VOLUME XVI. J. D. WILLIAMS. JOHN HAFT, JR. Z. D. WILLIAMS & Co., Whohleale Grocers and Commission Merchants an Dealers in Produce and Pittsburg Manufactures, No. 116, Wood Street, Pittsburg. HAVE NOW IN STORE, and to arrive this week, the following goods, of the most re cent importations, which are offered on the most reasonable terms: 115 catty boxes prime Green Tea. 45 half chests do Is 46 " Oolong and Chelan. 100 bags Rio Coffee. 15 ‘. Laguyra and Java. 60 boxes B's, s's, and Ilb lump tobacco, 35 bbls. NO,. 1 and 3 Mackerel: 10and do No. 1 do 2 and do Salmon. 50 oxes sealed Herring. 1300 lbs extra Madder. 3 bales Cassia, 1 bale Cloves, 6 bags Pepper & Alspiee, 1 bbl Nutmegs, 2 bbls Ground Ginger, 1 bbl ground pepper, bbl Ground Pimento, 10 kegs ground Mustard TO kegs ground Cassia, 10 du do Cloves, 2 bbls Garret's Snuff, 45 tois Mearin Candles, 20 bxs Star Candles, 10 do Sperm do 100 doz Masons Bbick'g 100 lbs sup. Rice Flour, TOO lbs S..F. Indigo, 20 doe Ink, 156 dot Corn Brooms, 125 des Patent. Zinc 50 bxs extra pure Starch, Wash Boardg, 15 do Saleratus, 75 bbls N. 0. Molasses, 15 bbls S. 11. Molasses, 10 do Golden Syrup; 25 do Loaf, Crashed, 5501bs seedless Raisins, & Powdered Sugar, 50 drums Smyrna Figs, 20 jars Bordeaux Prunes, 50 Ihs Sicily Prunes, 5 boxes Rock Candy, 2 boxes Genoa Citrons, 10 do Cocoa & Chocblate, 5 do Caslild & Almond 12 doz Military &AP, Soap, bbl sup. Curb. Soda, 1 bbl Cream Tartar, 1 case Pearl Sago, 2 cases Isinglass, 2 cases Sicily & Refined 1 case Arrow Root, Liquorice', 150 Bath Brick, bbl Flour Sulphur,loo gross Matches, 100 doz Extract of ein. 5 doe Leition Sugar, on, Rose & Venilla, 1 cask Sal Soda, Glass, Nails, White Lead, Lard oil, &c." Refer to Merchants Thomas Read & Son, 4 6 •• Fisher & M'Aftirtrie, Charles Miller, Minor/ibis Jobtr leer„ Hu'ntingddn, May 15, 1851.--ly, FITS, FITS, FITS: • JOBS A. KING Begs leave to return his shicere thanks, for the lery liberal patronage he has heretofore received, and at the same time informs a generous public, that lie still continues thd TAILORING BUSINESS, at the old stand of Jacob Snyder, where be will be pleased to have his friends call and leave their Every garmat is warranted to tit neatly, and Shall be well made. JOHN A. KING' Hunt., July, 185 T GRAND COMBINATION OF 'PIIE Useful, Beautiful and Ornamental !! EDMUND SNARE BEGS LEAVE to inform the people of Hun- Oigdon, anti the rest of mankind, that he has bought, brought and opened' the richest, largest and cheapest assortment of WAIGNES Bi, JEWELRY ever beheld in tills Meridian In addition to hp, unprecedented .stock of Watches and Jewelry he is just Opening a most excellent variety o miscellaneous.. BOOKS, ae well as School Books and S'r A TIOI•TARY, which he is de termined shall be sold levier than ever sold in Huntingdon. . . . . Call 'in and see if this statement is not cor• rect. Store formerly occupied by Neff & Mil. 0:7 - 01d Gold and Silver wanted April 24; 1831. tO OWNERS OF INPATENTED L A ND S.—All persons in pos t-.' session of, or owning unpatented lands with in this.Crmmitinwealth, and havehy notified that the act of assembly, pealed the inth of April, 11335, entitled "Au Act to graduate lands on which money is due and unpaid to the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania,' and which act haS been extend ed from time to time by supplementary laws, WILL EXPJUtEON VIE FIRST DAY 01? DECEMBER NMI, after whiCh tithe no sthatemennt can be made Of any interest which May have accrued upon the original purchase Money. It will therefore he highly important to those in terested to secure their patents and tho benefits of the said act and its supplements during the time the same will continue in force. WILLIAM HUTCIIISON, ISAAC` PEIGHTAL, BENJAMIN LEAS, Commissioners. August 28, 1851 ABeautiful lot of the latest style of Bonnets, large and small. Also, children's Flats for sale by J. i t W. Saxton. May 29, '5l. TIAGLEY'S Superior Gold Pens, in gold and silver patent extension cases, warranted to give entire satisfaction, for sale at Scott's Cheap Jewelry Store. ILVER SPObNS of the latest patterns can be .0 had at E. &lard's Jewelry Siore. FORTE MONNAIES-8 or 10 different kind's; from 25 cents toll dollars at Seott's Cheap Jewelry Store. SIX DOLLARS and Fifty cents for the largest Gold Pencils, at Ed. Snare's Jewelry Store. ASplendid assortment of Ladigs Slip r pers for sale by J. i t W. Saxton. May 29, '5l. THE beet assortment of Hardware in town, for sale by J. t W. Saxton. May ta, ro~ ~la~~~~~~~~~ THE LAY OF A LIFE DY RICHARD YAUX. 'Tw As sunrise when the thought was born, And bright and gay This er!fant lay, For not a cloud bedecked the morn ; Midst birds and flowers The early hours Of its young life away were worn. In perfect joy The laughing boy, Now robbd iit pleastfre and content, On fairy's wings He rooms add swigs • 'Restillined nor know . ilAg whdie lie went; The golden sun, Its course begun, Had kissed tho . Waters of a hike, Upon whose shore • One echo more The artless youth again would wake; Thus wiled itway His boyhood-day, - Not dreaming that a cloud could rtsu, In hand-like farm, To end in storm, All curtaining in gloom the skies. - At noon-day tide, On either side, The man in vain sought c"en a shadow; So blithe Lindsay Had been a day, A jewel rare in "Old Time's" cadeau, 'Twas harmony And euphony Attendant came on every thought, Nothing to mar, A-near or far, The bliid meridian houi's had brought. Erb el:entitle, On sunset-side, • The dark clouds spen filchr onward way, Thiiir very form ilclokct ii stdritt, Shrouding all gladness from the day. The latest gleam , Of light, a Wale, Lit "Ignis &tuns' en the plain, And as it flared The old man glared, Too late resolved a Heaven to gain. 'T is often 7rfl.; Through life we go, No thought bestowed upon its end; For brightest morn Is changed to storm By little clouds we ne'er forefend Oh, wise is man In life's short span At sunrise looks to sunset hours; That he pert:bailee, At single glance, The cloud may see before it ItilverS. Prom the Home Journal A REMINISCENCE. Some time in the month of May, 1826, while I was concerned in publishing the Northern Spectator," a weekly newspa per; in the village of East Poultney, Ver mont, I was one month engaged, in my garden, when there came to me a stripling about fourteen years of agii aid enquired if I was the than who carried on the prin.: ting office? I answered that I was. He asked ire if 1 wanted to take a boy as an appentice? .I told him I had thought of it, and asked' him if be wished to become a printer? He said he had some notion of learning the printing business. He had come some ten miles on foot that morning from an bumble bottle in the vicinity of Wea llaved, to make this application. I had not, at first, paid much attention to his address —and now turning to the young stranger, I saw standing before me a light, slender form, dressed in the plain farmer's cloth of the day, and with a negtzge not in' accor= dance - with thti fastidious taste of Beau Nash or Broininel. His hail., of a light hue, shading upon the orange, lay thinly upon his broad fore head, and over a head rocking on shedders' apparently too slen der to support the weight Of di:umber so dis proportioned to his general outline. On en tering into conversation, and a partial ex amination of the qualifications of my new applicant, it required but little time to dis cover that he possessed a mind of no coin mon order, and an acquired intelligence far beyond his years. lie had but little opportunity at the common school, but he said, "he had read some"—and what he had ho well understood and remembered. In addition to the ripe intelligence mani fested in one so young, and whose instruc tion had been so limited, there was a sin glemindedness, a truthfulness, and com mon sense in what he said, that at once commanded my regard. After conver sing with him a while, I told him to go to the office and talk with the foreman. He did so, and soon returned with a line from, HUNTINGDON, PA:, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 23, 1851. the forman, saying ho thought we had bet ter try the Ind.—He soon entered the of fice, after having bound himself an appren tice for four years. iii fiist entering the office, there was quite a sensation among the older appren tices and journeymen. They thought they had caught a green one, and resolved on a treat of fun. But the new-comer paid no attention to what was passing. He took his copy end composing-stick from the 'Ordain, and stood up to the desk Of ems, "intent on thought, and all the world a blank." He had not stood there many days before his office companions appeared somewhat to doubt, and the more tame ones began to sniff a little of the young lion. But they could not entirely forego the anticipated pleasure of initiating their young friend, so as his hair was of a light er hue than they thought became the trade of ink and types, they applied the "black balls;" until they thought the im pression would come off intelligibly,— This was done while he stood at the desk of types; but ifone e these thfirgs moved him, nor did he lose a single em by the operation. About this time the late Rev. L. J. Reynolds, a sound, well-read theologian, and practical printer, was employed to ed it and conduct the paper. This opened a desirable school for the intellectual culture of our young debutant. Debates ensued —historical, political and religious ques-; tions were discussed, and often while all hands were engaged at the font of types ; and here; the purposes foi which out young friend "had read some," was made mani fest. Such was the correctness of his memory in what he had read, in both bib lical and profane history, that the Rev. Mr. R. was often put at fault by his correc tions, He•always quoted the chapter and verse to prove the point in dispute. Ou one occasion, the Rev. Mr. R. said that money was the root of all evil, when he was corrected by the "devil," Who said he believed it read in the bible that the love of money was the root of all evil. - A small town library gave him access to books, by which, together with the read ing of the exchaUgepapersof the' office, lie improved all his leisure hours. He be came a frequent talker in our village lyce um, and often wrote dissertations. In the first organization of our village temperance society, the question arose as to the age when the young might become members. Fearing lest his own age might liar him, he nieved that they be received when they were old enough to drink. Though modest and retiring, he was of ten led into political discussions with our ablest politicians, and few would leave the field without being isiatrueted by the Sound ness of his views; and the . unerring correct ness of his statements of political events. Having a thirst for lam/lodge, he bent his mind and all his energies to its acqui sition with unceasing application and un tiring devotion—and I doubt, if, in the whole term of hl apprenticeship,- he ever spent an' hour in the common . recreations of young men. He used to pass my door as he went to his daily meals, and though I often sat near or stood in the way, so much absorbed did he appear in his own thoughts—his head bent forwird. arid his eyes fixed upon the gifoinid, that I have the charity to belieVe'the reason why he never turned his head or gave sue a look, was be cause he had no idea I was there! At the end of about four years' ho went to Chatauque county, where I think, he sojourned about a year employed as a jburneyman printer, but lost all hia earn ings by which he had hoped to place him self in better circumstances. We next see him in the city of New York—a stranger in a strange city, friend less and alone, in queat of employment as a foreman printer. At this time he wrote me the first letter, giving an account of himself since he had left Poultney-'—sta ting his object in going to the city, and the many obstacles lie met with in the way of obtaining the etnployment he desired. Now, all the rest of the acts . of HORACE GREELEY, from first to last, aro they not writtenin the late New Yorker,' The Log Cabin, The New York Tribune, and the coteruporary literature Of his country 1 ex oept we have late seen him at the assem bling of nations, speaking for America at the Paxton dinner, or, as an American Li on, shaking paws with a British Lioness at a levee of England's nobility. A. B. Extiavaiance in Living. "One cannot wonder that the times oc casionally get hard," said a venerable citi zen, the other day, " when ono sees the way in which the people live and ladies dress." We thought there was a good deal of truth in what the old gentleman said. Houses at from five hundred to thousand dollars rent; brocades at thre dollars a yard; bonnets at twenty; and shawls, cloaks, &c., &c., from fifty dollars up, are enough to embarrass any commu nity, which indulges in such extravagance as extensively as Americans do. For it is not only the families of realized wealth, who could afford it, that spend money in this way, but those who aro yet laboring to make a fortune, and who, by the chances of trade, may fail of this desirable result after all. Everybody almost wishes to live, now-a-days, as if already rich.— The wives and daughters of men, not worth two thousand a year, dress as rich ly nearly as those of men worth ten or twenty thousand. The young, too, begin where their parents left off. Extrav agance; in a word, is piled on extravagance till " Alps o'er Alps arise." The folly of this is apparent. Tho stuns thus lavished go for mere show, and nei ther refine the mind nor improve the health. They gratify vanity, and that is all. By the practice of a wise economy, most families might, in time, entitle them selves to such luxuries : and then, indul gence in them would not be reprehensible. If thole r:re two men, each making a Clear two thousand a year and one lays by a thousand at simple interest, while the other spends his entire income, the first will have acquired a fortune, in sixteen years, sufficient to yield him an income equal to his abeustomed expenses, while the other will be as poor as wheu he started in life. And so of larger sums ! In fine, any man, by living on half of what he annually ma'...es,' be it more or less, can, before he is forty, acquire enough, and have it invested in good securities, to live for the rest of his life in the style in which ho has been living all along.— Yet how few do it ! But what prevents ? Extravagance, extravagance, and again extravagance. Obstiimcy An obstinate man doed not hold opinions, but they hold him ; for when he is once posses Seed of an error, it is like a devil, only cast out with great difficulty.' What soever he lays hold on, like a drunken man, he never looses, though it do but help to sink him sooner. His ignorance is abrupt and inaccessible, impregnable both by art and nature, and will hold out till the last, though it, has nothing but rubbish to defend. It is as dark as pitch and sticks as fast to anything it lays hold on. His skull is so thick, that it is proof against reason, and never cracks but. oir the wrong side, just opposite to that on which the impression is made, which sur geons say does happen very frequently.— The slighter and more inconsistaht his opinions aro, the faster he holds them, otherwise they would fall asunder of them selves; for opinions that are false ought to be held with more strictness and as surance than those that are true, other wise they will be apt to betray their own ers before they are aware. He delights most of all to differ in things indifferent, no matter how frivolous they are, they are weighty enough in his weak judge went ; and he will rather suffer self-mar- tyrdom than part with the least scruple of his freehold, for it is impossible to dye his dark ignorance into any lighter color. He is resolved to understand no man's reason but his own, because ho finds no man can understand his but himself. ills wits are like a sack, which 'the French proverb says is tied faster before it is full than when it is ; and his opinions aro like plants that grow upon rocks, that Ohl fast though they have no footing. His • * ~. 4 _,' , le , ?) \, rj 0 t nt , 1 , ...._±.,,,,,,,. . , ,/,,.,,,/ , understanding is hardened, like Pharaoh's heart, and is proof against all sorts of judgements whatsoever. WOMEN AND MEN, . . Women may talk of their inherent rights as much as they please, but they can't overcome nature--they way pre.eli about the equality of the sex, but they can't overcome facts and organizations.— Men and oaks are made to be twined, and women'and ivy were made to twine about them. Though an equality were estab lished Vetwebn calico and cassitnere to morrow, it would not be a week before all the officers would be men, and all the soldiers women. Females are perfectly willing to go ahead, provided the men go first. Set fire to a steamboat, and not a yard of dimity will budge till corduroy sets the example. So long as the men cling to the vessel, the women will cling to the men. But if the men plunge over board, chimezettes plunge too. As we said before, reformers may prate as they may about equal right, but they can't al ter the regulation of God. It is as impos sible for women to cut themselves loose from men, as it is for steel dust to free itself from its attachment to a magnet.— [Exchange Paper. tBA. This island is six hundred and twenty four miles in length, with an average width of about sixty miles, containing an area of thirty-seven thousand square miles, and a population of 1,500,000.—The val ue of its agricultural productions in 1849' was $62,781,035. The exports during the same period were $27,880,921, of which $8,700,224 were to the United State. Its imports during the same peri od were $26;708,843 ; of which $7,280,- '214 lciere froui the United States. The' amount of American tonnage employed in the trade with the island, during the same period, was 501,268 tons. The total a mount of taxes levied upon the American commerce with the island; in the shape of duties Upon elports, exceed $ . 4,000,000 annually. There are three hundred and fifty-nine miles of railway in operation on the island. Of the $27,000,000 of annual imports according to official documents -1'16,000,000 are in provisions, lumber, fabrics, materials, &c., which the one or the other of the United States could fur nish more readily than any other country ; but, through the taxes and restrictions im posed by the Spanish policy, not more than one-third of it conies from the fichls and factories of the United States. AN ANECDOTE or Join AnAmf.—When John Adams was a young 'twin, he was in vited to dine with the Cotirt and Bar at the house of Judge Paine, an eminent Loy aliSt; at Worcester.. When the wine wus circulated round the table, Judge Paine gave as a toast, "The King." Some of the Whigs were about to refuse to drink it. But Mr. Adams whispered to them to comply, - saying—. We shall• have an op portunity to return the compliment." At length, when John Adams was desired to give a toast, he gave " The Devil." As the host was about to resent the supposed, indignity, his wife calmed him, and turned the laugh upon Mr. Adams by immediate ly saying, "My dear, as the gentleman has seen fit to drink to our friend, - let us by no means refuse, in our turn, to drink to Izzi:" "'The water that flows from a spring does not congeal in winter, and those sen timents of Friendship that flow from the heart, cannot be frozen by advesity." "Forgiveness is the odor exhaled by flowers when trampled upori." 'Sweet is the Memory of an absent friend; like the last rays of the declining sun, it falls sweet yet sadly upin'the soul." "Every man has three characters, ono which his enemies give him ; one given him by his friends; and one which he really merits." SYDNEY S3fITU said there wore `three things which every roan ftnrcied he could do—farm a small property, drive gig, and edits newspaper. NVVIBER 40. Rules to be observed in an Editor's Sanctum. F. Comp in at all times; what business has he to be private 2. Take his papers with perfect free dom —what use can he have for them 3. If you bring in a long Communisa tion, just , to fill up his paper,' heat on reading and discussing it. Why shouldn't he be glad to spend an hour in listening'! 4. If you see his &changes piled upon his table, sieze and scatter them. What business has he to be particular? 5. If you find his chair vacant at any time, sit id it. Why shonid he wish to keep his stationary and scissoring from visitors I 6. If you can't get that chair, though there' are a dozen others in the sanctum, be sure to sit on a table, and put your feet on another. If you can't practice such freedom in an editor's room, where awn you do it If you see the editor particularly en din writing a leader,' talk to him as industriously as you can. Will he not be gratified to hear you? Of course be will.—Benjamin Franklin. Miss Sum ON EDUCATICN.—We give the nip of a very amusing sketch which we find going the rounds without credit.— Miss Smix, a remarkable cephalic " school maim," is giving an account of her en deavors to teach a " young idea"—a re markable hard case—how to spell "At last," and here the sweet face of Miss Smia brightened, and the glimmer of some ihtehded smile phiyed over it, " I got him clean through the alphabet, and ho could point out any letter by name.-- In two weeks he got through with his ba ba, &c., and one bright Monday morning I put him into la-la, dy-dy—lady. I had to tell him lifty.times the nature of sylla bles, but his brain was opaque as a rock. "Do you love pies ?" said I, in order to interest him. " Yea,- ma'am." " Well, then, 4 apple and pie' put to gether, spell ' apple pie,' don't they I" " Yes ina'm." "By a like rule, 'la' and 'dy' spell la dy—you understand ?" Ye§ . „, ./Ifince and Tie' spell what ?” .Mince-pie." "Right! 'Pumpkin' and 'pie' what," Pumpkin-pie." "Then what does 1-a la d-y dy, veil!" "Custard-pie !" said he, with a yell of delight at his success. Dye A down east poet, thus exuberates on the anticipated joyi of wedlock. Hold him. . ' I wish I had a little wife, • • A little stove and fire ; I'd hug her like a lump of gold, And let no oil 6 ewe nigh' her ;' I'd spend thy dayg in happiness, I'd vegetate in eloidr , And when I died, I'd shut thieyes, Lay down and roll right over. THE,RE is nothing purer than hon esty—,nothing sweeter than charity—noth ing warmer than love—nothing richer than wisdom—nothing more steadfast than faith. These united in one mind, form the purest, the sweetest, the warmest, the 'richest the brightest and the most steadfast hap p i nes s . [lam If your sister, while tenderly enga ged in a conversation with her sweetheart, asks you to bring a glitss of water from an adjoining room, you can start on the eiTand, but you need not return. Yciu will not be missed, that's certain---we've seen it tried. [l7, The fbllbwing has been used down east as a very pleasant substitute for a priatbr's dun, and is to be set to the mu sic of the jingling of the dollars: " We'll gaily chase dull care away, And banish every sorrow— Subscribers, pay your debts to-day; . And we'll pay ours to-morrow." EIJ=" Flour is an article well enough in its sphere but we deprecate the rubbing of it upon ladies' faces. try-A coquette is a rose bush from which each young beau plucks a leaf, and the thorns are left for the husband.