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The Expositor, 1869-12-17, Page 1.• Attal in the Conn- naTSIIEU .1:>,:-.170.1‘41 • ann. in advance, rayzeria`oiy be i—av-. 99 Bi o.s ,..• .. , ,. 1 .•4 .•‘N, • ' .:. " - - . • Iv 4., ''al . ''''''..r.•14,1,-‘4..k.r.ttrt.• I. . la, ....,, ' ' .- ''' *; V • i ''‘'• .,:''''' .,- --VX.c....t.A.st .44-.Z.' ' 4' ' ,.--:''..',::;;t°''`4.`1:?; 4 4 - 7Z.:..t.4,....,..44,4.441.4.q. at, ttt• .t. . ,-..a. to. , _ • N 'r .- ',V. ' .--At- .•,',1A-44;10•404;', •ti. -11.4.' .t t•Y r -i'' •,"„ ANI) 0 .pyak- I 1'1 Litre .af. 4 '*4 _1e no a ti forI it eNee,tt nctes f I; • • VI • he tar, over those t,f eI,11„er • el**,'li 1i vt," 1:tat te ee e43,a1 - - Oti t" I m ",I tIkk Nt-ttitt (/' eteentertiola `- - et: tie 12 vaa51;41110':,7! PM -FIT P1D kaat ..at'a eva'a• _ - 0!) ell e -a NJ' -ILI AI& (ace re eta lea, :a ot) 1_11 OA tt I • FLA AND tal r_eloeit•I bv the/1' f 7 , _ '1-/-4.t-,e •/1-744- k eeale of solai -4 ,-1:4-14-L _L' ; /14 114;reertanZi autt eltar t tl a t-- • ee*eter. Ctrl'"r"Y . 14+4.,44,1K k , a.ororeai. in the conetrael-,ien of .the;se instruments& r • tut- tile last 11.1111..tk-r.tl1 is used, and feea...t.eetaa -workmen employed ;-• and as the net .uteketurers have haltover...fifteen, years of personal ealaTienee, they are 4tile to produce . instrumt•nt *4 1i L . ••-•••••-."•-••••• • .:kshtitttlet)Mt",, froins. • 0,(),• . Clabi7net Organs, fidni.93 OC .A inry and verity e;tiieed thouaand Terms Liberal. nt t3 d1.ifferent • 1.1 1-• !title:U.5u, 51: _cur ..taraaer IflXt.tell tars ti quire of [Waring w F. L1,T,k,10-NT, pueity Of' the • It or: Unice, (• effected by par - 'es of 5 and: Isi_ . o eir; tt warranted t- Seaforth, Auce 29th, IS.09-,tr aether ad which ilm-av :_iartiou iu ; taut 'be etaltetal • - 1 Reastetl C'offte, the faiv,ear - = , i arot evt-rV InteK" : ri . s ttr 10 tbsr . .- -. . . a.4. , . : ..etatiou cart:aee .,....-...,:. vcrca tiv e tittles s. .realataate Eroken nee ylavortal Very - rpilE follawing remarks on Testimoniala of aiaind aoiong.1. •mast avoielerful aad. extraozainarY curea • Very Fine do. ' in Caliada by toe .i.h•tat,i, Indian Kemedeee • line 60e., 11 ev are stern, untltn:alil'e aaa ineouteb,ible • sufieknt to canivieme the meet skepti- ankay 506., 55-., ilaat the ( i aJ. t. (impound 65e -;41c- ; vt timed after foi eeees is ma,. accessedt:e - vat 1 Vtry Choiee oe- pee- zi-te eze-,(aa--Te.,*.7,afere, efae plat • • • I tea tisavaac 1 : ;eupierane - 'r AND • - 4 gi A - , ueseases of the Threatt. Lanes Liver .0e ;iY 2, 23e.; 1 Yeetative r!?ns, idneya„ I &c. Seitkiada,the various Siciril,iseat-es, llemors sold by this . and all dieeases ariai,a; frem linpuritave of the 1,1tiod, evt Loftily :-.-oatte that tlas td,r1:at reme- ; dy has never la en (quailed. lune Wag , tin tu E.ter euelt a cure as that -in tbe person t of N,V.Iben etairias of bfedewii, 7_ of $k Mantra:IT, Ceesteinp.ion ; or that ct eier C. V: itare'ease Earetsza an, C. ot Coaiatmption. or chat your la teat:, , of Antliros0 Wood, of t Ufl'--lt.' ii, C. W., of !,tee, awl 1 ain liyspepeia and Liver complaint., or that of e: the tioetee, of -N. zipanee, of ',lieu- r4a4.3.ors • t -a, maiis re, v h t t1 aetuaily been on crutchea Yours Tare for y of ail treittment hereto -fore F. .7Jd is now.- we'd. ,•eores ot eush ceases Might- I,e menti •nefl 1 ad. -we spaee. at the • Dena azcere and get a t ircular of untruas6ion- eareliaake1 of you able eertiileatie on the Great Slieblionces- • ae4I ltertiet'ey ziatl Pills, anal satisf5,- yourselv. stra112,-- Csae Price tf l`tenietly in huge yin cs, $1- T".- .4.ita your T4:1.11 - t I or sale by all Li tts akJ Dea,.Tera in art -barn„ -whieli t )• .eak. I at- N vVutaaas....\,aia Ac; nyTS Elliott & altititaue. Dank.! \\*. t • j ' paneell . inel, I Uo1, ; Is( runLo I. al broc.,k & Stark T , 1 ewei.. theetaluT ' (3.1 • f .;.et Manteeal. I -.:klatloc, County of1LI astings, ;- the Montreal , Province of Ontario. 1.-ee. 9en, 18G-8. - • • 1'7u -res 13 esers. t utItunbi Con 2-41414 ; bills - ; u lara,e aniteaut rt- ritatettt you • 0-e Cy.- _Lie:11)10.v, (Jut.: - - -4, ;lad we are r ims is to eurLify that during the winter .,apidly 1 c1t. s j of 1 wets utleen with a weakness_o f gnef geiw- the anelts. Which gradually, dillang the ,at larae aniatait spring of 18f.`,7, extemled to my- knees, and !eccaeeon to re- on up to wee hips, &tat 1 beclaing SO Weak that - tieratand, at-aa1 oeuiti not but W QUI -kilned to niy l• 'or zdaatt two years, while this ! -weakness wee, eamiue, On me, and afteiwarda iteoress (.0 1 so,igitt mef lieal advice, employing at differ- , e1l!. tiniee thee aatt ieediehtes of -ate, Ottawa. ; (ha; rent kinds, pzeacribed by friends, but of uo avail. I continued to get wem.: and. ,..taeliah Break -1 wei-se, antil the sammer of it,68, vinela 1 Was -:hich you sent induced to try the ereat Shoeltonees Itemedy You may ex- eer reading the car..;:s pciaormed, in a -ual-TiPh- :,e, "kt il6t. this time 1 had. begun to feel the SK INNER. 14 5' in my luta& ; fact I was „letting . alnioat fielplees, 1 have taken two bottles. af the Shoalicatees 11cme4iy and two boxes of the Pills and 1. am entirety restored to health. . t I never eapected to get better, but siarelY tried the medicine as a sort of forlorn hope111 - = case of mine was not a private one, but l▪ atown to all my !neighbors and fru:nos; and 17' r • t• • on:- zifilieed as1 was, I have only to ; St Iry the altashanaes ttemeoy e wale\ e it tceitler their „ ARV ANI S knai HUT . - .1: Will Cure Yon. NI Sworn 'before me ati Mattoe, County of r"‘ ru"s Ilaat.he s this V1 5. a.U 5 ti 1 f in'trY 1869- fer tfie very a 7 .1 }, A. ,JP eteenit aeo e tl,ey h 1 In rt, certifY that I haa-e known Mrs. r M'ary Ant) 1a,10,ty for the last iifLetn. years; :1:.a• ir alie weln In of probity' an.ttratla I have ,teet ry tear, kut,wn htr before, tittrime, and. inee her ill - 11 irk 1nas. belaae her certificate to be true in nt tskin, e ery par, ieulan 1 know diet while ill her may laver ve ,it.elarett le/lakes; and I kuow that ias none but ts.lie her recovery, always attribut- t 11 uI 114 r 1 overt to the Shoshonecs Remedy- etattoin phm- 1.V1. ever I1 11 be the peenhar proprieties of 1.1P AY. hi- ,e4Pst! has acted alix•oisbt Ti.kr til:rtfore t hie int divine, one thing • Fna-ine and rn vt..of Twrztele. A F, Wow), J. P., `.11 a ,` ,akt• . Warden oftlie Caunty of 11astiiags, Proviace 74-1-3m of teader."..au 01 Jaada„ .11 • - • • • 5 t- 4,4 ROSS & LUTON, EDITORS & PUBLISHERS. VOL. a, NO. 2.. 0 HARP'S , very Stable, and 0 General Stage Office, Main Street, R. L. SHARP, Proprietor. Seaforth, Jan 8th, -.1869 53-tf. � CA. MON, BARRISTER AND „ Atto ey-At-Law, Goderich, Ont. Dec. 14, 18i& 53-tf. 11L.VE (JAN, .1441nOrnt -r\R,. W. R GEON, Grocery. R .Seaforth, C017, M. D.. C. M., PHYSI- lurgeon, etc., Egmonclville. • eeDee. 14, 1868. 53-tf. SMITH, PHYSICIAN, SUR e. Otlice,—Opposite Veal's sidenee,—Main Street, North, eq. 14, 1868. . -5-ly r-r1:1AC AU D., 0011,01`:TER FOR. • 4.the Ceunty of Huron.Or FICE and li,ESIDENCE—Pn( doer East of the Methodist Episcopal. Chnrch. Seaforth. I "e. 14, 1868. 53-1 y T ,CAMP ELL, M. D. C. M., (Graduate J „ of McGill 'University, Montreal)•Physi- • ciati, Surge( la A:ea Seaforth.}anat.'s.— Scott'sBrick 31ock. Residence—Mr. Stark's Mani street. Seaforth, "DENSON 1) and A Chancery. a Notaries Pa NVroxeter. Co: of Uppe curities 8 per cent.; JAS. BENS Seaforth, ------ , TerENRY WA.T.K1NSO.N, Architect and ri Builde . . aqatis, Specifications and Details (trawl correctiy. Every aoscription of Building IN -Yorks measured and valued. Bills.ot qua trues prepared- . 0 fil0E.— ext (tour North of Mr. Hick- . . son s old Ste e, otlakuita seatertn; if line 11111, 1.8b9 . . . 79 tf . . j i1-1, i MoC0 ATTORNEY AT LAW, , „ Solicit° • in Chancety,Convey ancer, etc., Paris, Ont. Money to loan on farm seen- ity. Terms easy. Office—First fiat, Paris Star Buil ding. -53-tf Paris, De 14, 1868. uly 15th, 1869. 84-ly & MEYER, BAR.RISTERS torueys at Law, Soacitors in Insolvency, Conveyancers, lic, &c. Offices, —Seaforth and gents for the Trust & Loan Canada, and the Colonial Se - f London, England. Money at o commission charged. N, H. W. C. MEYER. ec, 10th 1868. 53-1y. & G.- W. McPHILLIPS,. PROVINCIAL tand urveyorse. Civil Engineers, &o. All manna of Conveyancing- done with , neatness and dispatch. G: McPhillips, Com- missioner in 3. R. Office—Next door south of Sha-rp's °tel., Sea:fOrth. • Seaforth, .)cc. 14, 1868. `. 53-1y Jil and Y oiicitors in Caaneery, ..Notaries Public, 'Conveyancers, &c. Office, Over Mr. ArchibahPs Store, Urabb's Godericli, Ont. Money to Le.nde W. TORRANCE HAYS. J. Y. EL"WOOD. • Seaforth, Dec. 1401'1868. 53-tf -REX'S, L. D. S. . _artificial Den- tures inserted. with. allthe latest _1 improvemen -s.- The g,reatest care taken for the preserva -ion. of deea,yed and tender teeth. Teeth extra ted -svithout pain. " Rooms over Collier's Sto e. - . Seaforth, )ec. 14, 1868. ae. -ly • HAZL e FEUR8T, LicenSed Auctioneer _D. for th - County of Huron, Godericb. 1 Ont. Parti .tdar attention paid to the sale of Bankrupt Stook. 'Farm Stock Sales at- tended on Liberal Terms., Goods Apprais- ed. Mottgag' Foreclosed, Landlord's War- rants Execn ed. Also, Bailiff FirA Division Court for I -I iron. • - . Godetich, June 9th. 79-tf. — TE. ROSS Pro u•-;eto`r New Dominion • , e) . Hotel. begs to :nfor n the people of Sea ' 'forth and th- travellin ; community general lv, that he ;.cop 'ir:.it-elass accommodation in every thmg required by travellers. A [ good. 511111)10 and. willing hostler ah -v -Vs OD band. Run lar Boarders will ir.eceive ever) necessary a,thention. Seaforth, ileb..8th, 1869. !. • 63-ly 5) • )0A1101-1EY & 1IOLMSTEAD, BAR- 11,ISTE ts, Attorneys -at -Law, Solicitors in Chancery and InsolVency, Notaries Public .and Convey ncers, Solicitors for the R. C. Bank, Seale •th Agents for the Canada, Life Assurance (`o B.—$30,000 to lend. at 8 %. Fani, • Houses and. Lots for sale. Seaforth, cc. 14 1868. 53-tf. 0 MAIL L t CROOKE ARCHITECTS, &c. , Plans a] d_ Specifications drawn correctly, Carpenter's, Plastercr'a„. and Mason's work, measured an valued, Office—over J. C. Det; lor & Co.'s s ore, Court -House Square, Gode- rich. Goclerich, Apri' 23, 81869. 70-1y. riOMMEPI V,) ville, accomo The, larder a the best t stabling in c Ainleyvill G'I.A.L HOTEL, AINLEY - mos Laird prqprictor, affords first latiou for the travelling public. id bar are a,l-Way-s supplied with e markets afford. Excellent imection. e April 23 1869. 70. tf. LITTL WON.D17.R ITAIB IN attia' and 8having 'Saloon.- If you. waiet go'[ or your hair cut, or Shampoo as it might to be, go to the- "Little Vender," South side of Sharp's Rotel, Ma' 8treet, Seaforth. The Bath twins in • cc nneetion will ,be eopened lele pa:)lie on pea lst. Lubelski's tonic for th-ing i he hair grow and preventing" it from coming otit, vas never known to fail. Sold la tit les at $1 each. Come and buy it. ,StatfOri.h, ec. 14,1868. 53tf S. LI:BLSRI. • "Pretdom in Trade.—Liberty in Religion.—Equality in Civil Rights." GEORGE W. ROSS, PROPRIETCR SEAFORTII, FRIDAY, DECEMBER 17, 1869. AlVIERIO.A. A.ND ENGLAND 1 America! and England! . The rulers of thi world, 0 may their mighty banners ln peace be ever furled. i From age to age in friendship May each, for ever great, Abide; and may they never Feel enmity or hate. • What though Lhe restless ocean May fiercely roll oetween, 'What though its tide diviieth Their smilmg meadows green• What though their climes may differ, America is sprung Of 13ritain—may they ever In friendliness be one. An let the wings of commerce 'Unite more closely still Their lots --may each experience True friendship, and good will. Ler each the hand of friendship In fellowship enclasp ;— And never let discussion. Relax their mighty grasp. • SIGHTS IN JAPAN. .Yeddo is invested with new attrac- tions, now that it has, become the capi- tal of the Mikado, instead of tl:e Ty- coon. But had "done" it ten years ago atore thoroughly than I could hope to clo on this occasion. . So denying my- self the pleasure Q f seeii.g again it e vast aasembhige of pfetty villas, each the abode ot a nobleman and his retainers, its temples hidden iu imPenetrible Shades, its bazaars ablaze -with lacquer, and its streets glittering with r neoly pageants, I tookethe New York for Nagasalei, via the inland sea. . THE MOUNTAINS AND VOLCANOS. FusisAme, yenerated as the guardian, and admired as the pr'ele of the Island Empire, looked down upon us as we rounded the cape and steamed away for ehe south. 1‘. perfect cone, except that its .trunci.ited summit iudicates a crater which .at long intervals buitsts into fearful activity, tnis noble mountain rises from the plain to the height of 12.000 feet. Even in midsummer its I i b • d rifted sides are streakec w t snow, an its head, if it had any, would be cov- ered with a shining crown. It stands' as a, beacon vieible ;•tt the distance of a hundred milesamid the Japanese show at once their patrtotism and their-- good taste in taking as toe favoi it° em- bliieoment of their ornamental wares. Ohosima, a minor volcano, in a peipe- tual state of what by a Hiberuianism, we might call sluggish activity, rose ma our left as we passed the harbor of Simecla, reminding us • by it fitful puffing of the sourcies of that earth- quakr, by Which, a few yea•rs ago, ' this city was nearly destroyed, while a Rus- sian war frigate Was evreck'ed at her anchorage, and the evavee, excited by the great sommotion, rolled across the entire oreadth of the Pacific. There are &Lid to be teu seats of yolcanic action, in Whiell the Japanese locate the "ten hells" of the Bildbist religion, and so subject are these islands to sudden tre- mors that a friend of mine, undertak- ing to count the shocks he might ex- perience during his residence, desisteci from the attempt on reaching the Limn- ber of thirty-six, which occurred in the -lapse of a few days. The* earth lost to him the attributes of terra firm,a, and .heaving and nedulating- beneath his feet, it seemed to his excited imagina- tion to be a green scum toating on the surface of a lake of lava. by the "foreign" passengers. In this 1 -of the State religion, as it has now they were not constrained as invited ' come. A small room of unpainted guests, but as willing imitators,eif cus- wood I speak of the shrine the reverse toms which they esteemed as better of imposing, as are all the religions than their own, they simply demanding. structm es ia these islands-; its location the fare they had paid for. The Hin-1 was picturesque ; and the fine avenue cloo breaks into open re -volt if required of ttees and the snecession of sculptured to bite the end off &greased cartridge, gateways that conducted to it announced and he throws away his dish of rice if that it most be regarded as peculiarly the shadow of a passing white man hap -1 sacred. It was elevated to the God of pens to faia on it. The Chinese cleaves Agrieolture ; and a subordinate idol in to the chop -sticks of his foiefathers as a side appal -merit, which seemed to at - an obligatien of filial piety, and asserts eract no incoesiderable share of worship that though power may be on the side was a horse, labelled in Chinese char - of the "barbarian," the Chinese is still ' acter-s'" divine horse " the paragcn of refinement. But DO A boy, the son of one of the priests.-. or 42nd, is the favrnite• It is minx's- '— such gulf as caste or (ast-irou eustom • ( hey are not celibat ). was 'reading 111 ed entirely of blue and green, and in, separates the Japanese from ourselves. Chinese the discourses of Confucius; the true tartan every line of the plaid is WHOLE NO. 106. Tartans. The word "tartan" does not refer to any particular fabric, bur, to the various coni binations of colors and patterns . adopted as a distinguiehipg mark by the diffennt Highland clans. The colors and lines of many of the original tartans are coined faithfully in modern • . . serges and poplins. Ladies who wear plaid germente should know what tar- tan they have assumed; hence we give the color of those ipost worn at pres- ent. Of the' blue and green tartans, now so fashionable, the Stifle rlano, As they eat our' food, they will sococl and scenes and ceremonies alike _ repeated. whether the blocks are large learn to think our thoughts and enter- minded as of the neighboring mainland. °rsmiJlThis tartan as the basis of tun 'our sentiments These inward The Sinto relieion is the Tanism or many othei•s; .for example, the Suther- changes were foreshadewed by still oth- native worship of the Chins se, which land plaid with cross -bars f°rnis the observed at that table of the Daimois. the first germs of Chinese civilization, Gordon, with Campbell tartan, with yeilow bars the . -with red the McDonald, with er indications that mieht have, been-: found its way into these islands One of the guests, an officer of high !at least six centmies before the Chris- both red and yellow the Farquharson, rank; was dressed completely in t),e ! tian era. Buddhism entered Ly way with red and white the McKenzie. European style.. Others had on simply : of China at a later date, and the whole These ,are the plaids mist worn for street suits. Among the gay plaids chosen for shawls and burnoeses the Stuart is the favorite It has large scarlet blocks with crossinglines of yellow, white, black and bine. The McIntosh is a similar tartan with more yellow in it. The McFarlane has a red ground baseed with green, white and blue. The Victoria plaid, named in compliment to the Qtmen, who pre -- 401 -s it to any other, is the oliginal dress - tarten of the Stuact clan, with white ground iastead of red. This bright pleid, like the seariet and black Rob Roy, is popular for shawls and for chil- (iren's clothing Feench poplins- in tartan colors are sold for children'a best dresses. For plaid suits there should be two skirts, the lower One trirned with a bias flounce five inches wide, vandyked on each side, and1 bound with alpaca braid • the upper skirt is merely vandykedVery narrow satin gall- oons, in tartan coloas, are sold for trimming self -colored dresses. . . a coat or trowsers of foreign m4, while innumerous in -stances there was nothing but a hat, boots or shoes to in- dicate their vowing conformity to European manners. At Nagasaki (to anticipate a little) a body of soldiei-s are training in foreign taotics, and clad in foreign uniform. These are straws, but they show which, way the wind blows ; and it was moretthan a straw when one of the princes thaplefully accepted a New Testament, which it would have been death to receive a few lyears ago. BEAUTY OF THE INLAND SEA. Passing a narrow strait, the inland sea burst on us in a bewildering mono- tony. --Winding -passages, which it would require the clue of an Ariadne, or better still, an accurate chart, to re- member, or retrece—islaeids, reproduc- ing the thousand. isles of the St. Law- rence many -times over, and suggesting as they rose above the water in green hummocks or nodules, that they might intellectual celture of these imitative islanders appears to have been derived from that coneinental Empire. Hith- erto they have looked up to the Chinese but now they are beginning to despise them, and to look to the West for bet- ter models. Jt will interest meny of your readers to know that Right :Rev. Dr. Williams, A M erican .BiShop of China and Japan, has determined to place his See at. Osaka. He has the largest diocese in the woia—swaying the ciezier over tao of is mese popu- lous Empires. THE STRAIT OF SIMONOSAEL Leaving Hiogo, the Strait of Simon- osaki, let us note the China Sea, or the Sea of Japan as it is more usually cal- led. This strait is of historic note. It was here that two of the Princes tried the range of their cannon from the op- posite shore about nve years ago, and the victorious Chosin undertook to close this weatern. gale against the coln- nierce of the world. The ships of the have descended originally in the form Treaty Powers, however, soon demolish - of a meteoric shower, shores with their ed his batteries, ana dispelled his fine waving lines expendini to make room dream LI a marts c'laus-upn. for bodies of water like those of our • NAG.ASKI. - great lakes. and then contract:nit to form the links that chain Cherie togelher Nagasaki was our last landing place waters that smile and mountains that hi the reahn of Japan—a city beauti- frown, the molten rocks having been ful for situ ition, encomeessed with lashed into angry waves by some fierce mountain wails, and looking down tempest and then congenled in their upon los isle clotted harbor, which' if present postures , such were the leading not abeolutely peerless, is scarcely sur - features reproduced with little variation passed; by any other on the face of the in each section of the panorama. globe. It is a modern city, erected SOME GROIVDTG CITIES: • 'ahout three centuries as a depot for Arriving at Hiogo, a spell of bad weather prevented my. visiting, the great city of Osaka, only sixteen miles distant ; but 1 consoled myself by re- flecting that it resembles Yeddo /et cata- kcanibus. Japanese cities 'are 4111 alise as much so -at least as Japanese faceet which it sorely puzzles foreigner to distinguish: Osaka is newly opened to foreiga trade, and a few "foreigners" sene in _le on the cross. And it is bore more (this word has a techanieal Portuguese trade. At first it was a Christian city—i.e., Awns ruled over by a Christian Prince, and for a long tintit no idol temple was allowed within its limits. Later in its history, how- ever, it became still more noted for the cru el `extirpation of n a tivc Oh rietianity. Multitudes of its people were precipi- tated from a Tarneie7n rock, that rises ni its harbor, ,,,nd the rest were corn - pe e asaan annum ceremony o ramp - Dinner at a chinese-Inn. ;tin fri,111 partaking °fits flesh. Exclud- ing this we ordered a little of evcry thing else,, and the cooking of our din- . ner began under.our eyes. We heard the chickens squeal, and in a feti utes they were thrown through the - windotv to the cook, who had them dressed and I:roiling in an incredibly short time ; the bread -maker put the lumps of manItau into the steamer and then busied himself -with the lau-pii Taking a lia.ge piece of well -kneaded dongh, and peeking it into a stick a Eastern A sia, and means white ikiople) eh,- l th• t tl le lt are beginning to settle there, hut 3.6 inficcessible to fel eign shipping, and Hiogo of Kooe, as the place is begin- ningeto be called, must be to it what Callao is to Lima, or Yokohama to Yeddo. ,A.1- this young port treide rapidly on the increa4, and it promises took to extinguish the flame that e; as 11.awl Pat.ting 'me '911°'" disks, as he finished each of these lie, at nodistant day to offer a more for- - ,midaltle competition to its more north- bursting out anew. A hendred end . . . uttered a shout, and with a well -direct - ern rival. Resting, like the latter,' on fifty were .seized one &fir and sent into thesecute basis of a silk and tea pro- banishment, where many have' died, ed aim he tossed it some twenty or , thirty feet across the room to the cook. - clueing district, it hos the advantage and whence none have retuined. And : the meantime another man was of access to iatrious commodities -among about a fortni =hi since, as I was in- - formed by the6French Consul a dozen ' manufactll ring the vermicelli, &sated -- them' cam ph or and -v-arn h— wh ich re- d b f OD a machine, some three or four --fe-et- quire a warmer dinette. It enjoys, more were dragge e ore tne ovei-nor We enter. -d, and, sitting dewn at a . rough deal table, ordered our dinner of the Chang-kweite, or, as Abbe gue calls him, "the. Inspector of the chest." There were stewed matte"), and beef and ponitry, chietangehatfer or fried eggs, lear-ping and men -tan, or fried cakes and.steamed bread, and ver- micelli. There was also pork- in vari- ous shapes, hut our knowledge of the - Chinese pig and'its habits disinelined ' in anye cie e ee, a le ng luso . . . . . yard lone. he drew threw, pulled and 5 ec moss is again raising its leaic . 0 . . stock twisted it tintil it assnmed the dimen- many secret believers of the old .. have come forth (a Roman-. Bishop simis of a ze-Sirr' sk1PPing. rope, and ti.' 1-1 doubling and twisting and pulling it ' claims twenty theteand iii all the is - again and again, producing a derthie lands), and so many new converts have stub and twist textin e. he eut it into Joined them that the Government be small -pieees, whieh eft er et good deal ef gan to be alarmed ast, year anc ruder- ; above t e coo mg -range this man wor - EUROPEAN MANNERS AMONG THE J4- too an ins mense market for its imports and ordered to recant. Refusing to ° PANESE. Kioto, the Miaco of the ancient books; do , so . . ' ed a long lever which moved a piston tt-ey wei e threatened with , the abode of the ghostly D-airi who -°'is a cylinder with a neiforated bottom'- , ) death, but the next day was released 1 . ' ' 3 Our spacious' steamer wes crowded now comes to the front as tile Mikado • ,, e • • s a , at every stroke the long white strin -a ; without roreign interierence. en of to -day lying, with its luxurious mei- - pan it is nolikely that the old fife% : • • ‘ t esceia e in a ce ing potenea , lions, in the rear of Osaka, while the!, will ever break out again. The public : until the cook, judging that the quantie great Lake of Oitz and the rivers of the i sentiment of Christendom- is felt as a 1 ty was equal to the demands of our ap- - interior open up a high Way to the Hrin-1fei nild the mind of 3-„n,In is petite, cut off the rnateliaI flush with cipalities of the West, I would raltner tati-..'s-i---a-cli- - iO--t-hat—direertio--n: geavi- the cylinder, giving the man on the buy property et Hiogo than in any . other seaport of Japan. A BREAD RIOT with japanese passengers. le ae- liament or Congeees, of which I. wrote you in my last, haviug adjourned, or rathar dissolved, several Prinees, aith their retinues, were reaming -to their estates in the southern erovinees. All who enjoyed the dignity of wearing a dli d and reeeived first-class se or c a. me aecommodeti me. And it yeas amusing to see men who at home never take ilieh• meals at a table, sit on a chair or eat withea knife and fork, serioesly ad- dressing themselves to ah the form:ill- ities of an American dinner. They had inch fed it's'eparate table butecit was served ia every particular like that occupied • TEMPL ?. OF' THE SINTO SECT. A bread riot, a novelty in these is- Wheo the sky beganto close I climb- lands, has jest oecurred here, 1,2000 ed, a hilit---a Mountain. 1 utight call it men parading in front of the Governor's if I were not ao conscientiously vera- palace, and then proceeding to break cious--and enjoyed a magnificent pros- open the shops of certain traders, whom pect, which, hoWever, I shall not pause they accused of reising the price of food. eo describe. On the hillside stood a . The season has been so wet that a fern - little temple of the Sinto Beet or rather ine is thr ate ed lever time to curl up on the narroVe board and smoke hie pipe ti.1.1 another customer should neel his ;service& While waiting for dinner theyaveller ' passes his time in drinking large quan- tities of tea, but during the meal the beverege consiats of the strong rice brandy, sometimes flavoured with rose ,leaves, and always taken hot.— 4- I1 America and Asiat 4 •-i 15. 4