(-7.,L-37,1 f 0 ,eO.N t , 4 , r, ! 'ii; ')v• I , \ , . •!,, ~4I ./ ~ / ','• 1 5 4 - ,r: ES . - 5 ~.. i ~ : ! ~ i :i. , 1 .. _ ) ',. .. x , ,„ , ~ ,-., 7 t. 1 ' 7 4 , L'd i . : 1 4 ; .' .., 4 I I : $,, h 1, , - ; • • • • i'l \:-.,.;: ,j' ii, . • - I !,,'-: '. f ; _ I . 4; : . 7 ~,, , -... :, . . . •.,-... , f-„,. 7 , , ,;,,, ' 4,0 , . ,1 . . .... : WILLIAM BREWSTER,,,,„ , ~, SAM. G. WHITTAKER, J elect HIAWATHA. A Heston man (John Smith) has let oat the +met dale authorship of Hiawatha. He says I.migrellow hod nothing w•halet•er to do with nit it was written by Lint Smith ft contract with Barn. 111,1. trIQ ,11 , 211( . 1, of Longfellow by laying a wager of “twice five thousand dui :4,i" that he could not remain silent for six months. But we will let him tell the rest of hi Flory in trochaic measure Next the poet he engaged-- AL., John Smith, by mortabl called Cave ine money--paid me freely, fu eomand fur him the poem. At first I. wrote in :wing rhyme With measure. cadence, so at: A simple thrilling Indian stoty, Filled with mist and legends hoary Or our hills and lolly mottittains, Or our streams and gushing rountaitis, Or the dark hluesliy that quivers, O'er our deep majedie rivers, Or.our coccrn, rude, (ir our woods' deep,olitmle, 1,,0 1111 . , rolling waves, 111 . our patriot fathers' graves. Or the p: rill once belore them. the green grass growing o'er them, "fill my sonl seemed all on fire, Soaring like all eagle : limit riv chockol 11i , 4111-- litou s i,t /1,:. mill time, Nonwnw. Smith, pray leave thy 8 , 11180 j .1 V., it a 1,1; JI; lu eaten the pent, A t A 11;1v In en .di law) and vlialT; "For tho, hearts SO 11,511 mid simple, bolii•vo that in all ages -Every !Inman heart is human, "Writ with little skill of song...craft ; "Call it Song at iliawatiia ; in and gems, and flowers— awl tufts of crimson berries— ( )1.1 stone walls—neglected churchyards, ‘.l Lintel v phra,e, —tender pathos— "llisna iworprinis—llapping eyries -4•Stinshinc--nnuovdtine—lternn--benver- • and iniiings--strivings—yearnings, "Eugl,*.; flapping—ever singing. "lit the land of l'at-kintatnes.— "In the land ul U•liejtistt,t" Dacutalts. t Ojilieways. did IJisciil;in . 1 , 0,n the Phil:ple!phin Iltilhtin THE OUTCAST AND HER CHILD. A STORY OF T I.; SNOW STORM. n Every woe a tecr 11131 y Except a fallen sistor . 3 Amu, "•. young female was found by the polite, ..NYllll , l,lllg about the streets during the hei t the sbatn. ;;he Inv, Gttrrliiul awl m ''iitlitttl itt her armn. She teas taken to the ;;ahem house. Such is n brief paragraph that appeared in the newspapers among the incidents of the recent severe snow storm, and which compressed within five short lines a tale of wretchedness and woe more substantial and infinitely more terrible in its dreadful reality than the stories of the sufrerings of love-lore damsels, and the troub:es of high born dames. with which the writers of ro mance are wont to excite the sensibilities of their readers. There arc thousands who would shed tears, free as rain,over the fic titious sAhrings of Ming:nary characters ; who would peruse the paragraph quoted above, perhaps, without giving it a second thought, and certainly with.mt feeling a sympathetic pang fur the barefoot mother and her halinaked babe, wandering, chill ed to the heart, through the deserted streets, with the howling storm enveloping them in a snowy shroud which they Joust have found had they not obtained shelter. How sad the task to look back at the • history of the '•young female" of the newspaper paragraph. How fondly was she loved by her dear mother, and how little did the doting parent—who anticipa ted her every wish, who carefully shield ed her from pain and from harm, who watched her• anxiously as she grew from babyhood to girlisimess, and who felt • pride and love, glowing in her heart as she saw the slender girl ripening into the blooming woman—how little did that do ting mother dream of her pet wandering through the streets—with the child of shame in her arms— through a furious winter storm, with no covering to hor and no roof for her head. In this instance it was tho "old tale so often told." The winning face and the bland smile, with the serpent under the maslc—and when, by smile and deceit the victim was fascinated to her ruin, and her weak heart was tnade captive, and her re putation stung to death, she was left to follow it to the grave alone or live on and bear her burthen of shame, and support her little one ns best she might. As usual there was scant charity for the•fallen errs- ture, and the poor deceived and deserted dupe sought temporary relief fur her sor rows in strong drink. This bad recourse at best, only plunged her still deeper into the abyss of rms. It would be a sad story—could its & tails be laid bare—the progress of that bro. iiun. and ruined toyulita fwiti tba ,iine she took her first step in her downward career, until the police found her wandering about with an infant in her arms. Those who were in their on•n warm homes on that rough night and who only took a shudder ing glance through their lace curtains at the furious storm without, can lone but a feeble notion of the sufferings of the barefoot mother and her famishing child. Let those who dreamed of flying half•na. Iced front their blazing dwellings, and of saving nothing front the wreck of home but the babe in their arms lot them but imaging that the flames had devoured up everything—home, friends, reputation, hope—all—and if they will but fancy that the wintry storm comes down fast and fu• rious when ruin overtakes them, and they are thrown desolate and friendless into the streets, with their helpless babe—then they may conceive the sufferings of this wretched outcast barefoot mother, with her shivering charge hugged close to her warm breast. There is certainly something radically wrong in the social system that suffers such things. The villain who accomplish. ed all this ruin escapes unwhipt of justice, and goes through the world seeking new victims, while his dupe and his child are spurned by society, and are only rescued from death in one frightful shape to find it perhaps in some other form critic Ily terri ble. There are many sad stories of long suf fering hidden in short paragraphs, and the newspaper reporter is apt to learn in his professional experience that each day there are scenes enacted in the great Dra ma of Real Life that for pathos and terror shame the most successful writers of fic tion. To our thinking the barefoot wo man and her child in the streets, in such a storm as that of Saturday night, realign as profound a depth of wretchedness and destitution as ever Dickens portrayed or Hood sang of. LAUGH ANDiEHEALTHY. We regret we are unable to name the writer of the following. 'Vito philosophy of mirth here presented, has been a favor. ite "dogma" with us, in public and private fur years. We give it a place at this time that it may stimulate our readers to adopt its teachings, and profit by the practise during the coining year. "Professor Plogel devotes 270 pages to a profoundly philosophical investigation of the origin, use, and benefit of laughter generally, and treats of its different can nod aspects under thirtpseven distincnt heads. lie is able to inform us how to judge a man's character and disposition by bearing hint laugh. The melancholy man's laugh is a poor hi, hi, hi!.-the choleric temperament shows itself in a he, he!•-- the plegmatic in a cheerful ha, ha, ha!" anti a sanguine habit is betrayed by its own characteristic, ho, ho, hp!"—J!'est• WillSier Review. Two hundred and seventy pages devo ted to laughter! But not too many. As a remedial agent nothing equals it. One hearty laugh every day, will cure each and all who are sick, or any way ailing of whatever, and keep those in health always well ! The laugh cure will even beat the water attic, potent as it is. And the two combined, if universally applied, would soon close every apothecary shop, lay ev ery physician, water cure included, on the shelf, and banish every form of disease front among men. All its giggles effectu ally stir up every visceral organ, churn the stomach and bowels more effectually than anything else can possibly do—hence the easy laughers are always fat, hurry the blood through the system tvith a real rush, burst open closed pores, and cast out mor bid matter most rapidly; for how soon does hearty laughter induce free perspi ration, set the brain in motion to manufac ture emotions, thoughts, and mentality, as nothing can excite it ? and universally practiced would be worth snore to the race than if California deposits covered the whole earth ! Only when fully tried, can it be duly appreciated. Laughter is life ; while sadness and long faced sedateness is dea!lt. A medical neighbor tells the following: ..NV Idle on a picnic excursion with a par. ty of young people, discerning a crow's nest on a a rocky precipice, they started in great glee to see who would reach it first. Their haste being greater than pru dence, some lost their holds, and were seen rolling and tumbling down the hill side, bonnets smashed, clothes torn, pos tures ridiculous, &c., lint no one hurt.— Then commenced a scene of the mi , st vio lent and long continued laughter sit' which being young people well acquainted with each other and in the woods, they indul ged to a perfect surfeit. They roared out with merry peal on peal of spontaneous laughter; they expressed it by hallooing when ordinary laughter became insufficient is express the inerrimen " LIBERTY AND UNION, NOW AND FOREVER, ONE AND INSEPARABLE. HUNTINGDON, PA., WEDNESDAY, JANUARY 23, 1856, own ridiculous situations, and those of their mates ; and over afterwards the bare men tMn of crow's nest, occasioned renewed and irrepressible laughter. "Years after, one of their number fell sick, became so low that she could not speak, and was just about breathing her last. 'Our informant called to see her, gave his name and tried to make himself recog- nized, but failed, till he mentioned the crow's nest, at which she recognized him, and began to laugh and continued every little while renewing it, and from that time began to mend, recovered, and still lives a memento of the laugh cure." The very best application •f laughter is in connection with intellect, as in the soul•stirring, speech where some public folly or wrong is held up to merited ridi cule—the location of mirthfulness at the side of casualty indicating their conjoint exercise. But we laugh wisely or foolishly, at something or nothing, at ourselves or oth ers, let us ha ha many times a day, and laugh off many of those ills and petty an noyances at once, over which too many now fret and cry. The hi hi hi. he he he, ha ha ha, ho ho he , mentioned in the above quotation ns signs continued laughter, continuity and appli. cation ; while a short ha ha of only two of character, are all true, but embody on_ ly the merest glimpse of those character istics disclosed by different laughs. Thus ejections, and the first the most forcible, signifies "good on the Spirit," but without consecutiveness. What such can do with a rugh, they will do first rate, yet will plod over nothing. Whole souled, spontane ous persons, laugh right out heartily and loudly while secretive persons suppress their laughter, and hypocrites change their countenance into an unmeaning leer.— Warm feeling but reserved persons hold in for a while, then burst into a broad hear ty laugh. Such will be cold and stoical on first acquaintance and towards uncoil genitals, yet warm and devoted friends when their affections, adhesive or conjugal are once enlisted. Discriminating per sons laugh with sense or only when soul. thing laughable is presented; while the undiscerning, laugh about as mach at what is a little laughable as at what is superla• lively ridiculous. Cast iron conservatives laugh little, and then by rule ; and proud aristocrats must keep on a dignified, hard faced look, while true republican familiars laugh freely.— Vain persons laugh much, at least with their faces, and at what they have said and done. Forcible persons laugh ' , good and strong," while tame ones laugh tamely.— Some laugh mainly with their faces, others with both face and body. The former is better for health than nothing, yet a thou sand times more healthy is the latter. The old fogy notion that to laugh out loud is decidedly vulgar, especially for a female is simply ridiculous. It is on a par with breathing, thinking, and every other natural curiosity. True, there is a coarse, gross, sensual, and an exceedingly vulgar laugh, yet its vulgarity consists in sensualism of the laughter, not Its hearti ness. There is a sad truth repeated in the above lines from the poets. The deser tion of friends in adversity is an ugly trait in our selfish human nature. 'rite world flies from the unhappy. The Priest and the Levtte pass as far from the sufferer as possible. It is only the genuine Christ. man—the good Samaritan, that over pauses to listen to the sorrows of the wretched, or to pour the balm of kindness into wounded hearts and hopes. Misfortunes are coldly treated as crimes ; and that, too, when prosperity or adversity depend upon a :nere accident, as uncontrollable as the tur ning of a card or the toss up of a copper. "There is one step more to make your Johnny Reckless, a drunken loafer, is sod life comfortable, and to advance your for. denly seized with the "California fever," tune, and that is well to dispose of yourself and rushes on board the first vessel up fur in marriage; certainly a business which the Golden land. Stumbling into a gold requireth grave consideration. Ride not mine, he returns at the end of five years post for your match; if you do, you may n millionaire, bespangled with diamonds in the period of your journey take Sorrow and hailed as "a jewel of a man." Fifth for your inn, and make Repentance your Avenue palaces open their doors to his host. If you marry, espouse a virtuous auriferous touch ; and he who was regar person a celebrated beauty like a fair, ded as a lazy, dirty, vulgar lout but a few will draw chapmen from all parts. Make years ago, is to-day courted and coddled choice of your wife by the ears, not the as a gentleman of most exquisite purity eyes. He that in a choice of a wife doth and parts. An accident has made him, believe the repoof of his sight, is like him what nature never designed him to be— who telling out the portion in his thoughts what the world calls a gentleman, takes the woman upon content, not exam- Springing from the same sod, we may ining her condition, or whether she be fit Point to one, the very opposite in or for him. I would not advise you to marry ganization and character of the coarse clod a woman for beauty; for beauty is like we have sketched, who was ' , born with summer fruits, which are apt to corrupt, a gold spoon in his mouth," early amis. and not lasting. Never marry so much touted to the tenderest care and most mil- • for a great living as a good life; yet a fair tied culture of all his faculties ; who is lo• wife without a portion is like a brave house ved and envied from his cradle up ; but without furniture you may please your. who, in early manhood, is suddenly bereft self with the prospect, but there is emit- of fortune and of health ; and, by a turn of ing within to keep you warm. Si vie MI- that tide, which often so mysteriously con r boo! pari these weddiugs are the happi. trels •the aditir, of men." finds himself HOW TO MARRY. The quaint, straightforward sense of the following, while it can hardly fail of seg• gesting thought, if read with attention, will, in a marked manner, illustrate the difference between the homely but honest counsel of our ancestors, and the namby pambyism of the present. It is an extrnct from ' , Herman Prudence," a little volume printed some two hundred years ago, and addessed to a friend : est where the parties are first matched be lore they marry. If a man marries a wo man much superior to himself, he is not so truely husband to his wife as he is una wares made slave to her portion. 15a sure you love her person better than her state, for he who marrieth where he doth not love, will be sure to love where he doth not marry, and love without ends hath no end. Love is the child of Folly ; its the strongest of the passions, and often found in the weekest minds. Young men are amorous, middle age affectionate, old men are doting. There is a great difference between a portion and a fortune of your wife if she be not virtuous, let her for tune be ever so great, she is no fortune to you. Its not the lusture of gold, the sparkling diamonds and emeralds, nor the splendor of the purple tincture that adorns or embellishes a woman—but gravity, dis cretion, humility, and modesty. A young Lacedemonian lass being asked by an ac quaintance of hers, whether she had yet embraced her husband ? made answer. "No, but he had embraced her." And there is little or no use to be made of a mirror, though in a frame of gold, encha sed with all the sparkling variety of the richest gems, unless it renders back the ' true similitude of the image it receives; so there is nothing of profit in a great por tion, unless the conditions, temper, and humor of the wife be comfortable to the disposition and inclination of the husband and that he sees the virtues of his own mind exactly represented in hers. Choose such a wife as may sympathise with you in your misfortunes, for marriage is just like a sea voyage-.-be that enters the ship must look to meet with storms and tem pests. If you have children, its better to leave them a competent estate with a pro fession than great riches without it ; for in the one there is a place for industry, but the other, like a lure, winning all birds of prey to devour them. lie that breeds his children well, though he leaves them little, gives them much. The ancients placed the stature of Venus by tki:t of Mercury. to signify that the pleasures of matrimony chiefly consist in the sweetness of conver sation. They who sacrificed to Juno as the goddess of wedlock, never consecra- te d the gall with the other parts of the sacrifice, but having drawn it forth they cast it behind the altar, thereby implying that all passionate anger and bitterness of reproach should be terminated from the threshold of nuptial cohabitation. If you will be happy, never have above one wo• man in your bed, one friend to your bosom and one faith in your heart." Summer Friends. "The friends who in our sunshine live, When winter comes are flown, And he who has hot tenrs to give Must weep those tears alone." "Deserted in his utmost need, By those his former bounty fed, (to the bare earth exposed he lies, With not a friend to close his eyes. "Is there none of all my halls have nurel, Page, squire, knight, groom, No one to bring Sonic blessed water from the spring To slake my dying thirst?" stranded and deserted upon "this bank and and shoal of Time," an outcast and .a waif, 1 *arum' forsaken and forgotten by tho very friends who swarmed around him in his golden dawning, and gaily fluttered in the sun-1 The Prospect shine of his brighter hours. The Baltimore These are sad views to take, and to ex- ! of t h e Southern r hibit, of human character and human prac- mars to put as inn Lice; but none who has lived observantly ! I Bible to wheat seed can deny the truth of the picture; and set- ginitin holds that dom a day passes that we nre not painfully ! !State may be coati reminded of .man's inhumanity to man," i die o f D ecem b er , a by the consideration bestowed on the ficti- often been 'node tiuus surroundings, and not on the charac- from December see ter of the individual. To see Society ta• remunerating price king off its hat, and bowing and smiling next year the Virg on some heartless, brainless money-bag, or a contingency, and some pinchbeck counterfeit of humanity,: believe from inforn lifted by accident into a transitory gleinn increased breadth o of prosperity ; while it shores its cold ! with the prospectiv shoulders against better men, whom rnis• of brendstuffs, has fortune's eclipse has cast into shade is en- this portion of the ough to make a misantrophe of the kindli- lowestcatmint, o f I est hearted philosopher, did not the tho't- in England and Fri fill eye look through and beyond the prea- two countries may 1 ent phantasmagoria of unequal conditions, m illi on b us h e l s. A and see the enigma solved by the retribu- be made up before live adjustments of a Future life. question arrises Nobody plies to come. It i that the crops of wl If nobody's noticed you, you must ho small, 1 jf • out the whole of N nobody'; slighted you, you must be tall ; • If nobody* bowed to you—you must be low, deficient, and L spec If* nobody's kissed you--you're ugly, we know, inees sod the interii II nobody's envied you—you're a poor elf; , If nobody's flattered you—Sattor yoursoli flour is at this mom If nobody's cheated you—you are a knitve, • suck. In fact, the i If nobody's hated you—you area slave, stuffs from these on If nobody's called you a "foul" to par face, Somebody's wished fur your book, in its place ; except the United If nobody's celled you a "tyrant" or "scold," mark, Sweden, Spa Somebody thinks you of spiritless mold ; If nobody knows of your limits but ''a friend," Egypt, it will pro f Nobody'll miss of them at the world's tool; 1 meet the deficienc y If nobody clings to your purse like a fawn, in France. Cattail run liku a hound when it's gone ; . If nobody'; eaten, his bread from your g Ina, nore, ot relied Nobotly . ll call you "a miserly bore;" 'or set,.n million btu It' nobody's slandered you—here is our pen— which the expendss Sign yourself Nvlicel.y, quick as you cam in fact been prod [From Household words] Spain, Poringal, Et FEMALE FACES. of the Danube can I know a woman who might have been furnish the balance the ancestress of all the rabbits in all the teen millions, of th hutches In England. A soft, downy-look mg, Rttr , placid woman, with long hair cos to France, the looping down like ears, and an innocent face of mingled timidity and surprise.-- in England, rangin She is a sweet-tempered thing, always thirty to fifty milli( eating or sleeping—who For this supply, say breathes hard obtained fr om when she goes up stairs, and who has as hte few brains in working order as a human send more "rain to being can got on with. She is just a Feted in wheat rnu. t man rabbit, and nothing more—and she he world durin the g looks like one. W 'iodations for that 3 We all know the setter woman—the best of all the types—gracc ful, animated, well-formed, intelligent, with large eyes and wavy hair, who walks with a firm tread but a light ono, and who can turn her hand to anything. The true setter is always married ; she is the real woman of the world. Then there is time Blenheim spaniel, who covers up hor feed in her ringlets, and holds down her head when she talks, and who is shy and timid. And there is the greyhound woman with I lantern-jaws and braided hair, and large knuckles, generally rather distorted.— There is the cat woman, too; elegant, stealthy, clever, caressing, who walks without noise, and is great in the way ef endearment. No limbs arc so supple as hers, no back bone so wonderfully pliant; no voice so sweet, no manner so endearing. Sho extracts your secrets from you before you know that you have spoken, and half an hour's conversation with that graceful purring woman has revealed to her every most dangerous fact it has bean your life's study to hide. The cat-woman is a dan gerous animal. She has claws hidden in that velvet paw, and she our draw bloods •vhon she unsheathes them. Then there is the cow-faced woman, generally of phlegmatic temperament and melancholy disposition, given to pious books and tee totalism. Aud there is the lurcher man, the strong visaged, strong-minded fe male, who wears rough coats, with men's pockets and large bone buttons, and whose bonnets fling a spiteful defiance at both beauty and fashion. I have sever seen a true lion-headed woman, excepting in that Egyptian figure, sitting with her hands on her two knees, and grinning grimly on the Museum world, as Buhastis, tho lion-head ed goddess of the Nile. urn wontun will cling to the chosen object of her heart like a 'posutn to a guns tree, and you can't separate her without snapping strings that no art can mend, lea vinga portion of her soul upon the upper leather of your allections. She will some times see something to adwire; awl when Iter fondness is once fastened on a fellow it sticks like glue awl molasses in a bushy head of hair. Mr•IV hen once infidelity can persuade 'nen that they shall ,lie like beast.;, they will soon be brought to lice like bea,t,, New York Bottom than twenty million exported to Englent glis h Board of Tra, erago of 915,030 eight million bushel eight vs ar.s front IS "If, then, as has b available surplus cx the United States world should be sup of course will still r even should we be u Haired amount, we t without a surplus f at the cease of the t that purpose prices! In conclusion, we wi Itiwing important hie ginian: Our harvt month in advance rope, and will cause season just at that p ey will be most seas in fact, when prices, must be irrespective English or continent It is now quite too talk about increasin! 1555. The extent determined weeks crop of the United trait than that of win and meal exported, few millions of dolla etc , much of which Between this and ph our farmers may cal for prices, and plant can be but little deal every species of gra ral produce will brit: least two or three ye much longer no one degree of certainty. safe for farmers to spring all the corn Spring Wheat for It also to grown with peas, beaus, etc., wi turns, and will probr of winter wheat itt to fore, if our farmers t all thing,' read• for tittinwr crops, thu v ; . rettly boleiittd,