VOL. 18. \ TERMS : The "TruNTINenoN JOURNAL" to published at the following rates t If paid in advance $1,50 If paid within six months after the time of subscribin„ 1:f paid at !112 end of the year• • • And two dollars and MY , cents if not paid till rifler the expiration of the year. No subscription will bo taken for a less period than six months, and no paper will be discontinued, except at the option of the Editor, until all arrearages are paid. Subscribers living in distant counties, or in other Buttes ; will bo required to pay invariably in advance.. • far Tho abos'l , a7formr to m all cases.- '4,- RATEf OF ADVERTISING. s will he rigidly adhered One squareof 16 lines or lees For 1 insertion $0,50, For I month, $1,25 tt 9a 0,75, " 3 " 2,75 f t 3 41 1,00, " 6 " 5,00 rooer.setosit CARDFL , not exceeding le lines, nod not changed during the year $4,00 CARD and JOURNAL, in advance 5,00 BUSINESS CARDS of the sane length, not changed _ _ •• • • $3,00 C,itn and Jornum., in advance 4,00 Cr Short transient advertisements will ho ad mitted into our editorial columns at treble the usual rates. On longer advertisements, whether yearly or transient, a reasonable deduction will be made for prompt payment. PoztraNlibe Tho following lines, written some years ago, by that poct•son of Albino, J. C. Prince, are, wo think, very beautiful: The Pen and the Press. Young Genius walked out by the mountains and streams, Entranced by the power of his own pleasant dreams, Till the silent, the wayward, the wandering thing, Found a plume that had fallen from a passing bird's wing. Exulting and proud, like a boy nt his play, Ho bore the new prize to his dwelling away ; He gazed for a while at its beauties and then Ho cut it, and shaped it, and called it a Pax. But its magical use he discovered not yet, Till he dipped its bright lips in a fountain of ..• jet; And O I what a glorious thing it became I For it spoke to the world iu a language of flame; While its master wrote on, like a being in spired, Till the hearts of the millions were melted and fired. It came as a boon, and a blessing to men, The peaceful, the pure, the victorious rco. Young Genius went forth on his rambles onco more, The vast sunless caverns of earth to explore ; Ile searched the rude rock, and with rapture he found A substance unknown which ho brought from the ground. Ho I used it with fire, and rejoiced in the change, A s be melted the ore into characters strange, Till his thoughts and his efforts were crowned with success, For an engine uprose, and he called it a PRESS. Tho pen and tho press, (blest alliance!) com bined To soften the heart and enlighten the mind, For that to the treasures of knowledge gave birth, And this sent them forth to the ends of the earth. Their battles for truth were triumphant indeed, And the rod of the tyrant was snapped like a reed. They were made to exalt us, to teach us, to bless ; Those invaluable brothers—the PEN and the Paces. fiIItIgiVEII27I2CAZ. From the Knickerbocker. _A STORY About an Old Gentleman and a Wolf. 'REIT, PURSUED BY A BEAU.' Shakespeare: Winter Talc, Act HI: Scene 111. lam about to relate a story concerning an old gentleman and a wolf, which I flatter my self will be found highly tragical and enter taining. I tell the story precisely as I heard it ono winter evening about five years ago, in the kitchen of John Buck, a good and true far mer of ono of the middle States. I was at that time eighteen years old, and followed during that particular winter the laudable occupation of teaching school. In the course of my `boarding around peregrinations, I had at this time got billeted on John Buck, and I can tes tify with gratitude that they lived iu the solid est fashion there, and used mo as if I had been a prince. I was a prince, it is true, and hav ing comp to voting age, and now a king; an American king, a republican sovereign; but like a good many other princes of my time, who diverted themselves by teaching district school in the winter, my royal rations were too often sour shortened cake and dried apple-pie, more fit for an ostrich than for an heir-appar ten; and so the steaming steaks, the fragrant coffee, and the noble pies which adorned Mrs. Buck's table are to this day glorious in my memory. On the certain winter evening of which I spoke, I sat on ono side of the spacious fire place, with a closed book in my hand, which I had just been reading, and was contemplating the two family groups which occupied opposite sides of the room. On one side, and not far from myself, sat the farmer, a hale, ruddy, largo framed man, rending the Weekly Bomb Shell,' a sweet and cheerful political newspa per, the organ of his party in the county. His wire, a quiet woman, sat beside the same table, sewing; while Aunty Baldwin and grand.moth. er Buck, sitting in rocking chairs, plied their knitting needles and told stories of dreadful length, involving intricate genealogies, which are not to be made intelligent by me without a blackboard. The fanner was a zealous poli tic:an, and occasionally broke out with some paragraphs of astounding purport from the col umns of the 'Bomb Shell,' ns thus: 'Hal thunder; wife; just hear this P Special Telegraphic Dispatch to the New York Trib une from Washington.—Senator Sixshooter, of Arkansas, has just published a letter on River and Harbor Improvements, addressed to the Italltingtot Ittlitilat. I SEE NO STAR ABOVE THE HORIZON, PROMISING LIGHT TQ GUIDE US, BUT THE INTELLIGENT, PATRIOTIC, UNITED WIIIO PARTY OE THE UNITED STATES."- [WEBSTER. Hon. Mr. Twopistols, of Kentucky, saying, that unless Congress immediately appropriates two hundred and fifty thousand dollars for the pur pose of clearing the snags and alligators out of the Chickochofee river, the inhabitants of Bok nit.° county will secede, set up an Independent government, and declare war. They have sent to St. Louis for a six-pounder and two tons of percussion caps.' There I thoso chaps want to scars Congress, and If Congress is scared by them, it ought to be spanked. Two hundred and fifty thousand dollars for snaking the alligators out of their creek I I could go there and pick 'cm out of the mud with a pitch fork. If I was President, I would make them sallow their two ton of percussion caps.— They're a queer nation out West.' 'Yes,' sighed Aunty Baldwin, 'they are a very peculiar kind of people. lam afraid that the Pope has got his eye on the West, and would like to have tho inquisition going there, if Ito could. But I trust and pray that ho will fail in all his designs as Dr. Jones said at the annual meeting of tho American Board.' 'Ho I good I' the fanner again broke out; 'hero is what Mr. Splinters, the editor of the 'Boesk Shell,' says about the Secretary of the Treasury: 'Besides the miserable incapacity and flagrant corruption of this vental tool of the Administration, there aro other crimes laid to his charge, which, In our opinion, render him a fit subject for the action of the High Court of Impeachment of the United States." But no matter what Mr. Splinters said about the poor Secretary; ho wrote with a rattle snake's fang; and it will do none of us any good to rehearse his congressional leaders. On the other side of the blazing the-place sat, first, Mag, a strapping two-fisted won* chopping minced-meat in a wooden bowl. Not far distant sat John a hired man, a drawling, pork-fed mortal, with his feet on the rounds of his flat-bottomed chair, smoking a pipe, and addressing his remarks on men and things, cattle, politics, saw-mills, and hog-feed, to every person in the room by turns thus imparting his valuable experience and the result of his dissiminnting observation in a manner well calculated to 'rest on the age.' Three boys sat on the broad hearth, with hatchet, hammer, nails, knives, sticks, and leather-straps, ma king a now-fangled quail-trap, supposed by them to be an invention of incalculable impor tance, and likely to revolutionize the whole science of catching quails in February. The first of these striplings was Dave Buck, a boy of thirteen, loud voiced and brown-haired, one of the sort known as 'staving fellows.' The second was his brother Mat., somewhat young er. Joe Kedge, a neighbor's boy, completed the trio. Joe was a long faced, mathematical genius, the master-architect of the new trap, which, under his skillful fingers, was gradually rising to pyramidal symmetry, curious to be hold. Two children, twins,the ono Will, an hon est, courageous, open-eyed little fellow, and Nelly, a pretty and timid creature, stood by, watching the progress of Joe Kedge's trap with the intensest interest. 'Now, h.o.y.s,' said John, holding his pipe in his fingers, and scrutinizing the new snare with a skeptical eye, 'you won'tketch no quails in any such kind of a darned York trap as that, I can toll you. I've ketched quails in my time, and I reckon that I know quails about as well ns the next man; and I just tell you once—t for all, that if you ketch the fust quail in that there trap, then I am a lawyer. W-a.a-11, J-o.h-n,' replied Joe Kedge, imita tating the drawl of the hired man, 'peaps you couldn't ketch a Connecticut q-u-a-i-1 in it, but I guess we can coax a Y-o-r-k quail to get into it. York quails havo n't been to school so long as Connecticut quails, they have n't had so many 'advantages,' and consequently don't know so much about the steam-engine, and have n't got so much information generally.— Guess a fellow might ketch a Y-o-r-k quail Johnny.' Dave Buck exploded at this, and so did Mat., and the two rolled over on the floor, shrieking with laughter; hut Joe was straightening a Crooked shingle-nail on an old flat iron, and did not move a muscle of his face. would jest like to know, Joo Kedge, how you calc'lato you can induce a quail to go inside of that there coop,' said John, a little tartly. 'Oh,' replied Joe, I would pat some c-o-r-n and things on that there piece of shingle, and if that did n't in-d-e-u-co the quail, I would toll his mother on him: Dave and Mat., shrieked again at this true specimen of boy's humor, and keeled over on the floor. John stuck his pipe in his mouth, and said, 'You are getting' entirely too smart for your hide to hold you much longer, Mister Kedge; but I tell you that I know quails, and you can't ketch the fast quail in any such kind of a two story trap as that.' 'Why can't we John?—now I'd just like to know l' cried Dave Duck. 'Why!' said John; 'why—why, because it ant reas'nable: 'Oh, you get out l' cried Dave. 'Why John I tell you that you can't keep quails out of it, said Joe. 'l'll just tell you a little fact that happened down to our house last Saturday night, and then eon what you will have to offer on the subject. I made just such a trap as this on Saturday afternoon, and when I got it done, father forked on it, and says he, 'Let this alone, young man, till Monday morn• ing. I won't have you satin' traps on Satar• day night, and feteldn' in a lot of live quails on the Loan's day. So he took it down that uight,we heard something peckin' in the col. lar, and no body in the house could guess what it was. But when we went down there in the morning, to see what was the fuss, we found a quail there, that had worn his bill off up to his wisdom•teeth, trying to make a hole in that tub, so as to get inside of it, and get catched in that there trap. No, Sir, you can't keep quails out of it. Mat, hand me that there awl.' Dave and Mat, wont into convulsions once more. John grinned, and said, 'l'm accord your funeral will be attended before you git of HUNTINGDON, PA., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 14, 1853. age, young man. But I say Just what I said all along, that you can't ketch any thing in that trap, or else I'm a lawyer. Jest remember now that I told you before-hand' 'Oh you get out, John l' cried Dave. 'Ton don't know any thing. Hero we put the corn, and hero comes the quail. Now,how in Sam Hill do you suppose ho is going to go by that there crib without stopping to fodder ?—and then, you see, he's a gone sucker at once.' -Wa-11, you'll see—you'll see,' said John, blowing a cloud of smoke into the air, and stretching out hie legs. Little Will, who had been earnestly watch ing the operations of the trap-builders, henrd with consternation the verdict of John on the merits of the new engine, and ran across the room to his mother, with his large, honest eyes starting from his head, and said: 'Mother! mother! John says that Joe Hedge's trap won't ketch no quails 'Hush, child I hush! said the mother; 'your father is reading to us. Go and ask John to tell you and Nelly a story.' And truth, Will had interrupted his father intho midst of ono of Mr. Splinters's pungent commentaries on tho Report of the Secretary of the Treasury: 'An other proposition of this profligate and dastar dly idiot is, to saddle the groaning millions of this broad Republic with an additional duty of one-and a-half per cent, on cut-nails; a propo sition which makes our blood boil with indig nation.' and so on. Mrs. Buck, innocent wo man, could not see why Mr. Splinters should suffer so much anguish on account of the duty on cut-nails, but, like a model wife, listened with duo attention to whatever her husband was pleased to read for her illumination; while Grand-mother Buck and Aunty Baldwin con tinued to unravel tangled genealogies. 'John,' said little Will, returning to the tri pod of the kitchen-oracle, will you please to toll Nelly and me a story ?' 'Oh, do tell us a story, good John Robbins' cried Nelly. 'Well, little folks,' said John don't care if I do. What shall it he about?' 'Oh, tell us about Grand-father Robbins and the wolf!' cried Will. 'Oh, do,. good John V Nelly said; 'but it makes me so 'fraid l' 'Well,' said John, having filled his pipe, 'I don't cars if Ido toll you the story about Grandfather Robbins and the wolf. Let me get my pipe agoin' first, though. Mat., just light-that pine sliver in the fire place, and hand it to me. There, you Ingen, look ont I you needn't mind setting me on fire.' 'Get out, you scamp bawled Mug, as the ur chin passed behind her chair with hie little torch. 'Natty, said Grand-mother, look, 'what are you doing?' 'Noth'n—noth'n at all,' said Matronly help in, John light his pipe.' 'Only settin' me a fire l' cried Meg; 'ho ought to bo licked. And I'll do it, too, if ho don't behave himself.' 'Martin" said tho boy's mother, 'go away, and don't bother Margaret.' 'Yes'm,' Mat, said, and resumed his scat by the quail-trap. 'Now, little folks,' John said, 'it seems that Margaret ain't going to burn up Just now, and so I'll tell you the story. Fifty-threo year ago, on the twenty-fourth day of last November, Grand-father Robbins came into Howlin' Hol ler for to make a settlement. It was a new country then, and there wasn't a neighbor with. in three miles of him and ho was quite an old man, too. But he got a few titters and a chunk of pork, and reckoned ho could make a live on't till Spring, though it was apooty small chance. There was wolves in the Holler—au unaccountable mess of 'em; and painters—the wust kind of painters. There was ono of 'em killed a man in the Holler in the year 1799. There was a pedlar came along a good many years after that had l'arnin, and ho made somo po'try about it. It went so : "Now listen, all ye lumber-men, Both ye that have and have not sin, And I will quickly you inform How JONAS Bnows a painter torn. He went out to the hemlock woods; His frock was made of checkered goods; He bad his provisions in a pa!?,, And there occurred this dreadfid talc." 'There's twenty-seven verses of it. I've got it in my chist up stairs, and some time I'll bring it down and read it to you. Squire Johnston took it down to the Corners, and had it printed on sheets of paper, with edging all around the sides. 'There was Ingens down to the Holler, too --great, big red Ingens, that skilped folks in the war, and carried on monstrous ugly when they was drunk.' 'John,' said Will, 'tell us what the Ingens used to sny to Grand-father Robbins.' " 'Oh, John! cried Nelly, 'do tell, but It makes me so 'afraid.' 'Well,' John said, don't justly remember the expressions Grandfather said: they used, though I've heard him tell more'n a hundred times; but it was something like this: 'Tommy wommy ! whoop! whoop! ca-whoop!" 'Oh-o-o lit makes me 'frail] I' cried poor Nelly, hiding her face in her apron. 'How big—when? John, did you ever see an Ingen?' Will said. 'Yes, a good many, and some time I'll toll you about old Captain Wild Turkey, the Chief of 'em; but now I'll tell you how Grand-father encountered a pesky wolf one day, the first one he ever seen. He went out into the woods ono morning tt,choppin'. Well, after ho bad chop ped all day, it came on dusk; and while he was a-choppin', all at once't he 'spied a wolf comin' toward Mm, and the wolf he 'spied Grandfather Bobbins a-choppin'. So Grand-father ho stop ped choppite, and the wolf ho stopped comin'. Then the wolf ho crooked up his back and heowled, and then Grand-father ho crooked up his back and heowled. Grand-futher Ito was skeert, and be reckoned that the wol f was skeert, and so they stood there quite a spell. The wolf he h-c-o-w-l-e- d at Grandfather Nubbins, and Grandfather Robbins he h—e—o—w—l—e—d at the wolf I' Here poor little Nally, though he had heard twenty times before, the legend of Grandfather Robbins and the wolf, was so terror-stricken at the dreadful peril of the good old man—her apprehensions being aided not a little perhaps by the tragic emphasis with which John utter ed the fearful word h-e-o-w-l-c-d that she ran away crying, and buried her face in her moth er's lap, but Will stood his ground bravely, though faltering slightly at first, and stared in the face of John with wide eyes and mouth half open. 'l'd Just liked to been in Grandfather Rob bin's place about two minutes,' said Davo, flourishing his hatchet; I'd a made that there wolf sing ;hear I I'd a cracked his snout with a chunk of wood till he would have thought day was breaking I' 'No you wouldn't, Davo Buck,' said little Will, kindling with earnestness; 'no yon wouldut You wouldn't dared to did it. Tho wolf would have sicallered ye.' 'A great many times that wolf would have swallored nie 1 cried Mat. 'l'd have fixed him out so that his aunt wouldn't liar° known him;' 'About how long by the clock did Grand father Robbins stand there a-hcotolin', John ?' inquired Joo Kedgo. 'Well,' said Jolla, 'he never could tell pre. cisoly how long. Folks ideas about time dif fers. Somo folks ha'nt no judgement about it at all, and others again have. Grandfather used to judge that he might have stood there about five minutes, and then the wolf ho turned around and slid one way, and Grandfather Rob- bins ho turned around and slid another way.' 'ls that the end of the story about Grand father Robbins and the wolf?' said Joseph. 'Yes, that's the end of it,' John said. 'Got any more such? continued Joe. 'Not that I now recollect of,' said John, in. nocently. 'Well, then, John,' the youth proceeded, 'I guess you had hotter go up to bed. There's the schoolmaster been harking.' (This he said lowering his voice, and speaking for the bene fit only of the circle around him.) 'Who knows John, but what he'll fut it in the papers ono of these days?' Kentucky Regard for Fair Play. In the year 1838 I was traveling with a strolling theatrical company, and arriving at a small town in Kentucky., it was resolved to treat the inhabitants to a bit of the legitimate. A suitable place having been secured, notices were stuck up informing the pnblic that on that evening would ho performed, by ono of the best theatrical companies in the Union, the admired and popular drama of "William Tell, the hero ic Swiss." Night came, and the room was crowded by an anxious audience, many of whom had never witnessed a theatrical performance. The piece passed off very well, eliciting much applause, and enlisting tho sympathies of the audience in behalf of Tell, as they tookseveral occasions to cheer the patriot on. When tho shooting scene came, great excitement was manifested among the group of the hardy sons of Keutuekey— they began to think . that the thing was real.— At that moment when Toll remonstrates with Gesler for having picked out the smallest ap ple, and the tyrant says: "Take it as it is: thy skill bo greater if thou hittest it." To which Tell replies. "True, true, I did not think of that! Give me some chance to save my boy!" Ono of the group I have mentioned—a har dy sapling who would measure full six feet two inches in his stockings—sprung upon the stags confronting Cooler, and shouted; "Give him a fair chance I I vow to snakes it's too mean to mako him shoot his sonl 'sposo I let him shoot ono of my niggers; or if that won't do I'll lot him have a crack at mo provi. ded ho puts a pint cup on my head instead of that cussed little apple. It is almost useless to add that this caused a scene—especially as three or four of the Ken. tuckian's friends jumped upon the stage to back him and side with Tell. It took some time to pacify and assure them that it was a play. "Well, stranger, we won't stand any foul play in those diggms, and nein' no how it's only a show, why we'll step ont," and the val iant Kentuckian as well as his friends, resum ed their seats. To Make Light Bread. Take a pint of milk; all lot Home to a boil put in enough cold water to make it a little more than milk warm; put in ono ;largo tea spoonful of salt; two largo tea-spoonsful of corn meal, and enough flour to make it as thick as you can conveniently stir it. Keep about milk warm; if water rises to the surface stir your yeast up, and if it &A uotbegin to rise in four or five hours, stir in a little more meal. When your yeast rises, sift your flour, put in a little salt and a piece of butter half as big as a hen's egg; mix up with warm water; grease your pans and warm them and fill them half full, and when the dough rises to the top of the pan, put it to bake. Bake to a light brown, then take it out of the pan and wrap it up.— Bread ought not to be cut under twelve hours after baking. A Pointed Sermon. Many a discourse of an hour's length is not half as impressivo as this from an eccentric English Divine:— "Be sober, grave, temperate."—Tilua i. 8. I. There aro three companions with whom you should always keep on good terms:--- 1. Your wife. 2. Your stomach. 3. Your conscience. 11. If you wish to enjoy peace, long life, and happiness, preserve them by temperance. In. temperance produces :- 1. Domestic misery. 2. Premature death. 3. Infidelity. To make these points clear, I refer you : I. To the Newgate Callender. 2. To the hospitals, lunatic naylums, and work houses. 3. To the past experience of having men, read and suffered, in mind, body and estate. tar An Irishman in distress asked a gentle man for relief. ITe was repulsed with a 'go to h-11.' Pat looked at him in smelt a way as to fix his attention, and then replied : "God bless yer honor for your civility, for yer the first gintlernan that's invited me to his father's house since I came til Ameriky Galileo. Reading the other day how poor old Galileo was made to repent of teaching that the earth revolves upon its axis and around the sun, our pen unconsciously slid into the enormity of rhyme, and produced the following homely sort of sonnet, which is cordially dedicated to all who believe that there is no salvation out of the church that took so much pains to save the heretical astronomer 0 church infallible! 'Ewes well for thee To make old Galileo bend the knee; Not that the doctrine hurt thee which ho taught, But thy groat enemy is human thought: And how could men believe this mighty world Around the solar orb is yearly whirled, And not plunge into such tremendous thinking As soon to snake thy dearest tenets -7 Let others joke thee for this tilt at truth : Of all the thousands since thy harmless youth, Which thou haat tried, with more or less success, This was the most triumphant, I confess. If not the Sun, through heaven's eternal cope, It whirled a son of science round a blockhead Pope. Preserving Peaches. Tho following recipe forpreserving peaches was obtained from the wife of an experienced fruit grower. To twelve pounds of peaches, take six pounds of clean brown sugar, and ono pint best cider vinegar. Simmer the sugar and vinegar to. gether, which will make a clear syrup. Pour boiling water upon the peaches, and remove them in two minutes from the water, and wipe thorn dry without breaking the skin. Put them into the syrup, and boil gently until the fruit is cooked to the stone. Keep the preserves in jars, which must be closely covered and in a cool place. They should be inspected occa• sionally, and if a white mould appears upon the surface of the syrup, it must be carefully skim. ed off, and the syrup scalded and returned to the peaches. Tho peach tried last full were a seedling variety, ripened the last of October.— They were acid, but preserved the peach flavor in a high degree, which was retained by this method in a perfect manner. This is the most economical, and, to our taste, the very best preserver we know of. A Wery Remarkable Diskivery. A certain deacon in one of our Massachusetts towns, who was a very zealous advocate for the cause of temperance, some years since, one hot summer's day, employed a carpenter to make some alterations in his parlor. In repairing a corner of the mop-boatel near the fire place, it was found necessary to remove the fire-board; when lo I a "mare's nest" was brought to light, which astonished the workman most marvel. lonely. A brace of decanters, sundry junk bot tles—all containing "something to take," a pitcher and tumblers, were reposing cozily there in snug quarters. The carpenter, with wonder stricken countenance, ran to the proprietor with the Intelligence. "Well, I declare," exclaimed the deacon, "that is c-u-r-i-o•u-s, surely. It must be that old Capt. D. left those things there when he occupied the premises, thirty years ago. "Perhaps ho did," returned the discoverer; "but, deacon, that ice in the pitcher must have been well congealed, to have remained solid so long a timer—Boston Post. 110,.."Judge, you say if I punch a man, oven in fun, ho can take mo up for assault and bat tery 7" "Yes, sir, I said that, and what I said I re peat. If you punch a man, you are guilty of a breach of the peace, and can bo arrested for it." "Ain't there no exceptions?" "No, sir; no exceptions whatorcr." "Judge, I think you aro mistaken. Suppose, for instance, I should brandy-punch him; then what ?" "No levity in court, girl Sheriff, expose this man to the atmosphere. Call the next ease." We ALL DAD TO DO tv.—A half scorn of young urchins worn gathered around a com panion whose pained &co indicated that ho was very sick, the result of some juvinile indis. cretion. Tho little follows were busy offering their sympathy in various phrases. The truth was, ho had taken a "chow" of tobacco for the first time in his life, and having swallowed a portion of tho weed grew deadly sick. Ono lit tle follow, who seemed to understand morn ful ly his companion's situation than any of the others, gently placed upon the sick boy's shoul der his hand, and said in a voice of deep con dolence-- "Never mind, Jimmy, wo had all to go through this very severe trial I" cr "Julius, suppose there aro six chickens in a coop, and the man sells three, how many are they loft? "What time ob day was it ?" "What time ob day was it?' "Why, what do debble has dat to do with it ?" "A good deal, honey. If it was dark, dar wouldn't be none loft, that is if /you happened to coma along that way." "Look here, nigger, just stop them posonali ties. If you don't, I'll explode your head wid a pump handle, I will, sartain as Moses." er A lady had taken her morning bath, when to her surprise she found her invalid hus band standing at the door. She exclaimed— " What are you hero for ? I thought you were asleep." He replied— "l heard an angel troubling the water, and thought I would step in and get healed." Cr 'I hav'nt seen your wife lately, said a gentleman to another in an omnibus. 'No,' was the reply; 'she has retired for a while from society, for the purpose of attending to ono of those little affairs which add to tho duties of the census taker.' tar "Mien Got I rot vill de Yankee make next ?" as the Dutchman said the first time he saw a monkey." The Bewitched Clock, A YCIKEIiI STORY. About half-past eleven o'clock on Sunday night, a human leg, enveloped in blue broad- cloth, "might have been seen" entering Den• con Cophas Barberry's kitchen window. The log was followed, finally, by the entire person of a live Yankee, attired in his Sundaygo to• meotin' clothes. It was, in short, Joe May. weed who thus burglariously won his way into the deacon's kitchen. " Wonder how much the old deacon made by orderin' me not to darken his doors again?" soliloquized the young gentleman. "Promised him I wouldn't, but didn't say nothin' about winders. Winders is just as good as doors, of there ain't no nails to tear your trousers onto. Wonder if Sally 'II come down? The critter promised me. I'm afeard to move about here, 'cause I might break my shins over somethin' nuttier, and wake the old folks. Cold enough to freeze a Polish bear here. 0, here comes Sally." Tho beauteous maid descended with a plea sant smile, a tallow-candle, and a box of lucifer matches. After receiving a rapturous greeting she made up a rousing fire in the cooking., stove, and the happy couple sat down to enjoy the sweet interchange of vows and hopes. But the course of true love ran no smoother in old Barberry's kitchen than it does elsewhere, and Joe, who was just making up his mind to treat himself to a kiss, was startled by the voice of the deacon, her father, shouting from his cham ber door :—."Sally 1 What arc you getting up in the middle of the night fur 7" "Tell him it's most morning," whispered "I can't tell a fib I" said Sally. "I'll make it a truth, then," said Joel and, running to the huge, old-fashioned clock that stood in the corner, he set it at five. "Look at the clock, and tell me what time it is," cried the old gentleman. "It's fire, by thC clock," answered Sally; and corroborating her words, the old clock struck fivo. The lovers sat down again and resumed their conversation. Suddenly the staircase began to creak. "Goody gracious I It's fa ther," exclaimed Sally. "The deacon I by thunder I" cried Joe. "Hide me, Sally. "Where can I hide you I" cried the distract ed girl. "Oh, I know," said he. "I'll sqneoze into the clock-ease." And, without another word, he concealed himself in the case, and closed the door. The deacon was dressed, and sitting himself down by the cooking-stove, pulled out his pipe, lighted it, and commenced smoking deliberate ly and calmly. "Five o'clock, eh?" said he.— "Well, I shall have time to smoke three or four pipes, and then I'll go and feed the critters." "Hadn't you bettor feed the critters rust, sir," suggested the dutiful Sally. "No; smokin' clears my head, and wakes me up," replied the deacon, who seemed not a whit disposed to hurry his enjoyment. Burr•r•rr—whiez—ding I ding I ding I ding went the clock. "Tormented lightning !" cried the deacon, starting up, and dropping his pipe on the stores "what'n creation's that?" "It's only the clock striking five I" said Sally, tremulously. Whizz I ding) ding I ding! went the clock furiously. "Powers of mercy I' cried the deacon.— "Strikin' five 1 it's struck a hundred already." "Deacon Barberry I" cried the deacon's bet ter half, who had hastily robed herself, and now came plunging down the staircase in the wildest state of alarm, "what is the matter with th^ ,-lock ?" "Goodness only knows," replied tho old man. "It's been in tho family theso hundred years, and never did I know.it to carry on so afore." Whizz! dingl ding! ding! went tho clock `"It'll bust itself I" cried the old lady, shod• ding a flood of tours, "and there won't be no thin' left of it." "It's bewitched 1" said tho deacon, who re tained a leaven of good old Now England su• perstition in his nature. "Any how," said ho, after a pause, advancing resolutely towards the clock, "I'll goo what's got into it." "Oh, don't," cried his daughter, seizing one of his coat-tails, while his wifo clung to the other. 'Don't!" chorussed both the women W q t . l ort -r go my raiment," shouted the old den eon. "I ain't Mbar(' of the powers of dark ness:' But the women would not lot go; so the con slipped out of his coat, and whilo, from the sudden cessation of resistance, they fell beavi• ly on tho floor, ho darted forward, and laid his hand upon tho clock-case. But no human power could open it. Joo was holding it in• side with a death-grasp. The old deacon began to be dreadfully frightoncd. He gave one more tug. An unearthly yell, as of a fiend in dis tress, burst from the inside, and then tho clock case, pitched headforemost at the deacon, fell headlong on the floor, smashed its face, and wrecked its fair proportions. Tho current of air extinguished the lamp—the deacon, the old lady, and Sally, fled up stairs, and Joo Afar weed, extricating himSolf from the clock, of footed his escape in the same way in which he entered. The next day all Appleton was alive with tho story of how Deacon Barberry's clock had been bewitched, and though many believed his ver sion, some, and especially Joe Mayweed, af• fected to discredit the whole affair, hinting that the deacon had been trying the experiment of tasting frozen eider, and that the vagaries of the clock existed only in a distempered imagi- nation. However, the interdict being taken off, Joe was allowed to resume his courting, and won the consent of the old people to his union with Sally, by repairing the old clock till it went as well as ever. NO. 37. a&EnovrptazL. From the Farm Journal. To Prevent Fly in Wheat. MESSRS. EDITORS : The wheat crop, in many parts of our country having been more or lees injured by the fly, permit me through the medium of your useful Journal, to recom mend brining the seed for the ensuing crop.— The benefit of this preparation has been ac counted for by some on the hypothesis of the insect egg being deposited in tho grain, and consequently destroyed by the soaking. Others assert the egg is deposited in the shoot, and if this bo the ease, the soaking of the seed can only deter the fly by the earlier and more vig cross start of the plant. But however opera ting; cqrtain I am, from experience, that this preparation of the seed, has the desired effect. I gave this preparation of seed a trial many years back, when the fly had been very injuri• ous for three or four years is succession. and my crops escaped, while those around, although in every other respect as carefully farmed and manured, were injured exceedingly. And,in:a recent conversation with an old farmer from a distance, ho observed, the wheat crop in his vicinity was much injured and straggled, but that his stood all erect, and had produced a full Crop. This difference he attributed entire. ly to having thus prepared his seed, and added, he had never known it fail to prevent the fly injuring the wheat crop. Farmers disposed to try the experiment, will accept the following hints. I proceeded thus :—Having bored and inch and a half augur hole on ono side the bottom of an open hogshead, I placed it on trussels on the barn floor, high enough to put buckets under to receive the brine when drawn off. Then from below, drive in a vile, andplacc over its point inthe hogshead, an old tin cup, perforated with awl holes—then half fill with water and a half bushel of salt. This done in the forenoon, to. ward evening the salt (frequently stirred) will he dissolved, when the wheat is poured in, fill ing to six inches of the rim, as this will admit of brine sufficient over the grain to supply the sinking of the brine by absorption. Early next morning the brine is drawn off, the grainapread on the floor, and pulverized lime (two or three pecks) spread over and mixed with it. This absorbs the moisture, and prevents the grains sticking together. As seed prepared thus swells considerable, there is of course not so many groins in pro. portion to bulk, and this makes it necessary in sowing the soaked seed, to grasp larger hand fuls than when sowing dry seed, otherwise the seeding may he thinner than intended. Mater Co., Aug. 10, '53. The Thriftless Farmer. Tho Fort Warm Times, given the following life like portrait of a "thriftless farmer." The thriftless farmer, then, provides no slid ter for his cattle; during the inclemency of the winter; but permits them to stand shivering by the side of a fence, or lie in the snow, as best suits them. He throws their fodder on the ground, or in the mud, and not ;Infrequently in the highwny; by which a large portion of it, and all the ma nuro is wasted. Ho grazes his meadows In the fall and spring, by which they aro gradually exhausted and finally ruined. His fences are old and poor—just such ns to lot his neighbor's cattle break into his fields and teach his own to be unruly, and spoil his crops. He negleete to keep the manurefrom around the sills of his barn—if he has one—by which they are permaturcly rotted, and his barn de• stroyed. 110 tills, or skims over the surface of his land, until it is exhausted; but never thinks it worth while to manors or clover it. For the first ho has no time, for the last, he "is not able." Ile has a place for nothing, and nothing is its place. He, consequently, wants a hoe or a rake, or a hammer, or an augur, but lcnows not where to find them, and loses much time. _ _ Ile loiters away stormy days and evenings whon ho should be repairing his utensils, or improving his mind by reading useful books,or newspapers. He spends much time in town, at the corner of tho street, or in the snake holes, complaining of 'hard times,' and goes home in the evening, pretty well 'lore.' no hits no shed for his fire-wood—conse quently his wife is out of humor, and his meals out of season. Ife plants a few fruit trees, and his cattle forthwith destroy them. Re 'has no luck in raising fruit.' One-half of the little ho raises is destroyed by his own or his neighbor's cattle. His plow, dray, and other implements, lie all winter in the field where last used; and just ai lie is getting in a hurry, the next season, his plow breaks, because it was not housed and properly carers for. domobody's hogs break in, and destroy his garden, becauso he had not stopped a bolo in the fence, that he had been intending to atop fora week. Ho is often in a great hurry, but will atop and talk as long as ho can find any one to talk with. Ho has, of course, little money, and when he must raise some to pay his taxes, Itc.,he raises it at a great sacrifice, in some way or other, by paying an enormous shave, or by selling his scanty crop when prices are low. }leis a year behind, instead of being a year ahead of hisbusiness—and always will be. When he pays a debt, it is at the end of an execution; consequently, his credit is at a low ebb. If the Printer wants a quarter of beef, or a few bushels of oats or potatoes, on his bill, out farmer "has none tcopare."