OF DOLLAR PER ANNUM, INVARIABLY IN ADVANCE. IOWA NDA: Cuinrbm fllornmn, Xpril 7. 1853. pottni. THE BURSTING OF THE BUD. Spring IN coming—Spring is coming! With her sunshine anil her shower ; Heaven is ringing with the singing Of the Girds in brak" and bower. Buds are tilling, leave.- are swelling. Flowers on field, and bloom on tree, O'er the earth, and air and ocean; Nature holds her jubilee. fl thou stealing, comes a feeling O'er my bosom tenderly ; Sweet I ponder as I wonder. For my musings are of thee. j - ring i- coming—Spring is coming 1 With her mornings fresh and light. With her moon of chequered glory, *V. of blue, and clouds of white, t'jim. gray nightfall, when the light falli Frv.u the -tar-lv-ranch-d sky, \\ |i;!< the splendor, pale and tender. Of the voting moou gleams on high. S: 1 at mom. at noon, and even, -a. ig i- full of joy for me, F.r I ponder a- I womh'r. And my musings are of thee. -t ' n thee my thoughts are dwelling. What- •e'er thy name may lie ; Beautiful. Utyond words telling, i- thy pre-enee unto me. V rning's breakings find t'.iee waking, \\ indering in the breezes' flight ; N gl-ry mantles o'er thee la a shower of sunny light; P _ r ht. dying, leaves thee lying l.i the silvery twilight ray ; stars i.. k i rightly on then' nightly ; the coming of the day. I* rywhere and every minute Feel 1 near thee, lovely one ; In the lark and in the linnet I ran hear thy joyous tone. Bud and blooming mark the coming Of thy feet o'er vale and hill: And thy jrr-ence. .th life's e—enee. Makes the forest's heart to fill. Lo Ufoiv this-. I adore thee. l.ovk ("KitaTtVE, thee 1 .-lag ; .Vow 1 meet thee, and 1 greet thee By ihe h> ly name of SORING. |)ionffr Distorn. Lot tor from Hon. C. 1\ A very. r i fFYSE OF THE STROPE FAMILY FROM THE tHARHE OF TORYISM A V/> FROM A IiROSS n TAt K MADE IPOS THEM BY i i/.'VFR OF IIILKESRARRE HFS HfSTO •\ V <>F II YoMlSt r < .t .Vi ASSEtI PIOXEER t - s I'II'AL—STROPE BIBLE T Wlt.T'. AM P. M'N'ER, KSQ.. Editor and PsNiJlfr of the " Record of ike Timet," ll'lht tt-barre Sir. : It is with no little regret that I have ;'-t read an article .u your paper of last week, purporting to have been written by your t*a ;her. the venerable CHARI.ES MIXER, and •ouehed in the form of a letter to Our mutu ally re.sjn.vtgtl friend lion. Wm Jrssir. of M ntroso. The direct aim of the letter appear s to lie. '•i throw entire discredit upon the narrative of Mr- .1 ASK WHITAKER, a daughter of JNEBASTIAX STR : E. who. as has been published by tue. was .ken captive with other relatives iu May, 1775, from the wjaox and earned as prisoners : Canada where they were detained for two y -s This discredit he seeks to estaldish. not y . "N hut by mere eonjecturrs and inferen - •: a fore I and very uusatisfactory eharao lu the same war. without adducing a : ■' tie of substantial proof, he seeks to fasten tf charge of toryism ami the character of a - y uix>n her father. SEBASTIAN STROPS, JOHN v. her uncle, and all of the members of : . Vi\ VALKENRIRG family who constituted t: -ettiement. at the mouth of the Wysox. at time of the capture. Deeply .a; ire -sod. as I am, with the strict r-.ii truth of her narrative, as well from P cveii :.t character ami romiborating facts. ■ the otter of her orieina t. ra fabrication. 1 could not hut be y i-.i • that Mr. MIXER should have - >- and you should have permitted •* - at this late day and far such it • r- u.s. to aqpetae the memory of j : •" " -: • able lady. If the desivndants *. \ Sunn, ami of his brother Jane, i l are now living at Towandaand '--'—it v :.ity. had not the most convincing i- • • f :ae truth of her statements, corrobora y : r.e unbroken current of traditiou iu that • • -si; if they could not satisfy any r sliced uiiud of the self-eacrifieiug ' ■ u of their ancestors during oar strug f ' i: ; vrt they might indeed look ujon Mixta* attack as s. inethingserious ; but, ; -•: rtuuateiv for them, and they ahi per ' - —u " hough a stranger—to congratulate -t painful irisls in the history of : iy. that facts have lava preserved, a:i-• i oav Inciag, not s*.'&*■.. but a :iu "• which leave t;o room, Uur uceustoa for •" -*■ EAEA to advance disturbing and inijwr .>■ :urts ; and which otakU upon athw, as ianregnable as the rock of f ffihar, the integrity of their w>ttwi— •• -i. i jatricvtisnj. and their reliance —c li<.> w hah your aged father, thro' ■ 1 • ' ibean- i.>f your ooiimms. ha< initia "g • . A ,w with them. ! shall deal . THE BRADFORD REPORTER. in his venerable years, stood alone, and had been solely instrumental in presenting himself, so unfortunately and with so much rancor and viudictireness to the public. You are his pro tector and friend, not exempt by age or any other cause, voluntarily in the field, fully re sponsible, skilful and imjvetuous, as the emer gency may require, in making or receiving a charge. It is for this reason my letter is ad dressed to you iustead of him. 1 will address myself at once to the facts of this narrative, and. because your father through you, has given only partial extracts from it, I will introduce a rough outline of it in connec ted form, and endeavor to meet his conjectures and hypotheses. The fara uies of the settlement at the mouth of the \\ ysox at the time of the capture, num bered three, viz : —SEBASTIAN STROBE, wife and children, of whom Mrs. WHITAKER, my inform ant was one : JOHN STROPE, wife and children, .Mr. and Mrs. TAX YALKEXBI-RC, and their un married daughter, EVA. These families were all connected. The Messrs. STROPE were bro thers and each had married a daughter of Mr. VAN* YAI.KENBURG. The date of their emigration from Cat.-ki'l to Wysox was 1773-4, nearly five years pre vious to the capture. All of them were cap tured in May 1778, with the exception of SE BASTIAX STROPE. who apprehending an attack, had gone to the Fort-; at Wyoming to procure a sufficient guard and help to protect and aid him in removing the families arid their valua bles to Wyoming, which was then viewed, in comparison with their remote frontier residence, as a place of security. The houses of the settlement were all de stroyed and the captives were taken at once to Tioga Point, and there given uj> to a Bri tish officer, at the head of his Rangers and In dians. In the latter part of July, they were taken up to Baiubridge and Unadiila. Short ly after, they were scut back to Tioga Point. Thence, in the Pali they were sent, by the usual trail, to Fort Niagara. [ln the published se ries of the Sr. Nicholas, these journeys are giv en tolerably full, although facts might, anri should have been given more iu detail. Mr. VAN" V.VLKEXBLRG and JOHN STROPE had been -cut. immediately after the capture, as prison ers under Inuiau escort to Fort Niagara, where they were iu confinement when their families arrived. Having remained a short time at the Fort, they were all then seat down the Lake to Buck's Island in a vessel. I u the narrative as given me by Mrs. WHITAKER. she calls it ' Buck's lslaud." but knowing that it could have b*>en none other than the one at the foot of the Lake, I felt warranted in correcting, what was with her. evidently, only a defect of memory.] From that point they were sent in bateaux to St. Johns, where theyremaiued du ring the greater part of their captivity : after ward to Maehiehe, and soon after to the vi i ciuity of Montreal, and in the Autumn of 1780, they rre svet. with three hundred other eajj tivi- for exchange, by cartel, to Skeucsboro*. now Whitehall. Thence they were sent, in such vehicles as could be then procured, to their various homes. l~{ou hearing the new-of the return of so many captives. SEBASTIAN SXR TK hastened to All.any, and pu-hing on at ouce toward Ske:ieslM>r nigh, met hi- long I-i fami ly and friend-, including his aged father and mother-in-la .v and otners. Such a meeting words are inadequate to describe. lit took them all to Cut-kill, and remained there until peace was established, and the next Spring returned to Wy-ox. t which place the others followed in the Fall. The full p.triicu !ar<. as emlvxlietl by nie in the June. July aud SeptCMfeer nuialx'rs tf the 6t. Nicholas, ,an uot. of course, be detaileti here. This rough outline i- sufficient for our present purpose. Among other incidents which xvurred after the return to Wysox, aud may be aj>f>r>priate ly re-statel here, was this : J HN T>TXURT. a noteil Tory, after the war. attempted to settle iu Mr. STROBE'S neighborhood, and so indignant was the latter, ou account of that man's cruel ty to the captives, while they were jrisoners upon tiie Susjuchauna, that he sought him out. whipped LLu and drove him froai the country. The name of Mrs. JANE WKITAKER'S first husband was JEREMIAH WHITE. IU the year 17>7. s'Xn after their marriage, they removed : up the river, as did many of the Wyoming he roes. the SAITEKLXES, ELU-KS, HVNXAS. JBLax - •M-. AU'ENS. F RSYTUS. AC. Mr. WHITER-.t "led ou land on the west side of the Owcgo Creek, ynow the town of Tioga, but less than a uitle from our village. From timt date— down to tin 1 time of her removal to Berkshire, in this County, a few year.- since, where she went to reside with her daughters, Mrs. HAN NAH HI LL aud Mr- LYPIA OLNEY, whui she left about the year IN.YO, to take up kr re.-i- | dence with her son. OUVE* WHITAKER. a m >st resj-eetable gentleman of Toulon. Illinois, where ! she died, rihe was known to all of our citi zens. and from the first to the la-: she bore a character, which the public hero w II say. Mr. | CHARLES MIXER and WILLIAM PENS MIXER ' might Ix 1 proud to eujor, even with their " proud breast-."* of which they boam the same font, which they s.> freely urated into her narrative a* published. It TVS- not then deemed imjx>rtant. It is now 1 give it in her precise :—"One O>LE was a Tory in the time of the war lie came to > nr house : a surveying oarty wa- there ; Surveyor PIXLET among the re-: COLE teii ti.at at such and such places he had led the enemy My Wood l>i!ed when J recMlcc tl how much we bail all suffered. ! said to hira. " walk out of the door " lie hesitated : my hn 'There had come in strange fare dies of interlopers from families of interlopers fruii Miuisink. from Westchester.'Minisink. from Westchester, i Xevr York.fro ui Kiuderhook.jXew York, from Kinder hook from Cat'kill and the ,\f and the Mohawk, neithercoii hawk.neither connected withjnected with Pen; sylvan ia Pennsylvania nor Counecti-fnor Connecticut, between ; cut, between whom and the whom and the old settlem j old settlers there was neither there was neither sympathy sympathy offeelinsr.norcom-W feeling nor community of munity of interest—Van 'ior-f interest—Wintermoots, Van der- and Van Al-tine- and order- and Van Alstines. olken. — A path of communi- A path of communication i cation was opened between was opened by the disaffected New- York. l i~iaox and Tio- betweeri Xew : York and Xi ga, the Indian country and ig-ara, to strike the Susque- Xiagara. to strike the Sus- iianna twenty miles above uuehanna tweut v miles above j VVilkes-barreY Wilkes-barre.' It appears from this, that to " make oat a case." your father has interjxjlated the word-. " Catskill," (the old home of the STROPES " Wysox," (their new home.) and further, the words "and others." In the spurious extract, he ha left out the " Wintermoots," the most notorious of all, and substituted the words " aazi others," for the jmrpose, doubtless, when ques tioned. to answer that those words iucluded the WINTERMOOTS, SIROPES and Van YALKEX BCRGS. What a miserable trick ! How uu- Sortunate. sir. that your compositor set up those interpolations ia italics, thus makimr them so conspicuous to the public ; and did you sup pose, when you allowed the article to go into your columns, that some friend of the STROPES would not detect the wroac ? Why, the words "Cat-kill," "STROPES" and YAK "YALKENBCRGS" do not appear iu your father's work of 1845, from the beginning to the end ! Here is an " afterthought" with a vengeance—yes, truly, with a vengeance. This disclosure, sir, needs no comment: but a fair-minded public, rest assured—particular ly the surviving representatives of this family— will, of right, make their own comments. In j the name of common fairness—in the name of | the dead and the living—l ask why you, as editor aud son, suffered this to so into print thus ! Pray, sir, urge your father to make a prompt correction. Let justice be done—sim ple justice. Let not the pure curren uf histo rv be thus polluted. Tuis is all that family ask of yott. Your father says:—" Her narrative must have been an afterthought," Ac l'iease to say to him. that I dt.eai it fortunate for iier. and not a little so for myself, that there are individuals yet living, who have heard hernar- j rate it, ju-t as it has been jrinted. I give yon their names and Po-toffiee address : Captain DANIEL 11 PARK, Fleuttngvilie, Tiuira Co. : JESSE IGG, JACOB CATUX, CHALXCEY IIILL, Pa vh TAYL -r. Mrs. JOEL FARNHAM, Mr. aud Mr-. SYLVENTS FOX. and. at a later late, Mr. F. 11 PCMPELLY. Owego. Not oolv before 1n32. when your father ttrmmenced his research, but at au early ifay, they heard her narrative, before he ever thought of erecting u|'<."xi the liank of the Susquehanna, a tribunal, like that of the Gileadites, at the pa-sages of the Jor dan. to see. forsooth, whether Judire HOLLEX 3ACK. SEBASTUV STROPR. and other-, whoharv- J jx-ncd, without fault of their own. to hail front Virginia, Cat-kill, 4c.. instead of Connecticut. —!<• SBC, I -ay. whether -itch incorruptible pa- • triot- crit'i express the Shibboleth of Wv> minir" :n away that he could approve ! Please say to your father, that if he had consulted a little mcTe freely the papers of Judge HOLLEX- : BACK, in the possession of his son. George M . and -uine other authentic sources, which he has somewhat neglected, it would not have injured his history. After impugning my motives, in a war not to be iui.-utiderstOod. yov father, with hi-foot >tiil planteo ujx>n the gravt of Mrs. WHITAKER, says further of the riiROPE- : " Under what j title or auspices did they -ettle? Neither the gallant and patriotic grand-father of Mr A', E RY, nor any other Connecticut settlers recog nized them at that time." I will answer. fir?t. that there are no documents to show it ; but the tradition is, that at the time of the cap ture. they wire holding und<-r a Connecticut claim The township in which Wysox w:i situated. was " Ciaveraek." 3 name given by the Sus.pi-hanna proprietor-, and that being the name of a town fi the Ea-t side of the lluds-m. uearly ej>posite Catskill, where the VAN Valkk.nm.rcs had. iivt-d : how natural bir the Conuevticut owners to endesv =r to please the settler- from Cat-kill and " Old Olavent.-h.*' bv giving the same name to their new homes. Iu this view the Stropes and VAN VALKEX biK-.s lot k like any other sort ..f characters than adventuring "interlopers." They secured, from the " proprietors." their old Dutch name, to which, by early association-, they had be- ;• cw -o mix h attached. Tni- indhnfttes tenn of cordial cofidence between them and the pa triotic " proprietor*." But. ;tr. with considerable effort, and with bis foot set uf-sn an honored lady's tomb. yx:r father reaches *p to pluck tbe'ieavos from the laurel, which.' by patient research and with fe most ponxxse I had planted, and had been hoping to keep green to her memory. With a strauge impulse, he -ca:ters tho-e leave- equivocally obtained, upon th* grave of my •-rrsßd-'atcer Ou b 1 ? behalf w-om I bsv . :g l •- *r*ak T rer •• ic ——i. The violent and reckless baud, which was re quired to strip them from the branch oil which they were growing by Mrs. WHITAKER' S tomb, made them wither before they fell upon his.— Take them back : let your lather do simple jus tice before he seeks to bestow complimentary legacies. On re-perusing Mrs. WHITAKER'S narrative, you may be sure, sir, I was truly pleased to fiud this statement iu her own words : "When my first husband died, in ISUS, J. H. AVERY helped and befriended me in settling his estate, so also did Judge ASHBEL WELLS : my hus band left no will, having died suddenly, bv having his leg crushed iu the machinery of a mill, near where the late Deacon JoxEs lived." I can sj>eak with propriety of Judge WELLS. — He was a discriminating, highly intelligent aud judicious man, and knew the difference bet ween a truth-telling woman, and one who could ori ginate a vile fabrication. Your father takes exception to this, which ajtpears in the St. Nicholas, as written by me ; " Mr. MIXER, in his excellent History of Wyo ming, makes no mention of the destruction ot the settlement at Wysox. He does not ap j>ear even to have been apprised of its exis tence." no calls this a " complimentary im jieachment" of his History. Any sensible man will tell him that those sentences convey no impeachment. He happened not to have been ajprised of the event. It would have been an impeachment if I had charged him with a knowledge of it, and that he had suppressed it from his work Wysox was about sixty miles above the field of his immediate research, and no rational man would impeach him unless he assumed to cover more ground than he could examine thoroughly. I ask notc whether such was not the case, and whether he should not now be impeached by this, connected with oth er omitted facts. He fins omitted mention of a patriotic family, settled at She-she-quiu, one at Towanda, aud also the more interesting par ticulars connected with the FITZGERALDS who settled below Wysox. But I will impeach hiru from the record. He says : "In the month of May, 17T8, * * no families were attacked— no houses burned." In answer to this. I refer youjto page 516, ' Pennsylvania Archives, 1777-S," where a letter appears from JAMES POTTER, under date of ATay 17. 1778. written from "Upper Fort," Penns Valley. He says: *' Our savage enemies continue to murder and scalp. * * * On the 11th in-t., out of a few families, coming to Lycoming, six person were killed. * * Three men also, at Loyal-' sock. * * Further, twenty person- killed on the North Brunch I the main river which runs by Wysox. was then so called) and one taken prisoner, who made his escape. (This was probably far above Wyoming, for. if it had been near there. Mr MIXER might have heard of it ; but as he has now taken all of the Sus quehanna under his jurisdiction, we have a right to make a charge of—want of knowledge. The wriur goes on, " the prisoner who has es caped. -ay- that the Indians are determined to clear the two Branches of the Susquehanna, thu moon (clear them of the white -cttler-. of course.^ Now, here is substantial impeachment, and not very "complimentary." Your father mid like to make u- believe that the tuajoritv of settlers above Wyoming were Tories. A* he knew scarcely anything of the upper portions of the river, th.s was a convenient theory. But the fact is different, as mauy yet living, well know. The Tories were few. comparatively. For further and important defects in votir father's history, with regard to BRANT'S parti cipation in the Wyoming massacre—the Mora vian Mi-sion- ESTHER'S hi-tory—the locality of S' LIJVAN'S battle upon the Toga, and Indian H;-t<>ry generally. I might refer you to ttro faithful and intelligent Historian*. o!" Towanda aud Eiraira, as well a- to the se ries and "54' of tfle St. Nicholas ; but for the rea.*on that I have no right to ura any gentlemen into to this controversy, with out consulting thcin. I refrain from saying how much the* might enlighten your father Again, sir. you have misquoted iae from the St. Nicholas, to suit your jmrpo-e :—• srcuocs. OLM'INT *• At the <•{*■:!!!* of th ** At th opening of the nrtr. under the gauLtuce of war. Un ier the iruidi&'re of their war-chief*, (the M -'their war-chief .the . hawks.) r.umerva- famuiui rjmer'His powerful, va vacat'Ni their p- oi ated their P"-sc-*si..ris np- n the M >hawk. aisi removed the Mohawk, aad renKurii to toCaaada. ' i< aaada."—it .YicAuu-r, p. Auain : *• Tfcev were tak-: *l. eti at once to T: -ca I'wil. Again—page 12i : •• The in>i th*re fiun up." [in tW aptOes were take-, el e - le >or(o b poe i.) Twn Point, and there t Oi, w. no, no 'J ■ hire up L" a Britih. at DK Jncfd to a Bntteh officer." lead of his JUiigers and In ic. iuos." The words, " families," " iatroluccd," 4c., arc your iut. rpolation*. Now, air. I appn-wh another subject with some reluctance, imt I feel the necessity and justice of allude:ng to it. The of Selastain ami Joho Str.pe are so respect aide and intelligent, and feel so keenly your attack, that they will banily excuse me if I fail to make mention >f any important fact that may have a bearing U]>-Q the qn-tion of father's cwadoT ami fairness. As they arc upon the de fen-ive —an attacked party—and. a-sailed bv suqris\ a.* you w t ll km *—l v*ill help then: to weaken you and fortify themselves. I wi'l name some of them : Mrs. LTWA S*rorr. wi dow of Judge GEORGE SCOTT, ami Mrs. Bt RDX KINGSBJ RV. her dajght< r. at Towanda ; Mr*. JANE LEAVEXWORTH and Mrs. CATHARINE HC LET. of Genoa, in th"> State : II >.RRT STROPT. of Wysox; Mr-. MARY HART, of Mooroeton : Mrs. EBENEZEK STEVENS, of Candor iu this county ; ISAAC STROVE, Mrs. HENRY TO TLE, 4c., 4e. You ap- w*'l awar that quite a proportion of voor father's bist>rr roiat** to the roeftict ing titles of Connecticut and Fenn-ylrama t-> th* northern part of your State. I had heard about two years since, that Samuel Avery, mv grin-ifatber, pebiisbed a treatise upon those titles aiwl. having a wish to see it. I wrote to yc>nr father in 1853. requesting hiir to -end me a eojvy, as I had understood he was the publisher of tfie work for Mr. A Your father rouid !>*■( or weald cot furnish it tone. About a yar since st the Piouecr Festfral at A 'l e? !* iroiT.es -~>f "he oM settlers for t. ' ' :. r" v I "e? s **jw >~vz t Major KINGSBURY of Bradford County. Jt tit! is "The Suscjuelianna Controversy Exam ined' Done with Truth and Candor, by S. A. (Wilkesbarre Pa.) Printed by A. 4 C. Miner, 1803," und numbering 141 pages of closely and well reasoned mutter and showing laborious research. 1 would like to have the grand chil dren and the great-grandchildren of Sebastian Strojie take your father's hook in one hand, particularly between pages 63 and 103 and the treatise in the other, and see whole solid pages transcribed from one to the other. Tills was all well enough if your father had ouly given credit, but the uame, Samuel Avery, does not appear from the beginning to the end of hi work. lie does say occasionally, however, in a style quite amusing, "it is moreover asserted by A very. 1 kuow not ou what authority' Ac., again " Sir. Avery adds but gives no authority for the opinion," Ac., again, "so says the Con necticut Advocate" 4c. The authority was good enough for your father, on which to base pages of sold matter ; then why. did he ques tion it ? Mr. A VERY was a poor man ; thrown al most upon the charities of the world by the failure of his Connecticut title ; and his trea tise was written while he was surrounded by a_ large family, suffering and dependent. Iu this point of view it was poor authority, but the material was rich enough for your father's use, notwithstanding it was furnished to his hand by a depressed and almost despairing man. And now, sir, let me weave together the threads of this matter in a more compart form: and. after having thrown the uet—for which you have *o -.trangely j)reiured yourselves, by your ferociou.* attack—securely over both, 1 will leave you. I hold, l*t. I have established Mrs. WHITTAKER'S gojer portionsof the river and conflicts with Mrs. Whittaker. and the " Penn sylvania Archives." Bth. That lie has, by interpolation, misquot ed, materially, his own history and in} writings in the St Nicholas, for nootber purpose aj>pa reutly, than to injure the character of the Stroj>e.s and wound my feeiingsas the r humble annalist. 9th. That he ha-, in his history, n-ed *h..- literary htlxvrs of an old friend, published bv him iu lbo3, without honorable eckaowkrtLs ment. 10th. That he ha- committed a blunder, near horn-' by not knowing that it was Elijah Shoemaker, whon th* tory Wtndaker, ina-sacred. See hi.- appendix, page 16. where he ha* it wrung, j 11th. That the large Dutch Bible, exhibited at the Pioneer F etiral at Okego. thciJdult.. and which wa- carri-1ly the fainlfv throughout their whole captivity, and has upon it- cover the mark of the conflagration from which it >. as saved is ' *troug as proof from the Holy Writ.' to their unshaken fidelity, a- Christian Patriot.*; and that the absurd hyjiothcsl* that they burned t;.< ir own buildings, "as n tL-cfnl doai to cover their true desiini M JWBT fa ilier -*ay> : scorched their family Bible : swept off all the coiuforta which they had Ln accu mulating f.>r five years at their Louie cp-oatL'.s remote frontier ; and then eud•lred a captivity of twi years and abent a half: an i. after the the war, returned to the sam-- groond. which '5 even now occtqaed by a graua-oa. ami—but *top. w iiy pur-ue such absurdity ? 1 take it that the world are not all fv< Is. if your fatiier i*—such a. bad logician. 12th That he ha- unnecessarily, har-hiy and wantonly hurt th* feelings of the descen dants of Seija*tian and Johu Stroj**. by ro;, jectures and reckless assertions, w iuiout a sin gle fa**t. and has. qute —rrTiirarilj. although quit' 1 jathetical!y, c Judge Jr.- • r tor having re*Tt in \ >ae an worthy vein, it *a> a sjiendia Festival, a ,d I rejoice that apj-njriatc mention va* mad of lwt> anrtiiv. To that fe-'iva?, vonr father w-- ful ly ami cordially invited. Hi* letter response WAS noble, uiuuly. and u.vrtny of tiw cca?m I shall IKY- r forget th* gr. rif.ed !-.k of the andien'T. anl the plea-nre I felt w?.. n or, ha of (t-,~ ("omrilttceof AmjP-romc- r-. I rond it to th* honored in as gnot way 3s my - &'••*.-- w> >ki permit. Among il-e FAFATA VCK HURT >:X--PE. an old g> ntlr ma* atwi - veral who hid joorncved all the way from Wysox and Towanda. to Kc rce-- en' n-vi wiw> aro d*s(*oi>daii*s of the r-atrot. against whom you have issued inyowcoinnms. a: this late day. a procratratKHi of arraiDoer If I had droamc*i or suspected thai the same pen. which w rote thv letter, sv- *o soon to in dite the proclamation I wctnltl now ask their j aro- c. behait of the Committee and of our County—for sach WJL* cot the fetfrtaaawrt to which err r ~ td citiaens, zz-i r*. *r :ro'*ed "ZciZ \'OL. XV. —NO. 4:3. [NOTE. —When, burdened with official du ties uud with but little leisure, 1 commenced writing this letter—l hoped—desired, earnest ly desired—that I might discharge uiy duty to this family and to the cause of truth, without speaking too plainly, and agitating your aged lather—for I have b?en accustomed to Vcn r ate years—and 1 have, in an humble way, nt all tines endeavored, by influence and example, to enjoin this upou those of my own age and generation ; but pray, sir, point out the limit, --or let the public do that fyr us—ujxjti the • lark, field of private vrronsr, 'where veneration should- leave off, and resistance begin. I hear from a friend, who was at Wilkesbwr re the next week after oar village pupers reach - | ed there, freighted as they were with the report |of that festival-—of the great interest it there j excited with all classes—your father, doubtless | at thu time, had many iuquiric* addressed to I him as to the history ai d sufferings of the ! STROM: family ; but he, no mention having boon made of these interesting facts, in hi.s own J work—felt driven, by- '• pride of authorship" to : iff are tli'in. Under such impulse, he unwise ly thought thut he must attaint the bloodof the Si MORES, or else suffer himself, asa h'uturi j an. How unfortunate, sir. how verv uufor j tunale. that he should have so thought, ami that you should have blazoned such waut of wisdom in your columns ! It is a mistake to supjrftsf that any one elevates himself in the I same ratio that he seeks to depress others.— I -ually. as in this instance, the result is quite ; different. If his facts are mistaken, his cuu , elusions erroneous, and his intention sottish, he d- pre-scs himself, like the heavy end of the old fashioned well—weep, going down plump to the j ground. with it dead weight hurrying the de =*ent. while the old oaken bucket," fresh and running over from the deep well of Truth, ru •' us u the top.j loth. Alt.hough the bran* hes ot defence against your attack, are as numerous a-. the J stars upon our country's flag, and too, as clear, I 1 w ill stop, now. at" thirteen," for the Strores love 1 that number, in " the times that tried . mens souls." I make lids statement for fear ; that you may forget the stars, while feeling uud • contemplating only the Id strip's. i In colluding. I take the liU-rty tosav, that , the History of Wyoming by vour father, <'n.vr.-.F.s Mixf.r. by means of this painful con ' trover.-y. which !♦*, through you. has initiated, j looks UiU. ii less like a monument to his indus ! try and fairness thau it did before his wanton j attack and th*sr disclosures, if. !>v his impru dence and pa—ion. it becomes further under j mined, it will lose its boasted character, and [totter, on its injured uase, —no lunger a nionu | Kent—but an aecu-iug, reproachful column. I am sir. nitb line consideration, l'our-. Sic., < lt.\Ki.r< r. AVERY". Oiregn. 2/crcd 2b, lSpo. j SII.vf.RINO Misjtojp.—The silvering of m:r> i r>.r< i* performed in the following manner : | A sheet of tin foil, the -ize of the projosed | niirror, is laid on a flat tabic, and rubl*-d over with a little men-try. until the latter to a , certain degree. amalgamates with the tin A 'urge quantity of mercury i.-> then p. a red over th- worknv..-- ha.lug certain ways informing them whether the sheet is iu aproperly pre] tar ed st-jLte rot. When ail i right. the edge of a sheet of peper is laid upon the edge of | the mercury, ami the glass is then did trendy : along, pushing part of the quicksilver before it, and resting njs 1.4J fccn lifted and set on edge, smnli quantities continue to ooze o.it. When the plate is lut ed. tlit tin foil adheres to the lack, a:.d the mirror is form d. i A R 'tfNNG Sr-VR 11 ATHF.aS v. i M S- VT( what of that : who w ants to be a Rf-sv old stone away in some damp Corner of a pasture where -andiinc ami fre-h air never conn.a, f r the cows to rub thcmsclres against, for snails r.rd bug s to a.iiy annc.ved bv inces sant coughing among hi* wtTtration. mns>.j tn ds discourse an 1 remarked, tnat *• If toe i-i-is*.*" would wreuT tlidr bor a.: s their boa-Is, fctt-i t-.e the str.ng*. cough- w.vud not le v j rwah-nt." He certainly d eft mran to be " coughed down." f'l'" Toe foilcw lag was jasstal oa the d.v.vr of th I.ttiivx ( .run h iu HirUoriibire some tD h&t k :—" r.i- - to give not;.-e that ao j-. r-ui to l>e 1 ir.'.-l in the cLnr.heard, but th-is Sv?.;g in the parib. Tbc ;n a colt. ar.] ar.w e r, take h'gl T cider brandy ati*J yahr*-tre as wi a 5 wil disawlve, a*. ray ae.gnmvs curai oo* of three or jVt years -trading, by the a- UQB of tru- a few biues — Lou a Celt it zt i * ter If y i to wfcethcra -oil *r tr ■? oo"."a:?.* i;c*r. ru jj-jr pcur ir - "" it % small qaatuttr of noegnr. or dilate tr url acc tiid. If uzse rg vit's ' - 'ir'.izzr :: *~s;-ec-e