THE COLUMBIAN. Published Eveiiy Fejoay,, XT ST. HELENS, COLUMBIA CO., OIL. BY E. 0. ADAMS, Editor and Proprietor V 1 1 PCBLISHXD EVKRY FRIDAY, AT . ST. HELENS, COLUMBIA CO.. OR., BY . G. ID A1IS, Editor and Proprietor, Subscription Rates : Advebtisinq Rates: Oae square (10 lines) first insertion. . $2 One year, in advance $2 00 Six months, 1 00 VOL. V. ST. HELENS, COLUMBIA - COUNTY, OREGON, MAY 8, 1885. NO. 40. Three months. " 50 Each subsequent insertion 1 09 THE COLUMBIAN. jvfl THE LOST BATTLE. To his heart It struck Much terror Ti.at i.e laughe i a laub of a.-orn The man m tue soldier's doublet, W'itU i lie sword so bravely worn. It struck bU heart like t'e frost-wind 'lo find hia comrade fled. While ti.e battle-tteld wan grarded l$y the lit.-ro" who lay deud. lie drew his sword In the sunlight, .And ailed with a long halloo, D a 1 men. there is one living Snail stay it out with you!' lie raised a ragged standard. Turn lonely s ul In war. And called the to to onset Bj: phouta tuey tear alar. vallooed 6wlft t a ward him. banner floated wMe; It sank ; he sank be -tide it - I'pon his sword, and died. -Hote Itatctliorne Lathrop, in Harper' $ Maga zine. SOMETIME.. A Practical Sermon Preached by the Cellar Stairs. Strangely enough, the cellar stairs preached it at least they contributed that very important part, the applica tion. Sister Searles had furnished the text in the morning, but then the ser m,on ni ght have gone on from firstly to forty-seventh ly without Mrs. Bar ney's notice, had it not been for the cellar stairs. Mrs. Barney was hurried that day she was always hurried and it wa? warm and uncomfortable in the sun shiny, stove-heated kitchen, where she was hastening to and fro. growing fretted and tired without slackening her speed. Neal'e, standing at the ironing-table, was tired also. "1 here's so much to do." she said, wearily. "I do not see why we need do bak ng and ironing both in one day. It makes sucn a crowd, and we could have left one for to-morrow." To-morrow wll bring work enough of its own," answered Mrs. Barney, qu'ckly. "Besides, if we should get the work all out of the way the first of the week, a whole day to rest in would be worth something." But then we shouldn't take it for resting just because it would be a whole day and someth ngelse would be crowd ed into it." murmured Nealie, to whom one hour now looked very inviting and that possible day in the future very un ce.ta:n. The mother did not answer, and the grrl's nand moved more slowly over the damp musl ns as her gaze wandered away to the hills where great trees wt-re throw ng cool shadows. How pleasant the shade and greenness were! ri.e tie-iire to br ng :t nearer suggested another thought to Nealie "Some vines would be so nice at th s window, mother. I could plant them if you would let Tim dig a little spot out theie." "Yes, but if we ever get the house fixrd up as we want it we shall have shutters at that w.ndow." "But we don't know when we can do that, and the vines would be so pretty now." urged Nealie. Prettv? Wi 11. yes. if we had the whole yard trimmed and laid out as it should be. I hupe we shall have it some day; but a stray v.ne here and there seems hardly worth fussing over when we can't have the whole done." Nealie sighed but was silent, and presently Tim came in with an armful of wood. Nealie," he said, pausing near her table, "if you just sew this sleeve up a little. The old th ng tears awful easy, and 1 just hit it against a nail." He spoke low, but Mrs. Barney's quick ears caugh the words. "That jacket torn again. Tim? I never saw such a boy to tear things to pieces! No, Nealie can't stop to mend it now. and I can't either. I've been intending to get you a new one, but there doesn't seem much chance to make anything new while you contrive to make so much patching and darn ng on the old." Mrs. Barney shut the oven door with a snap. Tim was the hired boy, kind hearted but careless, and he wa rather discouraging. Board and cloth ing sometimes appeared to her a high price for .his serv.ces. "Hurry, now, and pick some currants for d nner," she said. Tim took the tin pail pointed out to him, but he d:d not hurry as he pas-ed w.th clouded face down the walk. The thought of a" new jacket would have been very pleasant a few minutes be fore, but 't had suddenly lost attract iveness. The boy drew his bushy brows into a scowl, a- d as soon as he was out of sight of the house, threw himself upon the grass, and began Irs c:irrant-p. eking in a very leisurely manner. Then it was that Sinter Searles drove up in her rattling old bu'gv With a horse that was, as Tim fa d. "a regular old revolutionary pen sioner.'' "If I can't have fine horses and car r.age. I can take a deal of comfort with these' was always Sister Searles's cheery comment upon her equipage. She had an errand at Mrs. Barney', and had stopped on her way to the vil lage. A plump, ro.y-faced little wom an she was, not young, only that she belonged to the class of people who never grow old: neatly dressed, though it was "but the old poplin made over." Mr-. Barney noticed while . she was talk'ng, wondering a little that she should have "taken the trouble, when she purely needed a new one." " "Th.s room is tod warm to ask- any one to sit in," she said, apologetically, j:lac ng a chair for her caller just out k de thu door. "When we are able to have the house altered to suit us I shall have a stove here in the summer." "In the mean time you have his nice tod porch. What a pleasant place it is!" sa d Sister Searles, adm'ringly. Yes, if one had time to enjoy" it," answered Mrs. Barney, with an uneasy laugh. "I'm so hurried trying to get everything about the place in just the right order that I don't have time." Take time. Sister Barney, take time," said Mrs. Searles, smiling, but earnestly. Make the most of what you have while you are working for something better. Don t crowd out any little sweetness you have to make room for some great pleasure that's further off. You see," she added". blush. ng a little, as if her words need ed excuse, "it's something I had to learn myself years ago never trampl on daisies in a wild chase after roses. The roses I haven't found, but the dai sies have been enough to make the path bright." Mrs. Barney looked upon her in some perplexity as she took her de parture. She had listened with one half her mind on the loaves of "bread in the oven and the other half did not fully comprehend what had been said. "Daisies and roses! l don t see what any sort of flower has to do with want ing a new kitchen. But there! 1 sup po1 minister's wives hear so much taiTfc Vwwr"i "cotncsnatural to them. B.ts of old sermons, like as anyway. Dear me! I don't get much time for 5oetry in ray life, I'm sure of that, low Tim does loiter!" Tim. meanwhile, had j-auntored out from aruong the bushes, and was en- faged in untying the old horse that Irs. S -arles had fastened as securely as if it could be induced under any cir cumstances to run. He was moved to this set nf frnllnntrv nartlv because he ...... . 4 really 1 ked the cheery little woman and partly because he heard M rs. bar ney's call and was in no haste to go to the house. "That will do, thank you, Tim," said Sister Searles, nervously anxious to ex pedite his steps in the way of obodi- ence. "1 think -Mrs, liaruev is calling yon." Yes'ru: she mostly always is,' answered Tim, philosophically, pausing to arrange the harness with painful de liberation. "But. my dear boy," urged Sister Fcarles, read hg something in his knitted brows, "you should really try to please and help her all you know. She is kind to you." "Oh, yes. shVs.k'nd. Only when I see one of her kindnesses a-com'n'. I dodge it; it generally hits a fellow hard enough to be uncomfortable," re sponded Tim". Then, having relieved hs feelings by this statement, his con science pricked him slightly, and he added: "You see. she's always in such a hurry. She can't come and bring 'em; she has to p tch "em." Mrs. Searles meditated as she drove down the country road. "Well, I never thought of that be fore, but I do suppose that's why the Bible speaks of the Lord's loving kind ness and tender mercy because there is so much kindness in the world that isn't one bit loving, and so much mercy that is only duty and not tenderness. I'll tell Josiah that." For it happened that while the good minister pored over h s books and studied theology, his wife, going here and there, studied hu manity. And though he cooked his own sermons she often seasoned them. The baking was done at last, the cur rants picked and Mrs. Barney's dinner readv. "For the bounty bestowed upon us may we be duly grateful.' murmured Mr. Barney, with head bowed low over h s plate. Then he looked up and 're marked that he was tired of a steady diet of ham and eggs and ilidn't see why they couldn't have a little variety. "You would see if you had to cook in the hot kitchen as I do," responded Mrs. Barney, more shortly than her wont. "I'm glad to have whatever I get most qu ckly and easily. Wticn we h ive a summer-kitchen we can begin to Jive as other people do." "If we ain't all as old as Methuse ler," complained Master Tommy in an undertone which was perfectly audi ble; "anyway, the chickens will be, if we can't have any cooked till that time." He had sniffed the odors of the baking on his homeward way from school, and, settl.ng his juve nile m'nd upon chicken pie for din ner, had been grievously disappointed. Warm and weary with her morn ing's work the questions and sugges tions fretted Mrs. Barney. She felt wounded and aggrieved, too, as she moved about silently after dinner. No one seemed to see she cared a- much for things nice and comfortable as did the others, she said to herself. She cared far more, indeed, since she was willing to do much now. and work and plan for the sake of having things all - that could be desired by and by. How many present comforts and con veniences had she foregone for that! Those ver3' oellar stairs toward whoso dark and tortuous steps she was tending were an example; they could scarcely Ik? more badly built, or in a more inconvenient place. Mr. Barney bad wanted to remove them, but she would not allow him to incur the ex- Eense, because a second removal might e necessary when the house was thor oughly rearranged. No, she prolerred to submit to 'the discomfort all'this time. "Too long a time it proved, for while she meditated, an insecure board slip ped beneath her feet, plunging her down the dark, narrow stairway, aga'nst tho rough stone wall, and then upon the bard floor of the cellar. One swift moment of terror, the crash of the d shes that fell from her hands, a flash of exeruciatingpain, and then she knew nothing more. She did not hear Neal.es wild cry from the room above, nor see her husband's pale face as he 1 fted her in h's arms. When idie returned to consciousness a strange voice the physician's was saying: No bones broken, though it's a won der her neck wasn't, falling in the way she did." Slowly she opened her eyes upon a confused mingling of. anxious faces, wet cloths and bottles of arnica and camphor, and gradually comprehended what had happened and her own con dition not dangerously injured, but bruised and lamed, and with a sprained ankle that would keep her a prisoner for some days at least. It was a sud den pause in her busy life an enforced rest. She scarcely knew how to lear it. for a moment, as she remembered all she had planned to do, until a ec ond shuddering thought suggested that she might have left it all forever ; then she grew pat ent and thoughtful. Yet it seenied strange to be Jying quietly on the lounge in the best bed-room tho room that had been kept so carefully closed to preserve its furniture until an addition to the house should transmute it into a back parlor ; to watch through the open door, only a spectator, while Nealie flitted to and fro in the kitchen beyond, spreaking the table for tea. How good the children were that evening, how tenderly thoughtful her Husband was, coming to her side again and again to talk or read to her! They had not found much time for talking or reading together the e late years, she and David; she had always been so busy when he was in the house. She had dreamed of a leisure time coming, though, when they should have many evenings like this, except the illness. She had not thought much of illness or accident coming to mar her plans, or of death suddenly ending them. .But it Hashed upon her now how many little loving words and oflices and daily en joyments had been crowded out of their little home, and iu that brief retrospec tive glance she understood the meaning and the earnestness of Sister . Scark-s's entrea'y. "Why, it's all kind of real nice and jolly if you wasn't hurt," declared Tommy, unable to express his enjoy ment "of the pretty room and the unusual fam'ly gathering any more ch-arly. Tears gathered in the mother's eyes, but she had foun I her clue and she meant to follow it. She had ample t'ru'j for thought in the days that fol lowed, when she was only able to sew a little now and then on garments for Tim, or look over seeds for Nealie' s vino-planting: and slowly but surely she learned her lesson, and brought it back to health with her to gather life's pleasantness as God sends his sunshine day by day. Pacific Evangel. SKATING. The Distinction He t ween Skating On the lee and Jn the Kink. Skating on rollers round and round a rink is one th ng; skating on the ice, over a long, straig'it-away course, un der cliffs, pa t meadows, among hTls, is quite another. The relation of the former to the latter is the same that shooting at clay-pigeons bears to quail hunting in the stubble. In the one case we find pleasure in dexterity; in the oth r we get near to nature and catch the spirit of adventure. Tho writer never had but one thor oughly satisfactory skating experience in his l.fe. It occurred on the Kentucky River. He was one of a party of ten, all young enough, to be lively, all old enough to appreciate the rare condi tions. The river wa struck where a break in the blurt's gave an easy descent to the ice the objective point (and it is always well to have an objective poii t in life, whether one is kating. soldiering or sermonizing), seven miles away. The sky was gray; just a thought of snow m the a"r; the wind with us; the scenery rugged and picturesque. Here was felic ty unmixed! We seemed to sink into the embrace of nature. The region was as wi'.d to the view as when Daniel Boone tir.-t looked upqn it. We gazed down the perspective of the valleys, that oc casional 13 opened as we swept out of one defile into another, half-exr ecting to see a village of Wigwams in the dis tance. There was a charm in every foot of the landscape which, like a vast pano.-ama, swept behind us a we flew. But th charms were those that hold us irresistibly when we contemplate the "deep sol tude-." of nature, profoundly sensitive of the august majesty of the Creator's own handiwork. We began with a whoop; but, as the true senti ment of the scene touched our souls, we prew subdued by the environing grandeur, the pace conform ng to the general mood, and it was not until there was a sudden realization that the goal was near that the wild halloo of the foremost, h mself abruptly aroused, awoke tl e spirit of frolic. If skating were only attractive under these circumstances there would .be few skaters in the world; but the same up lifting experience may bo attained in other ways and at all scasous. The busy American needs the suggestive diversion that sport in the open ar g ves whether it be skating, bicycling, hunting, fishing or tours afoot. And he needs to open his soul to the senti ment of tho past roe. To play merefy to perfunctor ly acquiesce in a physi c an's prescription, is not the doctor's intention. We should learn to enjoy hunting quite as much because we go to the hills and fie'ds as for the oppor tunity to tiil a game-bag. Skatmg in a rink, shooting at a target under cov er, or rac ng against time around the tan-bark circle, are well enough in their way. but the better thing is to go a-sporting where tho eye can discover a 'distant horizon. The anise-bag has its proper use in default of the fox. That there is, at the present time, a popular tendency to play out-of-doors is very evident, notwithstanding the fervor with which some in-door -pastimes are held. It is giving, as has been noted by intelligent ob'ervers a grateful element to American litera ture, and is awakening in the Ameri can youth an ardor in the pursuit of these healthful pleasures which are only to be found where Nature main tains something of her original condi tions. It wis not many years ago when there were but comparatively few resorts f r tli summer-tourist in quest of an idling-place. Now they abound everywhere. The reason lies in the fact that people no longer, as a rule, desire to go With the crowd, but prefer the .-niall groups in tho places to which the noisi of commerce does not reach, and where the beat of Nature's heart can be heard. G. C. Matthews, in Chicago Current. According to Dr. Dolan's work on nydrophobia, physicians may convey to their patients a reasonable hope of al most perfect immunity from the dis ease after three months have elapsed' from the time the bite was inflicted. The danger is thought to be lessened with everv month that passes, "so that after a year the physician may afford a S'Mentdic certainty of the patient's re covery.'' Absolute quietude, or "se dation." and the use of the Turkish bat.i, are the measures chiefly recom mended as oreventive treatment. N. Y. I'o.-t. "HANDS UP." A Condition Tending to Make One Anxious and Uncomfortable. I don't know o anything that makes a modest, retiring m m feel more un comfortable than to sit in a railway train, holding up both hands, while i.i front of him stands a fellow that loois like a hurriedly arranged Mephisto pheles in a tramp Faust company, lev eling a six-shooter whose muzzle seems to open like the mouth of a hungry caf. fish. A man may have fought duels anc' may have the "reputation of being as firm as the architecture of Themistoele,s; but when au ungainly citizen, wearing 8 mask, throws tip a revolver and says: 'What time did oi say it was?" he will not 'repeat an o'd joke and reply: "Same time it 'twas t!vs time yester day,", but hands his watch to the dem onstrative stranger. This is not surmise with me. I arj;u from a foundation of truth, plastered with the cement of ex perience. 1 was a passenger on the raihfV train recently robbed near Little "lloek. Ju-t before leaving Pine Biu!t", a friend came to me and said: I wish you would take my watch up to the city "and leave it with a jeweler. It stopped the other day and I think there must be something the matter with it; indigestion, probably." Of course I consented, desiring to ac commodate my friend, as I didn't owe him anything." I put the dyspeptic time killer iii my valise, but after the train started, fearing that some one might mistake my luggage for his own, I took the watch but and wore it, not without a slight thrill of pleasure as the gold chain caught the rays of the lamp over head. When within a short distance of Littla Rock, the train suddenly stopped. The rapid firing of pistols without seemed fo assure the passengers that tax collectors were in the neighborhood, for eveny on began to show signs of uneasiness, but before we had time to engage in those little speculations and humorous re marks which frequently delight an ap preciative company, a very tall fellow, followed by several companions, en tered the car and made a remark which I understood to mean "hands up." The passengers readily accepted my interpretation of the remark, and fol lowing my example, held up their hands. I felt sorry for one poor fellow. He only had one arm with him at the time, and his piteous implorations that somebody would lend him another hand for a few moments were quite enough to have moved a gall of flint. The Captain of the gang was very gentle manly, and doubtless tore my vest by mistake while taking off the valuable watch which the Pine Bluff man hacWn trusted to my keeping. "Look here.William the Kid, or what ever your name may be on the present occasion," said I, ""this watch does not belong to me. I am only taking it up to town for a friend. It won't run, so wait until it is repaired." I looked arotKid to see if the audience were applauding my presence of mind and determination to be facetious. No one smiled, but an old man who was so fat that he filled one seat and bulged over on another, groaned and said: "Wonder why some fellow don't shoot that fool." "Not your watch, eh?" said the leader, tugging at the chain. "No. sir: belongs to Colonel Met. L. Jones, of Pine Bluff." "That so? Why, I am glad to know it. Colonel Jones is a friend of mine and I am sure he made a mistake in letting you.take it. There now, it's all right' ;Look hear, boss," said an old negro who was being searched, "mebbe yer doan know it am ergin de law ter ack like yerse'f is er doin'. l'se dun had all my property made ober in de name o' my wile, tan1 yer ain't got no right ter take er lady's property dis er way. I doan mine seein'. er man 'posed on, but when er persun 'poses on er lady, w'y den I yas, sah, yas," as a pistol barrel came up under his nose; "take de ladjr's property, sah. Got no bus'nes wid hit, nohow."" When the robbers allowed the tram to proceed, everybody got mad, and after we were under way, one mau drew a pistol and swore that no rooster in America could rob him, and then remembering that he had lost his watch, added "again." It makes no difference how cool and frosty a man's temperament may be, it i3 quite difficult for him to keep from feeling anxious and uncomfortable when a burly fellow levels a pistol and says: "Throw up j our bauds. ' Opie P. Head, in -V. 1'. Mercury. PAID THE DEBT. 2fever So Good a Time as Now to Dis charge Obligations. The following true incident was pub lished by the local papers years ago, but being true, and having been crushed to earth, rises again: In Van Buren there once lived an old gentleman of the name of John Bostick. He kept a hotel and was also proprietor of a blacksmith shop. A well-known minister. Rev. Mr. Buchanan, who al ways put up with Bost:ck, met the hotel man on the street one day, after having staid all night with him, and said: "Well. Uncle John, how much do I owe you?" "Owe me for what, Brother Buck?" "Why, you know I have staid all night with you." "Yes, Brother Buck, but you know that I never charge preachers." "I know that. Uncle John, but I had my horse shod." "Brother Buck, I never charge a preacher for shoeing his horse." "I don't want work done for nothing." said the preacher. "Well, Brother Buck, just remember me in your pravers." "All right. Uncle John, but as I have always adhered to the rule of never leaving a place ia debt, get down on" your knees and we'll hive prayers right now." The two men knelt on the sidewalk an I the debt wa paid. Arkansaw T- iveter. rih'ianion cuke: When the sponge of yes! .-jke is ready to knead take a portion f nd roll out three-fourths of an indi thliK put thin slices of butter on the top, sprinkle with cinnamon and sngar; let it well, tVan bake. Th EauseJiol'l. 1 Disappearance of the "Naming" autl Court Mart lal Ungbears. The collapse of a bugbear is an event. Few American children come to mail's or woman's estate without experiencing, a thrill of pleasure at the discovery that some terror to which they have been paying the homage of fear for years is a pure creature of the imagination, in vented for their express benefit. It may be the comparatively innocuous "snnd man." whose worst fear is putt: op; jid in their eyes to drive them all too' iy to bed; or it may be the grim oMin. of an hundred names and ten trnc; as many shapes whose predicted c-omiug to swallow or otherwise destroy has sub dued their wildest tempests of infantile rage and sent them cowering to the nurse's arms or some other hiding place. Whatever it is. soon or late its narmlessness er non-existence is discov ered and " the disenthralled young.tr revels in a joyful sense of" freedom j which few experiences of after-lift par I allel or approach. I There are grown up bugbears, how ever, before wh:eh the adult world trem bles as unhappily ns the child does be fore those invented for his repression. There have been two, in particular, which have long enjoyed dominion; and by a singular coincidence they have both fallen from their high estate in the f ame week almost on the same day. One of them was the awful bugbear which had done duty for generations in the British Parliament, the awful bug bear of being "named" by the Speaker. It. was a remarkable illustration of the power which an unknown terror pos sesses. Nobody within the recollection of any human being now living ever was "named" by the Speaker. Nobody ever had the slightest idea what tho consequences would be of being "named." But for this very reason the oare threat 01 a rqoaker to "name a member has always leen sufficient to reduce the most turbulent to subjection. The effect not being defined, the imagi nation pictured the threat as full of all the direst possibilities from the anathema maranatha to annihilation: and no one, consequently, dared to brave the operation. Hut during the past week a venturesome Irish member what will not an Irishman venture? drove the maddened Speaker into 'putting out the ,enerable bugbear and actually naming the member. For a moment the House held its breath with a feeling that chaos might po-sibly be coming. Then, as nothing happened, they began to inquire what "naming" actually amounted to. only to find that it simply involved suspension from the floor for a week. Ami the venerable bugbear was dead past all hope of resurrection. About the same time, on the other side of the ocean, in the laud of the free. etc. (see patriotic songs), another venerable bugbear yielded up the ghost. Like its British cousin it had held its place for generations, exercising chief s ay over the men-at-arms who serve their country on the tented field and occasionally " in office at Washington. It was the bugbear called court-martial. For untold years it had been held tin before the military eye as a frightful, awesome contingency which must on no account be dared. Hut in an evil hour a court-martial was actually called in the case of Judge Advocate General Swa'm and by the time the proceedings were brought to a close the time-honored bugbear had ceased to be service able. It will le trotted out again, per haps, with its tattered garments patched and its hideous lineaments outlined in ghastly colors. Hut its power, to in spire terror is gone forever. While it was a vague and indefinable horror which might mean anything, the soldier shr ink from it with a tremor which no belching battery or shower of leaden rain and iron hail had power to produce. Now that he knows it means only half pay and no work he can no longer be affrighted with it. , The British loss we can not regret, for it does not affect us; but it really is a pity that a good working bugbear like the court-martial should be suddenly and hopelessly dethroned. The worst of it is we have nothing to replace it. There is the "reprimand." it is true, which has often done good service in the bugbear line, and the efficiency of which is not wholly destroyed. There is fear, however, that in the reckless ness engendered by the discovery that "naming" a member of Parliament is not equivalent to a death warrant and that a court-martial is rather a pleasant picnic, some one may compel the "rep rimand" also to show its colors. And the minute it does that it, too, is doomed. Detroit Free J'res.i. THE WASHINGTON MONUMENT. Opinion of Colonel Ca.cy, the Kng'nerr, s lo Its stability. Colonel C.v-oy. the engineer, says: "I do not suppose it possible for man to t . . . t r make anything mat Wiiienuure iorevcr. There is no substance in nature that will withstand the ravages of time, and the marble and granite of which that phaft is composed are no exception to the rule. I bolievo it will stand as long as there is anything left of it. How many hundreds or thousands tf years It will take the frost and storm and sun to wear away, particle by particle, that great mass of stone, it would be idle even to conjecture. It will be so far in the future that I do not think there is any occasion for us to feci distressing apprehensions Yet 1 believe thatif the worltl and this nation shall endure so long, the memory of Washington will outlive the monument. That can not be forgotten while wo exist as a people; but the people must sometime yield to decay. The effects of time are already discernible on the old section of the shaft, built thirty-live years ago. True, it is only slight, but "you can plainly see it here and there oa the ex ternal surface. It only enables us to imagine what will be the result of the beating and scorching of the elements through centuries" of time. Of course no engineering skill can provide pgainst the contingency of earthquakes or other extraordinary "convulsions of uature, but I am absolute in the belief that the broad and deep foundation on which the column stands will be firm and en during, and that years will only make more perfect its stability. Cor. Cleve land Herald. COLLAPSED. THE -DATOORA. Teeuliar and llMtngerous Propri'tle of an , Indian Herb. One of the most common plants by ditch-side or cactus-hedge is the datoora, with its large white flower, and leaves resembling the hollyhock, and now well known as a valuable medicino for asthma, for which its leaves are used in the shape of cigars or "tobacco." The seeds, on the other hand, are a subtle and powerful poison, in small quantities causing temporary insanity, and in large, either permanent injury to the brain, or death. By an acchlent, I be came aware of the jiecultar properties of the datoora. A robbery occurred in a neighboring village, and an alarm spread that this had been effected tliTbugh the agency of datoora-poison-ing by an organized gang of robber poisoners. It seemed the gang had put up at the viiliigc t ho uight oefore in the guise of traveler, anu succeeded in getting 011 friepdly terms with one of the wealthiest families there, whom they entertained to a feast of sweet meats the only eatable in which different castes may join. As night ad vanced the family allowed them to put u)i in their veranda: and when the village was sunk in sleep, the effects of the roi- ! solicit sweetmeats gradually placed the house and all it contained at the mercy I of the ro'oler. Next morning, when j the hue and cry arose in the village, and j native inspectors, thanvahdnrs and con j stables had arrive I from far and near j to investigate the case and to turn to ! what nrolit they could the onnortunifv they found the family of eight lying helplessly and dangerously ill, scrai kliotic, and unconscious of what had occurred or was going on around them. The house had lecn ransacked, and monev dug out of the ground (the na- ! tives" purse) amounting to about thirty j thousa d rupees: and the suspicion of datoora-poisouiug was confirmed. No j trace of the gang could be found, in i spite of the official raids made by the j jwdieo, and the levy of blackmail on j those who could afford to "pay" to es j cape .xup:cion. The family gradually : recovered to lind themselves almo-t j penniless, the timn they had been under ; tho po'son being a blank to them. I A ad ease of datoora-poisoning oc ; eurred some time af.er this. My gar I dener's ch'M. a tine little fellow of two j years, whom I had often seen in the j garden, had swallowed a few datoora j seeds while plaving with somo children j by the roadilo. This was firt siis i pected by his parents from some of the feds being found in Jus hand: and nfier bHng taken home the fatal result too oon confirmed their fears. From being in perfect hoaltfc, in a few hours he was a memory of the past: and one the saddest 'ghts was the. distracted grief of the parents for their only son. Sadder if anything was the fact of the lvty being kept for three days in the hot weather muter the shade of a large sacrificial banyan tree close by, covered only wilh a light cloth and some leaves, wa'f'ng till the injinohdar of the ncar- 1 c-( si at ion could find leisure to come and report on it before burial, while the mother was rushing off at all hour of he night and day to take another look at her dead child. Chambers' Journal. ORIENTAL BRASS WORK. The New Made tv Men. and the Repair ing hj I)amaetift Women. The trays usually called Algerine are always beaten out on thin brass, are not useful in a domestic sense, being apt to "wobble" when a weight is carried on them, but their color being peculiarly golden, as decorations they are perfect. They arc ornamented with man' pointed stars or varieties of the double triangle. They generally present a mosque, often a ship, a crescent and star, or one of the varieties of the conventional sign known as the hand of Mahomet. They are never made now in Algiers: the only brass work known there resembles that from Tangiers patterns cut out in low relief. Some very handsome trays of this lattersorl can 1m purchased, and inscriptions of mottoes made to order: they are more expensive than the oth ers Women aim children in Damas cus are much employed in restaniping old trays from which patterns have be come effaced by long use this being probably not thought such important work as the making new ones, a tak reserved for men. Thus I have seen an old Ven't:an platter preserving the familiar twNted rope and emb ossed center, but with afl the rest of the surface inc!sel in flat Damascus work: the conventional loz enge could st 11 be seen at the back. Th's was a mo-t unnecessary waste of labor on the part of the Damascus workmen, as Venetian platters, though riddled with holes like a sieve when hold up to the light, are still cherished as priceless bits of color. The inscriptions on Vonet'an platlers are unfortunately often (like those on Eastern work) so degraded as to be incomprehensible even to the experts of the Uriti-h Mu seum. London Queen. The be.-t State for an artist, Colo rado; for a doctor. Md.; for pigs, Ponn.; for miners. Ore.; for dogs, Ky. ; for a poor marksman. Miss.; for Arabs, Ala.; for those unable to pay, ().; for a flood. Ark. The State one is apt to like best Mo. The worst State for health 111. A State worth more than nine Sta'os put together Tenn. The Almighty has done much for us, giving us a prolific soil, rich min erals, a temperate climate, and every advantage at our very doors except population to develop our resources, and money to enable it to do so. These two essentials we need, and we need them badly. --Mobile iW titer. . The language of letter seals is the latest. A seal of pink wax means con gratulation; one of black, condolence: of bine, love: of purple, friendship; of red, business; and an invitation to a wedding or other festivity is sealed with white wax. Chicago Inter Orcan. The highest price which Meissonier ever obtab?d for a painting w.i3 870, 000, paid bTM. Secretan for "1814." The highest-priced Meissonier in this coun try cost the late A. T. Stewart $00,000. Mr. Vanderbilt paid $40,000 for the "Arrival at the Chateau." .V. Y. Mail. - TEA AND COFFEE. How the Beverage Should Be, Bnt Vaaall Are Not, Prepared. It is not every housewife who under stands how to make really good, re freshing tea, though some people con sider it one of the moist easy things in the world. Many recommend the use of a metal tea-pot, in preference to earthenware, contending that the flavor of the tea can be more fully obtained. For my own part, I decidedly prefer china or earthenware, for the reason that they can be kept so very much sweeter and cleaner than metal. If those who have their tea made every day in a metal tea-pot will just examine the inside, I fancy they will find it very much discoloredr and anything but in viting looking. It will often be found, too, that it sends forth an unpleasant odor, very different from tho sweet,-refreshing smell when we lift tho lid of an earthenware pot. Strict cleanliness in nil that we eat or drink, is an im portant subject. The water with which the tea has to be made ought always to be just freshly boiled. If, as I have seen done in some kitchens, the kettle is allowed to remain boiling for half an hour before it is re quired, the full, rich flavor of the tea will never be obtained. If the water, is very bard, a smalj pinch of soda should be put into the tea-ot with the- tea. The tea must on no account be brewed before the wafer boils, or the result will be as unsatisfactory as having it boiled too long. 'Unless the kcttl bolllnj? be, Filling the tea-pot, spoils the tea." Before making the tea, pour about half a pint of scalding -hot water into the teapot, and let it stand for a minute or two, until the tea-pot is thoroughly heated through; then empty it out and immediately put in the tea. Put on the lid and let it remain a minute till the tea gets quite hot, then pour in tho boiling water. Set the tea-pot on the stove, where it will keep hot. but on no account boil; or, better still, put it un der a cosy for five or ten minutes, when it will be ready for use. A very safe rule as to the rjuantity of tea required is the old-fashioned one, one teaspoonful for each person and one over for the tea-pot. The plan which is adoptci by some persons of letting the tea boil for a min ute before using it does not take mv fancy. It at once turns almost black and bitter, and thus becomes anything lut the refreshing, fragrant beveragj which it ought to be. If any tea is left after the meal is fin ished do not let it be thrown away as useless. Pourit out into a jug a pitcher? Ens. to get cold; then add a few drops of lemon juice, and it will be found a most refreshing drink. . Now about coffee. Some people pur chase the berries raw, and have them roasted at home; but this is not easily done in an ordinary household, as a proper apparatus is required. It Is much loss troublesome, anL far more satisfactory to buy tho belies ready roasted from a first-rate dealer onu who can be depended upon. The cof fee should always bo ground at home, because it soon loses its delicious aroma if kept powdered. The requisite quan tity of berries should be put into the oven and allowed to,get hot, but on no account burnt; then thev should be ground while hot, immediately before using. The berries must not be ground too fine, or the coffee is apt to be rather thick instead of perfectly clear. It seems almost needless to say that tho very best coffee should always be used, because every housekeeper, of any prac ticaj experience, knows full well that the best of everything always proves the cheapest and most economical in the long run, if used with judicious care. Coffee is best when made in a tin cafetiere. Put the ground coffee upon the perforated bottom of the upper com partment, put the strainer on it and pour boiling water in gradually. Coffee made thus will bo clear, bright and full flavored. If a cafetiere is not at hand then tho best must be made of the ordinary coffee-pot. Fix a piece of muslin very loosely over the top of the coffee-pot, so as to hang a little way down in the in side, in the form of a bag; into this muslin put the proper quantity of ground coffee, pour the boiling water very slowly upon It. When it is all drained through give the bag a gentle squeeze, to get nil the good possible out of it, then remove it from the coffee-pot; the coffee is now ready for use; it requires no settling or clearing, and should be sent to table at hot as possible. The quantity of coffee used must, of course, bo determined by individual tastes; but one thing is certain, if the coffee is not strong the rich, fragrant aroma is lost. There is still, remaining in London, one of the real, old-fashioned coffee-houses, where, my husband tolls me, the best coffee in tho land is always to be had. They roast the berries them selves, grind them hot, and make the coffee very strong, almost black; boiling milk, as well as cold, is always served with the coffee, and this entirely removes atry harshness which might be experi enced, if only cold milk were ucd. They just about half fill the cup with coffee, thus leaving room for plenty of milk, which is always a very great im provement, making the coffee taste po mellow and rich. The milk for coffee should always be used hot. I do not see any reason why this method of making coffee, with the ex ception of roasting the berries, should not be carried "out in everv household where coffeeJs used. Even if the trouble were ever so much, I would rather un dertake it than let my husband think he got better coffee anywhere else than in his own home. Aunt Chloe, in Country Gentleman.' 7 We have a friend in Oneonta of tho legal profession who is the father of a bright boy of six summers. In attend ing a funeral recently he took this lad with him. During tlie early part of tho service the boy maintained a proper de corum, but toward U10 close he grew restless and wished to speak to hi father, who whispered with some stern ness in his car: "You must keep quiet." "Just let me speak one word to you. papa, and I will." "Wtll. what is itP" There are twenty-one bald-headed men in the room besides yourself." Cvopcrs totcn (N. Y.) Freeman's Journal.