..A k 2 THE JOURNAL. COELIUCCT PRINCII , II...SUIPPOTTED SIT TRUTH.] HUNTINGDON, TUESDAY, OCT, 30, 1849. TERMS: The "ilintrivotiox Jouitmat.” is published at the ; 00 if paid during the year, and following lo r;:ea, viz : $1,15 a year, if paid IA advance/ $2,11,0 If rid paid until after the expiration of the year. The above terms to be adhered to in 11l eases. _ . . No subscription taiten for less than six months, and no paper discontinued until all arrearages are paid, unless at the option of the publisher. 47' We afe again at our post improved in health and spirits, and ready to devote all our energies during the coming winter to making oar paper useful and interesting. E.RATA.-In the card of Mr. J. A. HALL, published last week, two typographical errors occurred, viz: a Muse*" for Moses and ',ped dling" for piddling. These were errors of the printer and not of the author. New Advertisements. We call the attention of the public to the ad• vertisements in this paper. Remember that those who advertise sell cheaper than those who do not. Timms., ADAMS hue opened new Chair and Furniture Ware-rooms a few aoore from this of fice. NIT! , & MILLER, (new firm) have just receiv. ed a splendid assortment of watches and Jew• elry at the old stand of Nett & Bro. J. & W. SAXTON, have just received a supe rior stock of Fall and Wintet goods, the arrival of which has calised much excite merit up town. The Winter Session of MILN WOOD ACADEMY will commence on the first Wednesday of No- vember, t The Hollidaysburg Register has been putting on a new rig during our absence from home. We sincerely hope friend Jones may re ceive a support that will enable him in a few years to boast a larger " pile" than his "down east" friend whose example in business he no kindly advises us to imitate. City Hotel, By a card in another column, it will be seen that the City,Hotel, located in :bird street, Phil adelphia, has been leased by Col. A. H. HmsT, well and favorably known in Huntingdon and the neighboring counties, We recently stopped a few days as this house and can assure the trav elling public that it is kept in a most superior style. As a landlord Col. H, cannot be sur passed. In his manners he is a perfect gentle man, and meets hls friends with a cordiality that at once makes them feel perfectly at home. His rooms ate pleasant, servants attentive and obliging, and on his table is found every thing in the way of substantials and delicacies that the market can afford or the appetite crave, In short, we felt mote at home and better satis fied with the accOmodations at the City Hotel during our brief stay there, than at any house we ever stopped at in Philadelphia, and we have therefore no hesitation in commending it to public favor. Coverly's Hotel. During our absence from home we made abrief stay tn Harrisburg, and was pleased to observe that Col. COVERT, was repairing, enlarging and entirely renovating his well known and popular Hotel. His repairs are very extensive, and his Louse will now be one of the most pleasant in Ilafrisburg. We commend it to the patronage of all visiting the Seat of Government. See Card. Blair County. Our . friends of the Hollidaysburg « Whig" and " Register" are down on oar humble self in their last papers, because we took occasion to paldiely express our private opinion in re lation to the result in Blair county. We con t..sa ourself somewhat surprised at this. In the article to which exception is taken, we made no complaint of ineficiency or want of proper effort on the part of the Whig press of that county. On the other hand we admired the zeal and ability with which the editors of the Whig" and Register" advocated the usages of the party in regard to their local nomina tions as well as the State Whig nominee. What we did say by way of reflection was intended for others, and if our friends of the , 4 Whig" and " Register" deemed our remarks worthy of notice, it would in our humble opinion, have been more becoming in them to have first shown that we were wrong, before they commenced harpooning us. When we commit an error, and a friend frankly points it out to us, Wefeel more like thanking than abusing that friend. As a Whig that has as yet never flinched from duty, we regret the late disaster in Blair coun ty. We regret to see disorganization triumph ; but we blame thefrst cause of this disorgani zation more than we do those who made it sue• cessful at the polls. The one who was mainly instrumental in dividing the Whig forces in Blair had been honored by one of :he best and moat honorable offices in the county. Grati tude, therefore, if nothing else, should Lave caus ed his selfishness to yield to the interests of his party. And it was because we regretted the success of disorganization that we denounced the chief cause of it. Our friend of the " Register" is informed that we are endeavoring to follow in the footsteps of that worthy individual "down east" who made himself comfortable i t a particular way. We have still many subscribers in Blair, and hence feel at liberty to occasionally comment on the local transactions in that county. And our friends of the " Whig" are informed that al though we make no pretensions to be " far•see ing'• or angularly "sagacious," yet we are sure we have attributed the result in Blair to the proper source, and hence have nothing to re- the Complete Result. We are enabled this week, in the language of the Pa. Intelligencer, to give the complete re sult of the late election in Pennsylxania, for Canal Commissioner, a table of which will be found in another column. The majority for Mr. Gamble is 11,729. The whole vote palled is 277,951, being 38,- 793 less than the vote for Governor last fall, *n490,8011 less than , the vote for Prosideftf: Of this enormous decrease in the vote, Fuller received less than Johnston 35,412; and less thun Taylor 55,4021 Gamble received less than Longetreth 23,381, and less than Case 27,- 130. Now what have the Democracy to boast of dr to cheer them in such a result, or what is there, in it to discourage or frighten the Whigs. Noth ing. It is a mere temporary triumph of our dp ponents, gained solely through the apathy and censurable indifference of our friends. A full Whig vote in the city of Philadelphia, and the three Whig counties of Lancaster, Allegheny and Adams, would alone have made a difference of upwards of 12,000 votes in our favdr, and elected Mr. Fuller, or if but one-third of the indolent Whigs who voted for Johnston last fall, or but one fourth of those who voted for Gen. Taylor had turned out, the ?stilt would haVe ,been changed. So also a proper understanding between the friends of Johnston and Taylor in the county of Philadelphia, would have secured the election of the Whig Senator & members of the House of fie pretentatives, and a very little more effort would have elected another member in Alleghen'y, and one in Bucks and Bedford, which woied have given on a majority in both branches of thd Le gislature. It is to be regretted to be sure, that a little more. effort was not made by our friends as we never had in our hands an easier victory, yet there is nothing in the result to discourage us, but rather to encourage and cheer us on to more vigorous and determined efforts hereafter. We repeat what we have often uttered before, that Pennsylvania Is decidedly Whig, and all that is required at any election is a fall zolug vote to demonstrate it. Fine.—We regret to learn that the extensive buildin; occupied by the Democratic Union, in Harrisburg, was almost entirely destroyed by fire on Sunday last. The office of the Magnet ic Telegraph was in the same buildinf. (0. The important civil suit tried in Blair county last week—The heirs of - Summerville vs. Thomas Jartson—involving property to the amount of $20,000, resulted in a verdict for the plaintiffs. The case we understand was ably argued on both sides. .1011:i G. MILES, Esq. of this place, and J. F. Con, Esq. of Somerset, argued the case for the defendant, and Hon. T. STEVINS of Lancaster, and S. S. Blair, Esq. of Hollidaysburg, for the plaintiffs. A motion for a new trial was made bydefendant's counsel. 25" The notorious J. G. Mills, who seduced three sisters, WEIS tried at Harrisburg last week. For black-hearted villainy this case stands with out a parallel. The trial last week was for the seduction of the youngest sister, who is under age, under the act of '43. We heard the speeches of the counsel on both sides. .feud C. KUNKLE, Esq., concluded for the prosecution, in a speech which for eloquence and merited severity, we never heard equalled in) any Court. It was an effort of which Mr. K. and his friends May justly feel proud, and which ranks him among the most eloquent speakers in the State. Mills was convicted, but as there ate three other indictments hanging over him, he Will not re ceive his sentence until they are disposed of. SIR JOHN FRANKLIN'S EXPEUITION.-The whale ship McClellan, of New London, just ar rived from the ice, announces that about the Ist of August last, While in Bathos Bay, lat, 75 lon. 72, the natives of the coast implied by signs that two large ships were lying at Prince Regent's inlet, where they had been for four seasons past. On being interrogated whether the crews of the vessels were "asleep," that is, dead, they replied that the men of the ships were alive and well. There being no proba bility of any other ships being ice-bound for so long a time in these seas, the information of the natives was regarded by the officers of the McClellan, and of a ship called the Englishman as indicating that Sir John and his gallant com pany had survived the horrors of four polar winters. On receiving this information, the Captain of the Englishmen proceeded to Cape Flay, near Pond's Bay, where the voyagers must pass should they ever return, and landed a supply of coals and provisions, with which he had been furnished by the British Govern ment for the use of the missing ships. After all, there is s probability, for it scarcely amounts to hope, that Sir John and his gallant adventur ers may be safe. Minnesota. The St, Paul's (Minnesota) Chronicle furnishes some interesting particulars respecting the climate production, &c., of that territory. Esculents of every description and of superior quality are produced in abundance, and the crops of oats and Indian corn are spoken of as being• much heavier than those of Ohio and Indiana. Mechanics and particu larly house builders are in great de mand, and it is believed that unmans of small means could there acquire prop erty and grow up with the country.— The lumber business is spoken of as at tracting much attention and increasing in importance with the return of every spring and the rapid augmentation of the population. Mercantile and profes sional pursuits are in small demand, al though St. Paul', it is believed, would compare favorably in this respect with kny other town of the same size. The oldest inhabitants of the territory de clare'that at no place where they had formerly resided, have they or their families enjoyed a greater share of health than in Minnesota, The Diflicuity with France. In addition to the inteligence already laid be fore our readers in regard to the difficulty with France, the New York Courier and Enquirer of yesterday furnishea the folierveing important telegraphic despatch ffdtri UMW*, dated on the day of the sailing of the Steamer ,4 The Paris koniteur of last night states that the French Goveenmeni entirely disavows the conduct of M. Pcruasin. It Mao announces the appointment of M. Bois Le Conipt, at pres eht French Minister at Turin, to be Minister Plenipotentiary at Was'dington. He ie to be re placed at Turin by M. Lomen Murat." II the statements contained in this dispatch are correct—and we see no good reasons to doubt them—the conduct and the policy of the Administration at Washington are vindicated in a manner. which, while it redounds in the high est degree to its honor, at the same time reflects the utmost disgrace upon the unprincipled oppo- Bifida which was raised by the Locofoco press. It clod hot become us to inquire how the French GovernMient came to disavow the action of M. Pouseiiii especially in the face of M. de Tocque yilie's letter to Mr. Rush, in which he imputed faults on both sides; it is enough for us to know the fact, and to feel that the character of our Government has been nobly sustained by the decisive and high boned cc/rade of the Adminis tration. If Louis Napoleon, encouraged by the extremes of gasconade and submission which were eithibited by the late dynasty in the Ore gon negotiation, hoped to strengthen his power at home by an experiment upon the courage and integrity of those now charged with the respon sibility of government, he has awekened to a sense of his mistake, and by a prudent cdnces sion endeavored to repair the errer which he committed, b 7 sactifiCing the instrument through which it was attempted. • • • • How the foreign organ at Washington and its locofoco allies, who espousod the qharfel of the French Minister, denounced the Secretary of State, assailed the Administration, and reflected upon the gallant conduct of Commander Car penter, are to bear themselves after this news, is more than we can conjecture. Their zeal seems to have transcended their supposed au thority, and like Poussin, they are now aban doned—with the added shame that they are aban doned—by the very men whose interests they were engaged in defending, against the rights of their own government. A spectacle' More Hu miliating and cantemptible than that which the Union exhibits at this time, has never before been presented to the American public ; and much as we have been compelled to denounce its vindictive course, for the credit of the press we feel pity for its present degredation. There is a brand upon its brow which time cannot re move, and a sentiment of well deserved scorn in the American heart which no mere proton- sion of repentance can ever' extinguish.—North American. Letter From Gov. Ramsey. In a letter from Gov. Ramsey to a friend in this State, we find information which will be of advantage, perhaps, to some of our readers, and which gives an idea of the resources and pros pects of the new territory that can be relied on. If any of our young men think of " seeking their fortunes" in the great West, we would ad vise them, by all means, to give consideration to Minnesota St. PAUL, Minesota, Sep. 19, 1810, In almost eve ry industrial pursuit, as Farmers, Mechanics, Merchants, &c., Pennsylvanians would be at home here, and from their high character for integrity, would, I am sure, soon place them. selves in comfortable positions. The great characteristic of this country, and one that I am satisfied will insure its rapid settlement, is this : that while the soil is as fertile as any in the Valley of the Mississippi, it is happily as heal thy as the mountain regions of Pennsylvania. We have no fever and ague here. In emigra ting from Pennsylvania to Illinois, you would have to anticipate suffering for two or three years, from lever and ague, until you become ac climated here there is nothing of that kind to be feared. Here all kinds of (arm produce command higher prices than in Pennsylvania, and this will long continue to be the case, as the military posts and Indian agencies, pineries and the fur trade will ever continue to give us a good ' home market, and the Mississippi opens a high way for the outlet of our surplus produce. Of all other people I shall be most happy to see Pennsylvanians among us. There are nosy a large number here. 1 shall myself feel snore at home when they settle amongst us, and I know that in them the Territory will have its best and most reliable population. I By all means advise your friends and mine to pay us a visit, and see for themselves; if they • do so I have no doubt the 3 will remain. Remember me to my Lebanon county friends for whom I shall ever cherish the warmestfeel 1 . iings. Very truly, yours ALEX. AMSEY. Mr. Juo. Malty, JonestoWn, Lebanon Co., Pa VERMONT.-It is one of the peculiar features of the dovernment of Vermont that, at stated periods a Council of revision" assembles to overhaul the Constitution and Laws of the State for the purpose of making such alterations as the times may suggest, subject to the ratification of the people. This council is now in session, and among other things, has ;tilled a conven tion of delegates from the people to amend the Constitution, by altering the present mode of electing Assemblymen. As the Constitution stands, each town sends one representative and no more, whether great or small: and thus small towns have as large an influence as the greatest. - theamendment proposed provides that