'Mom: Hcaorxa.-â€"A sweet-scented young tulip you are. Caleb, not to know what to meant by "hugging a delusion." Hugging a delusion menus embracing o pretty girl who is ready to go back on you just at soon as the ï¬nds another follow that sum her better thnn you do. You ought tobo ashamod to oontou your ignorance in this unblurhlng manner. â€"â€"NEgotistions saving-mare“ between Russia and China for the cessiou to the former 01 a large portion of Msnchooria contiguous to the Amoor. {or military and non! purposes. â€"â€"The Swedish Government is said to be so much alarmed e: ibelerg‘e development of the Russian torpedo and gunboat flotil- la in the leiic, thnt it has resolved upon the construction of a number of vessels of the same description next spring. â€"-â€"Genersl Kaufmsnn is noon: to eelalilieh M Tashkend, 3 college for oriental lan- guages, ai which all those .Indian tongues will in: 0-“..Ls LL- _ v ~ _ ,,,-._ _..- vâ€"VVV nuullu muuuas will be taught. the acquisition of which is obligatory upon entering the Indian Civil Service. The next measure will be. no doubt, to render these languages obligatory to tho oilicera of tho ankeaum army. who will thus be able some damvhon the invasion of India is attempted. to lead the troops of tho recalcitrant Indian tondstoriea against the Blitith. VVVVV __° -_â€"uuuew-e V!!!†a iew exceptions a general rise to 35 per cent. is requezted on the 175 per cent. iiet; (ram 5 to 15 or 20 per cent. is to be im- posed on ropes and oordege; on leather, 35 per cent., at the leest; on silk, 35 per cent.; on iurniture, 25 to 30 per cent.; boots, shoes and seddiery, 35 per cent. ; on agri cultural implements, 25 per cent.; on other machinery. 35 per cent.; on woollens, 50 to 75 per cent.; on wool. 25 to 35 per cent.; on cottons, 35 to 50 per cent.; on flannsls and blankets, 50 to 75 per cent. It is steted that in its general policy the Government will endeevor to tax such articles heavily as are imported extensively from the United States. and fever those imported from Englendtoe large extent. This course is merely to prevent the English menuisc turers irom becoming alarmed. Coal is to he removed irom the tree list and subjected to e duty of 17} per cent., with a slight dis- crimination in ievor oi herd coel as e boon to Ontario. There is still doubt as to the pig iron question, and on this point the Menuiscturers’ Associations are still in difï¬culty. A compromise be~ tween the ,iron manufacturers and the ueers of iron has been brought about by the Associations, but in: en unwilling com- .promire on the part of the users of iron, for they scarcely ice! that in the trifling protec- tion afforded them they here an equivalent to the several dollars per ton imposed on pig iron. Indian corn is to be texed at ten per cent; flour end wheat at irom ï¬fteen to twenty per cent. Belt will also be taxed to a trifling extent, as on that item the Meritlme Province Ministers ere edveree, neturslly, to I heavy duty; but the Onterio members ere vigorously pushing the claims of the pro- ducers. Butter, cheese, etc., will scarcely be increased in the terit‘l. es the items are not thought oi now. The duty on spirits is to be largely increased, and the finer brands oi tobecoo end cigars, while the coarser brands of tobacco, which permit of manufacturing. will be admitted almost tree. The sugar and tea industries have not yet been considered deï¬nitely. â€"â€"-â€"It is stated that the Russian authori- ties are secretly sxiling to Siberia. with- out trial, a large numbar of persons con- earned in the Nihilist movement. â€"-â€"â€"Ths Russian Embassy st Tshsrsn is striving its utmost to prevent English espi- tslists from receiving any oonosssions tor the public works that the Shah is desirous of having exscntsd in Persia. V_ â€"'"- Ill-I lulu- wu s diï¬crence 0! opinion no to details between the representatives of the Upper end Lower Provinces. but thst on the main re- quiremente they were sgrecd. Tomorrow the principal interview will be held with the Minister of Finsnce, when the whole of the delegates will be present for the ï¬rst time. Notwithstanding the secrecy to s certain extent observed by the delegetes or to the nsture of their precise demsndl. it is believed, titer careful enquiry from 3 number of sources, thst the icllowing is s [sir represen- ‘tstion o! the amount of protection which they desire on s few leading industries. With - l-_. _____.r Meeting of Prolccllonhln. Oman, Jan. litâ€"Thin evening a meeting wu held in the Russell Hon-o. ot which Dr. Young was present to: the putpou of com- puing notes. The gentleman who composed the mutation: were E. Gamay, jun.. Pruidont. and W. H. Frazer. Secretary 01 the Ontario anlnoturera' Auoointion; Menu. E. K. Greene, President, ond J. Livingstone, Boom- tu-y, J. Rankin, R. Foraylh and J. Potter-son, of the Quebec Monuhcturen’ Auoointion; Maura. J. H. Pork, J. H. MoAvity and L. H. Young. of the New Brunswick Mnnnhotnreu’ Association. Ind John Stain. representativm of the Homo: Bond of Trade. It not dil- oonred on I comparjsonpf notes that than .n. - man-..“ O solemn bolls! whole consecntod mule- Recall the mm 0! oldâ€" 0 tinkllng bollt! tun lulled with twillgm mullo The upmuul told! You volco- bran and Intel-in the dukneas- Brash. taller. and are mm: And tolled and mnuo. him the Host demanding. '1 ha gun sinks hom the hill! I no the dyihï¬'élï¬'aYEJï¬iihwin. 'nw uuuot drcam and on i 8 store ma rise the demo-limped Mission towers. The white Presidio ; The "on commander in hit [anthem jerkin. The pdeat in scale 0! now. Onoo more I no Patton's cross npiiiung Abovo the toning Inn ; And pan the hoodlum. northwud slowly dxiiunc The hemmed saloon Belle of more", who“ 10:] {omo‘ten music btlll lili- the wide exoemo. . Tlnslng in the echo: twilight o! the Pteeent With eolor o! tomenoe. I heu you cell, end see the sun demanding 0n rock Ind wave end and. Al down the coast the Mission Voleee blending Girdle the hoethen lend. \ Within the circle of your lnoentetion No blight nor mlldew hill; No: new . unreal. no: in», nor low unbllionj Pu“. thou dry wells. Done on the well of your long waves receding I touch the}_u;tll0r}fut,â€" I -A- An- Ann. A A..#, uvsslAn Mn-nsn neu- ol tho Angolan. THE TARIFF 3‘!!! turn. ’5 PO? 00113.; on other n; on wooflons. 50 to I. 25 to 35 per cent; tor cent; on flannel: “ Tn Ban."-Thero‘a n bonnet. Cmnaz To ms J mu: m A may Cmt. Cnsn m A 81'. 'l'nonns Jonas. Gentlemen : It up- peau to me that the plaintiff In a chunk ; I oblorvo you look blue It such language from this bench. but that didn't affect my decia. ion. H9 in n. liar, and u monk, and a mum, dhty ignonmuu. I! this is not borne out by the evidence. all I have to any is that you, gentlemen of the jury, are a tmoulont lot of 7110 haves. and it anon-d: mo gratiï¬cation to be able to tell you no to your momâ€"Grip. Tnz Gurnnorisz.â€"â€"The Reign of Terror had a very discouraging effect upon the times honored custom oi dueling in France. An illustration of it is furnished by what heiell the Marquis de Croix, who when Danton had rsiused to accept a challenge. gave him the choice. as he put it. to be kicked like a coward or shot like a dog. The arch-dema- gogus, who said that nature had bestowed on him the athletic form and harsh leatures of liberty, replied. with diabolical. humor, that, having the selection oi weapons, he would name the guillotine. This was no idle boast. Before the week was out the head oi the Marquis rolled upon the scaffold. What ter- rible days were these! They seemed to differ lirom one another only by a diflerence in the decepitations. Danton: met the same late that he had appointed for Croix. He foresaw hie end. When he declared. “ All will go well so long as the people say ' Robespierre and Danton.’ Ii they should ever say ‘ Dan- ton and Robespierre,’ woe to me.†he proved himsoll a prophet. He had stout stuff in him. but no virtue. His speech at hie con- demnation was signally French. “ My 11031.1 i anton. My dwelling will soon he in an lhilation. But my name will live in the ; Pantheon of History." The are in the great ‘ revolution simpliï¬ed personal encounters. When two politicians quarrelledâ€"and all men were politicians thenâ€"it was much easier for one to denounce the other to the bloody tribunal than to get surgeon and seconds and go into the suburbs on a pinkiu or shooting excursion. One of the grim wag oi the Terror was wont to say : “ The guillotine saves me many duels. It always killsite man at the ï¬rst tire." BE ORGANIZATIONOF 'l‘llll HIIAII'S ABJIY. An cflicer now residing in Vienna states that the Shah of Persia has been granted, at his personal request. the services 01 a General and thirty~two Austrian oiiicers as a staff oi instructors in view of the reorgan- lzation of his army on European principles. The conditions 0! service appear to be most favorable and the pay is thrice that given in the Austrian service. It is to be hoped that the potentate oi Pereia will pay them regularly and not place them in the same position as he did some of his own troops. not long since, 0! " begging " for their back pay. On his relusal to. comply with their request, a riot ensued which ended in a tow score of the warriors being decapitated by; Royal command. The Austrian oflicers are‘ to be paid travelling expenses from Vienna‘ to Teheran and given a free passage to their 1 country again at the expiration oi three years. which is the term for which they are to engage. - _-â€"â€"_â€"-u HUI-VI VI trials, with varied appliances. lresh opera- tivee and still more experienced reï¬ners. that some of theee capitalists would be eatieï¬ed. Neither pains nor money were epared. The best reï¬ners and machinery were imported from France. Why. then. could they not manufacture sugar 2 That was the minimum the uneolved problem then, and remain so ‘to-this hour. One eaid eoil, another cli- ‘mete; some found fault with the water, and one whose opinions on other matters were considered logical and decisive argued in philosophical toms that the sole cause existed in the condition of the atmos- phere. These events and experiments occur- red well nigh hall a century ago.and were any person to go to any of these pieces now and proton to make sugar from beet root he would be ooneidered an apt subject for a lunatic asylum. Let Hamilton capitalists and othere interacted beware, lest they get their ï¬ngere burnt. Yours truly. Ouz Wao HA8 Base: Tunes. Notwish'utandini the hiluro of one or more, it won only 5m: 5 continued series of 1.3-]- _2.‘ 7 - V Look at the root-producing countries of England, Scotland and Irelandâ€"but espe- cially England. a country thatchellenges the world to raise its much weight of beet to the acre as she can. These countries not only cultivete the beet plant. but have also attempted to get sugar therefrom. Millions of pounds sterlingâ€"yes, more brains and sweet and treasure than would sink a shipâ€"have been literally cast to the winds in the attempt to successfully manu- facture sugar from the best. There is ‘ scarcely a county or shire in the three king- dome in which may not be pointed out the site 0! one of these factories. consisting oi premises, buildings end machinery. now lying in ruins. each factory costing from $100,000 to $200,000. True, they made what they called “ sugar.†put it up in hogehecde and shipped it. but. nice. it was almost imme- diately returned on their hands. possessing the consistency of molssm, with this die- tinction, that it contained but very little of the properties of that article. The auger manufactured from the beet in these instances was utterly useless. fleet Bus Inn-r. (From Hamilton Times.) Bumâ€"In re “A Beet Root Sugar Factory in Hamilton." permit me to say the manu- facture of sugar irom beats in Canada must be considered a question of the very highest import. That it has been tried in the neigh- boring States and been a failure. and that the experiment has never been tried at all in any part oi the Dominion. are (sets equally well known. During c late session 0! the Quebec Legis‘ lsture a sum oi 820,000 was appropriated as a bonus to any individual or company that would establish a factory within certain limits, and show to the satisfaction of the l Government that the thing was really ‘ practicable. Such a company has been l formed in the City oi Quebec. and Item the high standing of its di- rectors aud promoters there cannot be the slightest doubt oi the question being fully tested within a very short time. One of the leading men has actually been engaged in the business in France. (rem which country both machinery and reï¬ners will be brought. It is well known that France is the ï¬rst plm in the world (or the manuiacture oi sugar from the beet. Would it not then be1 well tor the promoters 0! this enterprise here to havea little patience and wait the issue in qubepr b In every 030': V-_..-- â€"- ---â€". "nu-a w I‘ll-[Ce ' A lady was the mother of a bright little boy about three years old. The whooping- cough prevailed in their neighborhood, and the mother became very much eiermed leet but boy would take it. She_hed talked so much about it. and worried over it. that ehe had infected the child with her fears to such an extent that he would eeereely leeve her side. One night, alter the little fellow had been put to bed and to sleep. ajeckeel was driven part the house. and when just Oppo- site set up hie lie-haw, lie-haw, hehew. With a shriek the little iellow wee out of bed. screaming at the top of his voice, 'The whoop-cough in coming. memme: the whoop- ing cough is coming.’ Hedidn‘t catch it that time.â€"_Q¢’ncinnati Commercial Tan Mmmd ï¬niQiï¬ï¬Ã©iiâ€"y: “ya an Amer on editor. is the missing link bunm our uhuflbon Ind tho «mom, Windsor Castle and neerly ell places where Her Majesty resides at from time to time. ' It appears that H. R. Highness the Prin- cess Louise has sent word to England that she likes her Canadian home and is charmed with the prospect oi spending the summer at Halifax, the house there which is intended for her future residence. and that ol the Governor-General being suited to their tastes and wishes in every essential. The sentries which are posted on duty in the Governor-Generai’s reeidence at Ottawa bring to Her Boys] Higness’ mind agreeable associations to remembrances oi the familiar uniform oi the Foot Guards belonging to the Household Brigade which snount guard in Qha nah-kl.--l---1 A. n -uv aayvci an auu season. But there it very little of each thing. and it is rather in arrangement than in material that they appear rich. The idea that the French are gonrmande in private life ie incorrect. They spend little in eating, and they eat inferior thinge; though their cooking in rather a science than a mere accident of civilization. At home the great aim of the French in to save; and the ecli- eecriï¬ce that will lead to this reenltie cheer- fully undertaken, more especially in eating and in the luxury of mere idleness, No French woman will epend a chilling to save hereelt trouble. She would rather work like a Gray-horse to buy an extra yard of ribbon, or a new pair of gloves, than lie on the softest note in the world in plecid ï¬ne ladyieln with crumpled gauze and bare hands. _....'.._ A Fasscn Worm! n Harmâ€"She helps tocook the dinner she has boughtâ€"for servants are wastlul with charcoal and ehe knows to an inch how little shecan use. In that marvellous place, a French kitchenâ€" ‘ where the two or three little holes in a stove cook such delicate dishes. and perform such culinary feats as our great roaring joints of coal ï¬res have no conception ol-she flits about like a fairy, creating magical messes but oi raw material of the most ordinary description. Yes, though a lady born and bred, reï¬ned, elegant and agreeableinsociety. a belle in her way, yet she does not think it beneath her dignity to lighten her house- hold expenses by a practical economy and activity. The dinner of a French family is cheap and simple. There is always soup, the meat of the stewpanâ€"usometimee, it not etrict in expenditure, another plate 0! meat â€"â€"generally two vegetables, dressed and eaten separately; and sometimes. not always, a sweet dish; if not that a little trait, such as 1‘ may bethe cheapest and the ripest in thel non-An D_a AL__- , , We heve every reason. to believe that although the Bueeien Government has in principle consented, at the demandpf the British Cabinet, to recall ite envoy. General Bazgonoï¬, 1mm Cebu], step: will. never- theleee, be secretly taken to render the pro- mise in practice null and void. Were the Russian Government aetueted by the friendly feeling. its profeeeee, the Czar, by means of telegraph and special meeeengere, could have the summons of recall conveyed to Debut in leee than a week, but three times this duration is the period spoken of by count Schouvalofl and we are informed that it is almost certein that e etill longer delay than thle will eventually be de- manded. It seems clear. therefore, that the Czar in trifling with the matter. __ ~.-- .- â€", nun uu DWI. it would be “ a grateful and Christian not †to pay such a compliment to the memory of the deed Cardinal who did so much for charity and brotherly love during hie life. He be. lievee the measure could be carried out, and that it would increase the bond: of union growing up between Proteatante and Calho- liee in Ireland. A strange and generous suggestion has been made through the Dublin Freeman, by an Irish Episcopal Protestant. and it is noth- ing less than the gratuitous transfer to the Catholics of one“ the Protestant cathedrals of Dublin. The writer says that thereis no Protestant necessity for keeping both at. Patrick’s and Christ Church. as only s small portion of either is ever usefl. end he thinks 1" â€"-â€".IJ L- 1- - The Jewish Meltenger, referring to a sum- mary of Christian work among the Jews 0! New York, says: “At our very doors shall the Episcopal Church Mission boast that it sustslns a school of mere than ï¬fty blight children. selected from the better clue of Jewish lsmilies. whom it proposes to take when young and give s sound Christian education and training? Shall we tamely submit to the spectacle of Jewish children apoststized, while we wrangle about the length of, a prayer or the position of asset ?†It says there must be united eflort among the Jews for the education 0! Jewish children. There should be 10,000 children attending (ling? the Jewish free schools instead 01 only ; , 0. ‘ - ...---., â€"â€"~. u-VUHOIIHU. via" Turin nnd Bosnia. There no thirty- nino organized churches, besides twenty-four unions. Ind sixty-two plum roguiariy viniied but having no nomad miniuier or onngeiiu. The iormstion 01 a General Aucmbiy oi the whole Chutoh is now being aimed st. via" The Walden-ism Church. which is includ- ed in the Presbyterian llmily. consists o! ï¬fteen patience in the'vallezond two outside. m.._x_ â€"â€"3 “r The Beptiet Church in Pei-ll. Frenee. hu nowllO memheu. At tent two-thinl- ere oouverte iron: Ronni-m. The Baptiste of Bootiend number 8.163. wonhipping in eighty-on. ohntohee. They no euoeieted in eunion which but elreedy erected lourteen ehepeln, with Iittingo for 10,000 penong, u e coat of $297,175. The Gongugetiouel minute:- at Ohlcego, in discussing popular ammonium at their meeting int week. senate“: egrocd thet ends. billiards, the-tree, denoing. eto.. were not evil. in themselves but bed become evill. end that the line of two refotm 11,, not egeinet amueomente per se, but in on:- ooming evil with good. uussuu RECALL. “all... Iltcullclu, Vâ€"â€"a all-3 uv asve iunderstand the witchery of bright eyes an lroey lips, but set of! their beauty by all the artiï¬cial means that lie in their power. never reflecting that by so doing they destroy their principal charmâ€"that of innocence. The rounded cheeks. the bright eyes. the waving hair of a girl in her "teens" need only the sim- plest setting. Bioh fabrics and sumptuoua adorning are more (or the matron. her drese gaining in ample fold and grsoelul eweep as she puts on the dignity of years. The sea- eons teach us something here, it we go to Nature (or an object lesson. How different her charm lrom the deep. maturing manner. when the hues are decided. end the air is loaded with the perfume of a thousand cen- one i The schoolgirl is only on the three- hold oi eummer. she has not crossed it yet. Let her copy the sweet grace oi the spring on her graduation day, and discard artiï¬cial“). are r: ihicl Take awaywomnn Ind what mull folle uks_n writer. We would. 7 -v _v_â€"â€"_ '- uvv Elli-HO mind. Were I to die my wife would tak one share of what little property I have ; one share would be reserved for the expenses of i my youngest daughter's wedding. and a share Ee-piece would go to cash of my two sons. ; Besides the members of our tamily we keep ‘one coolie and the old women to do th ‘ rough work of the household. Every day well: {our English miles to my duties. and four miles back again in the afternoon. ThisI have done for nearly twenty years. Certainly. I might move to a nearer place. but I enjoy a very high position in my neigh~ borhood, being one of the spokesmen of the ward. The wards are of different sizes. Ours is a small one, consisting 0! not more then two hundred houses. All small matters are relerred to the {our spokesmen. who either settle the matter individually, or meet in the temple to discuss it. Grave matters 30 belore the district magistrate in the usual way. __ ...-- cue-u- vuuulVI-l and my oonavin an} his four daughters, that; form the whole or our lamily. 33818 IN SHANGHAI. My house coneiats of 31x apartments and atanda me 35 a month {or rent; two of the apartmente are reception rooms. Belore I was employed by my lorelgn Mend. I lerved as a clerk in the Custom House; but never having any inclination to squeeze I did not get on well. I know I am stupid. but Iteally cannot squeeze. although my friends make sport of me for it. I like to be quiet and independent. and as long as I can get my salary regularly paid .I hape to remain of the same _8-‘ m; ‘ â€" - .s "" l salary, to defray the cost of the last little sfl‘air. 0! this I had ssved 9120: in the delicate guise of cake money many of the neighbors contributed from 81 to 82 apiece, and the seat I had to borrow. and am still paying 011'. The chief expense is (or three days’ open house kept during the lestivities. Pork, cakes. wines, etc.. have to be liberally distributed around, and it would never do for a gentleman 01 my position to be shabby. Then the wife’s outï¬t must always be sup. [plied by her own family. Tables, chairs. clothes-trunks. pots and pans. and goodness knows whet not. Ah! you have little idea how we Chinese fathers must scrape and starve to do our duty respect- ably. Well. my second son is still at school; he is twenty-one yearn 0! age, but as yet not betrothed. My youngest ‘ daughter is thirteen. and she leerns her household duties at home. Of course all the temales 01 our lemily are small looted. My uncle's son, aged Iorty-ï¬ve, is still alive and has four daughters. _My wife and children. -_J _â€" A, A ville-o [father mue- hle Condition and Ambition II Life. (From the bhonghni Celestial Empire.) I cm the third Ion at my lather. and em ï¬lty-one yar- ol age. He wee a native oi the Province of Cheh Kieng. and war ct the time of hi- death an expectent megietrate in attendance at the Court at the Provinciel Governmental Yâ€"~â€"-. He died at the age oi titty-tour. )uet twenty years ego. My pnternel grandiether wee a lull megietrete of the District of Zâ€"â€", in thin province. end we consider him the progenitor oiour family. All connection with our Oheh Kieng anceetore hae long eince been cut of! end forgotten. I eve elm one uncle living. the younger bro her oi my tether. My mother was e smell-looted Cheh Kieng‘ women. and came from her native province with my (other; she could epeek the Men. darian dialect on well M her native tongue. end it in to her that I am indebted ior the Kwen-hwe which I now use. My mother bore my inther two cone beside myself ; one younger then myeelt died at the ego of three or tour yeere. I am married to a emalloiooted native of Yâ€"â€"-â€", who in now lortyoeight yeere of ago. By her I have hed nine children ; (our boy and ï¬ve girle. The eldest eon died at the age of twenty-ï¬ne. The eldest child }livlng is e deughter, eged twenty-seven, who is married to a local trader, and belonge. of course, to my lemily no longer. My eideet living eon. aged twenty-ï¬ve, ie employed as etutor to boye in the neighborhmd of our dwelling. and hie total euninge from this eonrce would emount to about 38 a month. He is married to the daughter at a clerk in the Provincial Treasurer‘s Oflice. 393838 0? WOBS. My second daughter was married this year to the teecher of n boye’echooi. The-e mar- riage: are the greet expenee of ne reepecteble lemilice. It cost me 8300. nearly one you're ; celery, to deirey _the coat oi the last little UIIINIII UAIIILY Ll I'R The udiu' Col-Inn. Bnunnr or Wu.nmo.-â€"- Every muecle h the body is greatly and uniformly bro into action by the ewing oi the loge arme, and, consequently oi the trunk in 5 vertical direction. The undulations made the head. cheat and abdomen, in a ve plane, are thus not only according _ Hogarth’a line of beauty, but allo int†tending to pericct health. Every intend organ is gently stimulated to more tom action. Never in a common walk doe-I pereon‘ bgeathe twice the aame air. becanub is conatantly changing his poeition. Thie (M alone ie at incalculable advantage. 86m writere contend that the rebreathlngoi onco partially need in one oi the moat caueee oi coneumption. The moat {av time for walking in about midday in winter.'and in the morning and to evening in the aummer. \ From e reliable eouree we regret to been that Mr. Bright’l heeith ie in in from : setiefaotory condition end has n o )neirlmble tendency to give riee to some emount o! alum to his numerous iriende. He euflm ooneiderebly from depreeeion of spirit! and hue expreleed himeeli that he leer: he will not be able. at least for it long time to o to take an active pert in the public barium oi the country. We believe he he: even he! eome thonghte oi retiring from the rep"...- tation of Birmingham, and ie only untrained from doing so at the earnest solicitation: of hie eupportere. We have every reuon to hope he may epoedily recover. ee eppmntly â€"â€"being only eixty seven yeere oi egoâ€"h. muet etill have some " go " remeining in hill for a few yeere more. I! we me: drew our inferences from the general duretion Englieh etnteemen’e liver, Mr. Bright Ir ehould be now in hie prime et eirty-m taking or instancoe Lord Heliiex. who to eeventyeight year-e oi ege; Beeconeiield. seventy.three; Gladstone. sixty-nine. In. Robert Lowe, sixty-seven. -- , . ~ , V" “Ivâ€"- and Italy. which apparently is the am of many such embroglioa. The English authorities apptor now to ho satisfied that it is impossible to keep order ll all the scoundrels and law breaker: continue to invoke foreign consuls to seem‘ to them immunity from British'justiee. Tho Adminietrstor has therefore"elmply refuse! tormognize these claims, which are good. nevertheless, and will continue good until the Porte is relieved or releases itself from these " Capitulations." which were ï¬r“ imposed and are still maintained in order to make all government as impossible in To: us the English ofï¬cials have found . would make it in Cyprus. The ï¬rst Tu: reform, it appears to us, end without whids all others will remain useless and inop must be to get rid of all the “ Oapitula together. Meantime, their existence in Cyprus has bred a quarrel between England tried by another Government thou the Turkish. The Island of Cyprus in At tho‘ prenent under the “ Olpitulntionl." nnd at this moment. thoralora. any foreign count can protect I11 persons belonging or proton to belong to his nationality Irom the om tion of the laws which tither exist or which may be made {or the good government of t]. blond. The impossibility of governing any ocu- tty under the system which h“ boul- impoued on Turkey by the “Utpllnlstiogu‘ wu made npparon: go soon u n came to In 1â€"1;, I A 7 OYPRUS AND “CAPITIJhA'I'IONI. 7 At least, 311013 in the Emotion of ‘he “ that. tried piper " par excellence of this grant oily. ........... sun I" "I, “III “ honorable mention" and their editorial oolnmn praises. Their comings sud goings, their births. weddings and dentin, ere mutton of public moment, and their “ program? ere right royal. They command etteflion and receive it; and if they but add one more indecent wink to their vilely Ingseetlvo‘ baunde, it shall be noted end hold up tor. nation's wondering praise with as much cert, mony end pomp as would the learned, elude performance of philo|0phio Hamlet. Why. tha'v’érign’t' mountebnnku and flip. flap throwers in than plum are “unï¬t." "oomodiano" and "professionals." Th0) have their “opinions of the pron," flair H hnnnv-kln maâ€"l:‘â€"II A-) .1, , ch . - What mutter: it that every line which tho vocalists sing contains an indoliono all vulgar thought? if every acetate in MON 0! indecency! Are then follows not tho “ MAP. " A. QM- ‘AI‘Aâ€"A-- ‘R 17-.._LI_ no: a “ poor: " of ‘tho iolloworï¬ 5i K513i; 3353.53: Maoready, and all the great exponndm of ouignndeat works .’ -mnsie, mske up the sounds in this delecta- ble place 01 amusement. whose srtists, In certain columns. stead line by line. shoulder to shoulder, with men and women of and breeding, sud eueh se represent the weeks olglnglsnd‘s greetegt poet. ‘ ‘ Tho clam} 61 glmumhink o! 011an- ins, Mbukee'a“ of waiters. ohgfl otudl. gust- of inafmmegulâ€"an {quay}: 01 was! ~.__1_ 477 ' ‘he waiters are kept busy; e fluorite (on. of drink being epims, vitalized by anon lemonade lrom ï¬zzing homes. Olsen on slso vended by n peripatetie snlelmm. 'ho spgoars_to do 3 good business. -â€" -_- w ‘- .uuuv-uvu- tau-luau. The entice end eilly things done upon the Itege excite feeble interest only among 3 hr lode at the extreme heck of the pit. the choir- men Ind e heli-eeore or no “1.25:" In the gellery. The people in the at In too busy with their own affairs to wute time on enytning else. end even when they apple“ they do so without troubling themselvel to know why. gn Such oi the f else as are not engaged in conversing with their acquaintlnm m but, with their eyes, looking {or name one they either know or do not know; whillt elm. node and beckoninge are freely indulgedin whgn the right person erouoe their line 0! Big t. e o vulva-W U'.’ The vontiietion being bed and the loo- orowded. it ie eoon discovered tint tho etmoephere ie vileâ€"phyeioeiiy or vol! II monily. Cloud- ot nest toluene-mu float lirtieuiy end heevily hither end thither. tumee of iiquore eteei in diugreeeble nixtm ï¬tiully eorou the nostril. end impure teih. hemmed nire from oetehy opera bums or vulgur mueio iron: the bend. With now end ogein the note: oi e v " eomiqne‘e" voice. uni! the em. , All around is low end vuiger. Even “I. 'weli-dreued men end women become v looking or you look It them. Their do“ appear to put on o eiouohy. diuipeted "poet. booeuee their weurere ndopt Iueh negligence in their pontnree. The link jewellery of some oi the women looks II well u the reel jewellery 0! otherr. beeeuee in thh place all thet in pinchbeok. common on! flash seems appropriate and everything which in genuine and good econ link: into the iikeneee of the hue imitetione around. JOIIN MBIGII'I‘. ‘ lando- Ila-Io llau. (Togomtonp. )_