HU \TIINGDOIN Jot 1..'1N - i:1, BY JAMES CLARK VOL, XII, NO, 30, TERMS The "HUNTINGDON JOURNAL" will be implished hereafter at the following rates, viz: $1.75 a year, if paid in advance; $2.00 if paid during the year, and $2.50 if not paid un til after the expiration of the year. The above terms to he adhered to in all cases. No subscription taken fur lest than six months, and no paper discontinued until all arrearages are paid, unless at the optiori of the publisher. oj. To quics of six, or more, who pay in ad yance, the Journal Will be seht al itq1.,50 per Popy for one year; and any ono who will send us that number of names accent pahied with the tnoneye shall receive the Journal one year for his trouble. ADVERTISEMENTS not exceeding one square, will be inserted three times for $l.OO, and for every subsequent insertion 25 cents. If no deffinito or ders are given as to the time an advertiseMent is to be continued, it will he kept in till ordered out and charged accordingly. POETICAL. [From Gody's Lady's Book ] MAW. Great Heaven, what a sight did its pale rays reveal to him. Extended upon the floor lay the body Of his Wife, with her infant clasped to her breast—both cold in death ! Blood, too, was there— the life-blood of his guileless wife, and innocent babe—a cold, coagitlated poi! "Oh God ! my wife, my child ! ' he shrieked—his brain reeled, and totter ing a few paces he fell at her side.— Soon he recovered himself, and lifting them gently from the floor; he placed thehi side by side upon the bed, and stood silently gazing upon the placid countenance of his young wife, beauti ful even in death. There is ml eloquence in silence, when the heart is too full for utterance, mid solemn voice in silent grief. Vain were our attempt to describe the tumult of feeling, the crush of emotions that filled the heart of poor Charles, as lie bent over the body of his murdered wife.— ' No word escaped him, no sigh, no tear drop started,but his bosom heaved quick ly, his lip quivered, his eye rolled wild ly, and with a demoniac glare. He seem: ed as though his Very faculty of Mind was intent updn one word, which would speak the fullness of his misery and des peration, and his lip struggled to give it utterance ! At length it came. " Ven geance !" and he started at the hoarse unearthly tones of his own voice. " Ven geance !" and the dark winds swept aieay the echo as it formed. " Vengeance!" and his wild and solemn vow stood eter nally recorded. All that night he Watched by the bd: dies of his wife and child—and the next morning buried them with his own hands —swearing over their graves, bitterly to avenge them. As he was returnin g from his melan choly task; he fdued lying upOn the grass near the door a large hunting knife still red with blood. Upon the haft watt Carved in rude characters the name, " (7 , IIARLFIS Slam" . This Si'nith a violent and cruel Seventeen hundred and set enty aine. Tory partisan (a companion of the :no 'Twas a cheerless evening in October : torious Vanbuskiek) who, with a compa- The sun had already set, a young moon ny of outcasts like himself, and a few negroes intid frequent incursions into was struggling with the dark clouds that the upper counties of New Jersey and at intervals Oliseur i ed her bright dise, as were notorious for other cruel and bar they were borne along ? by the resistless barons treattnent of the patriotic females. fury of the angry wind whiCh hoWled dismally among th 6 naked brandies of Years ago, when the wife of Foreman the leafless forest trees. Nosy it came was quite young, he had professed an in fitful gusts, scatteriiig the fallen leaires, attachment for her, which she by no means encouraged, and the of his and whining piteously at its lack of hand was, as might have been exreted, power. Now it increased in strength, • snapping the decayed brunches; Ev e" t he" he swore she shoudd b to ent lie and ng the tough boughs tof the sturdy ""``' oaks. tig acause deadly re h p atred hail taken ad- Ano n n it swelled into an oVerwhelinins• va " l "ge o f the absence of her husband, and paying a visit with his troops, to blast, twisting the gnarled trunks, and, Hackensack, with his own hand dealt with a deafening crush uprooting and the blows which depriVed both mother verthrowing the mighty lords of the .00 ;—then sinking into a sullen moan; li'iid child of life it howled a mournful requiem over its I " This knife," exclaimed Charles as spent and departed strength; he glared upon its reeking blade, " this knife; which hits rendered my life a Dark indeed, and dis Mal Was the night, knife; timid utterly darkened my future; and furious the tarring of the elements, shall yet drink thy heart's blodd; but darker and intim dismal Were the d man monster !" And after carefully inhn reflexions and more fierde the coniliet wiping the blade; he placed it in his belt, that rae within the breast df the in lured pa g triot; who forms the subject of and entered his desolate home. it narratite: For more than an hour he sat in silent Mr. Charles Fdrtnan was a young far- agony, the big drops coursing clown his ,er residing within a few Miles of haggard cheeks, as lie brooded over his ackensack. At the first eutbreaking wrongs mid dreamed of vengeance.— ;:t our Revolutionary troubleS; i is 'd Then, starting suddenly to his feet, he 3houldered his musket, and'tearing In in- cast one last, long, lingering look upon self from his young and lovely Wile, had each familiar object, and rushed from fought, aye, and bled in Freedom's cause. the house, vowing as he shut the bolt, Ho was with the army at Morristown ; never to return while Smith lived t” , siihen; having received intelligence of murder and destroy: the' illtiess of his wife, he asked mid ob- A week had passed ; 'twas midnight, taint d leaie to visit his home. and front a small house, situated on the verge of a wood, about a mile to tle• He had traMled on foot and alone for eastward of White Plains, there issued two clays =had&eased the rugged "Blue Ridge," and the evening ul'tinshouts of boisterous revelry, interrupt second day had reached his e hum bl e • ed only by occasional snatches of seine .swelling. As he neared the hduse, the rude bacchanalian' song. evidences of a Tory visit were—eVen at Smith and his men were indulging in night—plainly discernable. their accustomed nightly debauch, after With a beating heart he crossed the having returned from it successful exile little court yard, and stood upon the clition, Near the house stood Clink, 13Y H. HASTINGS wELii Of a truth Yperceive that 9?]) is no respecte r of persona." SAY. what is wealth 1 N gilded pain : And wint in power 1 A weakness hid And what is life A shadow vain: And joy 1 A phantom still forbid : Shall, the t, proud man his grandeur ward By toys which Gov doth not regard? And what is man? In outward guise Let him he prince, or peer, or slave, Or poor and weak, or great and wise— A mortal tending to the grave : Such are all men—from earth we c onie— Earth doth her own peor dust reclaim. And what is want? 'Tie virtue's test . NVhat weakness? An escape front pride That life on earth may be the best, In which by grief the eoul is tried : For He whose word is ever sure, Hath said that Blessed are the poor." But what is man 1 Shies Goo, who made Tue stars, is mindful of his fate, When from the skies the snits Shall fade; Ho will our bodies new create And moral serf and monarch must Arise immortal from the dust. Call not his hand unequal ilieti Who to the station fits the mind,. And 'mid the different ranks of men Ordains that each his trial find One soul to save—one Guu to adore— The humblest have—the great no More, Joy has its griefs, and pain its joys— Each man lives in his proper sphere : Each with his state his mind employs, And all are but sojourners here: Then let net foriklih fitorial pride Despise one soul for whom CURIST Each has his daily task to do— And life itself is hut a day : The "Day's Work Ended " Gon shall view, And in His own just balance weigh : Our every thought and deed HE scans, Whose ways and thoughts are not as matt's. MIgCELLANEOUS. A HUSBAND'S REVIINGE; BY WM. T. RODGERS, JR door-step. His heart sank within him, as he lifted the latch, and found the door was fastened. Gently he knocked, fear ing to disturb his suffering wife; again he knocked, and again, but knocked in vain. There was no cheerful light, as Of late was Wont to beam from his little window, to comfort these Within, end dirbet the Weary, way-worn wanderer to a shelter. No smoke issued from the chimney ; no blazing hearth was there ; and save the flapping of the shutters; and the rustling of the vines that over hung the porch, all else was silent. He could endure suspense no longer : and forcing the door he stood within the house. All was darkness there. He grop , ad his way to the bedside, but it stood tenantless. He called upon his wife by name—no answer came! ~S aitan" he cried; and the winds howled the louder, as if in mockery of his agony.— With a trembling hand he produced his tinder-box, and lighted the lamp that stood in its accustomed place, upoa the mantel ! tCORRECT PRINCIPLES-SUPPORTED 13Y TRUTH.] HUNTINGDON, PA., JULY 2'7, 1847. Forman, leaning upon a fence, carefully marking the progress of this drunken party; his dark eye flashing fearfully; as the constant clanging of glasses was heard, and his teeth gnashing with rage as the dying cadence of a drinking song came upon his ear. Suddenly he aroused hiniself, and clutching the fatal knife, he moved toward the house. Pausing a moment at the threshhold, to collect his strength, he burst open the door, and stood confronted with his foe. " Vengeance !" he shouted, and ere the half-drunken wretches could stay his hand, he seized the tory lcadcr; and dashed him to the floor. " This," cried he, plunging his knife into his bosom, "for my murdered wife, and this," plunging it still deeper, " for my inno cent babe ! Haste with your ftuilty soul to the father of lies, and tell him that a widowed husband, made childless by thy hand, has sent thee to deserved tor ments !" , Then rushing upon the affrighted To ries, he plunged his knife indiscrimi nately into those who were nearest him, until overpowered by numbers, he fell dead upon the floor, muttering be tween his clenched teeth, " Ssirttli" and " Vengeance!" The Course of Providence, The Pottsville Democratic Press states that a few days since, letters from Capt. James Nagle, and Lieut. Simon S. Nagle, written from Vera Cruz, were received by their wives, enclosing a daguerrotype likeness of each of these officers, as to kens of love, and a few gOld pieces.— Lieut. Nagle, in his letter bids his wife kiss their little son for him. "Poor fel low !" adds the Press, " he little dream ed that at the time his letter was writ ten, his darling bOy was Tiietly sluin berin in his little grave, on the beauti tul mountain side of his gratefully rt.:• membered home !" There is much in this simple but affecting incident. It 1 shows the perfect uncertainty of life, no matter how seemingly secure. Here I is a man who has left the quiet, retired fatiiily circle, to mingle iti the strife and danger of war, With . an impression, per haps, of chiincei against his ever return ing to the bosom Of his family, but with out the shadow or intimation of a thought that such a visitor as death can enter the home he has left. Men are falling all about him, and lie counts it almost a miracle that he himself is not struck down : he . dges not once think that the insatiate araher has winged the shaft that quivers in the breast of the boy he has left behind him in apparent safety and security, with the ever watch ful cyc of the mother upon him, and no less natural solicitude of relatives and friends to. guard him from danger. The father sitting upon the very edge of the yawning cavern, with the groans of the dead and dying all about him, and the whizzing missiles of destruction filling the air on every side, is spared, while the child; far aft'ay, in the quiet; seclu ded mountain home, dies! Such is the dispensation of Providence! When, seemingly, in the very vortex of danger, ti, , e are frequently sfited—while; when in apparently the greatest security, we are often struck down. In the language a the poet : Fide steals along with silent tread . . Fothid eftenest in whnt least wo dread Frowns in the slot rri with angry brow, But in the sunshine strikes the blow." An Argument fur Drinking. "Now I ax you felers who's the best citizen, him that supports government or hhu as doesn't'? IN•hy him as does, in course. He support government, that is if ho ;letters at a license house. Every bleSsed dr6p Of licker that he swol lets thar is taxed to pay the salary of thtm dr grate officers, inch as Mayors and Corporationers, Hie Constplils, Pres idents and Custoin-hOuse gentlemen:— Sposc we was to quit drinkin, why gov ernment must fail; it could'nt help it no how. That's the very rezun I drinks. I don't like grog, I mortally hate it. If I follured my own inclitiation, I'd either drink, buttermilk, or ginger pop, or llearhorn's sody water. But I lickers for the good of my country to set an exam ple of patriotism and virchus self-denial team rizon generation. 7 —Straw Sucker. COOLNES or GEN. WORTlL—During the bombardment of Vera Cruz, this gal lant officer, finding his horse considera bly exln4ated, despatched a servant for 7 , ticket of water.. Just as the man was raising the bucket to the horse's mouth, a large shell struck the groUnd the dikance of a few yards. The man star- . tcd in terror; but Gen. Worth, observing the fuse not quite burned out, said per emptorily' wit bout Moving: "Halt emp ty your bucket on that thing!" The man mechanically obeyed, and Gen. Worth captured the shell Whole. It wa, I• - .! inches in dialneter,' and weighed Aboitt I'2o lb 6 • IL YOUNG VICTIM, A SAD STOItY OF GAMBLING. So young and yet so lost." A few years since, Mr. Green, the re- ' formed gambler, took passage on board a steamboat at Louisville, bound for N. ' Orleans. A short time after the boat ' pushed off; it was discovered that there ' was no less than twenty gamblers on ' beard and much dissatisfaction was ex pressed, because so many had chosen the same boat. It was soon agreed tharten or Fifteen should return ashore at the first opportunity, and wait for another boat. Shortly after this determination was carried into effect, and it was while Mr. Green was standing on the hurri cane deck, noticing the landing of a por tion of his old friends, that his attention was arrested by a young man looking anxiously upon the departing gamblers. He was pale and agitated, and a tear drop glistened in his eye. This was so remarkable, that even Mr. Green be came excited and interested. He sought the youth, and asked him whither he was going 1 He replied that lie c‘ knew not where," as if to shun further notice, left the deck and de seceded into the cabin.—Green inore curious, followed him and by the expression of sympathy, finally induced him to unbosom himself. He said that his reply was correct—that he really did not know whither he was going.— He was the son of reputable parents in Boston ; and had left that city , a few Weeks Were for the purpose Of visiting Louisville, "which place," he continued —"you perceived we have just passed." The reasons for this course were sad ones. Ile had a sister at Louisville who had moved thither, while he was yet a child. The death of that sister's band had induced her to her f tc come on, to protect her its her widowhood and assist in settling up the estate. His parents provided him with all the necessaries for the journey, gave him permission to tarry a few days at New York and Philadelphia should he think proper and also gave him two hun dred dollars iii elOriey. All Werit smooth ly and pleasantly until he arrived in Philadelphia. Here lie took lodgings at a leading Hotel and soon formed an ac quaintance with two young men of gen teel exterior, plausible manners, and captivating address. Accompanied by them; he, during the day, visited sever al of the leading institutions and at night • accepted an invitation to play a game of whist; the only game of cards with which he was familiar. Several days and evenings were occupied in a similar manner. Ho then determin ed to continue his journey, which he did, by taking passage in one Of the Lines for Pittsburg. Oe eppear ing at the depot the next morning, he was delighted to find his fwd ecitripan-, ions. They also had business out west, and they regarded it as a pleasure to • have so agreeable a companion. After exhausting the ordinary topics of the , • day, the gains of whist was again , thought of and renewed.—They first I played for cards, then for liquor, and finally for small sums of money. The youth became excited, and ere they reached the iron city, he had lost every dollar that belonged to him; with the exception of a sum just sufficient to pay his passage from Pittsburg to Louis- ?hit again the strangers ihadc tittir appearance on beard eh Ohio river steamer, and in the hope of recovering what he had lost, the deluded young man played again, when his gold watch was the sacrifice. On arriving at Cineinna• ti he was nearly mad. He theii be: thought hiMself of a package which his mother had confided to hini for his sis- ter. He sought for it in his trunk, found and opened it: It contained a necklace as a lovegift, and an unsealed letter, in which Was enclosed a bank note for 100. Still tempted by the demon of gambling, and still anxious to regain what he had lost, he returned to his Vile companions and whist. He played hour after hour, lost the money, then staked and lost the necklace. At this point; the horrors of his situation were indes cribable. Louisville was at hand, but how could he meet his sister How could he explain his folly, his infatua tion and his crime Ile had left home with a good llama, on a mission of sa cred duty; and lie was now a thief and a robber. He had misempleyed funds given under hallowed circumstances, and his condition was indeed desperate. Confused and perplexed he at last de . tormined to rush from the boat, leave the rifled package at the house of his eis . t cr, return and follow the fortunes of • the gamblers, who had tempted and be ! rayed him, in the hope that they would not be so heartless as to throw him oir. But this hope was of short duration, for they Were among the party that left the boat as above described, in consequence of their being too many of the fraterni ty on board. It was while they were returning that he was noticed by Green, and that hence , a tear forced itself to . his eye, when he realized the loneliness and wretchedness of his condition. He Was an outcast end a robber—had become so in a few days, from having ventured upon what he ettled an innocent game of whist, and thus he truly said; in re ply to the question that had been put to him—that he knew not *hither he was going.. Green advised him to return to his sister and make a . frank confession -,-but his heart failed hiin—he had not the moral nerve. He could not meet the being he had so bitterly Wronged.— He gratefully accepted a slight loan from Green and soon after departed. Two years rolled by. Green was again on the MisSissippi, a passenger on the steamer Mediterranean, on her way from Orleans to Louisville. .An acci dent Which happened by which she was induced to stop near Plaquemine. While there, a fellow-passenger remarked that lie lies just witnessed a horrible sight • upon the forward deck of the boat. "Ah !" exclaimed Green—and imme diately proceeded to the spot designated. He there beheld five men in chains-- convicts, on their way front New Or leans to Baton Rogue, where the State Penitentiary of Louisiana is located.— ✓lmong them was young Melmoni—(the name is of course lictitious)- 7 -the wreteh ed youth, whose unfortunate journey from Boston to Louisville, we have here so has tily described ! He had but a few days before been convicted of forgery, and sentenced to the State Prison for !tile years! This gentle reader, is no fiction, but a true story, and the moral it con . veys as to the danger of gambling, can mot be Mistaken.—Phila. Beautiful .Ixtraet , • I saw the temple reared by the hands of men, extending with its high pinna cles in the distant plain.. The storms beat upon it—the God of plain.., hurled , his thunderbolts against it—and yet it ! stood as firm as adamant. ReVelry was in its hall—the gay, the happy and the beautiful were there. I returned . and the temple was no more ! Its high Walls lay scattered ruins—moss and wild grass grew wildly there, and at the midnight hour the owl's cry added to the deep sol itude—the gay and they9png who rev elled th 6.6 has passed away. I saw a child rejoicing in his yduth— the idol of his mother and the pride ,of his father: I returned .4.lkt the child became old, Trembling N , ith the weight of years; he stood at the last of his generation—a stranger :mild the des olation around him, . • 1 saw an old oak stand in all its pride cn the Mountain—the birds were carol ling on their boughs. I returned—the oak was leafless and sapless; the winds were playing at their time through its branches. " Who is the destroyer V" said Ito my guardian angel. "It is Time,'' said he; " when the morning stars sang together in joy over the new made world; he commenced his course, and when he shall have destroy ed all that is beautiful on earth—pluck ed the sun from his sphere—veiled the moon in blood—yea, when he shall have rolled The heaven and earth away as a scroll, then shall an angel from the thrCne of God come forth, and with one foot on the sea and one on the land, lift up his hand torard heaven ; and . swear by Heaven's Eternal— , Time wa::, but Time shall be no longer.'" A DISAGIEEAI3LE JOKE.—The N. Y. Sun says that a lady residing in Port land, Maine, expecting a large company to tea, sent for a quantity of cret►ui of tartar to raise her biscuits. By mistake tartar emetic was got:—The biscuits were beautifully light, and the guests ate heartily, one lady exclaiming there "never was any thing so nice." The meal was hardly over when the emetic begun to work, and the gentlemen and ladies fell to vomiting with might and main. One of the gents, a very fat man, imagining he was poisoned, sent fur a doctor but before that functionary ar rived the medicine had taken a severe ' course, leaving the patient in as bad a condition as a cleanly person could imagine. 'rho cause of the vomito was soon discovered, and the party signed a "total abstinence from hot biscuit" pledge for six months. GEtEaous.—A youth whO, it is char itably presumed, had ,never "seen the elephant," recently Isand himself in the company of thl'ee young ladies, and generously divided a whole orange be tween them. " You will rob yourself," exclaimed one of the damsels. "Not at all," replied our innocent ; "/ have three or Aar more in my pocket !" MY EYES !--The onion crop of Connec ticut promises a most abundant yield. EDITOR AND PROPRIETOI WHOLE NO. 600. THE COST OF FOLLY We know that the expenses of the present war have been, and are, great beyond, any imaginable estimate.of ad, vantages from it, even if the Wildest hopes of its projectors were realized.— We know that it has given us a national debt ; and that in the contraction of im ports which must attend the coming rev olutiOn in our relation With ,Eur Ope, in duced by the cessation of the famine', our revenues, under the ,present tariff, will be shrivelled into an impotent ficiency, that may—the war continued— render direct taxation necessary. Yet We do not know how nor where we stand. the costs of this war are wholly. unascertained. The administration per !nips cannot, perhaps dares hot, ascer tain them. Seneca said—" I keep an account of my expenses ; I cannot affirm that 1 lose nothing, but I can tell you what 1 lose, and why & in what ',motion". Such should be the policy of a .conscien tious administration. , W . . tre such an account presented to the American people in relation to this war it would astound them. They would discover that they have been raising tip mortgages upon the industry and hopes of themselves and their children, ia. the future, of which theyhave not dretnited.. In the unascertained costs of this war, in the waste, and wantonness, and corrUp tion, there are millions upon millions, fraudulently incurred in dishonest par tisan contracts, but consecrated ,by the seal of our country, that must be paid : - The sunlight of this administration has been faithful to its favorites—if it has reached none else. We trust that the coming Congress will probe this subject to the scat of the wound given to the: country. Let the.many Millions which the war has and will cost; be arrayed against the prospect of its advantages we are content to abide by the decision of the people upon the balance thus struck.—.Varth, .thnerican. CL -4 7 (20URTING.-A , lawyer whom we knew well; did his courting elf-hand. He had got a good practice and a high rep- . utation, as well for what his noddle con tained of Coke and Blackstone, as for being a very eccentric chap in all his ways, doings and sayings. Hii eccen, tricity got him into the notion it wasn't " meet that women should be alone," and so of a delightful summer's eve; When the roses smiled and the cowslips laughed; Sunday evening; too, mind ye, gentle reader, tat Delightful hour of witching love, Ile caught up his hat and was seen as. cending the steps of the cottage beside the hill—where tripped A lovely darnsiA, bright and fair, She Opened the door, as he politely asked, "is- the Chief Justice within " No, sir," said the pretty , one, " but will be shortly." that's no mat ter;" said C'ounsellor; as he was curtisetl within the door, " I did not come to see the father; my client, is interested only in the testimony of the daughter. My client, madam, owns the mansion you, see from yonder, and the pith of of the suit is to ascertain if you would have ally objection to becoming its tnistress. I'll call next Sabbath evening fsr your ansvier:" " Why, sir, it won't be neces• sary to- suspend the suit. 1 think your clients's case is founded in justice, and I am sure he will win his point without any special pleading; but as the father has been vvel4-one years upon the befichL it would be decorous to see if his opinion tides not confirm mine.". Certainly, madam . ' said alb lawyer, as the father entered the apartment. It is needless to say that the full court did not reverse the decision, and the happy pair signed the bonds and went into pos session in four weeks froth that night. ANECDOTE Or DAVID C.R.OOKETT.—Da vid once visited a maaageqe . at Vk ash ington, . and pausing 4, Tonient before a particularly hidioas monkey, exclaim ed; "what a resemblance to the Hon: Mr:!" The words were scarce ly spoken when he turned; and to his actonishment, saw, standing at his side, the very man whom he had com plimented. "1 beg your pardon," said the gallant Colonel, " I would not have made the remark had I known that you was near me ;, and I am ready to make the most humble apology for , rny unpardonable rudeness, but," loolthlg first at the insulted member of Congtess, who face was any thing but lovely, and theti at the animal that lie had colapared to Mtn, "hang me if I can tell whether ought to apologize to you or to the mou,‘„ key!" • • A FAIR HlT.—"Here, you bog trot ter," said a half dandy sort-lock to an Irish laborer—" come WI the binest lie you ever told in all your ..fe, and I'll tea'' you to a whiskey punci 4 , ', A n d by in , yer honor's a ge',ocmati," /etorteti Pat.