9rr , (c ° t iiiirtgbott w ‘,. ; • o , .;4,11P ournar BY JAS. CLARK. !'!SEAIUTY, A JOT FOREVER." ment, like that vision of Himself, when .We find in the February number of the Mis- " there eves under His feet, as it were, sionary,"a beautiful discourse by Bishop Doane, a paved work of sapphirh stone, and as at the consecration of Grace Church in Newark, it were, the body of Heaven, in His IC J., from the text, 0 worship the Lord in clearness." And, then, in its time, the the beauty of holiness"—which is said to have temple, of hewn stone, and cedar beams " • three-fold theme: Beauty; Consecrated and olive and palm, enriched with car- Beauty; acceptable to God as an accessory of ving, and overlaid with gold, and splen- Worship." We extract the illustrative corn- did with jewels, the very bowls, and ba went on the first two sins, and spoons, and snuffers of purest 1. " 0 worship the Lord in the beauty gold. of holiness." The theme of the text is I The sea and land all compaeseed, the BEAUTY. " A thing of beauty is a joy ,stores of nature ravished, art in its ut forever." This was the happy thought, most consumation, that the house, built in happier word@ of him* whose self- for the Lord. in David's own expressive Vollitted epitaph stands, on his tomb, at phrase, might be " exceeding magnifi- Roast cal." These leave no doubt of his con " Sere lies eee, whose name was writ in water." ception of the use of consecrated beauty. "A thing of beauty is a joy forever." Not we:. it only for the Jews, to know It stirs the immortal spirit; and its pul- and feel its power, and make it bear sea, like the circle in the water, spread upon the instincts 01 the nature, which tfinough its whole eternity. You scarce- He gave to us, who first made us like ly note it, now. A bursting rose-bud. i Himself. The Holy Jerusalem, the lhe evening star. A tree, in autumn. church of Christ, is revealed to the be- Some special pageant of our western loved John, as its comes out of heaven, skies. A sleeping infant's smile. But, I from God ; her light; like a stone clear as is another hemisphere, and, at the lapse! crystal ; the foundations, sapphire and of half a life, you know not how, or I emerald, and chrysolite, and chrysoprase Why, " the electric chain ix touched ;" I and amethyst; the gates, twelve pearls; and it is there, in all its loveliness, "a!,the street, pure gold, as of transparent thing of beauty,'' and "a joy forever." 1 glass. Who wonders, that with models And who can tell, when Paradise shall such as these, before them, Christians, in open, and let in the morning twilight of other years when all the aid that science jlie perfect day, upon the ransomed soul, lent to art, in the comparison with us how much, that constitutes its bliss, was, as the twilight to the nuon, reared shall he, in memories of the lovely and the Cathedrals, and the Chapels, and beloved of the earth--and things of ' the Chantries, whose mere ruins mock beauty thus be joys forever 1 Does it at our magnificence 1 Why, even the not help to this conclusion, that beauty heathen show the instinct of the heart, has no standard ; and can have none 1— to lay its powers all out, and work them Else, were the children of the Father to the last perfection, in results of con dealt with, in unequal measure, in the serrated beauty. Look at the Partite• thing, for which all seek instinctively ; ' non. Look at the Coliseum. Look at and in which all find chief delight.--H the Pantheon. What is the Venus, Does it not help to this conclusion, that that enchants the world 1" What is air, and light, and life itself, are not of . the Belvidere Appollo 1 vi hat are the wider salty, than beauty, and the love Diens, and the Hebes, and the Graces 1 of it 1 The green, that garnitures the i What is the majesty of Jupiter 1 What earth. The hues and tints, that sport; is the magnificence of Junol What is and revel in the clouds. The Wayward th e " Niobe, all tears 1" What are tie charms, that play upon the water's writings of Laocoon 1 What is the changeful face. The fine Mosaic, which utmost reach and range of ancient ar a morning in the Spring enamels, of the chitecture, sculpture, poetry, in all its flowers. Or, the fantastic frostwork of forms of grace, and dignity, and power, a winter's night. Does it not help to but still the working out of the instinc this conclusion, that the love of beauty five and inwrought idea of consecrated never tames and never tires; but still bentity 1 See it, in Raphael, and Mi goes on to grow, expansive as the mind, chael Angelo, and Reopens. Feel it, in more vigorous with use, and with indul- the serene and holy beauty of the Bless gence still more exquisite? What are ed Mother; and in the infant loveliness these all but hints and harmonies of the and purity of that God-child. Hear it divine creative power, that moulds, its in all that music has achieved, of ten by our instincts ; and employs our sym- detest sweetest, most subduing, • yet Tathies, to sway us, for our happiness 1 most elevating, to the soul ; till even hat. makes even this fallen world a Milton looses all the Puritan, while lie minister of immortality ; and earth, in brings more than all the poet, to the ruined, yet entrancing, beauty, a vesti- praise of consecrated beauty, in its bule of Heaven 1 Oh, that we would blendid form of sacred structure, and but learn, by all the lessons that are lav ished on our life! Oh, that we had an ear, like Plato's, that could catch the music of the spheres! An eye, like John's, in Patmos, to behold the rnin bow, like an emerald, that girds the throne! A heart, like David's, in the stillness of whose subdued and reverent wisdom, the heavens were " telling the glory of God !" So, in the simple joy of little chil dren, we should feel the power of beau ty, in its purity ; know that it comes di. rect from him ; and make it . but the star paved path, to lead to Him again. So, should we take the beauty of the outer world ns but the the sacramental sign of His perfection who crested it ; employ it as the argument of virtue, and the in strument of piety ; and find it as, no doubt, the angels do, a motive of devo tion and the element of immortality. "0 sing unto the Lord a new song, sing unto the Lord, all the earth. Sing unto the Lord, bless His name, show forth his salvation from day to day." Honor and majesty are before hint, strength and beauty are his sanctuary. Give unto the Lord, 0, ye kindreds of the people, give unto the Lord glory and strength. Give unto the Lord the glory due unto His name ; bring nu offering, and come :into His courts. 0, worship the Lord ' in the beauty of holiness. ii. " 0, worship the Lord, in the beau. ty of holiness." The theme of the text is CONSENTRATED BEAUTY. It is the beauty which was consumated, in the full perfection of Its kind, and set apart for sacred uses, that the Psalmist speaks of. This Was a household and familiar theme, to Jewish ears and hearts. The tabernacle, with its gold and and silver, its blue, and purple, and scarlet ; the mercy seat, of pure gold ; the very can dle sticks, with their almonds. and knops and branches, and flowers, one beaten work of pure gold ; all made after the pattern which was showed to Moses on the Mount. The priest's robes, of blue and purple, and scarlet, and fine twined linen, ouches of gold, and chains of wreathen work in gold, and settings of onyx.stone. 'I he sacred breast plate, radient with ruby, and sapphire, and amethyst and diamond. Every thing, in ell the holy service of Grid's appoint• of sacred song : ig Let my due feet never fail To walk the studious cloister's pale ; And love the high embowed roof, With antique pillars massy proof: If And storied windows, richly dight, Casting a dim religious light, There, let the pealing organ blow, To the full voiced choir below, In service high, and anthems clear, An may, with sweetness, through mine ear, Dissolve me into ecstasies, And bring all heaven before mine eyes." What have we here, in every age, and every land ; what shall we find in every form of worship, true or false, Jewish or Chiristian, or Heathen, but the site of consecrated beauty ; in the heighth of its conceptions, sad in the fullness of its consumation, for the ser , vice of religion! What is it all but comment upon comment, upon David's text "Worship the Lord in the beauty of holiness!" •Keats. Halite and Home Influences. Many of our readers, no doubt, re member the late Hon. Felix McConnell, member of Congress from Alabama. From the evil influences of corrupt so ciety, he became a debauchee and an outcast, and committed suicide while in the city of Washington, some three or four years since. The following inter esC.ng sketch we take from the "City Item." What a commentary upon home and home influences ! How many a , youth and even the aged, have mourned i over the day in which they were led to \alight such influences, and put at naught the pious admonitionsof parents. What reason all have to make use of those beautiful words in the Lord's prayer— " Lead us not into temptation, but de liver us from evil !" " Poor McConnell I He was gifted by nature both in body and mind; brave, generous, honorable, affectionate end faithful. There is a *ice, which as the canker-worm, fastens upon the richest fruits, destroys,. the noblest creatures. It made him a madman and laid him in a grave *high his own right hand had reddened I Yet ; living with all his wesses, there were bursts of his better nature breaking through the darkness, which forced men to love him ; HUNTINGDON, PA., TUESDAY, MARCH 20, 18491. find dying, no one remembered that there 0, 0 118 any thing to condemn. the demon of the cup was never more a demon, than when he overcame McConnell, a man rich in home affec tions and home virtues—without which all more expanded and boastful merits are nothing. *. * * * * * Shortly before his death on incident occurred, which we believe honorable to the unfortunate man Who was the principle actor. McConnell, then a member of Cong ress, stood at the bar of one of the prin ciple hotels in Washington. Beside' him, and drinking with him, was one who, without a virtue or a generous feeling, had enjoyed all the advantages of an exalted family aaci great wealth— advantages which his innate and ungov ernable vices, had, to a great extent, forfeited. H ei was shunned by the good; but McConnell had long since left the choice of his companions to chance, and then chance was generally untoward. The-individual referred to spoke of the Bible, sneered at its authority, ridiculed its injunctions, and repeated its most sacred passages with ribald comments: McConnell, who had been all excite ment and exhilaration, stood silent and sadly by without a word of remark. The blasphemer continued in language more and more offensive; and it was marked the eye of McConnell flushed with unwonted fire, and that his cheek flushed even with a deeper glow titan that which dissipation had fixed there. At length he stepped forward and said: " Stop my friend! From the moment I looked into your face, I feared you were a scoundrel, for God had set the mark of Cain upon your forehewt now know it. I turn a bad man—a lost man—a man, every moment of whose life upbraids him. But I have one green spot still left in my heart—l love my•wife and she loves the Bible. I believe in what my wife believes, and her faith is in her Bible. It has made her an angel upon earth, it must be true ; the man who derides it, insults her ; !Ind.! will hold that man account- able unto death for the wrong !" It is needless to add that the wretch shrunk away from this unexpected butst of feeling, and was not known after wards to hazard the experiment of as sailing the Bible in a crowded bar room. HON. A. H. STEVENS, of Georgitii. Mr. Stephens is one of the most re• mint, wouldn't sell a notion under an markable men of the day. His history ounce of dust, arid. sacked' the whole abounds with incidents- which, while bilin. they illustrate the struggles which u , to work again ; totted' tip' at sun aided genius must encounter in its down, and found we'd averaged $26 efforts ficit distinction and usefulness, at per man. Got back to the shanty ; but the same time demonstrate the certain before that darned Hiram K. Doughboy success which ever attends true merit would let me inside the door, forced to and unyielding perseverance. Mr. S. pay down $3O for a days' board and Ind was a poor orphan boy. The rudiments gin'. Calk illated to camp out in future, of his education were acquired at what cut Hiram, and work on my own hook, they call in Georgia an old field school. havin' realized that Socialism ain't no At an early age he was transferred to go in gold diggin'. Asked Hiram why the Academy, and by the aid of some he didn't go out with his bowie-knife benevolent friends who had been attrac- and washing-pail. Hiram sniggered, ted by his remarkaable development of and said he warn't greedy, and prefer talent of the highest order, he was en- red helpin' folks in his shanty. Hiram abled to enter Franklin College, where usen't to be such a consarned fool. * he graduated with honor, fully realizing * * Started alone—hating, swopped the highest expectations of those who I the gold I' got from . a Down-Easter yes now watched his career with growing i TALE BEARtria.—Never repeat a story terday, for one blanket, half-quarter interest. It was expected that he would ! unless you are positively certain that it cas k of pork, and half demijohn of devote himself to the ministry ; but it 'is correct, and even unless something is brandy. Must convene that I've lost was ultimately determined otherwise.--1 to be gained either of interest to your. fifty per cent ,by bargains; but a cargo Young Stephens aimed at independence I self or for the good of the person con- o f new diggers have just come in from for himself and family. He entered a! cerned. Tattling is a mean and wicked i Panama, great demand for such fixins, law office, and in a short time, before he , practice, and he who indulges in it, and forced to give what the old flint of was yet out of his minority, was admit- grows more fond of it in proportion as i a Down-Easter choose to ask. He's ted to practice in the courts, by a ape- he is successtul. if you have no good I made considerable some by his trade, cial act of the Legislature of Georgia. to say of your neighbor, never reproach that's a fact, and I doubt if he could A few years found him in the first rank his character by telling that which is have done better at the diggins. of his profession, and one of his first, false. He who tells you the faults of Made a great day—haring sucked uses of his good fortune was to return, ' others, intends to tell others of your I $4O at least. Got sorter lost, and found, with interest, the favor he had received faults, and so the dish of news is hand- when I traced back to the tree where I when in adversity. An ardent Whig, led from one to another, until the tale i cached my plunder, that those 'tarnal he was elected to represent his County becomes enormous. A story never loses Ingines had absquatulated with blanket, in the State Legislature, in both bran- anything by telling, is wisely remarked, pork, and brandy. Luckily I've got my ches of which he served with great but on the contrary gains in proportion tools. Q ability. In the year 1843 there was a as it is repeated by those who have not ',pent the night under a cotton tree ; vacancy to be filled in the Congressional a very strict regard for the truth. Tru- mighty sharp set in the morniii . , having delegation, and the Whig party,as usual, ly, "the tongue is an unruly evil, full eat nothing since yesterday at twelve. were called upon to nominate their can- of deadly poison." Struck the trail of Zerubbabel W. Pea didate. Owing to the signal defeat of body ; and traded with him for mine the party in the general election, which f MATERNAL LOVE.-A thrilling inci- i bread and pork doin's for which the ev had taken-place the previous year, there i dent is related in the Dayton Journal. erlastin' old skin-flint made me come was an evident reluctance on the part lOn Saturday morning the house of Mr. down cruel, cleanin' me out of all I'd lof the prominent men of the party to Waidle, in Dayton caught fire in the raised yesterday. enter the canvass, and it was doubtless absence of both Mr. W and his wife. Zerubbabel says he ain't diggin', but owing to this fact that Mr. Stephens A little daughter of four or five years, goin' about with a provision and liquor was selected as the candidate. Little had been left rocking the cradle, in store. It's amazin ' how long-headed I hope was entertained of his election, which was the babe. The little girl men like Zerubbabel can be such darned I owing to the large Locofoco majority easily escaped, but the infant was left idoats. which was known to exist in the upper in the burning house. Several persons I've got out of the track of the settle 'section of the State, ca ll e d the Chero. tried to penetrate to rescue it, but were ment, and into a prime diggin—all to iliee country, and his friends consoled driven back by the excessive heat. But myself—where the lumps of gold run themselves in advance with the reflee- a woman came rushing to the spot from i as big as pigeon's eggs, and lie as thick Lion that it could not hurt a new man to a n eighbor's—she threw water over her as hailstones in Broadway, after a come be beaten for Congress. 1 clothes and drew her wet apron hastily down in the fall. But I'm darned Weak But Mr. Stephens determined not to ! over her head, rushed in and returned for grub, and so rheumatic with camein Ise beaten, if it was in his power to pre- .in a moment—the child in her arms and out that it's quite a caution. 4 vent such a disaster. He immediately I safe. It was the MOTHER-of course it I Two days without seem' food—gold \set off alone for the Cherokee country, , was,—every mother's heart will tell her gets more abundant than °Ver. * * * canvessing every County, and address- ! t h a t I. [Extract from the "St, Francisco ing the pecple at every Court House.— "A few tittys"in the Diggins: 9 His opponents, taking alarm from the sy A o FRISS AND INDEPXNDINT." accounts which reached them of the rFrom Punch. j—Landed at San Fran success of his efforts, hastened upon cisco, after a tarnal tossin of five months. his track. One after another of their This is coming through the small end most popular speakers encountered him, i of the Horn, I reckon, and there ought only to be discomfitted, and to retire, I to be pretty considerable some on the overwhelmed with mortification at his other side to make up for levin' my dry triumph, The people followed him goods store and family fixins in Broad with enthusiasm--men, women and chil- way. dren thronged to hear "the little wire i Traded with a down-Easter, who is grass boy" as they called him, and lost mskin' tracks for the settlements, with tbeir devotion to Locolocoism as they 30,000 dollars in his carpet bag, for a listened to his convincing argumentsspade, pick, scoop, and washin through and impassioned appeals. Many laugh-l—givin 800 dollars for the plunder, and able anecdotes are told of his meeting ! glad to get it. as Increase Niles Flint, with the hardy mountaineers of upper of Salem, Mass., went 750, and he is a Georgia. On one occasion nn old lady tarnal old boss at a deal. who had come a great distitnee to hea t givoppied my traps and blankets, a him, and had listened to the well-direct , ((barter cask of pickled pork, and a deM ed eloquence of the boy, as she auppb='l ijohn of reach brandy, which I had lain sed, until she could restrain her ndmi- in, for six pounds of ginoeine gold.— ration no longer, sprang from her seat, I Pretty considerable smart trndin and exclaimed—" Gracious goodness' rioted my tools to Hiram K. Dough me ! if 1 could only have a boy like that boy's boarding shanty, and settled with I'd be willin' to die right now !" On hirri'for blanketsThO'd board,. at 30 dol another occasion, the Locofocos, seeing tars per diem. Catawampus ptices here that their speaker was getting the worst —that's a fact ; but everybkly's got of the conflict, endeavored to break tip more dust than he knows what to' do. the meeting, and several of them, with with, canes in their hands, advanced towards Off to the diggins tf pally ; the stand where Mr. Stephens was then mighty small potatoes moat on 'em ; all speaking. "Stop!" shouted an old sorts and colors, and everlastin' ragged mountaineer who had been standing by,l—Bay, statesman, Backwoodsmen, Buck resting on his double-barrelled buck- eyes from Ohio, flosses from Kentulc, .gun, looking up with a broad grin into Cape Cod Whalers, St. Francisco In the face of the speaker, and giving em- dinns, Leperos from Santa Cruz, Texan phasis to his words by significant winks, Volunteers, Philadelphia Quakers, a nods, and jerks of the head--" Stop !" j Latter-Day Saint, six Irish Sympathi- I said he, at the same time presenting his zers, twelve Yankees, as many British gun at the crowd, " Don't one of you lay I era,- a Squad of Deserters ; a Blackfoot ver finger on the boy. I'm as good a Guide, a 'Methodist Parson; and a Arbr.• dimmycrat as any of ye, but I won't mon Elder. A 'tarnal nigger tried to i see no foul play. He's tellin' you noth- I join us, but got cow-hided. ing but the truth, and if one of you Struck diggins, and sot to serious' dares to touch him,. I'll let old Betsy washin'; parson began to ask a blessin', loose among youquickern'n you can any but seem' Silas T. Forks, of Orange ' Jack Robinson P, The confusion was soonburgh, N. C., helpin' himself, parson cut quitted ; and Mr. Stephens procee- it short off, and we went to work, .like ded with hrs . speech. I niggers at cane hoin', ngreein' to dig in Thus in tale short month he encoun- company and share profits. Cotched tercd and defeated nearly all the prorni'l the Qualidr stinniie himself, and takin' neat leaders of the opposite party on kink out of his back with a Havana.— their own ground, completely revolu- Convened a meetin', cowhide(( Quaker, Lionizing a large section of the State and at it again. Gold 'yin' about like that had always before given an over whelming. Locofoco vote. The result earth-nuts, and ri((((ll(( through the ter like . hailstones in a sherry-cobbler. was the triumphant election of Mr. Ste- Siiiinded the couch for grub, and found phens to Conliras, and Mr. Crawfoid• nobody got anything, but that 'cote old as Governor o the State. Since that time Mr. Stephens has represented his coon,. Zerubbabel W. Peabody, of Sta. ten Isiabd,• who bad brought a bag of district with ability, and has perhaps, biscuit, and tobtne meat fixins. The var- exerted a greater influence, both in and out of Congress, than any other man to the House, to preserve the harmony and unity of the naticnal \Vhig party; arid to promote its success. Mr. Stephens is a man of slight frame and feeble constitution, of a very youth ful appearance, with a voice clear, mu sical and childlike. His influence with his constituency is almost unbounded, based, as it is, upon their confidence in his enlarged patriotism, sound jiidg ' ment and unimpeachable integrity in all the relations of life. He is now about 35 years of age, and, should he be spared to the country, he is destined to achieve still higher honors for his na tive State, by enrolling his name among those of the first Statesmen of America. VOL, XIV, NO. 10 Star."j " Yesterday some Indians from the up diggins came to the settlement with a man whom they had found lying insensible farther up the Sacramento Than any of our diggers have yet pene trated. He had a bag by his side, which contained £lB,OOO, in dust and lumps of the precious metal , the Indians exacted most of it for bringing him back to the settlement. He was fear fully emaciated ; and, in another twelve hours, the adventurous treasure-seeker must have perished of hunger." l'he Wages of Sin. The wages of sin is death," saith the great Teacher. Every day's expe rience confirms the truth of the teaching. We do not remember to have read more harrowing narratives, going to confirm the truth of this saying, than that which the late Cincinatti papers givo cf the murder by the wife of her husband', mistress.—We allude, to the cause cf Mrs. HOWARD —Goaded to madness by the brutish conduct of the man who promised at the altar to be her protect or, and deprived of her children by the inhuman wretch who was their father, in a moment of madness she sought the woman whom he had wickedly taken to iiisliosoth• and killed her. This man (Howard)' soured the' Wind and he haw reaped the whirlwind. He took a con. tiding woman from the bosom of her mother's family; and she bore him twcr, children. He forgets his vows and plunges into a career of sin with the wife of another man, who was equally guilty. He then begins to abuse his lawful wife, to destroy her reputation, t'o btat het botilly,.and ends by taking from her, her children, tioi'heart's jew-, els, and turns her out upon tftb cold . world to live as she may. The worm that he trod upon and spurned, turn led at last in a moment of mad ness to plague the wicked tormentor. •He now sees the work of his hands— and a sorry sight it is. It is - death—; the wages of sin. And yet men will continue to turn their domestic bliss in ; to a hell, to persecute their defenceless, wives because of their own abandon ment of the marriage tie ; but though the wages of their sin may not be reap. ed in blood on this eait!i, they may be assured, if they relict a moment, that they have laid ep wrath for the last day,• unless they repent. Woman, in this • , world, is the prey of the develish pas sions of man, and no power can rescue her from his fangs but the subduing spirit of the gospel upon the hearts of both sexes.—Notional Whig. R' hies from Seed: Most, if not all, of our valuable pots toes have been raised from seed. With this valuable esculent, as with fruits, from raising numerous kinds from seed, we occasionally find an excellent new variety, which may in some respects ex cel other kinds in general use. This should lead farmers to make ex-' periments, as potatoes may be raised from seed, with as little trouble as frnit trees,.and it takes far less time to test a new variety ; as the potato will come to perfection in less time than a fruit tree will attain sufficient size to set out as a standard. _ uu We commenced this anitle with a view of recommending that the :'zed' should be prepared the same as seeds of fruit tries, instead of sowing them dry in spring. Put the seeds in damp sand or loam, set them in the cellar, and keep them slightly moist till the time of sowing. If kept dry, and sowing be delayed till warm weather, only a part of the seeds will vegetate; but if sowed dry in March, they twill generally vegetate freely, as they lie awhile in the earth before vegetation commences, which serves as a preparation. If the seeds be put into sand late in winter, or early in spring, it will be in sermon, We received a lot of seeds last year, rather late in the season, and we pit them into moist loam the last of March, and sowed them the last of April. They came well, and by extra culture we raised, the first season, some potatoes of medium size, say four in ches long, and nearly two in diameter. Making an Arrest. Decidedly the best jiake we have heard for a week, was played off on a relentless, sharp nosed constable in the western pert of the state. He started out to arrest a person who had often es caped pursuit, but who, he was inform ed; was at that time engaged in a noigh boring cornfield. The constable, wish mg to take him by surprise, took a round a bout direction, scaling the sheds and fences opposite, when, " squattin,!' he crawled stealthily along, and' , at length pounced upon his victi..., clench ing him firmly round the waist, exclaim ing : You're my prisonar.7 He had nab bed a—icore crow.