, :l 1-.4 . J,i f. ', - Elantittgbon lar :„.A:t I. WILLIAM BREWSTER, I EDITORS. SAM. G. WHITTAKER, f COFRT AFFAIRS—August Term, 1857. TRIAL LlST—Fins? %rubs. Epoch Dean vs Joseph Barhang', Savage's Trustees vs Davis & Smith. Stevensfor use vs Henry & Smith, Thomas Clark's heirs vs Orison Clark, D. Grow's adm'r vs Abednego Stevens, Sterling & Alexander vs Bracken, Stitt & Co, X. Greenland vs Caleb Brown, Daniel Crownover vs Joshua Gorsuch, Bichsel Quarry vs Wise & Buchanan Patrick Kelly vs Penna. R. R. Co., ileorga AlcCrum vs Thos. Wilson. SECOND WEEK. IdeCuteheou vs James Entrekin. J. Creaswell vs Robert Hare Powel, Petur Crown over vs Daniel Shindle, Samuel Beaty vs Wm. H. Wharton, John Dougherty vs Abr. Taylor et al, Weiler, & Ellis vs C. Coats, Edwards for Stunkard vs Glasgows, Joel Moore vs B, X. Blair et al, Gemmill & Cresswell vs J. R. Cox, Admr. Same vs Same, Diary E. Trout vs Wm. A. King & Planner, Julia W. Glasgow vs John Brewster, :S. P. Glasgow vs. Same. GRAND JURORS. lhomas Adams, mechanic. Huntingdon, Peter H. Burke:, tanner, Warriorsmark. John Hishin, laborer, Porter, Jacob Cresswell, agent, Tod, Alex. Cunningham, merchant, Huntingdon, Jackson J. Fee, carpenter, Henderson, John Hunt, laborer, Cromwell, John Birst, farmer, Barree. Samuel Lutz, farmer. Shirley, John Logan, farmer, Henderson, David Long. farmer, Clay, Jealous Goruell, farmer, Cass. David Miller, farmer, Tod, Benjamin Myers, farmer, Shirley, T. E. MeCaban,larmer, Waroiorsmark, Caress Patterson, blacksmith, Porter, Samuel Rorer, farmer, Shirley, Benjamin Rhodes, farmer, Cromwell, William Rothrock, brewer Huntingdon, Thoruae F. Stewart, Esq., farmer, West, Jacob Stover, hornier, Warriorsmark, Thomas L. States, hatter, (once) Huntingdon William Thompson, farmer, Union. • Daniel Weight, farmer, Wurriorrwark. TRAVERSE JUROBS—FmeT WEEK. John Brown, farmer, Brady, John Brown, former, Springfield, John Beaver, farmer, Hopewell, John Bowls. teacher, Springfield, Thomus Bell, carpenter, Ilmee, Benny Boyer, fanner, l'enn, Alexander Cree,.farinet, Dublin, Alexander Coulter, laborer, Walker, John Carl, miller, Dublin, Abraham Crane,fartner, l ranklin, Basil Devor, tanner, Crornive 11. Jacob S. Devote, blacksmith, Shirley, William Dorris, Sr.. gentleman, Huntington, A. W. Evans, merchant, Oil...villa, Chance Geisinger, farmer, Union, Andrew Garner, fanner, Warriorsmark, Andrew S. Harrison, J. P., Huntingdon, Jesse Henry, carpenter, West, John M. Hight, mechanic, Cussville, r.ruierri,rtglmer Samuel Ilackedon, farmer, Tell,. Thomas It.farmer, 'Luling, Shirley, zlijah G. Fleck, plasterer, Clay, Diehard Junes, farmer, Franklin, -Nathaniel Lytle, saddler, Morris, John Love, fanner, Bernie, John Miller, saddler, West, Janice lilyton, fanner, West, Samuel McCord, farmer, Jackson, Joseph McCracken, farmer, Brady, John McClain, farmer, Tod, Jailed!. McWilli,ans farmer, Franklin, Alexander M. Oaks, limner, Barren, James Oliver, farmer, Franklin, Isaac Feightal, fernier. Penn, Samuel Porter, fanner, West, Daniel Peightal, farmer, Penn, Jacob S. Park, farmer, Cues, John Rupert, farmer, Clay, David Stevens, farmer, Clay, Alcxundei Stewart, fanner, Franklin, Lawrence Swoops, mechanic, Cassville, Hebert Stewart, inu-keeper, Jackson, Joseph Taylor, filmier, Clay, Samuel Work, (firmer. Porter, David Weight. limner, Warriorsmark,' John B. Weaver, farmer, Hopewell, Jesse Yoram, mason Brady. TRAVER . SE JURORS—St:coati W... George Bcll, fanner, Barren, James Baker. mason, Cromwell, David Hayrick, fernier, West, Jesse Cook, farmer, Tod, • George Cresswell, merchant, West, Dorsey Green, iron waster, Porter, William P. Goshoni, farmer, Tell, William Hutchison, fernier, Wurriorsmark, William 11. Harper, merchant, Jackson, John Henderson, Jr., farmer, Warriorsmark, Days Hamilton, manager, Franklin, Frederick Hoover, farmer,Penn, John Headings, blacksmith, Brady, James Horning, fernier, Barree, William Johnston, fanner, Warriorsmark, John S Isett, iron 'nester, Morris, James Long, fernier, Shirley, Joseph Law, merchant, N orris, Isaac Lininger, cabinet-maker, Huntingdon, John McCartney, farmer, Henderson, Samuel K. Melts, fanner; Brady, Jacob C. Miller, fernier, Barren, William Meredith, carpenter, Brady, Jonathan Miller, fernier, Clay, Jll:Cd. Miller, gentleman, Huntingdon, Jac, !, Neff, farmer, Porter, Noble, mason, Cromwell, Henry Neerhoof, farmer, Warriorsmark, Joshua Price, farmer, Tell, Charles Porter, merchant, Porter, Joseph Rackets, laborer, Shirloysburg. G. W. Robison, clerk, Shirley, den. Sipes, Esq., merchant, Cromwell, Abraham States, blacksmith, Walker, James Simpson, farmer, Brady, David Henderson, flamer, Franklin, Jul; 22,'57. Cheapest "Job Printing" Office ZN Titz cQUNTY. iird have now made such arrangements in our Job Office as will enable us to do all kinds of Job Printing at 20 per cent. cheaper rates Than any Office in the County. Give us a call. If we don't give entire satisfac tion, no charge at all will be made. i~'.Aßi~~ BLANKS MINKS I D 1 A Izi LE gi . 1 I #eneral assortment of Blanks of all de. .verlptionsJust printed and for sale at the "JournalOffie." Appointm't of Referees, Common Bond, Notice to Referees, Judgment Notes Summons, Veodue Notes Execution., Coustabltes Sales, Soh* }racist!, Subpoenas, Complaint., Deeds, 'Warrants, Mortgages, grits - Ont. Faso K Ovular Constahl. Its. ,*tiert V ottrg. 'Tis Well to llaveaitlerry 'Tis well to lm) u worry heart, However short we stay ; There's wisdom iu a merry heart, Whatefer the wort l may say. PI) iosophy may lift its head, Aud find out many a Haw, But give me that Philosophy That's happy with a ,;craw. If lift but brings us happiness ; It brings us, we are told, What's bard to buy, tho' riot Oriel try, With all their heaps of Then laugh away—let others boast, Wiutte'er they will of mirth; Who laughs the most may truly say He has the wealth of earth. There's beauty in a merry laugh, A. moral beauty too— It shows a heart an honest heart, That paid each man his due, And lent a share of what's to spare, Despite of wisdom's fears, And made the cheek less sorrow speak, The eyes weep fewer tears. The eye may shroud itself in cloud, The tempest wrath begin; If finds a spark to cheer the dark, Its sunlight is within I Then laugh away, let others say Whate'er they will of mirth; Who laughs the tnoA may truly boast 11,'s got the wealth of earth I Vuipit. [From the New York Independent.] Duty of the Church and Ministry IN THE UNITED STATES, In Relation to the Iniquity of Slavery. qf Silence and Consequent Conni• vance. The inquity of Slavery never could have grown to the enormity and extent of power and wickedness in which it now reigns, except by such connivance and silence. Had the thunders of the word of God against Oppression but been unsealed from the beginning, this iniquity would have emits nui have stood in a single State against an mein. muniention by the Church and Ministry. But when God has cointnatided His angels to loose the sea& and the thunders to ut ter their voices, there have been other an gels repressing them—conservative angels hoisting them in, and giving counsel that Christian expediency requires us to restrain them for tear of the agitations, disturbances tumults, earthquakes and lightnings shut might follow from them. See now the consequences of precuring peace, or deter ring a necessary conflict, by consesting rebuke sin ! The sin grows, and yes more and more afraid of it—afraid to .ay one word against it—till at length it bold ly challenges you as your master, and claims to be a sightsi institution ; and from beginning by a purchase'of your st- Nene, it rules over you and binds you hand and foot. The evil and the sin have grown to a magnitude that noise but God can cope with, and nothing but Ilis word can int.et. It has advanced steadily froth step to step, till now it is publicly enshrin ed and enthroned in the place of rigliteou.s tit,s, the tribunal of national justice. In this position, with these impious, unblush ing, daring claims, it is impossible to con front it with tiny authority but God's, that of God's word to the conscience. Every other consideration it has disregarded, ev ery obligation overridden ; all political combinations against it have been as fl.tx before the fire. Indeed, everything, in comparison with the word of God upon the conscience, is as unspun hemp In compa rison with a wrought cable ;'and that word is our last resort, our only refuge. It has never beets thoroughly tried, nor the con science roused by it, hut the pulley of si• lence and the reign of terror have preven ted it, and it is now fur the church and the ministry to conic forward and apply it. And, by as much as this remedy has been neglected and delayed, while the iniquity has been growing., and the evil rolling on, by so much is the greater zeal, energy, boldness and perseverance now requisite. It is not now a few words that will answer but a vial as of the seventh angel must be poured forth into the air, and the great voice from the throne out of the temple of heaven. All the collected and concentra ted thunders in the word of God are need ed. Objections C onsidered. But there are objections urged against this course, and it is proper that we meet them. The fanaticism, hypocrisy, and folly of the outcry about political preaching have been sufficiently demonstrated alrea dy, and 1 proceed to consider the only ma terial argument urged against bringing the word of God to bear upon the sin of rlltt very. 11 is seitt that preaching about such " LIBERTY AND UNION, NOW AND FOREVER, ONE AND INSEPARABLE." HUNTINGDON, PA., WEDNESDAY, JULY 29, 1857. sins gives offence to the People, and that, have devoured souls; her priests have painful, delightful sensation of genuine go mad, and do something desperate—per where it is well known that any particular violated my law, and have profaned mine Love. I liendled the article thoroughly—! chance tear a board off the pig-pen. truth brought into view will irritate a part holy thing; they have put no difference examined it. tasted it. rubbed it and smelt I But, my friends, there shonld be no ne of the congregation, and perhaps drive between the holy and profane. [snowed of it,—and yet, for the soul of me, I can't cessitv for love dying out while being con• thein away, it is not expedient to present the difference between the clean and the new tell what it is, nor even what it's like. nubialized. If you don't dream too much that truth, but a regard to the interests of uueientt,] and have hid their eyes from Enough to say, it's some sort of a nervous in its early stages—but have your eyes, the society forbid., it It Lo-d that suet' oly Silt aths, so that lum profaned among off •en m , liking root in the lwart, branch. your ears, anti your better judgment open, preaching rep • , ilieio, And her prophets have daubed tug out and tilossoming in the brain , and to Assiut ynu in making a choice selection people from t.ncuyr c., oient with uotemperel mortar. This is w;.en thoy come to nervous diseases, doe- for life--I'll stake my Bible against a last ;may the p,opk, , ,„., v is of oar guilt. It there ta• a reigning iniquity tors of medicine, doctors of divinity, end year's almanac, that you don't find it fiz• .• et o nc e , in the hoid, ...rid the Church and Ministry horse /1. o ors are alike oqu illy in the dark. zlingnut, just at the time when conjugal pios a,• c.,1 arrayed agates. it, they conspire Bei th,ro is ,1111,11.1 , -g it, as the unite. joys should begin to cluster, thicker than i• t. , s e into it if they keel) silence in ri•gerd lev r said when li.• took the bloghing.gas hornets and yellow•jackwe at the bong o, it c..nsent, and all that they do say Brother Burns. used ro plotprh up hole of a barrel of new cider. Love can society requite that it b and n claf. ••• so otle,slc., Now let us c issly, to what Ties o.ity for mortar to daub that sin. If a good deal of no. tieetry, never told us he so managed in its acute stage as to be. this objection summits ;.d we shall he stint ,in spit. iii ATrien or I nd ia they could what Love aria illy is, a lbeit h e has givers come chronic, and run in the family for at I ready to say, 'Get thee behold me, Satan r ,p,.,nis ~,t 'Against it, aid none would ob •us to understand something what it is dice. least a couple of generations. So mote It We shall Mid that it is really inoiiing but ' jeep, hut all would upplattd Because it . lie says— be ! a medern Simon Magus bargaining with is Nero, among us, u;,._.r us, is our own 1 "Love is like a dizziness. i N. 13 —T prepared the notes to my ace- It wilt one IA 3 pool 1,117; : Peter. in It is really taking fur grained flea churches, in out tll, 11 trtmials, the very I Gang Maid his ley,iii.,- '' no yesterday, with great fear and tremb not the truth nor the glory of God, nor the reason that reneers the application of God's I That is so, my friends ;Li o uefi.. aho ling, expecting every moment to be num tedemption of men from sin, is the object word imperious and unquestionably pr..p. dy tor any useful pursuit upon the f„, of bored among the things that used to be.— of the Church and the Ministry entrusted ier and necessary, is alleged against nip the earth, and annihilates his appreciation But, thank Heaven, we have dodged the whh God's word, but the selling and ren- : such applications, because it wit! Illitk, ,of anything that is really valuable. I sup- , comet this tune; and therefore you will ring of the pews. If it were demonstrated disturbance. I pose that when the fit is on, even miners' please sing the Dodge ology commencing that by this kind of preaching you could 1 'rho influence is dreadful on all our can't dig with the en e rfsy ot a woodchuck with— build up the society, and rent all the pews, views of truth, in permitting the preju- lin the last stage of consumption—and when We've dodged the Comet, aa i rl a k i t u ;f i r i d i ! then by these principles you would have • : dice against race and color to remain and they conic across a nugget, they probably . A narrow dodge, upon our word— this tried of preaching. Preach the truth grow, unopposed, uncorrected; and the look upon it as being worthless, as did lE•Hal•tablehguli I us you find it in God's word, If you can ' prejudice in favor, of Slavery to stand be- I sop's old rooster upon the jewel he clime- ! , ‘) -I'il (i os i l ° e r Pt,h i e l 75', Te l 's}?e i r 9 2,'tgo l , do it without giving offence, and just so wren us and out consideration of the sub- :ed to scratch out of a dung-heap. • And eke the darts from Cupid's bow— • far as you can do it in that way, with that ject it, the word of Clod It is only by I Love is a lazy, dreaming, high.ho.ing Glory I Halleluyah I insurance. ['reach the truth, so far as you gaiing at the truth filth open face, with htato Of exiA, ace, in which one either leaks ( Omit the elghty.fifth verse, and as ma- I can do it without damaging the pew-ren• the sail of self int e res t . le st , e nd prejudice on the world as a garden full of roses, with- ny more us you please,) tabs, but by all means rent the pew, ; for cant away, that we can see and acknowl• out a single thorn, or an immense field of Good Backers.-An the interests of the society are first to be edge even nor duty. A writer on the Canada thistles and not a solitary one in , Incident of Elphitu &limn. be consulted, and th e truth mu s t he sup. power of atdoe, and the causes that im- : blossom. When your preacher first expe- ' A long-bearded customer recently enter. pressed, and the minister who proclaims it pair it, notice s th e wevirig of veils as per I rienced a severe touch of the tender pas. ed a spiritual bookstore in New York and put away, if it damages those intere s t s , if ma's it ti , we e kt.,,i ng ia a ny naturally good' sion, everything, from the wood pile to the applied for an agency. He proposed to take it impsrils the revenue. eyes. is aecrlint of (h.• endeavor., of the henhouse, was crowned with roses bigger a large quantity of books to his part of the The statement and analysis of such an organ of vision to elsjust itself to the cease I th an flapjacks; end turkey•buzzards hov• country, 'away out west,' where he repro. objection are enough to refute it, and staa.p less vibrations ot the medium before it. Just ering over the csreass of attend mule see• rented that he could soon sell them, as he it wish shame. God never meant to have so, whatever veil Of expediency or self-im mod like so many Cupids poising their pin- was assured by the , invisibles."Phe en- His Word withdrawn front tue conflict a- terest bangs before i.e moral vision, if • inis above the bosom of sty sleeping Beau- terprising bookseller was of course deligh- gainst sin, and applied as a dray•liorse to there be any prejudite there, whether of i ty, ted with this prospect of a sale ; but his drag the finances of 1.: society up hill. cast or color, or a private am or specula I Unhappy Goldsmith, my brethren, once enthusiasm was somewhat dampened on When we see heaven °petted, and the two, or any ambitious project, neither the ! poetically exclaimed, in something like the long bearded gentleman remarking that White Hor-e, bearing forth in infinite di- heart nor the mind cat. steadfastly receive these heart-piercing words : • he had no money, and wanted the hooks vine glory the Wm dof God, and the ar- she light, or look to any noble is )ral end Oh i what is friendship but a name— entirely u pun credit, moos of heaven following Win upon white v ith a .Ih.nevolent, diAtoteit , sted, Single- I A .;', \ , j.,ho",„'„,milriittl:l::,:•,.:hs,l,l,,Mlflarne, ' 'Are you responsible I' was the natural horses clothed in fine linen, white and nest. The truth ry.limMuf,e, s od , the light i That leaves the wretch —A 8111,1.3. I inquiry of the merchant. al, do we expect the quasLer- master instead or sitinttreTingtaly bfruggle* end ior ..to-weep,” I k,,,,,,,, w hi c h___„,.. ) , lik e l y ~,, , ,e ct, y ., with a committee of gentlemen to meet wavers through a medium itself obscure i"a sheep,"—tee more natural. : 'What reidencea of your reliability can them, and harness them to the finances, ands unsteady. I But what says our text?—""l'is a fool's you furnish ?' the bagg,age.wagon, and the pay-master's The effect of suppressing the truth in wild dream of something that ne'er exis. 'I have the best of backers—men whose chest I God never meant that His word regard to any one thing on whiclaGod has I tence had." Now, my friends, you know names you know very well. should be changed from an Almighty war• given it to be spoken, extends to the sup. : very well that the woof of all dreams is The merchant's countenance brightened rior to a paymaster's drudge ; that its last pressing and destr uctiun of its power in ev- composed of threads spun by Fancy, and 'Very well,' said he, 'let us see your pa. end should be to meet the expenses of a cry direction, If the Ministry are muzzled, snore brittle than the bettms of a dilapidat• pers' ' - • -- -- - society, or to settle the bills fur costly tem• the souls of the people suffer. We have pies, toted of instructing and eddying read an account or a new and cruelly in soots. God means the society for has guidons instrument of torture, contrived wurd, the society to receive His word, the in Sicily, tor which the Neapolitan ty imt..tety to wait upon Ilia word, not ills rant had rewarded the inventor. It was teurd to wait like is ctic- thy• torture of being compelled to keep si ty, or like a sexton m • The I. ,:• under an iron mask and collar, so liinrch is the ;idler tar ' it -cr. wed upon tl.e face and neck, that any up, to set it on high, to 'mid ••• •' r• to the agony of pain by groans nut the Truth a mere cash cur:: 5 r ;,,,;,.xolinuations became impossible, and Uhurch ; the candlestick is t 1 Le every pain !oust be endured without the hold the light, not the light to • •., ray- bilgiit,t dentunstration, The effect of went for the candlesticic. oleti never such . intollerable enforced mascillar ri meant that Elis word should be tat sad gidity and silence under anguish was to curved Jnly according us a body of trustees congest and cramp the lungs and the heart, might determine would be for the interest producing suffocation. Just s ich must be of the Society. Arid if men. anywhere in the effect of it compulsory silence of the Our laud, are coming'into bondage under Ministry, before the sufferings and tor such ideas, and ,ettlitig awl unsettling tures of the dumb, ,o whose behalf we are ' ministers by theta, it is a perfect gangrene coniumtaled to speak nut. A congestiou of Simon Nlaguses in the church ; it is the of piety, a curivu Hee pressure of blood destruction of all purity, independence, driven back upon the heart, and all the manliness and power. God never meant dreadful struggles of suffocation in the Ito make the Church or the sanctuary an system, must ensue, The stillness of the enormous cradle with downy niches, in which men could be lulled to sleep by the music of the organ, the great end of the preaching being to pay the expenses at. tendunt on the eabbath's nap, the expenses of warming and rocking the cradle and providing pillows. Neither did lie mean that the Church should be like a ship, in the sides of which ministers, fleeing from their duty in Nineveh, might take their berths, and sleep out the voyage, having their own passage by concealing their mission. The sinfulness, debasement and shame, ! g stti ang. t• .1 as well asthe mischievous dostrui.tits ten ======----- 7 ='!"=---='!—=------------ dency of such views, cannot be too thor A SHORT PATENT SERMON °uglily reprobated and exposed. Thus i CALIFORNIA SERIES—NO. XXXI. saith the Lord, Stand ye in the ways and see and ask for the old paths, where is the good way, and walk therein and ye shall find rest unto your souls, But they said. •We will not walk therein. Also I set watchmen over you, saying. Beacon to the sound of the trumpet. But they said: e will not hearken. Therefore hear ye nations, and know, 0 congrega. Con, what is among them. Hear, 0 earth ; behold l will bring evill upon this people, even the fruit of their thoughts, because they have not hearkened unto my words, nor to my law, but rejected it. A conspiracy is found in the land, a conspir acy of her prophets in the midst thereof, Wore mitring , lion revemiegt he prey a they pulpit under such despotism would cry louder to God fur vengeance than the most terrific howlings of agony. God will take nil excuse for silence. '•lf thou forbear to deliver thorn that are drawn unto death, and them that are ready to be slain, if thou sayest, behold we knew it not ; cloth not He that pondereth the heart consider it, and He that keepeth thy soul doth not He know it? and shall Ile not render to every wan accenting to Fits works ?" C. BY DOW, JR. .D'Orville' sends me the following text, I will expatiate a little upon it this morning: What is Lute?-7i3 a fool's blind dream Ut stanething that tio'er existence had; It vanishes 'nuath the daylight's gleam— I And when it is gout, the fool goes mad 1 I • MY HEARERS It you think that your lonely preacher, through practical experi ence, is more capable of giving a perfect analysis of Love, than anybody else, you sit there under a heavy mistake. True, in my more susceptible days—and before I took to chewing tobacco—l often felt a slight, mysterious jerking at the heart strings, but only once the real, magnetic, galvanic, spasmodic; cornlsive, soothing; ed moon ; the whole fabric is flimsy trash ut the best. Then, if Love be nothing more than an idiot's dream—gilding every• thing. and convertmg airy nothing into a seemingly Build something, and yet noth ing after all—then, I say, Love wont pay for candle-light—much less for either its lai;annut or its brandy•cocktails. My la mented friend Moore says, most pathetic ally : New days may mime with mildor light, Or shed a brighter heats ; Bet thoro's walling half so sweet in life As Love's yoong dream ..Love was mice a little boy;" and full or mischief ; and then all his dreams, though very sweet, were notwithstanding„ very foolish ; and he doubtless found so, when he came to grow up and know the differ ence in the value of a kiss and a five dol lar gold piece, or that of is leg of mutton and a pretty ankle. My text, brethren. wens to give us to understend; that when Love's silly dream vanishes before the broad daylight of Reason, the dreaming f..0l is very likely to go mad as a March hare. If this don't hold good in all in- stances, I tell you, my friends, that in a majority of cases, it will apply as tenacious ly as hot glue in a nigger's wool. Hear the same poet rave, in his crazy second thought : Oh I the days are gone when Beauty 'aright My heart's chain move-- When all my dream, front 'nom till night, Was love, still lore Here, toy brethren, you can easily see the madness protruding an inch or so Mark how the lellow sighs, like a furnace with that distrussful !"—how he takes on, to think that the days are forever past when he had little else to do, and 'vas fit for nothing else, than to crawl under a gooseberry bush and dream of "Love, still love,"—or sit and doze while Beauty was manufacturing a halter for his heart, and perhaps for his neck. That the girt. ed bard of Hibernia's Green Isle died of a softening of the brain—after he hod drunk of love and wine to their very lees—is a melancholy fact. That the dream of love "vanishes 'neath the daylight's gleam," is perhaps inure true than poetical. All !overlie but dream during the uncertain moonight 'of cour t . ship. They awake to a true, sober sense of their situations only in the broad glare of matrimony. And then, if they find the first flame extinguished, arid beyond the rower . 9f rekindling, it is no wonder they Thereupon the customer presented the following document : 'To whom it troy concern : We, the undersigned, having been acquainted spir itually with Mr.-, of -, consul, for many years, recommend him as perfectly reliable, and would not be afraid to trust hint to any amount. GEORGE WASHINGTON, THOMAS JEFFERSON, HENRY CLAY, MOIL. PAINE, JOHN Mivrox, and others. "Through Jane medium.' The bookseller remarked, that the back ers were good lithe medium :vas reliable ; bu: he thought, on the whole, he would prefer to keep the books. The customer hereupon denounced the bookseller as an imposter, telling him that he did not be lieve his 'own doctrines, and that the spir its would expose his duplicity to the world. Of this he felt assured by the spirit of prophecy within hint. The bookseller was not convinced Mr. Buchanan on Polygamy. Nlajor Jack Downing thus relates a con versation he had with Mr. Buchanan an Utah t'Old Back is a good deal riled with Brigham Young, who with his one hun dred wives, have created a rebellion— when the old Buck hasn't one that he can call his own. If one woman created a re bellion in the garden of Eden when she had a man and ought to bin satisfied, it isn't wonderful that one hundred should do the like in Utah, having only one man among 'cut all ! Bays I, 'Bucky, did you ever see union and harmony where there wan a hundred s4imin and but one man— it's nit' ull outer to expect it—and the on ly way to bring matters to a sartin point. is to see eadfi woman has her man.' 'Yes, but,' says old Buck, 'then every man would be obleoged to her his woman.' 'Yes, sartin,' sez I. 4 Well, then,' sez he 'l'a be blamed for the hull of this trouble and say I'd sot 'em a bad example.' Iles so,' sez I, 'and since you druv so many women to take up with one man brkase you refused to take your sheer, it's your duty to make 'em peaceable us they are, or else break the hull thing up by reforming and setting every old bachelor a good example by takin ono of these do. ludea women at once.' Laugh and grow fat, VOL. XXII. NO. 30. The Mother's Inflnoue, The solid rock which turns the edge of the chisel bears forever the impress of the leaf and the acorn received long, long since, ere it had become hardened:by time and the elements. If we trace back to itc fountain the mighty torrent which fertili • zed the land with its copious streams, or sweeps over it with a devastating flood, we shall find it dripping in crystal drops front some mossy crevice among the distant hills; so too the gentle feelings and affec tions that enrich and adorn the heart, and the mighty passions that sweep away all the barriers of the soul and desolate socie ty, may have sprung 'up in the infant bo som in the sheltered retirement of home. "I should have been an atheist," said John Randolph "if it had not been for one recollection ; and that was the memory of the time, when my departed mother. used to take my little hands in hers, and caused me on my knees to say, 'Our Fa ther which art in heaven !" Dr The manner in which editors are treated out west is scandalous. No re spect whatever is paid to these unfortu nate beings. Only listen to the statement of the editor of the Kansas Canton Ball, who describes in graphic style, peculiar to himself, the reception lie met with from the pro-slavery men after he had return ed from a four days visit in the back set tlements : ''On our way to our sanctum we were met by a delegation who began presen ting us with vegetables, &c. One of them thinking we were fond of game, threw us what they no doubt supposed to be a coon, but which we (being a judge of game) thought savored like a cat of the pole species. They placed us on a pole, intending to do us honor, as it had been formerly used as a flag-staff, and conduct ed us through the town and then to the outskirts, where they began stripping us. When they had divested us of all but om left stocking, they procured a bucket of black paste, resembling tar, also a bag of feathers. They then proceeded to make a very warm suit for winter, feather dined with paste. After they had all saluted us Ly 4 ...itt ng nor nose, ("winch is the custom ary salute between the pro and anti-sla very men) they told us it was time to go which, after receiving a concussion in the rear, we did. We were surprised to hoar when we went to the office that we had been tared and feathered. The foreman assisted by the devil. fell to work anti picked us, we all the time experiencing the sensations supposed to belong to that •insect' called 'goose.' We are .tow 'fea therless' but the tvr will stick to us as long as we live. P. S. The feathers are for sale at out office. The whole lot for sale for $7,515, ANOTHER HINT TO LADIES INTIM CAR. —The hint to ladies in the curs' which some time agn feund its way into the newspapers, receives an appropriate coun terpart in the following : The seats were all full, except one which was occupied by a rough-looking Irishman—and at one of the stations, a couple of evidently well-bred and intelli gent.young ladies came in to procure seats, but seeing no vacant ones were about to go into a back car—when Patrick rose hastily and offered them his seat, with evi. dent pleasure. 'But you have no seat yourself, responded one of the young la dies with a smile—hesitating, with true politeness, as to accepting it. 'Nicer ye mind that,' said the Hibernian, ‘yer wel come to't ! I'd ride upon tee cow-catcher till New York, any time, for a smile from such jiattemanly ladies !' and he retreated hastily into the next car, amid the cheers I of those who had witnessed the affair. nor An Agricultural Society up in Vermont, offers the following premium : A beautiful silk dress (the color and qual ity to be optional with the fair recipient) to the maker of the best loaf of bread-- tip competitors to be unmarried ladies, and the committee of judges to consist or bachelors and widowers. It is generally thought that bachelors in search of good housekeepers will be on hand at that ag ricultural lair. The following is the transcendental for "Miss, will you take my arm !" 'Young lady will you condescend so far to sacrifice your own convenience to my pleasure, as to insert the five digitals and a part of the extremity of your con tiguous arm through the angular aperture formed by the crooking of my elbow against the perpendicular portion of my framer "OLD GRIMES IS DEAD."--Mr. S. F. Grimes died recently in Georgia, at dm age of one hundred and ten years.