Kssai VOL. III. OXFOED, N. C., WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 22, 1877. NO. 34. TMIG PAlIl*J3i£’S GKAVE. 5To sable pall, no waving plume, tliousainl toreliliglits to illume j No parting glance, no lieavy tear Is, seen to tall upon the bier. Tliere is not one of kindred clay To watch the coltin on it.s way; No mortal form, no human breast dares where the pauper’s bones may rest. But one deep mourner follows there, Whose grief outlives the funer.al prayer; He does not .sigli—he l0(!S not weep, But will not leave the fresh-piled heap. ’Tis he wlio wms the poor man’s nnate. And made him more content with fate; The mongrel dog that shared his crust. Is alHhat stands beside his dust. He ben(>s Ifis listening head, as though He thought to hear a voice below; He ]>ines to miss that voice so kind, .Vnd wonders why he’s left behind. The sun goes dowii, the night is come; He needs no food—ho seeks no home; But, stretchexl upon the dreamless bed, AVith doleful howl calls back the dead. The passing gaze may coldly dwell On all that polish’d marbles tell; Bor temples built on cJiurchyard earth. Are claimed by riches more than worth. But who would mark with uudimm’d eyes The mourning dog that Starves and dies ? AVho would not ask; who would not crave Shell love and faith,to guard his grave ? —/'Vunfc Jje-sKe'i Sunday Mayasiine. PAESEAl'l'S tIEI.PIKG CUlIiDKEA' liv study; We teacliers feel that the aid tvhlch pafenls will persist in giv ing to their children at home is a grout liindranee to their improve ment, and, consequentl5A a great injustice done to ns. The teaciior, for instance, gives a pupil a les son consisting of questions on tlie map. lie wishes liim to look for the answers himself, and, by habit, to gain facility in finding places. The child, if he cannot find a place immediately^, asks the parent to find it for him. He complies I \Yhon, if he had refus ed, the child would have found it by himself after a time, _ and, while looking for the particular place, would have gained a gen eral knowledge of the situation of places on the map which would liave been useful at other times. He would also have been forming the habit of self-dependence. Take another case. A teacher, after ho has, in the fclssss, explain ed a certain rule in arithmetic, and made the pupils perform ex amples undUr tliat rule, till the process has become familiar, gives them some examples to be done out of class. A pupil carelessly makes mistakes in doing them. The teacher would tell him to look till he found his mistake and correct it. This would be a good mental discipline. Ho takes the example to his parent, wha finds the mistake for him, and thus encourages useless habits. Again, in arithmetic and alge- bva, pro.bJenj.s are often given, concerning which there are, no particular directions in the book, but the benefit of which consists in the thought which the pupil is obliged to ei^ercise in regard to the hiaiine!,’ iu whiph thu}^ are to he solved. In svioh a case, if the parent tells hina how to do them, do.es he not injure his child,?. Who, then, has, reason to, com plain,—the parent or the teacher, whose efforts to discipline the wind of the pupil are rendered unavailing by the interference of the parent? But the parent will reply, •* If I do not assist luy child, he will lose liis marks or his standing in the class.” If ymu have committed the training of your child to a judicious teacher, he will not make him lose credit because, after having worked a sufficient time over a problem, he has not been able to solve it. He will reward him for the effort, whether that effort is successful or not. If the pupil has made a mistake through carelessness,mak- ing him lose his marks will be the best way to make him more care ful another time. In studies which are not math ematical, it will often happen that, in a new lesson, there is some thing which a child cannot un derstand. In such a, case the judicious teacher will not blame the child for not being able to recite that particular paragraph, but will explain it to him, and the explanations thus given help to make the recitation interesting. Again, how inany^ parents help their children in writing compo sitions ; thus, not only- preventing them from strengthening the powers of their own minds by exercise, but teaching them Xoinj to deceive their teachers. I say tryy for the experienced teacher will not often be deceived. If he is judicious; he will give the pupil no credit for what he has done with the assistance of another, but will rewArd him for his own exertions, however many- faults there may be in his stvle. The object is, not to have a well- written essay copied by^ the pupil, but to teach him to express his own thoughts with facility. But it may' be said that all teachers are not judicious in re gard to this thing. Then let the parent send his child to one who is; and, even if tliis is impossible, would it not be better to let him lose his marks or las standing in the class than to let him lose the benefits of proper mental discip line ? I hope that what I have said may' lead some thoughtful parents to a different course from that which they' have pursued, and I think they will find that their children will have their powers of mind more thoroughly educa ted (dravVn out) than by the former method.—An Experienced Teacher, in N. Y. Observer. SAY WEIit, AYD DO WEEE. In closing a sermoU on “ Good Works and Good Words,” Dean Stanley, of Westminster, quoted the following lines, which some suppose wore written by one of the earliest deans of Westminster : “ Say \vetl' is-good, but do vveti is better; Do, tyell seeina the spirit, say well is the let ter ; Say well is goodly, and helps to please ; tint do well is godly, and gives the world ease ; Say v;eU to silence sometimes is hound, liut do, well is free on every ground. S.a,y well has friends—some hero, some there, But do well IS welcome everywhere. By say well many to God’s Word oieavo ; But for lack of do well it often Icavo. If say w'oll and do well were bouudi iU' on.e- frame. Then all were done,, ail were woij^ arid got ten. were gain.” TJIE FIU8T PHOTOUKAPllEK. It is not to Niepce de St. Victor that the citizens of Chalonisur-Saone (a town, by the way, not to be mistaken for Chalons in the Champagne coun try) are about to erect a statue, but to his uncle, Josepth Nicephore Niepce, wlio might as well be distinguished as the first jihotograplrer, since he it w'as who succeeded first of all in fixing an image in the camera. In a Life of Nieepliore Niepce, recently irublished by Victor Foque, appiear letters which leave little doubt that in May, 181C, Niepce had accomjilished the feat of fixing shadows in the camera, for in communication of that date to his brother he incloses four photographs, of which he says; “ Tlie pigeon-house is reversed on the i)ictures, the barn, being to the left, instead of tlie riglit. Tlie white mass whieli you pierceive to the right of the iiigeon-house, and wliicli appears somewhat confused, is the refiectiou upion tlie paper of the pear-tree, and the black spot near the summit is an oiieniiig between the brandies of the trees. The sliadow on the riglit indicates the roof of the bake house.” This, then, is a description of the first camera pricturo ever taken, and it was by reason of Niepce’s ina bility to prevent his impressions from fading after lapse of time that lie turn ed ids attention to the bitumen of Ju dea pnocess, with which he piroduoed pliotograpihs as early as 1824, one or two spieciraelis being still among the science treasures of the Briti.sli Muse um. The name of Nicepiliore Nlepice is little known in England. And yet this should not be. As is well known, he came to this country in 1827, and re sided at Kew in the liopie to receive aid and encouragement, and shortly afterward, on ids return to France, en tered into piartiiershipi with Daguerre, to work out togetlier a more piractical pirocess. AVheu Daguerre made known his discovery in 1839, his piartnor liad been dead two years, and no mention was made of Niepice at tlie time Arago iiiade%lds famous spieecli announcing tlie discovery of tlie Da-guerrotypie. Spieciiiieiis of the wonderful pirocess were not long in reacldiigtids country, a.iid tlie first piioturc was placed in Faraday’s hands with the remark that lie liad never seen anything lil;e. it be fore. But Faraday said he had. A Frencliman, h e remembered, had brouglit him a piicture of Kew Clinrch a dozen years ago, with tlie quaint re mark tliat “ tlie sun liad done it.” Faraday was so certain of this tliat in quiries were at once instituted into the iii.attor, and in the end a communica tion was addressed by the ISe-cretary of the Itoyai Society, Mr. Bauer, to tlie Academie at Paris, a communication wliioli helped materially to substanti ate the claim of tlie Niepice familj', and to obtain for the son, Isidore, a piension in ackiiowledgcmeiit of the father’s services. The deed of piartiiershipi be tween Niepce and Daguerre is still ex tant, but iiow mucli of the latter’s pub lished results were due to his dead partner the world will never kuow.- Nature. now IMAKBEES ARE MADE. A vonerable Clulstian in Cfin- aectiout,. aged iiinety-tw(\ o-p- poses, pipe organa because he does, ‘‘pot believe in pumping prai,s.e up to God.” It is also understood that he objects to lightning-rods, because they “pull thunder down Irow heaven,” There is something very inge nious in the manufacture of mar bles. The greater part of them, are made of a hard stone found near Ceburg, in Saxony. The stone is first broken with a ham mer into small cubical fragments, and about a hundred or a hun dred and fifty of these are ground at one time in a mill, sometliing like a flour-mill.. The lower stone; ■which remains at rest,, has sev eral concentric cirevdar grooves; the upper stone is of the same diameter as the lower, and is made to, revolve by water or wind power. Minute streams of water are directed into the furrows of the lower stone. The little pieces are made to roll about in all di rections, and in a quarter of an hour the whole of the rough fragments are reduced Into nearly . accurate spheres. WHO WAS CASABIANCAI StIDSTTTETE EOlt STOiVES ‘liV PKIIVTSAG. Owen Casablanca was a native of Corsica, on which island he was born in the year 1788. His father was Louis Casabianca, a distinguished French politician and naval commander, and the friend of Nauoleon. He Avas captain at this time of the Orient, one of the largest vessels in the French navy, a magnificent ship- of-war, carrying 120 guns and 500 seamen. Of Casabianca’s mother, we know little, save that she was a young and beautiful Corsican lady, and devotedly at tached to her son. Owen was her only child, a handsome, man ly little fellow, with her beauty in his flashing eyes and dusky hair. She died while he Avas yet quite young, and when the green sod Avas placed over lier grave, the boy left the pleasant valley under the smiling hills of Corsica to go Avith his father and tread the dark deck of a war ves sel. Mere child as he Avas, Cas abianca soon grew to love Ins father’s dangerous calling, and became a favorite with all on board. He Avas made midship man, and at the early age of ten years participated with his father in the battle of the Nile. Soon after, Captain Casibianca, the father, was Avoiinded by a musket ball. Not yet disabled, he was struck in the head some minutes later by a splinter, which laid liim upon the deck insensible, liis gallant son, unconscious of the chieftain’s doom, still held his post at the battery, where he Avorked like the hero he Avas. He SQAv the flames raging around him; he saw the ship’s creAv de serting him one by one, and the boy Avas urged to flee. With courage and coolness beyond his years, he refused to desert his post. Worthy son of Louis Cas abianca, he fought on and never abandoned the Client till the whole of the immense vessel Avas in flames. Then seeking refuge on a floating mast, he left the burning ship behind him. But he was too late. The final catas trophe came like the judgment doom. With an explosion so tremendous that every ship felt it to the bottom, the Orient blew up, and from among the Avreck the next morning Avas picked up the dead, mangled body of the young hero, Avhose story, romance and poetry cannot make more heroic than it was.—Youth's, Com panion. A very little boy had one day done Avrong, and was .sent, after paternal correction, to ask in se cret the forgiveness of his heaven ly Father. His offense was pas sion. Anxious to hear Avhat he Avould say, his mother folloAved to the- dioor- of his room. In lisping accents she heard him aslc to be mpde better; never to be angry again; and then, with childlike simplicity, he added, “Lordl make ma’s temper better tool A carrier-pigeon, carrying a message to the French Ambassa dor in London, won a race against a train going sixty miles an hour The bird was llbemted as soon as the steamer reached Hover, Avhence it fleAv to its dovecot in Loudon, seventy miles in sixty minutes. The name of stenochromy is given to a noAv process of color printing, described in one of tlie London scienlific journals and which consists in producing pic tures composed of many different colors by one impre.ssion, on pa per. Instead of stones, as is prac tised in mosaic Avorks, cakes of color are substituted, the colors being so compounded that, Avlieu moist paper is pressed upon them they yield a print in kind. The colors are originally prepared and used in a liquid state, but are of such a character that they rapidly solidify. A little of the color is poured on a flat slab into a sort of little cell, or compart ment, formed by slips of metal standing edgeAvise on the slab. As soon as this has become solid, the slips are removed and the lit tle mass of color pared aAvay to the outline required—say the form of Ja green leaf; the next color is similarly applied, and cut, say to the form of a rose leaf,— then the next to that,—and soon, until the picture .thus is built up, ])ieoe by piece, in different colors. The paring aAvay is done by a vertical knife fixed in a frame, so that it can be moved sideways in any direction, but all its cuts are perfectly vertical. From this compound block the picture is printed in a press like that used the lithography. A young lady in NeAvton coun ty, Ga., is possessed by a strange monomania. She fancies herself a baby, and has not spoken a word in three years, although her po wersofeonversation used to be of more than ordinary average. Not withstanding this absurd halluci nation, she is inconsistent enough to read and write letters. —A mother having occasion to reprove her little daughter for playing Avith some rude children, received the reph', “ Well, ina, some folks don’t like bad com pany, but I ahvays did.” In giving a geography lesson doAvn East, a teacher asked a boy Avhat state be lived in, and Avas amused at the reply, dravvled through the boy’s nose, “A state of sin and misery.” —The daughter of Aicbbishop Whately has a school of four hun dred boys and girls in Cairo, Egypt- —A proud and dev-otod Avife, whose husband had got a job on a cellar excavation, explained his absence by saying be had gone to Wheeling. —The ai'tosian well in Charles ton, S. C., has been bored to the depth of 1,450 feet and no Avater obtained. They intend to have it if they have to bore through to China. “It is well to leave something for those who come after us,” as a man said when he tlireAv a bar rel in the Avay of a constable Avho- was chasing him. “■Are those soaps all one scent?'* inquired a lady of a juvenile sales man. “No, ma’am, they are all ten cents,” replied the innocent youngster..