t- --, , : r i( n,n - ting.b\ on BY JAS. CLARK. Gone are thy Glories, Sumnier Gone are thy glories, Summer But hast thou fled alone ? Have none when in their household glee, Missed one familiar tone? Is there no vacant seat beside The bright and blazing hearth 1 Ilave no young, gentle spirits passed, From our abodes on earth ? Thine answer, Summer, I well know : Thou'lt whisper, more than one, With eye of light, and step of glee, Down to the tomb bath gone ! Thou'lt tell me, stern, relentless death, Thou hast no power to stay; That beauty, pride and loveliness, Alike become his prey. Yes they have passed, 0 Summer, Like thy flowrets' whispered tones, And Autumn winds their graves o'eraweep With many sighs and moans But memory o'er the bleeding heart Her vigils sad shall keep, And Summer's breath must ever wake A strange fond wish to weep. AUTUMN. How quickly have passed the pleas ant days of summer I The llowry Spring But yesterday, came joyously along, Laden with sweets that she is wont to bring And all alive with melody and song. The trees put forth their leaves—the flowers began to bud, and the husband man prepared his ground to receive the fruitful seeds ; but the b. ight days of Spring passed away—the flowers bloom ed, faded and crumbled to the dust—like many dear friends, who a few months since were with us, full of life and spir it, cheerful active and happy. How kind and hnppy they were ! Blessed were the hours we passed in their soci ety; but all too blissful to abide. The grave is now their resting place. Like the flowers, they perished in their beau ty and bloom. And now Autumn has come. The •hoer days and cold winds speak the ap proach of winter, which will soon be upon us. But all seasons of the year have their beauties—and we lova the Fall of the year. Flow delightful is the many colored forrest—from the deep green to the pale yellow—an infinity of shades. Who does not love to stroll amid the woods and witness the fading beauties of nature—surpassing lovely in its decay ! Thrice happy time, Best portion of the year, in which Nature rejoiceth, smiling on her works Lovely, to full perfection wrought." How forcibly, at this season of the year, are we reminded of the autumn of life—when the bloom and vitality of manhood are past, and the winter of ex istence is at hand. The fading of the trees and the falling of leaves, speak impressively to every heart, " Thou al so must lose thy bloom and fall and per ish in the dust." If we survive to a good old age—(alas ! how many of us will never see another autumn 1)--we can be cheerful and happy, Age is not sad and gloomy to those who possess kind hearts and pleasant dispositions-- who have schooled their affections in the temple of wisdom, that have lain up a store of virtuous thoughts to make the decline of life a season of unalloy- I ed pleasure. True religion, implanted in the youthful breast, will be a source of unfailing happiness till God shall sunder the thread of life, and translate the soul to his own mansion above.-- Portland Tribune. Are you Kind to your Mother I Come, my little boy, and you, my Ile girl, what answer can you give to this question I Who was it that watch ed over you when you were helpless babesl Nho nursed you and fondled you, and never grew weary in her lovel Who kept you from the cold by night, and the heat by day 1 Who guarded you in health, and comforted you when you were ill 1 Who was it that wept when the fever made your skin feel hot, rind your pulse beat quick and hard I Who hung over your little bed when you were fretful, and put your cooling drink to your parched lipsl Who sung • the pretty hymn to please you as you lay, or knelt down by the side of the bed in prayerl Who was glad when you began to get welll and who carried you into the fresh air to help your re covery 1 Who taught you how to pray, and gently helped you to learn to read ? Who has borne with your faults, and been kind and patient in your childish ways 1 Who loves you still, and who contrives, and works, and prays for you every day you live 1 Is it not your mother—your own dear mother 1 Now, then, let me ask you, Are you kind to your mother ? • There are many ways in which chil dren show whether they are kind or net. " Do you always obey her, and try to please her 1 When she speaks are you ready to attend to her voice 1 or do you neglect what she wishes you to do 1— Do you love to make her heart feel • glad 1 Life's Sorrows and Comforts. This world has been termed a vale of ' tears. And to n great extent it is so. Tough the sky is bright ahovo us, and the earth is fair and lovely ; though we are surrounded by the works of art, and strength, and wealth, and though we hear at the festive board and in the hall of gaiety the voice of mirth and plea sure, there are none -7ithout their griefs. Some sorrow preys upon the heart of each one crowding through our busy 1 streets, thronging the active marts, and bowing at the shrine of fashion and amusement. Not one lies down at night upon his couch without being visited with painful reflections, and hea ving a sigh in remembrance of some heavy misfortune or sad bereavement. How many are the homes where pover ty creates its painful anxieties, where the disappointed, with affections blight ed, weep in loneliness ; where the sick languish on beds of pain, and the strick en in heart mourn that death has snatch ed from their embrace the dearest ob ject of their affection. How many are the unkindnesses, and wrongs, and de ceptions which all encounter ; how many the perplexities and hardships and un certainties of business ; how many the accidents and reverses against which no foresight, however prudent, can guard. Such is life. It is a valley of sorrow ; but dark as this valley is, it is not whol ly overshadowed with clouds. There are not only occasional glimpses of sun ' light which relieve its gloom, but the ' stars of faith and hope are ever gilding ; it with their mild beams. Indeed with its sorrows, life has many console , Lions. When weary with the labors of the day, it is a consolation to know that we have a friend who will never deceive ; when disappointed in the pursuit of wealth, it is a consolation to feel assur ed that we shall never ask in vain for that wealth which is imperishable ; when crippled and enervated by disease, it is a consolation to know that we will not always live in that condition, The Grave. Oh, the grave, the grave! It buries every error, covers every defect, extin guishes every resentritent. From this peaceful bosom springs none but fond regrets and tender recollections. Who can look upon the grave even of an en emy, and not feel a compuctious throe that ever he should have warred with the poor handful of earth, that lies moul dering before him! But the grave of those we loved—what a place for medi tation ! There it is we call up in long review, the whole history of truth and gentleness, and a thousand endearments lavished upon us almost unheard in the daily course of intimacy. Then it is we dwell upon the tenderness of the parting scene, the bed of death with all its stifled grief; its noiseless attendants, its mute watchful assiduities ; the last testimonial of expiring love, the feeble fluttering feeling. Oh, how thrilling is the pressure of the hand, the last fond look of the glaring eye, turning upon us even from the threshold of existence; the faint faltering accent struggling in death to give one more assurance of af fection. Ay go to the grave of buried love, and meditate! There settle thy account with thy conscience, of past en dearments unregarded, of that depart ed being, who never can return to be soothed .by contrition. If thou art a child and hest ever added sorrow to the soul, or a furrow to the brow of an af fectionate parent; if thou nrt a husband, sand hest ever caused the bosom that ventured its whole happiness in thy arms, to doubt one moment of thy truth ; if thou art a friend, and hest wronged by thought, by word, or deed, the spirit that generously confides in thee ; if thou art a lover, and hest ever given one un merited pang to the true heart that now lies cold, and still beneath thy feet, then be sure that every unkind look, ungra cious word, every nngentle nction, will come thronging back upon thy memory and knocking dolefully at thy soul ; then be sure that thou wilt lie down sorrow ing and repentant on the grave, and ut ter the unheard groan, and pour the un4 availing tear—bitter, because unheard and unavailing.—W ash. Irving. Newspaper Press. The. Rev. James Aspinwell, in the course of a recent speech on education, gave quite a glowing and forcible sketch of the newspaper press. He said that "from being a mere chronicle of pass ing events, a dry register of dates and facts, the newspaper has grown one of the leading schoolmasters of the day. Its articles amuse us with their wit, and instructs us with their wisdom They exhibit the brilliancy of the classical scholar, and the close reasoning of the logician, it is an encyclopwdia in itself. It reviews all books, and treats of all science. It is familliar with all geog raphy, and at home in all history. It HUNTINGDON, PA,, TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1849. is the (Edi Pus to read the riddles which every political Sphinx may set before it. It dives into cabinet secrets, and anticipates the purpose of Statesmen. It has the hundred eyes of the ever wakeful Argus, the hundred hands and fifty heads of Briareus. And, as omni= present as omniscient, as übiquitous as versatile, it is here, there and ciirey , where, froM the Indus to the Po, from China to Peru, compassing the world with its correspondents, and, with its expresses and the electric telegraph, ra cing against time to communicate its intelligence of mankind in every region of the earth. The ancients counted up seven wonders of the world. If they had possessed a newspaper press, they would have an eighth, more marvellous and of more worth than all the rest to gether." That the human mind may be pow , erfully operated upon by a narration of the events which constitute the Biogra phy of a notorious character, is a pro position which scarce requires a formal demonstration. That numbers of the Most remarkable statesmen and warri ors of antiquity owe their garlands of fame, which the passage df centuries hath not withered, to a constant and practical exemplification of the most worthy features in the life of some sage or hero of a previous age, is a matter of common history. That this species of literature is not at the present time, a potent though silent lever in the forma tion of private character, is to deny the accumulated experience of mankind ; since every intelligence can enumerate numberless actions in his past existence, to which he was incited by a desire to emulate some precedent, in admiration of which the inspiration was generated. The intellect is so constituted, as in its progress to maturity to receive eve ry impression, whether it be of an evil or beneficial stamp. Just as the exteri or understanding in one's infantile years would receive the imprint of the odious as rapidly as the beautiful. Especially is this the case in that period of time when one is bidding adieu to boyhood for the more stirring scenes of manhood, when having become familiarized with the natural world, the ripening mind be gins to grasp at causes, and expand with the hitherto unknown world of knowl edge contained in books. At this peri od of existence, an individual who, hav ing perused Ainsworth's celebrated ve hicle of crime, "Jack Sheppard," and ri ses up with his judgment shaken by the gaudy representations of successful villainy, would in all probability have finished the life of Benjamin Franklin with a fixed determination to practice the cardinal virtues therein inculcated, and thereby secure to himself the earthly happiness and perhaps the spontaneous praises awarded his great prototype.— Ire j'rit!'g — llflant'Ane t ?agM ri g n: eral truth that the formation of a youth's mental attributes depends much upon the moral tendency of the works which he is accustomed to read and study.— Let him have unlimited access to novels of the later French School; to narratives of immoral, depraved men ; to the va rious other kindred publications, which the mention of these will suggest ; and be may not be surprised if his idea of the moral merit or demerit of human actions are being fast obliterated, if cis conceptions of virtue become indis inct, by reason of the miasma of an im• rare imagination; and if his. aspirations nirtake of a grovelling nature rather ban of that upward tendency peculiar o the performance of a noble deed. 'V akin g . Toll. If, on the contrary, the Biography of iumanity's benefactors should be stn- The St. Louis Reveille is publishing lied as master pieces of correct action a tale, purporting to give some adventu resn the different relations of life, the prin• in the life of a young physician, from )iples which they pursued so success' which we take the following extract : A snow having fallen the young folks "ally as to be worthy of imitation, will of the village got up a grand sleighing most probably ingraft themselves as part party to a country tavern at a distance ;and parcel of the person who has been and the interesting Widow Lumbkin so fortunate as to perceive in them an archetype of character. If in the life of sat in the same sleigh, under the same buffalo robe with myself. ewton, the virtue of perseverance be . Oh,. oh—don't !" she exclaimed, as lng exemplified, is copied ; if in the his we came to the first bridge catching me;ory of the American revolution, the by the arm, and turning her veiled face value of prudence and bravery being towards me, while her little eyes twink perspicuous in the example of Washing led through the gauze in the moon - ton, are emulated ; if in the biography light, of John Howard, the beauty of philan . Don't what ? I asked, riot doingthropy — being illustrated, benevolence is any thing.'. chosen to be a principle of primary con , Well, but I thought you were ru l gsequence in future life; if in the writings to take toll,' replied Mrs. Lambkin. of Chambers, the importance of knowl t Toll 1' I rejoined ; 'What's that 1 ?Age being evident, their attainment is Now, do tell I' exclaimed the wid o ,tssuredly undertaken ; then I may pre her clear laugh ringing above the music lict a character in which will be reflect of the bells. .Dr. Mellows pretends that .d the virtues of those by whom it was ho don't know a hat toll is!' ormed, and in time may we reasonably Indeed, I don't then,' I said laughingocpect, as the consummation of 8116 in in turn. .truction, the development of an Intel. Don't know that the gentlemen when ect imbued tt'ith a given degree of mor they go a-sleighing, claim a k i ss, as toll l excellence. when they cross a bridge ! Well 1 nev- Thus the former class of biographies er !' end to vitiate, while the latter enobles But shall 1 tell it all The struggles ur nature. For owing to different cau of the widow to hold the veil were notes, that bastard Literature, which sufficient to tear it, and somehow, whenqually kindles vice in innocent hearts the veil was removed, her face was turn.nd further inflames the embers of wick ed directly towards my own, and then, dness which may have lurked in the the snow glistening in the moonligh t ouls of others, and which likewise feeds and the horse trotting on for himself,he greedy flame when fully roused, the toll was taken for the first time tn .aving obtained a wide circulation, and the life of Dr. Mellows. onsequently a proportionate influence Soon we came to the long bridge but ,n the public mind, its injurious effects the widow said it was 'no use to resist, ) society have been noted by accurate and paid up as soon as we reached it. bservers. While, also, every general 'But you won't take toll for every -eauer can safely compute the nature span, will you doctor I' she added. T° rid weight of its agency on the minds which the only reply was, a practical.- individnals by recurring to his own negative to the question. x perience, as to the insidious treachery Did you ever, reader, sleigh-ride with ith which they, under the guise of de. a pretty widow and take toll at the brill tyingvice, implant a rooted inclination ges ! it all that is opposite to virtue. Forbid —The potato disease has appeared bun, that we, in this article, should be different parts of Ohio. nclerstood to advise the reading of such Irish Emigrants. John G. Whittier the Quaker poet, in writing about the Irish emigrants among us says : "For myself I feel a sympathy for thu Irishman. I see him us the represen tative of a generous, warm hearted; cruelly oppressed people. That he loves his native land—that his patriot ism is divided—that he cannot forget the claims of his mother island—that his religion is dear to him—does not de crease my estimation of him. "A stranger in a strung land, he is to me always an object of interest. The poorest and rudest has a romance in his history. Amidst all his gaiety of heart i and national drollery and wit, the poor emigrant has sad thoughts of the "ould mother of him," sitting lonely in her solitary cabin by the bog side—recollec tions of a Father's blessing and a sister's farewell are haunting him—a grave mound in a distant churchyard far be yond the "wide wathers," has an eternal greenness in his memory—for there perhaps, lies a "darlint child," or a "swats crathur," who once loved htm— the New World is forgotten for the mo ment—blue Killarney and the Liffy spat ile b h— ; f nd i i nr r T g eaftm ctltg—e ee the same evening sunshine rest upon and hallow alike with nature's blessing the ruin of the seVen churches of Ire land's apostolic age the broken mounds of the Druids and the Round Towers of Phceneeold sun worshippers—beautiful arid mouthful recollections of his home waken within him—and the rough and seemingly careless and light hearted la borer melts into tears. It is no light thing to abandon one's country and household gods. Touching and beauti ; fill was the injunction of the Prophet of the Hebrews: "Ye shall not oppress the stranger, for ye know the heart of the stranger, seeing that ye were strangers, in the land of Egypt." For the Journal, BIOGRAPIIICAL INFLUENCE. ( 4 , iAoon'rixgr Biography. (We have, contrary to re ceived opinion, classed novels under the head of general biography—inasmuch I as in the abstract every novelette is but the narration of events which have taken place in a particular portion of a certain individual's life.) That the latter class tends to the en nobling of man, is not only agreeable to , the dictates of common sense and the ' teachings of wisdom, but is substantia ted by the accumulated testimony of the past and the present. We are aware that it has been said by many, and caught up by the vulgar as a maxim, that "none can be truly great by imitation." Who ever was the original author of this idea, may have supposed and spoke lb accor dance with the belief of the proneness of mankind to imitate the objectionable features of an otherwise worthy charac ter; or, which .is more likely, he may have spoken with reference to imitating another's style in composition. If the former was his meaning, the application is different from the sense in which we use the term "imitation," and if the lat. ter, it still differs, although in its pro' per sioification it is true to the letter, inasmught as it is an offence which ranks next to plagiarism. All suppositions to the opposite might be cut short, howev er, by one simple interrogatory. Where fore do the most devoted Christians en. deavor to imitate the character of the Saviour, as contained in his biography Reasoning by analogy from this unques. tionable authority, is not the conclusion evidentl No one will deny that many a praiseworthy action in his or her life was caused in the laudable resolution of imitating similar action in the biogra phy of some one whose principles are admired, or whose advice concerning the philosophy of existence has met with approbation. Who that has devoted his leisure hours to an investigation of the system in which Socrates, the Gre cian philosopher, lived, but has been chained, as to his admiration of that spirit of unalterable equity, that resig nation to fate, however adverse, and that majestic serenity with which he refu sed every argument of his malignant ac cusers, au attavviututt with the ess.mnry of the celebrated Pagan. Then, is it not right to suppose that an admiration of such a character presupposes a desire to "go and do likewisel" Such we firmly believe to be the rel ative tendencies of the antagonistic clas ses of Biography. Ay, there is many criminal whose name an even handed justice has linked tvith obloquy and dis honor, and whom men have accused of sinning from natural depravity and with out an attempt to justify his iniquity td himself beforehand, and yet whose o'. fence consists in a pret'ious admiration, and consequent imitation of another, whose biography had ranked high in the callendar of successful crimes.— Moreover, there is many a virtuous deed and many a noble sacrifice of which the world is ignorant--Many a mental bat tle in which correct principles have tri umphed, and many a resolution in which the soul is pledged to the fulfillment of sotne high and holy purpose, that nre all generated in the past actions of kin. dred spirits as recorded in Biography. If such be the efficacy of the history of a virtuous man, every one is or should be alive to the importance of a proper distinction between the vehicles of vice spoken of in the beginning of this arti cle, and books of moral worth. To the young American works of this latter class abound, and which possess an ad= ditional claim upon his consideration, in being Biographies of the elite of his countrymen. Of the dead and of the living. Of men, who in their labors, and in the peoples memory yet green with a cherished veneration, are almost connected with the present time. Of departed Statesmen, many of whom re duced life to practical illustration of virtue and independence, and whose names fill the highest pages of the worlds Biography, He may also enjoy sketches of the virtuous living, who when death has shuffled off the garb of their mortality, eager fume and after ages will accord their manes the honors which to the great are ever posthumous. On a thousand pages is to be seen and imitated, the acting power, which influ- , enced the "greatest Trogan of them all ;" George Washington. The life of John Quincy Adams is a living panegy ric of integrity. Tho Biography of Professor Edwards, the greatest theolo gian of his age, deserves to be read as a model of moral excellence. Names crowd upon the mind, all of which have stood high in the arts and sciences, or in religion and morals, any of which might be read and studied with profit by him who would aim high—aim to emulate. In conclusion study virtuous Biogra phy, for if there is any department of Literature that is rational in its opera. tions on the human understanding, and VOL. XIV, NO, 43 being thus common to a whole peoples acts as an impulse from virtue, it is the record of the just and the patriotic, whose deeds yet remnin, and cast the sublime halo of reward and influence upon the efforts of those who would profit by these voices of experience. M. Confession of A Woman who Murdered her eighth Child. The conviction and condemnation, in England, of the female Rebecca Smith; for murdering her infant child; we have already published ; With an lntiniation that a horrible suspicion rested on her of having killed several of her children in the seine way. We have now to add the confession of the wretched womati since her conviction.—She had ten chil dren, nine of whom died in their infan , cy, the eldest only being now alive. She was tried for the murder of the young est of these children ; an infant of a month old, but she has confessed to the chaplain of the Devizes Jail, where she is waiting her execution, that she had previously murdered seven other of her Children in the Barrie Manner. Yet this woman was religious, in her outward deportment at least. She attended di vine worship at the meeting houses et= ery Sabbath day, and regularly said her prayers—praying at night, (by her own showing,) that she might be preserved thro' out the night, and returning thanks and praying for further mercies in the morning, and while she was praying and thanking God for her own preservation for a period of years, she was the annu al and deliberate destroyer of her own offspring, no sooner bringing them into the world, than administering poison to get rid of them, and this, too, in a man ner the most unnatural—converting the channel of their sustenance into the means of their destruction by applying the poison, arsenic, to tier own bosom, that the children might suck it off, calm , ly looking upon them sickning ; pining; dying I—W2ll might the Judge say he wanted words to express his horror at . such a crime. The only motive the . wretched crimnal assigns for such deeds of horror is, that she feared her children t might come to want. She bore the char t acter among her neighbors of being an i inoffensive and industrious woman, and there is no doubt that she has suffered • privations, her husband being given to - drunkenness. Her father was a market gardner; and she had £lOO bequeathed I at his death, but the whole bf the sum • was squandered by her husband. Sus i' picions were entertained that she had • also endeavored to poison her surviving i Child When in infancy, but this she firm • ly denies ; on the contrary, she express , ed the greatest affection for this child, , her only fear (as she says) being that when she is gone, her daughter will be neglected by her husband.—Ex. Paper. liaising Pork. Every farmer knows full well that it ; he has to winter pigs, even in the most fertile of corn countries, and cannot get three cents a pound for his pork, he is lositig money ; he* important then, that he keep such a breed of swine, and feed them so well that he can bring the pig, dropped early in the Spring, to weigh from 200 to 300 pounds, in December or January. Let people say what they will about the necessity of caving old hoes to make thick cut of clear pork on the ribs for packing, we know this is all gammon. We have seen many a pig fed well from his birth, that would weigh full 250 pounds and cut 4. inches thick of clear pork on his sides, at nine or ten months old ; and have heard of others weighing 300 pounds, and cutting five inches. We could never winter any , thing but breeders of the swine family, and the moment thepigs were dropped we would commence shoving them with feed till ready for the knife. The far mer who pursues this course will make from 30 to 60 per cent. more on his pork than those who winter their Spring pigs. As for autumn we would not have them. Let the sow breed but ones a year. 'A HINT TO WIVES.'-' If I'm not at home from the party to-night at ten o'clock,' said a husband to his better and bigger half, 'don't wait for 'That I wont,' said the lady, significant , ly, wont wait—but I'll came for you: fle returned at ten precisely. 'My gracious!' said an urchin of New York, on beholding an English carriage with three footmen in livery, 'well, if it doesn't take three Britishers to make a nigger !' ID'•A very honest chap in Boston wha wishes to sell his horse, advertises ii as follows :—" Foe SALE-A brown horse with a roman nose, in good health, and very fond of travelling—having run away four times within a week I"