mJmHai' i it pn'uhi uimjL'i'iu'n i i i ! in ij j i HJcuotcit to $olitiai, Citcraturc, riatlturc, Science ilttft'aiitj), anb (Siutfml Jfatcllignia;, VOL. 13. STROUDSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA. JULY 21, 1853. NO. 39, V v XniliPsIicd ly Theodore Sckoch. TERMS Two dollars per annnum in adrance Two dollars and a quarter, hair yearly and if not paid be lore the end of the year, Two dollars and a half. Those M ho receive their papers by a carrier or stage drivers employed by the proprietor, will be charged 37 1-2 ceiiis, per year, extra. No papers ditcontinucd until all arrearages are paid, except at me option ot the Editor. IO" Advertisements not exceeding one square (six teen lines) will be inserted three weeks for one dollar. and twenty-five cents for every subsequent insertion The Charge for one and three insertions the same. A liberal discount made to yearly advertisers. ID All letters addressed to the Editor must be post lnid. "! JOB PRINTING. Having a general assortment of large, elegant, plain and ornamental Type, we are prepared to execute every description of Cards, Circulars. Bill Heads, Notes, Blank Receipts Justices, Legal and other Blanks. Pamphlets, &c. printed with neatness and desputcU, on reasonable terms, AT THE OFFICE OF THE JEFFERSON I AW. Ladies Names. There is a strange deformity Combined with countless graces, As often in the ladies' names As in the ladies' faces. Some names are lit for every age, Some only fit for youth ; Some passing sweet and beautiful, Some horribly uncouth. Some fit for dames of loftie3t grades, Some only fit for scullery maids. Ann is too plain and common, And Nancy sounds but ill ; Yet Anna is endurable, And Annie better still, There is a grace in Charlotte, In Eleanor a state; An alegance in Isabel, A haughtiness in Kate. And Sarah is sedate and neat, And Ellen innocent and Sweet. Matilda has a richly sound, Fit for a nurse's trade ; Sophia is effeminate, And Esther sage and staid, Elizabeth's a matchless name, Fit for a queen to wear In castle, cottage, hut or hall, A name beyond compare. And Bess and Bessie follow well, But Betsy is detestable. Maria is too forward, And Gertrude is too gruff"; Yet, coupled with a pretty face, Is pretty name enough. And Adelaide is fanciful, And Laura is too fine : And Emily is beautiful, And Mary is divine. Maud only suits a high-born dame, And Fanny is a baby name. Eliza is not very choice, Jane is too blunt and bold ; And Marian somewhat sorrowful, And Lucy proud and cold. Amelia is. too light and gay, Fit only for a flint; And Caroline is vain and Ehy, And Flora smart and pert. Louisa is too soft and sleek, But Alice gentle, chaste and meek. And Harriet is confiding, And Clara grave and mild And Emma is affectionate, And Janet arch and wild. And Patience is expressive, And Grace is old and rare, And Hannah warm and dutiful, And Margaret frank and fair. And Faith, and Hope, and Charity, Are heavenly names of sisters there. Rebecca for a Jewess, Rose for a country belle ; And Anges for a blushing bride, Will suit exceeding well. And Phoebe for a midwife, Joanna for a prude, And Rachel for a gipsy wench, Are all extremely good. And Judith for a scold and churl. And Susan for a sailor's girl. Curiosities for the Fair. The Tri-Statcs Union, of Saturday, says, that on the day previous, there paBsed through . Port Jervisjon theN. Y. &.Erie Railroad en route for the World's Fair, the greatest won der we ever saw of the sheep kind This curiosity is a sheep girthing nine feet and covered with wool of the finest texture, 35 inches long, and growing in natural rolls, ready for spining, of which rolls there are 8,000. The weight of the wool is estimated to be 30 pounds. The wool hangs in beauti ful white rolls reaching to the ground on each side. There was also a lamb three years old weighing 300 pounds, and covered with wool 30 inches in length and growing in the same peculiar way. We saw also a liliputian.cow only 30 inch es high, weighing 229 pounds, and the moth er of three calves, one of which was by her side and giving milk, though only 13 months old. The sheep were raised by James Bick nell, of Aurora, Eire Co., and are of the Beak well breed. ' jggrHow late is it, Bill ? Look at the boss, and see if he is drunk yjst; if he is'nt; it can't be much after e-leven. Do we ever Forget? One of the most startling and mysteri ous phenomena of our nature, is the sud den revival of the recollection of scenes, events and thoughts, which had apparent ly been long forgotten. In many in stances, we can explain this by the law of association; but not uufrcqucntly the re collection flashes without warning upon the mind. It is as though we had been gazing out into theblank darkness, which lighted up all at once by a sudden flash, should become a theatre upon which the minutest events of our past life are re enacted. Phenomena of this kind, more or less distinctly marked, occur in the experience of every individual, in his ordinary and normal states. But here, as in many other cases great light is thrown upon the latent capibilities of the mind by its action, when physical disease has induced changes in the conditions which regulate its manifestations. The bodily organ in the healthy state seem to act as checks and as limitations upon the operations of the mind, somewhat as the balance wheel of a watch, checks and regulates the un coiling of the spring. We do not know how rapidly the wheels may be impelled, until the check is taken off. The balance wheel makes the watch move in time and it may be the limitation of the bodi ly organs only, which compels the mind to act in reference to time. A disem bodied spirit may have as little to do with time as with Epace. To all spirits, in their degree, as well as to the Supreme Spirit, one day may, in the literal accep tation of the words, be as a thousand years, and a thousand years as one day; so that in the future life we may continually live over again every portion of our past ex istence; not piece-meal and fragmentari ly, but as an undivided whole; just as the eye takes in a single glance the whole prespect before it, no matter though it bo bounded only by the remotest distance from which the furthest ray of light has come which has been casting upwards since creation. Something of this sort has been re marked by those few who have so nearly passed the boundaries between the pres ent and the future life, that they have won a glimbse of that 'undiscovered country from whoso bourne,' the great dramatist assumes, falsely, porhaps, 'no traveler returns.' De Quinoy, the 'Eag lish opium eater,' relates an incident of this kind, of a friend who was once at the point of death by drowning. At the moment when she was on the verge of death, she saw her whole life, down to its minute and apparent trivial incidents ar rayed before her, as if in a mirror; and at the same time she felt within herself, the sudden development of a faculty for comprehending the whole and every part. And he intimates the possibility of this mighty develoment, is confirmed by ex periences of his during that abnormal re lation between his spiritual and physical nature, which has been induced by the use of opium. Abercrombie relates the case of a boy, who at the age of four yeurs was rendered insensible by some violence, which fractured his skull. In this state he underwent the operation of trepanning. After recovery, he retained no recollection of the operation or of the accident which occasioned it. More than ten years after, he was seized with a violent fever, during which he became delirious. And now, the faint traces made so long ago on his consciousness traces so faint that there was no reason to suspect their existence were brought out under the fierce alchemy of disease, with the utmost distinctness, and he has related the occurrence with the ut most minuteness. One of the most common phenomena with respect to old age, is the re-awakening of the dorment recollections, of child hood. Many cases are on record of em igrants who left our German Fatherland, and have sought a new home in America, at so early an age as to have forgotten their native language; but when, often in the extremest age, they lay upon the bed of death, those long forgotten words come back to their recollection, and their latest prayers are breathed in the language their cradle hymns were sung. Uno ot the most affecting and truthful delinea tions in modern fiction, is that of the beautiful English novel, 'Mary Barton,' where the aged peasant woman, when just passing the boundaries of the better land, lives again the days of her child hood. Carsten Niebuhr, the oriental traveler, father of our beloved historian and states man, furnishes a striking example of the revived recollection of scenes and events long past. When old and blind, and so feeble that he had barley strength to bo borne from his bed to his chair, the dim rememberance of his early adventures thronged before his memory with suoh vividness, they painted themselves as pictures upon his sightless eyeballs. As he lay upon his bed pictures of the gorge ous Orient flashed upon his darkness as distinctly as he had just closed his eyes to shut them out for an instant. The cloudless blue of the eastern heavens bending by day over the broad deserts, and studded by night with eastern con stellations, shown as vividly before him, after the lapse of half a century, as they did upon the first Chaldean shepherds whom they won to the worship of hosts of heaven; and ho discoursed with strange and thrilling eloquence upon those scenes, which thus in the hours of stillness and darkness were reflected upon his inmost soul. The case of Tennent, a well known American clergyman of the last century, opens tip many interesting trains df thought; but none so worthy of consider ation as that of the sudden revival of re collection lie was attacked by danger ous illness, occasioned apparently by severe and protracted study. One morn ing, after his life had been despaired of, while conversing In Latin with his broth er, he suddenly became insensible, and to all appearance dead. His funeral was appointed after the usual interval. But his physician, who was an intimate friend, refused to believe he cold be dead whose conviction was somewhat sup ported by the avermont of one of the per sons who assisted in laying out the body, that he thought he had perceived a slight warmth in the region of the heart. So earnest was the physician, that the funer al was postponed; the time was again ap pointed, and again and again the friend pleaded for a little delay, first an hour, then half an hour, then a quarter but still no signs of life appeared, and it was determined the ceremony should proceed. But just at the supreme moment, the sunken eyelids were raised for an instant, and the body became once more an ap parent corpse. An hour passed away, and other groan, followed now by a slight token of returning life. The feeble spark was carefully tended, and the pa ttent was slowly restored to health. But it was apparent that his memory was a complete blank. The past was entirely forgotten as though ho had drank of the waters of Lathe. One day seeing his sister reading, he asked her what it was she held in her hand. On being answered that it was the Bible, he rejoined, 'What is the Bible? I do not know what you mean.' In every respect, so far as ac quired knowledge was concerned, he was a child again. Slowly and laboriously he re-commenced his education, beginning at the simplest rudiments. He was one day reading an elementary Latin book with his brother, with whom he was speaking in that language at the time of his apparent decease, when all at once he stopped as though he had received a sud den shock, and declared the book seemed familiar to him. In a short time, the veil was entirely lifted, and his past ac quirements and experience became once more portions of his conscious being. During all this time he uniformly asseser ted, he had the most intense and vived recollection of all that transpired during the days of apparent, or, as ho firmly be lieved, real death, ne dared not, he said, late fully what he had seen in that spirit land; but an account of it would be found among his papers after his decease. The event, however, took place during the dis turbance of the war of the American Rev olution, and these papers, by a series of singular accidents, were lost, before falling into the hands of his executor, and so were never examined. But if his own testimony the testimony of a gentleman of unimpeached veracity, who, for more than half a century thereafter, maintain ed a character of remarkable soberness and circumspection is to be relied upon, his soul passed from the body and entered the world of spirits, where he stood in the full presence of that inestimable glory upon which no man may look and live. Did he, in fact pass those viewless portals, which, we are told, deny all return ? Was his call to life a new birth from the Dead? Who knows? Whatever may be the bearings of this case of Tennant upon tho subject of dreams and trances or apparent death, it is certain that a forgetfulnes apparently as absolute as can be conceived was in fact only apparent; that the light from his past existence was invisible, only be cause obscured by the brighter light from tho spirit land; just as the faint stars are invisible whan concealed by tho obscur ing daylight, and wait to be revealed when that shall be withdrawn. It is ono of those numerous instances which go far towards warranting the belief that there is no such thing as absolute forgetfulness; that every impression made upon the mind, is ineffaceable, every inscription incapable of obliteration. A veil may be drawn between the after consciousness and the inscription; the characters may hp flllod nn: but this veil is ready at any moment to be withdrawn, the filling up to fall away when the character will become as legible as when first traced. Thero is another well authenticated case, in some respects still more striking, showing as it does, how slight may be the impressions made upon tho mind, which shall yet prove ineffaceable. A poor servant girl, in a German town, was attacked by a violent fever. She was unable to read or write, but during tho payroxyams of her disease, she become possessed as the priests say by a very polyglot devil. She would keep spouting forth in a loud and monotonous voice, unconnected sentences of Latin, Greek and Hebrew. Sheet after sheet of these ravings were taken down; but those who attempted to find tho elucidation of some deep mysteries in the Babel of unknown tongues, cot their labor for their pains. At lengtu ner pnysician ueiunumuu I trace out her antecedents, no succeeded ;in ascertaining that many years before, 'while a mere child, she had been em ployed as a servant by a learned ecclesi astic, whose habit it was to pace up and ! down a passage in his house, communi ' eating with the kitchen, and read aloud his favorite boojfcg, fcese gcajiEd arid unconnected phrases, caught in the inter vals of her labor, were now reproduced by her, after an interval of many years. Passage after passage of tbe notes taken down from her feverish lips, were identi fied among the old priest's favorite authors, so that not the least doubt re mained as to tho Origin of the girl's 'pos sessions.' Coleridge, in speaking of this case, adds to it one of the weightiest comments ever uttered : 'This instance,' ho says 'contributes to make it probable that all thoughts are in themselves imperishable, and that if the intelligent faculty should be rendered more comphrehensive, and that this is probable, the instance citied above from the 'Opium Eater' shows conclusively it would require only a different and ap portioned organization the body celesti al instead of the body terrestrial to bring before every human soul the col lective experience of his whole past exis tence. And this, perchance, is the dread Book of judgment, in whose mysterious hieroglyphics every idle word is recorded. Yes, in tho very nature of a living spirit, it may be more possible that heaven and earth should pass away, than that a sin gle act, a single thought, should be loosened or lost from that living chain of causes, to all whose links, conscious or unconscious, the free will our own ab solute self is co-extensive and co-present.' It is no idlo question, 'Do we ever forget ?' From the Lansing (Mich.) Journal. Terrific Tornado On Thursday the 2d. inst., a tornado, resembling rather a tropical hurricano than the tempests usual to this latitude, swept over a portion of this country, through the township of Alaiedon, &c., with irresistable fury, tearing up the for estby acres, and prostrating houses, barns, &c. A correspondent at Mason, furnish ed us with the following account : "As we approached the path of ruin at the clearing, near the former location of the dwelling of Mr. Wm. Childs, we could see at a distance the shattered stubs of unnumbered trees, standing at from 15 to 30 feet high, the tops of which had been twisted and torn off. In the centre of the current, varying from 10 to 20 rods, as far as we could see, not a solitary top was left. The tornado passed a short distance to the north of the dwellings of Messrs. J. and Leonard Pierce, which es caped with merely the loss of their cham bers and contents, consisting of furniture, wearing apparel, grain, &c. Their stout frame barn being a little out of the centre of the current, was taken up, carried bod ily some 60 or 70 feet toward the whirl, and torn to fragments, not a board or shingle left on the original location. A portion of their fanning mill was found about two miles on in tho course of the tor nado. It crossed the Sycamore near this place, tearing up the crossways, which were built of logs on the bottom-lands, together with the bridge, scattering the logs, timber and planks in every direction, and many of them were carried from 50 to 100 rods, to the high grounds in the line of the wind. "Mr. Childs' house was upon the oppo posite bank of the stream near the centre of the whirl. It was a very strong one. built of heavy logs locked and pinned to gether. Hardly a vestige of it is left to mark its former location, merely one or two of tho bottom logs. It was whirled in an instant into fragments, and with its contents scattered on in the course for miles. We saw the torn and mangled bodies of his liens, turkeys and sheep, which were killed on his premises. Logs from his house, a foot in diamater, were carried from 40 to 50 rods, and left standing one end in tho ground, with a tunnel formed in tho earth, as though they had been whirled a thousand times after alighting. A largo cauldron kettle weighing half a ton, nearly filled with water, was carried about 10 rods, with its contents. Ilis grain, fruit and shade trees, with all his marks of improvements, are in completo ruins. He, with two or three of his children, barely saved their lives by fleoing to the cellar. This tornado seemed to exhibit its greatest force through this, Pierce's and Uhilds' improvement, bevcral per sons who stood a short distance off, with great difficulty saved thomselves from be ing drawn into the centre of the whirling mass of ruins produced by this terrible tornado. Marvel not, thercforo, that Lemuel fancied the Day of Judgment was passing, as he reached forth and caught his lovely wife, to savo her from being drawn away by this powerful suction. A heavy drag was carried over 50 rods (high in the air) and let down in the cen tre of the stream. I saw trees two feet in diameter, which had been torn up by their roots and carried for rods in the air. The trees near the edge of tho path seemed to be drawn toward the centre Heavy oak stumps were torn from the ground, and carried to a groat distance. I saw a large one which came from tho State Road, about a mile to the south west. The small shrubs and trees that , were left on tho ground looked as though they had been violently wisped about in the dirt and mud. This frightful torna do was first sefeh by the.. inhabitants of tbjsr place in the town west of this its co'urse being north-east, and between its , place of origin anKl the place I have just mentioned, several new built and heavy log houses were totally demolished; and their contents scattered to the four winds of heaven; Several dattle wore killed in the lino of the tornado, and their scattered limbs found in separate places. About half a mile north-east on from the Pierce settle ment, a sheep was discovered whirling several hundred feet in the air. The course of this destructive and pow erful tornado was from the south-west to the north-cast, accomponied by the most rapid and circular whirling motion con ceivable. The cloud that attended or preceded . this tornado moved very near tho ground, changing its shape, and form frequently, and moving rapidly over the scene of de vastation. It appeared to those who saw it at a distance to be powerfully charged with e-j lectncity, though no inconvenience from its effects in thisrecpect was experienced by those who were near. Altogether, this was a most remarka ble phenomenon, marching in its way a cross our country, with a force that noth ing could withstand nor resist, whirling the heaviest as well as the lightest mate rials into one confused, vexed and broken mass. One should see the effects in or der to form a just conception of its power. The course was providentially through a tract but little settled, and though sever al narrowly escaped, I have heard of no persons being killed. Had it passed through a village not a houso would have been left in its march." The First Western Steamboats The Newport (Ky.,) Jcics has the an nexed interesting account of tho first steamboat on the Western waters. Tho first steamboat that ever run on the Wes tern waters, was built under the superin tendence of Mr. Robinson, eighty years old on the 8th ult., and now living with his son William, two miles back of New port, Ky. His head is whitened by ago, but his memory is good, and he recollects well about his youthful exercise. He was employed by Pulton, Livingston & Co., of New York. Tho boat was launched at Pittsburg, Pa., on the 17th day of March, 1811, and called the New Orleans. She was primed with a bluish colored paint. She passed New Madrid, Mo., at the time of the earthquake in Deoember, 1811. Mr. Scowls, now living in Cov ington, a wealthy man, was cabin boy on her. Andrew Jack was piolot and a Mr. Baker was engineer. She carried Gen. Coffee and Don Carl from Natchez with their troops down to New Orleans, in 1814, at the time Gen. Jackson was de fending that city against the British. Wo heard a good story once of a olergyman whose parishioners were al ways behind in paying their subscription; as he entered the church one morning before service, he was met by one of his wealthy members, and asked the loan of a dollar. The dollar was handed over, and after the services, as the minister came out of the desk, he handed baok the very identical dollar to the individual of whom he had borrowed it before ser vice. The brother manifested surprise at his returning the money without using it. Tho minister replied: 'that it had done him a great deal of good, as he could always preach better with money in his pocket.' An elopement and marriago took place in Wheeling the other evening, of a young ster and his landlady's daughter, who had just arrived at sweet sixteen. They had their clothes all made and snugly stowed away, but the old lady had not beon look ing over her spectacles for nothing, and and when tho hour had came for stealing off, the new cloths were missing. Not to be foiled the young lovers borrowed suit able apparel, and departed one evening for tho Justice's, the old lady just being in time to be too late. Sho had her re venge, however, in her own way. She went to the bureau where she had locked the clothes of the parties, took his to a wood pile, and with an axe cut up his boots, demolished his beaver, chopped his coat and pantaloons mincemeat fashion, and tore his linen into ribbons. David Crockett. An anecdote i3 rela ted of this rcmarkablo man which does him infinitely more honor than any of fice he ever held. Before he was a can didate for Congress, or expected to be, thero was a season of scarcity in the Western District, where ho lived. He went up the Mississippi and bought a flat-boat load of corn, and took it to what ho called 'his old stamping-ground When a man camo to him to buy corn, tho first question he asked was, 'Have you got the money to pay for it? If the answer was in the affirmative, Davy s reply was, 'Then you cant have a kernel. I brought it here to sell to people that have no money.' It was the foundation of his popularity. Z A loafer who had his Christmas load on, 'fetched up' against thc side of a house which had been newly painted. Shoving himself clear by a vigorous ef fort, he took one glimpso at his shoulder, another at the houso, a third at his hand, and exclaimed. Well, that are's a darn'd careless trick in whoever painted that house, to leave it standing out all night for the people to run against ' ' Electrical Influence. A. NEW DISCOVERY. It is the general impression among scienti fic men; that only a smalt portion of the pow er and influence of electricity has yet been developed: One of its recent applications ha3 been the lighting of cities. As one of the results of this new application, we notice' the following statement from, the Paris corres pondent of the National Intelligencer : " Science, particularly electrical science seems to be making fresh triumph every day. We have now to a new application of elec tricity by Joseph Watson, which is exhibit ing in the neighborhood of Wadsworth. Tho' great feature of the invention is, that the" materials consumed in the" porduction of elec trical light are employed for a profitable pur pose, independent of the illumination, and more than enumerating the entire expanses; so that the light, which is rendered constant and brilliant, is produced for nothing. Thus, while the light is produced by galvanic ac tion, materials are introduced into the batte ry, which pigments of the finest quality are obtained ; these are so valuable, that they con siderably exceed the entire cost of the opera tion, Dr. Watson thus speaks of his inven tion, in a pamphlet not yet published " Our battery we have termed chromatic battery and its produce is colors. It may seem difficult to imagine how any number of galvanic arrangements can be made to yield a great variety of colors: but when it is re membered that the real number of natural colors is small, and that a difference of tint and shade imparts to each separate pro duct a distinct commercial existence as a color, we may then be believed when we say, that by the use of not more than five substan ces introduced into our batteries, we are abld to produce no less than one hundred valuable pigments, exceeding in value, by a great per centage, the original value of the article con tributing towards their production. Our mode of producing these colors consists, not in any subsequent mixing of tho products re sulting from the working our batteries, but it is the result of the actual developementof tho electricity in .he battery." A laughable story of some carrier pigeons is told in an Antwerp newspaper. The editor of a celebrated journal pub lished in that city, sent a reporter to Brussels for the King's speech, and with him a couple of carrier pigeons, to take back the document. At Brussels he gave the pigeons in charge to a waiter, and called for breakfast. He was kept wait ing for some time, but a very delicate fricasse atoned for the delay. After breakfast he paid his bill, and called for his carrier pigeons. 'Pigeons!' exclaimed the waiter, 'why, you havo eaten them!' IE? A train of 37 coal cars, weighing each 3 tons, 100 pounds, containing 5 tons of coal each, were drawn, on Monday evening week a distance of 5 miles from this place on the Del., Lack., and Western Railroad, by a sin gle engine, up a grade of 75 feet to the mile, at the rate of about 6 miles an hour. In that distance there are 13 curves, comprising full two-thirds of the way. Lackawanna Herald. Pennyroyal powdered and mixed with hou- ey has been presented to the French Acade my of Science as a capital remedy for hydro phobia. It must be taken, six spoonsful a day, with Eome sweet oil, for three days, and then, it is said, no fear need be entertained about the disease. In several of the northern counties of Ohio the foliage of the forest tress has been, in cer tain districts, so generally devoured that most of the limbs are entirely Btripped of their leaves, by a browrt bug which flies at dusk and settles upon them. It is about an inch long, and a quarter of an inch in width across its back. OCrThe fast train on the Pennsylvania railroad, a few days since, when near Greens burg, attained the extraordinaty speed of SO miies per hour. ET We observe that J. L. Ringwalt, form erly of the " Monroe Democrat," has been ap pointed, by Collector Brown, a clerk in the Philadelphia custom house. Miss Lucy Stone, one of the 'strong minded,' made a speech in New York tho other day about tho sexes, and said : Toor, weak woman. She has always been weak has it not been so from the beginning? Did she not first yield to temptation ? Ah! yes; Eve could conquer Adam poor elf! But to conquer woman it took Satan himself. Laughter and applause. That woman ought to have a husband who could sing to her Oh, rock the cradle, Lucy !' She'd soon get bettor then! That's all that ails her ! A Mistake. :The people of Delaward thought they saw a comet on Wednesday last. It turned out to be, however a red-headed woman chasing a boopod "ler down the road for squirfgrto'acco 1 juice on her Sunday carpe'fj .'s' 4