i B. F. SCHWEIER, IHS COKSTITUTIOS THB TJ5ION AND THE ENFORCEMENT OF THE LAWS. Editor and Proprietor. VOL. XXVIII. MIFFLINTOWN, JUNIATA COUNTY, PENNA., AUGUST '26. 1S74. NO. at. i ? ! Poet ry. SiOT LOST. BY MARY BBOTHEBTOX. mp rooted like trees in one place. Our brain foliage toss'd Like the leaves of the trees that are caught 15y the fonr win Id of heaven-some thought lllowg out of the world into space. And seems lost. IL We fret, the mind labors, heart bleeds; We believe and we fear. We believe and we hope, in a Lie, r a Truth; or we doubt till we die, I'urbUndlr examining creeds With a sneer. IIL To Life we apply an inch rule. And to its lien tower; Each to self an infallible priest. Each struts to the top of the leant. And savs to his brother, "Thou fool ! Jo down lower." IV. l'.ut fall'n like trees from our place. Hid. imbedded, enmoss'd; Our dead leaves are raked np for mold. And some that were sun-ripe and Blown out of the world into space. Are not lost. Kf-ottish Anecdote. In a very entertaining work, entitled "Reminiscences of Scottish Life and Character," from the pen of Dean Ram say, we find the following humorous illustrations): "Some years ago, when it was not an uncommon thing, even in Scotland, for challenges to be given and accepted for insults, or supposed insults, an Eng lish gentleman was entertaining a party at Inverness with an account of the wonders he had seen and the deeds he had performed in India, from whence he had lately arrived. He enlarged particularly upon the size of the tigers he had met with at different times in his travels, and by way of corroborat ing his statements, assured the com pany that he had shot one himself con siderably above forty feet long. A Scottish gentleman present, who thonght these narratives rather ex ceeded a traveler's allowed privileges, coolly 6aid that no doubt those were very remarkable tigers, but that he could assure the gentleman there were in that northern part of the country some wonderful animals, and as an ex ample he cited the existence of a skate- fish captured off Thurso, exceeding half-an-acre in extent. Ihe Ji.ngiish man saw this was intended as a sar casm agains'i his own story; so he left the room in indignation, and sent his friend to demand satisfaction or au apology from the gentleman who had, he thought, insulted him. The nar rator of the skate coolly replies, 'Weel, sir, gin yer freend will tak a few feet aff the length o' his tiger, we'll see what can be done about the breadth o' the skate.' " "The parishioners of a clergyman in Scotland, iu expressing to him their aversion to the nse of manuscript ser mons, urged: 'What gars ye tak np your bit papers to the pu'pit?' He replied that it was best, for really he could not remember ms sermon, ana must have his paper. Veel, weel minister, then dinna expect that we can remember them.' " "A late Duke of Athole had invited a well-known character, a writer of Perth, to come np and meet him at Dunkeld for the transaction of some business. The Duke mentioned the day and hour when he should receive the man of law, who accordingly came punctually at the appointed time and place. But the Duke had forgotten the appointment, and gone to the hill, from which he could not return for some hours. A Highlander present described the Perth writer's indigna tion, and his mode of showing it by a most elaborate course of swearing. But whom did he swear at?' was the inquiry made of the narrator, who re plied, "'Oh, he didna sweer at ony thing particular, but juist stude in ta middle of ta road and ewoor at lairge.' " Cheap Ice. When the first artificial ice was produced, in Trance, it cost 8110 a ton, or 5 cents a pound. In 1850, Prof. Twining of Ohio patented a pro cess in Europe, and succeeded in mak ing, with a ten-horse engine, 1,000 pounds of ice a day, at a cost of a half cent per pound, or $10 per ton. Bnt the Columbus (Ga.)Sun says that the Columbus iron works have perfected machines by which they can make a su perior quality of ice in quantities only limited by the capacity of the apparatus, at a cost ranging from seventy-five cents to two dollars per ton, the latter being the maximum, or one-tenth of a cent per pound. "The Columbus process" claims superiority in the cheap ness and durability of its apparatus, and in the cheapness, cVity simplicity with which icu et ee manufactured. Distilled water is tsi, and the ice is therefore purer rhUhat cat from stan ding pond. These machines are being built now with a capacity of from 1000 to 20,000 pounds a day, and ranging in prices from SiWO to $20,000. They can te naed in the water at less expense than the cost of cutting and storing the ice made by nature, and are as good for northern as southern latitudes. Length ofLife of farmer. In Massachusetts there is a State Board of Health, which has been pay ing attention to the sanitary condition of farmers. Its fourth annual report is publiehed, and an article on the above subject, based upon the reports of country physicians, appears. This tes timony, including evidence collected the past 28 years, shows that the aver age life of the Massachusetts farmer is to 1-4 years a greater longevity than that of any other class. Yet it is claimed that farmers might live much longer if they were better and more caref ully fed, lived upon more nutri tious and wholesome diet, ate wiih greater deliberation, and were careful wt to engage in active exercise too oon after eating. They should eat more fruit end vegetables, less of pork, pies,cakes, saleratus biscmt,take pains to protect themselves better from sud den changes of temperature, deodorize cess pools, sinks, out-houses, and keep clean back yards; change clothing and bathe more frequently. Such statistics and suggestions are valuable, and de- serve me aisii"" . In the last six months the value of telegraphic wires, etc, exported from England was 1.579,754; in the same period in the corresponding year, 7Ua,-410. TI1E IRISH BRIGADE. The story of the Irish Brigade is one of the most interesting episodes in the history of the Irish people. Their ardent military spirit, which lias one of the results of their Celtic origin, had been wasted through many centuries, in savage feuds among themselves, or in fruitless resistance to their invaders and when at length it had become dis ciplined, under Sarsfield and St Ruth, and acquired a force whicn might have yielded England the greatest service in her ensuing wars, it was lost to her through the intolerance which pro scribed the religion of a nation. The laws of the period, which forbade Catholics to bear arms nnder the Eng lish crown, blindly renounced all the advantages to be derived from their de votion, and compelled the army of James IL, when disbanded at the Peace of Limerick, to pass over to the Con tinent, and enroll nnder its various monarchs. Almost every throne of Eu rope profited by the bold hearts and stalwart frames of the buoyaut sons of the Emerald Isle, except only the one that still nominally claimed their alle giance while repudiating their services. It was in France, however, that James's army was fonnd principally to reassem bleowing, probably, to the greater sympathy of the Hibernian and the Celtic temperaments and there formed themselves into a body, which soon be came distinguished under its title of the "Irish Brigade." These gallant emigrants, who left be hind them all their social and domestic ties, carried abroad, with their untar nished honor and their indomitable courage, all their unconquerable gayety and their undying love for their native country. Almost as deep, however, perhaps was their love for their native music So strong was it. indeed, that they refused to march to the French tunes, and on all military occasians in sisted on the use of their national airs a gratification that was conceded to them, though the same favor was denied to the Swiss. For this, however, there was a reason. The mnsic of the "Kanz des Yacb.cs" awoke in the breast of the latter such a passionate longing for home, that it often led to desertion ; while in the poor Irishman, whose home was lost to him, no such danger was to be feared. During the course of almost a century the Brigade was enrolled in the French army, aud had an honorable share in all the latter's brightest achievements in Flanders, Spain, and Italy. Many instances of its stanch fidelity and its daring, decisive courage might be quoted from the military records of those days ; but one especially may be selected, which, in its singular combina tion of the heroic and the grotesque, must be regarded as very national : Cremona, besieged by Prinoe Eugene, and defended by the French, was sur prised one morning before dawn, and would inevitably have been lost but for the promptitude of the Irislu While the punctilious and ornate Frenchmen were deliberately buttoning up their regimentals, the former, at the sound of their trumpets, jumped out of bed, and, simply staying to buckle on their cross-belts and cartonch bozes, seized their guns and hurried to the square, where, on forming in fighting order, their commander's words, "Halt ! dress !" were, at least in one respect, superfluous. Their indifference to ap pearances on this occasion wan all the greater that the period was midwinter, and the city was near the Alp. In this condition they were charged by the Austrian cuirassiers. It was steel-coats against night shirts ; but the linen trade of Ireland proved the more for midable of the two. The Austrians were driven back, and the French had time to form and recover possession of the town. For this brilliant service the Brigade was honored with the emphatic thanks of Louis XIV., and also had their pay increased. But these fearless fellows, as may be supposed, carried aboard to their new service not only their courage and fidelity, but all their exuberance as Irishmen. Their rollicking spirit and love of fnn were quite as great as their love of fighting, and at times were so opposed to propriety and discipline, that the martinets of the French ranks had to make formal complaints on the matter. It was on one such occasion that a great compliment was paid them by the brave Duke of Berwick, who, however, had good reason to love them for their devotion to his father. "Marshal," said the king to him, "this Irish Brigade gives me more trouble than all my army put together." "Please your majesty ," replied the duke, "your enemies make just the same complaint of them 1" The idol of the Brigade was the cele brated Marshal Saxe, whose great bravery, in union with his jovial, mirth ful temierameut, gave him a character that was so engrviug and so kindred to their own. It wa in reference to him originated one of the blunders of poor Pat that has so often been repeated and localized everywhere, The marshal was wounded in some engagement, and, moreover, it was reported in his back. None of the Brigade, however, would believe it. "When did he ever show bis back to them ?" was the general exclamation. "Wasn't it his face they knew the most of and wasn't it their backs that he knew best?" At last a solution of the mystery was hit unon : . "He was purshuing 'em, yon see, and just to make the villius think thst, on the conthrary, he was Tetratjng, he buttoned his coat behind him !" Of the anecdotes and jokes told of the Brigade during their extended foreign .Urciiv nmnfH of a humor and light- heartedness which exile even could not subdue the number is, indeed, legion. Gallic vanity forced them often into the attitude of censors, and several of their repartees are excellent, and as full of senseas they were of pleasantry. Among the mass of these is one inas u often referred to their sources when a Frenchman, claiming for his country 41. invent if in Cff all the elegances, named, among other things, ruine , and Pat answerd : "We improved on it we put to it a shirt" . . . , , Tn thA same stunt bnt less known, was his retort upon a shopkeeper in some potty town where ne was qnaneiru. Tii. .,io haA rather a pretentions gate, and the grocer, dilating on its grandeur and asking what the Irish would say if they possessed it "Faith, they'd say," ws his reply .-ii krvo tha bir eat shut, or the dirty littletown will be after rumng out of it" , The sarcasm, however, was deeper and more essentially Hibernian when, on his going somewhere to dine, after hearing great praises of French cookery, he saw a pot of soup brought in with a bit of meat floating on the top of it upon which he pulled on nis coas, aou, "Sure I am going to have a swim for that little bit of mate there." Among the adventures recorded of the Brigade, one of the most amusing was an occurrence, in the time of the Regent Orleans, in honor of whose birthday a grand masquerade was given in Paris. It was a high-class affair ; tickets were a donble louis d'och are ; all the rank and beauty of Paris were assembled round the regent, and a costly and luxurious supper crowned the attractions of the night While the entertainment was proceeding, one ef the prince's suite approached and whispered to him : "It is worth your royal highness's while to step into the supper-rooms ; there is a yellow domino there, who is the most extraordinary cormorant ever witnessed ; he is a prodigy, your high ness he never stops eating and drink ing ; and the attendants say, moreover, that he has not done so for some hours." His royal highness went accordingly; and sure enough there was the yellow domino, laying about him as described, and swallowing every thing as raven ously as if he had only just begun. Raised pies fell before him like garden palings before a field piece ; pheasants and quails seemed to fly down his throat in a little covey ; the wine he drank threatened a scarcity, whatever might be the next vintage. After watching him for some time, the dnke acknowledged he was a wonder, and laughingly left the room ; but shortly afterward, on passing through another, he saw the yellow domino again, and as actively at work as ever, devastating the dishes every where, and emtying the champagne bottles as rapidly as they were brought to him. Perfectly amazed, the duke at last could not restrain his curiosity. "Who," he asked, "is that insatiate ogre that threatens such annihilation to all the labors of our cooks ?" Accordingly, one of the suite was dis patched to him. "His royal highness the Duke of Orleans desires the yellow domino to unmask." But the domino begged to be excused, pleading the privilege of masquerade. "There is a higher law" replied the officer ; "the royal order must be obeyed." "Well, then," answered the incognito, "if it must be so, it must ;" and, un masking, exhibited the ruddy visage of an Irish trooper. "Why, in the name of Polyphemus 1" exclaimed the regent, as he advanced to him ; "who and what are you ? I have seen you eat and drink enough for a dozen men at least, and yet you seem as empty as ever." "Well, then," said the trooper, "since the saycret must come out, plase, your royal highness, 1 am one of Clares's Horse that's the guard-of-honor to night and when our men was ordered out, we clubbed our money to buy a ticket, and agreed to take our turn at the supper-table, turn and turn about." "What !" exclaimed the duke, "the whole troop coming to supper ?" "Oh, it's asy, plase your highness ; sure one domino would do for all of as if ache tuk it in turn. I'm only the eighteenth man, and there's twelve more of us to come." The loud laughter of the jovial duke, probably the heartiest he had had for a long time, was the response to this ex planation, followed by a lonis d'or to the dragoon, and a promise to keep his "saycret" till the entire troop had supped. The career of the Irish Brigade closed with the approach of the French Revolu tion and fortunately for them, no doubt ; since, had they remained in Fiance, there is little question they wolud have maintained their loyalty, and been massacred like the Swiss. "Life of Samuel Lover" (London, 1874). The Gentle Life. This is the beautiful heritage of the well-born man and the gentle woman. They may be poor or rich to-day, they may be living a life of leisure or toil ing for their bread all the same they carry with them the grace, the care.the gentleness, the consideration, the know ledge which we call intuition or in stinct, which comes from generations of culture and a thousand qualities of mind aud heart which win social recog nition and bring happiness to the pos sessor. The accumulation of more money as an inheritance for children is often worse than nothing in their hands; it deprives them of all inoentive to per sonal effort and nnfrequently proves the means by which they ride fast to destruction. Money is worse than nothing if the lives of the past and as sociations of the present have not taught us how to put it to its noblest uses. But the order, the training, the ex perience of a life are invaluable. They form witn eaucauon, a aey inai un locks the recesses of the world, and be comes a power that no loss in stocks or bonds or houses or lands can deprive the unfortunate possessor of. They make him the equal of the best, and therefore at ease with all men. De prived of leisure and of resources which we would know how to appreciate, he still finds within himself more than others find outside of themselves. Out wardly, his life is isolated; inwardly, he holds communion with all that is best and finest in art and society and literature. His gracious and kindly manners, which he retains in spite of poverty or wealth, show that he con sorts only with the noblest, whether his dwelling here be a hut or a palace. Bachelors ana Patrimony. rtno unn whw there are so many bachelors is that young men in moder- ate circumstances cannot anoru w marry. The extravagance of the outfit ..l tf utiwiiiu nf the bridal tour frighten many a timid young man whose oanx account is iiui cuuiuieu inrAtA with hiii love. An example in point is the case of a Leavenworth couple wno, owing vo pareuuu op tions, could not be married within the boundaries of their native State. So the groom, securing funds to the amount of nine dollars, started with his intended, her mother and a mutual friend for the friendly soil of Missouri. The twain were made one. The fee to (1 sm and the railway fare Braced the exchequer to one solitary dollar. A banquet t.ai an ice-cream sa loon) still further diminished their r.nr,lv nf ash and the las', two nickels 1 1 j - , were used in the purcuase of soda water. ow, nere was au eipouunuxu of nine dollars, and all for a wedding. If any young man is willing to begin his wedded life on the capital men tioned by Ingomar, "Two souls with knt iit1a ttnpht two hearts that beat as one," let him start it; otherwise be had better suci to iu mwroaiwuu and buy a poodle. Inter- Ocea n. The ball that is kept rolling The croquet ball. A Jealinw Marshal. The stories told of the celebrated Russian Marshal Snwaroff, display bet ter tan whole pages of description the wjnderful way in which he contrived to adapt himself to the rnde spirits with whom he had to deal, without losing one jot of his authority. What Napoleon was to the French Snwaroff was to the Russian army now jesting with a soldier, and now rebuk ing a general; one day sharing a ration of black bread beside a bivouac fire, and the next speaking as an equal to princes and potentates. In fact the two great sponsors of Russian wit form a most picturesque contrast Balk aireff was very much the character of a spaniel in a lion's cage admiring even while mocking his formidable patron, behaving toward him with a half wag gish, half affectionate familiarity, per petually forgiven. Snwaroff comes be fore us as an uncrowned king, one whose authority needed no outward symbol; an autocrat of nature's mak ing, full of rough, hearty familiarity that was in no danger of breeding eon tempt, and surrounded by men who enjoyed the bonhomie, while they dreaded the displeasure of the little pug-nosed, grimy man, who was in their eyes the incarnation of earthly power and grandeur. It must be owned, however, that in his own peculiar vein of pleasantry the old marshal more than once met with his match. One of his favorite jokes was to confuse a man by asking him un expectedly "How many stars are there in the sky?" On one occasion he put this question to one of his sentries on a bitter Janu ary, such as only Russia can produoe. The soldier, not a whit disturbed, an swered coolly "Wait a little and IU tell yon;" and he deliberately began to count, "One, two, three," etc In this way he went gravely on to' a huudred.at which point Snwaroff, who was already half frozen, thonght it high time to ride off, not however, without inquiring the name of the ready reckoner. The next day the latter found him self promoted, and the story (which Snwaroff told with great glee to his staff), speedily made its way through the army. Ou another occasion one of his gen erals of a division sent him a sergeant with dispatches, at the same time re commending the bearer to SuwarofTs notice. The marshal as usual, pro ceeded to test him by a series of whim sical questions; but the catechumen was equal to the occasion. "How far is it to the moon ?' asked Suwaroff. "Two of your excellency's forced marches," answered the sergeant "Supposing you were blockaded, and had no provisions left, how would you supply yourself?" "From the enemy." "How many fish are there in the sea?" "As many as have not been caught." And so the examination went on, till Suwaroff, finding his new acquaintance armed at all points, at length asked him, as a final poser "What is the difference between your colonel and myself ?" "The difference is this," replied the soldier,coolly;"my colonel cannot,make me a captain, but yonr excellency has only to say the word." Suwaroff, struck by his shrewdness, kept his eyes upon the man, and in no long time after actually gave him the specified promotion. The anecdotes of the marshal's ec centricities his habits of wandering about the camp in disguise, his whim of giving the signal for assault by crowing like a cock, his astounding en durance of heat and cold, his savage disregard of personal comfort and neat ness are beyond calculation; but per haps the most characteristic of all was his appearance in 1799 at the Austrian court, then one of the most brillian t in Enrooe. On being shown to the room pre pared for him (a splendid apartment, filled with costly mirror and rich furni ture) this modern Diogenes said, simply "Turn out the rubbish, and snaKe me down some straw." An Austrian grandee who came to visit him was startled at these prepara tions,and still more so at the first sight of the marshal's "baggage," which con sisted of two coarse shirts and a tat tered cloak tied np in a bundle. "Is that enough for winter ? asked the astonished visitor. "The winter's the father of as Rus sians," answered Snwaroff, with a grin; "besides, you don t feel the cold when you're riding full gallop." "lint when you rs tired oi riding what do you do ?" "Walk. "But when you're tired of walking ?" "Run." "And do you never sleep, then ?" asked the petrified questioner. "Sometimes, when I've nothing bet ter to do," replied Suvoroff, carelessly; and when 1 want to have a very luxu rious nap, I take off one of my spurs." The thunderstruck Austrian bowed and retired, doubtless considerably en lightened in his ideas of a Russian General. Eccentricity at" Genius. Alexander Dumas the elder persisted in going into the kitchen to take a hand at the spit, and Ingres was un happy nuless he could play on the vio lin. But these occupations were not pursued to the neglect of those call ings to which they were bom. If Dumas made those ragouts for which lie was famous, he at the same time did much literary work. If Ingres played a good deal on the violin, he at the same time made pictures that will not easily le forgotten. "The spider in the ceiling" of Edmond About is worse than either of these. It is poli ties. For a nuniler of years he was on the brink, or paddling about in the shallow waters, of the political stream; and this terminated three or four year m-n in the fatal plunire. The idea of having a political part in the history of his country has pursued him with un rest, and caused him, if he were not too Sroud to admit it, a good deal of pain, ournalisni was thought to offer the best ladder to political prefernieiit,and he embraced it. Here he was at a dis advantage for half a dozen journalists in Paris can write as good if not better leaders than he, although there is not a man in France capable of writing such words as he has written. It was thought when he and i rancisque Nir ppv Tiecame editors of the "XIX. Siecle," that with two such men the success of the journal would be equal tn anv of its contemporaries, which turns out not to be the case. That About' s articles are able, and often brilliant, few deny: but they fail to in fluence any large class of people even in his own party. .The Galaxy. The churlishness of the undertaker in demanding pay in advance delayed the funeral fonr days. The Bay who Took m Boarder. Once upon a time, long before any of you children were born nlmnt two hundred and fifty years ago, in fact a little loy stood, one morning, at the door of a palace in Florence ,and looked about him. Why he was standing there, I do not know. Perhaps he was watching for the butcher or the milkman, for he was a kitchen-boy in the household of a rich and mighty cardinal. He was twelve years old, and his name was Thomas. Suddenly he felt a tap on his shoul der, which made him turn around, and he said, with great astonishment: "What! Is that you, Peter! What has brought you to Florence f and how are all the people in Cartona T" "They're all well," answered Peter, who likewise was a lioy of twelve. "Hut I've left them for good. I'm tired of biking care of sheep stupid things! I want to lie a paiuter. I've come to Florence to learn how. They say there's a school here where they tearh people." "But have you got any money V asked Thomas. "Not a penny." "Then you can't le a painter. You ltad much better take service in the kitchen with me, here in the palace. Yon will le sure of not starving to death, at least," said the sage Thomas. "Do you get enough to eat !" asked the other bov. reflectively. "Plenty. More than enough." "I dou t wan't to take service, lie cause I want to be a painter," said Peter "But I'll tell you what we'll do. As you have more than you need to eat, you shall take me to board on trust at first, and when I'm a grown-up painter, I'll settle the bill." "Agreed," said Thomas, after a mo ment's thought "I can manage it. Come up stairs to the garret where I sleep, and I'll bring you some dinner, by aud by." So the two Imys went np to the little room among the chimney-pots where Thomas slept It was very, very small, and all the furniture in it was au old straw ln-d and two rickety chairs. But the walls were beautifully white washed. The food was good and plentiful, for when Thomas went down into the kitchen and foraged among the broken meats, he fonnd the half of a fine mut ton pie, which the cook had carelessly thrown out. The cardinal's household was conducted upon very extravagant principles. That did not trouble Peter, however, anil he enioyed the nintton-pie hugely, and told Thomas that he felt as if he could rly to the moon. "So far, so good," said he; "lint, Thomas, I can't be a painter without pnjier and pencils and brushes and col ors. Havn't you any money t" ,Xo," said Thomas, despairingly, "and I don't know how to get any, for I shall receive no wages for three years." "Then I can't le a painter, after all," said Peter, mournfully. "I'll tell you what," suggested Thom as. "I'll get some charcoal dowu in the kitchen, and you can draw pictures on the wall." So Peter set resolutely to work, and drew so many figures ol men and wo men and birds and trees amllieasts and tlowers.that liefore long the walls were all covered with pictures. At last, one happy day, Thomas came into possession of a small piece of sil ver money. I'pou my word I don't know where he got it. But he was much too honest a boy to take money that did not liclong to him, aud so, I Cresnme, he derived it from the sale of is "perauisites." You may lie snre there was joy In the little boarding-house up among the chininey-MiU, for now Peter could have pencils and paper and India-rubber, and a few other things that artists need. Then he changed his way ot life a little. He went out early every morn ing and wandered about "Florence, and drew everything he could find to draw, whether the pictures in the churches. or the fronts nf the old palaces, or the statues m the pulilic squares, or the outlines of the hills bevond the Arno, just as it hapened. Then, when it became too dark to work any longer, I'eter would go home to his lioarding house, and find his dinner all nicely tucked away under the old straw lieu, where landlord Thomas had put it, not so much to hide it as to keep it warm. Thiura went on in this way for about two years. None of the servants knew that Thomas kept a boarder, or if they did know it, they good-naturedly shut their eyes. The cook used to remark sometimes,that Thomas ate a good deal for a lad of his size, and it was surpris ing he didn't grow more. One day, the cardinal took it into his head to altei and repair his palace. He went all over the house in company with an architect,and poked into places that he had never in all his life thought of before. At lost he reached the gar ret, anil, as luck would have it, stum bled right into Thomas's boarding hoiise. "Why. how a this T" cried the great cardinal, vastly astonished at seeing the mean little room so beautifully decorated iu charcoal. Have we an artist among us T Who occupies this room T" "The kitchen-lioy.Thomas.your Lin inence." "A kitchen-boy ! But so great a genius must not be neglected. Call the kitchen-boy, Thomas. ' Thomas came up in fear and trem bling. He had never been in the mighty cardinal's presence before. He looked at the charcoal drawings on the wall, then into the prelate's face, aud his heart sank within him. "Thomas, yon are no longer a kitchen-boy," said the cardinal, kindly. Poor Thomas thought he was dis missed from service and then what would liecouie of Peter t "Don't send me away!" lie cried, im ploringly, falling on his knees. "I have nowhere to go, and Peter will starve and he want's to be a painter so much !" "Who is Peter V asked the cardinal. "He is a Iniy from Cortona, who boards with me, and he drew those Eictures on the wall, and he will die if e cannot be a painter." "Where is he now t" demanded the cardinal. "He is out, wandering aliout the streets to find something to draw. lie goes out every day and conies bivt at night.' "When he returns to-night, Thomas, bring him to me," said the cardinal. "Such a genius ss that should not be allowed to live in a garret" But strange to say, that night Teter did not come back" to his boarding house. One week, two weeks went by, aud still nothing was heard of him. At the end of that time, the cardiual caused a search for him to be insti tuted, and at last they found him in a convent It seems he had fallen deeply in love with one of Raphael's pictures which was exhibited there. He had asked permission of the monks to copy it, and they, charmed with his youth and great talent,had readily consented, and hail lodged and nourished him all the time. . . Thanks to the interest the cardinal took in him, Peter was admitted to the best school for painting in Florence. As for Thomas, he was given a post near the cardinal s person, and had masters to instruct hint in all the learn ing of the day. Fifty years later, two old men lived together in one of the most beautif ul houses in Florence. One of them was called Peter of Cortona. and people said of him, "He is the greatest painter ot our time. ' 1 he other was called Thomas, and all they said of him was, "Happy is the man who has him for a friend !" And he was the boy who took a boarder. St. Nicholas. Old Custom In Ihe Xorth ol England. At Hartlepool, time of Henry VI IT., the fine for "lystening about anie man's wyndowes" was twelve pence. About the same date, at Preston, women were fined for "gossiping at the town wells on Sunday mornings." At Richmond, in 1274, the Corpora tion ordered that "no one winnow any corn in the street unless they carry away the chaff," and enacted that swine tronghs shouhj not be set in the streets, and that "no man suffer any swyne to come into the market-place on fairdays, or any other market-days, upon payne of a fine of vid." At Hartlepool, in 1599, the Council ordered that "whoso ever he bee, of this towne yt keepeth anie mastyve dogg within this towne not mussled in the day, and in the house upon the nighte, shall pay for every such default iijsiiijd; "also" yt is ordeyned yt noe inhabitante of this towne shall keep anie geese or swyne within the precynctes of this towne, ex cept upon their back-yard, upon paine to pay, for everye swyne which shall be taken abroad, xijd., and for every goose vjd." At Newcastle there was an offi cial named "the hougher," whose duty it was to chase any pigs he saw in the streets, and sever the sinews of their hind legs, as a punishment to their owners for letting them stray! The Coroner of Darlington, in the North of England, was formerly elected by the Bishop, and was sometimes Bai liff and steward of Darlington also. There is a tale of efo-de-8KA connected with the Coronership, early in the present century. One Webster, a dis appointed lover, cast himself into the River Skerne, and was drowned. At the inquest, the jury were about to re turn a verdict of felo-de-se, when one solid yeomen, astonished at the deplora ble ignorance of his compeers, ex claimed: "Nay, lads! nay! that wad niwer dee; iwerbody knows that he therw hissel intit Skerne; folks wad think us all fules!" Goldsmith on hU Travels. Goldsmith, as Boswell said to John son years afterward, "disputed his pas sage through Europe." Through Flan ders and France to Paris, thence to Ge neva, and over the Alps into Northern and Central Italy, as far as Florence, he wended his way, most often on foot, working his passage by playing his flute, and making himself popular with the natives of many countries with jo cose antics and humorous stories. Many adventures had he, which he re lated on his return with much gusto. He partook of the free hospitalities of the monasteries, slept on straw in hum ble barns, and when he reached a village would pull out his flute and strike np a lively air, to which the rustics would respond with dances, and in recompense for which he would obtain a modest lodging and something to eat When he came to extremities he did not dis dain to beg; and in Italy, where the surfeit of musie rendered his flute pow erless, he used to earn his keeping by engaging in the competitive discussions at the universities, the champion of which wonld claim a free dinner and bed. "In this manner," he says, "I fought my way toward England, walk ing along from city to city, and, if I may so express it, saw both sides of the picture." At Paris he was delighted, and observed things which induced him to predict the revolution which broke out nearly forty years after; and at Ge neva he visited Voltaire, at whose house he saw DiJerot and Fontenelle, and heard Voltaire make a magnificent de fense of England. He ate "savory dinners" on the summits of Alpine passes, "flushed" woodcocks on Mount Jura' and meditated themes which af terward took poetic shape in his immor tal poem of Tlie Traveler. So wander ing, he returned in time to England, having made the grand tour almost pen niless, and enriched his mind with a stock of minute observations which was to serve him in preoious stead in the future. Cash Instead or Credit. People who buy for cash always buy cheaper than those who buy on credit They buy also more closely, and select more carefully. Purchases which are paid for when they are made are limited more exactly to the Purchaser's wants. There is nothing like having to count the money ont when the article is bought, to make people economical. The amount of indebtedness incurred is not much considered when the pay-day is far off. Persons who do all their business on a cash basis know just where they stand and what they can afford; consequently they find after occasions for regretting, in a turn oi times, that they have indulged m this luxury or that, which they would have forgone had they seen what was coming. Real wants are few and can be gratified for cash; at all events they should be limited to what can be paid for in cash. How much of anxiety, how many sleep less hours, how many heart burnings, disappointments, and regrets would be avoided if this rule were always strictly adhered to. A Child's Plaything 4,000 Years Of even greater interest are the household articles, implements of trade. food, Ac, which, like the spoils of Pompeii, restore for us the domestic life of the people. Here, for instance, are stools, cane-bottomed chairs and work-boxes, 4,000 years old, yet no more dilapidated than if they came out of a garret of the last century ; nets, knives, needles and toilet ornaments ; glass bottles and drinking cups, as clear as if just blown ; earthenware, glazed in bine and yellow patterns, the very counterpart of old Majolica; seeds, eggs and bread ; straw baskets and a child's ball for playing; paint-boxes with colors and brushes, and boards for games of draughts in short, a col lection almost as varied and complete as the ashes of Vesuvius preserved for us of the One co-Roman life of the year 79 of our era. But these Egyptian relics date from 1.000 to 3,000 years before our era began. Bayard Taylor. There was lately sold in Paris the library of the eccentric Lncien de Roeny. The buildings, as wel1 as the volumes, were unique, ' There were books in it bound in the skin of eats, crocodiles, moles, seals, the Canadian black wolf, the royal iSengaJ tiger, tne white bear and the rattlesnake. The book we hear so mnch of as bound in human skin was alone absent In fact it is doubtful if such a book exists, although several libraries boast of a work claimed to meet the requirement. Yontlis Column. A Gem. Fntifnl tim they that wear Ttir htftit of pi.ifcuit apint there. It nimtter little if Oark or fair. ltautiful tuttiiU are tiiey that do. Th work ol the noble, gont ana trn. lltuy fr th-m the wUole day thfouU. lfe-aitif ul feet are they that tfo Swiftly :o Utfhlen another' '(. Thnnt;h autumer'a heat and winter's snow. Beautnul i-hililrrn.i nt'h tr pr. Who walk the pathways aweet aaui pare That lead to the mansion strong and sure. The Growth of a Feather. In the skin of a bird, where a new feather is to grow, there is a little pit, and at the bottom of this an elevation or pyramid ; extending up on one side of this pyra mid is a groove or furrow, deepest at the base, and gradually shallower until it disappears at the top ; from each side of this furrow a great many smaller grooves extend around to the other side of the pyramid, and these also de crease in depth, and at last disappear just as they are about to meet on the side opposite the large furrow. The whole pyramid is covered with skin, and the surface is made of the same scales or flattened cells that are found over the rest of the surface of the body ; but instead of falling off when ' tney are pnsneu by tne new ones below them, they become united or wedded to each other, so as to form a horny coat over the surface of the pyramid, with ridges on its lower or inner surface corresponding to the groves on the pyramid ; and, as the new cells grow at the base, this coat or cast of the surface is pushed upward till it breaks at its thinnest parts which is, of coarse, the smooth part without ridges opposite the large farrow ; and then, as it is pushed onward and flattened, it assumes the form of a feather, the ridge formed in the main furrow being the shaft, while the casts of the side grooves form the separate barbs of the vane. When all of the same has been formed and pushed forward, the pyramid loses its grooves and becomes smooth, and the wall now formed on its surface, being of the same thickness in all parts, does not break, bnt remains tubular, and forms the quill, which is attached to what is left of the pyramid. A finger nail or hair is formed from the same kind of scales in the same way, the process differing only in ti;oso features which give to each organ its special character. Feathers, scales, hair, claws and nails are all made alike from the dead, flattened cells crowded to the surface by the process of growth. The Five Sthooxer. narold is a dear little blue-eyed, golden-haired English ooy. He lives close to the great ocean ; bnt, until last summer, he had never been on the water. He once told his mamma he longed to be a few hours on a steamer. But his mamma was timid, and not willing to trust her little boy with any one but his own papa. Now, his papa is a doc tor, and too bnsy, attending to other people's little boys and girls, to have mnch time of his own. Before Harold was born, his papa used to go to sea as navy doctor ; and j young iaJie8 not to attempt to follow he has told his little boy so i may stones the elanipie get by Miss Richards with about the sea, that Harold has imade up out the approval of their families and his mind that he will be a sailor hen ) medical advisers. Girls are very imita he he is a man. He is very fond of : tive, and there is reason to fear that oai i.u Bu.s, sua is always wiping of the time when he shall have a ship ol his own, and eighty men to com mand. One day last sumner a friend of his papa's begged to be allowed to take Harold in a boat Mamma knew the gentleman wonld be very carefnl, so she gave her consent ; and nowhere could there have been found a happier little boy than Harold, when he started off with his own little sail boat under his arm. They rowed all around the harbor, and Harold let his sail boat boat after them, whilst he held it securely by a string. Presently a large steamer came puff ing and blowing into the harbor. "Ah, ah !" exclaimed Harold. "They think 'hey can run down my boat. But I tell you, Mr. Brown, there isn't a finer sohooner on the ocean than mine." Harold was never tired of talking of his "journey on the ocean," and of how nnely his "schooner sailed. A BEAmrn. Sexttiiext. Shortly before his departure for India the lamented Heber preached a sermon, which contained this beautiful senti ment : "Life hears us on like the stream of a mighty river. Our boat glides down the narrow channel through the play ful murmuring of the little brook, and the winding of its grassy borders. The trees shed their blossoms over our young heads, the flowers on the brink seem to offer themselves to our young hands ; we are happy in hope, and grasp eagerly at the beauties around us but the stream hurries on. and still our hands are empty. Our course in youth and manhood is along a wilder flood, amid objects more striking and magnificent We are animated at the moving pictures of enjoyment and in dustry passing ns. we are excited at some short-lived disappointment The stream bears ns on, aud onr joys and griefs are alike left behind us. We may be shipwrecked, we cannot be delayed ; whether rough or smooth, the river hastens to its home, till the roar of the ocean is in onr ears, and the tossing of the waves is beneath our feet and the land lessens from our eyes, and the floods are lifted around us, and we take our leave of earth and its inhab itants, until of our further voyage there is no witness, save the Infinite and Eternal" Bad Wages. "I have left my place, mother," said a poor boy one day when he returned from his work. "Why have yon left?" said his mother ; "was your master unkind to you ?" "No, mother, he was kind enough," said the boy. "Don't you like the work?" asked the mother. "It was the wages I didn't like," said the boy solemnly. "My master wanted me to sin, and the wages of sin is death. His master bad expected him to lie about the goods, and deceive and cheat the customers ; but the boy said : "No, sir, I can't do such things ; I will leave your service first." And he did leave it, and he was right about it too. Such boys will make mother's hearts glad, and will find that the Lord takes care of those who put their trust in him and will not work for Satan, nor earn the wages of sin. Such trials do the faith ful good. It may seem hard to suffer, because we do not sin ; but the rough sea make the best sailors ; the not furnace makes the pure gold ; the strongest faith comes from the hardest trials, and they who suffer for Christ and for conscience sake, shall be blessed here, and crowned with joy hereafter. The Brooklyn Argut characterizes the hen as the most popular o' females as she is engaged for every set "Vtivieties. A highly intelligent dog The type setter. The tongue is the worst part of a bad servant Tough beef steak makes a man think of Ch.u-cer. A man with large feet should never stand upon trifles. The contented man is never poor, the discontented never rich. When is a literary work like smoke ? When it come out in volumes. Ridicule is often employed with more power and success than severity. As the dint and steel stricken together produce fire, so the conflict of men's mind's elicits truth. The word would be more happy if persons gave np more time to an inter course of friendship. Dupes, indeed, are many ; but of all dupes, there is none so fatally situated as he who lives in undue terror of being duped. A man at Andover, Mass., does not believe in a fall in prices because he has just sold for fifty cents a pocket knife which he bought for that price in ISO'., and has used steadily for sixty four years. A politician, wishing to compliment a well-to-do farmer, said : "You must have begun life early to accumulate such an estate as this." "Yes," replied the farmer, -'I began life when I was a mere baby." It is said that Miss Emily Faithfnll is about to issue a weekly paper to be devoted to women and women's work, and to the entire class of females at present employed in trades and profes sions throughout England. The most important lesson of life is to know how to be happy within our selves, when home is onr comfort, and all in it, even the dog and cat, shares our affection. Do not refine away hap piness by thinking that which is good may be better. It is something unaccountable how these sober and sedate old fellows, as soon as their families have gone to the country to spend the heated term, com mence to wear their Sunday clothes every day, and to argue that four hours sleep is all that the human frame re quires to be healthy. Detroit Free l'resz. The Earl of Caithness has just pat ented a machine for washing railway carriages, by which a long train may, after a dirty rnn, be thoroughly cleaned, and made to start afresh in about half an hour, nis lordship had also invented a gravitation compass, to render ocean navigation more accurate, and thus has rendered a service to both ocean and land traveling. The Pall Mall Gazette, having learned that a young English lady. Miss Rich ards, has performed the feat of walking a thousand miles in a thousand hours, says, with remarkable profundity and good sense : "It may be as well for thousands of them will now take to walking thousand of miles in thousands of hours without pausing to consider the effect on their constitutions." The best enp of coffee to be had in Europe is in Vienna. On the principal business streets there is a coffee house in almost every block ; they are not located down in a dark and dingy base ment, bnt on the street floor. Beer is rarely sold in them ; wine may be had. But coffee and cigars, with a newspaper and a little bread roll, constitute the commodities of the place. Sitting aronnd scores of little metallic or mar ble tables, within the room or on the sidewalk, may be seen groups of per sons, of both sexes, sipping coffee, with bread and newspaper, and, if the sipper be of the male persuasion, a cigar is added to the entertainment The Saratoga Sun gives the following as a dinner table feature adopted by some of the hotels at that resort : "At every plate the snow white napkins. tastefully folded, are placed in the clear cut-glass goblets, and carefully disposed in every napkin is a beautiful little but ton hole bouquet These are intended for the guests, and are cheerfully appropriated. The effect, both while the boquets embellish the napkins and after they have been transferred to the button holes of the gentlemen's coats, and to the bosoms of the ladies' dresses, is very pretty and pleasing. The Sun day bill of fare is handsomely illumi nated, and, being so pretty, all of them are carried away from the tables as a sort of souvenir." Ahmednngger, in the Madrid Presi dency, claims "the oluest inhabitant" In March last a venerable Mohammedan died there at the age of 1 13 years. II had lived a very religious life, was a priest of his caste, was never married, and is now naturally considered as a saint by the Mohammedans. His funeral was attended by hundreds of persons of all castes, and his bier was loaded with flowers, and the streets were well watered by bhistees all the way where it had no pass. Such a funeral had never been witnessed. People from the villages within ten miles round attended him to his last resting place, which is in a garden without the city, chosen by himself. Money was given by all castes for the erection of a tomb for the saint. On a certain occasion, during General Jackson's Presidency, Mr. Buchanan, at the request of a Miss J aton. omy too much ratified to accompany j her to the White House, with the view of introducing her to "Old Hickory.' They arrived at the presidential man sion somewhat inopportunely (as it wonld seem), the President being in his library at the time, smoking his pipe, and in a state of comparative undre-n. Buchanan, who had the privilege of the house, communicated to the President the object of his visit when "the man of iron" (as Louis Philippe designated him) rose from his seat, laid aside his pipe, and intimated to Buchanan that he wonld wait upon Miss Paton at once. Buchanan became somewhat wmpluvted imagining that the old General meant to receive Miss Paton in his then state of dixhabille, and nervously insinuated that the matter was not urgent, and would allow the General to change his dress, ia. Old Hickory gave Buchanan one of his withering looks, remarking, at the same time : "Buchanan, did you ever hear of thai man in Kentucky who got rich by minding hit own bun net t" Mr. Buchanan, on relating the circumstance afterwards, acknowledged that he never felt so cheap in his life. The old General, in a very brief space, received Miss Paton in the Drawing Room, the interview preying so agree able to the lady that she declared, after wards, she never encountered a more chivalrous and agreeable man in her life. ) :3 A 1 - ' Mi .1 being asKea wuj u m