VOL. VI, No. 29.] TIP MS OF THE HUNTINGDON JOURNAL. The" JOURNAL" will be published every Wednesday morning, at two dollars a year, paid IN ADVANCE, and if not paid with .n six months, two dollars and a half. Every person who obtains five subscribers, and forwards price of subscription, shall be 'arnished 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. -- r All communications must be addressed to the Editor, POST PAID, or they will not be attended to. Advertisements not exceeding one square, will he inserted three times for one dollar, and for every subsequent insertion, twenty live cents per square will be charged. lino 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. AGENTS. roil The Huntingdon Journal. Daniel Teague, Orbisonia; David Blair, Esq. Shade Galt; Benjamin Lease, Shirleys burg; Eliel Smith, Esq. Chilcottotown; Jas. Entriken, jr. Ceffee Run; Hugh Madden, Esq. Springfield; Dr. S. S. Dewey, Bir mingham; James Morrow, Union Furnace; John Sisler, Warrior Mark; James Davis, Esq. West township ; D. H. Moore, Esq. Frankstown; Eph. Galbreath, Esq. Holli daysburg; Henry Neff, Alexandria; Aaron Burns, Williamsburg; A. J. Stewart, Water Street; Win. Reed, Esq. Morris township; Solomon Hamer, .Neff's Mill; James Dysart, Mouth Spruce Creek; Wm. Murray, Esq. Graysville; John Crum, Manor Hill; Jas. E. Stewart, Sinking Valley; L. C. Kessler, Mill Creek. POETRY. THE MAIDEN'S PRAYER. She rose from her untroubled sleep, And put ankle her soft brown hair, And, in a tone as low and deep As love's first whisper, breatled a prayer; Her snow white hands together pressed— Her blue eyes sheltered in its lid— The folded linen on her breast . _ Just swelling with the charms it hid i As from her long and flowing dress Escaped a bare and tender foot, Whose fall upon the earth ?id press Like a snow white flake, soft and mute, And there from slumbers soft and warm, Like a young spirit fresh from Heaven, She bowed her light and graceful form, And humbly prayed—to be forgiven, Oh God ! if souls unsoiled as these Need daily mercy at thy throne— If sus upon her banded knees, Our loveliest and our purest one, Suit, with a face so clear and bright, We deem her some stray child of light— If SHE, with those soft eyes in tears, Day after day, in her first years, Must kneel and pray for grace from thee, What far, far deeper need have NvE 1 How hardly, if she win not heaven Will our wild errors be forgiven. THE SABBATH BELL. BY 3011 N DI'CADE. 'Tin sweet to hear the Sabbath bell, Whose soft and silvery chime Breaks on the ear with fall and swell, Waiting our thoughts from time. I love to hear its mellow strain, Come fleeting up the dell , While wending to that sacred fane, Where chimes the Sabbath bell, How memory mingles with that peal ! How hours of other years ! How sad the thoughts, that, pensive steal Along my trickling tears ! Thoughts, mournful to my bosom lone, Yet those I would not quell ; For, soothing to my grief, that tone Of thine, Sweet Sabbath bell. A few years more—the winds, so bland, Will bid the young flowers wave ; Which, oh! perhaps some soft sweet hand. Will plant around my grave ! I'll miss thy dear, familiar voice, Which, ah ! so oft could tell My heart, tho' tempest-tost, "rejoice,"— Thou dear, dear Sabbath bell ! An Irishman remarked to hie compan ion, on observing a lady pass. "Pat did you ever see as thin a woman as that i" "Thin," replied the other, "Bathershune, I seen a woman as thin as two of her." TIM RIGHT or IMITATION.—Wooden cakes, beautifully frosted, and mahogany doughnuts are advertised to be let for par • ties. in one of the Bangor papers. THE JOURNAL. Fragment ofa Modern Novel. Immediately on his arrival in town, Barent drove toward his own dwelling, through crowds much more numerous than those whi::h usually fill the streets. A general sensation through the city mark ed some uncommon and interesting event, and the increasing throng poured with a general haste and excitement, from the adjacent avenues, into the Park, like the rushing tributes of the mountain streams swelling the v, eters of a lake. At length they completely surrounded the Bride well, with a closeness of beings like bees swarming about the hives.—As they grad ually increased, the last comers, after lingering a few minutes in the Park, with out being able in consequence of the pres sure, to get near the prison, bent their course in large numbers up broadway, re sembling, if the reader will pardon the continuation ofa common simile, the wat ers of the same lake, which, when swol len, to inundation, rolls forth its superflu ous contents over the banks and urges them along some new channel. It was the day appointed for the death of the unhappy French girl—and it was to be.- hold her issue from the prison-door that this mighty concourse of spectators were now assembled. The lost and abandoned creature, in a fit of jealousy and intox cation, ignorant of the law, and half-uni conscious of what she did, had fired the house of ber profligate destroyer. She had been convicted, and seteneed to die— greatly to her astonishment, never having conceived herself committing capital of fence. So strong was the curiosity to be , . hold her, that woman decently dressed, and some with infants in their arms, min gled in the dangerous pressure to gaze with a horror irrepressible, yet, to some minds, strangely attractive, upon a fel low-being undergoing the last terrible or deal of fate. The same love of excite ment, which led the Romans to the ampi theatre, still, in a modified shape, gathers the thousands to view a mortal in the sub lime moments of death The sentence of the law provided that the condemned should be taken from the prison and consigned to her fate between the hours of nine and three. It was al ready past noon, and for several hours the populace had waited in suspense, and, with a singular inconsistency, which forms one of the parodoxes of human na ture, even while they pitied the poor wo• man, impatient to behold her execution. At length, and with great difficulty. a carriage drove up before the door, follow ed by a cart. containing the coffin. Sev eral minutes after the prison was thrown open, and a group of gentlemen—the sheriff and his assistant, and several cler gymen appeared; and in the midst, and fatally conspicuous by her dress of white, and her arms pinioned at the elbows; the doomed victim of justice walked slowly; her face and lips, even through her Bro. nette complexion, blanched to a hue of death. A murmur of horror and deep compassion went heavily through the crowd, upon whose multifarious, unfeel ing and clamorous agitations, fell the mo tionlessness and silence of a desert. She walked, however unsupported, to her car riage. and once or twice was observed to smile and shake her head ; but her words, which apparently accompanied the action, extended not beyond the circle immedi ately around her. As the carriage pro ceeded, at a slow pace, frequently ob structed by the multitude, the innumera ble spectators hastened forward to secure places, as if at some agreeable scenick re presentation. The contagion flew from one to the other, and the tramping of thousands of her fellow beings, as they rushed by in a broad and heavy tide, to witness her death, must have fallen with exquisite horror upon the cars of the crime final. To the astonishment, however, of every one within hearing, although the paleness of her ashy face and bloodless lips fully attested her excitement, yet she persisted obstinately in asserting the belief that the whole was extended as a mere theatrical spectacle, to frighten her and the public —that she was not going to be diliber ately put to death—butchered in daylight, and before the eyes o: the whole assem bled city, for a crime committed in a mo ment of madness She assured the Sheriff that she had many a happy day to live yet—that she would leave the country as soon as this mu mery was over, and that after having, in the presence of the governor, invoked a blessing upon his head, for the reprieve which she knew he had granted, and which she was sure the sheriff or some of the attends had in their pockets, she would change her name and go back to her dear France, to live with her mother. Vainly the sheriff protested that she had no grounds for hope—that he knew nothing of pardon or reprieve. Vainly her reverend companions, by the most solemn entreaties, urged her not to beguile the time with such delusive hopes —but to turn her thoughts toward the sal vation of her soul. She firmly but re• gpectfully rejected all their holy offers! "ONE COUNTRY, OhE CONSTITUTION, ONE DESTINY." A. W. BENEDICT PURGISHER AND PROPRIETOR. IfUNTINGDON, PENNSYLVANIA, WEDNESDAY,JUNE 33, 1841. would neither join in their psalms nor prayers, and at length, so Is: . recovered her spirits, that, when they reached the spot, already blackened far and wide with a concourse of fifty thousand people, she ascended the scaffold with a firm and even eager step, and an undisguised selt congratulation that her exposure and im prisonment were near their termination. " Uhappy, wretched, blinded woman l" cried the sheriff at length, after a vain at, tempt on the part of the clergymen to en• gage her attention. "Do not harden a• ' gainst you the hearts inclined to compas sionate and soften your last moments. Do not rush into the presence of your God without a prayer for mercy. Kneel —kneel—and pray ! or I shalt be com pelled at once to execute my awful duty! See! unhappy creature ! it is now half past two. Before three o'clock—•,you mud meet your Creator. A ghastlier white crossed the features of the condemned. She begged to look at the watch herself. " It is cruel in you, gentlemen, and use less as it is cruel, to keep up this game with so much earnestness. l should, in deed, be otherwise employed, (though not, gentlemen, perhaps as you would re commend,) but that I know, from authori ty—that the goverenor has granted me a reprieve / Tell me, Mr. Sherill--" and she fixed upon him those soft eyes—whose beams had so often thrilled the soul of Barent. " You have my pardon come —show it to one l'' Unfortunate being!" cried the sheriff, "I swear to you solemnly, that no reprieve has been granted!" "Then it will be !" she added, with a convulsive start, and turning yet paler, "Hark t look 7 see !" The sheriff; with a gesture of horror, now approached, and, with a gentle mo tion, unperceived by the object, drew her beneath the beam, and attached the rope already around her neck to that which awing in the air. "The time has come !" he said solemn ly, but firmly. - " Gentlemen !" she crted—"for the love of God end this dreadful mockery! Give me the reprieve-1 am sick at heart —I am choked!" "All is in vain 1" said the i;fficer, mournfully—"my duty must be perform ed 1" It was with a convulsive start and a deep and dreadful change of countenance, that the unhappy culprit perceived that her position had been altered, the ropes attached, and that she stood now alone upon the platform, with only the sheriff, the rest of her companions having in the meantime descended the steps. "My God !" she exclaimed aloud, in a choked, husky voice—"l am deceived —I am deceived—stop—stop. 1 have a dreadful story to tell—pardon me—save me--I will confess—l—" The sheriff, obliged to proceed with punctuality, yet with a thrill of horror, approached to draw the fatal cap over her face. 'Only one moment !" she shrieked in a voice, which the very intensity of ter ror had deprived of strength. "Give me but a single moment! Hark! I h ea r their tread! lam guilty—but I can reveal. Give me to the last minute—l tvill reveal—" The last minute had already arrived. The officer shuddered ! as he drew the cap over her face, so as to stifle her words in the midst of her exclainatives. Her arms were already closely bound. She stood upon the scaffold alone. The vast, vast crowd, that covered with its im mense throngs hill and plain, house top and tree, stilled its mighty and tu multuous heavings, and were now hush ed to a silence, wide, and unbroken with out a motion or a breath. The signal form of the culprit, in its frock of white, af ter standing a few seconds, the centre and sole point of every intense gaze, was observed to drop upon its knees, either from a yielding of physical strength, or borne down by the weight of a repentant ' heart, subdued in that tremendous ins. ment. The hands after a few impotent gestures, were clasped convulsively to , gether--then came a sudden, quick flit ting motion—the platform was no longer visible, and an electric jar and a tumul tuous burst of murmur shook and stirred the thousands as the occupant fell, sus pended in the air. and spun rapidly round her snowy garments fluttering in the wind Two struggling movements announced the strdggles of nature—the shoulders were twice drawn up and let down again slowly--the hands were stretched forth, either in fruitless solicitation for mercy, or from the mere blind convulsions of death--and the poor creature, at length hung without life--without motion—in one instance for ever hurled beyond the shock of earth and human evil—in one in stance amid those eternal secrets, for which civilized and the savar, did peas ant at his toil and the philosopher amid his books, have panted io vain since the creation of the world. The high pitch of excitement to which such an exhibition winds up the feelings, ensures a sudden reaction. The releae. ed mind falls back to commonplace ob jects. The vulgar return to coarse jests —the cultivated dismiss the subject with a Few artful consolations, derived, partly from selfishness and partly from ph►loso. phy. In a short time the event, however it may have occupied us, during the pe riod of its transaction, with painful inten sity, dwindles back again to insignificance —the point of a cold moral, or the shadow of a future revery. The mob, who had been awed by the dignity of ,the law present to their sight, soon relapsed into their ordinary mood and dispersed into a thousand straggling groups to their homes and pleasures. The jocund laugh rung in the air responsive to the rude jest--the hustle of occupation reappeared, and the streets at once resu med their usual aspect, as if the morning had glided away without any unusual e vent. The papers the next day detailed a long account of the scene, amid the flip pancies of mirth and ►ht calls to amuse ment. It may be objected by some that this scene is of too awful a description for the pages of a story. It is true that many love to lose themselves in romantic hor rors, who shrink from the recital of na ked, real wo, and who pay to see a deser ter shot on the stage, but will hear noth ing of the life quenc ied by their own laws Let these partial reformers first banish, I such scenes from the records of the day What it is proper for the legislature tom flict, it cannot be inexcusable fur the his torian to relate. If to us be denied the dignity of an historian, we must appeal to the candor of the reader for the fact, that while history sometimes encroaches up on the realms of fiction, the latter often delineates with a beneficial fidelity, the scenes of real life. The crowd were not all dispersed, and the lifeless image yet hung suspended, motionless in the air, when Barent, whose absence abroad had kept him entirely ig norant of the events related in the forego ing pages passed the spot, maddened by the replies of several of the crowd, to whom he casually addressed questions coacerning the culprit, yet still convinced that the startling coincidences were mere.' ly accidental, he plunged the spurs deep into his horse's flank, till the sides of the poor creature dropped blood, and dashed to the scene. The officers were taking down the body when he reached the spot. The fatal cap still covered the face. One small, unloved hand, hung nerveless by her side. Upon the finger was a ring. "Take oft the cap," said ooe of the men carelessly. "No, not for a million worlds!" shriek• ed a voice, and Barnet shrinking shud dering back, and dashed his extended patine against his face, as if to strike out his eyes, fell senseless on the ground. The riderless horse fed ,quetly on the fresh, short grass. The Soldier's Son-in-law. A ItICCENT FAOT. A young Englishman, from gaming, love affairs, and other such gold scatter ing enjoyments, had so nearly reached the dregs of his great-grandfather's he• reditary portion, that he could calculate the departing hour of his last guinea. As one evening he was returning home from i one of those haunts of dissipation which ho habitually frequented, feeble in body us in mind, and for the first time in his lite, casting a firm look upon the ruin of his fortune, he could not well determine whether he should end his troubles by drawing a trigger, or by throwing himself into the Thames. IVhile he was thus waving between fire and water, the very pi ofound idea occurred to him not to lay violent hands upon himself, but to allow himself to be conducted out of this labyrinth of pover ty by the fair hand of some wealthy bride. With this consoling thought he went to bed, and already in his nocturnal visions the rapid races flew, the fair girls frisked 'around him, both of which, lie was happy in thinking, he might maintain in future in the dowry of his wife. On the following morning he reflected anew upon this plan, and found it unex ceptionable in every point excepting the very slight circumstance of not knowing when or where he was to find the rich heiress he wanted. In London, where all the world regarded him as a spend thrift, it was not once to be thought of— he saw that for the future he meet throw his nets out elsewhere. After much en g itation at last hit upon an old rich colonel, liv— ing upon his own estate, about twenty miles from the capitol, .vho fortunately had a friend in London, and was the fa ther of an only daughter. Into the house of this gentleman, by means of a friend, to whom he promised half the booty, he got himself introduced and recjived, The daughter of the cob°. nel was an an awkward country girl, with round chubby cheeks like Ruben's cherubims, and looked particularly odd . in the hand-me-down attire of her sain ted mother, which did not at all fit her, and was of course not the most fashions. ble cut. Her mind, too was as attractive as her attire; she could only talk of hens and geese; and when any other topic same above-board, her conversation was limited to a "ves, yes," or a "no, no;" all beyond this seemed to her sinful. This wooden puppet was indeed a mighty con trast to the sprightly, gay, and lively nymphs with whom the young Briton had heal toyng ;—but he carefully confi, ned to the solitude of his own bosom the disagreeable feeling of this heaven-and earth distant difference. His flattering tongue called the girl's silliness celestial innocence; and red, swollen cheeks, he likened to the beauty of the full blown damask rose. The end of the song was, he turned to the father, and sued warmly for his daughter's hand. The colonel, during his sixty years'ca reer through the world, had collected this much knowledge of mankind; that however slyly the young man had masked himself, he could, nevertheless, discover the fortune-hunter peeping through the disguise. At first, therefore, he thought of peremptorily refusing him permission ' to woo his daughter; but, on the other hand, he thought, "the youth is fashiona ble, and perhaps / may be doing him in justice; he as yet, betrays no anxiety about the portion, and why should the girl, who is marriageable, remain longer at home? His request shall be granted—but his ap parent disinterestedness shall stand a tri. a." The suitor was then informed that the father had no objections to the match, pro vided his daughter would give her con sent; and she, poor thing, replied, as in duty bound— "My father's will is mine." Indeed, could any thing else be expected? In the course of a few weeks the mar riage ceremony was performed at the country house of the colonel, and he in stantly made his son-in-law acquainted with his wife's port ion, amounting to thir ty thousand dollars. The dissembler ac ted as if he wished to know nothing a bout the matter,f,and solemnly vowed that he had not as yet thought on such things, but had regarded only the noble qualities of his charming wife, whose pure self was dearer to him than all the treasures of the world. Upon this they sat down to dinner, ard the father-in-law urged and begged that they would make as much haste as pos sible, as it was his intention that the young married people should set off that very afternoon for London, and that he should accompany them. The son in-law was confounded, and began to make some excuses about travel ling on the first day of his happiness; but the soldier maintained that these were fu tile, assuring him that he had particular reasons for proceeding forthwith to the capitol, and that his matrimonial joys would be as well realized in London as in the country. What was to be done? Why, the journey was immediately un dertalcen. The old man secured in a casket, before the eyes of the bridegroom the portion of the bride, partly in gold and partly in bank-notes, took it under bis arm, and placed himself by the side of the young people in the carriage. The road ran through a forest, and scarcely had they fairly entered it when two horsemen darted out from the brush wood, with masks upon their faces, and stopped the carriage. One of the persons watched the postillion with a presented pistol, while the other approached the window and said —"We are adventurers, and request you to give us up instantly the portion of the 'Aide:" The colonel and his son-in-law swore and ranted, but the robber coolly insisted upon his demand. After some parle) ing, however, the horseman bent towards the young man, and whispered in his ear —"That you may see we are most reas onable, we leave you the choice of the two things—give us either the bride or the portion; fur certain reasons it is quite immaterial to us, and moreover, no one shall ever know your decision." The bridegroom did not think long a ' bout the matter, for he whispered, "Take the bride:" "Brother," cried the robber to his accomplice, "we shall take the bridi l" In the twinkling of an eye the soldier seized his gentle son-in-law by the neck. shook him violently, and exclaimed with a thundering voice—"fla! villain! so my was not unfounded, that you cared not for my thunbte- h, it reiv for her fortune! heaven nd lira\ t_n euetnai my child and my money are not yet irre vocably in your clutches! Know, then, knave! the man who married you was no clergyman, he was a brother soldier in priest's attire, and these gentlemen are no highwaymen, but friends who have done me the service of proving you. [Wm3LB No. 289. Since, then, you have laid open your whole vileness, we shall have no inure con nection. I shall return home with my daughter and my money, and you may go to London—or to the devil, if yuu like." With these words he transplanted the astonished bridegroom with a kick from the carriage to the road, and ordered the postillion to turn about. The outlaw trudged back to London, and had, while upon the road, the fairest and best oppor tunity of determining whether he should now use a pistol, or throw himself into the river.—N. Y. Mirror. The Milford Bard. The following in relation to the Mil ford Bard, we extract from the New Or leans Cresent City: We know the unfortunate subject of this article. Ten years ago he was the centre of the most brilliant circle in his native State, now a degraded drunkard he is thrust into the society of alms-house paupers! Ills story is soon told. He was young, rich, and generous; posses , sing the strong impulses which forms the fountain head of the silver stream of poe sy, his life was ono continued strain of music, one long vibration of the golden harp of love. "Then came the curse of by gone years." In the rich halls of fame their glided in noiseless beauty, a creature of heavenly brightness. The old tale!—the poet ad ored the spirit of his soul, and she looked on her worshipper with the cold, dull eye of pride. Few of us are blessed with the moral courage to survive disappointment like this, and madly we fly to the dark waters of the Lethe, even though they drown but for a single moment the burn ing thoughts which press their scorpion stings deep into the brain. Far be it from us to advocate the curse of intem perance, but even while we deprecate, we must look with pity upon those who have been smitten with the plague-spot of this horrid vice. Blindly he dashes on, reck less of the future, and forgetting in his delirium the green old days passed in the glorious sunshine of youth. Ile has then the broken hearted man, the dying notes of the once rich song floated upon the ear like the sigh of a wounded spirit at the gate of heaven. The object of his early love married. With a glazed eye and fa ded hope, he sees the last plank torn from his grasp, and hears the livid waters gur gle in his ear. Then comes madness, and the poet revels in the splendor of a lurid ball. The dream is over, he has passed through the altar of fire into Bael, but ho is scathed, scathed to the quick! Step by step he walks on to perdition, and one by one his friends desert him. Still he clings to her memory—still the sweet sad song of the past is borne upon the wave of sorrow. Some two years ago an attempt was made by some of his friends, to endeavor, if possible, to save him from utter depre dation, by placing him for a voluntary pe riod in the Baltimore jail. I called one evening to see him, he was gay and cheer ful, but happiness was the thin upper crust of his feelings. There was one sen tence which I can never forget; it was late, and the jailer informed me that Mr. was rather unwell, and was about retiring to rest. Yielding to my impor tunities, however, he led the way to his apartment. Peeping through the key-bole I saw him engaged in prayer; his hands were raised in mute supplication to heav en, and tears were rolling down his cheek. "Men call me drunkard! but oh, God ! forgive her who caused this wreck!" The friend and companion of Thomas Moore, he whose society was courted by the first of the land, and around whose !now fame would have thrown her richest wreath, is now a degraded inmate of a common asylum for paupers! He will go down to the tomb unhonored—and the hillock growing with weeds above his head, will he pointed out by the passer by as the "Drunkard's Grave." Gems of Thought. Liberty is to the collective body what health is to every individual body. With out health no pleasure can be tasted by man, without liberty no happiness can be enjoyed by society.--Bolingbroke. The audience or the world requires that he who aspires to act the part of a great man, shall never for a moment for get his character.—Bourienne. Plays and romances sell as well as books of devotion, but with this differ ence: more people read the former than buy them, and more buy the latter than read them.--Tom 13rown. Of all our infirniitiesvanity is ths ••• ••• to keep that alive.— Tom Brown. Women have more strength in their tears than we have in our arguments.— ' Saville. The truly valiant dare every thing but doing any body an injury.---Sir P. I). 'Sidney.