J r-gs.'i.ww,;,i.ji i A II "WE GO WHERE DEMOCRATIC PRINCIPLES POINT THE "WAY ; WHEN THEY CEASE TO LEAD, 7E CEASE TO FOLLOW.' VOLUME VIII. EBENSBURIJ, THURSDAY, JULY 1, 1852. NEI1BER37. 4 Win II I IE I II I IE I ' ft I III III II ui X LI IE I T W 11 II S. The "MOUXTAIX SEXT1XEV is publish ed every Thursday morning, at One Dollar and fif:v Cent per annum, if paid in advance or vi'thin ree months ; after three months Two Dolluri will be charged. 'o subscription will be taken for a shorter period than six months; and no paper will be !iicontinued until all arrearages are paid. A failure tJ notify a uiscontir.unnc at the expira tion of the term subscribed for, will be consid ered as a new engagement. ADVERTISEMEXTS will be inserted at the following rates: 50 cents per square for .... ci ;..arfinn- 7f rr-iits for two insertions: $1 for three insertions ; and 25 cents per square ,-or c verv subsequent insertion. A liberal reduc tion nia'le to those who advertise by the year. All advertisements handed in must have the prc:..r number of insertions marked thereon, or ihev will be published until forbidden, and charged in accordance with the above terms. gci All letters and communications to insure attention must be pott paid. A. J. R1IEY. From the Westchester Republican. A CAMPAIGX SOXG. DT 0. W. I'lARCE, 9Q. AirTht Old Granite State. Our banner now is streaming, And on its folds is gleaming, A name with honor beaming, From the old Granite State ; That name shall be our rally, The fort from which we sally, And we'll not forget the tally. When November comes around. Come, round our standard gather. It shall flout in cv'ry weather, And we'll shout aloud together, For the old Granite State'; Her son shall be the story, And ws'll all protect her glory, As we join the peaceful foray, With our leader in the van. We have act the ball in motion. And we'll make a great commotion, With this latest "Yankee notion" From the old Granite State ; Oh! the Democratic party, Is very hale and hearty, Ig very h.de and hearty la ev'ry sister State. We are ready for the battle. And will it" with a rattle. For we've got the purest mettle, From the old Granite State ; You niay see the fire already, Is burning bright and steady, And the boys are growing heady, As they wheel into the ranks. The Baltimore Convention. Just stopped and said, "attention," While it made a modest mention Of the old Granite State ; In a momtnt there was roaring, The name of Tierce was soaring, And a peal of joy was jiouring. Like a wave around the Hall. We are all for the Union, For tho old happy Union, That has long in blest communion. Held the noble band of States; And we'll hold together ever, And not a link shall sever, But we'll stronger make the tether. That binds us all in one. We must not forget another, A true and faithful brother, And he claims as his mother, Tho Alabama State; He has stood upon the tower, A sentinel of power, Through many a trying hour, In the Democratic ranks. Bo wo'll pnt them both together, And they'll s!im the hill and heather, Like a bird upon the feather, Through the whole United States; Our watchword now is ringing, For Tierce and King we're singing, And around them we are flinging, The mantle of the strong. Then peal aloud the cheering? There is victory appearing, la him who had his rearing, In the old Granite State ; Ch ! we ll shout like creation, '' hen we put him in his station, i:;e ruler of the nation From a Yankee Doodle State ! I"1" .Couldn't help laughing the other day, at an ?.- -dote of a man accustomed to make long pr . -r-t frho had over persuaded a guest great ly '- :ii5t his inclination to stay to breakfast. Hf i - ;-ed and prayed, till his impatient guest i -o think of edging away quietly, and a - off but in attempting it he waked up 1 man's son, who was asleep in bis chair, soon will your father be through?" w! . r ri l the guest. ' ? he got to the Jews yet?" asked the boy "-o." said the other. ":, then he ain't half through," whispered " '"'J and composed himself again to his nap, rcupcu the guest bolted at once. 'flam, who do you Tote for?" "i -to for de beepleB, I do." " ' t:l, but what candidate ?' "Cor President." "v h :t President?" "i'.:rn what gits elected mit de ballot-box, dis Jr l.n ein fortnight!" & There is a sign post on the road to Lake :ch bears the following inscription : 'V.hor. this post is six feet under water, this passable." Johu Vail Bartn lu tlie Trace. We are glad io see Jons Van Bent back again in the traces of the national democratic party. The following is a report of his speech at the Tammany Hall meeting in New York, in which he promises to put his shoulder to the wheel for Pieiick and King. John is undoubt edly one of the most talented young men of the nation and can do much good. We welcome him back to his "first love :" The Chairman then introduced to the meet ing Mr. John Van Buren. The enthusiasm of the meeting at this point became more intense than ever, and they shouted, cheered and clap ped, with most deafening industry. At length, Mr. Van BritEN was allowed to speak. He said : Fellow Citizens, that I have not had the pleasure of raising my voice during my past life in Tammany Hall, was caused by circum stances which prevented my doings so until I came to man's estate ; and in the later years of my life circumstances arose which would have made it disagreeablcfor me to come here. He had however, the honor of receiving an invita tion to speak here to-night, and he took the op portunity of congratulating them that a victory had been now achieved of the great principles of democracy over private interests ; and he congratulated them also that he had now the opportunity of addressing them in Tammany Hall. He had never troubled the people by so licitation for power or for place, and if God granted him strength and sense, lie never should. He knew Franklin Pierce from his boyhood, to be an upright, bold, unflinching democrat, and, above all, he knew him to be what was above all praise an honest man. (Great applause.) He knew him to be a man qualified to discharge the duties of the Presidency, to which lie would be called. He would support him candidly and j zealously. He bore testimony also to the char- j acter of Wm. R. King, the candidate for the Vice Presidency, and he (Mr. Van Buren)-was prepared to stand on the platform laid down at Baltimore. (Great cheering.) New York would stand on that platform, and he would not stop to inquire under what vote, or under what in fluence it was adopted ; but he would say that he most unqualifiedly approved of that platform for this election (cheers,) and would faithfully and cordially stand upon it. He would now speak to them in respect to the difficulty subsis ting between them and him. He was prepared to stand with them on an adoption of all the laws of Congress, including even the Fugitive Slave law. lie was perfectly willing everybody should obey that law who would, and everybody sustain it who could. For the present, at all events, these laws were to stand and be unim paired, and he appealed to his Southern friends to adopt such a course. He asked them not to agitate the anti-slavery subject. He asked them not to denouce those who have peculiar views on that subject, and he asked them to stay this discussion on the floor of Congress. Allow me to say, gentlemen, that the reason why I pe culiarly rejoice in this nomination Ms, that no section of the party has been defeated by it no section of the party has triumphed by it. It was a free, universal, spontaneous suggestion, adopted by the democratic party, to which no individual sect, locality or creed, could lay any peculiar claim. What, then, ought to be the consequence with us of this nomination ? Why should it not be a cordial union in our ranks ? Ought it not be an entire oblivion of past differ ences ? Ought it not to be true that we should join together ? for my friend from Tennessee has not directly comprehended the division which heretofore existed between us, in respect to hun kers and barnburners. This is my feeling. We should act upon this principle and from this day we should remember no man except as a democrat or as a whig. (Applause.) Allow me to say to you there is one class of my fellow citizens to whom this nomination of Franklin Pierce addresses itself with peculiar force. They are the young men of the republican par ty of the United States. There is no party liv ing, and never was, except the democratic par ty, that stood in an emergency like that in which they now find themselves. The convention at Baltimore had passed over the great, distiguish ed, tried leaders of the party for the safety of the party and of the Union, and presented as their standard-bearer a man of forty-6ix years of age a youngman, new to the public sense, distinguished only for purity of heart, depth of patriotism and disinterestedness of purpose. This should give the young men new encourage ment. This should give them new life. When they found that the high offices of the country were open to men in the prime of life, in the vigor of manhood, and before they had wasted their energies in the struggle to procure position. It would be encouragement to them to find that the people voluntarily selected a modest, unas suming man, living in a distant State, to occu py the highest office in the government. United as we are on entering on the great struggle, we yet require all the prudence and caution of the whig party to carry it successfully. Allow me to tell you this federal party never surrenders power without a deadly struggle to maintain it. Having possession of the offices, having posses sion of the patronage of the public purse, and nsing it with uncrupulousness never equalled in the history of the world, I say to you here, they may appear to be divided, yet they are sure to maintain a great and severe struggle, and one in which the young men of this country shall be called upon, as they always have been, to the yeoman's service in the ranks. And it is for New York, the imperial State, as our neighbors call us, to come forward now as she did in 1800 now as she did in 1841, whea a distinguished Tennesean was a candidate for the Presidency. New York must come forward, and her giant arm, and throwing the sword into the scale, give to it an inclination to the democratic side. And if this is the duty of New York, ought not the democracy of the city, which has always been foremost in the contest were radical principles are involved who took the lead in favor of an independent treasury who took the lead in re lieving the country from the oppressive taxation of an unequal tariff who took the lead in re sisting the infraction of the constitution, fo the sake of providing for the enlargement of the canals ought not New York now ador t these State right doctrine presented, and make an ef fort worthy of her ancient fame ? Ought she not make an effort worthy of her past career, to throw a strength into the contest which will make this old hall resound, as in the days of Jackson and Polk, with the cheers of a victori ous democracy ? (Enthusiastic applause, du ring which the honorable gentleman sat down.) How th Tiukre enred the Dntchman'i Dog of ttealiag Sheep. Abner was a quiet, peaceable sort of a Yan kee, who lived on the same farm on which his father had lived before him, and was generally considered a pretty cute sort of a fellow. Now it so happened that one of Abner's neigh bors sold a farm to a tolerable green looking specimen of a Dutchman one of the real unin telligent sort. Von Mom Schlopsh had a dog accustomed to obtain his dinners from his neigh bor's sheepfold. W hen Abner discovered this propensity in the canine department of the Dutchman's family, he called on his new neighbor to enter acomplaint, 'which mission he accomplished in the beet na- tured manner in the world. "Waal, Von, your dog Blitzcu's been killing my sheep !"' "Ya, dat is bad bad be ish von goot tog. Ya, dat ish bad " "Sartin; it's bad, an' you'll have to stop him." 'Ya, dat ish all as goot ; but Ish weis nicht." "What's that you say ? He was nicked ? Waal, now, look here, old feller, nickin's no use. Crop him ; cut the tail off close chock up to his rump. That'll cure him." "Vat is dat ?' exclaimed the Dutchman while a faint ray of intelligence crept over his fea tures. "Ya dat is goot dat cure von sheep steal, eh ?" "Sartin it will ; he"ll never touch sheep-meat again in the world," said Abner, gravely. "Den come mit me ! He von mighty goot tog ; all the way from Yarmany. I not take von five dollar ; but come mit me and holt his tail, eh ? I'll crop him off." "Sartain ;" said Abner. "I'll hold his tail, if you want me tew ; but you must cut it up close." "Ya, dat ish right; Ich make him von goot tog. Here, Blitzen Blitzen, come right here, you von 6heep-6teal rashcull I chop your tail in von two pieces." The dog obeyed the summons ; and his mas ter tied his feet fore and aft, for fear of accident and placing the tail in the Yankee's hand, re quested him to lay it across a log. "Chock up," said Abner, as he drew the tail over the log. "Ya, dat is right. Now, you von tam tief sheep, I learns you petter luck," said Von Mom Schlopsh, as he raised the axe. It descended J and as it did so, Abner, with characteristic pres ence of mind, gave a sudden jerk, and brought Blitzcn's neck over the log, and the head rolled over the side. "Waal, I swow!" said Abner, with apparent astonishment, as he dropped the headless trunk of the dog ; "that was a leetle too close !" "Mine Cot !" exclaimed the Dutchman, "yow shvsl cut him ojj de wrong end." Tribute to Woman. There is something about woman that is curi ous, isn't there? This morning I swept the school house. I thought it was nicely done. I felt proud. Presently some girls came in ; and one, true to the instinctive sense of neatness characteristic of her sex, took the broom. She swept after me and, good gracious, what a change ! It seemed as if well I cant tell ; but when she had got done, I had a very poor opin ion of my house-keeping powers, I assure you. The stave-hearth, the wood by the stove, all, ev ery thing, put on that look which only woman can give. What in creation is it that makes them give such an air to things ? fi&A Quandary. To sit on a sofa between two pretty girls, one with black eyes, jet ring lets, and rosy cheeks, the other with soft blue eyes, sunny ringlets, and red cheeks and lips, and both laughing at you at the same time. We know of nothing more trying - to one, unless it be to have both arms in the dough, and a flea up the leg of our trowscrs. TI Female Aesasln. By P. K. Cambacere3, Arch-chance of Franca. At the close of the Directory, the keeper of a hotel garni, waited on the Minister of Police, in a state of great agitation and stated that one of his lodgers had been murdered on the preceed ing night. He 'ngaged his lodging about six in the evening, described himself as an inhabi tant of Melun, who had come to Paris, on busi ness. He went out, saying he was going to the Odcon, and would return after the performance. About midnight he returned, but not alone, he was accompanied by a young and beautiful fe male, dressed in male attire ; who he stated to be his wife, and '-bey were shown to the apart ment which had been repaired. In the morning the lady went out ; she appeared to be fearful that her husband should be disturbed ; and she desired that no one should enter the room until her return. Several hours eiapsed, and she did not make her appearance ; at mid-day surprise was man ifested at her absence, and the sorvant at the hotel knocked at tl e gentleman's door, but with out receiving any answer. It was discovered that the lady lock d the door, and carried the key away. The door was broken open, and the unfortunate man was found dead in his bed. A doctor was sent for, and he declared it to be his opinion that the min's death had been caused 1 by a blow of a hammer, adroitly inflicted on the temple. The fema'.e never again appeared ; she was sought for in vain. In about a montii after, a similar murder was committed. The victim was likewise a man from the country, and his death was produced in the manner described. The affair excited con siderable consternation in Paris. Within another fortnight a third crime of the samo kind was committed ; and in all these affairs, the myste rious female in man's attire was involved. It is scarcely credibly, but nevertheless true, that 18 or 20 of these murders were committed with impunity ! In every instance the little that was seen of the womanr. rendered it difficult for any one to "give a minute description of her person all the information that could be ob tained was that she was young, very pretty, lit tle and well formed. This description of course answered that of many women in Paris, besides the murderess. Meanwhile Napoleon arrived from Egypt, and possessed himself of the reigns of government. Being informed of the atrocities which had been committed in" the capital, he directed that active measures should be taken for the detection of the criminal. He spoke to Fouche on the subject. At this time, the Capital was filled with Fouche's spies. One of these spies, a fine looking young man, about 20, was accos ted in the street by a person whom he had sup posed to be a very handsome youth. He passed on ; but suddenly the thought struck him that the person who had spoken to him was a woman in disguise, and he immediately recollected the female assassin. "It is she !'' he exclaimed ; "I have discover ed her, and my fortune is made !" He turned back and entered into conversation with her. She at first denied her disguise, but finally acknowledged it, and the young man pre vailed on the nymph to accompany him home, in the character of a young relation from the country. "Where do you live !" she enquired. He named a hotel in which one of the myste rious murders had been committed. "Oh, no, I cannot go." " "Why ?" "Because I am known there." These words confirmed tho suspicions of the police agent. He alluded to his property ; and mention 200 louis which his uncle had given him, of which he said he had spent tbe 20th part, adding : "Well, then, if you will not go to my lodgings where else shall we go ?" The female mentioned a hotel ; to which they repaired. The young man was about to leave the room to order supper, when the woman cal led him back. "Will it be safe," said she, "to leave yourmo ney at night at your lodgings ? Is it not likely you may be robbed. Suppose you go and bring it here." "Ah," thought the young man, "the veil is now raised," and then, without the least appear ance of suspicion, he thanked her for her prudent hint, and went, away, under pretext of going to fetch the money. He repaired to the office of the Police Minister, and gave information of the discovery he had made. Furnished with tbe sum of 180 louis, he returned to where he had left the woman. He was accompanied by several agents of the police, who stationed themselves at the door of the apartment. The murderess and her pretended lover sat down to supper. She requested him to hand her handkerchief, which she had left on a con sole behind her chair. He rose to get it, and during the instant his back was turned, she poured a powerful narcotic into his glass. He did not perceive this, and drank off his glass of wine hastily ; but he had no sooner swallowee it, than he exclaimed, "What wretched wine." The lady made the same complaint. A sec ond glass was poured out pronounced hotter. Meanwhile, the young man felt his head be comng confused, and his lips growing stiff. W ith well acted concern the woman rose, and threw her arms around his neck, apparently with the intention of supporting his drooping head. At this nloment he mechanically raised his hand and felt the hammer in the side pocket of the coat worn by the female, ne felt conscious of the danger of his situation ; he attempted to raise and leave the room, but his strength failed him. He tried to speak but his tongue was paralysed. By one desperate effort he made one faint outcry,- and then fell on the floor in a state of utter insensibility. The woman drew the little hammer from her pocket, and laid it on the floor. She the search ed her victim, took his purse and deposited it in the pocket of the waistcoat she wore. She pla ced his head in the requisite position to receive the deadly blow, and she raised her right arm for the purpose of inflicting it, when the fatal hammer was suddenly wrested from her grasp. The police agents opportuuety entered the room at that moment. On the first examination she gave the follow ing romantic account of herself. She was of respectable family, and of irreproachable con duct, but having bestowed her affections on a young man who had treacherously forsaken her, she had from that moment vowed implacable hatred to all the male sex ; and the murders she had committed were actuated by no other motive than vengeance for the injury inflicted on her feeling. An effort was made, to screen the wretched victim from ths punishment of the law. But when asked why she committed robbery as well as murder, she could give no satisfactory reply. A pardon was therefore refused. This eertain. ly is one of the strangest cases on record. An Anecdote. The inhabitants of a small town in Ohio were recently in a state of great excitement by the announcement that Kossuth would pass through their village at a certain hour. Accordingly ev ery person that could walk, man, woman, and child, was at the depot at the expected moment, prepared to give a warm welcome to the nation's guest. It so happened that Kossuth did not ar rive in that train of cars, but a returned Califor nian was there, who prided himself on a mngni ficent moustache and heavy growth of black whiskers, and sported a Kossuth hat and plumes. Upon seeing the parade, he stepped forth on the platform, to the great amusement of his fellow passengers, and was received with three times three cheers. He raised his hat and plumes, and bowing gracefully to the assembled compa ny, remarked, that owing to his past labor he was in delicate health, and should not be able to address them at any length, but thanked them most sincerely for their sympathy with down trodden Hungary, and amid deafening hurrahs returned to his seat in the cars. The conductor gave the signal, the train moved on, and was soon out of hearing. The inhabitants of that village will undoubtedly go to their graves in the firm conviction of having seen and listened to Hungary's great patriot. Matrimonial. Eme'y M. Bonnet, whose worser half posted her in the newspapers and then ran away with another woman, contrary to the statute in such case made and provided, comes out in the Woon socket Patriot after this wise: "As no one would have trusted him for as much as a peck of meal, I therefore forbid any person or persons trusting him on my account, as I shall pay no debts of his contracting after this date. I have worked to support him in gambling and laziness as long as I mean to, though should he die soon, I will pay his funeral expenses with pleasure." What la lie Reserved for. There is a lad of only twelve years, W. II. Waddell, living at Pocahontas, Ark., who, in the spring of 18G0, was stabbed, the wound thought to be mortal ; the same fall, was knocked sense less and cold, lightning; in the fall of 1851, was run over by four mules and a wagon ; last win ter, fell from the third-story window, lighting upon a pile of stones ; about six weeks since was shot, three balls entering bis body. The hero of all these ugly accidents is still alive and heal thy, being reserved, doubtless, for some other kind of shuffling off this mortal coil. Jjgj" Of all the melancholy sights, a bachc por's home is the most so. A house without a woman, is like a world without a sky, or a sky without a star dark, desolate and dreary. With the exception of the lady who "milked the cow with tlie crumpled horns," we know of no thing more forlorn and melancholy. j&SyAn Irishman, being in a church where the collection apparatus resembled electiou box es, on its being handed to him whispered in the carrier's ear that he was not naturalised, and could not vote. E3"Why is General Scott like a piece of iron in the hands of a blacksmith ? Because he is bound to be beaten. A Bloomer lna Ilage. Harriet Pomeroy gives the editor of the Ply Mouth Banner a few digs in the bread basket for his impertinence. Give it to him, Harriet, until he pants i " .-autifully as you do. Hear her : "I have, sir, with others, stepped beyond the bounds and dominion of fashion that remorse less tyrant who rules more subjects than any ten of Earth's mightiest Kings and Oh ! what a crime it is, in the eyes of some superlative modest folks ! Well, sir, ia there really any thing immodest in a . pair of panU and a short dress? If there is, then your sex must be im modest beyond degree. The truth is, the im modesty is all in the imagination, and not in the dress. When I hear a man or woman, matinn- , w gratuitous remarks," I mark him or her. as the case may be, as possessing a corrupt mind, and an impure imagination. We have adopted the "Bloomer" because we do not like to carry from morning till night, suspended from our waist, from two to four pounds of cotton, and half bolt of calico, which we have to lift at every step we tase it is a burden too grievous to be borne. '. If as you say, "the long dress and four pound petticoat is productive of much sickness and death, why don't you come out and be our champion, and advocate the universal adoption of the "bloomer Costume?" Ilemember "con sistency is a jewel !"' You think it "dispenses with rather too much clothing in cold weather," this only proves that you gentlemen know noth ing about the matter. In cold wet weather. I wear under my pants, two pair of drawers, a cotton and flannel pair, w hich makes me more comfortable than any long dress open at the bottom possibly could. You think also that "the fashion might be changed by degrees, with out causing any "gratuous remarks." Permit me to say sir, we think you are at least twenty years behind the times ; it has been demonstra ted long ago, that to cut a dog's tail off inch by inch, hurts worse than to cut it off all at once. Yours for the Bloomers."' HARRIET POMEROY. Iife of an Editor. The editor of a paper published at Canton Ohio, gives the following description of his part ner : "Mr. Pike and I published a newspaper in 1837, among the Miami Indians in the State of Indiana. It was a great partnership, that We had two advance, paying subscribers, on who liquidated his subscription with beans, the other with saw logs. Godfrey, the chief, took five papers, and could not read a word. Our pa per was called 'Peru Forester,' and being prin ted in the woods, that title was appropriate. The town of Teru had a number of magnificent names for its streets, such as Pearl, Broadway, &c, which streets exhibited the animating and bustling spectacle of stumps and trees as high ns a man's head. The stirring events which transpired in that city imperiously demanded a couple of chroniclers, and Pike and I were at hand to discharge this m important function. Pike wrote poetry, and I dipped considerably into politics, and discussed in a very learned manner every question of interest to the few settlers and Indians. Besides being an editor and a printer, he kept the Broadway Hotel was postmaster, justice of the peace, land agent, pettifogger, canal contractor, 'nerchaat, and a day-laborer, overseer of the poor, painter, had been a schoolmaster, was twice a widower, was raised a Quaker and the last time I saw him hs was a preacher had married a third wife, and was an auctioner, and what more I know not." Great exhibition lit Ireland. A great industrial exhibition is to "come oT in cork some time during the summer. The building will occupy a site of five acres in ex tent, and the whole will be surrounded by a wall 20 feet high. The "Wexford Chronicle says : "The Corn Exchange will be, as it were, the basis of the building owing to the capacious gal leries and halls it contains ; and in addition to this, there are to be other large galleries abut ting from the main edifice. An immense num ber of applications are being made from every part of Ireland for pace to exhibit. The exhi bit ion will be confined exclusively to Irish pro ductions. Maclise, it is said, has promised to paint an original picture for the exhibition. M. Dow ell will exhibit his 'Eve,' and also an or iginal group: Foley, two original groups. Contributions in art arc also expected from nu merous other distinguished Irishmen resident in England. Mr. C. T. Rocney, the great railway diplomatist, is making arrangements with the different railway companies in England and Ire land, by which a scale of fares will be laid down to enable the humblest mechanic from remote parts of the country to visit Cork during the ex hibition. Committees have been appointed, both for town and country, to communicate with the exhibitors, and to enlist co-operation. The gross amount collected for the cxldbition exceeds 1-5,000. An Irishman who had commenced building a stone wall round his lot, of rather uncommon dimensions, viz : four feet high and six feer thick, was asked the object by a friend "to save repairs my honey. Don't ycu see that if it should ever fall down, t'will be higher than it , is now." s