VOL. VI, No. 42.] TE2.1. , 10 OF TIIK HUNTINGDON JOUEINAL. foe " JOURNAL" will he published every tNinesday morning, at two dollars a year, . •iaid IN ADVANCE, and if not paid wirh- A six months, two dollars and a half. elvery person who obtains five subscribers, forwards price of subscription, shall be troisheil with a sixth copy gratuitously for ne year. N,i subscription received for a less period lan six mantis nor any paper discontinued ntil all arrearages are paid. t II i,,mmunications must be addressed PJST PAID, or they will not att,,Aded to. tisements not exceeding one square, ill he inserted three times for one dollar, for every subsequent insertion, twenty vie cents per square will be charged. him t•:hnite 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 FOR . The ffimalitszilo3a Journal. Daniel Teague, Orbiaonia; David Blair- Esq. Shade Galt; Benjamin Lease. Warleys burg; Elie! Smith, Esq. Chilcottstown; Jas. Entriken. jr. CdTe e Run; Hugh Madden, Esq. Springfield; Dr. S. S. Dewey, Bir mingham; am es Morrow. Union Furnace; John Sisler. Warrior Mark; James Davis, Esq. West township ; D. H. Moore. Esq Frankstown; Eph. Galbreath. Esq. Holli daysbura; Henry Neff. Alexandria; Aaron Burns, Williamsburg; A. J. Stewart, Water Street; Wm. Reed. Esq. Morris township; Solomon Hamer. eff"s James Dysart. Mauch Spruce Creek; Wm. Murray. Esq. Graysville; John Crum. Manor Hill; Jas. E. Stewart. Sinking Valley; L. C. Kessler Mill Creek. r-Q 4 V4 so; . PO E TRY. SUMMER'S GONE. Then art gone, Oh! glorious summer, With thy sunshine and bright flowers; Thou hest left the hearts that lov'd thee, With thy merry, laughing hours; The pleasant sounds that dwelt with thee, Will soon be heard no inure, And the rky wears not as bright a blue As yesterday it wore. Thou hast not met a lingering fate. Like some consumptive one, Nor seen thy beauties all decay, Before thy race was done; The leaves are still almost as fresh Asin their early prime, Yet thou hast pass'd awry from earth, Oh glorious snmmer time. The glossy 1 ,. .ap1e leaves begin To wear a tint of brown, And now and then a dying nue Comes slowly sailing down; But thou art fled—thou wilt not see Thy lov'd ones all decay— Oh! thou hast faded gloriously, Sweet summer's latest day. LIKE AND NOT LIKE, William was holding in his hand The likeness of his wife, 'Twas drawn by some enchanted hand, It seemed ao much like life. He almost thought it spoke—he gazed Upon the picture still; And was delighted and amazed To view the painter's skill. "This picture is just like thee, Jane, 'Tis drawn to nature true; I've kissed it o'er and o'er again, 'Tis so very much like you." f.Aud has it kissed thee back, my dear?" "Ah, no! my love," said he; "Then, William, it is very clear, It's not at all like ME." From the New York American. ON A FAIR LADY. She shone upon the bright saloon Mid mirth and musk's sound, Like moonlight, on the glimmering, Of tapers dim around. And when she walked 'twos wonderful How all our hearts she bow-M, And how she tamed the manliest, And how she awed the proud. some shapes there are, tho' dear and rare, By grudging Nature given, To teach us here, how beautiful The angels are in heaven; ,And such was she, the queen of all, The fairest tithe fair, The lady of the gentle heart, put soul-subduing air. _ gr- 4 , 1 NT,m " • A, `' l7 -tt . , r r, ' 4 -•• it - 4, sec,' . , • HUNTINGDON, PENNSYLVANIA, WEDIiESDAY, OCTOBER 20, 1841 My Aunt Elonour. lIT AGNES STRICKLAND. My Aunt Honour- was for eight years the reigning beauty of her native village; and even at the end of that period, though the opening charms of early youth had gradually ripened into the more dignified graces of womanhood, and she was a girl no longer, no one could say that the change had caused that diminution in her personal attractions which could Aimd just reason for the loss of the title. It was but the seasonable expansion of the bud into the flower, and in the eye of ev ery person of taste and sense my Aunt Honour was a beauty still. How, indeed, could she be otherwise, with her graceful contour of form and face, her noble line of feat urea, brilliant yet reflective ; eyes of rich dark hazel; serene brow; coral lips; and clear brunette complexion? Hut un•, luckily for poor Aunt Honour, she had! two younger sisters in their teens, who, as soon as they were emancipated frcm, boarding-school, began to consider the expediency of making conquests; and finding that very few gentlemen paid much attention to them when their eldest sister was present, they took the trouble of mekiug every one acquainted with the precise date of her baptismal register; after which kind disclosure Aunt Honour lost the title of beauty, and acquired that of an old maid. This change of style was, I should ap prehend, rather a trial of patience, in the ' first instance, for Aunt Honour, though she had never exhibited the slightest de gree of vanity or presumption, on account of the general admiration she had excited, was nevertheless pleased with the hem age paid to her charms--and it was hard I to feel herself suddenly deprived elan her 'flattering privileges at once, and that without the reasonithle warning which the faith! ul mirror gives of the first indi- Calif:lS of the sure, yet silent progress of decay in those who are not so wholly blinded by selfroneeit as to be insensitil; to its ravages. Time had dwelt so gently with Aunt Honour, that when the account of his takings and leavings were reckon• ad, it scarcely appeared that she stemd at disceunt—l am inclined to think the bal ance was in her favor; but tiTgit I had so much reason to love her, that perhaps I was not an impartial judge. How, in deed, could I Firge her tender cherishing care of me in my bereaved and sickly childhood, when by the early death of my parents, toy brother and myself being left in a comparative state of destitution, were thrown upon the compassion of my moth er's family. This was regarded in the light of a serious misfortune by my two young stints, Cal oline and Maria, who might have instructed gray haws in les sons of worldly wisdom, and both pos sessed what is vulgarly termed a sharp eye flit the main chance. They calcula ted with a clearness and accuracy truly wonderful at their age—for the elder of the twain had nut completed her eight eenth year at the period of which I speak, •—the expense of our board, clothes, edu• cation, and the general diminstion of their comforts and chances of formiug ailvantageoue matrimonial settlements, which would be occasiened by our resin dence with my grandfather; and they did not of course forget the great probability of his providing for tie in his will, which would, naturally, take something front their portions of the inheritance. Under' the influence of such feelings, they net; only used every means in their power to prevent our reception into their father's house, but after we were, through the in fluenee of Auk Honour, admitted, they treated us with a degree of unkindness that amounted to actual persecution. All our little faults were repeated by them in the most exaggerated terms to my grand mother; and, but for the affectionate pros tection which Aunt Honour extended to, ward us, we should have experienced much harshness in consequence of these misrepresentations, but her tenderness made up to us for all deficiencies in other quarters. She was to us in the place of mother, father, and every oilier tie or kin dred ; she was by turns our nurse, pre• ceptress, and playfellow. Our love, our duty, our respect, were all lavished on her; she was our kind aunt, our dear aunt, our good aunt; and well do 1 re member being tied to the kg el the table for a whole morning by my grandmother, , as a punishment for exclaiming, in the fulness of my heart, "that she was my pretty aunt, and aunts Maria and Caro line were my two old, ugly, cross aunts." The rage of the injured junior, by twelve years, may be imagined at this rash re proof of my devotion to their eldest sis ter; nor could Aunt Honour, with any degree of prudence or propriety, inter fere to avert the castigation which ins young aunts bestowed upon me in the shape of boxes on the ears, too numerous to record, in addition to the penance of being confined to the leg of grandinama's work-table. Considering me, however, in the light of a martyr in her cause, she "ONE COUNTRY, OM; COM A. W. BENEDICT PIIBLiSTIE• made me more than ample amends in pri vate far all I had sacred, and liviled me with the most endearing caresses, while she reproved me for having said such im proper things to aunts Caroline and Ma ria. Ny grandmother, who, for the misfor tune of her husband, was married long be , fore she knew how to conduct a house with auy degree of propriety, was one of those foolish women who occasionally boast of their own early nuptials to their unmarried daughters, with ill-timed re marks on their comparative tardiness in farming suitable matrimonial alliances, which has too often piqued and mortified inuide a ns into contracting most unsuitable matches, that they might avoid the re proach of celibacy, the fruitful source from which so many ill assorted and ca lamitous marriages have proceeded. My grandfather, who had formed a ve ry just estimate of his eldest daughter's merits, was wont to observe, in reply to his wife's constant remark, "that Honour would never marry now, poor girl!"— "Those women who were most eminently qualified to prove excellent wives, moth ers and mistresses of families, and who were, metaphorically speaking, the twen- " ty thousand pound prizes in the inatti. monial lottery, were generally left in the wheel, while the blanks and tickets of tris fling value were drawn over and over again ; but, for his part, he knew so much of men, that he would recommend all his daughters to remain single." Notwiths standing this declaration of the old gen tleman, it was evident enough that he was inwardly chagrined at the unaccountable circumstance of his lovely Honour, his' sensible, clever girl, the pride of his eyes, and the darling of his lonia, being umnar• tied at thirty years of age; or as her younger sisters, iu the insolence of their only attraction, youth, called her an "old maid." No ! that he would not allow—.thirty' --she wad in the prime of her days still, and, in his eves, as handsome as ever— certain' v ‘s , ser and better than when she seas in her teens—far more likely to be the choice of a sensible man then either of her younger sisters—and he would bet a hundred guineas that she would be mar ried now before either ofthcm. Wert:July, papa, it wedlock goes by turns, she ought to be,' woulcl . aunt Car oline rejoin, 'tor you know she is twelve years older than I.' 'She might, however, make haste if she thinks of getting married now,' would aunt Maria add, with a silly giggle, 'for she is getting trite venerable; and fut.' my part, if 1 .to not marry by the time I ant one-and-twenty, lam sure loh con sitter myself an old maid.' (here will be some wisdom in amis. turning yourself to the title betimes, since it may very probably be your portion for life, young lady,' retorted my grandiltther one occasion; 'at ally rate, no man of taste anti sense wiil be likely to prefer you to such a woman us your sister Honour.' But here my grandmother, who always made a sort of party with her younger daughters interpoeed and said, 'lt really was quite absurd that Honour should put herself so forward in engagiug the attent , on of gen tlemen, who might possibly Sc their re gards on her younger sisters, provided she would but keep a little in the background, and remember that her day was gone by. Sits had, from some unaccounsable reason, permitted several opportunities of forming a goad establishment to slip by, and now she ought to allow her sisters a fair chance in their turn, and submit to her own destiny with a good grace.' And Aunt Honour did submit, not only with a good grace, but with a temper per fectly angelical, not only to a destiny of blighted hopes and wasted feelings, but to all the invidioes taunts with which it was embittered by those to whom she had been ever ready to extend her generous kindness, whenever it was required. She never hesitated to sacrifice her own plea sure, if she thought it would be condu cive to theirs. Her purse, her ornaments, her talents, and • iedustry, were at their service on all occasions, and though it was far front pleasing to her to be either artfully manoeuvred, or rudely thrust out of her place by the juvinile pair, who had formed an alliance offensive and defensive against her, yet she did not attempt to contest with them the usurped rights and privileges of eldership, or to struggle for the ascendancy she had hitherto enjoyed in the family; nor did she boast of her youthful charms, or the multiplicity of her former conquests, in reply to the lit solence with which she was daily annoyed. She was too dignified to appear to regard these things; yet doubtless she felt them keenly, her heart knew its own bitterness, yet sufrered it not to overflow in angry, useles retorts. She kept the quiet even tenor of her way, under all provocations, , with silent magnaohnity ; and sought in the active performance of her duties, a resource front vain regrets and fruitless, , repinings, and if a sigh did occasionally 'Win) 'ION, ON ~...''.- ;Id' -.V. .. . ' lil :„..,.vot, ..' - , . -4. .:„. ~.. - *lt "' E DESTINY." [Z AND PROPRIETOR. e ldca l ile her, it was smothered ere it fully brea hed. ne village in which we resided was one of those dull, stagnating sort ofplaces in ntlich years pass away without any visi ble 4?hinge appearing to he affected. The inhah:tants were few, and these, for the mos) part, beneath us in situation; the my grandfather was a man of family, though his fortune was inadequate to the expense attemlant on entering into that society with which he alone would have permitted his wife and daughters to mix. Latterly however, my two younger aunts contrived to engage in a general round of expensive visiting with the surrounding gentry with out paying the slightest regard to his dis approbation. Their mother upheld them in this line of conduct, and had recourse to many painful expedients, in order to . . • tarnish them with the means of appearing like other young people, as she termed it, and we had all - to suffer the pains and penalties of a stinted taLle in cause iuene. Aunt Honour was of course ex cluded from all these gay doings, and her allowance was very irregularly paid, and somiiritnes wholly diverted from its prop er chOind, to supply her younger sisters with hail dresses, or to satisfy the milli ner, Tim would not depart without the payment of at least part of the bills my grant 7 mother hail imprudently permitted her :elfish favorites to contract, when ready money to procure some indispensa ble piece of finery, to be worn at places of more than ordinary attraction, could not be obtained. Our house, in termer times so quiet and respectable, was now the resort at the thoughtless, the gay, and the extrava gant. Our peace was broken by the domi ciliary visits of duns, to get rid of whom, a system of lalsehood, equivocation and blandishment, was made use of, which rendered our family despicable in the eyes olservants, and mean even in our own. Aunt Honoar reasoned, entreated, and represented the evil and moral in justice of these things in vain. Iler mother told her 'site was mistress of her own house, and would do as she thought proper,' and her two sisters informed her, 'that they hail no ambition to become old maids ;the her, which would Itf ilibly be the ease if they were confined to the dull solitude which their father preserved, and she appeared inclined to enforce.' Aunt ilonour represented, in r 'ply, that they were not pursuing a course very like ly to lead to the desired goal of the tem ' plc orliyinen; and received, in return, a reitort of more than usual aggtavation. She was accused of malice, of envy, and an unt.l4terly desire oldeptiving the youth. lid maidens of plensitre belonging to their time of life; and, wo..se than all, of tit.' opportunity- of becoming happy wives anti useful members of society. Aunt Hon our wottiti have smiled at the fo:ly of the Later ineendoes, had she not felt inclined to weep at their unkindness. In the midst of one of these scenes, of now almost daily occurrence, the whole party received tickets of invitation to a bell, given by Sir Edward Urosvenor, in honor of having been chosen after a con tested election, as one of the representa tives of his native county. Sir Edward Grosvenor, who had passed his youth in India, where he had greatly signalized himself under the banners of the Marquis of fiastings, had only recently returned to England, to Luke po•ses,3ion of his estates on the death of his elder brother without lade heir. Nothing could ex ceed the exultation of my grandmother and two youngest daughters, at the pros pect oft. flattering introduction into the house of so distinguished a character as their wealthy hamlet neighbor, of whom fame reported noble things, and who was a very handsome man in the prime of life, not exceeding, as the date of his birth in the baronetage of England stated, his six and •thirtieth year. Visions of a title equipage, and wealth, floated over the brains of aunts Caroline and Maria, as their delighted eyes glanced over the tickets.—There was bat one drawback to these felicions anticipations —the difficulty of procuring dresses suit able for such an occasion They looked in eager inquiry at their mother; she shook her head, cannot do anything to tOrward your wishes,' she said, 'for reasons too obvious to you bath;' but after a pause she added, 'Your sister honour can assist you if ~he pleases.' They both turned to Honour with im ploring glances. _ 'ln this instance it will not be in my power,' observed Honour, gravely. 'You have ouly just received your quar terly allowance from your father,' said her mother. '1 have already appropriated part of the sum to the purchase an few necess:iries for my orphan nephew and niece,' replied she, 'and the residue, which would be quite inadequate for your purpose, will be barely sufficient to supply me with a simple dress of book muslin, with shoes and gloves requisite for this occasion 1' 'For this occasioa echoed both here sisters in a breath, 'surely yuu do not think of going to the ball ?' 'Why not?' demanded Honour, so 'You are so--' 'Old. you would say, Caroline,' contin ued Auht Honour, coolly, finishing the sentence fur her; 'only as you happen to want money of to-day you are rather more cautious of wounding my feelings than is usual with you,' 'Well, but really, Honour, I do not see what good your going to a ball would do.' 'None,' interposed her mother; 'and I thought you had given up these sort of things long ago.' 'ls it not your intention to accept the ticket which Sir Edward Grosvenor has sent fur you, u e asked Honour. . - 'Of course it is ; your sisters could not, with any degree of propriety, go without 111 'Then I shall do myself die pleasure of accompanying you,' said Honour, quietly. The elder sisters of Cinderella never said more insulting things to that far famed heroine of lairy lore, to prevent her from trying her chance in fitting the glass slipper, than were uttered by Caro line and ilLtria to deter Aunt Honour from going to the ball. She listened to them with her ' , slid mildness of temper, yet persevered in her resolution. I ihink I never sitwherluuCso beauti ful as on that eventful evening, when at tired in 'widest, simple elegance, she was led by my grandfather to tha carriage, in spite of all opposition 11 . 0111 the adverse parties. I, of course, was nut included in the party; bat I can readily imagine that the surprise and envy of the mortifi oil sisters of Cinderella, on entering the roost where tie hitherto despised victim of their persecutions was dancing with her princely partner, did not exceed that 01 my juvenile aunts, when they beheld that of the hero of the night—the gallant and admired Sir Edward Grosvenor— greet old Honour, as they disparagingly styled their elder, iiith the differential yet tender air of a lover; and passing over, not only themselves, but many oth ers of the 3sung, the fair, the higlishorn stars of the evening, and entreating to open the WI with her—a distiuctinn - which was modestly declined by her,' with equal sweetness and propriety, on the plea that there were others of high rank present, who were, scent ding to ett- : quette, better entitled to that honor. 'Honor !' exclaimed the gallant knight of the shire, gently possessing himself of her unrelw;:tant hand ; 'the Lomr, I tru. t, is mine; I have long,' he added, in a whis per that itas meant fur no other ear than ' hers, , siglied to possess this honor, of which the cold considerations of rank and etiquette can never possess sullicient pow( r to deprive me.' Con one believe that Aunt Honour was fastidious enough to examine too critical ly the merits of the pun which a faithful lover, under such circumstances, ventur ed on her name ? There was nut, perhaps, one lady in the room that would nut have been proud of bring !he woman Edward Grosvenor addressed tiro. whtspered com pliment; but there was none to whom it was so well due as to her whom he de lighted to honor; for she was the love of his youth, who for his sake, had faith• fully endured years of expectation and delay, with no other assurance of his re membrance and constancy than that hope which keeps alive dispair, and survives all the fading flowers of youthful affection —that farad reliance on his regard, which would not suffer her to imagine that he could be false or forgetful.—Nor was the object ofsoch devoted love undeserving of feelings like these. He too had had his sullerings: he had endured paternal wrath, expulsion from his home, years of exile, of poverty, and of suspense. 'But it is all over now,' he whispered, as he dashed an intrusive tear from his sun-burned cheek. .1 suffered for Hon. our! I fought for Honour ! and the resi due of my days will 1 trust, be passed with Honour It was a proud day for my grandfather, when he bestowed his daughter on Sir Edward Grosvenor at the marriage altar; and he did not fail to take due credit to himself on the vertfication of his predic tion. As for my aunts Caroline and Ma ria, I think I had better say nothing of their feelings on the occasion ; but, fin• the warning of such of the juvenile readers of these pages who may feel inclined, in the thoughtless pro.sumptian of early youth, to brand the eider--and, perchance fatter females than themselves—with the contemptuous epithet of old maids, I feel myself compelled to record fity mortifying fact, that these two luckless sisters of my honored mother remain at this momeat spinsters of forty nod forty two years standing, and both have acted as brides maids to Lady Grosvenor's youngest daughter, without one opportunity having offered to either of them of changing their forlorn condition. [ WHOLE NO. 302. So far, however, from voluntarily as suming the name of old maids, if unmar ried at one and twenty, as they engaged to do when in the !Illness of their self con • ceit they imagined such a circumstance out of the bounds of human possibility, neither of them tvill acknowledge the title of forty; in the contrary, they endeavor to conceal the ravages of time under the affectation and airs of excessive youthful. ness. SHORT PATENT SERMONS. NEW SMiIES-NO. LXVI. On the LoquacEty oriVoramen. Nature, impartial in her ends, When she made man the strorgest In Justice, then, to make amends Made woman's tongue the longest. TENNARILL MY IfitaEns.—keep your nut cracks ers closed, and be tongue tied while I tongue it for a few moments on the sub ject of tongues, ifyou please. As regards the utility of the tongue, it is needless to say that it is one of the most important ap pendages of the human system. It is dv signed (Or other uses than lieknig ses and carrying grub from one grinder to another during the pleasant, but . some• times tedious process of mastification. Its principle ufliee is to form or finish words as they bubble up in the chaotic state, thro' the thorax, front the well-spring of the heart. In society the tongue is both a useful and pleasing member—as it not only imparts information to the unlearned but serves in beguiling many a weary hour, and aid:4'in digesting sorrows, that sits as heavy upon the soul as stewed horse nails upon a dyspeptic's stomach.—ln its oper ation it should be guided by prudence and moderation, else it becomes a bore in. stead of a blessing. Some People have naturally so much loquacious steam in their boilers, that when they once get the clappers to their corn mills ill operation, they never know when to stop them. Such folks, generally speaking, arc as empty as egg shells and softer than soap fat. A dam with a gate that's always hoisted can hold but little water, and a man who leaks at the mouth, can't have much in him excepting that gas with which the bladder of vauity is ever intlat, My friends—my text implies that Na. tore made woman with a longer tongue than man in order to compensate her for what she lacked in physical strength—that, whenever the science of flstification might fail in her purpose, she might have re• course to the worst of all weapons—a long tongue; and I fed bound to say, with regard for the delicacy of the femi nine gender, that vi omen's tongues are of ten too extensive fur their own special gout!, and for the benefit of the communi ty at large. If they would only bring them into play when necessity required, I wouldn't say a word ; but the fact is, they , are too apt to keep up a continual click clack, for the sake of the music alone; and efien, too eften, they upset their own teapots while leveling a kick a their neigh. bor'a. Why, my friends, I know several of the she sex in this city who has e knock ed out all their front teeth and worn away part of their gums by the continual arid everlasting working of their scandal dis tribetars. I knt w it is the nature of the beautiful animal to indulge in meddlesome aarrulity, and when she becomes so ex• sanded with gossip as to be in danger of bursting her apron strings, I am willing she should let off her surplus steam, pro vided she doesn' t blow it in the face of innocence, and to the detriment of social peace. I admire, respect and love a wo man whose looks are as mild as the moon beam, and whose winds are as gentle as the zephyr which disdains to brush even a dew drop from the mountain. daisy; but I don't like to muddle with one whose disposition contains the essence of light ening, vitro!, cream of tartar, and harts horn—who manufactures words by the mile, and measures their meaning in a thimble. 1 don't care whether their be any meaning in them or not. I don't like it, :tad thats enough. All talk and no cider—as is the case with some wry men and the locofocos—is unreasonable, and all talk with too much cider—as with the whias—is equally as bad. Those aro my politics. As the rain falls the gen tlest from the clouds when unattended by thunder, so, give the a tongue that can silently shake off the particles of speech and let them drop through the car into the heart—there to moisten and refresh the young plants of virtue, and cause them to, flourish, like hug weeds in a barnyard. My friends—TheDutch governor thought wisely when he advised the girls to wear short tongues and lung petticoats, but his advice was as water spilt upon the ground. They will persist in wearing long tongues and short petticoats; and when i came to take measure of the different makes in their moral characters, I must confess that I feel a disposition to presecu te• them with my preuchina till I ran tat ..at a ha... -~...t,...,. ~: ^„?..