rlfrAflfittObtlfl -„/T2) BY JAS. CLARK. THE BLUE JUNIATA. There rose an Indian girl, Bright Alverata, Where sweeps the waters Of the blue Juniata. Swift as an antelope, Thruu4h the forest glowing, Loose were her jetty locks, Wavy'tresses flowing. Sweet was the mountain song, Of bright Alverata„ Where sweep the wate7s Of the blue Juniata. "Strong and true my arrows are, In my painted quiver, Swiftly glides my light canoe, Down the rapid river. " Bold was my warrior good, The love of Alverata, kroud waves his snowy plume, Along the Juniata. " Soft and low he speaks to me, In his war whoops sounding, WaV'es his voice and thunders loud, From height to height resounding." So sang the Indian girl, Bright Alverata, Where sweeps the waters Of the Clue Juniata. Fleeting years have borne away, The voice of Alvcrata, Still swap tiro waters Di the bloc Joniata. LOVE IN THE BACKWOODS. Or Jauttny Waddle's first Courtship. "'Talk o' spress, boys, puts me in mind o' toy voting days. I should rather guess, I was in for 'em some, myself, them times." •This was said by an old man whom we will introduce as Mr. James Wad- tile, or rather as 'old Jim Waddle.' Er erybody, except the render, knows bins anti his penchant for yarn spinning. It is the evening of a military training day. There are a goodly number, after the company is dismissed from duty,' who are lounging around, and all now gather around the aforesaid Jim, to hear hi:. Yarn to which he has already begun the prelude, and only awaits somebody to urge him to go on.—l-le then inquired what they would have—'One of his hunting or one of his courting spreesl' The b'hoys unanimously demanded the latter. Then, after requesting that none of them should laugh till he got through, with .a few preparatory hems and an assumption of a comically grave face, he commenced, (I wish 1 could re port in his inimitable language, verbat im et literatim.) 'When I war a boy, you know, dad dy moved front W irginny to Kaintuck. I'd been born and fotched up on the fronteers, and Kaintuck was a perfect paradise for me to hunt Bars and Ingins in. But I forgot—you want a court in' story. Well, although I was always cuttin up some deviltry among the boys yet, somehow I was u little shy and skeery among the gals. I liked the critter prodigiously, but about the only war I could manage to show it, was by . , castin sheep eyes in abundance at 'em. We had meetins as well as well as fro!. ics.—Sometimes, while the preacher was preochin tender heartedness, broth erly kindness and love I was'nt thinkin o' nothm else. I used to set what I could look the gals in the face, and then gaze at some party one, till she'd blush as red as a pepper pot. Then I felt so queer about the gizzard, and wished an earthquake to throw me right in her lap. 1 wns in love, but could'at tell who 1 lov ed most. Thar was Peggy Masonhammer, mity tine gal, even in her tow linen frock, her cheeks war as full as a Chinn pig's, and as red as a turkey gobbler's; and then Char was Sally Perkins, with he glo riously striped home-made cotton frock, besides, her hair and eyes warns black • as ink; and then thar was dimple-cheek ed, blue eye'd Lotto Smith who always toted her shoes and stockings in her hands till she got in sight o' the mecum' house. Well, o' these three I could'nt tell for my life which I liked the best— sometimes one and sometimes another —but always the last one 1 looked at. 'But when Squire Crumpton come to our diggins his two gals tuck the shine °lithe rest on 'em, specially the oldest one, Betsey. I silent attempt to de. scribe her—but when I tell you she had a calico frock with yellow flowers as big as your hand—brass ear bobs, besides half a dozen strans o' beeds as large as the end o' your little finger, you may think she was a charmer—l did anyhow. Of all the magnum bonum charmers [ everseed, she — was the magnum bonutn - est ! And so all the young fellows said t.u. When I fuss seed her it was at .deacon Snook's meetin. I fastened my eyes on her till her's met mine—she looked steadtastly—then smiled a char ,ming smile, and blushed and looked down. Lordy, thar was a flutterin then equal to a sawmill, 'tween my two jack et pockets' I felt I was a goner. From that hour I was too big fur my breeches and on Sunday's I borrowed dad's breeches he'd bin married in before the revolutionary war, and come ofl at the knees, but as he war tall and I warnt, they come below mine three or four in ches. Agin the next ineetin I was pre pared to cut a big stiff; sister Sal star ched and ironed my new fine shirt as nice and slick as a sheet of new tin. The shirt had the finest-hind of flax linen in the bosom and collar, but the invisible part of it was coarse tow, with a hem that would cable a steamboat.— Now while Sal was smoothin the wrin kles near the hem, with an iron just hot• from the fire, down stairs tumbled one o' the tarnel brats, knock in the breath out 'ont. It war Saturday night, and she war the only one up, and run to it in course, but afore it come tu, the iron had very decidedly made its mark, that is, burnt two holes in the extremity of my linen. , Next mornin I put it on ns it was, then the first regular far o' shoes I ev er had. I was seventeen jist that Sun day mornin, and in my Sunday riggin, felt myself a man, and resolved if Bet sey Crumpton was at the meeting to show it. Well, she was titer, and I ax't fur her company and got it. Walkin by her side I felt light ns nothm, I skeerely techt the ground I walla on. But I shunt tell you the fine things I thought. and said to her on the way, and more after we got hum. (Oh, yes, do, said several voices.) No you'll have null' without that—you're to skim the cream o' the story yet. She kept me up late, say two o'clock, and spite o' the novelty (it bein the fust time) 1 got sleepy. Now the Squire had just come to the parts, and put up a one story, roomed log cabin, and the whole family, 'cept some of the young 'tins slept below. I was a leetie bash ful about guine to bed thar, but 1 was three miles from home, and it was rain in like blazes, I had to do it, and with out exposin the blanks in my linen, 1 resolved to be up afore anything else in the mornin on the same account and some other. This was the last I knowed till wa kened by the hounds, (half a dozen of which slept tinder the bed,) a pull'n the kivers ofl'n me. Holy Moses ! the sun was two hours high—breakfast on the table, and me in bed. Just as I was guine to spring out, in pops the old 'omen, with a plate of venison. • It was dog days, you know and she cookt in the shanty. I possmned till she went out again, then lookt for my trousers—thar they wet., in the jaws of the pup at the foot of the bed I I made a mighty lunge over the footboard to regain them ; but horrors!—me head ' down and my heels up! What's the matter thinks I— but it flasht across me in a minit, that the hole in my linen was over the post —and a tall post to I I kicked and floundered, and floundered but all to no purpose-1 coot l'nt get down-1 stiaird ed to break the hem, but it was all no go Just now all the hounds ccmmenced Yellin' so furiously that the old 'Oman acid both gals run in to see what was up, and when they seed it was me, they run out again—one begun to holler for the Squire, while tothers through the cracks battled with fisbin poles the cussed !mounds that war wullin me.—Oh, I thought of Absolem, and every body else that ever did hang, but he did'nt hang with the wrong end up and that was a consolation I had'nt ! I'd cussed my fate like Balam, but I remembered I belonged to meetin', and it was agin the rules. I did howsumever, think some mighty hard words, if I did'nt speak 'em ! But all that did'nt do any good. I could'nt make nothin' by pnllin down' , ards, so I thought ird clime up the post and unloose myself that way. I had nearly succeeded, when one o' the un mannerly pups attacked me in the rear, and loosin my holt I fell in a knot—de cidedly peelin, ofrmy linen—the buttons busted off, and I come out full length on the floor, in precisely the same state of fix Job said he came into the world. The next minit I was under the bed, where the everlnstin' pups had dragged my trousers. I cur em off, but every time I put one leg partly on, the eternal whelps would pull the tether off. I wor ried this way sometime, when a puncheon gave way, and I fell through into a trough of soap under the house! Gosh ! I thought I was in the pit that's bottom less ! I sprung for my life, but in doing this, I threw myself in the face and stom ach of Squire Crumpton, who was cum min' on the run, 'spectin' the inguns was mussacreein' the whole fancily. The collision threw him down the hill ; I fol lowed suit, heels over head, to the bot tom. Here 1 recovered my understan ding, and without apologies, or even a word, I struck a bee line for home, jist as I was, in all my native purity, at a speed that split the wind, my toenails striking lire out'r the; flints at every jump ! But b'hoys, I never went within a quar- HUNTINGDON, PA., TUESDAY, MAY 15, 1849: ter of a mile of Squire Crumpton's after- ! From the N. Y. Spirit of the Times. wards—nor did I ever cast sheep's eyes A Sermon "as is” a Sermon. Mr. spirit :—The following article was me at Betty again, let 'lone gallantin' her home. ied from some old writings brought to this country some forty years since, and your con- The Order of Jesuits., tributor, who had never seen or known of its Before the order ofJesuits had existed being in print, thinks it may be of interest to an hundred years, it filled the whole' your readers, as it is too good to be lost, par world with memorials of great things ticularly in these days of Bpiritnal temperance, done and suffered for the faith. No re- and will go to prove that, at that time, temper ligious community could produce a list ante had its able advocates. of men so variously distinguished; none The Rev. Dr. Dodd lived within a few !idles of Cambridge, (England,) and had offen had extended its operation over so vast a space, yet in none had there ever been several students by preaching a sermon en such perfect unity of feeling and action. emperance. One slay some of them mcf him; There was no region of the globe, no they said one to another : walk of speculative or active life, in Here's Father Dodd—he shall preach us a which Jesuits were not to be found. sernion. „ Accosting him with, Your ser They guided the councils of Kings. Your deciphered Latin inscriptions,— They observed the motions of Jupiter's , satelites. They published whole libra ries, casuistry, history, treaties on op tics, Altaic odes, editions of the fathers, , madrigals, catechisms and lampoons. The liberal education of youth passed almost entirely into their hands, and was conducted with conspicuous ability.— They appear to have discovered the pre- cisc point to which intellectual culture can be carried without risk of intellect- ! nal emancipation. Enmity itself was compelled to own that in the art of man- , aging and forming the tender mind they had no equals. Meanwhile they assid ously and successfully cultivated the eloquence of the pulpit. With still grea ter assiduity and still greater success, they applied themselves to the ministry of the confessional. Throughout Cath olie Europe, the secrets of every gover ment, and almost every funnily, were in their keeping. They glided from , one protestant country to another, un der innumerable disguises, as gay cav aliers, ns simple rustics, as Puritan preachers. They wandered to coun tries which neither mercantile avidity nor liberal curiosity find ever impelled nny stranger to explore. They were to I be found in the garb of Mandrins, so-: perintending the observatory of Pekin. They were to be found spade in hand, teaching the rudiments of agriculture ' to the savages of Paraguay. Yet what- ever might be their residence. whataver their employment, their spirits was the same, entire devotion to the cormnou cause, implicit obedience to the central authority. None of them had chosen,' his dwelling place or his ndvocation for himself. Whether the Jesuits should live under the artic circle or under the equator, whether he should pass his life in arranging gems and collating manu scripts at the Vatican, or in persuading naked barbarians in the Southern Hem ispheres not to eat each other were mat . ters which he left with profound sub mission to the decision of others: If he was wanted at Liina; lie was on the At. lantic in the next fleet. If he was Want-, ed at Bagdad, he was toiling through the desert with the next caravan. If his ministry was needed in some coun try where his life was more insecure than that of the wolf--where it was a crime to harbor him, where the heads Lind quarters of his brethren, fixed in public places, showed him what he had to expect--he went without remonstrance or hesitation to his doom. Nor is this heroic spirit extinct. When in' our own time a new and terrible pestilence passed round the globe ; when in sonic ' great cities fear had disolved all the ties which hold society together ; when the secular clergy had deserted their flocks; when medical succor was not to be pur chnsed by gold; when the strongest natural affections had yielded to the love of life, even when the Jesuit was found by the pallet which bishops and curate physician and nurse, Father and Mother had deserted, leaning over in fected lips to catch the faintest accents of confession, and holding up to the last before the expiring penitent the image ' of the expiring Redeemer.—iirCauley's History of England, ATANNERS.-1 make it a point of mor ality never to find fault with another for his manners; they play be awkward or graceful, blunt or polite, polished or rus tic, I care not what they are, if the man means well and acts from honest inten tions without eccentricity or affectation. All men have not the advantage of "good society," as it is called, to school themselves in all its fantastic rules and ceremonies, and if there is any standard of manners, it is one founded in reason and good sense, and not upon these arti ficial regulations. Manners, like conver sation, should be extemporaneous, and not studied. I always suspect a man, who meets me with the same perpetual smile on his face, the same congeeing of the body, and the snow premeditated shake of the hand. Give'me the--it may be rough—grip of theitand, the careless nod of recognition, At d when occasion requires, the homely but welcome salu tation, "How are you, my old friendl" vants !" Sirs ! yours, gentlemen !" replied the Doc They said," We have a favor to ask of you, which rux al be granted." The divine asked what it was? " To preach a sermon," was the reply. " Well," said he " appoint the time and place and I will." The time the present, the place that hollow tree," (pointing to it,) said the students. 'Ti , s an imposition!" said the Doctor— " there ought to be consideration before preach ing." "If you refuse," responded they, 66 we will put you into the tree !" • Whereupon the Doctor did as desired; asked of them his text 1 c‘ Malt !" said they. The reverend gentleman commenced Let me crave your attention, my beloved ! I am a little man, come at a short warning, to preach a short sermon, upon a short subject, to a thin congregation, in an unworthy pulpit.— Beloved! my text is « Malt." I cannot divide it into syllables, it being but a monosyllable, therefore I tnust divide it into letters, which I find in my text to be fotir-31.,e-v-r. M, my beloved, isallegorieal—L,is literal , is thean:i'lral.. ist. The moral teacheth such as you drunk ards good manners; therefore M, my masters —A, all of you—L, leave otf—T, tippling. 2d. The allegorical is, when one thing is spo ken and another meant, the thing spoken is " malt," the thing meant the oil of malt, which you rustics make M, your masters—A, your apparel—L, your liberty—T, your trusts. 3d. The theological is according to the effects it works, which are two kinds—the first is this world; the second is the world to come. The fleets it works in this world are, in some, If, murder—in others, A, adultery—in al, L. loose ii,ss of life—and pareiculorly iu .curio, T, trea ,:on. In the world to come, the effects of it are : Jl, misery—A, anguish—L, lamentation —T, torment—and thus much for my text, " Malt." infer Ist : As a Wont at exhortation; M, my masters—A, all of you—L, leave otlL—T, tip pling. : A word for conviction : I%r, masters—A, all of you—L, look for—T, torment. ld : A word for caution, take this ; A drunk ard is the annoyance of modesty--the spoiler of civility; the destroyer of reason; the brewer's agent; ale wife's benefactor; the wife's sor row; his children's trouble; his neighbor's scoff; a walking swill-tub ; a picture of a beast; a monster of a man." The " young 'uns," it is supposed, left." Envy. Envy is the only vice which can be practiced at all times and in all pieces, the only passion whirls can never lie quiet for want of excite ment. It is impossible to mention a man whom any advantageous distinction has made eminent but some secret malice wilt burst out. The frequency of envy makes it solamiliar that it escapes our notice, nor do we reflect on its tur pitude or malignity until we happen to feel its effects. When he that has given no provocation to malice but by attempting to excel in some useful end, is pursued by multitudes whom he never saw with the least personal resentment; when he sees. clamor let loose upon hint as a pnblic enemy and incited by every stratagem of calumny; when he hears of the misfortune of his family or the follies of his youth exposed to the world and every failure of conduct aggrava ted or ridiculed, we then learn to abhor and de spise those artifices at which he only before longed, and discovers hots , much the happiness of life is increased by its eradication from the human heart. SUICIDE,-The following is an anecdote of Dr. Johnson : Boswell once asked Johnston if there was no possible circumstance under which suicide would bejustifable. cc No," - was the reply. " says Boswell, "suppose a man had been guilty of some fraud that he was equally certain would be found out I" " Why, then," says Johnson, "in that case let him go to some country where he is not known, and not to the devil where ho is known." The following sign adorns a black smith shop not more than fifty miles fron here: A DAM BIG HE BLACKSMITH. It should read: Adam Bighe, Black o IVIIAT IS L 114;? BY URIAII 11. JUDAN To discharge our duty to - our fellow-creatures, and to act a proper part with firmness and con stancy; to be true to the God whom we wor ship, and to mankind faithful to friends, gen crous to enemies, warm with compassion to the distressed, and zealous for public interest and private happiness; it is to be magnanimous without being proud, and tunnble without being mean ; it is to prepare for death, and murmur not at its mandate ; to daily acknowledge grati tude to an Almighty Power, and nightly, on Vended knees, and with uplifted hands, to offer up our beautiful thanks to the great Creator of the world, for the innumerable favors we hays rebeived, and for the boon of freedom that we all enjoy; and ever to bear in mind that— There is a calm for those who weep, A rest for weary pilgrims [bond; And while the mouldering ashes sleep Low in the ground. The soul of origin divine, God's gloriens image, freed from clay, In heaven's eternal sphere shall shine A star of day. The sun is but a spark of fire, A transient meteor in the sky; The soul immortal as its sire, Shall never die. Behold yon aged man bending 'neath the weight of years ! Stark how he still clings to I earth, but era long mil,/ sink into the grave, and relinquish his wealth to expecting heir 3, who perhaps will quarrel over a division of his substance. And how bath be lived 1 Though " three-score and ten" his heart has never throb bed at the tale of wo, and no " tear of pity" hath fallen from his eye ! Look how he bends beneath the infirmities of age as he grasps his bags of gold. Poor, tottering man ! thy grave will soon open to claim its "pound of flesh," and thy memory, unhonored, glide away from the recollection of every knni,ve mortal! IT'hilt is Lift? To act the part of the "Good Samaritan" whenever sorrow displays her gmo my flag, and wheie wretchedness waves her rribUrnful banner. It is to dive into the depths of dungeons-i4o plunge into' the infection of hospitals—to remember the forgotten--to at tend the neglected—to lighten the face over cast with sadness—to wipe . the tears from the Icheek of the widow—and to change the notes of mourning into those of joy. The Forest 'Funeral- She was ;fair child, with masses of long black hair lying over her pillow.—Her eye Oas dark and piercing, and as it met mine she started slightly, but looked upward and smil,d. I spoke to her father, and turning to her, asked her if she knew her condition I know that my Redeemer livcth," said sl e in a voice whose melody was like the sweetest strain of the /Eolian. You may imagine that the answer started me, and with a very few words of the like import, I turned from her. A half hour passed,and she spoke in that same deep, rich, melodious voice. "Father, I am coldtlie down beside me ;" and the old man lay down by his dying child, and she twined her arms around his neck, and murmered in a dreamy voice, "deal father, dear father:" • 4 My child," said the man, "cloth the flood seem deep to thee t" "Nay, father, my sontis strong." "Seest thou the thither shore 1" ,6 I see it, father, and its banks are green with immortal verdttte'," licarest thou the voice of the inhabitants 1" I hear them, father—the voices of angels, falling from afar in the still and solemn night time—and they call me. Her voice too, father; 0, I heard it then." noth she speak to thee 1" 16 She speaketh in tones most heavenly." 11 lloth she smile I" „ An angel smile ! but a cold, calm, smile. But lam cold—cold ! Father, there is a mist in the room. You'll be limely. Is this death, father It is death my Mary.” ~ Thank God!" Sabbath evening came, and a slow, sad pro cession, wound through the forest to the little school house. There with simple rites the good clergyman performed his duty, and went to the grave. The procession was short. There were hardy men and rough, in'shooting jackets, and sonic with rifles on their shoulders. lint their warm hearts gave beauty to their unsha ven faces, as they stood in reverent silence by the grave. The river murmured and the birds sang, and so we buried her. THE editor of the Yankee Blade gives the following, among other "Hints on Matrimony":— "Don't be surprised, if, after you have sailed smoothly eight or ten mouths on the voyage of matrimony, you are suddenly overtaken by squalls." "My dear, don't pull that pig by the tail; you may be a hug yourself our of these days." "Very likely; my honey, as we are both one flesh. , The bystanders fainted. 11_ 7 7" The Ailicuity of acquiring our language, which a foreigner must experience, is illustra ted by the following question : Did you ever see a person pare an apple or a year with a pair of scissors VOL. XIV. NO, 18 Conscience: It has been remarked that the forebodings of a guilty conscience are rarely, if ever, fully re alized in this life. Threatenings of a guilty mind pursue it to the last moment of earthly existence, and still promise a fearful retribution to be realized beyond the grave. 4 , The wick ed travelleth with pain all his days. A dread ful sound is in his ears. Ile knoreeth that the day of darkness is ready at hand. Trouble and anguish shall make him afraid." The life and death of many a renowned steep tic, prove that this is no exaggeration of the truth. The dread word.atmom, indicates the fearful reprisals which conscience is sure to levy upon guilt. The most successful course' of crime is not safe from the terrific visitation of this inward monitor. Conscience :flay sleep during n long erinrse of crime, but she never dies. She will gnaw again. The hour of ca lamity, the moment of death, arms her with tenfold terrors. If there be not, therefore, a future state of ectribution, the last pang of human-guilt is a lie --a lie for which the creator is responsible.— We almost tremble at the language we hav'e used, though it be but hypothetical ; and we fly to the alternative in whirls alone•the mind can rest, that God is true—that man . lives beyond the grave, and that the soul that perseveres in sin is hastening to ruin; which it must meet at some point of its future existence. Such is the teaching of human nature--such the teaching of the Author of human nature.-- Ail the efforts of a perverse ingenuity have never been aisle to invalidate this testimony, as it is written upon the very frame work of the soul of man. However, unbelief may continue to blunt the sensibilities of the conscience, and foe a time to :Tread a delusive calm over the mind, by the induence of things seen and tem oral, yet it can never change the essential na ture or the soul. It may pervert its powers mid bear it on to ruin, but it can never tranquil ize its instinctive presentiment of the doom that awaits in The Sabbath. The institution of the Sabbath, whether re- - garded as of human policy or divine sanction, is one of the most beautiful and blessed inheritan ces of man. It has 'a divinity in its adaptation to the material necessities of the race—as a day of rest on which to refresh and recreate the wearied energies of the body—but its higher di vinity lies in the divorce it brings to the spirit froM the pursuit and care of temporal and cor rupting things, leading it to a clearer and nearer contemplation of God, its relations to the imma terial, and its destiny beyond this fleeting 11th.• Its periodical frequency grasps, the soul in firm bonds, and hemming it round with associationi iu 11111S011 with its acknowledged sacredness, lies done more to discipline the mind, and purify the licart'of society, than all the problems of proad and shifting philosophy put together. Like the sublime lessons of Christ, the Sab bath contains the profoundest proofs of its origin in the wisdom and goodness of God, in its com mon acceptance by man, and the tininess of sat isfaction it gives to Lis body and soul longings. Bet vfeen nations and races who observe, and those who do not observe the Sabbath, there is drawn a line, on the opposite borders of which,• alike, rest the evidences of its beauty and benefi-' cence. On the side of the Sabbath, are civili zation, intelligence, industry, art, science, peace and prosperity—man elevated trnly and' nobly in the image of 6`;1321: Oft the other'sbre; are barbarism, ignorance, superstition, war and. misery—man degraded in the image of God. The Sabbath is not arbitrary or conventional.• The more intelligently it is observed, the more necessary, harmonious, and beautiful it appears, and temporal economy, however great, becomes secondary and insignificant, contrasted with its spiritual. Let any man, let tiny philosopher contemplate the obliteration of the Sabbath, and see what a picture society mast" soon pre sent. Philosophy tried the experiment once, with one of the most intelligent and philosophic of nations, and the result of the trial taught the world that man cut loose from the Sabbath, was cut loose front God. It is by the acceptance and true appreciation of the blessings God has given to man—and the Sabbath is as manifestly one as is the air or light of heaven—that Mari' comes into close and fraternal communion with God himself. Atheism itself, denying God, has, through its highest apostles, eulogized the institution of the Sabbath, and confessed tliut human wisdom' could not conceive of a more beautiful ordina tion. But we need not the eulogy nor the ad missions of Atheism. As members of a Chris tian community, we have all v•itnessed and felt. the influence of the Sabbath; we have grown up shaped and governed by its associations and suipestions, until it has become interwoven with the deepest thoughts and affections of our It is our• especial time of forgetfulness of the' vanities of the world, in the sublimer content- - plations of heaven and the future.• Chilhood,• youth, manhood, and old age alike share in its hallowing influences, alike owe to it the . most glowing colors of life. We pray cod the Sab bath may come to be regarded as holy by every human soul. Even if it be but a mutter of faith ye a myth, it is purifying and ennobling beyond all that human wisdom can invent to fill its place. Let the experience of the world speak the truth and no man shall be found to my the' Sabbath is not a divine institution.