w.: VoL. Vii. No. 43.] PUBLISIIED ➢Y THEODORE H. CriEMER. I.Mi3. The "louxNAL" will be published every Wedueschtv morning, at two dZillars a year, if paid 114 ADVANCE, and if not paid within six months, two dollars and a half. No subscription received for a shorter pe • rind than six months, nor itny paper discon tinued till all arrearages are paid. Adveftisements not exceeding one square, will beinserted three tin:;,, frome dollar, and fur evert , sul,,qn.•lit ia,rtinn twenty five cents. If nn definite ortlei a are given us to thetime an advertisement is to lie continu ed, it will be kept in till ordered out, and c harged itecordinel y . 0 4 ' 4,144.1:7"ia. -3,3 f l'OMT,?::. Nobody navvy file. fIY GEORGE P. MORRIS. Heigh-ho! for a husliand r—heigh ho! There's danger in loner delay! Shall I never again have a beau? Will nobody marry 111, pray ? I begin to feel strange, I deolare With beauty my prospects wiil fade! I'd give istysdi .gyp to despair 111 thought I should die an old maid! I once cut the b,utix in a buff— • I. thou;:ht it e sin and a shame ' 'That no one had emu;;11 TO ask me to nit, r my name! So I turned up my no at the short, And rolled Up my , ey,r, at the tall ; But tken I jt.st did it in sport, And now I've no lover at all! These men are the plague of my life! 'Tis hard from so many to choose! Should one of them wish for a wife, • Could I have the heart to refits,' I don't know—for none have pr, _ 9 li,dear_utr.! 'itue.r.!;! That I slinuld be singlz till now? Rise iaa YOnie INCA iVe gircagiff. BY 3. U. BUTLER, Rise in your native strength, Mechanics of the land! .And clash the iron rule From rude oppressiaa's hand; By all the Might of mind, Assume the puny c:f men -11 0: not the Gct.tf of• those \Alio Sul n tic aril: an. Ye sinews of a state, Your nation's pride and boast, Whose glory crowns the hills, And guards her native coast, You are her wealth in peace, Her vital breath ye are, And when the belts of death are burl'd Ye are the shields in war! By the eterfal sword, 'Postern browed Justice given; By freedom's holy self, '1 he night of wrong is riven! Strong monuments crier; In record of your praise ; Transmitting down your names To men of who' days. Proclaim it to the world Your us . ..fulness and woi tit ; Speak cut with trumpet tongue, Ye mighty men of earth! Was not the soil ye tread Won by your fathers' blood ? Then on oppression's self, Roll back oppression's flood!. The EZclort. DT GEORGE P. MORRU Old Birch who taught the village school, Wedded a maid of homespun habit; lle NV,S ,tubborn as a mule, And she as playful as a rabbit. Poor Kate had scarce become a wife, Before her husband sought to make her The pink of country-polished life, And prim and formal as a quaker. One day the tutor went abroad, And simple Kitty sadly missed him ; When he returned, behind her lord She slowly stole mod fondly kiss',' him! The husband's auger rose!—aud red And white his face alternate grew! "Less freedom, ma'am!"—Kate sighed and said, " Oh, dear I didn't know 'twos you f," There are kur things that affects a man's spirits ; a dull day, an empty pis:ket, being in lure, :aid the tent:melte. ,:-.,...„, '`4 .;:ii‘e. 1,1-' , , ~. ...„. . , • ~, , -e '•:,'-," 'i' a -....;.' • ‘ 'z'i,,,,... \ '' . • - iii . .....;# _ :i'•,:. ,'4., ~.?.:: ....P )•'i• 1• -• , : 1,--t , ;4:*• ',. ... . 1 \ I 'T . , ' 4. ,: - ~,„„ /..? --• } ~1 ,1 . 1 , . .;;; ' ..,; ii,1,4 ,' , !-- , _ ,L i-,,j, I~2IN~:~;~,d~'m~v'~~ ~iJ~. From the Stu. ay Mercury. Short Patent Sea•anon. At the rrquest of a subscriber to the Sunday Mercury in Alabama, A. will preach front this text : I'o love is p iinful, that is true— Not to love is p.ontul too ; But oh! it gives the greatest pain To lur e aura nut be loved again. My hi , arers—l love to preach about love; for love furies a rosy wreath for the heart, in which the green leaves of friendship, the flowers of affection, and a few thorns of pain are entwined, just fur the sake of variety. It is the pre cement that ;inheres seal to sod— the lbw] olangels iu heaven, and a stim ulant to mortals on earth. It smoothes down the asperities of human nature— lilies the hrei,t with the velvet of svtupa• thy—and gives a silken coating to the rough exterior ef humanity. To love ar dently, deeply, devotedly, I acknowedge is sometimes painful; n,vertheleas it is a pleasant pain, attended with some de— li;Othul sensations. It is a hind of in ward itching, which riqufres the continual exercise of scratching, and yet the ireins lion is never allayed. The more we I scratch, the more we itch—and imthilig hut matrinniny can servo as an effectual remedy—an i'. t, hi too many instances, is far worse • i.t,oa,e. My friend,--el o painful. To h.tec all your ft -. eebed lit the dark sepulchre ef -, and our hopes lust in the cold 1„:.. •hru py, is about as let as b. den,geon, to be fed with the fr4iwnts•l critter follies. The light of love, admitted through the windows of the heart, warms and nourishes the soil of the sutd—causes the buds of benevolence to expand, and the capsules of charity to be filled with the ripe seeds of sympathy.— "Without the genial intim-nee of love the bosom freezes, and becomes its barren as a goose poster iu wintei. if a flower chanzes to [demo, it is destitute of fra• ;ranee; or, it it have any, it Witql's its sweetness• a. the :,Olf`t sett air. To be without love is like being and a sun at mid tiny. The heart that never laves is as hard as a 'trick bar, as in sensible as a pickled clam to all t h e finer feelings, and a stranger to every delights fill emotion. An old bachelor, my friends, whose heart is never warmed with tion, is a miserable nobody in the world. lie is as cold blooded as a turtle, awl limits as melancholy as a elem. His hopes die as soon as they begin to pinfeather— there is no more s.ntiment in his soul titan there is illogic in it,,corn stalk thoughts are wrapped up in the shroud of self--he knows r,ot .the pleasures atten dant on the sexual anialgainatien or souls —his abode is fixed in the military wild of celibacy, where all is cheer less;comfort- I less and dreary. There he tires andl I there he dies, unlionored and unwept; aid 1 when he is finally carried away by the current of time, we can only say,'There I goes another parcel of rubifish into the I gulf of eternity! My hearers—it is painful to love, and painful not to love—painful anyhow you can fix it; but oh! it is excruciating pain to love and not have it reciprocated; To f go to an extravagant outlay of affection, I and 'then have it all wasted, or sent homel as sour as swill, is enough to make a man tear his shirt and tread on his own corns. It's manslaughter for a girl to spurn a youngohap's love, when she knows that by so doing she will drive the pule. fellow Ito destruction in a considerable of a hur ry. It's murder in the first degree--it's cruelty to helpless animals--it's worse than skinning eels alive; and any female guilty of such a wanton act, ought to be courted by fiends during her liletime, and wedded to the devil at last, When any of you, my young male friends, get so tan gled up with the object of your loves that you don't hardly know to wh . ch gender you belong:, you know very well that yon care a precious little who, what or how you are so long as you remain io such a happy, pleasing perplexity ; but let the least breeze or jealousy, doubt or disap lointinept blow, you straighten right out, ike a dead frog. Yen:• bosoms till up with buttermilk and bitter meditations-- your stomachs with bile, and your hoods with suicidal ideas. You grow saturnine —get sick—neglect your business—and that perhaps, to wind up the whole, ad mit the coatimin atmosphere into your gizzards with a dirk knife, or ventilate your brains' cells with a pistol. Oh! an• reciprocated love has led the jaws ill Death with many a precious 'num.l or humanity; and Cupid's arrow, which issaidlo tickle while it Wounds, sometimes tickles pretty (mint:tided hard. Its head is often pfd in poison, and wo betake the poor .; victim it pierces: I dim't know, myself, ,xactly how a fellow feels when he loves • almost to destruction, and then suddenly • i sees his adored one flirting with, or wed-I dad to another; but I suppose Its lads at I "OJNE COUNTRY, OA E CONSTITUTION, ONE DE.STINY." NGDON, PENNSYVANIA, .iIIJ ^l'i' first as though a piece of ice was thrust under his shirt, and his bosom ready to collapse. Ile most endure the torment; of . the damned, for a titne at least , utp4 the only way in It inch he can heal his wounds, is to plaster them over with the salve or forgetfulness, and swallow this consoling . anodyne: There itit yet as ;mut fish in the sea as ever have been cao4ht." PAy dear friends-11 you were all to love one another, in a moderate hot sin cere chi istianlike way, von mi;llit be sure of being loved, not only by y•our sister, woman and your brother, inan, but also by your Father, God. Then would peace, harmony, and happiness prevail up on earth, and joy ainotig the angels of heaven. Then would our thorn covered ways be turned to flowery lawns—then would the rank weeds of hatred put forth the sweet blossoms of friendship—and then might we all partake of die pleasures of love unpoisoned by p So mute it be: Dow, 2itly or Compensation. A. certain writer, (we have fin'g,•ottcn who,) has said, that there is a niwistrous inequality in the wages of the different occupations in society. Ile is right.— There is ton touch difrerence in the a mount or payment received ler the differ ent kinds of labor, which mankind perform for one another. It is not graduated right, and it ls• one great cause of ih e evils which arise from the unequal distri bution of this world's g00d , ,, !lich we commonly ill wealth. remody th,c evils, some knevolent people have !Teem mended a uentounity of goods. or Focie• lies in winch all the property, mid all the frui4 and profits of labor sfiould be coin mcn stock.- We think it woeful be het tor, if the rates of payment for labor conlit Ite equal. A into comes into your field at sunrise, MOWS for you and a.sists in securing your hay or your grain omit sunset. Ile toils incessantly till and you give linen a dollar, and ',hat ho C3ll eat at Al drink. A 7:l , :ut-bank cam ', ahem fl.' ads. ••• , u•Htl /6tv Ais heed and cu. m ,ilry :Abu , no a slack rofie.. lie kick, te,•l K tnaes rune nob; I ,r tiour two; and departs twit mere tneney the first man can eaten in ti month. A worthy yeung woman, ol gond talents and education, prudent, discre e t, Ni l one in vrhom all have confidence, is em ployed to teach a school for children. Parents are anxious to put their children under her care. She earns lint twelve ~dollars per month and •board. She toils constantly and faithfully and receives no particulars honors, nor any further Ml sideration than payment of wages. Fanny Eisler, a French girl, c-u nes into the country :Ind proclaims her unrivalled feats in dancing. Site dresses indecently and kicks up her list is drearlial agony The people are thrown into e i ,i'M e y. call her divine, and consider it ait hotior • to pull the horses out of th.t cat and put themselves into the liaru,s—a team of (taws. She is honored and ca cussed. She leaves the country in a year or two, with twenty thousand dollars in her purse. Here is an inequality midi a vengeance. Tiny former lays.the foundation of a na.l Lion's greatness by-the• solid hot iinob-I instruction she gives to tha young.. ji 'Flue other corrupts and leads astray by the delusion of a false taste, end the cor ruption el lascivious shows. The fernier f dies unlionored and unsung, it may be, In t want. The other is trumpeted to the fuer winds and loaded with i fiches. Nor is the inequality any the less antom: those of the same callin; and occumoiim. We have noticed this rartieularly in th , ministerial profession. o r , in:in settled in a parish where the peopk! rich and luxurious. lie preaches each Sunday to a full fed, sleepy congregation, and they pay him a fat salary and keep him above the privations of poverty or the fear - of beggary. Another, of equally good talents is settled in another parish, where the people are not so rich, where, in addition to the pulpit duties, he haw to be on the alert to prevent as well as cote moral evils, where he has to act as advi ser, comforter, friend, fuller end protec tor; and yet receives hardly enough to feed and clothe himself and faintly de. cently. AVG might follow the same com parison throughout the walks of lila.— There appears to be something wrong in these things ;—we mention them at facts, and end as me began. There is a coon strolls inequality of emnpens,,tion received for the same amount of la',or among man kind.—Maine If you wish to recollect any particular errand or business, just button a few stingin; nettles up in your breeches next your skin—or rubs little c;iwitch between your fingers—or tleposile n grain id ihrt in your eye—or stick a wafer on the end of your nose—asoil you will be sure to re. collect what you wis). WED:';ESDAY, NOVEMBER 2, 1842 Aalcr:L:i D caoEo•.2. by REV. JOHN TODD, It is eat difficult to be decided, were! this all : but to he decided and fins while the feelings and the vitiee are as soft as the late„is difficult. Your child has no juilgumm.t. Many times every wet k, and sometimes every day, lie must be deimicd, i and Lis wi-ltes and %till be made to sub- 1 mit to pairs. When he is well, you must. of neees , ity, he constantly thwarting his nicht - mt.:oils, holm:ding him, orcounnand ing bitet i mid when lie is sick, you must force hito, and ntaiid further than ever aloof hem indulgeticm Even when you feel that, he is oa the bed of death, yon must control him, conimand hint, and see that he t iteys: Your own deciston,'ener-i gy, anti fit lilrle:S, mount never waive for a moment in his pre ;.lice. While a moth er's heart pleads fur indulgence, you must have a resolution which will lead you to do vent tioty, even while the heart bleeds, a nd IL : eta weep. That natitle mother —who liiMml Ler child whsle his let was ampubil. ti, and did it firmness which Ht dared I,ot rests ti ill, a ten-. demons ..hat mail. him tee tat site did it t o i for his t;mtil--NVII flocs not admire ?-- ilittsmi ~ .,..it 9 dni,;ittn and mild ness, arts se! il in man. lie is eilllVl' ton St, lenient. But the mother, the assess them both, and have them both is exercise ,L Cie same moment. Site must, however, have the aid of Ileaven. She trust net:h ittia pray ! sr, at thy foot of Coe throne, ;i t ' d th cre she loth find ii. coalli point . yOll to a son win) Crier. fishes immery of his mother as some thiu dear and sacred. Site was a , he hor only son. When a dal something in ti . ..•A. and Cousin, , 1. , t 01y it i,,. • • N , , , 1 faith, mildly and requested him to make an ; to die girl,. "Fiji he declis insisted upon it, and even laid •iLrelds. lie refused. She next • ' in the thi...dslary. Ile complied. v. :•y cool' nub the key, and .' •H. ~• ..;ionh lock the door, and he •i her face, nor receive . • .... • . Led-. •J,;ythe <alied at the door of the • " diy s,m, are you ready to comply with my rotioe, , ,t " No, l'Amher." The second day, the same question was asked and the saint, ansv er rt.ccived.— ne third day she went to the ;lino., and said, "James, you think by holding. out thus. your [limiter will yield, and come to your trim 4, but you don't know her. I am in i 1, ., .:;i of in v duty, ,ntl 101311 not yield till ~, timuvrs of this house decay and !..! ~. ,•• Id I lice so long.!" .......:. l 7 7 : ~•:4 he would hare sent a m: • i ... ;,, L ~ mother, but he had no ;••.men:, ,-. , the fourth day he promi sed to ‘:., ••• ,„c ever she required. She opened i., (Jam., and her pale, sickly iiiid;ing I; :. i mbraceil her with tears, as• iier p,.,:iin, and submitted to her re it.. -:H,ii. fie has since been seen to shed 1,• •, • • . .:-aiitude over that deci.mn an ii 1.,:i;.f.' , : .1 1.. ~ssert, with the ut most ; , • :,!. ~. ,•, 7 ,j it mess this firmness in 1,-, • ‘— •! ~, -; iter, dial 11, Vt . ,' Ili 11l I . l'oln .: ~' . - :,, , ;.i ~ • - id,thcr's Aseis laht. Xlatti4's Farewell DifisCo7lV6e. The I.lluwilig are the a ~cchhea floy. Mal'- 0110 COn;rOSS, the CVO It IS Si , ,CI,UO of that peculiar style r of Mr. Atallir. t;entletnen! Your distant await you I 'clivre bloom the per reaial homy-suck!, or love and alrec tionato frien,hip, all the air of your clista.:., •':! ; , : . our m;. cumi I ,ore , route away— come home !" Alas ! alas who came loin.: at the openiiig• oldie ses cannot return a, —tin to their ! ;int! Dix , im, aiiil Ilastin : s, arid Williams, and I, iwriiiire, and Druock, cannot return to homes, and the loved greetings of al fr..rionate friendship! Ali, nu! the clods of CI, Vale too heavily upon their bosoms- —they cannot n home non; ne,rl not wait ft, them ! You need out cdl tlieir names on your roll : they are absent, arol will heat' you. You need not shout to :licit:. that the session ig ! for that dull, cold ear death! You need n,r ,av e your hand to U,•• signal Of ! They arc " beyood hull at whence 110 wy;tlioJi 7 . tbar fair home, awry rise fir4t tip the I:::taterrt !;nitlat the du:Ill-rapt Iltte frills of ever! Moon toins, • State—be th soontlim,' boa New Englan savannas of the Fities o wave of the tributaries, fi of the West Go all to voo Thither I hortations of would I assm dictator to s mind, of wor —yet. io the foss, I n),V Si 11 of hearts and o • your wlmle ii down from tl Purity—Luv It At May a hie you io the pitted out Lie,ht !tprt your• footste your innoec pillow, On 1.0(.01 resr,•rt Tu diet from all nail under Ile,tv first burn iu co:,;:nzarices 'Chem I,r slraile of 'nil thin my I)ru, a; yours! ARK: Gallaer. a cA,verill;,;lll as to I. I .,r,;111 *hilt! th ai A does fiCrViCO ; Ct)111,!S 0:1, , t-er of hero- Clay, they at airy dry ct+ sitte, tt:at tli cots; they lar is in - do, secure (rum 15tald,r1 or;
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