tttmt ' ! JL. -9. ,s .1. . The whole art ok Government consists in the art of being honest. Jefferson. 11 VOL. 2. STRO UDSBURG. MONROE COUNTY, PA., WEDNESDAY, MARCH 24, 1841. No j 5 PRINTED AND PUBLISHED BY THEODORE SCHOOL TERMS. Two dollars per annum m advance Two dollars and a auarter. half yearly, and if not paid before the end of the year Two dollars and a half. Those who receive their papers by a carrier or stage drivers employed by the proprie tor, will be charged 37 1-2 cts. per year, extra. No n.mers discontinued until all arrearages are paid, except at the option of the Editor. rrPAdvertisements not exceedinjr one square (sixteen lines) will be inserted three weeksfor one dollar . twenty-five cents for every subsequent insertion : lamer ones in proportion. A 1 liberaldisconut will be made to yearly advertisers. Ail icuers aaaresseu to tne Editor must De post pam. job pRiNTmra. Having a general assortment of large elegant plain and oraa menial Type, we arc prepared to execute every as cription of Cards, Circulars, Bill Heads, IVotes, Blank Receipts, JUSTICES, LEGAL AND OTHER PAMPHLETS, &c. Printed with neatness and despatch, on reasonable terms. The following excellent SONG, composed by a Lprominent member of the Tippecanoe Club of Northampton county, was distributed among the Jelagates to the Convention which nominated me IHon. Johx Banks. It appears "That Rosin has re-turned his old fiddle, And rubbed some new dust on his bow." All hands are singing it. The Frigate Pennsylvania. air "OW Rosin the Bow." Since the Ship Pennsylvania has righted And rides o'er the waves stiff and true, We must hunt up a gallant commander To take charge of her Harrison crew. That the Locos have had her in keeping Her damaged condition will show, But the people will put her in order With the gallant commander, we know. Then freemen display your fair banner, In harmony close up your ranks, And place at the helm of your frigate The friend of the people, JOHN BANKS. Since the Locos have had this fair vessel. They've proved but poor sailors indeed; , They have eaten up all the provision , . .And left none for a season of need. - ; The barnacles stick to her bottom The mildew has rotted her sails, Her mainmast is sprung by the tempest. U Her mainsail is rent by the gales: But her timbers are sound as cast iron, For which we give Heav'n our thanks, And she 11 sail well as ever when guided By the peoples commander, JOHN BANKS. When the Locos endeavored to sail her They steer'd her through mist and through fog, They run against banks without number And never could show a fair log. h iney lorgot tne goou cnart constitution, jL Their compass they overboard threw, Tiiey mortgaged the ship and her cargo, And turned off the best of the crew. The rats fell to gnawing her timbers The worms fell to boring her planks, Her chain pumps were choked beyond working So the people called out for JOHN BANKS. They've got a commander one Porter, A land lubber you may be sure; When this bungler was put in commission The frigate was tight and secure. When the tempest beat down on her quarters, To break open the stores wa3 his plan, Cries Dave "she's going to pieces. Let every one save what he can." But the people they cried out to Davy, "You renegade, leave off your pranks, Just hold by the mainstay one minute, . We'll bring you relief with JOHN BANKS. .He'll4 carry her into the harbor .And shelter her safe from the storm; 'While his bold gallant crew will careenljcr :Ineconomy's dry dock reform. New shipwrights he'll put in commission, Ker .tackle and stores he'll renew, And the skulkers will all get a starting With 'the crack of a rope's end or two. Then freemen draw up in close order, r. The pirates drive off from your flanks, - And rally for God and your country, And the friend of the people, JOHN BANKS. Nxw .who's for a sail in this frigate With BANKS as commandier-in-chief. TLet us join heart and hand at the. halyards iAad give our poor comrades relief. Huzza for the old Pennsylvania, How gallant she'll look when she sails, And she safe will return to her station In spite of political gales. And when ,she rounds to in the harbor, To the, bottom her chain cable clanks, . . In a full flowing bowl, eacji bold isailpr .v Will drink their commander,JOIlN J3rA2sTiKS.-. ' Prom the New York Express. MAJOR DOWflTIBTG. We commend the following letter especially to our transatlantic brethren, simply remark ing that in representative Governments, like England and the United States, the action of Government must mainly depend on public sen timent. A large portion of the present generation of both countries know little personally of the hor rors and crimes of war, and this fact may ac count, in part, for the light and careless man ner so grave a subject is treated by many. We approve of the major's temper in discus sing the matter, and hope with him to live to tec the great Anglo Saxon race spread far and wide, improving, as they extend, with good laws, good morals, and a general dispensation of human happiness. Washington, March 8, 1841. To Join Bull, Esq. Sir I see, in reading the newspapers, that you are the man most folks out of office write to, who have any business with your Govern ment in foreign matters. I did think, at first, 1 would send this letter to the Queen herself, so there would be no mistake about it, as I find the best way, after all, is to go right to the head of the family--but it is now going on thirteen years next grass since 1 wrote a letter to any kind of women folks, and the last was to Miss Hepsy Ann Appleby, who kept a school at Sa co, about a little courting matter; and I riled her considerably by calling her an angle instead of an angel, and she sent me back about as sharp and sour an answer as ever a man got there warn't a bit of that paper that wouldn't turn a pan of milk as quick as a piece of runnit and all owing to that accident in my putting an L before an E, and she Tiaving a leetle crook in the back which I never thought on but wo men are particular folks in such things, and if you touch 'em on a soft spot, the fat is in the fire right off and so I said I never would again try my hand in writing any on 'em a letter again; and that is the mam reason why I don t send this letter to the Queen instead of to you. I have been considerable about this country from East of sunrise to West of sunset, and from the North where the wild geese go in sum mer, to the South where they pass the winter, and I have got a notion that I know pretty much how folks feel and think here about most mat ters; and there is no way in the world to get this knowledge, unless by tombling about with folks, and talking politics, and farming, and log ging, and steam boating, and rail roading, and matters of that natur, and no man can tell exact ly how things are likely to work in this coun try, unless he has wet his feet and watered his Hcker from the Penobscot to the Mississippi and supposing you would like to get the hon est notions of such a man, and seeing that there is some matters of misunderstanding getting up twixt the two countries, I thought it best to send you a letter; and that you might know it is gen uine, I let my printers print it, and put my fig ure head at the top on't so if one mail miscar rys the next may reach you. In reading over the newspapers and the pro ceedings of your Congress, I see that there is a notion in England that folks in this country want to take Canada, and to prevent this, re ports say you are going to push more troops with red coals into Canada, and are going to build war steamers on the Lakes, and also to organize troops with black faces in the West Indies, and so forth. If these reports are true, you are making about as great a mistake as if you was to put on your shirt tail eend upper most, unless you want to bring on a difficulty, and if that is the case then you are doing ex actly right. The truth of the matter is, that excepting a few unruly scamps, chiefly from Canada, along the lines, there aint a corporal's guard in all this country nat'rally disposed to disturb the power of Canada, much less taking possession of it; and the less able Canada was to oppose a con quest by the States the more secure she would be from it, for our folks would go right in and help thrash out any set of scamps who should go in there to disturb the peace. But if you don't believe in this state of public feeling, and on the contrary go on and crowd in fighting folks, and build war steamers on the Lakes, our folks, must do the same to keep an eye on you, and when we come to calkilate the ex pense on't, we may come to the notion that your folks are expensive neighbors, and the best way would be to git rid of such neighbors, and then will como bad blood and fighting and if that be gins it won't eend till one or tother knocks un der, and you can guess which is the most like ly to do so as well as I can. War is bad cnuf between foreigners, but it is shocking unnatural and ugly between folks speaking plain English. J. see also that some of your folks in England think there is a nat'ral animosity growing up betwixt the two nations of late. If this is so it is owing mainly to yourselves, and it will keep growing jist as fast as you take the meas ures y.ou do to protect, as ydu say ''her majes ty's dominions." But this animosity, if any thero is, is not because Canada is English, for, if the folks along that line had any other 'mother tongue than English, Ave should have changed the boundary line long and long ago. Do you think that we would have been able, to work along peaceably with neighbors whose line fence divides rivers and lakes with us dipping in here, and cutting across there if their mother tongue made "o"" or "si" or "ja" spell yes? See what quick work our folks made of Texas! We are chips of the old Anglo-Saxon block, and think the safest boundary line betwixt us and nations that don't speak plain English, is salt water. It was just so when you owned this country there was no peace and quiet so long as the "Oui" folks owned Can ada and Nova Scotia; and when at last you conquered them, the only mistake you made was in letting that lingo be spoken there in the laws. This kept up a constant inward discon tent and grumbling, till a few years ago it broke out in a fresh spot, and your soldiers was set on thorn and cut their throats and burnt their houses, and this was considered so strange and inhuman by some of our folks near the lines, who could not see the necessity in a country of laws for this unnat'ral severity, that they bristled right up, by a sort of a nat'ral animal sympathy, jist as the pigs do when they hear a squeel of one of their kind caught by a gate or a dog without stopping to inquire whose pig he is, bristles up and shows fight. This is about the amount and cause of present frontier feeling, and it seems nat'ral to the Anglo-Saxon family, and dies a nat'ral death as soon as the cause is explained and examined into. 1 don't care to say any thing in this letter about the N. E. boundary line, or the burning of the Caroline, or the capture and trial of McLe od, or the taking or examining our vessels on the Coast of Africa, or the Oregon claims, and things of that natur, all that is the business of the Government, and thev are all matters of law and treaty, and will go through that mill, and will, and must, come out strait, no matter whose toes are pinched. But there is one thing I will say that the law will have its way here, from a Justice's Court to the Supreme tribunal, and no man, or set of men can prevent it, and no na tion can awe it and it is all good old English law to. If a treaty says a line shall run thus or so thus or so it will go just as a deed of a farm runs. If in free countries, like England and America, folks have a right to go where they please they may go, and if they invade other countries, and get caught, it is their look out, and they must suffer the consequences, they can't claim the law of their country to pro tect them, though they may claim, if they can, its animal sympathy. Now, to show you how this works what has been done by this country to shield the folks who got caught in Canada, making war there from this side? Nothing. You hanged some, and others you sent to Botany Bay, by the law, and that was right, presuming they had a lair trial and we shall do the same on all occasionSj and that will keep things strait by the law, and be assured of one thing, that we shall never hang a man here, unless it is clearly shown by the law he richly deserves it, for a man has to make considerable interest here to get hanged; the natur of our folks pre ferring to shut him up if he is a bad man, and keep him from doing harm 'till he is fit to let out, and get an honest living. But to return to general matters if you will take my advice and it is honest, though it may not be understood if you desire to keep peace between tvo important branches of the great Anglo-Saxon family, and thereby escape the scandal of a great family quarrel, (the woist of all quarrels) don t give cause of jealousy be tween your possessions on this Continent and ours; and bear in mind that what you call pro tecting against attack, may be considered here as intention to attack and that may bring gun for gun and then guns want scaling occasion-ally-w-and a salute may be mistaken 4th of Ju ly, and 22d February, and 8th January may not agree with some of your great days, and slight mistakes may lead to greater events; and our folks don't like to pay for the expense of watch ing neighbors. You would see this at once, if a line of boundary divided your river Thames, or cut across one of vour counties, and red coats on one side and blue coals on t'other. It may be that you think that force, and the fear of being licked may keep us quiet. This would he a fatal mistake, for it would be the very thing, of all others, that would stir up strife. I don't pretend to account for it but such is the natur of the. breed a willingness to fight if only to show that they are not ajratd of being licked; and there is no other people since the days of Adam who have shown this like the j people who speak English nat'rally. They never was known yet (except among them selves) to agree to stop fighting because they feared they would have the worst of it ; and this comes froin their true religion, and true law, and their love of both beyond all other con siderations. Now, as before said, if you take my advice it is Don't waste rnoney in an idle protection, as you call it, of your Colonies here; just keep military force enough tp aid your civil author ities in executing jlie.laws, and if such a force is rqujredrnakeiit militia as far practicable. Good Laws won't require much to aid them; push the Common School principle, and that always makes good laws and militia too; for it creates a common interest. Give your soldiers " quarter sections" of land in Canada, and put them all on half pay, to aid them in clearing up ground for a year or two, and they will soon become profitable citizens, instead of paid sol diers. And then what consequences is it to England's gloiy or England's happiness whether they choose to live under laws of their own and pay their own taxes; so long as they speak and pray in plain English, and extend the blessings of human liberty and comfort; two words that are only known to that tongue, and can't be written or clearly understood by any other. Swarms of the old Hive, who are ready to cavil and dispute among themselves on minor points, but in any great contest between liberty and oppression, are always true to the mam chance sound laws, liberty, and good order. This is the doctrine that should prevail at the old Hive. It makes no odds in what quarter of the world these swarms may go, they are part and parcel ol the mother stock, and any quar rel between them and their old Mother is a scan dal, and should be avoided if possible for, as they prosper, so you prosperif they fall, you may fall and who can then tell what lingo shall be law. foreigners may get uppermost all the world over; and when that is the case, I, for one, if living, would just as leave be in Ara by as any where else; for one place is just as unsafe as any other, when folks don't speak plain English. This doctrine, perhaps, won't suit some folks, but the time is come to speak out truly and frankly. The Anglo-Saxon family, wherever located must be true to themselves, to their laws, their religion, and their notion of human liberty or joreigners may triumph. We should tell all nations to keep the peace, or we will make tnem ao so, ana n we wane in among 'em. it is only to teach 'em English and steam pow er, and by common schools and other improve ments put aside human oppression. I send you with this a copy of Gen. Harri son's Inaugural address to our folks, just before he took the oath to administer, as President. the laws of the United States. It is considered here a considerable complete document, in its way setting forth general principles and when Congress meets he will give his notions more particularly on matters that Congress is likely to act on. Times here at present in the money way are not very good, owing to the fact that your coun try and our country both about Uie same time, some five years ago, took a notion to limit the power of their two respective paper money reg ulatorssupposing it would make matters bet ter but the experiment proved otherwise. The new Banks in both countries pufTd the bladder till it burst, and then want of confidence follow ed and very high prices fell to very low. prices and credit came down to hard currency for credit and confidence is pretty much like steam, which can lift mighty piston rods and turn big wheels, but when a cold breath is thrown upon it and it is condensed, its power is reduced to a small quantity of cold water. But foreign na tions mustn't think because your country and my country can't pay all debts, in gold and sil ver on demand, that we arepoor and can't pay debts, or fight for rights. You fought and lick'd pretty much all creation (except us) with paper money, and we can do that too on a pinch, and continue fighting and then working, till we bring our paper money to the value of gold, just as you did. If I write you another letter, I will tell you the best and most economical way for you to spend your money in this quarter of creation, but for the present, depend on it the worst use you can make of it is to spend it on troops in Canada, or building war steamers on the Lakes, or organizing nigger regiments in the West In dies. And if you don't think so now, you will before you hear more from your obedient ser vant. J. DOWNING. Major, &c, &c, &c. New Method of Raising Water. A patent has recently been taken out for a machine which is likely to supersede the hith erto known methods of raising water. It is esteemed Hall's Patent Hydraulic Belt, and is already in operation in many parts of the coun try for the purpose of draining land. The con trivance is the most simple, being merely com posed of a woollen belt which is made to re volve round two rollers one keeping the belt beneath the water, and the other fixed at any required altitude. The adhesion of the water to the woollen belt overcomes the gravity of that element, when a velocity of 1000 feet per minute is acquired, a continuous stream is brought up and, poured in the receiving pipes. John Bull. UjP I feel too hzy to work, said a loafer, and I have not time to play. I think I'll just go to bed, and so split the difference. What is the differnce between-a brewer and a flea? The one uyj,,and the. other takes hops. -. Care of Animals. The stock of the farmer requires his utmost care and attention during this month. In the severe climate of the north, animals are more liable to diseases in the spring months than any other; and as it is besides, the usual time of bringing forth their young, additional reasons lor attention are furnished by the fact. Cows should have daily supplies of bran or shorts in water, with roots if they are to be had, for some time previous to dropping their calves, as good nutritive food gives them strength, and besides secures a better flow of milk. Sheep now, es pecially the ewes, should have a good supplv of turnips or other roots daily, with a good portion of salt, and, if not as necessary now as in the summer, an occasional covering of the trough with tar, will conduce to health. On the treatment of his animals much of the far mer's success in his business is depending, anil it is one of those things to which his audition cannot be too frequently urged. Every dairy man is aware of the great difference in profit there is between a cow that is in good condi tion in the spring, and one that does not recover from the effects of the winter until the summer is half past. So with sheep. A flock of well kept ewes will raise more and belter lambs : and their wool will be ten per cent better than that from half starved, weak and feeble ani mals. Albany Cultivator. Sowing xiass Seeds. If there is one point of husbandry more than another in which farmers are generally defec tive, it is the niggardly way in which they use grass seeds in their tillage. If any seed are sown, not more than half the quantity required is often used, the fields are left bare, and the unoccupied ground becomes a fit place for vile weeds that are ever ready to spring up, where the husbandman does not anticipate them, by giv ing the earth something more valuable. So7ne thing must grow on our rich lands; it remains for the farmer to say whether the product shall be valuable or useless; whether it shall be grass es, clover, &c, or Johnswort and daises. ib. The " Divine Fanny" is turning the people of New Orleans pretty much as she does her self in some of her dancing freaks, that is, top sy turvy. No sooner had she landed from the steamship than the whole town, men, women, children, animals, two legged and four legged, rushed to see her. Six men, standing at the corner of the street when she left the carriage, were offered a doubloon apiece for the sight they accidently caught of her, whereat one of them became so indignant that he could scarce ly refrain from using violence towards the per son who made the insulting offer, and would actually have killed him, but that he was re strained in his wrath by his five equally indig nant but more temperate companions. One gentleman gave the hackman a hundred dollar bill for the cushion she sat on, and, pressing it to his side, rushed home in an ccstacy, in tending to mako it his pillow. Young men cut crazy amies, and old men foolish ones. Walk ing had become unfashionable in the city. So ber men of business ran down the streets on the points of their toes, or turned a corner in a pirouette, and it was no uncommon sight to see friends, when they met in the street, instead of extending their hands, stick out their feet to be shaken. Nothing was thought or talked of but the illustrious Fanny. All business, all engagements were suspended. Merchants omitted taking up their notes at bank, in their desire to take seats at the ballet; and lovers, instead of making engagements of their own, talked of nothing but the engagement of the divine Fanny. In fact, the latest intelligence from that city represents that the whole com munity is dancing mad; the inhabitants are all dancing, and so are their brains, and it is doubt ful if they will ever recover sufficiently from the effects to be called again a steady people. Public Ledger. Wonderful Men. It is said of a short man in this city, that he is obliged to climb to the top of a post, to hear himself think; while there is one so tall, that he is obliged to bend nearly double to look down a man's chimney. Softening the Expression. "That's a thundering big lie," said Tom. " No," replied Dick. " It's only a fulminating enlargement oY elongated veracity." Tom took off his hat, elevated his eyes, and held his tongue. The Height of Imitation.-Wooden cakes, beautifully frosted, and mahogany doughnuts a-' advertised to be let lor parties in one of ilfcV"' uangor paper. A dandy, who warned the milk passed to him at one of our taverns, thus asked fur it : 'Landlady, please pass your cow down this way.' To whom the lady thus retorted: 'Wai ter, take this cow down where the calf is bleat ing.' "Is. Jonathan Dumpy here," asked a raw country fellow, boltpg into a city printing of fice. "I don't know such a man," replied the foreman. "Don't you know him!" exclaimed Jonathan, "why ho courted my sisterJ" i 0 f. 4''i !' 1 r - '1