THE HUNTINGDON JOURNAL. "One country, one constitution, one destiny." 3312 Eatta. co co # Wednesday morning, May 7., '44. V. B. PALMER, Esq. (No. 59, P.: rset below Third, Philadelphia,) is authorized to Jet as Agent for this paper, to procure subseripticma and advertisements. cc? The Huntingdon Journal his a larger circulation than any other Newspaper in Huntingdon county. We state this fact for the benefit of Advertisers. ~ Once more our glorious Banner out Upon the breeze we throw; Beneath its folds, with song and shout, Let's charge upon the foe!" FOR PRESIDENT, HENRY CLAY, OF KENTUCKY. FOR VICE PRESIDENT, EARMAR DENNY, OF PENNSYLVANIA. (Subject to the decision of a National Covention.) FOR GOVERNOR, JOSMPII INIARILLO, OF WESTMORELAND COUNTY. FOR CANAL COMMISSIONER, SIMEON GUILFORD, OF LEBANON COUNTY. Whig Principles. The principal objects which, I suppose, engage the common desire and the common exertions of the Whig party, to bring about, in the Government of the United States are : 1. A souxo NATIONAL CURRENCY, regulated by the will and authority of the nation. 2. AN azzacaTE simmer, with fair protec tion to AMERICAN INDUSTRY. 3. JUST RESTRAINTS ON TEE ErecuTivE Pow an, embracing farther restrictions on the exercise of the veto. 4. A faithful administration of the• PUBLIC no mAttr, with AN suotTeut,N DISTRIBUTION of the proceeds of sales of it among all the states. 6. AN DONRST AND ECONOMICAL ADMINIRTRA. TIO3T or Tits oovattroteaT, leaving public officers perfect freedom of thought and of the right of suf frage, but with suitable restraints against improper interference in elections. 8. An amendment of the Constitution, limiting the incumbent of the Presidential office to a ma n. TERM. These objects attained. i think that we should cease to he afflicted with bad administration of the Government."—Henry Clay. c' The Pennsylvania Legislature adjoured eine die on Monday last. 0::). The Whig nominating and ratification Con ventions meet in the city of Baltimore to-day. It is supposed there will be a greater crowd there to day than over assembled in that or any other Amer ican city before. Another =ember of Congress Dead, We learn from Washington letter writers that Death has again stalked into the House of Repro. sentatives, and that his shaft has again sped ! The Hon. PETER A. Bassist.. of Louisiana, died on Wednesday last, after a protracted but not painful illness. He was a native of the State which he represented. This is the tenth death which has occurred among the members since the last Congress—seven from the House and three from the Senate. Th. funeral of Mr. B. took place on Friday, and was attended by the officers and members of both branches of Congress. Military Election. The election for Colonel of this Regiment, held on Saturday last, resulted as follows: 2d Batalion. 192 David Da, 27 60 George Bell, 71 219 131 lat Batalion. David Duff, George Dell, Total—Duff, Bell, Duff's majority, A. K. Comyn, En., withdrew his name from the list of candidates about ten days before the election. New Papers. We have received the first number of the a Co lumbia Freeman," a spirited little Whig paper, published at Columbia, Lancaster county, Pe., by Mr. Taarau TAYLOR. WO have also received a specimen number of the ' , Weekly Argus,' hailing from Marietta, Lancaster county, Pa. It is neatly printed and ably edited, by Messrs. I. GOODMAN and F. L. ILIUM; and supports Clay and Whig principles. Success to them. A. Br.artz Facsamoon.—The Locofoco papers— that is, all those whose Editor's are lost to every sense of decency and truth—publish the fol lowing paragraph, as from one of Mr. Clay's speeches: cc? , If the gentlemen will not allow us to hare black slave. they must let us have white ones, for we cannot cut our fire-wood and black our shore and have our wives and daughters work in the kitchen." The above leas black a falsehood—as palpable a lie, as ever a Locofoco pen wrote, or a Locofoco tongue uttered. Hard, indeed, murt our opponents be tun, when they are compelled to resort to such base, contemptible falsehood as the above. Of course, every man who know. any thing of the character of Henry Clay, knows that ho never ut tered go infamous a gentiment.—Unien Nur. A Personal Difficulty in the House. The Clay Bugle of Thursday last says :—" An unfortunate collision occurred in the House of Representatives on Tuesday between Mr. COOPIR and Mr. SMITH of Berks. The difficulty arose in the course of a debate on the subject of the report from the select committee appointed to investigate the case of the over-issue of Relief notes by the officers of the Barks County Bank. The particu lars may be briefly stated as follows: A motion to print the report of the committee being before the House, Mr. aurrn moved to print with the report the testimony of Elijah Dechort and A. F. Boas, taken before the committee, together wills the testimony of those witnesses, and also that of Governor Porter, taken before the Judiciary Committee, from which committee Mr. S. had pre viously made a report on the same subject. Mr. S. said that the testimony taken before the two committee was conflicting--that the witnesses an swered interrogatories before one committee in the affirmative, which they afterwards answered before I the other committee in the negative, and that when the subject was properly before the House, he would bo prepared to snow that in the one case or the other, they had committed perjury. Mr. Com sit defended the witnesses against this sweeping cl arge of perjury, and in the course of hie remarks said that if the testimony was printed, in trder to. have a full understanding of the whole subject, it might be necessary to publish with it a certain paper which lied been given in evidence be fore the committee, pledging a member of the House and other individuals, for certain considerations, against any opposition to the Berke County Batik. Mr. Smith jumped to his feet and inquired wheth er the gentleman from Adams alluded to him I Mr. Cooper said such a paper had been before the committee. Mr. Smith repeated his inquiry—. Does the gen tleman allude to met' Mr. Cooper hesitated, then remarked—. Well, I will tell the gentlemen—l do allude to him.' Mr. Smith replied—' It is false Mr. Cooper inquired—. Does the gentleman say that I have uttered a falsehood Mr. Smith—. Yes air--it is false!' Mr. Cooper—. Then sir, you are a coward and a scoundrel ! and I will prove that what you have uttered is false!' The SecAttem here interfered and suggested to the gentleman from Berke (Mr. Smith) the propri ety of making an apology—that he certainly did not mean to charge the gentleman from Adams with falsehood, and lie had merely stated what had occurred before the committee. Mr. Smith replied that he had no apology to make. The Speaker then remarked that in performance of his duty he would be compelled to place him in the custody of the Sergeant -at-arms. He had grossly violated the rules, and it was for the House to say what further action should be taken on the subject. Some further conversation ensued between Mr. Smith and the Speaker, which finally terminated with the understanding that Mr. Smith withdrew the offensive words as applied to Mr. Cooper, and applied them to the evidence referred to—that the evidence so far as regarded himself was false. Mr. Cooper then made a statement of the cir cumstances as they occurred—apologized to the House for the intemperate words he had been com pelled to use in vindication of his own reputation, but stated that as to the gentleman from Barks, he would retract nothing. Ho then read to the House the paper referred to. The papers were signed by Gsoasts SMITH, and in consideration of the pur chase of a certain amount of stock of the Berks County Bank by Lloyd Wharton front the said Smith, he, (Smith) pledged himself that neither he nor his brothers Henry and John, would make any opposition to the Bank. Mr. Smith followed with a statement of his un derstanding of the matter, in which he reiterated that so far as that paper regarded himself it was false—that he knew nothing about it. And so the affair ended. The motion to print the testimony was not agreed to, and the printing of the usual number of copies of the report was ordered. Sabbath Breaking, Mr. Clay arrived at Mobile on the 25th of February, and left Mobile for the North on the 3d of March." The Almanac makes both of these dates to full on the Sabbath ! So we have the elec tioneering progress of the bloody hand"—leaving Louisville on the Sabbath, he entered New Orleans on the Sabbath. Comment is unnecessary." If atrocious, unsparing slander will defeat a can didate, then there can be no help for M. Clay. Of all the above charges against him, it is only true that he, being at Louisville awaiting since the night before a boat for New Orleans did take passage in one which left on Sunday. Many will condemn this, yet we doubt not he had thus a better oppor tunity to keep the Sabbath than he could do in a strange city surrounded by friend. True, the steamboat arrived at New Orleans on Sunday, but how could passengers help that I It was said that the Military were called out on the occasion—. which, if true, Mr. Clay could neither foresee nor prevent—but it is false. Mr. Bullitt of the New Orleans Bee affirms that only himself and a single friend who happened to he on the dock welcomed Mr. Clay and accompanied him to his Hotel. Souse Military were out, indeed, as is quite common on Sunday in New Orleans, but they knew nothing of Mr. Clay's arrival till he passed them. That he left New Orleans on Saturday and arrived in Mo bile on Sunday morning is most true, but ho went quietly to his Hotel, without a parade of any kind. It is utterly false that he left Mobile on Sunday the 3d inst.—he left on Tuesday the sth as we stated at the time. The Mobile Daily Advertiser, in ex pressly contradicting this last slander, expresses astonishment, which proves it unacquainted with The Plebian.—N. Y. 21ibune. HARD DRIVEN!—The Harrisburg Union copi ously extracts from the "Emancipator," an abolition paper and transfers its congenial libels on the char acter of Mr. Clay. leseph Markle and the People. Wear° glad to see that measures have been adop ted, by the Whigs, to hold a meeting in this city, with a view of sustaining the nomination of Gen. Joseph Markle, as the candidate for Governor of this Commonwealth. The times are such as to call for the solemn consideration of every friend in this State, whether it is not due to himself, to the Coin monwealth, and to the holders . of her broken pro- . miser, that we should elect a man who has a heart to aid in placing Pennsylvania in her old position, and who is not afraid of adopting the only means, that can now be resorted to for her restoration, viz taxation and economy. The present time is peculiarly favorable to a con centration of votes, not merely those of the Whig party, but those of every Pennsylvanian, upon a man who will, who dares commence the work.— There is no incumbent to defeat, no direct patron age to work against, no cherished attachments to a party favorite to be violated, no distinguished name , to be overshadowed. Mr. Muhlenberg has not held a place by any action of popular favor. Ho was elected to Congress in Berks county, where the par ty would have elected his coachman, if nominated in the party name, by a diminished vote, perhaps, but still he would have had a majority. Ho went to Europe by appointment, and distinguished himself less by any public service titan by the writing of a few letters, so exceedingly unfortunate in their I choice of subject, and deficient in the composition, as to lead to a sudden suppression of its series. As a candidate now, he obtained the norninution by what the Convention denominated unfair means, and so unsatisfactory was the result, that the defea ted deem themselves absolved from any obligation to sustain tire candidate whom they opposed. Mr. Muhlenberg, then, is not, and never bas been, a popular candidate. He has never enjoyed popular favor. He hes never, by any distinguish ed act, won the esteem of his political opponents, and he has displeased a majority of his own party, by aiding to defeat the election of George Wolf against Joseph Ritner, and by defeating the nomi nation of Francis R. Shunk, by means not ap proved. Joseph Markle is justly known to the people of our State as the citizen soldier, ready, not merely to take up arms, but to lay down his fortune, and expose Isis life for his country. Ho did all these, and haling accomplished the work he undertook, ho did not haunt the door of the War Office, dog the heels of the President, nor beseech the Congress of the nation, for < office,' < pension,' or < relief,' for his services. He thought it hie duty to serve his country in the hour of her peril—he performed that duty. it never entered Isis head that more was due to him than to any other man who did his duty.— He knew, felt, acknowledged, and discharged his obligations as a citizen, and then retired to his farm and his mill, to enjoy the liberty which he had aided others to defend. Mr. Markle has been a close observer of men and manners, and understands well all the bearings of the great questions of public policy that are likely to come before the nation ; but especially does he understand and feel for the honor of Pennsylvania. Connected with no clique, he will, as Governor of I the State, have no favorites to reward at the public expense. Committed by no previous vote, he will not have to sustain an imaginary consistency at the expense of public prosperity. Prosperous in his I own affairs, his attention need not be diverted from public business. Beloved by those who know him best, and cherished for his honesty as a man, Its will be esteemed as the Chief Magistrate of the Com monwealth, for the simplicity and fidelity with which he will discharge his public duties. Such a man is presented to the people of Pennsylvania as a candidate for their suffrages. Are we not bound to believe that, in their present unfortunate position, they will eagerly seize upon all honest means to elect such a man, and thereby show their anxiety to redeem the faith of the Commonwealth, and sustain good old Pennsylvania.— U. S. Gaz. Mn. CLAY AND PROTECTION.--lIOW meanly contemptible must those Locofoco editors appearin the minds of the People, who have charged upon Mr. Clay an abandonment of the protective policy, and that he has one expression for the North, and another for the South, upon a reference to his late speech at Charleston—the hot bed of Free Trade and Nullification itself! There he has put the libel lers to shame, who must invent some other mode of attack. We have before us a Locofoco paper which is constrained to acknowledge that "Ma. CLAY DECLARED HIMSELF IN FAVOR OF A SYSTEM OP Flummox, moderate, reasonable, CERTAIN and nuns exa"—moderate and reasonable, that it may be certain and durable; and advocating the present Tariff; denies that it violates the spirit of the com promise, which contemplated the raising sufficient revenue for an economicel administration of the government, and a proper discrimination in favor of the products of American Labor! Mr. Clay de clared that he did not stand up there to flatter any man—that 44 what he had said on the Elkhorn he ' would dare to say in the Palmetto State." For this manly declaration all true friend. of the Tariff will give Mr. Clay credit; but not ao those hypo critical pretenders who, constrained to support an avowed enemy of the Tariff in principle and in detail, dare not manfully meet the issue. But their knavery is becoming manifest to the People, who cannot be deceived or misled by their misrepresen tatione—Beaver Argus. The " While Slavery" Lts, against Mr. CLAY, so much like a somewhat similar story against Gcn. lIAHRISON, has been dropped as rather too base, by that portion of the Locofoeo press which makes any pretension to manliness or decency. It will of course,he harped be upon grovelling minds,whostop at no falsehood, and never apologize for an attemp ted wrong.—lb. CO' A daughter of the Commander-in-chief of the Army, Gen. Wirrtitun SCOTT, has entered the nunnery at Georgetown. The Forum correspondent says : "I have not learned the cause ; the General is absent, attending a Court Martial at Old Point Comfort, and the seclusion of the young lady has been most unexpectedly determined on." Rights of Conscience. Important Decision.—An exchange paper says : The lion. Judge Banks, in a case recently tried in Lehigh county, Pa., has given an opinion directly the reverse of that given by Judge Lewis of Ly coming, a year or so ago, respecting the rights which a parent has to control his minor children in their religious opinions. It appears that a father entered a Methodist Episcopal . Church for his daughter, a girl of fifteen years of age, took her by the arm, raised her from her knees and told her to come home. This produced excitement, which termina ted in violence and assault and battery, upon which an indictment was found and the case tried. In the opinion of Judge Banks, given on this oc casion, the constitution guarantees the right of every individual to adopt. any creed or mode of worship which his conscience approves, though this liberty of conscience is restricted by the worship of Al mighty God and extends to no other worship what ever. The constitution declares that "no human au thority can in any case whatever control or interfere with the rights of conscience." The exercise of parental authority by a father, so as to control or interfere with the rights of conscience of a minor child, would, in Judge Bank's opinion, be an exer cise of human authority, so as to control or inter fere with the rights of conscience in a particular case, whereas it is declared that it cannot be done in any case whatever. This, he says, is the funda mental law of the land. It is binding upon all parents. Judge Lewis, it will be remembered, gave his opinion in a similar oase, that during legal minori ty, the law of filial obedience takes the precedence of all other laws which are binding on the child. Pinal Passage of tho Tax Bill hi the House. The yeas and nays on .the final passage of the bill to lay a three mill tax on all species of property in the Commonwealth, and to submit it to a vote of the people, whether the public works shall be sold, are as follows: YEAS—Messrs. Adams, Anderegg, Bennet, Blair, Boat, Brackenridge, Brady, Carson, Connor, Cooper, Cummins (Mifflin,) Dickey, Edson, Far rell, Jordan, Kerr, Knox, Luning, Lawrence, Lin ton, Long,Macmanus, Musser, M'Ewen, M'Fad den, M'Kinley, Nicholson, Parke, Porter, Sankey, Shattuck, Shaw, Shindel, Smith, (Clearfield) Smith, (Lancaster,) Snyder, Straub, Thompson, Poland, Trego, Tustin, Whittaker, Whitman, Snowden, Speaker-55. NAYS—Messrs. Ambrose, Bachman, Carpenter, Cumming (Payette) Cummins (Butler,) Botts, Dunlap, Eckels, Elliott, Evans, Hammer, Heck, Hineline, Kauffman, Kugler, Metzger, Moore, Mor gan, M'Caslin, O'Bryan, Picking, Smith (Berks,) Smith (Monroe,) Smith (Wyoming,) Strouss, Ur ban, Weber, Wilson-28. The following are the. Commissioners to sell the Main Line : John Sinninon, Philadelphia county, John G. Lowery, Centre, Thomas M'Cully, Philadelphia, Joel K. Mann, Montgomery, Thomas P. Cope, city of Philadelphia, Robert Poland, do., Philip Dough erty, Dauphin, Thomas C. Rockhill, city of Phila., Jacob Shearer, Philadelphia co., John Junkin, Per ry, Henry Flannery, Berke. Christian Myers, Clar ion, Dr. Wm. Darlington, Chester, George Harrison, Bucks, Alex. Cummings, Philadelphia, George R. White, Allegheny. Michael Muss!omen, Lancaster, John Kerr, Huntingdon, Jacob E. Raged, city of Philadelphia, George M. Hollenback, Luzerne. CONNECTICUT ELECTION.- Octal—The fol lowing result, obtained from the Canvassers, shows the actual vote at the late election for Governor : Cleveland. Baldwin. Gillette. Scat. Hartford co. 5356 6006 282 6 New Haven 4650 5065 229 2 New London 3564 3539 254 3 Fairfield 4400 4805 141 2 Windham 2420 2296 425 1 Litchfield 4291 *1398 384 Middlesex 2282 2124 145 2 Tolland 1894 1860 111 3 28,846 30,093 1,971 9 • 230 votes returned for Roger Baldwin, instead of Roger B. Baldwin. Now Yeas Towx Eracmoss.—The Town Elections in New York have closed, and the Alba ny Daily Advertiser gives returns of the Supervi sors elected in each county, which sum up as fol lows 1844. 1843. Van Buren 457 545 Whig 408 337 Native 17 0 Total 884 882 Whig gain from last year 71 ; loco lose 86 ; net Whig gain, 157. Tu. BArrzn GROUNDS.-We have boenshown two beautifully engraved views, ono of the "Ger mantown Battle" and the other of " Yorktown," intended to illustrate early numbers of Graham's Magazine. If the series now being published in Graham's Magazine are all to be put out in such style as these before us, he will put any competitor upon his metal. To fall below the standard thus set, will be to fail altogether in the eyes of the pub lic. Mr. G. informs us, that this enterprize is with him, one of years, and not of months, and that as he occupies most of the important battle grounds. by the possession of pictures and sketches, he no more fears competition in this matter, at this late day, than he does in the "Portrait Gallery of American Authors."—Spirit of the Times. 00". There was a rumor quite current at Wash. ington last week, that Gen. JAcxsow had written a letter advising the withdrawal of Van Buren, and declaring himself in favor of Cass. Poor Van is a used up man! G:1. A correspondent of the Albany Journal at Ellicottsville, Cattaraugus county, says : "Our little village is severely afflicted with sickness; out of a population of 440, two hundred and nineteen are now, and have been sick, and many deaths.— My whole family (nine in number) have been sick." art Mr. Jones, of Ohio city, (0.) for a wager of $5OO, fumed one cord of wood in 13 minutes and 57 second,. ! Nuzzo for the Coon The Miners' Journal of Saturdny states, [bat the following handbill was posted up in the borough of Pottsville, on the 22nd ult. The Fox and the Coon !—Grand Contest ! A grand contest between a little red Fox and a real live Coon, the representatives of Van Buren and Clay, will be had at the saloon of the town hall, thin evening (Saturday, March 23rd,) at 8 o'clock. The friends of the Fox of Kinderhook, and also the adherents to "that -same old Coon" of Kentucky, are invited to attend, and see that " fair play" is shown to their respective favorites. Admit tance 12 cents. This contest," says the Journal' "grew out of a dispute about the representation in the Forum, of a Coon with a Fox down. On the evening in ques tion, a large number assembled at the hall to wit ness the exhibition. The Coon was only about six months old, and rather small. The Fox was an old 'un, nearly twice the size of his Coonship, and looked quite as sly and cunning as Matty himself. The preperations were made— bets ran high—Coo ny walked deliberately into Foxey, and lick'd him in iWO minutes. Foxey ran and ensconsed himself in a bucket—Cooney followed, sprung upon the bucket, placed his paw in a peculiar position—and a shout in favor of " the Coon of Kentucky," fairly rent the hall. Is not the result of this battle omin ous of the grand contest next fall r House of Representatives Frauds. The Senate Committee on Retrenchment and Reform, have made a report, which fully discloses the enormous frauds of Mr. Ex-Speaker Wright and Ex-Clerk Andrews, by which itappears that the whole amount of money drawn from the Treasury, by Win. J. B. Andrews, for the contingencies of the House of Represen tativea, during the session of 1842 and 1843 and a part of the session of 1844 is $55,- 170 and that the whole of his accounts passed legal ly or illegally, amount to $46,260 23, leaving in the hands of that Clerk, unaccounted for the sum of $8,909 77. It further appears that H. B. Wright, Speaker of the House of Representatives for the iies lion of 1843, drew fourlwarrants in favor of Wm..l. B. Andrews, amounting in the aggregate to $9,480 22 ostensibly for "contingencies," without the shad ow of authority and in direct violation of the provi sion of the " Reform Bill," of last session, which declares "that hereafter no warrant shall be drawn o by any Speaker of either branch of the Legialature, " except for the pay and mileage of the members." If these $9,480 22, be added to the balance struck against Andrews as above shown, of $9,909 77, it will make the sum with which that Clerk would ho chargeable as unaccounted for, $18,389 99- This is the way the people's money baa been span" dered by loco foco office holders, and this is the reason why Pennsylvania has been unable to pay the interest on her debt. Wiwi. AN ExAmext !--A New York paper says :—We learn from Westchester co, that Chris. Lilly appeared before Judge Ruggles and his Court, at Dedfort on Tuesday and plead guilty to the kil ling of McCoy in a milling match, some time ago! He was sentenced to pay a fine of $500! This sentence is certainly most extraordinary. A pugilist, who engages in a most brutal prize fight and beats to death a fellow being, is to pay $500! Let us ask, what will be the effect of such a sentence I It is already stated that some of the sanguinary professors of the brutal art of pugilism in New York, are seeking to make up a milling match. And it certainly might have been anticipated that this would be the result of the Westchester county decision. It does appear to us that if any crime should be visited with the utmost penalties of the law, it should be that of deliberately beating to death a fellow be ing in a public prize fight. Tho sad example of this worse titan barbarous exhibition, should cause the ministers of the laws to look to the influence which one case must have upon others. There is probe. bly no way of preventing the frequent repetitions of prize fights, but by severely punishing those who shall dare to engage in them on our soil : and in view of that position the fining of Lilly for the kil ling of young McCoy, is not likely to operate as a check to the spread of these brutal fightsin ourcoun try.—Saturday Courier. A RESULT or TUE Tatum—A Company at Manchester, New Hamshire, chartered in 1837, are now erecting a mill 440 feet in length, and are about to commence two other mills of equal size each to contain 25,000 spindles. The commence ment of the operations of the Company hasbeen de ferred till now in consequence of the depression in manufacturing business. Since the present Tariff has revived the drooping energies of the business portion of the nation, hundreds and thousands of laborers have found employment, and profitable re muneration. The company above referred to will now set in operation 75,000 spindles, and of course employ a large number of hands, furnishing a sub sistence perhaps to many a needy family, and aid ing to create a home market end demand for Amer ican produce. This is a single instance among thousands, showing the benefits—the absolute ne cessity—of a protective tariff to the prosperity of our people. oj. An old bachelor contemporary thus speaks of ono of the miseries of human life :—"Receiving a newspaper from a friend, with the marriage (marked , of course,) of a young holy with whom you have boon desperately, though secretly in love fur two years. A young lady trading with a rather raw clerk for a pair of stockings, asked how high they came V' Her beauty and her question staggered him, but at last he stammered out, ( 4 Dont know—'above the knees I guess !" At a celebration of the " glorious eighth," in Norwich. Conn., the following was perpetrated; By P. M. Judson— The Ladies—Who, reversing the order of Old Hickory's defence, place the cotton bags in the rear. If the ladies don't make a bustle when they read this toast, then we ere ;:iistskon.-2,...,,i,"; Queen Esouna.—Among the records of the good old town of Ipswich, Mass., we find the fol- lowing under date of Hal : Single persons who ale under no government are ordered to put themselves under the care of some head of a family. Daniel Weldrom is required to return to his wife according to law." The record does not give us the reasons why Daniel Weldrom left his wife in the first place, or whether he returned, "according to law," in the last. Singular people, our forefathers, and strange ways did they have.—/V. 0. Picayune. Herrn or Julian BALDWIN.—The Philadel phia papers of 22nd Wt., announced the death of the lion. Hasny BALDWIN, one of the Judge. of the Supreme Court of the United Stat.. He died at his lodgings at the Merchant'. Hotel in that city, on Sunday evening the 21st. FIRST OF MAY CoNvaxTrox.--The Baltimore American states that the Whig National Conv,en tion of the first of May, for the nomination of can .didates for President and Vice President of the Uni ted States, will hold its meetings in the Universal ist Church, Calvert street. .The body of the Church will be reserved for the Convention, and the galleries wilt be open for the public. NEW Cotrwrsarsyr.—Lebanon Bank, Leba non, Pa.-s's altered from broken Gillipolas (Ohio) Bank, Vignette, three figures, one Mercury holding a horn of plenty, a Griffin standing on an iron chest. On the right margin female, and in the distance steamboat, &c.; between the name of the officers, dog and chest. Engraving by Emden, Wright & Hatch, N. V. The genuine notes were engraved by Draper, Underwood, Bald & Spencer, and have for a Vignette a figure of Mercury sitting on a bale of goods. On the right end 'Justice,' and on the left female with horn of plenty. ASSOCIATION or NAMES.--Tho Washington Standard gives the following singular association of names A year ago the natnce of the President and most of his Cabinet terminated alike, as for example, Tyler, Webster, Spencer, Porter, and Urethan— Now they commence alike, as for example, John Tyler, John Calhoun, John Spencer, John Mason, and John Nelson—to say nothing of John Tyler, Jr., the Private Secretary and John Jones, the organ !" Film—Spring Forge, with all it machinery and fixtures, in Paradise township, York county, le longing to the hairs of Thomas B. Coleman, dec'd., was destroyed by fire on the 231 ult. Loss estima ted to be from 2,500 to 3,000. Insurance on the property $2000.-- Fork Advocate. oj. The following feet needs no comment. New York Jan. 25, 1843. I have been afflicted with the Asthma for twenty years, sometimes so severely as to be confined to my room for weeks, and though attended by various medical advisers of the highest reputation and skill in the country, twice the decease proved nearly fetal to life. Some few weeks since I commenced taking lar's Balsam of Wild Cherry, which gave in ztant relief, and a single bottle has produced what I believe to be a radical and perfect cure. For asthma. coughs, colds, shortness of breath. wheezing, and soreness of the lungs, I believe it to lie the very best medicine in the world. I send this certificate to the agent, whom I &a not know, only as a duty which I owe in sympathy to the af flicted A. V'VILLI . AI4IS, Counsellor at Law, 58 William street. We are acquainted with the writer of the above certificate, and his statements are entitled to the full confidence of the public. F. A. TALLMADGE, Recorder of the city of New York. JOHN POWER, Vicar General of New York. For sale by Thomas Read, Huntingdon and James Orr, Hollidaysburg. a=~;a, In Hollidaysburg on Friday last, CH ARLES,son of Mr. Robert Lytle, Jr., aged 5 years, 5 months and 21 days. STATE OF THE THERMOMETER, (in this Borough.) 7♦. :v. 2. P. M. 9P. W. APRIL 25 - - 46 62 5O 26 - - 46 69 27 - -- 53 70 29 -57 . 72 29 - 54 78 30 - - 61 70 Temperance Meeting. The Washingtonian 7eroperante Society will meet at the Old Court House, on Saturday even next. The ladies are particularly invited. By order of the President. May 1, 1844. Wagon Making. CALEB Y 0 C t II li s ) ESP F.CTFULLY informs his friends 4,13 and the public in general, that he car ries on the above business in the shop for merly occupied by William Wooster, situ ate in Main street, in the borough of Alex andvit., Huntingdoi county, Pa., where he is prepared to do all kinds of work - in his line of business in a durable and woi kman. like manner. A stock constantly on hand-- and work made to order. •—•• By strict :mention to business he expects to merit and receive a liberal share of pat _ _ Al .. xandria, May 1, 1844. zo'cm)uK._ . P.Lat. S II IL tillsOhoNttoarei m h r t 7 c a b s y e n or meddle in any way with the following de scribed property, purchased by the subscri ber at Constable's Salk:, as the property of James Kennedy, of Porter township, liuut co. I brown horse, 1 sorrel d0.,2 set of horse gears, 1 plough and 1 set of iarrow pins, 4 hogs and 1 heifer, 1 eight day clock, 2 lots of grain in the ground. Which properly I have left with said Kennedy until such a time as I may choose to remove it. JOHN nuvErr. April 29, WU 1 11RLANK BONDS—Judgment and