sjTp-'tT: 'ifMjW ' f ft? ft'' K - THE. BLESSINGS OF GOVERNMENT, T.ntR THE DEWS OF HEAVEN, SHOULD BE DISTRIBUTED ALIKE UPON THE HIGH AND THE LOW, THE RICH AND THE POOR. ' ;i ' ' ' .: EBENSBTIIiG, 'JUNE. 20,' 1855. VOL. 2. NO. 36. EW: SERIES.- THE DEMOCRAT & SENTINEL, is publish ' ed every Wednesday niorning, in Ebensburg, 'Cambria Co., Ta;, at $1 50 p?rannum,iF paid ' TM advasck, if not $2 will be charged,' ADVERTISEMENTS will be conspicuously m- .sorted at the following rates, J-, -1 square 3 insertions, . : , , ' . Every subsequent insertion, 1 square 3 months, . , , 1 . '. 6 " . " ".'. " 1 year, ." - iiz; $1 00 . 23 3 12 00 00 00 ' col'n l. 1 year, SO 00 15 00 5 00. Business Cards, ; Ccj-Twelve lines constitute a square. THE BATTLE OF BUMiCER HILL. : The sound of drum and trumpet, the clat ter of hoofs, the rattle of gun-carriages and all the other military din and bustle in the streets of Boston soon apprised the Ameri cans, on their, rudely fortified height, of an impending attack. They were ill-fitted to withstand it,- being jaded by the night's labor and want of sleep ; hungry and' thirsty, hav-' ing brought but scanty supplies, and oppres sed by the heat of the" weather. Prescott fcent repeated messages to Gen. Ward, asking reinforcements and provisions. Putnam, sec luded the . request in person, urging the ex igencies of the case. T v AVaru hesitated. lie feared to weaken his inain body at Cambridge, as his military stores were deposited there aud it might have to sustain the principal attack. At length, hav ing taken advice of the Council of Safety he issued orders to Colonels Stark and Head, then at Medford, to march to the relief of Prescott with their New Hampshire regiments. The order reached Medford about 11 o'clock. Ammunition was distributed in all haste two flints, a gill of powder, and fifteen balls to each man. The balls had to be suited to the different calibres of the guns ; the powder to be carried in powder-horns, or loose in the pockets for there were no catridges prepared. It was tho rude turn-out of yeomen soldiery destitute of regular accoutrements. In the meanwhile the Americans on Breed's Hill were sustaining the tire from the ships and from the battery on Copp's 11 ill, which epencd upon them about ten o'clock. -They returned an occasional shot from one corner -of the redjuht, without much harm to the en--einy, and continued strengthening their posi tion until about 11 o'clock, when they ceased to work, piled np their entrenching tools in the rear, and looked cut anxiously and impa tiently for the anticipated reinforcements aud supplies. - . - About this time. Gen. Putnam, who had been to headquarters, arrived at the redoubt j ' on horseback. Some words passed between biin and Prescott with regard to the entrench ing tools, which have been variously reported. The most probable version is that he urged to have them taken from their present place, where they might fall into the hands of the enemy, . and carried to Hunker's Ji 111, to be employed in throwing up a redoubt, which Avaa part of the original plan, and which would e very important should the troops be obliged i o retreat from 15 reod's Hill. To this Pres cott demurred that those employed to convey them, and who were already iadcsl with toil, might not return to his redoubt. A large 5art of the tools were ultimately carried to Junker's Hill and a breastwork commenced by order of Gen. Pateam The importance of such a work was afterwards made appa rent. About noon the Americans descried twenty-eight barges crossing from Boston jn paral lel lines. They contained a large detachment of grenadiers, rangers aud light infantry, ad mirably equipped, and commanded by Major General Howe. They made a splendid and formidable appearance with their soa4ft -uniforms, and the euu flashing upon muskets and bayonets and brass field-pieces. A heavy fire from the ships and batteries covered their tidrauce, but no attempt was made to oppose them, and they lauded about 1 o'clock at 3Ioul ton's Poiat, a little to the north of Breed's Hill. Here General Howe made a pause On reconnoitering the works from this point the Americans appeared to be much more strong ly, posted than he had imagined. He descried troops hastening to their assistance. These were the Kew HaiapsWre troops led on by Stark. - Howe immediately sent over to Gen. Gage for more forces and a supply of cannon balls, those brought by him being found through some egregious oversight too large for the ordnance. While awaiting -their ar rival, refreshments were served out to the troops,, with grog" by the bucket full ; and tantalising it was to the hungry and thirsty provincials to look down from their ramparts of earth and Bee their invaders seated in groups upon the grass eating and drinking, and pre paring themselves by a hearty meal for the coming encounter , . , , , The only consolation was to take advantage of the delay while the enemy were carousing, to strengthen their position. The breastwork on the eft of the position extended to what was,called the Slough but beyond this the ridge of the hill and tke slope towards Mystic river were undefended, leaving paJ by which the enemy might turn thl leftflank the position, and seize upon Bunker's Hill Putnam ordered his chosen offiecr Cant Knowlton, to cover this paan with the Qoa necticut troops under his eommand. A novel "kind of rampart, savoring of rural device, was suggested the rustic general. . , . About six hundred feet in the rear of the redoubt and about one hundred feet to the left of the breastwork was post-and-rail fence set in a low foot-wall of the " f UVUVUUC JUVStia river. 1 ha nncf. and taihi of another fence were hastily pulled up !H.a. few feet o behind this, and the in. haTf7otBpacf WM fiIIed UPM new mown protection t!ri proved an important seven bunjd S d "'ij0!' ; While Knowlton and his men were putting un this fence. Putnam proceeded with other of his troops to throw up the works on Bunk er s Hill dispatching his son, Capt. JPutnam, on horseback to hurry up tho , remainder of his men from Cambridge. . By this time his compeer in French and Indian warfare, the veteran Stark, made his appearance with the New Hampshire troops, five hundred strong. He had grown cool and wary with age, and his march from Medford, a distance of five or six miles, had been in character. He led his men at a moderate pace, to bring them iuto action fresh and vigorous. In crossing the Neck, which was enfiladed by the , enemy's ships and batteries, Capt. Dearborn, who was by his side, suggested a quickstep. The vet eran shook his head. V One fresh man in action is worth ten tired ones" replied , he, and marched steadily on. . Putnam detained some of Stark's men to aid in throwing up the works on Bunker's Hill,' and directed him to reinforce Knowlton with the rest. Stark made a short speech to his men, now that they were likely to have warm work. He then pushed on, and did good service that day at the rustic bulwark. . About two o'cloek Warren arrived on the heights, ready to engage in their perilous de fence, although he had opposed the scheme of their occupation. He had recently been elec ted" a major-general, but. had not received his commission ; like Pomeroy, he came to serve in the ranks with a musket on his shoulder. .. ' Putnam offered him the command at the fence ; be declined it, and merely asked where he could be of the most service as a volunteer. Putnam pointed to the redoubt observing that he would be under cover. .. , - " Don't think I seek a p!ac$ of safety," re plied Warren, quickly : " where will the attack be hottest?" Putnam still pointed to the re doubt. " That is the enemy's object ; if that can be maintained the day is ours." . Warren was cheered by the troops as be entered the redoubt. Col. Presscott tendered him the ! command. He again declined... ' I have I come to serve only as a volunteer, and shall j be hnppy to learn from a soldier of your expe i rience." Such were the noble spirits assom- . bled on these perilous heifrhts I The British now prepared for a general as sault. - An easy victory was anticipated, the main thought was how to make it most eifec ; tual. The left wing, commanded by Gen. i Pigot, was to mount the hill and force the redoubt, while Gen. Howe, with the rijrht wing, was to push on between the fort and Mystic river, turn the left flank of the Amer- . icans. and cut off their retreat. " . S! Gen. Pigot accordingly advanced up the hill under cover ( a fire from field-pieces and : howitzers pluuted on a small height near the lauding place on Moulton's Point. His troops commenced a discharge of musketry while yet at a long distance from the redoubts. The Americans within the works, obedient 1 to strict command, retained their fire until the enemy were within thirty or forty paces, when they epencd upon them with a tremendous -volley. Bvdng all marksmen, accustomed to , take deliberate aim, the slaughter was im mense, and especially fatal to officers. The assailants fell bnck in some confusion ; but, rallied on by their officers, advanced within pistol shot. Another volley, more effective ' than the first, made them again recoil. To, add to their confusion, they were galled by a flanking fire from the handful of Provincials . posted in Charlestown. Shocked at the car- 4 nage, and seeing the confusion of his troops, ; Gen. Pigot was urged to give the word for a i retreat. In the meanwhile Gen. .Howe 'it I wing, ?dvuncea along Jlystio river, towards i the ffcuce were Stark, Head and Knowlton r were stationea tnmking to carry tins slight r breast work with ease, and so set in the rear of the fortress. His artillery proved of little j avail, being stopped by a swampy piece of j ground, while his colums suffered from two or three field pieces with which Putnam had' fortified the fence. . Howe's men kept up a i fire of musketry , as they advanced but, not taking aim, their, shot passed over the heads of the Americans. - The latter had received the same orders with those In the redoubt, not to fire until the euemy should be within thirty paces. Some few transgressed : the command Putnam rode up and swore he would cut down the next man that fired con trary to orders. . 1 Whea the British arrived within the stated distance, a sheeted fire opened upon them from rifles, muskets and fowling-pieces, all levelled with , deadly aim. . The carnage, as. in the other instance, was horrible. The British were thrown into confusion and fell back ; some even retreated to the boats. , ' There waa a general pause on the part of the British r The, v American officers avalied themselves of it to prepare for another attack, which must soon b made. ; Prescott mingled among his men in the redoubt, who were all in high spirits at the severe check they had given " the regulars." , He praised them for their steadfastness in maintaining - their post and their good conduct in reserving their fire until- the word of command, and exhorted them to do the same in the next attack. Putnam rode about Bunker's Hill and its skirts to rally -and bring on re-inforcements which had been checked or scattered in cros sing Charlestown Neck by the raking fire from the ships and batteries. Before many could be bought to the scene of action the British had commenced their second attack. Ihev again ascended the hill to Btorm the re doubt ; their advance waa covered as before Jrge8 of artilfery. Charlestown, which had annoyed them or their first attack by a flanking fire, was in flames by sheets thrown from Copp's Hill and by marines from the ships. Being built of wood, the placo waa soon wrapped in a general conflagration. : The thunder of artillery from batteries and ships, the bursting of bomb-shells : thn cfim discharges of musketry; the shouts and yells t of the coiubatanta; the crash' of burniu buil- I dings, and the dense volumes of smoke which -j. obscured the summer sun, nil formed a rc- mendous spectacle Sure I aui.'' said, Bur- govne in one of his letters "Sure I am, noth ing ever has or ever can be taorej dreadfully terrible than what was to be seen or heard at this time. The most incessant lischarge of guns that ever was heard by morfel ears." ? The 'American troops, though f unused to war' stood undismayed amidst a sene wbere it was bursting udoq them with all Its horrors. Reserving their fire, as before, unfel the ene- my was close at hand, they again poured forth t repeated volleys wnn me larai aim oi snarp- j shooters. The British stood the " fikt shock, I and continued to advance; but the mceB?-jnt j stream of fire staggered them. 'Their officers j remonstrated, threatened, and even attempted j to goad them on with-their swords, butjthe j havoc was too deadly : whole ranks were mof ed down ; many of the officers were either snn or wounded and among them several of he j staff of Gen. Howe." ' The troops again give j wav ad retreated down the hill. . r;; All this passed under the eyes of thousands of spectators of both sexes and all ases, wash ing from afar every turn of the battle in wljch j the lives or tnose most aear to mem wereat hazard. The British soldiery in Boston gied with astonishment and almost incredulity at the resolute and protracted stand of raw inli tia, whom they bad been taught to desjise, and at the havoc made among their own Vet eran 1 troops. Every convoy k of wouqded brought over to the town increased their con sternation 'and General Clinton, whohad watched the action from Copp's Hill embirk injr in a boat, hurried over as a volunteer, taking with him reinforcements. j " A third attack was now determined on, though some of Howe's officers remonstrated, declaring it would be downright butchery. A different plan was adopted. T Instead of ad vancing in front of the redoubt, it was to be j taken ia flank on the left, r where the open space between the breastwork and the fortified i fence, presented a weak point. It having been accidentally discovered that the ammu- , nition of the Americans was nearly expended, ! preparations were made to carry the works at , iha mint of the bavonet: and the ' soldierv j i' ' j ;- threw off their knapsacks, and some even tbcir- coats, to be more light for action. ri Geu. Howe, with the main body, low made a feint of attacking the fortified Mice; but while a part of bis force was thus engaged, ithe rest brought'eome field-pieces t enfilade the breastwork on the left of the redaubt. A rakiug fire soon drove the Americans out of this exposed place into the enclosure. Much damage, too. was done in the latter by balls ; which entered the sallyport '-'A- j The troops were now led on to aail tho works , those who flinched were as before goa ded on by the ; swords of the officers. The Americans again reserved their fireuntil th ir j assailants were close at hand, and tcn made j a murderous volley, by which several officers were laid low, and General Howe hiiiself was ' wounded intbe foot. j The British soldiery this time likewise re- j served their fire, and rushed on vith fixed j bayonets. Clinton and Pigot had reached ! the southern and eastern sides of the redoubt, -: and it was now assailed on three sides at ouce. Prescott ordered those who had no Jmyonets to retire to the back part of the redoubt, and ' five on the enemy as they showed. themselves on the parapet. The first who mounted ex- ! claimed in the triumph, ".The day is burs !" ! Fie was instantly shot down and so werosev- j eral others who mounted about the sama time. ; Thfl Americans, however, had fired thpir last round, their ammunition wa exhausted ; aad A i,nnd tn bnd with Knnota 'm.I ffi- r - At lenth. as the British continued io vonr in, Prescott gave the order to retreat. His w - - men had to cut their way through two divi sions of the enemy who were getting in rear of the redoubt, and they received a destruc- ! tive volley from those who had formed on the 1 captured works By that volley fell the pat- riot Warren who had distinguished himself i throughout the action. He was . among the , last to leave the redoubt and had scarce done so when he was shot through the head with a musket ball and fell dad on the spot. While the Americans vfero thus slowly dislodged from the redoubt, Stark, Reed and Knowlton maintained their ground at the for tified fence, which indeed had been nobly de-. fended throughout the action Pomeroy dis tinguished himself here by bis sharp-shooting until bis musket was shattered by a ball. The resistance at this hastily constructed work was kept up after the troops in the redoubt had given way and until Colonel Prescott had left the hill, thus defeating Gen, Howe's de sign of cutting off the retreat of the main body, which would have produced a scene of direful confusion' and slaughter. Having effected their purpose, the brave associates of the fence abandoned their weak outpost, retiring slowly, : and disputing the ground inch by inch with a ! rcg'ilarity remarkable in troops many of whom j had never before been in action. .: The main retreat was across Bunker's Ilill, where Putnam had endeavored to throw up a breastwork. The veteran, sword in hand, rode to the rear of the retreating troops, re gardless of the balls whistling about him. His only thought was to rally them at the un finished work. ;'.r' Halt! make a stand here !" cried he, " we ean check them yet. In God's name, form, and give them one shot more." . . Pomeroy, wielding his shattered nmsketas a truncheon, seconded - him in his efforts to stay the torrent ' It was impossible, howev er, to bring the ; troops to a stand. They continued on down the hill to the Neck, and across to Cambridge, exposed to a raking fire from the ships and batteries, and only protec ted by a single, piece of ordinance The British were too exhausted to pursue them ; they contented themselves with taking posses- from )kton. atii threw np aidUIonftl worl s durinff tno nigni. ... ; .; ; The Great Telegraph. . .For a considerable period nothing has been heard of the progress of the great enterprise of constructing a line of electro-magnetic tel egraph across the Atlantic ocean from Europo to America by the way of Newfoundland and Ireland, and no doubt many have supposed the whole thing a mere project,;without body of any tind, existing only in' the newspapers, and the stock market. To be sure, we have had at intervals-vague giving out of what the company was going to da, but nothing actual ly accomplished , having been ; chronicled, the enterprise has been regarded as a castle in the air . At length, however, we have something more substantial, "flic company hiys been all this" time busily at work, and there Is a visible prospect of the construction of the tel egraph. From the government of Newfound land an exclusive charter has been obtained for fifty years, to build a telegraph to or upon the island," or in the waters adjacent thereto, or any of its dependencies; and to encourage the undertaking, the government has agreed to pay JC5000 towards constructing a bridle path across the island for the use of tie telc grarh, and to guarantee the interest on XoO, 000 for twenty years, besides giving fifty square miles of land to be selected anywhere on tho island,, on the completion of the liue to St. John's, and fifty more if the line be suc cessfully carried across the , Atlantic to Eu rope. From the government of Prince Ed wards Island the Company has ahsO obtained an exclusive charter for fifty years, and a gift of one thousand acres of land. The Company has also purchased a charter previously ob tained iu New Brunswick, and have since ob tained one from Canada, with full liberty to cross those territories, should it be necessary. An agreement has been made with- Professor Morse for the use of. his patents, and all re newals. "' The Company has done something more substantial than merely to obtain charters. : It has proceeded to act vigorously thereon, hiving purchased the steamer Victoria, and sent her to Newfoundland with an engineer and assistants. : The whole of last season six hundred men were engaged in cutting the road across Newfoundland, a distance of four hun dred miles. - In doing so, three mineralogists employed by . the Company to explore the country, discovered two mines of coal, one of copper, one of lead, aud quarries of slate and alabaster, besides very valuable tracts of ship timber. ; These discoveries wiU, of course, tend' to populate the line of the road, and make the telegraph valuable. The most im portant achievement of the Company's agent U thus narrated - by the New York Ecange lUt: , - . . .-;. i " Iu London ho formed a contract with the Transatlantic Telegraph Company composed of English aud l'rcucb capitalists, whereby the latter engaged to construct alid lay down at their own expense and risk a submarine cable, extending from Ireland to St. John's, Newfoundland, and to have it cempleted for operatian on or before the 22d day of Janua ry, 1858. The two companies, European and American, each will own the line which it construct, but their contract obliges them to operate in connection with each other, to the exclusion of all other lines, for the period of fifty years, which is the limit of the Amer can company's charter. At the same time a favorable contract was made for the submarine cable to connect Newfoundland with Cape Breton. This will be scventy-fottr miles long," and is to be ready on the last day of this memth, when it will be shipped direct to New foundland 'The steamer V ictoria " sailed a few days since for St. John's, with Mr. Kllis, the Chief Engineer, and his assistants. ' The company confidently expect to have telegraph ic communication established between New York and St. John's in the course of this summer. All the necessary harbor and wharf accommodations have been secured at that port for the steamers which are expected to call there on their trips between America aud Europe. St. John's is about two days nearer to England than Halifax. We have there fore every reason to believe that in three months the old world and the new will be within a week's of each other and that with in three years the two hemispheres cill he in instantaneous cimmtmicatin.n, - This news will be as unexpected as grati fying to; everybody. The thing is actually under contract, with a prospect that it will be completed in three years. The last day of this month tho first link of submarine cable is to be delivered for shipment. Of course, the great difficulty exists in laying the main cable from Newfoundland to Ireland. How that is to be effected is, as yet, a mystery, as in so long a journey any vessel containing the cable would run serious risk from storms. Philadelphia Nbrt h American. ; A Cubical Anecdote. ' It is said" that an eccentric minister of the Congregational church, who, in refusing to join the order of Know-Nothings, had resisted the force of the example of so many of his clerical brcthern, was preaching from the story that Saul, while in search of the lost asses of his father, found a kingdom, closed his sermon with the intro duction of the following epigram: 'When Saul, the handsome son of Kish, Was seeking for his cattle. He found a kingdom, which he won Without a single battle, In Boston now the thing's reversed, ' (This age the old surpasses,) We, seeking for a government, Fiud Legislative Bases." Prov. Journal. Vaixablb Bequest. A Scotchmam na med William Maclure, says the Toronto Pat riot, recently deceased, left the bulk of his property, valued ar $300,000, . to be appro priated expressly for the purpose of the diffu sion of useful knowledge and instruction amongst the institutions, libraries, clubs or meetings for useful instruction of the working classes or manual -laborers in the. United Stats of America." : A Case for the Know-Nothicga. To the Editor of tub New .York Trib ute Sir:. Will you be kind enough to pre sent Tny. case for the consideration of your Know-Nothing readers. I was born in Eng land by accident, not choice; I was not con sulted in the matter ; I came on the faith of your flag your Constitution and your laws ; these told me I might become a citizen of the Republic and stand on an equal footing with my neighbors. ' native to the manor born" by giving ralue received." The consideration waa renunciation of my birth-right, my natal citizenship. ' I paid the - consideration - and became, as I supposed, a citizen of the Uni ted States ; hardly-establibbed in my new home, I hear the war blast -and find myself doing a soldier's duty in Mexico, under my newly-adopted flag ; after that I bind myself by other relations to this country ; I marry an Ameriran woman and bave sons born nnto me, Americans all; I come out into this wilderness to carve out of this forest aud these prairies freemen's homes for my sons. I am startled by another sound, the scream of bigotry and intolerance, I am told the contract maun be tween the United States and me is to be repu diated, that I am to be deprived of my citizen ship, or at least that it is to be robbed of its virtue and its grace, that its attribute Equal ity, for which I prize it, must be stricken out; I must not hold an office ; I want none, but I like not this ban. I gave away my citiien ship for another ; this was the contract, and " I must have my "bond." Bnt you sny I shall not have it To this I reply ; You are strong and can withhold it ; I submit. If it is dangerous to your institutions that foreigners should come among you I will leave. - It will be a loss and inconvenience to me, yet leave I must. I cannot stay where I am not welcome, nor live where I am not as good as another. I will seek again the red cross banner, and on the cold soil of Canada repent like the Prodigal. T will take my American wife and my American sous, and on the threshold of their native country they i shall shake the American oust off their feet. I My bovs tre sons of the sires of '76(Puritan I Ktetck. not Hessian like some Know -Notbinirs.') but they will never know it. Of the suffcr j ings of their ancestors, in the cold days at i Valley Forge and in the hot days at Mon mouth they shall nothing know. One. thing 1 I regret ; I cannot take them all, for one of ) my boys has become American dust. He lies ' on the'shores of the Old Dominion, and the waters of the Chesapeake dash upoa his grave. . He sleeps well; let him Elcep. J- ' Here a new difficulty meets me. If, as American jurists tell me, I cannot renounce the allegiance I myself have voluntarily un dertaken, then I am doubly cheated.- But if this be not so. will England take me back ? j She may ; but my wife and children England j does not know. . She may recognize ray- wife as part of my own individuality; but my son, they are foreigners, born in America when ' their father was an Ameri-an citizen. They ! cannot stand on an equality with free-born ' English citizens. Here is the dilemma. What : am I to do ? If I live here I am under polit- ical and social ban. If I go to my native j country my children are under the same dis ability. ho is responsible I l am not. You told me I might bccoice an American cit izen by rendering a certain consideration. 1 gave it. Am I to be cheated aud my chil dren too 1 4 Very respectfully yours, . Lex. Butler Co., Iowa, April 24, 1S55. A Great Susie Story Encounter with i Eattlesnake. IFrom the Massillou News. i Having met with a considerable adventure with a large rattlesnake, I concluded to give you some description of my encounter with him.: Having occasion to go from Akron to the town of Massillon, I started with my team, consisting of a two-horse buggy, aud after having proceeded about eight miles, I discov ed an object in advance of me lying across the road, which at first Eight I mistook for a crooked limb of a tree, but upon approaching the spot where it lay, judge' of my astonish ment to find it to be a large rattlesnake, slow ly and stealthily moving toward the side of tho road, where, upon examination, I found he was about io make prey of a j oung squirrel that was unable to move from its position. Being anxious to see the result of bis move ments, 1 followed him as close as I thought it prudent to do; but his majesty not liking the intrusion, or preferring me for a victim, im mediately gave a very loud rattle and turned directly towards me. Being unarmed, and not thinking myself in a bituation to meet my assailant, I wes obliged to turn and give as is commonly called -Meg bail,' which I did to the best of my ability; but being closely pur sued, and finding that I . was rapidly losing ground at that pace, I was somewhat fright ened, thinking that unless I could succeed in distancing him I would certainly become his victim. ; Exerting ruyself to my utmost, I finally in creased the distance bctwecu ihs reptile and myself, but s vet I had no great adrantagc; but in my fig'ut I was fortunate enough to find something in the shape of a weapon, being ' a good stout stick about three fctst long and about four or five inches in circumference. Hastily seizing this, I turned aud prepared for battle, te;n but a momcut's wtk, as the snake was then close in . the rear gathering himself up to make the fatal spring upon me ; he made a momentary pauso, during which time I held my breath through fear and f-x-'citemeot together, lest I might fail to hit my mark. During this short pause I took advan tage of his position aud struck him a severe blow with my stick immediately on tha back of the neck, close to the bead, which stroke to ray joy and surprise entirely severed the head from the body, causing it to fly some twenty paces frota the spot where I stood. After the head was severed the body contin ued to run in different directions, as it gen erally tho fn! previous to ita death but in this case it coutiuued for au unusual length of time, owing no doubt to the size of the rep tile and the amouut of muscular strength which il possessed. After it become suffi ciently quiet, fro that it could be straightened out, I measured it i-Ksely and found it to be six feet and eleven iu'.-hes iu length by nine and ' a half inches in circumference," being the lar gest one of that Fpecies that had ever been seen in that region of country. Knowing the incredulity of some persons respecting snake stones, I couclued to throw him into the bug gy and take him to the Louse of Mr. C. A. Johnson, close to the road, who has taken tho pains to have it skinned and hide stuffed, and can testify ta my statement, as the hide as well as rattles are now in his pot-session . I have given 3 0U this description as I thought it might be interesting to some of your readers, should you iuscrt it in your journal. Yours, respectfully. DANIEL TEEltYM AN. Massillox, June 1, 18o.". . A Stump Speech. The following specimens of quaint humor we find in oue of our exchanges under the head of ' California Correspondence. They purport to have been delivered by a stump candidate at San Francisco : Fellow-RipulA leans andellow-sitff'erers t I am a plain and honest man, born at a very early period of my existence which occurred at home one night when my mother was out, I have struggled from the obscurity to which an unlucky star had doomed me, till I have risem like a bright exhalation in the evening, to the very summit of human greatness and grandeur. Gentlemen , I profess no princi- pies unfortunately I have none. On the unhappy occasion of my birth, a dismal and melancholy man, cltbed in the sombre hues of mourning, swapped me away for another baby, and subsequently lost me at a rafSe. Sad event ! but who can control his fate ? We are the creatures of destiny. " There'6 a di vinity that shapes our ends, rough hew them how weVill." I was intended by nature for agreat states man. Had I lived in the days of Hannibal I should, have lea ten the greatest chieftain iu crossing the Alps, and it is a dead certain thing that I should have dintanced Cortes iu crossing the Isthmus ; he never performed the feats I did; he never came up the Chagres river iu a canoe, with a deaf and dumb hom bre. without a red cent, or a change of sum mer apparel. . But a light heart and a thin pair of breeches go rmrrily t hrough the : world." ... Sir, every man who has come here is a Co Innibus. ' He comes to discover new diggius. I am a Columbus ? I w&s dead broke at home, as Columbus was, and I have come here to strike a new vein. But Iam not going to the mines. Oh, no! You don't catch me up to ' my waist in ice water, with a juvenile pick-. ! axe and an incipient crow-bar, laboring un der a heat of 100 degrees in the shade to dig -out the filthy lucre.. No. sir ! I am not on that lay I hate labor it was au invention to vex mankind. I prefer an office one that is lucrative, and not laborious ; what you call a sinecure. And if I can't get one tuyself, I will go in for any man who will divide on a dead level, and no splits. Sir, where will you find a country like this? Talk not of the oriental gorgeousncss of eas tern countries. Tell Us not of the fairy scen ery which poets who revel in the great warm path of heavenly imagination paint, with gol den pens on leaves of satin. The description of this glorious country should be written with the golden wing of an angel dipped in the sof test rays of the sunbeam upon the blushing surface ofro.se loaf. . Excuse me, gentlemen. 1 I except the rainy Beason, and the time when tue ausi uics. - We love our native land we honor her flag, and we would not rob the custom-house, if we . had a fair show. But Congress must not put oa any airs, or we will take charge of the cu3tom-house and the post office, and make a muss generally. These are my sentiments, gentlemen" ; if they don't admit us into the Union we will burst open the custom house, and admit all liquor free of duty. And now, with a parting blessing on the girls wc left be hind us, aud the boys who are coming after us. we will adjourn and take a drink. ' The IxaiAS War. An Iadian trader, named Picott, who has arrived at Wolf river, ' Kansas, from the Blackfcet country, with 20, 000 buffalo robes, says that, as he passed through the Sioux country, he found . all tho tribes of that nation talking about the war, which they were expecting to have with the United States, and moving iu large numbers down towards Fort Laramie. " Picott reports that the Big Chief Mountains in the Black feet country abound io buffaloes of a larger, more shaggy and ferocious kind than those of the plains ; that more than a hundred thousand of tbem are aunually slain by the hunters, while a like cumber perish iu tho snow aud rivers, and yet there is no apparent diminu tion in their numbers. Other traders who have arrived from plains report meeting sev eral thousand Sioux warriors at Ash Hoiiow, who, however, treated then kindly, and saLi that they would make treaty of peace if they could, or fight, if they must. Oa the 15ta of May Col. Cook left Fort Laramie with two detachments, one of infantry and one of cavalry, and will reach Ash Hollow early in June. . Scimce and sound mind axe both gifts; thu former of stuJy, the latter of nature. Stu dy is the elevator of miud and feelings, and the interpreter of this ia the ongue. A small point of a balance is the ioague and yet what miracles does it perform. ' Jt57Thcught and theory must precede all action that moves to salutary purposes. Yet action is nobler in itself than either thought or theory.