u . -iv7 fVl XJ :VO?r; C Si. ". --'- :-.' fi'J "till V ,;3. ti'.T li V T III III II I ' :IIJ- J .. - - - J ) A ?1 e 4-i V. THE BLESSES GS OF GOVERNMENT, LIKE THE DEWS OF HEAVEN, SHOULD BE DISTBIBUTED ALIKE UPON THE HIGH A AND THE LOW, THE BICH AND THE POOR. II " ' - , " ". ' . -J : . a ' . SEW SERIES. From the U. S. Police Gazette A DANGEROUS ROAD; OR, ow I Captured Seven Robbers. A SKETCH OP TRAMR LIFE. BY JOHN KKNSF.PV. i It was towards ewuing .that I travelled!- .lovrly across the prairie, to give my horse j U cool ironi utts .uieusc neat ot the un. which we had endured a few hours tfore. v jaJdl'J-bags were heavy from the h. weight vf -roin I carried in Xhem. --1 was en ruuttf for a land office, at which I was. to inter land, ut1 or myself, but for vtheig. 1 observed a horseman ahead of nu, and travelling slowly in the baine direction as mvsL'If. I was not very auxioua for com-p'u)-, and therefore did not hasten my pace, hut kept at a s1'jw gait. The iuao ahead of me oUckeuifd his speed, anU seemed deter ujined I should overtake him. 1 accordingly slackened uiiuc. He dimouuted to fix some thin? about his fuddle. I stopped to observe tho laudacape. He atcompted to mount. His horrre was fractious, and uuue kus er fectly docile. At length he reached tho sad J!r. I di.suiunted ; my rigging was out of crier, lie dropped hi rein, and left his horso to grazr. I examiued my pistols and looked well to my knife. He cast a long luok at me, and theu rode forward, ut which I mouuted and pursued my journey His conduct had becu suspieioua I was fully ruuei to a fcusr of daueer. Could the man mrau mo harm 'I or was he anxious for com jiTj y to while away the monotony and loneli hf of the loute 't fiT a mite or two he kept at a very re ;c!fcblc distance, and i begau to think 1 ttoiild not bo troubled with his immediate cimrsny. Suddenly his horse wheeled in hi? course, and came dashing furiously to wards me. His movement wa executed o rt-idlj, and was so unexpected, that I was at a loss how to act. I5ut as tclf-dcfence is one of the first laws of nature, i found tlie fird ruitt-stion which came to uy mind, and wi;l it came my pi.-tol. "'.'cuce,'- rail he, at the aiuc time hold uig xw up be lore him; my horse took flight ut.d rati a way with n.c." Imiced ."' I replied. VIat a curious h'ltte," I thought in inysjlf, whJlo I carefully 'irrfjed the animal au i a noule beast he wi. "It's very loiKKome travi-lliug abme over thrso prairie. a;id thvir wild sanicmss al raofli fri-htciif me. 1 had half a miud thus jnon.x"6VJl'iK urcr uatil L met with com- Vou are a ?traner in trs partt, I re- riarked. as l ciot-ciy horuiiiii u a lue mat. s lcaiurrs. and p articularly ohsei ved every part 4f hi cl-tLing aud equipments. I observed nothing MJpioi. us about him. tut on the contrary, he ceeni'd to be like it. df--a traveller. Hi c-mv.rKation was jlrasaut, h manners sr.; tjle an 1 iusi;iuatpig l.i lio;t, v-u." ac'j'ia ntaiiet: was siou ro;n pltr, and I tlio-ighl 1 had inisjulged the man. He wa ou the same business, travel- ling to the up at the vame same place, an I intended to put hotel where I intended to lu addition to other facts, he informed me he Lad live thousand l dl irs in actual cah in liii ad(i!e-bags, r.hi' h he was going to in irnl in lands In retur'i for his unsolicited f'ufideuce, 1 acquainted him with the amount in mv pof session, at which he expressed no urpiin, bu'. rthcr iutimated that it was a uiU amount. "I wonder if there is any danger of rob brr?" M.i-1 ho, as we were approaching a mall clump of trees, which were thickly tuddod wub uudcrbrush. I ahould thiuk not," I replied. liut his remarks had awakcovd in my miud . - i t 1. . : . . .. . n , a eustnciu iou, aua 1 Kepi my eye luieuiiy uxeu upon the woo-Js, whicti ly to tne rig tit oi a, and close t which our road ran. I sm this troubled :uy compauion, and he tried by every pot-siblo means to divert my attention to some other direction. This only continued iny suspicions, and takeu in connection with the manner iu which ho came iuto my com pany, destroyed all the confidence of honesty I had a few moments before reposed in hiui. Wc now reached the densest part of the woods, aud I noticed he rode more closely to my horse's head, and glanced uneasily to wards the timber ; but at the same time watched me closely. I passed my hand behiud, but no sooner was it beneath my coat than he teized the Tein of my bridle in one hand, and with the other pointed a pistol to my breast. Another move, and you are a dead man I Your money, tir," ho demanded. "Ah! a highway robber," said I, gazing upon him in wonder, 'i supposed as much, but you were too sharp for me." "I LViOw it," he replied. "We all have to n .Urn in this western couutry ; wc have a fast world out - here; r. . t . . but your money, and save me the trouble of pulling this trigger !" "Well." thought I, 'T may bo even with you yet." "You will spare my life if Tgivc you all my money?" I asked, pretending to be acared almost out of my senses- -Perhaps, though, it was not all proteuce for I confess I felt kind of light about the heart, and my hair moved on my head m if its electricity was all positive, and each respective hair wished to get as far away from its fellows as possible. .' "I will spare' your life, though it is con trary to my rules I have and will follow the motto t Dead men tell no tales I" I Understood his meaniBg perfectly, and knew it would but be a contest for lit'o, and why hould I submit tamely ? '" 'Well," sail I, "it ia hart-awktnjag to part with the honest earnings of a life of se vere toil, without receiving any compensa tion " -1 will give you your life," he replied ; "and if you do as the rest of mankind do prey upou their fellows for gain you will soou make up the amount you may accom modate me with. Come.be hasty. I have mure worK neiore me. I moved forward in my saddle, and drew UP y saddle-bags, and then fixed myself " i"j just iiola that, paid I. drawing out a bundle of shirts and handinfr them to him He immediately replaced the pistol, and tak ing the bundle, held it very patiently. Please hold that Bible too, my money is in each end, and of course tho bottom ar ticle." I aeain thrust mv hand into the saddle bag, but this time drew out a long pistol, and instantly it was at his breast 'Move, or make the least noise," I fairly screamed with excitement, "and I will blow yoa through tbe heart." - . With my left hnnd I fistcned the rein of his bridle over th le uorn or my fca-lule. and iih my eyes sraring mm iuii in tn reached forward with my left hand . - 1 11 .1 3 face, I and re- moved his pistols two large revolvers. He turned pale when he found himself disarmed, aud with a sickly smile, said, 'You have been too sharp for me.' "Yes," I replied ; "this western country is a fast country, and I have been a little too fast for you." Still holding the pistol to his breast, I re placed the articles as best I could in the saddle-bags and adjusted them with all their contents in their accustomed place; I then released tho bridle rein, aad still levelling the pistol towards him, I rode forward, and when at a respectable distance, I put my horse i.ito a cauttr. "We'll meet again!" hi yelled after me, shaking his fit menacingly. It had become quite dark when I ap proached a small house, standing alone on the prairie. I rode up in front of it, and dismounting, fastened my horse to a stake, which seemed as if driven in the ground for that purpose. I taw a light through the door, which stood slightly aj.ir, and on ap praching it, heard several voices in conversa tion I rapped agaiust the casing aud im mediately a hurley looking iudivitiual made his appearance. "Can I s?op all night '?' I asked, seru'i uizing hiiu as w-ll as I culd in the light which shone dimly from a eindle.- Well, stranger, I reckon you kin, if you put up with such fare as 1 ea: give you." 1 am no way particular," I replied, "s I am protected for the niglit." .Well, yes, that's all light, jist walk in, and I'll take care o' your h"rs-j."' I did walk in, with my saddle-bags on my arm. and tin re sat two men- great muscular-looking monsters, with stifl black hair, coarse savage features, aul long dirty beards I took a seat and waited patiently for the return of the landlord. When hi! Mine in I thought ! noticed something strange in his conduct, and he watched " me rjther closely. and seemed very anxious to beneath uiv cout. get a glance 'You'll have supper, I reckou," he said, stetipia befuie me, aud endeavoring to make a liow. No sir,' I replied harshly, for I saw in tlm actions of the mau that which convinced me I wuuld uot eit a secoud one. Though hungry, ravenously hungry, yet I would not risk my life to quell the cravings of my sto inac''. My reply took the landlord by surprise, and after zing at ine a moment, ho walked sullenly away. I aski d to retire, when the landlord picked ! up a short piece of can lie, aud lighting it, J Lade me follow Wc ascended a close nar- row staircase, at the head of which was a ' door and through which wo c.itered a room The furniture of the ap u tmeut was anything but iuvitbig especially the bed I guss you'll have to undress in the dark,'' said mine host, moving toward the door; "I ain't got any candlestick, and iu fact, can't spare the candle ' I can't do that, sir," J replied promptly; "I must have that candle." I cau't fpare it, stranger," and he kept backing toward the door, . "Will you give me that candle ?" I de manded. "Well, I reckon you'll have to have it," said he, yieldiug it very reluctantly. When he had withdrawn. I examined the door, and found there was nothing by which it could be fastened. All my suspicions were now aroused, and I had the glorious and pleasing reflection that I was in a nest of robbers. Still I thought I might bo uiisUkcu, and that the landlord was only acting from ignorance or a want of hospitality. How to secure my door was the next thought, aud only one way presented itself, and that was to place my bed against it. When this idea occurred to my mind, my at tention was attracted to the bed, and I dis covered it was surrounded with a curtain, which descended from a rail to the floor. Under any other circumstauces, thi3 would not have appeared uncommon, ;but at tho present time it was in direct contradiction to the other arrangements of the apartment. I thought something might be concealed be neath it, and then it might be used for other purposes.; How; to ascertain whether the under part of the, bed was occupied, without exposing a vital part of. my body, was query. - . ' 1 "Ah !. now I have it." I turned the cur tain up all arouud, and taking my revolver,', I leveled it so that it would ba sure to hit any object underneath the bed, at the same time Saying ''Two minutes to come out, or, I fire! " I listened for about a minute, and the stillness ; frewime insuflVrablcs. , Was I EBENSBURG, SEBTEMBER 29, 1858. mistaken? and dare I risk ; my.. head, low enough to take a peep? Would it be-judi: cious to fire, and if no one was there, alarm the host? I was about to withdraw the pis tol when I detected a light suppressed breath ing. At this discovery a thrill passed, thro me like an electrio shock, and my heart palpitated audibly. .' "One half minuto more to make your ap pearance," said I "or I fire." An interval of silence, then of shuffling,' and the head of a man peered from beneath the bed, followed in snake like order by the body. 4 . . "Ha!" said I, "you were prepared to cuV a noie tnrougn your nead, a3 1 pressed" the pistol close to his forehead. He dropped upon his knees in an imploring position, but not a word escaped him." 1 then took the case from off the bolster on the bed and drew it over him, aud, fortu nately, it was lonj enough to partially confine his legs. 1 then cut a place through which he could breathe and tumbled him into one corner. i urew my Dea against the door, and so cured it otherwise, as best could. I placed my arms in a convenient position, of which I had a goodly supply three revolvers and a large knife. I then took a seat upon the bed, and patienty awaited the result -f my preparations. My candle had burnt out, and T, despite all my exertions to the contrary, had become sleepy, and several times I caught myself noddiug. A rustling in the corner warned me my captive was making efforts to free himself. "Keep quiet," said I, "or this knife will find the way to your heart." in arxiut a nair an nour alter, l heard a gentle rapping upon the door. No answer bt-iiig made, a voice sai 1 in a whisper: "Tip, Tip, is it done?" "Yes," I whispered back. "Let me in, will you?" "Not vet." "Well" hurry." ; "Directly." During this time I was rapidly considering what course to take cr how to- manage the affair. Should T admit this man. how could I secure him? Ah! the bel cord, why not think of that before. I instantly threw the clothes off the bedstead, and loosened the cord, an! then pulled the remainder of the bed away from the door. 1 " "Come in," said I, as I opened the door. The man stepped confidently in and as he did eo, I placed the muzzle of a pistol in his f.ice. and warned him not to utter a syllable or he was a dead man. Holding '.he pistol with one hand, I wound the rope around his hands, until they were fast, then laying-the pistol down, securely tied his hands and feet, and set him down. Tn a little while I saw a light ascending and approach the door. The same 6igisal was given as before, when I opened the door, and the landlord entered with a light. His consternation was the most ridiculous, "as he beheld me with a pistol at his breast, bidding him be silent. I then tied his hands and feet and with an admonition to keep silence, set i . . . him upon the floor. ? They kept coming, and I binding them ever to keep the peace, until I had six iu the room, and by the dim' glare of the candle they presented a ludicrous appearance After a long pause the seventh man canie, and when I let him in, it was my companion who had traveled with me on the prairie,- and who had tried to rob me. "Ha!" he exclaimed, starting back con founded at what he saw, "yOu once escaped but not now." "Y'es, and now," said T, pressing my pis tol close to his face, "be quiet or your head will go to atoms in a twinkling " I secured him without any further trouble and seated him among his companions. At length day dawned, and when the light was perfect, I took ray first prisoner from his sack and tied him hand and foot and then left them, cursing and swearing at each oth er's cowardice. I went on to the next town, from which officers were sent out, and the gang of robbers taken to prison. lut this capture broke up that gang, and if they ever commenced operations again, it was in some other locality." Ode to Frazer's River. O, frazter rivier virgien land Were gold crops out as thik as punkens and Previsions air, notf toe be hadd at hardly any price ime down on yeu lik a cart lode cf brix and. shorcly wood cut my lukky or t mean my styx Ony i haint the fundz to travel outer Onse i git awaa from this beer place dod-darndif ever i goas rummin" round this Terraketous world agin no Sirree Hoss ! fly for the star-spangered banger furrevcr shill -: wave were the drinks are one but and the gold by ers shave -x Loving vs. Liking. The distinction be tween liking and loving was well made by a little girl six years old. She was eatig some thing at breakfast which she seemed to relish very much ' '-Do you love it?" asked her aunt. "No," replied the child, with a look of disgust ; "I like it. - If I loved it I should ki$st." :.- l"-- " -i . I never! shot, a bird in my life," said some one to bis friend,: who replied "I never bhot anything in the shape of a bird, except a squirrel, which I killed with a stone, when it fell into tho river and was drowned." , , ' The following contains all the letters of the alphabet: John P. Brady gave me a black walnut box of quito a small eize. , PEBBLES IN THE SEA. AN OLD POEM. v. Who Bhall judge a man from manners 7 jj -. Who shall know him by his dresa 1 raupers may be fit f.ir princes, Princes fit for something less, Crumpled shirt "and dirty jacket 5 "May become the golden ore 1 ' Of the deepest thoughts and feelings; Satin vests could do no more." ' .f-U I here are springs of crystal nectar Even swelling out of stone, Th-jre are purple buds and golden Hidden, crushed and overgrown: God, who counts by souls, not dresses; . Love and prospers you and me, While lie values thrones, the highast, But as pebbles of the sea. Man, upraised above his fellows, Oft forgets his fellows then ; Masters rulers lords, remember That your meanest kinds are men; Men by labor, men by feeling, Men iu thought, and men by fame. Claim epual rights to sunshine In a man,s ennobling name. There are foam-embroidered oceans, There are little weed-clad rills, There are feeble inch high saplings, There are cedars on the hills; God, who coun ts by souls, not stations, Loves and prospers you and me, For to him all vain distinctions Are at pebbles in the sea. Toiling bands alone are builders Of a nation's wealth or fame; Titled laziness is pensioned, Fed and fattened on the same; By the sweat of others' foreheads, Living only to rejoice, While the poor man's outraged freedom Vainly lifteth up bis voice. Truth and justice are eternal, Born with loveliness and light; - Secret wrongs shall nevar prosper Where there is a sunny right; God, whoes whole-heard voice is singing -Boundless love to you and me Sinks oppression with its titles, ' ' As the pebble in the sea. THE CAVE OF DEATH. Iu Hugh Miller's posthumous work entit led "The Cruise of the Betsy," we take the following interesting account of the Cave in which the whole . people-of the Islaud of a a Ki'22 one of the Hebrides, were smoked to death by a neighboring clan, the McLcods: "Wc struck a light, and,, worming our ! selves through the narrow entrance, gained the interior a true rock gallery, vastly more roomy and lotty man one coma nave antici patcd from the meau vestibule placed iu front of.it, Its extreme length we found to be t'vo huudrcd. and sixty feet; its extreme breadth twentyseven feet; its height, where the : roof rises highest, from eighteen to twenty feet. The cave seems to have owed its origiu to two distinct causes, , The trap rock on each side of the fault like, crevice ... which separates them are greatly decomposed as i by tho moisture from above; and directly in the lice of the crevice must the surf have charged, wave after wave, ages ere the last upheaved of the land. When . the Do stone at Dunolly existed as a sea stack, skir ted with alsai. . the breakers on this shore must have dashed every tide though the nar row opening of. the cavern, and scooped out by.handfuls; the decomposing trap within. " i he process ot decomposition, ana con sequent enlargement, is still going on inside, but there is no longer an agent to sweep away the disintegrated fragments. . Where the roof rises highest, the floor is blocked up with ac cumulations of bulky decaying masses, that have dropped from above; and it is covered over its eutire area by a stratum of earthly rubbish, which has fallen from tho sides and ceiling in such abundaucc that it covers up the straw beds of the perished islaniers. which still exist beneath, as a brown mould ering felt, to the depth of from five to eight inches. Never yet was tragedy enacted on a gloomier theatre. Au uncertain ' twilight glimmers gray at the entranc.,froai a narrow vestibule; but all within, for two hundred feet, is black as with Egyptian darkness." As we passed on with our one feeble light, along the dark mouldering walls' and roof, which absorbed every straggling ray that reached them," and over the dingy floor, ropy and damp, the place called to recollection that hall iu Roman story, hung and carpeted with black, into which Domitiao once thrust his senate, in a frolic, to read their own names on the coffin-lids placed , against the wall. The darkness seemed to press upon us from j every side,' as if it were a dense jetty fluid.' out of. which our light had scooped a pailful or two, and that was rushing in to supply the vacuum; and the only objects 'we saw dis tinctly visible were" each other's heads and faces, and the lighter,'parts of our dress. " "The floor,' for' about 'one hundred feet in wards from the narrow vestibules, resembles that of a charncl-houso. At almost every step we camo upon heaps of human bones grouped together, 'as when one cutteth and cleaveth'wood to the earth," They are of a brownish, earth hue. here and there, tinged tpitVi nr-rtan' tho HWUllS Wit th the exception ot a few broken fragment?, havo disappeared; r il,. TTohrhloci hnv of Into iur iiaveicm iu years been numerous and curion?; and mariy ft museum that at Abbotsford among the rest exhibits a grinning skull, its me morial of the Massacre of Kigg. We fud, too, further tnarks of visitors in the . single bones separated from the heaps,1 and scatter-: ed over the area: bat enough still remains to show, in the general disposition of there mains, that the hapless islanders died under the walls in families, each little group sepa rated bv a few feet from the others Here and there the remains of a detached skeleton may be seen; as if somf robust islander, rest less in his agony, had stalked out into the middle space ere he fell; .but the; social ar rangement is the ceneral one. . .. "And beneath every heap we find, at the -pth'as'has Wen SiiJjf w!iftche8; the r : r .li - i: .i ' W- de remains of the straw bed upon "which the family had lain, largely mixed with the smallest bones of the human frame., ribs and the vertebrae, and hand and feet, feet boDes; occasion potte housewifery under one family heap, the pieces of a half burned, unglazcd earthen jar, with a narrow mouth, that, like the sepulchral urns of our ancient tumuli, had been moulded by the hand, without the assistance of the potter's wheel; and to one of the fragments there stuck a minute pellet of. srrey hair. From under another heap he disintered the handle- stave of a child's wooden porringer (Jbicktr,') perforated by, a hole still bearing the- mark of the cord that had bung it to the wall; and beside the etavc lay a few of the larger, less destructible bones of the child, with what or a time puzzled Ms both not a little one of the grinders of a horse. Certain it was, no horse could hare got there to have dropped a tooth a foal of a week old could not have passed itself through he opening; and how that single grinder. evideutly no recent introduction into -the cave, could have got mixed up in the straw with the human bones, seemed an enigma somewhat of the class to which the reel in the bottle belongs. : I found in Edinburgh an unexpected commentator en the mystery, in the person of my little boy, an experimental philosopher in his second year. 1 had fcpread out on the floor the curiosities of Eigg, among the rest, the relics of the cave, including th pieces of earthen jar, and the fragments of the porringer; but the horse's tooth seemed to be the only real curiosity among them in tj, rD r.r i;ttt l;m ; IU instant hold 1 of it; and, appropriating it as a toy. contin- ued playiug with it till he fell asleep. r J O ...... . 1 I I have now little aoubt but. that; it was first brought iuto the cave bv the poor child amid whose mouldering remain a Mr Swanson found it. This 'little pellet "of gray hair spoke of feeble old age involved iu this whole- sale massacre, 'with the vigorous manhood of ally, too, witL fragments of unglazed ep DJ 5M?P u 4uirc u. rv, and various other implements of rude influence and power so cnaageu, inuceu. tk r.-cii.i fV.r T. t mat no cannoi recozuize lu.wiuii-i mcum, the island; and here was a story of unsus- ion. systematic moue ui lunurc, Krauu pecting infancy-amusing itself on the eve of ally break down the constitution, cap the destruction with its tovs. Alas for man! Should not I spare Niuevah, that great city,' said God to the angry prophet, 'wherein are more than e'x . score thousand persons that cannot discern between their riht hand and their left?' God's image must have beon sadly defaced in the murderers of the poor inoffensive children of Eigg. ere they could have heard their feeble waihngs, raised, no j doubt, when the stifling atmosphere within began first to thicken, and yet ruthlessly persist in their indiscriminate destruction." "Some hundreds of years ago." say Mr. Wilson, "a few. of the McLeods landed in V'irror from Siren chpr bavin 7 irreatlv mis- conducted themselves, the Eiggites strapped them to their own boats, which they set adrift in the ocean. They were, however, rescued by some clansmen; and soon after a strong body of the McLeods set sail from Skye, to revenge themselves on Eigg. The natives of the latter island, feeling they were not of sufficient force to offer resist- "'f-j-i J - o o j ance, went aud hid themselves, (men, wo- contrast, wneu power, uueer ra., . -men and children. in this secret cave, which ployed wisely, kindly, courteously, and bo- is narrow, with an exceedingly- small en- trance. It opeus from the broken face of a! steep bank along the shore; and, as the whole coast is cavernous the particular retreat I would have been sought for in vaiu by stran gers. So the Skye-men, rinding the Island uuiubabitcd, presumed the natives had fled. and satisfied their revengeful feeling by ran- i K.iekin'T and mllaiu'? the emntv houses. Probably the movulAes were of no great val- mi . 1 i .1 1 . i human being among the cliffs awakened their ue -tney men tooK toeir aeparture, ana sen, ucwiu - .- "i .oum left the islaud, when the sight of a solitary 1 ces, a curse instead of a blessing to his fellow suspicion and induced them to return. Un- Those upou whom high power has been con fortunately a slight sprinkling of snow had ferred, or great riches, are also surrounded fallen, and the footsteps of an individual were by corresponding responsibilities They b.ave traced to the mouth of the cave. Not hav- io some sense been elevated above their fol ing been there ourselves at the period alluded low being?, and have had an extraordinary to, we cannot speak with certainty as to the nature of the parley which ensued, or the terms offered by either party; but we know that those were not the days of protocols. The ultimatum was not satisfactory to the Skye-men. who immediately proceeded to adjust the preliminaries' in their own way. which adjustment consisted in carrying a vast ! collection of heather, ferns, and other com bustibles, and making a huge fire just in the very entrance of the Uamh Faaingh, which they kept up for a length of time; and thus, by 'one fell smoke,' they 6moothered the en tire population of tho island. . -PaKSEKvisn Fruit wituoct Sugar. To preserve fruit fresh for winter use, put it in bottles, fill them up with cold spring water ; tic down with a bladder tightly ; put them in a kettle of copper of cold water up to the ; neck of the bottles, with hay to steady them ; ' let them simmer for a quarter of an hour, but not boil ; let them cool in the water ; wipe the bottles and put away in a cool place. On , no account open them' till wauted for eating. S3T The best way io treat slander is to let it alone and sav nothing about it. It toon i- . - j a. ' ' ' i dies away when fed op ulcct contempt. VOl7i5.NO.46. - THE "DESPOTS OF "DOMESTIC LEFE. . w - i. - .. . 'It is excellent To have a giant's strength, but it - ia tyrannoue To use it like a giant." 7.; f .1 .7 There are few human beioga who do not covet power. It appears to be one of the great desires of the mind and heart Men toil for it day by day' and year by year, and not a few waste health, risk reputation, and even peril life in ita acquisition. If we look into tho busy world, we t.hll find the multi tude constantly engaged in an effort to iectjra position, place, fortune and power. And strange as it may appearTttie cases are rare - a i 1 .a - . " wtucii wncn acquirea. ivesc are uo nsodior abusedyVe , r all, -more or kaa iJi'i'nriKp'i to nlav the desnot. How freouent- ly does it happen that an individual who in hia early years was poor, depeulent, meek nd bumble, becomes a chanced beinjr as and even his own original character is lost in the metamorphosis. We can conceive of nothing more narrow, selfish and paltry. Another foible of erring human nature, and it is one that is frequently indulged,- is to disown and deny parentage, associations and origin, however honest aud honorable, becausa connected with poverty. lhe poor tool who UUa laucies luul uc ticmm uuuai.. expense of truth and integrity is only cor temncd and despised by the intelligent . and high minded. The abuse of power in every case, should be regarded as a crime. In the first place, it indicates ingratitude to Divine Providence, for the blessings and immunities conferred; and in the second, it exhibits a selfishness, a vanity, and a tyranny that are every way culpable and deplorable. We can imagine nothing more despicable than a do mestic or a social despot an individual who delights in making others miserable, simply because he is in a condition to do so with a certain degree of impunity. The. slave dri ver who scourges his victim for every trifling offence, is scarcely more culpable, for wounds may sometimes be inflicted as well by the tongue or the manner, as by the lash or the whip. Hearts, too, may be lacerated by words, far more readily than bodies by blows. The temper is sometimes more scathing and fatal than a double-edged sword. We be lieve that many a spirit has been broken through its agency, tnat many, a that many a I-tc naa been made, wretched, and thai jnany a gentle . ue,uS "3 uccu . r Tl . 1 , C Zn K ot ic lint rrl w iv m iuvu. cruel, out n is criminal. Anu. aunouga it is natural for us to turn with horror from detailed accounts of the execution of some convicted homicide, we fear that there arc many domestic despots who Dy a cool, wan- strengtn ana snonen me es ui wie rcry strength and shorten the lives of the beings they are bound to watch over and protect. Can anything be more terrible than this description of tyranny? Can auythihg be more awful than this fearful manifestation or temper t In some ot tne earlier ages poisons were administered stealthily and grad ually, with the object of putting away some relative, friend, or associate, who had become troublesome, or whose estates were coveted. The mode was deliberate, monstrous, and murderous, and yet the victims suffered with out knowing the hand that prepared the fa tal draught. " But the despots of domestic life arc uot only seen and knowu, but their blows upon the mind and heart are felt hour- . . ; . f i y ana ually. aoa arc 0Ilcn Dorne m orrow and in suflenog. rather than resort to an open rupture or a wordly exposure. Such miscreants and tyrants deserve to be scouted, scorned and execrated wherever discovered, for they abuse the position and pervert the privileges that have been confided to them for benificent purposes. How happy is tho nevolentiy; when it is regarded as a gift from the Almighty, a trust or a boon, and is used a'Ordingly! It then, indeed, becomes a blcssing, and is the source of many other blessings.' So, too, in relation to wealth. The individual who. having accumulated an immense fortune, hoards, worships, and faila to employ it judiciously, is false to his trust. Instead of making the means thus acquired j subservient to useful and benevolent purpo II I, o lh.. AAn. tliA c T t r t li 1C STK11 ufiS1a creatures, aud a operable victim to avanco. mission confided to them; and as they are faithful or faithles, so will they enjoy sym pathy, respect, confident and friendship among their- fellow creatures, and so will they be adjudged in the world beyond the grave. . . General Walker Again. The Washing ton telegraph correspondent of the New York Exprets says . The Government has just scratched it eyes open, and found out that Walker, tho Fillibuster, has been, and ia about. The report to them now is. that Walker leaves the Gulf coast to meet a fillibuster force to be landed in Nicaragua on the Pacific side. Arms 1 and amunition hate already gone. The new lint's (sometimes called Joe White's) steamer put into Savannah lor coal, is hero believed to be, put in for that kind ef coal called Filibusters .The intended enset on Nicaragua is now found to hav roots wide and deep. , The Penna. R. It. Co. have con tracted for the building of six Sleeping Cat a of the Woodruff patent, to t-9 ruu on tbis road when erciple ted.