VoL. VI, No. 35.] TERMO OF THE HUNTINGDON JOURNAL The" JOURNAL" will be published every ♦Wednesday morning, at two dollars a year, if paid IN ADVANCE, and if not paid with in six months, two dollars and a half. Every person who obtains five subscribers, an.l forwards price of subscription, shall be tarnished with a sixth copy ,gratuitously fur one year. No subscription received for a less period than six months, nor any paper discontitased until all arrearages are paid. communications must he addressed to the E litor, POST PAID, or they will not be attended to. Advet tisements not exceeding one square, will be inserted three times for one dollar, and for every subsequent insertion, twenty ti cents per square will be charged. lino definite orders are given as to the time an advertisement is to he continued, it will be kept,in till ordered out, and charged accor dingly. AGENTS. FO R Vae If lunlinwdon Journal. Daniel Teague, Orbisonia; David Blair, Esq. Shade Gap; Benjamin Lease. Shirleys burg; Eliel Smith. Esq. Chilcottolown; Jas. Entriken. jr. Ceffee Run; Hugh Madden, Esq. Springfield; Dr. S. S. Dewey, Bir mingham; James Morrow. Union Furnace ; John Sister. Warrior Mark; James Davis, Esq. West township ; D. H. Moore. Esq Franketown; I?.ph. Galbreath. Esq. Holli daysburg; Henry Neff. Alexandria; Aaron Burns, Williamsburg; A. J. Stewart, Water Street; Wm. Reed. Esq. Morrie township; Soloman Hamer. ef Mill; James Dysart. Mmtli Spruce Creek; Win. Murray, Esq. Grayaville; John Cram. Manor Hill; Jas. F.. Stewart. Sinking Valley; L. C. Kessler Mill Creek. POETRY, FOR THE JOURNAL. I met a lily in the vale, Just open'd to the morning gale, And so I stopp'd to gaze ; And thou art beautiful, I said ; That lily did not hide its head, But freely forth its odors shed, To pay me for my praise. But, Ellen, there's a lovelier thing Than lily, rose, or mountain spring, And yet it wakes my fears For when I praise, behold it frowns! And when I'd clasp, may it bounds! And when I'd kneel and kiss it—sounds! I get a slap upon my ears! Mill Creek, July 29, 1841 THE WITHERED FLOWERS. I knew they would perish!— Those beautiful flowers!— As the hopes that we cherish In youth's sunny bowers— I knew they'd he faded!— Though with fond, gentle care Their bright ',ayes were shaded, Deca l was still there. So all that is brightest Ever first fades away, And the joys that leap lightest The earliest decay. The heart that was nearest The widest will rove, And the friend that was dearest Th e first cease to love. And the purest, the noblest, The loveliest—we know— Ate ever the surest, 'I he soonest, to go. The bird that sings sweetest, The flower most pure, In their beauty are fleetest, In their fate the most sure. Yet still though thy flowers Are withered and gone, They will live like some hours In memory alone. In that hallow'd shrine only Sleep things we would cherish, Pure, priceless, loved, lonely, They never can perish. Then I'll mourn ye no more Ye pale leaves that are shed, Though your bri;htness is u'cr, Your perfume is not fled; And like thine own aroma— The spirit of flowers— Remembrance will hover O'er the grave of past hours. From Graham's Magazine. THE WIDOW. There sits a mourner, solitary now. With downcast eyes, and pale dejected brow. Cold is the pillow where she laid her head, When last they sat beneath their favorite shade— Hushed is the voice, which ever to het' o an Answered in tones of tenderness alone. Stilled are the merry notes of childish glee, And she is left—of all that family! She looks abroad—and sees no welcome smile No cheerful sounds her weary hours beguile, She looks within—and all is mute despair, She looks to Heaven; oh! jly ! her all is there. THE OURNAL. INTEMPERANCE, On looking round, we disoovered the regular smoothness of the horizon, broken by a large ensign d;splayed from the top of an adjacent building; and as the morn ing was distinguished by a smart southern breeze, the flag was flapping wide into the lair, shaking out a thousan►l folds, and seeming to rejoice in.its elevation, and to give a ken of hilarity beneath. It might, for ought we knew, have been a saint's day, whose fame was connected with the craftship below, and the pride of the profession was engaged to honor his day. Partaking little in such feelings, we let the colors wave, without further notice; nor would they have occupied our thoughts again, had we in passing the building about noon, observed that the sober quiet of business was set aside by the noise of feasting and mirth; and if we felt astonished in the morning, at the out hanging of a flag, much more were we sur prised that the right forward course of business should be checked in mid slay, the sober lively of mechanic employment doffed for the guise of merriment; and this at (neither new moon nor appointed time.' Shortly afterwards, we discovered a lad emerging from the door; his very counter nance betokened a holiday; there was no necessity for his cleanly haints to gi re no tice of a cessation from employment. 'And what, my child,' said oe, 'is the mirth-doing in the rooms above stairs? Why have you hoisted your colors to day?' The boy stopped short In his errand, and whether it was the sombre hue ut our gar ments, contrasting the sickly paleness of •Ihe visage, or whether mirth is allied to melancholy, we pretend not to say; but a transient gloom shot across his youthful visage, and the lambent fire of his eye was fur a moment dimmed. We N uuld not, though melancholy be our food, we would not be the cause of a moment's pain in 'human breast,' though it should ease us forever from our load— God forbid. if misfoitune hath mingled sorrow and disappointment in our cup, why should we, vampire like, draw forth the life blood of another's pleasure, or hug around us, like the fabled Upas of the east, a withering and a deadly shad ow? We renewed our questions to the lad. The light cloud had passed away from his face, and joy was again peeping from under his eyelids. Does your mas ter give a feast to-day? 'No,' replied he, ''tis William' And who is William? 'Why, our William,' replied the boy— ' // ill ion) And why does If illiam leave business to give a feast? 'Oh: ktilliam is one and twenty today, you know, and this is his freedom treat.' W e knew no such thing, until the little urchin told us; but we could not find it in our heart to profess ignorance of what he appeared to think every body knew; so, thanking the child and bidding him Good morning, we suffered hint to pro• coed. Ire did not otter hint money as a compensation for detention—for what would have been the whole contents of our collapsing purse, to the overflowing treas ures of his festive heart?—the pockets of Timm to the hoards of Cresus. P. G. S. Instead of pursuing our course, as busi• ness suggested, we stepped across the street, and leaning against the salient points of a dour frame, gazed in upon the festive scene as far as its height would permit. There were assembled a large. number of young men of William's age, land here and there the thinly covered heath of an individual, denoted that years had not made its possessor forget the feelings ut youth. Numbers of the joyous crowd passed and repassed the windows, open to the floor; every face gave token of en joyment. As group after group came and went, we looked anxiously for the form of 11 illiam. At length he stood full in our view ; we had never seen him before; yet there was no difficulty in distinguishing him from the many of his own age around him. They all talked, but his conversa tion seemed to be confined to the scene around him. The movements of all were light and active, such as became their age and settled health; his steps were bboyant, and eccasionally rapid; the oth ers ate and drank; he was active, but neither food our the cup was in his hand. lle.matle the circuit of the room repeat edly, and once as he approached the win dow, those who accompanied him, turned short towards the table, and William step ped forward ;—he stood then alone, roll in oar view. IPhy it was that we - felt a peculiar interest in him, we know not; though his were a form and countenance to arrest attention. The muscular firm' ness of his frame, gave no awkwardness to 'his movements m appearance; and there was in his features something that deno ted superiority in almost every pursuit to which business or inclination might direct him; and if the thickness of his neck had not imparted something peculiar, Canova himself would have taken his bust as a model fur an Apollo. "ONE COUNTRY, OPIE CONSTITUTION, ONE DESTINY." A. W. BENEDICT PUBLISHER AND PROPRIETOR. HUNTINGDON, PENNSYLVANIA, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 11, 1841. ..Strength and fair proportion sat upon his limbs." While these reflections were passing through out mind, the smile banished tram the lip of II illiam, and the soft gladness of the eye faded away; a cloud of mote titan melancholy rested upon his lace—it.l was almost anguish. We watched the movements of his eyes--he did not lower them; he gazed, but with an elevated look;—he was thinking of years to come. Hitherto, amid the crowd of friends, he hail only felt that the chain of dependence was broken. One single solitary tno• ment, had brought with its thought of in-, dependence, a care for• its support. The fluctuation of times, and the consequent changes of business, might snatch from him the means of maintenance, and make hint sigh for the labor which had hitherto been a burthen. But the cloud, deep and dark as It settled upon him, soon passed otr, and hope and gladness brained again • upon his face; for whit has health and youth to do with sombre anticipations? Experience will settle the early furrow upon the brow, and scatter the untimely frost upon the head. Why should youth anticipate 'the evil days.' SoMetime afterwardi we saw William, the soul of the social board; he had a fund of anecdotes and a soul of song, He was therefore, more than welcome to all celebrations. * a • a Returning some two or three weeks since from a walk into the borders of the city, we followed a few mourners into a 'muff% place, and before the limited pros cession had gathered round 'the narrow house,' we enquired the name of the de ceased—it was William. Ills very name, and the thinness of the procession told the whole tale; his gaiety ni habit, his com panionship, his delight in mirth and his power uf diffusing it, had led bins to com pany, to a neglect of business, to dissipa tion; the inebriating chalice, 'whose in gredient is the devil,' had prostrated the powers of the young man, and brought him to an early grave; but not till he had planted thorns, for whose rankling neither time nor joy bath a balm. We drew up into the circle that had the deep grave and the coffin for its centre.- 1 he aged mother was resting ou* the arm of a distant relation, we saw not her face, her whole frame was palsied with grief, and her firm was bowed down as her spir it had long been. The greyheaded minister commenced the simple 'service of the dead,' with an address, composed chiefly of admonitions to the living; here and there a sentence of consolation to the afflicted was thrown in, but the memory of him who lay stretch ed in his shroud and coffin before them, needed no blessing. Our blessed religion furnishes its com fort to the smitten and crushed kom stores of hopes in future blessings, and in the consolation that present affection shall work out an 'exceeding weight of glory;' but it gives no right to embalm the un righteous, with commendations for vir tues, which if they did not despise, they hail not courage to practice. W hen the officiating clergymen with tithe freedom which his sacred office, and his many years sanctioned, admonished the young' around him, by the early grave before them, to avoid the errors which opened it, and which broke the widowed heart of a dusting mother, the histeric sobs of the wretched parent drew all attention from the speaker• The grief stricken woman, no longer covered her visage, or stifled the expression of her grief. From the hour she saw life steal of from the con vulsed lip of her only son, she gave her self up to lamentation. When they laid him in the coffin she attempted to school her heart to that quiet woe, which the open grave & its imposing solemnities de mend. She heard in silence the holy man denounce sin as the parent of death, and death as the lot of all on earth, she felt that it had now no terrors for her ; since it had laid so low the stay of tier earthly hopes—but, when, even confined, her son had no virtues praised, when, as lie lay before her, in the cold unoffending silence of death, his errors were made a beaten, a mother's feelings were not to be restrained—her affections looked beyond the few months of his offending career— she called up the virtues of his boyhood, those blossoming promises of manly ex cellence—she brought close to her heart the kind obedience the willing sacrifice of her darling—she remembered and when did a toothier ever forget; the blooming beauty of her boy. the light eye, the shin ing forehead, and its over clustering curls —these come gushing upon her memory ; and he lay now stretched out upon the earth, a festering, and offensive corpse, mill even the blessings of funeral praise denied. The address was abruptly closed—and prayer commenced, it calmed clown the turbulent grief of the mother, and sighs succeeded to wailings. When man speaks to man of errors, and their consequence, he mocks his maker if he paliates the crime; but when he turns from earth, and carries up the offences and the grief to the foot of mercy. It is good then, that the consecrated intercessor plead the, weakness of the erring mortal, and the • long suffering of an initi B nant providence, and tithe smitten object of his prayers is bowing down beside him in anguish, wait. ing till the gush of grief shall have passed 101 l that resignation may have place—mer cy pardon and the leading - comforts of life, demanded— they were, and we gazed lull in the face of the mother, which had late ly been moistened with tears and distort ed with clamorous grief—it was calm, placid us the countenance of sleeping in fancy.—As we were looking upon the mother, a sigh on the right drew our at• ter.tion. The spectators of the scene, were generally giving that heed which such times and such occasions demand, but the sadness of their countenance allow - ed them rather sympathetic than suffering mourners. One individual bower formed an exception: it was a young female, neat ly and modestly clad; her appearance was such as to rivit our attention ; she was gazing on the coffin as it rested before her, with painful intensity n—her shy via ! age was not marked with a single tinge of colour, and her inflamed eye yielded no drop of moisture —there was a tremulous motion on her lip, bat in all else, she stood a fixed statute of despair. %V hen the service nad ended, they laid the' coffin upon the slender cords and lowered it slow and rattling down into the narrow cave—a gush of agony burst front the mothers heart, she leaned over the grave and sprinkled the coffin of her William with her tears. Not a tear however sprung to the 'eye of the young female—the tremulous mcve anent of her lips was increased, and she swallowed with strong exertions. The agonies of another moment would have bean too powerful for her frame—but, the little procession was formed anew and passed out of the yard. What we had taken in the grave yard as comfort and confidence in the mother, was the result of other sensations. She submitted to time rod—she bowed down her /marl to providence, but she felt that its vital strings had been severed, and its thick cold thiubbings would soon be hush ed. That heart did indeed beat slowiy ; and - While the wheel Utile trembled in its round, poor Alary—she whom we had no• ticed at the grave—bent over the bed in pious devotion, watched the wasting away of life, and in three short days, felt the only thread severed that bound her to earth. The recent grave of the mother is yet unsodded ; and Mary—blighted hopes, slighted love, and the inwastiug fire of woman's pride, are leading her with a rap id course, to the only shelter which earth has for her miseries, and the only avenue to promised consolations. She is sinking hourly, and a few days will number her with the countless victims sacrificed by beastly appetites to the Moloch of IN TEMPERANCE. Huntingdon, Sugual 41h, 1841 Mr. J. SEWELL STEWART: Sir,—As the Committee appointed for the 'purpose, we respectfully solicit you to furnish, for pub lication, a copy of yoJr excellent address delivered before the Iluntin,gdon Temper ance Society, on the Sd inst. With the sincere hope that you will not fail to gratify the wish of the Society, we remain respectfully yours, Sze. MICHAEL BUOY, A. K. CORNYN, Committee. JOHN S. LYTLE, Huntingdon, August sth, 1841 GENILEDIEN OF TkIE COMMITTEE: Your polite note, requesting a copy of my ad• dress before the Hantingdon Temperance Society, has been received. If you think that its publication would tend, even in the least, to the advancement of the cause of Temperance, you may consider your selves,welcome to it. I am, gentlemen, Yours, with respect.' J. S. STEWART. MICHAEL BUOY, A. K. CoRNYN, Committee. Juuzo S. LYTLE, ADI)IIF,SS, • Delivered before the Hunting don Temperance Society. To effect a reformation in either sci ence, morals, or religion, has always been attended with the greatest difficulties.— The prejudices which are generally thrown around long established usages and cus• toms, render them near and dear, when every reason upon which they were foun ded has ceased to exist. We cling to them with more than filial affection, little thinking that we are warming and resus citating an adder in our bosoms, which sooner or later will dash its poisonous fangs into our vitals. It is this blindness, l .this perfect indifference, in regard to our I coming welfare, that fastens the chains of prejudice upon us, and renders us incapa ble of examining the subject as it stands related to truth and right. If man would make his intellect its ruler, and requ're his.passions to move in subordination to it ; if he was to cultivate his moral pow ers, and endeavor to discover the line of demarkation between right and wrong, and act in accordance, we would soon see him assume a station of moral and intel lectual sublimity, more neatly arguing with that Divine Being, to whom he some times feels proud to assimulate himself. Bet-the passions and the interest of men,. cloud their judgment, that they cannot see their own real interest, and the best good of the community. These prejudices, with all their weight and authority, stood in the way of the temperance reformation. But the sway of reason, and the force of truth, have now partially at least triumphed over their formidable adversary. ' All that is now required, is that the advantage which has been already gained, should be pursued with a proper degree of activity, in order to secure those results which have beer) long wished for. Although the whiskey bottles in a majority of our private fain!. lies have been emptied of tl'eir poisonous ' contents, and the bulk of public opinion exerting its influence against its use, there is still much to be done to bring about that absolute reformation, which is so es sential to the temporal salvation of mil lions. In order then to have a 'better under standing of the subject, let us inquire a little into the causes which impel men to run headlong into a vice, which has de stroyed •so many millions—has scattered such wide spread ruin and desolation over the fair face of creation, and blasted for•. ever the brightest prospects of the aspi. ring mind. Let ne endeavor to discover the reason why it is, that the moment one plunges into this - hell of misery, a,iother, as though he was charmed with the situa tion of his predecessor, eagerly follows in his footsteps. If we gO back to the original dispusi tines of the human mind, we will find one implanted there, denominated playlulness, or a susceptibility of the gay and pleasing , . It is this faculty, which isin active exer cise, when we are in what is called a flow of spirits ; and it is this which throws a ray of cheerfulness around the otherwise surrounding melancholy, producing that equilibrium of feeling which is necessary to our well being and happiness. This cheerful disposition is always at work to find something to gratify it ; and men will do almost any thine for the sake of a little fun. This is particularly the case in youth, when every power both of body and'inind is on the advance. Their amuse ments tl'en are both pleasant and inno cent. But they are beginning to approach toward manhood, (a time when biys are peculiarly peculiar,) and they must there ' lure do its men do. Several of them get together, and take what is called a spree: they get intoxicated, not for the sake a l the drinking, but for the sake of the fun.' In a short time the same thirg is acted again, with the same motions. Finally they get in the company of men, who have long since given to innocence the parting hand, and journeyed into a distant court. try of vice and wickedness, without even shedding a tear at the absence of the friend of their youth, and mingle With them in their vicious pleasures around the "flowing bowl." Here their taste be comes vitiated, and a bad habit formed, the fouillation of which their own misdi rected desire for pleasure laid in youth. Not only has he been led on thus far, but his mind has become somewhat corrupted, and he is absolutely governed by wrong notions. He begins to think that it is as noble and rational a source of pleasure and gratification as any other. , lie is now be• ginning to lose those noble feelings--that genuine pride of character, which should govern every man. Correct principles of thinking are one alter another taking their departure front his mind, and he is about to cast himself within the circumference of a whirlpool, from which, immediate aid or active exertions on his own part can alone extricate him. Ile is loosing sight of his relations to himself and to his neighbor, and has forgotten that God is his ancestor. He never thinks that by using spiritous liquors, he thereby vitiates his natural taste, and acquires an artificial one, which is wore difficult to destroy than the former. lie forgets that custom begets habit, and that habit is a second na. ture, which once acquired, costs the high est amount of energy to overcome. if the mind was stored with correct ideas, and right motives to govern . it; if man would place in view some noble goal, and direct every effort toward it;.he would never stoop so low as to be found fre quenting the haunts of intemperance. His pride of character would conquer every such desire; and he would feel that he was made for a nobler purpose than to [WnoLE No. 295. bring the high qualities of his soul to such a pass. This is the advantage then, of possessing right and honorable motives. l'heir possessor can stand above the faults and foibles of the world, and the appetites and passions of his own heart. These then, ore the great first causes which have produced such a number of intemperate drinkers, viz: a misdirected desire fur pleasure, and the consequent acquisition of wrong motives of action. Habits of idleness, continual tippling, and other things which cannot now be fore seen, take in a few; but they are few in comparison with the thousands who fall by means of the great mental delusion mentioned first. These causes continually operating, drive him farther and farther in his vicious course, mail the chains of habit have bound him hand and foot. He begins to see for the first tiine what he has been doing, he looks upon the multi plied horrors that sunound him ; he feels • that he has proved recreant to .the high trust that is reposed in him; an 4 is it any wonder that his heart sinks Veneath the load? But there is some hidden impetus in his soul, urginz him on in his career, until all his social feelings are burned to a cinder; the moral covered with the mantel ofguilt, and nothing left but the native barbarity of the heart. Having thus given the causes, the pro cess, and the cojirse pursued in conse quence of the haft, we come now to the effects which they are sure to produce. This opens out a field, should every nook and cm ner of which be exposed , would present a scene of wretchedness, misery and death, at the bare description of which. the heart would sicken. Time baneful effects of intemperance, have been found wherever the foot of civilized man has trodden. Not content- ed that he himself should be its subject and victim, he must pour the poison into the mouth of the wild and untutored sav age of the wilderness, who for ages, had no ether stimulous than the pipe. Th ese unsophisticated sons of nature, accepted the poison fron► time hand of the white man, which stole the wisdom of the wise in council, unnerved the arm of the war rior in battle, and prostrated the wild chieftain of the mountain, ere the twang of his bow told him, that an arrow had 'lodged in the heart of his enemy. Without speaking of the physical deg radation to which intemperance subjects its victim ; the diseases which it entails and fastens upun his system; or the thous ;ands who for want of tht power of loco- I motion, have perished in the snow drifts of winter; let us see how it elects the !great, mental part of man, for which all things else. were created. It is this that sutlers the most, because a disease fasten ed here is as immortal as the soul. Frain the social, moral and intellectual principles of the mind, sprint every thing good and great. Whatever does not de rive its existence from one of these, or all of them, is confined to and derived from a little contemptible thing called self. The intemperate use of intoxicating liquors, takes away. for the time, the healthy and vigorous operation of the former, and stimulates the latter, that is the selfish feelings; thereby giving them the ascen dency, from which has arisen every vile action that has ever disg raced humanity. Look at the transcendant power, they ex ert over the intellectual part; tyranizin. over it, and i..ndering it incapable of fill ing its place, or performing Oa office which, was intended when it was consti tuted by Omnipotence, to preside over. ,and direct the operations of the other great powers of the mind. This is amply illustrated in fact. There is no person when hearing a man under the in fl uence of ardent spirits, converse, has not ob served, that when he has gone probably half through a sentence, he either has for gotten what he intended to say, or has passed off to another subject, whereby ut tering nothing but nonsense. Here he is speaking entirely from impulse, the dis criminating power of his mind has been 1 overcome. It is this that makes drunken men, such disagreeable companions; they have lost their reasoning faculty. A sober man, looking on a company, by themselves in a spree, kicking and jumping through a room, and toasting the heavens with their lusty voices, might be brought to wonder at first, whether these men that he saw were men like himself, or a company of gentlemen spirits, from some hot country, out in search of fresh air. He concludes however, that they resem ble the human species in some particu lars, and accordingly ventures in among them. He takes a couple of swigs of the thing that makes glad, and his wonder is all gone. The steam's up; the joy's ahead and he can make as big a noise as any other man. The fun's on tiptoe, and the whole house shakes with vocal thunder. The loudest voice, the quickest heel, and the hardest head belongs to the best fel low. But in a short time the powers of nature give way, and they are one atter another 'sunk down and deliciously beaati• fled to the floor.'