THE JOURNAL. [CORRECT I'RINCIPLES--SUPPORTED BY TRUTII.] HUNTINGDON, TUEBI)AI'. OCT. a. 1!1{11, Democratic 111.1iig Nominations. FOR PRESIDENT GEN. ZACHARY TAYLOR. FOR VICE PRESIDENT INILLAIRD riLLmour. ELECTORAL TICKET. SENATORIAL Otra-roKs. TitomA, M. T. M'KENNAN, of Wzobington JOHN P. SANDERSON, of Lebanon. 4. Joseph G. Clarkson, 13. Henry Johnson, 2. John P. Wetherill, 14. William Colder, 3. Jame M. Davis, 15. William :Vl'llvaine, 4. Thomas W.Duffield, 16. Charles W. Fisher, 5. Daniel 0. Hitner, 17. Amlrew G. Curtin, 6. Joshua Dnngon, 18. Thos. R. Davidson, 7. John D. Steele, 19..fo.scph Markle, 8. John Landis, 20. Daniel Agnew, 9. Joseph Schmucker, 21. Andrew Loomis, 10. Charles Snyder, 22. Richard Irvin, 11. Wlllam C. Hurley. 23. Thomas S. Sill, 12. Francis Tyler. 24. S.am'lA.Plarviance. roR WM. F. JOIINSTON FOR CANAL COMMISSIO.NRR rJrn "2:1,1:7,71317AZ-Z7:27.. FOR COXGRZ:SS CIALA=. VA1L17.7.7. COUNV7 TICKET A 3 XL .turazlrm OTARY Thee. Vrernr.,r, c‘f Runtingdf.T. ItEGIITITR ARID RECOR.DI7R Matthew r. Campbell, of Howie: COMiONFR WliliaTint liritchinSOH, of Wai ci,roiarl; AUDITOR William Ramsey, of Springfielit CORONER: Henry Grafius, of Alexandiia 03 V. B. PALMER, Esq, is our author ir;ed agent for receiving advertisements and subscriptions in the cities of Philadelphia, Bal timore and Net , York, and for collecting and receipting for the same. WOOD! WOOD ! ! We want wood immediately. Will some one of our customers furnish us Beware Of SPURIOUS TICKETS, LYING iroiu-HILLS An, EXTRAS, and all such "LAST CARUS" usually played ow by locofoeo leaders on the eve of important elections. We have known them t 3 circulate VOILGFD LETV6US on the eve of an election to injure Whig candidates. What they have done once they la og do again, and we there fore caution all to be on their guard. Read It. On our first page will be found an articlo un der the head of “Relief Notes," which we ask all to read before casting their vat.; The unprt jtidiced mind will find it a triumphant vindica tion of Got'. Johnston's participation in the passage of that law. COLONIZING ! Freemen of Huntingdon County ! Are you aware that the locofocos are making an effort to carry this county and Congressional District by the aid of IMPORTED VOTES I If not, we can inform you that a Locofoco boasted to us a few days ago, that a prominent locofoco in the county of Philadelphia had promised to send to this county, at least ten days previous to tho election, ONE HUNDRED AND FIFTY VO. TERS !! And, from looking at the Assessment List here, and the unusual number of stringers among us, who are following no vocation, we are fully convinced that the promise sins seen FULFILLED TO THE LETTER ! ! And that IMPORTED VOTERS, whose only busi ness is to vote the LOCOFOCO are now in our midst ! Citizens of Huntingdon County ! Whigs and honest Democrats, are you prepared to quietly submit to an outrage so bold, so infamous and so wicked 1 Arc you willing to he VOTED ! DOWN in the selection of county officers and a Representative in Congre,s, by nl•n HIRED to do SO ? If not, AROI . SK, AT WAKE UP your Townships ! Bring every resident voter • to the Polls, and thus assert your rights and , maintain your dignity; you can do it if you will' The right of suffrage is a sacred and glorious I right, and should at all times be ex.reised by , those entitled to it. But especially should this be done when an attempt is made to render this sacred right a perfect nulity—whena corrupt gov ernment is about to stifle the• honest expression of a SOVEREIGN COUNTy AND DISTRICT by means of i a HIRED IMPORTED VOTE! Let the friends of free suffrage andthe purity of the ballot box AROUSE then at once. It was in vain that the blood of our fathers was poured ant like water to secure to us equal rights and free gov ernment, if we cringingly refuse to give one day's time to perpetuate those rights and keep sire this government. To the POLLS then, o se and - all, and let the SOVEREIGN VOICE of the Freemen of Old Huntingdon SPEAK OUT! ilxrutaiste Your Tickets. Whigs, be on your guard on the election day. EXAMINE YOUR TICKETS hetOre voting, and see that you have nothing but the WHOLE WHIG TICKET. We have heard of Whip voting fox locofoco candidate. before now te/ith ,?.... a of f.. Every voter :.hould c::- amine bie"ticket before deNe'.r4r.g vote. •In these :Ater tlay6 Let all be oa their guar, I,at TO THE POLLS. Taylor Men of Huntingdon County ! are you prepared for the contest on Tuesday next t We address Taylor Men, for every one who desires the election of that honest old Patriot, General ZACHARY TAYLOR, should deposit° his vote for WM. F. JOHNSTON. There is no argu iiient necessary to show why this is so. John ston is the candidate of the Taylor Party, end his defeat would be claimed as the defeat of Gen. Taylor in Pennsylvania. Every Taylor man should therefore cast his vote at the first election for Johnston. It has always been the .custom in the last paper previous to the elec tion, to inflict a long article upon the readers of Political papers, showing the importance of go ing TO THE POLLS. We shall deviate from this custom at this time. We have endeavored, so far as our humble abilities enabled us to do so, to show our readers the importance of the coming contest, and the superiority of the can ! dilates which we support to those supported by our opponents. The time for argument has ; gone by, and the time for action has arrived.— We therefore now call upon all who think with us—who are in favor of Gen. T.,Loit, who are in favor of PROTECTION to AMERICAN INDUSTRY, and opposed to the extension of Slavery into Territory now free—who are op posed to the exercise of the Oxr. MAN Powra, to defeat the.wishes of the People, who are in favor of diminishing rather than increasing the ex:or:now Stets Debt of FORTY MILLIONS of dollars, entailed upon the Taz-yetyers by Le :or'oco rule—wha are in short, in favor of the conservative principles of the Whig Party in opposition to the radical destructive, plundering Principles of the Locofocos, to Turn Out. on Tuesday noxt, and vote for WM. F. JOHN ?,TON, NER MIDDLESWARTH, SAMUEL CALVIN, A. K. CORNYN, T. H. CREMER, M. F. CAMPBELL, WILLIAM HUTCHIN SON, HENRY GRAFIUS, and WILLIAM RAMSEY. Vote the we= T/CNET and NO THING BUT THE TICKET. Every one of those candidates are entirely worthy the sup port of the friends of Old Zack. They are all ~pable, and firm reliable IV/I4 . Re member, that great etorts are now being made to ele.:t a FREE TRADE, SLAVERY EX TENSION man, in the person of Add few Par- Ivr, to Congress from this Tariff district. If you had no other inducement, the election of SAMUEL. CALVIN, the trite friend of Northern Rights should be sufficient to go To the Polls on Tuesday next. Before we issue another paper, the contest will be over. And before closing this article we would say to the Taylor Men of Huntingdon comity, AWAKT: ! AROUSE from your seeming apathy. Give one day to your country. Go :co ?CE POU.P. Go early— take your neighbor with you. if Tie has too far to walk send a horse for hint. Spend one whole day to show that no scheme to cheat the sov ereign 'Peciple of this county and district out of their rights shall triumph. Do this and all will be well. "Shinny on your own Side." An effort is now snaking to secure the county offiees to the Locofocos, that is anything but creditable to those who are making it. The Locoforos nominate at all times men who are thoroughly with their party. No one doubts this Net, who has any knowledge of Locofoco tactics. And we do not complain of their so , doing. All we complain of is, that after recei , ring nominations front their Locofoco friends, they should prowl about like Wolves in sheeps' clothing, and pretend, in part, to belong to the Whig party. We are led to these remarks front . the faet thit weave informed that Jelin 11. Of, 0f,,,, the Locofoco candidate for Prothonotary, is electioneering with the Whigs of Penn mid Hopewell townships, and perhaps elsewhere on the ground that he is as " much Whig as Loco foco !" As much Whig as Lecefors, indeed ! ! Why so strong a Party man is this Given, that, at the last Spring election in Walker township he refused to allow a candidate for Constable, a Whig, to keep leis tickets for that paltry office ia his Ntore ! ! And now he has the impudence to go oboist begging for Whig votes ! He will , not only not receive any such votes, but deserves the active opposition of every Whig. And .1..06 Miller, Esq., who has been twice nominated by Locofoco county Conventions, is, we understand, playing the same game. He is sending circulars to leading Whigs throughout ! the county informing them that he does 'not be ' long to the Locofoco party—that the "infinen :9'o" and "respectable" portion of the Whig party 't desire no change," &e. &c. If this be so, how comes it that Mr. Miller has twice re ceived the nomination of the Locofoco Party And secondly, if the influential portion of the ‘Vllig party desire no change, how did it happen that the Whig County Convention nominated F. CAMPBELL without ever mention ing Mr. 'Miller's name. Does any Whig believe that Mr. Campbell, as firm a Whig as lives, was nominated for the very purpose of being defeated t No one can think so. Mr. Campbell I has a right to expect from his Whig friends an election if they have votes enough to secure it. This continued twaddle of Locofoco candidates that they do not belong to that party is too shallow to deceive any one. Let them be elec ted once by the aid of Whig votes, and their election is claimed as a Locofoco triumph, and they will demonstrate by their actions and fidel ity to Locofoco wrinciples that they were wor thy candidates of that party. As we retnarked in our last, Whigs should stand by their own candidates. Honor and duty alike require it. Let Locofoco office seekers " shinny on their own side." Let them look for support from the Party which they serve and which put them in nomination. CCP The locoloco papers object to Cleo. Tay lor that he holds slaves. Well if he does hold he at beet aeverattempted to make al,rves Cat. es much be -aid ut General BEWARE OF FRAUD!!! In 18.11, Loco Focoism triumphed by a new and enlarged system of FRAUD; every where throughout the country, where they had the means, the honest resident voters of the country were VOTED DOWN, by the paid vagabonds of power, who were scattered around into such places as their votes would be the most effective. Their villainy then escaped unpunished ; and we have great reason to believe that the SAME GAME is to be practised again. Freemen! every Citizen who loves his country and her in stitutions, shouid be awake and WATCH Al' EVERY POLL. Rogues ever become bold, us .they are successful in their knavery. The Duty of every Inspector, DI to swear every um day moo, unless one of them knows him to be a legal voter. The In spectors are, by the 00th Section of the Law of 1829, compelled to swear all whose names are not on the list; and every man whose vote is ob jected to; and by the 101 th Section, they are subject to a line of $2OO for a neglect of this very duty. By the former Section EVERY Tux DAY MAN must prove by at least one witness, (and that witness a qualified voter) that he has resided ten days within the district. Let every Inspector look to this, or then let the honest citizens hand them over to the tender mercies of the Law. The Fraud Detected ! Judge King has lately decided that it is the duty of the Assessors to put rm. - names on the ten day Assessments, unless the evidence is produced that the ten day traveller is, or would be a voter. In our county and our town, we have other Latvs it seems. Here, Assessors travel around and hunt up every stranger, and get his name on to the list, hoping in the first place, there will be no questions asked ;" in the next, that if there should be, that his wan dering patriot will swear through. We know A Case in Paint. The Assessor of this township called upon an honest boy to be assessed, and the boy told the assessor, lam not of age." "Well," says this worthy (!) assessor, "have your name put on the list, awl pay your tax, and very likely there will be no questions asked." The boy, bold and honest, in his love of the purity of the ballot-boxes spurned indignantly, the foul at tempt to disgrace him, and corrupt the very fountain from which spring all our laws, and told the assessor "NO ! I won't vote till I can vote honestly." Here was a noble rebuke, and we wonder the assessor did not bang his head in shame, and go back to his own house and re solve that he would no longer be the tool of a corrupt faction ! By the 119th Section of the Law of 1839, it is provided that if any person shall aid or procure any person to vote who is not qualified he shall be pani,hed by fine and imprisonment. What was this assessor doing I Was it not a direct violation of the spirit of that Law 1 Was he not aiding one not qualified, to vote / What saved him from being directly amenable to that law 1 Nothing but the bold honesty of the boy !! But we must explain to our country friends How the Fraud Works. In our town, this very worthy assessor has added to our list, about Sixty ten dny men, who nobody knows ! Their names are on the list and THERE MAY BE NO QUESTIONS ASKED." Such men are assessed while some old citizens have been left off the list for years; and this assessor has been told of it,—the name given to him,—but he will not assess certain men if they do not want it. The county and State are to be cheated out of the tax !—and this assessor win", at it ! It is all an effort to Rob the Citizens of this County out of their just rights, to cheat them out of the choice of their officers ! It is a norm SCIIEME to tole down. by FRAUD the old residents of this county ! ! It is a bold and extensive fraud, and will you tolerate it ? or will you turn out and scare these Vultures from their prey. Watch every Man you suspect! Watch those that lead him up ! Watch them at the Polls! Object to every sorb vote! Make the Inspectors swear every man. Remeo th...r what he swears ; watch him after the election, and if you find the least violation of the law, bring up the guilty before the pro per tribunal. By the 119th Section, before re ferred to, you have the power to punish every such effort at fraud ; be watchful then,—be vig ilant—be active. AROUSE YOUR NEIGHBORS: To a sense of their duty. Let every active man devote a day or two previous to the election to visiting his neighbors and impressing upon them the necessity of attending the election. If the Locofocos succeed in their schemes of FRAUD pole, they will try the same game at every future struggle. But if the People of this county rise iu their sovreign might, and put down the first attempt at infringing upon the Purity of the Ballot-box, an attempt of the kind will not like ly soon be made again. TO THE POLLS, then, Freemen, ONE AND ALL ! Locofoco Tactics. It is singular that so many of the Locofocos in this county, from the day of their party nom inations up to the day of the election, become "NO PARTY MEN." At all other times they are known to be violent and tenacious Locofo cos. In fact their pretence of being , c no party men" is all deception. Let the Whigs test their sincerity at the polls. If any of these , 4 no party men" ask you to vote for one or more of their candidates, just do you in return ask them to vote for Johnston, or Middleswarth, or Cal vin, or any other Whig randitiate. Of course this is a reasonable request to make of ~n o party men"—they can consistently vote for one or more of these candidates, and without doing violence to any creed, for they profess to have none. But be not satisfied with promises, for promises are too often made to DECEIVE.— See for yourselves whether they don't after all vote the whole Lueofoco Ticket in the face of all their pretensions to neutrality. We know that :inch will be the result, and we oughtall to learn from them the duty to support «OUR OWN." THE TEN DAY VOTERS. We have learned enough of the extraordinary labors of our Assessor, and those of whom he is the instrument, to say we know that many of the names on the Assessment List are not enti tled to rote! We have no particular reference to men employed on the Railroad in any of our remarks touching the ten day men. Many of them doubtless, are legally entitled to vote, and we would not have them deprived of their right. And many of them, too, are in favor Of Old Zack and opposed to Cass and the British Tariff doctrines of that Party. But whether they are for one party or the other, they are en titled to be assessed, and to vote, if they have complied with the requirements of the Law.— If they have not, they have no Eight to he as sessed. The honest, hard working men on the Railroad need no body to lead or drive them.— And we cannot think that any of the gentleman ly contractors would stoop to anything so low as attempting to induce any one, not qualified, to make an effort to vote. It cannot be that the Pennsylvania Railroad, in which men of i both parties are alike interested, is to be convey ted into a vast political machine. For the sake of all concerned, we hope this is not so. But we allude to those on the Assessment who are mere sojourners among us—not known to any one, save those in the secret. The check rolls on the different sections may be examined for their names—they are not tAere ! They are following no employment whatever, and we I have good reason . for suspecting that they are the paid hirelings of power, and that their only 'business among us is to vote ! And we give all such notice, and those who lead or drive them, that they shall be wracked and well WATCHED, and any violation, or any attempt at violating the Election Law shall be PM:ISM!), if justice, and judgment can find them. To our citizens—the honest of all Parties— we appeal.. Let not your ballot boxes be pol luted by such foul, such bold, and such infa mous corruption and villainy. Guard your I.lots from e;ohititm. And you, the ever faithful Whigs of glorious old Huntingdon, let this note of warning be like the cry to Sampson of old—" the Philistine, are upon you Sampson." AROUSE to a sense of the schemes to destroy you, and like him show that you are not bound or shorn of your strength. Send forth the warning to every man in your township! Excite all to activity and industry, and the green withs with which they think they have bound you, will snap like tow touched with the flame, and your good old county will stand unshorn, in her ancient pride. That Gold and Silver. The Globe has the impudence again to prom ise GOLD and SILVER to the "(fear people" if they will vote down the Whigs once more.— This has been the stereotyped promise of the Locofoco lenders for the last twenty years!— They have been in power nearly constantly, but the gold and silver is still kept back, and only talked of on the eve of an election. 1t is held up as a sort of is bribe for votes. The "dear people," although they vote for Locofoco Pres idents and Governors, and elect them too, get nothing but "Rotten Bank Bills and Ragged Shinplasters !" If there is any gold and silver going it goes into the long purses of the olive holders. Ask the poor laborers on the Big Break Re pairs last winter what sort of "gold and silver" they got for their hard work, and they will show you "Rotten Bank Bills"—Lekistoteu money ; and ask them how much they got in " Ragged Shinplasters," and they will tell you they had to sell their claims on the State at a share of fifty per cent. to keep themselves and their families from starving. Judge Longstrcth was then pocketing the " gold and silver" as his pay as Canal Commissioner ! Remember this. And if you go in for this kind of currency —GOLD and SI.LVER for the OFFICE HOLDEMS, and 6, Rotten Bank Bills an d Ragged Shinplasters" for the People, then vote for LONGSTRETH and the whole Loco foco Ticket ; but if you want to put doo•„ the,e swindlers and shavers who now aguin INSULT you with the stale cry of GOLD and SI !NEB, go to the polls and vote for JOHNSTON and the whole Whig Ticket. We cannot promise as much us the Locofocos, but we will yrrfo rrn much more. Try us for once. A. DOLD GAME ! We learn from the Eaetern papers, that a bold game is to be played by the Locofficos to defeat, if possible, the election of WM. F. JOIIN sToN. The office-holders are aware that if they lose Pennsylvania, all their Presidential hopes are scattered to the winds. Hence, they are bringing into Pennsylvania, from the State of New York, and elsewhere, where they have no hopes of success, large numbers of men who can he hired for any purpose, and scattering them through the various counties of the State! And all this is done with GOVERNMENT MONEY ! Freemen of Pennsylvania! will you allow yourselves to be thus cheated out of your rights 1 Answer at the .BALLOT-BOX on Tueaduy next. Vote Early. We would advise our Whig friends who can spare the time to VOTE EARLY, and then try to get their Whig neighbors to turn out and vote also. We should like to see our Whig friends in every township take the inside track," ear ly in the day and keep it until the Polls are closed. After voting yourselves, and getting your neighbors to do so, see that no illegal votes are slipped into the ballot box. Look out for It. This week's Globe will be filled with all man lier of extravagant stories in large type, for the purpose of deceiving honest voters, knowing that there will be no means of contradicting anything they .say previous to the election.— " Combinations," "Bunk Rags," " Federal ism," " Bank Charters," " Anti-War" &c. &c. will be the burthen of its song. We caution all to be on their guard. Remember their FALSEHOOD and DECErbIiON in 1811 in relation to the Tariff and be not again deceived. WHIGS OF HUNTINGDON COUNTY, REMEMBER at the polls on next Tuesday, that ANDREW PARKER, the Locofoco candidate for Congress, denounces you in all his public speeches, as BRITISH TORIES! REMEMBER, that he denounces Mr. Clay and Mr. Webster, and all who be lieve as they do, as moral traitors of the deepest dye; and that too while the hearts of these patriotic statesmen yet bleed for their SONS who fell upon the bloody plains of Mexico! . _ RgiIIEMBER that he is for FREE TRADE, for the One Man Power, for ar, for Slavery, and to sum up all in short, that he is a Loco Paco, reckless, radical and progressive! REMEMBER that SAMUEL CALVIN, the Taylor candidate holds principles on all these subjects directly opposed to those of Mr. Parker, and is moreover a man of ability to represent this district in a manner creditable to himself and his constituents Rally then, to the polls, and cast your votes for Samuel Calvin and the whole Whig Ticket. A Boa After concluding his labors on Saturday night last we understand that our Assessor boasted that he had names enough on his list to beat the Whigs 100 at this box. If you have the !Agal sass to do so Mr. A550.,07 well and good; if not you will probably End mice dicli.:ty in :nuking up you: 300 majority from the material you have than you are aware. QUESTIONS WILL BE ASEED. No Emelia= ges. We would caution our Whig friends agidast bargaining with the locofocos on the elector. day. If a locofoco proposes to vote for a Whig candidate on the ground that a Wi.ig Will voto for a locofoco, dont do it. There are three chan ces to one that the locofocos will cl.eiit you. And there is no necessity for Whigs :nailr.: : : any such bargains. All we have to do stick to our ticket to triumphautly elect every man upon it. Bank Etago.” The last Globe was filled With in very large type, denunciatory of Ran!, P.ags. Have not the locofocos been in power from time immemorial in Pennsylvania and why is it tl.at they continue to curse the people with their Bank Rags I" Why do they not give us the "gold and silver" about which they always prate so much on the eve of every election I Answer these questions, Mr. Globe, before you again iimuit the intelligence of the people by your silly promises of "gold end silver curer,,_ ry." For, your promises are nothing more or less than downright insults to every man of or dinary intelligence, and should be resented at the Pol!s. Longstrethand LEWISTOWN MON EY would be a much more appropriate motto for you to adopt than Longstreth and gold and silver! MEETINGS OF THE PEOPLE The Taylor meetings held last week in Frank lin, Warriorsmark and Walker were cheering demonstrations. The attendance at all of these places was quite large and the determined spirit manifested all were indications of victory. We had the pleasurdof attending the meeting at Hawn's School House on Saturday evening, and were highly gratified to see so large and respec table a. attendance. The Taylor men on the Branch are wide awake. Let all remember the Grand Rally at the Bourg cf SAMUEL STEFFY, in Jackson town ship on Friday next. Calvin, Curtin and others will be . present. There will also he evening meetings ut the • following places during the week viz : McCONNELLSTOWN, on Friday Evening, 6th inst. CORBIN'S SCHOOL HOUSE, Uf.ion township, on Saturday evening, 7th of • October. MILL CREER, on Saturday evening, October 7th. AN ERROR CORRECTED. The following article appeared in the « Dem ocratic Standard" published in Hollidaysburg, on the 47th day of September A. D. is : ! "A Narrow Escaip! for Dr. Alc Iv ~~3n. On the morning* tic,t the Whig Conferees " were preparing to start for the pinta of in-ct " in, a youn,r, loan a,ked one of them what the "Calvin men would do if the McCulloch men " should beat them. The answer of the Ca I yin C•infer:.e was that if they did, the "-would brat the Mrenlloch non the da l( 44 the election." Fortunately for the Doctor he " was not nominated and he thus escaped the "political assassination which awaited him in Little Blithe." The und,rsigned, the Cutilvees alluded to in the above article, embrace the earliest opportn city as an act of justice to their highly esteem ed and much respected friend Dr. JOHN LOCO, to say there is not the least sembhinee of truth in Wig part of the above article—THAT IT IS FALSE FROM BEGINNING TO END. Instead of entertaining Such feelings towards the Doctor, the Conferees freely acknowledge that he would cheerfully have received their united and determined support us a candidate for Congress, as well us that of every Whig in Blair county, had he been nominated by the Conference. N. lIEWIT, JAMES COFFEY, M. CRISWELL. In addition to the above, I take pleasure in saying, as one of the Conferees from Hunting don county, that the honorable and gentlemanly conduct pursued by the Blair county Conferees towards Dr. JOHN McCutt.ocii, the choice of Huntingdon county, was the subject of remark and commendation among the friends of that gentleman, at the time of the Conferee meet ing. And I have no hesitation in stating it as my firm conviction, that, hail the nomination of Mr. Calvin not been attainable, Dr. Johu Mc- Culloch would have been the second choice of the Conferees representing Muir county. J AS. CI. ARR.. MORE lIARD LYING. The Ten Dour Law. In the Huntingdon Globe of last week, a pa per that, in its desperation to serve party, has been doing up more herd lying during the pres ent campaign, than perhaps any other paper of its inches in the State, we find the follow ing wi/jrn/ and direct falsehood in relation to Gov. Johnston's course on the TEN HOVE LA W: Q. Who voted AGAINST limiting the la bor of children in Factories to ten hours . / • A. Wm. F. Johnston who now nits the fath ers and brother: of thoic children to vote for him." Now what are the FACTS in relation to Gov. Johnston's vote on the bill in question. Why directly the revarea of filo statotnclit of the Globe. It is a FACT, that on referring to Senate Journal, page 31/, we find that the Senate had under consideration on second reading, Bill No. IGS, entitled " An act to prevent the employ ment, in factories, of chidren under twelve years of age," 4nd or. the queaion, will the Senate agree to the first section ; a motion wa3 made by Mr. Joasaror, of Armstrong, to a mend the same by adding thcrato the following "Nor shall any contract stipulating for the performance of more than ten hours !floor in the aforesaid factories be deemed valid or carried into effect by any Court of this Commonwealth." On the question w:r. the Senate agree so to amend, the yeaa and were required, and stood, yeas 6, nay 11—and among the year, tae naMe Jo: - .1.‘ton, of Arrni - Arong, now Gov. JOU:YE:TON • Does this look Lk:. opposition to the Tcn Law ? Capt. VT:x. F. S:SALL, the champion of th, Tan r.aa: System, and the locofoco 'cagier m the Se.late, voted with Mr. Johnston for this a crier.d.zent. it is a FACT, t tor. pager and 317 of the :axle Senate Journal, we f.. - .d two di..tinct votes, in which the yeas and nay. were record ed on motions to amend . made or seconded by :In.. &mail, and in each instance the name of Joi:x.,:or in found voting fon the bit; witli 7r. 5ra...7!; and o:. 3:7, on the vote being ta:xcr. t?.e section amcnded, the sarze wae- Gay. JO.N.TON vatiog to: it. Loan like appo.,:tion to the Bill F.:..f.."T—that on page 321 a the :our renumed the consideration of tine ...nd after one or two unimportant amend rr.er. :s, a motion was made to go into ee of ri e ` , ...ho!fi fr.: the puritan of adding to the hill the following provifa , c Provided, That nothing contained in this act shall be construed to prevent minors above the age of fourteen years from being employed more than ten hours in ally day, if the same' be dons by special contract with their parents or guardians." The 'notion was cairied, Mr. JOHNSTON voTini suit IT, and the Senate resolved itecif into Committee of the Whole, for the purpose indicated. After some time the Committee roso and reported the bill with the amendment, and on the qu,stion, will the Senate agree to the r, port of the Committee, it was decided ill the affirmative, the yeas and nays not being callc,!, WOl the commotion if the proprie ty of this !tom lament. It 16 a FACT—that the bill then coming . be fore the Senate on itsjiwil passage, and the yeas and nays being required, they stoqd, yeas le, nays o—Gov. JOHNSTON'S NAME being re corded ninon,: the YEAS, with the laborer's special friend, Wm. F. Small As we Expected. We learn from the New York Tribune that a movena is now on foot to withdraw the Cat a Electoral Ticket in the State of New York.— We shall not be the least surprised if thin should In done. Case stands no chance in the State of New Yorii, and if thy whole Locefoco party could be united upon Van Buren his chanco would be much better. Cass stock must bn getting low - if hi, friends should so far humitiste themselves a 5 t, withdraw• from the contest in favor of the man who has been doing all he can to cut their throats. rill INe The laa urri% al from Dirope a still further in:CLINE in Git IN and Flour.— Will the Locus be willing to gi,e the T:mlf of 'l6 the cr:dit for this decline? Last year !vhcn Bre:Ostia. advanced, they had en hesitation ;it claiming that advance a., one of the effect, 01 their Free Trade Policy ! [From the Hollidaysburg Rcgiiter.j KEEP IT BEFORE THE PEOPLE': That the law under which the Re/Natty were issued required them to be redeemed nt the end of five years from the the passage of the law, and that the live years expired on the Ist of May, 1$ in—more than two year:; ago—and the y- are not yet redeemed. Keep It before the People That the Leeefeeo, have been in power since that. time, and that they might have had them all destroyed, if they were opposed to this kind of money. Keep it before the People That if they want a good Currency they must vote for Gov. JOHNSTON and u PROTECT IVE TARIFF; Because Gov. Johnston, if elected, would speedily with. these miserable rags from circulation; And Because ; _ A Protective Tariff would tutu the balance of Trade in our favor, and compel the British to send us GOLD and SILVER for our Agricultu ral Produce instead of " goods," and so render SPECIE ABUNDANT and times easy. And keep it before the People That to vote for LONGSTRETII, PAINT. and PAIIK. is to vote for the Briti,v/t Tariff of '46, which is rapidly producing a recurrence of the Hard Times from which we were rescued by the Tariff of '42. Locos take Care how you Het. The Louisville Journal gives us to understand that the 6, moral and religious" Locofocos of Washington City have been scorching themselves a little betting upon old Kentucky. BETS ON TilE KENTUCKY ELECTIONS.—We un derstand that the Democrats in Washington C.ty have lost over 50,000 on the Kentucl Gubernatorial election. Boyd, it is said, to $6,000. The bets ranged front 2,000 to 5,0( majority for Crittenden, and of course the Wok ers of Crittenden have w•on all. The boast•n, of the Locofoco central committee of Kentu( has been a sore business to their friends abroad