." Repeat this scallop all around tbe top of the leg. The work is now complete with tho exception of a little chain uud tassels, or a narrow ribbon around the ankle. The pattern will billilly be called a handsome one, but it is easily made uud under¬ stood. Recapitulation: Cast on 35 rtitches for top of leg ; leg 15 rounds deep, top of foot 13 stitches wide, and ten rows to narrowings for the toe. 'two rows of narrowings.8 stitches in all; toe. 5 stitches wide ; «epth of foot, 6 or 7 rounds. Finish with scallop on :g and ribbon rouud ankh*. ?- SCRAP-BAG. Thk Dawv Pattern..Mrs. D. B. B. siys that tbe Daisy Pattern given recently is po pretty that She is anxious to make it. She understands all ex¬ cept tho 3d round winch says " work ut tho back .f thc petals, etc." This ls very easy. After com¬ pleting the 2d round ju*-t turn tne work over.this Is tbe b._ci\" where* thc next row is tn he worked. There are only 0 petals when tho 2.1 round is com¬ pleted. Hy woiking at tho " hack" a petal between each petal of tho 2d round you get 12 as in cut. The petal is to bo worked lu tho "2 DC," of tho preceding round. CLOVER Leaf.-Mw. H. B. B. says she found no rtifl-cully with Mrs. Gidcoii-clover-leaf edging, aud -wonders at tbe complaints in regard to it. Will others who have tried it report! Frinok for Tidy..Mrs. II. H. W. replies to .'Farmer's Daughter'' thst tbe fringe of her tidv ls not knitted, anel gives the following directions'for making it: "tako a pieco of paste hoard, ora book, or p.nvthing that is shout the length you would like the fringe, wind the* yarn evenly around it and cut one edge. Double oaoli thread aud witb h crochet book (1 use one tor convenience,) draw it through the edge of tha tidy, forming a loop, then draw the ends through tbe loop thus formed, if *oo wish a boavier fringe, draw two or three* (breads through tbe same place. It is very simple, and ©Mily done." Honey-Comb Stitch. . M. E. C. wants another pattern for honey-comb stitch, nd finding tho ouo recently published that which she had inlier mind's .ye. She says: "The one I desire is a$ perfect au Imitation or honey-comb as can be made with worsted. Double sepbyr is generally used for it and but few stitches sre required to make the pat¬ tern- I think the wrong side is made by 'purling' ont sm not sure." Can some oue oblige ber with tbe desired pattern f Caoc-XT T-JU&s..Ifiss B. lt, G.. wdl find har questions as to terms answered in the last number of this department. Wool »or -Roman Afghan*.".K. K. writes: " Tn Thk Titibi:.nk of April ll, 'L. M. C.' asks how much Germantown yum is reqnireel for a Roman Afghan. There is required one and three-eighths pounds of black, ono murtee nf a non nd blue, one quarter of a wound wotto, three iieeini.ls of pink, two pounds of yellow. Coal nf material abonl $3. Delicate! shades are prefer.'ebie.thees" of th" Colum¬ bi*, yarn are beautiful. ' K. K.' will he happy to give uiiy information ni ber power.with regard to any nf the threw Afghan patterns .-hieh sim senl." Pms ion Knithno,.Mrs. L. J. says thst she bs been knitting lacesnccescfally willi Cu;*- hair pit for needles. The re ls only one Knitting Kxtra ont nt present; another will bo published in a compara¬ tively short nun'. A Ciiarmino Fancy.."Adelaide" has ad.Iel ¦really tc the beauty of Mrs. Jennie Drake edging hy simply pulling a row of treble crochet in white fliisssilk around the edge of the sealion.. I be effeel of tin; silk edge on tbe white woolie owes ls remark¬ ably pretty. Nothing could be nicer ai a trimming for flannel skirts. DitAwms and L> ohing*-*..Mrs. K. T. B. n*eks for directions for drawers and leggings lot a child e.f lom- or moro, and wonld like to bo told of some iarge- siscd yarn, strouger and more durable than double zephyr, willi which lo knit them. Misch.i.ani.-ors..Mr*. E. 0. B. would like pat¬ tern of lady's hood, knit or crocheted, willi trim¬ mings of crorhet work edged with .silk thread or flo. s coveiiug tho knilteel or crocheted foundation. Also pattern for crocheted saeque or clonk for street wear for inri from six to e.igni.size ol' needles, qual¬ ities and names of materials to bo given lull..A. Y. m. wonts pattern for nndersblrts tor geiitlemeu. .Mrs. il. C. W. ssks for directions for crocheting a border en a crocheted jacket nut of (Jcrmantowii yarn..N. C. .san act Ihe pamphlet she refers io by writing to the Nonotuck Silk Company, Bostou, Mas-*. Woukinc oct Pa rr .tn.i..Mrs. J. II. W., after working to tho eud ol tim pattern for lace, insertion, etc., should begin again at ino beginning and keep repeal inn till sho han worked as much as she wishes. Tim patteiiim arc not lo bo worked backward, Lack Tit*..A. E. B. kindly writes, In answer to H. M. B.'s ineiinry in regard to lace ties, thut she knitted a piece of Tunisian in¬ sertion thc length she wan.ed her tie, and theu knit ted Normandy lace of sufficient length to go all round the strip nf in-crtioii. She sd els; " A piero of insertion and edging made willi BOO thread and put on tli- end of a.si np ol line organdie, ts quite pretty, thc* German lace, made up with a little ribbon, is lov.-ly. A friontl of mine nonie ti handkerchief for the neck by taking a piece of wash blinnie, eiuting il to lit tho neck, nml finishing itali round witb Tunisian insertion and Nurmaudy lace. 'It i-. tit to wear before tho Quceu."' A. I'., li. courtejoiml.v semis the followingdirections f*>r a loee whii n is pretty and serviceable knitted with linen thread No. 50 for underwear, or ot fine woollen j urn lor ll,inn.1, skirts: Caston 9 st it ches. 1st row: Slip 1. knit l.nverand knit 2 tosetherS innes, over, kim 1. 2el row: Knit .lain ; every alternate row is knitted plain. 3d towt .lip 1, knit 1. over and knit 2 together 9 Dine.--. overi kuli tho remaining stitches plain, Repeat this '.) lillies or until you nave l** sfitchesun lbs needle. Thou knit across plain tbtcc times. Then sii]) 1, knit 2together, overkill! 2 together four lime*; km! tbo remaining 7 stitches. Repeat (every alternate row plain) nil yon have 10stitches only on tim needle. I lien slip 1, knit 2 together, over tend knit '_ together 3 times j knii last stitch plain. This gives tbe original numbei.niuo. Knit across plain Ihree linus before tiesiunlug aliolli. r *-. "lilllie. Keiiicinlicr thal the " over " rn* well ss the " Unit 2 together ll times" i- to bs repeated. K- .tum; Ti hms..h. F. C. wants lo know tbe meaning eef "por. 2 together lour times.'' Mus is eqnivule ni io saying four limes: "Purl 2 together,*1 ;imi does neel take on so mneh needed space, Thei.. no difference between "purl 1 fear times" and "1 purl tour innis," except thal the former is less awkward) "purl 4" would he better than either. "Knit 1 four times" means knit plain Ihe four con- secutive stitches coming Ural on yonr left ueedle. "Purl 2 together" moans to run yonr riant needle through two siitchcs instead of ooo ou yonr Icfi needle, and lake I hem off together if They wire only one. We cannot agree witb H. P. C. IHal Ihe terms ate blind. They an* easily intelligible lo one who has given an hour's study to them. We sdvi ie her to examine the directions lur knitting in the "Woman's Lxna," tbo terms being explained there¬ in. Leaf Tidy..Mrs. J. S. J.'s pattern of "Raised Leaf Tidy" is in type and will be primed as won ns she supplies thc missing 8th and 'Alu rows. Will 6hu kindly do tins sa scion as possible T JUVENILE POEMS. _ By TT, ll. Mallock, authur of " Is Life Wort)' Living V A CllII.I)'.-> LOVtt SoNO. it'uhipoied in a living.) Tbe broeses :ir>* sighing About me, above nm I Oh. I should In* happy, If Celia WODld love mo I But without ('elia's love Tbo breezes may blow'i And, for all (bat 1 eur.-, To the devil may go ! _An. tut. 8. A HOY'S LOVK SONO. If Celia won't have yon, fond lover. Why squander in sighing tbe flay I If all your entreaties won't move her, Kescut it, ami meet lier half way. Sieppeisc you were now to possess her, i-.-i beauty snd sll von desired] How soon you would cease (¦* cares* her J How soon ol thu beauty bo tired I Then sim. a more icsoliito measure, Nor rquander in ricking the day j It cannot h. much nf a treasure Whose charms with possession demy. An. mt. 13. PROFESSOR HUXLEY ON DOGS. From The London Telegraph. Prof._w.or Huxley pointed mit by the aid of n dia¬ gram, in which lone-was given to tho Illustration mr tba skeleton of the uiilmal being raiaud ou hind legs, that in internal coaatralotion tho only diil'nr- ence between mau ami dug was tine of size im.l pro¬ portion, Then* wan not a bone in one which dbl not exist in tin other.not a Mingle, constituent in the ono that was iioMij he found in Hie oilier. In tho cease of the dog there wns not thu! which, on super¬ ficial examination, answered to lb.* collar-bone ol lu¬ man; but .lost) dissection would dmelose in the ease* ot ibe lower animal » little hone varying in length frum a third to half an inch, occupying ihe same place as the haman collar-bones, whi.li was in¬ dubitably a rudiment ar., collar-bone, Il appeared to be of no functional Importance, bul there ii wus. Considering thc psychological nature of the* clot/, the lecturer remarked that no might bo met al tlie outset with tin- objection,u Talk of the mind of a dog; why, I don't believe be has a mind.' Well. tim only reason bc bad len- sssumiug timi tin; dog bael a mind was tits samo reason liv which lionMiimeel that all present had minds. There was 'ie. din ci evidence of thc fae;! any more in tho one bau in thu other. Ran a pin into a man, ami thero wai s -int i nml a cr** b\ which they .iiiin" le> (he conclusion that .-sin han resulted, nun a pin into a dog, ami there was a howl and attempt, perhaps to bite, bj which wi Inferred that the intimal wns in a state of consciousness in which ii also suffered pain. Could th.-y say that tho dog was a mero piece ol animate machinery J I' wasquite true that certain philosophers had bold views of tbat kind, but com¬ pton st uno people would not have it. anil hu l>e- llovod thc common sense people wen- right. At the Killin1 time In1 was disposed to think thal in dogs Ihe feeling of pain was Infinitely duller than lu human beings. Ai to tin* other senses belonging to dog., hi. was Inclined to doubt very much if dogs <¦> >n 1<1 see with anything like thc .'.i.itim itiioes ol niau, Their bearing was indisputably very acute; but il remarkable: fu.t thai that sense wm regulated mi a totally different seale- In do.-, as compared with hu¬ man beings. Did they ever hear of adogtukiug o pleasure in ransic 1 'Ju the contrary, the Bonnels of music seemed lo cause' him acute pain, accompanied by a horrible sent of fascination, which fastened him lo the spot at which he was subjected to tbe torture;. Else, when a German band was doing ii« worst in tho streets, why did he si; up on his haunch¬ es and bowl wben he might get up and runaway! Yet he often wondered whether dogs really did sillier pain from music or whether they bowled purely in sympathy, as did.t hsjackals of the prairies. Tho w-iiso ol smell in ;i dog|Was some! liing marvel- loos.marvellous uot only for its delicacy, but for tho fact|thut its elisc'rii.limit ion.)!,v. hat was agreeable and disagreeable was exactly tho reverse of ours. They never heard of ;i dog being Infatuated with lavender water, or patchouli, or Eau do Colognes bc rather revelled In tbe smells which to meu were a source oi unfeigned horror and disgust. He once not a dog which be frequently left amongst tue thou¬ sand- frequenting Regent's Park, to secrete hi behind u tree, bo soon a** toe animal lound .hal he had lost his master he laid his nose to tho grmiud, and in that manuel. ve.-y soon tracked him to his liiding-placo. That showed that, tim dog hud the power of distinguishing tho particular modittcatiou of tho leather of the boots caused by the wearing of his master, in contradistinction to the modifica¬ tions produced hy biiiulrcds of Uiousauils of other people present at tho moment. As to the ability of dogs to find their way fiom place to place, ne believed there was un un- concious registration In iheir minds oi tho visual pictures presented to it lu tho vin inns tracks through which they passed, ami that Hie memory worked backward until thc animal reached its des¬ tination. No ouo could doubt thu mural disposition of dogs. Somo wees trustworthy, others moro or le__ thieves j wmie) were uuuublo, olhetd vinous, ami so on. Neither waa there uny doubt that a dog had Ideas 11' equality and inequality. They cotilu easily settle that point by oin nug a dog ix large aud a small piece of meat ou tho same dish, aud by ob¬ serving which he took first. Indeed, thero was co fundamental faculty connected with tue reasoning powers that might not bo demonstrated..to exist in lift SCIENCE FOR THE PEOPL E. THE OBEAT SOUTHERN COMET. Dr. B. A. Gould, of lb- Cordova Observatory, who discovered tim great Southern fomot or February last, has un interesting article upon it in the* M iv Dauber of ibo The /iincrtcan Journal of si ii ncc. Thc comet's tail was first uren on February 2. On Um -IH) Dr. Cou el first saw the* head, winch seemed scarcely brighter than Encke's comet at its last perihe¬ lion, bnt was much larger, find hud a eosrse nnel undefined aspect No nucleus was vis- i!)le. The lail was brightest eui February 0 and 7. It was then about tm brilliant ns the Milky Wnv in Taurus, and maintained ita length of rrom 35° to 40° till it faded from view*. On Pebruury 20 thc comet could uot bc detected in a IV* inch e quieten eal. The- exces¬ sive length of ihe narrow tail, itw luck of grada¬ tion ra brilliancy and the* relative faintness of the bead, formed v. ry notable chai-cto.ristl-s. Hut, to my astonishment says Dr. Gonld, on computing a parabola fi inn tin- obs_rva.'.onso_ February 6, 0 and 12, I found reproduced tho orbit of the Creal Comet of 1843. The ahnosl Incredibly small perihelion di-tance suggests in each case* the origin of the hngetail; but tho other elements were almost equally similar. A. second orbit, from observations irom February G to 18, proved equally similar lo tlie orbit re¬ sulting from Hubbard's discussion e.f the comet of 18*3; und leaves no doubt whatever In my niiiiel as to the identity of the two bodies, not¬ withstanding tbat un ellipse *>t' 532 years was found to afford tbe bett representation ot tho series of observations In 164.9 aw a whole. Ibo elements now obtained ue theses winch are expressed in Washing!on mean tune', and re¬ felled to the mean equinox of 1880.0. Perihelion passage. 18H0. Jun. 87-*_0_7». LotiKlfuetp ol tin* nscenillin? node, 0* UV SO" '0. Longitude e.! tao, perihelion,86° 18' 10"-0. lill llUUtieJll, 1-1-° 'JW UH" 8. I_c.i_r.-t: ii inn of nu- perihelion dlitanee. 7.7.103(111. Dr. Goold further believes tlmt this comet is the same as those of 1702. IT.'IO, 1771 ami 180G,:iik1 thu thc interval between the pere- heiion passages ha* been steadily Increasing. The wonderfully small, anti epi-aiently dimin¬ ishing perihelion distance* affords to Dr. (Joni.1 an explanation of the increasing period; for, hitch elinir lo ibe- present .-lem.-ills, tins .list .-iiicc is bm 0.00349, while ih.- sun's own radius ls 0.00400. It se.ms Impofwilde tbat one side of the coma shoulel nol sufl'i actnal friction against the body of the sun, lo say nothing ol its traversing the densest portion of bis atmos¬ phere through a full semi-circumference. The mechanical resistance thus interposed must bave nctc.l io diminish tim perihelion distance ; :in.l we iii;(l this accordingly to have been 0 00".:is after tin- pass ge e>f 1843, and 0.0051M7 aller that of 1880. Yet. while this resistance anel the lateral friction mus! during their continuance be causing ii diminution of the radius-vector, it would appear thai they haye nm diminished, but on the contrary, in¬ creased, thc major axis. This ls a delicate mid in some respects a difficult question. A moat interesting qnesiion arises regarding the densest portion eel tbe tail. There in no reason to doubt that flus pointed southward before the perihelion, as it <li.l afterward. Now the comet a centre nf gravity passed lunn one side to tbe utter of Ihe sun. describm.- an arc ol' l**o In Inn* annmnly in ab.mt *th 8mj and indeed dr-scribed 141° 42' in a single hour. If thc tail in gonernl consisted ol tbe same parti¬ cles before as aftei tho hour ol penhelion, it must bave bren actually severed oy the body of tbe sun, surrendering ol course a consider¬ able iiiiioiin: of its material. THE DEEP SKA. Some interesting results of recoil! deep sea explorations were cone se -ly stated in a lute lee- tuie ;it tm1 Royal Institution, Loudon. Four* elevenths, or nearly three-fourth* ol the surface of the earth is covered by sea. The average denthofthe ocean is. accoiding to thc latest ev'eiiliitii.ii. of Mr. Otto Krummel!, almul 1,v.77 fathoms, or somewhat over two miles. lin- great) t dciith known to exist w s dis¬ cover.!] by the l'iiite.1 Slates ship .'uncarora. near tin1 Iv 111 ile- Islands, in the Noi theasi Pacific lt ls4,0<Vi fathoms or about thro miles aud a quarter. The highest mountain existing ia of about the same height as the deepest sou ls deep. Mount Evi-iesl ls f.1*".'. fathoms in height. So insignificant, however, is tin* total volume of the laud raised almvu m .1 level in proportion to the va-* cavity occupied bj the sen, thal were (Iii** cavity iliipiicil nf Its. thc whole of thc lim.! now nlmvc sea le vi*l ronlo be **'. ovi lied into il Iwi nf. -two am! a half f ines ovir before it would bc filled up to thc present sea level. Nevertheless, tito depth <»f ihe oceana, great as ii ls, js as nothing iii i-oiuimrisoii wilh thc vastness of their extent of surface. As Vi. Croll has saul, (lie oceans in nlatiun to their superficial area an ns shallow us u slni-i ol' water 100 yunis indiauiei.r uud only au inch in eb lilli. The nidi n ui tii" ocean hu-ius uie not at all steep. Tiny me im-.-lh so littlv inclined that an eeielinaiy locomotive engine could run np tl,eui in a straight due with case. Their in¬ clination is usuall,! liol more (ililli lille ci eel four degrees or less. Arouu*t some oceanic islands the slope i.s {.nate r. The Ma pei»t slotH. known laat Bermuda, when; theri- is an inclination of near!) twenij el.gu. 1 from tho edge of thu reef to 'J,ono futhoms, There are uo s;;cli things* as mountains mid valleys on the deep sea bottom. Animals cannot slip clown aiminst their av 111 into ihe depths, bm mnsl move delib¬ erately into them, :iinl tra vol a long journey 10 reach them. Tuc pressure excited by thc superineum bent water :.t jjre it depths is e* great as to Im almost beyond conception. I. illllUUIit.S lOUglllV td il toil e,u *|.. ijiuil i- Hull fol every 1,000 fathoms of depth, about IOU times an much as thu pleasure to which people are subjected* on land. .Vt _h<*| greatest depths thc pressure is about four ions ami u lian'. Vast though this pressure i-, i! is, how- .vcr, only about oni.-cl--h.-i if thal which Pro¬ fessor j\im! anil Captain Nub!.- have im-usiircil, as peToduced in their cxiieriments on guu- powder. The deep seo anim il.-., being com¬ pletely pei nu ;ileil by (Innis, nu. pu,li.ibly no more conscious ol pressure neting upoii them th.ni wu, aud, so long a*, they move dow ly from one depth to unotlier, are most likely umiffii ti .1 by tho consequent chances of pies iii". Willi regard to the* temperature of thc deep sea water, the conditions which would affect animals are comparatively simple. Nearly all over thc ocean the leuipt-rature rn odo futhoms i. aa lou ns lo I'., :ni.l this i thu ease eve 0 immediately uudcr tlie equator in the Atluntic ami Pacific Oceans, Below 2,000 Intliomsthe temperature is never more than a few degrees above freezing point exceptingiu tho .-ceiiliiir cases of laud-lockod sea 1, ucb ue ihe Sula METALLIC AND NON-METALLIC AGES. Some time ago Ile ii' Eckci proposed to divide (lie prehistoric lime into a pre-nictullle atula metallic lime, instead of the three periods of stone, bronze, nnd iron. Hu rearons were that tho earlier period was characterized rather by thc non-use of metal than bj tlioii-o of stone, and tha! the phrase "metal period" leave* un¬ decided Which of llie lucia!.-) Him cann: into ll ie. A*, to how man came to uso incl-tim, lu- Im-, lotciy urged that il was accidentally through observations in working stone, The savage, for example, found a slono: h.* bnmmercd it in >prder to chip il into shape; no pieces, however, broke off, but thc .-lone gradually took, under banuncriug, tho desired form. This malleable stone was solid copper. Thus, iu northern North America, copper seems to nave been the metal whieh nrst came into use. in another place the savages found that muong the stones whieh tlmy used for Bi got red and plowing with intense heal, and then coulel b._ hammered lu this si.des Tbls was tbe iron bloom, lt is probable that in Central Africa [roo was the metal which Iii r_t cunio into use. The expel ience ibm stones could also be fused, or timi two liquid kinds of stone (copper and tin) finnish a still more, liquid fliiiel (bronze), belongs evidently to a much later stage of i'o- vt'lopnicut. ARTIFICIAL ITO»DUCT IONS. Mr. P. L. Bimmonds reviews lu Thc British Trade-Journal the various substitutes for nutu- tul products whieh modern art has invented. I he fact be .sayfc, is apparent beyond question that art i*. fast invading the domain of nature. Chemistry is enabling us to replace anima) and vegetable dyes, and to lona anlllciiil gem., or creditable imitations; mineral oils replace annual and vegetable ones for Illuminating uuipoocs. and thc electric light, ls treading upon the hee-ls of gas. Tho oxpcusivu outfit- ioi thu whale, ashenes ure comparatively abandone-d, whalebone and blubber from the. Inigo marine mammals biiug liss in request] coral iiicsociH may proceeel with their submarine construc¬ tions unmolested ; tho sea tor!oise will bo pur- s "od kee- eagerly for its carapace; tbo ostriches of the desert be less sought after; and even the great pachyderms of India and Central Africa can be spared to bo more usefully em- Cloyed in extending the inarch of commercei wier our enlightened civilization wo can now mmmfacttiro our own whalebono, coral, tor¬ toise sholl, ivory, and feathers, without the recd of penetrating into wild jungles and arctic or tropical seas for our supplies. Tho extinc¬ tion of whalebone in commerce will not deprive us of our umbrellas, or tho female sex of their parasols and corset busks. Rattans havo been converted into wallosin, and hom shaped into pliable bones, while steel ribs also do duty eOoctually for baleen. lu fact, he adds, there is no end to artificial productions, and tho list might be extended indefinitely including artificial ice, which ren¬ ders us Independent of King Frost; artificial sugar, which we can make from starch or rags; artificial fruit essences, artificial horn from sea- wed, artificial wood from compressed sawdust or straw, artificial leather from old scraps or the leather cloth, artificial parchment from paper chemically treated with sulphuric acid, and as bides for leather become more in demand, wo have como utilize tim formerly neglected Skins of the alligators, the snakes, tho kanga¬ roos, thc porpoise and other sea mammals, and fishes. A III>'T FOR FRUIT DEALERS. 77m; Loudon Mayazinc of Pharmacy, in lament¬ ing the bruised condition in which American apples reach England, says thero I .in reason why this splendid fruit should not be imported BS fresh and blooming as when it is gathered from tho tree. And it gives these practical hints: " A common but soft kind of tissue paper shonld envelop each apple before it is placed in the cask, and this tissue paper should have been soaked in a solution of salicylic acid anti dried before it is used. Tho best preparation of salicylic acid for this .purpose is tho alcoholic solution, mate with tbe strongest sp-iit, and then diluted with as much water os it will boar without precipitating the acid, so as to make thc solution go as far as possible. Each apple should be enveloped in at least ilu ce or four folds of ilns (alleviated paper, and every pos- Bible precaution should bo taken to prevent bruising when loading into the casks or eases. Well packed apples should not move at all during thc* vo*ft__r_. nnel tho shaktnir of a rail¬ way train should have little effect upon them. Nevertheless, a certain amount of contusion is Inevitable, .and to avoid tho ulterior results of thi-*, the* siilicylaie paper is indispensable. As to the cost, it would he ii mere trifle When WO consider the result gained, and thc splendid condition of thc fruit when it enters tho London market." _ INCREASE OF TEMPERATURE WITH ALTITUDE. A phenomenon, whieh lia*, attracted a good deal of attention from French meteorologists lately, is the difference ol temperature, of tho two stations of tito Puy-Mle-Dome obst rvatorv, the mountain station being often less c..1.1 than thal m Clermont, 1,100m. below. This differ¬ ence w;is well marked last Winter; tims, in the space of two months mci o half fifty-one nights wen: less col.! ut I'uy-dc-lJome than at Cler¬ mont, lin* dill, renee* ol' minimum temperature ranging from ll to 18dt-im-es. A study of the circumstances hus enabled M. Alluard to estab¬ lish this general rule : Whenever ii roue of high le.cs.mes covers Central Europe, aud esp* eiialiy Fiance, there ls mi iniei version of tho temperature with tho altitude. Naturally this iuterveision ia more manifest at night, that tune hiing flee fiom the perturbations (lue* to thc presence of the sun above the (.orison; but ii ul ii appears by d iy, though more rarely. Tlie differeuct-a between the stations are mora nm!ked tlie greater thc pressures and the more stable thc condition of tuc atmosphere. It re¬ mains to Ikj ascertained now lar up this Inter¬ vention of temperatures extends. DEADENING NOISE. The Worliehop t.'om pan ion gives the following practical Innis tn those who cany em Industrial opii.uiieiis iuvolviug considerable poundina: first, rubber cushions under the legs of tue work bench. .''hu min rn Journal describes a fae lory where the hammering ol' fifty copper¬ smiths was scarcely audible in tbe noni below, tin ir benches having under each leg a rubber on liioii, Becond, kegs of sand or sawdust ap¬ plied in the same wa... A few inches of said or sawdust ls firsl poured into each ing; on tins is hud .a bo.ml or bloc!, upon winch the leg rcs -, a .el around the leg and block is poured flue dry -ai el or sawdust. Not emly all noise, but all \i- biation uud shock are prevented, mid an ordi¬ nary anvil, so mounted, may be used in a dwell¬ ing-house without iii.i.ii>ing the. inhabitants. Jo amateurs, whose workshops are usually placed in dwelling-houses, thia device affords a cheap and simple relief from a areal annoyance, s-iol'l, MOST FAMOUS <>F Rf'PE-DANCERS Frum The Pall Mall Cosette. Tbe most famous rupc-daucer eu recent times was undoubtedly .Mun. Suqiii, and ber long ca¬ reer would se eui tu--how ihat if th.* practice af' rope-dancing brings winne of its professors to a sud- den end, it must in 11-«-11 I>.- fur fruin unhealthy, \V« in;iy fairly infer ihal In lier case it was conducive lu l.nigi'Vtl v ; lor she hml alrca.lv malle ber rciiniatioii nt thu end ol ibo eighteenth ceniurv, ami SH still lim,elim lc.-.. Ih.ni Iiiiiii1, yearn 111.0, when sile li,iel ntl 11111 ci I ihe- ugii ol si vijiity-six. Ai coi ding to sonic authorities Mme. Saijui was born of Fieiii'b na- nins. Her tallier, .Jenn Baptiste I.lianne-, was hiiu- snlf a distinguished acrobat, snd bo Introduced his daughter to the public at ll verv early age in ;i l'lelo- , iii iiiiiii on the subject ot "(ielii".-:i*Ve* (te- ltrubuilt." llie* part of (o'licviove-'H child iMHUg cotilitled lo theT debutante*), lt was as a dancer on tim ordinary hoartlH ih.it tia* youthful ."-milli linnie, her iii'-t appairauoo in public; hut she soon aspired to lugber ihiiiits, ami niiei* the troupe of the "vrandM il ni-ti'ii .cs ila roi -* bau been broken up ut ibo time of dei Revolution, lbs took a regular course ol les. sons in ropc-dnncing trama friend of tho family, who divined the bent ol her pentan. Tin* counsellor and Instructor who iliseoverad and fostered lier talent lor balancing hrf-nl.. on thc tigbt-ropo waa, or loni ln'c-li, a liiiiliciil stllilelil, who, lo escape the tediousness of lecture*, had fumed acrobat; aad ii was lluoiirIi his caine.t lepieseiitntioiis ihat llie parents of the future rortc-e.unoiug eulebrily were jirwailod upon to allow their daughter to emit the ie. a' 11 stace for a loss dignified arena, I lie c'.nd practised wilh anior, and wss soon nblo lo rasintsin herself Arm and erect npoa tbs rope wit inuit- tim Assistance of Un* balancing peel*. Mer tlc- .nt Was 11 tl .lu lea I willi thee inosl bril lill li! IUCCCSS, and fer upward of haifa uni my this primo donna ol' the! daiieing ail travelled from capital io capital, unpin tided ami WU-d wherever shs nerluruied. lhi-iie wus uo town in France, noi uuntry hi -Jiiropc, which she did nol \ inil. Aftern time she established a theatre of her own at Parla Ibu Buipcror Napo¬ leon, who appreciated her talent, and was |>.*ihi»ii- ;iliv milch plea nil with her. iniiiicd har "lirst acro¬ bat of Franco ".s liilo which so pleased ber ina! sin'h.ni 11 in. ci ibid on Um wagon couUiuiiig her i-osiiiiiits iimi apparatus by winch ncr travelling couch was followed. Napoleon used toeagace her for ull public fe us, and frequently invited her to pelf na itt ins own private entertainments, f-he was tho spoiled child, moreover, ot all tbe princes mid dultes, all ibe marshals and generals of the Em¬ pire I and she waa as great 1 favorile with the* peo¬ ple as with the member, ol ths Imperial Court, Nu Italian singer, eercn in our own ilay, enioyod snob popularity aa fall tu tim lol ol Umc. 8aoui, For a liiiiee but starsoouisto have fadedi or por¬ tie retired ou the imuiousa suma of money u bioh her p Tioimmici's hail broun ht her In. llow- eii-i iimi muy have beeu, oircumsiauces forced her in ism io reappear, when she made a tonriu Spain, In Alcona anil in the principal towns of Franee. in l.s.'i'J she went lo Pans and gave a series of per* fortuanoea nt the Hippodrome, 'I'he next yeurshe made a sensational ascent of tim tight-rope In the Champ do .Mars; and the Hippodrome wus Ihe scene of a final performauive given for ber benefit ni 18G1, when, ni the ng.1 of ¦evouty-sir. abe went ibrough a seiics ol funambuUstio exeroisrs and fan¬ tasias whieb few, il any, ol bor rivals could have 1 quailed. Burne four rears afterward, when sho baa already completed lier eightieth year, this lightest aud most aerial *'f hnllerine elled. AX IRISH ROMANCE. From Thr London World. In the.o days, when levorything is driven hy ste am and stopped hy air-breaks, and even the; tick¬ ing of our hearts is regulated by a golden key, liko xe 1 Ih nt clockwork, thine ls very little room for" a romance In real Hf*'-" In a certain county in {roland, however, not eiulfe a hundred miles fruin Me.iitli, thero dwells u family of niuo .beautiful minden**., who an wont to amuse themselves byae- rtiiinlng the apron and mob-cap of '* ueat-hiiiided rhillis." and iiuiklng themselves all sorts of Pastry in the garden. Not very long ago [the cry ana ora of the \1nfsi1111n was hean! without, and one of the* iifoi-snhl cine, with her sleeves tucked up nnd her halo nuns I.c-ll. nivd, rusbcil to tho garden-gat.1, which, o noni ng nu 11 laue, shut behind ber Just M a .martyoung prince, attached tomi Imperial ...ute., attired iii buckskin and pink, came trotting up. .. Which way ha*, the fee.*c «;oue? I did uot know such pretty wild-flowers grew tn the hedges about h. iv la fore,'' said young Marlow. " And what may your name be T" Bin* blt her Hp, blushed mid fairly bolted; but whon tho others carno up, he was a little surprised Jaud abashoel on lcarmug that our hut mu-, v. a.. uo other than a granddaughter tv tho ___o_-t noble. Manitus who first informodj our ^moai gracious Msjeaty of her uncle's death. RELIGIOUS INTELLIGENCE. mt Re**!*, an on Petir and Paul..* The Legend ot the Roman Church.Peter and Panl.-'waa the subject of M. Renan's second Hibbert lec¬ ture, delivered in St. George'e Hall. Liugham- nlace, London, three weeks ago- He treated at length the question of St. Peters personal con¬ nection with the Church he is said traditionally to have founded, and premised with saying that ai the Reformation it was made a sort of dogma by the Protestants to deny tbat Peter had ever been in Home, and thus to dethrone the Pope at a blow, since he claimed to bo tbe head of Chris¬ ti minni na the lineal successor of St. Peter. For himself and those who thought like him, M. Renan said the question was simply a curious one of history ana nothing more. He proved that tliero was no tangible evidence that Peter arrived in Rome in A. 1). 42. and that he held oflice as head of the Church twenty-three or twenty-four years.pointe which were sturdily affirmed by tho Roman Catholics.and added that, the evidence of Paul's Epistle to the Romans, written in the year 58, and of the clos¬ ing verses of the Acts, was quite conrlusive against it. At the same time M. Renan pre¬ sented many strong aigumouts showing that Poler visited Remo at a later time than Paul. Of the manner of tho death of those A post lea he said that the likeliest view wns that they both perished in tho great massacre of Christians ordered by Nero. It was only too easy, he said, for Nero to carry out his monstrous idea to make the new sect tho scapegoats of bis own crime in setting nre to Roino: for they wero hated by the populuce worse than himself, and the horror with which they wero known to look upon the temples made lt easy for an ignorant mob to believe they had at least fed, if they had not lighted, the flames. But u the hateful mid brainless Emperor did not seo that he was founding a new order of things, and was sign¬ ing for the future a charter whoso provisions would be matter of claim at the end ot eighteen hundred years." It is not improbable, M. Kenan added in conclusion, that these Apostles died in the manner attested by tradition.that Peter was crucified with his head downward aud that Paul wus beheaded. Niano Pkeaching..A writer in The Congre¬ gationalist relates several amusing incidents of lecent visits made by him to colored churches in Washington aud Richmond. In a Washing¬ ton church it mus insisted that tho services could not go forward uutil $40 in money had been raised to pay oft a debt. Many persons at once went forward with ccntributious aud re¬ ceived tickets in return. Then the boxes were passed until tho entire sum was finally raised. Tho sermon had for its text,** I saw a new Heav- e n and a new earth.and there was no more sea.*1 Again nud again it was carefully ex¬ plained that the. expression uno more sea" meant ne> moro ocean, and not that nothing nne coulel be seen. Tho term sea was tuken to signify nil kinds of trouble, ol' which there was accordingly to bo an end In Heaven. At Rich¬ mond the celebrated Jasper was heard in the very sermon that has mado him celebrated. The correspondent and bis friends had scats in the recetSS behind tho pulpit, and .Mr. Jasper was good enough to address his remarks especially to them turning his back to the* congregation for a good put of the tune. His text, Joshua's command to the sun anel moon to stand still, was not reached until he had spoken precisely fifty-five minutes about tho history of tho Chil- elreu ol' Israel up to the delVai of the seven kings. Then his first point was reached.that tlpe sun was commanded to stand still, a thing thut coeild not have been if tho sun had uo motion. This was followed by various other references, .inch as tho sun's "going down" or " hastening on his wav,r and iu quoting them the preacher seemed to take great delight in clinching his sentences frequently with thc -li¬ nn v, "Call me a liar if tin; Bible don't say so." this crashing outbreak ol'defiance called out loud cheers from tho audience, which numbered about a thousand. _ C.vnmvAL i.nwMAV..A deputation of Irish Roman Catholics waited on C.ndinal Newman two weeks ago, and preseutcd him with an ad¬ dress e.f congratulation upon his elevation to a seat in tho Sacred College. The document it¬ self is a very beautiful specimen of illumination on vellum, executed in tlie style which pro- vailed from tba seventh to the twelfth century, when the art reached in Leland a very high point of excelh*nce. Many of the designs ate studlea from tho celebraied Book of Kells, the (.o-pels of Mae-Regnl and St. Chad, nnd the Hunk of liiuhnm, whieh are now preserved iu the library rt Dublin and elsewhere. The ad- dresa fills thiitcen folio pages, mid is bound in dark green morocco with plain gold tooling of an antique pattern. The covers are lined with white Irish ponl.n. In reply to the address the Cardinal saul lie would not.deny that on several occasions in past years he had bein misunder¬ stood, and flint sometimes it had been himself that fie had to blame. At the samo time he re- flertod that "whatever pain that trial might cau*e him, It was the lightest he could have: that a man was not woith much who could not bear it, and that if he had not this he iiik-i.t have a greater* " And uow, my wonder is," ho saiel in conclusion, " that the sunshine has e. me nut so soon and with so fair a promise of lasting through my evening." Restoration at Monte Cassino..The time was when tho Benedictine monastery on Monte Cassino possessed great wealth; but the suo- cesaive Nooliatious from which it has buffered haye reduced its possessions to very email limits. That portion of the vast edifice which Served for tho habitation of St. Benedict, and has for many years boon in nord of restoration, it was the great wish of tho Order to restore, as a fcaturo of the recent celobration, and an Aohot in 1870 undertook a Journey to ull the monas¬ teries ol' the Onlor to raise tho necessary f-_ds. Work bus boe.il going on at Monte Cassino for threo years past, and all expectations have been surpassed by the results. Tho ancient chambers in which tho saint and his earliest followers lived have been di*>interred from the ruin, which many disasters had heaped above th< ni, and pincott in ix condition of complete re¬ pair and ornamented with frescoes that lune1 merit. Tho church belonging to tiio monastery, well known ni Italy for the richness of its marbles and ornaments, was decorated for the festival wilh a large number of chandeliers brought from Rome. It la recorded that forty-three members of Im- i)i rial families and forty-four persons of Royal blood have found rt st within Benedictiue walla. An Ao_f> Bishop..Rishop von Mnrwitz, of Cuim, Prussian Poland, has had an eventful life*, ile- belongs to an old family in Pomerania, and when eighteen vears of nae joined the atmy nf liberation as a volunteer and made with Blucher the campaign of 1813-'14 in his regi¬ ment of hussars. He was present at every im¬ portant engagement, but escaped without a wound. His health was greatly impaired by the hardships of the campaign, and after eight years of en foi ced retirement he took orders, when nearly thirty-five years old. He ls well known t>) tim preaent Kin?', and after the Polish insurrection ol 1M<JI tho King conferred upon him the Order of the Red Eagle, nnd accom¬ panied the decoration with aa autograph lotter iu which be said that thc bishop " Iud shown in very difficult cirenmstances that ho know how to givo to CtOSST what was Caesar's." Bishop von Marwitz ls now eighty-five years old, and a special festival was maele a short time ago to celebrate tho fiftieth auuiversary of his ordina¬ tion. _ St. Catharine..Tho Dominicans of Siena, Italy, ou Friday last intended to celebrate tho tilth centennial anniversary of (tho .death of St. Catharine. Among tho best known incidents in tho life of this remarkable woman, her success in restoring the Florentines to tho favor of Gregory Xl. is perhaps the chief. At the same time her iufluouce in bringing about thc return of tho Papal powers from Avignon to Rome, through appeals to Gregory, was considerable. Rome, as much ns Siena, ought for this reason to honor her memory, for to what depth of decay nnd desolation might sho not have fulleu but for the return of tho Popes 1 "Even the sixtyeigth years they were absent had brought tho grass into her streets mid silence into tho public places. _ The French Jesuits..Cardinal Guibert has addressed a letter to Presidont Gi.vy iu opposi¬ tion to.the decrees against the Jesuits. Ho has grown old with tho century, he says, and in his tlmo has seen many conflicts arise in France; hut for his closing years a sadly novel spectacle was reserved. Ho was doomed to see the pre¬ judice of u party violently bringing to a standstill tho progress of public Uow ties aud forcing the Sovernuient baok to the forgotten practice ot espotic Powers. Is it thus that it is imagined our evils can be cured t he asks. A more than questionable Jurlsprudeno ls resorted to to con¬ summate u an undoubted and possibly sn ure** parable wrong," while . to gratify a ^ wiso of pnolic opinion, more than ene-b* nation is plunged into giief and desolatisn.*-. Death or a Pastor..Silas Ketchi of the Congregational Churcft at , Conn., died suddenly in Dorahss-sr week ago. Re was a descendant of G. Bradford of tbe Mayflower, and began Itu. shoemaker.and how many men, by dm WbtA have risen to honorable rank in the profeaaj once were sh<emakers, not to mention, many shoemakers who have reached ] eminence t Mr. Ketchem for several yrs as bis first duty the care of his parents, released from this be studied at DartoM-Uo. finally got into the ministry. His labors _, local antiquary were considerable, and if wi tbat he had done a great deal of -work in paring an elaborate dictionary of New-H____ shire biography. Ho had written ont upsn of a thousand sketches, and bad gathered di for twice as many more. New Chukches in Missouri..A missie who went to Missouri several years ago, to friends in the East that in 1874 in a certs village of twenty families he found that ttl of the families possessed no Bible. He >tt a Sunday-school, and in five years a with between twenty-five and thirty meal was organized. One year ago ho foundei school in another place, where he had been.t tbe lending men were accustomed to play on Sunday, and he has since organised a ot there with a membership of sevenL Again, he went into a village where -gam*. was a Snnday amusement, giving no need te warnings, which were thrown out to him thal j be bad better not go. Soon he had regular preaching there, and inst Fall a revival waa t-M cause of starting a church witb a membership 01 _, thirty-two. ______ Mr. Spurgeon has written a second 11 about the voting-for-the-Devil story. He clares that be has not written a single lin reference to the Northampton elections, so Happened," be says, u that I h-eard not) about Northampton, and knew nothing proceedings, and therefore was auder no tation to express myself thereon. but it i that even if a man is quite silent and re_ from the scone of action, he is still liable to] assailed by wicked tongues." In October will occur tbo 2.">0th anniverslM. of the Society of the First Congregationali Church, of Boston, and steps are already on ibo! to celebrate it in becoming manaor. Among tbe four signers of tbe first covenant of tho church wero Governors Winthrop and Dudley. The first book of records and a silver goblet winch Governor Winthrop gave to the church are still in the society's possession. Authorities at Cambridge, England, Intend to destroy the old timbered house where Jeremy Taylor ia believed to have been born. Tho quaintly carved gables of this house and of others near it aro a characteristic feajnre of the town, and deep regret is felt at the University that tho step should bc taken. It is hoped that something will be done to prevent their destruc¬ tion. _ Among the leading Oxford converts to tho Church of Rome, which Cardinal Newman numbers among his friends and co temporaries of that time, was John Brande Morris, wnp died a fortnight ago in England. After hts couv.r- sion he published at Oxford a mystical poem in several books eutitled "Nature: a Parable,*1 aud an elaborate essay on the doctrine of the incarnation. _ Dr. F. M. Ellis, of Denver, Colo bas ac¬ cepted the call of Tremont Temple Church, of Boston, although efforts were made at Denver to retain him. He has been very popular in the We st. and has had pastorates in Illinois, Kansas and Colen ado. His age is forty-one, and he was born iu Ohio. _ At Mercersburg, Penn., Dr. Thomas Creigh, n Presbyterian minister, died recently at the ago of seventy-two. He had been in the ministry forty-uiue years, and was never settled over any chuich except the one at Meicersburg. Dr. Hervey D. Gan.e, for several years pastor of the Madison Avenue Reformed Church in this city, has been called to a church in Buffalo. Recently he bas lived in St. Louis. A decree now in preparation at the Vati.an will proclaim St. Thomas Aquinas the pro¬ tector of all Catholic educational institutions. CURRENT RELIGIOUS OPINION. REFORM OR ABOLISH IT. J>oro The Chicago Advance (Presbyterian.) If there was a widespread feeling last week tbat our National Military* Academy at Weat Point tia " either reformed or abolished I" that conviction is doubly strong now. Tbe utter ostracism, from first to last, practised against Cadet Whittaker bv all the studonts, and, ao far aa appears, by ali the ojpeere of the academy, is tha bottom meanness of this whole affair, of which tbe specific brutality of tbe other du y's ont race was merely a alngle emptive symptom. If Weat Point ia not a school of mean men, dominated by a mean, cruel and unreasoning prejudice, as unrepublloan as it ts au c hrtitian ann inhuman, it is high time for General Schofield and the other geutlemon connected with him in tho uiaiiagouieut aud instruction of that National U-» stitutiou, and for tbs young meu wUo are there being supported by tbe Nation for the National service, to set about showing tbe contrary. DOING AWAY WITH A REPROACH. From Th* Nexe-Tork Jetciih Messenger. It ls eminently proper that our congregations abould cooperate in saving to our faith Jewish work¬ ing-people, particularly youn* men aud maiden-. Tbe result oannot fad morally to strengthen tho temples and synagogues, and powerfully promote fellowship, refinement, and Judaism among all claMee.. There is no gimpier method of diffusing Jewish influences, aud reviving at last the Sabbath spirit; while it will roll away forever the reproaoh so ofteu uttered against the shrines tbat tbuy have become in many cases elegant mausoteoms, rather than promoters of practical righteousness, aad the Judaism which Isaiah would propagate if be wear* living to-day. _________ THINKING ON O.VI_*8 LEGS. Prom Ihe New-York llcthodlsL Wo agree with others that general condemnation of manuscript sermons ia too sweeping. But we atso think the statement that "very few men can think well ou their legs" needs qunhticatiou. it ii true that too few think tbat they csn, but many of tbe doubters are probably mistaken. UntU recently ths editor of this psper reckoned himeoif among tb nae who could not extemporise. Five years ago lie resolved to return to his earlier mode of extem¬ pore preaching, and he has found it very easy to follow a lino of thought previously arranged. Many whodcubt that they can think on their legs hara never faithfully tried to form the habit. CHANNING WORK AND PLACE. From The Neto-Ycrk Chrittian Advocate (Meta.) When Channing cams to the New-England front there whs a uni vernal reign of sharp Calvinistic doc¬ trine. Thero had not been any general break in lt from the landing of the Pilgrims down through the whole colonial period to the American Revolution. Channing introduced a positive and serious protest* He marked out a new path. His life waa nure, but without tbe inspiration of fervor and the faith that needs a definite object for lu ai tract ion. Ho expected * much, but believed little. Hero, then, is Channing's place. It is ons of moral reform, not spiritual life. His was not an original mind in its higher production and inventive quality. He has built op little and pnlled down much. American Unitarianism, neverthcleaa. was at its best in him. One of the dead failures in our theology is Unilarianlsm, even with Cb-uning as ltsfilher. Its members do not grow. It simply sits still and .--pins its web of moral geoeraiis.tiona. One Father Taylor, tho sailors'preacher, ia worth moro to Boston and oar whole land than ten Chao- niuns. Cbaunlngisra has no future lu lt. It will stand aime as tho typo of tho greatest theological failure iu American history during our first century. That system that calls Itself a faith, and leaves Christ out of lt, ennaot live, lt haa no projecting capacity. It is tho fashion of au hour, aud will then take its pla*-) among tho diied basks of dla- curdiel things. Channing was ua ickle e. hen hst needed thc breath of Spline. COLONEL INGERSOLL SHOULD BE PRAYED TOU. From The Boston Congregationalist Colonel Robert (J. Ingersoll has been lecturing ta >; this city again, recently, in b>s characteristic fash¬ ion. Hil lectures aro astonishing com bm at ions of shrewd sense, tender feeling nnel sparkling rhetoric, f. with colossal ignorance, apparently deliberate mie- rcpreseutatlon and repulsive blasphemy. Ile db* * plays an utter abandon of recklesducss whleb das- 2les many for the moment, and some for mack longer. We hara ly know wmeh to pity mest, the man who has taught himself to believe and disbe¬ lieve what Colonel Ingersoll does, or the people wbo let themselvea be befooled by the glamor of bi sen toucoa. Three things are certain i thst P"*-1* opponents as he no more can stay the pr" Cb list's caose than a swarm of liorueta e. a railway train by atiucing some or Itsoat-. thut their activity ought to atimulatS Qje-fet a more earnest and practical pletriand "*- ought to be made by the churclnina.l apecial prayer. It wuib Cbioago .>nm wto fa*'! atlt.

KNITTING CROCHET. SCIENCE PEOPL - Chronicling Americachroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83030214/1880-05-02/ed-1/seq-9.pdf · baby'sleg.probably thiriy-tivo stitches, moreor ... Hywoikingat

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Page 1: KNITTING CROCHET. SCIENCE PEOPL - Chronicling Americachroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn83030214/1880-05-02/ed-1/seq-9.pdf · baby'sleg.probably thiriy-tivo stitches, moreor ... Hywoikingat

KNITTING AND CROCHET.A CHILD'S PETTICOAT.JVC*-* The Weekly Tribunt.

iChildren's undergarments, liotli ltnitteel and cro-

cbeteel, are veiy popular now. Tba above repre¬

sents u pretty little petticoat, in ribbed crochet,wlikl! is easily unel quickly linnie. It is worked inpink and wbite Saxony wool with a bouo crochetbook.Begin at tbe lower edge with a chain a yard arida

.quarter in length, and divisible by 12, tbe numberfor each scallop, which is dented thus:Work from right to left. . 1 DC on each of th©

first 5 ch., 3 DC into the sixth, for tbo centre

and ontwaid peak; 5 DC on tbe next 5 ch., miss 2 to

6hnpe the hollow or inner peal.; this at the same timemakes an open seam, which divides the scallops.Repeat from \ and, at tho end of tbe mw, to ribtbe crochet, turn tbe work, and pierce tho needle at

the back of the stitch in the preceding line.At the 20lh row derreuse by missing 1 stitch on

either side of the festoon. Fasten off at tho 32.1

row. anil join at eVbe back, leaving a placket hole or

not as preferred. Prepare a band e.f doeililo crochet,on which we.rk any simple crochet editing. A draw-

lug string may bo iusertcel through Ibis.

EMITED LACE."Adelaide "furnishes a pretty pattern of lace and

tbo following direction-! for knitting it.

Cast on 10 stitches.1st row: Knit 2, over twice, purl 2 together, knit

2, over twice, narrow, knit 8.2d row: Over, narrow, over, narrow, knit G, purl

1, knit 2, over twice, purl 2 together, km! 2.

3d row: Slip 1, knit 1, over twice, purl 2 to¬

gether, kuit 13.4th row: Over, narrow, over, narrow, knit 9, over

twice, purl 2 together, 2 plain.8th low: Slip 1, knit 1, over twice, purl 2 to¬

gether, knit 2, over twice, narrow, over twice, nar¬

row, knit 7.Otb row: Over, narrow, over, narrow, Ts plain,

purl 1, knit 2, purl 1, knit 2, over twice, purl 2 to¬

gether, knit 2.7th row: Slip 1, knit 1, over twice, purl 2 to¬

gether, knit the rest plain.8th row: Over, narrow, over, narrow, ll plain,

over twice, purl 2 together, knit 2.Oth row: Slip 1, knit 1, over twice, purl 2 to¬

gether, kuit 2, over twice, narrow threo times, rest

plain.lOtbrow: Over, narrow twice, 5 plain, purl 1, 2

plain, purl 1, 2 plain, purl 1, 2 plain, over twice,purl 2 together, 2 plain.11th row: Slip 1. kuit 1, over twice, purl 2 to¬

gether, rest plain.12ili ron : Over, narrow, over, narrow, G plain,

bind ott G, 8 plain, over twice, purl 2 toijcthe.-,knit 2.Repeat from 1st row. "Adelaide" nays thia lace

is very pretty knitted with linen thread insteadof wool. :i9 the loops on the edge stand out betterand make the pattern moro showy.

' INFANT'S CROCHETED SOCKS.Socks for the lit tlo ones are tu such constant do¬

main! Hint plain directions for crocheting n simple.useful pattern will bc acceptablo to beginners.With single zephyr of tin. desired colorant! a rather

Bunill hook make a chain lung euough tog) arouudbaby's leg.probably thiriy-tivo stitches, more or

less. Join lliem together to form a round, .ntl workin DC, putting the hook through tho underhalf of

each stitch for about 15 rounds. This forms tho

leg.Now, for ibo top part of the foot, rai_e 13 stitches.

crochet tricot.e.that is. put lu the hook as before,pull the wool through and leave the loop on thcbook. Work these 13 (ditches forward and back¬ward iu crochet tricotdu for IO rows.remember-

ing that forward and backward make 1 row. Onthe next row narrow by drawing tho weul throughthe lirst 3 vertical stitches on the right hand sideof tbe piece, and again through the 3 stitches imme¬diately belorc tbe last loop. Kepeat these narrowingson the next row. There aie now 5 stiches. Makea DC. lu each. The top part of tho foot le finished.Next, work down thc left Bide of this pice** in DC,

then aiouud the i-.titche. ut tho bottom of tbo leg,and afterward along the right of the loot andaround the toe. In doing this tho only part to becareful nhont is tho left side of the foot. The hookhere should bo put uniter tbo last of tbe afghanstitches doini tbe side and through tho stitch be¬low. Work ronnel and round tho bottom of footaud leg in DC. for G or 7 louuds. Then tum thoWork inside out, place tho two sides carefully to¬

gether, put the hook through 7 stitches at tho toeend and draw thc wool through the whole. Crochetin DC. the bottom edges of the foot together tillonly 7 sti'.ehes are left, put the book through all ofthecve, draw thom together to match tho too end,fttsteu ott', turu it insido out agaiu, and tho foot isfinished.Next fnsten the wool on the top of the leg; make

three chains, work two treblo Into thc same l.olo.miss two stitches, aud fasten with a DC. hilo tbethird stitch. Moke two chalti, work two treblesInto ibe same bole as tho DC. i miss two stitchesand work a DC. eu the thirel." Repeat this scallopall around tbe top of the leg.The work is now complete with tho exception of

a little chain uud tassels, or a narrow ribbon aroundthe ankle. The pattern will billilly be called a

handsome one, but it is easily made uud under¬stood.Recapitulation: Cast on 35 rtitches for top of leg ;

leg 15 rounds deep, top of foot 13 stitches wide,and ten rows to narrowings for the toe. 'two rows ofnarrowings.8 stitches in all; toe. 5 stitches wide ;

«epth of foot, 6 or 7 rounds. Finish with scallop on

:g and ribbon rouud ankh*.?-

SCRAP-BAG.Thk Dawv Pattern..Mrs. D. B. B. siys that

tbe Daisy Pattern given recently is po pretty thatShe is anxious to make it. She understands all ex¬

cept tho 3d round winch says " work ut tho back.f thc petals, etc." This ls very easy. After com¬pleting the 2d round ju*-t turn tne work over.thisIs tbe b._ci\" where* thc next row is tn he worked.There are only 0 petals when tho 2.1 round is com¬pleted. Hy woiking at tho " hack" a petal betweeneach petal of tho 2d round you get 12 as in cut.The petal is to bo worked lu tho "2 DC," of thopreceding round.CLOVER Leaf.-Mw. H. B. B. says she found no

rtifl-cully with Mrs. Gidcoii-clover-leaf edging, aud-wonders at tbe complaints in regard to it. Willothers who have tried it report!Frinok for Tidy..Mrs. II. H. W. replies to

.'Farmer's Daughter'' thst tbe fringe of her tidv lsnot knitted, anel gives the following directions'formaking it: "tako a pieco of pastehoard, orabook, or p.nvthing that is shout the length youwould like the fringe, wind the* yarn evenly aroundit and cut one edge. Double oaoli thread aud witbh crochet book (1 use one tor convenience,) draw itthrough the edge of tha tidy, forming a loop, thendraw the ends through tbe loop thus formed, if*oo wish a boavier fringe, draw two or three*(breads through tbe same place. It is very simple,and ©Mily done."Honey-Comb Stitch..M. E. C. wants another

pattern for honey-comb stitch, nd finding tho ouorecently published that which she had inlier mind's.ye. She says: "The one I desire is a$ perfect auImitation or honey-comb as can be made withworsted. Double sepbyr is generally used for itand but few stitches sre required to make the pat¬tern- I think the wrong side is made by 'purling'ont sm not sure." Can some oue oblige ber withtbe desired pattern fCaoc-XT T-JU&s..Ifiss B. lt, G.. wdl find har

questions as to terms answered in the last numberof this department.Wool »or -Roman Afghan*.".K. K. writes:

" Tn Thk Titibi:.nk of April ll, 'L. M. C.' asks howmuch Germantown yum is reqnireel for a RomanAfghan. There is required one and three-eighthspounds of black, ono murtee nf a nonnd blue,one quarter of a wound wotto, three iieeini.ls of pink,two pounds of yellow. Coal nf material abonl $3.Delicate! shades are prefer.'ebie.thees" of th" Colum¬bi*, yarn are beautiful. ' K. K.' will he happy togive uiiy information ni ber power.with regard toany nf the threw Afghan patterns .-hieh sim senl."Pms ion Knithno,.Mrs. L. J. says thst she bs

been knitting lacesnccescfally willi Cu;*- hair pitfor needles. The re ls only one Knitting Kxtra ontnt present; another will bo published in a compara¬tively short nun'.A Ciiarmino Fancy.."Adelaide" has ad.Iel

¦really tc the beauty of Mrs. Jennie Drake edginghy simply pulling a row of treble crochet in whitefliisssilk around the edge of the sealion.. I be effeelof tin; silk edge on tbe white woolie owes ls remark¬ably pretty. Nothing could be nicer ai a trimmingfor flannel skirts.DitAwms and L> ohing*-*..Mrs. K. T. B. n*eks for

directions for drawers and leggings lot a child e.flom- or moro, and wonld like to bo told of some iarge-siscd yarn, strouger and more durable than doublezephyr, willi which lo knit them.Misch.i.ani.-ors..Mr*. E. 0. B. would like pat¬

tern of lady's hood, knit or crocheted, willi trim¬mings of crorhet work edged with .silk thread or

flo. s coveiiug tho knilteel or crocheted foundation.Also pattern for crocheted saeque or clonk for streetwear for inri from six to e.igni.size ol' needles, qual¬ities and names of materials to bo given lull..A.Y. m. wonts pattern for nndersblrts tor geiitlemeu..Mrs. il. C. W. ssks for directions for crocheting a

border en a crocheted jacket nut of (Jcrmantowiiyarn..N. C. .san act Ihe pamphlet she refers io bywriting to the Nonotuck Silk Company, Bostou,Mas-*.Woukinc oct Parr .tn.i..Mrs. J. II. W., after

working to tho eud ol tim pattern for lace, insertion,etc., should begin again at ino beginning and keeprepeal inn till sho han worked as much as she wishes.Tim patteiiim arc not lo bo worked backward,Lack Tit*..A. E. B. kindly writes, In answer

to H. M. B.'s ineiinry in regard to lace ties,thut she knitted a piece of Tunisian in¬

sertion thc length she wan.ed her tie, andtheu knitted Normandy lace of sufficient lengthto go all round the strip nf in-crtioii. She sdels;" A piero of insertion and edging made willi BOOthread and put on tli- end of a.si np ol line organdie,ts quite pretty, thc* German lace, made up with alittle ribbon, is lov.-ly. A friontl of mine nonie ti

handkerchief for the neck by taking a piece of washblinnie, eiuting il to lit tho neck, nml finishing italiround witb Tunisian insertion and Nurmaudy lace.'It i-. tit to wear before tho Quceu."' A. I'., li.courtejoiml.v semis the followingdirections f*>r a loeewhii n is pretty and serviceable knitted with linenthread No. 50 for underwear, or ot fine woollen j urnlor ll,inn.1, skirts:Caston 9 st it ches. 1st row: Slip 1. knit l.nverand

knit 2 tosetherS innes, over, kim 1. 2el row: Knit.lain ; every alternate row is knitted plain. 3d towt.lip 1, knit 1. over and knit 2 together 9 Dine.--.overi kuli tho remaining stitches plain, Repeatthis '.) lillies or until you nave l** sfitchesun lbsneedle. Thou knit across plain tbtcc times. Thensii]) 1, knit 2together, overkill! 2 together fourlime*; km! tbo remaining 7 stitches. Repeat(every alternate row plain) nil yon have 10stitchesonly on tim needle. I lien slip 1, knit 2 together,over tend knit '_ together 3 times j knii last stitchplain. This gives tbe original numbei.niuo. Knitacross plain Ihree linus before tiesiunlug aliolli. r

*-. "lilllie. Keiiicinlicr thal the " over " rn* well ss the" Unit 2 together ll times" i- to bs repeated.K- .tum; Ti hms..h. F. C. wants lo know tbe

meaning eef "por. 2 together lour times.'' Mus is

eqnivule ni io saying four limes: "Purl 2 together,*1;imi does neel take on so mneh needed space, Thei..i« no difference between "purl 1 fear times" and"1 purl tour innis," except thal the former is lessawkward) "purl 4" would he better than either."Knit 1 four times" means knit plain Ihe four con-secutive stitches coming Ural on yonr left ueedle."Purl 2 together" moans to run yonr riant needlethrough two siitchcs instead of ooo ou yonr Icfineedle, and lake Ihem offtogether n» if They wire

only one. We cannot agree witb H. P. C. IHal Iheterms ate blind. They an* easily intelligible lo onewho has given an hour's study to them. We sdvi ie

her to examine the directions lur knitting in the"Woman's Lxna," tbo terms being explained there¬in.Leaf Tidy..Mrs. J. S. J.'s pattern of "Raised

Leaf Tidy" is in type and will be primed as wonns she supplies thc missing 8th and 'Alu rows. Will6hu kindly do tins sa scion as possible T

JUVENILE POEMS.

_

By TT, ll. Mallock, authur of " Is Life Wort)' Living V

A CllII.I)'.-> LOVtt SoNO.

it'uhipoied in a living.)Tbe broeses :ir>* sighingAbout me, above nm I

Oh. I should In* happy,If Celia WODld love mo I

But without ('elia's loveTbo breezes may blow'i

And, for all (bat 1 eur.-,To the devil may go !

_An. tut. 8.

A HOY'S LOVK SONO.

If Celia won't have yon, fond lover.Why squander in sighing tbe flay I

If all your entreaties won't move her,Kescut it, ami meet lier half way.

Sieppeisc you were now to possess her,i-.-i beauty snd sll von desired]

How soon you would cease (¦* cares* her JHow soon ol thu beauty bo tired I

Then sim. a more icsoliito measure,Nor rquander in ricking the day j

It cannot h. much nf a treasureWhose charms with possession demy.

An. mt. 13.

PROFESSOR HUXLEY ON DOGS.

From The London Telegraph.Prof._w.or Huxley pointed mit by the aid of n dia¬

gram, in which lone-was given to tho Illustrationmr tba skeleton of the uiilmal being raiaud ou hindlegs, that in internal coaatralotion tho only diil'nr-ence between mau ami dug was tine of size im.l pro¬portion, Then* wan not a bone in one which dblnot exist in tin other.not a Mingle, constituent inthe ono that was iioMij he found in Hie oilier. Intho cease ofthe dog there wns not thu! which, on super¬ficial examination, answered to lb.* collar-bone ol lu¬man; but .lost) dissection would dmelose in theease* ot ibe lower animal » little hone varying inlength frum a third to half an inch, occupying ihesame place as the haman collar-bones, whi.li was in¬dubitably a rudiment ar., collar-bone, Il appearedto be of no functional Importance, bul there ii wus.Considering thc psychological nature of the* clot/,

the lecturer remarked that no might bo met al tlieoutset with tin- objection,uTalk of the mind of adog; why, I don't believe be has a mind.' Well.tim only reason bc bad len- sssumiug timi tin; dog baela mind was tits samo reason liv which lionMiimeelthat all present had minds. There was 'ie. din cievidence of thc fae;! any more in tho one bau in thuother. Ran a pin into a man, ami thero wai s -int i

nml a cr** b\ which they .iiiin" le> (he conclusionthat .-sin han resulted, nun a pin into a dog, amithere was a howl and attempt, perhaps to bite, bjwhich wi Inferred that the intimal wns in a stateof consciousness in which ii also suffered pain.Could th.-y say that tho dog was a mero piece olanimate machinery J I' wasquite true that certainphilosophers had bold views of tbat kind, but com¬

pton st uno people would not have it. anil hu l>e-llovod thc common sense people wen- right. At theKillin1 time In1 was disposed to think thal in dogs Ihefeeling of pain was Infinitely duller than lu humanbeings. Ai to tin* other senses belonging to dog., hi.wasInclined to doubt very much if dogs <¦> >n 1<1 seewith anything like thc .'.i.itim itiioes ol niau, Theirbearing was indisputably very acute; but ilremarkable: fu.t thai that sense wm regulated mi atotally different seale- In do.-, as compared with hu¬man beings. Did they ever hear of adogtukiug opleasure in ransic 1 'Ju the contrary, the Bonnels ofmusic seemed lo cause' him acute pain, accompaniedby a horrible sent of fascination, which fastenedhim lo the spot at which he was subjected to tbetorture;. Else, when a German band was doing ii«worst in tho streets, why did he si; upon his haunch¬es and bowl wben he might get up and runaway!Yet he often wondered whether dogs really didsillier pain from music or whether they bowledpurely in sympathy, as did.thsjackals ofthe prairies.Tho w-iiso ol smell in ;i dog|Was some! liing marvel-

loos.marvellous uot only foritsdelicacy, but for thofact|thut its elisc'rii.limit ion.)!,v. hat was agreeable anddisagreeable was exactly tho reverse of ours. Theynever heard of ;i dog being Infatuated with lavenderwater, or patchouli, or Eau do Colognes bc ratherrevelled In tbe smells which to meu were a sourceoi unfeigned horror and disgust. He once nota dog which be frequently left amongst tue thou¬sand- frequenting Regent's Park, to secrete hibehind u tree, bo soon a** toe animal lound .hal hehad lost his master he laid his nose to tho grmiud,and in that manuel. ve.-y soon tracked him to hisliiding-placo. That showed that, tim dog hud thepower of distinguishing tho particular modittcatiouof tho leather of the boots caused by the wearingof his master, in contradistinction to the modifica¬tions produced hy biiiulrcds of Uiousauils of otherpeople present at tho moment.As to the ability of dogs to find their way

fiom place to place, ne believed there was un un-concious registration In iheir minds oi tho visualpictures presented to it lu tho vin inns tracksthrough which they passed, ami that Hie memoryworked backward until thc animal reached its des¬tination. No ouo could doubt thu mural dispositionof dogs. Somo wees trustworthy, others moro orle__ thieves j wmie) were uuuublo, olhetd vinous,ami so on. Neither waa there uny doubt that a doghad Ideas 11' equality and inequality. They cotilueasily settle that point by oin nug a dog ix large auda small piece of meat ou tho same dish, aud by ob¬serving which he took first. Indeed, thero was cofundamental faculty connected with tue reasoningpowers that might not bo demonstrated..to exist inlift

SCIENCE FOR THE PEOPL E.

THE OBEAT SOUTHERN COMET.Dr. B. A. Gould, of lb- Cordova Observatory,

who discovered tim great Southern fomot or

February last, has un interesting article uponit in the* M iv Dauber of ibo The /iincrtcanJournal of si ii ncc. Thc comet's tail was firsturen on February 2. On Um -IH) Dr. Cou elfirst saw the* head, winch seemed scarcelybrighter than Encke's comet at its last perihe¬lion, bnt was much larger, find hud a eosrsennel undefined aspect No nucleus was vis-

i!)le. The lail was brightest eui February 0and 7. It was then about tm brilliant ns

the Milky Wnv in Taurus, andmaintained italength of rrom 35° to 40° till it faded fromview*. On Pebruury 20 thc comet could uot bc

detected in a IV* inch e quieten eal. The- exces¬sive length of ihe narrow tail, itw luck of grada¬tion ra brilliancy and the* relative faintness ofthe bead, formed v. ry notable chai-cto.ristl-s.Hut, to my astonishment says Dr. Gonld, on

computing a parabola fi inn tin- obs_rva.'.onso_February 6, 0 and 12, I found reproduced tho

orbit of the Creal Comet of 1843. The ahnoslIncredibly small perihelion di-tance suggests in

each case* the origin of the hngetail; but thoother elements were almost equally similar. A.second orbit, from observations irom FebruaryG to 18, proved equally similar lo tlie orbit re¬

sulting from Hubbard's discussion e.f the cometof 18*3; und leaves no doubt whatever In myniiiiel as to the identity of the two bodies, not¬withstanding tbat un ellipse *>t' 532 years wasfound to afford tbe bett representation ot thoseries of observations In 164.9 aw a whole. Iboelements now obtained ue theses winch are

expressed in Washing!on mean tune', and re¬

felled to the mean equinox of 1880.0.Perihelion passage. 18H0. Jun. 87-*_0_7».LotiKlfuetp ol tin* nscenillin? node, 0* UV SO" '0.Longitude e.! tao, perihelion,86° 18' 10"-0.lill llUUtieJll, 1-1-° 'JW UH" 8.I_c.i_r.-t: ii inn of nu- perihelion dlitanee. 7.7.103(111.

Dr. Goold further believes tlmt this comet isthe same as those of 1702. IT.'IO, 1771 ami180G,:iik1 thu thc interval between the pere-heiion passages ha* been steadily Increasing.The wonderfully small, anti epi-aiently dimin¬ishing perihelion distance* affords to Dr. (Joni.1an explanation of the increasing period; for,hitch elinir lo ibe- present .-lem.-ills, tins .list .-iiicc

is bm 0.00349, while ih.- sun's own radius ls0.00400. It se.ms Impofwilde tbat one side ofthe coma shoulel nol sufl'i actnal frictionagainst the body of the sun, lo say nothing olits traversing the densest portion of bis atmos¬phere through a full semi-circumference. Themechanical resistance thus interposed mustbave nctc.l io diminish tim perihelion distance ;:in.l we iii;(l this accordingly to have been0 00".:is after tin- pass ge e>f 1843, and0.0051M7 aller that of 1880. Yet. while thisresistance anel the lateral friction mus! duringtheir continuance be causing ii diminution ofthe radius-vector, it would appear thai theyhaye nm diminished, but on the contrary, in¬creased, thc major axis. This ls a delicate midin some respects a difficult question.A moat interesting qnesiion arises regarding

the densest portion eel tbe tail. There in noreason to doubt that flus pointed southwardbefore the perihelion, as it <li.l afterward. Nowthe cometa centre nf gravity passed lunn oneside to tbe utter of Ihe sun. describm.- an arc ol'l**o In Inn* annmnly in ab.mt *th 8mj andindeed dr-scribed 141° 42' in a single hour. Ifthc tail in gonernl consisted ol tbe same parti¬cles before as aftei tho hour ol penhelion, itmust bave bren actually severed oy the bodyof tbe sun, surrendering ol course a consider¬able iiiiioiin: of its material.

THE DEEP SKA.Some interesting results of recoil! deep sea

explorations were cone se -ly stated in a lute lee-tuie ;it tm1 Royal Institution, Loudon. Four*elevenths, or nearly three-fourth* ol the surfaceof the earth is covered by sea. The averagedenthofthe ocean is. accoiding to thc latestev'eiiliitii.ii. of Mr. Otto Krummel!, almul1,v.77 fathoms, or somewhat over two miles.lin- great) t dciith known to exist w s dis¬cover.!] by the l'iiite.1 Slates ship .'uncarora.near tin1 Iv 111 ile- Islands, in the NoitheasiPacific lt ls4,0<Vi fathoms or about thro milesaud a quarter. The highest mountain existingia of about the same height as the deepest souls deep. Mount Evi-iesl ls f.1*".'. fathoms inheight. So insignificant, however, is tin* totalvolume of the laud raised almvu m .1 level inproportion to the va-* cavity occupied bj thesen, thal were (Iii** cavity iliipiicil nf Its. .¦

thc whole of thc lim.! now nlmvc sea le vi*l ronlobe **'. ovi lied into il Iwi nf. -two am! a half f inesovir before it would bc filled up to thc presentsea level.

Nevertheless, tito depth <»f ihe oceana, greatas ii ls, js as nothing iii i-oiuimrisoii wilh thcvastness of their extent of surface. As Vi.Croll has saul, (lie oceans in nlatiun to theirsuperficial area an ns shallow us u slni-i ol'water 100 yunis indiauiei.r uud only au inchin eb lilli. The nidi n ui tii" ocean hu-ius uie notat all steep. Tiny me im-.-lh so littlv inclinedthat an eeielinaiy locomotive engine could runnp tl,eui in a straight due with case. Their in¬clination is usuall,! liol more (ililli lille ci eel fourdegrees or less. Arouu*t some oceanic islandsthe slope i.s {.nate r. The Ma pei»t slotH. knownlaat Bermuda, when; theri- is an inclination ofnear!) twenij el.gu. 1 from tho edge of thureef to 'J,ono futhoms, There are uo s;;clithings* as mountains mid valleys on the deepsea bottom. Animals cannot slip clown aiminsttheir av 111 into ihe depths, bm mnsl move delib¬erately into them, :iinl travol a longjourney 10reach them. Tuc pressure excited by thcsuperineumbent water :.t jjre it depths is e*

great as to Im almost beyond conception. I.illllUUIit.S lOUglllV td il toil e,u *|.. ijiuil i- Hull folevery 1,000 fathoms of depth, about IOU timesan much as thu pleasure to which peopleare subjected* on land. .Vt _h<*| greatestdepths thc pressure is about four ions ami ulian'. Vast though this pressure i-, i! is, how-.vcr, only about oni.-cl--h.-i if thal which Pro¬fessor j\im! anil Captain Nub!.- have im-usiircil,as peToduced in their cxiieriments on guu-powder. The deep seo anim il.-., being com¬pletely pei nu ;ileil by (Innis, nu. pu,li.ibly nomore conscious ol pressure neting upoii themth.ni wu, aud, so long a*, they move dow ly fromone depth to unotlier, are most likely umiffii ti .1by tho consequent chances of pies iii".Willi regard to the* temperature of thc deep

sea water, the conditions which would affectanimals are comparatively simple. Nearly allover thc ocean the leuipt-rature rn odo futhomsi. aa lou ns lo I'., :ni.l this i thu ease eve 0immediately uudcr tlie equator in the Atlunticami Pacific Oceans, Below 2,000 Intliomsthetemperature is never more than a few degreesabove freezing point exceptingiu tho .-ceiiliiircases of laud-lockod sea 1, ucb ue ihe Sula

METALLIC AND NON-METALLIC AGES.Some time ago Ile ii' Eckci proposed to divide

(lie prehistoric lime into a pre-nictullle atulametallic lime, instead of the three periods ofstone, bronze, nnd iron. Hu rearons were thattho earlier period was characterized rather bythc non-use of metal than bj tlioii-o of stone,and tha! the phrase "metal period" leave* un¬decided Which of llie lucia!.-) Him cann: into ll ie.A*, to how man came to uso incl-tim, lu- Im-,lotciy urged that il was accidentally throughobservations in working stone, The savage, forexample, found a slono: h.* bnmmercd it in

>prder to chip il into shape; no pieces, however,broke off, but thc .-lone gradually took, underbanuncriug, tho desired form. This malleablestone was solid copper. Thus, iu northernNorth America, copper seems to nave been themetal whieh nrst came into use. in anotherplace the savages found that muong the stoneswhieh tlmy used for Bi got red andplowing with intense heal, and then coulel b._hammered lu this si.des Tbls was tbe ironbloom, lt is probable that in Central Africa[roo was the metal which Iii r_t cunio into use.The expel ience ibm stones could also be fused,or timi two liquid kinds of stone (copper andtin) finnish a still more, liquid fliiiel (bronze),belongs evidently to a much later stage of i'o-vt'lopnicut.

ARTIFICIAL ITO»DUCT IONS.Mr. P. L. Bimmonds reviews lu Thc British

Trade-Journal the various substitutes for nutu-tul products whieh modern art has invented.I he fact be .sayfc, is apparent beyond questionthat art i*. fast invading the domain of nature.Chemistry is enabling us to replace anima) andvegetable dyes, and to lona anlllciiil gem., orcreditable imitations; mineral oils replaceannual and vegetable ones for Illuminatinguuipoocs. and thc electric light, ls treading uponthe hee-ls of gas. Tho oxpcusivu outfit- ioi thuwhale, ashenes ure comparatively abandone-d,whalebone and blubber from the. Inigo marinemammals biiug liss in request] coral iiicsociHmay proceeel with their submarine construc¬tions unmolested ; tho sea tor!oise will bo pur-s "od kee- eagerly for its carapace; tbo ostriches

of the desert be less sought after; and eventhe great pachyderms of India and CentralAfrica can be spared to bo more usefully em-Cloyed in extending the inarch of commerceiwier our enlightened civilization wo can now

mmmfacttiro our own whalebono, coral, tor¬toise sholl, ivory, and feathers, without therecd of penetrating into wild jungles and arcticor tropical seas for our supplies. Tho extinc¬tion of whalebone in commerce will not depriveus of our umbrellas, or tho female sex of theirparasols and corset busks. Rattans havo beenconverted into wallosin, and hom shaped intopliable bones, while steel ribs also do dutyeOoctually for baleen.

lu fact, he adds, there is no end to artificialproductions, and tho list might be extendedindefinitely including artificial ice, which ren¬ders us Independent of King Frost; artificialsugar, which we can make from starch or rags;artificial fruit essences, artificial horn from sea-wed, artificial wood from compressed sawdustor straw, artificial leather from old scraps or theleather cloth, artificial parchment from paperchemically treated with sulphuric acid, and asbides for leather become more in demand, wohave como t» utilize tim formerly neglectedSkins of the alligators, the snakes, tho kanga¬roos, thc porpoise and other sea mammals, andfishes.

A III>'T FOR FRUIT DEALERS.77m; Loudon Mayazinc ofPharmacy, in lament¬

ing the bruised condition in which Americanapples reach England, says thero I .in reasonwhy this splendid fruit should not be importedBS fresh and blooming as when it is gatheredfrom tho tree. And it gives these practicalhints: " A common but soft kind of tissue papershonld envelop each apple before it is placedin the cask, and this tissue paper should havebeen soaked in a solution of salicylic acid antidried before it is used. Tho best preparationof salicylic acid for this .purpose is tho alcoholicsolution, mate with tbe strongest sp-iit, andthen diluted with as much water os it will boarwithout precipitating the acid, so as to makethc solution go as far as possible. Each appleshould be enveloped in at least iluce or fourfolds of ilns (alleviated paper, and every pos-Bible precaution should bo taken to preventbruising when loading into the casks or eases.Well packed apples should not move at allduring thc* vo*ft__r_. nnel tho shaktnir of a rail¬way train should have little effect upon them.Nevertheless, a certain amount of contusion isInevitable, .and to avoid tho ulterior results ofthi-*, the* siilicylaie paper is indispensable. Asto the cost, it would he ii mere trifle When WOconsider the result gained, and thc splendidcondition of thc fruit when it enters tho Londonmarket."_

INCREASE OF TEMPERATURE WITHALTITUDE.

A phenomenon, whieh lia*, attracted a gooddeal of attention from French meteorologistslately, is the difference ol temperature, of thotwo stations of tito Puy-Mle-Dome obst rvatorv,the mountain station being often less c..1.1 thanthal m Clermont, 1,100m. below. This differ¬ence w;is well marked last Winter; tims, in thespace of two months mci o half fifty-one nightswen: less col.! ut I'uy-dc-lJome than at Cler¬mont, lin* dill, renee* ol' minimum temperatureranging from ll to 18dt-im-es. A study of thecircumstances hus enabled M. Alluard to estab¬lish this general rule : Whenever ii roue of highle.cs.mes covers Central Europe, aud esp* eiialiyFiance, there ls mi iniei version of thotemperature with tho altitude. Naturally thisiuterveision ia more manifest at night, thattune hiing flee fiom the perturbations (lue* to

thc presence of the sun above the (.orison; butii ul ii appears by d iy, though more rarely.Tlie differeuct-a between the stations are moranm!ked tlie greater thc pressures and the morestable thc condition of tuc atmosphere. It re¬mains to Ikj ascertained now lar up this Inter¬vention of temperatures extends.

DEADENING NOISE.The Worliehop t.'ompanion gives the following

practical Innis tn those who cany em Industrialopii.uiieiis iuvolviug considerable poundina:first, rubber cushions under the legs of tuework bench. .''humin rn Journal describes a

faelory where the hammering ol' fifty copper¬smiths was scarcely audible in tbe noni below,tin ir benches having under each leg a rubberon liioii, Becond, kegs of sand or sawdust ap¬plied in the same wa... A few inches of said orsawdust ls firsl poured into each ing; on tins ishud .a bo.ml or bloc!, upon winch the leg rcs -,

a .el around the leg and block is poured flue dry-ai el or sawdust. Not emly all noise, but all \i-biation uud shock are prevented, mid an ordi¬nary anvil, so mounted, may be used in a dwell¬ing-house without iii.i.ii>ing the. inhabitants.Jo amateurs, whose workshops are usuallyplaced in dwelling-houses, thia device affords acheap and simple relief from a areal annoyance,

s-iol'l, MOST FAMOUS <>F Rf'PE-DANCERSFrum The Pall Mall Cosette.

Tbe most famous rupc-daucer eu recent timeswas undoubtedly .Mun. Suqiii, and ber long ca¬reer would se eui tu--how ihat if th.* practice af'rope-dancing brings winne of its professors to a sud-den end, it must in 11-«-11 I>.- fur fruin unhealthy, \V«in;iy fairly infer ihal In lier case it was conducive lul.nigi'Vtl v ; lor she hml alrca.lv malle ber rciiniatioiint thu end ol ibo eighteenth ceniurv, ami SH stilllim,elim lc.-.. Ih.ni Iiiiiii1, yearn 111.0, when sile li,ielntl 11111 ci I ihe- ugii ol si vijiity-six. Ai coi ding to sonic

authorities Mme. Saijui was born of Fieiii'b na-nins. Her tallier, .Jenn Baptiste I.lianne-, was hiiu-snlf a distinguished acrobat, snd bo Introduced hisdaughter to the public at ll verv early age in ;i l'lelo-

, iii iiiiiii on the subject ot "(ielii".-:i*Ve* (te- ltrubuilt."llie* part of (o'licviove-'H child iMHUg cotilitled lo theTdebutante*), lt was as a dancer on tim ordinaryhoartlH ih.it tia* youthful ."-milli linnie, her iii'-tappairauoo in public; hut she soon aspired tolugber ihiiiits, ami niiei* the troupe of the "vrandMil ni-ti'ii .cs ila roi -* bau been broken up ut ibo timeof dei Revolution, lbs took a regular course ol les.sons in ropc-dnncing trama friend of tho family,who divined the bent ol her pentan. Tin* counsellorand Instructor who iliseoverad and fostered liertalent lor balancing hrf-nl.. on thc tigbt-ropo waa,or loni ln'c-li, a liiiiliciil stllilelil, who, lo escape thetediousness of lecture*, had fumed acrobat; aad iiwas lluoiirIi his caine.t lepieseiitntioiis ihat llieparents of the future rortc-e.unoiug eulebrily were

jirwailod upon to allow their daughter to emit theie. a' 11 stace for a loss dignified arena,

I lie c'.nd practised wilh anior, and wss soon nblolo rasintsin herself Arm and erect npoa tbs ropewit inuit- tim Assistance of Un* balancing peel*. Mertlc- .nt Was 11 tl .lu lea I willi thee inosl bril lill li! IUCCCSS,and fer upward of haifa uni my this primo donnaol' the! daiieing ail travelled from capital io capital,unpintided ami WU-d wherever shs nerluruied.lhi-iie wus uo town in France, noi uuntry hi -Jiiropc,which she did nol \ inil. Aftern time she establisheda theatre of her own at Parla Ibu Buipcror Napo¬leon, who appreciated her talent, and was |>.*ihi»ii-;iliv milch plea nil with her. iniiiicd har "lirst acro¬bat of Franco".s liilo which so pleased ber ina!sin'h.ni 11 in. ci ibid on Um wagon couUiuiiig heri-osiiiiiits iimi apparatus by winch ncr travellingcouch was followed. Napoleon used toeagace herfor ull public fe us, and frequently invited her topelf na itt ins own private entertainments, f-hewas tho spoiled child, moreover, ot all tbe princesmid dultes, all ibe marshals and generals of the Em¬pire I and she waa as great 1 favorile with the* peo¬ple as with the member, ol ths Imperial Court, NuItalian singer, eercn in our own ilay, enioyod snobpopularity aa fall tu tim lol ol Umc. 8aoui,For a liiiiee but starsoouisto have fadedi or por¬

tie retired ou the imuiousa suma of moneyu bioh her p Tioimmici's hail broun ht her In. llow-eii-i iimi muy have beeu, oircumsiauces forced herin ism io reappear, when she made a tonriu Spain,In Alcona anil in the principal towns of Franee. inl.s.'i'J she went lo Pans and gave a series of per*fortuanoea nt the Hippodrome, 'I'he next yeurshemade a sensational ascent of tim tight-rope In theChamp do .Mars; and the Hippodrome wus Ihescene of a final performauive given for ber benefit ni

18G1, when, ni the ng.1 of ¦evouty-sir. abe wentibrough a seiics ol funambuUstio exeroisrs and fan¬tasias whieb few, il any, ol bor rivals could have1 quailed. Burne four rears afterward, when sho baaalready completed lier eightieth year, this lightestaud most aerial *'f hnllerine elled.

AX IRISH ROMANCE.From Thr London World.

In the.o days, when levorything is driven hyste am and stopped hy air-breaks, and even the; tick¬ing of our hearts is regulated by a golden key, liko

xe 1 Ih nt clockwork, thine ls very little room

for" a romance In real Hf*'-" In a certain county in{roland, however, not eiulfe a hundred miles fruinMe.iitli, thero dwells u family of niuo .beautifulminden**., who an wont to amuse themselves byae-rtiiinlng the apron and mob-cap of '* ueat-hiiiidedrhillis." and iiuiklng themselves all sorts of Pastryin the garden. Not very long ago [the cry ana ora

of the \1nfsi1111n was hean! without, and one of the*iifoi-snhl cine, with her sleeves tucked up nnd herhalo nuns I.c-ll. nivd, rusbcil to tho garden-gat.1,which, ononing nu 11 laue, shut behind ber Just M a

.martyoung prince, attached tomi Imperial ...ute.,attired iii buckskin and pink, came trotting up.

.. Which way ha*, the fee.*c «;oue? I did uot knowsuch pretty wild-flowers grew tn the hedges abouth. iv la fore,'' said young Marlow. " And what mayyour name be T" Bin* blt her Hp, blushed mid fairlybolted; but whon tho others carno up, he was a

little surprised Jaud abashoel on lcarmug that ourhut mu-, v. a.. uo other than a granddaughter tv tho___o_-t noble. Manitus who first informodj our ^moaigracious Msjeaty of her uncle's death.

RELIGIOUS INTELLIGENCE.mt

Re**!*,an on Petir and Paul..* The Legendot the Roman Church.Peter and Panl.-'waathe subject of M. Renan's second Hibbert lec¬ture, delivered in St. George'e Hall. Liugham-nlace, London, three weeks ago- He treated atlength the question of St. Peters personal con¬nection with the Church he is said traditionallyto have founded, and premised with saying thatai the Reformation it was made a sort of dogmaby the Protestants to deny tbat Peter had everbeen in Home, and thus to dethrone the Pope ata blow, since he claimed to bo tbe head of Chris¬ti minni na the lineal successor of St. Peter.For himself and those who thought like him,M. Renan said the question was simplyacuriousone of history ana nothing more. He provedthat tliero was no tangible evidence that Peterarrived in Rome in A. 1). 42. and that he heldoflice as head of the Church twenty-three ortwenty-four years.pointe which were sturdilyaffirmed by tho Roman Catholics.and addedthat, the evidence of Paul's Epistle to theRomans, written in the year 58, and of the clos¬ing verses of the Acts, was quite conrlusiveagainst it. At the same time M. Renan pre¬sented many strong aigumouts showing thatPoler visited Remo at a later time than Paul.Of the manner of tho death of those A post lea hesaid that the likeliest view wns that they bothperished in tho great massacre of Christiansordered by Nero. It was only too easy, he said,for Nero to carry out his monstrous idea tomake the new sect tho scapegoats of bis owncrime in setting nre to Roino: for they werohated by the populuce worse than himself, andthe horror with which they wero known to lookupon the temples made lt easy for an ignorantmob to believe they had at least fed, if theyhad not lighted, the flames. But u the hatefulmid brainless Emperor did not seo that he wasfounding a new order of things, and was sign¬ing for the future a charter whoso provisionswould be matter of claim at the end ot eighteenhundred years." It is not improbable, M.Kenan added in conclusion, that these Apostlesdied in the manner attested by tradition.thatPeter was crucified with his head downwardaud that Paul wus beheaded.Niano Pkeaching..A writer in The Congre¬

gationalist relates several amusing incidents oflecent visits made by him to colored churchesin Washington aud Richmond. In a Washing¬ton church it mus insisted that tho servicescould not go forward uutil $40 in money hadbeen raised to pay oft a debt. Many persons atonce went forward with ccntributious aud re¬ceived tickets in return. Then the boxes werepassed until tho entire sum was finally raised.Tho sermon had for its text,** I saw a new Heav-e n and a new earth.and there was no moresea.*1 Again nud again it was carefully ex¬

plained that the. expression uno more sea"meant ne> moro ocean, and not that nothingnne coulel be seen. Tho term sea was tuken tosignify nil kinds of trouble, ol' which there wasaccordingly to bo an end In Heaven. At Rich¬mond the celebrated Jasper was heard in thevery sermon that has mado him celebrated.The correspondent and bis friends had scats inthe recetSS behind tho pulpit, and .Mr. Jasper wasgood enough to address his remarks especiallyto them turning his back to the* congregationfor a good put of the tune. His text, Joshua'scommand to the sun anel moon to stand still,was not reached until he had spoken preciselyfifty-five minutes about tho history of tho Chil-elreu ol' Israel up to the delVai of the sevenkings. Then his first point was reached.thattlpe sun was commanded to stand still, a thingthut coeild not have been if tho sun had uomotion. This was followed by various otherreferences, .inch as tho sun's "going down" or" hastening on his wav,r and iu quoting themthe preacher seemed to take great delight inclinching his sentences frequently with thc -li¬nn v, "Call me a liar if tin; Bible don't say so."this crashing outbreak ol'defiance called outloud cheers from tho audience, which numberedabout a thousand.

_

C.vnmvAL i.nwMAV..A deputation of IrishRoman Catholics waited on C.ndinal Newmantwo weeks ago, and preseutcd him with an ad¬dress e.f congratulation upon his elevation to aseat in tho Sacred College. The document it¬self is a very beautiful specimen of illuminationon vellum, executed in tlie style which pro-vailed from tba seventh to the twelfth century,when the art reached in Leland a very highpoint of excelh*nce. Many of the designs atestudlea from tho celebraied Book of Kells, the(.o-pels of Mae-Regnl and St. Chad, nnd theHunk of liiuhnm, whieh are now preserved iuthe library rt Dublin and elsewhere. The ad-dresa fills thiitcen folio pages, mid is bound indark green morocco with plain gold tooling ofan antique pattern. The covers are lined withwhite Irish ponl.n. In reply to the address theCardinal saul lie would not.deny that on severaloccasions in past years he had bein misunder¬stood, and flint sometimes it had been himselfthat fie had to blame. At the samo time he re-

flertod that "whatever pain that trial mightcau*e him, It was the lightest he could have:that a man was not woith much who could notbear it, and that if he had not this he iiik-i.thave a greater* " And uow, my wonder is," hosaiel in conclusion, " that the sunshine has e. me

nut so soon and with so fair a promise of lastingthrough my evening."Restoration at Monte Cassino..The time

was when tho Benedictine monastery on MonteCassino possessed great wealth; but the suo-

cesaive Nooliatious from which it has bufferedhaye reduced its possessions to very emaillimits. That portion of the vast edifice whichServed for tho habitation of St. Benedict, andhas for many years boon in nord of restoration,it was the great wish of tho Order to restore, as

a fcaturo of the recent celobration, and an Aohotin 1870 undertook a Journey to ull the monas¬teries ol' the Onlor to raise tho necessary f-_ds.Work bus boe.il going on at Monte Cassino forthreo years past, and all expectations havebeen surpassed by the results. Tho ancientchambers in which tho saint and his earliestfollowers lived have been di*>interred from theruin, which many disasters had heaped aboveth< ni, and pincott in ix condition of complete re¬

pair and ornamented with frescoes thatlune1 merit. Tho church belonging to tiiomonastery, well known ni Italy for therichness of its marbles and ornaments,was decorated for the festival wilh a largenumber of chandeliers brought from Rome. Itla recorded that forty-three members of Im-i)i rial families and forty-four persons of Royalblood have found rt st within Benedictiue walla.

An Ao_f> Bishop..Rishop von Mnrwitz, ofCuim, Prussian Poland, has had an eventfullife*, ile- belongs to an old family in Pomerania,and when eighteen vears of nae joined the atmynf liberation as a volunteer and made withBlucher the campaign of 1813-'14 in his regi¬ment of hussars. He was present at every im¬portant engagement, but escaped without a

wound. His health was greatly impaired bythe hardships of the campaign, and after eightyears of en foi ced retirement he took orders,when nearly thirty-five years old. He ls wellknown t>) tim preaent Kin?', and after the Polishinsurrection ol 1M<JI tho King conferred uponhim the Order of the Red Eagle, nnd accom¬

panied the decoration with aa autograph lotteriu which be said that thc bishop " Iud shown invery difficult cirenmstances that ho know howto givo to CtOSST what was Caesar's." Bishopvon Marwitz ls now eighty-five years old, anda special festival was maele a short time ago tocelebrate tho fiftieth auuiversary of his ordina¬tion. _

St. Catharine..Tho Dominicans of Siena,Italy, ou Friday last intended to celebrate thotilth centennial anniversary of (tho .death of St.Catharine. Among tho best known incidents intho life of this remarkable woman, her success

in restoring the Florentines to tho favor ofGregory Xl. is perhaps the chief. At the sametime her iufluouce in bringing about thc returnof tho Papal powers from Avignon to Rome,through appeals to Gregory, was considerable.Rome, as much ns Siena, ought for this reason

to honor her memory, for to what depth ofdecay nnd desolation might sho not have fulleubut for the return of tho Popes 1 "Even thesixtyeigth years they were absent had broughttho grass into her streets mid silence into thopublic places. _The French Jesuits..Cardinal Guibert has

addressed a letter to Presidont Gi.vy iu opposi¬tion to.the decrees against the Jesuits. Ho hasgrown old with tho century, he says, and in histlmo has seen many conflicts arise in France;hut for his closing years a sadly novel spectaclewas reserved. Ho was doomed to see the pre¬judice of u party violently bringing to a standstilltho progress of public Uow ties aud forcing the

Sovernuient baok to the forgotten practice otespotic Powers. Is it thus that it is imagined

our evils can be cured t he asks. A more thanquestionable Jurlsprudeno ls resorted to to con¬summate u an undoubted and possibly sn ure**

parable wrong," while . to gratify a ^wiso of pnolic opinion, more than ene-b*nation is plunged into giiefand desolatisn.*-.Death or a Pastor..Silas Ketchi

of the Congregational Churcft at ,

Conn., died suddenly in Dorahss-srweek ago. Re was a descendant of G.Bradford of tbe Mayflower, and began Itu.shoemaker.and how many men, bydmWbtAhave risen to honorable rank in the profeaajonce were sh<emakers, not to mention,many shoemakers who have reached ]eminence t Mr. Ketchem for several yrsas bis first duty the care of his parents,released from this be studied at DartoM-Uo.finally got into the ministry. His labors _,local antiquary were considerable, and ifwitbat he had done a great deal of -work inparing an elaborate dictionary of New-H____shire biography. Ho had written ont upsnof a thousand sketches, and bad gathered difor twice as many more.

New Chukches in Missouri..A missiewho went to Missouri several years ago,to friends in the East that in 1874 in a certsvillage of twenty families he found that ttlof the families possessed no Bible. He >tta Sunday-school, and in five years awith between twenty-five and thirty mealwas organized. One year ago ho foundeischool in another place, where he had been.ttbe lending men were accustomed to playon Sunday, and he has since organised a otthere with a membership of sevenLAgain, he went into a village where -gam*.was a Snnday amusement, giving no need tewarnings, which were thrown out to him thal jbe bad better not go. Soon he had regularpreaching there, and inst Fall a revival waa t-Mcause of starting a church witb a membership 01 _,

thirty-two. ______

Mr. Spurgeon has written a second 11about the voting-for-the-Devil story. Heclares that be has not written a single linreference to the Northampton elections,so Happened," be says, u that I h-eard not)about Northampton, and knew nothingproceedings, and therefore was auder notation to express myself thereon. but it ithat even if a man is quite silent and re_from the scone of action, he is still liable to]assailed by wicked tongues."

In October will occur tbo 2.">0th anniverslM.of the Society of the First CongregationaliChurch, of Boston, and steps are already onibo!to celebrate it in becoming manaor. Amongtbe four signers of tbe first covenant of thochurch wero Governors Winthrop and Dudley.The first book of records and a silver gobletwinch Governor Winthrop gave to the churchare still in the society's possession.Authorities at Cambridge, England, Intend to

destroy the old timbered house where JeremyTaylor ia believed to have been born. Thoquaintly carved gables of this house and ofothers near it aro a characteristic feajnre of thetown, and deep regret is felt at the Universitythat tho step should bc taken. It is hoped thatsomething will be done to prevent their destruc¬tion.

_

Among the leading Oxford converts to thoChurch of Rome, which Cardinal Newmannumbers among his friends and cotemporariesof that time, was John Brande Morris, wnp dieda fortnight ago in England. After hts couv.r-sion he published at Oxford a mystical poem inseveral books eutitled "Nature: a Parable,*1aud an elaborate essay on the doctrine of theincarnation.

_

Dr. F. M. Ellis, of Denver, Colo bas ac¬cepted the call of Tremont Temple Church, ofBoston, although efforts were made at Denverto retain him. He has been very popular in theWe st. and has had pastorates in Illinois, Kansasand Colen ado. His age is forty-one, and he wasborn iu Ohio.

_

At Mercersburg, Penn., Dr. Thomas Creigh, nPresbyterian minister, died recently at the agoof seventy-two. He had been in the ministryforty-uiue years, and was never settled over anychuich except the one at Meicersburg.Dr. Hervey D. Gan.e, for several years

pastor of the Madison Avenue ReformedChurch in this city, has been called to a churchin Buffalo. Recently he bas lived in St. Louis.

A decree now in preparation at the Vati.anwill proclaim St. Thomas Aquinas the pro¬tector of all Catholic educational institutions.

CURRENT RELIGIOUS OPINION.

REFORM OR ABOLISH IT.J>oro The Chicago Advance (Presbyterian.)

If there was a widespread feeling last week tbatour National Military* Academy at Weat Point tia" either reformed or abolished I" that conviction isdoubly strong now. Tbe utter ostracism, from firstto last, practised against Cadet Whittaker bv allthe studonts, and, ao far aa appears, by ali the ojpeereof the academy, is tha bottom meanness of thiswhole affair, of which tbe specific brutality of tbeother du y's ont race was merely a alngle emptivesymptom. If Weat Point ia not a school of mean

men, dominated by a mean, cruel and unreasoningprejudice, as unrepublloan as it ts au chrtitian anninhuman, it is high time for General Schofield andthe other geutlemon connected with him in thouiaiiagouieut aud instruction of that National U-»stitutiou, and for tbs young meu wUo are therebeing supported by tbe Nation for the Nationalservice, to set about showing tbe contrary.

DOING AWAY WITH A REPROACH.From Th* Nexe-Tork Jetciih Messenger.

It ls eminently proper that our congregationsabould cooperate in saving to our faith Jewish work¬ing-people, particularly youn* men aud maiden-.Tbe result oannot fad morally to strengthen thotemples and synagogues, and powerfully promotefellowship, refinement, and Judaism among allclaMee.. There is no gimpier method of diffusingJewish influences, aud reviving at last the Sabbathspirit; while it will roll away forever the reproaohso ofteu uttered against the shrines tbat tbuy havebecome in many cases elegant mausoteoms, ratherthan promoters of practical righteousness, aad theJudaism which Isaiah would propagate if be wear*living to-day.

_________

THINKING ON O.VI_*8 LEGS.Prom Ihe New-York llcthodlsL

Wo agree with others that general condemnationof manuscript sermons ia too sweeping. But we atsothink the statement that "very few men can thinkwell ou their legs" needs qunhticatiou. it ii truethat too few think tbat they csn, but many of tbedoubters are probably mistaken. UntU recentlyths editor of this psper reckoned himeoif amongtb nae who could not extemporise. Five years agolie resolved to return to his earlier mode of extem¬pore preaching, and he has found it very easy tofollow a lino of thought previously arranged. Manywhodcubt that they can think on their legs haranever faithfully tried to form the habit.

CHANNING WORK AND PLACE.From The Neto-Ycrk Chrittian Advocate (Meta.)

When Channing cams to the New-England frontthere whs a univernal reign of sharp Calvinistic doc¬trine. Thero had not been any general break in ltfrom the landing of the Pilgrims down through thewhole colonial period to the American Revolution.Channing introduced a positive and serious protest*He marked out a new path. His life waa nure, butwithout tbe inspiration of fervor and the faith thatneeds a definite object for lu ai tract ion.Ho expected * much, but believed little.Hero, then, is Channing's place. It is ons of moralreform, not spiritual life. His was not an originalmind in its higher production and inventivequality. He has built op little and pnlled downmuch. American Unitarianism, neverthcleaa. wasat its best in him. One of the dead failures in ourtheology is Unilarianlsm, even with Cb-uning asltsfilher. Its members do not grow. It simplysits still and .--pins its web of moral geoeraiis.tiona.One Father Taylor, tho sailors'preacher, ia worthmoro to Boston and oar whole land than ten Chao-niuns. Cbaunlngisra has no future lu lt. It willstand aime as tho typo of tho greatest theologicalfailure iu American history during our first century.That system that calls Itself a faith, and leavesChrist out of lt, ennaot live, lt haa no projectingcapacity. It is tho fashion of au hour, aud willthen take its pla*-) among tho diied basks of dla-curdiel things. Channing was ua ickle e. hen hstneeded thc breath of Spline.

COLONEL INGERSOLL SHOULD BE PRAYED TOU.From The Boston Congregationalist

Colonel Robert (J. Ingersoll has been lecturing ta >;this city again, recently, in b>s characteristic fash¬ion. Hil lectures aro astonishing combm ations ofshrewd sense, tender feeling nnel sparkling rhetoric, f.

with colossal ignorance, apparently deliberate mie-rcpreseutatlon and repulsive blasphemy. Ile db* *

plays an utter abandon of recklesducss whleb das-2les many for the moment, and some for macklonger. We haraly know wmeh to pity mest, theman who has taught himself to believe and disbe¬lieve what Colonel Ingersoll does, or the peoplewbo let themselvea be befooled by the glamor ofbi sentoucoa. Three things are certain i thst P"*-1*opponents as he no more can stay the pr"Cb list's caose than a swarm of liorueta e.

a railway train by atiucing some or Itsoat-.thut their activity ought to atimulatS Qje-feta more earnest and practical pletriand "*-

ought to be made by the churclnina.lapecial prayer.

It wuib Cbioago .>nm wto fa*'!

atlt.