1 ftf ft fV iT t it W ft $5 W 1 1 W 1 NEW SERIES. la liuhlirdied eVtTV Ve 1 liCSi i IV j M -rning, at Two Poi.i.aus per . uiiiumi, jiyablo in advance; Two Dollai.s ami j T-LXTV Five Cestk, if i"t paid within ix month ; and Two Dollaks anu Fik j ty Oust if nut paid until the termination of the year. No subscription will be received for a shorter period than U monthi-, and no subscriber will be at liberty to discontinue bi-- paper until all arrearages are paid, ex cept at the option of the editor. Any ier. boo subscribing fir mx months wil ! char gtd Osi Dollar Twenty Five Cents. tm the. nmuey i paid in advance. A4vertllny Rates. One inserVn. Tyco do. Three do liqnar. r"l2lines 60 76 $1,00 2 iquarcs. J 24 linesl 1 00 1 60 ? 00 S quares.r 86 lineal 1 60 2 00 8 00 8 monma. o uo. iz ao 4 lines or less, $1 50 $3 00 1 square, 12 lineal 2 50 4 60 2 squares, j 24 lines 4 00 7 00 P squares. 36 linen 6 00 9 00 r-alf n column, 10 00 12 00 One column. 15 00 22 00 $5 00 9 00 12 00 14 00 20 CO 35 00 business Curbs. DM'LAUGIII.IX. Aiterney at Law. J Johnstown. P.u Office in the Ex- i clmifce- building, on the Corner of Clinto- ; nJ Lociift streets up starrs. Will attend j to all busir.ess cenii'.-ctt'd with bis prolusion. ; Isc. 9, 1S63. tf. WILLIAM K1TTELL. j 'Jtfornnt at JCnto, Qrbtnsburg, j Cambria County Feana. OiSce Culoaude row, De. 4. 16 CYRUS L. PERSHINti. Kf.y. Atthknkv at Law, J.!.iitinvti, Cambria Co. I'a. 01'ire on liain t,trcet, second tl ur over Baiik. ix 2 It. T. C. S. Gardner, rilYSTCIAN ANH SURGEON. Teii lers his prfv ssIo:..d M-rvi.e to t'.tizei uf eden s i; una, nd surr. .tiudiiiT vii initv. oFUCi: IN COLOXADE ROW. June 'JO, l04-tf the J. II, Scasilaii, ATTO li N t: Y A T L A W , EuEN'Mii'Ro;. I'a., OFFICE ON MAIN STREET. THREE IJOORS KA-T or the LOGAN HOUSE. Dercmber 10, l&G3.-!y. R. L. Johnston. Gko. W. Oathax. JOHNSTON & OAT MAN, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. Ebiunburg Cambria County l'enua. 0FHCE REMOVED TO LLOYD ST., Ou.' dtMr West of 11. L. J..hnst..n'rf Rus- i-hn.:e. I Dec. 1. 101. !-. 10 I I OI1N FKN'LON. Esq. Attornky at .aw, EWens-l'iirtr. Ciiinbria coiintv I'a. 'Hii': on M;uu stiect uij' ining bio dwvl n.. i 2 I NOON, ATTORNEY AT LAW. J TE.VSRrKG. OAMBRIA U .. I'A. Ofhce uue duor Eat of the I..-t Ollice. Feb. IS, 18t3.-tf. G K0RGEM. REED. ATTORNEY AT LAW, EBENSBURG, Cambria County, Pa. OPTICS IN COLON A DE HOW. March 13. 1864. MICHAEL IIASSON, Erq. Attoeney at Law. Eoenvburz. Cambria Co. I'a. Ounce on Main street, three doors East f Julian. ix 2 s. w. HICKMAN. G. W. HICKMAN &L CO., Wholeajile Dealers in MANUFAC TURKD T BACCO. FORZIGV AND DOMESTIC SEOARS. SNCFFS. Are. N. E. COiL TlllitI) .v MARKET STREET. I'HILADnLl'lilA. Augmt 13. Ibu3.-!y. t--1-381 0o lnf S JJOjzjbo rOl V "0l soX a'jjjv k o:i il j, 'ssiiuaav on ia Villi UKV sua vxs -qua v aim NVOHJ-lILW S3IVH VIH JiaaVlIHd I.S2H0IH Ior Rent. An office on Centre Street, xt d,v)r north of iviq. Kinkcad's office. PotoehBin riven imneliatelv. JOSEPil M'DONALD. Air'l 15, IMi. BLESSINGS OF GO VER KM EST, LIKE Select lccirir. 8 El A I ti i;y I'kkstos o'hakiiktt. Come! clasp the steel upon thy feet : How fair a hall room spreads before us : We'll dai.ee upon the froze:- sheet. The windi sbal! 1kj our minstrels sweet, Fci dauce like ours nee s fiyiug chorus ; The ice our fi.ior To wander o'er. Our roof the sky, blue bending o'er ua. It is a sport fir heart an.? limb, And both alike with j y are leaping; The tenant of the stream shall swim Less tiset, lelow than we shall skin:. In graceful curve above them sweeping; And many a shout Shall we ring out, To wake far echoes fioni their sleeping. Now fur the revel strain the nerve; By demon frost be laggaid bitten ; The inn; straight line untiughi to swerve ; The whirl, the ring, the sweeping curve, Shall all upon the fl u d lie written. Each maze we weave Behind we leave, A trace to tell where we have smitten 3ftti5CfIlaiuou5. M ASUMC ii O 31 4 I C ., Or tU Mitoule Tallamau. BY AN OKHCKU OK Tilt: 17 During the lute Mexican war a lad of : sixteen, u daring youn Virginian, leaped i a fericc and climbed a parapet some bun- tired yards abend of bis company, and ' was taken prisoner; but not Ijefore be f bad killed three Mexican?, and mortal! ; wound. d a Colonel. His mother, a oor ! widow, but, though poor, h lady, (and i w hy not ?) beard of hi? fate, ami as be who an only son, her heart yearned for bis J releaae. JShe wept at the thought, but j while the tears were streaming down her i t hecks, suddenly she recollected that she j was a Mason's widow. Hope lighted up ! her bo-otn at the thought she dried her tears and exclaimed : j tk I will go and test the ta'.ismanic power of the order my husband loved and ; levered so much.' I She sold some articles of furniture, and ; n 'uh the money reached the city of Wash 1 ingtuii on loot. j In her dusty attire she entered the de ! paitment of the Secretary of War, and ! with some difficulty obtained an ii:tei view. ; As she entered the apartment in which lie j was seated, and he saw bow dusty she appeared, " Well ma'am," was the salu i t.itioii he gave her ; but when she removed j her veil, and saw the visage of the lady I in her face; be h :f raised himself in his chair and jiointcd her to a sent. She told lii hi of her son's capture and wished to go I to him j " I can't help you, ma'am," he replied, ! "a very oxpcn.-ive journey to the t-ity of ; Mexico. Your son will bv; reloascd by and by tip exchange of prisoners." . Sir," said llie vidow, s th'i tears of woe rolled down her check, 44 can you not help me to a pas.-jn-it." " Of course," be replied, " that will ! lie granted to you at the Secix-tary of the j Statea' office, but you are poor, law do I you expect to pay the cxeriscs of such a journey It is a visionary scheme, (wood morning ma'am." "Sir' said the lady, " will yon be so kind as to recommend me to the officer in command of the regiment that will sail from Uallimorein a tew days?" ItnjRissible, ma'am, imjMissible," be replied. Then tuniit g to the page, be said ' who did you say was waiting for an audience? Tell them I am at leisure, now." 4i Sir," said the lady, " I have one more question to ask you before I leave your office, an I I pray you answer it j are you a Mason ?" " Yes, ma'am," he replied. " Then, sir," she said, permit mc to say I am a Mason's widow with ibis declaration I leave your ufrlee. That moment the Secretary's manner was changed to that o( the most courte ous interest. lie entreated her to lie sealed until he could write a few lin.s to the Secretary of State. In a few moments be presented her with a note to the Secretary, recom mencing her to bis pympathy and friend ship. Tbo Secretary of S'ate received her most kindly, and ave her a letter to I he commandant at New Orleans direct -inr him to procure her a free pass to Vera Cruz by the first steamer. Through the agency of the two Secretaries the Lodges placed in her hands three hundred dollar, with a talism-inie card from the Grand Master at Washington, and the widow left tbo city. THE DEWS OF HEAVEN, SHOULD BE EBENSBURG, PA. WEDNESDAY, JANUARY ! When she reached l'lttsbnrg the siage I agent seeing the letter Ito bore from the and Master would receive nothing lor ! her pasage ihe Captain of the steamer on which si e embarked for New Orleans, no sooner deciphered it than he gave her the best state-room he had, and when she ! leached the Crescent City, she had two ! I i end red and ninety dollars left of l::r j three hundred. She there waited on the General i command of the station, with ! ihe letter of the Secretary of State, who 1 immediately instructed the Colonel in ! command of the forwarding troops to Pee I that she had u free passage to Vera Cruz j by the ti'-st steamer. lly all the officers she was treated with the greatest polite ness and delicacy, for they were all Ma son's und felt boo ml to her by ties as strong and delicate as those which bind a brother to a sister and rejoiced in the opportunity offered them of eincing the benign and noble principles of the craft. After a passage of 'five days she reached Vera Cruz, and having a letter from the commandant at New Orleans, to the American Governor she sent it to him. enclosing the talismanic card she received from the Gr in 1 Master at Washington. The Governor immediately waited on her I at the hotel and offered her a Iransporta j tion to the city of Mexico by a train that would start the next morning. The Co!o , nel who commanded the train, kindly t took her in charge and offered her every i facility and comfort on her journey, provi j ded her with a carriage where th.i country I was level, and with mules and palanquins I over the mountains. Within ninety miles of the city, they ; were overtaken by a detachment oi tra- gociis escorting a f-ovt rnmcnt official to ; the General in command Anxious to get o i faster, she asked permission of the Co!o:a! to join ihe detachment, and though informed of the I.ir.gor and fatigue of riding a'l dav on horseback she wa.- willing to brave all, that she might s. o:.er see her son. The Colonel then provided her with a Meet and gentle Mexican ponv and she assumed her place with the troops, ! escorted by the officers, and never fatigued till llie towers o! .Mexico were in si-m. She reached the city on the second day's battle, and in the heat of the battle, at- i tempted to enter the gates. An officer I insrtantlv seized the bridle and told her she j must wait until the city was taken. j '-Ob! sir," she exclaimed, i cannot i i wait one hour m signi oi me cuy mai ' hold.-, my son a prisoner I must see him, ! sir." i '-The city must first be taken, madame," tie again replied, wuu muui tmpnasi.-?, becoming excited. 44 1 cannot wait sir," she replied, 44 my son. mav be ill dying in chains in a : dungeon t-ne hours delay may remove : him from me. Oh ! 1 must go to him ! I will enter the city. i 44 Madame," said the officer, 44 you 1 cannot reach it bat by crossing the battle- fw, you wilt surely be killed." "Sir," said the Inly, "1 have not j traveled from Virginia to the gates of the i city to fear enter tl.em hanks for 1 - 1 ;..,l-...s a thousand heartfelt : i 1 1 Hit ..; - ' thanks 'or von and the officers who have ; lioen so kind m ni'-. 1 shall always re i mendier these otiieers with t!ie most grate- I ful feelings of my heart but don t detain ; I me longer. Yonder is a 'gate that leads j I to the city. 1 will enter it in search of ! my dear boy. j i And on she sped, but ere she reached ; j the gate anoiher officer rode up by her j I Pi,ie 'a,,,! admonished her of danger and j i imprudence. j ! 44 Sir " she replied, 44 this is no time to talk ofprudence and tear-- my son, my j only stin is a prisoner in chains. I am i told that' Santa Anna is in the midst of j dimtnenng group, l will seek turn ; his hand place the talismanic card j and in Inch I bear he is a Mason, and will ' .rtainly heed me." ; CtIlfll",J " ' i . . , it 1 i 1 t I . 44 War destroys all lrotIirhxxi, nai.l . the iWr who was not a M:ufun. made tilll iki itl n . iiiil w:iii'iiiiili !... I w l.nf : 1.7 moment, strutK ner piny an.i across the field of deaih. At that mo- . inent the masked battery that mowed . down one-half of the Tahne'to regiment, opened yet right across the gory field she J was seen galloping on her white pony, ; ivoidiiv the retreating platoons by e"- i circle around their Hank the next mo- j aicnt she was seen coursing over the . .M-oun.l i e f ,,,e 'ry in mU 1 nlav H-in hvd swing her shipped, forget- , ' . . . .tf .,.llw! ih;it bowled . ,ul OI . , lt .-xnect- 'i-rtiitill lllCIII, iil'i'il' liiuii- . aiotinu iii-" ii . aootlicr. i I ,i i,or to la I every moment, uui on ! went with fearless air. York, njuli.tude of .n-ople none of i "Tl woman's love for her son has j whom bus bad more than half a break ,,d.' her wild," .aid tin officer who at- ! fast, or exjiect to have more than had a ! en .'ted to a-rest her flight 1 dinner,- will choose a legislature. Is ,t ! 44 She will surely be killed," exclaimed possible to doubt what sort of a legnsla 51ien' J .,ro ur hit r'uosen ? On oiw Mde 15 a. DISTRIBUTED AUKS. UP.JW Till " A niotuei's love is -hunger than ihe pain- of l-a!h," exclaimed a si.Mier. The God oi battles vvnl protect her." said a Tcnnesean. 'She :i r-.-ie!l i Santa Anna safe and s::mid as a roa b " The soldier was i "g!it An- went over the field of (hath and readied Santa Anna unhurt. He received her jmliu ly, and when she told him her crraud and presented her talismanic card. Madame," said be, " I am a Ma son, and know the obligations of the Order in icacc and in war. When your son was taken prisoner he mortally wounded my materi al nephew, who is now dead, but he shall be restored, for I will not re fuse your request in the face of the letter you bear. lie immediately gave her an escort to the city, with an oilier to restore her son to her anus. The order was promptly olieycd, and that very day, as he promised, she embraced her long lost son. lio much for a mother's love; and so much for the protecting arm and noble sympathetic heart which Masons ever ex tend to lovely, help'ess woman. Oil ! if widowhood be th" ilmm of woman, li woiiMi not oe a iason s wne, moiner, daughter, or sister in the hour of peril and need ? .11 a can la 3 ' Opinion of tin bL'i;I fec' Mates Cjiuvei-niiteut. 'Ihe fiHowing letter was written in J8.j7 by Iord M.icaulav to Henry S. Randall, Esq., of New Yoik, the author of the Life of Jefferson : You are surprised to learn that I have ., i,-,.,!, ., T..(V.,..., .,,..! ' lllll .Ul . fit. UVI .-"II ttil'l 1 i ! I am certain that I never wrote a line, and ' that I never, in 1 aihament, in convcrsa i lion, or even on the hustings a place j where it is the fashion to court the popu ! lace uttered a word indicating an opinion that the supreme authority of a State : ought to be instructed to the majority of i cbizens told by t'ie bead, in other words, to the iHxircst and most ignorant part of ; society I have long been convinced that institutions purely democratic must sooner or Liter destroy liberty, vi- i.-ivilimi"ii, or both. In Kurope, where the population is dense, the effect of such institutions would bj instantaneous. M hat hannened lately in ienuu.e is an example. In 1848 a pure democracy was established there During a short time there was reason to expect a general spoliation, a national bankruptcy, a new partition of the soil, a maximum of prices, a ruinous load of taxation '.aid on the rich for the purpose of supporting the poor in idleness. Hut the time will come when New Eng lanl will be as thickly settled as Old Eng land. Wages will be as low, and will fluctuate as much with you as with us. You will have vour Mancuesters an 1 Hir- minghanis; an I ia ihos.; Mancliesiers and 15irir.in;.bat:s hundreds of thousands of arti.-a.:s wih ns.-uivd.y be sometimes out of, work. Then the institutions will be f.uily j h'v.u'dit to the test. Distress everywhere i i ' . i.,i. ,..i:,....., l .r. I makes the laborer mutinous and di-.con-ter.t" d, and inclines him to listen '.ti'.h eagerness to agitators who tell him that it is ;i monstrous iniquity that one man shall i Vl. m;;i;0n while another cannot get a luj nie:d. Li bad years there is plenty of jumbling here, and sometimes a little rioting. Hut it mat Tors little, for here the sufferers are net the rulers. The supreme power is in the hands of a class numerous indeed, but select, of an educated class, of a class which is, ami knows Us. If to be, deeply interested in the security of pro- i.y . ctirdmgly, the nial--ontents are hnnly yet gently constrained. '1 he bad time is got ovei iu .v....... ...v. .-v..... Hove the indigent. i ne spnn-s o. ..a...... al prosperity soon begin to How again : work is plentiful ; wages use, and ad is ... , ( UilHtl'JIlil V H4 l,iuviiiimvi" x n:lve scon Mm Wl fillip! tlil-nilfrll StlOll (THinil n-.i-MMin as I have descubed. Through such seasons the United States will have t pass in the course of the next century, if nt t of ibis. I Ley will jou pass through fktm! I beartiiv wish you a good deliverance. Hut inv reason and my wishes are at war; and I cannot help fonlxiding the worst. It is q lite plain tint your gov ernment will never be able to restrain a distressed and discontented majority. I-'or with you the majority is the govern ment, and has the rich, who are iiHvin s : a minority, absolutely at its mercy. I lu a minority. I , -. . .. - , ,,,., .,.,,, ,,, si... t-A New tuiv HUH AND THE LOW, THE RICH AND THE POOR. IS, 1865. statesman prcaci.i.ig patience, ivmhvI tor' ve.-ieil lights, strict ob.-M r auce of ptiblh latin. Oa the o.her is a den-igogije ranting about ihe tvranny of caphalirt nnd usurers, an 1 aking whv ambodv siiouM be permitted to think champ gne and ri le in a carriage while thuu.-antis of holiest lalis are in want of neee.-saries. ' Inch ot the two candidate is to be pre ferred by a workingm ui w ho beais his ciiildre ii cry fur more bread I furiously apprehend that you will, in some such season of adver.-ity as I have descriU-d, do things which will prevent prosperity from returning ; that you will act like pe-iple who should in a year of searcitv, devour all the seed com, and thus make the next year a year not of scarcity, but of absolute famine. There will lie, I lear, siMiliaiiou. There is nothing to stop you. Youi constitution is all sail and no anchor. As. I said before, when a society has entered in this downward pro gress, cither civ ilization or lilierty must ieri.-h. Kit her some Cajsar or Nujioleon would seize the reins of government with a strong band, or your republic will be as fearfully plundered and laid waste by barbarians in the twentieth century as ihe Konian empire was in the tilth, with this difference: that the Huns an I V. n !a!s who ravaged the Hounni empire came from without, and that your Huns and Vandals will have been engendered will, m your own country by your own in.-litu- lions. Thinking thus, of course, I cannot reckon .Jciterson among tlie uenetactors i of mankind. I readily adui't that bis j intentions were good, and his abiiitiis: considerable. Odious stories have been I circulated aluiut his private life: but Ij do not know on v. h it evidence the.se .-.to- j lies rest, and I think it probable that thev ! are false or monstrously exagerated. ' in u TJglit riaee. The human skeleton, whether living or d ad, is not in itself a cheerful subject, perhaps. Nevertheless, there is one por tion oi the suijevt the dead head to which the Lender occasionally devt ies a brief paragrapfi or so, wnfcii rrinini.- mo as Mr. Lincoln is reported to have casu ally remarked, of a very strange story, in which a dead-head figures to an extent that is both marvelous anl piciuie.-que. I bad the story from St. Gothard him self, which, of course, is a sufficient voucher for its authenticity. If St. Got bar J should come to see it in the col umns of the Lender, I must take the con sequences; bui as he lives at an immense distance from New York, I mean to risk it. This is the story, which will read best if narrated in St. Gothuid'u own words : Out of the most remarkable oljects I remember ever lo have seen, s ii i he, is or was in view near the head of the lonely valley of Tamara, in I'eiu. Ab- ut fifty yards iVtiui the road that dips into the uorttiern end of ihe gorge there crops out fioin I lie grct u s'.v al ii a rugged mass of rock s .me thirty feel high. On the b.ei of this lock, which is in the form of a truncated cone, there stands a man in armor. He has stood there for over two hun dred years. It is natural, ihcivfore, that his iron clothes should Ik somewhat rus- ! ty, which f ey ..iv. Through ihe gride tit his visor there gleams a something that looks white and dry. That is his skull It has t.-eii white and dry for over two centuries The icople of the countrj few of whom ever pass that way, have a su perstition almut him. A king's ransom (whatever that may lie when reduced into currency) would not tempt one of them tot limb lo ihe summit of the ruggtd cone a:al inspect the Man in Armor. I slept u.ider Ins shadow, in peace, for more than a week, when my horse was lame, and brigands were infesting the ueighboihotKl. Asa patrolman,', 1 con sider the Man in Armor equivalent to about seven men hers of the admirable Fifth ward police. I waved my ham! to Ihe Man in Ar mor, one fine morning, and mounting my trusty steed, dived into the valley at its northern cud, nor puded bridle until 1 bad emerged at the southern- '1 here I found a posada, or, in plain English, an r..n the daughter of the h use was lovely, and her name was Margarita. She shod. len d one day w hen I told her how 1 had sh pt under the shadow of the Man in Armor, and as ihou-.li t-h preform! to decline comcrsing iiIkuiI. him; but 1 fastened her with nir eye and she sjK.ke at last, though with pallor. "Once" quoth Margarita, 44 the Man in Armor was a robin r, known t the Kople for miles around as l'asquale tbo Hri"and. He kert pos-ida himself and waslne inventor, of the cia.'o " 44 And VOL. 12 NO. 1. what is the cmt-; prilhce, beautiful Mar- ganta T "Minna tiaclci stcppttl a while at the poxlda" said the and didn't give ti.e ra.-eal who k pt it a chance to r.b and murder him, but rode Ibi ward oa his way, he generally found I. is horse lame before he bad gone any great dis tance Then he would return t the jo tzidd, where be would decide to pass the night probably, unable to d'wnvtr the cause of bis horse's lameness. Next, he would be killed in the course of the night, ami his remains thrown into the cleft known to the present day as the Lift cf Dent!-. The horse would be all ripht. Oi.e tou. h of a knife would remoe the thread id strong waxed silk tied so tight ly by the mbljcr jnst above the jmimnl's p-slein, and lonte.ded among the hair, causing temjKirary lainuie-s. That lia u e is w hat we call the onto," said Mar gaiiia, with a nfnnte charming in one bO wi II, never mind. l'asqua'e prtispered 50 greatly on bi9 mur.l.-i, and acquired such a giniid stud j of horx-s by mei.ns of the ciuto. that, like all shoddy men, be became very solicitous ab ut hi.- life. Once he caught a tartar in a traveler w ho gave him the cont nts of bis pistol instead of bis purse. This warning the wounded la?-q!i:de took se riously to heart. He burnished up an old suit of ancestral armor. (1'asqualo maintained anctstors) and in this be con tinned to pursue bis unholy calling -an i bon-i-hid man from head to foot. UettCr j fur l'a-quale ho had gone in brass There was a Jesuit missionary in these parrs, well known and greatly t steciucd as the l'adre Hartolo. I think there is a work of bi.- e itant upon the geology of the district in which I am supj-osed to be -ojourieng. The convent to w hich Har tolo belonged, enjoyed a reputation for wealth, and to despoil that institution of its treasure had long been a scheme that lay deeply coiled at the bottom of the robber I'asquale's heart. The wily Jesuit was aware of this. He even got tidings of a certain time at which I'asquale's plan was to be put into execution, and be resolved to frustrate it e.fter a fashion o bis own. l'asqcule 1jji! ftitv bi'i.;iii( Is to back him. T. I I - . . ii was a loveiy morning as itie l'adre j H..,rto!o arrived at the head of the pass of 1 amain upon bis mule. lie was not startled ut the vision of an iron-clad war rior tui horseback just emerging from the gorge, for he knew Iaquale well, and had once undertaken to convert him, but it was not to le 44 My son," said the l'adre mendaciously, addressing the rob lcr in bis most dulcet tones : 44 1 pray for you daily. Just now I cursed you however: I tetrad. As I arrived at the high groend a mile behind me I observed from it that our convent is in flames, and that there is a wiid hurrying to and tro. !'. squ.tle has d- t:e this, said I : accursed bo l'asquale. Forgie me, my son, I spoke in ib heat of the moment, and my hfrt melts tow.ed you now that I see von here. Clandier lo ihe summit of rt :;t c. r.iea! r. ok, and thence ou will d--Mry ihe devastation the evil doers have wrourJ.t ujion our holy shrines. 1'lcsa you son l'asquale. I will hold your 'horse." Stunned at being forestalled in bis da ring project, the unsusjiecting robber, de scended from bis horse, elimlnd up the fatal rock with such ngiliiy as his iron trammels wou'd allow, and stood upri-bt on the summit of if. lie has stood there ever since. The wily Jesuit in the course of l is geological reMarcl.cs. had discovered that the stone forming the aptx of the riclc was a Iodestone of wonderful power. No force could wrench iron from it. 44 Hicss yon, niv f on !" cried be, as be rt tie away waving bis band Inward ibi-mist ta ble biijai.d. 44 Hit ss you. my son! we will do what we can lor the repose of your soul, but I have no fears. Do not struggle. Inevitable destiny has at last fallen cpon yon, and your hour has come. Spare your anathemas. There j-ou are, while the iron lasts, a spectacle and a warning for ages to the assassin and ihe roblior. Cursed be he who attempts to remove you. These are the words of Hart olo, and tl ev shall be inscribed upon the rock." 44 Hot why didn't the rohlicr walk out of his iron clothes, Margarita, and vacate liie fatal fciniidiou ?" localise be was dead," replied Mar garita. "He died of fiL'-t m the awlul wur-ls of l'adre Harn.lo, whose cur-o w afterwards -. raven upon the reck, though it is not disceruable now, Uhg worn away by the baud of time." And the Man in Armor stands on I.is roek ni the present day, proliabiv st il king illustration of the light xnua tight place. .Veic York Leader. ia