HUNTINGDON JOURNAL. Irnote No. 196.1 TERMS OF TON FIVNTINCMON .TO'O7.IIA.L. The "Journal" will be published every 'iriviliirsday morning, at two dollars a year if IN A DVANCK, and if not paid within s 4 months, two dollars and a half. Every person who obtains five subscribers and torwards price of subscription, shall be farmshed with a siVlt copy gratuitiously for one year. N isn'iscription received for a less perinti than lilt 111011til% nor any paperdisconti tttt ed untikarrearages are paid. . All c mniuhicatimis most be addressed to the Editor, post paid, or they will not be ntetided to. Advertisments not exceeding one square will' be inserted three times for one dollar fur every subsequent insertion, 25 ficents per square will be charged:—if no detnite °Herd are given as to the tune an adverisment is to be continued, it will be kept in till ordced out, and charge accordingly. To the Public. THE public arc hereby inform.d, that JACOB MILLER ;has been appointed agent for Huntingdon county, fur the wile of Dr, Evans' Camomile and family apo icnt pills, . • irheee all those that nerd medicine, can be supplied as he intends always to have a sup ply unhand. WE AND HE ALT IL—Persons whose . aia nerves have I e in injured by Calomile, or excessive grief, great loss-of blood, the sup pression of accustomed discharges or cuta aeons, intemperate habits, or other causes which tend to relax and enervate the ner- von system, will find a friend to soothe and contort them, in EVANS' CAMOMILE PILLS. Those afflicted with Epilepsy or Falling Sickness, Palsy, Serious Apoplexy, and organic affections of the heart, Nausea, Winding, pains in the side, breast, limbs, head, stomach or hack, will find themselves imniediately relieved, by using EVANS' CAMOMILE AND APERIENT PILLS. - I[ll‘. EVANS dOeS not Pretend to say that his medichie will cure all diseases that flesh and Mood ahe heir to,.but he does says that in sll Debilitated and Impaired Constitutions --in Nervotts diseases of all kinds, particular ly of the I/IGESTIVE ORGANS, and in Incipient Cdnsumption, whether of the lungs Or Ivor., they will cure. That dreadful dis ease. CONSUMPTION, Might have been checked in its commencement, and disap pointed its iirey all over the land, if the first syniiitoms Nervous pehility had been c.Miiteracted by the CAMOMILE FLOW ER ,chentically prepared; together with many other diseaies, where other remedies have &rved tat:A: How many persons do Vec daily find tortu relt with that dreadbil disease, SICK FADACHE, If they would only make trial of tliit invaluable medicine, they would perceive that life it a pleasure and nbt a coUrce of thisery and abhorrence. In conclu shin I would warn nervous persons against the abstraction of BLOOD, either by leech es, iCupping,lor the emPloyment of the lancet. Drastic,purgatives hi delicate habits are al most equally improper. Those ;are prac tices toti often resorted tc In such cases, but they seldom fail to prove Ihighly . itijttrions. Certificates of cures are daily received which add sufficient testimony of the great efficacy of this invaluable medicine, in relieving af flicted mankind. The above medicine is for sale at Jacob Miller's store, Huntingdon W . Swayne's Compound SOup of Orli • 'sus of Virginians or wild Cherry. ' This syrup is highly . beneficial in all pecto ' ral affections; also, in diseases of the chest in which the lungs do not perform their proper office from want of due nervous energy: such as asthmas, pulmonary con sumption, recent or chronic coughs, hoarse toss, wheoping cough, wheezing and fieulty of breathing, croup and spitting of blood, Ate. lbw litany sufferers do we daily behold apprdachin e , ,, to an untimely grave, wrested in the hlodm of youth from their dear relatives and friends, afflicted with that common and destreciite rava ger, called consumption, which soon warts the miserable sufferer until they become beyeiid ,the power of human skill; it such sufferers would only make a trial of Dr. Swayne's invaluable medicine, they would soon find themselves benefitted; thati by gulphing the various ineffective certain remedies of which our newspapers daily abound. This syrup immediately begins to heal the ulcerated lungs, stopping pro time night sweats, mititigating the distres s* cough at the same time inducing a, t heillthy awl natural expectoration, also re hewing the shortness of breath and pain in the chest, which harrase the sufferer on the slightest exercise, and filially the hec tic flash in the pallid and emaciated cheek will soon begin to vanish, and the sufferer will here peceive himself snatched from a premature grave, into the enjoyment again of comfortable health. For sale at Jacob Miller's store Hunt. EAD THIS!: DR. SW AYNE'S COM— M./ POUND SYRUP of PRUNES VIR GINIAN A, or WILD CHERRY: This is de cidedly one of the hest remedies for Coughs and Colds now in use: it allays irritation of the Lungs, lo isms the cough, causing the plops to raise free and easy; in Asthma, Pulmonary Consumption, Recent or Chron ic Coughs, Wheezing & Choking of Phlegm Hoarseness, Difficulty of breathing, Croup, Spitting of Blood, &c. 'lids Syrup is war- ranted to effect a permanent cure, it taken according to directions which accompany th e bottles. For sale only at Jacob Miller's stors Huntingdon. THE GARLAND. —"With sweetest flowers enricled 'tom various gardens cull'd wills care." THE DRUNKARD. I had a father—the grave is his bed: I had a mother—she sleeps with the dead; Freely I wept when they left me alune— But I shed all my tears on • their grave and their stone; I planted a willow—l planted a yew, And left them to sleep till the last trumpet blew! 'ortune was mine, and I mounted her car— 'leasure from virtue had beckoned me far; hiward 1 went, like an avalanche down, And the sunshine of fortune was changed to a frown, Fortune waA gone, and I took to my side, A young, and lovely, and beautiful bride! Her I soon treated with coldness and scorn, Tarrying back till the break of the morn; Slighting her kindness & mocking her fears: Casting a blight on her tenderest years; Sad and neglected and weary I left her— Sorrow and care of her reason bereft her— Till like a star, when it falls from its pride, She stink on the bosom of misery and died! I had a child, and it grew like a vine— Fair as the rose of Damascus was mine: Fair-8c I watched o'er,lter innocent youth, ,As an angel from heaven would watch over truth; She grew like her mother, in feature & form; Her blue eye was languid,her cheek too was warm: Seventeen summers had shone on her brow; The seventeenth winter beheld her laid low Yonder they sleep in their graves, side by side, A father mother—a tlauLllter—a bride When they all left me I stood here alone— None of my race or kindred wad known! Friends all forsaken, and hope dll departed; Sad and despairing, and desolate hearted. Feeling no kindness for aught that was W- I man— _ Hatecll} , man, and detested by woman— Bankrupt in tortune, and ruined in name— Onward 1 kept in the pathway of shame! And till this hour since my father went down, My brow has but known a continual frown, Go to your children and tell them the talc; Tell Client his check, too, was lividly pale; Tell theth his eye was all blood-shot & cold; Tell them his purse was a stranger to gold; Tell them he passed through the world they arc ini The victim of sorrow, and Misery; and sin; Tell them when life's shameful conflicts were past; lit horror and anguish he perished at last. Atlett rate: From the Southern Literary Messenger. The Loser's Talisman; or, the Spirit Bride. DT YRS. SEIM SMItII. "Anna" said the young collegian, "you are a noble girl—no die away airs, because your lover is so long absent; no making all the rest of your admirers feel, that they are just the last persons in the world that you care any thing about--no, no; you are not so selfish as that, Anna." A shadow passed over the face of the fair girl, and the smile died away upon her lips. "Indeed, cousin, this might be a cutting reproach; but you do not intend it as such— I know you do not." "Never," said the youth passionately ; "I meant mill to commend my cousin's sweetness of temper—her constancy Anna raised her linger. "I have issued my interdict upon that score, cousin; but do you know I have a 'Talisman that will ensure ins the constan cy of William—and it is of a kind, too, that is valueless in case of fickleness upon mypart !" -Indeed ; initiate me into its mysteries, Anna ; there are a pair of blue eyes, that I should like amazingly to fix for me alone; and when you are inni red, sweet coz, per haps your-Talisman will he transferable." "Aunt can describe its virtues best, cousin George ; and if she will tell you the story of Hannah Newton, you will never he at a leas to understand the na ture of the Lover's Talisman." Mrs. 11. the aunt, raised her eyes from her needle, and a faint sal le played over "ONE COUNTRY, ONE CONSTITUTION, ONE DESTINY." A. W. BENEDICT PUBLISHER AND PROPRIETOR. HUNTINGDON, PENNSYLVANIA, WEDNESDAY, JULY 24, 1839. .her placid features.—She was an unmarn ed lady of nearly fifty, dressed with great simplicity, her gray hair neatly parted over her forehead, which was still smooth and fair. The plain muslin cap, with its fine satin strings, denoted a member of the So ciety of Friends. " nee is very fond of that atoll, Anna ; but thee must not rely too much upod the power of the Talisman, as thee calls it ; for ours is the constant sex, Anna, and we remember long, it may be, alter %re ere fut. gotten." I observed a faint blush stole to her check as she uttered this, and for the first time 1 began to ask myself why Mrs. B. (I use the English terns of Mrs. as applied to ladies of a certain age, I think it dig. stilled, and altogether proper,) with all her sweetness of manner, and femitsi tie excel lences, should still have remained, like "the last rose of summer, left blooming alone." 'But the tone of the voice, the flitting blush, and more than all, the senti ment she had expressed, revealed to one at once a record of wasted affections, of lone ly watching, and midnight tears--of the bitterness of sorrow, known only to who seeth in secret, and of that "conceal ment, that preyed' like a worm in the bud" Lpon the humais heart. Mrs. It., from that time, became with me an advocate for the whole sisterhood of thoie who are to seek for a kindred spirit amongst the pure essences of the invisible world, instead of the grosser elements of earth. She told the story with a grace and pathos, that I dare not even hope to transfer to my pages—l can only give the details, leaving my readers to imagine the many line touches of feeling and beauty, which could be imparted only by the lips of Mrs. 13. THE STORY OF MRS. B. Hannah Newton, at sixteen, was mere ly a quiet, sweet-looking girl, with small pretentious to beauty; for she had noth ing of that regularity of feature, and bril liancy of complexion, that are supposed to be essential to it. She was neither a a blond nor a brunette, but a mixture of both—her eyes were neither black nor blue ; they were, I believe, hazel, but they owed much of their power to long curved lashes that veiled their extreme tenderness 'of expression, and made them appear lunch darker than they really were. 1 say this of Hannah in the early part of her life, for at thirty she was called beautiful by those to whom an elevated expression of countenance, combined with softness and grace of manners, constitute beauty. Her mother was a pale, gentle woman, with large blue eyes, who had always been an invalid, and whose delicacy of look and demeanor contrasted strongly with the rough, harsh manners of her husbantl. Constant ill health had Made her winning and dependent as a child; yet beneath all this softness of exterior; she carried a fix edness of principle, an elevation of mind, and strength of purpose, that had their full share of influence diver her stern, im perious companion. Whatever might have been his previous irritation of feeling, no sooner did he enter the presence of hit wife, than all traces of it disappeared, even as if hie rigid brow had been swept by the wing of his good angel. Hannah had inherited all the fine wo manly qualities of her mother, superad ded to an excellent constitution, and a dash of her father's energy of will.—lt was well for her that it was so, for even from a child the duties of a woman had been exacted front her, and she was at once sister and mother to the little group about the domestic hearth. As she ap preached maturity, she became the friend and companion of her mother, the nurse of her Bich room, and even the utterer of her religious faith and devotion, as physi cal suffering sometimes dimmed the vivid ness of exalted truths. At such times the high-minded girl might be Seen kneeling by the bedside, and with clasped hands, pouring forth the simple, fervent prayer of a young heart, deeply responding to the blessed truths of revelation. The mother pressed her to her bosom with tears and blessings, for her progress to the tomb was made a pleasant pilgrim. age, while cheered and supported by such a child. At this time an addition was made to the little family, in the person of a youth of rare piety, and such powers of intellect as to warrant the elders in settiio , aside their ordinary rules for his benefit.—An drew Horton was an orphan, left penny less by his young parents, who both died of an epidemic when he was scarcely a year old; beryocathing this their only earth ly gift, to the charity of the church. He became, as it were, the property of the church, and each individual of it claimed a right for the discharge of kindly ollices in belial fol . the little orphan. As he grew up, lie was, evidently, not unworthy of their solicitude. Ile was of rare modes ty, deep piety, and such wonderful intel lectual endowments, that all eyes turned to him, as one destined to become a lea- der in Israel, a burning and a shining light in the temple of the Lord, Unusual care was bestowed upon his education, as was Meet for one who was hereafter to become the expounder of the Word, and a voice to the people of the Lord. Friend Newton had now claimed his privilege of entertaining, at least for one year, the favored youth, while he should prosecute his studt!s, and engage in those acts of devotion and piety, which so much engrossed his affections, and were so ap propriate for one called to his high and ho ly vocation. _ _ Mrs. Newton listened to the lofty ut terance of prayer from the lips of the pi ous young man, with a new strength, and felt her faith quickened, and her hoes elevated, while she heard the truths other religion explained and illustrated in his clear, vigorous manner, with the slowing language of his aspiring imagination and fervency of spirit. Hannah, always retiring, and occupied with household matters, had little time for converse with the youth ; but in the ' secrecy of her owu heart, she sat even at his footstool, and imbibed not only the ' stores of wisdom from his lips, but the far more dangerous lessons of youthful love. Andrew Horton scarcely noticed the quiet, unobtrusive maiden, so occupied was he in his studies and devotions. But when it became necessary for him to ac dept the hospitality of another of the breth ren, lie started to perceive how often the image of Hannah mingled in his dreams and obtruded upon his meditations. He missed everywhere her sweet voice and placid smile, and felt that she must hence forth be to him what no other maiden ever could become. The affliction of the little family, occa sioned by the increasin g illness of Mrs. Newton, seemed to justify his frequent visits, and Andrew Horton, more than once, upon his return from the bedside of the dying, threw himself upon his knees, and besought forgiveness from the Father of Spirits, that his visits should have been rather the promptings of earthly attach ment, than those of a high and holy sense of duty. All sterness end pride of orooohoo for sook Friend Newton, as he stood by the side of his dying wife.—lle threw himself upon his knees, pressed her hands in his own, and the tears streamed from the eyes even of the strong man. Andrew Hcirton was there, and his rich deep voice breath ed the language of prayer. He ceased— the soul of the sufferer had taken its flight open the wings of his lofty aspirations; the mystery of life had ceased in the cold form before him. Hannah arose with pale check, and ap proached the bet caved husband. 'Go with me, my father.' she said, gently putting her arm in his, while she pressed her lips to his pale, damp brow. file old man arose with the docility of a little child, and she led him forth to an inner room, where none might witness the ago ny of that moment. When she placed the large arm chair for him, and had ad justed the cushions, he opened his arms to his child, and she fell upon his bosom. It was an unwonted tenderness, for Mr. Newton had never expressed any thing like it for any other being than his wife. Now that she had left him, he yearned for some heart to which he might reveal the burden of hib sorrows. "Thee has been a dtitiful child, though I may never have told thee so before. It always grieved, Hannah, that I expressed so little tenderness for thee; but it wasn't in me—l couldn't do it—but I love thee just 'as well, child. And I might have made thy mother a great deal happier, but for my stern, hard ways. Oh, Hannah, Hannah, the grave is the revealer of all hearts. Ft hat would I not give to hear her say once again that she forgives me !" and the old man bowed his head upon the bosom of his daughter, add wept like a lit tle child. Hannah had wept too, but sho felt that she ought not to witness the humiliation of her parent, and she raised her head calmly— .. Thee has ever been a good father td us all, and my mother loved and blessed thee to the last." ..Hannah, Hannah, I was unworthy of thee !" His voice was choked by a gush of tears. Hannah turned to the Bible, and read a part of the fourteenth chapter of John, "I will not leave you comfortless, I will come unto you; 'and gradually the anguish of her father became soothed, and he pressed her again to his heart, saying— " Thy voice is like thy mother's, Han nah, and thee will be to me all that a child can be; and I will subdue my nature for the sake of thee and the little ones." Ile kept his word—from that day a gen. tleness was infused into his manners, and a tenderness of feeling hitherto unknown. If occasionally his former spirit gained the ascendency, he went alone to the cham her that hud witnessed the suffering and death of one so gentle, and when he re- turned, it was as if her mantle had fallen upon him. Andrew Horton found himself the pu pil, rather than the teacher of the noble girl ; and his own zeal and piety were ' strengthened by his intercourse with her. They had exchanged their pledges of fideli ty, and Andrew was about to leave the vi cinity to prosecute his mission in a dis- tant field. It would be many years ere he would return. llannnh, in the multi city of household avocations, in atten dance upon her sick-mother, in the exer cise of her own religious views, to which the silent worship of their sect afforded ample encouragement, had imbided a lofty enthusiasm, a shape of spiritual mysticism, little in accordance with the practical faith of her people. Ste had watched the operations of her own mind, and compar . ea them with circumstances and events, till she saw a mysterious connexion be tween them, and even at times was led to a floinCthing verging upon the spirit of prophesy. She delighted to dwell upon the inter-communication of mind w.th mind, and the power which she believed it had to influence a congenial spirit, even though separated at ever so great a dis tance. The mind was unsubjected to the laws of the body; it traversed the fields of space, and lived in the past as well as the present. Even the future, under cer tain circumstances and states of the mind, she believed might be revealed to it. Why then should not the intense thoughts of the human mind, especially when di rected to an object of attachment, Ao forth •like winged messengers and work their influence upon the distant and beloved ? For this reason, the said, she would keep her thoughts and imaginations pure, that no emanation from her own mind should mislead the conceptions of another; that no unhallowed emotions should ever be associated with her in the mind of those she loved. Andrew Horton listened to these mys- ' beat views of the lofty girl, until his own ' mind shared a portion of her enthusiasm —if it were a weakness or error in Judg ment, it was at the least a harmless one, ' —one that to them could only purify and exalt, while it could never unsleritl :moth cr. Therefore, he gave himself up to the beautiful illusion, that established a per petual intercourse between himself and Hannah in the king period of absence. "I do not ask," said Hannah, "wheth er I shall be forgotten. You cannot for get me, unless I cease first to think upon you. For oh, Andrew, I can never for get you ; and the emanation of my thoughs will momentarily create an image of my. self within your mind. Do you realize, my friend, what it is to love one like me? You can never forget me, even should you desire it ; for my thoughts, fixed as they will be upon you, will forever present an intense image of myself to your mind. You may cease to love, but you cannot cease to think upon me. I hold the talis than, that will ensure me this. But, oh Andrew, when you shall desire to torget me, think not I can temain ignorant of the fact. No, never: While the attachment is mutual, and the thoughts and memory of each other pleasant to the mintl.;the ,emanations of each will conjoin, and there will be pmodueed upon the fancy of each, the most vivid conception of the oth er—it will be as it a pleasant painting of each should be presented to the eye: But , Should the allectidris of either become cold the image of that one will fade from the vision of the other. He may retain the iiiinory, but that vivid impression that brings up the eloquent eye, the speaking lip, and the very tones, and look of endear ment, will grow Ices distinct, till it shall fade altogether away. Now, Andrew, this must be the case with you.- My im age will be forever distinct to •you, for I can never cease to think upon you. But should your's fade from my mind's eye, alas I shall know too well bow to inter pret it." Andrew Morton's brow contracted. "Hannah, I did not expect this from ther. Have I ever given thee cause for distrust ?" "Never, my friend," she said, laying' her hand upon his; "but thee will have many snares to encounter, Andrew. Beautiful faces will look up to thee in thy holy ministrations; timid maidens, who will flatter more the pride of thy heart, than ever Hannah could, will tremble and weep at the fervor of thy eloquence, and come to thee as to a spiritual guide, Would it be surprising then, if vows to one like me should be forgotten i" The youth trembled under her search ing, anxious glance ; but he drew the hand to hisbosom and kissed the lofty brow of the impassioned girl. hannah's head fell upon his shoulder, and tears started from her eyes. .Hannah, thou Nast a lofty soul, awl thy love is to me dearer than aught upon earth. Do not distrust me, Hannah, I shall have thy pray ers and thy blessings, and that mystery ot inter-communication of thy soul with mine, which of itself will [ VoL. IV, No. 40. he an amulet to preserve me from danger: AU that is noble and pure in lifeis associa ted with thee, and thou well knowest it is in contemplations like these that I de light." — Two years passed away, and the smile grew faint upon the lip of hannah. She had taken the child, who was an infant at her mother's death, upon her knee, and its cheek rested upon her bosom. "Hannah, dear, don't thee hattabtr said the child, lifting its eyes to her lace. "Humber, my dear—what does that mean !" The little one heaved a deep sigh. "There, to the so, sister—that was a heat her." Hannah felt the tears spring to her ens. "No, Georgy, I wont do so any more-- it is wrong. I must make thee feel quite happy." The child kissed her cheek many times, and put his arms about her neck, calling her a dear sister. From that time Hannah went about her daily avocations, with a strong purpose to forget her own sorrows, in ministering to the happiness of others.--The child had taught her to feel the selfishness of con- cealed sulTering, and she wrestled in pray er for strength to sustain her under the many trials of her lot. She felt a strong internal conviction, that Andrew Horton had ceased to regard her with his former attachment. Impressed with this belief, she wrote a letter in answer to one of his, from which I shall extract a few sen tences. "Thy letters reach me with the same punctuality as ever, and their language is still tender; but, Andrew, the spirit is wanting. It is as if the sentiments turn ed to ice under thy pen. There should be no disguise between us. Thee should never attempt it with me, Andrew, for I can divine all. • Thy image has almost fa ded from my sight, and I know that thee desires to forget me. Tho vows that bind thee to me have become shackles. It Would more become thy calling, Andrew, if thee would tell me so at once; for de ceit must be painful to thee. I absolve thec from thy vows, my friend ; thou art free to do as seemeth to thee good. I will try even to forget thee, that my image be nut troublesome, as I know it will be If I continue to think . upon thee. My thoughts, fixed on thee, will perpetually create in thy mind an image of myself, which I would not do, it thy affections are fixed upon another. "Farewell, my dear friend; I say this fur the last time, and thee will forgive the utterance. Do not distress thyself upon my account. I was made for endurance —it is a woman's destiny. I would for give thee, if I had aught to forgive; but the affections are not to be schooled like wayward children. I cannot even now believe they are transferable. Farewell -and may thee be very, very happy." In the reply of Andrew Horton, he confessed alt. Hannah had indeed divi ned the truth. Ile spoke of a sweet, gen , tlegirl, whose Witchery had chased the Wye of Hannah from his heart, But he implored her forgiveness, he deprecated his own fickleness of heart, and conju red Hannah to forgive him, to forget him, and be happy in some new attach ment. Hannah's proud lip curled in scorn, and she laid the letter upon the coals of the hearth. She went about her accustomed duties with a new pride, a womanly spir it of endurance, that knowing the worst, hath nerved itself for the trial. Ten years passed away, and Hannah had become like unto Deborah, in the es timation of her people: Her proud beau ty, her fervent piety, and the burning power with which she sometimes expoun ded the truths of her religion, had raised her up to be a leader amongst her people;, little short of a prophetess, indeed, did she seem to many, as she hold forth in the congregation. It was rumored that Andrew Horton would return, and explain the scriptUres once more in the place of his nativity. Hannah took her seat early, amonst the matrons--for time had abated nothing of the interest with which she once regarded him, although it had become modified by the eircuthstances in which he was now placed. Ten years had elapsed since the reception of that last letter, yet Hannah Newton felt her limbs tremble as she found herself once more in the presence of And- - raw Horton. She raised her eyes, as a stranger sat down upon the farm beside her. It was the bride of Anth cwilorton—a fair girl, whose eyes were fi xed upon - her husband, through the whole exercises. as if the only divinity she worshipped were vested in the meanly form of the preacher. I As the rich tones of his voice once more broke upon llannah'e ear, and she eneoun tend those deep, passionate eyes, she cies , ed her own, for a new weight of misery I seemed pressed upon her heart. Why I had he returned, to do away at a glance.