HUNTINGDON JO Tr -) .I%Y r • Wnout Na 170. J TERMS CF THZ 1,7T:1 , 70-2:01 , T J0UP.11.6.7... he "journal" will be published every nesday morning, at two dollars a year if IN A.)VANCE,I and if not paid within ouths, two dollars and a half. et y person who obtains five subscribers forwards price of subscription, shall be 'shad with a sixth copy gratuitiously for yea:. o subscription received for a less period six months, nor any paper discontinued I arrearages are paid. 11 communications must be addressed to Editor, post paid, or they will not be tided to. dvertisments not exceeding one square be inserted three times for one dollar for ry subsequent insertion, 25 ficents per are will be chargedt—if no detnite orderd given as to the time an adverisment is to ontinued, it will be kept in till ordeed; :, and charge accordingly. TIIE GARLAND, —"With sweetest flowers enrich'd 'yowl various gardens cull'd with care." THE SAILOR'S SICK CHILD. , Mother, when will morning come?' A 'weeping creature said; on a woe-worn, wither'd oreast It laid its little head, nd when it does, I hope 'twill be All pleasant, warm and bright, pay me for the many pangs • re felt this weary night• mother, would you not, if rich, Ike the rector, or the squire, a bright candle all the night, And make a nice warm fire? I should be so glad to see Their kind and cheerful glow! then I should not feel the night eto very long I know • is true you fold me to your heart, And kiss me when I cry— ad lift the cup onto my lip When I complain I'm dry. cross my shoulder your dear arm All tenderly is prei,s'd, id often I am lull'd to sleep Sy the throbbing of your breast. at %would be comfort, would it not, For you as well as me, o have a light— -to have a are— Perhaps—a cup of tea? gun think I should be well II these things were but so— rottaether, I remember, ones We had them—long ago. Tat you ware not a widow dun, I not an orphan boy; Vhen father. (long ago) came home I us'd to jump with joy, Iced to climb upon his knee, And cling about his neck, And listen while he told us tales Of battle and of wreck. ) had we not a bright fire then! And such a many friends! When are they all gone, mother dear ; For no one to us sends? !think if some of them would come We might know comfort now Clough of them all, not one could be Like hint I will allow, But he was sick, and then his wounds Would often give him 'pain, io that I cannot bear to wish Him with us once again, mou say that PC shall go to him In such a happy place— : wish it was this very night, That I might see his face!' ['he little murmurer's wish was heard, Before the morning broke, :Ie slept the long and silent sleep, From which he never woke; ►bove the little pain -warn thing The sailor's widow wept, %nd wonder',] how her lonely heart In vital pulses kept! iut she liv'd on, though all bereft, A toil-worn, heart-rung slave And oft she came to wet', upon Her young boy's little grave; corner of the poor-house ground Contains his mould'ring clay, knd there the mourning mother wept A sabbath's !:JLIV away. And as she felt the dull decay Through all her pulses creep, 'he cry'd, 'By his unconscious dust I'll soon hi:laid to sleep: Thar valour, patiencel/2?innocnice, Like visions will have passed, And the sailor, and his wife and child, Will have bound relief at last,' SELECT TALE, THE SAIIKE EJITER. -'Some strange commotion Is in his brain: he bites his lip, and starts; Stops on the sudden, and looks upon the ground; Then lays his finger on his temple; straight Springs nut into fast gate; then stops again, Strikes his breast hard; then anon he casts His eye against the moon; in most strange posture We have seen hi in set himself.' SIIAKS. HENRY VIII, A few years ago, near the sunset of an autumnal day, I reached a populous town on the banks of the Mississippi. An ac cident to the steam-boat, wherein I had embarked, and by which many lives lost through the carelessness of an ignorant and drunken engineer, had compelled the directors of the boat to stop with the re maining company. and repair the damages that had occurred. Alas! there were damages and evils on board that unpretending craft, which were beyond the reach of mechanist or chirur geon. The dead were strewing the deck; fragments of the boiler, and broken wheels were lying around; and masses of soot and cinders from the uncleaned blackened tht deck, On every side were corpses, and wailing friends, and tearful eyes. A few settees had been brought up from the cabin, and on the mattrasses with which they were covered, the dead were laid. It was an awful scene. Two hours before, all was well; and every heart seemed bounding with the rapid im. pulse of life and hope. I myself escaped by a miracle. I was seated at the stern of the boat, near the end window of the cabin, over the rudder, watching, as is my wont, to see the turbulent waters boil around the keel, and mark the landscape flit by and recede, A noise like an earth- quake, which made the shuddering boat recoil many yards,--a rush of hot steam through the broken windows--the hissing of the pieces from the boilers, as they dropped into the river, and after one sad pause of an instant, the shrieks of the dead and dying, sad the surviving mour ners,—these were the signs which beto kened the appalling disaster, and convin-' ced me visibly, for the first time, what a amount of pain and misery can be crow ded into a passing moment. It is a sight of horror to behold the strong man smitten down in his might; to sec the pride o f womanhood defaced and blighted by sudden death; to hear the lamentations of grief and despair, where but a little time before were heard the light laugh of pleasure, and the tones of delight. llow distant was the thought of harm, from each and all! Truly it is said by the great bard of nature,-- , We know what we are but not what we shall be.' W c weave the garlands of joy, even by the precipice of death; we disport in' the sunbeam, unmindful of the storm that is blooming afar, and will soon be at hand. The sun descended as we entered the town, which was situated o■ ascending grounds near the river. A swell of up land, overlooking near at hand a few patches of green, which I took to he cot ton fields, and which apparently coalman.' ding an extended view of the shores and course of the great Father of Rivers stretched rearward for the place. Over come with excitement and gratitude for my deliverance, and seein; also there had thronged to the wharf, a large num ber of citizens, sufficient for every pur pose of charitable assistance toward the sufferers, and the dead on board of the steam-boat, I selected that portion of my luggage which had not been destroyed, and after seeking a hotel, made the best of my way to the upland of which I have spoken. I felt like one snatched from the grave; and deeply impressed with the sense of the danger from which I had es caped through the watchfulness of a be nignant Providence, 1 determined to seek some haunt of retirement, and quiet my agitated spirits with thankful medita ' titm. When I gained the eminence, I found that the view was calculated to heighten and expand all the feelings with which "ONE COUNTRY, ONE CONSTITUTION, ONE DESTINY." A. W. BENEDICT PUBLISHER AND PROPRIETOR. HUNTINGDON, PENNSYLVANIA, WEDNESDAY JANUARY 16, 1839. my heart was surcharged, to the overflow. A few gorgeous clouds, bedight in crim son and purple, were sailing in glory along the melancholy west; dark cypres ses hung to their tops with trailing clus ters of wild vine, colored with mingled violet, amber, and emerald, stood in re lief before the horizon; while afar, on either hand, the great Mississippi was seen rolling along with a kind of quiver ing radiance, and exhibiting, even at that distance, the turbulent might, which makes it seem like prostrate Niagara. At a distance, in each extremity of the view, it was lost in dark woods and mis• ty head-lands; an emblem, most striking at the moment, of that obscurity which, like the shadow curtain in the vision of Mirza, overhung the stream of life and time, making to the Past a dream; and of the Future a vast unknown. It is impossible to describe the sensa tions which animate the bosom of an Amer ican, as he looks at this running ocean, and the long vale through which it rolls. lie gazes onward with the eye of antici pation to the not distant period, when that almost interminable stretch of land scape shall become bright with towns, and vocal with the sounds of human in dustry; when the busy hu►n of scholars at their tasks, of artists at their labors, of the husbandman folding his flocks, or garnering the rich treasures of the har vest, shall succeed the moanings of the cypress, and the mingled howlings of rosining beasts of prey, and yet wilder Indians; when the light of civilization and religion shall extend over forests and sa vannahs, until the progress of our people through the dominions of the receding Aboriginecs, shall be, in the expressive words of Scripture, •' as the morning spread upon the mountains; a great peo ple, and a strong; of whom there !lath not Ven ever the like, neither shall be any more after it, to the years of many gener ations." As I turned to survey the prospect, I saw at no great distance from the spot where I stood, a white tent, or pavilion surmounted with a parti-colored flag. which was waving to the evening breeze, and en which 1 read the words,-- , TnE Smut': EarEtt."The tent was open on one side like a door, before which there was a curtain. Benches were placed in an amphitheatrical form before the tent, which were then filling with people. The faint glimmer of an early lamp was per ceivable behind the dark curtain; and moved with curiosity, I bent my steps to ward the assemblage. I paid the requi site sum to the person who kept the gate of a picket fence which surrounded the amphitheatre, and took my seat among the crowd, in the open air. 'Twilight had now set in, and the twink. ling of the stars could be seen on the bread bosom of the Mississippi, as it mo ved ;11 voiceless solemnity towardlthe ocean. The cypresses assumed the sem blance of weird and ghastly forms against the sky; and an occasional sweep of a be lated hawk from the far oft prairies, with his dismal scream, gave token that the day had died, and its dirge was sounding. Presently, at the tinkle of a little bell. the certain of the tent was lifted. A young man was seated at a table, with a box before him, covered with glass, and apparently subdivided into two or more drawers. lie seemed eight and twenty years of age; his face was thin, and a leaded wanness overspread his features; but his sunken eye had that supernatural brightness so often seen in his eyes of the consumptive by an occasional cough; and 118 he removed his cravat, and turned his wristbands over the cuffs of the coat, he said: 'The company has' assembled to sec the Snake Eater. If any one wishes to sat_ isty himself with regard to the reptile which I am now about to devour, in the presence of you all, and to restore again from my throat alive, he will please to draw nigh.' He turned the closed cover of the box over toward the audience, as he made this observation, and disclosed to the sight a t ideous rattlesnake. It was & when disturbed, elevated its spiry bead from its circle, and while its forked tongue played with a rapid motion, it dar ted against the glass in vain attempts to escape, while its rattles continued to qui ver with a violent and whizzing sound, accompanied by that apparent flatening of the head, which denotes the highest pitch of resentment, Its dilated eye shot fire; and the coarse scales on its contorted form grew rugged in its anger. After this expose, the Snake Eater pla ced the box in its original position. A chil ly shudder ran through the assembly, when after turning his back to the behol der, he bent his face for a moment at the edge of the horred reptile with his hand. The snake now seemed languid and pas sive, though the rattles continued to sound. Its placed the head of the veno mous serpent to his lips—he opened his mouth, and the long spire began to de scend. It was an appalling sight to see that huge mcnsti•uin horroolum making its way into the throat of a human being. The cheeks of the young man began to dilate, and his complexion became a livid purple. His eyes seemed bursting from their sockets--masses of foam gathered about his lips—and lie looked as if in the severest struggles of the last mortal ago ny—as it tasting of death. Several of the audience shrieked with affright. After appal a ntly mumbling and craun ching his fearful nice!, the Snake Eater again partially opened his lips, and the forked tongue of the reptile was seen playing, like threads of bright red fire, be tween them. Presently it began to emerge. It moved very slowly, as if held back by other serpents that had preceded it, in the awful deglution of its master, As the long, loathsome folds hung from the lips and continued to extend, the fea tures of the Snake Eater assumed their wonted aspect; and in a moment, the rep tile had emerged, was replaced in the box, and the feat, was accomplished. After seating himself far a few seconds, to recover from the perilous execution of his task, the Snake Eater arose and ad dressed the audience. He desired them to believe that he had wished, not to ap pal, but to surprise them. There was, he acknowledged, an art in what he had done—but it was a mysterious and un discoverable one. 'They call me mad,' he added bitterly, 'and a conjurer; but a conjurer I am none, and though I have been mad, lam not now; yet often ds I wish I were. You will dominate my calling and of foolish haz•rard, and per haps of disgust; but did you know all, you would judge of me better. I thank you for your attendance; and I have succeeded in surprising you, my aim has been won.' The audience,• in the enthusiasm of western feeling, gave the performer three hearty cheers, and retired with wonder stricken faces. I lingered behind until the last had departed, and stepped into the tent, where the Snake Eater had drawn a few eatables from his kaapsack, which he was discussing with considerable rel ish. I found him sociable, but sad. By degrees my observations excited a sym pathy in his mind; and as we sat, toward midnight, in his solitary house of canvass, the dark Mississippi rolling below, the pale stars fretting the vault above—and the far West stretching in dimniss around, he thus began:— THE SNAKE EATER'S STORY, "I am not, my friend, what you see me. Though regarded hereabouts as one ' who has dealings with familiar spirits and wizards, I am only a heart-broken man, the child of sorrow, and almost without hope. Ido not thus speak foi your spil -1 pathy ; for your sympathy can at best but awaken afresh the wells of mournful ten derness in my breast, withoutpowing one ray of sunshine upon the troubled foun tains; they must How on in darkness, without a prospect of day. Listen to me. "Eight short years ago, with the spirit of adventure stirring within ire, I came as it were directly from the walls of a university, in one of the Atlantic states, to this 'far country.' I came with prodi gal endow melts from my father: and seek ing the their frontiers of civilization, cm barked in trade with settlers and Indians. I bought tura and sold all kinds of mer cantile riches. I prospered; my capital re-doubled itself, and in all respects I was prosperous. You may perhaps de sire to know my motive for thus leaving the charms of society, and seeking the seclusion of the wilderness. It was the strongest of motives—human affection. An uncle had preceded me, Ile had a ward, to whom I had been deeply and de votedly attached from my childhood.- - She was the paragon of her sex. I speak not as a rhapsodist, or with en thusiasm; for the loveliest being that ever came irons the hands of God into this lower world, could not excel her for beau ty. She made that beauty perfect, by the graces of a mind. pure and clear as the foaming diamond. Ifer voice was melody; her smile a burst of living and pearly light; and her calm blue eyes were the sweet expositors of a sinless affection. The young peach, when the airs and beams of summer have awakened its ri pening blushes, or the pomegranite, as it glows among the leaves that tremble to the rich chant of the nightengale, surpas sed not her cheeks, for bloom or loveli- , ness, when her fair hair was divided on her brow, and fell in masses of waving and silken gold around them. Truly, I loved her with my whole soul. She was my idol—my cynosure—the centre of ev ery desire, and the object of every aspi ration: "We were married. Time went on, and brought me a bud from the rose that I had established in my ween bower of home. We were blest indeed. Aloof from society, though we missed a few of its luxuries, we suffered none of its vex ations and demoralizing corruptions. On Sabbath days, we rode many miles through the wilderness, to worship our Maker in bib sanctuary, and hear the word of life hom the lips of those who journeyed through the ,forest en missionary enter prises,.- ambassadors from a court, of which the most noble court of earth af fords not the faintest emblem. "On the day that our dear little Sarah attained her second year, she was seated by my counter, and her mother was stan ding by, when three fierce looking ludi lans entered the store. They had evident ly travelled a long way, for their leggins were torn and dirty, and their feet were almost bare. I recognized one of them instantly, as "The Grouching Wolf, a desperate being, who hung alteinatcly around the skirts of settlements, begging for rum, or getting it in barter for small poltry, which lie obtained in the chase. Just one year before, he has visited ins for the purpose of procuring the fire-water, or ardent spirit. I refused him, and he left me with a vow of future vengeance. qlocglir said he, as he reeled up. with his grailooking companions, towards the. counter, where my child was playing, and my wife stood: 'The Crouching Wolf said he would conic back. lie wants the talking w ater,=—he wants that or revenge. He will have one!' 61 tried to reason with him,--but he was deaf to reason. He had alread y tasted from the flagon of one of his red comrades, and the fumes were in his brain. 'Come, medicine-man, the Wolf want s the fire milk. Where is it? lie cannot wait. Ilia spirits is up,'and his forehead is warm.' 'I saw that he greW desperate,—but resolution was fixed: I sternly denied him —lt was a fatal denial. Ile stepped back a few paces, growled some guttural sentences to his companions and the three then advanced toward child. I was motionless, and pariqzed with terror. As the Wolf Approached my daughter, he drew a r.miahawk from his belt, and flourished A on high. 1 sprang toward him, but was pushed back by his companions. The dear innocent, 'unaf frighted. smiled in the face of the Crouch ing Wolf, and it seemed as if the cheerful purity of her look stayed his vengeful m. He paused, until a scream from the mother aroused the terror of her first born. She shrunk back from the relent less savage, while her mullet was kept, [ Vox.. IY, No. 14 like myself, at bay, sad while her sweet red lip, chiselled liKe her mother's, was quivering with dismay, she said, in child ish simplicity— , Raiighy Indian,--if he hurts Sarah, mu will be angry, and punish him.' As she said this, sho burst into tears,—her last forever. 'ln one instant, the trenchant weapon of the infuriated Indian clove in sunder the head of my babe: in the next, his exci ted cumrads had murdered the wife of my bosom. I have an indistinct and horrid remembrance of my burning store, the red fiends yelling over the consuming roof and walls,—tny - escape to the forest; tlie rest was but silence and oblivion. I was a madman: 'Ten monitis after, I found myself its New-Orleans. I had reached the city, no one knew how,—had been conveyed to a hospital, kindly trcatod. and discharged as cured,—but an outcast and a beggar. Misfortunes seldom come single. My fath er had died,—and as I had already recei♦ ed my share of his estate, the residue mot ted away among a host of brothers. My inheritance had been destroyed by the In dians. I was without a home or a friend. 'How I subsisted, I scarcely know. At last, as I was one day walking on the levee, I saw a group collected around an Indian, who was performing certain tricks from a box, with a rattlesnake, It was the Crouching Wolf. 'The murderer of my wife and child!' I exclaimed, us I penetrated through the ring, and one huge blow felled the vile monster to the earth. I seized him by the throat.—l placed my knees open his breast. In a few moments, he was a elis_ torted and ghastly corpse beneath my feet. 'My award of retribution was consid s cred just, and no effort was made to ar rest me. Availing myself of the box be longing to the Crouching Wolf, which I contended was mine as a debt; L. seen !earnt the mystery of his art, as it were b♦ intuition. The upper drawer of the box contained the real rattlesnake; the other merely the skin of oar, which could be inflated by the breath, at will. The mo tion ,of the tongue, which was dried, and had wit4s within, was produced by load stone; the movement of the rattles by the same cause.• 'Filled from the lungs, it could readily be taken into the mouth, and compressed into a very small compass,--and while re. passing outward, inflated again. I bdught a new skin from a museum, which I. kil led, and prepared according to the mod el :before me. I could not endure the thought of even using 'the same instru ments formerly employed by the destrey er of all that I most loved on earth, and I f turned from his trickery with a feeling o f almost positive loathing. A little prac tice made me au adept in the mystery of snake-eating,--and t have since wander tiered in loneliness from town to town; attempting this curious enterprise. My pecuniary success has been sufficient for my comfort and convenience,•—and the feat is only in appearance. With a slight exertiou, I can resolve My face into the colors and contortions you witnessed this evening, and which heighten the interest of the spectacle.t But these things can only temporarily divert my thoughts,— for I carry within my heart an aching fr yer, which no prosperity can allay or re. move. The objects that have cheered ins caw c h eer m e no more. I stand alone in this w ilderness world,--a mourner and a pilgrim, My visions arc of my wife and 'child; my day dreams are of the n; but I must suffer as you see, until I meet them in that better country, where the sun de scends not, and darkness is unknown, where the wicked cease from troubling, and the weary are at rest. I can forget my child,— for her existence seems to ins like a misty trance,--in the fond assu rance that the sparkling dewsdrop has ex haled to heaven; but for the cherished rose that sustainediit, I cease not to grieve. Alas, for the wife of my bosom! Well can I say, with one who, perhaps, has loved and mourned like me;