HUNTINGDON JOURNAL: WHOLE No. 183.] TERMS oP Tint ZIVIITINOMON :01:71%11.6.L. The "Journal" will be published every Wednesday morning, at two dollars a year if . iaid IN ADVANCE, and if not paid within fix months, two dollars and a half. Every person who obtains five subscribers Lod forwards price of sobstription, shall be irnished with a sixth copy gratuitiously for me year. _ N•isubscriptionreceived for a less period Ilan six months, nor any paper discontinued utiti I arrearages are paid. MI commuhications must be addressed to he f.ditor, post paid, or they will not be Nitended to. .• A dv,rtisments not exceeding one square ball be inserted three times for one dollar for every subsequent insertion, 25 ficents per quart will be charged:—if n 9 detnite nrclerd sre given as to the time an adverisenent is to 'se cgatinued, it will be kept in till ordeed; hat, and charge accordingly. Tat GARLAND. -- ,, W ith sweetest flowers enrich'd Frain various gardens cull'd with care." From the Sunday Morning News. THE OLD CLOCK: BY JAMES NACK. Two yankee wags one summer day, Stopped at a tavern on their *ay, Supped, frolicked, late retired to rest, And woke to breakfast on the best. The breakfast over, Torn and Wilt sent for the landlord and the bill; Will looked at over; "Very right , — tut hnld ! what wonder meets my sight! Tom! the surprise is quite a shock!"— "What wonder? where"-. , "The clock! the dock!" Tom nod the landlotd in Rhin'. ;Stared at the clock with stupid gaze. And for a moment neither spoke; M last the landlord silence broke—=' "You mean the clock that's ticking there? I see no wonder I declare, Tho' may be, if the truth were told, 'Tis rather ugly=-somewhat old; Yet time it keeps to half a minute: But, it you please, what wonder's in it?" "Tom, don't you recollect." said Bill; "The clock at Jersey heat the mill, The very image of this present, With which I won the wager pleasant?" Bill ended with a knowing wink— Tom scratched his head and tried to think. "Sir, begging pardon for inquiring," The landlord said, with grin admiring; "What wager was it?" "You remember It happened, Tcm, in last December, In sport I bet r Jersey Bloc That it was more than he could do, To make his finger go and come In keeping with the pendulum, Repeating, till one hour should close, Still, 'Here she goes--andahere the goes'— He lost the bet in Italia minute." "Well, if /would, the devil's in it!" Exclaimed the landlord; "try me yet. And fifty dollars be the bet." "Agreed, but we will play some trick To make you of the wager sick." "I'm up to that!" "Don't make us wait, Begin. The clock is striking eight. Ho seats himself, and left and right His finger wags with all its might, And hoarse his voice and hoarser grows With—'Here she goes—and there she goes!' "Hold!" said the Yankee, 'plank the ready!' The landlord wagged his finger steady, While his left hand, as well as able: Conyer.cl a purse upon the table. "Torn, with the money let's be off!" This made the landlord inward scoff! He heard them running down the stair, But was nct tempted from his chair; Thought lie, "the fools! I'll bite them yet! So poor a trick shan't win the bet." And loud and loud the chorus rose Of, "here ally goes—and there she goes!" While right and left his finger swung, In keeping to his clock and tongue. His mother happened in to see Her daughter; "where is llfre. 11--P When will she come. as you suppose? Son?" "Here the gore—and Mere she gore!" "Here! where!—" the lady in surprise His finger followed with her eyes; "Son,. why that steady gaze and sad— Those words.•-that rpotion—are you mad?— But here's your wife—perhaps she knows, "Here ahe goes—and Mere she goes!" His wife surveyed him with alarm, And rushed to him and seized his arm; He shook her off. and to and fro His finger persevered to go, While curled his very nose with ire, That she against him should conspire, And with more furious tone arose The, here she goei—and there she goes." .I.awl“!' screamed the wife. 'l'm in a whirl! Run down and bring the little girl; She is his darling, and Who knows But"- "Here she goes—and there she goes!'" "Lawks! he is mad! what made him thus? Good Lord! what will become of us? Run for a doctor—run—run—run— For doctor Brown, and doctor Dun, For doctor Black, and doctor White; And doctor Grey, with all your might." The doctors came, and looked and wondered, And shook their heads, and paused and pon- dered, 'Till one proposed he should be bled, "Nc—leeched you mean—"the other said 'Clap on a blister,' roared another, 'No—cup him'—no trepan him, brother I' A sixth would recommed a purge, The next would an emetic urge, The eighth, just come from a dissection,. His verdict gave for an injection; The last produced a box of pills, A certain cure for earthly ills; 'I had a patient yesteruight,' Quoth he, 'and wretched was her plight,. And as the only means to save her Three dozen patent pills I gave her; And by to-morrow I suppose That'— 'Here she goes—and there she goes!' 'You are all fools;' the lady said, 'The way is, just to shave his head,. Run, bid the barber come anon'— 'Thanks mothe,' thought her clever son, .Yori help the knaves that would have bit me, But all creation shan't outwit me!' This t o himself, while to and fro His hn ger perseveres to go, And from his lip no accent flows But ' here the goes—and there she goer.' fhe barber came— , Lord help him! what A queerish customer I've got; But we must do our best to save him— So hold him; gemmen, while I shave h im!, But here the doctors interpose- - - 'A woman never'---, There die goes!' IA woman is no judge of physic, Not even when her baby is sick. He must be bled'— .no—no—a blister'-- .A purge you mean'—'l say a dyster'— .Nc—cup him—' 'leech him—"pills! pills! pills!' And all the house the uproar fills. What means that smile!what means that shiver? The landlords limbs with rapture quiver, And triumph brightens up his face— His finger yet shall win the race! The clock is on the stroke of nine— And up he starts—.'Tas mine! 'tts mine!' 'What do you mean?'' mean the fifty? I never spent an hour so thrifty, But you who tried to make me lose, Go to the devil, if you choose; But ho' . v is this? %%here are they?' 'The gentlemen—l mean the two Came yesterday—are they below?' 'They galloped off an hour ago.' 'Oh, purge me! blister! shave and bleed! For, curse the knaves, I'm mad indeed!' The Maine Legislature has granted a di vorce to Col. Ebenezer Cosa, and his wile, Mary BACON. The Colonel is on the wrong side of fifty, while the bride has just passed the right side of twenty. For this divorce, the only course. That wisely could be taken, Fair Mary sued—the cause was proved, And thus she saved her BACON! Can any blame the youthful dame, Who gave the court a job? When all the corn is shelled and gone Say—who would keep the Cosa? For age and want sate while you may; No morning sun lasts a whole day. "ONE COUNTRY, ONE CONSTITUTION, ONE DIISTINY." W. BENEDICT PUBLISHER AND PROPRIETOR HUNTINGDON, PENNSYLVANIA, WEDNESDAY, APRIL 17, 1839. Iftfotettant ono. From Chambers' Edinburg Journal, THE FORTUNES OF A COUNTRY GIRL. One day, I will not say how many years ago—for I intend to be very mysterious for a time with my readers—a young woman stepped from a country wag on that had just arrived at the yard of the famous Chelsea Inn, the Goat and Compasses, a name termed by corrupt ing times out of the pious original "God encomposeth us." The young woman seemed about the age of 18, and was decently dressed, though in the plainest rustic fashion of the times. She was well formed and well looking, both form and looks giving indications of the ruddy health consequent upon exposure to the sun and air in the country. After stepping from the wagon, which the driver immediately led into the court yard, the girl stood for a moment in apparent uncer tainity whether to go, when the mistress of the inn who had come to the] door, ob served her hesitation, and asked her to enter' and take rest. The young woman readily obeyed the invitation, and soon, by the kindness of the landlady,found her self by the fire side of a nicely sanded parlour, whsrewithall to refresh herself after a long and tedious journey. "And so, my poor girl," said the land lady, after having heard, in return for her kindness, the whole particulars of the young woman's situation and history, 'so thou bast come all this way to seek service, and had no friend but John Hodge, the wagoner? But he is like to give the poor help, wench, towards getting a place.'' "Is service, then, difficult to be had 1" asked the young woman, sadly. "Ah, marry, good situations, at least, are hard to find. But have a good heart, child," and as she continued, she looked around her with an air of pride and dignity "thou seest what I have come to myself; and I left the country a young thing just like thyself, with as little to look too. But 'tisn't every one for certain must look for such a fortune, and in any case it must be wrought for. I showed myself a good servant, before my poor old Jacob, heaven rest his soul, made me mistress of the Goat and Compasses. So mind thee, girl —" The landlady's speech might have gone on a long way; for the dame loved well the sound of her own tongue, but for the interruption occasioned by the entrance of a gentleman, when the landlady rose and welcomed him heartily. "Ha! dame," said the newcomer, who was a stout respectable attired person of middle age, "how sells the good ale?— scarcely a drop left in thy cellars, I hope?' "Enough left to give your worship a draught after your long walk," as she' rose to fulfill the promise implied in her words. "I walked not," was the gentleman's return, "but took a pair of ours, dame, down the river. Thou knowest I always come to Chelsea myself to see if thou lack est any thing." "Ah, sir," replied the landlady, "and it is by that way of doing business that you have made yourself, as all the city says, the richest man in all the Brewers Corpo ration, if not in London itself." "Well, dame, the better for me if it is so," said the brewer with a smile; "but let us have the mug and this quite pretty friend of thine shall pleasure us, mayhay, by tasting with us." The landlady was not long in produce. ing a stoop of ale, know that her visiter never set an example hurtful to his own interests by countenancing the consump tion of foreign spirits. "Right, hostess," said the brewer, when he had tasted it, "well made and well kept, arid that is giving both thee and me our dues. Now pretty one," said he, filling one of the measures of glasses which had been beside the stop, "wilt thou drink this to thy sweetheart's health?" The poor country girl to whom this was addressed, declined the proffered civility, and with a blush; but the landlady ex claimed, "Come, silly wench, drink his worship's health; he is more likely to get thee a service, if it so pleased him, than, John Hodge, the wag-mer." "This girl has 'come many a mile," continued the hostess, "to seek a place in the town, that she may burden her family no more at home.' 'Who?' "'L e o seek service!" exclaimed the brew er; "why then perhaps it is well met with us. Has she brought a character with her or cart you speak tur her dame?" "She has never yet been from home, sir but her face is her character," said the kind-hearted landlady; "1 warrant she will be a dilligent and trusty one." "Upon thy prophecy, hostess, will I take her into my own service; fur but yes terday was complaning of the want of help, since this deputyship brought me more in the way of entertaining the people of the ward." Ere the wealthy brewer and deputy left the Goat and Compasses, arrangements were made for sending the country girl to his house in the city on the following day. Proud of having done a kind action, the garulous hostess took advantage of the circumstance to deliver an immensely ' long harangue to the young woman on her new duties and on the dangers to which youth is exposed in large cities. The girl heard her kind benefactress with modest thankfulness. hut a more minute observer than the good landlady might have seen in the eye and countenance of the girl a qui et firmness of expression, such as might have induced the cutting short of the lecture. However, the landlady's lecture did end, and towards the evening of the day following her arrival at the Goat and Compasses, the youthful rustic found her self installed as housemaid at the dwel ling of the rich brewer. The fortune of this girl it is our purpose to follow. The first change in her condi tion which took place subsequent to that related, was her elevation to the vacated post of housekeeper in the brewer's fam• ily. In this situation she was brought more than forint:llv in contact with her master, who found ample means for ad miring her propriety of conduct, as well as her skillful economy of management.— By degrees he begu n to fi nd her presence necessary to his happiness; and being a man both of honorable and independent mind, he at length offered her his hand. It was accepted; and she, who but four or five years before had left her country home barefooted, became the wife ut one of the richest citizens of London. For many 'years Mr. Aylesbury, for such was the name of the brewer, and his wife, lived in happiness and comfort to gether. He was a man of good family and connections, and consequently of high• er breeding than his wile could boast of, but on no occasion had he ever to blush for the partner whom he had chosen. Her calm, inborn strangth, :f not dignity of character, conjoined with an extreme quickness of precivtion, made her till her place at her husband's teble with as much grace and credit as if she hat'. bola to the station. And as time ran on, the respectability of Mr Aylesbury's position received a gradual increas . e. Ile became an Aldermen, and, subsequently sherilt• of the city, and in consequence of the lat ter elevation was knighted. Afterwards— and now a part of the mystery projected at the commencement of this story must be broken in upon, as far as time is con eerned--atter..!•ards, the important !dace which the weAthy brewer hard hl the city, called down upon him the attention and favor of the king Chiles I, then anx ious to conciliate the good will of the citi zens, and the city knight received the farther honor of a baronetcy.. • Lady Aylesbury, in the first year cf het carried life, gave birth to a daughter, who proved an oak child, and tounol whom, as was natural, all the hopes and and wishes of the porent'; entwined them selves. This daughter had only reacl,ed the age of seventeen when her father died, leaving an immense fortune behind him. It was at first thought that the widow and her daughter would become inheritors of this without a shadow of dispute. Bet it proved otherwise. Certain relatives of the deceased brewer set up a plea upon the foundation of a will made before the deceased had married. With her wanton ' firmness, Lady Aylesbury immediately took steps for the vindication of her own and her child's rights: A young lawyer who had been a frequent guest at her husband's table, and of whose abilities she had formed a high opinion, was - the person whom she fixed upon as legal as ' serter of her cause. Edward fTyde was, indeed,'a youth of great abilityfthough!on , ly twenty years of tge at the time referred to, and though he spent much of his youth ful time in the gay and fashionaale circles of the day, he had not neglected the pur suits to which his family's wish, as well as his own tastes, had devoted him. But it was with considerable hesitation, and with a feeling of anxious diffidence that he con sented to undertake the charge of Lady Aylesbury's case; for certain strong tho' unseen and unacknowledged sensations, were at work in his bosom, to make him fearful of the responsibility and anxious about the result. The young lawyer, however, became counsel for the brewer's widow, and daughter, anti by a stricking exertion of eloquence. and display of legal ability, gained their suit. Two days after the successful pleader was seated beside his two clients. Lady Aylesbury's usual manner was quiet and composed, but she now spoke warmly of her gratitude to the preserver of her daughter from want, and also tendered a fee—a payment munifi cent, indeed, for the occasion. The young lawyer ditllnot seem at ease during Lady Aylesbury's expression of her feelings. lie shifted upon his chair, changed color, looked at Miss Aylesbury, played with the purse before him. tried to speak but stopped short, and changed color again. Thinking only of best expresin , e her grat itude, Lady Aylesbury appeared not to observe her visitor's confusion, but arose, saying 'ln token that I hold your services above compensation in money, I wish also' to give you a token of my gratitude in another shape." As she spoke thus, she drew a bunch of keys from her pocket. which every lady carried in those days, and left the room. What passed during her absence be tween the parties whom she left together, will be best known by the result. When she returned she found herdaughter stand ing with averted eyes, but her hand with- ; in that of Edward Hyde, who knelt on the mothers entrance, and sought her consent to their union. Explanations of the feeling which the parties entertained for each other ensued, and she was not long in giving the desired consent. "Give me leave, however," said she to the lover "to place around your neck the memorial which I intended for you. This chain•"— it was a superb gold one—'•was a token of gratitude from the ward in which he lived, to my dear husband." Her calm serious eyes were filled with tears as she threw the chain round Edward's neck, saying, "These links were born on the neck of a worthy and honored man. flay, thou, my beloved son, attain to still higher honors." The wish was fulfilled, though not until danger and suffering tried severely the parties concerned. The son•in-law of f Lady Aylesbury became an eminent mem ber of the English bar, and also an impor tant speaker in arliament. When Oliver Cromwell brought the king to the scaffold' and established the Commonwealth, Sir Edward hyde—for he held a government post and was knighted—was too prom ' tient a member of the royalist party to escape the enmity of the new rulers, and was obliged to reside in the continent till the restoration. When abroad, he was so much esteemed by the exiled prince, (af terwards Charles II,) as to be appo , nted Lord high Chancellor of England, which appointment was confilmed When the king nnis ree+tired to his throne. `mite years atter Hyde was elevated to the peerage, first in the rank of a baron, and subse quently as Earl of Clarendon, a title which lie made famous in English history. i'hese events, a o briefly nar"ated, oe cupied a large space of time, during which Lady Aylesbury passed her days in quiet and retirement. She had now the plea sure of beholding her daughter Countess of Cl:Hendon ; and tf seeing the grand children, who had been born of her. using. gle as equels ns noblect of the land. But a still inure exhalted fate aralted the poor friendless girt who had cosine to Loudon in search of service, in a wagoner's van. Ilcr grand-daughter, Ann Ilyde, a young lady of spirit., wit, and Leanty, had been appointed, while her family staid abroad, one of the imids of :senor to the Princes of Orange, and in that situation had attrac ted so strongly the regards of James, puke of York, and brother of Charles ii, that he contracted a private marriage with her. The birth of a child forced on a public announcement of this contract, and crc long the grand-daughter of Lady Aylts bury was openly received by the royal family, and the people of England, as Duchess of York, and sister-in-law to the soverign. Lady Aylesbury did not long survive this event. But era she dropped into the grave, at a ripe old age, she saw her de scendents heirs presumptive to the British crown. K ing Charles had married but had no legitimate issue, and, acccrdingly, his brother's family had die prospect and the rights of succession. And, in reality, two immediate descendents of the barefooted country girl did ultimately fill the throne; Mary (wife of William III,) and Queen Anne, Princesses both of illustrious memory, Such were the fortunes of a young wo man of whom the worthy landlady of the Goat and Compasses was fearful of en couraging to rash hopes by a reference to the lofty position which it had been her own fate to attain in life. In one asser tion, at least, the hostess was undoubtely riAlit—that success in life must be labour , ed for in some way or other. Without the prudence and propriety of conduct which won the esteem and love of the hrewer, the sequal of the country girl's history could not have been such as it is. THE LAST SPECIMEN OF WESTERN ELOQUENCE. 'Gentleman of the jury, whar has the stranger been travelling to?—that's what would like to know. He's shown a great deal of college larnin'. He's soak with old Socrates, ripped with old Euripi des; roamed with old Romulus, and canted with old Canthardes—but what the h—l does he know about the laws of Arkan 'saw?--that'a what I'd like to know." [VOL. IV, No 27 A LESSON FOR COQUETTES. "We have a visitor to-day," said Lord Pallister to his niece, the lovel" Elizabeth Pallieter, who was on a visit for a week to her right lion. uncle. “IVlre. is it,” said the lady, "a lady or gentleman'!" gentleman—Mr. Jones." "And who is Mr. Jones—is it Bumper Squire Jones, or the renowned Tom?" But we will ease his lordship the trouble of describing who Mr. Jones was. He was simply Mr. Jones, of Piercefield in the county of Suffolk. Now this discrip tion is very short but it is quite sufficient to describe Mr. Jones. It is evident he was not of very ancient gentility--had he been so, he would basic been Mr. Jones of Piercetield Hall, or Piercefield Manor; he was not a retired merchant, or he would have been Mr. Jones of Piercefield House; neither could he have been a retired shop keeper, or his hoarse would have been dig nified with the euphonies name of Rose Villa, or Bellevue Cottage, or Piercefield Lodge. But Mr. Jones' house was a very good house, it stood on a lawn only one hundred yards from the road-side, and the entrance-gate was suspended between massive stone piers, surmounted with round balls. It is, therefore, evident that its owner was a man of a small indepen- I dent for tune, and he was a gentleman by two or three descents. Now, Mr. Jones was a bachelor, his age twenty five, his ed ucation such as he could obtain at a cele brated, endowed school in the neighbor hood; he was eminently handsome, but he was "gootinatu red and well-disposition ed, and a special favourite of Lord Pal lister. Now, Miss Pallieter, beside being a wit was a little bit of a coquette—just suffi - - tient ofevil in her disposition to prevent ber being an angel, but she was a very charming lady. She therefore debated wills herself as to the course she should pursue toward Mr. Jones, whether she should abash the poor squire by her sa tire, astonish hilts by her wit, or facinatie hint by her condescension, and finally de termined to be ruled by circumstances. Accordingly after being introduced to our squire, Miss Paliister occupied ihe five minutes which usually intervene between the completion of the toilet and the ser vinT of dinner in surveying the fortress she ment to r.ttack. 'Not at all distirF guished in his appearance," was her first !thought, "but the man Is decidedly hand souse," her second. People may talk of their appreciation of intelleetaal.gifts but there are few who are indifferent to personal beauty; and when Mr. Jones led the lady to the dining room, he was favoured with the sweetest of smiles, and during dinner, and until she retired to the drawing-room, she had I directed the fu'l battery of her charms !and graces against the heart of Mr. Jones. She was witty without ill-nature, and vi vacious without being, rude; but 'then she was alone she confessed to herself that in all appearance her labor had been thrown away. Janes had listened to her conver sation, but he had not expressed, and did not seem to feel, any great admiration of either her wit or her hieauty; but his polite replies and accommodating affirmatives were given with a degree of r-oodhamour -led nonchalance that convinc ed Miss Pal lister, to her great mortification, that she bad failed in her attack on his heart. 'A niece country squire to be thus invulneraa ble to charms which; have drives half the fashionable world mad,' thought she, 'it is wonderful?' and Miss Pallister was not vain in so thinking—it was a 'fact. 'The man is not a foal either, and the fellow is handsome.' She coloured, though alone, as this idea a second time occcurred. She the star, or rather the sun of fashion, was not surely losing her own heart without obtaining another in exchange. Pshaw! it was ridiculous, but this did notprevent bet, when the party reassembled, from re newing her attack, and she again failed; for Jones, from the effects of good wine 4* Miss Pallister's encouragement, had be come rather talkative, and to her surprise he talked remarkably well; for though not brilliant he hail good sense, had read a great deal and had a good memory. The evening soon passed away, the lady on reviewing the events of the day, was nor. tified to confess that, not only had she made no impression on Mr. ..loins, but she began to suspect that her own heart was net invulnerable; she ***colleeted that she had listened with . pleastire,;to Jones' dts• quisition on the Ptolemaick kings, dhe who had never listened for two minuted to.. settler to anybody--it was omnious. The intercourse between the parties tai rame daily of a more particular descrip tion, and Miss Pallister was deligted to find that she had subdued the stubborn heart of Jones. How she would tease hint when he had once been brought to confer= stun. But to bring about this confession was more difficult than the lady expected. It she gave him encouragement In tk6 presence of her uncle ; knee world to - low het lead bnskley enough; but alone