A ARB A PAB BAN or Popular Cossack Song, A hopvine in the garden crept Along the earth so low; Near by a lonely maiden wept, Her heart was full of woe. Why twinest thou, green blooming vine, Not apward toward the sky? Why droopest thou, a maiden fine, In sorrow head and eye? How oan the hopvine upward twine, Supportiess and alone? How can the maid's eyes gladly shine Her Cossack friend is gone? Ce AI WH N55 In the Mining Town. “Na the last time, darling,” he gently said, As he kissed her lips, like cherries red, While a fond look shone in his eyes of brown. « MY own is the prettiest girl in town; To-morrow the bell from the tower will ring A joyful peal. Wasthere ever a king So traly blest on his royal throne, Az I shall be, when I claim my own? "T'was a fond farewell; bye; But she watohed him go, with a sigh; So into the basket, that swayed and swung Q'er the yawning abyss, he lightly sprang, And the joy of heart seemed turned to woe As they lowered him into the depths below, " twas a sweat good troubled Was the fairest face in the mining town. 10! the moming came: but the marriage bell, High up in the tower, rang a mourning knell For the true heart buried "neath earth and stone, Far down in the heart of the mine Asorrow-paal on her wedding day, For the breaking heart, and the heart of olay; And the face that looked from brown Was the saddest face in the mining town. ~alone, her tresses Thus time rolled on in its weary way, Until fifty years with theirshadows gray Had darkenad the ligh ROW, And had turned the brown of her hair to SNOW. . Oh! never a kiss from a husband's lips Or the clasp of a child s sweet finger-tips, Had lifted one moment the shadows brown From the saddest heart in the mining town. of her sweet eyes’ Far down in the depths of the mine one day, In the loosened earth they were digging away They discovered a face, »0 young, so fair— From the smiling lips to the bright-brown hair— Untouched by she finger of time's docay. When they dr The wondering To gaze at the man so strangely w him up to the light of day, people gathered round found. Then a woman sprang from the erowd, With her long white hair, and her slight form bowed; She silently knelt by And kissed the lips that were cold and gray. Then the sad old face, with its snowy hair, On his yonthfol bosom lay pillowed there. He had found her at last~his waiting bride; And the people buried them side by side. among the form of clay, A Curious Disposition. Three ladies were seated in Agatha Foster's parlor; Miss Fortescue, large SE opolized the most comfortable arm- chair ; Mrs. Becker, shrunken an sandy, who was constantly slidin off the sofa and reinstating with a jerk, and Miss Agatha herself, who sat apart from the others, glanc- ing uneasily out of the window, as if distressed by their garrulity. Miss Agatha was a fair young woman, with a noble head and a countenance ex- pressive of all grace and goodness, Yet at this moment she ] Qa or hersel fiersell entertained feel ings decidedly hostile to her callers, who had run in, with the familiar free dom of fellow boarders in a family hotel, to chat away the afternoon. At heart they were immensely sorry that Miss Nannie Foster had not yet returned from a suburb, where she had gone the day before. Miss Nannie, Agatha's cousin, companion and chaperone in one, was far more to their taste; she was more attentive, more easily impressed, more sympathetic, they thought. She never sat looking out the window when they were retailing their cl bits of scandal for her especial benefit. But then she was a woman of years. How- ever, they still lingered; it was a pleasant place. The Fosters had the handsomest suite in the building—and furnished with such taste! Such ear- pets! Such decorative art! And the Fosters Were tip-top people. There were four of them, Miss Agatha, her two bachelor brothers, ten and a dozen years her senior, and Miss Nannie, who, since their parents’ death, had kept the children together. The winter day drew to a close, the room grew dusky, and still the ladies lingered. Agatha could endure it no longer; this, of all days, she was without pa- tience. She rose quickly. “Ladies,” she s with an indig- nant quiver in her sweet contralto voice, * you must excuse me, 1 cannot listen to such conversation I” There was silence a moment; then Miss Fortescue lifted her cumbrous frame. “Oh, certainly. I quite un- derstand. We will withdraw, We do not wish to offend.” “Oh, certainly,” faintly echoed Mrs. Becker, sliding from the sofa for the last time and preparing to follow. Agatha’s impatience only increased. « And allow me to say,” she ex- claimed, with no compunction, “that I think ladies might be better employed than with their neighbors’ affairs.” (yood-afternoon,” said Miss Fortes- cue, savagely. “ (rood-afternoon,” Becker. “(Good riddance!” cried Agatha, sharply, ere the door had closed. “To-day of all days,” she said, as she walked to and fro in the dusk. Presently the door opened. . « All in the dark, Agatha?” asked a cheery voice, wicest ¥ 114d «Hi, sneered Mrs. ” ” Nannie,” was the swift, unnerved re- ply. : “ Why, what is the dear?” «1 have just put Mrs, Fortescue and Mrs. Becker out of the room, and it has annoyed me.” “Dear me, what had they done?” “The same old sickening gossip. Miss Bruce flirts on the street; Mrs. Gray holds her step-child to the fire to burn it, and so on-and so on.” “They get their ideas from morning papers,” unclasping her fur-lined circular. * The stepmother holding the child to matter, news is scarce. Sometimes she heats the flat-iron. never go to that trouble.” staid humor. She helped putaway the wraps, and inquired after thesuburban friends. “You look pale; aren't you well 7” asked Miss Nannie when they were seated. The girl dropped her eyes. “Nannie, I have some news for you,” she said with an effort. “I—last night—I promised Mr. Peters—to—to marry him.” Then she sighed as if relieved of a great burden. The room was still, utterly still. If Miss Nannie were surprised or shocked he gave no token. She only sat quietly RB oking at the girl and taking time to tlect. Agatha never lifted her eyes il, after some moments, her cousin ed her throat and tranquilly in- hd: * Well, dear, are you satisfied lyou will be happy?” VOLUME XV, Hditor and CE Then the girl rose and throw upon the sofa, “Oh, Nannie, know: I can't teil” More silonce. asked if she had told A 0 these women George would be “the boys’ lived. “1 told Georg Agatha, In & “Lewis was would tell hu » And wi Lie as lon and meditated, bringing To be sure he had m t vilt % SURNUINS even felt 3 Hives J mel was atl and th Lit uly ag sy reviewed his by his * wild ey wut the room while w en be 3 DOSE il and ¢ or \ langul to say nothin adorers Agatha, whe because he lac the senator and the was a wid- congressman becau ower, Nannie remembered that the girl had suffered and shed tears over re fusing these and others. She had a curious disposition, as the boys had y roused and spoke. and now, dear, it 18 near dinner “ 1 you ha time.” “ Hark!" eried now Nannie recogn Lewis Dlekil ne in gone int faa before (ev rising. “Yes, di 3 hor wien ner ¢ y the corridor, and her tap careless * Come q ) after and lists rother’s door. Nannie, den sob Has pr i “Oh 08 Yery us disposition + all ily some way to dis- med Lewis, grimly; | out with the xt Arctic expedition—" Nannie rose. “You will be very careful what vou say, Lewis?” “Oh, of course.” : She lingered “ Agatha not a forceless nature by any means,” she said ; “sl get angry if she cares to. She tell ne she put and Mrs. Becker out of our parlor to-day, because of their vile I have no doubt she did.” “ Humph I” * * * # * Agatha came down to dinner witl manner r inward defiance was not outwardly manifest. Of her family, George was a shade more dignified than usual, and Lewis ap- peared annoyed, while Nannie put on a regretful look and sighed occasionally, When they left the dining-room, Agatha swept haughtily by the table, at which sat the Fortescue and Becker She was done with twain and intended they should see it. Up in their parlor, George sat down by his sister. “Agatha,” he said, slowly and with an evident distaste for the subject, “do you think you did well to vourself to Mr. Peters before consulting your family 7” “1 was of age three years ago, she said, regarding him with serene dignity. “ Yes, yes, of course, such a thing as advice. our good fri d, but is husband for vou?” “ What is there against him?” she asked, uanflinchingly. She was not blind to her lover's bodily impe fections. She had lain awake night mentally endeavoring tostraight- and control his But with daylight they upon her as uncompro- has Miss Fortescue QS TY gossip. Sine 1 : her 1 Composed i 1e gracious as ever, the engage But there is Mr. Peters is he a suitable en his crooked litnha recreant orb, had dawned But George would not stoop to per- sonalities, “Nothing,” he answered, “Only we have looked very high for you. We want you to be happy.” “Then do not speak against Mr. Peters,” she said, ing way that seemed George betook himself to his own Agatha. “I suppose I am to congrat- ulate,” he said, with a careless disre- gard of Nannies injunctions, “ You donot seem very enthusiastic,” his secretly-heard exclamation upon first learning the news. “I can’t help it if I don’t,” he an- swered, half impatiently. “You know how proud we are of you, Gath, and we can’t be expected to think any man good enough.” She smiled. He went on recklessly: “I don’t be- lieve you knew what you were doing. You don’t love Peters, you only pity him, just as you used to pity the sena- tor and alltherest. This crooked little curmudgeon! Why, heis older than George, and cross-eyed—" HALL, 1882, NUMBER 45. Never . tasitin a Peters made no rothers’ opinions of Miss Nannie had con s though all was satis wloration quite when he had am to pity 1tivh } much she d, and, hav- Agatha's juite re Nor- wWor- Wis jet, intense devotion of te : to him she rs was toucl ht Nannie, with a soft- he were oily not quite he were only a halt +} height with J tha! : Meanwhile Agatha was fretting her- self to de A thousand little heart- less SArcasie ind glances ol ! iis greal ndeavored to rise , telling her eir cruel wis de- But she ore a hunted Becker Riis circulate petty ingeniously whispers ol or y to y i and " n from lig breath of friéendshij the ears of the only grew vex catha 10 rR, and I the tall hal a r I sh 11 al HE LAK SHALL Oise, OF shalitake AY not aamire, d Mrs. Fortescue atience r don’t For God's sake, why didn't you ity some one suitable 7" ; : She trembled with exeitement and passion, “ Lewis, if you have the least particle of love or respect for me, you will never speak SO Again. I do love Nor- man, and will kill me if anything 1" { r engagement should bre: Lewis quit her presence crestfallen. The days slipped by. There had been no date fixed for the wedding, nor was the subject discussed by the family. : None but Nannie knaw the terrible tremor in which the girl existed, was moving about, 1 stantly occupied. Nhe her hands or shine, the two women were out of They had always an errand, usually one of mercy. ever disinclined, would doors, have felt it a the moodiness, the chill, or the storm of the springtime, until one last morn- ing. It had been raining for three days, and so steadily that the sidewalk flags were cleaned and whitened. Agatha pered with a carriage, and they took a for a mile or so, alighting to walk a few squares to another line. The storm had abated, and the rain was but a lstless drizzle, Agatha slipped and slid once, and Vi ie gave a frightened exclamation, said the : “I must have another I have a good deal of shopping LO to soon.” “Your ontfit and stopped. Agatha sighed, but the sigh was lost in the noise of the street, A poor little yellow dog limped out from under a passing vehicle, holding up one paw and yelping pitifully. “Oh, see,” cried Agatha, with her eves “Poor, poor doggie | I am Car My aver shoes are useless” irl, carelessly. ventured Nannie, wet, 0 sorry !” The yelps died away in the distance, ladies went on. ind man erving “Cough lozen- ges?” upon the corner detained them for a moment, In the next block an old building had been torn away to give place to a Careless workmen had loft the sidewalk unguarded in one place, a step from which would have landed ber of loose foundation stones, Just as they had reached this spot they were brought to a sudden halt by loud eries and confusion. arunaway team dragging a splendid carriage, Agatha took an irresolute step for- ward, and then sprang back as the horsedashed up against the sidewalk, The women forward, cold with horror. and there lay upon the stones limp and unconscious. * * * * * She would live, sadly crippled and So sald the would hence and one hip dislocated, best of surgeons Sit and tondernesss poor ! I Care ‘Thank God she is not Nannie, As for the hoy %, LIEOTEe Wa ( omple tal) i and Lewis paced the tho erving for hi * Poor, A ratd forth require al "oried sister! sted dd, when it the noOwHn, ins upon hearing Wis mide K lent and-byve Nannie cm 1 great tears tremiding un dark evelashes . d the hovs were i they withdrew to the winds s OWN, without for life, face was as pale as Agatha’ “ Norman, , & preface, q i iid, LEERY) he eried, with ine off : le font cast dearer “ Peters,” he sald, * we haven't done right by you. 1, mysell 2 2s % ii But if you tes deably wget, it will be very different in . have Le will faraiy Willi TOrgi i and fi lay watching she 0 stay the tears 8 bid 3 as sobbed aloud, could be so found ns ran nn mitted ‘3 nals of all classes, ages and « Experiments upon over four hundred show how great is the diver- jon as to the size of objects ough the microscope. The ob- used in the experiments was a common louse magnified to a theoreti. cal size of 4.66 inches, The majority of observers underestimated "this value : two estimates wore only one inch ; seven were over a foot, and one was at least five feet, New students of the mieroscope usually re- ceive an impression than the real value, and for a considerable time, Dr. Mittendorf states can students are near-sightedness La somewhat large r adhere to it that Ameri less afflicted with than German stu- The affection is developed by ercise, women being therefore more liable to contract it than men. It the twenty-first year. Weak often follows treatment. In his paperon this sub lin which became intractable and was found to be suffering from near sightedness, but was as docile as ever after a pair of glasses had been fitted to its eyes, II Norwegian Graveyards, A national characteristic is the re- markable care that Norwegiads bestow on their graveyards. 1 stumbled on one at Christiansandt on a Saturday evening and found it alive with people the plots and ornamenting the graves, The graveyard was not an untidy field like many of our old chiurchyards, nor yet was it a stiff and trim garden like most of our modern cemeteries, It was a quiet and secluded rustic retreat in limes, The graves were not mounds covered with green sod; they stood high almost like boxes, and were overgrown with periwinkle and covered on the top with flowers either growing in the soil or in flower-pots, or set in vases and crystals of various shapes, that of the cross being the most common, The and neatness with which the graves and grave-plts were kept were quite remarkable, Each family plot formed a little garden, with walks and flower- beds, and generally with a little iron seat at one side of it, where the sor- rowing friends might sit and meditate, On nearly every plot one or two ladies were busily engaged in trimming and dressing the garden, They had little rakes in their hands and also little watering-cans, with which they dressed and watered their flowers and Fuschias, roses, geraniums, care luxuriantly on many graves, This surely is an improvement on the dismal basket china to which we are too much accustomed. There can hardly be any fitter or more pleasing emblem of the life beyond than pretty flowers and graceful trees, with their constant life and with their bloom ever being re- newed from season to season.— London Times. ms ASIII bcs Sets FACTS AND COMMENTS. The rapldiy-di ing United Kingdom leads the Englis ss to a discussion of its son and the ded In 1874 there y, DOO O00 head COR refnpsdios nm Were neariy i fallen to 32,000 000, and sing cores His ment number is IHN) as HH) past iv amounted to i Yours over a ul 1 lows: dtantord (el , 000: Huntin on, $100,000: Hopki § 10K tot; I hey rather stint stanford, * HOW follows: $40,000 000 1, $50,000,000; Hopk ns' total, $200,000 (NN), red # syndicate to build rocker, ©5 SO 000 000; 56 men a ratlroad tot mense personal and from the ve Hunga ows that v8 US Wi an erin all alter a Spanish inst died il cal : vit ile ryan ous use of warm to aid solution of ferri } in to cheek hemor he disease, ended for inhalatic vere stage of t worthy the attention who are supposed to be in s 4 his age in Lhe se s fdea is well ff the many the initial stages of consumption, would be an inestimable boon if the saving them, to say nothing of the many others whose cases are otherwise hopeless, ne means of better known as “ Buffalo Bill” that General Custer killed himself, when he that death was inevitable, in preference to being killed by the Indians. He gives the following reason for this be- lief: “The Indians will not mutilate a body which d dead, and Gen eral Custer's only that was not sealped and otherwise eat pieces or burned. My impression is that he, after seeing all his command shot down, and that he himsell must also go, turned and took his own life rather than be killed by the savages, I was in General Crook's command that goon after arrived upon the scene, and although Custer went into the fight with seven companies, and had 300 men killed, I am satisfied he would never have given the Indians battle had he not thought reinforcements were near at hand, Some time after the engagement an Indian warrior told me that Custer was the last man to fall, and killed himself. Had been given entire command of troops he would have whipped the In- dians instead of being erushed by them. They did not recognize Custer after he was shot, 08 he had a few William PF, Cody, H Li Yes SAW one to Se —————————————————— Anecdote of Frank James, Among the anecdotes which the ad- to the glory of their hero is one be- longing to the period of the Colurgbia (Ky.) bank robbery. bers of the band had decided upon ploring the surrounding country inthe guise of cattle-buyers, Frank James being hospitably entertained for sev- eral days at the house of a well-to-do farmer. gently cultured the social amenities, frolicked with the cildren and made himself particularly agreeable to their grandmother. The old lady's chief de- light in life was to peruse the Pilgrim's Progress. James professed to be deeply interested in that work, pored over it by the hour, and when, finally, he took his departure, begged her not to disturb the mark which he had placed at the point where he was A few days later, when the country was ringing with the old lady scorned to believe that her pious young friend was a desperate villain, CONQUERED BY A BARBY, Once upon a time, and not very long that, a voung wan of Atlanta Atlanta girl This e, itil, as also hap gr gird fell In with Somehow or other oung girl frowned hearts continued to lov i upon the i i that one, and they frown until thu young people, thrown upon thei | i young | Od Hi 1 LWO beat as WWII resat eloped, as the parental to, instead of becom- tion 11 inevitable, widened into bitter dis I'he father and mother » iy their daughter and he) re overwhelmned with grief when they discovered that for the first in her fife had digobeyed frown alluded nid a benedid in the time she them. the HIVENnoss, In the course of time a little baby was born to the young eouple—a mar- velously pretty child, we have told—and it it was beautiful, purpose of bestowing their for- been One day recently a lady acquainted with the facts, and with both families, called upon the young mother, bie found nobody at home but baby and nurse, An idea struck her and lost no time in out. selzed the bab id bore it off in triumph to its grandmo When rang the door-bell at grandmother's house the a tremor, but baby as cool and unconcerned ber, Perhaps we unconcerned, for grandmother opened the aby laughed and crow ed in and v Saucy as you intimate she carrying it she she WHS In Nis As please, in and rest Well, the lady didn't know; she was just passing, and i mght she would ring and see getting along; but in she went, and presently grandmother was iring baby as it sat perched, brigh buoyant, he lap of the lady. herself ? WOE Welk upaot mt eX ! 1t held dimpled 0 its grand- and was soon nestling against her motherly bosom, It laughed and crowed and cud and when somes body made a pretense of taking it it What wonderful vsure! What a 1, half hidden behind ears! What tempting What dainty little hands! wether, the the me mother, ihdied the nderful baby alt mother tho his critical moment the grand. and thi elit and said. Cas i father made ius Appearagoee; 8 remarkable baby seemed to understand d 1a its business thoroug ‘ % i crowed at the grandfather, io aris, and hi i I'he grand tossed and itin a ‘hen the ft was embarrass She ing result, but she v two old people ki ighter's child, grandmother fell to wonderful and the grandfather round wiping his why he was so thing would do their daughter nd such another ro- held over x » was seen in At we'll say and stick to, passed in front of the lee vesterday, and in it Hers of the yv had a front ing and crowing a pink, and wild look, 4 clasped this i was it this true story, ask the grand- nla (Ga.y Cone II The Discovery of Porcelain, Kaolin, a hydrated silicate of alum- nin, is abs refractory { ie, the n. Feldspars are sili- ately and natitutes high temperature into a parent antity of feldspar with he mixture with a layer heat the whole at a glass, HN qu cover t y r, ant and communicate to the clay a clearness greater or less to the quantity \ it that liar, is chemical, and least authors tainly made it regularly for at a thousand years; many fix the discovery at fifteen hundred or eighteen hundred years ago, but no evidence exists to justify our going back further than a thousand years. The first pieces that came to Europe were probably brought the fifteenth century from the sultan Jabylon; but it was not till the sixteenth century that the importation of these Dutch merchants assumed a real ime portance, saving a Prince, There was a time when the loca manners at Brighton had a rough pleas the primitive simplicity of the place. When Miles (or Smoaker, as the Prince too far, as Miles thought, out at sea. Miles hailed “ Mr. Prince” to come back. The prince struck further out. Thereupon Smoaker back by the ear, exclaiming as he thus towed the princely freight, “I aren't a-goen to let the king hang me for let- ten the Prince of Wales drown hisself: not I, to please nobbudy, I can tell 'e.” The prince forgave the act in considera- tion of its motive. In remembrance of it he founded the Smoaker stakes; and when they were first run for in 1806 the prince, of course, won the race his own horse Albion,—Bel- gravia, One of the sweetest-looking girls in the State of Missouri dislocated her shoulder the other day by kicking a cat. Beauty is a mighty deceiving thing, young man, The True Homanee of Pocahontas, From her first meeting with Smith English, and rendered the settlers many services, She often secured supplies for them, and indeed seems to have haunted the fort, utterly naked was, after the manner of little girls among her people, who wore no clothes and showed no modesty until they were twelve or thirteen years of age, at which time they put on a deer- skin apron, and were very careful not to be seen without it, The agile littie barbarian would persuade the English lads to make wheels of themselves by turning upon their hands and feet, wherenpon she would follow them, wheeling as they did, all through the fort, Her real name was Matoax ; but, by order of Powhatan, this was carefully concealed from the whites, lest by their supernatural enchantments they should vork her some harm. W hetgfi icp] Wyflin was sent from Jamestown to apprise the endangered Captain Smith, environed by [Os among Powhatan's people, of the death of his deputy, Mr, serivener, and his ten companions, by drowning, Pocahontas hid him, mis directed those who sought him, and, by extraordinary bribes and maneuvers, brought him safely to Smith after three days’ travel in the midst of extreme peril. Bo, also, when Hatcliffe was cut off with thirty men, she saved the Ind Spilman, who was then living with Powhatan, and sent him to the Potomacs, But the most touching story of all precedes in order of time the other two. In the same difficult adventure among Pow- hatan's people, in which Captain Smith was engaged when BSerivener was drowned, the treacherous chief had arranged to surprise Smith at supper, and cut off the whole party, when Po- cahontas, the “dearest jew el and of the aged chief, * in that } as Bie woods” to warn the captain of Pow- hatan's design. Captain Smith offered as the heart of an Indian maiden de lights in; “but, with the tears running down her cheeks, she sald she durst not be seen to have any, for, if Pow. hatan should know it, she were but dead; and so she ran away by herself as she came” In 1613 Pocahontas was among the Potomac Indians, Captain Argall, a man of much shrewdness and execu- tive force, but infamous for his dis honest practices, happened to be trad ing in the river at that time. He would gain in negotiations with Pow- hatan for the return of the white prisoners held by him, if he could secure s0 valuable a hostage as the chief's daughter, With a copper kettle he bribed Japazaws, the chief with whom she was starving, to entice her on board the vessel, where he detained her, much to the sorrow of the daughter of the wilderness, whose life hitherto had been as free as that of the wild creatures of the woods, To James town, whereshe had frolicked as achild, and whither she had so often come as 4 friend with food, she was now carried and a prisoner, She had refused to enter the town since the de- parture of Captain Smith. This transaction, not very creditable to the gratitude of the English, ao- complished purpose in causing the white men held in slavery by him, with the least useful of the stolen aris. But he still contrived to evade some of the demands of the English, who therefor retained his daughter until the affair took a new tara. have been a widower, became enamored of Pocahontas, now growing to woman- hood, and wrote a formal letter to Sir as an enemy its to Christianity and marry her, which pleased the governor, as tending to promote peace with the Indians, and was likewise acceptable to Powhatan. The chief sent an old uncle of Poca- hontas and two of her brothers to witness the marriage, during the life of Powhatan, who, on ene occasion at least, sent a present of buckskins to his daughter and her hus- A free intermingling of the two races took place, and Englishmen were accustomed to hire Indians to live in their houses and hunt for them. This amity lasted eight years, In 1616, more than two years after went to England with Sir Thomas Powhatan sent some Indians with his daughter, one of whom was commissioned to count the number of the English, The arrival of the Lady as Pocahontas was called after her baptism, prosivced a great sensation. She was received by the well. But it became necessary to de- gist from calling her the wife of John Rolfe, for the King was very jealous, daughter of a foreign potentate with- committed treason. The climate of London, and perhaps also the uncongenial habits of eivili- vorably, and she was taken to Brent. ford, where Smith, then busy with his preparations to sail for New England, visited her. In the successful efforts of Rolfe and others to win her to the Christian faith and to marriage, they dead, probably because they knew she When, “brave” therefore she who had object of her roaidenly ad- sho turned her face away and refused to speak for the When she did, it was to claim the privilege of calling him father, which Smith granted only after importunity, afraid, perhaps, of incurring the King's dis- pleasure. Pocahontas went to Graves- end to take ship for her return to America, much against her will, for she had become weaned from her savage life and greatly attached to the English, At Gravesend she died of smallpox three years after her marriage, leaving one son, from whom some of the most prominent Virginia families trace their descent.—Kdward Eggleston, in the Century. saw been A curiosity in the shape of a vast army of small toads was lately to be seen at Linkville, Oregon. They were migrating up Klamath river, and were go numerous that on large areas it was impossible for people to walk without stepping on them. ————————— I soe The first cloud that obscures the peaceful sky of an infant's existence is about the size of a man’s hand. Tiger Killing in Java, The following is a translation of an Java Bode, the chief paper of Batavia: ess, the sultan, in order to make At about 10 commander, - stant resident and other spectators ap] mm behind the Kraton and seated thems in a grand stand constructed for the ; pose, Thousands of Javanese flocked Noon a fight bet ween aroyal tiger and a buf falo together in a pen commenead, The tiger was several times tossed into the air and then gored to death by the buf- possible by pepperad water, burning nettles and red-hot iron bars. The combat lasted fully two hours, Aftér ward began the rampolsen or tiger flight. On the plain alongside the Kraton stood Javanese armed with the otier, forming altogether an ex- traordinary large square. The two foremost rows lay kneeling, the two hindmost stood erect. In the center of this open space were thirteen straw-roofed rooden pens, in each of which was a tiger. At a given signal a musical instrument called the gam- elan begins playing a martial air to slow measure. Three tiger keepers then step out of he ranks and approach the cage. Two of them bear each a burning torch, with which they set fire to the straw. The tiger, frightened by the shower of sparks, is then forced out into theopen either by a desperate spring to away over the buman wall which keeps it inclosed or tries to ” through underneath. But it pierced by the many spears which have struck it. It uttersasavage ery, which of the multitnde. In silent agony it strikes around furiously with its mighty paws The shafts of the spears often break like glass, In such cases a single blow might cost any unfortunate within It is afterward This scene took Only a One soldier, killed outside it, after causing great commotion among the spectators. An affecting scene presented was that of while she was being slain.” ts The Virtues of Coffee, of coffee is directed It pro- eos a warming, cordial impression on the stomach, quickly followed by a The action 3 ~erebral functions, giving rise to in- any subsequent con- such as is character- Coffer contains es- properties, and is one of the most articles for sustaining system in certain prostrating As compared with the nutrition to be derived from the best The medicinal effects of In intermittent instances. physicians with the happiest effects in cutting short the attack, and, if prop- In that the banks of the Mississippi river and other malarial districts, accompanied with enlarged spleen and torpid liver, when judiciously administered it isone of the surest remedies, In yellow fever it has been used by physicians, and with some it is their main reliance after other necessary remedies have been administered ; it retains tissue change, and thus be comes 8 conservator of force in that state in which the nervous system tends to collapse because the blood has be- come impure ; it sustains the nervous power until the depuration and reor ganization of the blood are accom- plished, and has the advantage over other stimulants in inducing no in- jurious secondary effects. In spas modic asthma its utility is well estab- lished, as in whooping-cough, stupor, terical attacks, for which, in many cases, a physician can form no diagno- sis, coffee is a great help. ‘offee is opposed to malaria, to all noxious vapors. As a disinfectant it has wonderful powers. As an in- stantaneous deodorizer it has no equal for the sickroom, as all exhalations are immediately neutralized by simply passing a chafing dish with burning coffee grains through the room. It may be urged that an article pos- sessing such powers and capacity for such energetic action must be in- jurious as an article of diet of habitual employment, and net | without deleterious properties; but no | corresponding nervous disarrange- ments have been observed after its effects have disappeared, as are seen in narcotics and othef™Stimulants, The action imparted to the nerves is natu- ral and healthy. Habitual coffee drinkers generally enjoy good health. Some of the oldest people have used coffee from earliest infancy without feeling any depressing reaction, such as is produced by alcoholic stimulants. — Philadelphia Times. Treatment of Frozen Persons. Medical men have always differed as to whether the best medical treat- ment of frozen persons was by a gradual or a rapid application of heat. “To settle the matter,” says Know-| ledge, * Laptchinkski has made a series of very careful experiments vpon dogs, | with the following results: Of twenty animals treated by the method of gradual resuscitation in a cold room, fourteen perished ; of twenty placed at | | once in a warm apartment, eight died ; | while of twenty immediately put into a hot bath, all recovered.” The experi- ments will probably influence the practice of medical men in Ru Northern Europe, where the of the best means of pessons suffering from exces of frequent occurrence every