THE HUNTINGDON JOURNAL. ..One country, one constitution, one destiny." Elettaarnatina=calcorza 9 Wodnoiday morning, Jan. 8, 1843. irj. V . B. PALMER, Esq. (No. 59, Pine street below Third, Philadelphia,) is authorized to act as Agentfor this paper, to procure subscriptions and advertisements. PRACTICE vs. PROFESSION.—Henry Clay emancipated his servant Charles; Mr. 'limey sold PROPHECY l—The New York Herald thus launches as a prophecy for 1848: .. Mr. Polk has only succeeded to the fate and destiny of Mr. Van Buren, and Benton, Calhoun, Cam, Wright, snd all, will materially destroy one another. So that the prospect of the ruin of the Locofoco party, in consequence of intestine feuds, is brilliant in the extreme, and promises to pave the wiry for the election of Mr. Clay in 1848, by one of the most overwhelming majorities that ever car ried a popular man into the Presidency." Eel...—. Poor things ! how cold they must he, to here their coats taken off this weather,: said a tender-hearted damsel to a man skinning eels.— Don't it hurt them I ' • Not a whit of it, marm—they aro used to it ; ■nd then you see, we warms 'cm directly in fat, and that heals up their hurts. Fat art good alarm, for sores.' Pass 'em along Bill. DEATH OF MR. HUNTER.—We regret to announce the death of James N. Hunter, Esq., a member elect from this county to the State Legis lature. He died on Thursday afternoon, the 26th ult., at the residence of his father, in Rockland tp. Mr. H. woe in his 26th year, a young man of ability, and active business habits, whose election to the Legislature gave general satisfaction to men of all parties. He la a victim to the fatal ravages of Consumption.— Reading Gazelle. THE POST OFFICE BILL.—A correspon dent of the Journal of Commerce mentions the i features of the bill reported by the post office com mittee for reducing the rates of postage. The Post-Office Committee reported a bill to day reducing the rates of postage to 5 cents for 600 miles, and 10 cents for any greater distance; and greatly reducing the postage on newspapers and periodicals. The Treasury is to pay $750,000 an nually fur five years. as an equivalent for the trans portation of the public correspondence; after which it is to pay the sante postage as private letters. I think the bill will pass the House without any diffi culty. It adopts the penal bill of last aession." THE BIBLE.—The attention of our father. was early directed to the spread of the Bible as a means of national happiness. On the 11th Sept. 1777, a committee of Congresa recommended the importa tion of 20,000 Bibles from Holland, Scotland and elaawhere, as the proper type for printing could not be procured in this country. ry The case of Miss DELI• A.WEDSTEII,triCa I at Frankfort, (Ky.) for abducting slaves from the State, was given to the jury on the 19th ult., after a brilliant defence from her counsel, Messrs. Leslie Combs, Johnson, and Shy. The jury remained together all night, and on the following morning, returned into Court with a verdict of " guilty."— Her term of imprisonment has been fixed at two years, but in consideration for her sex, the members of the jury signed a petition, prsying the Governor to grant her a pardon. 'l'he case of Fairbank, indicted for the same of fence as Miss Webster, has been postponed until the March term, in consequence of the absence of witnesses material to his cause.—U. S. Gazelle. A fire broke out at the corner of South and Pratt streets, Baltimore, on the evening of the 29th ult., which destroyed property of the value of $`25,000„ Z. We learn from the Lexington Observer, that Mr. Clay had liberated the mother and sister of hie servant Charles, some time previous to the emanci pation of the latter. j A young American lady being asked by a boring politician which party she was most in favor of, replied that she preferred a wedding party. Mr. Torrey Sentenced. The motions in arrest of judgment, and for a new trial of Mr. Torrey, convicted in Baltimore on an attempt to entice away slaves of a citizen, have been refused and overruled, and the following sentence will to-day be at his request, privately given by the Judge of the Court. " On the first indictment, confined in the Peniten tiary from December 28, 1844. to ‘2ll Aprlil, 1847. tin the second indictment, until 2d April 1849.-- Ou the third indictment, until 4d April, 1851. Miller has again come forward to keep up the excitement about the end of the world among hie deluded followers. In the last number of the Midnight Cry" is the following paragraph: • I have fixed my mind on encther time, end here I menu to stand until Gun gives no more light —end that in, to-day, T.DAT, and tu.uao, until He cornea." NOT BAM-The Now York Tribune foyer—By the laws of the United States, the importation of t 5 sees into our country is a flagrant crime, and the Shive•Trade is Piracy, punishable with death. Mr. John Tyler, in his lost annual Message, felicitates our people on the fact we were the first to deal no throu;hly with that infamous tralllc. A correspon- dent wants a solution for this problem: If the needy rascal who brings ONE slave into the Union de4erves to be hung, what punisnment should be meted on John Tyler, C. Ingersoll & Co., who exerted all their power to bring in Twenty-fire TA.,a,:m.2 Slaves at once by the Annexation of V;s:1 ' , me Pt:ie.-13,c1. r im i t o ut • The Legislature. Our Legislature met at Harrisburg yesterday.— The Governor's message will be delivered to-day, and we expect to receive it in time to publish it en tire in our next. The first subject of importance, after the election of Speakers, Clerk., &c.—which is usually done on the first or eecond day—will be the election of a United States Senator in the place of Dr. STUR OZON, whose term expires on the 4th of March next. The prominent candidates are, the said Dr. Bruno mow, W uses* M'CANnLegs, H. B. WRIORT, SIMON CAMERON, THOMAS S. BeLl, Jesse MILLER and DATI n R. Powren ; and then there are others as numerous as the counties in the State, some of then; pretty good men, aside from their politics, and others again who would scarcely be entrusted with the lowest township office. Perhaps a' Old Hunt ingdon" is the only county that has not been hon ored with a recommendation of some one of her "democrats." But perhaps she still lays claim to our own Davy R.," and her Macfarlanea, Wil sons, &c., may stand off for his Excellency. We cannot see how their merits and their claims could otherwise be overlooked. If the Whip determine to become mere " lookers on in Denmark," there will be such a fight among the "progressive de mocracy" as will fully equal that of the Kilkenny cats. The time fixed for this election is Tuesday next, the 14th inst. On the 20th a State Treasurer is to be elected.— There is comparatively little said on this subject on yet. The "fuse" will perhaps commence when some great men find their prospects for something better become gloomy. The Inauguration of the new Governor takes place on the 21st. This event will of course be at tended with all the "pomp and circumstance" that anxious office seeking patriots can get up; and " the Governor" will then find out, it he has not already learned the fact, that he has numerous very devoted friends, ready and willing to assist him in the administration of the Government. Gov. Por ter says " a smooth sea and pleasant voyage" are in prospect for his successor. We shall see. Until after these matters—so highly important to individuals—are disposed of, the Legislature cannot be expected to do much towards devising "ways and means" to relieve the people of their present onerous and still growing burtlien of taxation. We will keep our readers advised of the "say ings and doings" of the Legislature horn week to week. A. Locofoco state Senator Expelled in North Carolina. The Raleigh Register contains the proceedings of the Senate of North Carolina in the case of Wm. Eavere, a Senator from the county of Onslow, who took his seat at the beginning of the session upon the evidence of a forged certificate of election. The facts are thus stated in the Register: ENNETT readied this city on Sunday, the day before the commencement of the Session, without bringing his certificate of election from the Sheriff of Onslow. That day the fact was known here, and was the subject of general conversation, end of much anxiety, because if every Senator should he in attendance the next day, parties would be ex actly tied in that body; but then,one of the Whig Senators was detained at home by indisposition of his fierily, and therefore, if every Locofoco Senator took his seat, they would have a majority of one in that body, and thus could control the elections of its Officers, and by electing their own Speaker, pos sibly secure the Governor's Chair to their own par ty. EN:tares votes, therefore, were of very great 1 importance in such a crisis! Next morning he had his Certificate! He presented it at the Clerk's table in the Senate as his warrant for taking a sent in that body, as a, Senator, and upon it took his seat, and continued to clnim it, and vote under it. Several Senators rue pected a forgery in the case, and examined the Cer tificate, and it was found that the body of it was in one hand-writing and the signature in a very differ ent one, and neither in the hand-writing of the Sheriff, whose Certificate and hand-writing it pur ported to be. The fact of the forgery woo soon established be yond all doubt by the arrival of a true certificate from the Sheriff of Onslow. A Committee of the Senate was appointed to investigate the matter; and upon his failure to appear before the Committee, or to procure evidence of exculpation, a report was made to the effect that he ought to be expelled. In the discussion of the case before the Senate, Mr. ENNETT was defended by counsel. The vote of expulsion was passed by the casting vote of the Speaker, the political friends of Mr. ENNETT all voting for him, and the Whig votes to expel him. It is said by the Register that the signature to the forged certificate was in a hand very much like that of Mr. ENxere himself. The circumstances of the case so strongly intimated that the party using the forged document knew it to be false, even if he did not execute it himself, that there seemed to be slight ground indeed for doubting the guilt of the expelled Senator. =arse's Telegraph. It will be seen, says the Philadelphia U. S. Ga zette, that efforts are being made in Congress, to extend Morse's Telegraph from Baltimore, the pre sent eastern terminus, through Philadelphia to New York. The entire success which has attended the experiment, warrants Congrees in any expenditure necessary to carry on the work. Many of our rea ders, suppose, that the Telegraph only makes or marks a few arbitrary signs, by which a leading fact is made known ; but it is true that the procee ding of Congress are reported in a very satisfactory manner in Balthnore, by the Telegraph, and printed in the Patriot. We seem only to have entered upon the first steps of the improvement in covey ing intelligence, when we got up railroads. Hero is information, correct and connected, coveyed forty miles, (and a hundred and forty miles would make no perceptible difference,) in a time as short as not to admit of measurement, " Compared with the speed of its flight, The tempest itself lags behind, And the swift-winged arrows of light." The advantaged of this mode of conveying intel ligence, especially in time of ,var, are incalculable; in time of ma:e ths: kill comet:. I:e ororlooketl or prrd:~~a'r3 , Mr. Payne's Speech. We were not a little surprised on opening the Hollidaysburg Standard of last week to find the Free Trade or Revenue Tariff speech of Mr. PAYNE of Alabama, lately delivered in the House of Representatives at Washington, on the bill " to provide for the remission of duties on railroad iron , in certain cases." The speech is a good specimen of the Southern doctrine, and is full of the spirit of nullification. We have said we were surprised— surprised at seeing such a speech in a northern Locofoco paper--a Locofoco paper in Pennsylva nia—and most of all, a Locofoco paper in Hunting don county. Previous to the last Presidential rice l lion not a Locofoco paper in the State (except the Carlisle " Statesman") would have published ouch a speech. The leaders of the Polk party would rather have seen all their editors beheaded than per mit one of them to publish such doctrine in " poor, deluded Pennsylvania." Perhaps Mr. Dougherty has yet a spark of conscience left, and is endeavor ing to undeceive the " democracy" of the Keystone State. "Better late than never" may be his motto; or he may think that although it may a payneful speech it is too late to do any harm where the peo ple were induced to vote for Polk, Dallas and the Tariff of 1942! We make two extracts from the speech, and we copy from the "Standard." Mr. PAYNE observed • ' " * that he was in favor of reducing the duties not only on iron, but on all the articles of consumption which are taxed by the tariff of 1842. He wanted a simple revenue duty imposed on that article, as well as on every other on which a duty Is now levied by the gov ernment. How long was this system (the Protective Sys tem) to be borne? Was it to be perpetual? No: the American people had pronounced against it once, and had pronounced against it unequivocally in the election of James K. Polk; it might be at tempted to evade this question, but the American people had proclaimed it at the ballot-boxes that this iniquitous system, among others, should fall to the dust; and fall it must. We look (said Mr. P.) for relief to the returning sense of justice of the American people. Whenever we have had a fair "lick" at this question, it has always been con demned; and if this Congress chooses not to act at this session, when that still silent voice is heard again from the ballot-boxes, it would speak in tones not to be misunderstood. The Senate was lo be reformed ; this House was to be reformed ; and in the next Congress all these questions were to be settled on principles of right, of equality; and of jus tice to all. He desired anything rather than op pression of this character. He was prepared at any time to meet any emergency that might arise, rath er than continue to endure the weight of this injus tice and oppression. We hope (Mr. P. repeated) to have redress front the returning sense of justice of the American People. There were one or two other remedies. State interposition was one ; sub mission was out ol the question. He did not say this in vain boast, with a view to create prejudice and excitement; and he alone was responsible for it. But ho said submission was out of the question.— There were two other remedies, then. One was an actual State veto of the laws of Congress; and an other was Male Legislation which would reach rt, I which, in his opinion, was efficient; and which, if the State legislatures were true to the interests of their constituents,they would not fail to adopt. Wind was it? I would (continued Mr. P.) attack the r e tariff bill of 1842. I would attack it in detail, or in any way. I would adopt any measure to get rid of it. I would take the tariff bill of 1842, and lay a tax—not an impost tax, but a tax on every article of domestic manufacture in this country, precisely as high as the tax was laid upon foreign articles. I would take the Kentucky bagging, and would tax it at 5 or 6 cents per yard—which the State legis lature has a perfect right to do. I would tax Penn sylvania iron—if she insists on the protectior she now has—and every other article, precisely as the tariff bill of 1842 taxes the foreign article. I would go farther—as far as to throw the entire South upon the foreign article, instead of the domestic. I would rob—not rob, sir—but I would vindicate my right, by being robbed no longer. I would give as a bounty that which w• refuse to have extorted from us by force. The very instant tt_le northern States lose the southern market, they will go without it forever, or until they agree to a modification of the present oppressive duties: whenever they modify them, I would relax my State legislation. Let tne tell you, if we do not get redress from the returning sense of justice among the people, - we know full well that we have the power in our own hands.— Long have we suffered under this system of oppres sion. We agreed, on one occasion, upon a com promise; we complied fully with that compromise; our advantage. resulting from that compromise had but begun when our enemies, the advocates of pro tection, violated all their plighted faith--the plight ed faith of those who had preceded them in °like— ned struck down this system of compromise, and re-established these high duties. We feel that we have the power to du this thing --to redress our selves; that we are about to escape front the bur dens under which too long and too tamely we have suffered; we feel that, like the children of Isreal, we have panned the Red Sea, and stand upon the sum mit of Mount Pisgah; and we feel, too, rs if the promised land were just before us; and we now tell gentlemen if they refuse to adjust this thing upon terms of equalily justice, we will apply the remedy. Whenever the question between uncon ditional submission and slavery—abject slavery to a dominant irresponsible interest of this country, I tell you, sir, we will resist ; for aught I know, for aught I care, a million of swords may leap from their scab bards and drink deep the blood of their oppressors. That is my view; I state it on my own responsi bility ; so far as I am concerned I am ready to meet any contingency rather than to submit tamely while plunder shall continue to he the order of the day I will do any duty let the case be what it may. TO THE FRIENDS OF MR. CLAY, We find the following in the National Intel!igen cer :—" We have beck requested by Mr. CLAY to express his thanks to those editors of Newspapers who have been so kind as to supply hint gratuitous ly with their papers fur some time past. Desirous of avoiding obligations which he cannot convenient ly repay, ho wishes henceforward to receive only such papers as he subscribes for. Wo add, on our own information, derived from the friends of Mr. Clay, that his postage is enor mous—swelled, we are shocked to leant, by exult ing and insulting letters, transmitted to him, as well as by letters requesting his autograph, dr.c., and by other correspondents. Those who address him ought to reflect that he is not invested with the franking privilege. Wo are sorry to learn that his pecuniary condition is such as to make the practice of great economy an indispensable duty. co-A bill has been reported in the Legislature of Miii!land to abolish imprisonment for Debt. Kensington Rioters. In the Court of Quarter Sessions, Judge Parsons passed sentence upon the following persons : John O'Neill, convicted of riot, committed in Kensington in May last, was fined one dollar and costs, and sentenced to nine months imprisonment. This is the man who Trove the cart into the nice ' Ling, an act which occasioned such serious conse quences. The sentence. His Honor remarked, was lighter than i t would have been because the defen dant had already undergone a long imprisonment. John Tegert, convicted of riot in Kensington in May last, was fined one dollar and costs, and sen tenced to one month's imprisonment. Defendant would have received a heavier sentence, said Judge Parsons, but that he received such severe treatment at the hands of the mob. John Bennett, who had pleaded guilty to riot in Kensington in May, was fined one dollar and costs, and sentenced to four month's imprisonment. De fendant had been sentenced to six month's impri sonment on another bill of indictment. John McAleer, convicted of riot in Kensington in May, was fined one dollar and costs, and sentenced to one month's imprisonment. Prisoner is the man who had his thumb blown off while in the act of discharging a gun from ono of the house windows nearly overlooking the meeting in Cadwalader st. Frederick Hess, convicted of arson, in setting fire to a house in Codwaloder street, during the Ken sington riots, was sentenced to one year's imprison ment. Defendant was thus lightly sentenced be cause of his extreme youth. Patrick Murray, convicted of riot in Kensington on May last, was fined one dollar and costs, and sentenced to six months imprisonment. Prisoner was one of the men who furnished amunition to some of the rioters. His store. and the stock therein were destroyed by the other rioters. Biddle Sopher, convicted of riot in the rescue of Dick Manly from the custody of the police, grid also t an aggravated assault upon an officer, was fined r one dollar and costs,and sentenced to nine month's ) imprisonment. ca. Hon. James B ecru NAN U. S. Senator from Pennsylvania, recently sent the following Toast to a Locofoco Jollification in Pittsburg: "Domestic Manufactuers.—They have been sa ved by the election of James K. Polk, from being overwhelmed by the immense capital which would have rushed into them for investment, and from an expansion of the currency which would have nullified any protection short of prohibition" Of course, the Carpenters, Bricklayers, Masons, Machinists, &c. &c. assembled at the dinner, recei ved the toast with screams of exultation and hur rahs for Polk and Buchanan ! No more Factories, Forges, Furnaces, &c. to be built—the triumph of Polk has 'protected' those now in operation from any new home competition. But the wives and children of these same mechanics and artisans being at home and sober, might possibly take a different view of the matter. They might reflect, This sort of Protection' may or may not answer forLthe Foc i tories and Forges, but how will it do for us? We have necessities as well as others. The reader will bear in mind that Senator Bu chanan avows and glories in the fact that it is the election of Polk which has arrested the rushing' of immense capital' into the establishment of new and the extension and improvement of existing Home Manufactures. Yet the working men whose employment is cut off by this very effect will be told by the first grog-shop demagogue he meets that he had been discharged by his Whig employer solely on account of his politics! that his work is stopped only from spite, or a determination to crush him! Thus is the public mind poisoned by the blackest and most wanton falsehood. The poor slang of Bucnanan about the expan sion of the Currency' es a necessary result of a Whig triumph would disgrace any other Senator. A sudden and mischievous expansion of the cur rency has several times resulted from Locofoco ascendency--not once from the action of the Wings. The Currency of the Nation has never been so steady, nor in the average so restricted in volume, as ur the guidance of our two National Banks. A .e last was Vetoed, the Currency expanded liar. :a as much in the next four years as it had done ... the preceeding fourteen. But who expects such a demagogue to pay any regard to truth.-IV. Y. Tribune. HEIIALII OFFICE, Norfolk, December 25, P. M. elancholy Disaster. LOSS OF SEVEN HUMAN LIVES. The schooner Caledonia of this port, owned by Captain S. Pedrick, and commanded by Captain Drown, employed in attending on the wreck of the British brig Nancy, (ashore near the Wash Woods,) left here on Saturday last wills the intention of bringing np the anchors of the brig; but after reach ing Cape Henry, the weather became so thick that she could not proceed, and an easterly wind spring ing up, she put back and anchored near Buckree.— On Monday morning the wind shifted round to W. S. W. and blew a heavy gale all day. In cense- : (pence of thin detention, Captain Brown it. appears, gave up Isis trip to the brig, and concluded to re turn to Norfolk; for he got under way about sun set, though the gale had abated but little, and at tempted to beat up. The schooner had not got further on her way, however, than between the Rip Raps and Sewell's Point, when she capsized, and melancholy to relate, every soul on board was drowned! There were' it is believed, 7or 8 per sons on board, but we have heard only the namca of Captain Brown, (the master,) and Captain Isaac S. Pugh of Phila., (formerly commanding the schnooner Seeford of this port.) The wreck was seen next morning, and boarded by Capt. Hughes, (of the British brig mentioned above, who was at Old Point,) who found the body of Capt. Pugh en tangled in the railing--all the others having been washed overboard. A bout came off from the Rev enue Cutter Taney with six men, who, however, rendered no assistance its taking off the drowned man, though invited to do so by Capt. Hughes and the body remained on the wreck during the day. It was late before the intelligence reached here and a friend of Capt. Brown, applied en board the U. S. ship Pcnn , ylvania, at a late hour of the night, or some means of conveyance to the wreck, when Commodore Dolton, with promptness and politeness highly praiseworthy, ordered the steamer Engineer to be gut ready immediately, which was done; and and she was despatched in charge of Lieutenant Carter and Mr. Olmstead, Master's Mate, to the wreck, at which she arrived about 2 o'clock on Wednesday morning, and returned a few hours after, with the body of Captain Pugh, which was respectably interred. Capt. Pugh, we learn has a wife and four children residing at Philadelphia. From the York Republican. The brogress of Agar lanisin. Our readers have already noticed what nro called Now York, the anti-rent disturbances in read accounts of the opposition to legal process and outrages to personal security and even human life which have been perpetrated in their progress.— They first broke out among the tenants of the Manor of Rensselacrwyck, which embraces nearly the whole territory of the cointies of Albany and Rensselaer—is twenty-four miles in length and forty-eight in breadth, and has within its bounds eighteen townships and a population of 50,000 souls. This district of country was first settled by KILLIAN VAN RENSSELAER under a libel al Charter from the Dutch Government—the original Europe an proprietor of the soil. The title of himself and his descendants was confirmed by the English Gov ernment under Charles 2nd, who conquered the' provice from Holland—further confirmed under Queen Anne, and finally recognized and guaran teed by the people of New York under their first Republican Constitution, and the amended instru ment of 1821. The settlers went upon the lands under perpetual leases from the " Patroons" or par amount owners, being bound to pay an annual rent "in kind" or winter Wheat—to deliver "four fat fowls" and do a day's work with horses and wagon, and pay all taxes. There was also a fine in most of the leases upon all alienations, otherwise than by will, of one quarter of the purchase money.— The tenure was therefore, according to the spirit of the times in which it originated, feudal in its na ture. That the rent is light is evident from the fact that in Albany county the farms pay fourteen bushels of Wheat to the hundred acres, and in Rensselaer ten bushels to the same quantity of land. The grievance complained of consists mainly in the exaction of these moderate rents; and it is this which has led to overt acts of disobedience to the law—to resistance to the Sheriffs—to the formation of bands of men disguised as Indians, and to the murder in more than one instance, and the tarring and feathering in many of those for any cause ob noxious to these violent, ruffianly and fierce bandit ti. It must be remembered that the tenants on the Manor never paid aught for the purchase of the Farms which they occupy, except the annual rent —that the rent was fixed in "kind" rather than money, because it was so preferred by the tenants when the Manor was first let, .d that the Proprie tor offers to give a clear title in fee simple to the oc cupants of the land on the payment of a principal sum of which the interest should be the annual rent commuted into money at the average price of grain during the last ten years, to be calculated at the rate of five per cent. The operation of this would pay the Patroon four dollars per acre—the tenant will only consent to give two. As to the right of property no one can doubt that it is in the Patioon, where the Constitution of New York re cognizes it to be. This is not changed by the fact that the tenants have continued to hold the lands under their leases, many of them no doubt in an unbroken lino of descent for two centuries, and others as the alienecs of the original lessees. All this may seem to them to give them a free title to the soil ; but it does not so—they have acknowled ged the contrary by the undisputed payment of the annual rent until lately—the Supreme law of the land and the fundamental instrument of the State Government declare otherwise, and the Courts of Justice have more than once decided to the contrary. The Springetsbury Manor case in this county is a precedent in point; and the quit-rents thereon, fully its heavy and due to a Proprietor who did as little towards the actual culture of the soil as he of Rens. selaerwyck, had still to he paid. Out of this matter then lave sprung the anti-rent disturbances in New York, which so feafully menace the public peace and supremacy of the laws in that State. The mischief, however, does not stop here—once transcend the barrier of legal order, and there seems to Ito no limit to the spirit of disturbance and mis rule. From Rensselaerwyck organized opposition to the payment of rents has extended to a tract of property owned by the Livingston family in Colum bia county ; and from what wo read we do not find that in the latter case there exists even the same bold pretence of oppression as in the former. The Sheriff has there been assailed and beaten off---a detachment of Indians from Rensselaer have joined the savages of Columbia ; and although the ring leader of the band—" Big Thunder" or Doctor Bocanrov-has been arrested, yet so rife was the spirit of disorder that the jail in the City of Hud son had to be guarded and the Burgesses' Corps of Albany 300 strong despatched to aid in its defence. The diffusiveness of the mischief may be judged from the fact that at the last Election two anti-rent candidates were elected to the Legislature front the county of Scholiarie, wt.ose connexion with that matter is not clearly known to us. We must close this hurried article without much comment on its caption—the Progress of Agrarian. ism. A discerning mind, well acquainted with re cent events, cannot fail, we think, to discover the drift of those remarks which we would make. Look at the history of Locofocoism—the grasping and usurping examples of the Jackson era—the avowed contempt of vested rights—the open violation of the single District law by the present Congress—the contempt showed to the great Seal of New Jersey by a former one--the fomenting of the Dorr treason in Rhode Island and the sympathy with the convic ted traitor is the Penitentiary; and then let the mind recal other instances of the like kind which we cannot even mention, but vehose name is legion and whose particulars must be familiar to intelligent minds; and then, you may trace the lineal demsnt of the anti-rent disturbances in Nc w To;k, end ell the violence and Guttural. of even more heincus nature which may succeed them. 1:0- Since the above wu written we learn that BorasTore or "Big Thunder" behaved with great pusillanimity after he was confined in jail, his fears having even subjected him to fits. It is also credit• ably stated that he has confessed himself to have. been one of the principal instigators of the anti-rent rebellion in nearly one-half of the counties of New York, and revealed the names of all his coadjutors. The Sheriff of Rensselaer county had ermined two of the gang chewed with murder without opposi• lion, and it seemed as though the law was about to regain its supremacy. id have NEARP.ZIED, l'n Oliver township, on the Ist inst.. by Robert M'Mansgal, Esq., Mr. ASBURY OAKS, of Stouts Valley, Huntingdon county, to Miss ELIZABETH MITCHELL, of Oliver township, Mifflin county. On the 24th ult., by the Rev. T. Mitchell, Mr. NATHAN W. GREEN, of Warriorsmark town ship, to Miss CATHARINE PLOTNER, of Bit minghant. W'ASUrDIGTONZELNS I The Society will meet at the usual place, the Old Court House, on Saturday evening nest. The third Lecture of the course, will be delivered by David Blair, Esq. Sullied:LA lefcnco of the Bible in Public Schools. The citizens generally, and the Ladies especially are incited to attend. There will bo singing, and music by the Band H. V. MILLER, See'y, Jim. 8, 1845. LIS r OF LETTERS remaining in the Post Office at Alotandrm, on the Ist Jan., 1145, which if not t; ken out within three months will be sent to' the Post Office Do. partment as dead letters. Baker John Murrels Andrew Br, neman Isaac Mari Henry Dickey Susan Moyer Henry Davis John C: Pine Isaac Davis Samuel Plymptnn Elijah Fisher Mrs. Porter John Focklet H. & 1. Parmentcr S. S. Gun Benjamin Spyker Smnuel Green James Esq. S inter Mr:—German: Houtz Daniel Stewart Alexander Houston M. L. Shively James Herren John B. Smut Mr. Hall Weston Shin, ly Mary . Johnston William Thumas David P. Ireland Judith Young George B. Ichingee John Yocum Samuel Kennedy J. if, Wilson James Kaufman George Walker H. C. Martin Isaac Walker George M'Clure Andrew JOHN GEMMILL, P. M. Alexandria, Jan. 8, 1895. LIST OF LETTERS, which remain in the Huntingdon Post Office, January Ist 1895. It not called for previous to the Ist of April next, they shall he sent to the Post Office Department at Washington. Bottontot John 2 M'Vcy Michael Bottontot James Mirgrath Miss Emil'a Coder T. B. M'Willams Thomas Crull Augustus Murchorn John Diffenbacher A L. 2 Numn Russel Dysar Joseph Ntuitmer John Grubb Abraham, jr. Patterson John Gray Miss Harriet Peppard Oliver Grubb E. &C. B. Ro.enhiem Abraham Heisler D. S. 'roman James Hight Charles • Wood Samuel R. Lay George Weight Henry M'G wire Catharine Witherow John M'Cnnnell James Williams Jesse DAVID SNARE, P.M, January 8, 1845. CAUTION. LL persons are hereby cautioned a iry& gitinst buying, levying on, or meddling, in any way with the following property, which I purchased at Constable Sale, on Wednesday the 11th D.cember, inst., as the property of .1 F. Livingston, to wit i one Sorrel Mare, Saddle and Bridle: which property is I. ft in the possession of said Livingston until 1 see fit to remote the same. JAMES ENTREICIN. Jr. Coffee Run, Dee. 24, 1844. Bridge Proposals. PROPOSALS will be received at the Com missioners' Office in Huntingdon, till Janu ary Court next for tht building of a Bridge across Stone Creel , ' at Couch's Mill, in Bar• ree township. The plan and specifications can be seen at :my time in the Commission. ers' Office. ALEX. KNOX, Jr. MORD. CHILCOTE. JOHN F. MILLER, Dec. 18, 1844. Commissioners. XOTICE. LL persons interested will take 'ideo Aathat the account of henry Snyder, Committee of the person and estate of Con rad Snyder, an Idiot, has been filed in the office of the Prothonotary of n the Court of C mmon o Pleas nf Huntingdo comity, and will be presented tithe Court on the second Monday of January next ;1845) for confirm ation and allowance, and will be then con firmed unless cause he she wa to the contra- ry. J AMES STEEL. Nov. 26, 1844.-3 t. Prot'y. STRAY REIFE'R. Came to the residence of the subscriber, in Sinking Valley, Tvrone township. some time last June, a dark brindle heifer, some white on its belly, supposed to be a year old last spring. The owner is requested to come forward, prove property. pay char ges and take it away. FREDERICK REAMY. Dec. 4, 1844. AUDITORS' NOTIC E.—The undeN signed, appointed to distribute the assets in the hands of Wii:iam Bell, Administrator of Samuel Bell, late of Allegheny town ship, dec'd., amongst the creditors of said clec'd., hereby gives notice that he will at teed for that purpose at the Register's'Of fice, on Friday the 17th day of January 1843, at I o'clock. P. M. JACOB MILLER, Aad'r. Hutingdon, Dec. 25, 1844. STRAY HEIFERS. Came to the residence of the subscriber in Warriormark township, on the '22d day of November, 1844, two stray Heifers, rt• sing three years old, the one is black, the other red, with some white spots, sad has it short tail. the owner is rinested to come and prove property, par ehareea, and rake. th”rn away. 111',N141' PUNK, The. 11, 1844