HUNTINGDON JOURNAL. WHOLE No. 198.] TERMS OF THE 11 . 01\TTINODON .70171%1\TAL. The ...Journal" will be published every Wednesday morning, at two dollars a year if paid IN ADVANCE, and if not paid within six months, two dollars and a half. . .. Every person who obtains five subscribers and forwards price of subscription, shall be f unished with a sixth copy gratultiously for one yea:. . tto subscription received for a less period than six months, nor any paperdiseontinued cad arrearages are paid. All commuhications must be addressed to the Editor, post paid, or they will not be *tended to. Advertisments not exceeding one square sill be inserted three times for one dollar for every subsequent insertion, 25 ficents per square will be charged:—if no detnite orderd are given as to the time an adverisment is to be continued, it will be kept in till ordeed out. and charge accordingly. To the Public. THE public are hereby informed, that JACOB MILLER has been appointed agent for Huntingdon county, for the sale of Dr, Evans' Camomile and family aperient pills, where all those that need medicine, can be supplied as he intends always to have a sup ply unhand. IFE AND HEALTH,—Persons whose di' nerves have been injured by Calomile, or excessive grief, great loss of blood, the sup pression of accustomed discharges or cuta mous, intemperate habits, or other causes which tend to relax and enervate the ner vous system, will find a friend to soothe and comtort them, in EVANS' CAMOMILE PILLS. Those afflicted with Epilepsy or Palling Sickness, Palsy, Serious Ap_o_plexy, and organic affections of the heart, Nausea, Vomiting, pains in the side, breast, limbs, head, stomach or back, will find themselves Immediately relieved, by using EVANS' CAMOMILE AND APERIENT PILLS. 1)a. EVANS does not pretend to say that his medicine will cure all diseases that flesh and blood are heir t q but he does says that in all Debilitated and Impaired Constitutions to Nervous diseases of all kinds, particular ly of the DIGESTIVE ORGANS, and in Incipient Consumption, whether of the lungs or liver, they will cure. That dreadful dis ease, CONSUMPTION, might have been checked in its commencement, and disap pointed its prey all over the land, if the first symptoms of Nervous Debility had been counteracted by the CAMOMILE FLOW ER chemically prepared; together with many Other diseases, *here other remedies have proved fatal. How many persotis Ao we daily find tortu red with that dreadful disease, SIC K HEADACHE, If they would only make trial of this invaluable medicine, they would pereeive that life is a pleasure and not a cource of misery and abhorrence. In conclu sion I would warn nervous persons against the abstraction of BLOOD, either by leech es, cupping,lor the employment of the lancet. Drastic purgatives in delicate habits are al most equally improper. Those ,are prac- Bees too often resorted to in such cases, but they seldom fail to prove highly . injurious. 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. I~R. Swayi?s . a . mpound Syrup of pro nits of T irgonann 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 ness, whooping cough, wheezing and ;dif ficulty of breathing, croup and spitting of blood, 4.c. How many sufferers do we daily behold approaching to an untimely grave, wrested in the bloom of youth from' their dear relatives and friends, afflicted with that common and destructive rava ger, called consumption, which soon wasts the miserable sufferer until they become beyond .the power of human skill; it such sufferers would cnly make a trial of Dr. Swayne's invaluable medicine, they would soon find themselves benefitted; than by gulphing the various ineffective certain remedies of which our newspapers daily abound. This syrup immediately begins to heal the ulcerated lungs, stopping' pro fuse night sweats, mititigating the distres sing cough at the same time inducing a healthy and natural expectoration, also re Ilieving the shortness of breath and pain in the chest, which harrass the sufferer on the slightest exercise, and finally the bee tio flash in the pallid and emaciated cheek will soon begin to vanish, and the sufferer will here peeeive himself snatched from a premature grave, into the enjoyment again of comfortable health. For sale at Jacob Miller's store Hunt. BAD THIS!: Da. SW AYN E'S COM -441 POUND SYRUP of PRUNES VaR GINIANA, or VGLDCHER - ItY7This is de cidedly one of the beat remedies for Coughs 44 Colds now in use: it allays irritation of ,the Lungs, loosens the cough, causing the plcgm 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. This Syrup is war ranted to effect a permanent cure, it taken according to directions which accompany the bottles. For sale only at Jacob Miller's story *untingdon, THE GARLAND. -"With sweetest flowers enrich'd From various gardens cull'd with care." FOR THE JOURNAL. STANZAS. Oh where's the gem that shines so bright As that k!en eye of thine; The stars that light the sable night With fainter lustre shine. Who would not leave their trade or art, To scrutenize that face And graceful form—and every part Is redolent of grace. Thy step is that of the wild Ga zelle, So nimble, light and free; And beauty, like the Archangle dwells, Most charming girl with thee. I admire.---Oh who could ever view Your visage and form divine; And feel when first he knew His heart was wholly thine. THE OLD OAK TREE, BY G. P. MORRIS. Woodman, spare that tree! Touch not a single bough! In youth it sheltered me, And I'll protect it now. 'Twas my forefather's hand That plac'd it near his cot; There, woodman, let it stand, Thy axe shall harm it not! That old familiar tree, Whose glory and renown Are spread o'er land and sea, And would'st thou hack it down? Woodman, forbear thy stroke; Cut not its earth-bound ties; 0, spare that aged oak, Now towering to the skies! When but an idle boy, I sought its grateful shade; In all their gushing joy Here, too, my sisters played. My mother kiss'd me here; My father press'd my hand--- Forgive this foolish tear, But let that old oak stand:— My heart-strings round thee cling, Close as the bark, old friend; Here shall the wild-bird sing, And still thy branches bend. Old tree! the storm still brave! And, woodman, leave the spot; While I've a hand to save, The axe shall harm it not. Into tettane ono. From the National Intelligencer. SKETCHES OP THE PERSONAL AND PUBLIC CHARACTER OF DANIEL WEBSTER. LETTER NO. 11. R---, MA s. JULY, 1889. Dear Sir: I am reminded of my prom ise to write you another letter about Mr. Webster by an incident which took place last evening. I have a neighbor, a black smith, for whom I entertain a sincere re spect, though he is a Van Buren man. The state of society is such in our village that we have few distinctions founded upon vocation or style of living; so my friend of the anvil often pays me a visit, and, though we diner in politics, we have a good deal of pleasant intercourse. Well, he called last evening, and began by asking me if I had heard the news. I replied in the negative; and he proceeded to say that the steam-packet Liverpool had arrived, bringing a letter from Mr. Web ster, withdrawing his name from the list of Presidential candidates. I remarked that this did not surprise me, as I had long understood that Mr. Webster had only permitted himself to be held up as a can didate at the solicitation of Ins friends. Here I attempted to turn the conversa tion, as we are uccustometl to avoid party topics; but my neighbor, contrary to his wont, chose to pursue the theme. "What do vou think they will say to Webster in England?" said he. "They have the Globe," I replied, "and that being the Goverment organ, is likely to be considered in London as the best authority- The Globe always represents Mr. Webster as not only a wicked but an inconsistent man. Ile is always spoken of as interior to Benton, Wright, Walker, and especially John M. Niles." "Ah. but the Globe is a party paper." "True; but it always speaks of John "ONE COUNTRY,, ONE CONSTITUTION,, ONE DESTINY." A. W. BENEDICT PUBLISHER AND PROPRIETOR. HUNTINGDON, PENNSYLVANIA, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 14, 1839. M. Niles as rowing Webster up Salt river in debate." "I don't cats for that. It's my idea that Webster can clinch a nail, in argu ment, as well as the best on 'em." "That I shall not dispute. But let us consider that Webster is now in England; and, though we may say what we please, we care n►ore about John Bull's opinion of us than that of the world beside. A French Mauves or a German Prince may travel among us, and go home and say what he pleases; be it good or ill, we care little. But if an English writer laughs at our follies and our• foibles, even though it be some trollop of a widow, or an acidulated old maid, we turn red in the face, and get seriously angry. This 'shows how much we care for the good opinion of mother England. And now 1 wish to know, which you would rather have go to England as a specimen of our Ya^.kee breed—Daniel Webster or John M. Niles?" "Fudge!" said the blacksmith. "But," said I, "Niles always beats Webster in argument—at least says the Globe." ' "Niles is an —!" "Well, what do you say to Benton?" "Benton talks to much Latin; Webster never talks any thing but English, and he handles it just as a strong man handles a sledge-hammer; that is, in an easy kind of way. a, if he was playing with it; and yet the sparks fly right and left from the red-hot iron. 1 heard Webster myself at Bunker Hill, when the corner stone of the monument was laid. It was the 171 h June 1825. 1 sat right neat to one of the old soldiers who was in the battle. When the speech was over, the old patri ot pulled up the waistband of his breech es with his right hand, and turned to me saying, .That's a grand speech, I do de clare. lam pretty deaf, yon know, but I heard it all as plain as I did the British cannon. Every word of that speech seemed to weigh a pound. Hurrah! hur rah! hurt ahl' " MARY. "And so you think, because Webstei pleased this old patriot, and pleased you too, that he will please the English. How does that follow?" "Oh, there's do gammon about him. He's true steel—and that's the stuff', whether you wish to point a plough-share or edge a razor. He was brought up a farmer, and he knows how to sit down and think a glass of cider, and talk about fat cattle as well as any body. And it you were to see him, as I have, by a New Hampshire fireside, you'd think he really was a farmer. why, there he's as ready to o eive a neighbor the time of day as any body. But I went once to Washington, and what do you think I saw? I went to the—what do you call it?—the levee. Well there was a great crowd of officers, all yellow with epaulettes and gold lace; and there was dark hairy fellows looking as wild and foolish as Shetland ponies; and there were ladies with amazing tall feathers upon their heads; and right in the midst was Daniel Webster: It did me good to look at him, and I was just on 'the point of crying out, "Hurrah for the Granite State:" "W by so, pray?" "Why? Do you think I was'nt proud of my native State when I saw a New Hampshire boy, a farmer of New Eng. land, a real Yankee, in the midst of all that splendor; and to see him, too, care so little about it I His eye was roving 'round, as if he thought it was all nonsense. was jammed in between the Brazilian Ambassaaw and the fattest woman I ever saw. I suppose I was pretty much cover ed up; but it seems my head was out, for Webster saw me, and not minding who was looking on, he came right up and got hold of my hand and gave it a real New Hampshire gripe. I should have known it was a New Hampshire fist in the dark, for:twas just like my own vice." “Well, what has all this to do with Webster's being in England?” "Why, you see, tho' Webster was'nt afraid to shake the hand of a blacksmith at the President's levee, and in the midst of such splendid ladies and so many shi ning officers, he still seemed as easy and as much at home there as he used to be in mowing a meadow of foxtail with a sharp scythe. And now, I say, it stands to rea son that that's the sort of man to be look ed up to anywhere. He'll be no mere afraid of your . queens and dukes, and all , that sort of thinz, than he would be of so much gold lace and buckram. I'm told that, after all, these big people don't par ado about the streets with their badges, and coronets, and ribbands, like our mili tia corporals on a muster day. A man told me that he once saw King William, and he was dressed for all the world like a common man, only that he wore a little bit of a star on his breast. Ile also said to me that he once heard a person sneeze just as natural as life, and was told it was the Marquis of Murryburrow." My friend here had a lurking smile upon his face, and I perceived that he had turn- ed from the point of discussion by design. It was evident he had been betrayed into an expression of interest in Webster which was at variance with his political treed, for it is a melancholy fact that par ty fidelity seems to demand of its vota nes unqualified rancor and hate towards thoxe who are not birds of its own feath er. Enough had been said, however, to *how that my neighbor, though a Locofo co,was willing, nay proud that such . a . sp men of the true Yankee as Darnel Webster should be in England. When I Intimated that he might have been better pleased it John M. Niles had been sent to represent the country there, he had that sort of expression about the face which is apt to come over it when ipecac is men tioned. From the Public Ledger. “WHY, I HAD A FIP ONCE!" Walking some time ago upon one of our wharves, my attention was attracted to one of those table stands which so nu merously stud the public path, for public accommodation, generally atten ded by females, and upon which are often displayed a thousand luxuries, exotic and indigenous. The one upon which I look- I ed was elegantly and temptingly laid out with "burnt" ground nuts, mint sticks, cherries red and ripe, crackers with sausa ges, cigars, (Spring Garden Cabanos, no doubt,) together with a thousand and one of smaller, but yet delicious and savory notions, well calculated to tempt the ap. petite and intently fix the gaze of many an eppicure who might be loitering along that way. Before this stand was one of the very character just hinted at, whose locomotion had been arrested by a glance at the"deli cacies of the season," and who, intent upon the gratification of his appetite, had made a demand upon the "good woman," for some one of the fine things under which her table groaned. While the ev- er-ready and complaisant caterer was diligently engaged in selecting from her Nast assortment the articles required, our hero, who was as black as the ace of ; spades, us John—would say, stood bent, forward, inclined obliquely to the right,'' with his leg crooked and resting somewhat on his toe, his right arm pushed its utmost length into his pocket, his eyes wildly rol ling over the good things before him, but yet with an evidently strong and affecting sympathy between them and his fingers, which at that moment were eagerly ma ' king a circuit round the corners of his pocket, in search of money, to be sure, as the reader will readily perceive, when I tell him, that at this moment this sooty gourmand made the significant ex clamation, "Why, I had a fip once :" To me it seemed that his whole soul was absorbed in the object of his search— his peculiar posture, his every feature, every look indicated to me that every hope, every idea of pleasure and of joy were-et that instant concentrated in the little fugitive sixpence--the once lone and solitary inmate of our hero's breeches pocket. "Why, I had a fin once !" he ex claimed, pushing his hand still further in to the recesses of his pocket, with appa rent despair, his eyes in their "fine fren zy rolling," evidently at work with his fingers in their wild goose chase after the forlorn hope—whose well known mis chievous propensities prompted it no doubt for some sinister object to hide its "di minished head" in some one of the nu merous crumples of our hero's unmen tionables. I passed on, anti have vet to learn whether success crowned his exertions or not--whether he glutted his stomach with the good things of this life, or, under cir cumstances of deep mortification, was dri ven disappointed, sorrowful and hungry from a scene where things "pleasant to the eyes and good for food" •rere sumptu ously portrayed, inviting the most fastidi ous to "eat, drink and be merry." Be this as it may, in wending my way home ward, my mind pursued a train of reflec tion which afforded Inc a pleasant and re galing feast. I thought, in the situation of this son of Ham, in his exclamation, that I saw a picture of many, very many, of my poor and unfortunate fellow crea tures. I fancied to myself the tender and doting mother, who for years spent the income of the family upon sever al of her sons, but, by a sad reverse of fortune, was reduced in circumstance, and now, when applied to by one of the younger branches of the family for a see cial favor, she is compelled, with agoniz ing feelings, to deny it—and with emo tion only to be felt to be fully realized, she thinks to herself—" Why I had a fip once !" There was a time when I could have granted the boon to my little boy, but, alas alas the day of my prosperity is gone, and I ant poor : I thought, too, of the kind indulgent father, whose eldest daughters were fondly brought up in the fashions of the day—who spent a fortune to give them what the fashionable world calls accomplishments. I fancied, in af ter years, the younger members of the family at common schools, in ordinary, though decent attire—while his neighbor's children are engaged in various sports, or indulged in carriage rides—while others are enjoying all the luxuries of life, their sons and daughters in the heyday of youth beast with ten thousand pleasures—he, poor old man, looks upon these things, the tear of regret swelling his eyes, and feels the hard iron pang take mental existence, and with its dark impress upon his soul haunts him with broken hopes and by gone joys, and through his mind darting the thought, "Why, I had these things once. Why, once I was happy too ; alas poor me 1." I thought also that I saw the once haugh ty, proud and self-willed young girl, but now the married lady, weeping over her tender and helpless children—whose fath er, unfortunate in ti ade, disheartened and griefworn, unnaturally leaves them to the tenderness of a broken hearted mother, and the chary kindness of a cold and un. feeling world. I thought I saw her, while weeping scalding tears, caress her little babe, and fancied that I heard the gushing sigh burst forth in melancholic and articu late strains, "Oh I was happy once. I once had plenty and to spare." 1 con-' templated the refactory and stubborn son, whose father had twice set him up in bu siness, but whose waywardness—to give it no harsher name—had brought him in to discredit, with the entire loss of all lie had--who, stung with mortification and under u sense of shame, flies from his kindred and home—among strangers and sick, without money—without resources, he looks homewards and weeps with the bitter exclamation, "I had friends once I once had a home with kind and soothing friends !" I saw the gambler, penniless and desponding—evaded by his colleague --despised by all good citizens who knew him--without hope--and in the wildness of frenzy crying "I had honor once, I once had money, and a friend !" I saw too, the drunkard, the loafer, in the morning after a night's debauch—his visage bloated—his whole appearance for lorn, wretched and miserable—with nerv ous trembling, and unsteady gait—burn ing with thirst he seeks the tavern—with eager haste demands a baneful glass—the deathly liquid is poured forth, and • the wretch in human form earnestly raises the poisoned chalice to his lips, when the land ' lord demands his pay in advance, which falls like a thunder clap upon his car. With reluctance he desists, yet sternly compelled, with feat ful forebodings he commences au apparent diligent search in the tattered remnants of his pockets—in utter dismay he finds that all arc empty— penniless— penniless—and in the poignan cy of his grief, with horror and death de picted in his face, he exclaims "I had a fip once—l had a fip once." Dear reader, if one thought has been suggested of benefit to you or any one else, I shall be repaid for my few motnents' reflections, and the time occupied in put ting them upon paper. I hope that all who read them may be profited, and not at any time be compelled, under any cir cumstances, to look back on past time, and with grief exclaim, "Why, I had a fip once." APPARITION Notwithstanding ou rotten declar'd skep ticism regarding any visitation to earth by the disembodied spirit, the following et.- lotion, cooling to us from a source truly respectable, and so enlightened by , liber al education as to defy all suspicions of her being the slave of nursery tales or popular superstitions, we insert it without further comment. —Montreal Trans. Last Tuesday fortnight, as Mrs-, [a lady of literary taste and rather studi ous habits,] sat reading in her drawing room, the clock on the mantle struck twelve; as the last stroke reviberated through the apartment, its doors were sud denly flung open. In the act of raising her head to reprove the intrusion (unrung for) of her servant, her eye rested on the torm of her late husband; she screamed & fell senseless on the carpet. This brought up such members of the family as had not yet retired to rest; restoratives were ad. ministered, and when Mrs-, had re gained possession of her suspended fac ulties, and being a woman of strong mind and highly cultivated intellect, she felt disposed to consider the whole of the dis tress she had undergone as the result of certain associations between the melan choly tale she had been perusing, and her late loss, operating on a partially derang ed nervous system. She, however, con sidered it advisable that her female ser vant should repose in her chamber, least any harm of what she had determined to consider a nervous affection should dis tress herself and alarm the family. last Tuesday night, feeling stronger 66 better spirits that she had enjoyed for sev leral months past, Mrs— -dispensed with [VOL. IV, No. 42. the service of her attendant, retiring a lone to her chamber, and went to bed a little before 10 o'clock. Exactly as the clock struck 12 she was awakened from sleep, and distinctly beheld the appari tion she had before seen, advancing from the table (on which stood herinight lamp) till it stood opposite to and , drew aside the curtains of her bed. A seaoe of suf focating oppression deprived her of all power to scream aloud. She describes her very blood retreating will icy chill ness to her heart from every , vein. The countenance of her beloved in life wore not its benevolent aspect, the eyes once beaming with affection, were now fixed in stern regard on the trembling half dissol ved being who with the courage of desper ation thus adjured him. 'Charles! dear Charles! why are you come again?' les see' slowly and solemnly aspirated the shadowy form, waving in its hand a small roll of written paper, "Jessee, pay my newspaper account 4- let me rest in pence!' IRISH PATHOS, There are many melancholy aids in the country that give Pathos birth, which na turally increase its effixt ; but it does not need them in the same proportion that Irish humor does, it goes straight to the heart, while its opposite works on the im agination ; it follows or precedes the jest with extraordinary rapidity—the smiles bursts forth before the tear is dry, but its sadness is certainly augmeLted by witnes sing the causes that produce it. There is a depth of pure and holy po:try in Irish pathos which cannot be surpassed ; its metaphors are appropriate, and attack our reason by the force of their beautiful simplicity. We remember once passing by an Irish cottage on the estate of an ab sentee landlord, wlins;.l agent had distrain: !;r: rent; the family were of the very poor. A mother, whose husband was re covering from the "sickness," as typhus fever is always called, staggered from be heath the door-way, not from any weak ness of her own, but from her efforts to support the wreck of what had been, three years before, the finest young man in the parish. She was followed by two little children, the small remnant of her family —three had been cam vied to the grave by the disease from which the father was re covering; it was beautiful to see how that pale, thin, deep-eyed woman suffocated her own feelings with the affection she bore her husband. "Don't cry afther the poor place, chil i dre dear; sure th' Almighty is above us ale—and this last trouble has been sent in good time, whin there's not so many of us to bear it. The could earth is heavy enough on Kathleen and Matty and Mich ael,but the throuble of this day would be heavier—for they were made of feeling. Sure, my darlings, if there's power given to the landlord now, he'll not be our land lord in world above ! The Lord be prais ed for that same ! Don't cry afther the pig, Ellen, avourneen, what signifies it? May the little boy take the cat itself, sir?" addressing the halt tipsy man who had taken the inventory of the contents of their miserable cabin. "Never heed it, my darlint, though to be sure it's only na tural to like the dawshy cat that lay in his bosom all the the time of his sickness. Keep up, Michael," she whispered to her husband, who overpowered by illness and mental suffering, resisted her efforts to drag him into the high road ; he glared upon the bailiff with the glare of a famish ed tiger, so famished that it has not the power to spring upon its foe, impotent in all but the fierce and racking thirst for blood. "What signifies it? sure we'll be happier than ever-by'n bye," she added, while the haggard smile upon her lips was the bitter mockery of hope. "Come as way, Michael, I wonder that you wouldn't be above letting the likes of them, without a heart, see that you care about them or their goings on. Oh ! where's your pride gone . I—that, and the silence together, put many a throuble over us that's known on ly to ourselves and the Almighty—bless ed He is ! He knows the throubles of the poor, and keeps their secrets, Come away Michael ! and don't let them tame Na gurs see that it's the WOMAN that puts courage in ye !" But the peasant heeded her not—the home affections were tugging at his heart. lie kept his eyes fixed upon the remnants of the furniture of his once comfortable cottage, that were dragged out previous to being carried away : he pointed to the po tatoe kish which was placed upon the table --that indispensable article in which the potatoes arc thrown when boiled, and which frequently, in the wilder and leis civilized parts of Ireland, is used as a cra dle for the "babby." "God bless you !" he exclaimed to the man ! "God bless you, and don't take that—it's nothing but a kish! it's not worth half a farthing to ye, it's fulling to pieces; but it's more to me, homeless and houseless as I am, than thousand's—it's nothing but a hash, but my eldest boy--he, thank God, that's not to the fore to see his father's poverty this