til i 1btf 111 I 111 .B.Hufl r 1 sum iiiiiM . sjhim fsM tssssssv iMm nn im rn.MM.mji vuiji t ,vif Is t-t. I' have sworn upon the Altar of God, eternal Hostility to every form of Tyranny over tile Mind df Ttfan." Tlilimiis Jcffdrsdri IB' PKINTED AND PUBLISHED BV II. WEBB. liimeiVI, BLOOMSBUBIG, COLUMBIA COlINTY,I?A. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 19, 1842 6:'OPF1CE"OF TlIE DEMOCRAT J foroaiTE St. Pawl's1 Church, Maik-st-1 r.. '''TERMS': ' fht COL UMBlA DDM&CRJIT will be published jeverj) Saturday morning, at ttfrO-D OLD All Spcr arinufiV payable half-yearly in advance, or Tfoo Dollars cl Fifh Gents,-if notipaid within the year, tfd subscription wilhbe,lakenfora shorter merioiithan six months nor any, discon tinuance permitted, until fill arrearages 'tir'e discharged:' IsbVER TfsMfE'tf'TSt not Exceeding a K'Mtare will'be effnspituously inserted at t ,On3 Dollar for the fir,slthree insertions. 4 and Twenty-five cents for e?ero 4U0fL quent nserlxon. A liberal dtscouni rnade to those who advertise1 by the year,, lEERS addressed on business, must 'bVp'dst.paid. fi i, ' - . - na gwatag' iiili,.lbP Poetry. .u POPULAR SONG. RXJBSJKBER THE POOR. Now'Wjnter has come with his cold chill ing breath, And the .verdure has dropp'd from the trees; ill nature seems touch'd with the finger of r ' dea'tli, VAneUhe streams ate beginning to freeze; .When wautqn young lada o'er the river can alide, And Flora attends ui no mora; When in plenty you sit by a good fireside, "0 That's the tijie to-remember the poor. When th cold feathered scow shall in plenty descend, And whiten the prospect around; Whijr the keen cutting winda from the v north shall attend, Hard chillinr and freeiing the gnund; ifryiien te kills and the .dales are all candi- r .eu wiui wniie, ' 'Andlhe rivers congealed to the shore; When the bright twinkling stars shall pro claim a cold nigbt, , .That's the time, xosemtmbtr the poor. 'hen'the poof im'rous hare can be traced to the wood, fc1Jy her footsteps" in'deated in snow; When tl:e lips and the fingere are starling with blood ; "When the raarkesmen acocftehooling go; When the poor robin redbreast approaches the cot, t And icicles hang at the doer; W.hn.bcfwls emoke with aomothing reviv ing andt hot , . . ; , .Thai's tlie time to remember tkepoor. When a thaw shall ensuo and the waters increase, . .1 . i aqane rivers cn.insoiuin jruw, a re 'Uase; Whan in danger the-travellers go When the meadows are hid by the proud swelling flood, And the bridges are useful no more; Wlien in health you enjoy every thing that is good - That's the time to remember tfie poor, Soon the day wil be here when a Sayiour was, born; blithe world shall agree as one voice; 'All nations, unite to salute the blest mom; All the ends of the earth shall rejoice; Grim death ia . deprived of hie all killing atinir, And the grave is triumphant no more, 'Sainw;?angels, and men, hallelujahs shall sing; v if Andfllie richishall .rtwwmfierMe poor. THE RETORT. "i r .! .!.- v,0d Birch, wheutaught the village school, Wedded a maid of homespun habit; Us was slubboru as a mule, And she was playful as a rabbit. "Poo'r Kate had scarce become a wife, sIBefgreiher husband sought to make her Qik ptnk,of country polished ife, WBii formal sai s quaker.. One" day the tutor went abroad, And simple Kitty sadly miss'd him; 3Yfien he returned, behind her lord . She slyly stole, and fondly kissed him! The husband's anger rose and red, And white his face alternate grew ! '.ess freedom, ma'ami'-Kate sighed Acsaid 'Ob, dear, I didn't know 'twaa youl' Friendship. Friendship is a dangerous word forvy6'ung' ladies'; it is love full aedged andjyiiflng J(r a day o!JW From,tlie;N. Y. Flag o. tho Unidn( Letter from aJPriendin Ireland. Dudlin, Sept, I812i ' My dear sir Perhaps a line i fronAtie Irish metropolis may possess some inter est coming from an eld acquaintance, who is happy to see you once more, a. member of the Press-gang. 1 have been over a great part df Ireland during the last two months. Nothing can exceed the abundance of the, harvest and excellence, of thepqtato crop the latter pf infinite' importance here, inasmuch as po tatoes form the principal iliet 6f the poorer classes of the Irish' throughout the year; And this reminds me' of an anecdote which I have heard Dr. MacKenzie tell with so much quiet humor that I know I shall. spoil it by writing jt down. Fancy the docter with a friend or two at his (able, and' a few glasses of whiskey punch under his waistcoat, one at his elbow,- rea dy, for, immediate libation, and the shout of laughter at his last pun or, anecdote settling down into a general smile fancy kim, I say, looking quietly at his friends, as f he wondered what they could have been laughing at, fiddling with his spoon, or perhaps with his glasses in his hands, carefully rubbing them, as hia theory is, that unless they be clear,- he cannot get out three sentences to his own content. And now. MacKenzie Loquitur. Just touch the bell will you? (Dell rung, enter a servant) Ann, mmu inai you crisp me potatoes tor supper, and the fowl better browned than they were last rigTrt bo sure about thq potatoes, for Mr. likes them done that way (hxil Jinn.) By the way, apropos of potatoes, did yoa ever hear the story about Lady Middleton and the lodge kee pers wile? Nol well then, here it is, and an undoubted fact or ought to be. which is all the same! 'Lord and Ladv Middleton are absentees, as every one knows. Some five and twen ty yeais ago, they determined to visit their Irish estates. Accordingly, over, they came, wow, hve and twenty vears ago, Lady Middleton was younger and hand somer than Time nas ten ner now. To look at her.t would think her just the wo man to have a tremendous large family a famous person to send out (o anew Colony, where the increase of population was an object. Some how or other, her Ladyship has no children, and greatly lamented the same. She was passionately fond of chil dren, and never easy when she saw a group of rosy cheeked little ones until she had confidentially aked their mother how it happended that the had such a family! It happened, as luck would have it, that the wife of the man who lived in the por ter's Udte at the entrance of Lord Middle ton's Diincipal estate in the county of Jork, wis a remarkably delicate looKing woman' who had achieved a very particu lar reputation in her neighborhood by pre senting her husband with seven linle ones in about three years. This is a fact, I as sure you. There were twins twice, and three at the third birth, When Lady Mid dleton drove up to the nark gate, this 'mo therofthe Gracchi' came to the door of the lodge with her three young (twins I sunbose we may call ihemJ in her arms, and her ladyship immediately beckoned her to the catriage. Whoso children are these, my good woman!' 'All mv own.mylady.' 'What, three infants of the same age !' 'Yes.my lady, I had three the last time,' 'How long are you marnedl' 'Three years voui ladyship.' 'And how manv children have vout 'Seven, mr lady,' But here the colloauy was broken in by Lord M. des ring the postillion to go, on, as u thev delayed there, the dinner would be snoiled. So the carriage rolled on, contain iosf Ladv Middleton wrapped up in a fur cloak, in a brown study. Her ladyship talked ol nothing that whole evenine, but the 7 children in the vears. and the butler assured ber that the mother had told nothing more than the truth The next day, as soon as breakfast was over, Lady Middleton walked down to the porter's lodge, and eurprised the woman in the act of washing seven children. As her ladyahip entered, a youny, eturdy, handsome countryman, quitted the house, and took off his hat to salute the lady as he nasBed her. Thai's Pat. my lady,' aiid -the wo man. And who mav Pat bet On.' pat'e ay husband, your lady shin.' Lady Middleton, who, aa I told you, was very fond of children, caressed the seven little ones, and made their mother a hand some present of money; to provide clothes fur thorn far if the truth be told; I fear they weie alio! in a lUta of audit Then followed on a set of matrimonial In quiries, as to whether.When in the slratv, ho fruiiful mother had usually a'good time,' or a 'bad lime,' and a" Variety of other question, too numcrotisias tho auctionesis say, to be enumerated in, the present ad vertisement. At last came the question of questions how she cameito have children! The poor woman, not wejl knowing what this cate cl)i8m mea.it, and not knowing how to wrap up in delicate' Words, her idea of caimo and effect, blushed, and grow confused, and at last, for waiit of something better to ray replied, 'I, thinking it must be, the. potatoes, ray ladyl 'This unfolded a theory of popu- lation quite, new to Lady Middleton, who eagerly demanded, 'the potatoes!' do yoti eat much of them!' 'Ofi! yes, my lady, we very, seldom have bread, and Hike potatoes all the year tound.' Greatly agitated with her new information, the lady futhcr asked, and, w"here do you gel the potatoes! 'We grow them in our little garden, my1 ladv, sure, Pal tills it.' Well, said Lady Middleton, 'send roe up a cart-load of these potatoes, and the stewaid shall pay you wen lor tnenv Shortly afler.lier ladyship rose to leave .the house, and indeed, had left it, when the matron ran after her, and blushing as she put the .question, asked; 'ah. then, my lady it iB to have children, that you want the load of potatoes!' It was the lady's turn to blush, as she confested thai it was 'Because, I'm thinking my lady, in that case, that Pat had belter take the potatoes to you himself.' Jloml the potatoes without Pat, would not have the desired effeci. Peril. ps you may smile at this .anecdote, but if you had heard it. with Mackenzie's imitations of the tilled lady's English, twang avd the Irish peasant a palpable brogue. 1 thing you would have lauglied, as we did, at the archness of the wifa's concluding quest, on with reference to the redoubtable 'Pair DEATH OF WASHINGTON. The following vivid and touching sketch of the last moments of Ihe Father ;of Jiis Country is from a letter in the New York American: Passing the great hall ornamented with pictures otlSnglish hunting scenes, we as cended Ihe oaken staircase, with its carved nd antique balustrade. We stood at the door we ptessed the handle the room and the bed Where he died were before us. Nothing in the lofty drama of his existence surpassed tho grandeur of that final scene. 1 Jip cold, winch he had taken trnm expo sure in overseeiog.some parls of his grounds and whion restated the earliest domestic remedies that were applied, advanced, in the course of two short days, into that frightful form of the disease of the throat laryngitis. His valued friend, Dr. Craik, was instantly summoned, and, assisted by the best medics! skill of the surrnunding countrvv exhausted all tho means of his arts but without affording him relief. He. patiently submitted, though in great distress lo the various remedies proposed; but it became evident, from the gloom settling upon the countenances of the medical gen' tleinen. that the case was hopeless!' Ad vancing insidiously, the disease had. fasten ed itself with deadly certainly. Looking with perfect calmness on the sobbing1 group around him, he uaid : "Grieve not, mv friends, it is as I anticipated from the first; the debt which we all owe is now about to be paid: I am resigned to the event." Requesting Mrs; Washington to bring him two wills from his escritoir, he directed one to be burnt, and placed the other in her hands, aa his last will and testament; and then cave some final instructions to Mr, Lear, his secietary and relation, as to the adjustment of his business affairs. He Boon after became greatly distressed; and as, in the paroxyisins, which became more freauent and violent. Mr. Lear, who was extended on the bed by his side, assisted him lo turn, he, with kindness, but with difficulty, articulated: "I fear I give you great trouble sir; but perhaps it is a duty we all owe. one to another! 1 trust you will receive the same attention, when you shall require it." As the night waned, the latai eyrnptons became more imminent, ti is breath oe came more labored and suffocating, and hi voice soon aftet failed him. l'eceivine ni end approaching, he straightened himself to his lull leneth; he toiueu ins owu nanus in the neeessarv attitude upon his chest: nlac cine his fineer upon the pulse of his left wrist, and thus calmly prepared and watch iue his own dissolution, he awaited the summons of.his Maker. The last faint hope of his friends had disappeared. Mrs. Wash ington, stupified with grief,, sat at the foot or the bed, her eyes nxea steauiasny upon him; Dr. Craik, in deep gloom, stood with hia faoo buried, iij bU tuudi tlie iroj bii faithful black' servant Christopher, the (cars uncontrolled irihkling tlbwn his, face) '6n one sidetook the last look of his dyfng hiasler, while Mr. Lear, in speechless grief, with folded hands,' bent over his pillow on the other. Nought broke the stillness of his last moments, but (ho suppresscd sobs' of the affectionate servants collected on the staircase; the tick of the large clock in the hall, as it measured' off) with painful dis tinctness, the las fleeting momeuls of' his existence; and tint low moan of the winter wind, as1 it swept through the leafless snow Covered trees; the laboring and iweared spirit drew nearer and nearer to its ' goal tile blood languidly 'coursed slower and more slowly through its channels the no-' ble heart .stopped struggled stopped fluttered-the right hand slowly slid from the wrist, upon which' its finger had been' placed it fell at the side and the manly effigy of Washington was all that remained extended upon the death couch. EFFEOfsOF EXPANSION. A cannon ball when heated, cannot be made lo enter an opening through which, when cold, it pasaes tapitily. A glass stop per sticking fast in the neck of a buttle, may be released by surrounding the rlecV, with cloth taken out o,r warm water, or by im mersing, the bottle in the vater up to the neck. The binding rinc is thus healed and xpanueu sooner man the stopper, and so becomes slack or loose upon it. Pines for conveying hot water, sleaoi, hoi air, Sic. if of considerable length, must have joinings mat allow a uegree ul shortening and length ening, otherwise a change of temperature may aesiroy inem. An incompetent per son undertook to warm a large manufactory by steam from one boiler. He laid a rigid main pipe along a passage, and opened. lateral .urancnes tiuougn holes into the sev eral apartments; but, on his first admitting the sieam, the expansion ot the mam pipe iron railing, a gate which, during a cold day may be, loose, and easily shut or opened,- in a warm day may , stick, owing to their being greater expansion of it, and.pl. the neighbor inc railnm. than ol the earth on which thev are placed. Thus, also, the centre of Ihe. arch of an iron bridge is higher in warm than in cojd weather, while, on the con)ra ry, tit a suspension or chain bridge, the centre is lowered. The iron pillars now aa much used to .support the iront walls, of houses, of which the ground stories serve, -as shops with spacious windows, in warm weather. .really lilt up. the wall which rests upon them, and in cold weather allow j again lo sink or subside in a degree consid erally greater than if Ihe wall .were brjck from to-j to bottom. The pilch of a piano loric is lowered in a warm day, or in warm room, owing, to the expansion of the strings being greater than the wooden frame woik; and in cold the reverse will happen. A harp or piano, which is well toned in a morning drawingroom, cannot be perfectly in tuue when Ihe crowded evening parly has heated ihe room, uellwirea, loo slack in summer, may be of the proper length in winter. 1 here exists a most ex traordinary exception-, already mentioned, to the law of expansion by heat and .contrac tion by cold, producing unspeakable bene fits in nature namely, in the case of water, Water contracts, according to the law', only down to the temperature of forty i degrees while, horn that to lliirly-two degrees which is its freezing point, it again dilates A very curious consequence ol this peculi arity is exhibited in the wells of the glaciers of Switzerland and elsewhere, that when once a pool or shallow well on the ice commences, it gocon quickly deepening Hccir.until it penetrates lo the earth beneath Supposing the surface of the water origin ally to have nearly the temperature of the inelline ice, or Ihiny-two degress, but to be afterwards heated by the heat Sc sun, instead of the water being thereby dilated, or spe cifically higher and detained at the surface, it becomes heavier the more neatly it is heated to forty degrees, and therefore sinks down lo the bottom or the pit, or well, but there, by dissolving some of the ice; and being consequently cooled, it is again ren dered lighter, and rises, to be heated as be fore, again to descend, and this circulation and digging cannot cease until the water has bored its way quite through. Arnott, An F-nslish iudcre being asked what contributed most to auccess at the bar, re plied, 'Some succeed by ereat talent, some by high connexions, some by a miracle, but the majority by commencing without a shilling.' U yod want to hud out a way to give the ladiea the reins of government, eo that they will not dare lo take them, pass law that every woman forty years old shall vote. Not one would confess that ahe w so old, ;,-v BEAUTIFUL EXTRACT, Go. out beneajh tie arched heaven iri nigh"t,s ptofouridgloom, and say If yod can, 'There is no God.' Pohounce that; dread mvs'lerv. and each afar above will Vop'rovcf you for your Unbroken da'riines'9,pf inleUMt?-j every' voice Ihit floats upon ihV night winus win UEwau your uuer nopeesaucon and despair, h there no grfd' Who then, unrolled that blue scroll; and threw upon Its liirfH frontispiece We" eeible. cleaning of immortality! ..Who fashioned tWs greed errlh.withlls peetual; rolling waters, and itg.W.ide expanso of Island and main! Who paved me heay.epf with clouds, atlunes am ill "banKers" of storms the voice of thunders, and unchains the lightnings that linger; end lurk,, and flash in, tli? gloom Who gave to theiBaglo't the eyrie, where the, 'tempests dwell" and beat strongest, and to the drove a' tranquil aliode amid the forest that eVei; ccudea, tb the mihslresly of Jier. moanf Who made thee, oh man, with thy perfect elegance or intellect! Who made the light pleasant (6.. thee, and the darkness a. covering' and ,4' herald to the first beautiful flashes of tlie morning?, Who gave thee matchless syrn- raelry of sinews and limbsf the regular flow-' ing.of blood! tfie irrepressible and daring, ..r i in - t' t -'J '..' passions oi aiiiuiiiun ami iotci aiiu'oi the thunders of heaven and the waters of earth are chained. T.hey remain, but tho. bow of reconcilitfon hangs above and . ben eath them, and it were better that the im-' itless waters and the mountains, were eon-' vujseu anu commingieu logcinei n worot better lhal those very stars were eonfla. gration by fire, or shrouded in eternal gloom, than one single, soul should be lost, whiis mercy kneels and, pleads for it beneath tho altar of intercession PERSONAL! APPEARANCE OF, JEF FERSON. , . - - yraie since published an interesting-voiumo of 'Familiar Letters on Public Characters'. The work was prepared with great care," and. the sketches were faithful, as they were beautiful. r In. remarking on the Declaration of independence, and the author of that memorable document, he thus describes us author. 'When Mr. Jeffersdri came to' Philadelphia, in March, 1797, -hVwae aall' man, over six feet in stature; neither luir nor thin in body,. Ills limbs were long,? and loosely jointed. His hair" Vas' 'of a reddish tinge combed loosely over the fore-1 head, and at the sides', and ti'eil behind' His' complexion was light or sandy. Hie forehead, rather high and broad; His 'eye brows long and straight; his eyes blue, his cheekbones high, his face broad beneath hia eyesf his chin long, and his jnouth latge? His dress was a black coal,aud light under clothes. He" had 'no polish of manricrs.but' a simplicity afcd sobriely of tlepdrjme'nt.i-; He was quiet and unobstriisivey and yet sitsnger; would prreeive, that he was in the presence of one' wfio1 was' not a common1 man. Hia manners of conversing was calm1 aiid deliberate, and from all gesticula tion'; but lie sp'oVeiike one who codifldered himself entitled to.defereyice; and.'as Ih'ough he metsured WhatlfiVsatd'hy some etand ard'or self compliqerlcy. The expression of his faYe' wa's ihaiof a tfioughlfulness and", observation; arijl, cerlainlyjnot'th'at x ripen-1 ness and'frankn'ees; When speaking-, he did hot look at his auditor) but cast his eyes towards tlie ceiling, or' any' where btit at the eve of his auditor. He had alieady become a personage of some distinction, and an object of curiosity;4 oven to a very young mart. A, VALUABLE BOY. What can you do!' skeda traveller of country urchin, whom he saw by the mad ams tickling a toaa wnn a long etraw. -u. I can do morn'u ronsider'ble : I rides the turkeys tu water, ralks the geese, cards down tne old roosters, put up the pigs' tails in papers to make emcur, keeps tally fof dad and marra when they scold at a mark, and cuts the buttons off dad's coal when. ho's at prayer in the morning! He who reads',, converses and meditates will certainly improve ir. knowledge. By the first he converses with the dead; by the second, with the living; and by the third, -.11- , ! wiiu iiimicu. Our frail bodies are tottering habitsliomi every beat of the heart is a rap al the door. to ten us ol our dancer. Dr. Franklin said that 'seven hours sleep is enough for a scholar, and uine for a Aoa' tin i i - wiiion are yeui A man in New Jersey has been tunted t lajoul of Affice in a Temperance Souivty, for 4 jjj bwng.iadkigii pirive , - . i 'i 4