BY JAS. CLARK. WE'LL IJEET AGAIN. We'll meet again ; how sweet the word— How soothing is its sound ! Like strains of far. oil' music heard On some enchanted ground. We'll meet again ; thus friendship speaks, When those most dear depart, And in the pleasing prospect seeks A balm fur the bleeding heart. We'll meet again, the lover cries ; And oh, what thought but this, tan e'er assuage the agonies Of the last parting kiss 1 We'll meet again, are accents heard Beside the dying bed, When all the soul by grief is stilled, And bitter tears are shed. We'll meet again, are words that cheer While bending o'er the tomb, I'or oh ! that hope, so bright and dear, tan pierce its deepest gloom. We'll meet again ; then cease to weep, Whatever may divide : Not time nor death cah always keep The loved ones from our side Vbt in the mahsionl of the blest, Secure from care and pain, In Heaven's serene and peaceful rest We'll surely meet again. Short Patent Sermon--Tiike Warning. BY DOW, JR, Tarr.—The Summer flowers that fade and fall, Send forth a warning voice to all, ,4 Prepare, prepare to die !" .71fy Hearers : Are you prepared to die I don't intend to kill you, but I merely ask the question—' are you pre pared to die V Are your baggages ready? —have you packed up such necessary articles as faith, hope and heavenly love, in case you are called to depart to-day No—when you see Death's black wagon standing at the door of your neighbor, you don't feel as if you would like to take a gratuitous ride to the charnal-yard, notwithstanding many a loved one and intimate friend may have been borne thither. As we stand upon the high promontory of Time and take a glance at the unbounded, dark and mysterious ocean of eternity, the soul shrieks with fear, and seems to secrete itself some where between the heart and the liver, like a timid child endeavoring to hide in the folds of its mother's frock. We see no vessel, not even a clam smack, upon this unnavigated ocean. Not a living object is to be seen, save a few sea-birds that scream as they flap lazily along the coast where are strewn the bones of millions of the human race. Our an cestors are buried in the bosom of this mighty and most mysterious of seas— the waves of ages roll over them as sec onds dribble by us miserable mortals of earth ; but whether they rove supreme ly blest amid coral bowers, or are stuck fast in the mud and tormented by sea devils, is more than lam able to tell. As 1 have said, wo stand upon an eleva ted bill(' of this eternal aqueous expanse, and find it so bedimmed with dread mys tery, that we involuntarily scratch our heads, turn our backs, and with a kind of 1-don't-care-about-venturing-look has ten to get away as far as possible. My frieuds: you can't bear the thought of dying when you are young, and so you make no preparations for the awful event. Your buds of joy, so daily ex panded beneath the warm sun of hope, you long to see blooming in full bright ness and bliss, at some future day. When arrived at the age of maturity, your af fections are too strongly rooted in this terrestial soil to be easily transplanted to a foreign sphere; and your souls are so firm ly fastened to earth with silver solder, that it is difficult to detach them as it is to loosen the love of a young or old bachelor for a beautiful heiress possess ed of fifty thousand dollar charms. When you are old, and have laid up a superfluity of filthy and yet lovely lu cre, you don't feel as if you were pre 'pared to die, any more than a lousy calf by the hand of; the butcher. Although you have little ur nothing to live or hope for in the world, still you don't like the idea of leaving that which you cannot longer use and enjoy yourselves, to be scattered among a ravenous multitude. —This shows the natural weakness of age and the foolishness of man. When I come to die, I am perfectly well satis fied that I shan't care a counterfeit cop per whether what I leave behind is left undisturbed by posterity, or whether nations go to battle far my boots and breeches. My dear hearers : it is hard for you to think of bidding farewell to the world at any season of the year. In spring you want to live to enjoy its soul awake ning sensations and pleasing associa tions---for there is a newness and a fra grance in the atmosphere that smells precisely as though the Omnipotent were just gathering fresh materials with which to manufacture another cre ation. You desire to live, then, for the sake of new laid eggs, early radishes, and the first dish of green peas.---It is very unpleasant and inconvenient to die in the bloom of summer, surrounded by fl,niitA(obon new potatoes, cucumbers, melons, peach es and green corn. You don't want to be cut down with the harvest, nor drop with the fruit that falls in autumn ; and you don't care about leaving in winter, so long as you hake a comfortable home, a warm fire, and enough to eat. The truth is, let death come when it may, you will all wish to put it ()WWI , a more convenient season,' as you do paying your printers' and tailors' bills. Now, my friends, as you behold how the summer flowers are begining to fade, and how their cradles are being convert ed into sepulcres, you cannot but be re minded that you too will soon wilt and wither, and be trodden under foot by posterity with the same unconcern as you now tread upon the dust of decayed vegitables. You, young ladies, who are now blooming like roses in midsummer ! bear in mind that your superficial charms must soon be blighted, your sparkling eyes lose their lustre, your alabaster brows be tinged with an autumnal yel lowness. Then you may paint and patch as much as you please, but you will find it impossible to conceal the sad chan ges that time has wrought upon your features; and you may scent your per sons with the sweetest perfume, but they will no more compare with the rich fra grance that youth and beauty emit, than the atmosphere which surrounds a woun ded skunk can equal the odor of an or ange-grove. Young men you have em blematical evidences that your autumn is near. 'Go it while you're young,' but don't neglect to prepare in time for that season of life when the fountains of pleasure which now squirt with a loose ness, are become dr , ed for ever—when you can no longer go it' as you were wont in your youthful days—and when your only hope of a renovation of de cayed joys is placed beyond the tomb. Oct married, by all means, if you wish, at least, to be comfortable when those dull, autumnal days shall come upon you. I love to see two hearts approxi mate and adhere—two souls meet and mingle into one. It is an interesting sight to me, and whispers of purity, love, happinessharmony, appiness and perpetual peace. . . . My worthy friends: I know that ma ny of you are not tit to die, from the fact that you are not fit to live ; but, if you will purge your hearts of even one tithe of their accumulated abominations and show by your conduct that you are worthy of a being, and are partially prepared for death. I will gladly go to the expense of letting off a hundred loud hallelujahs, and a half dozen heavy hosannahs, for sake of variety. So mote' it be. PEACE CONGRESS. Victor Hugo's address to the Peace Congress which assembled not long since in Paris, and of which he was Pres ident, has been commended very gen erally as a master-piece of eloquence.— The commendation seems to be deserv ed. It is a grand and beautiful picture which he draws of the expected result of civilization in its harmonizing and as similating influences upon nations.— Looking back over the history of Chris tendom for the last eighteen hundred years, one might conclude that the pro gress of peaceful tendencies had not been very encouraging, and that the ef forts of those and such as those who as sembled in Congress in Paris, were di rected in pursuit of an illusive vision. Nevertheless the views and conclusions presented in the following extract from Victor Hugo's address are not without an impressive interest : Gentlemen, if four centuries ago, at the period when war was made by one district against the other, between cities, and between provinces—if I say, some one had dared to predict to Lorraine, to Provence, to Dauphiny, "a day shall come when you will no longer arm men, one against the other—a day shall come when it shall not be said that the Nor mans are attacking the Picardians, or the people of Lorraine are repulsing the Surgundians ; you will still have many disputes to settle, interests to contend for, difficulties to resolve ; but do you know whom you will select instead of armed men, instead of cavalry and in fantry, of canon, falnets, lances, pikes, swordsl You will select instead of this destructive array, a small box of wood, which you will term a ballot-box, and from which shall issue—what I An Assembly—an assembly in which you shall all live—an assembly which shall be, as it were, the soul of all—n su preme and popular Council, which shall decide, judge, resolve everything-- which shall make the sword fall from every hand, and excite the love of jus tice in every heart—which shall say to each, "Here terminates your right, there commences your duty. Lay down your arms !" (Great applause.) And in that day you will all have one common thought, common interests, a common HUNTINGDON, PA., TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 13, 1849. destiny ; you will embrace each other, and recognize each other as children of the same blood, and of the same race ; that day you shall no longer be hostile tribes—you will be a people; you will no longer be merely Burgundy, Nor mandy; Brittany ; Provence—you will be France.—(Bravo.) You will no lon ger make appeals to war—you will do so to civilization"—(Great applause,)— if ; at the period I speak of, some one had uttered these words, all men of a serious and positive character, all pru dent and cautious men, all the great po liticians of the pet iod, would have cried out, "What a dreamer! what a fantas tic dream! How little this pretended prophet is acquainted with the human heart! What ridiculous folly ! what absurdity" Yet, gentlemen, time has gone on, and we find that this dream, this folly, this absurdity, has been real ized (Brave !) And I insist upon this, that the man who would have dared to utter so sublime a prophecy would hate been pronounced a madman for having dared to pry into the designs of the Deity. (Bravo!) Well then, you at this moment say—and I say it with you —we who are assembled here say to France, to England, to Prussia, to Aus tria, to Spain, to Italy, to Russia—we say to them "a day will come when from your hands also the arms they have grasped shall fall. A day will come when war shall appear as impossible, and will be impossible, between Paris and London, between St. Petersburg and Berlin, between Vienna and Turin, as it is now between Rouen and Amiens, between Boston and Philadelphia. (Ap plause.) A day will come when you, France—you, Russia—you, Italy—you, England—you, Germany—all of you, nations of the continent, shall, without losing your distinctive qualities and your glorious individuality, be blended into a superior unity, and shall consti tute an European fraternity, just as Nor mandy, Brittany, Burgundy, Lorraine, Alsace, have been blended into France. A day will come when the only battle field shall be the market open to com merce, and the mind opening to new ideas. A day will come when bullets and shells shall he replaced by votes— 'as the universal suffrage of nations— by the venerable arbitration of a great sovereign senate, which shall be to Eu rope what the Parliament is to England, what the Diet is to Germany, what the Legislative Assembly is to France. (Ap plause.) A day will come when cannon shall be exhibited in the public muse ums just as an instrument of torture is now, (laughter and applause,) and peo ple shall be astonished how such a thing could have been. A day will come when those two immense groups—the United States of America and the Uni ted States of Europe—shall be seen placed in presence of each other, exten ding tho hand of fellowship across the Ocean, exchanging their produce, their commerce, their industry, their arts, their genius, clearing the earth, peopling the deserts, meliorating creation under the eyes of the Creator, and uniting, for the good of all, these two irresistible powers—the fraternity of men, and the power of God. (Applause.) VIRTUE.—We copy the following brief but beautiful passage from the Albany Citizen : " The creations of the sculptor may mould into dust ; the wealth of the bard may wither--thrones of conquerors may be shivered by an opposition power into atoms ; the fame of the warrior may no longer be hymned by the recording minstrel ; the hope may be disappoint ed, but that which hallows the cottage and sheds a glory around the palace— virtue—shall never decay, It is cele brated by the angels of God—it is writ ten on the pillars of heaven, and reflect ed down to earth." FAT FELLOWS.—We like fat people— good, jolly, laughing!, broad-visaged, hon est, fat people. We love fat women— fat boys—fat babies—fat purposes—a fat list of subscribers—a fat job, and fat advertisers—fat everything. Fatness is a big sign of big health. Fat men are never treacherous—fat women are not sharp tongued—fat boys are not mischevious—fat babies are always good—in fine fat people are the kindest, and therefore, the most popular. Com mend us to fat people. LOGICAL ILLUSTRATION.-.A. layman in Providence who occasionally exorted at evening meetings, thus expressed his belief in the existence of Deity "Brethren, lam just as certain that there is a Supreme Being, as I urn cer tain that there is flour in Alexandria; and that I know for certain, ar I yester day received from there a lot of 300 bar rels fresh superfine, which I sell us low as any other person in town. Punch's Charge to the Jury. GENTLEMEN OF TILE JURY :-YOll are sworn, in all cases, to decide according to the evidence; at the same time, if you have ahy doubt, you are bound to give the prisoner the benefit of it. Suppose you have to pronounce on the guilt or innocence of a gentleman accused of fel ony; you will naturally doubt whether any gentleman would commit such of fences ; accordingly, however strong may be the testimony against him, you will, perhaps, acquit him. The evidence of your own senses is, at least, as cred itable as that of the witnesses ; if, there fore, your eyesight convinces you that the prisoner is a well dressed person, you have a right to presume his respec tability ; and it is for you to say wheth er a respectable person would be likely to be guilty of the crime imputed to him. In like manner, when you see a shabby looking fellow in the dock charg , ed, fur example, With sheep stealing, the decision rests with you, first, wheth er or not that individual is a ragamuffin, and, secondly, how far is it to be sup posed that a man of that description would steal a sheep.—Of course, as has been before said, you will always be guided by the evidence; but then, wheth er the matter is trustworthy or not, is a matter for your private consideration. You may believe it if you chose, or you may disbelieve it; and whether, gen tlemen of the jury, you believe or dis believe, will depend on the constitution of your minds. If your minds are so constituted that you wish to find the prisoner guilty, why then, very likely, you will disbelieve it. You are to free your minds from all passion and preju dice, if you can, and in that case, your judgment will be unbiassed; but if you cannot, you will return a verdict accord ingly. It is not, strictly speaking, for you to consider what will be the effect of your verdict; but if such a consider ation should occur to you, and you can not help attending to it, that verdict will be influened by it to a certain ex ' tent. You are probably aware that when you retire, you will be locked up until you contrive to agree. You may arrive at unanimity by fair discussion, or by some of you starving out the oth ers, or by tossing up; and your conclu sion, by whichever of these processes arrived at, with more or less in accord. once with your oaths. Your verdict may be right ; it is to be hoped it will ; it may be wrong : it is to be hoped it will not. At all events, gentlemen of the jury, you will come io some conclu sion or other, unless it should happen that you seperate without coming to any. The Turn in Life. From forty to sixty, a man who has pro perly regulated himself may be consid ered as in the prime of life. His ma tured strength of constitution renders him almost impervious to the attacks of disease, and experience has given his judgment the soundness of almost in fallibility. His mind is resolute, firm, and equal ; all Ins functions are of the highest order; he assumes the mastery over business ; builds up a competence on the foundation he has laid in early manhood, and passes through a period of life attended by many gratifications. Having gone a year or two past sixty, he arrives at a critical period in the road of existence, the river of death flows before him, and he remains at a stand still. But athwart this river is a viaduct called "The Turn of Life,"wh ich, if cross ed in safety, leads to the valley of "Old Age," round which the river winds, and then flows beyond without boat or causeway to effect its passage. The bridge is, however, constructed of fra gile materials, and it depends upon how it is trodden, whether it bend or break. Gout, Appoplexy, and other bad charac ters also are in the vicinity to waylay the traveller, and thrust him from the pass ; but let him gird up his loins, and provide himself with a fitting staff; and he may trudge on in safety with perfect composure. To quit metaphor, "The Turn of Life" is a turn either into a prolonged walk or into the grave. The system and power having reached their utmost expansion, new begin either to close like flowers at sunset, or break down at once. One injudicious stimu lant--a single fatal excitement, may force it beyond its strength, whilst a careful supply of props, and the with drawal of all that tends to force a plant, will sustain it in beauty and in vigor un til night has entirely set,--Science of Life. SntELLING IT.—Some poetical genius, after being on a tight, penned the follow ing verse : Men brandy drink, and never think That girls at all can tell it; They don't suppose a woman's nose Was ever made to smell it. ° ttr Au Awkward Mistake. A farmer who had bought a calf from a butcher desired him to drive it to his farm, and place it in his stable which he accordingly did. Now, it happened that very day, that a man with a grind ing organ and dancing bear, passing by that way, began their antics In front of the farm. After amusing the farmer for some time, the organ-man entered the farm house, and asked the farmer if he could give him a night's lodging.— Tbe farmer replied, he could give the man lodging, but he was at a loss where to put the bear. After musing a little, he determined to bring the calf inside the house for that night, and place the bear in the stable which was done.— Now, the butcher expecting the calf would remain in the stable all night re solved to steal it ere morning; and the farmer and his guest were, in the night awakened by a fearful yelling from the out-building. Both got up, and taking a lantern, entered the stable, when the farmer found, to his surprise, the batch. er of whom he had bought the calf, in the grasp of the bear, which was hug ging him tremendously, for he could not bite, being muzzled. The farmer immediately understood the state of the case, and briefly mentioned the circum stance to the owner of Bruin, who, to punish the butcher for his intended theft called out to the bear, "Hug him, Tom my ;" which the bear did in real earnest ; the butcher roaring most hideously the whole time. After they thought he had suffered enough, they set him free, and the butcher slunk off, glad to escape with his life; while the farmer and his guests returned to their beds.—English paper. BAD TEMPER.—The greatest plague in life is a bad temper. It is a great waste of time to complain of other peo ple's ; the best thing is to amend our own ; and the next best quality is to learn to bear with what we meet in oth ers. A bad temper will always tire it self out, if it find no one to resent it ; and this very knowledge is worth a tri fle. Irascibility is Very injurious to health, and so, in fact, is every morbid indulgence of our inferior nature. Low spirits, melancholy, diffidence, disincli nation for ordinary duties, discontent, fretfulness, even down to mental lassi tude, indolence or despair--are very in imical to enjoyment in life, and every possible effort should be made to cast them all to the winds and look unblush ingly into the truth of the fact. It is astonishing what a little reflection will do. The fears aro mostly imaginary, and with one dash of resolution may all be overcome. SO WE Go !—The American Me chanic [Poughkeepsie,) justly remarks: A man growls at paying a shilling for a loaf of bread, thinking he ought to get it for eleven pence, and the same even ing takes his family to witness the feats of a magician, for the purpose of being humbugged, knowing they will be hum bugged, and willingly pay a dollar for the privilege! Another is too poor to pay a dollar for a newspaper, but can spend two shillings every night at the tavern, and not miss it. Another is too poor to pay a few dollars but can attend all the concerts and negro performances that come along. Another wants a me chanic to work for nine and sixpence a day, when he demands ten shillings, and watches him to see that he labors faith fully, and the next day hires a horse and wagon, nt the expense of two dol lars, to travel ten miles to see a horse race. Another "beats down" an old woman a penny on a bunch of radishes, and before getting home spends two shillings in treating his friends. Mr. W. Buchanan, a minister of the Scotch kirk, having had a difference with the editor of a Kilmarnock journal, who stated that the Reverend gentleman had threatened, only for his coat, to horsewhip him (the editor,) his rever ence has written in reference to that statement—"My friends know tolerably well that my coat never gives me the least concern when 1 have anything which 1 think my duty on hand. What 1 consider proper or likely to be useful I should do in my coat, out of my coat, and in spite of my coat ; and if the sup position had ever crossed my mind that a horsewhip would have mended the morals of this incorrigible fellow, he should have had it until every bone in his body roared for mercy." To &lig Titounix.---Set about doing good to somebody ; put on your hat, and go and visit the sick and the poor ; in quire into their wants and administer unto them ; seek out the desolate and oppressed, and tell them of the consola tions of religion. I have often tried this method, and have always found it the best medicine fur a heavy heart. VOL, XIV, NO, 44 Improving Church Music. A correspondent of the Newark (N. J.) Advertiser, writing from Bromfield, Ct., tells the following 'good one'—'By the way, a good story may be told of our chorister's attempt at improving the psalmody as well as the music of our church. He set some music of his own to one of the Psalms of Watts, a very familiar Psalm, in which occur these lines : 'Oh, may my heart in tune be found, Like David's harp of solemn sound:' Calling on his pastor, who has more music in him than you would think, the chorister asked his approbation ofa new version of these lines which would ren der them more readily adapted to the music he had composed. He suggested to read them as follows : , 011, may my heart be tuned within, Like David's sacred violin.' The good pastor had some internal tendencies to laugh in the singing man's face, but maintaining his gravity as well as he could, he said that he thought that he could improve the improved ver sion, admirable us it was. The delight ed choristor begged him to do so, and the pastor taking his pen, wrote before the eyes of the innocent parishioner, these lines t 60, may my heart go diddle, diddle, Like uncle David's sacred fiddle.' The poor leader, after a vain attempt to defend his own parody, retired, and I guess he will sing the psalm as it stands.' CONJUGATION AND AGREE:VT:Nr.-1,1 a lesson in parsing the sentence, "Man courting in capacity of bliss," &c., the word "courting," comes to a pert young miss of fourteen to parse. She coin. mences hesitatingly, but got along well enough until she was to tell what it agreed with. Here she stopped short. But the teacher said,—"Very well, what does courting agree with I" Ellen blushed and held down her head. "Ellen, don't you know what that agrees wan'!" " Ye—ye—yes, sir !" " Well, Ellen, why don't you parse that word What does it agree with V' glushing still more and stammering, Ellen says— " It—it—agrees with all Me girls, sir !" DIGNITY.—Some men are dignified— very. But what is dignity ? It is not to feel yourself superior to your neighbor and seldom condescend to speak to him. It is not to wear a sober face and think it betrays a week mind to lough. True dignity consists in treating ail men with respect; in receiving and returning fa vors—no matter from whom received or to whom returned—the rich and ac• complished, the poor and illiterate—we love real dignity, %s herever we finch it. Generally it is often banished from those whose actions it ought to govern. Gnna-r YIELD or Conx.—The Marion Messenger of a late date says :—"Our readers will remember that we noticed a few weeks since, a remarkably promis ing crop of corn grown by Col. John Smith, of Cedar Creek, Wilkinson coun ty. Mr. S. writes us over date of the 7th instant that be had just finished gath ering his corn, and that from one acre and a quarter he had measured one hun dred and fifty-eight bushels one peck and a half! The corn was measured in seal ed meaures, and weighed fiftys•even pounds to the bushel." INFLUENCE OF A PRAYING YoUTll.—The Rev. John Angell James, of Manchester, Englund, has publicly stated, that all his usefulness in the ministry and m lie church of God may be traced to "the sight of a companion, who slept in the same room with him, bending his knees in prayer, on retiring to rest. Nenrly fifty years have since rolled away," lie says: "but that little chamber, that hum -1 ble couch, that praying youth, are still present to my imagination, and will never be forgotten, even amid the splen hours of heaven." To the Moon. Chaste goddess ! goddess so pure that not even the blush of innocence has ever mingled with thy soft brightness, I dare invoke thee to become the confidant of my most secret sentiments. Like thee, I have no cause to blush for any feeling of my heart. But often the remem berance of the blind and unjust judg ment of mankind clouds my brow, like thine too often veiled. Like unto thee, the errors and miseries of this world inspires my reveries. But happier than I, oh, citizen of the skies ! thou always presurvest thy serenity ; the tempest and the storms which rise from this our globe, glide over thy ever peaceful disc. Oh, goddess ! thou who sntilest on my maluncholly, pour into my soul thy cold tranquility.—Chateaubriand.