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e Tho Reve Roliert Collyier at tho Church of the Discipies, . s Wané-U]fin-Fool ot the- Religion. of ‘ - Uonfucius, e The Mechanics’ Fair---The Art-Gallery ~=-Labor-Saving’ Machinorye i ¢ 8, e v 0 The Montpensicr Pictures---Kanlbaoh’s ' Tre. of tho Reformation,” Chitcigo Tribsite, R ., ‘Maea,, Oct, 1, 1674, © Lnst Sunday morning,'ss I was. scatod beford, A glowing conl-firs in'my friond's--pleassnt pnr- lor, not niany milos from:-Boston, 'I*picked up tho Saturday’s. Zeening Transeripl, and, glane- Ing down'its columns, saw that " ¢ B g ~~ TUE NEV. ROBERT COLLYRR, . * . bt Chidngo, ivan'to preach at the Cluirch' of thi Difciples, corner of 'Weut- Brookline -streot! and /| Warren dvenua, - I looked ab. the’ elock: o’ tlia mantol, and snw that I hind about‘sn liour Lafore train loft, As {t was many-years..sinco I -had heard Mr. Coltyor,. I made & sudden resolve—in- spite of throatonitg' clouds, muddy- stroeth, snd, mord- than /all, ‘my ulterigucranco of. whoro tho-.church. taa'-to ~bo . found— to hoar' him “if - poasiblo: : T haatily made - my- proparations,-——my' friend’ ldndly addbig n fow: Onishing tonclies, that 1' might.‘not *look f0o “ countrifiod.”~uud, protcetod by thick boots'] and a large -wuterproof, I.utarted. ~About twen- ty minatos' ride ‘brought mé to tho-city, aud all looked' gloomy ‘onongh as-iwe ontared'the still, tlosed depot. X took tho only stroot-ear in‘wait- Ing, trusting I.should roach mome placo, if .- not tho owo I starteds for. Aftor--riding 'until iv vcomed* to’ mo'wo:must ‘liave “nedrly ‘roached Hong-Kong, or soma othor placo on tho ‘other side of tho globo, the condiictor called’ “-Brook:' lino ‘streot.”. -I.had then quito & -distanco. to wallzyard entored’ tho rehurch - to- find~it one surging’ mass - ‘bf poopld § * but," 'after & tittle pationt. . waiting, ‘ -I'* ‘succeeded -in gotting’ o " sent..on- .tho .atm- -of | &, pow, where I could-now-and then catelia.glimpso of tho epeaker's faco, which is-to mo‘s sermon In itaolf,—tho pirit of & ttuo;'ond, hoble muh i bining throngh every featuro™ and. expression. That alone wotild have satisfiod mo, evenif I had not baon ablo -to hear,every word as dio- Hnetly as it T had been within throo feot of him.. The'last slght T thad -of-lilay Lo’ ntoud -in tho | pulpit, surrounded by that ‘inmense congrega- tion, all singiog the closing Lymn,” * g I wont directly to fricnds in the city to spond tho night; ‘One ‘of them: had boen to.Pariter Fratornity Hail, to hoar: - BY S e * © - waNa-cHIN-rob, il and had como liome greally plozsed andintefosted Bho deseribed ‘him' 18 n man. of 24 or 25, vory rgrecablo in-appenranco; -drossed 1n to Chineso: firess,— pigtail ¥ reaching " ‘ainiodt to tho ground, Linlangnags choied and: elgant,.and no giMiculty cxperionctd it undorstanding.-oyory word, Flo:belioves that'the' *religion of Con=| Tucius is tho bort in'tho world ;" and thinks that, *.A8 wo have beairgo kind'ns to “nend o ries to hiis poople to converk them to O 1t 18 no moro than'right fiiat’ thoy, hit Correspondence . of The ' y B shonld sond miégionarics to s, 10 con their older, and, a they beljeve, better Zaith Monday motning, elthongh the ‘ky wan still mod threatenine, Tngain lax ed forth,—thi to 865 tho collection of bea kiful things at * R e L T thought to- mike "tho. most of ‘my’ op-’ ortunities “and ,woll wid I repsid;for thy hres or - four’ hours &pent - thero: . T Grat inspccted -tlis display - ol -wax fruit and Rowers,—onn cgro in particnlar, | whore. tho oysters in thelr sholls woro 8o naturkl ‘ond could scarcely bellova'they wero not o of tho briny deeps “the wood-carvi broidericsof ‘ail kinds; tho benutiful 'Ti work, clogely resembling ivory aud ebony inl: —mnkiug tho, most elegint and” atiraclive plove-boxes, card-boxes, | in ‘il ZTerent stares, from the éocoon to the bi colored silke on 8pools ready Tor usu; the dark, dingy wox In its rudo atato, to thig, aniity Whit and colorod cakes,—an drnamant " to ‘any lady's work-box ; besides many things too tunierous to |. mention, all of tho best of ‘their kind, Ithempagsedinto =0 © 7 Tt THE ART-OALLLRT. E Lcan’ only ‘may of thisroom, I wish every one zould have au entranco'{o it. filled “an 1t is with 30 many rar6 aud beautiful thifgs. On the lowqr’ Tloor aro cholco specitons of china ad, glns Rogers' oxquisits groups, that ona nover arows sroary of lookinig at} a fow paiutings and photos graphs. Tn au inner room -is a small eollection of marble statusry. The hoadof St Jolm, by Thomas Ball, attracted ma tha wont3 it is e facs tull of ingpiration. In the middle of tha Jarga room i o 6quaro, pyTmid of four ar flva slops, on_which tro placad many beautiful and at- dractivo things,—slatuary, flowers, efel In ‘the room abovo, tho walls'are covered with paintings i oils and warer:colors. _ Ono suiall room is do-' votod to eogravings. I foltus it horo I conld apend hours, and yet, with so much to seg, one knowa not what - to look - ab Grat, ' The “Itplian Girl nand | Child" "Ly ' Boimat, cemed o nitrict tho’ wost™ attention, - o F-oung' girl holding in lier arme a benutiful nalted bibo. , Tho Boy with' Brord,” by Aerle, deeply tolichos : one's “heatt. “The' landsenpen, fruit and _gamo, picces, wero, very iina, Ono moonlight - hecno—" Miduight on” the _Grand Bank, by W, L. Norton—was grand. Thid panal- printing, with ono or twa excaptions, secnied to mo failures,—too conrae, and_duuby. The di- tant effcct may be fing, Vit ithcems to me that it ia mory esgontial, even than ‘in paintng on canvas, that the worlk sholdbe fno " uiid doli- cnte,—mors ns Nature borell paints, = Lut Ishall weary you,with a_dcteilod acconnt of ali tho bemitiful things I saw. Tho longer ono stays, the moro loth oue s to. lonve. But 1 lindt becomo vory, weary § 50 Lhiat, much na I am iuterested in ; i } FACHINERY, T feol that T can rearcely do. Juatice to that de- partmont, Ona thing 'did.séom to me a groat thing for poor gowing women,—and Ged kunows they ncod all tlint enu make tholr work and life. ecgior,—nud thub iy the tiow aliachinent, by ‘which'sowing-machines aro ruu. by machinory, on tho smno principlo as & clock runs, instead of | the old foot-prossure, which is killing o meuy sronien ; and it is porfectly simple. " Thon tho femily manglo, kaving the lient and lubor of the old way of irohing, Suraly, auy fumily would 800u Kava in fuel and stronglh 40, the price of one of them, A, X e dluch maro would I 1iks to spodk of at length, ‘but I muat Lasten on, ap T eannot pass over un= :::lnod wy uext'day’s visit (o tho Athenicum, to TILE JONTPENAIER PICTUREA: for tho spitic of wight-soeing scomod to hayo takon possesuion of we, uud, in mpite of tho dronebing rain, T agin started forth. 1had no iden thut I could . uppreciate, ns one well versed in Euch things could,—tho real mer- its of tho plcture; but T did thoroughly oujoy thew, Thoy ocoupy two ropmo, A1 antered tho firat, I was nlmoit startled by the four large pictures hanging opporite me, ~the coloring, tho light, all boing s0 unliko anything I hud soot Yoforo, At first thoro was sluiost u sharpnesss but as Isrood and gazed, the sherpneus faded way, and I Leeume cntinnced, - 'hey wore by Franconco do Zurharan, born 1598, died 1063, At ouo time, thoso four plotures with tivo smaller onep, formod the grout nltar-rlcuu of the Catihu- sian Convent at Cadiz™: 1, **The Annunclalion " ~behind the kuceling form of Mery—is the Angol tolling hor the * glad tidings ¥ 3, e Adoration of the Bhopherds;" 8, “1ho’ Adorn- -tion of tha Magli"—tho grand old® men Lneoling bofore the fufaut Chrigt ; and 4," ¢ The Circumeision,” On tho opposite will is o ** Monk Drayging,” by the enmo urtist. *The Virgln of tho Swalhing Band” fa by t nas painteit ?‘"}mk{)‘mmtfivftflm“ ) Thuritlo, for tho Count'of Aquils, aud afterwards bonght for the Bpanish U:\lr}m'y at tho Louvro; and, ‘il— tor tho death of Louls Philippo, wau purchnscd 4y tho Duke de Moitponsior, 1€ is very unliko tho ouivor pintings in the collection in'coloring, and is Iu strong contrast to the four Iatgo anoy ibavo just mentiovod. ‘I'horo ia a snf¢ brillinnoy about it, that grows upou one rupldly. Yot none of thedo paintings bear u hasty glanco, Inmont sustances tho (et foolive ia ono of dlsappoint- -ment j but, &4 one looks and looky, he DECOMES ALNOKT VELL-TOUND, 14 No, 7 ia **A Dortwuit," by Diego de Silva ‘Vdnq\un 8 sud D aro equeatrian poriraits EY ' a of ' Tiilip 1V, Ting..of .. Spain, Sand, Count +Dhka .+ d'"Olivares, ' Prime - . Mitits torr.of - Vhilip » IV, 0, 1% T'ha, . Nopantunt, Magdalen Dospoiling Hoinolf of -Hor.Jewels, ! by . Atanneio-Boceanogia, pupll.of - Alonso ‘Cano, 11, ¥ Oato of ‘UtiosToaring Out Hia Entralls," by, Josoph' do Tibara; -éalled: Lg - Bpaguolottors thio faco, so Tull of palnand ngony, makes one althost unconscloualy angyimo. tho samo oxpres. slon,—it Is horribla In its naturaluosy, - 12, *iho Discovory of tho Holy Gross,” by’ Judn Valdes, Loal, .14 and 14 aroi* Bt. Augunting aud. Othor Fathors of tho Churelr,” ¥ 8t, Jaromo sud Other TFathors of th “Ohutch,” by Franviseo' Hawora, 16 aud 16, Jandacnpes, - by tho same nrtiat, 17, * Tcatasy of. Bt Francin of Assisl,” hv Juan da Ritindtn, *_ 18, i%Tho - Mladoima. with.the Dead Christ in .Iler Armp,” by Luis'do iMoralea ; tho Madounn's face; a0 Mled with miol and ahguish, holding the poor, shrmilen, lifolas form in' her’ frma, 10 anothor one of tho hiotures that, whilo 1t attracts one by it torrible ealicy, makos 'ano g TORN ALMOST BIUDDERING AWAY /1 10, *Thg Moly Family,” by ¥ra Sobrstinn Plord- bo:- 20, W Portralt of 'the Coustable de Tonr- bon,", by: Loeonatd do T.fmoges. 21, " Gamé— Jlll‘lD Borna Through the Airin s -Olinriot}. 23; ** Yrut—Cores tn -n Cfinrlot,"—both by Jhcopo Dnaoono: 28, * Tiona in Ropose,” by FrauzSny- dor; 4t:in a uplendid picture of four or fiya Hony, taken, L showld judgo, -ns - large ds life. 21, “ Pricat on-Horadlinck In & Waod; Canrying thé Tioly Ciboritm,” by Autliony Franz Vandornion- lew, 25 °und 20, landsenpes,. 7,98, and 20, “History 6f Jacob," by.T'odro’Orranto; thoso threo aro very.datk and dim, 8o thnt oio.hns to sludy thém n loug tinos tho, style: of paifiting scenn moro liko the fvat Taar in’ it sharpness, nnd tho peeulinr Hight thiown: npon then; azo Lan made sowo patts of thom almost indistinet; but. thioy are: well worth-'studying out, * 30 und . -*The Ocesn: X\‘ymle . \Vuo'nlug " upon tho Rackiof Promatiioun,” rnd *The *Sirouo Scoliing:io Entico-Ulysses,” by Flouri: Schman, arg very benutiful,and, in ‘thoir novness ‘and fresh colorinjy, prorent & sirong ‘and pleasing coutrast to:.tha -othors in ! the’ collection, 9. Lay-Brother in Chargo-df. tho Collar,” Trancols .Granet, givos ‘oo nu:iden that tho celir i3 by no means an ciptyy ono or tho Liny- Brotlier's dutics very arditony, - 38 to 96 aro collcction of :vesy buwnil: plotures, . by Tony Johaimot.: 2k oA e But I nmmet hosten-on, only mentioning :68, = ahn.in tho Josort,” by Christofero Allori; 69;:.¢/Tho Desect.from .the.Cross, -cartoon, by Tinphacl Mongs ; 60, * Holy Family,” by Annibaln Coracal;-61, 2 Madonua-nid Ghild Y (Uhing da Concglinno;; * Portrait -of the Socond Lovil Ealtimoro"—all of. them pstudy fu themsolyos.., I must uot forgebto meution .- 5, & oo x ) *_THE GREAT-ATTRACTION OF :ALI o 4*The Eruofthe Rutormation,” cartoon, by Baron Wilbohu vori: Kuuibaeh, ownod -by 3fr. 1, 3L O.. Duxfoo,, of Fall -Tivar, ; ita hoight In 23 feot,» width .96 feet,—Alling.in: ona ontire.sldo of- tha room from floor to ceiling. It-ropresonts:the in- tortor of-n lurge cathedeal, the- choir in the can- tre, aud the. vast building thronged, with mon,— not only tho reul-Reformers, but * also tho cariy | Church-Reformers. who hogalded thoir, coming and propured their way, "—niore than aighty lito- giza ligures, stauding out-in pieh bold relief, aud 80,true 1o fifo, it usema ns il they muas bo, as tho ehildren eay, *reallivo men.” hero is o chart by which ono, can be intredueed.to evory ono of tho distinguishod persohages represont- ed;: bubyamaong 80 »many eagar.to 6ea:it, no one couid uolishiy ¢laim it for.xo-long.a timo; there- fora I feel'but paosly. prepared o do-justice.to it- Ono would nover weary of: looking at it. - I can only-hopa iha! Vi u to you, who eounot teo_ them fol - < BOME. 611 of. tho.rich treat that I Lavo ecnjoyed, Iad I thonghtat the time of fttompting to. doseribe it i to you, I shonld have masde niore effort to have learned mote of wiab migit est to. you, instead of gralis tagtes, - rensbed homo tired Theen mvited- o viib w prival ture, Lthal are said £0 be tempted to tell yoyof-.wh: avo becn of inter- gy, ouly my own and wat, L hayo colleetion of pic- fine, zl I’ may Le SONGS BY THE LATE' BRYAN : ToR. . [Wa print beluw. toof A, Proctor's nou “King Death i wax very populie u- its- duy, end Fry used it s tho opondng choryy of g opera © Leanoza, ) 3 KING DEATIL - - + Ring Death was arao oid fellow | 310 Bt wheie up vun vocl ehine § And L i s Tianal £ yeilow, And potred out'lils gox L Hugrab { for il Lack 'wine, ul-black wine | Thers came tohim many & mabdey, Vihose eyes had forgal to shine ; widows, with grief oerladen,. v dratight of bis sleopy.wine, aprah | for hocoal-black wine | The Schoinr left all hisJearn “Che Yot hin fanciad woes And the Beauly bee bloow returning, Like lite torthe fading ove,. Durrak § for tio coal-black wino | A céime to thie roval o1d follow, Who lzuglied tll lils éyes dropped brine, And ke gave thom bis hand so yellaw, Aud pledzed shomn fn Deatl'’s bluek wine, Hurrah 1 Hueedh | g Thurrai | fo tho.conl-black wino, - . A PETITION TO TIME, “Pouell ua geutly, Timo | Lot s iido ndown thy strexm Gently,—ua “Througl o' quiot dream } itmbld voyagzre ore-vre, - Tusliaud, wife, and cbildren threo— (One i loxt,~—an angal, fied ‘0o ihe azure, averbend f) ¢ < Tonch yin gently, Thins | - Weé'va not prond nor soaring wings : Our embition, our coutant, - Tidex su simplo thinga, 5 Humble voyagoranre wa, O'or Lifa’ din, unsoutiled ges, Beeking only sommo calin plime :— “Fouck us geutly, gontle Tise | —— - ' .The Erench Zounves, 'y Tho Arabs of the Beni-Sausson tribe nra gront emateurs of gunpowder, and never. nogleel mi opporiunity of provling about the French eamps and offeying tho soldiors lutgo sumy of money for.tho-coveted nrticlo, 'hoy prolended to ba Araba. of " {ho! neighborhood, -~ friondly to tho Frerioh, and eay thoy.want powdar for hunting, + Onio day'it was dincovared sthat’ .the Zouavow hod' bosn gelling their powder, - To paint tho | fury of the ofticer in command of the Arab bu- rosu ig an imlmm(iblo thing, but he resolved to discover the vulprits snd punjéh thom soveroly. An Arab in the'gorvice of the burcau wout in a mystorions way in quest ¢f powder, An old Zounva bronght him four eartridges, and_ asked him 20: francy :for. themi - Tho bargnin was styuck, but tho ppy instantly dizclosed hia offi- cinl ehavactor, and brought the cartrldge vender boforo the communder. “In it you, then{” cried tho officer. * Cownrd &nd knave, who would have your comraden as- sussinnted by the Loni-Snusson 1" | 45 Yy, cominandant, I did it," * You baye committed a hueo netion.”. “Indmibif commandant, but with tho srmae poivdut that T sohd Lnm golbg to blow my, braing out ; that will save tha troubles of & Conrt-martial, and the Zoudves will not Lo dishouored -by o public sentence.” St With fhoso words the Zonaye taok o onrtridge, londed a pistol with it, droppad & rounad buil hi tha barrel, and, with ‘snperb. cookncas, put the muzzlo to his hend und pulled tho triggor, Tho wenpon missed fire, and the Louave burst Into hoarie laugh, i 4 The Jndgo biad acquitied mo,” said he. How so " said tho comminudant, Why, you roe, commandunt, that the powdor I sell to Lo Beni-Sauuscns is ohly ground char~ vonl; tho balls avo mado of clay, tko wholodore up in gonulto cartridges, You Lave just soon \lio proof of it." 1t wau trno. Tho Zouavo had chented his eus- tomer, and lio added with an nir of trinmph ; *'he firat time the Boni-Bausseun como _into action, all their piccos will miss firo, and "you will guin tho battle,” “ihen you hisve told n good deal of powder 7" # Nathor "—md tho Zouwva oxhibited u for- midable pipe, not with wolid gold, Though the Arabs may be pretty sharp folloys, they are no mutch in cuuning for tho Zouaves, - pigh Taalod' < i3 . San Evancizco Milliontires. T'he foltowing, According to the San I'runclsco Bufletin, isn carofully Erapnrufl list of ypiergons aud firms in that city whowo reported wealth ox- coodn 1,000,000 : _ Michael Recse, D. O, Mill, William Shoaron, W. O._ stalston, Charles Lux. Henry Millor, John Partolt, -A. Hayward, Loyl Btrunss, Jucob Schollo, Willlam Heliollo, Jamon Pholtn, L. Buchs, William 8. Olark, J. C. Flood, Willtam 8. O'Bien, O, 8. astings, N, Tuing, Claus Hpreckols, homas Dell, A. B. McCreer: R, Jobngon, Jr., 8, Crim, Jonaa Q. Clurk, J. I, Ihouny, Morcn Eliig, Benjamin tiehardson, Livingstone, Poter Donale, 11, Al Nowhnll, Josfult Bskden, A, T, Lope, William atbot, Lolaud Hienford, Charlos Orockor, Mok Hop- King, Josoph Donahue, D. '\ Muv‘lhv, Adam @raut, M, §, Latham, 1. I, Woodward J. B, Haggin, J, Glazior, O, O. Pratt, Thomay Tilytho, John' Gantor, It Morrow, Johin Dinc 1. Vriedlandor, A, A, Coten, L. J. Bald Firma : Lazsrd Frores, James Donshue Litate, T Eefate, A. 5. Rosonbmum & Co,, Nisid Drothors, Wait Brothers, Lick Istate,’ sorce Brothers, lowurd & Bhaftor, Main & Wi - tor, Canningbam Entato, Tubby Drothors, Ma tin' Broibors, Howard Zulate, Le Voga Estato, B. & J, 8, Doe S A WMystorious Disappearancos-- Talk with a Bloomer, Ball in Honor of tho Thirty-sixth’ " IDlinois Infantry, - ° A German rWadZ:Iing-'--Visift to a . Cheese=Factory, = B160dcd iorses-Al Hiti--arér- mons-~-fadicul Women. réspariilencs of The' Chedao Tribiine, + VAo, Keidall Cos, TIL, Serit: 20, 1671 Como dotvi' to tho ‘fonnlon of ‘tho “‘Thirty- sizth Tlinols Reglmont—patriotismbig dluner ~Hdnze'at tha' Town-Iill—ypécchies nnd musio,* This was the medsage that-time finsbing to"mo orfo'day Intoly, and; withodt any* proliminarios; Iticd on_my" hnt, canght-up o’ satcliel, and— misioll this' morning-traim by tho frkotion of nscc~ ond: Nover mind,—1dmo'tvas not bifln o iy I was i ensy tima for the'd:20 p. m, ¢ Chicagt, Burlibgron &'Quinty Road, nnd “almost: boforo Lliiow it tho hours bad sped; and T'seat= ad myslf In tho'conifortabla departmont/allowed me, riud toolé's’ calm suFvéy of my follow-travsl- ots, whb Wore progito'goivg only sliort distances, conadquently were botlor 'drossbd and mors’ at-’ trachive than the much-traveled and bewrapped individial whb bélongd to” the’ riguldi*routine. T looked them ovor'with the'indifforonco ono ac: quires fiohvsecing many uow frcel’ daly, when my atlentioit way tixed by the appearanco'ofitwo veraous,~ohne, an ciderly 1ady ‘of réflined ‘and | dignified ngpdct, whoso sérone’ facs boro Jubt touck of“thint ‘pathetic’logs which'is innlieniblo from thoko who aro deaf or blind ; and tlie other, thiat* thost * Inconigruous'ot - apparitions, & fulle fledgged Bldomer, who marched ip'and dowii the clule’of! the car, {otally indifféront Lo the'looks of curlouityy vidicle, or repulsion, that wora ho- stowed upon her, . As both of those personnges Iind deeoointions of mucommon interest sttachod to tuem, 1 aettled ‘mynolf. ‘in my geat with a cor~ tafit‘conviction that wy time would bo'ploasant: 1y, if no¥ profitably, spont. gt B Tire eldorly Indy was Mrs, C. T., formerly of Chicago, but now of Oshnloosn, In,—a wenlthy widosr, whose b Same it t'7 " CNysTeERfoUs PISAPPEARANOEL i "Naw Yorlt n fow yenrs igo created such an fm- meuso exciteniont, wholo columus with startliig hend-lines being dovoted to it. The factn of tho caso wera® thess s +Mra, T, wag' & resident. of- Chieago, wortl'about £50,000, and dovoted much af her timo'to traveling ; sho was on her way to Furope, and stopped st an nristocratic .up-town lestel in Now York, Going out'one. day, she met eoma frieudg from Brooklyn, who :ingisted upon taking-lor home with thom, and sho staid thero threa days, enjoying hovself, and totally .uncou-’ seious that tologramy. wevo fiashing hither and taither, polico-oflicers woarching .tho- city,” and nowapapers publishing stavtling thoories, all on Ler necoint, Bhe did not know it till eho read “of. ibin & moruiig papér, and loaruod that hor trunks had Leeu opchod at the Liote), and lattors ruamaged and read, in oider to identify her ve- 1awing ¢ for no one doubted that -sho lind been fottlly wurderad, . Meanwhile * tho body " was seading of 1ts mysterlouy dlsappesrauce in any- ‘uut'a tranquil state of mind, which was not bottered by « knowledgo of bLills for tele- granw, polico-sorvices,.atc,, to the amount of o B e ¥ mero dotlasi ; : Vo diseuszad alt this through o longth of tub- ing,—thadelicate meohanivm that conveyed sound ta tay [riead, rud which reminded mo of a long, solemu night, long ago, when, through tho samo ageney, wo hnd carried thoughtn of Sorrow nnd comfort, whilo death Iny stera and rigid botwoon us, . \Whon, ot Napcrvillo, my companion left tho cary, my curfosity vovorted to the woman a fow beyoud me, who had the woral courago to ar - A BADICAL CORTOME, which even the inventor had not been strong- minded enough to don. I worked my conrageun to tae necesanry pitoh, and decided to futerviow Lo on tho spot. Dropping into n vacunt seat kesido her, I took niy ditomma by the Lorns in the airicst manner T could assumae, Tho lady proved to bo Mrs, Hawley, of Mondota, and sho wa rather pleaved than otlierwiso to give her reasons for woaring the Bloomor costutie, seo- ing, it'may bo, in ovory wowan o possible con- vert. *¢ What lod you to adopt the pantaloons and skirt?" T nuliod, glanoimg over the snufi-brown uniform, 5t % 3 “My own ‘convictions of right," snswored 3frs. Hawley. “‘Xwalked 2 miles in mud nud watey, with o long dress swishing at iy hools 3 aud I was 8o exhiusred I took to my bed with o nervoud fever, and did hot get up again for two wealis.” s 2! * Could you not have hold d it up out of tho way? In eithior caso I should have had tho biurdon in anothoy way ; Tnoedod nuiy hanids freo, Whilo Iytug ill, T luoked tho matter ovyr and rensoned in this way : T'ho hands und .feot nro_my nor- vants; thoy donlywork. I givo my hands, all the frcodom thoy want. but my. fook nro him- perod ab evory stop. 1f, I cuc thoso draggiug wliirld off, aud lotuy fedt havo Tall. play, - thoy will 0t drag and get tived; as they do nov. Tho Dlood will citenlate canily; aud T uhall oscapo tha mira of the nirects, - ‘As voon as I coall st up in‘bod, I gent my daughter to s :store to buy some brown Arilling, and I had’a pair’ of panty made, mitch ns ymall boya wear, only they cumo down' Lo'tho fnatep § & thott skirt, reaching to tho'call, and o loosc ‘jacket, I have worn the dres sinco last Fobruiry, and find it mora con- voniont, henltticr, and Lottor every way, than tho regulation dress for women.” slied Lor how many garments it combined. ur,—fust tho ¥ame’ a8 & mew's elothos, Thera is & Canton flaunol andorswnist, made long- sleaved, and comiu down ovor tho hips. This hag the pnnts ind drose-skirt buttoned on, Thon I wear a loosa jaoket, with or without a baolt. ‘I'ha costume can bo of woolon cloth ju the win- ter-season. 1t in tho only sonaible; comfurtablo dross & Woman can wear. 5 1 aluded to the fact that ehe wore n fashiona. Dble, womsiuly mat, with roses, and s veil, and to her voalth of ravon ourls. = R Thoy followed me about tho Exposi- tion, Tidiculing my dross ; but I hoard thom sny, ¢Sho ling %rolt.y hair, ond ler hat jun't stvong- minded u bitl" " > Dut sha did not oxnlain why slio clung to this crowning revelation of womanly roukness,. 1 found that bo lectured on the subject, and bo- longedtos * " £ COLOXY OF FREE-TIINKLRS formad in Clicago for the purpose of ollling in Sontiiorn Utali,~ Tho citcular of the Company, headed Lo whom it may concern,” was nov very pmponupsa[u(.i in appearanco, neither was it eatlutactory in a literary point of view, Altar uotting forth the charactoristica of tho nocioty, colony, community, or whatovor it proposes to Lo, It glvos theoxponsa of trausportation, and then envimorates tho advantages of living, among which it clussoa guoh luxurios ns wild turkeys, prairio-chickens, grouee,. mountain-sheop, and autolops. loney forms s stuple artlelo, and flour Is- incidentally montioned, Among the privi- lurgeu,‘ a man will have 160 acres, with 'conditlons of yoarly improvoment, whilo s’ singlo ludy can ouly possees 80 acres. A clauge in the documont nsuiired un tiet *The tand i ownoed by God, but, for certain ronsons, Unclo Bam holdd the doedn of it;" we aro loft wildly to donjecture about the *cortaln ronsons.” We are assured, aloo, in au ambiguous sontonco of ohoap coustruction, thut *Lnorpotls ‘und wholo-sonled mon and women will find frionds In our ¥anks ; no mattor of what' porsuasion, worldly posscesiou or pra- Touslons, $hoy uro, only thoy Le true mon nud wamen; the rest wo will loave Lo thonisolves and thelr gods to decide.” Thay, expect ta atart from Chicago ubout the middls of October, 1874, Af exactly 0:68 we roachied Plano, aud found the Hon. Lowls Stoward awalting friends, with his family-carrisgo fn atlondsneo, “An I came in that category, I Was ‘soon ‘seated comfortably, &nd whitling along at s speod that left no room for talk, * Hurry no'mun's cattlo,” was not n Plano , maxim, ovidontly. “Ilold on tlore,” shouted the Colonel ns we turned o corner on one wheol, and thon we $ame to o halt, and wero o tha platform of the haspitable howe, from wloso opou doors strewmod chsory vagh of light, fhora waw Mrs, Bteward, with “hor bouutltul baby-boy in her armas thore was Diok Springer, tho" gonlul aditor of the Yorkville Ncws, and i G-year-old Loy, littlo Dick; and tiero, foo, wus bia protty potite cooditor and youthtul wifa, Jit- tlo Californis Bpringer, who ean edit tho Ilnn"' set tho typo, moko up tho form and print {t, and canvasi tho county for the Peoplo's caudidao, | your dress up, or whilo:demurely working np tho intoiiosts of hor pagior, . A bravo littla repfenontative. woman, A wlid has.maro clesr grit, and. accomplishon mora, usoful work; than any other. woman in. the cobfiliy, .« 5 a0, : : ‘tl‘haru waw aball fntho. evoning in lonor of ho. v v TIIRTE-BIXTIE NEGIMENT OF - ILLINOIS TNFANTRY, commaiided by Col. Grousel,~tho regimont thint Toat moro brave boys from 1ts ranki than any othor in Illiols; the roptment - that . made itsolt famous for ts fine esthotio tasto by apending tho largost amount of 'noney for ronding matter dutlugthe War,~5000;-tho lieroos of Pow Ridyge, Stone - River, : Ohickamaugs, aud many other poluts whora: the” sofl was watered with - tholr oods i - B W wont to'the hal), and saw all tho young aople ssgombled {o do honor b the brave boyy K: bluo. It was goollly - company,—part of the bona and shiew--na weil s’ beauty of Kendall County,~—and they daucod with o detormination, that was almost solomn In its zest. Thera wore somo boys vith badged pluied 1o Uielr couls, who did not davco/:. I notlcod ono who loanad on. 2 hioavy-knottod #tick, tha knoba of which wero tipped with silvor. - On the suall, round surfaco o} anch was a alnglo lottor:carved. I had'tho curlosity to Yoad ench one, ahd ko mada out the. historio namo, ** Chickswmauga,” **Why do you not tuke part with them?" I asked, polnting to the dancors, ™ ¢ . < o X x, *“T earry o bullet hore,” 18 enfd, touching Lia right wide,” and it liay an'ngly way of rominding me of "it4" prosence. ' Besides - and ho glanced at & {qnz shapoly and round enough in s{lponrmwu,’ kb poworless to dd itd ownor's bid- ng. 3 lg-oy_n Dlage, =t - 0 ; |, 4 GENUINE GERMAN WEDDING, * |, Tho occasion” was' thé mnrrln}:ov of oud ‘of tho domestica ‘of Col. Stoward's fumily ; the bride otty Qerman gir), drossed {n b whito muslin,’ witli' gonio neat piuk ‘ribbons, aud.short, cutlad liair., The groom,was 2 fito specimon of “a forohanded ' Gormnn’ mechnuic, with a ligndsomo pliyalquo, s0d & long;' blonds, mustachy that u_oql(e not bo finproved ; ho:was in his shirt-sleeves, nid worked liko a L'rojan. First lio danced with all the old Women in skirta and short gowhs,—girls of 73 and_ thororbouts,; then Ho flow round with pitchors’ of Ingor-boer and varions-sized mugs and,_glasses, helpiug tho giioats drinl: (16 tienlily of ‘tho bride; thon ho toola turu 4t Lo accordoon, and accompaniod tho violhy fn its - inapiring atraine; Tho hotiko, which was o plain woodon one;—the gift of tho, groom to'his * fran, "—iwaa fillod witl’ Germnus, ho supper was 1aid oiit in tho collnr; and’ cone sisted of ‘sweot Gormau cales, chickens, and fruit. It wae brought up .and handod round to the guests, ‘The presonta wero laid out in nn uppor chamber, and consisted of thinga suitablo to honackeoping,—Col. Stoward's ‘Ei'n of $100 being fald out in'a chamber-suit of black watuut, Wa loft to morry, nolsy party siuging songs of der Vaterlsnd,” dvinkis ‘i’ lager, aud * spin- ning round and round:" 'ho Gormiaua are all good daucers, keoping timo.to the music, and swaying the body in harmony. with it. . Thoy used o good daal’ of energy,—tho men soizin; tho womon vigoronsly round the 'waist, ani wh}r\xnx them madly through ths everlesting waltz, tlie" lall w}' wont to arothor assom- Ter pootiest franlein in de house, Bhe vayed dwo hundred pownd, And, every (lima she gife a shomp, Stio makes der windows sound. 8o ended tho day,—a d?fi' that bad been good for Plano in tho way of military reunions, dances, and * veddin-bartics," Tho following morning wo wont up to © " TUE ONEESE-FACTORY, and gay how .choeso wzs manufaciured, Tho Plano Cheasery is a woodon bnlldins, Toeated on o fino rumming spring, called Rock Crook, which washes throngh the. basoment, keeping -the comanted floor swoot and cool, Larme waoden tanks, lined with zino, stand roady to receive the ilk, which is ponred into them warm from the cows. The tanks hold about 4,600 pounds. 1In theso Lo or thiroo rounots aro placed, to turn tha milk mto ciird.. When thia process is com- l;lutu, the amooth white curd is chopped up by nsorting & choosa-knife,—an iron utonsi re- sembhing o gridiron. Tio whoy {8 _all run off, and tho curd packod Into molda and prossed. 1t i turnod overy day on & smooth shelf in thodry- ing-room, which'ia fitlod wit fine_eheoso, of all ngos to suit purchasors,—~somo liking & mild, now choese, whilo others prefor an older, richier arliclo, As Ilojtered in tho choeso-room, M. Rova, tho mtolliyent foremnan, described tho wholg rroceul vory clnnxl{: The brmgms: in of tho milk; tho teating of it by meansof a lactom- otor, which shows tho nmount of croam raised from each instellmout of milk; tho thermome- tor, which shows when the milk is heated to 80 deg,—the right tomvarsture for the ren- not: the amount of s&alt, 3l pounds Lo 1,000 pounds - of milk; ' the. proccen of draining aud pressing tho curd; the paoking it into the motal molds; aud, inally, the turning out of tho yellow, shapely muoss, drossed in o thin robe of chicose-cloth, Thacoloring processia dono by aunatto, ‘The cheose-cloth 18 munu- factured on purpose. A bnewwood heading in used for tho two rounds of the chicoso when it is packed. AsIlooked at the nlump monstors,— many woighing 45 ponnds each,—I noticed o small boast prowling about the edges, and was told it was n cheeso-fly,—tho post of the factory. 1t was no bigger than & midge, porchied on four long lagy, and hiad gossamor wings, As I watched tho “hinseet,” it raised itsclf on its Lind legs, and usod ita foro-paws to wipe Off remuants of cheesa from its small proboscis, while it leered wickedly at me from two round eyes in tho top of its hend. Ifit can find any opening in tho cheese-oloth, it deposits ita oggs thore, and tha rosult in an unlimited fupply of skippors. Tho faotory turns out from fourtcon to twouty cheesa daily for the Chicngo market. Our noxt atep was to the stablo of tho FLANO TONSE ASSOCIATION, : of which Col. Stoward is President; and all of tho most valuable Lorics thore wero trotted out for our inspoction, Thoro wero groat Scotch dranght-borses,withlogs ke pillars, groat, mus- cular chests, and small, blooded hoads. A mag- nificont scion of the Hoyal Gaorgo, uamed Pauic, 8 brotting-horae, was led out suorting aud pranc- ing,~hit “* ueck clothod with thunder,"—his slon- dor, #hapoly feot spurning tha gronud, Ho way a gplendid thoroughored, with “limbg like n deer and ayes like & gnzollo,—ouly their uort,_d\'our ing languor.could chango to a flash of ttiumph, and again to o vicious ploam that kopt us all clear of his hools. Ho wasn dark blood-bay,— a changeablo color that rauged from ruby-red to brown, and'settled in Lis lega to sn iutonse black. -Hiq fine neck arched, as the English groom oxproesed it, **like o Indy-orso,” and bis thie, thid nostrils dilatod iu hiy pride of strongth and bonuty. Tor this Lorse Lis owners huve ro- rofugod 310,000, Noxt eanio Révango,—n goldon-bronza-chost- nut, with ono white stocking,—a thoroughbrod race-horso, by imported Monarcls out of Lush~ ion,—n ligch stoppor, and o benuty overy inols. lack Lion, n great Clydesdalo stallion, throw his misn about like & fouther-woight ; Lis sizo was tremendous, his weight 2,000 pounds ; blaok 86 ink, with one white stocking; blood and mis- ohiof in his rofling oye. Ilo was'intonscly ag- gravated by the close " proximity of Brown Dicls, a trotter ko makes Lis nilo and wins races oasy in 2:35,—a fancy brown, mmotéled liko old mn- hogany. * XYook at 'is heye,” snid the graom admiringly; **'o's a 'orso of spirit,—bit o man's noso off oue day, and kicked two of my front tooth'down miy throat,—but a8 gontle as a lamb 1t o8 "andlod rght 1" " Ilooked on him in muto ceatnsy, but did not caro to * 'andlo 'ni,” 28 ho and Buick Lion woro toaring tho yard mto splin- ters, trying to roach vach othor, A now Clydesdalo horse; just fmnnnod’ wag bronght out to bo namod. Wo *tied bis sleoves ™ with blug ribbonn, drank pire sparkling wator over his back, and christoned him_ Lord Gordon, Champagne, sired by Edwin Forrest out of Gray Goose, was a light gray, past his primo, but with o record of turf-timo st 2:26. Thore wasa sad despondency about the old fetlow as ho :;umuhxlnu Lin oaty, as if ho sighed over departed Inys, ‘Ihen a 2-vonr-old colt, wolghing 1,800 pounds, with Jimbs Jike an olophunt, ambled avound us; aud g big whito bulldog, with a cold, pink noxo, and Jips that revealad his white teotl:, cameaud sat dovn on aur skirta; ho was * bobtalted or nary dorg,"” with ears pnred down to his head, and & look Bupgestive of miuco-meat about the’ droop of Lis noar oye; La i worth bis weight in gold nbout the stablos; howover, ss a rogulator of man nud hoast. “Ihiou wo ran through i THE MILL,— weut in wheat and came out flour,—aud waore surprisod to soo how cosy it was to turn the in= significant borry into n pure whito powdor; the st lx\mraum\xi foature lmlnp‘ tha_yellow sille bolt-cloth, finer Lhun " any bride’s woedding-drosy, thraugh which tha last Procoss takes tho flour, Thoro Is Lut lttle change fn tho mill; it iu the snmo lustitution, and keeps up the same cus- toms of a huudred years ago, Tho facmors go on s wot day, whon they can do nothing olée. Ong-eighth s toll, ‘I'hére are middlings and sharts, braw, Urabam flour, and tha yporfoct ertiolo, boila tout] " i f Plano han a dpupur onllod tho Tyue Latler-Day Saint’s Herald, and u sociaty of Mormons to sehom it bolone, Thoy wro lod Ly Josoph Hmith, asonof Joo, the Prophet, who wan killed at Nuttvoo In 1842, They do not bulivve in a plu- rahty of wivos, are Inspired iu prophooy, und bave a tomplo hora, THL WOMEN OF THIE TOWN ore extromoly radieat, Thoy are gm“f in n body to the Wotsu's Cougresa to bo holdon in Ohicago uoou, apd sro of the unanimoup boliof T :that only universul suflrago onn; snyo thio éoi Atry. lioyturnod out to » womian for o raid on tho drinkors, during the oxcitomont of Igat wine ster, and enlled on Lowls Biawart to know if tho; ‘had his permisston, ns a prominent town-ofilein, topray fn tha' saloons. As that gontleman’s mnin concosblon to e domands of sostoty in o biled shirt," you mny hnagine their. irepida- tion xy they proforred -their’ roquest. Tho ane Bwer - d\v‘r‘\‘n’ “eharactoriutio : * Yas, _prnx’ly and .bo B M e o i ' A MILLIONAIRE PAUPER, b A . Non=Polltical Sensation in New i Orlenns— A . Quadroon Millionuire Allows Eiy Propérty to I¥e Neld Rathor ‘than Luy Elis Faxes—Tho Iomo'of the' Miser—Hlls Elistory—A ! Seenoat the Auclion Exchunges “Noto'Orleqny (Sépt, 30) Correspondence of the New York ST Teibunes : Outside ‘of politica: tho * sonsation ‘in Now Orloaus just now i tho case of the old octoroon Francois Lacroix, last waele a'millionnire, to-day: a frlondloss boggar, wold out for taxos which ho could but would not pay. ' ¥o was tho owtior of proportios in ‘the city and sdjoining parishes, stores, dwollings, - aud - plastations, paying two months ngo an aggregato monthly rental of moro than $4,000; * Yostorday I sy him sitting on tho stops of tlio auctionoer's rostrum, smoking o vile ‘cigar, and wagging his vacant old hoad while tho lngb romains .of his fortuno was Loing wafted away on the-acho of the crier's voico, . - - Linctorx's nintory ls singulatly “iuterosting, A quartor of & contury ago ho was the fashionable “taflor of. New Orleans. ‘Ihe popular shiop’of * Cordiovillo -& TLucroix . was .on 8. Charles stroet, ono or:4wo doora below tho presont site ‘ot *tho Bt. Ohales Iiotol. Botl trore ‘colored mon, Cordieville wag & flashy, showy fellow, quito an exquisite, prona’ to brawls and duols, +bub e polivhed- artist in: hia lino. - Ho sfectod Tranco yory grently; had n chntosu near Paris, whoro, during tho 'greater part of tho yoar, ho used to ninmtuin an’establishinont of great lux- ury and .splondor. . Fiually, lio withdsow from Now Urleans.to spond, tho romaindor of his life in his foyorite country. , Lacroix was a man_of ,Qifferent. tastos and habits, Au octoroon like | Cordiovills, ho s, uuliko. hini, pentrious, fra- gal, plodding. Onco n yoar hd wont to la balle Trauco for, tive or six woeks, and wild storic aro told_of - hia_oxtravaganco, nnd . debauchory on thoso.oceasions ; but horo 2t homo he lived in positive. meanncgs, 1lis "housd .on Dumaino strcot, in .tho French quavtor, . whoro, by the way,. o ., sl lives, an old colonial ,utructure, built of wood, with bigh roof and long dormeér windows, rickety, In- firm, and uninvitiog.. It i scarcoly botter than the average plantation cabin, cortainly not half 80 cheerful and attractivo. . I wont down and took a look at it tho otuor duy, though tho sur- voy.was attended with diflioultles. Tho intorior is n pictiiro of disordor pnd discomfort, with fonr rooms in the tuain, building, divided oIf by par- titions of. what “seomed pastoboard—otie great room, 80 far as sound or smeli might be con- corned, 'The dutor aparimont, tho only one I gnined accoss to, was erowdod with prepostorous old furniturs, mangy-looking bundles, boxea, odds nud, ends, the wholo formiug a collection which negroes call ““plunder,” Enthroucd in tho midat of nll this_confugion, proppod in a hugo and infirm rocking-chair, was ‘an appalling old woman—Lacroix's mothor. 1 hnd_ 1ot oxpocted this, Lneroix is o trille ovor 70 himself, and I, nover anticipated being called on to confront his mothier, Much to my surprige tho npoke o littho broken Tuglish ; much to my disappoint- mont sho informed me thal lier Loy was siok and inviviblo. I glencedaround the room— & perfect chnos of euriositics uscloys but ancient, Wt aybody wanted with such o lob of nbaurd old traps I cannot “imagine. In only onain- starly did I neo an article that portsined to eive {tizution or the ninoteanth contury. Whut article wag n safo—an iron sute of uuciont paltern, It looked as thouph it might have beeir purehinged whon Lacroix was 2 crowing, ivfuut, bought fn’ some extrevagaut outhurst by his fathor. L sap- noio it contained titlo-doeds and woon, As I bowed myself out I ohsorved p Himalayan hond- dreny of yellow and red cotion surmounting la- craix mera, > A Ioro tho miser lives and has Yived. wines tho time whou (the now fuslionable disty Now Orleany was n mipe-sronnd. | supp nual expenses of that establizhmont up g high as 100, Tus, with spont in thoso Parisinn re o up tho tozal of his oxpeudituras ; and’ tho rest, for nearly half @ century, bné Leen going into now Inndy, moro losw, sud ndditional houses, Ho made money at o tromoudony ' ralo thirty , yenrs ago. ILs shop was *.the centre of fushion, His conty wora the sino qua tion of kovaty. No dandy ot thut duy could hops to shing in tle foyer of tho Orleuns ~ Opera uutit Lacroix's touch propared it for the offort. Tho bloods of Dauphine and Royal wireets never dreamed of strutting near the shadow of Cabitdo or the Poutnlba I'alico until Lacroix had drosead bis logs. "Dicnoy was no objeet then, ' It emco casily to theso young roystors, and Lacroix had no great modesty as to his charges. Making fw- mougo sums aud spending nothing, putting his necumulationa into property that roso ovory duy in valuo, ko grew mch by almost magical . ad- vances. A tuilor's siop would scarcely seom the cradle of o Crawns, yob' in_ 1861 Lacroix wag more than o wealthy man. Ho had properties in overy growing quarter of tho city, mortgages on "a seora of pluntalions, and _rentals af princoly magnitude. Ho was Lucroix tha millionzive. fiiow his tax troubles commonced no eno wooms exactly to undorstand. 1 faucy ho bas ulways been a “ tax-resiater. The city Dooks show sama very old dolinquencios, Tho chroni- cle of " the city's litigations record o thousand Dard-fought ‘battles whoroin ils viclorios, like thiosa of Porsenna, wero barely short of ruin, Anparontly he nover paid until tho Iast momont, nor without bittor conflict, Thrao years ago, howover, his_caso sssumod promitionce, Ab that time the Lucroix city tax billahad mounted up to some £30.000. Ho triod'as usual to evado it, but Warmoth's freo lunces wora rough aud hungry aud thoy drove him hard. At last ho gathered togother the required awount, and, so Fumor says, gave it to bis sou to mako the set- tlemont with. Hero comea in tho seerct of tho drsmn, They day the younz man lost tio money or wug choatod out Of it in somo way, end, weeka afterward, tho old man wos mnde sudden-~ Iy sware that tho ‘30,000 was wtill unpaid and bhis_proporty trembling in tho balanco. ‘I'hon ho broke down. * It wus hard encugh for him to part with'money ot tha best of timen, and this dicastor filled hiy cap. - Report hath it that lho cant tho prodigal forth with ourves, and from that moment foll into o stolid, obatimateinaction, whicl: nothing could aronse. Numcrous at- tempts woro mado to iuduco him fo soto meas- ures of solf-protection. Dankers, brokors, who liked kim aw a rolic of the good old time, or wishod, porliags, to make a reasonable profit on the job, offered tha funds nocessary to rolouso his provorty. It wanof no nval, At tha bogius ning of tho present yoar the bills, State and city, roachod over 875,00, sud &t lnst, aftor moro thau Lhroo years of forhourance, tho authoritios moved, the hnmmor was uplifted, and Francois Lacroix’s calospal fortuna bogun to crumble, 1 havo droppied In once orbwica at tho Auction- cors' Exchauge to watch the progress of the drawsa, All its intorest conters in Laoroix hini #olf.” 1o sits on ‘tho steps of tho roatrum, a foolish and yot a touching figure, Drossed in shabby linon, with nis” home-mada calico shirt opon at the throat, smoking—always smoking—a wratchod, dissoluto-lookng cigar, grinning va- cantly whonever tho hemmer falls, snd’ nover by any chanco meating tho spectafor's eyos, ho fa & plcturo at otica forlom and trugie. ‘Thoy say ho 18 erazy, that ho Las doliborately furthored this sacrifico in order to destroy his falthless son's inheritanco ; his othor son, tha darling on whom ho Invished all his lave and gencrosity, was kill- ud in the Machanics’ Inytitnte riot of 1866, I do not know how s 4, 1 canmot quito mule him out. ills yellow faco soems vury unmoaning. 1tis slraggimg white buira are fraught with dig- nity. Mo watohes tho dissipation of his superb fortun with nyparont indiforonce. Ounce, whon somo ospocially baloved proporty was disposed of, ho gavo way. 1o sobbod pitoously, and hiy hand luried nnutondily to Lis eyes for just ono instant, Thut was tho only timo, Doforo and’ sinco thoro hag boon no sign of fooling, or iu- deed of vonsciousness. IHo I8 too narrow and suspiclous to bo & horo, too soliish to be & wur- tyr, too iguorant to be a stiuteglut, I am bound 0 beliove, whon 1 sca him looking on nnmoved whilo bls possossions go to sharpors as a gitt, that ho ls » poor demeutod old man that age aud nvarice lisve driven mnd. fe I3 ono of the anciont elas of freoborn French colored men, and Ius wus one of the lasg of thouo superh es- tntes which war ard carpul-baggers have left in Loulslana. AN, 3 ———— ‘Fhe 0ddest Unibrelln, A gontloman in Boston awns tho oldost wn- Lrolls, - Houays: I have now in my possession anold groon sl wmbrelln, presouted by my srandfathor to his wifo whon they communcod [{Solcupig fn 1707, n Halltax, N, 8. linii- grating to Mussachuuotts In 1770, Lie touk nides With tho patriots and had a new handie uttachod to his umbralls boaring the dualim of an eaglo, suriounded by thivtorn atari. Tho framo an landia uro in 8 stuto of orfeot prosorvation, bt tho sillc_covor {8 somewhut frayod—ns might bo 1 o3p0ated from An umbrolla 107 yoarw old, SALISBURY POINT, MASS: A Visit to the Poet, Whittier. Church on Rocky The Old Hill, Corresvondence of "The Chitano Tridune, .+ - BALIBDURY Porxt, Mass,, Oct, 1, 1874, This anolent town of. Salisbury, whore I am & tomporary sojourner, was sottlod in 1098; nearly two couturied and a half ago, and i now famous for many things: for its church of the oldon time, on Rocky IIill,—in theso later days an objeot of interost to. curiosity-seokerss for tha. almost: unoqualed bosuty of the Louks of tho Morrimna:at this point - for its fino beack, whero tho towntouches tho son; forits three ministers, &l bearing the namo-of Wright,—ono of whom livea-in'tho uppor part.of the town, ono In:the lowar part, and tha third ¢ the ills, and o, uaturaily onough, they aro called .by everybody, Upright, Downright, Zand Millright. If, under such - gplritual guides, tho . pooplo aranot all vight, thoy aro without oxeuso. And horo Ju the placo where .thoy build boats for Gen,: Butlor's “frionds) aud noighbors,” - the flshermori of Gloucoster' aud all* along shore. Thoy butld thom, T'should say, ot the rato of about half-g~milo por day, aud saw thom off, it In gald, in quantities to sult. 'Choy have recont- ly sont o ship-lond of ‘them {o Franco. Across tha'vrvor, onthio dummit of a-lofty swelling hill, commanding 8, grand viow of occun.and river, stunds the summor rtosidonce of Sir Edwdrd Thornton, the Britlsh Bnvoy. Who structure is castic-Hka in itw propdrtions, but - snffers’ from near inspection, bolug built of wood, and rathor shabuily at thut. I Jocationaid its surround- inga are superb. " e PPECIEP i THE YOST WRITTIER.. . . Ou this aldo of tho rivor, uud,uboiit a mile dia- tant, scross the Amesbury lino, is the cottago of Whittior,—a plain, old-fashivned lioubse; of modest dimonsions, with nothing to sttrach the nttention of ‘pakeers-by. A simplo front yard, without or- namontation save & Tow.troes, tivo.or three liluc- bushes, sud a vaso of-flowerd,—thiy is all thore is oxternally of tho abode of the Quakor poct. In compnny with'my ojd frioud, J; *N.. C., who, han wniton some’ pleasant things ahout the wihales and tlio sea, I 'callod t6'seo him yestor- day. o answorqd the door-bell'in porson, and gavo us a very cordinl greeting, .considering' wo woro both surangors, and ywithout lettors, - Ho led us through what I took to bo the dining- roonfdirect t0 hin cliarming* littlo utudy, whonce Las ingucd his immortal yorses. A cheory, open firoplaco, witis tho old-fashioned braiss andirons ; # small table, thickly scattered with manuscript and writing materiala; o fow well-fillod sholves of. books; thieo or four chuirs; picturas of Sumner and Lincoln, with o few photographs of Lis litorary and personal frionds, covstituto tho vlnco where 1o writes. poot himsel! is n tall, &pnro wman, of rbodb u5: crect; of plain garb, mclining to tho Qulor cut; an oyo dark. und prercing, but singularly, mild “and” Kmdly in his glaneo, wltila 15 “whole”conntenance beams withi an ineXprosiible beniguity, Ilo at ouco placed us at our eio, anil” mudo inquiries about what he termed ow” wondertul® City of the Wost, saymg bo bLad-'nevar boén: i Difnos, - When 1 spoko of “the thousunds who would give him n foving welcome to their Westorn lionses, bo said they ware ouly too kind, aiid that 1o Lioped et sowe tynco to vivit Clucugo, and ro- gaetted ho was notablo to,atterd the vonnion of tho ofd "Abolitinnsts I June lust. Me then npulie of hiw caly o purioriced dn Philadelplrn, when on-wd others, *inchuding Lim= golf, cune so near Loy mobbed, Ile atiudad to an inetdent (hat huppaed not Jong aftertho War, whei ho el Sowewlicre Lo Virgiuin hulies, who £aid to/ Liox, vo nhotild be Taps py 16 sea you in ond, and will muko you a3 " to which ho replied : walcoma t9 our ho 5L glad £ hoar thve vay thig, but haw af I Dad mudo thee | w, Cvieig, in, 1362 sponklug of 3 Taugol, - o sl WIoopeccived - tho " "ows Coof Chid b noniuation—ho baing then unkrown to g —wici daep dirappoinduient 0rrow, winled ouly Ly the deoper grief L LGl8 at the news of his dosths whep L liaa comw Lolove pimua wl to'tho troukias m Louingia, pisisis (hat, whilo he suppo oiily:dono his duty ju suppressing Lo considored the Kellogg Govertment . traud, Hovordy dolwson’s Jetter, favormg Kellog's ros- Ignation und & now olection, ho tionght. o wise suggestion.” Unow'rimng to go, ho pave us o cordial fnvieation to como_again’; and wo -took our lenve, aftor & visiL which to me was o rare treat, and yill not soon bo.forgotten, : . TIE OLD CHURCIE ON ROCKY NITL, ) Inif-p-mile from tho rivor, onthe bLfow of Rocky ik, stands the old square churell, just as it wtood a eentury 2go, innocont of paint, or spire, orchimnoy, in a neighborhood of country~ lousos weattored nlong winding Janes and narrow rosds bordercd by stono walls, Now thut this old church_ias bocome famous, tho pacish hes wigely deternunad to permit no chango in its straciuro, outaide or in, but to prosorve it in ity primitive 8tatoas u momorinl of tho vonerablo oruplly it is a largo, square, two- -oodew building, with double rows of win- ) ol wound, made of 7-by-9 glass, 2t i3 without columu, or cornico, or the slightest’ projection of uny wsort,—a groat uquare wooden hox, now durk nnd almost moss-covered with age. Wo onter, and find our- selvos within the sacred precivets of a house which, fu respeet to its internal fictings, ns out~ lived, I think, all its Now-Euglwud contempo- raries, . 'The buams ond posts of_its solid onken frame ntund out at the sides and angles of the Toom, and, in place of our moder slpu or pows, you fiid the old-time, square, uupainted narrow, cushionloss, waodon scats, liigh backs, over the tops of ponu, With und porpendicular, which you barely eatelt & glimpso of your nei bors’ lguds, These keats uro hung at tho odge with old-atylo iron linges, aud nro lifted up during tho hour of prayer (which, in ya ' oldeu time, was o lite hour), o s to - givo lesning ortunicy to the worshipor, The broad gallery extonds around throo sides, sud is also divided up into HquAro pous us botow, vxcopt the kauts for tho singers, But tho chief abject of intarest iy the two-story pulpit,. surmounted by the old-time sounding-bourd, which romains_ in all ity primi- tivo glory, ‘Lils has no small protonsions to or- namouiation, and, as compured with tha seating, is quito rogol in its :nuupg-lilm appointmonti, Hard bonches and straight bucks wore good enough for common folk in the days of our Pu- ritan fathors ; but, for the ministor, something & liltle more sumptuous was vouchsalod, Di- rootly in front, st tho base of the puipit, and fuelng the congrepation, aro tho seats for tho deacous and olders, whoare thus cuavled to keop & watchful eyo upon uuruly boys, or nodding broturen when Salen beguiles $hom into an aftor- noon nap, In this statd old church pronched tho vonorablo Parson BSawyer, who only Inid oif the Gospel-linruess whon overtaken by death in L 88th yoar. From sll sccounty, ho was tho sturdy roprosentativo of a fornler gencration, and o valizut dispensor of tho good, old-faste ioned orthodoxy, wndiluted with modern senti- mentulism. e was # wan of extreordinary physical vigor, uover used spoctacles, and, down to the timio of his death, his hair, like hiy ro- ligiow, rotained its ovigiwal. color, nlthough it may be that tho shado of both was a little dark, Among the formor attendunts of this clureh wag Dr, Samuel Nye, an ominent physician of Ttovolutionury dayh, snd &n nequaintunce, and friend of Gon. Washingfon, to whom ha bore o slriking resemblance. 1 nm spond- ing a fow delightful days in the fumily of hid youthful danghter, s lady of 90 sum- mors, who, sliortly sfter tho boginuing of tho provent cantury, marricd Fosssudon Olark, o worehant in Loston, whore sho bocame tho mother of & umerous 'famly; uad, in thoe lator yenrs, hau returned to the hume of lior childhood, on tho banks of the Morrimue, to spend tha evening of hor duys, With a mind oy churmingly bright as ut 25, snd mm:l“ a_lively intorest m the current evonts of the duy, 1 trust sha miny long be spared to hor devotod circle of children, and yot sttalu to o guod old ago. During the ‘sununer-uontis, the okl churoh attracts wany visltors from thio norghboring wutering-placos and other fashionablo resorts, who come over to look at tho quaint old houso of worship, and poasibly to catch invplration from its venerable atwosphero, 1 will closo Ly suyiug that, if any tourlst from Ohlcago wishos to find n 'Intorosting loeality, and aw bonutiful rivor-sconcry as Now Lnglan ean boast, let bim apond o taw daya at Balichury Point, and mako tho acquaintanca of ity houpi- tablo peoplo, And erpocially do not fail to hunt up my chiorished frlend, J, N, 0., who, with hin tuut Hetlo cruft and practiced oyo, will pont out to you overy beautitul epot from Haverill to tho Buuch, LG w —— Eanuticism in Ruusia, From the Palt Mall Gazelte, A corrogpoudaub writes to us: A strangostory has renchod Momel, in East Prossis, from Itus- siw, In Worno, & Itussian town, a nulo servaut snddunly disappeared from the houso of hiis em- ployor, & Komun Catholie prioat, and it did not oconr to anybody thut bo, like nny othors, might hava run away to esoaps from " military ~ |, sosvioo, to which, aacordlug to tho new roguli- Mrss Stanton nnd Hoe tlons of Russln, every young man on_ ranching bily 20ty yonr i ablo, © 'he fivival toll Ity tole gregation that tho abyonleo had prosented hime solf Lo him {n o dronm, covered with nwiul gashe ok, and related to him tiat tho Jowa had mur- dered Lim and sont his blood to Jorusntem, The Jowish towhspeople,” in” consoqitonce of {his ridienlous siatonent, *nro in' dungor of hoing murdorad. . The potty magnates of thoe town do tiot stir in the mattor, and’ loave Lho.mob to do- torminé tho eayo as may bo thought proper, 'The Govornor of the provinco, who liss beon applied to, takos no notice of the dangorous neeisation, As n natural consoquenca s vivlent atiack: was taado vn & Jowish dealor who hnd vantured to quit tho town. ‘Mo poor fellow hna rocoived such injuries that his lifo [y dospaired of, st e i TUI GREAT SCANDAL, Mre, Tilon to’ Sy’ Nothing till the Y rind ‘Takes Plice, & From the New York P'ribune, Oct, 7, Mea, Wilton fa still with the fawmlly of Edward J. Ovington in Brooklyn, My, Ovington rgsured & Pripune roportor yostordsy that Mrs. Tilton Va8 ‘not proparing’ any papor for'publieation, Slo hnd deeidod to sav nothing mora until the trial catno off. Thon sho'would speak out un- rosorvadly angd Lo the point. He ndded that sho was eolloctivg and arrangivg dala niooting her caso, IBeeehérts Locture-Bnoagementss Fron the lioaton Globe, Mr. Boecher writen to Alr. Rodpath that he ennnot maat hiu tecturo-ougnizatonts this weok, beonune he ia forcad to ntay ot homo by the nag- giug ‘Tuwenits, This will grontly disappolut, tho- yeoplo of Salom and lolroge, who woro down forloatures on Wednosday and 'Fhursday, and thono of ‘Brattleboro and Braudon in Vermont. Ar, Bacclier's lattor 18 as follows: K mier W, fiodpathy - Vi Dizane S s Tuo ks at Inw fly back and_ forth with ek nimber andalaerity that my connael wiil not let e o uut of fown, this weok, * OF coutse, such thiugs Ao finperative uid nok to o gainsafd, ' 1 shall go on With tho engagements for tho week foliowiug in regu- lur order, yours, - 10V, Dekbinza, Uinookty, Oct, 4, 1874 LAY DE icr?s ¢ Life of Chrise? 5 e To tho Fditar of the New Yoek Tyiluine, * ' *° Bins” Lwan in* Logelind whon Vol, 1., Tocols or's “ Lito of Jesus, The Christ,” camo out. 1t was- fesued thero by Nelvou & Co., the #ront Beottivh publishors, aud vold at 103, or $2.60, 1 bought my copy in Linmsgato, and saw it all ovor Lngland in all good stationers® shops. The rest of Mu, I, B. Stauton's’ letter moy bo ag trao as == which tho Iluglish markot rofused {o toucl until the second volumna way forthcoming.” Mogsre. Nelson told mul(}mm'fluz. Respactfully, rxey W, Vi 3 New Yonx, Oct, 6, 181, e CEE e . EZeceher’s ® Flymouth réka Neto Fork Corresuondence of the Springield (Mass.) Repnblian, There's the white-powed, white-coiled church, devorated, 8 to_desk and preachot’s platforia, organ front, and groat, surtounding gallovies, nixd tho wulls eud brackots above “thg gallerion, with fostoons of gracefal wilux, looped upon Lrilliant autumu Bouquots of .gladiolus, lily, and dablin, with bogonias, - coloud, uud durk green Jily spathes to wot thom off, The peapla are in the best of humor, gayiy chattinyg, ebugratulat- ing, ruatling their Ailks, and bockoning baok and forth withi o huin liko many bives of murmucous bees, and tho wlhiole seoms .1iko'a groat festal ro. umon of such a considarable . family as the chil- dron of Tsraol may havo boon whion they wera led up out of Egypt. F And now, ak lio Sull height'of this friendly in- torchange,” comes n hushi ad sudden “as whon somatimes the wind lpkuuns ntterly in tho brunt of. tho storm,—n hush that is painful: and all oyes turn to ono spot. 1 cannat expross to you tho emphasis of that hush aud that turning, Tlio mighty magnetism of theso tlm‘us_am?u maves uit, and ite object is tho magnet thak contera iL. 'For tucre, walking, in his old, simpla way, like a'futher into”his household, upon” hig platform, quiotly divesti himsolf of hat aud ploves, senting himself, and taking from hix Yuu: t#his notes—mora heads, It 18 plain—ix Lonry Ward Boccher. As tho organ ovortura Yol In aweriptions over his head, Mr. Bocohor Hits the contrd of all ey Ho has chsvged, ithout o doubts tho wurrow of theuto monthe as told ou him. e looks ns Atslwart aud raddy, walli a5 stoutly and holdu the plentituda of henlth, to all appearance, Dub ws’ ho sita tharo, the whitening liairs, tho droeping, weary eyos, end- tho . sonsitive mouth, whose *Tiant humor luiygiven placo toan oxprossion of ex- cooding pain and sadness,—theso * boar ovidonca of thu sirength-draining task of tho summer mouths, * When the music cearcs Mr. Beochor comes forwnrd and ntters a pathetic iuvecation for thg peaco of God,—that all of s here preseut may bring to Thoo onr sorrow, and our trouble, and our wrong, aud bo nt rast; that wo may lsave these saddoning thiugs of carth, and may mount up a8 on englo's wings into clenr regions of fuith and hope, and be at rest; and 0; wilt Thou grant that all our pailng and orrows, our sin, our remose, our four, snd alljour human ilik may fico'away for this while, and loave us oua duy for rost and peace. ‘Chen o glorioys Te Doum of Zundol—though it ie nol Zundel wha playe it ; he is not at his post to-dny—wolls over the vust audionco, and, nieauwbilo, the pastor #its with closed oyes, for the most purt, aud tha woary look is pintner thun Lofore. When. he rinod agait it i4 to read tho wards of Jesus, in part of the fifth chepter of Matthew's Gospol— the gormon ou the doznt—and to us, thinking of ‘tho eircnmatauces behind all this, there soomy to bu s marked omphnsis giveu ta “Blossed aro yo when mon shall rovila you, and persecato you, nnd ssy all modner of ovil againkt ‘you falscly, for my sake,” “And in his vrayor fhat follows, thera are many politions thot porbaps auother. pastor might udo unnoticed, but that cortaiuly now scem to come from tho wrung heart of the ono wha prays. . Itis nery to bo littd up to God, for Retnin e “Thou alono knowest us, can estimute tha pres.. | 81ro on each one of us. Af Thou wert storn,.! 1 cannot-now tell whou I can_render sho - | Iapied” ongagements, bt -will.in_due t{me, - Truly and Thino eyo mndo inguisition amoug us for - #i0, who could stund? Who woukl not perish in bis fecbloness and his seusibility # Thou wasl tompted enough to uuderstand how mew ara tempted, Thow wast sble to sosist by Chy foflnito atrongth, but man cnvnot rosist fika to Thea, Thou thyself didst pray that tha cnp might pang from Thieu s what wondor, thon, thut mun's faintesoul zhould elink [rom the draft # ¢ Thio sermon proves to bo ono of his longest and most oloquent ; prolouge:d ugif by tho ox- uberant wealtl. of omotiong nud thoughts aud images that crowd and prosy for utternuco, and will not bo gainsaid. ¥ iy ermon was dollyorad ivith all r, Becche er's wondrous aliorantionaf poutio. boauty, strong dennuclation, pluin, v’ mmon sonse an heavt-reaching tondernews,- vith- only once or twico & lapeo inta thut Lumor thiat is us nptural to him s epeech itsolf. he pathetio passages woro the most impressive, aud their power over tho nudivuco was a8 magnetio as ever, Ha bowed tho hearts of Lis poopla avon m tho hoart of ove mun ; and tho alfoction nud faith go freely manifested wero fairly contagions, I beganta undorstand why and how men could sbsolutely refuso to beliove n word againt tho man wha thurillod themm so, Sunday aftor Sunday, year aftor yeur, aud to_foal thut L. too, under’.that spoll Wwould probably dofy as thoy dety all ovidence to shako iy trust. Nothing in the wayof oratory hug ovor moved mo #o much us tho lnst fow Hontences ho uttorad, 'Tho words, ana stilt more tho gostures, are Indelibly wrought on my momory, “There is not,” waid he, “a soul in this houso, this morning, that hao not tho right to suy, * My Father.” Lt is not sou ihut mako bargains with God; it is e that zonches down to you, Thin (tod Is yonr God, “This Hifo s Yull of God, nnd it I8 for you bo sxy, ¢ Our Fathor, log Thy will bo done on oarth as it I in hoeaven,' and by henvenly hearts, God hears you, and will, Jictlo by hittle, fulull, nntil, by and by, lio will draw asido tho voil from Hin Taco,—and that 14 deathi; for when o look upon God tho world Is dead, Wo have fled away ;. Wo havo escaped-us birds from thoir eagen aud tholr nosts, st loust to omargo from the forest-and fly vindor all hoaven ; wo flying, froo as the bisd, from tho oy aud the neat and il the nour twigs and dark - copros, and gloony forest dopts bo- youd wo whnll emergo, shiging 18 wo ‘l.ly to houven, to dwail forever in tho troe of Jifo. As My, Doechor npoko of Ctad drawing tha vell from 1lis fuco, ho rawed® his loft hand to hia grand brow, then stowly drow it away, s if thoro woro vm-lmbl,v » shrowding veil there, and :rhn_n ho spoke thio words ‘‘and that fs donth," hig voico Lrembled and sauk, willt & cadenco of loyo, Tovoronco, and mwo, as It ho had nawad _the Kindest angel of thoso that stund beforo God's fuco, —_— A Woulidsio Mothor-In-Law, Mg, Thompson, 'of Molawk, N. Y., loves chivalrons mon, Bhio wanted one’ fur r son-in- law. Sho had some doubts nbont the young man b wis ongazod o hor daughitar, G0 sho drossod - men's elothen and piokod a quarrel with bin, Tho proipoclive sop-in-taw took olf his coat, jmnmad tho old lady's plug hat down oyor lier oyes, tore her coliur off, broke her noso, ond wie about to make carpet-ragy of her pantaloons, whon he dissovered that he waa Ll;fi]u:]ng ®woman. Mys, Thowmpson thinks he wi 0, ¢ A s w21