r , ~ _ _ ~, . .. ~ _ , I a . . . ::,!.. - 1 , ; .. ' ~..'.• - ,•I : - . p ... . . ..; .... 7 N..- • , : . .. , . : la. ' . . . .: , . . . • . . . . . ... . . . . . - . . . . I . . di l , . , ill. .. . t • • " .. . • . . . VOLUME 6. THE PE OPLE'S . JOURNAL. PUBLISHED EVERY FRIDAY MORNING BY HASKELL & AVERY. Terms: One copy per annum, in advance, t 1.03 Villagesubscribersperunnum,inadvanco,l.2s RATES or ADVE RT/S ING..-011C square, of twelve lines or less, ' be inserted three times for one dollar; for every subsequent insertion, twenty-five cents will be charged Rule, and figure work .will invariably be charged double these rates. nir 'These terms will lie strictly adhered to TYRE. BS BAYARD TATLOR The wild and windy morning is lit with lurid fire; Thu thundering serf of ocean- beats on the rocks of Tyre— Beata on: the fallen column; and round the headland roars, And hurls its foamy volume along the hollow shores, And calls with hungry clamor, that speaks its long desire : - •'{Vhero are the ships of Tarshish, the mighty • shipi of Tyre l" IVithin her entitling harbor, choked with in vading sand, No galleys brim , their freightage, the spills of every laud, And like It prostrate forest, when auttninn's gales have blown, iler colonnades of granite lay thattertd_and earl hrow n ; And front the reef of the pharos no longer flings its fire To beacon home the Tarshish and lordly ships of Tyre. Where is thy rod of empire, once mighty on the waves— Thou that thyself exalted, till kings became thy slaves I - Than that didst s peak to nations, and saw thy will obeyed— Whose favor made them joyful, whose anger sore afraid— Who laid'st thy deep (emlations, and thought them strong and sure, And boasted midst the waters : shall I not aye endure I Where is the wealth of ages, that heaped thy princely mart 7 The pomp of purple trappings; the gems of Syrian art; The silken goats of Kedur; Saha'sne spicy store; Th.; tributes of the islands thy squadrons homeward bore, Who in thy gates triumphant they elite. red front the sea, •With sounds of horn and sackbut, of harp and psaltery 1 Howl, howl, ye AO of Tarshish ! thy glor3- is laid waste : There is no habitation; the mansioas are 'de- • factal ; No tuariners of Sidon unfurl your inigley sails; N ‘vorkinen fell the tie-trees that prow i Shenir's And Bashan's oaks that boasted a thousand years of suit, - Or hinv the masts of cedar on frosty Lebanon. Rise, thou forgotten harlot! take up thy harp . mid sing; Cull the rebellious islands to own their ancient king : B to the spray thy bosom, and with thy hair unbound, Sit on the piles of ruin, thou throneless and discrowued ! There 1.111% thy voice of wailing with the thun bens of the sea, And sing thy song of sorrow, that thou re membered be ! Thonoli silent and forgotten, yet Nature still laments The pomp and power departed, ,the lost mtg.- nifieehce: The hills were proud to see thee, anti they are sadder now; The sea was proud to bear thee, God wears a troubled brook; And evermore the' surges clMunt forth their coin desire : # Where are the ships of larshish, the mighty ships of Tyre Theodore Parker on the Nebraska Question. Theodore Parker made a powerful speech on the Nebraska Question. The Cincinnati Gazette makes the following extract: Now if the South carries the Ne braska bill, will that be the end of it ? Not at all. A little while ago we were told that the Union was in danger, and men cried, Save the Union." 1 thought that it would not be long, as that game turned out, before the Union would again be in danger, and we should have other volunteers to save it. I did not think it would come before 1955. 1 was, however, a little mistaken in this calcu lation, as it carne in 1851. Now sup pose.the Nebraska bi 4. is carried; the -next step, I think, will be •for Congress to pass a law providing that a slave 'owner can take his slave into any free Beate, and keep him there six months, or ' perhaps a year, or perhaps seven years. .rhe next thing will be to provide that be can-take his slave 'and keep him there as long as he likes. Will the North say No!- lam not sure of that, gentlemen. The past does not warrant me in being care that the North will say " No" any more than it did in 1788, 1192, 1803, 1845. 1847, 1848, and Ibso. lam by no means sure of it. Now suppose that point is gained, the next thing will, be to repeal - the ordinance of 'B7. It will be declared inoperative. Then the South •will insist upon California being a Slave State. • They sill then want new territory, and Mexico, Cuba, Hayti, Porto Rico, and the British West Indies, will be slave States. Do the • North see it ? I am not sure of that.. The next point will be - to restore the slave trade. I , • . DEVOTED TO THE IquNDipLEs OF DEMOCRACY, AND THE DISSEMINATION OF MOR)ALITY. LITERATURE, AND NEWS. know exactly that the argument which will be given, if the Democratic party is in power, and the Administration favors the measure, is that free trade will re quire the slave trade. Then I know the arguments.which Reverend Clergymen will advance. They manufacture argu ments ; I do not mean to say ministers of Christ. God forbid, for they do no such thing. I mean to say ministers of commerce %via do it; and we shall hear , the cry raised from the pulpits—l will import my mother; father, or brother; to save the Union. The like has been already said from our pulpits and by professors in our colleges. Will the North say. " No, we will not abolish the slave trade 1" If the Whig party are in .power, it will be necessary to restore'the slave trade-in order to protect our manu factures and compete with 'foreign na tains. . I do not know of any depth 'of wickedness too low or too deep for Northern politicians to dive into and stay under—not one. [Laughter and ap plause.] lam very sorry to say these things, for I am a Massachusetts man myself. lam a Northern man, and I am' proud of her past history before the Revolution. I take pride and pleasure :n her glorious churches, which once rang with the glorious liberties of the children of God. I felt ashamed the first time that I ever spoke in Faneuil Hall, and said : Who am I, 0 Lord, that I should have the privilege of standing in this hall, which has rung with the echo of-the voices of- great and noble men [Cheers.] I say, Let us resist this - NebraSka measure with all our might, not merely by passing resolutions, but by carrying out the proposition. lam not a political man, but I suggest that a town ,meeting shall be solemnly called in 'every town of the Commonwealth ; then a district meeting shall be called -in every Con gressional district in the Commonwealth, and all men asked to kcome together, without distinction of-arty ; and then that a great mass meeting be held here— no, not here in Boston, but held in the town of Worcester—in the heart of the Comtnonwealth—held in a city that has never kidnapped a man—[applause]-- held in a town, the court-house of which has never been girded with chains, and the State Judges crawling under them. [Loud cheers.] Hold the meeting in ihe town of Worcester, and discuss the . question, and if the bill pass, call a con verrion of all the free persons in the Free States, and pledge ourselves to repeal the Nebraska measure; next to abolish slavery in the district of Colum bia ; next to abolish it in Utah and New• Mexico, and wherever it exists under the' federal jurisdiction; next to repeal the Fugitive Slave Law and all the so-called Compromise of Slavery, and lastly, go ( to work and -tear' that hated leaf out of the Constitution of the United States. [Loud cheers.] Gentlemen, lam no madman. lam ! a cool, calm man, who has studied the facts of our nation's history, and know them well. I have studied the ideas which were the programme-of principles , in the Revolution, and which were the ! programme of pttrpose in the - formation of the Constitution, and it is to these great truths, there embodied - and written by God in the hearty of men, that I call your attention, and I ask you to swear I allegiance to your wives and your chil dren, by the bones of your mothers that are under ground, and by the soul of the Almighty God whose higher law rules earth. and sea, and sky, and time and eternity. [Loud cheers.] Well, if we are beaten on the Nebraska question, and on the•other measures, let us retreat with our face to the foe, never flinching, losing everything but our honor. Let us fight the battle from line to line, from State to Sate, until we are ,driven back to old .Massachusetts. Then let us fight it from town to town until at last we,are driven back to the old rock of Plymouth, and there with the soul of our fathers still in us, taught by the experience of a hundred years, and rich with the prom ise of all eternity in our bosoms, let us gather together the last shreds of the sacred Mayflower, build our ship, take on board what is, left of Puritan integ rity and republican virtue, launch our bark upon the 'waves,—go to Greenland, or to Africa, found institutions, and se cure the glorious liberty of the children of God. [Loud cheers.]! AN INTERESTING VIEW OF THE Irlsva acoTtox x CIIINA.—An European cor respondent of the National Era has communicated to us the following intelli gent, and, we doubt not, truthful descrip tion of the aspect of afFairs in China. The eyes of the world are turned_toward that interesting -country,, and great and gratifying results are almost universally anticipated from the events now 'trans p:ring there: CrEa. Recent information from the Celestial Empire, derived from a quarter ,Of great and peculiar interest, tan hardly - fail, to be of interest to American readers ; nor the less so, because it has not - been communicated•to the people elsewhere, COVIDERSPORT; POTTER . -COUNTY, PA., MARCH 24, 1854. through any of the organs of general. intelligence. Our informant has resided many years in, and enjoyed, the most favorable op= periunities for making himself acquainted with the true state of the country. He writes„ that he entertains ho doubt of the speedy advance of the insurgents to Pekin, and the overthrow of the Tartar dynasty. It is pretty well known and understood at Canton, that the accom— plislunent of this event will be the signal for a revolution in the grand emporium of trade; and then there will be at least four separate rebellions in the field, viz. : at Pekin, Amoy, Shanghai, and Canton. The new view of the case presented to us is, that all these are ' , separate " and distinct organizations, not only not con nected with one another, but absolutely hostile. Thus, while there is a common' Chinese object, everything tends toliring about the crisis; and when destruction has had its sweep, construction will pro duce another elemental war. Elsewhere, it would rightly be predicted of _such a struggle, that anarchy and ruin must be the result ; but China differs from all the rest of the world, and, though it is im possible to prevent confusion to a great extent, the non-belligerent and pre-emi nently mercantile character of the peo ple offer a different solution to the important question. The population of Tokien, the Province of which Amoy is the principal port, are the best soldiers in the country, and, as they have had the hardest fight, are likely to keep their own.. The main body, ',tasters of Pekin and Nankin, are not likely to lose sight of their one object, and may 'therefore be preiumed as . likely to establish a permanent Government.. The same may be expected from the numerous peop!e and vast wealth and trade of Canton, more aqtiatic than Holland used to be represented in travels and tales. What is expected, therefore, is, that this im mense tertitory, and millions upon mil lions of inhabitants, will, in the end, be resolved into several States or Kingdoms, or whatever the succes.-,ful leaders of the various revolts choose to style them, and that the partition of [he Empire will more resemble that which followed the death of .the Macedonian conqueror than any other historical record. At all events, this strange division of the earth must be thrown open to the rest of mankind ; and, whether the new powers fight . or agree, the introduction of so immense a change will have an effect almost beyond imagination to conceive, on the universal bearings of the civilized' world. At any rate, it is curious to learn, as part of the datd on which the future is to hin4c, that instead of one insurrection in China, as we have supposed, it is a hydra, and the heads are as bitter enemies to each other-e9s if they were long exasperated foreign foes. From the N. Y. Ermthig Yost. The Cheat of Non-Intervention. The pretense that the bill which has just passed the United States Senate, allows the inhabitants of the new tern'-' tories to govern themselves, is utterly. groundless. It is, in fact, simply a false hoop A" people which governs itself chooses and frames its own form of government. In the present case it is Congress which dictates the form of government under which the inhabitants of Nebraska are to live. It is Congress which imposes the constitution upon them, and whether they are pleased with it or not; they cannot change it; the federal govern ment does not permit them to do so. If the state of New York were obliged.to receive its constitution from the federal government without the power to alter it at pleasure, we should hardly admit that we enjoyed the privilege of governing ourselves. A community in the exercise of self government elects its own Governor...— In the case of Nebraska the Governor is to be appointed by the President of the United States. The people of the ter ritory may make certain ordinances, but they cannot execute them. The presi dent sends them a man.to execute them— a man vested with the appointment of all the subordinate executive agents. if thatman does not choose to carry into effect the ordinance made by the territo rial legislature, the people of the territo ry cannot compel him,cannot punish him, cannot remove him ; he is not responsi ble only - to the federal government. A people which. governs itself...ap points, either directly or indirectly, the judges who sit in its courts and admin ister its laws. Its judges are not sent to it from without. 13ut in' the present case, Dir. Douglas's bill provides that the judges shall be appointed by the Presi dent of the United States and confirmed by the Senate. Whateirer ordinances are passed by the territorial legislature will be expounded and applied by judg es who are the creatures Of‘the 'federal: government: If the territorial legisla ture should pass any law prejudicial. to - slavery,.the judges, who will represent the administration at Washington, • may annul it as contrary to 'the ;constitution. 'Those who govern thqinielv6,.create their own legislature. The Nebraska bill assigns a part of the legislative power to an agent of the President—to the Governor whom he shall appoint. It gives the Governor a right to send back to the territorial legislature, with his veto, any bill passed by the. majority, which can then only become klaw by a vote of two thirds of both houses., The course of legislation is thus obstructed by the agency of a power without the territory. Again, no . people can be said to govern itself which has not the-power to prescribe who shall exercise the right of suffrage. - .I.n‘ the territories the practice has hitherto been to allow all the inhabi tants to vote as soon as they have fixed themselves in the country, without re quiring the* process of naturalization. In that way, Michigan, loWa . and Wis • cousin were settled. Every man,Whether from Ireland; England, Germany, Nor way or France, was allowed a voice in the territoral elections. This was a reasonable arrangement in .a country where the inhabitants were few, and where in many neighborhoods the sole inhabitants were recently from Europe. Douglai's bill disfranchises all this class of men, and puts them on a level, so far as their political rights are concerned, with the slaves exported from Arkansas and Missouri. There will, in all proba bility, be settlements in Nebraska, with two or three planters from those states, and a considerable population of recent emigrants from Europe, who have not been long enough in the country= to become naturalized citizens of the United States. Two or three planters will elect members to the legislature, and this class will control the legislation of the state. In th's respect, the bill before 'Congress allows the inhabitants a far lesg share in the government of the territories than was permitted by the former laws. What did Mr. Cass 'mean when he said that the passage of this bill was the triumph of squatter . sovereignty ? It puts the squatter of foreign birth—the Celt, the Tuton—on a level with the Af riran. Its effect vill, of course, be to exclude the white emigrant, and to Africanize Nebraska. With what face can these' men talk of non-interventton by the federal government, whew, the federal government appoints the Execu tive, appoints the Judiciary, and appoints an agent to interfere with the legislative power . ?. Dishoneit pretenses are fre quent •in these days among 'Politt cinns. but the assertion that the Nebraska bill leaves the people of the territoris at liberty to govern themselves and fram'o their own -institutions, is a hoax of the grossest and most shameless character. A WONDERFUL CLOCK.—There is nosy in the possession of, and manufactured by Mr. Collings, silversmith, of Gloucei tershire, England, a most ingenious piece of mechanism—an eight-day clock, with dead-beat escapement maintaining power —which chimes the quarters; plays six! teen tunes, plays three time in twelve hours, or will play at any tithe required. The hands go round as follows : One,, once a minute ; one, once an hour; one, once a week ; one, once a month ; one', once a year. It shows the moon's age', the time of rising and setting of the sun; the time of high and low water, half-ebb and half-flood; and by a beautiful con trivance, there is a part which represents the water, which rises,- and lifting the ships at high-water tide as if it were in motion, and as it recedes leaves these little automaton ships dry on the sands, It shows the . hour of the day, day of th 4 week, day of the month, month of the year. In the day of the month there is a provision made for the long , and short months. It shows the twelve signs o r the zodiac ; ,it strikes or not, chimes as you wish it ; it has the equation table t showing the difference of clock and su every day in the year. Every portio of the clock is of beautiful workmansnipi and performs most accurately the many different objects which are called intc action by the ingenious proprietor, who is most willing to describe, all its various achievements to any one who may feel pleasure in paying him a visit. . .The New York Senators. lt,gives us pleasure to perform a aim ple act of justice towards men to whose course, on many political questions, w , are utterly opposed. Among the faith ful few who resisted, at every step, an to the last, the Nebraska iniquity, wer Senators g,eward and Fish, of this State.' The ode by a powerful speech—evincl ing, A moral courage which we should have been glad to see ,imitated . by some of his democratic associates—as welt as by his votes ; the other by his votes • 'never wanting when called for—our Seni ators have , faithfully and fearlessly per ; i formed their duty. On the field-wher so many fainted and fled, no brave ma who provedtrue shall fail to receive th praise he merits at our hands. , WithOu regard to their party affinities, we fee proud 'of the course pursued, on' thiS question, by the Senators,. from ,Diet 4 York. We only.wish that every free- State`hatl been as ably • and - faithfullY represented:—Eve.'Post. • ' ' ' , lEMII , - ' Front the San Francisco Herald. i Discoveries of Ruined Cities in the Great'Dasin. .. , . The'Grent Basin in the middle of our territory, bounded on the north by the WahsstO mountains and the settlements of the Mormons in Utah, on the east by the Rochy mountains, skirting the right bank of the Rio Grande, on the south by the Gila; and the west by the Sierra Ne vada, is l'a region still almost unknown. f rrappas and mountaintiers hive passed all around the inner rim, but none have ; ever crossed it, with the exception of Mr. Beale, who traversed, on his recent trip, the northern slope, and Captain Joe Walker, the famous mountaineer, who passed nearly through its centre in the winter of 1850. But .little, there- fore, is known regarding it, but that lit- tle is exCeedinglS , ' interesting, and fills the mind.with eagerness to know more.' From Captain Walker we have gained many particulars respecting this cele- biated trip, and the character of this mysterious land, which have‘never be- , fore been brought to light. There is no ; lack of streams within it; the Rio Colo rado, Chi quito, or little Red River runs i entirely across it, about one hundred ; miles to the bard' of the Gila, and al most parkallel to it and empties into the' Colorado. About 120 miles still further to the North, the San Jnan follows, ex-; actly the same course as the little Red, arid ;empties into. Grand River, the most, important branch of the Colorado.---1 Grand _River itself pursues a course a' little south of west- across the northern ' part of the Basin, while the Avonkaree, a large; river discovered by i l ,lr. Bale. Green River, mid ithe Rio Virgin, are all large streams, which drain the north ern Motintain rim and ran in a souther ly direction into the Colorado. , The Great Basin between the Coburn-' do and the Rio Grande, is - an immense table of land, broken towards the Gila and the Rio Grande by detached Sierras. Almost ill the streams run through can ons. The country - is barren and des°• late. anal entirely uninhabited even by the lowest order of Indians. But, though nnw so bleak and forbidding, strewn all around. May be seen the evidence that it was once peopled by a civilized and I thickly settled population, They have long since disappeared, but their handi work remains td - attest their former greatness. Capt. IWalker assures us i that the; country from the Colorado to the Rio Grande, between the Gila and the Saa.Juan, is full of ruined habita -1 Lions .and cities, most of which are on the table land. Although ; he had fre tquently Met, with crumbling masses of masonry; and numberless specimens of ; antique pottery, such as have been no , tired in the immigrant trail south of the Gila, it was not until his last trip acrop, that he ever saw a structure standing. 'On that; occasion he had penetrated about midway from the Colorado into I the wilderness, and had encamped near 1 the Little Red River, with the Sierra Blanche looming up to the south, when h= noticed' at a little distance an object. that induced him to examine further. 1 As he . ,approached, he found it to be a I kind of ,citadel, around which lay the ruins or a city more than a mile in length. It ivzs located on a gentle de ) clivity that sloped towards Red River, and the lines of the streets could be dis tinctly traced running at right angles with each other. The holises had all been built with stone, - but nil had - been reduced to ruins by the action of some great heat, which had evidently passed over the whole country. 'lt was no or dinary conflagration, but must have been some fierce, furnace-ltke blast of fire, similar to that issuing from a volcano, as the stones were all burnt, some of i them almost cindered, others glazed as if meltect r This appearance was visible in every ; ruin he met with. A storm of fire seemed 'to have swept over the whole country, and the inhabitants must have falieri before it. In the center of the city ive refer to, rose abruptly a rock twenty or thirty feet high, upon the top of which t stood a portion of the walls of what had once been an immense build ing. The outlines of the building were still distinct, although only the northern angle, with walls fifteen or eighteen feet long, and ten feet high, was standing. These walls were constructed of stone, well quarried and wellbuilt. All the south end of the building seemed to haye melted to cinders and have.sunk to ,a mere heap of rubbish. Even the rock upon which, it was built, seems to have been partially fused by the heat. • :Capt. Walker spent some time in ex amining this interesting spot—he traced many of the streets and the outlines of the hobses, but could find no other, wall standing-; as often as he had seen ruins of this character, he had never urilil this occasion, discovered any.of the im plements, of the ancient people. ' Here helound a number of band mills, Simi. lar to those still used by the Pueblos and, the IVliiiicans for grinding theii 'Corn., They were "made of light porous brick, ,and consisted.. of two peices about two feetionond leo. iriche3 wide, the one hollowed- ,out; and . the other pa,lile con ... NUMBER 45. vex like a . roller.. to fit the concavity. They were the only articles that had resisted the heat: . - No, metals of any - kind were found. Strewn all around, might, be seen numerous fragments of crockery, Sometimes beautifutly carved, at others, painted: This, however, was not peculiar to the spot, as he_had seen antique pottery in every part, of.-the country, from San Juan to the Gila Capt. Walker' continued his journey, and . noticed several more rains on a lit tle of his route,• next day but be could not stop to examine them. On this.side of the Colorado, he has never yet seen any remains, except Abe present races. The Indians have no traditions relative to the ancientpeople that once so thickly settled this •region. They look with wondei upon these .remains; but know nothing of their origin. Capt. Walker, who, we may remark, is a most intelli gent and close observer, far Superior to the generality of old trappers, and with a wonde l rfullyt retentive memory, is of opinion that this "Basin, now so - barren, was once a charming country, sustain ing millions of people, and that its pres ent desolation'has been wrought by the action of volcanic fires. The mill dis covered proves that the ancient race once farmed ; the country as it now op rUrs never could be titled, hence it is inferred, that it must have been differ ent in early days. • They must haie . had sheep, too, for the representation of that useful animal was found carved up o n Piece of pottery. " • Lieut. Beale states that,pn his- first trip across the continent, hekdiscovered in the midst of the- wilderness north of the Gila, what appeared to be a strong full, the' wall of great- thickness, bu :It of stone. He traversed it, and found it contained forty-two rooms. - In the vi cinity were met with numerous ,balls of the hard clay, fro.n the size of a bullet, that of a grape shot. What was sin gular about them was the fact, that fre quently ten or twenty of them were stuck together, like a number of bullets run out of a half-a dozen connecting Imoulds, or like a whole bakin'g of rolls. It is difficult to say what these were ih tended for. They were so hard, how ever, that the smaller ones could ba dis charged from a gitn. And now it re mains for the antiquarian to explore this interesting region in the very hetart of our country, and to say who were the people that inhabited it. They may have been the ancestors of the Aztecs, wham Cortez found in Mexico. for they were known to have come from the n•arth. - Tradition relates that they sailed out from their northern homes, directed by their prophets not to case their march till they came acicss an eagle sitting up on a cactus, with a serpent in its claws. 'Fills they found where the city of Mex ico now stands, and here they established their dominion. This legend is still preserved in the device upon the Mex ican dollar. Some remnants of the Az tecs still remained within a few years past at the ruin. d city of Gran Quivero or Pecos, in the wilderness of New Mex ico. -.1-lere in deep caverns they kept alive,with reverential care, the Sacred Fire, which was always to burn till the return of Montezuma. It only went out about ten years ago, when the last Indian of the the tribe expired. It might be that the Pimos. south of the Gila, are an offshoot of the great Aztec nation, left behind in their march to the south. The Pimos, it is knowh, are far superior to the Indians of New Mexico. They raise fine ccaton, and from it manufacture all their clothing. Would that some Stephens or Layard would arise to explore the wonders that lie concealed within this Great Basin, and. to bring 'to light the history of the strange people who inhabited it. A rROPER DISTINCTIOti.—Our Indiaa incidents are fruitful. This is not the worst we have had : . "Are you a Christ ian Indian ?". sailta person to.an adhe rent of Red Jacket; at the settlement near Cattaraugus. "No," said the star dy savage, n 1 Whisky - lodian." . lie. could see that Whisky drinking and LChristianity had little in common, and was honest enough to classify himself i according to his habits. - Not. a -few of ' our civilized "Whisky Indians" lack I I the honesty or discriMination . of the sar i arr o e.'lluffulo Express. — • . . CICERO said of a than.who had plough ed up.the grcund in 'which his father was buried, " This is really cultivating ode's father's memory." the'N. Y. independent we find the following from a . mother: f. But did I tell you what a time I bad with my little Joe ?" ..No, what was it ?" Why, L-wasr showing•him a picture of Ihe,martyrs throw:110 the lions, and vas t talking very solemnly tO, trying to Make' him feel what c. terrible thing it was'. a Ma !" said he all at once, Oh .ma I just look at that poor little lion way .beltind.there, he .won't , get any." EU