THE HUNTINGDON JOURNAL, =— "o:t -- e country, one constitution, one destiny." Elo2m.r.ariamm...ell CID cras Wednesday morning, Zune 8, '44. ,r).V. B. PALMER, Esq. (No. 59, Pine street below Third, Philadelphia,) is authorized to act as Agent for this paper, to procure subscriptions and advertisements. The Huntingdon Journal has 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, HENRYCLAY, OP KENTUCKY, FOR VICE PRESIDENT, THEODORE FRELINOHUYSEN, OF NEW JERSEY Senatorial Electors. CHESTER BUTLER, of Luzerne. TOWNSEND HAINES, Cheater. Representative Electors. let District—Joseph C. Clarkson, of Philadelphia• 2d John P. Wetherill, do 111 John D. Ninesteel, do 4th John S. Litteit, Germantown. sth Elleazer T.JlVDowell, of Bucks co. Bth Benj. Frick, of Montgomery. 7th Isaac W. Vanleer, of Cheater. Bth William Mester, of Lancaster. 9th John S. Hinter, of Berks. 10th John Killinger, of Lebanon. 11th Alex. E. Brown, of Northampton. 12th Jonathan J. Slocum, of Luxerne. lath Henry Drinker, of Susquehanna. 14th James Pollock, of Northumberland. 15th Frederick Watts, of Cumberland. IGth Daniel M. Smyser, of Adams. 17th James Mothers, of Juniata. 13th Andrew J. Ogle, of Somerset. 19th Daniel Washabaugh, of Bedford. 20th John L. Gow, of Washington. Slat Andrew W. Loomis, of Allegheny. Old James H. Power, of Mercer. 231 William A. Irvin, of Warren. 24th Benjamin Hartshorn, of Clearfield. FOR GOVERII on, JOSEPH IVIARKLE, OF WESTMORELAND COUNTY. FOR CANAL COMMISSIONER, SIMEON GUILFORD, OP LEBANON COUNTY. A, T'riumphant Refutation. In another column will be found a letter address by Mr. CL►Y to Hon. J. Warre, relative to the white slave slander," which has been for some months past going the rounds of the Locofoco pa- pers. Mr. Clay unequivocally denies ever having made use of the language attributed to him. al' The MUNI, Lunn/Aar, conducted by the Messrs. Peirrrzas, came to us lately in a new dress. The Luminary is one of the most spirited and influential Whig papers in the interior of Penn sylvania. Success to it, and its cause. cij. The Hon. JAMES CAnnot.r., of the city of Baltimore has been nominated as the Locofoco Can didate for Governor of Maryland by the State Convention which assembled in Baltimore on Mon. day of last week. fop The "London Punch" thinka Bob Tyler must be a remote descendant from the renowned Wet Tyler, who got his scull split some hundreds of years ago, by the mace of ono of the Lords Mayor of London, and that the crack in the head aroma to have remained ever since in the family.— We have an idea that Punch is right. Qj Why did the Lie-one of Democracy, in this borough, on Saturday morning about six o'clock, post up bills on houses, poets, corners, &c., calling a meeting to ratify the nomination of JAMES K. POLK, as their candidate for the Presidency, to go off at the Old Court House, afterwards, about 10 o'clock, go around and tear them down? An swer "Democrats." - The absence of the Editor will account for the ecarcety of editorial, and all errors that way ap. pear in to•day'a " Journal." 0:1- At the Annexation Convention, convened in Baltimore, on Monday of last week, his aecidency, john tyler was nominated (before dinner,) unani mously as the Tex. candidate for the the Presiden cy. He will never he heard of after '44. ~'j' The celebrated J. IV. Bear, the Buckeye Blacksmith, is now in Ohio, as usual hammering it down on the Locofocos of that State. CZ) . Ica ! Ica CREAM !!—A delicious article this warm weather—call at the Store of Mr. James Saxton, of this place. We presume the nomination of Col. POLY will silence all the vindictiveness of tho locos against Mr. Clay as a duellist, for the Colonel himself has smelt powder in his day. How mighty conacion cious these locos are ! V" lima!" cried one demented loco yester day, “the party is safe now !" Yes,"eays a by stander,"as safe as a pig in a poke!" aim. sosEnz MAILICIAM. The Locofoco Editors throughout Pennsylvania, taking their cue from our 'contemporaries of the mis-called " Democratic Union," which famous State paper, eq. the Harrisburg !ntelligencer, was the first to set the infamous example, have ever since the nomination of Gen. ?shunts, poured up on him a continual volley of abuse and slander, and made him the peculiar object of their sneers and ridicule. Every thing that would in the least de gree operate against him is sought with avidity, and in the absence of any thing calculated to affix the slightest stain upon his character, they do not hesitate to manufacture to order all sorts of ridicu lous stories in relation to the old Soldier, and scat ter them broad-cast over the State, which are copied from one Locofoco paper into another, and repeated from mouth to mouth until many who suffer them selves to be the dupes of this system of party war fare, receive them as Gospel and believe them to be true. The honorable position in which Gen. Menxts is placed at this time before the people renders it out of the question that he should escape calumny, even were he "as pure ea ice and chaste as snow." He is the Whig Candidate for Governor of this Commonwealth, and that alone is enough to induce every reckless and unprincipled Locofoco Editor, and political brawler in the State to join in preach ing up crusade against him. His election too, is rendered so certain by the signs of the times and the rapid popularity he is acquiring with the people, that Locofocoisni is rendered desperate and is ready to say any thing, publish any thing and do any thing that will be calculated to injure him in the estimation of his admiring fellow citizens. But General Msnitxx's character as a single minded patriot is too well established to be assailed with impunity. The mats who offered up life and property—who submitted to dangers and privations —who served his country most faithfully in the darkest hour of her need, is not the man to be mis trusted in this day and generation. The man who in the course of a life of three-score years, has by his industry, his honesty and his probity, acquired the universal respect and admiration of his friends and neighbors, who have known him long and well, is not the individual who can be injured by the reckless assaults of unprincipled politicians. His whole past life may be brought up in review and submitted to the scrutiny of his opponents, but they will find no act in it calculated to derogate from his fair fame. He stands beforelhe world confessedly one of those noblest works of God—an honest man and no matter to what extent he is assailed, he will prove invulnerable against each and every attack. The character of the Whig Candidate being such as to afford no hook upon which his opponents can hang the shade of an objection on the score of honesty and worth, they are reduced to the necessi ty of endeavoring to get up a feeble opposition to him on the ground of incompetency. Because he Is a plain PENNSYLVANIA FARMER, he is, they say incompetent to discharge the Chief Exe cutive duties of this Commonwealth! Because he belongs to that industrious class of citizens who earn their bread by the labor of their hands and the sweat of their brow, he is therefore incompe tent to preside in the councils of this great agricul tural State! Because he had not the good fortune to receive a collegiate education and does not happen to be a lawyer, or a preacher, or a gentleman of leisure, a hue and cry is raised by his opponents that he is unfit to be made Governor of Pennsylva nia! Most sage objection! Moot wise conclusion! How very complimentary must this train of argu ment appear to the agriculturalists and working men of the Keystone, who compose three-fourths of the constituency of Pennsylvania! Farmers, bow your heads in the dust, nor presume again to raise ono of your own humble class to the highest hon ors of the State, for modern "democracy," or Lo cofocoism, has in its proscription of burn MA nic. declared, on, AS A CLASS, unworthy to aspire to places of honor and trust! Mechanics, working men, look to your rights; for if the principles of Locofocoiain are suffered to prevail,and ono of your number is to be proscribed because he is identified with the class to which you yourselves belong, your influence in the State is at an end. We are told General MARKLE is incompetent by those who know no more about his qualifications than the man in the moon. Upon what do they found their assertion? Upon the simple fact of his being a Farmer? Our Locofoco opponents appear to for get that the best Governors Pennsylvania ever had were men of the same calling. Who doubts that General Miami:Cs qualifications, much as they are decried, are fully equal to those of SIMON Ssyntirl Who does not know that honesty and purity of in tention, with a sound, practical education, are bet ter calculated to advance the credit, character and interests of the State than corruption and intrigue, though they be hidden under the seductive mask for brilliant attainments? Gen. Manus is the man of the people—the man for the crisit, and the very man best calculated to bring the good old Keystone back to its ancient glory and renown. In endeavoring to'cast ridicule and approbrium upon the Whig Candidate, some of our Lecofoco contemporaries over do the matter. Many of their assertions are so highly spiced with Locofoco false hood that no honest or honorable man can be induced to swallow them. Our contemporaries of the Union, for example, asserted soon after the nomination that Gen. Markle was so grossly ignorant as not to be able to write Ms own name! This they after wards found was " piling on the agony" too strong, and hence in a few weeks afterwards they seceded from their position and admitted that the General could write his name--after a fashion—but that he always wrote it without prefixing the capital letters, thus—joseph marble !—another Editor declares that the General is not so well versed in orthogra phy as he might be—another that he is guilty of the henious crime of writing a stiff cramped hand ! In a word, from the simple fart of his being a mere Farmer, whose character is invulnerable at all points, they have been compelled to descend in the scale of abuse to the petty meanness of circulating the ridiculous stories which we have above recoun ted. With regard to there charge. of incompetency, we'presume it will be sufficient for every good Whig to know that a Convention composed of the most intelligent men in the State—many of whom knew Gen. Markle intimately and well--placed him in his present position before the people. It is not to be presumed that they overlooked his qualifications in making the selection. The idea that they would nominate an individual so boorishly Ignorant as Gen. Minute is represented to be by the Locofoco papers is absurd, and no man of common sense will , believe it. In conclusion, after all that has been said by the Locofocos in reference Jodie ignopance of General MARBLE, we verily believe that, notwithstanding -his vastly superior advantages, HENRY A. Men- LErruxao is the most ignorant of the two in all that constitutes the Statesman. Mr. Muhlenherg is very far from being a learned man and never was re markable for any thing brilliant. We are told he was a very passable Dutch Preacher, and it may be possible that had he not capitulated, but contin ued his warfare with his Satanic majesty, he might in due course of time have been worthy of the title of General Muldenberg, which Gen. Jackson is represented as having been so anxious to bestow upon him. We believe that there are thousands of Farmers in the Commonwealth who are in every respect as well and better qualified to be Governor than he is, and that General JOSEP. MARK. of Westmoreland, the present Whig Candidate, is one of them. From the National Forum. The Locofoco Baltimore Convention. THE LAST DAY'S PROCEEDINGS, BALTixonE, Wednesday, May 29. The convention assembled at 9 o'clock. The question was the appeal from the decison of the chair, that it required a vote of two-thirds to adopt the resolution declaring Martain Van Buren to be the nominee of the convention. Mr. Bartley, of Ohio, took the floor against the decision of the chair, and proceeded to condemn the course of the convention on the subject of the appeal. Mr. Hopkins, of Va., moved that the appeal be laid on the table. Mr. M'Nulty, of Ohio, then withdrew his appeal for the sake of harmony .! ! Col. JOHNSON'S name was then withdrawn by the Kentucky delegation. Mr. Brewster, of Piffled., said he and his colleagues were pledged and in stucted to sustain Martin Van Buren and stand by him and to fall with him, and no delegate from that State dare go home and look his constituents in the face, who had pursued a contrary course. They were pledged not only to cast their ballots for him, but to do everything to promote his nomination as the first choice of Pennsylvania. He administered a rebuke to those Pennsylvanians who had voted for the two-third rule, and declared Buchanan his second choice. Mr. Hickman of Pennsylvania, who yesterday nominated Gen. Jacasox for the Presidency, next followed In a Van Duren speech, and spoke a good deal about loss of character to those who had helped to defeat him. He said he had but one object in view, which was to defeat the apostate Mr. Clay. He said too that all the Pennsylvania delegation could not support Buchanan. Mr. Hickman is the last man on earth who should talk of apostacy or character, having himself once been the editor of a paper friendly to Mr. Clay, and having lately sub mitted to the terms of liar and coward from a gen tlemen who called him to account for having insul t tcd some ladies in a political harrangue. After little more debate and attempts at concilia . non, the convention proceeded to the EIGHTH BALLOT. V. B. Cass. Poly. Buchanan Calhoun Main 8 1 N. Hampshire Vermont 6 Rhode Island 4 Massachusetts 6 7 Conneticut 6 New York 36 New Jersey 1 5 1 Pennsylvania 22 1 2 1 Delaw'are Maryland 1 6 1 .... Virginia N. Carolina 2 8 Georgia Alabama Mieaieaippi 6 Louisiana Tennessoc Kentucky Ohio 2l 2 Indiana 1 11 Illinois 1 8 Michigan Missouri 7 Arkansas 104 114 Mr. Frazier, of Pa., stated that on the last ballot he had voted for Polk, and would do so on the next, despite the threat that had been thrown out that those who had not voted for Mr. Van Buren would be ashamed to show their faces before their constit uents. He denied that he had violated his pledge ; that he had voted for Mr. Van Buren on three bal lots, but finding that Mr. Van Buren was not the choice of the convention, he had voted for Mr. Bu chanan. Finding that Mr. Buchanan could not succeed, he had cast his vote for James K. Polk, a whole hog" democrat. Mr. Pout had been nominated and eulogised by Gov. Hubbard, of N. H., and the current now set strongly in his favor. Mr. Young, of New York, tried to resist it; said six States had nominated Van Buren before New York spoke, and deprecated the Texas fire brand, thrown into the party by the mongrel administration at Washington. Ho made some allusion to a Nero who wee among them.and now woe probably fiddling while Rome was bunt ing ! This allusion was evidently to Mr. Calhoun, and several of that gentleman's friends asked who he meant, but Mr. Young did not reply. Another uproar appeared about to ensue, there were charges of meanness, skulking, &c. interchanged, but Ham met, of Miss., and Gov. Hubbard succeeded in allay ing it. Mr. Howard, of Maryland, and Sam Meda ry, of Ohio, both talked a great deal about harmony, which produced considerable cheering. Sam decla red for Texas, and gave in so far as to say ho would take any Texas candidate. The rampant "lion democracy" having thus been soothed, a ninth ballott was proposed and JAMES K. POLK unanimously nominated. Some dele gates from South Carolina, who had not participa ted in the convention, now appeaMd and after blackguarding the Whigs, almost - as bad as they once did Blair of the Globe, gave in the adhesion of South Carolina! After the requisite degree of enthusiasm, tho convention adjourned until four o'clock. AFTERNOON SESS At the re-assembling Mr. Walker, of Mississippi, proposed that Six. WRIGHT, should be nominated for the Vice Presidency by acclamation which was not agreed to, but on the first ballot he was nomi nated, Georgia alone dissenting. Now all was settled except the feuds hetween father Ritchie, the Globe and the South, so Cave Johnson, got up and pledged'the Globe to the support of the nominations! What a ludicrous thing! Who doubted that the spaniel Blair, would not crawl to the feet of the victors and kiss the hand which had been striking him ! Cave likewise proposed apologies, concessions and all that sort of thing, for the insult the Globe had heaped on Southern men. Mr. Saunclers,of N. C., who yesterday had convicted Blair in open conven tion of a lie, said nothing. Mr. Pickens, of S. C., coalesced with the "galvanized corpse," young Ritchie. one of the Secretaries, was ready to frater nise with the libeller of his father, and if Blair had been there in person, there is but little doubt a mo tion would have been made and carried,that a general hug and kissing shOuld be gone through with. The proceedings having thus reached the climax of absurdity, the usual forma! business was transac ted and the Locofoco Convention of 1814 adjourned sine die. It will be the last National Convention ever held by the party. After next Fall, you can no more rejoin its scattered fragments than you can re-collect the asteroids, into the one planet there are supposed to have originally constituted. WASHINGTON, May 6,1844 My Dear Sir : i hrive received your note, bring ing to my notice a certificate subscribed by five gen tlemen, members of the present House of Represen tatives, ell of them my political opponents, which you inform me is going the rounds of the locofoco papers. The object of that certificate seems to be to verify the correctness of an extract taken from the National Intelligencer of the Ist of 'July 1820. In that extract I am stated by a former member of the House of Representatives (I believe not now liv ing) to have remarked, in s debate which occurred a year before, to the followed effect : If gentlemen will not allow us to have black slaves they must let us have white ones; for we connot cut our firewood, and black our shoes, and have our wives and (laugh tees work in the kitchen.' I think you attach an importance to this misera ble attempt to prejudice me which it does not merit. Here is en extract from the files of the Intelligencer, under date near twenty-four years ago, not from any speech of mine, but from a speech of another meniber of Congress. Ho does not undertake to give my words, but merely states his impression of the elfect•of certain words used by me a year be fore During the long and arduous discussion of what was called tht Missouri question, I was so engrossed with the importance of the subject, and so deeply apprehensive of the awful consequence which it in volved, that I never wrote out or corrected any speech of mine made during the progress of the de bate. On the last and most important occasion of the agitation of that question, I made an elaborate speech of several hours duration, no part of which, I believe, was ever reported by any of the stenograph ers, as it certainly never was by me. I certainly will not undertake to recite what were the precise words used by me on the occasion of of any of the nuinerous speechee short or long, which Since the above was in type, we have received I made in Congress on the Missouri question ;but this I will undertake to assert, with the most ierfect news from Baltimore of the nomination of the Hon. confidence, that I never used the words, Or any GEOIIIIE M. DALLAS of Pennsylvania, for Vice Presi- words which would bear the import of the extract dent, in place of Mr. Wright. Ito which 1 have alluded. I am confident of it be cause I never entertained such a sentiment in nay The Nomination. life. I never conceived a contingency in which I We mentioned says the United States Gazette, to I would sr fave r r:rszuinott e i n i a nntrot: l ing o, white l orth t . o e our readers, on the 31st ult that it was likely that Mr. tenor Y of a whole life, during which my " h ° u P rn P ble ex- Dallas would be nominated as the locofoco candi. ertions have been constantly directed to the preser date for the Vice Presidency. Information from cation of liberty at home and the encouragement of its establishment in foreign countries. If I have not Baltimore since shows that we were =met , and been able to extend these exertions to the black race the Hon. George M. Dallas is, therefore, to see his I held in bondage in this country, it has been because name connected with that of James K. Polk, in the of considerations and convictions, sincerely and hen- Presidential canvass. I estly entertained, embracing the peace and happi onftesesoolfiebooothrtel:::tot a t ;: o d black o race which have We remember that some years since, when a ticket was nominated with John Sergeant for the Vice It is quite P possible that, in P arguing upon the ex- Presidency, we tickled Mr. Walsh very mach, by istence of the institution of slavery in this country, calling it a' oyrimidical ticket'—the largest at the I may have contended that the black race supplied base. Well, the locofoco ticket is certainly of that thosel ,dZeendilaci servants,' and l a t h , u d n o d , : es r ttt,,naarulet be class now. What will the Van Buren men say to found in every state of civilized society, and conge al! this 1 Polk was, indeed a Van Buren man, but quently relieved the white race from the performance he was more of a Jackson man, and his nomination of those offices. If I have ever employed such an is more indebted to General Jackson's whim-wham argument,(of which I have no recollection) it is ap ant how erroneous inf m have to have Tennessee go against Henry Clay, than to drawn from it which it did not erences authoriz ay e. been the old General's hopes or desire for the success of I have no desire to disparage the industry of the the whole ticket. And after all, Clay will carry wives of any of the certifiers to the extract, nor to Tennessee, and what will be more annoying, he will , boast of that in my own family ; but I venture to say that not one of them performs more domestic in dustry with her own hands then my wife does at But poor Mr. Van Buren lies according to the Ashland. New York Evening Post, been cheated out of the I am, with great respect, your friend and obe nomination by Pennsylvania. Her delegates, who d ie " t ""a" H. CLAY. : were instructed to go for Mr. Van Buren, and who Hon. Jou, WHITE. realy pretended to obey, went in for the two-third Another Prize Banner measure, and thus defeated the nomination which Mr. Wright Declined. ' When the nomination of Mr. Wright was an. nounced at Washington, by the Telegraphic des patch, he was at the Telegraph office in that city, and immediately transmitted a communication to the New York delegation, in which he states that he positively declines the nomination under any circumstances. they were instructed to promote. We suppose these things will be duly remember ed, for realy they deserve thought; and the family difference will, we hope, for propriety's sake, be al lowed to remain in the form of coolness, rather than to be warmed into bickerings and strife. It is a very pretty quarrel as it is, and must, like most other quar rels, result in advantage to the neighbors. Information Wanted. Can any of our Locofoco contemporaries inform us what are the objects intended to be accomplished by the election of their Locofoco Candidate for the Presidency? What aro the general principles of the party If the Sub-Treasury system is to be be revived; the Standing Army project put in exe cution—the repeal of the Tariff effected—and the Free Trade system adopted, it is meet that the peo ple should know it. Let the Locofocos know what they aro struggling for & the people understand what they are fighting against. Our own glorious Harry of the West, has himself run up the Wum FLAG with the principles for which we aro contending, inscribed upon its ample folds. Let the opposing candidates go and do likewise, that the whole Union may understand what aro the interests involved in the earning contest.—Pa. In. A. Tory in Congress William S. Winter, Eq., late of Maryland, be queathed to Congress, in January last, the Cutup Chest of General Washington. Hon. John Quin cy Adams was designated and requested by the do nor to present the relic to the House. This duty ho performed on the 18th ult. He concluded his eloquent address on the occasion by offering the following Resolution: Resolved by the Senate and House of Repre sentatives of the United States of America, in Congress assembkd, That the Camp chest of Gen. George Washington, which 60 used during the Revolutionary Win, bequeathed by the last Will of the late William Sidney Winter to the Congress of the United States, ho and the same is hereby ac cepted and that the same be deposited as a precious relic to be preserved in the Deportment of State." In favor of this resolution the vote was unani mous, with thu exception of Mr. HALE, a locofo co from New Hampshire, who, " true to his in stinct," voted " No!" Read the coon communication in another column. From the National Intelligence" To the Editors. Hors. OP REPRESENTATIVES, May _2B, 1844. , Gentlemen : I herewith transmit a letter writen come weeks since by Mr., Clay, (in reply to a note which I addressd to him at Norfolk, in Virginia) which I have withheld from publication, inasmuch as lie was impressed (as expressed in his letter) that I overrated the importance of the charge. Within the last ten days! have received several letters asking copies of my speech in defence of Mr. Clay, partic ularly upon this charge. I have not yet had the ! leisure to write out my speech, but shaU do so at the first convenient moment. In the meantime you will please publish the enclosed, which is a single link in the chain of testimony I have in my posses sion to nail this charge to the counter as a base forgery. JOHN WHITE. To Messrs. Gales and Seaton. At a meeting of a number of Whiga from differ ent States of the Union in Washington city, a few days since, the following resolutions were offered by Nathan Sargent, of Philadelphia, and were unanimously adopted : Resolved, That a Par. BANNER be offered by the Whigs of the United States to the Whigs of that State wnich shall at the next Presidential elec. tion give the largest proportional increased Whig vote over her Presidential vote of 1840, the said banner to be presented to the State to which it shall be awarded on the 4th day of March next, at Washington city. Resolved, That a committed, to consist of one person from each State, be appointed by the Chair, to carry the above resolution into effect, and that a Treasurer of said committee be also appointed. Resolved, That, as the Whigs of the United States abhor repudiation, and us a banner was nobly won by the gallant State of Kentucky in 1840, if the money collected by the committee shall enable them to do it, they shall cause a banner to be pre pared and presented to the Whigs of that State at the same time and place that the other shall be presented. Resolved, That published in the Whig papers of the Union, and that the gentle men named as the committee be requested to perform the duty assigned them. Safe Home again. Mr. Clay reached Lexington, Ky., on Saturday week, whore ho will remain till some time in Feb ruary next, when ho will be required to start for Washington to take possession of the White House. in obedience to the call of his countrymen. His re ception at home was marked with all the enthusiasm and show of attachment which Kentuckians, on all occasions and at all times, have ever evinced towards their adopted son. A Lexington paper says, Mr. Clay was received in a brilliant manner by numer ous friends. Seated in an open Barouche. with the Hon. George Robertson,Gov. Metcalf and Hon. John Speed Smith, accompanied by the long procession, with gleaming torches animating muaick, he pro ceeded through some of the prinripal rtrrrts of the city, and thence to 'Ashland. A s tho culvacade pas ' sed along, tho windows and doors were crowded with the fair ladies of Lexington, who testified their pleasure and delight by the waving of hand kerchiefs and bonnets and such smiles no the la dies of Lexington alone can bestow. .Ilia Excellency, the Kickapoo Chief, with several of the leading Sachems were at Baltimore to superintend the two loco foco conventions, which met there on the 27th ult., or perhaps we sltould say the loco fact, convention and the Texas con vention. The Locofoco Nominations. Poor Locolocoism ! if pity melts the mind to love, we must have The feeling of kindness for the done up and used up Locofoco party—for most assuredly pity the lamentable plight in which they find them- selves ! Never did we know a nomination received with such an universal feeling of disgust as was that of Por.x and WHIGUT by tho Locos of our city. ' What an abortion !' cried one Was that the best I the Convention could do,' asked another. What claim has James K. Polk on the Democracy ?' said the third. Consternation, dismay and disgust were visible everywhere among the rank and Sleet' Loco. focoism, although we have no doubt the leaders, will cry hozauna, and the Pennsylvanian and the Times will assert that the ticket is juel the thing! Poor locofocoism !—after playing for months the game of brag, to be reduced to the catch-penny, name of poke ! After trying for years to prove that black is white, they now have to take Wright, right or wrong. What a comment on the princi plea of Locofocoism ! What a refutation of all the false accusations circulated against the Whigs ! What a rebuke to the impertinent lettere of Van Buren and his mendacious charges that the elec tions of 1840 were carried by fraud and amid the excitement of debauchery ! Where is now the 'sober second thought' which was to show that Van Buren was cheated out of his election 1 Where the bold, bullying, blustering instructions of nine teen States in favor of Van Buren, pledging them selves to restore the turn and tattered flag of Loco focoism, and place it flaunting over the strong towers of Whig principles 1 Where their confidence in the great exponent of Locofoco principles! In ever aspect we view the withdrawal of VAN Beaus ' and Jouxsox as a triumph—a moral triumph, as gratifying as will be our political triumph next Fall over PoLx and WRIGHT. The crowded state of our columns to-day (filled with many articles laid over yesterday to give room for the convention news,) will not allow us to enter into the exposition of the glaring facts that 'mote coism has put itself in ambush for the next fight, and that although they have changed their men, the same destructive principles are involved in tho contest. As far as the chances of success aro con cerned, we are perfectly satisfied with Pots. and WRIGHT; they are but the tools of VAN BUREN and can be , more easily defeated than their leader. The people will soon leard that their election will be but a restoration of the influence of Van Buren, and that result can never be obtained by party drill. The most curious aspect of these nominations is the triumph of Van Buren over all the efforts made to defeat his influence in the Convention. Next to his own Success, Mr. Van Buren doubtless would desire that Mr. Polk and Mr. Wright, who as poiticians resemble him as much as one pea does another! It may be asked then, why then was not Van Buren nominated? What was to be gained by throwing him off the ticket? The an swer is obvious; the people knew and had con demned Mr. Van Buren's course, and it was neces. sary to take up men less known, but who if elected, would carry out the same measures. But we must forbear further remark for the present. If our loco friends are well satisfied with the nominations we are, their joy will be prodigious !'—Forum. MEDICINAL USES OP THE WILD CHZART.-.- Ever since the settlement of America, Wild Cherry has been known to possess very important medici nal virtue. Every body knew this fact, but nobody knew how to extract its essential properties. Every moth er gives Wild Cherry tea to her children for worms, for colds, and for almost every dieease and adults throughout our country are in the habit of making a compound or syrup of Wild Cherry bark:, and other ingredients, to be used in spring ae an an tidote to complaints incident to that changeful sea eon. It is found by experiment that the Wild Cherry possesses even far more important qualities than was ascridedto it. For the first stages ofCon sumption, Asthma, no matter how long standing, Coughs, Liver, Complaint, &c., it is proved to be the beat medicine known to man. Dr. Wistar'sßal- Liam of Wild Cherry is a chemical extract, combin ed with a similar extract from Tar, which enhances its value. Its success in curing Pulmonary disease in almost every stage' after our best physicians could do no more, has astonished the faculty, and led them to confess that Wistar's Balsam of Wild Cherry possesses a principle heretofore unknown to medical men. For sale by Thomas Read, Huntingdon and James Orr, Hollidaysburg. SZARB.ZIBID - On Thursday 30th ult., by the Rev. IL G. Dill, Mr. JOILN P. STEII ART, to Miss. LUCY ANN FOSTER, both of Huntingdon County. On Thursday morning, the 23d ult., by the Rev. A. Heberton, Maj. SAMUEL S. BARR, of Gays port, to Miss CHARLOTTE H. GIBSON, of Bedford. On Wednesday evening, the 22d ult., by the Rev. Mr. HeMer, Mr. HENRY J. STORM, of Holli dayburg, to Miss CATHARINE MARY, daughter of N. Lightner, Esq., of Baltimore city. On the 30th ult., by Ephraim Galbreath, Esq., Mr. REUBEN KE VS, to Miss RUTH REFNER, all of Hollidaysburg. IDllin, On Monday, the 27th ult., after an illness of four months, Mm. ROSANNA SMITH, consort of Michael Smith, of Hollidaysburg. CLAY CLUB. A meeting of the Clay Club" will be held in the Old Court House, on Friday evening next, at half past seven o'clock. The friends of Clay, Freling huysen, and Markle, are requested to attend. By order of the President. Julie sth 1844 TO THE ELECTORS OF RUN' TINGDON COUNTY. FRIENns &c : Having spent my whole life in your county, and the greater part of that time at the business of Farming, I now take the liberty of nff2ring myself, subject to the decision of a Whig County Convention, as a candidate for the office of GOOLCUBLiaLILPUK I . If succes.ftil, I pledge myself that my best efforts shall be to discharge its duties im partif.lly, to the best of my ability. JOHN HEWIT, Wee township. June 5, 1844,—t3c,