7 1 Siiillioii B. F. SCHWEIER, TEE C033TITTITI05-THE UBlOH-AlfD THE ESrOEGIMEITT OP THE LAWS. IZditor ami Proprietor. VOL. XXXI. ii.i MIFFIJXTWX, JUXIATA COUNTY, PEXXA., WEDNESDAY, JUNE 13, 1S77. XO. 24. THE VEB OF YEA.RS. From oat the loom of time the rev Unroll a fabric ail mast wear ; The wool of Joy aod warp of team Are spun br moving hope aod fears. Aod preened bj weight; rolling care. What nv asnre noto each is given ? A span mar gnape tbe greatest part. And ret the lcaet from earth to heaven Do reach, as in the qniet even hearts. hhort prayers sent op from children's The web too quickly for us all Is wove, while pass the shuttles fleet. And when the threads have ceased to fall. Death throws it e'er us as our pall. Or round as as our winding-sheet. LI.IZVBETH'S r.CKI.E. BY LI7.ZIK M. MfLHERX. Elizabeth Caverly stood leaning list lessly against tb window, her clear gray eyes resting on tbe green fields and sunny meadow before her. "Elizabeth!" "What is it,' Y arena! Yoa look ex cited." Oh, Elizabeth, think of it. Old Aunt Kate is dead, and yoa yon, Eliza beth Caverly, are her heiress. Heiress of bouse and land, and all her grand old jnwelry, . How I envy yon, ma belle. Xo I don't either, only I am wild with delight." "Delight over the death of a poor old lady, who waa always kind to us." Warena'e face sobered. "So." she said, "ouly glad you are her heiress." "Yes. I suppose that is all." "You will go away to-morrow, Eliza beth, to be in time for the funeral, and to take possession of your new home." "And you, little cousin are to take possession of it along with, me." "XoElizbttU, 1 will etill live with grandma. 'J j J ' ' . I: A few nrinatee afterward Elizabeth was wandering down through tbe sun ny meadows, past the drooping labur num trees, till she stood iu a pretty, leaf-skeltered glade. A young man, tall, dark, handsome and auubrowued, stood leauing against a tree. r. "Have I kept you waiting long. John f she Mid. , . . "Not very. Only 'long enough to make it impossible for us to liuieh Elaine" this evening." "I am afraid we will not finish it at all," she said a faint rosetfusb staining her cheeks, "for John, Aunt Kate is dead, and I am her heiress." The man's face grew very pale. "Then you are very w y, Eliza beth, and of course the humble home where you have spent your life will be vonr home no longer! "Xo," she answered, half sadly, "I leave it to-morrow. I have to be at the funeral. I will have to bid you farewell. John." "You we going away to another life entirely, Elizabeth, a life so different from ours, we can scarcely understand it." "So I believe." "And you can say farewell so calmly. Oh! Elizabeth, the dream of my life is past." "Is it!" she said slowly. "Yes," he answered, "for you are one of the wealthiest heiresses in the ' country, and 1 am simply John Flow era. I bid you and my dream good-bye together. Good-bye Elizabeth." ; "Good-bye," she answered, laying her hand in his and looking up into his face, and then she turned slowly away, her face pale, her eyes glowing. -'If be loves me lie will tell me so of his own accord, for I will give no sign," she said. One year later John Flowers lay dreaming in the sheltered glade where he bad parted from Elizabeth Caverly. He was dreaming of her, tbe woman be loved, the. fair, proud woman, who was more to him than all else on earth. He bad loved her from the time when she had been a tiny child with curly bair and big gray eyes, and could he cease to love her then, when she was the fairest woman his eyes had ever rested on! In a few hours he would see her, for she was down at her old home, and she had sent for him. sent for her old playmate to come and aee her. She had come down to the old home stead pale and a little sorrowful look ing. "Are you not happy. Elizabeth!" AYarena asked, though wondering how she could be otherwise. "I scarcely know, AYarrie;" then after a pause, "I have felt happier in my life than I do now." VYarena opened her eyes. "Warrie," Elizabeth said, "do you remember the amethyst necklace Aunt Kate prized so highly!" "Yes; the old-fashioned thing with the legend attached to it. The neck lace lost and found so many times!" "Yes. Well, it is lost again stolen." "Stolen!" "Yes, along with some other jewelry. It is said when it is lost it will be found, and the finder will bring either happiness or misery to its owner." ' "Such nonsense!" -- ! i I .- i .' "If yoa. believe Annt Kate, it was lost many times, and not only was it found, but the legend verified on all occasions." Just then John Flowers entered. Elizabeth met him with her cold, sweet smile, and laid her white hand in bis. She looked so beautiful then, that be felt his pulse leap beneath the touch of her hand. ' ' "Why do yon come Elizabeth!" he aid, scarcely knowing what he did say. 'Why did you send for me, when I was struggling to forget yon. Are all wo men tbe same; do they delight in the pain a mas sutlers for her sake. I would not have believed" Elizabeth turned coldly away, a half angry light in her eyes. She knew be loved her, but she was far too proud to let him know how little wealth and position were to his love; far too proud to let him see how willing she-was to come down- from her high estate and become a farmer's wife. " , "It my love is not worth asking for," she tnurmnred to herself, "it is not worth bestowing." ' It was late that night when John Flowers left for bis own borne. It waa . quite a little distance, bat there was an old. nnfreqnented road, by which he could go iu a much shorter time than by keeping to the main road. He turned his horse iu that direction, and rode leisurely along thinking of Eliza beth. "My love for her grows deeper day by day, and hour after hour. But she was glad to aee me to-day. I saw the welcoming light in her eyes. Oh! my love" Just then two men confronted him. "We want your horse," said the fore most, "and we have no objection to any loose cash you have arouud yon. For answer John leaped oft his horse, and dashing the pistol which one man held, to the ground, closed with him. The other man lifted the pistol aud tired. A low cry came from John's lip, bis clasp on the ruffian loosened, and be fell to the ground, and there be lay. senseless, his arm shattered, aud an amethyst necklace lay glittering at bis feet. It was not long till consciousness re turned to him, and of coarse his eyes rested on the necklace dropped by one of the robbers, no doubt. He lifted it up and put it in his pocket, and then almost faint with pain, he made his way to the nearest house. A few days later he lay tossing in a brain fever, for a ball bad entered his shou'.der as well as the one that shat tered his arm, and Elizabeth Caverly knelt beside his couch. It was pitiful to hear biui call her name. "Elizabeth!" be cried. "Oh! my darling, why did yon leave me! Wealth came between us, my love, for would I ask you to be mine when riches came to you, when I bad been silent before. But I was waiting, yes. I was waiting, and, my love, I waited too long," and the girl who loved him so well, laid her proud bead on the side of the couch beside the crazed man. ? "Must my wealth ataud between us forever!" she cried. ' ' - One month later he was himself again, pale aud grave, but proud aud self-willed as of old. - Elizabeth Caverly sat in the old leaf shaded dell, a few days before she was to leave for ber home, She looked pale and weary, and she had come to bid farewell to the old spot. She was going back to her etately home never to return. "Elizabeth!" j She rose to her feet, for John Flow ers stood before her, aud something glittered in his hand. "My amethyst necklace !" she said ber face paling, then flushing, as she remembered the old story connected with it. The finding of it wonld bring happi ness or misery to its owner. ' Which would it bring her! ' "Yes," he said, laying tliem in her baud, his eyes on her face. "Yoa are going away again going away to hap piness, I hope, for I have heard the story of the necklace; aud God forbid that auy thing but happiuess should be yours. 1 have tried to forget you, Elizabeth, but I have loved" He stopped short. Xo. She was wealthy and high, and she might misjudge him. Anything was better than that. Suddenly she laid her hand on bis arm. "I am not going away to happiness," she said, slowly; "I am leaving happi ness behind me, but the old legend will be fulfilled." "Elizabeth!" She smiled softly, and raised her eyes to bis. "Do not trifle with me," he said, "but tell me, do you mean you love me, and are willing to be my wife. Do you mean this Elizabeth!" "I have loved you all my life," she said, as be folded her in bis arms, aud kissed her sweet, red lips. Three month later, when Elizabeth Caverly knelt in her bridal robes, and rose Elizabeth Flowers, an amethyst necklace glittered round her white throat. Errors of Newspapers. A Western school master, says the Printer' Circular, in order to sharpen tbe wits of bis pupils, set them to work for half an hour each day to search for errors in the newspapers which tbe pedagogue habitually read himself. There is do fault to be found with this method of developing tbe vouthfu mind. Xot a few errors were discover ed, and tbe teacher jumped to the con clusion that editors .and printers were ignorant of the very rudiments of their callings; and be was not by any means the first individual who pronounced a similar verdict on tbe same slender evidence. It is a thousand pities that some of the people who pass such sharp nd sweeping snap judgements could not be induced to take charge of a daily or weekly journal, just for one issue; they would have no desire to try their hands at a second nnniber, for they would discover that the making of a newspaper is about the most difficult and complicated woik in the world. Tbey would be brought face to face, witb a formidable mass of matter to be gleaued in as many minutes as they would de6ire days; they would be cotn oelled to write on topics as widely dis similar as possible, at a moment's no tice; consult the best authorities, and with an unerring certainty to Know where to find them. Diffuse accounts of important intelligence would come streaming in upon them for condensa tion at the last moments. Their hand writing would become hurried and il legiable, to the despair of the composi tors, who are frequently compelled to put into type so few lines of copy at a time having not the remotest idea what thev are thus translating, and depend ing for accurracy solely on their trained nower to decipher - illegible writing with -their . eyes, while mechanically picking up types with their fingers. That the critical typo would become utterly bewildered, and in despair abandon bis task before it was hall com pleted, is reasonably certain. And we tnsv also rest assured that one and all of tbe captious critics that undertook the labor of setting journals to righto would arrive at the sensible conclusion that the wonder is not that there are so many, but so very few mistake in the newspapers. - The re of Terra Cotta. Vases In building appeared for the first time in the reign of Goidiano, and not in any preceeding construction.- Winkle- man write that these vases or urns of terra cotta wer placed with the mouths upward; then they were filled and surrounded with little stones and lime. Winkleman also writes that Aristotle told of vases and urns of terra cotta being used in the construction of rooms and halls for acoustic advanta ges to make the voice sound stronger. I remember, when I waa at Ravenna, having my attention directed, by read ing in Agiocourt, abont that time, to the construction of the cupola of San Yitale,, in that city, a work of Cbistian times, of the sixth century, the period of Justinian. That cupola is made en tirely of empty terra cotta tubes placed horizontally; eue enters another; they are fitted with such exactitude and proportion that they obtain light weight and great strength for the cupola. D'Agincourt also gives an account, with illustrations, of the vaults of the Ro man Church of St. Stefano Rotondo, on tbe Celian. in which are those terri ble martyr pictures of Pomerancio. In iu these vaults earthen tubes are also used, but pl"ed perpendicularly. This nse of terra cotta vases and the finding of them among ruins, led them in the sixteenth century to believe that tbey - bad been pots of treasure bidden away by the Goths in the ground. In that period there was little understood either about Goths or Roman history. There was a great rage for treasure seeking; tbe common people dug about for pots of money, and the nobles for statues, coins and medals; and in their blind, careless excavations they did as much injury to tbe ruins as the invaders of the middle ages. In the interesting "Meuiorie of Flatninius Vacea," written 1594. be says, "Many years ago went to look up some antiquities. I found myself out side "Porta Bastuuia" (Sebastiano), "at Capo di Bove"' (Cecil Metclla, so called at time because of tbe ornaments and figures on the frieze). "To shelter myself from a shower I went into au Osteriolo" (iuu). While waiting I talked with (he host, lie told me that some months previous a man came in to warm himself; he returned in the evening with three other men; they ordered a supper, which they ate iu si lence.theu went away. This they did six nights consecutively. The host sus pected them of some evil design; so one night he followed them; it was moonlight; be saw them enter the sub terraneans of the circus of the Cara calla" (Romulus). The following morning the innkeeper informed the court. An examination was immediately made of the place. A great deal of freshly upturned earth was found, also a deep cave, in which were niauy broken terra cotta vases. "I beitig near the place," continues Vacca, "went there, saw the freshly turned np earth, and the bowls of bro earthen vases, like large vetriue (water pipes). These were probably Goths, who, from some ancient information they possessed, went there to gather treasures." ' ' Adornment ef florae. Money which goes to buy a picture, statuette, or tasteful bracket for adorn ment, is all wisely spent. If young people just starting in life, after having secured the few articles of furniture that must be had, and made sure that they are what they ought to have, and if they have some money left to get a picture, an engraving, or a cast, they ought to work to get this cast, they ought to work to supply this want as seriously as the other, which" seems more necessary, but which 1 in realllty not a bit more necessary. The general character of a home will make a great difference to the children who grow up In It, and to all whose experience Is as sociated with it, whether it be a beauti ful and a cheerful one, or a merely formal and conventional one. Tbe re lation of these things to education is all that gives dignity or poetry to the sub ject, or makes It allowable for a reason able mau to give much thought to it. But it has a real relation to life, and plays an Important part In education, and deserves to be thought about a good deal more than It is. Seeming trifles like this make life either happy or miserable. . , The Rarer Xetals. t ti l . i . ' It is stated that four hundred years ago bus seven metals had been dis covered, while we are now acquainted with the existence of fifty-one, .thirty of which, nearly three-fifths, have been made known to us since the beginning of the present century. The properties of the commoner metals are so generally kuowu, that a statement of them would be almost superfluous; but as we are always interested in what Is strange, and frequently of no practical use, we may glye a brief account of the rarer of these unfamiliar substances. ' Cadmium Is a white,' malleable and ductile metal resembling tin. Its sul phide, known a tcudraiuin yellow, Is of a very bright color and has other quali ties of great value to artists. The metal itself seems to I ,of little use. Calcium Is a yellow, ductile and malleable metal, softer than gold. At a red heat it burns . with a dazzling white light. Erbium is a very rare metal at present and seems to resemble aluminium iu its properties and compounds. Glucinum Is a white, malleable and moderately fusible metal, also resem bling aluminium. - Iridium Is a very hard, White, brittle, and infusible metal; when pure it is never" acted upon by any acid. The uses to which this metal can be applied seem to Increase rapidly as It Is becom ing more common. - " Lithium is a metal resembling silver in cvlor. It admits of being drawn out into wire, but has very little tenacity. It Is remarkable for iu extreme Ugh t uess and the readiness with which it Is acted upon by oxygen. . Molybdenum is a silvery-white, brittle and infusible metal. It never occurs native, and neither it nor Its compounds seem to be of much pratical use. -. Osmium Is chiefly remarkable for its high specific gravity and Infusibility. Palladium closely resembles platinum in iu properties. An alloy of 20 per cent, of this metal and 80 per cent, of gold Is perfectly white, very bard and not tarnished by exposure. This makes it admirably adapted for scales for astronomical Instruments, but its high price at present prevents its general use. Rhodium is a white, very hard and infusible metal. It is said that a small quantity of rhodium greatly Improves steel. A It costs considerably more than osmium, the uses to which it is applied are very limited. Ruthenium in everything except specific gravity resembles iridium. It Is rare and of little practical value. S'rontlum Is a yellowish, ductile and malleable metal ; burns In the air with a crimson flame. Thallium Is a very soft and malleable metal. It Is not very rare, but seems to be of very little use. Thorium is an extremely rare metal, remarkable for its property of taking fire below red heat, and burning with great brilliancy. Xeltber the metal nor its compounds are of any practioal use, but its oxide is of interest for its high specific gravity of 9. 4. Titanium is a very rare metal, usually obtained in the crystalline form. It can be produced also as a heavy iron gray powder. The crystals are copper colored and of extreme hardness. . Tungsten is a hard, Iron-gray metal, very diilleult of fusion. An alloy of 10 per cent, of this metal and 90 per cent, of steel is of extreme hardness. Both the metal and its compounds have proved of value. Uranium is a very heavy and hard but moderately malleable metal, resem bling nickle and iron ; hut for its rarity It would be of considerable use, a it Is nnaltered at ordinary temperatures by air or water. Vanadium is present In very minute quantities in nearly all clays. It is, as now produeed, a brilliant powder. Rubidium and caesium so closely re sembles platinum that no ordinary test will distinguish which metal Is present. Indium is very soft, malleable and fusible; marks paper like lead. Btirluin, cerium, columblum, (or nio bium), diJymium, lanlhanium, tan talum, terbium, yttrium aud zirconium are ail rare metals. Their properties are not very well knowu. The discovery of a new metal called gallium has been announced recently, hut we believe it has not been isolated. AVir l'vrk Mtrcantile Journal. Uimm In faltleaesa. According to the author of La Politetse Frnncaiae, a work recently published In Paris, a gentleman, when he gives his baud to a friend, must press his friend's hand but not shake it. If he Is about to shake hands with a peasant he must present his hand ungloved or the Ieasant will consider himself insulted. If be is about to shake hands with a lady he must keep bis gloves on. When he offers to conduct a lady to tbe piano he must, in taking her hand, half close his own. In dancing with a lady he must "not permit himself" to squeeze her hand ; and he must, if he wishes to show himself a true gentleman or, at least, "nn veritable gentleman" spend 18,000f., or $3,500, a year on his gloves. A gentleman who spent this much a year on his gloves, of various kinds and colors, would probably, if only for the sake of consistency, treat himself every day to at least one new hat. All, how ever, that we are told on the subject is that a gentleman's hat should always be "bright and brilliant." A gentle man never altogether separates himself from his hat, though it is not etiquette to wear it in a room. In the street, on meeting an equal of his own sex, be takes it off for a moment. Ou meeting a lady, or superior of his own sex, he remains uncovered until he is told to put his hat on. Do not eat in the street, do not smoke a pipe iu the street, do not smoke a cigar in the street if you are walking with a lady "not even if you happen to be this lady's husband." it seems odd to tell a gentleman who is supposed to spend $3,600 a year on his gloves not to smoke a pipe In the street, but we have reproduced this caution as we find IU When you bow, bow properly, but not so deeply that your vertebral column will make a right angle with your legs. If an officer in uniform salutes you, do not make yeur- self ridiculous by returning his salute in military fashion. A lawyer will not only think you silly, but will be greatly irritated if, visiting him on a matter ot business, you ask him how he is, in quire alter the healh of his wife, ex press a hojie that the children are all well, and soon. This sort of talk should be reserved for friends whose time is not valuable or who have no right to charge for it. Day-Mare During the intensely hot summer of 1SJ5 (savs a philosopher), I experienced an attack of day-mare. Immediately after dining, I threw mvself on bit back - i i r ' t " upon a soia, anu ociore i wan aware, was seized with difficult respiration. extreme dread, and utter incapability of motion or speech. I could neither move nor cry, while the breath came from my chest In broken and suffoca ting paroxysms. During all this time I was perfectly awake; f saw the light glaring in at the windows in broad sultry streams; I felt the intense heat of the day pervading my frame; and heard distinctly the dinerent noises in (be street, and' even the ticking of mr own watch, which I had placed on the cushion beside me. I had, at the same time, the consciousness of flies buzzing around, and settling with auuoying pertinacity iiimui my laee. Lhiring the whole fit, judgment was never for a moment suspended. I felt assured that 1 labored under a species of incubus. I even endeavored to reason myself out of the feeling of dread which filled my mind, and longed with an insufferable ardor for some one to open the door, and dissolve the spell which bound me in its fetters, The fit did not continue above five minutes; by degrees I re covered the use of speech and motion ; and as soon as they were so far restored as to enable me to call out and move my limbs, it wore insensibly away. rORREGGIO'S"LT ANGEL. Brother Thaddeus was once a brave officer, and served long and honorably In the Venetian Army ; but growing weary of a soldier's lfie, he found a happy home on the quiet heaths of Parma. He lived about half a league from the village of Correggio, in a sort of hermitage grotesquely constructed from the ruins of an old Roman camp. Our hermit was widely known and loved, for he united the skill of a phy sician with the charity of an apostle. Late one night, in the summer of 1534, Brother Thaddeus heard a loud knocking at his door. In the ringing voice that once cheered his Sclavouian troops on to victory, he cried, "Who is there?" But when a trembling, childish voice replied, "The son of Antonio AUegrl," tbe hermit hastily rose and opened the door. Tbe child was out of breath, his eyes were full of tears, and those be bad shed in his rapid walk had been dried on his cheeks by the midnight wind. "My father is very sick," sobbed tie boy, "and mother begs you to come quickly." The hermit seized his staff. "Come, my child! We will throw weariness aud sleep to the briars of the road." As they hurried along the hermit asked Ludovic the cause of his father's illness. "Ah! brother, said the child in a strange voice for a boy of thirteen years, "my father's disease springs from an ancient trouble from pov erty.' Thaddeus looked at the child in sur prise. "Yes," persisted Ludovic, "poverty has killed him. You know my father's toil canuot satisfy his bard - hearted creditors. Eight days ago our landlord, that wealthy Jew of Parma, for four crowns that father owed him, took away the painting of ."Christ in the Garden of Olives." Father had worked diligently on it for six mouths. The same day the collector of the village made him paint portraits for himself and his wife for nothing, pretending that we had not paid our taxes." "Alas !" said the hermit "Is there no sympathy in this world for geuius?" "Some days after this," continued Ludovic, "the baker refused to trust my mother, and Bonoletta, the milkmaid, would not leave the pint of milk for my two little sisters. Mother wept passionate tears of shame and despair, and the children wept because they were hungry. Then father said, 'If you weep, you will dishearten me, and 1 cannot work. The Franciscan con vent owes me money, and to-morrow 1 I will go to Parma. In the meantime, here are some crumbs of bread I have saved. Share them, and be patient till to-morrow evening.' And he took a piece oT bread from the drawer of his easel. He had eaten nothing himself for two days." "Why did not Antonio come to me?" Interrupted Thaddeus. "My father's heart Is larger than his fortune, and be would blush to beg a glass of water from his best friend." "O Antonio, Antonio!" cried the hermit, deeply moved. "But finish your sad story, Ludovic." "Father started for Parma before dawn the next morning. He hastened to the monks and induced them to pay htm ; but either from malice, or because the reverend fathers had no other coin in their coffers, they paid the two hun dred crowns In copper. My father re turned to Correggio on foot, under a burning son, with this enormous bur den. When he reached home be had hardly strength to say, we are saved !' Dropping his heavy load, be drank two large goblets of cold water to quench the thirst that devoured him. An hour afterward he was seized with a raging fever. A terrible crisis has come to night, and mother sent me for you. Perhaps it Is too late," added the boy, "for death comes swiftly." And rev erently making the sign of the cross. he led the recluse to the chamber of the Invalid. The noble peasant, the illustrious author of so many grand works, was lying upon a miserable pallet covered with green serge. His wife and eldest sou stood at the head of the bed and made with their entwined hands a pillow for the painter, for breathing was al ready painful. Julia, the eldest daugh ter who was celebrated at Parma for her great beauty, leaned against the bed-post, her bauds crossed upon her breast; ber eyes were fixed upou a cru cifix which bung from the wall, and she seemed to pray fervently. The lit tle girls, Agnes and Veronica, slept peacefully in each other's arms on a bundle of straw in a corner of the room. Tbe violence of the disease distorted the features of tbe artist, and bis fine face bore the marks of both physical and mental suffering. He was fright fully thin, and flames seemed to dart from his sunken eves. "Thaddeus,' said the painter in a faint voice, "am 1 In danger of death ?" Thaddeus made no reply. The painter repeated the question, but was again met with silence. "Then there Is no longer any hope," he sadly cried ; "and my poor child ren I" "God may work a miracle," said the hermit, "but science can do naught." "He m ill not save me," said Antonio. "Does he help the feeble? The day I came from Parma I saw an innocent dove balancing itself on the branch of a sycamore; a serpent was coiled upon the trunk. Lightning struck tbe tree and the dove was killed ; but the reptile, unharmed, fled hissing away." "Dear Antonio, let us not seek to un derstand the mysteries of God. My friend, think of your soul, recall your past life, and " "My past life I" interrupted the dying man. "Toil and poverty have been my constant companions. I have borne humiliation and Injustice without mur muring, and have never resented the insults heaped upon me. I have edu cated my children in the fear of God. Why, then, do you wish me to review my past life, and why should I fear tbe Judgment of Him who bas meted out my sufferings." The recluse kissed the band of the painter. "Simple man ! Sublime gen ius I" he cried. "Yes you are right. The purity of your life, your active charity, will be your best advocate be fore the tribunal of God." Antonio now felt that life ebbed fast. "My wife, my dear children," he said, "I must leave you. O, do not weep! 1 could have wished to make you happi er, but the perseverance of misfortune overcame the perseverance of my brush. Ottavia and Ludovic, never abandon your mother and little sisters, who sleep there, under God's protection and yours." At this moment little Agnes awoke with a start, and struck by tiie mourn ful tceue before her eyes, the tears of her brothers and sisters, she kneeled In her crib, folded her hands, aud mur mured a prayer. The grace of the child, the perfect oval of her figure, framed by the luxuriant ringlets ot her golden hair, the sweetness of her face, which seemed to seek in the heav ens an unknown star, awoke the in stincts of the artist. "Give u.:- my brushes, my pallet!" be cried. "Give them to him," said Thaddeus. "The artist as well as the warrior, longs to die on the battle-field." They raised the sick mau and made a kind of ease on his bed. The great master took his brushes, mixed his col ors, and with a band already cold with death, reproduced upon the canvas, with that correctness of design, that harmony of coloring which distin guished his artistic genius, the features of tbe delicate child, whom he made an angel before leaving an orphan. The work ended, the paiuter said. "I sigued my first pictures, 'Antonio Alegri,' which was my father's name. Later ones 1 have signed 'Lieti,' my mother's name. How shall I name this one? "With your immortal name," said the recluse; "the name of Correggio." Antonio then slowly wrote these words at tbe bottom of the canva: "Currrgjin in limine mortii Pinxil, 17 Auut 15.14." Then, completely exhausted, he fell back, turned his beadtowar dthe cruci fix, extended bis arm to his children, and breathed his last. But the soul of the artist, before leaving its earthly abode, was revealed in the admirable sketch he had just traced. The "Last Angel of Correggio" was his farewell to earth, aud one of his most brilliant titles to glory iu the eyes of posterity. Tbe villsgers of Correggio and Parma crowded to the funeral of the great artist that Italy had lost. Thus the man whose life had been crushed by adversity was called great and divine when the coffin closed over his body. The noblemen wf all the countries ol Italy sent Jewish courtiers to Correggio to purchase the works of the illustrius painter. Advised by these secret agents and influenced by ber poverty, bis widow consented to make a public sale of those rich waifs of genius. When the other paintings had been disposed of, the last work of the artist was put up at auction, his 'Last Angel.' This masterpiece was about to be struck off at the moderate sum of thirty-three ducats, when a man dressed as a cap tain of the Sclavonlan troops boldly ad vanced, and proudly placed his buff gauntlet upon the picture. "In the name of Francis I.," said he in a loud voice, "I offer twenty thous and crowns lor this picture." Xo one dare outbid the king of France. When the Venetian captain took possession of the picture in the name of Francis 1., the widow and children of Correggio recognized the recluse of the Roman camp. "You save us. Captain !" they cried. "Xot I; the king of France is your preserver. My only merit Is having pointed out to that magnanimous prince a great talent dea I, and a great misfortune existing." "And where are you going?" aked Julia. "1 return," said Thaddeus, "to the Roman camp, to lay aside my uniform and resume my hermit's robe, not again to leave It until 1 rejoin my well loved Correggio." Conversation. Three subjects of conversation are specially dangerous to the comfort of the listener servants, children, and per gonal ailments. If circumstances com bine to launch you upon either of these topics, dear reader, beware ! remember that your children's perfection aud do mestic's faults may jiossess less inter est for your friends than for yourself, while a catalogue of your aches and pains should be kept for your physi ciau's ear. Who has not fidgeted under this last affliction, wheu some matter of fact individual has conscientiously gone through a fever for our benefit, and re tailed all the changing symptoms with aggravating carefulness! Even the kindest sympathy is not proof against such exhaustive treatment, and the habitual coin plainer finds himself, or herself, sedulously shunned. Doubtless, the more unselfish we strive to be, and are, the more accepta ble and interesting we shall prove to our friends. Aa Elephant's Trunk. Cuvier tells us the trunk of the ele phant is composed of forty thousand or more smalt muscles, interlaced in all directions, the contraction and relaxa tion of which enable the animal to shorten or lengthen its trunk, and render It so flexible. It is perforated through its entire length by a double tube, through which the animal breathes ami drinks. At the end of the trunk is a little finger-like appendage which serves to pick up small objects, aud also acts as a feeder. With this wouderful instrument, as with a hand, the elephant can pick up a needle or tear up a tree, twist the herbage from the ground, or strip the young branches or leaves frogq the trees upon which he feeds. The Leopard of the Air. "Yes," said Querlaoun, "in my younger days I remember, my wile aud myself were on our plantation with some of our slaves, and one day we heard the cries of a baby aud saw a child carried up into the sky by one of these guauiouiens. The baby hail been laid ou the ground, and the guaniouien whose eyes never miss anything, aud which had not been noticed soaring above our heads, pounced on its prey, and then laughed at us as he rose aud dew to a dispart part of the forest." Then Querlaoiiu showed me a fetich partly made of two huge claws of this bird. U hat tremendous things the talons ! how deep they could go into the flesh ! Then came the wonderful stories of the very great strength of the bird The people were afraid of them, and were compelled to be very careful of their babies. These grand eagles do n'ot feed on fowls; they are too Miiall of game for them. Monkeys are what they like best; they can watch them as they float over the top of the trees of the forest; but sometimes the monkeys get the better of them. People had better not try to get hold of the guaniouien young, it they want to keep their sight" said Gambo "lor, as sure as we live, the old bird will pounce upon the man that touches its young." For a long time I beard the people talking ol'llieguauionieii, but had never yet had a glimpse of one. Now, look ing up again, 1 saw several of them, llow high they were! At times tliey would apiear to lie quite still in the air; at other times they would soar. They were o high that I do nut see how they could possibly see the tree; every thing must have beeu in a haze to them ; monkeys of course, could not be seen. They were, no duiiht, amusing themselves; and 1 wonder if they tried to see how uear they could go to the sun. Some at tiuies Hew s liigh that I lost sight of them. In the afternoon I thought I would ramble round. 1 took a double-barrel sinoth-bore gun, ami loaded one side with a bullet, in case 1 should see larger game; the other barrel 1 loaded wilii siiot Xo. 2. Then 1 carefully plunged into the w oods till I reached the banks of a little stream, and there 1 heard tiie cry of the luomii (Colohus fiatanus), which is the largest monkey of these forest. From their shrill cries 1 thought there might be at least half a dozen. I was glad indeed that I had one barrel loaded with big shot. If the mom I is were not too far off, I would be able to get a fair shot aud kill one. I advanced very cautiously until 1 got near to them. 1 could then see their big bixlies, long tails, ami long, jet-black, shining bair. What hand some beasts they were! what a nice looking mud" their skins would make, 1 thought. ' Just as I was considering which of them I would fire at, 1 saw some big thing, like a shadow, sin Men I v come down upon the tree Then I beard the flapping of heavy w ings, ami also the death cry of a )xor ninmli. Then I saw a huge bird, w it U a breast spotted soine w hat like a leopard, raise itself slow ly into the air, carrying the monkey iu its powerful, ringer-like talons. The claws of one leg was fast iu the upMr part of the uerk of the lnonkey ; sodeep were they in the flesh that they were completely buried ami a few drops of blood fell ujkii the leaves below. Tbe other leg had its claws quite deep into the back of the monkey. The left leg w as kept higher than the right, and 1 could see that the great strength of the bird was used at that time to keep the neck and also the hack of the victim, from moving. The bird rose higher and higher, tiie monkey's tail swayed to aud fro, aud then both disappeared. It was a guaniouien. Its prey was no doubt, taken to some big tree where it could be devoured. The natives say that the first thing the guaniouien does is to take out the eyes of the monkeys they catch. But there must be a fearful struggle, for these mondis are powerful beasts, and do not die at the eagle's will. There must be a great trial of strength, for if the monkey is not seized at an exact place on the ueck he can turn his bead and then in diets a fearful bite on the breast of the eagle, or on his neck or leg, w hich disables his most terrible enemy, and then, both falling, meet their death. I looked on without firing. The mon keys seemed pa raized with fear wheu the eagle came down upon them, anil did not move until after the bird of prey had taken one of their number, and then decaniMil. When 1 looked for them they had fled to arts uukiiow u to me in the forest. I was looking so intently at the ea;le ami its prey lhat for a while I had forgotten the mondis. I do not woiider at It. for monkeys I could see often, but it is only once in a great w hile thai such a scene as I w it nesseil could lie seen hv a man. It was grand: and I wondered not that the natives called the giiauionien the leop ard of the air. I'.ial ClmillH. The Hibernation nf Swallow. The controversy res-etiiig the al leged hibernation of swallows has re ceived a new contribution in a letter w ritten by rir John .McNeill to his brother-in-law. the Ihike of Argyll, and printed in a late numlier of .murr. This letter, after some preliminary re marks, continue" as follow: "About twenty-five miles south of Teheran, the capital of Persia, there is a village called Kenara gird, near which is a stream of brackish water miming in a deep bed with nearly per-M-inlictilar brinks some forty or fifty feet high. Beitig largely impregnated w ith salt this stream is rarely if ever frozen, and in frosty weather is re ported to by flights of wild ducks. During a frost of unusual severity 1 went from Teheran to Kenara-gird. ac companied by Sir Henry Rawlin-ou for the purpose of duck-shooting, the se verity of the frost promising good ort. Having slept at the village we next morning followed the downward course of lhe stream along the north bank, and had proceeded altotit a mile. I should think, when we came to a place where there had quite recently licen a small landslip. The brink of the hank to the extent of perhaps tw enty feet in length, and ten or twelve broad in the middle, t.iiering oil' to each end. bad slipped, but had not fallen dow n the bank. Between this detached portion and the iierpemliciilar face about ten feet high, from w hich it had broken off, we saw, to our great surprise, a number of swallows, not less, I am sure, than twenty or thirty, lying, as I at first supposed", dead, but ou taking up one of them I found that it was alive hut dormant,; it was warm and its breathing was quite pen-epti-ble. I examined a considerable num ber, aud found that they were all alive and breathing, but none of them gave any sign of consciousness. My atten tion was then attracted to tbe perpen dicular face on our left, from w hich the slip had broken off, and which was perforated by a vast number of holes each about the size of a rat hole. On looking into such of these as I was tall enough to see into, I found in all of them swallows in the same dormant state. I was able with my finger and thumb to pull out swallow s from sev eral of these holes, and in each case found that the hole, which penetrated horizontally a considerable way into the bank, contained more swallows in the same condition. In no case did 1 see one lying on another they were all lying singly w ith their heads in ward, each head touching the tail ol the bird before it. How far these holes penetrated into the bank, or w hat num ber of swallows each contained. I did not ascertain, but it is plain that the original entrance to those dormitories must have been in the external face of of the portion that had slipped, w hich. as I have stated, was, in the middle, from ten to twelve feet thick. The holes in the umlisturhed portion may probably have been of eijual or greater length, and if so the number of swal lows hibernating there must have amounted to mauv hundreds." The Leaaon in the sky. It is a strange thing how littla in general eople know about the sky. It is the part of creation in which nature has done more for the sake of pleasing man, more tor the sole ami evident pur pose of talking to him than in any other of her works, and it is ju-t the part in w hich we least attend to her. There are not many of her other works in w hich some umre material or essential purpose than the mere leaing of man is not answered by every part of their organization ; but every essential pur pose of tbe sky might, so far as we know, be answered, if once in three days or thereabout a great, ugly, blai-k raiu clouds were brought up over the blue, and everything well-watered and so all left blue agaiu till next time with perhaps a film of morning and evening mist for dew. And instead of this, there is not a moment of any day of our lives wheu nature is not producing scene after si-ene, picture after picture, glory after glory, and working still upon such exquisite and constant prin ciples of the most perfect beauty, that it is quite certain it is all done for us and intended for our perpetual pleas ure. And every man wherever placed, however far from other sources of in terest or beauty, has this doing for him constantly. The noblest scenes of the earth can be seen and known by but few; it is not intended that mau should live always in the midst of them; he in jures them by his presence, he ceases to feel them if he be always wish them ; but the sky is for ail; bright as it is, ii is not too "bright and good for human nature's daily food ;" it is tilted in all its functions for the M-rietual comfort and exalting of the heart, for the sooth ing and purifying it from its dross and dust. Sometimes gentle, sometimes ca pricious, sometimes aw ful, ino-t human iu its passions, almost spiritual in it tenderness, almost divine in its infinity its appeal to w hat is mortal in us is as distinct as its minisrry of chastisement or of blessing to w hat is mortal is es sential. Aud yet we never attend to it, we never make it a subject of thought but as it bas to do with our animal sen sations; we look uoii all by w hich ii speaks to us more clearly than to brute, ujxni all which bears w ilni-ss to the in tention of the Supreme, that we are to receive more from the covering vault than the light aud dew w hich we share with the weed and the worm, only as a succession of meaningless and monoto nous accidents too common and too vain to be worthy of a moment of watchful uess or a giauce of admiration. If iu our moments of utter idleness ami in sipidity, w e turn to the sky as a lat re source, w hich of its phenomena do we speak of? One says it has been wet, and another it has been w indy, and an other it has been warm. Who, among the whole chattering crowd, can tell me of lhe chain of tail white mountains that girded the horizon at noon yester day? Who saw tiie narrow sunbeam that came out of the south and smote upon their summits until they melted and mouldered aw ay in a dust of blue rain? Who saw the dance of the dead clouds w hcu the sunlight left tliem last night, and the west wind blew them be fore it like withered leaves? All has passed uiiregretted a unseen : or if the apathy lie ever shaken off even for an in-taut, it is only hy what is gross or w hat is extraordinary : and yet it is not in the broad and tierce manifesta tions of the elemental energies, nor in the clash of hail nor the drift of the whirlwind, that the highest characters of the sublime are developed. God is not in the earthquake, nor in the fire, but in the still, small voice. Ther are but the blunt, low faculties of our na ture which can only be addressed through lampblack and lightning. It is in quiet and uldu-d paage ol un obtrusive majesty, the deep and the calm and perpetual that w hich mu-it be sought ere ic is seen and loved, ere it isuuiterstood,thing? which the angels work out for us daily, and yet vary eternally, which are never wanting, never res-ated. w hich are to be found but once ; it is through the-e that the lesson of devotion is chiefly taught, and the ble.-ing of lieauly given. Maxim fur Young Men. Always speak the truth. Make few promises. Keep good company or none. Live np to your engagement. Never gamble. Drink nn intoxicating liquor. Never speak light In of religiou. Be just before you are generous. Never be idle. If yonr hands cannot be usefully em ployed, attend to the cultivation of the mind. When yon speak to auy peisou look him in the face. Good company and good conversation are the very sinews of virtue. Good character is above all things else. Never listen to idle or loose conver sation. Your character cannot lie esseutially injured except by your own acts. If any one speaks evil of you let your life be so virtuous that no one will be lieve him. Ever live (misfortune excepted ) w ith -in yonr income. When you retire to bed think over what you have done dnrirg the day. Make no haste to be rich if you would prosper. Never run in debt unless you se a way to get out agaiu. Never borrow if it is possible to avoid it. Keep yourself luuocent if you would be happy. Save wheu you are youug aud spend when your are old. Never think that which you do for religion is time or money misspent. There are two hundred and fifty Protestattt churches in the Holy Lnd.