Huntingdon journal. (Huntingdon, Pa.) 1843-1859, July 01, 1846, Image 1

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    11UNTI)GBON JOURNAL
1M us.
_ -
a jYallzilp atitiopmity—nti;otar to etutrat futtiliattt re, ZatUtrtioitta, Itittratttre, c-Xito-, Zgrictitturt, 3mltotitleht,
'ccoD.. =EM 9 Egiaa. g 241.
PUBLISHED BP
JAMES CLARK.
Rai anitta ats
The “Jocimm." will be published every Wed
nesday morning, at $2 00 a year, if paid let advance,
and if not paid within six months, $2 50.
No subscription received for a shorter period than
six months, nor any paper discontinued till all or
reames are paid.
Advertisements not exceeding one square, will be
inserted three times for $1 00, and for every subse
quent insertion 25 cents. If no definite orders are
given as to the time an advertisement is to he continu
es}, it will be kept in till ordered out, and charged ac
cordingly.
TY V. B. PALMER, Esq., is authorized to act
as Agent for this paper, to procure subscriptions and
advertisements in Philadelphia, New York, Balti
more and Boston.
_
OFFICES:
Philadelphia—Number 69 Pine street.
Baltimore—S. E. corner of Baltimore and Cal.
vent streets.
New York—Number 160 Nassau street.
Boston—Number 16 State street.
ALEXANDRIA FOUNDRY.
I. 4' H. Grafius,
'fn ESPECTFULLY inform the citizens
of Huntingdon county, and the public
generally, that they continue to carry on
the
j Copper, Tin and Sheet •Iron Business,
in all its branches, in Alt xandria, where
they manufacture and constat tly keep on
band every description of ware in theirlme;
such as
- New and Splendid Wood Stoves
22, 24,, 28, 28 and *inches long.
R.IIDIATOII STOVES,
2 stzEs COAL STOVES io PAR LOIAS,
NEW AND sPLENDID • P ,%111,OR
STOVES FOR WOOD--THR EE
SIZES. EGG STOVES—.9Iso, IRON
RAILING for front of Houses—
. C AST GRATES for cellar win
dows•-•,-SELF SHARPENING
PLOUGHS, right and. left .
handed--NEW BULL
• PLOUGH ,with cast and
iron shear, and the
LIVINGS FONPLOUGH--DOUBLESHOVEL PLOUGHS for corn and
seeding in fall' grain—COPPER
PUMPS, for wells any length,
and Tin inside and nut..
• FORGE HAMMERS, •
from. 5 to 16 cwt,
Aiew Cooking Stoves or all lands, and
Also four sizes of Coal Stoves,
ALSO STOVE-PIPE...AND STOVES FINISHED
All kinds nt castings done, for Forges, Saw
mills arid Threshing-machines.. Also WAG
ON BOXES, MILL GUDGEONS, AND HOLLOW
wAgg ; all of which is done in a workman
like manner.
Also, Copper, Dye, Wdth, niter, Pre.
•
serving, and Tea kettles, for ode,
wholesale and ref nil.
Persons favoring this establishment with
their custcm may depend on having their
orders executed with fidelity and despatch.
Old metal, copper, brass and pewter ta
ken in eicchange. Also wheat, rye, corn
unit oats taken at market price.
• Alexandria, May 20, 1846.
'I f tTEEN Oi - 111113 WEST"
ID3 Qll7 ca) at-a va %PQM ,
Itorsale by 1. & H. GRAFIUS,
• Alex
andria, Huntingdon rounty,Pa.,
cheap for cash or country
produce at the
• market price.
'The "queen of the West" is an im
p,,,cement on Hathaway's celebrated
flat Mc Stove. There has never yet ap
peace(' any plan cgs Cooking Steve that
possesses the advantages that this one
has. A much less quantity of fuel is re•
quired for any amount of cooking or In
' king by this stove than by any other.
Persons are requested to call and see
before they purchase elsewhere.
May 20, 1846.
TO Parrhasers—Guarantee.
'Nu undersigned ages t of the Pattentee,
of,the Stove, " The Queen of the West,"
etnierstanding that the owners, or those
concerned for them, of other and different
, patent Cooking Stoves, have threatened to
bring suit against all. who purchase and use
any of " GUILDS PATENT COOKING STOVE
.4—The Queen of the West." Now this is
ifb inform all and every person who anal
liurchase mid use said Stove that he will inl
damnify them from all costsor damage, from
any and all suits, brought by a them Paten
t fees, or their agents. for any infrmgment of
( 'their patents. He gives this notice so that
persons need not be under any fears because
they have, while consulting their own inter
, epts an d c o n v e nience, secured the superior
advantages of this "Queen"not only of the
neat, but of the East.
ISRAEL GRAFIUS.
f r May 20, 1846.
• Dissolution of Partnership.
The subscribers doing business under the
firm of 1. Grafius & Son. in Alexanoria,
Huntingdon connty, dissolved partnership
by mutual consent on the 3rd day of April
last. All persons having accounts with sa id
firm will settle the same with 1. Grafius,up
to the above date.
L'GRAFIUS &SON.
•
Alexandria, May 20. 1846.
DE. 8. K. wzrr,
SURGEON DENTIST,
Huntingdon, Pa.
!MUSTICES' Blanks of all kinds, term%
rt this Officr.
POE TR7h
prom the Charleston Patriot
Pain..ilto and Resara.
A NEW SONG eon THE rocnTO or JULY, 1846,
I.
Now while our cups are flowiNg
With memories born to bloont,
And filial hands ere throwing
Their wreath's o'er valor's tomb ;
While lips exulting shout the praise
Of heroes of the past that stood,
Triumphant, 'mid old Bunker's blaze,
And proud in Eutaw's field of blood,
Be not forgot the gallant train
That lifts your name in Mexico war :
One cup for Palo-Alto drain,
Ono mighty cheer for Resaca!
11.
For Taylor—" Rough and Ready,"
True son of truest sires;
For May, who, swift and steady
Trod down La Vega's fires;
For all who in that day of strife,
Maintain'd in pride the stripes and stare,
The dead, who won immortal life,
And they who live for other wars:
For these, who with their victory,
New wreath's to grace our laurel bring—
A health that drains the goblet dry,
A cheer that makes the welkin ring!
ill.
Nor, though even now we falter
With thoughts of those who died,
And at our festive altar
Grow silent in our pride.
Yer in the heart's most holy deep
Fond memory shines the happy brave,
Who in the arms of battle sleep
By Palo's wood and Bravo's wave;
Nor in our future deeds forgot,
Shall silent thought forbear to bring
Her tribute to that sacred spot,
Where Ringgold's gallant soul took wing.
IV.
Fill to our country's glory,
. Where'er her flag is borne I
Nor, ih her failing story,
Let future ages mourn ;
Nor let the envious foreign foe
. Rejoice that faction checks her speed,
Arrests her in the indignant blow,
And sadden's o'er the uvehging deed!
Fill high, though from the crystal wave
Your cup, and from the grape be mine:
The marriage rites, that link the brave
To fame, will turn each draught to wine.
W. G. S.
A Legend of Judea
The cite occupied by the Temple of Solntnon
was formeriy a cultivated field, possessed in common
by two brothers. One of theM was married, and
had several children ; the other was unmarried ; they
lived together. however, cultivating, in the greatest
harmony possible, the property they had inherited
from their father.
The harvest Staten had arrived ; the two broth-
Ors botind up their sheaves; made two equal stacks
Of them, and left them on the field. During the
night, the one who was unmarried was struck with
an excellent thought: my brother, said he, to him
self, has a wife and thildren to support ;. it is not
just that my share of the harvest should be as large
as his. Upon this he arose, and took from his stack
several sheaves, which he added to those of his bro
ther; and this he did with as much secrecy at if he
had been committing an evil action, in order that
his brotherly offering might not be refused. On the
same night the other brother awoke, and said to
his wife, " my brother lives alone, witttoiit d eem
panion; he has no ono to resist him in his librirti;
nor to reward him for his tails; while God has be
stowed oti me II Wtfe and children; it is trot right
that we should take from our common field as many
sheaves as he, since We have already more then he
hes—domestic happiness. if you consent, we shall,
by adding secretly a certain number of our sheaves
to his stack, by way of compensation, and without
his knowledge, see his portion of the harvest in
creased." This project was approved, and imme
diately put into execution.
In the morning, each of the brothers went to the
field and was much surprised at seeing the stocks
equal. During several successive nights, the same
contrivance was repeated on each side ; for, us each
kept adding to his brother's store the stacks always
remained the sante. But one night having stood
sentinel to dive into the cause of this miracle, they
met, each bearing the sheaves mutually destined
for the other: it was all thus elucidated, and they
rushed into each other's arms, each grateful to hoe
yen for having so good a brother. Now, says the
legend, the place where so good an idea had sim
ultaneously occurred to the two brothers, and with
so much pertinacity, must have been acceptable to
God : men blessed it, and Israel chose it, there to
erect the house of the Lord l—Lantortine, Voy
age to the East.
A Speech by Gen. Stumm.
The following is an extract front a speech of Gen.
litincura, in favor of 64 40:
" Mr. Speaker—When I open my eyes and look
over the vast expanse of this great country—when
I see bow the years of freedom has caused it to rise
ire the scale of civilization, and expand on every
side—when I see it growing, swelling, roaring like
a spring freshet—l cannot resist the idea, sir, that
the day will come when this great nation, like a
young school boy, will buret its straps, and become
entirely too big for its hoots. Sir, we want elbow
room—the continent, the whole continent—and we
will have it. Then shall the great Uncle Sam,
placing his hat upon the Canada., rest his right aim
upon the Oregon and California coast, his left upon
the eastern seaboard, and whittle away the British
power, while reposing his leg, like a freeman, upon
Cape Horn! Sir, the day will—the day must
come."
LtacJU2uclsl.laucit),; zici,awr a, au.'342.4...1.
EloqUent 1-I.4'ittract. he Ineffective under such a pressure, and a life of
expedients has no end but penury. Our recipe for
• •
Amongst the speakers • before the meeting of the
succeeding in the world, then, is this; work much
AMERICAN SEAMAN'S tamsrn SocrkTr, in New
and spend little. ff this advice be followed, success
cork, was the Bev. Di. Tyne; of Philadelphia.—
In his address We fitid the fdliowing must come, unless, indeed, some unwise adventure,
&some accident against which no human foresight
There conies to us a voice from the sea. A
could provide, such as sickness, con fl agration, or
voice of soleMn wailing for the dead that have gone
other visitation of Providence, should arrest the
down with HO covering of otohement, no leen) of
progress onward; but in the ordinary course of
hope; d voice of complaint dr generation Oiler gen
huniart affairs, success will ever wait upon economy,
oration, thdt been neglected and left to perish
a voice Of entreaty, IS the ilootl6 seems to lift tip their which is the condition by which prosperity most
be earned. Worldly success, however, though uni
hands and ask if there shall hot be ari eed of this
versally theta!, con be"only desirable in so far as
waste of soul end body ; d voice Of w arning, speak=
It contributes to lieppidtsc, and it will contribute to
ing of that day when the sea and the earth shall
heppiriess very little unless there be cultivated a live
give up their dead ; and a voice of gratitude. as the
deep brings her sixty thousand praying Christians ly benevelence toward Every animated being,
,
and six thousand Christian ships bearing the Bible Happiness t' it has been finely observed, is in
over the world. Earth responds to the voice of the proportion of the number of things we love,
gratitude ; and widowed mothers receive their dead and the number of things that love Us." To this
brought bock to life nein, and wives, that have sentiment we mosteordially subscribe, anti tVestiould
wish to see it written on the tablet of every heart,
prayed for many years, hate answers to their pray-
and producing its fruits of charity. The man,
ors in their husbands restored ; nn The deep uttereth I
whatever be Ins fame, or fortune, or intelligence,
her voice." Sir, shall we hear? Shrill We listen?
Shalt We not say that with us there shall he no lon• wino can treat lightly another's wo—who is not
bound to his fellow man by the magic tie of sym
ger the responsibility or neglect or cold rejection of I
pathy, deserves, sy, and will obtain. the contempt
the cry? Let us with one heart, ono mind, one I
of human kind. Upon hint all the gifts of fortune
spirit, bear the sailor, in the arms of prover up to
ore thrown away. Happiness he has none; his life
the throne of God and lay him at the foot of that
is a dream, a mere lethargy, without in throb of he. throne on which the LAmn JEMOTAII reigns and
man emotion, and he will descend to the grave
lives in everlasting mercy to the Bens of men."
unwept, unhonored, and unsung." Such a fate
At the anniversary of the Tract Society, Dr, is not to be envied, and let those who are intent
Tyng unrolled the celebrated Vermillion edict" upon success, remember that success is nothing
of the Emperor of China granting full toleration without happiness.
to Christianity in that Empire. SLAVERY.
The resolution, continued Dr. Tyng, refers to On the subject of Slavery Governor Coca': thou
"all evangelical denominations." 1, sir, am not spears:
much in the habit of talking sectarianism. I find reak"
"Ours is a cotintry of benevolent prlneiplts and,
so much superiority in the name of Christ and
christian over those of Church and churchman, that Southern slavery excepted, of unequalled Liberty.
This exception—at variance wills the doctrine of
I am somewhat regardless of the lines that define
the boundaries among the different sects of Chris-
popular liberty—at variance with our declaration of
tians. [Loud and long applause.] And where are
I:berty and equal tights, and repugnant to our moral
the lines of demarcation? Do not I hope to meet sense, was entailed upon us by the framers of our
my brethren here at the feet of Jesus ? D . / not Constitution, whose palliation for the admission of
so great a blot upon our system, was the weak and
believe that they are called after Christ? Sir! have
tried to be a seCtation--but I cannot !—I have tried embarrassed condition of our country at the close
to build and keep up the fence of division between of the revolutionary war. But what can be said of
the present generation in the United States?—
my own and other denominations. But I have
ever found that the summer spent in building fences
Grasping territory for the purpose of increasing hu-
I
is followed by a Winter About a crop!—[Groat' man misery Texas has been annexed to the
. -
sensation, and warm applause.]
rrofession of the tatlii.
ft is a singular infaittiation—while there aro so
many fields to cultivate, so much land to clear up,
and so groat a dotriand for hondstlind industrious
labor all over tha country—that thousands and
tens of thousands run blindfolded and ignorant into
the profession of the law. States who have been
brought up fanners and mechanics--who might
have a good living and exert a happy influence—
lorsake the plough and the plane, the shovel and
the composing stick, and half starve themselves to
death in a lawyer's office. Is it not strange Is
the law more honorable than a trade 7 Who thinks
sot Surely not men of the most sense and best
judgment. Lawyers the most distinguished, advise
the young aspirants to stick to their anvils, their
hods and their types. Thoy know that unless a
Man has peculiar talents, skill,--and brass, we may
add,--he cannever soar higher than a miserable
pettifogger.—Portland Herald.
The Secret or Success.
There ere come men who appear born to good
f,rtune, and other. whose destiny appears to sub
ject them to eternal failure and disaster. The an- .
cicnts represented Fortune as a blind goddess, be
cause she distributed her gills without discrimina
tion; and in modern times, the belief has been
prevalent that the fortunes of a Stan were ruled
chiefly by the influences of the planet under which
he was born. Those superstitions, however ridic
ulous, show at Least that the connexion between
merit and success is not very conspicuous, yet it is
not therefore the lean perpetual. To coerced in the
world, is of itself a proof of merit ; of a vulgar
kind indeed it may be, but a useful kind notwith
standing. We grant, indeed, that those qualities
of rebid which make a man succeed in life, are to
a great extent subversive of gemus. Nevertheless,
numerous illustrious examples might be given of
men of the highest genius being as worldly-wise as
duller mortals. It is the pretenders to genius, rather
' than the possessors of it, who claim the large eV
eruption from those rules of prudence which regu
late the conduct of ordinary mortals, and array
themselves in the deformities of genius, in the Idea
that they conetitute its beauties. There are some
indiscretions, we believe, to which men of a vigor
ous fancy and keen sensibility aro naturally heir,
and for which it would be as unjust to condemn
them with rigor, as it would be to blame one of the
Icold blooded sone of discretion for being destitute
of poetic fire. Yet every deviation front prudence
I is a fault, and is not to be imitated, though it may
sometimes be excused.
The most important element of success Is econ
omy; economy of money and economy of time.—
By economy we do not mean penuriousness, Mt
merely such wholesome thrift as will disincline us
to spend our time or money without an adequate
return either in gain or enjoyment. An economical
application of time brings leisure and method, and
enables us to drive our business, instead of our bu
-11111006 driving us. There is nothing attended with
results eo dieastrous, as such a miscalculation of
our time and means as will involve us in perpetual
hurry and difficulty. The brightest talent. must
United States for no higher object than to perpetu
ate an institution which degrades the human race,
and dishonors the Cod of Heaven. For doing
this, there is no excuse that will avail for our coun
try before a righteous Judge. Let New Hampshire
wipe out the stain which has been flung upon her
by party muchinery, set in motion by the Baltimore
Convention, whereby she has been made to act con
trary to the true spirit of her original Democracy,
and contrary to the true feelings of three-fourths of
her citizens. While we of the North are not per
mitted to remain in a Southern State, by our agents,
for the purpose of obtaining justice, let us render
good fur evil, end toy to our southern brethren. of
whatever rank or color, that if they cdute ihlo New-
Hampshire they may enjoy equal liberty with us;'
and if any be clrilmed as a..tants or as slaves, lot
a right to their services, fOUntitd del
,mutual con
tract, be shown to the satiftieticin of a :dew-Hamp
shire jury. If Congress have not the emitititutional
right to abolish slavery in the District of Columbia,
it would look better for them to remove the seat of
government to sonic Free State,"
Sign id a Newspaper,
“NeighborShoeinaker: I see you . have
a fine stock at boots, bootees, arid shoes on
hand —all sorts, sizes and qualities, cow•
hide, calfskin, superfine and extra super
fine—for genileinen, ladies, misses and
children. You wish to sell them I sup
pose.
"I perceive. you have got a shingle over
the door, with the words, "Boot and Shoe
Store" inscribed thereon. That 1 pre.
some is to invite them to give you a calIV,
Well, some fen , of (hose who puss
along this street will doubtless notice your
sign, and they may be in want too. 'You
need another sign, Mr. Shoemaker.
"That's a fact, I &Witt think of that
before."
"Go then the first thing and get an ad
vertisement in the newspaper. Tell the
people where you are, and what you are
about, and %that varieties of boots and
shoes lou keep for sale, and that you will
be glad to see them: 'rhos instead of
barely notifying iho:e Who prigs along by
your shop, you OW inform the people all
around not °MY those whd pies the other
streets, but the farmers and their families
away back on the hillv; the ladies, me•
climes, and working men and alt others,
and my word for it, one stick sigii in a
newspaper, will be Worth a dozen over
your door.”
"Paid), I will try it before I am a day
older."
..And you, Messrs. Merchants, flatters,
Tailors, Tinmen, Cabinetmakers, and
Saddle and llarness makers, &c., you've
all got your shingles over the dour, as
though that would notify every body in
creation. Had you better not try a sign
in a treWspaper as well as neighbor Shoe.
maker "
cd "Any hog pile you dare'" inquired one
Dutchman of another, engaged in angling. " No
Hann." " Well, nothing pito me too."
GENERAL AMPUDIA
A newspaper just started at Matamoras,
be some Americans, called the “Republic
of the Rio Grande and Friend of the Peo
ple," says: An amusing story is told by a
Ranchero's wife of the trepidation in winch
he crossed the river on the afternoon of the
9th of May—a day likely to be rememkr
ed in his calender. The good woman says,
that A mpudia came to her house soon after
the firing commenced, at full speed, and
begged her husband like a hound to take
him over the river, before these shout
ing devils, the Americans, could over.
take hint. '1 he pubr husbandman compli
ed and ferried the poor crest-fallen, terror
:stricken hero across ; but he had no soon
er landed anal placed the broad river be•
tween himself and his pursuers, than he
became the haughtyoupercillous Gen. Am•
pudia again, and ordered his preserVer to
play lackey and groom to himself and
horse.
Ile is notorictus i❑ lids city for his mean
ness in pecuniary matters, especialy in
swindling the people from whom he hired
the furniture of his house, since his arri
val—and for his cold blooded cruelty 1.1
our Consul, Mr. Schatzell, a man near 70
years of' age, who he o rdered to leave the
place, under a guard, for the interith•, ih
such haste as to compel the old man to go
on foot, and sleep the first night in the open
air, in a severe norther, lle is alsO re
membered as the first man from the field of
haft le, who, as an apology for his own cow.
ardise, swore that the eptire Mexican army
was destroyed. the of the many rumors
afloat is, that Atopudia had charged Aris
ta with treachery—with having sold the
army to the Americans. A hard bargain,
indeed. to Arista, for Ids only pay was can
non balls anti cold steel. A tnpudia says
farther, that he would have won the day
had he had the comtnad. The lying brag
. gart —the man who ran at the first volley,
w hen second in command, to talk of
what he would have done as chief.
The Republic also says:—Aitsta's re
treat will, doubtless, continue to the moun
tains. After losing the day with file to
one at Palo Alto and Resaca de la Palma,'
it is nut likely that he will make another
stand on the plains. Gen• Taylor takes
the field with so overwhelming a force, and
so admirably equipped to that terrible arm,
the light artillery, thnt it would be mad•
ness in the enemy to fight again, wh , •re
defeat would he certain and retreat impbs•
Bible. Monterey is the first possiton of
any natural strength, and it also commands
the entrance of the motintuin pass to St.
tillu. It is there, in all probability, that
Arista will make his great etfort, which the
importance of the object, his wounded
pride, and the tultatitaoes or the ground,
will all tonsp're In itinCe,a but a
bloody day in the history of this War.—
We understand that Canales is 41 Olmi
tos Rancho, leagues on this side of Rey -
noia, levying coml.:buttons upon the pet)
ple, and plondcring them an their mules
and other thoveable. property. He has
closed the rsad and intercepts all comma
tile:twins from dna direction, treating all
those ” hit were suspected of coming from
this ultce With the greatest harshness.
Nauvoo.
The Haneock f.,:agie announces the res
toration of tranquility, to that neighhor.
hood. Maj. warren's troops left for
Quincy last v eek, to, be mustered into
the U. S. service. New settlers are last
arriving at Nauvoo, and the city of the Mor
mons will soon be filled with an induii.ri.
ous and Christian population. The Eagle
says:
The limited number of Mormon's left in
this country, continue their preparations
for departure. One hundred and forty six
teems have crotsed the river at this place
since our last week's report by the troops,
and a large number have been ferried
over at Fort Madison.
Many are leaving in steamboats, and as
far ai we can judge from obserVntion the
number of Mormons who depart by this
conveyance about equals that of the new
settlers who arrive.
We perceive that must of (huge who
now cross the river with their teems, push
directly forward for their destination.
With two . or three eiteptions the camps
on the lowa side have disappeared. and
we understand that the road to the Des•
Moines river is literary thronged with wag
ons and cattle.
At the rate they now move, it will take
them near a year to reach the Pacific.
if the Mormons do not starve upon the
way side before they reach Mexico, they
will come off bolter than we anticipate:
The last accGunts from the camp of lora
el,' represent their condition a.. anything
but comlortable. Provisions were becom
ing scarce, and an 't.litional supply could
not be procured. A Small portion of their
number, only, have as yet crooised the
Missouri river.
......
The Mormons are anxious to sell the
Temple immediately, and the Eagle ex
presses the opinion that a sale of it will be
concluded in a tew days. There are a num
ber of thieves in the neighborhood who
continue their depredations, in the absence
a~~na Irmo €15. a.;
of an efficient police. The new settleru
have held a meeting lor the . purpoit of (w.
ganizing an adequate policy and lo s r start
ing schools.—Mo. Rep. •
a witexiCtui Flat
The New Orleans Times says that Gen:
'Taylor, with a judgement that, goes intui
tively to its mark, in the conferring of
tomplimyntary favor, has just forwarded;
by Col. Winthrop; Aid-de-camp 14 Gov:
inhfison, a Mexican standard—one of
trophies on the 8111 and 9th
.. It. was in
token of his sense of what is dire to Lou;
isiana lor her promptitude in
.forwarding
reinforcements at the late crisis. Louisia
nians know how to appeciate the gift.
A Woman's Advantages.
A t% otnan may say what she likes to you; ,
Withok the risk of getting knocked down
for it.
She rail tate a snooze after dinner, ivhilo
her husband has to go to tiork.
She can dress herself in neat awl tidy.
calicoes fur a &flier, %%bleb her husband
has to earn and lurk over.
Sl.e can go forth into the streets with
out being incited to 'great" at every col
lee-hots e.
She Can tmint her face if it be to
or floor it it too red.
She can stay at home in time of war;
and wed again it her husband is killed.
She can wear corsets if thick, other "fix
ins" if too thin.
She can get divorced from her liusbanA
whenever she sees any one she likes bet-
. . . .
And she can run him into debt all over.;
. ..
until he warns the public by advertise- .
meets nut to trust her on his accout any
longer.
. . .
A letter front Bwilmerfend, pttbllahed in. tho
Washington. Union," speaks of a call made upon
the oppressed Jeers in Germany to emigrate to the
United States, as Mt inducement to which it is sta
ted in a German paper that, notwithstanding Pres
ident Pout is a Jew, he had attained the highest
honor that could bh conferred on him. It was sta
ted the other day, in a British magazine, that Mr.
Polk was a hero of the lest war, and was made a
prisoner somewhere on the Canadian frontier.--
Whet Metamorphosis he is next to undergo we can
not aurmise.--Alexandria Gazette.
The Late National
Every one mast suppose that this grand display
of American genius and enterprise would have bceti
regarded with pride and joy by every true-hearted .
American. To see these overwhelming proofs of
the progress the country has made, and how indc-
Pendent of foreign nations for the supply of our
wants we have become, would be exactly what .
would warm every patriot heart. But we find. in
stead of such patriotic joy, the most lugubriousi
groanings on the part of the Government organ
nod others of that ilk. The Union admits in its
colossus articles treating the whole display with
ridicule and contempt, and can see in these demon
ofAmerican greatness and honorable corm
petition with foreign enterprise nothing but a shil
ling strew, with no higher character than a menag
erie. When a few weeks, pgo a British agent ex
hibited his specimens Of British manufacture in a
room in the Capital, the free trade locos were de
lighted, but when American Manufactureicame for
ward to show what can be done in this country, the
locos turned up their noses and swear they smell a
menagerie. Fine patriots, these Locofocos! Where
is the British party 1 And who are the friends Of
American interests T
A Fallen A.ngel.
A wretched looking object, the wreck of a fair
and lovely gitl,was brought before Recorder Baldwin
yesterday morning for being found drunk hi the
streets. Su fearful and deplorable a eight of wretch
edness we have not seen for a long, long time. The
pallid face and sunken cheek and eye told a tale of
vice, sickness and misery pursued for tifew ahori
years, which had hurried a young girl to the brink
of eternity. Her long black hair hung in tangled
masses over a skinny neck where every muscle and
vein stood out in bold relief. A ragged, dirty pet
ticoat, and the waist of What, had once beak a
gown, was all the vestige of a dress she had on.
" Mury Collins," said the Recerder, "1 are sorry
to say that you were found drunk in the street yes•
terdai."
"Ito, no, yaur boner—no, no, sir," said the .
trembling victim, o not drunk in the streets not
drunk ! I jurt laid down in the shade, for I was
tired, that's all. Bo pleased to let me go this time.
I cannot promise that I won't bo brought up again,
for I must drink. I have tried to leave off, but
no use, no use. I have no friends left, not one:
tktlli where is the use of lerivin' Mr the only thing I
have to make me forget myself and ail the world
I'm not worth savin' and besides it's too late new,
too late. So let.rne go this time."
The Recorder told Mary she was more an object,
for sympathy than punishment, but as she wonld
be infinitely better off fn the workhouse than lying
about the street., he should send her there for a few
days.—N. 0. Pic.
A loafer, foiding against a gentleman.
was quietly knocked down with thp cone
Of the pcdustarian. Sir, said the Loafer,
rising and setting his hat fiercely on his
brows. 'Sir, did you do that in a jest or
in earnest?'—.ln earnest you rapscallion.
,Well sir, [rejoined the loafer very polite
ly,] '! am glad to hear it, I never puk
up with a jest. I alb not to be tried with .