Vox. VI. No. 49.] TZRI4I3 OF THE NTINGDON JOURNAL Joints/a." will be published eve* :slay morning, at two dollars a year, . . I N ADV ANCE, and if not paid with . o , oths, two dollars and a half. J.:A.B,m who obtains five subscribers, ,r,vards price of subscription, shall be ,shed with A sixth copy gratuitously for year. s subscription received for a less period , ;ix months, nor any paper discontiimed arrearages are paid. .7° all coonnuttications must be addressed . Use Editor, POST PAID, or they will not se attended to. advertisements not exceeding one square, +ill he inserted three times for one dollar, .4 for every subsequent insertion, twenty ye cents per square will he civirged. lino lefinite orders are given as to the time an advertisement is to be continued, it will he kept in till ordered out, and charged actor• dingly. AGENTS FOR The 1f antinsrflon Journal Daniel Teague, Orbisonia; David Blair. Esq. Shade Galt; Benjamin Lase. Shirleys burg; Eliel Smith. Esq. Chilcottatown; 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 Frankatown; Eph. Gabreath. Esq. Holli daysburg; Henry Neff. Alexandria; Aaron Burns, Williamsburg; A. J. Stewart, Water Street; Wrn. Reed. Esq. Mario township; Solomon Hamer. itters Mill; James Dysart. 'Vfouth Sftruce Creek; Wm. Moo-ray, Esq, Graysville; John Crum. Manor Min; Jots. E. Stewart. Sinking Valley; L. C. Kessler Afill Creek. Published by order of the Commissioners of Hunting don County.) AN ACT To Establish a Uniform Mode for the Valuation of Property and Assessment of Taxes. szeTioN I. Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the Com monwealth of Peonsylvania, in General lissrmidy met, and U is hereby enacted by the authority of the same, That the asses sors of the several wards, townships, and districts, within this Commonwealth, shall immediately on the receipt of the precept from the county commissioners according to the second section of the act entitled •• An relating to county rates and levies, rut township rates and levies," passed 'he fifteenth day of April, °tie thousand •ight hundred and thirty-four, and be '..re entering upon the duties of their ol- , bee, take and Pubscribe the following' ttli or affirmation: You do (swear or af irm) that you will support the constitu on or the United States, and the consti t•ttion of the State of Pennsylvania; that • will as assessor for (ward, township, district,) use your utmost dilligence .tt ability, to discover and ascertain all .I t .. property, real and personal, within v or township. ward or district, and all other objects subject to taxation by the kw% of this Commonwealth, and take a correct and accurate account of the same, and that you will justly and honestly as vess and value all teal estate, and person al property, and all other objects and things made taxable by the laws of this Commonwealth, within your township, ward or district, according to the actual value thereof, and at the price for which they would bona fide sell, and that you will rate a l .l offices, posts of profit, pro lessions, trades and occupations, accord ing to what you believe to be the actual yearly income arising therefrom, and that you will perform your duty as assessor of said township, ward or district, with hon • esty and fidelity, according to the laws of this Commonwealth, without fear, fa vor, or affection, hatred, malice. or ill will. • Seem*/ 2. The several assistant as• sensors beh•re entering upon the duties of their offices, under the several laws of this Commonwealth, shall take and sib• scribe an oath or affirmation similar to Sbat subscribed as aforesaid, For the asses airs of the said wards, townships, or tlis. tr;cts, which said several oaths or affirm• •tinns of assessors and their assistants, 11l all be taken before some officer, having authority by law to administer oaths, a n d duly certified by him, anti returned by e respective assessors to the commis signers of the proper county, at the time of returning their assessments us directed V, law. SECTION S. Il any assessor, or assist het assessor, shall knowingly and inten tionally omit, neglect, or refuse to assess sad return any property, person or thing, Made taxable by law, or shill knowingly end intentionally assess, rate, or value bheaasne. at more or less then he shall ft.c,c - te, and believe the just cash value or rate thereof, or neglect pr refuse to assess lax required by law, he shall be 01- is" of it misslemexner in offiee, and on con• THE JOURNAL. HUNTINGDON, PENNSYLVANIA, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1841. viction thereof, be subject to imprison. meat, not less than three, nor more than twelve months, and fined iu a sum not less than one hundred, nor inure than two hundred uullars. Si CTP/N 4. The third and sixth sec tions of the act entitled "An act relating to county rates and levies," passed the fifteenth day of April, one thousand eight hundred and thirty-faur, and all the laws of this Commonwealth which require the assessors of the several townships, wards, and districts, to fix a uniform standard of value of objects made taxable by law, be, and the same are hereby repealed, and Iron) and after the passage of this act, it shall be the duty of the several assessors and assistant assessors, to assess, rate, and value all objects of taxation, whether for state, county, city, district, ward, township, or borough purposes, according to the actual value thereof, and at such rates and prices, for which the same would seperately bona fide sell, and on the return of such assessment or valuas lion into the office of the county contorts, stoners, after the same shall have been carefully examined and corrected, it shall be lawful for said cot , missioners, if they believe any property or any thing made taxable, has otian assessed and valued be low its actual value, to raise the same to the actual value thereof, or if the same has been assessed and valued above its actual value, to reduce the same thereto : Protided, That in no case the said com missioners shall impose a dinerent rate per eentuni, on odic' ent townships in their county, but the sane shall be equal throughout, and all rates shall be levied on the assessments as returned and cor rected. SECTION 5. If the several assessors of this Commonwealth, in the discharge of their respective duties, shall have reason to believe any person or persons or corps. ration shall have rendered a false return of his, her, or their property, trade, pro ' fession, occupation, or any article made taxable by law, or shall not make a full disclosure of the same, the said assessors shall return what they shall believe to be the full value and amount thereof to the commissioners of the proper county, and as the person or persons or corporation thus assessed shall feel aggrieved, an ap peal may be had, according to the exist ing law, from such assessment, and it shall be lawful for the °aunty commis-, sinner a to administer an oath or affirma tion to the person or persons or corpora tion taking such appeal, touching the vat ue and amount of their property, trade, occupation or profession, or any article made taxable, and it they deem an abate ment proper, the same shall be made; but the sund commissioners may, it they see proper, receive other evidence. SECTION 6. That within four weeks of • ter the nextgeneral election, the com missioners of every county shall issue their precept to the assessors of their re spective townships, wards and districts, who shall proceed to make out and re turn, within sixty days thereafter, a just and perfect list. in such form as the com missioners shall direct, of the names of all the taxable persons residing within their wards, townships and districts, res pectively, and of all property taxable by law, together with a just valuation of the me, to be made in the manlier hereto ""re provided 'Or in the previous section °I this art, said valuation to continue un til the next triennial assesment, at which time the assessment shall be made by the assessors and assistant assesors, as pre scribed by the provisions of this act. _ 0 SECTION 7. So mu he proviuo in the fourth of an act entitled "An act to crea itioual re venue, to be applied towards the pay. inent of interest and the extinguishment of debts of this Commonwealth," passed the eleventh day of June, one thousand eight hundred and forty, as authorised the deduction of the value of any ground rent, dower or mortgage, on any real es tate. within this Commonwealth, in esti mating the value thereof, be and the same is hereby repealed, and said real estate shall hereafter be estimated at its lull value, and taxed accordingly. SECTION 8. It shall be the duty of the commissioners of the several counties of this Commonwealth, immediately after the return of the assessments and value ation of their respective counties in Jan. nary next, as required by this act, and in every year of triennial assessment there after, to mike out in a tabular form a lull statement of such assessment, showing the amount at which all the real and_per sonal property, and the respective offices and posts of profit, professions, trades, and occupations, aid all the other matters and things made taxable by the laws of this Commonwealth, have been valued and assessed ; also, the gross amount of tax assessed for county purposes in said county, and the rate per centum imposed to raise such tax, and transmit the same by mail to the auditor general to be filed in his office. "ONE COUNTRY, OhE CONSTITUTION, ONE DESTINY." A. W. BENFIDICT PUBLISHER AND PROPRIETOR. SECTION 9. It shall be a misdemeanor in office for the commissioners of any county to neglect or refuse to perform the duties required of them by law, in the assessment or collection of any tax which has been or shall be imposed by the laws of this Commonwealth, and on conviction of said offence he or they shall be punished by a fine of not less than fifty nor more than twohund red dollars. SECTION 10. So much of 'all laws (4 this Commonwealth which are hereby altered or supplied, be and they are here by repealed. WM. A. CRABB, Speaker of the House of Representatives. JNO. H. RN% ING, Speaker of the Senate. APrROvED--The fifteenth day of May Anno Domini, one thousand eight hund. red and forty.one. DAVID R. PORTER Nov. 24, 1841. 3t. TEMPERANCE SONGS. Written for the Iluntingdon Washington Temperance Society, Tvprz—" The Campbells are coming." The "bruisers" are coming, 0 ho! J ho! he "bruisers" are coming, 0 ho! 0 ho! The "bruisers" are coming from taverns all running The "bruisers" are coming, 0 ho! 0 ho! A bright and happy throng are they, As moving on their temperance way, They look behind where all was drear— ' Then see before a glorious cheer. The "bruisers" are coming arc. No more the same "old drunk" ti►ey are As in old times when tar met tar; The bravest Grecian then was he, Who most excelled in revelry. The "bruisers" are coming, &c. Brains are now still, that used to turn, And cheeks are cool, that used to burn; Eyes now are clear, that once were sore, And legs can walk that tell before. fhe "Lruisers" are coming,dgc The shattered, :wrecked, and broken frame— Disease and death.—and blasted name, Around the drunkard's pathway lie— Why doth he not to safety tly? The "bruisers" are coming, &c. Why think of cups--and poison gills, And fiery liquid from the stills? Tear down the Rum--God from on high, And check your wives & childrens cry. The "bruisers" are coming, &c. They come from valley hill and town To crowd our standard sheet around— Then join beneath its starry blaze. Our chorus song aloft to raize. The "bruisers" are coming 0 ho! 0 ho! The "bruisers" are coming 0 hi,! 0 ho! The "bruisers" are coming, from taverns all running The "bruisers" are coining, o_4l 0 its! Tune,—"Scot's. wa haw." RI ENDS of freedom swell the song, .11.: Young and old, the strain prolong, Make the temp'rance army strong, And on to victory. Lift your banners, let them wave, Onward march a world to save; Who would fill a drunkard's grave, And bear his infamy? Shrink not when the foe appears; Spurn the cowards guilty fears; Hear the shrieks, behold the tears Of ruin'd families! Raise the cry in every spot— " Touc h not—Taste not—Handle not," Who would be a drunken sot, The worst of miseries? Give the aching bosom rest; Carry joy to every breast; Make the wretched drunkard blest, By living soberly. Raise the glorious watchword high— "'l ouch not—Taste not till you die!" • Let the echo reach the sky, And earth keep jubilee. God of mercy! hear us plead, For thy help we intercede! See how many bosoms bleed! And heal them speedily. Hasten, Lord, the happy day, V hen, beneath thy gentle ray, TZMP'RANCE all the world shall sway, And reign triumphantly. From the Sunday Mercury. SitOast Patent Sermons. NEW SERIES—No. I.XX 111. The following are the words of my test for this occasion : 'Twas said of ow—deny it who can— The only laughing animal is man. My hearers—When we come to look over the whole field of animated maitre, we find that Man is the Only creature that evinces his joyful, pleasurable, or mirth tul emotions by a broad grin and convul sive ha ha! A dug may shake his tail in gladness at the return of his absent master---a kitten, in its merry moods, may play with a nut, or whirl round and round after its own posteriorial spindle— a jackass may pick up his ears in joy at the sight of a bunch of thistles ; but neith er of them can laugh audibly and without gesture, as can that crazy-headed, sell' supreme creature, called Man. The risi• ble faculties of the mute creation, my friends, are never excited except through a sense ofjoy or of gladness, They nev er laugh at the ludicrous--never laugh to scorn--and they never laugh to ridicule; 'tis only when they are really happy that nature prompts them to show any indica tion of laughter. It would be a blessed thing for mankind in general if they could but take a lesson from the brutes, and learn to laugh only when the exhilerating gas of true joy is at work within them. I wouldn't have you think, my dear friends, that I am teetotally opposed to laughing. Five miles from it. lam fond of a merry heart; a cheerful disposition, and I do think that an occasional fit of laughter that has a touch of the earthquake, torna do and thunder about it, is esseltial to the welfare of the human system ; inasmuch as it shakes up, and works off, all the bile of hatred and envy—clears out the 'cobwebs of moroseness, and makes a person feel new all over, from the top of his ears to the tip of his toes; but there is altogether too much laughing in social) communities at things ludicrous, things , 1 frivolous—aye, even at the pains, suffer- ings and misfortunes of others. Some will laugh at all their own folly—some at the folly of others--some at the sight of a dog with a tin ketttle tied to its tail--some at the clawing s of a tortoise with a coal of fire on its back —and Timuleon the' younger died of laughter on seeing an ass eat figs. It is a wonder to me the ass had not also died of excessive mirth on behold. ing'fimoleon holding his sides and grin ning at Death, with fire in his eyes and fun in his soul. My hearers—a habit of eternal giggling and sound sense don't jingle together any more than a lump of dough and a ball of cotton. fly continual laughing you so agitate the milk of a good story as to stir in the cream of the joke as fast as it rises —leaving the narrator in a pitiful quan dary as to whether you haven't laughed at the worst and lost the best of it. Although animals never laugh, still it is almost enough to make a cat laugh to see a son of Momus with his mouth always stretched from ear to ear. He looks like an alliga tor gasping to catch flies. He is as dull as the back of a razor in comprehension-- as shallow as a saucer in intellect—and as obtuse as a Dutchman's pipe in under standing. 'Laugh and be merry,' is a good motto ; but I advise you, my friends, never to laugh unless it is when you are really merry. This laughing merely be• i cause others laugh is the fat of foolishness, and betrays a soul small enough to be be yond the microscopic power of the Al mighty's eye, but no doubt sufficiently large for the devil to pick up with a pair of tweezers. My dear friends—above all things nev er laugh to ridicule. If you see anything that doesn't exactly accord with your no tions of pea soup and propriety, spread on the mustard of rPproof as thick as you please, but don't ridicule; for it bespeaks low breeding, and can have but little ef fect, as the old rain said when lie butted the strain engine. I don't want you should laugh, I say, except when you feel merry and gay round the outskirts of , the heart. I don't want you to laugh at my preaching unless it happens to fill your waistcoats with glory--then, you may lie down and roll in bliss, and shout in ex tacy, as though the infernal regions were out of fuel, and heaven had been enlarg ed. But there are times when Astra as well as Momus should reign. Yes, my friends, there is a time to weep as well as to laugh. There is a time to too, med itate and reflect; and to meditate rightly requires a man to be as sober as a sepul' ehre. He can't reflect upon his former follies, nor meditate upon his future doom, and laugh. He must shut his lips to con, fine his wayward thoughts—. shut his ears to the outer world, open them inwardly and listen to the instructions of a lordly reason, and to the admonishings of a mas terly conscience. My hearers—this is the season of the year when the laughing animal, man, ought to be as sedate as a swill tub, and as thoughtful as a thousand of convicts. He should go out into the fields—observe how the hand of desolation is stripping each inautiful wreath from the bonnet of summer —how the fading, the faded, the dying and the dead leaves of the forest whisper of life's last decline and of that tomb in which now repose the ashes of those who 'tote, like us, laughed in tner riness of heart for a few brief moments, and then closed their dim eyes in dark ness for ever! No, not for ever; they wake again in another and a better world, where all is bliss and joy—but no laugh ter. tio mote it be / Dow, Ja. Aping the Aristocracy. Yesterday we perceived a carriage in our streets with driver and footman wear ing livery badges ! We could not ascer tain whether it was owned by a French Marquis or a British Viscount Assur edly it did not belong to an American.— Louisiana Adv. It could not have belonged to an Amer. ican, a republican American. It may have been occupied by some frowsy old dame, and a bloated, purse-prord scav enger, who had been elevated, by some freak of fortmie, from the kennel in which j they were born, to roll in wealth and snow the world what fools such things are; but whether the) may claim their birth-place in America or not, they are not, cannot be Americans, You might as well call a scullion a King because he was born in the kitchen of a palace. We have Ire. quently had occasion to notice, in this section of the cour,try, the prevalence of such a spirit of aping the conte:npt Ude lol lies of the foreign "nobilty." A dandta lied stripling, whose respectable father and worthy old mother commenced life in a hovel, and by honest industry accu mulated a considerable sum of money, must needs make the tour of Europe, and and return with his shallow brain addled by the glare and glitter, the tinsel and foppery of fashionable foreign life, he, like the travelled monkey in the fable, sets himself up as the pattern of refine ment, anti with his face disfigured by mus taches. imperial and whiskers, he struts about a living personification of "puss in boots." The animal meets with cungerii al taste in some silly girl just escaped ' from the misery; and a wedding, on the most fashionable stye. is soon the talk or the elite. The; must needs set up a car riage, and to lie fashionable, some poor , creatures are discovered who for the sake of a mouthful of cold victuals, are will ing to wear the badge of slavery is the shape of a threadbare coat with rusty copper lace bound on to keep it together. They must, forsooth, have a coat of arms too, with which to emblazen the pannels of an old hack carriage, and the wag of a painter, who pla:s the part of "garter king at arms," furnishes them with a goose and gridiron, supported by two mules, to show that their mothers were kitchen maids and their fathers stable boys and that they have a touch of the propen sities of long eared animals. such are the specimens of yankee nobility that we see, and the effect of their foolery is that they are dispised.—Bull, Sun. Anecdote. A FACT.—A very genteel, iupudent looking young man, was seen to enter church in time of service—he paused at the entrance —the congregation stared-- he advanced a few steps, and deliberates ly surveying the whole assembly, cont inence(' a slow march up the broad aisle --not a pew was opened—the audience were to busy for civility—he wheeled, and in the same manner performed a march, stepping as if to kaolin Castle, or the dead march in Saul, and disappeared, a few moments after he reentered with a huge block upon his shoulders, as heavy as Tie could well stagger under, his coon • tenance was immovable—again the good people started and half rose from their seats with their bunks in their !mods. At length he placed the block in the very centre of the principle passage and seated himself upon it. Then, fin the first time the reproach was felt ! Every pew door in the house was instant') - flung open ! But no—the stranger was a gentleman— ,he came not here for disturbance--he moved not, smiled not ; hut preserved the utmost decorum, until the service was conccluded, when he deliberately shoul- ' dered his block, and to the same slow steps bore it off and replaced it "here he had found it. The congregation is now the most polite sod attentive to strangers of any in America. INDEPENDENCE OF MIND.-There nre some men who go in leading strings all their days. They always follow in the path of others, without being able to give any reason for their opinions. There is a proper mental independence which all should maintain—self respect and the stabil ity of our character require it. The man who pins his opinions entirely on anoth• cr's sleeve, can have no respect for his [WnoLE No. 30W ;owe judgment, and is likely to be a changeling. ‘Vhen we c:.n•oler catefu'- jly what appeals to our minds and exer ,cise upon it our reason, taking into IT spectlul considernion what others say upon it, and then come to a conclusion of our own, we act as intelligent beings should se, and only then. This prnprr independence of mind is far removed front presumptu ,, us self confidence, than which there is nothing more severely to be con. demned. Presumption is the associate of ignorance; and it is hateful in the ex treme to hear some hall•taught stripling delivering his opinions with all the au thority of an oracle. This is not what we wean by mental ineependence, and it is hoped none will mis , ake what has been said. We refer to a modest yct firm and independent exercise of judg ment upon subjects which the mind un derstands; in short, we intend only the opposite of that slavish habit which makes one man the mere shadow of another. From the National Intelligeneer. MR. BADGER AT HOME. upon his late return to North Carolina' the lion. Geo. E. Badger, Ex-Secretary of the Navy, was welcomed and compli mented by the inhabitants of the beautiful little city of Raleigh (the place of his resi•len-e) with a Public Dinner, at which ;I....nibbled a large number of respec ,ahl, intelligent citizens than had ev er before been gathered together at that place or neighborhood on any like occa• sion. After the third toast had been drank Mr Badger rose and addressed his assam bled friends in a speech that is very high• ly spoken of for its eloquence, and of which the following sketch, professedlya brief one, token down at the time, is pub lished in the Raleigh Register, and aft' rds no doubt a correct view of the general ground occupied by the gifted orator: Mr. BADGER commenced by remark. ling that he should indeed be wanting in sensibility not to be touched by the testi monial of undeserved approbation this day offered him, and by the complimenta ry sentiment which had just been so kindly received. He was fully aware that there were considerations other than personal connected with this mark of respect; and it was no doubt exuected, surrounded as he was by his old friends, and by those best aide to estimate his motives that ha should say something as to the dissolution of the late Cabinet, the present posture of our affairs, and the course proper to he a llopted by the Whig party of North Caro lina. I It was never known to his friends that he had never soup,ht for office, that he had nn fondness for it, and that he took it from considerations no way connected with his own personal interest and ad vancement. Had he believed himself tt liberty to consult only his own wishes and his own interest, he would have remain ed in his native State, and been contented to attract that degree of respect and es teem to which he might be thought enti tled. Having been influenced by public considerations to take office, he felt deep ly gratified, on laying it down, to find his !conduct approved and his motives justly ) regarded by those who had the best op portunity to know him. The events of the past year, continued Mr. 8., must have excited the astonish inent of every observant man. It seem ed to him only yesterday, when this grove was filled with thousands of determined Whigs, collected from every part of the State—brought together by no base or mercenary motives; but by the solemn con vietion tlitit the fate of the whole country was involved in the issue of a great pollt ical struggle. They were fired by the same spirit of liberty that impelled our Revolutionary forefathers, and, like them felt that the success of their eforts was necessary to the welfare and happiness of their posterity. They did succeed. Day after day the cheering tidings came in, that State upon State had declared for the IVhig cause. At length the voice of the whole American People was collec ted, and HARIII4ON, the Patriot, Sae t te, S , atesman, Soldier, and best of all Vais thm, was called to direct the nation, To his voice, said Mr 11., I yielded, and be came a member of his Cabin et. And %Own, air, I saw and knew DIV, noble old min, yid those whom he had called Ws. boot him—when I heard hi', n , in the mid st of thousands of his co . ,ntevinen, t,,ke• 'hit solemn oath which bound him to sa d oon the pledge then given of faithf. 4111e_ votion to his count' 7 , I felt deep *smut ! ranee that misrule, was at an end —that the one man pow er was repudiated from our system, an the Nation secure of a true Represeettative Government. But a fereful change has come over our la's't.--Tl•.ere is a voice of mourning, and a feelini; of distrust seems to pervade et/. ery part of the country. Why is this ?• Are Whig principles less valuable now than they were twelve ininiths ago ? Are Loc o Foco doctrines less fraught with ,MMIGCZNi•