-1 THE oimiti DEIlOtlttT. I have stvorn upon the Altar or tidd, ctcriial hostility to every form of Tyranny dv6r tho Atlild dfian. Thomas Jefferson -A. Printed Afofl Published by h. webb Volume VII. BL.OOMSBURG4 COlilTMBIA COUNTY PA SATURDAY, JUNE 17, 1843. Xumhar 8. 3 OFFICE -OF TJIE DEMOCRAT Opposite St. Paul's Church, Main-sT TEE.MS : The COL UMDIA DEMOCRAT will be published every Saturday morning, at TWO DOLLARS per annum payable half yearly in advance, or Two Dollars Fifty Cents, if not paid within the year. No subscription will be taken for a shorter period than aix 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 Twenty-five cents for every subse. quent. nserlion. VCPA. liberal discount made to those who advertise by the year. LETTERS addressed on business) must be post paid. THOMAS JEFFERSON. His agency in bringing about (he Revo lution! and in guiding it, and in shaping, our free institutions, which have so .blessed our country and benefitted the world, may be learned from this brief synopsis of his views and asts. Let them speak fur themselves, and let him be judged by his works. He was 32 years old and a member of the Legislsturc, when in 17,74 the news of the Boston Fort Dili reached Virginia. In the evening, he and a. few kindred spirits met in the Council chamber (o consult on the proper course to be taken. Then and Uiere it was agreed to recommend a day of fasting an-i ptayer thloughout the colony. The Legislature approved of the proposal, and he prepared the proclamation. The day was the first of June; then the Port Bill took effect. Soon after, he wrote the .ty - ' - - - iiVrpws;' " deputies to meet in Congress. J he first Congress met in Philadelphia, Sept. 5th .1774. During 1775, he was member of Congress, acting on the maxim, 'the Goil who gave us 'ife, gave us liberty too." June 28th 1770. the youngest member of Congress, ho as chairman reported the Declaration of Independence, which had been written by him at the unanimous re quest cf the committee. The Declaration was adopted, July the 4th; the debate was warm, and while going on, Doctor Franklin told Mr. Jefferson the famous story of 'John Thompson, the hatter.' July 4, '70 he was appointed on a committee to devise' suilabtej'coat of arms' for the U. States. The declaration of independence having gone forth, and Washington being at the head of the army, and fighting the battle nunfullv, Mr. Jefferson concluded to retire from Congress. Still he was reelecledjbut on the 2d of September he resigned On the last day of September,Congress appoin. ted him one of the commissioners to nego tiate a treaty wi'h Franco. But he declined tho appointment. He. thought that the great moral revolution just begun, would be more aided by him in the legislature of Virginia, than jn any other station. He was elected fend took his seat in the legislature in Octo ber. He wished to .have his state walk in the right path in passing from her monarch al to her republican condition; and ho thought it all important to the great cause cf liberty, to have a state government which should be a pattern for all the states which would compose this great confederacy. j While a member of the legislature from '76 to '70, he turned his great mind to tho ac complishment of the following objects; to reform the Judiciary system; to repeal the law of Entails tyvhich destroyed aristocracy to abrogate the right of primogeniture: and thus preparo the way for an equal division of inheritances among all the children and other representatives in equal degrees; the assertion of the right of expatriattonjlhe es tablishment of -religious freedom upon the broadest foundation; the emancipation of slaves born after a certain period the aboli tion of capital punishment in all cases ex cept for treason and murder; the ettablish ment of a systematic plan of general educa tion reaching all cUsoes of citizens, and adapted to every grade of capacity. 4 Most of these objects were accomplished! and other kindred ones of great importance. June '79, he was elected Governor of Vir ginia. His first act was to amefiorcte the sufferings of American prisoners, who had been taken by the British. On the right of suffrage his maxim was, to allow those to vole who pay or fight for the support of government. In '81, lie was appointed minister pleni potentiary (with others,) to negotiate a peace; but he declined. In '83 was again elected to Congress. In December, Wash ington delivered up his commission to Congress: and Mr, J. prepared the noble reply to Gen. W. In '84 he reported to Congress the money system consisting of the dollar unit. This year he was appointed minister plenipoten tiary to negotiate treaties of commerce with foreign nations. In '85 he was appointed embassador to France, and remained there four years. In '89 he was appointed Secretary of State by President Washington. Soon af- ler lie mado his famous reports on coins weights and measures. While he was Secretary of State, Gen. Hamilton was Secretary of tho Treasury, and tlcn it was that the questions sprung up, nut of which grew the two parties the Republican and Federal which have substantially ronlin, ucd to the present day. Tho former parly; by the same name, the latterly by various; names but always the same ends and aims in view. In '94 he was chosen President of the American Philosophical Society. In '97 he was elected Vice Picsidenlof the U. Stales; In 1801 he was chosen President of the II.Ii.J u r .1.. .u:... sixth ballot, and on tho fifth-flay oi toting: the federalists until then voted for Aaron Burr. President Jefferson soon put the ship of state on the republican tack, by re pealing the internal taxes reducing the ar my and navy discharging useless officers allowing the sedition laws to die pur chasing Louisiana, and thus doubling our territory treating our 'red brethern' hu manely keeping slates' rights in full vigor and by aiming at peace, commerce, and honest friendship with all nations, and en tangling alliances with none. In 1805 he wsp re-elected Piesident. In 1809 he retired to private life, 'with hands as clean as they were empty.' Among his favorite maxims were equal and exact justice to men of all persuasions. There is an eternal connexion between lib erty and knowledge. Improvement is the moral condition of man. Do right, and if approbation is denied in the beginning, it will eventually follow in the end." In his retirement, he continued to act on the great and equitable principles which had governed him through life. July 4th, i82G,ho died. His last words were 'I have done for my country and for mankind all I could, and I resign my soul to my God, and my daughter to my coun try." His own epitaph. (Here lies Thomas jErnmsoN. Author of the Declaration of Independ ence of tho statues of Virginia for religious freedom, and father of the University of Virginia." Xrnlr nf thf Preen )r. IT. called at the Times office, to inquire the price ui iiiariui wo uvaui ui 4 iu,aiivo. 'Tan sliillmtTs: said a surlv clerk. Dr. H. o f - remonstrated, and said he had only paid .... 1 . . - 1 8even Tor the last, 'un, saia mo ciers 'that was a common death, but this is sin cerely regretted."' 'Well, my friend' said tho Doctor, laying down the ten shillings, 'vour executors will never be put to that that expense." London Paper, Boston, the celebrated racer, has been withdrawn from the turf,. The reason is said to Jjo because he did not keep vj with the Fashion, ' ' - RIGHT AND WRONG POSITION. J BY SUSS SEDGWICK. Gray, in the most familiar of his exqtii' site Stanzas in a country Churchyard, (Full many a gem,' &tc.) has expressed most poetically the wbbIs of a false posi tion in life. The fond partiality of every village generation finds in its own burying ground some'vlllage Hampden, 'some 'mule, inglorious Milton,' or 'Cromwell guiltless of his country's blood.' It is a signal gnod fortune, when an indivi dual has a right position in life. The office of President of the United States is one of the highest among men, and he who worthily fills it is the peer of kings and autocrats. Washington,, the elected head of the American! people, was truly king of kings. But if the nation put in thai high place a man only fitted to be a clever ward politician, or a skillful overseer of a plantation, he is a mark in the pillory, not the light set on a hill. We see every day men in a false posi tion; no places of ill, fitting as a garment a world too wide, or perchance loo narrow Men arc raised to offices of trust and hon or, lit at arc worthy neither ef the one nor the other; and stout frames, which nature has built of muscle and sinew able to sub due the wildest of our wild land, are in places behind counters, that woman of right 'and trace should fill. Do we not all know ladies in drawing rooms, cumbeiers of that ground, who would have figured as first late milliners? And mistresses of our city palaces, who would have been inestimable market women? And yellow, languid fide ladies, who, in their right vocation of chamber maids, would have been brisk' and blooming? And do we not know those in their right position would biing with them the graces so much wanted .to give a zest to men Wef J here are men born to the in heritance and minislraiion' of a princely fortune, who are only fit to. keep a livery stable, or drive four in hand; a.id there are spiritual teachers, whose wh ole lives should be passed in the humblest class of learners. Bachelors there are, who would have been pattern husbands and idolized fathers; and husbands and fathers, who should have been roaming and growing alone through life.- It is this prevailing disorder and unfitness, that makes It is so peculiarly delighlfull to see a friend in the right position that gives to fitness the effect of harmony. ECCENTRICITIES OFA MADMAN. Mr. 7-7-, a lawyer in Vermont, doing a good business, at once became ineane,and took it into his head to abandon the prac tice of law, and engage in baskets making. Ho was at first an awkward hand at his employment, but, by dint of perseverance, he soon became very akilful, and could weave a basket as well as he had formely woven an argument at the bar. He follow. ed this business about six months, when, taking a new notion into his head, he aban doned it for that of chair bottoming. The materials used in this occupation was bark, which ho stripped fiom the trees in summer, when it peels most easily. Hav. ing come home one day coveted from head to foot with mud, he was asked where he had been, that he had got so thorougly bedaubed. He answered; that he had been in a neighboring swamp after elm balk, of which he exhibited a strip about forty fret long. Do you reirurk this?' said he triumph ant ly. 'Yes, but how does this accoun t for your being so mudy? It ins't usual to find mud on the top of a tree.' -.'No, but ynu may, sometimes find it at the bottom, though, I'll tell you how I found it. I cut the bark near the root of the tree, it then stripped it upwards.expec ting it would come to an end and break off, and rank itself out after a while.But it hung on like a suit in chancery and I stript, until it tun up forty feet, and strong as ever. Thinks I to myself, there's no use in pursuing the thing any farther, anil so I'll enter a nolle prosequi. But not to lose the benefit of what I had done that wa. the point (0 be decided. I wished at least tn save ensts but pshaw 1 lorgot 1 m not a lawyer now. Well, as I was saying, I looked at the subject to see how I could secure the bark. It was too strong for me to break off. At any rate, thought I, there's more than one way to skin ajcat(as a butch er would say. If I cannot break off this bark, I can climb up by it. No sooner said than done, t seized hold of the strip, and placing my feet against the trunk, of the tree, ran up hand over hand. By this method of climbing, you will perceive my back must have been downward ; and and nearly in a horizontal position my feet being braced against the tree, and my head standing from it an angle of nearly ninety degrees. Having arrived at the proper height, I was then in a quandary, how to get my knife out of my pocket,and how to get it open when it was out. If I let go with one hand, I was fearful the oth er would not hold me. However.savrf I, its neck or nothing. I ll try the experiment at any rate so I gripped powerfully with my left hand, and opening it with my teeth whipped off the batk as clean as the law would dock an entail. And what do you think was the result?' 'Why, you came flat on your back of course?' 'Right, gentleman of the jury a very correct verdict indeed. No man came down flatter on his back than I & never was one so completely bedaubed with filth and mud. But thanks to the yielding nature of the soil, I saved my bones, and only brought away the mischief on my coat. I gained my cause too which is more than, I can l'he company, laughed heartily a the lawyer's account of his exploit while the latter hanging his coat up in the sun, said, that tho mud, like the old woman's grease, would rub off when it was dry. He contined a while longer to follow his occupation of chair bottoming, when sud denly becoming sine again, he resumed the practice of the law, and has, ever since, preferred laying his opponents on their backs in a legal way, to being laid on his own in so ludicrous a manner as that above related. N, Transcript. SSH5SWSE 5ES HOOSIER ELOQUENCE. The following is a speech, verbatim, as delivered in the legislature of one of the western states. The question was, the chartering of a bank. .In the debate, the speaker had been wrapped over the nuckles by a very small man pretty severely. But here's the speech : Mr. Prcsidant.I had no idea that I should be compelled to say another word upon this here question. But since the mountain's torrents have been let loose upon my devo ted head since the slucegates of calumny have been opened, and the slandoiers tongue have lacerated my fair fame, I must 'cast back the billows mountain high,' as the poet says. Sir if a man do not 'stand up to the rack,' in his own defence, sir, I should like to know sir, who in the devil would do it? Sir, I'd rather fight my weight in alle gators than be caught back biting any man I'm in favor of gouging, and am willing to give a fellow a chance at my noso and ears, and he who can get tho first bite sir, let him take out a whole mouthful sir. But the back biter sir, is like a thief in ancient history, he seekest you in the dark sir he comes when you look not, he creepest in the grass like an Ingcn sir, and before you know anything sir, he has all under bolt, and ten to one if you ain't a gone coon sir. But sir, let me say, sir that I was brought up on the broad plat form of civil and reli gious principles principles as wide and enduring as the prairies of cur own land and sir, is it expected that I will be driven from this platform by a little would-be jackleg lawyer? a thing a possont could lash around this terreslial world with, his tail ! Sir I pity poor human nature, and am willing to take tho roan to ray bosom and feed him upon milk of human kindness I Let him sir, come lo my arms, and I will protect and, guard him ,as .tlje hBn her brood from the snares of the hawk or the owl. Sir, come to me, and when tho whirlwind of the angry world is dealing destruction all around when nature is convvlBed with unspeakable strife and luimoil when tho vengeful volcano of an outraged and hum hiiirued nonnle are dealing death and anni- --00-- I r-- - , , hilation to their enemies and those of theif , country. Yes sir; wh,ch all this comes, I say fly to my arms and you shall be saved from the 'wreck of matter, and the crash of worlds.' Sir, I'm no prophet.bnt I sin- t cerely hope the bill will pass. I have air, always been opposed lo that old gentleman j called monopoly, and 1 hope Dutuh Dick ,; will give him hell, if he dont completely, i annihdate him as soon as he enters this ' house; and if I don't I'll be.' and your ) hide mister speaker, won't hold shucks ! - , So sir, look out, you'll git my mortal all-fired spirit up, and then whoop yo'll J catch h 1 I'll tell you? Sir, the lamb laid , down with the lion, but you need not . think that I can bo caught in such compa ny human nater forbids it a duo regard for my standing in the, world ajsenso of my own importance and, above all, a duo i regard for the honor of my constituents, forbid I should lend my almighty power and influences in riveting upon them a curse. Forbid it! ye Gods! Sir, when I , look around and see all nature smiling ap- ' proval the genial sun imparting, with' ' lavishness, his lesplendid effulgence in j glotifying assent a miglity people shout ! ing in chorus,' go on faithful defender of j our civil and religious rights,' is it, sir, a time for me to stand back and speak r.ott fallt Sir, General Jackson is a great manj ,j he strangled the great monster of Phlladel- , pliia; he whipped the British at Orleans, '' and I 'follow his foot-steps,' and, I will throttle the young hyena youarp attempting- to raise within the borders of our land if I don't I'll be d ! Sir; 'cow's thar day.' and if you don't vote down this bill, j hury it in the tomb of oblivion, you'll catch J ' the d dst flogging you ever did! This is , a freo country sir, and the man that would betray her, is 'fit for slralagen and broilsf Cease, then, sir, tryinglo subvert the dear ly bought liberties of our happy home Wo cannot, sir, too dearly prize the boon. Will men sir, stand by with indifference, arms folded, and not make a struggle to avert (he threatened avalanche? Sir, I call upon you to step forward with (ho sword, and battle axe, and with heaits 'resolved, and hands propared, the blessing we enjoy, to guatd! On then to the rescue, sir, and let future generations g.ory in our wonder ful deeds! Where, sir, is the man so lost to a love of country, so craven to his duty, so ? ignoble, so pittiful and puppyish, as to flee jj, this land when danger approach? Sir, show '( me the man, and I'll make hiir bite the f earth! Sir, this vast fabric, this almighty 'I world, created by God;vvill totter and cium 'j ble to atoms,, sooner than the undying halo v of frame which encircles jour brows! Then ' sir by all that you hold dear, by all that is L in heaven, and by your hope of glotions ' immortality, I cor.jure you to vote down this bill. But, sir, if you won't tako my advice, but are determined lo rush on to'' destruction, I will have the consolation to ' know, that like the great Alexander, who conqured the world and sighed becamo there was no more to subjugate, I'll shed tear?! Sir I'm dono. And in conclusion,)1 I'd advico you all- .to sing 'O tako your time, Miss Lucy Long.1 j A young lawyer who. was pleading tho J cause oi an mum plamtill, took the child up in his arras, and presented it lo the jury suffused in tears. This had a great effeel, ' until the opposite lawyer asked what mado it cry. 'He pinched me,1 answered llmtj little innocent. The whole court was con- 1 vulsed with laightcr. Aboul tight. Tho weather.- t 1 8