-tre fS5 jijS:3& ' - .. il J W7 -"& "aw ' ,'--- . r te. V!fc t Hates of Advert Islnjf. TliE RED-CLOUD CHIEF. t Cloud Chief. i'UBMSHI.U WKKKI.Y AT -j- tinn.wmik 4 Me , Umr ik M tf RED SLOUD, NEBRASKA tU xirumtmi m ci -. M.H. WARNER & J. S. G1LIKAM, VOLUME IV. RED CLOUD, NEBRASKA. THURSDAY. SEPTEMBER 7. 1870. NTMIIKR .). KdltorM nml I'riirptoh. t ' m hM '" itfl yl IIP f.p JMW Hr m m "' w Jfe f - . i - " "r .- T,JnP'PJWMwr ' . - . m I TheRed fc . t- : eV.. r p. - A Xew Chinese .Sect. .-" A very extraordinary religious sect has recently sprung into life at :i place called Scaou-Bhan Ilien, in Che-Kiang Its headquarters are at a ruined temple near a .small mafket village, formerly j dedicated to adeitv called the We:-to Pusa; in immediate proximity with which an a few houses, thatched with grass but scrupulously clean, where some of the leatleis of the society reside. ..The movement is said to have had iJsH rise in the ecstaeies of a couple of. old women, ag-d respectively upward "flf S and .'0. who are the mother and daugh ter; the.e aie the high priestesses, or sibyls, and at ceitain tiui'-h become m spiied by a paitieular Pu-saor spirit, with whom they ho'd ficqucnt inter course, and whose ulteiances, through tho medium of the women, are legarded as divine oracles. Passing by this neigh borhood during theday-timc.eveiy thing lsquivt; theieis no.hing whatever to attract attention. At night, however, the scene is said to be most lemarkable. The place is eiowded with people, all come to consult the Pythoness, or to hear what it is all about people of every desci iption, men and women, i n-h and pour, had and good. The mteiior of the temple is brilliantly lighted, and theieis generally a dejil of eating and drinking, for this sect, unlike most of the othei.s, encoui ages high living and Condemns vegetarianism, .seated upon a high daisaie the two old women, with Cauda .i -!;.. niug on either side of them; and th' people worship them with in cense and joss-sticks as incarnations of the Pu-sa. Some f the ecstacie.s pie--onil to hae is:i.ns of this ileitj. and dl the uniclcs delnered b the priest efises aie unswei ingly obeel. One of the peculiar legulations of the sect is the abjuring of all silken clothes. No thing iswom but the simplest cotton. The initiated are firmly believed to be endowed with magical poweis and t be able todnve men mad with incan tations and the administration of curi ous poisons. The number of adherents is rapidly incieasing, and though the sect bus onl been in existence a lew weeks, it counts already upward of Too members Fr-on tli? (bsiUi! ICmjtin; Sfi a nih a i). An Extraordinary Will Case. At the Mullingar Assi.e, m 1 1 eland an action, -Purdon and others against Earl of Longford and otheis," was heard lecently to ascertain I'.e light of claim ants to the propel ty of the late Adolph Cooke. The testator died in Man h, ls7l', being then more than o ears of age. lie had never been mairied. and he had for years been subject to aggravated bodily ailments. He was possessed of valuable property in thecounU of West meath, the rental amounting to about r,000 pounds annually. He had been in the army, but v:is generally sum moned in remote coin.. lies, and neer rose beyond the r.Uik oi a.subaltein. lie was a total dishelieci in all leligion, revealed or otherwise, and he also re pudiated the eitene of a God. He was a believer in the transmigration of souls. He would not allow his servant to dog a dog, :is his noti-.n was that the soul of his grandmother was destined to dwell in a dogat some period or other. His fixed idea was that he was destined to be a fox at some remote period. IIo believed that all animals were gentle unless provoked b man. and on one occasion he went into a field where, there was a bull. lie was anxious to conciliate the bull, but the animal did not understand this attention, and very nearly demolished Mr. Cooke.. He an nually caused sticks to be collected for the crows, to facilitate them in nest building. He thought that trees, when cross-cut, would hae no diiliculty in growing if again strck into the ground. Mr. Cooke also refused to allow himself to be buried in consecrated ground. IIo caused a tomb to be built, for himself in a Geld.ai a cost of i'GO. In that tomb were arm-chairs and lounges, which he frequently used. A Remarkable Case or Suspended Ani mation. During the hist heated term Mr. Mark Carr, of Walpole. Norfolk county. Mass.. a very worthy laboring man about sixty years of age, received a severe sunstroke. .The day following the attack he wandered away, and though a thorough search was institu ted no trace of him could be found. His friends gave up all hopes of him, and his estate w;& about to be administered upon when news came from a farm house about a mile distant from he lived that MjvC GENERAL NEWS CONDENSED. The Republicans of Kansas have nominated the following State ticket: Governor, Col. R. D. Anthony,, of Leav enworth ; Lieut. Governor, M. J. Salter; Secretary of State, T. II. Cavanaugh ; Auditor, R. J. Bonebrake; Treasurer John Francis; A ttomey General "U il- lard Davis The Republicans of the Tenth Illinois district liave nominated Col. I J. F. Maish for congress, and in the Galesburg district they have nominated Thomas R. Royd The Democrats of the Fourth Wisconsin district have renominated Wm. P. Lynde for ron giess, and in the Tenth district of Ten newe they have renominated W. ( . Whitham I. S. Whitten, a glove merchant, and his daughter, of Bur lington, Vermont, were drowned in lake Champlain, Aug. 10th ...The business portion of the town of Ophir, Hah, w;ts burned on the night of Aug. l;th. Loss $:'-"',00 Orders have bn-n issued from the War Department for recruiting '-V.00 additional men for cav alry regiments. The principal recruit ing stations are M. Louis, Chicago. In dianapolis, Boston, Buffalo and New York. dames Mai tin and Peter McCahVry, two mineis at Port Richmond, Pa., were attacked, August 21st, by a crowd of "Molly Maguires," beaten with bludg eons, stabbed with knies and treated to a shower of bullets. McCaffery was killed outright, and Martin so terribly lujuied that he di d in a short tune . . . The Ten Cent Savings bank, of Poits mouth, X. II . has failed The Water man hub and spoke factory, in St. Louis, burned August -JL'nd. Loss, Si&.ooo The main building of the Soldiers" Or phans School at Phillipsburg, i." miles fiom Pittsburg, Pa., buined Aug. iind. i.oss, r.JOO The lumber yard, sash factory and saw mill, of Peter Stein x. Co., Cumberland, Md., was burned Aug. 21st. Loss $30.000 John T. Alex- andei. long known as an extensive cattle dealer near .Jacksonville, 1 11.. died on the night of August -Jlst. He left life insurance policies amounting to Jnojoo. The Republicans of the seventh Michigan district have renomina:ed Omar I). Conger lor Congress Hon. John II. Hudson, of Sandusky, Ohio, has been nominated by tlie Democrats for Congiess The Republicans of the Nineteenth Ohio district have renomi nated J;is. A. Garfield for Congress. . . The Democrats of the Eighth Tennes see district have nominated W. W. Gaith for Congress In the Third Kentuck district, Hon. John C Cald well has been nominated for Congress. A train was wrecked on the .New Orleans & Jackson railroad, eight miles south of Jackson. Miss., Aug. i'3d, by the giving way of a bridge. Four per sons were killeo. and sixteen wounded, the or six seriously. The foundation of the bridge hail been weakened by heavy rains Caterpillars threaten the almost total destruction of the cotton crop in a poition of Alabama V block of buildings was burned in Al bany, X. V., Aug. 2d. Loss, Slio.000. . . .The laborers on the rice plantations along the Combohee river in South Caiolina have struck for an increase of oo per cent, in wages. They made threatening demonstrations, and the ringleaders were arrested and lodged in jail at Beaufort A severe light is reported between the troops and the Indians at a point north of the Black Hills, and that the loss on both sides was very heavy, but the troops held possession of the field. The Indians broke into bands and dispersed over the country, with the troops in pursuit Wm. A. Knapp, of Columbus, Ohio, has been appointed chief clerk of the Post oflice Department The Republicans of New York have nominated ex Governor E. I). Morgan for Governor.. . . The Boards of Commissioners appoint ed by the Methodist Episcopal Church and the Methodist Episcopal Church South, to consider the obstacles to fra ternity between the two churches, have concluded their labors and issued an address to the bishops, ministers and members of the two churches. They say they have arrived at the desired consummation of unanimous agree ment, and complete fraternity. FOREIGN NEWS. An oilicial dispatch reports that the Turks were repulsed twice, August 21st. They were unable to even to ap proach the fortifications of Alexinatz, and only succeeded in burning some A dispatch from that the Servian the Rus- A number of other oflicers are expected ' Cbarlerf I."s Death and Burial shortly General Tchernayeff semis. In January, King Charles was taken frequent dispatches urging Prince Milan . to Inidon, and there was tr -d anil bc to continue the war. The Prince ap-, headed, as you know. You and I haw pears still undecided. It is understood not the time to inquire ,'and i-ihaps. that onlv three Servian Ministers favor between ourseh es,are not c!e t r enough the continuunce of the war ... A special 1 from a Bucharest correspondent of the London Daily Neia, whu accompanied Schuyler in his tour of investigation, says Barings' report of sixty villages burned andt12,6QO persons killed by the Turks "In iiulgaria, does not Include the outrages committed in the district north of Balkans, nor in the district north of Sophia. Forty villages were bunted north of Balkans and seventy south Schuyler has not completed his investi gation, but estimates the number killed at CO.OoO The oflicers implicated m the murder of the foreign consuls were formally degraded, August 2L'd, before the public, and salutes were exchanged between the forts at Sulvuica and the foreign men of war. Advices from Madrid state that tluee Spanish gunboats will be sent to the Chinese waters, at the lequest of the Spanish representative at Pekin. This step is either taken to suppoit the Span ish demand for the restitution of the vessel stranded at Formosa or for fear of complications arising from the re cent attack on the French missionary chapel at Ningkone Foo . . .The Fiench election of Presidents of the Council General, has resulted in the choice of ." Constitutionalists, 41 Monarchists, and '.VJ Republicans. The Republicans gained seven seats Tocqueffie and Arbil- lew, Republican members of the French Senate, aie dead It is stated that the Canadian government has decided to allow American vessels fiee navigation of Canadian waters for the lemainder of the season . . .The preliminary woiks of the International Exhibition to be held in Wi- in Paris, have begun. Turkey asks, in relation to the efloits of friendly powers, to essentially modi fy the conditions of peace negotiations Its demand is limited to a war indem nity, and guarantees against furthei breaches of the peace by Servia A telegram to the Russian embassy in London, says that despite Turkish olll cial reports all dispatches to the Rus sian papers allinn that the Servians repulsed the enemy before Alexinaty. The Turks to the number of ."0.000 were repulsed in idl directions. Philadelphia Pluck. Wh.Uevei advantages of this soi t may accrue to the Quaker City will have been most fairly and loyally won; for, of a surety, never was thero a great business scheme of national importance carried through with so clean hands, or such absence of all peculation as this Centennial Exhibition. And Philadel phians may well boast, that, at a period when the business of the country was showing unparalleled prostration, and jvolitical and private jobbery were ram pant, they have initiated and pushed to a successful issuo a grand scheme of international industrial exhibit, involv ing millions of cost, without any waver ing of faith, or a thievish blot upon its direction. Indeed, in the whole show there is not to our mind anything better worth showing than the steadfast, strong, straightforward puro.se with which Philadelphians have pushed this matter, through thick and thin, to its final issue, and thesuperb disdain which they have shown for all sorts of scoff ers and doubters. Pluck of this sort deserves its reward, and will have it, whether it comes by admission tickets, or in other ways. And other ways will oien whatever may be the exhibit of temporary pecu niary result. There is the positive city growth already alluded to some of which must be healthy and real ; there are the permanent buildings within the Exhibition inclosure which inure to the city; there is the newly established School of Art," whose administrators, with wise forecast, axe making large purchases of such material as could be secured under no other conditions, to such advantage, as here and now; there is the immense educating influence of the Exhibition in its entirety upon the population of the city; and there is the further material gain of winning and holding a reputation for executing a gigantic scheme with steadfast purpose, and for entertaining a world of stran gers without giving reasonable cause for complaint. From "In and about the Fair? by Donald G. Mitchell, in .Scribnerfor Septetiiber. At the recent primary election in Greenville, Tenn., young Andrew John son, son of the "great Commoner," was a candidate for nomination to the Leg islature, but was defeated bv an over- ing majority. A few days later enry Clay, a grandson of the Commoner." was defeated ce in Louisville. The iave been very worthy sought, but their been used ag amst this being the ments. .suffers his indulges jpensin jeever ible fo decidej how far this could have been helped, or what excuse thej had w ho did iL The only thing we can be sure of was, that Charles was not a bad man, nor Ciomwell an ambiti .: hypocrite, though I do not thiiik t1 one was a mart r, nor the othei i;otlcw ; eer. It was on the :5'th ot J . '.?... WW, that this terrible event took p'.-ce, :.oM. after that, ittcuricd the saddest scene that old Windsor ever saw. Pour ol the King's faithful serants .unl he had faithful sei ants all thioiigh iuscaieerj. the "Duke of Richmond, the Marquis ol Hertford, and the Earls ol Southampton and Lindsay," iequcstcd leave fo bury him, and carried the both bark to the Castle. They took with llu'iu that Bishop Juxon who attended the King on the scaffold, to lead the sei vi e over him now. But tin- Governor of the Castle, who was a certain Colonel Whitcljcott, would not allow the Burial Sen ice. He told them that "the Com mon Prayer-book had been put down, and he would not suffer it to be iue.1 m that garrison when he commanded." You will see from this that persecution was not all on one side, but that w ho eer was uppcimosl in these i;ient tunes did his besttociuah his neighbor. You could not fancy anything more heaitless than the Puutan's iefiis.d to allow these heart-bioken men to - holy prayers ow r their king's and tln-n fi lends gra-.e exctp:, nidenl. the ie fiisal of that same king to let the Puri tans lhe along with him in the native Emdand which had loom lor them all. When the faithful loids found it impos sible to change this decision, they wi nt sadiy to t. George's to find a place to lay him. but found the ehapcl so hate, so naked, so alteied that it was. only with hard ado that they found a vault in the middle of what had once been thechoii. wheiethey could lay the King. Here they lound a little spare- for King Charles, close by the great leaden coffin where Henry VIII. lay peacefully, un witting who was coming. The Duke of Richmond marked out roughly upon "a scale of Jead" the letters of his name and the date. Then, all' in silence, at three o'clock in the January afternoon, when it was no more than twilight in the cold and naked chapel, they carried the ct-llin. then covered with a black pall, of which "the foure lords" carried the corners, with a forlorn attempt at state. As they came down tho Castle hill toward the chapel with their bur den, it began suddenly to snow, and the snow fell so thickly and last that soon "the black pall was all white." Was there ever a more" mournful sight? In the dim chapel that snow-covered coffin would be the one sot of wintry lightness. "The Bishop of London stood weeping by to tender that his ser ice, which might not be accepted." Thus they laid him in the dark vaultto molder with the other royal bones, dropping the whiteness of the snow co ered pall fan emblem, they said, of his innocence into the black gulf with him not a word said, not a prayer ex cept in their hearts, the Puritan gov ernor of the Castle standing by to see his orders executed. When all was over he locked up the empty echoing chapel and took the keys away. Windsor has seen weeping and sorrow like every other old house where men for genera tions have lived and died, and more than most, for in the old days suffering and sorrow were apt to follow in the paths of kings; but never has our ven erable Castle seen so melancholy a sight. If the story of the Stuarts had been a drama, a great tragedy such a Shaks peare couid have made, no doubt it would have ended here. Mrs. Oliphant, St. Nicholas for September. A Traveling School. A society has been started in France for the purpose of prosecuting "voya ges of study" round the world. M. de Lesseps has interested himself in the project, and next year a fine steamer of 1,200 horse power y, ill take a cargo of boys, with tutors, regulations, and everything necessary to enjoyment on a long cruise, in which pleasure is to be duly seasoned with instmction. The ship will weigh anchor at Havre, and sail in the first instance for Xew York, touching at Lisbon, Madeira, and the Bermudas. From Xew York the stu dents will proceed to Charleston, Ha vana, Martinique. Para, Rio and Buenos Ayres. They will avoid Cape Honi, sailing tlirough the Straits of Magellan, on to Valparaiso, Callao, Tahiti, Auck land, and Melbourne. From Melbourne the floating school will make for Sidney, pause for a moment at Xoumea, thence proceed to Yeddo, Shanghai, Hong Kong, Singapore, Bombay, Aden, Alex andria, Xaples and Marseilles, when the young gentlemen will be let loose. Each heart is a world. You find all within yourself that you find without. The world that Burrounds you is the magic glass of the world within you. Tc know yourseB:, you have only to set down a true statement of thos'e that ever loved or hated you. Lacater. In Turkey there are 3,300,000 infidels and 4.000,000 Christians. Hydrophobia in France. sjine information has rtvei.th U-., published reg-.mbng Ljdrophobi.1 ai.l the treatment of dugs during these;i..n in which hyarophubia is supposed to regularly break out m Prance, u huh may bo interesting to this country In 1 Paris, to take an example, all unuiu- . led dugs ;ire taken iossesalon of b the police, but, instead of being indis criminately slaughtered, are taken to what is known as "La Touniere." a sort of reception-house lor dogs, and in which gKxl care is taken of the animals until they are churned. They are l-.vi-ded into two classes, aluable and val ueless. The former are kept eight da-; after that time has expire!, if they axe , not called lor, they aie put up to sale by auction, and, m the eent of no put- i chaser being found for them, tle-v aie ' hung up in the yard ol "l.a 'loiiriieie. The dogs consider.! of less alue, r more likely to go hiad. are allow eel n! foity -eight hours' grace. wh-n they aie summarily hanged. Their car trusses are sold to whoever caies lo b iy such car rion at To centimes pel head, and the ugly suggestion is made that it is at the time dogs are slaughteied that i markably line sausages arc to he had cheap. Be that :is it mav. it would appear that, m spite of the pieautius taken against hydiophobia, many er. bad cases i t it oceui m Paris, due ol these is peculiar, as showing how long , ;m(l t1(. j.uJ ujl( u,., l(Ul Wtl, ,) a turn may elapse befoie the hateful ,M.,Ilulti fo wed htm. and uhoisre- mis of the disease takes 11 et. A J j,riHj,icel m ctt's chainilng character man who was bitten by a mad dog was ,,. i;,.i.,,.a, ( ur -..ireisjKindent has lus taken t- .: hospital, wheie lie i.-ccued I mtorm.itt m frm a relative, t the ladv such internum that in : short ti ie- j ,,,,-,,,. .and the alieadv known huts was discharged as cured, some weeks ; ,,.,,. ,ilt ,lltI(. 1U),m t ,,mj,t ;1 ,, ,,H.M. parsed, ami the man appeared to be en- j ,,,,!v jmldislusl iletaiN .we suUtan joying hii usual health, when he w.m liA-u r.,mH-t. Tin !:.. wom rot ir. suddenly seized with hdiophobi: in ; ,,n,i,.s,t relates it. i, .e. follow its worst foil... The result was that he j WasllIIj!lM utu. -, ,.lh h ,Ushe,l into the-t.eet foaming at the , mouth, and in such a state of maduc-s- i , ."., ., . , ' gent and beautltlll .I-We--i in 1 hlladel that eei one lied befoie lnm. and he; , , , . . . , ' nhia. bv the nam-ol Reberc.i dial died on a shoit time aftei he w. i . . , , , - , i 1 his aciiiiainiau iifeneI mil love, in secuie!. and phie'.l mice mote in the , , . .. , , , . . ... . I which Uitli ihaied.anJ living pn.sel hospital. 1 iench -ilence bus v.-t ; , , . 1 , , . i tout nage, and was a pled on coinli- show a better cure fol incipient hvdi.i- ; . , ' : tloll that the UWcntS of the Iud WoU,U IriJOI'lll ". I'll. If, .1 ,. ."'. .v. t ' I aught the bitten person knows, be mad than the hcioieoneof cauteii'ation. The .Medici Family. When Xew York was a wildeim s-. peojded by bears and wolves, a wool merchant, on a wharf m Kluience, named De Medici, began to attract notice by the enormous sums which he made : nd spent as rapidly. lb built magnificent ships gondolas, to lloat uon the blue A mo princely palaces in which he held a royal state. He built palaces lor the city too, established schools in them where the sons ot the nobles learned philosophy; furnished great libraries ot rare manuscript. The greatest architects, sculptors, painters, and philosophers ot thewoild worked for this wool-merchant gladly, he was sojreneiousand friendlv a patron. They Lgav e him the name of the father ot 1 - ' coiintrv.and under his rule Florence became the most beautiful city in the world. But Cosimo de Medici was the father only of the rich and noble. The poor he trampled under foot; they were of no more value to him than the -wine in the stalls of l'iesole. If we could keep these unfortunate I wretches out of sight, the story of Cos- imo, his sons and grandsons, would be splendid as a dream of enchantment. They wakened allItaly to new. wonder ful industries. The great magicians in art, science, and song worked at their bidding. Gardens, churches, marvelous work in gold and silver, more marvel ous pictures sprang into being: great poems were written, scholars from all countries thronged to Florence, and in the shadows of vast palaces were given place to pursue their studies in peace; the whole known world, in a word, flushed into a glory of beauty and grace under the rule of the Medici, as a trop ical forest into flower beneath the sum mer sun. But the ioor, remember shared the fate of the creeping things in the forest. The only men who took any account of them were a few good, common-sensed Christians headed by a monk named Savonarola, who went about with such gloomy foreboding faces in this sunshiny, beautiful city, that they were called ' weepers. ' Lorenzo, the grandson of Cosimo, was known as the Magnificent; the po were almost willing to be crushed death by such a .genial, superb mas ' There was a little boy of eight, ploved as a page in the palace, of n blood we may be sure, or the gJ Lorenzo would not have noticed, as.rV did, his fancy for moulding figures, '1 clay. Walking, one day in the gareii I - the prince found the little fellow cop y! ing the figure of an old faun. He ht. 1 altered the mouth to make it laugL . en uoue, jucueiangeio. ne saia : "liut r1A mr.ti An Vff l.r.. ..U ,.l- t uivi iucu lu nut uae aueil letUl as UlOU hast given thy faun. Close his mouth." The boy bowed, but said nothing. The next day, Lorenzo, passing that way, found the faun still laughinsr, but with his teeth broken and decayed with age. The. prince placed the boy at once in a gallery of sculpture, and employed the first masters of the age to teach him. Xow Lorenzo is chiefly known in his tory as the patron of Michael Angelo. Lorenzo's son, who was made Cardinal at thirteen, and Pope at thirty-seven. w.vs of the Millie are of the .-ung vu'j ! r. .u.d had kti-u:i Lun m n l. . Le vs.w s.i ai.iMM i!..it he should lililsb the 'Lurch i-t X Peter's at Rome. tU.l he r.t-! the money nevosar b i:iran- wh.ch Luther protested tvgai nt a un law ful. and ou: of tali Mindt divnaloa begun and widened the great bretuh of the Reformation Another of this iaimiy wa the lath- ei;neof Prune- win laughed anJ joked while s"enty thousand of hr subjects ueie slaiiKhteied In one n-ht. Frvru ,hrt ucri and hi- ." in iSt .VAo. INU-ccu of lunh"' .,,,,, In Ing't l.ul . ritl Mlt.t Onlv The .ui Pr.i;c,s.-o t Arofi.V recently printed the lollowing vagnuil item ir der the "Pergonal ' head Mis Grundy as that the original jot Mr Walter colt': Betecca, tu the no el oi I.mho' was a Phthildi4ita , .lew ss, lsc ptctuie Washington liv mg showed t Scott." This publication has called lloiu a well-iufotiucd -oiiombiit somu m teiesting particulars of the part taken b !ring in Mipplyxng so,t.t with hi- interesting lileiat picture from real hie, in hiding tie Aiu-riean author's e.uly lie, disitpHiiitmeul. and the mu tual oWso! rellbiiri taken bv himself , . , . isiitiiiT to the ii'iititi nt then i!.oi.ht.-r with a (ientiie The Hebiew i-Iigiin loibadc such a mariiage; and, though ' the patents esteem d the suitor hlghlv. I they could not bring then minds to con sent to the violation of so saeird a reg ul ttioti of their faith. The attachment was so stiong between tin lady and Irving that nothing but then elevate! sense of the dutv of a child to parental authority kept them from wedding. Thcv i esolved. however, that in senti ment they would i emaiii true to each othei tluough lite, and never wed. It was duimg thti state of their rela t.ons that Irving made his first visit to Sir Walter scott. The latter had already made for himself an undving reputa tion as an author, and the former, with his literarv productions, had attracted the attention of the "Wrard of the Noith," who was at that tune inru- bating in his mind that wonderful storv oi 'ivaiihoe." Personal intercourse with living so won upon .scott's confi dence that he sketched to lnm tho plan of the storv. confessing, at the same time, that he felt the need ot a heroine other than Row ena. Irving's heart and head were full of his romantic Ive for Rebecca (Jrat. and he modestly prof- fere I to furnish Scott with a heroine, manv of the incidents connected with whom should be drawn from leal life. The offer was accept!, and Irving's Rebecca, mutually pledged with him to unwedded earthly fidelity. sti as model of the immortal Reli "Ivanhoe." Scott, of course, to the exigencies of his st great ideal as furnished i unchanged It is known to evj never was marrk intimate with 'ieved. that l attachment invsterv I, to the L other v esteeii was isto irv ' x .IMv i H!U Anm Ioouhvti duca,-.A forhfC: 7, si:s snop, a where sli with the pivj "I was a mel tmrrlilrt of c-u.id ..ww, v,,. OtJ had tho true knowW; st.p .wn:.; .u ti fr!air uC ftp,c;I.i. and Ha Hn. !. 'r.lAitt cttitMtii-ti in '.: fM-r . ri ol.t v ..'... n !.i.d- l- .?! f -1 Vh h u.is aw .iy fr.iw hir ?h- atatij for lnm all Ja d inW U: ! rru ft him at nitst. ltnriitig iMftr i tier of u hioU v vrv ort sm b ht.MMl many rielHtwe B"t U1. thttsh WmI cs.it'plci:ntt5, he utri-liHl t TTt" est rler lu lb r-rrd f hU bltlj wotk. cjMinjj al rrwp)tj. j ttiijj ami i-v-iitttJnj:. verifying fvd chix:kii e erv tkhk'. j-a ihul lhnU of UmiI iaUM- fe lMmtiMtr mkrtmj Her devottxn tu fvllii.g imimrum pbte. after a rr.r uU-txl h bflW ' w lule asMstin,: tin bi.h-r at tho tr! tsipe, she tMks of Uw "mftt" ''.' hal in knowing that "ui bioh: i-. rt !kKer. lot the tetnaiiiitrt f th j. ' was clHid) ' Aain. in hr li.t "Ma ul I inl.-ndi"! U pay a v pruttus.s! v iit U .Mrrn. t i . but l-ti : my br tler t ) uUii putting t: frty fst mimt in the lue Tl. ! ftn I pt-.iii uiv jotinw till ft - sure I should not l-t- want ml ml Im4i. ".lami.iiv 1. fiA J riirwli.'. was uinoiniMoiih -eveie. My brt.' suiter. si fi.nu lmltej;it. ail I ! my pait. felt 1 hmbl twi7r tiratiytfo: K else but an invalid I or lllr . but tli. 1 civ (.aretullv krjit to ameir. .o 1 Wlslntl t. he useful t UIV btotli I . long as I -fcjiblt !! ' tn l ; . little tlttteuf S.r tllUUtt' tril si III liel tleilillloll H.tlMlrttll. ! I - , this as a relic I'.vl line. fejic. tia. by the hand of Uiv eM blitth . coined a tr'jiire ! , ' siiiunuplac Inwk, in wih ti ! w t -out lit toll the atrtWci v!u. Ii I brotlM-rx.iveher.it l-re-iiklw!. o in I lew h-IHiiie llioliM'tll-. to lifr ije i as to the iitflthcumtu .! foimui.i - was ( use-ill luf -nUtMtlM.s .i III' 111.' fter br llM-V I I . CollK-lH. (hi tlMli .Itloll of t -! '. ' works lv the It. vat M"it. !' !' praise ami n- .iotioj ,I ber Inb. i astionoriii is ail tif-r l...ifie. b7 wriTe-i. ! hal the totnfort ttHti my biothi'i v. as satistjeit vttthniftM. deavois nt anhtstlng him' -Tr w f "n f I.itTalun . SrjU' f.il i A'l'tnlt The Lover" Telegniph. '1 lie latest kmk in tin lv bn Ima jut made it-. apjeatame. straKe! wondei what the young men on Brur'" wnv iihmii by selling !ug pink r1 with tin tvbndeii in eiu h end rt t.' thingrt ar- c.dbtl the "Lov J graph." and i-onsists of roun " d-rs about tw. inrl.r ti a niece ol bladdi-r sk.r. ha. .. 6 end the ofhr b. tlnoiif.Mi the Iii.'iilih r i J c)rd. rea hits',' j ' i' feet to the other l.d.j similar contnvni hdd one cvbnd r perviti sj-aks ,u t'J other end I the. travels aloi.g te ' t.ght skin, and iar the other rial, evei'j Broadwav omn.l M noises. 'I h.i so-'.w1 penally re--iinijei. who wish to con sides of the sir- t, . unnton tholdstv. chiefs and fnj Thr im and. I I