Indian Summer. Oh! those days, Autumn days! Whon the languid earth lies dreaming, In a sort of golden haze; When amidst the verdant woodlands Stand the maples all ablaze; pr" ftold and crimson, brown and orange. [ How they rise, (Rowing pyramids ol color, Tot ho skies When the summer tasks are done, I And the song-bird southward's gone, [And 110 sound Stirs tiie voiceless, breathless lorest, Save whon, lar away and seldom, , The ripe acorn strikes the ground; iOr when leaves, With a melancholy rustle, And unstirred by any breeze, Circling downward Irom the ttcea, Spread around A rich carpet brighter tiutod Then the cunning Persian weaves. Oh" these days, | Autumn days' Who can pnint the g!ow and glory Of these halcyon autumn days ? ' THE ROYAL ZULU. A TALK. KOI'NDEO Ot* PACT. Beneath the shade of a grove of palm a Zulu maiden knelt in prayer on the morn ing of the fatal twenty-second of January, IK7(. lier face was pretty beyond most of her country-women, and her small hands and fret, her distinguishing orna ments and graceful form bespoke her 'lie daughter of some powerful chief. Rut strange, considering her nationality, were the words of supplication which flowed front iter lips its she raised her clasped hands to heaven. Not from witchcraft or enchantment, or from the equally powerless deities of tier nation, did she seek for help, but from Him only, the one true God, Jehovah. "Father!" shecried, "to whom all the ends of the earth look for help in trouble, hear me for the sake of Jesus. The evil spirit of war and persecution has conic down and entered my father's kraal, and Cetywayo has folded his hands and bowed his ear to listen. ID has sworn I todrink the blood of thr white men, and eat up all the Christian Zulus of his nation. Oh, Great Father! in this hour of trio,, keep Cassatonga and me faithful to thyself!" At this moment a movement beside her caused the worshiper to turn around, and she beheld a stately war rior standing near her, leaning on his black shield. His eyes were fixed with unspeakable love on the youthful form before him. "1.u01a," tie said, "your prayer for me is answered; I can tight no more for Cetywayo. Lait night the murder, indescribable in cruelty, of Sirayo's wives, for their adherence to the Christian faith, proves what little mercy the king would show toward any one, even yourself, were you to oppose his will; and though it is our duty to bear persecution when it comes, it is no doubt equally madness to provoke it. Here we can no longer stay without de claring our faith, and therefore we must fly with all haste to Ilelpmakaar. You know the good missionary there, the same who taught us the will of the Great Master, and beneath his care you will be safe from your father's wrath. This alternative is the only one |< ft to us, and 1 feel it is the right one. Will you eotue'now, Luola* My horse stands readv in the thicket." " I will." And though the hand ex tended to him trembled. the voice was steady that decided their fate. "By Rofke's Drift is our shortest road." he said, as they reached the tree where hi* horse was fastened, and plac ing the princess on its back, tie mounted behind tor. and turned Ids steed in the direction of the Buffalo. They traveled for some hours with ex'reme caution, skirting every kraal nnd open ground, till at length they arrived at u iarge thickly plan to! wood, in which they hoped to find an hour's repose. Rut they had scarcely dismounted ere tlm roar ol artillery and tire cracking of rifles, mingled with wild yells, were heard In the aistani-e, and Cassntonija hastened to conceal his royaljiliarge be tore endeavor ing to discover the cause. Hiding I.urda and his horse in the densest part of tlie grove around him, he selected a lofty tree, whose thick branches would be a shield in themselves. Gliinhing with the agility ol his nation to the topmost houghs, lie beheld the fatal field of Isan dula spread out before hint. Amaze ment at the vnex peeled sight and deep admiring pity flashed 111 his eyes as lie looked on the tiny band of white men wtio, shoulder to shoulder, received un flinchingly the masses of his country men, as they - wept down upon them. The first emotion of his heart was to fly to the aid of the devoted column, but the thought of his bride restrained ' him, and lie sank ha k among the shel tering leaves. Straining his sight over the awful plain, lie could distinguish his •vn fierce regiment, although foremost in the work of death, yet not so preoc cupied therewith as to be unconscious of the plunder which lay ground, pausing even in the butchery to collect cattle, atop-- and wagons to be driven to their distant kraals. Horror and disgust filled his now enlightened .soul. " Why do those English soldiers stand there, he asked himself, as the breath eame •uiekiy through his laboring chest, "on that plain of Africa. far away from their island lioni's, to be shot down, steady in their matchless ranks, by their swarthy foes?" His own heart gave him the reply; "Tosave helpless women from the savage butchery he beheld ieet night; to gum d the gray hairs of old age from going down to a terrible grave beneath the real or feigned imputations of witch craft and divination; and. above all. to tench the pure faith of the Gospel where reigned the degrading demonology of bis native land.' His dark eyes biased and hi.', uulses throbbed as these thoughts surged through his mind, nnd he pressed his bands ovei his aohlilg eyeballs as he bowed himself to the service of that flag which shelters freedom and truth be seath its folds, j Rut meanwhile the worg of denlli I went on. Those who were sent for help to Knrke's Drift were, alas! shot or a*e gaied; few, how few ' readied the river, r and Gassatonga beheld with dismay thpt tin Zulus were scattering toward the lb if- Gould he skiit tiie wood and reach the ford before them with his precious charge? was now his anxious ; thought. Descending quickly from Ids position, lie found the trembling f/Uola b terrified at Ids long also nee. lie <|e #rrit#ed the nwftil suene he bad just wit nessed. and told her of the immediate I necessity for endeavoring to it.its the livsr. The l>loof the lion-like founder of her dyniuity (lowed in Euola's vein*, and though convinced of imminent danger, alio wiui not wanting in courage. "bet us BO," she said: (Sod will help UH and 1)0 our shield." Remounting, they rode on till tlmy came to the edge of the wood, when a new Uanwr menaced them, whleh tested to the almost the fleetness of theirstoed. Rarely out of range of rifle shot, some scattered parties of Zulus wi re coming toward them. Cassatonga knew well he could give no reason for not being with his troops, anil the daughter of the king was not unknown. Were alio seized and conducted hack to her father lie dared not think of her fate. I'rging his horse to a gallop, lie cleared the wood, and by carefully placing every hill and eluuip <( bushes between him and the savagi s, he sui cmlcd in making several miles undiscovered. Rut just as lie and l.uola were begin ning to hope they might escape un noticed a yell in the distance told that they were seen- Now was llie hour of trial for horse and riders. The uoblc animal seemed hardly to touch the ground as he flew over the plain, the wild yells of the Zulus ringing behind . At length the hauks of the Buffalo rose high before them, and Cassatonga real i/eii with horror that ho had not time to look tor the ford, and that lie must only trust his nearly exhausted com panion and breath less horse to the perils of a plunge from those lofty hanks. Rut it was their last hope of safety; they must do it or die. At length they reached the hank, which rose full six feet aliove the stream . Cassatonga held the princess tightly in his arms, and the horse's nostrils dilated and his eyes shot tire as he gazed 011 the torrent heneath . Rut not a second did the noble animal waver; obedient to his master's hand he hounded front the hank, and in another minute tossed Ids noble head atsive the wave as In bravely breasted the stream- In a few moments, how ever. his feet touched the Isittont; tlio ford was found, and the worst of the terrible strain was over. At length they gained the opposite hank, up which the weary horse toiled slowly; and soon, to his rider's great astonishment, the small English euiup lay before theni- Thc pair now paused to consult about tln ir next move. 1 heZulus,they justly conjectured, would make no delay in crossing the river, and their poor horse was far too • xhausted to take them that night to Ilelpmakaar; therefore they un hesitatingly felt their wisest course would l>e to place themselves ut der the protection of thr English eotntnander. i'ving a whit.- handkerekief to the end of liis spear, Cassatonga approached thr ramp; and when within ear-shot lie Culled out io aloud Voice to the sentries, informing him that they were Christian Zulus flying for safety. They were ini ni'sliately s >izvd and hrouglit before llie officer in charge, who received theui with murh suspicion, as he had only just heard of the disaster at Isandula. and was in no nmod to harbor Zulus of any kind. Their tale was soon told. Rut though the officer expressed his pity for t he suit-Tings of the royal maid, fie gave orders to have them strictly watched, at the same time commanding that their wants should be supplied. It is needless to give a description of the nif lit that followed. All the world knows how through llie darkness the tide ofimttle surged up. wave after wave, against the weak harriers of the little fort, and was again and again repulsed. All the world has ning with the names of Rromhcad and Chard, and a'l tl • other le-rocs who with strong hands and stronger hearts held the fort that night. Rut among them ail who fought beneath the red-cross flag that night there was no stronger ami, no braver heart than his, the young Zulu chief, who had re nounced friends, fortune, country, to enlist beneath the banner of a higher cross and strive henceforth for a more enduring victory. As the morning broke upon th • -eene and disclosed the dusky foe. disheartened and d-f.d. vanish ing dk'- dark clouds fi hind tiie distant hills, thegallnnt officiT, Ix-gritned with powder, ixed tiie now scarcely darker hand of the nohle Zulu, and thanked him as a British soldier for his timely niu. l.uola felt in that moment she was re. ward'-d for* il the terrors of the night. After some hours'needful rest at the fort, the young travelers prepared to re some their journey. Tliey were followed by the benedictions of iiji. lAtoia had bean untiring in her assistance to the wounded, ami tlm dying wrecheep d by lier words of eomlort. 'I bus. amidst many good wishes. tlmy bade farewell to their new friends, and accompanied by the officers biaring dispatches, they set out for Ilelpmakaar. Tiie evening shadows were lengthening as they entered and rode through the streets if that town, and soon they were received with warm welcomes beneath the roof of the good missionary. Not long afterward, before these offi cers returned to their po!i*h'-d in five hour* and a half, r at the rate of sixty mile* .-in hour; while the most ex pedition of a group let loose the n> xt day—a day not oft')" *am* kind—took twelve hour* to reach Berlin. Hn*' time wo* tak< n up in cxplorir g tie- country for land mark*. as wa* some of Mr. ForlxV in ids ride from Ulundi with news of Imrd Chelmsford's \i t<>ry. It is not in*tin>'t but sight by which the carrier pigeon guides its flight. Calistoga i* a famous tnin.rai spring re<>ri. sixty-eight mile* from San Fran cisco. it was intended to !■ tii- Sara toga of the I*a< ifleeoast, th* name being an abbreviated combination oft 'alifornia and Saratoga. The waters are prin fi nally sulphur, iron, soda and magnesia. Some of them will boil an egg in two minutes. Over one is built a pr.-fty sum mer house , Jt i call's! the chick' n soup spring lb-re the guests resort, after a both, Willi pepper, salt and era. k'rs, and if you are very hungry and of an imagin ative turn ol minv crned much after the fashion of one of , our States, while the general govern ment consists of a cabinet of live offhx-r*. In ore of the suburbs of Ixmdon. the other day. a medical district officer called in to see the children of a man named llolley sick with an eruptive dis ease, declared that they had small-tinx and ordered the whole family to go into hospital. When tliry had been there a fm might tliey were disehargt-d with tile enrvnlatorv assurance that the doctor's diagi.isis wa*erroneous, that they never as a matter of fact had small-pox, and that what the children had caught wa* chicken-pox, nn innocuous form of in fantile disease. Thus the whole family had bepn exposed for a lengthened tini" to tiic contagion of a most mortal and loathsome malady; the bread-winner lost hi* situation and two week*' pay, anil the local authorises, byway of compensation, magnanimously offered tlie sum of five shillings in money, two shilling* worth of groceries and four loaves of bread. A family Is broken up, a house disinfected at considerable e<>*t, and no end of mischief done because an incompetent health officer could not dis tinguish between variola and varicella. Tho moral is obvious. The production of nickel in Norway has become an industry of considerable importance of late years. The first mine was opened in 18-to by an English com pany in the Valley of Espeihil, in tli mountain district of Sondre-Gudhrands dal, but this was closed in IK r 7 in con sequence of tin* difficulty of approach and the absence of communication*. StibscqU' ntly t" tliii mines were opened at Kingerike and (iambic, near Ski'-ri, and from iHfil .0 there Were eleven nickel mine* worked, averaging 3,1.' j 5 2)*) tons from fourteen mines, and it gradually increased until 1W75, when it attained its maximum at tons. The greater part of this yield is exported in the shape ol ore, Norway hung the principal source of the nickel supply and furnishing quite one-third of the yield of the world. A part of t' e ore is smelted near the mines, averaging between I*7l 5 a yearly make of no,'smi kilogramme*. About tu.'> workmen arc employed in nickel min ing, though the number ha* been dimin ish' d within the last year or two, owing to the lessened demand. The Siberian exiles, when released from prison and the mine*, have had to choose between starving or st- aling the meat,* "f üb-.ixt< nee; being deprived of all civil rights, they were not allowed to ail-jit any honest calling. Such hiu. been the < on.lilion of the Siberian ex iles for centuries. I'ml. r the ifireum stanc *, it was natural tkat during the warm seasons I he Silwriun forest* should lie fiM< d with criminal vagrants, who resorted to 1M gging, sb ding, robbing and tnurd'-r, in ord. r ti keep body and soul together. Hoth the eeononiiea! and the moral Int. i sts of Siberia suffered Irom tie H. evils; and the govertiinent lias ofi. n be.-n petitioned to i mcdy th.-m. It ha* Ims ii found til at, in order to k'-ep all throe exile* in prison it would te r>< i .-ssary to erect a large ad dilional number of prisons, costing not less than fifty iniiiion* of roubles. The government eottid not spar. - sueh a sum .if money, and so the Czar r ■ ntly promulgated an or.b r allowing the exile* to pursue different occupations, upon the recommendation and under the sur veillance of the hsal autlioriii'--. The political exiles, however, are denied this right of honeatly making a living. To.d* tireat M.-n Work With. It is not t.Hi * tfint make tlie work man. hut the trained skill and jierse yeranee of the man hims.fif. Indeed, it is proverbial that the bar. Black discovered latent ln-at; and a prism, a hn* nn.! *h< < t of paste boar.l enabled Newton to tinfo d tie composition of iielit and origin ot color. An eminent foreign savant once called upon Dr. \Voolla*ton, and r.qn. tol Ui be shown ov< r hi* ialmratori.-*, in whi. h science ha* b many important discoveries, wle n the doctor t.M.k liim in a study, and pointing to an old tea tray, containing a few watch gla-ses, t<"t-papers, a small balance and a blow-pipe, said: "There is all tl.e .aborntorv I have." St'ithard learned the art <>i eomhining color# by closely studying butterflies' wing*; h" would often say that no one knew 'vhat he wwl to these tiny insets. \ I, unt *li k and a barn-door s< rve 1 \\ i'kie in lieu of pencil and canvas. IW-wiek first practiced drawing on tlif cottage walls of Id* native village.whieh heeovered with lii sketch.* m el,alk. ntid Itenjnniin West made hj* first brushes out of the cat's tail. F rgtison laid himself down in tlie fields at niglit in a blanket, and mad" a map of the heavenly bodies, by mean* of a thread with small bead# en it, stretched let ween lli* eyes and the star*. Franklin rtr*t roblted the thund.r cloud of its lightning hy mean, of a kite ma.'r with two cross-*ti< k* and a siik hand kerchief. Watt mode lila lint model of the con densing steam-engine out of an old an atomit's #\ringe, used to inject the ar teries previous to dissection. Guilford worked hi* first problem in mathematics when a cobbler's apprentice, upon small scraps of leather, whieh he beat smooth for the purpn-<\ while Uittenhou*.-, the astronomer, first calculated eclipse- on hi# plow-handle. The tireat Bridge. Both ot tli'* towers of the New York and Brooklyn bridge rest on sunken cais son*. whieli were substituted for tl.e solid foundation which the engineers were unable to obtain. It was expected that when the weight of the structure came upon the tower# they would ink some. "We are surprised," *ai, Col. Paine, of the enginerr corps, to a re porter, "that the towers have sunk little. The New York tower rests upon t wont v-two feet of limber and is seventy eight feet under water. In making the timber foundation there was a gain of two and one-half inches, hy reason of the pieces not coming close together. This we allowed to stand, ex peeling tl.nl the tower, when finished, would sink more than that; but now that the tower is all completed and over four-fifth# of all the weight that it is expected to tie or is upon it, wc find that it has sunk about an inch and a half, or hut iittie more than half of the unintentional increase in Its height. That is not near so much as we expected. At a certain altitude we had iron spike# driven into the tower at every angle to it on all sides, and we took Uie level from another spike, driven a* a ben eh nuirk into the sill of a win dow in South street. Ily taking tlie differ ence in tho level of those spike* to-day we get tlie di stall CO the tower has sunk. At oilier peculiar thing is that it ha* *unk evenly all around. Tbc Brooklyn tower lias not mik so much—not over an inch, 1 think." lowa boosts of a farmer who for thir teen months pet has drank nn average of ten gallons of water adny, and cannot even then sntDfy Lis morbid appetite. The rtilled Slates Signal Service. A Washington /W reporter ha* paid a visit to Fort Whipple (on<- of the suburbsl tho notional capital), where flM* trairiiriK iM'lioolof tin; IJnitwl StaU* Signal Service j* located. The Ameri can Signal Service ha* lr*n organ I z<l fur the protection of Catling guns and aruis, and a bri< k magazine f.i the safe storage of ammunition, signal shells and pyrot.s hni. s, for in tlnir spare moments the nnn make experiments with shell# charged with tun-cotum and "tin r interesting explosive*. Tln-y lorn to maneuver with field telegraph trains, and thej- liav. a pracfjee telegraph line forty mile* long. t)n a fWdTne eight min* long In-twcn the Fort and the town ofib <•, diffi niit tonus of telephone are tested, "Aid what do you signal b-side# flags?" " Torches and the heliograph. We use the sun.flash"* in the sann-way that the F.nglish did, you r mem ber. in the Zulu war." And the heliograph was kindly brought out for a practical illustration. It Is an inno. ent-.ooking little affair, standing on three leg*, and with a little mirror at the ton, almut five indies in I diameter. In the enter of the mirror I i* a small h le, and thr>ugji this the in strument is "sighted" and the *un , flash tli row n wherever it is desired. Words of Wi*dom. Adversity is the balance to weigh j friend*. , To him that live* well every farm ol life is good. We mut lot look around on the uni vw - r. as it i* used over and over again. Tlie saw and grist mill are run by this water falling on an over-shot wheel. Tinner tlie water fall* on an other wheel whi< h run * the linseed mill. The water and all is kept in motion by an ' iglity-nine hi f onc-iialf j ound wt ight. It i truly a k of art. and over seven - t'eti years w. -H-cupied in it*construe i lion.— AUoona (Pa.) Call. 4 ft cuubrful Georgia Parrot. Some months ago, say* a oorrespon dent of the St. Ixeii* We./knwof, I met a gentleman from Alabama who related the following parrot story, which I tieljere to Is- the iicst I ever beard Ir. .of Montgomery, Ala., ownitl a parrot during and aft r the war that was the pride and wonder of all Montgomery county. The doctor, like t ail physicians, was frequently called out at night by some one's •' halloo" at the front gate. Polly learned this, and one night when thedoctor answered a shrill "halloo" by coming to Urn door and ask- I ing what was wanted. Polly answend from a bunch of rose huahes: "He! hi! ha' I fool thedoctor that time; hi! he! ha!" 1 Polly received a sound thrashing for this trick and was quite sullen for a week or so. when onodork.rainy night the do< tor woke up to hear sonic one at the gate repeating his " halloo" fre i ciU' ntly. doing to the door he asked who was there. From the top