it WE GO WHERE DEMOCRATIC PRINCIPLES POINT THE WAY; WHEK THEV CEASE TO LEAD, WE CEASE TO FOLLOW. V 'BY JOHN G. GIVEN. EBENSBURG, THURSDAY, MAY 23, 1850. VOL. G. NO. 33. r " rj fly CXX80S LL AN I ; O Xi L THE PAIR OF GLOVES. A RUSSIAN ROMANCE. The crying iniquities of the lettres de ctchct, the abuse of which, it is now needless to dwell on were not peculiar to France, but may be traced throughout Eu rope, disguised under various forms and names. In England, the Bastile was the Tower of London; in Prussia the fortress of Spandau: in Spain the" castle of Pam peluna; in Russia, it was represented by Siberia. The following well authenticated Tact, the last scenes of which have been under our very eves, may be deemed interesting-, as a matter of comparison. . No sight is more striking than a review of St. Petersburg, under the balconies of the mahle palace or in the Place Bof the Admiralty. The bronzed faces of the sol diers, the unmoved sternness of their as peer, the automaton like precision of their evolutions, the strange mixture of costumes ts varied as the different races that wear themhere the Tcherkesses, in oriental uniform there the royal guardsman, with their silver breast-plates, in the midst of which shines a golden sun then the drag oons, in black hamlets, and the Don Cos sacks, with their long lances; and the most remarkable of all the imposing figure of the Emperor towering above the rest, and surrounded by his staff, consisting of the most high-born nobles, and the finest men of the Empire all combined to form an unparalleled scpne. baffling all description and the characteristics of which are as dif ficult for the imagination to picture to itself as for the pen the describe. The military ceremony is held in St. Petersburg every year, on Easter Sundav It took place as usual in 1848. and would have presented no peculiar feature to spec ulate upon had not the Emperor, during the whole time of parade, appeared in company with a little old man. dressed in a white coat tnrned up with red. yellow breeches, white buckles in his shoes, three eornered hat, and white aigre'.-who follow ed him about with a look of bewilderment mixed with sadness. Thesiht of a costume belonging to the time of Catherine II of course excited the greitest surprise, and gave rise to a thou ssnd conjectures. the truth, however, was soon mide known; and we will re peat, in the fewest possible words, the mournful tale of the old man with the white plume, as we heard it related on the spot. Potemkin was at once the most singular and the most lucky man of the age he lived in. Whenan ensign in the bodyguard he had the good fortune to be noticed by the j Empress, in whose service he drew his ! sword, in the time of the revolution that occasioned the death of Peterlll. He was handsome, enterprising and ambtious; he became her favorite, and completely sub jugated the strong minded woimn, whom the OrlofTs had frightened, but had vainly endeavered to subdue. j Potemkin never loved Cathetine II nor was he long beloved of her. Being drawn together rather by the sympathy of natural . genius than by any tender feelings, they ! were reciprocally unfaithful to each other. Potemkin, like the true spoiled child of fortune, tired of his easy conquests over ; the fragile dames at court had grown skep tic in matters of love, and only believed li gullin:rv. A polish lady under. ook his conversion. The Princess Zoumowski was pretty, graceful, capricious, a complete i coquette, full of wit and frivolity; aud was . in short, like Countess Veroeff d'Aselikeff of our times, the sovereign arbiter of fash on, and the divinity of Russian society. She inspired the favorite with a violent passion, to which she hersell appeared not wholly insensible. But, just at the very moment when Po temkin thought himself certain of his tri umph, the princess suddenly changed her mind, and became distant, reserved and cold. It was observed that this change had taken place ever since the fire at the principal theatre, where her life had been in danger had she not been rescued by the heroic efforts of a young Major, who, on hearing her screams had rushed into the bu ruing house, and thanks to good luck, and devoted courage had borne her from her box already encircled in flames. Potemkin, in despair of his non-success became desirous of ascertaining at least the cause of the rebuffs he had to bear: and from that day he Princess Zoumowski became the object of incessant, though cov ert, espoinage. Not the slightest clue, however could be found to the secret ol her coldness; and Potemkin half beginning to recover from his fears, attributed it to one of those caprices as frequent as they re transitory among women of her stamp when circumstance apparently insignifican: n nself, directed his suspicion in anothet garter. . On the 8th of March 1774, the Empress dressed ia the national costums of which die wore as much from coquetry as in compliance with the distaste manifested by the Russians for allfoieign inovations, and attended by tho Princess Zoumowski and Potemkin, had taken her place at one of the windows of the hermitage, under which the royal guard and and four regiments of Proobajuski were about to defile along the quay of the Court. When the second battalion of this fine regiment of infantry appeared in the sight on the bridge ot Troist, the princess leaned on the balcony, and her eyes seemed to be wandering in search of some one; then either designedly or by accident, she let fall one of her gloves. A young officer whose eyes had been fixed in the direction of the palace, saw the glove drop from the princess" hand aud without accelerating his pare, or brea king from the ranks, adroitly received it on the point of his sword, pressed it to his lips, stealthily hid it beneath the buttons of his uniform. The princess blushed, Potemkin leaned toward her. "That officer," said he, in hollow voice "has become enriched by one of your gloves. To whom pray do you destiue the other?" "To you Count, if you are gallant e nough to attach the least value to such a trifle," was the reply. "Give it me, then" So saying Potemkin retired. On the evening of the same day, a feld jager and a couple of Cossacks made their appearance in Galeruais, at Major Teheghelowski's The officer turned pale on beholding them, for such visits boded no good. Follow me!" said feldjager. "Whither?" "That's a secret." "Bv whose order?" "Look." "Will the journey be long?" "Perhaj s." "Allow me to take a bag of roubles and some papers." "Neiiher roubles nor papers nothing!' "Very well, sir, I will follow you," said the major, pale with emotion, "but permit me, at least, to give a last embrace to my mother, w ho is sleeping just by, in conscious security, and who will wake in tears and sorrow. For mercy s sake grant me but one single moment!" "I i is impossible! The orders are pos itive. Ciet in!" And the iron feldjager pointed to one of those little covered carts, called "telea gues," which stand very high from the ground, and are provided witii only one wooden seat. All resistance was vain, and would have been punished with the utmost severity. The major stepped into the tealeage in silence, and the horses; of the true Ukra nian breed light as the wind had pres ently borne them past vasili Ortroff, and left the watchiowers, the blue domes, and the golden spires of the citadel lar behind them. The snow was falling in heavy flakes, and drilling round the silent trav ellers. For a moment the major felt half tempted to sirangle his morose companion when he should happen to fall asleep; but the iron eye-lids of the feldjager were never once closed during the whole of the night. Thev now reached Pochezeroki. The major ventured to ask whether they had come to the end of their journey. "Not yet," replied the feldjager. They changed horses and went on. Nystarita and Pounenskoe were left be hind, as at each place the major, whose anxietv waxed more and more intense in proportion to the distance, questioned his conductor laconically, and still receiv ed,' as his only answer, that terrible reply, "Not yet." On crossing the forest of Vologsa, the tealeague was surrounded by a band of; famished wolves, that escorted it during forty worsts, but without exciting the : slightest notice on the part of the feldjager J such episodes being of fiequent occur-; rence in journeys of this kind, where the j traveller has an even cliance ot neing de voured by wild beasts, frozen alive, or hitriofl in ; tfimh nf snn- that closes lor- ever above its victims. Nothing can be I more dreary than the inderminable suc cession of white plains, the desolate uni formity of which is only broken, at rare intervals, by an Asiatic looking monaste ry, a hut made of bomboes twisted togeth er, or a gigantic rock, hollowed out by the hand of time. Seven days were spent in unspeakable suffering, the major was half dead with exhaustion, when the teleague halted on the border of an arid steppe, where, here and there, were sprinkled about twenty wretched huts, more fit to serve as dens for wild beasts than as human habitations. "This is your destination," said the feldjager. The Major's face became livid. "No, it is not possible!" cried he, con vulsively wringing the hand of his sinister companion, "you cannot leave me here, alone, in this accursed spot! What have I done? hat is my crime? Why was I carried off in this mysterious fashion? I am the victim of some inconceivable er ror? Oli! for pity's sake take me back to St. Petersburg, and all I possess, and all that my family possesses, shall be yours." 'I cannot," answered the feldjager. And then, drawing from the pocket in his cloak, a s m.a 1 1 pamol,Jia'.. presented it to Major Tcheghelowski, adding: "There is what Gen. Potemkin bade me give you when we parted." It was the other irlove of the Princess Zouwouski. The Major started; his deep emotion caused the blood to rush to his face; and , instantaneously calculating the distance of a fond recollection awakened the courage ; objects, or he would dash himself to pie tist had almost failed him, under so try- j ces. But in what conformation of his ing a circumstance, he replied, "Very eyes does this consist? No one can an well, fir; tell Gen. Potemkin that I value j swer. A cloud of ten thousand gnats dan his present far more than I dread Siberia, ces up and down in the sun, the gnats be and that he has given happiness enough , ing so close together that you can scarce to support me during the period of my ! see the minutest interval between them, exile." I yet no one knocks another headlong upon The feldjager bowed, cracked his whip, the grass, or breaks a leg or a wing, long and off the vehicle flew: while the unfor- and deli cateasthey are. Suddenly amidst tunate exile watched its disappearance, ! your admiration of this matchless dance, a with much the same feelings as the ivan- peculiarly high shouldered vicious gnat derer, lost in a labyrinth of catacombs, ! with long pale, pendant nose, darts out of would witness his feeble lamp flickering, j the rising and falling cloud, and settling on and about to be extinguished, or perceive ! your cheek inserts a poisonous sting. the thread that was to guide him back to . What possessed this little wretch to do light and life, suddenly, snapped asunderv this? Did he smell your blood in the Seventy years passed by seventy years mazy dance? No one knows. A four were-dragged through amidst hardships, horse coach comes suddenly upon a flock dangers, and privations of every kind. of geese on a narrow road, and drives Yes, even in that iron clime, that most straight through the middle of them. A desolate latitude, years' flew rapidly over goose was never yet fairly run over, or a the exile's head for it is astonishing how duck. They are under the very wheels time seems abridge by the sameness of ; the life one leads. Chance at length caused .the unhappy victim to be discovered, in 1842, by an j officer under government, who was sent j does the lonely woodpecker, when he de on a mission to Tobolsk. Having learned j scends his tree and goes to drink, stop his story, he caused it to be immediately ! several limes on his way, listen and look reported to Gen. Tcherenlchow, who re- j around, before he takes his draught? No lated it forthwith to the Emperor. The injustice had been secret, the reparation was open and signal. The exile now a centenarian, was taken from the isba that he had built with his own hands in Sibe ria; he was brought to St. Petersburg, and the Emperor, in the presence of the twelve regiments assembled on the place of Admiralty, addressed him in the follow ing noble language: "Be assnred, sir, that had I sooner known of your misfortunes, they should long since have ceased. Re main in St. Petersburg, a pension of 4000 roubles is henceforth insured to you; it is Russia that gives it." Major Tchelowski has religiously pre served the uniform he wore in the eigh- teenth centurv. Notwithstanding his ad- ; vanced age, nearly a hundred and seven ! and always seeking the light of first prin years. he may be seen walking about, on . ciples. On this account, he was often re the Newtki Parade, with a figure still proached with an excessive fondness tor erect, and a mildly serene countenance, ' abstractions; but it will be hard to point looking with the greatest surprise, on the out an instance in which his practical sa changes that seventy years have e fleeted gacity or executive energy was ever at in society, and talking, with a degree of fault. He possessed an uncommon degree enthusiasm that the snows of age have not j vet frozen,' of Catherine 11., the Prince de Linge, Count Segur, and Alexis Orloff, . terests of his native South Carolina, he as if all these personages were still to be j took counsel with no one as to his meas founcl in the Halls of the Hermitage, or j ures for her welfare; and in his most ex in me giiruen 01 me j ouriue I aiaee. t On reaching the capital, his first care had been to write his will. It consisted of the following words: "I request, as a last favor, that I may he buried with the glove that will be found fastened to my neck by a black ribbon." Workinsmrn Should SUidv Polilirs. I respectfully console those whom, I addiess (the workingmen of Americ i,) 1 console you to labor for a clear understan - ding of the subjects which agitate the community to make them yotir study instead of wasting vour leisure in vague. passionate talk about them. The time thrown away by the mass of the people rn the rumors of the day, might, if better spent, give them a good acquaintance with the constitution laws, history and interests of their country, and thus establish them on those great principles by which partic ular measures are to be determined. In proportion as the people thus improve themselves, they will cease to he the tools of designing politicians. Their intelligence not their passions and jealousies, will be addresseu by those who seek their vo!es. They will exercise not a nominal hut a real influence in the government and des tinies of the country, and at the same time will forward their own growth in truth and virtue. Dr. Charming. Free Schools in Mississippi. The Legislature of Mississippi lias appropri ated 8200.0JJ for which the people are to be taxed, to be distributed among the several counties in proportion to the num ber of children, to establish a system of free schols. Steps are also being taken to procure an accurate return of the num ber of children in the States between the ages of six and. twenty years. Sf&se and Sromllon. The greyhound runs by eyesight only, and this we observe as a fact. The carrier-pigeon flies his two hundred ana fifty miles homewatd, by eyesight, viz: from point to point of objects which he has marked but this is only our conjecture. The fierce dragon-fly, with twelve thous and lenses in his eyes, darts from angle to angle with the rapidity of a flashing sword and as rapidly darts back not turning in the air, but a clash reversing the action of his four wings the only known creature that possesses this faculty. His sight, then both forwards and backwards, must bo proportionately rapid with his wings, and and hoofs, and yet, somehow, they Contrive to flap aud waddle safely off. Habitually stupid, heavy and indolent, they are, nev- ertheless, equal to any emergency". Why one knows. How is it ihatthe species of ant. which taken in battle by other ants to be made slaves, should be the black or negro ant? No one knows. The Poor Artist. Drnlh of Mr- Calhoun. From the Manchester (Eng.) Examiner. The Niagara brings tidings of the de- Q CO cease of Mr. Calhoun the distinguished Senator from South Caroliua, an event which it appears, had been expected for several weeks. Mr. Calhoun was one of the most re markable men whom his country has pro duced. His intellect was singularly clear analytical, consecutive in its operations, of mental independence. Devoted with j almost fanatical love, to the honor and in- j neiue suggestions, iciicu cAuiuaivci uit ' the resources of his own capacious and j robust intellect. His eloquence was hee from the faults that are often ascribed to ! the oratory of American statesmen. It . had no verbiage, no pretension, no glitter, no clap-trap, in its composition With such severe logical precision, such ab sence of superfluous ornament, such force and compression of language, such vehe- ; mence and majesty of intellectual move j ment. it would hardly be extravagant to characterize it as possessing something of the antique Demosthenic ff:andeur. The friends of slavery have lost in him their most powerful champion. Would that i his noble talents had been devoted to a worthier cause! With Weister. Clay, and Benton, Mr. Calhoun formed one of that illustrious group of statesmen who for nearly forty years have been conspicuous ly before the public eye, exerting a protn nent and commanding influence on the course of American politics. Ep-The N. O. Picayune says that Mrs. Partington, while visiting the Museum, on looking among the old revolutionary relics and Scottish claymores, asked the superin tendent if he had among his famous cutlery the "axe of the apostles." CFA gentleman looking at his watch, after midnight exclaimed: "It's to-morrow morning I must bid you good nighti" "So here I am, between two tailors," said a dandy at a public table, where a couple of young tailors were seated, who had just begun business for themselves. "True," was the reply, "we are only be ginners, and can afford to keep but one goose between us." Ceaxlas Up an Eiprrutoc. A brace f lovyers, anxious to secure each other's shadows ere the substances faded, stepped into a Daguerreotype es tablishment, recently, to sit for their pic ters. The lady gave precedence to her swain, who. she said, had got to be tuck fust, aud raal natral. lie brushed up his tow heac of hair, gave a twist or two to his neckerchief, asked his gal if his sheert collar stood about X, and planted himself in the operator's chair, where he soon as sumed the physiognomical characteristics of a poor mortal in a dentist's hands, and about to part with one of his eye teeth. 'Now, dew look purtyi begged the lady, casting at him one of her most languishing glances. The picture was taken and when produced, it reminded the girl, as she ex pressed, jist how Josh looked when he got over the measles! and as this was not ah era in her suitor's history, particularly worthy of their commemoration, she in sisted that 'he should stand it again. lie ohejed, and she attended him to the chair. Josh, said she, 'jist look like smilin, and then kinder don t. The poor fellow tried to follow the indefinite injunction. La, ! she cried, (you look all puckered up.' One direction followed another, but with as little success. At last, growing impatient. and becoming desperate, she resolved to j try an expedient, which she considered : infallible, and exclaimed I don t keer if j decomposed elements of last autumn are there is folks around. She enjoined the 'the aliment of our present spring. Econ operator to stand ready at his camera; she I omy, rigid economy, is one of the laws then sat in her feller's lap, and placing j of nature; and we shaM not realize "th her arms about his neck, managed to cast 1 good time comin g" until we have a care a shadow of flaxen ringlets as a screen j fu I and economical world. Let this spirit between the operator and her proceedings, j prevail, and mt only will Ibe master l Which, however, were betrayed by a sue- '. saved from loss, but, in many instances, cession of amorous sounds which revealed ! the servant will rescue himself frcra the her expedient. When this billing and union, cooing had lasted a few minutes, thecun- ' ning girl jumped from Josh's lap, a fid The Evansville (la.) Journal says, that clapping her hands, cried to the astounded there is a voung man named Masterson. ariist 'Now vou have got him! put htm 1 threw!' Dow Jr., Crrfd. Dow, Jr., the inimitable preacher of Short Patent Sermons, gives us the arti cles of his creed, and concludes with the remark: Poke over with the cane ot considera tion what I have emptied before; and if j you can find a single grain of wheat among the four pecks of chaff, I shall be highly gratified. The following are the grains of the gen uine article or we are no thrashers: "I believe that the most industrious are the most contented and happy. Idleness is an incubus upon the bosom of enjoy ment. 'It is the hardest work in the world to do nothing by the month and have nothing to do with it. I believe that kicking against custom, and spitting in the face of fashion is a fool ish and futile endeavor. Both may need correction but thev must and will have their wav. t believe that if the devil be the fath- er of lies, he has a plaguy large family to look after, and is rapidly on the in crease. I believe that girls are like kittens gently smooth the right Way, and they rub and purr most affectionately; but give them a contrary brush and their back is up in a most disdainful manner. They like to be kissed but sham delicacy about the operation. I believe that human flesh is hard to di gest. Jonah didn't sit easy in the whale's stomach. I believe that simple honesty, the naked truth, pure virtue, fc stiaight up and down way of dealing wi th the world have as mnch advantage Over vice, trick and strat agem, in the long run. as a good square trotting horse has over a pacing pony, or a racker thai goes his mile or two like the mischief, and is done for the rest of the journey. fcjCSome people have very inquiring minds, but none', we think, carry their cu riosity so far as a Yankee friend of ours, who rung the bell of a fashionable resi dence up town the other day, and when the servant girl made her appearance po litely inquired what the family intended to have for dinner. Knickerbocker. Law. A publication has been made, giving, as far as can be ascertained, the uame, residence, and post cfEce of every practising lawyer in the United States. The entire list shows that there are n;ie teen thousand Jive hundred. There are three things which cannot be made too short and they are visits, pie crusts, and communications' for papers. Editors need condensers as much as steamboats do. The editress of the Lancaster Literary Gazette says that she wonld as soon nestle her nose in a rat's nest of swingle tow, as allow a man with whiskers to kiss her. Economy is Due to Our Employer. "Waste not. want not," is a gotd old proverb -He that ix faithful iu little is faithful also in much." A person wbo takes no care cf the materials committed to fiis hands hy his master, will nerer duly husband his own jiroperty. Encon omv and wastfulness are hab'is that .will influence us in all things, both when are engaged about our owi gaged about our own substance or that of another. To waste anothers gorda is the same as to 10b him. The less in both cases ts equal, and the ptinciplea whence they spring very much al ke. The man who takes care of his employ er's goods is sure to look after his own. and thus is on the road to prosperity. . It would be difficult to calculate the im mense loss of property that every year occurs from carelessness and want of eco nomy. Some persons are worth nearly half their wages more than others, be cause they ner t injuro or waste anything The employer being wealthy, or the t clc abundant, is no excuse for carelessness. A loss is a loss and a robbery is a. robbery. whether taken from the heap of the mi aer or the smalier store of the ' indigent. Gather up the fragments, thai nothing e lost, is a divine command. Heaven allows nothing to be destroyed. There has not b?en a single drop f water wasted from the creation until now. The awai tiling his trial at Rockeport, in thai State, who is able to throw a stone, with almost the precision a man can send a t ul let fr"m a go;d rifle. He can go into tne woods, and kid as many squirrels with dornicks, as an experienced hunter can with his gun. A drunken man was pur suing a brother of his. with a knife in hit hand, when Masterson threw and struck the fellow on the b;ck of his head, killing him instantly. He says he intended la strike the arm of the drunken man. to knock the knife from his hand, but his own arm was caught, and the object frus trated. He can prova this, we under stand. fA Re volutin in the currency is go. inr on pn-dured by the discovery of the California Gold Mines. The Philadel phia North American says. "We have a great abundence ot gold dust, and but little silver. Formerly, the rverse W;is the case. Our stock of silver has fast di- , minished, and is still diminishing, and the cause is ensuy asceriameu. voia dust, which can be readily sold in this city at SIM per ounce, can be as readily bought at San Francisco at S15 50 per ounce with silver coin and lar;e amounts of silver con have been shipped to Cali fornia for that purpose. 1 he investment yields a profit of some twenty per cent, while returns are made in the brief space of ninety days. ftO'Ma. I think you'r foolish sitd & little bov as be sat "beside his youthful mother." Vhy so, my dear?' Why, for marrying pa, when -oa might have .nar ried me if you only had waited a few years. A puzzle. M father is my son, and I am my mother's mother My sister ia my daughter, and I am grandmother to my brother. "Jim, did you ever double the Cape of Good Hope?" "I expect I have. hen?" "Last night, when I put my arms arannd the cape that belongs to the dress of the young lady that I have good hopes of ma king Mrs. Dusenberry." OTA minister at church approached a little urchin about twelve years old, and laying his hand upon his shoulder, thus addressed him: "My son I believe the devil has hold of vou." "I believe he has too." wis the signifi cant reply of the urchin. The preacher vamosed. Jake your wife is not so pensive as she used to be. No, she has left that offend turned -expensive. BP" You are writing my bity on very rough paper, eaid a client to Jus attorney. "Never mind, replied the lawyer, "It has to be Jihd before it corns t Coart."