Thou Art Mine. Thou art rains. Thou hut gi van thy word; dote, close iu my arms thon art clinging AUm far ray ar thou art ah-gtng A aortg which t stranger hath haaid j Bat afar front me yet, hlo * Wit, Thy uotil in some region u*lirt*d. On lt mystical circuit U Thon art mine, I have Ktadn thee wine own | Henceforth we are xuingled forsvsr; But in riuo, ail in v*m. I endeavnr-- Thougli round thee my garlands are thrown. And thou vtettdM thv tt)w and thy none - To master the spoil that atoue My hold on thy Wing cau aoxaf- Thmt art hi hie, thon haul come unto me ! Bat thy soul, when 1 strive to iia near It— Ttie Innermost fold of thy ajunt— la aa far from mv grasp, is as free, Aa the star- from ui* top* be, Aa Ute poail in the d whit of the aea From the portnmleM king that would wear it. L fe's I.UU Day. Hope*, like dew drope, pearl iu morning. Airy visions, fancies gay ; Soon they fade, Tenth* dreamland scorning, Purpose givwa as grows the daw. Work and toil come awiftly, aflhjM Brows, tired handa. and riven heart. ; And the soul weds right, forsaking Pleasure , witee f, not on the General's. We lived ' not far oft, and I lived much of my time ;at his house. Tout and myself had t beeu inseparable, aud we did not con ceal our rivalry from each other. " 'Tom,' said I one inormug, ' why can't you be eonteut with half the Gen eral's fortune, aud let me have the other ; half r " *Bah ! Jerry,' said he, 'as if that } would be anv more even, when you want Sarah with it In Heaveu's uauie take the half of the money, if that's all you want.' " ' Can't we fix it so as to make an i even division. Torn ? 'Dike all the for ' tune, and let me have her, and I'll call J it square.' £ " 'Just what I was going to propose ;to you. Be reasonable uow, Jerry, and get out of the way. You tuuat see she ; doesn't care a copper for you." "I twirled a rose-bud in my fingers i that she had given me that moraiug, i and replied— j " ' Poor fellow! I did not think you i could be so infatuated. Why. Tom, I there is no chance for you under the ! sun. But go ahead ; find it out aa you i wi!L I'm sorry for yon.' " A hundred such talks we used to have, and she never gave either of us one particlcujoreof encouragement than the other. She SraOlthne sister turns both, t and neither dared to break the spell of f otu tiM-foci happuieaa lf asking Ler to i be more. " And so time passed on. " One summer afternoon we were oflf together ou horseback, all three of us, over the mountain aud down the valley. I We were returning, toward sunset, sauntering aiong the road down the side of the bill. " * Fhilip, stir the fire a little. That bottle of claret is rather cold, it aeems to me, or I aui a little chilly myself. I Perhaps it is the recollection of that day that chills me. •*I had made up my mind, if oppor tunity occurred, to tell her that day what" I had thought for years. I was determined to know, once for all, Rolie , would love me or no "If not, I would go, I cared not where; the world was broad enough, and it should be to some place where I should never see her face again, never hear her voice again, never bow down and worship her magnificent beauty ( again. I would go to Russia and offer myself to the Czar or to Syria and join the Druses, or to India, Chine, any where to fight. All ray notions were military, I remember, and all my ideas were of war and death on the field. "I rode by her aide, and looked np at her occasionally, and thought she was looking splendidly. I had never seen her mure so. Every attitude was ( grace, every look was life and spirit "Tom bfhiiig efovefbktu One would have thought he waa watching the very opportunity I was alter myself. Now he rode a few paces forward, and as I was catching my breath to say 'Sarah,' he would rein np and fall back to bis place, and I would make some flat re mark that made me seem like a fool tc myself, if *ot to hi*. "* What's the matter with yon, Jerry?" said she at length. " 'Jerry's in love,' said Tom. "I could have thrashed him on the; spot " 'ln love! Jerry in love!' and she turned her large brown eyes toward me. "In vain I sought to fathom them, and arrive at some oonclusion whether or no the subject interested her with special force. "The eves remained fixed, till I blund ered out" the old saw, 'Tom judges f w .id! be pleaded guilty by his awkward looks, and half blushes, aud averted eyes, and forced laugh. " 'By Heaven!" thouglitl, 'whatwould I not give for Tom's awkwardness now! The scoundrel is winning his way by " 'Jerry, is Tom in love ?' "She naivete of the qnestion, tlio oorrectoesu of it, the very simplicity of the thing was irresistible, and I could not repress a smile that grew into a broad laugh. Tom joined in it, and t we made the woods ring with our mer ' riment. " 'I say, Tom isn't that vonr wkip lying hack yonder in the road ?' " 'Confound it, yes ; the ">rd has ; broken from my wrist;' and he rode back for it. / j *• 'Jtrtr. whom does Tom lcm Y laid she, quickly, turning to me. A )£?*•' ***** bluntly. * 'AVuy. ofconrao ; but wlb is ha in j love with, I mean ?' "It was a curious way to get at it. ; Could Ibe justified ? it was not ask- ' , ing what I had intended, but it was getting at it in another way, and jnst as well, perhaps. It was, at all events, asking Tom's qnestion for him, and it saved me the embarrassment of pntting it as my own. I determined this in an instant. " 'Sarah, could you love Tom well enough to marry him?' " 'I, Jerryl what do you mean ?' " 'Suppose Tom wants von to be his wife, will yon marry him ?' "'I don't know—J can't tell—l never thought of such a thing. Yon don't think he has any such idea, do you ?' "That was my answer. It waaenongli as far as it went, but I was no better ; off than before. She did not love Tom, j or she wsnld never have answered this. But did she love me ? Would she mar ry me % Wouldn't ajie receive the idea : in just (he same way ? "I looked back. Tom was on the ' ground, had picked np his whip, and had one foot in the stirrup, ready to monnt again. I gulped down my heart that was up in my throat, and spoke | out— " 'Sarah, will yon marry me ?' " Philip, she turned her eyes again toward me—those large brown eyes, those holy eyes—and bleased me with their unutterably glorious gaze. To my She looked at me one look ; and whether it was pity, sorrow, fuijrie, or can not tell ffllw thefn tuina ting * hen tb fl tah cam* and his horse swerved anil jumped so that his foot caught, aud he was dragged with his head ou the ground. " There was a point iu the road, about fifty yards ahead, where it divided into two." The one was dun carnage- track, which wound dowu the imnuitaiu by easy descents ; the other was a fooP path, which was a short, precipitous out 1 to a point on the carriage- road nearly a quarter of a mile below. " Cdhug to Sarah to keep back and wait, I drove the spurs into my horse, and went down the steep path. loath ing back, I saw her following, her horse making tremendous si>eey side, dowu the lull-side, j not fifty leaps along the level ground, and then came the turn. "Bh© waa ou the off-side. At thesbarp turn she pressed ahead a half-length and reined her horse across the gray' shoulder, if possible to turn him up ' toward the brtdgc. 1 ,r lt was all over in an instant The gray was the heavier horse. He pressed her clone; the black horae yielded, gave way toward the fetiee. stumbled, and the fence, a light rail, brake with a crash, aud they weut over, all together ' into the deep black stream. "Still, still the sound of that crash and plunge is in tuy nans. Still 1 car sett theui go headlong down that bank together ia*o the Mark water ! ' "I never knew exactly what I did 1 then. When I was conscious I found myself swimming arauml in a circle, i diving occasionally to find them, but in i vain. The gray horse swam ashore and stood on Uie bank by my black, with distended uostrils ami trembling limbs, shaking fram head to foot with terror. The other black horse was floating down the surface of the stream, drowned. His mistress was nowhere visible, and Tom was gone also. "I found her at last. "Yes, she was dead ! " Restore lier ? No. A glance at her face showed bok as if *be had ever ' lieeu a *treet singvr, amenable to the i Vagrants' Act, ami accompanying ber i nslf witii a fi-l.lla for Ui* entortainment iof pr-nrim-nxl Swedes. Vet she fiiegrin | tin* life when Urn yours old, and varied her fiddle performance* by an oucuaiou j ol aula ou tho flute, wbjch i-bvek dia ! tortiug in*truinent gave tione but pleas 1 ant sounds under her touch. One oohl dar at nightfall, Count Tornerhje'm, a uobleiuun with a* mnch wsulth aa kiud ne*a- -rarecombination -heanl her war ble out her clear childish notes aa she shivered under the biting wind, having earned but few copjM-ra that day, liiuan Imiug bad. He took oompa-*i-vi on her and caused her to be well educated. She came out at the Opera in Stock holm in 1860, being then seventeen, and her voice was admired ; but he wanted method, the which her patron | supposed Fans alone eould givo her ; j no ha dispatched her there to lie fiuialt ! ed, regardless of o--st, as a penuy paper would put it, by KL. Victor MOBSU and llerr Waal el. Chrjptine N"il*ou wa* m than wntild fill a nutshell. Hhe hol a enrious way of arguing, and liecame early im bued with the business a|>eeta of the career she wsa going to embrace. Her first eugsgeuioitt >u I8(i4 wo* at the riieatre Lyrique, of which Xladaina Miolan-CarValho, wife of the le*ee, wa* the star and popular favorite Msdame Carv-ilho wa* jat the opj>o*ito of Cbriv rine Nilfts-m—grm-eftil, tastefn!. play ful. Preucb all over-and ahedts tlie Hwadisli girl not a little good in teaofi uig her by what aria to osptivate that fauciful thing, the Farisisu public, which will uot give a rush for a voice that is nut wormed up by a aonL Christine Nla*ou'a dtbut was a *u-*ces*. but not such a flosluug one a* Patti's had been. Pari* found her notes too metalic—something like those of the silver flute on which she eotitinned to be a proficient, and with which she would regale her auquaiDUitom whin they cams to vuil her of a Sun-lay and >ip the somswhst yellow tea she pro vided. But she grew um>u her public just aa they grew to like her, nd. thank* to Madame MioloJi, gradually li-arued to die in the •• Traviata " m a manner to set the audience muveiling in their handkerchiefs after the must approved fashion. She than livvd ou e third story in a •in all strevt close to the CoiißsrvAtoire, did her own marketing, aud overhauled the butoiier a bills with a perspicuity deserving alt boaor. Her hands wera cold, her smile amiable, lier talk sensible, and her blue eye* keen. Frenchmen being cntcrnriaiug tt the world over, *ho receiveil preaeuta, aud lova note* along with tliern. Sua had uo objection to the presents, if dvcuuUy offered, but she burned the love notes Hhe wsa very hard at driving a bargain, and had no idea of aingiug for nothing Once, though, she must hnva thought aha had parto-l with three whole aougw. aid all in one night, too, for nothing It wsa at Madrid. Sht had returned from the enera, and wsa in b*r room, when a ladder was planted against hut baleoty, which lookod on to a gar-l< u, aud * gentleman with a cloak, and mask uambcred through the open window, tollowed by a scound, and ao on till there were six of tbem Christine Nilssun. no dotibt, thought they had tjome for toot money, but did not pull the bell-rope, because there was u-m* She aked them wittn-ut aerauniug what titer wanted, atwt tl*y explainod in very choice Castiiuui that, beiag (<• •leetitute to pay for admittam-o P the Opera st the uiercned rate of prio- *, tl.sy had come to hour the snug* in which they were informed aha excelled Parley proving bootless, there wn* oothing for it but to sing, and she did •ing right welL The (kudibaoa bowed to the ground, and aiumn-d her, aa they retreated through the way they had ar rived, that they had spent half an hour in Paradise. But when thoj had vauudi ed, they and their ladder, *hv found thev had left a diamond bracelet, worth a thousand guineas, which gave hr to wonder in all probability why tbey had i oViutrodueed themselves through the dour, as no six men with a luaOclut need be ashamed to do. Story of A IMoture. A painter once wanted a picture of i iuuoosnce, and drew Uie tiksnass of * ehiid at nray<-r. Tbe little supplicant , wsa kneeling beside his motlier; the palms of Ins uplifted hands wrre rev erently pressed togctlier; Lis ror chock A|H>ko ui health, and bis wilk-blu* t' 1 wa* upturned with the expression ol ■ devotion and peace. The |iortrait m voting Bnnert was much pnx* in a glistening condition, he oanght and pnt under the microecope in a drop ef water. Very few minutes had elapsed when lie had the aatisfaction of seeing the thorax open along the middle of tlie back ; the two tide* turned over ; the insect literally walked out of itself, un folded its wings, and in an instant flew up to the window. He vend times since ho has withessed this wonderful meta morphosis, and it is extraordinary how rapidly it takes place. From the m> rnent when the kiu first orsrks, not ten seconds are over before the insect has flown away. Liko the ephemera*, dragon-flies, at first dull, brown, slug gish and ugly larvm, with aix legs, are developed m water. Not so the ant lion, Vrliich passes its early days in dry ' An Invention Wanted. A correspondent of tbe Scicntfflr American says : " Fjowalinres, as now used, are enough to. woke any farm* r complain, especially if they ore steel ones, which are generally ruined after lieing sharjxuied once. The cast steel oues will not scour in black lands. Why. could not the share be made smaller, so that it would not be necessary to weld n plate of iron on it? The share and poiut might be made of twu pieces, and the point used in some way to fasten tbe share. Plugs or wedge* conld be need instead of bolts, which are so laced that they are hard to nncrow. 1 ould not such a contrivance be a* successful as the movable saw teeth ? I think so. If such a thing could be made, it would be one of tbe most pay ing inventions," A ltomanre lu Crime. It teem* very probable that th Horn -1 tnon-pla'e character of uiod>-ru life hjt* ' the cHbct to drive ohj* men Into cfiiuc * mere!* f*r the gratification of a love of 1 adieu tore. It is doubtful whether a i man of real ability will endure too eon t tempi vluuk always aeo>ui*iit>* the , uouirn-ty of m I (net if he can find scops : fur iu a inodg ol life of a kiud h> j win men's respect. The suicide of Henry Austin, a fid' Mouterief Watl ilauis', in liieTrcut'-u Penitonliary, gives occasion for a brief biography that should uot prose umustruolive. Wad dapis was liia rail U*U>*, and he WH* 1 t*ni of a wealthy farmlv n the north tsf England. After graii i tiling at Eton, he was released, through family iu fiueiu-e, from arret for * niisdcsineaiior ' at Leeds, on condition of Ufaleaving the • country. He arrived ttt New York in IH6J, imd at once tieeaine a bounty • jumper. He exerted himself with so rnwoh abibtv ami discretion that, it is , said, he realized over SIO,tWO from that i species of speculation. Alter a short visit to Euglaud, lie relumed, and be i gau a earner as a horse thief on the Peiiusylvania an 1 New Jersey liua with aiugular success. Four years ago the formers of New Jersey found it neces sary to combine agauiat htm and bit , associate*, iu 1H69, white ruling off f HJi lity, had c'oed : her long year* of devotion to ltfm, alhir * ed bv tile bromianr and wealth of a ' prominent Trenton politician. After : ibis, lie bereune despondent, and eeenr twl a shoemaker's knife, with which be ptU *U rod to his life, b.ceding to doath , before hi* keeper* discovered Uuo. Make Birds Friendly. ; Some kindly soul writes to a Cincin , uaU paper; I was much interested , wain wtick" IUUOC at the remark of r friend living in the suburb* of the city, ' that wbeu he left home early iu the momifig, he fhongbt m many a* two ' hiindrvd litnla were chirpbig nnd sing I ing in the tteea around hie home. -A niked bun, '• Hw *b> von eeeount for i t hie, seeing tiiatik is e very early yi : the auosou, Mel the snow aeamrly gone ! from the ground?' He rejiimd, "I iuvu birds, aud delight to feed thu little songsters and f-g thta purpose jmr -1 t-filUc Jvfuae grain and **cda at cheap 1 rates, and arrange shelves am! c*u- I venienee# for feeiMng on the trees and i fettean. Bv these mow* lam slwaj* Mirronndnij with bmle, early ami Into. I Now, iim purpose-if the writer of this ! . to proj-oks l(h acts and iikr pleasure , to other- i and to suggest to thoae htv iilg livUoepotaof Won to land to plant hfitflp, w<-r, ripe, and othct small 'aedtla ftliF e*}Wise of which need not exceed fifty centat, and they, too, can f-ed and ml joy the nreaenee at the early i hud*, which niU ds igbt to vmt ami \ \ sfiend tii< ir aumnwir days arouml the lususauu ol their foamls. Furti- Jsrly st this time, when our Acchmatii*tiou Society is spending money ami effuita so liberally iu introducing European birds of Bong, i* it UKI much to ak all who wotrld encfiurage the enterprise to half feed the bird*? Plant y-mr little sends, wateli the gmdual growth, keep ing in mind thn aim to make home and it* surroundings happier ami to teach the little t wo-lvga indoors to cure for and treat kiudh - the littla, two-leg* out -if -I-Kir*. Feel, fovd the bird*. All will be tie' happier. Ui'dueisg tbe FamUy. A frtmilY of sit persons, traveling through Mseomb eoxmty ttiwsrds De troit, Michigan, wtoppe.l about thirty mile* from the city uad attotnpteil to give away a UUlo l*iy four years obi to a farmer. lie dnl not want tho child, •u# tho wagon drove on . but it sceiu* that tbo.littU follow was set down in tlie road about hall a mile from tho honse, and is about an hour appeared nt tbe farmer's gate. The fanner was highly ut ilfteeu miles from tho city, while the teamster, whose name ia James Bruce, came on through. At the City Hall market tlie immigrant wagon was dift oovered by Ilruec, wlio found the man aud hia wife aluus, they having dis joined of Uiour live cliiUUeu along the rood. Little Batiafactiou could lxi ob tained ah to where tbo little ones bad been left, bulb parents seeming to have no mote feeling tbfln wolves, and when there tens tillk of arresting tbem tbey drova off aa fast as possible. It is behoved that they dropped the child ren hero and thure on the road, and probably most of them will find their way iuto Dutnuf to bo soul to the County lioiise. Law* Regulating Wining tandx. /Tprfv.ite Inquiry lisviiig been msile of tnq Aftorney-Oeneral oi the United fifwtes on the following subject, the qnwsHon wa* referred l>y hfm to the General Lsnd Office, nnd Acting Com missioner Curtis makes tins statement as tho rule of thq Deportment;—"lf lands liavo been entered and patented HS agricultural, upon which valuable mines were kpown to exist at the dateof such entry, the parties owning mcb mines are In no way debarred from ac quiring the title thereto open a full oompHaoee with Ui* lnws ami the in structions regulating the disposal of mineral lauds; aa bv express provisions oI law no title oau be ae,quired to min eral land under the sets regulating the diiqiosal of agricultural luud. Iu all cases where lauds have been retnrucdas mineral upon the township plot, or where affiiiavita were filed with the local laud officers alleging that the lands are more valuable for mining than for agri cultural purposes, it is the duty of th* register sud receiver to cauag a hearing to determine their true character before allowing their entry under the Pre-emp tion or Homestead laws." The Erie Indians. Let an ludiau tribe vanish entirely i from the earth without leaving a shadow i lu-huul, not even one chieftain to go a ' s deputation to WanhiDgtoo, not evu i ' one crave, who refuses to live on hi* 1 reservation, and skulks around the set 11 tleaienia etad 111 llie cant-off silk hale of i the white man, anil forthwith we Itqgis > i to exalt the extinct r ice with the hear) of an antiquarian aud the peu of a nor ! elist. It is only the degenerate, mind '! fatiguing Indians of to day whom we deapise ; no doubt the tribes of the past were of s nobler nature. Among tbcae tribes of the past there are none Wore i completely past than the Eriee, who j have left scarcely more tbau a name lie , hind them. They belonged to that re workable confederacy of triliea called | the Neutral Nation, dwelling upon the southern alum- of Lake Erie, a eity of ' refuge to warring parties on either side. To them belonged the right of lighting the council fire of peace, a ceremony watch wis* said to require s maiden hand, aud for years they held their place, r-s| K-cleil and at |iesce. Upon these Weatern lahunla were some of . their fs*tusai . traces of their fortifl cations were discovered there by the tlr*l surveyors, earthworks built, upper ently to enclose s Tillage, with gate* aud sallyports of wood, and in one place • quantity <>f new atone axes and arrow l beads stored sway in a huge armory for future a**, i'lotiire-writing wsa also ; , found, and cah the Incky ticket. | The S3(HJ sre but $2lO, and this Litter j ! figure ojflv* if the banker I?) chooses to treat hi* customer fairly. The *•!• of rickets for tetand waawpfim is de creasing, bat it is fnereoMng for the { I'lllie.t Htatsa For the purpose of owny.ug wo the bpauiah government i . and thtt war. ths people f tlie United S'.ate* purchase fit,ooo tickets for etgh- i teen drawing* per annum : this is equal | 4 to 162,000 ticket* at 52)t each, making j Sfi.s4o.tK*>. of which the govern me u I . raositrsa twenty-five per cent, directly, j i or SBIO,OOO, the ticket purr baser# run- • uiug their chances for the remainder lof their outlay, and receiving a larger or smaller premium. A* only six targv pntes are given, 20,094 people are dia- i appointed every drawing : six out of ( i 30,000 get a respectable pnxe, which generally finds it* way Imck again to 4 the coffer* of the inland treasury. I) j is also wdl-known that nine-tenths of ' the ao-cath'd tickets in the Havana Lot- . f tery, sold hi the United fttatos, are I counterfeit*, atill people buy them, ! hoping against loss all the time. When I • Will tna American psnpje have s little j ' wisdom, and not allow their pocket* to , |be picked by every adventurer who ( offers them $lO for sl. Tornadoes and Forest*. It is about thirteen year* since a fear- I ful tornado ru)u-d from the prunes of the Far West aud took our city in it* path. -The visitation *M not one that onylHKiy wanted to ee repeated. Oar 1 street* were filled with fragments of trees and with bricks from ovetturned chimneys. The roof ef the then n<*w ifitmmerrial office flew against the wratiwn cornice of the building at the miutkwestern corner of Fourth and Vine , streets, and left a dent to mark the col ' lisiou. Worst of all, several persons were killed in and alniutUiecity. Cinoin -1 nstt ia not ** exposed to such disaster* a* many other place*. Her rain part of hills i*"s great protection, of winch the 1 suburb* do not enjoy the benefit. But the moat elevated districts of ftontheru Ohio are freer from danger than the treeless and hilless States farther West, A few sere* of forests would do more to protect the d wclb-rsou the prairies than anything that Could be devised. It is true that a tornado %ill cut through a wood, but if it la met with many nch obstacle* its pathway would be impeded, its F-jieed and violence abated, and its track shortened. Tree p'snting organi sations are forming in some sections, sod their inereao* is urgently required. Central lowa has had a lesson which should not pass unimproved. In North western lown the railroads carry trees gratis for all who will plant them, and similar encouragement should le given elsew here. The destruction of forests is not only to lie deprecated m view of liurrinaneis, but it has injurious elT<>ets upon th rainfall and the oliiuate of the surrounding regions. A check onght in some way to lie put to the waste of wood, aud State* might well have spe cial connoiDsionfrs of forests. The snbiecthM received Increased attention of hit#, and we hope it may excite more general interest.—CV'ae/naofi (Ja tctft. _ _ Tost of the Trip to California. The Run Francisco flullctin gives the following as s fair statement of the cost of trip to California: Xrw Tor* lo ftn rrne)<-o sl*o S <-( Tr Old nana rsturn, Isn dj*' trip, |-t t Xlim, Init **X, IW Su Frandtro ty N|* V)l*jr,ett. .... 90 Hall i'rsnSlW* Yo Hint* ("rut, Prtadiw, ftan Jow, stc, a7 cur frku! trip.... *0 Tu ilaya lu all In ftaii Fcucl*-o, *1 $4 |r d*j W Trfiw to llw (T.lff tl->*w, Sle M San Fraui lwo la Nve) X i (MUIO lioE) 11 llrraklng trty tlirre dj> *t Truck** lo •*• lak* Tho* *nd Oounrr L*k* IS BrMklus trli> *> Oftdsu is Salt Lak* Citi.Mo., lour dc;>, *ll !• Total n'f of *t\* exjwnMS iu currtney, for wtilsli drduet ten p* r reut, on $330, *y.............. 9 Total rxpanww of fa'J Facjfio Cooal, trip*, w •bor*, la gold 0018 foro As estimates are usually made for the benefit of interested parties, it ia al ways best to raovs slowly. In the above ease, aman making thetrip might easily double tbe figures given, ho ooonomieal, sud when hs returw d lion lie would have little monevinhia purse. Ask any one who haa tried the trip and i sots Ilia answer. Terms: 02.00 a Year, in .Advance. The Captive Modoc*. lsplsiM Js*k Dtsvsnrti lh* Tntlan sf IU. Baud. A corrnmionJeut, writing from Gen. Davis' aaya; Hooker Jim and Steamboat Frank were reafl v to consummate their treach ery by killing Soonohe* and Capt. Jack. Hi"; travel**! two day*, kept guard during the intervening night, and, hav ing ridden tixty milm that day, brand 'hetnxclTea too bred and *!•-- f>r, aa Frank eipreaaed it, to tnut thainaolvra to akout. Their nerves ware out steady enough to r*ly upon to finish their work. Capt. Jack haa good reaaon to upbraid them, and yet may out be aware how deep a treachery they in temled. I took a look at Capt Jack to-day. He aat croa* legged, with a clean striped ahirt on, and looked about thirty-five. Ha ia a well-built man, ha* a face of some power and great intel ligence, and would probably be picked out a* the moat able maaiu the tribe. 11 ia favorite wife, Lixua, aat by his aide, working a moccasin. She waa neatly dressed, ia rather pretty too for in Indian, and her little girl is a very pretty mild. Hooker Jim and Bteaml>oat Frank have endured a great deal of late, and nave a great deal mi>re to endure, aa hare ilogua Charley and Shack Nasty Jim, their traitor confederal**, who are now absent attending to the removal of the rest of the Cottonwood* to tbia place. After the talk a few days ago, when tUey as* mted in identifying the Tule Lake mnrderera, Mary went back to the Modoc quarters, and had a talk With her brother. Capt. Jack, and the two renegades being present, the Mo doe chief arose and made a pa** ion ate harangue at their ezpenar. U remind ed bta hearer* that when the l'eace Commissioner* and Gen. Canby were trmig to aetlle mattera be was for peace, and would hare accepted the of fered term*, hut hi* tribe reeolred for war, and to pleaae tbem be waged war, mud now wan a doomed man. He point**] to the two Modus rane pjw uul reminded tbem and his bear *r that I hey too were for war and re to let him seoept term* and make pence. Then he taunted them with tearing hint to lßht alone, and turning traitor to him besides. He sailed them cowards; aaid they wen squaws, and made it ao WIT uncomfortable for them generally, that they eouldu'l stand it, bat went off and reported that Capt. lack was very iad and talkeil eery mean, flaring the field all to himself, the shackled chief turned to the reat ol nia tribe and deli rend an exhortation that created intenae excitement. The feeling rmt ao high that the officer* of the guard went in among them aud in sisted that the talk should oroae. The nature of the speech the Modoe chief made, aud which may be the last be ever will make, aa reported to the *m mading General, was to this effect: Cant. Jack, in the moat impassioned anil eloquent atrle of Indian oratory, commented on tVie treason of the four renegade* and nrged the tribe to edu cate their children to avenge it, if they ooahl not do it themselves. Said be : " t apt. Jack is nothing any more. He can do nothing to arenge himself or to avenge TOO. Tell your children to make it the business of their lives to lierer let them lire or die in peace and honor, bat to kill these traitors, who bare betrayed you and bar# lietrmyed me, and send them to dishonored glares." If this scene had been laid down in the lines of Virgil or of Ho mer, if it were told to us in the poem* of Oaaian, it might be counted cue of the most effective ever handed down in *ong or story ; sad it msy be possible that the light* and shadows of Modoe history, wnieh has so many shadows to darken its story, will yet find s poet who can work up the tragedy and the wonder of Modoe story. AHiflrtal foal. On some of the French railroads com pressed coal—made from waste ooal ' -ln*t —ia exclusively the fnal n*ed, and, at first, poaaesaed a*considerably greater economical advantage than subsequent i Iv, the net coat of tba article, including the motive power, the wear and tear of machinery, and for labor, having been -a low sa forty cents per ton, in soma of the district! *of Franca and Belgium, and, even in the moat important mann factoring centres, the average net coat per ton haa been aa low as thirty oeuta. The increase of rslne, however, aoou reached to four dollars per ton at the mill; and the fine dirt ooal, which once merely worthless, thus paid a nreflt of of ncarlv three dollars per too. But even this increase has been largely advanced upon, lieeanae the advantages of this kind of fuel have becoma more widely known, and the demand, consequently, greater, and because the modes of msnnfsetnre and the qnalitiea of the article have been greatly improved. When making contracts for this fuel, tlie railroad companies have been ac customed to allow aix per cent, of ash. tolerating a difference of one-half of one per cent., more or leas, than the standard allowance, with s correspond ing difference in price. But, when Hie amount of ash exceeded eight tier cent., the cal ia eouaidered unfit. It is esti mated that a cargo of thia artificial or pressed coal will represent almost, mathrmaticially, a aolid maea of coal, and that the ooal bunkers of a ship will, therefore, contain fifty per eent. more of this material than of ordinary looee coal in lump*. The Man Who Laughs. Detroit has what it call* a fanny man. An old man named Gregg, who mend* furniture for a bring, wa* sitting in the shop recently, when a stranger entered and asked him the loan ola dollar. Gregg bounded at the impudence of the request, and the stranger liegsn laugh ing nproaricnsly and shut and bolted Uie door. The stranger then took off hia coat, rolled up liia sleeves and stop ped up sud Mixed Gregg by the hair and lifted him up a foot or so. Gregg attempted to call in the police, but the funny man seised him by the throat and nearly choked him bo death. "Why don't you lawgli ?" aaid the stranger, * living which he bgan to twig his noae. A stair roil then came into requisition, Gregg being constantly requested to laugh. Seeing that his life was in dan ger, he did laugh, but it was not a hearty laugh, and accordingly the stranger began hitting at hia feet with a hatchet. A pair of shear* was then procured, and the man tiegan cutting of hia hair until liia victim was left bald. He then cut off tlio man's whiskers and tickled his feet with au old eurryoomb, threat ening to stab Gregg if he made any alarm. Growing tired at last, the st ranger said he guessed ho would go. He was not in need of any money, he said, but he liked to meet a man who could appreciate fun, and he went out. The carpenter was alive at last accounts, but the funny man is atill at large. It is thought that the case ia one of emo tional insanity. A Texas paper tells of a man who brought in for shipment to St. Louis eight hundred wolf pelts. He kills tbe wolves by putting strychnine in the car cassos of animals killed for the puipoae and left on the prairies. It often oc curs that ho finds as many as forty dead wolves about one of these carcasses. NO. 28. A Bigamist Arresled. Oeorge P. Evans, age AO, of New fork city, formerly of Boston, where be bea many wealthy kinsmen, wse arrested and placed in the Tombe on the charge of bigamy, and also on a eivil suit brought by Patrick it Barnwell for 810,000 damages. On March I, 1871, Evans married the dsugbter of the plaintiff. Miss Mama Barn wall, age 18. Hon after the marriage, the father of Mia# Barnwell, suspecting that all was not right with bta eon-in-law, separated i her from her husband and took her to his home. He then went diligently to work to discover the past life of Evans, aud found in Harlem a young woman named Almirm B. Davis, who e* sick in bed, and in a moat destitute condi tion. From her he learned that she was the daughter of wealthy narrate in Huston, and that 10 yean be tore, whan she was very young, Evsna, to whom she wae very much attached, had per suaded her to leave her home and ac company him to New York. For a time he treated her well, but of late years has not done so, subjecting her to vari ous luku ts and indignities. On March I. 1872. the day on which be married Mtaa Barnwell, Evaua was unusually kind, and after kissing hie wife el factionetely. left, stating that be would return in ten minutes. From that time she has nut seen him. After learning this much Mr, Barnwell west to Boston, where he discovered that la 1854 Evan* married the daughter of David N. Badger, a rich UM-rehant of Boston, by whom be had two children, one of whom, now living, is 18 yean old, the sge of his last wife. This woman and iter daughter Mr. Barnwell foand to be lie- i tng at Everett, Mas*. While Mr. Barn well was thus engaged in tracing the past life pf his Bou-in-law, the latter took a