VOL. VIII. TECE . PEOPLE'S JOURNAL. PCSLISEUED RYERY THURSDAY ilonxtrio, BY ADDISON AVERY. Terms—in Advance : One copy per annum, $l.OO Village subscribers, 125 TERMS OF ADVERTISING. I square, of 12 lines or less,l insertion, $0.50 " " 3 insertions, 1.50 every subsequent insertion, .25 Rulo and figure work, per sq., 3 insertions, 3.00 Every subsequent insertion, .50 I column, one year, ! 25.00 1 column, six months, 15.00 Administrators' or Executors' Notices, 2.00 6heritrs Sales, per tract, 1.50 Professional Cards not exceeding eight lines bursted for $5.00 per annum. IS" All letters on business, to secure at tuition, should' be addressed (post paid) to the Publisher. eStlect Vottrp. LIFE'S BETTER NOICEBTS I T,ife has its moments. Of beauty and bloom ; But they hang like sweet roses On the edge of the tomb. Blessings they bring us, As lovely as brief; They meet.us when happy, And leave us in grief. Hues of the morning Tinging the sky, Come on the sunbeams, And off with them fly. Shadows of evening Hang soft on the shore ; Darkness enwraps them, We see them no more. So life's better moments In brilliance appear, Dawning in beauty, Our journey to cheer. Round us they linger, Like shadows of even; Would that we like them, Might melt into heaven KY BEST FRIEND They gave me advice and counsel in store, Praised me and honored me more and more; Said that I only should 'wait awhile,' Offered their patronage, too with a smile. But with all their honor and approbation, I should, long ago, have died with starvation, Had thore not come an excellent man, Who bravely to help me along began. Good fellow !he got mo the food I ate, - His kindness and care I shall never forget; Yeti cannot embracc hiin,though othcr folkscan For I myself am this excellent man!' "FORGIVE HIM." DT SYLVANC.S COBB, JR "Forgive him !" said Mrs. Stearns. "0, Lowell, forgive him !" The speaker was an aged woman and a widow. Her head was white with the frost of years, and her mild features were deeply marked by the hand of time. There was a tear in her eye, and her face was clouded with sorrow. She spoke to her son, a middle-aged, strong-featured person, whose countenance betrayed a strong willed, unbending heart, but yet ap peared an upright, honorable man. " Forgive him !" repeated the white haired widow, as she raised her trem bling hands toward her son. "He is your brother. 0, if you know your own heart. you will forgive him." " Never !" spoke Lowell Stearns, in a firm, deep tone. " John has wronged mo—and I should lie to my own soul were I to forgive him now." " And have not you wronged him 1" asked the widow, impressively. " I wronged him 1 How 1" " By withholding from him your love, by treating him harshly and causing him to sin," answered his mother, kindly. " Cease, mother. When you say I have caused him to sin, you are mis taken. He has chosen his own path, Ind now he must travel in it." "Lowell, you are the oldest, and from you should come the love that can alone heal the wound between yourself and John." " Listen to me, mother," said the stubborn man, with a spice of bitter neat in his tone: —" John has been unjust to me—he has been unmanly and unkind. He has injured me be yond reparation." " No, no, Lowell," quickly inter rupted his mother; " not beyond repa ration." "Yes—be has injured my feelings by.the most fatal darts of malice and ill-will. He has lied about me to my friends, and even assailed my private character." • " And can you not forgive all this 1" she asked, tenderly. " Perhaps I might," returned Low ell Stearns ; hut," he added, in a hoarse tone, while his frame quivered With deep feeling, " he has done me more than that. He has spoken of my wife, and But I will not tell it ill. I cannot forgive him this." The strong man sank into a chair as he spoke, and for. some moments his mother was silent. At length she approached him and laid her hand upon his head. " Forgive him !" she whispered. "Never!" uttered Lowell. " Forgive him, and be happy. • Alas, Tll - E':-'.PEOPL.E!S...:.:_JOE.R7\ - AL. my son; you are not 'happy. now, nor can you be, as long .as you are at enmity with your brother. 0, why will you let this breach grow wider" You know .that all this commenced from a mere misunderstanding be tween you, and now you .are helping to make it worse. I know you will tell me that you• have done nothing to harin John, but if you will look into your own bosom, you will find that it is filled with hatred towards him. He is more impulsive than you are, but his heart is as kind as yours, and he is all generosity and love to his friends. More than forty years have passed over John's head, and during all that time he never spoke one unkind word lo his poor mother." And did I ever speak unkindly to you, my mother 1" asked Lowell, in a half hushed voice. • " No, no. You and John had both kind hearts, and it grieves me sorely to see you as you are now. - It grieves me to see you both so unhappy. Ah, Lowell, I fear that, you do not-realize how noble -a thing it is to forgive those who have injured., you." Lowell Stearns made . no reply . to his mother. He saw that he was un happy, and he knew that he himself was unhappy also. In former years he had loved his brother, and be knew that he had been faithfully loved in return. The trouble which had so unfortunately separated them had been trivial in its beginning, but Lowell's sternness of will and John's hastiness of temper had kept the fire on the increase. The first fault had belonged to the yOunger brother, but a word of explanation at the time might have healed without trouble ; now, how ever, the affair had become deep and . dangerous, and there was but one way for remedy. That way the aged mother would point out. " Lowell," continued Mrs. Stearns, speaking in a trembling tone, " I can spend but a few short days longer on earth. I feel that the sands in my glass have most all run out; and be fore I depart, I hope I may meet my two boys together in love—l hope I may see them once more bound to gether in the - sweet bonds of friend . When you were babes, I nursed you and cared for you, and I tried to do a mother's duty ; to make you both fit for the great world. As you grew I older, I promised myself a full share of happiness in your companionship, and naught came to dim the joy of my 1 widowed heart, till this sad cloud lowered upon me. 1 love' my chil i dren—l love them both alike—and yet they love not each other. Lowell, niv son, one thing weighs heavily upon me.. Should this thing last till I am ' dead, then how will you and John meet by the side of-my corpse ? How will you feel when you come to—" Hush, my* mother," uttered the stout man, trembling like a reed. "Say no more now. This evening I will speak to-you.my mind." • John Stearns. sat in his easy chair in his own cosy parlor, and about him were his wife - and children, Every thing that money could procure to wards real comfort were his, but yet he was not happy. Amid all his com forts there was one dark, cloud to trouble him. The spot where for long years ho had nurtured p. brother's love was now vacant; No, not vacant, for it was filled with bitterness. Ho knew that he was in the fault, but be tried to excuse - himself by- thinking his brother hated him. This, how ever, did not ease his conscience, for he knew that he was lying to himself. While he sat thus, he heard a rap at the front door, and in a few mo ments one of the children told him that Uncle Lowell wanted to see him. " Tell him to come in," said John ; and after this he made a motion for his wife and children to leave the room. " I shan't budge an inch," . he said to himself. "If be thinks to frighten me, he'll-find his mistake." Before he could say more, his brother entered the room. "Good evening, John," said Lowell, at the same time laying his hat upon the table. John Stearns was taken all aback by this address, and he could hardly believe his ears ; but he responded hesitatingly to his salutation. For an instant he looked up into his brother's face, and during that instant there flashed across his mind a wish that he had never offended. " John," continued 'Lowell, still standing, " you well know what has passed to make us both *nippy." "Yes, I know," answered John, hardly knowing what tone to assume. "`Yell; my brother," continued Lowell, while t tear' glistened in hii eye, and at the same time extending his hand, " I -have come to:bury the evil that ha s' risen up between us. If you have wronged me, I freely for give you, and if I have been harsh DEVOTED TO THE PRINCIPLES OF DEMOCRACY; AND THE DISSEMINATION OF MORALITY, LITERATURE, AND NEWS E1:1 COUDERSPORT, POTTER COUNTY, PA.; JULY 12,.1855. and unbrotherly towards you, I ask that . you will forget it. Come, let.us • be friends once more." Like. an -electric shock came this speech upon the ears of John Stearns., A - moment he stood half bewildered, and then the tears broke forth from his eyes. He reached forth his hand. but his NVOI ds were broken and indis tinct. He. had not expected-this from his stern brother, but it came like a heaven-sent beam of light to his soul, and in a Moment more the brothers were folded in a warm embrace. When they were aroused," it was by feeling a trembling hand laid upon their heads, and when they looked up they found their aged mother stand ing by them. " Bless you, my children, blessyou," murmured the 'white-haired parent," she raised her bands toward heaven, " and 0, I pray God that you may never be unhappy more." John Stearns knew that his mother had been•tho angel that had touched the heart of his brother, 'and did not alter his forgiveness. "0," he murmured, " I have been very Wrong; I have abused you, my brother—but if you can forgive me, I will try to .make it all up." " Your love will reyay it all, John. Let me have your love, and I will try never to lose it more." " Now I am truly happy," said the aged mother, as she gazed with prido upon her sons. ." Now I can die in peace. 0, my boys, if you would have your children sure of happiness in after life,.teach them that FORGIVE NESS' will heal social wounds which can be healed in no other way. Many a heart has been broken from the simple want of that talismanic power." Both those brothers tried to bless their mother for the healthful lesson she had taught them; and they failed not to teach it to their children as one of the boons that-could be given them fur life. A GOOD ItECOEMENDATION "Please, sir, don't you want a cab in boy?" • " I do want a cabin soy, nip lad, but what's that to you? A little chap like you ain't fit for the berth." - "Oh, real strong. I can do a great deal of work if I ain't so 'very old." "But what are you here for? You don't look like - a city boy. Run away from home, hey?" "Oh, no, indeed, sir; my father died, and my mother. is very poor, and I want to do something to help her. She let me come." "Well, sonny, where are vour let ters of recommendation?" Can't take any boy without these." Here was a 'damper. 'Willie had never thought of its being necessary to have letters from his minister or his teachers, or from some proper per son to prove to strangers that he was an honest or good boy. Now what should he do? He stood in deep thought, the captain meanwhile curi ously watching the working of his expressive face. At length he put his hand in his bosom and drew out his litile Bible, and without a word put it into the Captain's hand. The Cap tain opened to the blank page and ' - read) ".WILLIE GRAHAM: Presented as a reward for regular 'and punctual at tendance at Sabbath School, and for his blameless conduct there and else where. From his . SundaY School Teacher." Captain McLeod was not a- pious man, but he could not consider the case before him with a heart unmoved. The little fatherlez child, standing humbly before him, referring him to the testimony of his Sunday School Teacher, as it was given in his Bible touched a tender spot in - the breast of the noble seaman, and clapping Willie heartily on the shoulder, he said: " You are the boy for me; you shall sail with me and, if you are as good a lad as I think you are, your pockets shan't be empty when you go back to your good mother." CHARACTERISTIC ANECDOTE.--4DUTilig the last session of Congress, a man, well . known as deeply interested in the Mail-steamer bill, then before .the house, approached Mr. Benton while he was walking in Pennsylvania Avenue, aad said: morning, Mr. Benton." The salute was returned. "I see the mail-steamer, bill up to-day." "Yes, .sir." "Mr. Benton,- couldn't you bo prevailed Upon to go for the employment of more steamers by the governinentr 'Yes - sir,- upon -one condition."' The felloW smiled as if be' was,going to get a , '."lteland": of a suggestiori for:his "Oliier" of a bribe. "Aye, ort,one •. condition = that they could be used to transport suth,rae cabs as you are to some penal colony 1" From the N. Y. Tribune Tanios IN sorra CAROLINA. CoLuainie, S. C., June 15, 185 Please present my compliments to the gentleman of the Mississippi Free -Trtzdei, and' also my sympathies on • account of the very unpleasant and unpalatable fact,: that "somebody" in the midst of that delectable commu nity will ' the truth, and have it read too by the million readers of the "monster" paper of the country. A Pleasant time may he have, in his "search after truth"—a novel cruise to some people. There is one thing you Northern. Men quite overlook in your reasoning upon the vexed questions of the 'day. You really seem to think that the new-fangled nation of the earth's rev; tion is true, when every man can se "for hiensitif and know that he isn't turning somersets every day. Rea- - soning on just such false - premises, you would try to show that South Carolina is not the center of the globe, and that New York, and all the rest of creation must not, by inexorable law, perform their mazy dance around it. The sooner that crotchet is got out of your heads the better. - . Would you like a jotting or two from the cnivalric Statel Perhaps the conductor of the Mercury will flut ter like . his Mississippi brother. . In my travels about the State I have picked up some facts with refer ence to the working of the "peculiar institution" which it may do well to keep before the people. Some few weeks ago, in the town of Chester, York-District, a slave took it into his head to absent himself a few days from the scene of his inces sant and unrequited toil—perhaps to eve his family—perhaps to recruit his exhausted strength. Be that as it may, on his return (a voluntary return" lam told) his brutal overseer seized upon the poor wretch, and beat him till he died. on the spot. The mur derer left for parts unknown (perhaps) and the miserable farce was enacted of getting out a reward fur his appre hension. Whoever expects that it I will amount to anything more, prob ably-reckons without his bout. The chivalric South Carolinian must let the world know that he doesn't tol erate such abuses, but then you know it is rather delicate business to punish an overseer for over-zeal in doing"his duty, or for happening to misjudge in- regard to the size of his cudgel or the force of his blow. Chester is on the railroad from Columbia to King's Motint where is to be a grand celebra •tion in October, in commemoration of the battle fought•there in Revolution ary times—and to which celebration President Pierce and his Cabinet are to be invited I hear. Wouldn't it be in keeping to send for a Boston D. D. to officiate as chaplain on the occa sion? Perhaps the company, by ma king diligent inquiries in Chester might learn something further, where with to add to a new edition of the "Southern Side," or the argument for "Squatter Soyereignty" as illustrated in Kansas. • One more-case: An old gentleman in Spartanburg District, a few days ago tied up a servant girl, for - the pur pose of flogging her, when her moth er, who seemed to have some of a mother's instincts at least, interfered; there Upon the-enraged master ordered a slave to hold the mother, and seizing a bar of iron he aimed a blow at her, which, had not the slave released • his hold, thus allowing the woman to avoid the blow, must have killed her out right. Renewing his attack with the same weapon, she seized an ax to de fend herself, and her son coming to her assistance, she killed her master upon the spot. Mother and son are both to be hung next month, for not controlling their maternal and filial instincts , iu the first place, and then for saving their own lives, even at the expense of their master's life.. The master, I was told, was a very pas 7 sionate man, having been often kpown to abuse his own children shamefully, even dragging them out of the house by the hair of their heads. Judge ye, how kind a master such a man would make. And yet itis One of the worst features of the " Patriarchal" system that the laws of this State place almost unlimited 'power over'the life of the elate itrjust such a class of men ; and they are not few, I can assure you; Legree has his counterparts by hun dreds all over this country. - The above took place hard .by the Ceivpens, where Northern blood nour ished•the ".Tree of Liberty" in the struggle fol.- Independence. Thitik ye that thesevere the fruits, the• he foes that fell there were anticipating! We would advise some of our North 7 i3rii,friends; who ate, so anxious that 4Abietictihs ihottld -rule Americe;' to journey. through some portion& of the 'upper country' of South. Carolina, Georgia, &c., where the genuine Na tive Americans are to be found, the men . who have, as instruments in others' hands, ruled America for the last half-century. • May be they would go back with a new idea in their headS, maybe 'sadder and wiser men.' If they are unable to Make the pious pilgriniage♦ we recommend for their perusal some tables in the last census. Bur what of . the 'signs of the times 1' is not the time near when the might and.the right combined are to triumph? Or is Doughfacedom to cringe a little longer:? Already the chivalry are concerting their plans for the next Congress. It is evident they hear the breakers ahead. Bully. Butler said to a friend of Mine, a short time since, that every Southern Senator and Rep resentative would go armed to . the next Congress. We doubt not that it would be more agreeable to him to use the Bowie-knife than argument in another encounter with the gallant Sumner.. VIATOR. .1 II Among the Americans who attend ed the late ball given at the hotel de Ville, Paris, was Jack Spicer, of Ken tucky. Jack rushed the dress some what strong, and sported epaulette on his shoulders large enough to start, four Major Generals in business.= Jack was the observed of all oliser, vera, and got mixed up with a party that his friends could not account for. Wherever the marshals of .France went, there went Jack, and when the marshals sat down, Jack did the same, always taking the post of honor. The day after the ball, Jack called on leis old acquaintance, Mr. Mason, our Minister to France, who s tarted up a little • conversation in the following manner: hear, Jack; yoti were at the ball last night?' - was, sir, and had a high old time.' 'For which you are indebted, I .sup pose, to the high old company you got mixed up with'? ' By the way, how come you associated with the mar shals?' . 'How? by virtue of my office--thoy I were marshals of Fiance, while I am nothing else than a marshal of the Re- 1 public. I showed my commission and took post according, 'By virtue of your office; what do you mean ?' 'Read that and see.'. . Here Jack presented Mr. Mason with a white-brown paper, with a seal big enough for a four pound weight. 'What in the name of, heaven is this?' . 'My commission of 'marshal re ceived it in 1850, when I assisted in taking the census in Frankfort.' 'You don't mean to say that you travel on thiS?'• don't mean anything else. That makes me a 'mArshal' of the repulAlic, and intend to have the office duly honored.' Mr. Mason allowed that Jack was doing a large_business on a very small capital. - We should not wonder . if the reader did. 'the same. A census mar shal of Frankfort mixing in with the marshals of France is certainly rush ing matters in a manner that requires as much brass as epauletts. Jack, we are happy to say, is pxil3 re quirements. DINING AT SEA IN A GALE.—The fol lowing graphic scene on shipboard is depicted.by a correspondent of the Philadelphia Bulletin: "There is but a step from tho sublime to the ridiculous, from, the deck to'the saloon. It is rather too much trouble for a lazy man to eat on shipboard in rough weather. It would require a man to have the hundred. hands of Briareus and the hundred eyes of Ar gus, and to keep them all in constant occupation, too, to dine in safety, to -say nothing of comfort—for that, un der the circumstances, is totally out of the question: You haVe to hold on to your plate to keep it near you; to hold on to your glass of water to avoid the unnecessary. luxury of an extempore showerbith• to hold on to yourself to keep yourself at the table; to. hold on to the table to keep yourself off the top of it, and away from your neigh bors. . Besides this, to dodge or defend yourself, as the case may be, from the flying dishes that occasionally make little excursions,otf their own responsi bility. • A man that can get his victuals on board a ship'in a storm, can get hie living anyvibere; ho need have no fear of the future, so far at least as eat jag is concerned.", RENEWED ERUPTIONS of Mount Ire .SuviuS commenced on the first of May, When the form of the mountain became un'distinguiehable. - Nothing could be seen but dords, smoke;eo fire. . The scene, it is said, was: rendered, still irandee by an eclipse of the moon, which took place nbaut two hours and a half after midnight. ''. • CARING FOR STRANGE= IN A STRAW= LAND A colporteur who spends a part of his tune among the emigrants . says, "This part 'of my work lies very near my heart, and is very-cheering. An aged woman said to me as I was dis tributing tracts, "Man, I cannot read myself, but give me a leaf and - ,I will get others to read it to me. • Another said of a tract she he'd read, 'This tract'was made for me, it is a balm Tor my soul.' Another addressing the emigrants said, 'This man is sent to us. by a benevolent society.' In - Enropo we were told that there was no rol gion, no word'of God in America, but this man with bii delightful saving t: utli, has been here twice already.' " Two-men who were standing in a wagon, asked ma if:l. was a colporteur of that society of which we have al ready heard in Bremen. God has brought - him to us. Trust in God. He has always good intentions towards us.. This circumstance gained me a great deal. of confidence. I prayed with the company, and left them weeping tears of joy. A poor man with -lour 'children said, 'This Man brings to many a one, in . . his tracts, something he never got in 'Germany. I have been cheered and comforted by them, and although lam poor, will pay for !hem.' A 'great field is open. God grant that the tracts:dis tributed here, and carried to the far West, May bring forth fruit." WHERE shall the poet live?—in soli tude or society? In the great stillness of the country, where he can hear the heart of nature : beat, or in .the dark grey city, where he can bear and feel the throbbing heart of man? 1 will answer for'him, and say,' iu the dark grey city. Oh! they do - greatly err, who think that the stars axe all the poetry which cities have; and, there 'bre, that the pout's only dwelling should he in sylvan solitudes, under the greeii roof of trees._ Beautiful, no doubt, are all forms of nature, when transfigured by the miraculous power of poetry, hamlets and harvest-fields, and nut-brown waters: flowing. ever under the forest, vast and shadowy, with all the sights and sounds of hu man life? What are they but the course materials of the poet's song 1 Glorious indeed, is the world of God around us, but more glorious the world of God within us. There lies the land of song ; there lies. the poet's native land. The river of life, that flows through the streets tumUltuotis, bearing along so many gallant hearts, so many wrecks of humanity; the many homes and households, each a little world in itself, revolving around its fireside as a central sun; all forms of human grief and - suffering brought into that narrow compass;—and to be in this, and a part of .this, acting, thinking, rejoicing, sorrowing with his fellow men,stich should be the poet's life. if he would describe the world, he should live in the world.- , - , Longfellow. INCREASING THE SIZE OF rtAwEns.—:. From an exchange, we learn that a horticulturist of the suburbs of -Ver sailles, in studying the physiology of the vegetable kingdom, conceived the idea that the smallness of certain plants —the violet, for example—was owing to an atmospheric pressure too great for their delicate organs. Having fixed this idea in his mind, the florist conceived the idea of putting his the ory into practice. Providing himsel with a.pinall balloon, repderetl suffi ciently tight to , prevent the escape of any gas, he launched it into the air, having attached to it a silken cord twelve hundred meters long. Instead of a car, the balloon sustained a flow . - er-pot of Parma violets. This exper- iment has been going on about two months, with the most wonderful r; salts, in the shape of violets as large as Bengal roses. It is expected dmit the above expermenti may be turuad to some account. -CONTENTMENT.—Is that animal bet ter that bath two or three mountains to gaze on than a little bee that feeds on dew or 'mann4 - and lives upon what falls every morning from the store.; houses of - heaven, clouds :and Provi dance.? Can a man -quench his thirst better out of a river than a full., - urn. or drink better 'from the fountain which is finely ' paved with marble; than - when it wells over the 'green turf? A Nite.. . gSt it foe:hooking dat turkey' last night. .'Alas'r knows it.' " • Pompey.;--eI didn'thookit.. Wiriet de • turkey_ mas'i.. 3 l„ Well. . eat 'de . turkey, didn't I 4 'Well. - - "turkey part 'l'3'3'Bl" • sOiiiiieft turkey, but he got • more nigger. I tell ye do turkey only change places.' =NM IMIZEI NO: 8...