VoL. VI, No. 261 rmnizo OF THF. HUNTINGDON JOURNAL. The' JOURNAL" will be published every Wednesday morning, at two dollars a year, paid IN ADVANCE, and if not paid with in six months, two dollars and a half. Every person who obtains five subscribers, and forwards price of subscription, shall be tarnished with a sixth copy gratuitously for One year. No subscription received for a less period than six months, nor any paper discontinued until all arrearages are paid. II communications must be addressed to the Editor, POST PAID, or they will' not be attended tn. Advertisementa not exceeding one square, will he inserted three times for one dollar, and for every subsequent insertion, twenty five cents per square will be charged. Hilo definite orders are given as to the time an advertisement is to be continued, it will be kept in till ordered out, and charged accor dingly. AG ENTS. The Runlisiv i don Journal. Daniel Teat;tie, Orbisonia; David Blair, Esq. Shade Gait; B-Tijmnin Lease, Shir/eye burg.; Eliel Smith, Esq. Chilcottatown; Jas. Entriken, jr. Ceffee Run;. Hugh Madden, Esq. Sftringfirld; Dr. S. S. Dewey, Bir mingham; James Morrow, Union Furnace ; John Sister, Warrior Mark; James Davis, Esq. West township ; H. Moore, Esq Fran/admit; Erih. Gilbreath, Esq. Hall daysburir; Henry Neff; Alexandria; Aaron Burns, TV;lliamsburg; A. J. Stewart. Water Street; Wm. Reed, Esq. Morris township; Solaro m Hamer. Acre Mill; James Dysart, Mauth Sfiruce Creek; Wm. Murray, Esq. Grayaville; John Crum, Manor Hill; Jas. F.. Stewart, Sinking Valley; L. C. Kessler, Mill Creek, POETRY. From the• New Orleans Picay:une:• SNEEZING. Like a dog and &tin kettle; Like a bill a man can't settle,• Like a hat without a crown,. Like a bottle upside down,• Like a coat that doesn't fit, Like a piece of would e Like a pot of ale that's dead, Or like pastboard gingerbread, Like the queerest thing you please.. Is the checking of a sneeze !. Like a squinting lady's leer, Or a cross eyed auctioneer,• Like a hat blown off a head, When the head is very red,- • And the hat along the street Runs a race 'tis.hard to beat, With the owner running after, Amid roaring peals of laughter i• Half a sneeze is just like that— Like the man without the hat. Like a stale and broken charm• le a sneezing false alarm; Like a snapping &idle string, Or a more vexatious thing. But like water when you thirst,. Or a hope to crooning nurst, Like a friend's returning smile Atter wrath and storm awhile, Or like ought bestowing ease Is a good and hearty sneeze. Some poetast,r wrote the following for the Hartford Review,,but it killed him: Long is the morn That brings no eve ; Tall is the corn That no c .bs leave; Blue is the sky That never looks yeller; Hard is the apple That never grows mellerp But longer, and bluer, and harder, and tall, Is my own lady-love—my adorable Pull." Epigram Fwo jolly topers, St u n and Hugh; By tippling lost their breath, And having drank to sll they knew, At last they drank to DEATH." ItEsonst.—We clip the following capital hit from one of our exchange papers : How well it is the sun and moon Are placed so very high That no presuming ass can reach To pluck them from the sky. If 'twere not so, I do believe That sume reforming ass Vle ould soon attempt to take them down To light the world. with Gas ! "Where are my stays ?" asked a lady of her husband. "Here they are," bail he, throwing his arms around her. t=ryi A t - TT %;/, • '",, . t A a THE FUGITIVE OF MOSCO W A RUSSIAN TALE. ,!(:) welcome pure-eyed • faith, white-han ded hope, Thou hovering angel, girt with golden wings And thou unblemish's. form of chastity! I see the visibly, and now believe That he, the Supreme God, to whom all things Are hut as lavish officers of vengeance, Would send a glistning guardic.n, if need were,_ To keep my life and honor unassail'd.". During the reign of Czar Peter, there resided in the city - of Moscow a gentle man of birth and education named Prieur, a native of France, who left his country in disgust with the political and religious exciremt nts which agitated it, and which had been the means of deprivin him of a large portion of his lortune. He had but one child, a daughter, named Elnisa, whose !nether died in child-Led. In ad dition to the natural cords of affection which binds the parent to the offspring, this child was endeared to Prieur by a thousand adventitious associations, and he lavished upon her all that wealth could procure. Prieur was received with every mark of respect by the Czar, and his daughter immediately became the idol of the Rus sian Couit, with descriptions of her ac• complishments, her greatness, her s y m• metry of form, and particularly of the .pleasing expression of her eyes, the Rus• sian legendary ballads are filled. "Downcast, or shooting glances far How beautiful her eyt S. That hi nt the nature of the star With that of summer skies!" To charms such as Elnisa possessed, the Czar was not insensible; and neglec ting his estimable wife, thb lady Catha• rine, the noblest woman, if history may be believed, that ever shared the recal hot - , ors of the Russian throne, he snur...,ht to win the love of the fair Gallic maiden by un-, •velcome importunities, and even by un— manly threatnings. Alarmed beyond measure at his threats and her meditated degradation; aware al so of his despotic power and ability to ac complish, by the aid of his ready slaves, almost whatever he might desire, Elosia fled in terror secretly from the metropo.. lis, without informing even her lather of her intended destination. Three leag,ues beyond the walls of Mos cow, lay a marsh of many miles in extent, ettvered with wild briars and brambles;. in the middle - of that swamp was a mound or island, as it were, on w hich was a ru ined hut, once, it was said, inhabited by an anehorate, concerning whom many fearful legends were told by nurses to frighten and subdue wayward children; hut whether the legends are true or false, it matters not to our tale; there was the swamp. "A midway in the unsafe morass, A single island rose Of firm dry grrund, with healthful grass - Adorned, and shady booths." A knowledge of that island, and of the tales connected with it, Eloise had gath— ered from a vassal who lived upon the bur dens of the morass, and who for several years had supplied her father with game. 'Disguised, she Fought his solitary hut, and !besought him with ready rewards of gold, land promises of whatever he might ask, to lead her through the swamp to that se. eluded and desolate retreat. The honest fowler, on hearing of her distress, refu• he d her gold, and cheerfully conducted her to the little island, promising to sup• ply her daily with such food as he could ; procure. Eloisa took possession of her new habitation with a sense of devout thankfulness, and there she lived for two years, a saintly anchoress, alike conten ded amid the snows of winter and the flowers and fruits of summer. PHAZMA. During this time; no one in Moscow knew anything of her fate;. alt supposed her lost, and many believed through the Czar. Her father mourned her as dead, and the lady Catherine (who was not norant et her husband's passion) shared with him his' grief. Upon the rude walls of her cabin, the fair fogative had hut g a picture, in accor dance with Russian name, of the Maier Dolorosa, with which she communed ev ery morn and eve. Even there, in deep est solitude, she dreamed away her tunic in plea.ant fancies and ge.itle occupa tions; she cultivated wild flowers, and made companions of them and the birds that lived around the forest home; and when the early winter came, and she saw the white swans passing southward, she followed them in fancy on their flight to the vine clad fields of her native France, and memory dwelt for hours, in delight, on the recollections of childhood; the Kremlin and Czar were forgotten, the "ONE COUNTRY, OIIE CONSTITUTION, ONE DESTINY." A. W. BENEDICT PUBEASIFIER AND PROPRIETOR. HUNTINGDON, PENNSYLVANIA, WEDNESDAY, JUNE 9, 1841 past became the present, and the future was disregarded. As Eloisa was indulging in a reverie, such as is here poorly shadowed forth to the reader, a wounded deer catno houn ding through the forest; and sunk down exhausted at her feet: he was followed by a Russian nobleman named Inrak, who, lead on by excitement of the chase, hail pursued his noble game through the morass, encountering dangers, of which to think of made him tremble.- Led by his dogs, he came boldly up to the stag, and blew a "du:lib-proclaiming blast." Elosia, relying upon the strength which ever accompanies a virtuous mind, now came from a thicket, where, on In rak's approach she had taken shelter. Inrak, starting back with astonishment could only, with difficulty, find words to ask whether she was the divinity of the place, or a mortal mind, suffering cruel confinement there under the power of sunlit demon master, or wizard's charm. "Noble stranger, as your address and appearance 6-speak you," said Eloisa,' calmly. "you behold in me, as in this ob. ject of your pursuit, a stricken deer. I. might have lain in my covert unohserved, bu t from yolr deportment, sir, I judged that a suffering woman would find in you a friend. I on not terrified--I shed no, tears—but I beseech you., when you re turn to Moscow, not to explain the toys •tery which has thus accidentally been re vealed to you tomlay. I ask no more; for the honor of manhood do not deny a maiden in distress this reasonable boon." "Is it possible," said Inrak, in amaze ment, "that you are the maiden whose ,ourden disappearance from Moscow, two years since, was the theme of every tongue—whose virtue withstood the Em peror'S assail tr. ents—whose mysterious titte has drawn unnumbered'lears from the eyes of all those who were too happy in the enjoyment of your acquaintance." "Mv name is Eloisa Priem.," replied the lair fugative—"do you know if my father lives? I have never h&c-me(' him of try concealment, for fear, 0 wicked heart of mine! that he would resign me to the Czar." . . lires" . answerrd Torah, "in incon solable grief for your loss." In a moment was kindled in the breast of !oral: a passion strong as if it hail been of years duration. He already look • ed upon the gentle Eloisa as his own, and . besought her to trust in him her deliver ance. "The Czar," said he , has repen ted in deepest grief his violent suit, as 1 have learned from his own lips, and frism the lips of the fady Catharine, he has also so fight in a thousand ways, to make repa ration to your lather. Therefore, gentle maiden: if you will give sanction to my enterprise, I will make haste to Moscow, and return to you with the strongest pledg es a sovereign can give, that you may re -turn to your father and live inviolate." ! Eloisa smiled a taint consent, and hope grew bold in the breast of Inrak, who taking a respectful leave,- proceeded in all haste to Moscow, and returned on the third day after his departure, to the lonely island in the morass, and bore away hits prize to her father's arms. The old man clasped Elmsa to his heart, and the tear , of joy which fell from his eves, "tiid make the meeting seem meat like a dear farewell." Love succeeded gratitude in the breast of Eloise; the bridal day was appointed, the bridal day arrived, and the deliverer and delivered were united. "Meek Catharine had her own reward; The Czar he,towed a dower, And universal Mnscniv shared The triumph of that hour.'. ILIFE. BY BISHOP REBER Life bears us on like the stream of a mighty river. Our boat at first glides down the narrow channel, through the playful murmurings of the little brook, and the windings of its grassy border. The trees shed their blossoms over our young heads; the flowers on the brink seem to offer themselves to our 2 . oung 'hands; we are happy in hope, and we grasp eagerly at the beauties around lisp but the stream hurries on and still our hands are empty. Our course in manhood and youth is a long a widecanrt deeper flood, and amid objects more striking nod magnificent. We are animated by the moving picture 1)I enjoyment and industry which passes before us; we are excited hy some short livid success, or depressed and made mis. .erable by SOW equally short-lived disap• pointment. But our energy and our de• pendencies are both vain. The stream bears us on, and our joys and our griefs are alike lett behind us; we may be ship. wrecked, but we cannot anchor, our voy• age may be hastened, but it cannot be de• toyed; whether rough or smooth, the riv• er hastens towards its home, till the rra ring of the ocean is in our ears, and the tossing of the waves is beneath our keel, and the lands lessen from our eyes, and floods are lifted around us, and the earth loses sight of us, rind we take the last leave of earth and its inhabitants, and of our further voyage there is 00 witness, but the Infinite and the Ranal. And do we still take so much anxious thought for future days, when the days which have gone by have so strangely and liniformerly deceived as? Can we so set our hearts MI the creatures of God, when we find by sad experience that that the Creator is only permanent? or shall we not rather lay aside every weight and eve ry sin which loth most easily beset us, and think of ourselves henceforth as way faring persons only, who have no abiding • inheritance hut in the hope of a better worW; and to whom even that worid would be worse than hopeless, if it were not for our Lord Jesus Christ, and the in • terest we have obtained in his mercies. THE MISER WHO HAD A HEART. Arming all the of tiers and classes of men that inhabit this little planet of ours, and make such a bustle upon it, there is none more miserable and degraded. and really contemptible, than the lifiser.. —a wretched hermit in his plonmy den, wrapped up in the solitude of his heart. with-ring, soul-destroying avarice. Such l i beings .are. among the human family,. what toads and lizards, and adders are among the reptile race. Superior mind a cannot look upon them otherwise than with loath-. ing and disgust.. - We never could exactly understand the propriety of giving.these old curmud geons a decent funeral when they die,. much less of extending to their memories the immortality of a newspaper puff, mi• Tess; like the quack doctors, they pay liberally in advance. There probably never existed one of this numerous tribe who did not secretly exult in anticipation of what the papers would say of his wealth and possessions after his decease. Now the newspaper world should nut these olds fellows altogether—they never take a pa per—they never patronise except bv bor rowing—anti their deaths whether fair or fool, whether they die inn den or a pal ace, should never hi. heralded. A course of this sort, by giving them less prospec tive notoriety, would tend to make them better meta. _ The papers give an account of an loth vidual in Massachusetts, who lived to a good old age, and shut himself up fir the last ten yew's from his neighbors and re. latives, under the deusion that they were seeking to fleece him of his property. His charities never the hearts of the poor. A retail-. who yet survives, and is in destitute circumstanzes, once went to him when pressed by want fur a few quarts of meal ; but he turned her from. him He handed. He mild not tined to Marry. He made a will, but before his death destroy ed it by strikin7 out the names of the de. visees, whom he could not bear to think were to have his property. He several times within a few years Said that it was his intention to have his money put into his coffin and buried with him. He loved money—he worshipped it—and his great est grief was that he most part with it at death. Yet he would have been indig. nant had he been called while living a Feeding on the coarsest fare he called economy—sitting without fire, while his wood was rotting in piled, was with him frngality— and using a shingle foe the double purpose of a fire shovel and bellows, was, in his view, a saving-nt ex pense. The name of !his confirmed old miser was Halle, and he lived and died at Yar mouth. And his was certainly the most extraordinary case of avarice which we can now call to mind, with the exception of that of Old Sillerton . , the founder of the hospital that hears his name in the city of Aberdeen. lie was one of the greatest misers and most wretched men, that ever He was very fond of reading, but would never go to the exnense of a light : and instead of fuel for his fire, lie used to keep himself warm by lugging a hag of stones about his room upon his back. Tie at last denied himself the necessary food if procured' at his own expense, and final. ly died of a surfeit at the house of a friend ! --But enimeh of these sombre mus ine.s. Let us turn over a new leaf—and if 'here is any thing like sunshine in the life of a tassel., let us have it. The best thing we can say of one of these beings, is to tell a story we recently five' heal (I, in ofie of our nimbler( about Town, of THE MISER THAT IIAD A HEART. * * * "Uncle,"' said a sweet looking liltle girl the other day to a bluff old skinflint, up town, who owns something like a square (Anuses, and has a cool hundred thousand in the funds—"pray tell me: what is a miser?" "A miser, eh?—why, what put such a silly question as that into your head, child ?" . _ .;;05 .- , nothing in particular, uncle--only I heard Mr. Goodyear say, as he wen out the other day, when you refused to I help build the new church, that he was afraid you were getting to be a miser that's all, uncle." "Pub, pnli—go along to your lesscns, It osa." The old man was torched--he loved the blooming little niece, and notwith• standing her pertness, the thought of her dependence upon him, and of the poverty of her widowed mother, struck a chord that for once vibrated to his heart. He was confused, and his countenance ex hibited tokens of the scarlet fever. He bustled about after his hat and cane, and . hurried off down town an hour earlier than . hy Ro9a, my chill, what have you been saying to your uncle ?-1 - le'R (Mend ed with something or other you have said or done." "No, no, mother—l only asked him what a Miser was—and he told me to go along to my lessons; that's all." The timid and heart•stricken mother sobbed outright, at what she thought the the fat.•l imprudence of her child. She well knew his sordid passion, and had ob served with anxiety how rapidly it was absorbing his better feelings as age crept silently upon him. "Oh my child—you are thoughtless, and you have, I fear, greatly off tided your uncle. lie may turn us out of doors —and what would then becotne of us?" .Never fray," said the lively little girl - at him ; hug, nod kiss him, until be forgives me, and tells toe what a miser 19. He'll never t u rn us nut, mother —never—he can't be so naughty an un cle as that." Some time before the usual dinner hour, the old gentleman came stepping along into the parlor, lugging a huge bundle un der his arm. Little Rose flew to his side, anxiously watching, her node's counter,. ance, which she instantly perceived to be lighted up with a smile of benevolence, but she said not a word', .Rosy, my dear," said the old man, af ter he had carefully opened his bun d le, and displayed its rich contents upon the table—" Rosy, where's your mother ?" "There," 'continued the old man, when the lady and little Rose appeared, "there is a present for you, sister ; and you, yon little hussy, there's one for you; but. re. member, Rose, nerer to bilieve any one who says rar uncle is a miser." Rose sprons; into his arms, and the old man wept in the overflowing of his emo tions. From that hour he has been a hap pier man. The innocent prattle of the little Rosa hail kindled the spark of benev• olence in his bosom. He found out that ,HE Him A HEART. From the National Intelligencer—gictra. WASIIINGTON, June 1,1841. This day the PRESIDENT or THE UNI TED STATES transmitted to both houses of Congress the following MESSAGE: To the Senate and Home of Rrpresenta• lives of the United Stales: FELLow•CITI ZENS: l'ou have assembled in your aespective halls of p legislation under a proclamation bearing the signature of the illustrious citizen who was so lately called by the direct suffrages of the people to the dim-, charge of the important functions of their chief executive office. Upon the expire• Lion of a single month from the day of his installation, he has paid the great debt of nature, leaving behind him a name asso ciated with the recollection of numerous benefits conferred upon the country du• ring a long life of patriotic devotion,— ith this public bereavement arc connec ted other considerations which will not escape the attenfon of Congress. The, preparations necessary for his removal to the seat of Government in view of a resi dence of four years must have devolved upon the fate President heavy expend'. tures. which, if permitted to Lurden the limited resources of hie private fortune,' mar tend seriously to the embarrassment of his surviving family; and it is there. fore respectfully subMitted to Congress whether the ordinary principles of justice would not dictate the propriety of its le gislative interposition. By the provisions nt the fundamental law, the piwers and I duties of the high station to which he was elected have devolved upon me, and in the dispositions of the representatives of the States and of the people will be found to -a great extent a solution of the problem to which our institutions are for the first time subjected. in entering upon the duties of this of fire, I did not feel that it would be beet). ruing in me to disturb what had been or dered by my lamented predecessor. Whatever, therefore, may have been we opinion,.originally, as to the propriety of convening Congress at so early a day from that of its late arlimirnment, I found a new and controling intlucemett not to inter. ‘. fere with the patriotic desk*. the late •7• , 4,. [Wnor.E No. VG. President, in the novelty of the situation in which 1 was so unexpectedly placed. My first wish under such circumstances would necessarily have been to have call ed- ta my aid, in the administration of public affairi, the combined wisdom (lithe two !looses of Congress, in order to take their counsel and advice as to the Lest mode of extricating the Government and the country ft om the embarrassment weigh ing heavily on both. lam then most hap py in finding myself, so soon alter my ac cession to the Presidency r siarrounded by the immediate representatives of the States and the people. No important changes have to en place in our foreign relations since the last session of Congress, and it is not deemed necessary on this occasion to go into a de , tailed statement in regard to them. I am happy to say that I see nothing to rle• stroy the hope of being able to preserve peace. The ratification of the treaty with Por tugal has been duly exchanged between the two Governments. This Government has not been inattentive to the interests of those of our citizens who have claims on the Government of Spain founded on ex• press treaty stipulations, and a hope is in dulged that the representations which have been made to that Government on this subject may lead ere long to benefici al results. . A correspondence has taken place be tween the Secrefary of State and the Minister of her Britannic Majesty accre dited to this Government, on the subject of Alexander McLeod's indictment and imprisonment r copies of r.lncli are here wltli communicated to Congress. In addition to what appetirs from these papers, it may be proper to state that Al exander McLeod has been heard by the Supreme Court of the State of New York on his motion to he dis•Tharged from im prisonment, and that the decision of that Court has not yet been pronounced. The Secretary of State has addressed to me a paper upon two subjects, interest ing to the commerce of the country, n•hic'► will receive my consideration, anti which I have the honor to communicate to Cun• gress: So far as it depends on the course of this Government, nor relations of good w;11 and friendship will be sedulously cultivate) with all nations. The true I American policy will he found to consist in the exercise of a spirit of justice to be I manifested in the discharge of all our in ternational obligations, to the weakest of the family of nations as well as to the most powerful. Occasional conflicts of opinion may arise, but when the discus sions incident to them are conducted in the Jan.-nage of truth and with a strict re• Bard to justice, the scourge of war will for the most part be avoided. The time might to be regarded as having gone by when a resort to arms is to be esteemed as the only proper arbiter of national dif ferences. The census recently taken shows a reg gularly progressive increase in our popu lation. Upon the breaking out of the war of the Revolution our numbers scarcely equalled three millions of souls; they al ready exceed seventeen millions and will continue to progress in ratio which dupli cates in a period of about twenty three years. The old Slates contain a terri tory sufficient in itself to maintain n pop ulation of additional millions, and the most populous of the new States may even yet be regarded as but partially settled, while of the new lands on this side of the Rocky Mountains, to say noth ing of the immense region which stretch es from the base of those mountains to tlie mouth of the Columbia river, about 770,000,000 of acres, ceded and Unceded, still remain to be brought into market. We hold nut to the people of other coun cries an invitation to come and settle a mong us as members of our rapidly grow ing funny; and for the blessings which we offer them, we require of them to look upon our country as their cwn country, and to unite with us in the great task of preserving our institutions, and thereby p-rpetnatinv, our iibertics. No motive exists for foreign conquest. We desire but to reclaim our almost illimitable wd derness, and to introduce into their depths the lights of civilization. While we shall lat all times be prepared to vindicate the nntinnal honor, our most earnest desire will be to maintain nn unbroken peace. . - - In presenting the foregoing views, 1 cannot' withhold the expression of the o pinion that there exists nothing in the ex teFsien of our empire over our acknowl. edged possessions to excite the alarm of the patriot for the safety of our institu tions. The federative system, leaving to each state the care of its domestic con cerns, and devolving on the Federal Gov ernment those of general import, admits in safety of the greatest expansion, but, at the same time, I deem it proper tomtit that there will be found to exist at all times an imperious necessity for restrain ing all the functions of this government within the range of their respective pow.