VoL. V, No. 30.] rmr.me OF THE HUNTINGDON JOURNAL. The JOURNAL." will be published every Wednesday morning, at two dollars a year, if paid IN ADVANCE, and if not paid with in six months, two dollars and a half. Every person who obtains five subscribers, and forwards price of subscription, shall be furnished with a sixth copy gratuitously for one year. No subscription received for a less period than six months, nor any paper discontinued until all arrearages arc paid. 4 - I.All communications must he addressed to the Editor, POST PAID, or they will not be attended to. Advertisetrituits not exceeding one square, will be inserted three times for one dollar, and for every subsequent insertion, twenty five cents per square will be chlrged. If no definite orders are given as to the time an advertisement is to be continued, it will be kept in till ordered out, and charged accor dingly, AGENTS. The Munlingdon Journal. Daniel Teague, Orbitionia; David Blair, Esq. Shade Galt; Benjamin Lease, Shirleys b urg; Eliel Smith, Esq. Chilcottstown; Jas. Entriken, jr. CdPe Run; Hugh Madden, Esq. Springfield; Dr. S. S. Dewey, Bir mingham; James Morrow, Union Furnace ; John Sister, Warrior Mark; James Davis, Esq. West township ; D. H. Moore, Esq Frankstowu; Eph. Galbreath, Esq. Holli daysburg; Henry Neff, Alexandria; Aaron Burns. Williamsburg; A. J. Stewart, (Pater Street; Win. Reed, Esq. Morris township; Solomon Hamer. Afire JIM; James Dysart, Mouth Spruce Creek; I,Vm. Murray, Esq. Gransville; John Crum, Manor 11111; Jas. E. Stewart, Sinking Valley; L. C. Kessler, Mill Creek. .POETttY. HARRISON SONG, Ant—o. Gaily Mc Trout adour. G dly did Harrison Come from his holm, Whilst he was yet a youth, Not twenty °,.e. He joined the gallant band On our frontiers. Give him three cheers, k MI ye gallant Whigs, Firm, brave and true, After he'd Join'd thu band, What did he do ? lie led to victory, Free from all tears; Harri Harrison— Give him three cheers. Iluzza for Harrison! Success to him, Ile makes the Vanocrats .Look rather slim: He is the People's man ! Away with your tears. Ilarrison—llarrison Give him three cheers. then 10 us stick to Lim, Young, old and all, And like old Proctor's men, Malty must fall ! Turn, then/ ye Vanocrats, Fear not their sneers, Harrison—Harrison-- Give him duce cheers. LUG CABIN SONG. I love the rough Log Cabin . !yells of olden time, Whqs an hardy and au honest class Of freemen in their prime, Yirst I, ft their father's peaceful home, re was joy and rest. With their axes on their shoulders, Anti sailed for the west. Of logs they built a sturdy pile, i With slabs they roofed t o'er With wooden latch and hinges rude, hey hung the clumsy gor, And fur the little window lights, In size two feet by two, They used such sash as could be got . In regions that were new. The chimney was composed of slats Well hated:till with clay, Forming a sight we often see, In this a latter day , And here oat stones for fire-cloy', A rousing lire was made, While round it sat a hearty crew, •'With none to make afraid." I love the old Log Cabin, For litre in early slays, Long, dwelled the honest HARRISON As every Vanity savh: And when he is our President, Whn,h one more year will see. In good “Hard Cider" we will toast, And cheer him three times three. _ - :10 tlt r • .40,4 . • - RNA From the New York American. Carry Arras. "It is really abominable!" said Miss Sophia Singleton. "Oh shocking!" ehorussed a number of 'youn ,, ladies who were sitting around. 'Pray, ladies, what is the matter?" said Henry Jones, as he joined the coterie. ""t he matter?" replied all at once,"whj, “One at a time, it you please ladies; really it is too hard that so many sweet voices should combine to attack a poor mortal like myself, who, having but one pair of ears, can attend to no more than one at a tune. Come, Miss Singleton, will you tell mo what causes so much in d ignation?” "Why, this morning Helen Clarke walked down Broadway with Mr. Stone, and took his arm ; and in the evening she was bn the Battery with Mr. Lewis, and look his arm also! "And is this all?" said Jones quietly. “.A111" exclaimed the young ladies aghast with horror. — "II' ell, ladies, I think Miss Clarke was per fectly right : shall I state my reasons and try to convince you'!" . .. 'Ot! you never can convince us." "tt feast I can try. I believe you will grant that when a lady walks with a gentleman, it is for the sake partly el his protection. Ant I right?" "Perfectly." "Well, unless she takes his arm, she can enjoy neither. In the first place, they cannot carry on a conversation unless the man bends forward, in which case, the least inequality in the pavement may cause him to stumble against her, and down they must both go; or if a passer by brushes against him, the result is the sanie. In the second place, they may be separated by a crowd, and the lady be se verely hurt, while her companion can af ford her neither protection nor assistance, and may even remain unaware that any accident has happened! Again. the cros sings are often muddy, and then a gentle. man's arm would be useful; mot eover. alien a lady is fatigued, she would find 1 the support of an arm a very great relief; Iso that whether for safety, pleasure or support, a lady should always take the arm of her companion." "You are right," said Miss Singleton, "but it is not the custom." "Then make it the custom—nothing is easier. „Let every lady who has mind enough to judge for herself, make it a rule never to walk with a man she does not re spect, and when she does walk with one, let leer always take his arm. I know that when a lady takes a man's arm, people say they are engaged, but surely, no one would suppose her engaged to a dozen different men at once, and they must either believe so palpable an absurdity, or grant that she may not be engaged at all. This once settled, other ladies would follow her ex ample, and in a short time 'Carry Arms!' would be the word. Any one of you young ladies would take my arm at a ball or at the Springs, and refuse it in the street, because at one place it is cust ry, and at the other it is not. Now cas t toms should always be consistent, yet this is nut so ; in a large crowd in one place, where it is not needed, you take my arm : in a large crowd, consisting perhaps of the same individuals, you refuse it because you are an another place, and in the last instance it is absolutely necessary; there's consistency for you! Miss Clarke has• , set a good example, and I hope all !attics will follow it. Come, Miss Singleton, you are young and pretty, suppose you walk arm-in-arm with me to-morrow mor ning; people will say we are engaged; im the afternoon, walk on the Battery with your friend Harris, and Miss Reynolds' and myself will be there ; we will all walk arm-in-arm ; they will then say you. are engaged to Mr. Harris, and I to Miss Reynolds; the next day take some one else ; then they will say none of us are engaged ; ir, a lew days the oddity will have Avon' off, and no lady will walk with a man without taking his arm, and no man will walk with a woman who refuses it. Is Miss Clarke right, and will you follow her example?" "Yes," replied all the young ladies. "Then I have convinced you. 'Carry arms!" "We will." .I'a-morrow. Miss Singleton— " "I will walk arm in-arin with you; and always make the gentleman who accom panies me, be he who he may, give me his arm." W. J. S. A BOLD FELLOW. —Frederick the Great, after a very terrible engagement, asked his officers, •who behaved most in trepidly during the contest 1" The pref. erence was unanimously given to himself. "You are all mistaking, replied the king —"the boldest fellow was a fifer, whom 1 passed twenty times during the engage ment, and he did not cease to vary a note the whole time." "ONE COUNTRY, 011 E CONSTITUTION, ONE DESTINY." A. W. BENEDICT PUBLISHER AND PROPRIETOR. HUNTINGDON, PENNSYLVANIA, WEDNESDAY, JULY 22, 1840 POLITICAL. From the Ohio Republican. Richard M. Johnson. The present Vice President, R. M. John son, is a man with whom we have sonic acquaintance. Sonic of our Harrison ed itors have said a few hard things about Col. Richard M. Johnson, without know. log that they were unintentionally Bland, ering one of the bravest soldiers of the last war, and one of the firmest friends that ever Lien. Harrison had the honor of possessing. We know them both inti mately, and we speak by authority when we say there is nothing but the most kindly feeliugs entertained in the breasts of these honorable and distinguished men', toward each other. Richard M. Johnson has been kicked to one side, by his Van Buren friends, but that makes no darer ence to us. We mean to tell a tale, the incidents of which we can prove by one of the meat high minded and respectable men of Cincinnati. Elam P. Langdon is the man we allude te, and although there are some hundreds of others upon whose testimony we might rely, we name him in preference to all the rest, because, oldie' a supporter of the present administration, he possesses a stall, on which.in eight years' acquaintance we never discovered a single stain or blot. But to our tale, which is not one of fancy. _ _ On a certain occasion, not far from the dog days of 1835, it was rumored among some of us Jackson men of Cincinnati, that Dick Johnson, as every body famil iarly called him, was about to perpetrate a stump speech in Covington, which, as we presume all our readers know, lies ex actly opposite to Cincinnati, in the State of Kentucky, a State too well known in ' history and tradition to require our feeble attempts to eulogize. 11 ell we crossed the river in a ferry boat, went to the hall ' where Dick Johnson was to hold forth, shook him cordially by the hand, and then sat down, along with Elam P. Litngdon to hear his speech. Stump speeches in Kentucky aro not precisely like those in Ohio. It is some what difficult for a Kentucky stump ora tor, when he commences hi speech to guess with much exactness as to its dura tion of its peoration. The Kentuckians dislike to be humbuged, and they very frequently ask a stump orator, even in the very height and Sow of his eloquence, a question that throws him out of his own prescribed track. Such was the case with our friend, Colonel Johnson. He begen dissertation on matters and things in general and Democraky in par ticular. He was moving on as smoothly as a square rigged brig, with all her can vass shaken out, when somebody in the crowd yelled out, "Were you at the battle of Thames?" "I was, and what of it?" "Are you the hero of that battler' "That's a very singular question to be put to me by a gentleman that has read the history of the last war. My brother James and myself---and the Colonel dash ed a tear from his eye when he pronoun ced the name of his brave and departed brother—my brother James and myselt raised a regiment of mounted riflemen and joined Gen. Harrison on the Maumee. We asked him for the post of danger, the very moment it could be obtained, and he told us, if it were possible, and it would not conflict with the general operations of the troops, he would grant it to us cheer fully. We were shortly on the trail of Proctor. We caught him on the Thames. Our mounted regiment, as a matter of course, was in the advance, and when we descried the enemy, my brother and my self rode up to General Harrison and rc• winded him of his promise." "Hays your mounted men ever been practised to charge upon infantry?" said the General. "Certainly," said we. "Then," 'said the General, "the post of danger as well as of duty is before you. One half of your regiment will charge through the British regulars, and the other half will, simultaneously, commence an attack on Tecumseh's Indians iu the swamp." "So said the General—my brother James, and a braver and better man never lived, charged through the British, with one half of the battallion, while I, with the other half, undertook to rouse up the Indians in the swamp. They were not hard to rouse up, fur Tecutnseh, a man transcendently superior to Proctor, in point et real bravery, as 'Hyperion to a Satyr,' had determined to make that his best and most conclusive battle ground. We met there and fought them; and, when they learnt that Proctor's British , regulars had been demolished by toy bre- ! then James they began to retire. .At this moment my body had been pet forated by five bullets, and my horse could only be kept on his legs by the greatest exertion of my bridle hand. to endeavoring to make him leap over a log in the swamp he fell and died, with two more balls in his carcase than were in my own. A tall, good looking Indian approached me, with his tomahawk ready for a threw. My horse lay in a position that did not per mit me to be exactly dismounted. I pul led out a loaded pistol from my, holsters and shot him. They say it was Tecumseh I shot. I care nut, and I know not. I would have shot the best Indian that ever breathed under such circumstances without inquir ing his name, or asking the ages of his children." When the Colonel reached this point, there was a deafening roar of applause. A simpleton, present, who did not know the true calibre of the man he was about to interrogate, and who wished to make himself popular among the enemies of Harrison, exclaimed in a stentorian voice, " Where was General Harrison then?" The Colonel gave a calm survey of the crowd, u ntil he singled out the face of the queiist. Looking him dead in the eye, as the Kentuckians say, and drawing hun sell to his utmost height, with his eye di lated, and a • countenance that plainly showed there was to be no hypocrisy in what he was about to say, he replied in tones, as calm but as portentious as the incipient rumblings that precede a volca nic eruption— - _ _ "He was in the very spot where the COM mander.en-chief ought to have been. He was in the spot where his duty called him. He was amidst the whizzing of rifle bul lets, overlooking the movements of our mounted men—ready to charge over the dead bodies of my brother and myself, had we proved unfortunate in the onset, en or der to avenge us. No one must attempt to tickle my fancy by intimating in my pres ence, that General Harrison is a coward!" There was a pause•—aid then -there was a silence, so profound, so indescriba ble that it was painful. In that vast crowd, for the space of one minute—and that is a long, dreary lapse of time, to men who are listenitv , to a stump speech—the ticking of a watch might have been heard, as horribly Icud as it has grated on our ear in tire sombre chamber of the dying and the dead. But, anon, there was a slight clapping of handle--and then there writ a deafening thunder storm of ap plause, that seemed to shake the building to its very foundation, This is the same Richard M. Johnson whom the Loco Focos, at their late abor tive Convention in Baltimore, refused to re-neminate as their candidate for Vice President. He waa too honest fur them! Characteristic. The writer is acquainted with an aged 'and ;excellent lady for many years a wi dow, a relic of a citizen soldier of the N. western carspaip,ns during the late war, and the venerable and respected mother of a numerous ollsprin„,.... Two of her suns espoused the cause of Jackson, support ed him against Adams and Clay, and like many thousand of their countrymen al lowed themselves to be transferred to V. Buren, against their better judgment, by the farce of party ties. Hut although in 'SG they I;voted ..:for his rival, they did not treat tire name and character of Harri son with disrespect. Recently, however, partaking of the increasing bitterness of party spirit, these gentlemen (and very worthy gentlemen we know them to be) had so far succumbed to the prevalent par ty vice as, is the warmth of controversial debate to connect the name of Harrison with the epithets coward, granny, pctti— coal general, &c.; and, at last, on one oc casion in the presence and hearing of their mother. It was too much fur the old lady to bear. She was a frontier set tler with her husband in the fearful crisis of 'l2, 13 and 19. She remembred the dangers they then encountered—how her husband had followed his banner to the wilderness and fought by the side of the gallant Harrison. She could not forget what she had suffered and felt in that try ing day. Associating these recollections lwali the language now uttered by her children, the bosom of the noble old lady swelled ;with em ution—tears tilled her eyes—Teats of mingled gratitude, fond remembrances and deep chargrin, while she said—. "My dear sons, if you choose to vote for Mr. V. Buren, do so; but, don't abuse General Harrison. You know not what you are doing. lie saved your heads while in your cradles and that of the mo ther who nursed you then, and speak to you now, from the tomahawk and scat piing knife of the savages. When no other arm was nigh to help or save the ex posed settlers, his was always ready, when no other name gave confidence to their hearts or pacified their fears, the young mothers at the settlers always slept in peace when Harrison was near. Vote for Mr. V. Buren, my sons, if you think best—that may be right, for what I know —but if you love your mother or have any sense of gratitude for the services de brave and good man, don't abuse Genera l Harrison." She said no more—she had' said enough. Already had she torn the folds from the eyes of her sous and broken the bands which had held them. They were not again heard to "abuse General liarrison;" but their attention thus arres ted and directed to the unreasonableness of their conduct they considered, enqui red and judged. They were soon con vinced of their error; became the zealous advocates of Harrison, and are this day his active and devoted friends. The dis• taut reader, who mingles not with the western people, and hears not their every. day conversation, will learn from this an ecdote how it is that the name of Ilarri son has •set the prairies on fire" and cal led forth the shouts and the votes of the universal west. When the mothers and their children whom he protected and sa ved in the day of their peril, he is to Van Buren "an Hyperion to a Satyr."—Ohio Confederate. Tippecanoe Battle Ground Convention The following address was adopted by the forty thousand freemen who assem bled on the 29th of May on the battle ground of Tippecanoe, to celebrate the important victory gained on that spot 29 years ago, by General Harrison. It was one of the most stirring appeals which the present crisis has yet called forth: TO TUE PEOPLE OF INDIANA AND OF TIIN UNITED STATES. Assembled on the field of 'Tippecanoe to render the homage of our gratitude to the dead who lie here entombed, and to the living soldiers and commander who ex• posed their lives in defence of the wes. tern frontier; assembled to cherish in re membrance the simple and hardy virtues of the founders of the great and flourish ing empire of freedom in the west; as sembled to commemorate the patriotism, the fortitude and bravery of the men, who dwell in "Log Cabins," and the rude ten- ; ements which characterise the founding I of all commonwealths—whose hearts glowing with the love of liberty—whose minds filled with enthusiasm in the cause of civilization and the advancement of the human race, boldly unfurled their banners in the wilderness, and planted in the midst of the trackless forests of the west the social arts, and the institutions of freedom ; surrounded by these recol lections—here, from the place where Da viss, Spencer, Owen and Warwick fell— , here, where the gallant Harrison and his , brave comrades repulsed the savage enc.. mica of their country—from this consecra ted place we address the young men of Indiana, of Ohio, of Illinois; the young men of the whole Union. Here the har dy sons of the North—here the sons of the chivalrous South—here the dwellers of the Western forest tough side by side. There united voices rose in the shout of victory, and as brethren of the same fam ily they mourned over their fallen com rades. He call upon you, not as soldiers to buckle on your armor, and march forth in the wilderness to fight the battles of your country, but as citizens we entreat you to put lorh your mortal energies as champions of the institutions and laws of your country--to vindicate your claims as freemen to their inheritance of the glo rious constitution established by your fa thers. The spoilers are in the temple of Liberty, and foul corruption has polluted the sacred altar of Freedom. Where sat the immortal H ashington—the Father of his Country—the !glorious Champion of Liberty—is now seated the mere leader of party—one who, under the syren song of reform has bankrupted the Govern ment and bro'ght the people to the verge of ruin. The lofty station—whence the founder of this mighty Republic dispen. sed the tneed of reward to integrity, vir tue and patriotism, as a father watchiwg with yearning affection over the welfare of his children —is now degraded to a mart of Executive favoritism, where pa tronage and ',offices are sold at thepi ice of fealty to power—where subserviency has displaced independence—where faith fulness and ability no longer find an abi • ding place. Mea of the west--ye of the forest and palm--men of the lakes , and dwellers upon the mighty rivers--ye of the sunny South—ye of the vigorous North--descendants of men who fought at Bunker Hill—at Monmouth, at York town, at Tippecanoe, at Lundy's Lane, at the Thames, and the plains of New Or leans. 'ye who inherit the wisdom, vir tues and fame of the sages of the Revolu tion, embodied in the laws and constitu tion of your country, will .you suffer the sanctuary of Freedom's temple to be pro faned T Hill you renounce your birth right and become the panders of power— the parricides of the glory of your ances tors I will you destroy forever the hopes of posterity I No never, resounds from the verdant hills of Connecticut. The land of 11 ashington—ot Patrick [WHOLE No. 244 finery—the nursing mother of liberty, (shouts from all her mountains and valleys No ! never ! The Empire State has vin dicated her title to the nroud motto she claims, and with a Roman spirit worthy the age in which Brutus delivered his county from tyrany, she has passed judg ment upon her own son; her voice, loudest in the great acclamation of deliverance, shouts from all her borders, "Down with the Tarquins—away with the spoilers!" Barren and Montgomery, speaking through the voice of Old Bay State, point to the early scenes of the Revolution ; these are Concord, Lexington and Bunker Hill, and there remaining forever, still echoing hack the shout, No ! never 1 O hio, Illinois, Michigan, and the great west from all its forests and plains, its mighty rivers and lakes, as with the voice of all its rushing waters, shout, No! never! The warm and patriotic South with all its ardent and lofty spirits, cries, No ! never! Indiana, here in the living mas ses of her hardy sons, with her deep voice of gratitude exclaims—in our manhood we will cherish the protector of our infan cy. CIIARLES H. TEST. OM S. CLARE, JOSEPH M. Mon, Coneittee SAMUEL HANNA, , JAS. M. STEWARD, A Short Method With The Tories. Who said that General Harrison had done more for his country, with less coin palmation for it than any other man liv ing? A. James Madison. Q. Who said that General Harrison during the late war, was longer in actual service than any other general officer, of tener in action and never suffered a de feat ? A. Richard M. Johnson. Q. Who said that the victery of Har rison at the battle of the Thames, was such es would have secured to a Romau general to tha best of the Itepu.blic. the honor of a triumph ? A. LaugdGa C heves. Q. Who in writing to General Harris son of the battle of the Thames, uses the following language. "The prompt charge made by you in the order of battle, on dis covering the position of the enemy, has always:appeared to me to evince a hig,la degree of military talent?" A. ()liver Hazard Perry. Q. Who enjoyed the friendship and confidence of the first six Presidents of the U. States, and as a necessrry cense quence, the enmity of the eighth ? A. Gen. flamson. Q. Who said that he imagined there were two military men at the West, and that General Harrison was the first of the two ? A. The gallant Major Q. Who has evinced through the whole of his life the most uncompromi sing integrity, the most ardent patriotism, and thepurest republicanism? A. Gen. Harrison. Q. Who will be the next President of the U. States? WILLIAM H. HARRISON.-TrOy A. r; Mg, A Contrast. \VII° gains by the destruction of credit and establishment of a hard money cur rency ? The °pc Holders, who will receive their sallaries in !gold and silver, while the value of property will be rsduced one half. The Money Lender and Usurper, whose gold and silver, will will be augmented: in value in a ratio corresponding with the• 'reduction of property. The lizeh, for it will, in the language of General Jackson, "make the rich rich er, and the poor pourer." The Creditor, W ho will thereby be en abled to oppress, and utterly ruin his un fortunate debtor. WHO L.:mu by the destruction of credit and the estubliskruent of a hard mosey currency 1 The Farmer, whose farm is reduced in value one hall, and the productions in an equal proportion. • The Laborer, who is •either utterly de prived of the means of earning his daily bread, or is cotrpetled to work at prices varying from 10 to 40 cents par clay—in stead of one Glint or one dollar and a half, as het etotore. The Poor Mute, who will be deprived of all prospects of ever rising to opu lence in lite by the destruction of all cre dit and enterprise. The Young Man, who will have torn from him the great main•springs to indus try and tins—and, who henceforth, must never allow his aspirations to rise above the low and humbler walks of life, unless born to wealth end opulence. The Debtor, whosti prope will be sacrificed to fill the coffers phis rare . eattOr,