Pierre roared with rapture and delight, as well he might. The sly oid campaign er had thrown into the Seine nothing but the worthless old pocket book. Jules did not require his worthy father in-law's laughter to tell him what meant the pocket-book in the pie. As soon as it, was brought out and the lettering read, i the veteran's ruse was clear. Jules now enjoys his twenty-five thousand livers id rent, and loves his wife as much as if she had only brought him her heart for a dow ry. As to his scruples, he now says he ought to have been glad to get Marie, al though she had been a queen. Jules is at this day a distinguished and honored advocate. AGRICULTURAL. 'Such is the strength of art, rough things to shape, And of rude commons rich enclosures make., HINTS TO YOUNG FARMERS.—We are in the daily habit of hearing the casual ties and misfortunes of life, and particu larly in the management of the farm, as cribed to bad luck; and on the contrary, of hearing the blessings, comforts and en joyments of life, imputed to good luck; as though these things were casual. and did not depend upon the discreet or indis creet conduct of those whom they befell. If we will but scan this matter proper ly, we shall be convinced that our good and bad luck must generally comes through our own agency, and that we are in a great measure left to choose our own fortunes as far as this mattar is concer ned. The faithful practice of known du ties; with due restraint upon our baser passions, seldom fails to produce good luck while indolence, extravagance, and 'he lack of probity and good will to our fellows, are almost the certain precursors of bad luck. Anil even though our crops may grow from the exuberant bounty of nature, and although our patrimonial wealth may extort for us the fickle ap plause and sycophancy of the multitude the pleasures which they afford are utista , ble, and are not to be compared with thos that result from prudent industry and rec titude of conduct--from a consciousness of havin4 performed, and performing the high duties imposed upon us, to our fami lies, to society, and to our Goa. - - Let us trace some instances of good and bad luck, and in the business of the farm, to their palpable causes. The diligent farmer, who personoally superintends his own business; who rises before the sun, sees that his laborers are at their appointed business, that his farm stoek are in good condition, his imple. merits and fences in order, and his work timely and properly done, is pretty cer tain of enjoying a good round of good luck in all his forming operations. lie will have good cattle, good crops;and good profits; and if he takss care to bring up his sons in the way of their father, lie will have good luck with his family. On the other hand look at that man who gossips away a portion of his time at pub - lie houses, political clubs, and among his, neighbors; and who trusts the manage ment of his affairs entirely to the discre-' tion of others. and ten to one but you find him an heir to ill luck that his land is annually becoming poorer, his crops light er, his cattle diminishing, his fences and buildings dilapidating , and his fortune go ing to wreck. Who does not see in such a man a fountain of bad Eyck. Our young readers have most of them, perhaps, heard of the bad luck that befel the man who neglected, in time, to get a nail in the horse ishoe; the horse became lame, and ultimately died; so that the ow new lost his horse for want of a nail. The same bad luck attends him who ne glects his fences; a rail or a board is down; the cattle get in and destroys his crops, and lie is obliged to buy bread for, his family. The drone too, is generally' late with his work; he plants and sows late . --ane suffers the harvest to waste in the fitld, before his crops are gathered or 11 housed. The diligent farmer, destroys the weeds that rob his crops, and the brushes that uselessly encumber his grounds, he care fully economises and applies his manures, destined to feed his crops, and keep up the fertility of the soil; and he brings the best portion of it, though naturally wet and unproductive, into a productive state by a system of judicious draining. All these are certain precursors of good luck. Now mark the farmer of almost inev itable bad luck upon that farm down yon der, who, although in the harvest time, is from home, gone to attend a petty law suit, in which lie is a party. Look at the fences, the buildings, the bushes, the, weeds, the swamps and the crops; at eve-' ry thing. Du they not all betoken bad luck ? and speak in language not to be' misunderstood, that the unfortunate mas ter is going down hill. We have one more sug , ,4estion, which may extend to the lair sex. Idleness is, the parent of tattle—of mischief. Now the man or woman who attend ;to their o wn business as they ought, have no time i or disposition to intermeddle with the d,mestle alibis o f oill;crs—they have no, interest in sinking the reputation of their t h e did not return them as cash collected,, neighbors—hut would rather raise them to although he knew it was cash as soon as their own level. Their habits, therefore, tend to diffuse good luck to all around called for. Now he presents the order them.--Cullivafor. for ten years, and pockets all the money . , . _ _._ _ instead of giving the State half. The only thing we regret is, that Mr. • . , /1 r - 0, 1 , ..(. '4711. ; ' ) Blair, the county treasurer, did not se lect all those inure than six years old, and tell him as he told Crain, they were too old . l'" to pay. ' A THE JOURNAL. 'One country, one constitution, one destiny limatingdon, Nov. 6, 1839. Democratic .Intimasonic CA NDIDATES. FOR PRESIDENT, GEN, WK H. HARRISON I , oli VICE PRESIDENT DANIEL WEBSTER, FLAG OF THE PEOPLE! Kr single term for the Presiency and the office adminiiitercd for the whole P , EO- PL E. and not for a PARTY. V- A sound, uniform and convenient Na tional CURRENCY, adapted to the wants of the whole COUNTRY, instead of the SHIN PLASTERS bromslit about by our preset) RULERS. V.ECONOMY, RETRENCHMENT, and RE FORM in the administration of public affairs, ;Tired of Experiments and Experi menters, Republican gratitude will reward unobstrusive merit, by elevating the sub 'alters of WASHINGTON and the desciple of JEFFERSON, and thus resuming the safe and beaten track of our Fathers,—L. Gazette. Electorial Ticket. JOHN A. SHULZE, JOSEPH RUINER, Selectors Ist Disirict LEVIS PASSMORE, DwALLADER EVANS. do CHARLES WATERS, 3d do JON. GILLINGHAM, 4th do AMOS ELLMAKER, do JOHN K. ZELLIN, do DAVID POTTS, sth do ROBERT STINSON. 6th do WILLIAM S. HINDEU, 7th do J. JENKINS ROSS, Bth do PETER FILBERT, 9th do JOSEPH H. SPAYD, 10th do JOHN HARPER, 11th do WILLIAM M'ELVAINE, 12th do JOHN DICKSON, 13th do JOHN M'KEEH AN, 14th do JOHN REED, 15th do NATHAN BEACH, 16th do NER MIDDLESWARI H, 17th do GEORGE WALKER, 18th do BERNARD CONNEI,LY, 19th do Gml. JOSEPH MARKLE, 20th do JUSTICE G.FORDYCE, 21st do JOSEPH HENI)ERSON, 22 , 1 do HARMAR DENNY, z 3d do JOSEPH BUFFINGTON, 2 4th do JAMES MONTGOMERY, 2 5th do JOHN DICK. Meta Election. Our readers will see by our advertising columns, that there is to be an election held on the 20th of this month to fill the vacancy caused by the death of W. W. Potter Esq., Next. week is the week of the Court, and our friends must act with activity and energy, if they hope to con tend the field at all. They must be up and doing. Should our friends nominate a candi date, as they assuredly ought. Let eve ry man be on the ground. Let every man, who desires to save our country from the ruin of Sub Treasurer's, broken banks and broken faith, turn out, and re cord his name against the destructives. Dedication. The new Methodist Episcopal church at Manor Hill, was dedicated on the 12th of October. A large concourse of people assembled, and listened to a thrilling and eloquent dedication sermon from Mr, Bond. The church is of brick, 60 by BO feet, with a basement story fitted up for class rooms. It was erected entirely upon the liberality of the members of that truly evangelical denomination. A residue of debt of $lOOO remained on the day of de dication, at which time $5BOO was prompt ly subscribed, and we doubt nut will be as promply paid. Let them go on in their good work, and they will be enabled to say when they return their talents to the giver of all good—"Lo: I have gained other five." The answer is written upon the heart of every sincere christian. A Snug Thing. The old law relative to Prothonatories, rendered it the duty of tie Prothonatory of this county, to pay one half of all mo ney collected above $l5OO into the State Treasury. Our old fox, honest oath ta king, and oath breaking Davy, has a snug way of whipping the d---I around the stump. Since 1829, he has been presen• ing the county orders %% hich were drawn in his 'avor for cost; and cocscquently The Journal to its Patrons. Our paper has now concluded its fourth year. The renegade yankee whose tent was pitched in this county but for six months, as our opponents said, is still here; and it may not be amiss, to call the attention of our patrons, tc the necessi ty of complying strictly to our terms. For fuer years have we lent our unceas ing exertions to render our Journal wor— thy of the support of all. No pains, no expense, has been spared. As regular as the returning Sabbath, we might say, has been our publication. Frank, fear less, and independent ; —we have dared to censure, in the severest terms, the crimes, the character, and the conduct, of those whose wealth, and whose power, was their l only protection from the execration of an indignant people. Alike to partisan friends, and partisan foes, our condemna tion has been bestowed when merited. If the people wish well for themselves, their National Treasure, and character, they will extend the hand of encourage ►nent, and support to that press which has independence enough, to beard the lion of power, in his den; and dare break over the land-marks of party fealty, to apply the lash to the misconduct of all politi cians. The miserable driveller, who is hand cuffed to the car of party vassalage,— whose jaundiced eyes sees crime in every act of his opponents,—and virtue in every deed of his friends, deserves no counten ance from the virtuous among the people. The party press which pours forth nothing but fulsome adulation on its party and its acts, is a st::::Ailinz block in the way of truth and right. Too common, and by far too much truth is there in the declara tion that "there is little else in the papers but falsehoael; and we say it in sorrow. If there be any who deserve the censure of , bringing that palladium of our rights into discredit, much of it must fall upon the conductors themselves. True, there is a morbid and disreputable feeling among many, that, that press alone is spirited, energetic, and interesting, which is spiced with the vilest charges against character; the less true, the better; and every column groaning with its weight of misrepresen tation, and culum iiy. Have we been severe'? Has our course been marked by conduct of apparent per sonal defamation? we tell it in bitterness of heart that the people delighted to lion or those, that to fell the truth of, was to track their course from infamy to power. What we have said, we believe to be the pure and immaculate truth. We have never, knowingly, stated ,that which we did not believe; and upon all occasions where we have found that we were mis• taken, the error has been happily retrac t ted. To our patrons we appeal, to decide, if such has not been our course? With these Mcts before them, we feel assured that we do not ask in vain, when we demand of our friends not only their exertions to sustain us, but the pay for our labors. There are many,—very many--by far too many, who have not paid us one cent since our commencement. To enable us to do as we ought, in order to:make our paper more valuable, we should have our pay annually. We do not ask ►t as a favor, we demand it as right. We give them all, value received, ten times told; when we give them fifty two nnmbers of a paper for two dollars. There are a thousand ways, wherein a man is benefited by the reception of a paper, independent of the pleasure and in formation derived. To the man of a family, his children cultivate a love for reading; and each becomes anxious for its weekly appearance. They learn to read, and love reading. To the farmer, the ad vantages of the advertising columns, are often worth an hundred times the price of subscription. Many a farmer has seen a place advertised in the paper, nod by that circumstance, alone, became acquainted with the sale,—purchased it, and cleared hundreds of dollars, —so with many oth er things. That paper, which has obtain ed the confidence of its readers, is capa ble of much good. The gnat-administra tion of government, is told in the plainest, terms, to the quiet and unpretending cit i7.ol; and, hail the truth been believed by the people, for the last ten years, the.re would have been money enough saved,! which has been wrung from the people, in the shape of taxes, to have sent a paper, for the whole time, to every family in this union. To our patrons we appeal, confident of a hearty response. We owe some of them 'such gratitude, and many thanks, for their •atention and support. There are many, others, who owe us, not merely that— but, the price of our toil. May we not To the School Directors of hope to greet them with our thanks next this County. week. They shall hare them heartfelt, if There is now in the Commissioners they will follow St. Paul's p rec ept —, owerffice, a package from the superintendent no man, (the Editor,) anything.' of common Schools, for the school three- We have fought in the vain guarb of tors of each district, containing, among truth, many glorious strifes, but 11011Clother thing, a blank form of the annual, where we rejoiced more in our exertions, report, which they are required to make' than the past. We hope to fight one on the Ist. January. They will please to, snore, for the cause of the people—that send to the office for them. between Harrison and Van Buren. We - - - - - - - - desire to be ready for battle at the hour of -- — 4 1 EDITORIAL SUMMARY. need. Will you not bid us god speed. 1 _____ I The three living electors of Thomas The Philadelphia Collector. Jefferson, in New York, are all Whigs. Even the Loco Foco papers, have giv- We immagine Loco Foco logic would de en over denying, that Fritz has robbed nource them all Federalists. the State of about forty thousand dollars Their vocation is falsehood; but, the thing It i s said t hat the Van Buren Govern is too plain; they have stopped denying itthing ment are about to send to Cuba, to pur- chase blood-hounds, to hunt the Indians and have commenced singing hozannas to in Florida. Is this the refinement of cause, they say, he has sued the surities the praise of the Attorney General; be- American warfare? If it be true that such is the spirit of Van Burenisin, we do of the collector. The truth is, the plun der party have began their labors; and, not wonder at their encouragement or " now you can hardly take up a paper that dog-keepers" in our State is not exulting, simply, because a report that another collector was minus too, has been proven not true. It was reported that the collector at Columbia, had took a leetle of the State's funds, and the report got into the papers; and, now, because it has turned out false; even our county pa pers, say, when they mention their mis take, that it is an "opposition slander re tracted;" thus trying to cast discredit on the veracity of the anti-masonic press. Is there any better evidence of a man's candor, and honesty, than his willingness to retract an error ? No—and those pres ses, alone, deserve support, that will do so. Now the "Keystone" asks much credit] for the Attorney General, because, he has prosecuted the surities of Fritz, and at the same time it says, Joseph Ritner is a 'defaulter in $60,000, this, if true, is noth ing to the credit of the Attorney General. If Ritner has robbed the State; why not prosecute him? he shall find no defender in us. Sue him, Mr. Ovid F. Johnson, as you did Porter's collector,— Sue him and recover the amount —he is worth it; or no body will believe that your story is true. The "Standard" tells the same tale, that Ritner is a defaulter, but, the collec• tor at Columbia is riot. It may all be true but is not the whole truth a little more ? has not Fritz lobbed the State of money enough to make him rich. If Ritner is a defaulter, why does not your attorney sue him ? You all know it is a downright falsehood, manufactured out of the raw material, for a veil to hide the robberies of your uwn partisans. Let them sue old Joe al:d recover the money they say he owes, before tl;,,ty charge him with be ing a defaulter. .1 word of Prophecy. We said on other occasions, and we say it again, we lay no claim to the title of a seer, but that which we see written as plainly in the future, as the transcribed history of the past, we 'feel as if we hadtan undoubted right to advert to it. Perhaps there has no one thing, which has called forth more of the sophistry and falsehood of our opponents, than the ex penses of repairs on the canal last season. So much are they addicted to missrepre sentation, that cannot tell the same tale twice alike. Before the measures were taken to mend the breach above town, and during the time of its reconstruction, all, of the papers attached to the Van Buren party, in this county, (and it was reittera ted throughout the state,) said not less than half a million of dollars, would be requisite to repair it. It was done with three hundred and eighty thousand dol lars. Since that party have got into pow er, they have investigated the expense, and they unblushingly say, that two hun dred th . ousand dollars, has been plunder ed by the state officers. If this be true, then the whole or actual expenditure was only $lBO,OOO, to perform what they said would take $500,000. Were they fools or knaves then, or are they both now? But our present purpose was not to draw any comparison of the past. We now venture to predict that the ex penditure of money for the repairs of the public works, exclusive of increased offi cers, and increased salleries, will exceed the amount alma year including the ex pense of the "great break"--and the money plundered by the oflicers--that is including the 8380,000. We call the at• tention of the people to this thing, andl when the report of expenses is made, we will tell the people how near we are right. It will assuredly be the case, unless they pay no claims and thus keep out the a mount from the report. Remember what we say, and if it proves true, ask your selves, you Porter democrats; if this is the reform you sought.—Your retrench- Mont and reform, will more than double the expenses of the public works. The U. S. Gazette says the Canal Pack ets stop running on the 12th November. 'The editor says he speaks by authority. The New York election commenced Mast Monday. The National treasure is now in New York, trying its gold to car try the State. We hope it will tail. The New York banks still continue to pay out specie. Their officers say they are impregnable. Our cotemporary of the U. S. Gazette says, that either the laws, the banks, or the merchants must be bro ken. We shall see. Large quantities of flour have been !ihipped for England. This is right, if brother Jonathan owes old Jonny Bull, why let him take .ome of his products, especially when he needs it. We should be very happy to accommodate some of ,our debtors in that way. ..Indignant Freem Cut" seem to be pro vided for by the State authorities of Ma ryland. Nine of the rioters who took th e law, and a cudgel into their hands at the same time, on the Chesapeake and Ohio canal, have got their sentence. Seven to the penetentiary for 16 years, one 18, and one 10. What would have been the tate of those at Harrisburg, had not Judge Porter screened them from trial? A report has been current that Gen. Jackson was dead. It is not true; and we hope that he may live to see the end of his "experiment"—and to repent of his 'humble efforts" to better our currency. The Ohio papers say their banks are ruined either way. Their Governor must recommend ' , mutual forbearance." To COOD TO LOOSE.—A Loco Foco bank hater in the city of Vicksburg, was spend ing a portion of his time cursing the bank of that place, because he could not get rid of its paper money. 'Tell him," said the officer of the bank, "to pay his note, which was protested a month ago, the notes shall be received at par." Report says, that the merchants of New York are now and then going to the wall. A letter writer in the U. S. Gazette says, two failed yesterday, and there oth ers must go in spite of fate. The Loco Focos have a majority on ()int ballot in the Ohio Legislature of 4. An Umbrella, 64 feet in circumference and 12 ft. high, has been made at Bristol, England. It was made for some of the African Kings, to protect him from the sun. He must be afraid of tanning. A husking frolic, took place in New Hampshire. A farmer suspecting that his corn was not only husked, but carried away, went to his barn and found two sturdy fellows husking "to keep." lie proposed that they husked the whol e heap for him, or he would expose them. Like cautious fellows who were willing to take care of their ears, they husked the whole before morning. Civilized England still follows the bar. barons practice of branding. A London paper says a private of the Fusileer Guards, was branded for desertion, at the Tower. HYMENEAL. •7'he silken tie that binds two willing hearts. MARRIED — On the 17th ult., by the Rev. John Glinger, Mr. DAVID SPECK, to Miss MARY DEAN, both of Hun itingdon county. OBITUARY "In the midst of lye we are in death." DlED—Suddenly, in Union township, on the 20th of October, Mr. ZACHARIAIt LovE,ALL, aged about 70 years. In this Borough, on the 26th ult. after a short illness, MARY, wife of Wm. H. Law,, Esq. of Norwich, Conn., in the 34th year of her age. Host. fl W. Potter. It is our painful duty to announa the death of this individual. He *as tll6 member of Congress from this distticet and was a distinguished and eminent law yer. His own enduring application had placed him with but few equals, and no superiors in our section of the State. He has been suddenly summoned before the bar of that court, where the sophisms and special pleadings of the earthly courts avail not. He has gone down to his grave in the prime of manhood ; and at a time too, when we feel satisfied thLt his con stituents needed his influence, industry and energy, in the National Legislature. Proclamation. W HEREAS, the Governor of the Com monwealth by a writ to me direc . ted, bearing date the 2nd day of Novem. ber 1839, commanding me to hold an e lection in the county of Iluntin. ' dun on lJ ednesday the 20th day of November inst., for the purpose of choosing a Repre sentative of this ',commonwealth, in the ' !louse of Representatives of the United States, to fill the vacancy occasioned by the death of William 11. Potter Esq., who was elected in the fourteenth district, ' a member of the twenty sixth Congress. And, whereas, I am required to'give pub lic 'notice of such election. 1 Joseph Shannon, Sheriff of said county of Hun ' tingdon, do therefore, hereby, make known, and give this public notice, to the electors of said county of Huntingdon, that a ,5 per.ial Election will be held in the said county on Wednesday the twentieth day of November inst., for the purpose of voting for, and electing one person to rep reser.: the said(fourteenth distric, in the said twenty sixth Congress, and thereby fill the vacancy which has happened as aforesaid; in the several districts compo sing said county, in the following order: Ist District composed of part of Hen derson township, west of the line begin ning at thence, west so far as to exclude the farms owned by Michael Speck and the heirs of James Kelly, to Mill Creek, thence up the said creek to H est town. ship line, thence along the said line to the line of Mifflin county, and also a part of Porter township; and all tint part of (tal ker township not in the 20th district, at the Court House in the Borough of Hun tingdon. 2nd District composed of Dublin town ship at the house of Mathew Taylor, jr. to said township. 3d District composed of Warriorsmark township and parts of Tyrone and Antis townships, at the house now occupied by Christian Buck, in Warriorsmark. 4th District composed of the township of Allegheny, at the house of Jacob Black sth District composed of that part of the township of Itsodbury, not included in the 6th district, and part of Morris, at the house of ,Chris. Hewit, in ff illiams burg . 6th Diatrict composed of all that pat of If oodbury township, laying south of a line to commence at the line of said tp. on the summit of Tussey's mountain, thence to run westwardly, so as to include the house of Joseph Everhart, and south of the house of Aaron Burns, John Ditch, and Peter Sorrick, so as to include the power mill at Piney creek, and thence to the line of said township on the summit of Canoe mountain, at the house of Casper Uellung, in said township. 7th District composed of the township of Hopewell, at the house of David Si monton, in said township. Bth District composed of the township of Barree, at the house of John Horper, in the town of Salesbury, in said township 9th District composed of the township of Shirley, at the house of John Lutz, in Shirleysburg. 10th District composed of that part of Antis township not included in the '2nd district, at the house of John Bell in An tis township. 11th District composed of,Porter and Dart of Henderson township, at the school house in the town of Alexandrio. . . 12th District composed of the townthip of Franklin, at the house formerly occu- pied by If in Lytle. 13th District composed of 'fell town ship, at the Union school house near the Methodis meeting house in said township. 14th District composed of Springfield township, at the school house near Hun ter's Mill. 15th District composed of part of Urn. on township, ht the house formerly occu pied by L. S. Laguard in said township. 16th District composed of that part of Henderson township not included in the Ist District, at the public school house in t he village of Itozhiliy.