.Clearfield^SfcKeoitblicaii LtSHEp RFIJILT), B YD, W. MOQRB aND CLARK WI LSQNj DEVOTED TO POLITICS, LITERATURE, AGRICULTURE, MORALITY, AND FOREIGN AND DOMESTIC INTELLIGENCE - y - ■ - - *26 if paid within three months, Si 50 if paid within six months, SI 75, if paid within nine months, and if not paid until the expiration of the year $2 00 will be charged. VOL UM R 5. - -■ - - ■■ ‘ Gen, Snmnel Dale—liis Great Canoe Fight. .Icm-od their boat to movo leisurely dong In 1784, whtn Samuel Dale was ycl a ' w ith the current. As the two neared each boy, his fothor moved from Virginia, and ot^ er > the Chief arose, and with an ejacu mude a soltlcrncnt near the sito of the pres- ln, 'on of defiance to “Big Sam,” levelled ont town of Greensboro, Geo'gia. But a | his g u n 04 Smith’s breast; but before he fow days had elapsed when the subject of coul() draw trigger, the latter directed a our sketch—a youth of sixteen sufnmers— [blowat him which would have proved fatal, found himself an orphan, and in/virluo of!* 101 ) it not been adroitly avoided. The ca-'i his seniority, guardian of seven brothers ' nOL; s cnme.together with a jar, which threw and sisters. Disposing of them in the best Austill slightly off his balance, and ere he ! way his limited rcsoursces would allow, ho coultl re Ss n in it, a well directed blow from joined a company of volunteers, raised to n w nr-club, prostrated him across the boat. ; ! repel the invasion of tho Creeks; and hero , dolf a dozen powerful urms woro raised to } commenced that military career, which com plete the work, when tho heavy rifle! only closed when the difficulties of his ! o( 7 )alc came doun upon the head of the ‘ country ceased. Wo do not propose t 0 ’ chi«?l, with a lorce which sunk it deep into : follow it up. Whoever is acquainted wilh lh e skull. Smith hnd not been less active, the history of the Indian wars—with tho ; nn . d l, is trusty bnrrel hnd fallon with like'; bloody battles of Burnt Corn and Holy effect upon the head of another warrior Ground—the terrible massacre of Fort nntl Iho two now felt their death throes in Mims—the hazardous expeditions of Clni- the bottom of the canoe. AuslilL had, ir, borne, and tho Seminole campaigns of *^ e meantime, recovered, and added his Jackson—knows enough to appreciate the s,ren g'h in the work of destruction. The iron nerve and daring intrepidity of Gen. l,old Cmsar held the boats together with Dale. We will only notice a lew ofthose nn ' ro “ g RIs P. nnd wilh ono foot in each, remarkable adventures with which his life our heroes fought. Two successive blows i is so replete. - from Austin’s rifle dispatched two of the His celebrated ‘Canoe Fight,’in the Al abama river, in which he and two of his company, brained, with clubbed rifles, nine Indian warriors, in Inirnnd open combit, is a kind of household word with nur sett lers. Every old crony on the river could rela'e io you Ihe incidents of this bloody ci uflict ; whilo her aged partner, whose head lia.i whitened with the growing im prov incut of his State, would hobble down io l.ic bank and point out the very spot in the bright waters where the two canoes ne t ; and if, perchance the reuder has ev er re. do a trip down the river, on that beuu tifui boat which bears our heroe’s name, (Sam Dale,) lie has doubtless had desig na'.cd to him, by the courteous captain, the tme honored old beech which marks tho spot, as ueli as the high projeciing hank which had previously sheltered the name sake of his boat from the fire of tho Indi ans. Soon after the bloody tragedy of Fort Mulls, many of the w hites, urged by their defenceless condition, and the increasing hostilities of tho Indians, took refugo in Fort Mudison. As Gen. Claiborne was prevented from marching to their aid by the hostile movements of the enemy, nbout St. Stephens, Capt. Dale and Col. Curson were left in command of As S' on as wounds, received nt Burnt Corn, were sufficiently honied, Dale determined to change his lino o:’conduct from defen sive to offensive. With 70 nun he pro ceeded soulhwesiwnrdiy to Bruzu r’s land ing on the AluLmn. Here l hiy found two canoes, belonging to a negro named Caisar, who informed them that there were Indians above there on each side id the river. He ulso tendered them ihe use of his canoes, and proffered to act as pilot. Cant. Dale immediately placed the cunues m charge of Jeremiah Austil nnds.x w ho were o' denii to ki ep parallel with tho party on land. Arriving at t lie mouth of Ruudcn’s Creek, the canoe parly dis covered n boat filled wilh Indians, who, however, immediately, paddled to ihe shore mid tied. The land parly finding it im possible to continue their route on uccount of thick cane and vines, were ordered to cross proceed up on jjie other side.— While thev were effecting a passuge, Dale and several of his men kindled a fire a short distance from the river to prepare their day’s meal. Thus engaged they were fired upon by a party of Creeks, from ambuscade. Retreating to the river, so ns to gain the cover of the projecting hunk, they discovored a large botnomed ca noe, containing eleven nrmed'tmd painted warriors. Tho party behind them now retired, leaving Dale to enoose his own course towards those in tho boat. As boih of his canoes were on the opposite side, Dnle ordered the larger one to be manned. Two of the warriors now left their boat and swam for shoro, but a bull from the unerring rifle of John Smith perforated the bkull of one, who immediately sank the Other gained the shore and escaped. Eight inen, in the meantime, manned the largo canoe and were npproaching the Indiun boat, but coming near enough to see the number of rifle-muzzles over the edge of the boat, they hastily paddled back to the shore. Dale exasperated by this “clear back out,” us he termed it, of his men, shouted lo them in a scornful tone, “to look and see three bravo men do what eight cowards had shrunk from,” and followed by Austill and Smith, spVang into the smaller canoe, which the faithful Cmsar had just brought Over. Paddling their canoo directly to wards their enpmies, they soon commenc ed the ‘foanoo fight,” proper—so celebra ted in Alabama tradition. ■ When within twenty paces of the Indi uns, our heroes arose in their canoe, to give them an open broadside, but unfortu nately, the priming of their guns was wet, nnd they failed to fire. Had not tho same accident befallen the enemy, tho result ofi tho canoe fight might have been very dift ferent. Gen. Dale now ordered Cmsar to■ JJrin~ receipts in May amounted to $3,175,000, against $2,993, 000, in May ot last year. The increased receipt” at Philadelphia reached $30,000 pud at all tho other ports except Now Or leans there is an increase. The total re ceipts from customs, lands, &c., for the fiscal year ending the 80th ull., will be about $74,706,204, which will be an in crease over last year ofs 13,760,264. It is estimated that on the 30th ult, the bal. ance in the national treasury will be $32, 000,000,'0r $10,057,108 more than was on hand at the same period lust year.— The public debt paid off during the fiscal year now closing is about $2O, 000,000. • Of the entire revenue of tho year the existing tariff has produced $6B, 000,000, and the public lands $7,700, , 006. —Daily New*, NUMBER 22. Col John W. Forney. —The following eloquent tribute to Col. Forney, by one of the ablest men ofPennsylvania, Governor Reedf.it, we clip from the proceedings of the serenade given to the latter by the citi zens of Easton, when informed of his ap pointment ns Governor of Kansas: ~ “There is one man whom, on this oc casion, and in this connection, I am sure you do not wish to overlook, and whom I cannot allow to be forgotten, where manli ness and worth and nobleness of soul are appreciated. I must ask therefore, to fill for the health of a refined and exalted in tellect—of untiring mental force and activity—of warm and generous impulses, of unquailing moral courage, and of self sacrificing devotion to his friends. Faith ful as fidelity itself—generous ns the show ers of heaven—he would make efforts and sacrifices for his friend which he never ■would make for himself-nnd confer his benefits without a moment’s consideration whether they left him an uncounted hoard or an exhausted store—the very soul of honor, and faith, and pure unselfish gener osity; nnd with this merited and introduc tory tribute, given in the sincerity of my henrt, I propose.— The Health of Col John W. Fornev, Clerk of tho National House ofßepresen tatives. Another Cure for the Cholera.— The following extract from the fetter of a clergyman to the Lord Lieutenant oflre land, presents a very simple, and, ho says, effectual preventative of cholera, as well ns a remedy of great power: “Tho preventative is simple: a teaspoon ful of powdered charcoal taken, three or four times a week in a cup of coffee or li quid in tho morning. “When attacked with cholera, a mix ture of an ounce of charcoal, an ounce of laudanum, and an ounce of brandy, or any other spirits, may be given as follows — after being well shaken: a teaspoonful ev ery five minutes. In half an hour 1 have known it effectually to relievo nnd stay the disease. As the patient becomes better, the mixture may begiven at long intervals. “I have known n patient in the blue stage, and collapsed, perfectly recovered in a few hours. “The charcoal was tried as a preventa tive on a large plantation in tho Mauritas, and not a single individual out of eight hundred was attacked with cholera. | sec a number of whig and free soil editors at the North advocating a dis j solution of the Union, and we nre rather amused at their apparent idea that when ' they speak, tho entire sentiment of the peo pie, North, East, and West, is proclaimed; for instance, the New York Tribune and i its faithful echo, the Ohio Stale Journal, j have presumed to inform “all the world land the rest of mankind’’ that the idea of dismemberment of the Union is received with particular favor by all citizens ofthe United States north of Mason and Dixon’s line. But let the Tribune but make a roll call, and it will find that it is but a com parative few reckless spirits who are rea dy to answer aye to disunion. And the idea that the people of a single sovereign Sluto would at the ballot-box say ‘separate' is as absurb and ridiculous as for anyone '.o seek continueJ preservation by resorting to well-known destructive agents. North or South, the mass of the people of these States place a valuo upon the Union which will provo a never failing bar to a surren der of those blessings at the instigation of a horde of gambling, speculating, knavish, and fanatical politicians.— Wash. Union. Danger of Painted Pails. —The editor of tho Scientific American publishes the following communication from James Manleo, of New York, with the advice for all persons to avoid painted pails. A coat of varnish on the outside, is all the embel lishment we over desire to see on a water pail;— “The oxide of lead with which pails are painted, is n dangerous poison, and I know that it is productive of evil in many cases. Last week, having occasion to take a drink of water fiom a painted c** 11 ' which had been in use for so*—' mo **lns, I was convinced by tast’-e the water, that it had taken up a (,on of ‘he point, and having ana 1 .; ‘ho water, I found it to coni'”** a very minute quanty of it, suffi cient, however, if a large amount of water were taken, to produce those fearful diseas es peculiar to lead poisonings.” Mr. Brown to tub Tendeu-Heauted Watchman. —“Watchman,spare tbatjug. Touch not a single drop. It has served me many a tug, and I will bo its prop. — ’Twas my fore-father’s hand that placed it in his cot. There watchman let it stand —thy club shall harm it That old family jug, whoso credit nnd renown are known to many a mug, and would’st thou smash it down 7 Watchman, forbear thy blow!—Break not its earth-brown clay : nor let the liquor flow. But let the old jug stay.” - To keep Preserves, apply the white of an egg with a suitable brush to a single thickness of tissue paper, with which cover over the jnr.ijverlapping the edges an inch or two. No tying is required. - The whole will become when dry, as tightas a drum.