Iir\TING 10"\ JOUIn Le By JAMES CLARK VOL. XII, NO. 39. TERMS The "HUNTINGDON JOURNAL" will be pupliehed hereafter at the following rates, viz 54.75 a year, if paid in advance; $2.00 if paid during the year, and $2.50 if not paid un til after the expiration of the year. The above terms to be adhered to in all cases. No subscription taken for less than six months, find no paper discontinued until all mrearages are paid, unless at the option of the publisher. To Clubs of six, or more, who pay in ad- vance, the Journal will be sent at OIL SO per copy for one year; and any ono who - will send us that number of names accompanied with the money whatl receive the Journal one year for his trouble. POETICAL, (For the Huntingdon Journal.] LINES. So young--and yet the stain of crime Is on my pale, pale brow; And in my heart, the cursed blight Of deeds retrieveless now ! I'm sure I did not mean to sin, Nor cast a deathly shade Of sorrow o'er my Mother's soul,-- My God ! to Thee I've prayed To rescue her tram every ill, And make my valued life As pure and spotless as her own, And free from care and strife: But now, alas! 'tis vain to mourn The drear and gloomy past ; I feel my burning brain grow wi'd, My life-tide ebbing fast : O ! darkly fearful thoughts crowd in My seared and writhing brain-- • 'Tis but a leap to pass the bourne 1..01 earthly woe and pain ; And yet the world is bright and fair, And full of shine and flowers-- Alt ! now, my heart is back again To childhood's sunny bowers ; Those bowers of love, and hope, and truth, The Edon of my early yearn, Why lived Ito on after age To shed these hitter, bitter tears! But yet, I did not mean to err-- -0 ! hope comes back, all fresh and strong, Sure Heaven will ever be my friend. And shield me e'er from scorn and wrong Gone now the cursed, b istering smart, Whose sting was in my bursting heart; In prayer, and faith, and trusting love, I rest my all with God above. M. G. [For the Huntingdon Journal.] MY BROTHER. MIMI, gentle brother of my heart; 0 ! how my thrilling pulses start, As close against thy beating breast, I feel my throbbing temples pressed; And in thy mild and loving eyes, 1 read of joys beyond the skies— Sweet joys which thro' thy bosom steal-- Such joys as angels ever feel ! 0 ! would that in these hours of love, Bright angels from their home above, 'Xith starry wings and loving eyes, Might waft us to their antics skies ! M. G. Huntingdon, Sept. 17,1847. MISCELLANEOUS. California. The Washington correspondent of the Baltimore Patriot, gives the following idea of what California is, and to what extent it is worth the enormous expense our government has been at to conquer it : " Including all of New Mexico, which — Texas claims as belonging to her, Up, per California covers over a space of some 500,000 square miles, is made up of everlasting mountains, barren of ev erything but rock and snow, and barren, sandy, howling deserts, unexplored, tirk, gloomy and forbidding to the be holder ! The exception to this horrid state of country lies between two ranges of mountains, whose course is parallel with that of the Pacific coast. It is sit uated between the shore range of moun tains and the great Sierra Nevada, or Snowy mountains, and is watered by the Saw Joakin, running from the South, and the Rio de los Americanos which runs from the North, and both of which empty through a gorge of the shore range into the bay of San Francisco.— This fertile tract of country is so chop ped up by mountain spurs running down through it, that of the 60,000 r. qua re miles, equal to the size of New York, not more than 20,000 square miles, equal in size to Maryland, may be termed wor thy of cultivation, and then it must be done for most part by irrigation. The rains fall for six months of the year there, and frequently overflow the val leys. And during the dry season, it is dry enough ! But how are the people to get to this wonderful Paradise, no bigger than New Jersey or Maryland 1 It may be gain ed by a six months voyage around the cape. Another route is by way of Pa nama, and thence across the isthmus.— But the great route for traders and emi grants is by way of Council Grove and Santa Fe. From our frontier in Arkan sas to Council Grove is 200 tniles over a fine country. Thence onward 500 miles to Santa Fe is through a waste and barren desert. From the latter place, or rather from the South West Pass, it is 1500 miles along the brink of the great basin or desert to the enter ing place, through the Sierra Nevada, at Walker's Pass, to the "Promised Land." BUENA VISTA. TILE DEATH OF YOUNG HENRY CLAY. [Extract from Mr. LumAnu's address, at the mass meeting of the friends of Gen. Taylor, held at Philadelphia a few weeks ago.] Do you behold that dark ravine, deep sunken between these precipitous banks'? Hero no sunlight comes—for these walls of rock wrap the pass in eternal twilight. Withered trees grow between the mass es of granite, and scattered stone, make the bed of the ravine uncertain and difficult for the herd. Hark ! That cry, that rush, like a mountain torrent bursting its barriers ; and quick as the lightning flashes from darkness, the dismal ravine is bathed in red battle light. From its northern ex tremity a confused band of Mexicans, an army in itself, came yelling along the pass, treading one another down as they fly, their banners, spears, horses and men, tossed together in inextricable con fusion. By thousands they rush into the shad ows of the pass, their dark faces redden ed by the sheeted blaze of musketry.— The caverns of the ravine send buck the roar of their panic, and The grey rocks are washed by their blood. But the little band 71i '.hi- who pursue this army—who are they 2 You may see in their firm, heroic ranks, the volunteer costume,of Illinois and Kentucky. At their head, urging his men with shouts, rides the gallant McKee, by his side, young Henry Clay—that broad forehead which reminds you of his father, bathed in the glare, as his sword quivers on high, ere it alls to kill. There, too, a wild figure, red with his own blood, and the blood of Mexican• foes, his uniform rent in tatters, This arm, bared to the shoulder, striking terrible blows with his good sword—Hardin, of Illinois, conies gallantly forward. This small, but iron band, hurl the Mexicans from the heights into the ra vine, and follow up the chase far down into the eternal twilight of that moun tain pass. Look ! as their musketry stream one steady blaze you would think that one ceaseless sheet of lightning bathed these rocks in flame! Over the Mexicans, man and horse, hurled back in mad disorder, the Ameri cans dash on their way, never heeding the overwhelming numbers of their foes, never heeding the palpitating forms be neath their feet, with bayonet, with rifle and sword, they press steadily on, the well known banner streaming ever more overhead. The howl of the dying war horse— hark! Does it not chill your blood to hear it 1 The bubbling cry of the wound ed man, with the horse's hoof upon his mouth, trampling his face into a hideous wreck—does it not sicken your soul to hear it 1 A hundred yards or more into the pass the Americans have penetrated, when suddenly a young Mexican, rushing back upon their ranks, seizes the fallen flag of Ananuac, and dashes to his death! To see him, young and beardless, a very boy, rush with his country's flag, with his bare breast, upon that line of sharp steel—it was a sight, to stir cow ards into manhood, and it shut into the Mexican heart like an electric flame. Even in their panic-stricken disorder they turned, by hundreds they grasped their arnis, and rolled in one long wave of lance and bayonet upon the foe. Wo to the brave men of Illinois and Kentuc ky now. Locked in that deadly pass, a wall of infuriated Mexicans between them and that wall of rocks—above their heads, through every aperture among the cliffs, the blaze of muskets pouring a shower of bullets on their heads— wherever they turned the long and dead ly lance poised at their throats—it was a moment to think once of home, and die. Those who survived the fearful mo ment, tell with shuddering triumph of, the death of the three heroes—McKee, Hardin and Clay. McKee, you see him yonder, with his shattered sword, dripping blood, ho en deavors to ward off the aim of those deadly lances, and lights on his knees, when he can stand no longer, and then the combatants close over him, and you see him no more. Hardin rose from a heap of slaughter ed foes, his face streaming from its hid eous lance wounds, and waved a Mexi can flag, in triumph; as his life-blood gushed in a torrent over his muscular form. That instant the full light of bat tle was upon his mangled face. Then, flinging the captured flag to a brother soldier, he shouted—" Give it to her, as a memorial of Buena Vista! my wife!" It was his last word, upon his bared breast, the fury of ten lances rushed, and the horses' hoofs trampled him into the heap of dead. But most sad, and yet more glorious of all, it was to see, the death of the sec. HUNTINGDON, PA,, TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 28, 1847, and HENRY CLAY! You should have seen him, with his back against yonder rock, his sword grasped firmly, as the consciousness that he bore a name, that must not die ingloriously, seemed to fill his every vein, and dart a deadly fire from his eyes! At that Moment he looked like the old man. • For, his brow, high and retreating; with thel blood-clotted hair, waving back from its outline, was swollen in every vein, as though his soul shone from it, ere she fled forever. Lips set, brow knit, hand firm,—a circle of his men fighting round him—he dashed back the Mexi cans until his sword was wet, his arm weary with blood. At last, with his thigh splintered by a ball, he gathered his proud form to its full height, and fell. His face, ashy with intense agony, he bade his com rades to leave him there to die. That ravine should be the bed of his glory. But gathering around him a guard of breasts and steel—while two of their number bore him tenderly along—those men of Kentucky fought round their fal len hero, and retreating step by step, they launched their swords and bayo nets into the foe, and said with every blow—" HENRY CLAY." It was wonderful to see how that name nerved their arms, and called a smile to the face of the dying hero.—How it would have made the heart of the old man of Ashland throb to have heard his name yelling as a battle cry down the shadows of that lonely pass! Along the ravine, and up this narrow path ! The hero bleeds as they bear him on, and tracks the way with his blood.—Faster and thicker the Mexicans swarm—they see the circle around the fallen man, even see his pale face, up lifted as a smile crosses its fading line aments, and like a pack of wolves scent ing the frozen traveller at dead of night, they come howling up the rocks, and charged the devoted band with one dense mass of bayonets. Up and on. The light shines yonder, on the topmost rock of the ravine ; it is the light of the setting sun. Old Tay lor's eye is upon that rock, and there we will fight our way, and die in the old man's sight. It was - a murderous way, that path up the steep bank of the ravine ! Littered with dead, slippery with blood, it grew blacker every moment with swarming Mexicans, and the defenders of the wounded hero, fell one by one, into the chasm yawning all around. At la - st they the heights, the swords and bayonets glitter in sight of the contending armies, and the bloody contest, roars towards the topmost rock. Then it was, that gathering up his dying frame—armed with supernatural vigor—young Clay stated from the arms of his supporter,, and stood with outstretched hands, in the light of the settini7 ' sun. It was a glorious sight, which he saw there, amid the roaring battle clouds; Santa Anna's formidable array, hurled back, into ravine and gorge, by Taylor's little band ! But a more glorious thing it was to see that dying man, standing for the last time in the light of the sun, which never shall rise fur him again . . Leavt7 - me !" he shriekd as he fell back on the sod—" I must die and I will die here! Peril your lives no longer for me! Lo! There is work for you yon der!" The Mexicans crowding on, hungry for slaughter, left no time for thought. Even as he spoke, their bayonets, glis toning by hundreds, were levelled at the throats of the devoted band. By the mere force of their overwhelming num bers, they crushed them back from the side of 'the dying Clay. One only lingered ; a brave man, who had knoWn the chivalric soldier, and loved him long ; he stood there, and cov ered as he was with blood, heard these last words : " Tell my father how I died, and give him these pistols !" - Lifting his ashy face into light, he turned his eyes upon his comrade's face —placed the pistols in his hands—and fell back in death. That comrade, with the pistols in his grasp, fought his way alone to thetop most rock of the path, and only once looked back. He saw a quivering form, canopied by bayonets—he saw those outstretched hands grappling with the points of steel—he saw a pale face lifted once in the light, and then darkness rushed upon the life of young HENRY CLAY. D.- The Philadelphia Spirit of the Times demands of the Administration at Washington the discharge of all the mechanics in the Navy Yard who are not Locofocos.—This is the Locofoco doctrine—employ nono but your own party. [CORRECT PRINCIPLES-SUPPORTED BY TRUTH.] The following capital anecdote, illus trative of the peculiarities of the late Stephen Girard, of Philadelphia, is from the New Bedford Bulletin; we have not seen it published before: " Mr. G. had a favorite clerk, one who every way pleased him, and who, when at the age of twenty-one years, expected Mr. G. to say something to him in re gard to his future prospects, and perhaps lend him a helping hand in starting him in the world. But Mr. G. said nothing, carefully avoiding the subject of his es cape from minority. At length, after the lapse of some weeks, the clerk mus tered courage enough to address Mr. G. upon the subject . " I suppose, sir," said the clerk, "I ain now free; and I thought I would say something to you as to my future course. What do you think I had better do V' " Yes, I know you are free," said Mr. G., "and my advice to you is, that you go and learn the cooper's trade." This announcement well nigh threw the clerk oft the track, but recovering his equilibrium, he said if Mr. G. was in earnest, he would do so. " I am in earnest," said Mr. G.; and the clerk, rather hesitatingly, sought one of the best coopers, agreed upon the terms of apprenticeship, and went at it in earnest. 'ln process of time,' the young cooper became master of his trade, and could make as good a barrel as any other cooper. He went and told Mr. G. that he had graduated with all the hon ors of the craft, arid wns ready to set up his business ; at which the old man seem ed much gratified, and told him to make three of the best barrels lie could get up. The young cooper selected the choicest materials, and soon put in shape and finished his three barrels, and wheeled them up to the old man's count ing room. Mr. G. said the barrels were first-rnte ' and demanded the price "One dollar," said the clerk, loWns 1 can live by." " Cheap enough," said his employer ; "make out your bill and present it." And- now comes the cream of the whole. Mr. G. drew a check for $20,- 000, and bandibg it to the clerk-cooper, closed with these words: "There, take that, and invest it in the best possible way, and if you are unfor tunate and lose it, you have a good trade to fall back upon, which will atlOrd you a good living at all tunes." A young woman residing with one of our best families, has lately afforded a very curious instance of night-walking, when under the influence of sleep. About a week since, her employer heard a noise in the house, and supposing that some rascals were attempting an en trance, he arose, seized a pair of pistols, and softly opening his chamber-door, stood ready to give the robbers a blazing reception when they should make their appearance. While he stood there with a six-barreled revolver, his attention was• called off by his wife, who was terribly frightened, and threatening every min ute to swoon. When our hero again re turned to his position at the door, the robbers had passed on down stairs, and were heard ransacking the parlor, and what appeared to be a very strange freak, one of them was humming a tune. After a moment's consultation with the terror-stricken wife, our friend deter mined to avail himself of every assis tance in his power, and he accordingly I proceeded up stairs, where ho speedily aroused his brothers and a nephew, all of whom girded on every weapon within reach. After an injunction or two on the part of the head of the household to the others, to be firm, and stand up to the contest like men, and to remember that they were proceeding against ras cals, who murdered for pastime, the par ty began if slow and cautious descent for the parlor. Notwithstanding all their precautions, the stairs would screak, and the party trembled at the im mediate prospect of bloodshed.—Throw ing open the door the leader shouted at the top of his capacity, « Villians, we have you—surrender !" But what was their surprise and astonishment to find this disturbance had been created by the nurse, who had risen in her sleep, and with a baby of ten months in her arms, had gone down into the parlor, lit the gas, and was then soothing it to rest. Even the noise failed to arouse the wo r man, and for an hour she was watched with much curiosity; nt the expiration of which time, she walked quietly to bed again, wholly unconscious that she was the subject of remark. But that our friend's attention had been called away at the moment the woman was descend ing the stairs, lie would undoubtedly have killed her as well as the child.— There was no light in the hall,' and the mistake would have been appalling.— Philadelphia , Bulletin. Stephen Girard, " is as A Somnambulist. ]From the Pittsburg Despatch.] HORRIBLE T3AGEDT, ✓a Woman murder ed,and afterwards Burn. ed to ashes by her Step Daughter. An aged lady named Mary Morrison, wife of Samuel Morrison, residing in Mifflin township, Allegheny county, about three miles from McKeesport, was murdered on Friday, the 4th inst., and afterwards burned to ashes by her step daughter. The facts, as far as we have been able to learn, are these : On Friday morning Mr. Morrison started to the city with produce for the market, leaving his wife and daughter at home. The daughter is a woman of about thirty-five years of age, rather a simple creature, and considered by the neighbors as insane. Mrs. Morrison has from her childhood been subject to spasmodic spells. On the afternoon in question she was taken with one of these spells, and being on the floor, under the influence of the fit, her step daughter, Sarah Morrison, beat her on the head with a fire shovel, until, it is supposed, she killed her, and then threw her on the fire, and kept piling on the fuel un til she burned her almost to ashes, there not being bones enough left of the body to fill a quart measure. The step-daughter, after consumma ting the horrible and tragic act of burn ing the mother, carefully scrubbed the floor to obliterate the traces of blood, and made here escape to the woods. Mr. Whitaker, a brother of Mrs. Mor rison, visited the house on Saturday morning and found it deserted, but there being a very disagreeable stench, he suspected all was not right, and imme diately commenced a search of the prem ises. On examining the fire place, from whence the smell proceeded,he discover ed a number of small bones, and the jam spotted over with blood. Several of the neighbors were called in, and started in pursuit of the step daughter, who was arrested a few miles from the scene of the tragedy. She confessed the atrocious murder, and assigned as her reason for so doing, that " her fath er, step mother and herself could not agree, and she thought the best thing she could do was to burn her up." She also confessed the manner in which she consuimnated the act. Coroner Richardson was sent to hold an inquest on the remains, and the jury, after hearing the testimony of a number of witnessess, returned for verdict that "the deceased came to her death from violence at the hands of her step daugh ter, Sarah Morrison," and authorized the coroner to take he murdereress in custody. He brought her to this city, and lodged her in jail on Monday morn ing. Mrs. Morrison, the deceased, was a sister of Dr. Whitaker, of Allegheny city, and is said to have been a woman of mild and gentle disposition, when not under the influence of the spasmodic spells to which she was subject. Her untimely and tragical death is regretted and mourned by a large circle of rela tives and friends. PEACIIES.—The Delaware Republican says that John C. Clark, of Red Lion Hundred, a son-in-law of Major Rey bold, has sent 7000 baskets of Peaches to Philadelphia the present season. It is estimated, but we cannot sny how cor rectly, that one of the Reybolds will have near 30,000 baskets. As peaches bring a pretty good price they will re alize very handsome returns from the orchards. Indeed we learn that the Reybold family will net fully $4.0,000 clear, this season, from their peaches sent to Philadelphia. How MUCH IS A "HORSE POWER V' —We have heara this question asked a great many times. The Scientific Amer ican says, " what is generally consider ed as constituting a horse power is a power sufficient to raise one hundred and thirty pounds one hundred feet in a minute." (DA droll fellow was asked by an old woman to read the news paper, and ta king it up began as follows: "Last night, yesterday morning, about three o'clock in the afternoon, just before breakfast, a hungry boy about forty years old, bought a penny custard and threw it through a brick stone wait made of iron, and jumping over it broke his ankle right off above the knee, fell. into a dry millpond and was drowned. About forty years aftor that, on the same day a high wind blew Yankee Doo. I die on a frying pan, and knocked the Dutch church down and killed an old . sow and two dead pigs at Boating, where a deaf and dumb man was talking French to his aunt Peter. ID- The Danish government has en gaged an Irish flaxgrower to instruct the Danish peasants in the best mode of cultivating flax--a crop which it is sought to introduce into Denmark. EDITOR AND PROPRIETOR WHOLE NO. 609. [From the Pa. Telegraph.] The Locofocos Owning the Swindle ! Some editors there arc, who can consistent be While others grope about, in blind futurity—Pops. During the campaign of 1844, both parties in Pennsylvania were untiring in their advocacy of the doctrine of pro tection to American manufactures and home labor. The friends of HENRY CLAY urged his claims to the confidence of the people of Pennsylvania on this ground, and the friends of Mr. Polk were no less urgent in insisting that lie was a "better" friend to the tariff than Mr. Clay. Mr. Polk's letters on the subject were paraded before the people, and especially his letter to Mr. Kane re lied upon, as conclusive evidence of his soundness on that subject. All parties then denounced as a traitor to the best interests of Pennsylvania, him who da red to contend that the tariff of 1842 would not be safe in the hands of Mr. Polk. Amongst the most zealous advocates of that tariff then, wai the Editor of the " Democratic Union." He •vas highly indignant that the Whigs should even suggest, that Mr. Polk was unfriendly to protection, and in favor of free-trade. He stated to the world, through the col umns of that paper, that Mr. Polk held "the doctrine of free4rade in unqualified abhorrence." In that paper of June 5, 1841, his indignation bursts out towards the Harrisburg Intelligencer, in the fol lowing strain: Col. Polk and the Tariff --A Vile Whig Falsehood. "We perceive that the Harrisburg In telligencer, with the mendacity so emi nently characteristic of the coon papers, denounces Col. Polk in advance of an open Free Trade theorist.' The au thority for this gratuitous assertion is not furnished by the Intelligencer, as it is the policy of the Whig papers to deal in habitual misrepresentation both of the men and measures of the Democratic party. Now WE IMPPENto KNOW, and state upon Me authority of a TENNES SEEAN with whom we conversed at Balti more—a near neighbor of Col. Polk— that he holds the doctrine of Free Trade in unqualified abhorrence. Ile hasnever advocated it—and never will. He is in favor of a judicious revenue Tariff; affording, the .iIMPLEST incidental Pro tection to .dinerican Industry. He is THE ESPECIAL FRIEND OF THE COAL AND IRON INTEREST (!) those two great objects of solicitude with Pennsylvania, and believing Perma nence in our laws to be of incalculable value, IS OPPOSED TO THE DIS TURBANCE OF THE PRESENT TAR IFF These FACTS we state upon the best authority and caution the Democracy of the State against listening to the mis representations of the coons." After having thus relieved himself of his personal knowledge, we have every reason to believe, that he felt better for a while, solacing himself complacently, in the fraud he had thus perpetrated. But what a change has come o'er tho spirit of his dream !! Locofocoism, true to its interests, ack. nowledges a " lie well told as good as the truth," and shamelessly retracts all it then urged, and now denounces protec. Ition to American labor, and the Tariff of 1842 as an abomination. Yes, this same editor, in the same paper, pours out his weekly accumulation of gall, upon the Whig party, who show up his utter and reckless inconsistency. They continue steadfast in the advo cacy of the Whig doctrine of prrd;section to the laboring poor ; while the locofoco party ; a party without principle, skulk from one falsehoial to, another, led by unscrupulous. editors, to sustain them selves, believing that the people, have no reckoning to make with their betrayers. The people will settle this matter at the palls.. Open falsehood and secret abuse I will there be met and rewarded ; On the 2d Tuesday of October, those. Locofoco editors who have heretaore deceived the people, and have the effron tery to own it, as the Locofoco editors in this State now do, will find the ‘, ag. ony piled high," and be compelled to, cry out, . _ "Help Ccaesius, or I mkt" It is said that peaches and cream are positively good for the consumption.— , The peaches should be ripe and sweet.