THE JOTRNAL. HUNTINGDON, PA. Thursday Morniug, Nov. 6, 114.51: J. SEWELL STEWART—Enrroa, TRIMS OF PVIILICATION: Tan "HUNTINGDON JOURNAL" is. 011,1,shed at this following rates, : If paid in advance, per annum, $1,130 If paid daring the year, 1,75 If paid after the expiration of the year, • 250 To Clubs of five or more, in 841VU nee, • • 1,25 Tins above Terms will ho adhered to in all eases. No subscription will be taken fora less period than six months, and no paper will he discontinued un til all arrearages are paid, unless at the option of the publisher. V. B. PALMER Is our authorized agent in Philadelphia, New York and Baltimore, to receive advertisements, and any persons in those cities wishing to adver tise in our columns, will please cull on him. FOR THE PRESIDENCY IN ten, WINFIELD SCOTT, OF NEW JERSEY FOR VICE PRESIDENT IN 1852, JAMES C.. JONES,, OF TENNESSEE i '"Mr. James Maguire, of this borough, has commenced selling off his largo stock of goods at cost. Here is an opening for bargains, and we ask the particular atten tion of our readers to his advertisement in another column. 07"Coh Gwin offers goods "cheaper thanever." They must be very cheap, for the Colonel always sold goods remark ably low. See advertisement. It rOur friend, James T. Scott, has received a fresh supply of watches, clocks, jewelry, &c. He is also prepared to do repairing in the very best manner. You will give him a call, of course; ho deserves. to be well patronized. 11'7 - Benj. Leas, Esq., publishes an ad vertisement in to-day's paper offering a valuable farm for sale. Persons wishing to purchase will find it to their advantage to attend on the day of sale, G.The property of Samuel 31'Kinstry, late of Shirley township, dec'd., is offered for sale in another column of to-day's pa- Cf, - i''Mr. N. G. M'Divitt advertises a stray Mule. County Agricultural Meeting We aro authorised to inform the people of this county, that a meeting will be held in the Court House, on Tuesday evening of the first week of the November court,' for the purpose of forming an Agricultur al Society. The farming community, as well as all others who may feet friendly to the project, are respectfully invited to at tend. A Man Shot for a Turkey. William Hite, residing five or sii miles from this place, and his brother &dm, one morning last week, were in the woods hunt• ing turkeys. William was crawl ing among the bushes making a noise in imitation of a turkey, which hunters denominate "call ing." John, some distance off, seeing the stir in the bushes and hearing the noise above alluded to, shot, and the ball struck his brother on the back part of the head near the ear, but did not penetrate the skull. It was afterward extracted, and we are informed the accident is not likely to terminate fatally. We advise hunters to have a clear view of their game before they shoot. Ire'The Hollidaysburg. Standard will accept our compliments for his indistinct impression that we still exist. We were almost forced to fear, that after the smoke of the battle had cleared away and the thunder thereof had died on the distant hills, the stately form of the Rooster of victory made such an impression on the editor's mind, as to banish all recollection of his former friends. The poetical flights of fancy which he accuses us with doing up, we hope, wore not unwelcome attendants luring his short sojourn in the ethereal halls of political enchantment; and as he has evidently returned from. his visit to those shadowy mansions, to mingle in hu man scours and partake of human anxie ties, we will inform him that his ticket for Salt River would not. command a• passage. We are therefore neither there, nor yet (€up a tree," and we send the Journal reg ularly. The first time you are in town tire us a PRESIDENCY. The more we see and hear of polities; the more firmly are we convinced, that Mr. Fillmore in case he should be a can didate, has nothing to expect /tom loco focus. Ho has been, at tines, well spoken of in the South 'ey some of them, because of his firm stand in favor of the compromise measures, but the elections in those States, ePttept Georgia, rather indicate an aver sion to these measures by a majority of the people. The administration platform was occupied by the whigs in the late Virginia election for members of Congress, while the opposition candidates generally held the extreme doctrines of Southern rights, and still the delegation to the next Con gress will stand as it did in the preceding, two whigs and thirteen democrats. He could carry the whig Southern States be yond all doubt, hut from the indications in that quarter he would have no show of chance to carry any of the Loeofooo ones, for the locofocos there generally manage to satisfy their own people, that they are as friendly to the South as the whigs can• be. These things being true two or three of the great northern States will decide the contest, and the question is, who can carry them? If Mr.. Fillmore can, the! mere question of men amounts to little ; but we are satisfied, that for a sure unmis takeable victory, Gen. Scott is the man.— Ho has been engaged during his whole life in riveting the bands of the American Union, and executing the laws enacted un der the American Constitution. If any man on earth can be entrusted with that sacred instrument, it is he. Give him a platform as broad as the Whig party(and that is as broad as the Union) upon which to plant his standard and over which to unfurl the American flag, and the people will flock to it from the cast and the west and the north and the south. They will greet it with an acclamation louder than his cannon when it out-thundered Niagara, or reverberated in the mountain gorges of Cerro Gordo. With such a can didate victory is no problem, ("'" A, SPLENDID MAP of the civilized portion of North America, including, the Canadas, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick, the United States and all her Territories, Mexico, the States of Central America and the West Indies, has been!shewn to us by the agent for this county. It is published by Jacob Monk in Baltimore and is very neatly and elegantly executed. The new State of California and the territories of Oregon, New 'Mexico, Utah and Mincsota are accurately delineated, as also those portions of the ludiun• Territory,. assigned by the General Government to the - Indians, removed by her authority, from the eas tern side of the Mississippi. The gold re gion in the State of California is also no ted. There is a table containing the names of all the counties and county towns in the United States, with a great variety of other information, which maps alone can furnish. We cordially recommend it to the people of this county as a very valua ble and beautiful work, which, in addition to its utility would be an ornament in a house. No family should be without something of the kind, for maps and geo graphy lie at the very foundation of use • ful knowledge—and this one is furnished at a reasonable price. News of the Week. The steamer Cherokee has arrived at New York with over two millions• of dol lars in gold. Not the least important item, to politicians particularly, is the result of the elections in that State. It will be seen that the Democrats have carried all the principal officers. The steamer Franklin has also arrived at New York, after a remarkably quick passage from Cowes. She brines us four days later MATH from Europe. Cotton and breads tuffs were depressed, and had slight ly given way, KossuTit had not arrived in Europe when the Franklin sailed. From Washington, we learn that the Austrian Minister had demanded his pasts ports. Mr. HIVEs, 31inister to Piatre> had been recalled, at his own revest, and NATIIAN SARUENT, Esq., formerly the "Oliver Oldsehool" of the United States Gazette, has been appointed Register of the Treasury, in place of the HIM. TOWN SEND HAINES resigned. PRESIDENTIAL. CACCUSING.-1I is sta ted in the New York papers that the lead ing members of the Cabinet of the late President Polk are assembled in that city at this time, and engaged in concocting a scheme to defeat the movement in favour of Judge Douglas, of Illinois, for the Presidency, and to secure the nomination of Mr. Buchanau f of Pennsylvania. The New Mexican Revolution. Additional reports by telegraph mention a rumor that Matamoras had been taken by Caravajal and his insurgent forces, on the 26th or 27 of October, after a hard fight. Oe►►. Persifor F. Smith was doing all in his power to prevent Americans from join ing the revolutionists. The New Orleans Picayune of Oct. 24th says: "The Mary Ellen, Capt. Henry, arrived last evening from Tampico, bringing papers from that port to the Bth inst. The De fensor, of that date, notices a rumor to the effect that the Mexican government, having been convinced of the critical po sition of the Rio Grande frontier, had in structed Gen. Avalos, commanding at Matamoras, to withdraw the prohibitions on commerce and lower the duties. “Accounts from Tampico, received here on Wednesday, states that the schooner Neptune left there on the 11th inst., with troops for the Rio Grande, part of whom she brought from Vera Cruz. The schooner "Neptune" iS•the same vessel reported ass "steamer" in our late despatches, which arrived lately at the mouth of the Rio Grande. Her troops, after landing, were driven back by a body of Texans to the vessel. LATER—RATTLE OF 3IXTAISIORAS. NEW ORLEANS, Nov. 2. The steamship Fanny has arrived with Ric Grande dates to Oct. 30th—six days later. The attack on Matamoras commenced on the 21st, and on the 23d Garavajal had possession of the city. Within four squares of the Plaza the government troops still held out, suffering a loss of 150 Lilled and wounded. The revolutionists lost but three inclst ding Capt. Ford, who commanded a com pany of Texans: Gen. Avalos was wounded. No quarter was given to Americans du ring the engagement. Mr. Longstreth, a merchant, doing business at Matamoras; was killed. The city was set on fire on the 23d, and the Custom House and other buildings were destroyed. Mr. Devino's stores wore also buined, The Americen Consul w wounded Spain—Warlike Tone of the Span- lards. The Spaniards seem to be seized with a fit of warlike enthusiasm against the United States, as au immediate declaration of hos tilities is recommended, and the Sptinish papers gl oat over the rich prizes of Ameri can merchant ships which they would take in the East, to counterbalance. the loss of their Western colonies. A foreign war was said also not to be very distasteful to the Madrid cabinet, as the expenses incident to it would serve as a pretext for the non payment of the English bondholders, and would besides enable them to draw off the attentinn , of parties from a commencement of threatened intestine broils. A general insurrection of some of the Northern pro vinces' of Spain is said to be by no means an impossible or distant event. The sup pression of the Lopez expedition will, how ever, have the effect of calming the excite ment whiSh prevailed. The Ifersldo; in a long article 'on-the - Cuban expedition, and on the events• by which it was followed in the United States; expresses the opinion that, sooner or later, war between Spain and the United States cannot fail to break out, and it calls on the government to pur chase steamers, increase the fleet and make other preparations. A Madrid letter of the 14th says: I learn that the Spanish Government hts adopted a high tone towards that of the' United States; and as public feeling is de cidedly in favor of such a line of conduct just now, it will render itself popular by so doing. Moreover, it counts upon the sup port of the British and French govern ments; hence probably its pugnacity. Despatches are on the point of being trans mitted to the Spanish minister at Wash ington, directing him to protest in the strongest terms against the supineness of the American government, in having per mitted a second marauding expedition to attack Cuba, and to demand satisfaction for the outrage the Spanish Consul at New Orleans has been subjected to by the an nexationis ts. THE N ExT CON6LtESS.—The members of the 32d Congress have now been elec ted in all the States but Mississippi and Louisiana. In these, probably, two Union Whigs will be returned to seven Demo crats, of various hues. The Whigs will have from eighty-five to ninety members, the Free Sellers eight or ten, and the Democrats, a clear regular party majority of fifty or thereabouts. AT GF.N. TIVIGGS' MARRIAGE, in Pen , mole, a Cliarivari, for the benefit of the poor, was got up, and the General handed over the amount demanded ($100) and the crowd then suffered the bridegroom and bride to reet undisturbed. THE PENNSYLVANIA ELECTION.—The Harrisburg papers publish the following official returns of the recent State elec t tion : FOR COVERNOR. William Bigler, Deni. 180,499 William F. Johnston, Whig 178,034 Kimbor Cleaver, Abolitionist 1,713 FOR CANAL COMMISSIO:7EIt: Seth Clover, Dem. 184,021 John Strohm, Whig 175,444 David McDonald, Abolitionist 1,875 FOR JUDGES OF VIE SUPREME COURT. Jeremiah S. Black, Dem. 185,893 James Campbell, Dem. 176,069 Ellis Lewis, Dem. 183,887 John B. Gibson, Dom. 184,408 Walter 11. Lowrie, Dem. 185,464 Richard Coulter, Whig 179',238` Joshua W. Comley, Whig 173,635 George Chamburs,. Whig 174,381 William M. Meredith,. Whig 113,391' William. Jessup, Whig 172,23'2 GOOD.—Lancaster and Lebanon form a Senatorial district•—entitled to two Sena tors. Lebanon, though -a small county, claimed one of the Senators, and present ed John W. Killingcr as their choice—as sound a Whig as breathes in Pennsylva nia. Lancaster, having the power to elect whom they choose, insisted upon having both Senators, and presented two candi dates, both worthy men for aught we know. Gallant, steadfast, little Lebanon stood up for her man and for what she considered her rights. The result of the Oil was that the two Whig candidates in Lancaster were elected, because of the overwhelming Whig majority of that coun ty. But little Lebanon polled more votes for Killinger, with a certainty of his de feat; than she did for any other candidate. Honor, we say, to the Whigs of Lebanon, for sustaining her own worthy son, and for setting au example to W higs every where of a sturdy devotion to a just cause without regard to success or defeat. Bucks Intelligencer. Err An ingenious printer of Illinois Mr. F. A. C. Foreman, has recently invented an Electro-Magnetic Printing Press, which is highly spoken of by those who have examined it. The. Vincinnes, Ind., Gazelle, speaking of this invention, says— A contemporary who saw it at work says it threw off impressions with the ra pidity of lightning. His paper works on a reel, and is continuous, like a telegraph coil. The paper is carried over the type! on a cylender, and when one side is work ed, the paper is reversed, and the other printed with a most perfect register, and as they come down from the press, the sheets are clipped apart by an ingenious contrivance. -The speed of this press is almost unlimited, and its exactness is be yond anything in this line of machinery.— Mr. F. estimates the cost of the largest sized printing press at not more than five hundred dollars. ANOTIEER CUBAN EXTBDITION.—A. lot ter from Bayou Sarah, La., to the ./Vish ville Banner, says another Cuban expedi tion is on foot in that State, at the head of which ib Gen. Felix Huston: writer says : From what I. can • lours; some men of influence and means have beets approached on the subject. 1 know one who has bon offered a command. The plan is first to• get the means to procure arms. A near neighbor of mine was offered a command, and, I am sorry to say, at first thought favorably of it. The object was to get money, it being managed as secretly as possible. ANOTHER EUZOPEAN CONVUL,IoN HANn.— , Mr. Walsh, long a resident of Paris, writes from that city under date ot* September 16th, to the Journal of Com merce as follows : “That great events aro just before us-, is certain. The crisis of which I hxve of= ten spoken to you is drawing very near.— Between the 16th day of September and the middle or end of next May, the destk nice of Europe for probably half a century —which in these days is a very long time —will be decided. A. tierce struggle —it may be a most desperate and bloodistrug gle—between liberty, civil and religious, on the one hand, and hoary despotism in polities and religion on the other. \nut will be the issue, God only knows "1 find that there is a wonderful activity' here in the political world. The foreign am bassadors, especially those of Austria, Pru sin and Russia, have frequent conferences, and are constantly sending and receiving despatches. Nor are the Ministers resi dent of the smaller powers, such as Sardin is, Naples, Spain, the States oldie Church, Belgium and Holland, idle.• Those of rtgland and the United States are wide awake, and the former has not a little to Ido to ook after these Continental States,- I and the movements of their rulers." YANKEE ENTERPRlSE.—Arbusiness firm in Boston is loading a vessel with ice and apples for Alexandria, Egypt. She is to carry out an ioe house ales. TREATMENT OF AMF.RICANS IN AUS TRIA.—Every now and then a new case of shabby treatment of Americans turns up in the Austrian dominions. The Na tional Democrat, at New York, gives the annexed particulars •of the latest case, which we have before briefly mentioned.— Our Government will most likely be look ing into these matters. We quote— " By private letters we learn that Gen eral Averill, of St. .Johnsville, in this State, has also just been expelled from Milan, in a dastardly minter, without any explanation being given by the Govern . - meat in justification of its conduct. It appears that General Averill was allowed to travel . unmetteSted from the Alps to Milan. After reaching the city he was seized by gensd'-armes and conveyed be fore the authorities, who immediately or dered, without any trial, explanation or justification, that he be taken in charge of the police, to the frontiers of Sardinia. "He was allowed barely time at his ho tel to arrange his trunks, when he was placed in a carriage between two gensd'- armes, and driven to theSardinian frontier. Here he was detained under guard for about twelve hotirs, until the arrival of his trunks, when he was taken to the Sardinian soil, and forbidden to re-cross the frontier. The only explanation given was that he was a dangerous man—that they had had notice of his arrival, and were prepared for him." Street Dresses for Ladies. Whatever may be thought of the Bloom- I er costume, there is one evil at least, which it remedies :—we mean the inconvenience of a long skirt, sweeping the ground in wet weather, and thus wetting the ankles.— More females, perhaps, catch cold in this, than in any other way: Besides, nothing is snore unsightly than a wet, soiled and draggled skirt of this description. We heard a lady, the Other day, who consi& ers the Bloomer costumc indelicate, admit nevertheless, its superiority for wet weath er over the present fashiom She propo sed, however, to reform the dress of her sex, not by shortening the skirts, but by introducing a light-made Wellington boot, something like patent leather ones worn by gentlemen in evening costume:. Such a boot would he water tight fot . the foot, and would preserve the ankle from being wet ted by the skirt. A very little pritetice, our fair friend said, would accustom a lady to this sort of a boot; while thousands of lives would be preserved in consequence of the reform. The popular notion among females that a boot of this description must ho necessarily clumsy is entirely wrong. Boots, somewhat shnilar, are worn by the ladies of several foreign countries, and have, in many cases, quite a pictur: I °stle effect. It would be a posit ive reform, and not a mere whimsical change, if ladies would abolish the train, and, in wintry or rainy weather, wear a light, coquettish hoot, a Its Wellinglon.—Bulletin. BREAD BAKED BY STEANI.—The Eng-1 lish papers contain an account of a new method of baking bread. Thu bread is pronounced to be excellent, and superior to that baked on the old plan. A denrit ••• tion of the process will not be found unin teresting. When the loaves aro moulded they arq placed on carriages, and convey . edon railways into the ovens, which arc made of cast iron, and placed one above the other. The doors being closed, the steam is then turned on front the boiler, and passing through a singularly formed coil of pipes, heated to a high degree,. in F a furnace of remarkable con:Auction, is i by opening the valve, admitted to the.ovens. The baking process, front the thee of run ning in the carriages to drawing them out again, occupies front half an hour to an hour and a Kali, according as the loaves vary iu size. There is perforated pipea placed at equal distances inside the ovens, by which mewls all parts aro alike heated. The heat is kept within determinate ther mometric limits by the adjustment of the valves, and the degree ascertained by au indicator, the "bull," beingscareely thick er than a cob reb, yet ranging from 130 to 300 Fahrenheit. ASIENDE 110NOHABLE.-ThO Londun Times has the following "summing up" on the subject of the Crystal Palace Exhibi don : Great Britain has received 'store useful ideas and more ingenious inventions from the U. States through the exhibition, than from all other sources ! This is making the arnmde honorable to Johathan, for having cried "small pota toes" at the first sight of his traps and no- tiona% !.fe - In Mississippi a man always makes his will before accepting a nomination to run for Congress, and trusts to a pair of revolvers, bowie knife, and loather lungs,' to whip his opponent in the race. DEATH OF THE WIFE OF Gov. UJUAZY. --We learn from the Washington Tele graph that Major Tochman and lady have received a letter announcing that the wife of Gov. Ujhazy, the Hungarian exile, died at New Buda; Decatur county, lowa, on the 11th ult. The venerable Hungarian patriot, in announcing the sad tidings, thus concludes his letter: "The cup of my sorrows is full. I have lost my beloved wife! She departed this life after a few days' illness. Could I haye . corese9n that my exile was to shorten hbr days, I would have given my head to the foes of my country, to preserve the' life of the best of mothers. Your most affectionate, unfortunate friend." A Sitawerof FleBh at Benicia. On Saturday the 20th inst., a shower of meat fell at the army station near Benicia. It was first observed by Major Allen, who was struek by one of the falling pieces.— The shower lasted two or three minutes. The pieces were from the size of a pigeon's egg up to that of an orange—the heaviest perhaps weighing three ounces. No birds were visible in the air at the time. Speci mens of this meat, which is apparently beef, were preserved by Major Allen and the Surgeon of the Post. A piece that was examined three hours after it fell, showed a small blood vessel, some of the sheath of a muscle and muscular fiber. It was slight ly tainted. The ground on which the shower fell was about 300 yards long and eighty wide, and the entire amount of meat between two and a half and five bush els in bulk. No pieces of bone were founts. A strong west wind was blowing at the time and the skies were clear. This is' the third occurrence of the kind on record in the last six years. CREDITABLE it;VEBENT.—Ez-Proi dent TYLER has written a letter to CAL DERON DE LA BARCA, the Spanish Minis ter, soliciting his intercession for the re lease of all the•Cubnn prisoners. Mr. Tr- LER says if a sacrifice was• wanting to de ter others from the commission of a simi lar offence, it has been offered up. The vengeance of a great State has fallen ter- - rible and fatally, and to restore the small number now in custody to their friends and homes, would speak a more effective tale than would ever issue from the . dun geon or the gibbet. SANTA ANNA.—There is a concerted movement in Mexico for the restoration of Santa Anna and the overthrow of Arista's administ ration. This famous chief remains at Trubuco, a town in New Grenada, but he is evidently waiting anxiolitly for the moment when he shall he called front bih , retitement by his active pattitans in Mcxi co. Then we may look for another pro nunciamenlo, a triumphant ovation for the out-lened hero, and unless M. Arista) is very wide awake, he will have some trouble to keep his head on his shoulders.. Philosophical, The editor of the Easton ./Irgus, Mr.• W. Hotter, was defeated for the Le gislature in .Northampton county by a' Whig opponent, whereupon, Mr. 11. brief ly 11111101311CC8 : :The question was submitted to the pco , pie of Northampton county, on Tuesday,• whether they would have a good represen tative or a good editor, the coming winter, and they decided by a majority of 80 that they would rather have a good editor.-- litmeo foe our side. . _ SC El 00 t. Qe l ST 1.1 N. -111e Supreme Ju dicial Court of Massachusetts has decided that the proper Itutheritles,/tetiog in good faith, and for thc benefit of the schools, have a right to exclude a girl of bad Aar acter front the public schools: The court below had decided the contrary., GOLD IN TIM STI:LIETS.—Tho boys of many of the California fawns occupy their thee in washing the surface dirt of the" streets, and wake as high as four and five dollars per day. Some men have also been operating in the same way ; sonic of the dirt paid an high as twenty-five cents to the bushel. Valuable streets. Got - I:moil CABINET.--Tha Bloontsbur; Democrat suggests the fol lowing named gentlemen as the Cabinet of tihere of Goy. Bigler's administration; Gtio. W. WUODWARD, Luzerne, Secretary of State. Hon. ,TAMEs CAMPBELL, Philadelphia, Attorney General. Cu!. gAmom BLAcK, Pittsburg 341- taut amend. C? The ladies of Greenland dress rath er queer. Their petticoats consist of ox hides, while the only necklace they wear are made up of links of sausages. We have often hoard of ladies looking 'good enough to eat.' In Greenland they are so. PRICES CURRENT. PH ILADELPUIA, Nov. 4, 1851 $4 00 Flour per bbl. White Wheat per bushel 11e4 do Rye Corn Oats Cloversee4