I havo sworn upon Uio Altar of God, eternal hostility to every form of Tyranny brer the Mind of Mau."Tjlomas Jefferson. PRINTED AND PUBLISHED BY II. WEBB. - - i i -i - hi . . P- .. .t . " ' ....... . ..... .1 ,, , . . , , , f - - . . VoUnnc BV IMLOOMSBURg, COLUMBIA COUNTY, PA, SATORBAY, JttNE 13, 184(K Kumfaer 7. OFFICE OF THE DEMOCRAT, Opposite .St. Paul's Gnuncii, Main-st. -The COLUMBIA DEMOCRAT will be .published every Saturday morning, at TWO DOLLAR'S per annum, payable 'half yearly in advance, or Two Dollars Fifty Cents, if not paid within the year. vVo subscription will be taken for a shorter period than six months ; nor any discon tinuance permitted, until all arrearages are discharged. ADVERTISEMENTS not exceeding a square will be conspicuously inserted at One Dollar for the first three insertions, and Tivcnty-fivc cents for every subse quent nserlion. CT" 'A liberal discount ' made to those ivho advertise by the year. LETTERS addressed on business, must be post paid. POETRY. Trom the Philadelphia Saturday Chronicle the tio.va op the sejjsojv. BY WILLIS GAYLORD CLARKE. V e lovo the Spring, for all the bloom And fragrance which its glowing hours "Shed o'er the cradle of the tomb, It glorious lioritage of flowers; For light, and air, and sounds that play, In mingling danco around, above; The radiance of the early day, The presence of its soul of love. And when the Summer's breast receives In soft repose, Spring, virgin form What sweetness Nature round her breaths; Morn s light, or evening's rainbow storm Tho fields with beauty then are wiiitc; The ripening corn waves in tho breeze; And landward, in the stilly night, Come tho cool wind that fan tho seas. Tho Autumn with its polden crown. And dower of heaped &, countless sheaves, d4 Lays at man s foot his treasures down, 1 To sigh amid the painted leaves; His song is eloquent and low ' , Ho hastes to dio arid bo at-rest; And. lays his aged head, in wo, On winter's long and withered breast. , Then Winter reigns 1 His icy sway Usurps tho boauty of tho year; His heraldry, oft evory 'spray; Is pale, and desolate, and drear; Last scene ot all the seasons' round Where flowers, nor hopes nor verdue J!ora; From whence there breathes that solemn sound; " Thou living heart, behold thy dooral" Your Heart is a Musical-box, Dearest. Your heart is a musical-box, dearest 1 With exquisite tones at command, Of melody sweetest and clearest, If tried by a delicate hand; But its workmanship, love, is so fine, At a single rude touch it would break: Then oh ! be tho magio key mine, Its fairy-like whispers to wake ! And there's one little tune it can play, That I fancy all others above You learned it of Cupid ono day It begins with-and cuds with " I love !" ' 1 lovo !" It begins with and ends with ' I love 1" Harrison Melody, Tho following par ody is from tho Boston Post : When desperate Whiggies stoop to folly, . And find, too late, Old Tip's no go," What charm can soothe their melancholy ? What art can mollify woe ? The only art to save from ruin, To hido tho shame of all their clan, Is to denounce their former doing, And join tho friends of Martin Van. . Wellerisms," I'm ruined," as the old woman said when her houso was on fire liut it's a cold night, and I may as well warm myself.'1 " Well this beats mo out," as the rye said when the fellow hammered it over tho Lead with tho flail. " Oh, Nanny, wilt thou gang wi' me," s the fellow said when he was Irving to steal the goat. . " I won't take a stump," as tho girl said when she was asked to marry a short man. Who steals my purso steals trash," as ho chap said ven he filled his wallet with ebinplasters. . Those dear eyes of thine," as the old gentleman said ven ho bought hi? wife a pair of the dollar specs, DO NOT DECEIVE CHILDREN. Many arc unaware of the evil conse quences which result from this common ptaclice. A physician was once called to extract a tooth from a child the littlo boy seeing the formidable instruments, and anti cipating tho pain, was exceedingly fright ened, and relused to open his mouth. Af ter mucn ituitless consideration, tho physi cian said, " Perhaps, there is no need of .1 : : t !. . '.i limning it. juui me ruo u a nine wuu my handkerchief, and it may be all that is ne cessary it will not hurt you in the least." Tho boy trusts his woid,opened his mouth. The physician concealing his instrument in his handkerchief, seized hold of tho tooth, and wrenched it out. Tho parents highly applaudod his artifice. But tho man chea ted tho child. Uu abused his conGdcnco and he inflicted an injuiy upon his moral feelings, not soon to be effaced. Will that physician got his handkerchief into that child's mouth again 1 Will he beliovo what the physician will hereafter say 1 And when told that it is wicked to say that which is not true, will not the remembrance of tho doctor's falsehood be fresh in his mind 7 And while conscious that his parents ap proved of the deception, will ho not feel it to be right for him to deceive, that he may accomplish his desires ? This practice is attended with the most ruinous consequen ces. Itunavoidably teachos the child to de spise his parents. After he has detected them in one falsehood, he will not believe them when thoy speak tho truth. It des troys his tenderness of conscience, and it teaches arts of deception. And what arc its advantages ? Why in one particular in stance the point is gained. Let compulsion be resorted to, when nc cessary; but deception never. If a child cannot place implicit confidence in his pa rent, most assurely no confidence can be re posed in the child. Is it possible for a mother to practise arts of deception and falsehood, and at tho same time her daugh tor bo forming a character of frankness and truth f We must be what wo wish our clul dren to be. They will form their character from ours. A',mnthor was once trying to persuade her-littlo son to' take some medicine. The .medicine was very unpalatable, and she, to induce lam to laue it, declared it did not tasto bad. He did not believe. He Knew by sad experience that her word was not to be trusted. A gentleman and friend who was present, took the spoon, and said, "James, this is medicine, and it tastes very badly. I should not liko to take it, but I would if necessary. You have cour age enough to swallow something which docs not taste good, have you not V " Yes," said James, looking a littlo less sulky; ' but it is very bad, indeed." " I know it," said tho gentleman. " I presume you havo never tasted anything much worse." lhe gentleman then tasted tho medicine himself, and said : It is real ly very unpleasant. But now let us see if you have not courage to take it, bad as it is." The boy hesitatingly took the spoon. ' It is, really, rather bad," said tho gen tleman, " but the best way is to summon all your resolution, and down with it at once, like a man. James made in reality, a creat effort for a child, and swallowed tho dose. And who will this child most respect ? his deceitful mother, or the honest dealing stranger ? And who will ho hereafter most readily be lieve. It ought, however, to bo remarked, that had tho child been properly governed, he would at once, and without a murmur, have taken what his mother presented. It U certainly, however, a supposable case, that tho child might after all tho arguments of tho gentleman, still have refused to do his duly. What course should then be pur sued I Resort to compulsion, but neyer to decoit. Wo catuiot deceive our children without seriously injuring them, and des. troying our own influeuco. Frank and o pen dealing is the only safe policy in fami ly government, as well as in tho wide thea tre of life. Tho underhand arts and cun ning manmuvcjs of the intrigues, are sure, in the end, to promote his own overthrow. Bo sincere and honest, and you are safe. Tho only sure way of securing benefi cial results, is by virtuous and honorable means. Abbott. Speaking Grammar- " Well, Miss," said a knight of the birch rod, " can you decline a kiss ? " Yes, sir," said the girl, dropping a perplexed courtesy, " I can but I hato to, most plaguily," Art. Art is not the bread, but it is tho wine of Iifo. To reject it for tho sake of utility, Is to act like Domilian, who ordered all the. vines in tho empire to be pulled up, to promote agriculture, i ' MR. BUCHANAN'S REMARKS. Mr. Buchanan said : I rejoice at this day's debate. It has been tho most nronitious day for eliciting truth which wo havo seen since the commencement of tho session. Its consequences, for good or for evil, must po Jell, and will be felt either by our friends in the Opposition or by ourselves. I am most willing to abide the result. 1 do not rise to discuss any of the frreat questions agitated to-day, which havo not uu laiuiuuiaia uu.uiug uu W1U 6U0JCCI UdOrC tho4Senate. My purpose is, so tar as my voico can be heard, to fix the attention of tho Senate and the country upon the very question now at issue between tho twogteat political parties; which is, havo tho present Administration been guilty of an extrava gant and wasteful expenditure of the public money : As to the result of tho next Presidential election; I shall never inako thai a subject of discussion in this body, unless I should bo forced into it by Senators in tho Oppnsi tion. In passing, 1 would merely say, "Let not him that girdeth on his harness boast himself, as he that putteth it off" 1 shall never raise tho shout of victory, until the baitlo has been fought and won;although I may feel groat confidence in tho result, 1 he event, under Providence, is in tho hands of tho American people; and this day's debate will essentially servo to enlight en their judgment and to influence their de cision. Mr. Van Buren came into office on the 4th of March, 1837. Since that day, we must an admit that tho Treasury has not been full. On the contrary, wo havo found difficulty ever since in raising the ways and means. This fact we cannot deny ; and if wo nave been guilty ol extravagant and un necessary expenditures of tho public money within that period, we can neither justify nor excuso ourselves under the plea of an overflowing Treasury. Wo desire (o es cape from this charge under no such sub terfuge. Wc boldly deny the accusation of extravagance j referred against uo by our political opponents, and demand the proofs by which it is to be sustained. In order to establish their accusation.that this iAdminisira'tion lias been eulitv'' of an extravagant and unnecessary expenditure of uio people s monoy since the 4th of March, 1837, thoy must clearly and distinctly point out tho items and the objects of this extrav- . 1 . r again aim unnecessary exocnuiture. we call upon them for their bill of particulars We ask them where, when, and how, havo these expenditures been incurred ? Vague and general charges of extravagance, at though clothed in the most eloquent lan guage, amount-to nothing. We call for specifications for items. By this report lrom the secretary ot the Treasury, wo furnish our opponents with the best weap ons to assail us, if wo aro vulnerable. It enumerates, under different heads all the expenditures of publio money since the present Administration camointo power. ll presents the subject, item by Hem, and makes an aggrKgate for the last year (1839) of thirty-seven millions of dollars, The permanent and regular expenses of the Go vernment, daring that year, did not reach thirteen millions and a half; and it has nev er to my knowledge, been asserted, either by fiiend or foe, that under any system of wise oconomy, they could have been reduc er! below this sum. The remaining twenty-three millions and a half (I speak in round numbers) consists of eleven millions expended in the payment of tho publio debt which wo were compelled to creato in con sequence of the bank explosion of 1837 ; and twelve millions and a half appropriated by Congress for the purpose of meeting ex- uuuiuinury anu temporary expenditures which wo allege were unavoidable. Wo now como to the very point in controversy. This is a question of figures; and honorable Senators in the Opposition are called upon wun uio report oi mo secretary ot tho Treasury in hand, to lay their finjror upon those item3 of expenditure, whether ordina ry or extraordinary, which they condemn. Let them pom, out such as could havo been avoided. This, and this alone, is the mode by which they can establish tho charge of extravagance against the present Adminis tration. Now, sir, our casoispresentod. The heads of our expenditure aro before tho Senate, and tho people of the United States, in an official and authentic formjand feeble as I may be, I am willing to tako up the guantlet, and do battle with any of our political opponents in defence of the pres ent Administration against this charge. I shall not refer to the journals for the pur pose of proring that they themselvos have voted in detail for tho very expenditures which they now condemn in mass, This has never been my practice. I tako these expenditures as I find them ; and all I ask is, that our opponents shall como forward and specify in a distinct and tangible form, those particulars which they deem unneces sary and extravagant. Uenilemen, in the first place, fix fifteen millions of dollars as the proper annual ex penditure of tho Government, slid then charge tho Administration with extrava gance, because it has exceeded this imagin ary standard. The present report of the Secretary of tho Treasury exposes, in tho clearest light, the fallacy and the injustice of such a course, Amomr tho items consti- luting the twelve and a half millijns of the extraordinary and temporary expenditures during tho last year, we must certainly find the evidence of this extravagance.if it is any where to be found. Can any Senator spe cify a single expenditure upon this list which ought not to havo been made I In it tho items for Indian wars, for tho pur chase of lands from tho Indians, and their removal west of the Mississippi, amount to a large sura But who will say that these expenditures have been unnecessary? Tho present Administration, when it camo into power, found an Indian war raging on our Southern frontier. This war was more sa vage, if possible, than any war which thn savages had ever waged against us. Men, women, and children, were murdered in. discrinately. Would any of our friends on this side of tho House, stop to calculate tho cost of defending our citizens against such a cruel and treacherous foe ? 1 answer.not one. If millions more had been iicppohv for this purpose, they would themselves have granted these millions. With what justice then can the Administration bo cen sured for this expenditure ? Extravagance in this particular can with no more justice be charged on Mr. Van Buren, than on the Emperor ot China. Ho found tho Florida war raging when he came into power, and he was bound, by the most imperative ob ligations, to apply tho money granted by Congress to tho defence of the country. Had he acted otherwise, he would have vi olated the highest duty of his station, and yet tins is u ueavy uom in mo exlravanant oxponditure with which ho is charged. It is perfectly lair lor gentlemen to examine carefully the manner in which this war has been conducted, and if they can find any thing in it justly censurable, to hold it up to public view. But the war itself, and the necessary expenses of conducting were inevitable, Then as to tho removal of the Indians and the purchase of their lands. This policy was, I believe, commenced un der the administration ol ftlr. Monroe, and has been steadily pursued throujliont all the succeeding Administrations, Tho ob jeet has now happily been almost accom plished. Is Mr. Van Buren chargeable with the expense incurred by pursuing this policy ? If Indian treaties, ratified by the Senate, and sanctioned by Congress, had rcqui.cd the expenditure of fivo or ten mil lions more in removing the Indians from the States east of the Mississippi to the west of that river, who could have fairly charged Mr. Van Buren with extravagance in this increased expenditure ? Is there any Senator who would restore tho Indians to Georgia, and the other States from whonco they were removed, oven if, by doing so, he could restore the cost of their removal to tho public Treasury ? Not one. Tho most extraordinary item embraced in this goneral charge of extravagance, is the large amount of indemnities paid by the Treasury to our own citizens, for loss es sustained by the iniustico of foreign Go vernments, and which the administration of General Jackson obtained from these Go vernments by its vigorons and successful policy. These sums wore paid into the Treasury in trust for the claiments, and of necessity they wore paid out to tho clai ments. And yet this very disbursements contributes laigoly in swelling the aggregate expenditure of tho last year to $37,000,000 and is thus made to constitute one of the Hems of proof to establish the chargo of extravagance against the present Adminis tralion. I might examine in detail tho whole list of these extraordinary and temporary ex. penses of the Government during the last year, and ask which ono of them could have been avoided; and tho answer to each iiuuviuuai question must bo tho same. J! . ... 1 hey wore all necessarv. Mr. Van Bu- rcn is fairly chargeable with none of them. Point out when and where and how, he could have avoided or diminished any of them. Unless you can do this, you give up the question. Tho honorable Senator from Kentucky fMr. Clay! takes up the expenses of tho civil list. Ho compares their aggregate a mount with what it was a number of years ago, and shows that it has increased This increaso has been rendered absolutely ne cessary by the increase of our rapidly ex tending country. But he deals altogether in generals. Ho does not descend to par- ticulars where we could meet him: Here Mr. Clay said, I do descend into K nnrlKMllnro. I mnn nti. iltn number of custom-house officers. Mr. BirnirANAltf. Thn (rortlpmnn nf. frnnmnllv tn thn niutnm.hnntA nth.... . What trinrt nf n h nf nnrlinl... to ,Ut 1 If the the number of custom-house officers t. - l , i i i .i r. , i ... increase was made without necessity, aw was not required by the publio service. i ins i inmii win prove to be a duhcult task. Let tho subject bo minutely InvcstU gated. This is not a question to be carried by eloquent appeals, but by closo examination1 of facts and figures. The Secretary of tho Treasury has laid the caso fairly open for gentlemen, and if there has been any expen diture not justified by necessity, I ani wilU ing to unito with them in condemning it. inree years ot the expenditures of the pres ent Administration are now before the coun try; and I shall expect an early day, to hear from our friends in the opposition oil this subject. I repeat again, let them point out tho items of extravagance; and if we whd are the political friends of this Administra tion cannot defend each one of them in do tail, we must suffer the consequences. Tho people of this country have a right to know whether any, and, if any, what amount of the thirty-seven millions of dollars paid out of the Treasury during tho last year, h&i been expended without necessity, Sir, tho necessary expenses of this Go vernment must go on increasing. No hu man prudence or foresight can prevent it. All that wc can do, is to tako care that not a dollar shall be expended which is not ne cessary, to promoe the interest or defend the honor of tho country. You might, with equal propriety, say that tho same quantity of cloth would mako a carmont for the full grown man, which was sufficient for hirri when he was a little bov, as to allcgo that uiu nucussary expcnimuru lor nun country; .1:. r . t. - . now embracing twenty-six States and thieo populous territories, should bs limited by what they had been ten or twenty years a go. Tho position cannot for a moment, bo maintained. , . I agree with the Senator from South Car1 olina Mr. Preston that sound policy dic tates to us to increase our navy. It is our best and most natural defence against a for eign foe,and our cdmmcrcc,which is spread over evcty sea, demands additional protec tion. But, according to ihe positions as sumed by gentlemen, the appropriations' which may be made by Congress to carry this policy into effect would constitute, irt the aggregate of the account current, a hea vy item of extravagant expenditure against the President, who should execute our will. The'presont issue is precise and limited in its character. Havo the expenses of tho Government been extravagant since the 4tU of March,' J837 J V are ready for the trial. This question, however, is not to ba decided by comparing the aggreateu of ex penditures for tno year 1837, 1838, and 1839, with the aggregate lor previous years when there were no Indian wars no Indi an lands to be purchased, nor Indians to be removed, and nono of tho bther enumerated extraordinary expenses to be incurred. I have nothing more to say an Affecting incident. During tho silting of tho Democratic Na tional Convention at Baltimore, there oc curred an incident which is described by all who witnessed it aa a most thrilling occur rence. General Cariol, the venerable com patriot in arms of the old hero of tho Her mitago, presided over the deliberations of lhe convention. His scarred forehead, and the yet painful effects of his services iri tha field, added to his grey head, and the recol lection of his unspotted political character, mado him the observed of all observers. It happened that tho Hon. Tishlman A. Howard, the Democratic candidate for Go vernor of Indiana, a dclegato from that State, was called upon to address the con vention, which ho did in that peculiar and eloquent style which renders him so pow erful in debate, and so popular " on tho stumi!." "This certificate general;" ho said, refer ring to the Hero of tho British Whigs; "who was obliged to get his men to certify that ho did not run from the battlefield, in now tho candidate of Federalism. I will point you to a soldier, Mr President. I can see him now in his impetuous youth, with firm step, and devoted enthusiasm, fol lowing the great Jackson through tho Indi an wars mingling with him in tho bloody fields of Enuoekfaw, of Talidiga,and of tho Horseshoe, driving tho red fiendt from their hiding places, defeating them on their own' ground, and taking their prisoners in their own towns, I can see him again, now ady vanced to mature manhood, leading a regi ment of Tennessee militia, on the far-far and immemorial field of New Orlea'' the legions of Great Britain ' 9tf back upon each other lifce ' .et 'itthen J - - V l.lMVMb smy "-Ve,.