ft tttth It t ftft 3 Jefferson: 10 Richard Nugent, Editor The whole art oy Government consists -in-the art ''of being honest andPu3Is5ier YOL. I. STROUD SBTJRG, MONROE COUNTY; FA., FRIDAY, AUGUST 28, .1840; No 3i. JEFFERSON IAN REPUBLICAN rr.T,r.c. t... ,irtiinr nor annum in lulrancc Two dollars and a auarter. half yearly,-and if not paid before the end of toe rcaS dollara and a half. Those who receive their pa- neis by acameror awgu un.wo tu. .f. .rf,i 57 1-2 c.ts. ncr vear. extra. No papers discontinued until all arrearages are paid, except at the option oi mo jiunui. TT-A.Wrtisnmentsnotcxccedimrone sauaro (sixteen lines) will be inserted three weeks for one dollar : twenty-five cents fir every subsequent insertion ; larger ones m pruporuuii liberal discount will bo made to yearly advertisers. 1DAU letters addressed 10 me sailor musi oc posi yaw JOB PRINTING. Having a general assortment of large elegant plain and oma mental Type, vre are prepared to execute every des cription of Cards, Circulars, Bill Heads, Notes, JUSTICES, LEGAL AND OTHER MANKS, PAMPHLETS, fec. Printed with neatness and despatch, on reasonable terms. DELAWARE ACADEJjnr. The Trustees of this Institution, have the pleasure of announcing to the public, and par ticularly to the friends of education, that they iiare 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 Easion andMilford Stages pass it daily, and only 8 miles distant fr0nt 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 i 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 Principal, whose reputa tion, deportment and guardianship over his pu pils, afford the best security for their proper conduct, that the Trustees can giyQr,. 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 to as the advanced stages of the pupil's educa tion will admit. The male and female depart ment will be 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 tho 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 week3 S I 50 Pupils from 10 to 15 years of age from SI to SI 25 Tuition for the Classics, Belles-Lettres, French &c, per quarter, 2 00 Extra for music, per quarter, 5 00 N. B. A particular course of study will be marked out for those who wish to qualify them selves for Common School Teachers with ref erence to that object ; application made lor teachers to the trustees or principal will meet immediate attention, Lectures on the various subjects of study will lm fln.livered bv able speakers, through tho course of year Bv ordorofthe Board, DANIEL W. DINGMAN. Prcs't Dinnnan's Ferry, Pike co., Pa., May 2 1840 NOTICE. The Book of Subscription to the Stock of the Upper Lehigh Navigation Corapany, will be re opened atStoddartsville, on Wednesday, the loth day at July ensuing, when subscriptions win oe received for the balance of stock which remains vet open. At the same timn and place tlie stock holders wilLcloct a board of Directors. Charles Trump, John S. Comfort, - , Henry W. Drinkei -yVilliam P. Clark, ' Commissioners June IG, 1810. N. B: Proposals will Ue received at Stoddarts ville, on Thursday tho HHh day of July pnsuinff, for doing- the work ejther wholly or m jobs, requi red by building a lock and inclined plane with the necessary grading, fixtures and mach.riery lpr passing rafts descending the Lehigh over the Falls atStoddartsville. It is expected that the worn will be epmrrjenced asso on , as practicable. a nd be completed with despatch j, ' POETRY. An August Wocii ceite. BV W. C. BRYANT, N. V. The quiet Augcst noon is come; A slumberous silence fills the skyj The fields are still, the woods are durrifcH In glassy sleep the waters lie. - " And mark yon soft .white clouds, that rest Above our vale, a moveless throng; . The cattle on tho mountain's breas'i': Enjoy the grateful shadow long, O, how unlike those merry hours' , ? In sunny June, when earth laughs out,3 "When the fresh windsmake love to. flowers," And woodlands sing and waters shout! When in the grass, sweet waters talk And strains of tiny music swell" From every moss-cup of the rock,- From every nameless blossom's. bell But now a joy too deep for sound, A peace" no other season knows, Hushes the heavens, and wrans the ground The blessing of supreme repose. . -Away! I will not be, to day The only slave of toil and care; '. ;."; ,; ' Away from desk and dust, away! f. ' I'll be as idle as the air. , Beneath the open sky abroad, J. Among the plants and breathirig.'thJhgs', - - Ihe sinless, peacelul works ol trod;-- I'll share the calm the season brings": -2a Come thou in whose soft eyes I see The gentle meaning of the heart, . . - . , One day amid the woods with thee, : From men and all their cares apart. -: :Vnd whore, upon the meadows breast, .-. The shadow of the thicket lies, - ;. Tho blue wild flowers thou gatherest ,. Shall glow yet deeper near thine eyes. Come and when, amid the calm profound; I turn, those gentle eyes to. seek, They, like the lovely landscape round, . Of Innocence and peace shall speak. Rest here, beneath the unmoving shade, - And on the silent valleys gaze, Windino- and widening tiirilibyifua1" In yon soft ring of summer haze. : The village trees their summits rear -Still as its spire; and yonder flock, - -' t -At rest in those calm fields, appear ' As chiselled from the lifeles3 rock; i One tranquil mount the scene o'erlooks, Where the hushed winds their sabbath .keep, While a near hum, from bees and brooks, Comes faintly like the breath of sleep: - Well might the gazer deem, that when, ; Worn with the struggle and the strife . ; And heart-sick at the sons of men,, -. .' The good forsake the scenes of life. " ' ' ... Like the deep quiet, that awhile ' ,y ' f r. Lingers the lovely landscape o'erj . 3 Shall be the peace whose holy smile Welcomes them to a happier shore. . V -! ' -. - The following was written some two centuries and a half since, by Robert Southwell, an English Jesuit. It belongs to what may be, Called philoso phic poetry, and, to us, appears to possess high merit. Smoother versification we have never seen. Tinacs go by Tunis. " The lopped tree in time may grow again Most naked plants renew both fruit and flower; The sorriest wight may find relief from pain, The driest soil suck in some moistening shower. Times go by turns, and,chances change by course, From foul to fair, from better haptovworse. "The sea of fortune dees not ever flow, . She draws her favors to the lowest ebb; Her tides have equal times to come and go, Her loom doth weave the fine and e'oarsest web. No joy so great but runneth to an end, No hap so hard but may in fine amend. "Not always Jail of leaf, nor ever spring. No endless night, nor yet eternal day : The saddest birds a season find to sing, Tho roughest storm a calm may soon allay; Thus with succeeding turns God tempereth all, That man may hope to rise, yet fear to fall. "A chance may win that by mischance was lost; That net that holds no great, takes little fish: Insomo things all-in all things none are cross'd, 'Few all they need, but none have all they wish. Unmirigled joys here to manbefal, Who least hath some, who most hath never all." One of the most important female qualities is sweetness of temper. Heaven didmot.give to woman insinuation and persuasion, in order to be surlyit did not make theni weak, in order to be imperious; it did not give them a sweet voice to bo employed in scolding.- - Frontier SketcEies. (continued.) We left the fort about the last of March, ac companied by my uncle and his son, about twelve years old, and one Peter Pence. We had been on our farms about four or five days, when on the morning of the 30th of March we were surprised by a party of ten Indians. My father waslunged through with a war-spear, his throat was cut and he was scalped, while my brother was tomahawked, scalped, and thrown into the fire before my eyes. While I was struggling with a warrior, ihe fellow who had killed my father drew his spear from his body and made a violent thrust at me. I shrunk from the spear, and the savage who had hold of me turned it with his baud so that it only penetrated my vest and shirt. They were then satisfied with taking me prisoner, as they had the same morning taken my uncle's little son and Pence, though they killed my uncle. The same party, before they reached us, had touched on the lower settlements of Wyoming, and killed a Mr. Upson, and took a boy prison er of the name of Rogers. We were now marched pff up Fishing Creek, arid in tho af ternoon of the same day we came to Hunting ton, where the Indians fdilnd four white men at a sugar camp, who fortunately discovered the Indians and fled to a, house; the Indians only fired on them and wounded a Capt. Ran som, when they continued their course till night. Having encamped and made their lire, we, the prisoners, were lied and well secured, five In dians lying on one side of us and five on the other; in the morning they pursued their course, and leaving the waters of Fising Creek, touched the head waters of Hemlock Creek, where they found one Abraham Pike, his wife and child. Pike was made prisoner, but his wife and child they painted and told Joggo, squaw, go home. They continued their course that day; and en camped the same night in the same manner as the previous. It came into my mind that some times individuals performed wonderful actions, and surmounted the greatest dangers. I then decided these fellows must die ; and thought of the plan to depatch them. The next day I had an opportunity to communicate my plan to my fellow -prisoners ; they treated it as a vis ionary scheme for three men to attempt to de spatch ten Indians. L spread before them the advantages that three men would have over ten when asleep; and that we would-be the wiirsUnrisoners ihai wouU bo jnken into their towns anu villages aner our army nau aestroyeu their corn, that we should be tied to the stake and suffer a cruel death ; we had now an inch of ground to fight on, and if we failed it would only be death, and we might as well die one way as another. That day passed away, and having encamped for the night, we lay as be fore. In the morning we cdme to the river, and saw their canoes ; they had descended the river and run their canoes up into Little Tunk Ihannock Creek, so called ; they crossed t the river and set their canoes adrift. I renewed my suggcstidnslo my companions to despatch them that night, and urged that they must de cide the question. They agreed to make the trial ; but how shall we do it was the question. Disarm them and each take a tomahawk and come to close work at once. There are three of us: plant our blows with judgment and three times three will make nine, and the tenth one we can kill at bur leisure. They agreed to disarm them, and after that one take possession of the guns and fire at the one side of the four, and the other two take tomahawks on ihe oth er side and despatch them. I observed that would be a very uncertain way; the first shot fired would give the alarm; they would discov er 'it to be the prisoners, and might defeat us. I had to yield to their plan. Peter Ponce was chosen to fire the gtlns, Pike and myself to tomahawk; wd cut and carried plenty of wood to pive them a good fire ; the prisoners -tvero tied and laid in their places ; after I was laid down, one of them had occasion to use his knife; he dropped it at my feet ; I turned my foot over it and concealed it ; nicy an lay aown and fell asleep. About midnight 1 got up and found them in sound sleep. 1 slipped to Pence, who rose : I cut tiim loose, and handed him the knife ; he did the same for me, and J in turn took the knile and cut nice loose; m a minute's time'Nvc disarmed them. Pence took his station at the guns. Pike and myself with' bur tomahawks took our statious; I was to tomaliawk three on tho right wing, and Pike two on the left. That moment Pike's" two awoke, and were getting up ; here Pike proved a coward, and laid down. It was a critical mo ment. 1 saw there was no time to be lost ; their heads turned up fair; I despatched them in a 'moment, and turned to my lot as per agree ment, and as I was about to despatch the last on my side of the fire, Pence he shot, and did good execution ; there was only one at the of! wing that his ball did not reach ; his name was Mohawke, a stout, bold, daring fellow. In the alarm he jumped off about three rods from the fire ; ho saw it Was the prisoners mat made the attack, and pivinprihe warwhoon, he darted j 0-----0 v . to take possession of the guns ; 1 was as quick to prevent him: . tho contest was then.-between him and mvself. ,.As I, raised my tomahaw,k, he turned quick to jump from me ; I followed him and struck at him, but missing his head, my tomahawk struck in his shoulder, or rather the back of his neck ; he pitched forward and fell ; at the same time my foot slipped,' and I iell by his side ; we clinchod ; his arm was naked ; he caught me around my neck, at the. same time I caught him with my left arm around the body, and gave him a close hug, at the same time feeling for his knife, but coultl not reach it. a . In our scufrfe my tomahawk dropped btit. My head was under the wounded shoulder, and almost suffocated me with his blood. I made a violent spring, and broke from his hold ;. we both rose at the same time, and he ran; it took me some time to clear the blood from my eyes; my tomahawk got covered up and I could not find it in time to overtake him ; he was the on lv one of the party that escaped. Pike was powerless. I always have had a reverence for Christian devotion. Pike was trying to pray, and Pence swearing at him, charging him with cowardice, and saying it was no time to pray he ou "lit to fipt; we were masters of the ground, and in possession of all their guns blankets, match coats: &c. 1 then turned my attention to scalping ihem, and recovering tho scalps of my lather, brother, and others, l strung tnem all on my belt for safe keeping. We kept our ground till morning, and built a raft, it being near the bank of the' river where they had en camped, about fifteen miles below Tioga Point; we got all our plunder on it, and set sail for Wvomhiff. the nearest settlement. Our raft save way, when wo made for land, biit we lost considerable property, though we saved our guns and ammunition, and took to land; we reached Wylusing late in the afternoon. Came to the narrows; discovered a smoke below; and a raft laying at the shore, by which we were certain that a party of Indians had passseil us in the course of the day, and had halted for the night. There was no alternative for us but to rout them or go over the mountain; the snow on the north side of tlie hill was deep; we knew from the appearance of the raft that the party must be small; we had two nlles each; my only fear was of Pike's cowardice. To know the worst of it we argeecd that I should ascertain their number and give the signal for the attack; I crept down the side of the hill, so near as to see their fires and packs, .but saw no Indians. I concluded they had gone hunting for meat, and that this was a good opportunity for us tomakeoff with their rait to the opposite slue ot tha.nver. 1 gave the signal; they came and threw their packs ,on the raft, which was made oi, small, dry pine timber:; with poles -and paddles we drove her briskly across the river, and had got nearly out of reach of shot, wheri two of them came in; they fired, their shots did not injury; we soon got under cover of an island, and went several miles; we had waded deep creeks through the day, the night was cold; we landed on an island and found a sink hole in which 'we maee our fire ; after warming we were alarmed by a cracking in the-crust; Pike sup posed the Indians had got on to the Island, and was for calling for quarters; to keep him quiet we threatened him with his life ; the stepping grew plainer and seemed coming directly to the fire; 1 kept a watch, & soon a noble raccoon came under the light. I shot the faccoort, when Piko iumped up and called out, "Quarters, gentlemen: quarters, gentlemen." 1 took my game by the leg and threw it down to the fire, " Here, you cowardly rascal,' I cried, " skin that and ?ive us a roast for supper. Tho nest night wo reached Wyoming, and there was much my to see us ; we rested one day it be ing itbt safe to go to Northumberland by land, we procured a canoe and with Pence and my little son, we descended the river by night; we came to Fort Jenkins before day, where I found Col. Kelly and about one hundred men encamped out of the fort; ho came across from tho west branch by the head of Chilesquaka to Fishing Creek, tho end of the Knob Moun tain, so called at that day, where my father and brother were killed; he had burried my father and uncle; my brother was burnt, a small part of him only was to be found. Col. Kelly in formed me that my mother and her children wore in the fort, and it was thought that I was killed likewise. Col. Kelly went into the fort to prepare her mind to seo me; I took off my belt ot scalps and handed them to an officer to keep. Human nature was not sufficient to stand the interview. She had just lost a hus band and a son, and one had returned to take her by the hand, and one too, that she sup posed was killed. Tho day after I went to Sunbury, where I was received with joy; my scalps wore exhib ted, the cannon were fired, &c. Before my returrt a commission had been sent me as en sign of a company to be commanded by Capt. Thomas Robinson; this was, as I understood, a part of the quota which Pennsylvania had to raise for tho continental lino. One Jos. Alex ander was commissioned as lieutenant, but did not accept his commission. The summer of 1780 was spent in the recruiting service ; our -company was organized, and was retained lor the defence of the Irontier service in r erjru ary, 1 781, 1 wapromotcd to a lieutenancy, and entered upon the active duty of an officer by heading scouts, and as Capt. Robinson was no woodsman nor marksman, he preferred that I should encounter the danger and headMie scouts; we kept up a constant chain of scliuta around the frontier settlements, from the north to the west branch of the Susquehanna, by iho way of the head waters of Little Fishing Creek ChilKsquaka, and Muncy, &c. In the spring of 1781 Ave built a fort on tho widow M'Clure-s plantation, called M'Clure's fort, where our provisions were stored. In the summer of 1781 a man was taken prisoner in Buffalo Valley but made his escape; he came in and reported there were about three hundred Indians on Sin nemahoning, hunting and laying in a store of provisions, and would make a descent on tho frontiers; that they would divide into small par ties, and attack the whole chain of the frontiers at the same time on the same day. Col. Sam uel Hunter selected a corr.pany of five to re connoitre, viz. Capt. Campbell, Peter and Mi chael Groves, Lieut. Cramer, and myself; the party was called the Grove Party Wc carried with us three weeks' provisions, and proceeded up the west branch with much caution and care; we reached the Sinnemahbning, but made no discovery except old tracks ; we marched up the Sinnemahoning so far that we were satis fied it was a false report Wc returned, and a little below the Sinnemahoning, near night, wti discovered a smoke ; we were confident it was a party of Indians, which we must have passed by or they got there ,some other way; we dis covered there was a large party, how many wti could not tell, but prepared for the attack. A3 soon as' it was dark we new primed our riflesj sharpened our flints, examined our tomahawk handles, and all being ready, we waited with great impatience, and till they all lay down; the time came, and with the utmost silence we ; advanced, trailed our rifles in one hand and the tomahawk in the other. The night was warm; we found some of them rolled in their blankets a rod or two from their fires. Having got amongst them, we first handled our toma hawks; they rose like a dark cloud; we now fired our shots, and raised the war-yell; 'they took to flight in the utmost confusion but few taking time to pick up their rifles. We re mained masters of the ground and all their plunder, and took several scalps; It was a party of twenty-five or thirty, which had been as low down as Penn's Creek and had killed and scalped two or three families ; we fotind several scalps of different ages which they hid taken, and a large quantity of domestic cloth, which we carried to Northumberland and gave-, to the distressed who had escaped the tomahawk and knife. In December '81, our company was ordered to Lancaster; we descended tho river in boats to Middletown, where our orders were, counteracted and we were ordered to Reading, Berks county, where we were joined by a part of the third and fifth Pensylvania regi ments, and a company of the Congress regi ment. We look charge of the Hessians taken prisoners with Geri. Burgoyne. (Conclusion next wcefc.) A Real Freak of Eortune. " Two days ago, says the AudiencS, a country girl, who had spehi all her money at a lottery of hand kerchiefs, collars, and others articles, on a pub lic promenade at Versailles,offered herumbrella to the keeper of the stall, as security for some mb'ro tickets. The man refused to cemply with her requestj but told her that if she would al low him to ciit off her hair, he would give her, in exchange for it, twenty tickets. The poor girl, in the hope of redeeming her fortune, con sented, and in a minute the scissors of the de spoiler had deprived her of this ornament of her sex. The girl played on until nineteen of her tickets came up blanks. The twentieth was a prize. On opening the paper, the lotte ry keeper read it aloud to the persons were crowding arotind him, and who were, convulsed with laughter it was a comb." Paris Paper. Instability of Fortune. The deputy marshal who is taking tho census of Cincinna ti, says in his report of the fifth ward: "In this ward I found two instances of the instability of fortune. In destitute circumstan ces, dependent for the bread of the day on tho labbrs of the day, were two women, one a grand daughter of a distinguished Governor of Massa chusetts and the other a cousin of a late Gov ernor of New Jersey hardly less honored. Hero were women brought up in habits oTensi with servants around them in early life to per form those labors for them which they are j v doing for others. Ilow many scenes ar Irr nished daily to my observation, for maiy- v. I cannot profit by it, which would teach iuprv- sively not onlvrqsignation and contentment, ' absolute gratitude under the contrast of our eou dition with that of others." . Lending a newspaper. "WilLyou lenct;(aiher your newspaper? he only wants to read it." "Yes, my boy; and ask him to lend1 ihe hfs dinner; I only want to cat it." "This is a sweeping catas?rQphei"as!ithe man said whomhis wifo; knockedh6wh?ith a broomstick??? . I 4 - j . 'I- . . -t- m