... Arc 8 , Al& 0 ' 0 2 0 1 4- flngboi-(4( I 1111.- .?? I , . , , BY JAS. CLARK. TaS:4 ll ! & 4 171 Chill Fever, Durikb ktue, Inter mittent 84 Remittent _Fevers & all the various forms of Bilious DiseaS9S 'PtEDILY&THOFO : VILY CURED - --- a ipipg usgOod's India CAA This excellent compound it for oak by the propri• etol'a Agent T. READ & BON. Price $1 50 per bottle. iri" What is the matter with me, Doc- tor What the cause of this sallow complexion, jaundiced eye, depression of spirits, pain in the side sad shoulder, weariness of body, bitter taste in the mouth Such is the enquiry. and such the symptoms of many a sufferer! It is the liver which is diseased, and the Oholagogue is the rem edy always successful in curing it. Try it, and judge for yourself. For sale by T. Read & Son, agent for the proprietor. c 0•• Better die than lire, if I ant to be tortured from day to day with this horrible Agne, exclaims the poor sufferer whose life his become a burden from the racking paroxysms of at inter inittent, and whose confidence in human aid is de strayed by the id ure of remedies to produce the promised relief. I uch has been the riituation of thousands who are now rejoicing in all the Ides* ings of health from the use of Dr. Osgirod's India eholagague. In no instance does it fail of effect: ins a speedy and permanent cure. For rale by the 'pro rider's agent, 'l'. READ & SON. How few who think aright among the thinking few, now ninny never think, but only think they The sentiment implied in the alasen exclamation is on no subject more fully ex emp etled than on that of health. But few give its E i n ee immght, and fewer sti I reflect upon it with the observation and good arose which mit tens of minor consequence receive. As ohs. va tion teaches the fact that Dr. Osgood's India Clod n4oguo is a Lever fai ing temeily in Fever and A sue, good sense would surely indicate its prompt and immediate use. To he found at T. READ & SON'S, agent for the proptietor. inns 27. 1849. Certificate. JULIA PARKINSON of Huntingdon desires to say that she has used the 4 4 India Cholagogitc" for Ague and Liver complaint with entire suc cess. She therefore recommends it to all sim ilarly afflicted. FALL AND WINTER COODS, Great Reduction in Prices. DORSET tic MAGUIRE, Have just received direct from the Eastern Cities, and are now opening u splendid assortment of NEW AND CnEAP GOODS, ,eurisiatitig of overy variety of T~:~'•30CL18, Suited to Dadicsund Gentlemen's weer, including Cloths. Cassimers, Battinctis, Vest ings. Silks, Sat ins. Alpachas , Cashmeres, De Dailies, Plaithaorn bazines, Gilighams, I slimes, Check., Shaw le, &c. We have also a handsome assort tnent of READY-MADE CLOTHING, May would .ildo invite atteuti.. totlirittuucl, of G ROC E 1E S. Sugars-5, 6' utid cents per pound— Molasses, from 37i to 40 cents per ; and every other article usually kept' ii a Grocery Store, at equally low priber. • Boots, Shoes, Hats and Caps, Hardware and' CUttery, t !dna; Glass and Queens ware, Drugs, Medicines. Dye Stuffs, B , :c. Ali of which will he sold at very reduced prices. The Ladies and Gentlemen are requerotd to call and examine these Goods, as they cannot fail to please all both as regards any le and price. DORSEY cS- MAGUIRE,. in the store room. formerly occupied by' Jacob' Miller, opposite the residence of Judge Gain; Huntingdon. r All kinds of Country Produce ta , ken in exchange for goods. ['Sept. .16. 1 - 3 L . 'IZ":I7M3. I 8 hereby given to all persona interestee, that the Trust account of Joshua Greenland and Caleb hwoope, Assignees of Dr. Jacob M. Cover, late of Case township, has been filed in the office of the Prothonotary of the Court of C.immon Pleas of Huntingdon county, and that the same will be presented to the said Court on the second Monday of November neat, for confirmation and allowance. JAMES STEEL, Prey Oct. 17, 1841 I'ENNENTN Washington Gallery of Daguerrotypes, No. 234 North Second . Street, .W. corner of C'allotedsill Street, PIIILADZLPHIA, THE Likenesses taken and beautifully colored at this well known establishment. for not DOI.. I.An, are universally conceded to be EQ.., in ev ery respect to ANY in the city. Pictures token equally well in cloudy and clear weather. A large assortment of M ...LIONS and Locityrs on hand, from $2 to $5, including the picture. The subscribers respectfully invite the citizens of Huntingdon County, to call and examine spe cimens of the latest Improvements in the art of Dagnerreotyping, which will be exhibited cheer fully and without cha,ge. f. &. J. C. TENNENT July; 4 1848 Afresh supply of Mackerel just arrived and for sale by J. & W. SAXTON. THE DAYS OF THE BARRICADES, Or, Love and the Republic. One of my friends who had never ar rived at doing any thing, from having been for the last ten years in a happy state of expectation of a consulship in the East, made up his mind some time since to settle in Paris. He is yet young and much given to day dreams. How ever, he was taken up seriously by a banker in the matter-of-fact region, the Bourse; the worthy gentleman having ascertained that my friend Henri Del masures had some hundreds of acres of land in Beauce and Normandy on which I to build his castles in the air. He was a romantic visionary, but yet a landed proprietor. The banker after a whole 1 night spent in convincing himself that his daughter must be happy with such a man—a conclusion he arrived at by adding, multiplying and subtracting— I consented to bestow her hand upon him. Mademoiselle Matilda Hoffman was not merely a young lady wrapped up in bank notes or cased in bullion ; she had, on the contrary, in the atmosphere of three per cent, imbibed somewhat of aerial grace of nature and poetry. The chink of the guineas hod not prevcnted the airy voices that in every varied tone —but all soft, sweet, cheering—whisper the young heart, and till its spring time with delight. The dark, dull, close house in which she lived, had not shut out front her all fairy visions of the —Gay creatures of the element, That in the colors of the rainbow live, And play in the plighted clouds. And thus when my friend spoke to her a language not very usual before the 24th of February, till which epoch noth ing was more rare than a union of heats it was little wonder that she had listen ed to it, then learned to love it and him who spoke it. The only unions taking place of late in France were marriages between rnnk and ready money—between position and pelf.—Nor, incredible as it may seem, was this altogether to be laid to the charge of too cruelly prudent papas end mammas ; for the young ladies them selves had more than their full share of the fault. A rage for titles, or a pas sion for gold, possessed every heart, and had dispelled all the delightful illu sions all the bright glowing romance of life. It is not long since I heard a young creature, who had scarcely seen seventeen times the budding of the haw thorn, say in confidence to a friend : " I will marry no man that is not either a nobleman or a stockholder ;" while the friend on her part reciprocated the trust reposed in her by a whispered determi nation " never to marry any one but a prince or a banker." But Matilda Hoff man troubled not herself either about' tke titles her Henri had not, or the mon ey that he had , she was in love, just as the young were wont to be in the Golden Age. She was delighted to find that he did nothing, and wanted to do noth- , mg. "At all events" said she to her self " he will not immure me in a bunk; and we can go where we like, free to' , love and live for each other." It is but duo to my friend Delmasures to say that he was quite ready to live for her. Matilda Hoffman had sudden ly shown out upon him as the visible image of his beau-ideal of grace, good ness and loveliness—as his taste per sonified. The matter was soon settled, and the marriage fixed to take place on the twenty-fourth of February. On the evening of the twenty-third, after repeated calls, the at length sue eeeded in finding the mayor at home. Whilst the young lady was signing the necessary docnments, the functionary entertained her with a lecture on poli ties and morality. He did not find it a Very difficult matter to prove to her sat isfaction that a government which thus sanctioned love by marriage was the best of all possible worlds, and might defy any attempts to subvert it. On leaving the mayoralty house, however, neither Matilda Hoffman, the bridegroom nor the witnesses, could find their car riages. Whilst the mayor, in all the loyalty of his tri colored scarf, had been proving that there was nothing serious in this ebulition of boys and sucking children, the heroic and patriotic gamins had seized upon every hackney-coach, cab, omnibus and other vehicle to make barricades. That night Matilda passed alone in prayer for the dying. The next day at eleven o'clock, Henry Delmasures pre sented himself at the banker's in the dress of the evening before, which it was evident he had not taken offull night but with the addition of sabre and pis tol, and no small quantit of mud. "But, my dear friend, " said the bank er, without raising his eyes from three or four newspapers he held in his hand; 4 , my dear friend, we cannot marry to day." " Not marry to-day ! Who says sot" HUNTINGDON, PA,, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 21, 1848 "Do you not know what has happen ed 1 The people have been making barricades. M. Mole succeeds M. Gui zot ; M. Thiers succeeds M. Mole ; M. Odillon Barrot is in place of-1 forget whom—but no matter—the people will soon be in everybody's place. Just glance at these papers ; really some of the predictions are quite terrifying." . "Not an instant is to be lOst 1" ex claimed Henri. "Where is Matildal" He hurried to the young lady's room, and found her in her wedding dress. "My own Matilda how lovely you are looking 1 But we must hasten to Church, for in one hour it might perhaps be too late. You must not leave me longer in this revolutionary torrent that is carry ing all Paris away. See, 1 have been fighting hard--were I not modest 1 would say as hard as a gamin. To-morrow the Republic—but to-day love !" The terrified girl threw herself into the arms of Henri. "In mercy take me hence ; far from the world if you will ; but anywhere from hence !" "But, my love, you must change this dress. We shall have to make our way to.the church over the barricades." Before an hour had elapsed, the cure of the parish had pronounced the nup tial benediction in a small chapel, the humble walls of which were wont to witness only the plighted vows of those who had no wealth save their strong arms and true hearts. "Now," said Henri to Matilda, "let us leave your father to finish his discus sion with the cure on the present state of affairs, and let us fly to some steam carriage that, swifter than the wind will take us somewhere—l care not whither provided it be to a country where we. can peacefully enjoy the honey-moon." Suppose we take the Railway to Rouen ' Well do I remember in the woods there an old chateau ; it was en chanting, dear Henri. I spent six weeks there last summer wandering in its groves, with no one to speak to but the trees. lam only afraid it is too near Paris ; let us g. to the other end of the , 1 world." Henri and Matilda were soon on their way to Rouen, at the full speed °la train baptized that very morning. " The Re public," and through the windows of their carriage they were witnesses of the general flight attesting " the magnifi cent national co-operation that had ac cepted the new institutions," and the sincerity of the adhesions to the repub- lic, and evincing the universal confidence in the proclamations that order, liberty and equality had been established. " Hurrah ! the dead can ride apace," says the poet Burger ; but fallen cour tiers can ride the faster. " Only look," said Matilda, "at that servant in livery galloping so furiously, that l should not wonder at his out stripping us. Do you see him I" " I see him," answered Henri ; "it is one of the ex-ministers." " And that poor young woman who is dragging her feet so slowly along the rough road, and from time to time look ing back with such a terrified air'!" II see her," replied Henri ; she is l a princess." Tikes they beheld pass along before them all that, for nearly twenty years, had been the court and the administra tion. A dark page of history was un rolled upon the high road—the' last un finished story of Kings and Queens— " Once upon a time." Journeying in this way, the two lov ers arrived at Havre. While strolling on the sea-shore in the evening, they perceived an old gentleman hurriedly making his way towards a steamer a little apart from the rest of the ship ping. Henri and Matilda paused to ob , serve him. It was the monarchy levi ing the soil of France ; and the most determined republican would scarcely have chided the respectful salutation of the young pair—the respect of pity. But they gave up an intention they had formed of going to London. Was it from reluctance to follow in the track of the fugitive monarch, to come in con tact with the hoary head from which a crown had so lately fallen?. Or was it the fear that the ex-king might carry 'about with him, however involuntarily, the seeds of a successful revolution ?-- Perhaps each of these reasons had some influence in changing their route. Nei- Sher would they venture to Brussels, for reports had reached them, whether true. or false, of a new edition of a revolu tion, there as well as in Holland, where the peeple were demanding a little, and the king granting a great deal. However, ae-go-somewhere.they must, they went to Switzerland—the classic land of honey-moons. " Switzerland heiag already a republic," said they to themselves, "we need not be afraid of its wanting to make itself one." In the confidence of this hope, Henri and Ma tilda rented a chalet by the side of a i mountain, where they might place them- selves and their love under the protec tion of the Lendamann and the old Hel vetian Confederacy. But they were hardly on their way to it, after a short stroll by the side of the lake, when they perceived a band of armed nationalists wheeling about them. It was at Nauf chatel. They now turned their thoughts to Germany. "Let us go to Germany," said they. " There no one troubles himself about anything but waltzing or metaphysics." They set out, but they were warned, "Do not go to Vienna; do not go to Berlin." As their carriage was about to cross a bridge, a female equestrian, with her hair floating over her shoulders, and her long graceful velvet drapery falling over her Arab horse, yet withal of a martial air that might have become the queen of the Amazons, galloped up so sudden. ly to them, and threw herself so direct. ly in their way, that the postillion had scarcely time to pull up their leaders.-- " Back there !" she cried, as she presen ted in his face, a little pocket-pistol. The terrified postillion fell back upon the horse he was riding, while Henri, putting his head out of the carriage window, recognized in the desperate Amazon the Countess de Landsfield. " Madame," he said, with a courteous smile, " 1 beg to assure you that we are neither Prussian gensdarmes nor Bava rian municipal guards. Have the good ness, their, to reserve your powder and ball for some greater political emergen cy, and allow as to pursue our route." Lola Monies broke into a merry laugh, which made the mountains ring with its echo. They were like old courtiers, but a little more genuine—perhaps the last courtiers. "Take good advice," said she, "wher ever you get it, Go not to Germany; they have burned my hotel." So saying, the Cotintess de Landsfield set off like an arrow from the bow, leaving Henri and Matilda to exchange , glances of surprise, and to ask each other, in utter despondence, whither the here now to bend their steps— , what country would receive them I I " Let us go straight forward," at last they cried. And straight forward they went, through woods, and meadows, and ravines, till the Rhine became the splen did barrier to further progress, unless they committed themselves to its wa ters. They did so, and stopped not till they came to Johannisberg, where they met an old man seated in an arbor, with his bottle and glass before him. It was M. de Metternich, who was drinking his last bottle of Johannis berg. "Your Excellency," said Henri, re spectfully saluting—the bottle, "your excellency will pardon me if, in presu ming to address you, I derange the bal ance of power in Europe;. but we are a young couple from France, who are in search of some pretty little cottage where we may give a few short weeks to each other. Your excellency, who knows all news better than any telegraph, any newspaper—will have the goodness to tell us whether there arc any cottages is Germany." The diplomatic eye of M. Metternich flashed somewhat angrily ; but seeing nothing but artless simplicity in the faces of the young couple he filled a fresh bumper, tossed it off, and buried ! his face in his hands. "My lord minister," said Matilda, timidly. "I am no longer minister," answered "My lord prince," stammered Henri. "There are no more princes." " Well, my lord of, Austria." M. do Metternich raised his head ; looking sad as a German ballad. "Austria is no more," said he, in a gloomy whisper. " Austrii.ns have de stroyed it in destroying me. Diplomacy is no more, for 1 am the last diplomatist ; and I !—Oh, Talleyrand, thou bast done well to die ! The great art of working the hinges upon which all politics turn is at an end forever. The people break the hinges when they cannot open them, and the axe is a hammer that opens el/. ery lock. We have fallen upon evil times, when words arc of no other use to statesmen than to express their thoughts, and that even when perliaps they have none to express. Pity me, then ; behold me reduced to swallowing my last refuge of diplomacy—that is to say, my Johannisberg wine, that won drone beverage with which I have mys tified all Europe for more than sixty years." And M. de Metternich was silent, hav ing nothing more to drink or to say. I now lost all trace of Henri and Ma tilda for sometime, but rested satisfied that they had at length found the prom ised land, when this evening I received the followrng letter:: “Brescia, Mardi to. My DEAR FRIEND:—We have at length 0 , 11 0 44' A/ arrived in Italy, after having passed through twenty countries, nil in revolu- I lion. Up to this moment we have not I had an hour's quiet, for wherever we turned, there burst the revolutionary water spout. W hatever shore we reach- ' ed, the waves broke in upon it and drove us before them. We have been at Bres cia about half an hour, and leave it be-' fore the hour is over. %% e were afraid of Vienna—afraid of Milan. "No stran gers !" was the cry there ; and though 1 knew they meant the Austrians, yet I was not,certain how far they might car ry their nationality. We knew that Rome was celebrating a constitutional carnival ; that Florence's grand duke was proclaiming constitutions ; that Na ples had a king to-day and will have to morrow a Massenello. We thought of Monaco, but it appears a republic is pro claiming there. The republic of San Marino next occurred to us, but there ' they are seriously talking of proclaim ing an emperor. A prophetic hurrah has reached us from the Don Cossacks. Asia has turned her eyes westward, and drawn the sword against the emperor of all the Cossacks. Every day we see the moon rising, it appears to us under every form and every color. I suppose you have it tricolored in Paris! But it is not the honey-moon ; alas 1 we know not where to find that ! To what shore, favored of Heaven, arc we now to steer our frail bark of love, launched into open sea in such stormy weather 1 We had joyfully cried out " land !" when I we reached Brescia. Here in the fair fields of Lombardy, where spring halal already come with her hands full of I opening flowers and verdant foliage, we hoped to forget the world and all its rev-, olutions ; but hardly had we alighted from diligence, than a huge creature,' one of the rabble, collared me and de manded if 1 were nut the viceroy ; for the report had been already spread that the viceroy, driven from Milan, was on his way to Brescia, which lie believed to be friendly to him. " My worthy friend,' said I, you! really wrong me. I have just conic from a country where the very word royal is erased from the dictionary.'— I (Apropos of the dictionary, have you still an academy 1) By this time the diligence was surrounded by a crowd, not less demonstrative in its greetings than my first friend. I commenced a parley with them, interrupted from time to time by a poor nervous English-. woman, white as her country's cliffs, protesting that though she did come , from Munich, she was not Lola Montes. In a few minutes, however, a diversion was effected in our favor by the arrival of a second carriage. The mob rush ed towards it, and seizing upon a now who alighted from it, dragged him into the next square. 'Choy say it isthe viceroy ; I out not sure ; but one thing is • certain, that the revolution is here us well as everywhere else. Denton said, that we did not carry our country about with us on the soles of our shoes;" ; I but methinks I must carry about with me dust pregnant with revolutions. "'At length, in utter despair, I thought of Ireland. I have heard of no role- I lution' in Ireland.' If not,' iniswered Matilda, then we must not go ; a revo lution there would imply quiet, for it' implies change, and the usual natural ! state of that country is disturbance.' " Her WOIMIII'S wit at last suggested : Why not go back whence we came !' She is quite right. Will you then have the goodness to call ne my house and tell my English servant—but I was for getting that the cause of liberty, equal ity and fraternity would be compromised by my retaining him in my service— but tell any of my people you can find that we are on our way to Paris, and hope to spend our honey-moon at home " Farewell. 1 have but time to add, health and fraternity. HENRI DELMASURES, Posing a Pedagogue. Sally Jones have you done that sum 1 set you r " No, thir, I can't do it. "Can't do it! ashamed of you. Why at your age I could do any sum that was set me. I hate that word can't ! for there is nu sum that cant be done, I tell you." " II think, thir that I know a them you can't thifer out.'' " He, well, well Sally, let's hear it." "It ith thith t h ir :If one apple cau theth the ruin of the whole human rnth, how many thuch will it take to make a barrel of thweet thider, thirl" "Miss Sally hues, you truly turn to your parsing lesson." GAMBLING IN New Yoke.--The New York Hearld hears from various quarters that the in crease of gambling in that metropolis, has been very remarkable during the last two or three years. Houses of this description multiplying in all the fasionable streets and quarters of the city. VOL, XIII, NO. 46. [For the ituntingdon Journal.] UY R. 3I'DIVITT. When a maiden dies (among. the. Senecas) they imprison a young bird, until ithrs.f.; begins to try its power of song, and then loading, it with kisses and caresses, they loose its bonds, over her grave, in the belief that it will nor fold its wings neither close its eyes until it ha down to the "Spirit-land," and delivered it a precious burden of unction to the loved an d lost."—lnd. His. Away sweet bird in thy onward flight, Through the trackless realms of air; To fold thy wind in a world of . light And leave thy message thefe. Meet emblem thou, of ‘• the toyed and lost'. Whose spirit, (nOWunconfined) Ras soared away froni •its earthly dross, And left no tra.te behind. Thy pinions are freed, thy way in clear, i ty away to the"'spirit-land" And waft our niqhs fo our friend act dear As she moves in that Shadowy band l'? We have Indeed thy fetters bergrave above, We have kissed thee o'er and o'er, Then safely bear these tokens of love To her we ehall see no more. llnt oh ! thy pinion would fail thee, bird; Ete the journey thou hunt begun, Thine eye the to ight could never meet The bluue of the noonday sun. Awrty,thritgli th,.regions . of .. boundre3s epees Hath Alai di atlas.; spirit fled' And an Angela pinion ulone can trace The flight of the early dead ! She haShgOne to dwell in a world dal' Unpiereed by human eye ; Beyond the hounds of the farthest star That twinkles in yonder sky ! When tin , seraphs their glittering pinions fold Beneatii the Sapphire blaze," Where. the angels strike their harn3 of goid, And (terrible us they gaze!" 'heath the azure of bliss she bath folded her wings, O'er the regions of boundless love, She drinks for aye of the nectarine Springs Which gladden the courts above ! To those she loved she can ne'er come back, Lot tbere in the land of the blest, She will welcome the friends who may follow her track I To the.mansions of Heavenly rest . Huntingdon,' Nov.' 13, 1848.' Son against Father. The Cork Reporter relates the follow ing incident of the recent flurry in Ire land : Very soon after it was known that SMith O'Brien and his companions had assembled in the neighborhood of Bellingarry, five or six young men, holding a respeCtabl6 positioh in society,. some having attained collegiate honors, went down from Dublin to join him.— ; they reached the locality the evening after the affair at Widow Cormack's house;l and on learning the result, and , flitting that the lenders" where dth ded and dispersed, they made their way back to the country Meath, where they purposed to lie perdue for some time.— There, however, they found that the po lice were on their track, and determi ned on returning to Dublin, an 4 taking th6ir chance. Accordingly,. they did :tug! reached thr city about 11 o'clock at night. Here, after consulting fur a while, they resolved oh Calling upon a young frrimel and asking quarters for the night, until they could decide on their future location. Proceeding to the house of their friend's father, a re spectable professional gentleman, whose political sentiments were at variance With those of his' sOn, they knocked at the hall door, mid inquired for the per son with whom they desired to comtnu nicate, who presently came down to them ; While conferring in the hail as how he could best provide for them, his father ot'erheard the conversation end Coming out locked the hall-door putting the key ihto his pocket ; and having called for assistance, lie sent a servant through the back door for the police.— The son entreated, prayed, and plead the sacredness of a stranger seeking hospitality ; but in vain. Hie parent was immovable; and, seeing the urgen cy of the case, he said to his friends, "Come, boys, this shall never be." In an instant the father was seized and' overpowered, he we% brought into a back parlor, and tie& hand and foot in an arm-chair ; the hail dear was opened, and his son, having seen' his friends out of danger, returned to the house. Next day he was made fr prisoner, as " sus ' peeted of treasonable practices," and sent to Newgatc. His father went to vitit hint, and he rernsed him an inter view. LOVE'S FORGETFULNESS. -it i& said that poor men always make love better than those who are rich, because, having less to care about, and not being puffed up with their own consequence, they are not selfish, and think more of the lady than themselves. Young ladies also, who fall in love, never consider whether there is sufficient "to support the cuisine." Probably young ladies in love lose their appetitites, and not feel ing inclined to eat at that time, they imagine that love will always supply the want of food. They discover their mistake after the honeymoon, when their. appetites return.