u M t, 4. B4RRER, Editor and Proprietor. j.TODO UlITCHIXSO, Publisher. I WOULD RATHER BE RIGHT THAN PRESIDENT. Hxsbt Cut. TERMS -U I. AUVAM'L. 4 VOLUME 5. y RECTORY. "list of post offices. . t.i iirr: District. thel Station Enoch Reese, Orolltown, Joseph Lehe, Src,3 Spring.., Blacklick, Carroll. Chest. Taylor. Washint'n. r'burg- John Thompson, Eb.burg . . V, A 9:1 11. i lSliO Millie. J. M. Christy, Gallitzin. ijeuilock, Win Tile j, Jr., I. E. Chandler, M. Adlesfcerger, Wissinger, 4 T4 ii n Washt'n. Jolinst'wn. Loretto. Conem'gh. jobastown, Loretto, liberal Point, i!unter, r.ittivi'.le, Munster. Andrew J r crrni, ruisq nan. O W. Bowman, White. B,iC.luu r st,m. Wharton. Clearfield. ! level Georp. Berkey . Richland. ?San B- M-Colpan, Washt'n. S.-naan, Slick, Croyle. . Saaaierlw J, .m M Connell Washt'n. Sre, MorrUKeil, S'merbill. CSirnCHES, M1MSTEUS, &c. freran-REV. D. TIabbisox, Tastor -freaThiu- every Sabbath morning at 10 J I and in the evening at 3 o clock. Sab- S School aj 1 o'clock, A. M. V :a.T every Thursday evening at 6 o dock. preacher -in charge. Rev. J. 0ay, v. SrTpre'aching every bbath alternately at lOi.o'clock in the morning, or 7 in the 1 en k Sabbath School at 9 o'clock, A M prayermeeting every Thnrsday evening, at 7 nick Independent- Ll. R. Powell, P-Preaching every Sabbath .moving at 10 o'ciock, and in the evening at 6 o clock tibbath School at 1 o'clock, P. M. 1 rayer feting on the first Monday evening of each rlfand on every Tuesday Thursday -and Friday evening, eicepuug - - tich month. ir,,.,,,,, Minnie - evrnc ai r.tor. rreacning :- j--t; .r vl v Und 6 o'clock. Sabbath school L at I o clock A. if. Prayer meeting every mu-j - "";' t; 7 o'clock. Society every 1 aesuay i.Z-REv. W,Lotd, Pastor.TPreacb-i-z every Sabbath morning at 10 o cIocK. Particular Baptist,-. David Jkh, t i.: Sabbath evening at rmor. rri.iiiug wv.. j - t - J o'clock. Sabbath School at at l.o clock, , 1 . M. Catholic Rev. M. J. .hitchm-u, '-vices every Sabbath morning at 10 o clock ui Tempers at 4 o'clock in the evening. EREXSBITRSi HIATUS. MAILS ARRIVE. Eastern, daily, at H y.cl,oct' A' Astern, " at 11 J o'clock, A. M. MAILS CLOSE. Etcrn, daily, at 8 o'cloclc, P. M. ftcitern, "at " :i , c.rv, p.ntlir.Tmliana.Stronrs- ton, 4c, arrive on Thursday of each week, i; 5 o clock, 1 . M. , , . T-i - , r rl- irpr k. Leave Lbeasburg on rria.ij 1 t: s A. M. t!,Tlie mails from Newman 3 .MiU3, car r.:Ujwn, kc, arrive on Monday, Wednesday Leave hbcnsonr on xuesua, .,v- . . . rr J - T!nir;rl!lV!l ulSdtardavs, at i o cIock, A. i. RAILROAD SCIICOM. CRESSON STATION. rtiif Prn5a lpiirps at 8.-13 A. M. FfisfLifte " Piiila. Expre33 9.50 P. M 9.22 A. 8.03 P. M. 8.3S P. M 12.34 A. M- .Mail Train Throagh Expre33 " rast Line it Fast Mail 6.58 A. M- Through Accora. :t 10.3'J A. M- : COSIXTI OPWCERS.. Jttyt of the Courts President, Hon. Geo. ;:!or, Huntingdon; Associates, George W. 'itj, Henry C. Devine. Pnihanotary Jo3eph M'DonaM. R'futrr and Recorder Jarae3 Grif5n. Sue.-if John Duck. bu'rlct Attorney. Philip S. Noon. County Commissioners Pcler J. Little, Jno. -snrspbell, Edward Glass. Trtaturer Isaac Wike. Poor House Directors George M'Cullough, '"rOrir i ntr Trwin TliitplTft. r. " J i n foor .... Trmnurer Georce C. K. Zahm. M'if.7or William J. William?, George C. I'-iahm, Francis lierney. wufy Surveyor. Henry seaman. Cirr.rttf ...TmnA3 Shannon. 'rtantile Appraiser Patrick Donahoe. pf. of Common schools J. a. tonaon. AT LARGE. W.c'es of the rcacc David II. RobertSt :-rison Kinkead. Eurgat A. A. Barker. Mool Directors A1 Lloyd.Phil S. Neon, I'Mna D. Parrish, Hugh Jones, E. J. Mills, "4 j. Jones. EAST WARD. Conttallt Tlmmna J. Davis?. Toicn Council J. Alexander Moore, Daniel 'lEvans, Richard R. Tibbott, Evan E. Evans, "ijliara Clement. ' y-'x-cforj Alexander Jones. D. 0. Evans, "tyf o Election Richard Jones, Jr. Ullor TVinmtro L .Tnnpa. M'wranf Assessors David E. Evans, Wm. Cn. WEST WARD. at ftliUUJ .1A I it 3 j V As .Z7 Council John Dougherty, George C. 4om, Isaac Crawford, Francis A. Shoe "rieri James S. Todd. yVcor G. W. Oatman. Roberts Evans. 5 cJaionMichael Uasson. " Vp"i'ant Auetiort William Barnes, Dan- The rc-:ent terrUble catastrophe in San tiago recalls" vividly to my tiiind one of the most extraordinary adventure of my chequered life. Five-and-t sventy years ago I was captain of the Nortliern Lljht,a. large sclioouer trading between Hull and St. Petersburg. A long acquaintance with the vicissitudes of the Russian climate had made me somewhat reckless.' The consequence was, that on the 3Qth of October I found my vessel tight locked in ice. I had stayed a week too long, in my eagerness to take a lull cargo of timber, and ! was justly punihed lor my temeri ty; a prisoner till the middle or end of April, far away from my friends, and di'iog what a livery-stable keeper would call "eating my own head off." Being, however, of a sanguine temper ament, and having no wife at home to be anxious about, I resclved to make the best of it, and cujoved myself a9 well as I culd. I saw all the sight3 of St. Peters burg, from Peter the Great's wooden horse down to the mammoth. I visited Moscow. I went bear-hunting. I drove about in sledges. I fell in love and fell out again. Nor did I neglect business. I frequeutly attended the Exchange, and made myself known to the chief tallow, hernn, and timber merchants. I studied Huisiau commerce. I arranged for cargoes for two vears to come. The Anslo-itus- sians are very hospitable, and thanks to the kindness ot xlr. Anuerson, tne og lish banker, my hotel expenses were "very small. 3Iy fur coats were my chief expense ; they cost me a large sum then ; but I reckoned that they would last me my life, and so they have at least, I wear them to this day. - ' Nevertheless, I pined for the hour of liberty. An idle life did not suit a man of my temperament one who had been at sea ever since ho was twelve years old; Like all sailors, I was always grumbling against the sea, aud jet I was never happy away from it. At last the order of my release came. The ice on the Neva, opposite the Custom House especially, began to melt into thin bars an inch or so wide. Tt became dangerous to venture on it, ercept where it was piled with snow. The ice slabs on the quay began to break, when I pushed them with my stick, into jrlassv fragments. Here and there some spaces Degan to open, ana uir?y Drown snow-water noolcd on the surface. There 1 1- . 1 had been several warm days, but now rain aud wind came, and they soon melted the walls of my crystal prison. Sledges still ventured on .the Neva, though the water rose up to the horses' knees. One morning, when I looked out of my window on the ground floor at Mi.s lieu sou's, on the English quay, the water had all gone from'the surface of the ice; thit was the well-known sign that the ico had beconi3 too porous and spongy to hold water, and in a few hours would break away from the banks and begin to float teaward. . T lmrl insfc sat down to breakfast, when a thunder-peal of cannon broke from the fortress. "What is that, Miss Benson V I said to our hostess at the head of the table. "That," she replied, "is the signal that the commander of the citadel, with his officer?, is crossing the river, to present the emperor at the winter palacs with a "oblet of Neva water in token ot the return of spring. The emperor will give him the cup back filled with ducats." "Hurrah !" I cried; "then hey for old England!" It took me tome days to get fho ship off, for it was tedious going backwards and forwards to Cronstadt. It was the butter week time; that seven days' feast which precedes Lent, aud 43 followed by the rejoicing of Easter. In the intervals of business, as I went to and fro to my agent's, I amused myself with observing the revelry of this great Ttussian festival; There were thousands of peasants de vouring plenni (pancakes,) and caviar, honey-cakes, and nuts. There were swings, seesaws, and round-abouts.- The greaf squarjj of the admiralty was the chief scene of amusements. Close to the winter palace, the war-office, and the senate house, there were scores of tempo rary theatres,, and long lines of "icy mountains, down which the sledge3 kept rushing incessantly, amid the shouts and lauhler of the good natured but wild looking peasants. At the doors of the theatres stood the tea-Kellers, with huge brazen semovars smoking in the centre of their Cables, and surrpunded by countless toapots. The shop keepers themselves, in fur caps and gloves, stood by their stalls, stamping, and clapping their hands, and shouting : "Gentlemen, will you please to take a glass of warm tea, with lemon or cream f How will you take tho sugar ?" The admiralty square was strewn with -nut EBENSBXJEG, PA., THURSDAY, MAY shells; here and there drunken bear cf a peasant, a mere reeling bundle of greasv sheepskin, jostled against me, and then, with the simple-hearted politeness of hi3 race, took off his bat and hiccupfd out : "Pardon me, my little father, but remem ber it is Butter week." One day I sallied out into the great square about uoon, to see the grandees of the capital drive through the fair, and I never saw such a sight. The line was guarded by mounted gendarmes, dressed like lancers, and wearing light blue- uni forms with brown epaulettes. There were Chinese, Turks, Tartars, Germans, Eng lishmen, Russian princes, priests, soldiers, bearded soldiers and their portly wives, Circassian officers, colonels of the body guard in their eagle-crowned helmets, and se rfs, in a long procession of carriages, which, beginning at the rock on which Peter the Great's statue stands, reached to the base of the great granite column of Alexander, facing the enormous pile of the "Winter Palace. Tired at last of the proee3sion, I turned aside to one of the largest woodea thea tres. A clash of music from within announced tbe commencement of a new performance. Joiniug the torrent of peo ple who wefe jostling for admittance, I at last made my way to the pay-place, where a mob of clamorous moujiks were thrusting out their hands with the admittane fee, in childish impatience. I drew back to make way for a respectable old grey-bearded merchant and his pretty daughter, who, muffled up in a cloak, clung to his arm, and shrank back from the rough, gesticu lating crowd. I thought I had never seen so charming a girl, so tender in manner, so gentle and spring-like in beauty. The merchant and his daughter bowed, and thanked me in broken English for my politeness, paid their money, and passed in. I followed rapidly, but a crowd of peasants thrust themselves in, before me, so that when I took my seat I could obtain no glimpse of the merchant or bisjretty daughter. The wooden theatre of the Katsheli was an enormous building, built, as a peasant next me said, to hold five thousand per sons. It had large galleries, balconies, and Corinthian pillars, hung with cheap, drapery, and gay with red and blue paint. A vast chandelier lighted up the tent-like interior.- The theatre, was already full when I entered, so I had to content my self with a back seat in an upper box, not far from the head of oneot the staircases. I did not listen much to the overture it was that brazen mechanical sort of music," without color or life, that no one listens to. By-and-by, it ended with a'joking crash. There was a moment's pause, and the curtain drew up. A deep hush pas.cd over the troubled waves of the pit. The children clutched their fathers' hands, the soldiers ceased their practical jokes, the country-women paused in their gossip, the boys stopped eatinjr peanuts, and every eye turned to the stage. An honest old woman just before nfe, a hou?ekeeper, as I judged by her dress, amused me especially by her childlike eagerness ; she put on her spectacles, and leaned forward with both hands on her knees, to drink in every word. The play wa3 a little operetta, half French, half Italian. I think they called it "Hose and Lubin." It was a gay, tri fling thing. The hero and heroine were villagers, and an old cross father and a I malicious fool were the coustant interrup fter of their stolen meetings. Hose was dressed in a little tucked up gown of white silk striped with pink, and wore a gipsy hat ; Lubin wore a nondescript sort of blue silk coat and flapped waistcoat, while the zany tumbled into a thousand scrapes in a sort of miller's dress, all white, and a blue broad brimmed liar. There was a good deal of hiding, and searching about Avith soldiers, until the lover eulists, aud finally returns a general, to marry Rose. It was a pretty bit of nonsense, mixed up with dances and soDgs, and now and then a chorus; and it waa all over in half an hour. ' Silly as it was, it pleased tho audience, who shouted, laughed, and encored every thing. A display of - fireworks wai to follow, and then a. short farce. Suddenly all the clatter and laughter died away. The curtain had not risen, but a faint, crimson light was shiniug oehind it. It was the commencement of the pyrotechnic display, and I was curious to seo what the Russians could do in these matters. The first ecene was to be the illumination of the Kremlin at the coron ation of the Emperor Alexander the First. Probably that was tmly the prep aration, for though the red light widened and glowed, the curtain, strangely enough, did not rise. The people stamped and shouted. All at once the bajozzo (the clown) in his white dress,- ran forward, pale as death, his eyes staring, his hands about like thosv of a madman. "Wo are on fire !" he shouted. "Save yourselves, you who ean." "Bravo, Ferrari shouted the peasants, with roars of laughter. "Excellent ! Viva, Ferrari ! Bravo, Ferrari I" The clown fled from the stage", as it seemed, in an agony of feigned fear. The laughter redoubled. A jnan in evening dress rushed forward, whispered to -the opera, and waved his hand to some men who were not visible to the audience. The curtain rose swiftly at the ominous signal, and disclosed, to my horror, a roll ing ruas3-of fire and crimson smoke.-r-Already the lies had caught fire . and were hanging in blazing slljhers. Fire rose from below, fire gleamed iroin above, fire darted its quiek tongues from either side. The theatre was on fire. The bajozzo had not been terribly in earnest feigning, but was I shall never forget the scream that bur3t 4rom those four thousand people when ihe reality broke upon them. I had tmly an instant to look, but in that instanv I saw row after row of white faces turp as by one impulse to the door. Then came a stamping rush as of a herd of maddsned animals. Many tore forward without a thought but of their own safety, others snatched up their children, others dragged forward their old mothers or fathers, or bore their wives or sweethearts in their arms. Then came the grapple for life, the trampling, suffocating battle "for existence, that only served to fasten death. " I saw immediately that, though for'the moment safe, and far from the full torrent of the struggle, my hopes of escape were quite as desperate as the hopes of those who were trampling each other to death at th entrance below. Unfortunately one of the great folding doors opened inward.- In the first rush it had been closed, and now the pressure was so great that it could not be moved either way. The flames were spreading rapidly, the smolTe polled toward us in blinding clouds, and rroni these clouds darted and leaped serpent tongues of fire. The flames seem ed with cruel greediness to spring from seat .to seat. The slips were blazing, the orchestra was a seething pit of fire. The screams and groans on all sides were heart-breaking. I hesitated for a moment whether to remain where I was and meet death, or to breast the human whirlpool below. At that moment a surge of flame ran along the lede of the next box to me, blackening and blistering as it went. The heat grew intense. I determined to make one struggle for life. I ran to the bead of the stairs and looked down. There, the herd of screaming aDd shouting people fought with hands and feet in a horrible tangle of life and death. I gave myself up as lost, when a hand seized my coat. It was the old house keeper, screaming her entreaties to me to save her. I told her to cliDg to me, and I would do what I could. It gave me - courage to think I was struggling for some one besides myself. She kneeled and prayed to God for us both. I had placed myself at the edge of the crowd, in order to husband my strength for a last effort. Onn ncronizinrr thought alone shot thro' t my heart, and that was a thought for the I tender irirl I had seen so innocent and happv half an hour before. Suddenly, as I stood there, like a-diver, hesitating before he plunges, a peasant, scorched and burnt, dashed past me from the crowd that had trampled upcm him, and, staggering forward, half stifled with 6moke, fell faco. downward, dead at my fe-.fc. Ilis.axe, as usual with the peasants, vras thrust in his belt behind. A thought of self-preservation, surely sent straight from Heaven, flashed through my brain. I stooped and drew out the axe. "Make way, there, or I'll cut down the first man who stsps me I'M cried out, in broken Russian. I half fought, half persuaded a few to give way, until I reached the bottom of the stairs, and had the bare plank wall of the outer enclosure of the theatre baforc me. - "I will save you all," I cried, "if you will let me free my arm." The old woman still clung to me, but as I advanced to strike my first blow at the plank partition that arose between life and death, there came a rush which for a moment separated us. I had no time or room to turn, but the next moment I felt her grasp still firmer and closer. One blow, and- the splinters flew; a second blow, a plauk gave; a third blow," and the blessed daylight poured in on us ; a fourth blow, and a chasm yawned, wide enough for the pas sage of myself and my charge. After us, hundreds passed out rapidly. .1 found myself among a crowd of shrieking women, who were calling on an officer standing in a barouche drawn by six horses to save their husbands, sons, broth ers. Suddenly a man with a scorched 5, 18G4. beard, his eyes, streaming with tears, came and took from me the woman I had saved. I was so blinded with smoke and fevered with excitement, that I had scarcely given her a thought. All I knew wa3 that I had saved an old woman, and, by God's grace, opened a deor of escape to some hundreds of otherwise doomed creatures. When I looked around, I found the mer chant whom I had before seen lie was the scorched and weeping man shedding tears of joy over a beautiful girl who had fainted. The old woman had been divi- ded from ma in the tumult. The mer chant's daughter it was who had then clasped me it was her whom I had saved. Beautiful she looked as I bent over her and received her father's blessings. The tall officer was the Emperor. "My children," he kept saying to the mob, "I will Eave all I can. Bring that brave man to me." I am not ashamed to repeat these words, though I did not deserve them. "Englishman." he said to me in French, "the Russian nation owes you a debt of gratitude ; it is for me to repay it ; come to me to-morrow at the palace." I bowed ray thanks, and handed my card to one of the Emperor's staff. When the fire was subdued; and they began to dig for the bodies, the scene was agonizing. . Heaps of charred and tram pled corpses lay under the smoking beams some stifled, others trodden or beaten to'death. Some were charred, others half roasted, many only burned in the chest and head, the holiday clothes still bright and gay. In the galleries women were found suf focated and leaning over the front boxes. In one passage they discovered a crowd of dead, all erect, like so many shadows marshaled from the other world. More than a hundred were found still alive, but dangerously burned. More of these after ward died in the hospitals. One little boy was discovered cowering unhurt under a bench ; he had crept there' when the burning roof began to drop among the struggling multitude. The beams and dead bodies had so fallen a3 to form a shelter over his head, aud there he had remained till we disinterred him. ' The official returns set down the num ber of the dead at three hundred; but my agent told tao that while he himself stood there, he .counted fifty wagon3 pas3, each laden with from ten to fifteen corpses, and many people made a much higher estimate". I need not say much aboi4 my visit to the palace; sufSce it-to mention that the Emperor rewarded me with an order that I highly prize. On the same day the priests offered up -public prayers for the souls of the sufferers, on the site of the burned theatre. It was a solemn specta cle, and as I rose from those prayers, full of gratitude to God for my deliverance, a rough hand grasped mine. . . It was the merchant whose daughter I had saved. . Tears streamed from his eye3 as he embraced me and kissed my fore head and my cheek in the Oriental man ner of his nation. "My little father," he said, "I would rather have found thee than have cleared a thousand red rouble notes. Little Cath arine, whom you saved, has been praying for you ever since. Come, you must dine with U3. I will take no denial, for do I not owe you more than my life ? - Conic, a droshky there ; quick, to the Fon tanka; Catharine will leap for joy when shet?ees you." That visit was an eventful one to me, for on my third voyage from that date I married Catharine Maslovitch, and a loving and devoted wife I found her. She is .kissing my cheek as I pen these words. An Irishman cnteted a small vil lage ale-house somewhere in New Jesey, and looking around him for a minute, ad dressed the landlady as follows : "Missus, sho' me over sixpence worth of ale and sixpence worth of bread." The bread aud ah were set before him. He looks at the one, then at the other, and as if having satisfied his mindou some point, drinks tho ale. "Missus," says he, "I have taken the ale ; what's to pay ?" "Sixpence," says she. "Well, there's the sixpenny loaf," says he; "that pays for the ale," "But the loaf wasn't paid for," said she. "Bless your soul," says he, "I didn't ate the loaf." The landlady couldn't see through it; but Pat could, and walked away. BSi- "Captain, jewel," -said a son of Erin, as a ship, was coming on the coast in inclement weather, "have ye an alnie nick - on , board V "No, I haven't." "Thin, be jabers, we 6haH'have to take the weather as it comes," leplicd Pat. Of) i:d ideational Kcrjarlnieiit. fAll communications intended for this column should be addressed to "The Allrghanian." . Our School Buildings. It is. in the . nature of childhood to love what is beau tiful. The bright, sparkl.'ng eye tho open, cheerful-countenance of youth, a? naturally seek to gaze on a thing of. beauty as to breathe the air of heaven., Unac quainted with the world, living in tho realms of innocence and love, full of hope, aid sheltered by parental affection from the dark phases of human frailty, child hood turns to things and places in conso nance with its. own pure spirt, and drinkaT therefrom the purest, deepest, ami' most . hallowed jy known to mortal flash. WThen not corrupted by 'exposure to folly and crime, no purpose i3 holier, no lovo deeper, aud with less dissimulation, than that of childhood. Jesus gave testimony in support of this when ho Eaid to hia disciples that unless they would become as little' children they should not enter into the kingdom of heaven. Every one to whose charge is committed tho care of. . youth shoud ever keep these thiogs in lively remembrance, and should make it his constant endeavor to have the sur roundings of those over whom he has control consonant with the wants of youth ful nature. . Reader, do you believe what has been here said 1 If you do, then follow us a ' little further. In what condition is the school-house in your district ? Is it a dingy, dirty, uncouth, tumble-down con cern, -exposed to all the fury of the storm, without enclosure, without play-ground, or anything else to make it a harpy) cheer ful place; oris it what ie oLoM b to afford comfort and enjoyment to the fifty immortal images of God that cluster be neath it3 roof or play around its walls ? Wrhy is it that so many of our school- -houscs are defaced with all manner of obscenity ? Too often the fault lie3 with the teacher. We do uofsay his willful fault, but his fault, nevertheless. Often again, there arc other reasons. To havo the school-building and grounds respected, they themselves should be respectable. How can you hope to have regard phown to a place that is more gloomy in appear ance than many a prison ? How cai you complain of youthful minds, becoming corrupted at school when the place is barren of all that is beautiful and innocent in nature ? We Vnsw a teacher once-ho gave his life in behalf of his country who taught in an old and rickety building. Enlisting the sympathies of his pupils, he with their aid robbed the building of its gloom by hanging blinds to the windows, placing mottoes on tho wall, and by .va rious other devices ; while on the outside he planted suitable flowers, and trained vines, until the appearance of the place was changed. Well, do you think the'rudeet boy there ever pulled a vine or trampled a flower ? No ! The place was as holy ground, and "our school-house," and "our school-garden," aud "our teacher," were the theme of many a conversation. : Yet this schaol had always been in previous times rather bard to manage. What was the mystery cf the change ? Why, the desert-place had b.ecome as the garden of the Lord. What was beforo repulsive be came lovely, "and the .incentive to evil thoughts aud actions was removed. Now that is the grand secret of the change. Surround' mature minds with what is innocent and beautiful, things that ; in themselves contain nothing impure, and the good effect is soon and deeply felt : how much more then will this be the case with youth. There should be no happier spot for a child than the school-room and the school playground. . Make all school associations pleasant, make beauty aud happiness to reign in and about the school, and then, ia alter years, when contact with the world has blighted tho hope of early life, when the spirit is no longer free and buoyant, and even when the fail ing sight shall turn its gaze toward the eternal shore, memory will cling with fond delight to the schooldays of youth, when happiness joined hands with innocence in youthful sports. We draw no fancy pic ture. Association has much to do with the character of our thought, for thoughts we must have, aud they are more than likely to shane themselves to accord with surrounding circumstances. NUMBER v 1 i ) :t t it It I ', rj-t ; i. f f. .1 I I :; - v i. 1 v.i 1 H 4 n 11