I0tlt tttt 1 Kicliard ftugent, Editor The whole jiiit of Government consists in the. art or beino honest. Jefferson. C. W. Ic WItf, Publisher. VOL. I. MILFORD, PIKE COUNTY, PA., SATURDAY, JUNE 27, 1840 No 23. JEFFERSONIAN REPUBLICAN. mrnMr. ..,Tniinrs ncr annum in advance Two dollars 'and n nnartcr. half yearly, and if not paid before the end of the vear Two dollars and a half. Those who receive their pa pers bv a carrier or stage drivers employed by the proprietor, ui i,rrA 37 1-2 cts. ner vear, extra. No papers discontinued until all arrearages are paid, except at the option ui iiiu uuiiui. rr-pAili firtiscinentsnot exceeding one square (sixteen lines) ivill be inserted three weeks for one dollar : twenty-five cents fnr rrv snbseaucnt insertion : larcer ones in proportion. A iibcral discount will be made to yearly advertisers. IO'All letters addressed to the Editor must be post paid. JOB PRINTING. Hariri? a general assortment of large elegant plain and orna mental Type, we are prepared to execute every des cription, of Cards, Circulars, Bill Heads, Notes, Blank Receipts, JUSTICES, LEGAL AND OTHER PAMPHLETS, &c. Trinted with neatness and despatch, on reasonable terms. DELAWARE ACADEMY. The Trustees of this Institution, have the pleasure of announcing to the public, and par :icularly to the friends of education, that they have engaged Ira B. Newman-, as Superinten dent and Principal of their Academy. The Trustees invite the attention of parents and guardians, who have children to send from home, to this Institution. They are fitting up the building in the first style, and its location from its retired nature is peculiarly favorable for a boarding school. It commands a beauti ful view of the Delaware river, near which it is situated, and the surrounding scenery such as the lover of nature will admire it is easily accessible the Easton and Milford Stages pass it dailv, and only 8 miles distan from the latter place, and a more salubrious section of coun try can nowhere be found. No fears need be entertained that pupils will contract pernicious habits, or be seduced into vicious company it is removed from all places of resort and those inducements to neglect their studies that are furnished in large towns and villages. Board can be obtained very low and near the Academy. Mr. Daniel W. Dingman, jr. will take several boarders, his house is very conve nient, and students will there be under the im mediate care of the JMncipal,. . whose reputa tion, deportment ami guardianship over his pu pils, afford the best security for their proper conduct, that the Trustees can give or parents and guardians demand. The course of instruction will be thorough adapted to the age of the pupil and the time he designs to spend in literary pursuits. Young men may qualify themselves for entering upon the study of the learned professions or for an advanced stand at College for mercantile pur- suits, for teaching or the business of common life, useful will be preferred to ornamental stud ies, nevertheless so much of the latter attended o as the advanced stages of the pupil's educa tion will admit. The male and female depart ment will bo under the immediate superintend dence of the Principal, aided by a competent male or female Assistant. Lessons in music will be given to young ladies on the Piano Forte at the boarding house of the principal, by an experienced and accomplished Instructress. Summer Session commences May 4th. EXPENSES. Board for Young Gentleman or Ladies with the Principal, per week, SI 50 Pupils from 10 to 15 years of age from $1 to 51 'Zt) erence to that object ; application made ior teachers to the trustees or principal will meet immediate attention, Lectures on the various subjects of study will be delivered by able speakers, through the course of year. By ordorofthe Board, DANIEL W. DINGMAN! Pres' Dingman's Ferry, Pike co., Pa., May 2 1340. NEW GOODS. THE Subscriber, in addition jo his Fall sup ply has just received a full and complete as ortmentof GOODS admirably adapted to the sea son, consisting of Xry Goods, Groceries, CrocKcry. Hard and Hollow Ware, STEEL, NAILS, and NAIL RODS, in fact complete assortment of all kinds of goods usually kept in a country store, all ol wnicii ne is dispose to sell at moderate prices. N. B Grain and Country produce, White and yellow pine boards will be taken in exenange ; &1 eo, oak joist, &c. &c WJLLTAM EASTBURN. Stroudsburg, Jan. 15th, 1840. LAST NOTICE. All persons indebted to tha late Srm of Stokes 6f Tuition for the Classics, Belles-Lettres, French i tr0' haa bfn Published. Tt was almost uni &c per quarter '2 00 j rely conceded that he was the ablest advocate Extra' for music, per quarter, 5 00 of the system which was destroyed. He continu- N. B. A particular course of study will be j ed in the House after the change of administra marked out for those who wish to qualify them- tion, always conspicuous for his sound principles, selves for Common School Teachers with ref- constant acuteness, extensive knowledge, and nian- Urown, are requested to make payment on or be fore the first day of July next, or their account will be leftin the hands of a Justice for collection. STOGDELL STOKES.. May 29,1840: - POETR For the Jeffcrsonian Republican. The Farmer's CSioicei "A little house well fill'dj A little wife well will'd, A little land well tilPd." Our ancestors weie fed on bread and broth-, And woo'd their healthy wives in homespun cloth; 0 u mothers, nurtured at the nodding reel, Gave all their daughters lessons on tho wheel. Though spinning does not much reduce the waist, It made their food much sweeter to the taste : They plied with honest zeal the map and broom, And drove the shuttle through the noisy loom, They never once complained as we do now, " We have no girl to cook, and milk the cow." Each mother taught her red-cheek'dson and daugh ter, To bake, to brew, and draw a pail of water : No damsel shun'd the wash-tub, broom or pail, To keep unsoil'd a long grown finger nail, They sought no gaudy dress, no wasp-like form, But ate to live, and work'd to keep them warm, No idle youth, no tight laced, mincing fair, Became a livid corpse, for want of air No fidgets, faintings, fits of frightful blues; No painful corns from wp.saing Chinese shoes. Biographies of ZHstinguisIied Peuii syiianiaus. CONTINUED. James A. BaYARD5an eminent lawyer and states man was born in Philadelphia in 1767; His clas sical education was completed at Princeton Col lege. In the year 'SI, he engaged in the study of tho law, and on his admission to the bar settled in Wilmington, Delaware, where he soon acquired considerable practice and reputation. A few years after he reached his majority, he was elected a re presentative of Delaware in Congress. The first occasion, on which he 'particularly distinguished himself, was the impeachment of Willie Blount a Senator from Tennessee. Mr. Bayard was chair man of the committee of 11, who were selected by the house to conduct that impeachment. He took the chief and very brilliant ,part in ths discussion of the constitutional questions, which arose out of the successful plea of the accused, to the jurisdic tion o the Senate. At an early period of his po litical career, President Adams offered him the post of Envoy to the French Republic, which pru dential reasons induced him to decline. lie was one of the leaders of the federal party in Congress, at tho epoch of the election of Mr. Jefferson to the office of President, In the memorable contest in the House of Representatives, which was produ ced by the equality of votes for Mr. Jefferson and Col Burr, he finally prevailed upon his political friends tho mode of proceeding, which enabled tho friends of Mr. J. to triumph. Hostile as he was, to that statesman, and much as he had reason to expect of personal advantage from a different issue he sacrificed party feeling and ambitious hopejwhen he perceived that the peace of the coun try and the stability of the constitution might be endangered by continuing the struggle. In no debate of the house did Mr. Bayard display his ge nius more in that which preceded the repeal of March, 1802, of the iudiciarv bill. A volume of speeches which were delivered in this famous con ly copious eloquence. When elected to the Son ate, he displayed for several years, in that body, the same talents aud patriotism. In 1812 he stren uously opposed tho declaration of war with Great Britain. President Madison selected him a3 one of tho Comraissiocers, to treat for peace under the proffered mediation of the Emperor Alexander of Russia. He embarked on this important mission, which had not been sought nor expected by him self or his friends for him, from the port of Phila delphia, May 8, 1813, and arrived at St. Petersburg in July of that year, The absence of the Emperor prevented the transaction of any busines and when all hope of advancing the main ooject seemed idle, Mr. B. proceeded (January 1814) by land to Holland. There he learned the willingness of tho British Court to treat directly with the American Envoys. Previously to the arrival of his colleagues, who in consequence of this annunciation were despatched by the American government, he visited England. At the proper period he repaired to Ghent, which was ultimately chosen as the scene of the negoti ations which terminated in the treaty that bear the name of that place. His share in the oral discus- ions and the written correspondence with the British Plenipotentiaries was such as might have been expected from his peculiar fitness for the task of negotiation. On the conclusion of this business, he mado a journey to Paris, where he! remained until he heard of the ratification of the treaty and of his appointment as Envoy to the Court of St, Petersburg This he promptly decli ned. It was his intention however to go to Eng land, in order to coopejate in the formation of a commercial treaty with the lintish Uaoinet, as he was included in the commission sent for that pur- sose ; but an alarming illness put an end to every i plan, except that of reaching Ins homo as early as possible. He embajked at Havre, in a state of the most painful debility, suffered unfortunate delays in the voyage, and arrived to die only in the arms of his family. Mr. Bayard was a logician of the first ordei, possessed a "rich and ready elocution and commanded attention as well by his fine coun tenance and manly person as his cogent reasoning and comprehensible views. He acquired reputa tion both as a lawyer and a political lawyer, scarce ly inferior to that of any one of his American con temporaries. Francis Hopkinson, one of the Signers of the Declaration of Independence, was born in Phila delphia, 1738, to which city his parents had emi grated from England. His father was the inti mate friend and scientific coadjutor of Franklin, to whom, it is said, he first exhibited the experi ment of attracting the elective fluid by a pointed instead of a blunt instrument. Francis was edu cated at the College of Philadelphia. After grad uating there, he studied law, and in '65 visited England, where he remained two years. On his return, he fixed his resiilencejat Bordentown, N. J. and entered Congress as a delegate from New Jer sey in '75. Dr. Rush asserts that his satirical writings contributed greatly to the cause of Iris country's independence. He began this warfare in in '74, with his "Pretty Story." in the strain of the Tale of a Tub, and prosecuted it from year to year, with such production1!), as the "Prophecy," the admirable "Political Satechism," the various "Letters of Tories" and ciT" British Travellers." and answers to British Proclamations and Gazette accounts, &c. After the war, he employed his irony against domestic evik, particularly against the intemperance of parties, the ribaldry of tho newspapers and the exaggerations and prejudices, with which the present federal constitution was assailed. After his retirement from Congress, he received the post of Judge of the Admiralty for Pennsylvania, and in the year '90 passed to the bench of the District Court. He died in '91. The selection of his works in three volumes, printed in '92, embraces serious compositions in prose, mark ed by deep sensibility, strong thoughts and multi farious knowledge; papers on subjects of physical science ; a number of acute and learned judicial decisions, &c. Hs sotirfa possess much sweetness amLdclicacyf and tha Sirs which' ho composed for them rendered them doubly popular. The battle of tho Kegs is a specimen of his faceliousncss in verse, and the "Annual "Whitewashing in prose. Richard Peters, an eminent Judge and Agricul turist, was born near Philadelphia, August 22, 1744. He received his education in the College of that city. In entering into active life, he was a good Latin and Groek Scholar, and acquainted with the French and German languages. He adopted tho profession of the law, in which he obtained early and considerable success, particularly by means of his intimate knowledge of the land laws of the commonwealth and the fluency with which he spoke the German. Even in his youth, he was distin guished for wit and humor. His powers of pleas antry were felt even by tiie Indians, when he ac companied a delegation from Pennsylvania to the Six Nations. The Indian Chiefs delighted with his vivacity, formally adopted him into their tribe. At the opening of the Revolution, Mr. Peters be came Captain of a company of volunteers, but was soon transferred by Congress, to the Board of War, in which he continued until '81, whon he resigned his post, and received from Congress, a vote of thanks, for his services. He was closely connect ed with Robert Morris in all the exertions and sac rifices, which were made for supplying the neces sities of the army. No one possessed more curi ous and instructive anecdotes, of the distresses and trials of the government. After Mr. Petors quit ted the war office, he was elected a member of Congress. When the new government wa3 or ganized, under the present constitution, tho Presi dent offered him the place of comptroller of the Treasury this he declined, but accepted that of Judge of the District Court ot rennsylvania. He occupied this station for thirty-six years until his death, always assiduous, and highly useful, par ticularly m admiralty cases. Agriculture and pub lic works formed the chief objects of Judge Pe ters, besides his duties on the bench. He was the first President of the company at whoso expense the great bridge at rhiladclphia over the Schuyl kill was built. The country is indebted to him also for the use of plaster in agriculture. In '97 he published a relation of his experiments with it, on his own larm, which was widely circulated and produced important improvements in -Ameri can husbandry. He was President of the Phila delphia Agricultural Society, and enriched its memory with many valuable communications. He was an exemplary citizen and chnstian. (to be continued.) Hard Cider. An elderly lady who had some claim on Government for services of her deceased husband, recently called on Mr. Van Buren at the white house. The lady was re ceived with the President's usual politeness. but as her stay was rather long, his excellency Degan complaining ol a head acho, and askiii" the lady if she knew any remedy for it. " Oh yes, sir my poor dear husband used to be much troubled with it, and was always cured by ta king hard cider. " In one year after Mr. Van Buren is sworn into office as President, gold and silver will be the common currency of the people." Globe. What a plaguy long year that has been Mr. Blair; thirty eight months of it have gone, and the people would like to know when it is coming to an end. HARRISON AND TYLER. THE 0 HEEO AT FORT MEIGS. General Harrison said he was greatly in debted to his fellow-citizens of Columbus and Franklin County the most cordial hospitality had at all times been accorded to him by them. So long ago as the time when he was honored with the command of the ' Northwestern Army,' and held his head-quarters at Franklinton, on the other side of the river, it was his fortune to find in the people of Franklin County not on ly good citizens but patriots and soldiers. Their unvarying kindness to him had laid him under many previous obligations, and their generous attention on this occasion he cheerfully and gratefully acknowledged. He said he had no intention to detain his friends by making a speech, and he did so in obedience to what ho understood to be the desire of those whom he aderessed. He was not surprized that public curiosity was awaken ed in reference to some things which hadlately been published concerning him, nor was he un willing to satisfy the feeling o his fellow-citizens by such proper explanations as became him, in his present position before the country. He confessed that he had suffered deep mortifi cation, since he had been placedbefore thepeo pie as a cardidate for the highest office in their gift nay, tho most exalted station in the world that any portion of his countrymen should think it necessary or expedient to abuse, slan der or villily him. His sorrow arose not so much from personal dear as was the humble reputation he had earned as from public con siderations. He might draw consolation, un der this species of injury, from the revelations of history, which showed that the best of men who had devoted their lives to the public ser vice, had been the victims of traduction. But virtue and truth are the foundations of our repub lican system. W hen these are disregarded our republican institutions must fail ; he looked therefore at symptoms of demoralization with sincere regret, as betokening danger to our pub lie liberty. A part of the polUcal press, supporting the existing administration, and certain partizans o Mr. Van Buren, also a candidate for that higl omce, to wnicn somo oi tnose whom he addres sed desired to elevate him, had invented and propagated many calumnies against him, but he proposed on the present occasion to speak of one only of the numerous perversions and slanders which filled the columns of the newspapers and misrepresented his character and conduct, He alluded to the story of his famous " Confiden tial Committee," as they call it. The sto ry goes," said General Harrison, "that I have not only a committee of couscience-keepers, but that they put me in a cage, fastened with iron bars and keep me m that. To one who look ed at his bright and sparkling eye the light which beamed m its rich expression the smile which played upon his countenance, blendiug the lineaments of benevolence and firmness who remembered also that he was listening to the voice of a son of Governor Harrison, one o " the signers, the pupil of old " Mad Antho ny," the hero of Tippecanoe, the defender o fort Meigs, the conquerer of Proctor tho i- dea of Wm. Henry Hayrison in a cage was irresistably ludicrous ! When the laughter had subsided, the Gen eral proceeded. I have no committee fellow citienzs confidential or other. It is true that I employed my friend, Major Gwynn, to aid me m returning replies to some of the nu merous questions propounded to mo by letters But to such only as any man could answer as well as another. There is scarcely a ques tion of a political nature now agitating the pub lic mind, on which l have not long smco pro mulgated my opinions, by speeches, published letters or official acts. A largo majority of letters addressed to me purported to seek my views of about Abolition, U. S. Bank, & other matters concerning which my views are already in possession ol the public. The most suitable answer tothese-andto well-intentioned persons the most satisfactory was a reference to the documents to which my opinions already ex pressed were to be found. Such answers entrusted to my well tried an faithful friend Mr. Gwynn. Letters requiring more particular at tention, I answered myself. Every body who knows Major Gwynn, kniwsthathe is not one whom I would employ to wri e a political letter. Ho is a self made man, a soldier and a gentle manbut neither a politician nor a scholar. I asked the servico of him because he was my friend, and I confided in him, and it was plain and simple. My habit is to receive, open and to read my letters myself. Such as requrie special attention, I reply to myself. Such as may be easily answered by another, 1 hand to my friend, with an endorsation indicating where the information sought may be found as thus "Refer the 'writer to 0 speech at Vinccnnes" "orthe answer may be seen in my letter to Mr. Den ny," &c. But it seems that Major Gwynn was Chairman of a Commit tee of the citizens of Cincinnati or of Hamilton county. When the famoi, Oswego letter was received, it wa. read, as is usual with such letters i endorsed it & handed it to Maj. G wynu But, it seems, when the answer was prepared it was signed also by his col leagues of the county or City Com mittee. Of all this I knew nothing- nor in their capacity of Committee had they anything to do with my let ters. Fet by alitte mistake and much perversion these gentleman have been erected into a committee of my conscience-keepers, andmade to shut me up in a cage to prevent me from an swering interrogatories. General Harrison remarked that, had he, indeed, called to his assist ance the services of a friend in con ducting his correspondence, he would have had high authority tc justify him in the measure. It had been said of General Washington that many of the papers which bear his siprnaiure were written by others, and he believed it had never been contradicted; and General Breckenbridge aid to Gen. Jackson in the late war, had repre sented himself to be the author of much of General Jackson's corres pondence. But he had not done so to any extent, or in any other expense than as he had now explained it in requesting Major Gwynn, to refer those inquiries to him, to the public sources of information. And he would here say, that in all his public life civil and military, there was no letter, report, speech or order, bearing his name which was not written wholly by his own hand. He said to open, read, and answer all the letters ad dressed to him was physicallyimpos sible though he should do nothing else whatever. To give his readers an idea of the labor it would require, he said, a gentleman then present was with him in the morning he left Cincinnati when he took from the Post Office 16 letters there were u sually half the number at the Post Office near his residence 24 letters per day. Could any man, he asked, give the requisite attention to such a daily correspondence, even to thene glect of every other engagement 1 True it was that many communications were sent to him that were not entitled to his notice sent by persons who had no other object but to draw from him something which might be used to his injury and the injury of the cause with which he was identified yet, there were enough of those who clai med his respectful consideration for the sources from which they came and the subjects to which they refer red, to occupy more time and labor than any one man could bestow upon them. General Harrison said he had alluded particularly to this mat ter of the Committee because it had recently been the occasion of so much animadversion by his political adversaries. But it was one only, of many misrepresentations of him, his conduct, his principles and opiinions with which the Party Press was tee ming. He said it would occupy him many hours to discuss them, if it were necessary or proper for him to do so! He referred however to the Richmond Enquirer and expressed his sur prize at the manner in which his name and character had been treated by that paper. He did so as it afforded an "fit" 1 IT