LEWIS H. 0. HICSOS, Editor. 0. N. WOEDErJ, Printer. LEWISHUKfi CHRONICLE AW lvvrvT rMitT jort, htuti on Wciinnduy morning at Lcwithurg, Union caw.y, V?nnylvamc. fl.Vt per r--ar. Srrih .t.iaUy in dvnnr; if witUi.i titn in miis. il jmid i:lnu a Tear: if nt i 1 -f 'tvtl. yr .-pfi-f: 5 n-nl f-r single utinitw. aa'f ,TipiMii f..r in -itli or iew, to isii i" iidi'ATii-.'. 'iitiuu.tmw f.Umial with tin Ju'!i-h,r.fX'''Vt hn t'.e wari ypd up. AuveK.TitsKMSs li mJi.ic:ly niMrt.-i at 50 c.nt. per Htixn.on w li. ?1 f-'iir wr- k-. t y-ar: two jua, $i for mx ram;i. 7 1-r a iwr. M.T.m.tiln .tviTtie-in-nU. n t .v inIii--; on Imirtti if a foi;i!un. IU a year. XiltWOKK Ti l mi&. ftjWertif mnit to U; fiui-i ir h -n hail I-(1 ifi ir oViiverM. C'WMi'M AnO - mrit-it d or. all sVj"rt? of ffcn-Tnl intx- rrt not within th ran- of imrU .r wr :.tiian Mit'Tt All .. it. r mut ..lv. r.,v.,t ,: ,. . M.ai.i,,,-,..,..,.,.-.! 'yt'- '' '. f tl.- n.-r. t.. rrr-.".nt.-.-i- TW i.:u.iMriu-i-i t..thc Kiii-.riai ii.rtmit.t.. u - ii - rk-tc1 to Mt.Mtv ll:rK"K. h-j.. ht i'H mid Uivsv vn Id hatiun .. w..i.k. fMuk-r. t :!:( on Mark-1 -ir, t-t. b'lw.-.-n ''"ri I nrA Tliir.l, over the Pn.MK-i.-e. . v. wounKN. iv..rivt..r. Letter from Europe. l'ms, Oct. 1, 151. In my last letter from Venice, I gave Tr.n nn ni(-omiT of a grand fair an J carnival ,v - . Paris, where there are so many f Hies and ' 'mysteries" and museums and gallcrien of j paintings and statues, all to be sccu for j nothing. J5at to tho Alp, of all mountains the ; most gran J and terrific ! V,'e enter .Savoy i from the cast r:i i'.piiti.r of France, and j in l ours selves at the same ( :n: j among the These m-iiii;taiiis offr to the trav- Alps. iI.t em'Ms tin ions! curious an t tliO in r, s'tdits the most curious an 1 the most j imposins, productions the most varied, and : tonlr.ists the mast singular. For three j 1-m.f honrs tao clumsy i reneli diligence (with all its baggage on top) slowly labors hp the winding ascent along silo of the t ijundering torrent. The French diligence, j with its clumsy horses and clum.-.ier bar- liess, looks like a ton tf hay on a farm waron ; Lut wait unul 11 ana us mcive horses and its twenty-four passengers in- side aud ouUiJe are on the top of the ! mountain, they'll go down the other tide like a locomotive; the noise of the cataract that rushes after will be hushed by the hundred little bells that hang over the tops of the horses' collars. This is on the road to Turin by the pass of Mount Cenis, and some authors affirm that it was Vj first niour tain that Hannibal opened a passage for his troops by the aid of fire and vinegar. There is some difference of there. This time I'll give you some items j the kingdoms and petty States of the con from my memorandum book, if you are jtinent, the theatre and the press are under satisfied to take them in the disconnected the supervision of censors, not for the sake Ftyle I give them, as one has seldom either j of public morals, but to prevent the Cii time or inclination for Letter Trriting in semination of the republican sentiments opinion as to the route by which Hannibal of rocks. Tb.3 traces of this catastrophe are j limits of Piedmont are in the middle of passed, but the priests of the mountains, visible from the mounds and irregularity . the next plain beyond this mountain, with a great deal of assurance, point you of tho soil, now covered with vineyards. On leaving the plain, one sees a magni to the camp of naunibal near the summit j Moutmelian is a little city on the route, at j fieent mountain ou the left called Roch of the mountain called tho Litile Saint j the junction of four mountain roads and ' n.c'on. Ou its summit therein a chapel rJernaid. There is a circle 210 feet in ' four valleys. The castle of Moutmeliau ' cdled the' Chapel of Our Lady of the dhmcter, made of huge stones buried deep ; was a long time the stronghold of Savoy, Snows. It was formcly much frequented in the earth, with their tops two or three on the sido next France; but in 170", ! by pilgrims, but it is now abandoned, feet above the surface. It is called the . Louis IV. of France, becoming master of owing to the danger of ascent", liut bc t'ircle of Hannibal, aud tradition -says that it, demolished it. There exist yet some fore we commence ascending, we look Hannibal held a council of war within this fragments of the walls covered with briars, j both ways at the prospect. Uefore us in circle. 13ut some say that this circle of In coming out of this mountain city, we Piedmont are some of the magn iiceut stones was made by the Romans iu the-erots the river Isere on a high bridge, j ph;i is of Italy, and huudreo'd of villages time of their conquest of the country this ; from which we have a vew of Mount with their shining, tin covered steeples, tl..; of tho Alps ; others again say that it Blanc. ! and behind us are the plains of Savoy was male neither l j tbe Carthageuians j tor Romans, but that it wa a Celtie tern- clcr sees the ruins of a chnrcb, and of ; which spurs extend into the next valley, pie, made in the time when the god Pen many houses, which were destroyed and j and on every spur there are some ghastly was worshiped by the Centrons. This buried by an avalanche of snow, the 20th : old ruins. But one can not less admire highway across the Alps was begun by 'of June, 1700. The tops of the moun-! the colossal nature of these bridges,gallerics, Napoleon, aud Cuit-htd by the King of . tuin3 are here covered with perpetual snow, r walls and terraces. They correspond with Sardinia in 1M7. In traveling through and we are among the central chain of the j the colossal nature of the scenery, and the Italy, ono sees many improvements that ! Alps. It is somewhere near this village, ' g3nius that planned them. .4 were made ly Napoleon, aud which the that the Allobroges gave battle tollanui-j The route of the Simplon, north of this imbecile Italians would scarcely have ven- j "al, the first battle in which he lost a part i one, was still a greater undertaking. Na tured to make to this day ; improvements of the rear guard of his army. This place j poleon laid the plan of it immediately af- that have made him a benefactor, rather . than a scourge to the Italians of the pres ent generation, whatever he may have been to them in the davs of his victories. One of the former routes is vi.-iole from this, from Alguebelle towards Chauibeii, this ne. It is called the Ijaddcrs.nnd travelers :city seems placed at your feet ; you can cro5sed the Alps by this route by means of trace the road you have passed over and induen placed one above tltc other, or iu a the streams you have crossed, which look kind of arm chair, tied to the backs of the iiiouutaiu peasants of Savoy. Chamberi, a city of 12,00i inhabitants, is the first city you cuter on leaving Fi ance, It contains several towels aiul other frag- ments of the ancient castle, of the dukes of Savoy. In an ancient gothic chapel, yet ..eenpiod an 1 enclosed by the towers, they toll you f a holy winding direct (wri,,r -1 iUrij which w.-:s a long tire kept in this chapel, but w.uch ins been takcu to j unn, s.u l which Francis I- Kir-g r.f Fraiuv.ma le torrents have detached from the mountain, a pious pilgrimage lo ste, walking bare- The inhabitants, male and femalff, are footed ali the way from Lyon?, in Franee. nearly all deformed with the goitre, which At St. Peter's, Rome, there is another niany attribute to the crude nature of the fciifu swlatio, which is shown to the peo- Unow water, the ordinary drink of the in ple en extraordinary occasions. In this j habitants. Others believe that the disease thapcl'I rad from a frame that hung on 'is hcrcditory, or caused ly the habits of the wall, that an indulgence of a hundred the people. Among the Alps there is days would be grauted by the Tope to such ! another race of people called the Cretons, persons as would come there a certain J who, besides having the goitre, and being number of times and eay a certain mini- j otherwise deformed, are nearly all idiota. lier of pau, uotlers, and se marias, and Most of tho mountains are barren- anddes of course give a little or something for j titutc of trees, but one can not fail to ad some pious purpose. Before the French J mire the inhabitants, who leave not a foot revolution, Chamberi contained twenty of laud uncultivated. ' It is no uncommon conveuU; at fre.enttlcre arc lut seven"; thing to see small gardens on the sunny of which four arfr (or women and three for side of mountains, made in places that oue men. In the museum of Chamberi thuv I would thint i.r i t how many Roman medals, specimen of J t Roman pottery, &c . and iu the library, which contains 16,000 volumes, they Lave I catch the earth that is carried down by the a Bible on parchment, which dates from J torrents. Higher up, the chamou skips the ninth century. Americans are in the .from rock to rock and leaps the most ter habit of thinking that there is now more ' rifie chasms, regardless of the bears that liberty in France, since the Republic, than 'growl in the crevices of tho rocks, or the in some of its neighboring Kingdoms ; but ' hunters that pursue, while still higher up in the kingdom of Sardinia there it more ; is the region of eternal uow. liberty than in France. In the time of I But we approach Mount Cenis. Lans the last French revolution, the King, fnarinftliA wintAffinn nf rpmihl.pjin nnin. ions, crauted the people a liberal constitu - . fc . . r ... . i.-ir fhn3 I..-. .,.AntmA li ilai the cood sense to see that his fate , fc : wouj e j;je tj,e fate 0f jj0is Philip un- ; less he did. In fearJinia there are some Republican iournals tl at vnild be supeu- ded in the mock Republic of Fra""e, and one sees books for sale in the veij f w book stores there are, that the censorship of the French Republic would not permit to lc exposed for sale. In France, and all that labor to burst forth everywhere, and break the chains that bind them. In France, it is a common thing to suspend the publication of a Repulliean journal fur a J:iy or a week, but a Royalist r Buonaparte journal is never molested, During the mouth of September, three ! Paris journals were arrested for ridiculing ' .'the policy of tbe President, and the pub-j lishcrs of iheni, as well as those who wrote i the objectionable articles, were condemned , to nine months' imprisonment each, and ! two or three hundred dollars fine. The ' same happens in Sardinia, but not to the ' 11 ' same extent as in France, Austria, aud the other States of the continent. On leaving Chamberi, for Turin, one passes the ruin of an ancient city and cas- ue. rowus oi pilgrims come auu eueamp there every 8th of October, to be cured of i diseases by the Arirgin Mary, who, tradi- j tion says, once descended there. Ruiusof ; ancient forts are numerous here, on the ! towers of which fires were built, to give j warning of invasion. This was the telegraph fof the middle ages, and this chain of old 'castles and towers, extends far north and( j -wb TUn ;! tf !u. mountain which faces Chamberi.gave way in the year 1243, , and a city, called Saint Andre, with seven , villages, were buried under the fallen mass At Alguebclle, the next town, the trav- j is famous also for a battle which the duke j jPon Philip of Parma, at the head of the; ! French and Spaniards, had with the troops ! 'of the King of Sardinia. . In looking back' like threads of silver iu the vast landscape. ! On the spurs of the mountains you sec the ruins of ancient towers and castles which formerly served for tbe defence of the passes, underneath which may be seen cultivated spets, hemmed in by enormous masses of fallen roeks, that serve to prevent j j the earth from washing away. This is the I region of the high Alps. The mountains 'are steeper, and at every turn ono gees 1 ever his head enormous rocks that tUei ' - ' vvw, cvATCUiV ClimD LO. and these made too upon tne barren rocks. .... . . by means of etrong wall which serve to) BURG LEWISBURG, UNION COUNTY, PENN., WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 3, 1851. lcbourg is the name of the village at its fthtt. Kxtra horses are nmun attiiehed to ' the diligence, and it takes three hours and 1 . ,-c , t : t Ir nmn t id no v r n.l ci i-tl rl. ted zig-zags of this principal mountain of , . ' f , .,. i the route. . Here and there along this i... hi .-..H...1I o. ..-...r. i i .....:! Ui n;iu"u, mui'lL'U 1 'u . a 'lis n uvov uu;r ness it is to take care of the road and assist travelers. All these houses are numbered, and on the too of the mountain sleds arc constantly kept to take travelers to the foot, which is done iu about five or six miu utes when tho snow is deep enough to cover the inequalities of the mountain. This is about a perpendicular descent of two thousand feet, but there is no danger if one trusts to the experience of the man ! who guides the sled. At certain points j along this mountain, avalanches of snow , fall, carrying away everything before them, ' and it is necessary to be very quiet in passing those points. The bells are taken j off the horses, aud travelers do not even j whisper, because the least movement of air might bring a mountain of snow dowu upon their heads, and make them turn a thousand somersets among tree tops and over sharp edged precipices, precipitating what was left of them into the middle of a river of cold snow water, in a dark ravine that the sun never shone into. Ou Mount Cenis there is a husj e fro zen over six or seven mouths of the year. The lake is famous for its trout, but they belong to the monks. The hospital was founded by Charlemagne, who, iu the 9th century, crossed Mount Cenis with his army. The house iu actual use, was built by Napoleon. The half of it is now used by a corps of Sardinian carabineers who examine the passports of travelers and re ceive five franks per horse, which goes to the repairing of the road. The other half of the building is occupied by some Bene dictine Monks, who render assistance grat uitously to the poorer class of travelers, reserving two or three better rooms for those that can afford to pay. The between two range of mountains, from ; ter the battle of Marenjro, and the obiect 0f it may be inferred from a question he put to the chief engineer : "When can the cannon cross the Simplon?" The Eagliskinan, Sir James Mackintosh, said that of all useful works, the route of the Simplon across the Alps is the greatest and most marvelous. It took thirty thou- sind mcr, six years, to complete it. It has near seven hundred stone bridges, and like the route of Mount Cenis, is about twenty -six feet wide, and bordered in dangerous places on the lower side by a wall three or four feet above the level of the road. These two roads were (he first ever opened for carriages over the Western Alps, and in tho construction of them, all the known resources of ait were brou dit into requisition to overcome the greatest resistai.ci of nature. But wc descend through galleries cut in perpendicular rocks and over chasms frightful to look inlo. Suse is a little city near tho foot of Mount Cenis, which is remarkable for its antiquity, having been founded by a Ro man colony under the reigu of Augustus. The only thing in this place worthy of notice is a triumphal arch, erected about eight ypars before fbo Christian era, in honor of Augustus. On leaving this city, our course lies along the river Doire, thro a wide valley of the same name, which is all one orchard, but the view is saddened by the nakedness of the plain adjoining, which is covered with pebbles and stones washed down by a mountain torrent We pass through a poverty stricken village of five tfcrfemtf luIialUants, on tie LordcK of this desert plain. It contains the ruins of an ancient Gothic castle, and a great uuuv luiu I'l tenia aim iuiwviuv v"cg 1 Lazzaroui ia red and bare legs, the color Oreeii ana nomau amu. b" of old mahogany, a multitude of priests arc statues of marble and bronze Roman in long black gowns and broad brimmed cups and va.es of bronze and .ilrcr, Ko hats, and women iu veils and mantilla, man eagles, gilt thunderbolts of Jupiter, , i,.,f ,i;.;n;.i. ,i, T,,.l.-,tion of an ! household utensils, a charter of the fcmpe- Italian city or a large town. The towns, like the ponulution. are much alike. An- ' cient looking houses with colomiados in the tombs of departed fnen s. e r . - i i ...:,i', :inr.l..tnn. to ilaee a cup of their im ! fU'l'M'ili 1 1 1 71 1 SITt't'r.S VU LTL'tl Willi , sheds ; numerous shops full of sausages, I , ... . 4,. ,.4...,.tj ' maccaroiu, .ti .lirtv rrnnt...!. rom.' b .!. i,M;f.m ,.f n Ttai;;,.i tf.wn. i-"-''-' I'liyviuuuM ljutwepass throuu'h the towns oi St. placing crowns upon lue ,mU., ...H-v-George, St. Am W, and several other intervals, would appear no more rational, mint!,, places, and arrive at Rivoli, near and yet tho traveler can not but admire which took place the battle of that name, " f:.i..M.iQ in t.o n.ilit;irv nnnalji of Franee. On the way dowu from the mountains, the museum ot J'.gyptian curiosities ai iuim traveler discovers the increasing fertility is considered the best in the world. of the country, the vine married to the But enough of Turin. The King is elm," and the country covered with mul- j expected to pass one half of his time berry trees, which bring to mind that there, and the other half at Genoa, but Piedmont is famous for the fine quality of the King, Victor Samuel, spends most of its silks. The country improves as one time at Turin, which has tended to render advances, every inch of ground is cultiva- ihira. unpopular with the Genoese, lif ted, aud none even is occupied for fences. 'same was the case with the late King, As ia France, they have a police for the Charles Albert. Genoa is called the city fields, which answers for fences, as well as of palaces, and most of its palaces and for a guard against thieves. Canals for churches are built of marble, but its streets watering the country, border the road , are so narrow that it is inaccessible for car sides, which are also bordered by shade riages, and as many of the houses are six trees; huudreds of poor women may be and nine storeys high, the sun never shines seen doing all the drudgery of the fields ; into the narrow streets. There w said to fat monks pass you uowaud then on some be a Yankee speculator living there, who pious pilgrimage, or out with their wallets occupies a palace that is much handsomer on a begging excursion, aud you see look- than that of the King. Genoa has a pop-in- down upon every town that has a hill illation of about 130,000, of which 10, nJar it, a convent of Benedictines, of 000 arc soldiers, aud 8,000 are priests ; so Franciseaus, or Capuchins, or bloodsuckers that the " sovereign people" arc nowhere, of some other race that live aud thrive an 1 ti e tu omaton subjects can not fail to upon the ignorance and imbecility of the bo powerfully well governed, both spiritu people. ally and politically. An American, right- But' wc enter a long straight road in to appreciate American self government, face of the shining domes aud spires of must the difference as it exists on this Turin, which appear on an eminence, side of the water; and about the best The road is in the middle of a fertile plain medicine for Northern and Southern disu which is watered by a great number of nists m the United States would e to canals made to disseminate the waters of make the tour of Europe, and the an the river Doirc. This is the commence-! noyanco of trunk examinations at the i i.: . C AJ4r Crnrn 11V Vlrt fM-4- ment Ot tne rich plain -of Lorabardy, ; iroiiucr ui ccij in.-i.jr -j which extends across Northern Italy to '. tom Lousc and tU ti" more provoking the city of Venice, and which is considered j annoyance of being obliged to " give an one of the most beautiful plains in the i L'count of yourself, and show your pass world. Turin is one of the most eoiuMe-' Port" in almost eve,7 town 'ou eater : i i e tt 4 i:.. rable cities of Italv. It is situated in a vast plain, and at the confluence of two rivers, the Po and Doire. According to Pliny, it was the most ancient city of Li gnria, but nil the monuments and buildings of his day have disappeared. The princi pal streets of Turin differ from those of all other cities iu the symmetry of their building, all houses being of tho same height and looking like long lines of pub lic buildings. The windows of these houses have small porticos, and there is i court or hollow square of buildings back, which is often ornamented with a fountain, visible from the main street tlirocgh an arched entrance. One may waiK all about tne city of Turin under arcades, along each side of the street, which is very agreeable iu rainy or warm weather. To attempt to describe the magnificence of the churches of these cities of Italy would be useless. They are never entirely completed. Repairs or additions in some way, are constantly made to them, and the walls of many of them are covered with the best paintings in the world. All the religious feeling that can be brought out of the marble and paintings, stained glass and mellow lights, is there brought out, and one is compelled to feel in a religious mood while looking at them. But that is the religion of these countries, and when the devout Italian Catholic is out of sight of the crosses, pictures, and incente smoke, his religious feelings are all gone. His religion speaks ouly to the eye, for his mind is not under his own control. Among the numerous churches of Turin, the church called the Cunsolata is most fn uueiited on ascount of an imago of the Virgin, to which a great deal of devotion ia paid. Near this church is the public square, called the Cunsolata, in the centre of which is a column surmounted by a stat r.c of the Virgin, which was erected for the accomplishment of a vow imido at the time of the ravages of tho cholera in the eity. Another church is called the Church of the Holy Spirit, and is said to be foun ded on the spot where once stood a temple of Diana. You arc also told that it was in this church that Rousseau abjured Cal vinism. . The King's palace is nothing re markable in its outside appearance. It is situated so as to look down the four prin cipal streets of the city, and it is joined to the palace of the dukes of Savoy by means of a gallery. There is another palace called Palace Madam, or tho Castle. It was last occupied by a dutchess,but it is now used for the public exhibition of paintings. The Senate or Chamber of Peers holds il3 iegsions in the palace, and one of its towers IS ?avfel: CHRONICLE The museums of Turin are celebrated, and oue feels carried back a few thousand years in viewing its cauiueis vi rjjyuau, ... i ! its . l , l,sxm .tnnnnvlilph ror Adrian, tripoos, cm-cre, . ' Slieaaings xears ui iwuw- f I I 7 1. j tears upon the tombs oi meir in. , 1 f l,n Vomer of the museum, who COes I ....... !: lint around with tlie visitors ana expiaius. 'the custom in these Catholic countries ot - ; these mementoes ana regaru ...... r. 1 ' . . 'I I. t .,!,it,i in I iit iniif! cemeieuea. : WU1CU cn'is li"s dVr vl '""1 tudes." Yours, &c, K- C. ROSS. The Indian Summer. Thi-iT iii time, just :re the fmst I'D-pan:.-. t lwTe ulJ Winter's wnT. Whirl Auoimn, in wr.rrie l.t, Ibu nidluw tUj-tiine Jrv-aini ay When Summer comes, in musing mind, To iraze I'Div m'-re ou hill and .I' ll, T-J m:uk l.'.w many sheaves they bind, AilJ see if all is ril'eued weU ; With balmy br, ath she whisp Inw, The n inn Ih.wrrs l.ok up awl five Their Kweete.-t iueenie ere they p., for her ho ma.le their beautr- lire. Fhe enters 'nenth the wooJIan.1 H.-r i -phirrs lift the linrici: I' rl, An4 her" Relitl "here are laid The lim-J antl h rt ones of its tr-'C She sc. k the .-hore. old Oeean relive In Rlndues.- his hatxr, mtehty br at ; Trismus his wil.1 winds in their eave. Jtnd, basking in her smiles, is ble.-. Al last old Autumn, rislnfc, takes. Aain his seef'lre and his throne. With l.ist n.us hr-.ud the trees he shakes, Intent ou gathering all bis own. Sweet Summer, fihinjr. flies the plain, And wailing Winter, gaunt aud irUu, Sees miser Autnmn hoard his irmin. And sinLee to Uimk it's aU for him! " Only He." A lady had two children both girls. The elder was a fair child : tho younger was a beauty, and the mother's pet. Her whole love centered in it. The elder was neglected, while "sweet," (the pet name of the younger,) received every attention that affection could bestow. Oue day, after a severe illness, the mother was sit ting in the parlor, when she heard a child ish step upon the stairs, and her thoughts were with the favorite. " Is that you, sweet?" she enquired. " No, mamma," was the sad and touch ing reply, "it isn't sweet; it's only me." Tho mother's heart smote her; and from that hour, "Only Me" was restored to an equal place in her affections. Weights and Erasure. The following table of the uumocr of pounds of various articles to tho bushel, may be of interest to some of our forming friends : Of wheat, sixty potmds. Of fhelled-corn, fifty-nine pounds. Of corn, in the cob, seventy pounds. Of oats, thirty -five pounds. Of barley, forty-eight pounds. Of beans, sixty pounds. Of bran, twenty pounds. Of clover seed, sixty pounds. Of timothy seed, forty-five pounds. Of flax seed, fifty-six pound Of hemp seed, forty-four pounds. Of buckwheat, fifty-two pounds. Of blue grass seed, fourteen pounds. Of castor beans, forty-six pounds. If Mr. Farquhar of the Philadelphia Councils, succeeds in passing an wdinance against street washing, except early is the morning, we propose a statue lo him as as the Pieserver of the Public Health. 1 he reform is most deatahla Sam Harding's "Dead Letter." In the early days of Kentucky history, a hardy pioneer, named Sam Harding, located his family on a spot high up the Kenawha River, at which point he built himself a log-cabin, a rude f jrry-boat, and a small carol for the two or three faithful by whose aid he had reached the site of his new home. Sam's wife a good, notable, in dustrious woman aided by their son a stout boy of twelve took charge of the ferry, while the head of the household, armed with a long rifle, did up the hunt ing necesssary to supply the family with meat. This division of labor suited Sam exactly, and as it was no very laborious of fice to ferry over the few travelers who at that early day passed that way, Mrs. U. cheerfully took upon herself the duty. Time rolled on, and Sam not only im proved in outward appearance, but un proved his cabin and ferry also, and altho' he did not give np his favorite pursuit, he did not daily, as before, sally forth with his rifie. One day his settlement, which had considerably increased in inhabitants, was thrown into a state of excitement by the arrival of a mail wagon, and besides the mail, the driver brought a private let ter to Sam which contained a commission appointing him 1'ustmmtrr! Sam swore at once that he wouldn't have it, bat the mail carrier told him he mwt acoept it that he was appointed, and if he refused, was liable U arrest for tr am ! Sara had an indistinct recollection of one Arnold being executed for turning traitor during the Revolution, and the recollec tion of his ignominy, and the persuasions of his w ife, who was gratified at Sam's of ficial elevation, at length overcame his ob- Agreeable to what he conceived . jeetions, to be his duty, according to " instructions, namely, to open the mail with closed doors, i,., I.; f.m-lv nut of the cabin while . . ... j .i. ,.r tl. W Th ne assorieu me ' - o- for that .mint were of course few, j .v. ,i,f , .Wihutinir them would AliU M-J C have been light to some men, but it was a vast labor to Sam. His official honors hung heavy upon him, but he staggered under the weight with becoming dignity, until one day along came a letter, which evidently had strayed from its r.rorcr destination. It was direct ed as follows: "Sakuia Harper, liar- pert Ferry, Va." The cbirograpby on the outside of this epistle was so bad that no one would own it. Sam said it couldn't be for him, because there waa no one cor responded with him except the Post Office Department, so the missive remained un called for. At length, our new Postmas ter became anxious to make some disposi tion of it; he accordingly consulted his neighbors, and they, after due deliberation, unauimously agreed that it was a dead ktter, and that it was Sam's duty to carry it to Washington.where they had heard the Dead Letter Office was located. Carrying this defunct epistle to its manuscript grave, at length became Sam s necessity when with a sad heart, a new buckskin suit, his old na" Pete brushed up and saddled, and the dead htter rolled up in a dozen folds of what was once the tail oi nis low sniri, over which his wife carefully s wed a cov ering of buckskin, Sam prepared to make his eventful journey. It is needless to say that before he consigned his destiny to the road, he went around tne seiuemeni and kissed all the women farewell the young ones especially, and then with his tru:-ty rifle in hand he turned Pete's head in the direction of tne Capital. Nothing important occurred to inter rupthis progress, until one morning, when he bad fairly progressed into the hills of Virginia, and was traversing what was in those days a dreary region. Suddenly he noticed 'two wolves stealthily following him, but among the catalogue of four leed animals Sam ranked wolves as of very slight account. He, however, had under-estimated the large grey prowler of the Alleghenics. Preseutly the number of these former quiet followers begau to in crease, and ere long the foremost of them broke into a howl of confidence. This sound scoa brought more to the ranks of the pursuers, until they finally began to poke out their noses towards old Pete in such a significant manner, and howl 6-0-0-K-eeS .'" after him so hungrily, that he broke into an uneasy trot, then into a canter, and finally he began to- show them his heels in a very hasty kind of gallop. Saus new traveling companion?, however, had no idea of being ahaken off in this manner, but broke into a louder howl and an accelerated gait. In short, a race com -...fint-ed of a most exciting nature, and .- 1 i.ni nli"ht diminution of continues - c .peed for anhour,whcn it became apparent Co the Postmaster thatold Tctc would soon be forced to yield the race to his compcti-tors-his gait began to flag, his breathing became rapid, and his eyes, alines star-tin- from their sockets with fear, glanced piously back upon the hungry crowd which commenced to close iu upon him. Volume TDI, Knmbec 26. WLole Ifombwr 400. Horse and rider were in fearful danger, for they were iuenanced by a revolting death. At the very moment the leader of the ra pacious gang was meditating a spriDg upon old Pete'a haunches, he whinnied the plea in" announcement of succor at hand, anil as they emerged from the ravine upon s broad plateau, Sam, Pete and tbe woWea dashed in among a well armed emigrating party of five men, who were accompanied by several noble looking dogs. The wolves broke away on each side, receiving as thej fled a volley, which set them howling different sort of cry than their signal of pursuit. Gratefulness was a part of Sam'fl nature, and he felt truly so toward these men he had nothing to present them with as a token, but ha told them, if they ouly passed by his ferry in old Kaintuck, and told the old woman what " a tight place" they had caught him and old Peta in, she would not let them leave thar for a month Sam went on his way with the JatJ trttr.r, which he every now and then gree ted with a left-handed blessing, which included the Postmaster General, and the5 Post Offi-e Department generally ; and without further incident of importance, he reached Washington at an early hour in the morning, three weeks after his de parture from the ferry. The first place ha sought was the Capitol, where he made enquiry of a gardener engigeJ at work on the ground, who directed him to thtj otSee occupied by the Postmaster General. Oa his arrival at the place sought for, bti enquired for that dignitary, but he was not in. Sam said he would wait bat the messenger told him he bnd better call at eleven o'clock, the reception hour. Thtj hour arrived of the great man, and iu ha .11.-1 1 1.....;!. riinff Ihnuirrh turn wameu, auu u.j F..,s -- vestibule entered his private omce. " Is that thar, him T' giguificantly en quired Sam, looking the messenger at tha same time fiercely in the eye. . " , j . An affirmative was the reponse, and th ! next moment, without announcement, our Postmaster burst in upon the General. "You're the Postmaster Gin'ral?" wked Sam, drawing a chair close up to that of' ficer, and eyeing him interrogatively. "Yes, sir,' he qui Jtly replied, "I hold that office." "And ym in;v le me Postmaster, at my ferry, in Kaiutucky?" said Sam, enqui riu -ly. J "I am not j ist now aware of hiving perpetrated such an act," answered thd officer. "Is that your signature, stranger ? ' enquired Sam, with savage warmth, as bxJ held up a letter of instructions. "I can not deny that, certainly," said the Postmaster General. 'Then you're the fellar," said Sam, and pulling out the dead letter, and laying it deliberately upon tha table, he began to peel off his buckskin. 'What is the milter ? What are jovj going to do?" enquired the chief of tbi Department. " I'm jest goiu to give you your choice," said Sam; "you may be a GineraJ, atnJ able to lick the giuemlity of Postmasters into bein' imposed upon, but ef you don't take back that thar commission and let ma clar of Hardin's Ferry Post Office, you'll be the wurst licked gineral officer in about ten minutes that ever went through course of sprouts." " But, my feieinf," naid the' threatened officer, soothingly. ' Thar ain't no use tryin' that on mrf stranger," said Sam; "Ihevcome here to git clar of this offioe, and I'm goin' to, or lick somebody, and you're the critter that put me into trouble, so I'm artcr you V "If you have no desire to hold the of" fice," said the chief of the Department, " we wont force it upon you ; end in you rtslinutluu." "My what?" enquired Sam. " Your resignation," reiterated the oft' ecr. " Is this it ?" he enquired, picking:' up the package Sam had laid on the tablev "No," said the latter, with a reneweol feeling of wrath, "that w a consarmsj dead "letter which I hev toted all the way from Kaintuck to you, to put it i tho dead letter office." " My dear sir," said the surprised offi cer, "why didn't you send this and yonr resignation here by the wait carrier, am! not mule such a foolish journey for noth ing?" "What! I could cave sent it by h;i 'thout coram myself?" enquired Samr his head swell ig with indignant surprise "Certainly' was the respond " Well, thar!" exclaimed he, wuh as touithwent, "jest gin iu. No wonder' them wolves chased me on the road wheu they found out I waa so- (frrtn ( Thar ain't no malice atWecn u, straugcr," San added, as he reached out his h iud to the Postmaster General. " V off t- il K airv; tuck, tuddeuly, and ef I ever hev a-.u more to do with 'ither UcW or dead let' tcrs, you kin jest take the soujj. od" of tbi head of a new .ettlcmoU." i-i ! - t .