HI It 1 Mjjjuumaam mjuMnxMacnuaai mmwmjmrti TnE WHOLE ART OF GOVERNMENT CONSISTS IN THE ART OF HEING HONEST. Jefferson. VOL. 2. STRO UDSBURG, MONROE COUNTY, PA., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 1, 1841. No 27. PRINTED AND PUBLISHED BY THEODORE S CHOC II. tbijus n- n-rc nr-r annum m advance Two dollars and a quarter, half yearly.-and, if not paid before Ihc end of thn voar t- .lnii.rs and a lu-Jf. Those who receive their papers by a carrier or stage drivers employed by theproprie inr .riii u 371-2 cts. per year, extra. w 9 Mill JM 41Uw ..iitt . , No Daners discontinued until all arrearages are paid, except at me option 01 we 10Advcrtisemeuts not exceeding one square (sixteen lines) will be inserted three weeksfor one dollar . twenty-five cents for every subsequent insertion ; larger ones in proportion. A H7A11 letters addressed to the Editor must be postpaid. POETRY. Re-Union, in Heaven. BY V. LEG GET. If yon bright stars, which gem the night, Be each a blissful dwelling sphere, Where kindred spirits re-unite, Whom death has torn asunder here: How sweet it were at once to die, And leave this blighted orb afar, Mix'd soul and soul to cleave the sky, And soar away from star to star. But 0, how dark, how dear, and lone, Would seem the brightest world of bliss, II wandering through each radiant one, We failed to find the loved of this; If there no more the ties shall twine, That death's cold hand alone could sever, Ah! then these stars in mockery shine, More hateful as they shine forever. It cannot be each hope, each fear, That lights the eye, or clouds the brow, Proclaims there is a happier sphere Than this black world that holds us now; There is a voice which sorrow hears, WThen heaviest weighs life's galling chain, 'Tis Heaven that whispers Dry the tears, The pure in heart shall meet again. The following lines, of Bohemian descent, have been very extensively admired by certain readers of the "North American." The brev ity of the production isj0T the least of its merits : " In a green grove Sat a loving pair Fell a bough from above Struck them dead there. Happy for them They both died together, So neither was left To mourn for the other." Agricultural Reports. The editor of a new country paper in Louisiana apologizes in his first number for the want of attention be stowed on the agricultural department, but pro mises to lay before them in future numbers, the most approved mtthods of Salting pork curing hams, Shearing sheep, and raising lambs Making cotton curing hay, Building fence, et cetera. Truth is mitc-y so is cheese, Fancy's flighty so is fleas ! A Civil Request. An old woman observed a sailor going by her door, and supposing it to be hei son Billy cried out to him, Billy, where is my cow gone? The sailor replied in a contemptuous manner, Orone to the devil for what I know. Well, as you are going that way, said the old woman, I wish you would let down the bars. A sailor once had a dispute with his wife, who wished him to the devil. Plague on me Poll, said he, if I don't think I should fare pret ty well with the old fellow, as I married into the family General Rules don't apply in all cases. We once knew a man who was so careful not to give offence that in speaking of general faults, be would qualify his remarks by saying, "Dresent comnanv fixeented " He nhanrpd to be in company with some ladies, and spoke of an auseiii une as me ugliest person ne ever saw, present company excepted. Now this mistake was perhaps worse than that made by the boy whe, speaking of the greatest man he ever saw, was told by his mo ther he mii3t nlwavR Yrrent their minister. A few days after, he rushed into the presence of 1 .1 H .. mr .1 t t jus motner, ana exclaimed, "motner, l nave seen the greatest hog down town that I ever saw, except our minister!' Galena Budget. Affecting, very. The most soul-stirring -scene we have heard of lately, occurred at De--troit. The passengers had all got aboard the utearaboat and it was about leaving the wharf, when an old gentleman came on board crying out, "My son, my son, I must see him one mo ment. " Well," said the captain, " hunt him iip quick." Anon he came to a great over grown boy, of 18 or 19 years of age, and giving ihira a single copper, snuffling like a child, he cried out, "Here, my son, take this, and don't fprget your daddy!" Thirty years ago the young married coud! were content with the sanded floor until they i-i r .1 . mi l .i couia pay ior me carpet, j ney Knew nothing n i ii ? oi spienaia ottomans, extension laoies, six leet square looking-glasses and the like extravagan ces. And vet they lived comfortably and han - - . j- pily, for they lived honestly, and both "pulled at me same eim oi me siring. A FoRHEARINO HlLSIlANt). Th litnr n - - - ' w VVAft W I J I the Susquehanna Register says, if he had forty wives, and thirty-nine of them should run awav, t . 1 J i J no woutu noi aavenise mem. The custom of asking the printer 'what's the newsr is most annoying, impudent, and insuf ferable. It is his business to deal out the news at stated periods not to retail it at the corner of the streets. If grand jurors had any bowels ot compassion lor the tortured and tormented printer, they would promptly attend to the abate ment of this intolerable nuisance. Anger.- Never be angry with a person, merely oecause nis opinions are not your opm ions; never be angry because you cannot per ii , . - suade him to change his opinions: and, above all, never do him an injury, or hesitate about doing him good, because his opinions and yours are dtiterent. Horse Killed by Flies. A few days ago, some gentlemen in Canton started in a wagon, with their guns, on a hunting exhibition. They arovo into, the woods, and, having tied the horse to a tree, proceeded on their excursion. After an absence of two or three hours, they returned to the wagon, and found the horse dead. They gst a farrier to examine him, who, on opening his body, found it destitute of blood, the flies having sucked it all out of him, so as to cause his death. His hide, externally, was wet all over with blood. The horse was val ued at $200. fBoston Trans. A Huxdred Years in Prison. A late French paper states that a young man aged 18 years, m 1724, was condemned to the galleys in 1' ranee, on account of a high crime, for the long period of one hundred years, which was propably intended by the judgo to confine him for life. Remarkable as it may appear, in 1 824, the man being in perfect health, after an unre mitted series of hardships for one entire centu ry, was discharged, being exactly one hundred and eighteen years old. laghtsiinjr Rods should not be Painted. All metals are good conducters of electrici ty. Oil is a non conducter. The electric flu id, in passing along a conducter is confined al most entirely to its surface. Where that sur face is covered with oil paint, or any non con ducting substance, the passage of the fluid is obstructed it accumulates upon the rod, and is very liable to leave it and strike into the building or to some other object which may present a better conducting surface. Early Sowing of Wheat. We do not approve, as a general rule, of sowing wheat in August. There is usually too great a heat in the ground for it to vegetate freely and quickly, which is essential to the perfection of any plant, and if the sowing is followed by a drouth, a large part of the seed will never grow at all. The wheat plant is one which at no period of its growth requires or can endure a high temperature, and should the seed sown in August even sprout, the ex treme heat and dryness frequently experienced in the month, will be unfavorable to the vigor ous growth. Where much land i3, however, to be sown, it may be advisable, or even neces sary, to begin earlier than would be justifiable under other circumstances. We consider seed put in by the middle ef September, more cer tain of succeeding than if sown by ihe middle of August; later than the middle of September, the probability of a good crop grows constantly weaker. Exceptions to this rule, arising from the peculiarities of the soil, weather, &c. may occur, but the experience of the best wheat growers will confirm its general correctness. Albany Cultivator. Selling Stock. The drover and butcher will now make fre quent calls upon you, and if you have any ex tra nice animals, any sleek and smooth cattle, any lots of fat wethers or ewes, or good lambs, they will, with your permission, be sure to se lect these, and leave the raw-boned and hard to keep, the small, poor, and inferior on your hands. They are not to blame for this, for in doing this, they doubtless consult their own in terest; but the farmer who allows it, much mis takes his interest, as no extra price will com pensate the loss that is sure to ensue where this course is followed. Unless you have ani mals that will be no better for keeping, and some that you wish to sell, you had bettor make your own selections, and sell at moderate pri ces. You can in this way be constantly im proving, instead of running your stock down, and it would be well for the farmer to remem ber that choice animals are sure of a sale at fair prices. A Touching and Beautiful Incident. We know not when we have perused a more touching and beautiful litile story, than the fol lowing from the Hartford Couraut: It was bul yesterday that a friend a young gentleman of fine intellect, of a noble heart, and one well known to many of our readers was suddenly snatched by the hand of death from all the endearments of life. Surrounded by every thing that could make existence pleas ant and happy a wife that idolized hm chil dren that loved him as they only can love, and friends devoted to him the summons came and he lav on the bed of death. But a few short years ago, she to whom he was wedded placed a bridal ring upon his finger, upon the inside of which he had a few words privately engraven. The husband would never permit the giver to read them, telling her that the day would come when she should know the secret seven years glided away, and a day or two since when conscious that he must soon leave his wife forever, he called her to his bedside, and with dying accents told her the hour had at last come when she should see the words upon the ring sho had given him. The young mother took it frem his cold finger, and, though heart- stricken with grief eagerly read the words- "I HAVE LOVED THEE ON EARTH I WHL MEET thee in Heaven." Lawyers. The lawyers are a ill-used and much abused body of men. You may call them lean, lank, lying, loafing limbs of the law, and crack your stereotyped jokes about them, yet there is as much honour, honesty, and good kind feeling about them, as usually falls to the let of us erring and wicked mortals. Take them by and large, they makejgood citizens, fond husbands, doating fathers, dutiful children, effectionate brothers, loving cousins, kind un cles, and exemplary christians; but they have one great fault, an unpardonable fault they take pay for their professional services! From the Democratic Review Death in the School Room'. A FACT. Ting a ling-ling-ling, went the little boll on the teacher s desk of a village school one morn ing, when the studies of the earlier part of the day were about half completed. It was well understood that this was a command for silence and attention; and when those had been obtain ed the master spoke. He was a low thick-set man, and his name was Lugare. " Boys," said he, "I have had a complaint entered, that last night some of you were steal ing fruit from Mr. Nichols's garden. I rather think I know the thief, rim Barker, step up here sir." The one to whom he spoke came forward. He was a slight, fair looking boy of about four teen; and his face had a laughing, good humor ed expression, which even the charge now preferred against him and the stern tone and threatening look of the teacher, had not entire ly dissipated. The countenance of the boy however, was too unearthly fair for health; it had, notwithstanding its fleshy, cheerful look, a singular cast, as if some inward disease, and that a fearful one, were seated within. As the stripling stood before that place of judgement, that place, so often made the scene of heartless and coarse brutality, of timid innocence con used, helpless chilhood outraged, and gentle celings crushed. Lugare, looked on him with a frown, which plainly told that he felt in no very pleasant mood. Happily a worthier and more philosophical system is proving to men that schools can be governed belter than by ashes, and tears, and sighs. We are waxing toward that consummation when one of the old fashioned schoolmasters, with his cowhide, his heavy birch rod, and his many ingenious methods of child torture, will be gazed upon as a scorned memento of an ignorant, cruel, and exploded doctrine. May propitious gales speed that day! " Were you by Mr. Nichols's garden fence ast night?" said Lugare. "Yes sir," answered the boy, "I was." "Well sir, I am glad to find yen so ready with your confession. And so you thought you could do a Utile robbing, and enjoy your self in a manner you ought to bo ashamed to own, without being punished, did your " I have not been robbing," repliod the boy quickly. His face was suffused, whether with resentment or fright, it was diflicult to tell. 'And I did'nt do any thing last night that I'm ashamed to own." "No impudence!" exclaimed tho teacher, passionately, as he grasped a long and heavy rattan; "give me none of your sharp speeches, or I'll thrash you till you beg like a dog." 1 he youngster's face, paled a little; his lip quivered, but he did not speak. "And pray sir," continued Lugare, as the outward signs of wrath disappeared from his features; "what wore you about the garden fori Perhaps you only received the plunder, and had an accomplice to do tho more dangerous part of the job?' "I went that way because it is on my way J home. I was there again afterward to meet an acquaintance; and and But I did not go into the garden, nor take anything away from it. 1 would not steal, hardly to save myself from starving." " You had better have stuck to that last even ing; You were seen, Tim Barker, to come from under Mr. Nichols's garden fence, a little after nine o'clock with a bag full of something another, over your shoulders. The bag had every appearance of being filled with fruit, and this morning the melon beds are found to have been completely cleared. Now, sir, what was there in that bag?" Like fire itself glowed the face of the detect ed lad. He spoke not a word. All the school had their eyes directed at him. The perspira tion ran down his white forehead like rain drops. " Speak, Sir!" exclaimed Lugare, with a loud strike of his rattan on the desk. The boy looked as if he would faint. But the unmerciful teacher, confident of having brought to light a criminal, and exulting in the idea of the severe chastisement he should new be justified in inflicting, kept working himself up to a still greater and greater degree oi pas sion. In the meantime, the child seemed hard ly to know what to do with himself. His tongue cleaved to the roof of his mouth. Either he was very much frightened, or he was actu ally unwell. "Speak, I say!" again thundered Lugare; and his hand, grasping his rattan, towered above his head in a very significant manner. "I hardly can, Sir," said the poor fellow faintly. His voice was husky and thick. "I will tell you some some other time. Please to let me go to my seat I an't well." " Oh yes; that's very likely;" and Mr. Lugare bulged out his nose and cheeks with contempt "Do you think to make me believe your lies? I've found you out, sir, plainly enough; and I am satisfied that you are as precious a little vil lain as there is in the State. But I will post pone settling with you for an hour yet. I shall call you up again; and if you dont tell the whole truth then, 1 will give you something that'll make you remember Mr. Nichols's mslbns for many a month to come go to your seat. Glad enough of the ungracious permission and answering not a sound, the child crept tremblingly to his bench. He felt very strange- ly, dizzily more as it he was m a aream man in real life: and laying his arms on his desk, bowed down his face between them. The pu pils turned to their accustomed studies, for du ring the reign of Lugare in the village school. they had been so used to scenes ol violence and severe chastisement, that such things made but little interruption in the tenor of their way. " Now, while the intervening hour is passing, we will clear up the mystery of the bag and of young Barker being under the garden tence on the preceding night. The boy's mother was a widow, and they both had to live in the very narrowest limits. His father had died when ho was about six years old, and little Tim was left a sickly emaciated infant, whom no one ex pected to live many months. To the surprise of all, however, the pour child kept alive, and seemed to recever his health, as he certainly did his size and good looks. This was owing to the kind offices of an eminent physician, who had a country seat in the neighborhood, and who had been interested in the widow's little family. Tim, the physician said, might possi bly outgrow his disease; but every thing was uncertain. It was a mysterious and ballling malady; and t would not be wondorful if he should in some moment of apparent health be suddenly takn aWay. The poor widow was at first in a con tinual state of uneasiness; but several years had now passed, and none of the impending evils had fallen upon the boy's head. His mo ther seemed to feel confident that he would live, and be a help and an honor to her old age; and the two struggled on together mutually hap- j py in each other, and enduring much poverty and discomfort without repining, eacn lor me otner s sake. Tim's pleasant disposition had made him many friends in the village, and among the rest a young farmer, named Jones, who with his elder brother worked a large larm on snares, Jones very frequently made Tim a present of a bag of potatoes or corn, or some garden vege tables, which he took from his own stock; but as his partner was a parsimonious, high tem pered man, and had often said that Tim was an idle fellow, and ought not to be helped, because he did not work, Jones generally made his gilts in such a manner that no one knew any thing about them, except himself and the grateful ob- ects of his kindness. It might be, too, tnat the widow was loth to have it understood by the neighbors that she received food from any one; for there is often an excusable pride in Deoolo of her condition, which makes them shrink from being considered objects of "chari ty," as tboy would from tho severest pains. On the night in question, Tim had been told that Jones would send them a bag of potatoes, and he place at which they wore to be waiting tor urn, was hxea nt lvir. mcnuisa gmueu iuuuu. It was this bag that Tim had been seen stag- gering under, and which caused the unlucky boy to be accused and convicted by his teacher as a thief. That teacher was one little fitted for his important and responsible office. Has ty to decide and inflexibly serere, he was the terror of the little world he ruled so despotical ly. Punishment he seemed to delight in. Knowing little of those sweet fountains which in childrens breasts ever open quickly at tho call of gentleness and kind words, he was fear ed by all for his sternness and love by none. I would that ho were an isolated instance fit his profession. The hour of grace had drawn to its close, and the time approached at which it was usual for Lugaro to give his school a joyfully received dismission. Now ahd then one of the scholars would direct a furtive glance at Tim, sometimes in indifference or inquiry. They knew that hd would have no mercy shown him, and though most of them loved him, whipping was too com mon there to exact much sympathy. Every inquiringglance, however, remained unsatisfied, for at the end of the hour, Tim, remained with his face completely hidden, and his head bow ed in his arms, precisely as he had leaned himself, when he first went to his seat. Lu gare looked at the boy occasionally with a scowl which seemed to bode vengeance for his sul lenriess. At length' the last class had beeri heard, and the last lesson recited, and Luga'ft; seated himself behind his desk 6tt the platform, with his longest and stoutest rattan before him. "Now, Barker," he said, "we'll settle that little business of yours. Just step up here," Tim did not move. The school-room wad as still as the grave. Not a sound was to bo heard except occasionally a long-drawn breath. " Mind me, sir, or it will be the worse for you. Step up here and take off your jacket!" The boy did not stir any more than if he had been of wood. Lugare shook with passion. He sat still a minute, as if considering tho best way to wreak his vengeance. That minute, passed in death-like silence, was a fearful one of some of the children, for their faces whiten ed with fright. It seemed, as it slowly drop ped away, like the minute which preceeds the climax of an exquisitely performed tragedy, when some mighty master of the histrionic art is treading the stage, and you and the multitude around you are waiting with stretched nerves and suspended breath, in expectation of the ter rible catastrophe. " Tim is asleep, sir," at length said one of the boys who sat near him. Lugare, at this intelligence, allowed his fea tures to relax from their expression of savago anger into a smile, but that smile looked more malignant, if possible, than his former scowls. It might be that he felt amused at the horror depicted on the faces of those about him, or it might be that he was gloating in pleasure oa the way in which he intended to wake the poor little slumberer. "Asleep, arc you, my young gentleman!" said he, "let us see if we can't find something to tickle your eyes open. There's nothing like making the best of a bad case boys. Tim, here, is determined not to be worried in his mind about a little flogging, for the thought of it can't even keep the little scoundrel awake." Lugare smiled again as ho made the last ob- servation. lie grasped his rattan nrmiy ana descended from his seat. With light and steal thy steps he crossed the room, and stood by tho unlucky sleeper. The boy was still as un conscious of his impending punishment as ever. He might be dreaming some golden dream of youth and pleasure; perhaps he was far away in the world of fancy, seeing scenes, and feel ing delights which cold reality never can be- w. Lugare lifted his rattan high over his head, and with the true and expert aim which he had acquired by long practice, brought it down on Tim's back with a force and whack ing sound which seemed sufficient to awake a freezing man in his last lethargy. Quick and fast, blow followed blow. Without wailing to see tho effect of the first cut, the brutal wretch nlicd his instrument of torture first on side of the boy's back, then on the other, and only stopped at the end of a ftw minutes from very weari ness. Still Tim showed no signs of motion; and as Lugare, provoked at his torpidity jerked away one of the child's arms, on which he had been leaning over the desk, his head dropped down on the board with a dull sound, and his face lay turned up and exposed to view. When Lugare saw it, he stood like one transfixed by a basalisk. His countenance turned to a lead en whiteness; the rattan dropped from his grasp; and his eyes, stretched wide open, glared as as some monstrous spectacle of horror and death. The sweat started in great globules seemingly from every pore in his face; his skinny lipa contracted, and showed his teeth; and when he at lentgh stretched forth his arm, and with the end of one of his fingers touched tho child's cheek, each limb quivered like the tongue of a snake; and his strength seemed as though it would momentarily fail him. Tho boy was dead! Ho had probably beon so for some time, for his eyes were turned up, and his body was quite cold. The widow was nw childless too. Death was in the school-room, and Lugare hat! been flogging a corpse. W. W. at it 1 4 . V!