PUBLISHED WEEKLY. J A FAMILY PAPER DEVOTED TO POLITICS, LITERATURE, AGRICULTURE, MANUFACTURES, MINING, AND NEWS. 5 PRICE fp2 PER YEAR In Advance. fiOBERT P. WARING, Editor. $ RtfTS M. HEBRON, Publisher. " Ifafrs Sistinrt u tjre 9SiUoaj", hnt dm 110 ffj? Ira." VOL. 3. CHARLOTTE, N. C, FRIDAY MORNING, MAY 18, 1855. NO. 43. .Itiornt u at Emu?, 0 t in Lonergan Brick BuiLUng, 2nd Jioor. CHARLOTTE, N C. J. B. F. BOONE, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALER IN i 2 i SOLE LEJimK, (tILF SMirjWS, LINING AND BINDING SKINS, SHOE TOOLS OF EVERY DESCRIPTION, Charlotte, N. C. Oct. 20, 1854. ly ELMS dc JOHNSON. Forwarding and Commission Merchants. NO. 10-VF.NDUE RANGE, CHARLESTON, S. C. YV. W. ELMS. C. JOHNSON. June 23, '54. 48lf. R. HAMILTON, C 0 .11 II ISSIO . i?l E R II X T, Corner of Richardson and Launl Strctls, n lcmbia, s. c. J.i in J l -.') ly BREM & STEELE, WHolcsalo eft? Hetail ih xi it li Si S ft a o 'i KADK STREET, Nearly opposite Kims & Spratt's Grocery. CHARLOTTE, N. C. c 1") 20: f CAiUrlJA INK, I E N N I N G S B. KERR. t Jitu ioltc, JT. C 23 153. B January BOUNTY LAND BILL. EA VI. Attorney and Counsellor at Lav, 32.311 so t: ;, .1 C. I.f. entlrct i'.i, ur "'li- r bnsineM attended to w ith ;.r.i:i.;i. ; tartituUrlj Mieh as relet to the prom, cutem i Pt-iwioa t lain., land Warrants, and donations of BuiiMtj I ... t.i ...iii-t 11ms General Gov r u meal, un a) r the late ! utv La ad Law of March 3d, 1355, fiv. . . 1 1 : i ImmuT f uti to all Officers. Land and Naval. I '..mailssMMh d ur IMMI-t ullllWISIUt il Soidii rs, Sea- . i. TiVrkK. nr other nervous, who hVC tii rwd in any ot lite .rs 111 which the Lulled States I ave been ru 1790 ; and al,. to all uoxeers ana owiaicn , r.i ill,- U volition-ry var, uitir iuons aim wm ti Ulrm. Prison having sack claims, !y presenting them in- inn! i - ti Iv mav secure an curly issue nfl Tin ir certiti- cate. OlBd. 5dours south OI Sudor's Hotel. tt;6 Resptctfully Yours! rp II K iiin. lil, d hiisiuess ol I'ritch .r.i i. Caldwell for I I - 1 l. .i L Jaatd in t.'ie hands 'it' S. W . Duvi lor oi h i lion and setth no i.t. Those indented tor that vnr will 1m- doing us a great fuor l.y closing their Account-, lunoi .liatel v, w e have ia Pitiably Cqgh to pay, an.) " Money M, us all must kno-.v, is a hard thing to borrow.1 PRITCIIARD & CAI.OWELL. April 7. 1 .7:. 3S-' Kavc yojir Costs ! I miK K.J. :,!! AeenuiU oi the !..le firm of A. 1 UtttMC V I'", has bull pbiCCtl in 'he halo'i? nt S. V Iluvis. t.--i., lor ciHivCtluu md meUU incut. Those in- Ot hi. d illo r !y Note or Aee.Hinl, are rrq sun 10 main an immediate arrangement, as lurlUr iudnlgenec can not and will not lie griiutid. ALEX VNIiER & JOHNSTON. April 3S.v Notice MY Not.-s and Ace.. urns li..ving h. n placed in the h-nus ot S. W. D..vis, Kq,., ,,,r eoll, ciion, those ulionr.- indebted t m inditidnaUy, nr as one ul the Id Muted Sfeclc & Marty, are resp.etlully re.pn st eJ io make s -UlemcMt by Ap.iU'ourt, it nt A. C. STEELE -tt n tl . W IB A LA , Uross Mals.ery '2 HOOKS XOUTIl oFKKltn'S lloTKI.. LL Ur. sses cut and made bj the cclrhralcd A. D A l. tiKth.i.l, and warranted to lit. Bmum t notice. triiiiuied in the latest style at April -V, IcZ.'k the h 3au: rtca A. BETHUNE, I T-m O JFSL - No. S, Springs' Row, 4 HOOKS VAST OF TllK CHA11LOTTE BANK, CHARLOTTE, N. C. Feb. 16, 155. v 30tf W. S. LAWTON & CO., factors, Forwarding and Commission Bmi Atlantic Wiiarp, CHARLESTON, S. C. V. S. LAWTOV. THOS. ALEXANDER. IVI. jVormont RESPECTFI7LLT offers his professional services to the citizens ol' Charlotte and surrounding country. il- hopes by devoting his entire attention to the du'.ies ol his prolession to merit patronage. He may be found it all hours, at his office opposite the American Hotel, w hen not prolessionally engaged. march 2, 1S'5. 32tf Removal. W. BECK WITH has removed his Jewelry Store to No. 2, Johnston's Row, three doors South of u. iverr's Hotel. Feb It?, 18."5. 30-1 y MECKLEWUG H01SE, HAVING purchased the building on the cor. f I I till n.'r -l r.-u- il.iiir. ....tl.- 1 L" , II...., I n.l repaired and htted it up in first-ratc stvle, I would rcspi cliully inform the travelling public that it is now open lor the reception of regular and transient hoarders, br.ivtrs will And ample accommodations at my house. Jan. 1, l.-5.. 25-ly S. II. REA. THE i5iSlCAN HOTEL, CHARLOTTE, N. C. IBFi to announce to 1113' Jrienris, the public, and prc- nt patrons of the above Hotel, that I havelcastd the anic lor a term of years from the 1st of January next. A'tcr which time, the entire property will be thorough ly repa'-ed and renovated, and the house kept in first clsa style. Tina Hotel is near the Depot, and pleasant. -' situated, rendering it R desirable house for travellers nd families. Dec 16, 1833. 2Ji C. M. HAY. Krom Thomas H. Benton's " Thirty Years' View." Sketch ol John Ruudolph, John Randolph died at Philadelphia in the sum mer of 1S33 the scene of his early and brilliant apparition on the stage of public life, having com iw nced his parliamentary career in that city, under the first Mr. Adams, when Congress sal there, and when he was barely of an age to be admitted into the body. For more than thirty years he was the political meteor of Congress, blazing with undi minished splendor during the whole time, and often appearing as the planetary plague" which shed, not war and pestilence on nations, but agony and fear on members. His sarcasm was keen, refined, withering with a great tendency to in dulge in it ; but, as he believed, as a lawful par liamentary weapon to effect some desirable pur pose. Pretensions, meanness, vice, demagogism were the frequent subjects of the exercise ol his talent; and, vhen confined to them, he was the benefactor of the House. Wit and genius all al lowed him ; sagacity was a quality of his mind visible to all observers and which gave him an intuitive insight into the effect of measures. Dur ing the first six years of Mr. Jefferson's adminis tration, he was the Mural" of his party, brilliant in the charge, and always ready for it ; and valu ed in the council, as well as in the field. He was long the chairman of the Committee of Ways and Means a place always of labor and responsibilit v, and ol more then than now, when the elements of revenue were less abundant ; and no man could have been placed in that situation during Mr. Jef ferson's time whose known sagacity was not a pledge for ihe safety ol his lead in the most sudden, and critical circumstances. He was one of those whom that eminent statesman habitually consulted during the period of thir friendship, and to whom he carefully communicated his plans before they were given to the public. On his arrival at Washington at the opening of each session ol Con grcss during this period, he regularly found wait ing for him - at his established Jondgings then Crawford's, Georgetown (he card ol Mr. Jeffer son, with an invitation for dinner the next day; a dinner at w inch the leading measures of the ensu- J ing session were the principal topic. Mr. Jefferson j did not treat in that way a member in whose sagacity he had not confidence. It is not just to ludffe such a man bv ordinary rules, nor by detached and separate incidents in l i:i- 'iv i i . .... r 0 j ms life. lo comprehend h lit). hf must h unirft I . ww as a wholi physically and mentally and under many aspects, and for his entire life. He wis never well a chronic victim of ill health Irom the cradle to the grave. A letter Irom his most inti- n,!lle d valued friend, Air. Macon, written to me alter his death, expressed the heliel that he had never enjoyed during his life one day of perfect health such as well people enjoy. Such life lung Buffering must have its effect on the temper and n ihe muni ; and it had on his hrmginy (he temper uftcn to ihe querulous mood, and ihe state o Ins mind sometimes to the Question of insanttv: a question which became judicial alter his death, when the validity of his will came to be contested, j 1 huii my opinion on the point, and gave it respon sibly, in deposition duly laken, lo he rend on the trial of the will; and in which a belief in his in- i sanity, at several specified periods, was fully ex pressed with the reason for the opinion. I had good opportunities ol forming an opinion, living in (he same house with him several rears. Iiavnor J o his confidence, and seeing him at all hours of the day and night. It also on several occasions be- c une my duty to study the question, with a view In govern my own conduct under cricical c'rcum stances. Twice lie applied to me to Carry chal lenges for him. It would have been inhuman to have gone out with a man not in his right mind, lid critical to one's self, as any accident on the ground might seriously compromise the second, j My opinion was fixed, ol occasional temporary i nberrationa of mind ; and during such periods he would do and say strange things but always m his own way not only method, hut genius in his: fantasies j nothing lu bespeak a bad heart, but only j exaltation and excitement. The most brilliant ; talk that I ever heard from him came lorih on such occasions a flow lor hours (at one time seven hours,) of copious w it and classic allusion m perfect scattering of the diamonds of th mind. I heard a Iriend remark on one ol these occasions, " he has wasted intellectual jewelry enough here this evening to equip many speakers for great ora tions." I once sounded him on the delecate point of his own opinion of himself: of course, when ho was in a perfert natural state, and when he had said something to permit an approach to such a subiect. It was during his last visit to Wash ington, two winters before he died. It was in my room, in the gloom of ihe evening light, as. the day was going out and the lamps not lit no one pres ent but ourselves he reclining on a sofa, silent and thoughtful, speaking but seldom, and I only in reply, I heard him repeat, as if to himself, those lines from Johnson, (which, in fact, I had often heard from him before,") on "Senility and Imbe cility," which show us life under its most melan choly form : " In life's last scenes what prodigies surprise. Fears of the br.. ve, and follies of the wise! From Marlborough's eyes ihe streams of dotage flow, And Swift expires, a driveller and a show." When he had thus repeated these lines, which he did with deep feeling, and in slow and meas ured cadence, 1 deemed il excusable to make a remark of a kind which I had never ventured on before; and said: Mr. Randolph, I have several times heard you repeat these lines, as if they could have an application to yourself, while no person can have less reason to fear the late ot Sivift. I said this to sound him, and to see what he ihousht of himself. His answer was I" I 1 n.ie iiviu 111 uicnu ui lawuiij. was the opening ol a sealed book-revealed to me ,k- ,.. k o.n.. k.. I had ann 1 1: 1 :.. .1 1 r : " Thot m.c.-wr I 11 1 1 1 j-j j u a ....... .f ih ham iinrlprtrn I rtiii Hpr in him in flanirer Ol Hie i lata nf Sari ft mi. I Irom thr same cause as iudired by his latest and greatest biographer, Sir Walter Scolt. His parliamentary life was resplendent in talent elevated in moral tone slwjys moving on the lofty line of honor and patriotism, and scorning everything mean and selfish. He was the indig nant enemy of personal and plunder legislation, and the very scourge of intrigue and corruption. He reverenced an honest man in the humbiest garb, and scorned the dishonest, though plated With gold. An opinion v,s propagated that he was fickle in his friendships. Certainly there were some capricious changes ; but far more in stances of steadfast adherence. His friendship with Mr. Macon ivas historic. Their names went together in life live together in death anil are honored logether, most by them who knew them best. With Mr. Tazewel1, his friendship was still longer than that with Mr. Macon, commencing in boyhood, and only ending with life. So of many others ; and pre-eminently so of his neighbors and constituents the people of his congressional dis trict affectionate as well as faithful to him ; elect fng him, as they did, from boyhood to the grave. No one fell more lor friends, or was more solici lous and anxious at the side of the sick and dying bed. Love of wine was attributed to him; and what was mental excitement, was referred to deep potations. It was a great error. I never saw him affected by wine not even to the slightest depar ture from the habitual and scrupulous decorum of his manners. His temper was naturally gay and social, and so indulged when suffering of mind and body permitted. He was the charm of the dinner fa bl, w here his cheerful and sparkling wit delight ed every ear, lit up every countenance, and de tained every guest. He was charitable ; but chose to conceal the hand thrtt ministered relief. I have often seen hirn send little children out to give to the poor. He was one of the large slaveholders of Virginia, but disliked the institution, and when lei alone opposed its extension. Thus, in 1803, w hen as chairman of the committee which reported upon the Indiana memorial for a temporary dispensation J'rom the anti-slavery part ol the ordinance of 1787, he puts the question upon a statesman's ground, and reports against it, in a brief and comprehen sive argument : " That the rapid population of the State of Ohio sufficiently evinces, in the opinion of your com mittee, that the labor of the slave is not necessary to promote the growth and settlement of colonies in that region. That this labor, demonstrably the dearest of an)-, can oi!y be employed to advantage in the cultivation of products more valuable than any known to that quarter, of the United States; and 'h commiitee deem it highly dangerous and inexpedient to impair a provision wisely calculated to promote the happiness and prosperity of the North-western country, and to give strength and security to that extensive frontier. In the salutary operation of this sagacious and benevolent res- : . :, L 1: i ... . :l 1.!. .. i i: inniii, ii la ueueveu mai me miiauiiuu'.s 01 inuiniia will, .at no very distant day, find ample remunera- i lion for a temporary privation of labor and emi gration. He was against slavery ; mid by his will, both manumitted and provided for ihe hundreds which he hed. But he whs against lureign interference with his rights, his feelings, or his duties; and J never failed to resent and rebuke such interfer ence. Thus he was one of the most zealous of ' the opposers of the proposed Missouri restriction; ! and even voted ngninsi the divisional line of " thirty-six ihirty." In ihe House, when the term "slave-holder" would be reproachfully used, be would assume it, and refer to a member, not in the parliamentary phrase of colleague, but in ihe complimentary title ol "my fellow-slaveholder."; And, in London, when the consignees of his to- I bacco, and the slave laclors of his father, urged him tc liberate his slaves, lie quieted their intrusive philanthropy, on the spot by saying, " Yes : you j buy and del free to the amount of the money you have received from my father and his estate for I these slaves, and 1 will set free an equal number." j In his youth and later age, he lought duels ; in his middle life, he was against them ; and, for a while, would neither give nor receive a challenge. He was under religious convictions to the contra- j ry but finally yielded (as he believed) to an argu- 1 ment of his own, that a due' is a private war, and rested upon the same basis as public war ; and that both were allowable when there was no other j redress lor injuries. Thai was his argument; but I thought his relapse came more Irom feeling than reason ; and especially from the death of Decatur, ! lo whom lie wa greatly attached, and whose duel with Birron loiio and greatly excited him. He! had religious impressions, and a vein of piety j w hich showed itself more in private than in exter nal observances. lie was habitual in his rever ential regard for the divinity of our religion; and one of his beautiful expressions was that, "If wo man had lost us paradise, she had gained us heaven." The Bible and Shakpeare were, in hs latter years, his constant companions travelling with him on the road remaining with him in the chamber. The last time I saw him (in thai last visit to Washington, alter his return Irom the Russioa mission, and when he was in the full view of death,) I heard him read the chapter in the Revelations (ol the opening of the seals) w ith such power and beauty of voice in delivery, and such depth of pathos, that I felt as if I had never heard the chapter read before. When he had gel to the end of ihe opening ol the sixth seal, he stopped ihe reading, laid the book (open at the place) on his breast, as he lay on his ued, and began a dis course upon the beauty and sublimity of ihe Scriptural writings, compared to which he consid ered ail human compositions vain and empty. Going over the images presented by iho opening ol the seals, he averred that their divinity was in their sublimity that no human power could take the same images, and inspire the same awe and terror, and sink ourselves into such nothingness in the presence of the " w rath of the Lamb" that he wanted no prool of iheir divine origin but the sublime feelings which they inspired. JJuckNOU'8 NlgUt Attack, upon the Bri tish. We have no design lo write out an account of r .1 ? m .. 1 V..,,. f"l r ton r 1 . Oor oiirnnA IS me; ctiuipuioii .11 ,- .w-- .- . .. c I I. 1'- t k . . o VlllOlCflie Uie niifiu aiiae ui jauiva.jo no... ..... curious blunders tb two American writers h ive made about it. Mr. Ifeadly, in his romance ca.led the Lile of Jackson, speaks ol the night attack as me unc oi r a failure, and the auihor of the biography of J ick son in Harper's Magazine " says Jackson wa repulsed. It is shamelul that an American writer should betray such culpable ignorance of one of the most brilliant and useful deeds of American arms. Can the writer ol either of these brilliant statements have any proper conception of the sub ject upon which he was writing? What solitary authority is there, what shade of excuse is in ex istence for such a statement? There was not an officer nor a soldier under Jackson, at New Or leans, that suspected that he failed in his object, or was repulsed in the least degree on tho night of the 23d of December, 1814. Ttad South and West kept freedom's vigils on that momentous nigh;, and they cannot submit to any imputation ihas dpDreciates the rrlnrii.ns achievement of thai . F . , . ...... e. .... . - night. Let us begin at the beginning of it. General Adair, who hail no personal love lor Gen. Jack son, made a verbal statement in this city respect- ; ing the inception of the night attack. He looked upon it as the salvation of the city. He was din ing with Jackson and other officers , when a youth : uasiieu into the room and announced mat ine British had landed. Jackson had finished his dinner, and was leaning back from the table smok ing a pipe. In an insiant he rose from his chair, and, as if by intuition, uttered the sentence that saved the city. He did net pause one moment he asked no question of ihe youth as to the num bers of ihe enemy. The boy's speech hud scarce ly utlered his news, before Jackson exclaimed " the enemy must be flogged before lo-morrow morning." Adair, who was as brave a soldier as ever led troops, said be could scarcely believe his own hearing when Jackson made this announce- j ment. The military law is imperative that the commander of a defensive force must not attack an invader until he ascertains the number and j equipments of his enemy. But Jackson, when he announced me order lor the night, ne had no idea whether lie was going to attack one or ten thous and of the enemy. Gen. Adair soon found that Jackson was terribly in earnest. He said that in fifteen minutes from 'he time the youth announced his tidings, there was nothing in the neighborhood of Jackson that was not in motion. Coffee's and Carroll's commands were encamped four miles ahovo ihe city, but in two hours after ihe news of the landing of the enemy reached Jackson, these troops vere marching through the streets of New Orleans. Great calm prevailed in the city, but Jackson, at the head ol his troops, infused hope into the kearts of ihe citizens, by the announce ment that iho city should be defended. His plans were devised with consummate skill, but in order lo undersiHnf him, and the result which he won, let us look at the enemy. They hud come not merely to capture and plunder New Orleans, but avowedly to streich the lines of tneir power along the Mississippi ami Ohio rivers, until the line of British posts on Erie and Ontario should be inter seeled, nnd thus confine the United States mainly to the old colone boundary. The expedition was projected on this scale, and the British were under the illusion Mat the West would join them and assist in this career of conquest. The force con sisted of fourteen thousand choice troops, the most of them from Wellington's Peninsular army. The first disaster which threatened Jackson was the capture of his flotilla of gun boats, destined for the defence of the lake. But other sources of anxiety crowded upon him, and these were the inadeqency of t-ls rune o .1.- -j j one point, to say nothing of his inability to watch the various avenues by which the enemy might march upon New Orleans. The government was so shamelully negligent of his little army, that il contracted with keel boats to carry arms from Pinsburg, at fifty cents per hundred, with the priv iledge of trading along the. coast, ratNer than pay a steamboat seventy-five cents per hundred. But for Carroll's provident course in removing some of these arms from these trading keels, which he overhauled in his descent of the river, to his own boats, Jackson would have been in a pitiable con dition. And had it not been for the friendly dis position of LiFitie and his pirates, Jackson would have been without flints for his guns. He iabored under almost every possible disadvantage, except one, and that was his own invincible resolution, and his capacity to infuse it into others. In these outward circumstances the enemy land ed at Cat Island, and on the 23d of December, reached the hanks of ihe Mississippi, lour thous and strong, under Genera! Keane. There was riothing to prevent the march of the British that afternoon to ihe city of New Orleans. A smooth, level road on the bank ol the river, unobstructed in every way. either by defences or troops, invited the march. Another large force was on a swam py island below the Bayou fiienyenne, ready to co-operate in any forward movement. But tho golden opportunity passed unimproved, and Jack son's ' repulse" sealed th fate of the expedition. If they had possessed any ol the enterprise which should have characterized Wellington's veterans, ihe British might have reached New Orleans be fore iheir landing was known. Jackson, as we have seen, immediately gathered around him such resources as he had, and started upon his desperate enterprise. He had three ob jects in view first to give his raw iroops a taste of the quality of the enemy they were about to meet in defence of the city ; second, to produce the impression on General Keane that he had an immense force at his command, and wns acting in j conformity to the military law we have mentioned ; third, to paralyze the enemy by a bold and deter- j mind attack, so as to gain tune for the construe lion of defences, and lor reinforcements. He was after a moral effect, by which the feelings of his own troop" should be elevated to ihe highest pitch, J and those of the enemy depressed. But for t Iris j the British would have mtrched into Now Orleans the next morning. Every moment in these critical movements was of the utmost importance. No general ever knew j the value of lime better than Jackson, anil no one ever used it better. lie ordered Col. Ilayne to march with his mounted men to meet the enemy, and, if he found them advancing, to engage them, so as to retard their mirch, until he, Jackson, could support him. If the enemy were encamped, the order wis to cover his force in an orange j grove in Lrond's plantation, and await ihe co-op- 1 eration of the forces which Jackson was lo hasten forward, In less than an hour Hayne moved out j of the city at the head of lioO men. Jackson push ed matters with his usual energv. The 44th re giment was on the opposite side of the river, and il was hurried over with the utmost celerity. About sunset. Jackson having 2.167 troop3, left ihe city for his night attack. Of this number 1.881 engaged in the fight. These were ail raw troops, but to show what stuff thy were made of, Coffee's brigade, on hearing of the peril of N"w Orleans, had marched in (he last two days 120 miles, through a wilderness of swamps, and in most dreadful weather. We have seen how promptly this brigade responds to Jackson's order for bis night a'iock. I And now lei the reader pause and reflect lhal ; mot of Jackson's men were just Iresh Irom iheir farms and work-shops, and that ihey had never seen a disciplined enemv. But at the command , of their leader they marched with alacrity to meet the- best troops ol the British army. INot one ol them had any idea how strong the enemy might be, and few of them ctred. They knew their leader, and he knew them. All reliable accounts show that ihe British force handled by Jackson that night was 6,000 strong, for heavy reinforce ments reached liie enemy during the fight. Jackson marchsd down to the vicinity of the enemy, whom he lound spread over the plain Irom the bank of ihe river. He recounoitered ihe posi tion and force of the enemy, and, even after he found out iheir force, his iron will never quailed for a moment. Having made his reconnoisnnce, he arranged his order of baltle. The enemy were enjoying themselves in a great variety ol ways. Jackson had approached ihem, Stili as the breeze, but terrible as the storm," and even the picket qu i i ds were ignorant of his presence. Jackson's right flank resled upon ihe river bank, and his line extended across the plain, and Coffee occupied the extreme left. .jjThe plan was for Coffee to turn the right flank and attack in the rear, while Jackson moved upon the left flank and centre his with lorce. The Caroline was ordered to drop down the river slowly, to anchor opposite the enemy, and open a fire upon ihem as soon as (he 'land attack commenced. The Caro line was challenged, however, and had 10 precipi tate her cannonade, which gave the enemy warn ing that Jackson's army was upon them. Coffee found his advance checked by a ditch, and was forced to dismount, and leHve a great part of his lorce to hold the horses. But though frustrated in commencing the attack, he did his duty nobly. The cannonade of the Caroline produced the most terrible consternation in the tirilish lorce, and ihey were converted into a mob for some min utes. In ihe front ol the line commanded by Jack son in person, some derangement took place in consequence of the misconception of a subaltern officer, but nothing could stop the advance ol Jack son. He pushed into the Biitish line, and Gen. Iveane, the Briting commander, says: " A more extraordinary conflict has perhaps never occurred; absolutely hand-to-hand, both officers and' men." And in this hand-to-hand conflict the raw militia of Jackson drove three times their number of the veterans of the British army fully a mile from where the light commenced. And Coffee's bri gade were rifles, nnd iherelore had no bayonets to use. But Coffee drove iho enemy before him, and they sought an orange grove for safety. Here Coffee pressed upon ihem and drove them from the grove. They retreated to the riverbed found safety in a double embarkment, and Coffee' retired to join Gen. Jackson. tfrrtm lK ' -' -r .L TV'.. ish army no part of Jackson s force ever paused in its advance until il came to the hand-to hand conflict. The enemy were driven at all points one mile from where the fight commenced, and Jack son's troops occupied the mile of ground gained. They slept upon the field thus won, and moved ofT next morning as orderly as if marching to a fun eral. Jackson left General Hinds, with a forge of three hundred men, in a house within six hundred yards of the British army, and this force remained four days afler Jackson went up the river. Where, then, can an American writer find any sign of a repulse or failure on the part of Jackson in any portion of this eventful fight? Wh eigh teen hundred men he had met six thousand of the veterans of Wellington, nnd in a hand-to-band con flict had driven them a mile back from their'ori ginal position. He had taught his men the truth of Proctor's sentiments : Courage! Nothing e'er withstood Freemeii fighting for their good; Armed with all their father's fame, They will win and wear a name That shall go to endless glory, Like the gods of old Greek story." It is a species of sacrilego to tear from the he roes of the night attack on the 23d nf December, 1814, an iota of the glory w hich (hey won. They went forth lo a night battle, utterly ignorant whether they were to meet hundreds or thousands of the flower of the British army. They met the peril and conquered it ihey drove the enemy a mile belore them, and slept on the field Ihey had so nobly oo, And American writers, forty years after ibis glorious victory, gravely assert that these heroes were repulsed, and foiled in their attempt ! This is too bad, too intolerable. 4nd what were the consequences of Jackson's ntghi victory ? Ho paralyzed the British force. He checked all propensity on their part to meet him again without large reinforcements, and though numbering more than three to one of Jack son's force, Ihey lay cooped up at the place to which Jackson bad driven them on this memora ble night until Packenham arrived, on the 25th, with forces lhat swelled iheir number to fourteen thousand iroops. Jackson had so effectually whip ped ihem in his night battle that they did not dis :urb him in his construction of those works which he had gained time to make by his night attack. On ihe mjrning after his battle he marched about two miles up the river, cut the embankment, and let in the river between himself and the enemy. Behind this point he constructed those work'which on the 8th of January conferred immoWafity on himself and the troops under his commafro. It is obvious, therefore, that Jackson's night at tack saved New Orleans. But for that the enemy could have marched "into the city on the 25th, and no power could have stayed their progress. And shall theso men, who undauntedly fought and nobly triumphed on such an occasion, ana in such circumstances, be robned or any portion ol Ine glory which they earned so hardly? We have shown Jackson's object in fits night attack, nnd have demonstrated that he was per fectly successful in all ol them. We have dwelt at length upon some points involved in iho ques tions connected with thia proud triumph of western valor, but we could have elaborated many others which we have touched but cursorily. -3ut the fame which Jackson won in his defence of New Orleans is dear to every American citizen, and we cannot consent to see the public mind schooled into the belief that Jackson was 'repulsed in hi night attack on the British army. There would be as much truth in the representat:o 1 ih.it he was ' repulsed' oo ihe 8.h of January. That was a gn at day in African history ; I ui the night of the 23d ol December was a greater night, and WO are sure (lint there is no reader of the ' Courier ' who will not be gratified in perusing the fact on the subject which we have given to-day. Louisville Daily Courier. Discovery or a Sew People on Che Wet tern Continent. A discovery which, even in (his age of almost daily revelations of antiquities and wonders of rtuiole times and people, must strike the world with wonder, has just been made by the officers of ihe sloop-of-war Decatur. It will he recollected that the Decatur sailed from Bio in company with the Massachusetts (propeller) that they parted company, and that tor some weeks the loss of the Decatur was looked upon as certain. She was afterwards discovered by her consort, part way through the Straits of Magellan, and was towed into the Pacific by the Massachusetts. The New Orleans Picayune, of ihe 1st instant, publishes a letter received from O. H. Green, dated on bonrd the Decatur, off the Straus of Magellan, February 15," and which contains some statements so startling that we make the following extracts. From the apparent re speciabilit of the source, we see no reason for doubting '.he narrative, remarkable as it is. The wriier says : There being no appearance of a change of weather, I obtained leave of absence for a few days, and accompanied by my classmate and chum, Dr. Bainbridge, assistant surgeon, was landed on Terra del Fugo. Whh'great labor and difficulty wo scrumbltd up the mountain sides, which line (he whole southeast shore of these Straits, and after ascending" 3,500 feet, wo came upon a plain of supassmg richness and beauty, fertile fields the greatest variety of fruit trees in full bearing, and signs of civilization and refine ment meeting U9 on every side. We had never read any account of theso people, and thinking this island was wholly deserted, except by a fi w miserable cannibals and wild beasts, we had come well armed, and you can judge ol our surprise. The inhabitants were utterly astonished at our appearance, but exhibited no signs of fear, nor any unfriendliness. Our dress amused them, and being the first w hite men ever seen by them they imagined thai we had come from their God, the Sun, on some peculiar errand ol good. They are the noblest race 1 ever saw, the men all ranging from 6 feet to 8, we'll proportioned, very athletic, and strait ns an arrow. The wtm?n were among the most perfect models of beauty ever formed, averaging 5 feel high, very plump, witb small feet and hands, aui with a jet black eye which lakes you by storm. We surrendered at discretion, and we remained two weeks with this strange people. The ship is in sight that will carry this to you l.mnoP.,(l38.i.u9Pj8ayinf? that, tho offi will be filled with ihe most interesting matter, and astonish the American people, The vessel provsa to be the clipper ship Creeper, from tho Chinchi Islands, with guano, for your port, and I will avail myself of this opportunity to send you a specimen of painting on porcelean, said to be over 3,000 years old ; and an image, made of gold and iron, laken in one of their wars many years before the Straits of Magellan existed. Their teachers of religion speak tho Latin lan guage, and have traditions from successive priest, through half a hundred centuries. They tell us that this island was once attached to the main land; that about 1,900 years ago, by their record, their country was vitited by a vio lent earthquake, which occasioned the rent now kmwn as the Straits of Magellan ; that on tho lop of the mountain which lifted its heafl to the sun, whose base rested where the waters now flow, stood their great temple, which, according to their description, as compared to tho one now existing we saw, must have been 17,200 Icet square, and high, built of the purest pantile marble. They number about three thousand men, wo men and children, and I was assured the popula tion has not varied two hundred, as they prove hy their traditions, for immemorial ages. At Ihe aged grow feeble ihey are left to die, and if lh children multiply too rapidly they aro sacrificed by the priests, ibis order comprises about one tenth of the population,' and what the ancient Greeks called ' GymnophisH." They aro all of one peculiar race, neither will they admit a stran ger into their order. They live for tho most pari, near the beautiful stream called Tanucm, which takes its rise in the mountains, passes through tho magnificent valley of Leuvu, and empties into the Atlantic at the extreme southwestern point of the island. This residence is chosen for the sake of their frequent purifications. Their diet consists of milk, curdled with sour herbs. They eat apples, rice, and all fruits and vegetables, esteeming it tho height of impiety to taste anything that has life. They live in little huts or cottages, each one by Inmself, avoiding company and discourse, em ploying all this time in contemplation and their religious duties. They esteem this life but a ne cessary dispensation of Nature, which they vol untarily undergo as a penance, evidently thrirst ing alter the dissolution of their bodies, and firm ly believing dial the soul, at death, is released Irom prison, and launches forth info perfect liber ly and happiness. Therefore, ihey ore always cheerfully disposed lo die ; bewailing those that are alive, and celebrating the funerals of tho dead with joyful solemnities and triumph. Hos Drunk. The Moblesville (Ind.) Patriot gives an amusing account of ihe destruction of five hundred dollars worth of liquor by the lemperance people. Sumo seventy'barrels and kegs were consummed. Tho I) ty ton ale would not burn of course, and the Patriot says : The next morning, droves of hogs licked tho foam of beer, drank tbu half frozen spirits, and soon Mr. Poiker begin to hang his head and lop his ears, swinging head towards tail and tail to wards head, fhowmg ihs white of his eyvs, and opening his mouth as if things didn't feel right in his internal arrang"rnent. Tby soon look a lino for the river, hut occupying all aides of tho street in imitation of his mora noble boon com panion, iho biped. Didn't catch them at il the se cond time. They were seen lor days after, stun ding sullenly and sigaciously beside a fence, look ing as if the Maine law was iu opeistion.'