THE COLUMBIA. DEMOCRAT. "TKOTU WISUOtT FEAR ' SJ-TUJSU.1V, SUPT.ttJtEit 11, 18:J9. f RESIDENTIAL ELECTION 1840. Fou President, MARTIN" VAN BUREN. For Vice President, RICHARD M. JOHNSON. AND THE CONSTITUTIONAL TREASURY. The Rt Rev. Bishop Ondcrdonk, Avifl preach at the following places in Columbia county, at the times stated : Bloomslmig, Wednesday, Oct 9th, Morn. & After. Oct 10th Oct 11th Oct 13th Morning Jerseytown, Friday, Sugar Loaf, Sunday, Orange ville, Evening, 7 o'c. Dcrry, 14th Afternoon 2 o'clock The other papers in the county aio tie- tired to copy. We pronounce VALENTINE BEST a LIAR, and shall continue to do so,'until he either proves true, or acknowledges tho falsity of, the assertion made in an extra Intelligencer, which he, tho past week, was hawking about 4he county, like an itinerant slanderer, that we, " last fall, in company with a highly respectable and popular land lord of Bloomsburg, went to the house of John Robison, and joined with the said land lord, in urging Air. Kobison to come out in oppssition to the democratic candidate," as we declare the assertion to be a willful, deliberate falsehood on the jiart of Valen tine Best, and uttered ly ;liira for tho ex press purpose of personally injuring our selves and the "highly respectable and pop ular landlord," to whom he refers. We never did, either, by ourselves, or in compa ny with the landlord, nor did the landlord while in our company, ever urge John Rob-ison,-or any other person, to come out in favor-oT Bowman, in opposition to the de mocratic candidate; and wo challenge the High Priest and Grand Master of Somer sets to prove his assertion or acknowledge himself a CONVICTED FALSEFIER. But why are we, and the " highly respect able and popular landlord," at this time singled out for his abuse? Simply because tho " landlord" was a candidate for nomina- tion in opposition to his favorite bank can didate, and that wc lent our humble cid in assisting to procure his nomination and that of Jacob Eyerley. This of itself, is enough to open the flood-gates of his wrath, and in duce him to write and publish a column of falsehoods and abuse. If such stniT is cal culated to recommend him as a public offi cer, to the democracy of Columbia county, we are mistaken in their character and more especially to the friends of removal, whom he denounces as a set of Pirates. But it is in complete character with the detestable and dishonorable mode of politic al warfare which he has hetelofore prac tised. To slander and defame every man who would not lend a hand to advance his ii. :rest and that of the Bank Junto of Dan ville, has always been his creed; and there is hardly a democrat in the county who has tak"n an active part in politics, lhathasnot,at flume time, come in for a share of his abuse ; nd had nil the personal and political ene mies mat lie Jus made in the county, con-gr-ga'.ed in "Bloomsburg to oppose his nom- inntion, as he asserts, he would have been much more disheartened and chagrinned, if possible, than he was when tho convention refused to place him singly upon the ticket The convention were willing, how.ever, that lie should bo placed there in company with Mr. Eyerley, that ho might learn how much regard the democracy of the county lmve for the low, vulgar, slanderous abuse that ho has heretofore heaped upon them; es yer ally those of tho upper portion; and that they might also teach him, that the vi . ' poison is a healing balsoin compared to the infectious matujr with -which the en venomed shafts of tlm slandercr aro tipped For the last two days the weather haB been cxtretnly cold, and much fears aieon- tertatued that the "cold snap" will material Jy injur the crop of buckwheat. Tho contemptible, snivelled nosed whi ning booby of the Berwick Sentinel, who was imported into the county by the bank junto of Danville, to do their dirty work in tho upper section, -and who, through their instrumentality, obtained tho office of collec tor of that port, (a station for which he is wholly incompetent,) to pay him for hand ling the filth which they were ashamed to touch, publishes a pretended statement of our defalcation to tho Post Offico Establish ment, for tho want of something better, to gratify the malice and hatred of the bank junto towards us, for exposing their villainy at tho county convention. A transaction which originated out of a disputed claim be tween us and that establishment, and which has long since been adjusted. This is in perfect keeping with them. When we en listed in the defence of the rights of tho up per townships, against the unprincipled pro jects of tho bank junto, and exposed their nefarious scheme of dividing the county, we expected to have all tho hell-hounds and miserable tools that they could hire in and out of the county, pouncing upon us, with all the vile vituperative slang that malice or ingenuity could invent; therefore, we arc not surprised that they now let loose their dogs of war, when they find the people are aroused at the wrongs and insults that have been heaped upon them for years, and more especially within a few months past. They find it necessary to turn tho current of indig nation that swells tho bosom of the people at their acts, hence their base and slander ous attacks upon us at this time. But it will not all do. The people too well un derstand their rights to be any longer kept in bondage, or compelled to pay tribute to the junto of Danville, by such base and slanderous attacks upon an individual and upon themselves, as the junto have this week sent forth through that ignorant, sim ple, foolish tool whom they have nominally placed at the head of the Berwick Sentinel. A man who can neither write or spell ten words correctly, and much less cast the toll upon a ton of merchandise, and who is de spised by all who know him as a nuisance in society, and avoided for the same reason that they would avoid a skunk the more you handle him Me more you slink. But he is a fit associate for the bankiles, gam blers, liars and seducers, who have associ ated together to destroy us, and to oppress the upper townships; for should they all be tumbled into a barrel of feathers, you would hardly know which to pull out first, so near allied are they in kidney and kin. Go on. Pour out the vials of your wrath upon our humble heads, it will neither turn us to the right or the left, or make us falter in our task of showing you up in all the deformity which nature and your own vile dispositions have clothed you- We shall continue to lash the rascals naked through the world," until justice is satisfied, by the people of the county receiving their equal rights of which they have been so long deprived. The H.P. and G.M. of Somersets says he always goes the whole figure.' True, true to the letter, and ho does not slick at trifles in deciding upen which figure to play. He is as often found on one side of the board as the other, but always where self-interest dic tates. During the last twelve years he has as often opposed as he has supported the regular nominations of the party; never sus taining a friend to the removal when he could avoid it; but yet he asks this same in terest, which ho has so often opposcd.abus ed and insulted, to vote for him for the of fice of Prothonotary. Will this interest put an extra weapon into his hands that he may the more readily cut their throats here after. We cannot believe it. To the. Editor of (fie organ of the Dan ville Dank Junto. Did you not acknowledge that Daniel Snyder had a majority of the delegates in the convention, but that his friends could not cope with the Bank Junto in manage ment, because you was too old a soldier!" Did you not, the past week, acknowledge it as yom belief, that a bargain was made in favor of Colt, with tho delegates from Cat awissa? and did you not, at the same time, denounce one of Coil's firm and particular friends because you was not included in the bargain ! And did you not declare, that had you been in Danville on the day of the delegate election, that Wm. Donaldson should not have been a delegate, because you knew ho would not do any thing to advance your in erest! We find in the proceedings of the coun-l ty convention, as published in the Danville Intelligencer the following resolution : rWivTi... ... -r .i - -. i . hZSrXTSL' innn Ma , TV 1 is ,! JrZl t ' vT, nonm,.ate,d or didatM d.date for I rothonotary. I his resolution was never read or passed in convention. It was written bv a snecta- tor, handed to a member, and by him given " " I to another, from whom it went to the Prcsi- I dent without any acknowledged father. The I'resident was so much ashamed of the con tents, and of the spurious manner in which it was handed him, as no one would stand god-father to the little bantling, that he would neither present it. to the convention or allow any one to read it. A proposition was made after the first ballotting for Pro thonotary, however.to allow both candidates to be placed upon the ticket, which was a dopted But this would not suit the views ...1. I - ,, of tho " whole fiuure" man as it wnnli! compel him to place the name of J. Ever- ly, in lus columns; to avoid this, he must neads falsify the records, and strike his name from the, ticket, to advance his own interest- Whom " God wills to destroy, he first makes mad." Wo were highly gratified at tho appear ance in our villago on Tuesday last ef tho Danville Rifle Company under the com mand of Capt. Brandon. They were met at the canal by the Bloomsburg Artille ry, and escorted into town, when, after par ading through Main street, and performing various military evolutions, with correctness and precision, that done credit to the dis cipline and spirit of the company, halted at the house of Mr. Docblor. After dinner they again showed themselves in our streets much to the gratification of our citizens. About 3 o'clock, they were re-escorted to their boat by the Artillery, and set sail ior their home, amid tho cheers of both com panies, leaving a favorable impression on our citizens, and more especially upon their military brethren. Guard College. A correspondent of tne JJaily Advertiser gives the following de scription of the edifices connected with this iustitution : " The college is on an emi nence about equi-dislant from the Sehuyl- kill and Delaware rivers. To buildings of the five are erected, and tho walls of the large edifice, which will be in the centre, are up. 1 he buildings are of white mar ble, and they -will bo the most splendid of any Hung in this country. The pillars of the largest will cost, it is said, half a mil- ion of dollars, tho cost of each being 810,- 000. They are about sixty feet high, and the diamater of their base about ten feet. The rooms in this building are, I should judge, fifty feet square. The partitions be tween the rooms are more than t!irf fV.Pt thick. From the top of this edifice, where temporary seats have been orected, you I.-.,- ..: .1 i i .. . . iivu.i iuw ui mo wuoie city ana the sur rounding county. The Pcnitentiarv is imme diately before you the Schuylkill and the Water Works on your right and the Del aware on vour left." The Journal of Commerce has the fol lowing remarks upon the duel, or rather should be called murder, which deprived of life one of tho most tatented&amiablo mem ber of the last Congress. Tho sentiments have our concurrence : " This duel, (of Graves and CilM hor- rible as it was, has done crcat nood. It has brought out public opinion.and branded ev- cry man who was engaged in it with a nub. lie disgrace which can never be wiped from his character. I his stern nnhlin mml nation will hunt the guilty actors in that hoi rible affair to their graves, and we trust, prevent members of Congress from ever daring so again to insult their constiuents and tho nation." Trenton Encampment. 0t hundred and fifty regulars from Governor's Island, New York came as far as New Brunswick, u;r uciuic juaictu.iy, (in ineir way to tho encampment at Trenton, by the morning line, thev there left the their line of march at about 12 o' clock noon and probably reached Princeton the same evenincr, and unless the stnrm nru.n.,i arrived at Trenton yesterday. The troops' now at the encampment number about luuu. genera, OCou is also there, and on . ucou-y rcv.u-vcu mem. it was a beatiti- iiii I . ; ,,,u1,c,ml,03'"g ......... jr r.uo ? arc miormcu was rare v it ever witnessed m this section of the Uni- Z r,n,;";U tl,at G6neral Scott will remain at the encamDment fnr nri Awm 'I'l,... ., r' i , . S.trv ISl J n ."I50"'1 ? wltness-ng military display probably could n( ot.i .. - . ' :, ui . f p.! i 0.C.U?SI0? than durlns 1,18 8tay of General 8ott for the purpose.-TYmw-j WASHINGTON COUNTY MURDER Arkansas July 27. . .Wc Ba,."or ,t,ie ow,uff particulars of l"ls atroclous homicide, frem a leltor from Washington county, publtshcd in the Bates News, or the 13th instant: "The most horrible murder, ever perpe- tratedinnChrUtain countrywas commit- . . Battirj..v c' , M. Wm Wriirht and four nfhis rliililrffn. Mm Wrieht siatci that soon after rctmnir to t t t.t a . bed, she heard tho sound of horsemen ap- P.roacl,inS the house; her timidity suggested 4lif nnnr. lan.inn Ihnt Hint, ..ii,i l.n tile indians She awoke her husband and lit u iviitiiwii .mi. ,ii,y Iiliuilb uc HUB 2...1! C1L- I I t , . communicated her fears, and both arose. Mrs. Wrinlit throiKrh n pr.irlf liv dm ilnnr n 13 -i' t-wui, discovered three men walk up to the door. Une asKei; n no could stay all night ( Mr. Wright answered yes, and opened the door. The robbers at that mement seized and slabbed him to death. Mrs. Wright fled out of tho back door. A daughter (perhaps the eldest,) rushed out by the assassins, while yet butchering Her lather. Air. Wright ..!.. J .1.. r. l i uuiug uesjju.ciicu, mu uciius cuwirncnccu slaughtering his defenceless children. They I. ...i I !,!. .X r . . . sirucK out me urains oi a c imam, on.i le door, and run their Bowie knives tlirnurh the bodies of threo other children, as thuy reposed in the embraces of a sweet sleep. The fourth, a little boy of 10 or 12 years of ace. with a Ion;? heavy blade, the demons at a blow separated the crown from the mass of his head, striking him into Kfni!iliiv but not into death, as they supposed. For tunately, two other children sleeping in an outer apartment where not discovered. Also littlo Moris escaped their observation. This little child of the lender noc nf iv r seven years only, had been placed at the bad; side ol a trundlcbcd, thus hiding from the eyes of the murderers Little Morris was awake, and with tho wisdom of matur cr year?, lay in breathless stillness eyeing from beneath folds of the het fn sliango deeds of murder robbery and ar son. "From this intelligent child we learned that every eye beneath this ill fated roof, as they supposed, had been closed in death, and every tongue silenced for ever, the rob bers prnccded to plunder the house of all the monoy, set it on fire and galloped off. Lit tle Moris after satisfying himself that the murderers were gone, moved fiom his hi ding place, and commenced with astonish ing intelligence to rescue all from the ruins of tho inpidly advancing flames. He ran and awoke his little sisters and hurried them out of the burning dwelling returned and found his wounded brother restored to con sciousness. His feeble strength being une qual to his weight, Morris threw his aims around the shoulders of his almost murder ed brother, and tenderly drew him beyond the influence of the increasing fire retur ned, caught up the infant, and finding it lifeless gently laid it down a few paces from the door, on tho breast of the father. Ho then essayed to return for tho lifeless bo dies of the others but the fire having now wrapped the door in flames forbid his en trance. Seeing his angel like purpose thwar ted, he with his little sisters and brothers. sought such a resting place as a houseless farm and cleai sky afforded. The daugh ter that escaped at the outset, look refuge in the rye field. Mrs. Wright made her way a mile and a half or two mles barefooted and in her night dress to her friends." COL. HARNEY AND THE INDIANS. Col. Iltirnoy, for whose safety apprehen sions were entertained, arrived at Key Bis cayne, in the steamboat Ciucinatti, with 17 or 18 soldiers, the remnant of the Caloosa hatchie massacre. Col. II. had returned from hunting, slep soundly till he was a woke, near daylight, by the report of the arms. He could make no defence, for his men were e.ther dead or dispersed, and the savages were pursuing hotly. He, with one man fled in a canoe, and was afterwatds joined by a few more, who escaped by swimming. Ho returned at night, and found somo bread left by the Indians, which served him and his companions till they were fallen in with by the Cincinnati. ChittoTustenuggoe and Sam Jones, then at Key Btscayne, deny all previous knowledge of, or participation in the affair. Thoy say Jhoso who did it were Spanish Indians. Thoy say they aro willing to abide by the treaty and are ready and anxious to go with Col. H. and aid in taking vengeance on the perpetrators of the inassacie: an offer which Major Bennett, Paymaster of the U. S. Army, who brought the above intel ligence to St. Augustine, thought would bo 1...1 TIF I r uwcpwu.iroria. Jl Hank Attached. .The Essex Bank, at Guildhall, Vermont, has beer, sued by the person who obtained its charier, who has attached tho safe and its contents. Mr. Swan, a broker in New York, has also sued it for refusing to redeem ils bills. Its de posits are removen, it is said, in loto, and the sheriff has recorded their amount on the back of his writs, as being 13 slicks of seal ing wax, 819,41 in Specie, and two or three old blank books, bosses; It is noticed in several papers that the State of Indiana has recently lost a larne sum oi money uy tne fund uommission ers. The C nc nnat Ifamibl mi, tnin the current renori. that t , enmm!,,.,. placed bonds of the Slate to the amount of a, nnn nnn ... i .. ui.. ... . v,uvu,vuv ni mu nanus vi a uruitur, signeu Und executed, and the broker was to obtain a. t. u. i. , . , . , tne luiius. ii luuuiD nc uiu so anu laueu, and left lho FuHd Commissioners an empty bag to hold. ffaWwow Patriot, f-ifcinMio Orleans. 1f i ..f.... are the gavtat peoplo on t will, morVvariciy oF life nd mn,u"lm;m' any other city present, Jn LW ts l'n are the dullest The mono ony of , V" ence caused by the very ccntml i . i x"1' i only variedy thevT , scenes it creates. Wo proceed m. " cue, tho relation of wlcli 5 led 1??, t.rou?h our hearts, and .Irirk'hTf.J'" chain" by which we are strongly bou tsure ly must have ih.illed lheKrl o beholder with suddon horror. hff Dr. Lambeit, an excellent a's Wei eminent French physician in ihi. I u. "n les that during his frcquenta rides t l l the different streets, hi, attention ha Ct always been attracted as he paw.,1 a where a poor family lived. The f2 2 consisted of a man and his wife, both S young and the Utter good Iooki J tt lllllo infant smiling in boautv, and about!! months old. Ho V led to" from the appearance of content that IUej there, and their being frequently on t ,t banrjue le before the hu,e. After' the few ct m, he Mil saw them for somo d,"r happy as usual, but at length ..mj1Mj , ' from the accustomed place." This he did for two days, until on the third, feeling . easy for thorn, ho stopped his gig befor. the house; alighlcd-ripped at the di" No one answered; silence was in tls ma: sion. Ho pushed open.tho door and wm m. I here lay the husband and wife 0 the floor, both dead of the fever, and the former decaying. The child was alive and with its little arms around the dead mother's neck, vainly trying t draw the sustaining fluid from tho breast. Dr. L says that miliar as he is with srenee of death, nothinr before has ever shocked his feelings to half the extent. Willi a praiseworthy henoro Icnce he has taken measures to have the in fant protected. Such is "life m New Or leans." N. Orleans Times' Slippery W omen. The aboriginas 0r Ilaytt believed that wherr men were a lonr time destitute of women, but happening to wander near a small lako, they eaw certain animals among the branches of the tiew which proved to bo women. Thoy tempted to catch them but found ft impos sible to get any hold of them, as they wer as slippery as eels. At last they employed a number of men whose hands had been, rendered rough by a kind of a leprosy, and who succeeded in catching four of them by whoa the world was peopled. Ther seems to be an idea, as well among aavagei as civilized men, that woman is'rathei a slippery animal, Cm Sun. A memorandum on the margin of the Buflalonian of September 4. svn- A n, Great Western, the largest boat hut ono of all that sails on the inland waters of the United States, was leaving Detroit, she was discovered to be in flames and wasVur ncd all but hull and engine, which may be rebuilt. She was commanded by Captain Walker who commanded tho ill-fated Washington, which was burnt last sum mer." The Great Wcslsrn was n most splendid boat, built in the style of the Mis sissippi boats, with high pressure engines. She cost over 8100,000- She was 800 tons burthen. fjVcfo York Jour' of Com, Revolutionary relic. Rhode Island boasts of a rnusket and a sword, that are a mong the interesting of our revolutionary relics. Tho first blood drawn from tho veins of a British, ofliccr'in that groat quar rel,' said Mr. Tillinghast, Providence, in an eloquent address before a band of our sur viving vctrans of '70, was drawn by a shot from a Rhode Island musket upon our own waves, within sight from the tower of that temple where we have, this morning, hoard tho scenes and principles of the revo lution so eloquently reviewed by the oralor of the day. The owner of that musket still lives in honor amongst us, still charac terized by that native resolution, which the lapse of sixty-seven years from that time has not been able to extinguish or abate. The first sword that waved in triumph upon the surmounted rampart of Yorktown, was a Rhode Island sword. The owner of that sword, as he clambered up the work, receiv ed upon his hands and arms the stabs of the bayonets that wero aimed at his life, and, having gained the summit, and planted him self firmly thero, ho lifted his sword aloft in his bleeding hand, and called aloud to his fiiends and foes, ' Captain Stephen Onlay' company forms here. The Mormons, We are informed that tho Mormon missionaries held a two Jays woods meeting in Uwchlau township Chester county, on Saturday end Sunday last. What strange infatuation will soiz tho Inains of men when heated by the plau sibilities of deluded fanatics 1 We go by heart and soul for religious toleration; but we aro pained to see reasonable men aban doning tho sheet anchor of their salvation, to lay hold f the miserable impostures or at best delusions of Joe Smith- llllago Record. The supply of tho articles of tobarco and rum for the use of seamen of the British Navy, for this year, amounts to forty thou sand pounds of tho former, and tw'o hun dred aud thirty-five thousand gallons of tha latter. They are 20,000 ?eainon among whom the rum is to be divdid, making near twelve gallon to each man.