boil ,)j,` ouniai. Our position as members of the once great Whig Party, which we so clearly defined its our last issue of the • harnal, does not evidently meet with the concurrence and approbation of a number of individuals who once boasted of being ranked and numbered in the files, but who have latterly deserted the cause, and em braced an nbortion in the hideous shape of with the Locoloco Party. We must rim: plify our remarks still more, and we hope, we may now he clearly understood. These re marks are called forth by a paper signed by someforty•three individuals, residents, we are informed, of tho town of Petersburg, mid its immediate vicinity, propounding questions of similar import to those we published and an swered in the last issue of our paper. First, then, every opposition to any action or actions of a Conception, should have a good foundation. Have we a foundation for our opposition to the course pursued by the late so-called Whig County Convention? Rend the truth, and let your conscience answer, if you are unbiased by prejudice ; if you are tan honest man. You know that a Whig County Conven tion was called by the Chairman of the County Committe. You know dint it met, denounced Mc Know Yog ings, and ENTERED mro A CO ALITION wren Tile LOCOFOCO PARTY! I You know all this well, and now do you ask "why don't you support the Convention ?" Was there no other reason, the simple fact that a `Tusion" was agreed upon, should coMpel us to denounce it, bat there are litany, and bear with us while we give theta, simple, plain, yet an crushing as they can be tirade. The Convention denounced the Know Noth ings, and yet assembled at the call of enc.— ! Had it been consistent, when it declared its hostility to the lc. n. organi;ittion, it woold have repudiated all connection with its more deadly and inveterate enemy the Locofoco Par ty. This much of its action showed clearly that ink reNtal individuals controlled its pro credits! mently, it was not the voice //'/ ,„ / -e:df7rnv - . . . . _ sriumg, September 26, 1855. I EinToms. lITI'AliElt. S " NAL , has 300 Subscri , than any other paper Ant y. • as for Me Journal. wrsons \Velum appointed Agents loiN JOURNAL, who are author id receipt for money paid on soh , take the names of new subseri shed prices. the convenience of our subseri •listance from lluntingdon. 011.000, Esq., Hollidaysburg, " " N, East Barren,ae 'OHM:1.117B, Cromwell township. Clny township. Cromwell township. T.:00 Penn township, . TJATTnnn, Franklin township, E , Jackson township, W rsoN, Emily township, , SiWingfield township, Esq.. Warriorsmark tp., I\'tt Ft, 1,11, Petersburg, , - West Barren. Waterstreet,- ; MICKLEY.. Tud township, . i t ildin township, • •, Esq., Tell township, , Birmingham. , 1 - 1.1,, Eeq., Spruce Creek. to,, Alexandria. Union Furnace. Eiq., Union townNhip. Esq., Cass township. Franklin township. Warriorsmatk. is 4:, Todd township. Dublin township. ATE NOMINATION, )MM ESSUYNEIt 1•174M.11_,Z.Z.5QN,, - le e w a rd rtl will he paid for the ap viction of the villain or vil this oflice on the night of the dumber of cuts, a quantity red our paper press, pied a tesides doing other injury to • • • stint. $5O will be paid for of the scoundrels, or $lOO to o will give such evidence as -61. • R POSITION. •ct it again aunt again. In NO hope to have outdo it so runs may read. We owe no party but that ofeorrent prin , . • born American Whigs, raised •, ate AMCCICIIII Whigs, and •iean Whigs. „We aro oppaged 'deb would destroy the notion- play, eonserin ntly, we war i , h the Loeofo,o; or nny oth- We are opßosedi heart and ~, r es and men of the Locoroco to maintain our organiza. our erred. As Whi,Ts we I participation in tie T.ocofoco 1 as a Whig part . ", we were ' lose of the Americans. What - '••• ol• honest 'men, could be cx •_ • erg. of tie Whig Party of ld we submi,ively bow our of lure who despise us, with the very enemies wise I against us—whi have ever 1 \vim ouly ntits desire is "fu• so of strengthening them could do neitlya. We desired f u pure, old.line Whig ticket. :Ida. to support as Trays, 1 consequence—we millet ha -1 measures we despise. Tow and Then. published in tho Huntingdon ''rte 6h: ~ably no feeling of the human ling us ingratitude ; it places breast it finds no abode be the brute creation, nail by its influence, destroys every good it he may .61.1 possessed. In our the world, we are placed in a alon," ike. ald never have mentioned what •. James S. Barr, acted towards 'file Ungrateful Quest." We intent, spent our bard-earned Fal suit" he so ungenerously and he himself, Jame., S. Barr, the "communication" which :orator to carry on the soit.- I•inbt trill remember the arti ;dada. It was signed "I'eda• ,ropriate by the way) and was egotistic self•prnioe, and li :a nst Prof. Campbell of Shit , . •. WC published it without C. took umbrage at it, the suit which he lublinten• The case Was amicably set- Blowing from the lust issue of imerican. g' oarsoll',) bid hi, just des. a room in our county Nis -why for violating the law 1 acting in the capacity of n Council, while yet in alter, iS either an idiot or a S. Barr ungrateful? Into thrall will we judge him." "is below the level of a a Councilman, whoa yet in Urea .". Ashes of finder ! "swaddling clothes," how r, solicit our aid. a law, why does not hid him to prosmute ,o? We flay hint, and shall pipe, debased, ignorant JI we ore guilty of any aiding in placing a brain t vagabond in the respon• opi-rintentlent of Commit dmi (Alum, OUR POSITION DEFINED. :9 j C 011.9 of the 11111,33 of the people, but the shrivelled squealing of dishonest., disloyal partisans. Second. All Whig County Conventions, heretofore, have established a rule, that no business could be done unless a quorum of dcl- egates was present. Did the late Convention - adhere to that rule? We are free to say it did not. A quorum wtts net present, therefore its proceedings are no more binding, and have no more weight, and Cite Whigs of the coon ty owe no more allegiance to-them than they would to any private alerting of two or three individuals in any part or portion of the county. These are some of the reasons why we repudiated the action of the late Convention, so • called. 'We could give more, and as strong ones, but these we believe, are enough to satisfy nny reasona bly sane intm, that we are right. As regards the "fusion" entered into, Flint would have been sufficient to have roused our every energy in opposition to the most fully credited and °alio. dox Whig Convention that ever assembled.— And now we are told we "procaine to dictate to the Whig Party of the County." God forbid Hint we should ever seek.to humble ourself to I,the despicable station of a vote.craver. The republican blood that courses through our veins, which we inherit from ono who bled for his country's independence, forbids that we should ever become a "would-bedictittor." No sirs, but while we leave every one to the free exercise of a freaman's prerogative, we cannot and we will not stand tamely by, and see the members of the party who claim us as their or gan, led like .unresisting sheep and their party, sold to the interest of hell-deserving, political tricksters. "Will we support the fusion ticket," never while reason holds her empire. Threaten us as you have—plead with us as you may—and we will still answer you, we !intro a conscience. Espousethedoctrines we have always despised? —hypeseriticallydeague with the party which has denounced our own Henry Clay as a mur derer and a villain, and our doctrine as the spring, of bell?" Forbid it, righteous Heaven. Our answer to you, who dare threaten is—Do your best; you may- injure us it is true—you may take from us the means whereon we rely I for oursustenance—but you cannot, thank God, take frosts us our independence, our freedom of speech. "We know our rights, and knowing dare maintain." Wo here declare that sooner than sacrifice our principles, sooner than mat. gamate with corrupt Locofocoism, in short, sooner than support an individual, so debased, so corrupt, so despicable as to consent to a "‘fusion" with Locotbcoism for self- interest, we j would lose our all. These are our sentiments; ; are we understood? They may not,'tis true, be yours—we know not, see care not. We are in dependent American citizens, and whilst we accord to every man the privilege of thinking and acting for himself, is it anything more than justice that we should be allowed the sante ? icow, fusionists, you are answered—trouble us no inure with your "queries." Remember 'tin yon who are destroying the party ;'tie you who are endeavoring to smother the sinking embers of the party, to bury it in an eternal sleep, by this cursed fission. Ire can at least kayo the proud consciousness in after years, of knowing we have been loyal and faithful to the interests of the party, and that we have stuck to that party whilst she had a plank. How will it be with you ? flee, which have been published, commented upon and duly answered. Aee the Whigs of the county to acknowledge them as their load. era? Are they to become the dictators of the men they have ever traduced, slandered and libeled for holding the doctrines of Clay and Webster as paramount to all other? Honest and faithful men will not heed the brayings of Is Dr. John McCulloch aK. N.? I pragmatic politicians. We have received the following note from Mr. McCulloch, which we publish without com ment "a ENTLEMES :.—Your paper of last week sta ted that I belonged to the Know Nothing Soci ety, now I once about fifteen or sixteen months ago was induced to attend a K. Nothing Coun cil, and as far as cnce aftendancy made me a member of the order, I was so at that time, but I tun not conscious of ever having attended a locating since, nor do I intend to haveany con nection or sympathy with them hereafter. Yours respectfully, Jou. McCum.ocu." Huntingdon, Sept. 24th, 1855. In regard to the Doctor's allegation, that We "stated he belonged to the k, n. society," we beg leave to correct. We made nosuch state ment, no such charge. We merely asked the question which heads this article. Not know ing, nor caring whether ho bo or be not a know nothing, we beg leave to make the correction, It is said that a little power will make a mall a Mul. The "woodideker" of the "Am• ericau" will wake a "aote on't." FUSION, NO GO. We knew that the voice of the prepondera- Ling mass of Whigs of Huntingdon County, would be raised to ratify the course pursued by the Journal, as an orthodox Whig exponent and to denounce the iniquitous fusion which has been so urgently thrust al the members of the patty by those who have no stronger tie binding than to any political faith, than the loaves: and fishes. We have received nutner ous letters within the past week, fully enders. ing our course. They have been written by men whose Whiggery cannot be doubted—who have been always Whigs—who !lave done you man's service in the cause. We will have space only for a few brief extracts, from Vete. Whigs of Huntingdon County, read, and say whether the opinions and views of these men, do not coincide with yours. The following is from an old, staunch Whig of Franklin tp., whose name, together with others, we are at liberty to make known:— * * * "Your course I approve. I cannot see how honest, free IVhigs could sup port a fusion with Locofoccs. Those men who vote the fusion ticket, cannot act from priori. ple—sorely they must be acting the part of two-faced hypocrites now, or else, all their for. mer professed attachment to the Whig cause and hostility to Locofocoism was a farce.— • * * The Journal deserves the immortal thanks of every faithful Whig for its vindication of the true principles of the party and its denouncement of that inconsistency— fusion," &c., &c., &c. W. Now read those extracts from letters recei• ved from good Whigs in town of Petersburg— all of them cigners of the paper, sent us last week, propounding several "queries" to us.— The paper we allude to, was written by one Henry Orlady, a physician in the above named town, and a ranting Locofoco. His presump ties is certainly unprecedented, and only equal led by his ignorance, is presuming that true Whigs could bo blindfolded and hoodwinked into supporting his honorable course by his gentle doses of persuasive pills and threatening physic, We would advise this dealer in coughs drops to leave off poli ti cal working, and con• line his attention to his practice. But for the letters. The first one is signed by some half dozen signers to hi.r paper—read it, and see to what schemes politieimis will resort. Putma:in Sept. 18, 1855. . . Messrs. Whilialeer,,C , Brewster:—Dear Sirsl —We patrous of the •Jonout/ of the borough. of Petersburg, understanding that for some time past has. been assiduous in wri ting letters to you, and getting those to sign them who ham nothing their Contents, for the purpose, "to get the Journe/ over to the support of the fission ticket." If it were the de sire of your patrons in this place, to see the take to its embrace his spawn—the "Kangaroo ticket" we would not go to our po litical enemy to have him dictate our wishes.— The course pursued by the Journal meets our hearty approbation. We du not wish to dictate to you—you have a period right and we accede it to yon, of pursuing that resole which you may think best for our party. But when the time collies, he it sooner or later, when our most unprincipled political enemies must die tate the course of our organ—which is being tried, we will cease to act with that organ.— We hope you may never be sung to deep by the wily strains or the enemy, &e., &c. YOUIT PATRONS. Here is another one from a gentleman of the same town, who was, as he terms it "fooled in to signing." We give an extract : PETERSBURO, Sept. 20th 1855. Gentlemen :—I have signed a paper in the hands of Dr. Orlady, of our town, asking, seve ral questions of you, regarding your political course, in the coming contest. I hssew nothing of the true contents of the letter at the time a signing. He informed me it was asking you whether you would support the fusion ticket.— I considered the Dr. a gentleman of veracity, and was surprised when its real contents were made known through the.rournal. Your course I approve, I nos opposed to 'fusion' because I tun a Whig at heart. Do not for a moment indulge the belief that myself and many of the other signers- knew the contents of that paper. Its contents were misrepresented, &c. Hoping that I may not again be made the dupe of scheming politicians, I close A SUBSCRIBER. N. 7 . think this will benefit the good old cau.,e, you may publish.' We knew tl.at the republican blood of hon est-hearted men would not stand dictation from Locofoco sources. We rejoice that we are sustained in the course we thought proper to pursue, by the 'bone and sinew' of the county. We can now bid defiance to puny foes in the shape of fusionists and tell them to 'pile on the agony.' No, no—it will never go down with the true blue, to desert the banner of correct principles to fight under the skull and moss bones of Locofocoism. It won't pay, because the recompense honest men expect in support ing a party, is good government ; and who would accuse the Locolbco Party of ever steering cor rectly whoa in power 1 No. The people are waking,—our countrymen see the necessity of pure government, and they see and know that no government can be untainted, connected in nay manner, shape or form with the Locofoeo Party. From the foregoing extracts, it will be seen that Locofoco politicians have been the prime movers in the getting up of the series of epmo. A LITTLE WORD IN KINDNESS SPOKEN.- We would notify the editors of the Huntingdon American, and "one of our most respectable citizens," that if they continue making their of flee nn assignation don, (as it was on the night of the 15th iust.) for rats nod more rate, we shall be compelled to return them as keepers of a "five point" institution. A pretty husi. nose truly, for married men, editors of an Am erican paper, and "one ofour most respectable citizens" to be engaged in. 0111 Shame where is thy blush. Advertisements Crowded Out. We are compelled to crowd out a column or so of advertisements this week, to make room for our editorial matter. This shall ho no loss to our advertisers, however, us we shall contin ue their advertisements the number of times for which they are marked. THANKS.-MISS Mary Hall for a basket of delicious gropes, will please accept our thanks. Lung way they live who remember the printer. A Word to "Men." Honest, moral men, wo have ono small word for your ears. We do not wish to tireyour pa tience by any lengthy article ; we wish simply to speak in this, as we du in every paragraph we publish, the simple, untarnished truth. If we ever made a statement not entirely correct, God knows we meant it not. For the column upon column of abusive, blackguard epithets, heaped upon its, as individuals, in the last is sue of the Huntingdon American, we have not a word of reproach to return, from nny feelings of ill will. No, we pity the creature who can so fat forget his manhood, ,as to unblushingly he ; but if we pity, we must apply the chasten ing rod, and show to the world who, and what the editors of the Anzerican are. Read what the editor of that sterling sheet the /Mar COWL' ty Whig, says t "It comes with a good grace from the editors of the Huntingdon American, to call the Whig party "defunct," by men who were born with in. grain Locofocoism in their hearts! Such trash to be the leaders of a party, and traducing men of the Whig party who have stood by it in sun. shine and storm. It must be pleasant to the old Whigs of Huntingdoncounty, to be treated in such a contemptuous manner by this new fledged Locofoco concern I" That's the honest opinion of a candid roan. Men of Huntingdon County, can you, will you, countenance such 'trash' for your leaders? Is there an honest heart that will bow to the dic tion of such things ? James S. Barr and J. A. Nash, editors of an American paper I If the people of Huntingdon County countenance their filthy sheet, then truly may they be said to be paying- a premium for vice. We had in tended, in beginning this article, to show how often a good deed done for a soul-less man will meet with a base return. Read this: When we were editor of the Standing Slone, and at the time when the Legislature had ere ated Ito office of County Superintendent, Jas. S. Barr, came to us and stated that ho was in needy circumstances,—had a large family to support., Cc., &c. We knew nothing of the, man, but his piteous pleadings so worked upon our feelings, that they overcame our better judg went, and we consented to use our influence to procure him the situation. We exerted ourself in his behalf, and the rest is known. He was elected over m'en ofjud,gmen t, of brains, ofintel leet—for- which - we humbly crave the pardon of our fellow-citizens. NoW what return have we for saving this int: uman, soulless,. contemptible wretch from starvation ?—Let the last issue of his paper answer. Assailed as a tradn- ced as a common outlaw, as the breaker of the Imes of my country. Nor does-he stop there : no,—however willing he may have been to dis grace us in the 'eyes of the community, why does he dare bring our honored parent into the circle of his defamation. Oh, base ingrat itude. If the wealth, the honors and pleasures of life were laid at our feet, sooner than :lathe part of James S. Barr, we would turn front them in disgust. He has none of the attri butes of manhood. A common whoremonger, a barefaced liar, a debased &handle. That is his true position, and yet, the editor of an American paper l It cannot be, that men of honor will recognize him as a man of veracity. lint we Must pass on. James S. Barr, fel low-citiytens, has been shown to you as he is.— We have used nothing but the troth, the whole truth and nothing but the truth. We have held him out as a private thing, see now give him as a political renegade and reprobate He now publishes a Locofoco sheet and styles it an American paper I He has now at the head of his sheet an American ticket. He says he will support it. (We presume ho means if his masters will permit him.) Last fall he vo fed against the American Ticket. He wrote agonized articles against the American nomi nees, and in favor of - their opponents. He, to his shame be it said, was then a member of the Know Nothing or Ameria an organization. A traitor to his cause, a perjured villain. Can he have the hardihood to deny these assertions in the very face of overwhelming and overpow, cring evidence ? Can he ? Yes—mark it, be will. A man who ran make a mock of ecligion will not scruple to lie. We presume he will use his common argu ment to answer our facts, and call us what he dare not outside of ink and paper, "liars and villains." That Poor Nan Poor Jimmy Barr is endeavoring to create a sympathy for himself, by an agonized whin ing over his poverty. Hear him : "We think that this young "anger will not receive much applause for his ungenerous allu sion, by informing the public that our only crime was poverty." God forbid you poor soul you, that we should urge your poverty upon you as a crime. No, no. We would be speaking against ourself to do so ; because we have toiled for our daily bread since wo have been able to "pick." It is not your povotty which is a crime, but your in dolence. You are like the man that fed swine --too proud to work. It might injure the col- Jars and reputation of the County Su perinfen• dent. Take our advice, James, engage' in an occupaticn which nature has qualified you to fill with honor to yourself, and go at once to mauling rails, or breaking stone upon the street. No, poor soul, if "poverty was your only crime," you might well say, "Der's a balm, der's a b—a—l—m in de Gee-lid." You say if you lie, call you a liar, if you steal, er thief, Ac. As to your light-fingered propensity, we 'know nothing,' but your request reminds us of a story wo once read. A man had his meat stolen ; he suspected the thief, and determined to say nothing until the thief should name it. So ono day his neighbor po litely asked hint "if ho ever found out who stole his meat ?" A guilty conscience, Ac. To say lie is a liar, every time lie prevaricates would fill our paper with the word liar as thick as the word "five, five," is on a shinplaster. WHO BOUGHT THE "AMERICAN 1" The "little croaker" says the material of its office was purchased by its editors with the "aid of a fow of its friends I" Now that is childish. Mr. James S. Barr, you must not imagine people believe such tomfoolery. Your paper, we assert, was purchased by a company. You are nothing more than the mere /out of that corporation. The work under the instructions of a higher power. "Your press." Bah I Why in another column of your paper yob snigger over your poverty like a dying jack. "Your paper." Oh Jerusalem I We candidly be. IMve, neither of you have 'ary red in the con. cern. PEN, PASTE AND SCISSORS. kir Coming—Dan Rico's Circus. fbr Exciting these election times. Fa' Old Borens has paid tie a visit. Cr The Cholera has appeared in Norristown. (fir "ltats—rats."—ln the 'American' otilee.• Cr Appearing—The "me and yellow loaf." Cr The Yellow Fever is still .raging in Nor folk and Portsmouth. dal' The deaths by yellow fever in New Or- Icons, this season, number 2205. W Patent Medicines eointnand n premium with the rats of the "American." (lLir Evans, American, is elected Congressman in the Eastern District of Texas. fir Santa Anna has a fortune of come $2,- 000,000, which he stole in MexiCo. Cr Oysters—at all our restaurants. Who does not love the delicious bivnlves 7 0' A little boy, only ten years old, was hung in Louisiana week before last, for murder. Cr There has been n considerable amount of sickness in this borough for some time past. er We begin an interesting story in to-day's paper. It will be finished in two or three Nos. CT Yankee Notions for October, has been re ceived, and as usual, is overflowing with wit and humor. CT The firm of Gen. James Irvin in Centre county, has boon selected as the site for the State Farm School. eir The majority for Royce, the Republican Whig candidate for Governor in Vermont, will exceed 10,000. cir We would urge upon rotors the necessi ty of being assessed ten days previous to the e lection. Soe to it an once. igr The evidence of a "respectable citizen," is breaking into printing offices, doing injury to his neighbor's property, &e. Cr Our Markets—Potatoes are selling nt 25 eloper bushel. Wheat at $1,50 per be. But ter 15 cts. a•id scarce at Shot. a" The fishy little soul of the Huntingdon American, says 'our ears nre too long for a man' His, is too short for an ass. a" Wonder if the villains who broke iota our office imagine tha l to he nn honest and honorable manner to answer our articles I "Looks sheepish—the Doctor of the Journal, when ho passes our office."—[Little Croaker. Bah ! Looking sheepish at a sheep. tlZsr A monument is about being erected in the State of Connecticut, at a cost of $6,000 ov er the remains at Got,. Israel Putnam. - 0 - The Weekly American Whig, is the title of a new paper just started in Harrisburg ; it is to meet the wants of the oldline Whigs. fg" A trotting horse owned by the proprietor of Congress Hall, at Saratoga, and worth from $4,000 to $6,000 lint fr o m poison last week. (Fh — Joseph Henderson, the Whig nominee for Canal Commissioner, is the very man for ti c place. Ile is honest, capable, tried and true. There is a nursery in Rochester, X. I'.. which occupies two hundred and seventy-seven acres. It is ns largo a one as is in the country-. Cce Will a "respectable citizen" turd house breaker Which is the most honorable occu pation—a konsebreakei or a "killer of souls ?" The Jewels worn by Rachel the actress, in the character of Adriennewe valued at $:215, 000. The greatest part of them were the gifts of sovereigns. ' A colored man by name of Comic Car, who went from this place to Liberia last fall, re turned some two weeks ago, Ile reports leaving seen the "elephant." CZ Our merchants nro receiving their fall and winter stock of goods. Sextons, 1). I'. Owls, Coo. Cwin, Cunningham & Dunn, and others, will notify the public shortly. CT There is a village in Michigan where the church bell is rung every day at 12 o'clOck, for the people to take their quinine, as they have the chills and fever all rotted. ORT The janitor of the Lancaster Co. Court house, was arrested last week, charged with rob bing the Treasury or that County, of sotne $BOO. Most of the money was recovered. 4W' Su far as returns have been received, but ono person who voted in favor of the present Li quor Law, has been returned to the Legislature in the State of Maine. Significant, that. Wo would advise the "cross-eyed" youth and his partner, to keep out of our premise, on dark nights. If not, wo shall, by a leaden toes anger, rid the world of a couple of nuisances. Cy Dan Rice's Circus is spoken of as a tine affitir, by our exchanges. We presume our citi zens wil not begrudge a quarter to see the fun. Tho Circus will be here on the Bth of October. Cy" Funny—For the "American" to black guard us for publisbing patent medicines, when it goes it strong on the "Electric Oil" at the rate of fourteen dollars per year! Rats, rats, r-a-t-s. ErThe Committees of the County Agricultu ral Society, are having things rapidly prepared for the approaching fair. Tho ground is almost ready, and from appearances, is well adapted for the purpose. Godcy's Lady's Book for October, Itas been received. It contains numerous engravings fashion plates, choice reading matter, etc., etc. Godcy publishes the book for the ladies ; send and get it. "Some Punipkins—the Doctor 1 of the Jour nal." —[Lit tle Croaker. Sorry we can't return the compliment—the nearest wo can come is, some "rat"—the pro fessor 1 of the Little Croaker. CV' Oh Consistency.—The Huntingdon Am erican talking of us publishing patent medicines. See advertisement of "Electric Oil." "Rating" at that. Seven dollars for a half-column ad vertisement, (patent medicine, at that) for six months. air Geo. Eby of Mount Union, who was no minated by the fusionists as their candidate for County Commissioner, has signified his unwil lingness to accept the proffered HONOR. Goo. Long of Shirley tp., has been placed on the tick et in his stead. Hypocrisy.—The Pennsylvania Democra tic State Central Committee, in their addrosajust issued, eulogize the memories of Webster and Clay. When these illustrious Statesmen were yet alive, who wore more willing to traduce them than this same Pennsylvania Democracy 7 "For remedies for secret diseases, consult the columns of that Janus-faced sheet, the Hunting don Journal."—[Little Croaker. A•ha. We presume the discovery was made by oue of the "principal ahareholders," who, last year made application to us for a cure. We will mark the lad the next time he gets iu trou ble. We will. WHO DESERVES IMPRISONMENT I, It comer with a good armn certainly from James S. Barr, editor.of the Ilnatingdon Anter.. icon, to inform the public that we are polity of illegal voting, and therefore liable to impris smmit. It is well known that he has rendered himself liable to imprisonment and line by breaking that portion of the law which alludes to the Bea my Superintendent's acting as agent for any hooks. His recommending a book, the advertisement of which he . publishes—is sufficient. But we shall allude to lid ; again, and give the law or Pennsylvania on time matter, James S. Barr has made a sharmelit which we pronounce an u n mitigated M1,101.1---a i r l e ig t r e t s :l l l:y r i i :s i t i l lit i r l e o f f o i l l , B l.: d r i o:o:f i d i; a t i li n l i i h i s :1 , 1E 3 1 . . ' t;1 ' i i . , - tio, ' 1:::1 ' n ' t lF . l , :: l , to a paragraph from the Jaton/al of July or June last, wherein he imagines is the sufficient evidence. Now we defy him to prove by that article that we were not of age when we voted, or that we said we were not. Does Dor name appear is it? No, assuredly not. lie gives it as written--" Gabe, Jr." That is certainly not the name by which we are deuignated by ines of senso ; it is not, most assuredly the one by which we were christened. Jar. S. Barr, in assailing that we are guilty of illegal voting, gives utterance to a bare• fam ed lie, and stands benne the world n his true light, a brazen-faced, contemptible, nusertipu loos falsifier. Let him, if he is a Mall of hon or, if he is a law loving cilium prosecute u, at once. Hire does not, we shall ever present him to the world as he is in reality, a vagabond 1 and detestable creature, to lie :Turned as a loathsome reptile by men of honor. His honorable attempts to blacken our char acter, will fall harmless upon us, and rebound to his own in We are ready to noel him '• at any moment, in any Court of Justice. Has he the manhood to proceed ? Will he giro us ; the opportunity of proving Mtn to tko comma ! airy a calumniator? We call upon him to pro 'l teed, and ere will show the tublie who is deser• vine of an imprisonment and fine. If he dares nut, we bread him in the face of the world, as a coward, a villain -and a liar. Were it m'a that our spirit is above ouch s contmptilde ' ; manner of all,Welillg ' all 011,111y—a3 It 1,,,0 •t 1 to late—nee WWI Id compel Mr. James S. Barr, ,1 to substantiate Iris assertions. And well he , loam.; it. But we scorn such a resort,--and ' lit , re especially when our oppponent is a trod, , ling, ignorant and despised ignoramus. Ile, I however, is not blessed with airy of the liner ; 1 feelings of manhood, oral may not have-fay ' ! scruples. iVe defy him. i . . -- -........ :. ._ . I Our Imprisonment. We fed called upon to correct allot Inw or J. ;S. Barr's bare-faced lies. It is in regard to lb, imprisoning matter. He says we were inftris ' oiled for "libeling a school;" this is simply a , ' lie. We refried pining up the Mum of a co, n.,pondent—we refused ,Mering liail,—an,l of emir.m we 11011 to .bide the const.mences. II was simply becalm we would not render our ' self as obnorto honorable men no has J. S. Barr, an Ve up a earrespentimes name, that we NVC'f fnprisoned. If placed in simile' ' , circumstances, we should do so agai This sonic James S. Barr, was th vriter of ages one of the miserable conanunicati; 'which caused our prosecutor to proceed in the case ; it was to fill the math; of hi, halides A child. ron, we published his emumunicatinns, inllicli • I were the principal wit...miles against us: and • now what a return for favor ! .[lllll. S. Barr, ' I should have been the last soul to drag up that I - affair, which resulted in the salvation of a ire , glected family, from starvation. , . Ile asserts Ivo yokel illegally, and are liable to a fine of $2OO and three months imprison. meta! Ile is a liar and a villain. 11 he is n r man, and has a ntan'e anal, let him prosecute ; no. If he gains his cause we pledge ourself le give him further pecuniary aid. If he is a • law-loving creature, let him prosecute, nail we • will show the riper who would full a cell with • Betsey. WILL THE "GLOBE" EXPLAIN? ' Last week's Wahl contained nn article cal ling attention to the "letters and answers there to," LlOtWeell ourselves and certain individuals in Petersburg ! Hone is this Mr. GM, 7 l'ic publishedno such :'°Bl°:d:iil we believe individual the borough s,el : orespodeecps,3 : i :: i i looks suspicions—and shows, unquestionably, ,) ; that the Derfor has been keeping you pretty ; I well hooked up. And that he is the author of 1 those immortal letters. Illarricb., • On the 231 tilt., be Rev. P. M. Rightniver, Mr. A. A. MuCtur.i to MISS Margaret Keith, both of Waterstreet, Huntingdon Co. On the iith inst., by the same, Mr. Win. 8,, p lough of Frankstown to Miss Ann Meek ei Sinking Valle, .• On the nihilist., by the mono, Mr. George Young of Water:erect to Ba• key of Sinking Valley. i c~, On tho 4th Mut., in this borough, liarrim. liot, daughter of Homy W. and More Miller, aged 12 years, and d months. Nut lout but gone before.. _ _ In this borough on the 20th inst., Jacob Nu. ngcd about :15 years. In this borough on the 20th init., N. Decker, aged 40 yearn. ORPHANS' COURT SALE. Bynz"' order the Orphans' Court ofi tloiount therer e exposed to to public sale, in CASSVILLE, on Thursday, 25th day October next, A FARM OF 120 ACRES OF LAND, rut joining Cassville, partly in a good state of cul tivation. A FARM OF 200 ACRES, more or less, a• bout 2 miles from Cassville, with large Stone House, Saw Mill, and other improvements. ALSO,- twu point Lots in thu borough of Cassville. ALSO—At the same time and place, the one undivided half of a tract of Coal Land, situate on Broad-Top, Hunt., Co., containing 55 acres, more or less, known as the "Rhodes' tract." TERMS :—One third of the purchase mon. ey to ho paid on confirmation of the sale at the November Court following, and the remainder int wo equal nominal payments, with in teles t, se• cued on the property in the usual 'mailer. DAVID CLARKSON, 1 'te.arc, Estate of Robert. Spoor, Dee'd. . Sc pt. 26. 1455.--It.