The Columbia Democrat. (Bloomsburg, Pa.) 1837-1850, June 11, 1842, Image 3

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    Who hnil fallen in defence of the country,
ti was to applied, tis I havo reason
to believe; bnt Major Davczac can tell,
you moro particularly what was dona with
if
'Connected with the history of this causo
I would give you somo interesting facts,
slibwing the motives and feelings of Judgo
Hall; but I am too feeble to write, and I
have no disposition now to rovivo charges
which can have no effect upon tho judgo
merit which posterity will form from the
records; Although the Judge violated
orders and fled from tho defence of the
oily, and, in his proceedings against me
for attempt, committed blunders which
were extraordinary, if not criminal, it was
not in my nature to broolc over them after
the brilliant closo of the campaign, and,
hearing aflerwrd3 lhat he manifested con
trition and repenlonce; I cheerfully forgave
him.
'The Judge's character, however, should
be out of thejfiuestion in ibis case;or n tleast
I have no desire to assail if The great
point is thin. Ought not Congress lo inter
pose and return a fine, imposed;as mine was;
for the performance of an act which was
indispensable lo the safety of tho country?
And if not, will not the precedent prejudice
the public interest in a similar emergency,
should ono arise! Can it be expected that
a general will take a high and necessary
reponsibility for tho safety nf his country,
if he is insulted, fined, or imprisoned by a
mistaken or vindictive judjje, -whoso fiat,
under an erroneous view of what is duo to
forms of law. cannot be changed by legis
lativo power?
Thanking you again, for your generous
sympathies,
I remain your friend
ANDREW JACKSON.
'Hon L- F- Linn-'
"TIlCTtt W1TU0CT FEAll
D32aSGS!IT3nB 3
S.1TUUD.1Y, JTUJVE 11, 1812,
FOR PRESIDENT,
(Subject to the decision of the National
uonvcmion.j
MILITARY ELECTIONS.
On Monday Inst the elections throughout this
Brigade took place.
Robert II. Hammond, of Milton, was re-elected
.Brigadier Gencralnnd Colonel Jackson McFaddcn,
ofLcwisburg; Biigade Inspector,
Hiram R. Klino wasolectcd Colonel.and Michael
R. Hnwor re-cleetcd Lieutenant Colonel, of tho
71st Regiment. Michael C. Vimcc, Major of tho
1st, and Abraham Troxell, of tlio 2d, BaUlion
in
W,. Imvr. received thofirst number of tho 'Wash-
iuotokian, a i cmpcranco paper puuiisueu ai
Harrisburg, by John S. Ingram, at two dollars per
year. It is needless to say lo moso acquaimeu wun
him that it is well got up, and ably conducted. In
gram must certainly be classed among the thorough
go-ahead boys. He has driven steam rowxn un
til ho burst hia toiler, and is now advocating WA
Tr.n rown. You aro right, John. Watku row-
r.n is far preferable to steam, and much ciikaveiii
whilo it is lofs liable to explosion. Wo shall now
cxpoct a puff from our fr end Ingram for tho Fish
ing creek water power.Moy be that ho will includo
theinou-r nsusitir, if he has discarded tanza.
The Louisville Advertiser says;
A few days ago in Hardin county, a
i,in;., ,n r.iru.Haliln niiizen was
seized by tho constable for debt, end adver-
tised for sale. The people of that neigh-
hnrhnnd had ntodeed themselves not to
bid off property solu on execution, un
that account; when tne Uay oi paie arriveu,
none of them attended. A minister of the
uospei wno ueiongs io anouu-r semuinciu
a man who prolosses lo leacn mo precepts
of the christian religion, camo to tho placo
of sale. He was the only bidder. He
bid just onk-bit, and the cow, a very valu
able one, was struck off to him at lint price.
He drove the cow home, paying for her
just twelve and a half cents.'
FROM PROVIDENCE,
The Providence Journal of Monday says
i'l'lio General Assembly will meet at
Newport three weeks from this day. From
tho disnositisn of both houses wo entertain
no doubt that if things remain quiet the
General Assembly will pass an act calling
nnuthcr Convention toframo a wrtten Con
jilituiion for tho Slaio. and that the basis of
. .
the sum-ago, in voting for delegates to
.,.!. finnvnminn. will he enlamed to the
'limits proposed in Mr. Jackson's bill
m..,i ... ,r vir Krion last held in this
Ex-President Van Buren' Hia re
ception at Louisville, Ky; was very flatter
ing'indeod. He was mot about, six miles
out of town by a body of citizens estimated
at a hundred to ono hundred and fifty some
in carriages and somo on horseback. Hero
ho tookja seat in a private carrriago drawn
by four elegant bays, a conveyanco provid
ed for him by tho citizens, and conducted
to the ciljr. On a;riving at the boundary
lino ho was received by a largo concourse uf
people who had long waited his arrival. Q.
Durncan, Esq., distinguished lawyer and a
whig, addressed the Exprcsident in n elo
quence, welcoming him, in the namo of the
people, to liouisvile. To this Mr. Yan
Buren replied in his usual appropriate and
happy style.
A procession of the Military and citizens
then formed, more than a milo long, and
proceeded through the principal streets to
tho Gait House, whero apartments were
provided for Mr Van Buren and Mr. Paul
ding, by tho Young Men's Democratic As
sociation. acmj.M j i i limn m
Mr. Van Buren arrived at Lexington,Ky
on the 20th of May. He was met at tho
city limits by the military companies and
citizens. On his arrival at the point desig
nated for hie reception, R. N. Wicklifie, ad
dressed him 'in behalf of tho Democratic
citizens of Lexington and Fayette;' and Mr.
V. B. made n brief response. He rode in
an open barouche, Col. R. M. Johnson sit
ting upon tho same scat with him. Mr. Van
Buren subsequently visited Mr. Clay; at
Ashland.
A meeting in favor of General Cass for
the Presidency, is about lo be held in New
York.
Threo hundred and six of the U. Slates
troops, lately attached to the forces in Flor
ida, have left for New York. Tho7th in
fantry was still in active pursuit of Ocleachee
and his band of Creeks. Nothing more has
yet been heard of tho Creeks engaged in
the lato attack on Lieut. Baker's party.
Their'iiiimber was from ten to fifteen. Tho
most authentic accounts agreo that' there aro
now not more than 25 warriors north of tho
Withlacoochce; and about tho same num
ber south of it. Tho number of Somioles,
Tallahns3es9; and Mickasucksios, (warriors)
orj the original inhabitants of tho territory
at the beginnning of Vho war, is now reduc
ed lo Moelve. The war now prosocuted is
against the Creeks.
Thrilling Incident. Tho New York
Era ofSaturday says: 'On Thursday even
ing, as tho celebrated wild beasts perform
ing with his animals at tlio uowery l nea
ire, uiu licuji.uu onu mu igu.
an extra incident to tho performance by a
regular set too WllllO DneSDacIl was la Hie
cage with them, which camo near costing
the latter his live. Driesbach had succeedeU
m sealing the comuals, one ol which, me
Leopard, ho caused lo leap upon his shoul
ders, when the Tiger made a spring upon
him also, and buried his teeth and claws
into tho tho unfortunate tanner's face and
head, tearing oft a portion of Ins lace in
a m9st shocking manner, and dovormg him
with blood. Tho indomitsble courage and
aUUreis ot tlio neroic uerman, uou., -
never more conspicuously displayed than
upon this occasion: aim so ouecuy uiu u
subdue the enraged animals, even while in
the most imminent peril, thai some part of
the audience were not awaio oi u
ol tlie aeciuent.
gatnwsssass
Enormous profits from some of the
fjJ England. 'Ys increased con
sumption of gas in all metropolitan cities.the
vast number of steam ship of war, sailing
to and from tho ports of tho old world, and
upon the sea in every clime, has caused an
immpnstn n ml nermament demand for soft
coalSi AJ ex(ra number of i,and3 havo
been employed in all tho piincipal collieries
and the proprietors of the best coal-helus m
the territory of Great Britain aro heaping
up princely fortunes, from the profits of
their business. We have hoard of ono in
dividual, who has mado between four and
five millions, during a fow years past from
ho mines owned by himself alone. (Boit.
Traveller.
Tho Lancaster Bank, the Farmers' Bank
I .i n ... T.,V nnj finliimriln'
mo uerua ooumj wu, -
Bank and Bridge Uompany, navo resu.veu
unanimously lo resume specie payments on
all their liabilities on the first of September
npxf Vetv finod.
Sale of good bacon were made at Cincinatl
last week, .at 1 1-2 a I 14 cent per pound.
Pork is down sure enough.
Catholicism. Tho Corner stone of a
now German Catholic church was laid at
Pittsburgh, a few days since, The church
is to bo one hundred and filly feet in length,
an d seventy-one wide, is to have a steeple
one hundred and seventy-four foot high.jPitts
burgh is a groat p'.aco for churches. There
are about fifty in tho two adjoining cities
of Pittsburgh and Allegheny, about one
chnrch to every 700 inhabitants. That
speaks well (or the public morals,
Chicago. Eight year ago Chicago was
a willderii2ss,with only it military garrison,
kept up by the United States to serVe as a
check to aborigines. Tho following ex
tiact from a memorial addressed ,to Cong
ress by the Common Council ofTChicago
shows what it is now: 'Tho lasF census
rates tho inhabitants of this city between 5
and C000. The avcrago import trde is ever
SI. 500,000 annually, whilo that )f our ex
ports has readied, within tho dresenl year,
$313,302.'
Loveand Suicide. Tne '?hiledslphia
Ledger States that on last Saturday after
noon, a yovng woman but n few weeks
married, the daughter of a rich farmer in the
vicinity of Quakertown, in Bucks county
committed suicide by hanging herself to a
limb of an apple tree, near thrdwolllnghouse.
It appears that a short timtaincc she was
married, through the influohccaof her father
to a young man, while at (the same time
she was afl'eblionalely devoted to another.
Disappointed lovo is asjigned as the
cause ot trio rasli act. reparations
were being made by her li'usband lo take
her in a fow weeks to his own domicil-This
act no doubt hurticd on jtho melancholy
vent which has unquestionably caused no
small degree of grief anctt sorrows among
tho relatives and friends of the deceased,
One of tho iron slearaboats intended for
the coal trade on tho Delaware and
Raritan canal, wasjatsnched at New York,
on Wednesday week,. She is furnished
with Erricson propellirs, and is of two
hundred and thirty tons. Three moro of
tho same siz aro on ipe stocks for tlio same
purpose. i
The steamer 'Troy
Tuesday morning at
left Now York on
'seven o clock, and
reached Albany, ono
hundred and sixty
miles, at ten minutes before four
o'clock in the afernobl
Sho made eight
landings, and the Albaiv
papers cstimato
her speed at nineteen kites an hour,
The selectmen of IJ
ii, IVlnssacl.uscIs,
havo issued a card, dec
ring that 'that there
is not ono word oftru'lin the report' that
a scholar in school in thi town was lied up
by his heels and whipfl to death.
Kkoston, Juno 1
INDICTMENTS FCR TREASON.
i
The Supremo Court oihis Stale mot at
Kingstone on tho 31st ullNathan F.Dixon
Esq. was appointed altoriv general prolcsi
in ho absence of Uon. kecne. Bills of
indictment for tre&stin wci found against
Joseph Gavitt, of Charleston, aud Sylves
ler Himes, of North Itinirdn. members of
tho General Assembly unfj- the Peonlo'a
Constitution; Capiaes, nutnablo forth
with svero issued imocdiatjy against both.
Dutee'J. Pearce, Jsq., 0 Newport o
lected lo the Legislate, tintcrlhe People's
Constitution, resignejhis sell a fow days
since. ,
James Smith al
liawhn Brtnsh, indicted
uctis on thb Stoninglon
for placeing obsiructis
rail road, pleaded nclguilty.l This man
stated in his oxamin jn, prelious to his
commitment, that homo onlfroni Now
York with Thomas j Dorr, a(id said that
he was a buttender. (o was convicted, and
sentenced lo three vb imprisonment.
Tho Miners' JouJ slate that the re
ceipts for passengerierchandisc, &c. on
the Philadelphia, Ming and Putlsvile
Railroad, dnring ihenth of April amount
ed to nearly twentyiusand dollars,
-i
The Fayetleville C. Observer says:
Col. William Haik, of Monroe coun.
ty. has sent us a sre of new flour tho
firs) we have hear this year. Tho
wheat was sown oifo I8th of October,
1842, threshed on 51st, ground on the
22d, and inmarkel to 33d;
The chartist petition lately presented to
the British Parliamcn, is said to have been
signed by three milltions of persons. -
Tho whole number who onjoy tho right
ofeulTrago in Great Britain is probably
considerably less than dno million. And for
those, tho representation is so unequal that
probably threo hundred thousand overrule
the threo millions; or ten times their num
ber, and deny them all participation in he
government.
The whigs and lories combino in Eng
laud, as in -this counjry in refcrenco to
Rhode Island, in viewing the mass of man
kind as made only to toil, to bo taxed, and to
fight for their masters.
Tho standing army there, being much
larger than here, they am ab?o to enforce
their dedpoiitism more pormanent than'their
co-workers arc like to do in the United
States. Pennsylvanian.
Steam Boat Peat' t Hunt; The Steam
boat Corsair, arrived on Thursday night
from Galena, relates a curious incident, In
the Ohio River belew, they espied a large
Bear swimming tho river. The mato and
his campanions put off in a skiff with a
determination to capture Bruin. The
gentleman however rmdo a vory sturdy
resistance. At length they fixed a rope
around his head and cattied the other end
lo tho Stermboaf Then began a pretty
littlo scene. The Steamboat proceeded
on, and Mr. Bruin followed exnecessilalei
He was soon hauled in, when his first
proceeding was to climb the upper deck,
and put to flight all the loungers in' those
regions. The end was, ho was killed,
and proved to bo quito a magnificent fellow
. Cin' Chronicle.
By the latest arrivals from Texas it is
announced that tho citizens rf that Repub
lic aro in favor of an invasion ef Mexico.
Tho Jail of Vandalia, Illionis, was
broken open on the night of lGlh ult, and
the only prisoner, a female, was released,
by some gallant friends-
Tin Preach crop of East Jerssy hat
been oMnly cut off by tho lato fiosls,
'PI li7. T"
uuiu la m itJ present time, in a poor
houso in England wan ,vh0 was onco
worth 400,000.
Eleven prisoners escaped from the jail of
tho sccoud municipality at New Orleans.on
the night of the 18th ult. by undemanding
tho walls.
A mine of tin oro has been discoverod on
?.,,, il. ....:... :.. i.i .i .
jiiuiu uiuuiiiiiiii, in iiuains rouuiy in tills
Whitney, of New York, is said
to bo the second richest man in American.
His proporty is oaiiniated at $10,000,000.
The Moblo Herald of the 23d ult, elates
that the negroes concernedin ;ho murder
of lato Walter R. English were hung, a
uay or two before, without trial'
Somo Yankee editor says' ho liked to
died a lafin' to see a drunken chap trying
to pocket the shadow of a swinging" sign,
which he mistook for a pocket handker
chief-'
7dl swimming, Tho Duchess ol
Cheveronx! who wa3 for the first limo al
tho court of England in 1G33, swam across
the Thames in a frolie, near Windsor.
BITITAI&Y.
DIBD In this town, on Saturday Inst. ELI
ZAUETH, daughter of Doct. John Kamsay, aired 2
years aim nine months,
On Sunday last, JANE, daughter of Mr. John
McKride, aged 17.
In this township, on Tuesilav last, Mrs.
HAMPTON, consort of Mr. William Hampton.
agcu auout u.
On Tuesday last, vcrv suddenly, at Williams
burg, Mr. GEORGE WILLHKLM, a foreigner,
aged about 30.
PPJCES GTOSIE1TT9
At Bloomsburg, Pa.
( Corrected FPechly.)
Wheat, , si io
Rye- 00
Corn,- 50
Cloverseed,. .5 00
Flaxseed, .1 25
Butter,
Oals, Eggs,
Tallow,-
10
40
8
8
I
50
Lard,.
Dried Apples,-
iVnvV YORK Atfl) PriiXADELPUtf
c incus,
WELCH &, MA1T1T
PROPRIETORS
WILL BE EXHIBITED AT
Bloon.sburg, on Friday. June 10, 1842
AT 2 O'CLOCK, T. M.
In announcini: this extensive Establish
ment, the proprietors are gratified in having
it in their power to assure' the public that
their Company stands UNRIVALLED in
the WORLD, combining the largest num
ber of superior Trained .Arabian Horses,
together with, a Company of Ladies and
uenuemcn oi tno nrst talent that can ba
produced oither in Europe or America.
Among whom aro
Mr- C, J. ROGERS. Mr. GEORGE
CADWALLADER, Mr. GEO. SWEET,
nir.w.ituwAKU.Mr. KISLEY & SON,
Mr, DICKINSON, Mr, JENNINGS, Mr
HILSIE, Mr. PAMER, airs. J. SMITH
Mrs. WELLS. Misses LOUISA WELLS
AMELIA WELLS.IMARY WELLS, Mas
ters uj.ujnhuY, COLEMAN, CUES
NUT and CHAMBERS, Clowns Messrs.
WELLS and WILLIAMS of COOKS
AMPHITHEATRE.
The Exhibition will bo accompanied by a
SPLENDID BAND OF MUSIC!
CONSISTING OF BIB MEMBERS,
Admission Boxes, 50 Cents Pitt,
25 Cents.
For particulars of performance, set bills
uf the day.
At Private
HE Subscriber offers for sale his largo
TWO STORY
BRICK
7?R A vWTKHMsr?
v iuujiw iaiiViytDtsJiaq
situated on Main-street, Bloomsburg, Col. co. Pa,
It has beenkept as a Tavern for tho last 13 years,
and U well calculated for a Store and Tavern, being
CO feet front, and GO back, with stabling for 50 hor
ses, and a good well of wator. It U a corner lot,
CG feet front aud 314 back.
ALSO
A half lot near the above, with a FRAME BARN
ALSO
A half acre lot with a new
JFESAIyIE J JSOSE,
and eight or ten bearing
APPIiE
TE8EES,
good fmit upon it, situated btt 3d street.
ALSO
AH acre lot at BLOOMSBURG BASIN, on
which is a TWO STORV
and a WILUIF.
ALSO
9 12ths of an undivided IJ aero lot fronting 1st st
and Greenwood road. This Lot is well calculated
to divide into building LOTS.
Tho abovo property being situated in tha centro
of tho IRON REGION OF COLUMBIA COUN
TY, is well worthy the attention of tho CAPI
TALIST. It will bo sold together or separately, lo suit pur
chasers. DANIEL GROSS.
Bloomsburg, Nov. 21,1817,
Susquehanna Hotel,
COLUMBIA COUNTY, PA.
CHARLES HARTJUAW
O) E8PECTFULLY informs his friends and
1. tho public, that he has purchased tho- above
largo and commodious well known House la'clv
occupied by Samuel A. Brady, and having newty
fitted it up, and furnish d with Entire New fur
niture, is now prepared to cntcrtciic nil who may
call on him in tho best manner. As h'w V..VU will al
ways ho prpvided with tho choicest of Liqu y and
his TABLE with the best iho vouutry mar' t af-
for Is, ho ll.Uters hhnsell he whall bo able (
general satisfaction to all who may fvor him
their custom.
,vo
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asp
iriirrs,ffc.
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Ciittawisfj, Msy 164'i.