I 1 II I I II w j.TOD IIITTCIIIXSOX, Publisher. I WOULD RATHER BE RIGHT THAN PRESIDENT. IIexry Clat. TERMS: !?ii.5o i.v aivac:i:. VOL. 1. DIRECTORY. fT.EPAr.LD EXPRESSLY FOtt "THE ALLEGIIAXIAX. LIST OF l'OST oi riccs. p.jst OJkes. Benn's Creek, LL't'iel station, C.tri-jUtuwu, CiK-ii Spring, E'-i'-'iiibarj. F.i'.le:i Tuuber, Glen ConiK-ll, Hemlock, JuUliitoW'-l, I.orcf.o, Miii'--r:d Puiiit, M i. -I-:-r, ri.tttiville, R.stUu'i. St. Auiuiine, S: i!; L.vt!, S j:i:a .1:1. Si:a::K-r!iiII, S JiiKnit, TV Musters. Joseph Graham, Joseph S Mardis, Districts. Yoder. Blacklick. Lieiijaiuiu Wirtner , Carroll. Danl. LiUinyer, Chest. Washint'n. Ebensburg. White. Gallitzin. Chest. Washt'n. Johnst'wn. Loretto. Coui.'in'gh. Mu nster. Conem'gh. y u?(jban. White. Clearfield. Richland. Washt'n. Crovle. Washt'n. S'mmerhill. John J. Troxell, Mrs. II. M'Cague, Isaac Thompson, J. M. Christy, Joseph Gill, Wm. M'Uough, II. A. I3oggs, 111. G wina, E. Wissinger, A. Durbin, Francis Clement, Andrew J. Ferra! G. W. Bowman, Joseph Mover, George CotiruJ, B. U'Colgan, Win. Murray, Miss M. Gillespie Andrew Beck, ClIL'KCaiCS, JIIXISTLUS, &.C. i'rah'ittrfin Rev. D. Harbison-, Pastor. 'reaching every Sabbath morning at 10 '.l-jvk. a:i 1 in the evening at 6 o'clock. S ab et!! S iio il at 0 o'clock. A. M. Prayer meet z; every Thursday evening at G o'clock. M-' L.-:t Episcopal Church Uev. J. SHANE, i.vr in charge. Rev J. M. Smith, As ! ..'.!:. I'reaching every Sabbath, alternately t o ciix K in me morning, or in ine ng. Sabbath School at 'J o'clock, A. M. r meeting every Thursday evening at 7 : h Independent Rev. Ll. R. Powell. r. Preaching every Sabbath morning at 'S'-k, and in the evening at 0 o'clock. .-.'.h School at 1 o'clock, 1. M. Prayer tv i'-'. 0 . -ell :U a the first Monday eveniuar of each j; : and 0:1 everv Tuesday, Thursday i.i : 1 n-Jav evenin ci -- l"-"b "- .,ipr.tiiHr till t"ir-.t Wi'.l'L' r: a u. a 111 t Ii -Vi-iuisiic .' thodist -Rev. John Williams, Pastor. Preaching every Sabbath evening at 2 'i::d 0 o'clock. Sabbath School at 10 o'clock. A M. I'ravcr meeting everv Friday evening I) '.'.UClv. Society every Tuesday evening Rev. Wm. Lloyd, Pastor Preach- t ry Sabbath morning at 10 o'clock. . '..".'ir Uiptists Rev. David Jenkins. r. Preaching every Sabbath evening sit !'"'-k. Sabbath School at 1 o'clock, P. M. ;;c Rev. M. J. Mitchell, Pa.-tor . ' . ? everv Sabbath morning at 10 J o'clock 'a:rjTi at 4 o'clock in the evening. MAILS ARRIVE. E-.v. daily, at 11 o'clock, 'c lira, at lo.l " MAILS CLOSE" E.:rn. I'.ii'v. ut 4 J o'clock V.Vunt, ' at o li A. M. P. M. P. A. t-ir The Mails from Butlr-r.Indiafta.Strongs-t a:,. A.--., arrive on Tuesday and F.-Slay of week, at 3 o'clock, P. M. I.'.-.ivd Ebftirbiirg on Mondays and Thurs w'. at 7 o'clock, A. M. T3 The Mails from Newman's Mills. Car s' nvn. .Vc.. arrive on Monday and Friday of at 3 o'clock, P. M. v lav lv.ensl)urg on Tuesdays and Satur j "V-. at 7 o clock, A. M. j i'TV, Post (Mlice open on Sundays from D 3 ! j o'clock, A. M. 11 1EI.UO i sciicni'LC. WILMORE STATION, -.t Express Train, leaves at 8.55 A. M. Mail Train, " 8.07 P. M. Express Train, " 7.13 P. M- Fast Line, 12.12 P. M- Mail Train, " C.bS A. M. toixTi orricr.irs. J ' ? of th Courts. President, Hon. Geo. '! t. Iluutingdoa ; Associates, GeorgeW. y, Micharil Jones, Jr. l'--"'!,;nitary. Joseph M' Donald. VI-rk to J'ruthoiiotur;. Robert A. M'Coy. li' iitiiT and JitcorJ'r. Michael Ilassor.. li'l-u1!) Rajisttr and Recorder. John Scan 1:). ''.',-!'. Robert P. Linton. --,mh ShfrhT. George C. K. Zahm. h-Trict Attorn';. Philip S. Noon. Cun' Cvmmisxion'rs. John Bearer, Abel l-!vd. iVivid T. Storm. Vr; v, Commissioners. George C. K. Zahm. V-'t,i,l to Commissioners. John S. Rbey. Tr--i,,irrr. John A. Blair. 1'oor House Directors. David O'llarro, i li if l .F(;uire, Jacob Horner I'', or Il.ui Treasurer. GeoiL'eC. K. Zahm. i l'--r Hture Steward. James J. Kaylor. f i!-re.,Hiti, Appraiser. Thomas M'Conncll. A:o,t.,rs.ltiT Hawk, John Y. Stull. E. F- I;.vtl,. J ' '.!- Snrrejor. E. A. Vickroy. I '-rowr. James S. Todd. lL.-nntrndent of Common Schools. T. A. I -- -i-'uire. !ri:sii u iior. orritERS. I J'.'-ir.s f the Peace. David II. Roberts, 5;i UTi on Ki'nltM.1. 1 l'"'r v r ., ., Andrew Lewis. ''i n Council. William Kittell, William K. M,Pr- ''harles Owens, J. C. Noon, Edward "'"Mnaker. Vlrk t') Council. T. D. Litzinger. ll-.roH.jh Treasurer. George Gurley. Wnjh M.nttr. William Davis. S'tiool Directors. Edward Glass, William u"3, Reese S. Lloyd, John J. Lloyd, Morris jus, Thomas j". Davis. Treasurer of School Hoard Evan Morgan. Vxittahle. George Gurley. Collector. George Gurley. -J M.jxor. Richard T. Davis." 'il-jc of I'ltctxon. Isaac Evans. Rh lie's Coming-. He's coming, the blushing rose Whispers it low to me, And the starlight hastens with it, Over the twilight sea; All trembling the zephyrs tell me, On the light winds hurrying past, And my own heart quickly beating, Coming, coming, at last. The soft-lipped waves of the ocean, Gathering at my feet, Breeze-born at the coral island, Murmur the secret sweet; There's not a dew-steeped blossom, Or glistening orange tree, But furnish its glee-laden, To breathe this joy to me. List! that is the sound of rowing Stealing along the air, I must gather around my temples This weight of braided hair, And trust to growing darkness, And evening shadows dim, To hide with their wings the traces Of tears I've shed for him. BRADY'S LEAP. Dariirg the carlv settlements in the the western lait ot J 'eiuisvlviiiiia unci north-western part uf irinia, the hardy aJveiiturc-rs into thuie then v.ildeines bol ituJes at times siiUcrcd severely 1'runi the ineuisiuiis of the Indians. As early as 17M', (juite u lare body of warriors, i'roiu the vicinity of Cuyahoga Falls, came sud denly down upon the unprotected fron tier, and, before any check could be put to their ravages, succeeded in muidciiu and plundering puite a number of whites, and eli'ectiug their retreat in safety. At this time, there was a well-known Indian hunter in that vicinity, one Capt. Samuel Uiady, whose many daring exploits and hair-breadth escapes had rendered him as famous throughout, that region as his cotcmporary, the celebrated I'auiel Boone, was in Kentucky; and having under his leadership a goodly number of as brave and uaiing spirits as himself, he at once called them together, selected a certain number for the expedition, and set out on the trail of tho savages, hoping to over take them and inflict a severe chastise ment before they should reach their vil lages. In this respect, however, the captain and his friends were disappo'iite I, for the Indians had gained a start which enabled them to reach their towns in advance of their pursuers; but as they belonged to different tribes, it was discovered that they had separated on the bank of the Cuyaho ... i . i go, one part crossing it ana going to ine northward, and the other turning off to the westward, as it was supposed, to the Falls, where it was known there was a village. This division of the Indians rendered it necessary for the whites, if they would follow each trail, to divide their force also, which would weaken it materially, and render their lurther pursuit still more hazardous; and in view of this new danger, Captain lirady stated the whole matter fairly to his companions, and inqui red of them what they were disposed to do under the circumstances. Should he follow either oncof the trails, he said, the other half of the Indians wo'd escape ; should the- follow neither one, all would escape, and should they divide, each division would be comparatively small, and they might all be cut olf in de tail ; therefore, it was for them to choose wliLtlu r thev would ro forward in one ,, ..v, v J - CU party or two, or return as they were with out striking a blow. The men were not long in deciding; they were unanimous in their desire to push forward and take vengeance upon the enemy ; they also preferred a division of the party, and accordingly about one half of them immediately crossed the riv er and set oil to the northward, while the remainder, under Captain Brady, followed the westward trail to the Cuyahoga Falls. It was the design and expectation of the gallant Captain to take the Indians by surprise ; but the latter, expecting to be pursued by the whites, were prepared to receive them, and it was only by a mere accident that the borderers were saved from falling into an ambuscade which would have proved fatal to all. .y. f i.i.r tli.it the Indians were luliy pre- nnrcd for them that there was no chance of taking them by surprise that their numbers were at least four times as many as their own our friends judiciously de termined upon a retreat; but they had not gone far when the Indians, uttering their wildest war-whoops, set after them iu a body. Knowing that if his men continued to gether there would be no hope for any of ibi-iii. Cnptain Brady, in order to pare as EBENSBUHG, PA., THURSDAY, MAY 24, many lives as possible, called out to them to disperse in every direction, and each man to look out for himself. By this means he expected to divide the Indians into small parties in their pursuit of sin gle individuals ; and this might have been the result had they not, unfortunately for his own safety, discovered in him their most vindictive and troublesome foe, and at once resolved upon his capture. Captain Brady was well known to the Indians ; in former times he had hunted with them over these very grounds ; but he had subsequently became their most implacable enemy, and had done them so much injury as to create in them a fiend- lsli desire to taKe nim alive ana put luui to the torture they well knowing that the accomplishment of this purpose would not only rid them of the men they both hated and feared, but would deprive the whites of their bravest and most daring leader, and would thus strike a more effective blow against the latter than would the de struction of a dozen or twenty men of less note. For this reason, therefore, the mo ment it was ascertained that he was one of the party, his capture was determined on by all, and turning from the pursuit of the others, the whole yelling crew set alter him. Captain Bradv had something of the start, and was one of the' fleetest runners on the border; that he could distance and escape from a few, he was sanguine enough to believe; but when he found himself re cognized, and, looking behind him, saw the whole body in chase of himself, his very heirt seemed to die withim him. What chance had he of escape, indeed single-handed and alone afar from the refuge of even a wilderness fort and with fifty iuiuriated Indians iu hot pursuit, urged on by a spirit of revenge, and re solved, above every other earthly consid eration, upon taking him alive or dead? But the Captain was a brave man, and a brave man dies but once; he was a san guine man, too, and would not consider his case hopeless while the freedom of his limbs remained; and though, as he after wards expressed it, it was hardly one chance iu fifty, yet he was determined to do his best, and have no fault to find with himself fro in a lack of effort." Near the point where the race first started, the Cuyahoga makes a bend to the south, so as to nearly enclose an area of several miles iu the form of a peninsula ; the direction taken by Biady soon brought him within this enclosure; and the In dians, by extending their line to the two banks of the stream, at the jioint where they most nearly approach each other, considered him as in their net, and an nounced their satisfaction bv veils of tri umph. There was now, in fact, no chance for him but to escape through their lines, or across the Cuyahoga river; and consid ering that the foremost pursuers were not fifty yards behind him, either of these chances were regarded oy the savages as an impossibility. Still the hardy and gallant captain did not despair; he had many a time hunted over this very ground, and knew every inch ot it, and all the windings, turnings, and peculiarities of the river as well as the Indians themselves; he knew, too, there was one point where the river, com pressed within a few feet, rushed roaring and foaming through a rocky gorge ; and it at once occurred to him to shape his course for this point, and make a bold, desperate leap for the other shore, lie might fall short, and be dashed to pieces upon the rocks beneath, it was true; but this would only be a quick and sudden death ; the awful tortures of the stake awaited him if taken alive ; and to take him alive was unquestionably the design of his pursuers, since they had neglected to fire upon him from a distance which wouM have made their aim fatal. Casting away his rifle, as only an incum brance which could not serve him in this strait, he bounded forward with renewed energy ; and with a bare hope of life be fore him, he fled with a speed that few could equal slightly gaining upon the fleetest of his foes but not sufficiently, during the whole race, to take him be yond the easy reach of a rifle ball. Nearer and nearer he came to therusii in" and foaming stream : and as he heard the roar of the waters, and saw that but few seconds could intervene between the present and the awful leap which might save or destroy him, his heart beat wildly, and his whole frame seemed to tremble w ith the intense concentration of his mind upon the fearful venture. Xearer and nearer he came ; louder grew the roar of the waters ; the awful chasm grdually yawned before him, aud the white spray of the fearful torrent rising to his view; the Indians yelling behind, and his only hope here ; and then contracting his muscles, as his feet lightly pressed the precipitous rock, and throwing into thrm all th" poor of hi concentred will, he leaped into the air, like a bound ing ball and landed safely upon the other rocky abyss, striking a little below the height from which he sprung, but passing a clear distance of twenty-two feet between the mural shores. Instantly grasping some bushes whicli fringed the verge of the awful chasm, to prevent himself from falling backward in to the seething stream, the gallant captain stood for a few moments, panting from his exertions, and trying to recover his breath for still another flight. In those few moments the Indians ap peared upon the opppsite bluff,' expecting to find that lie had been dashed to pieces upon the rocks below ; but on discovering him safely on the opposite side, their as tonishment was so great as involuntarily and simultaneously to draw from them same two or three short approving whoops ! forgetting in their first surprise that he was clearly beyond their reach, and not seeming to recollect it till he had begun to vigorously to climb the ridge above him in his further efforts to escape. Then drawing up their rifles, with a quick aim, they poured in upon hkn something like ; a regular volley, most of the balls whist ling close around him, ami one of them lodging in his hip, and painful wound ana milictinir a severe Notwithstanding this, the gallant fellow continued his ascent, and on reaching the top of the ridge, he gave a v eil of defiance, and disappeared on the other side. Captain Bradv was now aware that the Indians would have to make a considerable j ciicuit in order to reach him; and had he j not been so severely wounded, he would ; have considered his escape as almost jci- j tain; but knowing he would still be fol- lowed, and finding his wound very painful, j he cast, about him for some place to secrete j himself from their search. After running a short distance he dis- ' covered a pond, and near the shore a large oak which had fallen into it; there might ; be nothing better than this ; and hurrying 1 forward with all his might, he boldly p'unged in, swam under water to the tree, and came up beneath the trunk and among the branches, in such a manner as to be barely able to breathe without exposing any portion ot his person to his enemies Here, in a state of mind which may be imagined but cannot be described, the gallant borderer remained for a long time, watching his enemies as they collected one by one along the shore at the point where his bloody trail had disappeared in the water. Still resolved upon finding him, either living or dead, the savages were by no means disposed to give up the search ; and after running along the shore for a consid erable distance, on either side of his trail, to ascertain if possible where he had emer ged from the water, several of the party plunged in, swam out to the oak, and ac tually seated themselves upon it, while they conversed in their own language, which he understood, concerning his won derful escape At last, with such feelings of joy as no one not similarly circumstanced might comprehend, he heard them state their be lief that he was drowned, and his body lost to them by being sunk in deep water; and soon after this, to his still greater joy, they quietly returned to the shore, aud one by one all gradually disappeared. licniaining in his uncomfortable position till he considered it safe to leave it, the wounded captain himself then swam back to the land; and weary, lame, and hungry as lie was alone, aud without a weapon for his defence he set oft" on his long, te dious journey through the wilderness for his own home, which he eventually reached more dead than alive; and where, to his great gratification, he found the compan ions of his perilous expedition already re turned in safety. This has truly been considered one of the most wonderful adventures of a region teeming with adventure; and to this day the pond in which the captain secreted himself bears his name; while the rocky chasm of the Cuyahoga, across which he made his desperate spring, is known, far and near, by the name of "Brady's Leap." Domestic Bears. Once upon a time there lived a couple known far and wide for their interminable squabbles. Sud denly they changed their mode of life, and were as complete patterns of congugal fe licity as they had formerly been of discord. A neighbor anxious to know the cause of such a conversion, asked the gudewife to explain it. She replied, "I and the old man have got on well enough together ev er since we kept two bears in the house." "Two bears!" was the perplexed reply. "Yes, sure," said the lady, "bear and for bear." 52y- Whatever the wind may do in win ter, it cannot be denied ths? in spring i 'turn? over a uew leaf." 18G0. Miakspearc It tin Ulad. Peter Knight was found wandering in the Fourteenth Ward the other night. The officer could not determine whether he was intoxicated or crazy, but, as he said he had no home, he was taken in charge as a vagrant, lie had been traversing the streets with folded arms, talking to him self in odd bits of plays and poems. He possessed a facility of quotation equal to ltichard Swivelh-r, Esq., but he was as reckless about the exactitude of his ex tracts, and jumbled up his authorities with as much confusion as Captain Cuttle him self. He seldom gave a quotation right, but would break off in the middle and substitute some words of his own, or dove tail an irrelevant piece from some strange author, or mix up half a dozen author with interpolations of his own, in an iuex tricable verbal jumble. Clerk What's vour name? Prisoner Peter Knight; am a native to the marrow-bone that's Shakspeare Clerk Was you intoxicated yesterday ? J risoner lis true, tis Pitv ; pitv tis there isn't a devil of a doubt of it that's Scott. Clerk Where did you get your liquor? Prisoner Where the bee sucks, there sucks Peter Knight all day, Thou base, inglorious slave, think'st thoa I will reveal the name of him who gave me wine ? No sir-ee Bob that's Beaumontand Fletcher. Officer, in a whisper If you don't tell you'll have to go to jail. Prisoner I do remember an apothecary and hereabout he dwells no he don't, he lives over in the Bowery but in his needy shop a codfish hangs, and on his shelves a beggarly account of empty bottles; noting this penury, to myself I said, if any man did need a brandy punch, whose sale is fifty dollars fine in (jotham, here lives a caitiff wretch who has probably got plenty of it under the counter. Why should I here conceal my fault ? Wine ho! I cried. The call was answered. I have no wine, said he, but plenty of whis . Silence! thou pernicious caitiff, quoth I; thou in visible spirit of wine, since we can get thee by no other name, why let us call thee gin and sugar. He brought the juice of curs-d juniper in a phial, and in t,ie porches my throat did pour Fdolpho olio s distillment. J litis was 1 bv a Dutchman's hand at once dispatched not drunk nor sober, sent into this dirt- Sta tion House three-quarters tight, with all my nnperlectioiis on my head. Ihelellow s j name ? My very soul rebels. But whether it is nobler in the mind to suffer the cuffs and bruises of this bloody Dutchman or to take arms against his red-haired highness and by informing end him? I go and it is done. Villain, here's at thy heart ! His name, your Honor, is Bobblesnofl'kin in the Bowery that's Shakspeare mixed. Clerk Have you got a home ? Prisoner My home is on the deep, deep sea that's Plutarch's Lives. Clerk How do you get your livi.sg. Prisoner Doubt thou thestarsare tire; doubt that the sun doth move; doubt truth to be a liar, but never doubt that I'll get a living while the oyster sloops don't have but one watchman that's Bil ly S. again. Clerk Do you pay for your ov-sters? Prisoner Base is the slave that pays ; the speed of thought is in my limbs that's Byron. Clerk do you steal them and then run away ? Prisouer I've told thee all, I'll tell no more, tnougn snort ine story oe ; lei me go back were I was before, and I'll get my liviug without troubling the Corpora tion that's Tom Moore, altered to suit circumstances. Justice (evidently at a loss, in a whis per to mystified clerk) I think he's crazy ; what do you think it's best to do with him. Prisoner (overhearing) Off with his head ; so much that's Shakspeare cur tailed. .Justice Will you promise to dis pense with the brandy and gin if you are discharged : Prisoner O, I could be happy with either were 'totlur dear charmer bottled up and the cork put in that's Dibdin, with a vengance. Judge What do you suppose will be come of you if you go on in this way, liv ing as you have done ? Prisoner Alas, poor Yorick ! Peter, I mean. Who knows where he will lay his bones ? Few and short will the pray ers be said, nobody Tl feel any sorrow; but they'll cram him into his clay cold bed, and bury somebody on top of him to-morrow; the minister will come put on his robe and read the service ; the choir will sing a hymn ; earth to earth and dust to gravel, aud that'll be the last of Peter Knight. Clerk Peter we will have to send you up for ten clays. Prisoner Fare the well, and if for ever, all the better th' By?0, revised and onrrtd. NO. 40. The Japanese Embassy. The first Ambassador is only thirty-five years old, though he looks like a man of forty-five or fifty years. The second Am bassador is all of fifty-five, and the Coun sellor of about the same are. All ara Princes, but not hereditary, and among the most distinguished statesmen of tho empire. In their manners and bearing, while there is a visible self-respect and modest dignity, there could be nothing more simple and free of self-conceit, dis play and arrogance Both of the Ambassadors are rather tall and thin iu form, with long and sharp faces, and, as with all the Japanese, of dark complexion and jet-black hair, so fur as any is left by the barber, for they havo a singular fashion in dressing the hair, in which the men expend as much care as the women, and take as much pride and pleasure iu its neat and fashionable ad justment. All is shaved off to the very skin, except around the temples, aud low down in the back of the neck, from which it is brought up on all sides to the top of the head and fastened by a string, and then bent forward, well stiffened with po matum, iu a queue about four inches long, and of the size of one's finger, and pointed forward over the front part of the head, which is left completely denuded of all hair. They dress in silk robes, and wear two swords at their sides, according to universal usage with the higher classes. No nation possesses so many elements of the Anglo-Saxon mind as the Japanese having the bump called gumption or com mon sense in large development, with lit tle or nothing of the unreasoning, wild and impulsive though their books, their pictures and works of art show they are not wanting in taste and imagination. Among the under-oflicers are an artist and a historiographer of the embassy, who are attached to the Ambassadors. The name of the artist is Yorsida Sagosagc nion, whose quick and searching ye, with a face kindled up with sensibility and be nevolence, at once indicates that he is a poet or painter. Matsmota Saunojio, tho historiographer, about thirty years old, ia plain and sedate, thinking twice to speak ing once. He might be reckoned among the philosophers, it we did not know he is a historian. The doctors are all young men whose heads are shaven to the quick, according to the usage of the profession in Japan. They are often taken for Buddhist priests or monks, who observe the same practice. Anatomy and surgery are utterly unknown in Japan, unless within a few years past the Dutch Doctor of Nagasaki has suc- eeded in communicating a little knowl edge to some thirty pupils he has been teaching under the patronage ot the Gov ernment ; and in medicine little is dono beyond roots, and herbs, and charms. These J'oung doctors, though courteous aud quiet, seem less intelligent and inquis itive than any class of their countrymen on board, and evidently command no res pect from them. I had hoped to be able to awaken some curiosity and induce them to commence the study of English on the long voyage, that they might in some measure avail themselves of the advantages to be derived from books and intercourse with the profession in our country, and go back to Japan prepared to be the ben efactors of their race. Currcsn7encc of the 2eic York Jviirmil ff Commerce. Kiciies. You may put a man in tho midst of all the musical instruments ia the world, and if he does not kuow how to piay on them, they will afford him no pleasure. You may heap wealth about a man till it ea-tles itself to heaven, and yet he may be a pauper. The paupers are not in poor-houses, but in mansions for a man is rich only by so much as he knows how to use; what he has everything beyond that is poverty. I do not think that the asses that lug the gold ore from the gold mines are rich : and yet many men choose to take iheir places, aud spend their whole life, and l end themselves double, to carry that which will ever be a burden for them. They do not carry it to make it a power of u.st fulucs ; they do not eanv it to make it Iced reason, they do not carry it to make it inflame and feed moral power, by benefaction by a large divinity of I t -ni licence ; they carry it morel y as gold, as property, and they are beasts of burden, burdened. Multitudes and multitudes of such beast there are; and ten thoiisai.d aping men run run after then. saying, -Oh that I were, the-, or like unto them.' And so th steep path from the mine to the point where they throw off their load is worn to smooth that many who walk upon it overburdened slip and go to perdition! fii-echer. - t&" If the Mexicans desire to learn thd secret ot stable govern mT,t thy should send fr Mr. T. -rx. a i I - a , it 9 1. 1- id m l- es I'll- a, ip "?4 -s. ir, ed "l4 rkt ir. si vj y ur od j .h- sr ow 70- rc- ivo lib am lo II CT inl me 3 mj ea rn v ing i as ?ry- lOSt ress -na nce ran i lie off th J ir