. 4 -Riclxnrtl Xugent, Editor The whole aut of Government consists ik the art of beino honest Jefferson. 1 and PiabJisiicr. f VOL. I. STROUDSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA., FRIDAY, APRIL 3, 1840 No. 11. , j - ., - I 51 JEFFERSONIAN REPUBLICAN. TERMS. Two dollars per annum m advance Two dollars nnd a quarter, half yearly, and if not paid before the end of Uie ye.ir, Two dollars and a half. TIiomj who receive their pa pers' by a earner or Maw drivers employed by the proprietor, will be charged 37 1-2 cts. per year, extra. No papers disronunuod until a3T, arrearages arc paid, except at Mte option of the Editor. 1Da lvernsements not exceeding one square (sixteen linos) will be inserted three wreks for one dollar ; twenty-five cents for every subseqwent insertion ; larger ones in proportion. A liberal discount will be made to yearly advertisers. IDA11 letters addressed to the Editor must be post paid. and split to proper sizes for current family use. Many of us in our neighborhood are bad off for wa ter, and the men don't take it as much to heart as they ought to, or things would soon begin to mend. Carrying water a long distance is real work, and i jrown l0 Mrs. Green, as they met, one mom T2ie Wilson IIohisu, OR VILLAGt GOSSIP, nv MISS LSSLIE. Mark how plain a tale shall put you down." Shnkspearc. " Have you heard tlo news ?" said Mrs. llannr a ircneral assortment of large dopant plain andorna mental Type, wc are prepared to execute every des cription of Cartls, Circulars, Bill Heads, Hfotcs, B Fa ii It Receipts JUSTICES, LEGAL AND QTHER PAMPHLETS, &c. P-.r.te-! with neatness and despatch, on reasonable terms. WO MAX. Not thine not thwe is the glittering crest ; ' And i he glance f the snow white plume ; N. rilie badge that gleams from the warrior's breast, Like a star 'mid the battle's gloom ! Nor 's thy place "mid thy country's host, Where the war steed champs his rein . Whore waving plumes are like sea-foam tossedfiaJ A id the turf wears a gory stain 1 " N ir thee nor these are thy glorious bower ; But a hauer gift is thine, , -r AV u-n the proai have fallen in triumph's hour, And the red blood flows like wine ; . , T wpp the dew from the chimmy brow T. raise the dtxxjpiHe head w'- T. c o! the parefcei lips fevered glow, A.. 1 - KKhe the lowly bed '. No! :hine not thine is the towering;! U"'ire ambition makes hs throne The- 'imui dove wings not her flighty Wacre the carie soars atone : Ii'i; m the halt and in Uie bower, j ' Aa.i by the humbly hearth," Man feel the charm and owns the power" Tua: binds hua still to earth. Yes these are thine '. aad whe can say 1L-- ; a brighter doom, Wh winds fame's gory wreath of bay, Tlnand an aching brsSv 'l bloom 7 Cii' to watch death's Bvflhaes depart T soc.lie lie aefcug p6p of wo, Anl to whisper hape to tht fiunUng heart, U the proudest jnien bolovv1. From the Farmers Cabinet. Small Coniorts. so is drawing it from the bottom of a deep well, and a tall pump don't work easy. A few of our neighbors have good large cisterns, with pumps in them, that save much time and labor ; and besides, the fine soft rain water they contain is so good for washing, that I wish you would give us a lift in the Cabinet, so that every family may be furnished with one, evenit should be thought to be for oui aakes alone. Now there is the milking, which y6u know must be done tain or jthinr, no matter how great the storm, or deep the mud, or filth of the path, or barn yard, or stable; try to help us along a little in this important matter; the path might be paved or grav elled, one would think, without much expense or labor; and the stables, can't you teach our dear masters how they as well as the cows, can be kept clean during the winter season. It is said cows give much more milk when they are kept tidy and clean, and I think "it stands to reason that they should. If 1 was a cowl wouldn't give a drop of milk unless I was kept neat and clean, and weli fed in the baigain, fori lintc these lazy, stingy fellows, that are always trying to cheat and get something for nothing : do give them a touch on those sub jects, and if you do it handsomely, I will write to you again, and tell you a few more of our grievan ces, under which we have been long laboring to our great discomfort, and the great injury of our constitutions. SUSAN. AN EXTRACT. Go nut beneath the arched heavens in night's profeund gloom, and say, if you can, "Tjiwik is ,jo uoo: nronoance tnat areau oiasoflainv, anu iug, at the principal store hi the village of Thebes, a place whichall our topographers have most unaccountabiiorgotten'to insert in their maps of the Slate of. IS'cw York. "No," repliod Mrs. Green. "Iis a long time since there was any news in Thobes." "Well " said Mrs. Brown, last.". Indeed ! 'the Wilsot House is taken at And who ms taken it ?" "Oh! 1 don't know; bdt'my Phillis saw the windows'open this inorniij,aud old Polly Splat ter door busy white-washing." " I wonder," observe! vMrs. Green, "that Phillis did not ai.k Polly. .Of course alio could have told who hired her." 'Why, to tell the truth," answered Mrs. Drown, " Phillis did inquire, and Polly said the name of the family was either James, or Clark, or Thomson ; though she could not ex actly remember which. , But Polly is so'stupid, that she can never understand names, and Phil lis so giddy she always targets them." "Did Phillis make no further inquiries ?" ask ed Mrs. Green. "To be sure she did," replied Mrs. Brown. "But you know old- Polly-Splatterfloor is so deaf that she eau scarcely licar, and has so few teeth that she can scarcely" speak, and is, be sides, so cross when she is white-washing. So she told Phillis to mmd her, own business, and make haste home with her market-basket, and not stand there hinderinglhcr." Mrs. Brown and Mrs. Green .have finished their purchases at the stos, walked on togeth er, making various conjectures to each other about the people that had taken the Wilson House, which was one of the best in the town, and which originally belonged to a' family of each, star above you will reproach you lor your un- that n wLo had ong jnce removed lo lll0 broken darkness of Intellect every voice that j pietropoiis. floats Upon the 'night winds will bewail your r.ttcr As 13 the case in most American villages, the i femaie population of Thebl's far outnumbered beinir hopelessness and despair ! Is there no God "Who, then, unrolled that blue scroll, and threw up on its high- frontispiece the legible gleamings of immortality V- Who fashioned the green earth with his perpeu&l roiling waters ind its wide ex panse ofisltmd tmtl maftn Whu settlediliu foun- Who paved the heav- popuiatiun oi I iiee the male ; and the matrimonial market extremely deficient in the article of youirg men, the ladies, in default of other occupation, wore much addicted to rofqrminjnihe world and im proving ahconTiltioiTfTIiinlvtuefJTey"noL; only kept a close watch over the little communi ty around them, but hey had lately taken the Pe- dations of the mountains ? ... .i i i i -i i : Women's work is never done, therefore you ought j ens wnn cjouas, ana uiuuuu amiu wc uauuexs ui . . Isldn(s unjer their protection, and had for lo lend a hand. l storms the voice- of thunders, and unchained the , j 11P;r!tv for the nurnose of stmnlvimr tho. ,,.,., ' J i 1 i i -j o wants (both mental and phvsica!) ol these ami able savajies the history of Prince Lee Boo The Cabinet, and other agricultural periods, liavc lightnings that linei, and lu.k, and flash in their mide our men folks very learned on the subjects i gloom 1 Who gave to the eagle a safe eyrie where t.f manures, crops, short-horned cattle, sheep, the tempest dwoll and beat strongest, and to the ; having convinced them that his countrymen dove a tranquil abode amid the forests that ever , were a peopie whose capacities were great, and manures, Ifwine, &c We hear them often discussing these It vics, and they really appear toderive benefit from it, for they seem to talk less of politics, and other tverlastiug subjects about which thoy could never ?ome to any satisfactory conclusion, since agricul tural papers have been generally introduced in our jhborhood. But there are some matters that te women folks, who constitute a part, and wc tLink no -unimportant part of the agricultural com- i mity, are desirous should claim a share of the Intention of the Editor of the Cabinet; just give us a page or two of your useful journal every month, h.i which to discuss such subjects as may more par- ftiruiarly appertain to our department of the duties of hou-n-wifcry as connected with agricultural life. If you will agree to furnish us with the uset of a chinviey corner of the Cabinat for our own use, we -will a?ccpt it with thanks; if not, we will have a j pipr of our 0&m for onr otcn use, edited by one of r j Ota numbers, and then look out, and stand c3. tvlien the hot water begins to fly about your I w ill now tell you ome of the matters we want ' r jj:'it :efore the public, widtthe view of meliorat ) . : - u ' conliUOMjUjtd promoting t&a interest & com n of all concerned. You raiy call these small i'.vU 'jrts, but of email things, groat ones are com- -.se!; praia f sand make mountains, drops of wau?r consttuue the ocean, a4 liule babies make J i'jn and women al! the world over; no exception ! E iitor. The gc& matters of agriculture are echo to the minstrelsy of lier moan ? ""ho made tiiee, oh Manl with thy perfected elegance of in tellect and of form 1 Who made the light pleas ant to thee: and the darkness a covering and a her ald to the first beautiful flashes of the morning ? Who gave thee that matchless symmetry of" sinew and limb 1 That regular flowing of blood ? Those irrepressible and daring passions of ambition and of love ? No God ! And yet the thunders of hea- v. hose necessities were numerous One learned Thvban, a lady, whose"chiof two female servants, one black and one white, had arrived in the steam-boat that had stopped at Thebes about noon ; and that they also lfad gone to the mansion in question. Putting all these things together, it was evident that the strangers had furniture, sen'ants, and a dog. As the ladies of Thebes looked down into the Wilson House they saw the furniture un packed, or unpacking, and some of it actually arranged. Curiosity increases by feeding, and they would now have given almost any sum to be inside of the house, with an opportunity of close inspection. They saw a long rough box, which, from, its apparent weight, when moved, was declared by Mis. Cobalt to contain minerals, and she was, therefore, convinced that the stranger was a man of science. Mr. Warspite rather believ ed he was a British i.py, and that the box was heavy with British goid. They were so fortu-natc-as to see it oput, and they found that it contained the kitchen clock. Aniono the objects that were not familiar to J our fair Thebans they perceived something that was only intelligible to Miss Cnerubina Moon shine, who had been educated at a city hoard ing school, where she read nothing but history in public, and nothing but romance in private; and who pronounced the thing in question to be a guitar case. And this lady immediately con jectured that the expected occupants of the Wilson House were a. young couple just eloped, and that this was the very guitar on which the lover had serenaded his mistrsss. A square box, very strongly secured, was the next thing to be wondered at. Mrs. Dailydove procounced it a medicine chest, and felicitated herself on the arrival of a new doctor or a new invalid. But Miss Watermilk feared that it was rather a liquor ca.se, and thought it shouldjie inquired into by the Temperance Society. While this, the moat mysterious of the box es, was under discussion, a chaise, "with a black leather trunk behind it, drove up to the door of the Wilson House, and. a gentleman alighted from it and handed out a lady, whose figure was concealed by a shawl, and her face hidden by a close straw bonnet and a green veil. The mulatto man received them at the door, and af terwards look the chaise round to the stable. The lady entered the house immediately; but the gentleman stood a few minutes on the steps, givlrrgBOrnfrdTf odipns to Jthe servants.. He was a. man of middle age, neither tall nor short, nor handsome nor otherwise. Shortly after, the lady was seen going thro' the rooms without her bonnet; and various in deed were the opinions respecting her, as the spectators in the opposite house pressed close to the window, and looked over each othej's shoulders; though all the glimpses they could obtain of her were certainly very imperfect. Miss Crow thought the strange lady's hair tudy was that voluminous work mis-culled the too light; which very much surprised Miss Flax, I T.' . . 1.- 1.1 I , 1 ' . I I 1 A T- Library of Entertaining Knowledge, was enga ged in writing a scries of paper on Natural Sci ence, to be translated into Pelen, whenever a professor of that language could be found ; and another was employed on an octavo of six hun dred pages, designated "a Synopsis of Ancient History, also to be translated by the same hn ven, and the waters of earth are calm ! Is there ! guist, and for the especial benefit of tho same no lightning that heaven is not.avenged ? Are there ; benighted islanders no floods, that ma rfis not swept under a deluge ? They remain but the bow of reconciliation hangs But the largest proportion of the members of this praise-worthy society being ladies whose out above and beneath them. And it were better ! stociungs were out narrowly siripcu witu ume, that the lnnitiess waters and the strong mountains ' ther wur, content to be employed in making i i i -uii. .i ,-,. up long flannel lackets, substantial quilted bon were convulsed and commingled together it were; . , a 1 1 r nets, and thick doable calico wrappers, to su- better that the very stars were conflagra ed by fire, 'edc cmtumo of pclcn h or shrouded m gloom, than that osu soul should be ! , j as t Vr t j j : i -r. i o . a . ' J the Altar of imrccssin ! And old continental arrived at an inn, and ask- j Society were hold in a ci-dovast- scl i c . 4 . u r ' directly opposite the Wilson House -. ! v and amply dicowed in your journal, but we 'a:it something aid about "our own wants and v.i,!us. rn jr or t mr o .rtt mii-ilflnxl n ' nrnnil A- y y a -jt a " wood houee, for the convenience a.i'J comfort of females ; it was much talked of, anci ( cry man in or neighborhood, oxcopt-an old bach t - r, approved of it, and most of the men said they v, .rjld b lild a receptacle for keeping the fuel dry. f.-.r ecn went so fir as to et the stuff (or it, but a L:r jrJi tuedjl for anodici purpose, and to tin's t , -re !m not Wnh binh a vi iMjil house i.i the , . .-, w- i " i .ip ; st we lu re burnt vet wood, and go out 1 - i jr:Jinner is delayed fieyond the usuni lime ' 'ir':Jefle lite fuei being wet nnd groen, i WiMi:ierer 'h$petis, we nfe.jjure te hoar of j i x way oi CQiOfMim, SOOUZn me lanii mys e. ise'.y vhre uWiMhU frft). I .'.ikinjr, jxw knmv, ejftpt WUm JteU?;(Hl - woo J. si we 'want ' fy&Mar emif n keej-ing wdofn tl;3ry, acl having it cut strangers to the comlorts ol warm clothing. I he weekly meetings of the Pelon island ( hool-room ti rr u ior reireiiii:uui. n ire nusiu&s aci iroiuiu nuu , i,:i, bone of ham, and a crust of bread. Her son, who; r, , ,. 1l3nnonpjl fltIll had been an officer, gave the poor fellow a shilling themselves, at the place of rendezvous, by two when ho had dur. pieking, and bid him march off. i o'clock in the alicrnoon, an liour before thy usu- Soon after the old wonmucorr.es in to loolc lor her; al tJmo. There was inucli discussion on the par. "Mother," auvs the officer, "what might the men tenants of the Wilson House the owiut nickinir of that bone be wortli ?:' "Why, about one of which lived, as we have staled in the city.- and sixpence, thee hard times." " Well," cries ! And Mr. Brown and Mrs Croon gave in their the humane son, "I have made a fine bargain, and saved sixpence, for I gave him but a shilling to pick the whole." KEJIPES, To Soften 1Va4er. A few ounces of soda will . Mrs. Pcttyfaqt deposed that her son Johnny (a boy of ten years old, who lived mostly about the wharves) had seen, eaiiy that morning, a number of packing-boxes landed from a low boat and put into two carts. The boxes were soften a hogshead of the hardest water. It is ; escorted by a man servant, a stout mulatto, very greatly superior to pot or poarl ash, giving a deli cale whiteness to linen, without the slightest inju-j only the varioloid, lie was dressed in a brown much marked with the small pox, or, perhaps. ry, and it never, unless excess is.usod, in the least -?' w,wwiinnJle,'gtllwis. if Johnny , ' : , , , . . ,1 colored man s hat was good, but not quite now shoifla bo warfied m vesv hot suds, and not rmsudinn , , , " ;, , . . ' . 11 he boxes evidently contained lurnuuro ; an , lUAKWJiiui wttwi sununo mum. A ploaglinan in not an ignorant man because Ijp doos not know hiw to read; if ho knows how to plosgh, he is not to be cH5 an ignorant man ; but, a wife nwy 19 jusflycaited an ignorant- woman, if She does not lftieW holv to provide, a dinnor for her 'husband. It1 is oW comfort Tor a hongry man ,10 loiymn liow doiiitfuliy his wife plays and slags : toVorsnuy live on very serial, diet; but husbands dtiuid in need of the solids. cloth coatee, gray trowsers, and a green and yellow striped waistcoat; tho stripes going was not mistaken. J he w and on the Up of tho last cart rode a dog-house which -was not surprising as the servant was followed by a large black and white dog, which Johnny know to . be a pointer, and therefore valuable. The dog'; name was either Bings or Mings, for he heard the. man call him so. Mrs. Potlyfact finished her narrative by in forming the' company that dear little Johnny had traced. the carts (that Is, followed. them,) to the Wilson House. Aed Mrs. Scoutwell as serted that she knew, from good authority, that to whom it appeared almost a jet black ; Miss Maypole thought her entirely too short ; Miss ilfifestone was just going to say that it was a pity the lady should be so tall. All, however, agreed in pronouncing her young, except Miss Parchment, who advised them not to make up their minds lo suddenly, as nothing was more deceptive than distance. The husband was decided, by an unanimous vote, to be not young, but they raised as to his most probable age the thermometer of their op'inion ranging from forty-five to seventy. Thevsaw him i.earlv all the time in one ol the front parlors, which he evideutly intended for-a library and once he camo to the iront door and look twice up the ' street, and three times down it. One lady lemarked the curls on his temples were evidently those of a wig but when he turned to go away, another point cd out to her companions that the back of his head was beginning to grow bald, and that it must be his own hair, as nobody ever wore a bald vig. The attention of the spectators was now a gain directed to the mysterious square box, which, to their grr.at delight, the gentleman was proceding to open. They almost fell out of the window in leaning over to look, and when the lid was linally raised, every head tried to bo a neck in advance of all the others 'The box was found to contain sundry articles of plate, including silver forks ; the latter uten sils being prool positive, m the opinion oi the gazers, that the gentleman and his lady won: undoubtedly genteel people, and therefore quite proper to be countenanced by all Jhebes place which had always held its head very high, in consequence of the universally good society, most of its inhabitants being lit to visit each other. There was one unopened package of silver yet remaining at the bottom of the box, when a total eclipse was put upon all, by the coloured man shutting the front windows at the approach of twilight. Wo need not stop to remark how little ad vancement was made this afternoon in the great works that were in progress for the unhappy natives of the Pelen Islands. Next day, a brass plate was seen oi the door of the Wilson House, and in half an hour all Thebes was acquainted with the fact that tho name of the new resident was B. Morrison. Coniecturc was next at work to divine the pro-, bable signification of the initial letter: some contending that B. stood for Benjamin, as was most natural ; others suggesting that it meant Bartholomew, Basil, Bernard or Barnabas. One man we acknowledge that he had always been considered the greatest fool in Thebes opined that the name might b"e Benedict ; but this absurd conjecture was indignantly scouted by his hearers, who unanimously declared that no American could possibly bear a name that had been disgraced by the traitor Arnold. In a few days, it being supposed that Mr. and Mrs. Morrison must be quite settled in their new domicile, the Thebans thought it timeto call upon them. The first visitors were their nearly opposite neighbors, Mr. and Mrs. Elliot, the clergyman and his wife; the next were the ladies that lived next door on each side; and all the rest followed suit immediately: so that long before the'next weekly meeting of the Pe len Society, all its members were competent, from personal observation, to compare notes a bout the new residents. Tho substance of the reports was that the house wasliandsomelvTur nished, though neither Mrs. Brown nor Green liked the patterns of the carpets ; and and that the age of the lady was somewhat be tween twenty and thirty ; but all agreed that she was considerable younger than "the hus band. It was generally concluded that, on her part, the marriage must have been a mercenary one, except by Miss Moonshiife, who adhere! to her theory that it had been a runaway match; but she explained the anomoiy of a eloping with a gentleman so much older than herself, by the probable conjecture tint shti had only done so to avoid the horrors of a union with a man still older, and in every respect worse, whom no doubt her flinty-he.trted parents had selected for her very likely an old fat fellow with a real wig. and the gout in both feet. "Now,'fsaid Miss parchment, "I am not sure that Mrs. Morrison-is so very young her self. I doubt if there are many years dirl'er ence between her age and her husband's. I observed when I called upon her the other day, that she took care to sit with her back to tho light." " Whatever may be their ages," said Mrs. Peltyfact, " I can't believe thay they arc peo ple of general knowledge, or who had soen much of the world. The day I visited them, Mr. Morrison said something about s'the inhab itants of Thebes,' instead of calling us ' the Thebans,' as he ought to have done. It is as tonishing what ignorance and what rudeness there is in the world. Once, when I was on a visit to my uncle Krips Yanblunk of Troy, I ac tually heard a Philadelphian talk to him of tho 'Troy people,' instead of saying 'the Trojans, as was right and proper. Could any thing have been more disrespectful? Uncle Vimblunk was quite affronted, as he had to-be he that was one of the very oldest of Trojans !" Mr. and ilirs. Morrison continued to be the objects of constant speculation to the Thebans, who cossipped over every thing concern ing them, till they made mountains out of mole-hills? What was first mentioned as conjecture was repeated as fact, each report being like'a snow-ball, that gathers additional snow as it rolls along. Still, every body visit ed the Morrisons, and various and contradicto ry were the opinions expressed of them, while those two little important words, "if" and 'but' were in perpetual requisition whenever they were talked of. Theirs was an ant illustration of the" position in which strangers frequently find themselves in a dull village. Old Judge Heavyhead, whose costume was never very recherche ; and who, when the court was not sitting, spent most of his time in going from house to house to get people to play chess with him called one morning on Mr. Morrison, for that purpose. As it happened the door was opened in the absence of a man by a very sim ple country girl, called Becky, whom Mrs. Mor rison, had recently hired a an assistant wait er, and was yet a stranger to tho Thebans. On Judge Heavyhead, inquiring for Mr. Morrison the girl replied he had gone down tos.he city, " Is Mrs. Morrison at home r saiu uie juago thinking he might have some chance oJVnlay- ing eness witn lier. ' Are you sir. Smith ?' asked the girl. " No ; 1 am Judge Heavyhead." 'Then.' answered Becky, " I cant let, you in. for Mrs. Morrison is engaged this morning. She axed me to sav them vory words. And she told me sho could not see any body but .nr. Smith. She has been expecting him theso two tours, and won't have nobody let m but turn. I guess you will have to go away." Judge Heavyhead Avent away ; but the dia- ogue had been overheard by airs. Brown and Mrs. Green, who were passing at tho time arm. in arm, and who loitered and lingered near the to distinguish Avhat was said, In tho course of ths morning all Thebes was alive wilh the rumor that Mr. Morrison having gone on a long journey about some important business, his wife had taken advantage of his absence, and made an appointment with Mr. Smith the only doubt was what Mr Smith it could bo. Some said it was Hopestill Smith, that occupied a front closet in Mrs. Poorstocks boarding-house, and who, while waiting ipr cli- m 4