BY J. A. HALL. TERMS OF PUBLICATION: . Tote "HUNTINGDON JOURNAL" is published at the following rates, viz : If paid in advance, per annum, $1,50 If paid during the year, 1,75 If paid after the expiration of the year,• 2,.50 To Clubs of five or more, in advance,. • 1,25 , THE above Terms will be adhered to in All MSS. No subscription will he taken for a less period than aix months, and no paper will be discontinued un til all arrearages are paid, unless at the option of the publisher. Vortical. Home is where there's one to los e us. Home's not merely four square walls, 'Though with pictures hung and gilded; Home is where affection calls, Filled with shrines the heart hath blinded llok'lli3!—go watch the faithful dove Sailing 'neath the.heuven above us— Home is where there's one to love! Home is where there's one to love us ! Home's not merely roof and room, It needs something to endear it; Home ig where the heart can bloom, Where there's some kind lip to cheer it! What is home with none to meet? None to welcome, none to greet us ? Home is sweet, and only sweet, Where there's one wo love to meet us! ARE YOU BEADY? Wl' J. 1). L. GANTT. Freemen, hark : your country calls For assistance at the polls; Firm, united, one and all, Are you ready now? Now's the day and now's the hour, See the front of battle lower, bee the fainting Locos cower ! Are you ready now? Le! the battle is at 111111 d: Will ye fly, or will ye stand, Round your banner hand in hand? Are you,ready now? La your leader, true and tried, Is our country's noblest pride, Joined like brothers, side by side; Aro you ready now I Scott, our nation's brightest star, Scott, whose conic is known afar, Leads you boldly forth to war, Are you ready now 1 Where the morning breezes stray, Lift your banners, let them play, While echo asks from far away Arc you ready now? Como and join our noble cause, Count nil British gold but dross; Fainting Pierce cloth lead our foes, Are you ready now 7 Franklin Pierce, why who is he'? Why, the Loco nominee, Rally, Whigs! and Pierce shall see That we're ready now ! Winfield Scott, whose noble fame Still ascends the mount of fame, Will wit( a field for you again. Are you ready Howl Soldiers you who nobly fought Side by side with Winfield Scott, Will ye stand and fuller not? Aro you ready now? Firmly joined, come one and all, Sons of freedom, great and small, MAI ahead the great Whig ball; And be ready now. Votitical. Gen. Scott's Mexican Offer. We extract the following from Gen. Scott's speech at Sandusky, and give it a place that our readers may learn from his own lips, the truth in regard to the offer made to him, to stay in Mexico. Read it with care, and you can see how his love of his own country rose above personal advan tage, or power.—Ed. Jour. "Ono word more about myself, my friends. My friend has adverted to the proposition seen floating about in the news papers. I have nowhere seen it correctly Mated that an offer was made to me to re main in that country and to govern it.-- The impression which generally prevails, that the proposition emanated from Con gress, is an erroneous one. The overture was made to me by private citizens—mom of wealth and prominence. During our stay in Mexico our system of government and police was established, which, as the inhabitants themselves confessed, gave se curity—for the first time perfect and abso lute security—to person and property.— About two-iiftbs of all the branches of Government, including nearly a majority of the members of Cnogress and the .Uxee utive, were quito desirous of having that n'nftngbn sons belonging to the American army would stand disbanded, and would be ab solutely free from all obligations to remain in the army another moment. It was en tirely true of all the new regiments called regulars, and eight out of ten of the rank and file of the old regiments, after the war was over. The Government overwhelmed me with reinforcements, after there was.no possibility of fighting another battle. When the war commenced we had but one-fourth the force which we needed.— The Mexicans knew that the men in my army would be entitled to their discharge. They supposed if they could obtain my services, I would retain those twelve or fifteen thousand men, and that I could ea-1 sily obtain one hundred thousand more' from home. The hope was that it would immediately cause annexation. They of- 1 fered me one million of dollars as a bonus, with a salary of $250,000 per annum, and five responsible men to become security in any bath in Now York which I might name. It would be so arranged that . 1 might get it in five days. They expected that an nexation would be brought about in a few years, or if not, that I could organize the finances, and straighten the complex affairs of that Government. It was understood that nearly a majority of Congress Wits in favor of annexation, and that it was only necessary to publish a pronuncioniento to that effect to secure the object. We pos sessed all the arms of the country, and oc cupied their cannon foundries and powder manufactories; had possession of their ports of entry, and might easily have held them in our possession, if this arrangement had gone into effect. A published pronunci omento would have brought Congress right over to us, and with these fifteen thousand Americans holding the fortresses of the l l country, all Mexico would not have distur- 1 bed us. We might have been there to this day if it had been necessary. I loved my distant home. I was not in favor of the annexation of Mexico to my own country. Mexico has about eight millions of inhabi tants, and out of those eight millions, there are not more than one million who are of pure European blood. The Indians and I 'nixed races constitute about seven millions. They are exceedingly inferior to our own. As a lover of my country, I was opposed to mixing up that race with our own. This was the first objection on my part to this proposition. May I plead some little love of home, which gave me the preference for l the soil of my own country and its institu tions, and here I am. I believe I have no more to add in reply." The following from the Now York TH. bune, we commend to the oareful peruse] of every reader. Nothing that we can say, could be more to the purpose; and we say, by way of endorsement, as Peter Bush said. "them's our sentiments" : " If we had Known., After an election is over, if our side hap pens to have been beaten, we are always favoured with a bevy of Job's comforters, who tell us how easy they could have poll ed the additional vote necessary to carry their State if they had only known that it was wanted. If they had not supposed that we were certain to succeed, they could have got out the few votes necessary to turn the scale. But they thought it was all safe, or all lost, and so made no serious effort. They will try to do better next time. Friends of SCOTT and GRAHAM! under stand now and henceforth that every vote is wanted in your Town and County ! Don't say your State is sure, or is hope less: for there aro not five States in the Union that are fixed beyond controversy, and even in these we want the last Whig vote called out. Effort in Vermont is de sirable and needed, though Vermont will give a large majority for Scott and Gra ham. So is effort in Alabama, though it is morally certain to vote for Pierce and King. Enthusiasm is contagious, and ef fort in one State stimulates efforts in oth ers. With proper effort on the part of his friends, Qen. Scott is not beaten. But the cause needs WORK. First in putting Information into the hands of the voters; next in affecting such an Organiza tion as will secure a full attendance at the polls. There are thousands of Whigs we say it with sorrow) who will go a journey in October and fail to reach home till after the Presidential election in November if they are not entreated to do otherwise.— Many will start on voyages of business or pleasure who mean to do the right thing, but, under the deceptive plea that "ONE Vote can make no difference," they will severally abstain from voting, and perhaps collectively defeat the Country's cause.— We oaro little for great meetings, but let Documents be everywhere diffuse&and a thorough Organization effected and we may then feel• assured of a Scott triumph.— Whigs everywhere ! rest not a moment un til your own County is thoroughly supplied nr.anized—then turn your attention — bainto HUNTINGDON, PA., THURSDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1852. To the Whigs of the Union! There is nothing in the result of last Tuesday's election which can dishearten any true hearted Pennsylvania Whig.— We have yet to inset the first Whig who has a knowledge of the State, and for whose judgement in political matters we have any respect whatever, that regards the result of the State election as indica tive of our defeat in November when Gen. Scott is in the field. There may be here and there a political croaker, who in poli tical contests, like Gen. Pierce in the bat tle field, becomes faint and sick when the enemy's citadel has to be taken by storm, and who now trembles in his shoes as to the result. But such, we assure our Whig friends in other States, is not the sentiment of the Whigs of Pennsylvania. All who are acquainted with the politics of the State, and understand the'causes which produced our defeat on Tuesday last, are as confident now as they have ever been that Gen. Scott will obtain the electoral vote of the State by a majority equal to that given for the lamented Taylor. No elaborate explanation need be made to them that the State is safe for Old Chip pewa; but as our Whig friends in other States cannot be supposed to be so famil iar with the state of public sentiment in Pennsylvania, and as many of them may be induced to regard last Tuesday's result as indicative of our inability to carry the State for Gen. Scott, we propose to sub mit a plain and unvarnished statement of the causes which led to our defeat, and of the reasons which induce us to feel confi dent of success in November. Our Whig friends in other States must, in the first place, bear in mind that the of fice of Canal Commissioner, although an important one, has not that political im portance attached to it in the minds of the great mass of the Whigs which it deser ves, or which is. necessary to arouse them to active exerlions, and concentrate and rally all in support of the candidate for that office. As an illustration of the truth of this remark we need but refer to the vote cast in 1848 for the respective can didates of the Whig party for Governor and Canal Commissioner. Mr. Middles warth, one of the very best and most popu lar men in the State, who was then Whig candidate for Canal Commisioner, fell short more than 4000 of the vote polled for Governor Johnston, and, as a conse quence, was defeated by his LocofocO op ponent, Mr. Painter, who, singular as it may seem, had some 12 or 1500 votes less than d ndge Longstreth, the Locofoco nominee for Governor. The same was again the case last year. At the election of October, 1851. Mr. Clover, the Looofo co candidate for Canal CosaisSioner, with a less aggregate vote than was cast /or Gov. Bigler, had about 1500 more of a majority over Mr. Strohm in the State, than Gov. Bigler had over Governor Johnston.— These instances show most clearly that there is never that interest taken by the Whigs in the success of their candidate for Canal Commissioner which there ought to be, or which, at all events, should be, if the vote for that office is to be taken as, a test of the strength of parties in the State. The indifference thus manifested about the Canal Commissioner by Whigs, in 1848 and '5l, who attended the polls, and voted for Governor, but neglected to do so for Canal Commissioner, affords a key to the non-attendance at the ballot box cf so many thousand Whigs on Tuesday last. The office of Judge of the Supreme Court is not a political office, and, although there is nine of more direct importance to the people than it, they yet seem to take less interest in it than that of Canal Commis sioner. These being the only State officers to be voted for, we could not rally the Whigs to the polls as we should have done with a gubernatorial candidate in the field. Other causes operated against us.— Thus in Allegheny county, where Gen. Scott is certain of a majority of no less than 4000, the unofficial reports give our candidate for Canal Comissioner but 6 or 600. There, it appears, the contest for Sheriff absorbed the whole attention of, the party, there being serious apprehon-, sious on the part of many Whigs; that the notorious Joe Barker, who was a candi date on his own hook for that office, had some chance to succeed, and as a matter of course all the energies of the party were directed to ensure the success of the Whig candidate. So in the Lucerne Con gressional District. There the great is sue was between Wright and Fuller, and in the contest for Congress, the Whig candidates on the State ticket wore lost sight of. So in Montgomery. There the Whigs saw a. prospect to elect a State Semitor, and directed all their energies to that object. They were successful, but it was more or less at the expense of the State ticket. So in Northampton, where two Whig Assemblymen were elected. We had other objects to accomplish, and other subjects of no less importance . •• ♦ wkinh to di- sional Delegation to elect, and, although unsuccessful, in securing a majority, we have yet an increase of two or three com pared with the delegation now in Congress. We had a State Senate to retain or lose. The effort to retain a majority in that body has been successful, and we shall have a Whig Senate during the next session of the General Assembly. These and other objects occupied the attention of Whigs and must be take into account when we sum up the result for Canal Commissioner; We have the full vote of twenty-three counties besides the city arid &minty of Philadelphia, and they add up as follows: For Canal Commissioner, Hoffman, 82,525 Hopkins,• •• • For Judge of the Supreme Court. .87,946 I Woodward, Buffington, In November of 1848, for President, it stood ns follows: Taylor, 108,321 I Cass, 88,715 I VBaren, 2,531 At the October election, 1851, the vote was : For Governor. 98,823 Bigler,• For Canal Commissioner. Johnston, Strohm, 98,641 I Clover, 98,970 It will be thus seen that the votejor Canal Commissioner in the countiqs offici ally heard from compares as folloWs with that given for President in 1848 Tayluir, 108,321 Cuss,. •• • Hainan, 82,525 Hopkins,• Deficiency,• • • 25,796 Increase, Compared with that for Governor and Canal Commissioner, in 1851, it is as fol lows : 98,823 I Bigler,• • .82,525 ilopk in., Jolinston, Deficieucy,• • • •16,298 Deficiency, Strohm,• ••• • • • •98,641 Clover,• •• • Hotlmon,• •• • • • •82,525 Hopkins,• • • Deficiency, 16,116 I Deficiency, A careful examination of these figures will show that while the Locofoco vote, as compared with Gov. Bigler's vote, is actugly diminished seven thousand eight hanged, -and ninety-seven, SIXTEEN ! THOUSAND TWO HUNDRED AND NINETY EIGHT WHIGS DID NOT 00 TO THE POLLS! And while the hocofocos have polled the full vote, which they gave for Gen. Cass and M. Van Buren, in 1848, and its na tural increase of about 1000 votes, in the counties officially heard from, no less than TWENTY-FIVE THOUSAND, SEVEN HUN DRED AND NINETY-SIX WLIIO VOTERS REMAINED AT HOME ON TUESDAY LAST, WHO VOTED FOR GENERAL TAYLOR IN 1848! These are facts which speak for them selves, and which should impel every Whig voter to do his duty in November next! News. To the Whig Farmers. The man who would go into his fields expecting to gather corn where be . had not sown the grain, would be esteemed a foul. "Seed time" before "harvest," all the world over. Not only is the seed needed, but it must be placed iu the ground prepa red for it; and if the ground is unprepared, the wise man gets it ready before the sea son of taking root is past. E very farmer and every boy knows and acts upon this common sense principle. Now we have a harvest to gain or lose on Uncle Sam's fZii.—The crops we want to reap are 1. Protection to our own. household, af fording to the operative better wages, that ho may have more to save and spend. '. A market at home, in order that half of the profits of the farmer's labors shall not be eaten up by the cost of transporta tion. _ _ _ 3. The removal of obstructions in our harbors and the improvement of our rivers, that our sailors may be saved from many of the dangers they are now needlessly, compelled to undergo, by which thousands of valuable lives and au immense amount of property would be preserved from de struction. 4. The preservation of the farm, and the keeping of it in "apple-pie-order," and having all of it well tilled. We might name others, but lot this suf fice. 'We are now in the midst of seed time, and yet some of us have not taken the first step to get seed and oast it in. Now,. to such we want to say a few plain words.— Have you a life-interest in the concern ? Have your children a similar interest ? Do you expect your neighbor to work, while you are idle? • if you are a Whig farmer we have named some of the ‘ crops you de sire to see gathered in November. Well, don't leave your sowing to be done a few days before you wish to shout "Harvest Home !" Come, go to work; don't wait for' your neighbor to speak to you first. That is what, perhaps, be is going to do. Begin now, in your own school district, at home. Call a few, if it be but three, together. You all know what is needed, is wanted; you •don't differ there. Consult then how it is to be accomplished; and go to work. That is your share of the labor. It may cost you a little time and labor, but (-- t v -9 'i 4 ooOrttrti /7) don't succeed—if you have done your du ty—tho shame of defeat will rest upon others, not you. Don't be disheartened, if you can't do all you wish. Don't be deterred from going ahead, and doing what you can, by the senseless slang and low abuse of those who assail your candi date and your party. Let that rather make you work the harder. Don't allow them to vex you, and make you in turn as sail theirs. That's what they want you to do. You can tell something that Scott has done, in forty years' service, for his country—ber glory, her honor, her pros perity. You can show that in every situ ation he has been called to fill be has "done up his work" in a masterly manner. His faithful services are a sure enough guaranty that other.duties will be perform ed as well. Everybody has herd Of Scott —evetylihdy knows his deeds. Now if your opponents can show what their candidate has done, let them show it. Not by lyingg, political iquibi, nor apocry phal lives written for election purpoies.— Like Scott, be has seen some considera ble public services, and if he was any thing of a public man, his votes, speeches, and other acts would be recorded. Here you will stump them. For if you sbould put together all his public services—scanty as they may be—you will find them in op position to that which you believe to be for the good of the nation. 92,255 94,336 100,152 86,715 .92,225 Now we affirui and believe that Genefai Scott will win the field, and gather in the harvest, as he oft has won the battles of his country. And as in every battle no soldier of it is a victory; wants to have it said that he was absent from the contest, or that he ut leant did not do something that entitled him to a share of the glory, remember that the nation has ever honored her real warriors when candidates for of 'flee. Who would take "bogus" money when the pure gold was to be had? Who would sow his fields with unknown grain when the best seed was offered at the same prieel And who ought to vote for an un tried, unknown man for President, when his competitor is one whose life has been spent.in the defence and for the benefit and honor of the nation'! , 3,L40 100,152 • 22,255 • 7,897 9R,970 .9.2.`f25 , 6,745 Up, then, farmers, and begin now the preparation fcr the November harvest.— See that your districts are thoroughly or ganized; that each and every honorable means are used to scatter light and truth where darkness or indifference now exists. Don't let your enemies catch you napping. If you do this, when the election day closes, you may with Perry say: 6 , lVe have met the enemy, and they are ours! [From Me Middletown (X. Y.) Press. How it workb—lron, We cominend the following extract from an article in the N. Y. Tribune headed "Who pays the Duty?" to the candid con sideration of both producer and consumer: Two years since the price of railroad iron in Wales was $22 80, or £4 15s. per ton, the duty on which was about $7; whereas, iu 1846, when the tariff of that year was passed, it had been about $lB per ton.— Under the circumstances, application was made to Congress to fix the duty at what it had been at the date of the present reve nue system, or at least to add six or eight dollars to the amount levied, raising it to thirteen or fourteen dollars per ton. Congress was then told "So long as do mestic competition is maintained, we shall be enabled steadily to improve our ma chinery, and iron will not only continue low, but there will be a steady tendency to fall in price; but if the English iron toasters be permitted to destroy our com petition, the price of iron will go up, and the money that should go into the Treas ury will go into their pockets." To all these representations Congress turned a deaf ear, and the consequence has been that step by step our iron masters have been ruined, and their works have passed into the hands of the Sheriff. Essex County, but lately the seat of a thriving manufacture, is now almost entirely silent. Booton has been sold for we think one fifth of its cost, and this after having dis tributed three ini;lions of dollars in wages. Armstrong and Clarion Counties have wit nessed the downfall of forty out of for ty-two furnaces, twenty of which will shortly have been sold by the Sheriff with in a period of twelve months. Such has been the case in almost every portion of the Union. Everywhere the men who were engaged in establishing competition for the supply of the world with iron have been ruined; and the domestic make of iron has now fallen from 850,000 to about 450,- 000 tons, when it might have risen to a million and a half of tons, and would have done so but for British free trade. Such vast destruction of property should have been followed with benefit to . some body, and such has certainly been the case, but to whom? To the people of the Union? Certainly not, for their produc tion of iron is far less now than it was four years since, although in the interim we have added four millions to our Ta_miton2.then! To the British VOL. 17, NO. 4a iron makers; *Use prices have risen pxs cisely as our furnaces and tniqs have best closed, and who now put 00 their pockets the whole sum that was, two years since, asked to be claimed for the Treasury.-- Two years since the price was, as we hr vs stated, £4 15 In Wales. A year since, it had risen to £5 ss, being an addition of $2 40. Now, it is £6 ss, being a fur thee addition of $4 80—aed thus the for eigh price his risen to the wkle exte t of the seven dollars that was Men to be added. In 1850 the British iron maiterspr +1,4. cost of getting to market; but as cop tion has diminished their prices hay creased, and now it is the consumer pays the duty: With another year ,es will rise again, and it must be regard, quite extraordinary if we do not see in., go up to seven or eight pounds, the for(Agn producers poalv.:ting the whole differnec be tween that and the £4 15e; at whit'.: it stood when Congress was urged to it ter pose and prevent theni from destroying s! our own furnaces, forges and rolling mills Gen. Scott with his Soldiers. Ile Testimony of a Democrat In our paper of last Saturday we copied from a Michigan paper an article which gave the particulars of an incident that 00. curred during the Florida wet•. The cub stat*e bf the article was, that at nighty after a weary march, a party was detailed to erect a shelter for the commander-in chief, who had nat yet reached the ground. Shortly after the work conutienced, Gen. Scott came up and finpiiied of the working party what they were doing. in formed, when he imMediately reu•lied cease work, and return to your company. I can participate iu the priva tion of my men. I will not have a weary soldier to I erform a moment's unneccd2ary labor for my convenience." And , :at the sod of the everglade, under the open the gallant old chief slept with his faithful soldiers. • This article happened to meet the oar of a gentleman min , living in CovingteTi, vdlo served under Gen. Sc - at iu Florida. nue who has up to this time. acted with t a DI mocratic party. 'This•gentleman called of our office on Tuesday last, to say that is was one of the men detailed to ere,:t shelter for Gen. Scott, and that he know; the statement that Gen. Scott request( the men to desist from the work to be in.. Our informant says that Gen. Scot: w 9.4 a diciplinarian, but that as a general thi , ,ps the dicipline was enforced rather agaii the officers than the privates; and t'.v. Scott was uniformly kind and attentive :•: the wants of his soldiers. Our informant further said that had C.:, been nominated he would have suppor : hnn; but that between Gen. Scott and G Pierce he must vote for his old Mon commander.—covinglon, Ky. Journal "For the sake of our British Friends," _ . . . We desire to seell7eFree-Trade Do!:: crate in power for the sake of the mil: ery commerce of North America; for if Pier shall be President; our Northern friena, shall have the benefit of 4; there fort. pray for the Demoeracy forthe sake c . ; our British Friends.—Canada Interha tional: Thus the British press, in Canada as it England, are for Pierce. They “prcy Democracy for the sake of our lurilis friends." British prayers and Britis., gold, will both be liberally expet,l,d t, promote British interedts Gen. Pierce. because of the principles which he advo cates, is the candidate of the moneyed aria tocracy of Great Britain. The same '.a . per which thus "prays" for Geri. "for the sake of its British friends Gon. Scott, "an old fool:" The B. Tories can never forgive General • having whipped the red coats at Lu. , Lane, Chippewa, Fort George, t l / 4 c. 'll would be exceedingly chagrined :..t election, while they have a dozen TeIISO, for desiring the success of General Bien, whom the London Times eulogizes as practical ally of British interests.'---..lita ny (X. F.) Journal. ‘Von't 'Vote against Scott An active, influential German Pen , - orat, of Berks county, said to a friend tut other day that he had read of Scuts the last thirty years—that ho knew Lim ~, be honest and patriotic, because party papers so pronounced him, and 11 never heard anything against him until hi was nominated for the Presidency. .c.! will not," he candidly continued, 6 , vytt for Pierce, because I never heard of Litt. before; if 1 do not vote for General t 4 eott o I will stay home; I will not vote rtgainsri him." Those are the holiest and praise worthy.sentiumuts of right-thinking Dem ocrats in the' country, who know that is voting for Scott they are not voting against the principles of Democracy, f* , ,; ' , ( - •ott is the greatest defender of rift• eiples and Democratic institutions -Roc din - in.—Roe/tutor Dematrst t SopA 141