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6 THE CHICAGO DAILY TRIBUNE: SUNDAY, JUNE 8, 1873. THE MODOCS. Schonchin' the Rightful Chicf of the “Tribe--Capty Jack a Rebel Mt.zfiners and Customs of the Mo- docs and Muckalues, The Legend of the Woman of Stone. Causes of the Troubles with These Savages. From the Ocerland Monthly for June. The Modocs have s hereditary chieftainship, of the principal functions of the medicine-man _is to ‘‘give the people a good heart,” which he “does through the insirumentality of & kpeech,” sometimes protracted to s length of throe hours. He has a repeater, who repeats every seutence after bim, though 1o himself speaks’ with suffi- cient loudness {o be heard. . 28 As theso Indigna’are braver and ‘more despotic -than their,. sonthern ~neighbors, sothey ~v 7y " o 3 i ¥ T " ARE MOLE VIRTOOUS— . or were, in their native stato. 1t was s primi- tivo ensfom among them' to destroy any woman who had commeres with & foreigner; which can bo affirmed of only two or three tribes in Califor-- nin. Polygamy 18 toloratod, and the women ‘havo not 8o much influonce as. among the Shas-_ teccas, though they possess considerablo. The, participate Freely in oll the war-dances, an other Jnrtmexucims- they have most of the medical practice; and they conduct, in person, nearly & the quarrels or fights which arise ont of jealousy or polygamio discord.- In that relates medicine, midwifery, hing, eotc., they nre' motsbly -mod- A whole family sometimes on- joy a sweat-bath together, in their mall ovens, heated with hot stones, but it is condncted with and they are something less democratic and in- dependent, than the California Indians proper. Bat their . SUBLY AND INTRACTABLE CHARACTER reveals itself occasionally. Sconchin, the lineal and rightful Chief of the whole tribe, and per- haps the most conscientious and honest Modoc the Americans ever knew, together with the femous Laylake (after whom 2 branchof the Dation is called), make s treaty of peacs with Capt. Jouso Watker in 1854, and again with the _Government in 1864, and both of them he kept Teligionsly. He remained on the Klamath Res- ervation, as he had promised and it was partlyhis fidelity to his pledges which Gnally bronght about Capt. Jack’s secession and all the subsequent troubles of thia yesr. In 1870, Capt. Jack, a cow- ard end a braggart, set up the standard of insur- rection, and led awsy from the reservation all ‘but o hundred of the Modocs, who remained and pertect propriety. The Modocs enjoy & p go which must render them the-envy of civil: ized men ; and that is, the privilege of KILLING THETR MOTHERS-IN-LAW. To prevent misapprehension, it is noceasary to say_ that this is not a common practice ; but if an Indian resort to it, his liberty is nowieo cur- tailed, nor his character sullied. A widow in--| Terita no property from her deceased husband, merely rataining the baskets and personal orna- ments which she has hersclf made ; and if an of his property is loft unburned, it is dividet among his relatives. Bo religioaly do they de- stroy the possessions of the dead, that, Some ears ago, when an American named More, who consorted with & Muckalue woman,-died, hoy bumed up e large uantity of fence-rails he bad lately split, To the backwoodsmen this seemed gratuitous, a8 rails cost a good deal of hard work. 4 . THE DEAD ADE BUBIED in a recumbent posture, and the relatives dance, inn wailing circle, around the open greve. A. pile of stones, or & tent, ia orected over it, to revent wild animals from exhuming the body. fhen one dies at a distance, he is burned, for as before statod, in 1670, Capt. & man of mean quality, a coward, and and his renogrdos rosmed, without xaace, throughout tho whlo rogion along Lost iver, and even penefrated, sometimes, &s far east o8 Goose Lake, slaughtoring certain catile strayed away from the hords ownod by settlors on the eastorn shore of the Iluke. them everyvwliere their immenso bands of ponics, —over Government 1ands, over claims of settlors,— that savages arcgo irgenions in'doing to mako another tribe old “Sconchin ~bore “it all ‘like ‘a’Spartan,fhav- ing ulfmnrs and lamonts of his"people dinned day and night in his ear, as the cries of Isracl came up to 'gxgunnw of the troops prevented bloody out- miserable. Brave and honest thougl’ tho regard to his promises, ogea’and Aaron in the desert. Only the reaks from occurring continually. But at last, ack—although A THOROUGH-PACED BABCAL— won the majority of the peoplo from old Scon- chinby siding with them against the treaty; ulx finally, pxesummglnpon the imbecile rule o and roturnod to Lost Rivor. Some weak attempts wore made to_induce him to return; bLut, presently, thé whole matter was dropped, and he an hig followors were allowed to roam whith- ex they would. To remedy the inarsdicable hos- . tility between the Modocsand the Klamath Lake Indians, s new sot of resorvation buildings waa established on the eastorn end of the reserve, in Sprague Biver Valley, aud called “ Yainax Tes- ervation ;" to which the remaining 100 Modocs, still loyal to Sconchin, were removed. But, with fatnougness worthy of the Indian Burcan, 700 Klamath Lake Indians wore also brought with them ; and thus the old elements of discord were perpetuated. boldly marched away from i, 0 Modocs' ancient home on 8 reservatio There was a_third band of tho Modocs split off, numbering only about forty, called tho ¢ HOT CREEK MODOCS,” who acknowledged neither the suthority of Sconchin nor of Capt. Jack, Rauging on Hot Crook, Lower Elamath Luko, and Dut under the quasi child and Dorris, thoy deported thomselves with compurative propriety, and were quito iaoffen- ve. . tte Crock, rotectorato of Meusrs. Fair- feantime, for two or three years, Capt. Jack fot or hind- Clear Lake, and the sdjoining waters, Ty drove with lands, over reservation CONTEMPTUOUBLY INDIPFERENT -~ SPRING-TRAVEL. g New York to Minnesota in Bay. _ Wo are a party of four ladies, leaving New, York via the Erie Railway, on a certain evening in May, 1878. - We are bound for Ohio, Chicago, and Minnesots, and to have s thoronghly good time on the way, unless some mishap or mis- fortune prevents. . We cross the river in squads of two and two, meeting in the elogant slesping-car ‘‘James Figk, Jr.” Here, in the large family state-room, we hang up our hats, and, disposing of sundry bags and pavcels, settle ourselves comfortably, —taking » critical survey of each other and our surroundings, before entering upon the real business of tho- evening, viz: & cosy, confiden- tial gossip,—a gesinine old-fashionod visit. Mrs. W—, tho leader of our party, is the wife of the indefatigabla President of Erie, aud, although & woman, ghe is by 1o means a non- entity in her sphore. If she cannot handlo and control railroads in a masterly manner, she can load a party of Indies in the-way they are de- lighted to go, and entertain them right royally in mind as well as ‘in body. - 8he can do this even if she cannot vote'as the equal of Dblack Charlie, the portor, who makos the beds and “ghines” the boots of his brother-voters taking lodgings in the * James Fisk, Jr." In statare the smallest of our party is one of the moat romarkable women of this or any age. She drosses in a quaint, quiet scylo, in perfoct barmony with hevself. And, by the way, what & picturesqao world this would be if all men and women, wmstead of following & fashion, dressed according to their own ideas of comfort and beauty,—put into their dress their own peculiar tastes and fancics. This little woman does it, I think, to some ex- tent. Her traveling dress, of soft material, falls gracefully about her neat figure, being noither too full nor too scaut, too long nor too short,— como'to feet e RévEr sghim; mave in dreams and in memories, until , too, cross over to the ‘bemtifulland of the Nereaftar: ~- - : NomTEFIZLD, Minn,, June 1, 1873. R (e e vl T THE LATE LOUIS NAPOLEON. * Reminiscences by o Porsonal Eriend-- The flzn and the Emperor--Eiis Gene eral -Character=-Pecnliar- Character of Hils Ambition—Causes of Elis Fail= ure as o General, . 2 S London (Hay- 8) Corretpondencs of the New York Tribune. - The continuing curiosity about “the lats. Em- peror Nspoleon gratifies to some extent his known, desire. His will was published this week, and discussed by everybody eagerly. If. throws some light on his charecter; but a far more interesting paper appears in the May Corn- hill, entitled “Louis Napoleon painted bya Contemporary,” It consists of passages from Mr, Nassau W. Senior's diary, recounting con- versations about the Emperor that took place between himself and a.lady designated as Madame ‘B.; and described "as having been brought up as a sister with the *Emperor, and continuing her intimacy till the coup d'etat, which shoas a woman of integrity and a staunch Republican, could not forgive. This paperis manifestly of & different kind from most of the gossip and guess-work anecdotes current about the Emperor during his lifetime and since. It Dbegins with an account of the escape from Ham, and comes down to April, 1863, when the Em- peror was more ocoupied With his Life of Cmsar than with anything else. Madamo R.'s knowl- edge of the man—not merely of the Emperor— is ‘minute, penetrating, critical, yet friendly. Indeod, she was plainly fond of him, though for twelve yoars after the coup d'etat she refused to seo him. She did not, however, re- fuse to correspond with him, and serve him in various ways, and she seems to have expressed her opinion with sufficiont frankness to Mr. Bonior, and he to havo put them down faith- ————— want of decision. Madame R, paints_him as lit- eray in his mental habits (which is preciscly of ~sdministra- f.im:i hating defail,. and_hating_discussion, but foud of study, and very fond o writing. When he Eofi to_worl on his ‘“Life of Cazear,” his tistars complained that.they conld not get sudience ar even signatures from him. Here is :'&'E‘l';?f, g)lchne of the way in which he came to ion : ECPE:" - |"Kinglake's view), {dle in matters ** Whon 1t i3 necessary to act he'does not éon-" sult his friends, etill less his Ministers, and per- haps he is Tight, for they would give him onl: Eh ndvé::r he does ga:hnnnw'mfiously thmz' 0 mal over, wej e 08idg Teas strike tha balsnss and act, Hotakes bis sigar, gives loose to his ides, leta them follow one an- other without exercising over them his will, Hll at last something picnses_his imagination, ho seizes it, and thinks himself inspired. Some- times the inspiration is good, as it was when he relensed Abd el Kader; sometimes it iavery bad, 28 it was when he chose the same time for open- ing the discussion of the addtens, and revealing the state of our finances." w Bome things he did and said were due in no emall moasure to his childlike delight in_aston- ishing peopls, in mnk!ngmll;umpe and France, and, above ali, his own Ministers, tare. Ho in- tended the conp d’etat, Jan. 29, 1849, six weeks after he became President. * He read his plan hangarnier, and the instant Changarnier bo- gan to oppose it, he folded up the paper atd was eilent.” " He kept it in his drawer two years and & half, and then executed it. I heard many such stories of him, Before his Ministers learned his ways they wore subject to continual surprises. He never would soything. Almost alwsys he put his idess in writing, and when he summoned a Minister to his Cabinet he would read Ch;‘plpetto him or hand it to him to Tead. If tho Minister disspproved, or eriticised, or suggested’ modifications, the paper was put back in its drawer without reply, and the Emperor turned to another sub- ject or dismissed Minister, and the latter would go away believing he had convinoed hia master, and that the plan waa abandoned. - The next thing he would hear of it would be the pro- :m]gnfion of the rejected plan as an Imperial ecreo. It may be worth noticing thst Madame R. gave no credit to the notion that Vorhuel was the true father of Louis Napoleon. The world —which certainly has rather inclined to that erratic gemwus I heard to-day. O _fegfllltl%gi&£lbuahen Bandyn check for kg 825 to iaughter Maud, who is fivi Oregon. This -is ordered *till forbid by Mi- lerso !ong«l; thmz is h:::ney in the locker.” ;=] awcett writt K #+Purple and Fine-Linen;” ‘which ‘cfixv«afifl%fii gfinxfl Houghton's. Monogiaphs, Parsgial: gud Socat il contuin it i esi £74 ul 08t i anlffl flbn a it “everybody of .nota in. ibner, Armstrang & Co: i Rochefort'a forbidden wovel -'%ucnumfifr;nggn" in :?Iulhl:\gn“lulh m& tion. : i an Hawthorno * Bressan,” will bo e Sty e L Pt anof i i. Empere han or fortheoming Ameri. = Bronghton, of “ Red b0 notoriely, Nava Tiew novel ina;r:unfffi: Appleton's. 1ta title s * Miss Nangy.” —*“The history of pottery is the history of hu. manity.” At.all evonts, 80 says A Albert Jacquemart, who has given fo the world s hi hly interesting "‘History of tho Ceramic Art,” in which he traces the fashions of dishes fn all ages and among all races, from Egypt to Bir~ minfi;m. — Saturday Review pronounces *'0ld Ken- sington,” which i5 the longest story Miss Thack-" ersy hos ye written, to” be the one that gives the higheést impression “of the richness and power of her genins. i —Duyckink's “Cyclopedia of American Litera- ture,” having been revised to date, with: 350 pagas of new matter incorporated mto the body of the book, is to be reissued by Zell in fifty semi-monthly parts. . It will make two guarta volumes of léglog Doges each. & —The es consequent 1] e death of Sir Henry Balwer (Lord D..m’;m; which' re- tarded the completion of the “Life of Lord Palmerston,” have been overcome the enorgies of Mr. Bentley ; and the third volum: bringing:rhil life down to 1857, will appear naxai September. Lard Dalling’s ** Bxetches of P Melbourne, and Lafayetts” will also appear tho B B pincott, & Co. . B. Lippincol . 8NNOuRCe & new caretully revised edition of Prescott's wux.klg The issue is to be » volame 8 month. The ed- itor is Mr. John Foster Kirk, author of - “The History of Charles the Bold.” —Mr. Jobn Bartlett is about fo lssue s naw sions nd fofar: fally. How completely separated in her own mind the man and the Emperor were may be seen from s singlo judgment which sho expresses. Sho was convinced that Napoloon had. mstaken his toall compleinta and remonstrances, and do- pasturing vast bodies of grass to nogood purpose. Maoy of tho residents of thoso claims were bachalors, nocosearily absent a good part of the day Derding thoir caitlo; and into their #till remsin loyal to their legitimato Chiof. He had given no pledges for himaelf, and ho do- clared thst Schoachin had no authority to bind & e not, in fact, Boticeabls in any way. But you in- voluntertly notice the emall foot and delicats hand; also, the dinmond ring, which scoms not out of place upon the taper finger. belief—* in her opinion,” talks nonsense. And sho gives & comparison 'of dates and facts Which certainly tends to prove that he might have baen the son of his mother's husband. That Kin Lous ofien eaid the boy was not his, she se edition of his “ Familiar Quotations,” and ‘the new work will appear 1n_six volumes octavo, The first edition_appesred eighteen years ago, and the fitth and last appeared in 1868. J. 0. Halliwell, who has taken the nama convenience of transportation, and his ashes aro 830 ed home, and " scattered on tho graves of his ancestors ; for there is nothing for which the dying savage £0 earnestly pleads with bis companions as their promiss to carry him 1t is sometimes aascrted that the Modoca have . e g BBLIes gasortéc G 9 i 4 ik Tio. oo | cabing tho Modocs would forco their way, | e e i improved in disposition since the American con- | home to regt; and nothing from w 20| nd commis potty . depredations, or por- en, 83 your eye rests upon the frill of 80ft | yosption; that instead of statesman or soldier | mits, but explains it on on the theory that he i in i : quost. B. F. Dowall, for instaace, states that, | Pieonely adjures thom bo Cetiver pim 8o the @i | potrats unmonfionsble indecencios, It 'tho | 16c0 about her throat, you wonder that matronly | which ho sspired to bo (in 1955 msture intendsd | was half med, and 8id 50 only to teasa s Wife. | fps, i 1o feok mocks ot i e S Bl him for & poet; that ho had an inventive, ori- G. V. 8. | ‘St of the o Life and o softler left a wifo Dbohind him, thoy | ladies ever, even in traveling, wear stiff linen o Shnkapears’ even worso than the twenty years go, they wore all roving, hostile, | “pis pation were upon which he has been many years engaged. ‘barbarous savages ; while now moro than half of | Modocs in the rapacity and cruelly with | Would comgnl her to gerve thom, fling water | collars; and sgain yon marvel that they do not | ginal, snd powerfnl imagination, which, under & i U obout the house, whoop, yell, bang the doors, | wear diamond ear-rings,—solitary gems, rivaled | propar training, would have produced somethin, " i bt el il ISR amatch articlos out of £hi capboard, aud bobave | only by the sparkle of tho eyo, aad the gloam of | Brost, AB fo hs faste: . © £ TOADEAD e B e Intoat wa ' B the el epeak good English. This ia x rank delusion, | ) o SO0 Po e T Slaves, thoy generally | Generally with outrageous and abominsble indo- | o loving, life-giving emile: - * He cannot tolerate French pastry,”ghesn- | ' o b Sere lows Sang,” is being translated for Holt & Will- common to American egotism. Their “loyal- | ;30 war op the timid sud peaceful Indians of | cency. ~For sevoral montbs,. overy summer, | This Woman has ono of tho eweetest faces | swored. ‘‘He is insensible to Racine, but ha ole star, that, with thy aott, A Lght, i Falonen Houis Series,” the Putnams " a8 with & great mejority of Indians, is sim- | Pit' River. Of i g Sconchin’s Indians would bo furloughed from | God ever sent to gladden the waste placos of | delights in Shakespearo, Goethe, and Schiller. oy b aving withdrawn_their announcement i ty)' grea i Pit River. Of the captives taken, they retained - i 2 A BEMER Ihevo song to sing to-night, having t in their ply fear; they aro neither more nor less kind | as many as they wished for their owa sorvice, | i Foservation, and come down on Lost River | 1ifo; a foco framed in silver,—tho aoft. fleccy | Tho_ great, the strange, aud the tragic, snit big Betore thos takist thy mouraful leave, favor, Hero Carthew,” the new work by Louisa i and tho Iakes. They would also bring hundreds | silver of gray curls. How can a woman dye her | wild and somewhat vaguo habits of thonght and | Since then 50 softly time has atered, Parr, author of * Dorothy Fox," will also e arts ‘That months hovo almost seemed 1ike hours, it w and sold the remainder to the tribes about The Dalles and Des Chutes., It was by means of this pear in the same series. his melanchol; —In criticising the adverb “illy” nsedbya tompersment. Of the hair after time has frosted it go besutifully 7 at interests him is architecture, than they wero as savages—if anything, losa upon hundreds of ponica along, to graze, though o F leaving many bohind upon the reservation; but, Just here let me give a briof sketch of this And T am like a little tho only one generous to each other; and experience gives I t painful proof of tho fact that the younger and | barter that they frst obtained u etock of ponios, | 38 Sl oitonss, they woman's life : : | probablyfrom tho vastnuss of o produsta, KG | ., Sistalpt o og gmol s Sovers, New York journal, the London Orchestra i ‘English-speakang generation are less truthful, | gme before themselves. These elaves, like all DENAVED WELL ENOUGH GENEBALLY. Mrs. Clomence Lozier, M. D., 861 West | hates music, and does not understand painting Son g 'mid the shedes of even, forms tho English philolo%im that it was nsed less . homest, and less virtuous than theold, | other;property, were sacrificed upon the death | It Was the universsl gentiment of | Thirty-fourth strect, Now York, is by birth sn | or sculpture.” But,oB! with sadder heart I sing,— in * sober seriousness.” Perhaps the New York 2 of the owner, dmngh the practice is now diecon- | the selllera that = they would make | American, and was educated in ono of tho best | Of his general character Madame R.'s concep- T sing of one who dwells in Heaven! journal will retaliate. simon-pure savages. tinned. The last matance when they attempt. | Yery, Little complaint “over the loss | literary schools of .our country. Early an | tion was opposed to the common one, which (a —The_lstest boon to literary travellers In orphan, sho married at tho age of 16, and be- | that time) painted him as unimprossiona- The winds are goft ; the clouds are few; “Graphine,” which is described by thie London of ‘tho pasturage; for that country is large enough, and rich cuongh in grass, hosvon wot, to maidtain all that will ever gef into it for the next twonty vears. But what they did vigorous- Iy protest against was, tho promistious running to and fro of the impudent snvages, and the in- And tenderest thought my heart beguiles, floating up mist and dew, e pale young moon comes out snd amiles * And, to the green, regounding shore, In'silvery troops the Tipploa crowd, L will give an instance of CONSPICUOUS SHARBINESS in their modern treatment of one an- other. When Cspb. Jack revolted and * left the reservation, he and his band went press a3 & little packet containing four emall- Bheets of paper, and on cutting off a little bit, no laxier thau one's finger-nail, and soakiag it in a tablespoon of water, if will produce a beau- tifal purple-colored ink. This condensed Writ- ing ink can be carried in_the pockatbook, liks od it was ot the doath of Capt. Georgo's daughter, from the cffects of & bum, when they wished to immolato all her Elaves; but the whites intervened, and provented it. When & maiden blo, decided, and obatinate. Ho hss, she says, none of thode qualities, oxcopt the Iast, and even that sometimes deserted him. Thiswas written 8o Into as 1858, when hbis irresolution was, I should have supposed, well cnongh understood. Mad- R.'s description of this sida of his character came the mother of Beven sons,—the only sur- viving oxo, A. W. Lozier,of Yonkers, N. Y., a suc- cossful physician and surgeon, and & frue Chris- tisn gentloman. From her childhood, sho was devoted to good works ; - was Superinfondant of down to Loat River and ongaged in |y . g, o ARRIVES AR WOUATROOD, r. | tolerable pother tney made in theirfamilies. As | & mission Sunday-school, s_tract-distributor, an | ame Lifts up its voice and lsughs aloud 3 _to i X party in her bonor. po! y made in their i s 9 T, amo R i k gambling with Cept. Goorge sad his Muckalucs i carly 2s the summer of 1873, there was a fierco | Abolitionist o equal-rights advocete, and a | is vivid: And atar on star, all soft and z it . and na trsveller need Hor young companions ssscmbie, end together 3 onie anc ot s e O ion Bt blld coating i e, et o Yo ks Sty bias court-plaster, and no traveller ned in the fature and menacing undercnrrent of talk running among all tho settlors of that rogion, especially on the Oregon: side. It was evident that there was needed only s slight occasion of mischicf- —M. Emile Saigey's *‘Unity of Natural Phe- nomens,” to_be republished goon by, Estes & Lauriat, it is said, goes a step beyond Tyndsll and the regular Correlation-and-Conservation- * awellon them for. years, and st last gradually forget thom, Whan bo wda soung, hs bud two fixed ideas, that he was to bo Emperor of France, and that 1 was to bo liborator of Ttaly.!” ch 420, 106t 10 ¢arth and steepod in balm, * My spirit flosts in ether‘too. Loved one, though lost to humsn sight, Y foel thy spiri: lingering nesr, : (ilzmzth Lake Indians). The letter were suc- 3 cossful, and eventually won twents-0dd ponies, i besides other articles. - When the time of reck- oning came, Capt. Jeck refused to give up the they dance and sing wild, dithyrambic rounde- | laysy improvised songs of the woods and the waters—as thus : Friendless.” At the ageof 27 she was a widow, supporting her family (ber husbsnd having boon for yoars an invalid) by teaching. Eloven yoars oniee, and . proposed that they stiould try a - Jamping echoes of the rack,, doing to bring forth a bloody outbreak or mas. | 8howas principal of a young ladies’ seminary, B ootibg-mteh for them Capt. George had el ke omenlier . b 5 7 T e e 8 e | B T s tha sty I cuiors £ sofug'as T feel the Light b of-Forces school, and. assumes the identity nob On the part of the reservation, what were the | the study of chemistry, physiology, and anat- | ¢ Ho has a calm crust, but furions Italian pas- u.fi‘nfi?u&wflfiffi;}mm&m H only of force under its soveral modes of haat, © fewer followers than he, and they were not arm- Flitien, whits 28 masyehieils, : b c u 22, sions boil beneath it. As a child, he was subject Though mute the bymn and hpshed theprayer, | light, electricity, and the rest, but also of mata . ervades, i 3 ed ; 50, after mucn fierco jangling, he wes forced | Running in the water, green; and deep, and atill. manifestations ? It was and is argued, that the | omy. H to consent. Theu Czpt. Juck turned bully, be- | = - ‘Eiho, hi-Bo, hi-hay] Tititude of tho vhol Kiamath Rocareation in o | - Hor first medical studies were directod by hor | to fits of anger, such 85 I nover ‘saw in any one Fos il ey dions p ter. " The only sabatance boing ether, It consti- gen to bluster like a pirate, and_openly threat- | Hicho, hi-ho, hi-hay I considerable 85 to preclude any useful cultiva- | brother, s physician of. the old school. _Sho wsa | else. While they lnsted he did not know What Which talls that worsnip hua heon there; tates not only atoms, but electricty, and heat, ened Capt. George's life, and finally drove the | This is the substance of one ‘of the | tion of the cereals, and hence, notwithstanding | refused admission to that ackool after Elizabeth | he said or did. A breath of incense left alone and light, and so-forth. & : +Ho is procrastinating, undecided, and irroso- ‘Whoro many a censer awuag around, " Tho frish Boclesiastical Reoord snnounces 2s ponies coolly off | songs, as translated for me, and I have | the enormous dimensions of the reserve, it was | Blackwell graduated, but subsequently was ad- lute. ‘Which thrills the wandorers, liks to ano roady for publication in a faw days the new se- : On tho other hand, how cdmirable was | imifated the rbythmical movement =s | pecessary to furlough tho Indianss good while | mitted to the Eclectic College of Syracuse, from Courage ho certainly has, and of every ! the condnct of Schonchin, in contrash. | nearly as possiblo, For five consecutive | svory sumemer, to pather roots and feh outgide | which uho graduted. i Kind, physical and moral.” © - Who treads on consecrated ground. Zohdy Lor prolication (o a Lo Jayp tho new se- : He snd his faithful hundred were afterward | nights, the maiden and her chosen companions, { of it. - But no excuse was mado, or Tn 1860, she commenced a course of free Iec- [ And again on the same point she speaks of 1 know thy soul, from worlds of bliss Histors," by the Iate Eugene 0'Curry, . H.T. i removed to the Yainax Eeservation, and, in the | locked arm in with_wristlets and anklets | - " COULD BE MADE, tures to womon, continuing them once n weck | him 8 agrecable and sttractive when s child, Yet stoops awhile to dwellwith me,— A:_Tho first volume of the new edition of Arch- 2 “repring of 1872, they departed on a fwo-montha' | of the chanize-bush, walk to and fro, on the | for not bringing back Capt. Jack—st least, dur- | for three years, until they culminated in tho | but in mature ife bis -gentlences was only in Hath caught the prayer I breathed in tlis, aall's “Monnsticon Hibernionm” will be issued Icave of abaence, to gather roots.and fish. The | sume line, all night; rattling amulets and deers’- | ing the winter. As things were managed in that | establishment of the New York Modical Collego | appearanco. ‘“Ho hag great self-command, but That I at last might dwell with thee, shortly. day before I reached the reservation, Schon- | toes, chanting and singing, continually. The | latitude, the Indians-were not at all to be blamed | for Women. This College was chartered by the | au fond ho is irritable.”” One would ‘think he I liu‘-rlammuffi:: g« sy s - —Messts. George Routladgo & Sons announce chin's furlongh expired, and the ofd Chief | In ogcasionally, stand decorously by and | for wanting their anoual furlongh; for it wes | Stoto in 1863, Mre. Lozer is its Dosn, and:| wad more than iritable, for on snother pago | That thrillame like the spirivasighs; that thoy havo puschased tho copyright of all ihe ‘monnted his horse and rode forty miles through | look on; but, unlike the Californis Indisns, | with them absolutely one of two things—dig | Profeesor of Diseasea of Women and Children. | Medamo R. is roportedas eaying: I havo known To3t maken 1o mine s Jow replies,— ublished and: unpublished works of the late 4 For incomo from her practice is $15,000 or 20, | him, nfter b conversation in which be betrayed A 3010 o1l low mad sweet like thine, §/ord Liytton, and that they are sbout t issue an farce. 3 WHEN GOING INTO BATTLE, her ; somotimes,. even, being obliged fo sell & | may bo too frosty for the successful production L 5 s il know 4he Modocs generally strip themsclves naked, | horse to enable him to' carry out 1 generons | of zqhe“‘ and ,,znim to import 40,000 pounds of | Bervizes to the' College -ere gratuitons, and sho | Dissimulation was with him a study aud he caz- ’mgm“fig‘:‘t:n fifih;"g}f‘" This new edition will be duodecimo size, and will and hideously besmesr the front of their | impulses. . flour o year; but it exhibits a fine, spacious ficld | hag also donated money to it liberally, rioditto tho extent of disguising his featurcs. His SH1l touched with tlat exprossivs gracs contain all the novels, poems, dramas, and mis- fodies with blood-colored stresks and Indians are more of that cereal in an sdvanced stage of growth, | -8be is.consulted byall schools of modicine, | long moustache was intendod to couceal his That made thee lovely cll thy dsya; callaneous prose writing, forming the only come mplashes of - paint. Every frontiersman | - ATTACHED' 70 THEIR CHILDREN and s new thraghing-machine. It is a good Jati- | being broad and liveral in hor views, and ig much | mouth, and he had disciplined his eyes. This By that sweet smile that o'er it ahed. plete uniform edition ever isan: ‘The volames > Imows and dreads tho tesrible significance of red | than most tribes in California. 8o poignant aud { tude for hotel-keeping, and Government rations | estcomed by some of the finest physicians of | latter practico began in 1¢48. Madame R. in ‘A beauty like the light of ev will bo published monthly. The first volume— i Jpuint mben employed by an Indian ; itis the | so overwhelming is the.grief of & father on 108- | aro cheap to the travolar at 5) centa » menl, | Now York, who soad to hor difiicult and puzzling | that year noticed o chango in them, znd asked Whote soit expression nover i “Engene Aram”—will bo published early. i * % “biack flag of savage warfare. Theirwomen often | ing his son, thathe sometimes rushes #%aY in | when thero is no other stopping-place for sixty | casés; bub ehe calls herself a truo discipls of | him ‘what was the mattcr. * Nothing,” he an- Eren when its soul had flown to Heaven, Jane: to be followed in July by * Palbam.” o {g0 fortl o battlo with them. Alvy Bolos relates | midwinfer, asconds the highest mountain, | miles on one side, sud twenty on the other. Theln. | Hehnemann. 3 svered. A duy or two lator sho again remarked T kaow fhoe by Lie shircy crovm —The Athenzum snys that he following in-" ; Ythe {oflomn%’smry, which may ‘possibly be a | plunges himself in the enow, and fasts—weep- | dian, with his one annusl shirt and his stomach | _Yet, notwithstanding ll this woman is, and | their 0dd appearance, aud a¢ last she discovored, Oh1 by those blossod sigms alane, scription, hitherto unpublished, is emblazoned ilittle apocryphal, though tho accounts roceived | ing, and besting his bresf. It would seem. | halt’fall of roots, on & frosty and nipping morn- | all she has dong, aho ia not cutitled to vota 88 | apparently by his owh confeseion, that he ha: 1 ¥now theo there,—11l Know thee thesol Founa tha banquetting hall of Bulwavs ol sf $rom the front during the present war go to con- | that, if bis friends did not foliow him and bring’| ing looks into the cozy dinug.room and sees a | the cqual of thoe miserable quack who solls | bybn secustoming hifnsolf to keop his cyelids 7 e ten R = {firm it: 101854, when Capt. Judy was campaign- | him back, ho would perish. ampered Chinaman serving a resorvation fami- | humbug-pills, or the carelsss druggist whopro- | closed, snd ‘to throw into his eyes a vacant, For ah! thine eye, within whose aphera Eoad tho Bade of the OId Boul Tres, "'+ They hold_that firo was onoa lost throughout | {7 and guests (the travelors) with hot, greased.| Pares poison-prescriptions by mistake, dreamy oxpression. ,n}:lzfl 'Wfizflfiz:fll;‘}mg met, Here be trust fast. Opinion free; - a the desert_to got it renewed, though he know well thero was ot & bayonet on the reservation, “and that the whole mstter was an unmitigated ing against the uuited bands of tho Modocs and Shasteecas, on the Kismath, north of Yreks, ~vomen wera frequently scen among the Indians, they take no part in the exercises, and profane them by no obscene remarks. on the cere- inony i8 ended, the father makes liberal pres- ents to the maiden’s friends who have attended all theworld, but that the coyote and the wolf stoleit, from some quarter, and restored it. The roots, or starve. If t n keep’ cattle instoad of ponics, they might have subsisted fatly on their flesh; but they had not, and there was no one to advise {bom. Yuinex oy had sense enough to cakes of Government flour. It would not an- Bver o have an Indisn in thero cooking, for he 000 o year; and sho Las a Inrge charity practice bosido. She s also physician in chargo of tha Hospitzl for Women and Children, and “Presi- dent of the Now York Suffrage Society. Her At an early honr we creep into our ciean beds, and ropeating “ Now I lsy me down to aloep,” 1o suger, break his own - farniture in his rage.” The first gign of tho etorm was a swelling of the nostrils, * ko thoso of an excited horso}” then his eyes becams bright and Ius lips guiverod. Bhe has muach to say of the peculiar character of his ambition. He desirod most eagerly avery- 1t givos an answer to my prayer, And brings my soul from Hesven'a sign ‘Thst I will know and mest thee there, Afust swim in love and softness sel Forah! its dark and liqnid bexms, entirely new edition of his works, to be known a8 the Knebworth edition. Amanmmb- lished books is a novel, entitled 3, and 8 play the title of which is The Captive.” Knightly Right Hand. Caristian knee, TR e Wit mrome. s ZLsughter open. Slander dumb., Hearth whare rooted Friendshipa grow, fighting, and sometimes found smong tho | coyote bad the secret principle of fire in his toe- | might surreptitiously hand victuals out of the | etc., (tho prayer which scems most appropriate | thing that he thought would give him posthurm- lghs, 3520 S0ne day, the . enemy came- sud. | nals, and ho imparted it to the turtle, than car. | Z3Ght, SAITSRt otyaom; Aad the hotel laria | £0 tho ootasitny, slumber tranquilly . morn: | ous fame. . 2 ¥ e e bt Tt hoobsn denly upon Lim, sdvancing rapidly over the | ried himup into the mountains, where the fur- | o hankrapted. ing, nedisturbed by oven a dream of horror. « Like most men of imagination, he lives in ‘Down from the gatea of Paradise; Eaem i evmtoroe bro of 2 Lill, and filling tho air with & perfect | tle communicated it to the fiints and trees; 80 | Byt every intelligént reader knows, too well, rning comes nll too soon. We find it -hard | the future. _As a child, his desire was to become ‘Were bright and radisnt like the m by T e v A + ‘shower of arrows. Bat not & male barbarian { thatan Indian can now exiract it by percussing THE BICKENING STORY to shake off slecp, which somehow clings never'| an historical charactor. He has no moral sense ; Yet soft and dewy a8 the eve,— If thy esp in them may ¥ : ho docs mot care about le bien ou le mat, ca fui | - To0 ead for eyes whare smiles aze born, P binten O Boot rrso. was in sight. e, . THEIR WOMEN ‘WERE MOVING TO THE CHARGE, 2fore them, in solid line of bat~ the one or drilling the other. BLYDELENELOKKE » (the Chief sbove) gave them, as they beliove, slt things that they poseess, and taught them their of the average Indian reservation. Who blames Capt. Jack for not wanting to go beck to i, if ho could help himself—back to this ac- B0 closely 05 when we feel that wo must get up;- that Charley wants to make. the beds, and sef his houso in order. § We find the dreasing-room clean and aweot, est egal, on plutot il n'en concoit pas la difference ; nor does he care much about %rasent Teputa- tion, except a8 an instrument. Ho begins now Tqo young far eyes that learn to geieve, 1 wonder if this cool, sweet breeze. ‘Hath touched thy fips and found thy brow ; A fow weeks ago Misa E. Stuart Phelps resd botoro the Now England Woian's Glub an osey on ‘““Woman’s Dress,” urging some very decids twhile the wairiors slunk. nlong behind then:, cursed i i o 0 d ; . pest-house ? 1t was & miraclo of sayage - idischarging their arrows between. For & mo- | nses and names. Ho showed their ancestors | fidelitythatSchonchin voluntarily rode forty miles | With plenty of water and towels; 'end, after | to expoct to fill as many pages in history as his For all my spirit hears and eees 2 2 9 “ament, the Americans wero taken sback. Their | how to make elk-skin hgm{ end boots or leggins, | to ,?ma furloughi renerwed. e m‘,flf{.’; were WQ&h&g our faces and reducing the troublesome mmolo has done, and heyh%pgsu that th:? will be Recalls thee to my memory now ; chflud g::rmr:‘ha Interee Q:E .flfsgnlll b ebion) i ‘traditional gailantry, not a whit diminished by | and that they shouldpfuck out'thoir beards ; | p chained tigor, tamperad with by fools. They | bair to order, a8 we sit by the open window, with | brighter; at least that they will be darkened by Fox every hour we hreathopant AL a0 pablisbed 1t mseversl Tt of the i } xoi on the frontier, forbade them from | and he instructed the squaws in the artof ( ot him play to'theend of his chain ; thay pulled | R0 dust to sunoy, inhaling the fresh air, end | fewer shadows. - Andif he belleves, as 1 have T loes that Sits this lonclo b bierd R e b (finng on tho tender gex.’ But what could be | weaving ekull-caps, ctc. - When an .In- | it they coaxed him, they threatoned, they threw | enjoying the vild, romantic scenery we feel that | resson to think he does, that the man who “Already Bllod 80 full Of theo, B e o T done?” They could not shoot = bullet at a | disn walks on the high hills or mont- | him crombs, they let himgo ngain. "Ho suarled, | traveling has ceased to bo a fatigno, and- ehould | founds freo institutions in Itely will ‘be praisod Yt many a tear these oyes must weop, Fpartant subject, and Mesers. 3. 1. Osgood & be classed among our pleasuros and recreations. | & thousand years henco, he will'do it. He will “And many » sin must be forgiven, Colari pubticn the perfected ascay [n g emall Tight sugle over the Women's Leads, though thoy would doubiless havo dono that if they conld. Then tho gallant Captsin gave the or- der, “Break down the breastworks!® It was | stone to stone, and he would be offended ¢ the | From firat to ast, there has beca Limogbe 1o done. Inhis report of the battle, Capt. Judy | absence of & single one, " =% | bear on the solution of this quastion & mis | quartor's worth of thanks, remembering’ past | But ho bad all sorts of motives, ss most men LITERARY NOTES. ive pieces” ;i mentioned that' B fow squawa weto hiliod by | © Bofors the: Mackslucs fell from their hugh, e of e e o e e 16 fho, ahape ot 5relsygutgAk, Bave. Beside tho ono abovestated, others drove |* —Henry Spencer's “Sociology ™ is in press at | ti7 pieces” sent by writers to nowspapers of . ey gatate, ey wero beppy people. Blydoliue- | gimuvr-smarss nmeomrs axp patznva, | Fotion potatoss, sour broad, aad vle coffeo, . | him into the war of 1860, Ho longed for mili- | tho Applatons'y 3 ; oo ol Lo e by sy b “Ono custom the Modocs have which | lokke gave them. freely all tl ogs to €2J07, | The Modoca kiow amaw'a motal when they sco | Erie bas - threo_oxcellont esting-houses, —nt | tary glory snd ho drosded sssassination. Th > Muthew Arnold has a e bock in preé on Prgpariz, aad sould be pickednp by BT is peculisr. the morning, at dsy- | without the toil ‘of woman's hands. Pleassnt | jhim; theyhave dononothing, all their Lives, but | Hornelaville, Susquehanna, and Tarner's ; how | Carbonari novor coased to plot againet him from | * Higher Schools and Universities in Garmany.” | 1% ¥10 (hough e Tt e break, * beforc any ome has ‘lssued. from'| yoots had they, aud all manner_ of flosh | yend'faces. They know George Crook from an- | Many more, I cannot say ; but at Dunkirk, be- | the time of thocoup d'etat. The Italian con- | —Mre. Somerville's posthumous work will ba derod by Jad “B","'m’h,m ey oo his wigvem, they all ariso in their rudo | —of olk, of door, of antelope, of flsh—with | other man. Thoy are no dotards ; they are mo | Waro, and oat not unlcesupon the point of starva- | epirators for frecdom caradlittlo for his outragos | “ Peraonal Recollections from Early Lifo to 01d | Fo2Gered by Judge Biatehford, In » case ivoit, couches end join in aa orison, msny green and goodiy herbs which tho curlh |.whiners. Tlioy judged tho Groat Father, ‘in | to, eod then sparings. upon his own subjects ; they wanted to kill him | Age.” : Towhatever way &n suthos may have orignally: © y D . o thinga After ‘losving Hornelsville, - the scenery is arriot Fenimore Cooper, oneof the two.|" bt q big edsavs, poems, of other composi- 5 A KIND OF GHANT, intoned with that hsuntivg and mournfal cadence—that hoarse, long, wailing sound— +which is so infinitely ssddening in all the musio: of the American Indians; It would seem to bo & Xind of invocation -to that Grest- Boing (Ko- ‘moose) whom the Modaca _vaguely Tecogniza -as the Crestor. This wes related ‘tome by N. B. Pzll, a soldier under Capt. Jesso Walker, who ains, ho carefully refrains from displacing or rolling down any stones, because Blydelkne- lokke walks on the mountains, stepping from they ent, without sweat, or toil, or chage, - Their daya wero fall of songe, aud their nights of swest love, and Isughier, and the dance. Thoir medicines 'talked with the Chief on high, and their words were wise. No pestilence, no black death, nor blight, nor deadly pains, ever paasad. smong_their villages. But o maiden of- the, Muckalucs wrought an odious thing in the sight and they coddled him. They begged bim to come back ; thoy sdvised him to come back ; they sent agents to urge him to como back: Washington, by bis sons whomho sent ; and the lntter they caught, and cast them out of- the vineyard, and slew them. I -once overheard a poor, simple-witted Digger Indian teliing his ‘comrade sbout somo terrjblo invention of tho white. man—ovidently a repesting-rifio. He wound up by saying, ** When ho shoot & man, he hit bim same-time bofore, behind.” But the Modocs know which end of & ienry nfle At Hornelaville wo_find o -breakfast equal to that of first-clags hotel. and when we pay our | 75 centa for the same, we foel like us«i{ng [y most lovely. Gray old mountains bend frown- ingly over emiling valloys, green and fresh with- spring-timo, through which the brooks wind in oud out, in ever-clianging crace aad bosuty. Tho view of Portage Frils is beautifal —the spray dancing in_the sunlight, and tho rainbow coloring gorgeonsly the rocky sides of the glen. At Buffalo, with 8 sigh, we bid good-bye fo do it if ho Kopea that history will sccept it a8 a sort of compensation for hia having dostroyed such institations in France.” 28 the'supporter of Papal tyranny, the supporter of Austria in Italy, and tho enemy of Italian unity. .The Orswi attempt gave hima shock from which he was long_in_rccovering. * The war,” says Madame R., “ relieves him from an apxiety which pressed ' on him from Jan. - 14, 1853, until Jan. 1, 1839— the fear of the Carbomari. Ho has breathed froely only sinco he could give notice " His con- Ero thesc pale lids shall sink to sleep, And you snd Ishall meet in Heaven. literary daughters of the Awerican novelist, will soon publish s *¢ History of the Oneida Tribe of Indians.” T & 5.5 —The Rev. Lemuel Moss, D. D,, has been s pointed by tho: Baptist Publication_Society to edit o history of the Baptist' denomination” for sdlt o b 3 ¢ denominatio 2 Gon, Yoin P. Hawkiss, brothérindsw of o lto Gon, Ganby, s calléctivg materials 1or bock, enitled “What to Wear,” within & fow - e ; 4 1t has always been supposed that the * fugi- tions, he can at any time assert his rights_over them, and prevent their uncopyrighted publica- tion, in book form, by other parties. Jnd‘go Blatchford said he would make & procedm for* this mattar, ¢ if there were none.” s —¢Le Catholicisme: avant Jesus Christ” is, to 'say the.'lesst, a most uing‘hr title for the- ‘book of & warthy Romag - Catholic, csnom of: of Paris. Ita suthor, fistencd o it one morning with a strango feeling | of men. I wrath and vengeince, Blydelkne- | Yiio load comeg out of. If men will Tom’ Ereand the “ James Fisk, Jr.,” and betake | to them that he accepted their terms. W while he lay.cloge alang the brow of s hill befors | lokke low her with bis hammar, wherowith be | theiveq siger. and let him ot Tarwe ";’&in‘"flg: us to tho: Lake - Shore, which runs smopthly, -| viction that he had R B the saakizg 6t 8 grost | a biography of that Tamented offcer. . E Ttk e W B T orova thal: the- battle, glancing down his gun-barrel and.| created and fashioned the world. Ho emoto her | yet them pot aqueal if they are bitten. : The pity | aud is usually on time; but ob, the dugt! * Dusf | General has long boen known, but is here | ' —The London Afhenaum announces that there | At T40pe B o Jaiiiert; FoTon £ Pagans,: saiting for tho daybreak to show the nick in the | unto ;ideam. on the spot ; but her guilty lover | of i js—the griovous pity—that it was the vot. | thou art, and unto dust thou ehalt retur,” may | brought ont very strongly. He said to Madame | is o prospect of a revised odition,—tho ninth— Sowrs, and~ Ohristians draw their origin from: sights.” = escaped. tlons whowere bitten, and not tho rosarvation | sppropriatoly bo quoted upon this roud, R., anco st Ham, “I trust that somo day Lshall | of the * Encyclopwdia Britennica.” .| What' he calls primitive revelation. According All“'the” Modocs were sbeent from | the SHE WAS TUDNFD INTO BTONT, people. No doubt the Modoes are o cruel, re- | . /This reminds me of a new feature which I dis--| command a great army. Iknow that I should —A German translator of Cardinal Wiseman's | P : - W symbols are found by all na- reservation - ‘and * widely - scatered . Overi| on' fhe momntainmde, and the grest ham- | Yonieful, and implecsbio race; bab thoy Lno | cover hero. The American Bible Society has | distinguish mysclf; 1 feel I havo evory military | 1 Horw Syrisce » describos fho divin a8 the | i¥n "thoir worship i iaentical in al ita en- the countrs, et tholr eummor Inbors; |mer lGikewiss, boside hef. ‘There thoy | {homaster whon they seehim. ' pluced neatly-bound book, containing selec- | quality.” Yet'with a return of self-distrust ho | ¢ from - an - Irisb-family - desconded-in-Spain- | (OR8 % +the traditions oonveyed: in the. _bence, Lsaw none ‘of the Chiefs, and did not | havo Jain_through many, many,many Anowe, 3 : * | tions from thia Old and New Testamonts, in | added, * Perhaps it would bebetter for mo to die | born-in-Fngland-oducated-in-Ttaly—consecratod | SEPHE BeT Mhe 080 Cong, BPRREaNEe wn U ot perfeetly seiatactory account o the tibe. | plaiuly visible on the mouniain “an GTCHSSUNE | Gourting Among Eagiien Emi racks at the side of tha-cars, four in eash car; | in the belief that I am fittod to be a groat Gener- | Syrian scholar.” . y - o | Zoraster lactads the general | expetationor's 3 ‘ - reminder to the unhappy . luckaltcs of the folly P e M BTARLS | g fhat saint or sipnor may read his Bibls and | al thad to Tisk tho exporiment. But Iwill tryit, | I Go A-Fiskitig” is the titla of Mr. W. C. | RE0R 0 PRRe) o BEOC , FRR AL g, TILE MUCEALUCS, and weakness of women, ond of the once happy i i loarn patience as he travels. i T can,andT beliova that L shall try 1t.” This was | Prime’s now book, which the Harpors are iseu- | qoernfic®s 3% o beliet fn Asis snd Europe. - known £o the Americans 1s tho Klamaili Lake «eatato_which they lost, forover - throngh Lior ““How did yon manage to win her affections s0 * Baut, wero I going to direct & missionary-work in 1859; six weaks beforo the battle of Magenta, in EA.n'othur Life of Jesus is putforth in Ger- —————— Todinas, have the same language and the same | wickednoes. On the mounisin, lowering high, | quickly, Dan? The Xeceipis worth knowing.» ks s | i and mearty loab his-army customs, and their history will capplement tho | wLich they call * Noylis,” just ot tho adge.of | * O, that was simplo: anough,” replied ha, | 1orLiobeneft of Lho Loy ol b oyer A | b o rping. it and was saved by | maoy. this timo by De. Koim: s Brofossor b . . Colored Dresses. it Sther: Moy divide. themselves isb. two matn | tho clafing aud leaping wavas of Upper Klsmadh | *Thé Srst night 1 amived at. the’ lodgigoonss | 1oaryreird j i T | Macitahon, ‘Hp orst have bocome convincod fu | Giescen University.. The. book sttractaatten- | Thé Scienfific American says it is- ok oftsn’ 4 that campaign thet with all his military knowl- | tion in theological circlos gbroad: | - .. .| that we find scientific items of any especia de- ‘bodies, the Ewekinnes and the Blykinnes, which ‘Liake, ia keen the gigantic form of tho Woman of in Auckland T’ found *myself sitting nozt to & apolis, tc., a few Sofas and ensy. ohairs, npon edge, tho qualities of & commander in tho field —Prof. Huxloy's mow volume is_entitled gres of interest to the members of the fair sex - names” mean ‘respectively - “lowlandors™ and ‘| ‘Stone, *extonding farup tho slope, and beside | young woman &t supper, who, I soon found; was | wi eiry. and alsk e, g “uplsnders.” The Eocskinnes dwell around | Her head tho Hammer of Croation. And ever | 0o of the nowly-arrived emigrants. I looled ra‘i’cctx{'u?‘?fi?{figlwémnm :u&':'hflin":xfi';f wore lagking’ to him. That conviction, it is | “Critiques and Addresses.” - Tho pspers now | who may, perchance, glance uwroqxgngflg;h\fi" Slamath Lako, the Biykinncs on Sprague River. | since that fatal day, tho haploss Muckalucs have | her over, and found sbo was o round, strong, | spolis I Lavo,seen twenty o thirtyladics wait- | moro.than probable, weighed upon him st the | ropublished, desling chiofly with educational,'| now we beliov we have got ons which s simply ; Thnpfih they have intermarried 8 good deal with |‘been ~condemned 'to. labor and to .pain— | chery-looking lass, with 8 lsughing face, and | jng for houts, eome too tired aud siok to hold up | outsot of ths: campaign of 1870, when political | scientific, and philosophical subjects, indicato, | absorbing. * Probably, Madamo or Miss, you are. tho Aodocs, giving rise o border race called | ‘all - because of ,the’ primal sin of woman. | fhought she'd do. - I didu't know how to go ool | thgir hends ; but, if forced to Lie dotwn, they | nocessity’ and the hopo of saving his throme| says the author, the high-water mark of the va- | the posessor of a summer dress, made from® Combatwash, they ‘have warred on them'even | If anybody posseeses the reismto ingennity to | ing around her,—as 'L am certain you would bave | must lie upon thd floor, &8 thers was not even a | for his boj compelled him, as ho thought, to put | rious tides of occupation by whiclt he has been | some white diaphanous material; and it msy; 4 himself at the head of his troops. * carried along sinco tho boginning of the year | also b imagined that during your shopping ‘you more, and beaten them time out of mind. They are deadly hereditary enermies. subjects an authority such as few, if any, Cali- ‘hunt this story back into s distorted version of the'tale of Eden, he {8 welcome to it. ‘Why not | .allow that the Indian sages, also, in their medi- substance of that treaty was remewed. This done, sir, no oifenso to you,—bai Just spoke & word or fwo with e, sad 'when o camo. out into the .passage, gave her s squeoze and terward. wooden setteo in the room, but only stationary sests, each divided from its neighbor-by wooden arms, The clean, beautifully-kept ststion at Tlike not thelevol prairies; theymake me home- sick, and setme longing for even the barren Yot Madame R.-believes that the deciding in- fluence on "him," in 1857, was neither a child’s shonld not be united to Picdmont ; that he hated 1870. —The University of Oxford has selected ono =alone brought about £100,000.*' A" sot'of them have inspected goods of similar nature, only of, :;.ging colors, from which you have purchased cient .materials to conatruct s mumber of. s T e e proas ot abi ey Oopon (21 R ded hord sud fast kiss. Saya she, ¢ H ¢ TBceE, W vo produced - great chicfs, mighty., | tations, may have groun: ard and fast on | & _ kiss. Ssys ©, How dare you?' | Erjo, Pa., is no botter than others in. this | dream, nor fear of sssassination, nor military | on the **Prince of Wales at the Grave of Wash- . :] : o, O o Soremmenl, mon of oMl |ithat ald, ol rockof blpwrack IWhane came | B832 D yihes ot t0 STATy you, my particular.. - In the City of Phiadolplia | smbition. Hisreal motive for tho war, aho | ington,” as the Newdegate poem. , - thoo bowildering garmonts in comparism with s zenown. - Perbaps the most celebrated of theso | disesse 2nd death into the world#" And surcly | dear.”. "‘Marry me?" cries she, Irughing, | are two comfortablo walting-rooms, at tho Bal-,| Astorts, which towered high sbove all others, | —Olive Logau's new socioty novelis a “Sum- | the intricaciesof which the most alaborate warks is was Cumtucne, who died sbout 1666. Ho-was'| the Muckaluo legend is no moro discroditablo | ** Why, I don't kmow you.” ‘Ko more doI-| timore and Kensington depots,—ni¢oly carpatod, | was his hatrod. of - Austris—a! hatred | mer Romance," the sceno laid at Long Branch | of modern engineering furnishno paralicl: Now;! HE rather s peaco-chief—that ie, & great orstor, | than the Hebrew, for both shoulder know you, my donr, 60 that makes it all fair and | furpished with hair-cloth Sofas snd ohsy-chaizs; | bred -in his_ very!'bones, . beginning | and New York. e - | a learned German Professor bss invented a plan HE glmphat: and rain-maker. Not only among the ‘ALL THE ELAME GEON TIE WOAMEN,— - equal.’’, Sho didn't know how to put a”clapper | and with & neat, obliging woman in_attondanco, | in __early | infancy; . fosl “durin, —G. W. Carleton, the publisher, is to give us | whereby your singlo white dress may e changed i s uckalucs and Modocs, but through all the sur- |.the Gne upon, her euriosity, the othier upon her | ou that, g0 sho only lsughed and gaid sho| Itjs s shametothe railroad autborities that | all bis early, ‘childiood and youth, and which | eketches of tho Bermudas by himself. - | ‘a8 often a8 you desire to sny color you ia rounding tribes, he was known and dreaded, and | frallty. Tho inventors of eithor atiributed to’| couldut think of it.. ** Not think of it,” saya I, | they do not. provide Tmore comforable waiting- | mado him n conspirator and.a Carbonaro whon | _—Dr. Smilas’ * Sclf-Help.” publishied by the | fancy, and thia in your ovn laundry, so th tHa Indians traveled two hundred miles to'consult |- her whatever they considered her besetting siv. | artful like, **not whon you bave come all these | room ; but, sinco thoy,do not, I think it would | most boys are thinking only of their games or of | Harpers, has heen Cansiatel into- Japaneee, and | hereatter themoney which you would devote ‘0 1S bim. It was balieved st ho could poison | Concerning tho rescrvation, the secossion| thoussndsof miles for thut purposo " # \What | ha well for Christian societica to da. mmissionary | their lossons. Ho Ead no objoction fo. giving | adopted as government foxt-book, . *"| seversl robes of varying hies may be entirely R water or food by Lis simple volition, and many"| therefrom, and the subsequent and preserit do you mean7” ssys she, staring. “ Come | work among them. . Italy free institutions ; on the contrary, he had, | —John Mitchell hasprinted in London a * Bé--| ‘saved, while you mey appear daily, if you choose; * g other wonderful things could he perform. A% |- TROUBLES WITIL. TIE MODOCS, _ now,” fl‘gfi 1,-#*don't tell me ; I inows what's | = At Aehtabuls two of our p: leaveus; an- thinks Madame R., 8 syrfip:thy for freedom, | ply o the Falsificstion of History by ‘James An- | in toilots of totelly different complexion. The B the present time, & very brief and simple statement_ will suffice. | what.” When "a man emigrationizes, it's to got | other drops off at Chicago ; and to-day finds mo | ¢ though, where he himeelf is concerned, ii is thony Froude, entitled -*The ‘English in Tre- | process s veryai.mgu, and_consists in merelf . % 4 5 , eir lends, by treaty, to, |'work ; & woman emigrationizes, it’s to get | ‘alone, glding cver the prairies of Towa toward | ove! ig desire of power. He likes S coloring the ‘atarch used in the 3 CAPT. GEORGE In 1854, they cedod all their lands, by treaty, to.|'work ; when & woman t it'a to get | ‘alone, g] i mfi:abyh' desire of He likes to bo | land.' " loring the ts ed in the **doing up. is Chief of the Muckelucs, without a rival, and | the United Btates Government, aud’ agroed to | married. - You may o3 well do it at once.” Well, | Minnesots, Jand of. blue streams and bluer | absolute himself, but he wishes &Il who arenot | —The most unheard of prices were paid for | Suppose a white dress is to be tinted a besatifal be can muster 250 warriors. Ho wields over bLis ['go upon the Klamath Reservation. In 1864, the | slo giggled = bit, and we were spliced ‘two days | skies. i his stibjects tobo frea.” Yot on another page it | the Turner Ergravings at the recent London on: Threo parts of fuchsin, an analad is sid hie was determined Lombard and Venctis | auction. The plates of the Liber Studorium” | color which any chemist can readily’ procure for you, are dissolved in twenty perta of glycerine, and'mixed in & mortar with s Jittle water. Then 1 oc { 4 of Hu fornia chieftains dsre attempt. On one occa- | reservation is50 by 40 miles in extont, lying ; H sion, not long ago, two of them were somewhat | cast of Uppor Klamath Lake, and including tho A Curious Spider’s Web, ‘| hills;—for anything fn nature to breuk the woary | Piedmont ag constitutional, as a neighbor too | comprised seventy-one plates, and they brought & the worse for fire-water; in consequence of [ fortile and magnificent valloy of Sprague | -A‘corrempondent of the Ellsworth (Me.) Amer- | ‘strotch of samwenes. - But-the rolling prairies,.| strong to bo's alave, and because -the King had | from 81,600 to 84,000 each-set. = ordinary starch, finely pulverized, is stirred 4 2 which they wore whooping and running riot, and. | River. Itis only Justice to the Modocs to eay | ican tells this: * Mr. Aaron Simpson, with his | which sboundin Minnesota, are lovely boyond-| from timo to time trested him; somewhat [~ —A now juvenile by George Macdonald, “Gut- | and the thick mass obtained ia poured out 8 b- i ot only refused obedionce to Capt. Goorgo, but | that thoy never wero permilted to live happily | brother Albert and Mr. Walton, of Sullivan, | compate, and leave one nothing o desire, save | roughly: nd thst “ss to the freédom or the | ta Percha Willie,” which has been delighting the | dried on blotting paper. The powder thus ob: = insali bim. “Thercupon, the despotic ofd sav- | on reservation. - The = Klamath Lake | while ot work in & meadow in August, 1872, dié- | now and then s wild_mountsin-gorge, & rude | prosperity of these provinces, when once thoy | readers of- Good Words for the 75 s tainedis used just the same a3 _common ""“-‘"u. : g20 coolly drow bs bow and shot them | Indisns—their bitter and bereditary "on- | covered suspended upon twige, by four guye, a | rocky glen, thrown in by way of contrast. cense to bo Austrian; or indeed as to the welfare | shortly be issned by the Routledges. and go applied to the fabric, When the latteris - o\ti outo death, . where thoy etood; [ emies, and greatly outnumbenng them—were | spider's web, the diamoter of which was about | - At 4 p. m. the whistle sonnds its_last' signal. | of any part of Italy, he is utterly indifferent.” | —A Boston letter says: * Trade is so dull in | dry it ia alightly sprinkled snd prossed with By b nul?i:x‘ their relatives ever dared | placed on it with them, together with several | eighteen inches. Across this parchment (such | I am at my journcy’s end. Northfield, the pretti- | One would like to know what the Milznese, who | books that some snnounced early in the sesson | moderately. warm iron. By mesna of cibet / g, im o, Judgment, Among - those, | hundred Pinfes, e Klsmett Lake Indisns | i soams 0 ua) wero owo perale lines ‘qulte an | esttown on e lroad from Prsirie 0o Chien | Bave lataly beon suberiiang for s monament £ | for summer pablication wil bo-wibhald umtl | coloriog matarials, mized da above geerle | loF CHlol i dme arbitrarils, the sumber | wero still on thoir own ancastral soil, while the | irich apart, which served o the bage for ihe ot | to St. Paul, comes into view, nestled on_either | the man they deem their benefactor, think of | antumn, Boberts & Brothers have decided not.| any desired tint-may be_obtained: Wo shoul i we e Dot 2 g;m';*’ smount of shells, which must | Modocs were fot ;and the former continually |ters of the following inscription. Upon- the"| ‘bank of thé Big Canon River, and creeping far | this exposition of his real * in helping | to bring ont Channing’s memoir of Thoresn un- | comsel, howeyer, an avoidance of damp l#‘l'm i R ° paid 83 blood-monsy, in case of murdar. tsunted them yith tha fact, flung at them a3 | first wero the words, ‘Envy, envy,’ and upon | up the hillsides, - them.. It ia not Kinglake nor Viotor Hugo whe | £ fhat 6, and to hold_ovér-J Miller's | ties, and strongly deprecata goiog out i &3, i e ere is s war-chief, and peacechuef or interlopers and baggmkahectum: and bullied | the second, ‘ W. W.;'all this waa in beautifal |- - t is raining as I alight at the station. No | makes it, ‘but & woman who was his life-long | new ‘Song;eomf the Sun-Land ’ untif then.’ Mil- 28 we doubt the **fastness ” of the dye ? B i o DT AT, mmfi obstructed their fishing tions, in- | capital letters of the Roman origin, and punctu- | familiar face moets me, but & quick pain pierces | friend: - - i 2 ler writes from London that he is certainly: to | would not be at ll surprised to behold the g3 K ;;;g ezh. g‘:ren lnu.m e::” petty local hesd-men, | eulted and best their -women whenever they | ated as above. Strango thia may geem to your | me as I remember a Eweot, patient face that will | ' Probably the two chief causes of his failure as ¢y Lady Crawford,’ and that his future | ment shortly assume s rather stresked 897, ssom the to leaders keop well in hend, Oner| conld do it safely, and, in short, did everything | readers, nevertheless it ia trao.”. ’ not meet mo even at the cottage-door, thet will | & General were his incapacity for detall, andhis | is all sun-bright. One good thing sbout this | sebra-lika sppeacance. & i H H