x ! . r .-3 -, The wiIolb art ok Government consists in' the art of being honest. Jefferson. VOL. 2. PRINTED AND PUBLISHED BY THEODORE SCHOCH. 'TERMS.-Two dollars per annum m advance-Two dollars nd a quarter, half yearly,-""! if not paid before the end of the year, Two dollars and a half, lhose who receive their papers by a carrier or stage drivers employed by the propne tor. will be charged 37 1-2 cts. per year, extra. No papers discontinued until all arrearages arc paid, except at the option of the Editor, lDAdvertisenients not exceeding one square (sixteen lines) will be inserted three weeksfor one dollar . twdnty-five cents for evcrv sulfequent insertion ; larger ones in proportion. A libcnildiconut wiH be made to yearly advertisers. IE? All letters addressed to the Editor must be post paid. POETRY. The .sky is blue, the sward is greeri, The leaf upon the bough is seen, The wind comes from the balmy west, The little songster builds its nest, The bee hums on from flower to flower, Till twilight's dim and pensive hour; The joyous year arrives; but when Shall bye-past times come back again? ' I think on childhood's glowing years How soft, how bright, the scene appears ! How calm, how cloudless, passed away, The long, long, summer holiday! I may not muse I must not dream -Too beautiful these visions seem : For earth and mortal men; but when Shall bye-past times come back again? I iirink of sunny eyes so soft, Too deeply lelt, enjoyed too oft, When through the bloomy fields I roved With her, the earliest, dearest loved; Around whose form I yet survey, " In thought a bright celestial ray ( To present scenes denied: and when Shall bye-past times come back again? Alas! the world at distance seen .4ppear'd all blissful and serene, ' - -An Eden form'd to tempt the foot,- f With crystal streams and golden fruit; That world, when tried and trod, is found A rocky waste, a thorny ground! We then revert to youth; but when Shall bye-past times come back again? Accommodating. "How fay is it to Taun ton?" "Why it's eight miles." "Eight devil's why a man told ma a mile back, that it was on ly six." "Well, seeing that you are an old man, and your horse tired, and you seem impa tient, we'll call il three.'' Breach of Promise. The N. O. Picayune, in noticing a breach of promise case, has the fol lowing very appropriate remark: These breaches of marriage promise are vile humbugs; we say it with all proper reverence for womankind. She whose broken and bleed ing heart can be mended by an application of copper, can be no great shakes. Prentice is of opinion that by a suitable ap paratus, evory man may have the means con stantly al hand of generating sufficient steam from the moisture of his own body, to drive him ahead like a locomotive. The income of John Jacob Astor is about two dollars and eighty-seven cents a minute, or nearly five cents a second. Truth. "How much happiness does the old bachelor lose! No smiling angel stands at the door to welcome him .as he returns, 'My dear, are you come?' No lisping cherub climbs his knee and in tones of love cries out 'Daddy, give me thum thugar kitheth. Three Abstractionists. A member of Congress in-the debate relative to the position to be occupied by the statue of Washington in the capitol, having suggested that it be placed in the corner of the rotunda, Mr. Stanly of North Carolina, moved that a committee consisting of three abstractionists, be appointed to find out where the corner of a ro tunda can be found. The idea is an excellent one and suggests a very fitting occupation. An abstractionist could not possibly be belter occu pied .than in looking for the corner of a circle. We should think he would find himself as much in his element, as a trout in a shady stream, or a fat negro sitting in the sun and fanning him self witli a brickbat. North American. When the celebrated George Buchanan was in France, the JCing took him to view his pic ture gallery. At length they stopped before a picture representing the crucifixion. George requested an explanation. ''That, sir,' said the king, 'is our Saviour; the one on the right is the Pope, and the one on the left is myself.' ' I am much obliged to your majesty,' replied George, 'for the information you have given me, for though I have often heard that our Saviour "was crucified between two thieves, I never knew who they were before.' England has now on the stocli3or prepar ing, twenty-seven large steam vessels in .addi tion ,J.o her presenaval fo . STRO UDSBURG. MONROE COUNTY, PA., WEDNESDAY, SEPTEMBER 8, 1841. ui-ijauiMU.i-iuwujii!aeiMJa'a.i .LJ.i-mi.miir A CJrcat Recitation. The following, from the N. 0. Crescent Ci ty, is the best thing of the kind we ever read: "The schoolmaster was in a great hurry he had received a note from his dulcinea, and the 'geography class was disposed of in double quick lime. "Polynesia, where situated, what are the pro ducts, the inhabitants, latitude and longitude, &c. how bounded?" shrieked the littie peda gogue, to a huge red-headed boy, whose face bore the expression of a turkey's egg, with feet like battering rams. " Pollykneeshia is an independent group of islands in the anterior of the desert of Saraharra, on the coast of Cornwall. Its products is bil in' springs, cucumbers, tortoise shells, caniballs, and sometimes women and children. The in habitants is for the most part Kalmuc Tartars, and 'tothers is Shakers and Injuns. Latitude and longitude is ditto. It is bounded on all sides by the Chinese wall, 'which was erected to prevent the nocturnal visits of the equator into the Caspian sea, and on the South by the Spareribbean ishsmushes, and the promonto ries which is uncommonly kivered at high wa ter mark with Shetland ponies and ether ani mals of the same class. The religion is like the producks, intolerance and idle worship. Willasja Peisai. A man is said to be now living in Bucks county, Pa. by the name of Preston, whose grandmother died in the year 1774 and saw William Penn when he first landed at or near where Philadelphia now stands. He stated thatjhis grandmother informed him that when the ship in which Gov. Penn sailed came up the Nehsamahony, on his arrival he was met by the Indians, and the masts struck the trees of Pevede's hill, at the (present) Navy Yard. She said that the white people had prepared the best entertainment they could for the Governor and his family; the Indians had done the same. W:IliamPenn walked with the Indians and sat down with them on the ground, and ate with them roasted acorns and hominy, that pleased them so much that thev began so show him how they could hop and jump, that Win. Penn stepped up and beat them all. Such wise com plaisance won and secured their friendship and affection for him during his life. Amcr. Mag azine 1S35. A Hard Case. The Rochester Democrat states that Mr. Eli jah Shaw, aged 70 years, who fought the bat tles of his country against three nations, is now in the Poor House within two miles of Roches ter. He was on board the Constellation when she captured the French frigate L'Insuj;gent in 1800. In 1S03 he was on board the frigate Philadelphia, at the time of her capture off the harbor of Tripoli, and suffered nine months im prisonment. He was on board the frigate Uni ted States when shecaptured the Macedonian, and the President, at the time of her capture by a British squadron. After the peace, he sailed under Commodore Decatur up the Aled iterrancan, to chastise the Barbary powers. This being done, he sailed with Commodore Porter in the squadron thai so effectually de: stroyed a gang of lawless pirates. The ToEibigbee Sliver on Fire. The Mobile Journal says: While J. M. Coo per was prosecuting the removal of McGrew's Shoals, after boreing to the depth of 375 feet, his augur suddenly dropped and eniirely dis appeared. In the space of several moments a deep hollow sound was heard, resembling the noise of distant thunder, from the chasm below, and at the same instant gushed forth from the shaft thus made clear, transparent, oleaginous substance or liquid, which boils up very simi lar to the effervescence of a boiling pot; and which owing to the sluggishness of the current, has gradually diffused itself over the whole sur face of the river. A quantity has been col lected, and upon application of fire, it is found to burn equal to the purest sperm oil. To gratify curiosity and make further tests, fire has been applied to the oil on the water, and the whole surface of ihe river is now burn ing, emitting a flame of most beautiful appear ance, about six inches high, and has already extended about half way down to Fort Stod dart; the reflection of which upon the horizon at night, presents a most sublime spectacle, far surpassing in grandeur and beauty of appearance the aurora borealis. Something Worth knowing. Twenty of the Members of the Convention, which framed the Constitution of the United States, were Mem bers of Congress when the act establishing the first Bank of the United States was passed, and only six of them voted against it. In the De bale on its passage, Elbridge Gerry, who had been a Member of the Convention, declared that "he thought Congress were as competent to establish a National Bank, as cither House was to adjourn from day to day? A prominent Democrat; Vice President un der Madison. : yw' . ' Alum will cure thesbjte.of aijalie.n- mggn Good SSooIvS. V A young man who has a fondness for books, or taste for the work of nature and art, is not only preparing to appear with honor and use fulness as a member of society, but is secured from a thousand temptations and evils lb which he would otherwise be exposed. He knows what to do with his leisure time. It does not hang heavily on his hands. He has no induce ment to resort to bad company, or the haunts of dissipation and vice; lie has higher and no bler sources of enjoyment in himself. At plea sure he can call around him the best of compa ny the wisest and greatest men of every age and country and feast his mind with the rich stores of knowledge which they spread before him. A lover of good books can never be in want of good society, nor in much danger of seeking enjoyment in the low pleasures of sen suality and vice. JSoveX ExMMlioaiu The New York Sun, in its notice of the pro ceedings of the Medical College of the Uni versity of New York, mentions the following singular case : A young man, twenty-five years old, was then introduced and seated in a chair. At the request of a professor he laid open his bosom, when there were exposed to view a pair of perfectly forrnod breasts, precisely like thbse of the female subject at the age of twenty' years. In all other respects the young man was natu rally constituted. His head, face and propor tions were of a decided masculine stamp; but in this one peculiarity, he differed nothing from a young woman. He betrayed something like maiden timidity at this public exposure, and as soon as his caseload been elucidated withdrew from observation. Secret Weapons Prohibited. The City Council of Tallah'asse have passed an ordinance by which a fine of two hundred dollars is inflicted upon any person who may bo found wearing se cret weapons, such as pistols, bowie-knives, dirks, Szc. It is to be hoped that the fine will be enforced, and the cowardly practice, which leads to so many murders, be entirely sup pressed. Letters from Geneva, N.Y. mention the death of Gideon Lee, Esq. formerly Mayor ofNew- l ork. He retired a few years since, with an ample fortune, to enjoy the peace and quiet of a residence near Seneca Lake. Multiply the figure 9 by any other single figure, and the two figures composing the pro duct, added together, will make 9. Thus 9 mul tiplied by 4 make 36, which two figures added together make 9, and so on with all other fig: ures. Fo Cure a Barn. -"A Lady," in the Knoxvillo Register, gives the following recipe for a burn: "Scarce a month passes away but we read or hear of some accident caused by fire. I send you the following recipe for a burn, be lieving that if it were generally known much suffering might be alleviated. Take a table- spoonfuloflardjialfa table-spoonful of spirits of turpentine, and a piece of rosin as big as a hick ory nut, and simmer them together till melted. It makes a salve, which; when cold, may be applied to a linen cloth and laid over the bum. If imme diately wanted, spread it on the cloth as soon as melted it will very soon cool. I have seen it applied after corroding effects of chemical poi sons, after a foot has been burnt by boiling su gar, after severe scalds, and in every case the sufferer obtained perfect ease in, ten or fifteen minutes after it was used- It may be applied two or three times a day, or as often as the cloth becomes, dry." Stifle. The following, receipt for curing this disease is given by a correspondent of the Cultivator. He says he has sold the receipt for many dol lars, and with it cured many horses: "A handful of sumack bark, and a handful of white oak burk, boiled in a gallon of water down to two quarts; bathe the stifle with this solution twice a day four days; then put on a salve made of the white of an egg and rosin, and bathe the same in with a hot shovel,, two or three times and the horse is cured. Receipt, for a permanent white wash for buijdings, fences &c. Take 1 bushel of liuic; 5 lbs, brown sugar; .2 lbs. alum; 1 pint of fino salt and a sufficient quantity of cold water to make it mix like a common white wash, stir it well, and let it stand Over night; apply this mixture with a brush, and give the fence or building two coats thereof it will get as hard as a stone. KLcnluelty. t , , , The Frankfort Commonwealth states that the House of Representatives in that Stale will con tain 77 Whigs and 23 Loco Focos, and the Senate will bo composed of 29 supporters and 9 opponents of the Administration, thus giving a clear Whig majority on joint ballot of 74. I, 11 111,1 wMIiimlMTO Dow' ermon. At the request of " Henrietta" I will preach upon this occasion from the following text: A wife, like echo, should be true, To speak when she is spoken to; But not echo, still be heard Contending for the final word. My hearers a wife is not only a choice piece of furniture, but a useful article for domestic purposes. She can darn stockings, mend breech es, keep all the apartments of a man's hearth in order, and twine for him garlands of tenderness to bedeck his connubial bower. She is the very marrow of comfort the principle tributa ry to the silvery stream of happiness the foun dation of joy a lump of the pure gold of love, refined in the crucible of Hymen. I would earnestly advise all my young male friends; who wander along the dark avenues of celibacy with no such bright star as woman to guide their er ring steps, to enter immediately upon the bloom ing lawns of matrimony, and bask in the sun shine of a fond wife's affections even as 'snakes quit their tenebrous dens, and lie oiit to warm beneath the congenial rays of a vernal sun. But, my friends, you mustn't let your bet ter judgement be kidnapped by the allurements of beauty; for beauty is a flower that fades in the noontide of life, and blossoms no more. The bright jewel pertaining to woman is not worn upon her finger neither does it glitter upon her bracelet. No; it lies buried in the casket of her mind. It is there that you shall seek for those precious gems which adorn the female character, and give to a woman all the attributes that belong to an angel :minus the wings and a diadem of perfect holiness. My dear young friends! 1 hope you will not be misguided in your search after those qualifications and natural disposition which a wife ought to possess. She should, of course, be submissive to the husband, inasmuch as the husband ought to be as mild towards her as the balmy breath of May to the rose. Her bosom should be a peaceful lake of love, surrounded by the high hill of forbearance, over which the gales of passion may never ruffle its placid sur face. She should, like an echo, always be ready to speak when spoken to by her bigger and more substantial half, and yet she should not like an echo be ever contending for the last word, for she ought to know that perverseness in a wife always presents a worse appearance than it does in the husband, even as a fly speck marreth the beauty of a white cambric more than doth an ink spot the comeliness of a black broad-cloak. She ought also to be aware that the obstinacy of the man genus is likened unto the bristle of a hog's back; which being stroked from the head towards the tail, appear smooth and delicate; but when manipulated from lliG tail towards the .head, are found to be as rough and obtrusive as the prickets that surround the prison house of endless torment. 0, my beloved hearers! I hope and trust that all you masculines who bear the conjugal yoke have made good selections from the fe male creation, to help you drag tho plough ofj care over the stubbles of such a barren exis tence as is allotted to man. I know some wives whose incorrigibleness is enough to wor ry the patience of a mile-stone, whose indefat igable exertions in tho case of mischief are worthy of a scholastic monkey with a fearful concussion when touched by the last spark of reproof. They draw their social talk altogeth er loo strong for weak constitution?, and throw too much salt in their husband's porridge. They want to wear the breeches, whether they will fit or not. They set their lords to peeling potatoes whilo they go out and chop wood, which the God of nature never intended should be subjected to the control of women. Oh, this doesn't any more accord with my ideas of what female worth should consist than does the toll ing of a funeral knell with the merry notes of Yankee Doodle! A wife who assumes too much, who will have her own notions gratified always who will raise flames of disputo upon trilling occasions, and persist in heaping on fu el to the last is worse than no wife at rA. When Heaven first saw fit to work up sorr-iO of its choicest materials into tho delicate firure of a woman, and placed her in the heririta"e of lonely man, it was intended that she should be to him a helpmate a choerCul companiona turtle dove that he should press to his bosom in the fondness of affection, and shelter from the cold storms of want; that he should dress the garden of his heart with, the perennial flowers of por.ee water them with tenderness, and strew his bed with roses of reciprocal love. For all which she should be, in a degree of submission, and never let tho tonguo do damage to those fine spun qualities which should ever be her pride and her boast. My friends--to find a good wife in these days of foolery and fashion is liko seeking pearls in an ocean of oyster shells; but if you are lucky enough to find ono, hang, on to her like hemp; for she is a rich treasure as ever existed in the imagination of an enthusiast. Cherish her, pro tect and love her; and you will find but few barren spots between tho altar and the grave. And you young maids; who are now delight ing in the joyful anticipatiqns of one day becoming-happy brides! I wanuyou to conduct No"3 yourselves properly lest your blooming hopes be suddenly overspread with the moss of mor tification, and you be destined to go shining down to the tomb, unwooed, uncourled and un wed. May you all, whether single or marriedy endeavor to live on such terms with ono ano ther that the triune ioys of Friendship, Love an u iiappniuss may wait un you to me conniies of eternity. So misht it be. DOWJr, 3Lws off Pennsylvania, PiixxpA Sexxinn nil fMl " A Further Supplement to an act entitled 'Aft Act for acknowledging and recording d'eedsV' See pamphl'pt laws, page 106. " Sec. 1. Beit enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in General Assembly met, and it .is hereby enacted by the authority ofjihe same, That it shall be the duty of all persons who claim any lands or tenements in this Com monwealth under or by virtue of any deeds of conveyances, bearing date previously to the act of eighteenth March, Anno Domini, one thous and seven hundred and seventy-five-, to which this is a supplement, to have the same recorded in the proper county, in the manner now pro vided by law, within two years from the datd hereof. Sec. 2. No such deed which shall remain Unrecorded as aforesaid, for the said term,, of two years, shall be permitted to be given in ev idence in any of the courts of this Common wealth, unless proven or acknowledged accord ing to the act to which this is a supplement of unless proven in the manner in which other instruments of writing are proven, by subscrV bing witnesses or proof of hand writing, or tin-, less the actual possession of the land has acr companied the said deed. Sec. 3. All such deeds remaining unrecord-j ed for the said term of two years as aforesaidj shall be adjudged fraudulent and void against any subsequent bona fide purchaser or mortgage for valuable consideration, without notice. A Snalte Storj"; The Danville Democrat says: that " Some time since a couple of gentlemen of Catawjssa? named Isaac Breech and JaGob B. Moyerj made a short excursion to the Cattawissa moun tain, and whilo gathering some huckleberries? they aroused a rattlesnake, which afterwards proved to be nearly three feet in length, having 19 rattles. While they were in the act of kil ling the monster, he gave the usual sign with his rattle; in a moment the whole neighborhood responded to the call; and on looking around they found themselves to be in the midst of a; den of rattlesnakes, all ready for the contest Nothing daunted, however, they coir-.menced; the work of destruction, and in a sliort time cleared the field, having killed 29 rattlesnakes, varying in size from three feet to one half, and having rattles from 19 down to thvee. Among them was a very large cobra capello, common ly called copperhead, which is particularly fear ed for its venomous bite. A remarkable cir cumstance is that everyone of the reptiles was blind, which; it is said, is always the case in the month of August." Wo should think, th?it in rx country so full of snakes as the mountain of Catawissa seems to be, the inhabitants would at least know their names. Who ever head of a cobra capcllo in this part of the world, and who is it that be lieves the bite of a copperhead to be more ven omous than that of a rattlesnake? Lan. Union. A Philadelphia Quaker. A certain 'Friend'' whom w very- well know was recently af a distant place of summer resort. He stepped into the Post Office ono morning, and while there, thei Postmaster asked him if he knew any English people staying at the hotel. 'Why does thee ask?' said the Quaker. 'Because' s.ai'a the Postmaster, 'here are half a dozen let ters directed to England by the next steamer, and as the postage to Boston is not paid I can not send them. If I cannot find the writers of them, they will bo forwarded lo the dead letter oflice'in Washington.' Our 'Friend' looked at tho letters. They were all double, and he re marked 'they appear to be family letters, and no doubt will bo most welcome if received, or may cause great anxiety if they should hot be:.' 'I cannot help it,' said the Postmaster. 'Well, I can, if thee cannot; what is the postage!' For six double letters three dollars.1 'Well here is tho money; thee will please mark the letters 'paid,' and send thorn to Boston.' And with this injunction, the Philadelphia Quaker left the Post Office his pockets not quite so heavy as when he entered, but his heart, we are sure, a great deal lighter. N. Y. Gazette: Religious Statistics. Tho number of Bap tists in the United States is estimated to be 4; 000,000; Methodist, 3,000,000; Presbyterians, 2,000,000; Friends, 220,000; Roman Catho lics, 1,300,000; Episcopalians, 1,000,000. Inhabitants Wanted. Tho legislature of Ar kansas hasjrasseda law offering a quarter sec tion of land as a bounty to each settler coining into the State. Some of the best land in the state is offered for their selection. s? IP 3