COLtlHBIA I have sworn upon the Altar of God, eternal hostility to every form of Tyranny Over the Mind of Man1." Thomas Jefferson HUNTED AND PUBLISHED BY II. WEBB VohiBsic "VI. BL.OOMSBURG, COLUMBIA COUNTY, PA. SATURDAY, APRIL, 14 1843. iV timber 49; nil MWMl.tT. i ''OFFICE OF THE DEMOCRAT bhposrrii'SST. Paul's Ciitmcii, Main-st TEPwMS: The COT. UMDIA DEMOCRAT will be published every Saturday morning, al TWO DOLLARS per annum payable half yearly in advance, or Two Dollars Fifty Cents,-if not 'paid within the year. No substriplion tvill be taken for a shorltr period than hix months ; nor any discon tinuane'e permitted, until all arrearages 1 'arc discharged. ADVERTISEMENTS not exceeding a square will be conspicuously inserted at One Dollar for Hie first, three insertions and Tiuenty-five cents for every subse , guent nserlion. C?f A" liberal discount made to those who advertise by the year. LETTERS addressed on business, must .be post, paid- 7 : SKETCHES OF THE WEST, tnu Indian's revenge. Every 'Buckeye,' 'Concracker.'or 'Hoo nier' has seen or heard of Simon Kenton, the celebrated Indian fighter and hunter. Born and raised amid scenes of strife and danger, he was taught, at an early ;ige, to rely upon his own energies foi support and protection, and many are ill c tales we have heard of hid indomitable bravery, presence of mind and segacity qualities that distin guished the pioieer of civilization in the boundless West, and enabled them to tri umph in the darkest hour, and compass difficulties that a less hardy race would have deemed insUrmuuntnble. At one period of Kenton's eventful career he was silting on a rude bench in frunt of his cabin smoking a corncob pipe, and en tertaining a number of 'responsibilities'witi, narratives of by-gone days, and stirring events in which he was a ' prominent ac tor. The sun had 'gone down in a blaze of glory,' as the novelists say, tinging the for est with a nielluw light, nnd robing in gor geous hues the giant oaks that stand like pillars against llio herculean firmanenf An Eden-like stillness reigned around the humble dwelling of the war-worn veteran the hum of insects ceased, and twilight was stealing on apace, soothing the turbulent passions of our nature, and lending an in describable charm to the woodland scene. At this moment, a noise was heard by Ken ton, and in an instant the form of an Indian vas seen emerging from a thicket in front of the hut. The red man did not advance with the caution of his tribe, but crushing the reeds ihal obstructed his passage, march ed with a bold step to the cabin, and stood befpre Kentor. 'in all his native majesty.' 'Good evening.' said the Indian, who spoke good English, 'how is Mr. Kenton, the Eagle Eye, as we call him.' Well, very well, you ied skinned vaga bond! What brought you to Simon Ken ton's cabin at such an hour as this! Ilcvengo !' Ah I you can't forget that brush, eh ' Never, old man. You killed my father, and the Great Spirit says I must have blood for blood.' 'Well, Ingcn you know where Simon Kenton's hut stands, and when you call upon him in dayligh't, like a while man, vou'll find him on hand. Enough ! W e will meet at the rising of the sun to morrow, in the 'Fallen Timber You know the place. I could hare reveng cd my father, who has gone to a happy hunting ground, by killing you at your door but that would not have been according to tny notions of honor among red men.' .Yes, Ingin, we will meet at sunrise, exactly, and recollect, as soon as we pass the morning compliments.lhe work begins You want to kill me for levenge, as you ay, as I happened to kill your father. Very well, Ingen. Simon Kenton knows what's right, ai'd when we meet luck will decide it. I will take my old rifle, and can be found at the'cioiising you know where All. you have got to do in the morning is to make abee line fur the spot, and when you see old Simon, blaze' away! The two parted in apparent friendship, and. the, old man retired to rest. At dawn, he arose and made preparations for the con flict, which heBknew must be deadly. Bills were made flints picked powder exam ined, etc. and without communicating to his family his intention, he sauntered forth, and was soon at ll'c appointed place. He found the Indian hod anticipated his arrival, and was leaning'upon his rifle, at a short dis tance fiom the place hojliad designated,, in a thoughtful mood. Signs Were exchanged and then commenced a 'bush fight' never surpassed. The Indian fired, and missed, and then took shelter behind a large hicko ry. Kenton was cool and collected, and trying again the flint of Black Bet,' told his' antagonist to stand forth. The Indian had reloaded, and both chose a position, and fired, without, effect. , Quick as thought the pieces were reloaded,' and the 'artful dodg ing that lollowcd can Uc better immagined than described. From tree to tree the as sailants glided, and every means ofingenui ty could invent was icsorted to by them to gain an advantage. This lasted for some moments, when the Indian, finding he could not outwit his while antagonist, in the wooils, came forward, and proposed that both should go to a clearing at hand, with uncharged rifles, and at a signtl agiced upon load aud fire. Kenton readily accepted the offer and repaired to the clearing. The remainder is soon told. As soon as the signal was given; both began loading with the utmost haste, being distant from each other but a few yards. The Indians move mcnls were hurried but certain Kenton was more methodical, but no less effective, and the ramrods were drawn out at the same time. Kenton however made a faiul misltke. Instead of throwing his rod on (lie ground, as his antagonist tid.he attemp ted to put it in its place, and while doing so, received a ball that sent his spirit to a belter world. Years have rolled away since the occur rence we have mentioned, but there are many yet in the land of the living who re member the sad fate of the old warrior. Near the translucent Licking may be found the grave of as noble a spirit as ever filled a tenement of clay. THE COSSACKS. The origin of this singular people ac counts in a considerable degrea, for their peculiar chaiacter. Nature and man have stamped an impress upon their minds,which can never be effaced, Placed on the fron tiers of Europe and Asia, they have always dwell on the plains which, from the earliest ages, have been the highway by which Scythian violence passed on to civilized plunder. Amidst tombs, which rising on either hand amidst the boundless waste, marked the bloodstained passage of the multitudinous nations, whose names, as Chateaubriand said, 'are known only to God;' amidst walls raised by dnknown hands, and cemeteries whitening of bones of Russians, Hungarians, Lithuanians and Poles, the Tartar still discerned the tracks which led from the far distant steppes to the seat of civilized man. Flights of rapa cious birds announced their approach, and the mournful omen was confirmed by the glowing sky that reddened as their torches consumed the villages: The barbarian hordes, in their sudden attacks.overpowered the inhabitants, soil seized the fruits of their toil, before the warlike proprietors could assemble from their castles for their defence Prornpt in aggression, prompter still iii flight, they dragged in captivity the youth uf both sexes, driving of all the herds, and leaving behind them only the silence of the ashes, and the corpses ef the slain. Not withstanding the ceaseless havoc, the population still sprang up afresh upon that beautiful soil; 'cut up as it was," says a Slavonian poet, 'by tho tramp of horses, fertilised by human blood, and white with bonos, where sorrow grew abundantly.' It was amidst this misery, and from the effects of thjs constant devastation, which continued for soveral centuries, that . tho Cossacks nation look Us rise. M.'vyo. cor ners of .and.oycrlooked of the great streams. of conquest, to the south west, remained as places of refuge, for the fugitives; one be yond the Ddty towards iho sea ,of Ezoff; and the other Beyond the islands of the Dneipcr, towards the Black Sea; and these were the cradle of this singular people as the Lagunrc of the Po; were from a simi lar cause, and at tho same period, of the Venltian Republic. About sixty miles be low Kieff, ihe Dhelpsr forms a variety of islands, upwards of seventy, in number.; The banks of the river, here fringed with wood, there steep or marshy the deep caverns in the rocky islands, concealed by spreading trees or tangled thorn hushes offered a favorable place nf refuge when the open country was overrun by barbarians. Al the epoch of the first general invasion of the Tartars, and agaiu duiing the Lithu anian wars, many persons found shelter here, and their number was subsequently increased by the arrival of adventures, guid ed by necessity of ihe love of" change; by deserters fiom the Lithuanian, Polish, Hun garian and Wallachian ranks, by fugitives from Tartar bondage, or by serfs escaping from the oppression of their lords. The motley crew was at first held togeth er and prevented from overstepping its limits, by a rule enforcing, during the com mon cilamity.celibacy.fishing ir, hard labor. Gradually as the danger rolled away, these restrictions were forgotten and they ventur ed upon secret excursions to the neighbor ing plains, which, by degrees, extending down the Dneiper, and along the shores of the Black sea lo the very walls of Constan tinople. In more peaceable times they spread over the adjoining plains, fed vast flocks on tl..teDnes. and cultivated the earth; and then in huts built oi ciay, til led a rude life, mindful only of the subsist ence of the moment. But they retained the character imprinted on them by their origin, their necessities, and their situation; fishing in the Don and the Dneiper ever remained, and still continues a favorite oc cupation of the people, and a principal source of their wealth; the necessity of flight to existence was constantly fell; and the nation, true to its origin, still looked for its riches in prosperity, its refuge in adver sity, to the swiftness of its steeds. 'Let the flams of invasion, '-said they, 'consume our huts, in a week we shall plant new hedges; fill up our ditches with earth, cover our thorns with reeds soon others shall arise. Sooner shall the foe be wearied with destruction, than we with restoration.' Independence amidst a world of serfs gave charms to this precarious existencejfreedom sweetened the toils and enlightened the dangers of these unfettered rovers. Their own indu.-try, the spoils of others brought them plenty; mounted on swift charges, free as the winds of the steppes, they enjoyed their liberty, and generations grew up amidst the clangings of swords and the song of battle' Singing the airs of his native wilds, the Cossack of former days left his home on a cruise 10 Azoff, Sinope, or Con stantinople; a beautiful captive often became his wife, the richest stuffs his attire, his enemies best weapon, his arms. He return ed homo with his trophies, distributed his and took no charge of the morrow: but tho trophies of his prowess were religiously preserved; his children played with his sword, or arrayed themselves in the pano ply of his enemies. These habits, still continue, though the object and the scene of his warfare are changed; and the Cos sack youth point to tho cuirasses of the French horseman, or the standards of the imperial guard, preserved in their ehurches, and honor these prizes of recent valor, as ther ancestors did (he trophies of Trebi zonde, or the spoils of Constanstinople. Alison $ Europe. A True Test. Nothing says a late writer, sets so wide a mark between a vul gar and a noble soul as (he reverential love of womanhood. A man who is always sneering at woman is generally a. coarse profligate or a bigot, t. . ., THE EMPRESS, JOSEPHINE'S, . PRdi'HEcY. The history of tho Empress Josephine has been very remarkable. She was born in t'le West Indies, and It had caHy been ptnphcsted by an old negress that she should Jose her first husband and be ex tremely unfortunate; but she should after wards be greater than a queen. (The au thor heard the prophecy long before Na poleon's elevation to the throne, from the Itfe Countess of Ancram, who was educated jn the. same convent with Josephine, and had repeatedly heard her mention -the cir cumstances in eariy younth.)This prophecy the authenticity of which is placed beyond a doubt, was fulfilled in the most singular mangier. Her first husband, Alexander Beauharnois, a gentleman of the irmy of Rhine, had been guillotined during the reign of terror; and she herself, who was also imprisoned al the same time, was only saved from impending death by the fall of Robespierre. So strongly was the prophe cy impressed upon her mind, that while lying .in the dungeon of the Conciergerie, expecting every hour to be summoned to the revolutionary tribunal, she mentioned it to her fellow prisoners: and to amuse them, named some of them nsjadies to the bed chamber, a jest which sho after wards lived to realize on one of their num ber. Josephine herself narrated this extraor- dinary passage in her life, in the following terms, in her memoirs. 'One morning the jailor entered the chamber where I slept, with the Duchess j' Aguillon and two other ladies, and told me was going lo take my maitrass lo give it to another prisoner. Why, said d'Aguillon eagerly, win rim mauniuc u-DcjtiUdiiiuis obtain a better one. No no, he replied, with a fiendish smile, she will have no need o one, for she is about to be led lo the Con ciergerie, and thence to the guillotine. At these words, my companions in misfor. tnne littered piercing- shrieks, I consoled them as well as I could; and, at length, worn out with their eternal lamentations, I told them that their grief was utterly un reasonable; that not only I should not die, but live to be Queen of France. Why, then, do you not name your maids of honor said Madame d'Aguillion, irritated at such a moment. Very true, said 1, I did not think of that; well, my deir, I make you one of them. Upon this the tears of these ladies fell apace, for they never doubled I was mad. But the truth was, I was not gifted with any extraordinary courage, but internally persuaded of the truth of the oracle. 'Madame d'Auillion soon after became unwell & I drew her towards the window, which I opened to admit through the bars a little fresh air. I there perceived a poor woman who knew us, and who was making a number of signs which I could not at first understand. She constantly held up her gown, (robe,) a.id seeing she had some object in view, I called out robes, to which she answered yes. She then lifted up a stone and put it in her lap, which she lifted up a second time I called out pierre, upon which she evinced the greatest joy, per ceiying that her signs were understood. Joining then the stone in her robe, sho oa. gerly imitated the motion of cutting off Ihe neck, and immediately began to dance and evince the most extravagant joy. This singular pantomime awakened in our minds a vague hope that possibly Robespierre might be no more. 'At this moment, when we were floating between hope and fear, we heard a great noise in the corridor, and the terrible voice of our jailor, who said to his dog, giving him at the sumo time a kick, 'Get out; you cursed Robespierre!' That course phrase at once taught us that we had nothing to fear, 3nd that France was saved.' -Alisen's History of Europe. 'That's my business,' as the. butcher said to 'ho dog-that was killiftg his sheep,JJt EXPEDIENCE' ' Two young rrieny both of them rriecliari-" ice, were married nbodt the same time, and entered life with apparently equal prospects' except that one was rather given to extrav- agance and fashion, while the other was more prudent and frugal. The wife of the latter hbwever, be'ing of a .different turrt from her husband, bdearrie Uneasy because" the former without any superidr advantages?' ges- made more show than what he did, and had many more firle ,lhings. She told her iiuuband that his 'incdme must bo as, much, as the other's, and that sho knew" they Were able to" appear as well as her neighbor. 'I want to do as other people do-' was her all conquering argument. Her hus band yielded again and .again to her en treaties, though always prdfesslng' that ha was not able. At length bin more showy neighbor fail-' ed. And seeing: their things sold under! the hammer of the auctioneer his wife.whd was (ar from being destitute of good feeling began to mistrust whether byimitatihglherov and 'doir.g'as other folks do,' they mightf not meet, with a similar fate.- 3he inquired' of her husband how his- affairs stood. Hoi told her that his expenses had exceeded. his! income, but he hoped to get through and pap what he owed. 1 Before long he was sued for his debts;.. Then his wife was in panics! She kheHto that hi i misfortune was chargeable to hei" folly, although he never reproached her'-" nor cast any unkind reflections. Disturbed with conflicting emotions she tried td plan some way to get along in this terrible dii-j ficultyl But finding all 'her endeavors fruitless, she said to her husband with un1' feigned distress. What shall We do? Whit." au wouu-- uo-caimiy replied:'we musmo -as others folks do have our tine things sold under the hammer!' A 11,0 T am uiiuugu iui IIL.I,, wuc Udu 7UL.I1 the beginning and the ending of common folly,- and she was satisfied. From that time he had no trouble to persuade her to' be frugal and prudent. They Were both agreed in pursuing the same course. And it is almost needless to say that their pros' perity was in proportion to their wisdom and prudence. Mr. Hunt, the celebrated preacher on Temperace, has been lecturing in Mifflin town, Pa; and the Times of that place is highly delighted with him. We also learn by a letter from Lewistown, that he is in that place, and created quite a sensation by his peculiar style of lecturing. In one of his lectures he attacked the intemperate extent to which the ladies carried their bustling habi's. Turning his back, which is hump ed, around o the audience, he remarked that had nature granted the ladies such a bustle as ho had they would think it neither a beauty not a convenience, and be, more anxious to do without them than they now are, to put them on! Good, for 'old Hunll! Pa. Tel. " Superstitious practices of the Ancients. The Lacedonians always during war.put up their petitions very early in the morning in order lo be beforehand with their ene mies, and by being the first solicitors, pre engage the gods ir, their favor. We may gather from Seneca that it was usual for tho. votaries in the temples to make interest with the beadle or sexton that they might have a seat near the image of the Deity, in order to best heard in their prayers and supplications lo him. The Tyrians, when bese.iged by Alexander, threw chains on the statue of' Hercules.to pi event that deity from desert ing to the enemy. Augustus, lia-jng twicer lost his fleet by storms, forbade Neptune" to be carried into procession along witfrffio other gods; and fancied that he had sufii- ciently revepged himself "sy thal.expedieiit. After the death of Gerinanicqs; ihe people were so enraged at their gods, that they stoned them in the temples,.and, openly re nounced all allegianca ilo,. them.-i-t.r7?ey Essays, ' f A.;